CON GRE DIREC To ho 7) wu ec < TI TT Ce Tm ITT J Hi ml HEHI 5; MHBUHINRTN TRA 18(@YDIES £7 A Cez 20% 2 NANRL4 SS “ary NE LIBRARY ULAR EAE RSRINEEVANUALCHAI AMOS EERE ERAT V ILS DD UTIL ER BT 0A (RAMANA TBA LIA HS TIES OOTY il TT NICH Toe. ¥4 .p93/). 952. 82° CONGRESS, 2° SESSION BEGINNING JANUARY 8, 1952 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1952 Compiled Under the Direction of the JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING CARL HAYDEN, Senator from Arizona, Chairman THOMAS B. STANLEY, Representative from Virginia, Vice Chairman EARLE C. CLEMENTS, Senator from Kentucky WiLLIAM E. JENNER, Senator from Indiana JAMES W. TRIMBLE, Representative from Arkansas KArL M. LECOMPTE, Representative from Iowa JAMES L. HARRISON, Staff Director Office of Congressional Directory, Room F-68, Capitol Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 29 or 187 All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indicated For sale by the Superintendent of Documents U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. NOTES The following changes occurred in the membership of the Eighty-second Congress since the election of November 7, 1950: Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in SENATORS Virgil M.. Chapman, Ky_________ MearsiS, 10518 0 T. 50 He 4 on Thomas R. Underwood!_| Mar. 19, 1951 Arthur H. Vandenberg, Mich._..} Apr:>18,1951 |. > 5 Blair Moody 1... ..... Apr. 25,1951 Kenneth S. Wherry, Nebr_.__.___ Nov:20, 1951 {ooo 08 Fredi AL |. Lo. Seaton... REPRESENTATIVES John B. Sullivan, 11th Mo_______ Jom. 229,105) Vf Claude I. Bakewell. ____ Mar. 19,1951 Thomas R. Underwood, 6th Ky. _|....._.________ Mar. 17,1951 | John C. Watts __.___.__ Apr. 23,1951 Frank Buchanan, 33d Pa_________ Aprs27.4950 lf earn Vera Buchanan. ________ Aug. 1,1951 John Kee, 5th 'W, Va. _.. oc. ..o0. May 8 1051 1. Siena Elizabeth Kee_ .________ July 26,1951 Fd Gossett, 10th Tex so. uo (> ~~ "Gi July: 31,1951} Frank Tkard............ Sept. 17,1951 Wilson D. Gillette, 14th Pa... “>| Aug. 7,105] “(= + ~~"+ __ Joseph: LL. Carrigeg. Joo pve Frank Fellows, 3d Maine____.___ Aug. 27,1951 Clifford G. MecIntire____ Albert C. Vaughn, 8th Pa________ Sept. 1,1951 Karl Ci Ring. wo. 0... Harry 1. Towe, th N. J. io. Sept. 7,1951 Frank C. Osmers, Jr____ Edward Breen, 3d Ohio____._____ Oct. 1,1951 Paul BF. Schenek.......... Karl Stefan, 3d Nebr... ._.. Oct. 2,1951 ‘Whitaker, John A., 2d Ky Dec. 15, 1951 1 Appointed by Governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected. CONTENTS (For List of Individuals, A Page Academy of Sciences, National. ._______________ 476 Accounting Office, General... _.________._.__ 299 Accounts, Bureau of (Post Office Department)__ 404 Accounts, Bureau of (Fiscal Service, Treasury). 368 Addresses of Members 649 Administrations: Agricultural Research... . i... i. oi aiiten. 418 Bonneville. POWer. i. ceca tilinh. daicshnin 414 mans Civik Aeronanties. 2: ti oo tains. 432 Defense: Blectric Powers. J. siotd seni is anly sail 407 Pisherles: toils a cabin nani ho bil br sets babe 408 Minerals’Exploration...c..._..Li... 407 S.C Petroleum... Lor onan Iaido 406 Production. Su. ouictl cli Sivaa ot 340 Solid Fuels... of ini 408 Transport... oii bl aaah coson i RISE , 342 Farm. Credit. oon i Re ate Tie 423 Farmers Home... eo Federal’ Housing... . ice dius caditrnatioot Pood and Drug... i hE 461 General Services: an i 466 Maritime. rae ae 433 Navajo-Hopi Indian, Joint Committee on._._ 221 Production and Marketing... _______________ 425 PublicHousing.. ioc feec elas tots 471 Puerto Rico Reconstruction... ._......._. 413 Rural Electrification... ---... . -ociunaala 427 Small Defense oc...nlui 348 Plants... C.D. Social Security. ..... co bciiooinrii acai y 464 ot Southeastern Power. ir — oi Corrieing 414 Southwestern Power... .-. ci i Sl raul: 414 Veterans’. dace. fon Sr sora ua oy 489 Congressional Service at Capitol SRT rn 298 Administrative Activities (State)__.._____._______ 360 Administrative Assistants and Secretaries to Senolors. alii aideno ated bo baits 249 Administrative Committee of Federal Register... 468 Administrative Division (Justice).._..._____.__ 399 Administrative Office (Navy)... oo... 382 Administrative Office of the United States COUT rs te sai ie emg pis Le i 510 Administrative Services (Agriculture). _._.______ 427 Administrative Services. (U. S. Army) ___..______ 379 Administrator, Office of the— Economic Stabilization Agency. __________ 342 General Services Administration. ____________ 466 Production and Marketing Administration (Agricaltnve) itil Jl ae Ping 425 Adviser to the President, Telecommunications. 340 Advisory Board on National Parks, Historie Sites, Buildings and Monuments_______ 411 Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, National. 476 Advisory Committee on Management, Presi- Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign Aid. 447 Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems, National. ___. see Index on p. 663) Aeronautics: Page Administration, Civil... ....ooainotee it on 432 Board, Civils ov: ui mar iit dar borne 451 Bureau of: (NAVY). cco itn a ma nr 386 National Advisory Committee for____________ 476 Agencies: Central Intelligencer... ia. vocudogenlis | 338 District of Columbia Redevelopment Land... 455 Economic Stabilization... ....._ li 342 Emergency. coil: ce cawit Bbese aaa suois 340 Pederal Security... cob oa ols fanaa to” 460 Housing and Home Finance... .......... 469 Independent... . hod fitodiiecir 447 icici Mutual Security. 5 St nay 474 Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry, Bureau ofr bn hank Ads sii dest a lan 418 Agricultural Economics, Bute TH fr PRLCAG A 415 Agricultural Research Administration_.________ 418 Agricultural Research Center__.________________ 418 Agriculture Conservation Programs Branch____ 4 Agriculture, Department of... .......... 415 Agricultural Research Administration. _______ 418 Agricultural Research Center... __.___.____ 418 Bureau of— Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. __ 418 Animal Industry... «et todee tootna 419 Dairy Industry... owes ont coda to 419 Entomology and Plant Quarantine_______ 420 Human Nutrition and Home Economies. 420 Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. i nila 421 gioioiantl Office of Experiment Stations_______________ 422 Bureau of Agricultural Economies. ___..______ 415 Commodity Credit Corporation.________.______ 422 Commodity Exchange Authority _.__._________ 422 Extension Service...iiiaio oo 423 Farm Credit Administration. _______.____.___ 423 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. ______ 423 Farmers Home Administration __________.____ 424 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation. ._.._____ 424 Forest Service... . il iia caoacigdie 424 TADYRLY . oven rims oo ME ts he SRLS ard 416 Office of— Budgetand' Finance...io... oil 416 Foreign Agricultural Relations. .__._._______ 416 Hearing Examiners... _ciulic.o co-o. 417 I OTTOON oat Ser a Fae mre Ln Mi 417 Personnels... hci dnada odd sl that seni 417 Plant and Operations. 2. Loo tf ol 417 Bolelli. oeen et 418 Production and Marketing Administration___ 425 Administrator. iol fon Jui Toit 425 Commodity Branches: -CITE Ma SA a mat TC pe tL 426 PalysEr anh 426 Pats and Ols.cos 0 cepoTd coisa ete 426 Fruits and Vegetables... .____.__..... 426 Grain. oc ie cual rata aos 426 TAvestock. iii iia tesa Jenibu. 426 V1 Congressional Directory Agriculture—Continued Page Production and Marketing Administration— Continued Commodity Branches—Continued TINT ee a BE 426 BE si a a Rs i al 426 4MY I SC SR a le 426 Functional Branches: Agricultural Conservation Programs_._.___426 Fiseal. conse saan and SOE BREIL 426 Tood Distribution. ..cua. aaeaaiioe00 220 427 Marketing and Facilities Research. ______ 427 Transportation and Warehousing_________ 427 Offices: Administrative Services. occa ooo... 427 Ay ERRLTS Re 427 pl BOAEeh cin dare mh dma rms oo a a 427 Compliance and Investigation. _.__________ 427 Information Services... ....____ 427 Materials and Faeilities ~~20 ______C 427 Personnel Management... .......___ 427 PIO ois rao ae Sf dion A oe SE 427 Requirements and Allocations. _.________ 427 Rural Electrification Administration. ____ ____ 427 Soil Conservation Serviee._.__....__..._.._._. 427 Air Coordinating Committee... ..._.__..___.._____ 447 Air Force, Department of the___..__._.___________ 393 Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force. .______. 394 Director of Legislation and Liaison. __._________ 394 General CounselZiii dn 0 odd ili 394 Tiaison Office, Capitol... i...To 298 Secretary of the Air Foree...oeeoeeo oo... 393 Special ‘Assistant, Officeof.................._... 394 Under Secretary of the Air Force... ______ 394 United States Air Fores... Lo..."= __ 395 Compirofer. Jl al 000 Todaldeto 396 Development. lo oi 396 Headquarters. lo. cull. oles dan Jail 395 Major Air Commands... __...0_.—____ 1. 397 Continental Commands... 397 Overseas Commands... _. 398 Separate Operating Agencies. ______.______ 398 Muatariall LQ a, SEIFTNr Fai 397 ODeraliong. cinesmn amas. Saat ii 396 Personnel... cc 0d a on J SIE 396 Airlines ticket office, combined ______ ___________ 297 Alr Station, Naval (Ui fin op TIONS Sail] 391 Alnglen Ballroad fl 0 m0 0 cag et 413 Seattle Representative... _...__._______ a A 413 Alnska Road Commission... = = atinili 413 Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation_______ 413 Alphabetical list: Delegates and Resident Commissioners.____.__ 172 Representatives... ..iwee ai Ad S00 ul, 165 Senators... Lia sdeimsaminaasas he Sais SL 163 American Battle Monuments Commission______. 447 American National Red Cross._____________.___ 448 ALCOR. nr rb Br a i re 449 Boardof ‘Governors. oi Tou cut Si ton 448 Directors of Services and Activities. __________ 449 Executive and Administrative Officers. ______ 448 Honorary OMEerS..-.. nooo oo BIES 448 OICOrE nimirs SN alien ENE 448 American Printing House for the Blind. ________ 461 American States, Organization of _______________ 352 Animal Industry, Bureauof. _..__.________.___. 419 Apportionment of Representatives by States, undereachieensas cs = oc Gof oo nr Page Apprenticeship, Bureau of (Labor)____._________ 442 Architect of the Capitol.__________ IEDs rd 295 Archives and Records Service, National _______ 467 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Cominis- CITT a a CSS NR 449 Armed Forces Policy Council _______.___________ 375 Armed Forces Medical Policy Couneil._________ 376 Armed Forces Staff College... __..____.. 376 Army, Department ofithe.._......_ =. 377 Administrative Assistant to the Secretary .__ 379 Administrative Serviees. 2. ii Ur ool 379 Assistant Secretaries of the Army_____________ 378 Chiefof Stall oui Sosialiidl 0% Snasany 379 Department Counselor, Office________________ 378 Department of the Army Boards, Exempted Stations, Military Missions, and Com-MIBSIONG. innitaba ba EX 380 mi General Biol... oi ee tt LE LSE 379 Office, Chief of Army Field Forces.____..______ 380 Secretary of the Army, office of the____________ 377 Bpacinl StarlaSe 379 Technical:Serviees. o.oo ves. SHHSIG§ 380 Under Secretary of the Army, office of the__._ 377 WU, 8. Military Academy... 380 20 Army Field Forces, Office of Chief __________: >i LORD Army. Yigigon Ofee ooSU el 298 Art: Freer Gallery of. laa to Cr 486 National:Gallery-of. onanS00 HOD 4836 02 Arts: Commissionof Pine = =...wi 0 453 National Collection of Fine... _.._.____________ 486 Assignment of rooms in the Capitol: Basement floor and terrace... __.___ 311 Inst oor. nie be a Re Si RR 313 CHallory TI00T sw wis slim emis Ra ASOT AEE 317 Ty ry ey OR st CE i tr 315 Assignments to committees: Representatives and Delegates... ___.________ 231 Sn LR SN Se CR EL 225 Assistant Postmasters General, offices of ____ 402-403 Astrophysical Observatory... i. 0 486 Atomic Energy Commission. 1 0 _-i io 449 Central Offiee. 00 2 ver Sein ARr i 450 General Advisory Committee... _.._____ 450 0 eee Be REARS a SERe sd 449 Military Liaison Committee... ______._____ 451 Operating Establishments... _____._ __. 450 Atomic Energy, Joint Committee on____________ 220 Attending physician at the Capitol .___________ 296 Attorney General, biography of ________________ 399 Attorney’s Office, United States... .____.___. 510 Audit, Office of (Agriculture)...___ 427 Authority: Commodity Exchange... 2 vr. 422 National Production (Commerce)... ..________ 435 National Capital 5. Housing... 477 Tennessee Valley. Learns nsnsbrsottmanmi 488 B Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International. ius... 5 aiid Mina ds 350 Bank of Washington, Export-Import__.____._____ 455 Battle Monuments Commission_____.__________ 380 Beach Erosion and Shore Protection Board. __ 380 Contents VII Biographies: Page Boards—Continued Page Aftorney. General... c.ciinirSannentan 399 Clerk of the House of Representatives...____. 290 Justices of the— Courts of Appeals, United States..__.._____ 493 Court of Claims of the United States... _.._. 503 Supreme Court of the United States..___.___ 493 United States Court of Appeals for the District ol-Columbiase veo oll) 497 United States Court of Customs and Patent Appealsooiioiii oon 9) 502 i. United States Court of Military Appeals.__ 500 United States Customs Court... _____._____._ United States Emergency Court of Appeals. 507 Postmaster General. oo ovr J ilo oa 401 President of the United States .........___.__. 337 Secretary of— Aerio ture... rr sn Sa de a pad aia 415 Alr Poreoliany oS ad sero ois el 393 ATI Tae A ne ART es Sa 377 Commerce. zo iets und ron ain wl 429 LB A BEN SS SED Sb a BE a PR 371 Interiors rennin sninn isons AR LES 0 hil 405 Labor: rn a rR MATE rE PER 5S 441 NAVY ition A dr pr I ARS L 2 381 ITY CR Una A CR A SRR 285 State a sco a Lash aa IR Ma 355 ID YCASULY iif wait ivi mmm i wo EA 363 Secretaries to the President _____.____________ 337 Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioner. _ ______________ 3 Sergeant at Arms of the House... ____________ 290 Sergeant at Arms of the Senate. ______________ Vice President of the United States__.....___. 3 Biological:Area, Canal Zone... Joi sh 10 Blind, American Printing House for the________ Blind-Made Products, Committee on Pur-ChaBES Of ir. inns as Sard ad ete Board of Visitors: Coast Guard Aeademy...-0 0 UL L000 218 Merchant Marine Academy... __.._.._. 218 Military Academy... LC GEUU lO Glu 2] 217 Naval Academy... J ol a ain lll Jl 217 Boards: Capitol Pole... i oh nil 8 296 Lo Civili Aeronautics Zr 0 Sell So oo 451 Combined Shipping Adjustment (United States and Great Britain)... _...____.__. 348 Commissioners, U. S. Soldiers’ Home____.____ 380 Correction of Military Records. -—ooo_—eo__ 380 Correction of Naval Records. o.______ 382 Decorations (ArmyY. hos Clio i Bedi 380 Decorations and Medals (Navy) ..oo_o-._____ 382 Defense Mobilization i... U1 J lilo ini 339 Disability Review (Army). ocoocooeoooooo._ 380 Discharge Review (ATINY) o-oo cocmceeee 380 District of Columbian. Li an sini lanai 520 Employees’ Compensation Appeals....._...._ 442 Engineers, Rivers and Harbors. -ccccaaoaooo-. 380 Foreign-Trade Zones... .. olinsae Sis 465 Geographic names (Interior) ....-ccccaeaaaacae 414 Government Patents... 0 0 coin lo ill 469 Governors, Federal Reserve System.________._ 459 Home Loan Bank. ....... .doiociaaoioaiois 470 Immigration Appeals (Justice) ...__o..____. 400 Indian Artsand Loi.iii. 409 Crafts. ol Inter-American Defense... o______-348 Library of Congress Trust Fund_________.____. 302 Maritime Board, Federal (Commerce)... ____ 433 Matériel Review Navy)... ___________ 383 Medical Examiners (Navy) ____..__._.___.____ 383 Munitions (Defense). .... L000 00] 374 National Archives Trust Fund.____._________ 467 National Labor Relations... .__...._._.._.._.__ 478 National Mediation. aa gd ii 00 ...oiceeelio 478 National Munitions Control ____._____________ 478 National Park Trust-Fund. 00 .......... 411 National Selenee i uo fai sd Cre LID 30g] 479 National Security Resources... ...____.._ 339 Naval Examining: ooooeaeo08 383 (Flag). aco Naval Examining (Line)... eae aoe. 0 383 Naval Examining (Marine Corps) __._.._____.. 392 Naval Examining (Medical). -______________ 383 Naval Medical Survey Review_______________ 383 Naval Retiring Review. co. .2l80 kL 383 Naval Sentence Review and Clemency. _____. 383 On Defense, Permanent Joint. ____________. 480 Parole (Justiee). costar iinemiemman bal 400 Personnel (Army)... oii ii 0 soa 380 Physical Disability Appeal Board (Navy)_... 385 Promotion of Rifle Practice, National. _.__.___ 380 Railroad Retirement. ..J--2 0.0 CL Did oil 481 Regents (Smithsonian Institution). __________ 485 Renegotiation. oi oi Srahn 483 Research and Development (Defense). _.____ 373 Review, Discharges and Dismissals (Navy) _. 383 Subversive Activities Control... ________.___. 488 Veterans’ Education Appeals... ______ 490 Boards and Commissions (State). __________.___ 361 Bonneville Power Administration. _____________ 414 Botanic Garden, United States. _._______.___.._._ 303 Brazil-United States Defense Commission, Joint. 351 Budget and Finance, Office of (Agriculture).... 416 Budget, Bareauof the... i...... ..: 338 Budget, Production and Marketing Adminis-tration (Agriculture). _____________ 427 Building Commission: House Office... UU U0 2ii0 ot) aide 215 Senate OffiCe. ov hanndabdadFRETS) Guba 215 Buildings and Grounds, Capitol___._.________._ 305 Buildings Service, Public... 0 0 Lo 0 2lc hc 466 Bureaus: Accounts, Post Office Department____________ 404 i Accounts (Fiscal Service, Treasury). _________ 368 Aeronautics (Navy)... co... wo coil di loan 386 Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. _.___ 418 Agricultural Economies... li ol Jul 0 415 Ameriean-Bthnology. 2-0 0idel To) 0 486 Animal Industry... allo lil anol 419 Apprenticeship (Labor)... ooo.0 lili 442 Budgeb. oa names tai d a da ih di sermon 338 Censns. oil Poa ei TE I 430 Chief Inspector, Post Office Department... __ 404 Customs. ribsEEE IR, 365 Dairy Industry... oo SHERI I 0 SE 419 Employees’ Compensation... ..._...__.. 442 Employment Security (Labor)... ..._.__.____ 442 Fngravingand Printing...000 00 368 Entomology and Plant Quarantine __________ 420 Ethnology, American.ii flo iioiiozin 486 2. Buropean Aare. oa LS) 358 Far Bastern Affafrsi 0 Cc llUiL Laas 358 Foreign and Domestic Commerce. __________ 430 Qerman Affairs... ce i i 3 RUS 358 Human Nutrition and Home Economies. ____ 420 VIII Congressional Directory Bureaus—Continued Page Indian Affairs, ooo editeddei heinad 409 TY CT VI SA Ra 409 Inter-American Affairs... 4. coninaaanoa. 357 Internal Bevenne.. . .. Sa.loi.ibiacohau. 364 Investigation, Federal (Justice) _.__._._________ 399 Tabor Standards... ion ise ataie tela 443 Babor StatiStes. . oo iin rnd nile ma a 443 Land Management (Interior) .______.__________ 408 Regional Offices... 0.0. beni. hanes 408 Medical Services (Public Health) _____________ 462 Medicine and Surgery (Navy)... .__..__. 386 py CL al es SN IN 411 VTEE) A TI do ce A 0 Gu A Sh SL 368 Nareotles:. . .... oe ey aia mas bans yst on 368 Naval Persommel.. i esi. if valor J ad 387 Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affalrs. oA oN LL a la tas 357 Ordnance (Navy). i. cooledi 0 388 Ul Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engi-TT TT]BY a A Ra £0 SP Ss 0) 421 Post OfficeOperations......_...... 402 = Prisongi(@usticeyr cou co oiiiit, 400 Public Debt (Fiscal Service, Treasury).-_____. 368 Public Roads (Commerce)... _..... 432 Reclamation... coor oiion Labi sda nl 410 TEI se Sr LE 389 Standards, National...ii. lo. 434 State Services (Public Health) ._______________ 463 Supplies and Accounts (Navy). ..._.._._.____ 389 Transportation (Post Office) ...._.____________ 402 United Nations lo civ ooo Affairs... 357 Veterans’ Reemployment Rights________._.____ 443 WRAL NCY voi mdm SA BY ea BS ET 439 Women’s (labor) sodden walls) 444 iu ilicacaaiil Yardsand Docks. li cuueoiiieinuiil 390 li Cc Cabinet members, lisbof.... ci iil Sains. 336 CRlenAar....... sey Saat IV California Debris Commission... _____.._______ 380 Canal Company, Panama... ......-ui... 2 480 Canal Zone, Biological Area... __._...__._..._._.. 486 Capital Housing Authority, National __________ 477 Capital Parks, National. ....._.c._ i... 0.0 411 Capitol: Airlines ticket office, combined .___._..._._.._.__ 297 Architect of the— Architeet’s Offer. on idan Liiiineilal 295 House Office Buildings cio iaoain 296 Senate Office Building... .._.__. 296__._.. Basement floor and terrace of— Assignment of roomson_. 311 LE TREC Se RG Ca NSA LS Ca 310 Buildings, history and description of. _______ 305 Congressional Daily Digest _____._________.____ 295 Congressional Record...oC 0... 295 Directory ofthe Senate... cl. ¢. 321 First floor of— Assignment of roomsion. oatoiol ioiioi 313 Disgram of... ue aad a ania 312 Gallery, fioor of— Assignment of roomson..____.___.________.__ 317 agra ofits co C0 be on ae TT SEIN ani 316 Grounds, Commission on Enlarging the______ 215 House Chamber, diagram of. ________________ 322 Glalson Offieesiat. toc. 0. ne dv i risen 298 MiscellanecousOfficials. 0... ......... 295 Capitol—Continued Page Office of— Areniteel Of ct aE ee eR 295 Attendingphysiclon-22 52 = 296 Congressional Daily Digest. __..__.._______ 295 Congressional Reeord....aoavicaeraaio 295 2nn Officers of the— BY OHIO lv ion dn oh Sem bros i obs al 2 ra) 289 Senate rian ie mL rE ar La 285 PaneiBah0o). ce din dit ven pe bs a re 295 BOCs a ees 296 Police Board. saad int tne re a Se iD 296 Post Office in Capitol, ranch Tate BOR I 292 Principal floor of— ‘ Assicnmentiofroomson. ............ooC i 315 0 EETA TT Si SR Se lie DL 314 Radiostudlon . ara re 297 Railroad ticketoffice. conanot 297 Senate Chamber, diagram and seating plan_318-320 Telephone Exchange... .._._.___:.__... 296 Western Union Telegraph Office_.____________ 297 CQaribbean Commission...-_-_ 451 Clontral-Seeveianiat iota 451 Caucus Rooms (HOUSE) — meenoe 292 Census Buren i 430 Central Intelligence Agency... ______.____ 338 Changes in membership of the Eighty-second Congress." _-.._ SARPEE III __o-LR Chaplain of the House of Representatives_.__.___ 289 Chaplain of the Senate... >i.or oo 285 Chief Inspector, Post Office Department___.____ 404 Chief of Naval Operations, Office of ._ __________ 385 Chief of Staff, Office (Army)...__ i... 379 Chief of'Staff (Coast Guard)... ..........:.__ 366 Chiefs of Staff, Joint (Defense). ________________ 373 City postioffice:. oi ili oie Ll 527 Civil Aeronautics itt EL R00 a val 432 Civil Aeronautics Lo oo 451 Board......2. Civil Defense'Schools....... o.oo... 347 Civil Service Commission... ....__.....3..: 452 Contact offices:at Capitol... ______.. _.__.. 208 Claims Commission, Indian... ._..___.___. 471 Claims Commission, Motor Carrier. __.____.____. 474 Claims Commission, War... ...__.._. _ = 490 Claims, United States Court of ____._________.__ 503 Classification, political, of Congress.__..._._._.___. 160 Clerk, House of Representatives. ________.___. 290 Clerks to House committees... _____...._._____ 213 Clerks to Senate committees... ___________.____ 201 Club, the to 0. = 454° Congressional... 5 Coast and Geodetic Survey... __._.________ 432 Coast Guard Academy, Board of Visitors to the. 218 Coast Guard (Headquarters), Treasury. ______ 365 Columbia Hospital for Women. ________________ 453 Columbia Institution for the Deaf _____________ 461 Combined Air Lines Ticket Office. _____________ 297 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board (United States and Great Britain)... ________:___ 348 Commerce Commission, Interstate. __._________ 474 Commerce, Departmentof —_ cz... ._. 429 Bureau of— Foreign and Domestic Commerce. _________ 430 Public Roads. i cai potas cwsmwdes masts bes 432 Standards, National. ...........-acrseenas=e 434 PheConsus. © Joliet iat oo, 2 alors, 430 Civil Aeronautics Administration... _..____ 432 Coast and Geodetic Survey... ....._______ 432 Federal Maritime Board... _____..____.____ 433 Contents 4 Commerce—Continued Page Inland Waterways Corporation..._..._______. 433 Maritime Administration...cc a. 433 National Production Authority... __________ 435 Office of Technical Services... _.__._..__ 439 Patent Office tt lo a oan 439 Weather Bureatl ci. oie oo ool re amie 439 Commissions: Asta Roads oye on Se san 413 American Battle Monuments... ____________ 447 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. ____._____ 449 TT ee a 449 California Debris to —.-bow © of ee 380 Coarihbean ss rr i ae Test ed 451 CiviE Berviog tn ar ar oven tal cy 452 Displaced Persons... oii ent 455 Enlarging the Capitol Grounds-...___________ 215 Par Easter. c oya ae anal 456: Eecderal Communications. ci...ii. 456 Bdderal Power roan 458 Eederal Trade. =. crt 20 2. oar An mans ov 464 Tine Artes i on or Sa ae el ss 453 General Anthony Wayne Memorial. _________ 219 House Office Building cro 215 Indian Claims. a ag a a 471 Inter-American Tropical Tuna, United States andrCosta Blea. wr =i oe 472 International Boundary, United States, Alaska, and Comada... ai oo 473 International Boundary and Water, United Statesand Moxie... cerns 472 International Fisheries, United States and CaN An ae i rt Le hae 473 Tnternational Joints cos ood oeeae 473 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries... ___. 473 Interstate Commeres. -1.SL mo 474 Joint Brazil-United States Defense. __._._ wd 351] Joint Congressional. ______________.__..__.. 215 Joint Mexican-United States Defense... 352 MentalsHealth. ors tai 509 Migratory Bird Conservation. ___.__.____._.____ 217 Misgissippl RIVET. oo vioi-chidmar mms lei 3801 00 474 National Capital Park and Planning______.___ 477: National Capital Sesquicentennial ______. ____ 290 National Forest Reservation... __..____ 216 National Historical Publications. ..........__ 467 National Memorial Stadium____________._____ 290 National Security Training... ...__....___.___ 480 Motor Carrier Claims =o...oo Public Utilities, District of Columbia... 527 Renovation of Executive Mansion ._._________ 221 oy Securities and Exchange... 483 Senate Office Building... 215 Somth Pacifie.. 0. J i eo 487 Tari, United States... oo iin oi 488 Territorial Expansion Memorial, United Sates: in oo teat ee 218 Vr CIE Soha iret Lit enti Sats oti 490] Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard...drain 217 .. Yoyue, General Anihony, Momerial SEEDY 219 Commissions and joint committees, congres- sonal. 215 Committee assignments: let oll yA eee Ce SN Te 225 Representatives: oC CL... oot 931 | Committees: Page Advisory Committee on Management, Presi- dentiss rile irriae 481 Advisory, on Voluntary Foreign Aid. ________ 447 Aeronautics, National Advisory. ..______ eae br Adri Coordinating’ Jf oo re lt, 447 House— Assionmentsite: or eae 231 Clarke tg: i ae, 213 Membership ofizozacirsdioiole yo commer 203 Official reportersito. > oo. lo i000 oo b 293 Selectandispeeial. oo oC on a a 211 Interdepartmental, on Scientific Research and Development =. ri ar 472 Joint:Congressional: 2 Cll 215 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 On Disposition of Executive Papers, Joint..__ 220 On Practice (Preasmry)-oo Cl 2 369 On Purchases of Blind-Made Produets.._____ 454 Printing, Joint. vaca 0 0 i 215 Reciprocity ITnformation--... __.........___._ 454 Select and special— Housel ol rat on a ae en 211 Benge. hid a eS he Se a 199 Senate— Asie nmen etn ee Sr 225 BL Th all Ge ei Le 201 Membership of. -=r on i 195 Special and seleet....._...____._____.______ 199 Committee to Discuss Problems With Consul-tative Assembly of Council of Europe, LT pangs sad tdbd sana io Lal die 221 | Commodity Branches (Agriculture)..___._..____ 426 | Commodity Credit Corporation... _...__.__.__ 422 | Commodity Exchange Authority... _.___._._.-422 | Communications Commissions, Federal ________ 456 Company, Panama Canal ®__ 480 | Compensation Appeals Board, Employees’. ____ 442 | Compensation, Bureau of Employees’ _.___.._. 449 | Compliance and Investigation, Office of (Agri- eninYe). 427 Comptrofler'(Air Fores)... .......... 396 1 Comptroller (Coast i ____. 366 Guardy..__--. Comptroller (Defense)... oa 2 on 372 | Comptroller General of the United States (General Accounting Office). ___________ 299 | Comptroller of the Currency-.--—-._.. -......_ 367 | Conciliation Service, Federal Mediation and. 457 | Conduct a Study and Investigation of Educa- tien, Wrnining, and Tosh “Guanniy Programs of World War II Veterans, House Select Committeeto..___________ 211 Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Prob-lems of Small Business, House Select Comittee tO. osa RS 211 | Congress: Tibrary.of. cos Co... 2 i Ee a 299 Political classification of ...-1-0. 1 160 o_o Sessions of. ool 265 Congresses. in Which Representatives Have freon rh a a SE SE A 181 GE ne 280 Chih eat, ed 454 Commissions and joint committees. ....-___-215 Daily Disost. eatin 205 | Delegations, by States... o.oo 151 DISErICtS, TAPS OF co a a et aia 595 Congressional Directory Congressional—C ontinued Page Record, office of, at Capitol... ceencee a= 295 Conservation Service, Soll... ero. 428 Continuous service of Senators... ______.___ 178 Contract Settlement.» roc 22 fla Co 466 Control Board, Subversive Activities. _____._.____ 488 Coordinating Committee, Air____._____________ 447 Coordinator of Information, Office of... ________ 204 Corporation counsel’s office, District of Colum- DR a ee Se ae ee 522 Corporations: Alaska Rural Rehabilitation. ... eevee 413 Commodity Credit. -.. eee 422 Federal Crop INSUranee. ..-------ciima-ntona-424 Federal Deposit Insurance... ___________ 457 Federal Farm Mortgage... ooo... 423 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance. .._..___ 470 Home Owners’ 1.0an.. rl 470 Inland Waterways oo 2 ae 433 ReconstractionBinance. =.==. ___ 482 Virgin Islands. 0 x oe se 413 Corrections, Department of (District). ._.__.___ 527 Cotton Branch (Agriculture)... ... ooo. 426 Council: Beonomic Advisers... ... S.C 338 A Ba I LS EC Bi SE Ci Se Sl 468 Federal Boeords.. ci... tantocsauin 467 National Advisory, on International Mone- tary and Financial Problems__________ 477 National Seeurity.....eaeee ocean ne 338 Courts of Appeals, United States___._._.___.____ 495 Court of Appeals, United States Emergency.--.. 507 Court of Claims of the United States. .__.___... 503 Court of Impeachment, Senate_________________ 271 Courts, Administrative Office of the United BE te i co tint nares Se ee wie 510 Courts, District of Coluanbia: Court of Appeals, United States___._.._._._._.____ 497 District, United States... ..-iii2. 509 An Rien ordain Telia inp bien DS 512 MuonielpaliCourt. ri inane 512 Municipal Court of Appeals... _._.___ 512 Probate, and Registerof Wills_____.__________ 510 Courts, United States: En a RR Su SS a SR 503 Conris of ADDCOIS . ain a net Sat Sse 495 SL Cee as le A Ne Gad 505 Customs and Patent Appeals... _______ 502 Emergency Court of Appeals.......__________ 507 Mary ADDONS. oO ak 500 Ty i NE NE ee 493 SE CN A a I BN 509 Credit Administration, Farm... _______ 423 Crop Insurance Corporation, Federal __________ 424 Currency, Office of the Comptroller of the..____ 367 Customhouse (Treasury)... .cveeerrinnannanens= 365 Customs and Patent Appeals, United States OITA Eee SES TO a I 502 Customs, Bureau ofa. ci incidn sim 365 nmi Customs Court, United States... ___....._ 505 \ D Daily Digest, _._ _....... 295 Congressional... Dairy Branch (Agriculture)... ___.____..__ 426 Dairy Industry, Baresu of. =o.ol 419 Deaf, Columbia Institution for the_._____.___.__ 461 Debates, Official Reporters of— Page AB DEEL ine Ee SER i 293 I FE A LC a AC aa 287 Decorations and Medals, Board of (Navy) __..__ 382 Deeds, Recorderof (Distriet)._ 2 __ 512 Defense Board, Inter-American... ___.___________ 348 Defense Commissions: Joint Brazil-United States..................__ 351 Joint Mexican-United States...._____________ 352 Defense, Departmentof.. oc... 371 Armed Forces Medical Policy Counecil._______ 376 Armed Forces Policy Council... ___________ 375 Assistant Secretary of Defense (Comptroller). 372 Assistant Secretary of Defense "(Manpower and. Personnel)... x. in ai ah 372 Assistant Secretary of Defense (Legal and Legislative Affairs). 0 372 Assistant to the Secretary (International Seearity Aflains). oC 373 Joint ChiefsSof Staff = fr i oe 373 Joi Sal 373 Joint ServiceSehools_ © 376 Armed Forces Staff College. ________________ 376 Industrial College of the Armed Forces. ____ 376 The National War College. ______._.._______ 376 Management Committee ..._._._...____._____ 373 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission... .-0. "Ui. 375 Military Traffic Service.......... 7 376 MuonitionsiBeard ..2.. o.. ..N 374 Officeof Guided "7 376 Missiles...~° Office of Public Information... 5 = = 376 Office of the Secretary, Immediate ____ras 371 Research and Development Board____________ 373 Weapons System Evaluation Group_._.._____ 373 Defense Fisheries Administration (Interior)_.__ 408 Defense Materials Procurement Agency. _______ 340 Defense Minerals Exploration Administration (B31TT hie So Easaidiin bi 00 Sind boy 407 F Defense Mobilization, Office of... ____________ 339 Defense, Immediate Office of Secretary of... __ 371 Defense Petroleum Administration (Interior)... 406 OEY 407 Defense, Permanent Joint Board on___._._____. 480 Defense Production Administration. ___________ 340 Defense Production, Joint Committee on____.___ 221 Defense Solid Fuels Administration (Interior)._ 408 Defense Transport Administration. ______ 342 Delegates and Resident Commissioner: Alphabetical Ust s.rmm maa 172 Assignments to committees... ______________ 231 Biographies of ~ 7. ru edrasa banked 148 List of, with home post offices and Washing- to aQAIeSEOR. ane 661 Rooms and telephones of... .-...ccrerece~pe=-= 327 LE OR OR SR Cn Be 261 Service record in Congress... _______ 192 Votes easifor.. =. -—-—--~---zz-o>ozo oo 279 Delegations, congressional, by States. .__.._____ 151 Dental'Sehool, Naval o_o i toad i, 390 Departments: Agricnlme. col or a nena 415 FE I rT A Se esa SS I i 393 A IY a a a Ce 377 COO CE am ven i ak 429 1B heelsSel bed du 371 DXOCUIIVE . rin rm amma = mt a = St ek Sm 337 Contents Departments—Continued Page District of Columbia—Continued Page TT LLTB SEN A oP ors i SS ASR Wes i 405 District Government—Continued TEA Lp th fe ML Se A EE, NM NS 399 People’s Comnsel. Joo 0 on oo oie 527 DL a el Sn pen SR AS CE SL IL ae 441 o Public Utilities Commission. ___.________.____ 527 NAY aa or ei a saa el 381 Jv e Corte. «ios hs Sh or 512 Post Office. ad a ara D rere 401 Municipal Court. on. ro so dhe std 512 I Hh nba ed IE ce Le (on TO DE Wr eames 355 Municipal Court of Appeals___.__._.___.___._. 512 RR CASTILY ta Dito tr er wi Po mn Crm od Ee OF 300S 363 Origin and form of government. ______________ 515 Department of the Army Boards, Exempted Recorder of deeds. oe iiven dot tomesdi 512 Stations, Military Missions, ete... 380 Register of wills and clerk of the probate Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal _______ 457 COI re Fo a Pe a 510 Deputy Chiefs of Staff (Air Force): Service to Veterans and War Workers. ______ 527 ee rr of ComPIrOlerrl ism on me <2 23000 District Columbia Redevelopment Land Development =. stra a 396 A GONCY a sl an Ee Na 455 Material cL a re ay 397 Districts, Maps of Congressional ______._Z_____ 595 Operations. iEual Sra 396 Divisions: Personnel to Lr on a a ley 396 Administrative (Justice). --ci.emunsainraara-399 Deputy Postmaster General... _______._____ 401 United States Savings Bonds__._______._______ 365 Description and history of Capitol Building._.. 305 Wage and Hour and Public Contracts__._____ 443 Diagrams of the— Domestic Commerce, Bureau of Foreign and. __ 430 Basement floor and Terrace of the Capitol___ 310 Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives. ._ 291 First floorol the Capitol... ose incr ois 312 Document Boom nord incendie 291 dais Gallery floor of the Capitol... cc. coe oa 316 Folding Boom oats. is a aera 291 House Chamber... 7... 0 oto itnalasis 322 Drug and Food Administration _______________ 461 Principal floor of the Capitol... .. 314 Senate Chamber... rei sel acis eat 320 E Digest, Congressional Daily... __.________ 295 Diplomatic Representatives in United States... 531 Economic Activities (State)... __________. 358 Director of Legislation and Liaison (Air Force). 394 Economic Advisers, Counecilof ___.____________ 338 Director of vehicles and traffic, District of Economic Report, Joint Committee on the. ____ 219 Colmmbln.. oo oy aii cm dma denn 524 Economic Stabilization Agency... ____ _ ETERS 342 Directory ofthe Senate... .. i... .ocin... 321 Administrator’stOffice_..-.-__..-.... + 342 _. Dispensary, Naval... ooo viedo dadiian 391 Price Stabilization Office... ______.______*___ 342 Displaced Persons Commission... ..__.._._._. 455 Railroad and Airline Wage Board... _________ 345 Disposition of Executive Papers, Joint Com-Stabilization si... ... 0 Rent Office... 344 mitteeon 1-1 nm 220 Salary Stabilization Board... .....:.i su... 344 District Court of the United States for the Office of Salary Stabilization._____.__.._____ 345 Districtiof Columbia. ==. i... 509 Wage Stabilization Board -._.__......_.__.._ i... 345 Commission on Mental Health_______________ 509 Education Appeals Board, Veterans’ ____._ ____ 490 District of Columbia: Education, Office of (Federal Security) ..._____ 462 BEATA RE AH EE Ia CR en AE LTR ee, 527 Electric Power Administration, Defense, (In-Courtof Appealsforthe....... .._...... a. 497 terior) csi. die id aie ass in 407 District Court of the United States for___..____ 509 Electrification Administration, Rural. _________ 427 Commission on Mental Health. ____________ 509 Embassies, forelen_ 0 oat 531 District Government. ..oc Lisi ol 519 Emergency Agencies. _ ....oooce... RN SA 340 Boards. oc A is 520 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board Corporation Counsel’s Office... 522 (United States and Great Britain)______ 348 Department of— Defense Materials Procurement Agency. ___. 340 Corrections. i tht. duit ra dmeaels 527 Defense Production Administration. _________ 340 Bublie Welfare: ...2 o.oooof i 526 | Defense Transport Administration___________ 342 Vehicles'and Traffic... ao i aii. 524 Economic Stabilization Ageney.__________.____ 342 Weights, Measures, and Markets_._______ 524 | of concnrat Office AdMINISIAtor. ca 342 SD istrict Ofees i Lei daliinate 519 Office of Price Stabilization_________._______ 342 Assessor’ OMfce. once cumnr demas writs 519 |. Regional Offices. ooo vd coins 0 343 BudgelOffice. o.oo ode iia aio, 520 Office of Rent Stabilization... _________ 344 Disbarsing Office...) oi. iii scsi smn 520 Regional Offices... = sso satbi.c 344 License Bareaw. coo ct Se 520 | Railroad and Airline Wage Board. ___._____ 345 Miscellaneous Offices... -oo ovoocmeeeee 520 Salary Stabilization Board... ..__....._._. 344 Office of Collector of Taxes. --__.__..___ 520 Offficeof io ei Sal re Ey 345 Officcofthe Auditor... oe oo ones 519 Wage Stabilization Board... _.____._._.._______ 345 Purchasing Division. = 00... ......... 520 Federal Civil Defense Administration. _______ 345 Engineer Department... 2 0: ooo. bo. 523 National Advisory Board on Mobilization Exeeutive Offices. ih deri ewes 519 Polley. Boni i ee isinshale) 347 Eire Departient ee de 525 Small Defense Plants Administration. _.____ 348 Health Department i ornare, 525 Office of Defense Mobilization. _______________ 339 Insurance Department. __ ooo cooeeenoo. 526 Defense Mobilization Board ___________.____ 339 Metropolitan-Police us s.r a a 526 Emergency Court of Appeals, United States... 507 Motor Vehicle Parking Ageney..._._.._.___ 524 Emergency Procurement Service. _.___________ 466 Nr el i Ee XII Congressional Directory a AA ki i a EE i HS, a pizrPLx Page Employees’ Compensation Appeals Board. ____ 442 Employees’ Compensation, Bureau of. _________ 442 Employment Security, Bureau of (Labor)__-___ 442 Engineer Department, District of Columbia____ 523 Engineering, Office of (Coast Guard).___.__-____ 366 Engraving and Printing, Bureau of .____________ 368 Enlarging Capitol Grounds, Commission on____ 215 Entomology and Plant Quarantine, Bureau of__ 420 Establishment (Smithsonian Institution).______ 485 Ethnology, Bureau of American. ___ ra 486 Exchange Commission, Securities and__________ 483 Executive Mansion, Commission on Renova-HI ee HR AR LA BS ne 221 Executive Office of the President. ______________ 337 Bureau of the Budget _ =. oC 338 Council of Economic Advisers... ._______ 338 Defense Mobilization, Office of. ______________ 339 Liaison Office for Personnel Management____ 338 Mutual Security, Office of Director for__.____ 340 National Security Couneil... 338 Central Intelligence Agency....___ . National Security Resources Board_____.___-Telecommunications Adviser to the President 340 The White House Office... vender oa 337 Peongonneliol. co ne ean a 337 Secretaries to the President, biographies of. 337 Experiment Stations, Office of (Agriculture)... 422 Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups... 175 Export-Import Bank of Washington____________ 455 Extension Service, Agriculture Department..__ 423 F Tar Eastern =o t_0 00 Caae 456 Commission. Farm Credit Administration... ..-._-_____"= 423 Farm Mortgage Corporation, Federal __________ 423 Farmers Home Administration. ___.____._.______ 424 Fats and Oils Branch (Agriculture)... __________ Federal Bureau of Investigation___..___________ Federal Civil Defense Administration__________ @iviliDefense'Schoolsy io oo onar Health and Welfare Office... _____-__.____ Management Office.________ die er LA Operational Services Office. ---oon... Plans'and PoliciesOffice--Regional Offices Cr vo 347 Technical Services Office. ..____ TALE GEA 346 Training and Education Office... ___________ 346 . Federal Communications Commission_._._______ 456 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation___________ 424 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation._.__._____ 457 Federal Expenditures, Joint Committee on Re- duction of Nonessential ._ _ _____________ 219 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation.___________ 423 PFederal'Pire Council... oc. oot. 468 Federal Home Loan Bank System... ___________ 470 Federal Housing Administration______._.__._____ 470 Federal Maritime Board 433 Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service...-457 Federal Power Commission. ___.__..._....__.___ 458 Federal Prison Industries, Inc. (Justice). ______ Federal Register (National Archives) __._______ 468 Federal Reserve System, Board.of Governors___ 459 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- 15 TTL a Sh a Ce ae Cm pal Sa 470 Federal Security Ageney. 460 American Printing House for the Blind______: 461 Federal Security Agency—Continued Page Columbia Institution for the Deaf. _.__________ 461 Food and Drug Administration_ ____.__.______ 461 Howard University... .oiooooaooao moan 461 Office of the Administrator-....-.....:2 _-* 460 Officeof Bddeation co =o. oon. otis lr 462 Office of Vocational Rehabilitation _.________ 462 Public Health o.ootS 462 Service. ano Bureau of Medical Services. __....._________ 462 Burean of =o. 463 State'Services.........i.._. Freedmen’s Hospital... % 463 National Institutes of Health _______________ 463 Office of the Surgeon General _.____________ 462 Regional Offices = 00 _____ mR 460 Branch Offices of Region X______________-__ 460 |, Saint -Elizabeths' Hospital..."~~ 464 Social Security Administration. ______________ 464 Federal Supply Service =... ...... =~ 2 >. 466 Federal Trade Commission. _......_____-_ __.___ 464 Brae Offices tc oor Lo on the x) hia 465 Finance Corporation, Reconstruction. __________ 482 Fine Aris, Commissionof....... ia 453 Fine Arts, National Collection of .______________ 486 Fire Council, + =. "0 Federal........ 468 Fire Department, District of Columbia_________ 525 Fiscal Branch (Agriculture) -....__..___.__.___ 426 Fiscal Service, Treasury. eo oeee oo. _ 2.. 368 Fish and Wildlife Service! 412 Floor leaders, House of Representatives. ______ 289 Folding Roomof the House... __________ 291 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Ibo Tene cal de Ba 348 Food and Drug Administration. _____________._ 461 Food Distribution Branch (Agriculture)... ___ 427 Foreign Aid, Advisory Committee on Volun- BA 447 Foreign Agricultural Relations, Office of _______ 416 Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of... 430 Foreign diplomatic representatives in the United YAY PR SS NO eae 531 Foreign-Trade Zones Board... ____________._____ 465 Forest Reservation Commission, National _____ 216 Forest Servioe.Tr a 424 or Foundation, National Science. ______.________ 479 Proedmen’s Hospital. on = 0 a ries 463 Breer Gallery OF AT os 486 Fruit and Vegetable Branch (Agriculture) _____ 426 Functional Branches (Agriculture) ____.________ 426 G Galleries: Periodical: Profs. = ci cir aiea ra 586 ess a Ne I en 541 Radio Correspondents’... ~~ = = 580 Gallery of Art: a a ES an 486 Naan a at eee 486 Garden, United States Botanic..___ ha 303 General Accounting Office... ____ 299 General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commis-=~ 2 TH Fi ete SS ls CU Bia ie ol RE 219 General Counsel for the Treasury, Office of .____ 364 General Counsel, Office of (Navy)..._______._.__ 384 General Services Administration ______________ 466 Contract Settlement... ..c_ oC .0.. 466 Emergency Procurement Service... _____ 466 Federal Five Connell =... i 468 Roglonal IDIECIOLS . «nemmm deme nese 468 Contents XIII General Services Administration—Con. Page Federal Supply _____ Serviee_.___._..._______.. 466 National Archives and Records Serviee_._____ 467 Administrative Committee of the Federal Register... ri C giorond Coiling 468 Federa. Records Council. __________________ 467 National Archives Trust Fund Board. _____ 467 ' National Historical Publications Commis-rT A i LAL eI IY a 11 10 {xa UAE 467 Trustees of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Li- DIOLY . co mmm OH EL st pens Jy 468 Office of the Administrator-_..._..__.__.__.___. 466 Public Buildings Service... i. Ca oi oll 466 General Staff, United States Army _____________ 379 Geodetic Survey, Coast and (Commerce). _____ 432 Geographic Names, Board on (Interior). _._____ 414 Geological Survey (Interior). _____________.____ 409 Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... ____._.__ 217 Government of the District of Columbia________ 519 Government Patents Board. _._________________ 469 Government Printing Office. ._._._.___ _....... 302 Governors of the States and Territories. ___._.____ 281 Grain Branch (Agriculture). -coe enna aao 426 Guided Missiles, Office of (Defense)... 376 Gun Factory, Naval, Washington, D. C________ 391 H ‘| Headquarters (Air Force) .......a0uur 2. 395 a Headquarters, Coast Guard. _ __._.__.______.___. 365 Headquarters, Marine Corps (Navy). __________ 391 Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Com- mand... oe aoaansiinn aly 391 Health, Commission on Mental. _.______________. 509 Health Department, District of Columbia ____._ 525 Health Service, Public to in, co io iolusnnoi 462 Hearing Examiners, Office of (Agriculture). ____ 417 History and description of the Capitol _______._ 305 Holmes Devise Committee, Oliver Wendell ___ 218 Home Finance Agency, Housing and 469. Home Loan'Bank Bogrd-> 0c. 0 Loy Home Loan Bank System, Federal Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. _..__________ Home post offices of Senators, Representatives, ete., with Washington addresses. __.____ 649 Home, United States Soldiers’ _.____________.__. 487 Hospitals: Columbia, for Women... .....acweewemnsiion.-453 Preedmen’s. Lill nl lal Jl Sia 463 Navalo... ....ooialodaalnlau nls. Lud 390 464 Hour and Wage and Public Contracts Division __ 443 House committees: Assignments 10.5 ce sod BEE LL 231 Clerksito. bo irae de IC Sua 0) 213 Meeting days. of. Shc dell Ue toi iii Ju bud 203 Membership of -. 0 coo oo S0dU Joo 203 Oficial Teporiers Lo 200Big] 0 293 0... ony Select and special ciiciibiriil Gila. ool 211 ‘House Office Building Commission House of Representatives: Members of, with home post offices and Washington residences ____________.____ 652 Minorityofficials. . . . .: .2o3sdc hein] 292 Miscellaneous officials... .._ soil)ui ol 295 Officersiof Slostiis 1nsie hrs pooeat UL Jot 289 Official Reporters of Debates... ________....___ 293 Official Reporters to House Committees. .__.- House of Representatives—Continued Page Personnel of— 68 Canecus Rooms. ue olil spas inindagosiid 292 Chaplains... cola. Loo. oaauduards 289 Clerksito committees... c. ln no. 213 Doeunient Room unica. Litsoed sol 291 Folding Room io iiovsis iiabioosls 291 Office of the— Clerkofthe House. =. foogindiinds 290 Coordinator of Information. ___________.__ 294 Doorkeeper: . . uleiiiloolHeol widen i 201 Legislativeicounsel ol. i 0. laiual Clan 293 Majority Leader ios 2 ohio uu fg lo 289 Majority Whip. unos 289 oiololoiii] Minority Leader i only 289 Minority Whip...gil _ollln 2 289 Parliamentarion. .. SEO0a 00 289 Postmaster... ois Le St, 292 temas Sergeant.at Arms. = 2200 anil. 290 ET ne en ARERRLe) 289 Radio Stndios. cane DF laa 297 Reporters to committees of. ____________.__ 293 Political classification of... oll Conall. 160 Rooms and telephones of... ____________ 327 Secretaries to Membersof._______________.... 253 Housing Administration, Federal _____ ________ 470 Housing Administration, Publie._______________ 471 Housing and Home Finance Agency. ________ 469 Federal Housing Administration. ____________ 470 Home Loan Bank Board i... oi00l 470 ......... Federal Home Loan Bank System._________ 470 Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpo- rations in lL LORE an YIL0M Co nad 470 Home Owners’ Loan Corporation__________ 470 Office of the Administrator... _..._._.. 469 Public Housing Administration. _______._ Hinz47] Field Offices... oe LO fou 5 471 Regionnl Offices... mada dE SL I 469 vores Housing Authority, National Capital. __________ 477 Howard University... 0 i Us oolGalo ol -. 461 Human Nutrition and Home Economics, Bureamiof Jalal nit A S83 Ia CL ITER il 420 I Immigration and Naturalization Service...._.__ 400 Immigration Appeals, Boardof ._______________ 400 Impeachment trials by the Senate... _________ 271 Independent offices, agencies, and establish- ments... ihe Bui deni bo ano al 447 Index. individual. i... oil. coil aiid Jo alusy 663 Indian Affairs;>Bureaniof.~c 2.0 illic... 409 Indian Arts and Crafts Board... ___... 409 Indian Claims Commission _.__.______.____._..__ 471 Individualindex Zioi nn od id. Uiobiiy 663 Industrial Chemistry, Bureau of Agricultural and... ...o-SuaaenELagi 418 LINN Industrial College of the Armed Forces. ________ 376 Industrial Relations, Office of (Navy). .___.__.._ 384 Information Office (Agriculture). __.___________ 417 Information, Coordinatorof. .-......toicuibes 294 Information, Office of (Agriculture)... _____. 417 Information Services, Production and Market- ing Administration (Agriculture)...____ 427 Information, Statistical... en. 265 Inland Waterways Corporation___________._____ 433 Institution, Smithsonian... aii 200057 485 Insurance Department, District of Columbia... 526 Congressional Directory Page Intelligence Activities (State) mmaeceeoaoooo__ 360 Inter-American Defense Board... ____________ 348 Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission, ; United Statesand Costa Rica... _____ 472 Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development. ___________ 472 Interior Department... ovenbas an IE 405 Alasks Railroad. oc tosis ati in aay 413 Seattle Representative... oveoooooeo oo. 413 Alaska Road io toni i Commission... 413 Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation_____ 413 Board on Geographic Names_________________ 414 Bonneville Power Administration____________ 414 Bureau of— Indian Aare. sa ad Ho dana 409 Area Offices. .vcaen-Pest LAST 409 1.and Management. ..eeeeseense ean iannaran-408 Regional OMCes.......ecamansmadnmtimnnm- ne 408 IBEE mA rb a I RS CE 411 Regional OfICES..... cwmenannmmmdseet msds 412 Reelamation.. 00. aed adie 410 RegionaliOffices...noomoeecaoo 410 oo Defense Fisheries Administration ____________ 408 Defense Minerals Exploration Administration. 407 Defense Electric Power Administration... ___ 407 Defense Solid Fuels Administration. _________ 408 Fish and Wildlife Service... _occeeeeoaao oo... 412 Rogional Offices to a aniiigeil 412 Geological SULVEY.. mental ...coacacneeanenntes 409 Indian Arts and Crafts Board............_.... 409 National'Park Service...diao.iil ooo 410 Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments. _____ 411 National Capital Parks: ooo.0 oor 411 National Park Trust Fund Board.________.__ 411 Regional OlICeS.. coat ni ams 2s bins mde 411 Office of Territories... ...... Ed 412 Petroleum Administration for Defense. ____.___ 406 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration__ 413 Southeastern Power Administration__________ 414 Southwestern Power Administration... ______ 414 Derpitorigl Officials. = a... 413 Virgin Islands Corporation... ooo _..__.._. 413 Internal Revenue, Bureau of... oes 364 Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee. 216 International Bank for Reconstruction and De- VeIODMON oie at aa ali 350 International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada __._________ 473 International Boundary and Water Commis- sion, United States and Mexico. ___..__ 472 International Exchange Service (Smithsonian)._. 480 International Finance (Treasury)... __:.___. 369 International Fisheries Commission, United Statesand Canada... oo UJ 473 International Joint Commission. ....._......_.. 473 International Labor Organization ______________ 350 International Monetary and Financial Prob- lems, National Advisory Council on._ 477 International Monetary Fund ___.._____________ 350 International Organizations. ____.___.__________ 348 Combined Shipping Adjustment Board, United States and Great Britain ______ 348 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations... >ooloa oi oo coil 348 Inter-American Defense Board... ____________ 348 International Organizations—Continued Page International Bank for Reconstruction and Developments nl Doo oiinan 8 International Labor Organization_____.____.___ 350 International Monetary Fund___ _______._____ 350 Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis- Blof S lasSay Stand Taney 351 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com-IASBIO rs NAER 352 Organization of American States... ________._ 352 Pam Americon -_—.. “Ble 0 Union... 352 The Council __..__ mE ae GE AU HER BET Pan American Sanitary Organization. _______ 353 United Nations. cid solo baie]. aio in 354 International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commis- sion. Sr diod a nl saab Aa STi) 473 International Security Affairs (Defense) _______ 373 Interparliamentary Union... _._._._____..__. 216 Executive Committee of... __._._ 2 __....... 217 Interstate Commerce Commission. _____._______ 474 Investigation, Federal Bureau of. ______________ "399 Island Possessions, Governors of the. _._________ 281 J Joint Board on Defense, Permanent ___________ 480 Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. 351 Joint Chiefs of Staff (Defense) ...__.__.__._____. 373 Joint Commissions: Brazil-United States Defense ______._________ 351 International. con a to th art Ul asasseua 473 Mexican-United States Defense. _____.__._______ 352 Joint Committees: : On Atomic Energy i. oid oa.iano lt 220 On Defense Production... ..o....._ i. 221 On Disposition of Executive Papers. _._______ 220 On EcoromiciReport._....-_sod... 1. 219 On Internal Revenue Taxation ______________ 216 On Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration _____ 221 On PrINGING. Cun Di bon tev a Sin bs RS RAT LE 4 215 On Reduction of Nonessential Federal Ex- penditures._.___-TE tn a A PAE BER IR RE 219 On the Report...__ 219 Economic _.._ On the Tdbrary.. JL oioo ot dn aniline 215 To Discuss Problems With Consultative As- sembly of Council of Europe. ________ 221 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Commis- BION... oii en TE aiid 352 Joint Senate and House Recording Facility.__ 297 Joint Service Schools (Defense) _______________ 376 Joint Staff (Defense) --_—__-ob CheeSY 0 373 Judge Advocate General (Navy)....._.________ 390 ATs Bar Al SE CM Fe Pe SR A oo. 493 Justice, Department of. o.oos.lz lil 399 Administrative Division... __.___% "© 399 Board of Immigration Appeals_ -_...__.______ 400 Board of. Parole... lo. oe i Ee 400 Buregn'or. Prisons... ie. oSsi 20amUlin, 400 Federal Bureau of Investigation. _____________ 399 Federal Prison Industries, Inc... ___________. 400 Immigration and Naturalization Service. ____ 400 Justices and Officers: Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, United Sates: uve an coon da 0 4 005 497 Court of. Claims. . SLi A 0 vermis 503 Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, United States... anal aS A 502 Court of Military Appeals, United States... 500 Contents Justices and Officers—Continued Page Courts of Appeals, United States......__._.__ 495 Castoms:Courtis i J ool Di nA OTT 505 Emergency Court of Appeals... .______ 507 Supreme Court, United States. ____.._._.___.__ 493 PaxcConriac wr. sa: techies tra SEINE GED 509 Juvenile:Court. 2. ia oh eT I Ae 512 L Labor, Departmentiof-__ Xo 2 Fry crite oh 441 Bureau of: Apprenticeship. co code uli Tithe Jo Le 20 442 Employees Compensation. ____________.____ 442 Employment Security. =. i Clo Crit _ 442 Faber Standards. Soi Gal Cau on A 443 Tighor Statistics et ari Ute Robi ton 443 Veterans’ Reemployment Rights __________ 443 Employees Compensation Appeals Board_.._ 442 Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divi-: 443 WomenisrBureans Sell ide ttn nerd ean Labor Organization, International _____________ Labor Relations Board, National ._______._____ Yabor Standards, __ Divisionof.-_--__-____". Tabor Statistics, Bureau of... 20 Co Land Management, Bureau of ._____________.__ Legal and Legislative Affairs (Defense) __._____ 372 Legislation and Liaison, Director of (Air Force). 394 Legislative Counsel: House: oe sa anI at IA 293 a a Er DS RH RR 287 Liaison Office for Personnel Management ______ 338 Liaison Offices at Capitol— Arora tre ant ne a A 298 ATTY os Sn mien Be Ma 298 vil Renvice: ir ocr ee 298 Nay corners oo atl rd orn alain 298 Veterans’ Administration, Congressional Serv- IE aa et a SU SE 298 Library, Department of Agriculture ___________ 416 Library, Joint Committee on the_.____._________ Library of Congress: Personneliof o..c t hl iG a dats a ae Trost Bondi Bogrd. 21. Joi ao Co he nr aid 302 Library, Trustees of Franklin D. Roosevelt____ 468 Livestock Branch (Agriculture)... ____________ 426 Loan Corporation, Home Owners’______________ Local addresses of Senators, Representatives, ete., with home post offices _._.___.______ M Major Air Commands (Air Force) __-oo.______. 397 Continental. oo. 12 on Fai ie lee 397 Overseas oo nos one a Ta tT NE 398 Separate Operating Agencies ________________ 398 Majority and Minority Secretaries, Senate__ ___ 287 Majority Leader, Office of: Ts Lr NeEN SL Sl 289 Senate... orcasEIDE ARI 285 Majority Policy Committee... .________ 199 Majority Whip, Office of: House. -=% ox. < thpbgit re So Fo alinse © 289 Senate. oceaniaIRIE HARA nl 285 Management Committee (Defense) _____________ 373 Management Engineer, Office of (Navy) _______ 385 Page Manpower and Personnel (Defense). ___________ 372 Maps of congressional distriets.________________ 595 Marine Barracksy a5 2a ano taiianioasmiidnh 392 Marine Corps, Headquarters (Navy).__________ 391 Maritime Administration. lo LoloSoio do 433 Maritime Board, Federal 2: ">: i i 2.7% 433 Marketing and Facilities Research Branch (Agriculiure) :nsss mms sors 4700 SF Wid 427 Marshal’s office, United States. ___________.._. 510 Material Office (Navy)... 0. 20 0, 385 Materials and Facilities (Agriculture). _________ 427 Medals and Decorations, Board of (Navy). ____ 382 Mediation and Conciliation Service, Federal__ 457 Mediation Board, National .______.______________ 478 Medical Center, National Naval _ ______________ 390 Medical Research Institute, Naval _____________ 391 Medical School, Naval. “2..._._ _.... \ 391 Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of (Navy). _____ 386 Meeting Days of House Committees. _ _________ 203 Meeting Days of Senate Committees. ._________ 195 Members? addresses... Lona an LY 649 Members of the Cabinet, listof ._.____ _.____..__ 336 Members’ rooms and telephones... _____ 325 Membership: House committees...LUC I Lion:og 231 Senate commitlees -. ils Lon dln od 225 Membership changes in the Eighty-second Con-Cryo CI SR Pl A RE Ls BE II Memorial Commissions: Arlington’ Amphitheater... ........ 0 0 lL 449 General Anthony Wayne... __._.... 219 National Stadium... io io 0000 220 United States Territorial Expansion._________ 218 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard, Construction of_.____________ 217 Mental Health, Commission on___._________.__ 509 Merchant Marine Academy, Board of Visitors. 218 Merchant Marine Safety, Office of ._____________ 367 Metropolitan police. 5.0 Uo 0 0 S00 Lil 526 Mexican-United States Defense Commission, Jot JCS 5 HE S10 A ARR Ji 352 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. ____ 217 Military Academy, Board of Visitors. __________ 217 Military Academy, United States. _____________ 380 Military Appeals, United States Court of _______ 500 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission (Defense) .___.____ 375 Military Missions. oo C0 LL TL 380 Military Sea Transportation Service (Navy)... 390 Military Traffic Service (Defense) .________._____ 376 Minerals Exploration Administration, Defense (Anterior). «. oun. neath SEE 00d 8 407 Mines, Burean ofl. oo 0 iin 411 Minority Officials (House) -__ ooo. 292 Minority Leader, Office of— FIOM. a donb a dni anne Baa Es SEE 289 Senater.. . -..oo.n SIE URES HITS TEND 285 Minority Policy Committee... _______ 199 Minority Whip, Office of— 15 Tn Er oo RS SR a ir sl a Ler 289 Oe fesa nr ra ea ee a 285 Mint, Bureau of the... :.cne casi oiadzi oo 368 Miscellaneousiofficials. i. oo und aaron 295 Mississippi River Commission ________________ 380 Mobilization Policy, National Advisory Board ORES 2 ores sn en TSI SE 347 Congressional Directory Page Monetary and Financial Problems, National ; Advisory Council on International . ____ 477 Monetary Fund, International” ._______________ 350 Monument Society, Washington National _____ 490 Monuments Commission, American Battle.____ 447 Motor Carrier Claims Commission. ________.___ 474 Motor Vehicle Parking Agency... _______.____.___ 524 Munieipal Court... eee. , 512 Municipal Court of Appeals... _.___.__.______... 512 Munitions Board .. . _....... (Defense)... 374 Munitions Control-Board, National ._._________ 478 Muscam, National =. Ff ic. 0 er a 485 Museum, National-Alr. aaa 486 Mutual Security Ageney. oo cieeee.l 474 Mutual Security, Office of Director for_________ 340 N Narcotics, Buren of. es oon oi 368 National Academy of Sciences... oo... 476 National Research Couneil . _..._._... ....... 476 National Advisory Board on Mobilization 347 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 476 National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems. ____ 477 National Air Museum.............-..-. Si Si 486 Advisory Board, (Lr. one ina 486 National Archives and Records Service._.______ 467 Administrative Committee of Federal Reg- FLT i GE ES Ce Sp 468 Federal Records Couneil ._ =o...___ 467 National Archives Trust Fund Board _..____ 467 National Historical Publications Commission. 467 Trustees of the Franklin® D. Roosevelt Li- LE 77 Rha sp pS SR RE Le a 468 National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Praclleeooo nd asa aon ony 380 National Bureau of Standards._______.__________ 434 National Capital Housing Authority. ____SALTY National Capital Park and Planning Commis- 3 FT Ra pe Ge PC Rh os pl TI 477 National Capital o..- Parks... __..o...io.o....l 411 National Capital Sesquicentennial Commission. 220 National Collection of Fine Arts.._._____________ 486 National Forest Reservation Commission _____ 216 National Gallery of Art. ove. 486 National Historical Publications Commission..-467 National Institutes of Health (Public Health) _ 463 National Labor Relations Board. -_____________ 478 Geperal Comnselin nr es 2 478 National Mediation Board_______________ ne 478 National Memorial Stadium Commission______ 220 National Monument Society, Washington______ 490 National Munitions Control Board_____________ 478 National Museamy:. 1. 0 coi 2 ron ae 485 National Naval Medical Center.__________.____ 390 National’Park Servies. = ir fo. it dn 410 National Park Trust Fund Board ._........_... 411 National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments, Advisory Board on_______ 411 National Production Authority. _—_____________ 435 National Red Cross, The American____________ 448 National'Research-Coanell......._..___..____.. 476 National Science Foundation. _._________________ 479 National Security Couneil _____________________ 338 Central Intelligence Agency. _ ooo. 338 Page National Security Resources Board... __.________ 339 National Security Training Commission._____.___ 480 National War College, Theo.oo. _. 376 2 National Zoological Park___.___.______.__ i 486 Notions, United. oi 354 oi...mii Naturalization Service, Immigration and. ._.__. 400 Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration, Joint Commitied ons. sol owl Ura oh 221 Naval Academy, Board of Visitors... __.____. 217 Naval Ale Station. 2 or emaioat, ent NavalDental Sehool:=... issued odes 390 Naval Dispensary eadil ohn drt biped 391 Naval Examining Board (Flag)... ________. 383 Naval Examining Board (Line)... ___..____..____ 383 Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps).__..___ 392 Naval Gun Factory, Washington, D. C.________ 391 Naval Hospital... cen momnveeoomee lost, 390 Naval Liaison Office (Capitol)... _-.___.______ 208 Naval Medical‘Center, National _______._.______ 390 Naval Medical Research Institute._....______ 391 Naval Medical’ School... ceils 391 Naval Operations, Office of Chiefof ____________ 385 Naval Personnel, of...cca... 387 Bureau .... Naval Petroleum Reserves, Officeof ._..___._____ 385 Naval Researeh, Offiecsof.: 0... o.oo... 385 Naval Retiring Review Board. .._________._____ 383 Naval School of Hospital Administration.______ 301 Naval Sentence Review and Clemency Board... 383 Navy, Bepartmentofthe. ..._. _.. ______..._ 381 Bureau of— Aoronautics olor aid se, Lalani 386 Medicine and Surgery... cone. iol. 386 Naval Personnels.0 cons, 387 Hoo. Loin OrANENee. oer Sh ree le 388 a 389 Supplies-and Accounts...cone. .. 389 Yardsiond: Docks...aan i 390 Ja Executive Office of the Secretary... Se 382 Administrative Office’... _.__.. ~=203%2 Board for Correction of Naval Records... __ 382 Board of Decorations and Medals... __._._-382 Board of Medical Examiners _______________ 383 Board of Review, Discharges, and Dismissal. 383 Matériel Review Board..._____ 383 Naval Examining Board (Flag)____._._.____ 383 Naval Examining Board (Line) ____________ 383 Naval Examining Board (Medical)... ._____ 383 Naval Medical Survey Review Board_._.____ 383 Naval Retiring Review Board... ___________ 383 Naval Sentence Review and Clemency LS Be RR le Re nL 383 Office of— _ Administrative Assistant to Secretary of NOVY he ee 382 Assistant Secretary of Navy__._.____._____ 382 Assistant Secretary of Navy for Air. ______ 382 Chief of Naval Operations.__.___.___.___. 385 Complroler. i rernme noe 383 General: Coangel.«.. Jot bn ToL li 384 Industrial Relations.. Ci.. 384 o-z. .oi Information...i nent turn hmm or OR Management Engineer... __ 385 Naval Material. oie al 385 Naval Petroleum Reserves___..__._____._.__ 385 Naval Besearen sali blir mi ae iain 385 Physical Disability Appeal Board.-.______ 385 SavingsBonds.. cr aw 330 \ Contents XVII Navy, Department of the—Continued Page Executive Office of the Secretary—Continued Office of —Continued Secretary of NAVY. ca 381 The Judge Advocate General ____________ 390 Under Secretary of Navy__.._.___________ 381 Headquarters Marine Corps___._____._________ 391 MIorinG Barracks. i a 392 Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps)... 392 Office of the Commandant... ._________..___ 391 Personnel Department... .;..~~ 392 Physical Disability Appeal Board... ________ 392 Supply Department... i. lo... 392 Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Com-WRN en sr 391 Military Sea Transportation Service _________ 390 National Naval Medical Center________.____..__ 390 Naval:Denial School... cru iia 390 NavaliHospital. ori cri tras i tieiaiae 390 Naval Medical Research Institute __.______ 391 Naval'Medieal School. io... 391........_.... Naval School of Hospital Administration... 391 NavaliAtr Stations a ret on 391 INERT BD REYITY af A Se i BA A ol SL 391 Naval Gun Factory, Washington, D. C.______ 391 Office of Chief of Naval Operations. _____._____ 385 Networks, stations, and services represented in Radio Correspondents’ Galleries _._____ 583 Newspapers represented in Press Gallery_______ 558 News Photographers Association, White House. 575 NOLO sa oe a Em NL II [0] Observatory, Astrophysical... i... 486 Office of— Administrator, Economic stabilization Agency. 342 Administrator, Housing and Home Finance A Oy a mo ma a 469 Administrator, Production and Marketing Administration (Agriculture)... __._.____ 425 Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of A I rT 379 Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of EheINGYY Lo olor a 232 Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force. ____.____ 394 Assistant Secretaries of the Army_____________ 378 Assistant Secretary of the Navy. __.___________ 382 Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air_______ 382 Assistants Postmaster General ___________ 402-403 Budget and Finance (Agriculture) .._________ 416 Chief, Army Field Forces........ 380 Chief of Naval Operations. _ ooo 385 Chielof Salt (Army)... ha 379 Commandant (Coast Guard)...___ 365 Commandant (Marine Corps). coco... 391 Comptroller(CoastGuard). ....... =... 366 Comptroller: (NOVY). eeea 383 Comptroller of the Currency. _.____.___.______ 367 Congressional Daily Digest ___.____..________ 295 Contract: Settlement. Toto boa 0 466 Coordinator of Information. .____.___.____.____ 294 Defense Mabilization: ~._ _._.. = =" 339 Department Counselor (Army) _______________ 378 Director for Mutual Security... ______________ 340 DistrictiofiColumbia.. of oi) 519 Education (Federal Security Agency)... ____ 462 Engineering, Coast Guard (Treasury) _._______ 366 90808—51——-2 Office of—Continued Page Executive, Secretary of Navy. ________________ 382 Experiment Stations (Agriculture) ___________ 422 Foreign Agricultural Relations________________ 416 General Counsel (Air Force)... ..........______ 394 General Counsel for Navy... __.__________ 384 General Counsel for the Treasury _.___________ 364 Guided Missiles (Defense). ____.______________ 376 Health and Welfare, Federal Civil Defense____ 347 Hearing Examiners (Agriculture). ____________ 417 Industrial’ Relations (Navy). ..._............ 384 Information, Department of Agriculture______ 417 Information, Public (Defense)... _____________ 376 Information NAVY). oc. cao npem enna rman 384 International Binanee......----c-ecvecn-nae-369 Judge Advocate General, Navy. ..__._________. 390 Legislative counsel: 120 Leet neo ads anu aie Soe sos 293 TET rn ee ae EL ANE 287 Majority and Minority Secretaries (Senate). 287 Management, Federal Civil Defense__________ 346 Management Engineer (Navy)____.____-_____ 385 Merchant Marine Safety, Coast Guard (ETE0 pam ie oes sb es sale added oa 367 Naval Material a re Ih 385 Naval Petroleum Reserves. .._._......_______ 385 Naval Reser. 385 ar Operational Services, Federal Civil Defense. _ 346 Operations, Coast Guard (Treasury)... 366 $50 py Me re a ee EAR 439 Personnel, Coast Guard (Treasury) __._.__.__. 367 Personnel, Department of Agriculture. __.____ 417 Plans and Policies, Federal Civil Defense-___ 346 Plant and Operations (Agriculture) _..______ 417 Postmasterofithe House...__C.___ °_ 292 > President of the United States. _______.________ 337 Public Information (Defense) — -occo cacao. 376 RentiStabillzation. oo = cts a ol 344 Savings Bonds (Navy)... ---tom-to oC 385 Secretary of Air FOree. nooooie ads 393 Seerelary of Ary. conta 377 Secretaryof Defense... o_o. 371 BecretarY Or ciateme mm NAVY. monn a= 381 Solicitor, Agriculture Department____________ 418 Special Assistant (Air Force)... _________ 394 " Surgeon General (Public Health) ____________ 462 Technical Services (Commerce) _ _____________ 439 "Rechnical Staff (Treasury)...---=--365 Pereitoriesinteriopy. = 2 Sel 412 Training and Education, Federal Civil Delonsers So ors EETe 346 Treasurer of the United States... ._______._.__ 369 Under Secretary of Air Force... ._...._. 394 Under Seeretaryof Army... eee. 377 Wnder Secretaryofl Navy... oo... 381 United States AtIOrNEY. ooops Zone em 510 United States Marshal._-2.~~ 510 Voeational Rehabilitation... ooo. 462 White Tonge. wood. 00 Cs. tec 337 Officers of the— TOR ee i mind Pm sei gt ed Et ar 289 I LC Ca UR i ERY (NCE 285 Offices, agencies, and establishments. ___________ 447 Offices, Production and Marketing Administra-tion: (Agriculture)... ciooo. 427 Official Reporters of Debate— 18 Ira ETE ee LT a a 293 RS CER eR ee 287 Congressional Directory : Page Officials, Territorial 0 oo 0 uae. 413 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 Operations, Office of Chief of Naval ____.._______ 385 Operations, Office of (Coast Guard) ..._._.___. 366 Ordnance, Bureau of, Navy... --5iacaice camer 388 Organization of American States. _.............. 352 Pan American Union. neces memes 352 Re Connell em a me 353 Organizations, International... __..___._______ 348 Origin and form of government of the District of Columbia. 2 oC lc ovis ol Page Behool, Capitol o.oo i wen mm enw mrs me Panama Canal, Company. = =... iicoicr-nces 480 Onthelsthmug. oe a 480 Pan American Sanitary Organization____._______ 353 Pan Ameria UNION. oi oona tt nein inanss 352 Park and Planning Commission, National LGTYa1 RTL St a ASC oe 477 Park, National Zoologieal........meoereicarsarizn 486 Park Service, National... 2. i... catenar. 410 Parliamentarian (House), Office of the. ________ 289 Parole, Board of (Justice). =... oo... . 0. 400 Patent Appeals, United States Court of Customs CTT MARR A Sa Le I SRE ny £ RE R 502 Patent Of ee se en ee 439 Patents Board, Government... _.__...._._ 469 People’s Counsel (District of Columbia)_______. 527 Periodical Press Galleries....___ 586 List of persons entitled to admission__________ 586 Periodicals Represented.... i or ... 589 Rules governing admission to______.._________ 592 Permanent Joint Board on Defense._.__._.______ 480 Canadian Section... 480 United:Siates Section... oor ie nina 480 Personnel Department (Marine Corps)... 392 Personnel Management, Liaison Office for______ 338 Personnel Management, Production and Mar- keting Administration (Agriculture)... _ 427 Personnel, Office of (Agriculture). .._.__.________ 417 Personnel, Office of (Coast Guard) _____.__.____ Petroleum Administration for Defense _________ 406 Photographers Association, White House News_ 575 Physical Disability Appeal Board (Marine LETTTARR ES Rl SEO De 392 Physical Disability Appeal Board (Navy)...___ 385 Physician at the Capitol, attending. __._____._._ 296 Plant and Operations, Office of (Agriculture)___ 417 Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural En- gIeerINgG a Nr 421 Plant Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and__ 420 Police: Capitol. hae iar Sra Sl Lad Metropolitan. cueTe me aman ii en a Police Board, Capitol. cues uma animnsinn=vmrnn Policy Council, Armed Forces. -.ooooooo. Political Classification of Congress. ......._.____. Postmaster General, biography of. ______._______ 401 Postmasterof the House. »._... oc.inea oi iii, 292 Branehin'Gapito). 0 a 292 Branch in New House Building. ____.________ 293 Branch in Old House Building. ._._..__.______ 292 Post Ofies, Cll tiie este Sih oa Se ns 527 Post Office col ool io a t] Department... 401 Bureau of Accounts, Post Office... .__..__. 404 Regional Offiees..= J. aii ft To 00 404 i Page Post Office Department—Continued Bureau of the Chief Post Office Inspector... 404 Bureau of Post Office Operations-.__.____.___ 402 Bureau of Transportation... o_o. 2 . 402 Deputy Postmaster General... _.___.__..__ 401 Offices of Assistant Postmasters General. 402-403 Potomac River Naval Command, Headquarters. 391 Poultry Branch (Agriculture)... oo... on. 426 Power Administration, Bonneville. __._________ 414 Power Administration, Southeastern. __________ 414 Power Administration, Southwestern_____.__.___ 414 Power Commission, Federal... SiR SS 458 Practice, Committee on (Treasury)... ......_... 369 PresidentoftheSenate.. oxo iii 285 President of the United States, biography of_.___ 337 Executiveofficeofthe...... nic. iviii os 337 Secretaries 10. «or Lo re ea ee Ll 337 President pro tempore of the Senate. __.____.___ 285 President’s Advisory Committee on Manage-TCH «i SE 5 Era ele Bl er Fer wh a 481 Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Con-gresses coincident with their terms... 282 Press Galleries: List of persons entitled to admission to_.._.__. 541 Newspapers represented in_ _______._____.__._. 558 Rules governing admission to___________._____ 573 Price, Office of (Agriculture)... wc comm mmm mein 427 Price Stabilization, Office of... co eona 2. 34% Printing, Bureau of Engravingand__..__. ____. Printing, Joint .__ Committeson....__..___:. Printing Office, ....._.___. 302 Government... __._ Prison Industries, Inc., Federal (Justice). _.____ 400 Prisons, Bureazol (Justice) noi.=0 22 400 Probate Court, Register of Wills and Clerk of fhe an aro Le a 510 Problems of Small Business, House Select Com-mittee to Conduct Study and Investiga-TI ae Pe bu BS i Se ee UN Eee 211 Production and Marketing Administration _____ 425 Production Authority, National . _ ______________ 435 Production, Joint Committee on Defense .._____ 221 Public Affairs Activities (State) ooo ooo_____ 359 Public BuailldingsService .. i... 466 Public Contracts, Wage and Hour Divisions_..__ 443 Public Debt, Bureau of the (Fiscal Service, I OASrY) oa re EL 368 dialsAST Public Health Service... __..__ ERR 462 Bureau of Medieal Services. cco 462 Bureau of State Services... zoo i. 463 Freedmen’s Hospital. oc oc o_o 463 National Institutesof Health ___________._____ 463 Office of the Surgeon General __________.__.___. 462 Public Housing Administration ________________ 471 Field Offices oc. a atin sma 471 Public Information (Defense)... --oo—__.____ 376 Public Roads, Bureawol r= tl Wr in tio 432 Public Utilities Commission (District of Co- Tumbia) ro a nes presaleSu, 527 Public Welfare, Department of (District of Co- 143 Er fi We Rs ll a Se ST en Ee 526 Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration ____ 413 Purchases ‘of Blind-Made Products, Committee I de lp a BTy 454 Quarantine, Bureau of Entomology and Plant___ 420 - Contents XIX BR Page Radio Correspondents’ Galleries... __.____.___ 580 List of persons entitled to admission to.._______ 580 Networks, stations, and services represented FT ren ee I TO Se Fl ps 0 Se SEE 583 Rules governing admission to. --.__.___________ 585 Radioistudios (Capitol)... ul Jim all es ue 297 Railroad and Airline Wage Board. _.___________ 345 Railroad, The Alaske. ..ooinoaeon ID ITIL des 413 Railroad Retirement Board. .-oo ii] 481 Railroad ticket office, Capitol. __._______________ 297 Reciprocity Information, Committee for. __..___ 454 Reclamation, Bureaaof iL. i il ot eliove2 410 Reconstruction Administration, Puerto Rico... 413 Reconstruction Finance Corporation __________ 482 Reconstruction of House Roof and Skylights, and Remodeling of House Chamber, Special Committeeon_._._._._____._____. 211 Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Skylights, and Remodeling of Senate Chamber, Special Committeeon. _....._-...____ 199 Reeorderofdeedss. 0 colin rel LIONS 512 Records Service, National Archives and.._._____ 467 Red Cross, American National _______.__________ 448 Redevelopment Land Agency, District of Co- lumbig. SRR LE RN 455 Reemployment Rights, Bureau of Veterans. ____ 443 Register of Wills and Clerk of Probate Court__.__ 510 Regular and special session of Congress, list of ___ 265 Renegotintion Board...o 2. otf oii co 483 Renovation of Executive Mansion, Commission OI) emir a RADE 221 Rent Stabilization, Officeof.. lil iC 344 Reporters of debate: EIR NE SDI Pn US 293 YET RN rb CATT Mee Sai a SL SE 287 Reporters to House committees. -..____________ 203 Representatives: Alphabeticallistofl i...iil C0 165 Fie Apportioned to the several States under each CONSUL ae SE Se en a Sete t 280 Assignments of, to committees. ______________ 231 Biozraphiesof: 2... 20m Hil ae on 3 List of, with home post offices and Washing- tolvaddresses. be Loli JENINiy 652 Political classificationof .......... i... 160 Boomsand telephonesof. Ze 327 ........._~O50 Tiny a ee a LL OE i 253 Service of, showing Congresses in which it has beeh tendered. .. .... ioe idm todos. VoleS east ior. oo oo anil lo i Gain] Requirements and Allocations, Production and Marketing Administration (Agriculture).. 427 Research Administration, Agricultural .__.______ 418 Research and Development Board (Defense)... 373 Research Center, Agricultural. _________________ 418 Research, Office of (Navy). 0... oi ilo ol 385 Reserve System, ooo 459 Federal......l.. Resident Commissioner and Delegates: Alphabetical list: Selo i nl In nil 172 Assignment to committees... --oo... 231 Blographiesiof io... oa Ti 148 List of, with home post office and Washington addresses. _____ FERC har tals ULI BER 661 Rooms and telephonesiof......_-21... ill. 327 Secretaplesto. adiosUo Glin JE 261 Service record Congress...ooo 192 in — Resident Commissioner and Delegates—Con. Page Notegeastior. oor 279 Resources-Board, National Security... .______ 339 Retirement Board, Railroad. ___________________ 481 Review, Discharges and Dismissals, Board of ___ 383 Road Commission, Alaska. _.__.____ "°° 413 Roads, Bureau of Public. _.0_ cL 280 frais 432 Rooms and telephones: Re DresoNtatiVeS iii amenah ee wn wa 327 BONGEOTE io i whi atime ms dn amma da a ee I 325 Roosevelt Library, Trustees of Franklin D______ 468 Rules governing admission to— Periodical Press Galleries... -coooo oo... 592 Progs Galleries: odsine oo em vd a 573 Radio Correspondents’ Galleries__._.._.___._____ 585 Rural Electrification Administration. __________ 427 S Saint Elizabeths Hospital... =...1 _ _._ 464 Salary Stabilization 1... 2". 344 Board...__ Office of Salary Stabilization... ._.__....______ 345 Salmon Fisheries Commission, International Poclfie. th en itn Sie SA Be 473 Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, Fed-rr ASon ad tn bua Bb 470 Savings Bonds Division, United States (Treas- TINY hh mi Rts Mid i Bn A A. 365 School, Capito) Page. cut teeni oll 0 oT 70 Uns 295 Schools, Joint Service (Defense). __-.__.________ 376 Science Foundation, National ___._______________ 479 Sciences, National Academyof .____.___-_______ 476 Scientific Research and Development, Inter- departmental Committee on____________ 472 Seating plan of the House, diagramof ___________ 322 Sentzol Senators...ile ira 318-320 Secretariat, South Pacific Commission. _____ 487 Secretaries to Representatives. ._______________ 253 Secretaries to Resident Commissioner and Dele- SOO ur nh 261 SecretoriestoSenators-..-._ 249 Secretaries to the President, biographies of ______ 337 Secretary of— Agriculture, biegraphyef. -=. 415 Alir Force, __ 393 blographyof...-.-._-_-_:% ATINY, biography of. oi 377 Commerce, biographyof.........-.—-._. 429 Defense, biographyof. 371 Interior, biography ol. ooo 405 Labor, biographyof .....oo. 441 Navy, biography of. = i 538) Senate, biographyof. ..—=no--i ~~ _._* 285 State, biography of. 2 os sd 355 Treasury, biographyof.. Fil i ui 363 Secret Servicer ait oe nial UAE EAR Br 368 Securities and Exchange Commission. __________ 483 Administration Division... il. 484 Division of Corporation Finance. _____________ 483 Divisionof Opinion __. 484 Writing...1 Divisionof Public Utilities... ____--__ >. 453 Division of Trading and Exchanges. _.________ 484 Office of the Chief Accountant_________________ 484 Office of the General Counsel. _______________. 484 Regional Administrators... 2-31. ...--a--. 484 Security Agency, Federal. ____c..____-___ _’'_._ 460 Security Administration, Social... _____ 464 Security Ageney, Mutual...0. 474 Security Training Commission, National ______ 480 o Congressional Directory Select and special committees: Page Service and terms in Congress—Continued Page House. fo A Ne a 211 Senators—Continued Senate. i ae bse Lae Expirationiof terms. 2 oi iol 175 esheets 199 Selective Service System... ooo lo. 484 Services to veterans and war workers (D. C.)___ 527 Senate: Service System, Selective -. ___.____.. ______. 484 Air Force Liaison Office. .__._________________ 298 Sessions of Congress, listof = 2... 0... 265 Chamber, diagram of... >. iol nasil 320 Sessions of the Senate, special, list of .___________ 270 Court of Impeachment... Ac Zit 0 oi 271 Shipping Adjustment Board, Combined (United DITeClOrY OF. fr ra et 321 States and Great Britain) .__.._..______ 348 Office Building Commission................o..0 215 Ships, Bureaa of... oo llaghL RE 389 Personnel of— Small Business, Select Committee on (Senate). 199 Chaplain... ti sili 3 285 Small Business, Special Committee to Conduct Clerks to committees... i. coo. Li. .C 201 a Study, ete. (House). 0 loos 211 o.oo... Office of the— Small Defense Plants Administration. _________ 348 Legislative counsel. cot. oie coin 287 Institution. 0 oo Cl 485 Smithsonian .....0icLoL Majority and minority secretaries. .....__ 287 Board of Regents, personnel of... ____________ 485 Majority Leader. 2. J... fal as 285 Establishment, personnel of. _________________ 485 Majority Whip... fo eaeana 285 Branches under direction of... _____ 485 Minority Floor Leader =... .._..... i... 285 Astrophysical Observatory... ...____ 486 Minority Whip iii ian lt Burcau of American Ethnology. acoc____ 486 coil. 285 Secretary... holed jodi 285 Canal Zone Biological Area... _._____ 486 Sergeant at Arms cuoiicavianainoul 286 Freer of Ll. sls. Soo Gallery Art... olor 486 Official Reporters of Debates. ..____________ 287 International Exchange Service. __-.——._____ 486 Presidentol raeatESE Ll 285 National Adr Museum oii a 2 issu: 486 President pro tempore... ooo. 285 National Collection of Fine Arts. _..._..___ 486 Secretaries to Senators... eve ema 249 National Gallery of Art... Loic Looio 486 Political classification aha il os 160 Nationa SE 485 of ..ooiua Museam...-..... Radipigtundiog af ie foe I lia 297 National Zoological Park... _._______ 486 Special sessions of... oieideale da dg 270 Social Security Administration... .________ 464 Senate committees: Soil Conservation Service... cocoa 498 AsSionmments 10... fon ate ne nas 225 Soldiers’ Home, United States-..-coooooooo_o.. 487 CY PE SR TR Th RSL I I a NR Th i 201 Board of Commissioners. ci noo. liao) 487 Membership OF. oi ves donb abinm tata iwt weed 195 Offfeorstofty ro ae ll CA 487 Meeting days ef... civeron cr detente 195 Solicitor, Office of (Agriculture)...___ 418 stem Special and selec. od. ood den ara 199 Pacific i----o.o"1 South Commission... oo 487 Senators: Searetariat. 2 a ae 487 Administrative Assistants and Secretaries to_. 249 Southeastern Power Administration. __...____. 414 Alphabetieallistof. oi io ogiai. 163 Southwestern Power Administration. _____..__ 414 Biographies of cia too or oat deaii ot tains 3 Speaker of the House of Representatives.._.____ 289 Continuous'serviceof...._.... _____o.so 178 Speaker, of Ll iis 289 Office the...lioalse Expiration of terms of service, by groups--.__. 175 Special and select committees: : Lists of, with home post offices and Washing-House. RSI 211 ton addresses 0 UU Cnn anaes 649 Senate... 5. lo eee Eni Gr IN dE Inien 199 Rooms and telephones of... ______.___._.______ 325 Special sessions of the Senate, dates of. _________ 270 Secretaries to. aidanra 249 SpeeialStafl, U.:8S. Arvmy. cof oii dif 0k 379 Notes engtiion. cid. or ori teasedtong 272 Standards, National Bureau of... _._._________. 434 Sergeant at Arms: Standing Committees: House of Representatives, biography of-______ 290 House... 35 ee: eee IGERL 2 BIT 203 Senate, biography of... oo o.oo oid odzg 286 Senate eeTL RE Sa a la 195 Services: State delegations in Congress... ____________ 151 Emergency Procurement... ._..____.. 466 State Department... io. Sisal. 355 Extension (Agriculture)... ....ovaicoseaidon 423 Administrative Activities... CL C02 360 Piscal, Treasury... . oo oo dooadaipatiinios 368 Boards and to. oo 0 0 361 Commissions... Fish and Wildlife (Interior). oo oo. __ 412 Bureau of: Porest (Agriculture)... o.oo .osiu=sdiy 424 European Affafrsc nA Solioi ou 358 General, Administration. ..c.dlczilaoiniiiie 466 Par Eastern Affairs. oon Do al 358 aolonadl Immigration and Naturalization. _._._._______ 400 German Affairs... Loiribnbia Lanne dis 358 National Park. ..coondbucivevsasatbsgiaids 410 Inter-American Affairs.....__. 357 Public. Buildings... i s.i 0 siicisit lassi, 466 Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Pablie Health. £0 ri cinuii aia 462 Affairs el ba bn san igi an Lid 357 Soil Conservation. ji... facedsagiands 428 United Affairs...lon 357 adi Nations LL. 000 Technical (Commeree). o.oo dood a wi oon 439 Activities. no S00. 358 Economie Coiiiic1 Service and terms in Congress: Intelligence Activities...li i iin ... 360 Delegates... i. rah 192 Public nl iol 359 celdoadamntinl Aflalrs’Activitles oo. Jos Representatives... ......Josoladd.Vit 181 U. Mission the Nations._.___.___ ssadunt S. to United 362 Resident Commissioner... co ccacoeaooooo 192 States and Territories, Governors of the________ 281 Senators: States, Organization of American... __.______._. 352 Continuous Service. i: .iururuin cuimsndn rgd 178 Statistical information... coco. Joa suniioall 265 Contents XXI Page Treasury, Department of the—Continued Page Statistics, Bureau of Labor..._ _.._ 443 Committeeton Practice. -.-____ 21 360 Subversive Activities Control Board-.__________ 488 Castornhouse. co ose nflly Lo dl Jia ao 365 Sugar Branch-(Agrieulture).._.__.______._______. 426 PisealiServiee. oo. 0 su loi iol LG 368 Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of (Navy)-____. 389 Bureanof Accounts. -=.......... op 368 Supply Department (Marine Corps) ----.._____ 392 Bureau of the Public Debt. _______________ 368 Supply Service, 5lu 466 Office of: Federal...ll Supreme Court, United States.._._.._.________ 493 Comptroller of the Currency... ____________ 367 Biographies of the justices. _-.____.___._______ 493 General Counsel for the Treasury... ______ 364 Officers of the Supreme Court .________..____ 495 International Finance...__.. 369 Residences of the justices and officers. ________ 495 Techmieal:Stall. oo. i... Jc Ci oo 365 Surgeon General, Office of the... ___________ 462 Treasurer of the United States...___._______ 369 Survey: : Tax Advisory Staff of the Secretary... _._____ 365" Coast and Geodetic (Commerce) .____________ 432 United States Savings Bond Division..______ 365 Geological (Interior)...a oo 0 409 United Secret Service._._._______.______ 368 oo States System: t Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate. ._____ 271 Federil Reserve... danas 459 Fund -cowewaiiodiinl 2h Trust Boards: Selective Service... 2 Uo IRL JT rinse 484 Library Of CONGLoss. . ovis wae wns mp ban 302 National Archives. o.oo item ony desninme 467 T NafionakiPark.. 0 as 411 Tuna Commission, United States and Costa Tariff Commission, United States _____.______:_ 488 Rica, Inter-American Tropical .__-472 Tax Advisory Staff of the Secretary (Treasury). 365 Tax Court of the United States___.._...__..____.. 509 U Technical Services: Civil Defense, Officeof. ooo ios, Union, .................... oooibianr 346 Interparliamentary. 216 Office of (Commerce)... Lo i ond 439 Wnion, Pan'American. oo... oo. ii... 352 WB APIA ede dani BARE LL SEs 0 -380 Nations. Ad d ill 354 United-.....ooendsoldi soai Technical Staff, Office of the (Treasury)-...____ 365 United Nations Affairs, Bureau of _____ad a 357 Telecommunications Adviser to the President-_ 340 United Nations, Food and Agriculture Organi-Nelegraph office, Capitol... oi... oC on. 297 zation of.....-a 348 Telephone Exchange (Capitol)... ______ 296 United Air ...coeneeeeeee States’ Force. eee 395 Telephones: United States Atomic Energy Commission. ____ 449 ReeAL id ne United States Attorney’s Office... __._________ IVeE mins 327 510 STE TE SRO Sse i te a RE ei 325 United States Court of Claims: .—____________. 503 Tennesse Valley Authority... ....... 488 United States Court of Customs and Patent Ap-Terms of Presidents and Vice Presidents. _.___ 282 rl CRO a aR ES Tr IE ee 502 Terms of Senators, expiration of -_______________ 175 United States Court of Appeals, District of Co-Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. 218 1731 Ss nS EE 17 ie se Sema 497 fPerritorial Officials (Interior)... ........-413 United States Courts, Administrative Office of Territories, Governorsof the... ........ 281 I i SL i a Re EA 510 Territories, Office of (Interior)... ..__-....... 412 United States Courts of Appeals. ___._________ 495 Ticket offices, Capitol: United States Court of Military Appeals. ______ 500 Airlines, combined... so.iu en 297 United States Customs Court. _.__._______ fl 505 Ralrogd ies it rT an 297 | United States District Court for the District of Tobacco Branch (Agriculture)... ________enn 426 COIMNBIN, irs nti mtn 2am wh merci 0 -509 fPrade Commission, Federal..._.. ._ 464 United States Emergency Court of Appeals.___ 507 Transportation and Warehousing Branch (Agri-United States, Foreign Diplomatic Representa- Cray. Ln EE a 427 1 es hs Sr es ey 531 Transportation, Bureau of (Post Office). ______. 402 United States Marshal’s Office. ...____________ 510 Transportation Service, Military Sea (Navy)... 390 United States Military Academy... ______._____ 380 Treasurer of the United States, Office of the. ___ 369 United States Mission to the United Nations_._ 362 Treasury, Department of the. __________________ 363 United States Savings Bonds Division... _____ 365 Bureau of: United States Secret Service... __________ 368 Customs. C1. Ee bs a rae I IT 365 United States Soldiers’ Home... __.___.__.__ 487 Engravingand Printing... “1... 368 United States Supreme Court. __.___.._________ 493 Interngl' Bevenne. oo loli nei nas 364 NGLCOLICE nna dh i oT AN 368 United States Tariff Coramission.______________ 488 A Th Se SSR CC ae 368 United States Tax Coart.—._-... _.._.. 2 509 Coast Guard (Headquarters) ._.............__ 365 United States Territorial Expansion Commis-ChietorSiafl wf sig ard 40 oi 366 3 Pry IRR Ce a SS RS 218 Commandant. vo. Si = Ct aig nnn 365 United States Veterans’ Administration Con- Comptrollers: iio on nar Sie a 0s 366 gressional Service... iol. 208 Engineering. oe mi Se ee a ard 366 University, Howard... ooo oo 82 0020 461 Merehant Marine Safety... 367 Operation asi nwo an i 366 Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insecticides POrSONNel ane a re 367 With Respect to Food Products, Select Wellare oc omen oes a a 367 Committee on. ty elous oi asi Congressional Directory Vv Page Valley Authority, Tennessee. -.--—-occouoooooo 488 Vehicles and traffie, District of Columbia, di-rector of...de dos iiss 524 Veterans’ Administration... oo oo io ozioo 489 Congressional Service (Capitol). _______ 298 Veterans’ Education Appeals Board ______._._____ 490 Veterans’ Reemployment Rights, Bureau of... 443 Vice President of United States, Biography of... 3 Vice Presidents and the Congresses coincident with their terms. .o o. i. da sosrooic 282 Virgin Islands Corporation... ...i.....l. 413 i... Vocational Rehabilitation, Office of... _._______ 462 Votes cast: Delegates and Resident Commissioner... 279 Representatives. ...... 0.0.0 iizaimlinity 273 TYEV1 iyo (NS LE Oe See 272 Ww Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division. 443 Wage Stabilization’ Board... ..._... 345 War Claims .~.. ..._>. 490 Commission... War College, The National...i= .¢ 376 .. ‘Washington addresses of Senators, Representa-tives, ete., with home post offices. _____ 649 Washington City Post Office __.._...:.__._.. 527 Page Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission._._______________ 217 Washington National Monument Society... _.__ 490 Waterways Corporation, Inland... ______________ 433 Wayne Memorial Commission, General Anthony boi 3% oon ders os 219 Weapons Systems Evaluation Group-._...______ 373 Weather Bureau...og cif ia. ob n.l 439 Weights, Measures, and Markets, Department of (District of Columbia) oo... -...... 524 Wellare, Coast Guard... ool. So io ioaa. 367 ‘Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol.______ 297 White House News Photographers Association. 575 Members represented... __________.. 575 Servicesyepresented.... 0..... ic 578 "White Bouse cis. thidecl 337 Office.-.............. Wildlife Service, Fish and.______ eoetaniitd Las 412 Womens Bureau@@abor). oo ....i.i.. 444 Women’s Hospital, Columbia... _._______ 453 Y 'Yardsiand Docks, Bureauof ................. 390 Z Zones Board, Foreign-Trade___ ooo oo... 465 Zoological Park, National =... ooo... 486 BIOGRAPHICAL * THE VICE PRESIDENT ALBEN WILLIAM BARKLEY, Democrat, of Paducah, Ky., was born in Graves County, Ky., November 24, 1877; educated in the county schools and in Marvin College, Clinton, Ky., graduating there in 1897, receiving A. B. degree, afterward attending Emory College at Oxford, Ga., and the University of Virginia Law School at Charlottesville, Va.; is a lawyer by profession, having been ad-mitted to the bar at Paducah, Ky., in 1901; was elected prosecuting attorney for McCracken County, Ky., in 1905 for a term of 4 years; at expiration of term was elected judge of the McCracken County court and served until elected to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-third and all succeeding Congresses; was chairman State Democratic conventions at Louisville, Ky., 1919, and at Lexing-ton, Ky., May 1924; was delegate at large to Democratic National Conventions at San Francisco in 1920, at New York in 1924, at Houston in 1928, at Chicago in 1932, at Philadelphia in 1936, and at. Chicago in 1940, serving as temporary chairman at Chicago and Philadelphia; served as permanent chairman at the Democratic National Convention in 1940; elected to United States Senate from Kentucky for term beginning March 4, 1927; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1933; reelected for term beginning January 3, 1939; and reelected for term beginning January 3, 1945; was elected majority leader of the Senate in 1937 to succeed the late Senator Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas, and served until January 3, 1947, when he was elected minority leader; served as tempo-rary chairman and made keynote address at Democratic National Conven-tion in Philadelphia in 1948, which nominated him for the Vice Presidency of the United States; elected Vice President November 2, 1948 for term beginning January 2 1949; married November 18, 1949, to Mrs. Carleton S. Hadley, of t. Louis, Mo. : ALABAMA (Population (1950), 3,061,743) SENATORS LISTER HILL, Democrat, of Montgomery, Ala., where he was born December 29, 1894; was graduated from Starke University School, Montgomery, Ala., in 1911; from University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, Ala., in 1914; from the law school of the University of Alabama in 1915; and from the law school of Columbia University, New York, City, in 1916; took a special course at the law school, University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, Mich., in the summer of 1915; honorary LL. D. degree, University of Alabama, 1939, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, 1939, and National University, 1941; was admitted to the bar of Alabama in 1915 and commenced the practice of law at Montgomery, Ala., in October 1916; president of the Montgomery Board of Education, 1917-22; served in the Army with the Seventeenth and Seventy-first United States Infantry Regiments during the World War, 1917-19; member of Phi Beta Kappa; married Henrietta Fon-taine McCormick, of Eufaula, Ala.; children, Mrs. Charles Hubbard and L. L.; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John R. Tyson; renominated and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, and Seventy-fifth Congresses, and served from August 14, 1923, until his resignation on January 11, 1938; appointed to the United States Senate on January 10, 1938, and elected on April 26, 1938, to fill the vacancy in the term ending January 3, 1939; reelected on November 8 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; reelected on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected on November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. ED iprapiies are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Represent-atives. Nore.—Population figures are taken from preliminary count, 1950 Census. Congressional Directory ALABAMA JOHN J. SPARKMAN, Democrat, of Huntsville, Ala., was born near Hartselle, Morgan County, Ala., December 20, 1899; attended the country schools, Morgan County High School at Hartselle, and the University of Alabama, at Tuscaloosa, where he received the degrees of A. B. in 1921, LL. B. in 1923, and A. M. in 1924; Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternities; a Mason, Woodmen of the World; Kiwanian; member American Legion; is a lawyer by profession; was admitted to the bar in 1923 and commenced practice in Huntsville, being a member of the firm of Taylor, Richardson & Sparkman, of Huntsville, until he retired upon election to Congress in order to give full time to his congressional duties; was a member of the Students Army Training Corps during the World War; is a lieutenant colonel in the Organized Reserves; married to Miss Ivo Hall, of Albertville, Ala., on June 2, 1923, and they have one daughter—Julia Ann (Mrs. Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr.); he, his wife, and daughter are members of the Methodist Church; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, and Eightieth Congresses; served as member of Military Affairs Committee and as Majority Whip; on November 5, 1946, was also elected to the United States Senate to fill out the unexpired term of the late Senator John H. Bankhead; following the election resigned from the House. of Representatives and entered upon his duties in the Senate; reelected November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, Washington, and Wilcox (7 counties). -Population (1950), 368,766. FRANK WILLIAM BOYKIN, Democrat, of Mobile, Ala., was born in Bladon Springs, Choctaw County, Ala., on February 21, 1885; educated in the public schools; began business career early in life; now prominently identified with real estate, farming, livestock, timber, lumber, naval stores business, and develop-ment of the timber and mineral resources in south Alabama; married Miss Ocllo Gunn, of Thomasville, Clarke County, Ala., and they have five children; during the World War was official in shipbuilding companies which built 52 percent of all ships built on the Gulf coast prior to Armistice; was president of the Loyalty League of Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana; is a thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Elk, W. O. W., Moose, O. E. S.; a member of the Methodist Church; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on July 30, 1935, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. John McDuffie; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; and at the convening of the Eighty-second Congress became the dean of the Alabama delegation. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, Lown-des, Montgomery, and Pike (9 counties). Population (1950), 369,108. GEORGE McINVALE GRANT, Democrat, of Troy, Ala., was born in Louis-ville, Ala., July 11, 1897; attended the academic department of the University of Alabama and was graduated with the degree of LL. B. in 1922; honorary LL. D., Bob Jones University, 1950; is a lawyer by profession; served as county solicitor of Pike County, 1927-37, and as chairman of the Pike County Democratic exec-utive committee, 1927-37; member of the State Democratic executive committee, 1935-38; World War veteran; served as State commander of the American Legion in 1929, and as national secretary of the Pi Kappa Phi fraternity in 1922; presi-dent, Dixie Amateur Baseball League, 1935; Alabama-Florida Baseball League, 1936-38; and Alabama Society in Washington, 1944-45; member, Kiwanis, Woodmen of the World, Masons, and Shrine; married Miss Matalie Carter, December 5, 1938, and has one son, George MeclInvale, Jr., and one daughter, Alicia Lee; nominated in special Democratic primary on March 11,1938, and elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election on June 14, 1938, to fill the unexpired term of Congressman Lister Hill, resigned; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. te THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lee, Macon, and Russell (10 counties). Population (1950), 303,664. : ; GEORGE WILLIAM ANDREWS, Democrat, of Union Springs, Ala.; born in Clayton, Ala., December 12, 1906; attended the academic department of the University of Alabama and was graduated with LL. B. degree in 1928; is a lawyer ALABAMA Biographical by profession; served as circuit solicitor for the third judicial circuit of the State of Alabama (Barbour, Bullock, Russell, and Dale Counties) from 1931 to 1943; at time of election to Congress was serving as lieutenant (junior grade), United States Naval Reserve, at Pearl Harbor, and had been in the United States Naval Reserve 14 months; was released from active duty by the Navy Department to serve in Congress; married Elizabeth Bullock, of Geneva, Ala., November 25, 1936; one daughter, Jane Meredith, one son, George W., 3d; fraternities, Sigma Nu, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Phi Delta Phi (legal); elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on March 14, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Henry B. Steagall, serving on Committee on Expenditures in Executive Depart-ments, Roads Committee, and Committee on World War Veterans’ Legislation; reelected to the Seventy-ninth and Eightieth Congresses, serving on Appropria-tions Committee and Independent Offices; reelected to the Eighty-first i on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Autauga, Calhoun, Clay, Coosa, Dallas, Elmore, St. Clair, and Talladega (8 counties). Population (1950), 301,783. KENNETH A. ROBERTS, Democrat, of Piedmont, Ala.; born at Piedmont, Ala., November 1, 1912; attended Howard College, University of Alabama, LL. B; lawyer, admitted to bar January 1936 and practiced law at Talladega, Ala., and Anniston, Ala.; State senator, Talladega County, Ala., 1942; resigned in 1942 as member of Alabama State Senate and was commissioned an ensign in the United States Navy, later made lieutenant and served in both Atlantic and Pacific theaters of war; member Alabama State Board of Veterans Affairs, member Baptist Church, Masonic Fraternity, Order of Eastern Star, Woodmen of World, Forty and Eight, American Legion, V. F. W., ATO and PAD Legal; elected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chambers, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Ran-dolph, and Tallapoosa (8 counties). Population (1950), 310,245. ALBERT RAINS, Democrat, of Gadsden, Ala.; was born in De Kalb County, Ala., March 11, 1902; attended the public schools of De Kalb County, Snead Seminary, Boaz, Ala.; State Teachers College, Jacksonville, Ala., and the Uni-versity of Alabama; is a lawyer by profession; was admitted to the bar in 1928 and commenced practice in Gadsden, being a member of the firm of Rains & Rains; was deputy solicitor for Etowah County, Ala, 1930-35; city attorney for the city of Gadsden, 1935-44; member of the house of representatives .of the Alabama Legislature from Etowah County, 1942-44; Mason; past district gover-nor, Alabama Lions Clubs; counselor, Lions International; past president Etowah County Bar Association; past president Etowah County and Alabama League of Young Democrats; member of First Baptist Church, Gadsden, Ala.; married Miss Allison Blair of Centre, Cherokee County, Ala., on December 29, 1939; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bibb, Chilton, Greene, Hale, Perry, Shelby, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa (8 counties). Population (1950), 250,664. : EDWARD deGRAFFENRIED, Democrat, of Tuscaloosa, Ala.; was born in Eutaw, Ala., June 30, 1899; was graduated from Gulf Coast Military Academy at Gulfport, Miss., in 1917; served as a private in the United States Army in 1918, receiving honorable discharge December 5, 1918, at Camp Pike, Ark.; received A. B. degree from University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, Ala., in 1922; was gradu-ated from law school at University of Alabama in 1921; was admittedto the bar in 1921 and commenced the practice of law in June 1921; member of SAE fra-ternity and deGraffenried Inn of Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity at University of Alabama; was alternate delegate to the Democratic Convention of 1932; served as a vice president of the Young Democrats of Alabama in 1938; was elected and served as solicitor of the sixth judicial circuit of Alabama from 1927 through 1931; reelected and served from 1931 through 1934; was again elected and served from January 1943 to January 1947; the father of five children by a former marriage whose names are: Edward 3d, Jeff B., William Ryan, Christopher, and Grace; married to Motie Gay Homan of Tuscaloosa, Ala.; member of Presbyterian Church and Farley W. Moody Post 34 of the American Legion, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; elected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. Congressional Directory ALABAMA SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Blount, Cullman, Fayette, Franklin, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Walker, and Winston (9 counties). Population (1950), 273,201. CARL ELLIOTT, Democrat, of Jasper, Ala.; born on route 2, Vina, Ala., December 20, 1913, eldest of nine children of George W. and Lenora Massey Elliott; attended the public schools of Franklin County, Ala., graduating from Vina High School in 1930; worked his way through the University of Alabama, and was graduated with an A. B. degree in 1933 and an LL. B. degree in 1936; served as president of the student body of the University in 1935 and 1936, and was affiliated with Omicron Delta Kappa and Phi Alpha Delta, legal fraternities; later engaged in the practice of law in Russellville, Ala., and Jasper, Ala., and was senior member of the firm of Elliott & Petree, attorneys, Jasper, Ala., at the time of his election to the Eighty-first Congress; retired from the practice of law in order to give full time to duties of office; a veteran of World War II; member of American Legion and Am-Vets; Methodist, member and former chairman of Board of Stewards, First Methodist Church, Jasper, ‘Ala.; member, former president of Jasper, Ala., Club of Lions International; also zone chairman and deputy distriet governor; member of Order of Eastern Star, Masons, Parent-Teacher Association, and Woodmen of the World; served two terms as member of Alabama State Demo-cratic Executive Committee, 1942-50; married to Jane Hamilton of Jasper, Ala., and they have four children: Carl, Jr., Martha Owen, John Hamilton, and Lenora Jane; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member of Veterans Affairs Com-mittee, where he sponsored free insurance for servicemen, direct home loans for veterans living in rural areas, and automobiles for veterans who had lost the use of arms, legs, or who had been made blind as a result of their service. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties). Population (1950), 321,137. ROBERT E. JONES, Jr., Democrat, of Scottsboro, Ala., where he was born June 12, 1912; attended public schools of Scottsboro; graduated from the Uni-versity of Alabama with LL. B. degree on January 7, 1937, and admitted to the bar in Alabama January 20, 1937; member of Methodist Church, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Kappa Alpha fraternity; married Christine Francis, and they have one son, Robert KE. Jones 3d; engaged in the general prac-tice of law as a firm member Brewton & Jones; elected judge of Jackson County Court July 1940; entered Navy December 1943, and served Atlantic and Pacific theaters of operation as gunnery officer; reelected in absentia judge of Jackson County Court, May 1945; discharged from service February 1946; elected on January 28, 1947, to Eightieth Congress in a special election to fill the vacancy created by John J. Sparkman’s election to the United States Senate; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Jefferson. Population (1950), 554,186. LAURIE CALVIN BATTLE, Democrat, of Birmingham, Ala., was born in Wilsonville, Ala., May 10, 1912; was graduated from Deshler High School, Tuscumbia, Ala., in 1930; Birmingham-Southern College, Birmingham, Ala., A. B., majoring in psychology, 1934; attended Vanderbilt University and Secarritt College, Nashville, Tenn., specializing in social work and sociology, 1935; received M. A. degree in sociology from Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, 1939, and completed 1 year in residence on Ph. D.; attended University of Alabama, Tusca-loosa, Ala., department of political science, fall, 1946; driver-salesman, assistant to personnel and claims director, National Dairies; laborer, district clerk, Southern Natural Gas Co.; Alabama National Guard, Company M, 1933-34; entered Army of the United States as private 1942, attended Officers Candidate School, dis-charged from Army Air Corps as major 1946; served in Pacific theater; member of the Methodist Church; member of Masons, Lions Club, Eagles, Junior Cham-ber of Commerce, Reserve Officers Association, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; fraternities: Kappa Phi Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Kappa Alpha, Phi Gamma Mu; married Miss Janis Hunt, of Brockport, N. Y., on December 3, 1945, and they have a son, James David Battle, born December 29, 1948, and one daughter, Anne LeMerle Battle, born August 1, 1951; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on Novem- er 7, 1950. ARIZONA B rographical 7 ARIZONA (Population (1950), 749,587) SENATORS CARL HAYDEN, Democrat, Phoenix; born Hayden’s Ferry (now Tempe), Ariz., October 2, 1877; educated in public schools of Tempe, Normal School of Arizona, and Stanford University; delegate Democratic National Convention 1904; elected treasurer Maricopa County 1904, sheriff 1906, reelected 1908; appointed major of Infantry, United States National Army, October 4, 1918; married; elected to Sixty-second and succeeding Congresses through Sixty-ninth; elected to United States Senate 1926; reelected 1932, 1938, 1944, and 1950. ERNEST W. McFARLAND, Democrat, of Florence, Ariz., born on a farm near Earlsboro, Okla., October 9, 1894, the son of W. T. and Keziah McFarland, early settlers of the Pottawatomie strip in Oklahoma; educated in Earlsboro and Seminole High Schools; taught country school in Seminole County for 1 year, worked in grocery store, sold life insurance, and was law librarian at Oklahoma University before he completed his schooling; attended East Central State Teachers’ College, Ada, Okla., where he was graduated, and the University of Oklahoma, wherehe received his A. B. degree; schooling interrupted by World War I; after his discharge from service in the spring of 1919 worked for a short time in the Valley National Bank, Phoenix, then attended Stanford University, where he received his Juris Doctor degree and M. A. in political science; received honorary LL. D. degree, University of Arizona, 1950; began practice of law, Casa Grande, Ariz.; served as assistant attorney general of Arizona for 2 years; county attorney, Pinal County, Ariz., 6 years; judge of the superior court of Pinal County, Ariz., 6 years, having tried cases in every county in the State of Arizona; during private practice of law, represented the San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District and has made an extensive study of irrigation problems and water law; during the time he was on the bench he tried many important water cases involving most of the water rights of Arizona; married to Edna Eveland McFarland; one daughter, Jewell (Mrs. Delbert Lewis); elected to the United States Senate in 1940; reelected in 1946 for the term ending January 3, 1953. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Maricopa. Population (1950), 331,770. JOHN ROBERT MURDOCK, Democrat, of Tempe, Ariz.; born near Lewis-town, Lewis County, Mo., April 20, 1885; educated in the common schools of Missouri; A. B. degree from the State Teachers College at Kirksville, Mo., in 1912, M. A. degree from the University of Iowa in 1925, did graduate work at the University of California in 1929; for 22 years an instructor in the three institutions of higher learning in Arizona; author of textbooks on history and government used in the public schools of Arizona; 3 years dean of the Arizona State Teachers College at Tempe; married to Myrtle Cheney in 1906; father of three children— Rachael Murdock Ellis, Scottsdale, Ariz., Lt. David N. Murdock, killed in action in Sicily, August 11, 1943, Lt. Col. John B. Murdock, Sixty-seventh Fighter Wing, Eighth Air Force; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 86 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948, and reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Apache, Cochise, Coconino, Gila, Graham, Greenlee, Mohave, Navajo, Pima, Pinal, Santa Cruz, Yavapai, Yuma (13 counties). Population (1950), 415,993. HAROLD A. (PORQUE) PATTEN, Democrat, of Tucson, Ariz.; born in Husted, Colo., October 6, 1907, the son of Herbert A. and Jenevre Callaghan Patten; came to Arizona in 1916; attended Tucson High School, 1925; received B. S. degree from University of Arizona in 1930; taught in Tucson High School 1931-32; director of recreation for city of Tucson and Tucson Public Schools, 1933-39; State director of recreation 1939-40; entered military service with Congressional Directory ARKANSAS Seventh Cavalry Regiment as first lieutenant August 1940; transferred to Air Corps, attending Brooks Field, Tex. (combat observer training), 1941; spent 31 months on foreign service in Africa and Italy, rank of major; returned to civilian life November 21, 1945, as assistant manager Phoenix Agency of Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York; past post commander of Morgan-MeDermott Post 7, American Legion; Arizona State commander, American Legion, 1947-48; member of Forty & Eight, Veterans of Foreign War, Sigma Chi, Sigma, Delta Psi, Elks, El Rio Club, F. O. of E., National Association of Life Underwriters; married Mary M. Reirdon, February 8, 1937; twa sons, Michael, age 13; Thomas, age 10; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. ARKANSAS (Population (1950), 1,909,511) SENATORS JOHN L. McCLELLAN, Democrat, of Camden, Ark.; born at Sheridan, Grant County, Ark., February 25, 1896; first lieutenant of A. S. S. C. during the First World War; lawyer; prosecuting attorney of the seventh judicial district of Arkansas, 1926-30; member of Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Congresses from the Sixth Congressional District of Arkansas; elected United States Senator November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943; reelected to the Senate November 2, 1948, for term beginning January 3, 1949. J. W. FULBRIGHT, Democrat, of Fayetteville, Ark.; son of Jay and Roberta ‘Waugh Fullbright; University of Arkansas, B. A.; Rhodes Scholar, Oxford Uni-versity B. A., M. A.; George Washington University LL.B.; attorney, United States Department of Justice; instructor in law, George Washington University; president, Universityof Arkansas; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1950), 425,861. EZEKIEL CANDLER GATHINGS, Democrat, of West Memphis, Crittenden County, Ark.; born in Prairie, Monroe County, Miss., November 10, 1903; parents, Melville W. Gathings (deceased) and Virgie Garner Gathings; attended Earle (Ark.) High School and University of Alabama; was graduated from the Univer-sity of Arkansas with LL. B. degree in 1929; married Miss Tolise Kirkpatrick on April 6, 1939, and they have two children, one daughter, Tolise Kirkpatrick Gathings, born April 22, 1940, and one son, Joseph Royston Gathings 2d, born March 26, 1945; lawyer by profession; member of the State senate, 1935-39; member of the Baptist Church; Mason and Shriner, Order of the Eastern Star, Rotary Club, and Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Alpha Delta, and Blue Key fraternities; elected to the Seventy-sixth and succeeding Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Prairie, Randolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties). Population (1950), 205,696. WILBUR B. MILLS, Democrat, of Kensett, Ark., was born there May 24, 1909; attended Hendrix College and Harvard Law School; married Miss Clarine Billingsley, of Kensett, May 27, 1934, and they have two daughters—Martha Sue and Rebecca Ann; lawyer; admitted to practice law before Supreme Court of Arkansas in November 1933, the Supreme Court of the United States in 1939; served as county and probate judge of White County, Ark., 1934 to 1938, inclu-sive; Methodist; thirty-second degree Mason; elected to Seventy-sixth and suc-ceeding Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1950), 178,000. JAMES WILLIAM TRIMBLE, Democrat, of Berryville, Ark.; born near Osage, Carroll County, Ark., February 3, 1894; attended the common schools in native county and was graduated from the University of Arkansas in 1917; lawyer; prosecuting attorney; circuit judge; married Miss Ruth Maples, of ARKANSAS Biographical 9 Berryville, Ark., on February 14, 1922; two children (twins), a daughter, Martha Carol (deceased), and James Kerry; Mason, Methodist, Legionnaire; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; relected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Countigs: Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1950) 216,485. : > BOYD TACKETT, Democrat, of Nashville, Howard County, Ark.; born near Black Springs, Montgomery County, Ark., May 9, 1911, as the first of five children born to the late John S. and Myrtle L. Tackett; when approximately 6 years of age moved with his parents to Glenwood, Pike County, Ark.; attended the public schools and graduated from the Glenwood High School; received his college and university training at Arkansas Polytechnic College at Russellville; Ouachita College, Arkadelphia; and the University of Arkansas Law School at Fayetteville; on April 26, 1936, was married to Miss Norma Armstrong, the daughter of Rev. T. M. Armstrong, then the pastor of the First Methodist Church in Glenwood; four children; Boyd, Jr., 12 years of age, and daughters, Terry, 6 years of age, Rebecca Lou, 2 years of age, and Toni Jo, 1 year of age; engaged in the active practice of law at Glenwood until January 1941; served as a member of the Arkansas State Legislature from Pike County 1937-41; elected as prosecuting attorney of the ninth judicial circuit of Arkansas in 1940, in which capacity he served, while residing with his family at Murfreesboro, the county seat of Pike County, from January 1, 1941, until his enlistment into the armed services on October 4, 1943; when released from military services on November 5, 1944, established his home in Nashville and engaged in the active practice of law; member of the Nashville Rotary Board, president of the Nashville Chamber of Commerce, Howard District Boy Scout chairman, American Legion service offi-cer, superintendent of the Nashville Methodist Church School and a member of the board of stewards of that church; until his resignation to make the cam-paign for Congress he had been a State police commissioner since January 1945; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTIES: Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties). Population (1950), 307,689. 3 BROOKS HAYS, Democrat, of Little Rock, Ark.; born in London, Ark., August 9, 1898, son of Steele and Sallie Butler Hays; attended Russellville, Ark., public schools; received A. B. degree, University of Arkansas, 1919; LL. B. degree, George Washington University, 1922; honorary degrees of doctor of laws, College of the Ozarks, and Salem College, and doctor of civil law, Atlanta Law School, served in the United States Army September to December 1918; married Marian Prather, of Fort Smith, Ark., February 2, 1922; they have two children, Mrs. William E. Bell, of Mexico City; and a son, Marion Steele; assistant attorney general of Arkansas, 1925-27; Democratic national committeeman for Arkansas, 1932-39; held administrative and legal positions in the Department of Agricul-ture, 1936-42; president of the Arkansas Conference of Social Work, 1932-34; member of board of trustees of George Peabody College for Teachers, and George Washington University; Sigma Chi, Phi Beta Kappa, and Phi Alpha Delta fraternities, the American Legion, and Lions Club (district governor, 1926-27); Baptist; Mason (KCCH); elected November 3, 1942, to Seventy-Eighth Con-° gress and reelected to succeeding Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1950), 309,755. W. F. NORRELL, Democrat, of Monticello, Ark.; born August 29, 1896, at Milo, Ark.; educated in public schools, A. & M. College, College of the Ozarks (LL. D. honorary) ; licensed and practicing attorney in Supreme Court of Arkansas and United States Supreme Court; member of bar associations; veteran of World War I, charter member of Joe S. Harris Post No. 2, American Legion, Depart-ment of Arkansas; member First Baptist Church (Deacon), Monticello, Ark.; member, F. & A. M. (worshipful master), Council, Eastern Star (past Worthy Grand Patron of Arkansas), R. A. M. Chapter No. 115, Monticello, Thirty-second degree Mason, Consistory of Little Rock; and Lions Club (past president); elected to State senate of Arkansas in 1931, reelected in 1935, serving 8 successive years; elected president of State senate from 1933 to 1937, during which time served on several occasions as acting Governor; married Catherine Dorris in 1924 and they have one child, a daughter, Judy Norrell; elected to Seventy-sixth and each succeeding Congress. Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead, Lafayette, Nevada, Ouachita, and Union (11 counties). Population (1950), 258,145. OREN HARRIS, Democrat, of El Dorado, Ark., was born December 20, 1903, in Hempstead County, Ark., son of Homer and Bettie Lee Harris; educated in public schools of Hempstead County and Prescott High School, Nevada County, Ark., Henderson College, Arkadelphia, Clark County, Ark., with A. B. degree, and LL. B. degree from Cumberland University Law School, Lebanon, Tenn.: engaged in the practice of law since 1930; admitted to practice in the United States Supreme Court; deputy prosecuting attorney of Union County, 1933-36; elected prosecuting attorney of the thirteenth judicial circuit in 1936; reelected in 1938 without opposition; member of the Baptist Church, a Mason (thirty-second degree and Shriner), Knights of Pythias, S. A. E. fraternity, and Lions Interna-tional Civie Club (district governor, 1939-40); married to Miss Ruth Ross, of Clark County, Ark., May 9, 1934; two children, Carolyn Marie and James Ed-ward; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. : CALIFORNIA (Population (1950), 10,586,223) SENATORS . WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND, Republican, of Piedmont, Calif.; born in Ala-meda, Calif., on June 26, 1908; was graduated from the public schools of Alameda and from the University of California; is assistant publisher of the Oakland (Calif.) Tribune; served from 1933 to 1935 as a member of the California State Assembly and from 1935 to 1939 as State senator; during his services in the State senate served as chairman of the Committee on Revenue and Taxation; in 1938 was ‘named as Republican national committeeman from California, and in 1940 was selected as a member, and later as chairman, of the executive committee; married Helen D. Herrick and they have three children—Emelyn, age 22; Joseph, age 20; and Estelle, age 13; served in World War II for 3 years in the United States Army as enlisted man and officer, 18 months of which time was in England, France, Belgium, and Germany and was still overseas when appointed United States Senator by Gov. Earl Warren on August 14, 1945, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hiram W. Johnson and took the oath of office on September 5, 1945; elected November 5, 1946, for the short term expiring January 3, 1947, and also elected for the full term expiring in 1953. RICHARD M. NIXON, Republican, of Whittier, Calif.; born in Yorba Linda, Calif., January 9, 1913; educated in public schools, graduate of Whittier College (A. B. 1934) and Duke University Law School (LL. B. 1937); practiced law in Whittier, Calif., 1937-42; attorney in Office of Emergency Management, Wash-ington, D. C., January to August 1942; on active duty with U. S. Navy from August 1942 to January 1946; member of the board of trustees of Whittier College since 1939; married Patricia Ryan in 1940; two daughters, Patricia and Julie; elected to Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; elected United States Senator from California November 7, 1950, for the term commencing January 3, 1951; appointed United States Senator by Governor Earl Warren December 1, 1950, for unexpired term in Eighty-first Congress. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Counties: Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Sonoma, Sutter, and Yuba (11 counties). Population (1950), 458,230. HUBERT B. SCUDDER, Republican, of Sebastopol, Calif.; born in Sebasto-pol, Calif., November 5, 1888; graduate of public schools; employed by city of Sebastopol as superintendent of utilities, July 1, 1912, to November 4, 1920, excepting period of time during World War I, serving in the Coast Artillery until the termination of the war; married Helen B. Norton June 18, 1924; engaged in insurance and real estate business November 1920; elected city councilman of Sebastopol April 1924 and mayor 1926; served out term and did not run for reelection; elected to the California State Legislature August 1924 and served from January 1925 until January 1941; was not a candidate for reelection; August CALIFORNIA Brographical 1940 was elected vice chairman of the Republican State Central Committee; August 1942 was elected secretary of the Republican State Central Committee; January 1943 was appointed real estate commissioner of the State of California by Governor Warren which included membership in the Governor’s council; resigned this position March 1, 1948, to become a candidate for Congress; Novem-ber 1947 was elected president of the National Association of License Law Officials and finished term by presiding at the annual meeting at Louisville, Ky., September 6-7-8, 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoe, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (18 counties). Population (1950), 261,734. CLAIR ENGLE, Democrat, of Red Bluff, Calif.; born in the city of Bakers-field, Kern County, Calif., on September 21, 1911; graduate of the Chico State College and the University of California Hastings College of the Law; married; one daughter, Yvonne; elected district attorney of Tehama County, Calif., in 1934, reelected in 1938; elected State senator in 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held on August 31, 1943; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; assistant Democratic whip; member of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Napa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solano, and Yolo (5 counties). Popu-lation (1950), 665,770. LEROY JOHNSON, Republican, of Stockton, Calif.; born in Wausau, Wis.; graduate of University of Wisconsin (B. A.) and University of California (J. D.); lawyer; city attorney of Stockton 11 years; referee in bankruptey 2 years; during First World War served as pilot in 104th Aero Squadron; participated in St. Mihiel and Argonne drives; awarded the Silver Star Medal; married Elizabeth Alpers, of Westfield, N. J., two children—William A. and Mrs. A. D. Parr, Jr., Lancaster, S. C.; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 19, 20, 21, and 22. Population (1950), FRANCK ROBERTS HAVENNER, Democrat, of San Francisco, Calif.; born in Sherwood, Md., September 20, 1882; attended Columbian College, Washington, D. C., and Stanford University, California; newspaper writer; member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, 1926-36; elected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; appointed in January 1941 a member of the California Railroad Commission for a 6-year term; elected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FIETH DISTRICT, ~Ony OF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 23, 24, 25, and 26. Populatjon (1950), JOHN FRANCIS SHELLEY, Democrat, born in San Francisco, September 3, 1905; educated in parochial and public schools in San Francisco; graduate of Law School of University of San Francisco; elected to California State Senate, 1938; reelected 1942 without opposition; was Democratic floor leader during that period; active in San Francisco and California labor movement; married Genevieve Giles in 1932; one child, Joan Marie, student at Stanford University; elected to Eighty-first Congress, special election, November 8, 1949; reelected to Eighty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTY OF CONTRA COSTA: Assembly district 10; COUNTY OF ALAMEDA: Assembly districts 13, 14, and 15. Population (1950), 708,760. GEORGE P. MILLER, Democrat, of Alameda, Calif.; born in San Francisco, Calif., January 15, 1891; was graduated from St. Mary’s College with the degree of B. S.in C. E.; veteran of World War I, serving as lieutenant, Field Artillery, and was graduated from the School of Fire for Field Artillery at Fort Sill, Okla.; executive secretary to the California Division of Fish and Game, 1941-44; served two terms in the California State -Assembly, fifty-second and fifty-third sessions, 1937 and 1939; married Esther Perkins and they have one daughter, Mrs. Ann Miller Muir; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; re-elected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——3 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, and 18. Population (1950),322,669. JOHN J. ALLEN, Jr., Republican, of Oakland, Calif.; born in Oakland, Calif., in 1899; University of California, A. B., 1920; J. D., 1922; admitted to practice of law in 1922; now in partnership with brother, Liston O. Allen; elected to the Oakland Board of Education, 1923, served 20 years; enlisted in Navy, World War I; served in Navy 1942-45, lieutenant commander; married Carol Cook Allen; two daughters, Ramona, 23, and Suzanne, 20; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Highty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: San Benito, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz (4 counties). Population (1950), 603,268. JACK Z. ANDERSON, Republican, of San Juan Bautista, Calif.; born in Oakland, Calif., March 22, 1904; moved to Santa Cruz, Calif., at the age of 6 months, and to San Jose, Calif., in 1913; completed grammar school and attended San Jose High School; moved to San Juan, Calif., in 1925, and took over job of managing pear ranch, when his father died that same year; was actively engaged in farming until elected to Congress in 1938; married Frances Giffin, of Fresno, Calif., in 1926, and they have three daughters—Jean, Carol, and Nancy; elected to the Seventy-sixth and succeeding Congresses; member of the Committee on Armed Services. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Fresno, Madera, Merced, and Stanislaus (4 counties). Population(1950), 507,149. ALLAN OAKLEY HUNTER, Republican, of Fresno, Calif.; born in Los Angeles, Calif., June 15, 1916, son of Henry A. Hunter and Janet Oakley Hunter; received his A. B. degree from Fresno State College in 1937 and LL. B. degree from University of California in 1940; special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 1940 to 1944; U. S. Naval Reserve 1944-46, assignment: Office of Strategic Services, European Theater; private practice of law, Fresno, Calif., 1946-50, member firm of KXimble-Thomas-Jamison-Snell & Russell; married to Geene Taylor and has three children, Genella, Janet, and John; elected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Kern, Kings, and Tulare (3 counties). Population (1950), 422,139. THOMAS HAROLD WERDEL, Republican, of Bakersfield, Calif.; born in South Dakota, September 13, 1905; resided with parents in Kern County, Calif., since 1915; father, Bernard Werdel, born in Iowa, and mother, Mary Laura (Burke) Werdel, born in Chicago; they now reside in Bakersfield, Calif.; educated in the elementary schools of Kern County and Kern County Union High School; received A. B. degree in political science from the University of California at Berkeley in 1930 and LL. B. degree from Boalt Hall at the University of California at Berkeley in 1936; was admitted to practice law in California in 1936 and since then has carried on a general practice in both the State and Federal courts in California; member of the American Bar Association, the California State Bar, the Kern County Bar Association; member of California Assembly, thirty-ninth district, for legislative sessions of 1943 and 1945, and received nomination of both Republican and Democratic Parties for Representative in Congress of the Tenth Congressional District of California, in the primary election of 1948; married Rosemary Cutter and have three sons: Thomas H. Werdel, Jr., aged 16 years; Charles Cutter Werdel, aged 13 years; and Terrance John Werdel, aged 9 years; elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Monterey, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura (4 counties). Population (1950), 392,182. ERNEST KING BRAMBLETT, Republican, of 549 Hillcrest Avenue, Pacific Grove, Calif.; born in Fresno, Calif., April 25, 1901; graduate, Stanford University, 1925; postgraduate work at Stanford and University of Southern California; married Miss Lois Bowker, Lindsay, Calif.; three sons; elected to Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946; member, House Committee on Agriculture; Sub-committees, Foot and Mouth Control and Eradication, Cotton, and Migratory Farm Labor; California Delegation Committees on agriculture and highways; reelected to Eighty-first Congress, November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950. CALIFORNIA : Biographical 13 TWhLETH DISTRICT.—1L.0os ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 49, 50, and 53. Population (1950), ® PATRICK J. HILLINGS, Republican, of Arcadia, Calif.; born in Hobart Mills, Calif., February 19, 1923, son of Edward and Evangeline Hillings; educated in Southern California and attended El Monte Union and Benjamin Franklin high schools; graduate of University of Southern California (A. B. 1947, LL. B. 1949); attorney, engaged in general practice of law in Arcadia, Calif.; on active duty with United States Army from March 1943 to February 1946, with service in South Pacific; married to Phyllis Reinbrecht in 1947; one daughter, Pamela Jane; member, Kiwanis, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Junior Chamber of Commerce, Knights of Columbus, Delta Theta Phi law fraternity, Foothill Bar Association, Los Angeles Bar Association, Trojan Club; elected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; member of Committee on the Judiciary. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 54, and 56. Population(1950), 253,026. NORRIS POULSON, Republican, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born and reared on a ranch in Baker County, Oreg.; educated in the Baker schools and Oregon State College; resident of California since 1923; member of Los Angeles and California State Society of Certified Public Accountants, American Institute of Accountants; member of Certified Public Accounting Firm—Gabrielson, O’Sullivan & Poulson; Scottish Rite Mason, S. A. E. Fraternal Society, Lions Club, Los Angeles Press Club, and First Congregational Church; married to Erna June Loennig, daughter of a pioneer family of Oregon, and has three daughters—Erna Bea (Mrs. Edward Anderberg), Patricia (Mrs. John W. Willis) and Norrisa (Mrs. Alfred W. Brandt, Jr.); elected to the California Legislature in 1938 and reelected in 1940; elected to Seventy-eighth, Eightieth, Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—1Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 44, 55, 62, and 64. Population(1950), 327,533. SAMUEL WILLIAM YORTY, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; of Irish-Dutch descent; age 41; born in Nebraska; resident of California since 1927; LL. B. degree; attorney at law; married Elizabeth Louise Hensel of Chicago, Ill., Decem-ber 1, 1938; one son, William Egan Yorty, born July 6, 1946; member of California Legislature 1937-40 and 1949-50; served as captain, combat intelligence, Air Corps, in New Guinea and the Philippine Islands; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 57, 58, 63, and 65. Population (1950), 332,459. GORDON L. McDONOUGH, Republican, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Buffalo, N. Y.; educated in Pennsylvania; profession, industrial chemist; special-ized in metallurgy and explosives manufacturing; married Catherine Ann McNeil, of Niagara Falls, N. Y.; has family of seven children, five sons and two daughters; all five sons served in the armed forces in World War II; they are: Lt. Gordon L. Jr., Thomas C., and James Q. in the Navy, and Lt. Vincent 8S. and Paul M. in the Army; honorary member, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Belleau Woods Post, Los Angeles; member of executive committee of Los Angeles Metropolitan Area Council, Boy Scouts of America; honorary member, Southwest Los Angeles Kiwanis Club; received citation from Navy for aid in civilian recruiting, and from United States Treasurer for United States bonds sales; received citation from American Legion, South Los Angeles Post 488, for meritorious service rendered to veterans; received citation from Cabrillo Assembly, fourth degree Knights of Columbus for leadership in civic affairs and humanitarian problems; appointed a member of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors by the late Gov. James Rolph, Jr., of California, in August 1933; elected three successive times to 4-year terms; first chairman of Los Angeles County War Council; served as chairman of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors; served as chairman of the Los Angeles County Flood Control District; served as chairman of the Los Angeles County Sanitation District; nominated as Republican candidate for Congressman of the Fifteenth California District July 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member of Banking and Currency Committee and special committee to investigate chemicals and adulterants in food, fertilizer, and insecticides. 14 Congression al Directory CALIFORNIA SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 59, 60, and 61. Population (1950), 478,349. ® DONALD L. JACKSON, Republican, of Pacific Palisades, Calif.; born in Ipswich, S. Dak., January 23, 1910; profession: public relations, U. S. Marine Corps, 1927-31 and 1940-45; overseas combat service, 2 years; married; elected to the KEightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first ono on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November , 1950. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 46, 66, 67, and 68. Popula. tion (1950), 650,471. CECIL R. KING, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Youngstown, Fort Niagara, N. Y., January 13, 1898; educated in the public schools of Los Angeles; businessman; married; one child; veteran of the First World War; mem-ber of the California State Legislature, 1932-42; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on August 25, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member, House Ways and Means Committee; chairman, Subcommittee on Administration of Internal Revenue Laws. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY, Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population(1950), 568,413. CLYDE DOYLE, Democrat, of Long Beach, Calif.; born in Oakland, Calif., July 11, 1887; father, Thomas Doyle; mother, Nettie Gilman Doyle; attended grammar school in Oakland, Calif., and Seattle, Wash.; graduated from Long Beach High School in 1909; graduated from the College of Law of the University of Southern California with LL. B. degree on June 17, 1917; continued to attend College of Law after successfully passing Supreme Court examination in 1916; began law practice in 1916 at Long Beach, Calif., in law firm of Haskell, Keeler & Doyle; by popular vote, elected president of Board of Freeholders, Long Beach, in 1921; subsequently was elected by public vote to serve on Board of Free-holders and draw the city charter of Long Beach; organizing president and first member of Kiwanis Club of Long Beach; first president of Boy Scout Council of Boy Scouts of America, Long Beach, Calif.; chairman for several years of tuber-culosis stamp sales; counsel and member of board of trustees of Adelaide Tichenor Hospital-School for Crippled Children; served as attorney and as member of board of directors of Long Beach Y. M. C. A.; member of board of trustees of California Junior Republic; president, Long Beach Recreation Commission, for about 15 years; president, Long Branch Coordinating Council, 1934; honorary member of National Recreation Association for about 10 years; member board of directors of California Conference of Social Work, 1934; honorary member of Long Beach 20-30 Club; past president, Long Beach Trojan Club; received Meritorious Citizenship Award in the Inter-allied Council of Service Clubs, Long Beach, Calif., April 1936; member California State Bar Legislation Committee, 1948-49 and 1950-51; member of the Judiciary Committee of the Los Angeles Bar Asso-ciation; member of the Board of Trustees Conference of Bar Delegates—State Bar of California; president, Abraham Lincoln Club; vice president, National City Bank of Long Beach; served as counsel during World War I on exemption board on volunteer basis with no salary; member of California State Board of Education; legal counsel for Superintendent of Banks for California; married in 1914 to Lydia Yeomans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Yeomans, early Long Beach pioneers; three children—Lydia Louise Doyle, owner and director of a private nursery school; First Lt. Clyde Doyle, Jr., served in Army Air Corps (deceased, a war casualty); and Mrs. Richard Stanton (Dorothy Doyle) who is the mother of two grandsons Dan-Doyle Stanton, 4 years old, and Clyde Douglas, aged 114 years; member of the First Congregational Church, Long Beach, and of Masonic Lodge, Sciots and Knights Templar; elected to the Seventy-ninth Con-gress on November 7, 1944; was Democratic nominee and elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; senior partner of the law firm of Clyde Doyle and Preston W. Johnson, 612 Jergins Trust Building, Suite 12, Long Beach, Calif.; reelected November 7, 1950, as member of Eighty-second Congress; mem-ber Committee on Armed Services and Special Lobby Investigation Committee, Eighty-first Congress; member of Committee on Un-American Activities and Committee on Armed Services, Eighty-second Congress. CALIFORNIA B 1ographical 15 NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 40, 51, and 52. Population (1950), 319,171. CHET HOLIFIELD, Democrat, of Montebello, Calif.; born in Mayfield, Ky., December 3, 1903, son of Ercie V. and Bessie Lee (O’Brady) Holifield; educated in the public schools of Arkansas; resided in Montebello, Calif., since 1920; en-gaged in manufacturing and selling of men’s apparel for 25 years; member of the Christian Church; delegate to the Democratic National Conventions in 1940, 1944, and 1948; married Miss Vernice Caneer and they have four daughters— Lois Anita (Mrs. William Mulholland), Betty Lee (Mrs. Robert H. Feldmann), Willa Mae (Mrs. Donald Lee Douglas), and Jo Ann; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, as the first representative from the newly reapportioned Nineteenth Congressional District of California, receiving 34,722 votes to his opponent’s 20,033; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; on November 7, 1950, reelected to the Eighty-second Congress, receiving 72,616 votes to his opponent’s 7,498; member, President’s Special Evaluation Commission on Atomic Bomb Tests at Bikini Atoll; member of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments (chairman of Subcommittee on Executive and Legisla-tive Reorganization), and Foreign Affairs. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population(1950), 654,111. : CARL HINSHAW, Republican, of Pasadena, Calif.; born in Chicago, Ill., July 28, 1894; son of William Wade and Anna Williams Hinshaw; educated in Chicago public schools: Valparaiso University, Indiana; Princeton University (degree, civil engineer, 1916); University of Michigan (postgraduate in business administration, 1916-17); enlisted in United States Army, May 8, 1917; served in American Expeditionary Forces, and resigned as captain, Corps of Engineers, September 1919, returning to Chicago; was employed first as a laborer and then . progressed to various managerial capacities in automotive manufacturing and sales until 1927; then entered the investment-banking field and was employed to conduct negotiations in reorganization and consolidation of industries; moved to Pasadena, Calif., in February 1929 and entered the real-estate and insurance business; became active in civic affairs and politics; married; two sons; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member, American Society Civil Engineers, Society Automotive Engineers, Institute of the Aeronautical Sciences, and honorary member, Institute of Navigation. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly district 41. County of San Bernardino. Population (1950), 345,975. HARRY R. SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Yucaipa, Calif.; born in Mobile, Ala., January 10, 1885; educated in common schools and university; studied law 3 years; entered transportation department of the Santa Fe Railroad; active committee member of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; thence engaged in copper business in Alaska; traveled in three continents in behalf of business interests; married to Miss Kay Olson, May 24, 1933; developed King’s Beverage and King’s Laboratories Corporations and served as president and general manager of the latter interests until 1934, at which time he retired from active business; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Imperial, Orange, and Riverside (3 counties). Popula-tion (1950), 446,033. JOHN PHILLIPS, Republican, of Banning, Calif.; born in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., September 1887; attended the public schools and Haverford (Pa.) College, holding teaching fellowship; during the First World War served in the United States Army, 1917-19; has lived in California since 1924; served in the California Assembly and Senate from 1932 until his resignation to represent the Twenty-second District in Congress; married; three children; member of the Triangle Society, University and Cosmos Clubs (Washington), San Francisco Press Club, Los Angeles Press Club, National Press Club (Washington), Adventurers Club, Congressional Directory COLORADO Masonic fraternity, B. P. O. E., Commonwealth Club (San Francisco), American Legion, D. A. V., Regular Veterans Association, Kiwanis Club; Presbyterian; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: San Diego. Population (1950), 535,967. CLINTON D. McKINNON, Democrat, of San Diego, Calif.; born in Dallas, Tex., February 5, 1906; moved to California in 1918, attending public schools and graduating from the University of Redlands in 1930; attended the University of Geneva, Switzerland, on a scholarship and spent 6 months hitchhiking through Europe and working his way round the world in the merchant marine; married Lucille Virginia McVey in 1932; they have three children, Dan 17, Mike 12, and Connie 8; after spending several years as a reporter, editor, and advertising man-ager on several Southern California newspapers, he established his own newspaper, the San Fernando Valley Times, in 1935; added three other newspapers within the next few years in and around Los Angeles; sold his interests in 1943, moved to San Diego and established the San Diego Daily Journal, the only successful metro-politan-newspaper to be started in recent years; established San Diego’s first 5,000-watt radio station in 1946, outlet for CBS; last year sold both the newspaper and the radio station upon his decision to enter the congressional race; has been active in many community affairs and organizations, serving as vice president of the San Diego California Club, treasurer of the Community Chest, chairman of the Urban League Demonstration-Study Group, chairman of the Juvenile Delinquency Prevention Committee of the Community Welfare Council, director in the Red Cross, San Diego Chamber of Commerce, Indoor Sports Association, and Star Light Opera Association, and an officer of Alpha Phi Gamma; also holds membership in the Rotary Club, Sales and Advertising Club, and other civic and social bodies; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. COLORADO (Population (1950), 1,325,089) SENATORS EDWIN CARL JOHNSON, Democrat; born in Scandia, Kans., January 1, 1884; raised on a cattle ranch in western Nebraska; homesteaded in north-western Colorado; operated Farmers’ Cooperative Milling Elevator and produce business, a farmers’ cooperative, for 10 years at Craig, Colo.; served four terms in the Colorado House of Representatives, one term as Lieutenant Governor, and two terms as Governor; married to Fern Armitage, Kenesaw, Nebr., in 1907, and they have one daughter—Mrs. Janet Grace Howsam, of Denver, Colo., and one adopted daughter, Mrs. Henry Arrance, of Denver, Colo.; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936; reelected on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949; reelected on November 2, 1948, for the term ending Jan-uary 3, 1955. EUGENE DONALD MILLIKIN, Republican, of Denver, Colo.; born at Hamilton, Ohio, February 12, 1891; son of Dr. Samuel H. and Mary Millikin; graduated from Law School of University of Colorado in 1913; executive secre-tary to Gov. George A. Carlson, Colorado, 1915-17; enlisted as a private in Colo-rado National Guard in 1917; served in United States with Thirty-fourth Division and in France with Forty-second, Sixth, and Seventh Divisions and Fourth Corps, and with Army of Occupation in Germany with Sixth Division; was com-missioned captain and major of Infantry and lieutenant colonel of Engineers; graduated from General Staff College at Langres, France; received Pershing cita-tion for distinguished and meritorious service; associate in law and business of the late United States Senator Karl C. Schuyler from 1919 to latter's death in 1933; married Mrs. Delia Alsena Schuyler on January 30, 1935; no children; appointed United States Senator December 20, 1941, by Gov. Ralph L. Carr, Colorado; elected November 3, 1942, to complete term of the late Senator Alva B. Adams expiring January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for 6-year term; reelected November 7, 1950, for 6-year term. COLORADO B 1ographical 17 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City AND COUNTY OF DENVER. Population (1950), 415,786. BYRON GILES ROGERS, Democrat, of Denver, Colo.; born August 1, 1900, in Hunt County, Tex., son of Peter and Minnie M. (Gentry) Rogers; graduated public schools, Checotah, Okla., 1919; served in United States Army 1918; at-tended University of Oklahoma 1919-22, Universities of Colorado and Denver 1923-25, LL. B. degree; practiced law Las Animas, Colo., 1925-33; city attorney of Las Animas and county attorney of Bent County, Colo.; member of Colorado General Assembly 1931-35 (speaker 1933); Department of Agriculture and N. R. A., Washington, D. C., 1933-34; assistant United States attorney, District of Colorado, 1934-36; appointed attorney general of Colorado, July 3, 1936; elected attorney general 1936-38; State chairman Democratic State Central Committee of Colorado 1941-42; public member War Labor Board 1942-45; county chairman, Denver Democratic Central Committee, 1945-50; married; two children, Ann 16 and Byron, Jr., 14; member of the First Baptist Church of Denver, Phi Alpha Delta; Denver, Colorado, and American Bar Association, Lions International, . Mystic Shrine, B. P. O. E., American Legion, I. O. O. F., Disabled American Veterans (life member) ; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Douglas, Elbert, Gilpin, Jefferson, Kit Carson, Larimer, Lincoln, Logan, Morgan, Phillips, Sedgwick, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (19 counties). Population (1950), 399,213. -WILLIAM 8. HILL, Republican, of Fort Collins, Colo.; born in Kelly, Kans., January 20, 1886; attended Kansas State Normal and Colorado State College of Agriculture; homesteaded in eastern Colorado; superintendent, Cache la Poudre Consolidated School of Larimer County, Colo., 1919; from 1919 to 1923 was associated with Colorado Agricultural College as county agriculturist, special-izing in boys’ and girls’ 4-H Club work; in 1947 the Colorado A. and M. College conferred an honorary doctor of science degree; secretary, Colorado State Farm Bureau, 1923; twice elected to Colorado State Legislature, 1924-26; manager, Standard Mercantile Co., Fort Collins, Colo., since 1927; private secretary, 1939, to Governor Carr, of Colorado; married in 1907 to Rachel Trower; two children— Alden T. Hill, attorney, of Fort Collins, Colo., and Mrs. Marjorie Hunter, of Fort Collins, Colo.; Presbyterian, Elk, I. O. O. F., Rotarian; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNnTIES: Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Conejos, Costilla, Crowley, Custer, El Paso, Fremont, Huerfano, Kiowa, Las Animas, Mineral, Otero, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Grande, Saguache, and Teller (19 counties). Population (1950), 333,419. J. EDGAR CHENOWETH, Republican, of Trinidad, Colo., where he was born on August 17, 1897, the son of Thomas Beaseman and Esther Rebecca Chenoweth, pioneer settlers in southern Colorado from Maryland; educated in Trinidad public schools and graduated from Trinidad High School in 1915; attended the University of Colorado at Boulder, 1915-16; worked for the Colorado and Southern Railroad, Continental Oil Co., and Colorado Supply Co., wholesale grocers, in Trinidad; studied law in his spare time and was admitted to the Colorado bar in 1925; began the practice of law in Trinidad the following year; served as assistant district attorney for Third Judicial District of Colorado from 1929 to 1933; appointed county judge of Las Animas County in 1933 to fill a vacancy; was elected in 1934, and reelected in 1936, being the only Republican elected in Las Animas County in both elections; elected chairman of the Republi-can State Central Committee of Colorado in 1937 and continued until nominated for Congress in 1940; married Ruth Ollevia Crews in 1919 and has five children— William, Wanda, Jack, James, and Ruth Anne; member of Board of Trustees of Colorado Woman’s College, Denver; former member of Board of Governors of Colorado Bar Association; Baptist, Rotarian, Mason, Eagle; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942, the Seventy-ninth Congress in 1944, and the Eightieth Congress in 1946; member of House Rules Committee in Eightieth Congress and secretary of Republican Congressional Committee; defeated in 1948 for reelection by 1802 votes, and elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Archuleta, Chaffee, Delta, Dolores, Eagle, Garfield, Grand, Gunni-son, Hinsdale, Jackson, Lake, La Plata, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Ouray, Park, Pitkin, Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, San Miguel, and Summit (24 counties). Population (1950), 172,560. WAYNE NORVIEL ASPINALL, Democrat, of Palisade, Colo.; born in Mid-dleburg, Ohio, April 3, 1896, the oldest child of Mack Aspinall and Jessie Edna Congressional Directory CONNECTICUT Norviel Aspinall, who moved to Colorado in 1904 and settled in Palisade, engag-ing in the peach-orchard industry; educated in the Mt. Lincoln public and high schools of Palisade, Colo.; graduated from the University of Denver, A. B. degree in 1919, and from the Denver Law School, LL. B. degree, in 1925; admitted to the Colorado bar in 1925; taught school in 1919, 1921, and 1925-33; also engaged in the practice of law and the peach-orchard industry; president of the school board 1920-22; member of board of trustees, town of Palisade 1926-34; member of the State house of representatives 1931-38, serving as Democratic whip in 1931 and 1933 and as speaker in 1937 and 1938; member of the State senate 1939-48, serving as Democratic whip in 1939, majority floor leader in 1941, and as minority floor leader 1943-45-47; during the First World War served in the air service of the Signal Corps as a corporal and staff sergeant and was discharged as a flying cadet soon after the armistice; during World War II was commissioned a captain in military governmentin 1943, serving overseas as a legal expert with the American and English forces, participating in the Normandy drive as an American officer with the English Second Army; during college years was a mem-ber of social fraternity of Beta Theta Pi, the legal fraternity of Phi Delta Phi, and the honorary biological fraternity of Phi Sigma; is a member of Blue Lodge of the Masonic Fraternity, Knights Templar, Scottish Rite, Mystic Shrine, I. O. 0. F., American Legion, Forty and Eight, B. P. O. E., Lions International, the Farmers Educational and Cooperative Union of America, and the Mesa County and Colorado bar associations; member of the Methodist Church; elected chair-man of the State Democratic Central Committee of Colorado, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Central Committee of the Fourth Congressional Dis-trict of Colorado, and chairman of the Mesa County Democratic Central Com-mittee; married Julia Edith Kuns of Lincoln, Nebr., January 27, 1920; four children: Wayne Norviel 2d, Owen Stewart, Richard Daniel, and Ruth JoAnne; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. CONNECTICUT (Population (1950), 2,007,280) SENATORS BRIEN McMAHON, Democrat, of Norwalk, Conn., was born in Norwalk, Conn., on October 6, 1903; attended the Norwalk public and high schools; was graduated from Fordham University with B. A. degree in 1924 and from the law school of Yale University with LL. B. degree in 1927; LL. D. Fordham 1946; judge, City Court of Norwalk, 1933; served as special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1933-35; served as Assistant Attorney General of the United States from 1935 to 1939 and was in charge of the Department of Justice Criminal Division; married Miss Rosemary Turner in February 1940 and they have one daughter, Patricia, age 11; elected United States Senator November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected November 7, 1950, for term Shins January 3, 1957; author, McMahon Act for the Control of Atomic nergy. WILLIAM BENTON, Democrat, of Southport, Conn., was born in Min-neapolis, Minn., April 1, 1900, the son of Charles and Elma Caroline (Hixson) Benton; attended Shattuck Military Academy, Faribault, Minn., and Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., 1917-18, and was graduated from Yale University with A. B. degree in 1921; while at Yale served in Student Army Training Corps; married Miss Helen Hemingway, of Connecticut, June 12, 1928; they have four children: Charles, Helen, Louise, and John; worked in New York and Chicago for advertising agencies until 1929 when, in partnership with Chester Bowles (former Governor of Connecticut) founded the firm of Benton & Bowles; in 1932 estab-lished residence in Connecticut where his Benton ancestors had been born for eight generations; resigned as board chairman of Benton & Bowles in 1936 and sold his interest in the firm; became vice president of the University of Chicago in 1937, on a half-time basis, and continued until 1945; served as Assistant Secretary of State in Washington in charge of public affairs, from August 31, 1945, to September 30, 1947; member of United States Delegation at six international conferences, on three occasions as delegation chairman: First General Conference of UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) at Paris, 1946; Second General Conference of UNESCO at Mexico City, 1947; CONNECTICUT Biographical and United Nations Conference on Freedom of Information, Geneva, Switzer- land, 1948; member advisory committee Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs, beginning in 1940 and vice chairman, United States Commission, Inter-American Development Commission; served as vice chairman, Committee for Economic Development, and vice chairman of CED Research and Policy Committee, from 1942 on except during tenure in State Department; became chairman of board and publisher Encyclopaedia Britannica, Ine., February 1943, and chairman of the board of Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inec., relinquishing these posts during tenure in State Department and resuming them October 1947; became chairman of the board in 1947 of the Muzak Corporation, a company which he has owned for 10 years; became a trustee of the University of Chicago in 1947 and of Carleton College in 1948; awarded honorary doctor of laws degree, Uni- versity of Louisville, 1948; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Chester Bowles to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Raymond E. Baldwin, who resigned effective December 17, 1949, and elected November 7, 1950. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 2,007,280. ANTONI NICHOLAS SADLAK, Republican, of Rockville, Conn.; born at Rockville June 13, 1908; was graduated from St. Joseph’s Parochial School, George Sykes Manual Training and High School, both at Rockville, and was graduated with an LL. B. degree from Georgetown University School of Law, Washington, D. C., after completing the prelegal courses at Georgetown College; former assistant secretary-treasurer of the Hartford Production Credit Associa-tion at Hartford, Conn., and former special inspector, Special Inspections Divi-sion, United States Department of Justice, serving from July 1941 through Decem-ber 1942; executive secretary to Congressman-at-Large B. J. Monkiewicz of Connecticut during Seventy-sixth and Seventy-eighth Congresses, resigning in March 1944 to accept commission in United States Naval Reserve; following indoctrination at Fort Schuyler, N. Y., and graduation from School of Naval Communications at Harvard, was assigned as communications watch officer and top secret officer on staff of Admiral Thomas C. Kinkaid, commander of Seventh Fleet; duty afloat and ashore in New Guinea, the Philippines, and China; married on May 30, 1939, to Alfreda Janina Zalewska; they have two children, Antoni, Jr., and Alita; member of American Legion, Veterans Foreign Wars, Polish Legion American Veterans, Naval Order of United States—New York Commandery; Loyal Order of Moose, Tolland County Farm Bureau; American delegate, Interparlimentary Union, Istanbul, Turkey, 1951; elected to Eightieth Congress; reelected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FIRST DISTRICT.—County: Hartford. Population (1950), 536,232. ABRAHAM A. RIBICOFF, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn.; born in New Britain, Conn.; graduateof University of Chicago Law School, LL. B. degree, cum laude; member of Connecticut Legislature 1938-42; judge of Hartford Police Court 1941-43 and 1945-47; chairman of the assembly of municipal court judges for the State of Connecticut; chairman of the commission on study of alcoholism and crime; member of the Charter Revision Commission of the city of Hartford; hearing examiner for the State of Connecticut Fair Employment Practices Act; secretary of the Hartford County Bar Association; married, two children; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950; member of the Foreign Affairs Committee. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties). Population (1950), 315,806. HORACE SEELY-BROWN, Jr., Republican; home address, Pomfret Center, Conn. ; fruit farmer; born, Kensington, Md., May 12, 1908; graduated, Hoosac School, Hoosick, N. Y., 1925; Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y., B. S., 1929; honors in chemistry and physics; Yale University Graduate School, 1929-30; head of science department, Pomfret School, Pomfret, Conn. (preparatory school for boys), 1937-43; served in World War II as air operations officer, Carrier Aircraft Service Unit, No. 2, in the Pacific, 1943-46; married Rosalie Slack, New York, 1933; three children, Rosalie, Constance, and Horace Seely-Brown 3d; elected to Eightieth Congress, served as Representative of Second District, 1947-48; defeated for reelection, November 1948; in addition to fruit farming . (apples and peaches) returned to teaching at Salisbury (preparatory) School, Congressional Directory DELAWARE Salisbury, Conn.; elected to Eighty-second Congress, only Republican from New England to defeat incumbent Democrat in either House; former State chair- man, Connecticut Young Republicans; former chairman, Republican Town Committee of Pomfret; former president, Windham County Young Republican Clubs; member, Wolf Den Grange, No. 61, Abington, Conn.; Putnam Lodge of Elks, No. 574; Albert Breault Post, No. 1523, Putnam, Veterans of Foreign Wars; Covell-Ayers Post, No. 170, Putnam, American Legion; AMVETS of World War II; Military Order of World Wars; Reserve Officers of the United States; Eastern Connecticut Council, Boy Scouts of America; Connecticut Public Welfare Association; Winthrop Chapter, No. 250, Order of Ahepa; Windham County Kennel Club; Windham County Farmers’ Association; Connecticut Pomological Society; recreation, hunting and fishing. THIRD DISTRICT.—NEw HAVEN COUNTY: Towns of Bethany, Branford, Cheshire, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Millford, New Haven, North Branford, North Haven, Orange, Wallingford, West Haven, and Woodridge. Population (1950), 366,309. JOHN ANDREW McGUIRE, Democrat, of Wallingford, Conn.; born at Wallingford, Conn., February 28, 1906, the son of the late John J. McGuire and Katherine Barry McGuire, educated at Wallingford public schools, Lyman Hall, and Dartmouth College; married Dorothy M. Martin on July 6, 1936, and they have two children, John Martin and Lois Ann; operates his own general insurance business; for sixteen years town clerk of Wallingford, having been elected for eight consecutive two-year terms; for eight years president of the Connecticut Town Clerks Association; also member of the National Association of Town and City Clerks; former chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee of Connecticut; fraternally a member of Lambda Chi Alpha, John Barry Assembly Knights of Columbus (Fourth Degree), Wallingford Club, Wallingford Lodge of Elks, No. 1365, Owenoco Tribe Improved Order of Red Men, and the Knights of St. Patrick of New Haven; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; member of Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. FOURTH DISTRICT.—County: Fairfield. Population (1950), 502,832. ALBERT P. MORANO, Republican, of Greenwich, Conn.; born Paterson, N. J., January 20, 1908; secretary to former Representative Dr. Albert E. Austin, Seventy-sixth Congress, and secretary to former Representative Clare Boothe Luce, Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; unemployment commissioner for the Fourth Congressional District of Connecticut from January 1947 to August 1, 1950; chairman of the commission from January 1949 to August 1, 1950; married, two children: son, Anthony Albert, 18 years; daughter, Clare Ann, 6; elected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—L11cHFIELD COUNTY, NEW HAVEN COUNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Wolcott. Population (1950), 273,584. JAMES THOMAS PATTERSON, Republican, of Watertown, Conn.; born in Naugatuck, Conn., October 20, 1908; educated in Naugatuck grammar and high school; Peekskill Military Academy, Peekskill, N. Y., 1929; Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., 1933; University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fla., 1934; and National University Law School, Washington, D. C., 1939; married to former Jeanne Kinsman, of Washington, D. C.; three children, Jim, Jr., Ann Hayden, and Jeanne Marie; entered active duty with United States Marine Corps September 14, 1941; graduated from Officers Candidate School; honorably dis-charged from the United States Marine Corps July 17, 1946, with rank of major; member of American Legion, V. F. W., D. A. V,, Marine Corps League, Elks, Delta Theta Phi, Eagles, Ahepa and Exchange Club; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on Novem-ber 2, 1948, and the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950 DELAWARE (Population (1950), 318,085) SENATORS JOHN J. WILLIAMS, Republican, of Millsboro, Sussex County, Del.; born on a farm near Frankford, Del., in Sussex County, May 17, 1904; attended Frank-ford High School; moved to Millsboro, Del., in 1922, and entered grain business FLORIDA Biographical at age of 18 years; member of Methodist Church; Mason; Shriner; Rotarian; married to Elsie E. Steele, of Millsboro, Del., May 4, 1924; one child, Blanche W., Baker; two grandchildren, Janet Rae Baker and Lora W. Baker; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953. JOSEPH ALLEN FREAR, Jr., Democrat, of Dover, Del.; born on a farm near Rising Sun, Del., March 7, 1903; son of Joseph Allen Frear and Clara Lowber Frear; educated at Rising Sun rural school, Caesar Rodney High School; B. S. degree, University of Delaware; honorary LL.D. degree, Bethany College; married February 11, 1933, to Miss Esther Viola Schauer of Hartford, Wis.; two children, Fred Frear, born April 19, 1934, and Clara Louise Frear, born "November 15, 1942; one sister, Mrs. J. W Wilson, Dover: an agriculturist; member of People’s Church, Dover; Masonic bodies; Rotary Club; Sigma Nu F raternity; American Legion V.F.W.: ; director of Farmer’s Bank, Dover: Baltimore Trust Company, Camden; veteran of World War II; elected to United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for term of 6 years. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 318,085. JAMES CALEB BOGGS, Republican, of Wilmington, Del.; born in Kent County, Del.,, May 15, 1909; educated in the rural schools of Delaware: A. B. degree, University of Delaware, and LL. B. degree, Georgetown University, Washington, D. C.; married Elizabeth Muir; two children, James Caleb Boggs, Jr., born October 31, 1934, and Marilu Boggs, born June 29, 1946; member of the bar of the State of Delaware and the United States Supreme Court; veteran of World War II; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FLORIDA (Population (1950), 2,771,305) SENATORS SPESSARD LINDSEY HOLLAND, Democrat, of Bartow, Fla.; born at Bar-tow, Fla. July 10, 1892; son of Benjamin Franklin and Fannie V. (Spessard) Holland; married Mary Agnes Groover, of Lakeland, Fla., February 8, 1919; four children—S. L., Jr., Mary Groover, William B., and Ivanhoe; graduated, Bartow public schools; Ph. B. (magna cum laude), Emory College, 1912; LL.B., University of Florida, 1916; honorary LL. D., Rollins College, 1941, Florida Southern College, 1941, Emory University, 1943; taught in public schools, Warrenton, Ga., 1912-14; practiced law in Bartow, Fla., since 1916; prosecuting attorney, Polk County, Fla., 1919-20; county judge, Polk County, Fla., two terms, 1921-29; member, Florida State Senate, two terms, 1932-40; Governor of Florida, 1941-45; served with Coast Artillery Corps in all grades through captain, United States Army, World War I; served as aerial observer Twenty-fourth Squadron, Army Air Corps in France; awarded Distinguished Service Cross, 1918; Methodist; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; a Kiwanian, Mason, Shriner, Elk; member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Tau’ Omega, Phi Delta Phi; trustee, Emory University, and former trustee, Southern College; member, ‘Florida State and American Bar Associa-tions; member, Executive Council University of Florida Alumni Association since 1924 (president, 1931); Democratic nominee to United States Senate from Florida, May 7, 1946; appointed September 25, 1946, by Governor Caldwell to succeed the late Charles O. Andrews in the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947; elected November 5, 1946, for full term ending January 3, 1953 GEORGE ARMISTEAD SMATHERS, Democrat, of Miami, Fla.; born in Atlantic City, N. J., November 14, 1913; son of Frank Smathers and Lura Jones Smathers; moved to Miami in 1919 and educated in public schools of Dade County, la. ; received A. B. degree, University of Florida, and LL. B. degree, College of Law, University of Florida; admitted to Florida Bar in 1938; married 29 Congressional Directory FLORIDA Rosemary Townley in 1939 and has two sons, John and Bruce; appointed assistant United States district attorney in 1940; resigned in 1942 to enter Marine Corps; discharged from the Marine Corps in October 1945; appointed special assistant to the Attorney General upon discharge from service; resigned in January 1946, to enter campaign for Congress; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hardee, Hernando, Highlands, Hillsborough, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, and Sarasota (9 counties). Population (1950), 642,638. CHESTER BARTOW McMULLEN, Democrat, of Clearwater, Pinellas County, Fla.; born in Largo, Fla., December 6, 1902; graduate of Largo High School in 1920 and of the college of law of the University of Florida, LL. B degree, in 1924; admittedto the bar in 1924; served as Pinellas County prosecuting at-torney 1927-28; elected State attorney, Sixth Judicial Circuit, Florida, in 1930 and served until coming to Congress; partner of law firm of McMullen, McMullen & Pogue, Clearwater, Fla.; member of Shrine, Elks, Loyal Order of Moose, past president and member of Clearwater Rotary Club and past president and -member of Clearwater Bar Association, Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity; director of the First National Bank of Clearwater; member of Methodist Church; married Veda E. Ulmer in 1923; has two children, a son, Chester B., Jr., and a daughter, Elizabeth, and two grandchildren, Chester B., 3d and Martha Ellis Mc¢cMullen; hobbies—fishing and golf (made a hole in one, twice); elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Dixie, Duval, Gilchrist, Hamilton, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Nassau, Suwannee, Taylor, and Union (16 counties). Popula- tion (1950), 502,835. CHARLES E. BENNETT, Democrat, of Jacksonville, Fla.; born in Canton, N. Y., December 2, 1910; moved to Tampa, Fla., in 1913 and to Jacksonville, Fla., in 1932; educatedin Tampa public schools and University of Florida (presi-dent of student body in 1934; B. A. and J. D. degrees in 1934) ; received honorary degree of Doctor of Humanities from University of Tampa in 1950; practiced law in Jacksonville since 1934; president of Jacksonville Junior Chamber of Commerce in 1939; served as member of Florida House of Representatives in 1941; enlisted March 13, 1942, and served 58 months in Infantry in World War II, including guerrilla activity in the Philippines; awarded Silver Star; discharged as captain January 13, 1947; affiliated with Disabled American Veterans, American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars; is a deacon in the Riverside Avenue Christian Church; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTties: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (16 counties). Population (1950), 402,248. : ROBERT L. F. SIKES, Democrat, of Crestview, Okaloosa County, Fla.; born at Isabella, Worth County, Ga., June 3, 1906, son of Ben F. and Clara Ford Sikes; farm reared; received bachelor’s degree, University of Georgia, 1927; master’s, University of Florida, 1929; married Inez Tyner of Laurel Hill, Fla.; two children, Mrs. Edward F. Wicke and Robert Keyes; publisher; elected chairman, county Democratic executive committee, 1934; served with Democratic National Com-mittee, 1936 to 1946, during national elections; elected to Florida State Legis- lature in 1936 and 1938; member of Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Zeta, Sigma Delta Chi, Phi Sigma, Alpha Gamma Rho, Masons, Grotto, Knights Templar, Shrine, Knights of Pythias, Moose, B. P. O. E., V. F. W., American Legion, Military Order World War; president, Florida Press Association, 1937; lieutenant governor, Kiwanis, 1940; honorary member, Rotary and Lions; Methodist; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Collier, Dade, and Monroe (3 counties). Population (1950), 520,300. WILLIAM (BILL) COURTLAND LANTAFF, Democrat, Miami Springs, Fla.; born at Buffalo, N. Y., July 31, 1913; moved to Jacksonville, Fla., 1921; to Miami, Fla., 1929; graduated Miami High School, 1930; received A. B. degree, University of Florida, 1935, and LL. B. degree, 1936; at university was president of Phi Kappa Tau Social Fraternity and Florida Blue Key Honorary Fraternity; FLORIDA Biographical president of student body (summer session, 1935); secretary-treasurer of studentbody; member of law firm of Walton, Hubbard, Schroeder, Lantaff & Atkins,Miami; assistant city judge of Miami Beach, 1939-40; president of Miami Beach Junior Chamber of Commerce 1937-38; president of Dade County Young Demo-cratic Club 1946-47; elected to Florida House of Representatives 1946, 1948; served two terms as member of Dade County delegation which was voted in 1949 as the most outstanding and most effective in legislature; chairman of House Committee on Governmental Reorganization; chairman of Joint House-Senate Governmental Survey Committee; chairman of Joint House-Senate Legislative Council; voted by Florida Junior Chamber of Commerce as one of five outstanding citizens in Florida (1948); commissioned second lieutenant, FA-Res, at Uni-versity of Florida (1934); inducted into Federal service with Florida National Guard as first lieutenant on January 6, 1941; discharged from armed forces November 15, 1945, as lieutenant colonel, having served as executive officer for the Military Intelligence Division, War Department General Staff; again on active duty from September 15 to December 15, 1950; married to former Betty Wilcox of Miami Beach; they have three children—W. Courtland Lantaff 2d, Kent, and Cathy; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brevard, Citrus, Flagler, Lake, Marion, Orange, Osceola, Putnam, St. Johns, Seminole, Sumter, and Volusia (12 counties). Population (1950), 390,365. ALBERT SYDNEY HERLONG, Jr., Democrat, of Leesburg, Lake County, Fla.; born February 14, 1909, in Manistee, Ala., son of Albert Sydney and Cora Knight Herlong; moved to Florida in 1912; educated in public schools of Sumter and Lake Counties; graduated from Leesburg High School in 1925, and from the law college of the University of Florida in 1930; married December 26, 1930, to Mary Alice Youmans of Fairfax, S. C., and has four daughters, Mary Alice, Margaret, and the twins, Dorothy and Sydney; engaged in the practice of law in Leesburg from 1930 to 1937; elected county judge in 1936, reelected in 1940 and 1944; has served as treasurer of Lake County Chamber of Commerce since 1937; past president of Florida State Baseball League; past president Leesburg Cham-ber of Commerce; past president Leesburg Kiwanis Club; past lieutenant governor of Kiwanis International; past president Florida County Judges’ Association; past president University of Florida Alumni Association; past president Young Democrats of Lake County; city attorney, city of Leesburg; member of Methodist Church; Kiwanis; Advisory Council, Florida Institute of Government; F. & A. M. (thirty-second degree); Ancient and Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine : Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; Independent Order of Odd Fellows; Loyal Order of Moose; Knights of Pythias; associate member, Junior Chamber of Commerce; member State Democratic Executive Committee; Pi Kappa Phi; honorary member, Florida Blue Key Honor Fraternity; held Reserve commission as captain in Army, called to active duty in August 1941, placed on inactive status in September 1941, because of asthma, honorably discharged in 1942; served two enlistments in Florida State Guard; elected to the Eighty-first Con-gress on November 2, 1948; nominated without opposition and elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. ; SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broward, Charlotte, De Soto, Glades, Hendry, Indian River, Lee, Martin, Okeechobee, Palm Beach, and St. Lucie (11 counties). Population (1950), 285,350. DWIGHT L. ROGERS, Democrat, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was born near Reidsville, Tattnall County, Ga., August 17, 1886, son of William Millard and Augusta Laing Rogers; educated in the public schools of Reidsville and Locust Grove Institute; was graduated from the University of Georgia (B.-S. degree) in 1909 and from the law department, Mercer University (L. B. degree) in 1910: admitted to bar for the practice of law at Ocilla, Ga., with his brother, H. L. Rogers, until 1925, at which time he moved to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and engaged in the practice of law with John E. Morris; representative from Broward County in the Florida Legislature from 1930 to 1938; speaker pro tempore of the house in 1933; father of the “Florida homestead amendment’; member of Century of Progress (World’s Fair at Chicago); chairman of Appeal Board No. 4, of the Selective Service System for 3} years; member of Methodist Church, Phi Delta Theta (Georgia Gamma), Sphinx (University of Georgia), Kiwanian; married Miss Florence Roberts, of Atlanta, Ga., November 15, 1916; they have three children—Dwight L., Jr. (lieutenant commander U. S. N. R.), Paul G. (major in the Army), and Doyle, attending University of Florida; elected as first Con-gressman from the Sixth Congressional District of Florida to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 24 Congressional Directory GEORGIA GEORGIA (Population (1950), 3,444,578) SENATORS WALTER FRANKLIN GEORGE, Democrat, of Vienna, Ga., was born January 29, 1878; was elected on November 7, 1922, to the Senate vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Thomas E. Watson; reelected on November 2, 1926, again on November 8, 1932, again on November 8, 1938, again on November 7, 1944, and again on November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957; married Lucy Heard, 1903; two sons, Heard F. George and Joseph Marcus George (killed in action). RICHARD BREVARD RUSSELL, Democrat, of Winder, was born at Winder, Ga., November 2, 1897; graduated from Seventh District Agricultural and Mechanical School, Powder Springs, 1914; from Gordon Institute, 1915; and from the University of Georgia, B. L. degree, 1918; practiced law at Winder, Ga.; member of the American Legion; representative from Barrow County in the General Assembly of Georgia, 1921-31; speaker pro tempore, 1923-26; speaker, 1927-28, 1929-31; Governor of Georgia, June 27, 1931, to January 10, 1933; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. William J. Harris, and took his seat January 12, 1933, after the expiration of his term as Governor; elected November 3, 1936, to full term ending January 3, 1943; reelected November 3, 1942, for the term end-ing January 3, 1949; reelected November 2, 1948, for term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Candler, Chatham, Effingham, Emanuel, Evans, Jenkins, Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Montgomery, Screven, Tattnall, Toombs, Treutlen, and Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1950), 349,350. PRINCE H. PRESTON, Jr., Democrat, of Statesboro, Ga., was born in Walton County, Ga., on July 5, 1908; attended the public schools of Statesboro, Ga.; University of Georgia, LL. B., 1930, and began practice of law same year in Statesboro, Ga.; was elected Representative in General Assembly of Georgia 1935-36 and reelected for 1937-38; elected judge of City Court of Statesboro, 1946, but resigned before taking office because of election to the Kightieth Con-gress; volunteered services to United States Army September 1942 and entered as private; commissioned second lieutenant in O. C. S. February 25, 1943; pro-moted to first lieutenant July 30, 1943, and to captain on May 15, 1944; com-manded Battery A of the 776th A.-A. A., A. W., Bn. in E. T. O.; married Myrtice Robinson on September 22, 1934; two daughters; elected to the Kightieth Con-gress on November 5, 1946; reelected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Baker, Brooks, Calhoun, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Thomas, Tift, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1950), 285,624 EDWARD EUGENE COX, Democrat, of Camilla, Ga.; son of Stephen E. and Mary (Williams) Cox; lawyer; received literary and law education at Mercer University, graduating in law in 1902; married Roberta Patterson, of Macon, Ga., 1902 (died 1916); two children—Lamar Patterson (deceased) and Mary Bennet; judge, superior courts, Albany circuit, 1912-16; married Grace (Pitts) Hill, of Cordele, Ga., 1918; one child—Gene; elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Ben Hill, Chattahoochee, Clay, Crisp, Dodge, Dooly, Harris, Hous- ton, Lee, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Peach, Pulaski, Quitman, Randolph, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Taylor, Terrell, Turner, Webster, and Wilcox (24 counties). Population (1950), 382,449. ELIJAH LEWIS (TIC) FORRESTER, Democrat, of Leesburg, Lee County, Ga.; born August 16, 1896, on a farm one and a half miles from Leesburg; educated in Leesburg schools and studied law in office of his cousin, R. R. Forrester; passed State bar examination in 1917 and admitted to law practice in Georgia; served as a private in the United States Army during World War I; married Thursba GEORGIA Biographical Marie Whitaker June 19, 1928; attorney at law; solicitor of city court of Leesburg 1920-33; mayor of Leesburg 1922-31; county attorney for Lee County 1928-37; solicitor-general, southwestern judicial circuit, 1937-50; Baptist, Mason, and American Legionnaire; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.— Counties: Butts, Carroll, Clayton, Coweta, Fayette, Heard, Henry, Lamar, Meriwether, Newton, Pike, Spalding, Talbot, Troup, and Upson (15 counties). Population (1950), ALBERT SIDNEY CAMP, Democrat; of Newnan, was born in Coweta County, Ga., July 26, 1892, son of William Walker and Ella Leigh Camp, both deceased; educated in the public schools of Newnan and Coweta County and at the University of Georgia, from which he received the bachelor of laws degree; admitted to the bar and has practiced law at Newnan since 1915; chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee of Coweta County, Ga., 1915-17; served 2 years in the Army (1917-19) as member of Headquarters Detachment, Eighty-second Division, American Expeditionary Force; delegate to the Democratic National Convention, New York City, 1924; member of the lower house, General Assembly of Georgia (1923-28), and served as chairman of the judiciary commit- tee, 1927-28; assistant United States attorney, northern district of Georgia, 1934— 39; commander of Georgia Department, American Legion, 1933-34; married Miss Sarah Farmer, of Newnan, Ga., November 19, 1925, and they have two children— Albert Sidney Camp, Jr., and Molly Farmer Camp; Methodist; Mason; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress on August 1, 1939, to fill the unexpired term of the late E. M. Owen; reelected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: De Kalb, Fulton, and Rockdale (3 counties). Population (1950), 610,771. JAMES CURRAN DAVIS, Democrat, of Stone Mountain, Ga.; born in Franklin, Heard County, Ga., May 17, 1895; received education in Franklin public schools, Reinhardt College, Waleska, Ga., and Emory College, Oxford, Ga.; mem-ber S. A. E. college fraternity; read law in office of Bryan & Middlebrooks, Atlanta, Ga.; admitted to the bar July 8, 1919, Atlanta, Ga., and practiced there until January 21, 1934; represented De Kalb County in Georgia House of Representa-tives, 1924-28, attorney for Georgia Department of Industrial Relations, 1928-31; attorney for De Kalb County, 1931-34; judge of Superior Courts, Stone Mountain Judicial Circuit, consisting of Clayton, De Kalb, Rockdale, and Newton Counties, from January 21, 1934, until January 1947; enlisted in United States Marine Corps December 24, 1917; honorably discharged January 11, 1919; served as first lieuten-ant and captain in Judge Advocate General's Department, Officers Reserve Corps, approximately 11 years; served as reemployment committeeman, Selective Service Board No. 3, De Kalb County, Ga., during and since World War II; married December 26, 1932, to Miss Mary Lou Martin, of La Grange, Ga.; one child, Mary Martin Davis, born January 15, 1936; elected to the Kightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Baldwin, Bibb, Bleckley, Crawford, Glascock, Hancock, Jasper, Jeffer= son, Johnson, Jones, Laurens, Monroe, Putnam, Twiggs, Washington,and Wilkinson (16 counties). Population (1950), 307,558. CARL VINSON, Democrat, of Milledgeville, was born November 18, 1883, in Baldwin County; educated at the Georgia Military College at Milledgeville, Ga.; graduated from Mercer University Law School in 1902; commenced the practice of law the same year in Milledgeville; solicitor (prosecuting attorney) for Baldwin County, Ga., 3 years; served two terms (1909-12) in the General Assembly of Georgia; speaker pro tempore during the term 1911-12; judge of the county court of Baldwin County 2 years; widower; elected November 3, 1914, to the Sixty-third Congress to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses from the Tenth District; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses from the new Sixth District; chairman, Naval Affairs Committee from December 1931 to January 3, 1947; chairman of the Armed Services Committee in the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Douglas, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (14 counties). Population (1950), 367,279. HENDERSON LOVELACE LANHAM, Democrat, of Rome, Ga.; born in Rome, Ga., September 14, 1888, the son of John Henderson Lanham and Julia 26 Congressional Directory IDAHO Thompson Lanham; educated in public schools of Rome and Piedmont Institute, Rockmart, Ga.; received bachelor of arts degree, University of Georgia, 1910: bachelor of laws degree, University of Georgia, 1911; master of arts degree, Har. vard University Graduate School, 1912; member, Phi Beta Kappa Scholarship Fraternity; Sigma Chi Social Fraternity; Delta Theta Phi Law Fraternity; chairman, board of, education, city of Rome, 1918-19; member, house of repre-sentatives from Floyd County, Georgia, General Assembly, 1929-33 and 1937-40; solicitor general, Rome Judicial Circuit, 1941-46; married September 1, 1915; to Anne White Phinizy of Rockmart, Ga., one daughter— Mrs, T. GC. Slappey, Jr, of Albany, Ga.; member, Methodist Church, Odd Fellows, Masons, and Rome Kiwanis Club; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected t0 Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950 (without opposition). EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Appling, Atkinson, Bacon, Berrien, Brantley, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Cook, Echols, Glynn, Irwin, Jeff Davis, Lanier, Lowndes, Pierce, Telfair, "Ware, and Wayne (20 counties). Population (1950), 267, 429, WILLIAM McDONALD WHEELER, Democrat, of Alma, Ga.; born in Bacon County, R. F. D. 4, Alma, Ga., July 11, 1915; was graduated from Alma High School and completed 31% years of work in the University System of Georgia, attending South Georgia College, Douglas, Ga., Middle Georgia College, Cochran, Ga., and Georgia Teachers College, Statesboro, Ga.; farmer; school teacher, having served as principal of junior high schools in Bacon and Appling Counties; served in the Army Air Forces from May 30, 1942, to June 4, 1946, having enlisted as a private and being separated as a captain; son of Elmore and Lola McLaughlin Wheeler; married Miss Aubee Louise Reeves of Baxley, Ga., May 25, 1941, and they have two children, Sherry Lynn and William Craig; member of Veterans of Foreign Wars, American Legion, and the Free Will Baptist Church; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950 NINTH DISTRICT.— CouNTIiES: Banks, Barrow, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwin-nett, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and White (18 counties). Population (1950), 246,061. JOHN STEPHENS WOOD, Democrat, of Canton, Ga.; graduate of Mercer University; former member of the General Assembly of Georgia; solicitor general of the Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit of Georgia and judge of the “Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit; member of the Army Air Corps during the First World War; married; member of the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses, 1931-35; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clarke, Columbia, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Lincoln, Madison, McDuffie, Morgan, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Richmond, Taliaferro, ‘Walton, Warren, and Wilkes 17 counties). Population (1950), 320,263. PAUL BROWN, Democrat, of Dinerion; Ga., was born in Hart County, Ga.; graduate of University of Georgia; lawyer and farmer; represented Oglethorpe County in General Assembly of Georgia 1907-8; delegate to Democratic National Convention in 1932; member of Methodist Church; married Miss Frances Lewis Arnold on October 21, 1914; two children—Robert Thomas and Frances Rosalyn Brown; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on July 5, 1933, and reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. - IDAHO (Population (1950), 588,637) SENATORS HENRY C. DWORSHAK, Republican, of Burley, Idaho; born in Duluth, Minn., August 29, 1894; educated in the public schools of Duluth; learned printing trade and entered newspaper work; editor and publisher of the Burley Bulletin 1924-44; elected president of Idaho Editorial Association in 1931; served in the American Expeditionary Forces; was Idaho commander of the American Legion in 1932; served as governor of the Idaho-Utah district of Rotary International, being installed at convention in Nice, France, in June 1937; married Miss Georgia IDAHO Biographical B. Lowe in 1917, and they have four sons—Henry I., Charles L., Ward W., and Calvin G.; thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason and Shriner; member of B. P. O. E. and I. O. O. F.; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; elected November 5, 1946, to the United States Senate, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Thomas, for the term ended January 3, 1949; appointed October 14, 1949, ° to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Bert H. Miller; elected November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1955. HERMAN WELKER, Republican, of Payette, Idaho; born December 11, 1906, at Cambridge, Idaho; graduate of Weiser High School and the University of Idaho at Moscow, Idaho, with a degree of LL. B.; prior to his election to the Senate was actively engaged as a trial attorney in the practice of law, and in farming and livestock raising in Idaho; while still at the University of Idaho was appointed prosecuting attorney of Washington County, Idaho, and was reelected twice through a Democratic landslide; in 1948 was elected to the Idaho State Senate and served through one regular and one special session; was successful in the Republican primaries against the Hon. C. A. Robins, Governor of Idaho, and John Sanborn, Representative in Congress of the Idaho Second Congressional District; opponent in the general election was D. Worth Clark, former United States Senator, who was defeated by one of the largest majorities in the history of Idaho politics; served as an enlisted man in the Air Corps in World War II; was married to Gladys Pence in 1930, who will accompany him to Washington; one daughter, Nancy, aged 11; member of the Masonic Lodge (El Korah Shrine), Elks, Episcopal Church, Knights of Pythias, American Legion, Idaho and Cali-fornia Bar Associations, Sigma Chi Fraternity, Phi Alpha Delta, honorary law fraternity, and the Idaho Cattlemen’s Association; in first attempt for high office was elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1950, for term ending January 3, 1957. : REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Benewah, Boise, Bonner, Boundary, Canyon, Clearwater, Custer, Gem, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, Lemhi, Lewis, Nez Perce, Payette, Shoshone, Valley, and Washington (19 counties). Population (1950), 242,650. JOHN TRAVERS WOOD, Republican, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho; born in Wakefield, England, 1878; came to North Dakota with parents in 1889; educated in public schools; taught school 6 years after self-study and passage of teacher’s examinations; graduated from the Detroit College of Medicine in 1904; practiced in “horse and buggy’ days in North Dakota for 1 year; moved to Coeur d’Alene in 1905 and licensed to practice in Idaho in 1906; charter member of Kootenai County Medical Society and president for many years; discovered and made public, cojointly with Dr. KE. J. Barnett, of Spokane, Wash., the knowledge relating to Rocky Mountain tick fever; postgraduate courses at Westley Memo-rial Hospital in Chicago, at University of Pennsylvania Postgraduate Hospital, at Bellevue Hospital in New York, and under Dr. Edward Rosenberg, of Chicago (the latter three on the study of arthritis); one of the founders and the first president of the Coeur d’Alene Hospital Co., continuing as president for 15 years; local surgeon for C. M. & St. P. R. R. for 40 years; president, board of trustees, Northwest Medicine; mayor of Coeur d’Alene, 1911-12; past grand master of -Masons in Idaho, 1934-35; thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason; married Margaret O. Thomson in 1907; two sons, one a practicing physician of Coeur d’Alene, and the other a children’s dentist, of Spokane, Wash.; public speaker, author, and student of history and philosophy; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ada, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Blaine, Bonneville, Butte, Camas, Caribou, Cassia, Clark, Elmore, Franklin, Fremont, Gooding, Jefferson, Jerome, Lincoln, Madison, Minidoka, Oneida, Owyhee, Power, Teton, and Twin Falls (25 counties). Population (1950), 342,442. HAMER H. BUDGE, Republican, of Boise, Idaho; born in Pocatello, Idaho, November 21, 1910, son of Idaho Supreme Court Justice and Mrs. Alfred Budge; education, Boise grade schools, Boise, Idaho; graduate of Boise High School in 1928; 2 years, College of Idaho, Caldwell, Idaho; 3 years (including A. B. degree, majoring in political science) Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif.; 3 years, University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho, LL. B. degree; continuous private practice of law in the city of Boise 1936-50, except for 314 years United States Navy, 1942-45, with final discharge as lieutenant commander, United States Naval Reserve; 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 4 28 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS two sessions Idaho State Legislature, representative from Ada County, 1939-41, assistant Republican floor leader both sessions; presently, Ada County repre-sentative, Idaho State Legislature, and majority floor leader; married Jeanne Tels in 1940; no children; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November , 1950. 3 ILLINOIS (Population (1950), 8,712,176) SENATORS PAUL H. DOUGLAS, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Salem, Mass., March 26, 1892; married to Emily Taft Douglas, Congresswoman-at-large from Illinois, Seventy-ninth Congress; A. B., Bowdoin College; Ph. D., Columbia University, 1921; member Economics Department, University of Chicago; author of The Theory of Wages, Real Wages in the United States, and Social Security in the United States, etc. ; president, American Economic Association (1947) ; drafted first Illinois Old Age Pension Act and helped to draft Illinois’ unemployment insurance law; adviser to Governor Roosevelt on New York’s social security problems and helped revise Federal Social Security Act in 1939; alderman from Fifth Ward, Chicago City Council, 1939-42; enlisted as a private in United States Marine Corps in May 1942; served with First Marine Division, advancing through ranks to grade of lieutenant colonel; twice wounded, at Pelelieu and Okinawa; awarded Bronze Star for ‘heroic achievement in action’; elected Senator on November 2, 1948, by plurality of 407,728, for the term expiring January 3, 1955. EVERETT McKINLEY DIRKSEN, Republican, of Pekin, Ill.; born at Pekin, Ill., January 4, 1896; attended grade and high schools of Pekin and Uni-versity of Minnesota College of Law; served in the United States Army, 1917-19, with 17 months’ overseas service; commissioned from the ranks; member of the bar of the District of Columbia and Illinois; married and has one child, Mrs. Howard H. Baker, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, and Eigh-tieth Congresses; retired voluntarily on January 3, 1949; nominated for United States Senate in open primary April 11, 1950; elected to Senate November 7, 1950; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Eagles, Elks, Moose, Masons, Shrine. and Eastern Star; chairman of National Republican Senatorial Committee. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 1, precincts 1 to 24, and 83; ward 2; ward 3, precincts 1 to 13, 15 to 83, and 85 to 106; ward 4, precincts 47 to 64, 66 to 69, 71 to 73, 81, 84 to 87, 91 to 94, and 97; ward 6, precincts 2, 10 to 13, 15 to 24, 26, 82, and 88 to 90; ward 20, precincts 1 to 12, 14 to 89, and 91 to 100. Pop- ulation (1950), 319,874. WILLIAM LEVI DAWSON, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill; born in Albany, Ga., April 26, 1886; was graduated from Albany (Ga.) Normal School and Fisk Uni-versity with A. B. degree; attended Kent College of Law and was graduated from Northwestern University Law School with LI. D. degree; during the First World War served as first lieutenant of the Three Hundred and Sixty-fifth Infantry, A. E. F.; attorney at law; State central committeeman, First Congressional Dis-trict, 1930-32; alderman of the second ward, 1933-39; Democratic committeeman from the second ward since 1939; married; two children, William L., Jr., and Barbara D. Morgan; executive secretary, Democratic Congressional Committee; vice chairman, Democratic National Committee; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; chairman, Committee on Expendi-tures in Executive Departments, and member of Committee on Interior and In-sular Affairs. SECOND DISTRICT.—C11y oF CHICAGO: Ward 4, precinets 1 to 46, 65, 70, 74 to 80, 82, 83, 88 to 90, 95 and 96; ward 5; ward 6, precinets 1, 3 to 9, 14, 25, 27 to 81, 83 to 87, and 91; ward 7; ward 8; ward 10, precincts 10, 25, 42, 51, 58, 59, 69, 73, and 78. Population (1950), 352,172. RICHARD B. VAIL, Republican, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Ill.; attended James Madison Grammar School, Hyde Park High School, School of Commerce, Chicago Technical College, John Marshall Law School; lieutenant, Infantry, World War I; member American Legion, Military Order of the World ILLINOIS Biographical Wars, Knights of Columbus, Eagles, Delta Theta Phi, South Shore Country Club, Olympia Fields Country Club, South Side Swedish Club; chairman, boardof directors, Vail Manufacturing Co., makers of steel products; elected to Eightieth Congress, November 5, 1946; member of Committee on Un-American Activities; elected to Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950. THIRD DISTRICT.—Ciry or CHICAGO: Ward 13, precinets 37, 38, 41, 42, 46 to 82 and 87 to 89; ward 16, precincts 2 to 7, 30 to 68, 71 to 77, 79, and 82; ward 17; ward 18; ward 19; ward 20, precinets 90 and 101, Population (1950), 347,519. FRED E. BUSBEY, Republican, 9144 South Hoyne Avenue, Chicago, Ill.; born in Tuscola, Ill., February 8, 1895; owner of Fred E. Busbey & Co., 10 South La Salle Street, Chicago, Ill., investment brokers and financial counsellors since 1930; attended public schools, Armour Institute of Technology (now Illinois Institute of Technology) and Northwestern University; enlisted in the United States Regular Army in World War I, later transferred and served overseas with the One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Field Artillery, Thirty-third Division, A. E. F.; Shriner, member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Elks, Moose, and Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity; married Julia Humpf, of Chicago, I1l., in 1920 and they have one son, Charles W. Busbey; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; elected to the Eightieth Congress Novem-ber 5, 1946; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ci1ty oF CHICAGO: Ward 9; Ward 10, precincts1to 9, 11 to 24, 26 to 41, 43 to 50, 52 to 57, 60 to 68, 70, 71, 74 to 77 and 79 to 82; Summit, Harvey, Chicago Heights, Lyons; also includes the T'own-ships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, Lyons, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. Popu-lation (1950), 439,439. WILLIAM E. McVEY, Republican, 15616 Lexington Avenue, Harvey, Ill; born December 13, 1885; reared on a farm in Clinton County, Ohio; B. S. degree, Ohio University; A. M. and Ph. D. degrees, University of Chicago; formerly division superintendent in Philippine Islands; for an extended period of time superintendent of Thornton Township High School and Junior College, Harvey, Ill.; professor of education, DePaul University, since 1949; lecturer at various times, University of Pennsylvania, Ohio University, and Emory University; president of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1943-44; member Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Kappa, Phi Kappa Tau; Episco-palian; author of books and magazine articles; president, Harvey Memorial Y. M. C. A.; member of board of directors of Ingalls Memorial Hospital, Harvey, Ill.; Loyalty and Efficiency award, American Legion; citation, AMVETS; married to Katharine Johnson of Galesburg, Ill., and they have three children; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—City or CHicAGOo: Ward 3, precincts 14 and 84; ward 11, precincts 11 to 42, 53 to 59, 61 to 65, and 67; ward 12; ward 13, precincts 1 to 36, 39, 40, 43 to 45, and 83 to 86; ward 14; ward 15; ward 16, precincts 1, 8 to 29, 69, 70, 78, 80 and 81; ward 20, precinct 13; ward 22, precincts 60 to 64; ward 23, precincts 5, 37, 38, 49, 55, and 62 to 84, and Stickney. Population (1950), 330,607. JOHN C. KLUCZYNSKI, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born February 15, 1896, Chicago, Ill.; son of Thomas and Mary (Sulaski) Kluezynski, who were early settlers in town of Lake, Cook County, Ill.; reared and resides in district he now represents; educated in public and parochial schools; served overseas in World War I with the Eighth Field Artillery; member of American Legion, Forty & Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Polish National Alliance, Polish Roman Catholic Union, Travelers Club, Olympia Fields Country Club, and Brighton Park Chamber of Commerce; married Miss Stephanie Polowy; owns and operates Syrena Restaurant & Caterers, 4270 Archer Avenue, Chicago, Ill.; elected to the Illinois State Legislature as State Representative for the Fourth Senatorial Dis-trict. in 1932; reelected seven consecutive times, serving 16 years; in 1948 elected to the State senate for a 4-year term; resigned December 1949 to become a candi-date for Congress; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; home address: 17564 West Garfield Boulevard, Chicago 9, Ill. SIXTH DISTRICT.— CIty oF CHICAGO: Ward 22, precincts 1 to 59, 65, and 66; ward 23, precincts 1 to 4, 6 to 36, 39 to 48, 50 to 54, and 56 to 61; ward 24, precincts 1 to 7, 11, 12, 17 to 41, 47 to 63, and 65 to 67; ward 29; ward 30, precincts 21 to 50, 54, 56 to 66, 68, 73 to 77, and 80 to 82; ward 37, precincts 46 to 81, 85 to 88, and 90, and Cicero. Population (1950), 333,637. 3 THOMAS J. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Ill.; educated in high school and took advanced courses in business law and accounting; married; State representative in the forty-fifth, forty-sixth, fifty-sixth, and fifty-seventh general assemblies; was State bank examiner under auditors Brady, Russel, and Nelson; associated in the accounting business with John S. Weisbach 30 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS & Co.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 164,187 votes, his oppo-nent, Alfred F. Ruben, Republican, receiving 95,637 votes; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected sheriff of Cook County, 1938 to 1942; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on Novem-ber 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; re-elected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; member Committee on Ways and Means. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or CHICAGO: Ward 1, precincts 25 to 82; ward 11, precincts 1 to 10, 43 to 52, 60, 66, and 68; ward 21; ward 24, precincts 8 to 10, 13 to 186, 42 to 46, 64, and 68; ward 25; ward 26, precincts 1 to 59, and 67 to 69; ward 27; ward 28. Population (1950), 397,007. ADOLPH J. SABATH, Dean of the House, Democrat, of Chicago, born in Czechoslovakia, April 4, 1866; came to the United States in 1881; attended Bryant and Stratton’s Business College of Chicago; graduated from Chicago College of Law, 1891, and admitted to practice same year; received the degree of LI. B. from Lake Forest University in 1892; practiced law in Chicago until 1895; served as municipal judge and police magistrate in Chicago from that time to 1907; as judge, advocated the municipal court act; was instrumental in abolishing the fee system, establishing the juvenile court, and also the parole system for first offenders; in 1906 had distinction of being nominated for two offices, municipal court judge and Congressman, choosing the latter; first elected to Congress in 1906 and reelected 22 times; March 4, 1951, marked his forty-fifth year of continuous service; has served under 8 Presidents and 9 Speakers; is the only living member of the historic Committee on Foreign Affairs of the World War I period; attended joint conference at White House of the Senate and House Committees on Foreign Affairs on first return of President Wilson from Europe; aided in bringing about the independence of Czechoslovakia, Poland, and other small nations; served 24 years on the Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, as a member of which he opposed inhuman and harsh immigration measures, but aided in the passage of stringent deportation laws; opposed legislation proposing racial or religious discrimination and intolerance; also served as member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; chairman, Select Committee to Investigate Real Estate Bondholders’ Reorganizations; chairman Committee on Rules 1938 1945; ranking minority member Kightieth Congress, reappointed chairman Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses; as chairman of the Committee on Rules advocated and furthered the consideration, and enactment of all progressive and labor legislation during President Roosevelt's administration; introduced the first workmen’s compensation bill; advocated in 1909 the passage of the first old-age pension bill; among other legislation advocated the enactment of the Social Security Act, the Parcels Post Act, Securities and Exchange Commission Acts, introduced in 1931 the first RFC bill; opposed prohibition and fought for its repeal; for 49 years member of the Cook County Democratic Central Committee, serving 36 years as a member of its executive committee and 10 years as chairman; delegate to Democratic National Conventions since 1896; married Miss Mae Ruth Fuerst, December 31, 1917; member of Masons, Elks, Knights of Pythias, and various social, fraternal, and civic organizations. EIGHTH DISTRICT.— City oF CHICAGO: Ward 26, precincts 60 to 66; ward 31; ward 32; ward 33; ward 34; ward 40, precincts 11 to 23, 25 to 65, 68 to 76, 79 and 80. Population (1950), 304,229. THOMAS S. GORDON, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Ill, December 17, 1893; attended parochial school; was graduated from Weber High School; engaged in banking business; later employed as clerk of the Polish Daily News and advanced to head cashier and office manager; appointed commissioner of the Chicago West Parks in 1933; 3 years later appointed as commissioner of public vehicles; elected city treasurer of Chicago, 1939 to 1942; married; four children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.— City or CHICAGO: Ward 42; ward 43; ward 44; ward 45, precinets 1 to 59, 62 to 66, and 68 to 91; ward 46, precincts 12 to 60, 63 to 78, and 80 to 84. Population (1950), 335,002. SIDNEY R. YATES, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, Ill., August 27, 1909; educated in public elementary and high school in Chicago; received the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy from the University of Chicago in 1931 and the degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence from the University of Chicago in 1933; served in the United States Navy for 26 months; released from active duty with the rank of lieutenant; practicing attorney since 1933; assistant attorney for Illinois State bank receiver, 1935-37; assistant attorney general attached to Illinois Commerce Commission as traction attorney, 1937-40; editor of “Bulletin of Decalogue ILLINOIS B tographicod 31 Society of Lawyers,” 1947; married Adeline J. Holleb of Chicago in 1935; has one son, Stephen H. Yates, age 10; member of American Bar Association, American Veterans’ Committee, Chicago Bar Association, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, City Club of Chicago, Decalogue Society of Lawyers; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TENTH DISTRICT.— City oF CHICAGO: Ward 30, precincts 1 to 20, 51 to 53, 55, 67, 69 to 72, 78, and 79; ward 36; ward 37, precincts 1 to 45, 82 to 84, 89 and 91, and Berwyn; also includes the Village of Oak Park, the Townships of Proviso,iRiver Forest, and Riverside. Population (1950), 370,410. RICHARD W. HOFFMAN, Republican, of Berwyn, Ill.; born December 23, 1893, in Chicago, Ill.; owner and operator of Radio Station WHFC and WEHS-FM, Chicago, Ill.; elected four times as president, board of education, J. Sterling Morton High School and Junior College (1933-36) (1939-42) (1942-45) (1945-48); veteran of First World War; member of the American Legion; elected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses from the newly reapportioned Tenth Con-gressional District of Illinois. : ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or CHICAGO: Ward 35; ward 38; ward 39, precincts 15 to 39, 41 to 63, 65 to 67, 69 to 73, 75, 76, 80 to 82, 84 to 88, and 90; ward 41; also includes that part of the Township of Norwood Park east of the center line of Canfield Avenue. Population (1950), 323,932. 3 TIMOTHY P. SHEEHAN, Republican, of Chicago, Ill.; born in the city of Chicago, Fébruary 21, 1909; graduated from St. Pius Grammar School, Joseph Medill High School, and Northwestern University, receiving the degree of Bache-lor of Science in Commerce, having majored in accounting; former secretary of the Illinois Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages and the Chicago Bottlers of Car-bonated Beverages; president of the Swedish Produce Co., food importers and wholesalers, and president of the Silverbrook Beverage Co., manufacturers of carbonated beverages; active Republican since coming of voting age; chairman of Forty-first Ward Regular Republican Organization; resides with Mrs. Mary Celeste Sheehan (McNearney) and four children, Mary, Kathleen, Timmy and Fileen, at 5515 North Linder Avenue, Chicago 30; member of Delta Sigma Pi, Beta Gamma Sigma, the Viking Club, the Swedish Club of Chicago, and the Knights of Columbus; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 39, precincts 1 to 14, 40, 64, 68, 74, 77 to 79, 83, and 89; ward 40, precinets 1 to 10, 24, 66, 67, 77, and 78; ward 45, precincts 60, 61, and 67; ward 46, precincts 1 to 11, 61, 62, and 79; ward 47; ward 48; ward 49; ward 50. Population (1950), 354,803. EDGAR A. JONAS, Republican, of Chicago, Ill.; born on a farm in Manito-woc County, Wis., educated in the public schools, graduating from the Manitowoc County Normal School; taught in the rural schools in Manitowoe County; entered Chicago Law School and graduated with degree of LL. B.; admitted to the bar in October 1909 and engaged in the practice of law in Chicago; married and resides at 5510 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Ill.; served as trustee, Chicago Public Library, 1916-18; assistant corporation counsel, 1919-20; first assistant State’s attorney of Cook County, 1921-23; president, board of directors, Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium of the city of Chicago, 1921-23; judge, Municipal Court of Chicago, 1923-37; appointed judge, Superior Court of Cook County, 1941-42; associate member, Board of Pardons and Paroles, State of Illinois, 1945-47; serving as Republican committeeman of the Forty-eighth Ward in Chicago since 1942; president, board of trustees, Illinois Masonic Hospital Association in Chicago since 1927; Shriner and thirty-third degree Mason; member, Chicago Athletic Club, Park Ridge Country Club, German-American Club, Elks Lodge; director and officer, Independent Order of Foresters of Chicago and Toronto, Canada; past supreme justice, Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity; member, Chicago, Illinois, and American bar associations; delegate to the Republican National Convention for the Twelfth District in Chicago in 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress from the Twelfth District on November 2, 1948, and reelected on November 7, 1950, to the Eighty-second Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Co0K County: Elmwood Park, Morton Grove, and Skokie; the Town-ships of Barrington, Elk Grove, Evanston, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, New Trier, Niles, Northfield, Palatine, Schaumberg, Wheeling, and that part of Norwood Park west of the center line of-Canfield Avenue; and Lake County. Population (1950), 462.419. MARGUERITE STITT CHURCH, Republican, 300 Church Street, Evanston, I1.; born in New York City, September 13, 1892; received degree of A. B., Welles-ley College, 1914; A. M., Columbia University (political science), 1917; Phi Beta Kappa; teacher at Wellesley College, 1915: consulting psychologist of State Charities Aid Association, New York City, during World War I; on December 21, 1918, married Ralph E. Church (deceased), lawyer, of Evanston, Ill., who was 32 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS a member of the Illinois General Assembly, 1916-32, and Representative in United States Congress, 1935-40 and 1943-50; three children: Ralph Edwin, Jr., William Stitt (both served in World War II), and Marjory Williams; active in political, | educational, and civic affairs; lecturer and writer; president of National Alumnae Association of Wellesley College, 1940-43; trustee, National College of Education, Evanston, Ill.; member of American Association of University Women, Business and Professional Women’s Clubs of America, League of Women Voters, Phi Beta Kappa Associates; president of Congressional Club, 1948-50; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950, by a majority of 91,563 votes over her Democratic opponent. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTiES: Du Page, Kane, and McHenry (3 counties). Population (1950), 354,219. CHAUNCEY W. REED, Republican, of West Chicago, Ill., was born at West Chicago, Ill., June 2, 1890; educated in West Chicago public and high schools, Northwestern University, and Webster College of Law; city treasurer of city of West Chicago, 1913-14; during the World War served in the Eighty-sixth Division of the United States Army; was first commander of Naperville Post, No. 43, American Legion, and served as National Garde de la Porte and National Con-ducteur of La Société des 40 Hommes et 8 Chevaux; elected State’s attorney of Du Page County, I1l., in 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1932; served two terms as president of the Illinois State’s Attorneys Association; chairman of the Du Page County Republican Central Committee for 8 years; associated in the practice of law at Wheaton, Ill., with Judge Russell W. Keeney; member of the Du Page County, Illinois State, and American Bar Associations; married to Ella Stegen in 1929 and has three children—Barbara Ann, James William, and Thomas Henry; elected to the Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses; member of the Committee on the Judiciary. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Boone, De Kalb, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Will (6 counties) Population (1950), 323,666. NOAH MORGAN MASON, Republican, of Oglesby, Ill.; born in Wales, July 19, 1882; completed high school and college, receiving degree of bachelor of educa-tion; also did graduate work in social science, studying taxation, government, and labor problems; in school work for 33 years as teacher, principal of grade school, and superintendent of schools; member of the State senate, 1930-36; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and to each succeeding Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUnNTIES: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, Whiteside, and Winnebago (7 counties). Population (1950), 352,437. LEO ELWOOD ALLEN, Republican, of Galena, Jo Daviess County, Ill., was born in Elizabeth, Ill., on the 5th day of October 1898; graduate, University of Michigan, 1923; member of law firm of Allen & Heer, Galena, Ill.; during World War I served for 27 months in this country and in France as a sergeantin the One Hundred and Twenty-third Regiment Field Artillery, Thirty-third Division; elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy -fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; chairman of Rules Committee in the Eightieth Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Ford, Iroquois, Kankakee, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (7 counties). Population (1950), 287,440. LESLIE C. ARENDS, Republican, of Melvin, Ill, born at Melvin, Ill; attended grade and high schools at Melvin, Ill., and Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio; married and has one daughter, Letty; served in the United States Navy during the World War; charter member of Melvin Post, No. 642, American Legion, serving as post commander, county commander, and seventeenth districg commander; member of Ford County Farm Bureau; Methodist; Mason; member of board of directors, Illinois Wesleyan University; actively engaged in banking and farming since 1920; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell (6 counties). Population (1950), 313,957. HAROLD HIMMEL VELDE, Republican, of Pekin, Ill.; born on a farm near Parkland in Tazewell County, April 1, 1910, the son of .the late Henry J. and ILLINOIS Biographical Laura Velde of Manito, Ill.; attended rural grade and high schools, Bradley University, and Northwestern University, where he received A. B. degree in 1931; LL. B. degree from University of Illinois Law School in 1937; athletic coach and teacher of Hillsdale Community High School and practicing lawyer in Pekin and central Illinois before service in the United States Army Signal Corps as a private in 1942; received honorable discharge in 1943 to become a special agent of the F. B. I. in the Sabotage and Counterespionage Division until 1946; holds certificate of war service and is a member of the American Legion, William Schaeffer Post No. 44; elected county judge of Tazewell County, 1946; member of Pekin Public Hospital Board, 1948; member of official board of First Methodist Church, chairman of the Tazewell County Chapter of American Cancer Society, and president Tazewell County Bar Association; member of A. F. & A. M.,, No. 476, Manito, Ill.; member of F. O. E., Pekin Aerie No. 1869; member of Lions Club of Pekin; married; wife, formerly Olive Pfander of Peoria, Ill.; two children— Richard W., age 19, and Joan, age 18, both attending Bradley University; elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, reelected to Eighty-second Con-pron member Un-American Activities Committee and Education and Labor ommittee. : NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Fulton, Henderson, Henry, Knox, Mercer, Rock Island, and Warren (7 counties). Population (1950), 324,915. ROBERT BRUCE CHIPERFIELD, Republican, of Canton, Ill.; born in Canton, Ill., November 20, 1899; attended Knox College, Galesburg, Ill.; was graduated with an A. B. degree from Harvard College in 1922, and an LL. B. degree from Boston University Law School in 1925; member of American Legion and Forty and Eight; married Miss Catherine Newbern, and they have a son, Robert N., 17 years old, and a daughter,. Virginia, 12 years old; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eigbty-second Congresses. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Adams, Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Hancock, Jersey, Mec-Donough, Morgan, Pike, Schuyler, and Scott (12 counties). Population (1950), 280,793. SID SIMPSON, Republican, of Carrollton, Greene County, Ill.; 35 years’ business experience; served with the A. E. F.; member of American Legion; present chairman, Greene County Republican Committee, serving 24 years; married Edna Oakes; two daughters, Mrs. Arthur Stoffel, Jr., and Janet; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bond, Christian, Macoupin, Mason, Menard, Montgomery, and Sangamon (7 counties). Population (1950), 284,449. PETER F. MACK, Jr., Democrat, of 812 East First South Street, Carlinville, Macoupin County, Ill.; born at Carlinville, Ill., November 1, 1916, son of Peter and Catherine (Kelly) Mack; attended Carlinville public grade and high school, Blackburn College, St. Louis University; aviation courses at Springfield Aviation, Springfield Junior College, Brayton Flying School; naval pilot training and Naval Air Navigation School; designated naval aviator, naval air navigator, and naval navigation instructor; qualified in jet-type aircraft; licensed C ET commercial pilot with ground and flight instructor and instrument flight ratings in single and multi-engine airplanes; automotive business in Carlinville; served 4 years in Naval Air Forces in World War II; unmarried; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress Novem-ber 7, 1950. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.— CountiES: Champaign, Coles, De Witt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1950), 331,625. WILLIAM L. SPRINGER, Republican, of Champaign-Urbana, Ill.; born April 12, 1909, at Sullivan, Ind., and educated in the public schools of Sullivan; graduated DePauw University, 1931, A. B., and from the University of Illinois Law School, 1935, LL. B.; practiced law at Champaign-Urbana; member, Cham-paign County, Illinois State, and American bar associations and the American Juridical Society; states attorney of Champaign County 1940-42; served in the United States Navy 1942-45; county judge of Champaign County 1946-50; married Elsie Mattis in 1942 and they have three children, Katherine, Ann, and Georgia; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; home address: 1305 West University Avenue, Champaign; Washington address: 9 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : 34 Congressional Directory INDIANA TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.— CounriEs: Clark, Crawford, Cumberland, Edgar, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Lawrence, Richland, Vermilion, and Wabash (11 counties). Population (1950), 269,169. EDWARD HALSEY JENISON, Republican, of Paris, Ill.; born in Fond du Lac, Wis., July 27, 1907, son of Ernest Manley and Laura (Hinsey) Jenison; student, University of Wisconsin, 3 years; married Barbara Weinburgh September 14, 1929, and they have one son, Edward Hinsey; editor Paris, Ill., Daily Beacon-News; during World War II served in Naval Aviation, in Washington and the Pacific; director, Illinois Chamber of Commerce, 1938-43; member, Reserve Officers Association, Scabbard and Blade, Sigma Delta Chi; Methodist; Mason; Elk; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.— Counties: Clay, Clinton, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Jefferson, Johnson, Marion, Massae, Pope, Saline, Washington, Wayne, and White (15 counties). Population (1950), 273,737. CHARLES W. VURSELL, Republican, of Salem, Ill.; sheriff of Marion County, 1910-14; member of the Illinois General Assembly for the forty-second senatorial district, 1914-16; publisher, Salem Republican, newspaper, 1916 to 1948; married Miss Bessie Brasel and has twe sons, Harold D. Vursell, vice presi-dent of Creative Age Press, publishing concern in New York City, and Charles E. Vursell, Detroit, Mich., branch manager for the Zurich Insurance Company, both of whom served in World War II; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. Nr ThH DISTRICT.— Counties: Madison and St. Clair (2 counties). Population (1950), CHARLES MELVIN PRICE, Democrat, of East St. Louis, Ill.; born in East St. Louis, Ill., January 1, 1905; educated in the parochial schools of East St. Louis, St. Louis (Mo.) University High School, and 2-year prelegal course at St. Louis (Mo.) University; newspaper correspondent (East St. Louis, Ill., Jour-nal, St. Louis, Mo., Globe-Democrat, and for 2 years sports editor of suspended East St. Louis News-Review); former member of National Baseball Writers’ Association; member of St. Clair County Board of Supervisors, 1929-31; secretary to former Congressman Edwin M. Schaefer, March 4, 1933, to January 3, 1943; single; member of American Legion, AMVETS, Knights of Columbus, Loyal Order of Moose, Eagles, Elks, Ancient Order of Hibernians, and the National Press Club; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress and each succeeding Congress. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Monroe, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (9 counties). Population (1950), 255,239. C. W. (RUNT) BISHOP, Republican, of Carterville, Ill.; born in Johnson County, Ill., June 29, 1890; educated high school and Union Academy, Anna, I1l.; learned tailoring trade; worked as coal miner, telephone lineman, professional football and baseball player and manager; city clerk of Carterville two terms; secretary of Lions Clubs of Illinois; postmaster for 10 years; secretary of Illinois Postmasters’ Association; district governor and special representative of Inter-national Association of Lions Clubs; married Elizabeth Hutton; one son, Jack Hutton, chief yeoman, United States Coast Guard Reserve; member of I. O. O. F., Rebekahs, Elks, Eagles, and Lions; teacher of Young Peoples’ Sunday School Class; elected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November , 1950. INDIANA (Population (1950), 3,934,224) SENATORS HOMER E. CAPEHART, Republican, of Washington, Ind.; born in Algiers, Ind., on June 6, 1897, son of Alvin T. and Susan Kelso Capehart; farmer and manufacturer; served 2 years in Army during World War I, having enlisted as a private; married Irma Mueller, of Wrightstown, Wis., on January 19, 1922, and is the father of three children: Homer Earl, Jr., practicing attorney, Indianapolis, Ind.; Thomas Charles, electrical engineer and manufacturer, Indianapolis, Ind.; INDIANA Biographical Patricia Louise, student at Maryland University; member of Lutheran Church, Masons, Shrine, American Legion, Elks, Indiana Societies of Chicago and New York, Moose, Eagles, Columbia and Indianapolis Athletic Clubs; National Re-publican Club, of New York; National Press Club, Indianapolis Press Club, Indiana Press Club of Washington, Burning Tree Club, Washington, D. C.; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for term ending January 3, 1951, reelected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1950, for term ending January 3, 1957. WILLIAM E. JENNER, Republican, of Bedford, Ind., was born in Marengo, Ind., July 21, 1908; received A. B. degree from Indiana University in 1930 and LL. B. from Indiana University in 1932; lawyer; entered World War II in June 1942; served overseas and was retired for physical disability October 7, 1944, as captain, Army Air Corps; served as Indiana State Senator 1934-42 when he resigned to enter the Army of the United States; was minority leader of the Republican Party Indiana State Senate, session of 1937, special session of 1938 and 1939, also regular session of 1939; served as majority leader and president pro tempore 1939-41 session; member of the Methodist Church, American Legion, Elks, Masons, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Eagles, Indiana Society of Chicago, Indianapolis Press Club, Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity, Delta Tau Delta national social fraternity; married Janet Cuthill, of Bedford, Ind., they have one child William Edward, age 9; elected United States Senator on November 7, 1944, for the unexpired term of the late Senator Frederick Van Nuys, ending January 3, 1945; served as chairman, Indiana Republican State Central Committee, Febru-ary 1945 to March 1946; elected United States Senator on November 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—County: Lake. Population (1950), 366,113. RAY J. MADDEN, Democrat, of Gary, Ind.; born in Waseca, Minn., Feb-ruary 25, 1892; attended the public schools and was graduated from Sacred Heart Academy, Waseca, Minn., 1910, and from Creighton University, Omaha, ~Nebr., in 1913 with LL. B. degree; elected municipal judge of Omaha, Nebr., 1916; served in the Armed Forces during the First World War; city comptroller of Gary, Ind., 1935-38; treasurer of Lake County, Ind., 1938-42; member of the American Legion; attorney; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Kosciusko, Newton, Porter, Pulaski, Starke, Tippecanoe, and White (12 counties). Population (1950), 302,269. : CHARLES A. HALLECK, Republican, of Rensselaer, was born in Jasper County, Ind., August 22, 1900, and has resided there all his life, attended grade and high schools in Rensselaer, was graduated from Indiana University with an A. B. degree in 1922 and with an LL. B. degree in 1924, elected a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Order of the Coif, and is also a member of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Phi; served in the World War and is a member of the American Legion; married to Blanche White, of Indianapolis, and they have two children, Charles W. and Mrs. Jerome Matthews; was elected prosecuting attorney of the Jasper-Newton circuit in 1924, and was reelected four times; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress at a special election held on January 29, 1935; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Fightieth, FKEighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; majority leader in Eightieth Congress. THOT Cooma Elkhart, Lia Porte, Marshall, and St. Joseph (4 counties). Population, SHEPARD J. CRUMPACKER, Jr., Republican, of South Bend, Ind.; lawyer; born February 13, 1917, at South Bend, Ind.; received degree of Bachelor of Science in Engineering from Northwestern University in 1938 and Bachelor of Laws Degree from University of Michigan in 1941; entered Army Air Force September 26, 1941, as private and was relieved from active duty March 1, 1946, as first lieutenant; married February 18, 1950, to the former Miss Marjorie Patton 2 Evanston, Ill.; no children; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November , 1950. : 36 / Congressional Directory INDIANA - FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Allen,” De Kalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, Wells, and ‘Whitley (8 counties). Population (1950), 327,207. E. ROSS ADAIR, Republican, of Fort Wayne, Ind.; born at Albion, Noble County, Ind., December 14, 1907; grade and high school at Albion, graduating in 1924; Hillsdale (Mich.) College, A. B. 1928; the George Washington University Law School, LL. B. 1933; practicing attorney and probate commissioner of Allen County prior to election to Congress; called to active duty as a second lieutenant, QMC-Reserve, in September 1941; serving until October 1945; presently holding the rank of major, Judge Advocate Reserve; awarded battle stars for the Nor-mandy, Northern France, Ardennes, Rhine, and Central European campaigns; married Marian Wood of Hillsdale, Mich., July 21, 1934; two children, Caroline Ann Adair and Stephen Wood Adair; member of Methodist Church, Masonic bodies, Loyal Order of Moose, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi Alpha Delta, Allen County and Indiana Bar Associations; elected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blackford, Clinton, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Jay, Madison, Miami, Tipton, and Wabash (10 counties). Population$(1950), 390,974. : JOHN VALENTINE BEAMER, Republican, of Wabash, Ind.; born in Wabash County, Ind., November 17, 1896, son of Jacob and Rosa Beamer; A. B. degree, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind., 1918; married Letha Urschel of Wabash, Ind., June 30, 1928; one son, John, Jr., age 22; one daughter, Rosetta, age 20; in Field Artillery, World War I; membership in American continuous Legion since discharge; traveling representative, college text-book publisher, 1921-28; in manufacturing business in Wabash 16 years following; presently manages own farms; representative Wabash County in Indiana General Assembly 1949-50; past member, Indiana Territory Sesquicentennial Commission, Wabash Carnegie Library Board, ‘Wabash city school board, Wabash community service board, Wabash County Boy Scout Council; past president, Indiana School Board Members Association; at present, member Indiana School Study Commission, Indiana Historical Society, Indiana Economic Council, Wabash County Agri-cultural Extension Committee; secretary, Board of Trustees, Estelle Peabody Memorial Home, North Manchester, Ind.; in college, member Kappa Sigma fraternity; member Presbyterian Church, Masonic Lodge, and Kiwanis Club; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Boone, Fountain, Hamilton, Hendricks, Montgomery, Parke, Put-nam, Vermillion, Vigo, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1950), 295,289. CECIL MURRAY HARDEN, Republican, of Covington, Ind.; born in Covington, Ind., November 21, 1894, daughter of Timothy J. and Jennie Clot-felter Murray; graduated from the Covington, Ind., schools and attended Indiana University; taught in Troy township and Covington public schools; active in local, civic, and national affairs; married to Frost R. Harden, December 22, 1914, and they have one son, Dr. Murray E. Harden; member of the Covington Presby-terian Church, Order of Eastern Star, D. A. R., American Legion Auxiliary, Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce, Business and Professional Women’s Club; member of Indiana State and National Federation of Women’s Clubs; Republican precinct vice committeewoman 1932-40; Fountain County Republican vice chairman 1938-50; vice chairman Sixth Congressional District 1938-50; Repub-lican National Committeewoman for Indiana since 1944; delegate at large to the Republican National Convention in 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.— Counmigs: Clay, Daviess, Gibson, Greene, Johnson, Knox, Martin, Monroe, Morgan, Owen, and Sullivan (11 counties). Population (1950), 297,994. 2 WILLIAM GILMER BRAY, Republican, Martinsville, Ind., born in Moores-ville, Ind., June 17, 1903, the son of Gilmer and Dorcas (Mitchel) Bray; reared on a farm near Mooresville; graduated from Mooresville High School in 1920; received LL. B. from Indiana University School of Law in 1927; served two terms as prosecuting attorney in Morgan County; returned to private practice in Mar-tinsville; married Esther Debra of Warren, Ind., in 1930; they have one son, Richard, born March 1, 1934; an Army Reserve officer, was called to active duty June 21, 1941, with the rank of captain; served with a tank company throughout the Pacific campaign, receiving the Silver Star; after the war, was transferred to Military Government and served 9 months in Korea as deputy property custodian; released from active duty in November 1946 with the rank of colonel and returned to private law practice in Martinsville; member of Friends Church, INDIANA Biographical Masonic Orders, Kiwanis Club, Acacia fraternity, Elks, Moose, Eagles, American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. EIGHTH DISTRICT.— CouNmTiEs: Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick (11 counties). Population (1950), 391,207. WINFIELD K. DENTON, Democrat, of Evansville, Ind.; born October 28, 1896, and resided there throughout his entire life; practiced law since 1922; served as prosecutor of Vanderburgh County for two terms, and three terms in the Indiana State Legislature, during which time he was minority leader in the 1941 session and caucus chairman in the 1939 session; appointed to the State Budget Committee by both Governors Townsend and Schricker; married Grace Aber-nethy, December 27, 1927; three daughters, Mrs. Beth Bamberger, Columbus, Ind.; Mary, student at the University of Maryland, and Sara, student at DePauw University ; a member of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; a Mason (32d Degree K. T. Shriner) and Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity; enlisted as a private in World War I, was commissioned a second lieutenant as an aviator, and saw service in France; entered World War IT when 46 years of age as a major and was promoted to lieutenant colonel, serving in the Judge Advocate General's office and assigned to the Air Corps; graduated from DePauw University in 1919 with A. B. degree, and from Harvard Law School in 1922, with LL. B. degree; is a member of the Trinity Methodist Church, Evansville, Ind., elected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson, Jen-nings, Lawrence, Ohio, Orange, Ripley, Scott, Switzerland, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1950), 258,560. EARL WILSON, Republican, of Bedford, Ind., was born near Huron, Law-rence County, Ind., April 8, 1906; reared on a farm; educated in the Huron Public School; received A. B. and M. S. degrees from Indiana University; diploma from Coyne Electrical School, Chicago, Ill.; attended Purdue University; taught high school in Dubois, White, and Decatur Counties, Ind.; high-school principal in Jackson County, Ind.; member of Vallonia Lions Club; married Elsie Bex; two children, Linda Sue, born November 25, 1944, Phillip Earl, born May 1, 1946; affiliated with the Baptist Church; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; to Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and re-turned to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Decatur, Delaware, Fayette, Hancock, Henry, Randolph, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (10 counties). Population (1950), 347,271. ; RALPH HARVEY, Republican, of Henry County, Ind., was born August 9, 1901, on a farm near Mount Summit; after being graduated from Mount Summit High School, earned a B. S. A. degree at Purdue University, and returned to his home community to serve as a vocational agricultural instructor from 1923 to 1928; entered politics as a county councilman appointed to succeed his father and twice was elected to the office; in 1942, was elected to the House of Represent-atives of the Indiana General Assembly, and served in the sessions of 1943, 1945, and 1947; in a special election, November 4, 1947, was elected to Congress to succeed the late Raymond 8. Springer; reelected November 2, 1948, to the Eighty-first Congress; and reelected November 7, 1950, to Eighty-second Con-gress by a plurality of 25,010 votes; an active farmer, he is married (Charline Bowers), and is a member of the Christian church, Masonic orders, Kiwanis Club, Alpha Gamma Rho, the Indiana Farm Bureau, and the National Grange. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Marion. Population (1950), 549,047. CHARLES B. BROWNSON, Republican, of Indianapolis, Ind.; born in Jackson, Mich., February 5, 1914, son of Charles M. and Helen G. Brownson; moved to Flint, Mich., in 1916 and attended public grade schools and Flint Central High School, University of Michigan 1931-35, majoring in psychology; entered year’s Thomasson Act training as Infantry Reserve second lieutenant at Fort Sheridan, Ill., August 1, 1935; moved to Indianapolis and engaged in wholesale wallpaper and paint business October 1, 1936; married Phyllis Augspurger of Fort Wayne, Ind., October 22, 1938; entered extended active duty World War II on February 10, 1941, at Chanute Field, Illinois, as first lieutenant, Infantry Reserve; served as A. C. of S., G—1 Eighty-third Infantry Division, Camp Atter- 38 Congressional Directory 10WA bury; graduated Command and General Staff School, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas; served as executive officer to A. C. of 8S. G—1 of First Army during invasion planning in London until VE-day; five battle stars and invasion arrowhead on European Theater Ribbon, Legion of Merit, Bronze Star, and French Medaille de Recon-naissance; transferred with First Army Planning Headquarters to Canlubang, Philippine Islands, August 5, 1945; released from active duty effective February 27, 1946, after over five years; two daughters, Nancy Gray, 11, and Judith Ann, 8, and son, Charles Christopher, 3% years old; charter member Ernie Pyle Post, No. 1120, Veterans of Foreign Wars; past commander John H. Holliday, Jr., Post No. 186 and Eleventh District, Department of Indiana, American Legion; past president Marion County Republican Veterans of World War II; member of Tabernacle Presbyterian Church, Sigma Nu, Mystic Tie Masonic Lodge, Scottish Rite, Murat Shrine, Forty and Eight, Indianapolis Press Club, Indianapolis Athletic Club, Indiana Society of Chicago and Washington, D. C., Marion County Juvenile Court Advisory Council, and Optimist Club No. 1; recipient, Junior Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Service Award 1947; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. IOWA (Population (1950), 2,621,073) SENATORS BOURKE BLAKEMORE HICKENLOOPER, Republican, of Cedar Rapids, Linn County, Iowa; born in Blockton, Taylor County, Iowa, July 21, 1896, son of Nathan O. and Margaret A. (Blakemore) Hickenlooper; graduated Block-ton High School, 1914; graduated Iowa State College, B. S.; Law School, Univer-sity of Iowa, J. D.; honorary degrees, Parsons College, LL. D., and Loras College, LL. D.; Elmira College, D. C. L.; first officers’ training camp, Fort Snelling, Minn., 1917; served in Three Hundred and Thirty-ninth Field Artillery in United States and France until spring of 1919; practiced law, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, beginning 1922; elected to Iowa Legislature (house) 1934; reelected 1936; elected Lieutenant Governor of Towa, 1938; reelected 1940; elected Governor of Iowa, November 1942; married Verna E. Bensch, of Lansing, Iowa, 1927; two children, Mrs. Charles H. McCreary, Jr., and David B.; member various fraternal and professional organizations and Methodist Church; elected to the United States Senate in No-vember 1944; reelected November 1950. GUY MARK GILLETTE, Democrat, of Cherokee, Iowa, was born there on February 3, 1879; attended high school at Cherokee and was graduated from Drake University, Des Moines, with LL. B. degree in 1900; admitted to the bar in 1900 and commenced practice in Cherokee, Iowa; is also interested in agricultural pursuits; served as prosecuting attorney of Cherokee County, 1907-1909; member of the State senate, 1912-1916; served as sergeant in the Spanish-American War and as captain of Infantry during World War I; married Miss Rose Freeman, and they have one son, Mark; was elected to Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected 1934; elected United States Senate 1936-38; reelected 1938-44; elected United States Senate 1948 with highest majority in history of Iowa; honorary LL. D. degrees, Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa, and St. Ambrose University, Davenport, Iowa. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cedar, Des Moines, Henry, Iowa, Jefferson, Johnson, Lee, Louisa, Mus-catine, Scott, Van Buren, and Washington (12 counties). Population (1950), 372,612. THOMAS ELLSWORTH MARTIN, Republican, of Iowa City, Iowa; born in Melrose, Monroe County, Iowa, January 18, 1893; attended country school in Monroe County and grade and high schools in Russell, Iowa, 1907-9; attended and graduated Albia High School, Albia, Iowa, 1909-12; A. B. degree, State Uni-versity of Iowa, 1916; juris doctor degree, Law College, State University of Iowa, 1927; Order of Coif; awarded university fellowship by Columbia University for 1927 and 1928; LL. M. degree, Columbia University, 1928; accountant and lawyer; admitted to Iowa bar, 1927, and to United States Supreme Court bar, 1939; member, Johnson County, Iowa State, and American Bar Associations; city 10WA Biographical solicitor of Iowa City, 1933-35; mayor of Iowa City, 1935-37; Republican nom-inee for Railroad Commissioner of Towa in 1932 and 1934; permanent chairman, Towa State presidential convention, February 28, 1936; graduate, First Officers’ Training Camp, Leon Springs, Tex., 1917; commissioned United States Regular Army; served with Thirty-fifth Infantry throughout World War I; retired November 10, 1919; assistant professor military science and tactics, University of Towa, 1921-23; sales analyst, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 1916-17 and 1920-21; married Dorris Jeanette Brownlee, of Waterloo, Iowa, June 5, 1920; children, Richard Coupland and Dorris Brownlee 2d (Mrs. Raymond Reiser); elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Committee on Military Affairs 1939-47; member of Committee on Ways and Means since 1947. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allamakee, Benton, Buchanan, Clayton, Clinton, Delaware, Du-buque, Fayette, Jackson, Jones, Linn, and Winneshiek (12 counties). Population (1950), 413,206. HENRY O. TALLE, Republican, of Decorah, Iowa; born and reared on a farm; by profession an educator in economics and political science; served in the United States Navy during World War I; commissioned ensign; elected to the Seventy-sixth and the Seventy-seventh Congresses from the old Fourth District; elected to the Seventy-eighth and all subsequent Congresses from the new Sec-ond District. THIRD DISTRICT.— CounTIES: Black Hawk, Bremer, Butler, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Floyd, Frank-lin, Grundy, Hardin, Howard, Marshall, Mitchell, Tama, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1950), 365,383. H. R. GROSS, Republican, of Waterloo, Iowa; born, Arispe, Iowa, June 30, 1899, and raised on a farm; education, rural schools, University of Missouri School of Journalism; profession, newspaper reporter and editor from 1921 to 1935; radio news commentator from 1935 to 1948; military service, Mexican Border Service 1916, American Expeditionary Forces World War I; member Presbyterian Church, Masonic Lodge, Elks, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; married to Hazel E. Webster, Cresco, Iowa, June 29, 1929; two sons, Phil and Alan; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. ' FOURTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Appanoose, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Mahas-2 yours Poweshiek, Ringgold, Union, Wapello, and Wayne (14 counties). Population (1950), KARL MILES LECOMPTE, Republican, of Corydon, Iowa, was born in Corydon, Iowa, May 25, 1887; graduated from the Corydon High School in 1905, and from the State University of Iowa, in 1909, with a degree of B. A.; publisher of the Corydon Times-Republican since 1910; member of the State senate, 1917-21; served as a private during World War I; was married in 1927 to Miss Dorothy Tye; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses; chairman, Committee on House Administration in Eightieth Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Popu-lation (1950), 349,048. PAUL CUNNINGHAM, Republican, of Des Moines, Iowa; lawyer; born in Indiana County, Pa., son of Robert Harvey and Sarah Jane Cunningham; gradu-ated from the State Normal School, Indiana, Pa., and from the literary and law departments of the University of Michigan; Fort Sheridan Training Camp, 1917; discharged 1919, first lieutenant, Infantry; former captain, Iowa National Guard; former State representative, Polk County, Iowa; member Westminster U. P. Church, American Legion, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, Masonic bodies, Odd Fellows, Elks, and various civic organizations; married Gail Fry; three children, Paul Harvey, Jr., Edward Plummer (killed on Saipan Island, November 15, 1944, in the Marines), and Harriett Sarah; elected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmett, Greene, Hamilton, Han- cock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, Winnebago, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1950), 299,113. JAMES I. DOLLIVER, Republican, of Fort Dodge, Iowa; born in Park Ridge, I1l., August 31, 1894; father, Rev. Robert H. Dolliver, mother, Elle Barrett Dolli-ver; was graduated from Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa, with A. B. degree in 1915, and from the University of Chicago Law School with J. D. degree in 1921; LL. D. degree (honorary) 1949; lawyer; served in the Signal Corps Service 40 Congressional Directory KANSAS in World War I; prosecuting attorney of Webster County, Iowa, 1924-29; member of school board, Fort Dodge Independent School District, 1938-45; department commander, Iowa American Legion, 1937-38; married Rachel MecCreight, of Fort Dodge, Iowa; four children—James M., 27, former ensign, Coast Guard, now student University of Washington at Seattle; Margaret, 22, now a resident of Seward, Alaska; Arthur, 20, now student at Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa; and Robert, 17; elected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Adair, Adams, Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Monona, Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, Shelby, and Taylor (14 counties). Population (1950), BEN FRANKLIN JENSEN, Republican, of Exira, Iowa; born December 16, 1892, on farm near Marion, Linn County, Iowa; commissioned second lieutenant during World War I; retail lumberman; student of government science and has devoted much of his life to the problems of the people; past seventh district com-mander of the American Legion; member of Lutheran Church; married Charlotte E. Hadden, of Clearfield, Iowa, and they have one daughter—Betty (Mrs. Donald G. Fitzpatrick); elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (12 counties). Population (1950), 296,077. CHARLES B. HOEVEN, Republican, of Alton, Iowa; born in Hospers, Iowa, March 30, 1895; was graduated from the Alton High School in 1913 and from the State University of Iowa with a B. A. degree in 1920 and an LL. B. degree in 1922; lawyer, and was admitted to the Towa bar in 1922; admitted to practice before United States Supreme Court, 1946; county attorney of Sioux County, Towa, 1925-37; member of the Iowa State Senate, 1937-41; president pro tempore of the Towa State Senate, 1939-41; permanent chairman of the Iowa Republican State Convention, 1940; both temporary and permanent chairman of the Iowa Republican State Judicial Convention, 1942; member, Phi Alpha Delta Legal Fraternity, Masonic bodies, and various other organizations; veteran of the First World War, serving with the AEF in England and France; member of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Disabled American Veterans: awarded Certificate of Accomplishment, State University of Iowa, June 1947; Republican midwest regional whip, House of Representatives; married Velma Ruth Pike, of Toledo, Iowa, and they have two children—Pauline Ruth Marshall, and Charles Pike, attending school at Alton, Iowa; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. KANSAS (Population (1950), 1,905,299) SENATORS ANDREW F. SCHOEPPEL, Republican, of 115 South Rutan Avenue, Wichita, Kans.; born on a farm in Barton County, Kans., November 23, 1894, the son of George J. and Anna Schoeppel; attended the district school in Ness County, Kans.; graduated from Ransom High School in 1915; attended Kansas University 1916 and 1917; left school during World War I and enlisted in the Naval Air Service; following the armistice entered the University of Nebraska Law School in 1919 and graduated with LL. B. 1922; married Marie Thomsen of Tilden, Nebr., June 1, 1924; served as county attorney of Ness County, Kans.; mayor of Ness City, Kans.; appointed and served as chairman of the Corporation Commission of the State of Kansas from 1939 until May 1942 when he resigned; elected Governor of Kansas in 1942 and again in 1944; chairman of the Interstate Oil Compact Commission of the United States 1943-45; in January 1947 joined the law firm of Foulston, Siefkin, Schoeppel, Bartlett & Powers, Wichita, Kans.; received honorary degree LL. D., Baker University, Baldwin, Kans., in 1946; is a Methodist; thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner; KCCH ; member of Sigma Nu fraternity; Phi Alpha Delta; American Legion; Forty and Eight: member of Sedgwick County, Kans., Kansas State, and American Bar associations; elected to the United States Senate November 2, 1948, for a term of six years. : KANSAS | Brographical 41 FRANK CARLSON, Republican, of Concordia, Kans.; farmer-stockman: born January 23, 1893, at Concordia, Kans.; attended rural schools, Concordia High School, Concordia Normal and Business College, and Kansas State College; World War veteran; member of Kansas Legislature 1929 and 1931 sessions; chairman of Republican State Committee 1932; member of Masonic bodies and the Baptist Church; married August 26, 1919, one daughter, Eunice Marie, born December 20, 1926; elected from the Sixth Congressional District, Kansas, to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress November 3, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1943; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected Governor of Kansas November 5, 1946; reelected November 2, 1948; served as a member of the State and Federal Affairs Committee of the Hoover Committee for Reorganiza-tion of the Executive Branch of the Government; chairman of the Interstate Oil Compact Commission 1949; chairman of the National Governors’ Conference 1949; chairman Council of State Governments 1950; vice chairman President’s National Safety Conference 1950; received honorary degree of doctor of laws from Bob Jones University in 1951; elected to the Senate November 7, 1950, for unexpired bors elected to the Senate November 7, 1950, for regular term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Clay, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Marshall, Nemaha, Pottawatomie, Riley, Shawnee, and Washington (13 counties). Population (1950), 317,646. ALBERT M. COLE, Republican, of Holton, Jackson County, Kans.; born in Moberly, Mo., on October 13, 1901, son of Walter I. and Mary B. Cole; attended grade schools of Topeka, high school in Sabetha, and Washburn College, Topeka; was graduated from University of Chicago with LL. B. degree in 1925; member of Phi Alpha Delta and Kappa Sigma; married to Emily Corbin of Kansas City and they have two children, Kitty and Will; member and president of Holton School Board for 12 years; county attorney of Jackson County; State senator, represent-ing Jackson and Atchison Counties from 1941 to 1944; member of Kansas Legis-lative Council from 1941 to 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress, the Eightieth Congress, the Eighty-first Congress, and the Eighty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1950), 357,196. ERRETT P. SCRIVNER, Republican, of Kansas City, Kans.; born in Newton, Kans., March 20, 1898, son of Rev. William H. and Etta (West) Scrivner; at-tended grade schools in several Kansas towns; graduated from Manual Training High School, Kansas City, Mo.; enlisted in Battery B, One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Field Artillery, in July 1917; served overseas with the Thirty-fifth Division; awarded Silver Star and Purple Heart medals; graduated from Kansas University, 1925, LL. B.; member of Phi Delta Phi and Order of Coif; general practice of the law; member of Wyandotte County Bar Association, Kansas State Bar Associa-tion, and of the bar of the United States Supreme Court; past State commander, American Legion (Kansas); member of Christian Church and Masonic bodies; married Jean Lorraine Marshall, 1921; one daughter, Nancy Lee; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on September 14, 1943, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of U. S. Guyer; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, to the Eighty-first Compr on November 2, 1948; and to the Eighty-second Congress on November , 1950, THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Montgomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1950), 227,024. MYRON V. GEORGE, Republican, of Altamont, Kans.; born in Erie, Kans., January 6, 1900; attended grade school and graduated from Labette County Com-munity High School at Altamont, Kans.; served in World War I, enlisted April 1917, discharged May 1919; published newspapers 17 years Edna, Kans.; right-of-way agent, Kansas State Highway Commission 1939-42; executive secretary Kansas State Highway Commission 1942-45; acting director, Kansas State Highway Commission May 8, 1945, to September 1945; director of Kansas Second-ary Roads Department, October 1945 to December 1946; executive secretary, 42 Congressional Directory KENTUCKY Kansas State Highway Commission, December 1946 to October 1950; resigned to run for Congress; charter member Altamont Legion Post, held all offices in American Legion Post including junior and senior commander, Third District; former Labette County Republican chairman 4 years, served 8 years secretary-treasurer Third District Congressional Committee; married Hazel E. Eplee, Parsons, Kans.; have three children, Elaine M. Hoffman, Phillipsburg, Kans., Myron Don George, medical student, Kansas University, and Charles Richard, high school student; all members Methodist Church; member of Masonic Lodge and American Legion; elected November 7, 1950, to short term -Eighty-first Congress and to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Butler, Chase, Coffee, Dickinson, Geary, Greenwood, Harvey, Lyon, McPherson, Marion, Morris, Osage, Sedgwick, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (15 counties). Population (1950), 442,807. EDWARD H. REES, Republican, of Lyon County, Kans.; born on a farm in Lyon County, Kans.; was a student at the Kansas State Teachers College, of Emporia, Kans.; was admitted to the practice of law in 1915; is married and has one son; member of the Kansas House of Representatives, 1927-33, being ma-jority floor leader, 1931-33; served in the State senate, 1933-35; served as chair-man of the Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee, 1935-37; member of the Kansas Judicial Council, 1933-37; is engaged in the general practice of law at Emporia, Kans., also operates a farm and interested in agriculture; member of the various Masonic bodies, the American Legion, and the Farm Bureau and Grange; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearney, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, Sumner, and Wichita (33 counties). Population (1950), 310,981. CLIFFORD R. HOPE, Republican, of Garden City, Kans.; born at Birming-ham, Iowa, June 9, 1893; has been a resident of Finney County, Kans., since 1906; attended Nebraska Wesleyan University, Lincoln, Nebr.; graduate of Washburn Law School, Topeka, Kans., 1917; admitted to Kansas bar same year; attended first officers’ training camp, Fort Riley, Kans.; served with the Thirty-fifth and Eighty-fifth Divisions in the United States and France; member of Kansas House of Representatives, 1921-27; speaker pro tempore 1923; speaker, 1925; married Pauline E. Sanders, of Topeka, Kans., January 8, 1921; three children—Edward Sanders (deceased), Clifford R. Hope, Jr. and Martha; Pres-byterian; Scottish Rite Mason; Elk; also member American Legion; elected to Seventieth and all succeeding Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cheyenne, Cloud, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Ottawa, Phillips, Rawlins, Republic, Rooks, Russell, Saline Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (26 counties). Population (1950), WINT SMITH, Republican, of Mankato, Kans.; born in Mankato, Kans., son of W. H. and Ella C. Smith; graduated from Mankato High School; A. B., University of Kansas, 1920; LL. B., Yale University, 1922; married Blanche G. Kingsley, daughter of George W. and Ida M. Kingsley; served as combat In-fantry officer with 24 months overseas in World War I, and as lieutenant colonel in World War II as commanding officer of the Six Hundred and Thirty-fifth T. D. Bn. with 22 months overseas; served as assistant attorney general; attorney, State Highway Commission, 1931-40; practicing attorney; member of Methodist Church; Mason; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; re-elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950. KENTUCKY (Population (1950), 2,944,806) SENATORS EARLE C. CLEMENTS, Democrat, of Morganfield, Union County, Ky.; born in Morganfield, Ky., October 22, 1896; educated in Morganfield public schools and University of Kentucky; enlisted, 1917, for service in World War I; dis-charged captain, Infantry; farmer; married Sara Blue, of Morganfield, Ky.; KENTUCKY Biographical daughter, Elizabeth Hughes Clements; served as sheriff, clerk, and judge of Union €ounty, Ky.; elected to Kentucky State Senate November 1941, serving as majority floor leader in 1944; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 1944; reelected November 1946; elected Governor of Kentucky November 1947; elected to the United States Senate November 1950, for the short term, taking the oath of office on November 27, 1950, and also for the 6-year term expiring January 1957. THOMAS R. UNDERWOOD, Democrat, of Lexington, Ky.; born in Hopkins- ville, Ky., March 3, 1898; son of Thomas C. and Frances (Rust) Underwood; attended Hopkinsville High School and University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.; married Miss Eliza Piggott, Irvington, Ky., June 20, 1925; two sons, Thomas R. Underwood, Jr., Lexington, Ky., attorney, and Walter P. Underwood, United States Navy; is editor of Lexington (Ky.) Herald and former editor and general manager of Lexington Herald; former president of the Kentucky Press Association, Blue Grass Automobile Club, Lexington Board of Commerce, Lexington Optimist Club; assistant to Director Fred M. Vinson, Office of Economic Stabilization, 1943; former chairman of the Democratic State Central Executive Committee and in 1947 State campaign chairman for Gov. Earle C. Clements; former member Kentucky Crippled Children’s Commission; member Episcopal Church, American Legion, Forty and Eight, Elks, National Press Club; secretary of the National Association of State Racing Commissioners 14 years; elected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress without opposi-tion and served until his resignation March 17, 1951; appointed to the United States Senate, effective March 19, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Virgil Chapman. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Christian, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Lyon, McCracken, Marshall, and Trigg (14 counties). Population (1950), 239,604. NOBLE JONES GREGORY, Democrat, of Mayfield, Ky.; born in Mayfield, Ky., August 30, 1897, son of William Jones and Rosa A. (Boyd) Gregory; edu-cated in private and public schools of Mayfield; married to Miss Marion Hale, of Mayfield on June 22, 1925; one daughter, Marion Hale; served in various official capacities with First National Bank of Mayfield since 1917; resigned as cashier and trust officer after election to Congress in 1936; at present, director of this bank; Presbyterian; member of Elks, Odd Fellows, and other fraternal orders; elected to Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936; reelected to Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means and member of Democratic National Congressional Campaign Committee. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Allen, Butler, Daviess, Edmonson, Henderson, Hopkins, Logan, Dien, Muhlenberg, Ohio, Simpson, Todd, Union, Warren, and Webster (15 counties). Population (1950), 342,912. [Vacant.] THIRD DISTRICT.—County: Jefferson. Population (1950), 482,285. THRUSTON BALLARD MORTON, Republican, of Glenview, Ky.; born in Louisville, Ky., August 19, 1907; was graduated from Yale University in 1929 with A. B. degree; formerly chairman of the board, Ballard & Ballard Co., Inec., Louis-ville, Ky.; former director, Louisville Board of Trade; and Louisville Goodwill Industries; present director of Frontier Nursing Service, Lincoln Institute, and United States Trust Co., Louisville, Ky.; 51 months’ active duty in the United States Navy; married Belle Clay Lyons of Louisville, Ky., in 1931; two sons, 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 5 Congressional Directory KENTUCKY Thruston Ballard Morton, Jr., and Clay Lyons Morton; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Anderson, Barren, Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, Green, Hancock, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Metcalfe, Nelson, Shelby, Spencer, Taylor, and Washington (19 counties). Population (1950), 285,055. FRANK LESLIE CHELF, Democrat, of Lebanon, Marion County, Ky.; born Elizabethtown, Hardin County, Ky., September 22, 1907; parents, Judge Weed S. Chelf, deceased, and Hallie Wrather Chelf, deceased; at age of 5 years, at death of parents, was placed in Masonic Widows and Orphans Home of Kentucky; attended St. Mary’s College, St. Mary, Ky., and Centre College, Danville, Ky., received LL. B. degree, Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; admitted to the bar, 1931; married Louise Rash, North Middletown, Bourbon County, Ky., 1935; children—Carolyn, Bonnie, and Frank L., Jr.; elected prosecuting attorney, Marion County, three consecutive 4-year terms; in July 1942 took leave of ab-sence and served in World War II with U. S. Army Air Forces; was a major when retired due to physical disability, August 1944; member, Phi Delta Theta, American Legion, V. F. W., Kiwanis Club, Knights Templar, Eastern Star; elected to Seventy-ninth, reelected to Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Kighty-second Congresses; member, Judiciary Committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Oldham, Pendleton, and Trimble (9 counties). Population (1950), 240,260. BRENT SPENCE, Democrat, of Fort Thomas, Ky.; son of Philip Brent and Virginia (Berry) Spence; born in Newport, Ky.; attorney at law, served as State senator for 4 years; and city solicitor of the city of Newport for 8 years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress from the Sixth District; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large; reelected from the Fifth District to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; elected chairman of the Committee on Banking and Currency on December 3, 1943, and served until the election of his successor by the Eightieth Congress; again elected chairman of that committee by the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bourbon, Boyle, Casey, Clark, Estill, Fayette, Franklin, Garrard, Henry, Jessamine, Lee, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (17 counties). Popu- lation (1950), 357,524. JOHN CLARENCE WATTS, Democrat, of Jessamine County, Kentucky; born in Nicholasville, Ky., July 9, 1902; was graduated from Nicholasville High School in 1921; from University of Kentucky at Lexington in 1925; from the law school of the University of Kentucky in 1927; is a lawyer by profession and engaged in the business of farming; was elected police judge for Nicholasville, Ky., in 1929, for a term of 4 years; at expiration of term was elected county attorney and served three full terms until 1945; served as county chairman of his party for Jessamine County for 24 years; elected to the Kentucky State Legislature in 1947 and served as majority floor leader in the house of representatives; served as commissioner of motor transportation for the State of Kentucky from 1948 until 1951, when he was nominated in a special Democratic primary on March 26, 1951, and elected to the Eighty-second Congress at a special election on April 14, 1951; married. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Floyd, Johnson, Knott, Letcher, Magoffin, Martin, Perry, and Pike (8 counties). Population (1950), 290,264. CARL D. PERKINS, Democrat, of Hindman, Knott County, Ky.; born in Hindman, Ky., October 15, 1912, where he still resides; son of J. E. and Dora Calhoun Perkins; educated in the Knott County grade schools-and Hindman High School; attended Caney Junior College; studied law at Jefferson School of Law, Louisville, Ky., graduating in 1935 and began practice of law; married Miss Verna Johnson, of Knott County, Ky.; member of the American Legion, Mason, and Protestant; served an unexpired term in 1939 as commonwealth attorney from thirty-first judicial district; member of Kentucky General Assembly from the ninety-ninth district in 1940; elected Knott County attorney in 1941 and reelected in 1945; resigned January 1, 1948, to become counsel for department of highways, Frankfort, Ky.; enlisted man in World War II, and saw service in Furopean theater participating in battles of northern France, the Ardennes, the Rhineland, and central Europe; elected on November 2, 1948, to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. LOUISIANA ; B 1ographical 45 * EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Breathitt, Carter, Elliott, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Nicholas, Powell, Robertson, Rowan, and Wolfe (20 counties). Population (1950), 284,410. JOE B. BATES, Democrat, of Greenup, Ky., elected on June 4, 1938, to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to each succeeding Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bell, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Leslie, McCreary, Monroe, Owsley, Pulaski, Rockcastle, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (17 counties). Population (1950), 399,394. JAMES STEPHEN GOLDEN, Republican, of Pineville, Ky.; was born in Barbourville, Knox County, Ky., September 20, 1891; attended the graded school in Barbourville, took high-school work at Union College, Barbourville, Ky., and graduated from the University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky., receiving an A. B. degree; while at the University of Kentucky was president of the Junior Class, president of the Seventeen County Mountain Club, president of the Union Literary Society; took law course at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich., receiving the degree of LL. B.; elected county attorney of Knox County, Ky., on the Republican ticket and served 4 years; has been in general practice of law since then in the Federal and State courts until elected to Congress on the Republican ticket; the son of Capt. Benjamin Bristow Golden and Elizabeth Davis Golden; his father was a captain in the Spanish-American War; the grand-son of Rev. Stephen Golden, Baptist minister and captain in the Union Army during the Civil War; married Ruth Decker, who graduated from high school at Union College and attended Sullens’ College, Bristol, Tenn.; two sons, Richard Davis Golden, graduate of Yale University, A. B. degree; artist; served over-seas 4% years in World War II; and Dr. James S. Golden, Jr., graduate of the University of Virginia, receiving the degrees of A. B. and M. D.; served 2% years in World War II; is a member of the Methodist Church and chairman of the board of trustees; is a Mason and belongs to several civic and fraternal orders; is a member of the Phi Delta Theta law fraternity; elected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. LOUISIANA (Population (1950), 2,683,516) SENATORS ALLEN JOSEPH ELLENDER, Sr., Democrat, of Houma, La.; born in Monte-gut, Terrebonne Parish, La., September 24, 1891; lawyer and farmer; graduate of St. Aloysius College, New Orleans, La., and Tulane University of Louisiana, at New Orleans, with degrees of M. A. and LL. B.; married to Miss Helen Calhoun Donnelly (died September 30, 1949); one son—Allen J., Jr.; served in World War I; city attorney of Houma, 1913-15; district attorney, Terrebonne Parish, 1915-16; delegate to Constitutional Convention of Louisiana in 1921; member of the house of representatives of Louisiana, 1924-36; floor leader, 1928-32, during administration of the late Huey P. Long, Governor; speaker of the house of representatives, 1932-36; Democratic nominee for United States Senator from Louisiana, and elected without opposition in the general election held on Novem-ber 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; reelected November 3, 1942 in the general election, without opposition, for the term ending January 3, 1949; again reelected without opposition in the general election held on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955; Democratic national committeeman from Louisiana, 1939-40. RUSSELL B. LONG, Democrat; born in Shreveport, La., November 3, 1918, of Huey P. and Rose McConnell Long; attended public schools in Shreveport, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans, La.; graduate of Louisiana State University; B. A. degree in 1941; LL. B. degree in 1942; lawyer; admitted to Louisiana bar in June 1942; member of Delta Kappa Epsilon, social fraternity; Phi Delta Phi, legal fraternity; Order of the Coif, legal fraternity; Omicron Delta Kappa; Elks; naval combat veteran of World War II; volunteered in June 1942 and discharged in November 1945; married Katherine Hattic; two daughters, Rita Katherine and Pamela Rust; elected to the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, to fill the unexpired term of the late John H. Overton; reelected November 7, 1950, for 6-year term beginning January 3, 1951. Congressional Directory LOUISIANA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—City or NEW ORLEANS: Wards 3 to 9 and 15. PARISHES: Plaquemines and St. Bernard. Population (1950), 347,418. F. EDWARD HEBERT (pronounced ‘“A-Bear’), Democrat, of New Orleans, La., was born in New Orleans, La., October 12, 1901; educated in the public and parochial elementary schools, Jesuit High School, and Tulane University of New Orleans; newspaperman on the New Orleans States and New Orleans Times-Picayune; city editor of the New Orleans States, elected successively to the Seventy-seventh through the Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CitYy oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 1, 2, 10 through 14, 16, and 17. PARISHES: Jeffer-son, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1950), 391,332. HALE BOGGS, Democrat, of New Orleans, La.; born on February 15, 1914, on the Mississippi Gulf Coast; educated in the public and parochial schools of Jeffer-son Parish, La., and was graduated from Tulane University with B. A. degree in 1935 and LL. B. degree in 1937; served as youngest Democrat in the Seventy-seventh Congress and was a member of the Banking and Currency Committee; served in World War II as an officer in the United States Naval Reserve and United States Maritime Service; separated from the service in January 1946; nominated to the Kightieth Congress on September 10, 1946; member of the Beta Theta Pi academic fraternity, the Omicron Delta Kappa leadership fra-ternity, the Phi Beta Kappa scholastic fraternity, the New Orleans, Louisiana, and American Bar Associations, the Roman Catholic Church, the New Orleans Association of Commerce, the Sons of the American Revolution, Society of Colonial Wars, the American Legion, AMVETS, and the Knights of Columbus; married to Miss Corinne Morrison Claiborne of New Roads and New Orleans, La.; three children—Barbara Rowena, Thomas Hale, Jr., and Corinne Claiborne; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; appointed to Committee on Ways and Means January 1, 1949; American delegate to Interparliamentary Union, Rome, 1948; Stockholm, 1949; and Dublin, 1950. THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, La Fourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1950), 298,299. EDWIN E. WILLIS, Democrat, of St. Martinville, La.; born in Arnaudville, La., October 2, 1904; graduated from St. Martinville High School and from Loyola University, New Orleans, La., with LL. B. degree in 1926; married to Estelle Bulliard December 9, 1929; one child, Bobby Willis, 13 years old; engaged in the practice of law continuously for 23 years; law lecturer at night for 8 years; past president of St. Martinville Rotary Club; chairman of St. Martin Parish Tuberculosis Association; chairman of Boy Scout Court of Honor; member of local Welfare Board; former vice-regional chairman of Louisiana Conference of Social Welfare; active in all local civic endeavors; elected to State senate in January 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, De Soto, Red River, and Webster (7 parishes). Population (1950), 328,070. OVERTON BROOKS, Democrat, of Shreveport, La., was born in East Baton Rouge Parish, La., parents, Claude M. Brooks, deceased, and Mrs. Penelope Overton Brooks; living—four sisters and one brother; educated in the schools of East Baton Rouge Parish; enlisted in the United States Army in July 1918 and served in the Sixth Field Artillery, First Regular Army Division, until September 1, 1919, serving in France, Belgium, and Germany during this time; graduated from the law school of the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., on April 10, 1923, at which time he began practicing law at Shreveport, La.; became United States. Commissioner on September 1, 1925, and served as such for 10 years; married Miss Mollie Meriwether on June 1, 1933, and they have one child— Laura Anne; member of the Episcopal Church, thirty-second degree Mason and Shriner, Elks, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation; Shreveport Bar Association, Louisiana State Bar Association, Kiwanis Club, Forty and Eight Organization, Bienville Cattlemen’s Association, Webster Parish Farm Bureau; elected to Seventy-fifth, and to the seven suc-ceeding Congresses. LOUISIANA Biographical : 47 FIFTH DISTRICT.—PARIsHES: Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, East Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (14 parishes). Population (1950), 322,563. OTTO ERNEST PASSMAN, Democrat, of Monroe, La.; born on a farm in Washington Parish, near Franklinton, La., June 27, 1900, of Irish-French-Holland Dutch extraction; parents, Ed Passman and Pheriby Carrier Passman; married Miss Willie Bateman of Franklinton, La.; graduate of Baton Rouge High School; graduate of Commercial Business College; business executive and civie leader; owner of Passman Equipment Co., Monroe, La. (manufacturers and distributors of commercial refrigerators and restaurant equipment) ; owner of Delta Furniture Co., Monroe, La., owner of Commercial Equipment Co., Fort Smith, Ark.; commissioned a lieutenant in the United States Navy, October 11, 1942, served as matériel and procurement officer; returned to civilian life, September 5, 1944; member, First Baptist Church, Monroe, La.; past State Commander, American Veterans of World War II, Inc.; member, American Legion; thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner; Knight Templar; member, Red Cross of Constantine ; member, Order of Eastern Star; Past Grand Master of Masons of Louisiana; member, Monroe Rotary Club; member, advisory board, Salvation Army; chairman, board of directors, Masonic Temple Building, New Orleans; member, board of directors, Society for Crippled Children; vice president Mississippi Valley Flood Control Association; elected td the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Ascension, East Baton Rouge, East Feliciana, Iberville, Livingston, Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1950), 414,975. JAMES HOBSON MORRISON, Democrat, of Hammond, La.; born in Ham-mond, La., December 8, 1908; attended the public schools; was graduated from Tulane University in 1935 with LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar in 1934 and commenced practice in Hammond, La.; married Miss Marjorie Abbey, of Webb, Miss., February 14, 1940; two children, Hobson and Benjamin; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Kighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Jef-ferson Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1950), 315,807. HENRY DOMINIQUE LARCADE, Jr., Democrat, of Opelousas, La.; born in Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, La., July 12, 1890; educated in the public and parochial elementary schools, Opelousas High School, Academy Immaculate Conception, and Opelousas Institute; married Miss Virginia Budd, of Opelousas, La., June 18, 1913; in early business experience engaged in banking; resigned banking connections to enter insurance business; presently engaged in general insurance business at Opelousas, La.; member of St. Landry Parish School Board, 1913-28; elected a member of the Louisiana State senate in 1928 from the sena-torial district comprised of the Parishes of Acadia and St. Landry, serving from 1928 to 1932; served as assistant clerk of the senate, 1932-36; elected as a member of the State house of representatives from the Parish of St. Landry, La., in 1936 and served until 1940; member of and served as head and official of American Red Cross, Chamber of Commerce, Rotary Club, B. P. O. Elks, Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus, District Boy Scout Council, Woodmen of the World, United Service Organizations, American Legion, Forty and Eight, and other civic organizations; served at Camp Pike, Ark., during the First World War; religion, Catholic; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Avoyelles, Grant, La Salle, Natchitoches, Rapides, Sabine, Vernon, and Winn (8 parishes). Population (1950), 248,558, A. LEONARD ALLEN, Democrat, of Winnfield, La., was born in a log cabin near Winnfield, La., January 5, 1891; son of Asa L. Allen and Sophronia Perkins Allen; reared on a small hill farm and received his early education in rural schools; graduated from the Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La., receiving A. B. degree in 1914; taught in rural schools; principal of the Georgetown High School, 1914-15, and the Verda High School, 1915-17; superintendent of Winn Parish schools, 1917-22; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1922, and has practiced his profession since at Winnfield; married Miss Lottie Mae Thompson in 1915, and they have two sons—Harwell Leonard Allen and Lyndon Blaine 48 Congressional Directory MAINE Allen; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, FEightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. MAINE (Population (1950), 913,774) SENATORS OWEN BREWSTER, Republican, of Dexter, Maine; born at Dexter, Maine, February 22, 1888; educated in the Dexter schools; graduated from Dexter High School, 1905, Bowdoin College, 1909, and Harvard Law School, 1913; prin-cipal of the Castine High School, 1910; admitted to the Maine bar in 1913; member of Portland school committee, 1915-23; representative to Maine Legis-lature, 1917-18; renominated, but resigned to enter military service; private, second lieutenant, captain, and regimental adjutant, Third Infantry, Maine National Guard; private, Field Artillery, Central Officers’ Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor; representative to Maine Legislature, 1921-22; senator 1923-24; Governor of Maine 1925-29; chairman Governors’ conference 1926-27; married Dorothy Foss, of Portland, Maine, April 20, 1915; son, Charles F. Brewster, born May 8, 1916; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on September 10, 1934, reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on September 14, 1936; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on September 12, 1938; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1947; reelected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1953. MARGARET CHASE SMITH, Republican; native of Skowhegan, Maine; served in House of Representatives 1940-49; elected to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cumberland, Oxford, Sagadahoc, and York (4 counties). Population (1950), 325,927. ROBERT HALE, Republican, of Portland, Maine, born in Portland, Maine, November 29, 1889; was graduated from Portland High School 1906; A. B. degree, Bowdoin College, 1910; B. A. degree, Oxford University, England, 1912; studied at Harvard Law School 1913-14; M. A. degree, Oxford University, 1921; honorary M. A. degree, University of Maine, 1931; honorary LL. D., Bowdoin, 1947; fraternities, Psi Upsilon and Phi Beta Kappa; admitted to Massachusetts bar in 1914; Maine bar in 1917; practiced law, Portland, Maine, 1917-42; repre-sentative to Maine Legislature, 1923 to 1930; speaker of Maine House of Rep-resentatives 1929-30; served in the United States Army, August 1917 to Sep-tember 1919, in grades from private to second lieutenant; married Agnes Burke, of Morristown, N. J., April 20, 1922; daughter, Patricia Hale, born January 7, 1926; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress September 14, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress September 11, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Con-gress September 9, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress September 13, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress September 11, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Kennebec, Knox, Lincoln, Somerset, and Waldo (7 counties). Population (1950), 294,759. CHARLES P. NELSON, Republican; born Waterville, Maine, 1907; graduated from Cony High School in Augusta, Maine, 1924; Colby College, A. B., 1928; Harvard Law School, LL. B., 1931; admitted to Maine bar, 1931; member Maine Board of Bar Examiners, 1946-48; married Elisabeth Gross, 1931; daughter, Elisabeth Ann; city solicitor, Augusta, Maine, 1934-42; mayor, 1947, 1948; entered military service in Air Corps, second lieutenant, 1942; discharged lieu-tenant colonel 1946 with 2 years’ service in ETO; elected to Eighty-first Congress September 13, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress September 11, 1950. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aroostook, Hancock, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1950), 289,770. CLIFFORD GUY MCINTIRE, Republican, of Perham, Maine; born at Perham, Maine, May 4, 1908, son of Frank C. and Velma Smith Meclntire; MARYLAND B 1ographical 49 educated in public schools of Perham; Washburn High School, Washburn, Maine (Vocational Agriculture, graduated 1925); University of Maine, Orono, Maine (College of Agriculture, B. S. Agronomy, 1930); R. O. T. C., 1925 to 1927, Uni-versity of Maine; member of Alpha Gamma Rho, Alpha Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Sigma, Free and Accepted Masons, the Washburn Rotary Club, and the Baptist Church of Perham; engaged in farming at Perham since 1930; from 1933 to 1947 employed as appraiser, supervisor, and regional manager for Farm Credit Administration, Springfield, Mass.; 1947 to 1951 employed as assistant general manager of Maine Potato Growers, Inc., Presque Isle; married September 11, 1931, to Wilda A. Holts of Perham; one daughter, Patrice, age 19, and one son, Blynn, age 16; elected to the Eighty-second Congress October 22, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Frank Fellows. MARYLAND (Population (1950), 2,343,001) SENATORS HERBERT R. O’CONOR, Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in Baltimore, Md., November 17, 1896, son of Mary Galvin O’Conor and the late James P. A. O’Conor; graduated from Loyola College in 1917 and from the University of Maryland in 1920; People’s Counsel of the Public Service Commission; State’s Attorney in Baltimore in 1923; reelected ‘in 1926 and 1930; Attorney General in 1934; chairman of the State Judicial Commission of Maryland; in 1937 President of the National Association of Attorneys General; married M. Eugenia Byrnes on November 24, 1920, and they have five children, Herbert R., Jr., Eugene F., Mary Patricia, James P., and Robert; elected Governor of Maryland in 1938; reelected in 1942 for a second term; elected Chairman of the Governors’ Confer-ence; honorary degrees of Doctor of Laws from the University of Maryland, Loyola College of Baltimore, Villanova College of Pennsylvania, Georgetown University of Washington, D. C., and Washington College at Chestertown; mem-ber of the American Bar Association, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953. JOHN MARSHALL BUTLER, Republican, of 221 Upnor Road, Baltimore 12, Md.; born July 21, 1897, Baltimore, Md., served 26 months during World War I with One-Hundred and Tenth Field Artillery, Twenty-ninth Division, over-seas 12 months; matriculated at the Johns Hopkins University; later attended University of Maryland and graduated in 1926 with an LL. B. degree; since then carried on law practice; with the City Service Commission of Baltimore City, April 1947 to June 1949; married Miss Marie Louise Abell, elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950, for the term expiring January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1950), 210,197. EDWARD TYLOR MILLER, Republican, of Easton, Md.; born at Woodside, Md., February 1, 1895; graduated from Sidwell’s Friends School, Washington, D. C., 1912; graduated from Yale in 1916 with A. B. degree; member of Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, American Legion, 40 and 8, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Psi Upsilon, National Grange, Lions, Elks Club, and K. of P.; Infantry officer in World War I; practiced law since 1920; served as referee in bankruptcy; police and juvenile judge; served as colonel of Infantry in World War II; married Josephine W. Ford in 1942; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford. City oF BALTIMORE: Wards 15 and 16; ward 25, precincts 1 to 10; wards 26 to 28. Population (1950), 745,493. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: JAMES PATRICK SINNOTT DEVEREUX, Republican, of Stevenson, Md.; born February 20, 1903; occupation, farmer; retired brigadier general, United States Marine Corps, 25 years’ active service; married; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS THIRD DISTRICT.—CiTY oF BALTIMORE: Wards 1 to 8; ward 18, precincts 8 to 12; ward 22. Population(1950), 195,213. EDWARD A. GARMATZ, Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in Baltimore, Md., February 7, 1903; attended the public schools and the Polytechnic Institute; married to Ruth Burchard; engaged in the electrical business; associated with the Maryland State Racing Commission for 3 years; served as police magistrate 1944-47; elected to the Eightieth Congress July 15, 1947, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Thomas D’Alesandro; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CitYy oF BALTIMORE: Wards 9 to 14, and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3; wards 19 and 20. Population (1950), 283,445. GEORGE H. FALLON, Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in the city of Baltimore, July 24, 1902, the son of Lawrence Fallon, Sr., and Mary Dempsey Fallon; educated in the public schools and Calvert Business College, Johns Hopkins University (night); engaged in the advertising sign business; partner in the Lawrence Fallon Co.; married Miss Willa Virginia Thomas in 1929 and they have one child, Mary Joyce; elected to Democratic State Central Committee of Baltimore in 1938, served as chairman; elected to the Baltimore City Council in 1939; reelected in 1943; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St. Marys (6 counties). CITY oF BALTIMORE: Ward 18, precincts 4 to 7, 13 and 14; wards 21, 23, and 24; ward 25, precincts 11 to 17. Population (1950), 474,572. LANSDALE G. SASSCER, Demeocrat, of Upper Marlboro, Md.; born in Upper Marlboro, Md., September 30, 1893, son of late Frederick and Lucy Clagett Sasscer; attended public schools of Prince Georges County, Central High School of Washington, D. C., and Tome School, Port Deposit, Md.; received LL. B. degree from Dickinson Law School in 1914; served 13 months with American Expedi-tionary Forces in France; at time of his discharge held first lieutenant’s commis-sion; after war, resumed practice of law in southern Maryland; married February 15, 1919, to Miss Agnes Coffren, and they have three children, Mrs. Hal B. Clagett, Jr., Mrs. W. Murray Sanders, and Lansdale G., Jr.; member of Maryland Senate, 1922-38, serving as majority floor leader and president of that body in 1935 and 1937; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress February 3, 1939; reelected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, FEightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Committee on Armed Services. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 coun-ties). Population (1950), 415,323. JAMES GLENN BEALL, Republican, of Frostburg, Md.; born in Frostburg, Md.; attended the public schools and Gettysburg (Pa.) College; during the First World War served in the Ordnance Corps, United States Army, being discharged with the rank of sergeant; engaged in the insurance and real-estate business, with offices in Frostburg and Cumberland, Md.; member of the Allegany County Road Commission, 1923-30; served in the Maryland State senate, 1930-34; served as member and chairman of the Maryland State Roads Commission, 1938-39; Episcopalian; married; three sons; elected to the Seventy-eighth Con-gress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. MASSACHUSETTS (Population (1950), 4,690,514) SENATORS LEVERETT SALTONSTALL, Republican, of Dover, Mass.; born in Chest-nut Hill (Newton), Mass., September 1, 1892; Noble and Greenough School; Harvard College, A. B., 1914; Harvard University Law School, LL. D., 1917; married Alice Wesselhoeft, of Jaffrey, N. H., June 27, 1916; children, Leverett, Jr. (first lieutenant, U. S. Army, discharged), Rosalie (deceased), Emily B. (Rm. 1/e U. S. N. R. WAVES, discharged), Peter B. (killed in action, sergeant, U.S. Marines), William L. (Quartermaster 3/c U. S. N. R., discharged), and Susan; served as first lieutenant, Three Hundred and First Field Artillery, 1917-18 (5 months’ service in France); attorney at law; member of board of aldermen, MASSACHUSETTS B 1ographical : Newton, 1920-22; assistant district attorney of Middlesex County, 1921-22; member, Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1923-36; speaker of the House for 8 years of service; director of Greater Boston Community Fund Drive, 1938; elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1938; reelected in 1940 and 1942; chairman, New England Governors’ Conference, 1939-44; chairman, National Governors’ Conference, 1944; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the unexpired term of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (resigned), ending January 3, 1949; reelected to the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for 6-year term ending January 3, 1955. HENRY CABOT LODGE, Jr., Republican, of Beverly, Mass.; born in Nahant, Mass., July 5, 1902, grandson of the late United States Senator Henry Cabot Lodge and nephew of the late Congressman Augustus P. Gardner; graduate of Harvard College; married Emily Sears, of Beverly, in 1926, and is the father of two sons, George Cabot and Henry Sears; Boston Evening Transcript, 1924-25; New York Herald Tribune, 1925-31; member, House and Senate Press Galleries; member National Press Club; elected Representative to General Court of Massachusetts, 1932 and 1934; elected United States Senator on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; served with first American tank detachment, Libya, 1942; reelected November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949; resigned from the Senate, February 5, 1944, in order again to go on active duty in the Army; served in the Mediterranean and European theaters until separation, December 22, 1945; elected United States Senator November 5, 1946, for term ending January 1953; appointed representative of the United States of America to the fifth session of the General Assembly of the United Nations, September 18, 1950. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Berkshire and Franklin. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Holyoke -and Westfield; towns of Blandford, Chester, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, and Tolland. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Towns of Belchertown, Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Huntington, Middlefield, Pelham, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol, Petersham, Phillipston, Royalston, and Templeton. Popu-lation (1950), 295,879. JOHN WALTER HESELTON, Republican,.of Deerfield, Mass.; born March 17, 1900; educated in the public schools of Gardiner, Maine, Amherst College, and Harvard Law School; lawyer; served in the United States Army October 10 to December 12, 1918; secretary, trustees of Deerfield Academy; trustee, Green-field Savings Bank; selectman, Deerfield, Mass., 1932-35; president, Massachu-setts Selectmen’s Association, 1935-38; district attorney, northwestern district, 1939, and reelected in 1942; married; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Kightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.— HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Agawam, Brim-field, East Longmeadow, Hampden, Holland, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Monson, Wales, West Spring-field, and Wilbraham. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Easthamp-ton, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield, and South Hadley. Population (1950), 343,206. FOSTER FURCOLO, Democrat, of Longmeadow, Mass.; born July 29, 1911; Yale College 1933, Yale Law 1936; lawyer; veteran World War II, service in Pacific area; married Kathryn Foran; three sons, Charles Mark, David, and Foster, Jr.; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948. THIRD DISTRICT.—H AMPDEN COUNTY: Town of Palmer. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Town of Ware. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Marlborough; towns of Hudson, Maynard, Shirley, and Stow. WORCES- TER COUNTY: Cities of Fitchburg, Gardner, and Leominster; towns of Ashburnham, Barre, Black-stone, Bolton, Brookfield, Charlton, Clinton, Douglas, Dudley, East Brookfield, Hardwick, Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Leicester, Lunenburg, Milford, Millbury, Millville, New Braintree, North-bridge, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton, Princeton, Rutland, Southbridge, Spencer, Stur-bridge, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Warren, Webster, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population (1950), 317,540. PHILIP JOSEPH PHILBIN, Democrat, of Clinton, Mass.; born in Clinton, Mass.,, May 29, 1898; educated at Clinton public and high schools, Harvard College, A. B. course, class of 1920, and Columbia University Law School, class of 1924, LL. B. degree; practicing attorney, businessman, and farmer; former secretary, campaign manager, and personal representative for United States Senator David I. Walsh; former special counsel, United States Senate Committee on Education and Labor; former referee, United States Department of Labor; former member, advisory board, Massachusetts Unemployment Compensation Commission; present chairman of Town of Clinton Finance Committee; presi-dent of Clinton Chamber of Commerce; married Miss Lillan Sundberg; two Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS children, Mary Ellen Bamby and Ann Blenda; veteran of First World War; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; reelected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.— MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Waltham; towns of Ashland, Framingham, Hop-kinton, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Berlin, Boylston, Grafton, Holden, Northborough, Shrewsbury, Southborough, Sterling, Westborough, and West Boylston. Population (1950), 349,899. HAROLD D. DONOHUE, Democrat, of Worcester, Mass.; born in Worcester, Mass., June 18, 1901; attended the schools of that city; was graduated from the Northeastern University School of Law in 1925; was admitted to the Massa-chusetts Bar in February 1926 and practiced law in the city of Worcester since; entered the United States Navy in December 1942 and was separated from the service in December 1945 with the rank of lieutenant commander; single; served in the Worcester city government for a period of 10 years; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on Novem-ber 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.— ESSEX CoUNTY: Town of Andover. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Lowell and Woburn; towns of Acton, Arlington, Ashby, Ayer, Bedford, Belmont, Billerica, Boxborough, Burling-ton, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Lexington, Lincoln, Littleton, Pep-perell, Tewksbury, Townsend, Tyngsboro, Watertown, Westford, Wilmington, and Winchester. Population (1950), 363,220. EDITH NOURSE ROGERS, Republican, of Lowell; born, Saco, Maine, 1881; graduate Rogers Hall School, Lowell, and Madame Julien’s School, Paris, France; received honorary M. A. degrees from Tufts College and Bates College; honorary LL. D. from Washington College of Law; president of the board of trustees of Rogers Hall School, Lowell; member of Women’s Overseas League and American Legion Auxiliary; served overseas, 1917; with American Red Cross in care of the disabled, 1918-22; appointed personal representative in care of disabled veterans by President Harding, 1922; reappointed by President Coolidge, 1923, and by President Hoover, March 28, 1929; Presidential elector, 1924; elected to Congress June 30, 1925, to fill vacancy caused by death of husband, the late Representa-tive John Jacob Rogers; reelected to the Seventieth and all succeeding Congresses, including the Eighty-second, by large majorities. SIXTH DISTRICT.— Essex County: Cities of Salem, Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and the city of Lynn, wards 2 and 3; towns of Amesbury, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Methuen, Newbury, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. Population (1950), 301,691. WILLIAM HENRY BATES, Republican, of Salem, Mass.; born in Salem, Mass., April 26, 1917, son of Mrs. Nora Jennings Bates and the late Hon. George J. Bates; educated in Salem schools, Worcester Academy, Brown University, and the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration; married Miss Pearle Jean Dreyer in 1943 and have one daughter, Susan; in naval service more than 9 years, resigning commission as lieutenant commander, United States Navy, when elected to the Eighty-first Congress in a special election held Febru-ary 14, 1950, reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Lawrence, city of Lynn, wards 1, 4, 5, 6, and 7, and city of Peabody; towns of Middleton, Nahant, and North Andover. SUrroLk CouUNTY: Cities of Chelsea and Revere and town of Winthrop. Population (1950), 281,265. THOMAS J. LANE, Democrat, of Lawrence; born in Lawrence, Mass., July 6, 1898; attorney at law; atténded the public schools of Lawrence, Mass.; graduated from Suffolk Law School with LL. B. degree in 1925; admitted to practice of law in Massachusetts in 1926 and the United States District Court in 1927; World War veteran; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1927 to 1938; member of Massachusetts Senate from 1939 until his resignation to become a member of the Seventy-seventh Congress; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on December 30, 1941, to fill, for the unexpired term, the seat left vacant by the death of Lawrence J. Connery; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—EsseEx County: Towns of Lynnfield and Saugus. MIDDLESEX CoUNTY: Cities of Everett, Malden, Medford, and Melrose, city of Somerville, wards 4, 5, 6, and 7; towns of North Reading, Reading, Stoneham, and Wakefield. Population (1950), 328,309. ANGIER LOUIS GOODWIN, Republican, of Melrose, Mass. ; born in Fairfield, Maine, January 30, 1881; Colby College, A. B., 1902, Harvard Law School, 1905; MASSACHUSETTS Biographical : 53 admitted to Maine bar in 1905 and to Massachusetts bar in 1906; practiced law with office in Boston since 1906; married Eleanor Hardy Stone, of Bangor, Maine, in 1905, and has three children—Roger L., Mary E. (Mrs. Robert DeWitt Culver), and Barbara L. (Mrs. Arthur E. Flint); during First World War served in Massachusetts State Guard and as member of legal advisory board to aid draft registrants; served as trustee of Melrose public library; member of planning board and chairman of board of appeal; 8 years a member of the Melrose Board of Aldermen and president of the board in 1920; mayor of Melrose in 1921 and re-elected in 1922; member of Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1925 to 1928; member Massachusetts State Senate from 1929 to 1941 and president of the senate in 1941; chairman Massachusetts Commission on Participation in New York World’s Fair; appointed by Gov. Leverett Saltonstall as chairman of the Massachusetts Commission on Administration and Finance in December 1941, and resigned in May 1942 to become candidate for Congress; thirty-second degree Mason, member of Shrine, Eastern Star, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Elks, Grange, and Zeta Psi fraternity; Unitarian; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty- second Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket. BRIsTOL COUNTY: City of Fall River, ward 6, and city of New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, and Westport. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Cohasset. PLYMOUTH COUNTY: Towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marion, Marshfield, Mattapoisett, Middleborough, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Rockland, Scituate, Wareham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Population (1950), 343,971. DONALD W. NICHOLSON, Republican, Wareham, Mass.; elected to Mas-sachusetts House of Representatives in 1925; served in the Massachusetts Senate 1926-47; unanimously elected president of the Massachusetts Senate in 1946, resigning the office when elected to the Eightieth Congress November 18, 1947; veteran of World War I; married; one son and one daughter, both veterans of World War II; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Newton. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Brookline. SUFFOLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 4, 5, 10, 12, 19, 20, and 21. Population (1950), 387,455. CHRISTIAN ARCHIBALD HERTER, Republican, of Boston, Mass.; born in Paris, France, March 28, 1895, of American parents; was graduated from Harvard University, cum laude, in 1915; attaché of the American Embassy in Berlin, Germany, in 1916, and for 2 months was in charge of the American Legation in Brussels, Belgium; in the Department of State at Washington, D. C., 1917 and 1919; in 1918 was assistant commissioner and secretary of special diplo-matic mission to draw up prisoner-of-war agreement with Germany and secretary of American Peace Commission; executive secretary, European Relief Council, 1920; personal assistant to Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover, 1921-24; editor of the Independent, 1924-28; associate editor and vice president of the Sportsman, 1927-37; visiting lecturer on Government, Harvard University, 1929-30; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1931-43, serving as speaker 1939-43; president of the Republican Club of Massachusetts, 1937-41; overseer of Harvard University, 1940-44 and 1950-; trustee of The Johns Hopkins University; deputy director, Office of Facts and Figures, Washington, D. C., from December 1941 to June 1942; married Mary Caroline Pratt, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1917; four children, Christian A., Jr., Dr. Frederic P., Mrs. Joseph Seronde, Jr., and Miles; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Cambridge and city of Somerville, wards 1, 2, and 3. SUFFOLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 1, 2, 8, and 22. Population (1950), 328,025. JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY, Democrat, of Boston, Mass.; born in Brookline, Mass., May 29, 1917; Harvard University, 1940, B. S. cum laude; Lon- don School of Economics; joined Navy in September 1941; served in PT boats in Pacific; retired in April 1945; newspaper correspondent; unmarried; author of Why England Slept; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SUrFoLK COUNTY: City of Boston, wards 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 7. Population (1950), 330,642. Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS Harriet Joyce of South Boston; member of the constitutional convention, 1917-18; member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1920, 1921, and 1922, and the Massachusetts Senate 1923, 1924, 1925, and 1926, the last 2 years as Democratic leader; Member -Seventieth Congress, filling unexpired term of the late James A. Gallivan; Member Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; majority leader; reelected to the Eightieth Con-gress, minority whip; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress, majority leader; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress, majority leader; World War I veteran; awarded honorary degrees of LL. D. by Boston University, Boston, Mass., March 13, 1942; LL. D. by Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., May 5, 1942; LL. D. by Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Mass., June 13, 1945; by Villanova College, Villanova, Pa., June 4, 1951; by Tufts College, Medford, Mass., June 10, 1951; member of Order of Malta, First Class, and Knights of Columbus. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NORFoOLK COUNTY: City of Quincy; towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Dedham, Holbrook, Milton, Needham, Norwood, Randolph, Westwood, and Weymouth. PLYMOUTH County: City of Brockton. SUFFOLK COUNTY: City of Boston, ward 18. Population (1950), 353,757. RICHARD B. WIGGLESWORTH, Republican, of Milton; born in Boston, April 25, 1891; educated at Harvard (A. B. 1912, LL. B. 1916); married Florence Joyes Booth of Louisville, Ky., April 30, 1931; children, Ann Joyes, Mary Dixwell, and Jane Booth; assistant private secretary to Hon. W. Cameron Forbes, Gov-ernor General of the Philippine Islands, 1913; lawyer; served in France during World War I as captain, Battery E, and commanding officer, First Battalion, Three Hundred and Third Field Artillery, Seventy-sixth Division; office of Secretary of the Treasury as legal adviser to Assistant Secretary in charge of foreign loans and railway payments, and secretary of World War Foreign Debt Commission, 1922-24; assistant to agent general for reparation payments, Berlin, 1924-27; Paris representative and general counsel for organizations created under Dawes plan, 1927-28; member of American Bar Association, Massachusetts Bar Association, American Legion, ‘40 and 8’, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Military Order World War, Military Order Foreign Wars; elected November 6, 1928, to the Seventieth Congress for the unexpired term of the late Hon. Louis A. Froth-ingham; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BrisToL CoUNTY: City of Attleboro, city of Fall River, wards 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,7,8,and 9, and city of Taunton; towns of Berkley, Dighton, Easton, Freetown, Mansfield, North Attleboro, Norton, Raynham, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Somerset, and Swansea. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Holliston, Natick, and Sherborn. NORFOLK COUNTY: Towns of Bellingham, Dover, Fox- borough, Franklin, Medfield, Medway, Mills, Norfolk, Plainville, Sharon, Stoughton, Walpole, sy and Wrentham. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Hopedale and Mendon. Population 1950), 339,719. JOSEPH WILLIAM MARTIN, Jr., Republican, of North Attleboro, Mass.; born November 3, 1884; educated in the public schools of North Attleboro; honorary degrees: LL. D. from Tufts College, Medford, Mass.; LL. D., Penn- sylvania Military College, Chester, Pa.; D. C. L., Boston University, Boston, Mass.; M. S. B. A., Bryant College, Providence, R. I.; publisher of Evening Chron- icle, North Attleboro and Franklin Sentinel, Franklin, Mass.; member, Massa- chusetts House of Representatives, 1912-14; member, Massachusetts State Senate, 1914-17; delegate to Republican National Convention, 1916; chairman, Massachusetts Street Railway Investigating Committee, 1917; chairman, Massa- chusetts Republican Legislative Campaign Committee, 1917; Harding-Coolidge Presidential elector, 1920; executive secretary, Republican State committee, 1922-25; delegate at large to Republican National Convention at Cleveland in 1936; chairman of the Republican Congressional Campaign Committee in 1938; permanent chairman of the Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1940; member of Republican National Committee, 1936 to 1940; elected chairman of the Republican National Committee, July 1940; resigned chairmanship in November 1942; delegate at large to Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1944 and served as permanent chairman; permanent chairman, Republican National Convention at Philadelphia in 1948; in 1924, elected Member of the Sixty-ninth and to each succeeding Congress, including the Eighty-second; elected Minority Leader, Seventy-sixth Congress; elected Speaker on January 3, 1947; elected Minority Leader January 3, 1949, and reelected January 3, 1951. MICHIGAN Biographical MICHIGAN (Population (1950), 6,371,766) SENATORS HOMER FERGUSON, Republican, of Detroit, Mich.; born in Harrison City, Pa., February 25, 1889; attended the University of Pittsburgh and was graduated from the University of Michigan in 1913 with LL. B. degree; lawyer; appointed circuit judge of the Circuit Court for Wayne County, Mich., in 1929, elected in 1930, and reelected in 1935 and 1941; married Myrtle Jones in 1913; one daughter, Mrs. Charles R. Beltz; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949; reelected on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. : BLAIR MOODY, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich.; born in New Haven, Conn, February 13, 1902; educated in public schools in Providence, R. I.; was graduated from Brown University, A. B., in 1922, majoring in economics; member of Phi Beta Kappa, Psi Upsilon, and Sigma Delta Chi fraternities; instructor in history and other subjects, Moses Brown Preparatory School, 1922-23; went to Detroit, Mich., and joined staff of The Detroit News, writing first sports, then polities and economies, until 1933, when he came to Washington, D. C., as correspondent and columnist for The Detroit News; also wrote extensively for the North Ameri-can Newspaper Alliance, the Bell Syndicate, and other newspapers and magazines; later added radio and television programs to his activities; in 1941 authored “Boom or Bust,”” a popular treatment of modern economic problems; as combat war correspondent in 1944, covered the war on Anzio beachhead, Cassino, and other sections of Italy, Africa, the British Isles, the Middle East, and Iran; for 6 years moderated “Meet Your Congress,”” a radio and television program pre-senting panel of four members of Congress debating public questions weekly; since the war has toured Europe extensively at least once each year, reporting and analyzing economic, social, and military problems and United States leader-ship in the recovery and strengthening of resistance to communism ; married; has three sons; member Congregational Church; member Gridiron Club, National Press Club, Detroit Athletic Club, Overseas Writers Club, University Club; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. G. Mennen Williams on April 23, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Arthur H. Vandenberg. REPRESENTATIVES “FIRST DISTRICT.— City oF DETROIT: Wards 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, and 15, and city of Hamtramck. Population (1950), 379,093. THADDEUS M. MACHROWICZ, Democrat, of Hamtramck, Mich.; was born in Poland on August 21, 1899, the son of Boniface and Frances Machrowiecz; attended St. Casimir’s parochial school in Milwaukee, Wis., Alliance College in Cambridge Springs, Pa. (1912-16), University of Chicago (1917) and graduated Detroit College of Law in 1924 with an LL. B. degree; World War 1 veteran, having served in Canada, France, and Poland as lieutenant in Polish Army of American volunteers; served with American Technical Advisory Commission to Polish Government (1920-21), also acted as war correspondent with Floyd Gibbons in Poland in 1919-21; married Sophia Jara and they have two sons— Tod, 11 years of age, and Don, 8 years of age; city attorney of Hamtramck, 1934-36; legal director of Michigan Public Utilities Commission, 1938-39, and municipal judge in Hamtramck, 1942-50; former national president of National Advocates Association, State president of Michigan Division of Polish-American Congress; former member of Governor’s Commission on Americanism and Wayne County Rent Advisory Board; former public member of War Labor Board; member of: State Bar of Michigan, Detroit Bar Association, American Legion, Polish Legion of American Veterans, Polish Army Veterans Association, Polish National Alliance, Polish Roman Catholic Union, and Alliance of Poles; elected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Population (1950), 380,064. . GEORGE MEADER, Republican, of Ann Arbor, Mich.; born Benton Harbor, Mich., September 13, 1907; A. B., University of Michigan, 1927; J. D., University Congressional Directory MICHIGAN of Michigan Law School, 1931; member, Michigan Bar, since 1932; counsel, Michigan Merit System Association 1939-40, which sponsored Michigan civil service constitutional amendment; prosecuting attorney, Washtenaw County 1941-43; assistant counsel, special United States Senate committee investigating the national defense program (Truman-Mead Committee), July 1, 1943, to October 1, 1945; chief counsel October 1, 1945, to July 15, 1947; consulting counsel July 15, 1947, to January 1949; conducted investigations of transporta-tion, 1944; United States surplus property disposal in foreign areas, 1945-46, Erie Basin Metal Products Company case, which resulted in war contracts fraud conviction of Congressman Andrew J. May and industrialists Henry and Murray Garsson, 1946, transactions between Senator Theodore G. Bilbo and certain war contractors, 1946, Inter-American Highway project, 1946-47, and military gov-ernment in Germany, 1946; 1948-50 practiced law, Ann Arbor, Mich., and Washington, D. C.; chief counsel, United States Senate Banking and Currency Subcommittee investigating the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (Fulbright Committee), 1950; admitted State Bar of Michigan, District of Columbia Bar, and Bar of Supreme Court of the United States; member American Political Science Association, American Society of International Law, Kiwanis Club (president, 1939), and Elks lodge, Ann Arbor, Mich. ; first president, Wash-tenaw County Federation of Young Republicans, 1932; charter member, Michigan Federation of Young Republicans, 1932-36; president, University of Michigan Club of Ann Arbor, 1937; vice president, Alumni Association, University of Michigan, 1940-41; member Methodist Episcopal Church; author, ‘Limitations on Congressional Investigation,” Michigan Law Review, April 1949, and ‘“Im-portance of the Fact-Finding Process,” University of Chicago Law Review, Spring, 1951; married Elizabeth Faeth, 1928; children, Robert, 20; Barbara, 13; Katherine, 11; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member, ‘Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Subcommittee on Government Operations (Hardy Committee). THIRD DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Pop-ulation (1950), 348,001. PAUL W. SHAFER, Republican, elected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses; born Apil 27, 1893, Elkhart, Ind.; educated Three Rivers, Mich., public schools, Ferris Institute, Blackstone Institute of Law; newspaper reporter, editor, publisher and owner; elected municipal judge, Battle Creek, Mich., 1928, serving until elected to Congress in 1936; served Indiana State Militia 1917-18; honorary member Post 565 Veterans of Foreign Wars, Potentate Saladin Temple Shrine 1935, district governor Lions Club 1936; member of Elks Lodge No. 131, DeWitt Clinton Consistory, F. & A. M., No. 503; Battle Creek Com-nets ap National Press Club; home address: 38 Woolnough Street, Battle Creek, Mich. FOURTH DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1950), 291,818. CLARE E. HOFFMAN, Republican, Allegan, Mich.; born Vicksburg, Pa., September 10, 1875; public schools; Northwestern University Law School; married; elected Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934; reelected Novem-ber 3, 1936, with a plurality of 5,276; reelected November 8, 1938, with a plurality of 15,367; reelected November 5, 1940, with a plurality of 25,224; reelected November 3, 1942, with a plurality of 23,588, which was 69 percent of the vote cast, highest previous plurality being61 percent; reelected November 7, 1944, with a plurality of 30,479; reelected November 5, 1946, with a plurality of 37,284, which was 73 percent of the vote cast; reelected November 2, 1948, with a plu-rality of 29,630, which was 64.8 percent of the vote cast; reelected November 7, 1950, with a plurality (unofficial returns) of 32,324, which was 69 percent of the vote cast. FIFTH DISTRICT.— CounTIES: Kent and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1950), 360,377. GERALD R. FORD, Jr., Republican, of Grand Rapids, Mich.; born in Omaha, Nebr., July 14, 1913; attended Grand Rapids public schoois; graduated from University of Michigan with B. A. degree 1935 and from Yale University Law School with LL. B. degree 1941; admitted to Michigan bar in 1941; served 47 months in United States Navy in World War IT; Grand Rapids Junior Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Service Award 1947; United States Junior Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Service Award 1949; married to Elizabeth B. Warren; son, Michael Gerald, born March 14, 1950; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. MICHIGAN B 1ographical 57 Bo A DISIHICT, Coun Genesee, Ingham, and Livingston (3 counties). Population (1950), WILLIAM W. BLACKNEY, Republican, of Flint, Mich.; born at Clio, Genesee County, Mich.; educated in the public schools of Genesee County; attended school at Big Rapids, Mich., and Olivet College, Olivet, Mich.; was graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1912, since which time he has practiced law in Genesee County; he was assistant prosecuting attorney from 1913 to 1917; member of the board of education, Flint, for 10 years; has been instructor of the factory night school at Flint for 14 years; married to Cassie F. Miller, December 28, 1904, and they have three children— Shirley Mae Cunningham, William W., Jr., and Jack Arnold; was elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934, to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938, to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-ninth Congress on Novem-ber 7, 1944, to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, to the Eighty-first press on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, St. Clair, and Tuscola (6 coun-ties). Population (1950) 412,984. Y JESSE PAINE WOLCOTT, Republican, of Port Huron, Mich., was born March 3, 1893, at Gardner, Mass.; attended public and high schools of Gardner, Mass., Detroit Technical Institute at Detroit, Mich., and was graduated from the Detroit College of Law, with degree of LI. B.; during the World War served as second lieutenant, Machine Gun Company, Twenty-sixth Infantry, First Division, and saw active service in France during the Meuse-Argonne offensive; after the war, settled in Port Huron; was elected assistant police judge in 1921, serving in that capacity until he was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney of St. Clair County on January 1, 1922; served as assistant prosecutor until he was elected prosecuting attorney, 1927-30; district governor, Lions Clubs of Michigan, 1925-26; State commander, Veterans of Foreign Wars, 1926-27; first vice presi-dent, Prosecuting Attorneys’ Association, 1930-31; member of Masons, Knights of Pythias (past chancellor, Port Huron Lodge, 1922), Odd Fellows, B. P. O. E., American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars, past department commander, 1926-27; married Grace A. Sullivan, February 26, 1927, and they have one son, Jesse Paine, Jr.; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Kightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member, House Committee on Banking and Currency and Joint Committee on the Economic Report; given Collier award for Distin-guished Congressional Service, 1947. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clinton, Gratiot, Ionia, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee (6 counties). Population (1950), 331,810. FRED L. CRAWFORD, Republican, Saginaw, Mich. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benzie, Grand Traverse, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Missau-kee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana ,and Wexford (11 counties). Population (1950), 272,501. RUTH THOMPSON, Republican, of 816 Division Street, Whitehall, Mus-kegon County, Mich.; born in village, now city of Whitehall, September 15, 1887; attended grade and high school; Muskegon Business College (shorthand, type-writing, and court reporting) ; studied law; employed in probate court, Muskegon County; attorney; member of Michigan State Bar Association and inactive mem-ber Federal Bar Association; public services: registrar, probate court, Muskegon County, 18 years; judge of probate, Muskegon County, 12 years; member Michi-gan State legislature (house), 2 years; with Federal Government, Civil Service, Washington, D. C.; Social Security Board, OASI Bureau, legal section, 11 months; Labor Department, Wage and Hour Division, legal section, 5 months; War Department, Adjutant General’s Office, civilian personnel branch, 3 years; Adjutant General’s Office, Headquarters Command, Frankfurt, 14 months; extra public services during above full-time services; member, Tri-County T. B. Sanitorium Board, Muskegon County, 4 years; member and chairman, State Prison Commission for Women, 4 years; member, Governor's Advisory Board (Michigan), 2 years; president, Michigan Association of Probate Judges, 2 years; member Post Restaurant Council, the Pentagon, 2 years; president, Y. W. C. A., Muskegon, Mich., 2 years; president and cofounder Quadrangle Club (B. P. W.), 2 years; member, First Congregational Church, Muskegon, Mich., 25 years; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. Congressional Directory MICHIGAN TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alcona, Arenac, Bay, Clare, Crawford, Gladwin, Iosco, Isabella, Maco Midland, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, and Roscommon (14 counties). Population (1950), ROY ORCHARD WOODRUFF, Republican, of Bay City, Mich.; elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventh-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; married; two children—daughter, Mrs. Ronald Houck, and son, Lt. Col. Devere H. Woodruff; member, Ways and Means Com-mittee; member, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alger, Alpena, Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Delta, Emmet, Kalkaska, Luce, Mackinac, Menominee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, and Schoolcraft (16 counties). Population (1950), 227,810. CHARLES EDWARD POTTER, Republican, of Cheboygan, Mich.; born in Lapeer, Mich.; October 30, 1916; graduated from Michigan State Normal College with A. B. degree in social science; married Miss Lorraine Eddy of Cheboygan; administrator of Bureau of Social Aid, Cheboygan County, from 1938 until enter-ing Army in May 1942 as private; served as commissioned officer with Twenty-eighth Infantry Division, seeing combat in Kuropean Theater of Operations; seriously wounded for third time at Colmar, France, January 31, 1945, resulting in loss of lower limbs; separated from service as major on July 10, 1946; vocational rehabilitation representative for Retraining and Reemployment Administration until resignation in June 1947; member of American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, AMVETS, Fraternal Order of Eagles, B. P. O. E., and Kiwanis International; elected to the Eightieth Congress at a special election August 26, 1947; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Con-gresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Baraga, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Mar-quette, and Ontonagon (8 counties). Population (1950), 177,360. JOHN B. BENNETT, Republican, of Ontonagon, Mich.; born in Garden, Mich., January 10, 1904; graduate of Watersmeet (Mich.) High School; attended Marquette University Law School 1921-25; postgraduate at Chicago University Law School in 1926; admitted to Wisconsin bar in 1925, Michigan in 1926; prosecuting attorney of Ontonagon County for three terms; deputy commis-sioner of the State department of labor and industry, 1935-37; general law practice for the past 25 years; married Corinne Waldhuetter of Milwaukee, Wis., and they have three children—Marilyn, Nancy Ruth, and John B. 2d; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.— City oF DETROIT: Wards 1 to 4, 6, and 8, and Highland Park city. Pop- ulation (1950), 340,614. GEORGE D. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born in that city on January 1, 1900; graduated from the University of Detroit in 1921 with the degree of A. B., and in 1924 with the degreeof LL. B.; has practiced law in Detroit, Mich., since 1924; admitted to practice law in the Supreme Court of the United States, the U. S. District Court for the District of Columbia, and is a member of the State Bar of Michigan; married and has five children— George D., Jr., Mau-reen, Joan, John P., and Mary Ellen; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Con-gresses. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF DETROIT: Wards 17, 19, and 21 and townships of Gratiot and Grosse Pointe, in Wayne County. Population (1950), 464,830. LOUIS CHARLES RABAUT, Democrat (lawyer), of Grosse Pointe Park, Mich., was born in Detroit, Mich., December 5, 1886, son of Louis A. and Clara Lenau (Reid) Rabaut; attended a parochial school; A. B. degree 1909, Detroit College; LL. B. degree 1912, Detroit College of Law; M. A. degree 1912, Univer-sity of Detroit; admitted to the bar in 1912; married Stella M. Petz, of Detroit, and they have three sons and six daughters—Rev. Francis Dermott (S. J.), Marie Celeste (Sister Mary Palmyre, I. H. M.), Louis 3d, Mary Jane, Vincent, Carolyn, Joan Marie, Stella Marie (Sister Stella Maris, I. H. M.), and Martha; 1935 guest of the Philippine Government at the inauguration of the Common-wealth; 1936, received a special citation from the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Michigan Department, for services as chairman of the Michigan congressional committee which obtained the establishment of veterans’ facilities in Michigan; MINNESOTA Biographical 1939, delegate to the Interparliamentary Union at Oslo, Norway, and inspected the United States Foreign Service offices in the Scandinavian countries; 1941, chairman of the first official congressional committee to South and Central America inspecting Foreign Service offices and studying effects of the cultural relations program in 17 countries; 1944, received annual award of the Inter-national Economic Council for outstanding devotion to world trade; 1945, at the invitation of the Secretary of State, Edward R. Stettinius, Jr., headed a congressional group on an inspection of the Foreign Service establishments and other Federal activities in Great Britain and certain countries of Europe; elected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of the Committee on Appropriations. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Crty or DETROIT: Wards 10, 12, 14, and 16. Population (1950), 382,332. JOHN D. DINGELL, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich.; born at Detroit, Mich., February 2, 1894; married Grace B. Bigler, April 27, 1925, and they have three children—John David, Jr., James Victor, and Julé Jane; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the Fifteenth District; reelected each succeeding Congress; member of the Ways and Means Committee, Joint Committee on Internal Rev-enue Taxation, and the Joint Committee on the Budget. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF DETROIT: Wards 18 and 20; Townships of Brownstown, Monguagon, Grosse Ile, Canton, Dearborn, Nankin, Sumpter, Taylor, Huron, and Van Buren; cities of Ecorse, Belleville, Dearborn, Garden City, Lincoln Park, Melvindale, River Rouge, Wyandotte; villages of Allen Park, Flat Rock, Inkster, Rockwood, Trenton, Wayne, New Boston, and Waltz, in Wayne County. Population (1950), 497,182. JOHN LESINSKI, Jr., Democrat, of Dearborn, Mich.; born in Detroit December 28, 1914; moved to Dearborn at the age of 11, where he has resided since with the exception of time spent in service and boarding schools; attended St. Andrews and St. Alphonsus parochial schools, St. Cyril and Methodeusz Sem-inary at Orchard Lake, Mich., and graduated from Fordson High School in Dearborn; married Margaret M. Stroinski, of Detroit, July 1, 1943; they have two children, John W., and Ronald L.; at the age of 18, enlisted in the United States Navy as an apprentice seaman, serving 4 years; was called to active duty again in February 1941, discharged October 1945; was wounded when the Japanese bombed the escort carrier St. Lo; in addition to receiving various ribbons and citations was awarded the Purple Heart, Good Conduct Medal, and the Navy and Marine Corps Medal; engaged in the lumber business with his father, the late Representative John Lesinski; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; member of Com-mittee on Post Office and Civil Service. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—OAKLAND COUNTY, CITY OF DETROIT: Ward 22, and townships of Livonia, Northville, Plymouth, and Redford, in Wayne County. Population (1950), 724,717. GEORGE ANTHONY DONDERO, Republican, of Royal Oak, Mich.; born December 16, 1883, in Greenfield Township, Wayne County, Mich.; educated in the public schools; graduate of Royal Oak High School in 1903, and of the Detroit College of Law, in 1910, with an LL. B. degree; admitted to the bar the same year, since which time he has practiced law; held the following offices: Village clerk of Royal Oak, 1905-6; township treasurer of Royal Oak, 1907-8; village assessor of Royal Oak, 1909; village attorney of Royal Oak, 1911-21; assistant prosecuting attorney for Oakland County, Mich., 1918-19; first mayor, city of Royal Oak, 1921-22; member of the board of education for 18 years; member of Methodist Church, Masonic orders, and Kiwanis International; married to Adele Roegner, June 28, 1913, and they have three children—Marion E., Stanton G., and Robert Lincoln; elected to the Seventy-third, and each succeeding Congress, including the Eighty-second. MINNESOTA (Population (1950), 2,982,483) SENATORS EDWARD J. THYE, Republican, of Northfield, Minn.; born April 26, 1896, Frederick, S. Dak.; son of Andrew J. and Bertha Thye; moved to Minnesota with parents a few years later and grew up on farm near Northfield; educated in public schools at Northfield and business college; LL. D., Carroll College; served in Air 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 6 Na 60 Congressional Darectory MINNESOTA Corps in World War I, commissioned in France, 1918; acquired farm of his own near Northfield in 1922 and has been engaged in extensive farming operations since; Deputy Commissioner of Agriculture, Minnesota, 1939 to 1942; elected Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota in 1942 and succeeded to governorship April 27, 1943; reelected Governor in November 1944; elected November 5, 1946, as United States Senator for a 6-year term beginning January 3, 1947; married, one daughter. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY, Democrat, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born in Wallace, S. Dak., May 27, 1911; educated in South Dakota schools; graduated with degree from Denver College of Pharmacy; University of Minnesota with A. B. degree, University of Louisiana with M. A. degree; pharmacist 1933-37; State director war production training and reemployment and State chief of Minnesota war services program 1942; assistant director, War Manpower Com-mission, 1943; professor in political science, Macalester College, 1943 and 1944, assigned as instructor United States Army Air Corps, Three Hundred and Forty-seventh Training Detachment; radio news commentator 1944 and 1945; candidate for mayor of Minneapolis in 1943; elected mayor of Minneapolis in 1945 and 1947; member of First Congregational Church of Minnesota, American Academy of Political and Social Science, American Municipal Association, American Political Science Association, American Public Administration Society, United Nations Committee, Minnesota Chapter Phi Beta Kappa and Delta Sigma Rho; elected in the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January , 1955. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIiES: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Goodhue, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Rice, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (12 counties). Population (1950), 337,005. AUGUST HERMAN ANDRESEN, Republican, of Red Wing, Goodhue County; son of Rev. and Mrs. O. Andresen; married; B. A. degree from St. Olaf College, Northfield, and Red Wing Seminary, Red Wing, Minn., 1912; B. L. degree, St. Paul College of Law, 1915; elected from Third Congressional District of Minnesota to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses from the First Congressional District of Minnesota. - SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Carver, Cottonwood, Dakota, Faribault, Jack-son, Le Sueur, McLeod, Martin, Nicollet, Scott, Sibley, and Watonwan (14 counties). Population(1950), 321,144. : JOSEPH PATRICK O'HARA, Republican, of Glencoe, Minn.; born in Tipton, Towa, January 23, 1895; educated in public schools; graduate of Spirit Lake (Iowa) High School; legal education, Inns of Court, London, England, and Notre Dame University (LL. B.); actively engaged in the general practice of law at Glencoe, Minn., specializing in trial work; member District, State, and American Bar Associations; admitted to practice in Federal courts of Minnesota and North Dakota, and United States Supreme Court; county attorney, McLeod County, 1935-38; served 27 months in World War I, including A. E. F.; past State com-mander, American Legion; married Leila Lee White, of Holden, Mo.; children, Joseph P., Jr., Edward M., and Terrence; elected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Anoka, Chisago, Isanti, Washington. HENNEPIN COUNTY: All that part outside the city of Minneapolis; the city of Minneapolis, ward 1; ward 2, precincts 1 to 17; wards 3, 4, and 5; ward 6, that part of precinet 1 north of the Great Northern Railway tracks; ward 7, precincts 1 and 2. Population (1950), 429,613. ROY W. WIER, Farmer-Labor-Democrat, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born in Redfield, S. Dak., February 25, 1888; moved with his parents in 1896 to Minne-apolis, Minn., where he has since resided; attended the public schools and North High School; took up telephone and electrical trade, later going into theatrical stage lighting work; while employed in theaters became a member of Stage Em-ployees Local Union, No. 13; during 1917 joined the United States Army and served for 18 months with overseas service in the A. E. F.; since 1920 has been active in the trade-union movement in Minneapolis and has been officially a representative of the Trades and Labor Assembly of Minneapolis; member of State legislature 1933-39; since 1939 has been a member of the Minneapolis Board of Education; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. MINNESOTA Biographical FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Ramsey, Population (1950), 353,190. EUGENE J. McCARTHY, Democrat, of St. Paul, Minn.; born in Watkins, Minn., March 29, 1916; graduated from St. John’s University, Collegeville, Minn., in 1935, from the University of Minnesota at Minneapolis with M. A. degree; taught social science in high schools for 5 years; professor of economics and education at St. John’s University 1940-42; Civilian technical assistant in the Military Intelligence Division, War Department; married Abigail Quigley in 1945; they have two daughters and one son, Ellen Anne, Mary Abigail, and Michael Benet; acting chairman of sociology department of St. Thomas College since 1946; chairman of the Ramsey County Democratic Farmer-Labor Party in 1948; delegate at large to the Democratic National Convention in 1948; elected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT..—HENNEPIN COUNTY, City of Minneapolis: Ward 2, precincts 18 to 28; ward 6, pre-She 1 to 24, except the north half of precinct one; ward 7, precincts 3 to 30; wards 8 to 13. Population 1950), 334,568. WALTER H. JUDD, Republican, of Minneapolis, Minn.; physician and sur-geon; born in Rising City, Nebr., September 25, 1898; received B. A. (1920) and M. D. (1923) degrees from the University of Nebraska; enlisted in the United States Army in 1918 and served in the Field Artillery; fellowship in surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., 1932-34; medical missionary and hospital super-intendent in China, 1925-31 and 1934-38 under auspices of American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions; after invasion of China by Japan in 1937, returned from China in 1938, to spend 1939 and 1940 speaking throughout the United States in attempt to arouse Americans to menace of Japan’s military ex-pansion and to get embargo on sale and shipment of war materials to Japan; entered private medical practice in Minneapolis in January 1941; married Miriam Barber, of Montclair, N. J., in 1932; they have three children—Mary Lou, Carolyn, and Eleanor; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress in 1942 and reelected to succeeding Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aiken, Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Hubbard, Kanabec, Meeker, Mille ri Morrison, Pine, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1950), 325,050. FRED MARSHALL, Democrat, of Grove City, Minn.; born March 13, 1906, Union Grove Township, Meeker County, Minn.; graduate Paynesville High School; an active farmer; married, two boys; member of State Agricultural Ad-justment Administration Committee 1937-41; State director of Farm Security Administration (now the Farmers Home Administration) from 1941 until August 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Big Stone, Chippewa, Douglas, Grant, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Lincoln, Lyon, Murray, Nobles, Pipestone, Pope, Redwood, Renville, Rock, Stevens, Swift, Traverse, and Yellow Medicine (19 counties). Population (1950), 304,957. H. CARL ANDERSEN, Republican, of Tyler, Minn.; born in Newcastle, Wash., son of C. C. and Lorena Andersen; family moved to present home farm near Tyler in 1901; married to Miss Martha Elder, of Florence, Ala., and they have two sons—Charles, 20 years of age, and Alfred, 12 years of age; elected to the Minnesota State Legislature in 1935; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; profession, farmer. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carlton, Cook, Itasca, Koochiching, Lake, and St. Louis (6 counties). Population (1950) 290,376. JOHN A. BLATNIK, Democrat, of Chisholm, Minn.; born in Chisholm, Minn., August 17, 1911; attended Chisholm public schools; Winona State Teachers College, Minnesota, B. E. degree, 1935; University of Chicago; graduate work in Public Administration, University of Minnesota 1941-42; school teach-ing and administration, 8 years; elected to Minnesota State senate in 1940; reelected in 1942; World War II veteran 3% years in Army Air Corps Intelligence and Office of Strategic Services; 18 months overseas in Italy and northern Yugo-slavia, awarded Bronze Star Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster and Air Medal; dis-charged from service January 1946 as paratrooper captain; elected to Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946; reelected to Eighty-first Congress, November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950. Congressional Darectory MISSISSIPPI . NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Lake of the Woods, Mahnomen, Marshall, Norman, Otter Tail, Pennington, Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (15 counties). Population (1950) 272,232. HAROLD C. HAGEN, Republican, of Crookston, Minn., was born in Crooks-ton, Minn., November 10, 1901; attended the public. schools and after graduation from Crookston Central High School engaged in railroading, farming, sales, and newspaper work; editor and publisher of the Vesterheimen, Norwegian newspaper; was graduated from St. Olaf College, Northfield, Minn. in 1927, with B. A. degree; taught history and civics at the Mandan (N. Dak.) High School in 1928; publisher and editor of the Polk County Leader, Crookston, Minn., 1928-32! secretary to Representative Richard T. Buckler from 1934 until his election to Congress in 1942; president of Congressional Secretaries Club, 1937-38; Minne-sota member of the Tri-State Waters Commission in 1937 ; awarded honor plaque by Congressional Secretaries Club in 1937 as most valuable and outstanding secretary; married Miss Audrey Melton on November 22, 1928, and they have two children, Harold M., and Andora; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944, by the largest majority ever given a winning candidate and by the largest vote ever given a winning candidate in the history of the district, reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, setting a new record for the largest majority ever given a winning candidate in the district, the margin of victory being 21,820 votes; reelected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, by a majority of 9,713 in spite of the fact that Democratic candidates for President and United States Senator carried the district, respectively, by margins of 22,693 and 18,662; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950, by a plurality of 26,120 votes, which is a new record for a winning candidate in the history of the Ninth District in Minnesota. MISSISSIPPI (Population (1950), 2,178,914) SENATORS JAMES OLIVER EASTLAND, Democrat, of Doddsville, Miss.; born in Doddsville, Miss., November 28, 1904; Methodist; attended the University of Mississippi, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Alabama; moved to Forest, Miss., in 1905 and was reared in Scott County, Miss.; studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1927, and commenced practice in Forest, Miss. ; also engaged in farming; member of the State house of representatives from Scott County, Miss., 1928-32; married Elizabeth Coleman in 1932; three daughters, Nell, Ann, and Sue, and one son, Woods Eugene; moved to Sunflower County, 1Miss., in 1934: appointed to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Pat Harrison, and served from June 30, 1941, to September 28, 1941, when a duly elected successor qualified; elected fo the United States Senate on November 3, 1942, for the term beginning January 3, 1943; unopposed for the term beginning January 3, 1949. JOHN CORNELIUS STENNIS, Democrat, of De Kalb, Miss., was born in Kemper County, Miss., August 3, 1901, the son of Hampton Howell and Cornelia (Adams) Stennis; attended the county schools and graduated from Kemper County Agricultural High School, Scooba, 1919; B. S. degree, Mississippi State College, 1923; LL. B. degree, University of Virginia Law School, 1928; member of Phi Beta’ Kappa, Phi Alpha Delta (legal), and Alpha Chi Rho fraternities; Presby-terian, Mason, Lion, member of Farm Bureau, Mississippi and American Bar Associations; past president, State 4—H Club Advisory Council; elected Mississippi House of Representatives from Kemper County, 1928-32: elected district prose-cuting attorney, Sixteenth Judicial District, 1931 and 1935; appointed circuit judge, Sixteenth Judicial District, 1937, and elected 1938, 1942, 1946; elected United States Senator November 4, 1947, to fill unexpired term of the late T. G. Bilbo; sworn in November 17, 1947; married Coy Hines of New Albany, Miss., December 24, 1929; two children, John Hampton and Margaret Jane. MISSISSIPPI Biographical REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alcorn, Clay, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, and Tishomingo (10 counties). Population (1950), 254,230. JOHN ELLIOTT RANKIN, Democrat, of Tupelo, Miss., dean of the Missis-sippi delegation in Congress: chairman of the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs; was born in Itawamba County, Miss., on March 29, 1882, son of Thomas B. and Modeste Rutledge Rankin; was educated in the common schools, the high school, and the University of Mississippi, graduating from the law department of the latter institution in 1910; entered the practice of law at West Point, Miss., in June 1910 and moved to Tupelo, Miss., in November of that year, where he has practiced his profession since that time, during which period he served 4 years as prosecuting attorney; is an ex-soldier of World War I; member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, the Masonic fraternity, the American Legion, and several other orders; was married on October 1, 1919, to Miss Annie Laurie Burrous, of West, Point, ‘Miss. ; they have one child, a daughter, Annie Laurie; was nominated in the Democratic primaries of 1920 and elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress at the general election on November 2; renominated and reelected to the Sixty-eighty, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; was a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions in 1932, 1936 and 1940; was coauthor with Senator George W. Norris, of Nebraska, of the bill creating the Tennessee Valley Authority, which contained section 12 of the present T. V. A. Act, giving to the Tennessee Valley Authority the right to build transmission and rural power lines, to distribute power, fix rates, and to build additional dams on the Tennessee River: successfully led the fight in the House to force the acceptance of that main provision of the bill in lieu of the bill which had been passed by the House; succeeded in getting every county in his district connected up with the T. V. A. and supplied with electric energy from the T. V. A. at the ¢yardstick” rates, serving tens of thousands of farm homes with cheap electricity; chairman of the public power bloc in the House, and known as the father of rural electrifica-tion, which fight he has led for the last 18 years; has adopted as his slogan, ‘“Let’s electrify every farm home in America at rates the people can afford to pay’’; author of the amendment to raise the base pay of the men in the armed forces to $50 a month; author of the amendment to the Rules of the House creating the permanent Committee on Un-American Activities, to protect this country from er enemies at home and abroad. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, Union, and Yalobusha (10 counties). Population (1950), 213,681. JAMIE L. WHITTEN, Democrat, of Charleston, Miss.; born at Cascilla, Miss., April 18, 1910; married to Miss Rebecca Thompson, of Saltillo, Miss., June 20, 1940; two children, James Lloyd, born March 5, 1942, and Beverly Rebecca, born January 14, 1946; member Presbyterian Church, Masonic order, Rotarian, Phi Alpha Delta (legal fraternity), and Beta Theta "Pi; educated in the public schools of Cascilla and Charleston, Miss.; attended both literary and law departments of the University of Mississippi, being admitted to the bar in 1932 with honors and has since practiced law at Charleston, Miss. ; served 1 year as school principal, 1930-31; elected to the Mississippi House of Representatives when 21 years of age and served one session; elected district attorney of the seventeenth district of Mississippi at the age of 23; reelected district attorney in 1935 and again in 1939 without opposition; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on November 4, 1941, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Hon. Wall Doxey; reelected %o the. Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Humphreys, Issaquena, Leflore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, and Washington (11 counties). Population (1950), 411,581. FRANK ELLIS SMITH, Democrat, of Greenwood, Miss.; born at Sidon, Miss., February 21, 1918, the son of the late Frank Smith and Sadie Ellis Smith (now Mrs. L. C. Spencer, Sr.); educated in public schools of Sidon and Greenwood; graduate, Sunflower Junior College, Moorhead, Miss., 1936, and University of Mississippi, B. A., 1941; entered United States Army as private, February 9, 1942; graduate of Field Artillery officer’s candidate schools and Field Artillery Congressional Directory MISSISSIPPI officer’s advanced course; served in Europe with Two Hundred and Forty-third Field Artillery Battalion, Third Army; awarded Bronze Star; major, Field Artillery Reserve; newspaperman and writer; member Methodist Church, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Beta Theta Pi; Leflore County Farm Bureau; married to former Helen Ashley McPhaul of Brewton, Ala.; member Mississippi State Senate, 1948-50; Mississippi Historical Commission; legislative assistant to United States Senator John Stennis, 1947-49; elected to Eighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Grenada, Mont-gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1950), 177,337. THOMAS GERSTLE ABERNETHY, Democrat, of Okolona, Miss.; born in Eupora, Webster County, Miss., May 16, 1903, the son of Thomas Franklin and Minnie Jinkins Abernethy; educated in the public schools of Eupora, Miss., the University of Alabama, Cumberland University (LL. B. 1924), and the Univer-sity of Mississippi; admitted to bar in July 1924 and entered practice of law at Eupora, Miss., 1925; served as mayor of town of Eupora, 1927-29; moved to Okolona, Miss., in July 1929, where he has continued his practice; elected dis-trict attorney of the Third Judical District of Mississippi, 1935, and reelected without opposition, 1939; Methodist, Mason, Shriner, and Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity; married July 5, 1936, to Miss Alice Margaret Lamb, of State College, Miss.; two daughters, Margaret Gail and Alice Kay, and one son, Thomas Gerstle, Jr.; elected November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress, reelected November 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth Congress, reelected November 5, 1946, to the Eightieth Congress; reelected November 2, 1948, to the Eighty-first Con-gress, and reelected November 7, 1950, to the Eighty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Simpson, and Smith (10 counties). Population (1950), 248,138. WILLIAM ARTHUR WINSTEAD, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Miss.; born in Neshoba County, Miss., January 6, 1904; educated in the public schools of Neshoba and Newton Counties, Miss.; attended Clarke Memorial College, Newton, Miss.; received B. 8S. degree from Mississippi Southern College at Hattiesburg, Miss., and did work on M. A. degree at University of Alabama; farmer and educator; married Miss Etna B. Johnson, April 26, 1933; one son, William Arthur (Bill) Winstead, Jr., born December 19, 1943; member of Baptist Church, Masonic fraternity, and Order of the Eastern Star; elected superintendent of education of Neshoba County in 1935 and reelected in 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress without opposition; reelected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress without opposition; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Counrties: Covington, Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lamar, Lawrence, Marion, Pearl River, Perry, Stone, and Wayne (16 counties). Population (1950), 380,973. WILLIAM MEYERS COLMER, Democrat, of Pascagoula, Miss.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; sponsor and chairman of the Special Committee on Post-War Economic Policy and Planning in Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses; member of the House Rules Committee. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Madison, Pike, Rankin, Walthall, Warren, Wilkinson, and Yazoo (15 counties). Popu- lation (1950), 487,433. JOHN BELL WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Raymond, Miss. ; born on December 4, 1918, in Raymond, Miss., the son of G. K. and Maude Williams; educated in the public schools of Hinds County, Miss., Hinds Junior College, Raymond, Miss., the University of Mississippi, and the Jackson, Miss., School of Law; admitted to the bar of the State of Mississippi on April 4, 1940, and practiced law in his home town of Raymond until November 5, 1941, at which time he enlisted in the United States Army as an aviation cadet; served as pilot with United States Army Air Corps during World War II, until retirement from active duty April 29, 1944, because of disabilities received in service; prosecuting attorney of Hinds County, Mississippi, from May 20, 1944 to October 1, 1946, married to former WAC private, Elizabeth Ann Wells, of Raymond, Miss. ; one child, Marcia Elizabeth; Baptist, Mason, member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Disabled American Veterans, and AMVETS; elected to Eightieth and succeeding Congresses. MISSOURI Biographical MISSOURI (Population (1950), 3,954,653.) SENATORS JAMES P. KEM, Republican, of Kansas City, Mo.; born in Macon, Mo., April 2, 1890; son of James P. and Evelyn Lee Kem; graduated from University of Missouri, 1910, from Harvard Law School in 1913; married Mary Elizabeth Carroll, of Bullitt County, Ky., in 1920 and they have two daughters—Mrs. V. R. Shackelford, Jr., of Orange, Va., and Miss Evelyn Kem; served in United States Army (Infantry) from 1917 to 1919; for many years has been engaged in the general practice of law in Kansas City, Mo.; chairman, Jackson County (Mis-souri) Republican Committee, 1944; delegate to the Republican National Con-ventions 1944 and 1948; member— American Bar Association, Missouri Bar Asso-ciation, Lawyers Association of Kansas City (president, 1943), Kansas City Bar Association, William Bland Post No. 50 of American Legion, Ivanhoe Masonic Lodge, Kansas City University Club, Kansas City Country Club, Cass County, Mo., Farm Bureau, Missouri Farmers Association, Inc., Farmers Club of Kansas City (president, 1942), St. Paul’s Episcopal Church of Kansas City; trustee (vice chairman of board of trustees), University of Kansas City; director, St. Luke’s Hospital of Kansas City; elected to the United States Senate on Novem-ber 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953. THOMAS C. HENNINGS, Jr., Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo., June 25, 1903, son of former Circuit Judge Thomas C. and Sarah Poullain Wilson Hennings; married to Elizabeth Stallcup of Sikeston, Mo.; two daughters, Sue and Karla; A. B., Cornell University, 1924; LL. B., Washington University, 1926; admitted to Missouri Bar, 1926; assistant circuit attorney, St. Louis, 1929-34; lecturer at Benton College of Law, 1929-35; Member, United States House of Representatives, Seventy-fourth through Seventy-sixth Con-gresses, representing Eleventh Missouri District; retired in 1940 to become candidate for circuit (district) attorney of St. Louis at request of St. Louis Bar Association Judicial Selection Committee, nominated without opposition and elected, 1940; lieutenant commander, United States Navy, 1941-44 honorably discharged because of service-incurred physical disability; resumed duties as circuit attorney until 1945; retired to private practice in 1945; a senior partner in Green, Hennings, Henry, and Evans, oldest established law firm in Missouri; director and treasurer, Big Brothers Organization of America; director, Urban League of St. Louis; trustee, Missouri Historical Society; vice president, Navy League of the United States; member, American Judicature Society, Phi Delta Phi, and the American, Missouri, and St. Louis Bar Associations; member, Westminster Presbyterian Church of St. Louis; elected to United States Senate November 7, 1950, with a majority of approximately 95,000. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adair, Clark, Daviess, Grundy, Knox, Lewis, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Aono, Mercer, Putnam, Schuyler, Scotland, Shelby, and Sullivan (16 counties). Population (1950), CLARE MAGEE, Democrat, Unionville, Mo.; born March 31, 1899, on a farm in Putnam County, Mo.; educated in public schools, Kirksville State Teachers College, and University of Missouri; admitted to bar in 1922; volunteered as apprentice seaman in First World War; later advanced to first-class seaman and small arms instructor; volunteered as private in World War II, serving in Field Artillery; later discharged to accept commission as captain in Army Air Corps; president Students’ Democratic Club, University of Missouri, in 1920; member Student Council, University of Missouri, in 1921; member of American Legion and honorary member V. F. W.; three terms president Unionville Chamber of Commerce; past president Unionville Park Board and past president of Quo Vadis and Rotary clubs; three terms chairman Democratic Central Committee of Putnam County; member Democratic State Speakers Bureau in two cam-paigns and member Organization Bureau in two campaigns; delegate to several State conventions and twice chairman of First District Caucus; State secretary and later president Young Democrats Jefferson Club of Missouri; postmaster at Union-ville 614 years; member I. O. O. F., Eagles, Eastern Star, Shrine, and a thirty- Congressional Directory MISSOURI second degree Mason; following First World War, homesteaded in the Big Horn Basin of Wyoming and worked as a laborer for United States Reclamation Service; now owns farm upon which he was born; married; one daughter; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Benton, Boone, Camden, Carroll, Chariton, Cole, Cooper, Hickory, Howard, Lafayette, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, Randolph, and Saline (15 counties). Population (1950), 273,498. MORGAN M. MOULDER, Democrat, of Camdenton, Camden County, Mo.; born in Linn Creek, Camden County, Mo., August 31, 1904, son of Fred J. and Margaret (Hillhouse) Moulder; married Nedra White of Camden County in 1928; one child, Marcia, age 12; educated in the public schools of Linn Creek and Lebanon, Mo.; Missouri University at Columbia, and graduated from Cumber-land University, Lebanon, Tenn., degree LL. B.; licensed to practice law March 31, 1928; elected and served four terms as prosecuting attorney of Camden County, served three and one-half years as special assistant to the United States district attorney, western district of Missouri, and serving as judge of circuit court, eighteenth judicial circuit of Missouri, when elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, De Kalb, Gentry, Harrison, Holt, Nodaway, Platte, Ray, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1950), 285,274. PHIL J. WELCH, Democrat, of St. Joseph, Mo.; born in St. Joseph, Mo., April 5, 1895; educated in the public schools; engaged in the furniture business 1916 to 1931; elected city treasurer in 1932 and again in 1934; served three terms as mayor 1936-46; assistant director Reconstruction Finance Corporation 1946-1947; married the former Esther Vinburg on September 26, 1917; children, one daughter and one son who lost his life in an overseas plane crash during World War II; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—JAcksoN County: Blue, Brooking, Fort Osage, Prairie, Sni-a-Bar, and Van Buren Townships. Kansas City: Wards 11 to 17, and parts of wards 2, 4, 18, 19, and 20. Popula- tion (1950), 279,569. LEONARD IRVING, Democrat, of Independence, Mo.; born at St. Paul, Minn., on March 24, 1898; educated in the public schools of North Dakota where boyhood was spent on a farm homesteaded by his parents; started work during summer vacations as a railroad call boy at age of 13; advanced to position of assistant passenger agent; served as a key transportation official during World War I; left railroad work thereafter to manage a theater in Montana and later a hotel in California before going to Jackson County, Mo., in 1934; after period of employment as a construction worker was chosen as representative of American Federation of Labor in western Missouri, advancing by election in 1940 to the position of president and business agent of A. F. of L. Construction and General Laborers Union, Local 264, a position he still retains; married Effie A. Bjornstad of Grand Forks, N. Dak., in 1918 and they have one son, Jerry, a grandson, Leonard 2d, and a granddaughter, Jerralynn Diane; member of Jackson County Shrine Club, Eagles, South Central Businessmen’s Association, and Congrega-tional Church; elected November 2, 1948 to the Eighty-first Congress, by a majority of more than 34,000 in his first campaign for public office; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—JAcksON County: Washington Township. KANsAs City: Ward 1; ward 2, pre- cinets 1 to 7, 9 to 14, 18, and 19 to 21; ward 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 6, 8 to 11, 13, 14, and 16 to 22; wards 5 to 10; ward 18, precincts 8 to 23; ward 19, precinets 1 to 3, 5 to 7, 10 to 15, 18, and 19; ward 20, precincts 1,2 5,69, 10, 14, 15, and 17 to 19. Population (1950), 257,981. : RICHARD WALKER BOLLING, Democrat, of Kansas City, Mo.; born in New York City on May 17, 1916; attended grade school, Phillips-Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H.; at the age of 15, upon father’s death, returned to his home in Huntsville, Ala.; attended University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., receiving the degrees of A. B., 1937, A. M., 1939; did further graduate work Vanderbilt Uni-versity, Nashville, Tenn.; member Phi Delta Theta fraternity; teacher and educational administrator by profession; entered United States Army April 1941; served four years overseas, Australia, New Guinea, Philippines, and Japan, leaving Army 1946 with rank of lieutenant colonel; awarded Legion of Merit and Bronze Star Medals; presently, lieutenant colonel, ORC; married; wife, Barbara Stratton Bolling, native of Maryland; resident of Kansas City, Mo., since 1945; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. MISSOURI Biographical 67 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barton, Bates, Cass, Cedar, Greene, Henry, Johnson, Pettis, Polk, St. Clair, and Vernon (11 counties). Population (1950), 285,351. 0. K. (ORLAND KAY) ARMSTRONG, Republican, of Springfield, Mo.; born in Howell County, Mo., and reared in the Missouri Ozarks; graduate of Drury College, Springfield, Mo.; Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.; and School of Journalism, University of Missouri; veteran of World War I, private to lieutenant in the Air Corps; did welfare work in Europe, 1919-20; teacher of journalism, 1925-30; executive secretary, Missouri Century of Progress Com-mission, 1931-32; secretary, Missouri Farmers Association Committee on Tax-ation, 1932-33; elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 1932 and served in the fifty-seventh, fifty-eighth, and sixty-second sessions; specialized in legislation pertaining to governmental organization; author, magazine writer, and newspaper correspondent; from 1944, staff writer for the Reader’s Digest; member, Committee of Baptists, advisory to the organization meeting of the United Nations, 1945; world traveler and lecturer on international relations; member of the American Legion, and was delegate to the Interallied Veterans’ Conference, Paris, 1937; University Club; married to Louise MeCool, 1922 (deceased 1947); father of five children; married to Marjorie E. Moore, 1949; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barry, Christian, Dade, Dallas, Douglas, Howell, Jasper, Lawrence, MPa, Newton, Ozark, Stone, Taney, Webster, and Wright (15 counties). Population (1950), 92,337. DEWEY SHORT, Republican, Galena, Mo. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounmiEs: Carter, Crawford, Dent, Iron, Jefferson, Laclede, Madison, Oregon, Perry, Phelps, Pulaski, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Shannon, Texas, Washington, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1950), 268,118. A. S.J. CARNAHAN, Democrat, of Ellsinore, Mo., was born January 9, 1897, on a farm in Carter County, Mo., near Ellsinore; grew to young manhood on the farm and attended the local country elementary school; 2 years of high school at Ellsinore and the remaining 2 years at Cape Girardeau, Mo.; was graduated from the State Teachers College at Cape Girardeau in 1926 with the degree of bachelor of science in education; graduate study at the University of Missouri and re-ceived the master’s degree in 1934; began teaching school at the age of 17; taught 4 years in rural schools, has taught elementary grades in the town schools, was 1 year a high-school principal, and for several years held school administrative positions in Carter, Reynolds, and Shannon Counties; served in the Navy overseas with a naval aviation unit in World War I; member of the Baptist Church; married in 1925 to Miss Kathel Schupp, a native of Carter County, and they have two sons, Robert and Melvin; served in the Seventy-ninth and Eighty-first Congresses and was elected on November 7, 1950, to serve in the Eighty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Maries, Monroe ’ Montgomery, Osage, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (13 counties). Population (1950), 212,606 CLARENCE CANNON, Democrat; born April 11, 1879; was graduated from La Grange College (now Hannibal-La Grange Junior College), William Jewell College, and the University of Missouri; received LL. D., conferred by William Jewell College and by Culver-Stockton College; married and has two daughters; professor of history at Stephens College, Columbia, Mo.; admitted to State and Federal bars; Parliamentarian of the House of Representatives during Republican and Democratic administrations; volunteered for service in World War; editor of Manual and Digest of House of Representatives; author of Synopsis of the Procedure of the House; Cannon’s Procedure (published by resolutions of the House); Convention Parliamentary Manual (published by the Democratic National Committee); Cannon’s Precedents of the House of Representatives (published by law); treatises on parliamentary law in the Ency-clopedia Britannica and in the Encyclopedia Americana; editor and compiler of the Precedents of the House of Representatives by act of Congress; Regent of the Smithsonian Institution; elected to the Sixty-eighth and succeeding Con-gresses; address: Elsberry, Mo., R. F. D. 1. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Dunklin, Mississippi, New Madrid, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, and Stoddard (10 counties). Population (1950), 317,397. PAUL C. JONES, Democrat, of Kennett, Mo., born March 12, 1901, in Ken-nett, Mo.; former member of the city council and mayor of Kennett; member for 12 years and president of the board of education in Kennett; 10 years’ service in Congressional Directory MISSOURI the Missouri legislature (8 years in the State senate where he served as chairman of the appropriations committee); chairman of the State Highway Commission of Missouri from August 1945 to May 1948; directed the organization of the Sixth Missouri Infantry, Missouri State Guard, and for more than 5 years, from Decem-ber 1940 until July 1946, served as commanding officer of that volunteer regiment; married and has three children, Mrs. Joe D. Cash, Paul C. Jones, Jr., and Nell Jones; for more than 20 years member of the official board of the Christian Church, and superintendent of the Sunday school; copublisher of the Dunklin Democrat for 25 years, and general manager of radio station KBOA ; past district governor of Lions International; Mason; graduate of the school of journalism, University of Missouri, B. J., 1923; elected November 2, 1948, to unexpired term of the Eightieth Congress and to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to Eighty-second Congress without opposition. ELEVENTH DISTRICT,—CiIty oF St. Louis: Ward 4, precincts 13 to 20, 24 to 26, 28, and 29; ward 5, pre-cinets 1, 9 to 14, 19 to 22, 29, and 30; wards 6 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 6, 10 to 14, 16, 17, 22 to 24, and 29; ward 14, precincts 3 to 9; ward 15, precincts 3 to 25; wards 16 and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3 and 7 to 29; ward 19, precinets 1 to 5, 8 to 20, and 22 to 29; ward 25; ward 26, precincts 1 to 3, 8 to 15, 26, and 27; ward 28, precincts 7 and 8. Population (1950), 347,666. CLAUDE I. BAKEWELL, Republican, of St. Louis, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo., August 9, 1912; graduated from Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., in 1932 with A. B. degree and from St. Louis University School of Law in 1935 with LL. B. degree; lawyer; member of the firm of Bakewell, Bakewell & Cramer; member of the board of alderman, city of St. Louis, 1941-45; lieutenant (jg) United States Naval Reserve, World War II; armed guard duty, Pacific, and general court martial work at Philadelphia Navy Base; married on February 22, 1936, to Helene C. Brown; two children; Helene B. Bakewell, age 14, and Claude I. Bakewell, Jr., age 8; member National Board of Directors, National Conference of Chris-tians and Jews; member, American Legion; Amvets; Veterans of Foreign Wars; Missouri and St. Louis Bar Associations; and Delta Theta Phi legal fra-ternity; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on March 9, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John B. Sullivan. TWELFTH DISTRICT,—St. Louis County. CIty oF ST. Lours: Ward 9, precinets 7 to 9, 15, 18 to 21, and 25 to 28; wards 10 to 13; ward 14, precinets 1, 2, and 10 to 28; ward 15, precincts 1, 2, 26, and 27; wards 23 and 24; ward 28, precincts 1 to 6, 9 to 11, and 17 to 26. Population (1950), 645,868. THOMAS B. CURTIS, Republican, 462 Florence Avenue, Webster Groves, Mo.; born in St. Louis, Mo., May 14, 1911; educated in Webster Groves public schools; A. B., Dartmouth College, 1932; LL. B., Washington University Law School, 1935; admitted to the bar of Missouri, 1934; member of Biggs, Curtis, Biggs & Crossen, engaged in the general practice of law; member of the Board of Election Commissioners, St. Louis County, 1942; member of the St. Louis County Republican Central Committee, 1946-50; member of the State Board of Law Examiners; member, Board of Trustees, Dartmouth College; served in the United States Navy from April 8, 1942, to December 21, 1945; married to Susan Ross Chivvis; four children; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—City oF St. Louis: Wards 1 to 3; ward 4, precincts 1 to 12, 21 to 23, 27, and 30; ward 5, precincts 2 to 8, 15 to 18, and 23 to 28; ward 18, precincts 4 to 6; ward 19, precincts 6, 7, and 21; wards 20 to 22; ward 26, precincts 4 to 7 and 16 to 25; ward 27; ward 28, precincts 12 to 16. Population(1950), 263,444. FRANK M. KARSTEN, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo., was born at San Antonio, Tex., January 7, 1913, moved to St. Louis, Mo., with his family in 1925; attended Benton and Cupples elementary schools and Beaumont High School in St. Louis; studied law in Washington, D. C., LL. B. National University in 1940; member of the bar of the District of Columbia; married Miss Opal Osborn of Washington, D. C., January 30, 1936; has two children, a daughter, LaVerne, and a son, Frank, Jr.; member of the Episcopal Church and National Press Club; served as secretary for 12 years to the late Representative John J. Cochran of the Thirteenth Congressional District; joined Cochran’s Washington office in 1934 and shortly thereafter was appointed his chief Congressional secretary; also served for 5 years as clerk to the House Committee on Expenditures in the Execu-tive Departments while Cochran was chairman and became clerk of the Committee on Accounts when Cochran took the chairmanship of the group; elected November 5, 1946, to serve in the Eightieth Congress from the Thirteenth Congressional District of Missouri; reelected November 2, 1948, to serve in the Eighty-first MONTANA Brographical Congress; reelected November 7, 1950, to serve in the Eighty-second Congress; assistant majority whip; member of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Post Office and Civil Service, chairman of Subcommittee on Public Accounts; also member of the Migratory Bird Conservation Commis- _ sion"and United States Territorial Expansion Commission. MONTANA (Population (1950), 591,024) SENATORS JAMES E. MURRAY, Democrat, of Butte, Mont.; education: graduated St. Jerome’s College, Berlin, Canada, 1895; New York University Law School, New York, LL. B. 1900, LL. M. 1901, LL. D. 1941; admitted to Montana bar, 1901; served as county attorney of Silver Bow County, Mont., 1906-8; chairman of State advisory board, Montana, P. W. A., 1933; married Miss Viola E. Horgan, of Memphis, Tenn., June 1905; has five sons, James A., William D., Edward E., Howard A., and Charles A.; elected to United States Senate on November 6, 1934, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Thomas J. Walsh; reelected Novem-ber 3, 1936, and again on November 3, 1942 for the term ending January 3, 1949; reelected November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. ZALES NELSON ECTON, Republican, of Manhattan, Mont.; born at Weldon, Towa, April 1, 1898; lived in Montana 40 years; studied 3 years at Mon-tana State College, Bozeman, Mont., and two quarters at the University of Chicago Law School; business is farming—grain and livestock; served 4 years as State representative from Gallatin County in the Montana Legislature; served 10 years as State senator from Gallatin County in the Montana Legislature; World War I, private in Infantry, Student Army Training Corps; married; two children—a son and daughter; elected on November 5, 1946, to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1953. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Beaverhead, Broadwater, Deer Lodge, Flathead, Gallatin, Granite, Jefferson, Lake, Lewis and Clark, Lincoln, Madison, Mineral, Missoula, Powell, Ravalli, Sanders, and Silver Bow (17 counties). Population (1950), 249,763. MICHAEL J. MANSFIELD, Democrat, of Missoula, Mont.; born March 16, 1903; reared, and educated in Montana; did not complete eighth grade, but left home in 1917 and joined United States Navy, at 14 years of age, on February 23, 1918, for the duration of the First World War; served 10 months overseas; enlisted in United States Army for 1 year, 1919-20; and in the United States Marine Corps for 2 years, 1920-22; while serving in the Marines was stationed in the Far East; worked as a miner and mining engineer in Butte, Mont., 1922-30; having never attended high school, had to take entrance examinations in high-school subjects to enter college; 1 year at Montana School of Mines, 1927-28; 4 years at Montana State University, 1930-34; B. A. and M. A. degrees; professor of Latin-American and Far Eastern history at Montana State University, 1933-43; married Maureen Hayes, of Butte, Mont.; one daughter, Anne, born January 16, 1939; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Big Horn, Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Custer, Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Golden Valley, Hill, Judith Basin, Liberty, Mec-Cone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Petroleum, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Richland, Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland, Wibaux, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks. Popu-lation (1950), 337,574. : WESLEY ABNER D’EWART, Republican, of Wilsall, Park County, Mont.; born at Worcester, Mass., on October 1, 1889; attended grade and high schools in Worcester, Mass., and Washington State College at Pullman, Wash.; married Marjorie Cowee; has one son; stockman and fariner; active in reclamation and livestock organizations in the State; director, National Park Bank, of Livingston, Mont.; thirty-second degree Mason, member of Shrine, Elks, and Kiwanis; Congressional Directory NEBRASKA served two sessions in Montana House of Representatives and three sessions in the Senate; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress at a special election on June 5, 1945, elected to the Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946, elected to the Eighty-first Conor November 2, 1948; elected to the Eighty-second Congress, Novem-ber 7, 1950. : NEBRASKA (Population (1950), 1,325,510) SENATORS HUGH BUTLER, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Missouri Valley, Towa; graduated from Doane College, Crete, Nebr.; now chairman of the board of trustees; construction engineer with the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Rail-road; operated flour milling and grain business; served two terms as president, Omaha Grain Exchange, and two terms as president, National Grain Dealers Association; district governor of Rotary International, 1932 to 1933; member of board, Rotary International, 1934 to 1935; State moderator of Nebraska Con-gregational Churches, 1937 to 1938; in Omaha, Nebr., served as member, Board of Education, YMCA Board, Salvation Army Advisory Board, Community Chest, Chamber of Commerce; Republican national committeeman from Ne-braska, 1936 to 1940; elected to the United States Senate for the term beginning January 3, 1941; reelected November 5, 1946. FRED A. SEATON, Republican, of Hastings, Nebr. ; publisher; born in Wash-ington, D. C., December 11, 1909; son of Fay N. and Dorothea Seaton; attended Manhattan, Kans., public schools, and Kansas State College 1927-31; married Gladys Hope Dowd, January 23, 1931; two children, Donald Richard, 11, and Johanna Christine, 8; served as chairman, Riley County, Kans., Young Repub-licans 1932; vice chairman and chairman of Kansas Young Republicans 1934-37; vice chairman Kansas Republican State Committee 1934-37; secretary to Alf M. Landon in 1936 Presidential campaign and vice chairman Kansas Republican National Convention Delegation 1936; Kansas Young Republican National Committeeman in 1935; Nebraska manager for Harold E. Stassen Presidential primary campaign and executive secretary, Harold E. Stassen pre-convention campaign in 1948; member Republican National Speakers Bureau; served in Nebraska Legislature 1945 and 1947 and chairman, Nebraska Legislative Council, 1947-49; president of Seaton Publishing Co. of Hastings and publisher Hastings Daily Tribune since July 1937; also president or vice president of concerns pub-lishing daily newspapers at Alliance, Nebr., Lead and Deadwood, S. Dak., Sheri-dan, Wyo., Manhattan, Winfield, and Coffeyville, Kans.; weekly newspapers at Lead, S. Dak., and Manhattan, Kans., Western Farm Life Magazine, Denver, Colo., and operating radio stations at Hastings, Nebr., and Manhattan and Coffeyville, Kans.; past president, Hastings Chamber of Commerce; trustee of Hastings College and University of Nebraska Foundation; director of Nebraska State Reclamation Association; past president and board chairman of Inland Daily Press Association and past president Nebraska Associated Press news-papers; member Rotary, National Editorial Association, Nebraska Press Asso-ciation, Inland Daily Press 'Association, Nebraska Social Service League, Navy League, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Delta Chi, Pi Kappa Delta, Masons, Elks, and Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben; appointed on December 10, 1951, to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Kenneth S. Wherry. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas, Gage, Gosper, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Johnson, Kearney, Lancaster, Nemaha, Nuckolls, Pawnee, Phelps, Red Willow, Richardson, Saline, Thayer, and Webster (26 counties). Population (1950), 367,647. CARL T. CURTIS, Republican, of Minden, Nebr. ; born near Minden, Kearney County, Nebr., March 15, 1905; attended Nebraska Wesleyan and the University of Nebraska; lawyer; married Miss Lois Wylie-Atwater, of Minden, Nebr., June 6, 1931; one daughter, Clara Mae, born April 21, 1936, and one son, Tommy, born December 12, 1939; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; member of the Ways and Means Committee. NEVADA . Brographical 71 SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cass, Douglas, Otoe, Sarpy, and Washington (5 counties). Popula- tion (1950), 337,726. HOWARD HOMAN BUFFETT, Republican, of Omaha, Nebr.; born in Omaha, Nebr., August 13, 1903; attended the public schools; was graduated from the University of Nebraska at Lincoln in 1925 with A. B. degree and certificate of Journalism; active in Omaha business since 1925; president, South Omaha Feed Co.; member of the Omaha Board of Education, 1939-42; married Miss Leila Stahl in 1925 and has three children—Doris Wood, 23, Warren, 21, and Roberta, 18; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Antelope, Boone, Burt, Butler, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Hamilton, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Polk, Saunders, Seward, Stanton, Thurston, Wayne, and York (24 counties). Population (1950), 297,562. ROBERT D. HARRISON, Republican, of Norfolk, Nebr.; born January 26, 1897, on a farm at Panama, Lancaster County, Nebr. ; attended the public schools of Lancaster County; A. B. degree, Peru State Teachers’ College; M. A. degree, University of California and University of Nebraska; superintendent of schools, 3 years at Bradshaw, Nebr., and 8 years at DeWitt, Nebr.; married Mary Sutton in 1921; one daughter, Nanci Belle, graduate of the University of Nebraska; member of Methodist Church; past president of Northeast, Nebr., United Cham-bers of Commerce; past president of the Norfolk Chamber of Commerce; vice president of Kiwanas Club; secretary of Y. M. C. A. Board; member of American Legion and V. F. W.; Masonic Lodge; Izaak Walton League; Chamber of Com-merce; chairman of County Civil Defense Board; chairman of Madison County Republican Committee; past president of Norfolk City School Board and mem-ber since 1945; member of Governor’s Highway Advisory Committee; owned and operated an oil business in Norfolk, Nebr., since 1935; also owns and operates a 200-acre farm in Cedar County, Nebr.; elected to the Eighty-second Congress December 4, 1951, to succeed Karl Stefan, deceased. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Arthur, Banner, Blaine, Box Butte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garden, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Hall, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keya Paha, Kimball, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Perkins, Rock, Scotts Bluff, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (38 counties). Population (1950), 315,144. ARTHUR LEWIS MILLER, Republican, of Kimball, Nebr.; born on a farm in Pierce County, Nebr. May 24, 1892; was graduated from the Plainview (Nebr.) High School in 1911 and from the Loyola Medical College, Chicago, Ill., in 1918; taught in a rural school at Plainview, Nebr., for 2 years; discharged from the Medical Reserve Corps in January 1919; practiced medicine and surgery in Kimball County, Nebr., since August 1919; owns farms in western Nebraska; mayor of Kimball, Nebr., 1933-34; member of the Nebraska Unicameral Legis-lature, 1937-41; State governor of Lions Clubs in 1931; president of the State Medical Association in 1939; a fellow of the American College of Surgeons; Methodist; Mason, Elk, and member of Knights of Pythias; State health director, 1941-42; married; one son; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. NEVADA (Population (1950), 160,083) SENATORS PATRICK A. (PAT) McCARRAN, Democrat; born Reno, Nev., August 8, 1876; lawyer; educated public schools of Reno; University of Nevada (M. A.); member Nevada Legislature, 1903; represented Nevada in irrigation congress, 1903; district attorney, Nye County, Nev., 1906-8; associate justice, 1913-16, and chief justice, 1917-18, Supreme Court of Nevada; member of Nevada State Library Commission; member, Nevada Board of Pardons, 1913-18; member, Nevada State Board of Parole Commissioners, 1913-18; president, Nevada State Bar Associa-tion, 1920-21; chairman, Nevada State Board of Bar Examiners, 1931-32; mem-ber, bar of California, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, and Supreme Court of United States; vice president, American Bar Association, 1922-23; author of many legal opinions, leading cases on water, mining, corporation, domestic relations, criminal law, and civil procedure under the code (Nevada Reports, 35 to 42); author Administrative Procedure, Internal Security, and other important acts; married August 1903, Martha Harriet Weeks; five children; elected to United States Senate November 8, 1932; reelected November 8, 1938; reelected November 7, 1944; reelected November 7, 1950; degree of doctor of laws conferred by George- 72 Congressional Directory NEW HAMPSHIRE town University on September 12, 1943; degree of doctor of laws conferred by University of Nevada on May 12, 1945; member, honorary society, Phi Kappa Phi; legal residence, Reno, Nev. GEORGE W. MALONE, Republican, of Reno, Nev.; University of Nevada, 1917; married Ruth Moslander 1921; daughter, Molly Patricia (married Dr. Michael J. O’Connor, Tucson, Ariz.); consulting engineer, former State engi-neer of Nevada and member Public Service Commission, State Bond Commission, and Colorado River Commission; former department commander and national vice commander of the American Legion; former president Nevada Council, Boy Scouts of America; former managing director and editor of Industrial West Foundation, nonprofit research organization, which publishes an industrial encyclopedia for the 11 Western States and Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands; special consultant to the United States Senate Military Affairs Subcom-mittees on Strategic and Critical Minerals and Materials and on Examination of Military Establishments, particularly as to Alaska and Pacific bases, and special consultant to the Secretary of War during World War II; chairman National Re-sources Economic Committee; enlisted as a private in 1917, Field Artillery, World War I, AEF, France; lieutenant, line officer and regimental intelligence, 1918; member American Society of Civil Engineers, American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, American Association of Agricultural Engineers, and San Francisco and Washington, D. C., Press Clubs; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1946. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 160,083 WALTER S. BARING, Democrat, of Reno, Nev.; born in Goldfield, Nev.; September 9, 1911; was graduated from Reno High School in 1929 as a gold medal honor student; was graduated from the University of Nevada in 1934, with a B. S. degree and a B. A. degree; holds a high-school teacher’s certificate; elected chairman Democratic Central Committee of Washoe County in 1936; was elected assemblyman from Washoe County to the Nevada State Legislature in 1936; was reelected in 1942; resigned in order to enlist in the United States Navy; served for 3 years; member Reno Lions Club; member Reno Lodge No. 13, F. & A. M.; member thirty-second degree Scottish Rite; member of Kerak Temple of the Shrine; member of Adah Chapter No. 4, Order of Eastern Star; member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles; member of the American Legion, Darrell Dunkle Post No. 1, Reno, Nev.; elected councilman, Sixth Ward, Reno City Council in 1947; engaged in furniture business in Reno; Protestant; has two children, Walter Stephan Baring 3d and William Robert Baring; elected to the Eighty-first Con-gress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NEW HAMPSHIRE (Popuation (1950), 533,242) SENATORS STYLES BRIDGES, Republican, of Concord, N. H.; born in West Pembroke, Maine, September 9, 1898; was graduated from the University of Maine; received M. A. degree from Dartmouth College, and LL. D. degree from the University of Maine, University of New Hampshire, Northeastern University, Towa Wesleyan College; D. C. L. degree from Carroll College and from the New England College; D. Lit. degree from Florida State College; former member of the extension staff of the University of New Hampshire; former secretary of the New Hampshire Farm Bureau Federation; former director and secretary of the New Hampshire Investment Co.; former secretary and treasurer of the Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.; member of the New Hampshire Public Service Commission, 1930-35; served as Governor of New Hampshire, 1935-37; delegate at large and chairman of the New Hampshire delegation to the Republican National Convention, 1936; delegate at large to the Republican National Conven-tion in 1940; at present serving as vice president and trustee of the New Hampshire NEW HAMPSHIRE Biographical 73 Savings Bank, as director of the Rumford Press, as treasurer of the Putnam Agricultural Foundation, and as director of the Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.; member National Forest Reservation Commission; married Doloris Thauwald, of St. Paul, Minn., February 11, 1944; his three children are Henry Styles, David Clement, and John Fisher Bridges; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; reelected on November 3, 1942, for the term ending January 3, 1949; reelected on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955, with the highest majority ever given by the people of New Hampshire for the United States Senate. CHARLES WILLIAM TOBEY, Republican, of Temple, N. H.; was born at Roxbury, Mass.; attended public schools and Roxbury Latin School; received honorary degrees of master of arts from Dartmouth College and doctor of laws from University of New Hampshire; business experience—has been in insurance, agriculture, banking, and manufacturing; has four children; married Loretta Capell Rabenhorst May 26, 1948; member of the New Hampshire House of Repre-sentatives, 1915-16, 1919-20, and 1923-24, and served as speaker, 1919-20; member of the State senate, 1925-26, and served as president, 1925-26; Governor of New Hampshire, 1929-30; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-fourth and Seventy-fifth Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938; reelected on November 7, 1944, for a second term, ending January 3, 1951, and reelected November 7, 1950, for third term as United States Senator, ending January 3, 1957; member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Monetary Conference held at Bretton Woods, N. H., July 1944; member Senate Crime Committee. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HILLSBORO COUNTY, City of Manchester; towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, and Pelham; MERRIMACK County: Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, Loudon, Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. Population (1950), 275,223. CHESTER EARL MERROW, Republican, of Center Ossipee; born in Center Ossipee, Carroll County, N. H., November 15, 1906; son of Llewellyn and Florence (Nichols) Merrow; student, Brewster Free Academy, 1921-25; B. S. degree from Colby College, 1929; student, Teachers College, Columbia University; summers, 1934-37; A. M. degree in 1937; engaged as instructor of general science, physics, chemistry, and biology at Kents Hill School at Kents Hill, Maine, 1929-30, and at Montpelier (Vt.) Seminary, 1930-37; assistant headmaster of Montpelier Seminary, 1935-38; instructor of political science and history, Vermont Junior College, Montpelier, Vt., also dean, 1937-38; member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1939-40; chairman of house ways and means com-mittee and member of the committee on banks, 1939-40; radio news commen-tator; lecturer on national and international affairs; trustee of Brewster Free Academy; member of Ahepa; member of Elks; member of Phi Beta Kappa; member of Grange; member of Masonic fraternity; married Miss Nellie M. Sands, of Albion, N. Y., June 12, 1933, and they have one son, Daniel S., born August 27, 1941; delegate to international conference on education and cultural relations of the United Nations held in London, November 1945; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress, November 2, 1948; reelected to the FEighty-second Congress, November 7, 1950; Congressional adviser to first conference of UNESCO held in Paris November 1946; member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs; member of Republican Congressional Campaign Committee; member of the United States National Commission for UNESCO from 1946 to 1949. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES; Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY: City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, Lyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mount Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK COUNTY: Cities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Danbury, Dunbarton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. Population (1950), 254,657. NORRIS COTTON, Republican, of Lebanon, N. H.; born Warren, N. H., May 11, 1900; educated Phillips Exeter Academy, Wesleyan University, George Washington University Law School; lawyer, firm of Cotton, Tesreau & Stebbins, 74 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY Lebanon, N. H.; married in 1927 to Ruth Isaacs, of Union City, Tenn.; secretary to United States Senator George H. Moses, 1924-28; prosecuting attorney for Grafton County, 1933-39; justice, Municipal Court of Lebanon, 1939-43; clerk of New Hampshire State Senate, 1927-29; member of New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1923, 1943, and 1945; chairman, Judiciary Committee and majority leader, 1943; speaker of the house, 1945; delegate, Republican National Convention, 1944; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. NEW JERSEY (Population (1950), 4,835,329) SENATORS H. ALEXANDER SMITH, Republican, of Princeton, N. J.; son of A. Alex-ander Smith, M. D., and Sue Lehn Bender; attended Cutler School, New York City; was graduated from Princeton University with A. B. degree in 1901 and from Columbia University with LL. B. degree in 1904; received honorary LL. D. from Brussels (Belgium) University in 1930, honorary LL. D. from Princeton University in 1945, and honorary LL. D. from Rutgers University in June 1951; admitted to New York bar in 1904; lived in Colorado 1905-18; admitted to Colorado bar in 1906; practiced law in: Colorado until 1917, the outbreak of World War I; served in United States Food Administration in Colorado and Washington during World War I, and was member postwar relief organizations headed by former President Herbert Hoover; returned to Princeton, N. J., in 1919, and was executive secretary of the university until 1927; then became lecturer, Department of Politics, Princeton University, until 1930, and later resumed practice of law in New York City, associated with the firm of Hines, Rearick, Dorr & Hammond; member of the board of directors or trustees of the following organizations: Belgian American Educational Foundation, Princeton Yenching (China) Foundation, Foreign Policy Association, and Advisory Council Department Economic and Social Institutions, Princeton University; also member of American Bar Association, Council Foreign Relations, Society of Colonial Wars, and St. Nicholas Society; became treasurer of New Jersey Republican State Committee in 1934 and chairman 1941-43; member Republican Program Committee 1938-40 under chairman Glenn Frank; member Republican National Committee 1942-43; also member Republican Post-War Advisory Council ap-pointed by Republican National Committee, which met at Mackinac Island, Mich., in September 1943; married Helen Dominick on June 21, 1902; children, Helen Dominick (Mrs. Samuel Moor Shoemaker, Jr.), Marian Dominick (Mrs. H. Kenaston Twitchell, Jr.), and H. Alexander Smith, Jr. (married Mary Howard Bruce of Baltimore); elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, to fill unexpired term of Senator W. Warren Barbour (deceased), ending January 3, 1947; reelected to United States Senate on November 5, 1946, for full term ending January 3, 1953. ROBERT C. HENDRICKSON, Republican, of Woodbury, N. J.; born in Woodbury, N. J., August 12, 1898; attended Woodbury elementary and high schools and Temple University Law School, Philadelphia, Pa.; during the First World War enlisted in June 1918 as a private in the United States Army, and served overseas in the Aisne-Marne, St. Mihiel, Champagne, and Meuse-Argonne offensives; awarded Medal of Verdun, Unit Citations, and Letters of Commenda-tion; during World War II offered services on May 31, 1943, and was accepted, commissioned a major and assigned to American Military Government; granted leave of absence as State treasurer on July 21, 1943, reporting for active duty on July 24, 1943; sent to Europe October 23, 1943, and assigned to Mediterranean Theater of Operations, serving in North Africa, Italy, and Upper Austria; entered Rome with the Fifth Army as senior legal officer; promoted to lieutenant colonel in latter part of 1944 and separated from service February 10, 1946; awarded World War IT Medal, European-African Middle Eastern Theater Service Medal with four bronze stars, Army Commendation Ribbon, and Allied Military Gov-ernment Citation (Fifth Army); admitted to the bar in 1922 and engaged in the practice of law; in 1934 was elected to fill unexpired term as State senator from NEW JERSEY Biographical 75 Gloucester County; reelected in 1938; was chosen as Republican majority leader in 1938 and as president of senate in 1939; Republican nominee for Governor in 1940; reelected State senator in 1941; elected State treasurer at joint session of New Jersey Legislature in 1942; reelected in 1946; member Board of Managers Council of State Governments, in 1940, serving as chairman in 1941; served as member of Commission on Delaware River Basin; organizer and charter mem-ber of Woodbury Rotary Club, now honorary member; commander of William Stokes Bonsal Post, No. 133, American Legion; in 1930 served as vice commander of Gloucester County, American Legion; served as treasurer of Gloucester County Bar Association for many years and elected president in 1937 and 1938; member, vestry, Christ Episcopal Church of Woodbury; married Olga Bonsal of Woodbury, N. J., in 1919 and they have four daughters and one son; elected to the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1950), 441,621. CHARLES A. WOLVERTON, Republican, of Camden (Merchantville), N. J.; married; born at Camden, N. J., his parents being Charles S. Wolverton and Martha Wolverton; educated in the public schools of Camden, graduating from Camden High School; studied law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, graduating June 13, 1900, with the degree of LL. B.; admitted to the bar of the State of New Jersey at the November term, 1901; has one son, Lt. Col. Donnell Knox Wolverton; in 1903 revised and compiled the ordinances of the city of Camden; 1904 to 1906 was assistant city solicitor of Camden; 1906 to 1913 was assistant prosecutor of Camden County; from 1913 to 1914, special assistant attorney general of New Jersey; from 1915 to 1918, member of New Jersey House of Assembly from Camden County; in 1918 was speaker of the New Jersey House of Assembly; 1917 to 1919, a Federal food administrator; in 1920, alternate dele-gate at large, Republican National Convention at Chicago; 1918 to 1923, prosecu-tor of the pleas of Camden County; ranking Republican member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; member of Republican congressional cam-paign committee; member of Union League of Philadelphia, Pa., Masonic fra-ternities, Elks, and Moose; elected to the Seventieth €ongress in November 1926; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND(1950), DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES:258,530. Atlantic, : Cape May, and Cumberland (3 counties). Population T. MILLET HAND, Republican, of Cape May City, N. J.; born in Cape May, N. J., July 7, 1902, son of Albert Reeves Hand and Sara Millet Hand, educated in the public schools of that city; graduated from Dickinson School of Law, LL. B. degree, 1922; member of the New Jersey bar; special master in chancery; former president of Cape May County Bar Association; member of New Jersey State Bar Association; member of bar of Supreme Court of the United States; newspaper publisher and other business interests; clerk, Board of Chosen Freeholders of Cape May County, 1924-28; prosecutor of the pleas,. Cape May County, 1928-33; mayor, city. of Cape May, 1937-44; married in 1930 to Mary Mercer Worth, of Philadelphia; widower; one child, T. Millet Hand, Jr.; married, 1950, Elizabeth Frost Spang, of Cape May; member of University Club and National Press Club of Washington, D. C.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Monmouth and Ocean. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of New Bruns-wick and South Amboy; boroughs of Helmetta, Jamesburg, Milltown, Sayreville, South River, and Spotswood; townships of Cranbury, East Brunswick, Madison, Monroe, Plainsboro, North Bruns-wick, and South Brunswick. Population (1950), 387,794. JAMES COATS AUCHINCLOSS, Republican, of Rumson, N. J., was born in New York City, N. Y., January 19, 1885, the sixth of eight children of the late Edgar Stirling and Maria Sloan Auchincloss; educated at Groton School, Groton, Mass., and was graduated from Yale University, degree of A. B., 1908; employed by Farmers Loan & Trust Co. in New York City; was a member of the New York Stock Exchange, 1910-35, and served on board of governors for 18 years; 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 7 76 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY veteran of Seventh Regiment, New York National Guard, and in the First World War served as captain, Military Intelligence; was deputy police commissioner of New York City and treasurer, president, and chairman of board of New York Better Business Bureau; served for 12 years as member of Council of Borough of Rumson, N. J., and was serving third term as mayor when elected to Congress; in 1909 married to Lee F. Alexander and has two children—Douglas and Gordon, and eight grandchildren—Kenneth, Gail, Stuart, Gordon, Sibley Ann, David and Lee (twins), and Juliet; elected to Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Burlington and Mercer (2 counties). Population (1950), 365,338. CHARLES ROBERT HOWELL, Democrat, of East Curlis Avenue, Pen-nington, N. J.; born April 23, 1904, in Trenton, N. J., son of Harriet Bumstead and Robert Wilson Howell; educated in Trenton public schools, Hoosac School, Hoosick, N. Y.; Princeton University, 2 years; University of Pennsylvania, spe-cial courses; engaged in own insurance business in Trenton since 1928; Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU) degree; former president Trenton Association of Life Underwriters; former vice president New Jersey Association of Life Underwrit-ers; elected to New Jersey House of Assembly in 1944; reelected 1945; introduced original New Jersey fair employment bill (FEPC); member: Mercer County Re-gional Council of State Division Against Discrimination; treasurer, Trenton Chapter, Conference of Christians and Jews; executive board, Trenton Council on Human Relations; vice chairman, New Jersey Americans for Democratic Action (ADA); Lions Club; Trenton Elks; former president Trenton Kennel Club; Episcopalian; married Inez Howe, daughter of Inez Whitefield and William Patton Howe, of Pennington, N. J.; elected to the Kighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Morris and Somerset. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Perth Amboy; boroughs of Carteret, Dunellen, Highland Park, Metuchen, Middlesex, and South Plainfield; town-ships of Piscataway, Raritan, and Woodbridge. Population (1950), 419,641. CHARLES AUBREY EATON, Republican, of Watchung, Somerset County; elected to Sixty-ninth and succeeding Congresses; former chairman, Foreign Affairs Committee ; member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, 1945; member of American delegation to United Nations General Assembly, London, 1945, New York, 1946. SIXTH DISTRICT.—UnNIioN COUNTY. Population (1950), 397,559. CLIFFORD PHILIP CASE, Republican, of Rahway, N. J.; born in Franklin Park, N. J., April 16, 1904, son of the late Clifford P. and Jeannette (Benedict) Case; Rutgers College, A. B. degree, 1925; Columbia University Law School, LL. B. degree, 1928; married Ruth M. Smith in 1928; has two daughters, Mrs. William M. Weaver and Ann Case, and one son, Clifford Philip 3d; attorney at law, practicing in New York City since 1928; became associated with, and later a member of, law firm of Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett; formerly alumni member of Rutgers University Board of Trustees; member of House of Assembly of New Jersey, 1943 and 1944, and of Rahway Common Council, 1938-42; elected to the .Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Kighty-second Congresses. . SEVENTH DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Hunterdon, Sussex, and Warren. BERGEN CouUNTY: Cities of Garfield and Hackensack; boroughs of Allendale, East Paterson, Emerson, Fairlawn, Franklin Lakes, Glen Rock, Hillsdale, Hohokus, Lodi, Maywood, Midland Park, Montvale, Oakland, Oradell, Pa- ramus, Park Ridge, Ramsey, Riverside, Saddle River, Upper Saddle River, Waldwick, Westwood, Woodcliff Lake; townships of Mahwah, Ridgewood, Rivervale, Rochelle Park, Saddle River, South Hackensack, Washington, and Wyckoff. Passaic County: Borough of Ringwood and town- ship of West Milford. Population (1950), 369,998. WILLIAM BECK WIDNALL, Republican, of Saddle River, N. J.; born in Hackensack, N. J., March 17, 1906; educated in the public schools; graduated from Brown University, Ph. B., in 1926 and from the New Jersey Law School (now part of Rutgers University), LL. B., in 1931; profession is law; married Miss Marjorie Soule in 1933 and has two children—Barbara, 17, and William S., 14; member Brown University Club of New York; member of the New Jersey NEW JERSEY Biographical 77 House of Assembly 1946-49 and reelected for 1950 and 1951; elected to the Eighty-first Congress in a special election held February 6, 1950; reelected No-vember 7, 1950, to Eighty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.— Passaic County: Cities of Clifton, Passaic, and Paterson; boroughs of Blooming-dale, Haledon, Hawthorne, North Haledon, Pompton Lakes, Prospect Park, Totowa, Wanaque, and West Paterson; townships of Little Falls and Wayne. Population (1950), 332,018. GORDON CANFIELD, Republican, of Paterson, N. J., was born in Sala-manea, N. Y., April 15, 1898, the son of Carl A. and Florence A. Canfield; after graduating from high school in Binghamton, N. Y., enlisted in the Signal Corps, Regular Army, in World War I; then entered newspaper work in Passaic, N. J., and attended night classes at the New Jersey Law School at Newark; in January 1924 became secretary to the late Representative George N. Seger of Passaic, this service embracing 17 years, and after his chief’s death in 1940 was elected his successor; congressional tenure began with the Seventy-seventh Congress and is now serving his sixth term; while a secretary, completed law studies at National University in Washington and was admitted to the District of Columbia, Bar; married Dorothy E. Greenwell of Washington, D. C., and they have two sons, Carl and Allan; during the congressional recess of June and July 1944, served as a utility man on a tanker in the Merchant Marine, North Atlantic run, and was in London for several weeks during the robot blitz; in April 1945, when Buchenwald was liberated by Patton’s Army, inspected the concentration camp at General Eisenhower’s request, and in January 1946 visited Nagasaki and Hiroshima with a congressional committee; is a member of the House Appropria-tions Committee and has served on the boards of visitors for the service academies at West Point, Annapolis, and New London. NINTH DISTRICT.—BERGEN County: City of Englewood, boroughs of Alpine, Bendix, Bergenfield, Bogota, Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Closter, Cresskill, Demarest, Dumont, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Englewood Cliffs, Fairview, Fort Lee, Harrington Park, Hasbrouck Heights, Haworth, Leonia, Little Ferry, Moonachie, New Milford, North Arlington, Northvale, Norwood, Old Tappan, Palisades Park, Ridgefield, Rockleigh, Rutherford, Tenafly, Wallington, and Wood-Ridge; townships of Lynd-hurst, Ridgefield Park, and Teaneck. HUDSON COUNTY: Town of Guttenberg and township of North Bergen. Population (1950), 348,980. FRANK C. OSMERS, Jr., Republican, of Haworth, N. J.; born Leonia, N. J., December 30, 1907; graduate Dumont (N. J.) High School; attended Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.; Congregationalist; married on November 7, 1942, to Marguerite Marsh Udall of Bergenfield, N. J.; two children: Frank C. 3d, born July 29, 1944, and Nancy Emma Lee, born November 18, 1946; member: University Club (Washington, D. C.), National Republican Club, the Engle-wood Club, Pascack Hospital Association, Brotherhood of Traveling Jewelers, Reserve Officers Association, American Legion, V. F. W., Elks, Masons, Royal Arch Masons, National Sojourners, Seventy-seventh Division Association, Three hundred and sixth Infantry Association, Haworth Men’s Club; Englewood, Bergen County, and New Jersey Chambers of Commerce; Rotary Club, National Home and Property Owners Association, Advertising Club of New Jersey; former member Board of Governors Englewood Hospital, Mayors’ Association of Bergen County; director: Tenafly, N. J., Savings & Loan Association, and Columbia County Association of New York City; chairman, Republican Com-mittee of Bergen County, N. J., since 1948; former vice president, Hudson County Graphic Arts Association; president, Bergen County Park Commission 1947-50; vice president, Bergen County Safety Council; foreman of September 1947 Bergen County Grand Jury which founded Bergen County Police School; former Boy Scout troop committeeman; New Jersey licensed real estate broker; jeweler, gem expert, and appraiser until 1939 as vice president of the Frank C. Osmers Co., Inc., New York City jewelry firm; since 1946 engaged in newspaper and magazine publishing and commercial printing at Englewood, N. J.; councilman, Haworth, N. J., 1930-34; mayor 1935-36; state assemblyman from Bergen County, N. J., 1936-38; member of the Seventy-sixth and Seventy-seventh Congresses, Ninth New Jersey District; left the Seventy-seventh Congress the day war was declared to enlist as private, United States Army; released from active duty as major of Infantry, February 22, 1946; served in Philippine and Okinawan campaigns, Korean Occupation; awarded Bronze Star; member of Army Reserve; elected at a special election on November 6, 1951, to fill the un-expired term in the Eighty-second Congress of Harry L. Towe, who resigned. 78 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY TENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 11, and 15; borough of Glen Ridge; towns of Belleville, Bloomfield, and Nutley. HupsoN COUNTY: Borough of East Newark; towns of Harrison and Kearny. Population (1950), 311,926. PETER WALLACE RODINO, Jr., Democrat, of 205 Grafton Avenue, New-ark, N. J.; born June 7, 1909, in Newark, N. J.; lawyer; one of first enlisted men to be commissioned overseas; highest order of Knighthood in Italy by former King Umberto, and other foreign decorations for distinguished services in the military; holds Knighthood in the Sovereign Military Order of Malta; served with the First Armored Division and Military Mission Italian Army; discharged from the service in April 1946, as captain; spearheaded the drive against communism in the April 1948 elections in Italy; chairman of the Middle Atlantic Veterans Housing Committee; member of Fellowship of United States-British Comrades, gold life membership Veterans of Foreign Wars; Loyal Order of Moose, American Veterans of World War II, American Legion, Military Order of World Wars, Knights of Columbus, Essex County Bar Association, National Unico Club, and the Elks; married to the former Marianna Stango; two children, Margaret Ann and Peter 3d; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. ; ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 3, 6, 7, 13, and 14; cities of East Orange, Orange; town of West Orange; village of South Orange. Population (1950), 309,603. HUGH J. ADDONIZIO, Democrat, of Newark, N. J.; born January 31, 1914, in Newark, N. J.; graduated from Lincoln Public School, Newark, N. J., 1928; West Side High School, Newark, N. J., 1933; St. Benedict’s Prep School, Newark, N. J., 1935; Fordham University, New York, N. Y., 1939, with B. S. degree; all state quarterback at West Side School in 1933; and at St. Benedict's Prep in 1935; member of Fordham Varsity football team from 1935 to 1939, playing as quarterback on the Great Seven Blocks of Granite under Coach Jim Crowley; entered United States Army on January 13, 1941, as private; attended Officers’ Candidate School at Fort Benning, Ga., and commissioned second lieutenant in the Infantry; served 37 months overseas with the Sixtieth Infantry, Ninth Divi-sion, participating in eight major campaigns (Algiers French Morocco, Tunisia, Sicily, Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes (Battle of the Bulge), Central Europe, and Rhineland) from the invasion of North Africa to the end of the war in Germany; the Ninth Division was the first American troops in North Africa, the first American troops to cross into Belgium from France, and one of the first divisions across the Rhine River in Germany; discharged as captain in 1946 with the following decorations and citations: European-African-Middle Eastern Theater Campaign Ribbon with bronze arrowhead and eight campaign stars, Bronze Star Medal, World War II Victory Medal, American Defense Service Medal, American Theater Campaign Ribbon, and Combat Infantryman’s Badge; one of the few living American combat officers to wear eight campaign stars, married Miss Doris Goodheart in Newark, N. J., in 1942 and have three children— Carol Ann, Frank Hugh, and Lois; vice president of A & C Clothing Co., Newark, N. J.; member of Veterans of Foreign Wars, Fordham University Club of New Jersey, American Legion, and Greater New York Chapter Ninth ‘Division Associ-ation; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 9, 10, 12, and 16; boroughs of Caldwell, Essex Fells, North Caldwell, Roseland, Verona, West Caldwell; towns of Irvington, Montclair; town-ships of Caldwell, Cedar Grove, Livingston, Maplewood, and Millburn. Population (1950), 334,893. ROBERT WINTHROP KEAN, Republican, of Livingston, N. J.; born in Elberon, N. J., September 28, 1893, graduated from St. Mark’s School in 1911 and from Harvard College with the degree of A. B. in 1915; served in the World War with the Second Division, American Expeditionary Forces, as a first: lieu-tenant, Fifteenth Field Artillery, and was awarded the Silver Star Medal and the Distinguished Service Cross; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1936; was president of the Livingston National Bank from 1927 to 1950 and a partner in the investment house of Kean, Taylor & Co., since 1921; married October 18, 1920, to Elizabeth Stuyvesant Howard, of Hyde Park, N. Y., and they have six children; elected to Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the -Eighty-second Congress. NEW MEXICO : Brographical 79 THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HuDsoN County: City of Bayonne; city of Jersey City, wards 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Population (1950), 268,421. ALFRED D. SIEMINSKI, Democrat, of Jersey City, N. J.; born in Jersey City, August 23; 1911; graduated from Princeton University in 1934 with an A. B. degree in political science; entered United States Army in 1942; served in Italian campaign, and with United States forces in Austria with Military Gov-ernment Division, and with the Legion of Merit in the Korean theater in 1950; wife and daughter; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—HupsoN County: City of Hoboken; city of Jersey City, wards 2, 3, 10, 11, and 12; city of Union City; towns of Secaucus and West New York; township of Weehawken. Popu-lation (1950), 276,206. EDWARD J. HART, Democrat, lawyer, Jersey City. NEW MEXICO (Population (1950), 681,187) SENATORS DENNIS CHAVEZ, Democrat, of Albuquerque, N. Mex., born at Los Chavez, Valencia County, N. Mex., April 8, 1888; attended public schools of Albuquerque; graduate of law school, Georgetown University, 1920, with LL. B. degree; married Imelda Espinosa, November 9, 1911; has three children—Dennis Chavez, Jr., Mrs. Stanley Miller, and Mrs. Jorge Tristani; served as clerk of the United States Senate, 1918 to 1920; member of New Mexico Legislature; practiced law at Albu-querque; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. Clyde Tingley on May 11, 1935; elected November 3, 1936; reelected November 5, 1940; reelected No-vember 5, 1946. CLINTON P. ANDERSON, Democrat, of Albuquerque, N. Mex.; born at Centerville, S. Dak., October 23, 1895; was educated at Dakota Wesleyan Uni-versity and University of Michigan; general insurance business; married, two children; president, Rotary International, 1932-33; treasurer of State of New Mexico, 1933-34; administrator, New Mexico Relief Administration, 1935; field ' representative, Federal Emergency Relief Administration, 1935-36; chairman and executive director, Unemployment Compensation Commission of New Mexico, 1936-38; managing director, United States Coronado Exposition Com-mission, 1939-40; elected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; chairman of the House Committee To Investigate Campaign Expenditures in the Seventy-eighth Congress; chairman of the House of Repre-sentatives Special Committee To Investigate Food Shortages in the Seventy-ninth Congress until his resignation from Congress to become Secretary of Agriculture; owns and operates farms in New Mexico and South Dakota; appointed Secretary of Agriculture June 30, 1945; resigned May 10, 1948, to enter Democratic primary for United States Senator; nominated on June 8; elected on November 2, 1948, to the United States Senate for the term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 681,187. ANTONIO M. FERNANDEZ, Democrat, of Santa Fe, N. Mex.; born in Springer, N. Mex., January 17, 1902; court reporter for the eighth judicial district of New Mexico, 1925-30; received law training at Cumberland University, Leb-anon, Tenn.; admitted to the practice of law in New Mexico in 1931; assistant district attorney of the eighth judicial district, 1933; practiced law in Santa Fe, N. Mex., 1934-41; served in the State legislature, 1935; chief tax attorney for the State Tax Commission, 1935-36; first assistant attorney general, 1937-41; member of the first New Mexico Public Service Commission, 1941-42; married Cleo Chavez in 1924 and has five children, Antonio, Jr., Orlando, Manuel Andres, Anita, and Dolores; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected 80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on Novem-ber 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. JOHN J. DEMPSEY, Democrat, of Santa Fe, N. Mex., was born at White-haven, Pa., June 22, 1879; formerly vice president of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Co., Brooklyn, N. Y.; independent oil operator; president, United States Asphalt Corporation; appointed State NRA director in 1933; also served as head of New Mexico housing campaign; president, board of regents, University of New Mexico; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; member U. S. Maritime Commission 1941; Under Secretary of Interior 1941-42; Governor of New Mexico 1943-45, 1945-47; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NEW YORK (Population (1950), 14,830,192) SENATORS IRVING McNEIL IVES, Republican, of Norwich, N. Y.; born in Bainbridge, N. Y., January 24, 1896; son of George Albert and Lucy (Keeler) Ives; A. B., Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y., 1920; L. H. D., Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y., 1943; LL. D., Hamilton College, 1946, Alfred University, 1947, Syracuse Uni-versity, 1948; D. C. L., New School of Social Research, 1949; LL. D., Hartwick College, 1950; married Elizabeth Minette Skinner, October 23, 1920, who died July 7, 1947; one son, George Skinner; married Marion Mead Crain July 12, 1948; with Guaranty Trust Co., of New York, 1920-23, Manufacturers Trust Co., New York City, 1923-30; in general insurance business, Norwich, N. Y., 1933-45; member, New York State Assembly since 1930, minority leader, 1935, speaker, 1936, majority leader 1937-46, inclusive; while chairman of New York State Joint Legislative Committee on Industrial and Labor Conditions became author and sponsor of legislation creating New York State Department of Commerce and New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University; chairman, New York State Temporary Commission Against Discrimination, 1944-45; chairman, New York State Temporary Commission on Agriculture, 1945-46; dean, New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations June 23, 1945, to February 1, 1947; served with the United States Army, 1917-19; dis-charged with rank of first lieutenant, Infantry; with AEF, France and Germany, 15 months; member, board of trustees, Hamilton College; member, board of trustees, Cornell University, 1944-45, and board of temporary trustees, New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, 1944-45; member, New York State War Council, 1942-45; member, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Phi Beta Kappa, Theta Delta Chi; Elks; National Grange; Presbyterian; directed preparation and publication of textbook: The American Story of Indus-trial and Labor Relations, 1943; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953. HERBERT H. LEHMAN, Democrat, of New York, N. Y.; born in New York City, March 28, 1878; after leaving college, engaged in the textile manufacturing business; became vice president and treasurer of the J. Spencer Turner Co. in 1906; in 1908 became a partner in the investment banking firm of Lehman Bros. of New York City, which was founded by his father and uncle; was commissioned a captain in the United States Army in 1917 and attained the rank of colonel on the General Staff, serving as an assistant to Gen. George Goethals; in 1919 was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal; on April 28, 1910, married Edith Altschul of San Francisco, Calif. ; three children, the eldest, Peter, a first lieutenant in the Air Corps, was killed in the war, and was survived by a wife and two daugh-ters; second son, John, served in the European Theater during the war and became a lieutenant colonel, and a daughter, Hilda Jane, served in the Army as a Wac in North Africa and Italy and is now residing in Cleveland, Ohio, with her hus-band, Eugene Paul, and their daughter and infant son; withdrew from business and entered public service in the fall of 1928; elected Lieutenant Governor of New York State in 1928; in the November election of 1932 was elected Governor; served four terms, for 10 years, as Governor, and at the end of 1942 was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as Director of Foreign Relief and Rehabilita- NEW YORK Biographical 81 tion Operations in the State Department at Washington, D. C.; in 1943 was unanimously elected first Director General of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (known as UNRRA) by the 44 nations which initially set up that organization; served in this capacity until the spring of 1946 and has continued to be active in international work and is a member of the Public Advisory Board of the Economic Cooperation Administration and on the Board of the American Association for the United Nations; the following colleges have conferred honorary degrees: (M. A., LL. D.) Williams College; (LL. D.) New York University, Oglethorpe University, Hamilton College, St. Bonaven-ture College, Alfred University, Niagara University, Syracuse University, Fordham University, Jewish Theological Seminary; (H. L. D.) Dropsie College, Hebrew Union College, Yeshiva College; (LL. D. and Phi Beta Kappa) Hobart and William Smith Colleges; is an active officer and director of many civic, philanthropic, religious, and educational organizations, among which are the following: trustee, New York University Law Center Foundation and Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; director, Henry Street Settlement, Visiting Nurse Service of New York, National Conference of Christians and Jews, Inc.; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, Palestine Economic Corporation, Woodrow Wilson Foundation, and the Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial Foundation; cochairman, United Jewish Appeal of Greater New York; residence, 820 Park Avenue, New York City, and office, 41 East Fifty-seventh Street, New York City; elected to the United States Senate November 8, 1949, to fill the unexpired term of Robert F. Wagner; reelected November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—SUFFOLK COUNTY. NASSAU County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at a point where the center line of North Hempstead Turnpike intersects the dividing line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties, running thence southwesterly along said center line of North Hempstead Turnpike to the center line of Guinea Woods Road, turning thence southerly along center line of said Guinea Woods Road to the northerly line of the incorporated village of Garden City, thence easterly along said northerly line of the incorporated village of Garden City to the northeast corner of the incorporated village of Garden City, running thence southerly along the easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Garden City to the northeasterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Hempstead, running thence along said easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Hemp-stead to the southerly boundary of the incorporated village of Hempstead, running thence westerly along the southerly boundary of the incorporated village of Hempstead to the center line of Baldwin Road, thence southerly along the center line of Baldwin Road and Grand Avenue to the center line of DeMott Avenue, thence easterly along the center line of DeMott Avenue to the center line of Cen-tennial Avenue, thence easterly along the center line of Centennial Avenue to the center line of North Brookside Avenue, running thence southwesterly along the center line of North Brookside Avenue to the northerly line of the incorporated village of Freeport, running thence easterly and southerly along the northerly and easterly boundary line of the incorporated village of Freeport to the intersection of the center line of the Meadowbrook State Parkway with the said easterly boundary line of the incor-porated village of Freeport at the most southerly point south of Merrick Road, running thence southerly and easterly along the center line of the Meadowbrook State Parkway to the center line of Ocean Park-way, running thence due south to the Atlantic Ocean, running thence easterly along the Atlantic Ocean to the boundary line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties, running thence northerly along said bound-ary line between Nassau and Suffolk Counties to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 440,738. ERNEST GREENWOOD, Democrat, of Bay Shore, Long Island, N. Y.; born in Yorkshire, England, November 25, 1884; education: public school, worked half time in factory at 10 years of age, attending school other half day; secondary school, higher board school, Halifax, England; Evening Technical Institute and College, 5% years, working as apprentice engineer during day; Columbia University and Columbia College, New York City, courses in education; employed by engineering firms, Hadfields and Sir John Brown, in Sheffield; courses in Engineering in Sheffield, and also taught there; Campbells Gas Engine Co., Halifax, England; came to the United States in 1910; employed by General Electric Co., Schenectady, 1910-14; teacher in public schools, Schenectady, 1914-16; head of vocational department, Islip High School, 1916-20; supervisor, Federal Board for Vocational Education, 1920-22; associate head master, Dwight School for Boys and New York Preparatory Evening School for Adults, 1922-27; head master, same schools, 1927 to retirement in December 1946; chairman of the board of trustees in same schools; elected president of trade union local at 23 years of age and trade union member 15 years; president of School Masters’ Association of New York and vicinity, 1934-36; president of New York Prepara-~ tory Evening Schools Association, 1927-50; president of Private Summer High Schools Association of New York and vicinity, 1927-50; president of Bay Shore and Brightwaters Civic Association 1948-50; director of First National Bank of Islip, N. Y.; vestryman of St. Peter’s Church of Bay Shore, N. Y.; president of Bay Shore Rotary Club 1948-49; vice president of Suffolk County Council Boy Scouts; County Executive, Board of Directors, Girl Scouts, Bay Shore, N. Y.; 82 Congressional Directory NEW YORK appointed: Islip Town Rationing Board 1942-45; chairman of planning com-mittee, board of education, Bay Shore, N. Y.; treasurer to board of education, Bay Shore, N. Y.; Committee on Census and Inventory of Military Resources— W. W. 1; member of National Committee for Citizens Committee for Reorgan-ization of Executive Branch of the Government; political: candidate for supervisor of Islip Town, Independent Efficiency Party, fully backed and endorsed by Democratic Party; reduced the 5 to 1 previous majority down to 11 to 9 in 1948; fraternal: member of Masonic Lodge, Islip, N. Y., 82 years; athletics: captain of soccer and cricket teams in England, Canada, and United States; member of Civil Defense Council, World War II; married Sarah E. Mosley in 1909; one daughter, Dorothy G. Banks; one granddaughter; elected to the Kighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.— NAssAU County: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the First Congressional District. Population (1950), 497,873. : LEONARD W. HALL, Republican, of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, N. Y., was born at Oyster Bay Cove, N. Y., October 2, 1900; graduate of Georgetown Law School, and has been a practicing attorney since his admission to the bar in 1921; served in the New York State Legislature, 1927-28 and 1934-38; became sheriff of Nassau County in 1929, serving a 3-year term; chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee; married; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at a point at the intersection of Twenty-eighth A venue and Little Neck Bay, thence along Twenty-eighth A venue to Bell Boulevard, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Two Hundred and Third Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Utopia Parkway, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-ninth Street, to Crocheron Avenue, to Northern Boulevard, to Parsons Boulevard, to Sanford Avenue, to Kissena Boulevard, to Elder A venue, to Rodman Street, to Horace Harding Boulevard, to Grand Central Park-way, to Sixty-ninth Road, to Queens Boulevard, to Sixty-sixth Avenue, to Thornton Place, to Dane Place, to Fleet Street, to Yellowstone Boulevard, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Cooper Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Sixty-ninth Avenue, to Seventy-eighth Street, to Cooper Avenue, to Central Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Myrtle Avenue, to Interborough Parkway, to Cypress Hills Road, to the boundary line between Queens and Kings Counties, to Elderts Lane, to Atlantic Avenue, to Eighty-fifth Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to Ninety-second Street, to Eighty-eighth Avenue, to Wood-haven Boulevard, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Hillside Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-second Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventieth Street, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventy-first Street, to One Hundred and Eighth Avenue, to Merrick Boulevard, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to One Hundred and Eightieth Street, to Liberty Avenue, to Dunkirk Avenue, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to Liberty Avenue, to Farmers Boule-vard, to Linden Boulevard, to Springfield Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Road, to Two Hundred and Eighteenth Street, to Merrick Boulevard, to Two Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to One Hundred and Thirty-third A venue, to Brookville Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-second Avenue, to the Nassau and Queens boundary line to the place of beginning, Population (1950), 464,092. HENRY J. LATHAM, Republican, of Queens Village, N. Y.; born in Brook-lyn, N. Y., December 10, 1908; educated at St. John’s College and Brooklyn Law School of St. Lawrence University; degrees, bachelor of laws and master of laws; attorney at law; member of the New York State Assembly, 1941-42; resigned in 1942 as a member of the New York State Legislature and was commissioned a lieutenant (junior grade) in the United States Navy; subsequently made a lieu-tenant; has been on active service in both the Atlantic and Pacific theaters of war; married Elizabeth Schwarze and they have two children, Barbara Ann and Stephen Grant; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Kighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Fighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Nassau-Queens County line at One Hundred and Thirty-second Avenue to Brookville Boulevard, to One Hundred and Thirty-third A venue, to Two Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to Merrick Boulevard, to Two Hundred and Eighteenth Street, to One Hundred and Thirty-third Road, to Springfield Boule-vard, to Linden Boulevard, to Farmers Boulevard, to Liberty Avenue, to Brinkerhofi Avenue, to Dunkirk Avenue, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Eightieth Street, to Brinkerhoff Avenue, to Merrick Boulevard, to One Hundred and Eighth A venue, to One Hundred and Seventy-first Street, to Liberty Avenue, to One Hundred and Seventieth Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-second Street, to Hillside Avenue, to Myrtle Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixteenth Street to Jamaica Avenue, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Eighty-eighth Avenue, to Ninety-second Street, to Jamaica Avenue, to Eighty-fifth Street, to Atlantic Avenue, to Elderts Lane, to the boundary line be-tween Queens and Kings Counties; thence along the said boundary line to the waters of Jamaica Bay; thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay east of Duck Point Marshes, through the waters of Rockaway Inlet to the waters of Atlantic Ocean; and through the waters of Atlantic Ocean, to the boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, thence along the said boundary line to One Hundred and Thirty-second Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 339,806. L. GARY CLEMENTE, Democrat, Queens County, N. Y.; lawyer; veteran; married; wife’s name is Ruth; five children, Christina, Gary, Stephen, Michael, and Catherine. NEW YORK B 1ographical 83 FIFTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at East River and Hoyt Avenue (Twenty-fifth Avenue) to Astoria Boulevard South, to Forty-ninth Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to Twenty-eighth Avenue, to Hobart Street, to Fifty-first Street, to Broadway, to Fifty-third Place, to Northern Boulevard, to Woodside Avenue, to Barnet Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Skillman Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Forty-third Avenue, to Fifty-fifth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Fifty-fourth Avenue, to Maurice Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-sixth Avenue, to Haspel Street, to Fifty-seventh Avenue, to Eighty-fourth Street, to Fifty-eighth Avenue, to Eighty-third Place, to Eliot Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Caldwell Avenue, to Seventy-seventh Street, to Eliot Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Place, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Metropolitan Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Seventieth Avenue, to Seventy-fourth Street, to Seventy-first Avenue, to Cooper Avenue, to Seventy-eighth Street, to Sixty-ninth Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Cooper Avenue, along Cooper Avenue, to Woodhaven Boulevard, to Yellowstone Boulevard, to Fleet Street, to Dane Place, to Thornton Place, to Sixty-sixth Avenue, to Queens Boulevard, to Sixty-ninth Road, to Grand Central Parkway, to Horace Harding Boulevard, to Rodman Street, to Elder Avenue, to Kissena Boulevard, to Sanford A venue, to Parsons Boulevard, to Northern Boulevard, to Crocheron Avenue, to One Hundred and Sixty-ninth Street, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Utopia Parkway, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Two Hundred and Third Street, to Twenty-sixth Avenue, to Bell Boulevard, to Twenty-eighth Avenue, to the waters of Little Neck Bay; thence through the waters of Little Neck Bay, Long Island Sound and East River, to Hoyt Avenue (T'wenty-fifth Avenue), the place of beginning. Population (1950), 402,326. T. VINCENT QUINN, Democrat, of Jackson Heights, N. Y.; born in Long Island City, N. Y., March 16, 1903; educated in the grade and high schools of Queens County; graduated from Fordham University Law School, LL. B. degree; practicing attorney since June 1925; married Dorothy B. Donohue and have two daughters, Dorothy Patricia and Mary Ellen; member of district attorney’s staff, Queens County, 1931-34; member of United States Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of New York, 1934-47; Assistant Attorney General of the United States, July 21, 1947, to August 10, 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on Novem-ber 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—QUEENS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at East River and Hoyt Avenue (Twenty-fifth Avenue) to Astoria Boulevard (Grand Central Parkway), to Forty-ninth Street, to Twenty-fourth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to Twenty-eighth Avenue, to Hobart Street, to Thirty-first Avenue, to Fifty-first Street, to Broadway, to Fifty-third Place, to Northern Boulevard, to Woodside Avenue to Barnett Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Skillman Avenue to Fifty-third Street, to Forty-third Avenue, to Fifty-fiftth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Fifty-fourth Avenue, to Maurice Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Queens Boulevard, to Fifty-sixth Avenue, to Haspel Street, to Fifty-seventh Avenue, to Eighty-fourth Street, to Fifty-eighth Avenue, to Eighty-third Place, to Eliot Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Caldwell Avenue, to Seventy-seventh Street, to Eliot Avenue, to Sixty-ninth Place, to Sixty-ninth Street, to Metropolitan Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Seventieth Avenue, to Seventy-fourth Street, to Seventy-first Avenue, to Cooper Avenue, to Seventy-third Place, to Myrtle Avenue, to Interborough Parkway, to Cypress Hills Road, and the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line to New-town Creek; thence through the waters of Newtown Creek to the East River; through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 340,080. JAMES J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Long Island City, N. Y.; born in New York, N. Y., March 19, 1901; member of law firm of Danahy & Delaney, 44 Court Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.; assistant district attorney for 9 years in the district attorney’s office, Queens County, N. Y.; married; one son, Patrick; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; elected to the Eighty-se cond Congress on November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KiINGs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at waters of East River and South Eighth Street, to Kent Avenue, to Broadway, to Berry Street, to South Sixth Street, to Broadway, to Havemeyer Street, to South Fourth Street, to Rodney Street, to Broadway, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to Lafayette Avenue, to Lewis Avenue, to Green Avenue, to Classon Avenue, to Eastern Parkway, to and around southern end of Grand Army Plaza, to Prospect Park West, to Carroll Street, to Eighth A venue, to First Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Fifth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Flace, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place, to Pacific Street, to Court Street, to Pacific Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia Street, to Congress Street, to waters of East River, thence through the waters of East River to South Eighth Street, the place of beginning. Popu-lation (1950), 312,155. LOUIS ‘B. HELLER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Manhattan, New York City, February 10, 1905; son of Max and Dora Heller; resides at 595 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y., with his wife, Ruth G., and two children, Robert M., born July 31, 1940, and Marcia D., born January 17, 1944; grad-uated from Public School 74 in 1918 and from Boys High School in 1922; received degree of LL. B. from Fordham University, School of Law, in 1926; admitted to the bar of the State of New York the following year; was subsequently ad-mitted to practice in the United States Courts, southern and eastern districts of New York; actively engaged in the practice of law, with his brother, Harry; under the firm name of Heller & Heller, at 16 Court Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., member of Brooklyn Bar Association, Federal Bar Association of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut; director, Criminal Bar Association of Kings ounty; served as a special deputy assistant attorney general in election fraud cases for 12 years; appeal agent, United States Selective Service; delegate to 84 Congressional Directory NEW YORK several judicial and State conventions; member of the New York State Senate, seventh (now eighth) district, 1943-44; served as secretary, New York State Temporary Commission Against Discrimination, by appointment of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, the commission being under the chairmanship of United States Senator Irving M. Ives, the then majority leader of the State assembly; State committee-man and executive member (leader) of the sixth assembly district, regular Demo-cratic organization of Kings County; member of Tau Epsilon Phi and former exalted grand master, Delta Rho Sigma; member of numerous civic, social, and fraternal organizations; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on February 15, 1949, in a special election to fill the seat left vacant by the death of John J. Delaney; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950; member of House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce; chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission Subcommittee. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—KiINGS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and South Eighth Street, to Kent Avenue, to Broadway, to Berry Street, to South Sixth Street, to Broadway, to Havemeyer Street, to South Fourth Street, to Rodney Street, to Broadway, to Saratoga Avenue, to Hancock Street, to Broadway, to Weirfield Street, to Bushwick Avenue, to Han-cock Street, to Central Avenue, to Halsey Street, to Wilson Avenue, to Jefferson Avenue, to Knicker-bocker Avenue, to Decatur Street, to the boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line and through waters of Newtown Creek and waters of East River to South Eighth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 279,637. " VICTOR L. ANFUSO, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born March 10, 1905, at Gagliano Castelferrato, Sicily, Italy; attended elementary and Commercial High School in Brooklyn, N. Y.; preparatory courses at Columbia University, N. Y., and graduated St. Lawrence University Law School, now known as Brook-lyn Law School; in 1927, LL. B. degree; admitted to the New York Bar on Novem-ber 7, 1928; practiced law since admission to bar, maintaining present offices at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City; during the 1930’s organized the Citizens Welfare Association in Brooklyn, N. Y., to aid those hardest hit by the depression; also successful in forming the Italian Board of Guardians in Brooklyn, N. Y., an organization which concerns itself with delinquent children and also children from broken homes; during World War II, served under Gen. William J. Donovan with the Office of Strategic Services in the Mediterranean Theater and upon return to the United States was appointed special assistant to the Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization, making an extensive survey of the immigra-tion laws as they pertained to Southern Europe; in 1948, during the Italian elec-tion, drafted and mailed over 250,000 letters to Italy, urging the Italian people to defend themselves against the Communist threat by voting against the left-wing candidates; in 1946 was Knighted by Pope Pius XI, because of his humani-tarian work; a commander of the Knights of the Holy Sepulchre; married the former Frances Stallone of Brooklyn in 1930, and have five children— Victor, Jr., Diana, Marianina, and twin sons, Francis and Joseph; elected to the Kighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NINTH DISTRICT.—KiNGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties at Decatur Street, to Knickerbocker A venue, to Jefferson Avenue, to Wilson Avenue, to Halsey Street, to Central Avenue, to Hancock Street, to Bushwick Avenue, to Weirfield Street, to Broadway, to Hancock Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Broadway, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Patchen A venue, to Fulton Street, to Bufialo A venue, to Herkimer Street, to Howard Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Radde Place, to Herkimer Street, to Rockaway Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Sackman Street, to East New York Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Sutter Avenue, to Christopher Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Watkins Street, tc Lott Avenue, to Stone Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue (Linden Boulevard), to Bank Street, to East One Hundred and Seventh Street, to Avenue D, to East One Hundred and Fourth Street, to Farragut Road, to East One Hundred and Third Street, to Flatlands Avenue, to Hinsdale Street, to waters of Fresh Creek Basin, to the waters of Jamaica Bay, thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay to Kings and Queens County line, and thence along Kings and Queens County line to Decatur Street, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 287,185. EUGENE J. KEOGH, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; graduate of New York University and Fordham University Law School; lawyer; member of the New York State Assembly, twentieth district, Kings County, in 1936; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth; Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. NEW YORK. Biographical 85 TENTH DISTRICT.— KiNGs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the corners of Greene and Marcy A venues, thence along Greene Avenue, to Lewis Avenue, to Lafayette Avenue, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to Macon Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Utica Avenue, to East New York Avenue, to East Ninety-sixth Street, to Avenue A, to East Eighty-eighth Street, to Avenue B, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Ditmas Avenue, to Ralph Avenue, to Flatlands Avenue, to A venue M, to East Thirty-fifth Street, to Avenue K, to East Twenty-sixth Street, to Avenue I, to Nostrand Avenue, to Avenue H, to Amersfort Place, to Germania Place, to Kenilworth Place, to Avenue G (Glenwood Road), to Amersfort Place, to Farragut Road, to Flatbush Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to East Twenty-third Street, to Cortelyou Road, to Bedford Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Twenty-eighth Street, to Tilden Avenue, to Rogers Avenue, to Church Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Maple Street, to New York Avenue, to Lincoln Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Lefferts Avenue, to New York Avenue, to Lincoln Place, to Rogers Avenue, to Grant Square, to Bedford Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Marcy Avenue, to Greene Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 305,811. EDNA FLANNERY KELLY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born August 20, 1906, at Easthampton, N. Y., daughter of Patrick J. Flannery (deceased) and Mary Ellen Flannery; educated at Easthampton High School and Hunter College, New York City, N. Y.; majored in history and economics; graduated in 1928 with B. A. degree; elected in 1944 a member of the executive committee of the Demo-cratic Party of Kings County, N. Y., from Eighteenth Assembly District; reelected to that office in 1946 and in 1948; appointed associate research director of the Democratic Party in the New York State Legislature in 1943; designated chief research director in 1944 and has served in that capacity until her election on November 8, 1949, to the second session of the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; has two children, William E. Kelly 2d, a student at Columbia College, and Maura Patricia, attending Marymount School; is the widow of the late city court justice of the city of New York, Edward L. Kelly; home address, 1247 Carroll Street, Brooklyn 13, N. Y. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.— KiNgs COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Classop Avenue and Greene Avenue, thence along Greene Avenue, to Marcy Avenue, to -Fulton Street, to Bedford Avenue, to Grand Square, to Rogers Avenue, to Lincoln Place, to New York Avenue, to Lefferts Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Lincoln Road, to New York Avenue, to Maple Street, to Nostrand Avenue, to Church Avenue, to Rogers Avenue, to Tilden Avenue, to East Twenty-eighth Street, to Beverly Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Bedford Avenue, to Cortel-you Road, to East T'wenty-third Street, to Clarendon Road, to Flatbush Avenue, to Farragut Road, to Amersfort Place, to Avenue G (Glenwood Road), to Kenilworth Place, to Germania Place, to Amers-fort Place, to Avenue H, to Nostrand Avenue, to Avenue I, to East Eighteenth Street, to Avenue J, to East Fourth Street, to Avenue I, to McDonald Avenue, to Eighteenth Avenue, to East Second Street, to Avenue F, to Dahill Road, to Forty-third Street, to Seventeenth Avenue, to Dahill Road, to Fortieth Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to East Fourth Street, to Caton Avenue, to East Fifth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Prospect A venue, to Vanderbilt Street, to Eighteenth Street, to Seeley Street, to Prospect Avenue, to Sixth Avenue to Thirteenth Street, to Fourth Avenue, to Ninth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to First Street, to Eighth Avenue, to Carroll Street, to Prospect Park West, to and around southern end of Grand Army Plaza, to Eastern Parkway, to Classon Avenue, to Greene Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 306,615. JAMES J. HEFFERNAN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y.; his forefathers were among the Irish pioneers who settled in lower Man-hattan and South Brooklyn before the War of 1812; educated in private and . public schools; was graduated from Bryant Stratton College, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y.; awarded the degree of architect by the University of the State of New York; married and has one daughter; delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1938; member of the New York and Brooklyn Societies of Architects; Council of Registered Architects; Montauk Club; Brooklyn Council, No. 60, Knights of Columbus; Old Timers of the K. of C.; Emerald Society; South Brooklyn Board of Trade; Society of Old Brooklynites; Police Athletic League; honorary member, Steneck Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Colonel Jacob Ruppert Post, Army and Navy Veterans; State com-mitteeman and executive member of the Twelfth Assembly District Regular Democratic Organization; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 86 Congressional Directory NEW YORK TWELFTH DISTRICT,—Ki1NGS CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Con-gress Street and East River to Columbia Street to Warren Street, to Clinton Street, to Pacific Street, . to Court Street, to Pacific Street, to Boerum Place, to Bergen Street, to Fourth Avenue, to St. Marks Place, to Fifth Avenue, to Fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Ninth Street, to Fourth Avenue, to Thir-teenth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Seeley Street, to Eighteenth Street, to Vanderbilt Street, to Prospect Avenue, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to East Fifth Street, to Caton Avenue, to East Fourth Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Fifty-second Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fifty-eighth Street, to New Utrecht Avenue, to Sixty-third Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Seventy-second Street, to Tenth Avenue, to Seventy-third Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to Sixth Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Second Avenue, to Wakeman Place, to Colonial Road, to Sixty-eighth Street, to Shore Road, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to waters of Upper Bay; thence through waters of Upper Bay, Buttermilk Channel and East River to Congress Street, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 292,617. JOHN J. ROONEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., born in the district which he represents and in which his family has lived for over 80 years, on November 29, 1903; education: St. Paul’s Parochial School, St. Francis Preparatory and College, Fordham University School of Law, class of 1925; practicing attorney; assistant district attorney of Kings County (Brooklyn) from January 1, 1940, to June 5, 1944; married Helen M. Hughes of Brooklyn and has two sons, John James, Jr. (now an enlistee United States Air Force) and Edward Patrick, and a daughter, Mary Ann; past exalted ruler of Brooklyn Lodge No. 22, B. P. O. Elks; past New York State vice president of Ancient Order of Hibernians in America; past president, St. Patrick Society of Brooklyn; life member, Columbus Council No. 126, Knights of Columbus; member Committee on Appropriations; chairman of Subcommittee on Appropriations for State, Justice, and Commerce Depart-ments and the Federal Judiciary; as member Committee on Military Affairs visited Western and Italian fronts November and December 1944; official observer Bikini Atom Test; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to the: Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT,—KiNGs CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at waters of the Upper Bay and Bay Ridge Avenue, to Shore Road, to Sixty-eighth Street, to Colonial Road, to Wakeman Place, to Second Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Bay Ridge Avenue, to Seventh Avenue, to Seventy-third Street, to Tenth Avenue, to Seventy-second Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Sixty-third Street, to New Utrecht Avenue, to Fifty-eighth Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fifty-third Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Fifty-second Street, to Fort Hamilton Parkway, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Dahill Road, to Seventeenth Avenue, to Forty-third Street, to Dahill Road, to Avenue F, to East Second Street, to Eighteenth Avenue, to McDonald Avenue, to Avenue I, to East Fourth Street, to Avenue J, to Ocean Parkway, to Avenue N, to Sixtieth Street, to Twenty-third Avenue, to Sixty-first Street, to Bay Parkway, to Eightieth Street, to Twentieth Avenue, to Eighty-sixth Street, to Bay Eleventh Street, to Bath Avenue, to Sixteenth Avenue, to waters of Gravesend Bay; thence through waters of Gravesend Bay and Upper Bay to Bay Ridge Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 298,084. : DONALD L. O'TOOLE, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in that borough on August 1, 1902; was graduated from St. James Academy and Fordham University; lawyer with offices in the Empire State Building; has served in Sev-enty-fifth to Eighty-second Congresses, inclusive. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT,—KINGS County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Gravesend Bay and Sixteenth Avenue, thence along Sixteenth Avenue to Bath Avenue, to Bay Eleventh Street, to Eighty-sixth Street, to Twentieth Avenue, to Eightieth Street, to Bay Parkway, to Sixty-first Street, to Twenty-third Avenue, to Sixtieth Street, to Avenue N, to Ocean Parkway, to Avenue J, to East Eighteenth Street, to Avenue I, to East Twenty-sixth Street, to Avenue K, to East Thirty-fifth Street, to Avenue M, to Flatlands Avenue, to Flatbush Avenue, to Avenue P, to Hendrickson Street, to Quentin Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Quentin Road, to East Twenty-ninth Street, to Avenue R, to East Twenty-seventh Street, to Avenue T, to East Twenty-third Street, to Avenue U, to East Twenty-second Street, to Avenue V, to Coney Island Avenue, to Ocean View Avenue, to Ocean Park-way, to waters of Atlantic Ocean, thence through waters of Atlantic Ocean and Gravesend Bay to Six-teenth Avenue, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 318,854. ABRAHAM J. MULTER, Democrat, of New York; born in New York City, on December 24, 1900; resides at 1397 East Twenty-first Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., with his wife, Bertha L.; two children, Robert K. and Howard C.; graduated from P. S. 80 in Coney Island, N. Y., Boys High School of Brooklyn; attended evening classes at City College of New York before entering Brooklyn Law School, where he received degrees of LL. B. and LL. M.; resided in the congres-sional district since 1911; at law school was president of Marshal Society and praetor of Alpha Chapter of Iota Theta Law Fraternity and, after graduation, its national praetor; admitted to practice in the State and Federal courts including the United States Supreme Court and before many Federal departments; is presently a trustee of Temple Beth Emeth, a member of the advisory board of East Midwood Jewish Center, a member of American Friends of Hebrew Univer-sity; Jewish Theological Seminary ; chairman, Brooklyn Allied Councils of Yeshiva University, life member of Hebrew Institute of Long Island, a member of many fraternal and civic associations, including Zionist Organization of America, NEW YORK Biographical 87 Midwood Lodge of B’nai B’rith, Jewish Chautauqua Society, Brooklyn Lodge B. P. O. Elks, L. O. O. Moose, Boy Scouts of America, Flatbush Boys Club, Elite Club, Police Athletic League, Men’s League of Brooklyn, Irving Robinson Benev-olent Society, Lawyers Club and Executive Committee of Federation of Jewish Philanthropies, American Jewish Congress, United States Coast Guard Auxiliary, Willow Brook Golf Club; director of United Palestine Appeal, Nottingham Civic Association, Col. David Marcus Memorial Foundation, and of Youth United; Served as judge advocate of the United States Coast Guard League; has been pres-ident of Parent-Teachers Association of P. S. 193, Men’s Club of Temple Beth Emeth, C. I. Y. M. H. A. and a delegate to the National Federation of Temple Brotherhoods and the Metropolitan Conference of Temple Brotherhoods; during World War II served in the United States Coast Guard Reserve; as chairman ot the Civil Service Committee of the Kings Highway Democratic Club of the Second Assembly District, organized and conducted a civil-service school where residents of the community, without charge, were prepared for prospective examinations; later became secretary of the club and for the last 9 years has served as its president; served as vice chairman of the Kings County Democratic Law Committee and of the New York State Democratic Law Committee; is a member of the Brooklyn Bar Association, the New York State Bar Association, the Federal Bar Asso-ciation of Washington, D. C., the Federal Bar Association of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, and the New York Law Institute; served without com-pensation for 10 years as a special assistant attorney general in election matters; served as counsel to the Democratic leader of the State Assembly and as counsel to many State, city, and Federal legislative committees and as special counsel to the Mayor of the city of New York; was member of the firm of Rayfiel & Multer, until Congressman Rayfiel resigned to assume his duties as judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York; now senior member of the law firm of Multer, Nova & Seymour of 120 Broadway, New York City; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 4, 1947; reelected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—KiINGS CouNTty: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at corner of Macon Street and Lewis Avenue, thence along Macon Street, to Stuyvesant Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Patchen Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Buffalo Avenue, to Herkimer Street, to Howard Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Saratoga Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Radde Place, to Herkimer Street, to Rockaway Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Sackman Street, to East New York Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Sutter Avenue, to Christopher Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Watkins Street, to Lott Avenue, to Stone Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue (Linden Boulevard), to Bank Street, to East One Hundred and Seventh Street, to Avenue D, to East One Hundred and Fourth Street, to Farragut Road, to East One Hundred and Third Street, to Flatlands Avenue, to Hinsdale Street, to Fresh Creek Basin, to the waters of Jamaica Bay, thence through the waters of Jamaica Bay to the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties, thence along said boundary line to waters of Atlantic Ocean, to Ocean Parkway, to Ocean View Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Avenue V, to East Twenty-second Street, to Avenue U, to East Twenty-third Street, to Avenue T, to East Twenty-seventh Street, to Avenue R, to East Twenty-ninth Street, to Quentin Road, to Nostrand Avenue, to Quentin Road, to Hendrickson Street, to Avenue P, to Flatbush Avenue, to Flatlands Avenue, to Ralph Avenue, to Ditmas Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Avenue B, to East Eighty-eighth Street, to Avenue A, to East Ninety-sixth Street, to East New York Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Macon Street, the place of beginning. Population (1950), 315,389. EMANUEL CELLER; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 6, 1888; attended the public schools; was graduated from the Boys’ High School of Brooklyn, in 1906, from Columbia College, New York City, in 1910, and from the Columbia Uni-versity Law School, New York City, in 1912; admitted to the bar and commenced practice in New York City in 1912; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress, November 7, 1922; reelected to each succeeding Congress; chairman of the House Committee on the Judiciary; married and has two daughters—Judith S., and Jane B., married to Sydney B. Wertheimer; home address is 9 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Washington address, the Mayflower. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—RIcEMOND COUNTY. NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and Whitehall Street, to State Street, to Broadway, to Great Jones Street (West Third Street), to West Broadway, to Washington Square South, to Thomp-son Street, to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, to West Fourth Street, to Barrow Street, to Bleecker Street, to West Eleventh Street, to Hudson Street, to West Twelfth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Twenty-sixth Street, to Hudson River, through the waters of Hudson River to the place of beginning, including Ellis Island, Governors Island, Bedloe Island. Population (1950), 274,678. JAMES JOSEPH MURPHY, Democrat, 3 Park Lane, Grymes Hill, Staten Island, N. Y.; born in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, 53 years ago and was educated in public schools and Curtis High School; in the import and export shipping business for the past 29 years; spent 31% years in World War I, 1 year on the Mexican Border in the first New York Cavalry and 2% years in France and Belgium with 88 Congressional Directory NEW YORK the Twenty-seventh Division; married Maria Bruns; has a son, James J., Jr., and daughter, Mrs. Henry Steele; two grandchildren; both son and daughter served in World War II with distinction; elected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at the East River and East Fortieth Street, to Third Avenue, to Bowery, to Great Jones Street, to West Third Street, to West Broadway, to Washington Square South, to Thompson Street, to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, to West Fourth Street, to Barrow Street, to Bleecker Street, to West Eleventh Street, to Hudson Street, to West Twelfth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Twenty-ninth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Thirty-first Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Thirty-fourth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fifty-fourth Street, to Ninth Avenue, to Columbus Avenue, to Broadway, to West Seventieth Street, to Columbus Avenue, to West Ninety-seventh Street, to Central Park West, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hundred and Tenth Street), to Fifth Avenue, to East One Hundredth Street, to Park Avenue, to East Ninety-seventh Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Eighty-fifth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eightieth Street, to Second Avenue, to East Seventy-second Street, to Third Avenue, to East Sixty-eighth Street, to Second Avenue, to East Sixty-first Street, to Third Avenue, to East Fifty-ninth Street to East River, through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 309,670. FREDERIC RENE COUDERT, Jr., Republican, of New York City; born in New York City, May 7, 1898, son of Frederic René and Alice T. (Wilmerding) Coudert; Columbia University, A. B. 1918, LL. B. 1922; awarded Kent Scholar-ship for proficiency in the study of law; Columbia University medal for distin-guished public service, 1941; admitted to New York State bar; admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States, 1927; member of the law firm of Coudert Bros. of New York City; married; three children; assistant United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1924-25; Republican candidate for district attorney of New York County, 1929; chairman, New York Lawyers Committee against Jones Act (Prohibition Law), 1929; delegate to New York Republican State Convention, 1930, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1938, 1940, 1942, 1944, 1946, and 1948; delegate to Republican National Convention 1936, 1940, 1944, and 1948; State Senate, Seventeenth (now Twentieth) District, Manhattan, 1939-46; chairman, Rapp-Coudert Joint Legislative Subcommittee to investigate public education in city of New York, 1940-44; member of the association of the bar of the city of New York, the New York County Lawyers Association, New York State Bar Association, Nassau County Bar Association, and the American Bar Association; veteran, World War I, 1917-19, Sixty-ninth Infantry Regiment, New York National Guard, later Twenty-seventh Division, One Hundred and Fifth Infantry Regiment in France until end of war; elected to the Kightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, reelected to the Kighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at the East River and East Fifty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Sixty-first Street, to Second Avenue, to East Sixty-eighth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Seventy-second Street, to Second Avenue, to East Eightieth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Eighty-fifth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Eighty-ninth Street, to Lexington Avenue, to East Ninety-seventh Street, to Park Avenue, to East One Hundredth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to East One Hundred and Nineteenth Street, to Third Avenue, to the Harlem River, through the waters of Harlem River and East River to the place of begin-yk with Welfare Island, Wards Island, Sunken Meadow, and Randalls Island. Population (1950), 307,699. JAMES G. (GEORGE) DONOVAN, Democrat-Republican-Liberal, of New York City; born in Clinton, Mass., December 15, 1898; lawyer; educated, Massa-chusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard College, Columbia University Law School, LL. B. 1924; under-sheriff, New York County, 1934-41; New York State Senator, 1943-44; veteran, World War I; married; elected to Eighty-second Con-gress on November 7, 1950; New York City address, 332 East Eighty-sixth Street. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the East River and Whitehall Street to State Street, to Broadway, to Great Jones Street, to Bowery, to Third Avenue, to East Fortieth Street, to the East River, through the waters of East River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 314,288. ARTHUR G. KLEIN, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York City, N. Y., in the Congressional District which he now represents, August 8, 1904; attended the public schools and Washington Square College; received the degree of bachelor of laws from New York University Law School in 1926; was admitted to the bar of the State of New York in 1927; was subsequently admitted to practice in the United States courts, including the United States Supreme Court; was an attorney on the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission from 1935 to 1941; now actively engaged in the practice of law in the NEW YORK Biographical 89 above-mentioned courts, as senior member of the firm of Klein, Wikler & Gottlieb, 50 Broad Street, New York City; married; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on July 29, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Con-gress; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on February 19, 1946, at a special election to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Samuel Dickstein; re-elected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Hudson River and West T'wenty-sixth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Twenty-ninth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Thirty-first Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Thirty-fourth Street, to Eighth Avenue, to West Fifty-fourth Street, to Ninth Avenue, to Columbus Avenue, to Broadway, to West Seventieth Street, to Columbus Avenue, to West Ninety-seventh Street, to Central Park West, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hundred and Tenth Street), to Columbus Avenue, to Morningside Avenue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Broadway, to West One Hundred and Fourteenth Street to the Hudson River, through the waters of the Hudson River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 315,792. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, Jr., Democrat; born in Campobello, New Brunswick, August 17, 1914; graduate of the Groton School, Harvard, and the University of Virginia Law School; on March 18, 1941, was called from the Naval Reserve to active service as an ensign in the Navy; naval service began on the North Atlantic, Murmansk, and Caribbean runs, and then included the North African invasion and the Sicilian campaign; in 1944 was made captain of the destroyer escort Ulvert M. Moore, and took part in the Philippine, Okinawa, and Iwo Jima campaigns; discharged from active duty in the Navy in January 1946, after receiving the Purple Heart for injuries, the Silver Star for bravery in the Sicilian campaign, the Legion of Merit Combat “V” for sinking a Japanese sub-marine during the Philippine campaign,’and the Secretary of Navy Commendation with ribbon for action during the invasion of Africa; as vice chairman of President Truman’s Committee on Civil Rights, helped to write that Committee’s report called To Secure These Rights; prior to his election to Congress, was chairman of the Mayor’s Committee on Unity in New York City; national vice chairman of Americans for Democratic Action, and cochairman of the National Veterans Housing Council; member of the law firm of Roosevelt, Freidin, and Littauer since his release from active dutyin the Navy; elected to the Eighty-first Congress to succeed the late Sol Bloom in a special election on May 17, 1949, as a candidate of the Liberal and Four Freedoms parties, and received a clear majority of the votes cast in a four-way race; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; member of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs; on August 31, 1949, married the former Suzanne Perrin of New York. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEW York CouNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line be-ginning at the Hudson River and West One Hundred and Fourteenth Street, to Broadway, to West One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, to Morningside Avenue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and Twenty-second Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to St. Nicholas Terrace, to West One Hundred and Fortieth Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Fifty-ninth Street extended, to the Harlem River, to the boundary line between New York and Bronx Counties and along said boundary line to the Hudson River, thence through the waters of the Hudson River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 308,084. JACOB K. JAVITS (elected on tickets of Republican Party and Liberal Party), Republican, of New York City; born on the lower East Side of New York City, May 18, 1904; attended public school No. 20; moved to Brooklyn and later to Washington Heights, and was president of his class at George Washington High School and a member of the first graduating class in 1920; after working several years and taking supplementary courses at Columbia University at night, was graduated from the New York University Law School in 1926; admitted to the bar the following year and became a partner of the law firm of Javits & Javits; lecturer and author of a series of articles on a liberal political and economic philosophy for the Republican Party; before Pearl Harbor was a special assistant to the Chief of Chemical Warfare Service and remained in that service until March 1942 when he went into the Army as a major and became assistant to the Chief of Operations of Chemical Warfare; served in the European Theater of Operations in 1943 and in the Pacific in 1944; received the Legion of Merit and Army Commendation Ribbon; discharged as a lieutenant colonel in June 1945, and resumed the practice of law; married Marion Ann Borris, 1947; daughter, Joy Deborah, born September 12, 1948; son, Joshua Moses, born January 2, 1950; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Jewish War Veterans; director of the Association of Committees for Inter-American Placement, an association engaged in specially training college men and women for work in Latin America; served in Eightieth Congress; reelected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. 90 Congressional Directory NEW YORK TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Harlem River and Third Avenue, to East One Hundred and Nineteenth Street, to Fifth Avenue, to Cathedral Parkway (West One Hundred and Tenth Street), to Morningside A venue West (Morningside Drive), to West One Hundred and Twenty-second Street, to Amsterdam A venue, to West One Hundred and Thirtieth Street, to St. Nicholas Terrace, to West One Hundred and Fortieth Street, to Amsterdam Avenue, to West One Hundred and Fifty-ninth Street extended, to the Harlem River, through the waters of the Harlem River to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 297,404. ADAM CLAYTON POWELL, Jr., Democrat, of New York City; born in New Haven, Conn., November 29, 1908; education: B. A. degree, Colgate Uni-versity, 1930; M. A. degree, Columbia University, 1932; D. D. degree, Shaw University, 1934; 1947, LL. D., Virginia Union University; studied 4 months in Europe, North Africa, and Asia Minor; minister of the Abyssinian Baptist Church, 1937, organized 1808, membership over 10,000, budget $85,000, property worth $750,000; first Negro councilman of the city of New York, 1941; member of the Phi Upsilon Kappa Society, honorary fraternity in philosophy; Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Masons, I. B. P. O. E. of the W., Y. M. C. A.; church committee, Russian War Relief; in the community —director of relief for Harlem during 1930 and 1931; conducted first successful campaign for jobs for Negroes in various stores; staged successful bus strike, securing employment for Negroes with the bus company; instructor, Columbia University Extension School, Department of Religious Education, 1932-40; editorial writer for New York Evening Post, 1934; executive committee, Negro Exhibit, New York World’s Fair; author, Marching Blacks, Dial Press, 1945; married August 1, 1945, to Miss Hazel Scott; son, Adam Clayton Powell 3d, born July 17, 1946; first Negro Congressman from the East, being elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress, November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eightyrsecond Congresses. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—BRrRoNX CoUuNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at Bronx Kills and St. Ann’s Avenue, and thence along St. Ann’s Avenue,to East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, to Third Avenue, to East Tremont Avenue, to West Tremont Avenue, to Harlem River, and thence through the waters of the Harlem River and Bronx Kills to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 340,683. SIDNEY A. FINE, Democrat, of Bronx, N. Y.; born in New York City, September 14, 1903; graduated Public School 53, Bronx, Townsend Harris Hall High School, College of the City of New York (B. A. 1923), Columbia University Law School (LL. B. 1926); lawyer; member of the New York State Assembly 1945-46; member of the New York State Senate 1947-50; married Libby Fine; two sons, Burton M. and Ralph A.; elected to Eighty-second Congress on Novem-ber 7, 1950. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BRroNX CoUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line begin-ning at the junction of the East and Bronx Rivers, and thence through the waters of the Bronx River to East Tremont Avenue, to Third Avenue, to East One Hundred and Forty-ninth Street, to St. Ann’s Avenue, to Bronx Kills, to East River, and thence through the waters of the East River to the place of beginning, together with North Brother Island, South Brother Island, and Riker’s Island. Popula-tion (1950), 340,173. ISIDORE DOLLINGER, Democrat, of the Bronx, N. Y.; born in New York City, November 13, 1903, the son of the late Emanuel and Jennie (Weidler) Dollinger; graduated New York University (B. C. 8.) 1925; New York Law School (LL. B.) 1928; admitted to the New York bar; member of the law firm of Dollinger & Dollinger, 170 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y.; member of the New York State Assembly 1937-44; member of the New York State Senate 1945-48; married to Rose Zahn, September 1, 1929; one son, Edmund; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Kighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.— BroNX CoUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the Harlem River and West Tremont Avenue, to East Tremont Avenue, to Bronx River, to East Two Hundred and Thirty-third Street, to Van Cortlandt Park East, to the boundary line between Bronx and Westchester Counties, and thence along said boundary line to the Hudson River and through the waters of the Hudson River to the Harlem River and along the boundary line between Bronx and New York Counties, to the Harlem River and West Tremont Avenue, the place of beginning. Popula-tion (1950), 370,216. CHARLES A. BUCKLEY, Democrat, of the Bronx, was born in New York City, June 23, 1890; was educated in the schools of the Bronx; married, and has two children; engaged in business in New York City for 20 years as a builder and contractor; elected for three terms to the board of aldermen of New York City, 1918-23; resigned in his third term to accept appointment as State tax appraiser for the State of New York, serving 5% years; appointed city chamberlain of the city of New York on January 3, 1929, and served until his resignation on October 8, NEW YORK Biographical 91 1933; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress on November 6, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—BRONX COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the junction of the East and Bronx Rivers, and thence through the waters of the Bronx River, to East Two Hundred and Thirty-third Street, to Van Cortlandt Park East, to the boundary line separating Bronx and Westchester Counties; thence along said boundary line to Long Island Sound, and through the waters of Long Island Sound to the East River, to the place of beginning, together with City Island, Hunter’s Island, Hart’s Island, Twin Island, High Island, Middle Reef Island, Rat Island, the Blauzes, Chimney Sweeps, Cuban Ledge, Big Tom, Green Flats, Hog Island, East Nonations, South Nona-tions, and all other islands in Long Island Sound within the boundary line of Bronx County. Popula-tion (1950), 393,831. CHRISTOPHER C. McGRATH, Democrat, of Bronx, N. Y.; born in New York City, May 15, 1902; graduate of Clason Military Academy and Fordham University, School of Law; member of New York State Legislature 1928-35, inclusive; chairman of the Committee on Public Education in 1935; elected to the Municipal Court, City of New York, 1935-45; reelected in 1945 for second 10-year term; resigned December 31, 1948, to serve in the Eighty-first Congress; married; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PUTNAM COUNTY. WESTCHESTER COUNTY: Cities of Peekskill and Yonkers; towns of Cortlandt, Eastchester, Greenburgh, Mount Pleasant, Ossining, and Yorktown. Population (1950), 327,872. 3 RALPH W. GWINN, Republican, of Bronxville, N. Y.; lawyer, farmer; born in Noblesville, Ind., March 29, 1884, the son of John Harvey and Eva Gwinn; graduated from DePauw University and Columbia University; admitted to the New York bar; during the First World War served as special counsel of the War Shipping Board and as special representative of Secretary of War in the European theater; village counsel of Bronxville, N. Y., and member and president of the board of education; married Essie O’Daniel on June 30, 1908; five children— Robert L., David M., Gordon T., Eleanor E., and Margaret (deceased); trustee of DePauw University, Indiana, and Asheville (N. C.) School for Boys; vice presi-dent of the International Council of Religious Education; president of the Inter-national Association of Daily Vacation Bible Schools; director of Agricultural Missions, Inc., and of the Christian Rural Fellowship; member of Reformed Church; coauthor of Fifth Avenue to Farm, 1938, and numerous articles on polities, agriculture, and religious education; former president of the National Republican Club; Mason; member Century Association, Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—WESTCHESTER COUNTY: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the Twenty-seventh Congressional District. Population (1950), 314,402. RALPH ABERNETHY GAMBLE, Republican, of Larchmont, Westchester County, N. Y., was born in Yankton, S. Dak.; son of the late United States Senator Robert J. and Carrie O. Gamble; educated in public schools and Tome School; Princeton University, Litt. B., 1909; George Washington University Law School, 1909-11; Columbia University Law School, LL. B., 1912; admitted New York bar 1913; admitted to practice in the United States District Court of South Dakota in 1916 and the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York in 1929; member of the law firm of McInnes & Gamble, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York City; married Virginia Nesbitt, of Port Deposit, Md., April 19, 1911, who died March 16, 1937; counsel, town of Mamaroneck, Westchester County, 1918-34; counsel, Larchmont, 1926-28; member, New York State Assembly, second district, Westchester County, 1931-37; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Delaware, Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (4 counties). Population (1950), 324,377, KATHARINE PRICE COLLIER ST. GEORGE, Republican, of Tuxedo Park, N. Y., member of the Town Board of Tuxedo for 15 years; second woman to be elected chairman of a Republican County Committee in New York State; former president of the Tuxedo Republican Club and the Orange County Feder-ation of Women’s Republican Clubs; delegate from Orange County in 1944 to the Republican National Convention; member of the New York State Agricul-tural Society and the Orange County Home Bureau; chairman of the Tuxedo 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 8 - 92 Congressional Directory NEW YORK Chapter of the American Red Cross for 10 years and an officer for 20 years; mem-ber of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce; member of the Business and Professional Women of Rockland County; married George Baker St. George and they have one daughter and two grandchildren; member of the Episcopal Church; elected to the Kightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first and to the Eighty-second Congresses with increasing majorities. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.— CouNTIES: Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Schoharie, and Ulster (5 counties). Population (1950), 324,167. J. ERNEST WHARTON, Republican, of Richmondyville, N. Y.; born in Bing-hamton, N. Y., October 4, 1899; was graduated from Richmondville (N. Y.) High School, Union University, and Albany Law School with LL. B. degree; married Miss Marion K. Turner; enlisted as a private in World War I; admitted to New York State bar 1923; employed by Travelers Insurance Company 1920— 29, claim and legal department; entered private practice of law at Richmond-ville (N. Y.) 1929-32; elected district attorney Schoharie County 1932, reelected in 1935 and 1938; elected surrogate, county judge and judge of Children’s Court of Schoharie County in 1941 and reelected in 1947; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.— CouNrTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Otsego, and Schenectady (5 counties). Population (1950), 307,834. BERNARD W. (PAT) KEARNEY, Republican, of Gloversville, N. Y.; born in Ithaca, N. Y., May 23, 1889; was graduated from Schenectady (N. Y.) High School and Union University, Albany Law School with LL. B. degree; married Lillian Dean; three daughters, Mrs. George V. Lynch, Mrs. Robert Wade, and Patricia; enlisted as a private in Company G, Second New York Infantry, Na-tional Guard, in 1909, later serving with Troop B, First New York Cavalry, 1911-17, serving 9 months on the Mexican border during 1916-17; attended the Second Officers’ Training School, Fort Niagara, N. Y., in 1917, emerging as a captain; served overseas in various outfits and took part in numerous engage-ments, including St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne; returning to the United States .in 1919, he was given command of Company G, Second New York Infantry, which later became the One Hundred and Fifth Infantry, and in 1935 was ad-vanced to rank of colonel; commissioned brigadier general in 1937 of the Fifty-third Brigade, New York National Guard, retiring in 1940, due to physical dis-ability incurred in line of duty, with the rank of major general; decorated by the French Government with the Legion of Honor (Officer), the French Croix de Guerre and New York State Conspicuous Service Cross; admitted to the bar in October 1914; city judge of Gloversville, N. Y., 1920-24; assistant district attorney of Hamilton County, N. Y., 1924-29, and of Fulton County, N. Y., 1929-31; district attorney of Fulton County, 1931-42; commander of the American Legion, Fulton County, N. Y., for four terms; department commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Department of New York, 1934-35; commander in chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1936; member of the Elks, Eagles, Knights of Colum-bus, Grange, and Delta Chi fraternity; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; and reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.— ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards 1 to 4 and 6 to 12. Population (1950), 272,331. WILLIAM THOMAS BYRNE, Democrat, of Loudonville, Albany County, N. Y.; born in the town of Florida, Montgomery County, N. Y., March 6, 1876; graduate of the Albany grammar school, the Albany High School, and the Albany Law School in 1904, with bachelor of law degree; was admitted to the bar in 1904, and commenced practice in Albany, N. Y.; profession, lawyer; member of the New York Senate, 1923-36; widower; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; and reelected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clinton, Essex, Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENs-SELAER COUNTY: That portion not hereinbefore described as part of the Thirty-second Congressional District. Population (1950), 347,163. DEAN PARK TAYLOR, Republican, of Troy, N. Y.; born in Troy, N. Y., January 1, 1902; educated in the public schools of Troy; attended Colgate Univer-sity and was graduated from Union University Department of Law with LL. B. degree; appointed assistant United States attorney, northern district of New NEW YORK B 1ographical , 93 York in 1927 and served in that capacity until 1930; now engaged in the practice of law at Troy, N. Y.; chairman, Republican County Committee, Rensselaer County; delegate to Republican National Convention; married Mary Hayford, of Newton, N. H.; one child, Peter; member Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, Sons American Revolution, director Union National Bank of Troy, trustee Russell Sage College; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Con-gresses. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Franklin, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, and St. Lawrence (5 counties). Population (1950), 311,545. CLARENCE E. KILBURN, Republican, of Malone, N. Y.; born in Malone, Franklin County, N. Y., April 13, 1893; Cornell University (A. B. 1916); captain of Infantry during World War; married Miss Anne Crooks, of Malone; two sons and one daughter; president, People’s Trust Co. of Malone; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on February 13, 1940, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Wallace E. Pierce; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. ; THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.— CoUNTIES: Oneida and Oswego (2 counties). Population (1950), 299,308. WILLIAM R. WILLIAMS, Republican, of Cassville, Oneida County, N. Y.; born in Brookfield, Madison County, N. Y.; occupation, farmer; member of assembly, New York State Legislature, 8 years, 1935-43; sheriff of Oneida County, N. Y., 1943-51; married to the former Bertha M. Risley, Cassville, N. Y.; have three children—Mrs. Stuart Pughe, Waterville, N. Y.; W. R. Williams, Jr., serving in the United States Marine Corps, and Jane E. Williams, Washington, D. C.; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTY: Onondaga. Population (1950), 340,875. R. WALTER RIEHLMAN, Republican, of Tully, N. Y.; born in Otisco, N. Y., August 26, 1899; graduated from Manlius Military Academy, Manlius, N. Y., and Central City Business School, Syracuse, N. Y.; owner of Tully Bakery, Tully, N. Y.; director of the Industrial Bank of Central New York; member of the advisory board of the Tully branch of the Syracuse Trust Co.; married; elected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, and Madison (3 counties). Popu-lation (1950), 270,176. EDWIN ARTHUR HALL, Republican, of Binghamton, was born in Bing-hamton, N. Y., February 11, 1909; attended Cornell University; in 1928 married Miss Elizabeth Miller, of Binghamton and they have four boys and two girls; entered the banking business and became chapter president of the American Insti-tute of Banking; winner of the New York-New England oratorical competition for the A. P. Giannini Foundation prizes in 1935; elected to the Broome County Republican Committee, 1935; chosen a delegate to the New York State Repub-lican convention at Albany, 1936; nominated in September 1937 for city council-man from Binghamton’s fifth ward in a heated Republican primary battle over Henry W. Strong, Edward W. Walls, Francis Wheaton, and William McLaughlin; elected in November 1937 to a 4-year term in city council over his Democrat opponent, Rev. Delbert O. Colburn; in September 1939 nominated in the Repub-lican primary for Congress over Clarence Chamberlain, and Howard Smith; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by defeating his Democrat-American Labor opponent, John V. Johnson, renominated by the Republican Party in September 1940 by defeating William T. Sampson-Smith, reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress over his Democrat-American Labor opponent, Donald W. Kramer; in August 1942, renominatedin the primary election by the Republicans, defeating John Stott; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress in November 1942 by de-feating his Democrat opponent, Arthur J. Ruland, and American Labor nominee Charles Doherty; renominated unanimously by his party in 1944 and reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress over Democrat-American Labor opponent James F. Byrne; elected to the Eightieth Congress by defeating Prof. Charles R. Wilson of Colgate University, Democrat-ALP nominee in November 1946, attaining the highest vote percentage of his entire career; in November 1948, elected to the Eighty-first Congress by defeating Myron Sloat, Democrat, John Mushock, American Labor, and Pierre De Nio, Liberal candidates; renominated in the Republican primary of 1950 by defeating the Rev. T. Milton Bond, James West- 94 Congressional Directory NEW YORK fall, and Lester R. Mosher; elected to the Eighty-second Congress by defeating Democrat and Liberal Party candidate John J. Burns, in November 1950, thereby establishing an all-time record for tenure of the office of Representative in Congress from Broome County, and being the first person in that district ever to be elected to Congress for a seventh term; member of the Committee on Agriculture. THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cayuga, Cortland, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (6 counties). Population (1950), 270,707. JOHN TABER, Republican, of Auburn, was born in that city May 5, 1880; educated in the public schools, Yale University (B. A., 1902) and New York Law School; admitted to New York bar in 1904; married April 13, 1929, to Gertrude J. Beard; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress, including the Eighty-second. THIRTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTiES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1950), 281,648. W. STERLING COLE, Republican, of Bath, N. Y.; Colgate University, Albany Law School; attorney; married; Sigma Nu Fraternity; Phi Beta Kappa; trustee, Colgate University; trustee, Woodlawn Foundation, Inec.; Masonic fra-ternity, Naval Reserve; member of Committee on Armed Services and Joint Committee on Atomic Energy; elected to Seventy-fourth and succeeding Congresses. FORTIETH DISTRICT.—MoNROE COUNTY: That portion within the city of Rochester beginning at the intersection of the city line and Lexington Avenue, thence along Lexington Avenue to the eastern boundary line of the twenty-fourth ward, to Lyell Avenue, to Whitney Street, to Jay Street, to Colvin Street, to Wilder Street, to Saxton Street, to Jay Street, to the eastern boundary line of the eleventh ward, continuing along the eastern boundary line of the eleventh and nineteenth wards, to the Genesee River; thence through the waters of Genesee River, to the city line, and thence easterly and northerly along said city line as it winds and turns to the place of beginning; towns of Brighton, Greece, Henrietta, Irondequoit, Mendon, Penfield, Perinton, Pittsford, Rush, and Webster. Population (1950), 377,814. KENNETH B. KEATING, Republican, of Rochester, N. Y.; born May 18, 1900, at Lima, N. Y.; graduate of Genesee Wesleyan Seminary, Lima, N. Y., 1915; University of Rochester, Rochester, N. Y., 1919, A. B. degree; Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Mass., 1923, LL. B. degree; attorney; member of firm Harris, Beach, Keating, Wilcox & Dale; sergeant, World War I; colonel, World War II (3 years overseas); now brigadier general; decorations: Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster; American, European, and Asiatic Theater Ribbons with three Battle Stars, Order of the British Empire; member, American, New York, and Rochester, N. Y., Bar Associations; American Legion, V. F. W., R. O. A., S. A. R., Mason (33°), Shriner, Elks, Moose, Eagle; married; one child; elected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses; member, Committee on the Judiciary. FORTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Genesee, Livingston, Orleans, and Wyoming. MONROE County: That portion within the city of Rochester not hereinbefore described as a part of the Fortieth Congressional District; towns of Chili, Clarkson, Gates, Hamlin, Ogden, Parma, Riga, Sweden, and Wheatland. Population (1950), 257,443. HAROLD C. OSTERTAG, Republican, of Attica, Wyoming County, N. Y.; born in Attica, N. Y., June 22, 1896; educated at Attica High School and Cham-berlain Military Institute; enlisted in the Seventy-fourth Infantry, Twenty-seventh Division, for service during World War I and served in the American Expeditionary Forces with the Fifty-fifth Pioneer Infantry; an employee of the New York Central System since 1917 with present position of assistant to the vice president, traffic department; served in the New York State Legislature for 19 years as a member of assembly from 1932 to 1951; chairman of the Joint Legislative Committee on Interstate Cooperation from 1935 to 1951; chairman of the legislature’s special committees on social welfare and on pollution abate-ment; chairman, Steering Committee of the Veterans Conference of the State legislature; member of the Board of Managers of the Council of State Govern-ments; a member and past post commander, county commander, district com-mander, and State vice commander of the American Legion; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; Elks; Attica Grange, and the Wyoming County Farm Bureau; married; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NEW YORK B 1ographical 95 FORTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—N1AGARA County. ERIE CouNTY: That portion within the city of Buffalo beginning at the north city line of Buffalo and Elmwood Avenue, to Scajaquada Creek, to Main Street, to North Street, to Porter Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Niagara Street, to Albany Street, to Niagara River, through the waters of Niagara River, to the north city line, to the place of beginning; towns of Tonawanda and Grand Island; city of Tonawanda. Population (1950), 376,796. WILLIAM E. MILLER, Republican, of Lockport, N. Y.; born in Lockport, N. Y., March 22, 1914; graduated from Notre Dame University, South Bend, Ind., in June 1935, B. A. degree; graduated from Albany Law School of Union University at Albany, N. Y., in June 1938, LL. B. degree; admitted to practice in the State of New York in October 1938 and engaged in the general practice of law at Lockport, N. Y.; appointed United States Commissioner for the Western District of New York, which office was held until induction as a private in the United States Army on July 1, 1942; after completion of basic training with the Seventy-sixth Infantry Division at Fort George G. Meade, Md., was assigned to duty with the Military Intelligence Branch of the Army and continued on active duty until selected for the Officers Candidate School of the Judge Advocate General Branch of the Army at Ann Arbor, Mich., in January 1945; graduated in May 1945; commissioned a first lieutenant, and assigned to the War Criminals Branch at Washington, D. C., until August 1945, when selected as one of the assistant prosecutors under Supreme Court Justice Robert A. Jackson, for the prosecution of the Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg, Germany; resumed practice of law in March of 1946; appointed assistant district attorney of Niagara County, New York, in March of 1946 and continued to serve in that capacity until January 1, 1948 when appointed district attorney of Niagara County by Hon. Thomas E. Dewey, Governor of the State of New York; elected district attorney of Niagara County in the November 1948 election by a majority of over 13,000; engaged in the general practice of law under the firm name of Miller & DeLange at Lockport, N. Y., and also serving as district attorney of Niagara County; member of the speaker’s bureau of the Republican Party during the Willkie for President campaign and Dewey for President campaign; married the former Stephanie Wagner of Lockport, N. Y., and resides at Lockport, N. Y., with his wife and two daughters, Elizabeth Ann and Mary Karen; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ERIE ‘CouNTY: That portion of the city of Buffalo beginning at the north city line at the intersection of Elmwood Avenue, to the Scajaquada Creek, to Main Street, to North Street, to Porter Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Niagara Street, to Albany Street, to the Niagara River, to the waters of Lake Erie, and through the waters of Lake Erie, to Buffalo River, through the waters of Buffalo River to West Perry Street, to Main Street, to West Seneca Street, to Pearl Street to West Swan Street, to Main Street, to Broadway, to Jefferson Avenue, to William Street, to Spring Street, to Eagle Street, to Smith Street, to Broadway, to the east city line, thence north and west along the said city line to the place of beginning. Population (1950), 322,452, EDMUND P. RADWAN, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., September 22, 1911; educated in public schools of Buffalo; graduated from the University of Buffalo Law School with LL. B. degree; practiced law in the city of Buffalo and the State of New York since admission to the bar in 1935; veteran of World War II, serving in the Army from 1943 to 1945; entered public life by being elected to the State senate in 1945 while in service, and served as State senator from 1945 to December 31, 1950; member of the American Legion, Regular Veterans Association, the 40 & 8, various Republican clubs, Automobile Club of Buffalo, Erie County Bar Association, and the New York State Bar Association; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FORTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—ERIE County: That portion of the city of Buffalo beginning at the intersection of Broadway and the east city line, south and west along said city line to Lake Erie, thence northerly through the waters of Lake Erie to the Buffalo River, thence through the waters of Buffalo River to West Perry Street, to Main Street, to West Seneca Street, to Pearl Street, to West Swan Street, to Main Street, to Broadway, to Jefferson Avenue, to William Street, to Spring Street, to Eagle Street, to Smith Street, to Broadway, to the east city line, the place of beginning; city of Lackawanna; towns of Alden, Amherst, Aurora, Boston, Brant, Cheektowaga, Clarence, Colden, Collins, Concord, Eden, Elma, Evans, Hamburg, Holland, Lancaster, Marilla, Newstead, North Collins, Orchard Park, Sar-dinia, Wales, and West Seneca. Population (1950), 386,358. JOHN CORNELIUS BUTLER, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born in Buffalo, July 2, 1887; played amateur football and baseball; educated at School 26 and old Central High School; married and has three sons; was electrical superintendent at the Marine Elevators, Buffalo, and also served as a delegate to the Central Labor Council; has been active in behalf of labor for 34 years; 96 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on April 22, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, and Eightieth Congresses; defeated in 1948 but led the Republican ticket for vote-getting in the combined seven wards and twenty-four towns in the Forty-fourth Congressional District; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FORTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Pop-ulation (1950), 254,457. DANIEL ALDEN REED, Republican, of Dunkirk, N. Y., was born at Sheri-dan, Chautauqua County, N. Y.; educated at district school, Sheridan, N. Y., Silver Creek High School, Silver Creek, N. Y., and Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.; attorney at law; married, and has two children; elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress November 5, 1918; reelected to Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; ranking Republican mem-ber of the Ways and Means Committee; member of Joint Committee on Taxation; chairman of Republican Post-War Tax Study Committee; member of subcommittee of the Budget Committee under the Reorganization Act; delegate to Interparlia-mentary Union which met in Rome, Italy, September 6 through 11, 1948; dele-gate to Interparliamentary Union which met in Stockholm, Sweden, September 6 through 12, 1949. _ NORTH CAROLINA (Population (1950), 4,061,929) SENATORS CLYDE ROARK HOEY, Democrat, of Shelby, N. C.; born at Shelby, N. C., December 11, 1877; attended the public schools until 12 years of age, at which time began working in a printing office as devil and continued for 4 years until he learned the printer’s trade; at 16 bought a county paper on credit and began editing and publishing this newspaper, which he continued for 14 years; in the meantime, studied law at home and attended summer law school at the University of North Carolina, after which stood examination before the State Supreme Court in September 1899 and obtained license to practice law, and has continued the practice of law since that time until the present; in 1898, when just 20 years of age, was elected to State house of representatives, but became 21 before it was necessary to be sworn in in January 1899; was reelected to the house in 1900 and elected to State senate in 1902; was appointed assistant United States attorney for the Western District of North Carolina by President Wilson in July 1913 and served until December 1919, when he was elected to Congress from the Ninth North Carolina District to succeed Hon. E. Y. Webb, who had been appointed United States judge; after serving for the unexpired term voluntarily retired from Congress and practiced law until elected Governor of North Carolina in 1936; served as Governor from January 7, 1937, until January 9, 1941, after which returned to Shelby and resumed the practice of law; served as Democratic national committeeman for North Carolina from 1941 to 1944; degree of LL. D. was con-ferred upon him by Davidson College in 1937, Duke University and the University of North Carolina in 1938, Bob Jones University in 1951; Methodist, Mason, Odd Fellow, Woodmen of the World, Junior Order, and Knights of Pythias; Omicron Delta Kappa and Sigma Chi; married on March 22, 1900, to Bess Gardner, of Shelby, N. C., and three children were born of this marriage—Clyde R., Jr., Charles A., and Isabel Y.; Mrs. Hoey died on February 13, 1942; was nominated for United States Senator from North Carolina in the Democratic primary on May 27, 1944, over four opponents in the first primary, receiving the largest majority ever given a candidate for Governor or Senator in a Democratic primary in North Carolina; was elected to the United States Senate in the general election held on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected to the United States Senate in the general election held on November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957, receiving the largest vote of any candidate on the entire ticket; member of the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, the Finance Committee, and the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, and is chairman of the Senate Investigations Subcommittee. NORTH CAROLINA B 1ographical 97 WILLIS SMITH, Democrat, of Raleigh, N. C.; lawyer; born in Norfolk, Va., December 19, 1887; son of Willis and Mary Shaw (Creecy) Smith; graduate Atlantic Collegiate Institute, Elizabeth City, N. C., 1905; A. B., Trinity College (now Duke University) 1910; law school, Duke University 1912; married Anna Lee, April 30, 1919; children—Willis, Lee Creecy, Alton Battle, and Anna Lee; admitted to the North Carolina bar 1912; law firm, Smith, Leach & Anderson; United States Army 1918; member North Carolina House of Representatives 1927, 1929, 1931 (Speaker of House, 1931); chairman Democratic State Conven-tion 1940; delegate Democratic National Convention, Chicago, 1944; member . commission preparing rules for use Federal courts in North Carolina, 1933; member Federal Judicial conference, Fourth Circuit; member board of trustees, Patrick Henry Memorial Foundation; National Probation Association; member American Bar Association (General Council, 1935-36); state delegate, 1936-39; board of governors 1941-44; president, 1945-46; observer Nuremburg Trials, 1946; member North Carolina State Bar Association (president 1941-42); Wake County Bar Association (president 1943-44); Seventh Judicial District Bar Asso-ciation, American Legislators Association (member board managers, 1932-33); American Law Institute, American Counsel Association, American Judicature Society, International Association Insurance Counsel (president 1941-43); Amer-ican Legion; President’s Amnesty Board (1947); Society of Forty & Eight; Sigma Phi Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa; Phi Delta Phi; Order of the Coif; trustee Duke University (chairman board since 1946); Methodist; Clubs: Lawyers, Kiwanis, Carolina Country, University, New York, Dunes; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950, and sworn in November 27, 1950. REPRESENTATIVES * FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Sn. Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1950), HERBERT COVINGTON BONNER, Democrat, of Washington, N. C.; born in Washington, N. C., May 16, 1891; son of Herbert M. and Hannah Hare Bonner; married to Eva Hassell Hackney, of Washington, N. C.; sergeant, Company I, Three Hundred and Twenty-second Infantry; served overseas with the Eighty-first Division during the World War; Episcopalian; Elk; Mason; Shriner; elected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Lindsay C. Warren, who resigned to become Comptroller General of the United States; also elected on the above date to the Seventy-seventh Congress; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, and Wilson (8 counties). Population (1950), 306,302. JOHN HOSEA KERR, Democrat, of Warrenton, was born at Yanceyville, N. C.; son of Capt. John H. Kerr, of the Confederate Army, and Eliza Catherine (Yancey) Kerr; was a student in the celebrated Bingham School and graduated from Wake Forest College, North Carolina, with degree of A. B.; studied law and was admitted to the bar; moved to Warrenton and entered upon the practice of his profession; LL. D., Wake Forest College, June 4, 1945; married Miss Ella Foote, of Warrenton, and two sons were born of this marriage—John Hosea and James Yancey; (Mrs. Kerr died June 4, 1949) ; elected solicitor of the third district and served 11 years; while solicitor was elected judge of the superior court and served 7 years; while serving on the bench was nominated for Congress to suc-ceed Hon. Claude Kitchin, deceased, and was elected to the Sixty-eighth Con-gress at a special election held November 6, 1923, only one vote being cast against him; member, Committee on Appropriations (Subcommittee on Deficiencies and chairman Subcommittee on War Appropriations) ; former chairman of Committee on Elections No. 3; trustee, University of North Carolina; member, Democratic steering committee; appointed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull to serve as chairman, United States delegation to the Inter-American Travel Congress, Mexico City, 1941; chairman, Special Appropriations Subcommittee on Subversive Activities; member, Board of Visitors, United States Military Academy; member, advisory committee for celebration of twenty-fifth anniversary United States Air Mail Service; member of subcommittee for State Department appropriations; selected by State Department to inspect United States Foreign Service Establish- 98 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA ments in Europe for postwar purposes; the third member of the same family by the name of John Kerr elected to the House of Representatives—his great-uncle, John Kerr, and his son, Judge John Kerr; reelected to the Sixty-ninth and each succeeding Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounmiEs: Carteret, Craven, Duplin, Jones, Onslow, Pamlico, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1950), 307,925. GRAHAM ARTHUR BARDEN, Democrat, of New Bern, N. C., was born in Turkey Township, Sampson County, on September 25, 1896; educated in Sampson County public schools and Pender County public schools; moved to Burgaw, Pender County, N. C., in 1908; served in United States Navy during the World War; graduated from the University of North Carolina with LL. B. degree in 1920; member Sigma Chi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; licensed to practice law August 23, 1920; taught school in New Bern high school 1 year; served three terms as judge of county court of Craven County, N. C.; represented Craven County in North Carolina General Assembly in 1933; married to Miss Agnes Foy, of New Bern, N. C., and they have one son, Graham Arthur Barden, Jr., and one daughter, Agnes Foy Barden; was elected to Seventy-fourth Congress from the Third Dis-trict; reelected to the Seventy-fifth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress; re-elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; reelected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). Population (1950), 401,913. HAROLD DUNBAR (POOLEY, Democrat, of Nashville, N. C., son of the late Roger A. P. Cooley and Hattie Davis Cooley; born July 26, 1897; attended the public schools of Nash County, the University of North Carolina, and the Law School of Yale University; licensed to practice law in February 1918; served in the Naval Aviation Flying Corps during World War I; Presidential elector in 1932; president, Nash County Bar Association, 1933; member of Junior Order United American Mechanics, Phi Delta Theta fraternity, and Phi Delta Phi national law fraternity; member of Baptist Church; married Miss Madeline Strickland in 1923, and is father of two children—a son, Roger A. P. Cooley 2d, and a daughter, Hattie Davis Cooley Lawrence; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, July 7, 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fourth Congress, November 6, 1934, and to each succeeding Congress; chairman House Committee on Agri-culture, Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTtIiES: Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (7 counties). Population (1950), 354,154. THURMOND CHATHAM, Democrat, of Winston-Salem, N. C.; born in Elkin, N. C., August 16, 1896; educated in the public schools and attended the University of North Carolina and Yale University; during the First World War enlisted in the United States Navy as seaman second class, and served from May 1917 to June 1919; in World War II again served in the Navy from February 14, 1942, to November 25, 1945, with combat duty in the Southwest Pacific; decorated with the Bronze Star Medal, the Secretary of the Navy’s Commendation Medal, and the Royal Order of Nassau with Swords from the Dutch Government, Ameri-can Theater Ribbon, European Theater Ribbon, Asiatic Theater Ribbon with three battle stars, World War I Ribbon, and the Victory Ribbon; went to work in the mills of the Chatham Manufacturing Company in July 1919 and rose through various positions to the presidency of the company and chairman of the board of directors; married to Mrs. Patricia Firestone Coyner, November 16, 1950; two sons by former marriage, Hugh Gwyn Chatham and Richard Thurmond Chatham, Jr.; engaged in agricultural pursuits as owner and operator of Klondike Farm at Elkin, N. C.; former president of North Carolina Dairymen’s Association, member of State Board of Conservation and Development, and county commis-sioner of Forsyth County; is a member of the National Grange, the Farm Bureau, member of the visiting committee of Woman’s College at Greensboro, of the board of directors of Methodist Children’s Home at Winston-Salem, and director of Hugh Chatham Memorial Hospital at Elkin; member, Society of Cincinnati; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. NORTH CAROLINA B 1ographical 99 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population (1950), 396,243. : CARL THOMAS DURHAM, Democrat, of Chapel Hill, N. C.; born in Bing-ham Township, Orange County, at White Cross, N. C., August 28, 1892, son of C. P. and Delia Lloyd Durham; pharmacist; educated at Manndale Preparatory School in southern Alamance County, N. C., and at the University of North Carolina; served in the United States Navy in 1918; married Miss Margaret Joe Whitsett, of Guilford County, N. C., December 30, 1918, and they have five children; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; vice chairman, Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, third ranking member on House Armed Services Committee. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Han-over, and Robeson (7 counties). Population (1950), 381,097. FRANK ERTEL CARLYLE, Democrat, of Lumberton, N. C.; lawyer; born in Lumberton, N. C., April 7, 1897, son of William W. and Lillian O. Carlyle; educated in the schools of Robeson County, Wilson Memorial Academy, Nyack, N. Y., and the University of North Carolina; served in the United States Navy, World War I; licensed to practice law January 31, 1921; married Miss Lois Godwin Caldwell, daughter of Luther H. and Nora G. Caldwell, of Lumberton, N. C., May 19, 1927, and they have a daughter, Lois Godwin Carlyle; former chairman Robeson County Democratic Executive Committee; past president Ninth Judicial District Bar Association; member of American Legion, and past post commander; Baptist, thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, and Phi Delta Theta fraternity; elected solicitor of the Ninth Judicial District of North Carolina in November 1938, and reelected without opposition in 1942 and 1946; elected to the Eighty-first Congress in the general election November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress in the general election November 7, 1950; member Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Rich-mond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin (12 counties). Population (1950), 368,775. CHARLES BENNETT DEANE, Democrat, of Rockingham, N. C., native of Anson County, N. C., the son of John Leaird and Florence (Boyette) Deane; edu-cated Trinity Park School, Durham; LL. B. degree, Wake Forest College (N. C.) 1923; licensed attorney; register of deeds of Richmond County 1926-34, retired to engage in practice of law and in the operation of general insurance business; com-piler of United States Congressional Directory (1935-39); held administrative and legal position, Wage and Hour Division, Washington, D. C., 1939; chairman Richmond County Democratic Executive Committee, 12 years; a trustee of Wake Forest College; recording secretary, North Carolina Baptist State Convention, 19 years; Baptist, Mason, Rotarian, Elk; married Miss Agnes Walker Cree, and they have three children, Betty, Carol, and Charles, Jr.; elected on November 5, 1946, to the Eightieth Congress and reelected to all succeeding Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, and Watauga (9 counties). Population (1950), 338,565. ROBERT L. DOUGHTON, Democrat, Laurel Springs, N. C.; farmer and banker; appointed member of board of agriculture of North Carolina in 1903, serving in same position for 6 years; elected member of State senate in 1908; served as director of State’s prison from 1909 to 1911; member of Baptist Church; married Mrs. Lillie Stricker Hix (deed.); children, Emorie Doughton (Mrs. B. O. Edwards) of Asheville; Claude Doughton of North Wilkesboro; Horton Doughton of Statesville, N. C., and Miss Reba Doughton of Washington; presented Inter-national Economic Council Award (1945) for outstanding contribution in further-ing international trade; awarded the North Carolina Citizens Association Certif-icate of Outstanding Citizenship (1950); degree of Doctor of Laws (honorary), University of North Carolina; degree of Doctor of Jurisprudence (honorary), Catawba College, Salisbury, N. C.; elected to Sixty-second and each succeeding Congress; chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means, Seventy-third to Seventy-ninth Congresses, inclusive; reelected chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means in Eighty-first Congress; alternating chairman, Joint Congres-sional Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation; vice chairman Joint Committee for Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. 100 Congressional Directory NORTH DAKOTA TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, and Mitchell (6 coun-ties). Population (1950), 358,802. HAMILTON CHAMBERLAIN JONES, Democrat, of Charlotte, N. C.; born in Charlotte, N. C.; graduated from the University of North Carolina with A. B. degree and later secured his master degree from Columbia University; studied law at both universities; owns and actively farms a 300-acre farm in Mecklenburg County; attorney at law, judge, City Recorder’s Court and Juvenile Court; assistant United States district attorney; chairman, Mecklenburg Demo-cratic Executive Committee; State senator; former president, North Carolina Bar Association; former president, Mecklenburg Bar Association; member, and former president of the Charlotte Rotary Club; member: Masonic Club, Executives Club, Elks Club, Red Fez Club, and Charlotte Country Club; former president of the Family Service Association; former chairman, executive committee, Thompson Orphanage and Training School; member of the board and vice chairman of the Charlotte Memorial Hospital Authority ; former trustee of the University of North Carolina; member of Vestry and Senior Warden of St. Peter’s Episcopal Church; married Miss Bessie Smedes Erwin, of Durham, N. C., and they have three chil-dren—William Erwin Jones, Mrs. Elizabeth Smedes Jones Boehmer, and Mrs. Alice McAden Jones Noble; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; member of Veterans’ Affairs Committee. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counriks: Cleveland, Gaston, McDowell, Madison, Polk, Rutherford, and Yancey (7 counties). Population (1950), 295,525. WOODROW WILSON JONES, Democrat, of Rutherfordton, N. C.; born in Green Hill Township, Rutherford County, N. C., January 26, 1914; graduate Mars Hill College, 1934; graduate Wake Forest Law School, 1937, with LL. B. degree; lawyer; lieutenant (jg), U. S. Navy, World War II; married Rachel Eliza-beth Phelps, Lillington, N. C.; children—Woodrow Wilson Jones, Jr., age 11; Michael Anthony Jones, age 9; elected and served two terms as prosecuting at-torney, Rutherford County Recorder’s Court; elected and served in the 1947 and 1949 sessions of the house of representatives in North Carolina General Assembly; Baptist; member of American Legion; Kiwanis Club, and various bar associations; elected in the special election November 7, 1950, to fill out the unexpired term of the Hon. A. L. Bulwinkle, deceased, in the Kighty-first Congress; elected on November 7, 1950, to the Eighty-second Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jack= son, Macon, Swain, and Transylvania (10 counties). Population (1950), 282,932. MONROE MINOR REDDEN, Democrat, of Hendersonville, N. C.; born at Hendersonville, Henderson County, N. C., September 24, 1901, the son of John L. Redden and Julia Trimble Redden; educated in the public schools of the county and the law school of Wake Forest College; admitted to bar in 1923, and has continuously engaged in the practice of law since that time; married Mary Belle Boyd in 1923 and they have two sons, Monroe M., Jr., and Robert M.; chairman, Henderson County Democratic Committee, 1930-46; chairman, State Democratic Executive Committee of North Carolina, February 1942—-August 1944; elected to Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946, receiving largest total vote and largest majority of any Congressional candidate in the State; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. NORTH DAKOTA (Population (1950), 619,636) SENATORS WILLIAM LANGER, Republican (elected with the endorsement of the Non-Partisan League), of Bismarck and Wheatland, N. Dak., R. F. D. 1; farmer and lawyer; at age of 15 was hired hand of neighbor farmer, where as a result of his ability to handle large crews of men he was appointed foreman; attended District School 102, later grade school at Casselton, N. Dak., where his first teacher was Alice Rutledge, a cousin of the sweetheart of Abraham Lincoln, Ann Rutledge; was graduated from Casselton High School, from the law department of the NORTH DAKOTA Biographical | 101 University of North Dakota in 1906, and from Columbia University, New York City, in 1910; passed the bar examination at 18 and admitted to practice law on his twenty-first birthday; married Lydia Cady of New York City; children— Emma Bulkley Schaeffer, wife of J. Peter Schaeffer; Lydia Cady Irwin, wife of D. King Irwin; Mary Erskine Gokey, wife of Franklyn Gokey; and Cornelia Lyndon Langer; State’s attorney of Morton County, N. Dak., 1914-16; attorney general, 1916-20; for 8 years a member of the State Parole Board, for 8 years a member of the State Board of Equalization, and for 4 years president of the State Board of Health; legal adviser, Council of Defense, World War; on North Dakota campaign committee, Robert M. LaFollette for President, each time he was a candidate, and comanager of Hiram Johnson for President committee; twice elected Governor of North Dakota; only person ever to be arrested in any English-speaking country for filing an affidavit of prejudice against a judge; member of Sigma Chi fraternity; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947; reelected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1946, for the term ending January 3, 1953, carrying every one of the 53 counties in North Dakota. MILTON R. YOUNG, Republican, of La Moure, N. Dak.; born December 6, 1897, in Berlin, N. Dak.; attended the La Moure County public schools and was graduated from La Moure High School in 1915; attended North Dakota State Agricultural College and Graceland College at Lamoni, Iowa; was actively engaged in the operation of his farm near Berlin, N. Dak., until his appointment to the United States Senate; member of school, township, and county AAA boards, elected to House of Representatives of North Dakota State Legislature in 1932; elected to State Senate of North Dakota in 1934 and served continuously until his resignation March 14, 1945; served as chairman of Committee on Corpora-tions, State Affairs, Ways and Means, and Appropriations; elected president pro tempore 1941; majority floor leader 1943; division campaign manager of Republican National Committee for Wilkie Farm Voters, 1940; Republican State campaign manager 1940 and 1944; married Malinda V. Benson, of La Moure, N. Dak., July 7, 1919; three sons, Wendell M., Duane C., and John M.; appointed to the United States Senate March 12, 1945, by Gov. Fred G. Aandahl to fill the vacancy caused by the death of John Moses; elected at special election June 25, 1946, for term ending January 3, 1951; reelected to full 6-year term in general election November 7, 1950, and received more than a two-to-one majority of total votes cast; in the last three State-wide elections, only lost one county (1950) of the 53 in entire State. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 619,636. USHER L. BURDICK, Republican, of Williston, N. Dak.; born near Owa-tonna, Minn., February 21, 1879, son of Ozias Warren Burdick, of Vermont, and Lucy Farnum Burdick, of New York; moved with his parents to Dakota Territory in 1882, and was raised in a farming community bordering on the Fort Totten Sioux Indian Reservation, and understands the Sioux language; graduated from the State normal school at Mayville, N. Dak., in 1900; married Emma C. Rass-mussen in 1901, both entering the University of Minnesota immediately there-after; both graduated from the university in 1904; was a member of the Minnesota football teams of 1903 and 1904, playing right end, during which time Minnesota was the champion team of the Big Ten; started the practice of law at Munich, N. Dak., in 1904, and was also credit manager for the First National Bank of Munich; elected to the State legislature in 1907, and again in 1909, and that year became speaker of the house, at that time the youngest speaker in the United States; elected Lieutenant Governor in 1911, and became judge of the senate in the impeachment proceedings brought against District Judge John F. Cowan, the first and only impeachment trial ever held in the State; elected State’s attorney in Williams County in 1912 and remained there as prosecutor or special prose-cutor for several years; appointed assistant United States district attorney in 1929 and remained in that office until 1932, when he resigned to enter the race for Congressman at Large from North Dakota; defeated in that election, but was successful in the election of 1934 and became a Member of the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; always independent in politics, being a member of the Nonpartisan League of North Dakota; supported Franklin D. Roosevelt for 102 Congressional Directory OHIO President against Herbert Hoover; has three children—Quentin Northrop Bur-dick (A. B., LL. B.), attorney at Fargo; Eugene Allan Burdick (A. B., LL. B.), attorney at Williston, N. Dak.; and Eileen Rosemary Burdick (A. B., LL. B.), Mount Vernon, Ohio; holds the degreesof Ph. B. and LL. B. and has written many books on western history, including The Last Battle of the Sioux, Tales from Buffalo Land, The Farmers Political Action in North Dakota, and History of the Range Cattle Trade of the Dakotas; now engaged in the ranching business at Williston, N. Dak. FRED G. AANDAHL, Republican, of Litchville, N. Dak.; was born at Litch-ville, April 9, 1897; finished grade school in one-room country school, attended Litchville High School, and graduated from the University of North Dakota in 1921, receiving a B. A. degree with a major in law; member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity; married Luella Brekke, 1926, and has three daughters— Louise, Margaret, and Marilyn; except for 5 years as superintendent of schools has been engaged in farming entire life; member of the local school board for 15 years; member of the North Dakota Senate in the 1931, 1939, and 1941 sessions; Governor of North Dakota for three terms, 1945-50; elected to the Kighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. OHIO (Population (1950), 7,946,627) SENATORS ROBERT ALPHONSO TAFT, Republican, of Cincinnati, Ohio; born in Cincinnati, Ohio, September 8, 1889; attended the public schools of Cincinnati and the Taft School, Watertown, Conn.; was graduated from Yale University with B. A. degree in 1910 and from Harvard University with LL. B. degree in 1913; married Martha Wheaton Bowers October 17, 1914; four sons, William Howard, Robert, Jr., Lloyd Bowers, and Horace Dwight; attorney at law; served as assistant counsel for the United States Food Administration, 1917-18, and as counsel for the American Relief Administration in 1919; member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1921-26, and served as speaker in 1926; served in the Ohio Senate, 1931-32; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1938, and reelected November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. JOHN W. BRICKER, Republican, of Columbus, Ohio, was born on a farm in Madison County, September 6, 1893; educated in country school, Mount Sterling High School, and Ohio State University, where he received his A. B. in 1916 and LL. B. in 1920; served as a first lieutenant and chaplain in the First World War; has practiced law in Columbus since 1920 except when holding public office; served as a member of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio for 3 years; at-torney general of Ohio for two terms; Governor of Ohio for three terms; was Republican candidate for Vice President in 1944; was elected to the United States Senate in 1946; married Harriet Day of Urbana, Ohio, in 1920 and has one son, Jack, a student at Dartmouth University. REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 7,946,627. GEORGE H. BENDER, Republican, of Chagrin Falls, Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio; president, insurance company; editor and publisher of the National Repub-lican; State senator, Ohio General Assembly, 1920-30; chairman, Republican central committee, Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), since 1936; author, The Challenge of 1940; married to Edna Eckhardt; two children, Virginia Bender and Mrs. Ernest B. Stevenson (Barbara Bender); elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-eighth Congress November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944,to the Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946, and to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. OHIO Biographical FIRST DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, wards 1 to 6; ward 7, except precincts J and U; wards 8 and 9; ward 10, except precincts I, K, L, N and O; ward 11, precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 13; ward 14; ward 15, except precincts A and B; ward 16, except precinets A, C, E, F, H; I, J, L, M, and N; ward 17, precincts D, M, S, T, V, W, X, and Y; ward 23, precinct T'; ward 24, precincts A to C and H to J; townships of Anderson, Columbia, Elmwood, and Symmes; all of city of Norwood. Population (1950), 349,696. CHARLES H. ELSTON, Republican, of Cincinnati, Ohio; born in Marietta, Ohio, August 1, 1891; educated in public schools of Marietta and Cincinnati; attorney at law; assistant prosecuting attorney of Hamilton County, Ohio, 1915-22; member of Cincinnati, Ohio State, and American Bar Associations; served in Aviation Service, United States Army, during World War I; member of the American Legion and Forty and Eight; served two terms as president of the Hamilton County Republican Club; elected member of Hamilton County Charter Commission in 1934; one daughter, Marilyn E. Elston; married Mrs. Zelda Giffin Wright on May 28, 1947; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: City of Cincinnati, ward 7, precincts J and U; ward 10, pre-cinets I, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 15, precincts A and B; ward 16, precincts A, C, E, F, H, I, J, L, M, and N; ward 17, except precincts D, M, S, T, V, W, X, and Y; wards 18, 19, 20, 21, and 22; ward 23, except precinct T; ward 24, except precincts A, B, C, H, I, and J; wards 25 and 26; townships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Lockland, Miami, Reading, St. Bernard, Springfield, Sycamore, and Whitewater. Population (1950), 372,739. WILLIAM E. HESS, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, February 13, 1898; educated in the Cincinnati public schools, University of Cincinnati, and Cincinnati Law School; admitted to the practice of law in 1919; member at large of Cincinnati City Council, 1922-26; ex-serviceman; Member of the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIED DIETRICT:Couynes: Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1950), PAUL F. SCHENCK, Republican, of Dayton, Ohio; born April 19, 1899, in Miamisburg, Ohio, and moved to Dayton in 1908; lifetime resident of Montgomery County; graduated from Steele High School in June 1917; 2 years of college train-ing; served as scoutmaster and commissioner of education for scouts for a number of years; assistant chemistry teacher in Steele High School, September 1917 to June 1919; automobile service business, July 1919 to August 1923; automotive training teacher and faculty manager of athletics at Roosevelt High School, September 1923 to January 1929; director of recreation, city of Dayton, January 1929 to August 1935; engaged in real estate business since September 1935; appointed to the board of education in 1941, and elected in 1943 for 4 years and again in 1947 for 4 years, serving as president for 7 years; resigned in June 1950, to conduct Congressional campaign; vice chairman of the Dayton Safety Council for two terms, 1946 and 1947; served the Dayton Council for Defense as executive secretary during World War II; president of the Dayton Real Estate Board, 1947, 1948, and 1949; member of Grace Methodist Church; member of Mystic Lodge, 405 F. & A. M., Scottish Rite, and Antioch Shrine; married to Charlotte Rairdon in November 1921; have two sons, Richard R. Schenck and Thomas F. Schenck; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 6, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Edward Breen. : FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, and Shelby (6 counties). Population (1950), 277,600. WILLIAM M. McCULLOCH, Republican, of Piqua, Ohio; lawyer; member, Ohio State and American Bar Associations; member Ohio House of Representa-tives six terms, serving as minority (Republican) leader, 1936-39, and as speaker for three terms; World War II veteran; married Mabel Harris in 1925—two children, Nancy and Ann; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 4, 1947; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (7 counties). Population (1950), 166,932. CLIFF CLEVENGER, Republican, of Bryan, Ohio, elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 104 Congressional Directory OHIO SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). Population (1950), 209,907. JAMES G. POLK, Democrat, of R. F. D. 1, Highland, Ohio: elected to the Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, and Seventy-sixth Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses; one of the few Members of Congress whose sole occupation is farming. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Clark, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, Logan, Madison, Union, and Warren (9 counties). Population (1950), 354,763. CLARENCE J. BROWN, Republican, Blanchester, Ohio; born in Blanchester, July 14, 1893; son of Owen and Ellen B. Brown; married Ethel McKinney July 15, 1916; three children, Betty Jean, now Mrs. L. M. Dearing; Dorothy Lucille, now Mrs. Robert A. Haines, and Clarence J., Jr.; graduated Blanchester High School and Washington & Lee University, Lexington, Va.; honorary degree, Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio; publisher, several country newspapers; president of The Brown Publishing Co., printers and publishers; farm operator; Lieutenant Governor of Ohio 1919-23; Secretary of State of Ohio 1927-33; Republican nomi-nee for Governor of Ohio 1934; delegate to various Republican National Con-ventions; member, Republican National Committee for Ohio; chairman, Executive Committee of the Republican National Committee, 1945-48; campaign director, Republican National Committee, 1946; author of the legislation creating the Com-mission on the Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (the Hoover Commission), and member of the Commission 1947-49; member of the House Committee on Rules; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Kightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Crawford, Hancock, Hardin, Marion, Morrow, and Wyandot (6 counties). Population (1950), 198,182. JACKSON E. BETTS, Republican, of Findlay, Ohio; born May 26, 1904, in Findlay, Ohio; graduate of Kenyon College, A. B. degree (cum laude), and Yale School of Law, LL. B. degree; lawyer; prosecuting attorney, Hancock County, Ohio, 1933-37; member of the Ohio General Assembly 1937-47; speaker of the house of representatives of Ohio 1945 and 1946; member of judicial council of Ohio 1941-44; member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity and Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity; member of Findlay, Ohio, and American Bar Associations; married June 12, 1934, to Martha Neeley; one daughter, Nancy Lou; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Lucas and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1950), 421,937. FRAZIER REAMS, Independent, of 2025 Richmond Road, Toledo 7, Ohio; born in Franklin, Tenn., January 15, 1897; graduate of University of Tennessee, B. A., 1919, and Vanderbilt University, LL. B., 1922; served in Field Artillery of the United States Army, World War I; practiced law in Toledo since 1922, senior member of firm of Reams, Bretherton, and Neipp; married Crystal Petree in 1924; children, Martha Lee and Frazier, Jr.; prosecuting attorney, Lucas County, Ohio, 1933-37; United States Collector of Internal Revenue, 1942-43; Ohio director of public welfare, 1945-46; member of Epworth Methodist Church; Toledo Post, American Legion; Toledo, Ohio, and American Bar Associations; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Athens, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, and Vinton (6 counties). Population (1950), 181,065. THOMAS A. JENKINS, Republican, of Ironton; born in Jackson County, Ohio; married to Miss Mabel Wynne; graduate Providence University and Ohio State University; admitted to bar in 1907; elected prosecuting attorney, Lawrence County, Ohio, two terms; elected to State Senate of Ohio in 1922; delegate to Republican Conventions at Kansas City, Philadelphia, and Chicago; member of the Platform Committee of the Republican Convention in Philadelphia in 1940; elected in 1924 to Sixty-ninth Congress and reelected to all subsequent Congresses; chairman of Republican Congressional Food Study Committee in 1944-46; member of Ways and Means Committee since 1933. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, and Ross (5 counties). Population (1950), 184,066. - WALTER ELLSWORTH BREHM, Republican, of Millersport, Ohio, R. F. D.; born in Somerset, Perry County, Ohio, May 25, 1892; attended Boston University, Ohio Wesleyan University, and was graduated from Ohio State University in 1917, OHIO Biographical D. D. S. degree; engaged in active ethical practice of dentistry for 25 years, member of Logan City Council, 1936-38; member of the Ohio House of Represent-atives, 1938-42; served 4 years, Company D, Seventh Regiment, Ohio Infantry; married Miss Lucille Fountain; two sons, Thomas and James; elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, FEighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CounNTY: Franklin. Population (1950), 501,882. JOHN M. VORYS, Republican, of Columbus, Ohio; lawyer; born in Lancaster, Ohio, June 16, 1896; attended public schools in Lancaster and Columbus, Ohio; graduated from Columbus East High School, Yale University (B. A.), Ohio State University (juris doctor); naval aviator No. 73 in World War I, served overseas, lieutenant, senior grade; teacher in the College of Yale in China, Changsha, China, 1919-20; assistant secretary, American delegation, Conference on Limitation of Armament and Pacific and Far East Affairs, Washington, 1921-22; representative from Franklin County in Ohio General Assembly, 1923-24; senator from tenth distriet in Ohio General Assembly, 1925-26; first director of aeronautics of Ohio, 1929-30; member of the law firm of Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease, 1926-39; president, Columbus Bar Association, 1938; married Lois West, of Lucknow, India, in 1927; three children—Martin, Jeanny Esther, and Mary; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress in 1938; reelected to each succeeding Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Erie, Huron, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wood (5 counties). Population (1950), 246,900. ALVIN F. WEICHEL, Republican, of Sandusky, Ohio; son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto A. Weichel, of Sandusky; educated in Sandusky schools; was graduated from Ferris Institute, Big Rapids, Mich., the University of Michigan with A. B. degree, and the Michigan College of Law with LL. B. degree in 1924; ad-mitted to practice in Ohio in 1924; commissioner of insolvents; prosecuting at-torney of Erie County 1931-37; president of Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Asso-ciation; special counsel for Attorney General of Ohio; lecturer, Ohio State University ; member of Ohio Bar Examiners’ Committee; member, County, State, and American Bar Associations; admitted to practice in County, State, and Federal courts; member of the American Legion; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, the Seventy-ninth Congress, the Eightieth Congress, the Eighty-first Congress, and reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; ranking Republican member of the House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries and chairman of the Com-mittee during the Eightieth Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit (4 counties). Popu-lation (1950), 658,423. WILLIAM HANES AYRES, Republican, of Akron, Ohio; born in Eagle Rock, Va., February 5, 1916; graduate of Western Reserve University (Adelbert College), B. A. degree, June 1936; president of William H. Ayres, Inc.; served as private in United States Army, honorable discharge December 17, 1945; married Mary Helen Coventry; three children, Virginia, Frank, and Judy; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Guernsey, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Wash-ington (6 counties). Population (1950), 195,886. ROBERT THOMPSON SECREST, Democrat, of Senecaville, Ohio. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (4 counties). Popula-tion (1950), 429,417. FRANK T. BOW, Republican, of Canton, Ohio; born in Canton, Ohio, Feb--ruary 20, 1901, where he has since resided; attended grade schools in Canton and Plain Township, Stark County, Ohio; attended University School, Cleveland, Ohio; Culver Military Academy, Culver, Ind., and received his legal education at Ohio Northern University, Ada, Ohio; was admitted to the bar of Ohio in 1923; served as general counsel to Subcommittee on Expenditures in the Eightieth Congress and general counsel of Select Committee to Investigate the Federal Communications Commission, Eightieth Congress; served as legislative assistant to Senator Andrew F. Schoeppel in the Eighty-first Congress; served as war correspondent, World War II, with Ohio’s Thirty-seventh Division in the Philip-pines; married Caroline C. Denzer May 12, 1923; has two sons, Robert Lee Bow ont Joe) Withrow Bow; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on Novem-er 7, 1950. 106 Congressional Directory OHIO SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Ashland, Coshocton, Delaware, Knox, Licking, and Rich-land (6 counties). Population (1950), 290,333. J. HARRY McGREGOR, Republican, of West Lafayette, Ohio; contractor; was born on a farm near Unionport, Ohio, September 30, 1896; graduate of West Lafayette High School; attended West Lafayette College and Oberlin (Ohio) College; during First World War served in the Field Artillery; member of the State house of representatives, 1935-40, and served as minority whip and secretary of the finance committee, 1937-39, and as majority floor leader and speaker pro tempore, 1939-40; married Miss Twila Cox, of Dresden, Ohio, May 29, 1918, and they have two daughters and one son—Mrs. Monroe Horst, Mrs. Warde Butler, Jr., and Harry Laird, on active duty in United States Army; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress at a special election held on February 27, 1940, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William A. Ashbrook; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Harrison, and Jefferson (5 counties), Population (1950), 319,789. WAYNE L. HAYS, Democrat, of Flushing, Ohio; born May 13, 1911, at Bannock, Belmont County, Ohio, son of Walter L. and Bertha Taylor Hays; lifelong resident of Belmont County; graduate Ohio State University, 1933; additional work Duke University, 1935; former teacher of history and public speaking; presently a farmer; mayor of Flushing, Ohio, three terms, 1939-45; Ohio State senator one term, 1941-42; member Officers’ Reserve Corps, United States Army, 1933-42; volunteered for active duty World War II December 8, 1941; honorably discharged in August 1942; Belmont County commissioner, 1945— 49; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Mahoning, and Trumbull (3 counties). Population (1950), 492,802. MICHAEL JOSEPH KIRWAN, Democrat, of Youngstown, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-fifth and each succeeding Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—City oF CLEVELAND: Ward 1; ward 2, except part of precinct V; ward 3; ward 4, precincts CC-DD-EE-GG; ward 5, precincts F-M-S-T-U-V-W, plus part of precincts A-B-C; ward 6, precincts W-Y-Z-A A-BB and part of precinct V; wards 7 and 8; ward 12, part of precinct N; ward 19, precinct I; ward 21; ward 22, precinct E; ward 23; ward 24, except precinets BB-CC-DD-EE-FF-GG; ward 25, except precincts W-FF-II-JJ-KK and part of precinct R; ward 31, except precinct C and part of precinct D; and ward 33, precincts Y-Z-HH-II. Population (1950), 276,278. MICHAEL A. FEIGHAN, Democrat, Cleveland, Ohio; graduate of Princeton University, A. B. degree, graduate of Harvard Law School, LL. B. degree; member of Ohio State Legislature, 1937-40; minority floor leader, 1939-40; married; Florence. Mathews; two children, William Mathews Feighan and Fleur Feighan; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to succeed-ing Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CitYy oF CLEVELAND: Ward 5, except precincts F-M-S8-T-U-V-W and part of precincts A-B-C; ward 6, except precincts W-Y-Z-A A-BB and part of precinct V; ward 9, pre-cincts E-H-I-J-K-L-M-P-Q-R-S-T-U-V-W-X-Y-EE-NN-OO and part of precincts F and QQ; ward 10, precincts A-B-C-D-E-F-G-H-I-P-Q-R-S-T-U-V-W and part of precincts J and X; ward 11, part of precinct O; ward 12, except precincts S-T-U-V-EE and part of precinct N; wards 13 to 16; ward 17, except part of precinct F; ward 18, precincts T-V and part of precincts P-U-DD; ward 19, precincts T-U-V-W-X-Y-CC-GG-HH and part of precincts Z and EE; wards 28 and 29; ward 30, precincts A-B-C-D-E-F-G-a Bast vV-Y-HE I-M NV: and ward 31, precinct C and part of precinct D. Population (1950), ROBERT CROSSER, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio, was born at Holytown, Lanarkshire, Scotland, and moved to Cleveland, Ohio, with his parents in Sep-tember 1881; attended the public schools at Salineville, Ohio, graduating from the high school in 1893; entered Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, in September 1893, and graduated in June 1897 with the degree of A. B. (M. C. L., honorary, June 1929; LL. D., honorary, May 1942); professor of law of torts, Baldwin Wallace Law School, 1904-05; entered the law school of Columbia University in October 1897, remaining part of a year, and the Cincinnati Law School in October 1898, graduating from the latter in June 1901 with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar of Ohio in June 1901, and entered upon the practice of law in Cleveland in September 1901; was a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1911-12; was elected a member of the Fourth Constitutional Convention of Ohio, which convened at Columbus on January 9, 1912, and adjourned August 26, 1912, serving as chairman of the initiative and referendum committee, and was the OKLAHOMA Biographical ; 107 author of the initiative and referendum amendment to the constitution; member Cleveland City Club and Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity; was elected to the Sixty- -third Congress from the State at large; reelected to the Sixty-fourth Congress from the Twenty-first Ohio District, and reelected to the Sixty-fifth Congress; again elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; author of the railroad retirement law. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Geauga, Lake, and that part of Cuyahoga County out-side of the city of Cleveland; the city of Cleveland, ward 2, part of precinet V; ward 4, except precincts CC-DD-EE-GG; ward 9, precincts A-B-C-D-G-N-0-Z-AA-BB-CC-DD-FF-GG-HH-II-JJ-KK-LI-MM-PP-RR-SS and part of precincts F and QQ; ward 10, precincts K-L-M-N-O-Y-Z-AA-BB-CC-DD-EE and part of precincts J and X; ward 11, except part of precinet O; ward 12, precincts S-T-U-V-EE; ward 17, part of precinct F; ward 18, except precincts T-V and part of precincts P-U-DD; ward 19, except precincts I-T-U-V-W-X-Y-CC-GG-HH and part of precincts Z and EE; ward 20; ward 22, except precinct E; ward 24, precincts BB-CC-DD-EE-FF-GG; ward 25, precincts W-FF-II-JJ-KK and part of precinct R; wards 26 and 27; ward 30, precincts I-L-M-N-O-P-R-U-W-X-Z-AA-BB-CC-DD-EE-Pr OUIRER-LI-NNO) ward 32; and ward 33, except precincts Y-Z-HH-II. Population (1950), 8,403. -FRANCES P. BOLTON, Republican, of Lyndhurst (suburb of Cleveland), Ohio; born in Cleveland, Ohio; married in 1907; three sons, Charles B., Kenyon C., and Oliver P.; active for many years in public health nursing and nursing educa-tion, social service, and education; honorary degrees, LL. D., Colgate University, 1940, LL. D., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1942, L. H. D., Baldwin-Wallace College, 1944, Doctor of Humanities, Western Reserve University, 1944; LL. D., Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, 1947; LL. D., Wooster College, Wooster, Ohio, 1948; Republican State Central Committee, 1938-40; vice chairman, National Republican Program Committee, 1938-40; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress to fill the unexpired term of her husband, Chester C. Bolton, at a special election held on February 27, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member, Committee on Foreign Affairs. OKLAHOMA (Population (1950), 2,233,351) SENATORS ROBERT SAMUEL KERR, Democrat, of 327 Northwest Eighteenth Street, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Washington address, 120 Elmwood Road, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md.; born September 11, 1896, Ada (Indian Territory), Okla.; attended Oklahoma Baptist University, Shawnee, Okla., and Oklahoma Uni-versity, Norman, Okla.; lawyer, drilling contractor, and president of Kerr-McGee Oil Industries, Inc.; served as second lieutenant, First Field Artillery, in World War I, with 9 months’ overseas duty; organized an Oklahoma National Guard unit at Ada, Okla., which later became a part of the Forty-fifth Division; served as State commander of the American Legion for Oklahoma in 1925; served as Democratic national committeeman for Oklahoma from 1940 to 1948; Governor of Oklahoma from January 1943 to January 1947; married and has three boys and one girl; made keynote address at Democratic National Convention in Chicago in July 1944; elected to the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. A. S. MIKE MONRONEY, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, Okla.; born in Oklahoma City, March 2, 1902; educated in the public schools and the University of Oklahoma, B. A., 1924; married; son, Michael Monroney; served 5 years as political writer of the Scripps-Howard Oklahoma News in Oklahoma City; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; served as vice chairman of the Joint Committee on the Organization of Congress during the Seventy-ninth Congress; co-author with Senator Robert M. La Follette of legis-lative reorganization bill of 1946; served as a member of the Banking and Currency Committee; winner of 1945 Collier's award for ‘Distinguished Congressional Service” in House of Representatives; member of Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Delta Chi, and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950. 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 9 108 Congressional Directory | OKLAHOMA REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Craig, Delaware, Mayes, Nowata, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Rogers, Tulsa, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1950), 448,477. GEORGE BLAINE SCHW ABE, Republican, of Tulsa, Okla.; born in Arthur, Vernon County, Mo., July 26, 1886; reared on farms near Sedalia and Columbia, Mo.; attended country and town schools in Pettis County, Mo., and Sedalia High School; arts and science and law education at University of Missouri, grad-uating in law in 1910; practiced law at Nowata, Okla., 1911-22, and at Tulsa, Okla., from 1922; mayor of Nowata, Okla., 1913-14; member of board of educa-tion, Nowata, Okla., 5 years; representative, Oklahoma State Legislature, from Nowata County, 1918-22: speaker, house of representatives, Oklahoma State Legislature, 1921-22; chairman, Republican County Committee, Tulsa County, Okla., 1928-36; delegate, Republican National Convention, 1936; member First Christian Church, Tulsa, Okla.; married; four sons, one daughter, one stepson; brother of Max Schwabe, former Representative from Columbia, Mo.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected November 5, 1946; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskogee, Okmulgee, Se-quoyah, and Wagoner (8 counties). Population (1950), 210,942. : WILLIAM G. STIGLER, Democrat, of Stigler, Okla.; born in Stigler, Indian Territory (now Oklahoma); educated in Oklahoma common schools, graduated from the Northeastern State College, Tahlequah, Okla., received legal education at the University of Oklahoma; attended Grenoble University, Grenoble, France, spring of 1919; admitted to practice law in State of Oklahoma in December 1920; in World War I served nearly 2 years, second lieutenant in Infantry; served over-seas with the Three Hundred and Fifty-seventh Infantry, Ninetieth Division, on the battlefrontsof St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne; with Army of Occupation in Germany ; city attorney of Stigler for 4 years, 1920-24; elected to the State senate in November 1924, from the twenty-seventh senatorial district, composed of Muskogee, McIntosh, and Haskell Counties; reelected second term in November 1928; president pro tempore of State senate in 1931; member of Soldiers Relief Commission of Oklahoma in 1932; elected department commander of the American Legion of Oklahoma in 1933; served as national executive committeeman of the American Legion from Oklahoma for 2 years; elected national president of the ~ Ninetieth Division Association in 1935; lieutenant colonel, Oklahoma National Guard, Forty-fifth Division, from 1925 to 1938; executive vice president of the Choctaw Area Council of the Boy Scouts; Haskell County chairman of War Finance Committee until resignation to run for Congress; ex-member of State Pardon and Parole Advisory Board under Gov. Robert 8. Kerr; admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, the United States District Court of Eastern Oklahoma, the United States Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, the United States Court of Claims, and the Supreme Court of the United States; national attorney for the Choctaw Nation for 7 years; member of executive council of State Bar of Oklahoma 1943-44; member of the Stigler Methodist Church, serving on the board of stewards for many years; American Legion, Forty and Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner, Bedouin Temple, Muskogee; Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Modern Wood-men of America, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and a duly enrolled member of the Choctaw Tribe of Indians; family consists of Mrs. Stigler and two daughters, Denyse and Elaine; nominated for Congress in special Democratic primary in Second Congres-sional District on March 7, 1944; elected to Congress in special general election March 28, 1944, to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Jack Nichols; sworn in as Member of Congress April 12, 1944; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Atoka, Bryan, Carter, Choctaw, Latimer, Le Flore, Love, McCurtain, Marshall, Pittsburg, and Pushmataha (11 counties). Population (1950), 244,981. CARL ALBERT, Democrat, of McAlester, Okla.; born in McAlester, Okla., May 10, 1908, son of Ernest H. and Leona. (Scott) Albert; attended Flowery Mound Rural School, Pittsburg County, Okla., for 8 years; graduated from Me-Alester High School in 1927 and from the University of Oklahoma with A. B. degree in 1931; awarded Rhodes Scholarship; attended Oxford University in England 1931-34, receiving two degrees in law, B. A., 1933, and B. C. L. 1934; lawyer; married Mary Harmon Albert and they have one daughter, Mary Frances, OKLAHOMA Biographical born January 7, 1948; entered Army, June 16, 1941, as a private and discharged on February 17, 1946, as a lieutenant colonel; served in the Pacific Theater; awarded the Bronze Star; member, Kappa Alpha and Phi Beta Kappa fraternities, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Masonic fraternities, Elks, Isaac Walton League, Methodist Church; elected to the Eightieth Congress on Novem-ber 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Coal, Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc, Pot-tawatomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1950), 236,490. TOM STEED, Democrat, of Shawnee, Okla.; born on a farm near Rising Star, Tex., March 2, 1904; served 20 years as newspaperman on Oklahoma dailies, including 4 years as managing editor of Shawnee News and Star; enlisted October 29, 1942, as private in Antiaircraft Artillery, released from active duty in May 1944, with rank of second lieutenant; joined Office of War Information July 1, 1944, and served in information division in India-Burma theater until December 1945; married February 26, 1923, to Hazel Bennett; one son, Richard N., Navy veteran; another son, Second Lieutenant Roger Steed, U. S. M. C,, killed in line of duty as fighter pilot in China in May 1947; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. . FIFTH DISTRICT.—CovuNTIES: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne (7 counties). Population (1950), 487,034. JOHN JARMAN, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, Okla.; born July 17, 1915; education: B. A. degree from Yale University in 1937; LL. B. degree from Harvard Law School in 1941; also attended Westminster College in Fulton, Mo., 2 years prior to attending Yale University; lawyer; member of house of repre-sentatives and State senate of Oklahoma Legislature; enlisted and served 47 months in Army during World War II, being honorably discharged December 11, 1945; married to Ruth Bewley and have two children, Jay, 7 years, and Susie, 4 years; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson, King-fisher, and Stephens (9 counties). Population (1950), 233,180. TOBY MORRIS, Democrat, of Lawton, Okla.; born in Granbury, Tex., February 28, 1899; left high school at Walters, Cotton County, Okla., to enlist in the Army during World War I, and served as a private, corporal, and a sergeant with the One Hundred and Tenth Combat Engineers, attached to the Thirty-fifth Division, and fought with them in trenches and several battles on the Western Front in France, including the Meuse-Argonne Drive; was admitted to the bar as a lawyer, by home and office study, at the age of 21; attorney at law; court clerk of Cotton County for 4 years; also county attorney of Cotton County, Okla., 4 years; engaged in private practice of the law 8 years; served as a District Judge for 91% years when he resigned in order to prepare for duties in Congress; married; active in church and civic affairs for many years, including the American Legion, Rotary, Red Cross, Boy Scouts, and Salvation Army; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946, reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on Novem-ber 2, 1948, reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beckham, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa, Roger Mills, Tillman, and Washita (11 counties). Population (1950), 159,838, VICTOR WICKERSHAM, Democrat, of Mangum, Okla., was born on a farm near Lone Rock, Baxter County, Ark., February 9, 1906; son of Frank M. and Lillie M. Sword-Wickersham; moved to Mangum, Okla., 1915; reared on cotton, wheat, and dairy farm near Mangum, OKkla., and on wheat and poultry farm near Greensburg, Kans.; educated in the public schools of Oklahoma; married Miss Jessie Stiles, June 30, 1929, and they have four children: La Melba Sue, born Au-gust 3, 1930, attending University of Maryland; Galen, born February 10, 1933, attending General Motors Institute, Flint, Mich., and Strayers Business College; Nelda, born July 25, 1935, attending Anacostia High School; and Victor 2d, born May 31, 1948; served in county clerk’s office, 1925 and 1926, and in court clerk’s office, 1926 to 1935, appointed court clerk one time and elected three times in Greer County, Okla. ;chief clerk of Board of Affairs of the State of Oklahoma, 1935— 36; is a member of the Christian Church; building contractor, Oklahoma City, Okla., 1937 and 1938; in private insurance business as agent for the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., 1938 until April 1, 1941, on which date elected at a 110 Congressional Directory OREGON special election to the Seventy-seventh Congress for the Seventh District of Okla-homa to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Sam C. Massingale; reelected to the Seventy-eighth and Seventy-ninth Congresses and was a member of the Committee on Agriculture; 1947-48 engaged in real estate business in Washing-ton, D. C., only while out of Congress; was elected in the July 1948 primaries and served in the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to Eighty-second Congress; mem-ber Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, 1949-50; now member Armed Services Committee. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Garfield, Grant, Harper, Kay, Major, Noble, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (12 counties). Population (1950), 206,197. PAGE BELCHER, Republican, of Enid, Okla., was born at Jefferson, Okla., April 21, 1899, on the claim his father took in the opening of the Cherokee Strip; attended high school at Jefferson and Medford; attended college at Friends Uni-versity, Wichita, Kans., and University of Oklahoma; made college letters in football, basketball, baseball, and track; served as court clerk, Garfield County; member of board of education; State president, United War Chest of Oklahoma; chairman of Red Cross; president, Enid Kiwanis Club; commander of American Legion; president, Great Salt Plains Council Boy Scouts, composed of eleven counties in Northwest Oklahoma; municipal judge, city of Enid; member at large, National Council Boy Scouts of America; was awarded Silver Beaver by Boy Scouts of America for distinguished service to boyhood, the highest award given by a Boy Scout Council; is now a member of Garfield County Bar, Oklahoma Bar Association, American« Bar Association, Enid Chamber of Commerce, Enid Kiwanis Club, American Legion, I. O. O. F., and the Methodist Church; practicing attorney in Enid, Okla.; admittedto practice law before Oklahoma Supreme Court, United States District Court, United States Circuit Court of Appeals, and United States Supreme Court; political affiliations: Eighth District chairman 10 years, State executive secretary of Republican party, Ross Rizley’s campaign manager for Congress, and secretary to Ross Rizley during first term in Washington ; married, and has a son, Page Belcher, Jr., who is a lawyer and is now practicing law with him, and a daughter, Mrs. Clyde V. Collins, and two grandsons; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. OREGON (Population (1950), 1,521,341) SENATORS GUY CORDON, Republican, of Roseburg, Oreg.; born in Cuero, Tex., on April 24, 1890; has resided in Oregon continuously since 1900; attended the public schools; served in the United States Army in 1918; county assessor of Douglas County, Oreg., 1917-20; was admitted to the bar in 1920; district attorney of Douglas County, 1923-35, inclusive; married to Ana Allen on September 30, 1914, and they have one daughter and one son; appointed to the United States Senate by Governor Snell on March 4, 1944, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles L. McNary; elected November 7, 1944, to the unexpired term ending January 3, 1949; reelected November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. WAYNE LYMAN MORSE, Republican, of Eugene, Oreg.; lawyer and educa-tor; was born near Madison, Wis., October 20, 1900; received Ph. B. degree, Uni-versity of Wisconsin, 1923, M. A. degree, 1924, LL. B. degree, University of Minne-sota, 1928; J. D. degree, Columbia University, 1932; completed 4-year advanced military training course, University of Wisconsin, 1919-23; LL. D. Cornell College, 1946; LL. D. 1947, Drake University, and College of South Jersey; held reserve commission as second lieutenant, Field Artillery, U. S. Army, 1923-30; taught argumentation at University of Wisconsin and University of Minnesota and was appointed assistant professor of law at University of Oregon in 1929; dean and professor of law, 1931-44; chairman, President’s Railway Emergency Board, 1941; public member, National War Labor Board, 1942-44; married Miss Mildred EI Biographical | 111 Downie in 1924 and they have three daughters— Nancy Faye, Judith Mary, and Amy Ann; Congregationalist; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Lincoln, Marion, Polk, Tilla-mook, Washington, and Yamhill (10 counties). Population (1950), 432,448. WALTER NORBLAD, Republican, of Astoria, Oreg.; born in Escanaba, Mich., September 12, 1908; parents moved to Astoria same year; high school, Astoria, and New Mexico Military Institute; bachelor of science, doctor of jurisprudence degrees, University of Oregon; graduate work, Harvard Law School; admitted to practice in Oregon 1932; member of Oregon Legislature 1935-39; delegate G. O. P. National Convention, 1940; military service 1942 to 1945; combat intelligence officer, Eighth Air Force; awarded air medal for combat flights; married to Miss Elizabeth Bendstrup, of Astoria; one son, Albin Walter 3d, 12 years old; member of V. F. W., American Legion, Masonic Lodge, I. O. O. F., Elks, Eagles, and Presby-terian Church; trustee, Linfield College; elected to Congress in special election January 11, 1946; reelected to each succeeding Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood River, Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1950), 245,976. LOWELL STOCKMAN, Republican, of Pendleton, Oreg., was born near Helix, Oreg., April 12, 1901; attended the Pendleton public schools and was graduated from Oregon State College in 1922; in 1924 married Dorcas Conklin, graduate of the University of Oregon in 1923; three children: William, age 21; Mary, age 17; and Margery, age 15; wheat grower until being elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to each succeeding Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Multnomah. Population (1950), 468,571. HOMER D. ANGELL, Republican, of Portland, Oreg., son of Thomas and Susan Angell, both of whom were born in New York and moved to Iowa, in 1852 settled in Oregon, where they resided until their deaths; born on a farm near The Dalles, Oreg.; educated in the public schools; B. A. degree, University of Oregon; LL. B. and M. A. degrees, Columbia University, of New York; attorney at law; admitted to practice in the States of New York and Oregon, in the Federal courts, and United States Supreme Court; member of the Oregon Legislature from 1929 to 1938, when he resigned from the State senate to become a candidate for the United States Congress, with the exception of one term for which he was not a candidate; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, and Linn (7 coun-ties). Population (1950), 365,105. HARRIS ELLSWORTH, Republican, of Roseburg, Oreg.; newspaper editor; was born in Hoquiam, -Wash., September 17, 1899; parents moved to Oregon the following year; attended public and high schools in Oregon; was graduated in journalism from University of Oregon in 1922; worked on Oregon newspapers, in lumbering industry, 1 year as manager of Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association and associate professor in journalism at the University of Oregon, and 3 years as manager of a lumber-industry publication; has been publisher and part owner of Roseburg News-Review since 1929; served as president of Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, Oregon Press Conference, and Uni-versity of Oregon Alumni Association; member of Oregon Educational Policies Commission; appointed State senator near the end of the 1941 session of the Oregon Legislature; served in the S. A. T. C. in World War I; married to Miss Helen E. Dougherty, of San Jose, Calif., in 1923, and they have two daughters, Mary Margaret and Jane; member of the American Legion, Grange in sixth degree, Kappa Sigma, Sigma Delta Chi, Sigma Upsilon, and Rotary Club; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress and reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 112 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA PENNSYLVANIA (Population (1950), 10,498,012) SENATORS EDWARD MARTIN, Republican, of Washington, Pa., was born at Ten Mile, Pa., September 18, 1879; graduated from Waynesburg College, 1901; admitted to the bar, 1905; married Mary Charity Scott, December 1, 1908; two children, Edward S. Martin, attorney-at-law, Washington, Pa., married to Suzanne Coit, and Mary Charity, married to James Beall Murphy; served in all grades in the mil-itary establishment from private to major general; awarded the D. S. C. with Oak Leaf Cluster, Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster, and American Legion Dis-tinguished Service Medal; placed on the Initial General Staff Eligibility List; was auditor general, State treasurer, adjutant general and Governor of Pennsylvania; Republican State Chairman of Pennsylvania, 1928 to 1934; chairman of Governors’ Conference 1945-46; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1946. JAMES H. DUFF, Republican, former Governor of Pennsylvania; was born January 21, 1883, in Mansfield (now Carnegie), Allegheny County, Pa., where he has since continuously resided and where his father for 40 years was the Presbyterian minister; his ancestors were among the early colonists in America, some of them settling in New England in the early 1630’s, others in Pennsylvania in 1683, and in western Pennsylvania they were among the earliest pioneers in that area, settling in that country in 1768 when it was almost a complete wilderness; married October 26, 1909, to Jean Kerr Taylor; graduated from Princeton University, A. B. degree, in 1904; attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School the succeeding 2 years, and the next year the University of Pittsburgh Law School, where he graduated, LL. B. degree, in 1907; recipient of twenty-one honorary degrees; while the attorney generalship of Pennsylvania (1943-47) was the first public office held, has been active in civie and public affairs all his life; in 1912 was a national elector from Pennsylvania and was a delegate to the Republican National Conventions in 1932, 1936, 1940, and 1948; elected Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in November 1946; inaugurated on January 21, 1947, and served until January 15, 1951; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES Minar 5 aa ee OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 1 to 4, 26, 30, 36, 39, and 48. Population (1950), WILLIAM A. BARRETT, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born August 14, 1896; was graduated from Brown Preparatory School and St. Joseph’s College, Philadelphia, Pa.; realtor; served as member of the Board of Mercantile Apprais-ers, Philadelphia, Pa., for 4 years; director of war bond and war chest campaigns in his district; married; three children, one son in United States Navy; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to the Eighty-first LE a on November 2, 1948; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November ,. 1950, SECOND DISTRICT.—Ci1tYy OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 27, 34, 40, 44, 46, 51, and 52. Population (1950), 374.784. WILLIAM THOMAS GRANAHAN, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., July 26, 1895; graduate of Roman Catholic High School, Philadelphia, Pa., and LaSalle Extension University, Chicago, Ill.; World War veteran, serving in Army of Occupation in Germany; member of American Legion, Irish War Veterans, Catholic War Veterans, Forty and Eight, and Vet-erans of Foreign Wars; member of Democratic State Committee for 4 years; Democratic leader of the fifty-second ward, Philadelphia, Pa.; engaged in building business, later supervisor of inheritance tax, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and chief disbursing officer for State treasury, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; married Kathryn O’Hay McNally, of Easton, Pa., on November 20, 1943; elected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; elected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. PENNSYLVANIA Biographical THIRD DISTRICT.—City oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 5 to 20, 25, 31, and 45. Population (1950), 339,213. HARDIE SCOTT, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Cynwyd, Mont-gomery County, Pa., June 7, 1907, son of John R. K. Scott and Helen Hardie Scott; was graduated from the Taft School, Watertown, Conn., in 1926, and from Yale University with Ph. B. degree and from the University of Pennsylvania Law School with LL. B. degree; member of the Philadelphia Bar; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. EOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 24, 28, 29, 32, 37, 38, and 47. Population (1950), EARL CHUDOFF, Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., November 16, 1907; graduate of Central High School, Philadelphia; Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and Law School of the University of Pittsburgh; holds degrees of B. A., B. S. in Economics, and LL. B.; a lawyer, he is a member of the bar of several courts of Philadelphia County and the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania; building and loan examiner, Pennsylvania State Depart-ment of Banking, 1936-39; chief boatswain’s mate, United States Coast Guard Reserve (T); member of the Pennsylvania State Legislature, 1941-48; is married; has two children; home address, 1923 North Thirty-third Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CiTY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 23, 33, 35, 41, and 43. Population (1950), 371,645. WILLIAM JOSEPH GREEN, Jr., Democrat, of Philadelphia, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, Pa., March 5, 1910; was graduated from St. Joseph’s Prep School and attended St. Joseph’s College for 2 years; insurance broker; entered Army on March 22, 1944, at New Cumberland, Pa., and was transferred to Camp Lee, Va.; after completing basic, field, and technical training at Camp Lee was assigned to company as supply clerk; member of the American Legion and Catholic War Veterans; married Miss Mary E. Kelly, September 25, 1937, and they have five children— William J., 3d, Mary Elizabeth, Anne Theresa, Michael Francis, and Dennis Patrick; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CiTY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 21, 22, 42, 49, and 50. Population (1950), 320,694 HUGH D. SCOTT, Jr., Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa.; graduated from Randolph-Macon College in 1919, with A. B. degree, and from the University of Virginia in 1922, with LL. B. degree; also attended University of Pennsylvania; engaged in active practice of law since 1922; partner in firm of White, Williams & Scott; assistant district attorney, Philadelphia County, Pa., for 15 years; formerly chairman, criminal law committee, Pennsylvania Bar Association; also active in Philadelphia and American Bar Associations; president, Woodmere Art Gallery, 1943-44; director, Independence Hall Association; enrolled in student R. O. T. C. and S. A. T. C. during World War I; commander, United States Naval Reserve, World War II, with service in the Atlantic and with the Third Amphibious Force, Pacific Area; entered Japan on first day of occupation and also served as ordinary seaman, Merchant Marine, tanker duty, World War II; combat service, Korean War, on U. 8. 8. Valley Forge and with First Marine Brigade; in 1944 received first annual award, Foreign Traders Association, for “outstanding service to the Port of Philadelphia’; author, ‘Scott on Bailments’”’ and “How To Go Into Politics”; chairman, Republican National Committee 1948-49; member, Houston Post No. 3, American Legion; Hewitt-Hausler Post No. 154, V. F. W.; and Olney AMVETS; Alpha Chi Rho (national president, 1942-46), Phi Beta Kappa, Tau Kappa Alpha fraternities, Sons of the Revolution, Society of the Cincinnati, Patriotic Order Sons of America, Order of Independent Americans, Philadelphia Cricket Club, the Union League of Philadelphia, Germantown Lion’s Club; married Marian Chase, of Germantown, Pa.; one child, Marian Lee; elected November 7, 1950, to a fifth term in Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTY: Delaware. Population (1950) 413,065. BENJAMIN F. JAMES, Republican, of Rosemont, Delaware County, Pa.; born in Philadelphia, where he attended public schools and continued education extensively in the graphic arts, in which field he has served continuously; moved 114 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA to Radnor Township, Delaware County, in 1910; chairman of the board of directors of Franklin Printing Co., Philadelphia (founded in 1728 by Benjamin Franklin) ; enlisted in the United States Army, First World War, and is a charter member of Anthony Wayne Post, No. 418, American Legion; in 1929 became a member of the Radnor Township (Delaware County) Board of Commissioners, by appointment to fill a vacancy, and was subsequently elected to serve two full terms of 4 years each; in 1938 was elected to the house of representatives from Delaware County and served in the legislature during four consecutive terms; is past president of the Typothetae of Philadelphia (Printing Industries of Philadel-phia, Ine.), and Poor Richard Club of Philadelphia; is a member of the Pennsyl-vania Society of Sons of the Revolution, the Welsh Society, Wayne Lodge No. 581, F. & A. M.; Delhi Grotto, M. O. V. P. E. R., Lions Club of Wayne, Radnor Fire Company, Union League of Philadelphia, Merion Cricket Club; married to Frieda Pauline Gneiting; no children; elected November 2, 1948, to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected November 7, 1950, to the Eighty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Bucks and Lehigh (2 counties). Population (1950), 340,961. KARL C. KING, Republican, of Morrisville, Pa.; born in Plevna, Kans., January 26, 1897; educated at high school, Budklin, Kans.; Kansas State Teachers College, Columbia University, and Wharton School of Business; newspaper reporter; now engaged in farming and farm supply business; served in the United States Navy during World War I; married. Lora Gould in 1921; two daughters, Lora Eileen (Mrs. Willard Croft) and Karla Wanda (Mrs. Arthur W. Doyle, Jr.); elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 6, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Albert C. Vaughn. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chester and Lancaster (2 counties). Population (1950), 392,824. PAUL BARTRAM DAGUE, Republican, of Downingtown, Pa.; born in Whitford, Chester County, Pa., May 19, 1898; graduated from Downingtown High School; special studies at West Chester State Teachers College, and electrical engineering at Drexel Institute at Philadelphia; sheriff of Chester County, Pa., 1944-46; served in World War I as a private first class in the United States Marine Corps; past department finance officer of the American Legion; member of Legion National Publications Commission, Masonic fraternity, and Central Presbyterian Church; married Mary Virginia Williams; elected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—County: Lackawanna. Population (1950), 256,208. HARRY P. O'NEILL, Democrat; born in Dunmore, Pa., February 10, 1891; went to work at an early age in a breaker; worked evenings as an apprentice barber until the age of 16; at the age of 18 purchased his employer’s business; is presently an insurance broker; is a member of various fraternal and civic organizations, including the Woodmen of the World, the International Order of Elks, Knights of Columbus; is past president of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick of Lackawanna; is married to the former Miss Margaret S. Shea; has seven children, Attorney Harry, Jr., Joseph D., Attorney William G., Ensign Paul D., all veterans of World War II; Margaret A., Lois C., Marian T.; elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1928; reelected for 10 consecutive terms; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTY: Luzerne. Population (1950), 391,226. DANIEL J. FLOOD, Democrat, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; born at Hazleton, Pa., November 26, 1903; received early education in the public schools of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and St. Augustine, Fla.; graduate of Syracuse University, A. B. and M. A. degrees, and later attended Harvard Law School and Dickinson School of Law, Carlisle, Pa., graduating in 1929 with LL. B. degrees; admitted to the bar of the various State and Federal courts in 1930; member of the bar, District of Columbia and of the United States Supreme Court; member of Luzerne County, Pa., Pennsylvania State, and American Bar Associations; engaged in the practice of law since 1930; attorney for Home Owners’ Loan Corporation, 1934-35; appointed deputy attorney general for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and counsel for Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 1935-39; director, Bureau of Public Assist-ance Disbursements, State treasury, and executive assistant to State treasurer, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1941-44; married Catherine H. Swank on" September 24, 1949; member of many local civic, fraternal, beneficial, and social PENNSYLVANIA Biographical : 115 societies; president, Wilkes-Barre Chamber of Commerce, chairman, United States Marine Corps Volunteer Reserve Committee, and secretary, Democratic Society of Pennsylvania; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; elected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. Twrisiy DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population (1950), IVOR D. FENTON, Republican, of Mahanoy City (Buck Mountain), Pa., was born in that city, August 3, 1889; received early education in the public schools of Shenandoah and Mahanoy City, and later attended Bucknell Univer-sity at Lewisburg; graduated from Jefferson Medical College at Philadelphia, class of 1912; served internship at Ashland State Hospital and short time after opened offices in Mahanoy City; married to Theresa Lewis, Mahanoy City, June 23, 1915, and they have three children—Mary, Elizabeth, and Peggy; enlisted in the United States Army Medical Corps and was commissioned a lieutenant, August 8, 1917, rising to the rank of captain; served 20 months (11 months over-seas) with the Three Hundred and Fifteenth Infantry of the Seventy-ninth Division; discharged on June 6, 1919, and returned to Mahanoy City to resume medical practice; member of numerous fraternal and civic organizations; past commander and trustee of Post 74, American Legion, Mahanoy City, and surgeon for Hall-Reese Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars; past president of the Schuylkill County Medical Society, member of Pennsylvania State Medical Society, member American Medical Association; elected to Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the succeeding Congresses. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Berks. Population (1950), 254,942. GEORGE MILTON RHODES, Democrat, of Reading, Pa.; born February 24, 1898, in Reading, Pa.; wife, Margie Seiverling; veteran World War I; worked as printer, business manager, labor editor, and labor representative; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Con-gress November 7, 1950. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Pike, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1950), 212,705. JOSEPH L. CARRIGG, Republican, of Susquehanna, Pa., was born in Susquehanna, Susquehanna County, Pa., February 23, 1901; preliminary educa-tion at Laurel Hill Academy, Susquehanna, Pa.; college education, Niagara University, Niagara Falls, N. Y.—degree A. B.; legal education, Albany Law School, Albany, N. Y., and Dickinson Law School, Carlisle, Pa.; admitted to the bar of the various State and Federal courts in 1926; member of Susquehanna County Bar Association, Pennsylvania State and American Bar Associations; engaged in the practice of law since 1926; district attorney of Susquehanna County 1936-48; burgess of borough of Susquehanna 1948-51; married Catherine E. O’Neill of Forest City, Pa., on May 10, 1946; member of many local civic and fraternal societies; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 6, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Wilson D. Gillette. x FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cameron, Clinton, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, and Tioga (6 counties). Population (1950), 252,692. ALVIN RAY BUSH, Republican, of Wyno Farms, R. D. No. 2, Muncy, Pa.; born June 4, 1893, in Boggs Township, Clearfield County, Pa.; attended public grade school; president and general manager, Williamsport Transportation Co.; director, Lowry Electric Co.; past president, Pennsylvania Bus Association; breeder of pure-bred Guernsey cattle; former chairman, Lycoming County Republican Committee; director, Muncy Valley Hospital; corporal, Five Hundred and Forty-first Motor Truck Company, overseas service, World War I; member of American Legion, 40 and 8, thirty-second degree Mason, Pine Street Methodist Church, Pennsylvania Guernsey Breeders Association; wife, Lucinda M. Bush; one daughter, Shirley L. Bush, and one son, Alvin C. Bush; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Montgomery. Population (1950), 351,964. SAMUEL K. McCONNELL, Jr., Republican, of Wynnewood, Pa.; born in Eddystone, Pa., April 6, 1901; was graduated from the University of Penn-sylvania in June 1923, with B. S. degree in economics; investment banker; married; one child, Shirley; past master, Franklin Lodge, No. 134, F. and A. M._; 116 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress at a special election held January 18, 1944, reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bedford, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties). Population (1950), 221,271. RICHARD M. SIMPSON, Republican, of Huntingdon, Pa., was born August 30, 1900, in Huntingdon, Pa.; attended local schools and the University of Pitts-burgh, graduating therefrom in 1923, with an A. B. degree, and from Georgetown Law School with the degree of LL. B. in 1942; served during World War I in the Tank Corps at Raleigh, N. C.; married Grace Metz, who died March 6, 1945, and has two daughters, Susan and Barbara; member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Huntingdon County for two terms, 1935-37; married Mae J. Cox, whose sons are James, Edward, and Joseph Cox; they have a daughter, Kay Josephine; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election held on May 11, 1937; reelected to each succeeding Congress. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CountIES: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Popula-tion (1950), 372,571. WALTER MANN MUMMA, Republican, of Harrisburg, Pa.; born in Steelton, Pa., on November 20, 1890; attended public schools of Steelton and graduated from Steelton High School in 1908; entered the Pennsylvania State Forestry Academy at Mont Alto, Pa., and graduated in 1911 with the degree of Bachelor of Forestry; worked from 1911 to 1916 for the Pennsylvania State Forestry Service; engaged since 1916 in construction activities and builders supplies; in 1921 organ-ized own company which he and his son still operate; past potentate Zembo Temple, A. A. O. N. M. 8.; active in community affairs, such as hospital, Y. M. C. A., chamber of commerce, ete. ; member of St. Johns Lutheran Church, Steelton, Pa.; former register of wills, Dauphin County; elected to the Kighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Clarion, Elk, Forest, Jefferson, Venango, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1950), 233,942. LEON HARRY GAVIN, Republican, of Oil City, Pa.; born in Buffalo, N. Y., February 25, 1893; during the First World War served as sergeant in the Fifty-first Infantry, Sixth Division; married; three children; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—Counties: Carbon, Monroe, and Northampton (3 counties). Population(1950), 274,739. FRANCIS E. WALTER, Democrat, of Easton, Pa.; born May 26, 1894, at Easton, Pa.; B. A., George Washington University, LL. B., Georgetown Univer-sity; attorney at law; Northampton County solicitor, 1928-33; director, Easton National Bank; vice president, Broad Street Trust Co., Philadelphia; veteran World Wars I and II; married; elected to the Seventy-third and subsequent Congresses. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Adams, Franklin, and York (3 counties). Population (1950), 322,549. JAMES F. LIND, Democrat, 141 North Keesey Street, York, Pa.; born in York, Pa., October 17, 1900; attended public schools in York, leaving high school while a junior to enlist in the Army in 1917; served overseas with the Third Infantry Division (France and Germany); was discharged in 1920 as first sergeant; completed formal education at Penn State Extension School (night); profession: cost accountant; married in 1922 to Grace Elizabeth Stahl; one son, James R. Lind, born in 1931; active in veterans’ affairs, having been Adjutant, Service Officer, and Commander of York Post 127, American Legion; active in organized Reserves and National Guard prior to World War II; entered service as captain, January 1941; released from active duty in February 1946 with rank of lieutenant colonel; served overseas in ETO; officer in charge of contact office of Veterans Administration, York County, 1946-47; chief clerk to county commissioners, York County, 1948; member of Advent Lutheran Church, F. & A. M., American Legion, V. F. W., and O. R. C.; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. PENNSYLVANIA Biographical TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Blair, Centre, and Clearfield (3 counties). Population (1950), 290,198. JAMES E. VAN ZANDT, Republican, of Altoona, Blair County, Pa.; born in Altoona, Pa., December 18, 1898, son of James T. and Kathryn Smith Van Zandt, descendants of pioneer residents of Blair County; married Esther L. Meisen-hoelder of Parkston, S. Dak., September 21, 1947; educated in the public schools of Altoona and Pennsylvania Railroad Apprentice School; employed with the Pennsylvania Railroad from 1916 to 1938, starting as molder apprentice at Al-toona shops, and serving in several departments of the railroad; enlisted in the United States Navy in April 1917 for duration of World War, being credited with 2 years’ overseas service; reenlisted in United States Naval Reserves in 1919 and at present holds the rank of captain; called to active duty in 1941, serving for extended periods in the Pacific and North Atlantic; resigned his seat in Congress September 1943 and spent the next 3% years on active duty in the Pacific area; in addition to the World War I Victory Medal with overseas clasp, he received the Legion of Merit (combat) Medal, the Transport Clasp, the American Defense Service Medal, Fleet Clasp (U. 8. S. Saratoga), American Area Campaign Medal, European-African-Middle Eastern Area Campaign Medal, Pacific Area Campaign Medal, World War II Victory Medal, and the Philippine Liberation Ribbon; in addition to being awarded the Bronze Star for combat duty he has been given the Naval Reserve Medal and Star for more than 30 years of honorable service; member of Masonic Fraternity, the Elks, the Moose, the Eagles, the Lions, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, and AMVETS; twice commander of the Department of Pennsylvania V. F. W.; and three times commander in chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States; was elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and Seventy-eighth Congresses; resigned his seat in Congress during the second ses-sion of the Seventy-eighth Congress to report for active duty with the United States Navy; elected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.— COUNTIES: Fayette and Somerset (2 counties). Population (1950), 271,067. EDWARD L. SITTLER, Jr., Republican, of Uniontown, Pa.; born in Greens-burg, Pa., April 21, 1908; attended Uniontown grade schools; graduated Uniontown High School, 1926; Brown University with A. B. degree, 1930; married Harriet Long, 1936; daughter, Jane Anne, age 5; with Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York since 1937; enlisted United States Army, February 1943; promoted through ranks, private to captain of Ordnance; 10 months’ service European Theater; discharged August 1946; former member and president Uniontown School Board; elected mayor of Uniontown, 1947; vice president Pennsylvania Division, American Cancer Society for 1950; member and elder of the Central Christian Church of Uniontown, Rotary Club, Board of Directors Community Fund, and Y. M. C. A., Union Grange, Veterans of Foreign Wars, the AMVETS, the American Legion, the State Board of Directors of the Y. M. C. A., and captain in the Organized Reserve Corps; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Greene and Washington (2 counties). Population (1950) 254,252. THOMAS E. MORGAN, Democrat, of Fredericktown, Pa., born in Ellsworth, Pa., October 13, 1906; attended the public schools of Washington County, and was graduated from East Bethlehem Township High School at Fredericktown, Pa., in 1926; was graduated from Waynesburg College, Waynesburg, Pa., in 1930 with a bachelor of science degree; from Detroit College of Medicine and Surgery, Detroit, Mich., in 1933 with a bachelor of medicine degree, and from Wayne Uni-versity in 1934, with a doctor of medicine degree; served internship at Grace Hospital, Detroit, Mich., and since that time has practiced medicine and surgery at Fredericktown, Pa.; married Winifred Stait at Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Canada, August 26, 1937; they have one daughter, Mary Ann; member of the Pennsylvania State Medical Society, American Medical Association, and numer-ous fraternal and civic organizations; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. 118 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaver, Butler, and Lawrence (3 counties). Population(1950), 376,918. LOUIS E. GRAHAM, Republican, of Beaver, Beaver County, Pa.; born in -New Castle; Pa.; was graduated from Washington and Jefferson College in 1901; honorary degree: LL. D., from Grove City College, Grove City, Pa., and from Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa.; attorney at law; district attorney of Beaver County, Pa., 1912-24; special deputy attorney general of Pennsylvania, 1924-27; chief legal adviser of former sixth Federal prohibition district, 1927-29; United States attorney for .the western district of Pennsylvania, 1930-34; special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States in Pitts-burgh vote-fraud cases, 1934-36; single; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh and succeeding Congresses. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, and Indiana (3 counties). Population(1950), 366,429. : JOHN P. SAYLOR, Republican, of Johnstown, Cambria County, Pa.; born July 23, 1908, in Conemaugh Township, Somerset County, Pa.; son of the late Tillman K. Saylor and Minerva Phillips; attended Johnstown public schools and graduated from Johnstown High School in 1924, Mercersburg Academy in 1925, and Franklin and Marshall College in 1929 with A. B. degree; attained LL. B. degree at Dickinson Law School in 1933; married the former Grace Doerstler of Roherstown, Lancaster County, Pa., in 1937; two children, John Phillips 2d, age 10, and Susan Kathleen, age 4; elected city solicitor to succeed father in 1938; member of the firm of Spence, Custer, Saylor & Wolfe; member of Cambria County, Pennsylvania, and American bar associations; member of St. John’s Evangelical and Reformed Church of Johnstown; teacher of adult Sunday school class; lay member of Synodical Council of the Pittsburgh Synod of Evangelical and Reformed Church; past exalted ruler, Johnstown Lodge No. 175, B. P. O. E; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, AMVETS, Masons, Knights Templar, the Gourgas Lodge, Pennsylvania Consistory, Pittsburgh, and Jaffa Temple, Altoona; enlisted in the United States Navy, August 6, 1943; elected to the Eighty-first Congress in a special election held September 13, 1949; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTY: Westmoreland. Population (1950), 313,335. AUGUSTINE BERNARD KELLEY, Democrat, of Greensburg, Pa.; coal operator; born in New Baltimore, Pa., July 9, 1883, son of Abraham Francis and Mary Elizabeth (Kegg) Kelley; attended parochial and public grade schools and Greensburg (Pa.) High School; United States Military Academy, West Point, N. Y.; married Miss Ella Marie Bates, of Scottdale, Pa., June 24, 1913, and they have nine children—A. Regis, Robert V., Richard B., J. Hilary, Paul A., Marcella M., Thérese E., Kathleen A., and James R.; owner, Mammoth Coal & Coke Co., receiver of the Fairfield Coal Co., 1923-25; member of the Greensburg Board of Education, 1935-36; member of the scale committee of the Coal Operators Associa-tion of Western Pennsylvania, 1935-39; delegate to I. L.. O. Conference, Montreal, Canada, 1946; member of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers; life member of the Association of Graduates of the United States Mili-tary Academy; member of the Army Athletic Association; member Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.; member Pittsburgh Athletic Association, Pittsburgh, Pa.; member Ancient Order Hibernians; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Com-mittee on Education and Labor; delegate to I. L. O. Conference, Geneva, Switzer-land, 1947 and 1950; chairman 1944-46, subcommittee, House Labor Committee on Aid to Physically Handicapped; member, Advisory Committee on Prosthetic Devices, for Veterans’ Administration. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford, Erie, and Mercer (3 counties). Population (1950), 408,541. CARROLL D. KEARNS, Republican, of Farrell, Pa.; born in Youngstown, Ohio, May 7, 1900; educated in the public schools of New Castle, Pa.; doctor of music, Chicago Musical College, Chicago, Ill.; bachelor of science, West-minster College, New Wilmington, Pa.; master of education, University of Pitts-burgh, Pittsburgh, Pa.; special work, Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa.; employed by Pennsylvania Railroad in New Castle, Pa., and Chicago, Ill., as yard clerk, lever man, telegraph operator, and in car service department; worked PENNSYLVANIA Biographical way through college as a railroader; nationally known concert artist and conductor of instrumental and choral groups; engaged in building business in Chicago in the construction of homes and public buildings; teacher and administrator in Chicago Public Schools, Chicago, Ill.; teacher and supervisor, Greenville Public Schools, Greenville, Pa.; department head, Slippery Rock State Teachers College, Slippery Rock, Pa.; superintendent of schools, Farrell, Pa.; organizer and three times president, Farrell Chamber of Commerce and recipient of the award as outstanding citizen; president, Mercer County Tuberculosis and Public Health Society; member, Pennsylvania Board of Directors, Pennsylvania Tuberculosis Society; former president, Board of Directors Shenango Valley Community Fund; direc-tor Shenango Valley Concert Association; member American Legion, Preston H. Carroll Post 160; American Association of School Administrators, National Education Association, Pennsylvania State Education Association; Western Reserve Fish and Game Protective Association; member Erie Club, Erie, Pa., and Iroquois Club, Conneaut Lake, Pa., and Mercer County, Pa., Historical Society; recipient, American Legion Distinguished Service Award; recipient, Benjamin Rush Medal; district committee member, Mercer County Boy Scout Council; honorary member Sharon Volunteer Fire Department; honorary member, North-western and Western Volunteer Fire Departments; honorary fire chief, Titusville and Conneaut Lake Volunteer Fire Departments; honorary member, North-western Pennsylvania Sportsmen’s Association; member, numerous lodges and fraternal organizations; married Nora Mary Lynch, of Greenville, Pa.; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. M : TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards, 7, 8, and 11 to 14; boroughs of Chalfant, Churchill, Edgewood, Forest Hills, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Swissvale, Verona, and Wilkinsburg, townships of Braddock, Patton, Penn, Plum, and Wilkins. Population (1950), 295,036. HARMAR D. DENNY, Jr., Republican, of Pittsburgh, Pa., born in city of Allegheny, Pa., July 2, 1886; great-grandson of Harmar Denny, a member of Congress from 1829 until 1837; attended Allegheny Preparatory, St. Paul’s School, Yale University, B. A.; University of Pittsburgh Law School, LL. B.; attorney-at-law, investment counsellor, chairman of Advisory Committee, Denny Proper-ties; married to Mary Burgwin; has three children, Elizabeth Denny Saxman, James O’Hara Denny, and Anne Burgwin Denny; member, National Executive Board, Boy Scouts of America; American Legion, Carnegie Hero Fund Commis-sion, Board of Western Pennsylvania Safety Council, Society of the Cincinnati, and Sons of the American Revolution; secretary, Board of Trustees, and member of Session, First Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh; first lieutenant, Air Service, U. S. Army, and bombing pilot, World War I; lieutenant colonel, Air Corps, U. S. Army, assistant air inspector, Eastern Flying Training Command; graduate, Command and General Staff School, Fort Leavenworth, Kans., and Advanced Air Inspector’s School, A. A. F. T. A. C., Orlando, Fla., World War II; commis-sioned lieutenant colonel, Air Force, retired; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member of Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 21 and 25 to 27; boroughs of Aspinwall, Avalon, Bellevue, Ben Avon, Ben Avon Heights, Blawnox, Brackenridge, Bradford Woods, Cheswick, Edgeworth, Emsworth, Etna, Fox Chapel, Glenfield, Haysville, Leetsdale, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Sharpsburg, Springdale, Tarentum, and West View, townships of Aleppo, East Deer, Fawn, Franklin, Fraser, Hampton, Harrison, Harmar, Indiana, Kilbuck, Leet, Marshall, McCandless, O’Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, Springdale, and West Deer. Population (1950), 293,317. ROBERT J. CORBETT, Republican, Ross Township, Pittsburgh (29), Pa.; born in Avalon (Pittsburgh), Pa., August 25, 1905; graduated Allegheny College in 1927, with A. B. degree; graduated University of Pittsburgh in 1929, with M. A. degree; Wallace Research Fellow in History (University of Pittsburgh) 1927-29; senior high-school instructor, Coraopolis, Pa., 1929-38; publisher and editor of the North Pittsburgh Times; member of Bellevue Chamber of Commerce; Phi Delta Theta fraternity; Loyal Order of Moose, Elks, Eagles, Kiwanis, and Lions; Phi Alpha Theta, Delta Sigma Rho; board of directors, Suburban General Hospital; and Pennsylvania State Educational Association; married Ruth Mec-Clintock, of Ligonier, Pa.; one child, Eleanor Louise; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; elected sheriff of Allegheny County (Pittsburgh), 1941; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. 120 Congressional Directory RHODE ISLAND THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY County: City of Pittsburgh, wards 19, 20, 28 to 30, and 32; boroughs of Baldwin, Bethel, Brentwood, Bridgeville, Carnegie, Castle, Shannon, Coraopolis, Crafton, Dormont, Greentree, Heidelberg, Ingram, Mount Oliver, the fifth election district of McDonald, Mec-Kees Rocks, Oakdale, Rosslyn Farms and Thornburg; townships of Collier, Crescent, Findlay, Ken-nedy, Moon, Mount Lebanon, Neville, North Fayette, Robinson, Scott, South Fayette, Upper St. Clair, and Stowe. Population (1950), 340,676. - JAMES GROVE FULTON, Republican, of Dormont (Pittsburgh), Pa.; born March 1, 1903, in that part of Allegheny County, Pa., now known as Dormont Borough, the son of James Ernest and Emilie Fetterman Fulton; graduate of South Hills High School, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Pennsylvania State College, A. B. degree; Harvard Law School, LL. B. degree; studied in Fine Arts Department of Carnegie Institute of Technology; publisher Mount Lebanon News, Bethel Burro, Crafton-Ingram Times, and The News; farmer; lawyer, formerly partner with Pittsburgh banking law firm; member of the Allegheny County Board of Law Examiners from 1934 to 1942; solicitor for Dormont Borough, 1942; State Senator for the Forty-fifth district of Pennsylvania, 1939-40; volunteered for military service and commissioned lieutenant in the United States Naval Reserve on active duty in 1942; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; returned from the Philippine combat area in the Pacific to take seat in Congress on February 2, 1945; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Board of Visitors, Annapolis Naval Academy, on appointment by Speaker, 1947; chairman, special subcommittee of the Foreign Affairs Committee on displaced persons, Eightieth Congress; United States dele-gate to United Nations Conference on Trade and Employment at Habana, 1947— 48, on appointment by the President. : LL) THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLECHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 6, 9, 10, 15 to 18, and 22 to 24. Population (1950), 295,537. HERMAN P. EBERHARTER, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was born. in that city on April 29, 1892; graduated from the Duquesne University Law School, Pittsburgh, with LL. B. degree in 1925; engaged in the general practice of law since 1925 at Pittsburgh; member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, sessions of 1935-36; veteran of World War I; married, and has two children— Herman P., Jr., born December 7, 1935, and James Jacob, born, January 10, 1941; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress on November 3, 1936, and reelected to each succeeding Congress; member of Committee on Ways and Means. Residence: 3408 Parkview Avenue, fourth ward, Pittsburgh, Pa. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, ward 31; cities of Clairton, Du-quesne, and McKeesport; boroughs of Braddock, Dravosburg, East Pittsburgh, East McKeesport, Eden Park, Elizabeth, Glassport, Homestead, Liberty, Munhall, North Braddock, Pleasant Hills, Port Vue, Rankin, the first election district of Trafford, Turtle Creek, Versailles, Wall, Whitaker, West Homestead, West Elizabeth, West Mifflin, White Oak and Wilmerding; townships of Elizabeth, Forward, Jefferson, Lincoln, Mifflin, North Versailles, Snowden, South Versailles, and Versailles. Population (1950), 283,689. VERA BUCHANAN, Democrat, of McKeesport, Pa.; widow of Representative Frank Buchanan; twin daughters, Joan (Mrs. William M. Cavalcante) and Jane (Mrs. John E. Thomas, Jr.); elected to the Eighty-second Congress on July 24, 1951, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of her husband; residence, 1121 Washirigton Street, McKeesport, Pa. RHODE ISLAND (Population (1950), 791,896) SENATORS THEODORE FRANCIS GREEN, Democrat, of Providence, R. I.; born in Providence, October 2, 1867; educated in private schools and Providence High School; received A. B. degree at Brown University in 1887, and A. M. in 1890; Harvard Law School, 1888-90; Universities of Bonn and Berlin, Germany, 1890-92; admitted to Rhode Island bar in 1892, to United States Circuit Court in 1894, and United States Supreme Court in 1905; engaged in the practice of law at Providence since 1894; instructor in Roman law at Brown University, 1894-97; received a commission as lieutenant during the Spanish-American War and commanded a provisional company of Infantry; member of the State house RHODE ISLAND Biographical 121 of representatives in 1907; delegate to all National Democratic conventions from 1912 to 1948, inclusive; Presidential elector in 1912; chairman of Democratic State conventions in 1914, 1924, and 1926; during the World War was promi-nent in many patriotic activities, national committeeman from Rhode Island since 1936; elected Governor of Rhode Island in 1932; reelected in 1934 by largest vote ever cast for any candidate for any office in the State; trustee, Butler Hospital, 1900-1919; secretary, Rhode Island branch of American Red Cross, 1911-18; United States delegate to its international convention in 1912; organizer of the Brown Union and chairman of its board of management, 1903-7; director, National Exchange Bank of Providence, 1904-9; president, J. & P. Coats (R. I.), Inc., 1912-23; officer, director, and receiver of various railroad companies and many other business corporations; chairman, Providence City Plan Commission, 1917-19; president, Morris Plan Bankers Association (National), 1924-27; trustee, Brown University, 1900-1929; at present is member of board of fellows, Brown University, since 1929; trustee, Rhode Island School of Design since 1900, and vice president, 1907-39; trustee, Providence Public Library since 1903, and secretary since 1908; chairman, board of directors, Plantations Bank of Rhode Island; director, Bankers Security Life Insurance Society (of New York); member, Council of Legal Education of American Bar Association, 1924-37; member of many educational, philanthropic, and social organizations; fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1903; member Phi Beta Kappa, Psi * Upsilon fraternities, and Rheno-Colonia, zu Bonn (Germany); hereditary member and President, Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Rhode Island; National Grange 7°; elected to the United States Senate on November 3, 1936, for the term ending January 3, 1943; reelected November 3, 1942, by a majority about three times that of 1936; reelected November 2, 1948, by a plurality of about 60,000. JOHN O. PASTORE, Democrat, of Providence, R. I.; lawyer; born in Provi-dence, March 17, 1907; married Elena Caito in 1941; three children, John O., Jr., Frances Elizabeth, and Louise Marie; educated in Providence public schools and graduated from Northeastern University with Bachelor of Laws degree; elected to House of Representatives 1934; reelected 1936; assistant attorney general 1937-38 and 1940-44; elected lieutenant governor November 7, 1944, and as-sumed the office of Governor on October 6, 1945; elected Governor November 5, 1946; reelected Governor November 2, 1948; honorary degrees: Providence College, Doctor of Laws; Rhode Island College of Education, Doctor of Educa-tion; Rhode Island College of Pharmacy, Doctor of Science; Rhode Island State College, Doctor of Laws; Bryant College, Doctor of Science in Business Adminis-tration; elected to United States Senate November 7, 1950, to fill unexpired term of J. Howard McGrath. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bristol and Newport. PROVIDENCE COUNTY: City of Providence, repre- sentative districts, 1 to 7; cities of Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket; towns of Cumberland, East Providence, and Lincoln. Population (1950), 366,268. AIME J. FORAND, Democrat, of Cumberland, R. I.; post office address R. F. D. 2, Valley Falls, R. I.; born in Fall River, Mass., May 23, 1895; attended Magnus Commercial School; took extension course (home) Columbia University; honorary degree of LL. D., Providence College, June 5, 1951; newspaper reporter and branch office manager, 6 years; secretary to Hon. Jeremiah E. O’Connell, Member of Congress, 1929-30, and to Hon. Francis B. Condon, Member of Congress, 1930-35; chief, Rhode Island State division of soldiers’ relief and commandant of the Rhode Island Soldiers’ Home, 1935-36; member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives, 1923-27; sergeant, first-class, Motor Transport Corps, World War I; served in France 12 months; married in 1931 to Gertrude Bedard; member of American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, Elks, Eagles, Knights of Columbus, fourth degree, Club Marquette, Club Canadien, and L’Union St. Jean Baptiste d’Amerique; elected on Novem-ber 3, 1936, to the Seventy-fifth Congress; elected to Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; chairman, Democratic caucus Eightieth Congress; chairman, Board of Visitors, United States Coast Guard Academy, 1948; member of Ways and Means Committee. 122 Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Kent and Washington. PROVIDENCE COUNTY: City of Providence, representative districts, 8 to 25; city of Cranston; towns of Burrillville, Foster, Gloucester, Johnson, North Providence, North Smithfield, Scituate, and Smithfield. Population (1950), 413,663. JOHN EDWARD FOGARTY, Democrat, of Harmony, R. I.; born in Provi-dence, R. I., March 23, 1913; attended La Salle Academy, Providence College; June 1946, awarded honorary degree (Doctor of Political Science) by Providence College; married; member, Knights of Columbus, Elks, Eagles, president of the Bricklayers Union No. 1 of Rhode Island; member, Smithfield Sportsmen’s Club; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Hightieth, FEighty-first, and FEighty-second Congresses. SOUTH CAROLINA (Population (1950), 2,117,027) SENATORS BURNET RHETT MAYBANK, Democrat, born in Charleston, S. C., March 7, 1899; graduate of Porter Military Academy and College of Charleston; veteran, World War I; married Elizabeth deRosset Myers in 1923 (died 1947); married Mrs. Mary Cecil, 1948; children, Burnet, Junior; Mrs. George D. Paul, and Elizabeth; Episcopalian; cotton exporter, alderman, city of Charleston, 1927-30; mayor of Charleston, 1931-38; chairman, South Carolina Public Service Authority, 1934-38; Governor of South Carolina, 1939-41; delegate of all Democratic city, county, State, and national conventions since 1930; national commiiteeman; was appointed by President Roosevelt on the Public Works Administration and by President Truman as a member of the American Battle Monuments Commis-sion; elected to finish unexpired term of Honorable James F. Byrnes, 1941; reelected in 1942; reelected in 1948. OLIN D. JOHNSTON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, S. C.; born near Honea Path, Anderson County, S. C., November 18, 1896; father and mother were E. A. and Lelia (Webb) Johnston, of Anderson, S. C.; married Miss Gladys E. Atkinson, of Spartanburg, S. C., on December 27, 1924; Baptist denomination; was graduated from Spartanburg Junior College in 1915, from Wofford College with A. B. degree in 1921, and from the University of South Carolina with M. A. degree in 1923 and LL. B. degree in 1924; during the First World War served as sergeant, Company C, One Hundred and Seventeenth Engineers, Forty-second Division, serving 18 months overseas; received regimental citation; moved from Anderson to Spartanburg, S. C., in 1924; lawyer, firm of Johnston & Williams; successful lawyer in all courts, both State and Federal; member of the State house of representatives from Anderson County 1923-24 and from Spartanburg County 1927-30; Democratic national executive committeeman 1935-40 and 1944-48; candidate for Governor in 1930, leading field of eight candidates by 15,000 majority in first primary and in second primary missed nomination by less than a thousand votes; in 1934 led field of eight candidates by approximately 20,000 votes in first primary and in second primary defeated opponent by almost 35,000 majority; elected Governor for a second 4-year term in 1942; member of the American Legion, Forty and Eight, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and Disabled American Veterans; member of the Baptist Church and for many years interested in work of Baptist Young People; thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Optimist, member of Jr. O. U. A. M., Red Men, Woodmen of the World, Knights of Pythias, and B. P. O. Elks; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1944, for the term ending January 3, 1951; reelected on November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.— CounTIES: Allendale, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, Dor-chester, Hampton, and Jasper (9 counties). Population (1950), 341,940. L. MENDEL RIVERS, Democrat, of Charleston, S. C., born in Gumville, Berkeley County, S. C., September 28, 1905; educated in public schools, College of Charleston, and University of South Carolina; admittedto South Carolina bar in 1932; served in the South Carolina Legislature, 1933-36; 1936 to 1940, served as special attorney, United States Department of Justice; admitted to EE EEE ——————————— SOUTH CAROLINA Biographical | 123 practice before Supreme Court of United States; member of Charleston Chapter of Elks, Landmark Lodge of F. & A. M., Junior Order of United American Mechanics, Blue 'Key Honorary Fraternity, Grace ¥piscopal Church, Charleston, S. C.; married, has two daughters and one son; elected to Seventy-seventh Congress, November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress; reelected to Eightieth Congress; reelected to Eighty-first Congress; reelected to Eighty-séecond Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.— CoUNTIES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland, and Sumter (8 counties). Population (1950), 415,222. JOHN JACOB RILEY, Democrat, of Sumter, S. C.; born in Orangeburg, S. C., February 1, 1895; elementary training in Orangeburg County school; was grad-uated from Orangeburg (S. C.) High School and from Wofford College, Spartan-burg, S. C., with A. B. and A. M. degrees; taught in the Orangeburg city schools and at Clemson A. & M. College, Clemson, S. C.; served in the United States Navy in World War I; has been engaged in the real estate and insurance business in Sumter, S. C., for the past 25 years, director of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Sumter; past president of Sumter Chamber of Commerce, Wofford College Alumni Association, and of the Sumter Rotary Club; past post commander of Post No. 15, the American Legion; past district commander, the American Legion; head of boys’ work, Sumter Post, the American Legion, 1926-44; member, Forty and Eight, B. P. O. E., K. of P., Mason; member, the Methodist Church; married to Corinne Anderson Boyd, of Spartanburg, S. C., in 1917; one daughter, Mrs. Douglas Warren Purdy, Erie, Pa., and one son, O. Beverley 3d; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress, the Eightieth Congress, and the Eighty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.— CoUNTIES: Abbeville, Anderson, Edgefield, Greenwood, McCormick, Newberry, Oconee, Pickens, and Saluda (9 counties). Population (1950), 307,557. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN DORN, Democrat; born in Greenwood County, S. C., April 14, 1916, the son of Pearl Griffith Dorn and the late T. E. Dorn; attended Greenwood public schools; in 1938 was elected to the South-Carolina House of Representatives and became youngest member of that body; in 1940 was elected South Carolina State senator at the age of 24 and became youngest State senator in the history of South Carolina; in 1942 volunteered for the Army Air Forces and resigned from the State senate; served for 3% years as an enlisted man, serving in European Theater of Operations with the Ninth Air Force; in 1946 was elected to Congress and became one of the four youngest members of the Eightieth Congress; in 1948 was runner-up in a field of five for the United States Senate, polling more than 83,000 votes; in 1950 was elected to Eighty-second Congress; according to all available records is the only man in American history who, in less than 10 years, served in a State house, State senate, 3% years in the Army, United States Congress, and made a strong race for the United States Senate; member of American Legion, 40 & 8, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Air Force Association, Farm Bureau, Grange, Junior Chamber of Com-merce, Woodmen of the World, Mason, Moose, Baptist Church; State residence; Route 1, Greenwood; occupation, farmer. FOURTH DISTRICT.— CounTIES: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Popu-lation (1950), 393,231. : JOSEPH RALEIGH BRYSON, Democrat, of Greenville, S. C., was born in Brevard, N. C., January 18, 1893; moved to Greenville, S. C., in 1900; began working at age of 10 and subsequently spent 15 years as worker in textile mills of Greenville; meantime, attended public schools of Greenville and was graduated from Furman University, with B. A. degree in 1917, and from the University of South Carolina, with LL. B. degree, in 1920; received honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Bob Jones University in 1948; lawyer; volunteered as a private in World War I and served for the duration of the war; member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, 1921-24; served in the State senate, 1929-32; married Miss Ruth Rucker, of Swansea, S. C., and they have five children— Joseph Robert (M. D)., Ruth, William J., David, and Judy; member of the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, and the Baptist Church, thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Woodman, Redman, Junior, Merrymaker, Moose (Loyal Order of Moose), and United Commercial Traveler; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress on November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress on November 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 10 EE 124 Congressional Directory SOUTH DAKOTA — 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Con-gross on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on Novem-ber 7, 1950. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1950), 266,321. JAMES PRIOLEAU RICHARDS, Democrat, of Lancaster, S. C.; born at Liberty Hill, Kershaw County, S. C., August 31, 1894, the son of Norman Smith Richards and the late Phoebe Gibbes Richards; worked on a farm and attended county schools of Kershaw County until 17 years of age; attended Clemson Col-lege; graduate of the University of South Carolina; began the practice of law in Lancaster, S. C., September 1921 and has practiced there since that date; elected judge of probate of Lancaster County in 1922, and reelected in 1926 and 1930; while serving third term was elected to the Seventy-third Congress; reelected to Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; volunteered as private at Camp Styx, S. C., in 1917, a few days after war was declared, and served throughout the war in this country and France with Trench Mortar Bat-tery, Headquarters Company, One Hundred and Eighteenth Infantry Regiment, Thirtieth Division, as private, corporal, and sergeant, and was commissioned as Reserve second lieutenant in February 1919, being discharged March 31, 1919; mar-ried on November 4, 1925, to Katharine Hawthorne Wylie, of Lancaster County; they have two sons—Richard Evans and Norman Smith—and one daughter—Jane; member of the Masons, American Legion, and Junior Order United American Mechanics, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other fraternal organizations; member of the Foreign Affairs Committee since 1935 and chairman since May 15, 1951. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Lee, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg (9 counties). Population (1950), 383,161. JOHN L. McMILLAN, Democrat, Florence, S. C.; son of the late M. L. and Mary Alice Keith McMillan, Marion County, S. C.; educated Mullins, S. C,, graded and high schools; academic course, University of North Carolina, and completed the Commerce and Finance School, also Law School, at University of South Carolina; member all-time all-South Carolina football team; enlisted in the U. S. Navy at Columbia, S. C., August 2, 1918, relieved from active duty December 17, 1918, and discharged from U. 8S. Naval Reserve September 30, 1921; married Margaret English, of Mount Pleasant, Tenn., October 1936; mem-ber of Baptist Church, Masons, Elks, and Jr. O. U. A. M.; member American Legion Post and Forty and Eight of Florence, S. C., National Blue Key fraternity; served as chairman, House District Committee, during the Seventy-ninth Congress and again selected as its chairman for the Eighty-first Congress; ranks No. 5 on the 30-member House Agriculture Committee; member of National Capital Sesquicentennial Commission, representing the House; elected to Congress in 1938 over five opponents, and reelected over one opponent in 1940 by a majority of 18,000 votes; reelected in 1942 over two opponents by a majority of 17,000 votes; reelected in 1944 without opposition; reelected in 1946 over two opponents with majority of 20,000 votes and without opposition in 1948; also without opposition in 1950. SOUTH DAKOTA (Population (1950), 652,740) SENATORS KARL E. MUNDT, Republican, of Madison, S. Dak.; born in Humboldt, 8S. Dak., June 3, 1900, the only son of F. J. and Rose E. Mundt, pioneer hardware merchants of that community; educated in the public schools of Humboldt, Pierre, and Madison, in South Dakota; A. B. from Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., 1923; A. M. from Columbia University, New York City, 1927; suc-cessively a school teacher and school superintendent in Bryant, S. Dak.; college speech and social science teacher in Fastern State Normal School, Madison, S. Dak. farm operator and real estate and insurance business; appointed to South EEEE ————————————————S SOUTH DAKOTA Biographical : 125 Dakota Game and Fish Commission (bipartisan) in 1931 for a 6-year term; one- time national vice president of Izaak Walton League; member of Delta Sigma Rho, Pi Kappa Delta, and Tau Kappa Alpha (honorary societies) ; cofounder and holder of membership certificate No. 1, of National Forensic League, of which he is now national president; editor of the Rostrum; associate editor, the Speaker; former editorial writer, Outdoor America, author of articles in Successful Farming, Collier’s, U. S. News and World Report, The Christian Advocate, The Country Gentleman, Liberty magazine, Tomorrow, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Nation’s Schools, Fairplay (London), and others; past governor, Minnesota-Dakotas District of Kiwanis International; member National Press Club and the University Club, Washington, D. C.; married in 1924; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress by a vote of 111,693 to 95,315 for his Democratic opponent; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress by a vote of 134,928 to 91,874 for his Democratic opponent; reelected to Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, and Eightieth Congresses with majorities of over 60 percent in each election; elected to the United States Senate from South Dakota in 1948 for the term ending January 3, 1955. FRANCIS CASE, Republican, of Custer, S. Dak.; born in Iowa; operates ranch in the Black Hills; former newspaper editor and publisher; B. A. and LL. D., Dakota Wesleyan University, and M. A., Northwestern University; married Myrle Graves in 1926; children, Jane Marie, 1935; Francis H., Jr. (d), 1945; served in United States Marine Corps, World War I; State Regent of Education 1931-33; elected to House of Representatives from Second District of South Dakota in 1936 with 51.6 percent of votes cast; reelected in 1938 with 61.4 percent; in 1940 with 66.1 percent; 1942 with 71.8 percent; in 1944 with 69 percent; in 1946 with 73.6 percent; in 1948 with 65.9 percent; in 1950 elected to United States Senate, 160,313 to 90,710; House record includes: Case-Wheeler Water Conservation Act, 1937 and 1940; Renegotiation of Excess War Profits, 1942; Government Corpo-rations Control Act (joint sponsor), 1945; United Nations Invitation to United States, 1945; “Case Bill”’—Labor Relations (vetoed); 1946; Synthetic Liquid Fuels Act, 1948, and active in behalf of appropriations to implement 70-group Air Force; member House Committee on Appropriations, 1939-51; House Select Com-mittee on Foreign Aid (1947-48), and Joint Congressional Aviation Policy, Eight-ieth Congress; member Senate Committee on Public Works. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aurora, Beadle, Bon Homme, Brookings, Brown, Brule, Buffalo, Camp-bell, Charles Mix, Clark, Clay, Codington, Davison, Day, Deuel, Douglas, Edmunds, Faulk, Grant, Hamlin, Hand, Hanson, Hughes, Hutchinson, Hyde, Jerauld, Kingsbury, Lake, Lincoln, McCook, McPherson, Marshall, Miner, Minnehaha, Moody, Potter, Roberts, Sanborn, Spink, Sully, Turner, Union, Walworth, and Yankton (44 counties). Population (1950), 491,882. HAROLD O. LOVRE, Republican, of Watertown, S. Dak.; born in Toronto, S. Dak., January 30, 1904; graduated from the Toronto High School in the year 1922, spent 2 years at St. Olaf, Northfield, Minn., and 3 years at the University of South Dakota at Vermillion, graduating in the year 1927, with an LL. B. degree; practiced law in Hayti, S. Dak., from 1927 to 1944 and at Watertown, S. Dak., from 1944 to 1948; past president of the State Board of Agriculture of South Dakota; past state chairman of the Republican Party for South Dakota; served two terms in the State senate, representing Kingsbury and Hamlin coun-ties, S. Dak.; member of the Lambda Chi Alpha and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; ~ member of the Masonic bodies; former states attorney of Hamlin County, S. Dak., for 8 years; married Viola Florell of Dell Rapids, S. Dak., in 1928 and have four daughters, Janice Ann, 20; Carmen Nedra, 16; Sandra Mae, 14; and Linda Kay, 6; elected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Armstrong, Bennett, Butte, Corson, Custer, Dewey, Fall River, Gregory, Haakon, Harding, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Lyman, Meade, Mellette, Pennington, Perkins, Shannon, Stanley, Todd, Tripp, Washabaugh, and Ziebach (24 counties). Population (1950), 158,147. E. Y. BERRY, Republican, of McLaughlin, S. Dak.; born at Larchwood, Iowa, October 6, 1902; practicing lawyer, newspaper publisher, and editor; LL. B., University of South Dakota; married Rose Hartinger in 1928; children, Robert E. Berry, born 1930; Nila Lee Berry, born 1934; member, State senate 1939, and 1941 legislative sessions; member, Missouri River States Committee, 1940-43; editor, State Bar Association Journal, 1938-50; member, State Board of Regents of Education, 1946-50; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950, with 60.5 percent of votes cast. 126 : Congressional Directory TENNESSEE TENNESSEE (Population (1950), 3,291,718) SENATORS KENNETH McKELLAR, Democrat, of Memphis; born in Richmond, Dallas County, Ala.; moved to Tennessee in 1892 after graduating in law at the University of Alabama; B. A.,, M. A., LL. B., and LL. D. (honorary), 1918, University of Alabama and Tusculum College, D. C. L., Lincoln Memorial University; lawyer; bachelor; Presbyterian; thirty-second degree Mason; Shriner; Odd Fellow; and a member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity; Presidential elector, 1904; delegate to Democratic National Convention, 1908; elected, November 9, 1911, to the Sixty-second Congress; reelected to the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses; nominated as a Démocratic candidate for United States Senator in a State-wide primary on November 20, 1915, and in the run-off December 15, 1915; elected to the United States Senate on November 7, 1916, by a majority of 25, 498, and took his seat March 5, 1917; elected as delegate at ‘large to the Democratic National Convention at San Francisco in 1920; renominated for United States Senate by a majority of 55,065 and reelected by a majority of 80,323 for the term expiring March 3, 1929; renominated for a third term in the Senate by a majority of 55,828, and reelected by a majority of 55,070 for the term expiring in 1935; delegate to Democratic National Conventions, 1932, 1936, 1940, and 1944; elected national committeeman for Tennessee, February 23, 1933; renominated and reelected to the United States Senate in 1934 for the term expiring January 3, 1941; renominated and reelected again for the term expiring January 3, 1947; was nominated by 72,822 majority and elected by 72,547 majority in 1946; unani-mously elected President pro tempore on January 6, 1945; on the death of Presi-dent Roosevelt, April 12, 1945, the Vice President having assumed the duties of the office of President of the United States, as President pro tempore he assumed the Vice President’s duties as presiding officer of the Senate; author of the book, Tennessee Senators, published in August 1942; renominated and reelected to the United States Senate in 1946 for the term expiring in 1953; is the only sen-ator ever to be elected to a sixth term by the people; some of the principal ac-complishments in House and Senate are: (1) Roads—was sworn in on Decem-ber 4, 1911, and introduced a bill for ‘Federal Aid to Roads’ on December 16, 1911, 12 days thereafter, and made a speech thereon on April 27, 1912; some 28 Congressmen had introduced similar bills; Speaker Champ Clark appointed a committee of eight to report a bill that all could agree upon; Judge Saunders of Virginia and he (McKellar) were the most active men on this committee and finally got a bill that passed the House and Senate and became the law; Senator John H. Bankhead, Sr., piloted the bill through the Senateon June 29, 1916, and it was signed by the President on July 11, 1916; (2) a free bridge across the Mississippi River at Memphis, which bill became the law in the last days of the 1912 session (Record, vol. 48, p. 9715); it did not cost the United States or Tennessee a cent; (3) a bill appropriating more than 5 million dollars for a second automobile and traffic bridge at Memphis, now nearly complete; (4) creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority and the building of the various dams of that Authority, many of them being built over the protest and opposition of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority; (5) bill creating the air-mail service between Wash-ington, D. C., and New York; and then between New York and San Francisco which established the air-mail service (Record, vol. 90, p. A3943); (6) work for woman’s suffrage in the Congress and personally helping secure the approval of the Constitutional amendment by the Tennessee Legislature as the thirty-sixth and final State to ratify, by four votes majority; (7) as acting chairman and chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, appropriation of funds for the greatest war ever fought, 1941-45, nearly 400 billions of dollars; (8) uniform work on rivers and harbors and National Government parks; (9) uniform support of all farm legislation; (10) uniform support of all veterans’ legislation; (11) uniform support of all legislation for the betterment of labor and, out of hundreds of bills passed, his position has never been questioned except on two bills; (12) uniform support of all progressive postal legislation, including post offices built throughout the country—72 being built in Tennessee at a cost of $12,469,337.00; (13) uniform support of all progressive civil-service legislation, serving on both the Post Office and Civil Service committees; (14) uniformly opposed communism and other isms EEE —————S TENNESSEE ; Biographical 127 of like kind; (15) uniform support of all education legislation and all appropria-tions therefor; (16) uniform support of all pension legislation and appropriations therefor; (17) Atomic Energy—in 1942 Secretary Stimson sent for him as acting chairman of the Committee on Appropriations and got him to agree to appropriate about 2 billions of dollars in various items looking to the discovery of atomic energy; built the principal plant in Tennessee; the war with Germany closed before the atomic bomb was perfected but it was perfected in time to win the Japanese war; (18) unanimously elected President pro tempore of the Senate on January 6, 1945, and as such officer attended Cabinet meetings; (19) elected each time by a vote of all the people of Tennessee. ESTES KEFAUVER, Democrat, of Chattanooga; son of Robert Cooke and Phedonia Estes Kefauver: born at Madisonville, in Monroe County, Tenn., July 26, 1903; educated in the public schools of Monroe County; received A. B. degree at University of Tennessee in 1924, and LL. B. degree at Yale University in 1927; honorary degrees: Doctor of Laws at Western Reserve University; Tusculum College, George Pepperdine College; Doctor of Civil Law and honorary chancellor at Union College; practiced law at Chattanooga since 1927; member of the firm of Kefauver, Duggan & Miller; married to Miss Nancy Patterson Pigott, of Glas-gow, Scotland; three daughters, Eleanor, age 10; Diane Carey, age 4; and Gail Estes, 1 year; one son, David, age 6; served as commissioner of finance and taxa-tion, State of Tennessee, for 4 months in 1939; member of the First Baptist Church of Chattanooga, the Rotary and the Mountain City Clubs, the Kappa Sigma fra-ternity, and the American and State Bar Associations; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, and Eightieth Congresses; served on Committee on the Judiciary and Select Committee on Small Business; author of book ‘Crime in America’’; coauthor of book ‘20th Century Congress’; elected to United States Senate on November 2s 1948, for term ending January 3, 1955; member of Armed Services Committee, Committee on the Judiciary, and District of Columbia Committee; chairman of Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Haw-J Jetoreon, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1950), BRAZILLA CARROLL REECE, Republican, Johnson City; born at Butler, Tenn., December 22, 1889; reared on farm; member of bar; chairman, Carter County Bank, First National Bank of Jonesboro, the Sullivan County Bank and Farmers Bank at Blountville; publisher, Bristol Herald Courier, Bristol, Va.-Tenn.; chairman of Republican National Committee 1946-48, and Committee-man for Tennessee; served as a member of the Temporary National Economic Committee and of the Special House Committee on Postwar Economic Policy and Planning; educated in Watauga Academy, Carson and Newman College, New York University, and University of London; LL. D., Cumberland University; member, American Economic Association, American Statistical Association, American Academy of Political Science, and American, Tennessee and Federal Bar Associations; assistant secretary and instructor in New York University, 1916-17; director of the School of Business Administration in New York Univer-sity and instructor in economics (day division), 1919-20; enlisted May 1917, and served in the American Expeditionary Forces October 1917 to July 1919 with the Twenty-sixth Division; commanded Third Battalion, One Hundred and Second Regiment, Infantry; decorated with Distinguished Service Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Purple Heart, and Croix de Guerre with palm, and cited for bravery by Marshal Pétain, Generals Pershing, Edwards, Hale, and Colonel Lewis; married Louise Despard Goff, 1923; daughter Louise Despard Goff Reece, born 1928; member, Newcomen Society, and following clubs—Chevy Chase, Metro-politan (D. C.), Lotos (N. Y.), and Johnson City Country; elected to the Sixty-seventh (youngest member), Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, and Seventy-ninth Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress, having relinquished his seat after his election as chairman of the Republican Party. Home address: Johnson City, Tenn. 128 C ongresstonal Directory TENNESSEE SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Knox, Loudon, Morgan, Roane, Scott, and Union (9 counties). Population (1950), 466,430. gs HOWARD H. BAKER, Republican, Huntsville, Tenn.; born in Somerset, Ky., January 12, 1902; son of James F. and Helen Keen Baker; educated in public schools of Scott and Knox counties; graduated University of Tennessee, A. B. degree June 1922, LL. B. degree June 1924; lawyer; admitted to the bar 1923; member Tennessee Legislature 1929-30; attorney general, nineteenth judicial circuit (counties of Fentress, Scott, Morgan, Campbell, Anderson, and Claiborne) 1934-48; member of law firm Baker and Baker, Huntsville, Tenn.; delegate to Republican National Convention from State at large in 1940 and 1948, chairman, Tennessee delegation, 1948; Presbyterian; married; wife, the former Irene Bailey, Sevierville, Tenn.; three children, Howard H. Baker, Jr., Mary Elizabeth Baker, and Beverly Irene Baker; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Grundy, Hamilton, McMinn, Marion, Meigs, Mon-roe, Polk, Rhea, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (14 counties). Population (1950), 423,109. JAMES B. FRAZIER, Jr., Democrat, of Chattanooga, Tenn., was born in Chattanooga, June 23, 1890, son of James B. Frazier and Louise Douglas Keith Frazier; his father, James B. Frazier, was twice Governor of Tennessee and United States Senator from Tennessee; educated in the public schools of Chattanooga, Baylor Preparatory School, University of Virginia, in School of Liberal Arts and Law; graduated Chattanooga College of Law in 1914 with LL. B. degree; admitted to bar June 1914, and has practiced law continuously at Chattanooga since, except for 2 years while serving in the Army during World War I; volunteered for service April 21, 1917; was sent to First Officers Training School, Fort Ogle-thorpe, Ga.; commissioned second lieutenant of cavalry, August 1, 1917; recom-missioned first lieutenant, Field Artillery, November 1, 1917; promoted to captain, Field Artillery, and assigned to Eighty-first Division; served as instructor Field Artillery Officers Training School, Eighty-first Division—Ilater assigned as instruc-tor, Field Artillery, Officers Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky.; discharged with rank of major, F. A., in March 1919; immediately reentered practice of law at Chattanooga as member of firm of Frazier & Frazier, of which his father was senior member, and continued as member of this firm until death of senior member in 1937; appointed United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, September 25, 1933; reappointed 1934, 1938, 1942, serving until April 12, 1948, at which time he submitted his resignation in order to become a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Representative in United States Congress from Third District of Tennessee; married Elizabeth Hope, daughter of Dr. W. T. Hope of Chattanooga, March 30, 1939; has one daughter, Elizabeth Hope Frazier, age 11 years; member Tennessee and American Bar Associations, S. A. E. Fraternity, Methodist Episcopal Church, and American Legion; received Democratic nomina-tion in primary August 5, 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Robertson, Smith, Sumner, and Trousdale (12 counties). Population (1950), 200,899. ALBERT GORE, Democrat, Carthage, Tenn., born December 26, 1907; B. S., LL. B.; married; one daughter, one son; elected to the Seventy-sixth and successive Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, De Kalb, Franklin, Giles, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, Rutherford, and Wilson (11 counties). Population (1950), 233,930. JOSEPH L. EVINS, Democrat, of Smithville, Tenn.; born in De Kalb County, Tenn., October 24, 1910, the son of James Edgar and Myrtie Goodson Evins; attended public schools of De Kalb County; graduated Vanderbilt University, A. B., 1933; Cumberland University School of Law, LL. B., 1934; George Washington University Law 1938-40; engaged in practice of law in Tennessee; attorney and assistant secretary, Federal Trade Commission 1935-41; served in Army 4 years, 1942-46; 2 years overseas; discharged as major; past chairman, De Kalb County Democratic Executive Committee; received Democratic nomination as State senator, Twelfth Senatorial District, comprising De Kalb, Rutherford, and Cannon Counties, while serving overseas, but declined to accept the nomination during continuance of the war; married the former Ann Smartt, daughter of Judge and Mrs. R. W. Smartt, McMinnville, Tenn.; three daughters; member of Tennessee and American Bar Associations, American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason, Shriner; Church of Christ; Phi Kappa Sigma and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; elected to Eightieth Congress November 5, EEE TENNESSEE Biographical 31 129 EEE. 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member Committee on Veterans’ Affairs; Special Committee on Veterans Education and Training; and House Select Com-mittee on Small Business. SIXTH DISTRICT.—DAvVIDSON COUNTY. Population (1950), 320,338. JAMES PERCY PRIEST, Democrat, of Nashville; born at Carters Creek, Tenn., April 1, 1900, the son of Harriet Hastings and George Madison Priest; attended the public schools in Maury County, Tenn., and Central High School, Columbia, Tenn.; attended State Teachers College at Murfreesboro, Tenn., George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn., and the University of Tennessee at Knoxville; taught school in Tennessee from 1920 until May 1926; member of editorial staff of the Nashville Tennessean from May 1926 until September 1940; Baptist, a Mason, and a member of the Civitan Club, National Press Club, and Elks Club; married Miss Mildred Webster Noland on February 14, 1947; was elected November 5, 1940, to the Seventy-seventh Congress; re-elected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cheatham, Dickson, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Lawrence, Ly Maury, Montgomery, Perry, Stewart, Wayne, and Williamson (13 counties). Population 1950), 230,743. : PAT SUTTON, Democrat, of Lawrenceburg, Tenn. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Fayette, Hardeman, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, McNairy, and Madison (11 counties). Population (1950), 247,508. TOM MURRAY, Democrat, of Jackson, Tenn., was born in Jackson, Tenn., on August 1, 1894; graduated from Jackson High School, Union University (B. A. degree) and Cumberland University (LL. B. degree); taught in high school 2 years; served in the United States Army in World War I and was a member of the American Expeditionary Forces in France; after discharge from the Army in 1919, began the practice of law in Jackson, Tenn.; elected district attorney general for the Twelfth Judicial Circuit of Tennessee in 1922 and served until September 1933; resigned as district attorney to become associated with the office of the Solicitor of the Post Office Department in Washington; served with the Post Office Department until May 31, 1942; chairman of Democratic Executive Com-mittee of ‘Madison County, Tenn., from 1924 to 1933; former member of State Democratic Executive Committee of Tennessee; delegate to Democratic National Conventions in 1928, 1932, and 1936; served as commander of the John A. Deaver Post of the American Legion at Jackson and as vice commander of the Legion for the State of Tennessee; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity; single; elected to the Seventy-eighth Congress on November 3, 1942; reelected to Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, Tipton, and Weakley (9 counties). Population (1950), 247,450. JERE COOPER, Democrat, of Dyersburg, Tenn., was born July 20, 1893, in Dyer County, Tenn., son of Joseph W. and Viola May Cooper; educated in public schools of Dyersburg and Cumberland University, graduating with the degree of LL. B.; engaged in the active practice of law in Dyersburg since 1915, except 2 years while in the Army, serving as city attorney for 8 years; enlisted in Second Tennessee Infantry, National Guard, in May 1917, and on July 23, 1917, was commissioned first lieutenant; on October 24, 1917, was transferred with com-pany to Company K, One Hundred and Nineteenth Infantry, Thirtieth Division, and served with this regiment throughout period of World War I, going through all its engagements in France and Belgium; on July 9, 1918, promoted to captain; discharged from the Army on April 2, 1919, after serving practically a year with the American Expeditionary Forces; returned to Dyersburg and resumed the practice of law; elected State commander of American Legion of Tennessee in 1921, and national executive committeeman of American Legion in 1922; unmar-ried; Mason, Knight Templar, Shriner, Maccabee, Moose, Kappa Sigma; member of Cumberland Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-first Congress; renominated and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; reelected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. \$ 130° Congressional Directory TEXAS TENTH DISTRICT.—SHELBY COUNTY. Population (1950), 480,161. CLIFFORD DAVIS, Democrat, of Memphis, Tenn.; born November 18, 1897, at Hazelhurst, Miss., son of the late Odom A. and Jessie Davis; educated in Memphis public schools; received LL. B. degree from the University of Mississippi; attorney at law; city judge of Memphis, 1923-27; vice mayor and commissioner of public safety of Memphis, 1928-40; Baptist, Mason, Shriner; married Miss Caro-lyn Leigh, of Memphis, and they have three children—Clifford, Jr., Barbara Leigh, and Ray; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress in a special election, February 15, 1940, reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member, Committee on Public Works. TEXAS (Population (1950), 7,711,194) SENATORS TOM CONNALLY, Democrat, of Marlin, Falls County, son of Jones and Mary E. Connally; born in McLennan County, Tex., August 19, 1877; A. B,, LL. D. (honorary), Baylor University; LL. B., University of Texas; LL. D. (honorary), Howard Payne College; enlisted man, Second Regiment Texas ‘Volunteer Infantry, Spanish-American War; captain and adjutant, Twenty-second Infantry Brigade, Eleventh Division, United States Army, 1918; member of the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth Texas Legislatures; prosecuting attorney of Falls County, 1906-10; married Miss Louise Clarkson, 1904 (deceased); one son—Ben Connally, Houston, Tex., United States district judge, Southern Dis-trict of Texas; married Mrs. Lucile Sanderson Sheppard, April 25, 1942; grand chancellor of Texas Knights of Pythias, 1913-14; thirty-third degree Mason; member of Marlin Methodist Church; delegate, Democratic National Convention, 1920, and delegate at large in 1932, 1936, 1940, and;1948; chairman Texas delegation, 1936; vice chairman, Texas delegation, 1948; permanent chairman, Texas Demo-cratic State convention, 1938; delegate to Interparliamentary Union, Geneva, 1924; London, 1930; Constantinople, 1934; Rome, 1948; and Empire Parliamen-tary Association, Ottawa, Canada, 1943; special congressional adviser to the United States delegation to the Inter-American Conference on Problems of War and Peace, Mexico City, 1945; vice chairman of the United States delegation to the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, 1945; Representative of the United States to the first session of the General Assembly of the United Nations at London, 1946; adviser to the Secretary of State at the meetings of the Council of Foreign Ministers at Paris and New York and at the Paris Peace Conference, 1946; Representative of the United States to the second session of the General Assembly of the United Nations at New York, 1946; served as a delegate to the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Continental Peace and Security at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1947; served in House of Representatives, Sixty-fifth through Seventieth Congresses; elected United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1929; reelected in 1934, 1940, and 1946; committees: Foreign Relations (chairman from July 31, 1941, until December 1946; resumed chairmanship, January 1949); Finance, Atomic Energy, and Joint Committee on Foreign Economic Cooperation. -LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON, Democrat, of Johnson City, Tex.; born in Stonewall, Tex., August 27, 1908; B. S. degree, Southwest Texas State Teachers College at San Marcos, in 1930; attended Georgetown Law School, 1935; elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress at a special election held on April 10, 1937, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James P. Buchanan, of Brenham, Tex.; reelected to the Seventy-sixth Congress November 8, 1938; reelected to the Seventy-seventh Congress November 5, 1940; candidate to fill vacancy created by death of United States Senator Morris Sheppard; defeated June 28, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth Congress, November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth Congress, November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress, November 5, 1946; nominated for United States Senate in Democratic primary, August 28, 1948; elected to the United States Senate, November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955; parents, Sam Ealy and Rebekah Baines Johnson; married Lady Bird Taylor, November 17, 1934; daughter, Lynda Bird Johnson, born March 19, 1944; daughter, Lucy Baines Johnson, born July 2, 1947; member Armed Services Committee and Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee. TEXAS Biographical REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bowie, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Harrison, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1950), 276,371. WRIGHT PATMAN, Democrat, of Texarkana, Tex.; born near Hughes Springs, Cass County, Tex., August 6, 1893; finished high school at Hughes Springs, 1912; received LL. B. degree, Cumberland University, 1916; United States Army, 1917-19, enlisted man and first lieutenant—machine gun officer; married Miss Merle Connor, of Winnsboro, Tex., February 14, 1919 (they have three sons, all having served in World War 1I); member of Texas Legislature for years; district attorney, fifth judicial district of Texas, 5 years; elected in 1928 to the Seventy-first Congress and reelected to each succeeding Congress; member of the Banking and Currency Committee of the House of Representatives; chairman of House Committee on Small Business; member of Joint House and Senate Committee on the Economic Report; chairman, Subcommittee on General Credit Control and Debt Management of Joint Committee on Economic Report; member of the Joint Committee on Defense Production; he and all members of his family affiliated with the First Baptist Church of Texarkana, Tex.; member of Masons, Elks, Eagles, Shrine, American Legion, Disabled American Veterans; associate member of National Press Club, member of State Bar Association and admitted to practice before Supreme Court of the United States. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Angelina, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson, Liberty, Newton, Orange, Sa-bine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (11 counties). Population (1950), 399,096. J. M. COMBS, Democrat, of Beaumont, Tex.; born in Center, Tex., July 7, 1889; married Katherine Alford; two sons, Melvin M. and Lamar G.; lawyer; county judge of Hardin County, Tex., 1919-20; district judge of the Seventy-fifth district, 1923-25; associate justice of the Ninth Court of Civil Appeals, 1933-43; member and president of the board of trustees of South Park Schools (Beaumont), 1926-40; president of the board of trustees of Lamar College (Beaumont), 1940-44; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth Congress; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Camp, Gregg, Panola, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood (8 counties). Population (1950), 270,091. : LINDLEY BECKWORTH, Democrat, of Upshur County, Tex., Gladewater, Route 2; born in South Bouie community, Kaufman County, Tex., June 30, 1913, the son of O. J. Beckworth, who came to Smith County, Tex., from Georgia in 1900, and the late Josie Slaughter Beckworth, of near Edgewood, Van Zandt County, Tex.; reared on farm; attended public schools in Upshur and Camp Counties, East Texas State Teachers College, Sam Houston State Teachers College, and Southern Methodist University; taught school 3 years; studied law at Baylor University and the University of Texas; was admitted to the bar in 1937; member of the State house of representatives, 1936-38; married to Miss Eloise Carter, of Tyler, Tex., June 27, 1942; four children, Lindley G. (Gary) Beckworth, Jr., Carter Otis Beckworth, Mary Eloise Beckworth, and Linda Louise Beckworth; nominated for the Seventy-sixth Congress in the Democratic primary of 1938, de-feating the incumbent and three others; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Kightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, Kaufman, Rains, and Rockwall (7 counties). Population (1950), 226,865. SAM RAYBURN, Democrat, of Bonham, Tex., was born January 6, 1882, in Roane County, Tenn., son of W. M. and Martha Waller Rayburn; is a graduate of the East Texas College; studied law in the University of Texas; is a lawyer by profession; served 6 years as a member of the Texas Legislature, the last 2 years as speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seven-tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, -Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, and Eighty-first Congresses; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress; majority leader, Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Congresses; elected Speaker on September 16, 1940, to fill out the unexpired term of the late Speaker William B. Bankhead, Seventy-sixth Congress; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-seventh Congress on January 3, 1941; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-eighth Congress on January 6, ’ 132 Congressional Directory TEXAS 1943; reelected Speaker of the Seventy-ninth Congress on January 3, 1945; elected minority leader, Eightieth Congress, January 3, 1947; elected Speaker of the Eighty-first Congress January 3, 1949, and reelected January 3, 1951, FIFTH DISTRICT.—DALLAS CoUuNTY. Population (1950), 610,852. J. FRANK WILSON, Democrat, of Dallas, Tex.; born in Corsicana, Navarro County, Tex., March 18, 1901, son of Jodie J. Wilson and Willie Cole Wilson; schools—Peacock Military College, Tennessee Military Institute, and Baylor University, graduated in 1923 with LL. B. degree; practiced law in Dallas, Tex., for 23 years, president of Dallas Bar Association in 1942; chairman of Democratic County Executive Committee from 1942 to 1945; appointed district judge in September 1943, and served during that year and 1944; married Ruby Lee Hopkins of Alba, Tex., in 1926; two children—J. Frank Wilson, Jr., deceased, and Marian Sue Wilson; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brazos, Ellis, Freestone, Hill, Leon, Limestone, Navarro, and Robert-son (8 counties). Population (1950), 227,196. OLIN E. TEAGUE, Democrat, of College Station, Tex.; born in Woodward, Okla., April 6, 1910, the son of James Martin Teague, a native Texan from Lampasas, and Ida Teague; attended Texas Agriculture and Mechanical College, 1928-32; married former Freddie Dunman of Fort Worth, Tex.; three children James M. Teague, age 16; John O. Teague, age 15; and Jill Virginia, aged 5 years; employed in the United States Post Office at College Station, Tex., from college days until October 1940, when he left his position as South Station superintendent to volunteer for army service; previously served 3 years as enlisted man in Na-tional Guard; commissioned second lieutenant in Officers Reserve Corps on finishing Texas A. & M.; commanded First Battalion, Three Hundred and Four-teenth Infantry, Seventy-ninth Division; was in combat 6 months; wounded number of times, decorated 11 times; discharged as colonel, Infantry, at Walter Reed General Hospital September 1946, to take seat in Congress; awarded Silver Star with two clusters, Bronze Star, Purple Heart with two clusters, Combat Infantryman’s Badge, Army Commendation Ribbon, French Croix de Guerre with Palm; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on August 22, 1946, to fill the unexpired term of Judge Luther A. Johnson, resigned; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anderson, Cherokee, Grimes, Henderson, Houston, Madison, Sp emey Nacogdoches, Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (12 counties). Population (1950), TOM PICKETT, Democrat, of Palestine, Tex.; born August 14, 1906, at Travis, Falls County, Tex., son of J. D. and Helen Mackey Pickett; attended the Palestine public schools and the University of Texas; licensed to practice law in 1929; elected county attorney of Anderson County in 1930, serving 1931-35; elected district attorney, third judicial district of Texas, in 1934, serving 1935-45; married Louise Watson, of Athens, Tex., August 30, 1938, and they have two daughters; elected to the Seventy-ninth and succeeding Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—HARRIS COUNTY. Population (1950), 802,102. ALBERT THOMAS, Democrat, of Houston, Tex.; born in Nacogdoches, Tex., April 12, 1898; A. B. and LL. B. degrees; World War I veteran; married; two children; was elected to Seventy-fiftth and succeeding Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Austin, Brazoria, Calhoun, Chambers, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Galveston, Goliad, Jackson, Lavaca, Matagorda, Victoria, Waller, and Wharton (15 counties). Popu- lation (1950), 403,949. : CLARK WALLACE THOMPSON, Democrat, of Galveston, Tex.; born in La Crosse, Wis., August 6, 1896; moved to Oregon in 1901; attended the Univer-sity of Oregon; enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1917; commissioned second lieu-tenant December 1918; moved to Galveston after the war; married Libbie Moody of Galveston; two children, Clark Wallace, Jr., and Libbie Thompson Marshall; has been in business in Galveston ever since, except while serving as a member of the Seventy-third Congress in which he filled the unexpired term of the late Clay Stone Briggs and during the Second World War when he was on active duty with the Marine Corps from November 1940 to May 1946; retired as colonel in the REEEE EEE TEXAS Brographical 133 ————————————— Marine Corps Reserve; reelected to the Eightieth Congress, August 23, 1947, to fill the unexpired term of the late J. J. Mansfield; reelected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bastrop, Blanco, Burleson, Burnet, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washington, and Williamson (10 counties). Population (1950), 213,362. HOMER THORNBERRY, Democrat, of Austin, Tex.; born January 9, 1909, in Austin, Travis County, Tex., son of William Moore and Mary Lillian Thorn-berry, educated in the public schools of Austin; graduate of the University of [ Texas, receiving B. B. A. and LL. B. degrees; licensed to practice law in 1936; member of the house of representatives, legislature of Texas, 1937-41; district attorney, fifty-third judicial district of Texas, 1941-42, resigning to volunteer for service in the armed forces in World War II; discharged in February 1946; married Eloise Engle on February 24, 1945; returned to Austin to reenter the practice of law; member of the city council, city of Austin, from 1946 to 1948, serving as mayor pro tem., 1947-48; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bell, Bosque, Coryell, Falls, McLennan, and Milam (6 counties). Population (1950), 280,769. WILLIAM ROBERT (BOB) POAGE, Democrat, of Waco, McLennan County, Tex., was born in that city on December 28, 1899, son of William A. and Helen Conger Poage; spent his childhood and received his first education in Throckmorton County, Tex.; attended Baylor University, the University of Colo-rado, and the University of Texas, receiving his A. B. and LL. B. degrees from Baylor; was admitted to the bar in 1924, and practiced in Waco until elected to Congress; member of the Texas House of Representatives, 1925-29, and of the Texas State Senate, 1931-37; member of the American Legion; married Frances L. Cotton, February 14, 1938; was elected to the Seventy-fifth Congress in 1936 and reelected to each succeeding Congress; since 1947 has served as a member of the American delegation to the Interparliamentary Union; is vice chairman of the Committee on Agriculture. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (5 counties).Population (1950), 419,638. WINGATE H. LUCAS, Democrat, of Grapevine, Tex.; born May 1, 1908, in Grapevine; attended North Texas Teachers College, Oklahoma A. & M., and Texas University; lawyer; served as an enlisted man in the European Theater of Operations in World War IT; married Miss Jerry Clark of Rhoadesville, Va., on September 15, 1936; five ‘children—Mary Dell, 10; Wingate H., Jr. (“Wink”), 8; William Clark (“Will”), 6; Joyce Christine (‘Christie’), 4; and Ellen Eunice, 2; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948, and the Eighty-second Congress oh Novem-ber 7, 1950. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Archer, Baylor, Clay, Cooke, Denton, Foard, Hardeman, Jack, Knox, Montague, Throckmorton, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (15 counties). Population (1950), 291,019. FRANK NEVILLE IKARD, Democrat, of Wichita Falls, Tex.; born in Henri-etta, Clay County, Tex., January 30, 1914; educated in public schools of Henrietta and University of Texas; LL. B. degree 1937; lawyer and judge of the Thirtieth Judicial District Court of Texas; served in the Army in World War II; married Jean Hunter of Wichita Falls; two children; elected to the Eighty-second Congress September 8, 1951. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aransas, Atascosa, Bee, Brooks, Comal, De Witt, Duval, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Jim Wells, Karnes, Kenedy, Kleberg, Live Oak, McMullen, Nueces, Refugio, San Patricio, and Wilson (19 counties). Population (1950), 455,394. JOHN E. LYLE, Jr., Democrat, Corpus Christi, Tex.; born September 4, 1910, Wise County, Tex.; lawyer; veteran, World War II; married Gertrude Swanner, whose home was Winnsboro, Tex.; elected to the Seventy-ninth and succeeding Congresses. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Cameron, Dimmit, Frio, Hidalgo, Jim Hogg,La Salle, Maver-ick, Medina, Starr, Webb, Willacy, Zapata, and Zavala (13 counties). Population (1950), 453,996. LLOYD MILLARD BENTSEN, Jgr., Democrat, of McAllen, Tex.; born in Mission, Tex., February 11, 1921; was graduated from the University of Texas with an LL. B. degree; an attorney; enlisted in 1942 as a private in the United 134 Congressional Directory TEXAS States Army and discharged as a major and squadron commander in July 1945; married Beryl Ann Longino of Lufkin, Tex., in November 1943 and have two sons, Lloyd 3d, age 7, and Lan, age 4; elected in 1946 county judge of Hidalgo County, Tex., and served one term; elected to the Eightieth Congress at a special election December 4, 1948; elected to the Eighty-first Congress November 2, 1948; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Brewster, Crane, Crockett, Culberson, Ector, El Paso, Glass-cock, Hudspeth, Jeff Davis, Loving, Midland, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Reeves, Terrell, Upton, Ward, and Winkler (19 counties). Population (1950), 353,937. KENNETH MILLS REGAN, Democrat, of Midland, Midland County, Tex.; born at Mount Morris, Ill., March 6, 1893, the son of John B. and Ella Calvert Regan; educated in the public schools of Mount Morris and attended Vincennes University for 3 years; real estate and oil operator and landowner; president of the Pecos, Tex., Chamber of Commerce; alderman of the city of Pecos for 3 years and served two terms as mayor of that city; served two terms as senator of the " Twenty-ninth Senatorial District, Texas Legislature; saw service in World Wars I and 1I with rank of captain in each; married Miss Roberta McGary of Roswell, N. Mezx.; elected to fill unexpired term of Robert Ewing Thomason at special election held August 23, 1947; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Callahan, Comanche, Eastland, Erath, Fisher, Hamilton, Jones, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Shackelford, Stephens, and Taylor (12 counties). Population (1950), 225,742. OMAR BURLESON, Democrat, of Anson, Tex.; born March 19, 1906, son of J. M. and Betty Burleson; lawyer; county attorney and county judge of Jones County; special agent of F. B. I.; 3 years in the United States Navy, World War 11; elected to the Eightieth and succeeding Congresses. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Armstrong, Briscoe, Carson, Castro, Childress, Collings-worth, Cottle, Dallam, Deaf Smith, Donley, Gray, Hall, Hansford, Hartley, Hemphill, Hutchinson, Lipscomb, Motley, Moore, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Roberts, Sherman, Swisher, and Wheeler (28 counties). Population (1950), 288,136. WALTER E. ROGERS, Democrat, Pampa, Gray County, Tex.; born July 19, 1908, Texarkana, Ark.; education: McKinney, Tex., public schools, Austin College, Sherman, Tex., University of Texas Law School, Austin, Tex.; district attorney thirty-first district of Texas 1943-47; married Catherine R. (Jean) Daly of Pampa, Tex., 1936; six children; member of Pampa Rotary Club; elected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Andrews, Bailey, Borden, Cochran, Crosby, Dawson, Dick-ens, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, Hale, Haskell, Hockley, Howard, Kent, King, Lamb, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Mitchell, Scurry, Stonewall, Terry, and Yoakum (25 counties). Population (1950), 367,973. GEORGE H. MAHON, Democrat, Lubbock, Tex.; born September 22, 1900, near Haynesville, La., son of J. K. and Lola Brown Mahon; moved to Mitchell County, Tex., 1908; reared on a farm; attended rural school, graduated from Loraine High School; B. A., Simmons University, Abilene, 1924; LL. B., University of Texas, 1925; attended University of Minnesota in 1925; married Helen Stevenson, of Loraine, Tex., 1923; one daughter—Daphne, born 1927; elected county attorney, Mitchell County, 1926; appointed district attorney, thirty-second judicial district, 1927; elected district attorney 1928, 1930, 1932; elected in 1934 to Seventy-fourth Congress and to each succeeding Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Bexar. Population (1950), 496,090. PAUL J. KILDAY, Democrat, of San Antonio, Tex.; born in Sabinal, Uvalde County, Tex., March 29, 1900, son of Pat and Mary (Tallant) Kilday; moved with his family to San Antonio, Tex., in 1904; attended the San Antonio public schools, St. Mary’s Parochial School, and St. Mary’s College at San Antonio, Tex.; was graduated from Main Avenue High School and from Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., with LL. B. degree, in 1922; attorney at law; married Miss Cecile Newton, of San Antonio, in 1932, and they have two daugh-ters—Mary Catherine and Betty Ann; elected to the Seventy-sixth Congress in 1938 and reelected to the Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member, Committee on Armed Services; member, Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. : UTAH | Biographical 135 TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bandera, Brown, Coke, Coleman, Concho, Edwards, Gilles-pie, Irion, Kendall, Kerr, Kimble, Kinney, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Menard, Mills, Real, Runnels, San Saba, Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Tom Green, Uvalde, and Val Verde (27 counties). Population (1950), 267,708. 0. CLARK FISHER, Democrat, of San Angelo, Tex., was born in Kimble County, Tex., on November 22, 1903; LL. B. degree; author of It Occurred in Kimble (1937); served as County Attorney, Tom Green County, Tex., State representative and district attorney before election to Seventy-eighth and succeeding Congresses. UTAH (Population (1950), 688,862) SENATORS ARTHUR VIVIAN WATKINS, Republican, of Orem, Utah; born at Midway, Utah, December 18, 1886; attended Brigham Young University 1903-6; attended New York University, New York City, 1909-10; Columbia University Law School, 1911-12, graduated with LL. B. degree, 1912; admitted to practice of law in Utah, 1912; editor of the Vernal Express, 1914; assistant county attorney, Salt Lake County, 1914-15; engaged in farming, 1919-25; elected District Judge of Fourth Judicial District, Utah, 1928; in 1934 was chairman of committee to organize water users in central Utah and helped organize Provo River Water Users’ Asso-ciation, sponsoring agent for Provo River, Utah, Reclamation Project; served as general counsel for this association since that time; president of Sharon Stake L. D. S. Church, 1929-46; married Andrea Rich, 1913; has six children—Nedra (Mrs. Thomas Reese), Arthur Rich, Don Rich, Venna Mae (Mrs. Carl Swalberg), Jeanene, and Nina; nominee for Congress on the Republican ticket in 1936; elected United States Senator November 5, 1946. WALLACE FOSTER BENNETT, Republican, Salt Lake City, Utah; born, Salt Lake City, November 13, 1898; second lieutenant of Infantry, 1918; A. B., University of Utah, 1919; principal, San Luis Stake Academy, Manassa, Colo., 1919-20; board chairman, Bennett’s, Salt Lake City; board chairman, Bennett Motor Co.; vice president, National Paint, Varnish & Lacquer Association, 1935-36; president, National Glass Distributors Association, 1937; president, Salt Lake Rotary Club, 1940; president, Salt Lake Community Chest, 1944-45; president, National Association of Manufacturers, 1949; member, Salt Lake and Ogden Country Clubs, Alta Club, Timpanogos Club, and Rotary Club; member, IL. D. S. (Mormon) Church; treasurer, L.. D. S. Sunday School General Board since 1935; author: “Faith and Freedom,” 1950; married Frances Grant, 1922; five children— Wallace Grant, Rosemary (Mrs. Robert C. Fletcher), David Wells, Frances, and Robert Foster; elected to the United States Senate November 7, 1950, for the term ending January 3, 1957. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Duchesne, Emery, Garfield, Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Summit, Uintah, Wasatch, Washington, Wayne, and Weber (25 counties). Population (1950), 286,274. WALTER KIEL GRANGER, Democrat, of Cedar City, Utah, was born in St. George, Utah; when 6 years old, he moved with his parents to Cedar City, Utah; has since made his home in that community; married; wife, Hazel Dalley Granger; received education in the Iron County public schools and the Branch Agricultural College at Cedar City; while residing in Cedar City, served 3 years as a member of the board of trustees of the Utah State Agricultural College and served in numerous civic capacities in his home city and in Iron County; served in France with the Eleventh Regiment of Marines as a volunteer during World War I; farmer and livestock man; first gained political recognition as mayor of Cedar City, a position to which he was elected three successive times; then followed three successive elections to the State house of representatives, the first in 1932;in 1935 was chosen speaker of the house; following the close of the 1937 session, was appointed a member of the Public Service Commission of Utah 136 Congressional Directory VERMONT and served in that capacity until elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress Novem-ber 5, 1940; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Kightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. Soo DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Utah (4 counties). Population (1950), REVA BECK BOSONE, Democrat, of Salt Lake City, Utah; born in American Fork, Utah; education— Westminster College, Salt Lake City, Utah, J. C. de-gree; University of California at Berkeley, B. A. degree; University of Utah at Salt Lake City, LL. B. degree; traveled at home and abroad; profession— high-school teacher for 7 years; legislator for two sessions (floor leader, 1935); lawyer; Salt Lake City judge for three terms; public service—rehabilitation of adults and alcoholics, juvenile delinquency (was named to Utah Hall of Fame in 1943 for work done in the foregoing fields); was member of Executive Board of Utah Research Foundation: served as official observer at the United Nations Conference; was a member of Executive Committee of the United States War Fund of Utah; was member of the Veterans’ Central Welfare Committee; was chairman of Wace Civilian Advisory Committee of the Ninth Service Command (comprising 11 Western States); director of program for Utah State Board on Alcoholism; chairman Committee on Laws and Ordinances, President’s Highway Safety Conference; Eighty-first Congress Congress. widow on and mother November of 2, a 21-year-old daughter; 1948; reelected to the elected Kighty­ to second the VER MONT (Population (1950), 377,747) SENATORS GEORGE DAVID AIKEN, Republican, of Putney, Vt.; born in Dummerston, Vt., August 20, 1892; son of Edward W. and Myra Cook Aiken; educated in the common schools of Putney, Vt.; graduated from Brattleboro High School in 1909; honorary degrees, Se. D., Norwich University; LL. D., University of Vermont; LL. D., St. Lawrence University; LL. D., Marlboro College; married Miss Beatrice M. Howard; four children—Dorothy Aiken Morse (Mrs. Harry), Marjorie Aiken Cleverley (Mrs. Harry Leighton), Howard Aiken, Barbara Aiken Jones (Mrs. Malcolm S.); occupation, farmer; elected town representative in 1931 and 1933; speaker of the house of representatives in 1933; Lieutenant Governor of Vermont in 1935, and Governor of Vermont in 1937 and 1939; elected to the United States Senate on November 5, 1940, to fill the vacancy for the term ending January 3, 1945, caused by the death of Senator Ernest W. Gibson; reelected November 7, 1944; reelected November 7, 1950. RALPH E. FLANDERS, Republican, of Springfield, Vt.; born in Barnet, Vt., September 28, 1880; completed high school in Central Falls, R. I., in 1896; went to work for Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co., Providence, R. I., January 14, 1897, as a machinist apprentice; completed the apprenticeship and has been in machine tool industry in various capacities of journeyman, draftsman, designer, editor, engineer, and executive; nearly 50 years of connection with the machine-tool industry was interrupted by a term of service as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, May 1944 to March 1946; resigned the chairmanship of the board of Jones & Lamson Machine Co., Springfield, Vt., on appointment to the United States Senate; married Helen E. Hartness of Springfield, Vt., in 1911, and they have three children: Helen Elizabeth Ballard, Anna Hartness Balivet, and James Hartness Flanders; appointed to the United States Senate, November 1, 1946, by Gov. Mortimer Proctor, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator Warren R. Austin; elected for 6-year term on November 5, 1946. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 377,747. WINSTON LEWIS PROUTY, Republican, of Newport, Vt., born in Newport, Vt., September 1, 1906; educated in Newport schools, Bordentown Military Institute, Bordentown, N. J., and Lafayette College, Easton, Pa.; mayor of EEE ————————— VIRGINIA Biographical 187 Newport for three terms, 1938 to 1941; member of Vermont House of Repre-sentatives in 1941, 1945, and 1947, serving as speakerin 1947; chairman, Vermont State Water Conservation Board 1948 until May 1950; partner in the Prouty & Miller Lumber Co.; director of National Bank of Newport and of Associated Industries of Vermont; married the former Frances C. Hearle; elected to the Fighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. VIRGINIA (Population (1950), 3,318,680) SENATORS HARRY FLOOD BYRD, Democrat, of Berryville, Va.; entered business at age of 15; in 1915 elected to Senate of Virginia, in which he served until he was elected Governor of the Commonwealth for the term 1926-30; appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. John Garland Pollard on March 4, 1933; elected on November 7, 1933, for the unexpired term of Claude A. Swanson, resigned, and reelected for the full term on November 6, 1934; reelected November 5, 1940, without opposition in the Democratic primary and without Republican opposition in the general election; reelected November 5, 1946, newspaper publisher, farmer, and apple grower. A. WILLIS ROBERTSON, Democrat, of Lexington, Va., was educated in the public schools of Lynchburg and Rockymount, Va.; B. A.) LL. B., and honorary LL. D. degrees, University of Richmond and Washington and Lee University; member, Pi Kappa Alpha, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity, and of the Jamestowne Society; member, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission; admitted to the bar in 1908; member of State senate for 6 years, 1916-22; Commonwealth’s attorney for Rockbridge County for 6 years, 1922-28; chairman of commission of game and inland fisheries for 6 years, 1926-32; during the World War served in the United States Army from August 1917 to June 1919; married Gladys Churchill Willis, and they have two sons, A. Willis Robertson, Jr., and Marion Gordon Robertson; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932; reelected to the Seventy-fourth and succeed-ing Congresses; elected to United States Senate November 5, 1946, for the un-expired term of the late Senator Carter Glass; reelected to the United States Senate November 2, 1948. REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—C OoUNTIES: Accomack, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spotsylvania, War-wick, Westmoreland, and York. Cities: Fredericksburg, Hampton, and Newport News. Popula-tion (1950), 312,028. EDWARD JOHN ROBESON, Jr. (Rob’-e-son), Democrat, of Newport News, Warwick County, Va.; was born at Waynesville, N. C., August 9, 1890; educated _at public schools in Georgia and at the University of Georgia, Class 1910; employed by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Newport News, Va., 1915-50; retired April 30, 1950, as vice president and personnel manager; member, The Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers; former president of Peninsula Chamber of Commerce; past president of Virginia Manufacturers Association; past director of National Association of Manufacturers; former director and vice president of the Citizens Marine Jefferson Bank, Newport News, Va.; chairman, Board of Managers, Riverside Hospital, Newport News, Va.; member of the Pioneers of Newport News, Virginia; honorary member of Newport News Rotary; married Ruth Richards of Thomson, Ga., August 15, 1916; has four children, Mrs. J. Weaver Kirkpatrick, Newport News, Va., Edward J. Robeson 3d, Martins-ville, Va., Mrs. Robert L. Amsler, Lexington, Va., and Martha Richards Robeson, high school student; a Methodist; Alpha Tau Omega (college fraternity); elected to the Eighty-first Congress at a special election held May 2, 1950, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Schuyler Otis Bland; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. 138 Congressional Directory VIRGINIA SECOND DISTRICT,—CounNTtiES: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Southampton, and Princess Anne. Crmies: Norfolk, Portsmouth, South Norfolk, and Suffolk. Population (1950), 488,432. PORTER HARDY, Jr.,, Democrat, of Churchland, Norfolk County, Va.; businessman-farmer; born in Bon Air, Chesterfield County, Va., June 1, 1903; son of Reverend Porter and Jane (Mahood) Hardy; educated at Randolph- Macon Academy, Bedford, Va., and in the public schools of Virginia, graduating from Boykins High School in 1918; B. A., Randolph-Macon College, 1922; at-tended Graduate School Business Administration, Harvard University, 1923-24; for several years employed as accountant and warehouse manager by shipping companies at New York and Norfolk, Va.; wholesaler of major electrical equip-ment on own account at Salisbury, Md., 1927-32; since 1932 living on and working his own farm at Churchland, Va.; active various farm organizations; Kappa Alpha fraternity (Southern) and of Tau Kappa Alpha (honorary); Methodist Church; was married in 1939 to Miss Edna Lynn Moore, of Morristown, Tenn.; has two children, Lynn and Porter 3d; elected to Eightieth Congress November 5, 1946; reelected to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT,—CounTIiES: Charles City, Chesterfield, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King Wil-an, ond New Kent. Cities: Richmond, Williamsburg, and Colonial Heights. Population (1950), J. VAUGHAN GARY, Democrat, of Richmond, was born in Richmond, Va., February 25, 1892; attended the public schools; graduated from University of Richmond with a B. A. degree in 1912, LL. B. degree in 1915; is a lawyer by profession; veteran of World War I; served as counsel and executive assistant, Virginia Tax Board, 1919-24; appointed executive secretary of the National Com-mittee on Inheritance Taxation, 1925; represented the city of Richmond as a mem-ber of the Virginia House of Delegates, 1926-33; president, Virginia Tuberculosis Association, 1938-40; president, Richmond Bar Association, 1941; president, Virginia State Chamber of Commerce, 1944; member of the board of trustees, University of Richmond and board of trustees, Fork Union Military Academy; was married in 1918 to Miss Eunice Croswell, of Gloucester County; has two children, Carolyn Gary Hugo and J. Vaughan, Jr.; member Sigma Phi Epsilon, Delta Theta Phi, and Omicron Delta Kappa fraternities; Baptist; Mason; mem-ber of American Legion; Member of the Seventy-ninth to the Eighty-second Con-gresses, inclusive. FOURTH DISTRICT,—CoUNTIES: Amelia, Appomattox, Brunswick, Buckingham, Cumberland, Din-widdie, Greensville, Lunenburg, Mecklenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Surry, and Sussex. Cities: Hopewell and Petersburg. Population (1950), 259,202. WATKINS M. ABBITT, Democrat, of Appomattox, Va.; born May 21, 1908; graduated from Appomattox Agricultural High School in 1925; attended Rich-mond College and received LL. B. degree from the T. C. Williams School of Law of the University of Richmond, 1931; passed State bar, December 1930; began practice of law at Appomattox in July 1931; married Miss Corinne Hancock, March 20, 1937; has three children, Anne, Watkins, Jr., and Corinne; Common-wealth attorney for Appomattox County, 1932-48; delegate to State Democratic Conventions in 1932, 1936, 1940, 1944, and 1948; Democratic elector for the Fourth District of Virginia in 1944; member of Virginia Constitutional Conven-tion of 1945 which extended right to vote to members of the Armed Forces; member of Virginia and Fifth Judicial Circuit Court Bar Associations; past president, Commonwealth Attorneys Association of Virginia; member, Council of the Virginia State Bar; director, Farmers National Bank; deacon and treasurer, Liberty Baptist Church; State campaign manager for Lt. Gov. L. P. Collins, 1945; State Democratic campaign manager, 1946; regent, Polycultural Institution of America, Washington, D. C.; member, Awards Committee of the American Forestry Association, 1950-51; active in county Democratic Party affairs, Young Democrats Club, American Red Cross, National Foundation for Infantile Paraly-sis, Ruritan Club, Lions Club, Disabled American Veterans; elected in special election on February 17, 1948 to fill vacancy caused by the death of the late Patrick Henry Drewry; sworn in on February 26, 1948; reelected without oppo-sition to Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carroll, Charlotte, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, Pittsyl-vania, and Wythe. Cities: Danville and Martinsville. Population (1950), 315,310. THOMAS BAHNSON STANLEY, Democrat, of Stanleytown, Henry County, Va.; born near Spencer, Va., July 16, 1890; educated in local schools and Eastman Business College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; furniture manufacturer, farmer and livestock breeder; married Anne Pocahontas Bassett, and they have three chil- VIRGINIA Biographical dren: Mrs. Anne Stanley Chatham, Thomas Bahnson Stanley, Jr., and John David Stanley; member, Methodist Church, Masons, Shrine (Kazim Temple), Omicron Delta Kappa fraternity, Bassett Country Club, Forest Park Country Club, Commonwealth Club, Richmond, Va.; Virginia State Chamber of Com- merce, Virginia Manufacturers Association, and Southern Furniture Manufac- turers Association; trustee, Ferrum Junior College; past president, Virginia Here- ford Breeders Association; director, First National Bank of Bassett; director, Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co.; Governor’s Advisory Board on the Budget; member of the Virginia House of Delegates 1930-46; Speaker of Virginia House of Delegates, three terms: 1942, 1944, and 1946; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 5, 1946, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Thomas G. Burch; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. : SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alleghany, Bedford, Botetourt, Campbell, Craig, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke. CrImiEs: Clifton Forge, Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1950), 337,695. CLARENCE G. BURTON, Democrat, of Lynchburg, Va.; educated in Lynch-burg schools and business college; employed Lynchburg Hosiery Mills, Inc.; elected treasurer 1907, president 1921; member Memorial Methodist Church, Lynchburg, seeretary Sunday school, chairman board of stewards; trustee of Randolph-Macon College; president Lynchburg Federal Savings & Loan Asso-ciation; president Memorial Hospital; director Commercial Trust & Savings Bank; past exalted ruler Lynchburg Lodge of Elks; past president Lynchburg Rotary Club; past president Natural Bridge Appalachian Trail Club; chairman Lynchburg Local Draft Board No. 2; chairman Virginia Appeal Board No. 5; vice chairman Lynchburg School Board; twice elected to Lynchburg City Council 1942-48; mayor city of Lynchburg 1946 and 1948; hosiery manufacturer and cattle farmer; elected to the Eightieth Congress November 2, 1948, to succeed the Hon. J. Lindsay Almond, Jr., resigned; and on the same day elected to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Amherst, Augusta, Bath, Clarke, Frederick, Highland, Nelson, Page, Rappahannock, Rockbridge, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren. CITIES: Buena Vista, Harrisonburg, Staunton, Waynesboro, and Winchester. Population (1950), 279,618. BURR POWELL HARRISON, Democrat, of Winchester, Va.; born at Win- - chester, Va., July 2, 1904; lawyer; admitted to the Virginia bar in June 1926; began general practice of law at Winchester, Va., in partnership with father, late Thomas W. Harrison, under firm name of Harrison & Harrison; admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States in 1938; member of first council and chairman first Committee on Permanent Organization of Virginia Integrated Bar; elected attorney for the Commonwealth, Frederick County, Va., in 1931 and reelected in 1935; Presidential elector 1940; elected member of Virginia Senate in 1939 but resigned in 1942 to accept appointment by Gov. Colgate W. Darden, Jr., as judge Seventeenth Judicial Circuit of Virginia; reelected as judge for an 8-vear term in 1946 by the Virginia Legislature; resigned as judge to accept Democratic nomination for Congress in September 1946; LL. D., Hampden-Sidney College, 1949; Episcopalian; honorary member Kiwanis; member Ruritan Club; member B. P. O. E., I. O. O. F., Grange; area councilman, Boy Scouts of America; member of law firm of Harrison, Benham & Thoma with offices at Winchester, Va.; elected to fill a vacancy in the Seventy-ninth Congress; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Albemarle, Arlington, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Fluvanna, Gooch-land, Greene, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Madison, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. CItiEs: Alexandria and Charlottesville. Population (1950), 505,979. HOWARD WORTH SMITH, Democrat, of Alexandria; born at Broad Run, Va.; graduated from Bethel Military Academy in 1901; B. L., University of Virginia, in 1903; admitted to the bar in 1904, and practiced law until 1922, when accepted appointment as judge of the corporation court of Alexandria; resigned this position in 1928 to accept appointment as judge of the sixteenth judicial circuit of Virginia; resigned as judge in 1930 to run for Congress; Commonwealth’s attorney of Alexandria from 1918 until he resigned to accept appointment on the bench in 1922; during World War I served as assistant general counsel to Alien Property Custodian; is president of the Alexandria National Bank; trustee and vice president of National Florence Crittenton Mission; engaged in farming and dairying; i% married and has two children, Howard Worth Smith, Jr., and Mrs. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——-11 140 Congressional Directory WASHINGTON Violett Smith Tonahill; member of the Episcopal Church; belongs to the fraternal orders of Elks, Masons, and Odd Fellows; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress as a Member at Large from the State of Virginia; reelected to the Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, KEighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bland, Buchanan, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, and Wise. City: Bristol. Population (1950), 387,923. THOMAS BACON FUGATE, Democrat, of Ewing, Va.; born April 10, 1899, near Tazewell, in Claiborne County, Tenn.; farmer and banker; attended public schools of Tennessee; University of Tennessee and Lincoln Memorial University ; married Lillian Oretta Rowlett, and they have four children, Maureen O. (Mrs. Joseph J. Shandrick), Harry M. Fugate, Beatrice Katheryn Fugate, and Francis B. Fugate; member of house of delegates, 1928-30; member of Constitutional Convention of Virginia, 1945; delegate, National Convention, 1944; president, the Peoples Bank of Ewing; member of board of trustees, Lincoln Memorial University; elder, Mount Carmel Presbyterian Church; Kiwanian; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. WASHINGTON (Population (1950) 2,378,963) SENATORS WARREN G. MAGNUSON, Democrat, Seattle; born, Minnesota, 1905; entered University of Washington, graduating from the law school in 1929, enter-ing the practice of law that year; served as special prosecuting attorney of King County, 1931; elected to the Washington State Legislature; served in the regular and special sessions of 1933; chairman of the Judiciary Committee; assistant United States district attorney, 1934; elected prosecuting attorney of King County, November 1934; member of American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars; served as lieutenant commander in U. S. N. R. in Pacific fleet; elected to the Seventy-fifth, Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, and Seventy-eighth Congresses; appointed to fill unexpired term of Senator Homer T. Bone December 15, 1944; elected to United States Senate November 7, 1944, for the full term ending January 3, 1951; reelected for the term ending 1957. HARRY PULLIAM CAIN; Republican, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in Nashville, Tenn., January 10, 1906; moved with his parents to Tacoma in 1911; attended the Tacoma public schools, Hill Military Academy, Portland, Oreg., and graduated with a B, A. degree from the University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.; awarded honorary LL. B. degree, 1947; employed by the Portland (Oreg.) Telegram, 1924-25, and by the Bank of California, Tacoma branch, Washington, 1929-39; married Miss Marjorie Dils of Seattle in 1935 and they have two children, a son, Harry P. Cain 3d, 14, and a daughter, Marlyce,8; elected mayor of Tacoma in 1940 for a 2-year term; reelected in 1942 for a 4-year term; affiliated with Veterans of Foreign Wars, American Legion, AMVETS, Elks, Eagles, Kiwanis, and Phi Delta Theta fraternity; took leave of absence of position as mayor to volunteer for the Army in early 1943; saw field service in Africa, Sicily, and Italy, staff service with S. H. A. E. F., England, and combat service as Assistant Chief of Staff, 18th Corps, Airborne, in France, Holland, Belgium, Austria, and Germany; promoted on Ardennes battlefield to rank of colonel; awarded Bronze Star with two Clusters, Legion of Merit, Croix de Guerre with Palm (French and Belgian); was honorably discharged from Army in De-cember 1945 to finish term as mayor of Tacoma, which expired in June 1946; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1946, and appointed to United States Senate December 26, 1946, to fill short term before assuming his 6-year term, January 3, 1947. WASHINGTON Biographical REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—Kirsap County. Kine County: City of Seattle. Population (1950), 520,296. HUGH B. MITCHELL, Democrat, of Seattle, Wash.; born in Great Falls, Mont., March 22, 1907; joined the editorial staff of the Everett (Wash.) News in 1931; served as executive assistant to Congressman and Senator Mon C. Wallgren 1933-45; appointed to the United States Senate in the Seventy-ninth Congress and served on Banking and Currency, National Defense Investigating, Interstate Commerce, Mines and Mining, Public Buildings Committees, 1945-46; president economic research firm 1947 and 1948 in Seattle; married to Kathryn H. Smith in 1937; two children, Bruce and Elizabeth; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; member House Committee on Banking and Currency and Education and Labor; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950; member House Committee on Rules. SECOND DISTRICT.—Countigs: Clallam, Island, Jefferson, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and What-com. KING COUNTY: Precincts of Avondale, Bothell 1 and 2, Broadview, Foy, Greenwood, Haller Lake, Hollywood, Juanita, Kenmore, Lake City, Lake Forest, Maple Leaf, Meadow Point, Morning-side, North Park, North Trunk, Oak Lake, Ravenna, Richmond, Woodinville, and Woodland. Pop-ulation (1950), 372,398. HENRY M. JACKSON, Democrat, of Everett, Wash., was born in that city, May 31, 1912; attended the Everett public schools and graduated from the Everett High School; attended Stanford University; University of Washington Law School, LL. B., 1935; after being admitted to the bar in 1935, became asso-ciated in the practice of law with the law firm of Black & Rucker; elected prose-cuting attorney of Snohomish County in 1938; affiliated with the Masons, Amer-ican Legion, Elks, Eagles, S. F. A., Sons of Norway, Delta Chi and Phi Delta Phi fraternities; member of the Washington State Bar Association; unmarried; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress, November 1940, and to each succeed-ing Congress; member of Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; served as adviser to American delegation to International Maritime Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, November 1945; was elected president of International Maritime Conference held in Seattle in June 1946; member of House Appropria-tions Committee and Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clark, Cowlitz, Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, Skamania, Thurston, and Wahkiakum (9 counties). Population (1950), 321,162. RUSSELL V. MACK, Republican, of Hoquiam, Wash.; born June 13, 1891, in Hillman, Mich.; resident of Grays Harbor County, Wash., since 1895; after attending Stanford University and University of Washington, joined the staff of the Aberdeen Daily World in 1913, and in 1920 became business manager of the paper; owner and publisher of the Hoquiam Washingtonian since 1934; past chancellor Knights of Pythias, past president of the Washington State Elks Association, former president of Northwest Rivers and Harbors Congress, and past post commander of the American Legion; member of Grange; served as a corporal of Field Artillery, Thirteenth Division, during First World War; married; elected to Eightieth Congress at special election June 7, 1947; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Columbia, Franklin, Garfield, Grant, Kittitas, Klickitat, Walla Walla, Whitman, and Yakima (12 counties). Population (1950), 355,766. HAL HOLMES, Republican, of Ellensburg, Wash.; born February 22, 1902; attended the public schools of Washington; was graduated from Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., with bachelor of science degree, doctor of laws degree, honor-ary, and from Columbia University, New York City, with master of arts degree; former professor of economics and business, dean of men, head of department of social studies at Central Washington College of Education; interested in livestock ranching and operations; married to Margaret Coffin Holmes; member of Grange, Farm Bureau, and Phi Beta Kappa; past northwest district governor of Kiwanis; elected on November 3, 1942, to the Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected on Novem-ber 7, 1944, to the Seventy-ninth Congress; reelected on November 5, 1946, to the Eightieth Congress; reelected on November 2, 1948, to the Eighty-first Congress; reelected on November 7, 1950, to the Eighty-second Congress. 142 Congressional Directory WEST VIRGINIA FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTIES: Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, Lincoln, Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Spokane and Stevens (8 counties). Population (1950), 339,950. WALT HORAN, Republican, of Wenatchee; born in Wenatchee, October 15, 1898, son of Margaret (Rankin) and Michael Horan; attended public schools in Wenatchee until enlisting in the United States Navy, April 5, 1917; returned after discharge in 1920 to finish high school; received Bachelor of Arts degree from Washington State College, 1925; engaged in fruit growing, packing, storing, and shipping; married college classmate, Helen Campbell; five children— Mrs. Douglas S. Paauw, Michael, Scott, Harold, and Walt, Jr.; received honorary degree, Doctor of Laws, Whitworth College, 1946; Presbyterian, Mason, Granger, American Legionnaire, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Sigma Delta Chi; member, Na-tional Capital Sesquicentennial Commission; elected to the Seventy-eighth Con-gress on November 3, 1942; reelected to the Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTY OF PIERCE. KING COUNTY: All that part not included in districts 1 and 2. Population (1950), 455,468. THOR C. TOLLEFSON, Republican, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in Perley, Minn., May 2, 1901, and moved to Tacoma, Wash., at the age of 10; attended the ublic schools of that city, graduating from Lincoln High School, graduated from cits of Washington Law School, member of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity, and Phi Delta Phi honorary legal fraternity; elected Pierce County Prosecutor in 1938; reelected in 1942; member of numerous fraternal and civic organizations including the Shrine, Moose, Elks, Eagles, Sons of Norway, Kiwanis, ete.; mem- ber of the Central Lutheran Church of Tacoma, married and the father of three daughters; elected to the Eightieth Congress in 1946; reelected to the Eighty-first Congress in 1948 and to the Eighty-second Congress in 1950. WEST VIRGINIA (Population (1950), 2,005,552) SENATORS HARLEY MARTIN KILGORE, Democrat, of Beckley, W. Va.; born in Brown, W. Va., January 11, 1893; educated in the public schools; was graduated from West Virginia University in 1914, with degree of LL. B.; attorney at law; served as judge of criminal court, Raleigh County, W. Va., January 1, 1933, until elected to the United States Senate; during the World War served in the United States Army, May 15, 1917, to March 13, 1920; member of the West Virginia National Guard, October 26, 1921, to date; member Masonic lodge, Elks, Moose, and American Legion, and Delta Tau Delta fraternity; married Lois E. Lilly, daughter of David G. Lilly, of Bluefield, W. Va.; two children—Robert Martin and Mrs. Albert T. Young, Jr.; elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1940, for the term ending January 3, 1947, reelected November 5, 1946, to the United States Senate for term ending January 3, 1953. " MATTHEW M. NEELY, Democrat, of Fairmont, W. Va., was born at Grove, Doddridge County, W. Va.; parents, Alfred Neely and Mary (Morris) Neely; served in the First Regiment, West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, throughout the Spanish-American War; was graduated from West Virginia University with A. B. and LL. B. degrees; received honorary degrees of D. Lit. from Salem College and LL. D. from Waynesburg College, and West Virginia University; is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Chi, and Phi Sigma Kappa fraternities; life member of Elks; life member and past Supreme Governor, Loyal Order of Moose; member and past Grand Chancellor, K. of P.; Odd Fellow and thirty-second degree Mason; was admitted to the Marion County bar in 1902, and since that time has been engaged in the practice of law at Fairmont; was married October 21, 1903, to Miss Alberta Claire Ramage, of Fairmont; they have two sons—Alfred Neely and John Champ Neely—and one daughter, Corinne Neely Pettit; was mayor of Fairmont, 1908-10; clerk of the House of Delegates of West Virginia, 1911-13; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress October 14, 1913, to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-sixth Congresses; elected United States Senator in 1922; unsuccessful candidate for reelection. in 1928; again elected to the United States Senate in 1930; reelected to the United States Senate in 1936 for the term expiring in 1943; resigned his seat in the Senate January 12, 1941, to become Governor of West Virginia for the term ending January 15, 1945; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress; again elected United States Senator for the term beginning January 3, 1949. : WEST VIRGINIA Biographical 143 REPRESENTATIVES FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Brooke, Hancock, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, Taylor, and Wetzel (7 coun-ties). Population (1950), 279,444. ROBERT LINCOLN RAMSAY, Democrat, reared in Hancock County, W. Va.; graduate of West Virginia Law School; practiced law in Wellsburg, W. Va., for more than 40 years; city attorney of Follansbee, 1905 to 1930; pros-ecuting attorney of Brooke County 1908 to 1912 and 1916 to 1921; served on the first Board of Governors of West Virginia University; married Miss Edna Brind-ley, of Wellsburg, February 12, 1908, one child living, Charlotte Phillips; member of the Christian Church and Odd Fellows Lodge; elected to the Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth, Seventy-seventh, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; during World War II, served as special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States, 1943-44 and part of 1945, in War Frauds Unit, of Antitrust Division, Department of Justice; assistant attorney general of the State of West Virginia during the years 1945, 1946, 1947, and 1948. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Pocahontas, Preston, Randolph, Tucker, and Webster (15 counties). Population (1950), 301,844. HARLEY O. STAGGERS, Democrat, of Keyser, Mineral County, W. Va., born in Keyser, W. Va., August 3, 1907, son of Jacob and Frances (Cumberledge) Staggers, attended public schools of Mineral County, graduated with an A. B. degree from Emory and Henry College in 1931; graduate work at Duke and Northwestern Universities; high-school coach and teacher for 2 years; head coach at Potomac State College, Keyser, W. Va., for 2 years; sheriff of Mineral County from 1937 to 1941; served nearly 4 years in United States Naval Air Corps as a navigator; member of the American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Loyal Order of Moose, and Lions; past president of the West Virginia State Moose Association; former district governor of West Virginia Lions Clubs; married Mary V. Casey, of Keyser, W. Va.; father of five children, Margaret Ann, Mary Katherine, Frances Susan, Elizabeth Ellen, and Harley O., Jr.; reelected to the Hishiyein Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second ongress. THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Braxton, Calhoun, Clay, Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Harrison, Lewis, Nicholas, Ritchie, and Upshur (11 counties). Population (1950), 310,360. CLEVELAND M. BAILEY, Democrat, of Clarksburg, W. Va.; married; six children; graduate of Geneva College, Geneva, Pa.; district supervisor of schools, Harrison County; Associated Press editor of the Clarksburg Exponent; assistant State auditor from March 4, 1933, to May 1941; member of Barnes Memorial Baptist Church; member of Elks, Knights of Pythias, and Kiwanis; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; elected to Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Cabell, Jackson, Lincoln, Mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Roane, Tyler, Wayne, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1950), 335,285. 4 M. G. BURNSIDE, Democrat, -of Huntington, W. Va.; born August 23, 1902; educated in public schools, The Citadel; B. S., Furman University; training in law, Furman University; M. A., Latin-American Relations, University of Texas; Ph. D. in Government, Duke University; international fellowships; public-school teacher; instructor; professor in the Political Science Department of Marshall College; Coordinator of Latin-American Affairs for Subregional Center; chairman for government and labor conferences; arbiter in labor disputes; served on Parole and Probation Examining Committee for West Virginia; chairman of Citizens’ Recreation Committee; board member and vice president of Community Welfare Council; chairman of Workers’ Education for West Virginia; one of the founders of the International Relations Clubs of America; member of following organiza-tions: Rotary International, Loyal Order of Moose; Pi Gamma Mu, American Association of University Professors; Southern Political Science Association; American Political Science Association; American Public Administration Asso-ciation; Lambda Chi Alpha, national social fraternity; First Presbyterian Church of Huntington, W. Va., deacon, elder, and Sunday-school teacher; married to former Evelyn Jackson Pell; one daughter, Marilyn McCants, 12 years old; elected to the Eighty-first Congress on November 2, 1948; reelected to Eighty-second Congress. ; 144 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Greenbrier, McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Monroe, Summers, and Wyo-ming (7 counties). Population (1950), 329,584. ELIZABETH KEE, Democrat, of Bluefield, W. Va. (home Woodland Drive, Bluefield, W. Va.); widow of the late Congressman John Kee, who was chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs at the time of his death on May 8, 1951; mother of two children, James and Frances; Episcopalian; active in Demo-cratic politics since 1922, and the first woman to be elected to Congress from the State of West Virginia; member of the American Newspaper Women’s Club, being the author of a weekly column which has appeared for many years in West Virginia papers; sponsor of library for physically handicapped at the Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center, Fishersville, Va.; served as executive secretary to Congress-man John Kee from time of his first election to Congress in November 1932 to the time of his death; elected to the Eighty-second Congress on July 17, 1951, to fill unexpired term of her husband; member of House Committee on Veterans affairs. SiyTh DISTRICT Convey Boone, Kanawha, Logan, and Raleigh (4 counties). Population (1950), ERLAND HAROLD HEDRICK, Democrat, of Beckley, W. Va.; born at Barn, Mercer Courity, W. Va., August 9, 1894; attended the grammar schools of Beckley, W. Va., and Beckley Institute; was graduated from the University of Maryland, Baltimore, Md., with an M. D. degree in June 1917; after graduation, served in the United States Army Medical Corps as a first lieutenant for 18 months; following discharge from the Army has since engaged in the practice of medicine in Beckley, W. Va.; married Myrtle Adelle Wade, of Nashville, Tenn.; served as medical examiner for the Veterans’ Administration from 1919 to 1944; city health officer and county health officer at various times during the past 15 years; is vice president and director of the Raleigh County Bank of Beckley; co-owner of an ice-cream factory and also interested in theater and real-estate busi-ness; was superintendent of Pinecrest Tuberculosis Sanitarium 1943 and 1944; vice president of the Corrinne Coal & Land Co. of Beckley; coowner of Guyan Utilities Co. of Beckley; member of American Legion, Beckley, W. Va., Chamber of Commerce, Moose Lodge, American Medical Association, and Raleigh County Medical Association, and was president of the latter association in 1932; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress November 7, 1944, with a majority of approximately 24,000 in the Sixth District of West Virginia over his opponent; reelected to Eightieth Congress 1947 by a substantial majority; reelected 1948 with approxi-mate majority of 40,000 to Eighty-first Congress, and reelected to the i second Congress with a majority of over 30,000; member of the Committee on Appropriations and Select Committee to Investigate the Use of Chemicals in Food Products. WISCONSIN (Population (1950), 3,434,575) SENATORS ALEXANDER WILEY, Republican, of Chippewa Falls, Wis.; born in that city on May 26, 1884; received education at Augsburg College, Minneapolis, Minn., and University of Michigan; LL. B., University of Wisconsin, 1907; married May Jenkins (now deceased) of Chippewa Falls; four children, Elisabeth, Marshall, Rosemary, and Winifred; small-town banker, businessman, lawyer, operator of dairy farm for 31 years; served as school board member, president of chamber of commerce, governor of Wisconsin-Upper Michigan District of Kiwanis; only public office held previously was that of district attorney for Chippewa County, 1909-15; elected to the United States Senate, November 8, 1938, for the term ending January 3, 1945; reelected November 7, 1944, for term ending January 1951; reelected November 7, 1950, for term ending January 1957; official representative of United States Government at the Interparliamentary Union Conference in Oslo, Norway, in September 1939 and the British Empire Parliamentary Conference in Bermuda in June 1946; head of United States delegation to Empire Parliamentary Conference in Bermuda in 1948; former chairman Senate Committee on the Judiciary; ranking Republican member of Senate Foreign Relations Committee; member, former Senate Special Committee to Investigate Crime in Interstate Commerce; United States delegate to Japanese Peace Conference in San Francisco, 1951. WISCONSIN Biographical ~ JOSEPH R. McCARTHY, Republican, of Appleton, Wis.; born in Grand Chute; Outagamie County, November 14, 1909; elected to the United States Senate in 1946 for the term ending January 3, 1953. REPRESENTATIVES a OT Couey, Green, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (5 counties). Population LAWRENCE H. SMITH, Republican, of Racine, Wis.; educated in the public schools of Racine, State Teachers College, and Marquette University, Law School, Milwaukee (LL. B., 1923); served as first lieutenant, Infantry, Thirty-second Division, during First World War; department commander, Wisconsin Depart-ment, American Legion; national executive committeeman, American Legion; national child welfare chairman, American Legion; president, Racine County Bar Association; director, Y. M. C. A., Racine; president, Racine Lions Club; member House Foreign Affairs Committee; married Eleanor Rowley, of Racine; three children, Betty, Alice, and John; elected to the Seventy-seventh Congress at a special election held on August 29, 1941; reelected to the Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Columbia, Dane, Dodge, Jefferson, and Waukesha (5 counties). Population (1950), 388,880. GLENN R. DAVIS, Republican, Waukesha, Wis.; born October 28, 1914; was graduated from Mukwonago High School in 1930, and from Platteville State Teachers’ College in 1934; taught at Cottage Grove and Waupun high schools 4 years; received law degree from University of Wisconsin in 1940, resigned from Wisconsin State Legislature to enlist in Navy after Pearl Harbor; served 334 years in -Pacific; married Dr. Kathryn McFarlane of Waukesha November 29, 1942; two children, Kathleen Ann and Margaret; Methodist, thirty-second degree Mason, V. F. W., American Legion, Kiwanis; member of law firm of Love, Davis and Gramling, Waukesha; named by United States Junior Chamber of Com-merce as one of ten outstanding young men in America for 1947; elected to the Eightieth Congress at a special election on April 22, 1947, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Robert K. Henry; reelected to the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, La Crosse, Lafayette, Monroe, Rich-land, Sauk, and Vernon (10 counties). Population (1950), 299,961. GARDNER R. WITHROW, Republican, of La Crosse, was born in La Crosse, Wis., October 5, 1892; was educated in the grade schools and high school of that city, and after 2 years of legal training entered the train service of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co.; member of the Wisconsin Assembly in 1926-27 and served as State legislative representative for the railroad brotherhoods from 1928 to 1931; elected on November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to Seventy-third, Seventy-fourth, Seventy-fifth Congresses; on Novem-ber 2, 1948, elected to Eighty-first Congress; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on November 7, 1950. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE COUNTY: City of Milwaukee, wards 3, 4, 5, 8, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 23, 24, and 27; cities of Cudahy, South Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and West Allis, towns of Franklin, Green-field, Lake, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa, and villages of West Milwaukee and Greendale. Population(1950), 442,870. CLEMENT J. ZABLOCKI, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis.; born in Mil-waukee, Wis., November 18, 1912; graduate of Marquette University with a Ph. B. degree; also took graduate work in education at Marquette University; taught high school in Milwaukee; organist and choir director; married Miss Blanche M. Janice of Milwaukee, May 26, 1937; elected State senator of the Third District, of Wisconsin in 1942, reelected in 1946; elected to the Eighty-first Con-gress on November 2, 1948; reelected to the Eighty-second Congress on No-vember 7, 1950. ) : FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILwAUKEE County: City of Milwaukee, wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 9, 10, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 25, and 26, towns of Granville and Milwaukee, and villages of Fox Point, River Hills, Shorewood, and Whitefish Bay. Population (1950), 421,067. CHARLES J. KERSTEN, Republican, of Milwaukee, Wis., born May 26, 1902, in Chicago, Ill, son of Charles H. Kersten and Nora Gillespie Kersten; graduate of Marquette University College of Law, Milwaukee, Wis., LL. B., prac-ticing lawyer in Milwaukee, Wis., since 1928; first assistant district attorney of 146 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN Milwaukee County, 1937-43; spent year of travel and study in Europe and Near East, 1925-26; married Miss Mary Edith McKinnon of Antigo, Wis.; one daughter, Mary Callista, and four sons, Edmund Campion, George Patrick, Kenan John, and Kevin; elected to the Eightieth Congress on November 5, 1946; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Calumet, Fond du Lae, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington, and Winne-bago (6 counties). Population (1950), 314,902. : WILLIAM K. VAN PELT, Republiean, of Fond du Lac, Wis., born in Glen-beulah, Wis.,, March 10, 1905; married; two children, William Peter, age 11, and Julie Ann, age 5; owns and operates fuel business in Fond du Lac under the firm name City Fuel Co.; active in the Republican Party for many years, serving as county chairman of Fond du Lac County Committee for 6 years; was a Stassen delegate to the National Republican Convention in 1944, and an alternate Stassen delegate in 1948; past exalted ruler of Fond du Lac Elks lodge No. 57; member of the Fond du Lac Kiwanis Club, member of several Masonic bodies, and has been active in many civic programs; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1950), 303,152. "REID F. MURRAY, Republican, of Ogdensburg, Wis.; born in Ogdensburg, Wis., October 16, 1887; graduate of College of Agriculture, University of Wis-consin, 1916; professor of animal husbandry, agriculture extension of the Uni-versity of Wisconsin, 1922-27; county agent, Winnebago County; agricultural agent, Northern Pacific Railway Co., 3 years; agricultural agent, First National Bank of Oshkosh, 3 years; married Lyla Hermanson; two sons, Reid, Jr., and Hyde; one daughter, Kittie Ann; elected to the Seventy-sixth, Seventy-seventh, Seventy-eighth, Seventy-ninth, Eightieth, FEighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoe, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1950), 359,203. JOHN W. BYRNES, Republican, of Green Bay, Wis.; born in Green Bay, Wis., June 12, 1913, and has resided there all his life; graduate of the University of Wisconsin, where he received a B. A. degree in 1936 and a degree of LLL. B. in 1938; since then has been engaged in the practice of law in Green Bay; has also been employed by the banking department of Wisconsin as a special deputy com-missioner of banking, but resigned from this position upon his election as a State senator in 1940; served one term in the Wisconsin State Senate, where he was majority floor leader and chairman of the judiciary committee during the 1943 legislative session; married Miss Barbara Preston, of Upper Montclair, N. J., on February 15, 1947; three children, John Robert, Michael Preston, and Bonnie Jean; home address, 414 East Walnut Street, Green Bay, Wis.; elected to the Seventy-ninth Congress on November 7, 1944; reelected to the Eightieth, Eighty-first, and Eighty-second Congresses; member of Committee on Ways and Means. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Olark, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson, Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau (11 counties). Population (1950), 300,122. MERLIN HULL, Republican, of Black River Falls, Wis.; lawyer; publisher of the Banner-Journal; served as district attorney; served in Wisconsin Assembly from 1909 to 1915; speaker of assembly in 1913; secretary of state for Wisconsin from 1917 to 1921; elected to the Seventy-first Congress from the Seventh District in 1928; elected to the Seventy-fourth Congress from the Ninth District in 1934; reelected to the Seventy-fifth and succeeding Congresses; was reelected to the Eighty-second Congress in 1950 by a majority of about 35,000. TENTH DISTRICT.—OouNTIES: Ashland, Bayfield, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Lincoln, Oneida, Polk, Price, Rusk, Sawyer, Taylor, Vilas, and Washburn (14 counties). Population (1950), 248,715. ALVIN EDWARD O’KONSKI, Republican, of Mercer, Wis.; born on a farm at Kewaunee, Wis.; May 26, 1904; graduate of Kewaunee High School; Bachelor of Education Degree from Oshkosh State Teachers College; graduate work at University of Wisconsin and University of Iowa; taught at Omro and Oconto High Schools; taught at Itasca Jr. College, Coleraine, Minn. ; superintendent of schools, Pulaski, Wis.; taught at Oregon State College, Corvallis, Oreg.; taught at Uni-versity of Detroit, Detroit, Mich.; president World Bill of Rights Association, 1945; director World League to Stop Communism, 1947-48; president of American WYOMING Biographical : 147 Anti-Communist Association, 1947; voted ‘Most Distinguished American for 1945” by foreign language press for work against communism and exposingof the Yalta agreements betraying the small nations of Europe and Asia; owner and operator of Radio Station WLIN, Merrill, Wis.; elected in 1942 and reelected each election since with increasing majorities; now serving his fifth term. WYOMING (Population (1950), 290,529) SENATORS JOSEPH C. MAHONEY, Democrat, of Cheyenne, Wyo.; born in Chelsea, Mass., November 5, 1884; educated at Cambridge (Mass.) Latin School and Columbia University; LL. B., Georgetown University, 1920; LL. D., Columbia University, New York, 1938; LL. D., Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., June 1941; Lit. D., De Paul University, Chicago. June 12, 1946; LL. D., Univer-sity of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyo., June 1947; D. Sec. in business administration, Hill College, Woonsocket, R. I., 1948; D. C. L., St. Joseph’s College, Philadel-. phia, Pa., 1951; engaged in the newspaper business in Boulder, Colo., December 1908; married Agnes V. O'Leary, June 11, 1913; city editor, Cheyenne State Leader, 1916; entered practice of law, Cheyenne, Wyo., and Washington, D. C., 1920; member of Conference of Uniform State Laws, 1925-26; First Assistant Postmaster General, March 6 to December 31, 1933; appointed by Gov. Leslie A. Miller, on December 18, 1933, to fill the vacancy in.the United States Senate caused by the death of Hon. John B. Kendrick; elected November 6, 1934, to both the unexpired term ending January 3, 1935, and the full term ending January 3, 1941; reelected November 5, 1940; reelected November 5, 1946. LESTER CALLAWAY HUNT, Democrat, of Lander, Wyo.; born in Isabel, Ill., July 8, 1892, son of William and Viola (Callaway) Hunt; attended Wesleyan University, Bloomington, Ill, and graduated from St. Louis University College of Dentistry, D. D. S. degree, in 1917; LL. D., University of Wyoming, 1950; began the practice of dentistry in Lander, Wyo., but in a few months joined the United States Army and served as a lieutenant until discharged in 1919; now holds the rank of major in the Reserve Corps; after post-graduate study at Northwestern University in 1920 resumed dental practice; Fellow, American Col-lege of Dentists; married Emily Nathelle, daughter of Guy W. Higby, February 3, 1918, and they have two children, Lester Callaway Hunt and Mrs. Russell Henry Wood Chadwick; elected to the State house of representatives in 1932; secretary of State of Wyoming 1934-42; Governor of Wyoming in 1942; reelected in 1946; chairman of Governors’ Conference at Portsmouth, N. H., June 1948; president of the Wyoming State Board of Dental Examiners in 1924-28; president of the Wyoming State Dental Society in 1926; chairman of the Procurement Service for Wyoming dentists during the war years, and at various times served as president of the Fremont County Medical and Dental Society, member Inter-national College of Dentists, the Lander Chamber of Commerce, and the Lander School Board; is also a member of the American Dental Association, the Masonic Order (32d degree, Shriner), American Legion, B. P. O. E., F. O. E., Moose, Psi Omega, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and the Rotary Club in Cheyenne; in 1942 was admitted to the Pierre Fauchard Academy; fellow, American College of Dentists; elected to the United States Senate on November 2, 1948, for the term ending January 3, 1955. REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE.—Population (1950), 290,529. WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, Republican, of Sheridan, Wyo.; born in Terre Haute, Ind., August 10, 1896; attended University of Nebraska; member of Sigma Chi and Sigma Delta Kappa fraternities; served in Army, World War I; engaged in the practice of law, Sheridan, Wyo.; member of the Wyoming House of Representatives 1945, 1947, and 1949; secretary of the Wyoming Legislative Interim Committee 1947-50; married Mary E. Newton October 19, 1920; two children, Maribeth Brewer and William Henry Harrison, Jr.; elected to the Eighty-second Congress November 7, 1950. 148 Congressional Directory PUERTO RICO ALASKA (Population (1950), 128,643) DELEGATE E. L. (BOB) BARTLETT, Democrat, of Juneau, Alaska; born Seattle, Wash., April 20, 1904; educated in Fairbanks (Alaska) grammar and high schools and Universities of Washington and Alaska; resident of Alaska since 1905; married Vide Marie Gaustad, 1930; children, Doris Ann and Susan; former staff member, Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner; secretary to Delegate Anthony J. Dimond of Alaska, 1933-35; gold miner in Alaska, 1936-39; served as chairman, Unem-ployment Compensation Commission of Alaska; secretary of Alaska under Presi-dential appointment, 1939-44; elected as Delegate to Congress from Alaska in 1944; reelected in 1946, 1948, and 1950. HAWAII (Population (1950), 499,794) DELEGATE JOSEPH RIDER FARRINGTON, Republican, of Honolulu, T. H.; born, | Washington, D. C., October 15, 1897; educated, Punahou Academy, Honolulu, T. H., and University of Wisconsin; second lieutenant of Field Artillery, World War 1; married Mary Elizabeth Pruett, 1920; children, Beverly (Mrs. Hugh F. Richardson) and John; newspaper reporter, Washington correspondent, managing editor, publisher, successively in Philadelphia, Washington, D. C., Honolulu, T. H., 1919 to present; elected Senate, Territory of Hawaii, 1934, reelected 1938; elected Delegate to Congress from Hawaii, 1942; reelected 1944; reelected 1946; reelected 1948; reelected 1950. PUERTO RICO (Population (1950), 2,210,703) RESIDENT COMMISSIONER ANTONIO FERNOS-ISERN, Popular Democrat, of Santurce, P. R., was born in San Lorenzo, P. R., May 10, 1895; appointed by the Governor of Puerto Rico on September 11, 1946, as Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico to the United States in the vacancy created on the appointment of Hon. Jesis T. Pifiero, former Commissioner, as Governor of Puerto Rico; confirmed by the Insular Senate on October 2, 1946; elected November 2, 1948, for a 4-year term; married Tula Delgado in 1920; no children; attended elementary and high school in Puerto Rico; also the Bloomsburg (Pennsylvania) State Normal School, medical preparatory course; graduate of University of Maryland, College of Physicians and Surgeons and School of Medicine; practiced medicine, 1916 to 1918, in Caguas, P. R.; health officer of the city of San Juan 1918; Chief, Bureau of Trans-missible Diseases, Insular Department of Health, 1919; Assistant Commissioner of Health of Puerto Rico, 1920-21; director of School Hygiene, city of San Juan, 1922; Assistant Commissioner of Health of Puerto Rico, 1923-31; Commissioner of Health of Puerto Rico, 1931-33; United States Delegate to the Fifth Pan American Child Congress held at Habana, Cuba, December 1927; chairman, Puerto Rico Chapter of the American Red Cross, 1930; chairman, insular Board of Health of Puerto Rico, 1930-31; chairman, Child Welfare Board of Puerto Rico, 1926-31; former professor of Public Health School of Tropical Medicine of Puerto Rico; private practice of medicine 1933-42; vice chairman, First Puerto Rico Child Welfare Congress, 1941; chairman, Puerto Rico Housing Authority, 1941 to 1945; director, Civilian Defense Metropolitan Area, 1942; Executive Director, Puerto Rico Food and Supply Commission, 1942; Commissioner of Health of Puerto Rico, 1942-46; Delegate for Puerto Rico to the First Session of the West Indian Conference held at Barbados in 1944 and to the Second Session of the West Indian Conference held at St. Thomas in 1946 under the auspices of the Caribbean Commission; acting Governor of Puerto Rico at various times from 1943 to 1946; honorary chairman, Puerto Rico Chapter, American Red Cross; honorary life member, American Social Hygiene Association; fellow, American Public Health Association. STATE DELEGATIONS [Number which precedes name of Representative designates congressional district. Democrats in roman; Republicans in #alics; Independent in SMALL CAPS] ALABAMA SENATORS Lister Hill John J. Sparkman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] 1. Frank W. Boykin 4. Kenneth A. Roberts 7. Carl Elliott 2. George M. Grant 5. Albert Rains 8. Robert E. Jones, Jr. 3. George W. Andrews 6. Edward deGraffenried 9. Laurie C. Battle ARIZONA SENATORS Carl Hayden Ernest W. McFarland REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. John R. Murdock 2. Harold A. (Porque) Patten ARKANSAS SENATORS John L.. McClellan J. W. Fulbright REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 1. E. C. Gathings 4. Boyd Tackett 7. Oren Harris 2. Wilbur D. Mills 5. Brooks Hays 3. James W. Trimble 6. W. F. Norrell CALIFORNIA SENATORS William F. Knowland Richard M. Nixon REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10; Republicans, 13] 1. Hubert B. Scudder 9. Allan O. Hunter 17. Cecil R. King 2. Clair Engle 10. Thomas H. Werdel 18. Clyde Doyle 3. Leroy Johnson 11. Ernest K. Bramblett 19. Chet Holifield 4. Franck R. Havenner 12. Patrick J. Hillings 20. Carl Hinshaw 5. John F. Shelley 13. Norris Poulson 21. Harry R. Sheppard 6. George P. Miller 14. Samuel W. Yorty 22. John Phillips 7. John J. Allen, Jr. 15. Gordon L. McDonough 23. Clinton D. McKinnon 8. Jack 7. Anderson 16. Donald L. Jackson 151 152 Congressional Directory COLORADO SENATORS Edwin C. Johnson Eugene D. Millikin REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 2] 1. Byron G. Rogers 3. J. Edgar Chenoweth 4, Wayne N. Aspinall 2. William S. Hall CONNECTICUT SENATORS Brien McMahon William Benton REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 4] At large— Antoni N. Sadlak 1. A. A. Ribicoff 3. John A. McGuire 5. James T. Patterson 2. Horace Seely-Brown, Jr. 4. Albert P. Morano DELAWARE SENATORS John J. Williams J. Allen Frear, Jr. REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large—J. Caleb Boggs FLORIDA SENATORS Spessard L. Holland George A. Smathers REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. Chester B. McMullen . 3. Robert L. F. Sikes 5. A. 8. Herlong, Jr. 2. Charles E. Bennett 4. William C. (Bill) Lantaff 6. Dwight L. Rogers GEORGIA SENATORS Walter F. George Richard B. Russell REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 10] 1. Prince H. Preston, Jr. 5. James C. Davis 8. W. M. (Don) Wheeler 2. E. E. Cox 6. Carl Vinson 9. John S. Wood 3. E. L. Forrester 7. Henderson Lanham 10. Paul Brown 4. A. Sidney Camp : IDAHO SENATORS Henry C. Dworshak Herman Welker REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. John T. Wood 2. Hamer H. Budge State Delegations ILLINOIS SENATORS Paul H. Douglas Everett M. Dirksen REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8; Republicans, 18] . William L. Dawson 10. Richard W. Hoffman . Robert B. Chiperfield . Richard B. Vail 11. Timothy P. Sheehan . Szd Stimpson Fred E. Busbey 12. Edgar A. Jonas . Peter F. Mack, Jr. . William E. McVey 13. Marguerite S. Church . William L. Springer John C. Kluezynski 14. Chauncey W. Reed . Edward H. Jenison . Thomas J. O’Brien 15. Noah M. Mason . Charles W. Vursell . Adolph J. Sabath 16. Leo E. Allen 25. Melvin Price . Thomas S. Gordon 17. Leslie C. Arends 26. C. W. (Runt) Bishop . Sidney R. Yates 18. Harold H. Velde INDIANA SENATORS Homer E. Capehart William E. Jenner REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 9] . Ray J. Madden 4. E. Ross Adair 8. Winfield K. Denton . Charles A. Halleck 5. John V. Beamer 9. Earl Wilson . Shepard J. Crumpacker, 6. Cecil M. Harden 10. Ralph Harvey JT 7. William G. Bray 11. Charles B. Brownson IOWA SENATORS Bourke B. Hickenlooper Guy M. Gillette REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 8] . Thomas E. Martin 4. Karl M. LeCompte 7. Ben F. Jensen . Henry O. Talle 5. Paul Cunningham 8. Charles B. Hoeven .. H. I. Gross 6. James I. Dolliver KANSAS SENATORS Andrew F. Schoeppel Frank Carlson REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 6] . Albert M. Cole 3. Myron V. George 5. Clifford R. Hope . Errett P. Scrivner 4. Edward H. Rees 6. Waint Smith KENTUCKY SENATORS Earle C. Clements Thomas R.: Underwood REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 2; vacant 1] . Noble J. Gregory 4. Frank L. Chelf 7. Carl D. Perkins . [Vacant.] 5. Brent Spence 8. Joe B. Bates . Thruston Ballard Mor-6. John C. Watts 9. James S. Golden ton = IBD DO — ON QOD == 154 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA SENATORS Allen J. Ellender, Sr. Russell B. Long REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8] F. Edward Hébert 4, Overton Brooks 7. Henry D. Larcade, Jr. . Hale Boggs 5. Otto E. Passman 8. A. Leonard Allen . Edwin BE. Willis 6. James H. Morrison MAINE SENATORS Owen Brewster : Margaret Chase Smith REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 3] Robert Hale 2. Charles P. Nelson 3. Clifford G. McIntire MARYLAND SENATORS Herbert R. O’Conor ? John M. Butler. REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3] . Edward T. Miller 3. Edward A. Garmatz 5. Lansdale G. Sasscer . James P. S. Devereux ~ 4. George H. Fallon 6. J. Glenn Beall MASSACHUSETTS SENATORS Leverett Saltonstall Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 8] John W. Heselton 6. William H. Bates 11. John F. Kennedy Foster Furcolo 7. Thomas J. Lane 12. John W. McCormack Philip J. Philbin 8. Angier L. Goodwin 13. Richard B. Wiggles-Harold D. Donohue 9. Donald W. Nicholson worth Edith Nourse Rogers 10. Christian A. Herter 14. Joseph W. Martin, Jr. MICHIGAN SENATORS Homer Ferguson Blair Moody REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 5; Republicans, 12] Thaddeus M. Machro-6. William W. Blackney 12. John B. Bennett wicz 7. Jesse P. Wolcott 13. George D. O’Brien George Meader : 8. Fred L. Crawford ~~ 14. Louis C. Rabaut Foo. mt . Paul W. Shafer ; 9. Ruth Thompson 15. John D. Dingell Clare E. Hoffman -. 10. Roy O. Woodruff 16. John Lesinski, Jr. Gerald R. Ford, Jr. 11. Charles E. Potter 17. George A. Dondero State Delegations MINNESOTA SENATORS Edward J. Thye Hubert 1. August H. Andresen 2. Joseph P. O'Hara 3. Roy W. Wier James 1. John E. Rankin 2. Jamie L. Whitten 3. Frank E. Smith James P. Kem 1. Clare Magee 2. Morgan M. Moulder 3. Phil J. Welch 4. Leonard Irving 5. Richard Bolling ~ James E. Murray REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 5] 4. Eugene J. McCarthy 5. Walter H. Judd 6. Fred Marshall MISSISSIPPI SENATORS H. Humphrey 7. H. Carl Andersen 8. John A. Blatnik 9. Harold C. Hagen O. Eastland John C. Stennis REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 7] 4. Thomas G. Abernethy 5. Arthur Winstead 6. William M. Colmer MISSOURI SENATORS - Thomas REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9; Republicans, 6. 5 o. 10. O. K. Armstrong Dewey Short A. S. J. Carnahan Clarence Cannon Paul C. Jones MONTANA SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES C. 4] 7. John Bell Williams Hennings, Jr. 11. Claude I. Bakewell 12. Thomas B. Curtis 13. Frank M. Karsten Zales N. Ecton [Democrat, 1; Republican, 1] 1. Mike Mansfield 2. Wesley A. D’ Ewart NEBRASKA SENATORS Hugh Butler Fred A. Seaton REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 4] 1. Carl T. Curtis 3. Robert D. Harrison 4. A. L. Miller 2. Howard H. Buffett 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 12 156 Congressional Directory NEVADA PONS TUR CDI SENATORS Pat McCarran George W. Malone REPRESENTATIVE [Democrat, 1] At large— Walter S. Baring NEW HAMPSHIRE SENATORS Styles Bridges Charles W. Tobey REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. Chester E. Merrow 2. Norris Cotton NEW JERSEY SENATORS H. Alexander Smith Robert C. H endrickson REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, §; Republicans, 9] 1. Charles A. Wolverton 6. Clifford P. Case 11 . Hugh J. Addonizio 2. T. Millet Hand 7. William B. Widnall 12 . Robert W. Kean 3. James C. Auchincloss 8. Gordon Canfield 13 . Alfred D. Sieminski 4. Charles R. Howell 9. Frank C. Osmers, Jr. 14 . Edward J. Hart 5. Charles A. Eaton 10. Peter W. Rodino, Jr. NEW MEXICO SENATORS Dennis Chavez Clinton P. Anderson REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Democrats, 2] Antonio M. Fernandez John J. Dempsey NEW YORK SENATORS Irving M. Ives Herbert H. Lehman REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 23; Republicans, 22] Ernest Greenwood . Frederic R. Coudert, 31 . Bernard W. (Pat) . Leonard W. Hall Jr Kearney Henry J. Latham . James G. Donovan 32 . William T. Byrne L. Gary Clemente . Arthur G. Klein 33 . Dean P. Taylor T. Vincent Quinn . Franklin D. Roose-34 . Clarence E. Kilburn James J. Delaney velt, Jr. 35 . William R. Williams Louis B. Heller . Jacob K. Javits . R. Walter Riehlman Victor L. Anfuso . Adam C. Powell, Jr. . Edwin Arthur Hall . Eugene J. Keogh . Sidney A. Fine . John Taber . Edna F. Kelly . Isidore Dollinger . W. Sterling Cole . James J. Heffernan . Charles A. Buckley 40 . Kenneth B. Keating . John J. Rooney . Christopher C. Mec-41 . Harold C. Ostertag . Donald L. O’Toole Grath 42 . William E. Miller . Abraham J. Multer . Ralph W. Gwinn 43 . Edmund P. Radwan . Emanuel Celler . Ralph A. Gamble . John C. Butler . James J. Murphy . Katharine St. George . Daniel A. Reed 30. J. Ernest Wharton 1 0 RO > Sp NI State Delegations NORTH CAROLINA SENATORS Clyde R. Hoey Willis Smith REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 12] . Herbert C. Bonner 5 . Thurmond Chatham 9. Robert L. Doughton . John H. Kerr 6 . Carl T. Durham 10. Hamilton C. Jones . Graham A. Barden 7 . F. Ertel Carlyle 11. Woodrow W. Jones . Harold D. Cooley 8 . Charles B. Deane 12. Monroe M. Redden NORTH DAKOTA SENATORS William Langer Milton R. Young - REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE) [Republicans, 2] Usher L. Burd: ck . Fred G. Aandahl OHIO SENATORS Robert A. Taft John W. Bricker REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 16; Independent, 1] At large—George H. Bender Charles H. Elston 9. Frazier REAMS 17. J. Harry McGregor . William E. Hess 1 0. Thomas A. Jenkins .. Wayne L. Hays Paul F. Schenck 11. Walter E. Brehm Michael J. Kirwan William M. McCulloch 12. John M. Vorys Michael A. Feighan Cliff Clevenger 13. Alvin F. Weichel . Robert Crosser James G. Polk 14. William H. Ayres . Frances P. Bolton Clarence J. Brown 15. Robert T. Secrest . Jackson E. Betts 1 6. Frank T. Bow OKLAHOMA SENATORS Robert S. Kerr A. 8S. Mike Monroney REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 2] George B. Schwabe 4. Tom Steed 7. Victor Wickersham William G. Stigler 5, John Jarman 8. Page Belcher Carl Albert 6. Toby Morris OREGON SENATORS Guy Cordon Wayne Morse REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 4] Walter Norblad 3. Homer D. Angell 4. Harris Ellsworth Lowell Stockman SORS 158 : Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA SENATORS Edward Martin James H. Duff REPRESENTATIVES | Democrats, 13; Republicans, 20] 1. William A. Barrett 13. George M. Rhodes 24. Thomas E. Morgan 2. William T. Granahan 14. Joseph L. Carrigg 25. Louis E. Graham 3. Hardie Scott 15. Alvin R. Bush 26. John P. Saylor 4. Earl Chudoff 16. Samuel K. McCon-27. Augustine B.-Kelley 5. William J. Green, Jr. nell, Jr. 28. Carroll D. Kearns 6. Hugh D. Scott, Jr. 17. Richard M. Simpson 29. Harmar D. Denny, Jr. 7. Benjamin F. James 18. Walter M. Mumma 30. Robert J. Corbett 8. Karl C. King 19. Leon H. Gavin 31. James G. Fulton 9. Paul B. Dague 20. Francis E. Walter 32. Herman P. Eberharter 10. Harry P. O’Neill 21. James F. Lind 33. Vera Buchanan 11. Daniel J. Flood 22. JamesE. Van Zandt 12. Ivor D. Fenton 23. Edward L. Sittler, Jr. RHODE ISLAND SENATORS Theodore Francis Green John O. Pastore REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Aime J. Forand 2. John E. Fogarty SOUTH CAROLINA SENATORS Burnet R. Maybank Olin D. Johnston REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. L. Mendel Rivers 3. W. J. Bryan Dorn 5. James P. Richards 2. John J. Riley 4. Joseph R. Bryson 6. John L. McMillan SOUTH DAKOTA SENATORS Karl E. Mundt Francis Case REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2] 1. Harold O. Lovre 2. E. Y. Berry -TENNESSEE SENATORS Kenneth McKellar Estes Kefauver REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 8; Republicans, 2] 1. B. Carroll Reece 5. Joe L. Evins 9. Jere Cooper 2. Howard H. Baker 6. J. Percy Priest 10. Clifford Davis 3. James B. Frazier, Jr. 7. Pat Sutton 4. Albert Gore 8. Tom Murray State Delegations | 159 TEXAS SENATORS Tom Connally Lyndon B. Johnson REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 21] 1. Wright Patman 8. Albert Thomas 15. Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr. 2. J. M. Combs 9. Clark W. Thompson 16. Ken Regan 3. Lindley Beckworth 10. Homer Thornberry 17. Omar Burleson 4. Sam Rayburn 11. W. R. Poage 18. Walter Rogers 5. J. Frank Wilson 12. Wingate H. Lucas 19. George H. Mahon 6. Olin E. Teague 13. Frank Ikard 20. Paul J. Kilday 7. Tom Pickett 14. John E. Lyle, Jr. 21. O. C. Fisher UTAH SENATORS Arthur V. Watkins Wallace F. Bennett REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2] 1. Walter K. Granger 2. Reva Beck Bosone VERMONT SENATORS George D. Aiken Ralph E. Flanders REPRESENTATIVES [Republican, 1] At large— Winston L. Prouty "VIRGINIA SENATORS Harry Flood Byrd A. Willis Robertson REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 9] 1. Edward J. Robeson, Jr. 4. Watkins M. Abbitt 7. Burr P. Harrison 2. Porter Hardy, Jr. 5. Thomas B. Stanley 8. Howard W. Smith 3. J. Vaughan Gary 6. Clarence G. Burton 9. Tom B. Fugate WASHINGTON SENATORS Warren G. Magnuson Harry P. Cain REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 4] 1. Hugh B. Mitchell 3. Russell V.-Mack 5. Walt Horan 2. Henry M. Jackson 4. Hal Holmes 6. Thor C. Tollefson 160 Congressional Directory WEST VIRGINIA SENATORS Harley M. Kilgore Matthew M. Neely REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 6] 1. Robert L. Ramsay 3. Cleveland M. Bailey 5. Elizabeth Kee 2. Harley O. Staggers 4. M. G. Burnside 6. E. H. Hedrick WISCONSIN SENATORS Alexander Wiley Joseph R. McCarthy REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats, 1; Republicans, 9] 1. Lawrence H. Smith 5. Charles J. Kersten 8. John W. Byrnes 2. Glenn R. Davis 6. William K. Van Pelt 9. Merlin Hull 3. Gardner R. Withrow 7. Reid F. Murray 10. Alvin E. O’Konsk: 4. Clement J. Zablocki ; WYOMING SENATORS Joseph C. O’Mahoney Lester C. Hunt REPRESENTATIVE [Republican, 1] At large— William H. Harrison ALASKA DELEGATE E. L. Bartlett HAWAII DELEGATE Joseph R. Farrington PUERTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONER A. Fernés-Isern CLASSIFICATION SENATE HOUSE Pemocrats. o.oonares 50 Pemocrate. . coir a 232 oi ea Republicans... 5... 00 J BEY 46 .. .... 201 Republicans... Independent... uo ona 1 Nacant.. ©... -i oad oa ALPHABETICAL LIST Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners, showing State and district from which elected, city of residence, and political alinement SENATORS [Democrats in roman (50); Republicans in italics (46); total, 96] Name State City Aiken, George Dl Ll. a. Vermont... ....... Putney. Anderson, Clinton P__..._._____._ New Mexico______ Albuquerque. Bennett, Wallace FellBk nue.) taht ol. oe maina Salt Lake City. Benton, William... . 000 co <..x Connecticut_ _ _ ___ Southport. Brewster, Owen Lu ilu. cnn. Sl Mame... ........ Dexter. Bricker; Job: Wisi io0 LIL Ohio 1... Columbus. Bridges, Siyles.... til 05 ncnnes-New Hampshire___| Concord. Butler, Hugh: Bo 008 800 cian Nebraska... ..... Omaha. Butler, John MM... 00 00 anaes Maryland... Baltimore. Byrd, Harry Flood. il. =... Virginia 1 -o-.-% Berryville. Cain, Harry P.. 200 0810 Lo 20 Washington_______ Tacoma. Copekart, Homer B._. o. -o:c.ioi Indiana. .-ounuss Washington. Carlson, Frank = |. 04 fo... 58000 Kansas: Concordia. Case, Froneis. ..-1 00 10. wi seves South Dakota_____ Custer. Chavez, Dennis ec Fillooo New Mexico. _____ Albuquerque. oo Clements, Earle C________._.____._ Kentucky... .... Morganfield. Connally, Tom oi 0% Lo. 07 ro. = Marlin. Teoxagiiad Cordon, Guy nA EE de Qregon.y...cousi-Roseburg. Dirksen, Everett Ml. 2. 2) -_ -... Tlinolg oo Pekin. Douglas, Paul 0 2 Tneolg di oo & Chicago. H..:>-( Duff, Jomes H. 2. neice Pennsylvania _ _ ___ Carnegie. Dworshak, Henry Cod’ Tdahols7 i... Burley. Eastland, James O_ C15 a Mississippi_ __ ____ Doddsville. Beton, Zales Nio:-0 l0 oooof Montana... Manhattan. Yllender, Allen'd.. Sr...... 1 Louisiana. .......... Houma. Ferguson, Homer 20 0 Michigan... ... = Detroit. Flanders, Ralph Bri il} oo. Vermont. [. Springfield. Frear, J. Allen, Jr 22... Delaware ____.___ Dover. Fulbright: J. “wp on Arkansas... ..... Fayetteville. WEL Uaa8) George, Walter F_____ al Georgin® Vienna. Gillette, Guy Mai ile, Towa. ii. ou. Cherokee. Green, Theodore Francis_ _ ______ Rhode Island _____ Providence. Hayden, Carl. 0 IV. on oo Arizona. iw Phoenix. Hendrickson, Robert C8 is New Jersey._______ Woodbury. Hennings, Thomas 'C. Jr... Missouri. wa St. Louis. Hickenlooper, Bourke B-_ _.. _._._. Town. io Cedar Rapids. Hill, -Lisfer. 030000 S600 Gl Alabama... Montgomery. Hoey, Clyde i North Carolina____| Shelby. Roe.ca Holland, Spessard L.... ..._ ....-Tord oceversas Bartow. Humphrey, Hubert H. -___...... Minnesota_._ -._ Minneapolis. Hunt, Lester. Col Wyoming... ........ Lander. Toes, Irving M. ss oo it aans New. York... ...... Norwich. Jenner, William BE... .c vive Indiana. ......=. Bedford. Johnson, Fdwin C...... ...-...+ Colorado... ...... Craig. Johnson, Lynden B.. ... ....-. Nema wi] Johnson City. Johnston, OlinD...... ....... .. South Carolina____| Spartanburg. 163 164 Congressional Directory SENATORS—Continued Name Kefauver, Estes... sevice .. 50 --3-Kem, James 00050 P......12. Kerr, Robert 8... 0. LC... Kilgore, Harley Mc ooo. Knowland, William FP... ._.__ Langer, William... <=. ~ 2... the : lehmon, Herbert BH... ..__ Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr——_______. Long, Bussoll B__ eee MeCarran, Pat. oo. co. too. McCorthy, Joseph R.....--oe “MeClellan, Jom Lo...—. _. McFarland, Ernest W.._........._. MeKellar, Kenneth. -.o.. MeMahon, Brienooco C2 2 Magnuson, Warren G___________ Malone, Georges Weoiiiii.... Martin, Edward. soca ieneua Maybank, Burnet R___.________ Millikin, Eugene D___ _________. Monroney, A. S., Mike__________ Moody, Blair.awusities-4. Morse, Wayre oo ilo uumal.one Mundt, Karl B..sscocsi-donons Murray, James: ... _.... E_.o.00 Neely, Matthew M_....__.____. Nizon, Richard Mowowin no ie O’Conor, Herbert: R....-..-....c O’Mahoney, Joseph C___________ Pagtore, Jom OQ. bets..._. Robertson, A. Willis... o.oooo =. Russell, Richard B.ov.. _.__._. Saltonstall, Leverello iio.... oo. i. Schoeppel, Andrew B.io. -... --sk Seaton, Fred A. -ods 5 -orn vn Smathers, George Al. i. -nn-Smith, H. Alexander-.;i—-_.___.. Smith, Margaret Chase. ___ _-_____ Smith, Wills... oes lorein Sparkman, John. deacon nnnno-Stennis, John C..cumilon ono Taft, Robert Auvadosindil. ori Thye, Baward -. J. caeeltiil. Tobey, Charles tr -ner- Woiawuia Underwood, Thomas R__________ Watkins, Arthur mie mnnm—= Vienio Welker, Her mou ative ds ir om sn Wiley, Alexanders i cine nre--= Williams, Jobhmd oy Young, Millon Becicorimrnm-cinm- State Tennessee x sues Missouri. i 2... Qklashomsn. ......... West, Virginia_____ California i. wv «eo North Dakota__.__.| New York... ._ Massachusetts... .| Louisiana... Nevada, 1... ... Wisconsin...---Arkansas | o_o Avizong. 4... Tennessee. ......... Connecticut... _._. Washington_______ Nevada... -....... Pennsylvania_ ____ South Carolina____| Colorado... Oklahoma... ..... Michigan... ....... Oregon. ic. nvvv~ South Dakota_____ Montana. .......-West Virginia_____ California... Maryland... ...... Wyoming......~-= Rhode Island. ____ Virginia. io cco Ceorgigl. + noo-'~= Massachusetts. ___| Kansas... ooo. Nebraska__.______| Florida... ove. New Jersey_______ Maine. J...--. North Carolina____| Alabamzy. Mississippi... ~~ rg de ERE Minnesota... _____ New Hampshire___| Kentucky... Udaheic rr bo Idaho. iy... Wisconsin... ...-.. Delaware... ._.... North Dakota____| City Chattanooga. Kansas City. Oklahoma City. Beckley. Piedmont. Wheatland, R. F. D. 1 (Bismarck). New York City. Beverly. Baton Rouge. Reno. Appleton. Camden. Florence. Memphis. Norwalk. Seattle. Reno. Washington. Charleston. Denver. Oklahoma City. Detroit. Eugene. Madison. Butte. Fairmont. Whittier. Baltimore. Cheyenne. Providence. Lexington. Winder. Dover. Wichita. Hastings. Miami. Princeton. Skowhegan. Raleigh. Huntsville. De Kalb. Cincinnati. Northfield. Temple. Lexington. Orem. Payette. Chippewa Falls. Millsboro. La Moure. Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES [Democrats in roman (233); Republicans in italics (201); Independent in SMALL CAPS (1); total, 435] Dis-: Name ric State City Aandahly Fred GC At L. | North Dakota _ _| Litchville. Abbitt, Watkine M... ..-.. 4] Virginia... ...... Appomattox. Abernethy, Thomas G______ 4 | Mississippi_____ Okolona. Adair el. Boss. an cincns 4% Indiana. ic. oo. Fort Wayne. Addonizieo, Hugh J.. ..-=~~ --11 | New Jersey._-___ Newark. Albert; Carle 2. ooo 3 | Oklahoma. .._.. McAlester. Allen, As Leonard.....----.-81 Louisiana coi. Winnfield. Allen; Job J., Jr innsr anon 7 California...-C Oakland. Alen)iLéo Bisrmotn 16} i. vs inn Tlinoisic. Galena. Andersen, H. Corl... .-v---. 7 | Minnesota.______ Tyler. Anderson, Jack Zc 8 ¢ California. -San Juan Bautista. Andresen, August lH. .. ---. 1 {| Minnesota... Red Wing. Andrews, George W________ 3. Alabama... ..... Union Springs. AnfusemVietor Lo. ol 8 | New York. ____ Brooklyn. Angell Homer Docise 3: Oregon... ~icc.: Portland. Arends; Leslie. C.....-—.-._. 17: Hlinois 2-2 --Melvin. Armstrong, 0. K..... -wceee-6. Missouri. i Springfield. Aspinall, Wayne N_____.___ 4’ Colorado... ---Palisade. Auchincloss, James C .._.___ 3 | New Jersey_____ Rumson. Ayres, Williom te -14: Ohdo. oc ona Akron. H._._. Bailey, Cleveland M________ 3 | West Virginia___| Clarksburg. Baker, Howard H__-_-.__—_ 2 | Tennessee. . ____ Huntsville. Bokewell, Clavde I... i=. ~ --11. Missouri... St. Louis. Barden, Graham A. _....._. 3 | North Carolina__| New Bern. Baring; Waller 8... AtL. | Nevada. _...... Reno. Barrett, William'A... cc... 1 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Bates, Jee Bo. _L._ .-zc.... 8 | Kentucky.______ Greenup. Bates, William H ..~¢ sv ~~ 6 | Massachusetts__| Salem. Battle, Laurie ©... <5 91 Alabama... Birmingham, Beall: Ji Glenn, cir iady — «= 6 Maryland... -. Frostburg. Beamer, John Vie onsie nn By Indiana... Wabash. Beckworth, Lindley _ _______ 3 2 TT ATE SE Gladewater, Rt. 2. Belcher; Pages nin iit = 8 | Oklahoma ______ Enid. Bender, George H .. . to mie or AtL.{ Ohio... ....__[{ Chagrin Falls. ote Bennett, Charles E_________ 2 Flovida)..«. Jacksonville. Bennell John Bat vis 12; |. Michigan... Ontonagon. Bentsen, Lloyd M., Jr... 15. iTexas 200. co McAllen. Berry Be Yodoot sha sali hin 2 | South Dakota___| McLaughlin. Betis, Jackson Bo. co ivia nm 8, Ohig. iain Findlay. Bishop, C. W..(Bunt).cs-.--26 Minpis..=.-~~ Carterville. Blackney, William W_______ 6 | Michigan. ....-._[ Flint, Blatnil: John AL io c-vr-. 8 | Minnesota______| Chisholm. Boggs, Hale. conrranestons 2 Lousiana... "New Orleans, Boggs, Ji Caleh sdopppse= wen At L. |} Delaware... Wilmington. iif Bolling, Richard. i .eiinic--5 { Missouri. ....-. Kansas City. Bolion, Eionees iP. «usin -93 1. Ohlo:. =o. i. Lyndhurst. Bonner, Herbert C___..____ 1 | North Carolina _| Washington. Bosone, Reva Beck____-____ IN AU he ie a Salt Lake City. Bow, Frank Tao. abi site ow 16:1.0Ohlo. a. -an. Canton. ovkin, Frank Wi nels 1.4 Alabama... . Mobile. Bramblett, Brnest Kon --11: California. ..._. Pacific Grove. Bray, William Ge etnavem -71. Indiana i... Martinsville. Brefom, Walter B... ois5 --11 { Ohio. .z-Millersport. Brooks, Overton: coeitex 4 | Louisiana.....-. Shreveport. Broun, Clarence Ji. iiiov 7a Ohio. 2 Blanchester. Brown, Paul i .oindbelonn 10}. Georgia co.--Elberton. Brownson,; Charles \B...-<-.--11.0 Indianasol. Indianapolis. Bryson, Joseph Roi. —...o 4 | South Carolina__| Greenville. Buchanan, Vera: ... c--.. 33 | Pennsylvania___| McKeesport. 166 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Buckley, Charles A_________ Budge, Hamer Hvieoviterien~ Buffeit, Howard H......ooove-Burdick, Usthier Ln...” wis ~~ ~ Burleson, Omar. =. «xp --~-Burnside, M, G_.. .-ven. Burton, Clarence Go...-. Busbey, Fred Boon ovina Bush, Alin BL. oo. Butler, JOMEC.... . rmsoi eim Byrne, William T._.. -..... Byrnes: Joris... vee Camp, A. Sidney... ...... Canfield; Gordon... ocene----Cannon, Clarence... _____ Carlyle, ¥, Evtel -.___... Carnghon, A. 8. J Corrigy, Joseph LL... oo... Case, CliffordiP ve == Celler, Emanuel... .... _. Chatham, Thurmond. ______ Chel; Fram Te -—o Chenoweth, J. Edgar_ _______ Chiperfield, Robert B________ Chudofl, Early. el... Church, Marguerite S_ ___ ____ Clemente, L. Gary... ...._. Clevenger, Cliff orevno -Cole; bert Mo vanes Cole, W. Sterling ec ses iam = Colmer, William M_________ Combs, J. Moo Co. 5 Cooley, Harold DD. .........._ Cooper, Jere... 2... lil Corbell, Bolero .oneeresinan Cotton, NOI iS iss. ose meen = Coudert, Frederic R., Jr... Cox, Bi ori os Bossyi Crouford, Fred I. os com --=-Crosser, Roberts: _... 2: Crumpacker, Shepard J., Jr__ Cunningham, Poul...-=. Curtis Corll. isomers dean Curiis, THOMAS Becerrao-Daguez Paul BoSL FC Davis, Clifford: >" Dovis, Glen ne Roneenina Davis, James: C...-. Dawson, William L_________ Deane, Charles B____.___ deGraffenried, Edward______ Delaney, James J = Dempsey, John'J........ Denny, Harmer D., J... Denton, Winfield K________ Devereux, James P.'S. ...... D'Bwort, Wesley 4. ei. Dingell, John D..--..----Dollinger, Isidore... ...._. Dolliver, Jomes ll... ..... Dondero, George A_________. Dis- ti 25 25: 2 At L. 7 4 6 3 15 44 32 8 4 8 9. 7 8 14 6 15+ 5 4 31 19° 4 133 £1 5% Lt 39 6 2 4 9 30 2 17 2 8. MP Si 51 IT 127%: 9 10 2° 5: Pi 8 6 6 At L. 29 : City New York City. Boise. Omaha. Williston. Anson. Huntington. Lynchburg. Chieago,"" © 7 Muncy, R. F. D. 2, Buffalo. Loudonville, Green Bay. Newnan. Paterson. Elsberry. Lumberton. Ellsinore. Susquehanna. Rahway. Brooklyn. Winston-Salem. Lebanon. Trinidad. Canton. Philadelphia. Evanston. ; South Ozone Park. Bryan. Holton. Bath. Pascagoula. Beaumont. Nashville. Dyersburg. Pittsburgh. Lebanon. New York City. Camilla. Saginaw. Cleveland. South Bend. Des Moines. Minden. Webster Groves. Downingtown. Memphis. Waukesha. Stone Mountain. Chicago. Rockingham. Tuscaloosa. Long Island City. Santa Fe. Pittsburgh. Evansville. Stevenson. Wilsall. Detroit. New York City. Fort Dodge. Royal Oak. State NewYork... ... Idabo. ope | Nebraska... _.._.. | North Dakota___| Texas)... | West Virginia___| Vivgipia, Mineis 2. ....... | Pennsylvania___| | New York... ____ New York... ... | Wisconsin______ PQeotgia. .....-. | New Jersey_____ Missouri... ..... | North Carolina_| Missouri... .... | Pennsylvania__ _| | New Jersey._____ New York... .--| North Carolina_| i -Kentueky. ..._. Colorado... Hinols ow = | Pennsylvania___| Illinois. | "New York. Ohio... Xansas "i -C | New York______ | Mississippi-..___ Donnie eel | North Carolina__| | Tennessee. _____ | Pennsylvania___| | New Hampshire_| New York... -. "Georgia: ...-. 1"Michigan.....:: Ohjo ra Indisma_.....-. Town... dos 'Nebraska..._ Missourl-.. | Pennsylvania___| | Tennessee. _____ "Wisconsin... Ceorgian= _..I--. lilinels +. | North Carolina__| Alabama... i: New York. | | New Mexico____| | Pennsylvania___| S-LIndianat’ i: 2'9%Maryland.... 2-t-Montana, 158% @Michican. | 24 | New York... ___ 6‘ Yown. .I .L.. 17° | Michigan. __--_ Alphabetical Lust REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name LE) State City Donohue, Harold D_.__.___ 4 | Massachusetts. _| Worcester. Donovan, James!G__/-___[<~ 18 |'New York...... New York City. Dorn, W.d, Bryan_ ~~. 3 | South Carolina__| Greenwood. Doughton, Robert L________ 9 | North Carolina_{ Laurel Springs. Doyle, Clyde > 2 Cos 18 |, California. _ Long Beach. Durham, Carl io 7 6 | North Carolina__| Chapel Hill. Eaton, Charles 4. i. 5 | New Jersey._.____ Watchung, Plainfield. Eberharter, Herman P______ 32 | Pennsylvania___| Pittsburgh. Elliott; Carl: . tort 7." Alabamg.-Jasper. Ellsworth, Harris. oz---ro= 4 OTCOR an~~ Roseburg. Elston, Clorles Hz =>..--1. Ohio, ance Cincinnati. Engle, Clave ol California... Red Bluff. Evins;doeXe. . ____._.__. 5 | Tennessee. .____ Smithville. Fallon, George H...._____.__. 4 "Maryland......--Baltimore. Feighan, Michael A________ 20-1 Oho. Je Cleveland. Fenton, Ivor Duims -12 | Pennsylvania___| Mahanoy City. Fernandez, Antonio M______ At L. | New Mexico-_-_| Santa Fe. Pine Sidney A og NeW. York or New York City. Flier, 0. C5 or > od he belHE RISENi San Angelo. Flood, Daniel >. 11 | Pennsylvania___| Wilkes-Barre. J... Fogarty, Jom B® __..= 2 | Rhode Island___| . Harmony. Yorand, Aime J: ---~--1%2 1 | Rhode Island___| Cumberland. Ford, Gerald R., Jr_ ________ 5 | Michigan_______ Grand Rapids. Forrester, BB. . kL. orice 3 | Georgla,. = Leesburg. Frazier, James B., Jr_______ 3 | Tennessee. _____ Chattanooga. Yugate, Tom BD ._.__ OV Virginial =. Coo Ewing. Fulton, James Borateine 31 | Pennsylvania. __| Dormont (Pittsburgh). Fureolo, Foster. ~~... 2 | Massachusetts _| Longmeadow. Gamble, Ralph A. — — cn 28 | ‘New. York... Larchmont. Garmatz, Edward A________ S| Maryland... Baltimore. Gary, J. Vaughan. ____ Virginia: = vb Richmond. Gathings EL. = -= 7 1-("Arkansag’... " West C_.. Memphis. Garin, Leon Hx. oc ----L 19 | Pennsylvania___| Oil City. George, Myron V . =: Slt-Kansae Altamont. Golden, Jomes 8... ----9 Tentuely Pineville. Goodwin, Angier Li. -~-L-. 8 | Massachusetts_ _| Melrose. Gordon, Thomas S_ +. 7 Si Blnois co Chicago. Gore, Albert... = wo 4 | Tennessee... .---Carthage. Grahom, Lois B. -_-...-. 25 | Pennsylvania___| Beaver. Granahan, William T_______ 2 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Granger, Walter K_________ PV ah Cedar City. Grant, George NS ra gt Alabama. _. Troy. Green, William J., Jr_______ 5 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Greenwood, Ernest_________ I. "New. York. ..--. Bay Shore. Gregory, Noble J... ..... 1 Kentucky... .: Mayfield. Gross, Hk or en Sl Jowa nL. Waterloo. Gwinn, Ralph Wh ot 97.1 New York... .---Bronxville. Hagen, Horold C2 5% 9 | Minnesota__.___ Crookston. Hale, Bobert oi 0-5ws Vane fi...>: Portland. Hall, Edwin Arthur... --—-37 1 New York. ..---Binghamton. Hall, Leonard W.. -.._-. 2% New York Oyster Bay. Halleck, Charles 4 ——-~~ 2 Indiana... =: Rensselaer. Hand, To Millels C52 5 2 | New Jersey_----Cape May City. Harden, Cecil. Ms. ol 6'f Indiana’... oc. Covington. Hardy, Porter; 72 1c -2 Vireinia =... Churchland. Jr... Harrle, Oren.” > 0 7 -t Arkansas... =: El Dorado. Harrison, Burr P...--..c-. 7. Virginia... 5-0 Winchester. Horvison, Robert D____ ___-3 | Nebragka...._.-__ Norfolk Hozrison, Willlam H.. ...->= AT. Wyoming... Banner. Bart, Edward Joo=. 14 | New Jersey._.-_--Jersey City. Harvey, Ralph > 10 dian: Lo New Castle, Rt. 4. Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Havenner, Franck R__._____ Hays, Brooks. iv cid Lo Hays, Wayne L_.. .._..___ Hébert, F. Edward... _.____ Hedrick, BH. iy cctv Heffernan, James J.__.______ Hellerplouis B.. . ace Herlong, A. S., Jr. swat. Herter, Christian A... x... Heselton, John Woueom ia -Hess, William BE. vs. Hill, William Sa. it ai imvic--Hillings, Patrick: Joo. os Hinshaw, Carl. . cities~~ Hoeven, Charles B... -=----Hoffman, Clore B...oinrs-... Hoffman, Richard W___._____ Holifield, Chet...2... .. .. Holmes, Hal 0. ct inant = Hope, Clifford RB... ovis Horm, Wall.. ovis resis Howell, Charles: R.......L.. Hull, FY aR LR Hunter, Allan Oakley _ _ . ____ Ikard, Wrak ee Trving, Leonard... cz. --Jackson, Doreld Looiz Jackson, Henry M_________ James, Benjamin Fo... ;-. Jarman, John 00-0 ...cae0-Joris, Jocob KB. indigo = Jenison, Edward H .... 5... Jenkins, Thomas A... ...._. Jensen, Ben tne Fopiciooitte JONSON, Leroy. sivsnfsi= Jonas, Edgar RT Jones, Hamilton C...o5-1--Jones, Paul Cr .vesdentyboa Jones, Robert E,, Jr.....0: = Jones, Woodrow W_________ Judd, Waller Hj oi. ry. Karsten, Prank M.....072. Kean, Robert Wooo ooriz x Kearney, Bernard W. (Pat)_ _ Kearns, Carroll D.wcuvr.n-Keating, Kenneth B_________ Kee, Elizabeth... .:.._._ Kelley, Augustine B________ Kelly, Fdua FP. iasasradoo Kennedy, John F__________ Keogh, Eugene J___________ Kerr, Johm'H i. uonze-i -Kersten, Charles. J..cois----Kilburn, Clarence B.._-.___. Kilday, Pauli onilial King, Cecll Rov bor vn King Karl Co btiieadsous Kirwan, Michael J_._______. Klein, Arthur G..--=. _. Kluezynski, Jom C.-C Lane, Thomas J en Dis- irict 4 5. 18+ 1 6 11 7.1 5 10 1 City San Francisco. Little Rock. Flushing. New Orleans. Beckley. Brooklyn. Brooklyn. Leesburg. Boston. Deerfield. Cincinnati. Fort Collins. Arcadia. Pasadena. Alton. Allegan. Berwyn. Montebello. Ellensburg. Garden City. Wenatchee, R. F. D. 2. Pennington. Black River Falls. Fresno. Wichita Falls. Independence. Pacific Palisades. Everett. Rosemont. Oklahoma City. New York City. Paris. Ironton. Exira. Stockton. Chicago. Charlotte. Kennett. Scottsboro. Rutherfordton. Minneapolis. St. Louis. Livingston. Gloversville. Farrell. Rochester. Bluefield. Greensburg. ; Brooklyn. Boston. Brooklyn. Warrenton. Milwaukee. Malone. San Antonio. Los Angeles. Morrisville. Youngstown. New York City. Chicago. Lawrence. State | California______ {-Arkansas....... Ohjor + =... | Louisiana. .._._.__. | West Virginia___| | New York... .._.. New York... .. Florida _.c...... | Massachusetts_ _| | Massachusetts. _| Ome. io. 2. Colorado... 12. | California... ..... 20 | California______ Sli lowa. ac... ... 4. [ Michigan....... 10:-1llinois.. =... 19 4 Dif 5 4 9 9 13. 4 16: 2 7 5 21 23. 104}. 3. 12; 10 10: 3 11 . 8 13°} 12 31 28 40 5 27 10 11 9 2 5 34 20. 17: 8 | California. _____ | Washington____._ Kansas... | Washington_____ | New Jersey...__._ | Wisconsin______ | California______ | Texas. ........... | Missour}........--|. California... ...... | Washington_____ | Pennsylvania___| |: Oklahoma... . | New York... .._. Hinois. .......... Ohio. Laci ibis Tidowa. tail. California. ..... Minos... | North Carolina__| Miséouri. | Alabama. ...... | North Carolina_.| | Minnesota..__._. -Missourh. Lo | New Jersey... ._._ { New York... .__. | Pennsylvania___| | New York... _._. | West Virginia___| | Pennsylvania. __| | New York______ | Massachusetts New York... .. . | North Carolina__| | Wisconsin. _____ | New York._____._ |. Texas. a... California... .. | Pennsylvania ___| 190.00. nn. ..... 19 | New York._._.__._ Bl Ilinois-+-.._.... 7 | Massachusetts. _| Alphabetical List REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis- Name trol State City Lanham, Henderson________ 7: iCeorgini. ...... Rome. Lantaff, "William C. (Bill) _ 4iPovidal lo Miami Springs. Larcade, Henry D., Jv... 7:1 Louisiana... Opelousas. Latham, Henry J S3200 on 8 ( NewYork _.... Queens Village. LeCompte, Karli M02... 41 -Towa. 20... Corydon. Lesingki, John, Jesoos: 16 | Michigan_______ Dearborn. Lind, James Boisiasad oo. 21 | Pennsylvania___| York. Lovre, Harold O_00835 1 | South Dakota___| Watertown. Lucas, Wingate H__________ 12: Texng uo Grapevine. Lyle, John BE, Jeri ool... 4p Texas... Corpus Christi. McCarthy, Eugene J____.__ 4 | Minnesota______ St. Paul. McConnell, Samuel K., Jr___ 16 | Pennsylvania___| Wynnewood. McCormack, John W_______ 12 | Massachusetts_ -| Dorchester. McCulloch, William M______ 4:0:0he ci ol Piqua. McDonough, Gordon L__ ____ 15 | California... Los Angeles. McGrath, Christopher C____ 26 New York... 2... New York City. McGregor, JiHarry. coo. AZ Ohler odo West Lafayette. MeGuire, JohnvAlLi io Lo... 3 | Connecticut____| Wallingford. McIntire, Clifford Gils... 3 Maine... ._. Perham. McKinnon, Clinton D______ 23 :| California. __... San Diego. McMillan, John L.___.___.___ 6 | South Carolina__| Florence. McMullen, Chester B_______ : lio Blorida.. budeoa Clearwater. MeVey, William Eo... 4: Winols. ______. Harvey. Machrowicz, Thaddeus M___ Tf "Miehigan.._ _... Hamtramck. Maek, Peter F,, Jroiic. _... 21 4 -Tinels. 0... Carlinville. Mack, Russell oi 3 Washington_____ Vorai... | Hoquiam. Madden, Ray Ji 0. 19 Indiana..... Gary. Magee, Clare... oii: 0... l=l=Missouri. . ._.. Unionville. Mahon, George H__________ 19 oxXas. leis. Lubbock. Mansfield, Mike_ __________ 1. Montana... Missoula. Marshall, Fred coool.Ju 6 | Minnesota______ Grove City. Martin, Joseph W., Jris .. 14 | Massachusetts__| North Attleboro. Martin, Thomas B-0.7. Telolows 00. bu. Towa City. Mason, Noah Mould. 1... 154 Mlinois... _.L... Oglesby. Meader; George iliouii. va. se Michigan.. ..__. Ann Arbor. Merrow, ChestersE-2 20... 1 | New Hampshire_| Center Ossipee. Miller, AT dian.i... 4 | Nebraska______._ Kimball. Miller, Edward Fsliiiii..... by Maryland... ... Easton. Miller, GeorgeiPac ooo. Lo 6 California_. __.. Alameda. Miller, William B.-L it. 42 | New York._____ Lockport. Mills, Wilbur. D:bious.Jy 2 iArkansas....... Kensett. Mitchell, Hugh: Bia. 1 | Washington_____ Seattle. Morano, Albert Pai oct. 4 | Connecticut____| Greenwich. Morgan, Thomas E_________ 24 | Pennsylvania ___| Fredericktown. Morris, Teby: i. 6 | Oklahoma __.____ biserayi Lawton. Morrison, James Hi : 6 (Louisiana... .__. Hammond. Morton, Thruston Bollard.__ _ 3: Kentucky... .. Glenview. Moulder, Morgan M________ 2:{-Missouri....... Camdenton. Multer, Abraham J... 14 New York...... Brooklyn. Mumma, Walter M_________ 18 | Pennsylvania___| Harrisburg. Murdock, Johm®R_ 7d... 14 Arizona... Tempe. Murphy, James J__________ 16:|oNew York... .__. Staten Island. "Murray, Reid Bol tuii. 7 Wisconsin. _._._. Ogdensburg. Murray, Tomii Ubaziid 8 | Tennessee. .___._ Jackson. Nelson, Charles Poo... 2: Maine ooo... Augusta. Nicholson, Donald W___:.___ 9 | Massachusetts. _| Wareham. Norblod, Walter soil... 1 (Oregon... ..... Astoria. Norrell, WiE. = sein]... 6: Arkansas... Monticello. O’Brien, George D_________ 13: Michigan... ..... Detroit. O’Brien, Thomas Joi. 6: dlllinoisr oo. Ll Chicago. O'Hara, Joseph Poi... 2 | Minnesota... Glencoe. 170 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name irict State City OKonski, Alvin Borisci..... 10 | Wisconsin_ _____ Mercer. O’Neill, Harry Po..... 10 | Pennsylvania___| Dunmore. Qsmers, Frank C., Jr... .. 9 | New Jersey_____ Haworth. QOsiertag, Harold .. .. 41 | New York_.___._ Attica. C...:o O'Toole, Donald L_________ 13 | New York. ..... Brooklyn. Passman, Otto Eo ood... 5: Louisiana... .. Monroe. Patman, Wright. .-s07.._.-1: Texas. o ...... Texarkana. Patten, Harold A. (Porque)... oft [iArizonal . . . .... Tucson. Patterson, James Tocco... 5 | Connecticut____| Watertown. Perking, Carl. . . 7 | Kentucky.--..... D_-.cuc Hindman. Philbin, Philip = i... 3 | Massachusetts. _| Clinton. Jot. Phillips, Johposcossii. 22 | California... Banning. i. Pickett, Tomi ool.i. 2 Zof:-Texas. od..... Palestine. Poage, W.. BR. sidi. 11 [Texas i..... Waco. Polk, James Goooocco ois Ohio. JJ. 1... Highland. Potter, Charles B..cooe 11 { Michigan... .... Cheboygan. Poulson, Norris: i Lo...... 13 | California. .____. Los Angeles. Powell, Adam C., Jr________ 22 {New York...... Mount Vernon. Preston, Prince H., Jr. 1 4:Ceorgia...... ..... Statesboro. Price, Melvin...1... 25+ Hiinois: i. -~~ East St. Louis. a0. Priest, J. Perey... ould. 2 6 | Tennessee. _____ Nashville. Prouty, Winston Liooo.o... AtL.| Vermont... _____ Newport. : Quinn, T. Vincent.oe tl... 5:fcNew York...... Jackson Heights. Rabaut, Louis Cc... 14 (Michigan... _ Grosse Pointe Park. Radwan, Edmund Pui... ... 43 | New York_____. Buffalo. Raing, Albert ccciinid. i... b:iAlabamh.... Gadsden. Ramsay, Robert Li. _._.____ 1 | West Virginia__._| Wellsburg. Rankin, John-B.oooial 1 | Mississippi--_---Tupelo. Rayburn, Sam ou iu. i _.. 4 PeShe idl oo i. Bonham. RAMS, FRAZIER. oocil. .... 9::0hio.. ........-Toledo. Redden, Monroe M.-________ 12 | North Carolina..| Hendersonville. Reece, B..Carroll. .i...C..2 1. | Tennessee. ..... Johnson City. Reed, Chauncey Weoal i... 4 Hlinois:.. 1... West Chicago. Reed, Daomdel A. clic. i... 45: New York. ..... Dunkirk. Rees, Bdword-H._. .... |... 4: Kansas. _..._... Emporia. Regan, Kenya zocaalLoad 16: Texas. I... ...-. Midland. Rhodes, Cronpee M.. ...... 13 | Pennsylvania__._| Reading. Ribleoff, AA. 1. 0 1 | Connecticut____{ ..ocicel Hartford. Richards, yo Pudiol. 5 | South Carolina..| Lancaster. Riehlman, BR. Walter. -______ 36 | New York. _____ Tully. Riley, John J. jonni... 2 | South Carolina__| Sumter. Rivers, L. Mendel... ______ 1 | South Carolina__| Charleston. Roberts, Kenneth A________ 4 | Alabama. ....... Piedmont Robeson, Edward J., Jr_____ slvpeVirginigs. .. -_ Newport News. Rodino, Peter W., Fred 10 | New Jersey. --_-Newark. Rogers, Byron G___________ 15=Colorado.. Denver. Rogers, Dwight L_.________ 6: yiFlorida.........-Fort Lauderdale. Rogers, Edith Nourse________ 5 | Massachusetts. _| Lowell. Rogers, Walter....oo:..... 18 exaS. bd..... Pampa. Rooney, John Jo oll... 12: "New York........ Brooklyn. Roosevelt, Franklin D., Jr___| 20 | New York_____._ New York City. Sabath, Adolph J... _.... 7 Minoiso i... Chicago. Sadlak, Antoni N___________ At L.| Connecticut___._| Rockville. St. George, Katharine _______ 29-{:New York....... Tuxedo Park. Sasscer, Lansdale G________ 5 | Maryland___... Upper Marlboro. Saylor, John Piizizni....... 26 | Pennsylvania___| Johnstown. Schench, Poul P.olioiel [... 3aliOhfe. J... ... Dayton. Schwabe, George Bo. _ _______ 1 |:Oklahoma...... Tulsa. Scoit, Hardie. ....oLoil..... 3 | Pennsylvania___| Philadelphia. Scott, Hugh D., Jreoi 0.5 6 | Pennsylvania. ._| Philadelphia. Scrivner, Brrelt Pool... 2:1: Kansas. .ouanne-Kansas City. Alphabetical Last REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-: Name wrict State City . Scudder, Hubert Beolioll ...... 1 |= California... ...- Sebastopol. Secrest, Robert T__________ 15::i0hlo:; Senecaville. Seely-Brown, Horace, Jr_____ 2 | Connecticut-___| Pomfret Center. Shafer, Poul Wai. Loti 3 | Michigan ____.. Battle Creek. Sheehan, Timothy P________ Hol Nhinois L.._-._ Chicago. Shelley, John F_ooioe l= 5: |: California. .... San Francisco. Sheppard, Harry R_________ 21 oCalifornis........-- Yucaipa. Short, Dewey... i walli. 7:3i: Missouri. .....-- Galena. Sieminski, Alfred D________ 13 | New Jersey.-_--_| Jersey City. Sikes, Robert L. F_ _.....___ Sf Forida.l.- Crestview. Simpson, Richard M________ 17 | Pennsylvania__._| Huntingdon. Simpson, Sid. ooo 20 | Minois._...__... Carrollton. Sittler, Edward L., JT -- -- 23 | Pennsylvania. __.| Uniontown. Smith, Frank Boson 3 | Mississippi--_._ Greenwood. Smith, Howard Wo -__- B-1. Virginia. .._... Alexandria. Smith, Lovwrence H. Joc.-= 1 | Wisconsin. .__._._ Racine. Smith, Wintel auiadtlisn Cup Kansas. oma --z Mankato. Spence, Brent... -naizan 5 | Kentucky.._-_-_| Fort Thomas. Springer, William L________ 22:0 Nlinolg x... --~ Champaign. Staggers, Harley O_________ - 2 | West Virginia_-_| Keyser. Stanley, Thomas B._........ Steed, Tom..uoosud-icnmnen= 51 4 | Virginia. ---. Oklahoma. _____ Stanleytown. Shawnee. R Stigler, William Gi. oe 2 | Oklahoma. ..___ Stigler. Stockman, Lowell 2.20 Sutton, Pat. a oi 2:1: 7 | Oregon. ..---:k= Tennessee. _____ Pendleton. Lawrenceburg. Taber, Fol eo oe BS 38 | New York...___ Auburn. Tackett, Boyd. ------o-.-- 4 | Arkansas__.__.. Nashville. Tolle, Henry 0.) o-oo ion-o n= 2 telown. sab ave Decorah. Taylor, Dean P.< . ...0 si. 33 | New York__.___ Troy. Teague, Olin ®_......._... G1 Texas .-o.. = College Station. Thomas, Albert... cu... Si Texas..--... Houston. Thompson, Clark W......... 9 Leman “scans Galveston. Thompson, Buth-:_:----=--. 9. Michigan._-.... Whitehall. Thornberry, Homer....>... 10] Texas... .2.-- Austin. Tollefson, Thor C=. nn. 6 | Washington_____ Tacoma. Trimble, James W__________ 3: Arkansas... Berryville. Vail, Rihard B.. ones 24: linois-o Chicago. Van’ Pelt, Williom K........... 61 Wisconsin, ... Fond du Lac. Van Z and, James B... ..... 22 | Pennsylvania___| Altoona. Velde, Hald Hare 13 Hiinofs.--..-_... Pekin. Vinson, Carl... oon. 6:1: Coorgin......--- Milledgeville. Yorys, Jon M._. a... % 12Ohip.---.....c Columbus. Vursell, Charles W............. 241 Mivioly...oo 0.0 Salem. Walter, Francis B_ __7_.__. 20 | Pennsylvania___| Easton. Watts, john 6 Kentucky’. ...- Nicholasville. Weichel, Alvin Bo...oc. 13 Ohio... ... Sandusky. Welch, Pay. 31 Missouri... St. Joseph. Werdel, Thomas H...-----... 10 1 California... Bakersfield. Wharton, % Bornes: oii be 30 | New York._._.._. Richmondyville. Wheeler, W M.(Don)..--._ 8 | Georgia... --- Alma. Whitten, Ioviel 2 | Mississippi-.._._ Charleston. Wickersham, Victor... ... 7: Oklahoma... .. Mangum. Widnall, William B_________ 7 | New Jersey...__. Saddle River. Wier, Rooy Wi. aioeian 3 | Minnesota____.. Minneapolis. Wigglesworth, Richwrd B....... 13 | Massachusetts. | Milton. Williams, Jom Ball. 7 | Mississippi-._..___ Raymond. Williams, Williom B...... ... 35.0 New York.... .. Cassville. Willis, Fav E . 3 Lousiana. _._... St. Martinville. Wilson, Bgl oe 0: Indiana... ..._.. Bedford. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——13 172 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name Diss State -City Wilson, J. Frankland... buliMexas. io... Dallas. Winstead, Avthurcou oo. 5 | Mississippi-----Philadelphia. Withrow, Gardner B___ _____ 3: Wisconsin... La Crosse. Wolcott Jesse Po nlisl oo. %: Michigan... Port Huron. Wolverton, Charles A________ 1 | New Jersey.___. Merchantville. Wood, JohmSaoeil oon. 9 l:Georgla: Canton. Wood, John-T. 28025. hjoldaho. .. ....-Coeur d’Alene. Woodruff, Boy OQ. iuii. 10 i Michigan... 1... Bay City. Yates, Sidney Bo oo i... 9: Tlinolge.i Chicago. Yorty, Samuel Wo oo... 14 | California. ..... Los Angeles. Zablocki, Clement J________ 4 | Wisconsin. _____ Milwaukee. DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Commonwealth, Name Title insular possession, City or Territory Bartlett, BE. LL. oi Delegate. .| Alaska. ___.___.__. Juneau. Farrington, Joseph R_____ Delegate. | Hawaii. _____._.___ Honolulu. Fernés-Isern, Al________ Res.-Com_| Puerto Rico..____ Santurce. 1 Popular Democrat. TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS Crass I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1953 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 13; Republicans, 19] Name Party Residence Benton, WAMU Loo ir affmdi est one 1, Southport, Conn. Brewster, QWoll.dawodlddan on sn nnn Lhe RB. Dexter, Maine. Bricker idohn Waite old boo devineianns R. Columbus, Ohio. Butler sHugh lo oot d Oei R. Omaha, Nebr. Byrd, Harry Blood: 1. ata D. Berryville, Va. Cain, Harry Pols. cad Lidl mie cna sa R. Tacoma, Wash. Chiver Dennis ada fT. 0 Fh D. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Connally, Tom......22 lf SE a D. Marlin, Tex. EcionhZalesi Nusa eld bee finn ders aes aness R. Manhattan, Mont. Flanders, Balph odd nina: Springfield, Vt. Boecnlyorodoin R. Holland;3Spessard Lied. i --(denn neem in D, Bartow, Fla. Ives, tying Mo eats. oo fT aaa EB. Norwich, N. Y. Jenner, WlamiaB oo 0 t ood oceans R. Bedford, Ind. Kemi; JamesiP au amit bre die aresoncecs's BR. Kansas City, Mo. Kilgore, Harley M au. 1.0 og oe hn D. Beckley, W. Va. Knowland ss Willllam Boz. to: 1. R. Piedmont, Calif. Langer WO WE. o dl deemed t R. Wheatland, R. F. D. outdo 1 (Bismarck), N. Dak. Todge, Henry Cabot, Jr..i... loom ann Beverly, Mass. McCarthysdegephi R40 1. Appleton, Wis. McFarland; Ernest: Wii. oo omens Ariz. ii-cmenrcm Florence, MeRKellaviRenneth....0i-33 ooo ee ein Memphis, Tenn. Malone, Gorge. Weieel no wile nom ons as sein Reno, Nev. Martin, Bdward. 0 oo Washington, Pa. Moody, Bir 2... ns orien Detroit, Mich. O'Conor, Herbert some bois mmm Baltimore, Be coovinsion 28 Md. O'Mahoney, Joseph Coons do idiLunaioies Cheyenne, Wyo. Pastore, John 7 30 mu] Dodqeait JH R. I. Qian Providence, Smith, BH. Alesander. 0 a to Princeton, N. J. Stennis, Jolm'C A...a De Kalb, Miss. hye, Bawatrd J... oi re aba nas Nortlifield, PF. D, senate EB Minn. Watkineg, Arthwr Ve ai Orem, Utah. Williams, John Joo ae oa ar a oh Millsboro, Del. 1 Appointed by Governor Dec. 17, 1949, to fill unexpired term of Raymond E. Baldwin; elected Nov. 7 1950. 2 Appointed by Governor Apr. 23, 1951, to fill unexpired term of Arthur H. Vandenberg. 3 Elected Nov. 4, 1947, to fill unexpired term of Theodore G. Bilbo. 175 176 Congressional Directory Crass II..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1955 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 22; Republicans, 10] Name Party Anderson, Climton 0. 0 ll. = P.........co D Bridges, Styles =. Jo 00, A ful mot R BAT DARE Lee SO le R Dogging, Ponl = Gi. Jo D B=... 0 Dworshol. Hepnvy €2001 Hi i 6! olanHho R Pastlond, James 0... Blender 2 Alen, Perguson Boomer... Pronrzd-Allow, Jei Gillette, Guy Mol Lo die a. D Sr... 008 0 or D llc enatd ua R Dot 1000 Green, Theodore:Franeis_ Hendrickson, Robert™C. zt Humphrey, Hubert W.... Hunt, Tester QL 2000 Lo oovdeateans D Johnson, Bdwin@=28 5 Jf ooo creas D Johnson, Lynden’ Bul.0 ois 14 5 Refauver, Estes «0200 do oooiasas D. Kerr, Robert Siu 0 Ch MeCQlellan,' John LUIIUY wo, Maybank, Burnet BIS: . ob. Mundt, Rapes VI. J 92. aosaiiianss D lon dwiocond D doiGsioohran D crsaaszinnes R Murray, James BIC 0 dl Jiirignesien D Neely, Matthew Mx _______. SEnpuahaunn D Robertson, A. doco D Willis"...veouo: Russell, Richard B22. Lf v.ccicccs D Saltonstall, Leverett __........_ ..:.. hdzoany R SchoeppelAndvew Pr: 1. ll Cail BR Seaton, Fred AZ. 1:10... scsoecuaed R Smith, Margaret'Chase.-_.......-..cicco-s R Smith, WilidsooposeldOoo ioe | : D Sparkman; John JUL Underwood, Thomas 1 Appointed by Governor 2 Appointed by Governor 3 Elected Nov. 7, 1950, to ¢ Appointed by Governor 0 0. Lo ol R4_ (if Oct. 14, 1949, Dec. 10, 1951, fill unexpired Mar. 19, 1951, Lng tate D ol cacti D 0. __ _.. _........ D _.. .... co.cc R .... ....aasiccaa D ii hacasaias BD oa... .0-. D to fill unexpired term of Bert Residence Albuquerque, N. Mex. Concord, N. H. Roseburg, Oreg. Chicago, Ill. Burley, Idaho. Doddsville, Miss. Houma, La. Detroit, Mich. Dover, Del. Cherokee, Iowa. Providence, R. I. Woodbury, N. J. Minneapolis, Minn. Lander, Wyo. Craig, Colo. Johnson City, Tex. Chattanooga, Tenn. Oklahoma City, Okla. Camden, Ark. Charleston, S. C. Madison, S. Dak. Butte, Mont. Fairmont, W. Va. Lexington, Va. Winder, Ga. Dover, Mass. Wichita, Kans. Hastings, Nebr. Skowhegan, Maine. Raleigh, N. C. Huntsville, Ala. Lexington, Ky. H. Miller; elected Nov. 7, 1950. to fill unexpired term of Kenneth S. Wherry. term of Senator J. Melville Broughton. to fill unexpired term of Virgil M. Chapman. Terms of Service Crass III.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1957 [32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 15; Republicans, 17] Name Alon Coorg Dorn so Teoh I Bennet), Wallace Pr = oa Po Butler, Jom MM -- _———— _ — . Capehavi Hlomer Bocoz-- 2-0 Carlson Pranic z= oriceow RIT ee Case; Branejsr el a co Clements, Bartle Corr Dirksen Everett M: 2-0 tO ee Dall Fama? Hr A Falbrighi ZF TW, a A a = George, Walter -tr or BB._ v0 ettaar Hayden, Caples Sr wubdidoa Hennings, Thomas C. Jr Sn 20 at Hickenlooper; Bourke B.-L. EL Digter ee mr Hoey, Clyde Bl. oo re Johnston, Olin Dl ry 8 Hs Lehmash, Herbert WF woes Hoo; JAGH00E Long, Busgell Br eeeen Nenana, Pal ae McMahon, Brien: oto Fs Magnuson, Warren GQ -2 > ~~ or. Millikin, Bugene: Dc = 0 -To Lo Monhronoy, A'S Mike ~~. oo Meise, Wayne. a Non Biehard M.-C een Smathers, Georoer A C= Ai Le. Pall, BoberC AL i or Tobey, Charles W == = c= eas Welker, Herman. co ooo Wiley “Alexander. =~ or Young, Milton B-~——. oorras Party B: RB: R. R.: RB R. D. R. Rn. D. D. D. D; R. D. D. D. D. D. D. D. br R. D; Rr: R. D. R. R. R. R. R. Residence Putney, Vt. Salt Lake City, Utah. Baltimore, Md. Washington, Ind. Concordia, Kans. Custer, S. Dak. Morganfield, Ky. Pekin, Ill. Carnegie, Pa. Fayetteville, Ark. Vienna, Ga. Phoenix, Ariz. St. Louis, Mo Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Montgomery, Ala. Shelby, N. C. Spartanburg, S. C. New York City, N. Y. Baton Rouge, La. Reno, Nev. Norwalk, Conn. Seattle, Wash. Denver, Colo. Oklahoma City, Okla. Eugene, Oreg. Whittier, Calif. Miami, Fla. Cincinnati, Ohio. Temple, N. H. ‘Payette, Idaho. Chippewa Falls, Wis. Berlin, N. Dak. 178 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS Rank Name State Beginning ofpresent service 1 | MeKellar, Kenneth... _... Tennessee. _ _.._..__. Mar. 4, 1917 2.1: CGeorge, Walter P._._ _.. ... _..... Georgi. ov cn veo Guia Nov. 8, 1922 3 Hayden, Carl.e.o.0 LL... AriZODa... nso Mar. 4, 1927 4 | Connally, Toms... cece nnn eXa8 on coir Mar. 4,1929 5 ( .Russell,:Richard B_ _..___..__... Qeorgly.. . cine Jan. 12, 1933 Byrd, Harry Flood... . 2 z Aug. 26, 1945 251 Holland, Spessard Lo... .. Plopida...o20 nse Sept. 25, 1946 26. Flanders, Ralph BB: _..__...._.. Yormont-.. -. S~-=r Nov. 1, 1946 Mr. Eastland also served in the Senate from June 30, 1941, to Sept. 28, 1941. Terms of Service CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Rank Nome Robertson, A. Willis... ____ 27 Eki John Johnie 298 Cain, Harry Pcl.= Le Ra | Bricker, John W.__....d6-0.. Beton, Zales N.__. Lucignl Ives, Irving Malc toll Ulla..L. Jenner, Willlam B.2___loadl _.. Kem, James P._.._ Gusseld Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr.2_.______| 29 { McCarthy, Joseph R._ ul. ___ Malone, George W._ ____________ Martin, Edward so isiiooo O’Conor, Herbert R____..____.__ Thye, Edward J..sai dil... Watkins, Arthur Voocoiieo. oo. Williams, Jom J... i--._. 30 | Stennis, John C4. c.cincacnann Long, Russell Bood oeoabivauai. 81 ones Roark Billo oyroll Joon Anderson, Clinton P__._, -.._._ Douglas, Paul H =oost vnescas Frear, J. Allen... icc. 0a. Gillette, Cuy M2. of na Hendrickson, Robert C.________ Humphrey, Hubert H___________ 82 Ww Hunt, Lester C...-oiab. Cou. Johnson, Lyndon Bo. o.oo... © Kefauver, Estes. cnn mne cca Kerr, Bobert 8... 2. Neely, Matthew M.S____________ Schoeppel, Andrew F___________ Alabatadl N. oon dadl Nov. 6, 1946 | Smith, Margaret 33 | Dworshak, Henry 34 Lehman, Herbert 35 | Benton, William. $6 Ce Earle Smith, Willis ®._ Chase. _.______ C7...._. Ho..... ... =. __._..__. Coie...Lk. i 00 lL. 2 Mr. Jenner also served in the Senate from Nov. 8, 1944, 8 Mr. Lodge also served in the Senate from Jan. 3, 1937, 4 Elected Nov. 4, 1947, to fill unexpired term of Senator Beginning of State present service Virginia... Lisa Washington... oi... Dec. 26, 1946 Ohlo..... Jeunesdl J ] Montana. .....0 juin. New York... ciuied Indiana. U tieiycl go Missouri.ioiol lo Massachusetts. _.___ Wisconsin. .cx Jan.” | 3, 1947 Nevada... Lsuosll % ) Pennsylvania. ..__.__ Marylandoo. oo Lluis Minnesota... sill Utah........0 baie Delaware... .-. ...; Mississippl.. oon on Nov. 5, 1947 Louisiana...ici ace South Dakota_______ fee 311048 New Mexico. vo. 2% THN0IS... ih wine 55 Delaware... ow. Town. asco an New Jersey _.______ Minnesota.........-Wyoming............ dan, 3, 1009 Texas...iat we Tennessee _________ Oklahoman... ........ West Virginia_______ Koneas... i... Maine...oase oC Idaho. ion. 5.2.2 Oct. 14, 1949 New Yorko. ......0. Nov. 9, 1949 Connecticut... ...... Dee. 17, 1949 Kentucky... ...... Nov. 97.1950 North Carolina to Jan. 3, 1945. to Feb. 5, 1944. Theodore G. Bilbo. 5 Mr. Gillette also served in the Senate from Nov. 4, 1936, to Jan. 3, 1945. 6 Mr. Neely also served in the Senate from Mar. 1941. 7 Appointed Oct. 14, 1949, to fill unexpired term in the Senate from Nov. 6, 1946, to Jan. 3, 1949. 8 Appointed Dec. 17, 1949, to fill unexpired term 9 Elected Nov. 7, 1950, to fill unexpired term of 10 Elected Nov. 7, 1950, to fill unexpired term of 4, 1923, to Mar. 3, 1929, and from Mar. 4, 1931, to Jan. 12, of Senator Bert H. Miller; elected Nov. 7, 1950; also served of Senator Raymond E. Baldwin; elected Nov. 7, 1950. Senator Alben W. Barkley. Senator J. Melville Broughton. 180 Congressional Directory CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued Rank Name State Beginning of present service 37 | Carlson; Frank ©. sical |. Kangas. [004. ims Nov. 29, 1950 3% | Nixon, Richard M.l2___._____.i_._ California. coloo Dec. 1, 1950 39. “Pastore, Jom OB. ulyJ. 2c Rhode Island_______ Dec. 19, 1950 Bennett, Wallace F...__.__.______ Winhs ooo Bhan] Butler; John M._ ..ouuinalJo. Maryland... ola Case, | Branels... oo liad Joel oo South Dakota... Dirksen, Everett M__oi _____ Tilinols. . 0 caetiliid. 40 || Hennings, Thomas C., Jro_______ Missouri= Lo... dan. 18, 1951 Monroney, A. S. Mike. _________ Oklahoma, =... Smathers, George A____________ Florida dl slcounl.70) Welker, Herman. .._.siallo. Idaho. ii susnas. 41 | ‘Duff, James Wiel copa Pennsylvania_ ______ Jan. 16,1951 42 | Underwood, Thomas R.14________ Kentucky tdi in Mar. 19, 1951 43. | Moody, Blair. BB locuailo. _ Michigan. _L. oll Apr. 23, 1951 44 | Seaton, Fred A.W. _. aliiL _ Nebraglka a. ib Dec. 10, 1951 11 Elected Nov. 7, 1950, to fill unexpired term of Senator Clyde M. Reed. 12 Appointed Dee. 1, 1950, to fill unexpired term of Senator Sheridan Downey. 13 Elected Nov. 7, 1950, to fill unexpired term of Senator J. Howard McGrath. 14 Appointed Mar. 19, 1951, to fill unexpired term of Senator Virgil M. Chapman. 15 Appointed Apr. 23, 1951, to fill unexpired term of Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg. 16 Appointed Dee. 10, 1951, to fill unexpired term of Senator Kenneth S. Wherry. EEEEEE EE ————————————..SS Terms of Service 181 CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE [*Elected to fill a vacancy; f resigned] SERVED, WITH Name State ou Congresses (inclusive) Rudi 23 terms, consecutive Sabath, Adolph J... .___.ioh ll nm 7 | 60th to/82d.. ;....-.u Mar. 4, 1907 21 terms, consecutive Doughton, Robert L_____ N.C... 9: 62d10'82d..........- Mar. 4, 1911 20 terms, consecutive Rayburn, Sam______..._. Temp. | 4) 63dtosed. Mar. 4, 1913 Vifison Carl J... .._.. Ga... 6) 263d to. 82d. sins Nov. 3, 1914 18 terms, not consecutive Crosser, Robert_________. Ohio___| 21 | 63d to 65th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923 to 82d. 17 terms, consecutive Reed, Daniel A__________ Nie Yeo-l 45 | 66th te:82d.. Mar. 4, 1919 17 terms, not consecutive Woodruff, Roy O_._... —_| Mich__.| 10 | 63d and 67th to 82d_| Mar. 4, 1921 16 terms, consecutive . Rankin, John BE. __..___.; Miss. _ - | 67th to:32d ... __._¢ Mar. 4, 1921 15 terms, consecutive Cannon, Clarence... _____ Mo... 0. 68th t0.82d...... 2. Mar. 4, 1923 Celler, Emanuel. ________ N. Y..[:15 | 68thto32d. .......... Mar. 4, 1923 Kerr, Jom BH, >... NGC. 2. %68thto32d....._:.. Nov. 6, 1923 Taber, Johny. Jie. a N.4sY.rz| 38 | 68th1o0:82d..._..: Mar. 4, 1923 14 terms, consecutive Cox, Bil... oi... any. - 2 | 6Mh't0 82d... i... Mar. 4, 1925 Eaton, Charles A________ NaF... 5{69hto32d . ci.-nx Mar. 4, 1925 Jenkins, Thomas A______ Ohio... {310 60th to 82d... ..... Mar. 4, 1925 Martin, Joseph W., Jr____| Mass...| 14 | 69thto82d_________ Mar. 4, 1925 Rogers, Edith Nourse_.___| Mass... 51 *60thto 32d... ._.... June 30, 1925 182 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) omen 13 terms, consecutive Hope, Clifford R..........- Kans___ 51 70thto82d.___.. Mar. 4, 1927 MeQGormack, John W.... | Mass_..| (12 | *70th te 82d... __. Nov. 6, 1928 Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Mass__.| 13 | *70th to 82d________ Nov. 6, 1928 Wolverton, Charles A____| N. J__._ Yi 70th to. S2d. .......... Mar. 4, 1927 18 terms, not consecutive Andresen, August H_____ Minn. _ 1 | 69th to 72d and 74th | Jan. 3, 1935 to 82d. Reece, B. Carroll. ______- Tenn___ 1 | 67th to 71st, 73d to | Jan. 3,1951 79th and 82d. 12 terms, consecutive Cooper, Jere. __... ....° Tenn... 9 71st to 82d 2.000 Mar. 4, 1929 Patman, Wright... -TeX. 1 -7st 40 82d... Mar. 4, 1929 11 terms, consecutive Smith, Howard W._..... Viv. Bi 72d to 82d... Mar. 4, 1931 Spence, Brent...lL. ol. Kyo 5 F2dto82d.... Mar. 4, 1931 Wolcott, Jesse: Poon” Mich... 7 72d tod; Mar. 4, 1931 10 terms, consecutive Alon Leo’W, coz20 22 Ti Bh 16 | 73410824 roan. Mar. 4, 1933 Brown, Paul.) Ga “Lol 110 (373d1082d... July 5,1933 Colmer, William M______ Miss___ 6 73d to'82d....20 020 Mar. 4, 1933 Cooley, Harold D........ N.C 4 ®73d10 82d... . July 7,1934 Pingell, Jom D-=r- 02 Mich {+15 | #3dt0'82d.. === Mar. 4, 1933 Dondero, George A______ Mich... 17 [73d t082d ._._._--- Mar. 4, 1933 Richards, James P........ RC. 3.1. 73d to 82d... Xiu Mar. 4, 1933 Walter, Francis E_.._____ Phen 20 "73d to 82d. .....-= Mar. 4, 1933 10 terms, mot consecutive Hess, William B-— Ohlo> 2 | 71st to 74th, 76th to | Jan. 3, 1951 80th and 82d. Hull, Merlin. >... 0.00. Win =. 9 | 71st and 74th to 82d_| Jan. 3, 1935 Short, Dewey... one. Mo... 7 | 71st and 74th to 82d_| Jan. 3, 1935 9 terms, consecutive Arends, Leslie C_________ Ti teoty 17: 74th %o'82d 2. nit Jan. 3, 1935 Barden, Graham A: “IN. '@-_ [i *3 ( 74ht0'82d Jan. 3,1935 Boykin, Frank W.._._..... Algo 1 P37uhto 82d. 1. July 30, 1935 Buckley, Charles A______ N.Y...|-25 74thilo 32d... Jan. 3, 1935 | Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State 2 Congresses (inclusive) gan 9 terms, consecutive—con. Cole, W. Sterling... ______ No Yaual 39 | 74th to 82d. .......i0 Jan. 3, 1935 Crawford, Fred L____.____ Mich _ _ 8 | 74hto 82d... ...._.. Jan. 3,1935 Halleck, Charles A_______ Ind. 2; | *74h to. 32d... ion Jan. 29, 1935 Hart, Edward J... ..... 3 NoJdeat 14 | 74h $0824... Jan. 3, 1935 Hoffman, Clare E________ Mich 4 | 74th to 82d... .____ Jan. 3,:1935 Mahon, George H_______ Texiiof 19:{.74thito824.. | Jan. 3, 1935 Reed, Chauncey W______ Pl. gis 14: 74thto8S2d.. ~~ _.. ¢ Jan. 3, 1935 8 terms, consecutive Allen, A. Leonard____.___. Ia....o 8: 75th 10:82... .....5L Jan. 3,1937 Bates, Joe Bs....__ ig Ry ioe 8 | *75th to 82d-.______| June 4, 1938 Brooks, Overton... __.___. 1a... .5 4. 7hthito 82d... ....¢ Jan. 3, 1937 Byrne, William T.______. N. ¥.3l 32¢| 75thito 82d... Jan. 3, 1937 Eberharter, Herman P___| Pa____. 32 | 753thite 32d... ...... Jan. 3, 1937 Gamble, Ralph A__._._.___. Ne Va:al 1283 *75th to: 82d... Nov. 2,1937 Grant, George M________ Alas 2: X75th t0:82d.. 1 .« June 14, 1938 Gregory, Noble J_ _______ Ky. ..z 10]. 75th 10°82d.. .....— Jan. : 3,1937 Keogh, Eugene J_______. No ¥Yadaa 0'| 75th.to0 82d... 10; Jan. 3,1937 Kirwan, Michael J_______ Qhiogonf (19:| 75th 4082d. . .. uvp Jan. 3,1937 Mason, Noah M________._ 3 11 SNE 15 | 75th to 82d... .;. Jan. 3, 1937 Murdock, John R..__..... Ariz. AGL] 75th to 82d... .... “Jan. 3, 1937 O’Toole, Donald L_______ NaYaealt 113 [ 75thto 82d... Jan. 3, 1937 BoagerW. Ri... ...--.1} Tex..ar 11.1 75thto82d.. .. -.... Jan. 3,1937 Rees, Edward H._______._ Kans __ 4: 75thte Sed... .... Jan. 3, 1937 Shafer; Paul W..._.._.... Mich __ S| 75th to82d... ....i. Jan. 3, 1937 Sheppard, Harry R______ Calif of 21 [ 75th.to.82d. ....._ .._. Jan. 3, 1937 Simpson, Richard M_____ Pa. J. 17:1 *75th 10.824. ............-May 11, 1937 Thomas, Albert........... Tex... S{75thio82d.. ....... Jan. 3, 1937 8 terms, mot consecutive Blackney, William W____| Mich_. 6 | 74th and 76th to 82d_| Jan. 3, 1939 O’Brien, Thomas J_______ lin daz 6 | 73d to 75th, 78th to | Jan. 3, 1943 82d. Rabaut, Louis C...._____ Mich __| 14 | 74th to 79th, 81st and | Jan. 3, 1949 82d. 7 terms, consecutive Andersen, H. Carl... ... Minn_ _ 7. 76th t0.82d. ... cio Jan. 3, 1939 Anderson, Jack Z. ______. Calif___ S| %thtoS2d Jan. 3, 1939 Angell, Homer D._____.: Oreg.._ 3c 76th t0:82d.. ._ _...JdL Jan. 3, 1939 Beckworth, Lindley______ Tex... 83 | 76thgo82d........: Jan. 3, 1939 Bolton, Frances P____.__: OhioJ.:t 22 | *76th t0i182d. ._ .. iu: Feb. 27, 1940 Bonner, Herbert C______._ NC: 1. *76thtoi82d...__... Nov. 5, 1940 Brown, Clarence J______._ Ohio... % | 76thteS82d... Jan. 3, 1939 184 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Ds Congresses (inclusive) hoa 7 terms, conseculive—con. Bryson, Joseph R________ S00 4: 76th'to'82d-. Jan. 3, 1939 Camp, A. Sidney... Ga... .. 4 | *76th'to82d......... Aug. 1, 1939 Chiperfield, Robert B.._ | Ill. __.. 19. | 76th to'82d. 5.” Jan. 3, 1939 Clevenger, Cliff__________ Ohio. = 51 76th t0 82d... -.....~ Jan. 3, 1939 Curtis, CarlPT__.....7} Nebr__. 1 76th'to 82d... ...L Jan. 3, 1939 Davie Clifford oor Tenni:ir 100 *76(h'to 82d...LL Feb. 15, 1940 Durham, Cart To... NC: 6: 76th to'82d.... Jan. 3, 1939 Elston, Charles H________ Ohio___ TL 76th te 82d =< 7 2: Jan. 3, 1939 Fenton, Ivor D-....-.._.. Ph 12 | 76th to 82d..."20 Jan. 3, 1939 Galhings B.C... .... Avie... 1 | 76th (0.824. ‘Li... Jan. 3, 1939 Graham, Louis Wooo l Pa iC 25 ( 76th to 82d.... 0! Jan. 3, 1939 Hall, Edwin Arthur._____ NY oi 137 [%76th tx82d......-... Nov. 7,1939 Hall, Leonard W._..._ Noyiie 2 76thtoS2d. Jan. * 3, 1939 Hinshaw, Carl... F Calif"Cl 20 76th'o'82d...... 5. Jan. 3,1939 Jensen, Ben P_.. Towa___ 7 76th to 82d... 500 Jan. 3, 1939 Kean, Robert W.._...... NF oH 12%) Y6th'1o'82d.... rei Jan. 3, 1939 Kilburn, Clarence E______ N.Y oi 34 | ¥76thto32d. =. Feb. 13, 1940 Kilday, Panl'd. 2 Tex 0.0} 20 | 76th 10-32d....-.-Jan. 3, 1939 LeCompte, Karl M______ Towa___ 41 76th 10:82d....-....." Jan. 3, 1939 McGregor, J. Harry... __ Ohioteuh 17 *76th te 82d... = Feb. 27, 1940 McMillan, John L______._ el DER 6 | 76th1t082d.. . -... Jan. 3, 1939 Martin, Thomas E_______ Towa___ 1'76thto32d.. I. Jan. 3, 1939 Mille Wilbur Doone Arle C0 2 | 76thito 82d... ot Jan. 3, 1939 Murray, Reid Fn Wis LC 7. 76th-10.82d oc. Jan. 3, 1939 Norrell WB... 0 Ale 0 6. | 76thto82d. 0... Jan. 3, 1939 Sasscer, Lansdale G______ Md. .. 9. 36thito 82d... Feb. 3, 1939 Tolle, Henry O......... Towa___ 2° 76th'to 82d... :.¢ Jan. 3, 1939 Vorys, John MJ... Ohio... 12 | 76thito 32d -......° "2 Jan. 3, 1939 7 terms, mot consecutive Burdick, Usher: Li... ..... N. Dak_|At L.| 74th to 78th, 81st | Jan. 3, 1949 and 82d. Porand, Aime J.C.00 if RE 20 1 | 75th and 77th to 82d_| Jan. 3, 1941 Core, Albert... Tenn _ _ 4 | 76th to 778th to 82d_| Jan. 3, 1945 Polk, JamestG. LUE0 CL Ohio. 6 | 72d to 76th, S8lst | Jan. 3,1949 and 82d. Secrest, Robert T________ Ohio.__| 15 | 73d to 77th, 8lst | Jan. 3, 1949 and 82d. 6 terms, consecutive Bishop, C.:"W. (Runt)... PHI fd 26 | 7T7thito' 82d... Jan. 3, 1941 Canfield, Gordon_________ No Jie S| 77th-to 82d... . Jan. 3, 1941 Cunningham, Paul_______ Towa___ 6 77thito' 82d..... 1. Jan. 3, 1941 Granger, Walter K_______ Utah___ 1] 77hto 82d...) Tan. t 3,104 Harris; Oven. connie Ark____ 7:1 T7thite 82d... J Jan. 3, 1941 Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) Pagina 6 terms, comsecutive—con. Hébert, F. Edward_______ Lalli] ri 77th 108824... .---Jan. 3, 1941 Heffernan, James J_.._.___ NOY AF | 77ihto'82d. sl Jan. 3,1941 Hill, William S_......... Colo. __ 2 | 77thto!82d.. ... ..c:: Jan. 3, 1941 Jackson, Henry M.______ Wash _ _ 2 77thto 82d... ...... Jan. 3, 1941 Kelley, Augustine B______ Pal lk 27 [ Tith{o82d......---Jan. 3, 1941 King, Cecll RB. . .....con-. Calif. 17 | *77th10:'82d.... .--Aug. 25, 1942 Lane, Thomas J......... Mass. _ Ti ®Tthito'82d. ..... LL Dec. 30, 1941 O'Hara, Joseph P____.._. Minn_ _ 21 .. i. Jan. 77th4082d..... 33,1941 Priest, J. Perey... ooo. Tenn__ 6 77tht0:824......... Jan. 3,1941 Rivers, L. Mendel....... 8. 0.x 2 77iho82d..... .... Jan. 3, 1941 Smith, Lawrence H______ Wisi (1): Bi-*7{letei32d. . ....--Aug. 29,1941 Whitten, Jamie L________ Miss___ 2.1 *7thite 82d... ..... Nov. 4, 1941 Wilson, Barlit . _._ ...... Ind: li: 9. 77thitois2d. .. Jan. 3, 1941 6 terms, not consecutive Bender, George H________ Ohio___| At L.| 76th to 80th, and 82d_| Jan. 3, 1951 Fogarty, Jorn BE..... RF i: 2 | 77th, 178th to 82d...{ Jan. 38,1945 Havenner, Franck R_____ Calif .__ 4 | 75th, 76th, 79th to | Jan. 3, 1945 82d. Klein, Arthur G......... N.Y_._| 19 | *77th, 78th, *79th to | Feb. 19, 1946 82d. O’Brien, George D_______ Mich. _| 13 | 75th, 77th to 79th, | Jan. 3, 1949 81st and 82d. Ramsey, Robert L_______ W. Va. | 73d «to 775th, 77th, | Jan.l 3,11949 81st and 82d. Sikes, Robert L. F_______ Fla LZ 8 77th, 178th to 82d.._|' Jan. 3,1945 Van Zandt, James E_____ Pai ills 22 | 76th, 77th, 178th, | Jan. 3,1947 : 80th to 82d. Withrow, Gardner R_____ Wis____ 3 | 72d to 75th, 81st and | Jan. 3, 1949 : 82d. Wood, John 8S. _._.....__|'Ga.__.|" 9 72d,73d,79th to 82d_| Jan. 38,1945 § terms, consecutive Abernethy, Thomas G____| Miss___ 493th 10'82d ~:~. Jan. 3, 1943 Andrews, George W______ Ala. 3 | *78th to 82d woiin:s Mar. 14, 1944 Auchincloss, James C_____ Ned = 34 78thte 32d. : =... Jan. 3, 1943 Beall, J. Glenn. = Lia Md... 6:3 78thto.82d., ....... Jan. 3, 1943 Brehm, Walter E________ Ohio... {5 11 | 7Sth.to'824..._ 1h Jan. 3,1943 Dawson, William L______ HS Ld 78th to:82d.. Jan. 3, 1943 Ellsworth, Harris________ Oreg.._ 4 [ 78th t0:82d._...... 1. Jan. 3, 1943 Engle, Clair... _-....... Califo 2 sth to0'324-Aug. 31, 1943 Feighan, Michael A______ Qhiol.{* 20: | 78th 10/824... Jan. . 38,1943 Fernandez, Antonio M___| N.Mex_|AtL.| 78h to 82d______.__ Jan. 3, 1943 Bisher, O. C. ... ..... ex... 21 I8th{o82d = = Jan. 3,1943 186 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State A Congresses (inclusive) PR terms, consecutive—con. Cavin Yeon: H... ........ Pall 19 78th 10.824... Jan. 3, 1943 Goodwin, Angier L_______ Mass: olc 8 78thto82d...... I.n|-Jan. -3,,1943; . Gordon, Thomas S_______ Today SL 73hto:82d. Jan. 3,1943 Hagen, Harold C_.______ Mimm:.\: 9 78thte'82d.......1L Jan. 38,1943 Hale, Robert. -.....cv.-.-Maine._ rq 78th 10824... .[. Jan. 3, 1943 Hays, ‘Brooks. ....cu....b Ark. Si 78thto:82d. ........ Jan. 3, 1943 Herter, Christian A______ Maszziol* 10 [78thte82d.. ....... Jan. 3,1943 Hoeven, Charles B_______ Towa. __ 8 | 78h to82d.____.__._| Jan. 3, 1943 Holifield, Chet... cuux--CalifLc 19 | 78thto:82d. ........ Jan. 3,1943 Holmes, Hall. ....o..... Wash __ 4 [78th to 82d... ..... Jan. 3, 1943 Horan, Wali. ..........5 Wash. <5 {78th to 82d... ...1L.: Jan. 3, 1943 Johnson, Leroy. .......... Calif___ 3 78thio82d. .......1 Jan. 3, 1943 Judd, Walter Hl... ... MinnliSfV 5 | ‘78th to 82d... coc. Jan. 3, 1943 Kearney, Bernard W. | N.Y...| 381 78thtoS82d......... Jan. 3, 1943 (Pat). ; Larcade, Henry D., Jr____| La_____ 7 278th %0'82d. 0 nooo Jan. 3, 1943 ... MeConnell, Samuel K., Jr_| Pa_____ 16 [2*78thito 32d... i Jan. 18, 1944 Madden, Ray J.....0L0 Ind... Li: 78thto 82d. ........ Jan. 3, 1943 Mansfield, Mike_________ Mont.» 1:{ 786th $0:82d. . ....... Jan. 3, 1943 Merrow, Chester E__ ____ NAHE «1 {78thto82d....4.... Jan. 3, 1943 Miller, CA. Lol. obdJ00% Nebr._._ 4 | 78h to82d......._..| Jan. 33,1943 Morrison, James H_ _____ Tadd] 16 [-78th1082d......... Jan. 3, 1943 Murray, Tom. 005 0. Tenn_ _ Si 78th to 82d... Jan. 3, 1943 O’Konski, Alvin E_______ Wise2] 10 [78th to 82d. ........ Jan. 3, 1943 Philbin, ‘Philip J....00. Mass_ 8 | 78thito'82d........0. Jan. 3, 1943 Phillips, John... .....LSR Coliti2 | 22: | 73th to 82d... c.. Jan. 3, 1943 Rootey, JohniJ. ....00 2. NAYS 12. *78th {082d _| June 6, 1944 ‘Serivner, Errett P. Kangils 2d *78th to 82d... ... 2. Sept. 14, 1943 Simpson, Sid... ......hE ER The 20 [| TSth to 82d... .... Jan. 3, 1943 Stigler, William G_______ Okla: i. 2 | Z78thtoiS2d _..I =. Mar. 28, 1944 Stockman, Lowell ________ Oreg___ 2 -78th1t0:82d:__. ..... Jan. 3, 1943 Taylor; Dean'P..Lisul.o NY LY 33 {78th to:82d....-.. Jan. 3, 1943 Vursell, Charles W_______ 3 Sli 24 | I8thte82d. Jan. 3, 1943 Weichel, Alvin F________ Ohio...[ -13 | 78th'to 82d... osu. Jan. 3, 1943 Winstead, Arthur....____| Miss__. 5 | 7Sth1toS2d...... =... Jan. 3, 1943 b terms, moi consecutive Butler SJohm€ ..........-N.Y___| 44 | 77th to 80th, and 82d_| Jan. 3, 1951 Chenoweth, J. Edgar_____ Colo__. 3 | 77th to 80th,and82d_| Jan. 3, 1951 Corbett, Robert J________ Pay: i 30 | ‘76th, 79th to 82d____| Jan. 3, 1945 Scott, Hugh D., Jr... ... Paciii 6 | 77th, 78th, 80th to | Jan. 3, 1947 82d. Wickersham, Vietor__..____ Okla... 7 | ¥77th to 79th, 81st, | Jan. 3, 1949 and 82d. Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Pi Congresses (inclusive) Lose § 4 terms, consecutive Byrnes, Joan'W... _...__. Wis... 8 | 79thto 82d... ..._.: Jan. 3, 1945 Cage, Clifford P._ ....._} Nadas 61. 79%hito82d ... ..... Jan. 3, 1945 Chell, Frankl... .-.. i: Ry ios 4. [79th to 82d... :...14 Jan. 3, 1945 Cole, Albert M...........; Kans _ _ | 79thio 82d... .... Jan. 3, 1945 Combs, J.aM. oii Tex. i.0 2: 179th to:82d.._ ...... Jan. 3, 1945 D’Ewart, Wesley A______ Mont _ _ 2: 270hit0:82d.... i.e June 5, 1945 Dolliver, James I________ Towa__. 6; 79thi1082d... Jan. 3, 1945 Fallon, George H________ Md... 4.0 7%h to 82d... o.= Jan. 3,1945 Fulton, James G......... Pa: o.0 31. 79th to 82d... ..... Jan. 3, 1945 Gary, J. Vaughan________ Va. ..c Br 279th to 82d... i... Mar. 6, 1945 Gwinn, Ralph W___.__.. N. Yost 27 [79th toe 82d.._ 0... Li... Jan. 3, 1945 Hand, T. Millet... .......: N.J.za 2 (79th to;82d ._....... Jan. 3, 1945 Harrison, Bure P.____... Vo... 7 ¥thtoi82d........ Nov. 6, 1946 Hedrich, EB: 8...... . W. Va _ 6 | 79th toiS2d. +. Jan. 3, 1945 Heselton, John W________ Mass _ _ 1] 79th t0:82d.. i Jan. 3, 1945 Latham, Henry J... NoX..0 3: 70hto 82d... ..._ . Jan. 3, 1945 Lyle, Joon 'B., Jr. _...... Texs.oal 14 | 79h toi82d.. 2 ic Jan. 3, 1945 McDonough, Gordon L.__| Calif...| 15 | 79th to82d__.._____. Jan. 3, 1945 Miller, George P____ _____ Calif.ic 6: [70th to:82d..._-.... Jan. 3, 1945 Morgan, Thomas E______ Pa: 2.0 24: | 79th:ito'32d........: Jan. 3, 1945 Norblad, Walter__ _______ Oreg.__._ 16-57 htor82d. ~.L . Jan. 11, 1946 Pickett, Tom... ...--: Tex... 7c 79th to82d. ii. Jan. 3, 1945 Powell, Adam C., Jr_____ N-Y..-p 22; 79th to:82d....._ .:.. Jan. 3, 1945 Price. Melvin... “tT 00 25: 79th 1032d. ..... .... Jan. 3, 1945 Rains, Albert... .-_.. I: Ala. 5.1 79h to82d. ... tL. . Jan. 3, 1945 Rogers, Dwight L________ Ya. ...c Or] 79th t0:832d_. _....1-Jan. 3, 1945 Stanley, Thomas B______ Va. i. Sof *79th 10182d._. ._& Nov. 5, 1946 Teague, Olin KE... _____.__. Tex. ..5 6. 379th t0.82d.......; Aug. 24, 1946 Trimble, James W_______ Ark_... Srl 79th toiS2d ......If Jan. 3, 1945 4 terms, not consecutive Bennett, Jon B.._..._.. Mich__| 12 | 78th, 80th to 82d..__| Jan. 3, 1947 Boggs, Hale... ........; Ya....0 2 | 77th, 80th to 82d_.._| Jan. 3, 1947 Buffett, Howard H_______| Nebr___ 2 | 78h to 80th, and | Jan. 3, 1951 "82d, Dempsey, John J________ N.Mex_|AtL.| 74th to 76th, an Jan. 3,1951 : 82d. Poulson, Norris. _....... Calif... 13 | 78th, 80th to 82d... Jan. 3,1947 Thompson, Clark W. ___. Tex i.: 4 | *73d, *80th to 82d._| Aug. 23, 1947 3 terms, consecutive Abbitt, Watkins M__ ____ Na. i.00 4: *80th to'S2d.... ..... Feb. 17, 1948 Albert: Carli. ...0._i Okla___ 31 S0tht0'82d..-. 0... Jan. 3, 1947 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 14 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Dr Congresses (inclusive) SE . terms, consecutive—con. Allen, John: Jr... Calif. 7 | 80th-to 82d... Jan. 3, 1947 ‘Battle; Laurie OC... ....... Aly. Lo 9 [.S0th1o82d./-... Jan. 3, 1947 Bentsen, Lloyd M., Jr... "Tex. ..!-15 | 380th to -. . Dec. 4, 1948 82d... Blatnik, John A. ooo ic Minn _ _ 8 | 80thto 82d... ....-. Jan. : 3,1947 Boggs,-J. Caleb............ Pel. 1:0 ALL. S0thto:82d.. Jan. 3, 1947 Bramblett, Ernest K_____ Calif:_.| 11 | S0th'to 82d... ....0 Jan. 3, 1947 Burleson, Omar._._._.___.. Tex.of (17. -80hito'82d. 2. >. Jan: 53 1047 Burton, Clarence G______ Ya: Lil 6. | 280th t6:82d.-.--Nov. 2, 1948 Cotton, Norris. + oon NaH Po 80thto:82d..... .% Jan. 3, 1947 Coudert, Prederie B., Jr: N.¥__.| 17 | 80th to 824... _-.° Jan. -3, 1947 Dague; Paal:B..... Pa: 9+ S0th10:82d . .-...." Jan. 3, 1947 Davis, Glenn R............. Wis..." 2 20h £0.82d. i Apr. 22, 1947 Davig, James Coo... Gal 5: 80thito82d: —.. .: Jan. 3, 1947 Deane, Charles B._______ NOG... 8 SOh'to' 82d... Jan. 3, 1947 Donohue, Harold D______| Mass_._ 4 -80thit082d =. Jan. 3 7047 BEving, Joe ilu ua Tenn. _ 5 | 80th'to/'S2d. =. Jan. 3, 1947 Tolcnoy Garmatz, Edward A_____ Md. Lic 3: *80thito 82d... July 15, 1947 Hardy; Porter, Jr... .....|-Va_.. 2: 80th to S24... 0. Jan. 3, 1947 Harvey, Ralph... .... Tod. ip 10:1 %*S0th 40.824 =. Nov. 4, 1947 Jackson, Donald L_______ Calif. _p 162 "80th t0:82d = 1. Jan. 3, 1947 Javits, Jacob dC... [0 N.Y. 21 SOthto:82d.-co. Jan. 8, 1947 Jenison, Edward H______ LI} JRE 23 | S0th:to 82d... Jan. 3, 1947 Jones, Hamilton C_______ N.C: 10%-80th'toi82d. Lo. Jan. “<8. 1047 Jones, Paul Coil ool Mo... | 10: :*80th to 82d..." Nov. 2,1948 Jones, Robert E., Jr______ Ala: 8 [/*80th t0'82d.....:-Jan. 28, 1947 Karsten, Frank M_______ Mo....| 13 | 80thte82d......--. Jan. 3, 1947 Kearns, Carroll D... ...... . Pa. Lo: 2% SGtht0 82d... Jan. 3, 1947 Keating, Kenneth B_____ N.Y. | 20 (-80thio 82d... +. Jan. 38,1947 Kennedy, John F_______._ Mass.{ 11 'S0th to82d ......_. Jan. 3, 1947 Lanham, Henderson______ Ga... 127 [30thto 82d... . Jan. 3, 1947 Lucas, Wingate H_______ Tex... 212 [>80th t0:82d. F. > % Jan. 3, 1947 McCulloch, William M___| Ohio___ 40 %80th 10: 82d... i... Nov. 4, 1947 Mack, Russell V_________ Wash _ _ 3-1 280th to 82d... June 7, 1947 Miller, Edward T._______ Md. ..: 180th 40:82d Jan. 3, 1947 Morris, Toby... 00. Okla. _. 6 SOthte 82d. -.--_"_ Jan. 3, 1947 Morton, Thruston Ballard_| Ky____ 3 80thioS2d....... ... Jan. 3, 1947 Multer, Abraham J______ NeYoo.) 1411 %80th to 82d... Nov. 4, 1947 Nicholson, Donald W____| Mass. 9 | 80th to 82d... Nov. 18, 1947 Passman, Otto -C _L Lali Bet 80th 10.8200 he Jan. 3, BE... 1947 Patterson, James T______ Conn._ _ 5 S0thi1o 82d i. 5. Jan. 3, 1947 Potter, Charles E____.___ Mich. ..| 11: ['*80th{o0:82d.. ..... Aug. 26, 1947 Preston, Prince H., Jr... [ Ga... 180th to82d.. 22 7" Jan. = 3, 1947 Redden, Monroe M______ NC. a2. ne0th to'S2d... o.oo... Jan. 3, 1947 Began; Ken... >: Tex i220 16. *80th-to 82d..." Aug. 23, 1947 Riehlman, R. Walter_____ INS Uk 36 | SOth'to 82d. Jan. 3, 1947 Sadlak, Antoni N..._.... Conn. VAt L.l S0thito 82d. _-.___= Jan. 3, 1947 Terms of Service SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State i Congresses (inclusive) gm 3 terms, consecutive—con. St. George, Katharine... | N. Y...| 29 | 80thto82d......... Jan. 3, 1947 Scott, Hardie... Pa. _. 3] 80thto82d. Jan. 3, 1947 Smith, Wint...i Kans __ 6 | 0th1o32d.... Jan. 3, 1947 Tollefson, Thor C.......__ Wash __ 6 [80th {o82d. Jan. 3, 1947 Wheeler, W. M. (Don). __| Ga___._ 8 80th to 82d. _-= Jan. 3, 1947 Williams, John Bell______ Miss___ 7 30th'to'82d Jan. 3,1947 Wilson, J. Frank: -__.____ Tex. i=: 51 80thtoS2d...__..-_-Jan. 3, 1947 3 terms, not consecutive Bailey, Cleveland M_____ W.Va__ 3 | 79th, 81st and 82d_.__| Jan. 3, 1949 Barrett, William A_______ Pa..o.i 1 | 79th, 81st and 82d___| Jan. 3, 1949 Busbey, Fred E__________ {1100S ae) 3 | 78th, 80th and 82d__| Jan. 3, 1951 Carnahan, A. S. J...... Mo... 2 8 | 79th, 81st and 82d___| Jan. 3, 1949 Delaney, James J________ Na¥Y.ai 6 | 79th, 81st and 82d___| Jan. 3, 1949 Doyle, Clyde...........05 Calif_.__| 18 | 79th, 81st and 82d___| Jan. 3, 1949 Flood, Daniel J. _-....L8 Pa. ib 11 | 79th, 81st and 82d.__| Jan. 3, 1949 Granahan, William T_____ Pa. ... 2 | 79th, 81st and 82d._..| Jan. 3, 1949 Green, William J., Jr_____ Pa... 5 | 79th, 81st and 82d__._| Jan. 3, 1949 Osmers, Frank C., Jr.____ Nadir 9 | 76th, 77th and *82d_| Nov. 6, 1951 Riley, MJohnid... co...14 8.0.1 2 | 79th, 80th and 82d_._| Jan. 3, 1951 Schwabe, George B______ Okla___ 1 | 79th, 80th and 82d. _| Jan. 3, 1951 2 terms, consecutive Addonizio, Hugh J_______ N.d--i 111 Sistand 82d. __.__ ._. Jan. 3, 1949 Aspinall, Wayne N_______| Colo__._ 4 | 8lstand 82d..._. Jan. 3,1949 Baring, Walter S.-_.__. Nev_. [AtL.| Sistand S2d._ Jan. 3, 1949 Bates, William H_._.._____ Mass. __ 6 | *Bistand 832d... Feb. 14, 1950 Bennett, Charles E_______ Fla _.. 2 | Sistand 82d _._._.. Jan. 3, 1949 Bolling, Richard... Mo... 5: 81stand 82d... __ Jan. 3, .. 1949 Bosone, Reva Beck _ _____ Utah. __ 2 ({Sistand 32d... _.__. Jan. 3, 1949 Burnside, M..G_..... ._._. W.Va __ 4 | 8lstand 82d... ___._ Jan. 3, 1949 Carlyle, F. Briel... .... N.C... 7 I-Sistand 82d... Jan. 3, 1949 Chatham, Thurmond_____ NC... 5 |: Sistand 82d... .-... Jan. 3, 1949 Chudofi, Earl .L ..._.._.. | Behe 4 | 81st and 82d_____._.. Jan. 3, 1949 Clemente, L. Gary______._ N.Y... 4 Sistand 82d. ...... Jan. 3,1949 deGraffenried, Edward. __| Ala____ 6.1 -8lstand 82d ...... Jan. 3, 1949 Denton, Winfield K______ Ind... S-Sistand 832d___ _._.. Jan. 3, 1949 Dollinger, Isidore ._____. N.Y... 24 Sistand 82d _._... Jan. 3, 1949 Elliott, Carl... .: ....... Als 7.4 Sistand 82d... .... Jan. 3,1949 Ford, Gerald R., Jr. -.... Mich___ 5 -Slstand 82d... Jan. 3, 1949 Frazier, James B., Jr_____ Tenn___ 3] Sistand 82d... .___ Jan. 3, 1949 Fugate, Tom B. ........ Va:.... 9 | Slstand 82d. ...... Jan. 3, 1949 Fureolo, Foster. ........... Mass _ _ 2 [-Sist and 82d ........ Jan. 3, 1949 George, Myron V__.__.___ Kans _ _ 3! *®lstand 82d___.._. Nov. 17,1950 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) bY NL terms, consecutive— con. Golden, James SS... Ky. J. 0 Slst and 82d... ... Jan. 3, 1949 Grows, fH Rat... d Towa.__ 31 8lstand: 82d... .... Jan. 3, 1949 Harden, Cecil M..__...... Ind. ... 6 | Slstand:82d.. ..._.. Jan. 3, 1949 Hays, Wayne L..._...... Ohio..cf 18 | Slstand 82d... _.... Jan. 3, 1949 Heller;: LouigiB....------1 N. Yi. 7 [ *Slsb and 82d... Feb. 15,1949 Herlong, A. 8, Jr... Pla... 5 Slst and 82d... ..... Jan. 3, 1949 Hoffman, Richard W_____ 1} HR 10 [Slstand 82d... ..... Jan. 3, 1949 Howell, Charles R_.____. NJ... 4 | 81st and 82d________ Jan. 3, 1949 Irving, Leonard. ....----Mo... 4 8lstand 832d. ....._.. Jan. 3, 1949 James, Benjamin F______ Py. 7 | Sist and 82d... 0: Jan. 3, 1949 Jonas, Hdgar A020 004 i § AREA 12 | Bist and 82d.......0 Jan. 3, 1949 Jones, Woodrow W______ N-CLck Ad F3Slst and 82d... Nov. 17,1950 Kelly, Bdoa'P......0 C N-Y.L p 0 | *8lstand 82d4....... Nov. 8, 1949 __. Lind, JomesilP,..-Dac LO Pa 020 21 {Sistand 82d... ..-. Jan. 3, 1949 Lovre,Hareld O_._20. 208 S. Dak_ 1 |. Sistand 82d... .....-. Jan. 3, 1949 McCarthy, Eugene J_____ Minn _ _ 4: 81st and 82d... Jan. 3, 1949 McGrath, Christopher C__| N. Y___| 26 | 81st and 82d__.______ Jan. 3, 1949 McGuire, John A________ Conn __ S| Sistand 82d... .1.... Jan. 3, 1949 McKinnon, Clinton D____| Calif___| 23 | 81st and 82d______._._ Jan. 3, 1949 Mack, Peter P. Jr. 1} SIN A 21 | Sistand 82d........-Jan. 3, 1949 Magee, Clare... _____ Mo. .. 1 pSistiand 82d... = Jan. 3, 1949 Marshall, Pred... ...-Minn. _ 6. Slstand 824... .. Jan. 3, 1949 Mitchell, Hugh B________ Wash. _ 1 [Sistand 82d. ius Jan. 3, 1949 Moulder, Morgan M_____ Mo... 2.1 Sist and 82d... Jan. 3, 1949 Murphy, James J... ... N.Y...| 116 [ Sistand 824... Jan. 3, 1949 Nelson, Charles P________ Maine 2. Slst and 82d... ---Jan. 3, 1949 O'Neill, Harry P......... |THA 10.1: 81st and. 824..... Jan. 3,1949 Patten, Harold A... ... Ariz... 2 | Sistand 82d... .-_-. Jan. 3, 1949 Perking, Cart D....... ..: Ry. ... 7 ESlstand: 82d... Jan. 3,1949 Quinn, T..Vineent. . ...... NoYes 5: 1Slst and 824... ..._.. Jan. 3, 1949 Rhodes, George M_______ Pa. 13 [Sist.and 82d... .-. Jan. 3, 1949 Ribicoff, A. Aus. in re Conn... 1 [Sistand 82d. ______ Jan. 3, 1949 Robeson, Edward J., Jr___| Va_____ 1 | *81st and-832d....... May 2, 1950 Rodino, Peter W., Jr_____ N.J.o-1 10 iSist and 824: .-Jan. 3, 1949 Roosevelt, Franklin D., Jr. N. Y...[ 20 [*Slst and 82d... ..-May 17, 1949 Saylor, John Po... iil... Pa. ir _. 26 | *Sistand 82d4._.__.. Sept. 13, 1949 Scudder, Hubert B_______ Calif... 1 (Slst and 82d... _..._ Jan. 3, 1949 Shelley, John PB... ...c. Calif _.. 5. isp and 82d..... Nov. 8, 1949 Staggers, Harley O_______ W. Va _ 2 [Sistand 82d... ..... Jan. 3, 1949 Steed, Tom pul --ian Okla... 4 Sistand 32d... Jan. 3, 1949 Sutton, Pater oo on.np Tenn _ _ 7 Sat and82d4 __.___. Jan. 3, 1949 Tackett, Boyd-_._.......¢ Avie. C3 4 | Sletand 82d..... Jan. '3,1949 Thornberry, Homer______ Tex... “10: Slst and 82d. "> _ Jan. 3, 1949 Velde, Harold H._______._ mm... 1S Slstand 824... Jan. 3, 1949 Welch, Phill J... .-.-. Mo... 3 |:Slstand 82d... ___. Jan. 3, 1949 Werdel, Thomas H_______ Calif. .|: 10 [Slstand : >. Jan. 82d... 38,1949 Widnall, William B______ NJ... 70 *8isb ond S2d.... 2. Feb. 6, 1950 Terms of Service 191 SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Name State Diy Congresses (inclusive) i 2 terms, consecutive—con. Wier, Roy WW... .. ...... Minn_ _ 31 8lst.and 824.......... Jan. 3, 1949 Willis, Bdwin E......... La. ic. 3 | Sistiand 82d... -... Jan. 3, 1949 Yates, Sidney R......... i: 0.1 Sistand 82d... .... Jan. 3, 1949 Zablocki, Clement J__.___ Wis____ 4: Set and 82d...=. Jan. 3, or 1949 2 terms, not consecutive Bakewell, Claude I_______ Mo...| 11 | 80th and *32d _.. ..._ Mar. 9, 1951 Dorn,-W. J. Bryan... 8. 0. 3 | 80th and 82d____.__._ Jan. 3, 1951 Kersten, Charles J_______ Wis... 5] SOthrand 82d....... Jan. 3, 1951 Seely-Brown, Horace, Jr__| Conn_ _ 2 S0thiand 82d... ... Jan. 3, 1951 Yuil, Richard B........... I... 2. SOthrand 824........ Jan. 3, 1951 1 term Aandahl, Fred G___._.__.__ N. Dale (ACE. (82d. il nnncannsi Jan. 3, 1951 Adair, BE. Ross........nuue Ind... RE nH SRCp 0 Jan. 3, 1951 Anfuso, Victor I... ____ N.Y. 8 82d a ah Jan. 3, 1951 Armstrong, 0. Ko ___.__ Mo...-. 6 82d eect Jan. 3, 1951 Ayres, William H________ Ohio. .of 1d 82d. oir 8. ciao id Jan. 3, 1951 Baker, Howard H________ Tenn. _ Zl 82d an ia Jan. 3, 1951 Beamer, John V_________ Ind...c BY 82d i lea Jan. 3, 1951 Belcher, Page... Okla... Br 82d. oii ila Jan. 3.1951 Berry BB: Voi areas S. Dak. 2 82d Lt ieaaatl de Jan... -3,.1951 Betts, Jackson E.______. Ohio... SL 82d Cal Jan. 3, 1951 Bow, Frank. TT... ..... Ohjocy 16 80d nn 0. Jan. 3, 1951 Bray, Willam G.._....... Ind. i. 71. 82d in.a adie Jan. +:3,:1951 Brownson, Charles B_____ Tndee) +3 83d. hr io 0 ox Jan. 3, 1951 Buchanan, Vera... ..... Ph... 833 138% om. Sila July 24, 1951 Budge, Hamer H_ _______ Idaho_._ yt Sg BL ME TE ee al Jan. 3, 1951 Bush c;AlvinR........... Pa... 15 82d. han nada Jan. 3, 1951 Carrigg, Joseph L_.___._ Pa ri 1d 282dr Hs Nov. 6, 1951 Church, Marguerite S____| Tll_____ 181 82d. rant Jan. 3, 1951 Crumpacker, Shepard J., | Ind____ EY Pe WhEe Jan. 3, 1951 Jr. Curtis, Thomas B.___.... Mo....[ +12 | 82d... isueucuri: Jan. 3, 1951 Denny, Harmar D., Jr. | Pas. 0] +204 824... £2 = oo Jah. = 3, 1951 Devereux, James P. S____| Md____ ide dsc Jan. 38,1951 Donovan, James G_______ NoaVial 18 (89d...sf doy Jan. 3, 1951 .. Fine, Sidney A... ...; NY (i283 0.84 ais Jan.” 3, 1951 Yorrester, BE. 1: ........: Ga... Bl82d..... iienavaaus Jan. 3, 1951 Greenwood, Ernest_______ N.Y 82d a Jan. 3, 1951 Harrison, Robert D______ Nebel: +8 [#89 op uo Dec. 4, 1951 Harrison, William H_____ Wyo. iA, 82d =... Siri ll Jan. 3,1951 Hillings, Patrick J. 2. Calif {12 (82d ~~. .T-Jan. 3, 1951 Honter, Allan Oakley: | Calif..[ 918d......, Jan.: 3,1951 ... Ykard, Frank... Mex... 13: 309d ct on Sept. 8, _.. 1951 192 Congressional Directory SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Dis-Beginning of Name State trict Congresses (inclusive) present service term—continued Jarman, John. oococcenls Ollniiod AB 82000 nid eras Jan. 3,1951 Kee, Elizabeth... ___ W. Va__ Fs LS Se SE July 17, 1951 King, Rarl Qu... cot Pas. BL ERD tl des amn snd Nov. 6, 1951 Kluezynski, John C______ iEHUB Bil Sod andDe Jan. 3,1951 Lantaff, William C. (Bill) _| Fla____ 4. RO Bela Jan. 3, 1951 Lesingki, John, Jr....._.. Mich: |. .116 824... 2. ot 20h Jan." 31951 Melntire, Clifford G__ ___ Maine__ SL E82 ob ol Oct. 22, 1951 McMullen, Chester B____| Fla____ LR LE Te SREMa Jan. 3, 1951 McVey, William E_______ 3 EER CSA PELL Jan. 3, 1951 Machrowicz, Thaddeus M_| Mich___ 1] 82d 0 0 esa Jan. 3, 1951 Meader, George. _ _ ______ Mich... Dil S2di0Y TT 00 Jan. 3, 1951 Miller, William E________ NAY. G42 82s ts an Jan. 3, 1951 Morano, Albert P......... Conn... EV IT Th ae pe Jan. 3, 1951 Mumma, Walter M______ Pa. .. 1804 82d on noo Jan. 3, 1951 Ostertag, Harold C______ No lo4l | 82d 0 a loos. Jan. 3, 1951 Prouty, Winston L.....-.-Vibes ALL NST rs pda oad Jan. 3, 1951 Radwan, Edmund P_____ INSY 20 23 82d inl i se na Jan. 3, 1951 Reams, Frazier. ________. Ohio: 0.4 B2dii nr oan Jan. 3, 1951 Roberts, Kenneth A_.____ Ad 1 4 Slt de oy gn] Jan. 3,1951 Rogers, Byron G._....;... Colo___ (Eh OESE ER Jan. 3,1951 Rogers, Walter _________ Pexc xt 118 | SAA a Lone ca Jan. 3, 1951 Schenek, Paul F______._.._ Ohio___ 34 E8240 ass Nov. 6, 1951 Sheehan, Timothy P_____ Tes YL (82d,noone Jan. 3, on 1951 Sieminski, Alfred D______ Nod 18 82d 0h. 0 andl rare Jan. 3, 1951 Sittler, Edward L., Jr... Pa. _.. 28 82E La Jan. 3, 1951 Smith, Frank B......... Miss__. [82d 0h san Jan. 3, 1951 Springer, William L______ 4 NEE, 2p 82d. hei Jan. 3, 1951 Thompson, Ruth... ... Mich__. OF 2d eae DE) Jan. 3, 1951 Van Pelt, William K_____ Wis... G0 Bde oto n] Jan. 3, 1951 Watts, John Coo ooo: Ry. ii SE HL Er CRN Apr. 14, 1951 Wharton, J. Ernest______ NXg 1306-824 8 hie sin ieee Jan. 3, 1951 Williams, William R_____ Ne Yo 350 82d lon. ooo Jan. 3, 1951 Wood, John. .coouicaus Idaho__ YI 82d Jan. 3, 1951 Yorty, Samuel W________ Calif] Yb { 82d. 0c on Jou, Jan. #3, 1951 TERRITORIAL DELEGATES Bartlett, Bab. .iauanaais Alaska _|..... THhito'82d...... Jan." 3, 1945 Farrington, Joseph R_____ Hawali-f... 78thito 82d... ...}.; Jan. 3, 1943 RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Fernés-Isern, A.......... P. RB... Tothto 82d. ......... Sept. 11, 1946 STANDING, SELECT, SPECIAL, AND JOINT COMMITTEES AND CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS 193 COMMITTEES STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE [Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics] Agriculture and Forestry (Meets first and third Wednesday) Allen J. Ellender, Sr., of Louisiana. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. Edward J. Thye, of Minnesota. Spessard L. Holland, of Florida. James P. Kem, of Missouri. linton P. Anderson, of New Mexico. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. Karl E. Mundt, of South Dakota. Hubert H. Humphrey, of Minnesota. C. M. Mouser, Chief Clerk Appropriations (Meets upon call of chairman) Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, of Wyoming. Milton R. Young, of North Dakota. Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Wiliam F. Knowland, of California. Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. Edward J. Thye, of Minnesota. Allen J. Ellender, Sr., of Louisiana. Zales N. Ecton, of Montana. Lister Hill, of Alabama. Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia. Everard H. Smith, Chief Clerk Armed Services (Meets Thursday) Richard B. Russell, of Georgia. Styles Bridges, of New Hampshire. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Leverett Saltonstall, of Massachusetts. Lyndon B. Johnson, of Texas. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. Estes Kefauver, of Tennessee. William F. Knowland, of California. Lester C. Hunt, of Wyoming. Harry P. Cain, of Washington. John C. Stennis, of Mississippi. Ralph E. Flanders, of Vermont. Russell B. Long, of Louisiana. William H. Darden, Chief Clerk 195 196 Congressional Directory Banking and Currency (Meets second Tuesday) Burnet R. Maybank, of South Carolina. | Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. J. W. Fulbright, of Arkansas. John W. Bricker, of Ohio. A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia. Irving M. Ives, of New York. John J. Sparkman, of Alabama. Andrew F. Schoeppel, of Kansas. J. Allen Frear, Jr., of Delaware. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Paul H. Douglas, of Illinois. William Benton, of Connecticut. Blair Moody, of Michigan. A. Lee Parsons, Chief Clerk District of Columbia (Meets first Tuesday) Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. | Francis Case, of South Dakota. Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. John M. Butler, of Maryland. Estes Kefauver, of Tennessee. Herman Welker, of Idaho. Lester C. Hunt, of Wyoming. Wallace F. Bennett, of Utah. John O. Pastore, of Rhode Island. James H. Duff, of Pennsylvania. Earle C. Clements, of Kentucky. Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois. Willis Smith, of North Carolina. Robert H. Mollohan, Clerk Expenditures in the Executive Departments (Meets first and third Thursday) John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Joseph R. McCarthy, of Wisconsin, Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. Karl E. Mundt, of South Dakota. Herbert R. O’Conor, of Maryland. Margaret Chase Smith, of Maine. Hubert H. Humphrey, of Minnesota. Andrew F. Schoeppel, of Kansas. A. S. Mike Monroney, of Oklahoma. Henry C. Dworshak, of Idaho. Thomas R. Underwood, of Kentucky. | Richard M. Nixon, of California. Blair Moody, of Michigan. Walter L. Reynolds, Chief Clerk Finance (Meets Thursday) Walter F. George, of Georgia. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Tom Connally, of Texas. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. : Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Edward Martin, of Pennsylvania. Clyde R. Hoey, of North Carolina. John J. Williams, of Delaware. Robert S. Kerr, of Oklahoma. Ralph E. Flanders, of Vermont. J. Allen Frear, Jr., of Delaware. Elizabeth B. Springer, Chief Clerk Foreign Relations (Meets Tuesday) Tom Connally, of Texas. Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin. Walter F. George, of Georgia. H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode | Bourke B. Hickenlooper, of Iowa. Island. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., of Massachu-Brien McMahon, of Connecticut. setts. J. W. Fulbright, of Arkansas. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. John J. Sparkman, of Alabama. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Guy M. Gillette, of Iowa. Francis O. Wilcox, Chief of Staff Commattees of the Senate 197 Interior and Insular Affairs (Meets Monday) Joseph C. O’Mahoney, of Wyoming. Hugh Butler, of Nebraska. James E. Murray, of Montana. Eugene D. Millikin, of Colorado. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Guy Cordon, of Oregon. Clinton P. Anderson, of New Mexico. Zales N. Ecton, of Montana. Herbert H. Lehman, of New York. George W. Malone, of Nevada. Russell B. Long, of Louisiana. Arthur V. Watkins, of Utah. George A. Smathers, of Florida. Mills Astin, Chief Clerk Interstate and Foreign Commerce (Meets second and fourth Wednesday) Edwin C. Johnson, of Colorado. Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire. Ernest W. McFarland, of Arizona. Owen Brewster, of Maine. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington. Homer E. Capehart, of Indiana. Brien McMahon, of Connecticut. John W. Bricker, of Ohio. Herbert R. O’Conor, of Maryland. John J. Williams, of Delaware. Lyndon B. Johnson, of Texas. James P. Kem, of Missouri. Lester C. Hunt, of Wyoming. Edward Jarrett, Clerk Judiciary (Meets Monday) Pat McCarran, of Nevada. Alexander Wiley, of Wisconsin. Harley M. Kilgore, of West Virginia. William Langer, of North Dakota. James O. Eastland, of Mississippi. Homer Ferguson, of Michigan. Warren G. Magnuson, of Washington. William E. Jenner, of Indiana. Herbert R. O’Conor, of Maryland. Arthur V. Watkins, of Utah. Estes Kefauver, of Tennessee. Robert C. Hendrickson, of New Jersey. Willis Smith, of North Carolina. (] J. G. Sourwine, Counsel Labor and Public Welfare (Meets Friday, or on call of chairman) James E. Murray, of Montana. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio. Lister Hill, of Alabama. George D. Aiken, of Vermont. Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. H. Alexander Smith, of New Jersey. Paul H. Douglas, of Illinois. Wayne Morse, of Oregon. Hubert H. Humphrey, of Minnesota. Irving M. Ives, of New York. Herbert H. Lehman, of New York. Richard M. Nixon, of California. John O. Pastore, of Rhode Island. William H. Coburn, Clerk Post Office and Civil Service (Meets Tuesday) Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina. William Langer, of North Dakota. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia. Herman Welker, of Idaho. John O. Pastore, of Rhode Island. John M. Butler, of Maryland. A. S. Mike Monroney, of Oklahoma. James H. Duff, of Pennsylvania. George A. Smathers, of Florida. Wallace F. Bennett, of Utah. Thomas R. Underwood, of Kentucky. J. Austin Latimer, Chief Clerk 198 Congressional Directory Public Works (Meets Friday on call of chairman) Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico. Harry P. Cain, of Washington. John L. McClellan, of Arkansas. Edward Martin, of Pennsylvania, Spessard L. Holland, of Florida. George W. Malone, of Nevada. John C. Stennis, of Mississippi. Henry C. Dworshak, of Idaho. Robert S. Kerr, of Oklahoma. Frank Carlson, of Kansas. Thomas ©. Hennings, Jr., of Missouri. Francis Case, of South Dakota. Earle C. Clements, of Kentucky. Frank Burnett, Chief Clerk Rules and Administration (Meets second and fourth Wednesday) Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., of Massa-Theodore Francis Green, of Rhode chusetts. Island. William E. Jenner, of Indiana. Guy M. Gillette, of Iowa. Robert C. Hendrickson, of New Jersey. William Benton, of Connecticut. Margaret Chase Smith, of Maine. Earle C. Clements, of Kentucky. Joseph R. McCarthy, of Wisconsin. A. S. Mike Monroney, of Oklahoma. Thomas C. Hennings, Jr., of Missouri. Darrell St. Claire, Chief Clerk SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE Special Committee on Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Skylights and Remodeling of Senate Chamber Chairman.— Dennis Chavez, Senator from New Mexico. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. James P. Kem, Senator from Missouri. Majority Policy Committee Chairman.—Ernest W. McFarland, Senator from Arizona. Majority Whip.—Lyndon B. Johnson, Senator from Texas. Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. Lister Hill, Senator from Alabama. Brien McMahon, Senator from Connecticut. Joseph C. O'Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Earle C. Clements, Senator from Kentucky. Robert S. Kerr, Senator from Oklahoma. Minority Policy Committee Chairman.—Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. Eugene D. Millikin, Senator from Colorado. Milton R. Young, Senator from North Dakota. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. Owen Brewster, Senator from Maine. Homer Ferguson, Senator from Michigan. William F. Knowland, Senator from California. Edward Martin, Senator from Pennsylvania. H. Alexander Smith, Senator from New Jersey. Edward J. Thye, Senator from Minnesota. Select Committee on Small Business (131 Indiana Avenue. Phone, NAtional 3120, extension 2190 or 2191) Chairman.—John J. Sparkman, Senator from Alabama. Russell B. Long, Senator from Louisiana. Guy M. Gillette, Senator from Iowa. Hubert H. Humphrey, Senator from Minnesota. Lester C. Hunt, Senator from Wyoming. William Benton, Senator from Connecticut. Blair Moody, Senator from Michigan. Charles W. Tobey, Senator from New Hampshire. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. Edward J. Thye, Senator from Minnesota. Robert C. Hendrickson, Senator from New Jersey. Andrew F. Schoeppel, Senator from Kansas. James H. Duff, Senator from Pennsylvania. Staff Director.— Laurance G. Henderson. Assistant Staff Director.— Walter B. Stults. Professional Staff Members.—Blake O’Connor, Charles M. Noone, Gillis W. Long; Ruth B. Thomas. Clerk.—Minna L. Ruppert. 199 CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry.—Counsel, Harker T. Stanton, 10400 Haywood Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; chief clerk, C. M. Mouser, 7057 Western Avenue; assist-ant chief clerk, James M. Kendall, 6605 North Williamsburg Boulevard, Falls Church, Va.; clerks, Jean Douglas, 1819 Belmont Road; Harriet D. Willey, 4617B Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Appropriations.—Everard H. Smith, chief clerk, 3321 Rittenhouse Street; assist-ant clerk, Thomas J. Scott, 3153 Westover Drive SE.; staff members: Earl W. Cooper, Mayo, Md.; Herman E. Downey, 2026 Thirty-seventh Street SE.; Francis S. Hewitt, 1126 Seventeenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Harold E. Merrick, 906 Aspen Street; Cecil McDaniel, 1359 Newton Street; Lawrence H. Wendrich, 5911 Crawford Drive, Rockville, Md. Armed Services.— Chief clerk, William H. Darden, 3720 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va.; assistant chief clerk, Herbert S. Atkinson, 1020 Eighteenth Street; staff assistants: Mark H. Galusha, 2330 South Ode Street, Arlington, Va.; Verne D. Mudge, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Banking and Currency.—Chief clerk, A. Lee Parsons, 4424 Forty-ninth Street; staff director, Joseph P. McMurray, Mayo, Md.; William ¥. McKenna, 8 Wessex Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Robert D. I’Heureux, 1251 South Forest Drive, Arlington, Va.; Thomas H. Daniel, 1205 Fifteenth Street; Raimond Bowles, 905 West Braddock Road, Alexandria, Va.; Eunice V. Avery, 2515 Thirteenth Street; Pauline C. Beam, 4733 First Street SW.; Henrietta S. Chase, 3636 Sixteenth Street; Caro M. Pugh, 1722 Nineteenth Street. Conference Minority of the Senate.—George H. E. Smith, staff director; Jeanne M. Gilcrest, 6406 Elliott Place, Hampshire Knolls, Hyattsville, Md.; H. Maurice Joyce, 415 St. Lawrence Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; David Kammerman, 2322 Forty-first Street; George R. Leighton, 916 Sixteenth Street. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Robert H. Mollohan, U. S. Senate. Expenditures tn the Executive Departments.—Chief clerk, Walter L. Reynolds, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; professional staff members: Glenn K. Shriver, 4708 Maple Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Miles Scull, Jr., 810 Janneys Lane, Alexandria, Va.; Herman C. Loeffler, 506 Surrey Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Eli E. Nobleman, 3616 South Taylor Street, Arlington, Va.; assistant chief clerk, Ann M. Grickis, 3200 Sixteenth Street; clerical assistants: Emily I. Tennyson, 2830 Sixth Street NE.; V. Blanche Holder Broz, 2515 K Street; Ray Barnett, 127 C Street NE.; Katherine Ellis, 3602 Ednor Road, Baltimore, Md. Finance.—Chief clerk, Elizabeth B. Springer, 2311 North Utah Street, Arlington, Va.; Serge N. Benson, professional staff member, 606 St. Andrews Lane, Silver Spring, Md.; clerical assistant, Evelyn R. Thompson, 421 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; stenographers: Janice M. Everly, 2000 F Street; Betty Mae Tapy, 2122 Massachusetts Avenue; Mary C. Murray, 2916 Second Street SE.; document clerk, Jesse R. Nichols, 3644 Park Place. Foreign Relations.—Chief of staff, Francis O. Wilcox, 4323 Albemarle Street; staff associates: Thorsten V. Kalijarvi, 1422 Thirty-third Street; Carl M. Marcy, 2600 South Hayes Street, Arlington, Va.; clerk, C. C. O'Day, 2317 Fifteenth Street; associate clerk, Pat M. Holt, 8204 Jefferson Street, Bethes-da, Md.; assistant clerks: Emmett M. O’Grady, 309 Grosvenor Lane, Be-thesda, Md.; Morella R. Hansen, 5415 Connecticut Avenue; Mary Proctor, 3601 Wisconsin Avenue; Nancy Hanschman, 1232 Thirty-first Street; William L. Martin, Jr., 2308 Ashmead Place; June Pitts, 5415 Connecticut Avenue. 201 202 Congressional Directory Interior and Insular Affairs.— Chief clerk, Mills Astin, 1605 Connecticut Avenue; assistant chief clerk, N. D. MeSherry, 3607 New Hampshire Avenue; profes-sional staff: Albert A. Grorud, Maryland Courts, 816 E Street; Elmer K. Nelson, 1912 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va.; Stewart French, 2228 Q Street; Arthur A. Sandusky, 2633 Adams Mill Road; Louis Donald Luttrell, 2139 Wyoming Avenue; clerical staff: Charlotte Mickle, 338 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va.; Marie Mathew, the Meridian Hill; hain Donnelley; 2909 P Street; Murial C. ©rness, 202 Portland treet ; Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Edward Jarrett, 804 West Broad Street, Falls Church, Va.; assistant clerk, Francis J. Keenan, Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va.; professional staff: Halford G. Davis, 6564 Williams-burg Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; Edward R. Jelsma, 3500 Fourteenth Street; Edward G. Sweeney, 3300 Nebraska Avenue; Nicholas Zapple, 1417 Timber Lane, Falls Church, Va.; clerical assistants: Cecelia M. Cook, 2127 Cali-fornia Street; Harriet Gray, 3190 Wisconsin Avenue; Vera B. Rudolph, 121 Nineteenth Street NE.; Martha P. Shaffer, 4720 Fort Totten Drive NE. Judiciary.—Counsel, J. G. Sourwine, 1518 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md.; Chief Clerk, Joe Davis, 127 Lynmoor Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Labor and Public Welfare.—Clerk, William H. Coburn, R. F. D. 4, Rockville, Md.; assistant clerk, Ray Rodgers, 9203 Mintwood Street, Silver Spring, Md.; clerical staff: Vivian T. Harman, 802 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Paul Sample, 2110 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Crawford C. Heerlein, 5211 Fifth Street; Mary Jane Del Balzo, 11708 Hatcher Place, Wheaton, Md.; Helen H. Papps, 5719 Kingswood Court, Bethesda, Md.; professional staff members: William G. Reidy, 219 Second Street SE.; Paul L. Badger, 319 Anacostia Road SE.; Thomas E. Shroyer, 3313 Quesada Street; Charles Bragman, Apartment 497, Arlington Village, Arlington, Va.; PaulH. Menk, 6704 Forty-fourth Avenue, University Park, Md. Minority Policy Committee.—George H. E. Smith, staff director; Lloyd W. Jones, 1720 Girard Street NE.; Rachael H. Peabody, 4905 Wisconsin Avenue; T. Avé Rian, 3420 Forty-first Avenue, Colmar Manor, Md.; Winifrede Burgess Sanborn, 1801 Sixteenth Street; Julia A. Shook, 2717 O Street; Alyce MecGahan Thompson, 3701 Connecticut Avenue; Bert Wissman, 1311 Forty-sixth Street SE. Post Office and Civil Service.—J. Austin Latimer, chief clerk and counsel, 3135 Worthington Street; H. W. Brawley, staff director, 406 Skyhill Road, Alex-andria, Va. Public Works.—Chief clerk, Frank Burnett; assistant clerk, Eloise Porter, 3231 Stephenson Place; technical staff: Ellsworth W. Bassett, 1617 North Green-brier Street, Arlington, Va.; Theo W. Sneed, 5709 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Rules and Administration.—Chief clerk, Darrell St. Claire, 4970 Linnean Avenue; counsel, Russell C. King, 4920 Deal Drive, Oxon Hill, Md.; B. Floye Gavin, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Catherine L. Guyon, 3040 Idaho Avenue; Ruth P. Noon, 3214 Alabama Avenue SE.; Helen M. Smith, 8237 Fourteenth Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE [Democrats in roman; Republicans in italics; Independent in SMALL CAPS] Agriculture (Meets first Tuesday and at call of chairman) Harold D. Cooley, of North Carolina. W. R. Poage, of Texas. i George M. Grant, of Alabama. E. C. Gathings, of Arkansas. John L. McMillan, of South Carolina. Thomas G. Abernethy, of Mississippi. Carl Albert, of Oklahoma. Watkins M. Abbitt, of Virginia. James G. Polk, of Ohio. Pat Sutton, of Tennessee. James F. Lind, of Pennsylvania. W. M. (Don) Wheeler, of Georgia. Clark W. Thompson, of Texas. Paul C. Jones, of Missouri. A. S. Herlong, Jr., of Florida. Eugene J. McCarthy, of Minnesota. Harold A. Patten, of Arizona. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. A. Fernés-Isern, of Puerto Rico. Clifford August Reid F. Edwin William Charles R. Hope, of Kansas. H. Andresen, of Minnesota. Murray, of Wisconsin. Arthur Hall, of New York. S. Hill, of Colorado. B. Hoeven, of Towa. Sid Simpson, of Illinois. Ernest K. Bramblett, of California. PaulB. Dague, of Pennsylvania. Ralph Harvey, of Indiana. Harold O. Lovre, of South Dakota. Page Belcher, of Oklahoma. Harold C. Ostertag, of New York. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Mabel C. Downey, Clerk Appropriatiens (Meets upon Clarence Cannon, of Missouri. John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. George H. Mahon, of Texas. Harry R. Sheppard, of California. Albert Thomas, of Texas. Michael J. Kirwan, of Ohio. W. F. Norrell, of Arkansas. Albert Gore, of Tennessee. Jamie L. Whitten, of Mississippi. George W. Andrews, of Alabama. John J. Rooney, of New York. J. Vaughan Gary, of Virginia. Joe B. Bates, of Kentucky. John E. Fogarty, of Rhode Island. Henry M. Jackson, of Washington. Robert L. F. Sikes, of Florida. Antonio M. Fernandez, of New Mexico. William G. Stigler, of Oklahoma. E. H. Hedrick, of West Virginia. Prince H. Preston, Jr., of Georgia. Otto E. Passman, of Louisiana. Louis C. Rabaut, of Michigan. Daniel J. Flood, of Pennsylvania. Christopher C. McGrath, of Néw York. Sidney R. Yates, of Illinois. Foster Furcolo, of Massachusetts. Fred Marshall, of Minnesota. Winfield K. Denton, of Indiana. John J. Riley, of South Carolina. Alfred D. Sieminski, of New Jersey. George Y. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——15 call of chairman) John Taber, of New York. Richard B. Wigglesworth, of Massachu= setts. Ben F. Jensen, of Iowa. H. Carl Andersen, of Minnesota. Walt Horan, of Washington. Gordon Canfield, of New Jersey. Ivor D. Fenton, of Pennsylvania. Lowell Stockman, of Oregon. John Phillips, of California. Errett P. Scrivner, of Kansas. Frederic R. Coudert, Jr., of New York. Cliff Clevenger, of Ohio. Earl Wilson, of Indiana. Norris Cotton, of New Hampshire. Glenn R. Davis, of Wisconsin. Benjamin F. James, of Pennsylvania. ‘Gerald R. Ford, Jr., of Michigan. Fred E. Busbey, of Illinois. George B. Schwabe, of Oklahoma. Fred G. Aandahl, of North Dakota. Harvey, Clerk 203 Congressional Directory Armed Services (Meets Tuesday) Carl Vinson, of Georgia. Dewey Short, of Missouri. Overton Brooks, of Louisiana. Leslie C. Arends, of Illinois. Paul J. Kilday, of Texas. W. Sterling Cole, of New York. | Carl T. Durham, of North Carolina. Paul W. Shafer, of Michigan. . Lansdale G. Sasscer, of Maryland. Charles H. Elston, of Ohio. James J. Heffernan, of New York. Jack Z. Anderson, of California. L. Mendel Rivers, of South Carolina. William W. Blackney, of Michigan. Philip J. Philbin, of Massachusetts. Leroy Johnson, of California. F. Edward Hébert, of Louisiana. Leon H. Gavin, of Pennsylvania. Arthur Winstead, of Mississippi. Walter Norblad, of Oregon. Franck R. Havenner, of California. James E. Van Zandt, of Pennsylvania. Melvin Price, of Illinois. James T. Patterson, of Connecticut. 0. C. Fisher, of Texas. Paul Cunningham, of Iowa. Porter Hardy, Jr., of Virginia. William H. Bates, of Massachusetts. William J. Green, Jr., of Pennsylvania. William E. Hess, of Ohio. Clyde Doyle, of California. Charles P. Nelson, of Maine. Edward deGraffenried, of Alabama. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. L. Gary Clemente, of New York. Victor Wickersham, of Oklahoma. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. A. Fernés-Isern, of Puerto Rico. Robert W. Smart, Clerk Banking and Currency (Meets upon call of chairman) Brent Spence, of Kentucky. Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan. Paul Brown, of Georgia. Ralph A. Gamble, of New York. Wright Patman, of Texas. Henry O. Talle, of Towa. Albert Rains, of Alabama. Clarence E. Kilburn, of New York. Abraham J. Multer, of New York. Albert M. Cole, of Kansas. Charles B. Deane, of North Carolina. Merten Hull, of Wisconsin. George D. O’Brien, of Michigan. Hardie Scott, of Pennsylvania. Clinton D. Mec¢Kinnon, of California. Donald W. Nicholson, of Massachusetts. Hugh J. Addonizio, of New Jersey. Gordon L. McDonough, of California. Isidore Dollinger, of New York. William B. Widnall, of New Jersey. Richard Bolling, of Missouri. Howard H. Buffett, of Nebraska. -Clarence G. Burton, of Virginia. Jackson E. Betts, of Ohio. Tom B. Fugate, of Virginia. William A. Barrett, of Pennsylvania. Wayne L. Hays, of Ohio. William J. Hallahan, Clerk District of Columbia (Meets first Monday) John L. McMillan, of South Carolina. Sid Simpson, of Illinois. Oren Harris, of Arkansas. J. Glenn Beall, of Maryland. Thomas G. Abernethy, of Mississippi. Joseph P. O'Hara, of Minnesota. Howard W. Smith, of Virginia. Henry O. Talle, of Iowa. Arthur G. Klein, of New York. A. L. Miller, of Nebraska. Olin E. Teague, of Texas. James C. Auchincloss, of New Jersey. John F. Kennedy, of Massachusetts. ‘John J. Allen, Jr., of California. Robert E. Jones, Jr., of Alabama. Carroll D. Kearns, of Pennsylvania. James C. Davis, of Georgia. Edward L. Sittler, Jr., of Pennsylvania. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. Harold C. Hagen, of Minnesota. George P. Miller, of California. James T. Patterson, of Connecticut. Monroe M. Redden, of North Carolina. Paul C. Jones, of Missouri. Pat Sutton, of Tennessee. William N. McLeod, Jr., Clerk Committees of the House Education and Labor (Meets upon call of chairman) Graham A. Barden, of North Carolina. Samuel K. McConnell, Jr., of Pennsyl-Augustine B. Kelley, of Pennsylvania. vania. Adam C. Powell, Jr., of New York. Ralph W. Gwinn, of New York. John S. Wood, of Georgia. Walter E. Brehm, of Ohio. John F. Kennedy, of Massachusetts. Wint Smith, of Kansas. Wingate H. Lucas, of Texas. Carroll D. Kearns, of Pennsylvania. Cleveland M. Bailey, of West Virginia. Thruston Ballard Morton, of Kentucky. Leonard Irving, of Missouri. Thomas H. Werdel, of California. Carl D. Perkins, of Kentucky. Harold H. Velde, of Illinois. Charles R. Howell, of New Jersey. Charles E. Potter, of Michigan. Roy W. Wier, of Minnesota. Richard B. Vail, of Illinois. Boyd Tackett, of Arkansas. Ernest Greenwood, of New. York. Carl Elliott, of Alabama. Fred G. Hussey, Chief Clerk Expenditures in the Executive Departments (Meets first and third Wednesday) William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Clare E. Hoffman, of Michigan. Chet Holifield, of California. R. Walter Riehlman, of New York, Henderson Lanham, of Georgia. Cecil M. Harden, of Indiana. Porter Hardy, Jr., of Virginia. George H. Bender, of Ohio. Frank M. Karsten, of Missouri. Charles B. Brownson, of Indiana. John W. McCormack, of Massachusetts. Thomas B. Curtis, of Missouri. Herbert C. Bonner, of North Carolina. Marguerite S. Church, of Illinois. John A. Blatnik, of Minnesota. George Meader, of Michigan. Harold D. Donohue, of Massachusetts. William E. McVey, of Illinois. M. G. Burnside, of West Virginia. Alvin R. Bush, of Pennsylvania. Richard Bolling, of Missouri. JohnF. Shelley, of California. W. J. Bryan Dorn, of South Carolina. Sidney A. Fine, of New York. William C. (Bill) Lantaff, of Florida. Walter S. Baring, of Nevada. Christine Ray Davis, Chief Clerk Foreign Affairs (Meets upon call of chairman) James P. Richards, of South Carolina. Charles A. Eaton, of New Jersey. Thomas S. Gordon, of Illinois. Robert -B. Chiperfield, of Illinois. Mike Mansfield, of Montana. John M. Vorys, of Ohio. Thomas E. Morgan, of Pennsylvania. Frances P. Bolton, of Ohio. Laurie C. Battle, of Alabama. Lawrence H. Smith, of Wisconsin. A. S. J. Carnahan, of Missouri. Chester E. Merrow, of New Hampshire. Thurmond Chatham, of North Carolina. Walter H. Judd, of Minnesota. Clement J. Zablocki, of Wisconsin. James G. Fulton, of Pennsylvania. A. A. Ribicoff, of Connecticut. Jacob K. Javits, of New York. Omar Burleson, of Texas. Donald L. Jackson, of California. Brooks Hays, of Arkansas. Christian A. Herter, of Massachusetts. Chet Holifield, of California. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., of New York. Edna F. Kelly, of New York. Henderson Lanham, of Georgia. Boyd Crawford, Staff Administrator Congressional Directory House Administration (Meets second Wednesday and at call of chairman) Thomas B. Stanley, of Virginia. Karl M. LeCompte, of Towa. Omar Burleson, of Texas. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, of Illinois. Charles B. Deane, of North Carolina. Charles A. Halleck, of Indiana. Edward A. Garmatz, of Maryland. Albert P. Morano, of Connecticut. Ken Regan, of Texas. Edmund P. Radwan, of New York. James W. Trimble, of Arkansas. William K. Van Pelt, of Wisconsin. Carl Albert, of Oklahoma. W. M. (Don) Wheeler, of Georgia. Wayne L. Hays, of Ohio. Harry P. O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. Reva Beck Bosone, of Utah. Charles R. Howell, of New Jersey. Wayne N. Aspinall, of Colorado. Victor L. Anfuso, of New York. Lea Booth, Clerk Interior and Insular Affairs (Meets second and fourth Tuesday and at call of chairman) John R. Murdock, of Arizona. Fred L. Crawford, of Michigan. Clair Engle, of California. Dean P. Taylor, of New York. Monroe M. Redden, of North Carolina. A. L Miller, of Nebraska. Toby Morris, of Oklahoma. Wesley A. D’ Ewart, of Montana. Ken Regan, of Texas. Norris Poulson, of California. Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr., of Texas. John P. Saylor, of Pennsylvania. Walter S. Baring, of Nevada. Edward H. Jenison, of Illinois. Reva Beck Bosone, of Utah. William H. Harrison, of Wyoming. Harry P. O’Neill, of Pennsylvania. J. Ernest Wharton, of New York. Wayne N. Aspinall, of Colorado. Hamer H. Budge, of Idaho. William L. Dawson, of Illinois. Frank T. Bow, of Ohio. Sidney A. Fine, of New York. E. Y. Berry, of South Dakota. Samuel W. Yorty, of California. Joseph R. Farrington, of Hawaii. Chester B. McMullen, of Florida. James G. Donovan, of New York. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. A. Fernés-Isern, of Puerto Rico. Claude E. Ragan, Chief Clerk Interstate and Foreign Commerce (Meets upon call of chairman) Robert Crosser, of Ohio. Charles A. Wolverton, of New Jersey. Lindley Beckworth, of Texas. Carl Hinshaw, of California. J. Percy Priest, of Tennessee. Leonard W. Hall, of New York. Oren Harris, of Arkansas. Joseph P. O’Hara, of Minnesota. Dwight L. Rogers, of Florida. Robert Hale, of Maine. Arthur G. Klein, of New York. James I. Dolliver, of Towa. Thomas B. Stanley, of Virginia. John W. Heselton, of Massachusetts. William T. Granahan, of Pennsylvania. Hugh D. Scott, Jr., of Pennsylvania. John A. McGuire, of Connecticut. John B. Bennett, of Michigan. F. Ertel Carlyle, of North Carolina. Richard W. Hoffman, of Illinois. John Bell Williams, of Mississippi. J. Edgar Chenoweth, of Colorado. Peter F. Mack, Jr., of Illinois. John V. Beamer, of Indiana. Homer Thornberry, of Texas. Harmar D. Denny, Jr., of Pennsylvania. Louis B. Heller, of New York. Kenneth A. Roberts, of Alabama. Morgan M. Moulder, of Missouri. Harley O. Staggers, of West Virginia. Elton J. Layton, Clerk Committees of the House 207 Judiciary (Meets Tuesday and Thursday) Emanuel Celler, of New York. Chauncey W. Reed, of Illinois. Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania. Louis E. Graham, of Pennsylvania. William T. Byrne, of New York. Clifford P. Case, of New Jersey. Joseph R. Bryson, of South Carolina. Kenneth B. Keating, of New York. Thomas J. Lane, of Massachusetts. William M. McCulloch, of Ohio. Michael A. Feighan, of Ohio. J. Caleb Boggs, of Delaware. Frank L. Chelf, of Kentucky. Angier L. Goodwin, of Massachusetts. J. Frank Wilson, of Texas. Edgar A. Jonas, of Illinois. Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia. Ruth Thompson, of Michigan. Edwin E. Willis, of Louisiana. Patrick J. Hillings, of California. James B. Frazier, Jr., of Tennessee. Shepard J. Crumpacker, Jr., of Indiana. Peter W. Rodino, Jr., of New Jersey. Claude I. Bakewell, of Missouri. Woodrow W. Jones, of North Carolina. William E. Miller, of New York. E. L. Forrester, of Georgia. Byron G. Rogers, of Colorado. Tom Pickett, of Texas. Harold D. Donohue, of Magsachusetts. Bess Effrat Dick, Chief Clerk Merchant Marine and Fisheries (Meets first Thursday, or at call of chairman) Edward J. Hart, of New Jersey. Alvin F. Weichel, of Ohio. Herbert €. Bonner, of North Carolina. T. Millet Hand, of New Jersey. Donald L. O’Toole, of New York. Thor C. Tollefson, of Washington. Frank W. Boykin, of Alabama. John J. Allen, Jr., of California.’ Edward A. Garmatz, of Maryland. Edward T. Miller, of Maryland. Charles E. Bennett, of Florida. John C. Butler, of New York. Phil J. Welch, of Missouri. Horace Seely-Brown, Jr., of Connecticut. James J. Murphy, of New York. Charles J. Kersten, of Wisconsin. John F. Shelley, of California. Timothy P. Sheehan, of Illinois. Edward J. Robeson, Jr., of Virginia. Walter M. Mumma, of Pennsylvania. John W. McCormack, of Massachusetts. Vera Buchanan, of Pennsylvania. Frank Tkard, of Texas. E. L. Bartlett, of Alaska. Frances Still, Chief Clerk Post Office and Civil Service (Meets first and third Tuesday) Tom Murray, of Tennessee. Edward H. Rees, of Kansas. James H. Morrison, of Louisiana. Harold C. Hagen, of Minnesota. George P. Miller, of California. Robert J. Corbett, of Pennsylvania. James C. Davis, of Georgia. Katharine St. George, of New York. George M. Rhodes, of Pennsylvania. Antoni N. Sadlak, of Connecticut. Frank M. Karsten, of Missouri. Usher L. Burdick, of North Dakota. M. G. Burnside, of West Virginia. Gardner R. Withrow, of Wisconsin. John Lesingki, Jr., of Michigan. H. R. Gross, of Iowa. John Jarman, of Oklahoma. James S. Golden, of Kentucky. Victor L. Anfuso, of New York. William R. Williams, of New York. William C. (Bill) Lantaff, of Florida. 0. K. Armstrong, of Missouri. Frazier REAMS, of ©hio. George M. Moore, Chief Counsel Congressional Directory Public Works (Meets upon call of chairman) Charles A. Buckley, of New York. George A. Dondero, of Michigan. | Henry D. Larcade, Jr., of Louisiana. Homer D. Angell, of Oregon. | George H. Fallon, of Maryland. J. Harry McGregor, of Ohio. | Clifford Davis, of Tennessee. James C. Auchincloss, of New Jersey. James W. Trimble, of Arkansas. J. Glenn Beall, of Maryland. John A. Blatnik, of Minnesota. Russell V. Mack, of Washington. Robert E. Jones, Jr., of Alabama. Charles W. Vursell, of Illinois. T. Vincent Quinn, of New York. Hubert B. Scudder, of California. John J. Dempsey, of New Mexico. Myron V. George, of Kansas. Frank E. Smith, of Mississippi. William G. Bray, of Indiana. John C. Watts, of Kentucky. Howard H. Baker, of Tennessee. Clare Magee, of Missouri. John T. Wood, of Idaho. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz, of Michigan. John C. Kluezynski, of Illinois. Tom Steed, of Oklahoma. Joseph H. McGann, Sr., Chief Clerk | | Rules (Meets upon call of chairman) Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. Leo E. Allen, of Illinois. E. E. Cox, of Georgia. Clarence J. Brown, of Ohio. Howard W. Smith, of Virginia. Harris Ellsworth, of Oregon. William M. Colmer, of Mississippi. Henry J. Latham, of New York. Ray J. Madden, of Indiana. John E. Lyle, Jr., of Texas. James J. Delaney, of New York. Hugh B. Mitchell, of Washington. Humphrey Scott Shaw, Clerk Un-American Activities (Meets upon call of chairman) John S. Wood, of Georgia. Harold H. Velde, of Illinois. Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania. Bernard W. (Pat) Kearney, of New Morgan M. Moulder, of Missouri. York. Clyde Doyle, of California. Donald L. Jackson, of California. James B. Frazier, Jr., of Tennessee. Charles E. Potter, of Michigan. John W. Carrington, Clerk Veterans’ Affairs (Meets upon call of chairman) John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachusetts. A. Leonard Allen, of Louisiana. Bernard W. (Pat) Kearney, of New York. Olin E. Teague, of Texas. Alvin E. O’ Konskz, of Wisconsin, Joe L. Evins, of Tennessee. James P. S. Devereux, of Maryland. Hamilton C. Jones, of North Carolina. William H. Ayres, of Ohio. W. J. Bryan Dorn, of South Carolina. E. Ross Adair, of Indiana. Walter Rogers, of Texas. Allan O. Hunter, of California. Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio. William L. Springer, of Illinois. Elizabeth Kee, of West Virginia. Winston L. Prouty, of Vermont. Edward L. Stittler, Jr., of Pennsylvania. Ida Rowan, Chief Clerk Committees of the House 209 Ways and Means (Meets upon Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. Jere Cooper, of Tennessee. John D. Dingell, of Michigan. Wilbur D. Mills, of Arkansas. Noble J. Gregory, of Kentucky. A. Sidney Camp, of Georgia. Aime J. Forand, of Rhode Island. Herman P. Eberharter, of Pennsylvania. Cecil R. King, of California. Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois. J. M. Combs, of Texas. Hale Boggs, of Louisiana. Eugene J. Keogh, of New York. WalterK. Granger, of Utah. Burr P. Harrison, of Virginia. Charles W. call of chairman) Daniel A. Reed, of New York. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. Thomas A. Jenkins, of Ohio. Richard M. Simpson, of Pennsylvania. Robert W. Kean, of New Jersey. Carl T. Curtis, of Nebraska. Noah M. Mason, of Illinois. Thomas E. Martin, of Iowa. Hal Holmes, of Washington. John. W. Byrnes, of Wisconsin. Davis, Clerk SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE Special Committee on Reconstruction of House Roof and Skylights and Remodeling of House Chamber Chairman.—James W. Trimble, Representative from Arkansas, James J. Heffernan, Representative from New York. Robert E. Jones, Jr., Representative from Alabama. J. Harry McGregor, Representative from Ohio. : Angier L. Goodwin, Representative from Massachusetts. Select Committee To Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business Chairman.— Wright Patman, Representative from Texas. Mike Mansfield, Representative from Montana. Joe L. Evins, Representative from Tennessee. Clarence G. Burton, Representative from Virginia. Abraham J. Multer, Representative from New York. Clinton D. McKinnon, Representative from California. Charles A. Halleck, Representative from Indiana. William S. Hill, Representative from Colorado. R. Walter Riehlman, Representative from New York. Horace Seely-Brown, Jr., Representative from Connecticut. Thomas B. Curtis, Representative from Missouri. Select Committee on Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insecticides in and With Respect to Food Products Chairman.—James J. Delaney, Representative from New York. Thomas G. Abernethy, Representative from Mississippi. E. H. Hedrick, Representative from West Virginia. Paul C. Jones, Representative from Missouri. A. L. Miller, Representative from Nebraska. Gordon L. McDonough, Representative from California. Walt Horan, Representative from Washington. Select Committee To Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Training, and Loan Guaranty Programs of World War II Veterans Chairman.—Olin E. Teague, Representative from Texas. Clair Engle, Representative from California Joe L. Evins, Representative from Tennessee. Earl Chudoff, Representative from Pennsylvania. Harold A. Patten, Representative from Arizona. Alvin F. Weichel, Representative from Ohio. J. Glenn Beall, Representative from Maryland. Hubert B. Scudder, Representative from California. Thruston Ballard Morton, Representative from Kentucky. 211 CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES Agriculture.—Clerk, Mabel C. Downey, 4801 Connecticut Avenue; staff assistants: Alice M. Baker, 6406 Elliott Place, Hyattsville, Md.; Lydia Vacin, 142 B Street NE.; Lorraine Greenbaum, 6040 Fourteenth Street; Betty Prezi-oso, 1111 Navahoe Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; professional staff: Altavene Clark, executive officer, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue; John J. Heimburger, counsel, Lovettsville, Va.; Gladys Ondarcho, special clerk, 4607 Connect-icut Avenue. ; Appropriations.—Clerk, George Y. Harvey, 4323 Clagett Road, University Park, Md. ; assistant clerk, Kenneth Sprankle, 7207 Massachusetts Avenue; second assistant clerk, William A. Duvall, 6523 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; administrative assistant, Robert P. Williams, 4134 Lorcum Lane, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks: Arthur Orr, 232 North Fillmore Street, Arlington, Va.; Corhal D. Orescan, 4513 Butterworth Place; Robert E. Lambert, 1935 Upshur Street; Paul M. Wilson, 7602 Wildwood Drive, Takoma Park, Md.; Jay B. Howe, 10230 New Hampshire Avenue, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md.; Frank Sanders, 2500 Q Street; Ross P. Pope, 723 South Lee Street, Alex-andria, Va.; Adelbert W. Heinmiller, 6 Schuyler Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Carson W. Culp, 100 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md.; Robert M. Moyer, 3386 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va.; Robert L. Michaels, 3012 North Tuckahoe Street, Falls Church, Va. Armed Services.—Clerk, Robert W. Smart, Hunting Towers Apartments, Alex-andria, Va.; professional staff: John R. Blandford, 2128 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va.; Charles F. Ducander, 3601 Wisconsin Avenue; special counsel: John J. Courtney, 620 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; assistant special counsel: Richard W. Webb, 5538 Tenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Banking and Currency.— Clerk, William J. Hallahan, McLean Gardens; deputy clerk, Elsie L. Gould, the Continental; stenographer, Helen E. Long, 1912 R Street; professional staff: Orman S. Fink, 824 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va.; John E. Barriere, 2800 Quebec Street. District of Columbia.—Clerk, William N. McLeod, Jr., 303 Monticello Boulevard, Alexandria, Va.; staff members: Ruth Butterworth, 403 Orange Street SE.; Wendell E. Cable, 5600 Thirty-ninth Avenue, Hyattsville, Md.; Marie E. Herda, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; George R. Stewart, 3300 North Abing-don Street, Arlington, Va. Education and Labor.— Chief clerk, Fred G. Hussey, 2655 Walter Reed Drive, Arlington, Va.; general counsel, John S. Forsythe; assistant general counsel, David N. Henderson; assistant clerks, Mary Pauline Smith, Barbara A. Stent, Kathryn Kivett; minority clerk, John O. Graham; assistant clerk, Myrtle S. Locher. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Chief clerk, Christine Ray Davis, 1841 Vernon Street; assistant chief clerk, Martha C. Roland, Gainesville, Va.; clerk-stenographers: Dolores Fel’Dotto, Berkshire Apartments; Mabel C. Baker, 2205 Guilford Road, Hyattsville, Md.; general counsel, Thomas A. Kennedy, 2116 Kalorama Road; professional staff: William A. Young, 3815 Nash Street SE.; J. Robert Brown, 6 Glenridge Street, Kensington, Md.; minority counsel, William F. McKenna, East Greenwich, R. I.; minority clerk, Annabell Zue, 210 Oakwood Street SE. Foreign Affairs.—Staff administrator and committee clerk, Boyd Crawford, 707 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va.; staff consultants: Sheldon Z. Kaplan, 4302 Twelfth Road South, Arlington, Va.; Roy J. Bullock, 8 North Oakland Street, Arlington, Va.; Albert C. F. Westphal, 3386 Stephenson Place; staff assistants: June Nigh, Falls Church, Va.; Winifred Osborne, 5425 Connecti-cut Avenue; Mabel Wofford, 253 Newcomb Street SE.; Helen C. Mattas, 2323 North Eleventh Street, Arlington, Va. House Administration.— Lea Booth, 223 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Clerk, Va.; assistant clerks: Marjorie Savage, 4108 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va.; Jack W. Watson, 5404 Worthington Drive, Bethesda, Md.; Lura Cannon, the Bellevue Hotel; Ruth Bradley, 2311 Calvert Street. 213 214 Congressional Directory Interior and Insular Affairs.—Chief clerk, Claude E. Ragan, Route 2, Box 45, Nokesville, Va.; assistant to the chairman, Virginia McMichael, 2805 Laurel Avenue, Cheverly, Md.; minority clerk, Nancy J. Arnold, 3310 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va.; clerks: Geraldine W. Eaker, Route 2, Fairfax, Va.; Elizabeth Lee Angus, 4108 Thirty-third Street South, Arlington, Va.; Ruth Timmony, 2308 Forty-first Street; professional staff: George H. Soule, Jr., 13 Gallows Road, Falls Church, Va.; Preston E. Peden, Falls Church, Va.; -William H. Hackett, 8 Walnut Street; Richard J. Queen, 213 Audrey Lane SE.; James K. Carr, 3106 Madison Street, Hyattsville, Md. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, 4730 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va.; assistant clerks: Royice W. Reno, 1235 Underwood Street; Harold W. Lincoln, 3132 Sixteenth Street; Georgia G. Glasmann, 1225 Thirteenth Street; Helen A. Grickis, 3200 Sixteenth Street; Elizabeth J. Gergely, 2324 Nineteenth Street; Roy P. Wilkinson, 155 Forty-seventh Street NE.; professional staff: Kurt Borchardt, 6007 Thirty-fourth Place; Arlin Earl Stockburger, 850—-D Northampton Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Andrew Stevenson, 9506 Jones Mill Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Sam G. Spal, 4214 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. Judiciary.—Chief clerk, Bess Effrat Dick, 1900 Spruce Drive; assistant chief clerk, Velma Smedley, 1657 Thirty-first Street; professional staff: Walter M. Bester-man, 2955 McKinley Street; William R. Foley, 330-E Hunting Towers, Mount Vernon Boulevard, Alexandria, Va.; Walter R. Lee, 4101 W Street; L. James Harris, 2500 Q Street; law revision counsel, Charles J. Zinn, 2115 F Street; assistant law revision counsel, Richard E. Vernor, 7316 Kent Village Apartments, Hyattsville, Md.; clerical assistants: V. T. Benn, 9500 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Helen Goldsmith, 21 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va.: clerical staff: Anne J. Berger, 4640 Twentieth Road North, Arlington, Va.; Frances Christy, 2500 Q Street; Jeannine S. Coble, 16 Fourth Street SE.; Betty Cooney, 2909 P Street; Vera Goudelock, 205 Audrey Lane, Congress Heights Station; Jane Hahn, 1671 Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Chief clerk, Frances Still, 5632 Twentieth Street; professional staff: John M. Drewry, general counsel, 2438 North Nottingham Street, Arlington, Va.; Thomas F. Flynn, Jr., assistant counsel, 202 Wellington Road, Alexandria, Va.; Reginald S. Losee, investigator, the Stratford; Gus S. Caras, investigator to the Minority, 3616 Veazey Street; secretary, Lucile P. Lamon, 3822 Davis Place; assistant clerk, Madonna Haworth, 1732 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va.; clerk to the Minority, Leonard P. Pliska, 1201 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Post Office and Civil Service—Professional staff: George M. Moore, chief counsel, 402 Deerfield Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Frederick Belen, counsel, 2419 Congress Street SE. : Public Works.—Chief clerk, Joseph H. McGann, Sr., 1345 Park Road; profes-sional staff: Robert F. McConnell, 4447 QQ Street; Charles G. Tierney, Room 1304, New House Office Building; clerk, Alice B. Norton, 5735 Fourth Street; assistant clerks: Joseph H. McGann, Jr., 1617 Twenty-second Street SE.; Margaret R. Beiter, 8503 Longfellow Place, Chevy Chase 15, Md.; Helen M. Dooley, 3935 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Florence Palmer, 4522 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Rules.—Clerk, Humphrey Scott Shaw, the Dorchester House; assistant clerks: Howard Dolan, 7306 Cedar Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Richard R. Haas, 1024 Vermont Avenue; E. M. Libonati, Hamilton Hotel; Minority clerk, Mrs. Lyle O. Snader, 9612 Merwood Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Un-American Activities.—Clerk, John W. Carrington, 2131 Suitland Terrace SE. Veterans’ Affairs.—Chief clerk, Ida Rowan, 3000 Connecticut Avenue; assistant clerks: Paul K. Jones, 5516 Fourteenth Street; clerical staff: Frances Mon-tanye, 1904 Florida Avenue; Alice V. Matthews, 1658 Irving Street; Noah S. Sweat, 1447 Chapin Street; George Turner, 2307 Forty-first Street; profes-sional staff: Casey M. Jones, 1400 Fairmont Street; Edwin B. Patterson, 212 Elsmere Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Karl Standish, Grayton, Md. Ways and Means.—Clerk, Charles W. Davis, 6518 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant clerk, Leo H. Irwin, 3326 Seventh Street NE.; staff assistants: Jane E. Burkett, 3947 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Anne Gorden, 713 East Capitol Street; Betty R. Hill, 412 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va.; Minority adviser, Gordon Grand, Jr., 2314 Forty-fourth Street; staff assistant to Minority, Susan A. Taylor, Valley Vista Apartments; messengers: Hughlon Greene, 1801 Maryland Avenue NE.; Walter B. Little, 1620 Seventeenth Street. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds Chairman.— Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States. Dennis Chavez, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Works. Yor z Cain, ranking minority member of the Senate Committee on Public orks. Charles A. Buckley, chairman of the House Committee on Public Works. George A. Dondero, ranking minority member of the House Committee on Public Works. , minority leader of the United States Senate. Joseph W. Martin; minority leader of the House of Representatives. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. Senate Office Building Commission (Office, Room 130-A, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 1175) Chairman.— Dennis Chavez, Senator from New Mexico. Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. John J. Sparkman, Senator from Alabama. Styles Bridges, Senator from New Hampshire. George W. Malone, Senator from Nevada. House Office Building Commission | Chatrman.—Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. | Adolph J. Sabath, Representative from Illinois. James C. Auchincloss, Representative from New Jersey. Joint Committee on Printing (Office, Capitol, ground floor, west center. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 29) Chaitrman.—Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. Vice Chairman.— Thomas B. Stanley, Representative from Virginia. Earle C. Clements, Senator from Kentucky. William E. Jenner, Senator from Indiana. JamesW. Trimble, Representative from Arkansas. Karl M. LeCompte, Representative from Iowa. Staff Director.—James L. Harrison. Associate Staff Director.—Paul €. Beach, 516 East Glen Carlyn Drive, Falls Church, Va. Clerk.—Elizabeth T. Anderson, 3406 Newton Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Stenographer.—Tempie L. Bailey, 148 Forrester Street SW.: Printing Technician.—Jack Mursell, 53 Hamilton Street. Printing Supervisor.— Clifford P. Reynolds, 605 Van Buren Street. Joint Committee on the Library (Office, Room 104-B, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, extension 1562) Chairman.— Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. Vice Chairman.— Thomas B. Stanley, Representative from Virginia. Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona. William Benton, Senator from Connecticut. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts. Robert C. Hendrickson, Senator from New Jersey. Ken Regan, Representative from Texas. Carl Albert, Representative from Oklahoma. Karl M. LeCompte, Representative from Iowa. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, Representative from Illinois. Chief Clerk.—Russell C. King. 215 216 Congressional Directory Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation (Office, Room 1011, House Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branches 290, 315, 1024) Chairman.— Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Vice Chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Eugene D. Millikin, Senator from Colorado. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. John D. Dingell, Representative from Michigan. Daniel A. Reed, Representative from New York. Roy O. Woodruff, Representative from Michigan. Secretary.— Bryant C. Brown. Cheef of Staff.—Colin F. Stam, 1011 House Office Building. Assistant Chief of Staff.—Gaston D. Chesteen, 1601 Argonne Place. Admanistrative Assistant.— David C. Longinotti, 11 Ridge Road SE. Technical Adviser—Russell M. Oram, 3880 Rodman Street. Leioiaioe Assistant.—L. L. Stratton, 6403 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, | Attorneys.— Bryant C. Brown, 1756 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va.; Fred W. Peel, 3530 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va.; Russell E. Train, 3015 Q Street; Robert R. Smyers, 4260 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Thomas M. Murphy 2923 Ordway Street; Ben V. Schneider, Jr., 3419 Tulane Drive, West Hyattsville, Md. Economists.—L. N. Woodworth, 2810 Crest Avenue, Cheverly, Md.; Gerard M. Brannon, 705 Jefferson Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Statistical Analyst.—J. L. Smith, Jr., Benedict, Md.; Grace T. Gunn, 1731 Twen-tieth Street. Statistical Clerks.— Anastasia F. Connaughton, 3010 Wisconsin Avenue; James LaMarche, 948 North Pollard Street, Arlington, Va.; Joseph E. Fink, 4907 Iroquois Street, Berwyn, Md. : Clerks.—Irma Crisler, LaSalle Apartments; Clara E. Scheid, 1400 Decatur Street; Bertha S. Harris, 1228 I Street; Ellen Riddle, 1630 R Street; Mildred G. Patterson, 3609 Webster Street, Brentwood, Md.; Dorothy M. Crouse, 2120 Sixteenth Street; Blanche F. Nagro, 2834 Q Street NE.; Thomas “LC” Vail, 227 North Granada Street, Arlington, Va. | | | | National Forest Reservation Commission (Room 4218, South Building, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Phone, REpublic 4142, branch 2749) President.—Frank Pace, Jr., Secretary of the Army. Oscar L. Chapman, Secretary of the Interior. Charles F. Brannan, Secretary of Agriculture. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Styles Bridges, Senator from New Hampshire. William M. Colmer, Representative from Mississippi. Wesley A. D’Ewart, Representative from Montana. Secretary.—F. W. Grover, 4320 Livingston Road SE. The Interparliamentary Union (1612 I Street. Phone, N Ational 7409) OFFICERS President.—Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate. Vice Presidents.—Harold D. Cooley, Representative from North Carolina; Homer Ferguson, Senator from Michigan; Daniel A. Reed, Representative from New York. Treasurer.—W. Robert Poage, Representative from Texas. Secretary.— Henry O. Talle, Representative from Iowa. Permanent Executive Secretary.—Dr. Franklin Dunham, 1612 I Street. Congressional Commassions and Joint Commatices 217 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ex Officio Chairman.— Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States and President, of the Senate. August H. Andresen, Representative from Minnesota. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Owen Brewster, Senator from Maine. W. Robert Poage, Representative from Texas. J. W. Fulbright, Senator from Arkansas. Estes Kefauver, Senator from Tennessee. Clifford R. Hope, Representative from Kansas. Hale Boggs, Representative from Louisiana. Migratory Bird Conservation Commission Chairman.—Oscar L. Chapman, Secretary of the Interior. Charles F. Brannan, Secretary of Agriculture. Charles Sawyer, Secretary of Commerce. A. Willis Robertson, Senator from Virginia. John W. Bricker, Senator from Ohio. ; Frank M. Karsten, Representative from Missouri. Walter E. Brehm, Representative from Ohio. Secrelmny Ait A. Riemer, Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the nterior. Commission for Construction of Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Chairman.—Harry S. Truman, President of the United States. Acting Chairman.— Thomas H. MacDonald, Commissioner of Public Roads. Alben W. Barkley, Presiding Officer of the Senate. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives. John Russell Young, President of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia. Frederic A. Delano. [Vacancy.] Herbert R. O’Conor, Senator from Maryland. Edward Martin, Senator from Pennsylvania. James F. Lind, Representative from Pennsylvania. J. Glenn Beall, Representative from Maryland. Conrad L. Wirth, Director, National Park Service. Brig. Gen. Bernard L. Robinson, Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia. Board of Visitors to the Military Academy Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Allen J. Ellender, Sr., Senator from Louisiana. Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Milton R. Young, Senator from North Dakota. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia. John J. Rooney, Representative from New York. Wingate H. Lucas, Representative from Texas. Errett P. Scrivner, Representative from Kansas. Katharine St. George, Representative from New York. Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. John C. Stennis, Senator from Mississippi. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia. Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr., Representative from Texas. Sidney R. Yates, Representative from Illinois. Richard B. Wigglesworth, Representative from Massachusetts. Edward T. Miller, Representative from Maryland. 218 Congressional Directory Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado, ex officio. “William Benton, Senator from Connecticut. Lyndon B. Johnson, Senator from Texas. John W. Bricker, Senator from Ohio. Edward J. Hart, Representative from New Jersey, ex officio. Herbert C. Bonner, Representative from North Carolina. John F. Shelley, Representative from California. Alvin F. Weichel, Representative from Ohio. John A. McGuire, Representative from Connecticut. Albert P. Morano, Representative from Connecticut. Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado, ex officio. Lester C. Hunt, Senator from Wyoming. Warren G. Magnuson, Senator from Washington. James P. Kem, Senator from Missouri. Edward J. Hart, Representative from New Jersey, ex officio. Donald L. O'Toole, Representative from New York. William A. Barrett, Representative from Pennsylvania. Alvin F. Weichel, Representative from Ohio. Eugene J. Keogh, Representative from New York. Charles P. Nelson, Representative from Maine. United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States. Vice Chairman.—[Vacant.] Secretary.—Col. Russell W. Murphy, St. Louis, Mo. Executive Committee.—Judge James M. Douglas (chairman), St. Louis, Mo.; J. Lionberger Davis, St. Louis, Mo.; Amon G. Carter, Fort Worth, Tex.; James M. Kemper, Kansas City, Mo.; Chester C. Davis, Pasadena, Calif. Other Members: Clinton P. Anderson, Senator from New Mexico. Wayne Morse, Senator from Oregon. Edward Martin, Senator from Pennsylvania. Wayne L. Hays, Representative from Ohio. Frank M. Karsten, Representative from Missouri. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, Representative from Illinois. Col. James M. Thomson, Gaylord, Va. ¥ tinow Woll, New York City, N. Y. illiam W. Crowdus, St. Louis, Mo. Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee Chairman.—Fred M. Vinson, Chief Justice of the United States. Hugo L. Black, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Felix Frankfurter, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Leverett Saltonstall, Senator from Massachusetts. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts. [Vacancy.] John W. McCormack, Representative from Massachusetts. A. A. Ribicoff, Representative from Connecticut. . Richard B. Wigglesworth, Representative from Massachusetts. Secretary.—Paul L. Kelley, Executive Secretary to the Chief Justice, Supreme Court Building, Washington 13, D. C. Congressional Commassions and Joint Commattees 219 General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. [Two vacancies.] Cliff Clevenger, Representative from Ohio. [Two vacancies.] William Wayne, of Pennsylvania. William A. Kunkel, Jr., of Indiana. Harry G. Hogan, of Indiana. Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures (Room 217-D, Senate Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 1187) Chairman.—Harry Flood Byrd, Senator from Virginia. Vice Chairman.—Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia. Styles Bridges, Senator from New Hampshire. Hugh Butler, Senator from Nebraska. Clarence Cannon, Representative from Missouri. John H. Kerr, Representative from North Carolina. Jere Cooper, Representative from Tennessee. [Vacancy.] John Taber, Representative from New York. Daniel A. Reed, Representative from New York. John W. Snyder, Secretary of the Treasury. Frederick J. Lawton, Director of the Bureau of the Budget. Joint Committee on the Economic Report (Office, Capitol, Room G-14. Phone, NAtional 3120, extension 43) Chairman.—Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Senator from Wyoming. Vice Chairman.—Edward J. Hart, Representative from New Jersey. John J. Sparkman, Senator from Alabama. Paul H. Douglas, Senator from Illinois. William Benton, Senator from Connecticut. Robert A. Taft, Senator from Ohio. Ralph E. Flanders, Senator from Vermont. Arthur V. Watkins, Senator from Utah. Wright Patman, Representative from Texas. Richard Bolling, Representative from Missouri. Clinton D. McKinnon, Representative from California. Jesse P. Wolcott, Representative from, Michigan. Christian A. Herter; Representative from Massachusetts. . J. Caleb Boggs, Representative from Delaware. Staff Director.—Grover W. Ensley. Clerk.—John W. Lehman. Economist for the Minority.—Fred E. Berquist. Economists.—James W. Knowles, William H. Moore, Thaddeus J. Obal. Seorelvion=Munyprol Miller, Othella Pompier, Eleanor F. Rabbitt, Hope G. ham. Assistant Clerk.— Marian T. Tracy. Librarian.— Francis Tillinghast. 90808°-——-82—2-—1st ed.——16 220 Congressional Directory Joint Committee on Atomic Energy (Room F-88, Capitol Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, extension 1550) Chazrman.—Brien McMahon, Senator from Connecticut. Vice Chairman.—Carl T. Durham, Representative from North Richard B. Russell, Senator from Georgia. Edwin C. Johnson, Senator from Colorado. Tom Connally, Senator from Texas. Glinton P. Anderson, Senator from New Mexico. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Senator from Iowa. Eugene D. Millikin, Senator from Colorado. William F. Knowland, Senator from California. John W. Bricker, Senator from Ohio. Chet Holifield, Representative from California. Melvin Price, Representative from Illinois. Paul J. Kilday, Representative from Texas. Henry M. Jackson, Representative from Washington. W. Sterling Cole, Representative from New York. Charles H. Elston, Representative from Ohio. Carl Hinshaw, Representative from California. James KE. Van Zandt, Representative from Pennsylvania. Executive Director— William L. Borden. Deputy Director.—Harold Bergman. Carolina. National Capital Sesquicentennial Commission (1400 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, STerling 0700) Chairman.—Harry S. Truman, President of the United States, ex officio. Executive Vice Charrman.— Melvin D. Hildreth. Kenneth McKellar, President pro tempore of the Senate, ex officio. Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the House of Representatives, ex officio. Spessard L. Holland, Senator from Florida. Matthew M. Neely, Senator from West Virginia. Margaret Chase Smith, Senator from Maine. John L. McMillan, Representative from South Carolina. [Vacancy.] Walt Horan, Representative from Washington. John Russell Young, President, Board of Commissioners, District of Columbia. Robert V. Fleming. Joseph C. McGarraghy. Robert Woods Bliss. Mrs. Philip L. Graham. General Manager.—Paul M. Massmann. General Counsel.—Gerhard P. Van Arkel. | | Joint Committee on Disposition of Executive Papers (Room 253, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, extension 829) Olin D. Johnston, Senator from South Carolina. William Langer, Senator from North Dakota. Edward A. Garmatz, Representative from Maryland. C. W. (Runt) Bishop, Representative from Illinois. National Memorial Stadium Commission [Three vacancies.] John L. McMillan, Representative from South Carolina, Lansdale G. Sasscer, Representative from Maryland. Sid Simpson, Representative from Illinois. Chairman. Congressional Commissions and Joint Commattees 221 Commission on Renovation of the Executive Mansion Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee. Edward Martin, Senator from Pennsylvania. Louis C. Rabaut, Representative from Michigan. J. Harry McGregor, Representative from Ohio. Richard Erwin Dougherty, of New York. Douglas William Orr, of Connecticut. Executive Director—Maj. Gen. Glen E. Edgerton. Secretary.— Lorenzo S. Winslow. Joint Committee on Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration Ernest W. McFarland, Senator from Arizona. Clinton P. Anderson, Senator from New Mexico. Arthur V. Watkins, Senator from Utah. John R. Murdock, Representative from Arizona. Toby Morris, Representative from Oklahoma. Wesley A. D’Ewart, Representative from Montana. Joint Committee on Defense Production (Room 11-C, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, extensions 1611, 1625) Chairman.— Burnet R. Maybank, Senator from South Carolina. Vice Chairman.—Paul Brown, Representative from Georgia. J. W. Fulbright, Senator from Arkansas. A. Willis Robertson, Senator from Virginia. Homer E. Capehart, Senator from Indiana. John W. Bricker, Senator from Ohio. Wright Patman, Representative from Texas. Albert Rains, Representative from Alabama. Ralph A. Gamble, Representative from New York. Henry O. Talle, Representative from Iowa. StaffMargaret Woodhouse Becker, clerk; Allan E. Pierce, staff director; Robert — L’Heureux, counsel; William C. Stewart, staff assistant; Carl Wilken, eco-nomic analyst; Sara Harley, Ann Livingston, clerical assistants. Joint Committee To Discuss Problems With the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe Chairman.— Theodore Francis Green, Senator from Rhode Island. Brien McMahon, Senator from Connecticut. Hubert H. Humphrey, Senator from Minnesota. William Benton, Senator from Connecticut. Alexander Wiley, Senator from Wisconsin. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, Senator from Iowa. Robert C. Hendrickson, Senator from New Jersey. E. E. Cox, Representative from Georgia. Howard W. Smith, Representative from Virginia. Donald L. O'Toole, Representative from New York. Frazier Reams, Representative from Ohio. Walter H. Judd, Representative from Minnesota. Harris Ellsworth, Representative from Oregon. Kenneth B. Keating, Representative from New York. ASSIGNMENTS ATEEN. en ANDERSON... BENNBRE. oe i BemnoR cao stan BrEWSTER._ ___ osoiiciociasual BRrogRER. orf oo wn coe Bripaps. i ee BurLER of Maryland. ...... ButLER of Nebraska_______ Byppoor ions alan CAIN... esosent Hage Cappuawe. ov 0 ok CARTON... oy as Cage. oo 7 ea Craver... .deairizull leur Crements: Connarry) i... OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES Agriculture and Forestry. Labor and Public Welfare. Agriculture and Forestry. Interior and Insular Affairs. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Rules and Administration. Select: Committee on Small Business. Foreign Relations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations. Armed Services. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Finance. Interior and Insular Affairs. Armed Services. Finance. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of Senate Chamber. Armed Services. Public Works. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Post Office and Civil Service. Public Works. Distriet of Columbia. Public Works. Public Works, chairman. Appropriations. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of Senate Chamber, chair-man. Distriet of Columbia. Public Works. Rules and Administration. Foreign Relations, chairman. Finance. 225 226 Congressional Directory CORDON. oe eda DIRESEN. i wn DovauAg rsmrnssmin irs Dyer. oo Locoum DWOBSTIAR ios oo rd de BASPLAND.. » i A EO ON wi mea sr md AES EriENDER, SB... BARGUSON. neil PLANDERY. nile aa FRrEAR, a mn FULBRIGHT. osene ons CROROT.. | dea «hedTE CULL ERTS aisa aes, OEwEN. a a HAYDEN. ioha wm HENDRICKSON... eee Hesvinags, JR. ono.on HICKENIOOPER. HULL. niian AIRE Appropriations. Interior and Insular Affairs. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Banking and Currency. Labor and Public Welfare. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Select: Committee on Small Business. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Public Works. Agriculture and Forestry. Judiciary. Appropriations. Interior and Insular Affairs. Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Appropriations. Appropriations. Judiciary. Armed Services. Finance. Banking and Currency. Finance. Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Finance, chairman. Foreign Relations. Foreign Relations. Rules and Administration. Select: Committee on Small Business. Foreign Relations. Rules and Administration. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of Senate Chamber. Rules and Administration, chairman. Appropriations. Judiciary. Rules and Administration. Select: Committee on Small Business. Public Works. Rules and Administration. Agriculture and Forestry. Foreign Relations. Appropriations. Labor and Public Welfare. Senate Committee Assignments 227 Bory. 0. edd Agriculture and Expenditures in Finance. Forestry. the Executive Departments. HOLLAND. oonfe aoadil Agriculture and Public Works. Forestry. | | HUMPHREY... ie minins Agriculture and Forestry. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor and Public Welfare. Select: Committee on Small Business. | | Hung oo Tn ort Armed Services. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Committee on Small Business. | Ives. or aa Banking and Currency. Labor and Public Welfare. JENNER. ot aa Judiciary. Rules and Administration. Jounson of Colorado. _____ Interstate Finance. and Foreign Commerce, chairman. JounsoN of Texas_ ________ Armed Services. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. JounsToN of South Carolina. Post Office Agriculture District of and Civil Service, and Forestry. Columbia. chairman. KEPAUVER:. © i Armed Services. District of Columbia. Judiciary. LTE eaeh a Agriculture and Forestry. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Special: Reconstruction of Senate lights and Remodeling of Senate Roof and Chamber. Sky- Rep: -2 0 on Finance. Public Works. KILGORE. £. ni. Appropriations. Judiciary. KNowEAND. oo Appropriations. Armed Services. LANGER. =. re oe Judiciary. Post Office and Civil Service. BBHMAN ochco a Interior and Insular Affairs. Labor and Public Welfare. Lopan, Jaa to doaan Foreign Relations. Rules and Administration. LoNaG: ooh oe oe Armed Services. Interior and Insular Affairs. Select: Committee on Small Business. McFARLAND Congressional Directory Judiciary, chairman. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Rules and Administration. Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chairman. Appropriations. Public Works. Interior and Insular Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations, chairman. Post Office and Civil Service. Foreign Relations. ; Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Interior and Insular Affairs. Public Works. Finance. Public Works. Banking and Currency, chairman. Appropriations. Finance. Interior and Insular Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Civil Service. Rules and Administration. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Committee on Small Business. Armed Services. Labor and Public Welfare. Agriculture and Forestry. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor and Public Welfare, chairman. Interior and Insular Affairs. District of Columbia, chairman. Labor and Public Welfare. Post Office and Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Labor and Public Welfare. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Interior and Insular Affairs, chairman. Appropriations. Senate Committee Assignments 229 PasrorE. 0 he ROBERTEON. Jo meni RusslilL. . inners SATLTONSTATLL oie aaa Senonprel aaa SEATON Laiawn amen SMATHERS. omnia Smita of Maine. ._______._ Smita of New Jersey_______ Smita of North Carolina... BPAREMAN el eer STENNIS oe an BADR oe binning Lh Hd A A na ee BOBBY oi staanos a UNDERWOOD. os iin Waumsine.. WELERR. ole aan Wry... ane Distriet of Columbia. Labor and Public Welfare. Post Office and Civil Service. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Armed Services, chairman. Appropriations. Appropriations. Armed Services. Select: Committee on Small Business. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Committeeon Small Business. Interior and Insular Affairs. Post Office and Civil Service. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Rules and Administration. Foreign Relations. Labor and Public Welfare. District of Columbia. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Select: Committee on Small Business, chairman. Armed Services. Public Works. Finance. Labor and Public Welfare. Special: Reconstruction of Senate Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of Senate Chamber. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Select: Committee on Small Business. Foreign Relations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Select: Committee on Small Business. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Civil Service. Interior and Insular Affairs. Judiciary. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. 230 Congressional Directory AN TEL TAM ee is i i bo nid Finance. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. YOUNG LL Agriculture and Appropriations. Forestry. ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COM-MISSIONERS, AND DELEGATES TO COMMITTEES AANDAHL: oi oo Sa AppyrT nt t aa ABERNETHY oon vii it comin ADATREUI DS Ja dB df DD ADDONIZIO. Jn ALBERT. ool Sling ALLEN of California________ Arren of Minos 2a JL ALLEN of Louisiana________ ANDERSEN of Minnesota____ Anperson of California____ ANDRESEN of Minnesota____ ANDREWeS Lo ANPUSO. of aan ANCELT. I ire oh ARENDT ea ARMSTRONG. _. =. Co." ASPINATL. aa AUCHINCLOSS..c coe ome AYRES soe RRIH Banmy. lL lias Baxee. o.oo Barewerr 0. oo Bavpmen. o.oo Appropriations. Agriculture. Agriculture. District of Columbia. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insecti-cides, ete. Veterans’ Affairs. Banking and Currency. Agriculture. House Administration. District of Columbia. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rules. Veterans’ Affairs. Appropriations. Armed Services. Agriculture. Appropriations. House Administration. Post Office and Civil Service. Public Works. Armed Services. Post Office and Civil Service. House Administration. Interior and Insular Affairs. District of Columbia. Public Works. Veterans’ Affairs. Education and Labor. Public Works. Judiciary. Education and Labor, chairman. 231 232 Congressional Directory BamNag Il a Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interior and Insular Affairs. Banpeppi ove0 oo -Banking and Currency. BABRTLEYT. .-o-cntl ooe Agriculture. Armed Services. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Interior and Insular Affairs. Bates of Kentucky________ Appropriations. Bares of Massachusetts.___ Armed Services. Barry. saad Foreign Affairs. BRALLL fa. at wedi District of Columbia. dohiide Public Works. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Ete., of World War II Veterans. BRAMMER Chu seo no Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BECEWOBTH oo Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Berompws 00 ai a Agriculture. : BEWDER. el iia Expenditures in the Executive Departments. BenNETT Of Florida________ Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BENNETT of Michigan______ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BENTSEN a Ll Interior and Insular Affairs. 125 ST TRE SI Interior and Insular Affairs. Bowes... oo ol oe.Sls Banking and Currency. Bifwor. | alae House Administration. BUAGRNEY. oleae Armed Services. BuATHiRS ao. Tn Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Public Works. Boaas of Delaware_ _______ Judiciary. Bocas of Louisiana_ _______ Ways and Means. BOLLING oe a Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. BOLTON Sc. ites a Foreign Affairs. BonnNme ob no oJ La Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BosoNw. no iris House Administration. Interior and Insular Affairs. Bow Dilania Interior and Insular Affairs. a Bovem. 0 hai Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Bravmrmee 0 os 0 Agriculture. Bravo oabi i re sy Public Works. House Breamissoinsedl auiitoey Booows i. on anh Brown of Georgia_________ BeownofiOhlo. ...._..... BROWNSRON. (oe ds BRYSON. eran a BuenanwaNn. Loo i BUueriBY = v-i0 an) Buvan Burrerr. 000 Buospiowits. ond BURLESON... oe tn BUBNSIDE. iver ustins BUBRTONL LLL sande Buskuwy 2: os Lo ua Busu. icoeiancell avdiinnn Bumper: on ar ByYrNE of New York______._ Byrnes of Wisconsin_ _____ Cave... Lo CANFIRID.. ... oie. CANNON... =. oo. los CarLyie. 2 oi. ia CARNANAN. ..L.. cecinaas CARRIGG. . ica or ns TE RR CNBR a COLLIER. oo cae aiinas Croamman:. 0 ll Cusvy.. . ... ... J0sioy CHENOWETH. ._...._ .L.. CHIPERFIELD. ol uli). Cnwpore. oo. oat Commattee Assignments Education and Labor. Armed Services. Banking and Currency. Rules. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Judiciary. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Works, chairman. Interior and Insular Affairs. Banking and Currency. Post Office and Civil Service. Foreign Affairs. House Administration. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant ‘Marine and Fisheries. Judiciary. Ways and Means. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Appropriations, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Foreign Affairs. Judiciary. Judiciary, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Foreign Affairs. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Ete., of World War II Veterans. 234 Congressional Directory CHRON. > ha Expenditures in the Executive Departments. CIEMENIES.. oy Armed Services. CrmveNeERl io Appropriations. Corcoflansas. | | Banking and Currency. Core of New York... .... Armed Services. CoOLMER Similan,lin, Rules. CoMBE... Li. Luinummaubaid Ways and Means. CloOLEY islSe ai hme Agriculture, chairman. COBPER Thenant Ways and Means. CORBETP. . ncalenitiaiag Post Office and Civil Service. COTTON... ian tisisen Appropriations. ClOUDERE. C0 en Saison Appropriations. Coxswain Rules CoawrpenRp.. vo. D000 Interior and Insular Affairs. CROSSER. (0 a 0 a Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. CRUMPACREER. co ills Judiciary. CUNNINGHAM...._._ Armed Services. Curtis of Missouri________ Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Curtis of Nebraska_ ______ Ways and Means. DAawe ca io ah Agriculture. Davis of Georgia ______ District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Davis of Tennessee_______._ Public Works. | Davis of Wisconsin________ Appropriations. 3 DAWRON so ieee el Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chairman. Interior and Insular Affairs. DEANE So. Se aaa Banking and Currency. House Administration. deGRAFFENRIED . — _ — _ ___._.. Armed Services. PDErANTY os ah Rules. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and In- secticides, Etec., chairman. DeMrPany. anna X. Public Works. Benyahe en Interstate and Foreign Commerce. DENTON: cnisaodet fora li Appropriations. House Commattee Assignments 235 Veterans’ Affairs. Interior and Insular Affairs. Ways and Means. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Works. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Judiciary. : Interior and Insular Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Veterans’ Affairs. Ways and Means, chairman. Armed Services. Un-American Activities. Armed Services. Foreign Affairs. Ways and Means. Education and Labor. Armed Services. Interior and Insular Affairs. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Ete., of World War II Veterans. Veterans’ Affairs. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Etc., of World War II Veterans. Public Works. Agriculture. Armed Services. Interior and Insular Affairs. Judiciary. Appropriations. Appropriations. Agriculture. Armed Services. Interior and Insular Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interior and Insular Affairs. Armed Services. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——17 236 Congressional Directory Broops 0 ase PogaArry: o.oo.25a li. HORAND SL. . iea Bonpit ines iin FoRBBSTER. ._oonscuugall PRAZIER.. i. in BUGATE scr ita FuoiroN... baal FPUuRCOLO soils uiilans CammLE:. oa Camsmanz. 2 > od GaAnyY. ta CATIINGS. cain ais CAVING. ©. oo io a cai CRORE ted. oi QotoEN... GOODWIN... ion. aan CORDON. un Ldn Ubu hus COBE i ab GRABAML coioovnluby bug GRANAHANG coilJdus Juin OBANGER Cailne 0 Quant. oolaes Tn CRPEN.. Sins sandr OREENWOOD omnia GREGORY: ooh ninns Gross toaos Lal CWINN. Todas HAGEN. ool HALE SOS Is008, Sagoo} Harr, EDWIN ARTHUR. ____ Appropriations. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Judiciary. Judiciary. Un-American Activities. Banking and Currency. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. House Administration. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Appropriations. Agriculture. Armed Services. Public Works. Post Office and Civil Service. Judiciary. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky-lights and Remodeling of House Chamber. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Ways and Means. Agriculture. Armed Services. Education and Labor. Ways and Means. Post Office and Civil Service. Education and Labor. District of Columbia. Post Office-and Civil Service. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. House Harn, LEONARD W.._.____. HAVIORian Aerie Hann ail > ned trios HaARDENLL ti is ll eilin HARDY a on yn Tis HARRIS on -abmom, non Harrison of Nebraska. _.__ HARRISON of Virginia. _____ Harrison of Wyoming_____ Hampea tn bk a HARVEY. atiiaan HAVENNER. booa HAys of Arkansas. __ ___ Hayssof Ohio... 2... _: i Hesenre. .:... ..... 208 HEDRICK. st: an aie HerreBNAN. a ih Wewnene: 0 of HEBLONG. (xin gen i i Jf HERTER Is so in) soba0 HEsmrmoN we of on ue LE pen CARR Na Hinge bevLl ee a HI nINGES oo a re Hansmawe uu wand aridigos Hopvsmewrs: ~ =o 000 ood ry HorrmaN of Illinois________ Horrman of Michigan_____ Commattee Assignments Interstate and Foreign Commerce. House Administration. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Armed Services. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Ways and Means. Interior and Insular Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Agriculture. Armed Services. Foreign Affairs. Banking and Currency. House Administration. Armed Services. Appropriations. Select: On Use of Cheniicals, Pesticides, and Insecti- cides, Ete. Armed Services. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of House Chamber. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. Foreign Affairs. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Armed Services. Agriculture. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Agriculture. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. 238 Congressional Directory Hoimipop... . coondini2s Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Affairs. Howmes.feciviobalLos wll Ways and Means. Horne. © el Agriculture. doleSlo HORAN Ebrhd od Appropriations. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insec-ticides, Ete. HowBLL oi ruundl sdoannsy Education and Labor. House Administration. Wut, os pedsguent yy Banking and Currency. HoNeBR: 00 oo an Veterans’ Affairs. IRARDL. eh ass Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Tovana. or ooo Cain Education and Labor. Jackson of California. _____ Foreign Affairs. Un-American Activities, Jackson of Washington____ Appropriations. FAMERS. MS Sm al Appropriations. JABMANZ oveoad Post Office and Civil oon Service. WIth Re RR i Foreign Affairs. JENISONL aiseray Interior and Insular Affairs. nl JENKINS. ers Ways and Means. TONSBN. oor ns a En Appropriations. JORINSOND: = a art Armed Services. JONAS Cubinhsaul soley i Judiciary. JonEs of Alabama. __._...._ " District of Columbia. Public Works. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of House Chamber. Jones of Missouri_________ Agriculture. District of Columbia. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insec- ticides, Ete. Jones, Hamirron C_.__._.. Veterans’ Affairs. Jones, Wooprow W_______ Judiciary. JUDIE nada Ese Foreign Affairs. RARSTEN _..... esodiaui). Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Civil Service. BANE aa Ways and Means. Reapwey al 3 Un-American Activities. Veterans’ Affairs. House Commattee Assignments 239 REARNS thannnn anas RuamiNG: Hoot2p any Reme ooa N naa KeLLEY of Pennsylvania____ Keiryof New York. __ RuNNuDY se Kueenr. oon oe MET Le Ee a KERSTEN. =» vat KasurN. Ll. © vis RILDAY sii nies Kina of California. =. King of Pennsylvania______ KIgWaN. a Kuen KiuosyNsSml. ohn0 J. DANE |RENTOn EO nl i ANVARE. ina i AROAPE. ho i en To PHAWG Lai iri LeCovene..o... oe LESINSRY. oe hal TaD we m0. on VOYEE. ovecis oa Lucas 0 i sik ain Bynw oo a aa McoCawrny,. i... MoCONNELL. ore mil etm MceCORMACE semen District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Judiciary. Veterans’ Affairs. Education and Labor. Foreign Affairs. District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Banking and Currency. Armed Services. Ways and Means. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Works. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Post Office and Civil Service. Public Works. Rules. House Administration. Post Office and Civil Service. Agriculture. Agriculture. Education and Labor. Rules Agriculture. Education and Labor. Majority Floor Leader. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. 240 Congressional Directory MeCuntool. wa ieieiass McDoNougH-.... =: MeGRATH. : vans MCGREGOR... McGuUIRE. oe Melee: ea McRINNON. ono McMiruaN of South Caro-lina. McMvuLLEN of Florida_ ____ MeVEY.: iiusoiiaii MacuroWICZ. ... n.--.5 Mack oflllinols_........_.. Mack of Washington_______ MADDEN... ra Mascep. > 0 Mammon. = ies oorele MARSEIELID:. = ovine - MARSHALL. ues. oni Marminof Jowa......._.._ Martin of Massachusetts. Mavow.. Sera MuEabpmw te aa MeRROoW. ci MirLLeRr of California_______ MILLER of Maryland SRS MiLLER of Nebraska ______ MirLLER of New York. _____ Mins ota a Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insec- ticides, Ete. Appropriations. Public Works. Special: Reconstruction of House lights and Remodeling of House Roof Chamber. and Sky- Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. District of Columbia, chairman. Agriculture. Interior and Insular Affairs. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Public Works. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Public Works. Rules. Public Works. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Minority Floor Leader. Ways and Means. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Affairs. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. District of Columbia. Interior and Insular Affairs. Select: On Use of Chemicals, Pesticides, and Insec-vicides, Ete. Judiciary. Ways and Means. House Commuttee Assignments 241 MITOHBLY.. henn deli MOBANOE 0 on MORGAN: Schedman 7 Mops. a 0 soon MORRISON. (cute oo oon MonrroN, mi inae ear a MourpEg2 5 0 Tne Mutame Loi"oho ac Mumma: oo Conn ah MUBDOUR oo ose Musrny. : ac own Murray of Tennessee______ MUuURrrAY of Wisconsin______ NORZoN I com ota mu Tad NICHOLSON: = oo ans uw NORBLAD ©. os NOBRELY: rtsns ait O'Brizvn of lllinois... O’BrieN of Michigan______ Oana. vo aa ONSET ie Sf Bl ONLY Se bes OBMERS. soz in roa OSTERTAG. =o ol oe OPO: oe ain ili PASSMAN on PATMAN: Caen PATTER a ainiia, PavrensoN. i io. Rules House Administration. Foreign Affairs. Interior and Insular Affairs. District of Columbia. Post Office and Civil Service. Education and Labor. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Etc., of World War II Veterans. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Un-American ‘Activities. Banking and Currency. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Interior and Insular Affairs, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Post Office and Civil Service, chairman. Agriculture. Armed Services. Banking and Currency. Armed Services. Appropriations. Ways and Means. Banking and Currency. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Veterans’ Affairs. House Administration. Interior and Insular Affairs. : Agriculture. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business, chairman. Agriculture. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Etec., of World War II Veterans. Armed Services. District of Columbia. 242 Congressional Directory PRBRING. ahi nana PHILBING . JL visiine, PrILLIes 5 nr oh hs Progmaw ooowas a aniady Podap ferredione doar PopRl od So Sel hak Porrer/colicoLU Dl rai PoursoN.. ... 020ni) Powenns. 0 oo oo 0 PRESTON. Shi wer To Sid alk Powe. oon Poymer. lainie tol Pooury. hd at QUINN... alii erred BABAUT =. anno tnnen BApwaN. oii. Oris RATNs Lorre aR RAMaAve rhe are BANKING LPSool is RAYBUBN cx. lo as BEAMS. oi cues ian y REppEN. a0 a inniton REBBOR oes sr i vd REED of Illinois Loma Reepof New York... ..... REBs. al baia Reagan ol fh ois BUopes... oC... RIBICORE. iiibonis ba HICHARDR 0 a RIEHIMAN. calag cial Bey. ooo si Education and Labor. Armed Services. Appropriations. Judiciary. Agriculture. Agriculture. Education and Labor. Un-American Activities. Interior and Insular Affairs. Education and Labor. Appropriations. Armed Services. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Veterans’ Affairs. Public Works. Appropriations. House Administration. Banking and Currency. Judiciary. Veterans’ Affairs, chairman. Speaker. Post Office and Civil Service. District of Columbia. Interior and Insular Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Judiciary. Ways and Means. | Post Office and Civil Service. House Administration. Interior and Insular Affairs. Post Office and Civil Service. Foreign Affairs. Foreign Affairs, chairman. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Appropriations. . House Bivens ios ieeeiitinh Et a Ropesom, Ju. oo. Clon BoDINGy nh tui: ila. Rocers of Colorado. ______ Rogers of Florida_.....__._ RocGers of Massachusetts___ Roaers of Texas. cna an- BoONTY «i a BoOSBvBum. oo an ah YE Ue i LR Sspraw Ani k ST OBORGE.. en Savacen, BBE Cs BAYLOR. see aes RR OENCY Jha deme SenwaAsE. ean Scots, IABDIE 2a. Scorr, Huvaa D.,Jr_____:_ SCRIVNER....... : aR hi | SCUDDER. on Lil...aE Suenpgrio a no Me tie 3 SEELY-BROWN, JR._________ Suwrems. oo SHERBAN. 5 vo rmesamm SHELBY SE Bwweeann. oo BHOBT uy nitesrm id Sresomswy. iT Bowwg roc Siveson of Tllinois. Committee Assignments Armed Services. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Judiciary. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Veterans’ Affairs. Veterans’ Affairs. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Rules, chairman. Post Office and Civil Service. Post Office and Civil Service. Armed Services. Interior and Insular Affairs. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations. Public Works. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Etc., of World War II Veterans. Veterans’ Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Problems of Small Business. Armed Services. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Appropriations. Armed Services. Appropriations. Appropriations. Agriculture. District of Columbia. 244 Congressional Directory SrmpsoN of Pennsylvania___ Ways and Means. STRLER LL bnaian District of Columbia. Veterans’ Affairs. Smith of Kansas_ _________ Education and Labor. Smita of Mississippi_-_______ Public Works. Smita of Virginia______..__._ District of Columbia. Rules. Smita of Wisconsin. _______ Foreign Affairs. NeENCE. a a Banking and Currency, chairman. SPRINGER... ou ail Veterans’ Affairs. Besaapne. oo. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BEANTEY. 0 a House Administration, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. SPEED. as taal Public Works. SEH A TER aR a Appropriations. STOCKMAN an Appropriations. ROTTON La et or aie Agriculture. : District of Columbia. TABERE Loh sa Appropriations. MACKEN A Sw Soin Education and Labor. PALE SL oe ne a Banking and Currency. : District of Columbia. TAYLOR. ooonh an dn Interior and Insular Affairs. RT BAGUE.Sa 0 a ay or District of Columbia. Veterans’ Affairs. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Ete., of World War II Veterans, chairman. THOMAS 4 oobi ms velo Fortwobis Appropriations. TrompPsoN of Michigan. ____ Judiciary. TraOMPSON of Texas________ Agriculture. THORNBEBRY. is... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. TOLLEFSON . -= oe aay Merchant Marine and Fisheries. WU RIMBEE. ren mea House Administration. Public Works. Special: Reconstruction of House Roof and Sky- lights and Remodeling of House Chamber, chairman. NATL Sod oe aE Education and Labor. Nan Peer House Administration. VAN LANDY. oo nina Armed Services. i ol AA i a House NEL ow a ane VINSON. oo. sos ote NORTE. wl em VUBRSELL Lo a ooohny Warwen oon WARTS hee WEICHEL.. ol. uninb ds WEIGH. asepe WeERDRL. Wanton... WHEELER. © al i on WHITTEN. Lasgn pas WiCRERSHAM.. LI WIioRAIL WinRar WIGGLESWORTH. .-.—__.._ WiLriams of Mississippi.___ Wirriams of New York ___ Wins. oo DL WiisoN of Indiana. _______ Wiison of Texas... WINSTEAD. -WriiRow. ior oi Woncory. .... ii. WOLVERTON... Woop of Georgia... Woop of ldaho .. ...._ WOODRUEE. conoe Noavtes Jo onal Youry oo... o.oo. ZABIOCOEY. =. A i A A I A, TN i a a a A AF 8 Commattee Assignments Education and Labor. Un-American Activities. Armed Services, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Public Works. Judiciary. Un-American Activities. Public Works. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Select: Conduct a Study and Investigation of the Education, Etc., of World War II Veterans. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Education and Labor. : Interior and Insular Affairs. Agriculture. House Administration. Appropriations. Armed Services. Banking and Currency. Education and Labor. Appropriations, Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Post Office and Civil Service. Judiciary. Appropriations. Judiciary. Armed Services. Post Office and Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Un-American Activities, chairman. Education and Labor. Public Works. Ways and Means. Appropriations. Interior and Insular Affairs. Foreign Affairs. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS AND SECRETARIES LIST OF SENATORS, ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARIES Senator Administrative Assistant Alken (Vi.) io a -as Anderson (N. Mex.)__ Claude E. Wood, 4630 36th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. Bennett (Utah) Robert W. Barker, 9901 Howard Ave., Bethesda, Md. Benton (Coenn.) :. i C. Stanley Allen, 4914 North 14th St., Arlington, Va. Brewster (Maine) Frances E. Dustin, 717 Dale Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Bricker (Ohio) Robert W. Minor, 4005 Tennyson Rd., Hyatts-ville, Md. Bridges (N. HI.) Scott McLeod, 508 East Capitol St. Butler (Nebr) ~~ . Lynn E. Mote, 326 South-phon Dr., Silver Spring, d Butler (Md). Frank Smith, 2700 First Rd., Arlington, Va. Byrd (Va). -. 7. M. J. Menefee, 209 Senate Office Bldg. Cain (Wash). Irving W. Thomas, the Westchester. Capehart (Ind)... Charles L. Egenroad, 1805 Boy Blvd., Arlington, a. Carlson (IKans.) .. George M. Stafford, 7313 Gloster Rd. Case (S. Dak)... Arthur Juhnke, 715 Ran-dolph St. NE. Chavez (N. _ ___Mex.) Clements (Ky.)_____.._ Connally (Tex.y-=". Arthur CG. Perry, Eddystone Apartments. Cordon (Oreg.)-_*____ Robert B. Parkman... Dirksen QI.) 2 > Mabel G. Haller, 3867 Ala-bama Ave. SE. Douglas (TIL): ~: Frank W. McCulloch, 3642 Upton St. Dull (Pa)... G. H. Lush, 3305 Runny- mede Pl. Dworshak (Idaho)____ Eastland (Miss.) Courtney C. Pace, 4826 17th St. North, Arlington, Va. Ecoton (Mont). =." Ralph E. Bodley. .._.._ _.. ASSISTANTS, AND Secretary Luna E. Diamond, 15 West Woodbine Ave. Chevy Chase, Md. Paul Cracroft, 5600 56th Ave., East Riverdale, Md. Catherine M. Flynn, 4125 18th Place NE. Ruth M. Brial, 3000 39th t. Bert Teague. Martha Boehm, 811 Ten-nessee Ave., Alexandria, Va. Virginia Haight, 2903 Ram-blewood Dr., District Heights, Md. Meda V. Dick, General Scott Apartments. 0. J. Dekom, 2515 K St. Gene Dawson, 6899 North Washington Blvd., Ar-lington, Va. Frank Paschal, 353 Irving i. Charles F. Gardner, Jr., 5028 Nantucket Rd., College Park, Md. Frances Ortiz, 1711 Massa-chusetts Ave. Mary V. O’Toole, the Dodge. A. 8S. E. Carr, 216 Mary- land Ave. NE. Grace C. Townsend. John Gomien, 8212 Queen Ain Dr., Silver Spring, d Augusta G. Milligan, the Bellevue. Virginia M. Simmerman, 1616 16th St. Jerry B. House, 9 East Franklin ~~ St., Silver Spring, Md. 250 Congressional Directory LIST OF SENATORS, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS, SECRETARIES—Continued AND Senator Administrative Assistant Secretary Ellender, Sr. (La.)..-. Ferguson (Mich.)_____ Flanders (Vt) — oo. Prear, Jr. (Del)... Fulbright (Ark)... George (Ga)... cow. Gillette (Iowa) Green (RB. 1). co... Hayden (Ariz.).....-.. Hendrickson (N. J.)___ Hennings (Mo.) ______ Hickenlooper (Iowa) ._._ Hill (Alay. oo. Hoey (N. CY ood ani. Holland (Fla.y Humphrey (Minn.)____ Hunt {(Wy0.)or creme Ives (NN. Y.) oc cucnae Jenner Ind.) =... Johnson (Colo) =~... Johnson (Tex)... = Johnston (S. C.)__.._.. Kefauver (Tenn.).._.._ Frank W. Wurzlow, Jr., 317 Naglee Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Oliver J. Dompierre, 1905 Charles L. Knight. Upshur St. NE. Harry T. Laffin, 3354 Gun-John A. Calhoun, 311 Sen-ston Rd., Alexandria, Va. ate Office Bldg. Robert F. Kelly, 1 Nassau Lane, Silver Spring, Md. John L. Erickson, 3415 John H. Yingling, 4616-B Martha Custis Dr. Alex-36th St. South, Arling-andria, Va. ton, Va. Heard F. GEOLLe. in sie eee W. Thad McDaniel, 6528 28th St. North, East Falls Church, Va. Stewart E. McClure, 3013 Cyril Farr, 4124 Arkansas Dent PI. Ave. Edward J. Higgins, the Dorchester. Paul R. Eaton, 2808 Terrace Edward O. Rodgers, 3320 Rd. SE. : Plyers Mill Rd., Kens-ington, Md. Paul P. Williams, 3225 23d Mary I. Thompson, 2137 St. SE. Suitland Ter. SE. Langdon C. West, 4708 Thomas C. Gilstrap, 5611 8th St. South, Arlington, 5th St. Va. Dan O’Brien, 2480 16th Charles E. Witt, 2022 St. Columbia Rd. Charles S. Brewton, Jr., Leslie S. Wright, 1121 8 Belfield Rd., Alexan-Wakefield Dr., Alex-dria, Va. andria, Va. Jack Spain, 2127 Suitland Ter. SE. William Paul Shelley, Jr., Ralph C. Davis, 4540 2000 Connecticut Ave. 34th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. William C. Simms, 8431 Max M. Kampelman, 2737 Woodcliff Ct., Silver Devonshire PI. Spring, Md. Zan lewis —o oJ... Ira Whitlock, 3249 23d St. SE. Dwyer W. Shugrue, 3266 Emily C. Davis, 1902 15th Gunston Rd., Alexandria, St. North, Arlington, Va. Va. Horace M. Coats, 3040 Wilma Wood, 40 Platts-Idaho Ave. burg Ct. Earl R. Howsam, 127 Poplar Nancy Chapman, 636 Jef-St., Fairfax, Va. ferson Ave., Falls Church, Va. Walter Jenkins, 3410-A Warren Woodward, 3720 South Utah St., Arling-39th St. ton, Va. J. Baxter Funderburk, 1521 Robert L. Alexander, 4926 Buchanan St. Deal Dr. SE. Richard J. Wallace, 9504 Henrietta V. O'Donoghue, Woodland Dr., Silver 3319 Dent Pl. Spring, Md. Administrative Assistants and Secretaries LIST OF SENATORS; ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS, AND SECRETARIES—Continued Senator Administrative Assistant Secretary Kem ‘Wo. yoo 0. ng Kerr (Okla) il 0. Kilgore (W. Va.) ____ Knowland (Calif.)___ _ Langer (N. Dak.)_____ Lehman (N. Y). aga Lodge (Mass.) ooo... Long (I). i... il McCarran (Nev.)_____ McCarthy (Wis)... McClellan (Ark.)_____ McFarland (Ariz.)____ McKellar (Tenn.)_____ McMahon (Conn.)____ Magnuson (Wash.)____ Malone (Nev.)-____.__ Martin:(Pa.). --.. Maybank (S. C.)_____ Millikin (Colo.)______ Monroney (Okla.)____ Moody (Mich.)_._.___ Morse (Oreg.).___.____ Mundt (S. Dak.) ____ Murray (Mont.)..___. Neely (W. Va.)_______ Nixon (Calif). =: _ = O’Conor. (M4)... ... 90808°—82—2—1st Stanley B. Botner, 7306 15th Pl. Carole Heights, Md. Ben Dwight, Quebec House + Harold C. Miller, 2500 Q St_ George F. Wilson, 116 West Greenway Blvd., Falls Church, Va. Julius C. C. Edelstein, 1738 Wisconsin Ave. Cammann Newberry Earl Bruce Tucker, 6515 Juris Rd, Bethesda, Md. BY B. Adams, 2420 16th t. George Greeley, 111 1st St. NE Ralph Matthews, 4124 Arkansas Ave. W. R. Davidson, 2710 Web-ster St., Mount Rainier, Md. John D. Lane, 4801 Con-necticut Ave. Irvin Hoff, 6116 Utah Ave.._ Ber Whitehurst, 1016 16th te George I. Bloom, the Dor-chester Apartments. Dresden A. Smith, the Con-tinental. Dorothy A. McRae, 1002 Pennsylvania Ave. SE. Robert S. Ball, 3814 Jocelyn St. Ivar H. Peterson, 5002 14th St. North, Arlington, Va. W. E. O’Brien, 835 Skyland Pl. SE. Charles A. Murray, 9713 Connecticut Ave., Ken-sington, Md. August J. Bourbon, 2909 Rittenhouse St. ed. 18 Ann E. MeLachlan, 3355 16th St. Ralph Trask, 1342 Savan-nah St. SE. Radle Herndon, 3601 Con-necticut Ave. C. E. Van Horne, 126 C St. NE. Thomas V. Brunkard, 2500 Q St. Francis McCarthy. Davetta M. Pudifin, 900 19th St. Mary B. Driscoll, 1915 Kalorama Rd. Wel L. Pope, 522 17th Roland H. Bibolet, 1905 Constitution Ave. NE. Sara L. Ward, 1900 F St. Gordon Quarnstrom, 4702 Chestnut St., Bethesda, Md. Nevila E. MecCaig, 3801 Connecticut Ave. Luella M. Boeschen, the Dorchester Apartments. Loretta Connor, 2800 Woodley Rd. Elmer W. Bennett, 65 Galveston St. Jacques DeLaurier, 1142 46th Pl. SE Genevieve Cooper, 3000 39th St. Robert MecCaughey, 3501 A St. SE Lo M. Miller, 1600 16th Aletha R. Huyett, 1224 North Carolina Ave. NE. Dorothea Cox, 1752 Irving St. Isabelle N. Simpson, 248 Senate Office Bldg. Congressional Directory LIST OF SENATORS, ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS, AND SECRETARIES—Continued Senator Administrative Assistant Secretary O’Mahoney (Wyo.)_-__ Pastored(R.. 1.) 20 Robertson (Va.)______ Russell (Ga)aaa i Saltonstall (Mass.) _-__ Schoeppel (Kans.)____ Seaton, (Nebr.)_ _.____ Smathers (Fla): L-. Smith (Maine) Smith (N.C) s-coaic Smith (N. J). cc Sparkman (Ala.)__._.___ Stennizg (Miss)... ... Taft (Ohio) Thye (Minn.)..---hh Tobey (N-H.) iia Underwood (Ky.)_____ Watkins (Utah) Welker (Idaho) Wiley (Wis). Go. oi Williams (Del.)....._. Young {N. Dak.) =: Leon G. (Pat) Flannery, 232 Senate Office Bldg. Carmine J. Maisano, 3880 Rodman St. Warren A. McNeill, 1535 Foxhall Rd. Leeman Anderson, 3380 Gunston Rd., Alexandria, Va. Henry W. Minot, the Brighton. George C. Young, 240 Sen-ate Office Bldg. William C. Lewis, Jr., 807 Milestone Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Robert E. Long, 1801 Clydesdale Pl. Elizabeth Wherry, 3495 South Wakefield St., Ar-lington, Va. Clyde H. Mathews, 9007 Eton Rd., Silver Spring, Md. I. Jack Martin, 8201 Col-ston Pl., Chevy Chase, Md. Carl L. Weicht, 2810 24th St. North, Arlington, Va. Helen C. Ramsdell, 325 Senate Office Bldg. H. H. Morris, 4743 North Williamsburg Blvd., Ar-lington, Va. Richard T. Cardall, 4812 a St. North, Arlington, a. Marion Jensen, 7342 Forest Rd., Hyattsville, Md. Wilson C. Hefner, 3111 W PL. SE. George S. Williams, 921 19th St. Pains Boe, 5207 U St. E. Julian B. Snow, 489 Co-lonial Village, Arling-ton, Va. James A. McKenna, 475 H 8%, J. F. Stratton, 112 Olin Dr., Falls Church, Va. Henry T. Brice, 3542 South Wakefield St., Arlington, Va. John B. Fisher, 4228 35th St. South, Arlington, Va. Elizabeth Voth, 2141 I St. John T. Carlton, 1617 Crestwood Dr., Alex-andria, Va. Blanche Hudon, 3235 23d St. SE. John K. Slear, 211 Dela-ware Ave. SW. Edward A. Robie, 3427 Tulane Dr., West Hyattsville, Md. Edd H. Hyde, 3610 Green-way Pl., Alexandria, Va. Annie W. Rice, 4801 Con-necticut Ave. Kathleen Hansen, 325 Senate Office Bldg. Christine Johnson, 1629 Columbia Rd. James O. McKinney, 148 Ames Rd., Silver Spring, Md. Neal D. Nelson, 4620 Hunt Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. Julius N. Cahn, 7001 Pyle Rd.; Bethesda, Md. ‘Arden E. Bing. Loyd M. Rockne, 1809 G St. LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES Representative Secretary Aandahl (N. Dak.) AbbItL (Va... “Le Abernethy (Miss.) coon. Adair nd). i ines ne Addonizio (NT)... 02.0 oon Albert (Okla)... ens ma Allen (Calif Alen (TH re ria Men (Bao tr oh Andersen (Minn)... =. ...1. Anderson (Calif) “=. Andresen (Minn.) =." _ Andrews (Aln.) Anfuso (N.Y) oon a Angell (Oren). oo. Avende (I) oo et Armstrong (Mo... Aspinsll (Col0,)....cox saw. . Auchineloss (N. J)... _ Ayres (ODD). orc vrimr mma ns Bailey (WW. VA.) or. cnwa Baker (Tonn.) co comews ws Bakewell Mo.) _:_ Barden (NaCl). iw. sevenmust Baring (Nev). -~-ce~--rn Barrett (Pa) oo onane aarie Bates (IY Yur ongcernedelas Bateg (Mass... ot Battle (AIa) oaroe ol Beall (Md.) somata ite Beamer (Ind). oc -cnaene--re Beckworth (Tex. =. Belcher (Okla.... .. Bender (Ohio)... inneve-r= Bennett dBln). cnncr=-snes Bennett {Mich.) cnn rre-a Bentsen (Tex)...-——- -. Berry (8. Dak.) ne onioos Bette (Ohio) me oar Bishop (T11.). r=. i. raat Blackney (Mich.)..-.-...---. Blatmik, (Minny --... ..... Louise W. Finke, 35 E Street. Marjorie A. Woody, 107 Fifth Street NE. Clair Stevens, 1915 Kalorama Road. Richard C. Prickett, 521 Peabody Street. Margaret M. Sullivan, 136 North Carolina Av- enue SE. Alma Burba, 215 C Street SE. Arlene A. Schatz, 1902 Fifteenth Street North; Arlington, Va. Daniel Bertrand, University Club. Emerson Agan, 1113 House Office Building. Susanna Johnson, 815 Eighteenth Street. Matilda Lindsay, 328 House Office Building. Reynold T. Bergquist, 3815 V Street SE. Blondie McQuagge, 2407 Fifteenth Street. Evelyn K. Carson, 5309 Fourteenth Street. Lenore Hinckley, 35 E Street. William R. Pitts, 2366 Skyland Place SE. O. K. Armstrong, Jr., 4604 Brookview Drive. Dorothy Jenny, 215 Constitution Avenue NE. Lee A. Auchincloss, 113 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Loretta Stankard. Jessie R. Gran, 7204 Garland Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Doris C. Smith, 1420 Thirty-third Street. Tom McGee, George Washington Inn. Marjorie L. Baring, 6604 Oliver Street, Eastpines, Riverdale, Md. Beatrice Herda Norrell, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. C. O. Haley, 2409 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Wilfred A. Pelletier, 230 Kentucky Avenue SE. Dorothy Lull, 3495 South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Cathryn B. Wolfe, 5310 Eighth Street. A. Kip Kinder, 719 North Cleveland Street, Arlington, Va. Helen Cagle, 19 Riggs Road NE. Clyde A. Wheeler, Jr., 121 House Office Building. Mrs. C. D. Terry, 700 North Lincoln Street, Arlington, Va. J. William Norman, 1100 Trenton Road SE. Margaret J. Robinson, 127 C Street NE. Celia Hare Martin, 1425 Rhode Island Avenue. Mavis G. Daly, 7207 Hawthorne Terrace, Land- over Hills, Md. Marvin E. Monroe, 1233 North Scott Street, Ar- lington, Va. Mary B. Stack, 5324 Colorado Avenue. Lois W. Woodworth, 4205 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. 3 L. J. Andolsek, 127 Ivanhoe Street SW. 253 254 Congressional Directory LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Secretary Boggs Mel)... 0.20211. / Jack D. Hunter, Colonial Acres, Route 1, Alex- andria, Va. Boggs (La.). -...n.iies Elaine Herring, 1354 Twenty-seventh Street. Bolling (Mo.) ...__sickasad Robert A. Sniezek, 1441 House Office Building. Bolton (Ohio) Marjorie Clough, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Bonner (NC)... Henry C. Oglesby, 2028 Fort Davis rons — SE. Bosone (Utah) Virginia Rishel, 2141 I Street. Bow (Ohio) Jessie W. Shepard, 2501 Q Street. Boykin (Ala) ...2. conta Alphonse Lucas. Bramblett (Calif.) oct ooo D. Bundy, Alexandria, Va. Bray.(Ind.)s riveLh R. 120 Street seg Don Kendall, C NE. Brehm (Ohio) Barbara Crozier Lanzer, 219 East George Mason Road, Falls Church, Va. Brooks (La) aid Nancy Scott, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. temacoos Brown (Ca)...0. oo Gholston, Hotel. a Lois A. Bellevue Brown (Ohio) Rose Kincaid, Alban Towers. Brownson Ind.) =... 22 Richard L. Taylor, 4805 Fourth Avenue, Glass- manor, D. C. Brysoni(S. C.). m0 nthpas Rhoda MeCarrell, 1108 House Office Building. Buchanan: (Pau: z oot: Veronica M. Conlon, 1650 Harvard Street. Buckley: iN: YD) maoi-oon Alvin F. Klein, 5735 Fourth Street. Budge (Idaho) W. L. Mills, 41 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Buffett (Nebr): _o—i coi Burdick (N. Dak.) ..... ._.o-_ Coleman J. Barry, 4201 Eastern Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. Burleson. (Tex.). ii. ona.ns John Hardesty, 4705 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va. Burnside (W. Va.) Francis W. Turner, 226 First Street SE. Burton (Va)... 2... «=x: Nancy Lee Callender, 930 Birchwood Road, Lakewood, Falls Church, Va. Bushey (TH.). ire Frieda Graham, 2420 Sixteenth Street. Bush (Pa.)os soe netoih oy Virginia Morris, Capital Plaza Apartments. Butler (No Yd) icinni Ruth E. Brookshire. Byrne (N.Y. ii itis 2ruiinea Francis Xavier Kilroy, 1723 House Office Build- ing. Byrnes (Wis). ...oo seein 20. William M. Gage, 2042 Fort Davis Street SE. Campi (Gn. ) gd eintn Albert B. Wallace, 2011 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Canfield (N.. J.) os Walter P. Kennedy, 326 House Office Building. Cannon {Mo.)-i. ciomatoe Gladney, Colonial Ar- fio Isabelle 1659 Terrace, lington, Va. Carlyle (IN: QC) oie a Lawrence P. Redmond, 2000 F Street. Carnahan (Mo.) wiv -tebae Juanita R. Reary, 2343’ Q Street SE. Ruth L. Dean, 2801 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Case (N. J Belle Leon Morrison, 1916 R Street. Celler (N.Y.) Ee Berta Kaslow, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Chatham (N=C.)... ooo ibe Hoo W. ‘Thomerson, 2133-B Suitland Terrace E Onell (RY.): a. aimiinans Prudence Kelly, 1421 Massachusetts Avenue. Chenoweth (Colo.) _.________ Chiperfield (T1.)..-5 one.2L Sara Kay Bohrer, 1801 South Portal Drive. Chudoft (Pa.). x. o.oo =i Mae C. Ryan, 4312 Nineteenth Place NE. Church. Cll.) oi ze ey Clemente (N.Y). ——' .: Harriet Sheridan, Wardman Park Hotel. Clevenger (Ohio) Allen Drake, 6803 Forty-sixth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Cole (Kang, oor ie ir Ralph A. Patterson, 1220 Savannah Place SE. Cole NY. our aor dieu45 Inez M. Tatascore, Winthrop House. Colmer (Misz.). =... 1 Waller Batson, 1024 Twenty-ninth Street. Combs (Tex). iu roiris Sophia Ottis Nerren, 120 C Street NE. Cooley {N. Cy... _..... Now Stevens Rutherford, 2321 Lincoln Road Secretaries 255 LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Cooper (Tenn) l LiloLol. Corbett (Pa) iz dl did.i Cotton (NUH)... Li. L_l Couderti (NY). iL Cox (Gaye. ool ia Fla ulal Crawford (Mieh.)........._20 Crosser (Ohio) Crumpacker (Ind.). i... 0000 Cunningham (Iowa) Curtis (Me.): a 00 San Curtis (Nebr.)-C LU02G 2 Pague (Pa) dic 0200.20d Davig (Ga) eaii ae) Davigi(Tenn.).... L220 Dio Davis (Wis). oman200 Dawson (TN.). co¥i2 5 Delaney (NL Y.)iido niin ll Dempsey (N. Mex.) ........ Denny (Pay o S0 lun. Cl Penton (Indy. liad L230 Devereux (Md.)-o oo =: D Ewart (Mont) LC. 150. Dingell (Mich)...lool. col Dollinger (N.Y) Loo uae Dolliver (Iowa) Dondero Mich.) Loo. JLlill Donohue: (Mass)... = Donovan (N. Yo Cll. Porn’ (BaQY i rials J) a0. Doughton {N, CJ---cneeas--Doyle (Calif.y Jalili sooo. Durham (N.C) on Baton (NE). luo idan, Eberharter (Pa)... 00 2220 Eliott (Ala): Ll lie Rllsworth (Oreg.) cco Elston (Ohio) Engle (Calif). 00 ln Evins (Tenn yl Jil 8 Ballon Md.) aa Feighan (Ohio) Penton (Pa.). iii sion Fernandez (N. Mex.) _._______ Fine (NY) 0 lio. 00 SD0e Pigher (Tex) LiLBul ove Flood (Ba)... B00 Yogarty (R1000.2 20 Secretary William A. Irvine, 1532 House Office Building. Ralph W. Horton, 5517 Glenwood Road, Bethes-da, Md. : Nancy Nelson, 318 A Street SE. Ruth C. Peters, 101 South Hudson Street, Ar-lington, Va. Helen L. Rawlings, 435 New Jersey Avenue SE. Charles A. Baird, 1508 Thirty-fourth Street. Millard D. Carlisle, 2924 Nash Place SE. George R. Wolf, 3272 South Utah Street, Fair-lington, Arlington, Va. Doris M. Rook, 103 Granville Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Irene E. Lupold, 1530 Sixteenth Street. Bill Edens, 3947 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Carl Lemser, 4922 Deal Drive. Jack Cory, 114 Webster Street NE. Leah I. Brock, 1440 R Street. John A. Lang, Jr., 3705 Alabama Avenue SE. Cleveland Tucker, 4278 Thirty-fifth Street South, Arlington, Va. Helen D. Lee, 2407 Fifteenth Street. Margaret McCormick, 1711 Massachusetts Avenue. Ruth Giles, Bluemont, Va. No R. Schepman, 208 Massachusetts Avenue Mary Benson Lewis, 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. Gilbert Le Kander, 105 House Office Building. Abbie E. Hauck, 1660 Lanier Place. Marguerite Mullen, 3200 Sixteenth Street. Lucie A. Ford, Continental Hotel. William A. Rourke, Continental Hotel. Loretta M. Coots, 2322 Twentieth Street. Robert C. Schumacher, 1230 New Hampshire Avenue. P. W. Meekins, 4733 MacArthur Boulevard. George Shaffer, 1030 House Office Building. Rayburn Webster, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE. Hayden S. Garber, 2009 Thirty-seventh Street de Jack Matteson, 2800 Ninth Street South, Arlington, Va. Rebecca Johnson, 215 Constitution Avenue NE. Frances B. Hoyland, Alban Towers. Irene M. Hopkins, Commodore Hotel. Roy M. Edwards, the Chancellor. Robert C. McConnell, 865 Northampton Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Ethel A. Cherry, Bellevue Hotel. Gladys B. Gordon, 601 Nineteenth Street. Eugene D. Hegarty, 121 Sipes Lane, Annandale, Va. George J. Kelley, 6412 Lee Boulevard, Falls Church, Va. Congressional Directory LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Secretary Porand (RR, 1). 00 of Pord (Mieh.)0 awn. 000s. Forrester (Ga. )sosnwmict S122. Fragler (Tenn.) . anil2.5 Pugate Va). ence niak Fulton (Pa. )iaiua dasa 10 Purcole (Mags). __ = Gamble, (N. ¥.)od wade. 2 Garmatz (Md... oil nine Gary (Vad: dei odoin.Sos Gathings (Arle)... ..00 Gavin (Pa): lovaoeoii. George (Kans)... ..... Golden: (Ky) is fo ee sail L500 Goodwin (Mass) ooo. ___._ Gordon (TW.) Ld suainia da Gore (Tenn.) w= FEAT ak Graham (Pal) comma a0. Crannhan (Pa.) oo enna Granger (Utah) Grant (Ala) in vio on Green (PL) cv nnddi Greenwood (N. Y.)o 1... Gregory (Ry)... Sa o_o Gross (Iowa) Gwinn (No. YR eeulh did 2 Hagen (Minn)... «i... Hale (Maine) Hall, Edwin Arthur (N.Y. }.-Hall, Leonard W. (N. Y.)____ Halleck: (Ind. YL aera. Soi Hand (IN. Joys ooul. matin Hovden nd)... ...... Hardy (Va.)id-2o5uyan BERS Harris (Arles drat0 oi Harrison (Nebr. =... Harrison Va.) oot oat Doki Harrison Wyo.) Harts (Na Josh idea onuo. Harvey (Ind): ......... Havenner (Calif.)oio.oisi Hogs (Arka. vr orn Hays (Ohio) Hébert lla) 308 aat ia.35: Hedrick (W.Va)...3; Heflornan (N. Yi)io li coon iit Heller (N.:¥.) Li ccosansl-Lik- Herlong (Flo)... Herter (Mass) i i...cris; Edward W. Heroux, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. John P. Milanowski, 1839 Mintwood Place. Eunice O. McDonnell, 1 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Lena N. Anderson, Miramar Apartments. Clyde Y. Cridlin, 1610 House Office Building. Martha E. Cameron. Miriam F. Garner, McLean, Va. Sahai L. Garmatz, 1805 Twenty-third Street Paul Saunier, Jr., 215 C Street SE. Daisy Kimball, 2523 Congress Street SE. Betty L. Lantz, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Leila M. Copp, 2501 Thirty-fourth Street SE. Walter Ray Smith, 5545 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. Lawrence Mitchell, 5116 Chevy Chase Parkway. Geraldine H. Davies. Alma Allen, Scott’s Hotel. Mary F. Lane, 2437 North Quantico Street, Arlington, Va. Louise M. Clarkson, 3308 D Street SE. Elva Wilkinson Bell, 4117 Davis Place. Robert B. Vail, 227 North Granada Street, Ar- lington, Va. Estelle M. Tyler, 1338 House Office Building. Charlotte R. Eldredge, Bellevue Hotel. Mrs. H. C. Lewis, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. Florence L. Smith, 2131 O Street. Earl McArthur, 1405 House Office Building. Grace M. Conant, 3713 Alabama Avenue SE. Almeta Mallison, '215 Constitution Avenue NE. William A. Reutemann, 7201 Summit Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Jess D. Nolph, ‘2721 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Delphine W. Brune, 1421 Massachusetts Avenue. Pal Bs Squires, 5808 Dewey Street, Cheverly, Thad S. Murray, 3852. Florence Drive, Alexan- dria, Va. Willie Harris, 2108 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Ray W. Nedrow, 6000 Fourth Street. Chris Mathisen, 3367 North Dickerson Street, Arlington, Va. Donald W. Shearon, 4405 Twenty-eighth Place, Mount Rainier, Md. Frank Henry, 8201 Allen Town Road SE. Robert Baker, 89 Galveston Street SW. Madalyn E. Callahan, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue. M. Steele Hays, 1317 Thirty-third Street. Marie H. Krim, Stratford Hotel. Betty Harter, 103 Cockrell Road, Alexandria, Va. Bernita N. Sloan, 5537 Sixty-eighth Place SE. Catherine M. Judge, 3333 Tennyson Street. Marie M. Feeney, 803 Villa Ridge Road, Broad- mont, Falls Church, Va. William H. Byrd, 318 A Street SE. Barbara Nelson, 2500 Q Street. Secretaries 257 LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Heselton (Mass.) __.__.__._.. Hess (Ohio) Hill (Colo. L soindeld 0 TI. Hillinga: (Calif) 000 una Hinshaw (Calif)... ..._.. ... Hoeven (Iowa) Hoffman Ul.) i... Hoffman (Mieh. aio ot. IL. Holifield:(Calif) = LL. 5. 2. Holmes (Wash). _.____.._. Hope (Kans). oul. aii... Horan (Wash.) c= oil ol Howell (NJ ri Junior_0US Hull (Wis) oa led Hunter (Calif) So cialoiual Thard: (Tex. Vacs: 50 vc Irving (Moe))oL coiotinda. Jackson (Calif.)oabc-OC lait Jackson (Wash.)............ James: (Pal) ool unueal Lill Jarman Okla)... ......... Javits (N.Y). ..onnianads, Jenison (dll. ivoll arial Jenkins (Ohio) Jensen (Iowa) Johnson: (Calif.):ct. 1115 Live Jonag (TW )ey on 0 0 Jones: (Ala). ic. lli diucedan Jones: {Mod oan Jones, Hamilton C. (N. C.)___ Jones, Woodrow W. (N. C.)___ Judd (Minn)...(aosis IF Karsteni(Mo.) oat)a5 Kean (IN. JU daqgue01ES UO. Rearney (NL. Yoda. 200. Kearng:(Pa) Juciiodoai Lot Keating (NioYo Yo van000 Ree: (W.Va)... -...... Kelley (Pa)... deat ll 48 Kelly (NX)... anil Kennedy (Mass.)o ao... LLL Keogh (Ni iY.) usoodala dd Kerr (NG): 2 nvimaisard Kersten (Wis. )oozi2 Lucas (8 Kilburn’ (We. Y-)=sicace. 100 Kilday (Tex) uc taaui0ic.. Ring (Calif) =... Bing (Pa). eee i Kirwan (Ohio) Wein (N.Y) 0c i Secretary Pauline B. Werner, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Irene Boger, 3701 Connecticut Avenue. William F. Price, 344 House Office Building. Edith Woodruff, 2500 Q Street. Joseph Macauley, 3422 Q Street. G. R. Blakley, 2430 Pennsylvania Avenue. Helen M. Boyer, 1631 A Street SE. Sally T. Strait, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Howard F. Sedgwick, 8477 Piney Branch Court; Silver Spring, Md. George L. Reid, Jr., 117 West Franklin Street, Alexandria, Va. Charles H. Kimble, 8000 Maple Avenue, Takoma, Park, Md. John H. Sharon, 528 House Office Building. William E. Sanderson, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Carl F. Hawver, 4505 Harrison Street. John L. Stallings, 2028 Fort Davis Street. Mrs. Leonor A. Sullivan, 1800 Twenty-eighth Place SE. Leola Long, 215 C Street SE. Archie Baker, 215 Constitution Avenue NE. Mrs. C. Allen Seward, 4321 Summer Road, Suit- land, Md. Don L. Bowen, 5838 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. . Bernell Karin Ekberg, 4041 Seventh Street NE. Grace C. Humphreys, 3638 Cumberland Street. Arista Huber, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. William L. DeyErmand, 2120 Sixteenth Street. Verna A. Badger, 137 Ivanhoe Street SW. Ann F. Schreiber, 3824 Halley Terrace SE. Ivadell Bowser, 35 E Street. Blanche J. Middleton, 215 Constitution Ave. NE. Herbert M. Lineberger, 232 First Street SE. Elizabeth Fletcher, 2801 Quebec Street. Eloise D. Baute, 30 Plattsburg Court. Frances R. Schultz, 3220 Connecticut Avenue. Gertrude A. Robertson, 1727 Massachusetts Avenue. Gladys E. Cron, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Hazel F. Peeters, 3206 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Elizabeth Richards Curlin, 2456 Twentieth Street. Margaret R. O’Connell, Caney Place, Forest Glen, Silver Spring, Md. T. J. Reardon, Jr., 1431 Saratoga Avenue NE: Agnes L. Mathisen, 3817 Military Road. Rex M. Best, Jr., 2007 Thirty-seventh Street SE. David Keyser, 3807 North Pershing Drive, Arlington, Va. Irene Williams, 2730 Wisconsin Avenue. S. Keith Linden, 7906 Chelton Road, Bethesda, Francis J. Schum, 8410 Donneybrook Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Roberta C. Messerly, 5415 Connecticut Avenue. Harold H. Buckles. Congressional Directory LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative . Secretary Rlvezynski (TIL)... Lanes(Massly onal oof. Lanham (Ga). ciaiioonior) Lantaffi(Fla) oo oll oo. hd Lareade (Ia). loonie hil Latham (N. Yo dooiir iu LeCompte (Iowa) Lesingki (Mich) oo oi ol... Lind Pa eoae a Lovre:(S:Dak.). =o. 0 11 Taengs (Memb none Eyle(Pem) iil l bn.Ul, MeCarthy (Minn) __________ McConnell (Pa) 0...Llc McCormack (Mass) _____ McCulloch (Ohio) McDonough (Calif)..... MeGrath (N. Y.). 2 oo McGregor (Ohio) MeGuire' (Conn.y. io Loi.48 Melntire (Maine). _________ MeRinnon (Calif) = =. McMillan (S. Cy ---1..i MeMullen (Bla.yo o_o.co McVey (I11.) _ _ Machrowiez (Mich.) _________ Maek QU) LL criodee J Mack (Wash)... Madden (Indy. cil won loi Magee (Mo.)_____._ Ss RR Mahon (Tex.)n ocala Mansfield (Mont.) _ _________ Marshall (Minn)... coz 0 Martin (Iowa) Martint'(Mags.). 0.80 Mason (ll) voon vn, Meader (Mich,).._..... Merrow (NH). od.af aii Miller (Calif). ctx Usui Miller (Md)... nial Miller (Nebr) ois, Loi. Mitchell :(Wash.)...__..._. . = Morano (Conn.y-Morgan (Ba)... cova Morris (Okln.y oi coo 4 UF Morrison (La:)..cuenveni iio Morten (Ry)... ob James J. Guinea, 1650 Harvard Street. Mary M. Cloonan, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Mrs. John D. Penn, 3711 Alabama Avenue SE. Bis Wilcox, 4526 Ridge Street, Chevy Chase, d. Mrs. D. D. Harrison, 7510 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. S. L. Verdi, 4457 South Dakota Avenue NE. Margaret Y. Welsh, R. F. D. 2, Sterling, Va. Estelle M. Corbett, 2019 I Street. Elva Schwamlein, 1445 Ogden Street. Philip M. De Vany, House Office Building. Elizabeth R. Myers, Route 4, Vienna, Va. Mary Cowles, 4715 Thirty-first Street South, Arlington, Va. Adrian P. Winkel, 209 Whitestone Road, Silver Spring, Md. Evelyn T. Haller, Route 2, Herndon, Va. James V. Hartrey. Byron E. Harter, 7308 Cranston Road. Sylvia H. Comfort, 201 House Office Building. Rose C. DeNicola, '20 Plattsburg Court. Mary Nicks Van Demark, Route 1, Rolling Road, Springfield, Va. Margaret LaThomus, Pall Mall Apartments. Joseph S. Brzostowski, 810 Park Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Jasper Ww. Cross, 2905-B Sixteenth Road South, Arlington, Va. Riley R. Zumwalt, 2249 Savannah Terrace SE. Mary Sobek. Mary Ball, 215 C Street SE. Dorothy Rylander, 251 Audrey Lane SE. James J. Sullivan, 2816 Q Street SE. Paul P. Presseller, 904 Chalfonte Drive, Alex- andria, Va. Jane C. Bittner, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Elsie A. Gridley, 2712 Ordway Street. Evelyn Krupp, 1117 House Office Building. Ann P. Lonergan, 35 E Street. Esther P. Miller. Therese M. Pierson, 2440 Sixteenth Street. Orland T. Huyck, 3417 A Street SE. F. Gibson Darrison, Jr., 15 Fourth Street SE. Mary Bassett, 4550 Connecticut Avenue. Ancil H. Payne, 300 Second Street SE. John P. Baxter. John H. Weiner, 3501 Carpenter Street SE. Charles Leslie Pain, 519 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va Florence H. Cooley, 215 Constitution Avenue NE Barbara Johnston Miller, 10207 Lorain Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Secretaries 259 LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES— Continued Representative Secretary Moulder (Mo.)-oni us Multer (NOY oon,A 00 Mumma (Pa) io ti oo. Murdoek (Ariz. yo. Ll. oo Murphy (NY. yoo 8 ha, Murray: (Tenn). .ll0 00000 Murray (Wis)...=. Nelson (Maine) Nicholson (Mass. yo... 02 Norbladi(Oreg.). 0s.fn HC Norvell ‘(Ark.). Jc.JA 0002 O'Brien (TY. o-oo annus O’Brien (Mich)... 20 O'Hara (Minn.) LC2 2200 OO Ronski (Wis) -240 O'Neill (Pa)... 801 000.580 Osmers (NJ. Ye ios evea us Ostertag (N. Vy J-o so on.ohs O'Toole (N: XY) .oonio-2:050 Passman (Ta) 20. 00s -¢ Patman (Tex). cee: acis Patient Ariz YU ooo oo Patterson (Conn)ii {255 Perking (Ky): on. oc Philbin (Mags). 0 .-... Phillips (Calif. yodoc 000 OC Pickett (Tex). oo ool Ae Poage (Tex Y._i i lio 0 4 Polk (Ohio) Potter (Mich). i... 5c Poulson (Calif v.02 & Powell (N. Yi... oli oo: Preston (Ca. ono oo Price (TW.)0 le: 51587: TiS Priest (Tenn). 20 i020000, Prouty (V6). i Dos. lus. Quinn (NY). iene an Rabaut (Mieh) Ul oii Radwan (NAY) o-o 220 Rang (Alo) =o3 on Ramsay (W, Vn). =... Rankin (Misg) oo:0 of Rayburn (Tex). oi Li... 0 Reams (Ohio) Redden: (N. Q.). nic 00850 Reece (Tenn)...=a =. % Reed (QUO 0 Log Lindl J Read (No XY.) oop tivo Bees (Kong)... enna Began (Tex. Yet Jl illo.0a. Rhodesi(Pa.) ool 200 th Ribicoff (Conny J 20 0 0 Gladys Douglass, 215 C Street SE. Lillian M. Fitzgerald, 1913 C Street NE. Kate McDougall, 123 House Office Building. Dorothy A. Nelson, 1226 House Office Building. Ruth G. Kilburn, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Anna M. Mourot, 2322 Twentieth Street. Marguerite A. Scanlon, 2700 Wisconsin Avenue. Willard C. Ellis. > Margaret F. Butler, 3951 Langley Court. Dorothy E. Woodring, 2706 Military Road. Janice Dilday, 1629 Columbia Road. James B. Miley, 532 Twentieth Street. Josephine O’Donohue. Josephine Peters, 1711 Massachusetts Avenue. Harold R. Edwards, York Apartments. M. Louise Hymers, 2702 Wisconsin Avenue. John T. Eiker, Jr., 215 C Street SE. Harryette M. Smith, 2222 I Street. Juli P. Langston, 708 Manor Road, Alexandria, a. Lucille Spain, 120 C Street NE. . Albert B. Sieh, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. William Painter. Helen Chapin, 1313 House Office Building. Lacey Sharp, 1608 Abingdon Drive, Alexandria, Va. Mae Elizabeth Smith, 4640 Nichols Avenue SW. Antoinette P. Cook, Continental Hotel. Marion Webb, 1400 Fairmont Street. Louise Maxienne Dargans, 1829 Sixteenth Street. J. Brantley Johnson, 4320 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. John Ewing Harris, 1225 Thirteenth Street. Thomas L. Hayes, 423 House Office Building. Agnes M. Egger, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. Mrs. E. Irene Neese, 5204 Twenty-sixth Avenue, Hillcrest Heights. E. E. Cox, 1314 Massachusetts Avenue. Genevieve B. Mayo, 7000 Piney Branch Road. Alla Clary, 604 North Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. : Alvin B. Glaser, 3405 Tulane Drive, West Hyattsville, Md. Clifford E. Brown, 215 C Street SE. Marguerite McMillan, 433 North Park Drive, Arlington, Va. Bessie M. Orcutt, 1629 Twenty-eighth Street SE. Sue Thomas Kirstein, 2629 Nicholson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Barbara D. Megee, 3741 McKinley Street. Marita K. Fanning, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Charlotte Umstead, 1010 Valley Drive, Alexan- dria, Va. Henry C. Shannon, George Washington Inn. Congressional Directory 260 LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Secretary Richards (5. Ci -ouig itl Riehlman (N.Y)... 5:05x dda Bileyi (8. CG) caiiiliianiiinl Rivers (8. C0 aired A005 Roberts (Ala Jats ound Goin Robeson (Va) vutuana d000 Bodine (IN. Jr even. Rogers (Colo). LLL = Rogers: (Bla) oui Ss. vl Rogers (Mags. yotl domi i Rogers (Tex) onanid Rooney (Na Vd aiinw dias is Roosevelt (N. ¥i)oui. uaini so Sabbath (JIL) caaciir i. pone Sadlak (Conny. id iciniii. St. George (N.. Yoda oad ait; Sazseer (Md) ot oo co 0 Saylor (Pa)... 000 sasstil} Schenck (Ohio) Schwabe (Okla.). veal Scott, Hardie (Pa)... iu. Scott, Hugh D., Jr. (Pa)... Serivner (Kans). oo. o.oo. Scudder (Calif). uo ih Secrest (Ohio) Seely-Brown (Conn.)________ Shafer (Mich.) oir vera Sheehan ([l).t son vmmisd Shelley (Calif) iid ..c1.nue Sheppardi(Calif.). ........-. ShorteMar). ie re Sieminskiz(N. J.)--1 i o00. Sikes (Flor oot oatool Simpson. (TDS Simpson (Pa) « sews toss. Sitller (Payal oo. oe Smith (Kans) oo ci o.oo Smith (Misg.)o2 of nae = Smith(Va ot... oo Smith (Win yo en orfy Spence iltKyy. a Springer (M1). © cualSdiide Staggers (W. Va.)........... Stanley (Va lu Yon.aeuiidin Steed (Oklx.) ccoir 8s. cal Stigler (Okla)... Stockman (Oreg.)....saub ius Sutton: (Tenn.).... osu sus Taber ANY.) ode raneiniind Tackett (ATE) camit SHE 0 Talle (Iowa) Taylor ANY.) bid adi nary Morrell L. Thomas, 1502 House Office Building. Mary Mayhew Einstein, 2021 Q Street. Mary E. Stiggins, 42 Independence Avenue SW. DeLacy Shuman, 2039 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Charles E. Benton, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Charles Conway Baker, 2018 Wardman Road Salig L. Bendit, 4817 Thirty-sixth Street. Nina Nunn Kelly, 215 C Street SE. Hattie Mae Thorson, 2802 Devonshire Place. Benjamin H. McKinley; 2501 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Dee Dodson, 325 Winthrop Street SE. George G. Buchheister, 5351 Quincy Place, Bladensburg, Md. Veva F. Murphy, 35 E Street. Milian S. Sadlak, 3225 Twenty-third Street George W. Murphy, 6000 Nevada Avenue. Mary E. Waldron, 3620 Sixteenth Street. Marie Pine. Marjorie Heston, 906 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. ; Edna C. Taylor, 120 C Street NE. Arnon M. Gulick, 136 Sixth Street NE. Russell C. Jones, 235 Emerson Street. Mildred W. Martin, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Herbert U. Smith, 3822 V Street SE. Vi Wilson, 3900 Hamilton Street, Hyattsville, Mrs. Guy Meadows. Lucille E. Brooks, 5209 R Street SE. Mrs. Jo Hughes, 3310 Fourth Street SE. Irene Lewis, 2150 Pennsylvania Avenue. John Murphy, 238 House Office Building. M. Y. Winslett, 1500 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Mary Linn, 3101 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Helen W. Simpson, 1801 Clyesdale Place. Helen L. Wangsness, 4232 Reno Road. William Kats. David Williams. Calvin Haley, House Office Building. Dorothy Veit Dunn, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Florence Colbert, House Office Building. Marie Lantz, 532 Twentieth Street. Alton G. Lacy, 302 House Office Building. Leroy Blaylock. Alice Morris, 213 Hawaii Avenue NE. Mildred Burnham, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. J. V. Elrod. Amelia O’Connell, 2114 Key Boulevard, Ar- lington, Va. Parker Westbrook, 127 C Street NE. Albert M. Cloud, Jr., 4610 Chase Avenue, Be- thesda, Md. Jean L. Casey, 2902 Porter Street. Secretaries 261 LIST OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SECRETARIES—Continued Representative Secretary Teague (Tex). oo no Thomas (Pex) oo vo vs Thompson (Mieh,) ._.. —__-Thompson (Tex)...__ "Thornberry (Tex)... Tollefson (Wash): =. Trimble (ATk.Y. =: a. Valla(Tlo: se od ion Van Pelt (Wis): Van Zandt (Pa).yo Velde (TILY. =v oo wr ooo Vinson (Ga) oi a Vorys (Ohio) Vursell (TI): 2 ob 0 rade Walter (Ba) oan Watts (Ky) © te Weichel (Ohio) Welch: (Mo.) i. aaa. Werdel (Calif) =..... Wharton (N.Y). c= Wheeler (Ga). 0... Whitten (Migs). == > Wickersham (Okla.)_________ Widnall (N.. Jd) ooo Wier Minn.) Wigglesworth (Mass.)____.___ Williams (Mise)... Williams (N. Y¥.) Willie (La). cbns Wilson (Ind) 2.=: ©» Wilson (Tex Yoo oo Winstead (Misg)_ = 2. = Withrow (Wig). >.» Wolcott: (Mich). Wolverton (N. J.) ——. oc. Wood (Ga) oo = 0 Wood (Idaho) Woodruft (Mieh.) =... Voton (LY... a Yorty (Calif)... -.-. Zablocki (Wig)... + = George W. Fisher, 5700 Chillum Heights Drive, Hyattsville, Md. Mens D. Ball, 4514 Albion Road, College Park, Helen Klassen, 2222 I Street. ols G. Leverett, 6701 Exfair Road, Bethesda, d. Tom Brashear, Jr., 4814 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va. Harry V. Smith, Jr., House Office Building. Mary Ellen McGill, 2403 North Capitol Street. Joseph P. Hanson, 211 Delaware Avenue SW. Walter H. Haefs, 850 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Thomas E. Sheridan, 312 Fifth Street SE. Robert H. Michel, 306 Kennebec Street. Marguerite M. Waselesion, 1445 Park Road. A. J. Griffith, 3417 A Street SE. Susan Davidson, 2100 Connecticut Avenue. Ruth Miskell, 1954 Columbia Road. Randolph S. Taylor, 4731 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Mary E. Carney, 339 House Office Building. Kenneth T. Boyle, 118 House Office Building. Rachel E. Bites, 5731 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Mollie A. Gaumner, 3040 Idaho Avenue. John W. Ellis, 121 Galveston Street SW. Ann TT, Watson, 5404 Worthington Drive. Margaret Hughes, 1217 House Office Building. Martha M. Schubmehl, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Charles Munn, 424 House Office Building. Ivan A. Hedin, 1613 Harvard Street. J. L. Peyton, 2104 Thirty-eighth Street SE. Fred C. Smith, 337 Irvington Street SE. Edwin F. Gary, 5007 Forty-fourth Street. Nyle M. Jackson, 4429 Thirty-fifth Street. H.G Donan 1320 North Stuart Street, Arling-ton Enez D. Pruyn, 2703 Mount Vinton Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Margaret S. Bayol, 1712 Abingdon Drive, Alex- andria, Va. Marguerite L. Sullivan, 1420 Twentieth Street. Sara L. Haslett, 215 C Street SE. John McBride, 441 House Office Building. Raymond C. Anderson, 2217 North Quincy Street, Arlington, Va. Samuel R. Sherwin. Virginia L. Noah, 2122 California Street. Marian Czarnecki, 1915 Kalorama Road. DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER Bartlett (Alaska) Mary Lee Council, 1914 Connecticut Avenue. Farrington (Hawaii) Margaret C. Turner, 2822 Devonshire Place. Perndés-Isern (BP. RY): -.- Orville Watkins, 3832 Seventeenth Place NE. STATISTICAL INFORMATION STATISTICAL SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Congress Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-|Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House g sion ning journment |in days of the Senate! of Representatives i CHEER 1 | Mar. 4,17892 | Sept. 29, 1789 210 | John Langdon,® of | Frederick A.C. Muh- New Hampshire. lenberg, of Pennsyl- vania. 2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 So ho StmA Sa vm 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 LB a Se aL, 2d. coca. 1 | Oct. 24,1791 | May 8,1792 197 | Richard Henry Lee, | Jonathan Trumbull, of Virginia. of Connecticut. 2 | Nov. 5,1792 |. Mar. 2,1793 119 | John of Langdon,New : Hampshire. io 1| Dec. 2,1793 | June 09,1794 190 | Ralph Izard, of South | Frederick A. C. Muh-: Carolina. lenberg, of Pennsyl-vania. 2 | Nov. 3,1794 | Mar. 3,1795 121 | Henry Tazewell, of Virginia. th. ooo. 1| Dec. 17,1795 | June 1,1796 bre fal QO. Lr as Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire. 2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. 83,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania. thi. wn. 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of Do. Rhode Island. 2 | Nov. 13,1797 | July 16,1798 246 | Jacob Read, of South | Dent, of Mary- George Carolina. land.4 Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts. 3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3, 1799 91 | John Laurence, of New York. James Ross, of Penn-sylvania. Oth... 1| Dec. 2,1799 | May 14, 1800 164 | Samuel Livermore, of | Theodore Sedgwick, New Hampshire. of Massachusetts. Uriah Tracy, of Con-necticut. 2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John E. Howard, of Maryland. James Hillhouse, of Connecticut. Sth. iio 1| Dec. 7,1801 | May 3,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of | Nathaniel Macon, of Georgia. North Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. Sth, oo: 1| Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27,1804 163 Jorn Brawn, of Ken-Do. tucky. Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of : Tennessee. Othe fo. 1 | Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. Maryland. 2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 Of izl it dosti. Lining. 2 1 Until within recent years the appointment or election of a President pro tempore was held by the Senate to be for the occasion only, so that more than one appears in several sessions and in others none was chosen. Since Mar. 12, 1890, they have served until “the Senate otherwise ordered.” 2 The Constitution (art. I, sec. 4) provided that “The Congress shall assemble at least once in every year * * * on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.” Pursuant to a resolution of the Continental Congress, the first session of the First Congress convened Mar. 4, 1789. Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress met regularly on the first Monday in December until 1934, when the twentieth amendment to the Constitution became effective, changing the meeting of Congress to Jan. 3. The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in New York City; subsequently, including the i Josson of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in ashington. 8 Elected to count the vote for President and Vice President, which was done Apr. 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for the first time. John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. ¢ Elected Speaker pro tempore for Apr. 20, 1798, and again for May 28, 1798. 265 266 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Congre Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-|Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the HouseNEIess | sion ning journment | in days of the Senate of Representatives 10th... .. 1 | Oct. 26,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 182 | Samuel Smith, of | Joseph B. Varnum, of Maryland. Massachusetts. 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont. John Milledge, of Georgia. Mth... 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28,1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Do. Pennsylvania. 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1,1810 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina. 3 | Dee. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 Yorn Fraps, of Ken- uc 16h ooo 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 William H, Crawford, | Henry Olay, of Ken- of Georgia. tucky. 2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 3 pt SS HEN oi tr Sth 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 fe Ea Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18,1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, Massachusetts. of 3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Gaillard, of | Langdon Cheves, of South Carolina. South Carolina. 14th. -_. 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 148% (3 EER ERR Buty Clay, of Ken- 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 ogi Lo rb LE ucky. 15th i 1 | Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 140 LORel SO Do. i 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3,1819 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia. 6th... 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John South Gaillard, Carolina. of Do. 2 | Nov. 13,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 1 do...--. = _.)lJobhn W, Taylor, of New York. th oo 1 | Dec. 3,1821 | May 8,1822 157... XT RE Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dee. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 gf at do.-uoi as 18th: ci. 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 j fr ERE doris 2831008) Dy Clay, of Ken- uck 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 SRE doris. S001. oth... 1 | Dec. 5,1825 | May 22,1826 : 169 | Nathaniel Macon, North Carolina. of | John W. Tayler, New York of 2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 99 |. ---RE Se oon... i. 1 | Dec. 3,1827 | May 26, 1828 175 | Samuel Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 on qo aes a ; | oVsh. li 1 | Dec. 17,1829 | May 31,1830 176 -----AOL edatas Son Do. i 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 83,1831 88 | Littleton Waller T'aze- i well, of Virginia. yy HE 1 | Dee. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 925 ---- Iie e Rr te Do. 2 | Dec. 38,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. 2 IER 1 | Dec. 2,1833 | June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do. Mississippi. 2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 Jon, Lyi, of Vir- | John Bell,”of T'ennes- see. 4th. sian 1| Dec. 7,1835 | July 4,1836 211 William R. King, of | James K. Polk, of Alabama. Tennessee. 2 | Dec. 5,1836 | Mar. 3,1837 | oth. io. 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct: 16,1837 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 9,1838 3 | Dec. 83,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 26th... ..... 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 13, 1840 Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 17,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 Cy RR anhen Cel Re eth. .....0 1 | May 31,1841 | Sept. 13,1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, | John White, of Ken- of New Jersey. tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | WillieP. Mangum, of North Carolina. 3 | Dec. 5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 UE RR SEERCa LL 28th. ..0 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 196 | 0E RS A Bl A John W. Jones,of Vir- ginia. 2'| Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 LUE [TEs dotlid ial] oth: 1 | Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10,1846 253 | DavidR. Atchison, of | John W. Davis, of In- Missouri. diana. 2 | Dec. 7,1846 | Mar. 3,1847 87 -LLL0 doi unis Th 80th. ni. L 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 od LE Al (4 Moet gLGg LA] =..| Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 apelin A012 aE HE Bist..c.ui 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30,1850 302 | William R. King, of Cobb, of Geor- | Howell Alabama. gia. 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar. 3,1851 020.15. 20 douuiaslDOL Elected Speaker Jan. 19, 1814, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. ¢ Elected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. ! Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. Statistical 267 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued fo e%5 Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ongres sion ning journment [in days of the Senate of Representatives 820 1| Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 275 | William R. King, of | Linn Dowd, of Ken-Anas, tucky 2 | Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 on TEER OR a Ll 834... nme 1| Dec. 5,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 Ty Atchison, of Do. Missouri. 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 | Jesse D. Bright, of In-diana. Lewis Cass, of Michi-gan. Bath. 1 | Dee. 38,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 | Jesse D. Bright, of In-| Nathaniel P. Banks, iana of Massachusetts. 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30,1856 107.0 dos Shooto,ue 3 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 | James M. Mason, of Virginia. Thomas J. Rusk, of Texas. 85th. ..... 1 | Dec. 7,1857 | June 14,1858 189 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, | James IL. Orr, of of Alabama. South Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3,1859 88isil. dois Lo8 os Sotho oo. 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 02. done akeion oun William Pennington, of New Jersey. Jesse D. Bright, of Indiana. 2 | Dec. 38,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 Boren Foot, of Ver-mon Sth... 1| July 4,1861 | Aug. 6,1861 Bae doo i... HERG Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 ORL doi teione 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 gga Cl dobsio i MLECE sth... 1 | Dec. 7,1863 | July 4,1864 200. dos. 2 bil Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana. Daniel Clark, of New Homnyure. 2 | Dec. 5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 SO adel nll Sotho. 1 | Dec. 4,1865 | July 28,1866 237 TAY Foster, of Do. ! Connecticut. 2 | Dec. 3,1866 | Mar. 3,1867 91 | Benjamin F. Wade, . Do. of Ohio. 0th: -__..-1 | Mar. 4,18678 Dec. 2,1867 LN docs plete ul Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1867% Nov. 10,1868 84501 do... 3 | Dec. 7,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 87 [Lh do... Theodore M. Pome- roy,10 of New York. 4st. 1 | Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 10,1869 38 | Henry B. Anthony, | James G. Blaine, of of Rhode Island. Maine. 2 | Dec. 6,1869 | July 15,1870 22% |i dof Jalhl 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 AL EEE doi aia...) 430 a 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | Apr. 20,1871 48 ae AOE Shiapad Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10,1872 1907-20 2 dolls Cli nian 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3,1873 02: | dein00 Mie 3d canes 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23,1874 204 | Matthew H. Carpen-Do. ter, of Wisconsin. 2 | Dec. 17,1874 | Mar. 3,1875 87 |1onn dob. boii Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. 44th = 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael C. Xerr,11 of Michigan. Indiana. Samuel S. Cox,12 of New York, pro tem-pore. Milton Saylor? of Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 38,1877 Lt) ABE dolla Lite. Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. a5th-_ .. 1 4 Oct. 15,1877 {-Dec. 3,187751:4 = 50°]. = oii A. AB A ym ors Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20,1878 200° --Qo ee deity 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 LD LER dotted Solos ay ath... 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1,1879 106 Alon, we Thurman, Do. 0 io. 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16,1880 199.1... -AO. ons attendagh 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 Beh 40... slicing 8 There were recesses in tis session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 2 9 There were recesses in hry session from Monday, July 27, to Monday, Sept. 21, to Friday, Oct. 6, and to Tuesday, Nov. 10. No business was transacted subsequent to July 27. 10 Elected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served 1 day. 11 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 12 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19. 13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 19 268 Congressional Directory SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued Congress Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-| Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House gr sion ning journment [in days of the Senate of Representatives 47th... 2: 1| Dec. 5,1881 | Aug. 8, 1882 247 | Thomas F. Bayard,of | J. Warren Keifer, of Delaware. io. David Davis, of Illi- nois. 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont. 48th... .._ 1 | Dec. 3,1883 | July 7,1884 8 = = do kn John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, 2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 SE I do. ial, oh 40th... 0 1 | Dec. 17,1885 | Aug. b5,1886 242 | John Sherman,of Ohio. Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of . Kansas. 50th... 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 B2hacin. doi sittin Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 3,1889 OF al dorisdo ul Bist... ... 1 | Dec. 2,1889 | Oct. 1,1890 B04 doses00 ah Phas B. Reed, of aine. 2 | Dec. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. Th BERT 1| Dec. 17,1891 | Aug. 5,1892 B11. dosilo Sie. Aus Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. ; 8A... 1| Aug. 7,1893 | Nov. 3,1893 80. LE Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28,1894 268 4-1. dosh ait Los 3 | Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 3,1895 97 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. Bath. 1 | Dec. 2,1895 | June 11,1896 193 | William P. Frye, of | Thomas B. Reed, of aine. Maine. 2 | Dec. 17,1896 | Mar. 3,1897 YE LLM Sl PRU BSthy ...... 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24,1897 130.5... LF TS A Se Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8,1898 2B |enas SEA ee 3 | Dec. 5,1898 | Mar. 3, 1899 80s. 5. do... tooiai...d Both... 1 | Dec. 4,1899 | June 7,1900 186: ar 0c doctel 1 a3gi.0on David B. Henderson, of Iowa. 2 | Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 ol fas dois hae ils Brth. oo. 1 | Dec. 2,1901 | July 1,1902 Nl doi. oi ns Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 50 dositi ital. ou BSth.... 1 | Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 7,1903 20 ro AO ease 0h Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. 2 | Dec. 7,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,1905 Both. _-.---1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30,1906 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3,1907 oth. ei: 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30, 1908 Do. 2 | Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 83,1909 Gist. 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 5 62a... 1| Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 Champ Clark,of Mis-souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,!® Brandegee,!6 Curtis,” Gallinger,18 Lodge.1? 3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 3,1913 92 | Bacon,20 Gallinger,?!_. nT 1| Apr. 17,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, of Do. Arkansas. 2 | Dec. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 by ERGs RE TE 3 | Dec. 17,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 BY teadois at ies, Gith__..... 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8, 1916 pySESE re RSS Se Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. eésth_...... 1| Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 18850. i. dOoscti ution. Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21,1918 3540 0 do scion de... 3 ! Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 920 nen Ou head 14 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr. 27, 1911. 18 Elected to serve Jan. 11-17, Mar. 11-12, Apr. 8, May 10, May 30 to June 1 and 3, June 13 to July 5, Aug. 1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dee. 15, 1912. 16 Elected to serve May 25, 1912, 17 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. 18 Elected to serve Feb. 12-14, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912 19 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912. 20 Elected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, Jan. 5-18, and Feb. 2-15, 1913. 21 Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913, 22 Died Oct. 1, 1916. Statistical 269 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued C Ses-| Date of begin-| Date of ad-|Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ONEIess | sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives 66th... 1 | May 19,1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, of Iowa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 1,1919 | June 5, 1920 188 | tx dO. cosine.laa 3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 88 | .0Ls qos. nbaoaiulo 67th. ia. 1| Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23,1921 07. bak docoboaasiur Do. 2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22, 1922 202-1" oo (3 Fy BaraCe RR 3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4,1922 IF lie 34 LAE CU ET 4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 3,1923 LPH EE do. copeif io. 68th... 1 | Dec. 38,1923 | June 7,1924 188 j= -ox do: cuahanirio Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 3,1925 08 an QOise bun ntiagin. 69th... .. 1 | Dee. 17,1925 | July 38,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth, : : New Hampshire. of Ohio. 2 | Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 880. =. do : Oth... 1 | Dee. 5,1927 | May 29, 1928 Y770- 20 do Do. 2 | Dee. 3,1928 | Mar. 38,1929 Li Re do a © RO 1 | Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22, 1929 2d EE do Do. 2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 38,1930 Nd do 3 | Dee. 1,1930 { Mar. 3,1931 93 lai do_._ Tod can 1 | Dec. 17,1931 | July 16, 1932 203] ox do J oh N. Garner, of exas. 2 | Dec. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 895... doz. it ao xg nl 84... 5 1 | Mar. 9,1933 | June 15,1933 99 | Key Pitman, of Ne- | Henry T. Rainey, vada. of Illinois. 2 | Jan. 3,1934 | June 18,1934 167): us QAO lid snk100 74th... ost 1| Jan. 3,1935 | Aug. 26,1935 286. |... Er pm aR RIE Sl ae Joseph W. Byrns,2 of Tennessee. 2 | Jan. 3,1936 | June 20, 1936 170 (=. Hk ae TmtLea William B. Bank- head,? of Alabama. 75thz oe 1| Jan 5,1937 | Aug. 21,1937 020 aa AOL. oer Do. 2 | Nov. 15,1937 | Dec. 21,1937 LY ea doin. ei 3 | Jan. 33,1938 | June 16, 1938 1650. oa. O00 och nmi vii an 1| Jan. 3,1939 | Aug. 5,1939 Noa 0. aioe Do.% 2 | Sept. 21,1939 | Nov. 3,1939 ql elo CF Smet oe 3 | Jan. 38,1940 | Jan. 3,1941 866 (Zc QO iim mi oie ts Sam Rayburn, of Texas. William H. King, of Utah. Sith. x 1| Jan. 3,1941 | Jan. 2,1942 365 | Pat Harrison,’ of Do. Mississippi; Carter Glass,’ of Virginia. 2 | Jan. 5,1942 | Dec. 16,1942 346 | Carter Glass, of Vir- ginia. 8th oo. 2 1 | Jan. 6, 194332 Dec. 21, 1943 350 5s dol. risers Do. 2 | Jan. 10, 194433] Dec. 19, 1944 M5 fe iev gs Jr Ge 79th. 2. 1 | Jan. 3, 19453 Dec. 21,1945 353 | Kenneth McKellar, of Do. Tennessee. 2 | Jan. 14, 194635] Aug. 2,1946 0V GEE nendn Celis 80th........ 1 | Jan. 3,19473| Dec. 19, 1947 351 | Arthur H. Vanden- | Joseph W. Martin, berg, of Michigan. Jr., of Massachu- setts. 2 | Jan. 6,19483%7| Dec. 31,1948 861 = Ro. nn Sst... 1 | Jan. 3,1949 | Oct. 19,1949 290 | Kenneth McKellar,of | Sam Rayburn of Tennessee. Texas 2 | Jan. 3,1950%8 Jan. 21951 865-1 do. aa Do. Rod. 1 | Jan. 3,19513¢| Oct. 20,1951 20. 0nd Do. 2c dam, RAOFY Nn tr etd door oo Do. 28 Died Aug. 19, 1934. 2 Died June 4, 1936. 25 Elected June 4, 1936. 26 Died Sept. 15, 1940. 27 Died Nov. 10, 1940. 28 Elected Sept. 16, 1940. 20 Elected Nov. 19, 1940 30 Elected Jan. 6, 1941; died June 22, 1941. 31 Elected July 10, 1941. 32 There was a recess in this session from Thursday, July 8, to Tuesday, Sept. 14. 33 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Apr. 1, to Wednesday, Apr. 12; from Friday, June 23, to Tuesday, Aug. 1; and from Thursday, Sept. 21, to Tuesday, Nov. 14. 3¢ The House was in recess in this session from Saturday, July 21, 1945, to Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1945, and the Senate from Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1945, to Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1945. 8 The House was in recess in this session from Thursday, Apr. 18, 1946, to Tuesday, Apr. 30, 1946. 3 There was a recess in this session from Sunday, July 27, 1947, to Monday, Nov. 17, 1947 87 There were recesses in this session from Sunday, J une 20, 1948, to Monday, July 26, 1948, and from Saturday, Aug. 7, 1948, to Friday, Dec. 31, 1948. 38 The House was in recess in this session from Thursday, Apr. 6,1950, to Tuesday, Apr. 18, 1950, and both the Senate and the House were in recess from Saturday, Sept. 23, 1950, to Monday, Nov. 27, 1950 8 The House was in recess in this session from Thursday, Mar. 22, 1951, to Monday, Apr. 2, "1951, and from Thursday, Aug. 23, 1951, to Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1951. 270 Congressional Directory SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE Year 1888. ani niles LE ES ER IE A800. Si ns Date of beginning Friday, Mar. 4 of oo ot ia aiaal Monday, Mar 4h Cod. Co al Monday, June 8... a a Saturday, Mar. 4. 0 LR ae Tuesday, Jay odie: 17....00 alias iy] Wednesday, Mar. 4. o_o coos 0 IS Tuesday, Mar. 4... ooo. Merl te 20000 000 Saturday, Mar. 4. i asa Monday, Mar. 4... i 0h Friday, Mar sia oss doll.cli Wednesday, Mar. 4 =... .ofeo cna Dob 000 Saturday, Mar. 4... cea... baton HL nN Pharsday, Map. 4... oo. ‘Tuesday, Mar.4 lo. cuaadil dy BEE Ci Monday, Mar. 5... >... bondnie Tuesday, Mar. 4__ Friday, Mar. 4... __ Wednesday, Mar. 4. 1. 8 us Cos Taesday JJaneds. c=. Lenaoes oh Friday, Marie, oon: abso daca man add ‘Tuesday, June 26d = 2) Lanaoo Monday, Mar. 4. 5. Arnisen) Wednesday, Mar. 4.0. Cr Jon Spoon Saturday, Mian. 4 2 too ed Monday, Apral othr. codleonies wil nd a Monday, Apr: 12. Sr... ctl ay Je Les Wednesday, May 10... oC 1. cron Wn Tuesday, Mar: Lox ats Briany, Mar Boe os ce Monday, Mar 5. ty Ir {Friday WALT)EE Le th NE lS EE Monday, Oct-10: Wednesday, Mar. 4. co eo Monday Mar a. a ak Saturday Mar ae Thursday, Marad oo aE Monday, Mond Looe ire HTER En ea Re een SS Saturday Mar. 4 ce oo RNa ai Thursday, Mar. 4. Tuesday, Mar. 4__ Monday, Mar. 5__. Friday, Map. 4 aaa Wednesday, Mar. 4... Nonday Mar. do we Monday July loia Saturday, Mar. 4. oa, Date of adjournment Friday, Mar. 4. Monday, Mar. 4. Friday, June 26. Saturday, Mar. 4. Thursday, July 19. Thursday, Mar. 5. Thursday, Mar. 6. Tuesday, Mar. 7. Monday, Mar. 4. ‘Wednesday, Mar. 9. Tuesday, Mar. 17. Friday, Mar. 10. Monday, Mar. 15. Thursday, Mar. 20. Friday, Mar. 23. Thursday, Mar. 13. Monday, Apr. 11. Saturday, Mar. 14. ‘Wednesday, June 16. Thursday, Mar. 10. Thursday, June 28. Thursday, Mar. 28. Saturday, Mar. 14. Saturday, Mar. 11. Saturday, Apr. 20. Thursday, Apr. 22. Saturday, May 27. ‘Wednesday, Mar. 26. ‘Wednesday, Mar. 24. Saturday, Mar. 17. Friday, May 20. Saturday, Oct. 29. Thursday, Apr. 2. Tuesday, Apr. 2. Friday, Apr. 15. Wednesday, Mar. 10. Saturday, Mar. 9. Thursday, Mar. 19. Saturday, Mar. 18. Saturday, Mar. 6. Monday, Mar. 17. Friday, Mar. 16. Tuesday, Mar. 15. Wednesday, Mar. 18. Tuesday, Mar. 5. Monday, July 21. Monday, Mar. 6. Statzstical 271 COURT OF IMPEACHMENT The Senate has sat as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the following accused officials, with the result stated, for the periods named: WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges dismissed for want of jurisdiction: Monday, December 17, 1798 to Monday, January 14, 1799. JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United States district court for the district of New Hampshire; removed from office; Thursday, March 3, 1803, to Monday, March 12, 1804. * SAMUEL CHASE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; acquitted; Friday, November 30, 1804, to March 1, 1805. JAMES H. PECK, judge of the United States district court for the district of Missouri; acquitted; Monday, April 26, 1830, to Monday, January 31, 1831. WEST H. HUMPHREYS, judge of the United States district court for the middle, eastern, and western districts of Tennessee; removed from office; Wednes-day, May 7, 1862, to Thursday, June 26, 1862. ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States; acquitted; Tuesday, February 25, 1868, to Tuesday, May 26, 1868. WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3, 1876, to Tuesday, August 1, 1876. CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States district court for the northern district of Florida; acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904, to Monday, Feb-ruary 27, 1905. ROBERT W. ARCHBALD, associate judge, United States Commerce Court; removed from office; Saturday, July 13, 1912, to Monday, January 13, 1913. GEORGE W. ENGLISH, judge of the United States district court for the eastern district of Illinois; resigned office November 4, 1926; Court of Impeach-ment adjourned to December 13, 1926, when, on request of House managers, impeachment proceedings were dismissed. HAROLD LOUDERBACK, judge of the United States district court for the northern district of California; acquitted; Monday, May 15, 1933, to Wednesday, May 24, 1933. HALSTED L. RITTER, judge of the United States district court for the southern district of Florida; removed from office; Monday, April 6, 1936, to Friday, April 17, 1936. 272 Congressional Directory VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS IN 1946, 1948, AND 1950 [The figures show the vote for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official statistics] Vote State 1946 1948 1950 Total vote cast in 1950 Democrat | Republican| Democrat |Republican| Democrat | Republican Alabama._______. Ti BT bi Le 185, 534 35, 341 a CL 2164, 011 Arizona___ 80, 415 35,0290 Soo ho 185, 092 AT ANSAS. oe cia mmm 5 mh wn mmm 216, 401 302, 686 California 1,167, 161 1,428,007 f= =] [) o— MH 15) fey ry D — B <= -Ra) al IE TB HI oS I en 1 LS TR Ba i 1 J 5 Tr Lv 1 | Alabama. ooriabaaehag al 11 3 7 7 6 8 8 9 9 10] 9 ara 9 ATIZONG 4. na er YR ral ae Ere he ea eS 21 1 2 Arkansas. b.oC coin oi Te Ee 11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 TT 7 Californie. ornare fe al al dS ah 22 2 3 4 6 7 S[-11-(20°7" 23 CoIorad0. ct I ai oH ag oe le HR, Be A 21 1 2 3 4-14 4 Connecticut... 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5:50 6 Delaware. _____._. 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11% 1 Blorida ty tones sana heb asthe 21 1 1 2 2 2 3 4] 5 6 Georgia...0 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 O-1 10 AI EILo12-110: 10 BARN. oon pia ee en Ee se 21 xz 1 2:12 2 TIN0IS. Jo chan hoe A a 31 1 3 7 LI fel U2 EE LR Bat DE 8 er BL RE By RS Indiana... Loi. Sin hele AST RL 21 3 sal B ea i el Ea bE ER a bE Re bd ERE BR {a SE TH BSC Da ee Rane Fl 200 he 22 2 6 9 1 11 11 11 9 8 Kansas... toi: Vad [Rd Bal et Lt Ln Si] EE en bo Bae 1 3 7 8 8 Selion7 6 Kentucky. 2 6 10 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 11 11 11 9 9 Louisiana... if Lox aleog = 1] 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 9 8| 8 8 Maine... ule a ak lig 37 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4| 3 3 Maryland_..___.. 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6: [76 6 Massachusetts..." “S11 14 | “17.0313 13 12 10-11] 10 11° "12:) ‘13 14 1-16: | 15 | 14 Michigans. oor ae eek 2] 3 4 6 9 11 12 12 13: 17 17 MinneSolay tr rlre fo 22 2 3 5 Tz 9 10] 9 9 Mississippl... ol £1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 S| = 7 Missonri. rioa a 1 2 5 7 9 E1814 0 S150) = 16 L=a67 | 18 1813 3(GEAR lint Sod 0 Sed added HEE 20 hai il PUECS TR] Eis ls ol] ites ny polio]. inmates Baur 21 1 1 2 2 2 Nebraska tua iE le ef Lat 21 1 3 6 6. 61=5 4 Nevada. Ll et =rok 21 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 New Hampshire. 3 4 5 6 6 5 4 3 3 ° 2 9 2 2.19 2 New Jersey....--4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 81 101-12 {141514 Ne Ml eRi00 te rp a fe 2 Sd ot #311 2 New York. ..... 6 10 17 { 27% 341.40 | 34} 33:31) 33) 34 | 34] 37 | 43 | 45} 45 North'Carolina. 15 "10:1 12 7" 9531" 131-13 1.« 9 8 7 8 9 0 =10 [10 {11,7 12 NorthiDakotai] a a a me la rnd na wre Ci 21 1 2 3:59 2 Ohl0> det da oie he 21 G6 1a Io n= 100 c 201° 20 | +21 (211-22 24%): 93 Saathes eed ES Re cai RE LER TR EE) Be Ll Sion Bid) Bat REE SA 25 81 9 8 gn ne RAS Oe EE ane LE TR Doel Fa I ol WB tr 21 i 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 Pennsylvania.__.| 8] 13 | 18] 23 | 26| 28 | 24 | 25 | 24 27 | 28) 30 | 32| 36 | 34 | 33 Rhode Island _.__ 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 302 2 South Carolina__.| 5 6 8 9 9 9 ri 6 4 5 7 7 7 7-1-6 6 [ South Dakota rer ee a a et ot ene tn 22 2 2 312 2 | Tennessee... |... 2] 3 6 91-13 | 11110 $1310.10: 210-1 1011-10: 9:-10 OAS Lr A Yr 22 2 4 6 11 13 16 18 | 21 21 LG pe Ll a ER ON FU BER EY Had) Ba Os Resin Bod BOE et ot Bete pei 21 i 2 2 2 Vermont 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2: 1 Virginia 93 gost 91 | 1513 p11 9:1: 10. 210° > 1071 10-{ +9 9 Washington rE a Le a I Tele 21 2 3 5| 6 6 West Virginia Bo a et a fT Loe oS 3 4 4 5 6| 6 6 Wisconsin ty ob ue a fo oie 22 3 6 8 9. 210 SA di-11 1:10:05 10 Wy OD efre i a ei om 21 1 1 1 1h 1 Rota... co. 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 293 | 332 | 357 | 391 | 435 |435 | 435 1 No apportionment was made in 1920. 2 The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated when new States were admitted and is included in the above table: First. Tennessee, 1. Second. Ohio, 1. ; Third. Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; Mississippi, 1. Fifth. Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth. California, 2; Florida, 1; Iowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh. Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1 Eighth. Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1. Ninth. Colorado, 1. ; Tenth. Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. Eleventh. Utah, 1. ; Twelfth. Oklahoma, 5. Thirteenth. Arizona, 1; New Mexico, 1. : ! s Twenty Members were assigned to Massachusetts, but 7 of these were credited to Maine when that area became a State. Statistical 281 GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES State or territory Capital Governor Poli oy Hxpization Salary STATE : : Years Alabama i... Montgomery... Gordon Persons... .......... D. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 112,000 Arizona 01 0) Phoenix. .c.. 0 Howard Pyle C02a: ol. R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 10,000 Arkansas... icc Little Rock. _..... Sidney S. McMath_________ D. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 110,000 California... --.-Sacramento... Earl-Warren. ..._ loci... RB. 4 | Jan. 1955 |1 25,6000 Colorado.....-----Denver... .... Dan Thomton....----_____. BR. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 10,000 Connecticut. .___-Hartford... 1 Joh Lodge. ocean iit. oo R. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 212 000 Delaware ........ i. % Elbert N. Carvel....___._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1953 7, Poveriiiiun 500 Plogidn, odio. Tallahassee... --Fuller Warren. .-...cce-n---D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 112, 000 Georgia 21.0 Atlanta” 2 vo x Herman Talmadge._..._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 212, 000 daho. 15.000(hn i EE Ct Se Ton B. ” ol lo R. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 17 500 IS Jordancilo Illinois. oo. to i oce Springfield .._.____ Adlai E. Stevenson_.________ D. 4 | Jan. 1953 |! 12,000 Indiana... .c.iicea Indianapolis_..._-Henry F. Schricker......... D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 18, 500 Towa. So aoe Des Moines. _.___ William S. Beardsley._____. R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 212,000 Kansas... ..C Topeka... .....1 Edward 'F. Ayn. 00 ctu rs R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 110,000 Kentucky... -.-Frankfort... i-:--Lawrence W. Wetherby. _._. D. 4 | Dec. 1955 | 110,000 Louisiana. ___:i.... Baton Rouge....__ Bal KR ong. oi inna D. 4 | May 1952 | 115,000 Maine to v2... Augusta. -Frederick G. Payne____._._. RB. 2 | Jan. 1953 |! 10,000 Maryland. _....__ Annapolis. ...___ Theodore R. McKeldin.___. R, 4 | Jan. 1955 | 14, 500 Massachusetts....| Boston___-._______ Paul A. Devers jocouill D, 2 | Jan. 1953 | 20,000 Michigan... ...._. Lansing. ....72 ro G. Mennen Williams_..___.. D. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 22,500 Minnesota _._.___ St. Pag] oooh C. Elmer Anderson. ________ R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 15,000 Mississippi... ..---Jackson Colo.1 Hugh L.. White ..C..0.0l.0 D. 4 | Jan. 1956 | 115,000 Missouri-..._..___ Jefferson City_.._. Forrest Smith... ___. io. D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 10,000 Montana... Helena... John W. Bonner..........:-D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 27,500 Nebraska_________ Lineoln -_-:-3t:2 Val Peterson’ us To R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 110, --coc 000 Nevada...>i Carson City__..... Charles H. Russell R. 4 | Jan. 1955 7, 600 New Hampshire..| Concord. ___.____. Sherman Adams R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 10,000 New Jersey ....___ Alfred E. Driscoll__ R. 4 | Jan. 1954 | 320, 000 New Mexico... ___ Edwin L. Mechem R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 115,000 New York. _._..._. A Thomas E. Dewey. R. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 225, 000 North Carolina. __| WW. Kerr Scott il. b-osainlil D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 115,000 North Dakota. --_ Norman Brunsdale_...._____ R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 16,000 lo nt Frank: J. Iausche _...______ D. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 13,000 Oklahoma. ._..____. Johnston Murray... i... D. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 115 000 Oregon. u..c.....o0-Douglas MeKay_........... R. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 11,000 Pennsylvania. ____ Harrisburg... -. Jom S: .-. = RB. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 225 Fine... 000 Rhode Island. ____ Providence... Dennis J. Roberts. ____. D. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 315 000 South Carolina___| Columbia_________ James F. Byrnes... __._____ D. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 212, 000 South Dakota. ___ Plerreis. coos. io Sigurd Andersen.______._____ R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 19 100 Tennessee... Nashville. _.__.___ Gordon Browning. _____._____ Ds 2 | Jan. 1953 | 112, 000 Toxag.:. adr ih Ashin 0 a Allan'Shivers: ~~.__. __.. D. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 212, 000 Utah. 8c 28 10] Salt Lake City..._| J. Bracken Lee..._........__ R. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 17,500 Vermont: os... Montpelier. .__.._.. Lee E. Emerson... __._._... R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 2 10, 000 Virginia...== Richmond ___..___ John 8. Battle... .....: D. 4 | Jan. 1954 | 115 000 1: Washington______ Olympia 2 x ex: Arthur B. Langlie.._........ R. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 115,000 West Virginia_____ Charleston_.______ Okey L. Patteson._.......... D. 4 | Jan. 1953 | 10,000 Wisconsin. _.___.. Madison._._.___._ Walter J. Kohler, Jr-..—_.___ R. 2 | Jan. 1953 | 112 500 Wyoming. _._._.___ Cheyenne..__..__. Frank A. Barrett... R. 4 | Jan. 1955 | 110,000 .. TERRITORY 4 Alagks io Juneau. coho noobs Ernest Gruening ............. D. 4 | Apr. 1953 | 15,000 Guam Li Cite Agang. > turaan Carlton Skinner___.________ D. 4° Aug. 1954. Hawali i 25 12k Honolulu: 0... Oren BE. Long... ...0. 00 D. 4 | May 1955 | 1 16, 000 ISLAND POSSES-SION + American Samoa__| Tutuila___________ Phelps Phelps. io ue reais sede Gin alla ie Puerto Rico...... SwJuan...-...... Luis Mufioz-Marin___._____ iD, 4 | Jan. 1953 | 210, 600 Virgin Islands. ._.| Charlotte Amalie.| Morris F. de Castro-._______| _____| .____.__ Indefinite | 215,000 1 Use of executive mansion and fund for maintenance and expenses. 2 Executive mansion furnished. 8 No executive mansion; nominal appropriation for expenses. ¢ Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. Congressional Directory PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS President Vice President Service Congress 1 George Washington..__._._. 1 John Adams... ...%__ Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4 2 JohniAdams. c= oo vii: 2 Thomas Jefferson. .______ Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5,6. 3 Thomas Jefferson. __________ 3 Aaron Burriioniilol Uo Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. 1 budehit Sol MES 0 4 George Clinton_ _._._____ Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9, 10. 4d: James Madison... .o-llsrs Ao.d 5 Te eR To Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11,12. Doel cella od 5 Elbridge Gerry 2_________ Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3, 1817 | 13, 14. 5 James Monroe_____.________ 6 Daniel D. Tompkins_..._| Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 3,1825 | 15, 16, 17, 18, 8 John Quincy Adams_.______ 7 John C. Calhount-... it: Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 3,1829 | 19, 20. Andrew Jackson... .......{5 a do.5. 02h(8 Jf Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, 22. YE TadA En SER 8 Martin Van Buren.______ Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23, 24. 8 Martin Van Buren_________ 9 Richard M. Johnson._.___ Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3, 1841 | 25, 26. 9 William Henry Harrison ¢__| 10 John Tyler ______________ Mar. 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. XO: John: Byler a ah ase, Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28. 1: James K. Polk...0 11 George M. Dallas____.____ Mar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30. 12: Zachary Taylors... ........ 12 Millard Fillmore. _______ Mar. 5,1849-July 9, 1850 | 31. 1S Var mores. So sh cr TR EiSE July 10, 1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31,32. 14 Franklin Pierce....cocn-.... 13 William R. King §__._____ Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3, 1857 | 33, 34. 15 James Buchanan. _..________ 14 John C. Breckinridge..__| Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35, 36. 16 Abraham Lincoln. _________ 15 Hannibal Hamlin________ Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 38,1865 | 37, 38. Doday. ar to 16 Andrew Johmson_________ Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. 170 Andrew Johnson... 2a... 00.000 ao oon SE DE ele Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3, 1869 | 39, 4C. 18 Ulysses S.'Crant........... 17 Schuyler Colfax. _.__._.___ Mar. 4,1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41,42. 1D GET i TA en 18 Henry Wilson 6________._ Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3, 1877 | 43, 44. 19 Rutherford B. Hayes. ._.___ 19 William A. Wheeler______ Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3, 1881 | 45, 46. 20 James A. Garfield 4.________ 20 Chester A. Arthur. _.____| Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19, 1881 | 47. 91. Chester A Arthurs. oo. er ir Sige IE jaja Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. 3, 1885 | 47,48. 22 Grover Cleveland 7_________ 21 Thomas A. Hendricks 8__| Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3, 1889 | 49, 50. 23 Benjamin Harrison.._...._. 2%: LeviP. Morton. .-.. Mar. 4,1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. 24 Grover Cleveland 7_________ 23 Adlai E. Stevenson______| Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 3, 1897 | 53, 54. 25 William McKinley. ________ 24 Garret A. Hobart ¢._____- Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 3,1901 | 55, 56. Patt: ry pom daa 25 Theodore Roosevelt _____ Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. 26: Theodore: Roosevelt... .. lei oe eas cope fidindt Sept. 14,1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57, 58 Dostl net Loo cn 26 Charles W. Fairbanks___.| Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60 ow WilllamH. Taft... . 27 James S. Sherman 10_____ Mar. 4,1909-Mar. 3,1913 | 61, 62. 28 Woodrow Wilson. __________ 28 Thomas R. Marshall_____ Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 3,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. 29 Warren G. Harding ¢_______ 29 Calvin Coolidge... ______ Mar. 4,1921-Aug. 2,1923 | 67. : 80:CalvinnCoolidge.. Co 0 aoe Sar an oF Aug. 3,1923-Mar. 3,1925 | 68. 10 fr AR NT A 30 Charles G. Dawes________ Mar. 4,1925- Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70. 31 Herbert C. Hoover—_______.__ 81 Charles Curtis. ic =. Mar. 4,1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72. 32 Franklin D. Roosevelt__.__._ 82 Jom N. Garner... Mar. 4,1933-Jan. 20,1941 | 73, 74, 75,76. 1D Ty 0, SE oe A ER 33 Henry A. Wallace.___.___| Jan. 20,1941-Jan. 20,1945 | 77,78. 10 rk Bsnh Case Lal 34 Harry S. Truman.___._._. Jan. 20,1945-Apr. 12,1945 | 79. SS Harry 8. .Teaman.... o.oo). oii ae US LLY Apr. 12,1945-Jan. 20,1949 | 79, 80. 1h Ti Eel alin ond 35 Alben W. Barkley._._______ Jan. 20,1949- 81, 82. 1 Died Apr. 20, 1812. 2 Died Nov. 23, 1814. 3 Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senator. 4 Died in office. § Died Apr. 18, 1853. ¢ Died Nov. 22, 1875. ” Terms not consecutive. 8 Died Nov. 25, 1885. 9 Died Nov. 21, 1899. 10 Died Oct. 30, 1912. THE CAPITOL OFFICERS OF THE SENATE PRESIDENT Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate.— Alben W. Barkley, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. Aide to the Vice President.— William W. Vaughn, 510 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE President pro Tempore of the Senate.—Xenneth D. McKellar, the Mayflower. CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Frederick Brown Harris, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., 2800 Thirty-sixth Street. : MAJORITY LEADER Floor Leader.— Ernest W. McFarland, 4404 Windom Place. MAJORITY WHIP Majority Whip.—Lyndon B. Johnson, 4921 Thirtieth Place. MINORITY FLOOR LEADER Minority Floor Leader.—[Vacant.] MINORITY WHIP Minority Whip.—Leverett Saltonstall, 2320 Tracy Place. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary of the Senate (the Westchester, phone, WOodley 9153), son of Billie B. and Ella (Turner) Biffle, born Boydsville, Ark., October 9, 1889; educated Piggott (Ark.) High School and Keys Business Institute, Little Rock, Ark.; honorary LL. D. degree, Dartmouth College; first came to Wash-ington as secretary to Representative Bruce Macon of Arkansas in 1909; served continuously in various capacities in the United States Senate until he was elected Secretary for the Majority in 1933, with the exception of the period he served with the A. E. F. in France as auditor for the War Department, 1917-19; appointed by President Roosevelt as a member of the American Battle Monuments Com-mission; appointed colonel on the governor’s staff of Arkansas, New Mexico, and Virgin Islands; married Miss Mary Glade Strickling October 1921; unanimously elected Secretary of Senate February 8, 1945, reelected on January 3, 1949, and again on January 3, 1951; member of the National Press Club, Congressional Country Club, Army-Navy Country Club, Jefferson Island Club, Manor Club, Burning Tree Club, Alfalfa Club. gion liter Assistant.—Betty Darling, 431 Greenbriar Drive, Silver Spring, Secretary.— Betty Kraus, 1420 South Highland' Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary.—Juliette F. Tucker, 3109 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. 285 286 Congressional Directory Chief Clerk.—Emery L. Frazier, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE, Parliamentarian.— Charles L. Watkins, Falkstone Courts Journal Clerk.—Edward J. Hickey, the Westchester. Legislative Clerk.—Edward E. Mansur, Jr., 3205 Ravensworth Place, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. I F. Thompson, 421 North Thomas Street, Arling- ton, Va. Assistant Financial Clerk.—Joseph C. Ellis, 1628 C Street NE. Principal Glerk.—Warren W. Bailey, 2101 Cascade Road, Silver Spring, Md. Enrolling Clerk.— William L. Landers, 4821 Fourth Avenue SE. Executive Clerk.—Lewis W. Bailey, United States Senate. Assistant Executive Clerk.—Rodney E. Marshall, 110 Maryland Avenue NE. Printing Clerk.—Guy E. Ives, 221 Constitution Avenue NE. Clerk of Enrolled Bills.—Harry C. Burke, 2435 Thirty-third Street SE. Keeper of Stationery.—Andrew J. Kramer, 305 Longfellow Street. Librarian.— : Superintendent of Document Room.—John W. Lambert, 1351 Juniper Street. Registration Clerk.—James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS JOSEPH C. DUKE, Democrat; Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate; born at Bisbee, Ariz., September 4, 1907; married in 1931 to Miss Dorothea E. Hart, of Denver, Colo.; member of Methodist Church; Elks; appointed colonelon the Governor’s staff of Kentucky; elected as Sergeant at Arms of the United States Senate on January 3, 1949; reelected January 3, 1951. -Personal Assistant.—Marie Geneau, 127 C Street NE. Assistant.—John A. B. McElveney, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE. ry Ai P. Adams, 2748 Seventy-third Place, Kent Village, Hyattsville, Md. Deputy Sergeant at Arms and Storekeeper.— William T. Reed, 200 Forrest Drive, Falls Church, Va. Chief Clerk.—Grace I. Genzberger, 2551 Seventeenth Street. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Nicholas J. Lacovara, 4012 Edmunds Street. Cron) Equipment.—Edna Guilford Cook, 4219 Twelfth Road South, Arlington, a. : Clerk of Official Telephones.—David D. Jennings, 2024 Thirty-seventh Street SE. Clerk of Official Telegrams.—C. Aubrey Williamson, 3216 Twelfth Street SE. Assistant Doorkeeper.—Samuel P. Griffin, 2701 Branch Avenue SE. Messenger at Card Door.— Lawrence S. Rygg, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Messengers Acting as Assistant Doorkeepers.— Raymond M. Mooney, 2745 Twenty- ninth Street; Albert E. Porterfield, 2824 Twelfth Street NE.; John L. Mar-tinez, 2500 Twenty-seventh Street South, Arlington, Va. Superintendent of Service and Duplicating Department.—John T. Chambers, R. F. D. 1, Martinsburg, W. Va. Assistant Superintendent.— Benjamin J. Gilleas, 302 Audrey Lane. Foreman of Document Warehouse.— Arthur Wilkins, 312 Tulip Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Foreman of Speech Folding Room.— Wellington M. Gwin, 2001 Sixteenth Street. Chief Cabinetmaker.— Tillman B. Huskey, 2900 Franklin Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Cabinetmakers.—Domenick Bellia, 1415 Varnum Street; Michael J. Vanni, 3949 Ames Street NE. Upholsterer.— Elmer Cheseldine, 2921 M Street SE. Finisher.—Charles B. Rogers, 3614 Forty-first Avenue, Colmar Manor, Md. Superintendent of Janitors’ Department.—Robert S. Collins, 1365 A Street NE. Captain of Guides.—Harry C. Nash, 1356 Randolph Street. Postmaster.—Roy E. Riddle, 153 Senate Office Building. Assistant Postmaster.—James C. Williams, 320 Livingston Terrace SE. Chief Clerk.—Hilles R. Leslie, the Dodge Hotel. Registry Clerk.—Morgan D. Roderick, 10 Third Street NE. Forwarding Clerk.—Thomas M. Gilbert, 641 East Capitol Street. Branch Post Office in Capitol.—Juliet Gantz, 7814 Stratford Road, Bethesda, Md.; Louise Joubert, 510 Four Mile Road, Alexandria, Va. Officers of the Senate 987 OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY AND MINORITY SECRETARIES Secretary to the Majority.— Felton M. Johnston, 5274 Watson Street (phone, EMerson 4054). Assistant Secretary to the Majority.— Walker Totty, Westchester Apartments (phone, WOodley 1756). Clerk.— Dorothye G. Scott, 430 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. (phone, SLigo 9021). Assistant, Democratic Cloakroom.—Bobby G. Baker, 3224 Valley Drive, Alex-andria, Va. (phone, TEmple 7029). : Secretary to the Minority.—J. Mark Trice, 17 Worthington Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. (phone, Wlsconsin 2777). : Assistant Secretary to the Minority.— Howard C. Foster, Park Towers, 2440 Sixteenth Street (phone, COlumbia 8841). Clerk.— Dorothy M. Burns, 4 Worthington Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. (phone, Wlsconsin 5857). 3 Assistant, Republican Cloakroom.— William Brownrigg 3d, 1423 Sheridan Street (phone, TUckerman 2454). OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. John D. Rhodes, 3535 Williamsburg Lane. Fred A. Carlson, 2020 Plymouth Street. Gregor Macpherson, 3111 Forty-fourth Street. Herbert N. Budlong, 5032 Glenbrook Terrace. Earl H. Pendell, 2901 Queen’s Chapel Road, Mount Rainier, Md. J. Chester Wilfong, 227 Seventeenth Street NE. Charles J. Drescher, 3738 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant.— Robert C. Brooks, 2018 Luzerne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Clerk.— Elmer L. Koons, 826 Aspen Street. Expert Transcribers.—F. F. Chew, 1502 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va.; Joseph A. Koons, 3601 Seventeenth Street NE.; Paul J. Plant, 1831 Belmont Road; Wilbur T. Smith, 3110 Massachusetts Avenue SE.; R. Thomas Loftus, 1061 Barnaby Terrace SE. Government Printing Office Clerk.— Placidino Zagami, 1000 South Carolina Avenue SE. (phone FRanklin 7782). OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 161, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 958) Legislative Counsel.—John H. Simms, 2801 Quebec Street. Assistant Counsel.—Charles F. Boots, 5601 Nevada Avenue; Dwight J. Pinion, 1914 North Kirkwood Road, Arlington, Va.; John C. Herberg, 404 Hamilton Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; John M. Reynolds, 1923 Seminary Road, Alexandria, Va.; Harry B. Littell, 5869 Fourteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Peter W. LeRoux, 110 North Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; Everard H. Smith, Jr., 4637—A Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—Dale E. Isley, 215 Constitution Avenue NE. Assistant Clerks.—Salvatore M. Derato, 413 Lincoln Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Mary F. Leach, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE (Phone, NAtional 3120) | OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER The Speaker.—Sam Rayburn, the Anchorage. Administrative Assistant to the Speaker.—Robert T. Bartley, 6301 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary to the Speaker.—Alla Clary, 604 North Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. Eecutive Secretary to the Speaker.—John W. Holton, 2900 South Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Clerks to the Speaker. —Jane Morgan Lagler, 5423 Eighth Place South, Arlington, Va.; Lorraine M. Kimbrough, 5421 Eighth Place South, Arlington, Va.; H. G. Dulaney, 5717 Chillum Heights Drive, Hyattsville, Md. OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENTARIAN Parliamentarian.—Lewis Deschler, 101 Lucas Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Parliamentarians.— William T. Roy, 4550 Connecticut Avenue; Claude E. Hobbs, 3814 Forty-seventh Street. Messenger.—Joseph F. Metzger, 625 Riggs Road NE. CHAPLAIN Chaplain of the House.—Rev. Bernard Braskamp, D. D. OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY LEADER Floor Leader.—John W. McCormack, the Washington. Administrative Assistant.—Eugene T. Kinnaly, 1918 Park Road. Secretary.—James V. Hartrey. Legislative Clerk.—John W. Newman. Assistant Legislative Clerk.—Olivia B. Stevens. Clerk to the Majority Leader.— Martin Sweig. MAJORITY WHIP Majority Whip.—J. Percy Priest, the Berkshire. OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER Floor Leader.—Joseph W. Martin, Jr., the Hay-Adams. Administrative Assistant.—James N. Milne, 104 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Secretary.— Elsie A. Gridley, 2712 Ordway Street. Legislative Clerk.—Helen E. Morris, 8703 Milford Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Clerk.—Marion B. Gasiewiez, 1400 South Barton Street, Arlington Village, Va. MINORITY WHIP Minority Whip.—Leslie C. Arends, Berkshire Apartments. 289 290 Congressional Directory OFFICE OF THE CLERK RALPH R. ROBERTS, Clerk of the House of Representatives (the Wardman Park), of Rockport, Ind., educated at Indiana University, Northwestern Uni-versity, United States Military Academy, and National University Law School; enlisted and served overseas with United States Marines in the First World War; past Commander of American Legion post; secretary to Member of Congress from Indiana 1923 to 1925; secretary, Democratic National Congressional Com-mittee 1925 to 1930; county chairman, Spencer County, Ind., from 1932 to 1934; special officer of the House from 1930 to 1943; nominated Doorkeeper by Democratic caucus and elected by House at special election in 1943 for remainder of Seventy-eighth Congress; reelected for Seventy-ninth Congress; elected Door-keeper of Democratic National Convention at Chicago in 1944; elected Minority Clerk 1947; elected Clerk of the House of the Eighty-first Congress January 3, 1949; reelected Clerk of the House of the Eighty-second Congress January 3, 1951. Administrative Assistant.—H. Newlin Megill, 4405 Thirty-fifth Street. Secretary.— Mildred M. Hinton, 10023 Dallas Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Clerk.—Thomas H. Tear, 3004 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. Journal Clerk.—Bernard H. Ellert. Assistant Journal Clerks.—Raymond P. Johnson, Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va.; Francis P. Hoye; Bailey Swanner.’ Reading Clerks.—Alney E. Chaffee, 4321 Verplanck Place; George J. Maurer, 157 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Reading Clerk.—Lyle O. Snader, 9612 Merwood Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Tally Clerk.—Harry W. Kalich. Assistant Tally Glerks.— William H. Hickson, 5516 Broad Branch Road; Curtis Christianson, 893 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Enrolling Clerk.—James E. Kent, 107 Fifth Street NE. Assistant Enrolling Clerk.—Harry M. Farrell, Continental Hotel; (assistant) Louis Breskin, Carlyle Hotel. Disbursing Clerk.—Harry Livingston, 1650 Harvard Street. Assistant Disbursing Clerk.—J. C. Shanks, 2404 Twenty-first Street NE. Assistants.—Alice Sattgast, Anne Trimble, Alida Dement, Anna Hamell, Nellie Haslet, Mary C. Griffin, Michael Duggan, Charles J. Benner, Madeline Jones, Frances Morrison. File Clerk.—Dillard Rogers, 522 Old House Office Building. Assistant File Clerk.—Doris P. Shaw; (assistant) Robert M. Miller. Chief Bill Clerk.—W. J. McDermott. Assistant Bill Clerk.—H. T. Coiner, 2000 Connecticut Avenue; (assistants) John MecLees, 1815 Seventeenth Street; Omar Greene, 10 Thirty-fifth Street SE.; Madison Boyce. Stationery Clerk.—E. C. Burns, Stationery Room. Assistant Clerk.—W. S. Combs, Stationery Room. Stationery Auditor.—Paul F. Morrison, Stationery Room; (stationery assistants) Molly Parker, Helen Wright, Willard Stevens, James Pittman, John Penn, Lonas Hinton, Dan Moley, W. Dyer, Newt Woodward, Mrs. J. White, Joe Johnson, Dan Jackson, Dennis Mosby, Stanley Smith. Librarian.—Gertrude R. Brannan, Continental Hotel. Librarian Assistants.—Richard E. Richards; Wallace Smith; (assistants) David C. Reid; Jerome Shea. Property Custodian.—John C. Page, 1313 Twenty-first Street South, Arlington,Va. Assistant Property Custodian.—James S. Gibson; (assistant) Peter Lektrich. Assistant Custodian.—Irene McCallan. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS JOSEPH H. CALLAHAN, Sergeant at Arms, House of Representatives; Democrat of Kentucky; address, 1545 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Secretary.— Mary E. McGrath, 3900 Sixteenth Street. : Cashier.—Frederick M. Kissinger, University Club, or Brandywine, Md. Assistant Cashiers.—H. Eldred Wilson, 3954 Second Street SW.; Zeake W. John- son, Jr., 108 Carroll Street SE. Bookkeepers.—Sam V. Boykin, 55 South Aberdeen Street, Arlington, Va.; Walter J. Behrens, 224 First Street SE.; Margaret M. Loughlin, 2141 I Street. Officers of the House 291 Deputy ek Li at Arms in Charge of Mace.— Victor Hunt Harding, 2928 Mc¢Kin- ley Street. : Deputy Sergeant at Arms in Charge of Pairs.—D. Thomas Iorio, 144 C Street SE. Special Assistant Sergeant at Arms.—Leo King, 714 East Capitol Street. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER WILLIAM M. MILLER, Doorkeeper, 1732 S Street SE.; phone, LUdlow 1-2125; born at Pascagoula, Miss., July 20, 1909; graduated Pascagoula High School; Harrison-Stone-Jackson Junior College, Perkinston, Miss.; and attended George Washington Law School; married his nurse, the former Mable Breeland, of Laurel, Miss., and they have one daughter, Sarah Patsy, 9 years old; has worked in the House Post Office; as messenger to the Doorkeeper; Assistant Sergeant at Arms; Minority (Democratic) Doorkeeper in the Eightieth Congress, and elected Doorkeeper of the House for the Eighty-first and Eighty-second Congresses; served as Assistant Sergeant at Arms for the 1944 Democratic National Con-vention, and as Chief Doorkeeper at the 1948 Democratic National Convention; member of the Baptist Church. Secretary to the Doorkeeper.— Kathryn Ann Dunphy, 3715 Woodley Road. Deputy Doorkeeper on the Floor.—Daniel R. Jones, 2004 South Quincy Street, Arlington, Va. Majority Manager of Telephones.—C. H. Emerson, 216 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, Md Assistant Majority Manager of Telephones.—Earl J. Morgan, 1400 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Minority Manager of Telephones.— Michael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street. Assistant Minority Manager of Telephones.— Allan M. Ames, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Special Employee.—Landon Mitchell, 825 Juniper Street. Chief Janitor.—John E. Bennett, 3304 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Majority Chief Page.— Turner N. Robertson, 3424 A Street SE. Minority Chief Page.—Lewis J. Harris, 1307 Forty-fifth Place SE. Deputy Doorkeeper in the Gallery.—Ira D. Walker, 2412 Monroe Street NE. Messengers.—James F. McCoy, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; George E. De Witt, 2802 Devonshire Place; Morris C. Foot, 5425 Connecticut Avenue; Bill Ray Barlow, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Charles E. Campbell, 149 Carroll Street SE.; Archer L. Keeton, 4308 Newark Road, Colmar Manor, Md.; Jack G. Ginn, 1923 N Street; Gene William Porter, 5516 Fourteenth Street; J. L. Etheridge, 127 Independence Avenue SE.; Ralph C. Violett, Brandy-wine Heights, Md.; Edward A. Gerth, 2115 P Street; Streling Munro, 2130 N Street; William Henry Davies, 2114 Suitland Terrace SE. Messengers—RSoldier’s Roll.—Frank Cubero, 103 Fourth Street NE.; Nicholas Nicastro, 220 Upshur Street; Lucian O. Hunter, Jr., 1824 Belmont Road; Harry S. Tansey, 222 First Street SE.; Albert M. Smith, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Thomas J. Duffley, 308 Second Street NE.; Carthell Williams, 114 Fifth Street NE.; Homer H. Pirtle, 3118 N Street SE.; John J. Durkin, 323 First Street SE.; Eugene G. Bell, 4117 Davis Place; J. C. Bates, 1204 House Office Building; Ancil M. Reed, 3077 South Woodrow; Ben C. Mec-Cleskey, 3521 Brothers Place SE. DOCUMENT ROOM Superintendent.— A. 3900 Cathedral Avenue. Elmer Lewis, Assistant Superintendent.— Gilman Udell, 3008 Ordway Street. Clerk.—Al T. Griffith, 100 Fifth Street SE. Assistant Clerk.—James A. Good, 216 Sixth Street SE. Assistants.—C. B. Slemp, 2442 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va.; Edward L. White, 1429 Columbia Road; William Graf, Jr., 20 Randle Circle SE.; George L. Robinson, 2900 Seventeenth Street NE.; John Little, 1012 Quebec Place; Grady Perry, 20 Randle Circle SE.; Ray J. Ratliff, 2702 Thirtieth Sram SE.; Miles D. Simmons, 7201 Forest Road, Kent Village, Hyattsville, d. FOLDING ROOM Superintendent.—Charleton B. Gallaway, 3228 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Clerk.—John Moore, 4624 Butterworth Place. 292 Congressional Directory Shipping Clerk.—Barbara J. Scott, 12316 Judson Road, Silver Spring, Md. Foreman.—W. Swem Elgin, Clifton, Va. Assistant Foreman.—Calvin Kimbrough, 5421 Eighth Place South, Arlington, Va. Clerks.—Mary ©. Vehue, 936 Madison Street; Sally Morgan, 215 Constitution Avenue NE.; Marie M. Budd, 1420 Harvard Street. MINORITY OFFICIALS Minority Clerk.—Irving W. Swanson. Minority Sergeant at Arms.— William F. Russell. Minority Doorkeeper.—T. J. Kennamer. Minority Postmaster.—Beecher Hess. Minority Pair Clerk.—James P. Griffin. Minority Employee.—John McCabe. CAUCUS ROOMS Magority.— Truman Ward, 3901 Illinois Avenue. Minority.—Sadie Molineu, Lanham, Md. OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER POST OFFICE IN OLD HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING FINIS E. SCOTT, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road; born in Tennessee and is still a citizen of that State; immediately before coming to Washington as secretary to Hon. Finis J. Garrett, then Congressman from the Ninth District of Tennessee, was Superintendent of Public Instruction of Dyer County, Tenn.; served as assist-ant postmaster of the House of Representatives during greater part of Woodrow Wilson era in Washington; married Helen Gardiner of Florida and Rhode Island; elected Postmaster of House in December 1931 and served until January 1947; minority employee on floor of House through Eightieth Congress; again elected + Postmaster of House on January 3, 1949; and reelected on January 3, 1951. Assistant Postmaster.—Edward B. Carney, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE. Registry, Stamp, and Money Order Clerk.—John V. Curry, 213 Gundry Drive, Falls Church, Va.; assistant, Johnnie G. Nazary, 3400 B Street SE.; as-sistant, Oliver G. Oja, 1201 North Kennebec Street, Arlington, Va. Special Marl Clerk.— Vincent R. Murphy, 312 Second Street NE. Eeakd Maal Distributors.—Day Clerks, Claude Jones, Jr., 738 Longfellow Street; Larry Weldon Hooper, 128 C Street NE. Night clerks, George M. Bowman, Jr., 3339 C Street SE.; Otis T. Bradley, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE. MISCELLANEOUS Delivery and Collection Messengers.—David G. Phillips, 221 B Street NE.; Thomas J. Kilduff, 3208 Seventeenth Street; John H. Scanlon, 2775 Naylor Road SE.; Lonnie W. Franklin, 221 Second Street SE.; Horace Hagenlocker, 704 Longfellow Street; Chester A. Coutant, 211 Delaware Avenue SW.; Gerald Elwood, 315 New Jersey Avenue SE.; Jethro Switzer, 111 Fourth Street SE.; Richard Hall Vandoren, 7 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Richard A. Jones, 214 Second Street NE.; Harold L. Blakely, 128 C Street NE.; Burton Parker, 128 C Street NE.; Max Neil Akers, 302 East Capitol Street; Randolph Smith, 4357 Nichols Avenue SW.; Paul G. Nitz, 302 East Capitol Street; James W. Hayes, 235 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Dallas Groce, 202 First Street SE.; Willard Dixon, 106 C Street SE.; Charles A. Puryear, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue SE.; Edward R. Mathews, 5625. Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md.; John T. Coleman, 137 Independence Avenue SE.; Willie Gilstrap, 316 Thirty-fourth Street SE.; Juan J. Manzanares, 106 C Street SE.; Clyde C. Dean, 727 Northhampton Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Rudolph Gryalva, 1332 Thirty-first Street; Matthew W. Norman, 1703 New Hamp-shire Avenue; John Sysak, 4319 First Street SE.; Edward J. Shaw, Jr., 5704 Sixteetnh Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL Clerk in Charge—H. Elmo Taylor, 1733 P Street SE. Officers of the House 293 BRANCH POST OFFICE IN NEW HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING Registry, Stamp, and Money Order Clerk.— William J. Burkhead, 137 Edgewood Street, Baltimore, Md.; Assistant, James N. Wolfe, 4-D Ridge Road, Green-belt, Md.; assistant, Dana H. Long, 233 Pennsylvania avenue SE. Foreman of Mail Platforms.—Orlie V. Barker, 233 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES (Room F-7, Capitol. Phone, branch 318) Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. W. L. Fenstermacher, 2929 Connecticut Avenue. Roy L. Whitman, 4820 Linnean Avenue. F. S. Milberg, 5032 Massachusetts Avenue. Elmer B. Clark, 604 Bennington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Frank E. Battaglia, 414 Ethan Allen Avenue, TakomaPark, Md. Claude S. Scheckel, 6 East Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Clerk.—Charles H. Parkman, 1003 Taylor Street NE. Assistant Clerk.—Paul L. Miller, Shady Side, Md. Expert Transcribers.—Charles T. Dulin, 2801 Fifteenth Street; Howard J. Butter- worth, 3221 Connecticut Avenue; Sidney W. Williston, 1830 Longford Drive, Hyattsville, Md.; Beulah Burns, 3314 Mount Pleasant Street; Terese R. Willmett, 935 Bonifant Street, Silver Spring, Md.; Joseph A. Mayo, 616 North Emerson Street, Arlington, Va.; Dorothy E. Bedell, 218 Baden Street, Silver Spring, Md. Government Printing Office Clerks.—Bjarne J. Sigurdsen, 1060 Barnaby Terrace SE. (phone, JOhnson 29870); Harry A. Gritton, 4326 Third Street (phone, GEorgia 4616). p OFFICIAL REPORTERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES (Room 156—=A, House Office Building. Phone, N Ational 3120, branch 491) Albert Schneider, 7516 Fourteenth Street. Talma L. Smith, 3548 Brandywine Street. W. R. Graham, 6839 North Washington Boulevard, Falls Church, Va. Lanham Connor, 1712 North Jefferson Street, Arlington, Va. Ralph J. Sterling, 801 Butternut Street. Julian R. Serles, Jr., 1403 North Taft Street, Arlington, Va. Clerk.—E. Homer McMurray, 8502 Irvington Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Expert Transcribers.—Mary B. Baldasaro, 9702 Cottrell Terrace, Silver Spring, Md.; Ellen L. Fentress, 4922 North Capitol Street; Andrew F. Gallagher, Jr., 1735 Irving Street; Louis E. Reichard, 8900 Manchester Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Perry B. Smith, 1125 Wayne Road, Falls Church, Va.; Virginia Ham-mer, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. : OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL (Room 159, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 592) Legislative Counsel.—Allan H. Perley, 3636 Van Ness Street. Assistant. Counsel.—Edward O. Craft, 4826 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Ward M. Hussey, 3234 Wellington Road, Alexandria, Va.; Robert L. Cardon, 3334 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va.; David B. Carper, Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va.; George S. Skinner, 107 Prince Street, Alexandria, a. Assistant Counsel and Administrative Assistant.—C. Breck Parkman, 118 North-brook Lane, Bethesda, Md. Law Assistants.—Charles F. Simms, 2339 Skyland Place SE.; Lawrence E. Filson, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Clerk.—John L. Pestell, 1809 Twenty-third Street SE. Assistant Clerks.—Cleo A. Garrett, 247 Delaware Avenue SW.; William 8. Wilson, Jr., 5832 Thirty-third Avenue, Hyattsville, Md.; Marianne J. Riley, 1650 Fuller Street. 294 Congressional Directory OFFICE OF COORDINATOR OF INFORMATION (Room 546, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 1441) Coordinator.—Francis M. LeMay, 437 Belleview Drive, Falls Church, Va. Executive Assistant.—Jesse Laventhol, 1431 Montana Avenue NE. Research Specialist.—Lawrence Sullivan, 6308 Oakridge Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Editors.—Samuel R. Davenport, 407 South Cherry Street, Falls Church, Va.; Oscar L. Hume, 5008 Newport Avenue. Librarian.— Mary M. Barlow, the Shoreham. Secretary to Coordinator.—E. A. Wilkins, 4908 Westway Drive. Clerks.— Marjorie E. Noone, R. F. D. 1, Sterling, Va.; Helen Roberts, 2801 Quebec Street. MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, NAtional 3120, branch 209) Clerk in Charge at the Capitol.—Ralph L. Harris, 1830 Park Road. CONGRESSIONAL DAILY DIGEST (Room 71, the Capitol. Phone, NAtional 3120, branches 334 and 335) Senate Editor.—Floyd M. Riddick, Manassas, Va. Senate Reporter.—Frederick H. Green, Braddock Road, R. F. D., Clifton, Va. Senate Secretary.— Elizabeth Gilmore, 2150 Pennsylvania Avenue. House Editor.—Jerry E. Allen, 5906 Forest Road, Cheverly, Md. House Reporter—John F. Haley, 4018 Tenth Street NE. House Secretary.—Josephine McCue, 5117 Linnean Avenue. CAPITOL PAGE SCHOOL (Library of Congress, third floor. Phone, N Ational 3120, branches 303 and 996) Principal.—Ruth H. McRae, 3702 Thirty-fourth Street. Secretary.— Gertrude M. Coffren, 3502 Seventy-ninth Avenue, Forestville, Md. Chairman, Department of English.—Jessie Williams, 7131 Twentieth Street. Chatman, Department of Foreign Languages.— Florence C. Block, 514 Ridge Road Chairman, Department of Science and Mathematics.—Richard Feldman, 713 West Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Charmin, Department of Social Studies.—Fred H. Hilton, Jr., 2515 Thirteenth treet. ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL ARCHITECT’S OFFICE (Office in basement of Capitol. Phone, NAtional 3120, branches 95, 125, 126, and 940) Arehitect.—David Lynn, 3700 Quebec Street. Assistant Architect.—Arthur E. Cook, the Roosevelt. Chap Arilje) and Engineering Assistant.—Fred M. Kramer, 3128 Westover rive SE. Administrative Officer.—Charles A. Henlock, 520 Oneida Place. Supervising Engineer.— Thomas F. Clancy, 2101 Thirty-fourth Street SE. Engineer (Superintendent of Construction).—Edwin H. King, 4304 Reno Road. Civil Engineer.— August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street. Engineer in Charge (House Wing).—Charles R. Torbert, 201 Second Street NE. Engineer tn Charge (Senate Wing).— Timothy Murray, 908 Longfellow Street. Ciel id Architect and Horticulturist.— William A. Frederick, 1213 Crittenden treet. Chief Engineer (Power Plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. Engineer (Power Plant).—J. M. Cowell, 1601 G Street SE. Electrical Engineer.—R. D. Holcomb, the Olympia. Elevator Engineer.—H. B. Sommer, 7827 Custer Road, Bethesda, Md. Air Conditioning Engineer.— Miles A. Bonnar, 35—G Ridge Road, Greenbelt, Md. 295 296 Congressional Directory SENATE OFFICE BUILDING (Office at room 152. Phones, branches 138 and 810) Custodian.—J. Lewey Caraway, 2315 Twenty-fifth Street SE. Assistant Custodian.— Charles E. Alden, 1801 Lamont Street. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS (Office on second floor, northwest corner, Old Building. Phones, branches 142 and 143) Superintendent.—A. Emmanuel Ridgell, 113 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Superintendent.—Sam P. McGill, 2403 North Capitol Street. OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN (Office on ground floor, Capitol. Phone, branch 305) Medical Officer.—Dr. George W. Calver. CAPITOL POLICE BOARD Joseph C. Duke, Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate. Joseph H. Callahan, Sergeant at Arms, House of Representatives. David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol. CAPITOL POLICE (Office in lower west terrace, room 3, Capitol. Phones: Captain, NAtional 3120, branch 1051; secretary, : NAtional 3120, branch 102) Captain.—Olin Cavness, 4005 Nichols Avenue SW. Clerks.—Leonard Ballard, 314 Second Street NE.; Francis A. Del Balzo, 11708 Hatcher Place, Wheaton, Md. Lieutenants.—James V. Blakney, 517 Seventh Street NE.; William P. Reed, 127 C Street NE.; Henry Gorski, 3529—-A South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va.; Robert James, 1629 Columbia Road; Blair R. Miller, 1228 Westmoreland . Road, Falls Church, Va. Special Officer.—James M. Mills, 142 Carroll Street SE. Sergeants.—John Golden, 203 Maryland Avenue NE.; Marshall Tanner, 409 Thirty-seventh Place SE.; Edward Lurty, 212 Oakwood Street SE.; Harley Hylton, Engleside, Va.; Gordon S. Houff, 17 Parkway Drive SE.; Thomas E. Mulloy, 128 Eleventh Street NE.; John J. O’Leary, 321 Second Street SE.; John Cozmyk, 19 Fifth Street SE.; E. L. Stevens, 1508 North Durham Street, Baltimore, Md.; Clarence Miller, 1301 Fifteenth Street. TELEPHONE EXCHANGE (Office, first floor, west side, New House Office Building) Chief Operator in Charge—Nena C. Thomas, Greenway Apartment (phone LUdlow 17812). Assistamts.—Mollie Combs, 1122 South Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; Clare Mann, 4000 Nineteenth Street NE.; Elizabeth Cole, 2900 O Street SE. Miscellaneous Officials RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE (Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, branch 260) Ticket Agent.—Clyde H. Freed, 613 Lexington Place NE. In Charge Capitol Ticket Office.—J. N. Thomas, 1401 Sheridan Street. Ticket Seller, Capitol Ticket Office.—William A. Sigel, 1512 Buchanan Street. COMBINED AIRLINES TICKET OFFICE (Ground Floor, House side of Capitol. Phone, branches 1425 and 1473) General Manager.—Randall J. Richardson, 5701 Sixth Street NE. Manager of Capitol Ticket Officc.—Margaret Scott, 1760 Q Street. Ticket Agent.— Mrs. Sid Zins, 2480 Sixteenth Street. WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. i : (Phones: Senate Office Building, branches 1111 and 28; Old House Office Building, branches 317 and 573; New House Office Building, branches 1062 and 208; House Press Gallery, branch 1085; Senate Press Gallery, branch 1251) Assistant Vice President.—K. W. Heberton, Commercial Bank Building. Assistant to the Vice President.—George W. Shaffer, Commercial Bank Building. Superintendent.—G. T. Harris, Commercial Bank Building. Hose oy Senate Legislative Representative.—Joseph G. Corona, Senate Office uilding. Cable Regional Manager.—Henry G. Catucci, Western Union. Manager Senate Office Building.—J. D. Brittingham, 2000 F Street. Manager Old House Office Building.—Charles E. Payne, 102 Trenton Street, Arlington, Va. Manager New House Office Building.—Alma T. Patton, 1413 Downing Street NE. Offices in the Press Galleries: Senate Gallery.—C. Walter Scherer, manager, 3005 Vista Street NE.; Eleanor B. Lemmon, assistant manager. House Gallery.—James O. Mathis, manager, 2901 Eighteenth Street. Sep Office Press Room.—Carroll Linkins, Western Union, National Press uilding. RADIO STUDIOS JOINT SENATE AND HOUSE RECORDING FACILITY (House, southwest corner, fifth floor, Old House Office Building: phone, branch 1387; Senate loca-tion, 9-B, branch 1620) Coordinator.—Robert J. Coar, Fairfax, Va. Phone, Fairfax 320. Studio Director.—Helen Badgley Coar, Fairfax, Va. Phone, Fairfax 320. Secretary.—Pauline C. Kramer, 1708 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Engineer.—Paul M. Clark, 826 Fifty-first Street SE. Phone, LUdlow 13384. Advisory Engineer.— Clarence Bouchard, 2104 North Scott Street, Arlington, Va. Phone, OWens 6521. 298 Congressional Directory UNITED STATES VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION CONGRESSIONAL SERVICE (House Office Building, room 524; Capitol phone, branches 1080, 1030, 295; Senate service, extensions 2195 and 2196) : Director—Earle D. Chesney, Valley Vista Apartments. House Office Building.—Harold G. Lockwood, Mildred C. Lawler, Agnes M. Richardy, Mary H. Geary, Edwin H. Gantt, Pauline V. Byrd, Dorothy K. Ham, Velma M. Perkins, Ralph E. Riggs, Jr., Vivienne M. Balluff, Anna Belle Mahaffey. Senate Service.—Leonard L. Montgomery, Margaretta B. Dawson, Salvatore DePrenda, Rita V. Dettmers. UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION CONTACT OFFICE (House Office Building, room 248. Phone, N Ational 3120, branches 225, 294, and 2215) In Charge.—Robert L. Bailey, Westchester Apartments. Associate.—James B. Baugh, Jr., 120 C Street NE. Assistants.—Gertrude W. Arline, 1701 Sixteenth Street; Virginia Ehrenberg, Westchester Apartments; Edith G. Stamps, 3051 Idaho Avenue; Thomas D. Geer, Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Va. ARMY LIAISON OFFICE (House Office Building, room 224, Phone, branch 1079 and 1433) House Army Liaison Office— Lt. Col. Harold L. Corey, Fort McNair, Washington, DB. C. Maj. Thomas H. Farnsworth, 2109 North Scott Street, Arlington, Va. Capt. Lucius F. Thompson, 1020 Nineteenth Street. Louise Boak, 2605 Adams Mill Road. Senate Liaison Office (in Pentagon, phone LIberty 5-6700, extension 72621)— Lt. Col. John Lockett, 1221 South Taylor Street, Arlington Va. Capt. Maurice W. Lundelius, 704 South Arlington Mill Drive, Arlington, Va. NAVAL LIAISON OFFICE (House Office Building, roem 306. Phone, branches 1040 and 1311) Naval Liaison Office— Lt. Col. M. E. Roach, USMC, 604 Fulton Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Lt. Comdr. Edwin I. Carson, USNR, 5424 Eighth "Place South, Arlington, Va. Lt. Alma G. Ellis, USN (W), 3831 Porter Street. Lt. Nita LaTour, "USNR (W), 311 Fairfax Road, Alexandria, Va. Tommie E. Lumpkin, YN1, USN (W), WAVE Quarters Rr, Arlington, Va. Fabia R. Bourg, YN2, USN (W), WAVE Quarters K, Arlington, Va. AIR FORCE LIAISON OFFICE (House Office Building, room 304A, Phone, branch 1394 or 2079) Col. James W. Wilson, United States Air Force, 4223 Thirty-fifth Street South, Arlington, Va. Maj. Luke C. Quinn, Jr., United States Air Force, 532 Twentieth Street. Maj. Helen E. O’Day, "United States Air Force, 19 East Bellefonte Avenue, Alexandria, Va. (Senate Air Force Liaison Office—Located in Pentagon—extension 76240) Col. Albert L. Cox, Jr., USAF, 2875 Woodland Drive. It. Col. Carl E. Welchner, United States Air Force, 3422 N Street. Mascellaneous Officials GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE (General Accounting Office Building, 441 G Street. Phone, EXecutive 4621) Complioiie General of the United States.—Lindsay C. Warren, 3300 Stuyvesant lace Assistant Comptroller General of the United States.—Frank L. Yates, 4628 Reservoir Road. Administrative Assistant to the Comptroller General.—Mildred L. Schrudder, 545 Fourteenth Street SE. Legal and Secretarial Assistant to the Assistant Comptroller General.—Cleo Lucas, 7019 Georgia Avenue. Executive Officer.—John F. Feeney, 1425 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Executive Officer.—Donald G. Dudley, 11 Poe Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistants to the Comptroller Gemeral.—Frank H. Weitzel, 6294 Twenty-ninth Street; Robert F. Keller, 5808 Massachusetts Avenue Extended. Director of Audits.—Ted B. Westfall, 4606 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Heads and Assistant Heads of Organizations: Accounting System Division.—Chief, Walter F. Frese, 4818 DeRussey Parkway, West Chevy Chase, Md.; assistant chief, Steve M. Brown, 308 Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Adminastrative Planning, Office of (in charge).— Assistant chief, Ellis S. Stone, 4819 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Audit Division.—Ghiéf, E. Ww. Bell, 3525 Pavehbort Street; associate chief, Charles M. Bailey, 148 South Virginia Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief Clerk, Office of the.—Chief clerk, Ernest C. Bohannon, Reh 1, Box'i0, Vienna, Va. Claims Division. —Chief, A. B. Thomas, 3713 Yuma Street; assistant chief, W. S. Benjamin, 3405 R Street. Corporation Audits Division.—Director, Stephen B. Ives, 806 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va.; deputy director, Irwin S. Decker, 3315 Newark Street. General Counsel, Office of.—General counsel, Edwin L. Fisher, 5552 Wessling Lane, Bethesda, Md.; associates general counsel, Ralph E. Casey, 17 Bay Drive, Bay Ridge, Md.; Eldred N. Mahoney, 5509 Chevy Chase Parkway; William I. Morrow, 12 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Investigations, Office of — Chief, William L. Ellis, 19 Carvel Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md.; assistant chief, Robert F. Cartwright, 2022 Columbia Road. Personnel, Division of.— Director, T. A. Flynn, 3319 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va.; assistant director, V. J. Kirby, 2009 Lanier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Postal Audit Division.—Chief, Gary Campbell, 4812 DeRussey Parkway, West Chevy Chase, Md.; : assistant chief, Frederic C. Burgan. Reconciliation and Clearance Division. '— Chief, Vernon R. Durst, 3911 Twentieth Street NE.; assistant chief, L.. A. Jones, Herndon, Va. Transportation Division.—Chief, Harrell O. Hoagland, 5923 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md.; assistant chief, C. L.. Brodman, 2811 Aldan Road, Parkville, Baltimore County, Md. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS (Capitol Hill.-Phone, NAtional 2722). Librarian of Congress.—Luther Harris Evans, 3105 Garfield Street. Librarian of Congress Emeritus.—Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street. OFFICE OF CHIEF ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN Chief hatte Librarian.—Verner W. Clapp, 4 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, d. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN Assistant Librarian.—Solon J. Buck, 321 A Street SE. Exhibits Office. —Herbert J. Sanborn, exhibits officer, Box 144-W, Route 2, Alex- andria, Va. Information and Publications Office.—Elizabeth E. Hamer, 6620 River Road, Bethesda, Md. 90808°—82—2—1]st ed. 21 300 Congressional Directory ADMINISTRATIVE DEPARTMENT Director.—John C. L. Andreassen, 653 East Capitol Street; William W. Rossiter, assistant director, 6511 Colesville Road, University Park, Md.; Alvin W. Kremer, keeper of the collections, 1621 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, bt Edythe W. First, management officer, 3402 Gunston Road, Alexandria, a. Accounts Officc.—Kenneth N. Ryan, accounting officer, 9417 Glen Ridge Road, Silver Spring, Md. Buildings and Grounds.— Merton J. Foley, chief, 7313 Forrest Road, Hyattsville, Md.; C. Eldon Ray, chief engineer, 4844 Cordell Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Disbursing Office.—James A. Severn, Jr., disbursing officer, 1900 Seventeenth Street SE. Guard Division.—Joseph E. Mullaney, captain of the guard, 1345 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Pers Division.—Jacob H. Mason, director of personnel, 5448 Thirty-third treet. Photoduplication Service.—Donald C. Holmes, chief, R. F. D. 1, North Springbrook, Silver Spring, Md. Secretary’s Office.—Mildred C. Portner, secretary, 138 Carroll Street SE. Supply Office.—George W. Morgan, supply officer, Seabrook, Md. Tabulating Office.—John I. Meehan, chief, 2704 Fairlawn Street SE. REFERENCE DEPARTMENT Director.—Burton W. Adkinson, 5006 Baltimore Avenue; Robert C. Gooch, assistant director, 4820 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Aeronautics Division.—John F. Stearns, chief, 8 Argyle Avenue, Garret Park, Md. Air Information Division.—George A. Pughe, Jr., chief, Little Acorns, Washing-ton Grove, Md. Air Research Division.— William T. Walsh, Jr., chief, Clifton Road, Route 2, Silver Spring, Md. : Division for the Blind.—Donald G. Patterson, chief, 4105 Wisconsin Avenue. European Affairs Division.—Harry J. Krould, chief, 9116 Flower Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. General Reference and Bibliography Division.—Lucile M. Morsch, chief, 3438 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va.; United States Quarterly Book Review, Joseph P. Blickensderfer, editor, Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va.; Slavic Room, John T. Dorosh, curator, 5421 Branch Avenue SE. Hespanio Foundation.—Francisco Aguilera, assistant director, 2817 Eighteenth treet. Loan Division.— Legare Obear, chief, 6111 North Dakota Avenue; Library Sta-tion at the Capitol, Harold S. Lincoln, custodian, 736 Easley Street, Silver Spring, Md. {rsdn Division.—David C. Mearns, chief, 9 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, d Map Division.—Arch C. Gerlach, chief, 4421 Brandywine Street. Music Division.—Harold Spivacke, chief, 3201 Rowland Place; Duncan Emrich, chief, Folklore Section, 1517 Thirtieth Street. Orientalia Division.— Arthur W. Hummel, chief, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Chinese Section, Arthur W. Hummel, chief, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; South Asia Section, [Vacant]; Japanese Section, Edwin G. Beal, Jr., chief, 2226 Savannah Terrace SE.; Hebraic Section, Lawrence Marwick, chief, 127 Galveston Street SW.; Near East Section, Robert F. Ogden, 4204A Fourth Street SE. Brin and Photographs Division.— Alice Lee Parker, acting chief, 3911 Livingston street. Rare Books Division.— Frederick R. Goff, chief, 4431 Greenwich Parkway; Micro-film Reading Room, John P. Melvin, 1765 Q Street. ~* x Science Division.— Raymund L. Zwemer, chief, 5003 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Dany Research Section, Dwight E. Gray, chief, 9614 Brunnet Court, Silver pring, Md. Serials Division.—Clyde Edwards, chief, Greenacres Drive, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md.; Government Publications Reading Room, John H. Thaxter, chief, 854 North Kensington Avenue, Arlington, Va. Slavic Division.—Sergius Yakobson, chief, 2227 Forty-ninth Street. Stack and Reader Division.— Willard Webb, chief, Clifton, Va. Miscellaneous Officials LAW LIBRARY Law Librarian.—W. Lawrence Keitt, 2014 Tunlaw Road; Francis X. Dwyer, assistant law librarian, 4207 Oakridge Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE SBRVICE Director.—Ernest S. Griffith (on leave of absence), 1941 Parkside Drive; Wilfred C. Gilbert, acting director, 7809 Morningside Drive; Merlin H. Nipe, deputy assistant director, 3009 Thirtieth Street SE. American Law Section.—James P. Radigan, Jr., chief, 1905 Upshur Street. Congressional Reading Room.—Clifford M. Wilson, chief, 1516 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. Economics Section.—Charles A. Welsh, chief, McLean, Va. Foreign Affairs Section.— Francis R. Valeo, chief, 35 E Street. Government Section.—W. Brooke Graves, chief, 2040 Newark Street. History and General Research Section.— Merlin H. Nipe, chief, 3009 Thirtieth Street SE. Library Services Section.— Frank J. Bertalan, chief, 705 Braxton Place, Alex-andria, Va. Specialists.— Hugh L. Elsbree (senior specialist, American government and public administration), 2406 Forty-fourth Street; George B. Galloway (senior specialist, legislative organization, District of Columbia government), 4612 Twenty-ninth Place; Theodore J. Kreps (senior specialist, business organization), Cosmos Club; Raymond E. Manning (senior specialist, taxation and fiscal policy), 6343 Utah Avenue; Gustav Peck (senior specialist, labor), 2319 Nebraska Avenue; Howard S. Piquet (senior specialist, inter-national trade), 2209 Yorktown Road; W. Y. Elliott (senior specialist, economic mobilization), 660 Concord Avenue, Belmont, Mass.; Thorsten V. Kalijarvi (international relations), detailed to Senate Foreign Relations Com-mittee, 1422 Thirty-third Street; Meyer Jacobsteinr (senior specialist, money and banking), 2651 Sixteenth Street; Dorothy Schaffter (senior specialist, American government and public administration), 2816 Dumbarton Avenue; John K. Rose (special analyst, geographer), 6931 Georgia Avenue; John C. Cooper (air transport consultant), McGill University, Montreal, Canada; Sergius Yakobson (senior specialist, Russian affairs), 2227 Forty-ninth Street; Frank B. Horne (legal analyst), 813 South Royal Street, Alexandria, Va.; John R. Mahoney (senior specialist, conservation and public domain), 5511 Wriley Road; F. O. Wilcox (international relations) detailed to Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 4323 Albemarle Street; W. W. Wilcox (senior specialist, agriculture), 410 Essex Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Asher Achin-stein (senior specialist, housing), 108 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Halford L. Hoskins (senior specialist, international relations), 4807 Quebec Street; Burton N. Behling (senior specialist, transportation), 4447 Davenport Street; Charles D. Curran (senior specialist, engineering and public works), 3302 Winnett Road, Chevy Chase, Md. PROCESSING DEPARTMENT Director.— Frederick H. Wagman, 2105 Plyers Mill Road, Silver Spring, Md.; John W. Cronin, assistant director, 2129 Thirty-second Place SE.; John L. Nolan, selection officer and editor of Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions, 17 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md. Binding Division.— George E. Smith, chief, 7203 Trescott Avenue, Takoma Park, M d. Card Division.— Edward A. Finlayson, chief, 3207 Wheaton Road, Kensington, Md Catalog Maintenance Division.—C. Sumner Spalding, chief, 307 Huron Drive SE. Descriptive Cataloging Division.— Richard S. Angell, chief, 5327 Flint Drive. Exchange and @Qift Divisjon.— Alton H. Keller, chief, 4801 Rodman Street. Order Division.— Lewis C. Coffin, chief, 3141 Nineteenth Street. Subject Cataloging Division.— David J. Haykin, chief, 4958 Brandywine Street. Union Catalog Division.— George A. Schwegmann, Jr., chief, 3534 Porter Street. COPYRIGHT OFFICE Register of Copyrights.— Arthur Fisher, 28 Carroll Place, Kensington, Md. Associate Register.—[Vacant.] 302 Congressional Directory Assistant Register.— William P. Siegfried, 3029 Clinton Street NE. Cataloguing Division.—Joseph W: Rogers, 1108 North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Examining Division.— Abraham L. Kaminstein, chief, 5908 Nevada Avenue. Reference Divistion.— Richard 8S. MacCarteney, chief, 3601 Idaho Avenue. Service Division.— Luther H. Mumford, chief, Route 1, Box 100-G, Clinton, Md. THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS TRUST FUND BOARD [A quasi corporation, created by an act of Congress approved March 3, 1925, with perpetual succession and “‘all the usual powers of a trustee,’”’ including the power to ‘‘invest, reinvest, and retain investments,’’ and, specifically, the authority to “accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts, bequests, or devises of property for the benefit of, or in connection with, the Library, its collections, or its service, as may be approved by the board by the Joint Committee on the Library.”’] Chairman.—John W. Snyder, Secretary of the Treasury. Secretary.— Luther Harris Evans, Librarian of Congress. Theodore Francis Green, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library. Mrs. Eugene Meyer, 1624 Crescent Place. Adolph C. Miller, 2230 S Street. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE (Corner North Capital and H Streets. Phone, STerling 6840) Public Printer.—John J. Deviny, 3571 Brandywine Street. Pepa foubie Printer.—Philip L. Cole, 1206 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Plant Engineer.— Willard A. Anderson, 1314 Highland Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Planning Manager.—James W. Broderick, 4620 Iowa Avenue. Comptroller.—Felix KE. Cristofane, 3901 Forty-eighth Street, Bladensburg, Md. Director of Terseantl ai Preston Hipsley, 3132 Gwynns Falls Parkway, Balti- more, : Production Manager.— William Smith, 215 Emerson Street. Hedi Soin Vieng ulian H. McWhorter, 624 Philadelphia Avenue, Takoma ark, . Superintendent of Documents.—Roy B. Eastin, Jr., 5804 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Production Manager—Harry D. Merold, 146 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Superintendent of Presswork.—John L. Grant, 5419 Thirteenth Street. Night Production Manager.— Alfred L. Fleming, 1506 Overlook Drive, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Superintendent of Platemaking.— William S. McAndrew, 3303 Seventh Street NE. Superintendent of Binding.—Thomas G. Maloney, 3614 Seventeenth Street NE. Superintendent of Composition.—Morris H. Reaves, 3816 Twentieth Street NE. Technical Director.— Morris S. Kantrowitz, 741 Madison Street. Director of Purchases.—Daniel H. Campbell, 2411 Bunker Hill Road NE. Assistant Plant Engineer.— Lansing KE. Van Allen, Burke, Va. Assistant Planning Manager.—Eustis E. Morsberger, 839 Glen Allen Drive, Baltimore, Md. Director of Planning Service.—Emmett I. Hill, 4213 Russell Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md. : Paras: of Typography and Design.—Frank H. Mortimer, 5917 Thirty-third treet. Director of Plant Planning.—Grover W. Tribble, 4531 South Dakota Avenue NE. Superintendent of Library Branch.—Harry Falk, Catharpin, Va. Liaison Officer—Maybelle G. Fickel, 803 Forest Glen Road, Silver Spring, Md. Disbursing Officer.—J. Basil Perkins, 3027 Douglas Street NE. Traffic Manager.—Herbert A. Tuohy, 100 Maryland Avenue NE. Alla Stevens, Takoma Chief Storekeeper.— G. 7404 Glenside Drive, Park, Md. Cimon here of Congressional Record at Capitol—Ralph L. Harris, 1830 Park oad. Captain of Guards.—Jovica Gluscevich, 3733 Benton Street. Mascellaneous Officials 303 BOTANIC GARDEN (West of the Capitol Grounds) Acting Direc(Phones, tor— Doffice, avid N Lynn, Architect Ational 3120, branch of the Capitol, 125; home, 3700 WQOodley Quebec 5724.) Street. Assistant Director.— Edmund E. H. Sauerbrey, 1911 Seventeenth Street SE. (Phone, office, N Ational 3120, branch 267.) Chief Clerk.— Charles R. Bleam, 2340 Twenty-fourth Street SE. (Phones, office, N Ational 3120, branch 267; home, Vletor 7700.) CAPITOL BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS THE CAPITOL This building is situated on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac River and covers an area of 153,112 square feet, or approximately 3% acres. Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its width, including approaches, is 350 feet; and the geographic position of the head of the Statue of Freedom sur- mounting the dome is described by the U. 8S. Coast and Geodetic Survey as latitude 38°53’22.909’/ north and longitude 77°00’33.706’’ west from Green- wich. Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 5% inches. The dome is built of iron, and the aggregate weight of material used in its construction is 8,909,200 pounds. The Statue of Freedom surmounting the dome is entirely of bronze and weighs 14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Thomas Crawford, father of Francis Marion Crawford, the novelist, in Rome, Italy, and the plaster model shipped to this country. It was cast in bronze at the shops of Clark Mills, on the Bladensburg Road, not far from the city of Washington. The cost of the bronze casting and the expenses in connection therewith were $20,796.82; and, as the sculptor Craw- ford was paid $3,000 for the plaster model, the entire cost of the statue was $23,796.82. It was erected and placed in its present position December 2, 1863. SELECTION OF A SITE FOR THE NATIONAL CAPITAL It may seem strange that, in the selection of the 10 miles square for the territory in which the National Capital should find a home, a locality was selected with but a meager population. It may have been the intent to found a capital which should develop its own particular surroundings instead of attempting to conform with conditions then existing. But the principal reason was the lesson learned from European experiences, where the location of the country’s capital in a large city offered an opportunity for the coercion of legislators by the citizens of the capital. From the inception of the Continental Congress, either through neces- sity or voluntarily, it had moved from Philadelphia to Baltimore, Lancaster, York, Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York City. Philadelphia seems to have been the favorite location, and it was from this city that the Federal Congress, organized in New York City, took up its abode until its removal to Washington in the year 1800. The original 10 miles square was formed from territory donated by Virginia and Maryland, and the cornerstone was erected and fixed on April 15, 1791, at Hunters Point, just southof Alexandria, Va. This area remained intact until the year 1846, when the Congress transferred to Virginia the portion furnished by that State. : PLANS FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDING Following the selection of a site for the Capital, some little time elapsed before advertisements appeared offering a prize of $500, or a medal of the same value, to be awarded for the ‘most approved plan’ for a Capitol Building. Some 14 plans were submitted—some writers claim 16—but of these plans none was wholly sat- isfactory. In October 1792, Dr. William Thornton, a versatile physician of Tor- tola, West Indies, requested by letter an opportunity to present a plan as within the terms of the original advertisement. The request was granted and his plan accepted by the commissioners on April 5, 1793. Affairs seemed to move rapidly in those days, for on September 18, 1793, the cornerstone was laid with Masonic ceremonies in the southeast corner of the north section of the building. Thornton’s plan provided for a central section nearly square in area, surmounted by a low dome, this central section to be flanked on the north and south by rectangular buildings, with a length of 126 feet and a width of 120 feet. The northern wing was the first completed, and in this small building the legislative and judicial branches of the Government, as well as the courts of the District of Columbia, were accommodated at the time of the removal of the \Government from Philadelphia in the year 1800. 306 Congressional Directory BUILDING OF THE CAPITOL In the development of the accepted plans of Dr. William Thornton in the "erection of the first unit of the building—the previous Supreme Court section— three architects were employed—=Stephen H. Hallett, George Hadfield, and James Hoban, the architect of the White House. The erection of the southern section of the Capitol, which is now occupied by Statuary Hall, was under the charge of B. H. Latrobe, and in 1807 the House of Representatives, which had previously met in the former Supreme Court section of the Capitol and in a temporary brick building within the walls of the southern wing, known as the Oven, commenced the occupancy of this new legislative chamber. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811. A wooden passageway connected the two buildings. This condition existed when the interior of both buildings was burned by the British on August 24, 1814. The work of reconstruction of the damaged interiors was commenced by B. H. Latrobe, who continued the work of restoration until December 1817, when he resigned, and Charles Bulfinch, a prominent architect of Boston, Mass., continued the work of restoration and the erection of the central portion of the building, commencing in 1818 and continuing until its completion in 1829. During the period of restoration and completion the Congress met, for its first session after the fire, in Blodget’s Hotel at Seventh and E Streets, and soon there- after in a building erected for that purpose on First Street NE., occupying a portion of the site now occupied by the United States Supreme Court Building. They continued this occupancy until 1819, when the Capitol was again ready for occupancy. The original Capitol as completed was built of Aquia Creek (Va.) sandstone, procured from quarries owned by the Government. This structure was 352 feet 4 inches in length and 229 feet in depth. The central portion was surmounted by a low dome, and the sandstone interior was unchanged when the new dome was erected in a later period. The cost of this original building, including the grading of the grounds, repairs, ete., up to the year 1827, was $2,433,844.13. Following the completion of the old Capitol in 1829 and the termination of the services of the architect, Charles Bulfinch, in 1830, such architectural services as were needed were performed by different architects until the year 1851, when the building of the present Senate and House wings was commenced, the plans of Thomas U. Walter having been selected in preference to others submitted. On July 4, 1851, the cornerstone of the extensions was laid in the northeast corner of the House wing. The oration was delivered by Daniel Webster, and his pro- phetic utterances on that occasion have been quoted many times. In the building of the Senate and House wings the exterior marble came from the quarries of Lee, Mass., and the columns from quarries of Cockeysville, Md. This work was prosecuted under the architectural direction of Thomas TU. Walter from 1851 to 1865 during his tenure as Architect of the Capitol, and there- after certain uncompleted details were supervised by his successor, Edward Clark, whose term ran from 1865 to 1902. The present House Chamber was occupied for legislative purposes December 16, 1857, and the Senate Chamber January 4, 1859. The addition of the Senate and House wings made the construction of a new dome necessary for the preservation of architectural symmetry. The dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast iron, completed in 1865. The greatest exterior diameter of the dome is 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda is 97 feet in diameter, and its height from the floor to where the dome closes in at the base of the lantern is 180 feet 3 inches. The Capitol has a floor area of 14 acres, and 435 rooms are devoted to office, committee, and storage purposes. There are 679 windows and 554 doorways. The dome receives light through 108 windows, and from the Architect’s office to the top of the dome there are 365 steps, one for each day of the year. During the period July 1949 to January 1951, the old roof and skylights over the Senate and House wings of the Capitol, including the Senate and House connections, were replaced with a new roof of concrete and steel construction, covered with sheet copper; the cast-iron and glass ceilings of the Senate and House Chambers were replaced with new ceilings of stainless steel and plaster, with an oculus of carved glass and bronze located in the center of each ceiling; alterations and improvements were made to the interior of each Chamber, from floor to ceiling, together with air conditioning, lighting, and acoustical improvements; and changes and improvements were made also in the cloakrooms and other adjacent areas. These alterations were the first major changes made in connection with Capitol Buildings and Grounds 307 the Senate and House roofs and Chambers during the more than 90 years that the Chambers have been occupied. The design for the remodelling of the Senate and House Chambers was studied with motives from the same sources of early Federal architecture used by Thornton and Latrobe in the Supreme Court and Statuary Hall sections of the Capitol, and from other buildings of the Early Republic. CAPITOL GROUNDS The original Capitol grounds were at one time a part of Cern Abby Manor and at an early date occupied by a subtribe of the Algonquin Indians known as the Powhatans, whose council house was then located at the foot of the hill. These grounds, part of original reservation 2, were acquired under President Washington’s proclamations of 1790 and 1797, for use as a site for the United States Capitol Building. These proclamations authorized the appropriation of all of reservation 2 which, in its entirety, included the ‘‘Capitol BR and the Mall east of Fifteenth Street West.” Additional ground (squares 687-688) was acquired under appropriations pro-vided by Congress in 1872 and 1873 in order to obtain a better landscape sur-rounding in keeping with the Senate and House wings which had been added to the building since the acquisition of the original site. The purchase of this addi-tional property completed the acquisition of the area known as the old section of the Capitol Grounds, totaling, in all, 58.8 acres. In the immediately ensuing years, under a plan developed by Frederick Law Olmsted of New York, the terraces were built on the north, west, and south sides of the building and the entire grounds developed and improved. During the period 1910-35 the Capitol Grounds were further enlarged and improved by the purchase, annexation, and development of 61.4 additional acres. Public Law 570, Seventy-ninth Congress, approved July 31, 1946, redefined the boundaries of the Capitol Grounds to include as a part of the Capitol Grounds the areas immediately surrounding the Senate and House Office Buildings and certain border streets and sidewalks, with the result that the area of the Capitol Grounds now totals 131.1 acres. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS OLD BUILDING An increased membership of the Senate and House resulted in a demand for additional rooms for the accommodation of the Senators and Representatives, and on March 3, 1903, the Congress authorized the erection of a fireproof office building for the use of the House Members as office and committee rooms. The first brick was laid July 5, 1905, in square No. 690, and formal exercises were held at the laying of the cornerstone on April 14, 1906, in which President Theodore Roosevelt participated. The building was completed and occupied January 10, 1908. A subsequent change in the basis of congressional representation made necessary the building of an additional story. The total cost of the building, including site, furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the House Office Building with the United States Capitol, amounted to $4,860,155. This office building contains 690 rooms, and was considered at the time of its completion fully equipped for all the needs of a modern building for office purposes. ; NEW BUILDING Under legislation contained in authorization act of January 10, 1929, and in the urgent deficiency bill of March 4, 1929, provisions were made for an additional House Office Building, to be located on the west side of New Jersey Avenue (opposite the first House Office Building). The cornerstone was laid June 24, 1932, and the building was completed and ready for beneficial occupancy April 20, 1933. It contains 251 two-room suites, 16 committee rooms, each suite and committee room being provided with a store-room. Eight floors are occupied by Members; the basement and sub-basement by shops and mechanics needed for the proper maintenance of the building. The cost of this building, including site, furnishings, and equipment, was $7,805,705. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING The demand for a new building to be used for offices was greater for the Rep-resentatives, on account of the large number forming the membership of that 308 Congressional Directory body, and because the Members of the Senate were supplied with additional office space by the purchase of the Maltby Building, located on the northwest corner of B Street and New Jersey Avenue NW. However, the acquisition of this building supplied but a temporary purpose, and its condemnation as an unsafe structure created on the part of the Senators a desire for safer and more commodious quarters. Accordingly, under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, square 686, on the northeast corner of Delaware Avenue and B Street NE., was purchased as a site for the Senate Office Building, and the plans for the House Office Building were adapted for the Senate Office Building, the only change being the omission of the fourth side of the building fronting on First Street NE., this being planned for but not completed. The cornerstone of this building was laid without special exercises on July 31, 1906, and the building was occupied March 5, 1909. In June 1933 the building was completed by the erection of the First Street wing, construction of which was commenced in 1931, together with alterations to the C Street facade, and construction of terraces, balustrades, and approaches. The cost of the completed building, including site, furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the Senate Office Building with the United States Capitol, was $8,390,892. ; CAPITOL POWER PLANT During the development of the plans for fireproof office buildings for occupancy by the Senators and Representatives, the question of heat, light, and power was considered. The Senate and House wings of the Capitol were heated by separate heating plants. The Library of Congress also had in use a heating plant for that building, and it was finally determined that the solution of the heating and light- ing, with power for elevators, could be adequately met by the construction of a central power plant to furnish all heat and power, as well as light, for the Capitol group of buildings. Having determined the need of a central power plant, a site was selected in Garfield Park, bounded by New Jersey Avenue, South Capitol Street, Virginia Avenue, and B Street SE. This park being a Government reservation, an ap- propriation of money was not required to secure title. The determining factors leading to the selection of this site were its nearness to the tracks of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad and its convenient distance to the river and the buildings to be cared for by the plant. The dimensions of the Capitol power plant, which was constructed under authorization of act of April 28, 1904, and completed and placed in operation in 1910, are 244 feet 8 inches by 117 feet, with a height over the boiler room of 81 feet to accommodate the coal bunkers. A later additional building, for accom-modation of shops and storerooms, is located near the power plant and is built of selected red brick, it being 90 feet long, 50 feet wide, and 2 stories high. The building is located upon concrete foundations resting upon 790 simplex reinforced concrete piles; the superstructure is of red brick. There are 2 Alphons Custodis radial brick chimneys 212 feet in height and 11 feet in diameter at the top. The buildings served by the power plant are connected by a reinforced-concrete steam tunnel 7 feet high by 4% feet wide, with walls approximately 12 inches thick. This tunnel originally ran from the power plant to the Senate Office Building, with connecting tunnels for the House Office Building, the Capitol, and the Library of Congress, and has since been extended to the Government Printing Office and the Washington City Post Office, with steam lines extended to serve the new House Office Building, the Supreme Court Building, the Annex to the Library of Congress, and the relocated Botanic Garden. In 1935 Congress authorized the air conditioning of the Capitol, Senate, and House Office Buildings and provided therefor an appropriation of $2,550,000 and, in 1937, an additional amount of $1,672,000, including authorization for construc-tion of a central refrigeration plant to serve the systems. An addition to the power plant building, 123 feet 2 inches long, 79 feet 6 inches wide, with a height of 37 feet 10 inches, was constructed to house the refrigeration plant. This plant was placed in operation May 16, 1938, and was, at that time, the largest central station water-cooling plant ever constructed. Its huge pumps carry chilled water through large supply mains to the four buildings served. The refrigerating capacity of the plant may best be described in terms of the melting % 3 block of ice 50 feet by 50 feet and the height of a seven-story building every ours. In September 1951, generation of electrical energy was discontinued at the Capitol Power Plant and the plant has since served only as a source of steam and refrigeration. Electrical energy is now purchased from the local public utility company. 01€ HOUSE WING SENATE WING i —- TRCN en ST TN BS IY Ed poy Se Sed RSE eh 4 ; : 930233, 57,55 y34, 52, 30,28 26, ' in Real BL La ba id OL AIG 1 HEE azzyrwae 10U018S24HU0)) A40190.40(] Rif BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING TERRACE SENATE SIDE TERRACE Room. Room. Room. 1. Dynamo room. B-21, B-23, B-25, B-27, B-29, B-31. Architect’s office. 1, 3. Captain of police. 2, 4, 6, 8. Architect’s office. 2, 4, 6, 7. Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. 3. Dynamo room. HOUSE SIDE 5. House Restaurant Office. 5. Dynamo room. 10. Room for page boys. 7,9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Dynamo.rooms. 12. Char force. 14. Tile room. 16. Night electrician’s room. B-21. B-23, B-27. B~29. B-31. Architect’s office. B-25. House Appropriations Committee. House Foreign Affairs Committee. Office of Congressional Directory. Coordinator of Information. 8, 10. Toilets. 12, Fan room. 14, 16, 18. Storage rooms. . 19. Electrician’s storeroom. 20. Men’s toilet. 18. Repair shop, dynamo room. BASEMENT 19, 21. Tinner’s shop. 20. Men’s toilet. 22, 24, 26, 28. Carpenter shop. 33, 34. Secretary’s 35,47. Elevators. file rooms. 30, 32, 34, 36. Machine shop. 39, 41. Engineer’s rooms. 37. Electrician’s storeroom. 43. Kitchen 38, 39. Storeroom. 40. Plumber’s shop. BASEMENT 33. Congressional coffee shop. 35, 39. Elevators. 37. Kitchen. IT€ fi1022.00(T 10U018S246U0)) ¢le HOUSE WING SENATE WING b — 69 | 68 | 77 J] 78379] 380 J ae i) pully) AEA SEE ZEEE NE » Y= " bog ” 04 n ’ ay 102 : x 703 Yios FIRST FLOOR FIRST FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING Room. F-1. Rest room (Congresswomen). F-2, F-3. Subcommittee on Appropriations. F-4, F-5, F-24. Majority Leader. F-6, F-7, F-8. Official Reporters of Debates. F-9, F-10. F-11. Parliamentarian. : F-12, F-138. Office of Sergeant at Arms. F-14, F-33. Private dining room (Speaker). F-15. Barber shop. F-16. Committee on Appropriations. F-17. Storeroom. F-22, F-23. Majority Leader. F-19. Toilet. F-20, F-21, F-29, F-30, F-31, F-32, F-34. Restaurant. F-25, F-28. Elevators. F-27. Office, House restaurant. F-31. Members’ private dining room. Room. Room. F-68. Joint Committee on Printing. F-35, F-36, F-37, F-38, F-39, F-40, F-67. Committee on F-70, House Appropriations Committee. Appropriations. F-71. Daily Digest. F-41. Deputy Sergeant at Arms. F-72, F-74, F-75, F-76, F-100. Dr. George W. Calver. F-42, F-43, F-46. Committee on Labor and Public F-77, F-80, F-107. Senator McMahon. Welfare. F-82. Hearing room. F-53, F-63. Committee on Foreign Relations. F-83. Senators’ barber shop. F-44, F-45, F-47, F-48, F-49, F-50, F-61, F-62. Restau-F-87. Congressional Hearing Room. rant. F-88. Committee on Atomic Energy. F-51, F-60. Elevators. F-89, F-90, F-91, F-101. Office of Doorkeeper of the F-66. Men’s toilet. House. F-168. Women’s toilet. F-93. Annex office, post office. F-94, F-96. Railroad ticket office. F-95, F-102, F-103. House disbursing office. F-97. Clerk’s storeroom. F-99. Enrolling clerk. F-104, F-105, F-106. Assistant property custodian. burpping j01dn)) R4022.43(T 1DU01882.45U0)) [48S HOUSE WING SENATE WING ar a Yea] za 1 §2s0 4 FV25 2 1 27 : 28 2 Ms 40 ; Roruwoa I Senate Chamber / . 13 30 44 5 32 «a a ss a -Ee a a = = [ _ 25357 i a 3¢, 3 3 x Pes oleic At, 3 of b 37 _ 5 EIEN = IE : oO 4 & 4 PRINCIPAL FLOOR PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL "PO IST—G—C8 080806 HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING Room. Room. P-1, P-2, P-3, P4, P-5. Committee on Appropriations. P-40, P-41. House document room. P-6. Toilets. P-42, P-43, P-44. Office of the Clerk of the House. P-7, P-8, P-9. Members’ retiring rooms. P-45, P-46. Senate disbursing office. P-10. Parliamentarian. P-58, P-59. House minority leader. P-11, P-12, P-13, P-14. Cloakrooms. P-60, P-61, P-62. Speaker. P-15. Committee on Ways and Means. P-63. Formerly the Senate Chamber and later the P-16. Library. : Supreme Court. P-17, P-18. Elevators. P-64. Representative Leo E. Allen. P-19, P-20. Speaker. P-65. Minority whip. GG SENATE WING Room. P-21, P-22. Office of the Secretary. P-23. Secretary. P-24. Chief Clerk. P-25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. P-26, P-27. Official Reporters of Debates. P-28. Senators’ lavatory. P-29, P-30. Cloakrooms. P-31. The Marble Room. P-32. Room of the Vice President. P-33, P-34. Sergeant at Arms. P-33%%, P-35. Elevators. P-36. P-37. The Senators’ reception room. v P-38, P-39. Committee on the District of Columbia. P-40. Room of the President. burping 101d) fi1010040(T 10U018S246U0)) 91¢€ HOUSE WING SENATE WING Hall GALLERY FLOOR Representatives. Li © >" -GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING Room. Room. : Room. G-1, G-2, G-3. Committee on Foreign Affairs. (G-27. Senate library. G-14. Joint Committee on the Economic Report. G-4. Radio Correspondents’ Gallery. (G-28. Senate library—Librarian’s room. G-15, G-16. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Com- G-5. Representative Charles A. Eaton. G-31, G-32, G-33. Senate document rooms. merce. ; G-6, G-7, G-8, G-9, G-10. Press Gallery. (G-34. Superintendent of the Senate document room. G-17. Periodical Press. G-11, G-12. Committee on Rules. (G-35. House Journal, tally, and bill clerks. G-18, G-19. Democratic Policy Committee. G-13. Ladies’ retiring room. (3-36, G-37. House document rooms. G-20, G-21, G-22, G-26, G-28. Press Gallery. G-14. Elevators and Periodical Press Gallery. (3-39. Clock-repair room. G-24. Ladies’ retiring room. G-15. Elevator. (G-40. Senate document, room, G-25. Radio Correspondents’ Gallery. G-41, G-42. Secretary to Senate Minority. G-27. Elevator. (G-43. (G-48. Secretary to the Hearing room. Majority. : #0) x (3-49, G-52, (3-57. G-50. Representative Charles A. Halleck. G-53, G-54. House Administration Committee. Democratic Whip, House. = Ss. Ss oy Ss = tol)SS S QQ 81¢€ Ri: ws R GC LCP LC D. Secretary to the Minority. 10U08S24HUO)) R4030040(] P. Vice President. Clerk. R. Official Reporters. On . Journal A. Secretary to the Majority. Sgt. Sergeant at Arms. BE SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER C. . PONS SEATING PLAN OF SENATE CHAMBER ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate KENNETH McKELLAR, President pro tempore of the Senate LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary EMERY L. FRAZIER, Chief Clerk JoserH C. DUKE, Sergeant at Arms CHARLES L. WATKINS, Parliamentarian FELTON M. JOHNSTON, Secretary for the Majority EDWARD E. MANSUR, JR., Legislative Clerk J. MARK TRICE, Secretary for the Minority EDWARD J. HICKEY, Journal Clerk REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain William . Hendrickson, Robert C., New Jersey. Brewster, Maine. Arthur Utah. Karl South . Smith, Margaret Chase, Maine. . Aiken, George D., Vermont. . Malone, George W., Nevada. . Jenner, E., Indiana. . Owen, . Watkins, V., . Mundt, E., Dakota. Ives, Irving M., New York. . Robert Ohio. Kem, P., Edward, Taft, A., . James Missouri. . Martin, Pennsylvania. . Styles, Capehart, . William California. Cain, Harry P., Washington. Bridges, New Hampshire. . Homer E., Indiana. Knowland, F., Morse, Wayne, Oregon. . Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. . Hickenlooper, Bourke, B., Iowa. . Williams, John J., Delaware. Butler, Hugh, Nebraska. . Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. . Saltonstall, Leverett, Massachusetts. . Thye, Edward J., Minnesota. . Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. Connally, Texas. . H. New E., . Tom, Smith, Alexander, Jersey. . Flanders, Ralph Vermont. . Langer, William, North Dakota. . Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode . Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. . Cordon, Guy, Oregon. Island. . Hayden, Carl, Arizona. . Stennis, John C., Mississippi. . McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. . Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. . Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. . Robertson, Willis, Virginia. A. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. . Hill, Lister, . James O., Mississippi. Alabama. Eastland, . George, Walter F., Georgia. . Russell, Richard B., . John L., Arkansas. Gillette, M., Georgia. McClellan, . Guy Iowa. . McCarran, Pat, Nevada. . Magnuson, Warren G., Washington. . Ellender, Allen J., Sr., Louisiana. . O’Conor, Herbert R., Maryland. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Johnston, Olin D., South Carolina. . Murray, James E., Montana. . Hunt, Lester C., Wyoming. . Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. . Holland, Spessard L., Florida. McMahon, Brien, Connecticut. . Herbert H., New . Lehman, York. . Clyde . B., . Neely, M., Virginia. . Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. Hoey, R., North Carolina. Long, Russell Louisiana. Matthew West . Fulbright, J. W., Arkansas. . Sparkman, John J., Alabama. . Douglas, Paul H., Illinois. . Humphrey, Hubert H., Minnesota. . Johnson, Lyndon B., Texas. . Kefauver, Estes, Tennessee. . Anderson, Clinton P., New Mexico. . Smith, Willis, North Carolina. . Kerr, Robert S., Oklahoma. . Frear, J. Allen, Jr., Delaware. . Clements, Earle C., Kentucky. . Benton, William, Connecticut. . Dirksen, Everett M., Illinois. . Bennett, Wallace F., Utah. . Pastore, John O., Rhode Island. . Hennings, Thomas C., Jr., Missouri. . Welker, Herman, Idaho. . Butler, John M., Maryland. . Underwood, Thomas R., Kentucky. . Smathers, George A., Florida. . McCarthy, Joseph R., Wisconsin. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massachu-. Duff, James H., Pennsylvania. . Monroney, A. S. Mike, Oklahoma. . Bricker, John W., Ohio. setts. . Case, Francis, South Dakota. . Moody, Blair, Michigan. . Schoeppel, Andrew F., Kansas. . Nixon, Richard M., California. . Ecton, Zales N., Montana. Seaton, Fred A., Nebraska. . Young, Milton R., North Dakota. . Dworshak, Henry C., Idaho. . Carlson, Frank, Kansas. 10140) sburppng pun spunout) DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate KENNETH McKELLAR, President pro tempore of the Senate LESLIE L. BIFFLE, Secretary EMERY L. FRAZIER, Chief Clerk JoseEpH C. DUKE, Sergeant ai Arms CHARLES L. WATKINS, Parliamentarian FELTON M. JOHNSTON, Secretary for the Majority EpwARD E. MANSUR, JR., Legislative Clerk J. MARK TRICE, Secretary for the Minority EpwARD J. HICKEY, Journal Clerk REV. FREDERICK BROWN HARRIS, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain . Aiken, George D., Vermont. . Ferguson, Homer, Michigan. . Kilgore, Harley M., West Virginia. . O’Conor, Herbert R., Maryland. . Anderson, Clinton P., New Mexico. . Flanders, Ralph E., Vermont. . Knowland, William F., California. . O’Mahoney, Joseph C., Wyoming. . Bennett, Wallace F., Utah. . Frear, J. Allen, Jr., Delaware. . Langer, William, North Dakota. . Pastore, John O., Rhode Island. . Benton, William, Connecticut. . Fulbright, J. W., Arkansas. . Lehman, Herbert H., New York. . Robertson, A. Willis, Virginia. . Brewster, Owen, Maine. . George, Walter F., Georgia. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr., Massachu-. Russell, Richard B., Georgia. . Bricker, John W., Ohio. . Gillette, Guy M., Iowa. setts. . Saltonstall, Leverett, Massachusetts. . Bridges, Styles, New Hampshire. . Green, Theodore Francis, Rhode . Long, Russell B., Louisiana. . Schoeppel, Andrew F., Kansas. . Butler, Hugh, Nebraska. Island. . McCarran, Pat, Nevada. Seaton, Fred A., Nebraska. . Butler, John M., Maryland. . Hayden, Carl, Arizona. . McCarthy, Joseph R., Wisconsin. . Smathers, George A., Florida. . Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia. . Hendrickson, Robert C., New Jersey. . McClellan, John L., Arkansas. . Smith, H. Alexander, New Jersey. . Cain, Harry P., Washington. . Hennings, Thomas C., Jr., Missouri. . McFarland, Ernest W., Arizona. . Smith, Margaret Chase, Maine. . Capehart, Homer E., Indiana. . Hickenlooper, Bourke B., Iowa. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . Smith, Willis, North Carolina. . Carlson, Frank, Kansas. . Hill, Lister, Alabama. . McMahon, Brien, Connecticut. . Sparkman, John J., Alabama. . Case, Francis, South Dakota. . Hoey, Clyde R., North Carolina. . Magnuson, Warren G., Washington. . Stennis, John C., Mississippi. . Chavez, Dennis, New Mexico. . Holland, Spessard L., Florida. . Malone, George W., Nevada. . Taft, Robert A., Ohio. . Clements, Earle C., Kentucky. . Humphrey, Hubert H., Minnesota. . Martin, Edward, Pennsylvania. . Thye, Edward J., Minnesota. . Connally, Tom, Texas. . Hunt, Lester C., Wyoming. . Maybank, Burnet R., South Carolina. .. Tobey, Charles W., New Hampshire. . Cordon, Guy, Oregon. . Ives, Irving M., New York. . Millikin, Eugene D., Colorado. . Underwood, Thomas R., Kentucky. . Dirksen, Everett M., Illinois. . Jenner, William E., Indiana. . Monroney, A. S. Mike, Oklahoma. . Watkins, Arthur V., Utah. . Douglas, Paul H., Illinois. . Johnson, Edwin C., Colorado. . Moody, Blair, Michigan. . Welker, Herman, Idaho. . Duff, James H., Pennsylvania. . Johnson, Lyndon B., Texas. . Morse, Wayne, Oregon. . Wiley, Alexander, Wisconsin. . Dworshak, Henry C., Idaho. . Johnston, Olin D., South Carolina. . Mundt, Karl E., South Dakota. . Williams, John J., Delaware. . Eastland, James O., Mississippi. . Kefauver, Estes, Tennessee. . Murray, James E., Montana. . Young, Milton R., North Dakota. . Ecton, Zales N., Montana. . Kem, James P., Missouri. . Neely, Matthew M., West Virginia. . Ellender, Allen J., Sr., Louisiana. . Kerr, Robert S., Oklahoma. . Nixon, Richard M., California. 101040) sburppng spunoLy) pun ROOMS AND TELEPHONES SENATORS [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N Ational 3120] Office building Capitol Name rp Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone ATREN.L Co star 358 TVS da na de a SE ae NE Nr RR I ANDERSON. -vccvccnn- 344 BOB i A SE SC LO SL NB cas SE ERI BERNEID: vienenan 447 MBG des BAR BSE) Jo i a a er a ER Cee DENTON aes 354 196°) ee ONS Bae Bl aN So sd gy rn es RA EE OE BREWSTER. ..oue-2-c 428 bo0 LH I ts Bon SL fe a Rip Ey FRR Regal {epi dipegt lgmignatel 2 Ab JE BRICEER en oat 124 rs mrad mmm Se A i mS ee ee Se Se A A ED 2 BRIDGES... oo. 145 dS rh dn om aaa EE LE A a ama SOE LL BUTLER (Md.). =... 7 LE TE Tr BR Te SSA St pt ptt ME SRS PL lr greenies LL BUTLER (Nebr.)...... 125 0 EB SRR Stage pel Sam nd Wi Lm SR Tes, oS Relies le a Ep BYRD: Tata 209 NS he a ee SE a Ca Se I lien ART CAIN. ais 226 yy a BE RE Pee hae i feted BE mTOR SREY S Jee ei ne te 4 Pe SR CAPEHARY.. clic 241 4 NES GRR ne ho Tet eh fee nor bt wells Spel Sh btm 0 A WL RRL CARLSON. ors oalle 307 i12110 BR eins 5 Se Se dee oh lente Bee) ie deh 0 Re TL leg pe Cp gE KE Lat CASE ans B11 par] [0 NE RC SR ae EER lr Pe dip Und A WL eli s VE Sie d Se eur FAL COAVEZ onion 420 4 2 1201 PUbHC WOT KS oc rrr ioe a a al hs hi Cena and 200 CLEMENTS... oni 313 638 a HE RR SO a LT a ta AE CONNALLY. ican 453 969: Foreign Relations. iL a a or rented ahins 101 COBDON. 22 cadens 333 bE pe OE al ate J RB Rp La Cn Re SL 0 DIBESEN cvs omsimaos 1 ER bo ES Bealls Ne ie FRE CS ER IS Ee PRU BL Lae DOUGLAS ica 109 080 3 a A Se Ci ce Rea DURE Ll isa 2 aE Li RE LEE SS iin cu LE 0 FI Ci die Sheet san tn SR DWORSHAE---.-o- Lr BREE 1 LB SR a i esha ER Sep Th U0 0 Cg Ral i Se SR SRE PER Le ASTLAND. toe mae 411 N20 SiG marie wht on Veins in wm SE oe wR SEE Raia, BCION i nneei inven 304 i72, BG SRC Reb pe a Le 4 ar 8 Ln (1D E PL ae mS Bien ISR Da ELLENDER.....---- 245 815 | Agricaltureand Forestry. |... 0 od iis a I LD FERGUSON... 139 hE BES ee ee ee ts el 0, Ss a A en EL KG FLANDERS. an 311 SUL oi arr irre ree re eI te Sa Sl Se mn 5 38S Sun aR AE BREAD = ie ntsencn 255 EE BE Ss i Cr Sa Ei ei Ri I St 2 J CE Re EER RR Lt FULBRIGHT... .-c.-- 259 s br 1 IE Sele re er Ye Cp Lr ed] TS SR iy SSR RR GEORGE... =. ie 342 8173 FInanee So re a A RC ER GILLETTE iran 229 VRE i a rr A rs He EN RR Te rE SEIN RE I UR GREEN... ivan 321 OD enn ea i Ed A A in ona ran el Ms Ee HAYDEN «cdi. 133 882 -Rulesand Administration |. 0 0. ol a. HENDRICKSON... 460 rR I en en ER Wt A CLR Ei eS ch He HENNINGS. coool. aE Re Sy Re ER eS et MS CL A RE CE I LCE HICKENLOOPER..___._. 206 FO EE or dre hr A 2 HILL. Lovaas 441 oe de BE a ee SE So CR rh bo Mana pis py Bi Km HOBY.. oi. canines 337 Sd rs a HOLLAND a. oa 421 ES Ee UL Oe a Sa Uy DA BL Sed DORN SSR SE LIE EL HUMPHREY. ._........ 140 REE EE A HUNT Caco 252 Er Rail C00) bo nia ip Sash, nm Ct te be hg gn I 5 EE 360 RE JENNER: rans 121 1AE SRR a elt a TSC in bE SR I TA Be SS JoaNsoN (Colo.)__... 361 12321 Interstate and: Forelgn [Foor ie tor ag eer ul 100 Commerce. JOHNSON (Tex.)...... 231 186 Majorily Whip os ian emai p is ee Le JOHNSTON (S. C.)..__. 253 820: Past Office Sandi aCivil ov 0. shies se han ee Service. Congressional Directory SEN ATORS— Continued Office building Capitol Name ee Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone KEPAUVER......0. co. 443 3 EB Cs I De DO Sl Se le CC ER er ne a 1090 Eel aE ors IB Glns 0 LOR 0 Te Re re Se Ee HS 150 a RC 362 RA eB A Se ee KILGORE. -. cobras 353 BD A A a A la nics KNOWLAND . ___._... 215 FR en, lr Bg a gs SL SE BR LANGER... cei -nabieis 142 I RE a Sel Se LR OS a Le Rs LEAMAN.. cin ins anion 455 Lr TOR Sos aie I Cran Bae LR ete ee ros SEAN SIN of LODGE. iii sie 204 Eo ds a ad ea eB Ye Ae eB Rs ee I ala IE CT Mas 262 A Bn Sr Ct be Bo Se i eR a MCOARBAN.......-.. 409 PE BO Be A Sn a Ie J SE a ee et DE MCCARTHY... ....---254 AE EG DE ECR INR A SC BRS a CO SS 8 1 MeCOLELLAN. 437 335 | Bxpendituresin Executive |....ooo. otis eo ELON Departments. MCPARLAND... --.. 463 171: Majority Yieader. cou vifeaa JE Co BBE ss Tea MeKELLAR. ....._ 221 101 Appropriations... oo) Tage Ln ees LL 61 0% DronC0 oes er a es Sa IS ed LS I A GN En gE a SL 947 BOY MAGNUSON. _.__._._. 127 LU BR Ee i el DE DCE EL i Re Ll nL 3 MAIONE ova 404 2; ve He en se CR a re De TS Coe Re Mn 0, EE ERE MARMN 260 {GE ree ey NR CE Sa a ei Me a a Sr BN LR Er MAYBANK -454 832 | Banking ond Currency: |e. daa 2 fai MILEIRIN. iene 315 RA A Et a CN PE Ee I BL MONRONEY....---459 OAD: od er a a ha REP ee Se ra eR J. MOODY: «cv vnsicsens B90 UBB oh i tm i Pe A SEN en a lel a MORSEL. Loreena 417 1 Br BE LA La 0. LLNS C02 00 NL SRR iste rh 2-0 Bl MUNDI... vipa 432 (Ep SE ae a Eh na TL Ee se IN SE tae ER EL Ty fo, MUBBAY. oc vunras 111 805 Taborand Public Weliare. | cei oe ee raed 41 NEELYS oe 431 878: | District of:Columbin=oteechy Tones LENE 0 ELT 113 NIZON a 341 A eh BAN IE i eT) O'CONNOR... bY CA yf Se a i I RI i 0 SR a EE Sa RR EV Sa O’ MAHONEY... 232 845 | Interior and Insular tb. ooe. il 00k. or Fo. ousifasasas, Affairs. PASTORS. oo. Sarai en 448 ed a we lh A CL 08 Se sls SNe St li utes A | 4p BOBERTSON. -..-onr-105 LE IRE See te eel BT CME TY i PT TR RUSSEYY, So oon 410 807.) Armed Services io co Ime ee rman AEE SALTONSTALL. ....-.--141 847. Minority Whip: caaslaionl. ora Lain os ea SCHOEPPEL:: .o5 nun 405 a ee ER a TL ETT An we NSE Ba I ee ECE SB I of se ST SMATHERS.. onion 240 IVES el lis Se ei RR Ce TING ev Dae Se El ea I RL SMITH (Maine). ______ 329 LAL i Seat Se i ea Seed SON BE LC ns BE © EE eo Fa i Sma (N.C)... 345 Sb ee AER Rl CC TR CRE Sl I CR BC SS Sa al I Re Sy (IN. T):... 227 STAs ent Te al Eee Se ns ee a SPAREMAN. .......... 211 La RS a es Re Br LL SS i me Yr 2 oo i STENNIS. .. . ia aa 444 A a ROR Ce en SL he SO al 7 NE Bi of Sh fie aS STE RE PARR a 332 HR a ee rR TR Sane Te ON 4Me SE RE Ee De 458 1 et a En hs a i ad Ba Le 9 STA ea Ca I YE ROBEY. 2. oaiaa 325 0 a a mR Re in foe he BS NE Sh LT ie pA eee YS UNDERWOOD. __..__.. bE ES a HO CR Se iN ee SE Sie LT WATKINS... Js... 442 gE Ra ER ie Sa a Bi TR Se Ea Sl er Ee WELEER: wid.na. 452 I RleS a a I Eo ea, WILEYS Soo eo 427 2K ee a a i Sr SE i i EEE WILLIAMS... ... eo 347 wr RE Cem si a le ee ee Sa ea ee YOUNG... oven 107 i 1 1 $50 Le el i SS i Say Es Cn ed Re MA ES CR Rooms and Telephones 327 REPRESENTATIVES [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol A tional exchange—N 3120] Office building Capitol Name Cents Chairmanship Room |Phone Location Phone AANDARY.. i. oi 140 7b EE NAR sR RG Were CS ea a es ABRIL. ah dea 1008 GLEE ER eee Re a EB CY nl Aaa ne Be ABERNETHY...oc nnn 1707 i | Ee seh mT Ei rates | 1388 Ta bs ADAIRe saoiio 433 LL SR BE aR Sy 11 ERR TL etl LA eg EAR ADDONIZIO --.cunneee 1606 08 nla we bE Eee SE EE er Soa simile] ife we ALBERT. ulin iannmnn 1037 ee A eT Se I Lis SL ER he Se ALLEN (Calif.)._____._ 1622 B08 ma sd sl een bean NAL a ALLEN)... 1235 Le a A I bn TD a a CS el EN 591 ALLEN (Layo 1113 248 } Ss hh Ao SA ST eh 1S No nN R00 Se i Si at eth el Bi re ANDERSEN (Minn.)._| 1328 ER Ee VE ee SR en A ee a IR ANDERSON (Calif.)._ Ly BR EH Rs a Je I RL Be LE a I Ce RE A ANDRESEN (Minn.)__| 1533 Bld ci a aS i wan on | a I SE ep on el Se Bs ANDREWS... cunnnns 1724 1 ER a See A ered WE Tom A EE LR Ba ANPUSO i cin asinns 438 vii Er eRSo ee Lo A Man Bho Op oh ap] A ANGELL. iacivssonns 1314 Zt aaa Dr En Chas Ne we en LL SIRE 0 ae enim, 0 ORO ARENDS: otis 1024 720 NM nority Whip. ofc Ra Ci dor anes dian] Baa ats ARMSTRONG. occ 421 FE so CE enn BT OR OS Dl a Le RI ASPINALLY ise tannin 325 028 Mii Ll Lh ae Ri a Sila SED wn Hs ah bm mr hen Re EEX AUCHINCLOSS.......... 245 Zn ee SN AE OS Ee a ee AYRES ox iid ini 411 VHB Br Ree Let I ISL ov LOE TR 7 RT BAILEY. i inencnensas 1239 LT a a ae me BARBER. -i ironinanins 419 be en LL sn YO IA Wl To 1 le, Tae Sa hey EN BAREWELL. o-ooa. 439 O47 der a ren ad abe mee ee nk as BARDEN... 1536 i IE aueation and Labor. Ne rr ne Aas eed al BARING 2 ev endaannin 1509 on RY Re EC a ST A BT Ll SOC SL Mae rg (CR BARREM...noiansn 405 ET CM i pos be bed 1 S73 2 a Bs Sod es Som ml SA! Fo ET LE BARTLETT. -ces. nenee-1029 102 Ee A Ct i a a TS A, rR al QTR Ie BATES (KY.)..ene-| 1204 ry on I Pe En ae BERARDI BATES (Mass.)...._.. 458 rE EE a Ce he OY ee en se BATTLE. einen 501 LL a a Sn 2 Ee SU SND 1 Alen ne Lie a Le I BeALL 1530 HE a a re SOUR Be, BEAMER oo... 425 EA I Se Pe Cr CL A Ce PA BECKWORTH..-..-. 1706 BE a a Be Lie il Tl pl BELCHER. ns 121 LL em OI a le SPR ah 0 Ia Th BENDER... oni 1630 Ly A Es SER RE I tel al KL te WC 0 RE I erg 00 I BENNETT (Fla). ____. 106 ER A ot We pr rie roth Hn Lipid Fe Cond et he Re EE DCA BENNETT (Mich.).__.| 1237 EE ae LC AS Ta sae WAS el LEO) BENTSEN.....-...._. 507 UE a YE LR A A BERRY. o.oo 418 A EH ee i a Sa ee BE CR RSE a BRITS. tienes EE TT en Ls nis Bo BISHOP. J oii aol 1207 ET Se A Ae GE Se ST si CR, BLACENEY: =... ove 1218 ed Senie a er ered a BIATNIR. oo. 231 Cah Be pe pe a ER LS Rn Ses De Nat ab Ce (ER Boggs (Del.)......... 352 ER RR a I I RE ee So RP i Bei oT Boggs (1a.)eeee-... 3 571i BR VR ea ea SEEe a EN A TE BOLLING... 1441 EN TR a She Sl 0 Re BOLTON... oa 450 El ee LS RS a Li sai ST REE EE RSE a SI TI RE 1339 BONNER. ..1:NN. _. 1015 1430 } et AR ie Cl er ARR gh LE Sapte Se Ll pa EI ._ BOSONE:. o.oo. 1416 RI Sr er Re BE Re RE I BRR BOW ll. iy 426 EIR EE en a Me Rl IL WE ASTRA I UR CS LE LCT RET 1332 BOYKIN... .ioonits 412 1382 } adres lk EC Met tee BREAMBLETT. ........ 1339 rR Ema I a rT BRAY... 120 DR a SI) £ FT To pt Poa (0) op MERE Bs vital pu er, LO) Jie! 20 328 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name bt Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone BREEAM: onal 246 7 NR A rr ee ES re SRD CS CC Sr Oe RS BROOKS coo cinta 1013 rrp BL SES a nee Se tT Br eee SC SE SIE i el] IONE RE BROWN (GR. aa 257 ABO oa a ma en RLY ne BrOwWN (Ohio) __...__ 1401 ESID Rr Sl Bed LL SS lL Sl Bo BROWNSON.__.-ocoeen 1522 ABA or i ttn a it of se EAT Ht os ema eS BEAN es Es BRYSON: cna. 1108 Be nn a a a tai een Bia BUCHANAN ...ccocuans 134 1 The Bik i So 04 Il gl SR ot gil SSE SEN LT SN toe Ll in HY BUCKLEY Lanesoi 1429 1318-1 Public Works. co cesssainalel 2, LSU ini fe BL BUDGE = rnin 135 ye YS Oo LR CR tts SEL Se Ro oe EY ho Bi le 8 BUFFER. trae sa 107 B70 lin ah Sp Sen nr ere a ARR Leer ora I a Sa BURDICR: Faw 256 et SC CL oO 8 Pl Sos hb 5 Am A Seal MA Rk lB fo dice BURLESON. .censnnaen- 1531 AOD rr SS A Sn ER LL ne Ch me a ee a BURNSIDE... 343 2030. Ji ir SEG rs Re BR Ba SA nn AA A BURION ai 413 DBA ot a re aaa nbd BEL ST ean el ae BUSBEY Joris soto 402 DE er Gr Baise Ae BL SE es Li A SS re ate BUSH. J ar sdepidan 303 1ka I TLC DL RL War CAP) SM WG 000 SE Bae Re RR pd RE Ll BUMILER oo ovo ans 1231 OREN Sh hd LS Coat 0h IR ob bk EI Xn mie A] A cc BYRNE-(N.- Yu) ooo, 1723 Le SARL SE ER) PARA Io AR RE RE SER Ta ties Eli BYRNES (Wis)... 540 aBo SP SL NR Ee tet Se RT De SE CAMP eit dais 255 FH ead ne ASE SR PEEL LSS Sl 0 RE BU Se nS ee Edt mi | Vite CANFIELD. oni 326 HY OES CEE Ee EEL CE SR AR RA Le or eR CEERI Site Eel Li CANNON de isin 1714 eA ROE THT are AA Lr Le EE Le HR CO RE RS Rh 215 CARLYLE duo ondraod 103 GAG lo ds ae a es Ch en a REE ee Tl eR CARNAHAN. ccvceannn- 1010 EE LL Le BES CN Na Sal Sn Co hen Stott Lh CARRIER. wim 439 AO led mr a er mm ae a he I a aba ee Ae CASE oa Se 239 Er ECE CROC Sa we NL SO LCR RE Re be ER LR A 347 791 it Coun. 316 l CCAR SE ER RT Rn EE EE BE Sr i 681 CHATHAM. Suvi 242 APO Sans a Ye I Ra a CHELY. rrr, 409 a a Ct FURR 0 Sl S00 Ne A00el bol olay abe By rh aa CHENOWETH... ccoee 218 HR NE RC Rp on LR Ls IE UB Cuan BE Rl EAs meee ba El RE si CHIPERFIELD. cum 1713 a EhA at Th ie rs CHUDORR ns 233 EH TE ES sn EE id FE Sm Lp Sl I Los Le Cn MET HI Be CHURCH. 2h chiinde 440 Bm a an pr bE A IR CLEMENTE. .uvvunna- 317 a et able eS A ROE IE CI rs Lo i Bevel a a re CLEVENGER... 1529 ry EE CE ES CH LE CE SH PL OOH Bee GE, Yd Sisto byt tnboded Latif kf CoE (Kans)... 1208 GRR = nest ar sa se as rh A seen irs rn a RE ee CoE (NV. Yo). n 1528 SAC ES SR La de SPE BL Clon abate 03 So Fo nt COLMER. 0 toms in 1705 bit cor ed on eB TT ro i ws COMBS. «abun 1210 SR de LR Ee Bh LS IRS GIG Je le bal AEE Ll ats cit 203 487 COOLEY. ssa 1310 { So1098 rAerienltume sir nani sal a eT 3 COOPER... os 1107 ODT Jeri dries md en a i EE Ee CORBETT cv inwunaim 1532 Rl ei a i] COTTON. hr 1641 ABO a tn le ta rd COUPER... c.f 503 LL ee CO Sp er en CAE Sl Clee TE ny Vp hent Simamnt HE 5 vatvrnh Cox onal 1104 EE a A BS i LT Sho J 1 Cries CRAWFORD. ___.._.... 1124 Ea CS SR TC Se TOES I SC SR Atel ei at pg En CLOSE chs sin 15 Interstate: and: Forelen | coe. omits ities oan oo ofonanss 1334 :228 Commerce. CRUMPACKER. _ ou. 404 FYE DR ER CI TIL Te at A SY J i ae SP CUNNINGHAM. _._....| 1127 FE CL fe on ed BEE We JRE ee drietins is) Ea ag Cores (Mo.)-o 122 Eh NF Ne S Sa Iho te Ee SS tin Lat pel CurTIS (Nebr.)...-.__ 1123 Ea Se is SOLER Ea Teo lal SRT SOS se Ee DAGUE. ior 119 EAE Ee ee Ne Ba an Le Ee Ee Se a POS PAVIS (Ga)... 1115 i mr RE ner Davis (Tenn):-2" 1321 I Sort oo en yw ed a Rooms and Telephone: 329 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Roem | Phone Location Phone DAVIS (Wis) .....c---fro BH TCE 71 DEY BER en A I BUS 1 ain LE A SRN re Rc Lo Dawson 1510 7 Expenditures in Executive |. coach e rea cee tea aS EEE 1501 499 Departments. DEAN. oss dnimae 209 TH HE cS Sp Wo SE a te abet ER RE 5 ER SE Ie Tht LE DEGRAFFENRIED._ ___ 1419 iT A FE Eni Ui Cem Ls amie Ji ve E10 ER hd a SIE Ne en EE DELANEY ou ioses 455 lr ee i le ns Ee a EL As ek mm SBI HES TRA DEMPSEY. os nrnenne 1122 AL PS AN RAC hha Ee een ei Be 1 Shin ag 1 bem el EVEN DENNY eiaeerias TALE TYR Ee Ra nO SCI A oy JE8 SE eS ER Bi EE CRY DENTON. a venca 335 LL ER SEA A Ln AI ed IR Se SRE EN Te Be DN SR PL 3 DEVEREUY. © cceaenas 316 71,1 a EE nC ia a JE) ee 4 Lod Se LS INURE DI EWART. -etennean £1 I NE EE a SINC A a A BIE ANS BL 13 LI RI Rt a el CE DINGELL... osiauns 1110 Rl SOSA eee Lo Be be Bp BER LAER St Tee A Hanley DOLLINGER..: nue 457 CREE Seen eS ERE SE Rk Is Se 0 Reed LE ST DOLLIVER is iacaaiae 1711 a SSL RA A DONDERO. ..oovesnns 1414 HLH RG Rar eRn ai ean ae d EUR Te URE RE PI OR ST CS DONONVE......coneein 235 0806: rs a RR i IR DONOVAN... ivieea-443 Be A Ll SN a a aT SL NA DORN odeaeneenres 221 od bs Eerie dpa re sr idl Essent hor a LER OF ma BRR RRR Tee He Bi 1101 759 DOUGHTON --—eeeee--.. | SIs tWaysand Means. oo...) bo fon lH 219 1102 277 DOYLE aaa 1030 bd Re CC A Deen 1 I CEES Ral 2 od Ra CO rh a HN Doemgam ............ 1236 1 Be He ES RR De ER LL ei EE RR Re Ra 1 Cr TRE CR SR RC RE SNR eR TE i ne LU | ed] I RE 565 EBERHARTER.________ 1125 vo AEE Se (TO se ER (TES TL RS C4 Ea nA OTR Re NE IE 0 BILIOTT oe oceans 331 dl NC Pen Sasa Rl Bee SR TIRE a I ors HS TRUER RE a RG ELLSWORTH. ........_ 1631 FE ES ee er seed PRRLED 1 Self Lo MEE IRR 5 nL End Breton. aaa 1717 ARES Se ae Sa ee il Ped a 1 See 00 IDR si se fe Ua BS 1427 ENGLE. aii: 1033 581 | 2 eA IN Se SRN ae SO ULE EE SRS STS BYINSLG foo 305 FEL ES SR eR A me Pe IRR OR Se et ELL BALLON. ... aia) 1337 LE Be ER Me Cae eee SS i SE Eee ein TY i FARRINGTON... .._._.. 254 at Bl EAR Saal Bie CS WU Baie SI SS Re SR SRI Lng FrigmaN..........5. 170851 ABE) aii ns pine me ANNE Se BE Ea San an a RE LEA EENTOR os aan 1410 ir] EYE ES a DES CORSA nl I) rN IRR RA teat SU BINS Lk 0 S70 FERNANDEZ. ....__... 1023 ALS a Rd SRN I eT en BL a RRR NER en 2) FERNOS-ISERN_ ______ 1710 "ly HA eae pape Ven ira Se ie men td BAECED LC SEht OL CR ae en a LL WT 6 PINE eS. aia 222 pp ER SRT A TRe Ss Res DP Te LL SIRE 0 © ae DRE EE Se | 473 ISTTER. oo. ooo 1213 498 ! Baa basen anu ane TE Sa alter a a FLOOD tat i en 329 LEE Sea So bop ne MT ne EAA Ba a Ee 0 De ee i SES Sk FOGARTY: notaries TIE TOT of omnia een mmm mma EE ares Sew drs mn mh Sa [ISS ER 478 FORAND aio 1120 a ERE NS ER RR | er 8 CLUE SR SR ER aa BORD 3% aaa 321 yD SR pak ee IRR e en IRR ES li 0 8 £4 Rl Se Seen ee dh. 010 FORRESTER. ......... 1616 ye 1 TEA LE np Fi at Een 00) ENG E12 Ramen Bp 19 BR SRI 0 8 FRAZIER... .......... 307 pyro SERRE be I, Sa Te HR RO TI IR SNES RE 1 CR FUGATE. to] 1610 TREE RURRED OC DAIL SUURR Aha RR Sn | ll S00 FS Sie 2 1 1 SGI SMT Ss 8 i (NA LE POULTON. --ca-veranee-337 AE Ee EE UR ae eit esl TNS LE SRE RTI RE fo and FPURCOLO ant seenan 3H BRS ee TES Ee DRC eR Ty INE ELOISE GAMBLE. .....c 1233 Sv) SR STARE Sel Smad I 5 IR SR EL RG SE RR SR le 1 0 6 GARMATZ oa 1238 LE RRR LA Se sted Io RO Yi oY RR Rima I 81 DR STL (SD GARY ZH and 207 737 EK EEE See Sp tet ERA LC bond a oF Bn IEDR EV AAR 9 ey GATHINGS. ...... oo. HEELERS: pi? TH Rn Bes SER De SUIS PR Lo ERE FL See fe (Vd VR Be FT CAVIN.Y rattan 1629 BT cman ens nr Ea ne EASE os Brads ci ne eR he et J DIT GEORGE. icocenaere 216 2 0 21 La OS IL Le eR Ca a 1 UR LE eR Se Lia Be at GOLDEN 24 cre 117 7-12 LR Ee pe eet nA Me RA BEE Se © LY RE ERT Se ee ee GOODWIN. aaa ipa bE EEE Se aR ESR Re Tie Tg TL I DE Ree Dd GORDON 5 ot aaiae 1406 12 LE Re RE RL ME er ie Bt 330 Congressional Directory REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone ROBE ataae nna 1404 111 0 Ro GRE are Oe fe BEE BE LL NR TD BL Ease SI A LE RATAN. coat 1628 2SH a San TO LA I LL IR TL CX ol Ve SRB ard HS GRANAHAN ccs 1421 vg A sh sera ne LOE Lei HS I Le Tb GRANGER. =... 1224 i Ee Rae s t n D R Sim Sle a ae EE GRANT ol fia 1721 hrm Ree ean le SE een Sa RR ee 1 GREEN. na 1338 BIOL imme a | AL of ot BE En bn ATA AE GREENWOOD __....... 437 LE SP SS SS NE SECO BE [00 Soh BE RN SS hat a Lr GREGORY... wnwnnns 1234 EE ERI LR Eee HTL nf MM ie a a © T 1 ROSE rein aansn 137 Fi FE Be Ce ae TRI LE WR SR CR RR Bo 8 WINN eee 541 1B AO SRE a SL Rl i 0 11) SR ba Se eR DL ie HAGEN . nanaaans 1405 LL Be ME St TN Ss a ll iy an ef £5 ae or nS Ce 1507 UT Ee a ee Se Tol St I BS SORES SRE tT i 0 HALL, Edwin Arthur.| 1109 RL ee Sasa Fe Lah RR CREE a edi] HALL, Leonard W____| 1227 FUE ees Dae tn a [de I Eee Lf Il ng 13000 Se a i lao Bl ERR Se A ED EL NE SA NE 0 008 SEG A ne Ne 694, 282 A 1504 IE os wir em Sa Sr A cr INE LT 3 ae CT a See HARDEN... i. ian. 1518 (37 1 oh Nn CR ST SBI LR LY ts 5 SN SNR ty (AY HABDY Zoos oi... 310 BO or i mem i mss ase er aR BES at HEN 00S HARRIS =i 1503 BY ms si rr mh is SRBD hn le HARRISON (Nebr.)._. 126 a A SS SI TL i i Sd LO Le a HARRISON (Va)... 348 VAY I PL Te SY Se SA EER SS A as SUR £4 EA HARRISON (Wyo.)___. 444 nie HD CO Te SN I DR a STN § RE TR RR BS TY 13 By pi shee Sst 453 627 Merehant Marine ana fa a AT RTA 219 ! 1535413 Fisheries. HARVEY oi isin rs 1519 Ds wth mem an a a i i A BE eestor DR LEE Nt HAVENNER. ..... 113 Vp Bl BL DL nN SR CEE I Na TR HAYS (ATK. ) oun or LOR MER LL) SRB SS CR COO t hs Yr od. J vou] de Se Bs SSPE To HaAvs (Ohio)... .....- 1007 P11 Rl ME SAR Tae pea EB Sida 1 Se Bes RRR] el oc BeBRRTI. oi 247 yO TRE eee Si DE Ve Le GT SE ee Te Sr BCH TS HEDRICK. Coot nana 1408 ro sem ares sn et ho a + a 3 DEE St ey HEFFERNAN. _______._ 1524 DBE mimi mt bs wt ANE i os in A Ss SVE 3) HELLER vas. ine 1440 YL Ee SC a SL SO ISR SN flay be Us Sane DR ee] LR 2 TL ERLONG. in mmsiin 1219 CE SR SI Rh BD EE Lad SN 0 Co RRR I a i EAL RL HERTER. 243 YS REC Se ES Ba nS NSD SUEY HESELTON- ioe neama 237 23d BEC ERs ame Lard Ca Sn SRE Sa £0 S008 re Bn BSS rs HEB aii 1516 LE le SE SC Ben CE 00 el Entel Te eb HILL aos 1327 BR CUD AC in en SS LG oY rd MS RE Piel eT nv io HILLINGS. ns 344 LY ERE RS Tn a ha DE | aa is pers HE BR a HINSEAW eerie 1511 vp: ta A Se RS NB 8 £58 se Tall i CR SE HOEVEN Lococo nninas 1119 by 1 NE Spite Se a Si Ser Dr CL Sed Sa Re UR RE HorrMAN (111) ...____ 408 hts a osm Sv So ene En BR TRE ode CN hs a LT HorrMAN (Mich.).___| 1424 PEE Eas not Ce SR I Ch os Cl en NESE J SL HOLIFIELD....._._..__.| 1034 TRUBS Co aa nT RE Ca ee a I HOLMES: . ce eeann 1306 1 dd Senseo Sota oe BY D0 00 3 8 Sinn seinen en Ca Herp. aa 1111 3 LR SS SS Ra A NE SE SE RB TR 1 DS I SL an I BHorAN anal 1329 va RYH Sa Et Sn See I Br fp BL 0 Sl ET Lay HOWELL. «ona ancania 528 7:2 AES ser Si a SNE I Co Ly BES Cs ER RON Re ER I a DEE 150 HerIN 210 Bl 1 Do ea Sa Sr A Sl SR LS EE SCRE oT TL HUNTER eh wiias 324 PL 1 REAR RE Dean ei I A a SE eh Sets mE SRC aid TRARD Le Sasa cnn 114 eH SS Ss LSA LS SEL) on SER BR oR Sa nn Ep Ss he en 8 IRVING as 1009 7 1 Ns iL ONS lel FS TE WL i 4.5 SR Dl ais] (0 Jackson (Calif.)_...__ 529 Ft A Re a me SL Ee | emi) Ee mR IE TT JACKSON (Wash.)_..__| 1428 EE en PO DE SRD BE Re BR SS ENS Ps 8 JAMES ca LL 110 3 a at RR NN Fa DEE Wnt Sh 0 Bolin eS, 0 Eo a 3 JA MAN os adaas 144 Cw rE Rn a le een ae] KOS or SIE Ci SS pe SR Ea ah JAVIrg SS. vin . = 319 “rh Se Ren ae ST a BS CE Se RE mn RC ILS TENISON coin minain 1205 hE nRetersi La ad a Ue Tel Med sli alm Con eee] LT JENKINS ne rear 1436 Lv Pa SO a er BE nf SER Lie a LR i Te JENSEN, orb oeiad 253 BLO a rr a her SS Ed SR LS Ce al Seer LG Ty 00S Rooms and Telephones 331 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued Office building Capitol Name i — Chairmanship Room | Phone Location Phone JONSON: ieee ABT OT a os da ran bw era a i md SRS oo Le nn SLL YES JONAS SOC ere 410 AOL. | desea spb SSRN I Ul Lili hn dt dee he A A STALL JONES (Al2.) oc 211 LEE SL nee ER OSPR aE Ta 6 a ER I Pa eT 0 8 JONES (Mo.) =: .~obev-1031 Pr rr ear A ED nh Ee ee SE DL JoNES, Hamilton C___| 1505 TITRA CNR ae ee I A Re I 10 Ta OE TL LR EO NE RT i JoNEs, Woodrow W__| 1418 741 PEA SN en ee CREE a LR DL eS BR Bl ER DRS JUDD eo tte Seer dines 1225 Far Fo len BORICIS Eo SN CR ABE nti im 0 HUN LS OR GR ER CB Re eR Ba KARSTEN (Mo.) _._... 1005 TEE SE WAI Se PCE SN SLE CI BET el el TE RR 11 KEAN Lol re sins 1729 LINE Sl ra Ce ISL Ae LB 8 I So ACRE SR I ERR EI URE TE KEARNEY voi veneers 1319 A ERE SER EH CUR LC PR 08 NR MR Ee S21 00 I EARNS ot wrrataaiaml 1028 EOE Re SI Ie a a DP Re SSIS SER A EL al) KEATING: --tosin mui 1719 EA ES I Laine ER © PERE CTS re B80 ELE SA LL 143 BOBRIED es ar mR a ee ERE SE ra ME AE is REILEY(P3.): rene 417 Bd ee re Pe SE ns EAE Ri ri pm Ro RELLY. (NY) evens 142 rs Sem mre a am PB RE ne i Ek ne Kerem aE Hd RB ENNEDY i hedaman 322 FARE OR NDR Lo OE BR CY SERS SARINIIS Le (08 L081 KEOGH ovr oiirciinimriis 1730 0 EAE Pn REE rae ee ER EE LE Sen le Re a fave Cd KERR sta. coca ovins 1201 00 ee ie es ir le i ti BA LAIN LT ee eR ae KERSTEN (Wis.)_..___ 1722 BB os oe eR Sn ne I ARE hem mmm SLL SED KA BUBN. iver 357 B26: | AL AE SDR 0 A re min ei I Sh RIDA io craves 1513 OEE sa a mad pies a EA BIN, Cd A rim EES En King (Calif). -....... 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MASON. oases IMEADER coos MERROW. oo cousins MiLLER (Calif.).._.__| MiLLER Md.) MILLER (Nebr.)______ MILER (N. XY... 1.7 Ey re ERR MITCHELL. vo acces MOBRANO-iis MORGAN: Ln. MORRIS o.oo MORRISON. evs MORTON. cman MOUIDER o-oo MUILTER. ioc aas MUMMA. Ca MURDOCE. MuUReRY. MURRAY (Tenn.)___. MURRAY (WiS.) oo... NELSON. eis NICHOLSON... NORBEAD evo nnbinn NORRELL oven O’BRIEN (IIL) ooo... O’BrIEN (Mich.)..__. OHARA OX RONSEL: eae OINTBILY. icici OSMERS. ....inoniianan in OSTERTAG.:.......... O'TOOLE. .... CE ae PASSMAN o.oo PATMAN. oii il PAYIEN. a PATTERSON... PERKINS... PHILBIN: cena PHILIPS cco PICKETT. lua aces POAGES ooo ro POLE. iii PONE Ray POULSON-=. POWELL... ie PRESTON... lo oii Prices ai ik PRIESTS 0 on EROULY cco neo tan QUINN i emanates RABAUT.....ol at RADWAN. i... 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GEORGE. =a 240 + SO DI il oa i I I A IRS LL A SL SASSCER... nine ciine 1130 0 lr ain aie dr A SE i fe EO i Se eS NS NB EL SAYLOB. viii 427 BBO 0d 2.5 5 om iE Sr 2 2 A hn A sm i ee a ESR A SCHENCE.. ovo... 127 eT i ge pg fd rg gogo esi mg He ih ob te in Ei pb a 11 SCHWABE.... one. 104 BO a a Ee a EE EE a I nS Fs Scott, Hardie_______. Ll eT Tn Rol Scott, Hugh D., Jr___| 451 IGE BE SS Te et eR i Db Rf Ll Cd a gl SCRIVNEB: +o, 1523 SO ele riod sa Sun dan atndent ens soba PAS Ran Ole ans orden tine im A etend TN SCUDDER. 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Soin iia 1512 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued building Capitol Chairmanship | Phone Location Phone 203: Lh ee aa Sr SaaS ass ES Sa i on Le BBY os ba ih wrt en ae ml EE SEE Stab et Ei a Se ZL ER meres Se | DE ea Een ei TE EE Ce OR I EE | KS Ea Rim DA Ee So LA 3 01. 0 WA 12 | PR A ER ne A ote eS Ee a Ee 5% a A LES ee Ne ee vi rieipa DGS iE FX oll a a ee get a B80 Ch ie Di in Ee ee Vo PRR TB Ph a rn rn i A NLR BSE Fr AI J AR CR nnuin] 1n a 1 NRA Be I Red See Sn EEE BASRA IY RT Se SOR ie AE hn HORT {EA RE VI mn | Me CC ad UR Be nl Pe CL te RT ne 8 LE Eee re nL EC I ER a Ee Al Sr a LE ir Sel na EATS ST She Land OLE SE SET L 9 7 3 Re mL a red IME CO el aT CREE I Be | REL ra RR pen Le ee I TG RR Sees Oe LI La I il ee) SO Bi Ce Pe BOBS ne pe a Ne EE Sn Sei leider el HE 43 VR Ce SEA I Be BB A ay LC LE i | 593 NT pArmed Services oll se CEO a a lel 341 LL Vi BS Sen a I SR I IC anh pi LO fet © IS Rl BIB UY. ih der nmi ims hn it 4 2 SR eA Dae he ve ot ht Be SAN TS DET. LE REE sae eee BEL Ae SR SR a Lag TU DS Nr | EL SA MC re Ge LB) ee ah 221 I A Te a Ae Ci eve oo MST Bi Ir Pe ls EL Ta a Ak 1 Re SEER ls DS A Cr EASE YS es Sl Ce ay Ce 0 A anda te hr SN AE SE ea i i NR Ee nr naa eae} [LR ei oy 1 RE ROR Re Te] Ter OR Le aE nn ee Ne SE EE hs bar a ERE CH er So aL af UR UL BRL OL ToT al Ct RL | MR Sat iv rl] a i at I BL Sb pa CLE ee SA SIREN SL a ts O80 oN ie ih rn a a dee A RED RAS Eee et ET LAR LR Ee Oa NR Se ei SO Cl ch I Ce I SD wg EET TIO sie sve a Si Ee pr DB Si Sd Eh AY Sd Se LY FE Ee TT od BG rN NA a Te SLE NR EE Re EY a EE NRA LEN GOR va El SRC a TS Re Se OP OFF 3 redbos sou maid smn eM LB. EE i Sn tl an ry Eo i Re BL La AR eS enol Rn GE Se es a ERIN ee ee {7 SO A Sr I hy ee La ee Seen El or RR ee A Se Be SE WD ES ee i SE 2 LER ee Cea DM a a Oe ee a LT 716 1357. [rUn-Ameriean Activities. {coi ..c li. iin ianainenneedons sbi 1405 1 43 pf RUE Te LS Sr Ba] I Tr SO ea DP ATR BI Da i A a ea Tee Sala net IR Sg Te (3 AR ee Se el A MAE TRE Lo Se CR Se aa La ae RS Ee are set dane LB Sh a aR ete MEMBERS OF THE CABINET Dean G. AcHEsoN, of Connecticut, Secretary of State, 2805 P Street. Joan W. SNYDER, of Missouri, Secretary of the Treasury, the Wardman Park. RoBERT A. LovEeTT, of New York, Secretary of Defense, the Shoreham. J. Howarp McGRrAaTH, of Rhode Island, Attorney General, 5100 Thirty-ninth Street. JEssE M. Donarpson, of Missouri, Postmaster General, 2800 Woodley Road. Oscar L. CuarMmaN, of Colorado, Secretary of the Interior, the Westchester. CuARLEs F. Brannan, of Colorado, Secretary of Agriculture, the Westchester. CHARLES SAWYER, of Ohio, Secretary of Commerce, 3331 O Street. Maurice J. ToBiN, of Massachusetts, Secretary of Labor, the Winthrop House. 336 EXECUTIVE THE PRESIDENT HARRY S. TRUMAN, Democrat, of Independence, Mo., President of the United States, was born May 8, 1884, at Lamar, Barton County, Mo.; son of John Anderson and Martha Ellen (Young) Truman; attended public schools in Independence; Field Artillery School (Fort Sill, Okla.), 1917-18; Kansas City School of Law, 1923-25; married Bess Wallace, June 28, 1919; one daughter, Mary Margaret; operated family farm 1906-17; first lieutenant, Battery F, and captain, Battery D, One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Field Artillery, Thirty-fifth Division, U. S. Army, in World War I and served in Vosges operations, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives, August 18 to November 11, 1918; dis-charged with rank of major, U. S. A. R. C., May 6, 1919; colonel, U. S. A. R. C,, since 1927; judge, Jackson County (Mo.) Court, 1922-24, presiding judge, 1926-34; elected to the United States Senate from Missouri in 1934 and reelected in 1940; served on Appropriations, Enrolled Bills, Military Affairs, Printing, Inter-state Commerce, and Public Buildings and Grounds Committees, and as chairman of the Special Committee To Investigate the National Defense Program; elected Vice President November 7, 1944, and took office January 20, 1945; acceded to the Presidency April 12, 1945, on the death of President Roosevelt; elected President November 2, 1948; member of the Baptist Church; Past Grand Master of Masons of Missouri. Legal residence, Independence, Mo. Military Aide to the President.—Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, USA. Naval Aide to the President.—Rear Adm. Robert L. Dennison, USN. Air Force Aide to the President.—Brig. Gen. Robert B. Landry, USAF. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT THE WHITE HOUSE OFFICE (1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 1414) SECRETARIES MATTHEW J. CONNELLY, born, Clinton, Mass., November 19, 1907; married; Fordham University, 1930; stock brokerage business, New York City, 1930-33; Western Union Telegraph Co., 1933-34; Federal Emergency Relief Administration, Boston, Mass., 1935; Division of Investigation, Works Progress Administration, 1935-38; Appropriations Committee, United States House of Representatives, 1939; Special Committee To Investigate Campaign Expenditures, United States Senate, 1940; Special Committee To Investigate the National Defense Program, 1941-44; Executive Secretary to the Vice President, January 20, 1945; Secretary to the President, April 13, 1945. Residence, Hotel 2400. WILLIAM D. HASSETT, born, Northfield, Vt., August 28, 1880; Clark Univer-sity, 1902-4; newspaper work, Washington, 1909-21; London correspondent of newspapers and press association, 1921-25; National Recovery Administration National Emergency Council; detailed to the White House, September 1935; " Secretary to the President by appointment of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, February 19, 1944; by appointment of President Harry S. Truman, April 16, 1945; clubs: Cosmos, National Press (Washington, D. C.). Residence, the Cosmos Club. JOSEPH SHORT, born, Vicksburg, Miss., February 11, 1904; son of Joseph Hudson and Irene Elizabeth (Jones) Short; A. B., Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va., 1925; married; reporter, Jackson (Miss.) Daily News, 1925-26, 1927-28; Vicksburg (Miss.) Post and Herald, 1926-27; New Orleans Times-Picayune, 1928-29; Richmond (Va.) Bureau Associated Press, 1929-31, Washing-ton Bureau, 1931-41; Chicago Sun, 1941-43; Washington Bureau Baltimore Sun, 1943-50; Presbyterian; club: National Press (Washington) (President 1948); appointed Secretary to thé President December 18, 1950. Residence, 3407 Gilden Drive, Alexandria, Va. : 337 338 Congressional Directory The Assistant to the President.—John R. Steelman, the Kennedy-Warren. Special Counsel to the President.—Charles S. Murphy, 905 Celumbia Boulevard, Silver Spring, Md. Administrative Assistants to the President.—Donald S. Dawson, 2017 O Street; David H. Stowe, 4001 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, 1]Md. Legisintive Assistant. ~_Joseph G. Feeney, 5508 Montgomery Street, Chevy Chase, Admanistrative Assistant in the President's Office.—Rose A. Conway, 1 Scott Circle. Executive Clerk.—William J. Hopkins, 814 Rowen Road, Silver Spring, Md Chief Usher.—Howell G. Crim, Lorton, Va. LIAISON OFFICE FOR PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT (1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 1414) Liaison Officer.—Donald S. Dawson, 2017 O Street. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET (Executive Office Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Director.—Frederick J. Lawton, 1816 Varnum Street NE. Assistant Director.— Elmer B. Staats, 4674 Garfield Street. Executive Assistant Director.—Charles B. Stauffacher, 3223 Beech Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Assistant to the Director.—Donald B. MacPhail, 102 West Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative Officer. —George Viault, R. F. D. 3, Gaithersburg, Md. Budget and Planning Officer.— Ellen M. Bozman (acting), 2633 North Greenbrier Street, Arlington, Va. 1 nformation Officer.— Virginia M. de Pury, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Personnel Officer.—Samuel T. Adams, 2339 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director for Administrative Management.—— William F. Finan, 6210 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director for Estimates.— William F. McCandless, 6023 Welbourn Drive, Wood Acres, Md. Assistant Director for Fiscal Analysis.—J. Weldon Jones, Hay-Adams House. Assistant Director for Legislative Referemce.—Roger W. Jones, 10 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director for Statistical Standards.—Stuart A. Rice, 4406 Thirty-eighth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief of the Field Service.—John J. O’N eill, 3753 Oliver Street. \ COUNCIL OF ECONOMIC ADVISERS (Executive Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Chairman.—Leon H. Keyserling, 2908 Albemarle Street. Member.—John D. Clark, the Shoreham. Member.—Roy Blough, 3618 Livingston Street. Executive Secretary.— Bertram M. Gross, 613 South Quincy Street, Arlington, Va. NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL (Executive Office Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 7491) Harry S. Truman, President of the United States (Chairman). Alben W. Barkley, Vice President of the United States. Dean G. Acheson, Secretary of State. Robert A. Lovett, Secretary of Defense. W. Averell Harriman, Director for Mutual Security. Jack Gorrie, Chairman, National Security Resources Board. Executive Secretary. —James 8. Lay, Jr. Deputy Executive Secretary.—S. Everett Gleason. Central Intelligence Agency (2430 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 6115) Director of Central Intelligence.— Walter B. Smith. Deputy Director.—Allen W. Dulles. Executive Office NATIONAL SECURITY RESOURCES BOARD (Executive Office Building. Phone, STerling 4700) Chairman.—Jack Gorrie, 3175 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Vice Chairman.—Edward T. Dickinson, 1868 Columbia Road. + Secretary of State. : ; Secretary of the Treasury. Secretary of Defense. Secretary of the Interior. Secretary of Agriculture. Secretary of Commerce. Secretary of Labor. General Counsel.—James L.. Kunen, 6508 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Special Assistant to the Chairman.—Robert O. Renville, 804 Hallwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. : Program Assistant.—Dal Hitchcock, Box 347, Route 1, Vienna, Va. Economic Adviser.—Oscar L. Endler, 4404 Forty-sixth Street. Special Assistants.— Gilbert C. Jacobus, 3801 Twenty-third Street North, Arling- ton, Va.; Everett M. Kassalow, 411 East Wayne Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Martha Sharp, 1325 Thirtieth Street; William T. Yarborough, 8712 Maywood Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Human Resources.—Robert L. Clark, 5528 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md. : Director, Materials.—James K. Remsen, 5218 Roosevelt Street, Bethesda, Md. Director, Special Security Programs.—Ethan Allen Peyser, 1414 Vance Building, Seattle, Wash. Gaia Officer—Edward L. Lacey, 2906 Allison Street, Mount Rainier, OFFICE OF DEFENSE MOBILIZATION (Executive Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3300) Director, Office of Defense Mobilization.—Charles E. Wilson, the Westchester. Special Assistant to the Director.—Clay P. Bedford, the Westchester. Assistant to the Director (Staff Director).—Charles B. Stauffacher, 3223 Beach Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. : General Counsel.—Rodolfo A. Correa, 4860 Thirty-third Road North, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Director (Production).—Raymond G. Fisher, 921 Twenty-sixth Place South, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Director (Manpower).— Arthur S. Flemming, the Shoreham. Assistant to the Director (Stabilization).—A. E. Howse, the Westchester. Assistant to the Director (Materials).— David D. Irwin, the Westchester. aki jn to the Director (Foreign Activities).— William Y. Elliott, 1028 Connecticut venue. Assistant to the Director (Public Information).—Andrew H. Berding, 3111 Foxhall oad. Assistant to the Director (National Security Council).—J. Murray Mitchell, 3345 Reservoir Road. Executive Officer—H. Dewayne Kreager, Edgewater Parkway, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. Reports and Statistics Officer.—James L. Sundquist, 3016 North Florida Street, Arlington, Va. Executive Secretary.—John D. Young, 707 Chalfonte Drive, Alexandria, Va. Administrative Officer.— Henry F. Hurley, 431 St. Lawrence Drive, Silver Spring, Md Chairman, Health Resources Advisory Committee.—Dr. Howard A. Rusk, 50 Green Acres, Scarsdale, N. Y. Chairman, Science Advisory Committee.—Dr. Oliver E. Buckley, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. DEFENSE MOBILIZATION BOARD Members— Director of the Office of Defense Mobilization, chairman. Secretary of State. Secretary of the Treasury. Secretary of Defense. Secretary of the Interior. 340 Congressional Directory Defense Mobilization Board—Continued Secretary of Agriculture. Secretary of Commerce. Secretary of Labor. Chairman, Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Chairman, National Security Resources Board. Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Administrator, Economic Stabilization Agency. Administrator, Defense Production Administration. OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR FOR MUTUAL SECURITY (Executive Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3300, branches 606 or 625) Director for Mutual Security.—W. Averell Harriman, 1800 Foxhall Road. The Assistant to the Director.— George M. Elsey, Downs Crest, Chain Bridge Road, McLean, Va. Military Adviser.—Brig. Gen. Frank N. Roberts, 8515 Rosewood Drive, Bethesda, Md. Special Assistant.—Samuel D. Berger, 5253 Nebraska Avenue. Executive Assistant.—W. J. Sheppard, 3530 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Comptroller.—John E. Murphy, 4300 Underwood Street, University Park, Md. Assistant Director, Programming.—Lincoln Gordon, 3004 Thirty-second Street. Assistant Director and Counsel.—Theodore T. Tannenwald, Jr., 3840 Fulton Street. Assistant Director, Requirements and Resources.—Richard N. Johnson, 4834 Rod- man Street. Assistant Director, Trade Conirols.—[Vacant.] TELECOMMUNICATIONS ADVISER TO THE PRESIDENT (Executive Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3300, branch 2277) Telecommunications Adviser to the President.—Haraden Pratt, 800 Quaint Acres Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to the Adviser.—F. C. Alexander, 40 West Washington Street, Kensing-ton, Md. Telecommunications Expert.—W. E. Plummer, 2804 Military Road. EMERGENCY AGENCIES DEFENSE MATERIALS PROCUREMENT AGENCY (General Services Building. Phone, EXecutive 4300, branch 4131) Admanistrator.—Jess Larson, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy Administrator. — Howard I. Young, Mayflower Hotel. Executive Assistant to the Deputy Admainistrator.—Julian W. Feiss, 310 Forest Drive, Falls Church, Va. Loin Administrator for Defense Coordination.—Irving Gumbel, 4530 Klingle treet. Director, Purchasing Divistion.—[Vacant.] Director, Claimants and Allocations Division.—Harold A. Montag, 4736 Eastern Avenue NE. Director, Program Development Division.—Tom Lyon, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Director, Domestic Expansion Division.—James Douglas, Shoreham Hotel. Director, Foreign Expansion Division.—Charles E. Stott, 10103 Connecticut Avenue, Kensington, Md. Administrative Officer— William C. Hawthorne, 2500 Q Street. DEFENSE PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATION (New General Accounting Office Building. Phone, STerling 5200) Office of the Administrator: Administrator.— Manly Fleischmann, 212 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. 1 1 ne William Hoff, 3927 Idaho Avenue. Director of Policy Development.—Ernest A. Tupper, 531 West Montgomery Avenue, Rockville, Md. Deputy Administrator and Chairman, Airerage! Production Board.—Harold R. Boyer, 2100 Connecticut Avenue. Emergency Agencies 341 Office of the Administrator—Continued us Deputy Administrator for Aluminum.—Samuel W. Anderson, 5015 Lowell Street. Assistant Administrator.—Joseph Keenan, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Administrator for Production and Distribution Controls.— William C. Truppner, 6902 Arlington Road, Bethesda. Md. Assan Administrator for Administration.— William A. Murphy, 6443 Western venue. Boppulied Ft Ra A. Heddleston, 1515 Delmont Lane, Takoma ark, . Director of Security.—Richard W. Lawrence, 3762 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. General Counsel.—Charles H. Kendall, 3426 Sixteenth Street. Assistant General Counsel.—Thomas R. Baldwin, 8210 Larry Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Administrator for Public Information.—Edward K. Moss, 1618 Twenty-first Street. Deputy Assistant Administrator for Public Information.—Albert J. Lubin, 308 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Si Director, Information Diviston.—Rollen B. Kadesch, 1821 Monroe Street NE. Office of International Materials Activities: Deputy Administrator for International Materials Activities.— Gabriel J. Ticoulat, the Westchester. Sp Assistant to the Deputy Administrator.—Morris V. Rosenbloom, 2000 F treet. Assistants to Deputy Administrator.—Frederick Winant, 716 (C) Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va.; Sherman S. Sheppard, 30 West Washington Street, Kensington, Md. - Director, Materials Review Division.—John D. Morgan, Fort McNair. Office of Staff Service: : Deputy Administrator for Staff Service.—Nathaniel Knowles, Jr., 2804 N Street. Special Assistant to the Deputy Administrator.—Francis P. Hoeber, 11 Duvall Drive, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Staff Assistant.—Harry O. Compton, 5415 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Economic Analysis and Reports Division.—Alvin Mayne, 1104 North Tuckahoe Street, East Falls Church, Va. Director, Military Program Analysis Divistion.—Henry Rau, 628 South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va. Office of Procurement and Production: Deputy Administrator for Procurement and Production.—Clay P. Bedford, the Westchester. Assistant Deputy Administrator for Procurement and Production.—Warren M. Huff, Alban Towers. Se Assistant.— Arthur S. Hawthorn, 6708 Forty-fourth Street, Chevy Chase, d ; Assistant Administrator to Coordinate Regional Defense Mobilization Com-mittees.— Eugene F. Bertrand, Carlton Hotel. Director, Conservation Division.— Howard Coonley, Cosmos Club. Chairman, Electronics Production Board.—Edmund T. Morris, 5425 Connecticut Avenue. Chairman, Critical Areas Committee.—Ivan D. Carson, 4632 Tilden Street. Chairman, Procurement Policy Commitice.—Donald G. Leslie, 1523 Rhode Island Avenue. : Assistant for Procurement.—Olaf K. Tackle, 1523 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant for Production.— William W. Shoaf, 2817 Woodley Road. Office of Resources Expansion: Deputy Administrator for Resources. Expansion.—James F. King, 3801 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Assistant General Counsel for Resources Fxpansion.—James P. Durkin, 508 Lincoln Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Director, Defense Expansion Division.—Byron D. Woodside, Haymarket, Va. Assistant for Tax Amortization.— Herbert H. Scheier, 5214 Eighth Road South, Arlington, Va. Assistant for Loans.— Furniss L. Parnell, 5612 Fourteenth Street. Assistant for Post Certification.—Joseph Rand, 369 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Office of Program and Requirements: Deputy Administrator for Program and Requirements.—Ralph S. Trigg, 406 Clover Way, Alexandria, Va. 342 Congressional Directory Office of Program and Requirements—Continued Assistant to the Deputy Administrator.—Charles E. Offutt, 1445 Ogden Street. Assistant Deputy Admanistrators.—Melvin L. Anshen, 3040 Idaho Avenue; Ralph H. Anderson, 4935 Thirty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va.; Albert J. Carey, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Director, Expansion Goals Staff.—Glenn E. McLaughlin, 3053 Ordway Street. Director, Materials Accounting Staff.—Henry J. Dammeyer (acting), 105 Arch- wood Avenue, Annapolis, Md. Director, Requirements Committee Staff.—George A. Steiner, 100 West Mason Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Director, Military and Atomic Energy Division.— William N. Lawrence, 2712 Wisconsin Avenue. Director, Manpower Staff. —Emmett H. Welch, 3703 Thirty-fourth Street. DEFENSE TRANSPORT ADMINISTRATION (Interstate Commerce Commission Building. Phone, REpublic 7500) Admanistrator.—James K. Knudson, 3833 Thirtieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Administrator.—Homer C. King, 1628 Annandale Road, Falls Church, Va. Executive Assistant.— Walter S. Rainville, Jr., 3723 Eighteenth Street NE. General Counsel.—Francis A. Silver, 311 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Adminastrative Officer.—Clarence Barker, 1735 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Information Officer.—John Cunningham (acting), 114 Exeter Road, Bethesda, Md. Director, Railroad Transport Division.—Elmer J. Stubbs, Statler Hotel. Director, Street and Highway Transport Division.— Edward D. Hicks, Jr., 3051 Idaho Avenue. Darerions Inland Water Transport Division.—John P. Coakley, 4201 Massachusetts Ave. Director, Warehousing and Storage Division.—Harold K. Osgood, Box 320, Route 1, Vienna, Va. Director, Port Utilization Division.—Andrew Lane, 515 Oglethorpe Street NE. Director, Equipment and Materials Division.—F. Berkeley Robins, 2304 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director, Manpower Division.—Samuel L. Newman, 1439 Spring Road. Director, Tax Amortization and Defense Loans Diviston.—Robert R. Hendon, 3200 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. ECONOMIC STABILIZATION AGENCY (Lafayette Building, 811 Vermont Avenue. Phone, STerling 0167) OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Administrator. —Roger L. Putnam, 216 Central Street, Springfield Mass. Assistant Administrator (Operations).—Ralph D. Hetzel, Jr., 5415 Tilden Street. Deputy Assistant Administrator (Operations).—Charles E. Mills (acting), 3416 Legation Street. General Counsel.—James Mcl. Henderson, 4310 Kentbury Drive, Bethesda, Md. Deputy General Counsel.—T. Peter Ansberry, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Economic Adviser.—G. Griffith Johnson, 811 Crescent Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant to the Administrator for Public Information.—Kenneth Clark, 726 Timber Branch Drive, Alexandria, Va. Personnel Adviser.— William Brody, 5767 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. Budget Adviser.— Charles E. Mills, 3416 Legation Street. Executive Assistant.— Tillie W. Pollock, 3914 Legation Street. OFFICE OF PRICE STABLIZATION (Temporary Building E, Fourth Street and Adams Drive. Phone, STerling 4200) Director—Michael V. DiSalle, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Special Assistants.— Lambert S. O’Malley, 2337 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Arnold F. Shaw, 4550 Brandywine Street; J. Joseph Whelan, R. F. D. 3, Box 512, Alexandria, Va. Executive Assistant.—Thomas Klechak, 3437 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Recording Secretary.—Joseph L. Dwyer, 6625 Chestnut Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Office for Industry Advisory Committees.— Ethel B. Gilbert, 1801 P Street Assistant Director, Office for Boards of Review.— Albert F. Reardon, 806 South Arlington Mill Drive, Arlington, Va. Emergency Agencies | 343 Chief Counsel.—Harold Leventhal, the Dorchester House. Director of Enforcement.—Edward P. Morgan, 3000. Thirty-ninth Street. Director of Public Information.—Max R. Hall, 3706 Morrison Street. Director of Field Operations.—J. Otis Garber, 3709 Chevy Chase Lake Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. : Divers of Accounting.—Paul M. Green, 300 North Granada Street, Arlington, a. : Economic Adviser.—Gardner Ackley, 886 North Lexington Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Management.—Richard F. Cook, 1711 Otis Street NE. Director, Management Staff.—Edison Montgomery, 800 Junior Street, Alex-andria, Va. : ig Director, Personmel.—Philipp L. Charles (acting), 3337 Buchanan Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Dien Budget and Finance.—J. C. Foulis, 8515 Reyburn Road, Bethesda, Director, Administrative Services.—David S. Phillips, 3683 Alabama Avenue SE : Director of Price Operations.—Edward F. Phelps, Jr., 4001 Warren Street. Special Assistants.— Virgil B. Zimmerman, 5324 Second Street North, Arlington, Va.; Kenneth E. Lawton, 8300 Sixteenth Street. Executive Officer.—James B. Opsata, 4801 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Rubber, Chemicals and Drugs.—T. H. McCormack, the Westchester. Director, Food and Restaurant.—George L. Mehren (acting), 702 South Over- look Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director, Forest Products.—Rufus I. Worrell (acting), Raleigh Hotel. Director, Industrial Materials and Manufactured IE D. Smith, Wardman Park Hotel. Director, Consumer Durable Goods.—E. W. Heilmann (acting), 6406 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Pus Consumer Soft Goods.— Thomas L. Karsten (acting), 2120 Sixteenth treet. Director, Transportation, Public Utilities and Fuel.—G. Storer Baldwin, Lee House. ; Director, Services, EHxport-Import.—Max L. Feinberg (acting), 1108 Quebec Street, Silver Spring, Md REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region 1.— (Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island)—Joseph McDonough, 18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass. Region 2.—(New York, New Jersey north of the southern boundaries of Bur-lington and Ocean Counties)—James G. Lyons, 70 East Tenth Street, New York, N.Y. Region 3.— (Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey south of the southern bound-aries of Burlington and Ocean Counties)— Joseph J. Mc¢Bryan, Commerical Trust Building, Fifteenth and Market Streets, Philadelphia, Pa. Region 4.— (Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, District of Columbia, Tennessee east of the western boundaries of Sullivan and Wash-ington Counties)—W. F. Bailey, 900 North Lombardy Street, Richmond, Va. Region 5.— (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee west of the western boundaries of Sullivan and Washington Counties)— George D. Patterson, Jr., 147 Hunter Street SW., Atlanta, Ga. Region 6.— (Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio)—Sydney A. Hesse, 1101 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. Region 7.— (Indiana, Illinois except St. Clair and Madison Counties, Wisconsin except Douglas County)—Michael J. Howlett, 9 West Washington Street, Chicago, Ill. Region 8.—(Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Douglas County in Wisconsin)— Philip Neville, 620 Marquette Avenue, Minneapolis, mn. Region 9.— (Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, St. Clair and Madison Counties in Illinois) —H. Roe Bartle, 112 West Ninth Street, Kansas City, Mo. Region 10.— (Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas)— Alfred L. Seelye, 3306 Main Street, Dallas, Tex. Region 11.— (Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming)— George F. Rock, New Customhouse, Nineteenthand Stout Streets, Denver, Colo. 344 Congressional Directory Regional Directors—Continued Region 12.— (Arizona, Nevada, California)—John H. Tolan, Jr., 870 Market Street, San Francisco, Calif. : Region 13.—(Washington, Idaho, Oregon)—J. L. Salter (acting), 506 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash. Region 14.— (Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Guam)—J. Herbert Meighan, Suite 403, 1405 G Street, Washington, D. C. OFFICE OF RENT STABILIZATION (Midway Hall, Twenty-fourth Street and Oklahoma Avenue NE. Phone, LIncoln 3-9590) Director of Rent Stabilization.— Tighe E. Woods, 3705 Huntington Street. Special Assistant (Congressional Liaison). —Zachary T. Del Giorno, 5101 Bangor Drive, Garrett Park, Md. Military Liaison Officer.—Burnham W. Diggle, 3690 Thirty-eighth Street. Economic Adviser.—Milton E. Davis, 9117 First Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy Director of Rent Stabilization.— William G. Barr (acting), 383 Washington Avenue, Wellington Park, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Deputy Director (Program).—Jacob Muchin (acting), 512 Belleview Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director (Advisory Board).—Wesley D. Pearce (acting), 1015 Upshur Street NE. General Counsel.—Ed Dupree, 3532 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director (Public Relations).—John T. O’Brien (acting), R. F. D. 5, Box 447, Telegraph Road, Alexandria, Va. Dep Directs (Administration) .—John J. Madigan, R. F. B. 2, Silver Spring, M Director, Administrative Services Branch.— William H. Weed, 1902 Eighteenth Street SE. Director, Budget, Planning and Finance Branch.— William G. Comfort, 3600 Idaho Avenue. Director, Personnel Branch.—Linda A. Matteo, 3833 Ninth Street North, Arling-ton, Va. REGIONAL OFFICES Region I.— (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, ang Vermont)—Edgar J. Driscoll, regional director, 141 Milk Street, Boston 9, Mass. Eastern Region.— (Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania)—John J. Pendergast, regional director, Midway Hall, Twenty-fourth Street and Oklahoma Avenue NE., Washington 25, D. C. Southeastern Branch.— (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and Puerto Rico)—XKenneth A. Campbell, associate regional director, 907 Georgia Savings Bank Building, Atlanta 3, Ga. Region I11.— (Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia)—John F. Kessel, regional director, 717 Superior Avenue NE., Cleveland 14, Ohio. Region VI.— (Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Texas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming)—Oscar G. Abern, regional director, 226 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago 6, Ill. Subregional Office.—Dallas, Tex.—Russell S. Stephens, associate regional director, Room 558, 207 South Houston Street, Dallas, Tex. Region VIII.— (Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Alaska)—O. H. Peterson, regional director, 821 Market Street, San Francisco 3, Calif. SALARY STABILIZATION BOARD (Executive Director's Office: Room 1042, Federal Security Building, South, Third and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 8215) Members: Chairman.—Justin Miller, Wardman Park Hotel Annex. Ellsworth C. Alvord, 7512 Lowell Street. Clinton S. Golden, Solebury, Bucks County, Pa. Charles P. McCormick, Sherwood Forest, Md. V. Henry Rothschild 2d, Hotel Washington. Emergency Agencies OFFICE OF SALARY STABILIZATION Executive Director.—Joseph D. Cooper, 8601 Leonard Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy Executive Director.—Fred E. Desmond, 3421 Thirty-fourth Place. Executive Assistant.—Jesse Robison, 1232 Thirty-first Street. Office of the Chief Counsel, Chief Counsel.—V. Henry Rothschild 2d, Hotel Washington. Associate Chief Counsel.—Drexel A. Sprecher, Oaklyn Drive, R. F. D. 3, Bethesda, Md. Compliance and Litigation Division, Chief.— Gordon W. Hostetter, 612 Ogle-thorpe Street. : Legal Planning and Interpretations Division, Chief.—Rudolf Sobernheim, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. Rulings and Opinions Division, Chief.— William J. Brown, 200 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Office of Program Policy, Director.—[Vacant.] : : Policy Analysis Division, Chief.—Charles Koblentz, Commodore Hotel. Statistical Analysis Division, Chief.— Max Lipowitz, 731 Upsal Street SE. Opes, of Case Analysis, Director—Donald Pendleton, 2039 New Hampshire venue. General Case Division, Chief.— William E. Bowman, Jr., 1503 Dublin Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Public Liaison Staff, Director.— William Haggard, 6030 Ritchie Road. Industry Relations Staff, Director.—Bernard R. Mullady, Springfield, Va. WAGE STABILIZATION BOARD (Federal Security Building, South. Phone, REpublic 7500) Representing the Public: Chairman.—Nathan P. Feinsinger, the Dorchester House. Vice Chairman.—Frederick H. Bullen, 50 Rockledge Road, Hartsdale, N. Y. John T. Dunlop, 54 Cross Street, Belmont, Mass. Thomas F. Coman, 8471 Piney Branch Court, Silver Spring, Md. Benjamin Aaron, 3303 Upland Terrace, Chevy Chase, D. C. William M. Hepburn, 4619 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Representing Labor: Harry C. Bates, 815 Fifteenth Street. Emil Rieve, Shoreham Hotel. Elmer E. Walker, 10106 Pierce Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Joseph A. Beirne, 3103 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. William C. Birthwright, 529 East Fifty-eighth Street, Indianapolis, Ind. John W. Livingston, 5772 Guilford Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Representing Industry: George W. Armstrong, Jr., 508 North Bailey Street, Fort Worth, Tex. Richard P. Doherty, 6615 Hillmean Road, Bethesda 14, Md. Hiram S. Hall, 151 Cedar Lake (East), Denville, N. J. Alexander R. Heron, 2647 Piedmont Avenue, Berkeley 4, Calif. Milton M. Olander, Mayflower Hotel. G. Maynard Smith, 596 West Wesley Road, Atlanta, Ga. RAILROAD AND AIRLINE WAGE BOARD (101 Indiana Avenue. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 6386) Members: Chairman.— Nelson M. Bortz, Old Georgetown Road, Route 4, Rockville, Md. Walter T. Nolte, 216 St. Lawrence Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Francis A. O'Neill, Jr., 2151 California Street. Executive Director.—H. Raymond Cluster, 4502 Maine Avenue, Baltimore 7, Md: FEDERAL CIVIL DEFENSE ADMINISTRATION (1930 Columbia Road. Phone, HUdson 5000) Administrator.— Millard Caldwell, 2233 Bancroft Place. Deputy Administrator.—James J. Wadsworth, 3125 O Street. Assistant Admainistrator.— John Whitehurst, Greenway, Mrs. L. 4101 Baltimore, Md. Assistant Administrator.—Clem J. Randau, Chastleton Hotel. 346 Congressional Directory Assistant Administrator.—Dwayne Orton, Dupont Plaza Hotel. General Counsel.—Samuel H. Sabin, 5049 Macomb Street. Director, Field Administration Office. —Hubert R. Gallagher, 4529 Lowell Street. Director, Public Affairs Officc.—John A. DeChant, 300 Hillman Drive, Silver Spring, Md. TECHNICAL SERVICES OFFICE Assistant Administrator.—Gerald R. Gallagher, 2937 W Street SE. Director, Engineering Services Division.—Perry T. Ford, 2300 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Rescue Services Division.— Lloyd A. Blanchard, 6226 Ninth Street. Director, Fire Services Division.—Kyle P. Laughlin, Burlington Hotel. Director, Warden Services Division.— William B. Blanchet, 5831 Conway Drive, Bethesda, Md. Director, Facilities Self-Protection Division.— Victor H. Anderson (acting), 4651 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Police Services Division. —Philip D. Batson, 2983 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Transportation Services Division. — William S. Lawrence, 3404 Tulane Drive, West Hyattsville, Md. MANAGEMENT OFFICE Assistant Administrator.— William N. Rehlaender, 4811 Middlesex Lane, Bethesda, Md. Deputy Assistant Administrator. Nini L. Coach, 401 South Garfield Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Personnel Division.— Cecil E. Goode, 4424 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Administrative Services Division.—Eric Collins, 6821 Wilson Lane, ~ Bethesda, Md. Director, Budget and Fiscal Division.—Patrick H. Buvens, Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va. Director, Organization and Procedures Division.—John R. Provan, 1131 South Forest Drive, Arlington, Va. Director, Security Division.—Paul S. Cooper, 1305 Admiral Drive, Alexandria, Va. TRAINING AND EDUCATION OFFICE Assistant Administrator.—Jack T. Johnson, Dupont Plaza Hotel. Deputy Assistant Administrator.—Charles S. Mattoon, 3707 Chevy Chase Lake Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Dire, Methods and Materials Division.—Earl K. Peckham, 2007 Wyoming Avenue. Director, Educational Institutions Division.— Urban H. Fleege, 2905 Parker Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. OPERATIONAL SERVICES OFFICE Assistant Admanistrator—Floyd J. Jolley, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Assistant Administrator—James T. Martin, 325 North Piedmont, Arlington, Va. Director, Supply Division.— Arthur G. Eaton, 2022 Columbia Road. Director, Shelter Division.— Martin J. Roess, Jr., 2100 Connecticut Avenue. Dien, ping and Communications Division.— William M. Talbot, 4623 Iton Place. PLANS AND POLICIES OFFICE Assistant Administrator.—Justice M. Chambers, 140 South Adams Street, Rockville, Md. Deputy Assistant Administrator.—Ralph E. Spear (acting), Route 1, Nokesville, Va. Director, Program Coordination Division.— George M. Lacey (acting), 9018 First Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Research Coordination Division.—H. Kenneth Gayer, 1512 Tyler Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Domes Requirements Coordination Division.— William H. Gridley, 7304 Gloster oad. Emergency Agencies Director, Government Liaison Division.—F. Lloyd Eno, 3606 Calvend Lane. Director, Tactical Diviston.— William A. Brewer, 2918 Thirty-eighth street. Director, Intelligence Division.— Theodore Babbitt, 3203 Macomb Street. Director, Emergency Operations Division.— Leslie 1. Kullenberg, Box 71, Route 1, Manassas, Va. HEALTH AND WELFARE OFFICE Assistant Administrator.— William L. Wilson, 4105 Tiegation Street. Director, Health and Special Weapons Defense Division.—Norvin C. Kiefer, 4602 Cheltenham Drive, Bethesda, Md. Director, Emergency Welfare Services Division.—Raymond T. Schaeffer, Box 256, Brandywine, Md. CIVIL DEFENSE SCHOOLS Director, Staff College.—Milton C. Towner, Olney, Md. Director, Central Training Center.— William J. Edens, Oklahoma A. & M. College, Stillwater, Okla. Director, Western Training Center.—John R. Nichols, St. Mary’s College, Calif. REGIONAL OFFICES Region 1.—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey—A. D. oO’ Connor, regional director, 143 Speen Street, Natick, Mass. Region 2.— District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina—H. R. Battley, regional director, Seventh and Main Streets, Richmond, Va. Region 3.—Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida— Wiley L. Moore, regional director, Bona Allen Building, Atlanta, Ga. Region 4 —Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan—Reed M. Winegardner, acting regional director, 507 United States Courthouse, Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio. Region 5.—Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota—Carl W. Gabel, regional director, Room 813, New Post Office’ Building, Chicago, Ill. Region 6.—Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma—French M. Robertson, regional director, 5600 East Mockingbird Lane, Dallas 6, Tex. Region 7.—New Mexico, Colorado, Missouri, Wyoming, Nebraska, RKaniie-—A. C. Tilley, regional director, 321 New Customhouse Building, Denver, Colo. Region 8. —California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona—Henry S. Eaton, regional director, 2223 Fulton Street, Berkeley, Calif. Region 9.—Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon—Roger E. Dunham, regional director, Room 3138-40 Arcade Building, Seattle, Wash. NATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD ON MOBILIZATION POLICY (Executive Office Building. Phone, EXecutive 3300, branch 413) Members: : Chairman.—Charles E. Wilson, the Westchester. David W. Brooks, of Georgia. William H. Davis, of New York. Marion B. Folsom, of New York. William Green, of Ohio. Dechard A. Huley, of Texas. George Houk Mead, of Ohio. George Meany, of New York. Philip Murray, of Pennsylvania. Herschel D. Newsom, of Indiana. John Lord O’Brian, of the District of Columbia. James G. Patton, of Colorado. Paul A. Porter, of Kentucky. Claude A. Putnam, of New Hampshire. Walter P. Reuther, of Michigan. Samuel Abbot Smith, of Massachusetts. Robert B. Taylor, of Oregon. Executive Secretary.—H. Dewayne Kreager, Edgewater Parkway, Hillandale, Silver Spring, Md. . 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 24 348 Congressional Directory SMALL DEFENSE PLANTS ADMINISTRATION (1337 E Street. Phone, REpublic 7500, branch 71201) Administrator.— Telford Taylor, 6101 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Admanistrator—John E. Horne, 804 Janneys Lane, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Administrator.—[Vacant.] General Counsel.—James M. McHaney, 7656 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS COMBINED SHIPPING ADJUSTMENT BOARD, UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN (Department of Commerce Building. Phone EXecutive 3340, branch 78) UNITED STATES MEMBER Vice Adm. E. L. Cochrane, USN (retired) (Administrator, Maritime Adminis-tration, Department of Commerce). Huntington T. Morse, alternate (Special Assistant for Governmental Liaison). GREAT BRITAIN MEMBERS Robert S. F. Edwards (British Shipping Attaché in the United States). In London: Rt. Hon. A. Barnes (British Minister of Transport). FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS . (Headquarters: Rome, Italy; North American Regional Office: 1346 Connecticut Avenue, Washington 6, D. C. Phone, DEcatur 7320) Headquarters: irector General.— Norris E. Dodd. North American Regional Office: Regional Representative.— Gove Hambidge. Technical Assistance Officer.—Harold Vogel. Public Liaison.— Florence Reynolds. Administrative Officer.— Morris Greene. INTER-AMERICAN DEFENSE BOARD (2600 Sixteenth Street. Phone, STerling 6400, branch 2401) Chairman.—Lt. Gen. Charles L. Bolté (United States). Vice Chairman.—Maj. Juan José Rodriguez (Nicaragua). Secretary.— Capt. Robert H. Gibbs, USN (United States). Vice Secretary.—Lt. Col. Rubén M. Macchi (Uruguay). Council of Delegates: Argentina.—Maj. Gen. Estanislao J. Lépez, Hotel 2400; Maj. Gen. Luis Ernesto Brizuela, Hotel 2400; Rear Adm. Pedro Insussary, 2136 R Street; Brig. Gen. Ramén Esteban Herrera, Hotel 2400. Bolivia.—Maj. Gen. Ovidio Quiroga, 9603 Denton Road, Bethesda, Md.; Lt. Col. Rubén A. Rioja, 3203 Queenstown Drive, Mount Rainier, Md. Brazil.—Rear Adm. Ernesto de Araujo, 2615 Woodley Place; Brig. Gen. Luiz Leal Netto dos Reys, 25600 Massachusetts Avenue; Col. Ademar de Queiroz, 2122 California Street. Chile.—Maj. Gen. Santiago Danus Pefia, 18 Nicholson Street; Capt. Jorge Escobedo Diaz, 14 West Howell Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Colombia.—Gen. Ricardo Bayona Posada, 4210 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. Costa Rica. — (No representation at present.) Cuba.—Lt. Col. Ramén M. Barquin, Chastleton Hotel. Bepiduies, Republic.—Lt. Col. Virgilio Garcia Trujillo, 2356 Massachusetts venue. Ecuador.—Col. Félix Vega D4vila, 4425 Reno Road; Lt: Col. Bolivar Pico Santos, 7211 Hilton Avenue, Takoma Park, ; El Salvador.—Lt. Col. Manuel J. Cérdova, 1929 Lamont Street. International Organizations Council of Delegates—Continued Guatemala.—Col. Eduardo Weymann, 2751 Macomb Street; Lt. Col. Ricardo A. Porras, 1909 N Street. Haiti.—Col. Pierre Haspil, 5016 Seventh Street. Honduras.—Capt. Roberto Zepeda Turcios, 1739 Nineteenth Street. Mexico.—Brig. Gen. Alberto Salinas Carranza, 2659 Woodley Road; Rear Adm. Antonio Vézquez del Mercado, 2829 Sixteenth Street; Col. "Juan Loyo Gonzédlez, 1330 Kennedy Street; Lt. Col. Rodolfo Delgado Severini, 2829 Sixteenth Street; Maj. Angel Lépez Padilla, 2803 Eighteenth Street. Nicaragua.— Maj. Juan José Rodriguez S., 1755 Harvard Street. Panama.— (No representation at present.) Paraguay.—Col. Carlos M. Bébeda, 807 Somerset Place. Peru.—Col. Lorenzo Barreto S., 4024 Arkansas Avenue; Lt. Col. Guillermo Alegre Soriano, 3612 Quesada Street; Commander Luis Castro Reus, 3900 Alton Place. United States.—Lt. Gen. Charles L. Bolté, Quarters 4, Fort MeNair; Maj. Gen. Robert L. Walsh, 1345 Thirtieth Street; Maj. Gen. John L. McKee, Fort Myer, Va.; Rear Adm. Milton E. Miles, "111 Shadow Road, Kenwood, Chevy Chase, Md.; Col. Willis M. Smyser, 3315 South Stafford Street, Fairlington, Va.; Capt. Jacob A. Lark, USN, 115 West Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Uruguay. —Gen. Carlos Iribar, Quebec House; Col. Mariano Rios-Gianola, 5228 Nebraska Avenue; Capt. Eduardo Beraldo, 5745 Moreland Street. Venezuela.—Commander ‘Wolfgang Larrazébal, 4322 Fessenden Street; Maj. Federico Schael, 2861 Twenty-ninth Street. The staff: Bien, .—Brig. Gen. Edwin L. Sibert (United States), 5600 Woodway Drive, umner. Vice Director.—Gen. Gustavo Rojas Pinilla (Colombia), Hotel 2400. Deputy Director for Army.—Col. Brookner W. Brady, 6924 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md Deputy Director for Air.—Col. Calixto C. Valle, 8483 Piney Branch Cours, Silver Spring, Md Deputy Director for Navy.— Capt. William H. Kirvan, 3122 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Committee M embers; Argentina.—Lt. Col. Eduardo Argentino Sefiorans, 2810 McKinley Street; Commander Fernando Muro de Nadal, Alban Towers Apartments. Brazil.—Col. José Pineheiro de Ulhba Cintra, Chastleton Hotel; Lt. Col. Luiz Gomes Pinheiro, 1228 Hamilton Street; Commander Arnoldo Toscano, 120, Biltmore Street; Lt. Col. Mario Perdigio Coelho, 1729 Varnum treet. Chile.— Col. Oscar Herrera Jarpa, 3900 McKinley Street. Colombia.—Commander Luis A. Baquero H., 54 Varnum Street NE.; Maj. Carlos Uribe U., 4806 Eastern Avenue NE. Cuba.—Lt. Comdr. Oscar Rivery, 1475 Euclid Street. i Republic.— Capt. Amado Herndndez Polanco, 6713 Fourteenth treet Ecuador.—Col. Garbriel Nufiez, 7109 Central Avenue and Garland Lane, Takoma Park, Md. Guatemala.— Maj. Héctor Medina C., 38 Sherman Circle. Paraguay.—Col. Leodegar Cabello, 722 Roxboro Place. Peru.— Col. Félix Huamén 1., Chastleton Hotel; Lt. Col. José del C. Cabrejo, 2619 University Place. ay States.—Lt. Col. Joseph H. Paul, 835 Bonifant Street, Silver Spring, Secretariat: Secretary.—Capt. Robert H. Gibbs, USN. Vice Secretary.—Lt. Col. Rubén M. Macchi (Uruguay). Liaison Officer.—Lt. Col. Paul Sapieha, USA. Assistant Liaison Officer.— Capt. ouglas Montgomery, USAF. Administrative Officer.— Lt. Col. John C. Petit, USMC. Public Relations and Assistant Administrative Officer.— Lt. Comdr. Ralph B. Terrill, USN. Finance Officer. —Capt. Lawrence L. Persons, USA Conference-Documents Officer.—Lt. Col. Leroy “M. Glodell, GSC. 350 Congressional Directory INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT (1818 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6360) President.—Eugene R. Black (United States). Vice President.—Robert L. Garner (United States). Assistant to the President.— William A. B. Iliff (United Kingdom). General Counsel.—Davidson Sommers (United States). Assistant General Counsel.—Aron Broches (The Netherlands). Secretary.— Morton M. Mendels (Canada). ; Treasurer.—D. Crena de Iongh (The Netherlands). Loan Director.—A. S. G. Hoar (United Kingdom). Research Director—Leonard B. Rist (France). Director of Marketing.—George L. Martin (United States). Director of Public Relations.—Harold N. Graves, Jr. (United States). Director of Administration.—Chauncey G. Parker (United States). Assistant to the Vice President.—Richard H. Demuth (United States). EXECUTIVE DIRECTQRS William MeC. Martin, Jr. (United States). Sir Ernest Rowe-Dutton (United Kingdom). Yueh-Lien Chang (China). Roger Hoppenot (France). B. K. Nehru (India). : Thomas Basyn (Belgium), also represents Denmark, Finland, and Luxembourg. Manuel Jose Diez (Panama), also represents Mexico, Cuba, Philippine Republic, Uruguay, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Hon-duras, and Nicaragua. Guillermo Perez Chiriboga (Ecuador), also represents Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Guatemala, and Paraguay. Louis Rasminsky (Canada), also represents Iceland. J. W. Beyen (Netherlands), also represents Norway. Yaqub Shah (Pakistan), also represents Egypt, Iran, Syria, Iraq, and Lebanon. Leslie Galfreid Melville (Australia), also represents Union of South Africa. Costantino Bresciani-Turroni (Italy), also represents Austria and Greece. Cabir Selek (Turkey), also represents Yugoslavia, Ceylon, Thailand, and Ethiopia. INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION (Geneva, Switzerland; Liaison Office with the United Nations, Great Neck, Long Island, N. Y.; 1825 Jefferson Place, Washington 6, D, C. Phone, DIstrict 8736) International Labor Office (Permanent Secretariat of the Organization): Headquarters (Geneva): Director-General.—David A. Morse. Assistant Directors-General.—Jef Rens, Raghunath Rao, C. Wilfred Jenks, Luis Alvarado, Jean Morellet. Washington Branch: Director.— Thacher Winslow, 1677 Thirty-second Street. Other Branch Offices: London, Paris, Shanghai, New Delhi, Rome, Ottawa. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND (1818 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6360) BOARD OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS Frank A. Southard, Jr. (United States), casting votes of United States; alternate, John S. Hooker (United States). Sir George Bolton (United Kingdom), casting votes of United Kingdom; alternate, The Hon. A. M. Stamp (United Kingdom). Beue Tann (China), casting votes of China; alternate, Kuo-Hwa Yu (China). Jean de Largentaye (France), casting votes of France; alternate, Francois Bizard (France). J. V. Joshi (India), casting votes of India; alternate, W. R. Natu (India). Octavio Paranagua (Brazil), casting votes of Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Dominican Republic, Honduras, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay; alternate Herculano Borges da Fonseca (Brazil). International Organizations Raul Martinez-Ostos (Mexico), casting votes of Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Panama, Venezuela; alternate, Javier Marquez (Mexico). : Ernest de Selliers (Belgium), casting votes of Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg; alternate, Jean C. Godeaux (Belgium). Ahmed Zaki Saad Pasha (Egypt), casting votes of Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Philippine Republic, Syria; alternate, Mahmoud Saleh El Falaki Bey (Egypt). : J. W. Beyen (Netherlands), casting votes of Netherlands, Norway; alternate, H. M. H. A. van der Valk (Netherlands). Louis Rasminsky (Canada), casting votes of Canada, Iceland; alternate, Harry L. Wolfson (Canada). L. G. Melville (Australia), casting votes of Australia, Union of South Africa; alternate, L. H. E. Bury (Australia). Guido Carli (Italy), casting votes of Austria, Greece, Italy; alternate, Giorgio Cigliana-Piazza (Italy). Nenad Popovie (Yugoslavia), casting votes of Ceylon, Thailand, Turkey, Yugoslavia; alternate, D. W. Rajapatirana (Ceylon). : OFFICERS Chairman of the Board and Managing Director.—Ivar Rooth (Sweden). Deputy Managing Director.—A. N. Overby (United States). Burapeny nd North American Department.— Director, G. A. P. Weyer (Nether- lands). Eats Heres Department.—Deputy Director, Irving S. Friedman (United tates). Latin American, Middle Eastern, and Far Eastern Department.—Deputy Director, George F. Luthringer (United States). Legal Department.— General Counsel, Andre van Campenhout (Belgium). Research Department.— Director, E. M. Bernstein (United States). Treasurer’s Department.— Treasurer, Frederick W. Gray (United Kingdom). Office of Administration.—Director, Oscar L. Altman (United States). Office of Public Relations.—Director, David H. Wills (United States). Office of the Secretary.—Secretary, Frank Coe (United States). Special Representative to the United Nations.—Gordon Williams (United States). _ Internal Auditor.—George P. Antonoff (United States). JOINT BRAZIL-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION (Room 2071, Temporary Building U, Twelfth and Constitution Avenue. Phone, LIberty 5-6700, branches ; 64903, 64905) UNITED STATES MEMBERS . Maj. Gen. Robert L.. Walsh, USAF, chairman and air member. Rear Adm. Milton E. Miles, U. 8. Navy member. Maj. Gen. John L. McKee, U. S. Army member. Lt. Col. W. Donn Hayes, Jr., U. S. air alternate member and adviser. Capt. Jacob A. Lark, U. S. Navy alternate member and adviser. Lt. Col. Walter J. Bryde, U. S. Army alternate member. Col. Joseph W. Barron, USAF, secretary general. First Lt. Robert F. McDermott, USA, assistant secretary general. BRAZILIAN MEMBERS Rear Adm. Ernesto de Araujo, chief of Brazilian delegation and Navy member. Brig. Gen. Luiz L. Netto dos Reys, Brazilian air member. Col. Ademar de Queiroz, Brazilian Army member. Col. Pedro Geraldo de Almeida, Brazilian Army adviser. Lt. Col. Orlando Geisel, Brazilian Army adviser. Lt. Col. Aleyr d’Avila Mello, Brazilian Army adviser. Lt. Col. Oswaldo Dealtry, Brazilian Army adviser. Rear Adm. Gerson de Macedo Soares, Brazilian Navy adviser. Lt. Comdr. J. Goossens Marques, Brazilian Navy adviser. Col. Jose Kahl Filho, Brazilian air adviser. “Lt. Col. Paulo E. da Camara Ortegal, Brazilian air adviser. 352 Congressional Directory JOINT MEXICAN-UNITED STATES DEFENSE COMMISSION (United States Section, Room 2055, Temporary Building U, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, Liberty 5-6700, branch 64752) Maj. Gen. Robert L. Walsh, USAF, chairman and air member. Maj. Gen. John L. McKee, USA, Army member. Rear Adm. Milton E. Miles, USN, Navy member. Capt. John P. McCleary, USA, secretary-general. (Mexican Section, Mexican Embassy, 2829 Sixteenth Street. Phone, ADams 5492) Brig. Gen. Alberto Salinas Carranza, chairman, and Army member. Rear Adm. Antonio Vazquez del Mercado, Navy member. ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES Pan American Union (General Secretariat) (Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone, N'Ational 6635) Secretary General.— Alberto Lleras, 201 Eighteenth Street. Assistant Secretary General.— William Manger, 3001 Birch Street. Chief, Office of Information.— Michael Lever, 3610 S Street. Director, Department of Economic and Social Affairs.—Amos E. Taylor, 1451 Jonquil Street. ; Admanzstrative Secretary, Inter-American Economic and Social Council.— Luis Delgado Gardel, 4748 Reservoir Road. Chief, Division of Economic Research.—Loreto M. Dominguez, 6608 Delfield Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Division of Agriculture and Conservation.—José L. Colom, 8904 Connecti- cut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Division of Travel.—Francisco J. Herndndez, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Bogan Trade Adviser.—J. Silvado Bueno, 1512 Longfellow Street, Hyattsville, Dorion i of International Law.—Charles G. Fenwick, 2653 Woodley oad. President, Inter-American Commission of Women.— Amalia de Castillo Ledén, 3132 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Division of Law and Treaties.—Manuel Canyes, 1605 O Street. Chief, Division of Conferences and Organizations. —Paul R. Kelbaugh, 3040 Idaho Avenue. : Chief, Translation Sectton.— Beatrice Newhall, 1277 New Hampshire Avenue. Doers Department of Cultural Affairs.—Aleceu Amoroso Lima, 2274 Cathedral venue. Chief, Division of Education.—Guillermo Nannetti, 6415 Thirty-first Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Division of Philosophy, Letters, and Sciences.— Anibal Sanchez-Revlet, 2700 Q Street. Chief, Division of Music and Visual Arts.—Charles Seeger, 7 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Librarian.— Arthur E. Gropp, 3324 Highland Place. Director, Department of Administrative Services.—Lowell Curtiss, 709 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. le, Fiscal Division.— Christopher C. Denman (acting), 4700 Connecticut venue. : Chief, Personnel Division.—Paul W. Bigbee, P. O. Box 305, Severna Park, Md. Chief, Division of General Services.— Frank W. Loops, 3506 Ottawa Street, East Falls Church, Va. Chief, Mimeographing and Duplicating Division.—George F. Hirschman, 402 Kennedy Street. Chief, Printing Division.— Harry C. Snodgrass, 3601 Wisconsin Avenue. Chief, Philatelic Division.—Albert F. Kunze, 8112 New Hampshire Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. : Chief, Buildings and Grounds Division.— William W. Kellum, Deale, Md. Chief, Publications and Distribution Division.—John McAdams, 349 Willard Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. ; International Organizations Publications: Managing Editor of Americas.—Kathleen Walker, 5746 Colorado Avenue. Editor of -Ann ans.— Enrique Coronado, 2601 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Special Publications Editor.— Lyn Manduley, 922 Manor Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Special Events Section.—Paul William Murphy, 424 Crittenden Street. Correspondence Officer.— Margaret Kiser (acting), 3214 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. THE COUNCIL HEADQUARTERS: PAN AMERICAN UNION Chairman.—John C. Dreier, Ambassador, Representative of the United States, 3511 Lowell Street. Vice Chairman.—Rafael Heliodoro Valle, Ambassador of Honduras, 4715 Sixteenth Street. Arturo Ludueiia, Interim Representative of Argentina, 1600 New Hampshire Avenue. 2 Fernando Guachalla, Ambassador, Representative of Bolivia. Hildebrando Accioly, Ambassador, Representative of Brazil, 3940 Fordham Road. Félix Nieto del Rio, Ambassador of Chile, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue. Cipriano Restrepo Jaramillo, Ambassador of Columbia, 1520 Twentieth Street. José Rafael Oreamuno Flores, Ambassador of Costa Rica, 2112 S Street. Gonzalo Giiell, Ambassador, Representative of Cuba, 1025 Connecticut Avenue. Luis Francis Thomen, Ambassador of the Dominican Republic, 4530 Sixteenth treet. Alfonso Moscoso, Ambassador, Representative of Ecuador, 3549 Springland Lane. Héctor David Castro, Ambassador of El Salvador, 2142 Wyoming Avenue. Carlos Aldana Sandoval, Ambassador of Guatemala, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Joseph L. Déjean, Ambassador, Representative of Haiti, 4400 Seventeenth Street. Luis Quintanilla, Ambassador, Representative of Mexico, 2501 Q Street. Guillem Sevilla Sacasa, Ambassador of Nicaragua, 1627 New Hampshire venue. Roberto Heurtematte, Ambassador of Panama, 2601 Twenty-ninth Street. Luis O. Boettner, Ambassador of Paraguay, 5500 Sixteenth Street. Soon Das de Lavalle, Ambassador, Representative of Peru, Mayflower otel. José A. Mora, Ambassador, Representative of Uruguay, 3000 Woodland Drive. René Lépervanche Parparcén, Ambassador, Representative of Venezuela, 3904 Eighteenth Street. PAN AMERICAN SANITARY ORGANIZATION Executive Organ: Pan American Sanitary Bureau (Regional Office for the Americas of the World Health Organization) (1501 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, HUdson 5280) Director.—Dr. Fred L. Soper, 204 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. diy Director.—Dr. Paulo C. A. Antunes, 410 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Secretary General.—Dr. Miguel E. Bustamante, 3179 Porter Street. Opes Public Health Dwision.—Dr. Abraham Horwitz, 2100 Massachusetts venue. Chief, Administration Division.—Harry A. Hinderer, 1603 Sherwood Road, Silver Spring, Md. Zone Representative, Guatemala, Guatemala.—Dr. Juan A. Montoya. Zone Representative, Lima, Peru.—Dr. Oswaldo J. da Silva. Zone Representative, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.—Dr. Kenneth O. Courtney. Zone Representalive, Buenos Aires, Argeniina.—Dr. Emilio Budnik. Chief, District Office, El Paso, Texas.—Dr. Jesse C. Ellington. Chief, Office, Kingston, Jamacia, B.W.I.—Dr. P. F. de Caires. : Executive Committee, Pan American Sanitary Organization.—Chile, Dr. Nacianceno Romero; Dominican Republic, Dr. Luis ¥. Thomen; Ecuador, Dr. Egberto Garcia Solérzano; El Salvador, Dr. Juan Allwood Paredes; Mexico, Dr. Saturnino Guzmén Duarte; Peru, Dr. Carlos Lazarte; United States, Dr. H. van Zile Hyde. 354 Congressional Directory UNITED NATIONS (New York, N. Y. Phone, PLaza 4-1234) Secretary General.—Trygve Lie (Norway). Executive Assistant to the Secretary General.— Andrew W. Cordier (United States of America). Director of Coordination for Specialized Agencies and Economic and Social Matters.—W. Martin Hill (United Kingdom). Assistant Secretary General, Department of Security Council Affairs.—Konstantin E. Zinchenko (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics). Principal Director.—Dragoslav M. Protitch (Yugoslavia). . : -Assistant Secretary General, Department of Economic Affairs.—A. D. K. Owen {United Kingdom). Director.—[Vacant.] Assistant Secretary General, Department of Social Affairs.—Guillaume Georges-Picot (France). Acting Principal Director.—Leon Steinig (United States of America). Assistant Secretary General, Department of Trusteeship and Information From Non-Self-Governing Territories.— Victor Chi-tsai Hoo (China). Principal Director.—Ralph J. Bunche (United States of America). Assistant Secretary General, Department of Public Information.—Benjamin A. Cohen (Chile). Principal Director.—Tor Gjesdal (Norway). Assistant Secretary General, Legal Depariment.—Ivan Kerno (Czechoslovakia). General Counsel and Principal Director.—A. H. Feller (United States of America). Assistant Secretary ( eneral, Department of Conference and General Services.— Shamaldharee Lall (India). Principal Director.—David B. Vaughan (United States of America). Assistant Secretary General, Department of Administrative and Financial Services.— Byron Price (United States of America). Director of Personnel.—Georges Palthey (France). Director of Finance.—Hans Christian Andersen (Denmark). DEPARTMENT OF STATE (Twenty-first Street and Virginia Avenue. Phone, REpublic 5600) DEAN G. ACHESON, Secretary of State, was born April 11, 1893, at Middle-town, Conn.; graduate of Groton school; An degree Yale University 1915; 11. B. degree Harvard University 1918; member of District of Columbia Bar Association; United States Navy 1918-19, ensign; private secretary to associate justice of United States Supreme Court 1919-21; engaged in practice of law 1921-33, 1934-41, 1947-49; Under Secretary of . United States Treasury 1933; honorary M. A, Yale University, 1936; appointed Assistant Secretary of State February 1, 1941; member Foreign Service Personnel Board, Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service, and Foreign Service School Board 1941 45; chairman of Executive Committee on Commercial Policy 1941-44; chairman "of Board of Economic Operations October 8, 1941-June 24, 1943; member of Frozen Funds Commission 1941; member of Requirements Committee, War Production Board, 1942; director of Office of Foreign Economic Coordination June 24—November 6, 1943: chairman of Policy Committee and Coordinating Committee of Commission for Ticonomic Policy in Liberated Areas 1943; United States member of the Council, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration 1943— 45; member of Department of State Policy Committee January 15-December 20, 1944; member of Department of State Committee on Post-War Programs January 15-December 20, 1944; chairman of Executive Committee on Economic Foreign Policy June 30, 1944; delegate to United Nations Monetary and Financial Con-ference, Bretton Woods, N. H., 1944; member of Secretary’s Staff Committee 1944; Under Secretary of State ‘August 16, 1945; chairman, Coordinating Com-mittee 1945; attended Advisory Health-Group meeting, ‘Washington, D.C, 1945; member of United States group, Discussions on Anglo-American Financial and Trade Negotiations, Washington, D. C., 1945; chairman of Secretary of State’s Committee on Atomic Energy, 1946; United States representative at first United States-United Kingdom meeting on 'Bizonal Arrangements for Germany, Washington, D. C., 1946; resigned as Under Secretary of State June 30, 1947; appointed by President as member of Commission on Organization of the Execu-tive Branch of the Government 1947; chairman of American section of the Per-manent Joint Defense Board 1947-48; awarded medal for merit June 30, 1947; honorary LL. D., Wesleyan University (Conn.), 1947; appointed Secretary of State and took oath of office January 21, 1949; United States member to the Sixth Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers, Paris, France, 1949; repre-sentative, United States delegation, Fourth Regular Session, United Nations General Assembly, New York, N. Y., 1949; member of the United States delega-tion to the Tripartite Economic Discussions, Washington, D. C., 1949; North Atlantic Treaty Talks and Signing Ceremony, Washington, D. C., 1949; Meeting of North Atlantic Council, Washington, D. <, 1949; married. Secretary of State.—Dean G. Acheson. Consultants to the Secretary.—John Foster Dulles, 72 East Ninety-first Street, New York, N. Y.; Myron M. Cowen, 2122 Massachusetts Avenue. Special Assistants to the Secretary. — Lucius D. Battle, 3332 P Street; Robert Rout West, 21 East Twenty-sixth Street, New York, N. Y.; R. Gordon Arneson, 5520 Twenty-third Street, Arlington, Va. Under Secretary of State.—James E. Webb, 3407 Rodman Street. Sone Assistant to the Under Secr etary. ~_Lloyd A. Lehrbas, 1815 Seventeenth treet. Special Assistant for Fisheries and Wildlife— William C. Herrington, 6025 Twenty-third Street, Arlington, Va. ‘Science Adviser. —Joseph B. Koepfli, 3340 N Street. Ambassador at Large.— Philip C. Jessup, 2122 Massachusetts Avenue. Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration.—Carlisle H. Humelsine, 6512 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md 355 356 Congressional Directory Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration—Continued Deputy Assistant Secretary.— Walter K. Scott, 4801 Bent Branch Road. Director General of the Foreign Service.—Richard P. Butrick, 2204 Decatur Place. Management Staff: Director.—Harlow J. Heneman, 5201 Massachusetts Avenue. Foreign Service Inspection Corps: Acting Director.—Edward T. Wailes, 2804 Thirty-fourth Place. Division of Foreign Buildings Operations: Chief.—Frederick Larkin, 601 Nineteenth Street. Division of Foreign Reporting: Chief.—Philip H. Burris, 1422 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Under Secretary of State.—H. Freeman Matthews, 4955 Glenbrook Road. Special Assistants to the Deputy Under Secretary. — Frederick E. N olting, R. F. D. 1, Herndon, Va.; Murat W. Williams, 1689 Thirty-fourth Street. Counselor of the "Department. —Charles E. Bohlen, 2811 Dumbarton — Avenue. NSC Staff Assistant.— Walter N. Walmsley, 3218 Woodley Road. i Li Secretary of State for Economic Affairs.— Willard L. Thorp, 1642 Avon ace. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs.—Harold F. Linder, 1901 Twenty-fourth Street. Dig, i Staff.—Charles H. Mace, 8315 Hadden Drive, Takoma ark Assistant ‘Secretary of State for Public Affairs.—Edward W. Barrett, 1840 Twenty-fourth Street. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Staite for Public Affairs.—Howland H. Sargeant, Department of State. UNESCO Relations Staff: Director.— Max McCullough, 6680 Thirty-second Street. Assistant Secretary of State for United Nations Affairs.—John D. Hickerson, 3314 Ross Place. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for United Nations Affairs.—Durward V. Sandifer, 8304 Oakford Place, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Executive Stag. — Paul T. Meyer, 1303 Barton Street, Arlington Village, Arlington, Va. Refugees and Displaced Persons Staff: Adviser.—George L. Warren, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affairs.— George C. McGhee, 2406 Kalorama Road. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affairs.—Burton Y. Berry, University Club, 1135 Sixteenth Street. Executive Director.—John W. Jago, 6700 Hillmead, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs. — Edward G. Miller, Jr., 2500 Foxhall Road. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs.—Thomas C. Mann, 3214 Porter Street. Executive Director.—George M. Czayo, 6101 Twenty-eighth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs.—George W. Perkins, 3123 Dumbarton Avenue. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs.—James C. H. Bon-Li by 2906 P Street. Executive Director.— Arthur G. Stevens, 5409 Allen Road. Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs.—[Vacant.] Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs.—Livingston T. Merchant, 3218 Cleveland Avenue. Executive Director.— Wilson C. Flake, 1523 Rhode Island Avenue. Director of the Bureau of German Affairs.—Henry A. Byroade, 4410 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director of the Bureau of German Affairs.—Geoffrey W. Lewis, 214 Belle Haven Road, Alexandria, Va. Executive Director.—Arthur A. Kimball, 3915 Forty-ninth Street. Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations.—Jack K. McFall, 2744 Thirty-second Street. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional Relations.—Ben H. Brown, Jr., 3501 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va Legal Adviser.— Adrian S. Fisher, 3013 Dumbarton Avenue. Deputy Legal Adviser.—Jaek B. Tate, 4432 Q Street. Department of State 357 Technical Cooperation Administration: Admanistrator.—Henry G. Bennett, the Washington Hotel. : Aen Demy Admanistrator—Johnston Avery, 209 Prince Street, Alexan- ria, Va. Special Assistant for Intelligence.—W. Park Armstrong, Jr., 2853 Ontario Road. Deputy Special Assistant.—Fisher Howe, 4611 Q Street. Director, Executive Staff.—John F. Killea, 6924 Thirty-second Street. Special Assistant to the Secretary for Press Relations.—Michael J. McDermott, 1855 Upshur Street. Deputy.— Lincoln White, 102 Jesup Lane, Bethesda, Md. Special Assistant to the Secretary for Mutual Security Affairs.— Charles A. Coolidge, the Westchester. Executive Secretariat: Director— William J. McWilliams, 204 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director.—Robert G. Barnes, 50 Franconia Road, Alexandria, Va. Protocol Staff: Chief of Protocol.—John F. Simmons, 2915 Forty-fourth Street. Policy Planning Staff: -Director—Paul H. Nitze, 3120 Woodley Road. Deputy Director—John H. Ferguson, 1650 Thirtieth Street. Executive Secretary.— Philip H. Watts, 1513 Twenty-eighth Street. BUREAU OF UNITED NATIONS AFFAIRS (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for United Nations Affairs) Office of Dependent Area Affairs: Director.—0O. Benjamin Gerig, 327 Essex Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director.—J. Jefferson Jones 3d, 3411 Prospect Street. Office of International Administration and Conferences: Director.— William O. Hall, 1198 Janney’s Lane, Alexandria, Va. Division of International Administration: Chief —George M. Ingram, Box 82, Route 3, Fairfax, Va. Division of International Conferences: Chief— Warren Kelchner, 2027 Hillyer Place. Office of United Nations Economic and Social Affairs: Director—Walter M. Kotschnig, 108 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director.—James F. Green, 21 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Office of United Nations Political and Security Affairs: Director.—David W. Wainhouse, 4708 Linean Avenue. -Deputy Director.—David H. Popper, 6116 Thirty-third Street. BUREAU OF NEAR EASTERN, SOUTH ASIAN, AND AFRICAN AFFAIRS (Under the Direction of the Assistant Serretary. a ite for Near Eastern, South Asian, and African airs Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs: Director— William M. Rountree, 6408 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director—Edmund J. Dorsz, 3820 Ingomar Street. Office of South Asian Affairs: Director.—Donald B. Kennedy, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Deputy Director.—T. Eliot Weil, 307 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Office of Near Eastern Affairs: Director.—G. Lewis Jones, 1644 Avon Place. Deputy Director—Samuel K. C. Kopper, 428 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Office of African Affairs: Director.—Elmer H. Bourgerie, 14 Carvel Road, Westmoreland Hills, D. C. BUREAU OF INTER-AMERICAN AFFAIRS (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs) Representative of the United, States to the Council of the Organization of American States.—Paul C. Dreier, 3511 Lowell Street. Represeniative of the United States to the Inter-American Economic and Social Council.—Merwin L. Bohan, 515 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Office of-Middle American Affairs: Director.—Albert Fa Nufer, Fairfax Hotel. Acting Deputy Director.—Roy R. Rubottom, Jr., 2107 Windham Place, Silver Spring, Md. 358 Congressional Directory Office of South American Affairs: “Acting Director.—Rollin S. Atwood, 7809 Rayburn Road, Bethesda, Md. Acting Deputy Director.—W. Tapley Bennett, Jr., 3026 Forty-fourth Place. Office of Regional American Affairs: Director.—Edward G. Cale, 6507 Brennon Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director and Alternate to the Representative of the United States to the Council of the Organization of American States.—Charles R. Burrows, 607 East Thornapple Street, Rollingwood, Chevy Chase, Md. BUREAU OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs) Office of British Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs: Director—G. Hayden Raynor, 6647 Thirty-second Place. Deputy Director.—[Vacant.] Office of Eastern European Affairs: Director— Walworth Barbour, 1304 Thirtieth Street. Deputy Director—Randolph L. Higgs, 4664 Reservoir Road. Office of Western European Affairs: Director—Homer M. Byington, Jr., 1539 Twenty-ninth Street. lo A a T. Williamson, 3477 S. Wakefield Street, Arling- ton, Va. Office of European Regional Affairs: Director.— Edwin M. Martin, 4804 Dover Road. Deputy Director.—J. Graham Parsons, 1404 Thirty-fifth Street. BUREAU OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs) Office of Chinese Affairs: * Director—0O. Edmund Clubb, 1635 Madison Street. Deputy Director.—Troy L. Perkins, 5001 Newport Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Office of Northeast Asian Affairs: Director.—U. Alexis Johnson, 2019 Rosemont Avenue. Deputy Director.—Robert J. G. McClurkin, 515 Baltimore Road, Rockville, Md. Office of Philippine and Southeast Asian Affairs: Director— William S. B. Lacy, 3705 Thirty-third Place. Deputy Directors.—John F. Melby, 123 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; William M. Gibson, 3412 P Street. BUREAU OF GERMAN AFFAIRS | (Under the Direction of the Director of the Bureau of German Affairs) Office of German Political Affairs: Director.—Perry Laukhuff, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Director.—John A. Calhoun, 2520 Q Street. Office of German Economic Affairs: Director.—Daniel F. Margolies, 511 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director.—William A. Fowler, 1204 Allan Avenue, Poplar Heights, Falls Church, Va. Office of German Public Affairs: Director.—Henry J. Kellermann, 5428 Roosevelt Street, Bethesda, Md. Begiay Director.— Albert G. Sims, 222 Martha’s Road, Hollin Hills, Alexandria, a. ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for Economic Affairs) Office of Economic Defense and Trade Policy: Acting Lin eng M. Leddy, 330 North George Mason Drive, Arling-ton, Va. Acting Deputy Director.—Raymond Vernon, 5717 First Street South, Arling-ton, Va. Business Practices and Technology Staff: Acting Chief.—Roger C. Dixon, 1646 Mount Eagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Commercial Policy Staff: Chief.—Carl D. Corse, 6511 Brennon Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Economic Defense Staff: Mey Chief.—Edwin G. Moline, 210 East Indian Spring Drive, Silver Spring, d. ; Department of State 359 Office of Financial and Development Policy: Director.— Leroy D. Stinebower, 4625 Thirty-sixth Street. Deputy Director.—Jack C. Corbett, 7231 Ramsgate Road, Woodacres, Md. Investment and Economic Development Staff: Chief.— Wilfred Malenbaum, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Lend-Lease and Surplus Property Staff: Chief.—Francis T. Murphy, 801 South Ivy Street, Arlington, Va. Monetary Affairs Staff: Acting Chief.—Alexander M. Rosenson, 5347 Twenty-eighth Street. Office of International Materials Policy: Acting Director.— Winthrop G. Brown, Chain Bridge Road, McLean, Va. Acting Deputy Director—John W. Evans, 3327 N Street. Agricultural Products Staff: Acting Chief. —Francis A. Linville, 31 Woodhaven Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Manufactured Products Staff: Acting Chief.—Halsted B. Vander Poel, 3600 Prospect Avenue. Metals and Minerals Staff: Acting Chief —Harlan B. Bramble, McLean, Va. Petroleum Policy Staff: Chief.—Robert H. S. Eakens, 2608 North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Office of Transport and Communications Policy: Acting Director.—J. Paul Barringer, 2911 Dumbarton Avenue. Acting Deputy Director.—Harvey Klemmer, Springbrook Drive, Springbrook, Silver Spring, Md. Aviation Policy Staff: Chief —Francis Deak, 4310 Forty-second Street. Inland Transport Policy Staff: Chief —H. H. Kelly, 1517 Thirtieth Street. Shipping Policy Staff: Chief.—Jesse E. Saugstad, 2021 Massachusetts Avenue. Telecommunications Policy Staff: Chief. —Francis Colt de Wolf, 3322 O Street. PUBLIC AFFAIRS ACTIVITIES (Under the Direction of the Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs) Office of Public Affairs: ; Director—Francis H. Russell, 9632 Kensington Parkway, Kensington, Md. Division of Public Liaison: Acting Chief.—John Patterson, 3507 Inverness Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Public Studies: Chief.—H. Schuyler Foster, Jr., 3933 Livingston Street. Division of Historical Policy Research: Chief —G. Bernard Noble, 710 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Publications: Chief.—Robert L. Thompson, 6800 Summit Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. International Information and Educational Exchange Program: General Manager.— Thurman L. Barnard, 1638 Thirty-third Street. Office of International Information: Director—Robert C. LaBlonde, 2731 Dumbarton Avenue. Acting Deputy Director—John L. Dunning, 2908 Brandywine Street. Departmental Staff of Commission on Information: Chief.—Nancy B. Chapplear, 2401 Calvert Street. Division of International Broadcasting: Chief—Foy D. Kohler, 1680 York Avenue, New York, N. Y. Division of International Motion Pictures: Chief.—Herbert T. Edwards, Arden, Harwood, Md. Division of International Press and Publications: Acting Chief.—Charles P. Arnot, 2300 Connecticut Avenue. Office of Educational Exchange: Director— William C. Johnstone, Jr., 3065 University Terrace. Deputy Director—Russell L. Riley, Maple Lane, Fairfax, Va. Departmental Staff of Commission on Educational Exchange: Chief —Elinor P. Reams, 5537 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, Va. Division of Exchange of Persons: Chief.—Francis J. Colligan, 6322 Thirty-second Street. Division of Overseas Information Centers: ‘Chief.—Dan Lacy, 5933 Anniston Road, Bethesda, Md. 360 Congressional Directory ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIVITIES (Under the Direction of the Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration) Office of Personnel: Director.—Edwin N. Montague, 201 Washington Road, Hollin Hall Village, Alexandria, Va. Division of Foreign Service Personnel: Chief— Elbridge Durbrow, 3505 Porter Street. Division of Departmental Personnel: Chief.— Arch K. Jean, 2306 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Foreign Service Institute: : Director—Harry C. Hawkins, Springdale Farm, Route 1, Clifton, Va. Secretariat of the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service: Executive Director.—Joseph C. Green, 10 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md, Office of Operating Facilities: Director.— William Diggs Wright, 2944 University Terrace. Division of Communications and Records: Chief.—Robert E. Stufflebeam, 409 Cambridge Road, Alexandria, Va. Division of Central Services: Chief —James R. Johnstone, 4012 Tennyson Road, University Park, Md. Division of Language Services: Chief.—Robert A. Conrads, 5510 Wriley Road, Montgomery County, Md. Division of Cryptography: Chief —Lee W. Parke, 4905 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. New York Administrative Office: Chief.—Alva M. Meyers, Jr., 111-09 Seventy-fifth Road, Forest Hills, N. Y. Office of Budget and Finance: Director.—Edward B. Wilber, 4940 Wakefield Road. Degray Director—John W. Harrison, 5133 Thirty-fifth Street North, Arlington, a Division of Budget: Chief.—Henry H. Ford, 4015 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va. Division of Finance: Chief —Louis F. Thompson, Route 1, Layhill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Office of Security and Consular Affairs: Director.—Samuel D. Boykin, 9138 Sligo Creek Parkway, Silver Spring, Md. | Passport Division: Chief —Ruth B. Shipley, 5508 Thirty-ninth Street. | Visa Division: Chief —Hervé, J. I’Heureux, 5201 Thirty-eighth Street. Drvision of Protective Services: Chief —Edward E. Hunt, 1243 Thirtieth Street. Division of Security: Chief—Donald L. Nicholson, 3724 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Munitions Division: Chief—John C. Elliott, 207 East Columbia Street, Falls Church, Va. INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES (Under the Direction of the Special Assistant—Intelligence) Office of Intelligence Research: Director.— Allan Evans, 2227 Twentieth Street. Division of Research for Western Europe: Chief —Richard M. Secammon, 1900 Q Street. Division of Research for USSR and Eastern Europe: Chief.—Mose Harvey, 3703 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Research for American Republics: Chief.—Miron Burgin, 4335 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Division of Research for Far East: Chief. —A. S. Chase, 2234 Decatur Place. Division of Research for Near East, South Asia and Africa: 37 Chief —Philip H. Trezise, 6900 Broxburn Drive, Bethesda, Md. Division of Functional Intelligence: Chief —Edward W. Doherty, 225 Lafayette Drive, Alexandria, Va. | Department of State 361 Office of Libraries and Intelligence-Acquisition: Divers Sidney Buford 3d, Linden Farm, Duke Street Extended, Alexan-ria, Va. Division of Library and Reference Service: Acting Chief.—George A. Pope, 3913 Eighth Street. Division of Acquisition and Distribution: Acting Chief —Theodore M. Nordbeck, 214 Spring Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Brographic Information: Chief —L. Douglas Heck, 10 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. BOARDS AND COMMISSIONS International Claims Commission of the United States: Chairman.—Josiah Marvel, Jr., 1645 Connecticut Avenue. Commassioner.—Roy G. Baker, 7405 Dartmouth Avenue, College Park, Md. Commissioner.— Raymond S. McKeough, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Erouling (Dire rlonda A. Simmes, 4203 College Heights Drive, University ark, . General Counsel.—Peter J. Connolly, 2725 Ordway Street. Solicitor.—Joseph F. English, 3620 Norton Place. Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service.—Richard P. Butrick (Director General of the Foreign Service, Department of State), chairman; Edwin N. Montague (Director of Office of Personnel, Department of State); Joseph C. Green (Executive Director of the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service, Department of State); Elbridge Durbrow (Chief, Division of Foreign Service Personnel, Department of State); Livingston T. Merchant (Deputy Assistant Secretary for Far Eastern Affairs, Department of State); Fred J. Rossiter (Associate Director, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture) ; Herbert P. Van Blarcom (Director, Foreign Service Operations Division, Department of Commerce); James F. Taylor (Chief, Foreign Service Division, Office of International Labor Affairs, Department of Labor); L. A. Moyer (Executive Director and Chief Examiner, Civil Service Commission). Board of the Foreign Service.— Carlisle H. Humelsine (Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration), chairman; H. Freeman Matthews (Deputy Under Secretary of State); Edward W. Barrett (Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs); Richard P. Butrick (Director General of the Foreign Service, Department of State); Stanley Andrews (Director of the Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations, Department of Agriculture); Raymond C. Miller (Acting Assistant Secretary for International Affairs, Department of Com-merce) ; Philip M. Kaiser (Assistant Secretary of Labor). Foreign Service Buildings Commission.—James P. Richards (Representative from South Carolina), chairman; Dean G. Acheson (Secretary of State); John W. Snyder (Secretary of the Treasury); Charles A. Sawyer (Secretary of Com-merce); Tom Connally (Senator from Texas); Alexander Wiley (Senator from Wisconsin); Charles A. Eaton (Representative from New Jersey); Frederick Larkin (Chief, Division of Foreign Buildings Operations, Depart-ment of State), executive secretary. The Institute of Inter-American Affairs: President.—XKenneth R. Iverson, 6901 Glendale Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Vice President.— Chauncey O. Rowe, State Hill, Falls Church, Va. General Counsel.—Philip M. Glick, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Division of Administration: Director and Treasurer.—Robert R. Couse, 4915 Ashby Street. Division of Public Administration: Director.—Robert E. Culbertson, 8900 Melwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of Information and Reports: Director.—Leo Ross, 5617 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Division of Program Planning: Director.—[Vacant.] Division of Food Supply: Director—John R. Neale, 1440 Rhode Island Avenue. Division of Education: Director—Willfred O. Mauck, 689 Rollingwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Health and Sanitation.: Director.—Dr. Henry van Zile Hyde, 107 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. 362 Congressional Directory UNITED STATES MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS (2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.) United States Representative to the United Nations and Representative tn the Security Council.— Warren R. Austin, Waldorf Towers, New York, N. Y. Deputy United States Representative to the United Nations and Deputy Repre-sentative tn the Security Council.—Ernest A. Gross, 178 Rockerest Road, Strathmore Village, Manhasset, N. Y. Deputy Representative in the Security y Council and Acting Deputy Representative wn the Atomic Energy Commission.—John C. Ross, Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y. Deputy Representative in the Commission for Conventional Armaments. — Frank C. Nash, 5035 Macomb Street, Washington, D. C. Deputy Representative in the Interim Commitice—James N. Hyde, 1165 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y Deputy Representative in the Collective Measures Committee.—Harding F. Ban-croft, 3154 Highland Place, Washington, D. C. United States Representative in the Trusteeship Council.—Francis B. Sayre, Fairfax Hotel, Washington, D. C. Deputy ‘Representative in the Trusteeship Council.—O. Benjamin Gerig, 327 Essex Street, Chevy Chase, Md United States Representative in the Economic and Social Council.—Isadore Lubin, 983 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y. Deputy Representative in the Economic and Social Council.— Walter M. Kotsch-nig, 108 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. United States Members in the Commissions of the Economic and Social Council: Arthur os Altmeyer, Social Commission, 4613 North Rock Spring Road, Arling-ton, George P. Baker, Transport and Communications Commission, 93 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, Mass. Pidvad F. Bartel, Fiscal Commission, 3017 Stephenson Place, Washington, D Olive R. Goldman, Commission on Status of Women, 203 Michigan Avenue, Urbana, Ill Horry J. Anslinger, Narcotic Drugs Commission, Shoreham Hotel, Washington, Leroy Stinebower, Economie, Employment and Development: Commission, 4625 Thirty-sixth Street, Washington, D. C. Stuart A. Rice, Statistical Commission, 4406 Thirty-eighth Street North, Arlington, Va. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Commission on Human Rights, Park Sheraton Hotel, New York, N. Y. Commission on Population. [Vacant.] Revel lenan .—Richard S. Winslow, 51 Barry Road, Scarsdale, New York, Director, Office of Public {osoemagion, —Porter McKeever, 511 East Twentieth Street, New York, N Military Staff Committee: Army: Representative and Chairman, United States Delegation.—Lt. Gen. W. D. Crittenberger, U. S. A., Governors Island, New York, N. Y. Deputy and Chef of Staff. — C. P. Townsley, U. S. A., Fort —Col.. Totten, o Bayside, Long Island, N. Y. avy resents —Vice Adm. O. C. Badger, U. 8S. N., United States Naval Shipyard, Quarters A, Brooklyn, N. Y. Deputy and Chief of Sta — Capt. Allan G. Gaden, U. S. N., 29 Claremont Avenue, New York, Air: Representative.—Lt. Gen. H. R. Harmon, U. S. A. F., Fort Totten, Bayside, Long Island, N. Y. Deputy.—Col. TT .& Rodieck, U. S. A. F., Fort Totten, Bayside, Long Island, N. Y. Chef of Staff.——Col. J. C. Reddoch, U. S. A. F., Fort Totten, Bayside, Long Island, N. Y. Secretary of Military Staff Committee.—Capt. R. W. Allen, U. S. N., 20 Gar-field Place, Rutherford, N. J. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, EXecutive 6400) ‘JOHN WESLEY SNYDER, of St. Louis, Mo. (the Wardman Park), son of Jerre Hartwell and Ellen Hatcher Snyder; born at Jonesboro, Ark.. June 21, 1895; student Vanderbilt University, 1914-15; served as captain in the Headquarters Staff, Fifty-seventh Field Artillery Brigade during World War I and subsequently through the rank of colonel in the Field Artillery Reserve; married Evlyn Cook, January 5, 1920; one daughter, Mrs. John E. Horton (Edith Drucie Snyder); served in various banks in Arkansas and Missouri, 1920-30; national bank receiver, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Washington, D. C., 1930-36; manager St. Louis Loan Agency, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, 1937-43; executive vice president and director of the Defense Plant Corporation, Washington, D. C., 1940-44; assistant to the Board of Directors of the Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration, 1940-44; executive vice president of the First National Bank, St. Louis, Mo., 1943-45; served in many business capacities in St. Louis and nationally, including member Advisory Committee of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora-tion; member, Advisory Council Secretary of Commerce; member, Advisory Research and Development Branch, Quartermaster Corps, U. S. Army; appointed by President Truman Federal Loan Administrator, April 30, 1945; Director of War Mobilization and Reconversion, July 23, 1945, and Secretary of the Treasury, June 25, 1946; chairman, board of trustees, endowment fund, of the American National Red Cross; chairman, Library of Congress Trust Fund Board; chairman, National Advisory Council of International Monetary and Financial Problems; United States Governor of the International Monetary Fund and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development; managing trustee, board of trustees of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund; member, National Park Trust Fund Board; Defense Mobilization Board; Loan Policy Board of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation; board of trustees, Postal Savings System; board of directors, Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation; Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures; Foreign-Trade Zones Board; National Munitions Control Board; Smithsonian Institution; board of trustees, National Gallery of Art; Foreign Service Buildings Commission; National Secu-rity Resources Board; trustee, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. The Secretary: Secretary to the Secretary.—Mary G. Kelly, 1 Scott Circle. The Under Secretary. —Edward H. Foley, Jr., 2340 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Tax Advisory Staff, and Division of Savings Bonds.—John S. Graham, 3326 P Street. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Kennedy C. Watkins, 1448 Harvard Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge of Office of International Finance.—[Vacant.] Fiscal Assistant Secretary im Charge of the Finances, Accounts, Public Debt, and Treasurer.— Edward F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. Assistant to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary.— William T. Heffelfinger, 1448 Juniper Street. Technical Assistants to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary.—Edward D. Batchelder, 6208 Walhonding Road, Glen Echo Heights, Md.; Martin L. Moore, 105 Sunnyside Road, Silver Spring, Md.; Frank F. Dietrich, 1214 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Head, Fiscal Service Operations and Methods Staff.—George F. Stickney, 3501 South Dakota Avenue NE. Administrative Assistant.—MauraceE. Roebuck, 5852 Fourteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. 90808°—82—2—1st ed.———25 364 Congressional Directory Administrative Assistant Secretary.— William W. Parsons, 123 Lexington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to Administrative Assistant Secretary.— William L. Lynch, Castle Road, Falls Church, Va. Director of Administrative Services.—Paul McDonald, 1400 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director of Administrative Services (Security Officer).— William W. Harrison, Jr., 1401 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Budget Officer— Willard L. Johnson, R. F. D. 2, Great Falls Road, Falls Church, V : a. Assistant Budget Officer.—Howard M. Nelson, 1717 G Street. Director of Personnel.—James H. Hard 2d, 706 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Vv a. Assistant Director of Personnel.—Joseph A. Jordan, 4103 W Street. Spel! Assistant to the Secretary.—Frank A. Southard, Jr., 4401 Forty-third treet. Assistant to the Secretary.— William J. Bray, 6306 Delaware Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant to the Secretary.—A. Lee M. Wiggins, Hartsville, S. C. Director of Information.—Leon M. Siler, 622 Fern Place. OFFICE OF GENERAL COUNSEL FOR THE TREASURY General Counsel.—Thomas J. Lynch, 416 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel for the Bureau of Internal Revenue.—[Vacant.] Assistants General Counsel.—Elting Arnold, 514 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Philip Nichols, Jr., 118 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va.; John K. Carlock, 2000 F Street. Assistant to the General Counsel.—Hugo A. Ranta, 3208 Eighth Street NE. Tax Legislative Counsel.—Vance N. Kirby, 6653 Barnaby Street. Assistants Tax Legislative Counsel.—Frederick C. Lusk, 305 West Braddock Road, Alexandria, Va.; Raphael Sherfy, 8504 Hempstead Avenue, Bethesda, d. : Special Assistants to the General Counsel.—George Bronz, 2704 Thirty-sixth Place; Lawrence Linville, 306 Sleepy Hollow Road, Falls Church, Va.; James J. Saxon, 22 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel: Coast Guard.—Kenneth S. Harrison, 5605 Fourteenth Street. Office of Comptroller of Currency.—John F. Anderson, 1805 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Bureau of Customs.—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. Office of Fiscal Assistant Secretary.—George F. Reeves, 3125 Quebec Place. Office of International Finance.—Elting Arnold, 514 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md: Bureau of Narcotics.—Alfred L. Tennyson, 1512 Thirtieth Street. Bureau of the Public Debt.—Theodore W. Cunningham, 3628 S Street. BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE (Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, STerling 8400) Commassioner.—John B. Dunlap, 219 Williamsburg Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Commissioner.— S. Martin, 4328 Eighteenth Street. Fred Assistant Commissioner.—Justin F. Winkle, 241 Quackenbos Street. Assistant to the Commissioner.— Thomas C. Atkeson, the Ontario. Director of Inspection Service—Edgar E. Hoppe, 2822 South Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Special Deputy Eldon P. King, 3821 Fulton Commissioner.— Street. Deputy Commassioners.— H. Self, 4505 Rittenhouse Street, Riverdale Md.; Victor Edward I. McLarney, 6619 Western Avenue; Alvin H. Cross, 712 Twenty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Charles J. Valaer, 2800 Woodley Road; Dwight E. Avis (acting), 1526 Locust Road. Chairman, Excess Profits Tax Council—Henry J. Merry, 2000 F Street. Head, Technical Staff.—Clifford W. Stowe, McLean, Va. Department of the Treasury 365 Chief, Intelligence Unit.—W. H. Woolf, 1722 Irving Street. Budget and Finance Officer.—Frederick I. Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road. Head, Personnel Division.—John E. Lynch, 2500 Q Street. BUREAU OF CUSTOMS (Wilkins Building, 1512 H Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commissioner—Frank Dow, 8300 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Commissioner.— David B. Strubinger, 4031 South Dakota Avenue NE. Special Assistant to the Commissioner.—W. R. Johnson, 4234 Forty-second Street. Deputy Commissioner, Investigations.—Chester A. Emerick, 4 Spring Hill Court, Chevy Chase, Md. : Deputy Commissioner, Appraisement Administration.— Walter G. Roy, 1732 Buchanan Street NE. Deputy Commissioner, Management and Controls—W. H. Ziehl, 3103 Belleview Avenue, Cheverly, Md. 5 Chief Counsel—Robert Chambers, Locust Lane, Gaithersburg, Md. CUSTOMHOUSE (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phones, MIchigan 0243 and 0244) Deputy Collector in Charge.—John F. Burns, 3720 S Street. OFFICE OF THE TECHNICAL STAFF Dns of ty Tehran) Staff.—George C. Haas, 5510 Cedar Parkway, Chevy hase, Assistant Directors—Edmund M. Daggit, 1100 Janney’s Lane, Alexandria, Va.; Thomas F. Leahey, 9004 Garland Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Robert P. Mayo, 111 Glenridge Street, Kensington, Md.; Sidney G. Tickton, 3923 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Acting Gosernma Actuary.— Cedric W. Kroll, 615 North Edison Street, Arling- ton, Va. Assistant to the Director.—Anna M. Michener, 1622 Twenty-ninth Street. Administrative Assistant to the Director.— William M. Weir, 3854 Florence Drive, Alexandria, Va. Librarian.—Isabella S. Diamond, 519 North Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. TAX ADVISORY STAFF OF THE SECRETARY Director of Tax Advisory Staff.—L. L. Ecker-Racz, 1318 Twenty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Associate Director.—F. Newell Campbell, 4113 W Street. Taxation Specialist.—Richard E. Slitor, 5428 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Directors—John Copeland, 2708 Cathedral Avenue; George E. Lent, 7614 Arnet Lane, Bethesda, Md.; Joseph A. Pechman, 7112 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. 5 UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS DIVISION (Washington Building, Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue) National Director.—Vernon L. Clark, Hay-Adams House. Director of Sales.—Leon J. Markham, 1636 R Street. Executive Officer.—Bill McDonald, 3200 Sixteenth Street. COAST GUARD (HEADQUARTERS) (01d Southern Railway Building, 1300 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) OFFICE OF THE COMMANDANT The Commandant.—Vice Adm. Merlin O’Neill, Westchester Apartments. Assistant Commandant. —Rear Adm. Alfred C. Richmond, 2365 North Edgewood Street, Arlington, Va. 366 Congressional Directory Administrative Aide—Commander Walter S. Bakutis, 2006 Patterson Street, Hyattsville, Md. Aide to the Commandant.—Lt. Comdr. William A. Jenkins, 4849-A Twenty-eighth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Chief, Public Information Division.—Capt. Leon H. Morine, 4815 Bradley Boule-vard, Chevy Chase, Md. Executive Assistant to the Head, Search and Rescue Agency.—Capt. William B. Scheibel, 3049 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Merchant Marine Council.—Rear Adm. Halert C. Shepheard, Wetherell Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Chief, Inspection Division. —Capt. Charles W. Harwood, the Chastleton. President of Panel, Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals. —Capt. Frank T. Kenner, 29 West Grove Drive, "Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Hearing Examiner.—James H. Molloy, 1709 New Hampshire Avenue. CHIEF OF STAFF Chief of Staff.—Rear Adm. Alfred C. Richmond, 2365 North Edgewood Street Arlington, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff.—Rear Adm. Russell E. Wood, 1525 Mount Eagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Administrative Management Division.—Commander Albert J. Carpenter, 6212 Thirty-first Street. Chief, Headquarters Services Division.— Commander James E. Davidson, 1621 T Street. Chief Counsel.—Kenneth S. Harrison, 5605 Fourteenth Street. Chief, Liaison Division.— Capt. Frank T. Kenner, 29 West Grove Drive, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Program Analysis Division.— Capt. Eric A. Anderson, 10304 Brookmoor Drive, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF ENGINEERING Engineer in Chief.—Rear Adm. Kenneth K. Cowart, 3122 Tennyson Street. Assistant Engineer in Chief. —Capt. Lawrence M. Harding, 7328 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Aeronautical Engineering Division.—Commander Loren H. Seeger, 3103 Edgehill Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Civil Engineering Division.—Capt. Frank R. Bellomy, 4920 Twenty-ninth Road South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Electronics Engineering Division.—Capt. John W. Ryssy, 5546 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Naval Engineering Division.—Capt. George M. Phannemiller, 1554 Mount Kagle Place, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Testing and Development Division.—Capt. Robert T. Alexander, 519 Merid-ian Avenue, Falls Church, Va. OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER Compiroller—Capt. Ira E. Eskridge, 208 Eighty-first Street, Virginia Beach, Va. Chief, Accounting Division.— Lit. Comdr. David B. Sollenberger, 1605 Roberts Lane, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Budget and Cost Analysis Division.— Commander James A. Alger, Jr., 2706 Sycamore Street, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Statistical Services Division.—John E. Amon, 8013 New Dale Drive, Be-thesda, Md. ; Chief, Supply Division.——Commander William W. Childress, 5615 Oakmont Avenue, Bethesda, Md. OFFICE OF OPERATIONS Chief, Office of Operations.—Rear Adm. Raymond J. Mauerman, 2917 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Chief, Office of Operations.—Capt. Harold S. Berdine, 6606 Delfield Street Chevy Chase, Md Chief, Aids to Navigation Division.—Capt. Richard M. Ross, 5611 Oakmont Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Department of the Treasury 367 Crh hati Division.— Capt. Carl B. Olsen, 203 West Bradley Lane, Chevy ase, Chief, Communications Division.—Capt. Earl K. Rhodes, 4318 River Road. Chief, Floating Units Division.— Capt. George W. Nelson, 5516 Northfield Road, Bethesda, Md. : Chief, Intelligence Division.—Capt. Frederick G. Eastman, 1514 Timber Lane, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Ordnance, Gunnery, and Readiness Division.—Capt. Marius DeMartino, 4104 North Chesterbrook Road, Route 2, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Port Security and Law Enforcement Division.— Capt. Harry W. Stinchcomb, 7510 Bybrook Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Shore Units Division.— Capt. Aden C. Unger, 6920 Thirty-second Street. OFFICE OF MERCHANT MARINE SAFETY Chief, Office of Merchant Marine Safety.— Rear Adm. Halert C. Shepheard, 10 Wetherell Road, Westmoreland Hills, Md. Assistant Chief, Office of Merchant Marine Safety.— Capt. Robert A. Smyth, 4521 Reno Road. Chief, Merchant Vessel Personnel Division.—Capt. Henry T. Jewell, 11 Fort Hunt Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Merchant Marine Technical Division.—Commander Charles P. Murphy, 206 Plymouth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Acting Chief, Merchant Vessel Inspection Division.— Capt. Philip A. Ovenden, 3431 Yuma Street. «| OFFICE OF PERSONNEL Chief, Office of Personnel.—Rear Adm. James A. Hirshfield, 604 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief, Office of Personnel.—Capt. William W. Kenner, 1620 Fitzgerald Lane, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Auxiliary Division.—Capt. Nathaniel S. Fulford, Jr., 2800 Ontario Road. Chief, Civilian Personnel Division.—Harry L. Morgan, 9026 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Enlisted Personnel Division.—Capt. Bret H. Brallier, 5601 Northfield Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Medical Division.— Rear Adm. Paul M. Stewart, U. S. Public Health Service, 2210 Wyoming Avenue. hos Officer Personnel Division.—Capt. Herbert F. Walsh, 6380 Thirty-first lace. Chief, Special Services Division.—Capt. Romeo J. Borromey, 6013 Melvern Drive, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Reserve Division.—Capt. John L. Steinmetz, 3303 Coryell Lane, Park-fairfax, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Training and Procurement Division.—Commander Louis M. Thayer, 6821 Nineteenth Road, Falls Church, Va. WELFARE President, Coast Guard Welfare.—Vice Adm. Merlin O’Neill, the Westchester Apartments. Executive Vice President, Coast Guard Welfare.—Capt. William W. Kenner, 1620 Fitzgerald Lane, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY Comptroller.—Preston Delano, 34 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Comptrollers—J. L. Robertson, 4614 Brookview Drive, Westhaven, Washington 16, D. C.; L. A. Jennings, the Westchester; W. M. Taylor, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief National Bank Examiner.—W. P. Folger, the Westchester. Personnel Officer—R. L. Miller, 6612 Barnaby Street. Secretary to Compiroller.— Cotter, Livingston the Alice 3715 Street. 368 Congressional Directory BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING (Fourteenth and C Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 5151) Director. —Alvin W. Hall, 1319 Kalmia Road. Associate Director.—Henry J. Holtzclaw, 2231 Sudbury Road. Assistant Director—Thomas F. Slattery, 102 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF THE MINT Director.—Nellie Tayloe Ross, 2126 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Director.— Leland Howard, 3835 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Chief Accountant.— Timothy KE. Russell, 324 George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Administrative Officer.— Kenneth M. Failor, 4930 Baltimore Avenue, Green Acres, Md. Technical Consultant.—Timothy J. Quirk, 3718 Livingston Street. ;) BUREAU OF NARCOTICS (1300 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400) Commissioner of Narcotics.—H. J. Anslinger, the Shoreham. Deputy Commassioner of Narcotics.—George W. Cunningham, the Jefferson. Assistant to the Commissioner.—M. I.. Harney, 4325 Verplanck Place. 1 UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE Chief —U. E. Baughman, 3432 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief.— Carl Dickson, 3167 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Executive Aide to the Chief. — Harry E. Neal, 5907 Wynnwood Rbad, Wood Acres, Md. = FISCAL SERVICE BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Commissioner of Accounts.—Robert W. Maxwell, 3352 Upland Terrace. Associate Commissioner.—Gilbert L. Cake, 3411 Twentieth Street NE. Assistant to Associate Commissioner.—Boyd A. Evans, 110 Church Place, Falls Church, Va. Deputy Commissioner.—H. R. Gearhart, 4525 Sleaford Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Deputy Commissioner. —Edmund C. Nussear, 6305 Thirty-second Street. Assistant Commissioner for Administration.— Wallace E. Barker, Jr., 2634 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. Executive Assistant to the Commissioner.—Stephen P. Gerardi, 4513 Harling Lane, Bethesda, Md. : : Chief Disbursing Officer, Division of Disbursement.—Paul D. Banning, 3902 . Jocelyn Street. Assistant Chief Disbursing Officer.—Julian F. Cannon, 5615 Greenway Drive. Assistant Chief Disbursing Officer.—Charles O. Bryant, Franconia Road, Alex-. andria, Va. eh, Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants.—Joseph A. Woodson, 3009 Military oad. Chief, Division of Deposits.—Bernard M. Mulvihill, 3900 Fourteenth Street. Chief, Division of Financial Reports.—Leonard A. Ritchie, 5510 Worthington Drive, Westhaven, Md. Chief, Division of Investments.—Edward O. Barnes, 3714 Windom Place. Chief, Section of Surety Bonds.—Harry R. Schwalm, 916 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT Commissioner.—Edwin L. Kilby, 3724 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md. sms Countian, .—Donald M. Merritt, 2 Abingdon Road, Westmoreland ills Deputy Commissioner in Charge, Washington Office. —Ross A. Heffelfinger, 4427 Davenport Street. Department of the Treasury 369 Deputy Commissioner in Charge, Chicago Office.—Charles D. Peyton, 9535 South Forty-ninth Avenue, Oak Lawn, Ill. * Register of the Treasury.—Edward G. Dolan, the Dresden. Assistant Register—Harlan T. Chapman, 1336 North Ode Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Division of— Loans and Currency.—Harold M. Stephenson, Route 3, Box 29, Fairfax, Va. Accounts and Audit—M. R. Loafman, 5408 Nebraska Avenue. Savings Bonds.—L. W. Owen, the Windermere, Chicago, Ill. OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES Treasurer.— Georgia Neese-Clark, 3000 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Treasurer.—Mabelle Kennedy. Deputy and Acting Treasurer.—F. L. Church, 3219 Fifth Street South, Arlington, Va : Assistant Deputy Treasurer—Edmund Doolan, 2408 T Street SE. Staff Assistant.—G. C. Emerson, 2840 Newlands Street. Chief, Accounting Division.—W. T. Howell, 2911 South Dinwiddie Street, Fair= lington, Arlington, Va. Chief, Budget and Management Officc.—W. L. Funk, 2416 Thirty-second Street SE. Chief, Cash Division.—John L. Schram, 5711 Kansas Avenue. Chief, Currency Redemption Division.—J. T. Baczenas, 418 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of General Accounts.—E. J. Kious, 2706 Dawson Avenue, Wheaton Hills, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Securities Division.—C. E. Hearst, 416 Center Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE Director—George H. Willis, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Deputy Director and Secretary, National Advisory Council on I nternational Mone-tary and Financial Problems.—C. Dillon Glendinning, 220 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Director.— William L. Hebbard, 110 Glenridge Street, Kensington, Md. Acting Director, Foreign Assets Control.—Elting Arnold, 514 Dorset Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. COMMITTEE ON PRACTICE (1300 E Street. Phone, EXecutive 6400, extensions 5017 and 5097) Chairman.—John L. Graves, 1300 E Street. Members.—Hessel E. Yntema, University of Michigan, Hutchins Hall, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Huntington Cairns, National Gallery of Art. Attorney for the Government.— Allison Rupert, Treasury Building. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (The Pentagon) ROBERT A. LOVETT, Secretary of Defense (Shoreham Hotel) ; banker; born Huntsville, Texas, September 14, 1895; married Adele Quartley Brown, April 19, 1919; children—Evelyn, Robert Scott 2d; partner Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., 1926 to 1940; special assistant to the Secretary of War, December 1940 to April 1941; Assistant Secretary of War for Air, April 1941 to December 1945; Under Secretary of State, July 1947 to January 1949; Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., April 1949 to September 1950; Deputy Secretary of Defense, September 28, 1950, to September 17, 1951; Secretary of Defense since September 17, 1951; served as pilot, advancing to lieutenant commander, U. S. Naval Air Service, March 1917 to December 1918; awarded Navy Cross and Distinguished Service Medal. Office: The Pentagon, Washington, D. C WILLIAM C. FOSTER, Deputy Secretary of Defense (1411 Thirty-fourth Street) ; administrator; born Westfield, N. J., April 27, 1897; married Beulah Robinson, May 9, 1925; one son, Seymour Robinson; president and director Pressed and Welded Steel Products Co., Inec., 1922 to 1943; member and chairman board of governors Region II Smaller War Plants Corp., 1943 to 1944; special representative of the Under Secretary of War on procurement for the Army Air Forces, director purchases division Army Service Forces, assistant to Director of Matériel Army Service Forces, 1944 to 1946; Under Secretary of Commerce, 1946 to 1948; deputy special representative Economic Cooperation Administra-tion, Paris, France, 1948 to 1949; deputy administrator ECA, 1949 to 1950; administrator, ECA, 1950 to 1951; Deputy Secretary of Defense since September 1951; awarded the United States Medal of Merit and the War Department Commendation for Exceptional Civilian Service for his wartime work in World War II. Office: The Pentagon, Washington, D. C. IMMEDIATE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY The Secretary of Defense.—Robert A. Lovett. The Deputy Secretary of Defense—William C. Foster, 1411 Thirty-fourth Street. Director, Executive Office.— Brig. Gen. Marshall 8S. Carter, USA, 4430 Q Street. Deputy Director, Executive Office.—Col. Kenneth R. Kreps, USAF, 6205 Twenty-second Street North, Arlington, Va. Executive to Secretary of Defense.—Col. Carey A. Randall, USMC, 210 South Jackson Street, Arlington, Va. Executive to Deputy Secretary of Defense.—Lt. Col. Donald W. Holmberg, USA, Wordford Road and Old Courthouse Road, Dunn Loring, Va. Private Secretary to the Secretary.—Dorothy J. Brady, Accotink Road and Spring Road, Hollindale, Alexandria, Va. Si Secretary to the Deputy Secretary.— Marian McCracken, 532 Twentieth treet. Director of Administration.—Ralph N. Stohl, 5815 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant for Administration.—J. Robert Loftis, 2331 Cathedral Avenue. Director, Personnel Division.—John E. Moore, Great Falls Road, Route 1, McLean, Va. Director, Budget and Finance Division.—John A. Wylie, 104 Barron Street, Takoma Park, Md. . Director, Office Services Division.—Charles M. Dulin, 4612 Nineteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. Da a Division.—George Gould, 4410 Glenridge Street, Kensing-ton, ; : Assistant for Interdepartmental Administrative Services—Raymond J. Hayden, 2400 Thirty-second Street SE. Assistant for Administrative Security.—Col. Sidney S. Rubenstein, USAF, 1337 Fort Stevens Drive. : Assistant for Civil Defense.—Col. Barnet W. Beers, 8214 Ellingson Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. 271 372 Congressional Directory ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (COMPTROLLER) Assistant Secretary of Defense.—W. J. McNeil, the Westchester. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Ruth L. Monson, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—Brig. Gen. Robert S. Moore, USA, 1900 F Street. Director, Fiscal Management Staff.—W. Carl Blaisdell, 209 Fairfax Road, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Comptroller for Budget.—Lyle S. Garlock, 2900 King Street, Alexandria, Va. Director, Economic and International Security Estimates Division.—W. H. Mautz, 5006 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Comptroller for Accounting Policy—Howard W. Bordner, 6500 Barnaby Street. Director, Contract Finance Committee.—John S. Bachman, 2023 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Progress Reports and Statistics Division.—Foster Adams, 1527 Mount Eagle Place, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL) Assistant Secretary of Defense.—Anna M. Rosenberg, Shoreham Hotel. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Phyllis Eckhoff, 1826 R Street. Executive to the Assistant Secretary.—Brig. Gen. James F. Collins, USA, 1501 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.— Charles Tyroler, 1911 R Street. Coin Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—James C. Evans, 35633 Warder treet. Director, Manpower Utilization Division.—Ralph P. Sollott, 102 Dorsett Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Manpower Requirements Diviston.—Maj. Gen. E. C. Lynch, USAF, 6928 Fifteenth Road North, Falls Church, Va. Director, Manpower Supply Division.—Charles Tyroler, 1911 R Street. Drrector (Acting), Industrial Relations Division.—John Fanning, 1105 North Potomac Street, Arlington, Va. ; De pech, Office of Personnel Policy.—J. Thomas Schneider, 6636 Thirty-second treet. Director, Civilian Personnel Policy Division.—Leon L. Wheeless, 409 Rosemary Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Military Personnel Policy Division.—Brig. Gen. John A. Dabney, USA, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Chief, Armed Forces Information and Education Division.—Maj. Gen. John M. Devine, USA, 321 Thernapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chis man, Reserve Forces Policy Board.—Charles H. Buford, 3040 Idaho venue. Chairman; Armed Forces Chaplains Board.—Rear Adm. Stanton W. Salisbury, USN, Kennedy-Warren Apartments. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (LEGAL AND LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS) Assistant Secretary of Defense.—Charles A. Coolidge, the Westchester. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.— Alice W. Blake, 4210 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. General Counsel: Associate General Counsel.—Nathaniel H. Goodrich, 2316 Forty-first Street. Associate General Counsel.—John G. Adams, 2122 California Street. Director, Office of Legislative Liaison.—Rear Adm. Harold A. Houser, USN, 4413 Yuma Street. Deputy Director—Col. Wade M. Fleischer, USAF, 5747 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director.—Col. C. J. Hauck, Jr., USA, 6032 Twentieth Street North, Arlington, Va. Department of Defense 373 ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS Assistant to the Secretary of Defense.—Frank C. Nash, 5035 Macomb Street. Deputy Assistant to the Secretary.—Maj. Gen. Clark L. Ruffner, USA, 1719 Hoban Road. Executive to Assistant to the Secretary.—Col. G. V. Underwood, Jr., USA, 2327 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Deputy Representative to Senior Staff NSC.—Charles P. Noyes, Dogwood Lane, McLean, Va. Acting Director, Office of Foreign Military Affairs.—Capt. A. C. Murdaugh, USN, 817 Twenty-sixth Place South, Arlington, Va. Director, Office of Military Assistance.—Brig. Gen. George H. Olmstead, USA, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. ) Director, Office of North Atlantic Treaty Affairs—Col. R. E. Beebe, USAF, 1310 Sleepy Hollow Road, Falls Church, Va. DEFENSE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE Chairman.—Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, USAF, Quarters 17, Fort Myer, Va. Karl R. Bendetsen, Assistant Secretary of the Army. Francis P. Whitehair, Under Secretary of the Navy. Eugene M. Zuckert, Assistant Secretary of the Air Force. JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF Chairman.—Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Quarters 1, Fort Myer, Va. Chief of Staff, U. S. Army.—Gen. J. Lawton Collins; Quarters 8, Fort McNair. Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral William M. Fechteler, Quarters A, United States Naval Observatory. Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force.—Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Quarters 8, Fort Myer, Va. : JOINT STAFF . Director, The Joint Staff —Maj. Gen. Charles P. Cabell, USAF, 2506 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Secretary, Joint Chiefs of Staff —Rear Adm. William G. Lalor, USN, 2310 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. WEAPONS SYSTEMS EVALUATION GROUP Director—Lt. Gen. Geoffrey Keyes, USA, Hunting Towers West, 1200 Mount Vernon Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director—Dr. H. P. Robertson, 2800 Quebec Street. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD -Chairman.— Walter G. Whitman, 2801 Quebec Street. Army Members.— Archibald S. Alexander, 1430 Thirty-third Street; Maj. Gen. Ward H. Maris, Quarters 15A, Fort Myer, Va. Navy Members.—John F. Floberg, Wardman Park Hotel; Rear Adm. M. E. Curts, USN, 308 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Air Force Members.—William A. M. Burden (acting), 1224 Thirtieth Street; Maj. Gen. Donald L. Putt, USAF, 910 Crescent Drive, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Chairman.—Dr. James A. Perkins, 1239 Noyes Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Vice Chairman.—Dr. Robert C. Gunness, 4854 Twenty-eighth Street North, Arlington, Va. ’ : Vice Chairman.—Edwin A. Speakman, 3636 Greenway Drive SE. Army Secretary.—Brig. Gen. R. W. Crichlow, 411 West Rosemary Lane, Falls Church, Va. Navy Secretary.—Capt. Steadman Teller, R. F. D. 2, Germantown, Md. Air Force Secretary.— Brig. Gen. Merrill D. Burnside, 412 Baltimore Avenue. Director, Planning Division.—Dr. S. D. Cornell, 3155 Highland Place. Director, Resources Division.—Neal D. Crane, 2800 Quebec Street. Director of Astrid Kraus, 3101 Highland Administration.— W. Place. Pager of Information.—Dr. Paul R. Beall, 1417 North Englewood, Arlington, a. 374 Congressional Directory Air Force Secretary—Continued Committee on Aeronautics, Executive Director.—James D. Redding, 827 Rose Lane, Falls Church, Va. Committee on Atomic Energy, Executive Director—David Z. Beckler, 5840 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Copniiies on Biological Warfare, Ewecutive Director—Dr. H. 1. Cole, 2000 F treet. Committee on Chemical Warfare, Executive Director.—Dr. Harlan N. Worthley, 833 South Frederick Street, Arlington, Va Commattee on Electronics, Acting Executive Director.—Col. Howard W. Serig, 3016 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Committee on Equipment and Materials, Executive Director.—E. Bryan Williams, 3722 Warren Street. Committee on Fuels and Lubricants, Executive Director.—Donald B. Brooks, 6508 Fulton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Committee on Geophysics and Geography, Acting Executive Director.—Dr. Roger A. Prior, Route 4, Vienna, Va. Committee on Guided Missiles, Executive Director.—Fred A. Darwin, 620 South George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Committee on Human Resources, Acting Executive Director.—Dr. Aaron B. Nadel, 9222 Pine Tree Road, Silver Spring, Md. Committee on Medical Sciences, Executive Director—Dr. Thomas B. Spencer, 2305 South Culpepper Street, Arlington, Va. Navigation Technical Group, Executive Director.—[Vacant.] Committee on Ordnance, Executive Director—Edwin F. Sweetser, 6625 Thirty- first Street. Special Committee on Technical Information, Executive Director.—[Vacant.] MUNITIONS BOARD Chairman.—John D. Small, 2535 Waterside Drive. Army Member. — Archibald S. Alexander, Under Secretary of the Army, 1430 Thirty-third Street. Now, Member.— Francis P. Whitehair, Under Secretary of the Navy, the May-ower. Air Force Member.—Roswell L. Gilpatric, Under Secretary of the Air Force, 3527 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Chairman.—H. D. Murray, R. F. D. 4, Vienna, Va. Assistant to the Chairman.—Lt. Col. F. J. Chesarek, USA, 2776 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Legal ghishen — Leonard L. Niederlehner, 4405 Seventeenth Street North, Arling-ton, Va Executive Assistant to the Chairman.—Robert M. Hatfield, Jr., the Wardman Park otel. Cote, Office of Administrative Management.—Donald E. Kidston, Layhill, Route , Silver Spring, Md. Gos of the Board.—Commander L. L. Schock, Jr., USN, 1013 East Greenwich Street, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Office of Statistics.—Robert C. Unkrich, 2304 Forty-first Street. Vice Chairman for Production and Requirements (Acting).—Robert M. Hatfield, Jr., the Wardman Park Hotel. Military Director for Production and Requirements.—Maj. Gen. J. V. Matejka, USA, 1022 Twenty-sixth Road South, Arlington, Va. Military Director for Production and Requirements. ~_ Maj. Gen. F. H. Griswold, USAF, 2619 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Industrial Employment Review Board.—John T. Mason, 2300 Con-necticut Avenue. Chief, Office of Programming.—Col. H. F. Sykes, Jr., USA, 4716 Cortland Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Chil, (ger of ’ Priorities and Controls.—Frank G. Chambers, 2800 Woodley ens Ogice of Facilities and Services.—James W. Ferguson, Jr., R. F. D. 1, urke, Va. one Office of Industrial Security.—Col. Leroy Hudson, USAF, 5605 Ridgefield oad. Chief, Office of Materials.—Col. C. M. Anderson, USAF, 10 Olin Drive, Falls Church, Va. Department of Defense 375 Vice Chatrman for Production and Requirements—Continued Gi Office of Production Equipment.—John H. Williams, R. F. D. 1, Amissville, a. Chief, Office of Components.— William A. Buschman, 315 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief, Office of Awrcraft Programs.—Myron A. Tracy, 2631 Colston Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Office of Ships Programs.—Commander G. C. Wells, USN, 3453 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Office of Clothing, Equipage and Subsistence.—Ray M. Clarke, 4829 First Street South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Office of Tank-Automotive Programs.—Col. E. H. Wilson, USAF, 2527 North Jefferson Street, Arlington, Va. : Chief, Office of Electronics Programs.—Col. Clifford A. Poutre, USA, 123 Wood-lawn Avenue, Falls: Church, Va. Chief, Office of Weapons and Ammunitions Programs.—Col. J. C. Light, USA, 1550 Forty-fourth Street. : Chief, Office of Guided Missiles Programs.—Col. W. W. Wendt, USA, 3508 Cameron Mills Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Office of Support Matériel Programs.—Lt. Col. G. G. Gaydash, USA, 1517 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief, Office of Petroleum Programs.—Rear Adm. B. B. Biggs, USN, 1420 North Illinois Street, Arlington, Va. Vice an for International Programs.— William T. Van Atten, the Shoreham otel. Chief, Office of International Programs.—Capt. W. B. Thorp, USN, 2005 North Hancock Street, Arlington, Va. Vice Chairman for Stockpile Programming.—John C. Houston, 2800 Woodley Road. Chief, Office of Stockpile Operations.—J. H. Connelly, 10414 Lorain Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Office of Stockpile Programs.— William W. Miller, R. F. D. 1, Bonifant Road, Silver Spring, Md. Vice Chairman for Government Agencies.—Robert M. Hatfield, Jr., the Wardman Park Hotel. Vice Chairman for Supply Management (Acting).—Rear Adm. M. L. Ring, USN, 8 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Office of Procurement.—Daniel J. Danahy, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Chief, Office of Supply.—George W. Malloy, 2800 Quebec Street. Chief, Office of Transportation.—Col. Charles H. Voeller, USAF, 117 South Hudson Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Office of Small Business.—Richard Lennihan, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. fredion Supply Management Agencies.—Daniel J. Danahy, 4000 Cathedral venue. Chairman, Armed Services Explosives Safety Board.—Lt. Col. L. M. O’Brien, USAF, 5208 North Carlyn Springs Road, Arlington, Va. ARMED FORCES POLICY COUNCIL Chairman.—Robert A. Lovett, Secretary of Defense. William C. Foster, Deputy Secretary of Defense. Frank Pace, Jr., Secretary of the Army. Dan A. Kimball, Secretary of the Navy. Thomas K. Finletter, Secretary of the Air Force. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff. Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Chief of Staff, U. S. Army. Admiral William M. Fechteler, Chief of Naval Operations. Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Chief of Staff, U. S. Air Force. MILITARY LIAISON COMMITTEE TO THE ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION Chairman.—Robert LeBaron, Wardman Park Hotel. Members: Rear Adm. Charles F. Coe, 1314 Twenty-first Street South, Arlington, Va. Rear Adm. Frederick S. Withington, 5141 Palisade Lane. Brig. Gen. Herbert B. Loper, Quarters 28, Fort Myer, Va. Brig. Gen. Stanley R. Mickelsen, 4737 MacArthur Boulevard. Maj. Gen. Roger M. Ramey, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Brig. Gen. Howard C. Bunker, R. F. D. 4, Old Courthouse Road, Vienna, Va. 376 Congressional Directory ARMED FORCES MEDICAL POLICY COUNCIL Chairman.—Dr. W. Randolph Lovelace 2d, the Berkshire. MILITARY TRAFFIC SERVICE Director.—Kenneth L. Vore, 1 Woodside Drive, Route, 5, Wilton Woods, Alex-andria, Va. OFFICE OF GUIDED MISSILES Director.—XK. T. Keller. OFFICE OF PUBLIC INFORMATION Director—Clayton Fritchey, 3006 Dent Place. Deputy Director.—0Osgood Roberts, 2501 Q Street. Assistant to the Deputy Director for News Division.—Lt. Col. Clarke F. Newlon, USAF, 3714 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant to the Deputy Director for the Public Relations Division.— Philip F. Hines, Box 32, Route 3, Manassas, Va. JOINT SERVICE SCHOOLS THE NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE (Washington, D. C. Phone, EXecutive 7700) Commandant.—Lt. Gen. Harold R. Bull, Quarters 9, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Deputy Commandant (Administration).—Rear Adm. Emmet P. Forrestel, USN, Quarters 12, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Deputy Commandant (Academic).—Maj. Gen. J. M. Weikert, USAF, Quarters 15, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Deputy Commandant for Foreign Affairs.—Edward Page, Jr., Quarters 11, Fort Lesley J. McNair, Executive Officer.—Col. John F. Bird, USA, Quarters 27-B, Fort Lesley J. McNair. ARMED FORCES STAFF COLLEGE (Norfolk, Va.) Commandant.—Vice Adm. John L. Hall, Jr., USN. INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE OF THE ARMED FORCES (Washington, D. C. Phone, EXecutive 7700) Conan Gen. A. W. Vanaman, USAF, Quarters 7, Fort Lesley J. cNair Deputy Commandant for Education.—Brig. Gen. J. L. Holman, USA, Quarters 2, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Deputy Commandant for Extension Courses.—Capt. B. R. Harrison, USN, Quarters 5, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Executive.—Col. E. P. Hardenbergh, USA, Building T-3, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Director of Instruction.—Dr. M. S. Reichley, 5305 Massachusetts Avenue. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY (The Pentagon. Phone, Llberty 5-6700) FRANK PACE, Jr., of Arkansas, Secretary of the Army (5024 Macomb Street), son of the late Frank Pace, Sr., and Flora Layton Pace; born in Little Rock, Ark., July 5, 1912; secondary education at Little Rock High School; attended the Hill School, Pottstown, Pa., from 1927 to 1929; was graduated from Princeton University in 1933 and Harvard Law School in 1936; honorary degrees (1950) Princeton University, M. A.; University of Louisville, LL. D.; (1951) Syracuse University, LL. D.; University of Arkansas, LL. D.; Temple University, LL. D.; Dartmouth College, LL. D.; assistant district attorney, twelfth district of Arkansas, 1936 to 1938; general counsel, Arkansas State Department of Revenue, 1938 to 1941; entered the Army in 1942 as a second lieutenant and served with the Air Transport Command of the Army Air Forces for 4 years, leaving the service as a major; for a short period after the war was special assistant to the Attorney General of the United States in the Taxation Division of the Department of Justice; for nearly 2 years was executive assistant to the Post-master General; assistant director, Bureau of the Budget, from January 1948 to January 1949; Director of the Bureau of the Budget from January 1949 through April 11, 1950; took office as Secretary of the Army April 12, 1950; member, President’s Advisory Committee on Management Improvement; acted as chair-man of the Defense Ministers Conference at Brussels; married Margaret Janney of Philadelphia in 1940; two daughters: Paula and Priscilla. The Hd Secretary of the Army.—Archibald S. Alexander, 1430 Thirty-third treet. Assistant Secretary of the Army (General Management).—XKarl R. Bendetsen, 2710 Beechwood Place, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of the Army (Manpower and Reserve Forces.)—Earl D. Johnson, 4934 Indian Lane. Department Counselor.—Francis Shackelford, 3104 N Street. Administrative Assistant and Chief Clerk.—John W. Martyn, Westchester Apartments. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE ARMY pects Assistant to the Secretary of the Army.— Arthur T. Port, 1801 Clydesdale ace. Public Information Assistant.—John F, Kane, 1445 Ogden Street. Aides to the Secretary of the Army.—Lt. Col. John Norton, 735 South Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va.; Lt. Col. J. R. Deane, Jr., 4745 Thirty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. Clerk to the Secretary of the Army.—John J. Lucas, Jr., 317 East Westmoreland Road, Falls Church, Va. Personal Secretaries.—Jane R. Pike, 4630 New Hampshire Avenue; Mary C. O’Brien, 2123 I Street. OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE ARMY Executive.—Brig. Gen. Andrew T. McNamara, 1213 North Evergreen Street, Arlington, Va, Executive Assistant.—C. Tracy Barnes, 1525 Thirty-fifth Street. Special Assistants.—Robert L. Finley, 1518 Thirty-fourth Street; Harry L. Erlicher, Claridge Hotel; Michael E. Kalette; Earl Mazo, 1684 Roberts Lane, Falls Church, Va. Senior Scientific Advisor.—James N. Davis, 432 Argyle Drive, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Erxecutive—Col. Ernest M. Clarke, 2210 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Requirements and Budget Branch.—Col. James L. Green, 9 Poe Road, Bethesda, Md. 377 378 Congressional. Directory Chief Procurement Branch. —Col. Russell R. Klanderman, 3531 Eighteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Cheeks Legal Branch.—Col. H. C. Chuck, 1617 North Garfield Street, Arlington, Chief, Facilities and Supply Branch.—Col. Robert J. Kasper, 901 South St. Asaph Street, Alexandria, Va. Administrative Officer. Maj. Donald L. Geer, 4428 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. | Secretaries.—Ollie J. Ferro, 4811 Thirtieth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Esther : M. Rice, 3000 Connecticut Avenue. Army Renegotiation Division of the Armed Forces Renegotiation Board: Chairman.— Brig. Gen. Robert W. Brown, 604 Tyson Drive, Falls Church, Va. Vice Chairman.—Frank Fox, 1630 R Street. Chairman, Army Contract Appeals Panel, Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals. —J. A. Avery, 6329 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Executive Officer, National Board for Promotion of Rifle Practice.—Col. James F, Strain, 2326 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE ARMY (GENERAL MANAGEMENT) Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Army (GM): Robert D. King, 31 Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, Va. John W. Macy, 204 Oakview Drive, McLean, Va. Kenneth Stiles, 510 Lincoln Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Ezxecutive.—Col. O. H. Kyster, Jr., 35625 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Executive.—Lt. Col. R. B. Bush, 714 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Military Assistants: Lt. Col. Kenneth BeLieu, 3051 Idaho Avenue. Col. E. H. Burba, 1809 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Col. Ralph E. Haines, Jr., 3203 Porter Street. Col. Mason H. Lucas, 3406 Old Dominion Boulevard, lovandvis Va. Col. K. A. McCrimmon, 2420 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Col. Alden K. Sibley, 2871 Woodland Drive. Lt. Col. John W. Finn, 1111 Graham Road, Falls Church, Va. Administrative Officer. — First Lt. Marvin N. Tarter, 2321 Eleventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Secretaries.— Nettie L. Andrews, 1016 Sixteenth Street; Pauline Peterson, R. F. D. 2, Box 201, Vienna, Va. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE ARMY (MANPOWER AND RESERVE FORCES) Acting Executive—Col. Frank C. Norvell, 618 Melrose Street, Alexandria, Va. Special Assistant for Civilian Personnel and Acting Director, Civilian Personnel Division.—H. J. Wright, 303 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Special Assistant for Occupied Areas.— Brig. Gen. A. L. Hamblen, 3410 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant for Reserve Forces.—Elvis J. Stahr, Jr., 3114 Dumbarton Avenue. pa rat for Education.—Dr. John R. Richards, 108 Wellesley Street, Glen cho, Md Special Assistant.—A. H. Onthank, Route 2, Box 245C, Fairfax, Va. OFFICE, DEPARTMENT COUNSELOR Deputy Department Counselor.—Fred Korth, 2401 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. Depety Department Counselor for Procurement.— William L. Cary, 3040 Idaho | venue. Special Consultant.—Brig. Gen. E. C. McNeil (retired), 2728 Thirty-fourth Street. | Special Consultant.— Maj. Gen. Hubert D. Hoover (retired), Burnt Mills Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chairman, Army-Air Force Clemency and Parole Board.—Luke F. Murphy, 3415 | Thirty-eighth Street. Chairman, Army Board on Correction of Military Records.—Gordon D. Taft, 3239 | Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. | ~ Department of the Army 3 379 OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY OF THE ARMY Deputy Administrative Assistant.—James C. Cook, 6803 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. Chief, REI Office. Roswell M. Yingling, 213 South Royal Street, Alex-andria, Va Personnel Manager. —John G. Connell, Jr., 1717 Preston Road, Alexandria, Va. Director, Defense Supply Service— Washington. —Spencer Burroughs, R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Director, Communications Division.—Everett L. Butler, 2931 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Army Library. —W. Kenneth Lowry, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Chairman, Loyalty-Security Screening Board.—John G. Connell, Jr., 1717 Preston Road, Alexandria, Va. Chairman, Loyalty-Security Appeals Board.—Gordon D. Taft, 3239 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE, CHIEF OF STAFF, UNITED STATES ARMY Chief of Staff, United States Army.—Gen. J. Lawton Collins, Quarters 8, Fort LesleyJ. McNair. Vice Chief of Staff.—Gen. John E. Hull, Quarters 7, Fort Myer, Va. Special Assistant for Civilian Component Affairs. — Maj. Gen. Lawrence C. Jaynes, Quarters 6—-B, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Administration.—Lt. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, Quarters5, Fort Myer, Va. Deputy Chief of Staff for Plans. — Lt. Gen. Charles L. Bolte, Quarters 4, Fort Lesley J. MeNair. Secretary of the General Staff.—Col. M. F. Hass, 3726 Connecticut Avenue. Cr of the Army.—Lt. Gen. Raymond 8. McLain, Quarters 3, Fort Lesley cNair. Chief of Information.—Maj. Gen. Floyd L. Parks, Quarters 27-A, Fort Myer, Va. Chief of Legislative Liaison.—Maj. Gen. Miles Reber, 2737 Devonshire Place. GENERAL STAFF Assistant Chief of Staff, G—1, Personmel.—Lt. Gen. A. C. McAuliffe, Quarters 13, Fort Lesley J. McNair. Director of Women’s Army Corps.—Col. Mary A. Hallaren, 3918 Eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2, Intelligence.—Maj. Gen. A. R. Bolling, Quarters 6, Fort LesleyJ. MeNair. Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3, Operations.—Maj. Gen. R. E. Jenkins, Quarters 21-B, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff, 0-1 Logistics.—1Lt. Gen. T. B. Larkin, Quarters 2, Fort Myer, Va. SPECIAL STAFF Chief, National Guard Bureau.—Maj. Gen. Raymond H. Fleming, 3031 South Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Executive for Reserve and ROTC Affairs.—Maj. Gen. Hugh M. Milton 2d, 1007 Eighth Street, Alexandria, Va. Inspector General. — Maj. Gen. Louis A. Craig, the Kennedy-Warren. Chief of Military History.—Maj. Gen. Orlando Ward, Compton Farm, Route 2, Seneca Road, Herndon, Va. Judge Advocate General.— Maj. Gen. E. M. Brannon, 3612 Ingomar Place. Chief of Finance.—Maj. Gen. B. E. Sawyer, Building 'T-52, Fort Myer, Va. Chief of Psychological Warfare.—Brig. Gen. R. A. McClure, 304 Strathmede Street, Falls Church, Va. ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES The Adjutant Gemeral.—Maj. Gen. William E. Bergin, the Kennedy-Warren. Chief of Chaplains.—Maj. Gen. Roy H. Parker, 3312 Newark Street. Provost Marshal General.—Maj. Gen. Edwin P. Parker, 1341 Thirtieth Street. 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 26 380 Congressional Directory TECHNICAL SERVICES : Ciel Chemical Corps.—Maj. Gen. E. F. Bullene, 621 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, a. Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. G. E. Armstrong, 4219 Twenty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Chief of Engineers.—Lt. Gen. Lewis A. Pick, 1868 Columbia Road. Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. George A. Horkan, 2315 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. . ; Chief Signal Officer.—Maj. Gen. George I. Back, 904 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief of Ordnance—Maj. Gen. E. L. Ford, 917 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chief of Transportation.—Maj. Gen. Frank A. Heileman, 19 Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE, CHIEF OF ARMY FIELD FORCES (Fort Monroe, Va.) Chief.—Gen. Mark W. Clark. Deputy Chief.—Maj. Gen. Robert C. Macon. Chief of Staff.—Brig. Gen. William S. Lawton. OCAFF Liaison Officer (Pentagon, Washington, D. C.).—Col. Harry M. Schwarze. Continental Armies and Military District of Washington: First Army (Hq. Governors Island, N. Y.).—Lt. Gen. W. D. Crittenberger. Second Army (Hq. Fort George G. Meade, Md.).—Lt. Gen. E. H. Brooks. Third Army (Hq. Fort McPherson, Ga.).—Lt. Gen. John R. Hodge. Fourth Army (Hq. Fort Sam Houston, Tex.).—Lt. Gen. LeRoy Lutes. Fifth Army (Hq. Chicago, Ill.).—Lt. Gen. Stephen J. Chamberlin. Sixth Army (Hq. Presidio of San Francisco, Calif.).—Lt. Gen. Joseph M. Swing. Military District of Washington (Hg. Bldg. T-7, Gravelly Point, Va.).—Maj. Gen. Thomas W. Herren. UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY (West Point, New York) Superintendent. —Maj. Gen. Frederick A. Irving. Commandant of Cadets.—Col. John K. Waters. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY BOARDS, EXEMPTED STATIONS, MILITARY MISSIONS, AND COMMISSIONS The following boards, exempted stations, military missions, and commissions are under the jurisdiction of the authority indicated after their respective names: Title Responsible Authority Battle Monuments Commission. The President. Beach Erosion and Shore Pro-Chief of Engineers. tection Board. Board of Commissioners, United Secretary of the Army. States Soldiers’ Home. Board of Engineers for Rivers Chief of Engineers. and Harbors. Board on Correction of Military Secretary of the Army. Records. California Debris Commission__. Chief of Engineers. Decorations Board... Secretary of the oc Army. Disability Review Board. ______ Secretary of the Army. Discharge Review Board. ______ Secretary of the Army. Military Missions......< ccm Assistant Chief of Staff, G—3, Operations. Mississippi River Commission_ __ Chief of Engineers. National Board for the Promo-The Under Secretary of the Army. tion of Rifle Practice. Personnel Board... Secretary of the Army. ; ___ =~..." United States Military Academy, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-3, Operations. West Point, N. Y. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY (The Pentagon. Phone, LIberty 5-6700) DAN A. KIMBALL, Secretary of the Navy (the Westchester); corporation executive; born St. Louis, Mo., March 1, 1896, son of John H. and Mary Able Kimball, both of whom were from pioneer families in the Mississippi-Missouri River Valleys; attended public schools in St. Louis; joined United States Air Service shortly after outbreak of World War I; trained as aviator and later in charge of flying at several fields in Florida; mustered out as first lieutenant and immediately entered upon business career; manager Los Angeles branch of General Tire & Rubber Co., 1920; rose to vice presidency of this corporation in 1942; general manager of Aerojet Engineering Corporation, Azusa, Calif., sub-sidiary of General Tire; took leading part in development of rockets and other new means of propulsion; Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air, February 1949 to May 18, 1949; Under Secretary of the Navy, May 19 1949, to July 31, 1951; Secretary of the Navy, July 31, 1951, to present; married, 1925, to the former Dorothy Ames of Chicago; home, 2221 West Live Oak Drive, Los Angeles; mem-ber of Institute of Aeronautical Sciences; Wilshire Country Club, Los Angeles; the Jonathan Club, Los Angeles; the Metropolitan Club of Washington; the Burning Tree Club of Washington; and the National Press Club; is a Congrega-tionalist. : Under Secretary of the Navy.—Francis P. Whitehair, Mayflower Hotel. Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Herbert R. Askins, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—John F. Floberg, Wardman Park Hotel. Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy.—John H. Dillon, 1307 Tracy Place, Falls Church, Va. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY : Naval Aide to the Secretary of the Navy.—Capt. D. B. Young, 3313 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Special Assistants to the Secretary of the Navy.—Edward E. Wilcox, 4700 Dover Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; Capt. H. V. Bird, 3601 Connecticut Avenue; Commander G. E. Pelletier, 3400 Thirty-ninth Street. Marine Corps Aide to the Secretary of the Navy.—Lt. Col. R. A. Churley, USMC, 3329 Martha Custis Drive, Alexandria, Va. Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—D. D. Louden, 1211 South Thomas Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Naval Aide to the Under Secretary of the Navy.— Capt. S. S. Bowling, 705 Tenth Street, New Alexandria, Alexandria, Va. Marine Corps Aide to the Under Secretary of the Navy.—Lt. Col. Richard S. Johnson, USMC, 511 Berkley Street, Falls Church, Va. Special Assistants to the Under Secretary of the Navy.— William P. Reed, 220 Second Street NE.; Commander George Bullen, 1830 North Inglewood Street, Arling-ton, Va.; Commander J. W. MecConnaughhay, 8402 Irvington Avenue, Bethesda, Md.; Commander E. N. Buddress, 101 East Howell Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Private Secretary to the Under Secretary of the Navy.— Margaret S. Stroud, 1731 New Hampshire Avenue. : : Administrative Officer.—Capt. Charles M. Whitley, USMC, 1200 West Lawn Place, Falls Church, Va. 381 { 382 Congressional Directory 5 OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Naval Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Capt. John E. Lee, 903 North Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. 3 Aide and Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Commander William M. Huey, SC, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— William H. Moore, 213 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Charles H. Mayer, 1247 Thirtieth Street; Lt. Comdr. Theodore B. Purvis, Jr., SC, 708 South Arlington Mill Drive, Arlington, Va. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Vivienne H. Chamer, 1803 Biltmore Street. Marine Corps Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Maj. Donald L. Mallory, USMC, 5222 Twenty-seventh Road North, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR AIR Naval Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Capt. Arnold W. MecKechnie, 3325 Runnymede Place. Special Assistants to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Clayton L. Burwell, 1416 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va.; William A. Leary, 1420 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway, Alexandria, Va.; Commander Lewis L. Snider, 6036 Brook Drive, Falls Church, Va. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Aivr.—Lucille D. Lowry, 1809 G Street. Marine Corps Aide to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air.—Capt. Albert C. Schoner, 2665 South Walter Reed Drive, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTTO THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY Special Assistant to the Admanistrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy.—Frank V. Kent, 1309 Tracy Place, Falls Church, Va. : Assistant to the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy.— Robert H. Dunnington, 4631 Chestnut Street, Bethesda, Md. Private Secretary to the Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Navy.— Mrs. M. L. Baldwin, 2923 Northampton Street. EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE, NAVY DEPARTMENT (Room 0014, Navy Department Building) Administrative Officer, Navy Department.—J. S. Davitt, 422 Allison Street. Deputy Administrative Officer, Navy Department.—A. J. Mulvaney, Route 1, Sterling, Va. Director, Fiscal and Management Control Division.—L. F. Waller, 2504 Tenth Street NE. Director, Departmental Civilian Personnel Division.—W. T. MecDonald, 2526 North Jefferson Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Office Methods Division.—E. D. Dwyer, 703 Hallwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Director, Operating Services Division.—I. C. Rogers, 6300 Thirty-fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Publications Division.— Adolphus N. Spence, 5833 Thirty-third Avenue, Queens Chapel Manor, West Hyattsville, Md. Provost Marshal.—Lt. Col. T. R. Belzer, USMC, 601 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF NAVAL RECORDS (Room 4423, Arlington Annex) Chairman.— Clayton L. Burwell, 1416 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va. Recorder.—C. M. Wiggin, Jr., 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. BOARD OF DECORATIONS AND MEDALS (Room G-634, Arlington Annex) Senior Member.— Capt. W. C. Gilbert, 8506 Irvington Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Member and Recorder.—Commander J. G. Urquhart, 5803 Chevy Chase Parkway. Department of the Navy 383 BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS (Room 2B-51, Yards and Docks Annex) Prose Cant, Robert E. Baker, Medical Corps, 200 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Recorder— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. BOARD OF REVIEW, DISCHARGES AND DISMISSALS (Room 4407, Arlington Annex) President.—Rear Adm. Robert P. McConnell, 1744 R Street. Secretary.— Commander John H. Brownfield, 4628 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Administrative Officer.—Lt. Comdr. Philip Drucker, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Chairman of Boards: Capt. Peter J. Neimo, 811 South Orme Street, Arlington, Va. Col. Robert E. Stannah, USMC, 5045 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. MATERIEL REVIEW BOARD (Room 2010, Navy Department Building) Chairman.—Vice Adm. C. W. Fox, 1522 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (FLAG OFFICERS) (Room 2B-51, Yards and Docks Annex) * President.—Vice Adm. John L. McCrea, 3701 Nebraska Avenue. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (LINE) (Room 2-B-43, Yards and Docks Annex) President.—Vice Adm. John L. McCrea, 3701 Nebraska Avenue. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL) (Room 2B-51, Yards and Docks Annex) President.—Capt. Clifford G. Hines, (MC), 4689 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Recorder.—Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL MEDICAL SURVEY REVIEW BOARD (Room 1516, T-3 Building) : President.—Capt. James D. Viecelli (MC), 4815 Reservoir Road. NAVAL RETIRING REVIEW BOARD (Room G-706, Arlington Annex) President.—Rear Adm. Robert P. McConnell, 1744 R Street. Recorder.—Commander Paul W. McEntire, 857 Frederick Street South, Arling-ton, Va. NAVAL SENTENCE REVIEW AND CLEMENCY BOARD (Room G-077, Arlington Annex) Senior Member.— Rear Adm. Robert P. McConnell, 1744 R Street. Recorder.—Lt. Comdr. Evan L. Krogh, 3825 Fifth Street North, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER (Room 4E728, Pentagon Building) Comptroller of the Navy.—John F. Floberg, Wardman Park Hotel. Deputy Comptroller.—Rear Adm. H. G. Hopwood, 3530 Edmunds Street. Assistant Comptroller, Director of Budget and Reports.—Rear Adm. E. W. Clexton, 4225 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Assistant Comptroller, Accounting, Audit and Finance.—Norwood P. Cassidy, 5415 Connecticut Avenue. 384 : Congressional Directory OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL (Room 2034, Navy Department Building) General Counsel.—Harold B. Gross, 532 Twentieth Street. ; : Assistant General Counsel.—Robert S. Pasley, 12803 Valleywood Drive, Glen-mont Hills, Md. Assistant Loman Counsel.—Meritt H. Steger, 416 South Garfield Street, Arling-ton, Va. Counsel for Bureaus and Officés.— Aeronautics—Frederick Sass, Jr., 3903 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Ordnance—Edward Savage, Jr., 7300 Gloster Road, Wood Acres, Md.; Military Sea Transportation Service— Wilbur L. Morse, 6031 Ninth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Personnel— Robert S. Hatch, 6909 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md.; Ships— Albert H. Stein, 5328 Sherrill Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Supplies and Accounts— William Sellman, Box 256, Route 1, McLean, Va.; Yards and Docks— Charles Goodwin, 1215 Sixteenth Street; Office of the Comptroller— Lawrence E. Chermak, 4112 Garrison Street.; Office of Naval Research— George W. Markey, Jr., 4211 Thirty-fifth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Armed Services Petroleum Purchasing Agency—C. Fred Pollock, 5121 First Street North, Arlington, Va.; Navy Renegotiation Division—Noel R. S. Woodhouse (acting), 3253 P Street; Aviation Supply Office, Phila-delphia—Robert B. Garnett, 6010 Tabor Road, Philadelphia, Pa.; Navy Purchasing Office, New York—Leslie Clifford, 42 Woodcrest Avenue, Short Hills, N. J.; Navy Purchasing Office, Los Angeles—Paul N. Culp, 10759 Massachusetts Avenue., Los Angeles, Calif.; Electronic Supply Office, Great Lakes, Illinois—Sherman M. Booth, Jr., 265 Sylvan Road, Glencoe, Ill., Navy Purchasing Office, San Francisco, Luther H. Gulick, 3428 St. Mary's’ Road, Lafayette, Calif. OFFICE OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS (Room 222, Pentagon Annex #1) Vitel tom Adm. W. McL. Hague, 1207 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, a. Deputy Chief —Capt. Philip F. Wakeman, 3420 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant to Chief.—Charles Piozet, 6902 Pine Way, College Heights, Md. Director, Administrative Services Division.—Lt. Daniel H. Bonham, 46 Williams- burg Road, Alexandria, Va. Director, Employment Division.—L. Eugene Wolfe, 6046 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Training Division.—Roy V. Colbert, 2323 North Vermont Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Wage and Classification Division.— Thomas L. Gardner, 1501 Bucklew Drive, Falls Church, Va. : Director, Safety Division.—Capt. Harry W. Baumer, 5008 Keystone Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Dzrector, Personnel Studies and Statistics Division.—Margaret E. Moore, 1109 Cross Drive, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF INFORMATION (Room 4D727, Pentagon Building) = Chto of Information (Room 4D727).—Rear Adm. R. F. Hickey, 3325 Cleveland venue. . Deputy Chief of Information (Room 4D727).—Capt. H. P. Smith, 5 Beech Tree Drive, Wilton Woods, Alexandria, Va. Spey Deputy (Room 4D727).—Capt. Walter Karig, Seminary Hill, Alexandria, a. Plans and Policies (Room 4D717).—Col. R. W. Boyd, Box 284, Quantico, Va. Administrative Office (Room 4D715).—Commander J. A. E. O'Handley, 3601 Con- necticut Avenue. Public Information Division (Room 4D683).—Capt. R. S. Benson, 2401 North Illinois Street, Arlington, Va. Civil Relations Division (Room 4D718).—Capt. W. C. Wingard, 409 Belle View Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. a Division (Room 4D730).—Capt. W. C. Jonson, Jr., 3814 Morrison treet. Department of the Navy 385 OFFICE OF THE MANAGEMENT ENGINEER (Room 4E824, Pentagon Building) ee Engineer.—Ben M. Williams, 1707 North Jefferson Street, Arling-ton, Va. OFFICE OF NAVAL MATERIAL (Room 2010, Navy Department Building) Chief —Vice Adm. C. W. Fox, 1522 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Vice Chief.—Rear Adm. P. B. Nibecker. Director, Administrative Division.—Lt. Comdr. J. W. Graham, 2629 North Poco- moke Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Planning and Coordination Division.—D. C. King, 3717 Reservoir Road. Assistant Chief and Director, Procurement Division.—Rear Adm. S. R. Edson, 6132 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief and Director, Production Divistion.—Rear Adm. M. Watt, 2328 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief and Director, Field Services Division.— Capt. M. Williams, 4220 East-West Highway, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Material Control Division.—Capt. P. H. Ross, 32 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, Md. OFFICE OF NAVAL PETROLEUM RESERVES (Suite 410, Mining Exchange Building, 1030 Fifteenth Street, Denver, Colo.) Director.— Capt. Robert H. Meade, CEC. OFFICE OF NAVAL RESEARCH (Room 1804, Building T-3) Chief —Rear Adm. Calvin M. Bolster, 3617 Everett Street. Deputy and Assistant Chief.—Capt. C. G. Grimes, 3205 North Glebe Road, Arlington, Va. Deputy and Chief Scientist.—Dr. E. R. Piore, 4315 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief for Administration.— F. V. Rigler, 270 King George Street, Capt. Annapolis, Md. Assistant Chief for Patents and Patent Counsel for the Navy.—Capt. G. N. Robillard, 5819 Chevy Chase Parkway. Assistant {hse Sor Research.— Capt. S. M. Tucker, 3302 Carolina Place, Alexan-dria, Va. Director, Naval Research Laboratory.—Capt. F. R. Furth, 5603 Lambeth Road, Bethesda, Md. Commanding Officer and Director, Special Devices Center.—Capt. T. B. Haley, Sands Point, Port Washington, Long Island, New York. OFFICE OF SAVINGS BONDS (Room 2021, Arlington Annex) Director.—Commander F. L. Lawrance. Eastern Representative.—Lt. Comdr. James F. Hackney. PHYSICAL DISABILITY APPEAL BOARD (Room 2B-51, Yards and Docks Annex) President.—Vice Adm. John L. McCrea, 3701 Nebraska Avenue. Recorder.— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS (Room 4E632, Pentagon Building) Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral William M. Fechteler, Admiral’s House, Observatory Circle. Vice Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral Donald B. Duncan, Quarters A, 2300 E Street. 386 Congressional Directory Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Personnel). —Viee Adm. Laurance T. DuBose, Quarters, H, Naval Gun Factory. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Adminisiration).—Rear Adm. Charles C. Hart-man, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Deputy Chief of Nawal Operations (Operations).—Vice Adm. James Fife, 8401 Bradley Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. : Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Logistics).—Vice Adm. Francis S. Low, Quarters C, 2300 E Street. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations (Air).—Viece Adm. John H. Cassady, Quarters B, 2300 E Street. ; Assistant Chief of Nawal Operations (Naval Reserve).—Rear Adm. William K. Phillips, Virginian Apartments, Lee Boulevard and Fort Myer Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief of Information.—Rear Adm. Robert F. Hickey, 3325 Cleveland Avenue. Naval Inspector General.—Rear Adm. Henry S. Kendall, 6003 Springfield Drive. BUREAU. OF AERONAUTICS (Room 2085, Navy Department Building) Chief, Bureau of Aeronautics.—Rear Adm. T. S. Combs, 4735 Nebraska Avenue. Aide to the Chief.—Lt. C. H. Dorchester, 334 Leonard Road, Falls Church, Va. Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. T. C. Lonnquest, 110 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief for Research and Development—Rear Adm. L. M. Grant, 3260 Gunston Road, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief for Matériel and Services.—Rear Adm. J. B. Moss, 5101 Manning Place. Head, Executive Office.—Capt. F. B. Johnson, 2115 Patrick Henry Drive, Arlington, Va.a Director, Plans Coordination ~Division.—Capt. H. F. MacComsey, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Director, Fiscal Division.—Capt. J. E. Dodson, 3911 Harrison Street. Director, Personnel Division.—Capt. G. A. Hatton, 1000 Seaton Lane, Falls Church, Va. Director, Aircraft Division.—Capt. F. E. Bardwell, 10128 Renfrew Road, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Guided Missiles Division.—Col. R. A. Black, USMC, 6312 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Power Plant Division.—Capt. E. M. Condra, 3603 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Electronics Division.—Capt. A. S. Born, 11 South Hudson Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Contracts Division.—Capt. J. A. Haley, 2 Foxcroft Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Director, Shore Establishments Division.—Capt. P. W. Watson, 27 17 South June Street, Arlington, Va. ; Director, Maintenance Division.—Capt. L. O. Fox (acting), 2404 Cameron Mills Road, Alexandria, Va. Director, Supply Division.—Commander H. J. P. Foley, Jr. (3C), 5418 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY (Potomac Annex, Twenty-third and E Streets) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. H. L. Pugh (MC), Surgeon General, 5506 Lambeth Road, Bethesda, Md. Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. C. J. Brown (MC), 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Legal Assistant to the Surgeon General.—Loren B. Poush, 5404 North Carlyn Spring Road, Arlington, Va. Public Information Officer.—Lt. Comdr. H. Browdy (MSC), 3708 Oliver Street, West Hyattsville, Md. Red Cross Liaison Officer—Capt. C. G. Hines (MC), 4689 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Special Projects Officer—Capt. C. G. Hines (MC), 4689 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Department of the Navy 387 Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau—Continued Research Adviser.—Dr. H. T. Karsner, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Administration Division.—Gordon Barnes, 1804 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Comptroller, Director, Comptroller Division.—Capt. M. K. Cureton (MC), 3082 South Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va. ny Medical Statistics Division.— Capt. J. D. Viecelli (MC), 4815 Reservoir oad. Director, Publications Division.—Capt. W. R. Whiteford (MC), 3100 Connecti--cut Avenue. Armed Forces Medical Publication Agency, Editor-in-Chief.—Col. W. G. Brand-stadt (MC), USA, 4660 Reservoir Road. Inspector General, Medical.—Rear Adm. L. O. Stone (MC), 4508 Chase Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Inspector General, Dental—Rear Adm. A. W. Chandler (DC), 5209 Andover Road, Chevy Chase, Md. * Bi Assistant Chief of Bureau for Personnel and Professional Operations.— Rear Adm. J. Q. Owsley (MC), 4609 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Personnel Division.—Capt. A. H. Staderman (MC), 3544 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Deca Naval Reserve Division.— Capt. C. ‘'W. Lane (MC), 2801 Quebec treet. Director, Professional Division.— Capt. C. G. McCormack (MC), 11 East Everett Street, Kensington, Md. . Director, Physical Qualifications. and Medical Records Division.—Capt. R. A. Bell (MC), 3360 South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Planning and Logistics—Capt. L. G. Jordan (MC), 3261 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Planning Division.— Capt. A. W. Eyer (MC), 5472 Roosevelt Street, Bethesda, Md. Director, Matériel Division.—Capt. W. L. Engleman (MC), 210 Smith Street, Freeport, L. I., N. Y. Head, Washington Branch, Matériel Division.—Lt. L. K. Thompson (MSC), 3308 Wheaton Road, Kensington, Md. ; Assistant Chief of Bureau for Aviation and Operational Medicine—Rear Adm. B. Groesbeck Jr. (MC), 3948 Garrison Street. Director, Submarine Medicine Division.—Capt. O. E. Van Der Aue (MC), 5305 Brookeway Drive, Springfield, Md. Director, Amphibious and Marine Corps Field Medicine Division.—Com-mander L. R. Gens (MC), 13 Ridge Road, NE. Director, Aviation Medicine Division.—Capt. J. L. Holland (MC), 3400 Morrison Street. : : Director, Dispensary Medicine Division.— Capt. J. T. Smith (MC), 2801 Quebec Street. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Dentistry.—Rear Adm. S. O. Claytor (DC), 2800 Quebec Street. Chief, Dental Division.—Rear Adm. S. O. Claytor (DC), 2800 Quebec Street. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Research and Medical Military Specialities.— Rear Adm. B. Groesbeck, Jr. (MC), 3948 Garrison Street. Director, Research Division.—Capt. C. W. Shilling (MC), 1643 North Green-briar Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Preventive Medicine Division.—Capt. R. W. Babione (MC), 413 Tyler Place, Alexandria, Va. Director, Special Weapons Defense Division.—Capt. V. C. Tipton (MC), Route 1, Marriottsville, Md. BUREAU OF NAVAL PERSONNEL (Navy Department, Arlington Annex, Arlington, Va.) (For answers to questions concerning naval personnel call Special Liaison Office, Bureau of Naval Person-nel, LIberty 5-6700, extension 41375) Chief of Naval Personnel.—Vice Adm. Laurance T. DuBose, 3043 N Street. Deputy Chief of Naval Personnel.—Rear Adm. J. F. Bolger, 2606 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. ; Administrative Aide.—Capt. B. L. Gurnette, 514 South Fairfax Street, Alexandria, Va. 388 Congressional Directory Administrative Assistant to Chief of Naval Personnel.—Helen M. Hess, 3301 Six-teenth Street. General Inspector.—Capt. BE. B. Taylor, 515 Duke Street, Alosandrls, Va. Special Assistant for Liarson and Public 1 nformation. — Commander D. H. Pugh, R. F. D. 3, Box 158E, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief for Women .—Capt. J. B. Hancock (W), Lemon Road, Falls Church, Va. Administrative Officer.—C. B. MacLean, 921 North Lebanon Street, Arlington, Va. Advisory Assistant.—F. J. Schuyler, R. F. D. 2, Vienna, Va. Director of Research.—— Capt. E. K. Van Swearingen, 208 North Royal Street, Alexandria, Va. i Assistant Chief for Finance and Property Management.—Capt. C. H. Crichton, 1200 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Director, Shore Establishment Division.—Capt. F. C. Lucas, 205 Adams Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Assistant for Plans.—Capt. W. M. Cole, 813 South Overlook Drive, Alex-andria, Va. Dicer Plans and Policy Control Division.—Capt. E. B. Taylor, 515 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va. Director, Legislation’ Division.—Capt. R. S. Craighill, 1208 South Oakcrest Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief for Naval Reserve.—Capt. J. H. Shultz, Box 54, Route 4, Vienna, Va. Director, Naval Reserve Division. —Capt. W. H. Duvall, 3433 Porter Street. Assistant Chief for Education and Training.—Capt. H. ‘0. Larson, 307 Queen Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief for Records. —Capt. W. G. Michelet, 2231 California Street. Director, Personnel Accounting Division. Commander H. F. Wells, 2451 North Powhatan, Arlington, Va. Director, Officer and Miscellaneous Records Division.—Commander A. I. Becker, 517 Monticello Drive, Falls Church, Va. Director, Enlisted Services and Records Division. —Capt. T. J. Van Metre, 5722 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, Va -Assistant Chief for Personnel Control.—Rear Adm. R. N. Smoot, 4800 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Officer Personnel Division. —Capt. G. C. Towner, 3208 Nineteenth Road’ North, Arlington, Va. Director, Enlisted Personnel Diviston.—Capt. H. H. Henderson, 1815 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Personnel Transportation Division.—Capt. E. K. Wakefield, 204 North Evergreen Street, Arlington, Va. ; Director, Medals and Awards Division.—Lt. Comdr. C. J. Kersting, 6822 Orland Street, Falls Church, Va. Director, Retirement Division. —Capt. J. Munholland, 4508 Gladwyn Drive, Bethesda, Md. Director, Recruiting Drvision.—Capt. F. B. €. Martin, 417 North Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief for Morale Services. —Capt. W. B. “Thelen, 8802 Maywood Avenue Silver Spring, Md. Director, Special Services Division.— Commander S. D. Cutter, 3622 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Director, Personal Affairs Division.— Capt. S. H. Ambruster, 4221 Twelfth Road’ South, Arlington, Va. Chief of Chaplains.— Rear Adm. S. W. Salisbury, 3133 Connecticut Avenue, BUREAU OF ORDNANCE (Room 0036, Navy Department Building) Chief.—Rear Adm. M. F. Schoeffel, 19 Glen Drive, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Depniy, and Assistant Chief. —Rear Adm. J. A. Snackenberg, 2726 Thirty-sixth ace. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Research.—Capt. M. R. Kelley (retired), 2100 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Planning and Progress.—Capt. K. M. McLaren, 3721 Legation Street. Department of the Navy 389 Assistant Chief of Bureau for Naval Ordnance Establishments.—Capt. M. A. Sawyer, Wild Rose Shores, R. F. D. 3, Annapolis, Md. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Material. Cap t. R. L. Adams, 6413 Lybrook Drive, Bethesda, Md. Director, Contract Division. — Capt. G. H. Wales, 4531 Walsh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Administrative Division.— Capt. H. L. Jukes, 1219 Thirty-third Street. Director, Quality Control Division.—Capt. B. L. Lubelsky, 1408 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Inspector of Naval Ordnance Establishments. Te W. J. Whipple, 2611 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. BUREAU OF SHIPS (Room 3036, Navy Department Building) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Homer N. Wallin, 3322 Stephenson Place. Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Wilson D. Leggett, Jr., 2201 South Knoll Street, Arlington, Va. Special Assistants to Chief of Bureau (Room 3403).—Thomas A. Callaghan, Jr., 5036 Glenbrook Terrace; Charles F. Elliott, 119 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, Va.; A. Brice Biggers, 1379 Sheridan Street. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Administration (Room 3030).—Capt. Charles J. Cater, 4447 Thirty-sixth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va. Fiscal Director (Room 2406). —Capt. Cornelius S. Seabring, 3612 North Albemarle Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Ships (Room 3026).—Rear Adm. E. Wallace Sylves-ter, 2601 Thirty-sixth Street. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Electronics (Room 3020A).—Capt. Willis H. Beltz, the Wardman Park. Director of Contracts (Room 1028).—Rear Adm. George A. Holderness, Jr., 3226 Cleveland Avenue. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Field Activities (Room 3044).—Rear Adm. Grover C. Klein, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Research and Development (Room 3448).—Capt. William R. Millis, 5802 Cleves Lane. : BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS (Room 0024, Navy Department Building) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. M. L. Royar (SC), 111 Devon Drive, Holmes Run Park, Falls Church, Va. Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Coors W. Bauernschmidt (SC), 2311 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Planning.—Capt. J. E. Wolowsky (SC), 4723 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief of Bureau for Supply Management.—Capt. F. L. Hetter (SC), R. F. D. 2 Lawyers Road, Vienna, Va. Assistant So of Bureau for ' Accounting and Disbursing.—Capt. H. C. Hayns-worth, Jr. (SC), 1605 Oakerest Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief of Bureau for T ransportation. —Capt. W. C. Johnson (SC), 419 Oglethorpe Street. Comptroller of the Bureau.—Commander R. A. Williams (SC), 2606 South Hayes Street, Arlington, Va. Professional Assistant to Chief of Bureau.—P. P. Brown, 126 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Inspector General of the Supply Corps.—Rear Adm. M. G. Slarrow (SC), 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Director, Office Services Division.—J. Frank Clarke, 127 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Naval Personnel Division.—Commander J. M. Lyle (SC), 3166 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Director, Civilian Personnel Division.—P. M. Camp, 6220 Twentieth Place, West Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Chief of Bureau and Chief of Field Branch, Cleveland.—Rear Adm. F. & Dunham (SC), 19636 Van Aken Boulevard, Shaker Heights, Ohio. 390 Congressional Directory BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS (Yards and Docks Annex, Arlington, Va.) Chief of Bureau.—Rear Adm. Joseph F. Jelley, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 3417 Porter Street. Deputy and Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Capt. Archibald D. Hunter, Deputy Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 2602 Central Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Inspector Gemeral.—Capt. John J. Chew, Civil Engineer Corps, 909 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Comptroller.—Commander Norman J. Drustrup, Civil Engineer Corps, 4532 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief for Administrative Management.—Commander William C. G. Church, Civil Engineer Corps, 4335 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Chief for Business Management.— Capt. Eigil L. Hansen, Civil Engineer Corps, 408 East Broad Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief for Operations.— Capt. Martin W. Kehart, Civil Engineer Corps, 818 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chief for Plans and Research.—Capt. Elmer B. Greey, Civil Engineer Corps, 304 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. MILITARY SEA TRANSPORTATION SERVICE (Room 1004, Building T-8, 3800 Newark Street. Phone, ORdway 9600) Commander.—Vice Adm. W. M. Callaghan, 3502 Runnymede Place. Deputy Commander and Chief of Staff. —Rear Adm. Ralph E. Wilson, 5608 Mont-gomery Street, Chevy Chase, Md. : OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY (Room 4E794, Pentagon Building) Judge Advocate General.—Rear Adm. George L. Russell, 911 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Capt. E. E. Woods, 4708 Drummond Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. : Gener Inspector.—Capt. Sanford B. D. Wood, 3716 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, d Director, Military Justice Division.— Commander Irving N. Klein, 6022 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Consultant Division.—Commander Robert D. Powers, 3905 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Director, Applied Law Division.—Commander Albert L. O’Bannon, 1001 North Kensington Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Legislative Division.—Capt. Henry C. Bruton, 300 North Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Administrative Division.— Commander Herbert S. Schwab, 825 Labella Walk, Falls Church, Va. Administrative Officer, J. Travis Price, 5318 Eighth Road South, Arlington, Va. Director, Admiralty Division.— Myron H. Avery, 4531 Forty-fifth Street. NATIONAL NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER (Bethesda, Md. Phone, OLiver 2500) Commanding Officer.—Rear Adm. W. J. C. Agnew, Medical Corps, Quarters A, Medical Center. : NAVAL DENTAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer.—Capt. Louis D. Mitchell, Dental Corps, 5616 Sonoma Road, Bethesda, Md. NAVAL HOSPITAL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer —Capt. Bartholomew W. Hogan, Medical Corps, Quarters B, Medical Center. Department of the Navy 391 NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer.—Capt. Wilbur E. Kellum, Medical Corps, 5415 Harwood Road, Bethesda, Md. NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer —Capt. John L. Enyart, Medical Corps, 2720 Daniel Road, Chevy Chase, Md. NAVAL SCHOOL OF HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION (National Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Md.) Commanding Officer.—Commander Max E. Zimmerman, Medical Service Corps, 8627 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md. : NAVAL AIR STATION (Anacostia, D. C. Phone, LUdlow 4-2400) Commanding Officer—Capt. R. H. Lyon, Quarters A, Naval Air Station. NAVAL DISPENSARY (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building, and Rear Third Wing, first floor, Arlington Annex) Commanding Officer.—Capt. Leo C. Thyson, U. 8S. N., 3601 Connecticut Avenue. NAVAL GUN FACTORY, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, FRanklin 5700) Sniper intindei —Rear Adm. B. Hall Hanlon, Quarters B, Naval Gun Factory. Aide to Superintendent.—Lt. Comdr. T. S. McCrory, BOQ, Naval Gun Factory. Administrative Officer.—Commander I. Williamson, 2001 Branch Avenue SE. Assistant Superintendent.—Capt. W. A. Riley, Quarters D, Naval Gun Factory. Industrial Relations Officer.—Commander W. F. Collier, 1608 Whiteoak Drive, Silver Spring, Md Production Officer. — Capt. M. A. Peterson, Quarters R, Naval Gun Factory. HEADQUARTERS, POTOMAC RIVER NAVAL COMMAND (Naval Gun Factory, Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, FRanklin 5700) Commandant.—Rear Adm. George H. Fort, Quarters A. Naval Gun Factory. : Chita) oF Staff and Aide.—Capt. Frederick L. Riddle, Quarters C, Naval Gun actory. Aide to the Commandant.—Lt. Comdr. H. J. Kelley, 4341 Gorman Terrace SE. Public Information Officer.—Lt. H. K. Griffin, Jr., 1702 Summit Place. Administrative Officer.—C. P. Plumb, 3812 Aberdeen Street SE. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS (Navy Department, Arlington Annex, Arlington, Va. Phone, LIberty 5-6700) OFFICES OF THE COMMANDANT Commandant.—Gen. Clifton B. Cates, commandants’ house, Eighth and G Streets SE. Assistant to the Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Merwin H. Silverthorn, 4711 Dover Road, Brookdale, Md. Division of Aviation. ~ Brig. Gen. Clayton C. Jerome, director, Quarters No. 4, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Inspection Division. — Maj. Gen. Samuel L. Howard, inspector general, Quarters No. 1, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. 392 Congressional Directory Division of Public Information.—Brig. Gen. John C. McQueen, director, 921 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Division of Recruiting.—Brig. Gen. John C. McQueen, director, 921 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Historical Division.—Brig. Gen. John C. McQueen, director, 921 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Division of Plans and Policies—Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Pollock, director, 1909 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Reserve.—Brig. Gen. Harry B. Liversedge, director, 1627 I Street. Administrative Division.—Col. William W. Orr, administrative officer, 4801 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Military Secretary to the Commandant.—Col. Thomas S. Ivey, 402 North Little Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Legal Aide.—Maj. Gen. Walter W. Wensinger, 2021 North Roosevelt Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Women Marines.—Col. Katherine A. Towle, 1801 Clydesdale Place. Aide-de-Camp.—Lt. Col. Russell E. Honsowetz, 4817 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va. SUPPLY DEPARTMENT Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. W. P. T. Hill, Quarters No. 3, Marine Bar-racks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Executive Officer—Brig. Gen. Leonard E. Rea, 4537 Lowell Street. PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT Director of Personnel.—Maj. Gen. John T. Walker, 314 Kent Place, Alexandria, Y a. Assistant Director of Personnel.—Brig. Gen. William J. Scheyer, 2425 South Inge Street, Arlington, Va. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MARINE CORPS) President.—Maj. Gen. Samuel L. Howard, Quarters No. 1, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. 2 Recorder.—Maj. Robert A. Scherr, 2808 Second Street SE. PHYSICAL DISABILITY APPEAL BOARD (MARINE CORPS) President.—Maj. Gen. Samuel L. Howard, USMC, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. Recorder.— Addie Brown, 1635 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. MARINE BARRACKS (Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, LIncoln 3-9400) Commanding.—Col. Jack P. Juhan, Quarters No. 2, Marine Barracks, Eighth and I Streets SE. DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE (Department of Defense Building, The Pentagon. Phone, Liberty 5-6700) THOMAS K. FINLETTER, of New York, Secretary of the Air Force (1743 Twenty-second Street, Washington, D. C.), born in Philadelphia, Pa., November 11, 1893; son of Thomas Dixon and Helen (Grill) Finletter; A. B., University of Pennsylvania, 1915, and LL. B., University of Pennsylvania, 1920; married Margaret Blaine Damrosch, 1920; children—Margot (Mrs. John F. B. Mitchell) and Lili (Mrs. Cass Canfield, Jr.); in World War I served with Three Hundred and Twelfth Field Artillery (1917-19) advancing to the rank of captain; admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in 1920 and the New York bar in 1921; lawyer with Cravath and Henderson law firm, New York, 1920-26; member of Coudert Brothers law firm, New York, 1926-41; lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, 1931-41; entered the government service in 1941 as a special assistant to the Secretary of State on international economic affairs; in 1943, appointed executive director and later deputy director of the office of Foreign Economic Coordinator; in this post was in charge of planning economic activities related to liberated areas and was in control of matters of foreign exchange and matters relating to the operations of the Alien Property Custodian; resigned this post in 1944 and returned to Coudert Brothers, New York law firm; acted as consultant to the United States delegation at the United Nations Conference at San Fran-cisco, 1945; chairman, President’s Air Policy Commission, established in July 1947, to draft a national air policy, the result of which was the submission of a report to the President entitled: ‘Survival in the Air Age,” in January 1948; chief of the Economic Cooperation Administration’s mission to the United Kingdom in 1948; returned to Coudert Brothers later in 1949 and remained until appointment by the President to be the second Secretary of the Air Force, April 24, 1950; member of the bar association of the city of New York and the American Bar Association; the International Law Society; Delta Phi Fraternity; the Knick-erbocker and Century Clubs (New York); the Metropolitan Club (Washington, D. C.) and the Anthenaeum Club (London, England); author: “Can Representa-tive Government Do the Job?” (1945); “The Law of Bankruptcy Reorganization’ (1939); “Principles of Corporate Reorganization” (1937). Home, 45 East Sixty-sixth Street, New York City. Under Secretary of the Air Force.—Roswell L. Gilpatrie, 3527 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Management).—Eugene M. Zuckert, 141 Hesketh Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Matériel).—Edwin V. Huggins, Hotel Statler. Fpectal Sevnion to the Secretary of the Air Force.— William A. M. Burden, 3014 treet. Swell Assistant for Base Negotiations.—Howard J. Newmark, 3215 Rowland ace. General Counsel. —James T. Hill, Jr., 4224 Van Ness Street. Director of Legislation and Liaison.— Brig. Gen. Robert E. L. Eaton, 4612 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE Executive Assistant to the Secretary.—Col. William G. Hipps, 2913 Argyle Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant for Analysis.—Frederick M. Sallagar, 1200 Mount Vernon Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Special Military Col. Ethelred L. Sykes, Route 1, Box 275, Annandale, Assistants.— Va.; Col. Gilbert E. Teal, 726 Woodlawn Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Deputy Executive Assistants.—Col. Frederic W. Barnes, 4305 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Col. Royal H. Roussel, 413 Franklin Street, Alexandria, Va. Aide to the Secretary.—Lt. Col. Howard L. Burris, 2334 South Meade Street, Arlington, Va. 394 Congressional Darectory Administrative Assistant.—John J. McLaughlin, 4623 Twenty-eighth Road South, Arlington, Va. Deputy Administrative Assistant (Management).—Lt. Col. T. A. Miller, 4807 Fourth Avenue SE. Deputy Administrative Assistant (Services).—Maj. Lloyd J. Powell, 4305 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Private Secretaries.—Clare Shands, 1300 South Thomas Street, Arlington, Va.; Sally A. Poole, 414 Thirty-seventh Street SE. OFFICE OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE Executive to the Under Col. John H. Bell, 2408 North Florida Secretary.— Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Executive.—[Vacant.] Private Secretaries—Helen L. Hashagen, 1803 Biltmore Street; Harriet J. Zim-merly, 5759 Thirteenth Street. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE (MANAGEMENT) Ezxecutive.—Col. Kenneth O. Dessert, 307 South Ivy Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Executive.—Col. Leon E. Bell, Jr., 1135 North Powhatan Street, Arlington, Va. Deputies to the Assistant Secretary.—James P. Goode, 5038 Bradley Boulevard, Chevy Chase, Md.; Col. Frank T. McCoy, Jr., 520 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; George E. Moore, 5100 Lowell Lane; Chester D. Seften-berg, Hunting Towers Apartments, Alexandria, Va.; William R. Sweeney, 910 Lewis Place, Falls Church, Va. Private Secretaries.— Ruth Anthony, 3665 Thirty-eighth Street; A. Marie Janinek, 1610 Park Road. Secretary of the Air Force Personnel Council: Director.—Maj. Gen. Edwin B. Lyon, 1827 Phelps Place. Deputy Director.— Brig. Gen. Frederick Von H. Kimble, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Ezecutive.~—Col. Harry C. Sigourney, 5321 Colorado Avenue. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE AIR FORCE (MATERIEL) Executive.—Col. Gustav A. Neuberg, 902 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Deputy Ezecutive.—[Vacant.] Deputies to the Assistant Secretary.—Joseph S. Imirie, 5907 Namakagan Road, Glen Mark Park, Md.; Lauren R. Reynolds, Jr., 4437 Cathedral Avenue. Chairman; Air Force Panel, Armed Services Board. of Contract Appeals.—Roswell M. Austin, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. : Chairman, Air Force Division, Armed Services Renegotiation Board.—Thomas Coggeshall, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. Private Secretaries.—Jean Lightbown, 3609 Seventeenth Street; Helen M. Loree, 1711 Massachusetts Avenue. ; OFFICE OF THE SPECIAL ASSISTANT Ezxecutive.—Lt. Col. Vincent T. Ford, 213 Ramsey Alley, Alexandria, Va. Deputies to the Special Assistant.—James C. Evans, 1217 Thirty-fourth Street; Garrison Norton, 3040 Dumbarton Avenue; J. Parker Van Zandt, West-chester Apartments. OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL Deputy General Counsel. —Edwin McElwain, 3818 Forty-seventh Street. Associate General Counsels.— Max Golden, 3505 South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va.; John A. Johnson, 1107 Lincoln Avenue, Falls Church, Va.; Arvin E Upton, 3263 P Street. DIRECTOR OF LEGISLATION AND LIAISON Deputy Director and Chief of Liaison Division.—Col. Frederic H. Miller, Jr., 6021 Wooten Drive, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Director—Col. Henry W. Terry 3d, 2707 South Walter Reed Drive, . Arlington, Va. Executive.—Lt. Col. James O. McKee, 2006 Sycamore Drive, Falls Church, Va. Legal Adviser—George S. Robinson, Box 206—A, Route 2, Vienna, Va. Chief of Legislative Division.—Col. Robert F. Burnham, 6000 Brook Drive, Falls Church, Va. Department of the Air Force 395 Chel, of Congressional Division.—Col. Edgar M. Scattergood, Jr., 6417 Western venue. Chuef of Analysis Diviston.—Col. Glenn E. Duncan, 3641 Greenway Drive. UNITED STATES AIR FORCE HEADQUARTERS Chief of Staff.—Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Quarters 8, Fort Myer, Va. Executive.—Brig. Gen. Richard A. Grussendorf, 2623 South Grant Street, Ar-lington, Va. Assistant Executive.—Lt. Col. C. J. Moore, Jr., 1316 Thirty-ninth Street. Aide-de-Camp.—Col. Godfrey T. McHugh, 2500 Q Street. Vice Chief of Staff.—Gen. Nathan F. Twining, Quarters 12-B, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Vice Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. William F. McKee, Quarters 72, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. The Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. Harry G. Armstrong, 3413 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. hid of Plans and Brig. Gen. H. H. Twitchell, 4434 Volta Hospitalization.— lace. Director of Medical Staffing and Education.—Brig. Gen. Edward J. Kendricks, 3356—A South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Professional Services.—Brig. Gen. E. Maxwell, 2333 South Nash Street, Arlington, Va. The Judge Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. Reginald C. Harmon, 3004 South Abing-don Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Civil Law.— Brig. Gen. Bertrand E. Johnson, 4674 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director of Military Justice.—Brig. Gen. Albert M. Kuhfeld, 2919 North Franklin Road, Arlington, Va. Director of Appellate Services and Training.—Brig. Gen. H. M. Kidner, 3 Fort Hunt Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Chairman, Scientific Advisory Board.—Dr. Theo. von Karman, 1501 South Marengo Avenue, Pasadena, Calif. Military Director, Scientific Advisory Board.—Maj. Gen. Donald L. Putt, 910 Crescent Drive, Alexandria, Va. : Special Assistant to Chief of Staff for Reserve Forces (Acting). —Brig. Gen. R. L. Copsey, 3245 O Street. Director of Public Relations.— Brig. Gen. Sory Smith, 3712 Massachusetts Avenue. Deputy Director (Civilian).—Nils A. Lennartson, 718 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director (Military).—Col. Arno H. Luehman, 204 Cambridge Road, Alexandria, Va. : Special Assistant.—Harry E. Patterson, 2918 P Street SE. The IT pshern Cooma Gen. Howard A. Craig; Quarters 71, Bolling Air Force Base, D. Deputy Inspector General and Director of Special Investigations.—Maj. Gen. Joseph F. Carroll, 1211 Rippon Road, Alexandria, Va. Air Provost Marshal.—Maj. Gen. Joseph V. Dillon, 2427 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. : Deputy Inspector General, USAF.—Maj. Gen. Victor E. Bertrandias, Norton Air Force Base, San Bernardino, Calif. Director of Flight Safety Research.—Brig. Gen. Richard J. O’Keefe, Norton Air Force Base, San Bernardino, Calif. Director of Technical Inspection.—Brig. Gen. Thomas O. Hardin, Norton Air Force Base, San Bernardino, Calif. Director of Procurement Inspection.— Brig. Gen. Clarence P. Kane, Norton Air Force Base, San Bernardino, Calif. Director of Inspection Services—Col. Cordes F. Tiemann, 2705 North Twenty-fourth Street, Arlington, Va. Depuly Inspector General, USAF.—[Vacant], Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, ex. Director of Field Inspection.—Col. John W. Persons, Kelly Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex. Secretary of the Air Staff.—Col. Wayne E. Thurman, 310 Lawton Street, Falls Church, Va. : Air Adjutant General.—Col. Kenneth E. Thiebaud, 1619 North Highland Street Arlington, Va. : 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 27 396 Congressional Directory DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, COMPTROLLER Deputy Chief of Staff, Comptroller.—Lt. Gen. C. B. Stone 3d, Quarters 62, Bolling Air Force Base, Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Compitroller.— Maj. Gen. Edward Ww. Anderson, Quarters 69, Bolling Air Force Base, D. Assistant for Plans and Policy.— Brig. Gen. Frederick J. Dau, 3119 Circle Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Auditor General. — Brig. Gen. Thomas R. Rampy, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Director of Accounting.—Col. Walter I. Miller, 3340 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Director of Statistical Services.— Brig. Gen. Charles R. Landon, 1768 Lee Boulevard, Falls Church, Va. Director of Budgel.— Maj. Gen. Manuel J. Asensio, 2706 South Grant Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Program Standards and Cost Control.—Col. B. J. Webster, 805 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director of Finance. ~ Brig. Gen. Kenneth E. Webber, 3133 Connecticut Avenue. DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, DEVELOPMENT Deputy Chief of Staff, Development.—Maj. Gen. Laurence C. Craigie, Quarters 65, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Development.—Maj. Gen. James E. Briggs, 5013 Sherrier Place. Assistant for Development Planning.—Col. B. A. Schriever, 42 Woodmont Road, Alexandria, Va. Assistant for Development Programming.— Brig. Gen. M. S. Roth, 312 Clover Way, Alexandria, Va. Director of Requirements.— Maj. Gen. M. R. Nelson, 3106 Circle Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Director of Research and Development. — Brig. Gen. Donald N. Yates, Route 3, Fairfax, Va. DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, PERSONNEL Deputy Chief of Staff, Personnel.—Lt. Gen. Laurence S. Kuter, Building 2-153, Quarters, Andrews Air Force Base, Camp Springs, Md. Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Personnel.— Maj. Gen. E. S. Wetzel, 630-C Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va. Assistant for Special Personnel.—Col. E. P. Archibald, 3520 South Wakefield Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant for Ground Safety.—Col. Will L. Tubbs, 401 Juniper Lane, Falls Church, Va. Special Assistant for Air Force Academy Matters.—Lt. Gen. Hubert R. Yaron, Army and Navy Club. Director, WAF.—Col. M. J. Shelly, Fairfax Hotel. Chief of "Air Force Chaplains.—Maj. Gen. Charles I. Carpenter, 6247 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va. Director of Personnel Planning.—Brig. Gen. Harlan C. Parks, Quarters 64, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Birecior of Military Personnel.— Maj. Gen. J. H. McCormick, 3342 Prospect venue. Director of Civilian Personnel.—John A. Watts, 1812 N Street. Director of Training.—Brig. Gen. G. P. Disosway, 32 West Grove Drive, ‘Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, OPERATIONS Deri ie) of Staff, Operations.—Lt. Gen. T. D. White, Quarters 12-A, Fort yer, Va. Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, Operations.—Maj. Gen. R. W. Burns, Quarters 66, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Assistant for Atomic Energy. —Maj. Gen. Roscoe C. Wilson, 5510 Montgomery Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant for Programming. —Maj. Gen. Walter E. Todd, 2645 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Department of the Air Force 397 Assistant for Air Bases.—Brig. Gen. Harold R. Maddux, 2401 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Intelligence. —Maj. Gen. John A. Samford, 4908 Fulton Circle. Director of Plans.—Maj. Gen. Robert M. Lee, MOQ, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Director of Communications.—Maj. Gen. RC Maude, 915 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, Va. Director of Manpower and Organization.—Brig. Gen. Roger J. Browne, TMOQ), Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Berets of Operations. —Maj. Gen R. M. Ramey, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, a. DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, MATERIEL Deputy Chief of Staff, Matériel. —Lt. Gen. O. R. Cook, Quarters 74, Bolling Air Force Base, D. C. Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff, kati —Maj. Gen. C. A. Brandt, Malbrook, Sleepy Hollow, Falls Church Assistant for Logistics Plans.—Col. Ww. “T. Hudnell, 2310 North George Mason Drive, Arlington, Va. Assistant for Matériel Program Control.—Brig. Gen. P. E. Ruestow, 125 North Columbus Street, Arlington, Va. Director of Maintenance Engineering. —Brig. Gen. W. W. Wise, Building T-52, BOQ, Fort Myer, Va. Director of Supply and Services.—Maj. Gen. A. A. Kessler, Jr., 25 West Grove Road, Alexandria, Va. Director of Installations.—Maj. Gen. P. W. Timberlake, Quarters 73, Bolling Air Force Base, D. Director of Industrial Resources. — Brig. Gen. T. Miller, Jr., 507 Woodland Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Director of Transportation. —Maj. Gen. W. E. Farthing, 1511 North Frederick Street, Arlington, Va Director of Procurement and Production Engineering.—Col. Whitmell T. Rison, 2826 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. MAJOR AIR COMMANDS CONTINENTAL COMMANDS Air Defense Command (Ent Air Force Base, Colorado Springs, Colo.).—Gen. Benjamin W. Chidlaw. Air Matériel Command (Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio).—Lt. Gen. Edwin W. Rawlings. Air Proving Ground (Eglin Air Force Base, Valparaiso, Fla.).—Maj. Gen. Bryant L. Boatner. Air Research and Development Command (5 West Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md.).—Lt. Gen. Earle E. Partridge. Air Training Command (Scott Air Force Base, Belleville, Ill.).—Lt. Gen. Robert W. Harper. Air University (Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Ala.).—Lt. Gen. Idwal H. Edwards. Continental Azr Comm (Mitchel Air Force Base, Hempstead, N. Y.).— Maj. Gen. Willis H. Hale. Headquarters Command, USAF (Bolling Air Force Base, Washington, D. C.).— Brig. Gen. Morris 'T. Toe. Military Avr Transport Service (Andrews Air Force Base, Camp Springs, Md.).— Maj. Gen. Joseph Smith. Spend Weapons Command (Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mex.).— Brig. Gen. John S. Mills. Strategic Air Command (Offutt Air Force Base, Omaha, Nebr.).—Gen. Curtis E. eMay. eh Avr Command (Langley Air Force Base, Hampton, Va.).—Gen. John K. annon. USAF Security Service (Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex.).—Col. Travis M. Hetherington. 308 Congressional Directory OVERSEA COMMANDS Atlin ir Command (Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska).—Maj. Gen. William D. Old. Cardio Air Command (Albrook Air Force Base, Canal Zone).— Brig. Gen. Emil . Kiel. : Far East Air Forces (Tokyo, Japan).—Lt. Gen. Otto P. Weyland. Northeast Air Command (Pepperrell Air Force Base, Newfoundland).—Maj. Gen. United Lyman P. Whitten. States Air Forces Norstad. in Europe (Wiesb aden, G ermany).—Lt. Gen. Lauris SEPARATE OPE RATING AGENCIES : Air Air Force Finance Division Gilchrist. Pictorial Service (Beury Pg.)—Brig. Gen. B. (3800 York Building, E. Allen. Street, 3701 Denver, North Colo.).— Brig. Broad Street, Gen. Phila John R. delphia, - DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE (Constitution Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets. Phone, REpublic 8200) JAMES HOWARD McGRATH, Attorney General of the United States; born Woonsocket, R. I., November 28, 1903; son of Ida E. (May) McGrath and the late James J. McGrath; graduated St. Joseph’s Parochial School, 1918; La Salle Academy, Providence, 1922; Ph. B., Providence College, 1926; LL. B., Boston . University, 1929; honorary degrees from the following institutions: Doctor of Laws, Providence College, Manhattan College, N. Y., Rhode Island State College, Boston University, National University, Washington, D. C., Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., St. Mary’s College, California, Duquesne University, Pitts-burgh, Pa., La Salle College, Philadelphia, Pa., Sienna College, Loudonville, N. Y., Fairfield University, Fairfield, Conn.; Doctor of Science, Rhode Island College of Pharmacy and Allied Sciences; Doctor of Education, Rhode Island College of Education; Master of Science in Business Administration, Bryant Col-lege; named by Pope Pius XII to Knighthood in the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem; the first American to be awarded the medal of Mary by the Marianist Fathers of Dayton University, Dayton, Ohio; married Estelle A. Cadorette, November 28, 1929; one son (David J. McGrath, age 14); admitted to Rhode Island Bar, 1929; City Solicitor, Central Falls, R. I., 1930-34; United States District Attorney for Rhode Island, 1934-40; resigned to accept Democratic nomination for Governor of Rhode Island; elected 1940, reelected 1942 and 1944; resigned October 1945 to become Solicitor General of the United States; resigned October 1946 to accept nomination for United States Senator; elected November 1946; resigned August 23, 1949, to accept appointment as Attorney General of the United States; oath of office as Attorney General of the United States, August 24, 1949; elected chairman, Democratic National Commit-tee, October 29, 1947; resigned August 24, 1949; legal residence: Providence, R. I. Solicitor General.—Philip B. Perlman, the Shoreham. Deputy Attorney General.—A. Devitt Vanech, 5808 Nevada Avenue. Assistant Attorneys General: Tax Diviston.~—[Vacant.] Antitrust Division.—H. Graham Morison, 2745 Twenty-ninth Street. Lands Diviston.— William Amory Underhill, 1830 K Street. Claims Diwvision.—Holmes Baldridge, 1445 Madison Street. Criminal Division.—James M. McInerney, 3200 Sixteenth Street. Office of Alien Property.—Harold I. Baynton, 4624 Tilden Street. Office of Assistant Attorney General.—Joseph C. Duggan. Customs Division.— David N. Edelstein, 201 Varick Street, New York, N. Y. Executive Assistant to the Attorney General.—Grace M. Stewart, the Westchester. Secretary to the Attorney General.—Mildred E. Fanebust, 2515 K Street. Director of Public Relations.—Dean L. Schedler, Fairfax Road, McLean, Va. Pardon Attorney.—Daniel M. Lyons, 4237 Forty-sixth Street. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION Administrative Assistant Attorney General.—S. A. Andretta, 2500 Q Street. Deputy Administrative Assistant Attorney General.—Frederick C. Kilguss, 3936 . Garrison Street. Chief, Budget Office.—E. R. Butts, 105 East Randolph Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Chadds. Services and Procurement Branch.—Harvey C. Donaldson, the Dorchester ouse. Chief, Accounis Branch.—Eugene J. Matchett, 613 Pickwick Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Personnel Branch.—John W. Adler, 4903 Brookeway Drive. Chief, Records Administration Branch.—Armando di Girolamo, Lincolnia Heights, Va. FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (Phone, EXecutive 7100) Dzrector.—J. Edgar Hoover, 4936 Thirtieth Place. Associate Director.—Clyde A. Tolson, Marlyn Apartments. 399 400 Congressional Directory Assistants to the Director.—D. Milton Ladd, 5235 Nebraska Avenue; Louis B. Nichols, 640 Oakland Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Directors—Hugh H. Clegg, Woodley Park Towers; W. Richard Glavin, 4105 Thirty-second Road South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va.; R. T. Harbo, 801 South Overlook Drive, Alexandria, Va.; Alex Rosen, 2480 Six-teenth’ Street; Stanley J. Tracy, 4800 College ’Avenue, College Park, Md.; Alan H. Belmont, 4235 Thirty-sixth Street South, Fairlington, Arlington, Va.; Earl J. Connelley, 506 East Fourth Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE (Nineteenth and East Capitol Streets NE. Phone, TRinidad 9910) Commissioner.— Argyle R. Mackey, 1752 North Troy Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Commissioner.— Benjamin G. Habberton, 3103 Hawthorne Street. Assistant Commissioners: Adjudications Division.—Allan C. Devaney, 3622 Davenport Street. Administrative Division.— Edward A. Loughran, Glen Road, Rockville, Md. Enforcement Division.— Willard F. Kelly, 3002 South Woodrow Street, Fairling- ton, Arlington, Va. Research, Education, and Information Division.—Raymond F. Farrell, 532 Twentieth Street. ; General Counsel.—L. Paul Winings, 316 A Street SE. BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS (Washington, D. C.) Chairman.—Thomas G. Finucane, 5514 Center Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Members.—Robert M. Charles, 7422 Georgia Avenue; Leigh L. Nettleton, 7327 Fourteenth Street; Robert KE. Ludwig, 4509 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Louisa Wilson, 2818 Wisconsin Avenue. Executive Assistant.— Anthony L. Montaquila, 6318 Second Street. BUREAU OF PRISONS (H. O. L. C. Building, 101 Indiana Avenue) Director.—James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Directors.—Frank Loveland, 5209 Thirty-eighth Street; Myrl E. Alex-ander, 222 Baden Street, Silver Spring, Md. BOARD OF PAROLE Members.—George G. Killinger, 5013 Fort Sumner Drive; Fred S. Rogers, 1028 Connecticut Avenue; Boleslau J. Monkiewicz, 2121 Virginia Avenue; Joseph H. DeWitt, 4831 Thirty-sixth Street; James ‘A. Johnston, 25 KE Street. Parole Executive.— Walter K. Urich, 5809 Annapolis Road, Hyattsville, Md. FEDERAL PRISON INDUSTRIES, INC. (H. O. L. C. Building, 101 Indiana Avenue) (Corporation authorized by act of Congress, approved June 23, 1934, and created by Executive Order No. 6917 of December 11, 1934) Officers and Directors: President.—Sanford Bates, Commissioner of Institutions and Agencies, Trenton, N. J., representing the Attorney General. : Vice President.—Dr. Marion Luther Brittain, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga., representing industry. James L. Palmer, president, Marshall Field & Co., Chicago, Ill., representing retailers and consumers. : Emil Schram, Peru, Ind., representing agriculture. George Meany, American Federation of Labor, Washington, D. C., repre- senting labor. E. Earle Rives, Greensboro, N. C., representing the Secretary of Defense. Commassioner of Prison I ndustries.—James V. Bennett, 119 Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Commissioner of Prison Industries.—A. H. Conner, 301 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Commissioners of Prison Industries.—J. S. Barrows, 47 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; John C. Hill, 2651 Sixteenth Street. Secretary. —Ralph J. TaVallee, 314 Rittenhouse Street. Assistant Secretary.—Dale M. Henry, 1650 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Twelfth and Thirteenth Streets. Phone, STerling 3100) JESSE M. DONALDSON, Postmaster General; born August 17, 1885, on a farm near Shelbyville, Ill.; : son of Moses M. and Amanda S. (Little) Donaldson; educated in the public schools at Oconee, Ill, and the Shelbyville Normal School taught in the public schools in Shelby, Montgomery, and Christian counties for 4 years and during summer vacations assisted his father, the postmaster, in the conducting of a fourth-class post office at Hanson, II; ; appointed’ city letter carrier at Shelbyville May 15, 1908; served as a post-office clerk and super-visor at the Muskogee, OKla., Post Office, July 1, 1911, to March 11, 1915; became. & postal inspector March 11, 1915, and assigned to the Kansas City division; appointed inspector in charge of the Chattanooga division August 1, 1932; appointed Deputy Second Assistant Postmaster General June 12, 1933: named Deputy First Assistant Postmaster General April 1, 1936; appointed Chief Post Office Inspector March 1, 1943; appointed First Assistant Postmaster General July 5, 1945; appointed by President Truman to be Postmaster General December 16, 1947; reappointed February 8, 1949; married Nell Graybill of Shelbyville April 14, 1911; has two children, Jesse M. Jr., and Doris D. Car-penter. Home: 2800 Woodley Road. Office: Post Office Department. Executive Assistant to the Postmaster General.—[Vacant.] Confidential and Administrative Aide to the Postmaster General.—Mary A. Hrebicek, 2420 Sixteenth Street. Special Assistant to the Postmaster General and Director of Public Relations.— William B. Allen, Jr., 4629 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Administrative Assistant to the Postmaster General.—Alfer B. Strom, 5411 Glen-wood Road, Bethesda, Md. Division of Budget and Planning: Director.—Clarence N. Bruce, 3532 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Directors.— Virgil C Stone, 9903 Sidney Road, Silver Spring, Md.; John C. White, 6228 Twentieth Place, Hyattsville, Md. Division of Research: Director.—Maurice B. Feimster, Johnsontown Place, Bel Alton, Md. Assistant Director—Lucas A. Leighton, 10606 Lorain Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Rates: Director.—[Vacant.] Assistant Director.—[Vacant.] Chisels Clerk and Director of Personnel. —Edgar B. Jackson, 4707 Connecticut venue. Assistant Chief Clerk and Assistant Director of Personnel. —Harold W. Bresnahan, 3361 Runnymede Place. Solicitor. —Roy C. Frank, 4408 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Solicitor.—Louis J. Doyle, 8721 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Associate Solicitor (Transportation) —Arne C. Wiprud, '6135 Nevada Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Acting Purchasing Agent.— William J. Kindsfather, 224 Madison Street. DEPUTY POSTMASTER GENERAL Deputy Postmaster General.— Vincent C. Burke, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. 402 Congressional Directory OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL BUREAU OF POST OFFICE OPERATIONS Assistant Postmaster General.—Joseph J. Lawler, Dorchester House. Executive Director.—Clinton B. Uttley, 7700 Blair Road. Assistant Executive Directors.—Tom C. Cargill, 3001 Porter Street; Fred U. Mills, 715 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Va. Admanistrative Officer.—Robert E. Harrington, 1523 Twenty-eighth Street. Division of Budget and Administrative Services: Director—Hugh E. Alford, 4511 Thirty-eighth Street. Assistant Director.— Donald L. Newton, Lanham, Md. Administrative Officer.— William C. Armbrust, 4006 Lorraine Avenue, Franklin Forrest, Falls Church, Va. Division of Clerical Service: Director—Andrew E. Newton, 125 Lawrence ro Falls Church, Va. Assistant Directors.—Donald R. Niblack, 401 Jackson Place, Alexandria, Va.; Earle L. Stone, 903 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Division of City Delivery: Director.—Jeremiah J. Dwyer, 5004 Seventeenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director—Hugh S. Noonan, 4722 Forty-sixth Street. Division of Post Office Personnel: Director.—John J. Leahey, 3896 Porter Street. Assistant Directors.— Alfred J. Dumas, 3307 Cameron Mills Road, Alexandria, Va.; Henry C. Wyman, 3149 Nineteenth Street. Division’ of Postmasters: Director—Norman R. Grant, 4209 Forty-sixth Street. Assistant Directors.—Dennis C. Link, 3352 Eighteenth Street; Thomas M. Raftery, 1412 Highland Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Rural Service: Director.—Joseph E. Cooper, 4437 Brandywine Street. Assistant Director.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street. BUREAU OF TRANSPORTATION Assistant Postmaster General.—John M. Redding, Great Falls Road, Route 2, Rockville, Md. Executive Director.— August C. Hahn, 4610 Thirty-first Road South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Executive Director.—John J. Gillen, the Dodge Hotel. Director, Division of Budget and Administrative Services.—Joseph F. Jones, 5704 Euclid Street, Cheverly, Md. Director, Division of International Service.—Greever P. Allan, 4609 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Division of Transportation Accounts.—Edward J. Chaszar, Hunting Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Executive Director.—George KE. Miller, 923 Edgewood Street North, Arlington, Va. Director, Division of Railway Transportation.—Andrew G. Threadgill, 1023 Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Director, Division of Air Services.—Robert S. Burgess, 667 Arlington Village, 2700 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Director, Division of Highway and Contract Tramsportation.— Leslie O. Boles, 8002 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md. Confidential Assistant to the Assistant Postmaster General.—Charles D. Brown, 1834 North Quintana Street, Arlington, Va. Executive Officer to the Assistant Postmaster General, Liaison with Economic Coop-eratton Admanistration.— Vincent B. Waters, 5103 Chevy Chase Parkway. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Assistant Postmaster General.—Osborne A. Pearson, 3040 Idaho Avenue. Executive Director.—John A. Brennan, 1886 Monroe Street. Assistant Executive Director—Nelson B. Wentzel, 1630 Nicholson Street; Robert E. Fellers, 2900 Connecticut Avenue. Division of Budget and Administrative Services: Director.—Clifford O. Arnebeck, 8407 Sixteenth Street, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Directors.— Michael J. Sweeney, 3711 Third ‘Street South, Arlington, Va.; Edward R. Jones, 9716 Sutherland Road, Silver Spring, Md. Post Office Department 403 Division of Postal Finance: Director.— Arthur E. Martin, 3712 Alton Place. Assistant Director.—James M. Bell, 117 Hilltop Road, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Stamps and Philately: Lees Mertens S. Chamberlin, 1554 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Assistant Directors.—Francis J. Salb, 5612 First Street NE.; Raymond Miller, 511 Margaret Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Postal Savings Banking and Investments: Director.—Cyrus L. Burnett, 2706 Parkway Place, Cheverly, Md. Assistant Directors.—Harry A. Leusenkamp, 1721 Kearney Street NE.; Edgar J. York, 3004 Sixty-third Avenue, Cheverly, Md. Division of Money Orders: Director.—Harry E. Stine, 2008 Glen Ross Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Directors.—Cecll V. Wiman, 2822 Sixth Street NE.; Edward F. Roberson, 500 Sixty-eighth Place, Seat Pleasant, Md. Division of Letter and Miscellaneous Maal: Director—Roy L. Sheridan, 48 Kennedy Street NE._ Assistant Director.— Earl L. Ellis, 1921 Twenty-first Place SE. Division of Newspaper and Periodical Maal: Director—James O. Bouton, 2857 Monroe Street NE. Assistant Director.—Edwin A. Riley, 2 Maiden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Davision of Registered, Insured and C. O. D. Mail: Director.—John A. King, 4617 Thirty-first Road South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Directors.— Walter D. Brown, 3504 Sixteenth Street; Everett C. Johnson, 1616 Hobart Street. OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL Assistant Postmaster General.— Walter Myers, St. Albans Apartments. Executive Director.—F. C. Cornwell, 9014 Fairview Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Executive Director.—G. W. Trexler, 5245 Nebraska Avenue. Sea Executive Director.—Joseph F. Betterley, 5004 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Division of Budget and Administrative Services: Director—Robert J. Porterfield, 404 East Nelson Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director.—Louis Y. de Zychlinski, 4260 Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. Division of Buildings Management: Director—John J. McGinness, 4618 De Russey Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Harold E. Richardson, 2901 Queens Chapel Road, Mount Rainier, Md. Division of Cartography: Director.— Arthur S. Page, 1421 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Director—John T. Hopkins, 1616 Isherwood Street NE. Division of Engineering: Director—James M. Lowe, 9608 Riley Place, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Director.— David Bregman, 931 Longfellow Street. Division of Equipment and Supplies: Director.—Leo H. Vullings, 3500 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Directors—Ted C. Gardner, 6313 Fifty-ninth Avenue, Riverdale Heights, Md.; John F. Buehler, 5116 Eighth Street. Mail Equipment Shops: Superintendent.— Walter Frech, 402 Lexington Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Superintendent.—Fred H. Clough, 747 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Post Office Quarters: Director—Charles H. Carle, 4612 Eighth Street. Assistant Directors.—Robert G. Parrott, 209 Maiden Choice Lane, Catonsville, Md.; Ralph C. Northrop, 1311 North Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Traffic: Director.—James R. Murphy, 745 Varnum Street. Assistant Director.—Carl R. Peterson, 4116 Fifty-first Street, Bladensburg, Md. Division of Vehicle Service: Director—Conrad J. Bowman, 201 South Pershing Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Directors.—Arthur R. Gehman, 3708 Fortieth Place, Brentwood, Md.; Herman W. Luth, 1237 South Forest Drive, Arlington, Va. 404 Congressional Directory BUREAU OF THE CHIEF POST OFFICE INSPECTOR Sf Post Office Inspector.—Clifton C. Garner, 9405 Columbia Boulevard, Silver pring, ; Assistant Chief Post Office Inspector.—Jesse M. Donaldson, Jr., 9504 Second Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Asge to Chief Post Office Inspector.—Roscoe E. Mague, 1812 Newton Street NE. Administrative Aide to Chief Post Office Inspector.—Elmer J. Dutemple, 4603 Fourth Street South, Arlington, Va. Division of Financial Investigations: Director—Lawrence C. Kirkpatrick, 1901 Amherst Road, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Director—John F. Free, 5730 Twenty-seventh Street. Division of Mail Fraud Investigations: Director—Michael L. Keefe, 8510 Loughborough Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director—Henry S. Simpkins, 6014 Second Street. Division of Mail Losses and Depredations: Director.—Joseph M. Cohen, 1420 Parkwood Place. Assistant Director.—Fred Schuppe, Jr., 3304 Fifth Street South, Arlington) Ye Division of Service Investigations and I nspections: Director—Paul R. Andrews, 4601 Brandywine Street. Assistant Director.— Walter H. Pilcher, 204 Crestmoor Circle, Woodmoor, Silver Spring, Md. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS Comptroller.—John W. Askew, 3220 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. : Assistant Compiroller.—Edmund J. Walsh, 3521 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. Special Adminsstrative Aide.—Joseph P. Griffin, 2873 South Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va Division of Cost Ascertainment: Director.— Lewis W. Hicks, 900 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Directors.—Seth LK. DeMaret, 922 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va.; Thomas F. McCormack, 6003 Madison Street, Riverdale, Md.; Ray-mond A. Wheeler, 114 Briland Street, Alexandria, Va. Division of Accounts: Director.— Gordon N. Miller, 2120 North Powhatan Street, Arlington. Va. Assistant Director. —[Vacant. ] Administrative Officer—Martin L. Long, 5114 Fifth Street. Postal Accounts Division: Director.—Thomas J. Cronin, Asheville, N. C. Assistant Director. — [Vacant]. REGIONAL OFFICES Boston.—Denis A. O’Brien, director, Devonshire and Water Streets, Boston 9, Mass. New York.—Richard E. Eggleton, director, Thirty-third Street and Eighth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y. Philadelphia. — Thomas A. Fitzgerald, director, Thirtieth and Market Strenty, Philadelphia 4, Penna. Cleveland. —Robert W. Merrill, director, Huron Road and West Third Street, Cleveland 13, Ohio. Richmond. —Elliott M. Clark, director, Eleventh and Main Streets, Richmond 19, Va. Atlanta. — Ray H. Holley, director, Forsythe and Poplar Streets, Atlanta 3, Ga. Chicago.—John Harman, director, Van Buren and Canal Streets, Chicago A Ill. St. iii.—John C. Ciccarelli, director, 5709 Waterman Boulevard, St. Louis 12 Minneapolis. —Alfred C. Broms, director, First and Hennepin Streets, Minneap-olis 1, Minn. Kansas City. —John L. Spears, director, Twenty-fifth Street and Broadway, Kansas City 8, Mo. Dallas.—James R. "Martin, director, Bryan and St. Paul Streets, Dallas1, Tex. San Francisco.—James F. Lynch, director, 1011 Bryant Street, San Francisco 3, Calif. DEPARTMENT ‘OF THE INTERIOR (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) OSCAR L. CHAPMAN, Secretary of Interior, of Denver, Colo.; born October 22, 1896, in Omega, Halifax County, Va.; married to Ann Kendrick; has one son, James Raleigh; educated at Randolph-Macon Academy, University of New Mexico, Denver University, Westminster Law School (LL. B.); honorary degrees: LL. D., Augustana College, 1934; LL. D., Colorado State College of Education, 1940; LL. D., Howard University, 1949; member of bar of State of Colorado and of District of Columbia; admitted to practice before United States Supreme Court, May 7, 1934; enlisted in United States Navy for World War I service, 1918; served as assistant and then chief probation officer of Juvenile Court of Judge Ben B. Lindsey, Denver, 1922-27; associated with the late Edward P. Costigan in law praetice, Denver, 1929; chairman of State Child Welfare Committee of American Legion, Department of Colorado; cofounder, Spanish-American League to combat exploitation of Mexican workers in United States; president, Board of Control of Colorado State Industrial School for Boys; now member Advisory Board, National Training School for Boys; appointed Assistant Secretary of Interior, May 4, 1933; appointed Under Secretary of Interior, effective March 27,1946; executive secretary to Public Works Board, 1933; member of Committee on Race Relations in District of Columbia; appointed by President Roosevelt to Interdepartmental Committee to-Coordinate Health and Welfare Services of Government, 1935; Committee on Vocational Education, 1936; Interdepartmental committee to review charges of subversive activity against Federal employees, 1943; member, United States delegation to Inter-American Indian Congress in Mexico, 1940; chairman of civilian committee appointed by Secretary of War to review records of applicants for Military Government service in World War II; vice chairman of Inter-American Conference on Conservation of Renewable Natural Resources in Denver, Colo., 1948; deputy chairman of United States participants to United Nations Scientific Conference on Conservation and Utilization of Resources, in New York, 1949; member of President’s Advisory Committee on Management Improvement in Government; member of Board of Directors, Franklin D. Roosevelt Foundation; member Phi Alpha Delta (legal fraternity); American Judicature Society, American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars; appointed Secretary of Interior December 1, 1949. Under Secretary.—Richard D. Searles, 5174 Watson Street. Assistant Secretary for Water and Power Development.— William E. Warne, 805 Enderby Drive, Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Secretary for Public Land Management.—Dale E. Doty, 229 Forest Drive, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Secretary for Mineral Resources.—Robert R. Rose, Jr., 5451 Harwood Road, Bethesda, Md. Administrative Assistant Secretary.— Vernon D. Northrop, 4816 Tilden Street. dtm to the Secretary.—Joel D. Wolfsohn, 4609 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, d. Director, Division of International Activities.—Joseph C. McCaskill, 4634 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Executive Assistant to the Secretary, Defense Production Staff (Acting.)—Alfred C. Wolf, Box 54A, R. F. D. 1, McLean, Va. Office of the Secretary: Executive Assistant to the Secretary.—Hildreth Bond, the Westchester. Special Assistant to the Secretary.— William H. McCrillis, 9000 Greentree Road, Bethesda, Md. Office of the Under Secretary: : Special Assistant to the Under Secretary.— Harry M. Shooshan, Jr., 4509 Chelten-ham Drive, Bethesda, Md. Administrative Assistant.— Margaret G. Gillette, 1721 Newton Street. 405 406 Congressional Directory Office of Assistant Secretary for Water and Power Development: Director, Division of Water and Power.—Reginald C. Price, 4314 Rosedale Avenue, Bethesda, Md. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public Land Management: Director, Division of Land Utilization.—Lee Muck, 3202 Wellington Road, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Office of the Assistant Secretary for Mineral Resources: Director, Division of Minerals and Fuels (Acting).—Lawrence E. Imhoff, 8505 ‘Bradmoor Drive, Bethesda, Md. Director, Division of Geography.— Meredith F. Burrill, 5503 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director, Division of Oil and Gas (Acting).—Hugh A. Stewart, 3108 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Office of the Administrative Assistant Secretary. : Assistant to the Administrative Assistant Secretary.—James C. Bradley, Jr., 322 Franklin Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. ; Bieri, Division of Administrative Services.—TFloyd E. Dotson, 5843 Potomac venue, : Director, Division of Budget and Finance.—D. Otis Beasley, 3725 Holmes Lane, Alexandria, Va. : Director, Division of Personnel Management.—Guy W. Numbers, 5109 Chevy Chase Parkway. : Director, Division of Management Research.—L. Wade Lathram, 213 North Emerson Street, Arlington, Va. Deyoninr, Division of Property Management.—N. O. Wood, Jr., 3410. Macomb Street. Solicitor.— Mastin G. White, 1422 Madison Street. Assistant Solicitors in charge of: : Indian Division.— William H. Flanery, 5735 Thirteenth Street. Public Lands Division.—Harry M. Edelstein, 3623 Jenifer Street. Legislative Division.—Herbert J. Slaughter, 1135 Sixteenth Street. Claims Division.— Thomas C. Billig, 8908 Grant Street, Bethesda, Md. Defense Division.—A. Bruce Wright, 5219 Augusta Street, Glen Mar Park, Md. Byars Division of Information.— William J. Dougherty, 3722 Livingston treet. : Lepiion; Program Staff (Acting).—Lyle E. Craine, 5504 Brite Drive, Bethesda, Derenis, Northeast Field Staff.—Leland Olds, 150 Causeway Street, Boston, ass. Field Committees: Region 1, Alaska.—George W. Rogers, chairman, P. O. Box 3093, Feero Build-ing, Juneau, Alaska. Region 2, Pacific Northwest.—Roy F. Bessey, chairman, 606 Southwest Evans Street, Portland, Oreg. ; Region 3, Pacific Central.—[Not activated.] Region 4, Colorado River-Great Basin.—Clifford H. Willson, chairman, 2013 Aleyone Drive, Los Angeles 28, Calif. Region 6, Missouri River Basin.—Harrell F. Mosbaugh, chairman, P. O. Box 2110, Billings, Mont. Region 6, Southwest.—Clarence L. Forsling, chairman, 307 South Solano Avenue, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Region Psion. alle E. Craine, acting chairman, 5504 Brite Drive, Beth-_ esda, Md. PETROLEUM ADMINISTRATION FOR DEFENSE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Deputy Adminisirator.—Bruce K. Brown, Westchester Apartments. Assistant Deputy Administrator.—Hugh A. Stewart, 3108 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant to Deputy Administrator.—Carroll D. Fentress, 3905 West Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Special Assistant to Deputy Administrator.—Bernice Kirschling, 1905 North Rhodes Street, Arlington, Va. Department of the Interior 407 Special Assistant to Deputy Administrator (Congressional Liaison).—Joseph V. Machugh, 1208 Decatur Street. Finance Counselor.—George Gibson, 9801 Grayson Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Director, Administrative Division.— William F. Littlejohn, 100 North Granada Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Public Information Division.— Bryant Putney, 1601 Springwood Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Deputy Administrator, Domestic Pelroleum Operations.—A. P. Frame, 3252 North Abington Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Production Division.—Richard G. Lawton, 4824 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Director, Natural Gas Production and Processing Diviston.—Richard P. Walsh, 10002 Cedar Lane, Kensington, Md. Director, Refining Dwvision.—C. Eugene Davis, Shoreham Hotel. Director, Supply and Transportation Division.—George A. Wilson, Shoreham Hotel. Baers, Dastribution and Marketing Division.—Lawrence W. Lee, Shoreham otel. Director, Materials Division.—Richard M. Morrison, Wardman Park Hotel. Director, Program Division.— Cecil L. Burrill, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Director, Manpower Diviston.—Samuel E. Hill, 1909 Q Street. Director, Facility Security Division.— William R. Boyd, 3d, Shoreham Hotel. Assistant Deputy Admaimisiralor, Foreign Petroleum Operations.—C. Stribling Snodgrass, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue. bare, Foreign Production Division.— William H. Farrand, 6622 Thirty-second treet. Director, Foreign Refining Division.— George T. Ballou, 510 Twenty-first Street. Director, Foreign Supply and Transportairon Division.—John A. Walstrom, 2300 _ Connecticut Avenue. Assistant Depuly Administrator, Gas Transmission and Distribution Operations.— C. Pratt Rather, Westchester Apartments. Director, Gas Planning Division.— Walter E. Caine, 2121 Virginia Avenue. Director, Gas Operations Division.—A. Dale Greene, Shoreham Hotel. Director, Gas Facilities Division.—Louis C. Sonnen, 3605 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Deputy Administrator and General Counsel.—Elmer E. Batzell, 3201 Idaho Avenue. Associate General Counsel.— William S. Tarver, 8205 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. DEFENSE ELECTRIC POWER ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator.—James F. Fairman, Shoreham Hotel. Deputy Administrator.—John D. Davis, 8 West Everett Street, Kensington, Md. Special Assistant.—Francis A. Kolb, 1331 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va. General Counsel.—E. Jason Dryer, 2401 North Potomac Street, Arlington, Va. Director, Division of Administrative Management.—Fred W. Bolen, 4201 Massa- chusetts Avenue. Director, Power Supply Division.—Robert Brandt, 2500 Q Street. Director, Materials and Equipment Division.— Thomas E. Marburger, 206 South Symington Avenue, Catonsville, Baltimore 28, Md. Information Officer.— George S. Holmes, 104 Worthington Drive, Yorktown Village, Md. Personnel Officer—Myrnon E. Hoft, 1023 Barnaby Terrace SE. DEFENSE MINERALS EXPLORATION ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Acting Administrator.—C. O. Mittendorf, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Acting Deputy Administrator.—Frank E. Johnson, 1701 Massachusetts Avenue. General Counsel.—John L. Hofflund, 5460 Thirtieth Place. Acting Chief, Examining Division.—Page B. Blakemore, 304 Madison Street. Acting Chief, Administrative Division.—Robert E. Adams, 1108 Rolfs Road, Falls Church, Va. 408 Congressional Directory DEFENSE SOLID FUELS ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Admanistrator.— Charles W. Connor, the Berkshire Apartments. Deputy Admainistrator.—E. T. Klett, 3507 Valley Drive, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va. Deputy "Administrator.—Charles R. Ferguson, Hamilton Hotel. Deputy Administrator.— William F. Hahman, 107 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. General Counsel.—Harry A. Sellery, Jr., 1635 Nineteenth Street. Information Officer—Andrew L. Newman, Jr., 4836 Thirty-third Road North, Arlington, Va. Director, 1 ndustry— Finance Division.—Leo Plein, 4421 Yuma Street. Director, Coke Division.—George P. Wilson, Jr., ‘the Berkshire Apartments. Director, Equipment and Materials Division.— Clyde W. Woosley, 3505 Macomb treet. Director, Manpower Division.— Lee M. Morris, Prince Karl Hotel. Director, Transportation Division.—W. J. Howard, 6819 Riggs Manor, Hyattsville, d. Administrative Officer—Lawrence W. Smith, 809 Fulton Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Personnel Officer—Elmer F. Graham, 1025 Eighth Street, Alexandria, Va. DEFENSE FISHERIES ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator.— Albert M. Day, 7206 Cobalt Road, Wood Acres, Md. BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.— Marion Clawson, 3050 South Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va. Associate Director.— William Zimmerman, Jr., 4713 North Rock Spring Road, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director.— William Pincus, 204 Schuyler Road, Silver Spring, Md. Din of Adjudication.— Clarence R. Bradshaw, chief, 410 Avenue B, Herndon, a Lisson of Administration.—Depue Falck, chief, 5553 Manning Drive, Bethesda, Division of Land Planning.—Russell S. Kifer, chief, 7435 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Division of Range ‘Management. — Gerald M. Kerr, chief, 514 Nineteenth Street. Division of Forestry.— Walter H. Horning, chief, 5808 Broad Branch Road. Division of Cadastral Engineering.— Earl G. Harrington, chief, 1321 Fern Street. Chief Counsel.—Jacob N. Wasserman, 1500 South Barton Street, Arlington, Va. Personnel Officer—Edgar B. Carroll, 111 Williamsburg Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Information Officer.—Norma R. Hazeltine, 3140 Wisconsin Avenue. REGIONAL OFFICES Region No. 1.—Roscoe E. Bell, regional administrator, Swan Island Station, Portland 18, Oreg. Region No. Latte T. Hoffman, regional administrator, Appraisers Building, 630 Sansome Street, San Francisco, Calif. Region No. 3.—Albin O Molohon, regional administrator, 1245 North Twenty-ninth Street, Th Mont. Region No. 4H . Byron Mock, regional administrator, 238 Federal Building, Salt Lake City, Utah. Region No. 5. —Eastburn R. Smith, regional administrator, 1015 West Tijeras, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Region No. 6.—Herman S. Price, regional administrator, Room 3641, Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Region No. 7.—Lowell M. Puckett, regional administrator, Federal Building, Anchorage, Alaska. Department of the Interior 409 BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commazssioner.— Dillon S. Myer, 116 Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Va. Associate Commissioner.—H. Rex Lee, Route 1, Box 392, Fairfax, Va. Assistant Commissioner (Resources).—Ervin J. Utz, 4507 Middleton Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Commissioner (Community Services).—John H. Provinse, 215 Spring Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Executive Officer (Administration).—W. Barton Greenwood, 5311 Massachusetts Avenue, Westgage, Md. Ci of Personnel.—C. Earl Lamson, 4512A Avondale Street, Bethesda, Chief Counsel.—Edwin E. Ferguson, Route 4, Box 308, Vienna, Va. Information Officer.—Morrill M. Tozier, 2440 Sixteenth Street. AREA OFFICES Juneau.—Hugh J. Wade, Juneau, Alaska. Minneapolis.—Don C. Foster, room 250 Buzza Building, 2908 Colfax Avenue South, Minneapolis 8, Minn. Aoerieen Jong M. Cooper, Bradbury Building, 820 South Main, Aberdeen, . Dak. Billings.—Paul L. Fickinger, 804 North Twenty-ninth Street, Billings, Mont. Portland.—E. Morgan Pryse, Swan Island Building 1, Portland 18, Oreg. Sacramento.—James B. Ring, P. O. Box 749, Sacramento 4, Calif. Phoeniz.—Ralph M. Gelvin, P. O. Box 7007, Phoenix, Ariz. Window Rock.—Allan G. Harper, Window Rock, Ariz. ; Albuquerque.—Eric T. Hagberg, P. O. Box 1346, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Anadarko.— William Wade Head, Federal Building, Anadarko, Okla. Muskogee.— William O. Roberts, Federal Building, Muskogee, Okla. INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS BOARD (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Chon an Rens d’Harnoncourt, Director, Museum of Modern Art, New York, N Members: Willard W. Beatty, Deputy Director of Fundamental Education, United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, Nineteenth Avenue, Kleber, Paris, France. William Lippincott, Williams, Oreg. James W. Young, Rancho Canada, Pena Blanca, N. Mex. Frederick H. Douglas, 1300 Logan Street, Denver, Colo. Business Manager.—J. Edward Davis, 2231 California Street, Washington, D. C. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY (General Services Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.— William E. Wrather, 4710 Woodway Lane. Assistant Director.—Thomas B. Nolan, 2219 California Street. Staff Geologist.—Julian D. Sears, 21 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel.—George M. Paulus, Jr., 1416 Arlington Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Executive Officer—Glendon J. Mowitt, 704 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va. _ Peron) Officer.— Willard F. McCornack, 5904 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Chief, Geologic Division.— Wilmot H. Bradley, 115 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase. Chief, Water Resources Division.—Carl G. Paulsen, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. Chto, Lopograpise Division.—Gerald Fitzgerald, 7203 Summit Avenue, Chevy ase, ; Chief, Conservation Division.—Harold J. Duncan, 1613 Mount Eagle Place, Park-fairfax, Alexandria, Va. 410 Congressional Directory BUREAU OF RECLAMATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Commissioner.— Michael W. Straus, Linnean Hill, Klingle Road and Porter Street. Assistant Commissioners.—Goodrich W. Lineweaver, 5415 Connecticut Avenue; Kenneth W. Markwell, 4607 Four Mile Run Drive, Arlington, Va.; Wesley R. Nelson, 416 Linden Lane, Falls Church, Va. Chief Counsel.—Edward W. Fisher, 1302 Quincy Street, Alexandria, Va. Director of Operation and Maintenance.—E Eugene D. Eaton, 5522 Warwick Place, Chevy Chase, Md Chief Engineer and Director of Design and Construction.—Leslie N. McClellan, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colo. Director of Project Planning.—John W. Dixon, 4651 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. : Director of Power Utilization.—H. F. McPhail, 2900 Thirtieth Street SE. Director of Programs and Finance.— Alfred R. Golzé, 2975 McKinley Street. Comptroller—W. Darlington Denit, 1305 Seminary Road, Silver Spring, Md. Director of Supply.—S. W. Crosthwait, 4205 Sheridan Street, Hyattsville, Md. Chief ry nn Officer.—Leonard W. Mosby, 403 Thayer Place, Silver Spring, Director of Personnel.—Glenn D. Thompson, 9103 Eton Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant to the Commaissioner— Management.—G. S. Ellsworth, 6707 Hillmead Road, Bethesda, Md. Asien; to the Commissioner— Engineering.—T. W. Mermel, 4540 Forty-third treet. Foreign Activities Officer.—George O. Pratt, R. F. D. 1, Falls Church, Va. REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region 1.—H. T. Nelson, Boise, Idaho. Region 2.—Richard L. Boke, Sacramento, Calif. Région 3.—FErnest A. Moritz, Boulder City, Nev. Region 4.—Ernest O. Larson, Salt Lake City, Utah. Region 6—Howard E. Robbins, Amarillo, Tex. Region 6.—Kenneth F. Vernon, Billings, Mont. Region 7.—Avery A. Batson, Denver, Cholo. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—Conrad L. Wirth, 10 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Hillory A. Tolson, 6604 Rannoch Road, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Director—Ronald F. Lee, 2 Drury Lane, Hollin Hills, R. F. D. 1, Alex- andria, Va. Hectic Thonn J. Allen, Care of National Park Service, Interior uilding. Chief oT B. Robinson, 3046 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Chief Counsel.—Jackson E. Price, 5518 Northfield Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief Forester—John D. Coffman, 5905 Wilson Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chief of General Services.— William A. Schnettler, 4209 Fourth Street SE. Chief Historian.—Herbert E, Kahler, R. F. D. 1, Box 234-D, Alexandria, Va. Ca 1 Information.—S. Herbert Evison, 219 East Marshall Street, Falls Church, a. Chief of Lands.—Charles A. Richey, R. F. D. 1, Fort Hunt, Alexandria, Va. Chief Naturalist.—John E. Doerr, 7116 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Cte sof Design and Construction.— Thomas C. Vint, 39 East Bradley Lane, Chevy hase, Chief of Concessions Management.— Donald E. Lee, R. F. D. 2, Fairfax, Va. Sn Recreation Planning.—Ben H. Thompson, 227 Wellesley Avenue, Glen cho, Chief Safety Engineer.— Frank L. Ahern, 5408 Forty-first Street. : Personne! Officer.—Leland F. Ramsdell, 507 New York Avenue, Takoma Park, Finance ‘Officer.—XKeith Neilson, 4101 W Street. Community Planner—Irving C. Root, 6301 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase, Md. Department of the Interior 411 REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region 1.—Elbert Cox, 900 North Lombardy Street, Richmond 20, Va. Region 2.—Howard W. Baker, 307 Federal Office Building, Omaha 2, Nebr. Region 8.—M. R. Tillotson, Box 1728, Santa Fe, N. Mex. Region 4.—Lawrence C. Merriam, 180 New Montgomery Street, San Fran- cisco 5, Calif. NATIONAL CAPITAL PARKS [ (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Superintendent.— Edward J. Kelly, 3103 Circle Hill Road, Alexandria, Va. Associate Superintendent.—Harry T. Thompson, 29 Woodhaven Boulevard, Bethesda, Md. ; Assistant Superintendent.—Frank T. Gartside, 3800 Fourteenth Street. NATIONAL PARK TRUST FUND BOARD (Phone, REpublic 1820) John W. Snyder, Secretary of the Treasury, the Wardman Park. Oscar L. Chapman, Secretary of the Interior, the Westchester. Conrad L. Wirth, Director, National Park Service, 10 East Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Charles G. Woodbury, 1801 Hoban Road. ; Kenneth Chorley, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, Rockefeller Center, New York 20, N.Y. ADVISORY BOARD ON NATIONAL PARKS, HISTORIC SITES, BUILDINGS, AND MONUMENTS Chairman.—Charles G. Sauers, 536 North Harlem Avenue, River Forest, Ill. Vice Chairman.— Theodore C. Blegen, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Secretary.—Frank M. Setzler, United States National Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C. Members.—Harold E. Anthony, The American Museum of Natural History, New York 24, N. Y.; Turpin C. Bannister, Department of Architecture, University of Illinois, Urbana, Ill.; Ralph W. Chaney, University of Cali-fornia, Berkeley 4, Calif.; Bernard DeVoto, 8 Berkeley Street, Cambridge 38, Mass.; Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant 3d, 712 Jackson Place NW., Wash-ington 6, D. C.; Alfred A. Knopf, 501 Madison Avenue, New York 22; N. Y.; Tom Wallace, Louisville Times, Louisville 2, Ky.; Charles G. Woodbury, 1801 Hoban Road NW., Washington 7, D. C. BUREAU OF MINES (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.—John J. V. Forbes, 4822 Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—Thomas H. Miller, 6501 Barnaby Street. Assistant Director.—W. C. Schroeder, Box 196, Route 1, Clinton, Md. Special Assistant to Director—Joseph H. Hedges, 4809 De Russey Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel.—Donald G. Welsh, 2212 Randolph Street NE. Chief Metallurgist.—Oliver C. Ralston, 4333 Clagett Road, Hyattsville, Md. Chief Meeping Engineer.—Eugene D. Gardner, 200 North Wayne Street, Arling-ton, Va. Chief Economist.—Sam H. Schurr, 8804 Bradford Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief Fuels Technologist.—Arno C. Fieldner, Cosmos Club. ; Chel Office A Minerals Reports.—Allan Sherman, 8318 Draper Lane, Silver pring, : Chief, Health and Safety Division.—[Vacant.] Assistant Chief.— William J. Fene, 9411 Thornhill Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Fuels and Explosives Division.— Louis C. McCabe, 6515 Brennen Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief.—Harry Perry, 8509 Old Bladensburg Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Minerals Division.— Lowell B. Moon, Prospect Hill, Barnesville, Md. 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 28 412 Congressional Directory Assistant Chief.—Charles W. Merrill, 15564 Forty-fourth Street. Chief, Adminastrative Division.— William E. Rice, 3708 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Md Personnel Officer.—J. Leland Acuff, 5208 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region I (Alaska).—Sinclair H. Lorain, Box 2990, Juneau, Alaska. Region II (Northwestern).—Stephen M. Shelton, Box 492, Albany, Oreg. Region III (Southwestern).—Harold C. Miller, 1012 Flood Building, 870 Market Street, San Francisco 2, Calif. Region IV (Rocky Mountain).—John H. East, Jr., 224 New Customhouse, Denver 2, Colo. ; Region V (North Central).—Paul Zinner, 2908 Colfax Avenue South, Minne-apolis 8 Minn. Beton VI (South Central).—Clifford W. Seibel, 514 Barfield Building, Amarillo, ex. Region VII (Southeastern). —Hewitt Wilson, P. O. Box 217, Norris, Tenn. Region VIII (Northeastern).—Harold P. Greenwald, 4800 Forbes Street, Pittsburgh 13, Pa. Region IX (Foreign Minerals).—Elmer W. Pehrson, 1573 Forty-fourth Street, Washington, D. C. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (Interior Building, Washington, D. C. Phone, REpublic 1820) Director.— Albert M. Day, 7206 Cobalt Road, Wood Acres, Md. Assistant Directors.—Milton C. James, 516 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md.; Clarence Cottam, 8206 Ellingson Drive, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Counsel.—Donald J. Chaney, Route 2, Herndon, Va. Chief, Division of Imformation.— Alastair MacBain, 9201 Wire Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Office of Foreign Activities.—[Vacant.] Coordinator, Office of River Basin Studies.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, 7901 Kentbury Drive, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Division of Administration.—Wesley E. Corbin, 6715 Dorman Street, Radiant Valley, Landover, Md. Personnel Officer—Severin F. Ulmer, 2901-B, Sixteenth Road South, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Commercial Fisheries.—[Vacant.] Chief, Division of Management.—Oscar H. Johnson, 2009 Twentieth Road North, Arlington, Va. Chief, Division of Research.—[Vacant.] REGIONAL OFFICES Regional Directors: Region 1.—Leo L. Laythe, Swan Island, Portland 18, Oreg. Region 2.—John C. Gatlin, P. O. Box 1306, Albuquerque, N. Mex. Region 3.—Daniel H. Janzen, 1006 West Lake Street, Minneapolis 8, Minn. Region 4.—James Silver, 316 Glenn Building, Atlanta 3, Ga. Region 56.—David R. Gascoyne, 59 Temple Place, 1105 Blake Building, Boston 11, Mass. Region 6.—Clarence J. Rhode, P. O. Box 2021, Juneau, Alaska. OFFICE OF TERRITORIES (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) - Director.—James P. Davis, Route 2, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Director.—Dan H. Wheeler, 619 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md Chief Counsel.—Irwin W. Silverman, 5704 Kingswood Road, Bethesda, Md. Chief, Caribbean Division.— Mason Barr, 608 Juniper Lane, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Alaska Division.—Joseph T. Flakne, Gunston Manor, Route 1, Lorton, Va. Chtelu fred Division.—Emil J. Sady, 919 Sligo Creek Parkway, Takoma Park, d Chef, Public Works Division — Lester M. Marx, 2902 Erie Street SE. Executive Officer.—D. H. Nucker, 2800 Quebec Street. Department of the Interior 413 TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS Governor of Alaska.—Ernest Gruening, Juneau, Alaska. Secretary of Alaska.—Joseph W. Kehoe, Juneau, Alaska. Governor of Hawaii.—Oren E. Long, Honolulu, T. H. Secretary of Hawait.—Frank E. Serrao, Honolulu, T. H. Governor of the Virgin Islands.—Morris F. de €astro, Charlotte Amalie, V. I. Government Secretary for the Virgin Islands.—Daniel W. Ambrose, Jr., Charlotte Amalie, V. I. : Governor of iPuerto Rico.—Luis Muiioz Marin, San Juan, P. R. Executive Secretary of Puerto Rico.—Roberto Sanchez Vilella, San Juan, P. R. Governor of Guam.—Carlton Skinner, Agana, Guam. Secretary of Guam.—Randall S. Herman, Agana, Guam. Governor of American” Samoa.— Phelps Phelps, Tutuila, American Samoa. Secretary of American Samoa.—John C. Elliott, Tutuila, American Samoa. High Commissioner of the Trust Territory.—Elbert D. Thomas, Fort Ruger, Oahu, T. H., of the Pacific Islands. Deputy High Commissioner of the Trust Territory.—James A. McConnell, Fort Ruger, Oahu, T. H., of the Pacific Islands. THE ALASKA RAILROAD (General Offices, Anchorage, Alaska) General Manager.—Col. John P. Johnson, Anchorage, Alaska. Assistant General Manager.—John E. Manley, Anchorage, Alaska. SEATTLE REPRESENTATIVE A. R. Sessions, 2400 Fourth Avenue South, Seattle, Wash. ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION Commissioner of Roads for Alaska.—Angelo F. Ghiglione, Juneau, Alaska. Chief Engineer.— William J. Niemi, Juneau, Alaska. Administrative Officer— Donald H. Miller, Juneau, Alaska. ~ PUERTO RICO RECONSTRUCTION ADMINISTRATION (Interior Building. Phone, REpublic 1820) Administrator—James P. Davis, Route 2, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Administrator.— Guillermo Esteves, San Juan, P. R. General Counsel.—[Vacant.] THE VIRGIN ISLANDS CORPORATION (General Office, St. Croix, V. 1.) Members of the Board of Directors: Oscar L. Chapman, the Westchester. Charles F. Brannan, the Westchester. W. Stuart Symington, the Shoreham. Morris F. de Castro, St. Thomas, V. I. Ward M. Canaday, Toledo, Ohio. D. Victor Bornn, St. Thomas, V. I. Secretary to the Board of Directors: Mason Barr, 608 Juniper Lane, Falls Church, Va. Officer: President.—Gordon Skeoch, St. Croix, V. I. ALASKA RURAL REHABILITATION CORPORATION (General Office, Palmer, Alaska) General Manager.—James J. Hurley. 414 Congressional Directory BOARD ON GEOGRAPHIC NAMES Chairman.— Rear Adm. K. T. Adams (retired), 4103 North Chesterbrook Road, Falls Church, Va. Executive Secretary. — Meredith F. Burrill, 5503 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md., Department of the Interior. Members: Department of State, S. W. Boggs; Sophia A. Saucerman, deputy. Department of the Army, Col. John G. Ladd; F. C. Shepard, deputy. Department of the Navy, W. G. Watt; Charles D. Rouse, deputy. Department of the Air Force, Dr. H. Thompson Straw; Gerneaux Horitor deputy. Post Office Department, Norman R. Grant; Dennis C. Link, deputy. Department of the Interior, John B. Bennett; C.F. Fuechsel, deputy. Department of Agriculture, Marshall S. Wright. Department of Commerce, Rear Adm. K. T. Adams, retired; Harold R. Ed- monston, deputy. Government Printing Office, George R. Ranow. Library of Congress, David I. Haykin; W. W. Ristow, deputy. Central Intelligence Agency. BONNEVILLE POWER ADMINISTRATION Admanistrator.—Paul J. Raver, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Assistant Adminzstrator.—D. L. Marlett, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Port- land, Oreg. General Counsel.—Norman A. Stoll, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Controller.—Earl D. Ostrander, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Boren Manager.— William A. Dittmer, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, reg. Chief Sk —S. KE. Schultz, 729 Northeast Oregon Street, Portland, Oreg. Manager, Washington, D. C. Office. —Morgan D. Dubrow, Interior Building, Washington, D.C, SOUTHWESTERN POWER ADMINISTRATION Admanistrator.—Douglas G. Wright, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Assistant Admansstrator.—James V. Alfriend, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Special Assistant to the Administrator.—N. MeGinnity, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Asp to the Admanestrator.—Henry W. Blalock, Interior Building, Washington, D Texas-Louisiana Representative.—Lee Simmons, P. O. Box 336, Denison, Texas. Arkansas-nt Representative—Earl Berry, Old Post Office Building, Little Rock, Ark Chief, Office of Reports and Infor mation. —Francis B. McManus, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Chief Counsel.— Robert L. Davidson, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Controller.—Mack Porter, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa1, Okla. Chief, Division of Administration. — Philip J. ‘Cassilly, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Chicf, Division of Operations.—Philroy C. Gale, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Whiter Division of Engineering.—Floyd E. Conway, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, kla. Chief, Division of Sales.—George J. Neighbors, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. Chief, Division of Land.—Grover C. Spade, P. O. Drawer 1619, Tulsa 1, Okla. SOUTHEASTERN POWER ADMINISTRATION Administrator.—Ben W. Creim, Elberton, Ga. Chief Counsel.—Charles W. Leavy, Elberton, Ga. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) CHARLES F. BRANNAN of Denver, Colo., Secretary of Agriculture (the Westchester); born at Denver, Colo., August 23, 1903; was educated at Uni-versity of Denver Law School; married; practiced law in Denver until 1935, at which time he was appointed Assistant Regional Attorney at Denver for the Resettlement Administration. Later (1937) became Regional Attorney at Denver for the Office of the Solicitor, U. S. Department of Agriculture. In November 1941 was appointed Regional Director of the Farm Security Ad-ministration for the States of Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana, with head-quarters in Denver. In April 1944 was appointed Assistant Administrator, Farm Security Administration, and was appointed Assistant Secretary of Agri-culture in June 1944. Served as agricultural adviser to the U. S. Delegation at the San Francisco organizing meeting of the United Nations; adviser to the U. S. delegate to the Economie and Social Council of UN; appointed a delegate to the Ninth International Conference of American States at Bogota, Colombia; headed the U. 8. delegation to the Inter-American Conference on Conservation of Renewable Natural Resources at Denver, Colo., and was elected president of this Conference; appointed chairman of the U. S. delegation to the fourth and fifth sessions of the conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and was elected chairman of the conference; chairman of U. S. delegation of fourth Inter-American Conference on Agriculture, Montevideo, Uruguay. Became Secretary of Agriculture June 2, 1948. Under Secretary.—Clarence J. McCormick, 601 Nineteenth Street. Assistant Secretary.—Knox T. Hutchinson, 2500 Q Street. Executive Assistant to the Secretary.— Wesley McCune, 2936 Woodstock Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Special Assistant to the Secretary.—Hugh H. Bennett, R. F. D. 2, Falls Church, Va. Assistants to the Secretary.— Nathan Koenig, 6411 Thirty-third Street; William A. Minor, 435 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Daniel J. Carey, the Harrington; Edward J. Overby, Route 1, Box 23, Vienna, Va. Assistant to the Under Secretary.—Herbert J. Waters, 4841 Ninth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant to the Assistant Secretary.— Stanley P. Williams, 9901 Edgehill Lane, Silver Spring, Md. : Judicial Officer.—Thomas J. Flavin, 4800 Dover Road. Secretary to the Secretary.— Louise 1. Nylander, 2500 Wisconsin Avenue. Secretary to the Under Secretary.— Wilma L. Hardin, 1601 Argonne Place. Secretary to Assistant Secretary.—Dorothy B. Dullard, 2656 Fifteenth Street. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Office of the Chief: Oris V. Wells, 14 Belfield Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. Foster F. Elliott, Associate Chief, 34 Kensington Parkway, Kensington, Md. William T. Wolfrey, Jr., 303 Whitestone Road, Silver Spring, Md Bushrod W. Allin, 514 Goddard Road, Bethesda, Md. Franklin Thaekrey, 102 West Rosemary Lane, Falls Church, Va. Earl E. Houseman, 1005 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Agricultural Estimates: Assistant Chief.—Sterling R. Newell, 4610 Chesapeake Street; Paul L. Koenig, 1733 North Danville Street, Arlington, Va.; Richard K. Smith, 12 Sunny-side Road, Silver Spring, Md. Division of Field Crop Slatistics.—Charles E. Burkhead, 4409 Underwood Street, Hyattsville, Md. Division of Fruit and Vegetable Statistics.—Reginald Royston, 811 Twenty-sixth Plaee South, Arlington, Va. Division of Livestock and Poultry Statistics.— Arnold V. Nordquist, 9230 Whitney Street, Silver Spring, Md. 415 416 Congressional Directory Agricultural Esttmates—Continued Assistant Chief—Continued Division of Dairy Statistics.—Benjamin H. Bennett, 3617 Patterson Street. Division of Agricultural Price Statistics.—Benjamin R. Stauber, 9701 Bex- hill Drive, Kensington, Md. Division of Special Farm Statistics.—Emerson M. Brooks (acting), 2366 North Oakland Street, Arlington, Va. Prices, Income, and Marketing: Assistant Chief.—Frederick-V. Waugh, 1006 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Division of Statistical and Historical Research.—Xarl A. Fox, 2 Bedford Lane, Alexandria, Va. ; Division of Marketing and Transportation Research.—Bennett S. White, Jr., 3810 Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. Production Economics: Assistant Chief.—Sherman E. Johnson, 118 North Jackson Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Farm Management and Costs.—Carl P. Heisig, 4845 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va. Division of Land Economics.— Ernest H. Wiecking, Quaker Lane, R. F. D. 2, Alexandria, Va. Division of Agricultural Finance—Norman J. Wall, 2928 P Street. Farm Population: Asin Chief—Raymond C. Smith, 3211 North Woodrow Street, Arlington, a. Division of Farm Population and Rural Life—Carl C. Taylor, 3139 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Special Surveys.—Forrest KE. Clements, 4914 Thirty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. LIBRARY (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) The Librarian.—Ralph R. Shaw, 3341 Prospect Avenue. Assistant Librarian.— Louise O. Bercaw, 3710 Fulton Street. Chief of Division of— Bibliography.— Margaret S. Bryant, 904 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Technical Processes.—[Vacant.] Reference and Lending Services.— Louise O. Bercaw, 3710 Fulton Street. ) OFFICE OF BUDGET AND FINANCE (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director of Finance and Budget Officer.—Ralph S. Roberts, 6400 Thirty-first Place. Deputy Directors.—John C. Cooper, Jr., 5209 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va.; Joseph C. Wheeler, 3538 Eighteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director—John L. Wells, 2722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Division of Accounting and Audit.—Chief, Stancil M. Smith, 3550 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Division of Budgetary and Financial Reports.— Chief, Keith L. Hanna, 615 Poplar Drive, Falls Church, Va. Division of Estimates and Allotments.— Chief, Charles L. Grant, 4922 Twenty-seventh Street North, Arlington, Va. Division of Legislative Reporting and Management Review.—John L. Wells, 2722 South Arlington Ridge Road, Arlington, Va. Legit Reporting.—Carl R. Sapp, 6047 Twenty-first Street North, Arling-ton, Va. ; Division of Procurement and Property Management.—John B. Holden, 309 Leighton Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF FOREIGN AGRICULTURAL RELATIONS (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Office of the Director: Director.—Stanley Andrews, Route 4, Vienna, Va. Associate Director.—Fred J. Rossiter, 6690 Thirty-second Street. Assistant Directors—Raoss E. Moore, 4336 Albemarle Street; Eric Englund, Pooks Hill Road, Bethesda, Md. Department of Agriculture : 417 International Commodities Branch: Chief.—Joseph A. Becker, 220 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Regional Investigations Branch: ; Chief.—Robert B. Schwenger, 18 Dresden Street, Kensington, Md. Technical Collaboration Branch: : Acting Chief—Glen L. Taggart, 937 Patrick Henry Drive, Arlington, Va. Division of Foreign Information: Head.—James O. Howard, 707 Meridian Street, Falls Church, Va. Division of Administration: Head.—Carroll E. Michelson, 3508 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF HEARING EXAMINERS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief Hearing Examiner.—Earl J. Smith, 3635 Ingomar Place. OFFICE OF INFORMATION Director—R. L. Webster, 301 Noland Street, Falls Church, Va. Deputy Directors—M. L. DuMars, 8412 Galveston Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; J. H. McCormick, 1326 Perry Street NE. : Assistant Directors in Charge of: Press Relations and Special Reports—Harold R. Lewis, 533 North Oakland Street, Arlington, Va. : Radio and Television.—Kenneth M. Gapen, 2809 Davis Avenue, Alexandria, Va. Chief of Exhibits Service.—Harris T. Baldwin, 4428 Volta Place. Chief of Motion Picture Service—Chester A. Lindstrom, 318 Dorsett Avenue, Somerset, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief of Publications (Acting).—J. H. McCormick, 1326 Perry Street NE. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director of Personnel.—T. Roy Reid, 3124 Quesada Street. Assistant Directors.—James L. Buckley, 4714 Sheridan Street, Riverdale, Md.; Strother B. Herrell, 7114 Seventh Street. Assistants to the Director.—Christopher O. Henderson, 5206 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Henry F. Shepherd, 6311 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; William W. Brown, 307 Marvin Road, Silver Spring, Md. Chad; Losin of Classification.— William C. Laxton, 7117 Harwick Road, Wood cres, 3 Chief, Division of Investigations.—Chalmers T. Forster, 904 Maryland Avenue NE. Chief, Division of Employment.—Parke G. Haynes, 309 Williamsburg Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Division of Employee Health.—Dr. Melvin T. Johnson, 4300 Third Street SE. Chief, Division of Organization and Personnel Management.—N. Robert Bear, 3290 Worthington Street. Chief, Division of Employee Performance and Carl E. Herrick, Development.— 3904 Edmunds Street. OFFICE OF PLANT AND OPERATIONS (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Arthur B. Thatcher, West Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Director.—Terry J. McAdams, Route 1, Hillbrook Drive, Annandale, Va. Assistants to the Director.— William T. Luman, 4001 Jefferson Street, Hyattsville, Md.; Samuel L. Gardiner, 1503 Pinewood Street, Falls Church, Va.; Marshall S. Wright, 1308 Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Administrative Services Division.—Hugh W. Berger, 502 Nicholson Street. Chief, Real Estate Division.— Mackey W. White, Box 558, Route 1, Annandale, Va. Chief, Records Administration Diviston.—John S. Lucas, ‘“Gralue,”” Box 309, Route 1, Vienna, Va. Chief, Service Operations Division.— William E. Weir, 1408 Franklin Street NE. Chief, Technical Services Division.— William K. Knauff, 3500 Fourteenth Street. 418 Congressional Directory OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Solicitor—W. Carroll Hunter, McLean, Va. Deputy Solicitor.— Edward M. Shulman, 2125 Observatory Place. Associate Solicitors for— Agricultural Credit.—Howard Rooney, 2601 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Commodity Credit, Production and Adjustment. —— Edward M. Shulman, 2125 Observatory Place. Fojosiy and General Legal Services.— Edward F. Mynatt, 5415 Connecticut venue. Litigation.—Neil Brooks, 3215 Morrison Street. Marketing and Regulatory Laws.—Charles W. Bucy, 4618 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Rural Hlectrification—XK. Wilde Blackburn, 4207 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Executive Assistant to the Solicitor—W. Edward Bawcombe, 4408 Thirty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH ADMINISTRATION (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Adminzstrator.—P. V. Cardon, 1730 Crestwood Drive. Deputy Admanistrator.—B. T. Shaw, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Administrator (Marketing) .—Harry R. Trelogan, 6025 Eighteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrator (States Relations and Chief, Office of Experiment Stations).— R. W. Trullinger, 3115 South Dakota Avenue NE. Assistant Administrator (Administration).—Frank H. Spencer, 4110 Woodberry Street, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant for Defense Activities.—M. R. Clarkson, 5569 Sixteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assim for Interdepartmental Research.—S. B. Fracker, 2745 Twenty-ninth treet. Asan for Production and Utilization.—Rhett Y. Winters, 6609 Thirty-second treet. Assistant for Marketing.—Barnard Joy, 1718 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant for Publications and Information.—Ernest G. Moore, 7205 Old Chester Road, Bethesda, Md. Agricultural Research Center (Beltsville, Prince Georges County, Md. Phone, TOwer 6430) Superintendent, Office of Operations.—Charles A. Logan, Agricultural Research Center, Beltsville, Md. Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—G. E. Hilbert, 5323 McKinley Street, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—Carl F. Speh, 208 Elm Street, Alexandria, Va.; G. W. Irving, Jr., 4836 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. M. Scott, 6318 Brookfield Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; J. R. Matchett, 5327 Saratoga Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Henry A. Donovan, 4440 Forty-ninth Street. Director of— Northern Region, Headquarters: Peoria, Ill.—R. T. Milner, 140 Cole Courts, Peoria, Ill. Southern Region, Headquarters: New Orleans, La.—QG. H. Fisher, 1624 Mirabeau Avenue, New Orleans, La. Eastern Region, Headquarters: Wyndmoor, Pa.—P. A. Wells, 207 Wheatsheaf Avenue, Abington, Pa. Western Region, Headquarters: Albany, Calif. —M. J. Copley, 862 Arlington Street, Berkeley, Calif. Head of— A ensirating Services Diviston.—Clara E. Preinkert, 1742 North Capitol treet. Allergen Investigations.—Henry Stevens, 4439 Volta Place. Biologically Active Chemical Compounds Investigations, Beltsville, Md.—T. D. Fontaine, 10004 Quinby Street, Silver Spring, Md Department of Agriculture 419 Head of—Continued Food Fermentation Investigations, Raleigh, N. C.—J. L. Etchells, 122 Faircloth Street, Raleigh, N. C. Fruit and Vegetable Products Investigations: his pi Calif. —E. A. Beavens, 1120 North Almanson Avenue, Alhambra, a Prosser, Wash.—A. M. Neubert, 1428 Prosser Avenue, Prosser, Wash. Puyallup, Wash.—J. E. Brekke, 410 Fifth Avenue NE. , Puyallup, Wash. Weslaco, Texas.—W. C. Scott, 1023 Texas Boulevard, Weslaco, Tex Winter Haven, Fla.—M. K. Veldhuis, 648 Avenue I NW., Winter Ne Fla. Information Division.—F. L. Teuton, 7701 Fort Foote Road, Washington, D.C Natural Rubber Extraction and Processing Investigations, Salinas, Calif.— I. C. Feustel, 200 San Miguel Avenue, Salinas, Calif. Now Sora Investigations, Olustee, Flo BX Patton, 430 Circle Drive, Lake ity, Fla Personnel Diviston.—N. E. Jack, 5409 Twentieth Avenue, Avondale, Md. Sugarcane Products I nvestigations: Houma, La.—R. T. Balch, P. O. Box 171, Houma, La. Tung Oil Investigations, Bogalusa, La.—R. S. McKinney, 530 Virginia Avenue, Bogalusa, La. Bureau of Animal Industry (The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief. —B. T. Simms, 942 Twenty-sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. | Assistant Chiefs.—Hugh €. McPhee, 6514 Fortieth Avenue, University Park, Hyattsville, Md.; S. O. Fladness, 2508 Clay Street, Alexandria, Va.; A. R. Miller, 366 North Washington Street, Falls Church, Va.; K. A. Butler, 1200 Kingwood Drive, Takoma Park, Md. Head of— Administrative Services Division.—Luther E. Harrover, Presidential Gardens, Alexandria, Va. Animal Foods Inspection Diviston.—H. H. Pas, acting, 5625 Eighteenth Road North, Arlington, Va. Animal Husbandry Division.—T. C. Byerly, P. O. Box 75, Belteville, Md. Budget and Fiscal Division.—N. A. Olmstead, 3020 Porter Street. Information Division.—J. K. MecClarren, 5418 Twenty-first Street North, Arlington, Va. Inspection and Quarantine Division.—C. L. Coisding, 2202 Apache Street, Route1, Hyattsville, Md. Interstate Inspection Division.— Truman W. Cole, 2338 South Ode Street, Arlington, Va. Meat Inspection Diviston.—A. R. Miller, 366 North Washington Street, Falls Church, Va. Pathological Division.—H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue. Person) Division.—W. A. DeVaughan, 2406 Mount Vernon Avenue, Alexan- dria, Va. Tuberculosis Eradication Division.— Abner K. Kuttler, 4318 Center Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Virus Serum Control Division.—Oren E. Herl, 1401 Oglethorpe Street. Zoological Division.— Benjamin Schwartz, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Bureau of Dairy Industry : (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—O. E. Reed, 4927 Thirtieth Place. Jase a (Research) .—R. E. Hodgson, 7006 Wake Forest Drive, College ark, Md Assistant Chief (Admanistration).—J. M. Kemper, 7 Crossway Road, Manor Country Club, Rockville, Md. Head of— Dission of Information.—L. S. Richardson, 3730 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, d Dairy Products Research Laboratories.— George E. Holm, 3513 R Street. Dairy Cattle Breeding, Feeding, and Management.— Milton H. Fohrman, 6807 Pineway, Hyattsville, Md. 420 Congressional Directory Head of—Continued Dairy Herd Improvement Investigations.—J. F. Kendrick, 2506 South Lynn Street, Arlington, Va. Nolen and Physiology.—Lane A. Moore, 4334 Clagett Road, Hyattsville, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.— Avery S. Hoyt, 100 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. Assistant Chiefs.—F. C. Bishopp (Research), 8014 Piney Branch Road, Silver Spring, Md.; H. L. Haller (Insecticides-Chemistry), 4407 Thirty-eighth Street; W. L. Popham (Control), 4026 Twenty-fifth Road North, Arlington, Va.; R. A. Sheals (Administration), 2437 North Taylor Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Assistant Chief (Admainistration).—Henry G. Herrell, 4820 Iowa Avenue. Staff Assistant to the Chief.—J. F. Martin, 7504 Fourteenth Street. In Charge, Division of: Accounting and Auditing.—A. F. Healy, 2880 South Buchanan, Fairlington, Va. Administrative Services.—L. Kenneth Wright, 229 Eleventh Street SW. Budget and Administrative Management.— M. Kirkham, 151 Mark Forrester Street SW. Bee Culture.—J. I. Hambleton, Brookeville, Md. Cereal and Forage Insect Imvestigations.—W. A. Baker, 2415 North Potomac, Arlington, Va. : Cotton Insect Investigations.—R. W. Harned, 4417 Garfield Street. Forest Insect Imvestigations.—J. A. Beal, 4504 Fordham Lane, College Park, Md. abi Insect Investigations.—B. A. Porter, 7125 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Grasshopper Control.—P. A. Hoidale, 131 Speer Boulevard, Denver, Colo. do Identification.—C. F. W. Muesebeck, 4312 Sheridan Street, Hyattsville, Insect Survey and Information.—David G. Hall, 5814 Ninth Road North, Arlington, Va. Insecticide Investigations.—R. C. Roark, 3163 Adams Mill Road. Insects Affecting Man and Animals.—E. F. Knipling, 2607 Marcey Road North, Arlington, Va. ; Personnel Management.—W. F. Leffler, R. F. D. 3, Box 181, Alexandria, Va. Plant Quarantines.—E. R. Sasscer, 9608 Glencrest Lane, Rock Creek Hills, Kensington, Md. : Stored Product Insect Investigations.—Randall H. Latta, 2122 California Street. Truck Crop and Garden Insect Investigations.—G. J. Haeussler, 5714 Fortieth Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Regional Directors: Region 1 (Northeastern) .—R. G. Richmond, 20 Sanderson Street, P. OQ. Box 72, Greenfield, Mass. Region 2 (Southeastern).—W. G. Bruce, Twenty-fifth Avenue, City Limits, P. O. Box 989, Gulfport, Miss. Region 3 (Southwestern).—1L. F. Curl, 571 Federal Building, San Antonio, Tex. Region 4 (Western).—W. V. Benedict, 2288 Fulton Street, Berkeley, Calif. Region 5 (North Central).—Harry L. Smith, 301 Metropolitan Building, Minne- apolis, Minn. Aircraft and Special Equipment Center.—Kenneth Messenger, in charge, P. O. Box 7216, Oklahoma City, Okla. Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—Hazel K. Stiebeling, the Westchester. Assistant Chiefs.—Ruth O’Brien, 614 St. Andrew’s Lane, Silver Spring, Md.; Callie Mae Coons, 5462 Thirtieth Street. Administrative Officer.— Cecelia Huneke, 1301 Fifteenth Street. Head of Division of— Family Economics.— Gertrude S. Weiss, 4710 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. ia and Clothing.—Bess V. Morrison, 1007 Merrimac Drive, Silver Spring, Food and Nutrition.— Esther L. Batchelder, 8 Devon Road, Silver Spring, Md. Housing and Household Equipment.—Lenore Sater Thye, 9416 Brookville Road, Silver Spring, Md. Home Economics Information.—Kathryn Cronister, 2630 Adams Mill Road. Department of Agriculture 421 Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering (Plant Industry Station, near Beltsville, Md. Phone, TOwer 6400) Chief.—A. H. Moseman, 4011 College Heights Drive, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant Chiefs.—F. P. Cullinan, 4402 Beechwood Road, Hyattsville, Md.; E. Stephens, 1416 North Taylor Street, Arlington, Va. Head of Division of: Budget Management.—V. H. Beach, 127 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Fiscal seed] Business Management.—E. H. Killen, Plant Industry Station, Belts- ville, ; Information.—L. E. Childers, 319 North Oxford, Arlington, Va. Personnel Management.—dJ. P. McAuley, 6019 Hawthorne Street, Cheverly, Md. Agricultural Engineering Research Director.—[Vacant.] Head of Division of: Farm Buildings and Rural Housing.—W. Ashby, 3746 Jocelyn Street. fam Electrification.—T. E. Hienton, 6203 Carrollton Terrace, Hyattsville, Farm ‘Machinery.—R. B. Gray, 3162 Key Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Mechanical Processing of Farm Products.—G. R. Boyd, 301 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Field Cr ns Peseh Director—W. M. Myers, 4209 Van Buren Street, Hyatts-ville ; Head of Division of: Cereal Crone and Diseases.—XK. S. Quisenberry, 6427 Colesville Road, Hyatts-ville, Md. Corgi: and Other Fiber Crops and Diseases.—H. D. Barker, 3269 Van Hazen treet. Pore Crops and Diseases.—D. F. Beard, 9001 Highland Drive, Hyattsville, Rubber Plant Investigations.—R. D. Rands, 1430 Floral Street. Sugar Plant Investigations.—C. H. Wadleigh, 4310 Queensbury Road, Riverdale, Md. Tobacco, Medicinal and Special Crops.—D. M. Crooks, 6910 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md. Weed 1 vestigations. RT. Lovvorn, 6910 Fortieth Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Horticultural Research Director.—J. R. Magness, 5 Valley View Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Head of Division of: Forest Pathology.—L. M. Hutchins, 3426 Tulane Drive, West Hyattsville, Md. Fruit and Nut Crops and Diseases.—J. R. Magness, 5 Valley View Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Handling, Transportation and Storage of Horticultural Crops.—W. T. Pentzer, 9405 Garwood Street, Silver Spring, Md. Mycology and Disease Survey.—J. A. Stevenson, 4113 Emery Place. Nematology Investigations.—G. Steiner, 4117 Twenty-ninth Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Ornamental-Plant Crops and Diseases.—S. L. Emsweller, 7004 Wake Forest Drive, College Park, Md. Plant Exploration and Introduction.—C. O. Erlanson, 10408 New Hampshire Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Vegetable Crops and Diseases.—V. R. Bosw ell, 6206 Forty-third Street, Hyattsville, Md. Soils Research Director.—F. W. Parker, Virginia Manor Road, Muirkirk, Md. Head of Division of: Fertilizer and Agricultural Lime.—X. D. Jacob, 3812 Woodley Road. Seine epee) and Irrigation.—R. Q. Parks, 4220 Colesville Road, Hyatts- ville, ’ Soil Survey.—C. E. Kellogg, 4100 Nicholson Street, Hyattsville, Md. National Arboretum.—B. Y. Morrison, director, 7320 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Md. Advisory Council: Frederick P. Lee, chairman, 6915 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Md. Charles G. Woodbury, 1801 Hoban Road, Washington, D. C. Ovid Butler, 4713 Harrison Street, Chevy Chase, Md. G. Harris Collingwood, Library of Congress, Washington, -Q, ConradL. Wirth, director, National Park Service, Department of the Interior. LJ 422 Congressional Dzirectory National Arborelum—Continued Advisory Council—Continued U. S. Grant 3d, vice president, George Washington University. H. H. Hume, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. H. P. Kelsey, president, Harlan P. Kelsey, Inc., East Boxford, Mass. E. J. Kraus, Oregon State College, Corvallis, Oreg. Mrs. H. G. Place, 530 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. W. J. Robbins, director, New York Botanical Garden; Bronx Park, New York; N. Y. K. A. Ryerson, assistant dean, College of Agriculture, University of California, Davis, Calif. 1..C, Stark, Stark Brothers Nurseries & Orchards Co., Louisiana, Mo. O. B. Thorgrimson, president, The Arboretum Foundation, 2000 Northern Life Tower Building, Seattle, Wash. Office of Experiment Stations (Administration Building, Fourteenth Street and Jefferson Drive. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—R. W. Trullinger, 3115 South Dakota Avenue NE. Associate Chief.—E. C. Elting, 621 Pershing Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Chief.—H. C. Knoblauch, 1109 North Evergreen Street, Arlington, Va. Administrative Officer.— Walworth Brown, 108 Glenridge Street, Kensington, Md. Coordinator, Regional Research Fund.—F. D. Fromme, Falls Church, Va. COMMODITY CREDIT CORPORATION (The Mall, beiween Twelfth and Fourteenth Streeis SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Board of Directors: ‘Chairman.—Charles ‘F. Brannan, Secretary of Agriculture, the Westchester. Clarence J. McCormick, 601 Nineteenth Street. Knox T. Hutchinson, 2500 Q Street. Gus F. Geissler, 8336 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Harold K. Hill, 2339 Nebraska Avenue. Elmer F. Kruse, 114 E. Cameron Road, Falls Church, Va. of Oris V. Wells, 14 Belfield Road, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Va. cers: President.—Gus F. Geissler, 8336 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Vice Presidents.—Harold K. Hill, 2339 Nebraska Avenue; Elmer F. Kruse, 114 East Cameron Road, Falls Church Va.; Robert W. Herder, 3301 Ferndale Street, Kensington, Md.; Roy W. Lennartson, 1605 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md.; Raub Snyder, 3812 North Washington Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Secretary. Lionel C. Holm, 4869 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Secretary. — Marion M. Crumpler, 2220 Thirty-sixth’ Street SE. Controller—XK. A. Brasfield, 604 South Spring Street, Falls Church, Va. Treasurer.—James J. Somers, 404 Woodland Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Chief Accountant.—Robert H. Fuchs, 8609 Lancaster Drive, Bethesda, Md. COMMODITY EXCHANGE AUTHORITY (Administration Building, Fourteenth Street and Jefferson Drive. Phone, REpublic 4142) Adminastrator.—J. M. Mehl, 1512 Underwood Street. Assistant Adminzstrator—Rodger R. Kauffman, 859 North Kentucky Street, Arlington, Va. Executive Officer— Walter L. Miller, 3555 Raymoor Road, Kensington, Md. Chief, Compliance and Trade Practice Division.—Douglas B. Bagnell, 112 Prince Street, Alexandria, Va. Chie, Trading and Reports Division.—W. Edwards Beach, 5719 Chevy Chase arkway. Assistant Chief, Trading and Reports Division.—Ronald C. Callander, 3540 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Segregated Funds Division.—Ralph K. Dawson, 2630 Fort Scott Drive, Arlington, Va. Chief License and Rules Division.—James Coker, 2310 Connecticut Avenue. 1] Department of Agriculture 423 EXTENSION SERVICE (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Director.— Milburn L. Wilson, 14 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Director.—W. H. Conway, 4120 Eighth Street. Assistant to the Director.—P. V. Kepner, 605 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Coordinator of Cotton and Grasslands Programs.—L. I. Jones, 3436 South Wake-field Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Business Administration, Chief.— Christopher S. Tenley, 1314 Thirty-sixth Street. Division of Field Coordination, Acting Chief —P. V. Kepner, 605 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Subject Matter, Chief.—J. L. Boatman, 4201 Massachusetts Avenue. In Charge, Agricultural Section.—S. P. Lyle, 4435 Davenport Street. In Charge, Home Economics Section.— Mary A. Rokahr, 2032 Belmont Road. Division of Agricultural Economics, Chief.—H. M. Dixon, 14 Riggs Road NE. Division of Field Studies and Training, Chief.—M. C. Wilson, 3005 South Dakota Avenue NE. Diehl of Extension Information, €hief.—Lester A. Schlup, 4707 Connecticut venue. : Assistant Chief.—Ralph M. Fulghum, Route 4, Box 109, Vienna, Va. FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW.) Governor.—I. W. Duggan, 3721 Forty-ninth Street. Deputy Governor.—R. L. Farrington, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Acting Deputy Governor.— Thomas F. Murphy, 3630 New Hampshire Avenue. Deputy Governor in Charge of Finance and Accounts and Administrative Divisions.— Carl Colvin, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. en Governor.—Edward F. Seiller, 4412 Thirty-fourth Street South, Arlington, a. Land Bank Commissioner.—J. R. Igleib, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. Askin Cooperative Bank Commissioner.—R. L. Farrington, 5420 Connecticut venue. Deputy Production Credit Commissioner.—A. T. Esgate, 6 Nicholson Street, Falls Church, Va. Intermediate Credit Commassioner.— George M. Brennan, 4000 Cathedral Avenue. Associate Solicitor in Charge, Farm Credit.—Howard Rooney, 2601 Russell Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief Examiner.— Martin J. Fox, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Chief, Economic and Credit Research Division.—R. C. Engberg, 205 MacArthur Road, Alexandria, Va. Chief, Cooperative Research and Service Division.—Harold Hedges, 6532 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md Director, Information and Extension.—W. Gifford Hoag, 3083 South Woodrow Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Administrative Diviston.—V. V. Hemstreet, 502 Greenbrier Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Chief, Personnel Division.— William L. Moore, 4605 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va. Special Assistant to the Governor.—Cliff Woodward, 1607 Preston Road, Alexan-dria, Va. Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW.) Board of Directors: Chairman.—I. W. Duggan, Governor, Farm Credit Administration, 3721 Forty-ninth Street. E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson Place. J. R. Isleib, 4701 Connecticut Avenue. President.—1. W. Duggan, Governor, Farm Credit Administration, 3721 Forty- ninth Street. Executive Vice President.—E. C. Johnson, 327 Mansion Drive, Alexandria, Va. 424 Congressional Directory FARMERS HOME ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. -Phone, REpublic 4142) Admanistrator.— Dillard B. Lasseter, Chevy Chase Club, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Administrator.—Ralph Picard, 3904 Southern Avenue SE. Assistant Administrators.—James E. Halligan, the Houston; Marcus B. Braswell, 2503 South Adams Street, Arlington, Va. Budget Officer—Charles C. Barnard, 2480 Sixteenth Street. Chief Administrative Analyst.—Cylar H. Van Natta, Jr., 2801 Sixty-third Avenue, Cheverly, Md. Chief of Administrative Service Division.—Winson O. Trone, 5612 Massachusetts Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief of Finance Division.—John E. Parsell, 4502 Thirty-first Street, Mount Rainier, Md. Chief of Information Staff.— Philip S. Brown, 7914 Sleaford Place, Bethesda, Md. Chief Personnel Officer.—James A. Somerville, 206 Fairfax Drive, Alexandria, Va. Chuef of Examination Division.—J. William Howell, 916 Manor Road, Alexandria, Va. Director of Farm Ownership Division.—Howard Bertsch, 1109 North Sycamore Street, Falls Church, Va. Director of Production Loan Division.—Henry C. Smith, 4112 Woodberry Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. FEDERAL CROP INSURANCE CORPORATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Board of Dzrectors: Clarence J. McCormick, 601 Nineteenth Street. Fred B. Northrup, Route 3, Box 758, Fairfax, Va. Gus F. Geissler, 8336 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Clarence W. Swanebeck, 10424 Torrey Road, Fenton, Mich. James B. Cullison, Jr., 209 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. Acting Manager. —Fred B. Northrup, Route 3, Box 758, Fairfax, Va. Northern Area Director.—John F. Thompson, 23 Riggs Road NE. Southern Area Director.—J. B. Daniels, 322 North Oxford Street, Arlington, Va. Western Area Director.— Ervin W. Anderson, 115 Jersey Street, Denver, Colo. Secretary.— Rutherford J. Posson, 3327 Quesada Street. Chief, Administrative Division.—H. Eugene Harker, 717 Hallwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Claims Division.—Ernest C. Neas, 6524 Twenty-sixth Road North, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Finance Division.—Carl A. Fretts, 221 Farragut Street. Chuef, Program Development Division.— William H. Rowe, 3422 Tulane Drive, West Hyattsville, Md. Chief, Sales Management Division.—Earll H. Nikkel, 3401-A South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. : Chief, Underwriting Division.—M. Eldon Colby, 105 West Cameron Road, Falls Church, Va. FOREST SERVICE (South Building, Twelfth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief.—L. F. Watts. 1911 R Street. Assistant Chief.—Edward C. Crafts, 6711 Forty-fourth Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of Fiscal Control.—O. A. Zimmerli, 6317 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md National Forest Divisions: Assistant Chief. —Edward P. Cliff. Division of Fire Control.—Carl A. Gustafson, 5527 Twenty-second Street North, Arlington, Va. Division of Timber Management.—Ira J. Mason, 5505 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md. Division of Range Management.— L. Dutton, 2651 Sixteenth Street. Walt Division of Recreation and Lands.—John Sieker, 1519 North Frederick Street, Arlington, Va. Department of Agriculture 425 National Forest Divisions—Continued -Assistant Chief—Continued Si of Engineering.—A. P. Dean, 4230 Thirty-fourth Street, Mount ainier, Division of Wildlife Management.—Lloyd W. Swift, 323 North Oxford Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Watershed Management.—Gordon R. Salmond, 201 Summers Drive, Alexandria, Va. State and Private Forestry Divisions: Assistant Chief.—R. E. McArdle, 2907 Rittenhouse Street. isin of Cooperative Forest Protection.—James N. Diehl, 4716 Fifteenth treet. Division of Cooperative Forest Management.— Arthur R. Spillers, 3410 Old Dominion Boulevard, Alexandria, Va. Forest Research Divisions: Assistant Chief.—Verne L. Harper, 8511 Beech Tree Road. Staff Assistant.—W. H. Larrimer, 3304 Rittenhouse Street. Division of Forest Management Research.—L. 1. Barrett, 5613 Huntington Parkway, Bethesda, Md. Division of Fire Research.—A. A. Brown, 3044 South Buchanan Street, Ar-lington, Va. Division of Forest Economics.—Horace R. Josephson, 5504 Burling Court, Bethesda, Md. Division of Range Research.—W. R. Chapline, 3802 Albemarle Street. Division of Forest Products.—George W. Trayer, 1200 Russell Road, Alex- andria, Va. Division of Forest Influences.—Harold G. Wilm. Division of Dendrology and Range Forage Investigations.— William A. Dayton, 4812 Twenty-fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Administrative Management and I nformation Divisions: Assistant Chief—Earl W. Loveridge, 1650 Harvard Street. Division of Operation.— William P. Kramer, 2700 Valley Drive, Alexandria, a. Prison of Information and Education.—Dana Parkinson, 3707 Military oad. Division of Personnel Management.—H. D. Cochran, 719 North Abingdon Street, Arlington, Va. Lands Divisions: Assistant Chief. —Howard Hopkins, 1801 North Hartford Street, Arlington, Va. Division of Forest Land Planning.—[Vacant.] Dagsion of Land Acquisition.— Frederick W. Grover, 4320 Livingston Road PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ADMINISTRATION (South Building, Fourteenth Street and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) OFFICE OF THE ADMINISTRATOR Administrator—Gus F. Geissler, 8336 Draper Lane, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy Administrator.—Harold K. Hill, 2339 Nebraska Avenue. Executive Assistant to the Administrator.— Lionel C. Holm, 4869 Twenty-eighth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Administrator for Production.—Raub Snyder, 3812 North Washington Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Deputy Assistant Administrator for Production.—H. L. Manwaring, 514 North Oak Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Administrator for Marketing. —Roy W. Lennartson, 1605 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy ei Administrator for Marketing.—George A. Dice, 3600 Whitehaven arkway. Assistant Administrator for Commodity Operations. — Elmer F. Kruse, 114 East -Cameron Road, Falls Church, Va. Deputy Assistant Administrator for Commodity Overations, —John H. Dean, 4837 First Street South, Arlington, Va Assistant Administrator for Program Coordination.—Robert W. Herder, 3301 Ferndale Street, Kensington, Md. Deputy Assistant Administrator for Program Coordination.—Gerald E. Tichenor, Box 522, McLean, Va. 426 Congressional Directory Commodity Branches COTTON BRANCH Director.—Clovis D. Walker, 4010 Warren Street. Deputy Directors.—Carl H. Robinson, 7443 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Elgia D. Bell, 725 North Edison Street, Arlington, Va. DAIRY BRANCH Director.—Preston Richards, 3130 Wisconsin Avenue. Deputy Directors.—H. L. Forest, 5 Shenandoah Road, Alexandria, Va.; Don S. Anderson, 2863 Beechwood Circle, Arlington, Va.; E. M. Norton, 3333 Albermarle Street, Arlington, Va. FATS AND OILS BRANCH Director—George L. Prichard, 4201 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director—W. T. Parker, 1215 Sixteenth Street. Deputy Director—Robert M. Walsh, 1312 North Emerson Street, Arlington, Va. FRUIT AND VEGETABLE BRANCH Director.—Sylvester R. Smith, 2845 South Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Directors.— Merritt W. Baker, 2308 Forty-first Street; Floyd F. Hedlund, 1 Scott Circle. GRAIN BRANCH Director.— Drexel D. Watson, 614 Dale Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy Directors.— William McArthur, 1556 Mount Eagle Place, Parkfairfax, Alexandria, Va.; E. J. Murphy, 1719 Crestwood Drive; Fred D Entermille, 2730 Wisconsin "Avenue; Alvah F. Troyer, 1115 Twelfth Street. LIVESTOCK BRANCH Director—H. E. Reed, 5420 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Directors.—F. 'W. Imasche, 3133 Connecticut Avenue; David M. Pettus, Route 1, Manassas, Va. POULTRY BRANCH [ " Director—W. D. Termohlen, 6638 Thirty-second Place. Deputy Director.—Hermon I. Miller, 5316 Moorland Lane, Bethesda, Md. Assistant Director.—Joseph W. Kinghorne, 1365 Iris Street. : SUGAR BRANCH Director.—Lawrence Myers, 230 Prospect Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy Director.—Thomas H. Allen, 824 Westwood Place, Falls Church, Va. TOBACCO BRANCH Director—J. E. Thigpen, 214 North Galveston Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director.—Stephen E. Wrather, 1513 Crestwood Drive, Alexandria, Va. Functional Branches AGRICULTURAL CONSERVATION PROGRAMS BRANCH Director.—Charley Mays, Raleigh Hotel. Deputy Director—Fred G. Ritchie, 4302 Fourth Street North, Arlington, Va. FISCAL BRANCH Director—X. A. Brasfield, 604 South Spring Street, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Directors.—R. H. Fuchs, 8609 Lancaster Drive, Bethesda, Md.; J. J. Somers, 404 Woodland Terrace, Alexandria, Va.; William R. Kelly, 4921 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Department of Agriculture 427 FOOD DISTRIBUTION BRANCH Director.—Leonard R. Trainer, 57 Victor Street NE. Deputy Directors.—James E. Hoofnagle, 20 Shenandoah Road, Alexandria, Va.; Marvin M. Sandstrom, 4149 Sixth Street South, Arlington, Va. Assistant Director.—Howard P. Davis, 3832 North Military Road, Arlington, Va. MARKETING AND FACILITIES RESEARCH BRANCH Director.—W. C. Crow, 12568 North Buchanan Street, Arlington, Va. Deputy Director.—Budd A. Holt, 4838 Twenty-fourth Road North, Arlington, Va. TRANSPORTATION AND WAREHOUSING BRANCH Director.—M. J. Hudtloff, 3916 Dunnel Lane, Kensington, Md. Deputy Director—C. E. Raeder, 7808 Old Chester Road, Bethesda, Md. Offices OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES Chief —John C. Hamilton, 700 West View Terrace, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chief.—Seth T. Brewer, 2904 Richmond Lane, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF AUDIT Chief —D. J. Harrill, Route 2, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief.—John F. MeShea, 2200 Washington Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. OFFICE OF BUDGET Chief. —R. P. Beach, 3818 V Street SE. Assistant Chiefs.—W. R. Pittman, 3582 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va.; D. J. Scruggs, 501 Magnolia Street, Falls Church, Va. OFFICE OF COMPLIANCE AND INVESTIGATION Chief.—W. H. Duggan, 3851 Porter Street. Deputy Chief.—Stephen 8. Sarrapede, 905 North Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF INFORMATION SERVICES Director.—J. B. Hasselman, 2900 P Street. OFFICE OF MATERIALS AND FACILITIES Director—L. B. Taylor, 110 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Deputy Directors—W. R. Allstetter, 8819 Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md.; Bruce M. Easton, 820 North Wakefield St., Arlington, Va. Assistant Director—G. Herman Gilbertson, 5445 Nineteenth Street North, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT Chief.—John P. Haughey, 2895 South Abingdon Street, Alexandria, Va. Assistant Chiefs.—C. K. Morrison, 607 West Windsor Avenue, Alexandria, Va.; W. Leonard Johnson, 6813 Standish Drive, Hyattsville, Md. OFFICE OF PRICE Director.—J. Murray Thompson, 2 Midhurst Road, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Directors.— William O. Shofner, 1803 Biltmore Street; Sidney N. Gubin, 1704 North Uhle Street, Arlington, Va. OFFICE OF REQUIREMENTS AND ALLOCATIONS Director.—F. Marion Rhodes, 3608 Gunston Road, Alexandria, Va. Deputy Director.—Richard Roberts, 2401 North Upshur Street, Arlington, Va. : RURAL ELECTRIFICATION ADMINISTRATION (Administrator’s Office: The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Administrator.—Claude R. Wickard, the Westchester. Deputy Administrator.— William C. Wise, 3821 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistant Administrator.—S. Riggs Sheppard, 413 South Wayne Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Applications and Loans Division.—Richard A. Dell, 3509 South Stafford Street, Arlington, Va. 90808°—82—-2—1st ed. 29 428 Congressional Directory Chief, Engineering Diviston.—John K. O’Shaughnessy, 4816 Montgomery Lane, Bethesda, Md. Chaef, MH enngemeny Division.—E. E. Karns, 625 South Highland Street, Arling-ton, Va. Chief, Power Diviston.—James Bernard McCurley, Jr., Maiden Choice Lane, Catonsville, Md. Chief, Finance Division.—Joseph F. Marion, 3489 South Utah Street, Arlington, Va. Chief, Technical Standards Division.—Joseph Edward O’Brien, 323 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief, Information Services Division.— Kermit O. Overby, 605 Hillwood Avenue, Falls Church, Va. Chief, Personnel Division.—John W. Asher, Jr., 1003 Beverly Drive, Alexandria, ting Chief, Administrative Services Diviston.— William T. Templeman, 2123 Street. SOIL CONSERVATION SERVICE (Executive Offices: South Building, Fourteenth and Independence Avenue SW. Phone, REpublic 4142) Chief—Robert M. Salter, 154—-C Colony Road, Silver Spring, Md. Executive Assistant to the Chief.—Glen K. Rule, 3018 Gainesville Street SE. Deputy €hief.—Jefferson C. Dykes, 4511 Guilford "Road, College Park, Md. Assustant Chief.—Edward H. Graham, Shreve Road, Route 1, Falls Church ,Va. Assistant Chief.—Ethan A. Norton, 4702 Morgan Drive. Assistant to the Chief.—Henry D. Abbot, 2319 Tracy Place. Assistant to the Chief.—Thomas L. Gaston, Jr., 4700 Connecticut Avenue. Foreign Liaison Representative—Glenn E. Riddell, 1234 South Taylor Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Division of— ie Services. —PFrancis R. Mangham, 7 Glenridge Street, Kensing- ton Budget and Finance.—Carl H. Dorny, 6812 Oak Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Information and Education.—D. Harper Simms, 4410 Thirty-eighth Street North, Arlington, Va. Personnel M anagement.— Verna C. Mohagen, 4713 River Road. Records and_Reports.—Robert W. Rogers, 5512 Huntington Parkway, Bethesda, Md. Chef 5:4 Operations. —Donald A. Williams, 5135 Fifteenth Street North, Arlington, lor Chief —Frank J. Hopkins, Shreve Road, Falls Church, Va. Assistant Chief.—Carl B. Brown, 317 Pinewood Avenue, Silver Spring, Md. Chief of Division of— Agronomy.—Grover F. Brown, Route 1, Nokesville, Va. Biology.—Lawrence V. Compton, 2841 Beachwood Circle, Arlington, Va. Cartographic.—Joseph M. Snyder, 4319 Woodberry Street, University Park, Hyattsville, Md. Engineering.— Thomas B. Chambers, 2030 Allen Place. Forestry.— Courtland B. Manifold, 6443 Barnaby Street. Zand Management.—Edward G. Grest, 1527 North Ivanhoe Street, Arlington, Nursery.— Acting, Grover F. Brown, Route 1, Nokesville, Va. Project Plans.— Alfred M. Hedge, 5600 Lincoln Street, Bethesda, Md. Range.—Frederic C. Renner, 6692 Thirty-second Place. Soil Conservation Surveys.—Roy D. Hockensmith, 2832 McKinley Place. Water Conservation.—Harold-O. Ogrosky, 1004 North Livingston Street, Arlington, Va. Chief of Research.— Mark L. Nichols, 3309 Stephenson Place. ern] Chief.—Howard E. Middleton, 1202 South Thomas Street, Arlington, a Research Specialists.—George W. Musgrave, 4205 Four Mile Run, Arlington, Va.; Gerald E. Ryerson, Route 2, Quaint Acres, Silver Spring, Md. ; James H. Stallings, 5146 Nebraska Avenue: Russell E. Uhland, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Chief of Division of— Erosion Control Practices.—Forrest G. Bell, 5320 Flint Drive, Westgate, Md. Farm Irrigation.— George D. Clyde, Logan, Utah. Weis Comoran and Disposal Practices. L Lewis A. Jones, 7131 Chestnut ree DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Constitution Avenue and E Street. Phone, STerling 9200) CHARLES SAWYER, Secretary of Commerce (the Westchester); born in Cincinnati, Ohio, February 10, 1887; son of Edward Milton and Caroline Butler Sawyer; educated in public schools, Cincinnati, Ohio; B. A., Oberlin College, 1908; LL. B., Cincinnati Law School, 1911; honorary LL. D.— University of Cincinnati, 1950, Bryant College, 1950, Franklin and Marshall College, 1951; member of Ohio Bar, Bar of Supreme Court of the United States, and other State and Federal bars; since 1921 (except for leaves of absence for public service) member of Cincinnati law firm of Dinsmore, Shohl, Sawyer & Dinsmore; in World War I enlisted as private in Infantry, served overseas A. E. F.; honorably discharged with rank of major, May 30, 1919; member of the Cincinnati City Council from 1911 to 1915; candidate for mayor of Cincinnati, 1915; lieutenant governor of Obio 1933-34; Democratic candidate for Governor of Ohio 1938; chairman, Ohio delegation to Democratic National Convention, 1940; Ohio Democratic national committeeman 1936-44: Ambassador to Belgium and Minister to Luxembourg, 1944-45; member, President's Loyalty Review Board, 1947-48; appointed Secre-tary of Commerce May 6, 1948; ex officio general chairman, Business Advisory Council, United States Department of Commerce; governor, Inland Waterways Corporation; chairman, Fcreign Trade Zones Board; member: Foreign Service Buildings Commission, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, National Archives Council, Smithsonian Institution. Commodity Exchange Commission, National Housing Council, National Munitions Control Board, National Security Resources Board, Defense Mobilization Board, Loan Policy Board of the Recon-struction Finance Corporation, National Aion, Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems, United States National Commission in the Pan American Railway Congress Association, Cabinet Committee on World Food Programs, Advisory Board, Export-Import Bank; participant: United Nations Scientific Conference on the Conservation and Utilization of Resources, Lake Success, 1949; clubs: Chevy Chase (Washington, D. C.), 1925 F Street (Washing-ton, D. C.), National Press Club (Washington, D. C.), The University Club (Washington, D. C.), The Alfalfa Club (Washington, D. C.), Queen City (Cin-cinnati), Camargo (Cincinnati), Commercial (Cincinnati), Commonwealth Club (Cincinnati), Country Club, (Cincinnati), Everglades (Palm Beach), Bath and Tennis (Palm Beach), Ohio Society of Washington, D. C., and Ohio Society of New York; member: National Council, Boy Scouts of America; recipient: Freedoms Foundation Award for 1949; trustee of Oberlin College; a Mason; an Episcopalian; married. The Secretary: Secretary to the Secretary.— Mildred Eaton, 2702 Wisconsin Avenue. Under Secretary.—[Vacant.] Under Secretary for Transportation.—[Vacant.] Assistant Secretary for International Affairs.—[Vacant.] 0 = io iT Burlington (V+t.) Free Press, Rutland (Vt.) Herald, Newport (Vt.) Daily Express. Associated Pressionnie an Washington Daily ......c.eeeaae News. oo. International News Service... ......___. ‘Washington Evening Star....._.__.._________ Washington Daily News... __________. Washington Daily News... ._...__. New York Herald Tribune... .._.__..____.. Washington Posb. oo Lo 00 Li = Bell8yndieate. =: co od Editorial Research Reports... __._________ Associated Press. to re a Michigan League of Home Dailies, Central Press Association, Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press, Port Huron (Mich.) Times Herald, Owosso (Mich.) Argus Press, Midland (Mich.) ' Daily News, Holland (Mich.) Sentinel, Capital Times (Madison, Wis.), Los Angeles Mirror, Anniston (Ala.) Star, Dear Publieations, The Overseas (Frankfurt, Germany). Wall Street J. ournal _____ as NL Qlobe:Syndieate to ke Daily Metal Reporter, Daily Mill Stock Reporter. Washington Times-Herald._.___.. ._.___... World: Prego tiieiiis Dulles aig to St.-Louis: Post-Dispateh.-_____ .__.__._._ _ ___. New York Herald Tribune... ...... cee. Manchester-Dispately = co oi Washington Times-Herald_____._.._..._..._. Agsocinted Press. co. i Renae ape United Press Associations. ......coocooonoo.. Assoelnted Pressio niin miibn teilooh 12 Dally Traffic World 0 J 0 ‘Washington Evening Star... ._.._______. King -Features Syndicate, Consolidated Hearst Publications. North American Newspaper Alliance. _.____ Now-York Dimes or» casas. Beli asin 1 A asncinlo@Progs. oh tt di EE rere N.C. Ww. London Observer. ae Washington Daily News | Cleveland Plain'Pealer = 20 Ca. United Press Associations. ......o-..2...L... ‘Washington Daily News________....__.__.___ Chicago Tribune. . ol ee Polish DallyZgoda ~~ Fa United Press Associations. _____________-____ Associated Prefss ri. toy Med eA a Harrisburg Evening News, Harrisburg Patriot, Long Island Press, Long Island Star-J ournal, Newark Star-Ledger, Staten Island Advance, Syracuse Herald-Journal, Syracuse Post-Standard, Camden Cour-ier-Post, Westchester County News-papers, New Britain Herald. ne Decatur Ave., Kensing-on, : 118 South Fairfax St., Alexandria, Va. 4285 North Vacation Lane, Arlington, Va. 3210 P St. 503 Albee Bldg. 4608 15th St. 233 2d St. SE. 605 Silver Spring Ave., Sil-ver Spring, Md. 602 Forest Glen Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 2480 16th St. 230 North George Mason Dr., Arlington, Va. 3838 S. Capitol St. 1020 Tod St., Falls Church, Va. 4619 Roxbury Dr., Bethesda, Md 912 19th St. 1808 Queens Lane, Arling-ton, Va. 2137 LeRoy Pl. 3055 Foxhall Rd. Chevy Chase, Md. 837 22nd St. 3420 39th St. 1543 Foxhall Rd. 4421 Alton Pl. 217 5th St. NE. 1916 R St. 1728 21st St. 1312 N St. 2325 North Jackson St., Ar-lington, Va 5716 8th St. 3100 Colne Ave, 6132 30t 4000 Cathedral Ave. 1335 30th St. 2206 Wyoming Ave. 1513 33d St. : 207 Miles Dr. 2314 41st St. a Ave., Forestville, 404 North Thomas St., Ar-lington, Va. 2616 P St. 6242 North Pershing Dr., Arlington, Va. 3815 Gramercy St. 1543 44th St. 5015 46th St. 906 QGlaizewood Ct., Ta-koma Park, Md. 1742 Park Rd. 2720 Terrace Rd. SE. 3500 South Stafford St., Arlington, Va. Eh Dr., Silver Spring, Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Byrnes, Robert D___________ Canby, Margaret Hart_______ *Caplan, Marvin....ccceee oo. *Carey, Francis BE... ____ *Carignan, Norman. ___.._... *Carlton, John 2a ...c.L T..... *Carpenter, Elizabeth S_...._ *Carpenter, Leslie B_........ *Carter, John Franklin *Casares, Manuel _______ L *Cassels, Louis... ._._.____. *Chadwick, John... ......... *Chaney, RexM. 0 —. Cheely, George... 2; *Chiang, Joseph..............L *Childs, Marquis W.__..______ | *Clark, Albert B......cczooo.L *Clark, Evert Bocwa-o0.ti nn *Clark, George Henry_____._. *Clark, Robert E Cleavenger, Morris M________ *Cline, Jom H_.0. Go coat. *Cole, Benjamin R______._____ Coles, Marshall *Collier, N.. Rex. .codigei *Collins, Frederic W____._____ *Collins, James M___.____.... Combs, George W.___.________ *Coppenbarger, H. L.________ *Corddry, Charles W., Jr____ *Corn, Herbert B.-L. oii. Cotten, Felix. hii. ssiuiiic... Cottrell, Mary James _.___.. *Couric, John M........ccut.. Cowan, Ruth Baldwin_______ Craig, May... .c.caalv oni) *Cramer, John TF... oo oc. *+Crater, Robert We. _. si c.. *Creagh, Edward F__________ Cromley, Erica...ili. 22 *Cromley, Ray.:..c....ii.... Hartiord: Courant. a... secit ogaascndehdbes 428 No orth Nelson St., Arlington, Va ‘Washington Evening Star___________._______ 2222 Eye St. Daily News Record, Retailing Daily, Wo-4640 Nichols Ave., SW. men’s Wear Daily. Associated Press. rns PN! Edison St., Arling-on ASSOCIATEA-PICSS.... .. cavandn icin mw iim denies 9222 Mintwood St., Silver Spring, Md. Miami Dally News. ob wuuet cooudt Easimiiab 1617 Crestwood Dr., Alex-andria, Va. Beaumont (Tex.) Journal, Abilene (Tex.) 3631 39th St. Reporter-News, Amarillo (Tex.) Times, Arkansas Gazette, Tulsa Tribune, Boston Post, Springfield (Mass.) Union, Spring-field (Mass.) Daily News. Arkansas Gazette, Tulsa Tribune, Beaumont 3631 39th St. (Tex) Journal, Abilene (Tex) Reporter-News, Amarillo (Tex.) Times, Boston Post, ‘Springfield (Mass.) Union, Spring-field '(Mass. ) Daily News. Consolidated News Features 2330 Massachusetts Ave. Madrid _| 8513 Northampton St. 909 Sligo Pkwy., Takoma Park, Md. nz Baltimore Ave., Glenn ve, 200 North Trenton St., Ar-lington, Va. iat sn St., Mount Rainier, Chinese News Service. .....c..ciidecnnnn--100 Woodridge Ave., Silver oo Spring, Md. United Features Syndicate... ooo... 501 Dorset Ave., Chevy hase, Md. Wall Street Journal... ci sircecnmiarin. 1017 North Qruangien St., Arlington, Va. Washington Daily oo. 5704 Denfield Rd., News...o..--Rock- ville, Md. ‘Washington Times-Herald._________________ 2816 Connecticut Ave. Indianapolis Star, Muncie Star______________ 6 Chesapeake St., SW. Associated Press i. i (iol ital nadasnidic 2430 Pennsylvania Ave. ‘Washington Evening Star... ___..__...__ 351 North Washington St., Falls Church, Va. Indianapolis Star, Muncie Star____________. , Oak Ave., Falls Church, a. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. ...... 2923 Q St. ‘Washington Evening Star... ______________. 4774 Old Dominion Dr. North, Arlington, Va. ProvidenceJomnal. oo ~ vo. CF 0 0 Td 3929 J enifer St. ON-DPally Ciesoni at han South Washington St., avd 800 Alexandria, Va. Baltimore Evening Sun 2 oc =n oe os 6239 33d St. ‘Washington Daily News___________o.. 3727 Northampton St. United Press Associations___________________ udWilson Lane, Bethesda, ‘Washington Evening Star_..____._.________. 6504 Meadow Lane, Chevy ‘has International News Service. _______________ 2005 North Key Blvd., Ar-lington, Va. Nashville (Tenn.) ~ Banner, Charlotte 2509 North Powhatan St., (N. C.) Observer, Greenville (S. C.) News, Arlington, Va. Troy (N. Y.) Record, Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader, Madison (Wis.) State Jour-nal, Sehonsviay Union Star, Green Bay (Wis.) Press Gazette, Appleton (Wis.) Post Crescent, La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune, Wilmington (N. C.) Star News. United Press Loi tans in. Kirby Falls Associations....li 4 Court, Church, Va. Associated Press. ........ocoast desta. 1020 29th St. Portland Press Herald, Portland (Maine) ALL Carolina Ave. Evening Express, Kennebec (Maine) Journal, Waterville (Maine) Sentinel, Portland (Maine) Sunday Telegram. Washington Daily News. coo connoccaaaa-Cape St. John, Rt. 1, An-napolis, Md. Cincinnati Post, Cleveland Press, Colum-7007 Fordham Ct., College bus Citizen, Kentucky Post. Park, Associated Press RATAN 0 5.041 BERETTA EE WA RE 720 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, Md. London Evening Standard le de i do Sd em 108 Martha's Rd., Alexan-dria, Va. WallStreet Journal: Si fey oan i 108 Martha's Rd., Alexan-dria, Va. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Cronan, Carey ..... .... eal *Crouse, Kenneth____________ *Crowley, Raymond J__.____. *Crowther, Rodney ...__.__.. Cull,’Richard, Ir . ........ Cunningham, James F_._____ *Cutter, John To 2-0 Dake, Marietta... c.nauene *Pale, BdwinL., Jr... ....... *Daniel, James M., 3d... *Davidson, Jean... -_______° *Davis. Arthur Leonard... *Pavis,: Charles E., Jr........ APavis, JEWEL eee. Davis, Walson....--:.cne-n-Dear, Ann Blevins. ___....... *PDear, Joseph A... .... *Debalta, Stephen Li_..._____ *Degges, Charles Boooooaoo._. *Dennis, Frank Li... 0... Denny, Diang. ooo alii... *Denny, Ludwell ________.____ *de Pury, Edward G_._...___ *Dervan, Sidney L_......____ *de Turenne, Henri. _. *Deuel, Wallace R__. £ *Dickson, Edward H......... *Dillman, Grant... ..=..... *Pittmer, De Wal. anda ens *Dizon, George... oun. *Dodd, Philp W............. *Donoghue, John H._....._._ *Dorvillier, William J________ *Douglas, Francis P.......... ¥Draper,:George’l -...cn-n-o-*Druckenbrod, John David . . *Drummond, Roscoe. ........ Dufiee, Warren 8... ....-. > Dunnigan, Alice A______..___ *Durno, George'E._........... Eads, Jame... nici tui. *Easley, L. *Eddy, Arch BR. .............- *Edson, Arthur L.___.___ at Edson, Peeler... vin nannies Edstrom, Ed..... coin... *Edwards, Willard. .___..____ Egan, Charles EB. 0 ........ *Egger, Charles... cone... Bridgeport -Post, Bridgeport Telegram, Stamford Advocate. St. Paul Dispatch-Pioneer Press... _______ AsSoelied Press... ana aas Baltimore Sune: er aT Dayton Daily News, Springfield (Ohio) Daily News. United Press Associations. ________________.__ United Press Associations... __._. Globe Syndicate. = oh der a al New York Herald Tribune... ._.__...__.. Rocky Mountain News. oooooooooeee Trance Presse... Loi soiiifesS20 Buffalo Evening News..__.__._________ Washington Times-Herald Assoeinted Press. ou) Selene: Service. unas dallas Londo Dally MAITor=... oie aeee em ndeiee= Michigan League of Home Dailies, Central Press Association, Pontiac (Mich. ) Daily Press, Port Huron (Mich.) Times Herald, Owosso (Mich.) Argus Press, Midland (Mich.) Daily News, Holland (Mich.) Sentinel, Capital Times Madison, (Wis.), Los Angeles Mirror, Anniston (Ala.) Star, Dear Publications, The Overseas (Frankfurt, Germany). Hagerstown (Md.) ia Mallar. Oakland (Calif.) Tribune. . . ..cccemasotna.--Washington: Posh: ol uh. ee name Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance....__._ United Press Associations... coo... Kingston (Jamaica) Daily Gleaner.......__. France-Presse... ol. hla alan Sin i St. TouisiPost:Dispateh..........cao-mioon---1 Sacramento (Calif.) Bee, Fresno (Calif.) Bee, Modesto (Calif.) Bee. United Press Associations. ._..__..._._______ United Press Associations. ................_. King Features Syndicate... coco... Chicago Tribune Is. ica. ve meinen never nwa a ds New York Daily Nowe Liat] oppure New York Herald Tribune Syndicate _______ United Press Associations... ___.______.. New York Herald Tribune... _____________. American Banker Dally... __.___ El'Mundo (Puerto Rico)..-.~..... ‘Washington Evening Star. _.________________ Washington Post. iol iii sii es S00 nan International News Service. ____._._____.__.___ Christian Science Monitor. _._______________ United Press Associations... .....__ Associated Negro Press... occa International News Service... Associated Press. co... on a haiti AssociatediPress. alo SL Sad iE ‘Washington City News Service. __._-._._._ Associated Press. tl io. Jaaat i usd an Newspaper Enterprise Association... ..____ Louisville Courier Journal Chicago Pribune..........th eaaiaiine:i. 0 6310 Oakridge Ave., Chevy Chase, . 850 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, Md. 2021 Lanier Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1214 od Press Bldg. 3132 16th St. 2515K St. 200 North Jensen St., Ar-lington 2514 ith §St. NE. 9002 Manchester Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 4244 35th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. Clarksville, Md. 1432 Otis St. NE. 2h Pores Dr., Chillum, 1811 North Key Blvd., Ar- lington, Va. 1422 Rhode Island Ave. 3524 ommsion, Rd. Alexan- dria 3524 Gunton Rd., Alexan-dria, Va. 1300 National Press Bldg. 2705 Bladensburg Rd. NE. 3125 Nebraska Ave. 3255 O St. 3255 O St. 1801 16th St. 3759 Nonny St. 30033 3026 Cambridge Pl. 3301 W St.S 2628 South Wayne St., Ar-lington, Va. 3718 Lyons Lane, Alexan-dria, Va. 2480 16th St. 1813 North Rhodes St. Arlington, Va. 621 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, Md 3221 Volta Pl. 1112 16th St. 6709 Delfield St., Chevy Chase, 3 1521 28th St. 3129 South Stafford St., Ar-lington, Va. 3427 Oakwood Tr. 1739 19th St. 10410 ed, St., Silver Sprin, 3029 are PL 601 19th St. 1939 Vermont Ave. 1439 Locust Rd. 3051 N St. 1406 Crestron Dr., Alex-andri Ci Valley es Alexandria, 53 ia Mount Vernon Rd., Alexandria, Va. 3046 R St 2500 Wisconsin Ave. 106 Indian Spring Dr., Silver 2 Spring, Md. 1417 N S 2000 Sm St., West Hyattsville, Md. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *Emory, Alan 8... *Engle, J. Bias cio Bnd. *Epstein, Sidney... ......... *Erving Morris Dicc..ii 0... *Estabrook, Robert H.________ *Evans, Joseph E *Evans, Rowland, Jr_________ *Everett, Mem D.. Lil... Bwing, Annie. node. *Fagan, Irving. Fairfield, William S__________ *Paron, Hamilton... .......... Farrell, Robert E___.._.__... *Fay,sltoniC...._.-.R1d...1 *Fedorov, Mikhail Ne ATs Cali *Feeley, Stephen V__._....... Pell, Truman Teoria... *Fernsler, David. _.___.__._.. Finney, Barbara Slotky...___ *Finney, John Warren_._._._ | Pinney, Ruth: .o3l lai..l. Risher, Irene... Loon. iia... *Trisher, John M-_=ic....... Fitzgerald, Leander E_______. Fleeson, Doris... io (i iui... Fleming, Dewey L______ *Flynn, Michael W___ *Plythe, William P........... *Flythe, William P., Jr *Fozg, Sam. nievemere *Poley, Thomas J. ........... *Folliard, Edward T..____... *Fontana, Giovanni.___._____ *Foos, Irvin D *Foote, Mark Ford, Elizabeth. .ao..c..oo... *Forrester, Leland S Paper represented Washington: Post -u.. coge ico m0 oul. Minneapolis Star and Tribune, Des Moines Register and Tribune. Watertown (IN. Y.) Daily Times.._________. Associated Press ‘Washington Times-Herald_._.___._____.____ Cincinnati Times-Star.... 00. cl Li... Washington. Post oo olias ila WalliStreet: Journal. oo sll Soune Gian Lo Associated Press. Cujo | idooliinini. Philadelphia Daily News, Wilmington (Del.) News, Wilmington (Del.) Journal-Every Evening, Youngstown (0.) Vindi-cator, Lancaster (Pa.) Intelligence-Ji ry Religious Service, Willoughby (Ohio) News Herald, Cleveland News, Tiffin (0.) Advertiser Tribune. SelenceiServiee. our piu CBN Labor Press Associated : Davenport Times, Pekin Times .__.__o..__. Associated Press ic. 81 SALLI Wall Street Journal..{oic toil coo ao. Associated Press... oi. roo rat LloL Tass Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R..._ Newsday, Binghamton Sun, Jamestown Sun, Erie Times, Meadville Tribune-Republican, Sharon Herald, Las Vegas Optic, Farmington Times, Tucumcari News, Buffalo Courier-Express. Miami Daily News, Florida Times Union.. Associated Press; li 0d Loti nin li. New York Journal of Commerce... United Press Associations. Jol uliesi... San Francisco Daily News, Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune. Santa Fe New Mexican... __._____.._.. Chicago Priblne. oitna de cians rdn Associated Newspapers, Ltd., of Australia, Sydney (Australia) Sun. Bell Syndicate... cco. il Sionls Baltimore Sun... ....c._.._.0 ‘Washington Times-Herald Hearst Newspapers, Albany Times-Union, Baltimore News-Post, Baltimore Ameri-can, Boston Advertiser, Boston American, Boston Record, Chicago Herald-American, Detroit Times, Los Angeles Examiner, 1.os Angeles Herald-Express, Milwaukee Sen-tinel, New York Journal-American, New York Mirror, Oakland Post-Enquirer, Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, San Antonio Light, San Francisco Call-Bulletin, San Francisco Examiner, Seattle Post-Intelli-gencer. Washington Times-Heraldo: i. Sao Cons... International News Service_______________. International News Service... _ ooo. Washington Post... oe oii sonyi Roma (Naples, Ttaly) o_o il. lois 0 Buffalo Evening News___ ____.___.o__.___. Booth Newspapers of Michigan, Grand Rapids Press, Flint Journal, Kalamazoo Gazette, Saginaw News, Jackson Citizen Patriot, Muskegon Chronicle, Bay City Times, "Ann Arbor News. Washington Times-Herald Chicago Tribune Residence 27%, pork Lane, Bethesda, 3208 Valley Dr., Alexan- ria, Va. 1642 29th St. 5424 32d St. nz; Upland Pl., Alexandria, a. 150 Exeter Rd., Bethesda, Mad. 10206 Big Rock Rd., Silver Falls , Va, 1039 National “Press Bldg. 1411 35th St. 5714 31st Ave, Hyattsville, Md. 2718A Devonshire Pl. 8609 Old Bladensburg Rd., Silver Spring, Md 7 Westwood Dr. 424 Edgewood Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 4970 12th St. NE. Noyes Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 729 Quebec Pl. 3807 W St. SE. 4808 Chevy Chase Blvd., Chevy Chase, Md. 4749 Reservoir Rd. 3217 Gunston Rd., Alexan- dria, Va. 3217 Gunston Rd., Alexan-dria, Va. 1525 5th St. 1515 33d St. 1530 16th St. 5000 13th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 3344 P St. 4201 Massachusetts Ave. 6120 Broad Branch Rd. 1301 15th St. 526 Donation Blvd., Al-exandria, i 20th St. North, Arling-n, Va. 2703 A hwod Rd., Hyatts-ville, 3200 44th St. 1236 31st St. 1667 34th St. 4816 Quebec St. 2447 39th. St. 1421 Massachusetts Ave. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF Name *Fortune, Francis BEA *Toster, Herbert... 3:04. _. *Fox, Joseph A___ *Francis, Lorania Bon uiasi *Francis, Warren Boop omit *Frandsen, Julius, Toi itn Prank, Murray... 0... *Wrantz, Harry Wooo... Free, James. _.___ Freedman, Max__ Friedman, Milton__________.. *Priendly, Alfred: tao... *Fryklund, John LAO pat *Fulbright, Freeman_________ *Funch, Allan J__ Furman, Bess____ Furman, Martha Morrow.____ Gaines, Estelle___ *Galbraith, William H., Jr___ *@Gall, Winifred N elson:...... *@Galpin, Stephen Kena *QGardner, Everett B *Qarel, Arthur___ *Garrett, *Qarwood, Darrell _____._____ *Geiger, Robert B............ George, A. R_____ *@Gilbert, Ben W._ *QGiles, John A___. Gimble, Gilbert. _ Gmeiner, M. Ruth *Godwin, Gaylord P._____._. Gonder, Laurence *Gonzales, Donald J... ..... *Goodwin, Joseph Ge ona Le Gordon, Evelyn__ Gordon, Harold. . Gordon, Irving oc 0000. *Gordon, Samuel. Gothlin, Maureen Goulding, Phil G_ .__.:_.>. *Graham, Dillon. *Ciraham, Philip L_-—__ =. Green, Sterling ®._____._____. Green, Walter S_._ *Greene, Charles J., Jr. _.____ *Greene, Roger D._.._..__... *Qregory, Nichola, gl ual *QGridley, Charles Oat 1s *tQGriffin, Bulkley *Qriffin, Gerald E THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Paper represented Residence Bufialo Evening News ooo.oo 00. 412 Pl. SE. nal 37th United Press Associations... .....oeeceeu...... 8600 Carroll Ave., Silver Spring, Md. Washington Evening Star...-.-.....-...... 1351 Montague St. Log Angeles Times... 6S madeline... 2808 McKinley Pl. Los: Angeles Times. oon. i die lo... McKinley PI. aidani 2808 United Press Associations. ________________ 3900 Cathedral Ave. Tewish Morning Journal, London Jewish 5237 2d St. Chronicle. United Press Associations..._._. 7824 Aberdeen Rd., Be-thesda, Md Raleigh News and Observer, Birmingham 1963 39th St. News, Cleveland News. 4201 Massachusetts Ave. Winnipeg Pree Press. Sorou i ciarusuiiidi 2100 Connecticut Ave. Jewish Telegraptic Agency... __._.___ 4201 Massachusetts Ave. Washington Post 1645 31st St. Congressional Quarterly News Features..___ 1225 13th St. International News Service... _____________ Tr pores Rd., Hyattsville, International News Service. _..__________.___ 717 Bayfield St., Takoma Park, Md. New York Times. coo aie ans 3435 34th Pl. saaentiinm SelenceServiee...... sobzens. copdiilnl. 0) 1914 Connecticut Ave. Washington Times-Herald.__.._._._.._.___.__ 3342 Dent PI. |, United Press-Associations..._......... 2514 Tunlaw oc. Rd. Arizona Republic, Phoenix Gazette. ___..__ 1727 Massachusetts Ave. Wall Street Journal... coo. oid ana. 7119 Harwick Rd. Washington Daily News. _.__._________._... Sandy Spring, Md. Daily News Record, Retailing Daily, 1442 Kenawha St., Hyatts- Women’s Wear Daily. ville, Md. Agsociniod Press orf stm a aie 3056 Clinton St., NE Gannett News Service. oo... a. .l..in0. ny Galt Drive, Wheaton, d. International News Service. .._...____.__. 3900 16th St. Associated Presse omnial oll init. 1. 8508 Pl., Chevy Gout Loughboro Chase, Md. Associated Press . roau. ods co roils Fd ”s, Eldon Dr., Alexandria. a. Washington Pest. .o. 0 solid oi. 4537 Grant Rd. coruaill Washington Evening Star... _.._._..____ 8502 Greenwood Ave., Takoma Park, Md Washington Daily News... .o___._._. 421 E. Capitol St. United Press Associations... __._.l..._...C 2500 Wisconsin Ave. United Press Associations... ................. 4812 South 30th St., Arling- ton, Va. Washington Post...» iota iosasd luni 3647 Minnesota Ave. SE. United Press Associations._._....__..___.__: 1 aon Rd., Alexan- ria Labor Press Associated. ci Coo il oo. 2812 ay Mill Rd. United Press Associations... _____ i 8806 First Ave. Silver Spring, Md. Associated Press. soos Belaiynni ii 365 Deon Dr., Silver Spring, Washington‘Daily News...._ .____ Q St. ._ 2500 International News Service... _____ 4708 Piney Branch Rd. International News Service... _____________ 7218 Forest Rd., Hyatts- ville, Md. Wiashington Daily: News... lone. lo... 4606 72d Ave. ir Landover Hills, Md. United Press Associations. aniath ssntanni hogy Arlington Village, Arling-ton Cleveland: Plain Dealer. ----__ _.__......... 6411 “Faiffax Rd., Chevy Chase, Md. AssoeclatedcPress.isr AL) ei ea 4231 South Four Mile Run Dr., Arlington, Va. Washington Post. coo on orl. bs ante nd dn vies 1647 30th St. Assobiated Prose. oii al oia 5337 MacArthur Blvd. Davenport Demoerat o.oo Tomi ol 1431 Fairmont St. New York:-Dally News. 2. ff Sion rn a. 3427 O St. AssociatedPress. 2 Bir nan 1615 North Springwood Dr., Silver Spring, Philadelphia Inquirer. >. oc. 3058 South Woodrow St., Arlington, Va. Shreveport Times. . cosinesresin 12th St. censis 1125 Bangor Daily News, Worcester Gazette, 4817 Woodway Lane. Pawtucket Times, Fall River Herald News, Waterbury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Holyoke Transcript-Telegram, Northampton Gazette, Brockton Enter-prise, Lowell Sun, New Bedford Standard Times, Meriden Record, Newport (R. I.) Daily News, Beverly (Mass. ) Times. Baltimore Sun. Jo ill aaa 111 Primrose St., Chevy Chase, Md Press Galleries 047 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Griffin, Isabel Kinnear. _____._ Gulick, Merle Lewis_________ *Guptill, Charles H =. ._._ *Haakinson, Edwin B________ *Hadley, Edmund E_________ *Hall, Georze H.__._......c..-SHH, Bronk A. a “Hall, Joseph W., Ir... *Holl, Robe. tt ar *Haller, Elis M._. oo... Hammond, Gilbert. ----._= *Haney, Thomas §___.._____. Hanlon, JOSEP... .--eeeaam=- *Harbour, Daniel I. ...._.___ *Hardecastle, William._________ *Harris, Edward A.__._______ *Farris, Kenneth... _... *Harris, Morris J...........---*Harris, Balph. ocean 2G Ep nian sei Ae *| Haswell, James M._________ *Haugland, Vern. ............ Haworth, Mary. -_-._ ____._ i Hayden, Jay CG... oc =. *Hayden, Martin S___........ *Hayes, H. Gregory ._.._.... : *Healy, Paul BY. _ .— 7 nl *+Henning, Arthur S_.________ *Henry, John C ; *Hensley, M. Stewart..___.__ *Hercher, Wilmot Wotan a *Hermann, Arthur FB. ____._.. *Hewlett, Frank. __..___.___._ Heymanson, Sydney R_______ ¥Higginbotham, W. R._______ *Higes, Bdward H._.._____. Ni, Kermit Eo__ ____. *Hines, William M., Jr.______ Hinshaw, Joseph U____..______ *Hinton, Harold B. _._....-..- ‘Worcester Gazette, Bangor Daily News, New Bedford Standard-Times, Fall River Herald News, Waterbury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Lowell Sun, Ha-verhill Gazette, Meriden Record, Holyoke Transcript-Telegram, Pawtucket Times, Northampton Gazette, Brockton Enter-prise, Newport (R. I.) Daily News, Bev-erly (Mass.) Times. Wall'Sirect Journal... St. TouisPost-Dispateh.-f= o_o CW. Co News Services. a Associated Press. Lo New York Daily Worker ‘Wall Street Journal ___________ Nea Newspaper Service... coo. Akron Beacon Journal, Chicago Daily News, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald. St. Louis Post-Dispatch BEL REET| poll orlitetons Saha Seon ish SO om London Dally Mall. s.r St..Louis’Post-Dispateh.. wo ‘Washington Times-Herald____.________.______ AsSocintel Press. erarie Detroit Free Press, Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal, Miami Herald. Assoeiated:-Press.. i i isk ia King Features Syndicate. _____.____________ DetrolE NOW. Sammie mlm at veins DDotroll NOWS.. ci iif mbit hmmm i ie Bid Washington Times-Herald . como New York. Dally NeWS. ..ouvvvonmecdswmesess Washington Times-Herald._____._.____ ca Chicago Tribune c=. =. en elena Wichita. Bogle .. oot aa toto deat nate Chicago. Tribune cot i iwi tram wiis mmm Washington Evening Star... ica o-0 United Press ASSociations......ceeeeeme—e=-- ASS0cintod Press... acest awed mem. International News Service... ._.___________ Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake Telegram, Honolulu Star Bulletin. Australian Newspapers Service. ..___....._. United Press Associations... cc. ASSOCISted Press... oni a rail al Associated Prosi... oo Las gol Greensboro Dally News... .-.. _......__..... Gannbtt News Service... 0... _ Battle Creek (Mich.) Enquirer and News, Lansing (Mich.) State Journal, Grand Rapids (Mich.) Herald. Washington Evening Star... cocoa... 4817 Woodway Lane. 401 South Adams St., Ar-lington, Va. 1719 19th St. 4930 Sherrier PI. 2633 15th St. 3509 Morrison St. 3619 Fordham Rd. 11303 Galt = Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 716 Varnum St. 3806 47th St. Burlington Hotel. 1882 Columbia Rd. 305 Timberwood Ave., Sil-ver Spring, Md. 8111 Tahona Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 3761 Oliver St. 5 Quincy St., Chevy Chase, 1235 31st St. 3900 14th St. 6617 East Ave., ‘Chevy Chase, ; 5010 Reno Rd. 4610 3d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 4430 Nichols Ave., SW. 2721 Terrace Rd. SE. 2219 California St. 1 East Lenox St., Chevy Chase, Md. 6504 Maple Ave., Chevy Chase, 945 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, 400 Cummings Lane, Chevy Chase, Md 2202 Decatur St. 3527 Valley Dr., Alexandria, Va. 6111 44th Ave., Riverdale, Md 2728 32d St. 5451 42d St. 12 West Leland St., Chevy Chase, 6108 Walhonding Rd., Glen Echo Heights, Md. 607 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 3470 South Utah St., Arling-ton, Va. Shoreham Hotel. 4605 Queensbury Rd., Riv-erdale, Md. 3046 South Buchanan St., Arlington, Va. 8415 Bradley Blvd., Bethes-da, Md. 2805 35th St. 215 Constitution Ave. NE. 1107 South. Washington St. Alexandria, Va. 5105 72d Ave., Hyattsville, Md 1833 Park Rd. 1425 34th St. 2244 North Quebec 8t., Arlington, Va. 4202 13th Rd. South, Arling-ton, Va. 548 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence Holeman, Frank... ::ccumnna-*Holland, Cecil: ....... ........ *Holland, Daniel E__.____.__. Hollander, Richard._..._._____ Holleman, Emmit C_________ *Hoover, John RB... *Hornaday, Walter C.___.__. *Horner, Garnett D.____.______ Huflines, Gordon... ........... *Humphries, Harrison B_.____ *|Huston, Luther A__________ Hutchinson, William K__.___ *Huttlinger, Joseph B__ Tr David Oc cairns *Tager, Betsy or cena *Jamieson, Edward ........._ Jewell. Ingrid Johnson, Alice Frein_.______. *Jolly, Bruce = =e J. Q:=vik *Jones, Coleman B20© *Kamps, JohnH _..... 0. Kater,"Rosalind >...0 Kearney, Martha M_________ ¥Keois, Jom ©. -.¢......... Kelly, Virginiag-We. .-l00 *Kemmerer, Bert............. *Kennedy, Frank A.......... *Kennedy, George. .....cce_.. *Renmedy, Paal ..- P..2.. *Kennedy, William P___._... *Rent, Carleton... ....... New York Dally News... coiaeee inmmmainns Washington Evening Star_________________._ ‘Washington Times-Herald. ___..__....____ Washington Daily News. a tee ¥ Now YorkiDimes.t ou oer icctmn wien ‘Washington Evening Star____________.______ Jackson (Miss.) Daily News, Shreveport Journal, Texarkana Gazette and News, Hot Springs (Ark.) New Era and Sentinel-Record. Associated Press... la dade nna International News Service... ________.____. Mobile Press-Register, Brooklyn Eagle, Midland (Tex.) Reporter Telegram. Neue Zuercher Zeitung... __._..... New: York Herald Tribune... __............ WallStreet Journal. =. o-ooai. vicis ook Wichila Beacon i 0...aaa Houston Chronicle, New Orleans States, San Antonio (Tex.) Express, Wichita Falls -(Tex.) Record-News, Fort Worth Star Telegram, Nashville Tennessean, Youngstown Vindicator, Honolulu Adver-tiser, Lancaster (Pa.) New Era. Omaha World-Herald 2 Central News Agency of China. ____________ Associated Press. oh ed Li.aa Pittsburgh Post-Gazette... oer. Seattle Times, Fairbanks Daily News Miner, Juneau (Alaska) Empire, Anchor-age (Alaska) News. Congressional Quarterly News Features... ‘Washington Times-Herald_-_______..____... Houshon Posted re ah ade San:FranciscoChronicle =... 2... Retailing Daily, Daily News Record, Wom-en’s Wear Daily Greensboro (N. of ) Pafly News. = > New: York-Herald _ Tribune... Associated Press. i. ob wisi lcapen i Retailing Daily, Daily News Record, Wom- en’s Wear Daily. International News Service. ________________ Washington Daily News...... ..___.... Assoriatedr Press rr Associated Press______.___ Sobesapdsinlripntl ProvidencelJournal: cr 3 a Long Beach (Calif.) Press Telegram. ________ Cedar, Rapids Gazette ost Sd ore St. Petersburg (Fla.) Independent, Jackson- ville Journal, Pensacola Journal and News, Orlando Sentinel and Reporter-Star, Panama City News-Herald. ‘Washington Evening Star. .cm--ccenecarann- NOW York IIe aenew rmus Washington Evening Star... c.iccmmecenaas Chicago Sun-Times. =. ou ee iri ann 1704 Hobart St. 14 West Lenox St., Chevy Chase, 3) R. F. D. 2, Falls Church, Va. 3215 35th St. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 607 Laura Dr., Falls Church, Va. 4112 4th St. North, Arling- on, Va. 4811 Albemarle St. 1415 Chapin St. 124 Lynmoor Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Bowie Hill, Silver Spring, Md 1603 Connecticut Ave. 3 Beverly Dr., Alexandria, a. 3914 Livingston St. 1285 National Press Bldg. 3018 N St. 1812 Varnum St. 4822 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 3921 5th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 1002 Barnaby Ter., SE. 310 Albemarle Dr., Alex-andria, Va. 2141 I St. 3000 39th St. 1137 North “Harrison St., Arlington, Va. 796 South Florida St., Ar-lington, Va. 22 South Fillmore St.; Arlington, Va. 3637 Jenifer St. 1933 Lamont St. 6213 11th Rd. North, Ar-lington, Va. 4419 Greenwich Parkway. 2480 16th St. 1700 Lamont St. 1232 31st St. Woodfield, Md. 3901 he St. North, Arling- to: 2602 Fenimore Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 2221 Wadhington Ave., Sil- ver Spring, 3000 Tilden St. 3051 N St. 1413 Crittenden St. 1332 Martha Custis Dr., Alexandria, Va. 3416 Tulane Dr., West Hyattsville, Md. 4 Park View Rd., Chevy Chase, Md. 3348-A South Wakefield St., Arlington, Va. 1214 National Press Bldg. 1425 44th St. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Kernan, Edward. ___________ Kernodle, Margaret. _________ Kerwin, William J____.____._ *|| Kidney, Daniel M_______.. Kindler, Don...ix snr. J.0 King, Patricia.c-. oto -nuc. *Kitchen, George... _._______. *Rluttz, Jerry....-.--:-sie Knebel, Fletcher ____________ ii gnion, William H. Y., T. *Knowles, Clayton_._._______ *Korteweg, Peter G. J________ *Koster, Simon... *RKovacic, Donald... ........... Kraft, Arthur Jeo. coed *Kranish, Arthur.“coc 20 #RKrock, Arthur... ........ *Ruest, Frank H.....o.0. *Kuh, Frederick. .._.....2__. *Kuhn, Ferdinand, Jr *Lahey, Edwin A ______ 2 *Lahr, Raymond M__________ *Lalley, Joseph M____________ *La Moore, Parker___________ Lando, Horry. oes *Tapham, Lloyd... -._ >=. *Larrabee, Donald R_________ *Larsen, Douglas A__.__._____ ¥Laatier, Louis B........... sf. awrence, David._.._..._..__ *Lawrence, William H_______ *Laycock, L. G., *Lazarian, Leon N........... sileach, Paul B ............. *Tee, Chien-San.........o....-loo, Ira loo a ooaie oe *loe, James, 0. itaa.. Ir... ER Rd LR hs a SA Lee, Robert Bt Lh _oriili....i Leigh, Miriam G_.. -_.._.... Lesnicki, Ludwik.______._____ *Leviero, Anthony H________ *Levy, Sidney A-ii. 0... Cleveland Plain Dealer: oo. o. ionvconens Associated Press. vii iit nee are nnn International News Service. __..__.._______. Indianapolis Times, Evansville (Ind.) Press. ‘Washington Daily News... ...... Philadelphia’ Bulletin =o ._ = __-._ ===. Canadian Press. oct ho om ori ou Washington POSE ii. ns dite hmmm mmsem Des Moines Register and Tribune, Min-neapolis Star and Tribune. Baltimore Sun. cen ioeanon ne ...oo-ao AC New York Dimes. in doo city Jonna dtolal Grote Provinciale Dagbladen (Netherlands). Aneta News ABONCY.. to. uiait So uc oo. AssociatedPress. ony ra ae su New York Journal of Commerce... como... International News Service. __.__.___.______ New. York: Ties. Loi. Jot cow tidorn mun tnibne The Copley Press Inc., Springfield (I11.) Illi- nois State Journal, Springfield (Ill.) Illi-nois State Register, Aurora (Ill.) Beacon-News, Joliet (I1l.) Herald-News, Elgin (I11.) Courier-News, San Diego (Calif.) Tribune, San Diego (Calif.) Union, Al-hambra (Calif.) Post-Advocate, Monrovia (Calif.) News-Post, Redondo Beach (Calif.) Daily Breeze, San Pedro (Calif.) News-Pilot, Glendale (Calif.) News-Press, Culver City (Calif.) Star-News, Venice (Calif.) Vanguard, Burbank (Calif.) Re-view. Chicago: Sun Times. .ocuieaminan ids. Washington Posto. 0 nen nn nintiouninmin Chicago Dally News. inn loo onal United Press Associations _______________.__ Washington Post: fen miinl | aienesil Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance._.______ Mason City (Iowa) Globe Gazette, Clinton (Iowa) Herald. United Press Associations. _________.___.__ Worcester Gazette, Bangor Daily News, New Bedford Standard-Times, Fall River Herald News, Waterbury Republican-American, Lynn Item, Lowell Sun, Haver-hill Gazette, Meriden Record, Holyoke Transcript-Telegram, Pawtucket Times, Northampton Gazette, Brockton Enter-prise, Newport (R. I.) Daily News, Beverly (Mass.) Times. Newspaper Enterprise Association _________ Atlanta Daily World, National Negro Press Association. David Lawrence Associates... __.__.______ New-York Times: secalid col. cpowadidls00 Nashville Tennessean... _____._._____._.__.... Le Journal ’Egypte (Egypt) o-oo. _.__. Chicago Daily News, Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald. Central News Agency of China_ _____________ Central News Agency of China____.________ International News Service _ _.._.__________. New York Journal of Commerce. ......____. United Press Associations... ......__.1_ Daily News Record, Women’s Wear Daily, Retailing Daily. Polish Dally News... ooedilfloaian di -. a New York’Dimes. .... coeff boinc td oo New York Journal of Commerce. ______..____ 5 Indian Spring Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 4401 Burlington Pl. Clifton Terrace Apts. Route 1, Annandale, Va. 517 North Piedmont St., Arlington, Va. 3705 North Lorcom Lane, Arlington, Va. 2732 Ordway St. 3600 Morrison St. 6412 Ridgewood Ave., Chevy Chase, Md 1673 Roberts Lane, Falls Church, Va. 2921 28th St. 2219 Washington Ave., Sil-ver Spring, Md. 2130 N St. 2000 F St. 1825 24th St. 4407 36th St. South, Arling- ton, Va. 4415 Davenport St. 3116 Cathedral Ave. . 5643 Western Ave. 2020 Laurel Court, Falls Church, Va. 425 Hawthorn Rd., .Balti-more, Md. 5728 4th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 11508 Joseph Mill Rd. Silver Spring, Md. 0s Ewing Dr., Bethesda, d 409 North George Mason Dr., Arlington, Va. 3511 Patterson St. 3015 18th St. South, Ar-lington, Va. 1241 24th St. 3220 Klingle Rd. 5023 Mineola Rd., College Park, Md. 1306 T St. SE. 4628 Albemarle St. 625 Hamlin St. NE. 1432 Girard St. 1701 16th St. 127 Galveston St., SW. 1310 35th St. 4503 24th Ave. NE. Riggs and Ager Rds. 2445 Porter St. 10610 Dunkirk Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Tewis, Edward W._._._..___. *Teowis, Howard... Lo... Likely, WV adsweny oe #1 incoin, G. Gould. ........-.- Lindsay, Malvina... ccna... *Lijppmann, Walter _ __........ *Tisagor, Peter... i Livingstone B. %_......... #1.0ftus, Joseph A 0 cncune---*Toftus, Robert™M.o..o Toorance, John =. 2. 2a. Lowe, Florence SS. ee. *Lowe, Herman A *Lowry, W. MeNeil......_.._ *Lucey, Charles T.avceene.. [[Lucas, Jim Lusby; Mary CO. io oo *Macfarlan, W. Joynes...._.. MacNeil, Nell... ocean nal *McCardle, Carls oaivonans McCardle, Dorothy Bartlett. McClendon, Sarah liens Pong ol *MecGrain, Joy... ...... MeKee, Rose oh Sooo *McKelway, Benjamin M.____ MecKusick, Frances... —.----_ *Mcleod, John Fo ccccaea.oo *McMahon, Charles P......_ MeNair, Marie S. cvvcmeaeaes *McNamara, Thomas. ....... *McNeil, Marshall. ..__.____. *Macomber, Frank J. aco... *Magruder, Milton E..._.. -Marekres, Earle. oi.as *Marder, Murrey. c.ceeeauan *Marlow, James... occcucunan *Martin, Lorenzo Wa ceeaa-.-*Martin, Ovi *Martin, Paul. i. 0... *Massip, Jose Ml... oooo... Mattingly, Anne... coceeeena. New-York: Dally News. so mio ili ‘Washington Times-Herald ......___...._..__ Selonee Service! ac i a ee Washington Evening Star, Boston Globe.__ ‘Washington Post New York Herald Tribune Syndicate_______ Chicago Dally News. _...cive-oifaa il Associated Press. oo le ea. ih dinne can New York Times. 5 oo 0 Lo ei United Press Associations. o.oo... Springfield (Mass.) Daily News_._..___..___. Daily Variety (Calif.) Po id News Bureau, Daily Variety Calif Dayton Daily News, Atlanta Journal, Miami Daily News, Springfield (Ohio) News. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance...__ Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance. _______ Houston Chronicle, Arkansas Democart_____ Associated Press: oo t0lla tll J a United Press Associations... ._____._ Philadelphia Evening Bulletin___.___________ North American Newspaper Alliance. _____ Beaumont (Tex.) Enterprise, El Paso Times, Sherman (Tex.) Democrat, Tem-ple (Tex.) ind Irish Independent (Ireland), Lubbock * (Tex.) Avalanche-Journal, San Antonio Light. New York Herald Tribune... __...____ ‘Associated Press. tL. cll in Gros n Scripps Howard Newspaper Allianee________ Des Moines Register and Tribune, Minne- apolis Star and Tribune. Philadelphia Inquirer... U0 G20 Reuters-Australian Associated Press. _._.___ International News Service. -.._____.____ ‘Washington Evening Stay... cocoa ooo Rome (N. Y.) Daily Sentinel, Oneonta (N. Y.) Daily Star, Endicott (N. Y.) Daily Bulletin, Stroudsburg (Pa.) Rec-ord, Mitchell (S. Dak.) Republic. ‘Washington Daily News. cmccaaaaao- United Press Associations 25 Washington Post oi aa agi. illu. Bell'Syndieate. iLL UTS Bai sali Houston Press, Memphis Press Scimitar, Knoxville News Sentinel, EI Paso Herald-Post, Fort Worth Press. The Copley Press, Inc., Springfield (Ill.) Illinois State Journal, Springfield (I1l.) Illinois State Register, Aurora (I11.) Bea-con-News, Joliet (Ill.) Herald-News, El-gin (I11.) Courier-News, San Diego (Calif.) Tribune, San Diego (Calif.) Union, Al-hambra (Calif.) Post-Advocate, Mon-rovia (Calif.) News-Post, Redondo (Calif.) Daily Breeze, San Pedro (Calif.) News Pilot, Glendale (Calif.) News-Press, Cul-ver City (Calif.) Star-News, Venice (Calif.) Vanguard. United Press Associations. ...........__.... Louisville Times... edt bad dado. Assoelated Press. .......oo0iaSee i00 LL Gannett News Service... oo oo _______ ABC Newspapers (Madrid)... _-_._...____ Western Newspaper Union. cc cccemeacena- 3137 Martha Custis Dr., Alexandria, Va. 7309 Riggs Rd., West Hy-attsville, Md, 1461 Girard St. 123 West Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. 1711 Massachusetts Ave. 3525 Woodley Rd. 2807 16th Rd. South, Ar-lington, Va. 6510 Georgia St., Chevy Chase, 406 Delafield PI. 1443 Martha Custis Dr. Alexandria, Va. 1305 N St. 3300 Military Rd. 3300 Military Rd. 5525 Nebraska Ave. Ashton, Md. 2830 Shipley Terrace SE. 1314 30th St. 3120 4th id North, Arling-ton 1340 ist %t. McLean, Va. McLean, Va. 207 North Park Dr. oy Arlington, Va. 1727 Massachusetts Ave. 1611 45th St. 2480 16th St. 801 Grandview ‘Dr., Alex-andria, Va. Army and Navy Club. 11619 Highview Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 2141 T St. 4920 Palisade Lane. 7005 8th St. 2703 Y itnan Rid. , ‘Wheaton, Md. 2011 Ld St., West Hyattsville, Md. 2308 Ashmead Pl. 3127 7th Li North, Ariing-ton, Rodney ‘Rd., Hillandale, 1012 Valley Dr., Alexandria, Va. 4631 Verplanck Pl 1020 19th St. 1115 Sol Pitt St., Alex- andria 2946 South "Dinwiddie St., Arlington, Va. 1763 Colupmis Rd. R. EF. 1, Fairfax, Va. 3611 30% St. 3322 Military Rd. Oxon Hill, M Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Mattingly, LeRoy S_________ May, Donald: HF. ...oci 0... *Mayers, Shirley D_._.._..._. *Maynes, Seaghan____________ Mellett, Lowell. ____________.__ Meyers, Joan Bic... iii. *Michelson, Edward J______.. *Mickel, Ernest Poo 00. *Miller, Gustav). J.C... *Miller, John Dunecan._..__.. *Miller, Saul *Mills,; Bert... eal il *Milne, Edward Jamieson____ *Minifie, James M___________ Minueel; Ulplo.... obs... *Mobley, Radford E., Jr..__. *Mobley, Willard H_________. *Mollenhoft, Clark R_________ *Monahan, A.C ce oi... Monberg, Helene C__________ Montgomery, Jean__ _.______._ Montgomery, Ruth S________ Mooney, Richard E__________ *Moora, RobertiL,._.......... *Moore, Edwin Dayton______ *Moore, William. .c.......... *Morris, Johnm'D. coool... Morrison, Maria T_____._____ Moulton, Charlotte G__.____. *Mowrer, Edgar Ansel_______ *Mullen, G. Frederick_...___. *Munn, James: Co... oo... Munroe, Bat iil aoieui Murray, Elizabeth Chilton__. *Murray, J. Harley. oi... Mylar Ts copa *Nagaharu, Yasuo... cc. l_... Nance, Eleanor............... *Naumann, Oscar E_____._____ Nell, Edwin D0.oo i *Nellor, Edward K Nelson, Lorraine. __.._.______ Nessly, William V...___.....__ *Newton, James Y.._.....___. *Neyroud, Gerald E_.__.._._. *Nichols, Charles T........_. *Nichols, Harman W_________ *NicholexTee sn. can taro o Jd, *Nizon, Robert @--.--—._. *Normon, lloyd H._.__...._ Norman, John T.._ cu... .. Congressional Quarterly News Features____. Washington Dajly News. _ i co cioooil Pally Traffie World... 5 casioom Reuters-Australian Associated Press. .______ Washington EveningiStar -o 50 c New York Journal of Commerce__.___.___.._. Pittsfield (Mass.) Evening Eagle, North American Newspaper Alliance. Dodge Daily Newspapers... ..o....:o.... Washington Times-Herald._.__............. London TIMes.. Jit sie or wie o% ta dame Hearst Newspapers. .so-oillao tioieait.. Providence Evening Bulletin... _____..___ New York Herald Tribune...............__. LN Popolo (MAM), oo oie niaonat Akron Beacon Journal, Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald, Honolulu Star Bulletin, Chicago-Daily News. Associated Press... Li oli. svtbnimisucmitae Des Moines Register and Tribune, Minne- apolis Star and Tribune. ........ Lo... Selonee Ber VIR Lo Dil, vrs bren nce Pueblo (Colo.) Chieftain and Star-Journal._ Tass Telegraph Agency of the U. S. S. R New York Daily Ni United Press Associations: =... ...c..ceuib.. New York Herald Tribune... ___.__._.__._..__ United Press Associations... ocomaaaa.. Chicago Tribune. Jil nbenlomeis caval dbabnds New York Times. .. . vuvis fives mime General Features Corporation_______________ United Press Associations.....cooaecacaoin.. Associated Press. ic usm ol dens Lown Western Reporters, Albuquerque Journal, Salt Lake City Desert News, Tacoma News Tribune, Twin Falls Times News. Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette. _____________. International News Service. ________________ United PressAssoeiations. ..............._... THE Cnshu=-Shn it 20 esoas minim Spartanburg (8. C.) Herald and Journal, Gadsden (Ala.) Times, Tuscaloosa (Ala.) ows, Winston-Salem Journal and Sen- inel. New York and Chicago Journal of Com-merce Washington Times-Herald.. oo. icin... WashingtoniRBeport-o.oo anid oie. Congressional Quarterly News Features. ____ Washington Post: oo nua savas 2 Washington Evening Star... ~~. TondonDaily Herald... oc... Southam Newspapers of Canada _____._______ United Press Assceiations....._..c........_. United Press Associations... ..._...___.__ International News Service _______..____.___ Chicago, THbUNe oo: ft ier nt oa, Daily News Record, Women’s Wear Daily, Retailing Daily. 1323 Grandin Ave., Rock-ville, Md. 1420 Rhode Island Ave. 3513 S St. 621 Beacon Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 1301 Vermont Ave. 3749 South Four Mile Run Dr., Arlington, Va. 1602 Fort Hunt Rd., Alex-andria, Va. 3264 Queenstown Dr., Mount Rainier, Md. 1418 Saratoga Ave. NE. 2616 P St. 751 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, Md. Slop:Beverly Dr. , Alexandria, 1600 North Lexington St., Arlington, Va. 1417 31st St. 1269 Holbrook Ter. NE. 3608 S St. me Hardy Ave., Wheaton, d. 3630 Fessenden St. 3700 13th St. NE. 812 17th St. 5041 12th St. NE. 3310 R St. 2721 N St. 6111 43d Ave., Hyattsville, Md 514 Queens St., Alex-andria, Va. 1 Scott Circle. 11 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md 1767 P St. 1314 North Court House Rd., Arlington, Va. 3301 Garfield St. 721 Montigiho Dr., Falls Church, Va. 209 Elmira St. SW. 2721 N St. Fairfax, Va. 723 Northampton Dr., Sil-ver Spring, y 429 North Park Dr., Arling-ton, Va. Francis Scott Key Hotel. Congressional Hotel. 3130 Tennyson St. 3723 Holmes Lane, Alexan-ria, Va. 1638 Fort Hunt Rd., Alex. andria, Va. 1727 Massachusetts Ave. 518 Missouri Ave. 408 Jefferson St., Alexan-dria, Va. ! 3207 Cleveland Ave. 3208St. Q 2204 Drexel Rd., Hyatts-ville, Md. 1221 Simmons Dr., Rock-ville, Md. 2100 Connecticut A ve. 5420 31st St. 4318 35th St. South, Arling-ton, Va Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Norrig, John GJ LU, an Norton, Jessie Ax 222of *Nover, Barnet.__..._.. *Noyes, Crosby S___.. Noyes, "Newbold, Jr : O’Brien, Cyrib¥ civ co *O’Brien, Frank, Jr-2:.... *O’Brien, John C._____..___. *0O’Connor, Donald P_______. O’Donnell, John... J 2 ___. *O Leary, Jo Al. . oH tv *Oliver, Frank tli7 LLL *Oliver, D. Harold 2. *Olofson, Darwin BR. 2i 4 20lsen, Arthur Jo 202D0 4 *Olsen, Joh BE. 22 18 4 *0Q’Neill, James M., Jr. _____ *O’Neill, Michael J.._._.____L *()’ Neill, Thomas. -..e-ovo. 20’Rourke, John’... ____. i *Ormshbee, Alexander... _______ *Qthman, Frederick C.______ Otten, Alan L...._..il :L_J Otten, Jane \-; 0 del’ f Ottenberg, Miriam *(Ozanne, Jacques... *Pattie, Y Delton. ITT Peacock, W. Bibs: Lie * Pearson, Drew... _ *Perking, Fred W._ 2. ..__.... *Poity, Milburn .->.<. *Phillips, Cabell 1s 20. 4 *Phillips, Thomas R......... *Pike, Miltond. Lo *Plotnick, Theodore..._______ *Poe, Edgar: Allen... _.__. *Potter, Chester M.__________ %Potier, Philip. 20020% 1. *Powers, Richard P__________ Poynter, Henrietta M________ *Poynter, Nelson P__________ Price, Harry M 2Pring, I. Edgar...x *Pusey, Merlo ¥ nao ata. Pyper, William F________.____ *Rabache, Andre J___________ *Rankine, Paul Seott_________ Raymont, Henry... «= _._ Redmond, Wilfrid ___________ Reedy, Mary BB... ... ...... *Reichman, John A_____.__.. *Reschkke, Oscar W_______.__. Washington: Posto Joo ily Lalor ogi) New York Herald Tribune... ______ Denver Post. ....i i100 ‘Washington Evening Star. ‘Washington Evening Star..________________= Trenton Trentonian, Vineland Times-Journal. Associated Press ty A IL E, Philadelphia Inquirer... ilo. ilo... 00 Detroit Times... iio Lo hod a iil New -York'Daily News... _... c....-J._0 ‘Washington Evening Star___________________ London Daily Graphie... loli io. 50. ASSOCIAed Pres amr le Omaha World-Herald _________._-._________ United Press Associations. oi. 2... .. ‘Washington Daily o.oo News.o__________ ‘Washington Daily News. coo... United Press Associations... _________ Baltimore: San... Fo Zoi ie ‘Washington Daily News. ooo ooo. Washington Daily News. ooo United Features Syndiecate_.________________ ‘Wall Street Journal ________ Motion Picture Daily_._.____ Washington Evening Star, New York Journal of Commeree.........__ Daily Traffic World Associated Pressiiic i oo i 200 adil Bell Syndicate, I1 Progresso (N. Y.).....___ 3 Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance.._____ Le OI Dally: Jen BEL IIo, cuisines LL NewiYork Times: cil. . van aei ea ae St: Louis Post Dispateh. 0... 0. iio 0 Washington Daily News___.______________.. New York Journal of Commerce __.________. New Orleans Times-Picayune ___.___________ Pittsburgh Pressiiizs lai vd) L0000 To Baltimore Evening Sul... cweepenmmwesmesas Associated Press. nic. Co trol Liioiiiiad Congressional Quarterly News Features_____ St. Petersburg Times____ ‘Wall Street Journal_. ______ ‘Washington Evening Star.__________________ Washington Post. Ur 250 SUL Jeo s Booth Newspapers of Michigan, Grand Rapids Press, Flint Journal, Kalamazoo Gazette, Saginaw News, Jackson Citizen Patriot, Muskegon Chronicle, Bay City Times, "Ann Arbor News. United Press Associations... ...._.__.. American Metal Market... ______ Superior (Wis.) Evening Telegram, Mani-towoc (Wis.) Herald Times, Chippewa Falls (Wis.) Herald-Telegram, Two Rivers (Wis.) Reporter, Virginia (Minn.) Range Facts, Mesabi Daily News, Lafayette (La.) Daily Advertiser. International News Service Deutsche Presse Agentur... cececcemeczcana- 2747 Ordway St. 4622 15th St. 2737 Devonshire Pl. a Rowland Pl. . D. 2; Rockville, Md. Bet "Eastern Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 5939 Le May Rd., Rock-ville, Md 3 West Underwood St., Chevy Chase, Md. 7010 Farragut St., Hyatts- ville, : 1510 19th St. 1222 Quincy St. NE. 2121 Virginia Ave. 6004 34th Pl. 1846 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. 4201 Massachusetts Ave. 2711 Q St. 2822 South Abingdon 8t., Arlington, Va. 3 Manchester Pl., Silver Spring, Md. 1708 Surrey Lane. 2219 California St. 803 Barrett Rd., Falls Church, Va. 01d Dominion Drive McLean, Va. 5923 33d St. 5923 33d St. 1613 Buchanan St. 115 2d St. NE. 11509 College View Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 3512 South Stafford St.. Arlington, Va 2820 Dumbarton Ave. 32 West Underwood St.. Chevy Chase, Md. 1215 Russell Rd Alex-~ andria, Va. 3311 Highland PI. 5900 Connecticut Ave. 10434 Haywood Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 2104 Dexter Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 2615 South Lynn St., Arling-ton 5410 Both Pl, East River-dale, Md. 108 Philadelphia Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 4315 35th St. South, Arling- ton, Va. 1156 19th st. 1156 19th St. Commodore Hotel. 1505 33d St. 9 Albemarle St. The Governor Shepherd. 3510 Quebec St. 7009 Wilson Lane, Be-thesda, Md. 3636 16th St. 3001 Meredith Ave., Ken- sington, 500 South, Walter Reed Dr. Sy Arlington, Va. 2430 Pennsylvania Ave. 4201 Massachusetts Ave. Press Galleries 953 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Resseguie, Harry LECIEhG j S *Reston, James B_ *Reynolds, H. K............. Reynolds, J. Lacey._____..... *Richards, Robert Wea itn *Riges, Robert Li... ......... *Ring, William E _ Ripley, Josephine Bal, *Riseling. John J. Ww *Roberts, Chalmers M_______ *Roberts, Arthur S__________. *Rogers, Harold B Root, Georgiana Merrill SSR *Rogers, James T_ Rogers, Yeonne: et Rogers, Margaret J._._._______ aa Jack Bo... uo... *Ryan, Edward F *Safchick, Irwin.Le eas sds uh gn *Sakal, ’Yonee: erioi i ti *Sanders, Donald. Sarge, Richard H.___......... *Seali, Ji oir pe LL RE EE he Shirley HH... ...._.. *Scheleen, Joseph C_______.___ Schumm, Ruth Hilpony IE *Schwartz, Lloyd *Seott, Panl... obits oe *Seib, Charles B., ph Bl a *Sentner, David P Daily News Record, Retailing Daily, Women’s Wear Daily. The Copley Press, Inc., Springfield (Ill.) State Journal, Springfield (I1l.) State Reg-ister, Aurora (Ill.) Beacon-News, Joliet (I11.) Herald-News, Elgin (Ill.) Courier-News, San Diego (Calif.) Tribune, San Diego (Calif.) Union, Alhambra (Calif.) Post-Advocate, Monrovia (Calif.) News-Post, Redondo Beach (Calif.) Daily Breeze, San Pedro (Calif.) News-Pilot, Glendale (Calif.) News-Press, Culver City (Calif.) Star-News, Venice (Calif.) Vanguard, Burbank (Calif.) Review. Louisville Courier-Journal N.C. W.C. Nows Service... 1. Christian Science Monitor... __._________ Nashineton®Post 2 il ol Washington Post ii. ooo. su aiisieis. Associated Press______ ef Ra Ratesh 4 PRL ‘Washington Evening Star... oooo_.___ Wall Street Journal. (Coot io lilo Washington Times-Herald.._._____._..___.... London Dally Bxpress. Li7 iif wii 8 i. Philadelphia Bulletin. o.oo al i i... Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald. _______ Washington Poster sannst Bani inn = Tokyo Shinbun... 5 ai ce aaaast nites Associated Press... cui. cudbesudBn ane Harrisburg Evening News, Harrisburg Patriot, Long Island Press, Long Island Star-J ournal, Newark Star-Tedger, Staten Island Advance, Syracuse Herald-J ournal, Syracuse Post-Standard, Nassau Daily Review Star. Newport News (Va.) Daily Press, Rich-mond (Va.) News Leader. Dally Trafic Weorlducs. =. DallasMoming News...5 =. ___.. Daily News Record, Women’s Wear Daily, Retailing Daily. Post-Hall nt, Bangor (Maine) Daily Commercial, Indianapolis Commercial, Anchorage (Alaska) Daily Times. International News Service. _______________. Hearst Newspapers, Albany Times-Union, Baltimore News-Post, Baltimore Ameri-can, Boston Advertiser, Boston American, Boston Record, Chicago Herald--American, Detroit Times, Los Angeles Examiner, Los Angeles Herald-Express, Milwaukee Sentinel, New York Journal-American, New York Mirror, Oakland Post-En-quirer, Pittsburgh 'Sun-Telegraph, San Antonio Light, San Francisco Call-Bulle-tin, San Francisco Examiner, Seattle Post--Intelligencer. ou Dominion Dr., McLean, Zi Woodley Rd. 1515 Ogden St. 3318-A South Wakefield, Arlington, Va. 3506 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Va. 4604 Chevy Chase Blvd., Chevy Chase, Md. -1370 Rittenhouse St. 2141 I St. 3608 Park PI. . 6699 MacArthur Blvd. 11515 College View Dr., Spring, Md 3620T 3136 Sarin Ave. 4452 Q St. 2000 F' St. 28 Primrose St., Chevy Chase, Md. 2800 Quebec St. 1301 15th St. 200 Harvard Ave., Glen Echo. Md. 3207 Macomb St. 1417 Martha Pah Dr., Alexandria, 8584 Loony Hl Rd., Be- thesda,M 3850 a. St. 6431 Fairfax Rd., Chevy Chase, Md. 7610 Atwood St., District Heights, Md 2311 Pennsylvania Ave. 1405-A South Thomas St., Arlington, Va. 552 Beacon Rd., Silver Spring, Md. : 3409 Ashley Tr. 3604 Chesterbrook Rd. 5811 Wilmett Rd., Bethes- da, Md. 3331 Martha Custis Dr., Alexandria, Va. 3922 4th St. North, Arling- ton, Va. 1277 New Hampshire Ave. 2663 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 7508 Elmhurst St., District Heights, Md. 213 North Edgewood St., Arlington, Va. 1825 Summit Pl. Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Shacter, James D._....___._.__.. Shafier, Helen. ii. B....___.i. Shannon, Donald H._________ *Sharpe, Harry W.._o.oLi. .... *Shead, Walter A............ #Shoop, Dike... 2o--so = Shuster, Alvin... J. .....04 *Sims, Edward Howell__.____ Simmons, Henry T *Singerhoff, John A *Sisson, William D__________. *Slevin, Joseph R............. *Smith, Achsah Dorsey. ..... *Smith, A. Robert Smith, Mrs. Charles Brooks__ Smith, Denys. ri. vei weeuna *Smith, Douglas N..__._____. *Smith, Eric Sydney......__. *Smith, Hal Harrison________ *Smith, Merriman_______.___. *Smith, Stanley H. .......... Snipes, Roscoel ti io loo oo *Snyder, Harry P__ *Soresi, a *Stanford, Neal A_________._. *Starnes, Richard... .._._ *Stavisky, Samuel E_________ Siecle, Jack...io .ag . *Qtecle, John Load Loli. *Stephenson, Francis M______ *Sterner, Charles J. ._______.. *Stevens, Austin. ____________ *Stewart, Roy PP... Li... . Stimpson, George W_________ *Stokes, Thomas T._. 0 __: i *Stratton, CH. Cooo-io. |Strayer, Martha. .......__._.. Street, Daniel H StromaBlsers. looown, *Strout, Richard L........... *Stuart, Roger W._.......... *Stucki, Torenz.......vaeacids Paper represented United Press Associations. ..... .._..L...... Women’s National News Service____________ Western Reporters, Albuquerque Journal, Salt Lake City Deseret News, Tacoma News Tribune, Twin Falls Times News. United Press Associations. .................. Jacksonville Journal, Pensacola News- Journal, Frankfort State (Ky.) Journal, Panama City New Herald, Ocala Star Banner, De Land Sun News, West Palm Beach Times. Kansas: GltyiStar-velo i die Lo asin. Ja. New York Times. ol ciluwibabalid. Columbia (S. C.) State and Record, Orange- burg (8S. C.) Times-Democrat, Sumter Daily Item, Florence Morning News. Wall Street Journal Washington Post lo mid Josetouc Memphis Commercial Appeal ______________ New York Journal of Commerce. ‘Washington Times-Herald __________________ Eugene (Oreg.) Register-Guard, Longview (Wash.) Daily News, Bremerton (Wash.) Sun, Everett (Wash.) Daily Herald, Pendleton (Oreg.) East Oregonian. Wheeling Intelligencer, Fairmont (W. Va.) Times, Parkersburg (W. Va.) News, Elkins (W. Va.) Inter-Mountain, Hinton (W. Va.) Daily News, Point Pleasant (W. Va.) Register. London Daily Telegraph____________________ Cleveland Press, Columbus Citizen, Cincin- nati Post, Kentucky Post. London Dally Express... aio. . .o0. ul. New. York Pimes on onl Lungo .ouiliozs United Press Associations... o_o... Daily Traffic so olan it. World... United Press Associations __________________ Associated Press World Press. uddn densi United Press Associations. ................. Science Service...RI ERNE m8 J Christian Science Monitor. ________________. ‘Washington Daily News_______________..____ Washington Pest... sate lo bicil New York Herald Tribune._________________ United Press Associations... _.._..._....._. New York Dally News. cou. .D0otii0il. Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Co., Ltd. New York Timesso .ohto.Duos. 0 Daily Oklahoman and Oklahoma Times... San Angelo (Tex.) Times... . __.......... United Features Syndicate. ________________ New York Daily Compass... ti ol...1. Federated-Press. iio amin), J. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance _.______ ‘Washington Times Herald. ____.__________.. Topeka Daily Capital, Chester Times.______ ‘Washington Daily News._________________.. Dodge Daily Newspapers... cococeemnn Aftontidningen (Sweden) __._____________.__._ Residence 4201 Massachusetts Ave. 3639 Warren St. 2721 N St. 1445 Otis PI. 8019 Eastern Ave., Silver Spring, Md 3901 Connecticut Ave. 502 Rittenhouse St. 3522 North Edison St.. Ar- lington, Va. 1707 Columbia Rd. ai] Li Rd., Bethesda, 120 South Lee St., Alex-andria, Va. 1051 her Rd., Alex- andria, Va. 1716 22d St. 208 1st St. SE. 1650 Harvard St. 5010 Klingle St. 4437 34th St. South, Arling- ton, Va. 3217 Connecticut Ave. 1824 Jefferson Pl. 6609 31st St. 7209 Spruce Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 1601 Argonne PI. 127 Galveston St. SW. Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, Va. 108 West Underwood St., ET. Chase, Md. 3, Gaithersburg, Roti 3405 Ashley Terrace. 803-Gordon Ave., Falls Church, Va. 9307 Singleton Dr., Be- thesda, Md. 4200 18th St. 3219 Volta Pl. 8109 University Lane, Silver Spring, Md. 1328 South George DLason Drive, Arlington, 501 Franklin St., aris dria, Va. 10210 Grant Ave., Silver Spring, Md. George Washington Inn. 2019 Hillyer PI. 5618 Nebraska Ave. 2901 18th St. 2030 Hillyer PI. R. F. D. 2, Manor Club, Rockville, Md. The Burlington Hotel. 1851 Columbia Rd. 1539 18th St. 1555 Colonial Ter., Arling- ton, Va. 4517 Garfield St. 509 Gorman Ave., Laurel, Md. 2816 Cathedral Ave. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF Name *Suttle, Howard... ____.__..___ *Suzuhawa, Isami____________ *Sybert, Ralph. ....::.__L. *Sylvester, Arthur. ....._.... Talburt, H. M *Tarry »ayior, Frank E., Jr_: a: Thayer, Mary Van Rens- selaer. *Thels, J. -William. 2. cx... Theis, Paul A cri. io00ti5n *Thomas, Phillip: F........... *Thompson, Glenn.______..____ Thompson, Jo... gore.L. *Thompson, John W,, Jr_____ *Thoren, Ame... i. .cotm.- *Thornburg, Dick. :.lueo. abe *Thuermer, Angus MacLean. *Timmons, Bascom N________ *Todd, Laurence _....._.._._.. *Torrey, Reginald F__________ *Tragle, J. Frank... .c.:o..... Trassell, Tait... 01... *Tucker, Ray... iu... 598.. Tufty, Esther Van Wagoner. _ *Tully, Andrew F., Jr________ *Turner, Kenneth H_ ____.._. * Twitty, Thomas: -..0. 5... Tyson, David Otto... -... Ullstein, Anthony... ___....__ THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Paper represented Residence Jackson (Miss.) Daily News, Meridian 3910 Southern Ave. SE. (Miss.) Star, Natchez (Miss.) Times, McComb (Miss.) Enterprise-Journal, Shreveport Journal, Opelousas (La.) Daily Iberian, Texarkana Gazette and News, Hot Springs (Ark.) New Era and ‘Sentinel-Record, El Dorado (Ark.) News and Times, Helena (Ark.) World, Camden (Ark.) News, Stuttgart (Ark.) Leader, Magnolia (Ark.) Banner-News, De Queen (Ark.) Citizen. PORVOO ASIN no ihe eet Phra mene ia Hotel National. Baltimore News-Post......___........_J..... 3037 Harlem Ave. Balti- more, Md. Newark Evening News... _______._._._...__... 2236 Massachusetts Ave. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance________ 100 Kennedy Dr., Ken- wood, Md. New York Dally News: o_o...i C.l. 3060 16th St. Christian Science Monitor________..________ 703 South Royal St., Alex- andria, Va. Associated Press. ir occ mma smi hn = 4241 Forest Lane, Falls Church, Va. Detroit NewR. breI am abl aes 2704 Dumbarton Ave. International News Service. ___________.____ 10 grenvile Dr., Silver Spring,M Daily News Record, Retailing Daily, 1237 M A Women’s Wear Daily. Washington Dally News... >... ..........i= 901 Posy Dr., Silver Sprin Cincinnati Enquifers. «oh cao tn onc ll 2 East , St., Chevy Chase, Md. Baton Rouge (La) State-Times, Morning 820 Connecticut Ave. Advocate, Cincinnati Times Star. ‘Washington Evening Star______________.____ 4605 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Expression, Stockholm, Sweden_______.______ 5329 16th St. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... 2480 16th St. Associated Press... o/b oo. oidaaTalY 3254 QGunston Rd., Alex- andria, Va. Houston Chronicle, San Antonio Express, 1316 30th St. Dallas Times-Herald, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Tulsa World, Nashville Ten-nessean, Shreveport Times, New Orleans States, ‘Arkansas Democrat, Youngstown Vindicator, Raleigh News and Observer, Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times, Amarillo News, Chattanooga News Free Press, Philadelphia News, Birmingham News, Wilmington (Del.) Journal Every Eve-ning, Wilmington (Del.) News, Cleveland News. Tass Telegraph Agency of the U.S. S. R____ 4805 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. Gannett News Service... uo. i.-loa oo 1732 North Troy St., Arling-ton, Va. Associated Press... .. . ok dens de ss 600 Dale Silver cestode D Dr., Spring, d. St. Louis Post Dispateh. = oi =o Burlington Hotel. Chicago Tribune... oo ea fo Sesit oeuddnd 2135 R St. New York Times: . ....l icici ocb=tri-ta 4900 Western Ave. Si Petersborg TIM, oo. ooo inna ds 4900 Western Ave. McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ____._______ 6308 Hillcrest Pl., Chevy Chase, Md. Michigan League of Home Dailies, Central 207 North Royal St., Alex-Press Association, Pontiac (Mich.) Daily andria, Va. Press, Port Huron (Mich.) Times Herald, Owosso (Mich.) Argus Press, Midland (Mich.) Daily News, Holland (Mich.) Sentinel, Capital Times (Madison, Wis.), Los Angeles Mirror, Anniston (Ala. ) Star, Dear Publications, The Overseas (Frank-furt, Germany). Seripps--Howard Newspaper Alliance_._..___ 16 Taylor St., Chevy Chase, Md. Atlanta Journal: cisccn i cast Junaid. Decatur Pl, Hyattsville, Md. : New York Herald Tribune_____.. I AIL 4329 36th St., Arlington, Va. Associated Press. ...i2i so wotdilooa 1670 34th St. United Press Association... -oc-coecaccacaaan 1308 Massachusetts Ave. 90808°—82—2 Congressional Directory MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION —Continued Name Paper represented Residence Umstead, William L_________ *Vaccaro, Ernest B........... *Vaille, Frank W._..... ....... *van der Linden, Frank.______ *Van Dernoot, Harry M_.____ Van De Water, Marjorie_.___ *van Vranken, Jean.-..._____.. *Varn, William O *Viglietta, Andrew. ..__._.___ Virden, Euphemia._._________ *Vogt, John McFarland______ von Kahler, Anita_____....... *Waggoner, Walter H. _______ *Waithman, Robert. _._._.____ *Waldrop, Frank C *Walker, Norman... .......... *Walsh, Robert K__ *Walter, James: =. 2...27. Walz, Joys Roel Ward, Annette Culler. _______ Ward, PagltWi, ir *Warden, Philip:L......_.... *Warner, James BE___._._.____ *Warren, Don:S...... coo. *Warren, Ernest G........... *Warren, Lucian O__________. Werner, Alfred B_______.____. *Weagt, Dielc SU Solr i Wharton, Elizabeth *White, William S____ *Whitehead, Don..._. *Whitney, Robert F..._...... Whittles,John'B.-.._.__..: *Wigging, James B........... Wiggins, Patricia Ann________ *Wilcove, Raymond... _.__._. Wilco, UaVa. cocacaceoias *Williams, Eric Lloyd..______ *Williams, Gladstone_._______ Williams, Juanita. ___.._.___. *Williams, J. L Wilson, Tivle:C:___..-.. .... *Wilson, Norman..._._____.. * Wingo, James Gi. “of *Winship, Thomas... ...._. International News Service -___________.___ Associated Press: ft cL Luo dR Associated Press...il oid Co Wilmington (N. C.) Star-News United Press Associations.....__..____-.____ Selenee Servicer ti aad International News Service. ---__...___..._ Associated Press... oaoo inne on Harrisburg Evening News, Harrisburg Patriot, Long Island Press, Long Island Star-Journal, Newark Star-Ledger, Staten Island Advance, Syracuse Herald-Journal, Syracuse Post-Standard, Nassau Daily Review Star. Tass Telegraph Agency ofthe U.S. S. R_____ Washington City News Service ____________ London News Chronicle. .....vaeerewe- coe ‘Washington Times-Herald._________________ Associated Progg a bd a a veut Associated Press. fC eet N. C. W. C. News Service LE Evening Star________. ‘Washington Times-Herald New York Times, cio Site oh oo Women’s Wear Daily, Daily News Record, Retailing Daily. Baltimore Sum = a Chicago Tribune J i013 AMALSoin New York Herald Tribune. .._______________ ‘Washington Evening Star_.__.________..____ Assoeinted Presa v2 id aot London Daily .C Herald... 2...i... International News Service. ________________ United Press Associations... ...__.__.__ New York 'Bimes. ro 0800 «joc is ASSocioted Prose ranean is otl Washington Post io 22020 wm Uliana, United Press Associations... _.___..__. ‘Ameriean'’Banker Daily... Colo. South African Press Association. ___________ Atlanta Constitution, Fresno (Calif.) Bee, Modesto (Calif.) Bee, Sacramento Bee. Clopley-Press, Ine... 10 2 0b, hl ie Kansas City Star coolantsWoes oa » David Lawrence Associates. _______.______... Minneapolis Star and Tribune, Des Moines Register and Tribune. United Press Associations. ___________.___._.. Reuters-Australian Associated Press. ...__. Des Moines Register and Tribune, Minne- apolis Star and Tribune. Manila Evening News. _ ooo. Washington Post i .....ooenmin ame mira 5624 7th Rd. South, Arling-ton, Va. 8003 Eastern Ave., Silver Spring, ’ Md 24 Farragut Pl. 3602 55th Ave., Hyatts- ville, Md. 23 Galveston St. SW. 1800 North Tuckahoe St., East Falls Church, Va. 2430 Pennsylvania Ave. 4711 River Road, Chevy Chase, Md. Congressional Hotel. 716 Varnum St. 1921 North Upton St., Ar- lington, Va. 2900 Adams Mill Rd. 25 Keswick St., Garrett Park, Mad. 3828 Livingstone St. 4900 Loughboro Rd. 1043 North Manchester St., Arlington, Va. 3628 Van Ness St. 1013 Upshur St. NE. 2222 Q St. 4403 Tuckerman St., Uni- versity Park, Md. 403 South Lee St., Alex-andria, Va. 400 Bashford Lane, Alex-andria, Va. 4711 Hunt Ave., Chevy Chas d. 2800 Ridee Bond Dr., Alex- andria,V 4000 Cat foal Ave. 1443 Spring Rd. 4336 Riv er Rd. 5505 Sonoma Rd., Bethesda, Md 3207 Cleveland Ave. 9919 Tenbrook Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 2) 16th St., Silver Spring, d. 1209 L St. 5851 North Four Mile Run Dr., A rlington, Va. 417 Belmont St. 5223 Reno Rd. 3900 7th St. South, Arling-ton, Va. Rt. 2, Falls Church, Va. 6724 Lak e St., Falls Church, V a. 2218 Wyoming Ave. 2218 Wyoming Ave. 510 Fleetwood St. Silver Spring, Md. 1421 29th St. 2817 Woodley Rd. 1919 Massachusetts Ave. 1920 S St. 610 Albee Bidg. Brookev ille, Md. 3242 Quesada St. 2336 Massachusetts Ave. S72L Ordway St. 1, Silver Spring, Md. 3907 W St. 3915 47th St. Press Galleries MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Paper represented Residence *Wolfe, Bennett. ............. Associated Prossy oo x i 4811 Chevy Chase Blvd., Chevy Chase, Md. *Wolff, George R___........... Trance Presses as Sie soba hy Ta Clarksville, Md. *Wood, Lewis_._.._._ NeW. York TIMes. fuuii fun atinh bh vm wh be 25569 Waterside Dr. Woolley, Geoffrey De... i. | -T.ondon Times... oi. uo ve ran 1900 Q St. Wooton, Paul... .......0.0.. New Orleans Times Picayune _.______.__.___._ 3016 Tilden St. *Wright; James... ........; Buffalo Evening News. ___f_____.___._.._.._ 3115 44th St. *Wright, J. Newman_._______ Passaic Herald-News: ahi oF oy 3806 Kanawha St. *Yap, DiosdadoM _{__...._.. Manila.Chroniele---2. > lc a 710 Rittenhouse St. “Yost; Pagal Mc. oe i Associated Press. oor it a anh 4608 Drexel Rd., College Park, Md. Young, Charlotte. ........_.. Congressional Quarterly News Features..___ 121 Hamilton St. *Young, Joseph... ..ccicuinait Washington Evening Star. _______________. B13] Laura Dr., Falls Church, a. *Young, Robert C............ Chicago Tribune. oii ie co a, 3601 Porter St. =Zagoris, Sam... oo... Washington Post... cron i iments sas gars St., Hyatts- ville, " *Zielke, George R......_._____ Pittsburgh Post Gazette, Toledo Blade_____ 149] Seinary Rd., Alexan-ria, Va. *Zimmerman, William E_____ International News Service. ________.__.._. 257 wos Ave., Lanham ark, NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN PRESS GALLERIES (Phones: House Press Gallery, NAtional 2437; Senate Press Gallery, NAtional 0618) [NOoTE.—e., evening; m., morning; S., Sunday] Paper represented Name Office ABC Newspapers (Madrid)...____________ Abilene (Tex.) Reporter News_____.___.___ Aftontidningen (Sweden)... ______._____ Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal (€.)-.----__- Albany Knickerbocker News Albany Times-Union... ____-_-:_ Albuquerque Journal... 0 ____.__-ol Albuquerque (N. Mex.) Tribune (e.)------Alhambra (Calif.) Post-Advocate__.....___ AmarilloNews(m.)_....———_—-.----_-_.. Amarillo (Tex.) 4BITE Peper eraoy ees ft American Banker Daily... American Metal Market... ._.._....-.._.. Anchorage (Alaska) Daily Times .......__ Anchorage (Alaska) News. ocean Aneta News Agency Ann Arbor (Mich. 5 News (@.): .ccceceei. ANNIStoN (AIR) Star 2. ami narae- Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent (€.).__-..__ Ares Presg (Mich) oon on Se oo Arizona Republie..... i... Arkansas Demoerati(e., 8.) ocean ooo Arkansas Gazeties. ney oo Associated Negro Press. . .....covmeeveennn-Associated Newspapers, Ltd., of Australia. Associated Press iret sia J sae Jose M. Massi Elizabeth 8. Carpenter....... Leslie E. Carpenter_________ Else Strom. lio Sn Paul B. Leach... _..0.0c Radford E. Mobley, Jr...... Thomas 8S. Haney ..........--Peter Lesagors.. oC20 D0 Edvin A. 1ghey. ......._._.. James M. Haswell. _________ Paull. Martin =... = David Sentner.___ walls William P. Flythe EE Pat MUNIOe. oi Donald H. Shannon_________ Ruth Finney... =... .-: Robert W. Richards. ______. Frank J. Macomber_________ Frank. Ruest........ Bascom N. Timmons. ._____ Elizabeth S. Carpenter.____._ Leslie E. Carpenter_________ TF Vo Wileox. ov oweic. John H. Donoghue__________ Wilfrid Redmond. .________. Robert: 8S. Allen. ............ PaplScotbn of i Alice Frein Johnson__.______ Simon K William F. Pyper Esther Van Wagoner Tufty-Joseph A, Dear. oo io Maurice Boehl.________.__.. Mary James Cottrell ________ Ester Von Wagoner Tufty.. Joseph A. Dear_ ____________ Maurice S. Boehl__________. Winifred Nelson Gall Bascom N. Timmons_______ Mary C. Lusby Elizabeth S. eit a Leslie E. Carpenter. ._______ Alice A. Dunnigan__________ LeanderE. Fitzgerald _._____ . L.B 3 BeBnglel oor anion Elton OC, Tay... ~~ 1. Ernest G. Warren___________ Raymond J. Crowley. _____. Edwin B. Haakinson__._.___. Rarl Bagman... W. F. Arbogast______ Ernest B. Vaccaro Francis]. Kelly c-> Sterling F. Green__.________. Herman'R. Allen..._.. Gardner Bridge...____. Nn 711 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 1555 Colonial Terrace, Arling- ton, Va. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1201 National Press Bldg. 1201 National Press Bldg. 1013 Thirteenth St. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 607 Albee Bldg. 607 Albee Bldg. 811 American Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 3000 39th St. 2921 28th St. 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 1915 14th St. 1251 National Press Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. 558 Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Associated Press—Continued._...._________ Margaret Kernodle_.________ Star Bldg. Arthur S.Roberts...._.... Bldg. . Star Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Edward HH, i SRT oR Star Bldg. JilfrankTragle _..._._.._.. Star Bldg. James Marlow... __..___..__. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Willard H. Mobley Star Bldg. Marvin L. Arrowsmith_____ Star Bldg. Bennett Wolfe... ........... Star Bldg. Norman Walker ___________ Star Bldg. Harrison B. Humphries_____ Star Bldg. SigrideAmnesyel Lo Star Bldg. Morris M. Cleavenger_____. Star Bldg. JamestCaMunn.l.._........ Star Bldg. Norman Carignan_________. Star Bldg. Donald Sanders... _....___. Star Bldg. John:Sealil ood... coun. Star Bldg. Arthun't. Edson... Star Bldg. John Chadwick... .......... Star Bldg. Frank BsTaylor, Ir...vvve-Star Bldg. Rowland Evans, Jr________. Star Bldg. Aired EeWall.............. Star Bldg. Robert E. Geiger. __..__..... Star Bldg. R. Gordon Brown._____..___. Star Bldg. WilllamO., Varn... ........... Star Bldg. W. Joynes Macfarlan_______ Star Bldg. Clarke Beach. ...o .._.... Star Bldg. Edward E. Bomar_____._.____ Star Bldg. Ruth Baldwin Cowan. ._... Star Bldg. Roger: D..Greene. ............... Star Bldg. Vern Haugland... ...« Star Bldg. DPillon:Graham... ..........« Star Bldg. Jack E. Rutledge... ________ Star Bldg. Harry P. Snyder... Star Bldg. Francis B. Carey _........... Star Bldg. Don Whitehead. . Star Bldg. Wilbur Jennings. ........... Star Bldg. OC. Yates McDaniel _.____. Star Bldg. Joseph C. Goodwin___._.__. Star Bldg. B. 1. Livingstone........... Star Bldg. Ge M, Kelly... cols Star Bldg. Joseph W. Hall, Jr... ...... Star Bldg. David Otto Tyson ...._.... Star Bldg. Fred S. Hoffman... ........... Star Bldg. Edward F. Creagh. __.__.__ Star Bldg. Frank O’Brien, Jr__________. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Star Bldg. AB Brymcit. Laan Star Bldg. JohnH. Ramps.............. Star Bldg. H. Lee Garrett. .onvrvron--Star Bldg. Angus MacLean Thuermer. Star Bldg. Charles H. Guptell___._.____ Star Bldg. Russell Brines>_.........__: Star Bldg. Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution (m.)___________ Gladstone Williams.________ 1295 National Press Bldg. Atlanta Daily World oo 2 00. zi. so Louis B.lsautier............ 2007 15th St Atlanta (Ga.):Journgli(e.; S.).....cvcnvne-.-W. McNeil Lowry.______.__ 614 Albee Bldg. 614 Albee Bldg. Aurora (I1l.) Beacon-News_ _______.._.____ Robert W. Richards. _ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank J. Macomber. i 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank H.RKuest.............. 1200 National Press Bldg. Australian Newspapers Service________.___ Sydney R. Heymanson_._.__ 1196 National Press Bldg. Baltimore (Md.) Evening Sun____________ George W. Combs________._ 1214 National Press Bldg. PhiliniPotter-o. oo an2 1214 National Press Bldg. Baltimore (Md.) News-Post (€.)-ccoooooo_. David Sentner.............. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P.iBFlythe =o. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Ralph J. Sybert............. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Baltimore (Md. Suni(m. Yo onal Dewey L. Fleming__________ 1214 National Press Bldg. PaulW. Ward... .......... 1214 National Press Bldg. William H. Y. Enighiog, Jr: 1214 National Press Bldg. Frank R.:K ent... ..... _c 1214 National Press Bldg. Gerald E. Ro ChE 1214 National Press Bldg. 1214 National Press Bldg. 1214 National Press Bldg. 1214 National Press Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued + Paper represented Name Office Bangor Daily Commercial. ________________ Bangor Dally News... accicozee Baton Rouge State-Times, Morning Ad- vocate. Battle Creek Enquirer & News__....._.____ Bay City (Mich.) Times (e., 8.) _oo—-__. i Beacon News... 0 dio. ooo Beaumont (Tex.) Enterprise cocoa Beaumont (Tex.) Journal. .... ocean... Bell Syndicate... uot toils fenmsmatatd Berkshire Evening Eagle. ___o.cocoaeaoaa_ Beverly (Mass,) Times... .....ccnconnnaas Binghamton {(N. Y.)Sun......_...._..... Binghamton (N. Y.) Press... _.___... Birmingham News..._...._...... 0 Birmingham Post Booth Newspapers of Michigan.____.____. Boston: Advertiser... ... 0 0 caacannana Boston American... oi 0. adil Boston (Mass.) Globe (m., €.). occa Boston Post Boston Record... ota. ies ainiannne Bremerton (Wash) San... 0... ccccneaeaa-Bridgeport Post Telegram... _._.......... Brockton (Mass.) Enterprise (e.)_______.__ Buffalo (N. Y.) Courier Express (m.)...._. Buffalo Evening News... .ocivccnnnennn Burbank (Calif.) Review. occceeeoo___ Burlington (Vt.) Free Press. oc occcceeneo-- Camden Courier Post. oi. ........: Camden (Ark) News «> 1 1° _...occacuin Canadian Press... ou tii tonneau Cedar Rapids (Iowa) Gazette. ._._.._...... Central News Agency of China._.__________ Central Press... ci5abitdLins AUG Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette. ____._....... Charlotte (N. C.) Observer (m.)__..___.____ Chattanooga Free Press (€.)-occa. Chattanooga Timesuic0. ira oo tose Chester’Times. oboa eannt LS Chicago (T11.) Daily News (€.)ccccemccennan Chicago Herald-American (.) o.oo... Chicago Sun-Times 110: fin joo haa. Chicago (TIl.) Tribune. =. = =: Co Robert S.:Allen......couun.-Paul'Scofbi ste Bulkley Griffin. .........-.. Isabel Kinnear Griffin..__.._ Donald R. Larrabee_______.. JOP homMpPSON ete es. co i ce Sarah McClendon... Elizabeth Carpenter. .______ Leslie E Carpenter... __. DorisiFleeson.........-.:--- Drew: Pearson..........-----Frederick G. Blumenthal. __ Thomas McNamara... Jack N. Anderson........... Edward J. Michelson. ______ Bulkley Griffin............. Isabel Kinnear Griffin.______ Donald R. Larrabee..._..... Stephen V. Feeley..._______ Paul L, Morin... Mark Foote... lovee William'P. Pyper... ......... DavidSentner:..___ .__..... William P. Flythe_________. DavidSentner! _...___.._... William P. Flythe..________ Gould Lincoln:......... .... Leslie E. Carpenter-________ Elizabeth S. Carpenter__.___ David Sentner............... William P. Blythe. ________ A. Robert Smith............ : Carey Cronan....___..___._._ Bulkley Griffin ©... Isabel Kinnear Griffin.______ Donald R. Larrabee_..._____ Lucian C. Warren._._______. Stephen V. Feeley. _________ James L. Wright______._____. Francis C. Fortune. ________ Irvin DD. Foosgsi: 7: Arthur Leonard Davis______ Robert W. Richards..___.__._ Frank J. Macomber_________ Prank 'H. Kuest......... Vonda Bergman..... James J. Butler.............. Howard Suttle............-. George Kitchen.........._.. Bert, Kemmerer. ..........-... Chien-San Lee... ocean... Esther Van Wagoner Tufty._ JosephA.'Deay. oo... Maurice G. Boehl___________ Elizabeth Chilton Murray. . Mary James Cottrell ._______ Bascom N. Timmons... _____ Charles L. Bartlett_.________ CUE Stratton... coven Paul'R.iTeaeh.............. Radford E. Mobley, Jr...___ Edwin A. Lahey. __________ Thomas S. Haney........... James M. Haswell. _________ Peter: Lisagor..... oven --David Sentner..........oo---William P. Flythe.......... Carleton Kent... ......... 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1393 National Press Bldg. 720 Albee Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1192 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 1228 National Press Bldg. 1313 29th St. 1313 29th St. 1313 29th St. 1313 29th St. 1170 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1389 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 723 Star Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 208 First St., SE. 894 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1389 National Press Bldg. 1389 National Press Bldg. 1207 National Press Bldg. 1207 National Press Bldg. 1207 National Press Bldg. 1207 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 233 2d St. SE. 1277 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 330 Star Bldg. 3051 N St. 1186-1188 National Press Bldg. 1186-1188 National Press Bldg. 1186-1188 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. Fairfax, Va. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1020 National Press Bldg. The Burlington Hotel. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1245 National Press Bldg. 1245 National Press Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Chicago (I11.) Tribune—Continued_. _____. Chinese News. Service... cocoon Chippewa Falls (Wis.) Herald Telegram._... Christian Science Monitor (Boston) (e.)._- Cincinnati (Ohio) Enquirer (m.)...._...__ Cincinnati (Ohio) Post (€.).....-eo... Cincinnati (Ohio) Times-Star (e.)--_..-.__ Cleveland (Ohio) News. _. _________.____ Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer (m.)__..__._ Cleveland (Ohio) Press (€.) o-oo. Clinton Jowa):-Herald_.....-7... Columbia (8S. C.) State and Record Columbus (Ohio) Citizen (e.)___ ______.____ Congressional Quarterly News Features.__ Consolidated Hearst Publications_________ Consolidated News Features. .____________ Copley Pros, ING. i. canes de tune ......ovmn Culver City (Calif.) Star-News____________ Daily Metal -coceavuine Reporter... nov Daily Mill Stock Reporter. _________._____._ Pally News cc..cnu (Mieh.)..:. bl Daily News Record (New York) (m.)_.___ Daily Variety (Calif.). 52 cocci oo Dallas (Tex.) News. (m.)-— oc... Dallas (Tex.) Times Herald (e., S.)_______. David Lawrence Associates... __.__.__._ Danville (Ill.) Commercial News.__________ Davenport (Iowa) Democrat (e.)__._..____ Davenport Times (6). oo. .ovn to a... Dayton:Daily News. (e.).-.---.. = Dear Publications: «oo 5 ii iii ‘William T'. Moore. _.._._... Lloyd H. Norman__________ PhilipW.Dodd .............. Leland S. Forrester. __..___. Robert C. Young... y Joseph/F.Hearst............ Arthur Sears Henning___.___ Joseph'Chiang.............. Mary B. Reedy. ...........- Roscoe Drummond... Richard L. Strout__________. Neal A. Stanford _____._.____ Josephine B. Ripley_________ Roland Sawyer---.________.__ EmilileTavel... .....__.__.. Glenn Thompson... .._..__ Douglas Smith... ......._.. Robert W. Crater... MorrisiD. Ervin. .......... JO: ThompsSOn./: cov cvvvcvae Bascom N. Timmons._..___. James Free oro...0. Phil G: Goulding... ......... Douglas Smith =... Robert W. Crater............ Harry: Lando. .-..cccon Edward H. Sims. ........ Douglas Smith. .......... Robert: W. Crater........... Henrietta M. Poynter .__.__ ClhairJohmson.c.-...- John R. Fryklund... ...... Lorraine Nelson_.__.______... Emmett Bedford. _._..____. LeRoy S. Mattingly. ___.___ Charlotte:Young............. George Rothwell Brown. .__ John Franklin Carter. ______ Robert W. Richards________ Frank J. Macomber._._...__. Frank'H. Kuest.... ........ Juanita Williams____________ RobertW. Richards... ___... Frank J. Macomber_________ Franlc HH, Kuest_.. William'J. Boyd... ...-.-... William J. Boyd Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. Joseph AsDear:............ Maurice A. Boehl. _________. Harry E. Resseguie._..._.._ Lloyd M. Schwartz. ._____._ John. Ti. Norman............ Walter Johnson. _ Annette Ward. _.__.._______ RobertrABarrs t.. ... Mary Ni: Bafley ._.......... Arthur Garel .......conevn- MarvinnCaplan:-........_.. Miriam G. Leigh. .......... Rosaline Mae Kater_____.___ Florence S. Lowe _ __________ Herman A. Lowe___........ Walter C. Hornaday .__..._._ Ruth Frances Schumm __.___ Bascom N. Timmons.____... Norman KX. Baxter... William S. Fairfield.________ W. McNeil Lowry. _.._.._.. Richard Call, Jr. >. ........ Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ Joseph'A. Dear... 5 Maurice G. Boehl.._.__.__.. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 815 Albee Bldg. 100 Woodridge Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1293 National Press Bldg. 1387 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1393 National Press Bldg. 1393 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1365 National Press Bldg. 1060 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 1156 19th St. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. 2330 Massachusetts Ave. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 513 Bond Bldg. 513 Bond Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. 1292 National Press Bldg. 1292 National Press Bldg. 620 Albee Bldg. 620 Albee Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1241 24th St. 1241 24th St. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1604 K St. 894 National Press Bldg. 614 Albee Bldg. 614 Albee Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. 997 National Press Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office De Land (Fla.) Sun News_.____........... Denver Post (@.) 0.0. 10.2 Sill ceaaaiian] De Queen (Ark) Citizen... ...........:.... Der Bund _.._ _._..... (Switzerland)... Das Maines (Iowa) Register and Tribune m., e.). Detroit (Mich.) Free Press (M.)_ ooo. Detroit (Mich.) News (e., 8.) cccovcommaaan Detroit Times... ooiodi cai iloi semi iiase Deutsche Press Agentur. ___________..___. Dodge Daily Newspapers... ococcooooo.. Duluth Hevaldy boo i000, Ul ssn sia Duluth News-Tribune. ........ cco... Editorial Research Reports. _____________ Elzin (111.) Courier-News..._.. ............ Elkins (W. Va.) Inter-Mountain_____._.___ Elmira (N. Y.) Advertiser_._..._ Elmira (N. Y.) Star-Gazette Elmira Star-Telegram... ...co.-o. El Dorado (Ark.) News and Times.._.____ El Mundo (San Juan, P. R.) El Paso (Tex.) Herald-Post (€.)_..__.._.___ EX Paso: (Tex.) Times. 2. ora. Endicott (N. Y.) Daily Bulletin_____._____ BricPimes (Pa) sua iis 0 ool foions Eugene (Oreg.) Register Guard.____.______ Evansville (Ind.) Press (e., S.).. _....._.__ Everett Daily Herald Exchange Telegraph Co. (Ltd.), London, England. Expression, Stockholm, Sweden. __________ Fairbanks (Alaska) News-Miner__._______ Fairmont (W. Va.) Times (m.).._...._.___ Fall River (Mass.) Herald News___.__..__ Farmington Times: 5. La Federated PowEE ru Oh Lin Film Daily (N.Y Flint (Mich.) Journal (SBN Lani Florence Morning News Florida Times Union... .....oiois Fort Worth (Tex.) Star Telegram (m., e.)__ Fort-Worth (Tex.) Presse.) cou. Promee: Presses La ols or nd Frankfort (Ky.) State Journal ____________ Fresno (Calif.) Bee (€.).-ccoiocoeooo. oo Gadsden (Ala.)-Fimes. .. 2..."0 Gannett News Service... ooo. General Features Corporation. ....._____.. Glendale (Calif.) News-Press... coo... ‘Walter A. Shead.____...____ Barnet: NOVeris.....nvowiien Howard Suiile....... Clark R. Mollenhoff________ MarrMecGaifin._....2 2 Paal BR. Leach. oo .......... Radford E. Mobley, Jr..._.. Thomas S. Haney........... Potor Lisagor. ol oo James M., Haswell ._________ Martin S. Hayden_________. fii Rensselaer Thaye: Dory P. O’Connor.....-... David Sentner:. ...........0. William P. Flythe........ Oscar W. iy rn Fa Robert W. Richards. _.___.. Frank J. Macomber.__._____. Frank H. Kuest Mrs, Charles Brooks Smith. Paul L. ay i Ln Stephen V. Feeley. .________ A, Robert Smith_..._...7] Daniel M. Kidney..._._____ A. Di ohets Smith Loe Swi ArneThoren oo... Alice Frein Johnson_________ Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith. Bulkley Griffin... ........ Isabel Kinnear Griffin______ Donald R. Larrabee... _____. Stephen V. Feeley... _....__ Jom B: Stone i. James J. Buatler............. Mark Feolel Loan Lo UR William FP. Pyper........... Edward Howell Sims Triman Pelt... Bascom N. Timmons. Edward Jamieson_____._____. Marshall McNeil. __________ Andre J. Rabacke..._...___. George R. Wolff. ___________ Jean Pavidson_.............. Henri de Turenne._......__. Anita von Kahler........___ Walter A. Shead............ Gladstone Williams________. Edward H. Dickson. _...... Tleanor Nanee........o.---. Paul M Reginald F. Torrey....._._.. Kermit E. Hill William A. Garrett __....._. James T'. Rogers... ......... Edgar Ansel Mowrer.....___ Robert W. Richards. _______ Frank J. Macomber.________ Prank: TF. Kuest. ..-..i.ic0i. 1057 National Press Bldg. 993 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 2816 Cathedral Ave. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 904 Colorado Bldg. 904 Colorado Bldg. 2704 Dumbarton Ave. 648 Munsey Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 4201 Massachusetts Ave. 532 Standard Oil Bldg. 532 Standard Oil Bldg. 622 Albee Bldg. 622 Albee Bldg. 1205 19th St. 1205 19th St. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1650 Harvard St. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 317 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1192 National Press Bldg. 7005 8th St. 1228 National pros Bldg. 208 First St. SE 1013 13th St. 208 First St. SE. 1091 National Press Bldg. 5329 16th St. 3000 39th St. 1650 Harvard St. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1389 National Press Bldg. 856 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 1060 National Press Bldg. 614 Albee Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 914 National Press Bldg. 914 National Press Bldg. 914 National Press Bldg. 914 National Press Bldg. 914 National Press Bldg. 1057 National Press Bldg. 1295 National Press Bldg. 1295 National Press Bldg. Congressional Hotel. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 3301 Garfield St. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Globe Syndicate j.ocioi 20s y ile aes Grand Rapids (Mich.) Herald_____________ Grand Rapids (Mich.) Press (€or icant Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette (e.)__.____ Greensboro (IN. C.) Daily News (m.)______ Greenville (S. C.) News-Piedmont________ Grote Provinciale Dagbladen (Nether- lands). Hagerstown (Md.) Herald Mail. __________ Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot & Evening News. Hartford (Conn.) Courant (m.)-.._.___.____ Hartford (Conn.) Timesi(e.)--c---.--=--.--Haverhill (Mass.) Gazette (e.) = --———-—_.__ Hearst: Newspapers. oc alii iniaaaca Helena (Ark. Werld crioo roounad iio Hinton (W. Va.) Daily News... _......_._. Holyoke (Mass.) Transeript-Telegram (e.)- HonoluluiAdvertiser-sis 000 L...___Jie Honolulu Star-Bulletin (e.) ooo.____ Hot Springs-(Ark.) New Era and Sentinel-Record. ; Houston (Tex.) Chronicle (e., S.) coo —___ Houston (Tex. ) Post coil 2 00s ae Houston (Tex.) Presse.) io i ovreeee TI Popoloit. cgi feemiie Ole tenner nnn Tl Progresso (N. Yi). Loti oreo Indianapolis Commercial ._________________ Indianapolis (Ind.) News (€.)---oo_.._.____ Indianapolis (Ind.) Star-Indianapolis (Ind.) Times (€.)--—cooceaooo-International News Service... ooo. Monte F. Bourjaily__.______ Marietta Dake... ......... Milt Dean Bill. _........... Mark Boote, ou t..-lotaos William F. Pyper..... 0... Mary James Cottrell. ______ W. A. Hildebrand _ __.._____ Bruce O. Jolly... ......... Mary James Cottrell ._______ Peter G. J. Xorteweg._._... Stephen L. Debalta_________ Andrew J. Viglietta_ ________ James J. Butler... .......... Bulkley L..Griffin.___...... Isabel Kinnear Griffin_ Donald R. Larrabee_..______ David Sentner______________ William P. Flythe...___.____ Bert Mills. dosti. caiinaca Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith _ Bulkley Grifin:............ Isabel Kinnear Griffin.______ Donald R. Larrabee._.______ Edward Jamieson___________ PFrank:Hewlett.t..........-: Radford E. Mobley, Jr. ._.__ Howard Suttle.............. Mary: GC. Lusby........ dic Norman W. Baxter..________ Robert V.Johnson_._._____. Marshall MeNeil.__________ Ulpio:Minuecci.............. Drew: PearsoN...-...cqiavva- Benjamin R. Cole.......___. Benjamin R.Cole._...__..__ Daniel M. Kidney ..._.__.._. William K. Hutchinson_____ Arthur F. Hermann________ Frank Bo Allen... .......... Emily Belser. 0 ..c...oco. John: Ni; Booth: x... Robert EiClark............ Felix Cotten..............-.. John David Druckenbrod... Allan). Poneh. =... Darrell Garwood. ....._.__. Harold Gordon.............. Irving H.-Gordon. ............. Joseph U. Henshaw_________ Edwin L. Hoffman Martha Kearney ......._._.. William J. XKerwin__________ Arthur Rranish. ............ Jamesilee, Ire. eens Earle’ Marekres. vce... RoseMeKee.......___...i%: Robert G.-Nixon...-.....__. Charles:!B. Seib, Jr........... William-Pheisi tonne William L. Umstead. __.____ Jean Van Vranken..____.___ Kenneth F. Weiss___._______ Raymond Wilcove__._______ William Zimmerman._._____ 4421 Alton Pl. 2514 4th St. NE, 720 Albee Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 1230 National Press Bldg. 2805 35th St. Falls Church, Va. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1673 Roberts Lane, Falls Church, Va. 1300 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1037 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1224 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 1850 Harvard St. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 317 National Press Bldg. 1286 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 317 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1269 Holbrook Ter. NE. 1313 29th St. 1204 National Press Bldg. 1204 National Press Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. 1013 13th St. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 T'imes-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. 602 Times-Herald Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Irish Independent (Ireland). ______________ Ithaca (N. Y.) Journal Jackson (Miss.) Daily News... __._._..._.. Jackson Citizen (Mich.) Patriot (e., S.)-.._ Jacksonville (Fla.) Journal (e.) coco. Jamestown (N.Y) Sun tot. Jewish Dally Porward.........oe oie Jewish Morning Journal... ._______ Jewish Telegraphic Agency... _..____.___ Jil Teushin-She. L008 Car J ooo Joliet (X11.) Herald-News__.___._______.._. Juneau (Alaska) Empir Kalamazoo (Mich.) Gazette (e., S.)._._____ Kansas City Star (e.) Times (m.).._.._.__. Kennebec (Maine) Journal _______________. Kentucky Poste)... 20. 1 lo lunes King Features Syndicate. ._.._..._........ Kingston (Jamaica) Daily Gleaner________ Knoxville (Tenn.) News-Sentinel (e., S.)-. La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune (e., S Labor Press Association... ............ Lafayette (L.a.) Daily advertiser ._________ Lancaster (Pa.) doings Journal... Lancaster (Pa.) New Lansing (Mich.) State ou es ©.) ind Tas Vegas Optie. ltl or oo 0 on Laurel (Mise) Leader-Call________....__.. Le Journal d’Egypte (Egypt)... Long: Istand Presse. oll tl ona Long Island Star Journal... _.. ............ Longview (Wash.) Daily News..______.___. London Dally Bxpress.... +....... London Dally Graphie__-~~... London Daily Herald ©.J... 0 000] LondonDally Mail... .......... London Pally Mirror... ol.i. London Evening Standard. _______________ London Jewish Chronicle _________________ London News Chronicle. _______.___.___. London Observer... ooo oeoaiiaaas London Daily Telegraph and Morning Post. London Times: 2 tue ili. AX diceraans Long Beach (Calif.) Press Telegram. ______ Los Angeles Examiner (m.)_.______________ Los Angeles Herald Express Los Angeles (Calif.) Mirror Los Angeles (Calif.) Times (m.)___________ Louisville (Ky.) Courier-Journal (m.)______ Sarah McClendon_._.._____. 1192 National Press Bldg. Poul lL. Martins:-__: 1267 National Press Bldg. Howard: Sutflel ....._--' 810 National Press Bldg. Gordon'Huffines.. 810 National Press Bldg. Mark-Foote.-2 co... 906 Colorado Bldg. Walter A. Shead____...._._. 1057 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Kennedy. ..._____. 1413 Crittenden St. Sonn V. od 1389 National Press Bldg. WillEAllen: 2:0ooo od 5606 Madison St., ‘Bethesda, Md Murray, Fronk...:.--....--.. 5237 2d St. Milton Friedman. Sonn ma 817 National Press Bldg. Yasas Nagaharu.........0. 714 National Press Bldg. Robert W. Richards__..____ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank J. Macomber_._______ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank H. K 1200 National Press Bldg. 3000 39th St. _| 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. 610 Albee Bldg. 610 Albee Bldg. May: Craig: 1 1228 National Brom Bldg. Doulas Smith... ......... 1013 13th St. Robert W. Crater............. 1013 13th St. George Rothwell Brown___. 615 Times-Herald Bldg. George DiXoni te Lo oo 613 Times-Herald Bldg. Mary Haworth... _..... .... 1063 National Press Bldg. Sidney L. Dervan_._.____._. 3759 McKinley St. Marshall MeNeil .__.______. 1013 13th St. Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. IrvingPagan...{ .... 1105 K St. A.Jane Bentley... _________ 1105 K St. Alfred E. Werner. __________ 1105 KX St. 1105 K St. 500 South Walter Reed Dr, Arlington, Va. Glenn D. Everett ______._.. 1253 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson. __________ 1253 National Press Bldg. Milt Dean Hill... ........... 720 Albee Bldg. Stephen V. Feeley. _________ 1389 National Srom Bldg. Howard Suttle_______._____. 810 National Press Bldg. 1306 T St. SE. Andrew J. Viglietta_________ 1142 National Press Bldg. James J, Butler. ............ 1142 National Press Bldg. Albert Abrahams. _ 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H. Sarge. 5 1142 National Press Bldg. Andrew J. Viglietta__ 1142 National Press Bldg. Jomesd. Butler. i... 1142 National Press Bldg. Albert Abrahams. __________ 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H. Sarge... ...... 1142 National Press Bldg. A.Robert Smith; ~~~ 208 1st St. SE. Eric Sydney Smith. ________ 1061 National Press Bldg. Margaret J. Rogers__________ 1061 National Press Bldg. Frank:Oliver..C i> "= 2121 Virginia Ave. 3207 Cleveland Ave. Gerard E. Neyroud..______. 3207 Cleveland Ave. William Hardcastle. ________ 1218 National Press Bldg. Ann Blevins D 999 National Press Bldg. Erica Cromley 0 artha’s Rd., Alexandria, Murray Frank... -oo 5a St. Robert Waithman 1168 National Press Bldg. 961 National Press Bldg. 961 National Press Bldg. Denys Smith. J... 1251 National Press Bldg. Johm'B. Whittles... ._____.__ 1251 National Press Bldg. Audrey E. Baird... ___.. 1251 National Press Bldg. John Duncan Miller________ 1202 National Press Bldg. Geoffrey D. Woolley. _______ 1202 National Press Bldg. Maria T'. Morrison 1202 National Press Bldg. Virginia W. Kelly ___ 3000 Tjlden St. David Sentner._._ 607 Times Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe 607 Times-Herald Bldg. David Sentner.: =. 607 Times_Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe_ .__...... 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Esther Van LA shi Tufty. 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph Av Dear, |... 00 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl 997 National Press Bldg. 1258 National Press Bldg. Lorania KX. Franeis..._.._._. 1258 National Press Bldg. Robert 1.’ Riges........... 1213 National Press Bldg. Ed Edstrom 1213 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Louisville (Ky.) Times (€.)-ccceeaee--sain Lowell (Mass.) Sun Lubbock (Tex.) Avalanche-Journal_ _.._... Lynn:i(Mass:Ttemitel) 55... anaes McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ..._____. McComb (Miss.) Enterprise-Journal_____. MeNaught Syndicate: oo... o.oo... Madison (Wis.) State Journal (e., S.).-.___ Madnidif coos lumii oobi Lea ER Magnolia (Ark.) Banner-News..__.___.__.. Malone (N.Y.) Telegram._..._.._..._.... Manchester (N. H.) Union Leader (m.,e.)_ Manchester-Dispateh.:.... 00... .. Manila Chromiele. ol Loli. a diol, Manila Evening News... ______.__..___ Manitowoc (Wis.) Herald-Times-_--.__-__ Mason City (Iowa) Globe-Gazette ._..__._ Massena Observer...oe. lol Meadville Tribune-Republican._._..._. Memphis Commercial Appeal... Memphis Press-Scimitar (.)---oocooo___ Meriden Reeora ii... ba iii innanmnn Meridian (Miss) Star. Cc. .....c..ils Mesabi (Minn.) Daily News. _cvoceeeen.. Miami (Fla.) Daily News (6.)ccvccemcceao- Miami (Fla.) Herald (In.).o.uueeeencmean-- Michigan League of Home Dailies ........ Midland (Tex.) Reporter Telegram___.___. Milwaukee Journal Minneapolis Star and Tribune (m., e., S)_. Mitchell (8S. Dak.) Republic______________ Mobile Press and Register. _______________ Modesto (Calif. Beeiz ll 200 Lol Monrovia (Calif.) News-Post...__........ Montreal Star. so. oa en Motion Pietore Pally to 00 ee. Muncie Ind.) Star. cud 0 00% ereaanas Muskegon Chronicle (e.). ._____________ National Negro Press Association_________ Nashville (Tenn.) Banner (e.) .___._._____.... Nashville (Tenn.) Tennesseean (m., €.).___ Nassau Daily Review-Star__ ______._..______ Natchez Times Lorenzo W. Martin 1025 National Press Bldg. Bulkley Griffin... _...__.. 1237 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin_______ 1237 National Press Bldg. Donald R. Larrabee____.____ 1237 National Press Bldg. Sarah McClendon ___....__.. 1192 National Press Bldg. Bulkley Griffin... . .......; 1237 Nationa] Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 6308 Hillcrest Pl., Chevy Chase, Md. 810 National Press Bldg. 1391 National Press Bldg. Mary James Cottrell... ______ 1230 National Press Bldg. Manuel Casares._.—-.......... 3513 Northampton St. 810 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg, Mary James Cottrell __...___ 1230 National Press Bldg. O. Henry Brandon.__________ 1154 National Press Bldg. Diosdado MM. Yap....:c..... 1009 National Press Bldg. JJoes GsWingo. ovo 3907 W St. Mary E. Reedy.-............ 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. Harryilondo i............: 1365 National Press Bldg. Paul L. Martin 1267 National Press Bldg. Stephen V. Feeley 1389 National Press Bldg. William D. Sisson hh 1013 13th St. Marshall MeNeil__.__._____ 1013 13th St. Bulkley Grithn: =. ....._.... 1237 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin_______ 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. ‘W. McNeil Lowry__________ 614 Albee Bldg. Troman Peltz... .......... 614 Albee Bldg. 614 Albee Bldg. Paul R. Le Doh 1286 National Press Bldg. Radford Le Abies jab 1286 National Press Bldg. Peter Tisagor.... oie... 1286 National Press Bldg. Edwin A. Lahey._______.____ 1286 National Press Bldg. Thomas S. Haney........... 1286 National Press Bldg. James M. Haswell __________ 1286 National Press Bldg. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph'A. Dear... ...._ _. 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl___________ 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph B. Huttlinger__.___._. 894 National PressBldg. Laurence C. Eklund ________ 977 National Press Bldg. David Sentner. ._...._____._ 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe__.______. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Richard L. Wilson__________ 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. 852 National Press Bldg. Wilbur Elston. ......... 0.0. 852 National Press Bldg. _| 852 National Press Bldg. Marr McGaffin___._____ 852 National Press Bldg. Frances McKusick____ 7005 8th St. Joseph B. Huttlinger__._____ 894 National Press Bldg. Gladstone Williams_._______ 1295 National Press Bldg. 1295 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Edmund E. Hadley......... 1150 National Press Bldg. Jane Ottenidol.b._ _..... 5923 33d St. 608 Albee Bldg. Mark Bootes. .tovaannno.. 906 Colorado Bldg. William F. Pyper-__.____.__ 906 Colorado Bldg. LouisiR.:Lautier...>... 2007 15th St. Mary James Cottrell ________ 1230 National Press Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons. ______ 1253 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson___________ 1253 National Press Bldg. L. G. Laycock, Jr__________. 1253 National Press Bldg. Andrew J. Viglietta_________ 1142 National Press Bldg. James:J. Butler-c.._....... 1142 National Press Bldg. Albert E, Abrahams________ 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H, Sarge._ .._.____.. 1142 National Press Bldg. Howard Suttle. -............ 810 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Hall 1312 Massachusetts Ave. 1312 Massachusetts Ave. 1312 Massachusetts Ave. 1312 Massachusetts Ave. 3914 Livingston St. 566 Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Newark: Star Ledger i alog "= lad Newark (N. J.) Evening News.__._.._______ New Bedford Standard Times...70... = New Britain por [8 ee A E50 | Newburgh (N.Y New Iberia (La.) Therian Cat hk A a Sa pea New Newspaper Service... __________.___ New Orleans (La.) States (e., S.)._.__.____ New Orleans Times Picayune (m.)________ Newport (R. 1.) Daily News. _____._._.... Newport (Vt.) Daily Express. _______..____ Newport News (Va.) Daily Press. ________ Newsda Newspaper Enterprise Association_ _______ New York Daily Compass... coco. New York Daily News (m.)___________.___ New York Dally Worker... 2:6... .. New York Herald Tribune (m.)._._.________ New York Herald Tribune Syndicate. ___ New York Journal American (€.) -ocmooo-_ New York Journal of Commerce (m.)_..____ New. York Mitton i. tol cil nc enaee 2008 New York Times (m.) J oct. oan oo 00 “Albert E. Abrahams_-______ Andrew J. Viglietta_________ Richard H. Sarge... Jomes J. Butler... -._..._ Arthur Sylvester ___________ Bulkley Griffin... __:._. Isabel Kinnear Griffin_.____ Donald R. Larrabee ________ James J. Butler.._._________ Edgar Allen Poe 2 Buckley Grifiin...._...._.:. Isabel Kinnear Griffin.._____ Donald R. Larrabee...._.___ Vonda Bergman............. Shirley H. Scheibla_...__... Stephen V, Feeley... _._ Peter Ed. Douglas A. Larsen. _......__ I. F. Sto e Gol arty ui oes Edward W. Lewis_________. Jack Doherty... ........ Ruth S. Montgomery. _._.___ Paul F. Healy Charles J. iy RL fa Francis M. Stephenson. ____ Frank Holeman....__.._.. >. Robs FP. Halllol ............. BerteAndrews:t Lo... Coleman B. Jones.._____.___ Raymond J. Blair... -__.. JackiSteele tt...ool James M. Minifie.__________ Thomas Twitty...sui Robert J. Donovan..________ David McConnell. __ OuB. Allena-aliain bo RobertL.. Moora... ........ Dorothy Brandon..______.__ Ned Rugselll...L............. Edwin L. Pale, Ir lci 1k Jessie A. Norton.__________ 4 Walter Lippmann__________ Barbara Donald...i: Joseph W. Alsop, Jr.._..__.. Stewart J. O. Alsop......... DavidSentner: |....: William P. Flythe._..__ 5... Oscar E. Naumann_________ Mox Barnesios boi. George.Cheely. ....._....... SidneyiA. levy... ... Joseph R. Slevin. _.__..____. Joan:Tweet Surnl ton oo Joan: BE. Meyers... ........... Barbara Slotky Finney. .___ Jacques Ozanne... __..__. David Sentner___.._____._._. William P. Flythe Arthur Krock.______ Bessi\Pormant db oo...=. Charles E.Egan. __.___.___. Harold B. Hinton ___________ Luther Ac Huston...0 Paul P. Kennedy. .........c. Clayton Knowles __________ William H. Lawrence. ______ 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. 901 Colorado Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1277 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 1420 New York Ave. 1420 New York Ave. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1015 National Press Bldg. 1015 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. 233 2d St. SE. 1013 15th St. 1389 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 225 Kellogg Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 1272 National Press Bldg. 954 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg, 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 1285 National Press Bldg. 3525 Woodley Rd. 3525 Woodley Rd. 2720 Dumbarton Ave. 2720 Dumbarton Ave.’ 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 705 Albee Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office New York Times (m.)—Continued_______ New York World-Telegram and Sun..___. North American Newspaper Alliance _____ Northampton (Mass.) Gazette ____.______ Oakland Post-Inquirer. . ._._.___...____. u Oakland Tribune. io) C00 lenin Ocala (Fla.y:Star Banner.__.0._L......... Ogdensburg Advance-News____.__.___._.__.___ Ogdensburg (N. Y.) Journal ____________.___ Ofl Dally... aD 20 Boa iain Oklahoma City Oklahoman. _____________. Oklahoma City Times. x _o0. Leen Olean (N. Y.) Times-Herald __.______.__.._. Omaha World-Herald (m.,e., S.)__________ Oneonta (N. Y.) Dally Star. .C..ce ee Opelousas (La. Y World. vo. 0. Lo i. Orangeburg (S. C.) Times-Democrat_._____ Orlando Sentinel and Reporter Star (m., e.). The Overseas (Germany Overseas News Agency. -ocoooccmmoceoean Owosso. Argus-Press. ul. oe ian Panama City News Herald (e.) Parkersburg (W. Va.) News (m.)_._........ Passaic (IN. J.) Herald News_._____.._..._. Pawtucket (RL) Times... nui Pekin (TI1.) Times, 200 os 1S eran Pendleton (Oreg.) East Oregonian.__..__._. Penn Federal News B Pensacola (Fla.) Journal and News (m.,e.) Philadelphia Bulletin (e.) (8.)--cccoemeoo Philadelphia Daily News_._... ooo... Philadelphia Inquirer (m., S.)..._________. Phoenix’Gazette: oi il. mannan Pittsburgh (Pa.) Post-Gots (mm... Pittsburgh Presse count ik... Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph_________________ Pittsfield (Mass.) Eagle (e.) ._.___.____.__._ Plainfield (N. J.) Courier-News___________ Point Pleasant (W. Va.) Register____.._____ Polish Dally Newsy... do... ... 20 PolisheDailly Zegoda oie sil Pontiac (Mich.) Daily Press (6.) = —coooooo- Anthony H. Leviero.. 717 Albee Bldg. Joseph A. Loftus... 717 Albee Bldg. John D. Morris. 717 Albee Bldg. Cabell Phillips. 717 Albee Bldg. James Reston... 717 Albee Bldg. Alvin Shuster... -| 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. 717 Albee Bldg. Omori P.iTrussell. .ugling: 717 Albee Bldg. Walter H. Waggoner.__.____ 717 Albee Bldg. Jay Walz 717 Albee Bldg. William S. White. _____._._.___ 717 Albee Bldg. Robert F. Whitney_._______ 717 Albee Bldg. Lewis Wood ool Louris: 717 Albee Bldg. RogerW.-Stuart. __. .......-1013 13th St. Steffan Andrews___________. 1170 National Press Bldg. Dorothy Bartlett McCardle 1170 National Press Bldg. Marie T. 1170 National Press Bldg. Edward J. Michelson_.______ 1170 National Press Bldg. Bulkley Griffin 1237 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin_______ 1237 National Press Bldg. Donald R. Larrabee. ____.__ 1237 National Press Bldg. David Sentner:............. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe. .....-. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Charles B. Degges_ _....._.. National Press Club. Walter A. Shead.__._...._.. 1057 National Press Bldg. Pauli Martin. ............. 1267 National Press Bldg. Poaldl, Martin..... 1267 National Press Bldg. Milburn'Petty............. 329 National Press Bldg. James M. Collins___.________ 329 National Press Bldg. Daniel L. Harbour_...__.____ 329 National Press Bldg. RoyP: Stewart. ............ 1250 National Press Bldg. Roy: P.-Stewart. ——........... 1250 National Press Bldg. PaulL.;Martin. ................. 1267 National Press Bldg. John W.. Jarrell. ............ 1220 National Press Bldg. Darwin R. Olofson__________ 1220 National Press Bldg. 7005 8th St. 810 National Press Bldg. 1060 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Kenned 1413 Crittenden St. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty. 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph: Al. Dear. -............ 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl___________ 997 National Press Bldg. 817-National Press Bldg. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty.__ 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph A. Dear. ...........: 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl___________ 997 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Kennedy_________ 1413 Crittenden St. Walter A. Shead ._._._..._.. 1057 National Press Bldg. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith _ 1650 Harvard St. J. Newman Wright 3806 Kanawha St. Bulkley Griffin’. __.._...... 1237 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin.._____ 1237 National Press Bldg. Donald R. Larrabee_________ 1237 National Press Bldg. William 8. Fairfield_________ 894 National Press Bldg. A. Robert:Smith............. 208 1st St. SE. Herman A. Lowe__________. 1292 National Press Bldg. Walter A.Shead _____.__.___ 1057 National Press Bldg. Frank A. Kennedy__________ 1413 Crittenden St. Carl W. McCardle__________ 1276 National Press Bldg. Robert Rothe.t. ............ 1276 National Press Bldg. Patricia King: ......cnnueev 1276 National Press Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons______._ 1253 National Press Bldg. Glenn'D.Everett........... 1253 National Press Bldg. John: C.:O’Brien.............. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. Nicholas P. Gregory. _._._.. 1206-1298 National Press Bldg. Paul J. McGahan__________. 1296-1298 National Press Bldg. 608 Albee Bldg. Ingrid Jewells:o) . ._..._d9¢ 1280 National Press Bldg. J. Lacey Reynolds. _________ 1280 National Press Bldg. George R. Zielke___________ 2 1280 National Press Bldg. Chester M.. Potter. __..__.. 1013 13th St. DavidiSentner .._.._ _....: 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe_.__.__.____ 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Edward J. Michelson_______ 1192 National Press Bldg. Paul L. Martin 1267 National Press Bldg. Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith_ 1650 Harvard St. Ludwik Lesnieki____._._._____ Riggs and Ager Roads. Charles. Burke 1124 Connecticut Ave. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph A. Der. ....cvuun-a 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl___________ 997 National Press Bldg. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office Port Huron (Mich.) Times Herald. ____.__ Esther Van Wanner Lasiy: 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl.__ : 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph A. Dear. 997 National Press Bldg. Portland (Maine) Evening Express_...____ MayiCralgior. oo... 1228 National Press Bldg. Portland (Maine) Press Herald (m.)....__. MaysCralgi. isl ion inion. 1228 National. Press Bldg. Portland (Maine) Sunday Telegram.______ May Craig iit cna o. 1228 National Press Bldg. Post-Hall Syndieate-.ooc... o.oo RobertiS. Allen... ......._.. 1204 National Press Bldg. Paul Scotti iii inion 1204 National Press Bldg. Pottsdam (N. Y.) Courier and Freeman... Paul L:iMartin..._......__.. 1267 National Press Bldg. Providence (R. I.) Evening Bulletin..____ Edward x Sia Mihe____ 1203-1205 National Press Bldg. Paul A.Ki 1203-1205 National Press Bldg. Providence (R. I.) Journal (m.).______.____ Frederic ol siting rls ne 1203-1205 National Press Bldg. PanlA. Kelly, i... oe... 1203-1205 National Press Bldg. Pueblo (Colo.) ian and Star-Journal._ Helene C. Monberg._____.___ 812 17th St. Radio Dally (N. Y= oo. boul eee John iN. Balley............0 1142 National Press Bldg. Raleigh News a Observer ii... Bascom N. Timmons.._____ 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. Redondo Beach (Calif.) Daily Breeze _____ 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Religious News Service. _____._ ooo 1253 National Press Bldg. Reuters-Australian Associated Press._.._... 1062 National Press Bldg. Seaghan Maynes_._____.___. 1062 National Press Bldg. John Jo MeGrain..............-1062 National Press Bldg. Norman Wilson. _.___.______ 1062 National Press Bldg. Ralph Harpise. Jl. .........c. 1062 National Press Bldg. Retalling Dally... (Licidis 2 hil aici iene Harry Resseguie...__._____. 508-509 Otis Bldg. Robert’A./Barr............ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Lloyd Schwartz. __ 508-509 Otis Bldg. John T. Norman. 508-509 Otis Bldg. . Walter Johnson. ............. 508-509 Otis Bldg. Amnette Wardii...... oc 508-509 Otis Bldg. Mary: N. Bailey... . 508-509 Otis Bldg. Rosalind Mae Kater__...___ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Miriam G.Yeigh... ......._. 508-509 Otis Bldg. Marvin H. Caplan.__._______ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Arthur gard i Ea On 508-509 Otis Bldg. 508-509 Otis Bldg. Richmond (Va.) News Leader_____________ Shirley CH; Scheibia URE Te 1013 15th St. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (m.)__-Paul L. Martin. ...... co... 1267 National Press Bldg. Rochester Times-Union (e.)..____________. 1267 National Press Bldg. Rocky Mountain News (Colo.)__.________ 1013 13th St. Roma (Naples, Italy)ao.l wil oe shi | Press Club. Rome (N. Y.) Daily Sentinel. _____._____ Rutland (Vt. Heraldaio di. oointos Vonda Bergman____________ St. Louis Globe-Democrat_.___________.___. Aaron G. Benesch. ________ 503 Albee Bldg. Robert B. Armstrong, Jr____ 503 Albee Bldg. St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch (e., S.)-___. Raymond P. Brandt________ 201 Kellogg Bldg. Edward A. Harris___________ 201 Kellogg Bldg. George HH. ... 201 Kellogg Halll... Bldg. Joseph Hanlon... __......_. 201 Kellogg Bldg. Wallace R. Deuel._.______.. 201 Kellogg Bldg. Herbert A. Pragk. .......... 201 Kellogg Bldg. Thomas RB. Phillips......... 201 Kellogg Bldg. Estelle G. Welsh___________. 201 Kellogg Bldg. St. Paul (Minn.)' Dispatch (e:).._....._... Kenneth Crouse....__...... 622 Albee Bldg. St. Paul (Minn.) Pioneer Press (m.)_______ Kenneth Crouse......._...._. 622 Albee Bldg. St. Petersburg Independent (e.). ___.___._. Frank A. Kennedy__._______ 1413 Crittenden St. St. Petersburg Pimes. =z 2 200 1. ......0 Nelson P. Poynter__________ 1156 19th St. Tait Trusgell J... ..... 1156 19th St. Sacramento (Calif.) Bee (6.) oo —cccoinaa. 1295 National Press Bldg. 1295 National Press Bldg. Saginaw (Mich.) News (e.,S.) cc cccemnao 906 Colorado Bldg. 906 Colorado Bldg. Salt Lake City Deseret News. _ ____.___._. 1201 National Press Bldg. 1201 National Press Bldg. Salt Lake Telegram’. sili. conve FrankHewlett...... ........ 317 National Press Bldg. Salt Lake Tribune lL sccli 20 0... 00%. Frank Hewlett. ....... ...... 317 National Press Bldg. San Angelo (Tex.) Standard-Times_.._____ George W. Stimpson... 726 National Press Bldg. San Antonio (Tex.) Express (m.)______..__ Bascom N. Timmons. ...___ 1253 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson.____._..___ 1253 National Press Bldg. San Antonio Light. ol Jil i. ...... David Seniner.............. 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe.......... 607 Times-Herald Bldg. 1192 National Press Bldg. San Diego (Calif.) Tribune-Sun......_.... 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank H. Ruest_-........... 1200 National Press Bldg. San Diegoi(Calif.) Union.........iccuu... 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank: FH. Kuest........----1200 National Press Bldg. San Francisco Call-Bulletin-_ _-___________ David Sentner-...._-_| 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Press Gallerzes NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office San Francisco Chronicle... ______.____ San Francisco Daily News (€.)-oo o—co___ San Francisco Examiner (m.). _._____.____ San Pedro (Calif.) News-Pilot.._._____..__ Santa Fe New Mexican. ______..ooooceeooo Saratoga Springs Saratogian_______________ Schenectady Union Star...ooo o_o. SclenceiServies Cui 0 laminae Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... Seattle Post Intelligencer... occa. Seattle TIMeS. 2. 80h iris Sentinel, Capital Times (Mich.)._._....__. Sharon'Herald. loon bl Sherman (Tex.) Democrat... _____.________ Shreveport (La.) Journal .____.____.________ Shreveport (La.) Times (m.)_____________. South African Press Association. __________ Southam Newspapers of Canada. .________ Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald and Journal.__ Springfield (Ill.) State Journal .___________ Springfield (I11.) State Register_.__________ Springfield (Mass.) Daily News (e.)-__.... Stroudsburg (Pa.) Record: tic. ova. Stuttgarti(Ark) Teader 2 nic. = Sumter:Dally Heme dae a 0 Superior (Wis.) Evening Telegram... .__.._. Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald _______ Sydney (Australia) Sun... .... _.......... Syracuse Herald Journal... ________.._._. Syracuse Post Standard... o.oo. Tacoma News Tribune......oooo ooo. Vance Johnson. _..___.._.._. 1190 National Press Bldg. Ruth Binney. ............; 1013 13th St. David Sentner._............ 607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe........... 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Robert W. Richards. _______ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank J. Macomber.___.______ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank H. K 1200 National Press Bldg. TreneiPisher:li.oo 03 1515 33d St. Paull, Martin: i...0° 1267 National Press Bldg. Mary James Cottrell ._______ 1230 National Press Bldg. Watson: Davis. J...0.2 1719 N St. Jame Stafford... i... oo 4h Ewing oe Van De Water Wadsworth Likely__________ Martha Morrow Furman... t. Walker Stone... ..._....... 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. . M barbie. 00 1013 13th St. Ludwell Denny_____________ 1013 13th St. Fred W. Perkins... 1013 13th St. Charles T. Lucey... ........ 1013 13th St. Marshall Coles..________ 1013 13th St. Oland D. Russell_. 5, 1013 13th St. Parker La Moore._..____..__ 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Andrew F. Tally, Jr... 1013 13th St. Diana Denny _.. 13th St. =... 1013 Charles Lo ) Pn ER 1013 13th St. Kermit McFarland. ________ 1013 13th St. David Sentner.....__...._-607 Times-Herald Bldg. William P. Flythe__________ 607 Times-Herald Bldg. Alice Frein Johnson.____.____ 3000 39th St. Esther Van Wagoner Tufty_ 997 National Press Bldg. Joseph A. Dear. ............ 997 National Press Bldg. Maurice G. Boehl___________ 997 National Press Bldg. Stephen V. Feeley__________ 1389 National Press Bldg. Sarah McClendon 1192 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. Bascom N. Timmons 1253 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson__..________ 1253 National Press Bldg. Charles O. Gridley __________ 1253 National Press Bldg. Eric Lloyd Williams 1062 National Press Bldg. Charles T. Nicols 991 National Press Bldg. Congressional Hotel. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. Robert W. Richards._ 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank J. Macomber 1200 National Press Bldg. Frank H. Raest.... i... 1200 National Press Bldg. Leslie E. Carpenter_________ 812 National Press Bldg. Elizabeth S. Carpenter... ow -812 National Press Bldg. John Loranee. :. .:........0. 1305 N St. Leslie E. Carpenter. ________ 812 National Press Bldg. Elizabeth S. Carpenter______ 812 National Press Bldg. W. McNeil Lowry.__________ 614 Albee Bldg. Richard Cull, Jr... .._...._..__ 614 Albee Bldg. Carey Cronan:.. ....<.. 894 National Press Bldg. Andrew J. Viglietta 1142 National Press Bldg. James J. Butlef..l.......... 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H. Sarge... 1142 National Press Bldg. Frances McKusick._.________ 7005 8th St. Howard Suttle______________ 810 National Press Bldg. 1060 National Press Bldg. 500 South Walter Reed Arlington, Va. A.D, Rothman... -_.... 1301 15th St. Leander E. Fitzgerald 1251 National Press Bldg. Andrew J. Viglietta_________ 1142 National Press Bldg. James J,-Butlers... .......... 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H. Sarge_.___ 1142 National Press Bldg. Andrew J. Viglietta___ 1142 National Press Bldg. James J, Butler... ......... 1142 National Press Bldg. 1142 National Press Bldg. Richard H. Sarge... ...._ 1142 National Press Bldg. Pat:MonnoeLsol.Loaa ini 1201 National Press Bldg. Donald H. Shannon. _ ______ 1201 National Press Bldg. Dr., Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued -Paper represented Name Office Tass Telegraph Agency of the U. S. S. R__ Temple (Tex.) Telegram: Jui...ad Texarkana Gazette and News. _________... Tiffin (Ohio) Advertiser Tribune__________ Times-Journal (NN. Td cialhaan a Toledo (Ohio) Blade (e.): iii. ..uueenaen- Tokyo Asal. an Drops0d Tokyo Shinbun.... 8 Loa Li... Topeka (Kans.) Daily Capital (m.)._..... Traffic Worlds. Ue Tei. eeaanwl Trenton (N. J.) Trentonian: | ___..._-.: Troy (N. Y.) Times-Record (m., e.)___.___ Tucumearl News... _.c..i lil cence Tulsa (Okla.) World: (ma). coil iene Tuscaloosa (Ala.) News. 20if o veennnz Twin Falls Times-News_.___ o.oo. Two Rivers (Wis.) Reporter. .._....o__-_.. United Features Syndicate... ..occeceucoo- United Press Associations... ...oeeeeeeen Mikhail Fedorov... _______ LaurenceTodd..._ ..._...._. Jean Montgomery. ___________ Euphemia K. Virden________ Sarah McClendon. ._________ Glenn D. Everett __________ Cyrit3. O’Brien. _......... J. Lacey Reynolds. ....._... George R. Zielke_______.____ Isami Suzukawa._._.__.._.__ Yoneo:Sakail CHfStrationis du...0. Stanley’ H. Smith... .___... Joseph C. Scheleen__________ Lewis W. Britton___________ Shirley D. Mayers... ________ J. Delton Pattie... _________ Mary James Cottrell ________ Stephen V. Feeley._._________ Leslie E. Carpenter. _______ Elizabeth S. Carpenter______ Bascom N. Timmons. ______ Edward Jamieson. __________ Norman K.:Baxter..-....... Eleanor Nance.........._... Thomas Li. Stokes... _....._. Frederick CO. Othman. ______ Marquis W. Childs_________ Lyle C. Wilsonz..!.......... Julius Frandsen, Jr__._______ Carroll H. Kenworthy ______ Milton E. Magruder._______ Ernest L.. Barcella___.______ Norn mia nae) JeilisMylepssulyi a. Charles Wr Corddry, Jr..... M. Ruth Gmeiner...._._... LeeNichols: ii... loouiul Raymond M. Lahr____.____ DoW. Dittmers 20 Harry Wo Frantz... .... Elizabeth Wharton. ________ Edward G. de Pury.________ M. Stewart Hensley. _______ Edwin Dayton Moore______ John'L. Steele:.. Robert F. Loftus._ G. Frederick Mullen________ Roscoe Snipes.__._..______I___ RBexM. Chaney. J........... Charles P. MeMahon_______ Maureen Gothlin_._________ Vincent J. Burke... Lomis Cassell oo Lo... John A. Goldsmith_________ Warren S. Duffee___________ Harman Nichols. ___________ James F. Cunningham______ Lofe®, Allewitin 7 ©. W. R. Higginbotham _______ Saying &P. Godwin... Hod Ww. Piggfe Sed David G. Briggs. ==. ____.. Paul Southwick. ___._.______ Neil-MaeNeil o.oo... 969 National Press Bldg. 969 National Press Bldg. 969 National Press Bldg. 969 National Press Bldg. 1192 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 810 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 0 Fosiom Dr., Silver Spring, 1280 National Press Bldg. 1280 National Press Bldg. Hotel National. 2311 Pennsylvania Ave. The Burlington Hotel. 815 Washington Bldg. 815 Washington Bldg. 815 Washington Bldg. 815 Washington Bldg. 815 Washington Bldg. 8009 Eastern Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1230 National Press Bldg. 1389 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 812 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. Congressional Hotel. 1201 National Press Bldg. 1201 National Press Bldg. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 1122 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 207 Kellogg Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented United Press Associations—Continued._.__ Utica (N. Y.) Daily Press. i... ...... Utica (N. Y.) Observer-Dispatch____. Venice (Calif.) Vanguard... __._._____ Vineland Times-Journal _________.... Virginia (Minn.) Range Facts...___.. ‘Wall Street Journal (m.). ......cooca ‘Washington Evening Star________._._ Washington City News Service______. ‘Washington Daily News (e.).._...... 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 38 Name Donald J. Gonzales. .._____. Michael J. O’Neill __.__.____ James D. Shacter.__........ David R.Bundy............ Alan‘E. Adams............. Lloyd lophamil. i... .... Arthur.J. Olsen... ____._ _._. John M.:Courie.......--.... Anthony Ullstein___________ Patricia Ann Wiggins_______ Richard E. Mooney._________ Harry M. Van Dernoot_____ DickKiSi West .0.....5. Henry Raymont..________._. John Warren Finney._______ Herbert Posters) -. _....... Paal lL. Martinool. ooo... Paull, Martin. 2. .... Robert W. Richards_______. Frank J. Macomber_________ Cyrild.. O’Brien: .........._. Mary E. Reedy. ______.____. William C. Bryant__________ Ray Cromley ia... ....... Albert B.Clark__ ____._.___. Alan'L. Often. 1.0... Harry Prieeit Que 1 © oo Merle Lewis Gulick.__..__... David QO. Ives: >i. ........ Fletcher V. Booraem________ Stephen K. Galpin... ________ Robert E. Farrell ._____..____ Georgiana Merrill Root. ____ Henry T. Simmons. ...._._. Joseph E. Evans... _..____. G. Gould Lincoln... ...___ JA O earyi” | Constantine A. Brown_____. Benjamin M. McKelway.___ JohnH. Cline’ 1... Joseph A. Pox ix i. ©. Herbert BF. Corn... ........ William M. Hines, Jr______. Don S.-Warren!... _........ Garnett D. Horner George Kennedy______._____ Josephi¥Young tics i... Margaret Hart Canby._..__ N.' Rex; Collier-............. Johnm'C. Henry... ....... Miriam Ottenberg______.___ Harold -Rogers.'.. ........... Robert K. Walsh. ...... ... John W. Thompson, Jr_____ Howard P. Bailey... _____._ George D, Beveridge, Jr_____ JohnA Giles! i: ; ......... Newbold Noyes, Jr.__..____. Francis P, Douglas. ........ CecllHolland: 5%... .. Crosby'S. Noyes... .._.. L.Bdgar Pring... _..._... William P. Kennedy________ Martha Strayer. ........... Richard Hollander__.....__. Joh. Burch:d. {........ Milton R. Berliner._.______. Henry Altman o.oo Richard Starnes. _.......:c.. Evelyn Gordon... ...._.._ Samuel Gordon... ...._. Everett B. Gardner_________ Cornelia M.:Ball. ......._... Office 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1267 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 1200 National Press Bldg. 2412 Otis St. NE. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1039 National Press Bldg. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 1101 Pennsylvania Ave. 705 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Congressional Directory NEWSPAPERS Paper represented Washington Daily News (e.)—Continued. ‘Washington Post (m., S)____... Washington Times-Herald __._. Waterbury (Conn.) American (m., e.).__.. Watertown (N. Y.) Daily Times Waterville (Maine) Sentinel (m.)_.__.._.___ Westchester County Newspapers... West Palm Beach Times. _..___ REPRESENTED—Continued Name John F.:Mcleod............ 1013 Robert M..Buek ............. 1013 H. L. Coppenbarger_.______ 1013 John: F. Cramer. ............ 1013 John RB. Hoover........cow.--1013 John: GC. Beats. J. oui uiv uns 1013 James M. O’Neill, Jr____.... 1013 Alexander Ormsbee_____..___ 1013 Phillip F. Thomas____ -| 1013 Evert B. Clark____ -| 1013 Donald: H.-May.........o..i 1013 Milton. J. Pike... 1013 Alex Bilonow.i-L.....-.c o_o 1013 1013 1013 1013 James B. Wiggins. .......... Post Edward T. Folliard o....____ Post William V., Nessly..__._.___ od Post MerloJ. Pusey. oeee Post H. B. Elliston... .......... Post Jerry Kluttz.o 5... ok Post Robert Albright... _........ Post John J. W. Riseling......... Post BeniW: Gilberts.....ceew- .. Post Malvina Lindsay... ........ Post Marie S. MeNaar. __........ Post Samuel E. Stavisky_________ Post John A. Singerhoff____._____ Post Marshall Andrews. ___ _____ Post Post Edward. PF. Ryan... ....... Post Philip 1, Graham. ......... Post John CG. Norris... oon. Post Ferdinand Kuhn, Jr. ___..__ Post Johw:Bal. csi oe... Post Herbert L. Block_____ Post William E. Gold.-_ Post Edward Russell _._____ Post Thomas Winship____._____. Post Chalmers M. Roberts_..____ Post Alon Barthes...es Post Alfred Friendly... -.......-Post George T'. Draper. _________._ Post Frank 1. Dennis... ....-Post Murrey Marder: ......... Post Sam Zagora. il. vac annmm Joseph M. Lalley.._.__..____ Frank C. Waldrop.._..._.___ Michael W. Flynn__________ B.C. Harterzu....vvveaed-= oo Sidney Epstein. .oao......__ Gustav J-Miller.........-.. Albert Armitage. ..__.______ Austine Hearst______________ Achsah Dorsey Smith_______ Daniel E. Holland __________ George Henry Clark. ______ EstelleiGaines................ Edwin D. Neff 2... .._...... James Walter-o 2... _...... William P. Flythe, Jr_______ William: Brady... _..._...% H. Gregory Hayes....._____. Charles E. Davis, Jr. ______ Jeane F. Rogers_.._.________ Merlin Johnson._.__________ Bulkley: Griffin... ........... 1237 Isabel Kinnear Griffin______ 1237 Donald R. Larrabee. _._..__ 1237 Alan S. Emory. cv meu. ..=. 1201 MeayiCralgo 0 1228 James J.;:Butler.............. 1277 1057 1057 Anne Mattingly._._.________ 1057 Office 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. 13th St. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. National Press Bldg. ‘Washington Report_.__________ Edward K. Nellor__________ 811 Barr Bldg. Western Reporters. _._._.__..__. Pat Munroe. never 1201 National Press Bldg. Donald H. Shannon_________ 1201 National Press Bldg. Press Galleries NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued Paper represented Name Office ‘Wheeling Intelligencer (m.)_______________ Mrs. Charles Brooks Smith__| 1650 Harvard St. Wichita (IFans.) Beacon... o-ovoeeinemoem Betsy Jager. (li ii. ool 0 1812 Varnum St. Wichita Bagleviion. coon iii. ousii William P. Helm _ _......... 619 Colorado Bldg. ‘Wichita Falls (Tex.) Record-News (m.).._{ Edward Jamieson. __......._ 1253 National Press Bldg. Wichita Falls (Tex.) Times (e.)---—-o—---Bascom N. Timmons.____.._ 1253 National Press Bldg. Willoughby (Ohio) News Herald___..______ Glenn D. Everett. ._.__.___. 1253 National Press Bldg. Wilmington (Del.) Journal-Every Eve-| Bascom N. Timmons.__..__. 1253 National Press Bldg. ning. Edward Jamieson _._________ 1253 National Press Bldg. : Glenn D. Everett. ___.__... 1253 National Press Bldg. Wilmington (Del.) Morning News_ __.._.. Bascom N. Timmons. _____. 1253 National Press Bldg. Edward Jamieson.___________ 1253 National Press Bldg. Glenn D. Everett. ___.____._ 1253 National Press Bldg. Wilmington (N. C.) Star-News (m., e.)....| Mary James Cottrell. ______ 1230 National Press Bldg. Winnipeg Free Press... ill lil Uli 0. Max Freedman... ....._.._.. 1201 National Press Bldg. Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel ._.___ Eleanor Nanece______________ Congressional Hotel. Women’s National News Service. .______.__ Helen B. Shaffer... ....... 1311 G St. ‘Women’s Wear Daily (m.)_..__........... Harry E. Resseguie.._______ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Annette Culler Ward. ______ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Robert: A. Bar... 508-509 Otis Bldg. Rosalind Mae Kater__.______ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Marvin H.Caplon..._______ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Miriam .G. Leigh_......._... 508-509 Otis Bldg. Lloyd Sehwartz.............. 508-509 Otis ‘Bldg. John 'P.. Norman...........--508-509 Otis Bldg. Walter Johnson. ____________ 508-509 Otis Bldg. Mary’ N.Bailey.........._. 508-509 Otis Bldg. Arthur Garel___.__ ASPi 508-509 Otis Bldg. Poul, A. THOS. . ene oll 508-509 Otis Bldg. oun Worcester (Mass.) Gazette__ __....._____ Bulkley Griffin _ _—.__.___.. 1237 National Press Bldg. Isabel Kinnear Griffin_______ 1237 National Press Bldg. 1237 National Press Bldg. WY OrlA Press. cui rai cinnamonSk 1192 National Press Bldg. mas 1192 National Press Bldg. Youngstown (Ohio) Vindicator (e.)..______ 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. 1253 National Press Bldg. HOUSE PRESS GALLERY William J. Donaldson, Jr., superintendent, 3730 Brandywine Street. Anthony P. Demma, 2847 Brentwood Road NE.; Richard L. Embly, 606 East Capitol Street; and Benjamin C. West, 7109 Varnum Street, Landover Hills, Md., assistant superintendents. SENATE PRESS GALLERY Harold R. Beckley, superintendent, 7 Normandy Drive, Silver Spring, Md. Joseph E. Wills, 2907 John Marshall Drive, Arlington, Va.; Howard C. Dawes, 2262 Mount View Place SE., and Don C. Womack, 5818 Twenty-sixth Street North, Arlington, Va., assistant superintendents RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES 1. Administration of the press galleries shall be vested in a Standing Commit-tee of Correspondents elected by accredited members of the galleries. The Com-mittee shall consist of five persons elected to serve for terms of 2 years. Pro-vided, however, that at the election in January 1951, the three candidates re-ceiving the highest number of votes shall serve for 2 years and the remaining two for 1 year. Thereafter, three members shall be elected in odd-numbered years and two in even-numbered years. Elections shall be held in January. The Committee shall elect its own chairman and secretary. Vacancies on the Com-mittee shall be filled by special election to be called by the Standing Committee. 2. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries of Congress shall make ap-plication in accordance with Rule 35 of the House of Representatives and Rule 34 of the Senate, which rules shall be interpreted and administered by the Standing Committee of Correspondents. 574 Congressional Directory 3. The Standing Committee of Correspondents shall limit membership in the press galleries to bona fide correspondents of repute in their profession, under such rules as the Standing Committee of Correspondents shall prescribe. 4. Provided, however, that the Standing Committee of Correspondents shall admit to the galleries no person who does not establish to the satisfaction of the Standing Committee all of the following: (a) That his or her principal income is obtained from news correspondence intended for publication in newspapers entitled to second-class mailing privileges. (b) That he or she is not engaged in paid publicity or promotion work or in prosecuting any claim before Congress or before any department of the govern-ment, and will not become so engaged while a member of the galleries. (¢) That he or she is not engaged in any lobbying activity and will not become so engaged while a-member of the galleries. 5. The Standing Committee of Correspondents shall propose no change or changes in these rules except upon petition in writing signed by not less than 100 accredited members of the galleries. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate. STANDING COMMITTEE OF CORRESPONDENTS Frercaer KneBEL, Chairman Raymond M. LaHR, Secretary JoHN T. CARLTON Epgar A. Por Paul F. Heary WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION (Press Room, White House) MEMBERS REPRESENTED [8 [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] ~ Name * Abbott, Genet'-LF god:i. *Allen, William Cuic. 00 *Alley, C. Ed *Alvey, Murray... __Axige *Bockhurst, John A__________ *Bordas, Walter... *Bowman, Gay D.... ...._.. *Brenner, Robert_____________ *Brockhurst, Robert H_______ Bumgardner, Everet F_______ *Burchette, Robert___________ *Clark,"Robert {.o.l.0 io. *Clover, Robert M *Corte, ‘Charles... *Cottrell, Ernest J..._0.. *Craven, Thomas. . ....... *Culver, Willard R.______.__. *Danor, George iu.i: *Dayis, Hugh, Fpl 0... *Del Vecchio, Charles. __._.. *Dennchy, Paul J *Denton, Robert H_..._______ De Titia, Jr., Deon. ii. i. *Dibble, Allen C._.________ (A *DiJoseph, John M___________ *Dorsey, George A...._._._.. *Dorsey, George Moa or *Dresner, Bernard M_________ *Driscoll, Norman... ________ *Edwards, Nelson____________ Elis, Arthur... ........ 0... Representing— Evening Siar. starter ain sonarads Associnted Press. .....oeo... Fused L. Acme Newspictures, Inc Warner-Pathe News, Inco «oo coca. Acme Newspietures.. ....—c.caceioncionch- Saturday. Evening Post. 20: oii oo i... Asgociated Press. o.oore Evening Star. ia liictaun2080 0 00. iv, Washington Daily News__._____.____....... M-G-M Newsofthe Day. ___________.______ International News Photos_..____...._______ Associated Press Photos... ii i i... Evening Stay. Snr g Bodoni. Republican National Congressional Com- mittee. State Department: o... od acne ines ve bts Washington Post ‘Wide World Phol0s. ces i-inrmap Acme Newspictures, Inc... _____.. ___..._.. Evening Star. = ccc... JJH 7] Le. BOEITINL Reni News -Phetes i. ui. 202i 1. Acme Newspictures, Inc. _ Acme Newspictures, Inc National Geographic Magazine -..........L. Paramonn IN OWS aain nate National Geographic Magazine _____________ Evening Star... 200. FL Iu IZE UL Fox Movietone News_._..________._____.___ Washington Potts. arrose it ‘Washington Times-Herald _________________. Marchof Pime to = 00 L200 Lu lu Reni News Photos: oc... 00200 oe NBC Television ‘Warner-Pathe News NBC Television Pathfinder Magazine. J. ..t 10. C0 0.0 Paramount News. oo orem Washington Postili. lll D0 Lui in Residence 1630 Fuller St. 6808 Dartmouth Ave., Col-lege Park, Md. 4814 29th St. South, Fair-lington, Arlington, Va. 8005 Eastern Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1372 Kenyon St. Fairfax, Va. 2800 Quebec St. 1524 Varnum St. 3611 South Four Mile Run Dr., Arlington, Va. Commodore Hotel. Box 294A, route 2, Fairfax, Va. 4842 1st St. South, Arling-ton, Va. 10208 Loraine Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 6935 26th bis East Falls Church, 2802 Terrace Ra. SE. 806 Thurman Ave., Hamp-shire Knolls, Hyattsville, Md. 9504 Old Bladensburg Rd., Silver Spring, Md 127 C St. SE. 3606 3d St. North, Arling-ton, Va. 5028 Massachusetts Ave. 2331 40th St. 1302 Bryant St. NE. 717 Olmi-Landrith Dr., Alexandria, Va. 350 North Glebe Rd., Ar-lington, Va. 1611 Myrtle St. 3794 Nicholas Ave, SE. 1445 Otis Pl. 806 Princeton PI. 7704 Colesville Rd., Union Hills, Md. 1332 Locust Rd. Building 7209, Apt. 101, Kent Village, Forest Rd., Hyattsville, Md. 1 oun Linem St., Ar- ing 1739 on St. NE. 7 Woodmoor Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 1359 Kalmia Rd. 1500 Lee Blvd., Arlington, Va. 715 Chestnut Ave., Falls Church, Va. 3054 Srinah Ave., Balti-mo d. 765 DR oeton PL 575 Congressional Directory Name *Fllis, Clarence... ...ononiecnn *Hrieson, Briand... ......o... *Psper,; Henry M._.. ....... [| Ferneyhough, Byrd F_______ Rine, Nabe iar nannns *Pisher, Franklin L._________ *Fletcher, John EB............ sTolletie, Frank...I... 2 .. *Forsythe, William J_________ sPoster, Burt... Slee zoiio *Preier, Milton....covanea vee *Gaylin, George R_ _.._.____. *Georges, Harvey.-...-........ *QGerlach, George. oo... *(Jlick, Leonard H........... *Goodman, Harry............ *Goodwin, Harry E_____..____ *Qorry, Charles. ico... *Qorry, Willlam Xzc. *Qreenberg, Hyman_____.____ Griffin, Henry... ii... *Heiberger, Joseph. ._..._._... Hess, Bobert.......-0.8.20 *Hoertel, Brieei. .cob.ouiltL *Jenkins, Henry... occa. *Johnson, Hugo C___._._._... *Johnson, Maurice. _:o.oo..._ *Johnston, George F._________ Jones, Charles. ii. 0.0... *Jones, Gene... ic. huge. *Kalee, Georgeoc.anilania.. *Kauffman, Mark. _.......... *Kelley, Thomas Wouis *Klemm, William O_________ Koza, Frank... cleo ii. tia... *Krebbs, Lawrence. .__....__. *Kress, G. Bradford_____.____. *Langenegger, John R________ *Lartz, Jack. coin dobel i Locke, Justin N______._._____ *Lyons, James E_....c0_1. *Mack, Charles J__._.__.__.___ Martin, Jackie...aiienm- i... *May, Andrew J... 0... *McCormac, Robert, Jr______ *McNamara, James. __._._____ *Miller, Hugh. iio .i...0:i. *Mulligan, Robert C *Mueller, John: GCG: .:.. *Muto, Alfonso. A. io MEMBERS REPRESENTED—Continued Representing— Warner-Pathe News... oo... Associated Press. cop fo sin pgs nial Washington Times-Herald ._ __._______._...._ Washington Times-Herald ______________.____ Sports World i inertiameaty National Geographic Magazine_._._____.____ National Geographic Magazine __________._..__ Tox Movietone News... oremnnbon Agriculture Department. ___________________ Associated Pressooi aidan l ui auaill umn Acme Newspictures, In€.. ccc Acme Newspictures, Ine. ===... ._..__. Ascociated Press... Cl. oc .lo.oaaol TRlENBWS..... coo em mmm md SSL I LSI RL Washington Times-Herald._________._._.____ NE ER Lr a SER SS a SE I Washington Posts c coll slic moiv ii. ASSoeIated Press. fi. inti inant Assoelated Press: =o tl xian il covuiies.. Veterans’ Administration. _._._______.___ ro Associated Press. s.i lil douse. Washington Times-Herald._.._.__._._.______ dR Day AR SO Ne I Se New York Times. coil count adoinad NBC Television. =o 00 inilagacawinivrnts ‘Washington Evening Star__._____. ____..____ Wide: World Photos. =...oe... 0 Associated Press: aaa Ls Paramount News...ude can.) o.oo. International Newsphotos... ..._..___ ‘Washington News Reel. .__._._____________. NBC Televison ol. aduilsnesacnasnn sardade NBO Television..... oon deed .. sriabanutJoe Washington Times-Herald._________________ Life Magazine. ood. oes bocouausiosonain.... Telenews. sooo dll siilagssasddil ll, Stadia Washington Daily News.__....__._..____.___ NBC Television... ..covui duseicicanliiiade. NBC Televsion. ...i cuuuvit sadian dodaet oa Washington Post....... code stice masala. National Geographic Magazine. _ ___________ Universal-International Newsreel .__________ M-G-M Newsof the Day... ___._...__. FreoLonee. ......... usiedil sisal egabhae. Haris EE Bwing... onolvcl.ilaii _ nt. Acme Newspictures, INC. -_ -cco Washington Times-Herald . ________._..___.__ Washington Post. coe sai obo tien = International Newsphotos Pvening Star... co se i aa International News Photos__._..._.___________ Residence 102 Woodhaven Blvd. Bethesda, Md 126 Springvale Ave., Mec-Lean, Va, 2306 11th St. North, Arling-ton, Va, ny North Taft, Arlington, a. 907 Pershing Dr., Silver Spring, Md 2101 Connecticut Ave. 806 East Broad St., Falls Church, Va. Commodore Hotel. R. F. D. 1, Sterling, Va. 2245 North Harrison St. oy Arlington, Va. 2120 South Buchanan St., Arlington, Va. 1436 Primrose Rd. 3000 Lee Highway, Arling-ton, Va. 1509 Longfellow St., Hyatts-ville, 1825 New Hampshire Ave. 3525 East Capitol St. 3617 S St. 678 Monin Drive, Falls urch, Va. 6581 Luly Falls Rd., Ar-lington, Va. 325 BS afield Place. 185% Ridge Rd., Greenbelt, d. 10016 Portland Rd., Silver Spring, : 508 Linden Lane. 3220 Connecticut Ave. 503 Bion? vor SE. 1606 A St. 8504 Sin 8t., Bethesda, Md. 507 Joys Ave., Takoma Park, Md. 1506 Live Oak Dr., Silver Spring, Md. EAE Blvd., Arlington, 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 5420 Connecticut Ave. 24 East 71st St., New York ~City, N. Y,., 5110 41st Ave., Hyattsville, Md. 9923 Woodburn Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 906 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, 2 612 Emerson St. 2500 Wisconsin Ave. 1660 Lanier Place. 401 Franklin St., Alexan-dria, Va. 4612 Clemson Rd., College Park, Md. S000 Haley Rd., Rockville, 2011 I St. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 7816 Aberdeen Rd., Bradley Woods, Bethesda, Md. 339 Randolph St. 1920 35th St. 407 Brewster Ave., Silver Spring, Md. 10210 Pierce Dr., Silver Spring, Md 4409 Yuma St. 218 Woodlawn, Falls Church, Va. 635 Farragut St. 2821 9th St. South, Arling-ton, News Photographers’ Association 577 MEMBERS REPRESENTED—Continued Name Representing— Residence *Muto, Anthony. *Q’eth, Alfred J._._ *(Q’Halloran, Thomas J., Jr___ *Payne, William Berkley__.._ *Pergola, Nicholas J........._ *Pridgeon, Irwin. ____ *Raley, Charles J. *Roberts, Joseph B_._ _.__.. *Rohland, Henry. *Rollins, Byron H-"-~:~ *Rous, John H____ *Routt, Francis R *Routt, Randolph Jos Sno *Qac Ss, Arnold ooove *Schmick, Paul M [[Schuster, Albert C *Qcott, Arthur B...... -..._. *Shutt, Charles B._.......... *Simonson, Alfred WAS Sut Le Sisson, Robert RH... tic at Lo *Skadding, George R_______._ *Oith, WJ, Jes rat *Smythe, William ES *Stein, John W___ *Stewart, B. Anth ony ici *Stewart, Richard SS *Stinchcomb, Warring _______ *Streets, Wellner C__.___ Pames, George. coo Crk LT Thomas, Gene........-.--..t-*Thompson, F. Irving... ____. *Tondra, John A... _._.. ... *Tretick, Stanley. *Tugander, Harry... ----..... *Van Tine, Harry M *Vines,-Daniel. os evi sWallcor, CL Avoid dara bo *Walker,, Honk. .. ... _... Wallis, Ralph. coren-=---[[Wentzel, Volkma Peery oe *Wilkinson, F. Clyde _._____ *Williams, Malcolm....._____ *Willoner, Andrew... _______. *Wilson, Jac. o> voce noae= *Wilson, Woodrow _...______._ *Wisherd, Edwin L._.________ Zimmerman, John Fox Movietonews, Inc Paramount News 15 Vd ERE DAS seii CR Te ei ‘Washington Times-Herald Acme Newspictures, Inc... ooo... BVenIng Sar os 5 dc rrnrrt omen inn Department of the Army National Geographic Magazine. ___________._ Washingten-Post: i Usd nll. | Assoclated Press Photos: ____._.. Associated Press Photos... ...____...... Evening Star. iol. a stan tar am mn e immrim Bvening Star loi ain International News Photos. ._ ooo Washington Evening Star SEL SR RE Universal-International Newsreel.________._ International News Photos. _______________ IONOWS. ainas nad a ot A N:B.C. Television... 0.010 el National Geographic Magazine _____________ Life Magazine, Time, Ine... _...... Associpted Press. wa GRUIOLE oll Fox Movietonews, Ine... Lo .. _.._._.___ International News Photos. ____.____._._____ National Geographic Magazine _____________ National Geographic Magazine ______..___.__ Harris & Bwing 0h or iis ‘Washington Tinos: Heraldlius New -YorkPimes. 2-0-3 7.0. i. Washington Daily News... _______________. International News Photos... ___.____.___.. Fox Meovietonews, . . ... Inc... = Acme News Pictures, Ine...__.. Universal:Newsreel © toro-oo noo Taf: Magazin@ 30 Liat sin lids tily Associated Press. ou ta Lo. National Geographic Magazine_____________ Fox Movietonews, The Zo. .. M-G-M Newsofthe Day... ......_......... National Geographic Magazine____________. TimeMagazine. on tioSRL Lil Bos 1138, Route 4, Annapo-is, 3 5419 Lincoln St., Bethesda, Md. 4504 37th St., Brentwood, Md. ms 14th St., Hyattsville, 16-F Ridge Rd., Greenbelt, Md 6147 30th St. 1213 Independence Ave. SE. 17 North Greenbrier St., Arlington, Va. ; 106 Lynnmoor Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 4421 Butterworth Pl. 3201 Snes Road, Alex-andria, Va. 2505 Parker Ave., Wheaton Hills, Md. 303 Lexington Dr., Wood: moor, Silver Spring, Md. 238 Oakwood St. SE. 220 .Pimmit Dr., Falls Church, Va. 1005 New J ersey Ave. on lo St. North, Arling- on, 653 ennlon Dr., Sil-ver Spring, Md. os 53d Pl., Bladensburg, Be Valley Dr., Alexandria, a. 2816 McKinley PI. 4513 17th St. NE. Bont 53d Pl., Bladensburg, 1303 Seaton Circle, Falls Church, Va. a MacArthur Blvd. 9 Woodmoor Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 938 14th St. SE. 2726 South Wayne St., Ar- lington, Va. 5611 Wilson Blvd., Arling-ton, Va. 6548 "Williamsburg Blvd., East Falls Church, Va. 6002 32d St. 200 Rhode Island Ave. NE. 8106 New Hampshire Ave. 3267 Queenstown Dr., Mount Reinier Md. 1527 Park Rd 514 Timber Lane, Falls Church, Va. 11801 Grandview Ave., Sil-sa Spring, Md. 0 O St. 2) tn aL Arlington, Va. il North Quincy St., Arlington, Va 413 3d St. 4106 70th Ave., Landover Hills, Md. 4415 49th St. 3022 K St. SE. 4704 Warren St. 3200 O St. SERVICES REPRESENTED Service Name Office STILL PICTURE SERVICES Acme Newspictures. o_o. cca. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Robert McCormac, Jr_____________ 1013 13th St. Nicholas Pergola. uso.ic 2. 1013 13th St. Stanley: "Bretick = o-oo 1013 13th St. Associated Press Photos. coool... Burt Foster, manager... __.__.___ 330 Star Bldg. William C. Allen 330 Star Bldg. Robert: Baer.o rer oot be ior 330 Star Bldg. Guy D.. Bowman. ..i..o.t. 00. 330 Star Bldg. Henry Barroughs..._.__._ 5... 330 Star Bldg. Erland Brieson og nisin. 330 Star Bldg. Harvey Georges.r. ia issinstbl 330 Star Bldg. Charles Qortyao nf rrr =a 330 Star Bldg. William Gorry...... coool 330 Star Bldg. Henryl. Griffin 0: o_o. 330 Star Bldg. Henry JLon! REEL EL Sok SEL dE 330 Star Bldg. Rann Walls or oer 330 Star Bldg. Harris & Ewing. luli iat mmenenaen—-Andrew J. May. manager. __.______ 1313 F St. Thomas J. O’Halloran, Jr. ________ 1313 F St. Daniel Vines tas sade. 1313 F St. winrar Warren Stinchecomb______________. 1313 F St. International News Photos...__ Walter J. Bordas, manager___._.____ 1317-1321 H St. Maurice Johnson": oo oi. Robert C. Mulligan.______________ Alfonso A. to ane 0 Muto.....5 Arnold'Sachssy race oooh Arthur B. 3 feu 110. Seotite:ov0 John W. Stein____ : F, Irving Thompson..............-1317-1321 H St. CA Walker SoU ovgr or std ee 1317-1321 H St. New York Times Photos.........._...... George Tomes... oo inal 717 Albee Bldg. Bruce Hoertel:. ci coioertouris 717 Albee Bldg. Wide: WorldPhotose +5. Lt. Joseph D. Jamieson, manager. ____ 330 Star Bldg. Byron H: Rollins... soot 330 Star Bldg. NEWSREEL SERVICES Fox Movietonews, InC_ — «oo coooooo.___ Anthony Muto, manager___.______ 413 3d St. Deon-De Title Ir 2a— oz an 413 3d St. | William KE. Smythe... .........;-413 3d St. John'A. Tondra. oa oo ci. condi. 413 3d St. Malcolm Williams. ............... 413 3d St. HuehiDavis. craata daa ris) 413 3d St. iss Frank Tollette > =.> %. 413 3d St. M.G.M.Newsofthe Day. .........o John'A. Bockhurst oo...4. 1005 New Jersey Ave. Charles J. Magk. oes oo. ooh. 1005 New Jersey Ave. Andrew Willoner_ ooo __..____ 1005 New Jersey Ave. Marehoof'ime 4... co. i. Aen CC Dibble Too. 1000 Vermont Ave. Paramount NEWS. Lie tin. nme Robert H. Denton, manager--___. 306 H amanns St. Thomas Craven. cu cio. 306 H St. Nelson Edwards.....-<.v2oona-io. 306 H St. Hugo: CQ. Johmson 2 .-..-........ 306 H St. Aired’ J. O’Bth:. = uence. 306 H St. Telenows, INS, INP. cou. tea. Charles E. Shutt, manager.._._..__ 1905 Fairview Ave. NE, George Gerlach. i... oc. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE, Robert Hess io. oe 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. Prank Boga. oo vi nih 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. Universal-International Newsreel________ James E. Lyons, manager_-.._.____ 1005 New Jersey Ave. Albert C.Sehuster........->... 1005 New Jersey Ave. Harry Tugander.. wos oad. 1005 New Jersey Ave. Warner-Pathe News..._.___ George M. Dorsey, manager____.. 707 Warner Bldg. Murray Alvey. oor 707 Warner Bldg. Clarence BINS...0a at 707 Warner Bldg. 0. 578 News Photographers’ Association 579 SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Service Name Office NEWS MAGAZINES Saturday Evening Post. _ -coooomoeeeen OMe ATEINS.. =, eee ert piss Fairfax, Va. THesMogazine. oo, o.oo en aE Mark Kanfflmen._._.2¢. 2... 1000 Vermont Ave. | ‘George Skadding_.___..________ 1000 Vermont Ave. Hank: Walker... Joa 00 1000 Vermont Ave. National Geographic Magazine. __.__.___ Franklin L. Fisher, manager 16th and M Sts. Ernest J. Cottrell. ..._._.C: 16th and M Sts. Willard:R. Culver... 16th and M Sts. John B®, Fletcher... ..... 16th and M Sts. Justin N. .. ..... 16th and M Sts. Tocke....... Joseph'B. Roberts... 16th and M Sts. Robert P. Sisson... =... 16th and M Sts. B. Anthony Stewart. ......__. 16th and M Sts. Riehard H, Stewart... 16th and M Sts. 16th and M Sts. Pathfinder: J 0. os Sports World... :iesovui... Time Magazine... --_._-_.. 1000 Vermont Ave. TELEVISION NEWSREELS NBC Television. .....c.cace.. a John R. Langenegger___..._._. Kass Bldg. George A. Dorsey. ooo... Kass Bldg. John Hefen = oeSir nor Kass Bldg. G. Bradford Kress... oo Kass Bldg. Bernard Dresner.—.......o.... Kass Bldg. Al'W, Simonson....:: Kass Bldg. NEWSPAPER PHOTO DEPARTMENTS Washington Daily News_.___ 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. 1013 13th St. Washington News Reel. ____ 1704 Preston Rd., Alex-andria, Va. ‘Washington Post... Erne Hugh Miller, manager. _______ Post Bldg. Robert Burchette.._._________ Post Bldg. Charles Del Vecchio ____.___. Post Bldg. Arthur Bliss Post Bldg. Harry BE. Goodwin............. Post Bldg. Thomas W. Kelley..___._..___. Post Bldg. William O. Klemm. __..__...._ Post Bldg. Jacki arls: 0 aa Post Bldg. Henry Rohland. .._..o..ooo-n Post Bldg. ‘Washington Evening Star___. ME Lone Irwin Pridgeon, manager Star Bldg. Eugene Abbott. _____________. Star Bldg. Elwood Baker. _ oo... Star Bldg. Ster Bldg. Augustus C. Chinn. ________.__ Star Bldg. George Danor.......ioccenea Star Bldg. Harry Goodman....:. comin Star Bldg. JOR THOraN. ootoct mn mi Star Bldg. John C. Mueller... ..=-:...--Star Bldg. Star Bldg. Randolph J. Routt Star Bldg. Pagl Sehmiek. o_o 5.0 Star Bldg. Washington Times-Herald_ _. So ly George Kalec, manager ___.._. Paul J. Dennehy... _.____._... Henry M, Bsper.. ............ Byrd F. Ferneyhough._______-_ Leonard H. Glick.............. 1317-1321 H St. Joseph Heiberger..........._... 1317-1321 H St. James McNamara. ....__..__.. 1317-1321 H St. William Berkley Payne_..___. 1317-1321 H St. Wellner C. Streets... ....______ 1317-1321 H St. OFFICERS OF THE WHITE HOUSE NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS’ ASSOCIATION EvceENE ABBOTT, President TrOMAS CRAVEN, Vice President MAvuRrIiCE JOHNSON, Secretary Bruck HorrtEL, Treasurer Executive Committee JoaN A. ToNDRA WirLiaM C. ALLEN HARRY GOODMAN G. BraDFORD KRESS RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION | [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the t designates those whose un- married daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] Name Representing— Residence *Agronsky, Martin___________ American Broadcasting A L—The 2605 Tilden PI. Co.—WM Evening Star Station. Ashby, Helen... . ©... WOL—Liberty Broadcasting System _______ 1301 15th St. * Ayers, Theodore A__.__ National Broadcasting Co.—Television Windy Knoll McLean, Va. News. *Back, J. Gunnar. ...... American Broadcasting MA L—The 8 Accotink Rd., Route 1, Co.—W Evening Star Station. Alexandria, Va. *Bancroft, Griffing_. ___. Columbia Rroadcasting System ____._________ 3051 N St. *Barriault, Arthur B-........ National Broadcasting Co.—Radio_____.____ 3621 Greenway Pl., Alexan- dria, Va. *Bates, Korl Yas i W OL—Liberty Broadcasting System _______ 1114 Edmonston Dr., Rock- ville, *Baykhage, H.R... i. Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ 1735 New Hampshire Ave. *Beatty, Morgan____.._. National Broadcasting Co.—Radio._________ Burnt Mills Hills, Silver pring, Md. *Berger, Eugene H______ WOL—Liberty Broadcasting System_______ 1524 17th St. North, Arling-ton, Va. Block, Rudolph... .... ...... KOMO, Seattle, Wash.; KGEZ, Kalispell, 818 17th St. Mont.; KPOA, Honolulu, Hawaii. *Blom, Virgins H._._....... Bill Henry Associates. ciclo ota 3218 39th St. *Bourgholtzer, Frank____ National Broadcasting Co.—Radio__________ 3611 Gunston Rd., Alex- andria, Va. *Brinkley, David._______ National Broadcasting Co.—Television 9000 Spring Hill Lane, News. Chevy Chase, Md. *Brooks, Ned... o.oo National Broadcasting Co.—Radio._________ 4103 Oliver §St., Chevy ase, Md. *Burke, Bryce W.. _-... United Press Radios ei den anna ams 3019 Edgewood Rd., Ken- sington, Md. *Butler, Jack Fo. ...... WWDC 427 Mellon St. SE. *Campbell, George W., Jr____ WOL—Liberty Broadcasting System_______ 129 Winchester Way, Falls Church, Va. *Cannon, James S_______ Associated Press Radio ciocE Eh Ave., Hyattsville, *Catella, Anthony P_._______ Associated Press Radio = ni 0 vo 519 St. NE. iin. Nicholson Chester, Anita________ -~ Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ 4201 Massachusetts Ave. Cioffi, Louis J Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ 4201 Massachusetts Ave. *Cochran, Ronald V_____ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ 5411 Massachusetts Ave. *Coffin, Tris..oio ion Tris Coffin Associates. 2 ie oo 5601 Warwick Place, Chevy Chase, Md. **Collingwood, Charles.___ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ 3626 Prospect Ave. *Coney, Charles Lee, Jr. American Broadcasting Co.— WM AL—The 2801 Adams Mill Rd. Evening Star Station *Connolly, E. Johny a x= WRC—National Broadcasting Co___________ 4329 4th St. Corrick, Ann M American Forum of the Air_________________ 3900 16th St. Costello, Bill. ...1=.. Columbia Broadcasting System____________. Grasslands, Linden, Va. *Cronkite, Walter L., Jr_ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ 6814 Oregon St. *PDavis, Bimer = 2 x American Broadcasting Co.— WM AL—The 1661 Crescent PI. Evening Star Station. *Dibble, Allen Carlton. March of Time—TV 424 North Lincoln §St., Arlington, Va. *Powns, Bill... Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ 4504 Salem Lane. Dresner, Bernard M_____ National Broadcasting Co.—Television 0, Lee Blvd., Arlington, News. A A_____ io *Edwards, Frank Mutual Broadeasting Co...i a i aes 2700 Mastachsity Ave. Edwards, John..........._ American Broadcasting Co.—WMAL—The 1736 K St. Evening Star Station. IE ee National Broadcasting Co.—Radio____..____ 2517 Massachusetts Ave. *Erwin, Julia Gaillard.__ Eve LL Services, Ine... a nisin 4741 Massachusetts Ave. *Evans, Kenneth_ ___________ WW 1012 North Kennesaw St., Arlington, Va. *Fanning, Wallace R., Jr Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ 6907 22d P1., Lewisdale, Md. Franck, Rodger i bn Columbia Broadcasting System___________.__ 2800 Queb ec St. *Frome, Galen... ......: WBAL—Baltimore oo. i oli emanninnn 813 Tred Avon Road, Balti- more, Md. *Gerlach, George: 2. 8211 Grove St., Silver Spring, Md. 580 Radio Galleries MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name *QGilpin, Lewie V_____________ *CGoad, Rex B.i. L.. — . *Qodwin, Earl lo 00... *Goodman, Julian *Griggs, Nelson M___._____.. *Green, Panml 8... _ Li... *Haas, Lawrence. ............ Halle, Kay. il ou.000. lo *Hamilton, Roulhae, Jr__..__ *Harkness, Richard. __...._. *Harsch, Joseph OC... _.._... *Hatch, William"'B....... .._. *Henle, Ray... Ll 0 col .. *Henry, Ray iii Ll oo ... *Henry, William M. (Bill)... *Hess, Robert *Higginbotham, W. R________ Hillman, William..... . *Hofl, Florence O.___ i ...... *Holles, Everette R__________ *Kany, Howard LI.... _. Kaplow, Herbert_________.____ Keller, Cassius Mic. Kirchner, Naney C._...... Kloepfer, William, Jr_________ Koop, Theodore Boer Koza, Frank *Rress, G. Bradford... _...... *Teiper,James B.._________.. sTewis, Fulton, Jr..._.. *McCafirey, Joseph F________ *McCarthy, George. ______ *McCloskey, Paul W_________ *MacFarlane, Ian Ross__.____ *MacFarlane, Louise Anne_._ "Magee, John P...___..--__.. *Mahoney, Claude A________. Mandel, Salome. ___._....... *Marder, George J... _..__-__. Markel, Hazel. “20... *Marks, "Dorothy Holloway. -*Martz, Glenn =... _..... Means, Henrietta. __________ *Miall, R. Leonard........... Montgomery, Jean Clark_____ *Morrison, Fred W.__________. *Mustin, Henry A.-.......-.C Neel, William: ....... a... sparmer, Charles..... sRosh, Bryson B........._.¢ sRoed, Jack RB. eeconneoaa--- Representing— National Broadcasting Co... oicceeoooo.. National Broadeasting Co.—Radio_.___..___ National Broadcasting Co.—Radio.______... National Broadcasting Co.—Television News WASH—Continental Network. _.____._...__.. Mutual Broadcasting System. _____.__.___.. Columbia Broadcasting System________._._.. WGAR, Cleveland, Ohio-..........iueda... Erwin News Service, Ine... oo cvvvveunens National Broadcasting Co.—Radio._____.... W OL—Liberty Broadcasting System. _..___ American Broadcasting MA Co.—WL—The Evening Star Station. National Broadcasting Co.—Radio_.___.__._ Associated Press Radio... ...ccoiuzil. Bill Henry Associates: foi coool ouaonl Telenews Productions Inc... United Press Television: .ioooaildoacnalio Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ KING, Seattle, Was Mutual Broadcasting System. .______________ Associated Press Radio... oo. il oauiaic... WRC—National Broadcasting Co.__._______ ‘WR C—National Broadcasting Co___________ 'Talenews ProductionIne. ir. 0% WRC—National Broadcasting Co Columbia Broadcasting System ______ : Telenews Productionne -............_.._ aE Broadcasting Co.—Television WS National Broadcasting Co.—Television News. Mutual Broadcasting System _______________ Mutual Broadcasting System... _____________ United Press Television... __.. coe. Enited Pregs Radler. ooo 0. ae. WBMD—Kay Broadcasting Corp., Balti-more, ! WBMD—Kay Broadcasting Corp., Balti-more -American Br oadcasting Co.—WMAL—The Evening Star Station. Columbia Broadcasting System_____._______ French Broadcasting System in North America. United Press Radios: oo 5...i Mutual Broadcasting System __._____________ Granite State Network... ....covennmnnen United Press Televeision._.__..._._. _._..... Erwin News, Ine: ct io asl British Broadcasting Corp----ene cee eee oo. National Broadcasting Co.—Television News. National Broadcasting Co—Radio.._........ Evening Stars. ol ai American Broadcasting Co., WMAL—The Evening Star Station. American Broadcasting Co.—WMAL—The Evening Star Station. Charles Parmer and Associatess—WMBG & Affiliates, Richmond, Va. American Broadcasting Co.—WMAL—The Evening Star Station. Washington Reporters, Inc., The Yankee Network, N, Providence, RR. IL; WICC, Bridgeport, Conn.; WNAC, Bos-ton, Mass.; WONS, Hartford, Conn. Residence 408 Jefferson St., Alexan-dria, Va. ila St., Alexandria, R.F.D. 2, Alexandria, Va. 4520 19th Rd. North, Arling-ton, Va. 10419 ‘Tulep Ave., Wheaton, Md. 158 Colony Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 1475 Euclid St. 1534 29th St. 76 Forrester St. SW. 3035 Dumbarton Ave. Dupo Dr., Bethesda, 1443 Oak St. NW. 2737 Devonshire Pl. 203 Donmanton Dr., Alex andria, Va. Dorchester House. 508 Linden Lane, Falls Church, Va. 4605 Queensbury Rd., Riverdale, Md. 1701 Massachusetts Ave. 1616 Utah Ave. 2039 New Hampshire Ave. 401A ion Lane, Bethesda, 127 Jefferson St. 5251 43d St. Nancarles, Gambrills, Md. 5415 Connecticut Ave. 2737 Devonshire Pl. 2500 Wisconsin Ave. 401 Franklin St., Alexan-dria, Va. 1755 N St. 5020 Palisade Lane. 206 North Cherry St., Falls Church, Va. 1020 Newton St. NE. 3408 Pendleton Dr., Wheat- on, Md. 8 East Hamilton St., Balti-more, Md. 8 a "Hamilton St., Balti-e, Md. 4222 lath St. NW. EN D. 4, box 694, Fairfax, a. 1750 Massachusetts Ave. jn Mississippi Ave. SE. 2500 Q St. 2891 Audubon Terrace. Arcola, Va. 1225 13th St. 206 North Little Falls St., Falls Church, Va. 1824 Belmont Rd. R. ot D. 2, Silver Spring, 417 South Washington St., Alexandria, Va. 1610 16th St. 2711 Q St. SE. 318 North Washington St., Alexandria, Va. 3110 45th St. 8718 Manchester Rd., Silver Spring, Md Congressional Directory MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Representing— Residence *Reedy, George E___________. *Roll, Richard Foorui Lido 1 *Royen, Walter Jay._._.....___ *Sartain, Denis... 0.ll. Scherer, Ray Li Lo... *Seavey, M. Hollis. .......... *Serling, Robert J. ......-.._ *Sevareid, Brie. _.i i on... *Shadel, Willard F_.___.__.._. *Shisler, Virginia C.....____.. *Shollenberger, Lewis... ____ *Shutt, Charles BE. ___...._.._. Stonehouse, Merlin F________ Thomas, Helen... _.._....._.. Tornabene, Russell _._________ *Turner, C. Russell, Jr____.___ *Von Fremd, Charles S_______ *Walker, Alma E._._.______.___ *Warner, Albert L___.________ *Wershba, Joseph_____ . Young, Amelia Belle George E. Reedy Associates—WINK, Fort Myers, Fla.; WMIE, Miami, Fla. W OL—Liberty Broadcasting System ______. National Broadcasting Co.—Radio._________ WWDC National Broadcasting Co.—Radio Mutual Broadeasting System. ______________ United Press Radio’ i 8 o_o... Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ Baukhage Radio Associates... __.__.__ Columbia Broadcasting System ______._______ Telenews Productions, Ine. ________________. Stonehouse News Agency. oooooooooooo United Press Radios 0 oU-us ooo.0... WRC—National Broadcasting Co___._______ Mutual Broadcasting System. ______________ Columbia Broadcasting System _____________ Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ National Broadcasting Co.—Radio._________ Columbia Broadcasting System_____________ W OL—Liberty Broadcasting System _______ 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 5044 11th St. NE. 5081 Bradley Blvd., Be-thesda, Md 1719 K St. 810 South Pitt St., Alexan- dria, Va. 6108 28th St. North, Arling-on, Va. 8521 Garland Ave., Takoma Park, Md. Valley Lane, Seminary Hill, box 559, route 2, Alex-andria, Va. 1230 16th St. 4000 Cathedral Ave. 1505 Stonewall Rd., Alex-andria, Va. 653 North Hampton Dr., Silver Spring, Md. 3000 39th St. 1914 G St. 3004 North Columbus St., Fairlington, Va. 4320 Lorcom Lane, Arling-ton, Va. 7034 Strathmore St., Chevy Chase, Md. 4801 Connecticut Ave. 3320 University Ave. 3140 Wisconsin Ave. 2122 Massachusetts Ave. NETWORKS, STATIONS, AND SERVICES REPRESENTED (Phones: Capitol switchboard extensions, House Gallery, 1410 and 1411; Senate Gallery, 1263 and 1264) Network, station, or service Name Office American Broadcasting Co.: WMAL, The | Martin Agronsky.___________ 724 14th St. Evening Star Station. J..Gunnar Baek... .___. 0. 724 14th St. Charles Lee Coney, Jr...____ 724 14th St. Bimer:Davis. cx 4... 1661 Crescent Pl. John Bdwardsor . ......... 724 14th St. William'B. Hatch... 724 14th St. John PP: Magee... ......... 724 14th St. Henry A. Mustin:._.-___._. The Frenne Star. WilliamyNeel..t.t....... 724 14th St. 724 Fits St. Bryson B. Rash... 724 14th St. American Forum of the Air________________ AnnCorricke ttt. iota 1627 K St. Associated Press Radio. tivo aaaa. James S. Cannon.__._._______ 330 Star Bldg. Anthony Catella............ 330 Star Bldg. RAV HWY oh sila 330 Star Bldg. Howard L. Kany... ._..._.. 310 Star Bldg. Baukhage Radio Associates..._____________ Virginia. QC. Shisler. ........... 1306 18th St. Bill Henry: Associates. i= -o2 ioe... William M. (Bill) Henry .___. Dorchester House. Virginisg HH. Blam. ._.___._.. 2480 16th St. British: Broadcasting Corp... ____________ R. Leonard Miall. .__.______ 907 National Press Bldg. Charles Parmer and Associates—WMBG Charles Parmer. ...........-318 North Washington St., & Affiliates, Richmond, Va. Alexandria, Va. Columbia Broadcasting System... __.______ Ciriffing Bancroft... 854 Warner Bldg. Anita Ghester..t.._.i 854 Warner .-. Bldg. ToulsT.Cloffi. =|... 0 854 Warner Bldg. 854 Warner Bldg. Charles Collingwood. _______ 854 Warner Bldg. Bill Costello... 854 Warner Bldg. Walter L. Cronkite, Jr___.__ 854 Warner Bldg. Bill Downs... i. aoa. io 854 Warner Bldg. Rodger Franek... .--:.._ 854 Warner Bldg. Lawrence S. Haas... _____ 854 Warner Bldg. Theodore F. Koop.--..----.. 856 Warner Bldg. Claude A. Mahoney. .___.__ 854 Warner Bldg. EricSovareld..... -....... 851 Warner Bldg. Willard F. Shadel . _______.. 854 Warner Bldg. Lewis W. Shollenberger._.___ 854 Warner Bldg. Charles S. Von Fremd._____ 854 Warner Bldg. Joseph Wershba.._______.__. 854 Warner Bldg. Alma E. Walker... .._..c.: 854 Warner Bldg. Erwin News Service, Inc... como. Julia Gaillard Erwin________ 606 Warner Bldg. Roulhac Hamilton, Jr.______ 606 Warner Bldg. Henrietta Means... _...__.___ 606 Warner Bldg. George E. Reedy Associates... ...._..____ George E. Reedy... ..___.._ 500 South Water Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. Granite State Network... oo... ....0. Dorothy Holloway Marks. . 2891 Audubon Terrace. KGEZ, Ralispell, Mont.2 oii. ...s..oe. Rudolph-Bloels:.. ..---1090 National Press Bldg. KING, Seattle, Wash Florence C. Hoff 2500 Q St. KOMO, Seattle Wash. =3 ~ uo. RudolphiBloek............. 1090 National Press Bldg. EPOA,;Bonolnla. o.oofi aaa Rudolph: Bloek.___---:-_.__-1090 National Press Bldg. MarchrofPime=lCVir tr Allen Carlton Dibble__.____ 1000 Vermont Ave. Mutual Broadcasting System. .___________ H.R. Bonkhage....-----zt 1306 18th St. Frank A. Edwards_..__.____ 901 Massachusetts Ave. Wallace R. Fanning_________ 1627 XK St. Paul 83Creen. b= io ats 901 Massachusetts Ave. Willlam Hillman. 2: 1627K St. Everette R. Holles.___...___ 1627 K St. Fulton Lewis, Jr.cio...icc 811 Barr Bldg. Jos. FP. MeCafirey.—..--... 1627 K St. Hazel'Morkel => 3 00 1627 XK St. Hollis M.. Seavey. ._...._._. 1627 K St. CO. Russell Turner, Jr........ 811 Barr Bldg. National Broadcasting Company—Radio_. Arthor B. Barrisult.-..-....... 724 14th St. Morgan Beatty 724 14th St. Frank Bohrahiol jar ARS SH a 724 14th St. Ned B: 1625 K St. 724 14th St. Lewie V. Gilpin ___________ 1627 K St. Rex Goad 724 14th St. BarliGodwin...cecda-nal 2 724 14th St. Richard Harkness._..._..... 724 14th St. 583 584 Congressional Directory NETWORKS, STATIONS, AND SERVICES REPRESENTED—Continued Network, station, or service Name National Broadcasting Company— | Ray Henle_________._________ Radio—Continued Herbert Kaplow..___________ Fred Morrison... o.oo Walter Jay Royen._._._.__._. Ray Scherer... ...0...... Albert L. Warner ........... National Broadcasting Company—Tele-Theodore A. Ayers.________. vision News. David Brinkley~ =..._.. Bernard M. Dresner.__._.____ Julian. Goodman. .....____. G. Bradford Kress... .._...... James: B. Leiper........2. Jean Clark Montgomery...__ National Broadcasting Company— WRC__ John E. Connolly. __...... Cassius M. Keller. _.______. William Kloepfer, Jr_._._____ Russell T'ornabene __________ Stonehouse News Agency... ooooooeo-Merlin F. Stonehouse. __.__. Telenews Productions, Inc —.._______.._.___ Charles BB. Shutt............ George Gerlach _. ....._..__ Robert’ Hess o>... Frank Koza. tos. w crmnin. The French Broadcasting System in North America. Tris Coffin Assoelates li: Co. oo ool Pris Coffin. Jos ono al a5 United Press Radios... ol... .. Bryce W. Burke. ........... Paul W. McCloskey. _.._.__. George J. Marder. .._.._..._. Robert J. Serling..__________ Helen Thomas: Lii. au. United Press Television... ooo _ W. R. Higginbotham _______ George McCarthy. __________ Glenn Martz. i. ou. WASH—The Continental Network. ______ Nelson M. Griggs. _......... Washington Reporters, Inc. and Yankee Jack'R. Reed fill... nunca Network. WBAL—Baltimeore: ito 00 oo 00 WBMD, Baltimore’...cada eee do Louise Anne MacFarlane. __ WGQGAR, Cleveland, OhiQ.. co...___ Kay Hale 0ulia oh... WINK—Fort Myers, Fla______.__.._______. George E. Reedy... _..__. WMBG & Affiliates, Richmond, Va______ Charles: Parmer. ............. WMIE, Miami, Blais oo 2000 George E. Reedy... ....... WOL—Liberty Broadcasting System.______ Helen Ashby... ......... Karl'J. Bates. ot ooo Eugene H. Berger___.__.._.. George W. Campbell, Jr. ___ Joseph C. Harsch. ._.._____. Richard T. Rolly. _.... ._.._ Amelia Belle Young_____.__. WWDO, Washington... ..00 ee ieiiina Jack'F. Butlers... oo Ken Bvang iii. coon Denis Sartain'.. ..c.vuuiun. Office 1625 K St. 724 14th St. 16256 K St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 1625 K St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 715-711 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 724 14th St. 412 Albee Bldg. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 1905 Fairview Ave. NE. 1750 Massachusetts Ave. World Center Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 705 National Press Bldg. 707 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 714 National Press Bldg. 1319 F St. 1397 National Press Bldg. 2600 North Charles St., Balti-more, Md. 8 East Hamilton St., Balti-more, Md. 8 East Hamilton St., Balti- more, 2 1534 29th St. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 318 N. Washington St., Alex-andria, Va. 500 South Walter Reed Dr., Arlington, Va. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1000 Connecticut Ave. 1627 K St. 1627 K St. 1627 K St. SENATE RADIO GALLERY D. Harold McGrath, superintendent, 3533 East Capitol Street. Robert C. Hough, assistant, 1114 Merrimack Dr., Silver Spring, Md. Con J. D’Andrea, assistant, 2579 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Carmen Garcia, assistant, 5316 Eighth Road South, Arlington, Va. HOUSE RADIO GALLERY Robert M. Menaugh, superintendent, 2311 Valley Drive, Alexandria, Va. Clarence T. Day, assistant, 3801 Sixteenth Street South, Arlington, Va. Manuel Michaelson, 1500 Lee Boulevard, Arlington, Va. Radio Galleries RULES GOVERNING RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Radio Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXYV of the House of Represent-atives, as amended, and to the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate, as required by rule IV, as amended, for the regulation of the Senate wing of the Capitol. Applicants shall state in writing the names of all radio stations, systems, or news-gathering organizations by which they are employed and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any. Applicants shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims or the promotion of legislation pending before Congress, the Departments, or the independent agencies, and that they will not become so employed without resigning from the galleries. They shall further declare that they are not employed in any legislative or execu-tive department or independent agency of the Government, or by any foreign gov-ernment or representative thereof; that they are not engaged in any lobbying activities; that they do not and will not, directly or indirectly, furnish special information to any organization, individual, or group of individuals for the influenc-ing of prices on any commodity or stock exchange; that they will not do so during the time they retain membership in the galleries. Holders of visitors’ cards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to all the restrictions of this paragraph. 2. It shall be prerequisite to membership that the radio station, system, or news-gathering agency which the applicant represents shall certify in writing to the Radio Correspondents’ Association that the applicant conforms to the regu-lations of paragraph 1. : 3. The applications required by paragraph 1 shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the executive committee of the Radio Correspondents Association, who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide news gatherers and/or reporters of reputable standing in their business who represent radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies engaged primarily in serving radio stations or systems. It shall be the duty of the executive com-mittee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association to report, at their discretion, violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker or to the Senate Com-mittee on Rules and Administration, and, pending action thereon, the offending individual may be suspended. 4. Persons engaged in other occupations, whose chief attention is not given to the gathering or reporting of news for radio stations, systems, or news-gathering agencies primarily serving radio stations or systems, shall not be entitled to admis-sion to the Radio Gallery. The Radio Correspondents’ List in the CONGRESSIONAL DirecToRrY shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to the gathering and reporting of news for radio stations and systems engaged in the daily dissemination of news, and of representatives of news-gathering agencies engaged in the daily service of news to such radio stations or systems. 5. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 6. The Radio Galleries shall be under the control of the executive committee of the Radio Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. Approved. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. CARL HAYDEN, Chairman, Senate Commattee on Rules and Administration. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, RADIO CORRESPONDENTS’ ASSOCIATION WiLLArD F. SHADEL, Chairman HowLris M. Seavey, Vice Chairman JouN EpwArbps, Secretary JosepH C. HArscH, Treasurer Ann M. Corrick, Member at Large Ruporra Brock, Member at Large PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES (Phone, NAtional 3120; Senate Gallery, extensions 1591, 1592, and 1593; House Gallery, extensions 1413 and 1476) MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them] Name Representing— Office Abrams, Bor o_ooa I I LO 870 National Press Bldg. Adams, Joon Hi... U. 8. News and World Report______________ 24th and N Sts. The Bureau of National Affairs. ________.._.. 1231 24th St. *Aflas,; Ben... soo on co ET re ERI GR Ie Ee dene 424 Kellogg Bldg. Baker, GeoIzZe. . ..connenrnit-1093 National Press Bldg. *Baldinger, Wilbur H.________ Newswee 1227 National Press Bldg. *Bay, Helmuth Bankers Monthl 1104 National Press Bldg. *Bayless, Glen. oo cocsicnns.i: MecGraw-Hill Publications... ________._._._ 1189 National Press Bldg. *Beal, John R Time lGlfe = ore os 1000 Vermont Ave. *Beatty, Jo Ean. eas Broadeashing. iv emi ge 870 National Press Bldg. *Begeman, Jean ________..____ New Republic...» oon vil Goi 0I03 1422 F St. *Berlyn, David W___________ Broadeasting soca o anid inci sod Sd Ga 870 National Press Bldg. *Billard, Jules B. . ........:.-Pathfinder 1323 M St. Blaly, Barbarasi =o 0r U. S. News & World Report__._________.__. 24th and N Sts. vod20 *Blair, Clay D., JTL.oa i Pime-Lifel tii lIiias ii onlay ition 20501 1000 Vermont Ave. Bonwit; Jay A. cus Loos LL es Ls PAE SS ra Ed 996 National Press Bldg. *Bookman, George. ......_._-Time-Life 1000 Vermont Ave. *Booth, Windsor: .-. == .} 16th and M Sts. Bratter, Herbert M Banking i iol.SNS 3000 39th St. *Brinkley, William C____ Time-Life... i. coiocous 1000 Vermont Ave. *Brown, Kermit K..._..__..__ Topics Publishing Co 1232 National Press Bldg. *Bryant, George B., Jr..__.__. -Hill'Publications ~ ii 1189 Press Bldg. McGraw 2-2’24 , National *Bucknell, Martha B_____.__. 1000 Vermont Ave. *Burke, Donald T_._._._.._._. Public Utilities Fortnightly. ____________ Woah 309 Munsey Bldg. *Carll,. George 8., Jr.......... Army and Navy Register-__________________ 511 11th St. *Celliers," Peter J... tu... Pathfinder Lote s iid wafini0 20 ores 1323 M St. *Cherry, Ralph'L,.L 1. J... Oil, Paint, and Drug Reporter_____________._ 621 Albee Bldg. *Cipperly, John ois =i N orthwestern Miller} Sitaawe 15th OC.) odie 723 St. Clarke, Bert C Weekly Underwriter......... so. 4. 1499 Irving St. Clay Norn Newsweek 1227 N al Press Bldg. *Clissold, Walter N..________ 1319 F St. *Codel, M Telecasting Publications, Ine__.________._____ 1519 Connecticut Ave. *Cohen, Stanley B._..-...... Advertising Age, ~~Co a0 995 National Press Bldg. Armyand Register." St. Collins, Joseph Gree oo Navy ~~ “i: 4 511 11th 2Conly, Robert. {.._ _ Ji 1:1 Lol G0 1323 M St. Pathinderc. Lengo),ene Conner, Dolores F____________ 1000 Vermont Ave. *Cornell, Douglas B-...._..... U. S. News & World Report... 24th and N Sts. sCuallen, George. over The Bureau of National Affairs. ____________ 1231 24th St. Daniel,i Ureel. 014 G5 0IL The Bureau of National Affairs_____________ 1231 24th St. *Darby, Edwin W___________ 1000 Vermont Ave. *Davis, Richard J..........0. 1227 National Press Bldg. *Dericux, James C........... Collier's Weekly: = oi oo py avy 601 13th St. Dicks Gerry. .cu ior das American/ Magazine. ool aren oe 601 13th St. *Diggs, J. U. S. News & World Report____ 24th and N Sts. Donnel, Edward H., Jr The Bureau of National Affairs. 1231 24th St. *Doying, George E., Jr_______ Modern Industry === or 0 oo ayo 742 Munsey Bldg. *Driscoll, Dolores M ____._._. Chain Store Age. ». bt oom owl ms 715 Chestnut Ave., Falls Church, Va. Drary, Allen Jr > oo 1323 M St. *Dysland, Robert C.-2: ot) 10 Independence Ave. *Fenimore, Watson_______.____ 1323 M St. Field, Carter... 1. 1189 National Press Bldg. *Fitzgerald, Francis Vv. Army and Navy Journal. ____._____________ 1711 Connecticut Ave. *Ritzeerald, Fred... 2... Broadeasting-t: oc ions Coin nS 870 National Press Bldg. Fleming, J NR U. S. News & World Report____________.___ 24th and N Sts. *Flieger, Howard W__________ U. S. News & World Report.______.___.._._. 24th and N Sts. Flieger, Kenneth_.___________ Porees. rendir nssnssenenm Jefferson Armed cvs ans se 1833 Pl. Floyd, Beth... i = U. S. News & World Report... _________ 24th and N Sts. *Foltz, pales, yy U. S. News & World Report... 24th and N Sts. *Fox, Derek U. S. News & World Report. _.__._.___._._. 24th and N Sts. *France, Boyd... .X. 0. ... McGraw-Hill Publications... _..._.___.___ 1189 National Press Bldg. Faller, Helen... 20. 2000 NeweRepabllg io rlie vate, or eo 1416 F St. *Galligan, Jimm_.__._... Our Navy Magazine... voi naianana 1610 16th St. *Galloway, Clark HH. ...... _. U.S. News & World Report......oeeeee.-... 24th and N Sts. 586 Perrodical Press Galleries MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Representing— Office *Gambatese, Joseph M LL McGraw-Hill Publications. .._______.________ 1150 riional Press Bldg. *Qates, Edmond NN... ... Army Times... Lo, eld epipads ada] *@iles, Bd 8 LATIN Cr Printers Ink. soi 2 TT 217 Bldg. bitaodsancid. Bond The Independent Film Journal 1365 National ih Bldg. U.S. News & World Report. ________.._._...__ 24th and N Sts. National Petroleum News. _______________.__ 1048 National Press Bldg. *Hadley, Arthur T_. ____.. 1227 National Press Bldg. 1025 Vermont Ave. The National Underwriter, National Under-1331 G St. writer Life Insurance Edition, The Black Diamond, The Life Insurer, and The Tobacco Leaf. *Harmon, Frederick M_______ U. S. News & World Report 24th and N Sts. *Henck, Fred W__._______... Telephone Engineer:o: i i i ii uills 1208 National Press Bldg. *Henkin, Daniel Z_ __________ Army and Navy Journal. o-oo= oT 1711 Connecticut Ave. Honeycutt, Leslie R__________ Army Rimes. cbr bi i has al = 3122 M St. *Hoopes, Roy H., Je... 0001 Pathfinder Lol oo. oad in =o oniZodonegion 1323 M St. *Hudoba, Michael Sports Afield.. 1... National Pross Bldg. U. S. News & World Report. -| 24th and N 8 Newsweek. oceania2 1223 National Press Bldg. Broadeasting. ....... oii. 870 National Press Bldg. Johnsen, Katherine __________ MecGraw-Hill Publications. _______________. 1189 National Press Bldg. Jones, Lucey Cobb. .o........ U. S. News & World Report Ign and N Sts. *Jones, Stacy i 100 Cosmopolitan Rt. 2, Falls Church, Va. Vioanee *Joyce, Arthur T Bakers Weekly 629 Woodward Bldg. *Tustice, Sami Jo triwioiot 1189 National Press Bldg. Ln Edward PH ...—... 1000 Vermont Ave. Morandi Publications... Goce toi tL 1189 National Press Bldg. Marine News. io hv vis sioinl adi ol 637 Woodward Bldg. McGraw-Hill Publications_.._...__..___.___.. 1189 National Press Bldg. Armed Forees: . dl ound Jefferson Pl. oc. 1833 Broadeasting=s notin sone Totnes ty 870 National Press Bldg. Broadeasting of sec deiictiiaoaaiiied 870 National Press Bldg. Railway Ages iemoad ii snl dolin i ton 1081 National Press Bldg. *Knight, C. Allen =. C li. 1323 M St. *Kreh, William Rx. ......... 1833 Jefferson Pl. *Kreutzberg, Edgar C________ 1123 National Press Bldg. *Kruckman, Arnold__________ 1120 Vermont Ave. { *Kruckman, Margaret A_____ 1120 Vermont Ave. *LaMotte, Clyde W__________ National Petroleum News. _ ___.___._.._.__.. 1046 National Press Bldg. *Lardner, Fred W Haywood Publishing Co... ....oo.l.020 3120 R St. *Lee, Ben Aviation Week 0 a ua. i National Press Bldg. *LeRoy, L. Army Times oa sonal ebuhnaios: 3132 M St. Levison, Frances. _....__..... Time-Tifesooor ois oa oinin 1000 Vermont Ave. 1292 National Press Bldg. 1227 Sonal Press Bldg. t. McGraw-Hill Publications_________.________ 1189 National Press Bldg. PopularSelenee. -.... 0 il iain 1275 National Press Bldg. *Lnce; Bank ooo oa Time-Life zois loo oo Saab sainosi 1000 Vermont Ave. *T,yman, Carson Bo... _...... 0,8. ed & World -Report..... oc ii; 24th and N Sts. *McConaughy, James L., Jr__ TIRE-LAG i. or dan id wrtmmbab D d h 1000 Vermont Ave. *McGill, George W Armed Forees hoi don oosuli lt e 1833 Jefferson Pl. *McHale, William F_________ ime-Lifel ool ow ca 1000 Vermont Ave. McKay, James V. 10... Army and Navy Register. 00: co iouli ll 511 11th St. McLain, Edward. _ _________ rn McGraw-Hill Publications. _____._____.____ 1189 National Press Bldg. McMillen, Robert D_________ Farm Journal 1323 M St. McNaughton, Franke. iii. 1000 Vermont Ave. *McNeil, Donald S._..._.... 1323 M St. *MeSurely, Alexander_____.__. Aviation Week. ...0 onandlolil: 1174 National Press Bldg. *March, Anthony___________. Army Ti 3132 M St. *Miller, Helen Fillo... Newsweek. oo aioli tins 1227 National Press Bldg. *Miller, Madeline _.__________ The Economist (England). _ ooo____ 2616 P St. *Mock, J. A., Jr McGraw-Hill Publications... _......-._... 1189 National Press Bldg. Montgomery, Gladys T__.___ 1189 National Press Bldg. *Moore; Axthurssioo Lo... 1189 National Press Bldg. *Moore, C. 1600 20th St. *Moore, F. Lee, Jr-____.._._.. 1174 National Press Bldg. *Moran, Alyce MM. coil. 1000 Vermont Ave. *Morley, Pelix.icin 1249 National Press Bldg. io i: *Morrison, Carl F__. Jewelry Magazine, Spirits Magazine_____. _. 1090 National Press Bldg. The Bureau of National Affairs. .________.__. 1231 24th St. The Saturday Evening Post... ccceen 744 Jackson Pl. MeGraw-Hill Publications... _.._._____ 1189 National Press Bldg. YO bE ES Se Ce A LS 1039 National Press Bldg. Bakers Weekly ....coil.. ocauninnanammmmmnass 506 American Bldg.- *Newman, Andrew L_._______ LY ETA BRS fai Een We IN 1115 18th St. Osbon; Jom Wi . .. o. .-Broadeastingy coi Se Se nn 870 National Press Bldg. *Osborne, John... ......:.= ir niin aaa 1000 Ave. Time-Lifes. saved Vermont Oswald, Elizabeth____________ 1231 24th St. Ottenberg, Louis, Jr__________ Tide 824 National Press Bldg. =*Oulahan, Richard. __.:. _... 1000 Vermont Ave. 90808°—82—2—1st ed. Congressional Directory MEMBERS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued Name Representing— Office Patla, Andrew R..........._. Peter, George Edward.________ *Platt, Charles M Prensky, Milton--. 0. __._. *Ragsdale, W Ramsey, Roy S,, Jr... 21 *Rannells, Ai Karl... . Rathbun, Benjamin, Jr__..__ *Reid, P. Margaret. _..___._ Richardson, Donald W_______ Ricker, Jame... ..... o.oo *Rippey, Stephens. _.____.__. *Robertson, Caroline... | *Robinson, "Archie W___ ih *Robinson, L. Noble_____ Hd *Ronalds, Francis S. 311 2 *Rowen, Hobart Aa DELI Russell, "Tack GL ea Lh Salisbury, Ragen na tor 1 *Sandifer, 7. en *Saunders, Reith.....! *Saunders, Richard E Saunders, Staart 10. l:22 0 *Sellon, Perry Boo oo ir 4 *Scott, Owen L,_. o00a0] *Scott, Ruth Boyer... ._____. *Shaffer, Samuel *Shalett, Sidney...i: *Shepley, James R___________ *Sherrod, Robert *Silberberg, William Simms, Robert L *Slinkmnan, John *Smith, Beverly. i... |. *Smith, Grace Cutler____.____ Smith, ‘Helena Huntington.__ *Smith, Vincent B *Stagg, Harold G_____ 2 *Stevenson, Charles *Stewart, John 00 DilioC *Straight, Michael... S.1.0 *Stroetzel, ponsla Sanford _ __ *Stroupe, Ray M SLAANe *Summers, A N pall, Waller Jolie Jae 0 *Taishoft, Bol oui ada *Tobey, Franklin APO |e Frruitt, James. LL Crr iN Turner, Richara ~ ¥, 22. *Visson, Anatole Pi fiir 0 *Visson, Andre. Sapir L *Ware, Margery T *Warner, A. Fred. -.01[ 0" ° *Weeksler, A, Nooo ol. *Weinstein, Albert. __________ Ny oeal, Edward *Westcott, ke Jeli: oo *Whichard, W. B., Jol EIT *White, William W____ *Whitman, LeRoy. ili | *Wisehart, MET *Wohl, Harry Ds y,. *Wood, Robert H__ *Wright, Todd... Yost, Marguerite R *Zilmer, Bertram G National Petroleum News. _.__________.___. 1046 National Press Bldg. The Produce 000 i 50 o.. 469 M St. News... SW. U. S. News & World Report... 24th and N Sts. Our World 702 Florida Ave. Pathimaer. .. i. a i dal ais 1323 M St. U. S. News & World Report ____.___._..._.. 24th and N Sts. Bureau of National Affairs__________________ 1231 24th St. 1093 National Press Bldg. 1231 24th St. 1046 National Press Bldg. 1231 24th St. 4MATT ARERR NH ER 0 EN CR 1000 Vermont Ave. Topics Pablishing Co....i. 1 | 1232 National Press Bldg. McGraw-Hill Publications... __________.___. 1189 National Press Bldg. U. S. News & World Report... .________._. 24th and N Sts. U.S. News & World Repori-......._—._____ 24th and N Sts. Time=Life. = = 1000 Vermont Ave. Newsweek ________ 1227 National Press Bldg. Army Times 3132 N St. Newsweek, oon a eat ha dd at 1227 National Press Bldg. Penton Publications. .......ci-t-vint1 956 National Press Bldg. Ameriean Aviation. i coil cial So 1025 Vermont Ave. Architectural Forum-Aero Digest anhalt 1275 National Press Bldg. Lie, 3H rr NTCa TT YR ED 1000 Vermont Ave. U.S. News & World i. i... 24th and N Report... Sts. U. S. News & World Report... 24th and N Sts. Nursing World 851 Venable PI. Newsweek... Gri iiubdl fda. Li 1227 National Press Bldg. The Saturday Evening Post. __________.____ 744 Jackson Place. Time-Life... S8gibsn dat at Low oi 1000 Vermont Ave. Time-Life... Re a Ye) CRE ILS TGR Ta EN 1000 Vermont Ave. 10 Independence ‘Ave. 1231 24th St. Christie-Collins onews Service is. onde. 1215 I St. Army. Times. oro td Goats ii 3132 M St. The Saturday Evening Post... ___________. 744 Jackson Pl. The Saturday Evening Post__._____._______. Lis Jackson PI. Woman’s Home Companion. _.____________... 13th St. McGraw-Hill Publications... ._____________ AP Sohne] Press Bldg. American: Weekly. .-ifciotimtan inooa a 1457 Park Commercial and Financial Chronicle ______. & National a Bldg. Army. Times... oobi wana iti 3132 M St. Reader’s Digest Association... 6800 Selkirk Dr. ., Chevy Hii Md. Pathfinder. __...:. New Republic. __. Pathinder .......f.cn mE ie 1093 National Press Bldg. 1231 24th St. RallWay-Age... . ooh ahd Sulit 1081 National Press Bldg. Broadecastin 870 National Press Bldg. Public Utilities Borlalihlls Shu Ee ON 309 Munsey Bldg. ANE FIO BL Re aa Sie ne IR SS 1000 Vermont Ave. U. S. Ny & World Report... ii 24th and N Sts. Pime-TAle. cu il a SR nial 1000 Vermont Ave. Reader’s Digest Association... _____.______ 2715 36th PI. McGraw-Hill Publications._._._____________ 1189 sion Press Bldg. 1231 24th St. 996 rn Press Bldg. 1519 Connecticut Ave. Newsweek 1227 National Press Bldg. Public Utilities Fortnightly.oo._ C1 i. 309 Munsey Bldg. American AVIatIOn .... cceeere.s iE 1025 Vermont Ave. Army.and Navy Journal... LU. i....... 1701 Connecticut Ave. McGraw-Hill Publications...._.._._._._.__. 1189 National Press Bldg. Time-Life... iliiaralldn dina ulo: 1000 Vermont Ave. Armyand Navy Journal... ......_......... 1701 Connecticut Ave. Path 1323 M St. 1323 M St. Aviation Week____ 13 National Press Bldg. Collier’s Weekly 601 13th St. Christie-Collins News Service... iy 2 4 The Bureau of National Affairs 1231 24th St. PERIODICALS REPRESENTED (Phones, NAtional 3120; Senate Gallery, extensions 1591, 1592, and 1593; House Gallery, extensions 1413 and 1476) Periodicals Name Office Advertising Age.c..euvnecovu- Stanley E. Cohen... .......... 995 National Press Bldg. American Aviation_____.______ James J. Haggerty o-—----.... 1025 Ver mont Ave. Keith Sounders... ....-.. 1025 Vermont Ave. Agricultural Forum-Aero Digest ________ American Magazine_ _________ American Weekly ____________ DPanjel:S: Wentz _.c..toe one Richard E. Saunders_...__.____ erry Dick icc iate donne ET A a ee 1025 Vermont 1275 National 601 13th St. 1457 Park Rd. Ave. Press Bldg. Armed-Forces.-=.-......oi..un Kenneth: Flieger: neveeven- 1833 Jefferson Pl. John A Killlek ouli ao... 1833 Jefferson Pl. William R. Kreh_ 1833 Jefferson Pl. Army and Navy Journal _____ CG. MO0Le3: ea een Francis V. Fitzgerald. ._.____ 1600 1711 20th St. Connecticut Ave. Daniel Z. Henkin... ..o----.. 1711 Connecticut Ave. Henry R. Westcott, Jr... 1701 Connecticut Ave. LeRoy Whitman.__............. 1701 Connecticut Ave. Army and Navy Register. occacoao___. George S. Carll, Jr... -.... 511 11th St. Joseph C.:Colling.. ~~. ... 511 11th St. James V. McKay...oc. ..... 511 11th St. Army, TIMES: 5 co ren halo a Edmond N. Gates. ...__..._.._ 3132 M St. Leslie R. Honeycutt. .._._____ 3132 M St. L. David LeRoy..o.a......... 3132 M St. Anthony: March... oon. 3132 M St. Andrew L. Newman.__________ 3132 M St. JackeRusselle semido or Loo 3132 M St. John: Slinkman. = ...co.c.- 3132 M St. 3132 M St. AVION Week ir or tv idonm cae n one Ben:S. hee suaveaide idlonis- 1174 National Press Bldg. Alexander MecSurely.__.______ 1174 National Press Bldg. EB. Lee: Moore, Jr. cco oinein 1174 National Press Bldg. Robert H.-Wood... .-..-.—ic: 1174 National Press Bldg. Bakers’ Helper... --c.oemua- Walter N:;Clissold............ 1319 F St. Bakers Weekly... oc. ... Arthur. T. Joyce. ivaccc ox 629 Woodward Bldg. Jeanella. Nevius. ».oeennnadnan 506 American Bldg. 1104 National Press Bldg. Banking.......c riuat soe swe 3000 39th St. PFelixMorley convo. 1249 National Press Bldg. Virginia Imlay Neal _________. 1039 National Press Bldg. Ben Atlas ar anal ooo 424 Kellogg Bldg. Black Diamond, The... % 1331 G St. Broadeasting..- Joao cso RorlAbrams. ooo a 870 National Press Bldg. J. FrankBeatty acu... 0 870 National Press Bldg. David W. Berlyn.i.......... 870 National Press Bldg. Fred Fitzgerald. on... 870 National Press Bldg. Edwin. James. ... .......... 870 National Press Bldg. ArteRinge ro co 870 National Press Bldg. Julia Ring ower on 870 National Press Bldg. John W. Osbon...ceaeevn-o--- 870 National Press Bldg. Sol Taishofl oie Jaan ic 870 National Press Bldg. | Bureau of National Affairs, The_________ 1231 24th St. George. Callen...ce avaa-- 1231 24th St. WreeliDandel oS lo 1231 24th St. Edward H. Donnel, Jr_..._._. 1231 24th St. Riley A. Morrison. .......... 1231 24th St. Elizabeth Oswald _______.__.___ 1231 24th St. Roy:S. Ramsey, Jr...o........ Benjamin Rathbun, Jr _______ 1231 1231 24th 24th St. St. Donald W. Richardson_______ 1231 24th St. William Silberberg. _.____._____ 1231 24th St. George N. Summers.___________ 1231 24th St. A, Fred Warner... ....... 1231 24th St. 1231 24th St. Chain-Store Age... oocee-. Chestnut Ave., Falls Church, Va. Chilton Publications. ______.. George Baker. oc ..ocoaoai 1093 National Press Bldg. A. RarlBannells: 0 -__.. 1093 National Press Bldg. Ray Mek. Stroupe-.-.....=. 1093 National Press Bldg. 1215 I St. 1215 I St. 589 590 Congressional Dzrectory PERIODICALS REPRESENTED—Continued Periodicals Name Office Collier's Weekly... ..... Lo c.. sie James C, Derieux.-............ 601 13th St. Milton Lehman... 601 St. __ >... 13th Todd: Wright: oor voe.cuvania 601 13th St. Commercial and Financial Chronicle.___-Lawrence Stafford. __________. National Press Bldg. Conover-Mast Publications... _________ A. N.Weeksler........... 996 National Press Bldg. Cosmopolitan... cap. ober oine io Stacy V. Jones. ....ouvnoi Rt..2, pls Church, Va. Economist, The (England)... MadelineMiller. Farm Journal Finaneial World .....vovuniiammnnoiaiio. Robert C. Dysland o.oo 10 Independence Ave. Jerome Shoenfeld _________ a 10 Independence Ave. Hardware World: 0.2: Margaret A. Kruckman._______ 1120 Vermont Ave. __........... Haywood Publishing Co__.._._____.______ Fred W.-Iardner............. 3120 R St. Independent Film Journal, The._____.___ 1365 National Press Bldg. Jewelry Magazine. i 0. one. 1090 National Press Bldg. T.ife Insurance; The 2. io... 2oiCs 1331 G St. McGraw-Hill Publications. ____..____._-Glen'Baylesse 2.0... lo. 1189 National Press Bldg. George B. Bryant, Jr__________ 1189 National Press Bldg. Carter Field 1189 National Press Bldg. Boyd France 1189 National Press Bldg. Joseph M. Gambatese_.._.____ 1189 National Press Bldg. Katherine Johnsen.._..._.__._ 1189 National Press Bldg. SamiFustice. fodaril lu, 1189 National Press Bldg. William H. Kearns, Jr_._..___. 1189 National Press Bldg. John Kent 1189 National Press Bldg. 1189 National Press Bldg. 1189 National Press Bldg. JAE Moek fod ani 1189 National Press Bldg. Gladys F. Sileioms Shall 1189 National Press Bldg. Arthur Moore: ....-.-...... 1189 National Press Bldg. Seymour P. Nagan............_. 1189 National Press Bldg. Caroline Robertson. .__._._._. 1189 National Press Bldg. Vincent -B. Smith. ........o... 1189 National Press Bldg. Margery T. Ware__..._.______ 1189 National Press Bldg. W. B. Whickard, Jr......._... 1189 National Press Bldg. Joseph'F.-Kelly... .......c 637 Woodward Bldg. Modern...no George E. Doying, Jr-._______ 742 Munsey Bldg. oe oe National Geographic Magazine.________. Windsor Booth: ............ 16th and M Sts. National Petroleum News_...____.....__ 1046 National Press Bldg. Clyde W. LaMotte........._. 1046 National Press Bldg. Andrew R.Patla.............. 1046 National Press Bldg. Marcaret B.-Reid. .L.......... 1046 National Press Bldg. National Underwriter Life Insurance H.C. Hallam cbc. ais 1331 G St. Edition. National Underwriter, The...._________. H.C. Hallam. .... 1331 G St. New: Republic: £10 ctl tr aa ia aanil Jean Begeman. 1422 F St. Helen Tuller... 0 oon 1416 F St. Michael Straight... _......._. 1416 F St. Newsweek. J. oso d iii ou bl naka Wilbur H. Baldinger...._____. 1227 National Press Bldg. Nera: Clay. aa 1227 National Press Bldg Richard J. Davis. ............. 1227 National Press Bldg. Arthwr TC. Hadley... = 1227 National Press Bldg. Arma, Tvs oy oe 1223 National Press Bldg. Ernest K.Lindley_..._...._.. 1227 National Press Bldg. Helen Hil Miller... _.._...._.. 1227 National Press Bldg. Hobart Rowen... ......-1227 National Press Bldg. Karen Salisbury. --..--.._._.. 1227 National Press Bldg. Samuel Shaffer... __..._.... 1227 National Press Bldg. Edward Weintal._____________ 1227 National Press Bldg. Northwestern Miller _._ Co: "oscar John C. Cipperly. 723 15th St. Nursing Worldh Sotaed rie Rath Boyer Scott....— .....0 851 Venable Pl. Oiland' Gas Journal: xc Oo el aio Bertram’ PF. Linz... .. 621 Albee Bldg. Qil, Paint, and Drug Reporter. _.....___ Ralph'L. Cherry...__-621 Albee Bldg. Our'Navy Magazine...) oat Jmm Galligan =..._.. 1610 16th St. Que Worlde oros aaa PL; oral rr a ht Ee 702 Florida Ave. Pathfinders of i i a sap ier 1323 M St. 1323 M St. Robert Coe SSE TR SRT 1323 M St. ARN Dray. a 1323 M St. Watson Fenimore._______ 1323 M St. Roy H. Hoopes, Jr 1323 M St. Co Allen Tonight... 1323 M St. Edward J. Linehan__.________. 1323 M St. Donald S. MeNeil..........__-1323 M St. Milton Clon, RIT eR 1323 M St. John D. Stewar 1323 M St. Ps 1323 M St. M. K. Wisehart 1323 M St. Harry PD. Wohl Moe oo et 1323 M St. Penton Publications T. N. Sandifer 956 National Press Bldg. Popular Science John T. Loosbrock.. ......._.. 1275 National Press Bldg. Printers Ink Richard Y. Giles... 217 Bond Bldg. George Edward Peter. ________ 469 M St. Periodical Press Galleries 591 PERIODICALS REPRESENTED—Continued Periodicals Name Office Public Utilities Fortnightly. ______.._.____ Nonald T. Burke: ... ..; 309 Munsey Bldg. Franklin J. Tobey, Jro_.__._.__ 309 Munsey Bldg. Franecis-X. Welch. _._......... 209 Munsey Bldg. Ballway Age. int enn rsa mmm fala Joe W. Kirin... ..o .. ooh. 1081 a ass Bldg. Walter J. Taft. oni siram=t 1081 National Press Bldg. Reader’s Digest Association. ____________ Charles Stevenson... _._._..._. on Selirk Dr., Chevy Chase, Andre Visson: io 0 2715 36th Pl. o.oo... Saturday Evening Post, The. ._._.__._____ Hugh Morrow. .25 co ines? 744 Jackson Pl. Sidney:Shalett. .. 0. 744 Jackson Pl. Beverly Smith... _.......... 744 Jackson Pl. Grace Cutler Smith___________ 744 Jackson Pl Spirits Magazine... i. oreo dimamminamads Carl. B. Morrison... === 1090 National Press Bldg. Sports Afeld: aaa Michael Hudoba... --_---.--_ National Press Bldg. FTE BERS a SOs ned £0 1) SPC ESE ITD Edgar C. Kreutzberg____._.__. 1123 National Press Bldg. Supervision raidaint] Jay As Bonwite Joo sad 996 National Press Bldg. sail i olli Telecasting Publications, Inc__..._..____ Marten to ion. .-. 1519 Connecticut Codel...--Ave. Albert Weinstein. ..o-eevee 1519 Connecticut Ave. Telephone Engineer Fred W. Henek._...._-"_.~_ 1208 National Press Bldg. ides st ahead Hoo Louis Ottenberg, Jr___________ 824 National Press Bldg. 4h EH en SRE Rr de Ce ne John R. Beal 1000 Vermont Ave. Clay D. Blair, Jr. 1000 Vermont Ave, George Bookman____ 1000 Vermont Ave. William C. Brinkley 1000 Vermont Ave. Martha B. Bucknell 1000 Vermont Ave. Dolores F. Conner 1000 Vermont Ave. Edwin W. Darby... ._.. 1000 Vermont Ave. MlenDibble Li oo ones 1000 Vermont Ave. Edward P. H. Kearn___..___. 1000 Vermont Ave. Frances Levison.._..__.....__ 1000 Vermont Ave. Hank Layee or vo. Jr 0 1000 Vermont Ave. James L. McConaughy, Jr____| 1000 Vermont Ave. William F. McHale. ._..... 1000 Vermont Ave. ‘Frank McNaughton __.._____ 1000 Vermont Ave. Alyce M.. Moran = ...._....... 1000 Vermont Ave. John-:Osbornes ci.liz 1000 Vermont Ave. Richard Oulahan. .....-.....-1000 Vermont Ave. Jane Rieker...o i. o_o 2 1000 Vermont Ave. Francis S. Ronalds, Jr-______. 1000 Vermont Ave. Stuart Saunders... _......_...C 1000 Vermont Ave. James R. Shepley. --_._._.__. 1000 Vermont Ave. Robert:Sherred. oc. cao.22 1000 Vermont Ave. James Myultl. oo heal 1000 Vermont Ave. Anatole TT. Visson. .__ oli. 1000 Vermont Ave. William W, White. __.___.___. 1000 Vermont Ave. Tobacco Leal, The. ... vie io nustnanas HC. Uallam., wo. rl oC 1331 G St. Topics Publishing Co Rermit 15. Brown a2 = th 1232 National Press Bldg. Stephens Rippey.oco-ceceaoo-1232 National Press Bldg. U. S. News and World Report_ _..._.____ John H. Adams... i cio... 24th and N Sts. Barbara Blair eo.ooo a2 24th and N Sts. Douglas B. Cornell... ___... 24th and N Sts. RB. Frank Diggs. Co fiat 24th and N Sts. John:RB. Hleming. >..." 24th and N Sts. Howard W. Flieger .________. 24th and N Sts. Beth’ Ployd So 20 24th and N tive Sts. -Charles Yolty, Jr. -----ad. 24th and N Sts. Derek Fox. do. cavaeoid inion 24th and N Sts. Clark H. Galloway... -o---. 24th and N Sts. Ben d/Aropt tn mirant 24th and N Sts. Frederick M. Harmon________ 24th and N Sts. Walter Husted-=.—--o--73= 24th and N Sts. Lucy Cobb Jones... .-------. --| 24th and N Sts. CarsonF. Lyman... .--:-..-i_ 24th and N Sts. CharlesM. Platt...5 --..-24th and N .. Sts. W.B.RBarsdaleo.....__.__.... 24th and N Sts. Archie W. Robinson. _...____. 24th and N Sts. L. Noble Robinson......._._.. 24th and N Sts. Perry K.Sellon.../..2... 24th and N Sts. iz. Owen Li. Seal. oc conan 24th and N Sts. Richard I... Turner. ........-. 24th and N Sts Norley. 0 cds aaah on Jacl levy oe a 1292 National Ses Bldg. Weekly Underwriter... .... i. _.-2.0 Bert C. ite LEA BE RL wl di 1499 Irving St. Western Construction News___.__________ Arnold Bruckman. .._. .._... 1120 Vermont Ave. Women’s Home Campanion_____________ Helena Huntington Smith____| 601 13th St. SENATE PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERY William M. Perry, Superintendent, Sunnyside Road, Box 226, College Park, Md. Phone, TOwer 4978. 592 Congressional Directory HOUSE PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERY Delmar Malkie, Superintendent, Box 55X, R. F. D. 1, Clinton, Md. Phone, CYpress 9567. RULES GOVERNING PERIODICAL PRESS GALLERIES 1. Persons desiring admission to the Periodical Press Galleries of Congress shall make application to the Speaker, as required by rule XXXV of the House of Representatives, and to the Committee on Rules and Administration of the Senate, as required by rule IV for the regulation of the Senate wing of the Capitol; and shall state in writing the names of all newspapers or publications or news associations by which they are employed, and what other occupation or employ-ment they may have, if any; and they shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims pending before Congress or the departments, and will not become so engaged while allowed admission to the galleries; that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department of the Government, or by any foreign government or any representative thereof; and that they are not employed, directly or indirectly, by any stock exchange, board of trade, or other organization, or member thereof, or brokerage house or broker, engaged in the buying and selling of any security or commodity, or by any person or corporation having legislation before Congress, and will not become so engaged while retaining membership in the galleries. Holders of visitor’s cards who may be allowed temporary admission to the galleries must conform to the restrictions of this rule. 2. The applications required by rule 1 shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the executive committee of the Periodical Correspondents’ Association who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide and accredited resident correspondents, news gatherers, or reporters of repu-table standing who represent one or more periodicals which regularly publish a -substantial volume of news material of either general or of an economic, industrial, technical, or trade character, published for profit and supported chiefly by adver-tising, and owned and operated independently of any industry, business, associa-tion, or institution; and it shall be the duty of the executive committee at their discretion to report violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker, or to the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration, and pending action thereon the offending correspondent may be suspended. 3. Persons engaged in other occupations whose chief attention is not given to the gathering or reporting of news for periodicals requiring such continuous service shall not be entitled to admission to the Periodical Press Galleries. The Periodical Correspondents’ list in the CoNarESsIONAL DIrEcTORY shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to such service for news periodicals, as described in rule 2, except that admission shall not be denied if his other work is such as to make him eligible to the Press Galleries or Radio Correspondents’ Galleries. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 5. The Periodical Press Galleries shall be under the control of an executive committee elected by members of the Periodical Correspondents’ Association, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Repre-sentatives and the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. SAM RAYBURN, Speaker, House of Representatives. CArL HAYDEN, Chairman, Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Frank McNaveHTON, Chairman GLEN BAYLESS, Secretary W. B. RAGSDALE : GEORGE BAKER SAMUEL SHAFFER Maps of Congressional Districts ALABAMA (9 districts) LAUDERDALE LIMESTONE MADISON JACKSON 8 2) 20 FRANKLIN oo al SH MAR DE KALE & MARION WINSTON CULLMAN 4 ETOWAH LAMAR — WALKER ~~] ut FAYETTE 7 0 ay& pl0 I\ { ile:) oot1 & Q$0)\¢ TUSCALOO. £ <<9D 3& 5 PICKENS / >RS CLAYRRANDOLPH \ 2) © 6 . B/BE oe < = COOSA TALLAPOOSA A | CH,|CHAMBERS 6 HALE 4 PERRY ELMORE lt AUTAUGA SUMTER MARENGO DALLAS ACO RUSSELL CHOCTAW Lenn oes oe! Ze of ot BULLOCK op Wo BARBOUR CLARKE BUTLER PIKE 3 1 MONROE WASHINGTON ; 4 2 RENSHAW HENRY 6 COFFEE DALE 3 ( COVINGTON HOUSTON ESCAMBIA oT BALDWIN GENEVA MOBILE SCALE STATUTE MILES EE Ds o 0 20 3c 40 $0 w, 596 Congressional Directory ARIZONA | (2 districts) v J Lg SR QO0cOoOnING Monave org [] 0) bh NAVAYD an on 6 a © 0 © © 2 0 © em 0 m0 es APACHE Yh | YAVarAl Ages, ha SUSY fs / * @no cme o asa MARICOPA nt ~~ Pinas GRAHAM bY “, h | . : rh | I : ! I 000HIBE poe abit | ed SANTA OPUZ basso6 sua mo WASHINGTON IZARD GREENE ei MADISON NEWTON 3 | SEARCY TONE SHARP LAWRENCE ry ITSMISSISSIPPI INDEPENDENCE CRAWFORD JOWNSON | POPE Bvaw suren CLEBURNE 2 POINIETT. rossE N ot«pv ¢R LOGAN ele CONWAY 5 { PERRY FAULKNER WWHITE LONOKENPRAIRIE gO J ack prvff00 CROSS 1 ST FRANCIS C *, > = Q fe& S Th QS scorr POLK HOWARD MONTGOMERY i | PIKE SALINE GARLAND HOT SPR,I SRING ASKS GRANT JEFFERSON LEE MONROE BPs =, %, x Cd A = Ny A2wp gS 5 (>dE wm > [05] S A) = a [V2 3 . QS S , SEVIER CLARK DALLAS 6 So Se.&%’ <2X Pere a “0|§S CLEVELAND LINCOLN | DESHA oS : prise, :g OUACHITA DREW @ RAs MILLE 7 CALHOUN BRADLEY SCALE -STATUTE MILES o »” 20 F “0 £0 16S 598 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA (3 districts) \ { ISISAIYOU MODOC d SHASTA LASSEN = g siALAVEDSP KECONTRA COSTA 7-ALAMEDA PT 12 TO SCALE-STATUTE MILES 0 is 30 60 75 20 / \ i. A /? 4 % LY J MOFFAT ROUTT JACKSON LARIMER WELD LOGAN SEOGWICK PHILLIPS MORGAN WASHINGTON [YUMA RIO BLANCO BOULDER ADAMS 2 EAGLE GILPIN 1 Yo Lu vad ; [DENVER GARFIELD A cf NPA RAPAHOE PARK DOUGLAS | EL BERT LINCOLN }IT CARSON 2rei54 PITKIN re Q $i L« TELLER EL PASO CHAFFEE. CHEYENNE GUNNISON MONTROSE FREMONT EE § x1owA PUEBLO CROWLEY SAGUACHE BENT PROWERS SAN MIGUEL OER HUERFANO RIO GRANDE |ALAMOSA HIONTE2 UIA LA PLATA rT LAS ANIMAS BACA ARCHULETA CONEJOS iC)0 -SCALE-STATUTE 1.MILES 0 10 20 30 40 50 (S1011SID 7)oOavaioTod $0148 JPU01SSa.LHUOY) fo sdv Ji LITCHFIELD HARTFORD a a TOLLAND WINDHAM (e81e[ 98 T pu SISIP 9)LADILOUNNOD SCALE -STATUTE MILES 10 5 20 10U0188246U0)) 14019042 Maps of Congressional Dastricts DELAWARE (1 at large)” - f ~ SCALE -STATUTE MILES o 5 Io 5 NEW CASTLE KENT SUSSEX 602 Congressional Directory FLORIDA Maps of Congressional Districts GEORGIA (10 districts) AD TOOSA S URBAN FANNIN UNION\ TOWNS (? RABUN NY G $ 8 A > R) & 3 ¥ RN Ga QJ NRE) x LumMPr! 3 CHAT TOOGH (GORDON cen X__ frepren siheiirnrire nis Hate Me nS Yer, 570 20 30 40 $0 30 BARTOW fCHEROKEEDLAWSO 8 ~ £10 FORSYTH n . % 7 Gi “7, (ELBERT bp) Yo, POLK . |coss 9, & 3 Poul) ARR LE THOR Tos f HARAL. |Y (AR Wy O, ong WN < “2 ) NG w %, pouvcLay 2 SAN <1 oL-0 A eT of I y = V3 Ved = X “%. » $ " \ J jo a ANAK 3 2\ 2 O00 30S J ENIRAZ HEARD ia «© o PUT: © ™ » S pone SPALOING( BUTT. PE REA iv fo horns ouf MERINET TV pInE [Lama TEonES 5 ER) of 7 z\/ % 2\ ! 2) e) fi UPSON $ X 2 y (ENING [eF HARRIS P ee © A189 i ou, JLOHNSON ¥ KES RQ on 3 p Wik RE" A i ye ocala Q 1 S Q 8) 02 MUSCO : Xo 0 & i 3 TREUL EA _(Canvoee ; 2 chr $ Ww 7 3 doen ZN AEE TEWAR; ¥ 2 Q 3 Ys\omAN \¢ 3 3 Xo WILCOX Yh S R Z oS I N CON 4 PULASK 3 B I J CRISP oA CBZ : wEBN SUMTER 3 7e, LEE ok LIN, Q our fa Q BEN MIL. Jef f Oo 2 & [Turner CLA N he RAND OLP & COFFE <5 7 ME/NTOS, HS CALHOUN|DOUGHERTY |, TE EARLY b ER £AC 0 " BAKER ATA, ry pl Py, 8 2k 3 ie 2 COLQUITT MILLER Ji IS z s Au A » 3 TT |CUNeANy, BS 0 . I» ™ SEMINOLE DECATUR] GRADY Sore TE ROOK SN OWNDE! 3 Ie iTON i 3 =. $ = 90808°—82—2—1st ed. 40 604 Congressional Directory BOUNDARY IDAHO (2 districts) BONNER Paves NOOTENA/ SHOSHONE LATA WEZ PERCE" | cLEARWATER SCALE-STATUTE MILES VALLEY © 10 20 30 40 50 Maps of Congressional Districts 605 ILLINOIS (26 districts) | JO DAVIESS STEPHENSON WINNEBAGO [BOON PT. 13 si JER CARROLL {16 OGLE CHICAGO 1,2,3,7,8,9,12 —— CRYmm MARSHALL > cnn CY 18 i L] | MC DONOUGH FULTON Hancock § ® oan © on os yen fo © =m @ | [el ADAMS oT : MACON [00 }-—-—- i § 1 DOUGLAS -= I j= ——d 606 Congressional Directory INDIANA (11 districts) ELK 7 LA GRANGE STEUBEN sr CAKE For NOBLE 5 DE KALE MARSHALL ROSCIUSKO WHITLEY ALLEN 2 wm WHITE CASS WELLS [ADAMS NEWTON BENTON CARROLL GRANT TIPPECANOE HOWARD 5 v BARREN CLINTON TIPTON MADISON HB DEL. o RANDOLPH ar © MONTGOMERY [HAMILTON BOONE HEN A N HENDRICKS J] MARION HANCOCK ( 2 PUTNAM S? 3 1 1 1rRUSH | 3 UNION £ SHELBY > ¢ JOHNSON 760 cLay MORGAN £ ZN Ais ses) ow; DECATUR MONROE [i BROW, (BARTHOLOMEW, SULLIVAN J 2 H Q GREENE H LAWRENCE fr] ANOX MARTIN JEFFERSON 3 ORANG yo ousois [Ferry SCALE ~STATUTE MILES 0 0 20 a0 ood—_—— OSCEOLA | DICKINSON JEMMET | KOSSUTH | WINNEBAGO) pms MITCHELL |HOWARD li O'BRIEN |CLAY PALO ALTO X [CERRO GORDO ! FLOvD CHICKASAW 4 FAYETTE CLAYTON CHERONEE | BUENA VISTAJPOCAHONTAS| HUMBOLDT WRIGHT |FRANKLIN |BUTLER |BREMER 8 ut rs 3 2 BLACK HAWIJBUCHANAN |DELAWARE |DUBUQUE WEBSTER Ld SAC caLHouNn HAMILTON [HARDIN hes TAMA BENTON LINN JONES MONONA CRA 0 CARROLL |GREENE |BOONE RY Z : JACKSON. CLINTON feeoa HaRmisoN |sweELey |AvoveoM Gutnmie foAlLas |Pouk JASPER POWESHIEK| IOWA JOMNSON TT 1 MUSCATINE . ] 5 POTTAWATTAMIE CASS ADAIR [ACADISON |WARREN {MARION KEOKUK WASH 7 4 = MILLS AGAR Tre CLARKE |Lucas WAPELLO |JEFFERSON [HENRY § FREMONT | PAGE TAYLOR RINGEOLD |DECATUR |WAYNE APPANOOSE | DAVIS VAN BUREN pV LY LEE 3 SCALE=~ STATUTE MILES 0 0 20 30 40 (S30113SID 8) fiu019041(T 10U01$82.40U0)) SCALE STATUTE ALES 0 0 20 30 40 Ss0 CHEYENNE R AWLINS re DECATUR [Noro NORTON PHILLIPS SMITH JEWELL WASHINGTON en REPUBLIC SHERMAN THOMAS SHERIDAN \GRAGAM ROOKS OSBORNE MITCHELL CLAY id © OTTAWA WALLACE LOGAN ; GOVE, TREGO ELLIS RUSSELL Si dpi SALINE < i , ELLSWORTH i. GREELEY [WICHITA 4 Pp —— [Ro ARTE N M5 MARION RICE CHASE COFFEY Sammy PAWNEE HAMILTON TKEARNY [FINNEY 4 HODGEMAN STAFFORD RENO BUTLER BOURBON WOODSON BALLEN RAY 3 EDWARDS FORD PRATT (STANTON GRANT HASKELL KIOWA KINGMAN ERAWIORD | " MEADE CLARK BARBER UMNER OWLEY MORTON | STEVENS 5 — |SEWARD WONTGOM. |LABETTE COMANCHE CHEROKEE HARPER CHAUTAUQUA 3 4 (s3011951D 9) 5 | atlive SCALE-STATUTE MILES 0 10 20 30 40 SO ” AACA = Pg EN2 Ww %PQNa2 &WW A SHELB S3 2 x 2s \ PEGRANT BRAC, B YAS 0!HARR.TROZ'\ ii0 4 ® i) a \ C oy > 46 4, % QA (3 6 eeNUITILS< £9; : g = 0p, HEND, 7, 4ot NTE5a Ss 62 ed RS : cRITTEN a 0 A\ 0 EX % Xs, 4 WY Aro 0 ne4 Q 29a 754 2 Can CARL. GRAVES 1 TRIGG S MARSH. 3 Q HICH, ; -3 : CALLOWA 5 IS SE « NS STARS RonS CG JEN! ay Ge BULLITT 2A) nN NYAONE) < RX [& S,NE x x) ;A 1 Wr,> POWEL = < EON s 0 yg ¥ po & ~ (oN 0}N oCFLoYSF W ¥ ! = 2, R 4 4 ? fh! \ \ 9 x 0 4 ED RIVE) BIENVILL ? ~& & > SE WINN 3 « 5 5 a10°cM = 5 a FBATONRLA LIVINGST o QNS x SZ 73 i 2 bd CALCASIEU JEFF. : DAVIS ACAD «© ST. MARTI! = ie) §Nt 3) (© a : KS 2)3&© a JAMEZ 2 A CAMERON NKR 51.0 OR a o 33J3z PY]= H' PE AG eo W45 i) Ee > > {JaB) » 9, 7 _FOURCHE 2 \Ze, o <=,2 20 «2 % & Cer ™ % Eo « s Xx TERREBONNE ue 1 (2) a 7 = -. © 0 SCALE-STATUTE MILES [owes ees} © 10 20 30 40 SO J - A | V4 x Maps of Congressional Districts i) MAINE (8 districts) AROOSTOOK PISCATAQUIS BP—— PENOBSCOT] SOMERSET OXFORD SCALE-STATUTE MILES ° "0 20 30 40 S50 (89911951 9) ANVTIXAYVINfa0p20.43(T oU0LSS2U6UO0Y) GARRETT ALLEGANY WASHINGTON 0 (FREDERICAS CARROLL ; HARFORD 2 BALTIMORE CEC/L BALTIMORE CITY 3,4, 2 PT, 5 PT. ky) & < \& & o SCALE 10 -STATUTE 20 MILES 30 W/COMICO v ef \ worceSTER jf 2 / BERKSHIRE FRANKLIN WOR Vii MIDOLESEX (53011381 FT) SLLISNHOVSSVI€19 $702.48] 1PU018SaLHU0)) fo sdD Ji 614 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN (17 districts) DICKINSON! CHARLE JOTSEGO [MONTMOR|ALPENA ANTRIM N 5 ee Zane GRD TRAV. (ALKASKARCRAWFD OSCODA | ALCONA MANIS |WEXFORD |MISSAUNEGIROSCOM OGEMAW |10SCO 10 / LAKE OSCEOLA |CLARE GLADWIN |ARENAC yy (NEWAYGOWMECOSTA |ISABELLA BAY |MIDLAND = TUSCOLA SCALE -STATUTE MILES a 0 1 20 3 +40 50 ALLEGAN MONTCALM |GRATIOT | SAGINAW 8 GENZSEE fo /ONIA CLINTON |SHIAWA Op BARRY EATON INGHAM | LIVINGST 17 3S 2 VAN BUREN CASS BWALAMA | CALHOUN JACKSON | WASHTENAW 3 2 ft STJ0SEPHBRANCH | HILLSDALERLENAWEE {MONROE J) | DETROIT 15, P18. | 13, 14, 16, 17 P16. 1,13, 14.16 17 Maps of Congressional Districts 615 MINNESOTA (9 districts) NITTSON ROSEAU TAN SCALESTATUTE -MILES o ] 30 45 €0 5 MARSHALL 3 HE 500s | KOOCHICHING ST.LOUIS POLK PENNINGTON = RED LANE i BELTRAM | TASCA : 91 F¢ 8 | XORMAN MAHNO. 5 dr O Qwussaro |cAss CLAY BECKER AITKIN NADENA [crow wine OTTERTAIL : CARLTON oi 6 PINE YITIET MORRISON > NANA 1S : 3 BENTON || Y STEVEN:ENS POPE STE,TEARNS 0 i. [SANTI ] a HERBURNE| 5, SWIFT 53> Ferra EN ona > WEERER > 3 2 A 2, \CHIPPEWA W RO) i ne [RA { MS LEOD RENVILLE ER S VEL. MEDI Georrioh MINNEAPOLIS 5, 3 PT. IBLEY LINC [LYON RN 2 « gree i, NICOLLET WF #, & “8, ROOWN v S| MuRRAY BLUE EARTHRWASECA|STEELE [DODGE ED) =z&£ [waronman ££) # COTTONWD 1 OLMSTEAD 2 ROCK | NOBLES 'WJACASON [MARTIN |FARIBAULT |FREEBORN |MOWER {FILLMORE _ |HOUSTON 616 Congressional Direc tory (7 districts) DE SOTO MARSHALL |BENTON {ripPAWQALCORN \, TUNICA $ | TATE | RENTISS, N [XN 1 | Q oe 5 UNION » AAVErry LEE ITAWAMBA po : Fronroroc Sr YALOBUSHA LHOUN| TALLAHATCHIE CHICKASAW ee GRENADA 3 CLAY WEBSTER S Al ARROLL | MONTGOM, So oF 10 WASHINGTON | 4 ge reons oN JorTIeBEHA cH oct Soy Ap 3 HUM. <5 JATTALA WINSTON WNOXUBEE SHARKEY] YAZ 00 {LEAKE NESHOBA KEMPER WARR NEWTON LAUDERDALE 7 SMITH JASPER CLARKE cLaiBoRNE |COPIAR SIMPSON JEFFE, RSON S WAYNE ; COVINGTON |JONE @RWRENE LINCOLN LA ADAMS | FRANKLIN JEFF. DAVIS Ww ans : a CAMITE Youre } ARIOpAZIoN LAMAR [pores PERRY |GREENE WALTHALL 6 PEARL RIVER slecoset STONE JACKSON HARRISON SCALE STATUTE MILES ° "0 20 30 40 80 HANCOCK Maps of Congressional Districts : MISSOURI (18 districts) | WORTH |WARRISON{ MERCER | PUTNAM MUTE SCOTLAND SULLIVAN id HNOX GRUNDY TIT aAviEsS 1 LINN MACON CEST SHELBY | MARION CALOWELLcn SCALE STATUTE MILES Hi CHARITON on RALLS CARROLL — © os e © 20 30 4 20 CLAY ! ? No Pp - PLATTE AY a 22> DRAIN 1 (\ “400 BOONE LINCOLN KANSAS CITY |. [MONTGOM. Ron \ AFAYETTE| > / CALLAWAY | 4 PT 5 COOPER i 4 x 5 PT: JOHNSON | PETTIS Lan / li 1 . 9 a fi A A | PT, 0 PT. {2 WS A ST. LOUIS 3 i| L HENRY reend 2) $ NS/NSs ra of % “oy, ey CITY. “ IN i 1,43, 2 PT. on = 3 s MILLER Eames 3 12 PT. ia] CAMDEN crAWFORD rd HICKORY gE 6 / ULASK] PHELPS <> Stecenevive } VERNON CEDAR)raed | DALLAS mo a Zo) POLK Lg 8 TRON N 3 J | ADISON | | Fe DADE 3 TEXAS REYNOLDS te waster |wriGHT ; « |swawwon } « \ | & § GREENE | 1) ware | § 7 i VASPER : LAWRENCE Bh () 0 HOWELL CARTER! 1 NEWTON CHEISTIAN DOUGLAS UTLER cy OREGON STODDARD : BARRY, [r1oLEY 2.% OZARK I MT DONALD ew maori | [pemiscor, S \%3 (8 POWDER RIVER BEAVERHEAD CARBON I SCALE -STATUTE MILES OTYi/5 30.45. 60 [B0ONE 3 BANNER ARTHUR |M°PHERSON [LOGAN | CUSTER VALLEY |GREELEY PLATTE OLFAX|DODSE fhm KIMBALL CHEYENNE ] : AUNDE! KEITH LINCOLN SHERMAN] HOWARD purer "QP OVSLAS SARPY IMERRICK DEVEL : BUFFALO HALL < oo YO. R SEWARD BLANCASTE CASS WP PERKING DAWSON GER Le |CLAY FILLMORE | SALINE HAYES FRONTIER GOSPERI PHELPS = | oEaRNEY ADAMS CHASE GAGE lLJOHNSO. DLALE~ STATUTE MILES 08 mau DUNDY HITCHCOCK |REDWILLOW| FURNAS HARLAN FRANKLIN |WEBSTER |NUCKOLLS | THAYER JEFFERSON or 0 10 20 30 40 50 a (S30113SID 7) ‘PO IST—C—G8—680806 §sroux DAW, ES | SHERIDAN CHERRY KEYAPAHA Pe ~) ou \N/ KNOX | Cs Roy ? Pap & ROCK 0,1, 2, “oy, UTTE JANTELOPE| PIERCE | if Sore WAYNE THURSTO! SCorTs Burr | Morrie CARCER GRANT HOOKER | THO, MAS | BLAINE LOUP |GARFIELD| WHEELE. R MAD! TANTON| CUM! 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TIOGA { IROOME & 3) S : oY 30 8 29 : Q GRANGE 2 23 T02 16(PT)/ 4 17 TO 227A | ('S Y7TOI5 ASHE \ ALLEG, SURRY |STOKES | 6. |CAsw. |PERS nf, WWARAN NORTHAMS,. {GATES \EANCUR. I] e) by 22) 3 , 2 >.> THRGUILFORD jor XS - ERT. C BD) 7, V Calo we 3 oN I Y 2 3 © SALEX!AL! 3 “Yi, hy “a & << Se SH. - py iAQ 1 oO I)Wi CHATHAM QD “Zs, 24, wasiasio >,« EK » =) = << HETIINGER EMMONS | LOGAN Tzarmoure “| RANSOM RICHLAND Mapsof Congressional Dustricts 0 HIO (22 districts and 1 at large) 1 LA = 2 nT ABU CLEVELAND Z2K WILLIAMS | FULTON 22 PT, L 21, 20 GEAUGA = Ttade HENRY 7 = 2! TRUMBULL DEFIANCE TOR CUYAHOGA 1 9 PORTAGE PAULDING MEDINA\ SUMMIT PUTNAM 1 4 MAHONING : ASHL'D) VAN WERT WYANDOT| CRAWFORDY RICHL D WAYNE STARA, Ee / COLUMBIANA ALLEN HARDIN 8 1 6 — CARROLL MARION HOLMES AUGLAIZE o oS — morRROW J KNOX 3 & *1 18 SHELBY UNION 5 COSHOCTON & HARRISON & DEL. o QQ ¢ DARKE 4 CHAMPAIGN Z/ea/NG GUERNSE MIAMI MUSKINGUM BELMONT FRANKLIN CLARK 15 73 PREBLE |MoNTGo. 3 FAIRFIELD PERRY MONROE < REENE 3 PICK AWAY MORGAN | VOBLE 3 FAYETTE WAR REN ro WASHING TON BUTLER Co HOCKING ATHENS VINTON, HAMILTON Ga 0 1 CLERMT MEIGS PINE Lackson 1 O SDAMS GALLIA BROWN 6 Coro SCALE STATUTE MILES N CE 0 0 20 30 40 Er LAWR CIMARRON TEXAS PF UMATILLA /ALLOWA (s3011981p %) NODHYHAO $700.08 pU0IsSsaLbU0)) fo sdv Jy oro” UNION WHEELER MORROW. GRANT rr) JEFFERSON L CROOK AERA : — DESCHUTES em LAN, HARNEY ; 2 1 of KLAMATH LAKE ooueGLAsS so" po JOSEPHINE 0€9 SCALE -STATUTE MILES o 10 20 30 40 SO ARREN MEKEAN POTTER ‘171064 “WBRAOFORD SUSQUEHANNA CRAWFORD | | 4 i PENANGO ; | 18 a WYOMING &3 emannLin Je PHILADELPHIA 1TO6 Maps of Congressional Districts RHODE ISLAND (2 districts) 0 CHESTER LANCASTER\ CHESTERFIELD =D 5 i SCALE-STATUTE MILES o "9 20 Jo 40 fo 9) (S30113SIP VNITOYVD HINOS fi40922.42( 10U0288246U0)) E— SPINK CODDINGTON DEVEL ARMSTRONG § SULLY HYDE | HAND LAWRENCE BEADLE HUGHES HAAKON PENNINGTON Er SHE JACKSON CUSTER SHANNON WASHA BAUGH ELLETTI phigrre ji) HUTCHINSON FALL RIVER BENNETT Cx, T7000 i) ; ay #4, ) 28 { $700.4382(] pu01ssILbU0]) [0 SAD Pi SCALE -STATUTE MILES .— a 20 PY) 60 80 (s30119SIP OT) HASSANNIL fi4019242(T 1PU018S24UO)) Ly IGA Gr . LAWRENCE Pal ps 5» We ARG | WAYNE Cavjche 3 ( POLK SCALE -STATUTE MILES 0 10 20 30 40 50 MENAIRY LINCOLN | FRANKLINBMAR!I0 N Maps of Congressional Districts TEXAS (21 districts) DALLAM | SHER. | HANS.|OCHIL LIPS. HARTLEY |MOORE |HUTCH.|ROB'TS| HEMP. OLDHAM |POTTER|CARSOM GRAY | WHEE. D.SMITH [RAND | ARM. | DON. |COLTH] bili WISH) BRIS. i CHI. BALY|LAMB [HALE 1 corr <0 > CH 2B Mh INE AMAR op 0 3 RR R|ARCH. |CROS DICH. | KIN VOX COCH{HOCK YL UBB. 1 "\oome z I JACK [WISE O |DENTNCOLLIMAUN ort <|""\Sycass YOAK|TERY [LYNN ARZAWENT [STONE HASKRTHROC|YOUNC & A WO UPS! IA GAINES |DAWS.| BORD] SCURRFISHER|JONES|SHACKIS TE! PALO. KAUF |< PARK. | TARRJDALASIRO. 50 = SM TRIE NO AT OHNRELLIS BS , 3 [FusHfpano ANDREWS MARTIN HOW, |MITCHRNOLAM TAYLOR CALL [EASTL'OERA ] L «\ 13 0G CHE! C N NDER HEL: ; LPASO|HUDSPETH |CULBERSN | Stor nai |ECTOR[MIDLDIGLASESTER A gorse t at! 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STARR 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——42 636 Congressional Directory BOX SLOER (2 CACHE districts) RICH TOOFLE <> See MORGAN \ A© \ ZN\ Z\ = Yo saLT LAKEMRHAS 2 Y74k I SCALE -STATUTE MILES A o 20 40 60 80 AGGETTSUMMIT 2 ~——— £ UINTA D UCHESN : JUAB MILLARD CARBON EMERY GRAND ~~ SEVIER 1 BEAVER PIUTE WAYNE SAN JUAN IRON GARFIELD WASHING TON KANE Maps of Congressional Districts VERMONT (1 at large) 07 FRANKLIN ORLEANS ESSEX Zenon 17 Win, a5 SCALE -STATUTE MILES R.1072040(T 10%01882.06107) 8€9 SCALE ~STATUTE MILES | mm ees. 0 0 20 30 40 SO 5 aC oBRUNSWICK Cr, = MN Q CHELAN 0 > 2) JEFFERSON ; LINCOLN > \e KING = ™ f % 1h > oS MASON =, 05) S i 3 GRAYS HARBOR > KING £ 8 > | Q & GRANT Se S la) 6 ADAMS WHITMAN Zz: Z S2 PERCE EO Ss: = S = 28 YAKIMA J A 2 | SI) S- ~ Ss. 2 Ca ASOTIN &% | SHAMANIA KLICKITAT — SCALE -STATUTE MILES Ee o Ld 20 30 <0 0 6€9 fL40702.40(T1DU018824HU0)) VINIDYIA LSHM SCALE -STATUTE MILES so Maps of Congressional Districts 641 WISCONSIN (10 districts) ° ©)0 a FP Fed ph 22 SCALE STATUTE MILES ASHLAND) “Te 0 20 0 40 IRON Vitus SAWYER PRICE OREST Lr.| ““Oreppm 1 0 ONEIDA 57 CROIX ¥ ; oon PDpay TAYLOR CHIPPEWA 9 CLARK i oad aeLINCOLN MARATHON (LANGLADE MARINETTE oconTo 8 SHAWANO % QO ; 4 =, , . © . - PIERCE Rey BUFFALO EAU CLAIRE Wwo00 PORTAGE WAUPACA | Novrasamie wi {3 Vv ol ; & N 9 Q olRK JACKSON * « MONROE A CROSSE UNEAU | JJADAMS 7 ARA WINNEBAGO, & R KS & ¢ &5 8 xS MARQUETTE|GR. L [FOND DU LAC! SHEBOYS. tp] VERNON SAUK RICHLAND CRAWFORD 3 COLUMBIA DODGE 2 d| § & S& § Al ‘ong DANE ¥ JEFFERSON | WAUNESHARNS, 5 >. 3=N—4 = LAFAYETTE GREEN Foc ALWORTH | RACINEWao KENOSHA CROOK YELLOWSTONE PA R SHERIDAN CAMPBELL B16 HORN 3 NATIONAL Park JOHNSON WESTON E WASHAKIE rETON + | NIOBRARA NATRONA ho CONVERSE CARBON ALBANY LINCOLN SWEETWATER . LARAMIE SCALE -STATUTE MILES 0 25 50 75 T)ONINOZA (e81e[ 98 A 1PU01882.40U0)) 1401924] SJ An / ’ \) anati VEGA SEAN RE CULEBRA 1S. (rarivro \ ® «> >m ” >. xA) sash fue 1 2 4Bayamon ay Riio od ~ irs Yo =O 4 oD nile)” VIEQUES IS. SN = Ox T) TIO) JUOPISOY (I0UOISSTII SAD Pi [0 $700.4380(] 1PU08S2LbUO)) — ~~ ® Sy ( al LE » 4 ~ ———/ ALTA ( N O0DI¥Y OoOL¥HANd { Nn he 23 = a . - A ~ S) . 0 E ”~ \ > ome” AGUAS J A 3 2hv &! g = T ( fe “ CIDRA Pte ® a MARICAO o ER \ \ 3 A bg 3 id io BY ra 1 AN @Humacsg Air ly 5 i 25; ~ ~ N vv -N Nim . i J 3! LORENZO> Ziomacno ® Vilalbh ian pur op ) ie >. -’ : \ a ote) ! AY LAJAS of oo [ od SANTA 1 SALINAS GUAY ® AMA : SL ' J ISABEL S / : J / oy / , Guayama ’ © A | | | | | | | | | | MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, WASHINGTON RESIDENCE, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS [The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the { designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them] THE SENATE *ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate, 2101 Connecticut Avenue. KenneETH McKELLAR, President pro tempore, the Mayflower. *LesLIE L. BirrLE, Secretary, the Westchester. *JosepH C. DUKE, Sergeant at Arms, 1112 Sixteenth Street. *REv. FREDERICK BrowN Harris, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain, 2800 Thirty-Sixth Street. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 325-326) Ni : : Biog Name Home post office ‘Washington residence raphy Page *Aiken, George D________ Putney, Vt... ... "The Carroll Arms... 136 *t Anderson, Clinton P____| Albuquerque, N.Mex_| 6 Wesley Cirele_ _ _____ 79 *Bennett, Wallace F______ Salt Lake City, Utah_.| The Berkshire_________| 135 *Benton, William ________ Southport, Conn. C0... o.oo ALK 18 *Brewster, Owen_________ Dexter, Maine______ The Mayflower________ 48 *Bricker, John W.._ _____ Columbus, Ohio_____ The Mayflower________| 102 *Bridges, Styles_._________ Concord, N. His The Dorchester_ ______ 72 Butler, Hugh... 2. Jl LJ Omaha, Nebr_______ 3065 Chestnut St______ 70 *Butler, John Mi." Baltimore, Md 000702.(0 fox oni . 49 *Byrd, Harry Flood______ Berryville, Va_______ The Shoreham ________ 137 2@ain, Harey Pit 0000 1 0 Tacoma, Wash______ The Westchester _ ____ 140 *tCapehart, Homer E____| Washington, Ind____|{ The Westchester______ 34 Carlson, Frankis ilo 0 Concordia, Kans____| The Wardman Park____| 41 *Case, Frapeis sic8 0 Custer; S. Dak______ 5444 27¢h St. 0 0 1 125 *Chavez, Dennis_________ Albuquerque, N.Mex_| 3327 Cleveland Ave____| 79 *t Clements, Earle C______ Morganfield, Ky____| 2800 Woodley Rd______ 42 *Conmally, Tom... __ Marlin, Pex iio 3025 Woodland Dr____| 130 #Clordon, Guy. ili. OF Roseburg, _ __ The Dorchester__ _____ 110 Oreg.__ *Dirksen, Everett M_____ Pelein, 1.000 200 4201 Massachusetts Ave_| 28 *t Douglas, Paul Ho...) Chicageg Wl... l00i00te 0 aa nn Ba J 28 Duff, James 2 0 Carnegie, _ = 4935 Hillbrook Lane___| 112 Hou Pa... *Dworshak, Henry C_____ Burley, Idaho_______ The Quebec House_ __ _| 26 *Eastland, James O______ Doddsville, Miss____| The Congressional_____ 62 *Hoton, Zales Noo... czo0x Manhattan, Mont___| 1152d St. NE________ 69 Ellender, Allen J., Sr_____ Houma, La. 00000 3900 Connecticut Ave__| 45 *Ferguson, Homer________ Detroit, Mich______ | The Westchester_ _____ 55 *|| Flanders, Ralph E______ Springfield, Vt______ 2701 O86... uo 136 *Prear, J.-Alen, Jr... .... Dover, Del... 000] The Broadmoor_______ 21 *Fulbright, J. W._________| Fayetteville, Ark____| 2527 Belmont Rd______ 8 *George, Walter F__ _____ Vienna, Gol... oUL0 The Mayflower________ 24 *Qillette, Guy M_________ Cherokee, Iowa _ ____ Kenmore Apartments__| 38 Green, Theodore Francis_ | Providence, R. I____| University Club_______ 120 Hayden, Corl. «oo nau Phoenix, Arvlz. JEEHL oo FL 9300 Jad] 7 *Hendrickson, Robert C___| Woodbury, N. J_____ 2300 Connecticut Ave__| 74 649 \ 650 Congressional Directory THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 325-326) Name *Hennings, Thomas C., Jr_| *Hickenlooper, Bourke B__| “Hill, Lisber L254.10 Hoey, Clyde B.........5. *Holland, Spessard L_____ *Humphrey, Fubert'H => | *Hunt, Lester C.......... ®lves, Irving MEU" __. *Jenner, William E_______ *Johnson, Edwin C_______ *Johnson, Lyndon B_____. *Johnston, Olin P.___..._. *Kefauver, Estes__.______ “Kem, Jamez P___--s # Kerr, Robert 8. cues *Kilgore, Harley M______ *Knowland, William F____| *1Langer, William________ *Lehman, Herbert H_____ *Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr../ %Tong, Russell B..._...... *tMeCarran, Pat.h..ilof McCarthy, Joseph R_____ *MeClellan, John L____.. *MecFarland, Ernest W___| McKellar, Kenneth_______ *McMahon, Brien_.______ Magnuson, Warren G_____ *Malone, George W______ *Martin, Edward. _.__._.._ *Maybank, Burnet R_____ * Millikin, Eugene D______ *Monroney, AS. Mike.ic *#| Moody, Blair. ...ooifon *t1 Morse, Wayne_._______ “Mundt, Karl BB... .... Murray, James E_ _ ______ *Neely, Matthew M______ *Nixon, Richard M....... #11] Conor, Herbert BR: "Mahoney, 7 oseph C____| Bo Men John Ox lor *Robertson, A. Willis_____ Russell, Richard B..______ *Saltonstall, Leverett_____ *Schoeppel, Andrew F____| Seaton, Fred A. iste *Smathers, George A_____ *Smith, H. Alexander.____| Smith, Margaret Chase._._.| Smith, Willis... cua... Home post office St. Louis, Mo_______ Cedar Rapids, Iowa__| Montgomery, Ala____| Shelby, N.C... Bartow, Fla...0 Minneapolis, Minn Lander,iWyo. 2i5iv.. Norwich, N.Y. --Bedford sing J te Craig, Colo JTL Johnsen City. Tex. 1L}'4921 Spartanburg, S. C___| Chattanooga, Tenn_ _ Kansas City, Mo.__._| Oklahoma City, Okla_| : Beckley, W. Va_____ Piedmont, Calif .____ ‘Washington residence raphy . Page 2429 Kalorama Rd_.___| 65 56511 Cedar Parkway, | 38 Chevy Chase, Md. 8715 49th St__________ 3 The Raleigh. un. 96 The Wardman Park.___| 21 [=.=© 60 = T0. 5105 4000 The 9506 Linnean Ave.__._._._ 147 Cathedral Ave____| 80 a 35 Carroll Arms_ __ __ 16 30th PLC © 11x 130 East Stanhope | 122 a Kensington, 1540 Upton HE SALLE 127 The Wardman Park____| 65 120 Elmwood Rd., | 107 Chevy Chase, Md. 3700 Massachusetts Ave._| 142 "The Berkshire... ..... 10 Whestand &. F. D. | The Roosevelt......... 100 1, N. Dak. New York City, N.Y.| The Wardman Park___..| 80 Beverly, Mass J... {oo Load ds 51 Baton Rouge, La____| Reno, Nevi....dcaui Appleton, Wis______ Camden, Ark. ______ Florence, Ariz_______ Memphis, Tenn_.___ Norwalk, Conn______ Seattle, Wash_______ Reno, Nev... o. uuu. Washington, Pa_.___ Charleston, S. C_____ Denver, Colo_______ iOklahoma City; Oklacl/. Detroit, Mich_______ Eugene, Oreg_______ Madison, S. Dak____[ Butte, Mont. ....... Pairmont, Wh Ylwelufa Whittier, Calif ______ 3210 Coquelin Ter., 45 Chevy Chase, Md. 4711 Blagden Aver sol 71 5157 33d St... nun 145 The Fairfax....couie.-8 4404 Windom P1_._.____ 7 The Mayflower. __.____._ 126 3201 Woodland Dr.t..-18 The Shoreham _ _______ 140 The Mayflower_______._ 72 The Wardman Park___| 112 4730 Quebec St______._ 122 2101 Connecticut Ave.| 16 | o.ooeliou sueT 107 5006 Tilden St... i... 55 5020 Lowell St_______._ 110 The Capitol Towers_.._.| 124 The Shoreham _ _______ 69 do oo ones age bn laday 142 4801 Tilden St..______ 10 Baltimore, Md:icdaahion nic adbusdaSisy ao 49 Cheyenne, Wyo____._ The Wardman Park___| 147 Providence, R. I____| The Dorchester____..._. 131 Lexington, VadoaciehnJlaldall aodus ooo 137 Winder, Ga. Loi). cmv Dover, Mass______.._ Wichita, Kans______ Hastings, Nebro basoll Miami, Flach siemlil Princeton, N. J_.____ Skowhegan, Maine___| ; Bileich N.C. ..... door mess seal in to 24 2320 Tracy PI. _L -.5.:o 50 Westchester Apart-| 40 ments. . chiwai senhani ban 70 nnn sie fang sank 21 The Wardman Park___| 74 511 West Thornapple 48 S., Chevy Chase, Md. The Wardman Park____| 97 Members’ Addresses 651 THE SENATE—Continued (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 325-326) Name Home post office Washington residence Li Sa Poon "Sparkman, John J... Huntsville, Ala______ 4920 Upton St. ___.___. 4 *Stennis, John C_.__. ug. 2 De Ralb, Miss oil 3609 Cumberland St___| 62 *TPaft, Robert A... J. Cincinnati, Ohio_____ 108 31st: 8f ons 102 ®Thye, Edward J... ..... Route 2, Northfield, | The Congressional ____ 59 Minn. *Tobey, Charles W_______ Temple, N..H.. ..... Hunting Towers, Alex-73 andria, Va. *Underwood, Thomas R__| Lexington, Ky_____ _| The Congressional _____ 43 *11]| Watkins, Arthur V___| Orem, Utah_________ 1433 North Inglewood | 135 St., Arlington, Va. *Welker, Herman _ _______ Payette, Idaho. = iv 43923 Tilden St. _ vo _. 27 || Wiley, Alexander________ Chippewa Falls, Wis_| 13 Duvall Dr., West-| 144 moreland Hills. *Williams, John J________ Millsboro, Del. _ ___. The Mayflower________ 20 *Young, Milton BR... LaMoure, N. Dak___| 2800 Quebec St._______ 101 90808°—82—2—1%st ed. 43 652 Congressional Directory THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Sam RAYBURN, Speaker, 1900 Q Street. *RarrH R. RoBERTS, Clerk, the Wardman Park. *JoserH H. CALLAHAN, Sergeant at Arms, 1545 Live Oak Drive, Silver Spring, Md. *WiLLiam M. M1LLER, Doorkeeper, 1732 S Street SE. *Fints E. Scort, Postmaster, 5323 Reno Road. *|REv. BERNARD Brasgamp, D. D., Chaplain, 1421 Montague Street. (For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 327-334) Name *t1Aandahl, Fred G______ Abbitt, Watkins M_______ *Abernethy, Thomas G___| 2Adair; BE. Bogs... Addonizio, Hugh J____.__ #*Albert, Carl. 0 orlold *Allen, A. Leonard _______ 2Allen, John J. Jri. i... Allen, Teo BB... ..cuucun *Andersen, H. Carl...._.. *Anderson, Jack Z. _..._._ * Andresen, August H_____ * Andrews, George W____. %Anfuge, Victor L.........-*|| Angell, Homer D______._ *Arends, Leslie C__.____. *Armstrong, 0. K._...... *} Aspinall, Wayne N_____ * Auchineloss, James C.___| *Ayres, William H_.....__ Bailey, Cleveland M______ *{ Baker, Howard H______ *Bakewell, Claude I______ Barden, Graham A______._ *|| Baring, Walter S_______ Barrett, William A_______ *Bates, Joe B............ “Bates, William H....... *Battle, Laurie C.......... Beall, J: Glenn. ~~ *Beamer, John'V...._.... *Beckworth, Lindley_____ *Belcher, Page... ..... *t Bender, George H______ Home post office Litchville, N. Dak___| Appomattox, Va____| Okolona, Miss______ Fort Wayne, Ind____| Newark, N. J. ______ McAlester, Okla_____ Winnfield, Ua ooo {0 Oakland, Calif _ _ ____ Galena, HI... ..._ Tyler, Minn... .... bay en Bautista, | alif. Red Wing, Minn____| Union Springs, Ala_ _ Brooklyn, N: ¥__._ = Portland, Oreg....... Melvin, TH... Springfield, Mo_____ Palisade, Colo_______ Rumson, N. J_______ Akron, Ohio... ..... Clarksburg, W. Va_ _| Huntsville, Tenn____| St. Louis, Mo..__.___ NeweBern;-N. Ca Reno, Nev.......... Washington residence oe Page 2800 Quebec St________ 102 Hotel Washington_____ 138 C78 20th Si. 64 McLean Gardens______ 36 The Continental _______ 78 2480 16th StL. oone 108 he. os dion Sung] 47 1104th St. NB...0 12 University Club_______ 32 1846 Upshur St_______ 61 4201 Massachusetts 12 ve. The Mayflower________ 60 So Massachusetts 4 ve. The Statler. 0 84 2121 Virginia Ave_____ 111 The Berkshire_________ 32 4604 Brookview Dr____| 67 5309 2d St... 17 113 South Lee St., 75 Alexandria, Va. 411 House Office Bldg__| 105 The Carroll Arms_____ 143 3339 Reservoir Rd___.._ 128 1256°31st St... 68 )._e 98 5806 66th Ave., River-| 72 dale, Md. Philadelphia, Pa... fd. sienna: 112 Greenup, Ky... Solem, Mass... 0... Birmingham, Ala____| Frostburg, Md... ..8 Wabash, Ind... Sia oapon, Tex., | route 2. Enid, Okla... ....... Chagrin Falls, Ohio__| Bennett, Charles E_______ Jacksonville, Fla____| %7% Bennett, John B.--Ontonagon, Mich____| *Bentsen, Lloyd M., Jr___| McAllen, Tex_.______ Berry EB. Y o.oo. ol. McLaughlin, S. Dak.| *Betts, Jackson K________ Findlay, Ohio... __:_ : *Bishop, C. W. (Runt)__._.| Carterville, I1______ |Blackney, William W____| Flint, Mich_________ The Congressional_____ 45 9005 Sudbury Rd., Sil-52 ver Spring, Md. 2065 38th St. SE______ 6 0 onus hase a 50 The Congressional_____ 36 6108 20th .. St... 131 : 3207 Martha Custis | 110 Dr., Alexandria, Va. The Mayflower______.. 102 George Washington Inn_| 22 7304 Bradley Blvd. 58 Bethesda, Md. Springbrook, route 2, | 133 Silver Spring, Md. 10701 Bucknell Dr., | 125 Silver Spring, Md. 1801 Key Blvd., Ar-| 104 lington, Va. 1833 41st PL. SE... 34 The Congressional_____ 57 Members’ Addresses THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued (For office rcoms and telephones, see pp. 327-334) Name Home post office Washington residence hs Page Blatnik; John AL... Chisholm, Minn_____ 2515 KX Bt... 25.1al 61 “Boggs, Hales). vuoi, New Orleans, La____[ 2911 Stephenson Pl_.___| 46 *Boggs, J. Caleb_.. cl. Wilmington, Deli iiaals. oo oo La doenui 21 *Bolling, Richard... ..c Kansas City, Mo... 114 CSt. SE___...._.. 66 Bolton, Frances P________| Lyndhurst, Ohio____| 2301 Wyoming Ave____| 107 *Bonner, Herbert C______ Washington, N. C___| The Roosevelt________ 97 tBosone, Reva Beck______ Salt Lake City, Utah_| 1711 Massachusetts | 136 ve. ¥Bow, Prank Tuoual Canton, Ohio..._._._. 2300 Connecticut Ave_| 105 *Boykin, Frank W_______ Mobile, Ala, Loa Hotel Washington_____ 4 *Brambletl, Brnest Ko i |-Pacific Grove, Calif... fines 12 *Bray, Willlam-G_........ Martinsville, Ind____| Hunting Towers, Alex-| 36 andria, Va. *Brehm, Walter E________ Millersport, Ohio.___| 11 2 Maryland Ave. | 104 *Brooks, Overton________ Shreveport, La______ 4413 46th St... Laws wie 46 *Brown, Clarence J_______ Blanchester, Ohio. __| The Alban Towers_____ 104 2H Brown, Paul... Elberton, Ga........ The Alban Towers_____ 26 *Brownson, Charles B____| Indianapolis, Ind____| Hunting Towers, Alex-37 andria, Va. *{ Bryson, Joseph R______ Greenville, S. C.____ Independence Apart-| 123 ments. | Buchanan, Vera. ______._ MoXeesporteePac ool: oui poised) on 120 Buckley, Charles A_______ New York City, N.Y_| 1429 House Office Bldg_| 90 *Budge, Hamer H_____.___ Boise, Idahocec alll. . losseld. hunucalics 27 *Buffett, Howard H______ Omaha, Nebuiy. cool Coo. 00 olodalJose 71 Burdick, Usher-Li....... Williston, N. Dak___| Cheltenham, Md______ 101 %*Burleson, Omar........-... Anson, Tex... iy 2737 Devonshire P1____| 134 *Burnside, M.-C... Huntington, W. Va__| 800 Crescent Dr., Alex-| 143 andria, Va. Burton, Clarence G___.___ Tynehburg, Va .oco la. 000i 2 5 soogal amvee 139 *Busbey, Fred E______.___ Chicago, Hl... .... 1814 29th St. SE__.__. 29 %jBush, Alvin:R...... Muncy, R. F. D., Pa_| The Continental_______| 115 *Batler, John C.......... Bulialo, Ni Yiu Lonel oi. Laat l-bonnt 95 Byrne, William T________ Loudonville, NoilY sucli ooo. ciaiimat 92 -mavils *Byrnes, John W______.__ Green Bay, Wis_____ 1215 25th St. South, | 146 Arlington, Va. *+ Camp, A. Sidney... ._ Newnan, Ga________ 2120 16th St. LL. oui 25 Canfield, Gordon_________ Paterson, Whdcwaons|o-nou Hoiesbis idm mds bon wa 7 *Cannon, Clarence_______ Elsberry, Mo_______ Ny Dew Jersey Ave. 67 *1Carlyle, F. Ertel_ ______ Lumberton, N. C.__.| The Wardman Park____| 99 *Carnahan, A. S.J__..._.. Ellsinore, Mo. ______ 2834 Fort Baker Dr.SE_| 67 *Carrigg, Joseph L______._ Susquehanna, Pa. pial. a att a Lal 115 Case, Clilord PR... ....... Rahway, N.J_-....L. 239 House Office Bldg_| 76 *1Celler, Emanuel ________ Brooklyn, N. Y______ The Mayflower________ 87 *Chatham, Thurmond__.._| Winston-Salem, N. C_| 3508 Prospect Ave_____ 98 Chelf, Frank Li. __.oi 0 Lebanon, Wy it coviadl. oii vmmnmnianalniis 44 *Chenoweth, J. Edgar. ___| Trinidad, Colo______ 6318 Utah Ave.____._.. 17 *Chiperfield, Robert B__._| Canton, Ill__ _______ 4800 DeRussey Pkwy., | 33 Chevy Chase, Md. Chudoff, Earl cool 0 Philadelphia, Pa. dials. bo olsun dob balums 113 + Church, Marguerite S____| Evanston, Ill_ ______ The Shoreham... . co 535 Boger, Irene, secretary to Representative Hill _ 257 Boggs, Hale, "The Interparliamentary Union____ 217 Boggs, J. Caleb, Joint Committee on the Eco- nomic Report aS aise ES i en 219 Boggs, S. W., Board on Geographic Names_____ 414 Bohan, Merwin L., Bureau of Inter-American RR CARPE Fa 357 Bohannon, Ernest C., General Accounting OEE es pri nt BE Se tw 299 Boheman, Erik, Swedish Ambassador__________ 536 Bohlen, Charles E., Counselor, Department of 25 State Bohrer, Lk K., secretary to Representative CRIPORICId is sarandaet SE bmn of om or 254 Bokat, George, National Labor Relations Board. 478 Boke, Richard L., Bureau of Reclamation_____ 410 Bolen, Fred W., "Defense Electric Power Ad- ISIIalION. ae os sree tL Lam edn Tl 407 Boles, Charles E., Interstate Commerce Com- IESSION iatee EL sd 474 Boles, Leslie O., Bureau of Transportation.____ 402 Bolger, DorAdm. J. F., Bureau of Naval Per- sonnelaa LT Bolling, Maj. Gon. A. R., General Staff________ 379 Bolling, Richard, Joint Committee on the Eco- ~nomie Report er eek acgcs oermmmerrmnrn-219 Bolster, Admiral Calvin M.: Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development _______________ 2 Office of Naval Research... .__. Zi oc... oui. 385 Office of Technical Services... .........______ 439 Bolte, Lt. Gen. Charles L.: Inter-American Defense Board HEI aT 348 Office, Chief of Staff, U.S. Army.______.._____ Bolom Sir George, ni Monetary ih i aC BRR 350 Bonbright, James C. H., Office of Assistant Sec-retary OL BOO) fo iia Lh 356 Bond, Hildreth, Office of Secretary of the In- terior io TAT Agana Sn arve ann sha (Fel S80 PNY 405 Bond, James H., Federal Security Agency______ 460 Bonesteel, Verne C., Federal Home Loan Bank System Lio gis i io 470 Bonham, Lt. Daniel H., Office of Industrial RelationsiC ein us Jaa gli oil Orie Bonnar, Miles A., Office of the Architect of the Capltpla nahin, (oes Sn ald Rar 295 Bonner, Herbert C., Board of Visitors to the : GoastiGuard Academy... Silo 0b 218 Bonnet, Henri: ; Far Eastern Commission. --_..ooooo......___. 456 French Ambassador.2o-suilthi 0 co, 533 Boochever, Louis C., American Red Cross... __ 449 Bookbinder, Hyman H:, National Production AUhorHiT co. oc Snnin amd dri ar ais item oe 437 Boone, Joel T., Veterans’ Administration_____._ 490 Boote, "Ward E. , Assistant Solicitor, Department ol ahora i oa i 442 Booth, Lea, Committee on House Administra-ser| Fee doie 2 ERIE sn SR i Ra RARER Fe Bon he LT Eneli Bi 13 Booth, Sherman M., Jr., Office of the General Counsel, NAVY Si ove ais sina emi lB 0 5) 384 Boothe, Gardner L., 24; “Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. ;..nuideradl 459 Boots, Charles F., Office of Legislative Counsel, enate Es wh a ER a a ma SALA EU dr i 87 Borchardt, Kurt, House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce... .......... 214 Borden, William L., Joint Committee on Atomic Energy re Ae Se SE SEE RS 220 Bordner, ord W., Office of Assistant Secre-tary obDefonm. Dia UF IEA 372 Born, Capt. A. S., BureauAeronautics, Navy. 386 of Bornn, D. Victor, The Virgin Islands Corpora- Borromey, Capt. Romeo J., Office of Personnel. 367 Borrows, John D., Federal Housing Administra- Borton, John C., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commeres. oan ET] 431 Bortz, Nelson M., Railroad and Airline Wage Board ‘3 Bosley, yr Milton A., District Veterinary Med- icine Examiners Bowdon 522 Bosone, Reva Beck, Columbia Hospital for Women aL te pk EAR EL DE 453 Boss, Robert L., Washington city post office. __ 528 Boswell, VY. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and ’Agricultur al Engineering... ool. 00 421 Boswell, William H., District Fire Department. 525 Botner, ‘Stanley B. ‘administrative assistant to Bonar TOMY. Soh onan. Ema a 251 Bott, George J., National Labor Relations Boards lay Ha 478 Bouchard, Clarence, radio studios, Capitol ____ 297 Bourbon, "August J., administrative assistant to Senator OC COnOT. as fon ih i tga) 251 Bourg, Fabia R., Naval Liaison Office_________. 298 Bourgerie, Elmer H., Office of African Affairs. 357 Bouton, James O., Office of the Assistant Post- master General EN lr oe ne 0 Sa 403 Bovard, Burton C., Federal Housing Adminis- tration SAR See be TCT RR AEE 470 Bowen, Don L., : Jarman A EE ee pO Br CRE pl Le 257 Bowles, Raimond, Senate Committee on Bank-: ing ‘and Currency Le i SA in PLR EA 201 Bowling, Capt. S. & Office of Under Secretary OL NE NAVY ns ne Samat bo Sa Jae 381 Bowman, Conrad J., Office of the Assistant Post- Dinter Geftomal-a 403 Bowman, Dean O., National Production Au- thority -438 Bs Congressional Directory : Page Bowman, William FE., Jr., Office of Salary Sta- bilization. Jos Sst arT iO 2. RSIS STN 345 Bowman, George M., Jr., House post office____._ 292 Bowman, James S., Tennessee Valley Author- i 489 Boyce, Madison, Office of Clerk of the House_. 290 Bowser, Ivadell, secretary to Representative Jones.of Alabamas. C.J Bade io lolil Tino] 257 Boyd, No W., Mutual Security Agency ._..._. 475 Boyd,G. R,, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering Boyd, Julian P., National Historical Publica- tions COMMUSSION. «ooo toooono 467 Boyd, Col. R. W., 384 Boyd, Pp, Munford, National oe Au- thority: oo uu ais diet nay LS ined dnalel 436 Boyd, William R., Petroleum Administration for:Defense amidodulni Diu LU IL sid 407 Boyer, Harold R., Defense Production Admin-Istuabione isos uadd dn Si Sh Salil. ann 340 Boyer, Helen M,, secretary to Representative Hoflmanwof Michigan ..t lL igual]os 25 Boyer, Marion W., Atomic Energy Commis- Boykin, L. E., Bureau of Public Roads 4 Boykin, Samuel D., Office of Security and Con-sular Adair to vantann. 0 Loo dia dL seeding 360 Bose,NT Boi Setien Wi. Bureauof the Budget... 338 Bradeen, Orrin C., Federal Fire Council .______ 468 Bradford, Robert B., Federal Fire Couneil_____ 468 Bradley, Charles Tl, Columbia Hospital for WV ONO i damit di anim om NE Tl Se mr) 453 Bradley, F Columbia Hospital for Sa ERE Ry CI J nL OT SE IIR CEC AVL 453 Bradley, eh ‘W., Bureau of Veterans’ Reem-ployment Rights ns dn A 443 Bradley, James C., Jr., Office of Secretary of the TNberIOra cs of cobb rie ban dain Tuts 2 2 wis 406 Bradley, Gen. Omar N.: : Armed Forces Policy Couneil....____________ 375 Joint:Chiefsiof Staff. or laevisnnd 373 Bradley, Otis T'., House post office ...___.______ 292 Bradley, Ruth, Committee on House Adminis- (Lron ER RU A A NI A a 213 Bradley, Wilmot H., Geological Survey.._._.____ 409 Bradshaw, Clarence R., Bureau of Land Man- LILo A OR sl TN A a 0 MT I Ce nel Brady, Dorothy J., Office of Secretary of Defense. 371 Bragman, Charles, Senate Committee on Labor and Pablie .... 202 Welfare...5. Brahany, Thomas W., District Unemployment Compensation Board... ooo...0c 0 522 Brallier, Capt. Bret H., Office of Personnel ____ 367 Bramble, Harlan B., Office of International Ma- terials Polley as iisiinisDiu babel dus 359 Bramhall, Walter F., Municipal Court for the Districtof Columbia... i" foo: leirnchTo 512 Brandstadt, Col. W. G., Bureau of Medicine andiSurgery. olin Us ei 387 Brandt, Maj. Gen. C. A., Office of Matériel _____ 397 Brandt, Robert, Defense Electric Power Admin-IRETREIONY. oc bom mrsr fo ht edisonbE 407 Brannan, Charles F. (Secretary of Agriculture): Biography ofs soci path ado di nit mann 415 Commodity Credit Corporation... .._______ 422 Defense Mobilization Board_____. _ 340 Member, Smithsonian Institution .._________ 485 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission.___ 217 National Forest Reservation Commission.__. 216 National Security Resources Board. __________ 339 The Virgin Islands Corporation. __._________ 413 Brannan, Gertrude R., Office of Clerk of the 15 Hype IRS dees Ta Be i el in £0 03 290 Brannon, Maj. Gen. Ernest M.: Special ba. Seana aa al icin 379 United States Soldiers’ Home______.__________ 487 Brannon, Gerard M., Joint Committee on Inter-nal Revenue Taxation... ~:~ 216 Brasfield, K. A.: Fiscal Branell. onl cir te ant rt 426 Page Brashear, Tom, Jr., secretary to Representative THOINDEILY.. os iit ns on aa SEE al X30 261 Braskamp, Rev. Bernard, chaplain of the House. 289 Brasse, Earnest B., Washington city post office__ 528 Bragsor, Francis P.: Braswell, Ethel, United States Attorney’s Office. 511 Braswell, Marcus B., Farmers Home Adminis-ation. So. lr a nasal Sout 424 chonibadlosre Braun, Wallace L., Department of Vehicles and Traffic A Ee Re Ee Se le Sn EAE 524 Brawley, H. W., Senate Committee on Post Office and Civil Service... .......__..__. 202 En ne EE CR eT TL STR 462 IP CABITY heb hed dn nae Bn Te SL EAA 364 Brayer, Edward F., Bureau of Employees’ Compensation ARR Rt ft AAG LE 442 Bregman, David, Office of the Assistant Post-TABSLOL ROTIOTAL oss 5 eatcent smite d 403 Brehm, Walter E., Migratory Bird Conserva-HOR COMMISSION. sar a is 217 esacnss Brelske, J. E., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial Chemistry Ee Saka SR OPIN 419 Bremer, George A., Federal Housing Adminis-4 rE EE ER Se I SE SN 471 Brennan, George M., Farm Credit Administra- Brennan, James T., Jr., District Corporation Counsel's Office i... sin init. cniandiin 523 Brennan, John A., Office of Assistant Post- master General... 0 oonodanis 402 Brennan, Roland M., District purchasing officer. 520 Brenner, Genevieve M., District Nurses’ Ex- ain BOAPA:. 000. na rarerne 521 Bresciani-Turroni, Constantino, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. 350 Brogsin, Lous, Assistant Enrolling Clerk, GEROTIL. a ite nts ar Be, Lawrence J., ABONOY. midsbeat a oF rs Cri 460 Brewer, BR id D., District Department of Public Welfare %. ooa 526 Brewer, Seth T., Office of Administrative Serv- 1 Ge MA Hs SE EE ae ee RR RE 427 Brewer, William A., Plans and Policies Office. 347 Brewster, Owen, the Interparliamentary Union. 217 Brewton, Charles S. Jr. administrative assist- BRL LO BeNRtor HIlls eral 250 Brial, Ruth M., secretary to Senator Bricker_._ 249 Brice, Henry T , Secretary to Senator Russell... 252 Bricker, John W.: Bord of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad- Ne = a Sle de Ee CE i EAE LR em 218 J ay Cenanition on Atomic Energy. ____.____ 220 Joint Committee on Defense Production._____ 221 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. __ 217 Briokelt, glared F., Office of Secretary of eC I AE San Ah a eR 442 Ee SNE eB sh ts wn To ge ot oA Ee 435 Brits tes Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures. ._..__.....______ 219 National Forest Reservation Commission_.__ 216 Senate Office Building Commission. ___.______ 215 Brierley, D. S., Maritime Administration._____ 434 Briggs, Gen. James E. , Office of Deputy Chief of Staff, Development ate a a 396 Brill, Charles R., Civil Service Commission. ---453 Brittain, Dr. Marion Luther, Federal Prison Industries, 5 Ea aL WD 400 Brifjfaguan, Y , Western Union Telegraph Briton, Theodore, Bureau of Employees’ Com-pensation a a IESE 442 Brizuela, Maj. Gen. Luis Ernesto, Inter-Amer-joan Defense «iissdo shail Board. von ot 348 Broches, Aron, International Bank for Recon-struction and Development... .......c.0.. 350 Brock, Leah I., Secretary to Representative IB EET Ee El RN in een Cu Me Aa 255 Brode, Wallace R., National Bureau of Stand-SH ren I He Co sl Aa TNE RR ge 434 Individual Index Page Page Broderick, James W., planning manager, Gov-ernment Printing .......__.__. 302 Office. 000 Broderick, Martin J., Home Loan Bank Board. 470 Brodman, C. L. , General Accounting Office.___ 299 Do win, Economic Smvillastion Cr088: oh hed sna a ahh See Sa Fron Aired C., Bureau of Accounts..__._____ 404 Bronk, Dr. Detlev W.: National Academy of Sciences... o-oo... 476 National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 476 National Science Foundation. _._______________ 479 Bronson, Richardson, National Production AUWTNOPIY sos Sai iogn a nav Soins und 435 Bronz, George, Office of General Counsel for the PreasurY. i i Jiolo a annul sasha Tou Bl 364 Bronzonie, John A.: District Engineer Department... __________ 524 District Plumbing Board... coo........ 521 Brooke, Allan F., District Assessor’s Office__... 519 | Brooke, Edgar D--National Production Au-thorlby.oii tasl se ghpdloglids2d ei Cn ll 436 Brooks, David W., National Advisory Board on Mobilization Policy 2 EXON ed LEA BE Ee 347 Brogsh Donald B. Ry atch and Development 3 ard Py Lt. Gen. E. H., Office, Chief of Army ok Ee ee RG 380 Brooks, Emerson M., Bureau of Agricultural Beonomies. i. ciili znd eo ueioes koe 416 Brooks, Lucille E., secretary to Representative Sheehan 0 les te. Coin a dd tl ois 260 Brooks, Neil, of:Solieitor-..i cl...Coll. 418 Oi 0 rocket Rev. R. W., District Public Welfare 5 Brooks, overt C., Office of Official Reporters of. Debates. ooo UL Lilian hn fen 287 Brookshire, Ruth E., secretary to Representa-tive Butler-Sibi: oivaiuneLl No 254 gaat Brosman, Paul W., judge, United States Court of Military Appeals (biography) .___________ 501 Brossard, Edgar B., Tariff Commission___.____ 488 Brotzman, Lloyd x; ‘Weather Bureau..____.____ 439 Browdy, Lt. Comdr. H., Bureau of Medicine AT BT eT he WEAR RR WOR G0 00 ET EE Ae 386 Brown, A. A., Forest Service......occooeaae__ 425 Brown, Addie: Board of Medical Examiners... 383 Naval Examining Board (Flag Officers)._.... 383 Naval Examining Board (Line)_______ L. 383 Naval Examining Board (Medical) _.__._..___ 383 Physical Disability Appeal Board____________ 385 Tn Disability Appeal Board, Marine 5 Brown, Dn B., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration a red mie I SNE 30 PSN, 482 Brown, Ben H., Jr., Deputy Assistant Secretary ol ate i ne Tei 356 Brown, Betty C., United States Attorney’s Office 511 Brown, Srnico K., Petroleum Administration RTa Te a 406 Brown, Bryant C., secretary, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. ____________ 216 Brown, Carl B., Soil Conservation Service ____ 428 Brown, Rear Adm. C. J., Bureau of Medicine and TEL I AREY 10 1 REL EOS 386 Brown, Charles D., Bureau of Transportation. 402 Brown, Clifford E. ’ secretary to Representative Redden. i rool lo Di oaods lsu 259 Brown, Ella A., Office of Register of Wills______ 510 Brown, Francis W., Civil Aeronautics Board... 451 Brown, Frank H. , Federal Mediation and Con- cllibtion Service. coil ool a 457 Brown, Grover F., Soil Conservation Service... 428 Brown, John C., Administrative Office of the United States Courts... 510 Brown, J. Robert, House Committee on Expend-itures in the Executive Departments. _____. 213 Brown, Paul, Joint Committee on Defense Pro-1 LA id adn Sa Aira IL dt a lane 1 Brown, Peter Campbell, Subversive Activities Control Board. ini 488 ooooii Brown, P. P., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts. 389 Brown, Philip S., Farmers Home Administra- 1 nye EUSAR Rr Neale Sh a PE ER a) 1 BS 0) LT 424 Brown, Brig. Gen. Robert W., Office of the Under Secretary of the Army._______________ Brown, Steve M., General Accounting Office_s 299 Brown, Walter D., Office of the Assistant Post- master Joo EN ne RS 403 Bra William W., Office of Personnel. ._____.._ 417 Brown, ‘Winthrop a. Office of NY Materials PONGY nov durciineiiniimnesabiies Browne, Alfred A., olor Trade Commission. _ on Browne, Brig. Gen. Roger J., Office of Opera- Brownfield, Commander John H., Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals____.____ Brownrigg, William, III, Office of Minority Secretary. Sal Zin ln AunAS nL LY 287 Broz, V. Blanche Holder, Senate Committee on Frponaimres in the Executive Depart- General lL] an AL RE eR FIL 401 Bruce, W. G., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine MARIE RAL CA Se 1 MLS AE 420 Bruggmann, Charles, Swiss Minister... __._____ 536 Brune, Delphine W., secretary to Representa- tive Hand... 0 ioe man sn SL Blain, 256 Brunkard, Thomas V., secretary to Senator Lehman Spas Ppa aR ll PR DOR ie 251 Brunsman, Howard G., Bureau of the Census_. 430 Brunson, "David S., "Office of the Surgeon Aetigral. Le ia Ar aT 462 Bruton, Capt. Henry C., Office of Judge Advo-cate General of the Navy ECF RE Le BR OER I 390 ny Irving, District Corporation Counsel’s ORce i SIS aS ad el SS Bryan, Toit H., Housing and Home Finance AGOAQY. UE CIOL Sn BUR Sn a lis 469 Bryant, yes 0., Bureau of Accounts..______ 368 Bryant, a S., Department of Agriculture TADIEY os raid oF IE 41 Bryant, Robert S., Metropolitan Police. __..___ 525 EL William B., United States Attorney’s (0) 11 Bryde, Lt. Col. Walter J., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. ______.__.._..__ 351 Brzostowski, Joseph 8., secretary to Representa- tive MEChrOWICE. iorbdr a dit 258 Bu Lucille J., Bureau of Labor Stand-” Buchanan, Thomas O., Federal Power Com- EEE E5111 DOA ER RE ne CN ON IE NE 58 Buchheister, George G., secretary to Representa- tivesRooney. «a 5 00 DANI SE ahs 260 Buck, Solon J.: National Historical Publications Commission. 467 Office of Assistant Librarian, Library of Con- Cn IRA Se CEDAR UR SLEDS SAE 299 Buckingham, Dr. D. E. District Veterinary Medicine Examiners Board _..______________ 522 ppg Dr. D. E., District veterinary A I a Sa LS hn dai de 520 Ry iol H., secretary to Representative BIN, Le Se La A IT aa 57 Buckley, Charles A., Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Gronide. Leo li 215 Buckley, James L., Office of Personnel .________ 417 Buckley, O. E. , Atomic Energy Commission___ 450 Buckley, Oliver, Office of Technical Services__. 439 ‘Buckley, Dr. Oliver E., Office of Defense Mobi-- zation, fot s dy fiat er nL Ee SSE 339 Bucy, Charles W., Office of the Solicitor._._____ 418 Budd, Marie M. , House Folding Room._.______ 292 Buddress, Commander E. N., Office of Under Secretary of the Navy i iol bn wn lilil 381 Budlong, Herbert N., Official Reporter, Senate. 287 Budnik, Dr. Emilio, Pan American Sanitary Organization rE A Ls ERS EI EL NT 353 Buehler, John F., Office of the Assistant Post- master Genel CF J i on iy 403 Bueno, 3 Silvado, Organization of American Traffic Buford, A. ie 3d, Office of Libraries a Intelligence-Acquisition SI BE 672 Congressional Directory Page Buford, Charles H., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense... oczos i call io Seo itor sabinun 372 Bukowski, Peter I., Reconstruction Finance Corporation eT a SES Ta Fes 482 Bull, Lt. Gen. Harold R., National War College. 376 Bullen, Frederick H. , Wage Stabilization Board. 345 Bullen, Commander George, Office of Under Secretary of the Navy... . i anosioilize 381 Balions, Li Gen. E. F., Technical Services, Bullock, i) I., Metropolitan Police Depart-ent Affai Bunch, Richard W., Bureau of Medical Services 463 Bunche, Ralph J.: American National Red Cross__........_.._.. 448 United, Nations colitis. 115 soni ial. ouussiod 354 Bundy, D., secretary to Representative Bram-> Otho aint adi ibis winnd nd dad usd sant oa Bunke, Michael J., Office of the Doorkeeper.... 291 Bunker, Brig. Gen. Howard C.: Atomic Energy Commission _____.____._______ 451 Military Liaison Committee to Atomic Energy COINS SION, i ot Ie ins nmr e dem ot 375 Bunn, Clarence K., District Fire Department__ 525 Burba, Alma, secretary to Representative Albert. 253 Burba, Col. E. H., Office of the Assistant Secre- tary ofthe ATTNY o.oo.oneal ods 378 io Burbridge, Charles E., Freedmen’s Hospital... 463 Burden, William A. M.: Office of Secretary of Ar Boron: wot. seugens 393 Research and Development Board___.________ 373 Bardetis, Walter W., District Health Depart-os Burdick, B. F., Panama Canal Company.._... 480 Burgan, "Frederic C., General Accounting Office. 299 Burgess, Ethel W., Civil Service Commission. 453 Burgess, Robert S., Bureau of Transportation. 402 Burgin, Miron, Office of Intelligence Research. 360 Burkart, Frank J., Office of Register of Wills__. 510 Burke, Harry Ci, Office of Secretary of Senate.. 286 Burke, John E., Washington city post office... 528 Burke, Joseph Yi Railroad Retirement Board__ 481 Burke, Thomas, National Production Authority. 439 Burke, Vincent O.: Deputy Postmaster General _.___...__...___ 401 Prosideni s Advisory Committee on Manage- Bs Jae E., House Committee on Ways ANGMGANIEAS Sush aoo nnd dence hn tA ore 214 Burkhead, is E., Bureau of Agricultural BONO, c1 mi bdr hk 415 esseeitaethl Burkhead, William J., House Post Office. __.___ 293 Burklin, 5 Reyburn, "Federal Home Loan Bonk System FEEL SReR Lng a LA SA iS Burleson, Mrs. Omar, The Congressional Club. . om Burnett, Cyrus L., Office of the Assistant Post- master PL PE Ne 403 Bhat, Frank, Senate Committee on Public aT ER SIS SRE ah AH a Oe i 260 Burnham, Col. Robert F., Office of Director oF Legislation AL ANISOTE oor ston ch ond bx nosias Burns, Beulah, Office of Official Reporters 2 Debates ric mad adi of inna on dln 293 Burns, Dorothy M., Office of Minority Secretary. 287 Burns, E. O., Office of Clerk of the House...... 290 Burns, John F., Customhbouse: -cir.uals orl 365 Burns, Maj. Gen. R. W., Office of Operations____ 396 Burns, Stephen, National Production Au- TNOPIbY isos bait anasto Jin Il. LF 438 Burnside, M.. G., Federal Records Couneil ._____ 467 Burnside, Mrs. Maurice G., The Congressional Burnside, Brig. Gen. Merrill D., Research and Development Board... ooo 373 Burr, Harold S., Federal Security Agency... __. 460 Burr, Susan S., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System HEREC ten aa Ba a ah 459 Burrill, Cecil L., Petroleum Administration for ee REIN Bie 407 Burrill, Meredith F.: : Board on Geographic Namess. oo alia.lus A. 414 Office of Assistant Secretary of the Interior... 406 Page Bury Lt. Col. Howard L., Office of Secretary of Alr Pores... col smc Tosa 393 Burris, Philip H., Office of Deputy Under Secre-tary of States toc tui emis nn 356 Burroughs, Spencer, Office of Administrative Assistant to Secretary of the Army Burrows, Charles R., Bureau of Inter-American Se Ee Burrows, Don S., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration... oo.l loool in iaart ell fy 482 Burrows, John D., Federal Housing Adminis-tration; sos soisnditelan Lussersld Jadviss 470 Burrows, Malcolm A., District of Columbia Redevelopment Land Ageney._______.______ 455 Burton, Harold Hitz, Associate Justice, United State Supreme Court (biography). sii. isi Burton, Roy E., Reconstruction Finance Cor-poration zi x il ool ol tis gra obra 482 Burwell, Clayton L.: Board for Correction of Naval Records........ 382 Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy fori Ad os Locacs Ldvudanld imei adi 382 Bury, L. H. E., International Monetary Fund. _ 351 Buschman, William A., Munitions Board _______ 375 Bush, Lt. Col. R. B., Office of the Assistant Secretary ofthe Army... lL otic 378 Bush, Dr. Vannevar, Regent, Smithsonian Institutionabl-palate Td 2. walic al gl 485 Bushnell, Curtis M+, Federal Communications Commission, Jo. sioasnel 0S suiieiaid.ads 457 Buskie, George F., Reconstruction Finance Cor-POrabion. 5: ins asians Ln lla nL ai Bussey, W. W., National Bureau of Standards _ Bustamante, Je oaquin C., International oa ary and Water Commission, United States andMexie0. or L to ah Ls tad 472 Bustamante, Dr. Miguel E., Pan American Sanitary Organjzation. ..-._-... diel oc 353 Bustamante, W. A., Caribbean Commission. ___ 451 Butler, Evelyn R., secretary to District Com-missioners. Ju od anal. al Lia LILUIG 519 Butler, Everett L., Office of Administrative Assistant to the Secretary of the Army. ____ 379 Butler, George H., Housing and Home Finance. 469 Butler, Hugh, Joint Committee on Reduction ‘ of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _____ 219 Butler, K. A., Bureau of Animal Industry... ___ 419 Butler, Margaret, secretary to Representative Nieholson. ooo vezi doi boll 0.08 259 Butler, Ovid, Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering... .._...___.... 421 Butrick, Richard P.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service__. 361 Board of the Foreign Service ________________ 361 Office of Deputy Under Secretary of State... 356 Butterworth, Howard J., Office of Official Re-porters OLDIE. oiedais 293 oe mms Butterworth, Ruth, House Committee on Dis- Butts, E. R., Administrative Division____._____ 399 Buvens, Patrick H., Federal Civil Defense Ad ministration. DicaslanrSl oeniaEl LE tie Byer, Herman B., Bureau of Labor Statistics.__ Byerly, T. C., Bureau of Animal Industry..... 419 Byington, Homer M., Jr., Office of Western European Affairs: asicdbus an 358 Bynum, Robert L., Jr., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... io. ori... JrrvziuhBile 482 Byram, William E., Civil Service Commission. 453 Byrd, Harry Flood: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy... 217 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-F1531 TH Re Be GAA pT SUE 0 I A SE dp oT Rs 216 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-tial Federal Expenditures. _____________.___ 219 Byrd, Pauline V., Veterans’ Administration Congressional Service. ..........L..ccooa 298 Byrd, William H., secretary to Representative Herlong oo sie. oo don BL a Ne ea 256 Byrne, pois T., Securities and Exchange Com-MSBION a ea 484 Byroade, 1 A., Bureau of German Affairs. 356 C Cabell, Maj. Gen. Charles P., Joint Staff________ 373 Cabello, Col. Leodegar, Inter-American De-fonse Board. oo aE 349 Individual Index Page Cable, Wendell E., House Committee on Dis-trict of Columbia 2 Cabrejo, Lt. Col. José del c., Inter-American Defense Board. ant 349 reesela lil Caemmerer, H. P., Commission of Fine Arts_ 453 Cagle, Helen, secretary to Representative Beck- worth Seeger he ee Tl al SE TT 253 Cahn, Julius N., secretary to Senator Wiley. _ ___ 252 Cain, Harry P., Joint Commission on Enlarging = - the Capitol Grounds... oo if 215 Caine, Walter E., Petroleum Administration for Pefens: 5 dma tse a mae 407 Caires, Dr. P. F. de, Pan American Sanitary Organizations ol 353 Cairns, Huntington: Committeeon Practice... 0... oo .-369 National Gallery ol Art. li. i 486 o.oo . Cairns, John F., District Public Welfare De- DAMEN a Te 526 Cake, Gilbert L., Bureau of Accounts. __________ 368 Qflawell, Col. Cloyd T., Selective Service Sys- 485 Affairs Calhoun, 7 ohn A., Bureau of German Affairs. _ Calhoun, John ba secretary to Senator Flan- ke nr be a Sled Ny i a Sa Se 250 Callaghan, Thomas A., Jr., Bureauof Ships. ____ 389 Callaghan, Vice Ad m. W. M., Military Sea Transportation Servige ~> i irr tem our. 390 Callahan, Anna L., Municipal Court for the DistrictofColumbia: coi 512 Callahan Joseph H.-Capitol Police. Board -.... oc ceneremaenn-—r-e 296 Sergeantat Arms, House... ou... 290 Callahan, Madalyn E., secretary to Represent-ative Havenmer: co Si 256 Callander, Ronald C., Commodity Exchange Authority 422 Callender, Nancy L., secretary to Representa- tive Burton oo ani Iii iin araks 254 Calver, Dr. George W., Capitol physician _______ Cameron, Martha E., secretary to Representa- TH RT TT TE ne Me SS Berney 256 Camp, John, National Production Authority.___ Camp, Brig. Gen. T. J., Columbia Hospital for LOE 11D TRE a fe ne TE Ce A ee 453 Camp, P. M., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts. 389 Campbell, Charles E., Office of the Doorkeeper__ 291 Campbell, Daniel 1 Government Printing B11 saasaa Se i RP 302 ae Cott. F. Newell, Tax Advisory Staff. ______ 365 Campbell, Gary, General Accounting Office... 299 Campbell,J. Ed, Tennessee Valley Authority __ 489 Campbell, Kenneth A., Office of Rent Stabiliza- bry Eh Ss le te te OR le 344 Campenhout, Andre van, International Mone-EE Ny Tr Re Rl SR a I Canaday, Ward M..: Caribbean Commission... . a... ccosraecnein 451 The Virgin Islands Corporation. ._______.____ 413 Cannon, Clarence: Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-tial FedernlExpenditares_-..________: .__.. 219 Regent, Smithsonian Institution ____________ 485 Cannon, Mrs. Clarence, Congressional Club____ 454 Cannon, Gen. John K., continental commands. 397 Cannon, Julian F. , Bureau of Accounts... _.__ 368 Cannon, Lura, Committee on House Adminis- tration he 213 Cannon, Mary M., Women’s Bureau._.________ 444 Soli, Lawson District Board of Educa- Capehart, Homer E., Joint Committee on Defense Production... ll iv.ST 221 Caputy, Victor W., United States Attorney’s a CE RRBE LS A 511 Caras, Lo S., House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries raulSo wy 214 Caraway, J. Lewey, custodian, Senate Office Buildin 296 Cardall, Richard T., administrative assistant -to Senator Waking 252 Cardon, P. V.: Agricultural Research Administration _______ Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development________________ 472 Cardon, Robert L., Office of the Legislative CommSel i HOUSE, ovo piimictns pido be 293 Cardona-Cooper, Jose L., Inter-American Trop-fea) Tuna Commission. ich...di ie DF 472 tration ci. dan ier Suan Ba I SL TR 342 Cater Nick M., Federal Trade Commission. . Cargill, Tom a, Office of the Assistant Post-master General Carle, Charles H., Office of the Assistant Post- ey IE ee 403 Carli, Guido, International Monetary Fund____ Carlisle, Millard D., secretary to Representative ConninERam. . ... -ocemy me cwombi ad bai brit. 255 Carlock, John K., Office of General Counsel for HEUTE NT panel iee iane s S a Sai. 2 364 Carlson, Fred A., Official Reporter, Senate_____ 287 Carlson, Vivian, Civil Service Commission. ___ 453 Carlton, John T., secretary to Senator Smathers. 252 Carney, Edward B., House Post Office... ____. 292 Carney, Mary E., secretary to Representative Welchal oo os Bh Laon ans 261 Carpenter, Commander Albert J., Chief of Staff, ConstiGuard.. fol inl J Lu iar i 366 Carpenter, Byron H., Patent Office. _______.___ 439 Carpenter, Maj. Gen. Charles I., Office of Per- some. le el ae Ean LR J OE 396 Carpenter, S. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. _________.._.___.0.. 459 “Carpenter, William Randolph, Motor Carrier ; Claims Commission 2 i 0. iUio ols 474 ‘Carper, David B., Office of the Legislative : ComsgelyHouset tien. 8 othe, lng 293 Carr, A. S. E., secretary to Senator Connally___ 249 Carr, Edward M., Municipal Court for the Dis- trietofColymblaln boo. oni 512 Carr, James K., House Committee on Interior and InsalarAfiains oo. 0 0 Codon.Sh 214 Carranza, Brig. Gen. Alberto Salinas: Inter-American Defense Board... ____________ 349 Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- missions fel iii See tC EEL CRIED 352 Carrico, Lawrence J., Washington city post ORR LE DL SE Sa IE RE 28 Carrington, John W., House Committee on Un-American Activities. ooo... oili0 214 Carol, Edgar B., Bureau of Land Manage-Onto nl E S R T 408 Carroll, Maj. Gen. Joseph F., United States Air a Bs A SR ES GL SELIG 395 on) i pny A., United States Attorney’s en a SRL LL ASE SITE 511 Carson, or Comdr. Edwin I., Naval Liaison Meare, restten RTE 208 Carson, ody K., secretary to Representative Anfuso RA ert A i SpE SL BEE Ei Re ren 0 253 Carson, Ivan D.: Defense Production Administration_._______. 341 Housing and Home Finance Agency... _.__.. 469 Carson, John, Federal Trade Commission. ____ 464 Carson, Lester, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce EAR RT TGR SER 2 431 Carter, Mrs. Albert E., The Congressional Club. 455 Carter, Amon G., Territorial Expansion Me- meorial. Commission. -.. oa dln 000. 218 Carter, H. L., Railroad Retirement Board____. 481 Carter, Brig. 'Gen. Marshall S., Office of Secre- tary of. Defense. 0. oc Joc Daman soni 371 Carter, Maude V., Civil Service Commission... 453 Carter, Oliver, Civil Aeronautics Board ________ 452 Sa Robert. F., General Accounting a ERO SU ea ea LS SCS RE LOE LE 2 Cary, Charles O., Air Coordinating Committee. 447 Cary, am I, Jr., District Health Depart- rai SAT A DR RR AR Er 525 Cor William L., Office, Department Coun- selor, Arey, LR A A RS 378 Cassanova, A ,Jr., Patent Office.....0 439 Case, Harry L.,TE Valley Authority... 489 Casey, Jean Y. secrefary to Representative Taylor 260 Casey, Ralph E. vs General Accounting Office. 299 674 Congressional Directory Page Casey, Walter J., judge, Municipal Court for the District:of Columbia. zoo i oho. Laiol 512 Cashell, Dr. Irving G., District Board of Veter-py Medicine Examiners... .............. 22 Cass,A. Carl, Export-Import Bank of Washing-ton Pet Rf PIR frets I SEN OR i LER 456 Cass, Millard, Office of the Seorctory of Labor__ 441 Cassady, Vice Adm. John H National Advisory Committee for Aeronau-1 A Sd lS Ce SR SN KENT Tn CO Office of Chief of Naval Operations. .__.__...___ Cassedy, James W., Federal Trade Commission _ Cassell, Albert I., District Motor Vehicle Park-ing Agency Cassidy, M. Joseph, Federal Housing Adminis-ion mindstration.. .... oo. ao, Aes Tl "Office Castillo -Roath, Amalia de, Organization of American States FRESE I Li Su I LS 3 Castro, Héctor David: El Salvadoran Ambassador... _.....__.______ 532 Organization of American States....._._____ 353 Castro, Morris F. de Governor.of Virgin Islands. _ _._..._____._____ 413 Virgin Islands Corporation. _____.__._____.___ 413 Caswell, J. Edgar, District Health Department. 525 Cater, Capt. Charles J., Bureau of Ships_______ 389 Cates, Gon, Clifton B., Commandant, Marine LEE SEE fn A Ere A ne Lah ex ULL 391 Catiosh rr G., Western Union Telegraph SB RL NTO es CCM ly a EL AE A De OY 297 Caulk, Paul A., Public Health Service... _______ 462 Cavanagh, Helen L., District Public Library._ 522 Cavanagh, John BR. Commission on Mental Health Cavness, Olin, Captain, Capitol Police_________ Cry, range R., Office of Secretary of Com- CAT rey chief judge, Municipal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. _ Cera, John C., National Production Authority. Chaffee, Alney E., reading clerk of the House__ Challinor, Mrs. David, American National Red C Chamberlain, John M., Civil Aeronautics ard cola)ads lal ie nail aks Chamberlin, E. H., National Advisory Com-mittee for Aeronautics... ___.__._..________.._ 476 Chamberlin, Herbert S., Office of the Assistant Postmaster General Chamberlin, Lt. Gen. Stephen J., Office, Chief of Army PieldiPorees ol nil oo. iid 380 Chambers, Frank G., Munitions Board________ 374 Chambers, John 7.) Office of the Sergeant at ArmagiSenate.y. oi ol ii Narn 286 Champers, Justice M., Federal Civil Defense Administration coo. do Ron ol alae 346 Chambers, Robert: Bureau of ond nls 365 Customs...) Office of General Counsel of the Treasury_____ 364 Chambers, Thomas B., Soil Conservation Service. Llob rin nyuN a Chambers, Wayne, National Production Au-thority Chamer, Yohine H., Office of Assistant Secre-tary ofthe Navy. 0. desis famosa 382 Chandler, Rear Adm. A. W., Bureau of Medi-cine and Surgery 387 Chandler, Henry P.: Administrative Office of the United States Coulsona Lt se 51 Federal Records Council ._.__.__.__________.___ 467 Chaney, Alvan C., District Public Library____. 522 Chaney, Donald 7, Fish and Wildlife Service._ 412 Chaney, Ralph W. | Advisory Board on National Parks, ebe. ou oats a ay 411 Chang, Yueh-Lien, International Bank for Re-construction and Development 350 Chapin, Dr. Eugene R., Civil Service Commis-A Chapin, Helen, secretary to Representative Pickett Page Chapman, Harlan T., Bureau of the Public DOE hs ih ne a A SE ETE Re An lh 369 Chapman, Nancy, secretary to Senator Johnson of Colorado Chapman, Oscar L. (Secretary of the Interior): American National Cross.a.o..ao 448 Red io Blography-of io. cis scaieiie va ina 405 Defense Mobilization Board... .___.____.__.__. 339 Member, Smithsonian Institution___.________ 485 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission____ 217 National Forest Reservation Commission. ____ 216 National Park Trust Fund Board.___________ 411 National Security Resources Board.._________ 339 The Virgin Islands Corporation. __.______.___. 413 Chappell, Richard A., Administrative Office of the United StatesiCourts: ot... 510 i... Chapplear, Nancy B., Office of International In- TOTMAEION tir ot oh te iT vias 359 Charles, Philipp L., Office of Price Stabilization. 343’ Chles Robert M, Board of Immigration Ap- LER OS LR Th 00 Chay Millard T., District Accountancy Board oe. colon ried 52 Chase, A. S., Office of Intelligence Research ____ 360 Chase, Elmer E., Export-Import Bank of Wash- ington NEE I et RE ese TR 456 Chase, G. Howland, Board of Governors, Fed-eral Reserve System reser a vee pr 459 Chase, Henrietta S., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency Sarat a a 201 Chaszar, EdwardJ., Bureau of Transportation._ 402 Chatelain, A. C., South Pacific Commission____ 487 Chatelain, Leon, Ir, District Architect Board__ 521 Chatfield, Helen, Federal Records Council ..__. 467 Chavez, Dennis: Commission on Enlargingthe Capitol Grounds. 215 Senate Office Building Commission___________ 215 Cheatham, William S., District Corporation Coals Office. Tare 23 Chermak, Lawrence E., Office of the General Counsel eo 384 Choy. Ethel A., secretary to Representative MBL: Lo nl a 255 Ses, Lt. Col.F. J., Munitions Board.____ 374 Cheseldine, Elmer, ATL of Sergeant at Arms, enate: a 286 Chesney, Earle D., Veterans’ Administration Congressional Service... J. fr ii 298 Chesteen, Gaston D., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation._______..__.____ 216 Chevalier, Mrs. Stuart, American Red Cross.__ 448 Chew, F Fo Office of Official Reporters of Debates, ol nf AR Labi ae Ee DA 287 Chew, + Cap; John J., Bureau of Yards and rr a rds reo as PY 390 Chidlaw, Gen. Benjamin W., Continental Commands ;. oF Toc Ble se Rt KU 397 Childers, L. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. oi. rc 421 Childress, Commander William W., Office of Compiroller.. oo fic iaiianelig5 wi 2 366 Ching, Cyrus, Federal Mediation and Con-ciliation.Serviees oi inanti 457 Chiriboga, Guillermo Perez, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development_______ 350 Chorley, Kenneth, National Park Trust Fund Board to. oo wn wieSan al 411 Claris, Milo F., District Recreation ynEN a aa 522 Mt Curtis, assistant tally clerk of Bouse. a ee a RR 290 Christy, Frances, House Committee on the ARO a ee ER ER EE RS a LT 214 Chuck, Col. H. C., Office of the Under Secretary of the AY Se ee i 378 Chupka, Catherine T., Board of Governors, Federal Toneres System IRIS en aE 459 Church, F. Office of the Treasurer of the United Are EL AS lag CL Church, Commander William C. G., Bureau of Yards and Docks: el i Th Churley, Lt. Col. Robert A., Office bf Secretary Of LN VY rr a Re A 381 Ciccarelli, John C., Bureau of Accounts________ 404 Cigliana-Piazza, Giorgio, International Mone- tary Fund 3 Cintra, Col. José . Pinheiro de Ulhoa, Inter-American Defense Board 349 Individual Index Clague, Ewan, Bureau of Labor Statisties_.___. 443 Chnots Regina H., District Engineer’s Depart- Capitol... 0 ae San Clapp, Gordon R.: President’s Advisory Committee on Man-AEOICHE. son sia ins mid BEES mr wr a ares 481 Tennessee aly Authority... coast 488 Clapp, VernerW., Chief phi Librarian, : Library of Congress LAR SRL De Bg sn La 299 Clark, A. C., Bureau of Public Roads_..__..___ 432 Clark, Altavene, House Committee on Agri- Clark, Bennett Champ, circuit judge, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ISLAY) co ea hs a atlas Sn LIST 497 Clark, Bonnell W., National Production Au- thority PNA SI AEB SS SEL RR ae 437 Clark, Earl ‘W., Maritime Administration._..._ 433 Clark, Elliott M., Bureau of Accounts. ________ 4 Clark, Elmer B., ‘Official Reporter, House_.__.__ 293 Clark, So Neese, Treasurer of the United Sh Clark, *Georza R., International Fisheries Com-mission, United States and Canada.__.______ 473 Sn, = Robert, Food and Drug Administra-a ‘Clark, John5 Council of Economic Advisers. oe Clark, John H Tennessee Valley Authority... 489 Clark, Kenneth, Economic Stabilization Agency... 342 Clark, Lelia F., Smithsonian Institution_______ 485 Clark, Gen. Mark W., Chief, Army Pela Foreed lo oni er a Clark, Omar W,, Veterans’ Administration__._ i Clark, Paul M., Radio Studios, Capitol-._._.____ 297 Clark, Robert 1. National Security Resources Boar eae Sn CNS EE Sp Je fot Ba Er 2 339 Olark, Thomas F., Smithsonian Institution..._ 485 Clark, Tom C., Associate J ustice, United States Supreme Court ...-—~_2. 495 (biography). :.-Clark, Vernon L., U. S. Savings Bond Division 365 Clark, ‘Walton a Federal Fire Couneil ._______ 468 Clarke, Col. Ernest M., Office of Under Secre-oy fargofthe Army So ce aan Clarke, James B., Howard University...._.._._ 461 Claes) J. Frank, Bureau of Supplies and Ac-50 unts Clore J. O0., Food and Drug Administration... 461 Clarke, Morris H., District Fire Department... 525 Clarke, Ray M., Munitions Board. ___..__...__ 375 Clarkson, Louise M. ., secretary to Representa- five Gramahan ._ i lL i a 2 Clarkson, M. R., Agricultural Research Admin-stration rs, a LU 418 Clarkson, Col. W. M., Columbia Hospital for Women: Dr ei. 453 Clary, Alla: Office of the: Speaker. =. 0000 ol aewinn. 289 Secretary to Representative Rayburn________ 259 Claudy, Dr. William S., Metropolitan Police Department. SEL 526 Claws Marion, Bureau of Land Manage-32 Clay. Cassis M., American National Red = pos inl hl ren a tn dan Clayton, Frank B., International Boundary and Sibi Commission, United States and Clayton, William L., National Security i fing Commission. . CLuleo.... 480 ______~C_ Claytor, Rear Adm. S. O., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery... .ciitai lena inne boa Ll 387 Clearey, Ansel R., Bureau of Apprenticeship... 442 Cleary, Daniel F., War Claims Commission___ 490 Cleary, Leo H., District Board for Registration of Professional if 2 woiil Engineers... 522 Cleary, William C., General Services Adminis-tration: io aaldiny il mands onlll 466 Clegg, Fuh H., Federal Bureau of Investiga-4) Clemmer, Donald, District Department of Cor- rections: = ue nian cu Lo RE La 1 527 Cleveland, Harlan, Mutual Security Agency.___ 474 Cleveland, H. C., Emergency Procurement Service LSU DLR TRE gel ERE 467 Clevenger, Cliff, General Anthony Wayne Me- morial Commission... ..0..... 0. 00 219 Cleverley, Frank T'., American Red Cross._.___ 449 Clexton, Rear Adm. E. W., Office of the Comp- roller, Navy. -0 cl erin 383 | Cliff, Arthur E., District Health Department. _ ey Cliff, Edward P, Forest: Service... "1 ni Cliford, Leslie, Office of the General Counsel. oH Clifton, ‘Sidney T., Tariff Commission_.._..___._ 488 Cline, ‘Genevieve R., judge, Customs Court (Holography Lb ud a fe BILE 505 Slogan, Mary M., secretary to Representative cr Fred H., Office of the Assistant Post-master General... lo. Lil 403 Claim Daj; secretary to Representative LRA Pn HSU Rae CT eS i Te 4 EM ers ed Clouser, Robert O.: District Zoning Adjustment Board... oi... 522 District Zoning Commission__.__._____________ 520 Clubb, O. Edmund, Bureau of Far Eastern 355 Cluster, H. Raymond, Railroad and Airline Woz Boards. oo laaSs Ren 345 Clyde, George D., Soil Conservation Service __ 423 Coakley, John P., Defense Transport Adminis- tration... fvJlo t Sei obo radi CEs LR oe Coar, Helen Badgley, radio studios, Capitol.__2 Coar, Robert J., radio studios, Capitol. ________ i Coats, Horace M., administrative assistant to Senator Ji OTNET i) Coit ok oir demi in 250 Cobb, J Bren A., District Public Library Board _ 522 Cobb, Dr. W. Montague, District Anatomical OYA... a Na Ton ae 520 Coble, Jeannine, House Committee on the Judiciary ca Sel Snag BOR ra MY SE 214 Coburn, William H., Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare... i. oii cin 202 Cochran, H. D., Forest = i_ 425 Service-:____.. Cochrane, Allister, Das Reporter, House.___ 293 Cochrane, Vice Adm. E Combined Shipping Adjustment Board, United States and Great Britain__.___._____. 348 Board... 433 Federal Maritime __..: _.. ... Maritime Administration ____________.______ 433 Cochrane, Warren R., Public Housing Admin-istration oie pol da il J iomliats nadioaiacon 471 Cockrill, Edith H., judge, Juvenile Court...___ 512 Coddaire, David 5. Subversive Activities Con- trol Board. 5 oo. LeeaE sd ey 458 Codrington, George W., Office of Technical Services qs NM alarel sada uty ideoih 439 Coe, Rear Adm. Charles F.: Atomic Energy COTAINISSION. tose ins hy mininis 451 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission... _L. icoors0 Sod oo 375 Coe, Frank, International Monetary Fund_.__. 351 Coe, Merrel A. , District Engineer Department_. 523 Coe, Theodore I., District Zoning Adjustment Board. oo 0. ardenTa 522 Coelho, Lt. Col. Mario Perdigo, Inter-Ameri-can Defense 7 oooriiase 349 Board... Coffin, Lewis C., Processing Department, Li- brary of Congress SA Bey 301 Coffman, Edgar S., Federal Power Commission. = Coffman, John D., ' National Park Service. ..___ 410 Cofiren, Gertrude M., Capitol Page School _____ 295 Coggeshall, Thomas, "Office of Assistant Secre- tary of ‘the Air Force, Matériel. ______.____ 394 Cogswell, Robert F., District Rent Conirals Administrator Tu RE hy Cogswell, Theodore, Register of Wills and Sieh of-the Probate Court: =. 0. ies. fs _ oo 510 Clements, Forrest E., Beonomios. «ool Clements, Vivian A., the United States 675 Page Bureau of Agricultural one SURGE DRI 416 Administrative Office of Courts =... ...._ 0. Cohen, Benjamin A., United Nations 354 Congressional Directory Page Cohen, Joseph M., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector. ER RE LN 40 Cohen, Paul, National Production Authority__ 435 Coile, Sam H., Veterans’ Administration. ______ 490 Coiner, H. TP. "Office of Clerk of the House. ____ 290 Coker, T ames, ‘Commodity Exchange Authority. 422 Colbert, Florence, secretary to Representative Springer... saudadescoh Lr Lk sai dd 260 Colbort, Roy V., Office of Industrial Relations . 384 Colby, M. Eldon, Federal Crop Insurance Cor- DOLAbION ono a Sa an Med tas JL Laud 424 Colby, Walter F., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Cole, Elizabeth, Capitol Telephone Exchange.. 296 Cole, Horman s., Department of Vehicles and Tra Coles Sie H. I., Research and Development oar Cole, Philip L., Deputy Public Printer_________ Cole, Robert , National Mediation Board... Cole, Truman W., Bureau of Animal Industry. Cole, Capt. W. M., Bureau of Naval Personnel. Cole, William Purington, Jr., Judge, Customs Court (biography)........._.-L.._-.. i... 505 Cole, W. Bion Joint Committee on Atomic Energy iioes lohan delttoc aie Janes _ Lda 220 Co Carl D., District Corporation Coun-Sells Officer oh out laden Sudo tio cea Coleman, Elizabeth B., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divislons. 1 toi. wacens 4 Coleman, Frank J., District Public Library____ Coleman, John T., "House Post Offi Colina, Rafael de la, Mexican Ambassador. _... Collier, CommanderW. F., Naval Gun Factory. Oolliflower, James E., District of Columbia Re- development Land Agene Colligan, Francis J., Office of Educational Ex-change 359 Colligo; G. Harris, Bureau of Plant Indus-try, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_ _ 421 Collins, ric, Federal Civil Defense Adminis- Board ovilaaigioingnsamil ion dl Colin, i V., Veterans’ Education Appeals Collins, Brig. Gen. James F., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense. .....o-omioo 05000 7 Collins, John F., Railroad Retirement Board... 481 Collins, Gen. J. Lawton: Armed Forces Policy Counell.. oJ coo.oals Chief of Staff, United States Army Joint Chiefs of Stall rn fas 373 Collins, Linton M., Columbia Institution for the oe 1 anole: iL UI pd Lt Rah. 286 Collins, R. Paul, District Assessor’s Office_____. 519 Colmer, William M., National Forest Reserva- tion Commission NATE Sr ES WL CWA et 2 Ln 216 Colom, José L., Organization of American States. 352 Colvin, Carl, Farm Credit Administration. ____ 423 Colvin, Howard T., Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service SETS: Vi 1 LAB pn 457 Coman, Thomas F., Wage Stabilization Board... 345 Combs, Mollie, Capitol Telephone Exchange... 296 Combs, Rear Adm.T. S.: Bureau of Aeronautics SEATTLE IN RE MRE RRP vail Al Museum..... adaST oe Combs,W. S., Office of Clerk of the House._____ 290 Combs, WinifredV M., United States Attorney’s SRA ut ES AR Ee AAR A IN LR 4 hr a SR 511 Coe Sylvia H., secretary to Representative McDonough 258 Comfort, William G., Office of Rent Stabiliza-344 Compton, Arthur H., Regent, Smithsonian In-CH RATLn De pp de tee Be Stl eg 485 Compton, Harry O., Defense Production Ad-IIIS ION erarm int ee 341 Compton, Karl T., National Security Training COMMISSION i re 480 Compton, Lawrence V., an LAR A od irs A BE eS RF i 428 Conant, James B.: Atomic Energy Commission. _____._.__..__.__ National Science Foundation_________.________ 479 Condon, David F., Jr., Commissioner, United States Court of "Military Appeals... L.lcail Condra, Capt. E. M., Bureau of Aeronautics.__ Conger, Edward S., Export-Import Bank of Washington. cisoos Lo dion c5 Jl beasts 456 Conkey, John G., Maritime Administration..__ 434 Conklin, Maxwell R., Bureau of the Census..__ 430 Conlid, JJohn C., Jr., ' United States Attorney’ S Conlin, ions T., National Capital Housing FU SER Se RE a 0 477 Conlon, Veronica M., secretary to Representa-tive:Buchanan > salvos adoncai bl nisiri 2 Connally, Tom: Interparliamentary UNION, ale iat os 217 Foreign Service Buildings Commission.._____ 361 Joint Committee on Atomic Energy... _._.__ 20 Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- Hon. covoat: puoi fe dal dh Bane Lud 216 Connaughton, Anastasia F., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. ____.....__ 216 Connell, John G., Jr., Office of Administrative Assistant to Secretary of the Army._._.______ Connelley, Earl J., Federal Bureau of Investiga- Fi Fyn En eR iO i Ip EL 400 Cotas; J. H., Munitions Beard__._.___._______ 375 Connelly, Matthew J. ., secretary to President Truman (biography) 337 Conner, A. H., Federal Prison Industries, Inc_. 400 Conner, Robert J., Municipal Court for the District of ClO ois isos be sdiad 2 512 Connolly, Edna V., Tariff Commission_________ Connolly, Peter J., ’ International Claims Com- mission of the United States... consisos 361 Connolly, William L., Bureau of Labor Stand- Connor, Charles W., Defense Solid Fuels Ad-ministration: cons wd Dasani ody Laadivaad Connor, Lanham, official reporter to House committees... ro uiaaniat ii tage Satiteaniing 293 Connor, Loretta, secretary to Senator Maybank. 251 Cons, Robert A., Office of Operating Facili- fesii bard to nln unde. tua smit adi Juans 9 Conroy, Joseph W., District Fire Department. Consedine, William R., National Labor ee tong Board. ici oiosind Sane tegen 478 Conway, Floyd E., Southwestern Power Ad-ministration. oo: 2 soli fare Finns lil: Lindy 414 Conway, Rose A., administrative assistant in President Truman’s Office... ...-__... 338 Conway, W. H., Extension Service___.__._______ 423 Cook, A P., to Representative Antoinette secretary (87 RR EERE LET hye Jn OB Seg (RC VL Cooks Archi E., Assistant Architect of oe APIO) abr Ba Ee do I J edn Cook, Qecelia M., Senate Committee on in state and Foreign Commerce. .....::3.5.25 202 Cook, Dopey C., Securities and Exchange Com-MISSION J Crtiia a a ane sh nt nl 483 Cook, Bana Guilford, Office of Sergeant at Arms, Senate an ha Bm SLE Sa PR, 286 Cook, H. Earl, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation NE RR RR FL 457 Cook, James C., Office of the Administrative Assistant to the Sodeinry of the Army._____ 379 Cook, Lt. Gen. O. R., Office of Matériel ._______ 397 Cook, Richard F., Office of Price Stabilization. 343 Cook, R.W., Atomic Energy Commission._____ 450 Cooke, Mos: Levi, Columbia Hospital for a TE RS PL) 453 Cooley, Poy H., secretary to Represent- ative MOITISON.. oo biota iuloini ann 2 Cooley, Harold D., Interparliamentary Union._. 216 Cooley, James, Mutual Security Agency...__.. 475 Coolidge, Charles A.: Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense_.._... Office of Mutual Security Affairs Coolidge, S. B., Jr., N ational Production Au-1 Ee PAE ag EA Lh REE SERRE Vg Ooolidge, William D., Office of Technical Services Su lll, Ol i I eas Coonass Betty, House Committee on the Ca hy Howard, Defense Production Fn 0 os ot a Bs te Eh ge As Ss hn rs no A 341 Individual Index Page Coons, Callie Mae, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economies. ..... oo ooo oii: 420 Cooper, Earl W., Senate Committee on Appro- PrIRHONSL assis spitisnyl alse ndiil, ten 201 Cooper, Genevieve, secretary to Senator Morse. 251 Cooper, Irving, Municipal Court for the District of. Colnmbig sud. sh gaias Janus 512 dada Cooper, Jere: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa- VIO a dn at an a ae i Rh Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures. ._...--......._.. 219 Cooper, John C., Jr., Office of Budget and Fi- AICS rs tas rd das ss ere ea eg Es 416 Cooper, John C., Library of Congress-_...._..__ 301 Cooper, John M., Bureau of Indian Affairs_____ 409 Cooper, Joseph D,, Office of Salary Stabilization. 345 Cooper, Joseph E., Office of the Assistant Post- master General NS ha oe LUGE 402 Cooper, Louise V., Administrative Office of the United: Siates ol 510 Courts... a-ouis.doid Cooper, Paul S., Federal Civil Defense Adminis-tration. oo fo soaientod Solna tall uae nl Cn 346 Copley, M. J., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry... ooo... 418 Coots, Loretta M., secretary to Representative Donovalet fodedintetsob cos id Shbuits g 255 Coptimnds woohn, Tax Advisory Staff of the Secre-5 365 SINE. ined Lust arnt i snare Corbett, Jack O., Office of Financial and De- velopment Policy AL rh A SE Oy CL 359 Corbin, Wesley E., Fish and Wildlife Service... 412 Corcoran, Thaddeus: Home T0an Bank Board. do iiin 470 o..ioilo Home Owners’ Loan Corporation. _.._._._..__ 470 Cordier, Andrew W., United Nations_...._._____ 354 Cordiner, Col. Douglas C., United . States Soldiers Home... o.oo sarin line 487 Cordova, Lt. Col. Manuel J., Inter-American Defense Board... co. ouuivmsniodediinei iz 348 rns Corea, G. C. 8., Ceylon Ambassador._.._.__.__ 532 Corey, Lt. Col. ‘Harold L., Army Liaison Office. 298 Corey, Jack, secretary to "Representative Davis Of WASCONBIN. 2 ass methine ra Sr 255 Cori, Gerty T., National Science Foundation... 479 Cornell, Dr. S. ’D.. Research and Development Board RE a Ei i Sr SEE IN 373 Cornely, Paul B., Freedmen’s Hospital--.____ 463 Corning, Dr. Hobart M., District Board of ed 521 Cornwell, F. C., Office of the Assistant Post-master Eo a a Ga 403 a Joseph G., Western Union Telegraph is TR Cr Ce eS Re 339 Corse, Carl D.: Committee for Reciprocity Information. _... 454 Office of Economic Defense and Trade Policy. 358 Cottam, Clarence, Fish and Wildlife Service _. 412 Cotten, "Anne I., Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve Systems... ih. So sail 459 bosagil Cotter, Alice, Office of the Comptroller of the CULYeneY ii ohs Hews n ads deatsd sun a th 367 Cottone, Benedict P., Federal Communications Commission i.e vil iisnie tent mobs hans only 456 Couch, Robert D., National Production Au-thority Ceol hi mR RT Ee Ri i SE Eo 437 Couch, Viel L., Federal Civil Defense Ad-ministration RL El PE nL ORR 346 Council, Mary Lee, secretary to Delegate BATilott, or Ls ies ar let 261 Courtney, John J., House Committee on ‘Armed EC NsBL Ce a Courtney, Dr. Kenneth O., Pan American Sani-tary Organization... ... . it cious tor ool 353 Couse, Robert R., Institute of Inter-American Page Covell, Howard V., Metropolitan Police De-Darien es sain a tos ont nn ttl Suet atT sal Covey, Edwin L., Administrative Office of the United States: Conrts..uounannn anil. 510 Covington, William L., Interstate Commerce Commission... on of wy wT hy 474 Cowart, Rear Adm. Kenneth K., Office of Enzingering ae i nae Le Sa aa 366 Cowel, J , Office of Architect of the Capitol. 295 Cowen, is M., Office of the Secretary of 355 Cowen, Wilson, Commissioner, Court of Claims. 504 Cowles, Mary, secretary to Representative Lyle. 258 Cox, Col. Albert L., Jr., Air Force Liaison Office. 298 Cox, Dorothea, secretary to Senator Nixon._____ 251 Cox, E. E.: Board of Regents, Smithsonian In-stitnblons ie, bh L adispuing srsndanatn, 485 Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Barong... -cusdated Sonatas oll Sounuutich 221 Cox, E. E., secretary to Representative Rains___ 259 Cox, Elbert, National Park Service.._....._.._. 411 Cox, Robert W., Federal Communications Com- nn He 57 Cox, Ward, Office of the Housing Expediter.._. 444 Coy, Wayne, Federal Communications Com- Cozmyk, John, Capitol Police_....._.. _-206 Cracroft, Paul, secretary to Senator Bennett. 249 Craft, Edward 0., Office of Legislative Counsel, Cr and OC., Forest Service. ...........0 424 Craig, "Emmett G., "Federal Power Commission_ 458 Craig, Lt. Gen. Howard A., United States air BOLCC: seal penne Lh TE aida hdd wikis Craig, Maj. Gen. Louis A., Special Staff, Blah SLAC ATIY Lou solr va ail iT, Bed 379 Craighill, Capt. R. S., Bureau of Naval Per-SONMOL. JL iis hor b oh i Dat rE BE 388 Cragie, Maj. Gen. LaurenceC., Officeof Deputy Chiefof Staff, Development SUE ELN pe] 396 Craine, Lyle E., ‘Office of Secretary of Interior. 406 Cramer, Edison H., Federal Deposit Insurance Corpo allo. eh Si LR 457 Calley J L., Housing and Home Finance Jauh SONQY nis adn th ada sd nat haa) 469 Crane, Noal D., Research and Development Bord ooeiiiee sutbolaf bindnedanticn niins i 373 Craven, Thomas, White House News Photog-raphers” Association... colanuniollo sian 579 Crovind, Boyd, House Committee on Foreign Affai Crome Charles W., Food and Drug Admin-istration Fo Rs Su SE EE CLP Cth 461 Crawford, Thomas F., District Apprenticeship Counci Ee I Sl ARE LY TE 520 Creasey, Robert T., Assistant Secretary of Labor_ 441 Creedon, Frank R., National Production Au- Td he A Rr BRA Re LU) 437 Creim, Ben W., Southeastern Power Adminis-TYRGIOTES oi dias ho eed sR LR HE 414 ithe Crichlow, Brig. Gen. Robert W., Jr., Research and Development Board... ________________ 373 Coicinn, Capt. OC. H., Bureau of Naval Per-} Rv Rs Se Ln 88 Cridlin. Tic Y., secretary to Representative Fugate Eat Sallie Ran dn i Sd rag 256 Crim, Howell G., chief usher, the White House. 338 Crisler, Irma, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... ooo Jo coool soos 216 Cristofane, Felix E., comptroller, Government Printing Office, . co nonin a ksh 302 Crem hered, Lt. Gen. Willis D.: Office, Chief of Army Field ForCes. ovo 380 TU. S. Mission to the United Nations_________ 362 Crocker, Arthur W., Patent Office_.-_.___..___ 439 Crogan, Charles J., United States Abney Kearns Ls TE OT ie RL WE Cronin, John W., Bureau of Medical Services. . 463 Cronin, John W., Library of Congress._..._._-__ 301 Cronin, Thomas J., Bureau of Accounts_.____. 404 Cronister, Kathryn, Bureau of Human Nutri- tion and Home Economics... = ssir3 420 _..... Crooks, D. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, “and Agricultural Engineering... -.-.--::..C 678 Congressional Directory Page Cropley, Charles Elmore: : Clerk, United States Supreme Court... ___.____ 495 Federal Records Couneil ._.______________.__. 467 Cross, Alvin H., Bureau of Internal Revenue... 364 Cross, Frank C., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-ticcCommeres. oot[U0 niin? 431 oii Cross, George W., Bureau of Employment BCCURILY . oot is bas ru rn AMES HT 442 Cross, Hugh W., Interstate Commerce Commis-Slomana lL SE BOR 74 Cross, Jasper W., secretary to Representative Mack of Wlinols. Loos ion inaany 258 Crossgrove, Robert F., National Production Atopy J. s 030 dL ses i i 438 Crosthwait, S. W.: d Bureau of Reclamation ______________________ 410 Committee on Purchases of Blind-Made Produets. Call ios gona natn 1 454 Crouse, Dorothy M., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... ______________ 216 Crow, W. C., Marketing and Facilities Research Branch; 0d ion we at iaion ye imal 0 427 Crowdus, William W., United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission. ________ 218 CrowlegiDDr. Jerome F., Columbia Hospital for Crowley, nT Jr., National Advisory Com-mittee for Aeronautics... ______ 476 Crown, John R., Export-Import Bank of Wash-ington. rio ud an gaat nh plage il Cruickshank, J. Calvin, District Insurance Department aan I 2 a ha 526 Cr Ch Nelson N., Mutual Security Ageney.lli0iNl Llibtind anh 475 OT LF M., Commodity Credit Cor-poration iii: Se ani ul Siu... 422 Cubero, Frank, Office of the Doorkeeper_ ___.__ 291 Culbertson, Robert E., Institute of Inter- ATeriCan AfIRIrS. oes dead 0s 361 Culkin, Charles L., Railroad Retirement Board. 481 Cullinan, Fr. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... _.____ ._.._.. 421 Cullison, James B., Jr., Federal Crop Insurance Corporations voi wi. odin ra RG 424 Culp, Carson W., House Committee on Appro- Dristiongad. sania snaCa 213 Culp, Paul N., Office of the General Counsel____ 384 Cummings, Herbert J., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... _.____.___________ 431 Cummins, Wallace D., Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. .________.___.__ 512 Cunningham, Evelyn H., National Labor Rela- dona Board. od 478 Cunningham, George W., Bureau of Narcotics_. 368 Cunningham, John, Defense Transport A dmin- ISUPAtION. cine ns wnun seni hie ar SARA) 342 Cunningham, Theodore W., Office of General Counsel for the Treasury... .._._...___.______ 364 Crnnpgiom, William G. rE ay city post Of A Ln snd LL A TE 528 Cunningham, Wiknd, Metropolitan Police._ 526 Cureton, Capt. M ., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery EE Le AL BEAT EA 387 Curl, L. F, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine is Ei Rh BR A Se See RE 2 420 Curlin, Elizabeth Richards, secretary to Repre- sentative Kelley of Pennsylvania Sd RARE 257 Curran, Charles D., Library of Congress. ____.._ 301 Curran, Edward M., judge, United States Dis- trict Court for the District of Columbia 509 foe Marrian D., District Engineer Depart-‘ Cons Lowell, EE of American States... clnaaiuehn ae 352 ri adnadi Curts, Rear Adm. M. E., Research and Develop-ment Board... aii nnd or 73 Page Cushing, Dr. E. H., Interdebartmental Com-mittee on Scientific Research and Develop-Tent Se i Se ST La NL ER 472 Cushman, Ralph E., National Advisory Com-mittee for Aeronautics EET re Rs TR Be IRE PER 4 Custer, Cecil E., Civil Service Commission____ Cutter, Commander S. D., Bureau of Naval Persoumeli. | ..ofoon Sco aHeE ay Czarnecki, Marian, secretary to Represent-ative Zablockl.... oui io el mits BOL) Czayo, George M., Office of Assistant Secretary sol State... wvmehinaone i 3 eg Dabelstein, Donald H., Office of Vocational Rehabilitation (800 0 Suiits (1 duis a, 4 Dabney, Brig. Gen. John A., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense... ........... ll... 3 Daffer, Rodney C., Washington city post office Dagglhy Edmund M., Office of the Technical pir ESE a AR RED FIRS a tal L NIeR Pel TL Dale, Chester, National Gallery of Art_________ Dale, Russell L., Washington city post office___ Dallin, Milton xr. National Production Au- thority RL EL NE Se EN ad Daly, ihe B., District Engineer Department. Daly, John T., Federal Mediation and Concilia- tion Service.ee SS i so ha er Dalzell, H. P., National Bureau of Standards. _ Dammeyer, Henry J., Defense Production Administrations: Liegaos JIE singel Dana, Edward, American Red Cross.._______._ Danahy, Daniel J., Munitions Board__._._____. 375 Dance, James a. Department of Weights, Measures and Markets _.____________._____ 524 D’Andrea, Con J., Senate Radio Gallery_______ Daniel, D. C., Federal Trade Commission______ Daniel, Thomas H., Senate Committee on Bank-. ing and Currency RN SS ER LS NE I EY Daniels, J. B., Federal Crop Insurance Corpe-ration Branch. CTE ne Pe IR nig A Due Di Samuel J., District Optometry ord. EL EI LE IG Darden, Colgate W., Jr., Washington National Monument Society A a eh 4 Darden, William Sy Senate Committee on Armed Services... iii Sogn AL IU Van 2 Dargans, Louise Maxienne, secretary to Ropes sentative Powell... ..... LCT UBHIGE Darling, Betty, Office of Secretary of the Senate. Darling, George L., District Fire Department__ Darrison, F. Gibson, Jr., secretary to Represent- Bijve Miller 2f New es Boa Dashiell. H. H., Railroad Retirement Board.__ Dau, ht Gen. Frederick J., Office of Comp- E17 ee Be ha RL A ae A RA TRE Davenport, Samuel R., Office of Coordinator of Information. 2... anli0 ieee BiG oh) 294 Davidson, Edward H., Interstate Commerce Commission... riL oo a nas iid ns 474 Davidson, Commander James E., Chief of Staff, Coast Guard Co ul Jn ta Int 366 Davidson, Robert L., Southwestern Power Ad-ministration. oo 0 Tula l JL SISO i 4 Davidson, Susan, secretary to Representative Nurse). aiashe des Yk 2 Davidson, RB., administrative assistant to Senator Nickel Sl ad fh eI TY Davies, Geraldine H., secretary to Representa-tive Gordon i: ola ii a ilDh ast 2 kee Dév Ta. 28 Félix Vega, Tnter-American Defense Bord. .f i La] Sa 3 Davis, Charles W., House Committee on Ways and Means =... Dl i Si iy 2 Individual Index Page Page Davis, Chester C., United States lp Dean, ig L., secretary to Representative Expansion Memorial Commission__________ ITig Rm th an SER he 4 BS A a Ee Davis, Christine Ray, House Committee Hg ol Li: Col. J. R., Ir., Office of Secretary of Expenditures in the Executive Depart- Dave os Clifford, The Congressional Club_._ Davis, C. Eugene, "Petroleum tn for Defense. oicac iia Dine tins Ll Davis, Emily C., secretary to Senator Ives.____ Davis, Finis, American Printing House for the Blind Davis, Halford G., Senate Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commeree. 0: .-... 202 Davis, Harvey N., Regent, Smithsonian Insti- TORion UVa I A sn Te i 4 Davis, Howard P., Food Distribution Branch. . Davis, J. Lionberger, Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... ...___._ 218 Davis, J. Edward, Indian Arts and Crafts Board i Le basii iiel se db S382 JL GHEE Davis, Mrs. James C., The Congressional Club. Davis, James P.: Office of Territories. ooo ooo ooo. Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. Davis, James N., Office of Under Secretary of the Army Davis, Joe, Senate Committee on the Judiciary. Davis, John D., Defense Electric Power Ad- ministration i ath pb ASE AR APS 407 Davis, John W., National Science Foundation._ 479 Davis, Milton B. , Office of Rent Stabilization__. 344 Davis, Percy A., "District Fire Department.___ 525 Davis, Ralph C. , secretary to Senator Holland_ _ Davis, Robert H., District Engineer Depart- TREAT. Se bins det vi aR AE RU Lol 523 Davis, ThomasW. S.: Air Coordinating Committee. Joos), Lion 447 Assistant Secretary of Commerce. ...____..___ 429 National Advisory Committee for Aeronau- tes vienna Suunto nb JOE A Ub JN Davis, Watson, Office of Technical Services..._ 439 Davis, William H. , National Advisory Board on Mobilization Policy sal ST BGO 347 Davison, Mrs. F. Trubee, American National Red Cross Davitt, J. S., Administrative Office, Navy______ Davlin, William R., National Production Au- thority Dawes, Froward C.,ha Press Gallery_______ Dawkins, RobertB., Federal Trade Commis- SlOPE LL TribAEE 464 OER a AANA Dawson, Donald S.: Administrative Assistant to the President.._. 338 Liaison Office for Personnel Management___. 338 Dawson, Edith L., Office of Register of Wills___ 510 Dawson, Gene, secretary to Senator Capehart.. 249 Dawson, James S., Jr., Maritime Administra- tion Dawson, Margaretta B., Veterans’ Administra-tion ‘Congressional Servis «cn ian 298 Dawson, Ralph K., Commodity Exchange Au-thoriby -sossini io aeligl, Son doula raondy 422 Day, Albert M.: Fish and Wildlife Service ah srs SUR ITE Defense Fisheries Administration..___________ International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Com- Day, Clarence T., House Radio Gallery __...__. Day, William %, Commissioner, Court of Shatme. al TE hn Tene 504 Day, William W., Washington city post office... 527 Dayton, M. Leon, Mutual Security Agency. ___. 475 Dayton, William x, Forest Serviee_._._.._...__ 425 Deak, Francis, Office of Transport and Com- munications SE on EC Re ER LR) 3569 Dealtry, Lt. Col. Oswaldo, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission... 351 Dean, A. P., Forest Service... ......... 425 Dean, Dr. B. F., Jr., Metropolitan Police..______ 526 Dean, Clyde C., House Post Office. ________.__.. Dean, Gordon E., Atomic Energy Commission.. 449 Dean, H. Trendley, National Institutes of Health. 464 Dean, Asst. Surg. Gen. J. O., Bureau of State Services. Ca ii seca PeoinE Lion ate Dean, John H., Production and Marketing Alay ministration SeoaEun JE Sen J aods nein ly Dean, Prentice N., Committee for Reciprocity Information LA SOC RA Eb T r the Avymy. sites ole -oun fa nda 303i 377 Dearing, W. 0 g Public Health Service. .___ 462 DeChant, John A., "Federal Civil Defense Ad- ministration (nL a Co a Ce RUE Ld 346 Deck, Leland P., National Science Foundation__ 479 Decker, Irwin S., General Accounting Office_____ 299 Dedrick, Dr. Calvert L., Bureau of the Census._ 430 De France, Smith J., National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics. _.____.________.____._ 477 Déjean, Joseph L., Organization of American States. iiiiainn id Re gf CHD pad 353 Dekom, O. J., secretary to Senator Cain_________ 249 Delaney, Joseph B., Customs Court_____________ 507 Delano, Frederic A..: Columbia Institution for the Deaf.____________ Washington-Lincoln Memorial ii Boulevard Commission.................._ Delano, Preston: Comptroller of the Currency _____.____________ 367 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. ______ 457 DeLaurier, Jacques, secretary to Senator Moody 251 Del Balzo, Francis A., Capitol Pelice_..__________ 296 Del Balzo, Mary Jane, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare_..________________ 202 Delgado Severini, Lt. Col. Rodolfo, Inter-American Defense Board 349 Del Giorno, Zachary T., Office of Rent Stabiliza-mm 4 tration WEL mae (ER IE Do) Si 0 A) Ke 4 Demaray, Arthur E., Washington National Monument Society. «ool Li. Li oil 490 De Marco, Patrick S., ams Court... uit 507 DeMaret, Seth E., Bureau of Accounts._._______ 404 DeMartino, Capt. Marius, Office of Operations. 367 Dembitz, Lewis N., Board of Governors, Fed- eral Reserve System. i: ii ones 459 balinil Dement, Alida, Office of Clerk of the House_.____ 507 De Merit, Merrill, Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Demma, Anthony P., House Press Gallery______ 573 Demorest, John R., Jr., Office: of Defense Man- TowerAdministration................0 441 Demuth, Richard H., International Bank for Reconstruction and Development... _______ 350 DeNeale, Stanley, District Corporation Coun-sels Ode. loo doin il bun lust 523 De Nicola, Rose O., secretary to Representative Mce@Grathioo lei. oniogd. zeolosach.id Denison, Edward F., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... cl i ld usa 430 Denit, W. Darlington, Bureau of Reclamation__ 410 Denman, Christopher C., Organization of Amer- IeoNStales. ~< cr u ansSan 352 Dennison, Rear Adm. Robert L., naval aide to the President... oil otio cuties 337 Depew, Robert E., District of Columbia Rede-velopment Land Ageney.._-_ _-.________._ 455 DePrenda, Salvatore, Veterans’ AnTImItTIon | Congressional Service .__._.__..__i _..___.. dePury, Virginia M., Bureau of the Budget ___ A: DePuy, Geraldine 8. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic QOMMerce. =o. 431 Derato, SalvatoreM., Office of Legislative Coun- sel Senate | coiiininJaci ror LO aul 287 Derryberry, C. Mayhew, Bureau of State Services orn Dd dani cal silanol 463 Derryberry,0. M., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 DeSaussure, Richard L., District Health De- partment: to nits Satins Ld HL 525 Deschler, Lewis, Alen ion of the House. 289 Desmond, FredE., Office of Salary Stabiliza- BION, i mi es a OAR I Dessert, Col. Kenneth O., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Management)... 394 Dettmers, Rita V., United States Veterans’ Administration Congr essional Service. .__._ Devaney, Allan C., Immigration and Naturaliza- HONBervice. oo ite aCe RUE 400 De Vany, Philip M., secretary to Representative DO TB cts i i ns hd i Sha ST 258 De Vaughan, W. A., Bureau of Animal Industry. 419 Devin, William A., Jr., Reconstruction Finance Corporation i er DAUD TE al 00 SGI) 482 Devine, Maj. Gen. John M., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense... o.oo oomocaonin 372 PDPeviny, John'J., Public Printer... 302 Congressional Directory Page De Voto, Bernard, Advisory Board on Nationsly D’Ewart, "Wesley A. Joint LC Shida a on Navajo-Hopi Indian Ad-ministration. 4: es Ea Li sili Sante BI ony National Forest Reservation Commission.___ 216 D? Eon Mrs. Wesley A., the Congressional labile sasgada. isin. cob bola 4 deWeldon, Felix W., Commission of Fine Arts__. 453 DeWitt, deorge E., Office of the Doorkeeper.-... 291 DeWitt, Joseph H, Board of Parole... -_..._i_ 400 deWolf, Francis Colt, Office of Transport pug Communications Policy fll alnte sl oni DeWolf, Rear Adm. H. G., Permanent Jolth Board on Defense, Canada-United States. 480 Dexter, Albert J., Mutual Security Agency... 475 DeyErmand, William Li. ., secretary to Repre- SONEOAIVE JOOREN. fino dhs biden Sila id bn 257 a’ Hannon) René, Indian Arts and Crafts or Boa; Dias Clark G.: Columbia Hospital for Womens. .ou calcu District Public Library Diamnagy) Isabella S., Stic of the Technical > taff 6 Diamond, Mrs, Louis, American Red Cross... 448 Diamond, Luna E., secretary to Senator Ander- SOB is al i en lL aL Le 249 Diaz, Capt. Jorge Escobedo, Inter-American Defense Board 348 Dice, George A., Production and Marketing on Administrations. Lori. Luin J dvee dail J Dick, Bess Effrat, House Committee on the Judiciarry fetishaul eater 214 odo Dick, J. Herbert, Office of District Collector of PAROS. Ls LA Graal or alt cant 520 Dick, Meda V., secretary to Senator Byrd_____ 249 Dickinson, Edward m., National Security Re- sources Board 339 Dickson, Carl, United States Secret Service... 368 Dickson, William C., Court of Claims_._..__.__. 505 Diehl, James N., Forest Service... 425 Dieffenbach, Rudolph, Fish and Wildlife Service. 412 Dieggle, Burnham W., Office of Rent Stabiliza- 344 , Dieman, C. A., National Bureau of Standards. 434 y Dietrich, Frank F., Office of Secretary of the nh Tae Diez, Manuel Jose, International Bank for Re-construction and Development. _____.______ 350 Dilday, Janice, secretary to Representative Norrell 0002 0 BEI Co Usa ina hen) 25! Dilli, Reginald C., deputy clerk, United States Supreme Court HE bin titnen Lol BE SR 495 Dillon, Fda J., United States Customs Girne CSN PAR Or a Dillon, John H., administrative assistant to the Secretary of the Nav DA Maj. Gen. hi V., United States Air 203 Dingell, = ohn D., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation a andra and) 216 DiSalle, MichaelV., Office of Price Stabilization. 342 Disney, Richard i, judge, Tax Court of the United States: 00D 00 Jaro oll 509 .....L.o. Disosway, Brig. Gen. G , Office of Personnel. 396 Dr 2] Walter qd. dm Hospital for Mes Dittmer, William A., Bonneville Power Admin-istration. Zullo | Joa porous Covnoaniatl 414 Divers, William K., Home Loan Bank Board... in Dixon, H. M., Extension Service... Dixon, John W., Bureau of Reclamation. __.___ ij Dixon, Roger C., Office of Economic Defense and Trade. Policy de a ee aR 358 Dixon, Willard, House Post Office_.____.__._____ 292 Doarn, James W., Federal Security Agency..._ 460 Do Jonn M., Housing and Home Finance ity Dod Halbert Ww., Railroad Retirement Board. 481" Dodd, Norris E. , Food and Agriculture Organ- ization of the United Nations. on: ic. 500003 348 Dodds, Harold W., American National Red LOBEL 5 en oe dn im oO iH NE SER LORE 448 Page Dodge, Vernon B., Washington city post office. 528 Dodson, Dee, secretary to Representative Rogers of Texas. too iat. unl Audis a8 Dodson, James E., Office of Secretary of Labor__ Dodson, Capt. J. E., Bureau of Aeronauties..__ Dodson, Richard W., Atomic Energy Commis- Doerr, John E., National Park Service.._______ Doherty, Edward W., Office of Intelligence Re- search Doherty, John F., Mutual Security Agency.__. Doherty, Richard P. , Wage Stabilization Board _ Doge, Leslie P., National Production Author- a hi lS SI AIRE SE Lh ee Tl 439 Dolan Edward G., Bureau of the Public Debt. 369 Dolan’ T. Howard "House Committee on Rules. 214 Dollard, Charles, National Science Foundation. 479 Dominguez, Loreto M., Organization of Ameri- canStates.. ote and ral tela Lo ow 352 Dompierre, Oliver J., administrative assistant to; Senator Ferguson. iro tr omnl Laing 250 Donahue, Charles, Office of Secretary of Labor. 442 Donydson, Harvey C., Administrative Divi- Sloncsien ules so busin an nl an las 399 Doron, Jesse M. (Postmaster General): Biography of Member, Smithsonian Tagiiintion Donaldson, Jesse M., Jr., Office of the Giiiet Post: Office Inspector. ........--aoitochdatas Donaldson, John E., District Pharmacy Board. -Donaldson, William J., Jr., House Press Gal- VOLT crit orl Fh oaallS o SB ih wo i a de ie 573 Dondero, George A., Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Qrotmds... cc obser: 215 Donlan, Dr. Charlotte, District Health Depart-IRENE: 2 Sean) ay Sail SEE 525 Donnella, George F., District Corporation Commsel’'s Office. .oo 0 toons sovidenas 523 Donnelley, Rosemary, Senate Committee on Interior and doyle, Afuns rR 202 Donohoe, Joseph M. P., United States Tariff Commission ito 1 gaat Sr aah gr oo 488 Donohue, F. Joseph, District of Columbia Com-IRIBSIONeY uti be aaelis fos SL a ae hl saat 519 Donovan, Henry A., Bureau of Agricultural and Industria Chemistry: hilo ar 418 i. o.ooon Doolan, Edmund, Office of the Treasurer of the United tates. a... roviices cosas Dooley, Helen M., House Committee on Public WOrKS ils cbse Lowabatly ofl dud alt. Cagis Doolittle, Dr. James H., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics Sar RG 476 Dorchester, Lt. C. H., Bureau of Aeronautics.. 386 Dorfman, Ben D., Tout Commission... ___ rend 488 Dorny, Carl H., Soil Conservation Service Dorosh, John T., Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress a EE i WI IR 300 Doraznski, Juliana, United States Attorney’s I Sr SC SE an sR he 511 Dorr, Russell H., Mutual Security Agency.._. 475 Dorsz, Edmund 1. Bureau of Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affairs _________ 357 Dotson, Floyd E : INEOPIOr.... oo oi fs Sa aaaans AER EYFE. £ Fees 406 Dotterer, Harold, Federal Security Agency._._. Doty, Dale E., Office of Secretary of the Interior. Dougherty, George W., Reconstruction Finance Corporationiztu. iia tisnaiattaecide rtalides Dougherty, Richard Erwin, Commission on Renovation of the Executive Mansion_.____ Dougherty, William J., Office of Secretary of the Interior. «ii cuvamanin das tanl se sind Joh bnaass 406 Doughton, Robert L.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-£7 231 Fria i Lees UE MOS SS TE LI J SR Ld 216 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal BExpenditares. co... oauvjoaio 219 Douglas, Frederic H., Indian Arts and Crafts 7 Dore James, Defense Materials Procurement Agency 340 Douglas, James M., United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission _-_.._.. 218 Douglas, Jean, Senate Committee on Agricul-ture and Forestry HR EN NRE SY 201 Douglas, Paul H.: Columbia Hospital for Women _________.__.__._ 453 Joint Committee on the Economic Report...-219 Individual Index Page Page Douglas, William O., Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography) _ -__ 494 Douglass, George S., Interstate Commerce Com- Douty, Harry M., Bureau of Labor Statistics... 443 Dow, Donald C., District Plumbing Board. ___ 21 Dow, Frank, Bureau of Customs____...________ 365 Dowd, Dorothy Donley, Commission on Mental Health... ... noose aeCL 509 Downey, Bernard A., District Apprenticeship I eR 520 Downey, E. F., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-poration 0 Cul Dx UU Rene 457 Downey, Herman E., Senate Committee on Duke, Joseph C.: . Capitol Polteo Boatd.. ol oii 296 Sergeant at Arms of the Senate (biography)_.. 286 Dulac, Peter, Coast and Geodetic Survey. _____ 432 Dulaney, H. G., Office of the Speaker__________ 289 Dulin, Charles M.., Office of Secretary of Defense. 371 Dulin, Charles T., Office of Official Reporters of Debates: oo on DIELS 293 oiieagivaamatfd | Dullard, Dorothy B., Office of Assistant Secre-tary of Agriculfore.-iL oll Jofllin 0 415 | Dulles, Allen W., Central Intelligence Agency... 338 Dulles, John Foster, Office of the Secretary of Spates. Sor Sunias La INNO Sn a 355 DuMars, M. L., Office of Information___._______ 417 | Dumas, Alfred ; Office of Assistant Postmaster Gatorade 402 Appropristions. lJ iol ua on AUR CE 201 | Duncan, Admiral Donald B., Office of Chief of Downey, Mabel C., House Committee on Agri- culture AL x3 It Ry i 213 Downey, Walter F., Federal Fire Council ______ 468 Downing, William R., District Real Estate nhs Lea ee es Ms SRL EL er Drake, Allen, secretary to Representative Clevenger. | a si pas i al 254 Drake, Lucian D., Administrative Office of el United States Courts. -Draper, Claude L., Federal Power Commission. pio Danes, Ernest G., | Columbia Institution for the FLEE Ty CNET SU Se a LE 287 Prewry, John M., House Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries_ ____.._._________ 214 Driscoll, A. J., District Public Welfare Board. _ 522 Driscoll, Edgar J., Office of Rent Stabilization_. 344 Driscoll, Mary B., administrative assistant to Senator MeCarthy. ....ccocicucoicdionunn 251 Driscoll, William D., Bureau of Employees’ COMPENSATION civ i ins fe wip it Bir al gh ee Drucker, Lt. Comdr. Philip, Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals. -occ ooocoooos Drustrup, Commander Norman J., Bureau of Yardsand Decks 0 C0) 0 ont oo Ll. 390 Dryden, F. H Dryden, Dr. Hugh L.: Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development _.____________ 472 National Advisory Committee for Aeronau-A rR LL Dr SE SE LS Dreyer, E. Jason, Defense Electric Power Ad-minisiration Sify Soo silaJ Poli Sid 407 Duarte, Dr. Saturnino Guzman, Pan American Sanitary Organization’ i. 0 353 DuBois, Orval L., Securities and Exchange COMMISSION. J. conor sre. vs snot arm ese sms 483 Dubose, Vice Adm. Laurance T Bureau of Naval Personnel _.._______..___._.. 387 Office of Chief of Naval Operations_._._._..___ 386 Du Bridge, Lee A.: Atomic Energy Commission. ____.__.i_._.____... 450 National Science Foundation _____..___________ 479 Dubrow, Morgan D., Bonneville Power Admin-8tration iL nn dl BI Eni a SE 414 Ducander, Charles F., House Committee on Armed Services... ....aoaiaotBI UN on 213 Duckwall, Katherine, Municipal Court for the District of Columbin: vr Troi dpiiiug 512 Dudley, Donald G., General Accounting Office... 299 Duffley, Thomas 1 Office of the Doorkeeper... 291 Duggan, I. W.: Farm Credit Administration 3 Lp HR BS LAN 423 Federal Farm Mortgage Hout oh Wey rl 423 Duggan, Joseph C., Assistant AttorneyGeneral. 399 Duggan, Michael, Office of Clerk of the House___ 290 Duggan, W. H., Office of Compliance and In-VORa ON, a nt me 427 Naval Operations. di 385 coccovaianL200 | Duncan, Col. Glenn E., Director of Legislation md Lisison oobi ial lh aed Sa 395 Duncan, Harold J., Geological Survey _..__.____ 409 Duncombe, Charles S. , Patent’'Office..._....= 439 Dunham, Rear Adm. F. C., Bureau of Supplies Si Union a A a TE 216 Dunham, Robert J., District Assessor’s Office. 519 Dunham, Roger E., Federal Civil Defense Ad- ministration RR RN Va i IAA Sa 1 347 Dunlap, John B., Bureau of Internal Revenue___ 364 Dunlop, John T., Wage Stabilization Board__._ 345 Dunn, Dorothy Veit, secretary to Representa- tive Smith of Wisconsin pil A SELL DE SE 2 Dunn, Halbert L., Bureau of State Services. ___ 463 Dunnahoo, Gilbert L., Bureau of Medical Serv- He HEA i le pe OL Ree Le le 463 Dunning, Carroll W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeres..... 00. bean i 0k 431 Dunning, John L., Office of International Infor- mation. lois Vrs i EL Ra aa 359 Dunning, William, Marine Administration___ 434 Dunnington, RobertH., Office of Administra- tive Assistant to Secretary of the Navy_____ 382 Dunphy, Kathryn Ann, Office of the Door- keeper, House: or soo on oorriE 291 Dupree, Ed, Office of Rent Stabilization._.._____ 344 DuPuy, Joseph H., Housing and Home Fi- NANCE AZCNOY fo vinio m rit nb 469 Durand, E. Tariff Commission._..__..___ 488 Durbrow, Blbridge: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service___ 361 Office of nd. Eh ade SR RRNEEG 360 DE NormanA., American National Red EE A A A a BR SR rE Ee ee 449 Dat Carl T., Joint Committee on Atomic Energy dh bas me a I ST LI 220 Durham, oward E., Federal Mediation and Conciliation HOIVIoE oo isfa ae 458 Durkee, Lindley R., Housing and Home Fi-NANCE AGONEY. ammp nnn emma tn occursdmm 470 Durkin, James P., Defense Production Ad-ministration -341 Durkin, ks ohn J Hou Durso, is J., District Board of Barber Bxaminers: lg rr i AL nin Lan 521 Durst, Vernon R., General Accounting Office____ 299 Dustin, Frances T administrative assistant to-Senator Brewster. =loL. LL Lal und 249 Dutemple, Elmer J., Office of the Chief Post Office Inspector. J cur. ln Ini 404 Dutton, Walt L., Forest Serving REE A 424Duval Dr. AddisonM., St. Elizabeths Hos- TE eee pe Ip Ee ae Ln 464 Duvall Lawrence E., Office of District of Co- © lumbia COMMISSIONer -« -ovo oon 519 Duvall, William A., House Committee on Ap-; propriations REE A eer LR EOE OE 213 Duvall, Capt. W. H., Bureau of Naval Per- HE I a Pl a CC i 1 388 Dwight, Ben, administrative assistant to Sen-SEOTHICOTE Lit mani ein is a 3 251 Dwyer, E. D., Administrative Office, Navy Department LRN Re aI ey REE 382 Dwyer, Francis X., Law Library, Library of CONETIOE = rs en cans OE 301 Dwyer, Jeremiah J., Office of Assistant Post-mater Genel een 402 Congressional Directory Page Dwyer, Joseph L., Office of Price Stabilization__ 342 Dwyer, W-, Office of Clerk of the House... _ 290 Dykes, Jefferson C., Soil Conservation Service... 428 E Eady, Lawrence E., Federal Mediation and, Conciliation Service iit rea shal pn ed Eakens, Robert H. Materials hi RR AE OR A, 359 Eaker, Geraldine W., House Committee on In-terior and Insular Affairs... oooeoesons 214 Eanes, Col. Richard H., Selective Service Sys-i tem Earle, a labath; District Nurses’ Examining 15 rd ei NCR a eR PL Earnest, John A., District Corporation Coun- ECT 0 EL erSOE 523 East, John H., Jr., Bureau of Mines____________ 412 Eastin, Roy B. Jr., Superintendent of Docu- ments, Government Printing Office. _______ 302 Eastin, Capt. Frederick G., Office of Opera-0; (111Le pee t RL ON Ohi) (Reo MES Son EG 427 E20 Eaton, Arthur G., Federal Civil Defense Admin-istration. tovalonl sum sn inh LoL Of th oak 346 Eaton, Charles A., Foreign Service Buildings Commission... to rl Esta ties 361 Eaton, Eugene D., Bureau of Reclamation______ 410 Eaton, Henry S., Federal Civil Defense Admin- i RR A 347 Taso, Miarad, Office of the Secretary of Com-; 42 Toi Pal R., administrative assistant to Sen- ator Hayden ER a 250 Eaton, Ramone S., American Bou Cross. ..u:e 448 Eaton, Brig. Gen. "Robert E.L.: Office of Secre- tary ofthe Ain Fores... ion. tocizona: 393 Eban, Abba, Israelian Ambassador_..___.______ 534 Eccard, August, Office of Architect, Capitol. ____ Echols, go C., District Undertakers’ Examining Eokoraw 1s. Ln. Jom Advisory Stl -comme S62 Ech, John C., District Health Depart-5 (TE PR TT pL LR ER AE TE SN oF TR 25 Eckhoft, Phyllis, Office of Assistant Secretary of Defenses oeanh Ls sess A as 372 Eckler,A. Ross, Bureau of Census.._..._._______ 430 Eddy, Clarence G., National Mediation Board_. 478 : os, David N, Assistant Attorney Gen- Hate Julius C. C., administrative assist-ant toSenator _.......coe.l 251 Lehman... .. Eden, Fred J., United States District Court for the District of Columbif. vo soil nu, fesii 509 Edens, oi i to Representative Davis of Geor 255 Edens, William J., Federal Civil Defense Ad-miStration. oo eae aude 347 Edgerton, Maj. Gen. Glen E., Commission on Renovation of the Executive Mansion..____. Edertoen, Henry W ., circuit judge, Court of Ap-peals "for the District of Columbia Circuit (biography) Joes eli nooo a ene dae 497 Edminster, Lynn R.: Committee for Reciprocity Information....._. 454 ‘Parift Commission. ool toad a ions os 488 Samoan, Harold R., Board on Geographic hh Bor, i Adm. S. R., Office of Naval Ma-Yi I Be Be i NR a RR 385 Edwards, Clarence L., Civil Service Com-mission. == Lo aaaah a id 452 Edwards, Clyde, Reference Department, Li-braryol Congress...liioiraciios J. 300 Eawardy Corwin D., Federal Trade Commis- Edwards; Daniel K., American National Red Edwards, Harold R., secretary to Represent-BUVE ONL or re ns irr 259 Edwards, Herbert F., Office of International Information... oc. 2 oi iri asa als 359 Edwards, Lt. Gen. Idwal H., Continental Com-mands. i on a a va da od 397 Page Edwards, Leverett, National Mediation Board. . 478 Edwards, Robert S. F., Combined Shipping Ad-justment Board, United States and Great Byte. li ao To Se so 348 Bava, Roy M., secretary to Representative TRENT EA AR SR Rl ER 55 Eesl, %:Jolin Taylor, Public Housing Administra-re Ne Naar ae el ree Rg 471 Rea OW liam J., American Red Cross... _...__. 448 Egenroad, Charles L. , administrative assistant to Senator Capehart na Ss SU ARE 0 XE 249 Egger, Agnes M., secretary to Representative (inh Re ES CE SE RE TTR 259 Eggleton, Richard E., Bureau of Accounts... ._ 404 Ehrenberg, Virginia, ‘Civil Service Commission Contact Offices. lf xy eae 298 Eiker, John T., Jr., secretary to Representative Ostertag RE rR LSE LA INH ve 259 Einstein, Mary Mayhew, secretary to Repre-sentative Riehlman___ 260 Ekberg, Bernell Karin, secretary to Representa-Ve TaVIiE: re 257 Ekwall, William A., judge, Customs Court (biography hs eh ham Be a BA se TEE 505 Eldredge, AT R., secretary to Representa-tive Greenwood... usenet. ooooleid ant 256 Elgin, W. Swem, House folding room_.__________ 291 Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Social Security Admin-istration a Le UR els a 464 Elizalde,Joaquin M., Philippines Ambassador.. 536 El-Khouri, Faiz, Syrian Minister... soo os 536 Ellender, Allen Tr Sr., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy eran SSC U7 Blok, Bo H., Office of the Clerk of the Bernard a ara ERC fot 290 Ellington Dr. Jesse C., Pan Aeriaan Sanitary Organization Re ANDRE 353 Elliott, Mrs. Carl, the Congressional Club______ 455 Elliott, Charles F. , Bureauof Ships... _._....... 389 Elliott, Fosior F., ‘Bureau of Agricultural Eco- eR A A Re RR A EL YS 415 Elliott, hy C.y Territorial: Officials... _o... 413 Elliott, John C.: National Munitions Control Board. ~________ 478 Office of Security and Consular affairs. _.______ 360 Eats, Nipswall H., General Services Adminis- moti, William Y., Office of Defense Mobiliza- Rh ph pe eB J PI ER 39 Elliott, W. Y., Library of Congress_..__...._... 301 Ellis, Tit. Alma G., Naval Liaison Office_.______ 298 Ellis, D. R., Palen OMo0: se iv iuiogor oss 439 Ellis, Earl L., Office of the Assistant Postmaster ie En ea Er an 403 Ellis, Jesse B., International Joint Commission... 473 Ellis, John Ww. secretary to Representative Wheeler... or soniee Slaigi bind dasenss 261 Ellis, Joseph C., assistant financial clerk, Office of Secretary LINE Bonterra ne 286 Ellis, Katherine, Senate Committee on Expendi- tures in the "Executive Departments... ___ 201 Ellis, W. C. dela Try, Caribbean Commission_._ 451 Ellis, Willard C., secretary to Representative Nelson Do A PL 259 Ellis, William L., General Accounting Office.__ Ellsworth, G. S., "Bureau of Reclamation... Ellsworth, Harris, Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Couneil'ol’ Europe... oc 02 ro i 221 Elrod, J. V., secretary to Representative Sutton. 260 Elsbree, Hugh L., Library of Congress... _____._ 301 Elsey, Greorge M.: National Historical Publications Commission. Office of Director for Mutual Security________ Elstad, Leonard M., Columbia Institution for the Dea Elston, Chories H., Joint Committee on Atomic IT RE On ST Or 220 Elting, E. C., Office of Experiment Stations._._ 422 Elwell, Richard E., Civil Aeronautics Adminis- rnOSI AR 432 Elwood, Gerald, House post office_.____________ 292 Ely, Edwin W., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- Yc COMUIBree i. oo Fu att or casei dia 430 Ely, J. Edward, Bureau of the Census._..._..___ 430 Embly, Richard L., House press gallery. .....__ 573 Emerick, Chester a Bureau of Customs...____ os Emerson, C. H,, Office of the Doorkeeper....__ Indrvedual Index - Page Emerson, Edward H., Securities and Exchange Commissiont. oo. coo.TU 8 Emerson, G. C., Office of Treasurer of United States fu. Sil gl Si HE 369 encod Emken, Cecil W., Interstate Commerce Com-1150011011 IA SB Sr a NR BL Ram REPS ais ard 474 Emmerich, Herbert, President's Advisory Com-mittee on Managem 11 na Renan a MY 2 To 481 Emmons, Charles N., District Engineer De- partment Snes Stand be CAS Rated Ge IL Fa 523 Emmons, MargaretA., District Assessor’s Office. 519 Emrich, Duncan, Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress... Lo. C.u emi 300 Emsweller, S. L., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering 421 Endler, Oscar L., National Security Resources BoardShasta Myon. Fornaio ee 339 Engberg,R. C., Farm Credit Administration__ 423 England, George A., assistant to District Engi- neer ‘Commissioner ROBIE SVE s 1 BARR SARA 519 Engleman, Capt. W. L., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery... ii. deena iin ede 387 English, J oseph F., International Claims Com-mission of the United Statess minaoo 1G 361 Englund, gre, Office of Foreign Agricultural Relation 416 tration EAA Se LL CAEL CARERS RIL oO TIL £2 Wt A, Ensley, Grover W., Joint Committee on the EeonomieBeporbi cin ool Tiana 219 Entermille, Fred D., Grain Branch_____________ 426 Entezam, Nasrollah, Iranian Ambassador. .____ 534 Enyart, Capt. John IL. Naval Medical School-. 391 Erhard, Fred W., Bureau of Apprenticeship____ 442 Erickson, John 1. administrative assistant to Senator Pulbrightouie cosiiaulosiiniamili 250 Erkin, Feridun C., Turkish Ambassador__.____ Erlanson, C. O., "Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... _____ 421 Exlicher, Harry L., Office of Under Secretary of oh the Esgate, A. T., Farm Credit Administration... 423 Eskridge, Capt. Ira E., Office of Comptroller. -. 366 Esteves, Guillermo, Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. liicaniiesiJ iii dive 413 Etchells, J. L., Bureau of Agricultural and In- Gngrial Chemistry Nass) pi Bnr tan aa 419 Etheridge, J , Office of the Doorkeeper-._... 291 Evans, Allan, Loon of Intelligence Research... 360 Evans, Boyd’ A., Bureau of Accounts._________. 368 Evans, Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Reve-oa BUG aaa sil Ul usa rao aL sed Evans, James C., Office of the She Assistant Evans, John R., District Apprenticeship Counc). ea oi a el LOR ies 520 Evans, John W., Office of International Ma-terials Policy ini sc anil dana ier ba lili ous 359 Evans, Luther Harris: Librarian, Library of Congress. -oo cceeeaeo. 299 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board. .._.__ 302 Evans, R. M., Board of Governors of the Federal ReserveSystemy. coco A Ul .ol nail. 459 Evans, W. Duane, Bureau of Labor Statistics. _ 443 Evans, W. Ney, commissioner, Court of Claims__ 504 Everett, John T., Maritime Administration____ 434 Everly, Janice M., Senate Committee on Fi- 177111 Beet ep IV, EIN 3 JE 1 Sa a HERE 01 Eversmeyer, Bernard H., Railroad Retirement Board. == o-ooamily Oak eee 481 Evison, S. Herbert, National Park Service_____ 410 Ewing, Homer H., "Office of Technical Services. 439 Ewing, Oscar R.: Federal Security ALENCY ro EE Se Gy 460 HowardiUniversity oe 2h Gausanesionae 461 iar. Eyer, Capt. A. W., Bureau of Medicine and SUPEOLY«ot iine ih han os no i etm SE Eh ww 387 F Fahy, Oharles, circuit judge, United . States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Cireuit (biography)... 20. JEGLIasUIGaI/Lit 499 Fairbank, H. S., Bureau of Public Roads_______ Failor, Kenneth M. , Bureau of the Mint__.____ -90808°—82—2—1st ed.——45 Page Faircloth, Olive G., Office of Collector of Taxes. 520 Fairlamb, Wilbur F., Federal Power Commis-SION. RELL Bh UI a hs J EINER OES 58 Fairman, James F., Defense Electric Power Administration... oi cous tesiecin 407 sill Falaki Bey, Mahmoud Saleh El, International Monetary Pung. .q-.cccrororcnaininwnaiis 351 Falck, Depue, Bureau of Land Management___ 408 Falk, Harry, Superintendent of Library Branch, Governthent Printing'Office.. . 0005 0 302 Falk, I. S., Social Security Administration_____ 464 Falk, 5 William, District Public Utilities Com- AL EO I an LH 527 Office a RE a AS ed pnd ne DA 510 "Falls, Dr. W. Marion, District Dental Examin-erg Board: 0 LuR. Slo LT 521 Fanebust, Mildred E., Office of Attorney General 0 0 ig hoe ayy 399 Fanning, John, Office of Assistant Secretary of efenge. VIR Sal EC UE a 372 Tn MaritaK., secretary to Representative oh Te RL 3 2 25 Talon William R., Federal Power Commission 458 Farmer, Lawrence, National Mediation Board. 478 Farnsworth, Maj. Thomas H., Army Liaison " Ce" Ar adin tab Sle SO Mle tin DY 08 298 Farr, Cyril, secretary to Senator Gillette. ______ 250 Farrand, William H., Petroleum Administra- ton for Defense... .......civeiscnsnmnarhanes 407 Farrell, Harry M., assistant enrolling clerk, HOUSE. Loi hl nd Di i) Es 290 Farrell, Raymond F., Immigration and Natural- ration Herve. coer secant 400 Farrell, oman Atomic Energy Commission 450 Farrington, RI, , Farm Credit Administration. 423 Farthing, Maj. Gen. W. E. , Deputy Chief of Staff, Matériel o.oo. coon vedi 397 Faulkner, Perry, Bureau of Employment Seetmity ~-osriin ii sinnan una da VIER 44 Fauver, Clarke L., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve: System coo. MUU VIN 2 459 Fechteler, Admiral William M.: Armed Forces Policy-Couneil-~._-.-_________ 375 Joint:Chiefsof Staff. JC artogsigico00 373 Office of Chief of Naval Operations. ........._ 385 Federico, P. J., Patent Office...Co ilii 2 439 Feeney, John 7 General orniiiG Office____ 299 Feeney, Joseph a; Legislative Assistant to the President roo til nrre 338 Feeney, Marie M., secretary to Representative SHEP Son ins prin den has i pe Lg cat 256 ices Feimster, Maurice B., Office of Postmaster generals it Con ann eB AE 401 Feinberg, Max L., Office of Price Stabilization. 343 Feinsinger, Nathan P., Wage Stabilization TE EE SR a Feiss, Julian W., Defense Materials Procure- ment Agency. Feldman, Richard, Capitol Page School. _.______ 295 Feldmans, Jules, Tatvian Minister. __________ 534 Fel’ Dotto, Dolores, House Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments__ 213 Felix, Robert H., National Institutes of Health__ 464 Feller, A. H., United Nations_.________________ 354 Fellers, Robert E., Office of the Assistant Post- master General. ........-:. coches 402 Fene, William J., Bureau of Mines...._....____ 411 Fennell, Aubrey s ., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia. _________________ 512 ye Edward O., United States Attorney’s sii Penn Mrs. Karl, District Public Library. .__ 522 Fenstermacher, W. 1. , Official Reporter, House. 293 Fentress, Carroll 15 Petroleum Administration PO IePa Rl A A nd a at derh ee 406 Fentress, Ellen 1, transcriber to House Com-I BOS sme pA mr eo 8 = a yr 93 Fenwick, Charles G., Organization of American 53 eked ender alan Ret aL un Ferguson, Charles R., Defense Solid Huds, Administration. i. eo oth psoctint Ferguson, Edwin E., Bureau of Indian Affairs.__ 41 Ferguson, Homer, The Interparliamentary 218 684 Congressional Directory Page Yerguson, Mrs. Homer, The Congressional aD ry in Sot ata hap CE TE al Ferguson, James W., Jr., Munitions Board... Ferguson, John H., Office of Policy. Planning LtM0 SIs LE 2 hs TL A 357 Fernald, Kenneth G., District Engineer Depart-mennt AN eS A in I ay 523 Fernandes, Luis Esteves, Portuguese Am-bassador... x RR ee SS EE 536 Ferrero, Paul L., Housing and Home Finance AOENEY ed thas ei I Sse Bo 469 Ferris, John P., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Ferro, ry”15 ‘Office of the Under Secretary of THe ATION nes Ne Sa rs A ae 378 Feustel, I. Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrial ST ESE een ON eT Fickel, Maybelle G., liaison officer, Govern-ment Printing Office... wo. i ni. 302 Fickinger, Paul L., Bureau of Indian Affairs____ 409 Fieldner, ‘Arno C. , Bureau of Mines ..i.:...... 411 Field, J ohn, National Science Foundation. ______ 479 Fields, Bernard, National Production Au-thority RS SR el 435 Fields, Col. K. E., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Fields, Ogden Ww. National Labor Botilons. BOOT. tb ite ble Abi rs Fife, Vice Adm. James, Office of Chief of fail ODeraliONS iy cot na tus Sean os LR 386 nay 3 ohn W., United States Attorney’s sil 070 i a esp iE Ey Gn ME Filho, Col; José Kahl, Joint Brazil-ig States Defense Commission. ..._.__________ Filson, Lawrence E., Office of Legislative iE sel, longer a hs fo ws 293 Finan, ‘William F.: Bureau of the Budget NEL RR ie 0 Gd brosijenis Advisory Committee on Manage-ne Finale, David P., National Labor Relations Board 478 Fink, Joseph E., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation CBR TRE a 216 Fink, Orman S., House Committee on Banking and Currency SF Er lh si Tre EE 213 Finke, Louise W., Secretary to Representative Aandahl 2 Finlayson, Edward A., Processing Department, Library of Congress SU RR SA eT nl Finletter, Thomas K. (Secretary of the Air Force): Avast Memorial Amphitheater Commis- SO a Sat 49 Armed Forces Policy Couneil ..__________.____ 375 Biographyior. oc a ns 393 National Munitions Control Board..___.______ 478 Finley, David E.: Commission of Fine Arts. ooo 453 NationaliGalleryof Art...==... : 486 Finley, el L., Office of Under Secretary of the Arm 377 Finn, Lt. Col, John W., Office of Assistant Secre- tary of the Arm Finnegan, Harold E., St. Elizabeths Hospital. _ Finnegan, Capt. Henry E., Coast and it BUTVEY i oti sn had dm Sth de beri ig on a 432 Finucane, Dr. Daniel L., District Health De-partment aie hans BOSE ASR 526 LE G., Board of Immigration 7 I a a ee a 400 First, ei W., Administrative Department, Library of Congress ee LE PONE Ire 300 poner, Adrian S., Office of Assistant Secretary of TTL UL RS a aah i i SN 356 Fisher, Arthur, Library of Congress__.._..._____ 301 Fisher, C. H., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry SA TEE NR ey St J TRE DIL Se 418 Fisher, Edward W., Bureau of Reclamation____ 410 Fisher, Edwin L., General Accounting Office__. 299 Fisher, George W., secretary to Representative A MAT ETE a A a eae sana i 261 Fisher, John B., secretary to Senator Saltonstall Fisher, Raymond G., Office of Defense Mobili- zation 339 Fisher, William O., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. i: aici d0NaT ating 483 FitzGerald, Dennis A., Mutual Security Agency. 475 FitzGerald, Gerald, Geological Survey __._______ 409 Page Fitzgerald, John E., National Production Au-_ thority Fitzgerald, Lillian M., secretary to Representa-Hye Muller. oana Baal 259 Fitzgerald, Thomas A., Bureau of Accounts... 404 Fitzgibbon, Dr. David J., District Dental Ex-aminersiBoard. = ide Tn ethane alas 521 Fitzpatrick, B. T., Housing and Home Finance 5 Co To haat J SR Lo SR rE SE RT PR 469 Fitzpatrick. Frank, Office of the Doorkeeper.._ 291 Fladness, S. O., Bureau of Animal Industry____ 419 Flake, Wilson a. Office of Assistant Secretary GEM LR Re LR i rl 3 56 Flakne, Joseph T., Office of Territories. ________ 412 Flanders, Ralph E., Joint Committee on the Beonomice Reporte. .o=uh 219 conic... of Flanery, William H., Office of Secretary of the Interlorsiior rods doped ope L008 5 sme 406 Flannagan, James H., District Public Utilities Commission o.oo... Sdemuinrnie yds 527 Flannery, John Spalding, Washington National MonumentSoeciety. ... _.__. 2 ur i 490 Flannery, Leon G. (Pat), administrative assist-ant to Senator O’Mahoney_________________ 52 Liaangy, Thomas A., United States Attorney’s A I RE Se et 1 RE 511 Flatley, >. W., Federal Supply Service. _._______ 466 Flavin, Thomas J., Office of Secretary of Agri- erlture. 3a ln eee SE ah 415 Fleege, Urban H., Federal Civil Defense Admin- istration. foal ol ion os Af LEE TT 346 Flegel, Austin F., Mutual Security Agency._____ 475 Fleischer, Col. Wade M., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defenses. Loi. ...uu ii tos 372 Fleischmann, Manly: National Production Authority_.________.__._. 435 Defense Production Administration _________ 340 Fleming, Alfred L., Night Production Manager, Government Printing Office. ___________.____ 302 Fleming, Braden R., District Engineer Depart- IONE oh oh Dns mins hawaii wad 523 Fleming, Leonard L., District Disbursing Office. 520 Fleming, Maj. Gen. Raymond H., Special Staff. 379 Fleming, Robert V.: National Capital Sesquicentennial Commis-SION LL I a aad 220 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. _____________ 485 Fleming, W. F., District Department of Cor-rections 20 ey LLnC TS GE 527 Fleming, Arthur S., Office of Defense Mobiliza-339 Jaddinis. unin Jah ERI oT 257 Floberg, John F.: Air Coordinating Committee ___._________._____ Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air 2 Office of the Comptroller, Navy. _____. Research and Development Board. __._______ 373 Flood, Mrs. Daniel J., The Congressional Club. 455 Florez, Luis de, Office of Technical Services. 439 Flory, William E. S., Committee for Reciprocity Toor tion. EEae Bans wn HE hn 454 Flynn, Catherine M., secretary to Senator Benton 2... ial oii ve tun] Shel a 3 249 Flynn, T. A., General Accounting Office. ______ 299 Flynn, Thomas F., Jr., House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries. _________ 214 Flynn, Vincent A., Tariff Commission. .___..__ 488 Fohrman, Milton H., Brest of Dairy Industry. 419 Foley, Edward H Air Coordinating Bommitioe ERLIGY ea dT 447 American Red Cross. oem2S EI 448 Under Secretary of the Treasury... 363 Foley Cumin J. P.,Jr., Bureauof Aero- Pole Gare J., Library of Congress._.....___. Foley, Raymond M., Housing and Home Fi-NANCEIAGONGCY. AL i il tl ame nd IR 469 Foley, William R., House Committee on the JUBICITY EL. aa a Sn I aC 214 rol W. P., Office of the Comptroller of the Folsom, Marion B., National Advisory Board on Mobilization Policy ---coeee oo oo-a 3 Fonseca, Herculano Borges da, International Fitzgerald, Henry J., Bureau of Labor Statistics Monetary Fund “Individual Index Page Page Fontaine, T. D., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial:=Chemistry. =. 10 Joi i200. 418 Foote, Morris C., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 291 Foran, Ross J., National Mediation Board... 478 Forand, Mrs. Aime J., Congressional Club_____ 454 Forbes, F. Preston, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mesticCommeree i. ii -aoi fous Joni 431 Forbes, John J. V., Bureau of Mines___________ 411 Forbes, Russell, General Services Administra- 17] 1 ER A a A 5 RR EE AN Fae 2 466 Sd Ba a LS te SEE STC 380 Ford, his Stanton, National Historical Publi- cations Commission ESET So Ch CHR En Sa RU 467 Ford, Henry H., Office of Budget and Finance. Ford, Lucie A , secretary to Representative Dondero al ca ar a SPREE SL Ford, Morgan, judge, United States Customs Court (biography) Ford,Gary T., Federal Civil Defense Adminis Fora. Lt. Col. Vincent T., Office of the Special Assistant (Air Force) Forest, H. L.,-Dairy: Branch 0 C05010 a Forrestel, Rear Adm. Emmet P., National War = 2 3 Forsling, Clarence L., Office of Secretary of the IRECTIOr. fia ar a imme IE Rr EE i Forster, Chalmers T., Office of Personnel 417 Forster, M. G., Tennessee Valley Authority.__. 489 Forsyth, Asst. Surg. Gen. Bruce D.: Bureal of Medical Services. o.oo. 462 Public Health Service loi. too toa los oot 462 Forsythe, John S., House Committee on Edu-cation and Labor 4% ALB STE ws 3 SI RE + AE LT 213 Fort, Rear Adm. George H., Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Command 3 Foshag, William F., National Museum_________ Foster, Bernard A., 7 r., Federal Power Commis- sional ol Cs Rh Een 458 Foster, Don C., Bureau of Indian Affairs_.___.__ 4609 Foster, George H., Commissioner, Court of alg a RE Foster, Howard C., assistant secretary to the Minority. ci. ol el Lim a Lan 287 Foster, H. Ean Jr., Officeof Public Affairs. 359 Foster, James C., Bureau of Foreign and Do- méstic COMIAOTER. 5. 20 Dt sds badass 431 Foster, Newton, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic CommMeree_ iii bout n beh oii 31 Foster, Roger S., Securities and Exchange Com-FEEL 1 Le el ES Se ET, Sis EE iN Foster, re H., National Production Au-od Foster, Wil O. (Deputy Secretary of De ense American National Red Cross_.__._. deal 448 Armed Forces Policy Council -______ --4375 Biography. of. ou iouie buon 0s SEO 0ESILI0T 371 Fou William Dewey, Commission of Fine i Foulis,J Fowkes, Luther PB, Ye ow office. Fowler, Henry H, National Production Au- thorlby ot co eaaia i 435 Fowler, Walter L., District budget officer_.___. 520 Fowler, William A., Bureau of German Affairs... 358 Fox, Vice Adm. C. W.: Matériel Review Board... 383 Office of Naval Material Fox, Frank, Office of the Under Secretary of the ih Fox, Karl‘A., Bureau of Agricultural Economics. 416 Fox, Capt. L. O., Bureau of Aeronautics________ 386 Fox, Martin J., Farm Credit Administration__. 423 Fox, Judge Raymond W., American National Red C 448 Fracker, S. B., Agricultural Research Adminis- Fx TLE Ee A NR A CAPR ee I SR Ri) 418 Frame, A. P., Petroleum Administration for Delenses Lobo hihi ei desk de dae ah sas 407 Frankfurter, Felix: “Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court (blography).l o_o...1.000] 493 National Historical Publications Commission. 467 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 EE Lonnie W., Office of the Postmaster, Franklin, W. Neil, National Archives and Rec-ordsiServiee.. ii ioiigiLouMauna 467 ao an Franklin, Zilpha C., Federal Security Agency-. 460 Franks, Sir Oliver Shewell: British Ambassador... «ovee eid miion oe Frantz, John M., Housing and Home Finance Agency 469 Franzoni, F. Royce, District Pharmacy Board. 521 Fraser, John C., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts DIVISION... ooo ooo 444 Frazier, Elmer S., Home Loan Bank Board..___ 470 radar, Enory L., Office of Secretary of the the De alo os nl aidnasal Sia 461 Frech, Walter, Office of the Assistant Post- master Generali io datum tiiintld. Lids 4 Fred, Edwin B., National Science Foundation. 479 Prop William A., Office of Architect of the tar_= Freed, Clyde H., Capitol railroad ticket office... 296 Freehof, Hyman B., Patent uu i... 439 Office...oo Freeman, Alice K., Office of Recorder of Deeds__ 512 Freeman, WwW. M. B., Emergency Procurement Freeston, Sir Brian, South Pacific Commission. 487 1 French, Stewart, Senate Committee on Interior and InsglarAfairer oo ii Sienna 202 Frentz, Arthur J., Federal Housing Adminis- BPAION) i Son mr elie dn mm BTR Lo 4 Frese, Walter F., General Accounting Office... 299 Fretts, Gar A. Federal Crop Insurance Corpo- Pri; Abraham S., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts DIVISIONS. cio iwsesi 444 riety Irving S., International Monetary rien, in Bureau of Toy and Domestic Tovpiny omim Friend, Philip B., pale TSeae ae 483 7 Fromme, F , Office of Experiment Stations. -422 Fuchs, Stones H.: Commodity Credit Corporation.cucoi. aod. 422 Fiscal: Branch... cease ani a a 426 o-oo Fueschsel, C. F., Board on Geographic Names.. 414 Fuhrman, Ralph E., District Engineer Depart- 524 Fulbright, J. W.: Interparliamentary Union... _____.___ Joint Committee on Defense Production._____. Fulford, Capt. Nathaniel S., Jr., Office of Per- SONNE dente ede SLSR SPRL aE 3 Fulghum, Ralph M., Extension Service._______ Funderburk, J. Baxter, administrative assistant to SenatorJohnston..._..._.i... _i i. . 250 Funk, W. L., Office of .the Treasurer of the OR 369 Fuquay, Leon M., Federal Power Commission. 458 Furr, Juliette L., District Assessor’s Office... 519 Furth, Capt. F. R., Office of Naval Research... 385 G Gable, Carl W.; Federal Civil Defense Admin-istration. copied ca.oil dips Enid TS 347 Gaden, Capt. Allan G., United States Mission tothe United:Nations. io aulail ol o.oo. 362 Congressional Directory Page i Willi M., secretary to Representative Gale, fiver C., Southwestern Power Admin- istration SRA Ln an BE LSE ee TE Galer, Charles L., District Fire Department____ Gallagher, Andrew F., Jr., transcriber to House COMMIEIBRE. ov ov vin opp mm opm 5 SILL SA 2 LY Gallagher, Buell G., Office of Education_.______ Gallagher, E. F., Bureau of Apprenticeship. _ Gallagher, Gerald R., Federal Civil Defense A AINISEOtION: ise biih Bibat so Gallagher, Hubert R., Federal Civil Defense Administration. 0. CL Ill nna 346 Gallagher, Nadine Lane, judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia_________ 512 Gallais, Hugues Le, Luxembourg Minister _____ Gallaway, Charleton B., House folding room. _ Gallen, Capt. B.L., Coast and Geodetic Survey. Galloway, George B., Library of Congress... Galt, Lowell T., Bureau of the Census... Galusha, Mark H. , Senate Committee on Armed ServiceSiiaiin ds olulam Surry oe i LL 201 Galvin, Michael J., Under Secretary of Labor. Gamble, Ralph A., Joint Committee on Defense Produetionl nhl ois Til henner Bh anus Gammon, W. Howard, National Security Train-ing Commission PNET SUES LYE Se AA, Gannon, Dr. James A., District Board of Edu- cation Gant, Charles G., National Science Foundation_ Gantt, Edwin H , Veterans’ Administration Congressional Servicers. 0. B00coum Gantz, Juliet, Office of Sergeant at Arms, Senate. Ganz, Samuel, Wage and Hour and Public Con- Pt DIVISION. Co Gin srdnaa berthsbani Gapen, Kenneth M., Garber, Hayden S., Secretary to CR on I a ae 255 Garber, J. Otis, Office of Price Stabilization.___ Garber, Myron’ B., National Production Author- it Garber, Paul E., National Air Museum.._..____ Garceau, Raymond G., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division... 444 Garcia, Carmen, Senate Radio Gallery. _..____. 584 Garcia’ Trujillo, Lt. Col. Virgilio, Inter-Ameri- can Delense Board... = oi ii. Sail 348 Gardel, Luis Delgado, Organization of American em mm mm mm om am mm mi om mn mm ee nm A ej Gardner, Eugene D., Bureau of Mines_..__ Ra. Gardner, I. C., National Bureau of Standards._ 435 Gardner, Mrs. "Joe Hume, American Red Cross. 449 Gardner, Ted C., Office of the Assistant Post- TOREET GOOTol oo sooo vis dois Aidit He was 403 Gardner, Thomas L., Office of Industrial Rela-TIONS oii maa ines tan saa Sarat iF (Tes 384 Garfield, Frank R., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System Garlock, Lyle S., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense. ocr dann lanl FTE 372 Garmatz, Edward A., Joint Committee on Dis-position of Executive Papers_-_____________ Garmatz, Elizabeth L., secretary to Representa- tive Garmars. «o,f. 0. Sol soins das Tiny 256 Garner, Clifton C., Chief Post Office Inspector. 404 Garner, Miriam F., secretary to Representative STADIE = 2 rhs hn sh na A se a STL 56 Garner, Robert L., International Bank for Re-construction and Development. ___._________ 350 Gamat, Robert B., Office of the General Coun-2 ER a me A RR ve AE I SA EE ns BAT A 3 Garrett, Cleo A., Office of the Legislative Coun-Sel House. oped iiss nn ie ei 293 Garrett, Edward W., United States DIS Court for the District of Columbia__._.____. Garrett, Finnis J.: American Battle Monuments Commission___ 447 Chief Judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography) = eee 502 Page Garst, Morrison C., Federal Mediation and Conelliation:Serviee wii coolio toi via? 458 Gartside, Frank T., National Capital Parks. 411 Gary, Edwin B., secretary to Representative Gas David R., Fish and Wildlife Service. Gasiewicz, Marion B. , Office of Minority Leader, House Ea FMR a a eh as Gaston, Herbert E.: Export-Import Bank of Washington_________ National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems_________ 477 Saston; Thomas L., Jr., Soil Conservation Serv- RC eS ok Savi Lake se ORG ME Lr Uy PISA | 428 Gatch], Willard W., Federal Power Commis- RATE Eh ANA 4 ERR CLA AMAT oo EY AON 458 Gan John C., Fish and Wildlife Service_____ 412 Gatov, A. W., Federal Maritime Board... 433 Gaucher, Clifford 0., secretary to Representa- tivelPhilbim, sn if er. 0 nnn c i ek 259 Gauges, Joseph G., marshal, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals. uni oo adi nid Jon 503 Gaumer, Mollie A., secretary to Representative WHATION nis edi ve mama me RRND) 261 Gauss, Clarence E., Export-Import Bank of Wiashingtons. 2 20h as seieosiaUuniaamd 455 Gavens, Henry S., District Health Department.. 525 Gavin, B. Floye, "Senate Committee on Rules and Administration. o.oo... 202 Gaydash, Lt. Col. G. G., Munitions Board_____ 375 Gayer, H. Kenneth, Federal Civil Defense Ad- ministrationiioestnssoil LH aela ls nile. 346 Gearhart, H. R., Bureau of Accounts__._________ 368 Geary, Mary H., Veterans’ Administration Congressional Service... ____._...._.._ 298 Geer, Maj. Donald L., Office of the Under Secre-taryiol thes Aymay Ju lois Jel i. Dassauill.ouy 378 Geer, Thomas D., Civil Service Commission vi Contact: Offices ful lo ool 298 obit. Gehman, Arthur R., Office of the Assistant Post-master General... oii il Sto naars 403 Geisel, Lt. Col. Orlando, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission _______________ 351 Geissler, Gus F.: Commodity Credit Corporation. ___.__________ 422 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation_ ________ 424 Production and Marketing Administration___ 425 Gelvin, Ralph M., Bureau of Indian Affairs____ 409 Geneau, Marie, Office of Senate Sergeant at BINS. sco ets a bakin 286 Geniesse, E. W., Patent Office. ____.__________. 439 Gens, Commander L. R., Bureau of Medicine and SOrgoryiie oil taser Soy nn HERE 387 Genzberger, Grace I., Office of the Sergeant at Arms, Senate: oid tive ipmiiess duanelnld, 286 George, Heard F., administrative assistant to Senator George. Lo oa ice siairidegiec 250 George, J. Mishell, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commeres. ono 431 Jocaibivibe George, Walter F.: Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax-ghlonieaingi tion {sbaannll UE aides Lat 216 Joint Committee on pe of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures. ____._______.___._ 219 National Forest Reservation Commission.___ 216 Regent, Smithsonian Institution. __.____._____ 485 Georges-Picot, Guillaume, United Nations. ._.__ 354 Geardi, Stephen P., Bureau of Accounts..______ 368 Geraghty, John L., Securities and Exchange Commission,» ou doi) 0 sida Th 484 Gereal, Martin, National Production Authority. 436 Gergely, Elizabeth, J., House Committee on In- terstate and Foreign Commeree.c:_ fT. zu 0. 214 Gerig, O. Benjamin: Bureau of United Nations Affairs.._______.____ 357 U. S. Mission to United Nations. .__________. 362 Gerlach, Arch C., Reference Department, Li-brary of Congr ELL Bi WT SU Gerstenfeld, Dr. Norman, District Public Wel- The Board bs bh ae Ch 522 Gerth, Edward A., Office of the Doorkeeper____ 291 Ghiglione, Angelo F., Alaska Road Commission. 413 Gholston, Lois A., secretary to Representative Brown of Georgia Fe IE TN ee JUN er TRC 254 Gibboney, Carl N., Bureau of Foreign and Do-mesticiCommeree. = oa 431 Individual Index Page Gibbons, Myles F., Railroad Retirement Board. 481 Gibbs, Capt. Robert H., Inter-American De-fenge Board aor, aa ana coh ie oR 348 Gibson, George, Petroleum Administration for Gibson, James S., Office of Clerk of the House.. 290 Gibson, John Ww, Displaced Persons Commis- ai Gicbel, Adam A., District Corporation Coun- LEO eae 5 Gilbert, Ethel B., Office of Price Stabilization__ 342 Gilbert, Pauline Go; Wage and Hour and Public Contracts DITRon, er i ae 444 Gina, phan M., Office of Sergeant at Arms of Thai SrA re ee AI Gilbert, William C., Washington city post office. 527 Gilbertson, G. Herman, Office of Materials and Facilities rd SRA rR ae BT a i i 427 Gilbertson, Wesley E., Public Health Service... 462 Gla Huntington, Mutual Security Gilchrist, ii Gen. John R., Separate Operat-ing Agencies SATE wee Snel nn amp Me 398 Gilerest, Jeanne M., Committee on Conference Minority of the Senate Bi Lone hell Ja, 201 Giles, Ruth, secretary to Representative Denny. 255 Gilleas, Benjamin J., Office of the Sergeant at APNE, Seneca heh ee a Lee 286 Gillen, John J., Bureau of Transportation______ 402 Gillesiie, Joseph P., United States Attorney’s 3 10 of the Interior ve Bre Lim rr SE NR ST Ca GE Gillingham, George O., Federal Communica- Hons COmmMIEHON or aah 456 Gillis, Eugene A., Office of the Surgeon General. Gilmore, Elizabeth, Congressional Daily Digest. Gilpatric, Roswell L.: Air Coordinating Committee... ......_.__. Munitions Board. =... oo. oe Under Secretary of the Air Force____._______. Gilstrap, Thomas C., secretary to Senator Hen- NINES a ee 250 Gilstrap, Willie, House Post Office. ____________ 292 Ginn, Jack G ffice of the Doorkeeper________ 291 Giron, Armando di, Administrative Divi- EES dea le OL Bt BALD le 99 Giesdal, Tor, United Nations... ~ = 7... 54 Gladney, Isabelle, secretary to Representative CO NIO ol or te nr re rare as 254 Rea 5 Glaser, i R., National Labor Relations Board 478 Glasgow, Frederick J., Wage and Hour and Pub-leiContracts Divisions... .... oc aaenie:=. 444 Glasmann, Georgia G., House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. __.___.__ 214 Glavin, W. Richard, Federal Bureau of Investi- FU)I Re aR DE line at ee ey 400 Gleason, S. Everett, National Security Council. 338 Glendening, William P., Jr.,, Federal Trade Commission. I. (oo voi Ll. 465 Glendinning, C. Dillon, Office of International Finance A'ffai Glodell, Be Col. Leroy M., Inter-American Delonte Binns. ira i Glover, Charles C., Jr., Washington National Monument Society Ee nl a Gluscevich, Joviea, Captain of Guards, Bh ment Printing ‘Office Eh ERAS ba a Godan Jean C., International Monetary Page Goff, Frederick R., Reference Department, Library. of Congress... oe a. tut co idio mney 300 Golden, Clinton S., Salary Stabilization Board. i Golden, John, Capitol Pollee iii dana 296 Golden, Max, Office of General Counsel.______. 394 Golden, Nathan D., National Production Au- A Firs CS OT CR Ea SEE A al 437 Goldman, Max, Federal Communications Com- TSSIONT Lh int hl Te bh Se mitts s drs Goldman, Olive R., U. S. Mission to the United INGHONS: Jose aa EE Te rT etnies 362 Goldsmith, Helen, House Committee on the 2} udiciary RE RS PER SS TR Re 214 Goldstein, Morris Ge District Pharmacy Board. 521 Golovin, N. BE. National Bureau of Standards... 434 Golzé, Alfred RK. Bureau of Reclamation. ______ 410 Gomes Pinheiro, Lt. Col. Luis, Inter-American Defense Board. ..o0 30. gf cad aloe 349 Gomien, John, secretary to Senator Dirksen__.. 249 Gonzalez, Col. Juan Loyo, Inter-American De- Tense Board... ccs l2 t soiaanls uddieis 349 Gooch, Robert C., Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress... aol swanoy oe 300 Good, James A., House document room..__.____ 291 Goodacre, Daniel M., Bureau of Employees’ Compensation... ._... =. dacs does loos 442 Goode, Cecil E., Federal Civil Defense Admin- ISUTotion: J/ lori onl Th Sieh ud 346 Goode, James P., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (management) 394 Gooding, C. L., Bureau of Animal Industry.... 419 Goodman, M. iL Maritime Administration... 434 Goodrich, Nathaniel H., Office of Assistant Sec- retary of: Defenser: . uioich Sir antaitt.oo 872 Goodson, William N., District of Columbia Be development Land Agency Goodwin, Charles, Poms oe bin) Counsel... 380 Goodwin, Robert C Bureau of Employment Security. slants 442 Office of Defense Manpower Administration... 441 Goodwyn, Wilfred L., Jr., Columbia Hospital or: WOmeN so dotia csi iit be ne asia ns 453 Gorden, Jung, House Committee on Ways and Gordon, Hayner H., Commissioner, Court of A AS io a He ai te I ll en ee SR 2 A Gordon, He Office of Director for Mutual ITT LA nl SL CR EF Ta 340 “Gorman, E. W., Maritime Administration...-. 434 Gorrie, Jack: National Security Couneil ._____.___.___._____. 338 National Security Resources Board... __....__ 339 Gorski, Henry, Capitol Police. ...._-.__2_-_= 296 Goshen, Edward E., Bureau of Apprenticeship. 442 Gossett, Mrs. Ed, The Congressional Club_____ 455 Gottlieb, Dr. Morris M., District Podiatry TI ONTi aE ae 521 Goudelock, Vera, House Committee on the J udiciar Gould, Elsie L., House Committee on Banking and CUITENCY.. -. -ios mimni bib mshi deems 2 213 Gould, George, Office of Secretary of Defense. 371 Graber, Jonas W., Housing and Home Finance AGENCY Sl i a eet Sa rade -469 Graf, § ohn E., Smithsonian Institution.._______ 485 Graf, William, Jr., House document room.______ 291 Graham, Burton’ M., National Production Authority 437 Graham, EdwardH., Soil Conservation Service. 428 Graham, Elmer F., Defense Solid Fuels Ad- MINISIratIon. 0. Gee i sents SpA ESE en 408 Graham, Frank P., Defense Manpower Admin- CER0 rere Gr eo Em TE 441 Graham, Fred F., District Assessor’s office. ____ 519 Graham, Frieda, secretary to Representative Bushey 254 Graham, SE. Federal Trade Commission. 465 Graham, John O., House Committee on Educa- an rR a 213 Graham, John S., Treasur Graham, Lt. “Comdr. J. W., | Office of Naval Comdr. J. W,, Material 385 Graham, Louis E., Columbia Institution for the Dea 461 Congressional Directory Page Graham, Mrs. Philip L., National Capital Ses-quicentennial Commission... 220 Graham, W. R., official reporter to House com-mitlenss. an SR aa Ss A 293 Gran, yeol R., secretary to Representative at aarti UE Ta Grand, hn Jr., House Committee on Ways Ail Moan os dan A TT 214 Grandey, Charles E., Federal Trade Commis- i IE pe RA 5 SS Ln a Ss CEE Se Lal 465 Grant, Charles L., Office of Budget and Finance. 416 Grant, David N. W., American National Red PORE. si isin mae mime Wn oh i am om ion Toa George M., The A Grant, John L., Superintendent of Presswork, Government Printing Office..."3 302 Grant, Rear Adm. L. M., Bureau of Aeronau-tics, ESTE A a LL CRE 386 Grant, Norman R.: Board on Geographic Nomes.....io ih Office of the Assistant Postmaster General___ - Grant, U. S., 3d: Advisory Board on National Parks___________ 411 Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricul- taral-BEngineering.. o.ooBEN 0 422 at I Washington National Monument Society__.. 490 Graves, Harold N., Jr., International Bank for Reconstruction and Development__________ 350 Graves, John L., Committee on Practice_______ 369 Graves, Rex E., National Production Authority. i Graves, Ww. Brooke, Library of Congress.._____. 301 Gray, Carl R., Jr., Veterans’ Administration___ 489 Gray, Chester HH. District Corporation Coun- sells’ Offical. (20 (20 1 oo lo H UL SL 522 Gray, Donald, Department of Public Welfare__ 526 Gray, Dwight E., Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress... -. lh ini co i) 300 Gray, Frank M., Department of Public Welfare. 526 Gn Prodon W., International Monetary and: I EO a NE SV Gray, Harriet, Senate Committee on Interstate Commeree...... 202 and Foreign =i io _. Gray, R. B., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering...... 421 Greb, Edward, National Production Authority. 437 Greeley, George, administrative assistant to ** Senator MeCarthy-~ «o.oo230i 2 251 Green, Frederick H., Congressional Daily DAZE i wa Green, James F., Bureau of United Nations LRN Br i LA ha Oe) STE Green, Col. James L., Office of the Under Sec- retary-ol the Army. Jl iii Voilaiim 377 Green, John C.: Office of Secretary of Commerce...__________. 430 Office of Technical Services... ____________.____ 439 Green, Joseph C.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service__ 361 Office of Personnel... J. 050 0 00 200 360 Green, Paul M.: Mutual Security li Agency............2 Office of Price Stabilization... .________.._ Joint Committee To Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council OE BOOP. sr rr oe oT TE UO 221 Green, Theodore Francis: Joint Committee on the Library______________ 215 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board_______ 302 Senate Office Building Commission___________ 215 Green, William, National Advisory Board on Mobilization Policy. -2-0, vf vehiibied 347 Green, William, Securities and Exchange Com-Tdseion 20 Fill i We Tle ok dat By BEA 84 Greenbaum, Lorraine, House Committee on Agricaltgre. sic iegi ote odo RED 213 Greene, A. Dale, Petroleum Administration for Defenses mts ene nd en CEE RUSK 407 Greene, Benjamin H., Federal Power Commis- mlongistdnt IAeh SiG of FAs an. Hiab died) 458 Greene, Francis T., Maritime Administration__ 433 Greene, Hughlon, House Committee on Ways ET a a i 8 Ln 214 Greene, Morris, Food and Agriculture Organ- ization of United Nations = = Ti+ 348 Greene, Omar, Office of Clerk of the House____. 290 Greene, Raymond M., National Production AUC i es OR 4 Page Greene, Walter L., Federal Housing Adminis- Greensfelder, Albert P., National Capital 3 and Planning Commission A SR ns Rea BRE ok Greenwald, Harold P., Bureau of Mines________ =o Greenwood, James Ww, Jr., Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service... ______ 457 Greenwood, W. Barton, Bureau -of Indian Ce ora P:, Tarif Commission... ......--488 Gregory, Francis A., District Board of Educa-5 Gregory, Raymond W., Office of Education..__ 462 Grest, Edward G., Soil Conservation Service... 428 Grew, Joseph C., Washington National Monu- EE a LL i ans sin won Sti lo St 490 Grickis, Ann M., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments... 201 Grickis, Helen A., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. ..____________ 214 Gridley, Elsie A.: Office of the House Minority Leader_._________ 289 Secretary to Representative Martin of Massa- CITE innit Son ih isin Si 258 pinballwot Gridley, Ross A., National Production Au- EIT oA pai 5 tI ins pM pi ph Gridley, William H., Federal Civil Defense Administration... © = fa Fe 346 Grieves, Howard C., Bureau of the Census_____ 430 Griffin, Bennett H., Civil Aeronautics Admin- TO a na 43 Griffin, Charles N., Reconstruction Finance BT EAD Tate hed A le Cadi Sis il 482 Griffin, Lt. Col. Goodman G., Jr., Office of As- sistant Secretary of the Air Force___._..__... 394 Griffin, Lt. H. K., Jr., Headquarters, Potomac River Naval Command... ..... 301 Griffin, James P., House minority official_______ 292 Griffin, Joseph P., Bureau of Accounts_________ 404 Griffin, Mary C., Office of Clerk of the House.. 290 Griffin, Samuel P., Office of Sergeant at Arms, Orlr re a a 286 Griffing, Col. Joel D., Selective Service System. 485 Griffith, A. J., secretary to Representative Vorys. 261 Griffith, A1T., House document room._________ 291 Griffith, Ernest S., Reference Service, Library of Cong PO ie er Ea TE sp SR 301 Grigsby, Rall I., Office of Education... _..___.__ 462 Grim, Charles E., National Production Au- thority 43, Grimes, Capt. C. G., Office of Naval Research__ 385 Grimes, F. Granville, Jr., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division...............--443 Grisso, Paul B., District Fire Department_____ Griswold, Maj. "Gen. F. H., Munitions Board.. 374 Gritton, Harry A. Government Printing Office Cler Groce, Deine, House Post Office 2 Groce, Walton C., National Ey Author-5 ity 43 Coals Rear Adm. B., Jr., Bureau of Medi-cine and Surger 387 Grogan, William B., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division... ceenz meme 443 Groner, D. Lawrence: Retired Chief Justice, Court of Appeals for oe Districs of COMI. or hun Washington National Monument Society... pr Gronewald, Robert G., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division..........-.. Gropp, Arthur E., Organization of American on Grorud, Albert A., Senate Committee on In-terior and Tostiar ARIE. fa 202 Gross, Bertram M., Council of Economic Ad-ES St i Lo os mem ag hr BP BIB 8 Gross, Ernest A., United States Mission to the TInt NRLIONT. cero ord ais wind talons 362 Gross, Harold B., Office of General Counsel.._. 384 Gross, John E., Mutual Security Agency.---..___ 475 Gross, Paul M., National Science Foundation... 479 Grosvenor, Gilbert H., Washington National MonumentiSoeilety 2 end 490 Indwidual Index Page Page Grover, Frederick W.: Forest Service. Loo cL dl oli o a a 425 National Forest Reservation Commission_._. 216 Grover, Wayne C.: Federal Fire Couneil .. _. o_o.__._. 468 National Archives and Records Service....___ 467 National Historical Publications Commission. 467 National Archives Trust Fund Board.-....___ 467 Grubb, Russell C., Weather Bureau. ......_.___ 440 Gruening, Ernest, Governor of Alaska__________ 413 Grunwell, Alfred M., District Fire Department_ 525 Grussendorf, Brig. Gen. Richard A., United : States Av Foree.-ool. Joc ool 2220 nt 395 Gryalava, Rudolph, House Post Office.________ 202 Guachalla, Fernando, Organization of American States oo Le USP I as 353 Gubin, Sidney N., Office of Price Stabilization. 427 Giiell, ‘Gonzalo, Organization of American States. 353 Guenther, Lewis H., National Production Authority. Lo Siaiar tila sen iy Pa nent 438 Guned, James J., secretary to Representative Kidczyneki. ai ubZo Din J spi Bete ie 258 Gulick, Arnon M. v Soomry to Representative Hugh D. Scott Gutise Luther H. Oftice of the General Coun-384 Gumbel, Irving, Defense Materials Procurement Agency Gunn, Grace T., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue'Daxation. 0 00 Lis na ni 216 Gunn, Ross, Weather Bureau... .-.....__..._. 440 Gunness, Dr. Robert C., Research and Devel- opment-Board of. a. Co no Ly 373 Gurnette, Capt. B. L., Bureau of Naval Per- BORA. cl mss cos hr fy PEEL 3 Gurney, Chan, Civil Aeronautics Board.-..____ Gustafson, Carl A., Forest Service.._..__...___. 424 Gunde Joseph 7, Federal Power Commis- Cr Aoilincion M., Office of the Sergeant 3 Arms, Senate: -= 200 ie uw, DIO 2 Guyon, Catherine L., Senate Committee hs Rules and Administration... -_....._._.__ 202 H Haas, George C., Office of the Technical Staff__ Haas, Richard R. , House Committee on Rules. Haas, Victor H., National Institutes of Health_ Habberton, Benjamin G., Immigration and Natnralization‘Service. .-.. f _ -__0._.. 4 Raheem, David L., United States Attorney’s ffi Hackett, William H., House Committee on In-terior and Insular Affairs_._________________ 214 Hackley, Howard H., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System__.__.....____._.__ Hy Lt. Comdr. James F., Office of Savings Bonds. Lia Dl SRST San) el Hadlock, Gerald B., Reconstruction Finance Corporation al RL ST A Eh RLS 482 Haefs, Walter H., secretary to Representative Van Pelt Haeussler, G. J., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine 420 Hafer, Lillian E., District Department of Cor-rECHIONSL IE ft pA ws Sad aaa eA 52 Hafstad, Lawrence R.: Atomic Energy Commission. o.oo... Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development. _______________ Hagberg, Eric T., Bureau of Indian Affairs_____ Hagen, Mrs. Harold C., The Congressional Hagenlocker, Horace, House post office_________ Haggard, William, Office of Salary Stabilization. 345 Hague, Rear Adm. W. MecL., Office of Indnae RelofionS cri oie pio me nippy Sco nis Ml Hahman, William F., Defense Solid Fuels Administration a 4 Hahn, August C., Bureau of Transportation... Hahn, Jane, House Committee on the Judiciary. 214 Haight, Virginia, secretary to Senator Butler of Maryland 249 Haikal, Dr. Yusuf, Jordan Minister.____..______ 534 Haines, Col. Ralph E., Jr., Office of Assistant Secretary ofthe Army.“ ce-foo ive Co 378 Haislip, To Wade H., United States Soldiers’ TEL EET SG Haldeman, Jack C., Bureauof State Services... Hale, Maj. Gen. Willis H., Continental Com- ‘Haley, Calvin, secretary to Representative Smith-of Virginia... hi sa 260 Haley, C. O., secretary to Representative Bates of Bentueky oi inea 253 Haley, Capt. J. A., 386 Haley, John F., Congressional Daily ny ea 205 Haley, Capt. T. B., Office of Naval Research__. 385 Hall, Alvin Ww, Director, Bureau of Engraving and Printing A Re 368 Hall, Charles 4 District Engineer’s Depart-BNL a te A a 524 Hall, David G., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine A a 420 Hall, Hiram S., Wage Stabilization Board. ____ Hall, Vice Adm. John L., Jr., Armed Forces Staff Collemey Lr ln ee 376 Hall, J. Sterling, District Assessor’s Office._____ Hall, Max R., Office of Price Stabilization._____ Hall, W 0O., Bureau of United Nations William ib ae ee LR Se Re se a Aa er Hallahan, William J., Ei Committee on Banking and Currenc Hallaren, Col. Mary A., ili Staff, United States Arm Haller, Evelyn T., secretary to Representative Moone 258 Haller, H. L., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine mt a Be eB I Emel 420 Haller, Mabel G., administrative assistant to FeNator DIEGO corns 249 «coosnai Hallett, Ralph, Federal Maritime Board_______ 433 Halligan, James E., Farmers Home Adminis- {iA TTT Linas Sa Tt Se nay RL Lh A er 424 Halligan, J. R., South Pacific Commission ____ 487 Hally, Frank M. , District Auditor’s Office. ____ 519 Halpern, Max, Maritime Administration ______ 433 Halpin, Franklin J., Bureau of Employees’ Compensation Sis Tatas roadie Sy SL eli -4 Ham, Dorothy K., United States Veterans’ Administration ‘Congressional Service_..___ Hambidge, Gove, Food and Agriculture Organ-ization of the United Nations_._____________ 348 Hamblen, Brig. Gen. A. L., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Army Hambleton, J. I., Sta of Entomology and Plant Quarantine lb bE LA Tk 420 Hamell, Anna, Office of Clerk of the House____ 290 Hamer, Elizabeth E., Office of Assistant Libra- rian, Library of Congress ALR AR II RA 299 Hamer, Philip M., National Historical Publi-cations Commlislon oc leh Hamilton, John C., Production and Marketing Administration Co or a 427 Hamilton, Maxwell M., Far Eastern Commis-ALT] he a ASAE as pe Ap 456 Hammer, Virginia, transcriber to House com-mittees Hammond, Elmer B., United States Marshal’s Haak; Roy B., District Fire Sa Honea, Capt. J. B., Bureau of Naval Per- PAGION lh Ee Le Ter LTR aT 482 Hankins, Mrs. O. G. Line Recreation Board. Hanlon, Rear Adm. . Hall, Naval Gun Fac- Handa, Frederick R., United States Court of Military Appeals 501 Hanna, John, Jr., District Board of Steam En- CIO Er ae 522 Hanna, Keith L., Office of Budget and Finance. 416 Hannah, Harvey H., 2d, Federal Trade Com- AS OY rr I te 465 Hanschman, Nancy, Senate Committee on For-eign Relationg on rt ee es Congressional Directory Page Hany, Dr. Carl F., District Board of Educa-521 Hansen, Kathleen, secretary to Senator Tobey. ol Hansen, Morella R., Senate Committee on For- alo Relat ONS ee 201 Hansen, Morris H., Bureau of the Census___.__ 430 Hansen, Rasmus & Washington city post OC maaa I as 528 Hanson, Arthur R., Public Housing Admin- istration A i Soli IRS TM al BU 47 Hanson, Harry G., Public Health Service______ 462 Hanson, Joseph P., secretary to Representative ai] rein Rea em el Sn TT RET 261 Horton, Maurice M., Bureau of Apprentice- ship Hanson, Olof, International Pacific Salmon Fisheries COMMISSION. oer iodides 473 Hantman, Alfred, United States Attorney’s oar os ore 511 Harbo, R. T., Federal Bureau of Investigation_. 400 Hard, James Ho 2d, Office of the Secretary of the Treasury. ie or PE EINE I te 364 Hardenbergh, Col. E. P., Industrial College A the Armed Hotton. a2 7 Hardesty, John, secretary to Em ea LD med SC SS RR I Ce a 254 Hardin, Brig. Gen. Thomas O., U. S. Air Force. 395 Hardin, Wilma L., Office of Secretary of Agri- Ce a era LINE 415 Harding, Capt. Lawrence M., Office of En- RY ae SR en SR 366 Harding, Victor Hunt, Office of the Sergeant at Armes Houser rls a er Age Hak H. Eugene, Federal Crop Insurance BTA EET TR i Laean 424 Harl, Maple T., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- DPOLILION oo ail ar vy os in er a 457 Harley, Sara, Joint Committee on Defense Pro- Aictionoat. co oy Sry ore tan a 221 Harlow, Roy L., Office of the Surgeon General. 462 Harman, H. E., "Federal Fire Council. ________ 468 Harman, John, "Bureau of Accounts... 404 Harman, Vivien T., Senate Committee on Labor and POble Welle... er err ne 202 Harmon, Lt. Gen. Hubert R.: Office of Deputy Chief of Staff, Personnel. ... 396 United States Mission to United Nations_._.. 362 Harmon, Maj. Gen. Reginald C., United States Rip Boren. Lo an 395 Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine...ii 2. Or Jl. 5. 420 Harney, M. L., Bureau of Narcotics._..________ 368 Harper, Allan ix Bureau of Indian Affairs_____ 409 Harper, Harvey M., National Production LN I A Ra a 438 Harper, Heber R., Federal Security Agency. ._._ Harper, Horace Ww. Railroad Retirement Board. Harper, Maj. Gen. Robert W., Continental COMIMANAL. or aban ons emma Bh = ee 397 Harper, Verne L., Forest Service..........---_-425 Harrell, Dr. J. B., Metropolitan Police. __._._____ 526 Harrill, D. J., Andi Branco aes 427 Harriman, E. Roland, American National Red 4 Harriman, W. Averell: Director for Mutual Security... ...._._____ Mutual Security AZeNncy.......ceoceeeoeasmom= National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems.________ 477 National Security Couneil .___________________ 338 Harrington, Earl G., Bureau of Land Manage- ICN a a a i what La Aa 408 Harrington, Robert E., Bureau of Post Office ODOLATIONS iil oo a Din dora a wt foe 402 Harris, Bertha S., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Naxation... oie ES 216 Harris, Clara F., United States Attorney’s OB i ore ren A fos nr sr Bre A re 511 Harris, Collas G.: National Archives and Records Service_...... 467 National Archives Trust Fund Board _.______ 467 Trustees of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Li- 468 Page Harris, Rev. Frederick Brown, D. D., Litt. D., LL. D., Chaplain of the Senate 285 Harris, G. T., Western Union Telegraph Co____ 297 Harris, John Ewing, secretary to Representative 123 3 CURIE rae Ji ne Sl rain 259 Harris, Lewis J., . NE a IER TES Ee A ab RE LAS EVE Ti 201 Harris, L. James, House Committee on the Judielary. ooo ts motte. cy Cs red da 214 Harris, Michael S., Mutual Security Agency... Harris, Ralph L., Government Printing Office Congressional Record clerk at Capitol. ____ Harris, Walter W., Federal Trade Commission. Harris, Willie, secretary to Representative Harris. Jovuoi soil gant ate ak 256 ddsniiunotn Harrison, Capt. B. R., Industrial College of the Armed Torees. oo tole itis Tk aplitrm a 376 Harrison, Mrs. D. D., secretary to Representa-HER EY es el = sl Ek a 258 Harrison, Kenneth S.: Chiefiof Staff, Coast:iGuard.....l 0.5 366 Office of General Counsel for the Treasury... 364 Harrison, Lloyd B.: District Corporation Counsel’s Office_________ 522 Public Utilities Commission... ..occeee.... 527 Harrison, Robert L., Office of Architect of the Grn Br alias ae iT ed MCE a Ue 295 Harrison, Samuel R., District Engineer Depart- Ment: a RT hae Sh des 523 Harrison, T'. Wade, Home Loan Bank Board_... 470 Harrison, William W., Jr., Office of Secretary of the Treasury MSR A ih » a LE a 364 Harron, Marion J., judge, Tax Court of the United States: outils. divest idtame = 5 Yn, Luther E., Bureau of Animal Indus- Har wards Bhi of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-2 oy of Visitors to the Merchant Marine AlemMYhi abel ls Ths asin il Tl saan 218 Joint Committee on the Economic Report____ 219 Hart, Col. Harry L., Arlington Memorial Am-phitheater COmNATSIOon deat. Losi 449 Hart, Lt. Col. Irving W., Selective Service Systell ot ie amr ad 485 Hart, Joseph M., Coast and Geodetic Survey... 432 Hart, [Shiney K., Federal Housing Administra- ee ISL Sr i 467 mission SL he Re et atte EE DAT 484 Hart, Willard L., Chief Clerk, Court of Claims_._ 504 Harter, Betty, secretary to Representative HORE. ot ntia tinesad tanh iad Saath s CREE 256 Harter, Byron E., secretary to Representative MeCulloch ob lu iaiier ve | re oy 258 Hartley, Gerneaux, Board of Geographic Names_ 414 Hartman, Rear Adm. Charles C., Office of Chief ol Naval Operations... ia... io 0. 386 Hartrey, James V.: Office of the Majority Leader, House. ._._____. 289 Secretary to Representative McCormack _____ 258 Hartson, Nelson T., District Public Library.... 522 Hartwig, Lawrence x, Renegotiation Board. ___ 483 Harvey, Benjamin w., Maritime Administra- WE SE Rg a oe CT STIR 433 LA Donald R., Civil Aeronautics Admin-Jstrationy. 0. oi oS dE oi Uvdtmael 432 Harvey, George Y., House Committee on Ap-DLOPLIALIONS: out Sa a La RE a 213 Harvey, John L., Food and Drug Administra- IT Ee Se LE La i 461 Harvey, Mose, Office of Intelligence Research... 360 Harvey, O. L., Bureau of Apprenticeship_._____ 442 Harvey, Patrick D., National Mediation Board. Harvey, Mrs. Ralph, The Congressional Club.__ Harvey, Dr. Verne K , Civil Service Commis- Harwood, Capt. Charles W., Office of the Com-mandant, Coast Guard Harwood, Wilson F., National Science Founda- “Indwidual Index Page Haselton, Norris S., Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada-United States_._.__________ 480 Hashagen, Helen L., Office of the Under Secre- tary of the Air Force Haslet, Nellie, Office of Clerk of the House______ Haslett, Sara’ L., secretary to Representative Wood of Georgia Haspil, Col. Pierre, Inter-American Defense Board ioc, io Hn adi ee tea SE Hass, Col.M.. F., Office, Chiefof Staff__.__._._. Hasselman, 5: B., Office of Information Services. 427 Hassett, William D. ., secretary to President Truman (biography) 337 Hatch, Robert S., Office of the General Counsel. 384 Hatcher, James E., Civil Service Commission... 453 Hatfield, Gilbert i, Federal Communications COMMISION ©. cht asd Bi hha 457 Hatfield, Robert by Ir Heitor pa G. Hotes Een E., secretary to Representative Dollinger ME SE en RE 255 Hauck, Col. C. J., Jr., Office of Assistant Secre-tary of leoa faa TY IE le 372 Hanghoy; John P., Office of Personnel Manage-oh ent Hovis; James N., Railroad Retirement Board ESR EREIRIC IT sa SR LS Rte eps 481 Hawkins, Harry C., Office of Personnel________ 360 Hawks, Stanley, American Red Cross. 22... 448 Haworth, Madonna, House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries_.._________ 214 Hawthorn, Arthur S., Defense Production Ad-ministration CE er Tl Sant Ur RSS CY 018 ERY Hawthorne, William C., Defense Materials Pro- curement Ane 340 ro secretary CarlF.,., secretary to Representative Haycraft, verti F., Federal Trade Commis-on Hayden, Carl: Joint Committee on the Library... _.___.____ Joint Committee on Printin: Hayden, Raymond J., Office of Secretary of HT LL pea ee LN eg Re A A 371 Hayden, Edith M., superintendent of nurses, Saint Enzabeths Hospital... ooo 20800 464 Hayes, Frank H., National Production Au- Thotity. oo SLE UL aL di Ce aU od Hayes, James W., House Post Office. .________. Hayes, Samuel Pp, Mutual Security Agency... Hayes] 14 Col. Thomas J., 3d, District Govern- Hoyo Wiliam J., Tennessee Valley Authority. Hayes, Lt. Col. Ww Donn, Jr., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission.._______ 3 Anyi; W. E., General Services Administra-i ON ee i Sa a a Ne LG Sa Havkin, David J.: Processing Department, Library of Congress 3 Board of Geographic Nomes oo bls Haynes, Dr. Harold A., District Board of Haw cation Haynes, John L., National Production Au- thority rial. salt hai nord th Cann 438 Haynes, Parke G., Office of Personnel __________ 417 Haynes, Dr. Preston, Columbia Hospital for WOMEN: =. voz =the an te rant i nabs raat a ah 453 Haynesworth, Capt. H. C., Jr., Bureau of Sup-plies and ‘Accounts 389 Hays, M. Steele, secretary to Representative Haysof Arkansas. i ooo J8louxlcol: 256 Hays, Wayne L., United States Territorial Ex-pansion Memorial Commission... 218 Hayward, Carlton: Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commerce Yngallings Norman R., Bureau of Land Manage-oh 3 ey oa M., National Advisory Com-mittee for Aeronautics AA A LE ER 476 Haas Arthur J., Displaced Persons Commis- Hoon William Wade, Bureau of Indian Affairs. _ Healy, AF, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Healty, Francis F.: District Engineer Department. _______._______ Keeney of Columbia Redevelopment Land’ en Hearne k: oy JJoss Irish Ambassador. _______ 2 rofl ; , Office of Treasurer of United ates Fliuice,eh ob a by Tt aos SAI Fo fr Heck, Ey nail, Office of Libraries and In-telligence-Acquisition 361 Heck, Mark A., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation She DSA a Bea a Bled 10 457 Heddleston, Russell A., Defense Production Administration En DES ey cn LA 341 Hedgecock, Leland M., District Engineer De- partment... dannFas isan 523 Hedge, Alfred M., Soil Conservation Service. __ 428 Hedgeman, Anna A. Federal Security Agency. 460 Hedges, Harold, Farm Credit Administration__ 423 Hedges, Joseph H. Bureau of Mines. _.________ 411 Hedin, Ivan A., ‘secretary to Representative Wigglesworth: (ui Loli de 2 oC afi aii a Tired Hedlund, Floyd F., Fruit and Yori rise de a sei Heerlein, Crawford C., Senate Committee we Labor and Public Welfare a obo paths oh 202 Heesterman, J. E., Caribbean Commission. ____ 451 Heffelfinger, Ross NE Bureau of Public Debt___ 368 Heffelfinger, William T., Office of Secretary of Treasury Hefner, “Wilson C., administrative assistant to Senator Wiley. 5 Heger, rire M., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board... oo i aE 520 Heileman, Maj. Gen. Frank A., Tochnieal Services, Army Heilmann, E. W., Office of Price Stabilization._ 38 Heimburger, J ohn J ., House Committee on Agricalbure oo foo onl op Sh ed 213 Heine, Irwin M., Maritime Administration____ 434 Heinmiller, Adelbert W., House Committee on Appropriations... ad Lali il eo ie 213 Heisig, Carl P., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- ROMER oS a anil A te 416 Heisler, Kenneth G&., Home Loan Bank Board._. 470 Helan, Thomas A., District License Bureau..._ 520 Helfenstein, Leonard, Securities and Exchange Commission. oil sl pon soln Liaison 484 Heller, Harry, Securities and Exchange Com-TOBIN er come or sae pn SR Se RAR RL A Heller, John R., Jr., National Institutes of Heal ho ous Sensa une En Helms, Charles H., National Advisory Com-mittee ir Acronanties ol cp lees Uh Talia 476 Hempaill, ¥ . Marl, National Science Founda-tio 479 Hr Capt. Henry W., Coast and Geodetic 5 SUIVEY . . iiiiunenothswai ibhss wohl mn 432 hus Hemstreet,V. V., Farm Credit Administration. 423 Henderson, Christopher 0., Office of Personnel. 417 Henderson, David N., House Committee on Education and Labor._____ 213 Henderson, Capt. H. H., Bureau of Naval Personnel «=... co ide a Henderson, James Mcl., Economic Stabilization TT Tt i op UE LL LR Henderson, Laurance G., Senate Select Com- mittee on Small Business... ______ 199 Henderson, Melvin S., District Assessor’s Office. 519 Hendrickson, Robert C.: Joint Committee on the Library... ___________ 215 Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council of 2 Quarantine Gs Et we bi mot a BR er rn 420 692 Congressional Directory Page Heneman, Harlow J., Office of Deputy Under Secretary of State uaa do consio i Sonn 356 Hendon, Robert R., Defense Transport Admin-istration rs ee ls i 2 CR AER IT 342 Henlock, Charles A., Office of the Architect of the Capitol as ws ovine: DOG ii bol ie nt Ty Hennock, Frieda B., Federal RAT I I al 456 Henry, Dale M., Federal Prison Industries, Inc. 400 Henly, Frank, secretary to Representative Henry, Maj. Gen. Guy V., Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada-United States_.. 480 Heatlod, E. S., Civil Aeronautics Administra-ps oa Herberg, John C., Office of the Legislative Counsel, Senale. on. coduiboen,cid tov, tony 287 Herbert, J ohn, Office of Recorder of Deeds_.___ 512 Herbert, Mrs. 1 oseph, Congressional Club______ 455 Herda, Marie E., House Committee on District of ColumbiR, i Lanse atest i 213 Herder, Robert W.: Commodity Credit Corporation. --l 22. 422 Production and Marketing Administration-. 425 Herl, Oren E., Bureau of Animal Industry... 419 Herman, David P., District Budget Office --__ 520 Herman, os J ustin, Housing and Home Finance A BONY nd uh eh i a 2 SIEGE Si] 470 Herman, Randal S., Territorial Officials. ._.___ 413 Hernandez, Francisco J., Organization of Ameri- CATE SIANES, aan aban dae, 352 Herndon, Radle, secretary to Senator Kilgore-_ 251 Herold, Francis H., District Purchasing Divi- Ci ERE dR cr IO el a 520 Heron, Alexander R., Wage Stabilization Board. 345 Heroux, Edward W., secretary to Representa- tive: Boman... i rr in an ad 256 Herrell, Henry G., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine Dr a ST a PERE 4a Herrell, Strother B., Office of Personnel _______ Herren, Maj. Gen. Thomas W., Office, Chief gs Army Pleld.Forees.. 2... is ooonis oan 380 Herrera, Brig. Gen. Ramodn Esteban, Inter- American Defense Board... ____..__._._._._.. 348 Herrick, Carl E., Office of Personnel __________ 417 Herring, Elaine, secretary to Representative Boggs of Louisiana... __:-.c e -_ xc 254 Herrle, Colin, American Red Cross_...__-_.____ 449 Herrington, William C., Office of is Secretary EE CE De EE Te 355 Hershey, Maj. Gen. Lewis B., Selective Service AL TA ES 484 Herter, Christian A., Joint Committee on the Heonomic Report... co aoo nor tonne 219 Herzog, Paul M., National Labor Relations Board ot cli. oof en i SE le ni LE 478 Hess, Beecher, House minority official ________ 292 Hess, Helen M., Bureau of Naval Personnel_.__ 388 Hesse, Sydney or Office of Price Stabilization_. 343 Heston, Majorie, secretary to Representative EIT IDO I: ch rons soa epi 260 Hetherington, Marion F., Federal Power Com-~ TOSSION: he da Fas TE 458 Hetherington, Col. Travis M., continental SO SITLL Lee te CE AD PR Se Heifer, On F. L., Bureau of Supplies id | Capi CEOS. leitaa a end Hota, Frog Z., District Apprenticeship pe I SS SN A i er 520 Hoi Naomi H., Public Utilities Commission. 527 Hetzel, Ralph 5 Jr., Economic Stabilization Agency SOE CT Cel Te i ETT 342 Heurtematte, Roberto M.: Organization of American States... __..._____ 353 Panamanian Ambassador. ....--.-a---o_-... 535 Hevenor, Herman L., National Production Au- a TE erI EEO 438 Hewitt, Francis S., Senate Committee on A ppro- DrIatioNS., oot ds ten SE SE Anil Lol Sa 2 Heyman, Philip I., Patent Office._....__.._____ 439 Hiatt, William E., Weather Bureau----..---.__. 440 Hibben, James H., Tariff Commission________-_ 488 Hickenlooper, Bourke B.: Joint Committee on Atomic Energy ____.._____ 220 Joint Committee To Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council OL ODO, a nt a a a tn al 221 Page Hickerson, John D., Assistant Secretary of State. 356 Hickey, Edward J., Office of Secretary of the Bendtesinl Mise urine JL Earl eis 286 Hickey, Margaret, American Red Cross________ 448 Hickey, Rear Adm. Robert F.: Office of Chief of Naval Operations___.._.__.__ 386 Office of Navy.-.--.._._i... 384 Information, iL. Shi ys BB; Federal Housing Administra- rn Tn PT Slee TR Re de CT 471 Hicks, word D., Jr., Defense Transport Ad- ministration toma en Bed LL 20 DL ane sriagg 342 Hicks, Lewis W., Bureau of Accounts__________ 404 Hicks, Capt. R. L., Maritime Administration. 434 Hickson, William H., assistant tally clerk of 290 Hienton, T. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ____.__________ 421 Higgins, Edward J., administrative assistant to Senator: Gredn. Jioeusidi oJ. J rue, J. alin 250 ii tl, Raymond T., Selective Service 484 ibn vig E., Bureau of Agricultural and fet : dustrial Chemistry SER ET TE GI Os a 418 Hildreth, Melvin D., National Capital Sesqui-cose) Commission...£0 ES ME 0 Ba 220 5 Hill, Emmett 1, Government Printing Office. 302 Hill, Harold K Commodity Gr edit: Corporation ._..c.._ oon 422 Production and Marketing Administration___ 425 Hill, James T., Office of Secretary of the Air For Hill, Te Sig International Boundary Commis- sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada___ 473 Hill, J ohn C., Federal Prison Industries, Inc... 400 Hill, Samuel E., Petroleum Administration i) Defense Pe EA WE SR OR SE NT a Hill, Samuel B., judge, Tax Court of the Fated States I SL EAR CR TN Ta 2 509 Hill, Viola A., Tariff Commission___._..__._.____ 488 Hill, W. Martin, United Nations______.________ 354 Hill, Maj. Gen. W. P. T., Supply Department__. 392 Hilliard, John F., Office of Defense Manpower Administration: . o. 0 o voids ind Ll a 441 ‘Hilton, Fred H., Jr., Capitol Page School______ 295 Hilton, Mary N., Women’s Bureau____.__._____ 444 Hilts, H. E., Bureau of Public Roads__________ 432 Hinckley, Lenore, secretary to Representative Er ET a RT ee a an EO SL re 253 Hinderer, Harry A., Pan American Sanitary Organization. oo it 135000 Jose ouidtoveue 353 Hindle, James, Securities and Exchange Com- mission... ph ene nniabo ne Binal Hines, Capt. Clifford G.: Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. __.__________ 386 Naval Examining Board (medical) ___________ 383 Hines, Phillip F., Office of Public Information, nL RTTe Li Tt A 376 Hines, W. R. Frank, District Undertakers’ Examining: Board... ainsi anni. 522 Hinman, W. S., Jr., National Bureau of Stand-i EE 35 Hinshaw, Carl, Joint Committee on Atomic BOLT. io iin ins bins 2 BERS bbs SA ED 2 220 Hinton, as Office of Clerk of the House_____ 290 Hinton, Mildred M., Office of Clerk of the 25) Hou Hipps, iy William G., Office of Secretary of The Ap Boree iin frau et sant nei ye alin ie 393 Hipsley, S. Preston, director of personnel, Government Printing OMice noni asin Hirschman, George F., Organization of Ameri- can Slates is ht Bs Td sR deli Sa 352 Hirshfield, Rear Adm. James A., Office of Personnel EE SE SL ERY ad Se Hitchcock, Dal, National Security rh Boardi i coodiatai sient areca ULL 339 Hitz, William, United States Attorney’s Office. 511 Hoag, W. Gifford, Farm Credit Administration. 423 Hoagland, Harrell 0O., General Accounting ais G0 a uC he Se SS Indwrdual {ndex Page Hoar, A. S. G., International Bank for Recon-struction and Development Hobart, Dr. Irma Belk, Commission on Mental Healt Hobbs, Claude E., Assistant Parliamentarian__ 289 Bony, Nea Oveta Culp, American National e 448 Hoch, William C., United States Marshal's Se 510 Hochfeld, H. M., Federal Maritime Board.__.__ 433 Hock, J oseph R., Maritime Administration. 433 Hockensmith, Roy D., Soil Conservation SerVICE niin is tics ENISHI EY 4 Hockersmith, F. D., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. =... 0: 0. tlioill] 431 Hodge, Lt. Gen. John R., Office, Chief of Army Pield Porees. il no. dor ils a0 Signe 380 Hodgson,R. E., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 419 Hoertel, Bruce, White House News Photog- raphers’ Asgsoelation Jo, oll iil JI 579 Hoeber, Francis P., Defense Production Admin-tration Hoey, Clyde R., National Historical Publica- tions Commission RACSIIES EO bn aie a A) Sl CE 467 Hoey, Jane M., Social Security Amdinistration. 464 Hoff, Irvin,aadministrative assistant to Senator Mag USO. oC.ei .eonects 251 Hoffhand; John L., Defense Minerals Explora-tion Administration he Sm es 407 Hoffman, Dorothy B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Heflin, Luther T., Bureau of Land Manage-408 Hott, Myron E., Defense Electric Power Ad- ministration RRL NAR ME SN RE § 2 SH 407 Hogan, Capt. BartholomewW., Naval Hospital. 390 Hogan, Harry G., General ‘Anthony Wayne Mémorial COMMISSION _ ---— ooo 219 Hoge, Asst. Surg. Gen. Vane M., Bureau of Medical Serviees. lL. fou is won tidijaaaloll 462 Hogenson, Roald A., Commissioner, Court of Claim. colds cuit oe JI saul JL 504 Hoidale, P. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine CLE SAR SNE ef TIC CR EL Cel 420 Holaren, J 27pes M., National Mediation Board. 478 Holbrook, H: , National Production Author- aa G., Export-Tapert “Bank of Washington rr eS A CE ANS Holcomb, R. Capiiol. is foo cman tn Ant ATR US 295 Holden, John B., Office of Budget and Finance_. 416 Holden, Dr. Raymond T., Columbia Hospital for Women, oo. se Ode Hsia 453 Holden, Walter G., Securities and Exchange Commission: Gilnny obo Don Lora Gaetilic, 484 Holga, Rear Adm. George A., Jr., Bureau of 45 Holland, at J. L., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery 38 Holland. led L., National Capital Sesqui-centennial Commission en ii hb Das IES 220 Hollznaey Edward D., Bureau of Labor Statis- Holley, Ray H., Bureau of Accounts. Hollis, Everett i , Atomic Freon Commission. 450 Hollis, Asst. Surg, Gen. Mark Bureau of State Services. oocoooooeoo-Public Health oo. ..0 0.0 Service... Holloran, Thomas A., District Corporation Counsel’'sioffice. oo oil tas feat neal 52 Holloway, W. A., Federal Fire Council..____._. 468 Holm, George E., Bureau of Dairy Industry.... 419 Holm, Lionel C.: Commodity Credit Corporation______________ Production and Marketing Administration_.. Holman, Brig. Gen. J. L., Industrial College of the Armed Forces... oui mr aen-ni 376 ceivvsine Holmberg, Lt. Col. Donald W., Office of Secre- tary:of Defense... oiicoer mndasiann 371 Holmes, Donald C., Library of Congress..._._. 300 Holmes, George S., "Defense Electric Power Ad- Ira On, a 407 Holmes, Mrs. Hal, The Congressional Club._____ Rota, Elwood, National Production Author-EL A ee TE Sr hae A HE A 436 Holt Yala A., Marketing and Facilities Re-search Branch 427 Holt, Pat M., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations... 201 Holt, William M., Indian Claims Commission. . 471 Holton, John W., "Office of the Speaker. ......__ 289 Holtzclaw, Henry J., Bureau of Engraving and Printing lies SN SL aaa Bees ESE Holtzoff, Alexander, judge, United States Dis-trict Court for the District of Columbia___. 509 Honsowetz, Lt. Col. Russell E. , Headquarters Marine Corps Lol. Aan Loe 3 Hoo, Victor Chi-tsai, United Nations...._..____ Hood, Andrew McCaughrin, judge, Municipal Court of Appeals for the Distriet of Colum- 5 Hoofnagle, James E., Food Distribution Branch. 427 Hooker, John S., International Monetary Fund. _ 350 Hooper, Larry Weldon, House Post Office-_ ___ Hoopes, Townsend, National Security Training Commission. co crook oo ae 480 Hoover, Maj. Gen. Hubert D., Office, Depart-ment Counselor, Arm 378 Hooyer, J. Edgar, Federal Bureau of Investiga- Hour, Raymond S., National Production Au- thority 437 Hoover, Ww H., Astrophysical Observatory. ___ 486 Hope, Clifford R., The Interparliamentary THOT. Ee Sia fet Lol Sods 1 TH AY 217 Hopkins, Frank J., Soil Conservation Service. 2 Hopkins, Howard, ’ Forest Service... 425 Hopkins, Irene M, secretary to Representative Peighan, tole 0 108 Sls els Loss gies 10 255 Hopi John T., Office of the Assistant Post-master General JUL. Cponda 403 Elophins, ‘William J., executive clerk, the White EL ee ET ae ere a 338 Hoppe, Edgar E., Bureau of Internal Revenue... 364 Hoppenot, Roger, International Bank for Re- construction and Development. ____________ 350 Hopwood, Rear Adm. H. G., Office of the Comp-troller, Nav 383 Horan, Walt, National Capital Sesquicentennial Commission GA TLE RE pe = 220 Horbett, J. E., Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve System... FE 459 Horkan, Maj. Gen. George A.: Committee on Purchases of Blind-Made ProGUCIS Ta he I Oe er na 454 Technical Services, Army United States Soldiers’ ord 487 Horne, C. F., Civil Aeronautics Administration. 432 Horne, Douglas B., Washington city post office.__ 528 Horne, Frank B., Legislative Reference Service, Library of Cong ee A LI Me 301 Hane Frank S., Housing and Home Finance en 4 Horas J oti E., Small. Defense Plants Adminis- tratio 348 Horning, Waiter H., Bureau of Land Manage- me 408 Horton, James A., Federal Trade Commission. _ 465 Horton, Ralph W., secretary to Representative Coton. oo ir rr sidan is brs ame TI 255 Horwitz, Dr. Abraham, Pan American Sanitary Orgapization. coi res vos Togdial mine 353 Horwitz, Solis, Reconstruction Finance Corpora- Hoskins, Halford H., Library of Congress_.____ Hostetter, Gordon W., Office of Salary Stabiliza- Hostrup, C. C., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System atl HE adn, LIE a 459 Houck, CatherineM., District Public Library. a Houff, "Gordon S., Capitol Police lout duly oo Hough, Robert c., Senate Radio Gallery. _____ Houghteling, James L., Civil Service Com- aission a SeeA ee 452 House, Dr. H. O., Metropolitan Police..__._..___ 526 House, Jerry B., secretary to Senator Ecton_ 249 House, John D., ' National Production Authority. 436 Houseman, Earl E., Bureau of Agricultural Reonomies-o.oo 0s oii pw Do ta ans 415 Houser, Rear Adm. Harold A., Office of Assist- ant Secretary of Defense. 0... .. 372 ........ Congressional Directory Houston, John Ci Munson Board....... 375 Houston, JohnM., National Labor Relations AL eR Se al i ary 478 Howard, Andrew J., Municipal Court for Dis-trict of Columbia i a SSIs HD 512 Howard, James O., Office of Foreign Agrient tural Lr Oa Lp Bn Tr TC a Howard, John D., Smithsonian Institution. _ 455 Howard, Joseph M., United States Attorney’s Howard, Leland, Bureau of the Mint_._._____._. Howard, Maj. Gen. Samuel L.: Headquarters, Marine Corps. .-.-..caeeeuui. 3 Naval Examining Board, Marine Corps__.... Pel Disability Appeal Board, Marine 303 Cor Hoa Nie A., District Budget Office..._.. 520 Howard, Ww. J., Defense Solid Fuels Adminis- tration _ Howard, Willis, Veterans’ Administration___.__ Howe, Lusher, Office of Assistant Secretary of 447 Bova j= judge, Court of Claims (biog-soi TODNY) cL. aes age erin onli hs Howell, Zz William, Farmers Home Adminis- tates Howlett, SN J., Office of Price rl tion © 343 Howorth, Lucy S., War Claims Commission___ 490 Howsam, Earl R., administrative assistant to Senator Johnson of Colorado.____.___.____.___ 250 Howse, A. E., Office of Defense Mobilization_. 339 Howser, Harry R., District Engineer Depart- EE rt pas LT 0 ah 523 Hoye, Francis P., Office of Clerk of the House-. 290 Hoyland, Frances B., secretary to Representa- tive Ballow oo or a at 2 Hoyt, Avery S., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. c...c zi. une ih cooiain. 420 Hoyt, James A., reporter, Court of Claims_____ 505 er Mary A., Office of Postmaster Gen- era, 04a Hi bas Ruth D., District Department of Publi Wellness 526 Huber, Arista, secretary to Representative JenkInguss. Sh, cil pened ie EG LE 257 Hudnell, Col. W. T., Office of Matériel.._.____. 397 Hudnut, Joseph, Commission of Fine Arts__.__ 453 Hudon, Blanche, secretary to Senator Smith of YT ND Ne LR La ey 252 Hudson, Col. Leroy, Munitions Board. __.______ 374 Hudtloff, M. J., Transportation and Ware- housing: Brome... io cases i. conieser 427 Huey, Commander William M., Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Nav 382 ff, Warren M., Defense Production Admin- stration. ci 0 ol To 341 Hufty, Page, Columbia Hospital for Women____ 453 Huggins, Edwin V., Assistant Secretary of the ATE PD OrO0 ra bret Lia aber hb bh pies Ha Mrs. Jo, secretary to Representative ODDANA don oa eeap eT Hi Sie secretary to Representative EI tse er et ae et Hughes, William P., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and MoRIO0 cnt sh dn ped de oe Ea cosaybinted 472 Hughitt, C.F., National Production Authority. 438 Huley, Dechard A., National Advisory Board on Mobilization Boley vist. ih. 0h osreb Hull, Harry M., United States District Court for the District of Colambig..ooeuianis00s 509 Hull, Gen. John E., Office, Chief of Staff_____._ 379 Hull, John S., Patent OffiMeu 5. 5 dnd de dimen 439 Hull, William C. , Civil Service Commission... 452 Hume, H. H., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. “ec: Si: 422 Hume, Oscar L., Office of Coordinator of Infor-2 Humelsine, Carlisle H.: Board of the Foreign Service...... Deputy Under Secretary of State Page Hummel, Arthur W., Reference Department, Library of Congress somlsvall ban intiaciis 300 Humphrey, Dorothy K., District Government. 519 Humphrey, George D., National Science Foun-dation uo boii). sods phai i wad. hil dni 479 Humphrey, Hubert H., Joint Committee to Dis-cuss Problems with the Consultative Assem-bly of the Council of Europe._..____________ 221 Humphreys, Grace C., secretary to Representa-tive Jenisonno, Lassi nul d JB0 HT Biadal 257 Huneke, Cecilia, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics... 420 Hunsaker, Jerome C.: Board of Regents, Smithsonian Institution... 485 National Advisory Committee for Aero-Hr ER A SS Ss SE ATR We Re 476 Hunt, Edward E., Division of Protective Serv-Toes vadendinl joni mara ii M0 3 sinenl 360 Hunt, G. Halsey, Bureau of Medical Services._ 463 Hunt, Josen Office of Vocational Rehabilita-i IE A RE ad TERY Tel Ce 0 RE Tl TL 462 Hunt, Nios C., Board of Visitors to the Mer-chant Marine Keaflemy id, nbd bia 18 Hunter, Capt. Archibald D. Bureau of Yards and Deelah ol coi lonail duns ol ennt us 390 Hunter, Clarence E., Mutual Security Agency... 475 Hunter, E. Glen, Bureau of State Services... 463 Hunter, Fay W., Federal Security Agency._..___ 460 Hunter, H. G., Public Buildings Service_______ 466 Hunter, Jack D., secretary to Representative Boggs.of Delaware... to. loiniiiid fui. 254 Hunter, Lucian O., Jr., Office of the Doorkeeper. 291 Hunter, W. Carroll, Office of the Solicitor_.____ 418 Huntoon, Robert D., National Bureau of Stand-rE ER ne eT Hurley, Cornelius E., National Mediation Boards, 2.0 ns Batata Hurley, Daniel F., Federal Mediation and Conciliation Servis Tere sn SR Ce LL ER Te 457 tio II James J., Alaska Rural Rehabilitation Corporation nina an i 1 Fld Cran Hurley, Ray, Bureau of the Census_.__________ Hurley, Walter L., District Fire Department.. 525 Husband, William H., Federal Savings aw Loan "Insurance Corporation Ee ar 7 Huskey, Tilman B., Office of the Sergeant ix: Army Sengle = vo 0 Las me Hussey, Fred G., House Committee on Educa-tion and Tabor... ve uimnue-tog lun il Hussey, Ward M., Office of the Legislative Counsel, House 293 Hutchins, L. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_.__.____ 421 Hutchinson, Knox T.: Assistant Secretary of Agriculture: oil. iil Commodity Credit Corporation _____________ Hutson, Archie G., District Engineer Depart- ment 523 Huyett, Aletha R., secretary to Senator Neely. 251 Huyette, Carl E., ‘Renegotiation Board:...... 483 Huyck, Orland T., secretary to Representative Miller of Nebraska ba Rh 4 Ly 258 Hyde, Edd H., secretary to Senator Sparkman_ 252 Hyde, Dr. Henry Van Zile: Pan American Sanitary Organization.._...___ 353 Institute of Inter-American Affairs. _.__._____ 361 Hyde, James N., United States Mission to the United Nations a a rk atte 362 Hyde, Rosel H., Federal Communications Com- missions Jorg Ul stun il, TE ar 456 Hylton, Harley A., Capitol Police.__.___..._____ 296 Hyman, Abraham 3, War Claims Commission. 490 CE Leonard &. Office of Recorder of le a Gee PC TU bofoabe opt Tur 00 4 Bog = oy 11 Hyman, wen W., National Science Founda-tion Hysong, Thomas Martin, District Undertakers’ Examining Board 522 yoy So National Capital Housing Au- Ikard, a: Frank N., American National Red | Cross Individual Index Page Yenirliz; Joseph J., District Engineer Depart-5 Iliff, William A. B., International Bank for Re-construction and Development. 2-22 foo. Imasche, F. W., Livestock Branch_.__._..___... Imhoff, Lawrence E., Office of Assistant Secre-taryioflthe Interior oi Ui oat 2 SSL EE Imirie, Austin S., Selective Service System_____ Imirie, Joseph S., Office of Assistant Secretary CHEAT Ed HOT ee at hI E 394 Imru, Ras H. S., Ethiopian Ambassador_._____ Ingle, J. B., Emergency Procurement Service. _ 467 Ingram, George M., Bureau of United Nations Afalrsites Sop Bri in oti) Anis 0 357 Insley, Herbert, National Bureau of Standards. 435 Insussary, Rear Adm. Pedro, Inter-American Defense Bogrd ll ind. 0 il iia) 2d 348 Iongh, D. Crena de, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. .________ 350 Iorio, Dy iti Office of the Sergeant at Arms, 291 Ireland, Lr Gen. M. W., Columbia Hospi for Wotton... susie bodon rina uy Carlos, Inter-American hres Irish, oh W., Federal Trade Commission____. Irons, Warren 8. Civil Service Commission__. 453 Irvin, Col. George A., Selective Service System. 485 Irvine, Joseph B.: District Health Department. .._____________._. 525 District Undertakers’ Examining Board ______ Irvine, William A., secretary to Representative Corbett Irving, Maj. Gen. Frederick A., United States MilitaryoAeademMy tii...2000 20 ob 380 Irving, G. W., Jr., Bureau of Agricultural and IndustrialChemistry Jo...2 ___.} ..C 418 Irwin, David D., Office of Defense Mobilization. 339 Irwin, James Ww. Civil Service Commission.__._ 452 Irwin, Leo H., House Committee on Ways and IG EE DE Ce ae SO Ce EU 0 LT 214 Tsades; J, Patent Officer. oor tld 23 or 439 Isaacs, Raymond M., District Auditor’s Office. 519 Isleib, J. R Farm Credit Administration... Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation ________ 423 Isley, Dale E., Office of Legislative Counsel, Saale, 0 il is ama ee wa A 287 Ispahani, M. A. H.: Far Eastern Commission... 0. 20.0 C0 Pakistan Ambassador... .----na--~--oii. Issacs, Myron S,, Securities and Exchange Com-mission. Sle can a Er EE ee 483 Iverson, Kenneth R., Institute of Inter-Amer- JC ATRIIES enn Bi Sim ep DASE TSE 361 Ives, Guy E., Office of Secretary of the Senate. 286 Ives, Stephen B., General Accounting Office___. 299 Ivey, Hoary 407 , Federal Deposit Insurance Cor- poration: AAG Lo EE BOAR hai 457 Ivey, Col. Thomas S., Headquarters Marine ODS. AA Rt ein, SL SI gall I Iwanicki, Angelina D., Public Utilities Com-mission. Bas on LI Lal RI 527 Jack, N. E., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus-trial Chemistr 419 Jackson, Andrew, Securities and Exchange Com- Jackson, Dan, Office of Clerk of the House_____ Jackson, Daniel G., United States Attorney’s 511 Jackson, Edgar B., Office of Postmaster General_ 401 Jackson, Henry M., Joint Committee on Atomic erp pataCl ne FR el Do Jackson, Joseph R., judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography) _._________ Jackson, Nyle M., secretary to Representative Wilson of Indiana: sofas lJ 0 000 caeatit Jackson, Robert H., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography). ________ Jacob, KX. D., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ____________ Jacobs, Harold H., Patent Office Jacobstein, Meyer, Library of Congress.._______ Jacobus, Gilbert C., National Security Re-sources word Ra TIS ARIAL DST Je 356 J ES Ae W., Bureau of Public Roads_________ 432 James, Macgill, National Gallery of Art________ 486 James, Milton C.: Fish and Wildlife Service... 0 880 hang. 412 Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission__ 472 International Fisheries Commission, United Statesiand Canada ii 4 0 als noe 473 James, Robert, Maritime Administration... __ 434 J ames, Robert, Capitol: Policel tili iii i 296 Janinek, A. Marie, Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Management) _______._____ Janzen, Daniel H., Fish and Wildlife Service... 412 Jaramillo, Cipriano Restrepo, Organization of American States. 2). 10S 5 od BRA DoT 53 Jarnagin, R. L., Veterans’ Administration______ 490 Jarpa, Col. Oscar Herrera, Inter-American De- fense Board... pn HOIST 4 DAT 349 .oaetvuncer Jarrett, Edward, Senate Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce. .______._______ 202 Jaszi, George, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeres, i: Elen e odie.(1080 430 Jaynes, Maj. Gen. Lawrence C., Office, Chief of Staff, United States Army.._._____________. 379 gonnelisic J i500 J ARGECE fy SHG 0st Jeffers, Commander Karl B., Coast and Geo-detieSarvey. 0. 2 00 J 0 JU UILL (0020 32 Jeffers, Thomas C., National Capital Park and Planning COMMISSION... ces oo ool 477 Jefferson, W. W., American Red Cross 835s 30d. 449 Jeffries, Albert c. , Washington city post office. 527 Jelley, Rear Adm. J oseph F.: Bureau of Yards and Docks. _________._._..... 390 Pederal Fire:Couneil: iio 00 in Vian) 468 Jelsma, Edward R., Senate Committee on Inter-state and Commerce...00 202 Foreign ti. Jenkins, Maj. Gen.R. E., General Staff._______ 379 Jenkins, Lt. Comdr. William A., Office of the - Commandant, Coast Guard. __________.___ 3 Jenkins, Walter, administrative assistant to Senator Johnson of Texas Jenks, C. Wilfred, aa] Labor Organ-dgabion. oop de usa oad Ono a JOE) 350 Jenner, William E. Joint ‘Committee on Print- ing De A re ATRIA NRL em 215 Jennings, Amy, Federal Trade Commission____ 465 Jennings, David D., Office of the Sergeant at Arms, Senatel) J Jian al a nasil]Joo Tl 36 Jennings, L, A'., Office of the Comptroller of the CUOrIONeY.. «2 Low ne cl po ib SH) 367 Jennings, R. O., Public Buildings Service ._____ 466 Jenny, Dorothy, secretary to Representative Aspinall 201 0d RIS n iia Bes aE 53 Jensen, Clarence G., Interstate Commerce Com-missionil 00 amull Lod nai, Jineid 474 Jensen, Marion, administrative assistant to Senator=-Welker. 0 ii0oislLr Q0ZN 200 252 Jerome, Brig. Gen. Clayton OC., Headquarters Marine Corps dias O00 Salih nl 391 Jessup, Philip C., Ambassador at Large (State Department) Zi0iie LoL LB ns ogll 355 Jewell, Capt. Henry T., Office of Merchant Marine Safety Cl slags lini,Luci 367 Johnson, Albert E. T., District Disbursing g Co lmid niiod sh tl Ssiipil lL, 0nd Johnson, Bernard L., National Production Authority SEN A OIL Se ORD E AiriPoreet. Ln rils FW SIRO HOR 395 Johnson, Col. Campbell C.: District Parole Board... gil on. 01 20000 National Capital Housing Authority..______. Selective Service System. ___._________________ 4 J gus, Christine, secretary to Senator Under-5 WOO. ret SONAR HL HBOS JS, J 100 Johnson, Courtney, National Production Au-thority 437 Johnson, % C., Federal Farm Mortgage Cor-poration SRT le SE Sas sees 4 Fon Earl D., Assistant Secretary of the "a Johnson, Var L., Maritime Administration_._. 433 Congressional Directory Page Johnson, Edwin O.: Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy. 218 Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy. = carina to eulitt AL EAT oD 218 Joint Committee on Atomic Energy__________ 220 Johnson, Edwin J., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System 459 Johnson, Everett C., Office of the Assistant Post-on av oh Frank E., Defense Minerals Explo-ration Administration ahd Bf ee FEL TE Ti Johnson, G. Griffith, Economic Stabilization ALCNOY2 boo doiin th is wan bh cabana EL ie 342 Johnson, Lt Harold E., American National Red Cross ite ait th inet oe 448 Johnson, Herman A., Freedmen’s Hospital._.. 463 Johnson, Jack T., Federal Civil Defense Admin IStration cebu Suripa inl TT SE ARR aie Jed, judge, Customs Court (biog- TAP). soso imtions aie do baa nay 506 Toten JJost C., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Johnson,J . Kimball, Federal Security Agency. 460 Johnson, J.. Monroe, Interstate Commerce Com- 11750) el LO Se PR ra Se Ge 474 Johnson, Joe, Office of Clerk of the House________ 290 Johnson, John A., Office of General Counsel____ 394 Johnson, Col. John P., The Alaska Railroad____ 413 Johnson, Kimbell, Civil Service Commission___ 453 Johnson, Mrs. Leroy, the Congressional Club__ 455 Johnson, Lloyd H., Columbia Institution for the Deal tog sos mua 00 07 igi 461 Johnson, Loraine T., Metropolitan Police De-partment... ct oth aiir nil hee] wes 526 Johnson, Luther A., judge, Tax Court of the United SEsAIR I I Oy ee AVY, 509 Johnson, Lyndon Board of pans to the Coast Guard Acad-CraBERR A SE TR RR Sa Te LR 218 Senate majority Whip... 2. odaocalola tool 285 Johnson, Maurice, White House News Photog-raphers: Association....ouie di. auiih o Johnson, Melvin T., Office of Personnel 4 Johnson, Mordecai W., Howard University._... 461 J ohnson, Nelson T.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf. __________ 461 Far Bastern Commission... co. 2 i: _ ‘i233 456 Johnson, Noble J., judge, United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography)... 502 Johnson, Oscar H., Fish and Wildlife Service___ 412 J ohmson, |Dr. Phillip T., District Board of Edu- Ga I Se SS ee vins Johnson, Richard N., Office of Director for Mutual Security. ou EL i oooion 340 Johnson, Lt. Col. Richard S., Office of Under Secretary ofthe Navy. li i ood aie 381 Johnson, Ruth Belle, District Cosmetology BoarQu cnt do siiinliitsdeasi Il 00 nab 521 Johnson, Sherman E., Bureau of Agricultural CONOMICS: . sadliaa... ih vse oie) Ui Johnson, Susanna, secretary to Representative Johnson, Thomas H., Atomic Energy Com-1115010 1 1a AA CSL EA RO © AL Ce DS EY 45 Accounts I A ER TA BE Ce SET 389 Johnson, W. Leonard, Office of Pomel, Management. o.. sodas Latin le diieey Johnson, Willard L., Office of Secretary of it Treasury EI i SLI, A rd Se ed SR 1 3 J ohnson, Zeake W., Jr., Office of the Sergeant at Arms, House. wie ET LY LO 0 Johnston, Elizabeth S., Bureau of Labor Stand-on Johnston, Felton M., Secretary to the Majority. 287 J ohnston, James A. Board of Parole... aay: 400 J ohnston, Leonard’ E., Atomic Energy Com- ISSION STen ne aR 450 Page Johnston, Olin D., Joint Committee on Disposi-tion of Executive Papers... o.ooham 220 J: easton, Walter David, American National Red Cross. niin il Les S850 0850, 448 xchan J oy Ponge J., Federal Civil Defense Admin-IBIEAtION on treeadd a 346 Jones, Casey M., House Committee on Vet-erans’ Affairs. ina. Seurmet oF oT 214 Jones, Claude, Jr., House Post Office. _________._ 292 Jones, Daniel R., Office of the Doorkeeper..___._ 291 Jones, Edward t Office of the Assistant Post- master Qoneral ceili dad. cenit iia 402 Jones, G. Lewis, Office of Near Eastern Affairs... 357 Jones, J. Jefferson, 3d, Bureau of United Nations Jones, Joseph F., Bureau of Transportation_._. 402 Jones, J. Weldon: Air Coordinating Committee... ._____________ 447 Bureau of the Budget tA CB EE 2 2s 338 Jones, L. A., General Accounting Office. .._____ 299 Jones, L. I., "Extension Service. ............ 423 Jones, Lewis A., Soil Conservation Service.__._ 428 Jones, Lloyd W., Senate Committee on Minority Policy EES RAR SB I SER ER I SE 202 Jones, Madeline, Office of Clerk of the House._ 290 Jones, Nsruin; chief judge, Court of Claims (biography)... oof = i ear geamnt uid Jones, Paul E. House Committee on Veterans’ Afalrs i ll oe Sat 214 oilaianna Jones, Richard A., House Post Office____.______ 292 Jones, Richard F., Bureau of Labor Statistics. 443 Jones, Mrs. Robert E., Congressional Club.____ 454 Jones, Robert F., Federal Communications Commission. .L...0 noo Uso Sead tin 456 Jones, Roger W., Bureau of the Budget__.____ = 333 Jones, Russell c., secretary to Representative Scrivner LE RSE Lae d a ada a ERE Sa 260 J Wester i Office of Technical Services_. 439 Jongbaw, C. H.H., Caribbean Commission____ 451 Jonson, Capt.W. C. JIT, Officeof Information, Navy. 384 Joost, i P., Union of South Africa Ambas- J; Sr, 0 JET) Herrera, International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Ep lms TR Dl Fut DECAL AS 08 TY ie 472 Jordan, Joseph A., Office of Seni of the Rreastvy. i Ce i ail 364 J Sy Horace R., Forest Serviee__..____.___ 425 Joshi, J.°V., International Monetary Fund.____ 350 Joss, John i Renegotiation Board. ___________ 483 Joubert, Louise, Office of Sergeant at Arms, Senate... ii situ sll mane sar sinning 286 To William H., Jr., Mutual Security Agency. 475 Judd, Walter H., Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe... .__....... 221 Judge, Catherine M., secretary to Representa-tive Heffernan. _2... 0 oie] ase 256 Judkins, Calvert J., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce Ln La pape LE 430 Judy, Howard A., Securities and Exchange COMMISSION. ot co Ri ae 484 Juhan, Col. Jack P., Marine Barracks.____..____ 392 Juhnke, Arthur, administrative assistant to Senator Ca80. vu. ooo tos sy StaiiaE Co pre 249 Jukes, Capt. H. L., Bureau of Ordnance._..____ 389 K Kadesch, Rollen B., Defense Production Administration__________ 341 National Production Authority. _____________ 436 Indwidual Index Page Page Kahler, Herbert E., National Park Service ____. Kahn, Herman, National Archives and Records Service a D Kailin, Harvey, Bureau of the Census__________ Kaiser; AW. Patent Office...lie 22 Kaiser, Philip M.. Assistant Secretary of Labor... ...___.._ Board of Foreign Service_________ Kaiv, Johannes, Estonian Legation Kalbfus, Admiral Edward C., American Battle » Monuments Commission... _....____._.._____ Kalette, Michael E., Office of Under Secretary Ole AY St Kalich, Harry W., House tally clerk____________ Kalijarvi, Thorsten V.: Senate Committee on Foreign Relations______ Library ol'Congress. ro oar se alk, CAs, Patent:Offfce Kallina, Carl T., Federal Power Commission__. Kaltenbach, Henry J., National Production Authority Nr Ter a Kaminstein, Abraham L., Library of Congress_. Kammerman, David, Senate Conference Minor- Hy Commitler. em Kampelman, Max M., secretary to Senator Hamre ys ane Kampmeier, Tid Tennessee Valley Author-INT Sy A rp eR i Pe an pL rs ane Brig. Gen. Clarence P., United States a Kane, John F., Office of Secretary of the Army__ Kane, John P., Public Housing Administration. Kantor, Harry S., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Division Ene Baa Tl Bl tin Kantrowitz, Morris S., technical director, Gov-ernment Printing.Office oc -. _conerc-aon--Kaplan, Sheldon Z., House Committee on For- (on SL Se peat SR toi Be Kaplowitz, Paul, Tariff Commission___________ Karig, Capt. Walter, Office of Information, NYY ee Karns, B E., Rural Electrification A dministra-tion Em Karo, Commander H. Arnold, Coast and Geo- detic SorayaaE ut Karr, C. L., Tennessee Valley Authority. ______ Karsner, Dr. . T., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery ph EL ede tren Eel on AR Sad adel vind Karsner, J. W., Federal Trade Commission____ Karsten, Frank M.: Migratory Bird Conservation Commission __ United States Territorial Expansion Memo-rial'Commission: o> ho soe or Karsten, Thomas L., Office of Price Stabili- TERT] abn ME at hl pea he Sn Rend al pms el Kaskey, Paul, Maritime Administration. ______ Kaslow, Berta, secretary to Representative Bello i a A Kasper, Col. Bohai? Office of Under Secretary OF NE AYINY oh a ammo Er Ei Kass, Garfield 4) District Motor Vehicle Park- INE AGBNGY So ed Am ol Everett M., National Security Re-sotrees Board-sio a. oa Kats, William, secretary to Representative Smithrof-Ifansas— = = =o oo lal To Katzin, Jerome S., Securities and Exchange Commissionsoar ri oes ot eg ee Kauffman, Harvey E., Patent Office. __________ Kauffman, Rodger R., Commodity Exchange Authority amin HM ERR ne ol bi 7 Kauffmann, Henrik de, Danish Ambassador.__ Kauffmann, Samuel H., Washington National Monument Society... o.oo) Kavanagh, Preston D., District Public Welfare 5 ITE a a Lh Mr He ee oe ae a hr gh Kay, Joseph W., District Fire Department._____ Kearney, Matthew E., National Mediation STI ed Sd es HE SL En SB SR Kearns, Mrs. Carroll D., The Congressional yd si Wah an i) te Keating, Kenneth B., Joint Committee to Dis-cuss Problems with the Consultative As-sembly of the Council of BEurope____________ Keats, Harold A., American Battle Monuments COMMISSION... -sor wrtoubarrsmeMrmibdmis ms ohne ss Keddy, J. L., Smithsonian Institution____._.__.__ 4 10°} Keech, Richmond B., judge, United States Dis- trict Court for the District of Columbia____ 504 467 Keefe, Michael L., Office of the Chief Post Office 430 HEE2 0 Tr Te SE Sees ail IR 439 Keen, Paul E., District Health Department.____ Keenan, Edward L., Bureau of Employment BO IY re tb ne EL ie an Keenan, Francis J., Senate Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce. ______._____.___ 202 Keenan, Joseph, Defense Production Admin-447 IS a Om me ar An 342 Keesing, Felix M., South Pacific Commission__ 487 377 Keeton, Archer L., Office of the Doorkeeper____ 291 290 Kefauver, Alden C., District Fire Department... 525 Kefauver, Estes, The Interparliamentary Union. 217 201 Reve George B., National Bureau of Stand-301 YET Lea eS DT Se EE Sy 434 439 Kegan, Lawrence R., National Production Au-458 thority 435 A A a ai 390 302 Keho, oe oh W., Territorial Official... 413 Kehres, Walter i, Bureau of the Census.-._____ 430 201 Keim, Walter G., ‘Bureau of Labor Statistics__. 443 Keith, Nathaniel S., Housing and Home Ti-50 NANCE AGONY csSls a eee 469 Keitt, W. Lawrence, Library of Congress... --301 489 Kelbaugh, Paul R., Organization of American States: on Sal Rree en 352 395 Kelchner, Warren, Bureau of United Nations 377 CL Csa i 357 471 Kelleher, Joseph E., Board of Governors, Fed- eral Reserve System HY ae I 459 444 Keller, Alton H., Processing Department, Li-brary.ofl Congress ici afer eons 301 302 Keller, K. T., Office of Guided Missiles________ 376 Keller, Robert F., General Accounting Office_ * 299 213 | Kellermann, Henry J., Bureau of German 488 384 Eli iis J., secretary to Representative 28 Pomarty = a an an 55 Kelley, Lt. Comdr. H. J., Headquarters, Poto-432 mac River Naval Command ______________. 391 489 Kelley, Capt. M. R., Bureau of Ordnance. ____ 388 Kelley, Paul L., Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise 387 RE ee al 218 465 Kelley, Wilbur E., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Kelley, William T,, Federal Trade Commission. 464 217 Kellogg, A. Remington, National Museum_____ 464 Kellogg, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, 218 and Agricultural Engineering... ~~. 421 Kellogg, Howard L., Securities and Exchange 343 IEE Ee ate Ne pe 484 434 i Charles F., National Production Author- Cy Te 437" 54 Kellstad®, Charles H., American Red Cross____ 448 Kellum, Capt. William E., Naval Medical 378 Bosonreh INSUIIe. oo orait coed de 391 Kellum, William W., Organization of American 524 babes ie RE a ee en Ye 52 Kelly, Edward J.: 339 District Motor Vehicle Parking Agency. ____ 524 National Capital Parks... = i. = 411 260 Kelly, E. Russell, Securities and Exchange Commission. roto li bila ad Sasa 484 483 Kelly, Harry C., National Science Foundation__ 479 439 Kelly, Henry E, Washington city post office-__ 528 Kelly, HH. H., Office of Transport and Commu-422 nications "Polic Nn te ep SX Aes 359 532 Kelly, James L., National Production Au- Hy nS DR eR a DE TR 438 90 Kelly, Lloyd E., Metropolitan Police__________ 526 Kelly, Mary G., Office of the Secretary of the 522 Treasiny: [oda flo Th, 8 BL JO05 AA Tut 363 525 Kelly, Nina Nunn, Satoh to Representative Rogersiof Colorado». vl oosniionrs ina 260 78 Kelly, Prudence, secretary to Representative 454 hal a Ne 254 Kelly, Robert F., administrative assistant to Senator Fregr. —i oo hr oe e e 250 221 Kelly, Willard F., Immigration and Naturaliza-Hon Service. toeST Sate 400 447 Kelly, William R., Fiscal Branch_______. HELA, 426 485 Kelsey, Frank W., Veterans’ Administration___ 489 Congressional Directory Page Kelsey, H. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... .... 422 Kem, James P., Board of Visitors to the Mer-chant Marine Academ Kemp, Harold A., District Engineer Depart- Kemper, J. M., Bureau of Dairy Industry.__.___ Kemper, James M., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... -......-ceicomer--218 Kendall, Charles H., Defense Production Ad-ministration or re 341 Rondo Don R., secretary to Representative Bind Rear Adm. Henry S., Office of Chief of Naval Operations CoC coke ey 386 Kendall, James M., Senate Committee on Agri-calturaland Forestry... a orc 2 _ tobi Kendrick, J. F., Bureau of Dairy Industry.____ Kendrick, John W., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce Kendrick, Phillip E., Securities and Exchange Common 12 oor ct a eal 484 Kendrick, Wayne, District Accountancy Board. 520 Kendricks, Brig. Gen. Edward J., United States A OO orete are rb 395 Keneipp, George E.: Department of Vehicles and Traffic._.________ District Motor Vehicle Parking Agency...._. Kennamer, T. J., House minority official. ______ Kennedy, Bernard R.: National Archives and Records Service. ______ 467 Administrative Committee of the Federal Register Kennedy, Donald B., Bureau of Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affairs __________ 357 Kennedy, J. Thomas, District Director of Weights, Measures, and Markets. _...._.___. 524 Kennedy, Mabelle, Assistant Treasurer of the Tnited States oo tur bitin oi 2 ook. 369 Kennedy, Thomas A., House Committee on Enea ies in the Executive Depart- Canfield et i anna Eeuneny, William J., Railroad Retirement TT EES Sa Shue ead LeeBe Kenner, Gen. A. W., Columbia Hospital for WOT hl hn ems a hie Kenner, Capt. Frank T.: Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals. oe Chief of Staff Kenner, Capt. William W.: Coast Guard Welfare. ©. ioe Officeof Persormel co oi ooo... 367 Kent, Frank V., Office of Administrative Assist- ant to Secretary of the Navy. _____________ 382 Kent, James E., House enrolling clerk __________ 290 Kenyon, Kenneth A., Board of Governors, Fed- eral Reserve System..:...........-.....0 459 Keogh, Eugene J., Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy: a 218 Kepner, P. V., Extension Service... __..__..____ 423 Kerlin, William J ., National Production Au- thorit Kern, John W., chief judge, Tax Court of the nited Biales es 509 Kerno, Ivan, United Nations... o.com... 354 Kerr, 7. R., Veterans’ Administration... ________ 490 Kerr, Gerald M., Bureau of Land Management_ 408 Kerr, John H., Joint Committee.on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _____ 219 Kersting, Lt. Comdr. C. J., Bureau of Naval Personnel aed pire A ie a 388 Kervick, John A., Public Housing Administra- ti 471 Kessel, John F., Office of Rent Stabilization..__. 344 Kessler, Mat Gen. A. A.,Jr., Office of Matériel. 397 Kestner, F. B , Smithsonian Institution. ...__. 485 hs Harry W., National Production CH A Ee Ee pe NTR Tore Edith M., Federal Security Agency.... 460 Keyes, Lit. Gen. Geoffrey, Weapons Systems Evaluation Group. =. oh do To Keyes, Paul H., lors Compensation Appeals Board Me a Eth we tw min 442 Page Keyser, David, secretary to Representative Kersten Keyeeng, Mary D., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce I a A 431 Kidd, Sard J., Office of “District Collector of For Kidston Donald E., Munitions Board. ____.____ Kiefer, Norvin C., "Federal Civil Defense Ad- ministration Sn EE pa amare 3 Kiel, Brig. Gen. Emil C., Oversea Commands... 398 Kielland, Rolf H., Federal Trade Commission. . 465 Kiernan, ' James P, National Mediation Board. 478 Kiessling, Oscar E. United States Tariff Com- EE 0 I SE eSRE Tn 488 Kiffer, Russell S., Bureau of Land Management. 408 Killum, Ruth G., secretary to Representative Mir phY. Le os dn ec 259 Kilby, Edwin L., Bureau of the Public Debt_.__ 368 Kilby, John H., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- He COMMEree. i or ort ete os 431 Kilday, Paul J., Joint Committee on Atomic BNOrgy coca fio frien lL et el Ba 220 Kilduff, | bn J., House post office........._. 292 Kilerlane, M.T., Maritime Administration... 434 Kilgallons Verne R., United States Attorney’s > 92 EET IEE Sl ER J Le 11 Kilguss, OS Sroderiok C., Administrative Division. 399 Killea, John EF. Office of Special Assistant for Intelligence. ET ARR aT A ee Eee 357 Killen, E. H., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ....:........--421 Killian, James R., Jr., President’s Advisory Committee on Management Ln hs dR wim 481 Killinger, George G., Board of Parole_....__.____ 400 Bin: rane Xo secretary to Representative a Tr A 254 Kimball, FT Bureau of German Affairs. 356 Kimball, Daisy, secretary to Representative Gathings olde ie inne Cn eiel son Tae Te 56 Kimball, a A. (Secretary of the Navy): Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis- HT ESE ie SCE SO Sa TR ET See 449 Armed Forces Policy Councils situa. 375 BloglapNy of tics oa eh se en ks adil 381 National Munitions Control Board._____._._____ 478 Kimball, Frank C., National Production Authority 36 Bmall, i J., District Engineer Depart-5 Kimbie, Caries H., secretary to Representative oran Kimble, Brig. Gen. Frederick Von H., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Man- LE Re 394 Kimbrough, Calvin, House folding room..____. 291 Kimbrough, Lorraine M., Office of the Speaker_. 289 Kimmel, Elleonora M., Uhited States Attorney’s OL NEAR La ina 511 Kincaid, Rose, Sercinry to Representative Brown OL ONI0,. or ootot ed nons 254 Kincannon, W. ry Office of Vocational Rehabilitation... toi. ft -oioo oode tease 462 Kinder, A. Kip, secretary to Representative 15 CT er Ee SR Le a TI 253 Kindsfather, William J., Office of the Post- master Cronoral we RR En a ETE 401 King, Charles D. B., Liberian Ambassador..._. 534 King, Clark F., District Corporation Counsel’s 4 ES Rr NE rT 523 King, D. C., Office of Material.....-co-ona 385 out King, Earle qa, Securities and Exchange Com- TEErr I Bee RR TE eh 484 King, Edwin H., Office of Architect of Capitol.. 295 King, Eldon P., "Bureau of Internal Revenue. __ 364 King, Homer a, Defense Transport Adminis- tration King, James F., Defense Production Adminis- King, John A., Office of the Assistant Post- I EE 403 King, Leo, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House... 291 King, Milton, Columbia Hospital for Women... 453 King, Paul, Federal Supply Service-eomcaaaaa--466 Indwidual Index King, Robert, Maritime Administration_______ King, Robert v, Office of Assistant Secretary of thet AYIAY.. Ler ol aa oars 378 King, Russell C.: Joint Committee on the Library .___..________ Senate Committee on Rules and Administra- lon rene SINS SUN SILOS. Solel Se 2 202 Kinghorne, Joseph W., Poultry Branch________ 426 Kingsley, Sam W., Patent Office... __.__. 439 Kinkaid, Admiral Thomas C., National Secu- to ority Training Commission to Sie! 480 so... Kinnaly, Eugene T., Office of the Majority Leader, Hoases:. 00 0 do Sica. 289 liisuaee Kinner, Harold C., District Pharmacy Board__. 521 Kinsinger, BR. 0., Bureau of Employment Secu- eo nm a a Ee a SY 442 Kirby, Vance N., Office of General Counsel ex ilo the Treasury. re ap er an REA LX 364 Kirby, V. J., General Accounting Office_.______ ae 5 Jo T., District Electrical Examin- ii Mark M., Bureau of Entomology i Plant Quarantine TL BRR Ee AVL Ta Kirkland, James R., United States isiich Court for the District of Columbia... Kirkpatrick, Lawrence C., Office of Chief posi | OMce. INSPEOIOT: =. Sis adalah ans aa Kirsch, W. U., Maritime Administration__ Kirschiing, Bernice, Petroleum Administration for:Delengpin ol Loh dal ay TLuaune 406 Kirstein, Sue Thomas, secretary to Representa-tive Reed of New Yor 25 Kirvan, Capt. William H., Inter-American De-femse Boards lout iui a a aa 349 Kiser, Margaret, Organization of American ry A AR Sa AGF 353 Kissinger, Frederick M., Office of the Sorgout OL ATS, FI ORSEY iii i it a ih SD wat i Kitt, Joseph C., an lion Finance a poration eh aE aa ERR 482 Kittner, Joseph M., Federal Communications Commissions Liab a re ie ar BSS Kivett, Kathryn, House Committee on Educa- Homiandi Labor: saunasoie le il 21 Klanderman, Col. Russell R., Office of the Under Secretary of the Army 378 Klapp, Edgar A., International Tie Com-mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 473 Klassen, Helen, secretary to Representative Thompson:of Michigan...i oi... ..0. 261 Klaus, Ida, National Labor Relations Board. _ Klechak, Thomas, Office of Price Stabilization. 342 Klein, Alfred, Civil Service Commission______. 452 Klein, Alvin F., secretary to Representative Buckley... nici inne i SRR Sos Klein, Rear Adm. Grover C., Bureau of Ships... Klein, Commander Irving N., Office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy 390 Klein, Lawrence R., Bureau of dd Statistics. a Klein, Otto G., Federal Fire Council 468 Kleinwaechter, Dr. Ludwig, Austrian Legation. 531 Klemmer, Harvey, Office of Transport and Com- apictions BOHCY one cia.tri Klett, E. T., Defense Solid Fuels Administra- tion a a ah i ee EE 4 Klinge, Ernest F., Patent Office 4 Klipstein, Kenneth, National Production Au- thority 43 Kloak, Adela B., Women’s Bureau..____._____ 444 Klopstee, PaulE., National Science Founda- ti Knarr, Matthias W., Reconstruction Finance Corporation BS Sp SL bmn ll Gi ph em ae irs 482 Rau, Wom K., Office of Plant and Opera-i tong... cll rl sera Ran aie foo Sola 17 hn Robert F., District Corporation Coun-sabmonitoesasaratorailnnl ina 523 g Knight, O. A., National Production Authority. 436 Knipling, E. F., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Duane FE an ARE Se LT Ae so dt ety 420 Knoblauch, H. C., Office of Experiment Sta-422 90808°—82—2—1st ed. Page Knopf, Alfred A., Advisory Board on National Parks, ele. ii aab uiis cus sla Do ANE Knowland, William F., Joint Committee on Atomic Energy... oo Uo. DOI Knowles, James W., Joint Committee on the Heonomic Report-io oo cit niin urns 219 Knowles, Nathaniel, Jr., Defense Production Administration Knowlton, Daniel W., Interstate Commerce COmMMISTION. lores ea 474 Knox, Rear Adm. Robert W., Coast and Geo-detic Survey. Lo Luni heii 432 Knudson, James K.: Defense Transport Administration. _._.______ Interstate Commerce Commission. _______.___ Knutson, John W., Bureau of State Services.__ Koblentz, Charles, Office of Salary Stabilization. Koch, A. S., Civil Aeronautics Administration. Koch, Henry A., District Department of Pub-lic LLY he ER eT SI Ol Ses seni sn EINER TaD 0 Romer, Gomes F., District Engineer’s Depart-ments SuiiarinEs ne aE Koehler, John T'., Renegotiation Board._._______ Sn Nathan, Office of Secretary of Agricul- ur Koon Dr. Joseph BL Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development___.____________ Office of Under Secretary of State_ _._________ Koerner, Osborne S., Federal Housing Admin- Steation das. lo tenis gL 0 LH. Sie 471 Kogod, Fred S., District Public Welfare Board. _ Kohler, Foy D., Office of International Informa- ATE SA Ra in TR ER La Re 511 Koo, Dr. V. K. Wellington, Chinese Ambassa-ed. BE Len Ia hah 532 Koons, line L., Office of Official Reporters or Koons , Toso A. , Office of Official Reporters. oN ehatess inl Jo ania UY Tank Kopper, Samuel K. C., Office of Near oe Ringe aNda an aa Korman, Milton D., District Corporation Coun-Sellsoffiee 0. co er EEA 3 Korth, Fred, Office of Army Department Connell... 378 Kosch, Col. Lewis F., Selective Service System_ 485 Kotschnig, Walter M.: Bureau of United Nations Affairs. ___________ 357 U. S. Mission to the United Nations_________ 362 Koval, Rosemary C., Office of District of Co-lumbisiCommissioner-...........L..0. ... 519 Kramer, Andrew J., Office of Secretary of Senate... rors Lf Saeed dn 286 Kramer, Fred M., Office of Architect of Capitol. 295 Kramer, Pauline C., Radio Studios, Capitol.__. 297 Kramer, William P., Forest Service__._________ 425 Kraus, Astrid W., Research and Development Board i. rv. oi atin aoa. us slsia i) 373 Kraus, Betty, Office of Secretary of the Senate. 285 Kraus, E. J., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. ____________ 422 Kreager, H. Dewayne: Maton Advisory Board on Mobilization olic Office of Defense Mobilization Krebs, William A. W., Jr., National Science Foundationki iain Fel 00 0 uth oaes 479 Kreek, 1. P., Patent:Office. 0 00 io. 439 Krekeler, Dr. Heinrich L., German Diplomatic Mision.I 533 Kremer, Alvin W., Library of Congress ..._.... 300 Kreps, Col. Kenneth R., Office of Secretary of Defense. nro al nth Bagiat So main, 371 Kreps, Theodore J., Library of Congress-______ 301 Kress, Samuel H., National Gallery of Art_____ Krim, Marie H., secretary to Representative Haysol Ohio. = 0c oi afi) oasis 256 Krogh, Lt. Comdr. Evan L., Naval Sentence Review and Clemency Board > Krohr, John J., District Disbursing Office... Kroll, "Cedric Ww., Office of the Technical Staff. 5 700 Congressional Directory Page Kroll, Milton P., Securities and Exchange Com-issi 48 Kronheim, Milton S., Jr., judge, Municipal Court for the District of Columbia... Krould, Harry J., Reference ho Library of Congress AR ABLE i A Krupp, Evelyn, secretary to Representative Kruse, Elmer F.: Commodity Credit Corporation_____.________ 422 Production and Marketing Administration.__ 425 Kagel, ZL Kenneth, District Engineer Depart-pa Ea a Ch eT era 524 Kuhfold, Brig. Gen. Albert M., United States Ar Pores. i) looiutanilt cotserna dnlurce 395 Kullenberg, Leslie L., Federal Civil Defense Administration... .outs ci osuo is nil 347 Kunen, James L., National Security Resources Board: Loo iuinonies doit ll nel SL Kunkel, William A., Jr., General Antony Wayne Memorial Commission... Kunze, Albert F., Organization of ea ERR i 352 Kuter, Maj. Gen. Laurence S., Deputy Chief of Staff, Personnel. ies. Loe in Con mond 396 Kuttler, ‘Abner K., Bureau of Animal Industry. 419 Kwai, Burnham Yung, Patent Office... ouioou. 439 Kyster, Col. O. H., Jr., Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army AA AAAS Du En 378 L LaBlonde, Robert C., Office of International Taformation. Jc. lol el fl os aii Tuy 359 LaBounty, Maxine, District Public Library Board 522 Labouisse, Henry R., Mutual Security Agency. 475 Lacey, Edward L.; National Security Resources Boardoibi sora Soultah 339 Lacey, George M., Federal Civil Defense A aninisteation oo. siobued i al Lacklen, Robert J., National Advisory Bont mittee for Aevonaubles oo i) oi dst as 476 Lacovara, Nicholas J., Office of the Sergeant My Arms, Senglesio i io eiiill Ch alaasil Ait Lacy, Alton G., secretary to eae Stanle 260 Lacy, Dan, Office of Educational Exchange __. 359 Lacy, William S. B., Bureau of Far Eastern N Laffin, iy T., administrative assistant to Senator Blanders._ o_o. 1 fi lai 250 Lagler, Jane Morgan, Office of the Speaker. ____ 289 Laird, A. H., Jr., Interstate Commerce Com- missions oy, oe AER A Seshiut hl and 474 Laird, George W.: Federal Records Council. --—-_ooomeees 467 Interstate Commerce Commission _._________ 474 Lalor, Capt. W. G., Joint Staff Lall, Shameldharee, United Nations. oo. ....0 La Marche, James, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue PRRON. i ees oui Lala ots 216 Lambert, John W., Office of Secretary of the Senate Lambert, Robert, American Printing House for the BRAT. 0 ol ann ina 461 Lambert, Robert E., House Committee on Ap- propriations eda dA Da RL EO 213 Lamm, R. A., National Bureau of Standards... 435 Lamon, Lucile P., House Committee on Mer- chant Marine and Fisheries _..._._.._._..__ 214 La Didi, Robert H., Railroad Retirement oar Lamson, C. Earl, Bureau of Indian Affairs__ Landau, William McK., Committee on Pur- chases of Blind-Made Products...__ 454 Landers, William L., Office of Secretary of the Senate SRR IS RARER ee I IR PSE Lael 286 Landesman, Bertram M., United States At-torney’s Office... io.Or) 511 Landis, James M., Trustee of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library Landon, Brig. Gen. harics R., Office of Comp-troller |b a a etl aT] -396 Page Landry, Brig. Gen, Robert B., Air Force aide to the-President cool oll 5 readin ton 337 Las, Andrew, Defense Transport Administra-FR TTT RY Lane, Capt. C. W., Bureau of Medicine and APEery.s fi, Tis aaaiil ssn noargauiates ld Lane, John D., administrative assistant to Senator MeMahon. ool JE Cotes noni 251 Lane, John D., United States Attorney’s Office__ 511 Lane, Mary F., secretary to Representative Graham. = isl intl hen a 256 Lane, Warren S., National Mediation Board.__ Lame Arthur H., National Labor Relations Lang, i H., Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System a tr ES i hw 456 Lang, J om A., Jr. secretary to Representative Deane "0. 00 ur re a Cl sae 20 Langer, “Wiliam, Joint Committee on Disposi- tion of Executive Papers. deetein 2 Langner, Lawrence, Office of Technical Services. lanssion, James A., Indian Claims Commis- Passman NA pe ae Che ER Oe 45 Lk 259 Lanham, Paul, District Engineer Department... 524 Lansburgh, Mark: District of Columbia Redevelopment Land AGONICY on oo pe Sa,Sede, 455 District Motor Vehicle Parking Agency. ..__. 524 National Capital Housing Authority ._._____ 477 Lantz, Betty L., secretary to Representative AVITL 0 nd SN eaninse sores ai anaes 2 56 Lantz, Marie, secretary to Representative Stageersser: oarrd can ln b nl sa) 60 Lanzer, Barbara Crozier, secretary to Rep-resentative Brehm. _...___._.... TRioldAl 254 La Padula, Michael J., Securities and Exchange Commission ooo i 5 Sil aban sgt 484 Lapham, Roger D., Mutual Security Agency... 475 Lapish, Edith Porter, Federal Housing A dminis- feation. oo JillsSanter 470 ch rel Laraque, Gustave, Haitian Ambassador_.______ 533 Largentaye, Jean de, International Monetary Band. opa Aa Ee 350 Larin, Don, Bureau of Employment Security... 442 Lark, "Capt. JacobA Inter-American Defense Board. ._._._________ 349 Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis-Tam EE Ih isa SEE a ERs Bae a LS SAL SLATE 351 Larkin, Frederick: Division of Foreign Buildings Operations_____ 356 Foreign Service Buildings Commission.______ 361 Larkin, Lt. Gen. T. B., General Staff, United States Army. io rl i LR GI 379 Larrazabal, Commander Wolfgang, Inter-Amer-lem Defense Board... iL l0nil 349 Larrick, George P., Food and Drug Administra- donee il Tl Re Pe Tn ECO 61 Larrimer, W. H., Forest Service____._._________ Larson, Mrs. Clare Linn, American National Red Cross. us dh ii san sd MA 4 Larson, Ernest O., Bureau of Reclamation_____ Larson, Capt. H. O., Bureau of Naval Personnel. Larson, Jess: Administrator, General Services Administra-£11 YT Be A Ae 0, Ss SONIA BO SA SL RAO, Le 466 Defense Materials Procurement Agency... Lasseter, Dillard B., Farmers Home Adminis-BA EO a a ten on seme SA EAE, LaThomus, Margaret, secretary to Representa- tive MeV. Lathram, L. Wade, Office Secretary of Interior_ Latimer, ‘George Ww. ., judge, United States Court of Military Appeals (biography) _.__________ Latimer, J. Austin, Senate Committee on Post ffice and Civil Service: ---—-wooomooooe LaTour, Lt. Nita, Naval Liaison Office oA Latta, Randall H., Bureau of Entomology and, Plant Quarantine Ce 5 Es ie SS Sl PE whi Laughlin, Kyle P., Federal Civil Defense xz 4 ministration. si Joo nhaegi LK Dive 346 Laukhuff, Perry, Bureau of German Affairs____ 358 Lavalle, Juan Bautista de, Organization of American States. iconecSt Indwidual Index Page LaVallee, Ralph J., Federal Prison Industries, 4 Inc mation Tea J A ee pd a ane LSE 294 Lawhorn, L. C., Civil Bervice Commission_____ Lawler, Edward G., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic-Commerce. 111.1100 0 ii Joseph J., Assistant Postmaster Gen- Te Mildred C., Veterans’ FYE Congressional CN CIE REN des 298 Lawrence, Charles Drummond, judge, Customs Court (DIOSIAPRY)-oo cmemn sn dinarsaa 506 Lawrence, Commander F. L., Office of Savings Bonds ars oe bo ad EH BE Lawrence, Richard W., Defense Production Ad- ministrationso Jer LE 341 Lawrence, William N., Defense Production Ad-ministration 2 ioral J saan ne Sony) 342 Lawrence, William S., Federal Civil Defense Administration or JL. ate ITY G00 346 Laws, Bolitha James: Chief judge, United States District Court for the Districtol Columbia....o 2....... 509 Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) RT Laws, Ernest W., Bureau of Employees’ Com- pensation Se ee pends DOLCE el SR en ie, 442 Lawson, Edward B., Mutual Security Agency. Lawson, Lawrence M., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mexieo do 3000 Shs 180 lGr e S30 TR JEN 472 Lawton, David F., Civil Service Commission__ Lawton, Frederick J.: Bureau ofthe Budget. --.__.__.1isi -2: 1 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen-tial Federal es 219 Lawion: KennethE., Office of Price Stabiliza-or tio Ti Richard G., Petroleum Administration for Defense. Jol. 0. SL Ioipiaat Lo Saud JST 4 Lawton, Brig. Gen. William S., Office, Chief of Army Field Poreesy iio ill col andi ian 3 380 Lawyer, John E., Employees’ Compensation Appeals BOAT. rr 442 Laxton, William C., Office of Personnel. __._____ 417 Lay, James S., JI., National Security Council. 338 Laythe, Leo 1. Fish and Wildlife Service__.___ 412 Layton, Elton T. House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce... ...... wimax Lazarte, Dr. Carlos, Pan American Sanitary Organization. ori ne Sd Loe aii 353 Leach, Mary F., Office of Legislative Counsel. Leahey, John Jos Office of the Assistant DO master General SER GL anda Leary, William A., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy OTA i a 382 Leavy, Charles W., Southern Power Adminis-tration Sis ea dB 414 LeBaron, Robert: Atomic Energy Commission__________________ 451 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Bnergy Commission...ii : 375 LeCompte, Karl M: Joint Committee or Printing_________________ Joint Committee on the Library... ________ 215 LeCompte, Mrs. Karl M., Congressional Club._ 454 Leddy, John M., Office of Economic Defense and Trade Polley. oso iii oF 7 Nes Cui Lee, A. W., District Apprenticeship Council___ 520 Lee, Adelbert W., District Board of Education. 521 Lee, Blair, 3d, National Capitol Park and Planning Commission...J.C -. 477 Lee, Donald E., National Park Service_._______ 410 Lee, F. B., Civil Aeronautics Administration __ 432 Lee, Frederick P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. _______ 421 Lee, Helen D., secretary to Representative Delaney... i: 00% ZL dls Gupied thas” Lee, H. Rex, Bureau of Indian Affairs._________ 409 Lee, Capt. John E., Office of Assistant Secretary ofthe Navy. J Sills S030 SO inde ti © 382 Lee, Josh, Civil Aeronautics Board for'Delensell [U0 oC A RU al 407 Lee, Brig. Gen. Morris J., Continental Com-mands, U.-S. Aly Pores... 00 od 1 oo... 397 Page Lee, Maj. Gen. Robert M., Office Deputy Chief of Stall Had. Jaan) or rosin 397 Lee, Roland L., Jr., Tariff Commission________ 488 Lee, Ronald F., National Park Service.________ 410 Lee, Walter R., "House Committee on J udiciary. 214 Lee, Dr. W. X; Far Eastern Commission______ 456 Lee, William EB. Interstate Commerce Com- missions Jo 0 REE hon J LETS ae 474 Leebrick, Karl C., South Pacific Commission__ 487 Leech, J. Russell, judge, Tax Court of the United Statens Tai 00 ners imal Seindd al 5 Leeper, Loren L., Federal Supply Service._____ 466 Lees, Frank, Office of the Assistant Postmaster General 2c mUANin dca ene ak 402 Leese, Dr. W. Earl, District Optometry Board. 521 LeFevre, Robert, Committee on Purchases or Blind-Made Produets........___.__....._ Leffler, W. F., Bureau of Entomologyand Plait Quarantine Caan de SR IRE, tegtion, 2 os UR nt sub Tae 461 Lehman, John W., Joint Committee on the Eeonomic'Reporbiitiin: Lo: “qognsl Sime 219 Lehman, Paul M., St. Elizabeths Hospital ____ 464 Lomas Lloyd A Office of Under Secretary ore ate ii, aL IO SH REE Leich, Harold H., Civil Service Commission. _ i Leiden, Bernetta, Administrative Office of the United States Conrtsi i Ciba jo) Lo 510 Leighton, George R., Committee on Conference Minority oftheSenate....__..... C0 7] 201 Leighton, Lucas A., Office of Postmaster Gen- Eeee a Le Da 401 Leisenring, L. M., District Architect Board____ 521 LeKander, Gilbert, secretary to Representative D’Ewart Lektrich, Peter, Office of Clerk of the House____ LeMay, Gen. Curtis E., Continental Com- mands, SRL ad Beal vali STH 397 LeMay, Francis M., Office of Coordinator or Information. . i ozs ean bio loin no BEL LeMire, Clarence P., judge, Tax Court of qo Hatten States slg ain of 2 Pay 509 ing Carl, secretary to Representative Davis of Tennessee gp TE a a Sk ERE a RR 255 Lennartson, Nils A., United States Air Force._ 395 Lennartson, Roy WwW: Commodity Credit Corporation............ 422 Production and Marketing Administration._ 425 Lennihan, Richard, Munitions Board 375 Lent, George E. , Tax Advisory Staff, Secretary of the Treasury Aad a 365 Leonard, F. Morton, Tariff Commission________ 488 Leonard, George K., Tennessee Valley Author- FIR 3 F., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Leonard, Col. Waldron E., District of Columbia Division of Veteran’s Services ee aR 527 Lequerica y Erquiza, José Felix de, Spanish Ambassadors J Cr rc era ie PLE ae 536 LeRoux, Peter W., Office of the Yop Counsel, Tg tration ET aN ts Bu Pa PA 341 Leslie, Hilles R., Office of Sergeant at Arms, SO a ot 286 Letterman, Oscar J., Metropolitan Police_______ 526 Letts, F. Dickinson, judge, United States Dis- trict Court for the District 6f Columbia______ 509 Leusenkamp, Harry A., Office of the A Postmaster General Dr Bi Rp poi Leventhal, Harold, Office of Price Stabilization_. as Lever, Michael, Organization of American States, . aris aannseti saul. & 352 Leverett, Jules G., secretary to Representative ARTi CROT a Levin, Joseph B., Securities and Exchange Com- TEE LTH Ea Ane io Sl ag soni sae 484 Levin, William, Federal Trade Commission_____ 465 Levine, Louis, Bureau of Employment Security. 442 Levitan, Simon W., District Accountancy Board 520 Congressional Directory Page Lewellen, Flo, Tariff Commission ___.___________ 488 Lewis, Carleton K., Tariff Commission. _____.__ 488 Lewis, Elmer A., House document room... ______ 291 Lewis, Geoffrey W., Bureau of German Affairs.. 356 Lewis, Mrs. H. C., secretary to Representative Gregoryica auc Varsha salb SOL Si Carts 56 Lewis, oi R., Office of Information. ________ 417 Lewis, , Harry H., Federal Mediation and Con-on Lewis, Irene, secretary to Representative Short. 260 Lewis, Mary Benson, secretary to Representa-tive Devereux:modi. sana. loge Jon 255 Lewis, Mitchel D., National Mediation Board__ 478 Lewis, Reeve, Jr., Columbia Hospital for Wome VE Sr TS CR Lye TAT £0 ME CY Ne BG hy LAI 453 Lewis, Mrs. Reeve, Columbia Hospital for OIC oe ern i ens BEI Sie 453 Lewis, William C., Jr., administrative assistant to Senator Smith of Maine. ______..___.___. 252 Lowls Zan, administrative assistant to Senator unt L’Heureux, Hervé J., Visa Division__..._..____. L’Heureux, Robert, Joint Committee on Defense Production tlio bisioti so doarfod ra sine 221 L’Heureux, Robert D., Senate Committee on Banking andiCurrency. il. co. i dondoseni 201 Liberti, Phyllis R., District Tax Appeals Board. 522 Libby, Willard F., Atomic Energy Commission_-450 Libonati, E. M.., House Committee on Rules.___ 214 Lie, Tryeve, United: Nations... idvsieviideued 354 Light, C 1.J. C., Munitions Board... ........:-375 oan. J can, Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force, Matbriok. vb coin pibecenss 394 Lima, Alceu Amoroso, Organization of American nr a, Lincoln, Harold S., Reference Department, Li-brary of. Congresses coe a boii Louie. 30 Lincoln, Harold W., House Committee on Inter-state and Foreign Commerce. ______________ 214 Lind, James F., Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ________ 217 Linden, S. Keith, secretary to Representative I Be DE ER ee Sn 257 Linder, Carl W., National Production Authority.. 436 Linder, Harold F. , Deputy assistant Secretary of State Lindley, Walter Charles, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) 508 Lindsay, Henry M., District Department of COITCCHONE. oo Se iti i si os os em ron 527 Lindsay, Matilda, secretary to Representative a) Lindstrom, Chester A., Office of Information____ 417 Lineberger, Herbert M., secretary to Repre-sentative Woodrow W. Jones 257 Lineweaver, Goodrich W., Bureau of Reclama-A FIOM. 20 das nnerwill wi Sie 1 Link, Dennis C.: Board on Geographic Names.___._..____.______ 414 Office of Assistant Postmaster General .______. 402 Linkins, Carrol, Western Union Telegraph Co__ 297 Linkins, Mary B., Railroad Retirement Board. 481 Linn, Mary, secretary to Representative Simp- sonolIinels. co oo. i Saati, 260 Linville, Francis A., Office of International Materials Policy oc... 8. mec ean Linville, Lawrence, Office "of General Counsel for the Treasury EE Sn ata Sm re TRS tte 364 Lipowitz, Max, Office of Salary Stabilization... 345 Lon, os C., District Plumbing Examining Libor oert J., Reconstruction Finance Cor-POIALION. on oni sie tars pe sR bid i 482 Littell, Harry B., Office of the Legislative Counsel, RRR 287 Litteral, Fred, District Fire Department..______ 525 Little, Delbert M., Weather Bureau..._.__..... 440 Little, Herbert, Office of Secretary of Labor. ___ 442 Little, John, House Document Room___________ 291 Little, Walter B., House Committee on Ways and Means. .c.--ue-onusBUERITEE 1 214 Littlejohn, William F., Petroleum Administra-tionfor: Defense. co ong anianee 407 Littleton, Benjamin H., judge, Court of Claims ArT nla er SE ie nde 503 Page Littlewood, William, National Advisory Com-mittee for ............4 476 Aeronautics... .. Liversedge, Brig. Gen. Harry B., Headquarters S Marine Corps, oi. oo oon onic 392 Livingston, Ann, Joint Committee on Defense Produetion.. (i. ivi bao unk 221 Livingston, Harry, House disbursing clerk______ 290 Livingston, John W., Wage Stabilization Board. 345 Lleras; Alberto, Organization of American ET RL SE Ta MI SS TeV Seep Loafman, M. R., Bureau of the Public Debt... Locher, Myrtle S., House Committee on Educa- tion and Labor... oi Hoey s-tedouiwasibl ‘213 Locke, Dr. Harry A., District Veterinary Medi- cine Examiners Board 522 Lockett, Lt. Col. John, Army Liaison Office__.. 298 Locknane, Bush W., Food and Drug Adminis- tration lust dos l ediiil hss 4 Lockwood, Harold G., Veterans’ Administration Congressional Service LATOR ay SL ae SIS 0 Lockwood, Warren J., Federal Housing Ad- TINIEIon.. eal di 470 Locraft, Thomas H., District Architect Board._ 521 Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr.: Joint Committee on the Library __.__.________ 215 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 Loeb, Robert F., National Science Foundation. 479 Loeffler, Herman C., Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Depart- MEALS Jes el fod cnn ip Yai i sn 201 Loening, Grover, National Air Museum_______ Loftis, J. Robert, Office of Secretary of Defense_ _ 371 Loftus, R. Thomas, Office of Official Reporters of Deba Le ies, TS STAC Uy SI TIRE, 287 ter Lote Albert L., National Mediation Board. . London, Lt. Col. Michael R., Selective ie re 485 Long, i Ey C., Bureau of Veterans’ Reem-ployment Right Bini tvardeacd TBEi AS 443 Long, C. Sterry, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commeree. ool dll Goa Load. 431 Long, Dana H., House post office... ________ 2 93 Long, Donald w., ‘Wage and Hour and Public Contracts DIVISIONS... otitis» itas. sons 444 Long, F.J., Veterans’ Education Appeals Board. 490 Long, Gillis W., Senate Select Committee on Small Business. --wee ann =--199 Long, Helen E., House Committee on Banking and Correney..: s.i.. aiti Jose arad 213 Long, Leola, secretary to Representative Jackson o:Californiac.. Joniol serail gud 257 Long, Martin L., Bureau of Accounts. _________ 404 Long, Oren E., Governor of Hawaii_______._____ 413 Long, Robert E. ., administrative assistant to Senator Smith of North Carolina. ._________ 252 Longinotti, David C., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... 216 Lonnquest, Rear Adm. Theodore C.: Bureau of Aeronambies. oo LL sal ali shail 386 ational Advisory Committee for Aeronau- FMB a ENT TR Le Ne SU A 1) 352 Loosley, Allyn = Tariff Commission.._..._.._ 488 Loper, Brig. Gen. Herbert B Atomic Energy Commission... .._........_.__ 451 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission... occ sol. lio dio. 375 Lopez, Maj. Gen. Estanislao J., Inter-American Defense Board. Li: csibeiiasuniei old 348 aor Lorain, Sinclair H., Bureau of Mines. ...._._____ 412 Lord, Isaac Q., National Production Authority... 439 Loree, Helen M., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Alr Foree, Matériel... coco tone. 394 Losee, Reginald S., House Committee on Mer-chant Marine and Fisheries... __._____..___ 214 Loss, Louis, Securities and Exchange Commis- ET PR Oley SN Deel el Te Veit ER SN at 484 Lott, William B., Federal Trade Commission... 465 Louchheim, Walter C., Jr., Securities and Ex- change COMI EO. corr tron at rt eae 483 Louden, D. D., Office of Secretary of the Navy. 381 Loughlin, Margaret M., Office of the Sergeant at Arms, House... Too T3 istmus claifimet. 290 Indwwidual Index Page Loughran, Edward A., Immigration and Natu-ralization Service ©. : __-i.oaccoooamaC 400 Lovejoy, F. Warren, District Motor Vehicle Parking Agency =... .eeboacl ol longs 524 Lovelace, Dr. W. Randolph, 2d, Armed Forces Medical Policy Couneil fa125-00 376 Loveland, Frank, Bureau of Prisons_.._________ 400 Lovell, Fred F., Federal Savings and Loan In- surance Corporation: oo... olsalc. 470 Loveridge, Earl W., Forest Service_.__..._..____ 425 Lovett, Robert A. (Secretary of Defense): Armed Forces Policy Couneil = nails 375 Blographylof bd as. Leip inning 371 Defense Mobilization Board... o.oo... 339 Member, Smithsonian Institution... 485 National'Seeurity Couneil... zo. coon... 338 National Security Resources Board. __.._.____ 339 Lovvorn, R. L., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... uo. cool 4 Low, Vice Adm. Francis S., Office of Chief of Naval Operations: oo sooo Lio Cleese Lowe, James M., Office of the Assistant Post-magier:Generalior oon. aus Ul nil sia, 4 Lowe, Jeffery L., District Undertakers’ Exam-ining Board Lowry, Lucille D., Office of the Assistant Secre-tary of the Navy for. Advani dob rureriad 382 Lowry, W. Kenneth, Office of Administrative Assistant to Secretary of the Army._________ 379 Lubelsky, Capt. B. L., Bureau of Ordnance.__. 389 Loony; Albert J Defense Production Adminis- tration 341 Lubin, Albert J., National Production Author-Ji) oy ee Cn IE SS ha le Tae Lah 3 Lane Isador, U. S. Mission to United Nations. 362 Lucas, Alphonse, secretary to Representative Boykin sn aaie tf onion or Jl er bang 254 Lucas, Cleo, General Accounting Office__.______ 299 Lucas, Capt. F. C., Bureau of Naval Personnel. 388 Lucas, JohnJ., Jr., "Office of the Secretary of the RTT thnk he i Ch Bad tt iy sind 377 Lucas, John S.: Federal Records Couneil . _ o_o __ 467 Office of Plant and Operations._____--.._._.___ 417 Lucas, Col. Mason H., Office of Assistant Secre-tary of the Army 3 Lucas, Wingate H., an of Visitors to the Mili-tary Academy. IE I IT 217 Luce, George P., Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration TN a I i LS 482 Lucey, George M., Plans and Policies Office____ 346 Luckett, H. B. , Maritime Administration______ 434 Luduefia, ‘Arturo, Organization of American Luikart, te Civil Service Commission. 453 Lull, Dorothy, secretary to a tions SRE SPT RAE nn rr Le EET 4 Lumpkin, TommieE., Naval Liaison Office... Lund, Anthon TH, Securities and Exchange COMmLSRIONT). oo tedomds abl. baunaes Lund, Chester B., Federal Security Agency..._ Lundegaard, C. H, Maritime Administration. Lamaelins Oapt. Maurice W., Army Liaison Lurty, Edward, Capitol Police... --oaee_-oo_C 29 tas, GH,H. , administrative assistant to Senator Lusk, Frederick C., Office of the General Coun- sel for the Treasury pm SR eb i Sa 364 Lusk, Georgia L., War Claims Commission.__. 420 Lutes, Lt. Gen. LeRoy, Office, Chief of Army Field LET Lo Tih om hay Wl Te CEO LC 380 Latin, Louis Donald, Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. oo... 202 Page Lutz, Clarence H., Metropolitan Police_______._ 5 Lyle, Commander J. M., Bureau of Supplies and ACCOUMIR. > nn viii.sara Saabs 389 Lyle, Richard H., Federal Security Agency.____ 460 Lyle, S. P., Extension Servien i eiieetil) 423 Lynch, David B., Tariff Commission. _________ 488 Lynch, Maj. Gen. E. C., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense... ooo Lor putas 526 Lynch, Frank L., Maritime Administration_.__ 433 Lynch, George F., District Corporation Coun- sells Offices...oo phEesNaarnly 523 oo. Lynch, James F., Bureau of Accounts._________ 404 Lynch, John E., Bureau of Internal Revenue... 365 Lynch, Thomas J., General Counsel for the Treasury ios to sonal JO Ee nila "364 Lynch, William L., Office of Secretary of the Treasury 364 Lynham, Cameron B., National Production AULhority: [oh aeonsSAGER anita my 37 Lynn, Col. Clark, United States Soldiers’ OIG... eats i a LR aa I ae Be 487 Lynn, David: Acting Director of Botanic Gardens. ______.___ 303 Architectof the Capital. (ox foianloil “ame 295 Capitol Police Board... _wiyalii: 296 Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Qroands.. 7... sive ll phan alliiod 215 District Zoning Commission. _ ___________.___ 520 Lynn, Fielder J., Washington city post office... 527 Lyon, Maj. Gen. Edwin B., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (management)__ 394 Lyon, Capt. R. H., Naval Air Station__________ 391 Lyon, Tom, Defense Materials Procurement Ageneyis lll asaitue Diode dad ain 340 pli Daniel M., Office of Attorney General.. 399 Lyons, James G., Office of Price Stabilization _ 343 Lyons, Thomas E.: Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. 431 Foreign-Trade Zones Board. ___________._____ 465 Lytle, Harvey O., Railroad Retirement Board__ 481 M McAdam, Sherry T., Jr., Securities and Ex-change Commission... 021 484 -.----...oy McAdams, John, Organization of American States... Jee RU LIOR IDOL Se TLRS 52 McAdams, Oliver E., Federal Trade Com-missions icf odin ota sa cb sai 465 Delany Terry J., Office of Plant and Opera- MATINEE, John A., Federal Housing A dminis-teation_ i... 0. io Clo wn i el JH McAllister, Lambert, Federal Power Com-mission: coal Sl Tar SOURS Cute Abia e 458 McAllister, Thomas Francis, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) ______________ 508 McAndrew, William §S., Superintendent of Platemaking, Government Printing Office__ 302 McArdle, R. E., Forest Service. _ _____.________ 425 McArthur, Earl, secretary to Representative Hiaben= = Ditto poh Gi sib wl 256 NE William, Grain Branch________.____ 426 McAuley, J. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_________ 421 Moni Lt. Gen. C., General Staff, a al nS TR er 379 McBee, ois W., Civil Service Commission___ 452 McBride, John, secretary to Representative Wood ol Idaho we a i 261 McBride, Harry A., National Gallery of Art___ 486 MeBryan, Joseph J., Office of Price Stabilization. 343 McCabe, John, House Minority Official _______ 292 McCabe, Louis C., Bureau of Mines. __________ 411 MecCahill, William P., Bureau of Labor Stand-CY EERE a AIS a i Ben as TT 443 McCahon, William H., Advisory Committee on Voluntary Foreign’ AJQ Cs Sa Rg fe A 447 MecCaig, Nevila E., secretary to Senator Malone. 251 McCallan, Irene, Office of Clerk of the House_-_ 290 Meals, Rev. Raymond, American Red a MeConalom, William F., Bureau of the Budget. 338 McCann, Leo 154 Patent Office ono 439 MecCarrell, Rhoda, secretary to Representative Bryson AA iE Se NT 2 Congressional Directory Page McCarthy, Eugene F., National Production Authority 437 McCarty, Francis, secretary to Senator Lodge_. 251 a Rita E., United States Attorney’s 5 11 Interior SSR LS TE En A STR A SL E01 Sr I STE ERY 405 MecCaughey, Robert, secretary to Senator Mundt: ib nd cs cr a alee 251 McCauley, William, Bureau of Employees Compensation... . rab tetas ade coche 442 MecClarren, J. K., Bureau of Animal Industry.. 419 McCleary, ‘Capt. John P., Joint Mexican-United States Defense Commission... 352 McClellan, Leslie N., Bureau of Reclamation__ 410 MecCleskey, Ben C., Office of the Doorkeeper___ 291 McClure, Brig. Gen. R.A. , Special Staff, Army. 379 McClure, Stewart E., administrative assistant 10 Senator Geto. ooo to. 250 McClurkin, Robert J. G., Bureau of Far East-er AIS eae A 358 McCollum, John P., Housing and Home Fi-nance Agency WEAR Tao ME DR ad Bra ted 469 McComb, eer S., National Production Authority Atle RS neal Ls 2 RTS IN 113A MOY SAR 435 McComb, William R., Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions... _...c.0.o0o.. 443 MecConley, George E., Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ci li. J Lani. 482 sssiiiiivsci McConnaughhay, Commander J. W., Office of Under Secretary of the Navy__.__._______.__. 381 MaGopmel, Beatrice, Bureau of Labor Stand- McConnell, James A., Territorial Official ______ McConnell, Robert C., secretary to Represent-ative Fernandegu o... wul il, Leoniddi 255 McConnell, Robert F., House Committee on Public WOLTERS itive.dain 21 Lull co McConnell, Rear Adm. Robert P.: Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals. 383 Naval Retiring Review Board 83 Naval Sentence Review and Clemency Board. 383 McCool, Ollon D., oan Records Council___ 467 McCormack, Capt. C . G., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery EAE Sp HL LS age 5 ga IRENE 387 McCormack, John W.: Majority Floor Leader, House... -cooooeooooo 289 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee_. 218 McCormack, T. H., Office of Price Stabilization. 343 McCormack, Thomas F. , Bureau of Accounts... 404 McCormick, Charles P Salary Stabilization Board McCormick, Clarence J.: Commodity Credit Corporation. ________...__ 422 Federal Crop Insurance Corporation_________ 424 Prosidsais Advisory Committee on manage- CNT... ol Shoe sna a his ahd Tie Sh i 2 481 SR Secretary of Agriculture. _____________ 415 McCormick, J. H., Office of Information_.._.____ 417 McCormick, James Byron, American National Bed Cross... on 2 oo slime dons belt ois sided 448 McCormick, Maj. Gen. J. H., Office of Person-nel, Air OTC cr ip a 396 McCormick, Margaret, secretary to Representa- tive Dempsey McCornack, Willard F., Geological Survey ..___ McCoy, Frank T., Jr., Office of Assistant Sec- Jory of the Air Force (Management) ._______ 394 McCoy,H. B.: Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 430 Committee on Purchases of Blind-Made POACi od diret et Pray ws National Production Authority McCoy, James F., Office of Ws Doorkeeper, 1 H 29 McCracken, Marian, Office of Secretary oh e-Defensel. oo. Glos eo nel a bale McCrea, Vice Adm. John L.: Naval Examining Board (Flag Officers)... 383 Naval Examining Board (Line) _____._________ 383 Physical Disability -Appeal Board ____________ 385 MecCrillis, William H., Office of Secretary of theldInterlor. 2. soir Lo oo plu bias 405 MecCrimmon, Col. K. A., Office of the Assistant Secretaryofthe Army... _.__. L.... 378 Meglio Edwin B., Maritime Administra- McCrary, Lt. Comdr. T. S., Naval Gun Factory. 391 Page McCue, Josephine, Office of Congressional Daily Digest. oui tue ciate BHA OLR ST 9 McCulloch, Frank W., administrative assistant -to:Senator Douglas... 7000= Shine 24 McCulloch, Mrs. William M., The Congres-gional Club... ooo. J uae Foard Gesinil 455 McCullough, James A., Committee for Reciproc-ity Informations oi toonsoad 0 Jo McCullough, Max, Office of Assistant Secretary 0 McCune, Wesley, Office of Secretary of Agri-CUITULE. co 2x NU TL IS ah el Da 415 MecCurley, James Bernard, Jr. Rural Electri-fication Administration ais 428 [lotioua-McCurry, R. R., Railroad Retirement Board... 481 McCutcheon, Charles R., Securities and Ex- change Commmissiony fey vartuoy tania 484 McCutcheon, William C., Jr., Civil Service ommission. a en ind aoiny Uatioiny 452 McDaniel, C. H., Maritime Administration.____ 434 prisfions. od Li a anni iad andl oe 201 Mosul) W. Thad, secretary to Senator Ore. LL nn asi ar rnin McDermott, Michael J., Office of the Assistant Secretary of State Losecadie vn 357 ll McDermott, Lt. Robert F., Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. ____.___________ 351 McDermott, W. J., Office of Clerk of the House... 290 MeDonald, Bill, U. S. Savings Bonds Division... 365 McDonald, Harry A., Securities and Exchange Commission 483 McDonald, es Office of the Secretary of the Treasury En PE RE eg Tr A 364 McDonald, Brig. Gen. Robert C., United States Soldiers’ Homie. oi soiolvnsidsatadadop in 487 McDonald, R. L. , Federal Maritime Board. .___ 433 McDonald, Willard F., Weather Bureau________ 440 McDonald, W. T. Administrative Office, BVY-LoniZinorth and ty Lal lial el so McDonnell, Eunice O., secretary to Representa-tive Rorrester. .....b 0. 5 oRULL .28 256 MeDomough, Joseph, Office of Price Stabiliza-Jom. coe saa ianna or se Lael de sold McDougall, Kate, secretary to Representa- five MOTTA. es ens cite Hs Odin McDowell, Capt. Ralph §8., Maritime Ad-ministration MTN SOR SIRE RA Ne 433 McElvain, Joseph E., Social Security Admin-istration ase sas brad sr ooh a BER 464 McElveney, John A. B., Office of Senate Ser-geant of APIS Le ata] 286 McElwain, Edwin, Office of General Counsel, Cr SeI SS a Te 394 McEntire, Commander Paul W., Naval Re-tiring Review Board... cc. oaueanaii 383 McEntire, Richard B., Securities and Ex-change Commission. .... cis: cnn oematsiis 483 McEwen, George H., General Services Ad- ministrationaed; -Ju sii 2 ingon JC ghe McFall, Jack K., Assistant Secretary of State... 356 McFarland, Ernest W Joint Committee on Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration... c.f...JE aL 221 Senate majority leader... _________________. 285 McFarland, Mrs. Ernest W., The Congres-SlonalbOlab. Lr Wedges 29008 ul Shiai da) 455 McGann, Joseph H., Sr., House Committee on’ Public Works. Joli Goi 0h lbs 214 McGann, Joseph H., Jr., House Committee ont PUblie Works vie oie ll oli o oobi 214 McGarraghy, Joseph C., National Capital Sesquicentennial Commission SEG HHT SEE 220 McGee, Hugh J., United States Attorney’s Office 5 McGee, Tom, secretary to Representative Barden oc fh Ser oe at Se eh a ped 253 McGeer, Grace, Employees’ Compensation Appeds Board Luli 2S UE oa... 442 Meghes George C., Assistant Secretary of he Serv ices E38 FETE 13 CR 5.300 AA PI TAS 11 RY (0 46 McGill, Kenneth H., Selective Service System... 485 McGill, Mary Ellen, secretary to Representa-tive Primble 2h fie a iii 2850000 261 Individual Index Page Page McGill, Sam P., assistant superintendent, House Office Buildings... ___25:iiv 2. 296 MecGinness, John J., Office of the Shen Postmaster General MecGinnity N., Southwestern Power rik tration... oanRrra an 414 McGrath, D. Harold, Senate Radio Gallery... 584 McGrath, Earl James, Office of Education_____ 462 McGrath, J. Howard (Attorney General): American National Red Cross.._..._......._.__ 448 Blography of a i dn i wen pm et 399 Member, Smithsonian Institution____________ 485 McGrath, Mary F., Office of Sergeant at Avms House. aL iN LE 290 McGregor, J. Harry, Commission on Renova-tion of the Executive Mansion.__.___________ 221 MoGroan, Mrs. J. Harry, The Conaressional : RRS EERIE SI aT 55 -| McGuire, Charles H., Maritime Administra-70 ITT REAL LIAS SIRE cr a At IAT Yat SEE 1 oR 434 McGuire, John A., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy. odadil So. 218 McGuire, Matthew E., judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia _ 509 McGuire, Robert G., Jr., District Undertakers’ Examining Committee...__.. >. 522 McHale, Kathryn, Subversive Activities Con-trol Boan®... a sala er lin 488 McHaney, James M., Small Defense Plants AGMIRISITALION aii nme mais I Ses. J 348 McHugh, Col. Godfrey T., United States Air TT A eC De SR CE IC Rs fe 395 McInerney, James M., Assistant Attorney Gen- | ERE rel eR ss de Be Regn BE RE 399 Meclver, Pearl, Bureau of State Services___.____ 463 McKay, C. G. R., South Pacific Commission___ 487 McKechnie, Capt. Arnold W., Office of Assist- ant Secretary of the Navy FTA. neni 382 McKee, James O., Office of Director of Legisla-on HOD ATG TARO ae 9 McKee, Maj. Gen. John L.: Joint plosion United States Defense Com-YAISSION. Suie i auar if gar dL on es a 52 Joint Brazil: United States Defense Commis- sloma asl uaa tan en al IT 351 Inter-American Defense Board. _____________ 349 Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada- United: States. oo. ool. _ J coaa ia. sii 480 McKee, Maj. Gen. William F., United States A OTC Lo ian ih ra SE] 395 McKeever, Porter, United States Mission to the Unio NallOns. ov. omardensa) ins 362 McKellar, Kenneth: Commission on Renovation of the Executive Mansions drei is onic Lei J dar Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures--iuci 219 ....-co-sio lL National Capital Sesquicentennial Commis-sions sonnal fl amrnaan oy onnesna Vo inal io 20 President pro tempore of the Senate..._______ 285 DiaRaima; Benjamin M., District Public TADEALY css mid ihe oo nd ann SS SRS MoKenna, Frank J., Railroad Retirement’ OA ss hen ean AR SEE ET McKenna, James A., secretary to Senator Pastore EE Ee RT Cn 252 McKenna, William F., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency SE Le PN VOUS Sl 2 McKenna, William F., House Committee on Expendituresin the Executive Departments. 213 McKeough, Raymond §., International Claims Commission of the United States... 361 McKinley, Benjamin H., secretary to Represent-ik ative Rogers of Massachusetts... Moliner, William S., United States Attorney’s Of Watling. oo. oni an a NH gs McKinney, R. S., Bureau of Agricultural and " Industrial Chemistry 0 aes 19 McKinnon, Wylie F., Reconstruction Finance i COTDOTAION on re sme cE em Bn a om mm McKinnon, Clinton D., Joint Committee on +3 Economic Report. ...-=--s-i--ccr-t-oezozz McKnew, Mrs. Donald, Columbia Hospital for . McLachlan, Ann E., secretary to Senator Kem. 251 McLain, Lt. Gen. Raymond S.: National Security Training Commission fs 480 Office, Chief of Cian) United States Army. 379 McLaren, Capt., K. M., Bureau of Ordnance. 388 MecLarney, es i Bureau of Internal TOVOINIID.. Co ce is ins Fania ease Ly McLaughlin, Anna M., United States Attor- ney'siQfficer. tall cL pda snd needy J McLaughlin, Arthur J., United States Attor-EH TTR Se ed I CT McLaughlin, Chiaries F., United States District Court for the District of Columbia. ._.__ McLaughlin, Donald H., National Science Boundotlon: >J 20 aos. ter. DRG 479 McLaughlin, Glenn E., Defense Production Administration oo ior iaeaalaals 342 McLaughlin, John J,, Office of the Secretary of SaheAdr Moree io Ll lest bi sy 394 McLees, John, Office of Clerk of the House. __ __ 290 McLeod, Scott administrative assistant to Senator Bridges NEE ok aman Tn de ASE 249 McLeod, William N., Jr., Hits Committee on District of Columbia... 213 McMahon, Hon. Brien: Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. .________ 220 Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council of BOD: ses tr rs on mmr Pe ae ea AREAL Dh 221 McManus, Francis B., Southwestern Power Administration. Lo. i a Es 414 McManus, William J., Columbia Hospital for WOMB 2, adil Siaon sl fais. 453 McMichael, Virginia, House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs... ___________ 214 McMillan, John L.: National Capital’ Park and Planning Com MISSION. at mn. Cre eke ao tunity SLE 477 National Capital Sesquicentennial Commis-SIO, ole 0 2 Tim Be tin as a hr DIS EB DRIES 220 National Memorial Stadium Commission.___ 220 McMillan, Marguerite, secretary to Representa-five Rede. loc suai. ol Uaitooli aia 259 McMurray, E. Homer, Official Reporter to Honse committees... 2 io. il. i J -igid 293 MeMurray, Joseph P., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency. Daolonl 0 NE a McMurray, PaulH., Commissioner, Court of McNally, James W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 430 McNamara, Brig. Gen. Andrew T., Office of Under Secretary of the Army 377 McNamara, Martin J., Jr., United States Attor-ney’s ot YR Ce 511 McNarney, Gen. Joseph T., Defense Manage-ment, Committee...Bl oo inl HH 373 McNaughton, Gen. A. G. L.: International Joint:Commission....z2.L0: 473 Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada- United -Statesunsiu ooo cata ll. ainiie 480 McNeil, Brig. Gen. E. C., Office, Department eR IE a 378 McNeil, W. J., Assistant Secretary of Defense. 372 MeNeill, Warren A., administrative assistant "to Senator Robertson of Vivginia_____ oo. 252 McPhail, H. F., Bureau of Reclamation________ 410 McPhee, Hugh C., Bureau of Animal Industry__ 41 Melhor, A. T., National Bureau of Stand- FR rn er A gn ry mr 1 Anduewsos Jilin sl Seal mal to aha tl cng McQueen, Brig. as John C., Headquarters Marine Corps. a rin sot sans ore. Sari ad 392 McRae, Dorothy A., administrative assistant to. Senator Millikin... ..o.. coool 251 McRae, Ruth H., Capitol Page School. .._.____ MoShes, John F., Office of Audit 4 McSherry, N. D., Senate Committee on Interior Het Insular A fairs MeVoit, Edward J., Office of Secretary of. AOL ae Rg McWherter, W. R., Court of Customs aid Patent Appeals. Haeitd -.......ceilsevonril McWhorter, Julian H., Government wa Office 302 706 Congressional Directory Page McWhorter, Roger B.: Federal Power Commission. __.___._________._ 458 International Joint Commission______________ 73 McWilliams, William J., Office of Executive Seerdlariati fii onal TL i 357 Macauley, Joseph, secretary to Representative MacBain, Alastair, Fish and Wildlife Service.. 412 Mac Carteney, Richard S., Library of Congress. 302 Macchi, Lt. Col. Rubén M., Inter-American Defense Board... a aa 348 MacComsey, Capt. H. F., Bureau of Aero- nputies, Navy = oi tsi Maga iii: 386 MacDonald, Dr. A. Magruder, District Coroner. 520 MacDonald, Russell, National Capital Park and Planning Commission od ba 477 MacDonald, Thomas H.: Bureau of Public Roads... ooo. 432 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. ane .......crooaeee 217 Mace, Charles H., Office of Assistant Secretary sR a Se 356 Mace, ClarenceM. Washington city post office... 528 MacIntyre, Everette, Federal Trade Commis- EL i Ue BE Re eM SE TS SG Laan 465 Machado, Dr. Luis, Cuban Ambassador. _.____. 532 Machugh, Joseph ¥. ,Petroleum Administration for Defense ERE ae ATS HS ELL Se oh 407 Mack, Clifton E.: Committee on Purchase of Blind-Made Prod- Tr pA BC Se TE ST at LTE a Fodoi Supply Service i. uit oe ia 466 Mad Ons C., Federal Housing Administra- Mach oh A.: Bureau of Foreign and Do-MEStC COMINOICR. «one come imis mien emias 430 Moods Mrs. Russell V., The Congressional oe OD ar ae aE ee i a Mack, Wilber H., Securities and Exchange COmsRIon. ehi nt 483 Mackay, R. A., Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada-United States conn es 480 Maolomls, Vernon G., Bureau of State Serv- Mocs Argyle R., Immigration and Naturali- ORION BEEVIOE eee eo is ears 400 Macklin, W. J., Railroad Retirement Board____ 481 MacLean, Allen D., Maritime Administration. 434 MacLean, C. B. , Bureau of Naval Personnel __ 388 MacLeod, Willis S. , Federal Supply Service.._. 466 MacMilld, Dr. H. a. South Pacific Commis-or Slomieii radi h i el Arts Macon, Maj. Gen. Robert C., Office, Chief of Army Pield Forces. Loi aes 380 MacPhail, Donald B., Bureau of the Budget___ 338 Macpherson, Gregor, Official Reporter, Senate__ 287 MacQuilliam, Joseph H., District Printing and Publications Division. iC.2. i 0.0 520 MacSwan, George S., National Mediation Foard.an tn 478 Macy, bi ohn W., Office of Assistant Secretary of the ATIY. i Lentaba 378 Macy, Edward A., Housing and Home Finance AgeNey.... Jl iH SR SS Se EL 469 Macy, Loring K., Bureau of Foreign and Do-Thestic COMINBICE. site ins ao omin 431 Madden, Joseph Warren, judge, Court of Claims (biography) a SL Bras ds Pe RE Sd EERE 504 Madden, M. K., St. Elizabeths Hospital ___.___ 464 Maddux, Brig. Gen. Harold R. , Office of Opera-27 Madigan, John J., Office of Rent Stabilization... 344 Magdeburger, Mrs. Elviria Z. , District Board of Bducation eer oo iY 521 Magee, Mrs. Clare, The Congressional Club____ 455 Magheru, Mihai, Rumanian Minister. -L i 10 536 Magness, J. R., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering. _._._....__... 421 Magnuson, Warren G., Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy PT RD A 218 Magne Ann K., American National Red = Eee i Le cL RO 44 Magruder, Calvert, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography ) 507 Magruder, Elizabeth R., United States attor-NEN To Sn Coa Li Sa 511 Page Mague, Roscoe E., Office ofthe Chief Post Office InSpeetOr oi el cr a a 404 Mahaffie, Charles D., Interstate Commerce ommission. "Jironines ec Mahaffey, Anna Belle, Veterans’ Administra- tion, Congressional "Service RR AE 268 Mahoney, Edna B., Tariff Commission________ 488 Mahoney, Eldred N., General Accounting Officer: to iid inact tolyr iE 1 rea T 299 Motos, John R., Library of Congress.___.___ 301 Mairs, Mis. E. Donald, American Red Cross.. 448 Maisano, Carmine J., administrative assistant to Senator Pastore Te apatraainil tn SR M0 252 Malenbaum, Wilfred, Office of Financial and Dev elopment Policy TR UNA SR © 59 Malik, Dr. Charles, Lebanonese Minister. _____ 534 ey Delmar, House Periodical Press Gal- emus hrt lh Le Rl Se 592 Li Arthur Hall. onl deaes 256 Mallory, Maj. Donald L., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy hi Henry B., District Engineer Depart-ment os oni un nl re i Li saa 524 3 Malloy, John T , judge, ations Court for the District of ho REE I ry (eh 512 Maloney, John W., National Production Au-thority Rg eR Ee Ee 437 Maloney, Thomas G., Superintendent of Bind-ing, Government Printing Office. oo 302 Manduley, Lyn, Organization of American Si Le a Ra AER LL I EE Ne 353 Service tees eC ar aa dn 428 Manley, John E., The Alaska Railroad. _______ 413 Mann, Clare, Capitol Telephone Exchange ____ 296 Mann, Thomas C., Office of Assistant Secretary of ‘State ED Ee Le a 356 Mann, William M., National Zoological Park.__ 486 Manning, Raymond E., Library of Congress_.. 301 Manning, Stephen C., Jr. Maritime Adminis- Eeln Ene RES Re pre SE 433 Manning, Thomas A., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 431 Mansur, Edward E., Jr., Office of Secretary of tho Sonnto. le i 286 Manvel, Allen D., Bureau of the Census_______ 43 Manwaring, H. Yr, Production and Marketing Administration he mS A A Me Sr a 425 Manzanares, Juan J., House Post Office________ 262 Marburger, Thomas E. , Defense Electric Power Adminbstration. ew hl 407 Marcellino, Joseph F., District Purchasing Di-VISION oe a ARR 520 Marcum, Carlos P., Civil Aeronautics Admin-stration. coc ro. a ie 432 Marcy, Carl M., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations... renar oie 201 Marget, Arthur W., Board of Governors of Fed- eral Reserve System mI TL a 459 Margolies, Daniel F., Bureau of German Affairs. 358 Margolin, Bessie, Office of Secretary of Labor_. 442 Marlin, Luis Mufioz, Governor of Puerto Rico.. 413 Marion, Joseph F., Rural Electrification Ad- ministration eda ee ae EE Ti 428 Maris, Albert Branson, judge, Emergency Court of Appeals (biography) Bd abide Rd a a LE 507 Maris, Maj. Gen. Ward H: Interdepartmental mite on Scientific Research and Development_ ________._______ 472 Office of Technical Services. o-oo coeoeaeeo. 439 Research and Development Board._________.__. 373 Markey, D. John, American Battle Monuments Commission: oe 0 uo naan 447 Markey, George W., Jr., Office of the General Compl. oe Si The 384 Markham, Leon J., United States Savings Bonds Division: i. LL on Clann ME Edward G., Jr., Assistant Secretary of RE Ra Ee Miller, Savard Tz Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy______ Federal Records Couneil. ..___._______.___.__ Ma ihn Edward T u Miller, Esther P., secretary to Representative Millerof Californias ox. ob bo ot cnebt anid Miller, Col. Frederic H., Jr., Director of Legisla- Hon and Linison = nettdate Miller, Frieda S., Women’s Bureau__-..___._.___ Miller, George E, Bureau of Transportation... Miller, Gordon MN, Bureau of Accounts__._____. Miller, Harold C., administrative assistant to Senator Kilgore Sp eT Ss Sa Lad Miller, Harold C., Bureau of Mines____________ Miller, Harvey L., District Boxing Commission. Miller, Henry, Federal Trade Commission... Miller, Herman I., Poultry Branch_____________ Miller, H. S., Patonih OmHee. evenae ie Miller, Jo Zach 3d, Veterans’ Education Appeals Bond: A Miller, Justin, Salary Stabilization Board._.____ Miller, Leo L., Federal Security Agency. .._.._. Miller, Lois M., secretary to Senator Murray... Miller, Margaret, Joint Committee on the Eco- nomic Report Miller, Air Vice Marshall F. R., Permanent : oint Board on Defense, Canada-ae yi TEE let ale Jr Come elie Loti 213 261 584 388 417 451 375 479 257 - 442 42 256 293 349 351 480 460 259 302 507 419 258 296 296 433 519 413 476 5 56 467 258 394 444 402 40 251 412 521 464 426 439 490 344 460 251 219 Individual Index Page Page Miller, Paul L., Official Reporters of Debates, oh Hou a I CA ei en Ps DARE Miller, Cm Office of Assistant Post-master General’. Ll L0G LIU S17 HDT 403 Nr Raymond C., Board of the Foreign BEVIOB viresrd rea es Miller, R. L., Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. iron ari ee pu dd SL IEC 367 Miller, Robert M., Office of Clerk of the House. 290 Miller, Mrs., Robin R., Department of Public Wellore. oc nen ama Span BUSI EL 5 526 Miller, Russell D., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporationtiifis: fil sade) Dity asm DOL 437 Miller, Seward E., Bureau of State Services.___ 463 Miller, Brig. Gen. T., Jr., Office of Matériel_.___ 397 Miller, Lt. Col. T. A., Office of Secretary of the Afr Forge Jolin SL 0 D000RT ES 394 BOBO Miller, Thomas H., Bureau of Mines. __._______ 411 Miller, Col. Walter I., Office of Comptroller__.__ 396 Miller -Walter L., Commodity Exchange Authotfity ft 10 000TH, on Si LU] 4992 Miller, Wilbur K., circuit judge, Court of Appeals of the Distriet of Columbia Circuit DIOZIaPNY) ou vio rrr aga ewe br 3 Miller, William A., Federal Fire Council _____._ 468 Miller, William M., Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives (biography of)... ______ 291 Miller, William W., Munitions Board.__.___._. 375 Milligan, Augusta G., secretary to Senator Douglag. 00000 000. So LETRA AE, UC 249 Milligan, E. J., District Public Utilities Com-NISSION tainHIS eos 527 Milliken, Capt. Rhoda J., Women’s Bureau, Metropolitan Polleg. i. CU nti Loins 526 Millikin, Eugene D.: Joint Committee on Atomic Energy HT 220 Soin: Committee on Internal Revenue Taxa-3 fon Lh Oth TE Sh LL 16 Millis, Set William R., Bureau of Ships______ 389 Miliner, Walker L., American Red Cross... 449 Milionzi, Robert i Securities and Exchange Commission © 02 22 ll ado ugt ody 483 as Aub C., Inland Waterways Corpora- Milla. Chatles E., Economic Stabilization gen Mills, Clyde M., Federal Mediation and Con-elation Servite. Lois ae air 457 Mills, Fred U., Office of the Assistant Post-master-General..........LUUUI0 0 DIU 535 402 Mills, James M., Capitol Police ___._____.._.__. 2 Mills, Brig. Gen. John -S., Continental Com-mands Mills, Shifty N., Interstate Commerce Com-~ TASSION: coos SOI EDR LT Lan 474 Mills, Mrs, Wilbur D., Congressional Club____ 454 Mills, W. L., secretary to, Representative Budge. 254 Milne, James N., Office of the Minority Leader._ 289 Milner, R. T., Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial Chemistry. ....... [CUE 418 Milstead, Kenneth L., Food and Drug Adminis- tration Cer La RRS A LARA SL VTS MAI SUR Ae 461 Milton, Maj, Gen. Hugh M., Special Staff_____ 379 Milton, Lorimer D., Howard University__.__.._ 461 Minderman, Earl, Federal Communications Commission... 1.0 70 Daten © Dot 456 Minnich, Robert E., General Services Adminis-tration: oll QA UE wun DUGROL CSTE 466 Minor, Leroy T., Bureau of Employes Com-PENSAUON. Cos icoooiicarcoronoalil 442 coisora ai Minor, Robert W., administrative assistant to = Sengtor-Bricker. .-..--cocosizzeooJol HEE Minor, William A., Office of Secretary of Agri- eudture UCL BCE A LT ag Ad LTT 415 Minot, Henry W., administrative assistant to Senator Saltonstall Minotto, James, Mutual Security Agency... ____ Minton, Sherman, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States (biography)... __ Ma Ruth, secretary to Representative Mitchell, James M., Civil Service Commission... 452 Mitchell, J. Murr ay, Office of Defense Mobiliza-Roo i oa ~ 2 Jie anol HUISSIILTIG Mitchell, fandon, Office of the Doorkeeper a Mitchell, Lawrence, secretary to Ropresopintiee o Goodwin Mitchell, Capt. Louis D., Naval Dental School. 20 Li itchell, Richard F., Interstate Commerce ration fa BUR Pa AS RRR a RL CR a EAT Mitchener, Joseph J., National Production Authority. Goi0I0 a 00 Doiiiid oot 28045 31 437 Mitman, Carl W., National Air Museum. _____ 486 Mittendor, C. 0, Defense Minerals Explora- _ tion Sli par tment Rg = HES oS RE SR Et ed 483) Mock, H. Byron, Bureau of Land Management. Moftat, Abbot L., Mutual Security Agency.____ Mohagen, Verna C., Soil Conservation Service. Mohler, Dr. William, District Veterinary Medi- cine amines Board Moley, Dan, Office of Clerk of the House... ____ 290 Moline, Edwin G., Office of Economic Defense and Trade Poliey il iota, i0, 1 o8ncits) 358 Molinean, Sadie, House caucus rooms. ___.______ Moling, Walter H., secretary, Court of Claims. _ Mollison, Irvin C., judge, Customs Court (DIOZTAPAY cnn si sad sa aap et pO] Mollohan, Robert H., Senate Committee on Bistrict-of Columbia. io 201 oi...22000 Molloy, James H., Office of the Commandant, Coast bone me Monta Peter J., United States Attorney’s Monkiewicz, Boleslau J., Board of Parole. _____ 400 Monroe, Marvin E., secretary to Representative Betts ity Monson, Ruth L., Office of Assistant Secretary of Defense PAT A A EE a SL LEO 372 Montag, Harold A.: Defense Materials Procurement Agency... 340 National Production Authority. _.__.____.__.__ 437 Montague, Edwin N.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service... 361 Office-of Personnel... ivi ios iT ..oaiaco 360 Montanye, Frances, House Committee on Veterans’ Affalrs. TUEEE 3090900 214 Montaquila, Anthony I., Board of Immigration Appegls oD SF ABUL ID HRGGTIELY 400 Montgomery, Capt. Douglas, Inter-American Defense. Board. coco: ao coccrizrrioiinniils 349 Montgomery, Edison, Office of Price Stabil-Iration. leastBIR WOE] 343 Mongomery, Leonard L., Veterans’ Adminis- tration Congressional Service... ___.____.___ 298 Montgomery, Sam B., American Red Cross____ 449 Montgomery, William, District Public Library. 522 Moons Dr. Juan A., Pan American Sanitary $ EER RS SS AR RRL LS RS Me Tp Ae By 5 Monty, Willis E., Veterans’ Education Appeals Board. [10 Lone seni LF HUSRGT Br 490 Moon, Joseph W., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Moon, Lowell B., "Bureau of Mines... HOLST 411 Mooney, Raymond M., Office of the Sergeant at Arms, Senate... IOI ei fe Fai 286 Moore, Lt. Col. C. J., Jr., United States Air Ys) I es Saag ges Se Sh LEO SER 1 395 Moore, C.'W., Patent: Offiee 1222 ili: i 439 Moore,Ernest -G.,-Agricultural Research Ad- -ministration. JOHG HN kalnas GER Hou 18 Moore, George E., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Management) ...-..__.__.. 394 Moore, George M., House Committee on Post Office and Civil Serviee: [| I0U00L HITUIL GIT 214 Moore, J. Francis, Home Loan Bank Board____ 470 Moore, John, House folding room ____._____.__.__ 201 Moore, J ohn E., Office of the Secretary of De- EE Re AE Ces SP pa 371 Moore, Lane A., Bureau of Dairy Tndustry asl] 420 Moore, Mar garet, E., Office of Industrial Rela-n i Remi EA SE EL a RR LL MR 3 Moore, Martin L., Office of the Secretary of the RYeaSUYY c-Sr rn Sno RE EE Sn SLT RIES OE SH 363 Congressional Directory Page Moore, M. B., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and I 1 FE I a Ee SCN ll ts iE pe fo 472 Moore, Phillips, Civil Aeronautics Administra-17477 EpRel LB RR Ae 0 SN IT Ah Lt tf Ad SL 32 Moore, Brig. Gen. Robert S., Office of Assistant Secretary of .3.i. 0 “coil Defense... 372 Moore, Ross E., Office of Foreign Agricultural Relntions. auido ot i cesta i sary rors 416 Moore, Wiley L., Federal Civil Defense Admin-istration: co os tira lad ae BR TRY 347 Moore, William H., Joint Committee on the Eeonomic Report. ....ocreeee-roee nama 219 Moore, William H., Office of the Assistant Secre-laryol the Navy. ri Sn adae 382 Moore, William L., Farm Credit Administra- Mora, Dr. José A.: Organization of American States._..__..______ Uruguayan Ambassador... occ oi. 537 Moran, James O’Donnell, District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board Morano, Albert P., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy.......-218 Morehouse, P. B., Federal Trade Commission. -Morellet, Jean, International Labor Organiza- Homi ain’ voir ee an RN aR TE 350 Morgan, Arja, Interstate Commerce Commis-si on Morgan, Earl J., Office of the Doorkeeper, 15 Gr oie ape Vor ST MEER Oe 291 Morgan, Edward P., Office of Price Stabiliza-{A eeeBn Te EA eh 343 SR Morgan, George W., Library of Congress___.____ Morgan, G. Warren, National Production Au- Bhoriby. oi. dee ar aed ni Tad 436 Morgan, Harry L., Office of Personnel._________ 367 Morgan, John D., Defenge Production Admin- Biratlon: oon ced cen bani Tl atonal oy 341 Morgan, Nathan V., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation...ai. oid ii 470 Morgan, Sally, House folding room __________.__ 291 Morgan, Samuel D., Reconstruction Finance COrDOYAHION. oro andre sa de ditt L os 482 Morgan, Thomas A., President’s Advisory Committee on Management________________ 481 Morine, Capt. Leon H., Office of the Comman-dant. Coast 2 sooebit odo ot 366 Guard... Morison, H. Graham, Assistant Attorney Gen-TOT trota arnt MEE rE IC Rs Morison, Samuel E., trustee of Franklin D. Roosevelt Library... szoa2of Soeocotel 468 Moritz, Ernest A., Bureau of Reclamation._.____ 410 Morén, Alonzo G., Caribbean Commission____. 451 Morris, Alice, secretary to Representative = De sn Sele rela DE CLER ae 260 Morris, Edgar, District Public Welfare Board._. 522 Morris, Edmund T.: Defense Production Administration. _________ 341 National Production Authority... _.___.__ 437 Morris, Helen E., Office of the Minority Leader. 289 Morris, H. H., Administrative Assistant to Senator Underwood... zo. =r ous l 252 Morris, James W., judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia_________ 509 Morris, Joseph C., National Science Foundation_ Morris, Lee M., Defense Solid Fuels Adminis- APR ON ae a i bh hn AE Se ln Sale ents 408 Morris, Toby, Joint Committee on Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration. .....-w-----22_-2--= 221 Morris, Una Rita, District Corporation Coun-EEO He EE le Ee 523 Morris, Virginia, secretary to Representative Bush 254 Morrison, Alice Angus, Women’s Bureau______ Morrison, Belle L., secretary to Representative i Ae I ST an Re I ee 254 Morrison, Bess V., Bureau of Human Nutrition -and Home Economies. ......-o-_----ooawaol 420 Morrison, B. Y., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering_____..___ 421 Morrison, C. K., Office. of Personnel Manage- ment Morrison, Frances, Office of Clerk of the House. Morrison, Loyle A., Tariff Commission.___.____ 488 Morrison, Paul F., Office of Clerk of the House. Morrison, Richard M., Petroleum Administra- ION OT DEIONEO oo maser am i i er a 407 Page Morrow, T. B., Patent Offiee les. rw 439 Morrow, Theodore F., Federal Mediation and Conellintion Servite. tod avail 45% sooliol Morrow, William L., General Accounting Office. 299 Morsberger, Eustis E., Government Printing BRIO. 2 ote oo om te om Ee i SY 302 Morsch, Lucile M., Reference Department Library ol Congress... .. oo. ._oZ_codi.. 300 Morse, David A., International Labor Organ- VE ON, hs on ad a hdres coi we Bs td mm ee Fi 350 Morse, Huntington T.: Combined Shipping Adjustment Board, United States and Great Britain_____._____ 348 Maritime Administration... --c-aea-o- Morse, Marston, National Science Foundation. 4 Morse, Wayne, United States Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission___.._.____ 218 ‘Morse, Wilbur L., Office of the General Counsel. Morss, A. Patricia, Department of Public Wallare..: .oimeaiinesdo La bE fr ti Mortimer, Frank H., Director of Typography and Design, Government Printing Office... 302 Mosbaugh, Harrell F., Office of Secretary of the IIa IO sons lr i ie sm Em EL 406 Mosby, Dennis, Office of Clerk of the House___ 290 Mosby, Leonard W., Bureau of Reclamation... 410 Moscoso, Alfonso, Organization of American SET DIE na ST me ARR ray EN ge 353. Moseman, A. H., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering__...___. 421 Moses, Mrs. Radford, District Welfare Board. 522 Moss, Edward K.: Defense Production Administration... 341 National Production Authority... ._..____ 435 Moss, Rear Adm. J. B., Bureau of Aeronautics. 386 Mote, Lynn E., administrative assistant to Senator Butler of Nebraska... ___....____ 249 Motley, Arthur W., Bureau of Employment EEVEN kr a alll es ERA RR SE Ep 442 Motley, Emmett J., District Corporation Coun- CEERI 1 er i BC ll ee 0, Eee 523 Motyka, Jean T., United States Attorney’s (0%[1 a eR Fi pt SP RR MER 510 Mountin, Asst. Surg. Gen. J. W., Bureau of State Servis. caerot mR i 463 Mourot, Anna M., secretary to Representative Murray of Tennessee, —---ccvwmomnsvmnamm—— 259 Mowitt, Glendon J., Geological Survey___.__._. 409 Mouser, C. M., Senate Committee on Agricul- ture'and Forestry... ..coe-a-cneiceaa=enas 201 Moyer, Esther, District Nurses’ Examining 57071 ps Ee ET a nb SS SER pa Te RE 521 Moyer, Lawson A.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service._. 361 Qivil Service Commission... --------—--_-I_ 452 Moyer, Robert L., House Committee on Ap- DIOPLIGIONS oi iso stn aos Se au Semmens 213 Muchin, Jacob, Office of Rent Stabilization._.. 344 Muck, Lee, Office of Assistant Secretary of the iBr eI Re Lg Lh 406 DOr Mudd, Robert L., District Auditor’s Office... 519 Mudge, Verne D., Senate Committee on Armed Berviees ss et SE de ar at Muesebeck, C. F. W., Bureau of Entomology and: PlantiQuarantine.z 2: -if . .acew.= 420 Mullady, Bernard R., Office of Salary Stabili- ZALIONE 3 od hs see bea mo ele RR 2 Ei BS 0 345 Mullaney, Joseph E., Library of Congress Mullen, Frank E., Interstate Commerce Com- I IOI «mn a Sh San Se ER RA BS 474 Mullen, Marguerite, secretary to Representative 1015 LTE op det Ce Baie ST Sg A 255 Mullen, Robert, Mutual Security Agency... 475 Mulligan, M. C., Civil Aeronautics Board.__... Mulloy, Thomas E., Capitol Police ......_.___ 296 Mulvaney, A. J., Administrative Office, Navy. 382 Mulvihill, Bernard M., Bureau of Accounts_._ 368 Mumford, Luther H., Library of Congress... Munholland, Capt. J., Bureau of Naval Person-- NEL te A nL a EA SSL A 8 Munn, Charles, secretary to Representative 8 ETE FT ER TI 261 Munro, Leslie Knox: Far Eastern Commission... oveooo oC 456 New Zealand i 535 Ambassador..iceoenen--- Munro, Sterling, Office of the Doorkeeper.._..-291 Munster, Walter N., Reconstruction Finance Corporation eT Ns 482 Individual Index Page Munthe de Morgenstierne, Wilhelm, Norwegian Ambassador... i... li ie REE IEE 535 Murdaugh, Capt. A. O., Office of Secretary of Defense oe SUES SN ODI A the B DEA Rin Moro, Abe, National Labor Ni Board init) 1000es Sep fe 0b IIUIUE ad Mites J. Edgar, judge, Tax Court of OS Unllod Sates. oor i sina Ad ea iy Murdock, John R., Joint Committee on Novi Hopi Indian Administration. _______________ 221 Murdock, John W., District Department Co Weights, Measures, and Markets... 0... Murdock, William 0. National i Roto Board 00a 0 ati ae Bs 478 Murff, G. R., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System iA ere) i 459 Murphree, Eger V., Atomic Energy Commis-1% slongsire dul LO SUT IC LS Murphy, Commander Charles P., Office op Merchant Marine Safety. ______.._____.____ Murphy, Charles S., Special Counsel to far Presidents U0 uct h, JU death ln HAI 338 Murphy, DanielJ., Federal Trade Commission. wi Murphy, E. J., Grain Braneh'.. lloilo. 426 Murphy, Francis T., Office of Financial and Development Tolley... ralsoil i.e 359 Murphy, George W., secretary to Representa- tive Sti George. ion UL Unogy 260 Murphy, James R., Office of the Asn Postmaster Qenerals Lui TT Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Senate__ w Murphy, John, secretary to Representative Sleminslds [O00 BEDS Lil Sal SLi 260 Murphy, John E., Office of Director for Mutual oy Security Murphy, hi F., Office, Department Counse-a lor Muto, P. F., Railroad Retirement Board._._ Murphy, Paul "William, Organization of a ican States 353 Murphy, Richard W., National Production 3 Authority Dancy JERSIUHES 03 437 Murphy, Col. RussellW., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission REA CER TET 218 Murphy, Thomas F., Farm Credit Administra- 423 Murphy, Thomas F., Patent Office. _._________ 439 Murphy, Thomas M., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue sation...lis 216 Murphy, Thomas W., Commission on Mental Health 0 Murphy, Veva F., Roosevelt onl 2 00 Ue Se Dit Murphy, Vincent R., House post offleers i oi Murphy, William A.: Defense Production Administration _.________ National Production Authority Murphy, William E., HARE and Exchange Commission. ri i GMO) Murrah, Pauline, American Red Cross.________ Murray, Charles A., administrative assistant to Senator Murra Many, Charles B., United States Attorney’s Murray, H. D., Munitions Board.________ LAE Murray, John F. , National Mediation Board __. 478 Murray, Mary o Senate Committee on Finance. 201 Murray, Philip: Amerfean Bed Cross coisl 448 Lol Lalu Nitonal Advisory Board on Mobilization Polic Murray, ober V., Metropolitan Police De-partment 526 Murray, Thad S., secretary to Representative HardVo oo J spe ia dss ta nan, Col Rs 256 Murray, Yom E., Atomic Energy Commis-449 Capitol 295 Mursell, Jack, Joint Committee on Printing___ 215 Murtha, Donald M., Office of Secretary of OT aanpn og ty 442 Muspiave, George W., Soil Conservation Serv-i. TNE OS EE CEE RE I SOS a Te 28 Page Myers, Frank H., judge, Municipal Court for the District/of i. 512 Columbia.....L. Myers, George H., Columbia Hospital for (0) 1110)160m Sen a i A ty bd ar A L135 ee 1 C3. 453 Myers, Lawrence, Sugar Branch___.___:.______ 426 Mya Robert J., Social Security Aindins lon ny 10. DN anne eee ae 464 Myers, Nil Assistant Postmaster General ________________ 403 Federal Fire Council. ________ SEL Raat 468 Myers, WilliamI., Advisory Committee on Vol-untary Foreign Adis tor with ciflacdaly 447 Myers, W. M., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... i000iil 421 Mynatt, Edward F., Office of the Solicitor. ___ 418 | Myrick, Lowell, Board of Governors of the Fed-eral Reserve System... oon 45% ; N Nabrit, James M., Jr., Howard University... _ 461 Nabuco, Mauricio, Brazilian Ambassador... ____ 531 Nadal, Commander Fernando Muro. de, Inter- American Defense Board _____________ 349 Nadel, Dr. Aaron B., Research and Develop- ment Board ipl ewan OL Bagias oti 374 Nagle, John L., Public Buildings Service.._____ 466 Nagro, Blanche F., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. Ue ULLi00 Jr 00 216 Naim, Sardar Mohammad, Afghanistan Am- bassador..... Uoiolindlcol luo, LAIUE 531 Namias, Jerome, Weather Bureau_._.___._______ 440 ha Guillermo, Organization of American 3 mm a dpe Lhe MELEE A BIRT or 52 Nash, Earl A., National Production Authority. 436 Nash, Frank O.: Office of Assistant to the Secretary of Defense. 373 United States Mission to the United Nations. 362 Nash, Harry C., Office of Sergeant at Arms, Cee Slene ae 286 Natu, W. R., International Monetary Fund._._ 350 Nazary, Johnnie G., House post office_....__._. 292 Neal, Harry E., Secret Service______._______._.._. 368 Neale, John R., Institute of Inter-American ATES ete 361 Nearman, Harold B., American Red Cross. _.._. 449 Neas, Ernest C., Federal Crop Insurance Cor- poration. ili ares Di aia HEED 424 nage Nedrow, Ray W., secretary to Representative Harrison of Nebraska. i....._. FARE 56 Nedrow, William M., Municipal Court for the District.ofl Columbifa......cicancacaaae0 ll 512 Neely, Matthew M.: National Capital Park and Planning Com-mission ih Sa Dain ac sete ai 477 National Capital Sesquicentennial Comumnis-SION i Ga nnd s d iti iem A SA LE id LE Neese, E. Jone, secretary to Representative Radwan,...0J.J00000. ik IJ 000 Jil. 259 Nehru, BY i International Bank for Recon-struction and Development... 20080,iC] 350 Neighbors, -George J., Southwestern Power Administration pment wtih LR DEE GL 414 Nelly Edward F., Sr., Commission of pine ARB RAE SIL Re es Ie BRR YEE 1 Sa Ue VE SERN 9. Neilson, George D., judge, Municipal Cont for the District of Columbia... 00008 ni 512 Neilson, Keith, National Park Service..__..___. 410 Neimo, Capt. Peter J., Board of Review, Dis- . charges and Dismissals... __ 388 Nelson, Daria, secretary to Representative 57:4 Hert 25 Nelson, ia P., Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy 218 Nelson, Curtis J., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Nelson, Dorothy A, secretary to Representative urdock Hider dard HG gE hdd di 259 Nelson, Elmer K., Senate Committee on In-terior and InsularfARairso cc Local oaqd 2 Nelson, Elmer M., Food and Drug Adminis-trations. co hi bacutolyGrabeel sdas Ar 461 Nelson, Erwin E., Food and Drug Adminis-tration Ramtec el Con Sl er ch a A TLS 461 Nelson, Fred A., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve SySbeny ro ooo pasannSh 459 Myer, Dillon S., Bureau of Indian Affairs______ 409 Nelson, Capt. George W., Office of Operations__ 367 Myers, Elizabeth R., secretary to Representa- Nelson, Howard M., Office of Secretary of the TIVE TMCAS. oii raion aa wn A iI 258 Treasury I IO 5 181 tLe (of 364 Congressional Directory Nelson, H. T., Bureau of Reclamation___...__. 410 Nelson, Maj. Gen. M. R., Office of Develop-ment 396 Nelson, Nancy, secretary to Representative oudert Nelson, Neal D., secretary to Senator Welker___ Nelson, Norman J., District Board of Educa- OTE 2 i or ne se fo Biriete ot SANS SE 521 Nelson, Otto L., President’s Advisory Com- mittee on Management. ___...___..._..__._. 481 Nelson, Wesley R., Bureau of Reclamation_____ 410 Nerren, Sophia Ottis, secretary to Representa- tive. Combs. gs ou i a asset, oh Nh en 254 Nesline, Frank J., District Board of Steam Engineers. bcull lo mdi ol bute nll J 522 Nettleton, Leigh IL., Board of Immigration PD! rr Ea Sal DR EE I (CT 400 Netto dos Reys, Brig. Gen. Luiz L.: Inter-American Defense Board. ______________ Joint, Brazil-United States Defense Commis- La ey Col. Gustav A., Office of Assists Secretary of the Air Force He alia de ait STL Neubert, A. M., Bureau of Agricultural a Industrial Chemistry Sie LM elie XG SE BC Tn 419 Neville, James F., Federal Housing Adminis- tration iu coe cops nat mili Ll ial a 471 Neville, Philip, Office of Price Stabilization 343 Newberry, Cammann, administrative assistant to:Senator Lodge... . costal dates 251 Newburg, Cecile J., National Production Authority... soc uaih amilaucidl ahold ai 436 Newcomer, Brig. Gen. Francis K., Governor, Panama: Canal zc oli ie aes 480 Newell, Sterling, R., Bureau of Agricultural Economics bi mami A EE ALT 415 Newhall, Beatrice, Organization of American States TN en EL RRO HS el re a 352 Newland, Robert W., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commeree.........-_osooz: ._ 431 Newlin, James E., National Mediation Board._. 478 Newlon, Lt. Col. Clarke F., Office of Public Information, Defense... .......i_ o_o. 376 Newman, Andrew L., Jr., Defense Solid Fuels Administration. oo. al lee 408 Newman, Helen, librarian, United States Supreme Court. «oo jonah anal Newman,J. B., Smithsonian Institution.______ Newman, John W., Office of the Majority Leader, House 289 thority Re dig LER RE Newman, Samuel L., Defense Transport Administration... cic ols Loin diva 342 Newmark, Howard J., Office of Secretary of the:Adr Fores: iat cobuposialy Toviid) inven 3963 Newsom, Herschel D., National Advisory Board on Mobilization Poliey....____.______ 347 Newton, Andrew E., Office of the Assistant Postmaster Generalosei oooSiH Lik 402 Newton, James E., Securities and Exchange Commission pases Loanenntl ooits 484 Newton, Donald L., Office of Assistant oe masteriGenerals. 50 an U8 buadeklr s Nibecker, Rear Adm. P. B., Office of rr Materials odo.lo deans, oo a 385 Niblack, Donald R., Office of the Assistant Postmaster General SL login. isu cae 402 Nicastro, Nicholas, Office of the Doorkeeper____ 291 Nichols, Cecil M., Civil Service Commission___ 453 Nichols, Jesse R., Senate Committee on HET Daren a a eae UY TE 201 Nichols, John R., Federal Civil Defense Ad-ministration nnn ER ER Ee 1 347 Nichols, Louis B., Federal Bureau of Investi-EHI pC EE Ne CL er eC I ST 400 Nichols, Mark L., Soil Conservation Service... 428 Nichols, Philip, Jr.: Office of General Counsel, Treasury. ____._____ 364 Renegotiation Board. loc niin ul fia. 483 Nichols, Samuel M., American Red Cross.__._ 449 Nicholson, Donald L., Office of Consular Affairs. 360 Nicholson, Mrs. Donald W., the Congressional 8]11 Ee ae SE SR Se i To WD 455 Nicholson, James T., American Red Cross.____ 448 Nickerson, George W., International Fisheries Cormission. =z. . iii. oh waaay] 473 Page Nicol, Mary Belle, Court of Customs ae Patent Appeglg-ry (rol vom katte 3 Niederlehner, Leonard L., Munitions Board. _. a Nielson, Leo, Reconstruction Finance Corpo-rational conc loindians nan de 482 Niemi, William J., Alaska Road Commission__ 413 Nieto del Rio, Félix: Chilean Ambassador...ei oh. _ 532 Organization of American States._____________ 353 Nigh, June, House Committee on Foreign Affairs a Ls Le BL 213 Nigro, Victor, Inter-American Tropical Tuna COI I eeSe ay 472 Nikkel, Earll Hi Federal Crop Insurance Cor-BOTAION A L310 Sault i aa Feu ighe Sa ir 424 Niles, Mary Cushing, Civil Service Commis- Nipe oO aiin H., Library of Congress. __.___._ 301 Nisonger, Austin M., National Bureau of Standards... oteLuau lo edd 1 434 Nitz, Paul G., House Post Office__._____.______ 292 ip Bi H., Office of Assistant Secretary of 357 Noble, ed Bernard: Office of Public Affairs. olaie li oil Nodional Historical Publications Commis- 467Noh, A | District Health Department. 525 Noble, Lindsley H., Atomic Energy Commis- Not ey, Eli E., Senate Committee on Ex-penditures in Executive Departments______ Nolan, John L., Processing Department, Li-brary of Congress i. coi itaia i ats 301 Nolan, Dr. Thomas B.: Geological Survey... odoin 409 Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development... ..-........ 472 Nolen, John, Jr. District Z oning Adjustment Board .___.______ 522 National Capital Housing Authority. ________ 477 National Capital Park and Planning Com- TRISSION cc 8. caus Sahai a Se I aa Non don D., secretary to Representative BMPS: i 1 CAREER 0.03 UL pt WF Pe Cy Lr IT Fl 256 Notion Frederick E., Office of Deputy Under Secretary of BER st snaa GEL 356 Noon, Ruth P., Senate Committee on Rules and Administration... iota... 0 Noone, Charles M., Senate Select Committee on. Small Business. J Jao lis 1 Noone, Marjorie E., Office of Coordinator of Information... icusoi oid gel did eC nit 294 Noonan, Hugh §., Bureau of Post Office Opera- Noorlander, J. C., South Pacific Commission___ Nordbeck, Theodore M., Office of Libraries and Intelligence-Acquisition. =...“ li. 361 Nordquist, Arnold V., Bureau of Agricultural TI CONOMICE. var an ode edi ms iI SL 415 Norfleet, William J., Federal Communications Commission: o. Lolo, eoiiag.ainda an 5 456 Norgren, William A., Municipal Court for the Disttict of Columbia. on aro niiitia 512 Norman, J. William, secretary to Representative Bennett of Florida ed et Th La 253 Norman, Matthew W., House Post Office. _.___ 292 Norrell, Beatrice Herda, secretary to Repre- sentative Barrett ooo Loto rita 253 Norrell, Mrs. William F., Clu ib RE par i a ee Ab 1 A TC AeA 455 Norstad, Lt. Gen. Lauris, Oversea Commands__ 398 North, Roy M., Postmaster, Washington city post Offigeont res onl fa re et 527 North, Brig. Gen. Thomas, American Battle Monuments Commission... ...-. to -~mwr-tax 4 Northrop, Ralph C., Office of Assistant Post-Maier General am mmm Sa pa 403 ites Northrop, Vernon D., Office of Secretary of the EraTr BL SN I BR SS Sa i 405 Northrup, Fred B., Federal Crop Insurance Corporations. Cot aaa SL dio 424 Norton, Alice B., House Committee on Public : Individual Index Page Norton, E. M,, Dairy Branch_.__-____.__.._____ 426 Norton, Edward L., Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System... _________. 459 Norton, Ethan A., Soil Conservation Service... 428 Norton, Garrison, Office of the Special Assistant (Air Force) 9 Non 1ak Col. John, Office of the Secretary oy the Ary. Disc l i on RRL VBI Sidi Norvell, Col. Frank C., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Army Nottingham, C. T., District License Bureau. __ ” Notz, Cornelia, Tariff Commission... 488 Noyes, Charles P., Office of Assistant to $aot Secretary of Defense... .o.. sios Dalat] Noyes, Guy E., Board of Governors of the ods eral Reserve System. ....... LECT ai ni] 459 Nucker, D. P., Office of Territories__._._________ 412 Nufer, "Albert -F., Bureau of Inter-American Affairs MATE ROA NG oh RI NCEA RR BRE 1 4A oe STR 57 Numbers, Guy W., Office of Secretary of the Interior visita Ae SLU Nola 2a Lg 406 Nufiez, Col. Gabriel, Inter-American Defense Beoardu oso a. SL nin, RLU 49 Nunneley, Emory T., Jr., Civil Aeronautics Board dt fol ooro LL RSL SU HIDUH LL 451 Nussbaum, Hymie, District Corporation Coun- SelPsiOfficer int cn [OL AL 2 LT 523 Nussear, Edmund C., Bureau of Accounts____.._ 368 Nye, Farlin B. , American National Red Cross... 448 Nykopp, J ohan A., Finnish Legation ___.______.. 533 Nylander, Louise ¥; Office of Secretary of Agri- colburel ae la Te SAREE 415 Nyman, Dr. Seward P., District Board of Podi-otry Examiners....... ioe. ocica cna id 521 Nyrop, Donald W.: Air Coordinating Committee Civil Aeronauties Board... ii (ico.liL National Advisory “Committee for . Aero- nanbiesoOo Sl a LL TL B00 Lay 476 ; Oo Obal, Thaddeus J., Joint Committee on the Economic Report Sanrrras dibs. 2000 1 0 219 0’Bannon, Commander Albert L., Office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy £00005 390 Obear, Legare, Reference Department, Library of ‘Congress 2 EE BR A tg ee i Ee 3 O’Brian, J ohn Lord.: National Advisory Board on Mobilization Polley. 0 Eire co TiSa No BL O02 347 Woatioston National Monument Society. ____ 490 O’Brien, Dan, administrative assistant to Sen- ator Hickenlooper. ULL JL JO, JOAN)0 250 O’Brien, Denis A., Bureau of Accounts__________ 404 O’Brien, James C., Office of Education__________ 462 O’Brien, John As, Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor poration LoTR G, LE al 470 O’Brien, John T., Office of Rent Stabilization. __ 344 oO’ Brien, Joseph "Edward, Rural Electrification AAIINIStrabIon =. oie. canst 498 O’Brien, Lt. Col. L. O’Brien, oy CL; Office of the ns of the Arm 3 oO’ hy Revert Lincoln, Washington National Monument Soclety-L 2 UUS ci8 3d Co 3Y 03 O’Brien, Ruth, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home ECONOMIes. ooo. 420 O’Brien, W. E., administrative assistant to Senator VIHA ones Db 251 coinsot 31 O’Brien, William E., National Production Au-thority oO’ Co Ambrose, judge, Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography Yii8ialrn0 502 0O’Connell, Amelia, secretary to Representative Ye CRE EA RL AT 260 0’Connell, John, Maritime Administration... 433 oO’ Connell, Marearet R., secretary to Repre- sentative Kelly, lo Crema crn poem tea Bitin hs 257 0’Connell, Martin J., Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service o ..( uiibviaghCou 0’Connor, A. D., Federal Civil Defense Ad-ministration... cya al as JRO. 347 O’Connor, Basil, trustee of Foanizline D. Roose velt Library FEE Er Ey SEAT A gS FE LL ER 468 Page O’Connor, Blake, Senate Select Committee on Small Business. ...iia sion vlog 199 O’Connor, Edward M., Displaced Persons Commission: 10 ooo ay oh nee 455 O’Connor, Frank, District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Board... rerwinstiniail 521 0O’Connor, J. J., Federal Fire Counecil_.________ 468 oO’ Connor, J oseph B., Federal Security Agency. 460 0’Conor, Herbert R., Washington-Lincoln Me-morial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission. 217 0’Day, C. C., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Luteo coals nahin 201 0’Day, Maj. Helen E., Air Force Liaison Office. 298 Odegard, Ethel J., District Nurses’ Examining Board 5 Odenweller, Charles J., Jr., Securities and Ex-change Commission. io ice dt ie ites 48 Odishaw, Hugh, National Bureau of Standards. 435 Odom, Edward’ E., Veterans’ Administration_. 490 oO’ Donnell, Walter J., Reconstruction Finance Corporation SEY RECA Se eR A RR BE Tt OMAN Ak 483 0O’Donoghue, Henrietta V., secretary to Senator Wefamverioocusinlobit so Pall Jol 250 Office 0’ Sl Josephine, secretary to Representa-tive O’Brien of Michig an Offutt, Charles E, Dofoase Production Admin-istration... . SL UZCEN Bit i 00k earned Ogden, B. K., Maritime Administration_______ 433 Ogden, Robert F., Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress en SRN 200) Ih is 300 Olay, | Honry C., secretary to Representative SL IO ER I Be TEL 254 (0) PE {emi M., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations o.oo: Sonsini Hauibnis 201 Ogrosky, Harold O., Soil Conservation Service... 428 O’Handley, Commander J, A, E., Office of Information SEE SPT eB JIB iN O’Hara, Thomas W., Motor Carrier Claims Commission’), i038, ee BLO VERN] 474 O’Hare, James F., Office of Secretary of Labor_. 442 Oheim, Curt {ou National Production Au- thority RL Tt al 436 Oja, Oliver G., House post office.__..._..._____._ 92 O’Keefe, Brig. Gen. Richard J., United States Adr Pores: or oth te I 395 O’Keeffe, Dr. J. A., Metropolitan Police De-00 PER LVR Ay ZB Wl I Ire WO 2 id Ba pend 526 Olander, Milton M., Wage Stabilization Board. 345 Old, Maj. Gen. William D. , Oversea Commands 398 olds, Leland, Office of Secretary of the Interior. 406 O’Leary, Gerald J., Securities and Exchange COININISBION {oti aii rs sa EF wrt smitten 483 O’Leary, John J., Capitol Police... ............. 296 Oliphant, William G., Inland Waterways Cor-DOTOION i tain fot amt rms oie a EP Cl srs 4 Oliver, John, Tennessee Valley Authority ...._. 489 Oliver, L. L., Smithsonian Institution ____.._.__ 485 Oliver, Robert, Mutual Security Agency. ______ 475 Oliver, Webster J., chief judge, Customs Court (Oolography)-Lc 10 JET EI Jan IT 505 Olsmtead, Brig. Gen. George H., Office of Sec- retary of Defense. woe aene cen dd D0 SUITE 373 Olmstead, N. A., Bureau of Animal Industry... 419 Olmsted, Orvil R., Public Housing Administra- i Lo ER an re hae SR 471 Olsen, Capt. Carl B., Office of Operations._____ O’Mahoney, Joseph c. , Joint Committee on the FE eonomiC, ReDOrt. cvs eri mw de San Ser 219 Male ey, Lambert S., Office of Price Stabiliza-a Eas Sree Mae Aeleai ann Code O’Marr, Louis J., Indian Claims Commission... Omer, Col, Daniel 0., Selective Service System. Ondarcho, Gladys, House Committee on Agri-ealbureld.. io cumnn th Ln LL ath A ung Soa! 213 O’Neill, Francis A., Jr.: National Mediation Board........ Railroad and Airline Wage Board... .... 345 O’Neill, John J., Bureau of the Budget __._.... 338 O'Neill, Vice Adm. Merlin: Comrnandant, CoastiGuard.....goosilin 365 Wellare. oon nimi em =H E LIER OLCURS 367 714 Congressional Directory Page Page Onthank, A. H., Office of the Assistant Secretary Oppenheimer, Dr. Ella, District Health De-DAREN. iii swim me EN FEI), 525 Oppenheimer, J. Robert, Atomic Energy Commission... .biaadl ho rr leivpinin] 450 Opper, Clarence V., judge, Tax Court of the United StatesuyroviosdLL Sisal, Soul dl. 509 Opsata, James B., Office of Price Stabilization._ 343 Oram, Russell M., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Faxation. iio J. o0s0e L0 oouct nis 216 Orchard, Claude R., Social Security Adminis-stration ein EC ooseel aden a dnbelb S hing Orcutt, Bessie M., secretary to Representative Reed of o.combm We THNOIS wpa bs 259 Oreamuno, Don J. Rafael: Costa, Rican Ambassador. toooloool cin. Organization of American States__.___.______ 353 Orendorfi, Joseph H., Housing and Home Fi-nance Ageneyusdaruvenilly taming Loanila 469 Orescan, Corhal D., House Committee on Ap-Dropriatlons lossoe, oul Jean. Si nase 213 Orndorff, Roy L., District Engineer “Departs on ment 2 Orness, Murial C., Senate Committee onhas and Insular Affairs DOE Rah eG SUSE 202 Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appropria--4 Hons. ust bussed sud iminoveil ss 21 bhi Orr, Douglas William, Commission on Renova-tion of the Executive Mansion______.________ 221 Orr, og William W., Headquarters Marine 3 "Cor 92 Orn Si Col. Paulo E. da Camara, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission. 351 Ortiz, Frances, secretary to Senator Chavez. ___ 249 Orton, Dwayne, Federal Civil Defense Admin- f 0 mtDr ne IeLs a 3 Osborne, Winifred, House Committee on For-(yD I OeDO Te DR 213 Osgood, Harold X., Defense Transport Admin-stration. cowal one utt 20 Lh dimen IRs edi 342 O’Shaughnessy, John K., Rural Electrification Administration... coo. Teomaoe 428 Osmer, Shirley R., Women’s Bureau__..________ 444 Osthagen, Clarence H., Office of Secretary % COTIINOLT0. ctr tns Bon iret a mg h & peti et Se Ostrander, Earl D., Bonneville Power FE tration al enn CR OL CL Se er Hs UT We Ostroff, Nathan, Bureau of Foreign and Domes-HE COTITIRI00 Lo eetan a tf 431 Ostrow, Dr. A. Harry, District Health Depart-ment 525 O’Toole, Hon. Donald L.: Board of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academ 218 Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Consultative Assembly of the Council of BUDE. at Lor a es TS SAT an UR 221 oO’ Tons Mary V., secretary to Senator Clem-ents. . 249 521 Ott, M. L., Federal Trade Commission..______ 465 Ovenden, Capt. Philip A., Office of Merchant Marine Safety. 367 Overby, A. N., International Monetary Fund. _ 351 Overby, Edward J., Office of Secretary of Agri- caliare: ... Inland Waterways Corporation... ..._._.__ 433 Member, Smithsonian Institution__.__________ 485 Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. _. 217 National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems... __ 477 National Munitions Control Board...._._..___ 478 National Security Resources Board. ._.___.._. 339 Reconstruction Finance Corporation... 482 Sawyer, Capt. M. A., Bureau of. Ordnance, IN YR or ve re ac Lor a i oe 389 Sawyer, Roland M., Federal Housing’ Adminis-tration. ea Te 471 Saxon, James J., Office of Secretary of the Treas-1 MY doa ir ptt oe AS Se ob 722 Congressional Directory Page Sayre, Francis B., United States Mission to United Hons Sir Pty die rn ale cri 362 So Capt. W , Coast and Geodetic Sur-432 Bolas Thomas C., municipal court for Dis-trict of Columbia = 00 sacaree 512 Scammahorn, James, Committee on Purchases of Blind-Made Products. i... ..oi oi. Tiies 454 Scammon, Richard M., Office of Intelligence Research. Jou cia 2000, Dogg ih aie Shout 360 Scanlon, John H., House post office___._________ 292 Scanlon, Marguerite A., secretary to Represent-ative Murray of Wisconsin_ ________________ Scantlin, H. D., District Assessor’s Office. __.__ Scattergood, Col. Edgar M., Director of Legis-lationiand Taisen... or oo niet of hay 395 Schaeffer, Raymond T., Federal Civil Defense Administration a. aay rood Boas Mak Federico, Inter-American Defense Schaffer, Arthur D., United States Attorney’s Office Schaffter. Dorothy, Library of Congress________ Scharf, John G., Columbia Hospital for Women_ 453 Schatz, Arlene x secretary to Representative Allen ofiCaliformin.. i ry oxi 25. o-ccoiiae on Scheckel, Claude S., Official Reporter, House___ gencdlors Dean I1.., Office of the Attorney Gen- era Scheele, Leonard A., Public Health Service_.___ Scheibel, Capt. William B., Office of the Com- mandant, Coast Guard............... o_o: 366 Scheid, Carl, National Production Authority__. 438 Scheid, Clara E., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. cc... ais = 216 Scheier, Herbert H., Defense Production Admin- ISiration il co. ith aa SE Sh 341 Schellenberg, Theodore R., National Archives and Reeords Service... ...... 467 Schenck, Herbert G., Mutual Security Agency.. 475 Schepman, Norma B, secretary to Representa- tive Sa) CHAT IC Si Gul ROR ei 255 Standards. Ee Br a ek A OS San BE An 443 Scherr, Maj. Robert A., Naval Examining Board (Marine Corps) 392 Scheyer, Brig. Gen. William J., Personnel Department, Marine Corps. _._._____..._. 392 Schimmel, Joseph, Patent Office__.________._____ 439 Schirmer, Walter E., National Production Au- TIT FSR Gt esa EL SIR SE 0 437 Schlup, Lester A., Extension Service. _.._.__.___ 423 Schmidt, Reinhart C., Weather Bureau.__._____ 440 Schmitt, Waldo L., National Museum. ________ 485 Schneider, Albert, official reporter to House TEFE TE Ra nL Se,Se te 293 Schneider, Ben V., Jr., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. ..__.._._.___.__ 216 Ts J. Thomas, Office of Secretary of fe 2 Sher, E. E., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce DE Solas ig I 431 Schnettler, William A., National Park Service._ 410 Schpe Julius, National Production Au- 1 ETT ART a dE Senne ie Ly ST Lh Schock, Commander L. L., Jr., Munitions Board Schooftel, Rear Adm. M. F., Bureau of Ord-nanee, Nayy. . i od Ll. iii RS SD ES IC EET SR Schoening, H. W., Bureau of Animal Sl Share, Mrs. Andrew F., The Congressional Schoettler, Robert J., International Pacific Sal-mon Fisheries Commission... _______ 4 Schollenberger, Herbert K., District Alcoholic Beverage Control Board 520 Schoner, Capt. Albert C., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Air__..._________ Schram, Emil, Federal Prison Industries, Inc__ 400 Schram, John L., Office of Treasurer of the United States. Re AEE i nl 369 Schreiber, Ann F., secretary to Representative ; 25 Page Senaingy) David B., Railroad Retirement oar Schriever, Col. B. A., Office of Development._ 396 Schroeder, W. C., Bureau of Mines____._______: 411 Schrudder, Mildred L., General Accounting Office 2 Sent, Martha M., secretary to Repre-gentative WIAA. 1 ones ci 261 Schuler, Donald G., Civil Aeronautics Admin-SET ION: owls sn dL She ro ka 432 414 sont Francis J., secretary to Representative Ing. oo Ceomea Slama V8 ps pak LSTEAG IY 257 Sehr, Robert C., secretary to Representa-tive Schunhoff, Hugo F., Columbia Institution for the Deal: ee tied Luba J 461 Unadlinal Schuppe, Fred, Jr., Office of the Post Office Inspector... 5 tale fob ons Saint ain, Schurr, Sam H., Bureau of Mines_____._.___.__._. Schuyler, F. J., Bureau of Naval Personnel_____ Schwab, Commander Herbert S., Office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy. _____ 390 Schwab, James E., District Zoning Adjustment Boamdi onde vill. dete idainde LLnL Bs 522 Schwalm, Harry R., Bureau of Accounts____.__ 368 Sevan, Elva, secretary to Representative 3 Landis) oer aoe A BE SI LL a LL an 5! Schwartz, Benjamin, Bureau of Animal In- dustry oi ania YORE RE a bib 4 Schwartz, Ferdinand, Customs Court. ___.____ 507 Schwarz, Marguerite, American Red Cross _.__ 449 Schwarze, Col. Harry M., Office, Chief of Army FieldePorces: sete 8. wadran i. .n 380 Rutile. Schwegmann, George A., Jr., Processing De-partment, Library of Congress._________.____ 301 Schweinhaut, Henry A., judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia. 509 Schwenger, Robert B.: Committee for Reciprocity Information______ Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations. _____ Schwob, Carl E., Bureau of State Services__.._. 463 Scott, Armond W., judge, Municipal Court for the District.of Columbia...2. Scott, Barbara J., House folding room __________ Scott, Dorothye a, Office of Majority Secretary. 287 Scott, Edgar E. , Metropolitan Police. iit i] 526 Scott, Dr. Eugene W., Interdepartmental Com- mittee on Scientific Research and Develop- ment 472 Scott, Finis E., Postmaster of House of Rep- resentatives (biography of) Booth, J: ohn Thad, Jr., National Mediation Bt Margeret, Combined Airlines Ticket priations OSCR Rn ae HME Pt 5 Te Scott, Walter H., War Claims Commission__ 490 Scott, Walter x, Office of Deputy Under Sec- retary SS am Ta 356 Scott, W. C., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry Laas Mw de at SRD AL Ee Lr 419 Scott, M., Bureau of Agricultural and In- dustrial Chemistr 41 Scrivener, Samuel, Jr., District Zoning Adjust-ment Board... J i0 lS Ln a Lh KT Scrivner, Errett P., Board of Visitors to the Military Academy 217 Scroggins, Francis D., YSistriot Fire Department. 525 Scruggs, D.J., Office of Budget 427 Scull, Miles, J r., Senate Committee on Expend- itures in the Executive Departments. .____.__ 201 Seabring, Capt. Cornelius S., Bureau of Ships... 389 Seabury, Robert M., Reconstruction Finance Corporations. b.i se Je ela ro RA 482 Seal, Charles R., Interstate Commerce Com-4 Searles, John R., Jr., District of Columbia Re-2, development Land Agency... _______.__ Individual Index Page Page Searles, Richard D., Under Secretary of the In- BOTIOL oo ome ee NB Tay TNT 405 Sears, Julian D., Geological Survey. ____________ 409 Seaver, W. P., Public Housing Administration_. 471 Sebastian, Mrs. Richard, The Congressional GIT dee Boban bade a Clin LR an 455 Sebenaler, DuWayne P., United States Attor- NeyE Oiee ©. eS SE 511 Sebrell, William H., Jr., National Institutes of Health a ae oe ht a A ER PTR FETINT 463 Sechrest, Earl F., Federal Power Commission... 458 Seckinger, Dr., Daniel L., District Health De- 1 TO (Ream phos Gaia ra le Ah IL SUR BAY 525 Secrest, William G., Court of Appeals for the District of Columbial. oi. ootad.ll. 500 Sedgwick, Howard F., secretary to Representa- tive Holmes... iiioie 2.05 257 nih ate Seeger, Charles, Organization of American States... asin lami does Tin Seeger, Soman Loren H., Office of Engi- neerin, Seel, Sir aL F., Caribbean Commission___.__ Seelye, Alfred L., Office of Price Stabilization___. 343 Seftenberg, Chester D., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Management) _ . _ i Seibel, CliffordW., Bureau of Mines_ __._____... Seiler, Edward EB, Farm Credit an LE BRSpel 18 yi 0 PE i 423 Selek, Nir International Bank for Recon- struction and Development ........... ...... 3 Self, Victor H., Bureau of Internal Revenue__.__ Sellery, Harry A., Jr., Defense Solid Fuels Ad- ministyationeee tn sulla pte bud Fugu 408 Seliiors Ernest de, International Monetary 3 nn Se ae Be otek Somabang 8 CE TT 51 Sllin William, Office of General Counsel_.... 384 Semple, Paul T. , Renegotiation Board. 2. .i.z0 483 Sen, Binay Ranjan: Indian Ambassador... ied 534 ooasiiolay Far Eastern Commission... ...o...i.-456 Senior, Mildred R., Interstate Commerce Com-mission mented a Jo Stearnnh 474 Sefiorans, Lt. Col. Eduardo Argentino, Inter- American Defense Board... ___________ 349 Séré, R. Lassalle, South Pacific Commission. ____ 487 Serig, Col. Howard W., Research and Develop- mentBogard cnn Sanaa os aaa 374 Serles, Julian R., Jr., Official Reporter to House COMERS re hte a oy aia di 293 Serrao, Frank E., Territorial Official ___._________ 413 Sorvall Francis X., Public Housing A dminis- Sen a Yo aio RT 833 Cross BE bn RS A AR SE eh EA Re ER Setzler, Frank M.: Advisory Board on National Parks, ete------ Notional Museam........ lois di oo olioLae Severn, JamesA ., Jr., Library of Congress... Sevilla-Sacasa, Dr. Guillermo: Nicaraguan: Ambassador... oon ~o-casaaz-2 Organization of American States. ..-...______ 3 Seward, Mrs. C. Allen, secretary to Representa-Uve James, od. Cr rian de eat SRE ae Ea ad 257 Sow Done F., Housing and Home Finance ITTA (Ty Rn ER Re RO 466 Shade, C. S., POATITH Sr Ab Re SA A CR Te 482 Shalis iki secretary to Representative Shaffer, Martha P., Senate Taio on Inter-state and Foreign CommerGe-> vo. .2 202 Shafroth, Will, Administrative Office of the United States 1 5 lc i. 510 Courts... Shah, Yaquib, International Bank for Re- construction and development... 350 Shalleck, Milton, South Pacific Commission___. 487 Sham, Hope G., Joint Committee on the Eco- nomic Report NE EB ep 219 90808°—82—2—1st ed.——48 Shands, Clare, Office of Secretary of the Air 3FL De bE Ree he a 394 Shanks, J. C., Office of Clerk of House __._..___ 290 Shannon, Henry C., secretary to Representative Ribicoft hn CATER SL igh 2 Shannon, Spencer S., Reconstruction Finance Corporation soins (aio EF wari 482 Sharon, John H., secretary fo Representative Howell REL Liege et GRE Se I LE Gc 7 Sharp, Dr. Edward R., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics... 477 Ga Loveys secretary to Representative 2% 5 Hr ey National Security Resources Board. oh inci i se emi A CRO 339 Sharpe, C. Melvin: National Capital Housing Authority._....._.-477 District Board of Education_______._._____ MANET) | Shatwell, K. O., South Pacific Commission_____ Shaw, Arnold F. Office of Price Stabilization. Shaw, B. In. , Agricultural Research Administra- tio Shri A oli K., National Labor Relations Boar 478 Shaw, David F., Atomic Energy Commission _ 450 Shaw, Doris P., ’ Office of Clerk of the House... 290 Shaw, Edward J. Jr., House post office... __ ~%992 Shaw, Humphrey Scott, House Committee on 5 Rul 14 Shaw, Ralph R., Library, Department of Agri- elfltmre oo il Lt aah iE 416 Shaw, Roselia B., District Cosmetology Board... 521 avy hh TE Office of Secretary of Com-; EE BL AE ASI I IR [GRANT SR 29 Dh DR oard M., District Department of Public Welltona Batt 526 Shea, Jerome, Office of Clerk of the House. ___ 290 Shea, Robert F. , American Red Cross... __. 449 Sheals, R. A., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine LAO SOE CI OL oat 420 Shearon, Donald W ., secretary to Representative Harrison of Wyoming RE Aon in La SL HRC 256 Sheehy, Joseph E., Federal Trade Commission-_ 465 Sheild, Marcellus a , President’s Advisory Com- mittee on Management EEA ST 481 Sheley, Dr. Rex B., District Optometry Board__ 521 Shelley, John F., Board of Visitors to the Coast Guard Academy SR CE RE OS ELAR 218 Shelley, William Paul, Jr., administrative assist- ant to Senator Holland Shelly, Col. M.. J., Office of Personnel. _.____:__ Shelton, Arthur B. clerk, Court of Customs me Patent Appeals Shelton, Edgar G., Jr., National Security ORT ing COmUisE ete 480 earhgnnn Shelton, Stephen M., Bureau of Mines ____.____ 412 Shepard, F. C., Board of Geographic Names_.__ 414 Shepud, Jessie W., secretary to Representative Srl, Rear Adm. Halert C.: Office of the Commandant, Coast Guard... Office of Merchant Marine Safely. out es 367 Shepherd, Henry F., Office of Personnel. __.___ Sheppard, S. Riggs, Rural Electrification Ad-ERT YR ATARI Le Se I A Ee 427 Sheppard, Sherman §S., Defense Production LETT DR Seni ae bth Bn aa Claneb Rut ds Sheppard, W. J., Office of Director for Mutual 255 Sherfy, Raphael, Office of General Counsel for tHe rea ee 364 Sheridan, Harriet, secretary to Representative Clemente. oy toms Fan ab a et Sheridan, Roy L., Office of the Assistant Po 4 master General ibd Sto wb all Aer sind Sees bmn Sheridan, Thomas E., secretary to SEL fiverlNoniZondl. nee ns 261 Sherman, Allan, Bureau of Mines Sherman, Merritt, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Sherrick, Arthur C., Reconstruction Finance Corporation ral WR BO Sa Titi 482 Shon, Samuel R., secretary to Representative Hd, Sidney, Export-Import Bank of Washington COA AS I dh Sen RR 456 724 Congressional Directory Page Se Frank M., National Produetion Author-Ee SE Nea Air ET 436 Shilling, Capt., R. W., Bureau of Medicine any Surgery. sind ar drpie nos. LIRR SEE Shipley, Ruth B., Passport Division______.____ Shipman, Fred W., Federal Records Council___ 467 Shoaf, William W., Defense Production Admin-iSteation oo toro Sending 341 Shoettler, Robert J., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Commission. ._._.._______ 473 Shofner, William O., Office of Price Admin-istration cic ail ab. Jennie] Tg 427 ouianor Shook, Julia A., Minority Policy Committee. . 202 Short, Joseph, secretary to President Truman (biography) Short, Oliver C., Office of Secretary of Com- TNEYCe. Lo. sad be ns dad ge Frag 430 Shortley, Michael J., Federal Security Agency... 460 Shooshan, Harry M., Jr., Office of Under Sec- retary of the Inferior. focalil Siousi Zs 405 Showell, Lemuel, Federal Housing Administra-pi LE LR a i bp theron ER SL hea TT 1 Shriver, Glenn K., Senate Committee on Ex-penditures in the Executive Departments. _ Shroyer, Thomas K., Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare Er MEI RR TL 8 es Shryock, Richard H., National Historical Pub- lications Commission... __ 467 Shugrue, Dwyer W., administrative assistant to Senatorilvess cy. odalth bs 250 Shuman, Delacy, secretary to Representative 5 i 260 Shulman, Edward M., Cffice of the Solicitor.__ 418 Shultz, Capt. J, H., Bureau of Naval Personnel. _ 388 Sibert, Brig. Gen. Edwin L., Inter-American Defense Board. oo. einen 349 Sibley, Col. Alden K., Office of the Amant Secretary of the Arn Sidotti, Saviour, District Board of Barber ST AINE. i or as rim toms oi oF BN bE, Siegfried, William P., Copyright Office.________ Sieh, Albert B., secretary to Representative Sicker, John, Forest Service... ..oocoooooo.. 424 Siepert, Albert F., National Institutes of Health. 464 Sigel, William A., Capitol railroad ticket office. 297 Sigourney, Col. Harry C., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (management)... 394 Sigurdsen, Bias J., Government Printing OTHE ClO TE. rn pt dae hie SL lit ats 293 Siler, Leon or Office of Secretary of the Treas- 110 Ae Ai a SC a Se eT A 364 Silk, Dr. Samuel A., St. Elizabeths Hospital... 464 Silsbee, F. B., National Bureau of Standards... 435 Silva, Dr. Oswaldo J. da, Pan American Sani- tary Organizaiion.. oo. ahs an ebro me Silver, Francis A., Defense Transport Admin- IS EON tr i ns te ra AE re wi EE 342 Silver, James, Fish and Wildlife Service........ Silverberg, Louis G., National Labor Relations Board Silvercruys, Baron, Belgian Ambassador... Silverman, Abner D., Public Housing Adminis- 1 0ACh Bt daa ded a a Ha 471 Bnei Silverman, Irwin W., Office of Territories... 412 Silverthorn, Maj. Gen. Merwin H., , Headquar- ters Marine Bt it SE I Lr 391 Silvey, Ted F., National Production Authority. 436 Simi, Gino 5 "District Apprenticeship Council. 520 Simrmerman, "Virginia M., secretary to Senator Eastland Simmes, Orlando A., International Claims Com- mission of the United States... 361 Simmons, Dr. ArthurH., Freedmen’s Hospital. 463 Simmons, John F., Office of Protocol Staff. _ 357 Simmons, Lee, Southwestern Power Adminis- HEL ie ee a I EDR 414 Simmons, Miles D., House Document Room___ 291 Simms, B. T., Bureau of Animal Industry _____ 419 Simms, Charles F., Office of Legislative Coun: Re BL UR Rr a PR 293 Simms, D. Harper, Soil Conservation Service. _ 428 Simms, John H., Office of Legislative Counsel, Sonata, fi et ay 287 Simms, William C., administrative assistant to Senator Humphrey Simon, Frances H., Tariff Commission. ._.. ---488 Page Simpkins, Henry 8., Office of the Chiel Post Offics Inspector. of baat ooo rim 404 Simpson, Helen W., secretary to Representative Simpson of Pennsylvania. oc. ici Ji. Un 260 .Simpson, Isabelle N., secretary to Senator BT Tn PR ES ee i REE Re SA a HY 251 Simpson, Robert E., Commitiee on Reciprocity Information. nese din ann nL 00S MOD 454 Simpson, Sid, National Memorial . Stadium Simpson, William R., Jr., National Capital Housing Authority. i sadalalmaci cone nl 477 Simrell, Earle V., Office of Secretary of Labor. . 442 Sims, Albert G., Bureau of German Affairs_____ 358 Sindt, Waldemar H., Housing and Home PinaneedAgeney ol i008. 0 0misaalys Singer, Edward J., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... ua oiieil ll. 08 osiusrsll 482 Skeen, John A., Federal Fire Council ._________ 468 Skeoch, Gordon, The Virgin Islands Cor- poration sh: lo LU UL SOE Lo Saar 413 Skillman, John F., National Production Au- thority A 438 Skinner, Carlton, Governor of Guam______.____ 413 Skinner, George S., Office of the Legislative Counsel, Houser. lo ob Einiii 203 Slaght, L. Malcolm, National Production Au-thority... Baul to liantug el Ion od 438 Slarrow, Rear Adm. M. G., Bureau of Supplies and: Aceounts. a oon a San] 389 Slattery, Edward E., Jr., Civil Aeronautics Board... 0d SILhus mn 452 Slattery, Toomey F., Bureau of Engraving and Printing |. 00 CREE ILL STI 368 Slaughter, Sot Jiy Office of Seer etary of the Toteriop oF Daud Santa aad Si oi 0 406 Slear, John K., secretary fo Senator Smith of North Caraling. se cb 0 on dana to 1 Jol 252 Slemp, C. B., House document room _._____.___ 201 Slitor, Richard E., Tax Advisory Staff to Secre- tary of the Treasury... otusgt olin. S00 365 Sloan, Bernita N., secretary to Representative Hedrick g Sloan, George S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Sloan, Gordon W., Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission o_o... ......._ 472 Slocum, Glenn G., Food and Drug Administra-ORL Lr ai op al a ee Rh SL ERO ET OTE 461 Slowie, T. J., Federal Communications Com- TISBION hl rae ey ER FS SER 456 Small, John D., Munitions Board______-.______ 374 Smart, Robert Ww., House Committee on Armed Services og a Ce a SL 213 Smedley, Velma, House Committee on the JOARCIANY oii. or da Fr pin nae Sab md ks 214 fay AddisonT., Columbia Institution for the ms hes wor a eB As ie ph He I ELE 461 Smith, Albert F., United States Attorney’s OEE es ria os cena EOS RON 511 Smith, Thre M., Office of the Doorkeeper, loage. tLll ns IN eR a LA A 201 Smith, ArthurP., Office of Register of Wills_._ 510 Smith, Charles W., Federal Power Commission. 458 Smith, Cyril S. , Atomic Energy Commission... 450 Smith, DeWitt, American Red Cross. __..._... 448 Smith, Dresden A., administrative assistant to \ Senator Maybank i EE REA IAS LIAE 2 251 Smith, Donald W., Federal Security Agency .. 460 Smith, Doris C., secretary to Representative t Bakewellw. 0000 Siri oh Sana hh sah 253 ‘Smith, Earl J., Office of Hearing Examiners .__ 417 Smith, Earl R., District Corporation Counsel's Office. -523 Smith, Eastburn iH, Bureau of Land Mana ge-ment i 408 Smith, Edward H., Jr., Office of the Legisla-tive Counsel, Senate Emit, liom D., Jr., National Labor Relations Boar 4 Smith, Ernest M., Motor Carrier Claims Com- Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on Appropriations Smith, Farrar, Civil Service Commission... smith, Florence L., secretary to Representative oo Individual Index Page Page Smith, Frances C., Bureau of Labor Standards. 443 Smith, Frank, administrative assistant to Sengbor:-Butler. iain.Siena A se Smith, Fred C., secretary to Representative Williams of New York Smith, George C., American Red Cross_.__.____ Smith, George vr Processing Department, Li- brary of Congress Prk I NN a ORE nS 3 Smith, George H. E.: Conference Minority Committee. ._._________ Minority Policy Committee... ---o-oo-te..-2 Smith, G. Maynard, Wage Stabilization Board. Smith, H. Albert, National Mediation Board. Smith, Harryette M., secretary to Representa- tive CoH NET DRE eaeI aes TE 2 Smith, Harry L., Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... .....cciizeslilostsuues 4 Smith, Harry V., Jr., secretary to Representa-tivedollefson._..........--.--. an diiniet tad Smith, Helen M., Senate Committee on Rules and Administrations sec oo tut _.. 2 Smith, Tony C., Farmers Home Administra-tions creda Sader i I SRL a Smith, De hort U., secretary to Representative Secrest 260 Smith, Capt. H. P., Office of Information, Navy-384 Smith, Hon. Howard W Joint Committee To Discuss Problems With the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe 221 National Historical Publications Commission. 467 Smith, J. L., Jr., Joint Committee on internal Revenue Maxation Sila ooiiinganT. oi Smith, Capt J. T., Bureau of Medicine i Surg ery Sn, i on, District Engineer Depart-5 Smith, "Krai: mands Cd abr a a SER Smith, Mrs. Lawrence H., ae Club. 454 Smith, Lawrence W., Defense Solid Fuels Ad- ministration Rta ARE DIL To (I LER 408 Smith, Lemuel C., Maritime Administration. 433 Smith, Mae Elizabeth, secretary to Representa- Toducation and Labor... co-s oo saeaanan 213 Smith, Murray D., Office of Price Stabilization. 343 Smith, Nelson Lee, Federal Power Commission. 458 Smith, Newbern, National Bureau of Standards. 435 Smith, Newmar, Office of Secretary of Com- 429 Smith. “Perry Bay mitt ees 293 Smith, MN Philip Sidney, District Library Boa Smith, A noth, House post office Smith, Raymond C., Bureau of Fp RE Ra 416 Smith, Richard K., Bureau of Agricultural Economics Ae LR SC SEL RR 415 Smith, Robert L., Bureau of State Services... 463 Smith, Samuel Abbot, National Advisory Board on Mobilization’ Policy +. _2o to LC. __. 347 Smith, Brig. Gen. Sory, United States Air For BBs a ER a a A 395 Smith, Stancil M., Office of Budget and Finance. 416 Smith, Stanley, Office of Clerk of the House. _ 29 Smith, Sylvester R., Fruit and Vegetable Branch SERIE LOR Ga YURI LEE ei 26 Smith, Talma L., official reporter to House committees Sa Pah ln i INA Sel ey 293 Smith, Dr. Thorsten, Department of Public aliator sf LU ELIEa oy 526 Smith, Wallace, Office of Clerk of the House... 290 Smith, Walter B., Central Intelligence Agency--339 Smith, Walter Ray, secretary to Representative s Smith, Wilbur T., Office of Official Reporters BERS ree a Re a A ae eA 287 Smith, William, Production Manager, Govern-ment: Printing Office... weve 3 Smoot, Rear Adm. R. W., Bureau of Naval Porsonnol.. ioe ha na 388 Smyers, Robert R., Joint Committee on Inter-nal Revenue Taxation Smyser, Col. Willis M.,, Inter-American Defense Board 349 Smyth, Henry D., Atomic Energy Commission -449 Smyth, Capt. Robert A., Office of Merchant Marine Bafebyeoi Seen tlovai dd iis Winey 367 Snackenberg, Rear Adm. J. A., Bureau of OPANINCE. oodah lie dhe cd 388 a Mrs. Lyle O., House Committee on Snader, i 0., Office of the Clerk of the House. 290 Snapp, Roy B., ’ Atomic Energy Commission___ 450 Snead, Herschel M., National Production AUUNOTIEY ras de Ae oA Sm Sd Sneed, Than, W., Senate Committee on Public Ei Pa AE Es Ee CL RIT Snider, Commander Lewis L., Office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy OPIATE 0 co ariidttos 3 Sniezek, Robert A., secretary to Representative Bollin is a i i we ee RB SA Sr (aE Snodgrass, C. Stribling, Petroleum A dminis-tration for Defense wt cos on ol rio a Snodgrass, Harry C., Organization of American Sr rn Se Ae EE AE Sly 5 LT Davis W., Public Housing Administra-JOM on 00 al dn nisl a SL ed Snow, lm B., secretary to Senator O’Ma- PEI eeu Su RL STAR I as WY BL IL J EL 252 Snow, Wiliam B., Jr.,, Federal Trade Com- INISSION. Lo viata atau de dies Ta ay 465 Snyder, A. E,, General Services Administration. 466 Snyder, John I., Tennessee Valley Authority... 489 Snyder, John W. (Secretary of the Treasury): American Bed Crosses... ouslnlit 00 on 448 Biographyiol dd J i oa or a sea 363 Defense Mobilization Board. ________________ 339 Foreign Service Buildings Commission.______ 361 Foreign-Trade Zones Board. ________________. 465 Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessen- tial Federal Expenditures_ ________._________ 219 Library of Congress Trust Fund Board. ______ 302 Member, Smithsonian Institution. __________ 485 National Advisory Council on International Monetary and Financial Problems. ________ 477 National Gallery of Art. oi. coi ritocto 486 National Munitions Control Board___._______ 478 National Park Trust Fund Board. ___________ 411 National Security Resources Board. .__________ 339 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 482 Snyder, Joseph M.,, Soil Conservation Service.. 428 Snyder, Raub: Commodity Credit Corporation. _____________ 422 Production and Marketing Administration... 425 Snyder, S. A., Federal Supply Service.___.______ 466 Soares, Rear Adm. Gerson de Macedo, Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commission__ 351 Boba May secretary to . Representative Sobernheim, Rudolf, Office of Salary Stabiliza- Sob enh, Lt. Comdr, David B., Office of, Comptroller SEL a SRE TOs Sr Sollott, Ralph P., Office of Secretary of Defense. Fu Solomon, Frederic, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System... anes. Leino 459 Solorzano, Dr. Egberto Garcia, Pan-American Sanitary Organization...i 2 0. oc 353 Somers, James J.: Commodity Credit .0_ i... 422 Corporation... PiscaliBranchy ure Fon ey st Si a oY 426 Somerville, James A., Farmers Home Admin-ET) Ere Ce Se a Pe SR a i cre srl 424 Somerville, James G., District Public Utilities Commission. oo. ilo ine sora, rie Jd dl, 527 Sommer, H. B., Office of Architect of the Capi-5 5 Smithson, Frederick G., United States Ar, Sommers, Davidson, International Bank for torney’ SQ ge ssn Bl dant LE Wea inil 3 Reconstruction and Development. _..___.__. 350 Congressional Directory Page Sonnen, Louis C., Petroleum Administration Jor Dense. oer am mer mann nen a bbe 407 Soper, Dr Fred L., Pan American Sanitary 2 UEBAN.-<5 rsh Sanne JURA J LE Ud al 35 Soriano, Ix. Guillermo Alegre, Inter-American Defense Board 349 Soule, George H., Jr., House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs ie rt G., Senate Committee on the Judi-a MA LAE NS Se Cr CAE DRE EEO ET LE SLE 2 SOR, Frank A., Jr.: International Monetary Fund oo...a0 Office of Secretary of the Treasury. Spade, Grover C., Southwestern Power Admin-istration iil) I a0 sn Sel a 0 Ls Jl 414 Spain, Jack, administrative assistant to Senator HOBY. on il rn sn be te eh a bd 250 Spain, Yelle, secretary to Representative Patan, chlue lsat ens wn bau SHULD Spal, Sam G., House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce... 200M UILELLL 214 Spalding, C. Sumner, Processing Department, Library of Orn TI RT 1 LN 301 Sparkman, John J Joint Committee on the Economic Report... 219 Senate Office Hon Commission. __._..__ 215 Sparling, Maj. Gen. A., Permanent Joint Board on Defense, In United States... 480 Speakman, Edwin A., Research and Develop-ment: Bogrd, J DL CS EE 378 Spear, Ralph E., Federal Civil Defense Ad-ministration: CUED 0 LSU EERE TLC a Spears, John L., Bureau of Accounts__...._____ Speh, Carl F.) Bureau of Agricultural aid | Industrial Chemistry Voit AHR I pet JUD EL Spelman, H. J., Bureau of Public Roads..__.__ Spence, "Adolp us N., Administrative Office, AVY fi mr atti i Sm le 382 Spence, George, International Joint Commis-Sion. ULE ILS ne SII, DL IT BR Spencer, Frank H., Agricultural Research Administration, [Lu al 0 SL ID Lk 418 Spencer, Kenneth W., District Public Utilities Comission. Ja Joti ni Gund So Sis 527 Spencer, Leland E National Production Authority L000 437 Reconstruction Finance Corporation_____.._.. 482 Spencer, Dr. Thomas B., Research and De-velopment: Board 1000 IQUE(UU. Zn 374 Spencer, Richard A., Maritime Administration. 433 Spencer, William A., Maritime Administration. 434 Spencer, William E. National Labor Relations Board oo lon sr isl Ase, cl Ueda: J 478 Spender, ag C., Far Eastern Commission___ 456 Spender, Hon. P 0. Australian Ambassador. . 531 Spillane, James 37 Federal Mediation and Con- ciliation Ser SRRder ata 458 Spillane, Lester W., Federal Communications Commissions. Jolin JO aie adil sala 457 Spillers, Arthur R., Forest Service. ._..___.._. Spilman, Joseph x Civil Service Commission__ 453 Spingarn, Stephen J., Federal Trade Com- MISSION Sh nt at a ie 464 Spivacke, Harold, Reference Library of Congress Splawn, Walter M. W., Interstate Commerce ke Ee 474 Spottswood, Sylvia T., Office of Recorder of Deeds vib Sari dca oases blh L all ognae Sprague, George, Jr., Securities and Exchange Commissions. aeon Sprankle, Kenneth, House Committee on Ap-Jo Bd SR ea NS 213 Sprecher, Drexel A., Office of Price Stabiliza-BION: i a aie a a Ss 345 Sprecher, H. Franklin, Jr., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Systerp Loc soaaey 459 Springer, Elizabeth B., Senate Committee on Pinanes., LL G02 0i0 eo dO 0] Se 21 LR) 201 Springer, Lewis S., District Unemployment! i Board Squire,F. C., Railroad Retirement Board._._. Squires, Paul R., secretary to Representative Staats, Elmer B., Bureau of the Budget... .._... Stack, Mary B. Sey to Representative Bishop... Page Staderman, Capt. A. H., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. Sl aL NULL Loin ol 387 Stafford, George M., administrative assistant to Senator Carlson... ci du. 0. 001 al 249 Stahl, O. Glenn, Civil Service Commission... 452 Stahr, Elvis J., Ir. Office of Assistant Secretary of the Arm Stakem, T. E., Maritime Administration Qk an Stakman, Elvin C., National Science Founda-tio; Stalker, Douglas A., District Apprenticeship Couneft. GUL Li da nb Lal Stallings, James H., Soil Conservation Service... o Stallings, John L., ’ secretary to Representative TE ER NS SR I IE LiL Tg 57 Stam, Colin F., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation... .....--illloiodol 216 Jioil Stambaugh, Lynn’ U., Export-Import Bank of WASNNGLON oo ion ime wisn werd Sa a ho IS 455 Stamm, Harold B., Federal Trade Commission. 465 pean, Jeon. A. M., International Monetary un Stamps, Edith G., Civil Service Commission. Contact Office. GL Lola...Juodaali Jd 298 h Bonin, al, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs clo Lil loan Ua uray 214 Stanard, ny secretary to Representative Str k, 0., International Joint Commission. Stanley, Dr. John M. , District Health Depart-ment. lod. Luo LL fais 526 Stanley, Thomas B.: Joint Committee on the Library. ._.._.. Las 215 Joint Committee on Printing__.__._____._._._. 215 Stannah, Col. Robert E., Board of Review, Discharges and Dismissals. __________.__.._.. 383 Stanton, G. Frederick, Howard University... 461 Stanton, Harker T., Senate Committee on Agri- culture and For estry LN SE LT 201 Stapleton, F. H., Railroad Retirement Board.. Starek, Herbert, Court of Claims Stark, L. C., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering _______._._____. 422 Start, Carine W., Federal Housing Adminisiry ON ehhel as ie wi 471 Starr, old W., American Red CrosS..c....... 448 Stauber, Benjamin R., Bureau of Agricultural BI CONOTRICE, oo i sail a diiae o ddo oa 416 Stauffacher, Charles B.: Bureau of the Budget. (co oii tliccaniuain.d 358 Office of Defense Mobilization... ....... 339 Stearns, John F., Reference Department, Li-brary.of Congress...goiaiiadn. o.uli. 300 Stebbing, Dr. Philip, A. E., District Health De-partments. Jil Ssiiiads iad J onsnil oo 525 Babin Dr. Ernest Lyman, American Red dL ine anni. a bal cae abd 448 Steed, Mrs. Tom, The Congressional Club. _._.. 455 Steelman, John 8, Assistant to the President... 338 Steely, E/N ewton, Civil Service Commigsion.... 452 Steffes, H. E., Maritime Administration. ........ 434 Steger, Merrit H., Office of General Counsel... . 384 Stehle, H., Caribbean Commission. ._....._.... 451 Steig, ‘Olga M., Securities and Exchange Com- TISSION ES LS iS, Lo iin doit an sat da toe 484 Stein, Albert H., Office of the General Counsel... 384 Stein, Edward 1, Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration i Cr oh ee Ban SSE ry _ 482 Stein, Elmer F., District Fire Department. .__.. 520 Stein, Dr. Herbert W. , District Juvenile Court. . 512 Steinbarger, Helen T., District Public Library... 522 Steinberg, br. Aaron M., District Podiatry EXominers. coo di ai hadi mde = Sod dL ed 521 Steinem, RL E., District Board of Tduoa-TT 1 0 Ah Pag i xe SCR ble) TN RE SB | og 521 Steiner, G., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering... ___....._____ 421 Steiner, George A., Defense Production Admin- istration ne br A A hr -342 Steinig, Leon, United Nations... Ja] Steinmetz, Capt. John L., Office of Personnel. ... 367 Steka, Frank, District "Electrical Examining Board Ee et enon a 521 St John C., Board of Visitors, to the Naval Academy rr SRE BR UL IGT 217 Stennis, Mrs. John C., The Congressional Club. 454 Stent, Barbara A. House Committee on Educa- tion and 5 Mm Ph fa LA AI mp Individual Index Page Stenzel, Clarence J., Public Housing Adminis-tratlont.col ae SL Ll CE 471 Stephens, E., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering ._______________ 421 Stephens, Harold M., chief judge, Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Cir-cuit (biography). = 0. 2 ie LE Stephens, M. A., Federal Security Agency.___. Stephens, Malcolm R., Food and Drug Ad-ministration. oul Lil Satan Jaa donnie 461 Sephens, Russell S., Office of Rent Stabiliza- e Sterling, George E., Federal Communications ComMMISSION EE & . iow ith sdb = Som tia ih de 456 Sterling, Ralph J., official reporter to House COTTE: coi Boo fl Boi so Bh mins Sirens 293 Stern, Ben, Civil Aeronautics Administration... 432 Stern, Boris, Bureau of Labor Statisties________ 443 Sterns, John F., Reference Department, Li- brary of Congress A ET AE Lh oS ead 300 Stetka, Frank, District Engineer Department___ 524 Stevens, Alla’ G., Chief Storekeeper, Govern- ment Printing Office. <0ol tJ 5 302 Stevens, Arthur G., Office of Assistant Secre-tary of State 2ibt le rs rad ana XE JE ME 356 Stevens, Clair, secretary to Representative Abernethy: Cn, iL Ca Ra Stevens, Donald J., District Public Welfare Department RD LS 3 LR 526 Stevens, Ii. L., Capitol‘ Police. c..—c_-t.e.o0 296 Stevens, Henry, Bureau of Agricultural and Industrial ChemiStLy. onan mati” 418 Stevens, Olivia B., Office of the Majority Leader, Houser. sii igen angel an 289 Stevens, Willard, Office of Clerk of the House. Stevens, William H. S., Interstate Commerce Commission A ey A LE Lal a 474 Stevenson, Andrew, House Committee on Interstate and Commerce....-vm--214 Foreign . Stevenson, Earl P., National Science Founda- Stevenson, J. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricultural Engineering Ale 421 Stewart, Charles D., Bureau of Labor Statis-ti Stewart, Eric G., Commission ee rr 457 Stewart, George R., House Committee on the District of olnmbla.. hCard 213 Stewart, Grace M., Office of the Attorney Tal ue eae 399 Stewart, Hugh A.: Office of Assistant Secretary of the Interior... 406 Petroleum Administration for Defense________ 406 Stewart, Joseph W., Court of Appeals for the District of Sra TEi a 500 Stewart, Rear Adm. Paul M.: Bureau of Medical'Services......--. __-___._. Offico ol Personnel. dr ean Stewart, Ralph, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic Commeree_. .. 5 0 cL Zo 00 Cl 431 Stewart, William C., Joint Committee on De-fense Production 2. Cu. 20 corr oo. 221 Stickney, George F., Office of Secretary of the Treasury 363 Stiebling, 2 fa K., Bureau of Human Nutri-tion and Home I La 420 Stiggins, Mary E., secretary to Representative 20 Riley Stiles, “Gordon 7; United States Attorney's Office Silos, Grace B., United States Attorney’s i Stiles, Kenneth, Office of the Assistant Secre-taryiof thet Army i Loo Salt de heii le 3 Still, Frances, House Committee on Merchant Marineand Pisherles..._... -__._-_. ._% 214 Stinchcomb, Capt. Harry W., Office of Opera-hin Stine, Henry E., Office of the Assistant Post-master General. bo Ghanails 403 Stinebower, Leroy D.: Office of Financial and Development Policy-__ 359 United States Mission to the United Netions... 362 Stirling, H. V., Veterans’ Administration__-._. 490 Page pin M. W,, Bureau of American Ethnol-486 SP im Arlin Earl, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce... ..._._. 214 Stocking, Ernest J., Civil Service Commission___ 453 Stoddart, A. F. R., South Pacific Commission.__ 487 Stohl, Ralph N., Office of the Secretary of Defense. iii, JO 0000 oh dutiiel nit) 371 Stoll, Norman A., Bonneville Power Adminis- TOtIOn Jo ee ts heeee 414 Stone, Lt. Gen. C. B., Office of Comptroller. ____ 396 Stone, Donald C., Mutual Security Agency.-.__ 475 Stone, Ellis S., General Accounting Office. _____ 299 Stone, EarleL., Office of Assistant Postmaster Generic... ei ln JEU Ee aL TE 402 Stone, Franz 'T., National Production Au-OLY oto add GIS IT cotosoannnos 436 Stone, Isase, Patent Office...lo. .0 439 coi Stone, Rear Adm. I. O., Bureau of Medicine and Sargery. GE U0 RT Scie 387 pen Virgil C., Office of the Postmaster Gen-401 Sto Charles E., Defense Materials Procure-ment AGENGY.L LY alll rans DIE oh Stout, Mile, on District Insurance Depart- ment, cool alanine lagerHotes Stout, William B., National Air Museum______ Stowe, Clifford W., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 364 Stowe, David H., ’ Administrative Assistant to Phe President. co eo on near ani Sem bnneh To 338 Stowe, LeRoy F:, Bureau of Foreign and Do- este. COMMOICEL i iret ns cnr rn ane-amma 431 Strachan, Otto W., Patent Office_.___.______.____ 439 Strain, Col. James F., Office of the Under Sec- retary of the Arm Strait, Sally J., secretary to Representative Holifield 257 Stratton, J. F., secretary to Senator Robertson of Virginia. a Py eal bn 252 Stratton, L. L., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation i Cs tp Bit Lh 216 Straub, ney W., Office of the Secretary op Shor. Dealt win WE al SH a 2 Straus, Hugh Grant, Committee on Perch of Blind-Made Products B37 RS EE CRA ady 454 Straus, Michael W., Bureau of Reclamation____ 410 Strauss, Frederick, Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic. Commerce. icici toi ol ile... 431 Straw, Dr. H. Thompson, Board on Geographic INBYIOE a as Lo te ait ims emo mi ie AE ERE Street, John E., District Pharmacy Board _.____ 521 Balai, Frank H., United States Attorney’s EER a Vie pn WO FUR 6 Lt RS I EF MR FLT 511 Stroberg, Harold R., Reconstruction Finance Corporation... i lib iia rn cai 2 482 Hiram, Aller B., Office of the Postmaster Gen-La I he 401 Stroud, Mie S., Office of Under Secretary of thet N. A SR Ea ARS SReR eh SI Ra 407 A ey Strubinger, David B., Bureau of Customs______ Stubblefleld, Bruce, Civil Service Commission... 452 Stubbs, Elmer i Fo 'Defense Transport Ee Gal istration 0 Ua. 08 Ln Laan. a Studds, Rear Adm. Robert F. A., Coast nl GeodeticSurvey. Lng va 432 Stufflebeam, Robert E., Office of Operating BacilLIes, nod sb sa cb a iE LE Tk 360 Stults, Walter B., Senate Select Committee on Small Business. chil.tsnte 199 ..... LG Stumph, Louis P., Commission on Mental Health oy olga. soviet nui anh hates Sturdevant, W. L., Tennessee Valley Authority. 380 Rigi aul L., National Labor Relations thor 6 Sullipon? Saris J., Metropolitan Police De-partment 526 Sullivan, Henry J., National Production Au-thority 43 Sullivan, ¥ ames J., secretary to Representative Mansfield 258 Sullivan, Lawrence, Office of Coordinator of Information. oo 728 Congressional Directory Page Sullivan, Mrs. Leonor A., secretary to Repre-senfativeTrving. co un 257 Sullivan, Margaret M., secretary to Repre-sentative. Addonizio :... _. iia ly 253 ........ Sullivan, Marguerite L., secretary to Represent- ative Woleotl ional tool id bans sdedouaio 261 Sullivan, Paul, Maritime Administration______ 434 Sulzberger, Arthur Hays, American Red Cross. 448 Sunderlin, C. E., National Science Foundation. 479 Sundquist, James L., Office of Defense Mobil- aon. 4 nnn ali tae he Si TL, 339 Sunstrom, E. a Tennessee Valley Authority... 489 Sutherland, + M., International Joint Com- ITE a She eR ER Sa Le SSS nC 473 Sutton, Millard H., District Fire Department._. 525 Swain, °C. Garton, Weather Bureau. ....._._... 440 Swallen, Jason, Ni ‘ational Museum... 485 Swanebeck, Clarence W., Federal Crop Insur- ance. Corporation ci. 424 coo...wdiass Swanner, Bailey, Office of Clerk of the House_. 290 Swanson, Irving W., House Minority Official __ 292 Sweat, N oah 8., House Committee on Veterans’ Sweeney, Edward C., Senate Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce ____.____ 202 Sweeney, Michael J., Office of the Aisne Postmaster General Fane lg dee sli Tr ie pd Sweeney, William R., Office of the Asian Secretary of the Air Force (Management)__ Sweet, G. H. ny Administration..______ Te “Hou Swi % oseph C., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Swift, Lloyd W., Forest Serviees. sais Jnl g 425 Swing, Lt. Gen. J oseph M., Office, Chief oh, Army:FieldBorees: oot oca. louiln:od Switzer, Jethro, House post office____....._._____ S02 Switzer, Frank K., National Mediation Board__ 478 Switzer, Mary E., Office of Vocational Rehabili-' tation oc. oh anlar)Sar hd 462 Joao Sykes, Col. Ethelred L., Office of Secretary of the AlriForee. ol. .o isi in. leas did 393 Sykes, Col. H. F., Jr., Munitions Board........ 374 Symington, W. Stuart: Defense Mobilization Board... ccceeeoo.. 341 National Munitions Control Board. ......... 474 Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ........ 482 The Virgin Islands Corporation. __._._......_ 413 Sylvester, Rear Adm. E. Wallace, Bureau of Sh Ese Re Saaga 389 Vo Edward M., National Production Authority. oon Dolo JH nad Jad 436 Szymeczak, M. S., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ____.________.___._. 459 Sysak, John, House Post Office... ..o......... 292 T Taber, John, Joint Committee on Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures. _______ 219 Tackle, Olaf K., Defense Production Adminis-tration /. siialall LL onid it al Luugioasl 341 Taeuber, Conrad, Bureau of the Census__.___.__ 430 Taft, Charles P., Advisory Committee on Vol- untary Foreign Ald... ..... oiiuil silo: 447 Taft, Gordon D. Office, Department Counselor... .....__. 378 Office of Administrative Assistant to the Secretary. of the Army... ......codouil 3 lay Taft, Robert A.: : General Anthony Wayne Memorial Com-210 MiSSION ooo Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation. 216 Joint Committee on the Economic Report..__ 219 3 h Taggart Sion L., Office of Foreign Agricultural 417 a Taggart, S. Ross, District Health Department... 525 Talbert, T. BR, Washington city post office 527 Talbot, William M., Federal Civil Defense Administration. ooab ean 346 Talle, Henry O.: Joint Committee on Defense Production. ._.__ 221 The Interparliamentary Union... ...oc..o.___ 216 Page Tamm, Edward A., judge, United States Dis-trict Court for the District of Columbia____ 509 Tammaro, Alphonso, Atomic Energy Com-MISSION... oi iiiien chen rs rear 450 Tann, Beue, International Monetary Fund..__. 850 Tannehill, Ivan B., Weather Bureau_.._________ 440 Tanner, Marshall, Capitol Police ._...__....__. 296 Tannewald, Theodore T., Jr., Office of Director {for Mutual Security... si sicoioilod 340 Tansey, Harry S., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 201 Tapy, Betty Mae, Senate Committee on Fi-DYORCB te a ii eS SL SS Earn FU 201 Tarchiani, Alberto, Italian Ambassador________ 534 Tarter, Lt. Marvin N., Office of Assistant Secre-taryof the Army 2000sR100 A 378 ou Tarver, William S., Petroleum Administration for Defense. LL Ba oR n ii Dla LR 407 Tatascore, Inez M., secretary to Representative Coleof New York: vlLl boom, 254 a pels ‘B., Office of Assistant Secretary 2 A th on Taylor. Card C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-; NOMMOE. colo lunh Loti linn al wits wd bbe wn 416 Taylor, Charles W., Jr., Interstate Commerce COMIN so i a mi tra ho wm 474 Taylor, Capt. E. B., Bureau of Naval Personnel. 388 Taylor, Edna C., Secretary to Represonintive Hardie Scotto. anna toa Gla din 260 Taylor, Frank A., National Museum.__________. 485 Taylor, H. Elmo, House post office, Capitol branch... ood rd ia 292 Taylor, Ida S., District Public Welfare Board_. 522 Taylor, James F., Board of Examiners for the PoreigniService. ool lo nit Loe divios 361 Taylor, John L., National Production Authority 436 Taylor, L. B., Office of Materials and Facilities. 427 Taylor, L. S., National Bureau of Standards.... 435 Taylor, Mark, Paotent'Office ou = Clb dil 439 Taylor, Lt. Gen. Maxwell D., Office Chief of Stal, U.S ATryn nara 379 Taylor, Randolph Ss secretary to Representa-Hye Walls. ii anal 261 Taylor, Richard L., secretary to Representative BOWS rl hs a in aaa 254 Taylor, Robert B., National Advisory Board on Mobilization Policy... -~s cao oC oie 347 Taylor, R. T., Railroad Retirement Board._.__ 481 Taylor, S. L., "Bureau of Public Ragdg "v0 432 Taylor, Susan A., House Committee on Ways LES Un es da dle me Dbl dibanndiinonis 214 Taylor, Telford, Small Defense Plants Adminis-ATELY pa a elie anne Lita le bn Su bin ano 348 Taylor, W. M., Office of the Comptroller cf the Currency res Bedard neni sellin nan dindl 367 Teague, Bert, secretary to Senator Bridges... 249 Teal, Col. Gilbert E., Office of Secretary of the TO LT Se Se i ae Dl 393 Tear, Beatrice, District Public Library Board... 522 Tear, Thomas T, Office of Clerk of the House... 290 Tedrow, Richard L., commissioner, United States Court of Military Appeals... 501 Tefit, Edward C., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation EO Lga A Rt Ly 451 Teller, Capt. Steadman, Research and Develop-ment-Board. ...cSilionredionsolltun i 373 Templeman, William T., Rural Electrification Administration... Cir oll aoe 428 Tenley, Christopher S., Extension Service...... 423 Tenney, Henry F. , American Red Cross... 448 Tennyson, Alfred ks , Office of General Counsel for the Treasury. tora rc ach aeo armen aid 364 Tennyson, Emily L., Senate Committee on Ex-pendifures in the Executive Departments_. 201 Termohlen, W. D., Poultry Branch_.__.__.___.. 426 : | Terrett, Barbara, District of Columbia Re-development Land Agency... _....._.__ 455 4 a fren, Lt. Some. Ralph B., Inter-American i efense Board. opr -grnsen-sr ome ny Emad | Terry, Mrs. C. D., secretary to Representative BOnAer.. doo. ooh rf ber ea i te 253 | Terry, Col. Henry W., 3d, Director of Legisla-tion and TAaison: Lodo abut dunmniieSind 3 Individual Index Page Teuton, F, L., Bureau of Agricultural and In-dustrialiChemistry oii ca saiiilsoo 419 Texier, Marie A., secretary to Representative Baton avs li ie An Ral anni dy 255 Thackrey, Franklin, Bureau of Agricultural Beonomies --oo vy bn olo Sema aiid 415 Thatcher, Arthur B., Office of Plant and Opera-Hongo rir fos ee i ee] Wn el tol 417 Thaxter, John H., Reference Department, Library of Congress Saree a 300 Thayer Commander Louis M., Office of Person-i hey William R., Weather Bureau____.__ 440 Thiebaud, Col. Kenneth E., United States Air Re ee RE ee 395 Thiele, Horace, District Recreation Board. ____. 522 Thigpen, J. E., Tobacco Branch__________._.___. 426 Thom, Corcoran, Jr.: Columbia Hospital for Women _______________ 453 Washington National Monument Society. __. 490 Thomas, A. B., General Accounting Office. ____ 299 Thomas, A. Ray, District Disbursing Office. ___ 520 Thomas, Elbert D., Territorial Official__ ______ 413 Thomas, Fred C., District Wage and Industrial Safety Bogrd Gio r nosliibi oundon 521 Thomas, Irving W., administrative assistant to Senator:Qain: tt. faa inital on Seat 249 Thomas, J. N., railroad ticket office in Capitol. 297 Thomas, Morrell L., secretary to Representative Richards: 0. Coc... corr oavmiie tata Thomas, Nena C., Capitol telephone exchange. _ 296 Thomas, Ruth B., Senate Committee on Small tinh bee eh oa Rd kas old abe Lop § AE Sa i 199 Thomas, Woodlief, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System_.__________________ 459 Thomen, Dr. Luis Francisco: Dominican Ambassador... _...._..2i.__Cioil. 532 Organization of American States_____________ 353 Pan American Sanitary Bureau_._._________. 353 Thomerson, Edward W., Federal Trade Com-MSSIONISE Ar Sra AR Ie 464 Thomerson, Harold W., secretary to Representa-tive Chalhamy oo oo 254 Thompson, Alyce McGahan, Minority Policy Commitlet i i a EY 202 Thompson, Ben H., National Park Service_____ 410 Thompson, Charles M., Veterans’ Education Appeals Board... o.oo. aonTie 490 EL Eugene C., National Mediation Finance ng Tr a ag Thompson, George F., financial clerk, Office of Secretary of the Senate_____________________ 286 Thompson, Glenn -D., Bureau of Reclamation__ 410 Thompson, Harry T., National Park Service___ 411 Thompson, John F., Federal Crop Insurance Corporafionis sia 0d auturs nia 3 ara alo 424 Thompson, John G., National Bureau of Stand- or 0 EEL lint SE el i Sw AB LA AL LEV het 435 Thompson, J. K., Caribbean Commission______ 451 Thompson, J. Murray, Office of Price Admin- stration. oul frist i i dabei oe 427 Thompson, Lester H., Federal Housing Admin- istration se RI oS 470 Thompson, Louis F., Division of Finance______ 360 Tao Lt. L. K., Bureau of Medicine and ATELY i an td Sd Ss EN Sans Thompson, Capt. Lucius F., Army Liaison Hendrickson Sn SIN A ih ae ea 2 Thompson, Milton M., National Production Authority Thompson, Ralph L., District Public Library _ _ Thompson, Robert L., Office of Public Affairs_ Thompson, Samuel H, Bureau of Labor Sta- Yistiesl si alata a TriniSara Thompson, Walter C., District Assessor’s Office. Thompson, William M., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics..._._._..________ 476 Thomson, Col. James M., Territorial Expansion Memorial Commission... ......._......._.. 218 Thomson, Robert J., Railroad Retirement Board areee NL SG 481 Thorgrimson, O. B., Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils and Agricultural Engineering_________ 422 Page Thornberry, Homer, Columbia Institution for the Deafiorienr Sn on nani ive Fal time) Thorne, W. Herbert, District Department of Public Welfare. co liosco tn aasnnibauie. 526 Thornett, G. M., secretary to the Board, District government Sg rT heaedd nealing 519 Thornton, Allan F., Federal Housing Adminis-HE Er OR NAT SECA LT SUNGi 470 Thornton, A. Oliver, Recorder of Deeds Office... 512 Thorp, Capt, W. B., Munitions Board. _________ 375 Thorp, Willard L.: American National Red Cross_________________ 448 Assistant Secretary of State_ ._________________ 356 Thorpe, Elinor D., District Department of VehiclesiandPraffic nba =F oii “wag 524 Thors, Thor, Minister of Iceland ________________ 533 Thorsen, Nellye A., Securities and Exchange COTIMUSTION oe ns oes oro Li 483 Thorson, Harvey A., “Socuritios and Exchange COTOIARION ee ee 483 Thorson, Hattie Mae, secretary to Representa-tive Rogers of Florida. 3 dimainsl ng sienna 260 {Cheosani Andrew G., Bureau of Transporta-EEL TINE ede I RNA EP TL Ee 402 Thee, Frederick A., Commission on Mental SIR dL es a NSE FRET 09 Thurman, Col. Wayne E., United States Air EAT ae ana ay Sut REL TECRR RCT SRR GR nL ERA 95 Thurston, A. Henry, National Production Au-thority I LS AE BTR 0 AT 437 Thurston, Elliott, Board of Governors of the Federal ReserveSystem _________________._. 458 Thurston, John L., Federal Security Agency... 460 Thye, Lenore Sater, Bureau of Human Nutri- tion and Home Economies. _________________ 420 Thyson, Capt. Leo C., Naval Dispensary _._____ 391 Tichenor, Gerald E., Production and Market- ing Administration. coo ooit Dhani 425 Tickton, Sidney G., Office of the Technical Salo a i as 365 Ticoulat, Gabriel J., Defense Production Ad- ministration or SEMEL 1 TEA RUBS ret on PIETER 341 Tiedemann, Hollie J., Maritime Administration 434 Tiemann, Col. Cordes F., United States Air IIe a PO Dee Cob AER Se Rs i Sn 395 Tierney, Charles G., House Committee on Pablic Works. io. noel te Lan Lo nok 214 Tietjens, Norman O., judge, Tax Court of the UnifedStates.. [000 0h. wrodoo 509 Tift, Sova E., Federal Deposit Insurance Cor-POTALION:. ha ators aS 30 BLL Uo i ad 57 [riley A. ©. Federal Civil Defense Administra- Tillinghast, Frances, Joint Committee on the HEeonomie Report. Lo uo ri canal onlll 219 Tillotson, M. R., National Park Service......___ 411 Timberlake, Maj. Gen. Patrick W.: Federal BiveCouneil nl. coos. lito: 468 Officeof Matériel Ju vl Zab s 2 oon. 397 Timmons, Francis L., Jr., District Engineer Department. £0 Saad Ll a dol oui hai 523 Timmony, Ruth, House Committee on Interior andInsalar Aflahs. coonoC on 214 Tipton, oa V. C., Bureau of Medicine and AREY nySe a en eR 387 Titus, old H., United States attorney’s POTYIOR smeete wh mE 511 Tobin, Maurice J. (Secretary of Labor): American National Red Cross. -—— ooo o—___ 448 Biography ola. 0 ase ebbt S Lad 441 Defense Mobilization Board... _______ 340 Member, Smithsonian Institution. _______.___ 485 National Security Resources Board... ________ 339 Todd, Dr. Anna Coyne, Commission on Mental Healthy hoki sii Sagi a nology 510 Todd, Maj. Gen. Walter E., Office of Operations. 396 Tolan, John H., Jr., Office of Price Stabilization__ 344 Tolman, Leland, Administrative Office of the United StatesCourts oo.oo. 0.0 510 Toon Clyde A., Federal Bureau of Investiga-= ton co i a Tole Hillory A., National Park Service__.____ 410 Tomlin, C.E., Patent Offige.. t.0 Lain 439 Topping, Dr. Norman H.: Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development. ________________ 472 National Institutesof Health ____________-____ 463 730 Congressional Directory Page Torbert, Charles R., Office of Architect of the Capitol i at mre A ASN JY) 295 Torrance, Charles M., Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation ENE SE 470 Toscano, Commander Arnoldo, Inter-American Defense Board... oa... LIBALGIRY 349 Totty, ale assistant secretary to the ELE Ee a WSR ROR h RIE 1 287 Towers, Art G., Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation LE REY SIR MAN SANT SA SE SE 45 Towers, Edward, District Department of Ve-icles and raffle. cou. . dieoe is tadin suka 524 hic Col. Katherine A., Headquarters Marine OFS Cai iaicr th Solana LAs y seal a Towner, Milton C., Federal Civil Defense Ad-ministration... DIU cid Io iE LL i002 347 Towner, Capt. G. O., Bureau of Naval Person-"3 8 Ty J. Leonard, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. lo doused 459 Townsend, Wilson L., Export-Import Bank of Washing £70)FIR SOE AEA So SN SEs Si 14 456 Townsley, Col. C. P.,, U. 8S. Mission to he United Nations... o_oooo iiond Tozier, Morrill M.., Bureau of Indian Affairs. _.. aa Tracy, Edward J., ’ Maritime Administration __ 433 Tracy, Marian T., ’ Joint Committee on the Eco- nomic Report RR Re a Te Ra 219 Tracy, Myron A., Munitions Board-_.______.___ 375 Tracy, Stanley Y, Federal Bureau of Investi- (FFA11 GRRE mn dre pee Lol bre NAL ERE RES Tat Mast By 400 Tracy, Thomas A., National Mediation Board.. 478 Train, C.E., Washington National Monument Soelety. or vail vn dL ten dang Jug 490 Train, George F., Mutual Security Ageney...._ 475 Train, Russell E, Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation THSLTAL 0 Ime Ran ne id CTL te 216 Trainer, Leonard R., Food Distribution Branch 427 Trask, Ralph, secretary to Senator Kerr. __.___ 251 Tratnik, Florénee M., United States Attorney’s Oe. rh aa. air Bl SNe Trayer, go ge W., Forest Serviee._....__.______ 425 Treanor, Arthur R., National Production Anthority ion 3 0 ual oad aul il vy i 437 Trefethen, vd M., National Science Founda-GFL 48 1A A BES aA RR BSE ee BATA 47 Trelogan, Harry R., Agricultural Research Ad-ministyationealy Loli aerator 418 Trexler, G. W., Office of the Assistant Post-masteriGeneral i. Uo nolanCIAL 403 Trezise, Philip H., Office of Intelligence Re-Searels asl iain Yoel] Jarl lenin 360 Tribble, Grover W., director of plant planning, Government Printing 7 302 Office. 0.20ao Trice, J. Mark, secretary to the minority. _____ 287 Trigg, Joseph x, District Boxing Commission... 521 Trigg, Ralph 8., Defense Production Adminis- trational Catal IL Lal Fg inl 341 Trimble, Anne, Office of Clerk of the House... 290 Trimble James W., Joint Committee on Print- Trone, ST To Farmers Home Administra- SON. i te Te Sh a ae Troyer, Alvah F., Grain Branch. lial 0 426 Trullinger, R Agricultural i ch Administration.....__. 418 Office of Experiment Stations_____..__.__.____ 422 Truman, Harry S. (President of the United States): Blography of Cos aasiid lira doula give 337 Honorary Chairman, American Red Cross... 448 Member, Smithsonian Institution..__..___._. 485 National Capital Sesquicentennial Commis- lon. Ji aia ar ne a nl Lally, da National Security Council... ____.._______ 33% Patron ex officio, Columbia Institution for the President ex officio, Washington National Monument Society. iio furs Ld. 0d 490 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... _.__._____._._..... 217 Truppner, William C.: Defense Production Administration... 341 National Production Authority... ..-.-.__.-: 436 Tubbs, Col. Will L., Office of Personnel _.._... 396 Tucker, Charles W. ! Maritime Administration. 433 Tucker, Cleveland, Secretary to Representative AEC AITOlTIon. er daei 255 Tucker, Earl Bruce, administrative assistant to Senator Tong... fo. EArt 251 Tucker, Henry ji) , Federal Mediation and Con-ciliation I rE 458 Tucker, Foliatin F., Office of Secretary of the Fogo Capt. 9 M., Office of Naval Research. 385 Tucker, Capt. W. B., Bureau of Naval Per-sonnel fo a ad a ER LA Sd Tucker, Wendell P., District Department of PublieWellare. .coituoil dosiwall afusq lia 526 Tuohy, Herbert A., Government Printing Office. 302 Tumbleson, Robert C., National Science Foundation... oo ii inal ican aa 479 Tupper, Ernest A.: Defense Production Administration. ____._.._ 340 National Production Authority... _.__.__ 435 Tuppner, William C., Defense Production Administration. co Zon dl. 3 Ua lL iil 340 Turano, Frank J., District Corporation Coun-sellsi@Mees. oi i nip irinlie JBN 523 Turcios Capt. Roberto Zapeda, Inter-American Defense Board. iio asi or Laid 349 bendion, Turner, Bolon B., judge, Tax Court of the nited States. nea 509 Turner, Francis W., secretary to Representative Burnside. ooo ll ali lA corpcdialans 254 Turner, G. Adolph, District Government___.__ 519 Turner, George, House Committee on Veterans’ ATMS male euTiane 214 Turner, George S., Federal Communications Commission... s-J0SSES Lac 2 Jinn 11 456 Turner, Julian B., Federal Power Commission. 458 Turner, Margaret C., secretary to Delegate Farrington. Lu a i Daa halo! 261 Turner, Mary S., Government Patents Board... 469 Twining, Gen. Nathan F., United States Air FITTER CL a ey ro i Ss 08 RL D8 SO ph 3905 Twitchell, Brig. Gen. H. H., United States Air {1761 bla tr em ass Te I SPR Bs Ld Ll a 95 Tyler, Carroll L., Atomic Energy Commission. 450 Tyler, Estelle M. , secretary to Representative SR SLE Cn OB AR OME eg dy 0 eS IBLE AIL 256 Tyroler, Charles, Office of Secretary of Defense. 372 Tyson, William S., Office of Secretary of Labor. 442 U Udell, Gilman, House document room. _ 201 Uhland, Russell E., Soil Conservation Service. 498 Uhlenhop, W. B. , Civil Service Commission. ._. 452 Ulinski, John A. "International Boundary Com- mission, United States, Alaska, and Canada. 473 Ulmer, Ralph E., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics RN SRA SR RC LAR, 476 Ulmer, Severin F., Fish and Wildlife Service... 412 Umstead, Charlotte, secretary to Representa- tive Rhodes nt tel Bi Bo Al me fs sion AIA 259 Umstead, Lyman J., District Corporation Coun-sel’s Office Eh ith A Ald a rae oe THRE 523 Underhill, Wii Amory, Assistant Attorney Generals sl TL IU a hs a RTE Underwood, Gilbert Stanley, Public Buildings Service). lil roll CUAL Lo LT] 466 Underwood, Col. G. V., Jr., Office of Soraiory of Defense... 2 iol oli ean Tul ULL 375 Unger, Capt. Aden C., Office of Operations_._.. 367 Unkrich, Robert C. , Munitions Beard. | G05 374 Updearaft, George C., Corporation Counsel’s Opto. Shane M., District Motor Vehicle Parking’ Ageney. 2. Clo fo L000 _JA0TU] 524 Upton, Arvin E., Office of General Counsel, Air i rere RN Ee ee SN et A SL BER 394 Urfas, Jesus Franco, International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and Mexleot ot Ui odin Le i FSB Gl SOK 47 Uribe U., Maj. Carlos, Inter-American Defense Board a a Rael ai 349 Urich, Walter K., Board of Parole..___._._______. 400 Urquhart, Commander J. G., Board of Decora- tions and Medals_. om ee em me mm me a mn a en Be OE Individual Inder Page Uttley, Clinton B., Office of the Assistant Post-master General. SNE SH A Rn Ian ST 402 Utz, Ervin J., Bureau of Indian “Affairs Li rns o 409 Vv Vacin, Lydia, House Committee on Agriculture. 213 Vail, "Robert B., secretary to Representative Grant Vail, Thomas “LC”, Joint Committee on Inter-nal Revenue oeses 2 PALIT os Valaer, CharlesJ., Bureau of Internal Revenue.. 364 Valeo, "Francis R., Legislative Reference Service, Library of Congress RAAT oT So EY ae 301 Valle, or Calixto C., Inter-American Defense 0 Boa Valle, a Rafael Heliodoro: Honduran Ambassador. ooo. 533 Organization of American States... _.__.___.__ 353 Van Aken, C. F., Bureau of the Census___.____ 430 Van Allen, Lansing E., Government Printing Vanaman, Maj. Gen. A, W., Industrial College ER 376 Van Arkel, Gerhard P., National Capital Ses- quicenfennial Commission RT Ne, 2 Van Atten, William T., Munitions Board. _____ Van Blarcom, Herbert P.: Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service_.._. 361 Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce... 431 Vance, Currell, Commissioner, Court of Claims. 504 Vandegrift, Gen, Alexander A. , American Battle Monuments Commission___________________ 447 Van Demark, Mary N,, secretary to Representa-tiveMeMullen.. a... oi il fcandivaidil 258 Vandenberg, Gen, Hoyt S.: Armed Forces Connell... Policy =o Joint Chiefs of Stafi United States Al Fores... oo... tuaaeni los Van Der Aue, Capt. O. E., Bureau of Medicine and Surger Van der Hoef, George T., Office of Secretary of) Commerce eR IR a Sea Vander Poel, Halsted B., Office of fnierttionil Materials HRI aeoR LE Van der Valk, H. M. H. A., International Wo tary Co RS aeea 351 Vandoren, Richard Hall, House post office...____ 292 Vanech, A. Devitt, Assistant Attorney General. 399 Van Fossan, Ernest H., judge, Tax Court of the United TI GSSL RB Ce 509 Van { Rev. C. E., secretary to Senator sommell ohinlt me a paint Foo Sen). ans 388 Van Natta, Cylar H., Jr., Farmers Home Administration. occ. ilu al. sos 424 Vanni, Michael J., Office of the Sergeant % Arms, Senate Jo nsl i Ly, SUT ata Van Scoyoc, Melwood W., Federal Power ti wyission. Lh Anan tt dae dg snl 5) 458 Van Sallie Capt. E. K., Bureau of Naval a a I SO Van Wagner, Ruth C., secretary to Representa-tive McKinnon... =... cee tier isecaid 258 Van Zandt, James E., Joint Committee on AOMICTNOITY.. oi ns imme mieme B BO Ei 220 Van Zandt, Mrs. James E., The Congressional BTEr RA REN nr ER TR Van Zandt, J. Parker, Office of the Special Assis-tant (Air {TTL DSR de I ARS A I SE 394 Vardaman, James K., Jr., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System_____________ 459 Vaskess, H. H., South Pacific Commission_____ 487 Vaughan, David B., United Nations___________ Vaughan, Maj. Gen. Harry H., military aide tothe President. 2. 337 Vaughn, William W., aide to Vice President BRIO a a me 285 Vazquez del Mercado, Rear Adm. Antonio: Inter-American Defense Board. ._____________ Joint Mexican-United States Defense Com- mMSSloN or Teac Ee Vehue, Mary O., House folding room___________ 291 Veldhuis, M. Ly Bureau of Agricultural and Page Verdi, S. L., secretary to Representative Latham 258 Verner, James M., Civil Aeronautics Board____ 451 Vernon, Kenneth F., Bureau of Reclamation___ 410 Vernon, Raymond, Office of Economie Defense and Trade Policy MET EA SO: LVL SI 0S EL Judielary. Loa iis on a Sas tase 214 Vest, George B., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System___________________. Viault, George, Bureau of the Budget__________ Victory, Dr. John F., National Advisory Com- mittee for Aeronautics... ......co clin 476 Viecelli, Capt. James D.: Bureau of Medicine and Surgery_.___________ 387 Naval Medical Survey Review Board.________ 383 vienmann, George A., Maritime Administra-ALTE thd GDS GTR Ci JER GRE Re Vilella, Roberto Sanchez, Executive Secretary of Puerto LEAT Ss SRRe Oa DY ee 413 Vinson, Carl: Board of Visitors to the Military Academy.__ 217 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy ______ 217 Vinson, Fred M. (Chief Justice, United States Supreme Court): BIOgraDRY OF. i i ie ie nr Smitserro 493 Member, Smithsonian Institution____________ 485 National GalleryiolfiArt.. 7 ___ .. ..: 486 Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 ‘Washington National Monument Society. _._ 490 Vint, Thomas C., National Park Service.______ Vinton, Warren J., Public Housing Admin- ISEra tion, or ois TRS aS a 471 Violett, Ralph C., Office of the Doorkeeper_____ 291 Voeller, Col. Charles H., Munitions Board_____ 375 Vogel, Harold, Food and Agriculture Organiza- tion of the Onited: States oo i or 48 taser Vogel, Col. Herbert D., Panama Canal Com-DANY. a a a ad Ta 480 Yogolana: Ervin, National Production Au-BROT Y oe 3s dona at Aa Ce von Dachenhausen, George A., District Asses- YA eahe Geno PR iS 519 Vonderlehr, Raymond A., Bureau of State BerVIeRs ol ha i en nr ae 463 von Karman, Dr. Theo., United States Air Ursa ei en Bains lad Suk Taba AL a von Storch, Earl G., National Capital Housing Authority. tienle savers 477 Vore, Kenneth L., Military Traffic Service.____ 376 Vorhes, Frank A., Jr., Food and Drug Admin- EN ETH ind ae ld LUN neinSG 461 tio Voth, Elizabeth, secretary to Senator Schoeppel. 252 Vallihs, les, Office of the Assistant Postmaster enera Wadden, Thomas A., Jr., United States Attor-ney’s Office Waddle, Catherine, Administrative Office of the United: States o.oo fs 510 Courts. ooo Wade, Catherine B., District Cosmetology Board. cee SE rg an Ea aE 521 Wade, Earle J., Board of Governors of Federal Reserve Bytom... odbas. oi sn Ul Gili 459 Wade, Hugh J., Bureau of Indian Affairs___.. Wadleigh, C. H., Bureau of Plant, Industry, Soil, and Agricultural Engineering__________ Wadsworth, James J., Federal Civil Defense Administration... So... SEER Wadsworth, James W., National Security Training: Commission. 02 0 Lf Fiore 480 Wosenls R. G., Bureau of Employment Secu- Waggaman, Thomas E., marshal of United States Supreme pace 495 COTTE. ierBLEEIE Wagman, Frederick H., Library of Congress__ 301 Wagner, A. J., Tennessee Valley Authority_.___ 489 Wagner, Allen, Civil Service Commission______ 4 Wahl, Charles F., National Mediation Board__ 478 Wahrenbrock, Howard E., Federal Power Commissiontics fos teal toimay er 458 Wailes, Edward T., Office of Deputy Under Seerefary-ofiState. io Loarri oni a 3 356 Wainhouse, David W., Bureau of Unit, Industrial Chemistry EE A sR 419 Nations Aare: oc on os 732 Congressional Directory Wait, Day J., Federal Power Commission. __._._ ‘Waite, W. E., Patent Office. __._..._i ._ 20. 439 ‘Waithayakon, Prince Wan, Thailand Ambassa-dor 5 Wakefield, Capt. E. K., Bureau of Naval Personnel pp RAR ot Re 8 e 3 Rta Su EN lu Te De Uh 388 Wakeman, Capt. Philip F., Office of ER Relations STE INES TRL LS SYR DL ER Bala 0k Waldron, Mary E., secretary to on Sasscer SLI BEE A 0 DS ae a Sl 260 Wales, Capt. G. H., Bureau of Ordnance__.._.. 389 Walker, Clovis D., Cotton Branch_____________ 426 Walker, Daniel, Commissioner United States Court of Military Appeals__._______________ Walker, Elmer E., Wage Stabilization Board... 345 Walker, Ernest P., National Zoological Park___ 486 Walker, Francis S., Maritime Administration.. 433 Walker, Frank C., trustee of Franklin D. Roose- velt Sry EET NS SSILp SY fe Walker, Harry L., District Corporation Coun- gel’8’Office > ota a Ud Sun 1g ATT 523 Walker, Ira D., Office of the Doorkeeper__.____ 291 Walker, John, National Gallery of Art__________ 486 Walker, Maj. Gen. John T., Personnel Depart- ment, Marine Corps: -iooce0 nut es a Kathleen, Organization of American Wome Te A aE Sal HA Walker, Paul A., Federal Communications Commission co ory oe vy mes uy Walker, Paul H., Tax Court of the oatind, Cam Willan Near E., Federal Fire Council .________ Wallace, Richard J., administrative assistant to Senator Belauver. ci. mio a ror at a 250 Wallace, Tom, Advisory Board on National Pa he a A a Waller, Fletcher C., Atomic Energy Commis-CT CY Tr eae Tene hi dd i 450 Waller, L. F., Administrative Office, Navy Department. ir mere Tan Ar Ee ei 382 Waller, Mrs. Littleman W. T., Jr., American Red LB rE Da ae Senate prion al dniop nt digi 448 Wallin, Rear Adm. Homer N., Bureau of Ships_ 389 Wallrodt, George R., Metropolitan Police. _____ 526 Walmsley, Walter N., Office of the Counselor, Departmentof State = 1 356 Walser, Daniel C., District Board for Regis- tration of Professional Engineers_.__________ 522 Walsh. A. J., Emergency Procurement Sei vice. 466 Walsh, Edmund J., Bureau of Accounts________ 404 Walsh, Capt. Herbert F., Office of Personnel___ 367 Walsh, Richard P., Petroleum Administration TT DEE. : is neon 407 Walsh, Maj. Gen. Robert L.: Inter-American Defense Board ____...__.______ 349 Joint Brazil-United States Defense Commis-Slo.alt 351 eirmilr aire) Joint Mexican United States Defense Commis-BO, ee het] Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada- United States. ....oeeel Suelo seta 480 Walsh, Robert M., Fats and Oils Branch______ 426 Wall J Boland F., United States Soldiers’ Wolk Thonis Gillespie, Commission ou Men-tal Health... idipstairteid 09 Walsh, Witla T., Reference Department, Library of Congress... cocoa gigall cuiuioad 300 Walstrom, John A., Petroleum Administration fop Defense... =~ o-oola 407 Walter, A. Henry, Interstate Commerce Com-mission Sh a Ak AEE YS EIR ULIT UR a nt) 474 Wangsness, Helen L., Td. to Representa-tive Sittlerdosisall snsoeal Hui slid vag 260 Ward, Charles H., Jr., United States Marshal’s YH Se a SE a a pi 510 Ward, Maj. Gen. Orlando, Special Staff, United States Aviny dois nd YA road 379 Page Ward, Raymond B., District Engineer Depart: menbiceolins acstcny oun nse ait 523 Ward, Sara L., secretary to Senator McKellar. 251 Ward, Truman, House caucus rooms. ___._._____ 292 Wardwell, C. A. R., Bureau of Foreign and Do-TOSHO COTIDOI00 so. eins con mes os 430 Warne, William E., Assistant Secretary of the Taterfor oh Dl adn ind, J WRG 405 Warner, Robert, National Production Authority 435 Warnock, Denver W., District Engineer De-partment ere eo A LR HE EAC a] 524 Warren, Charles, Washington National Monu-ment Society. Aor Se sett ZB 0 490 Warren, George L., Office of Deputy Assistant Secretary ofStdtel LL a) 356 Warren, Dr. George T., District Optometry BOAT 1 ah ige damon TL aE ATE Warren, Lindsay C., Conte General _____ 299 Warren, Mrs. Ae , The Congressional Worn: Marguerite M., secretary to Repre-Sortative Vinson. oto eld an Th 261 Washington, George Thomas, circuit judge, Court of Appeals for the District of Colum-bia Circuit (biography) Wasserman, Jacob N., Bureau of Land Man-agementosis JIU Dad 0 10 47 408 SITTIN Waterman, Dr. Alan T.: Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development__________._____ 472 National Science Foundation... _________._..___ 479 Waters, Herbert J., Office of Under Hoorotary of Agriculture Sad rer er SE I 415 Waters, John A., Jr., Atomic Energy Com- Waters, John K., U. 8. Military Academy... _. 380 Waters, Vincent B. , Bureau of Transportation... 402 Watkins, Arthur V: Joint Committee on the Economic Report__._ 219 Joint Committee on Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration. Si. ooo ve se sad nd UTES 221 Watkins, Charles L., Office of Secretary of BORAT0. sr vr Sn ae Bo a BAL Watkins, Mrs. Elise Z., District Board of LTELy Sa § 3 3 2 a 521 PT PR NR Watkins, Kennedy C., Office of Secretary of the TEeasUNY x20 0d Sl oof pl LOL LF Lala 363 Watkins, Orville, secretary to Resident Com-missioner Fernés-Isern™_____________ 261 Watson, Ann T., secretary to Representa- Hye Whitlen. co vu tins inn mw wD 261 Watson, Drexel D., Grain Branch. _____________ 426 Watson, Jack W., Committee on House Admin- (ii fn HEE Ie dE © SR 8 EE NE 213 Watson, oa P. W., Bureau of Aeronautics, : Ca fC Re eh TH ES SES AC ST TER 386 Watt, Li Adm. M., Offiee of Naval Material. 385 Watt, Ww. G., Board on Geographic Names______ 414 Watts, John CH Office of Personnel... _...... 396 Watts Lyle F.: Po BOrVICH = eo soni oh nr kr A AL 424 Watts, Fi 'H., Office oe es Tham, Sta, rs i ne wan Sh Lt bd LBL 416 Wayne, William, General Anthony Wayne Memorial Commission... _ 219 Weakly, Frank E., District Minimum Wage and Industrial Safety Boardioo cl ULL 521 Weaver, Alicia B., District Assessor’s office__.... 519 Weaver, Frank L., Federal Power Commission_. 458 ‘Webb, Frances Settle, secretary to Representa- Ve Wa Ker. oer oe Pn 28 oh mi te mrs stoe 261 Weaver, George L. P., Beeonstinefion Finance COTDOIACION.. Sonata ts nmr ns pork Ren wae ams 481 Webb, James E.: Air coordinating commitfeer oartlh ak 447 President’s Advisory Committee on Manage- ment Lolo (BU re JURE 100 gui 81 ‘Under Secretary of State... oll00 lil) 355 Webb, Marion, secretary to Representative Poulson. vo divi, frre ren ams Lil 259 Webb, Richard W., House Committee on Armed Services. __..._.. cw LIA Individual Index Page Webb, Willard, Reference Department, Library of ‘Congress. LA Tet De I Le Lo Ea 1 STR 300 Webber, Brig. Gen. Kenneth E., Office of Compirollericl oon aie fo Ss 396 Weber, Eugene W., International Joint Com- missions ey Lad ol Sata. SILT aid 473 Weber, Walter A., District Fire Department___.. 525 Weber, William, Weather Bureau... 440 Webster, Col. B. J., Office of Comptroller _______ 396 Webster, Edward M., Federal Communications COIINISBION 2 ad A SR a Cit 456 Webster, Rayburn, secretary to Representative liott, ER Re I Se fs ER OR FAT 255 Webster, KR. L., Office of Information __________ 417 Wedel, Paul J., ' Renegotiation Board. footsocsll 483 Wedel, Nr Theodore, District Public Welfare Oardisi sa re Cn RE a Sa 522 Weed, William H., Office of Rent Stabilization__ 344 Waoichel, Alvin F.: Hoard of Visitors to the Coast Guard Acad-; 21 hin of Visitors to the Merchant Marine Academy. pool Lr sioooatl ahs Gon. an Weicht, Carl L., administrative assistant to Senator 417 MRee bb TR Rar a 252 Weightman, R. H., Woall Buareaw: 2-0. oc 440 Weikert, Maj. Gen. . M., National War Col- 2 Weil, Dr. Emil, Hungarian Legation_.__________ Weil, T. Eliot, Bureau of Near Eastern Bouin Asian and ATTA ATDIE, oad 357 Weiner, Joun H., secretary to Representative Morga 58 Weir, Willian E., Office of Plant and Opera- ti Weir, William M., Office of the Technical Staff. _ Weiss, Gertrude S, Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home FL CONOTIHOS. on nice riots 4 tee Weiss, Lewis Allen, National Production Au- Phopiby ar ad EL RL le He em iii, 38 Weiss, Samuel, Bureau of Labor Statisties.._____ 443 ‘Weisz, Morris, "Bureau of Labor Statistics. _..___ 443 Weitzel, Frank H., General Accounting Office___ 299 Welch, Emmett H., Defense Production Admin- istration MEAT CARINE eR PL TA 342 Welch, E. J., Department of Corrections. _______ 527 Welch, Henry, Food and Drug Administration__ 461 Welchner, Lt. Col. Carl E., Air Force Liaison Sa SE nv ml ce He ee Ee 98 Weller, Dr. G. Louis, Jr., Metropolitan Police___ 526 Wells, ne R., Railroad Retirement Board_______ 481 Wells, Commander G. C., Munitions Board__._ 375 Wells, Commander H. F., Bureau of Naval Porsonnoll.. iit ais ara 388 Wells, John IL.i Office of Budget and Finance... 416 Wells, Orvis V Bureau of A ell Economics... 415 Commodity Credit Corporation.______________ 422 Wells, P. A., Bureau of Agricultural and Indus- trial Chemistry bier ham TE EEE 418 Welsh, Charles A., Library of Congress._.___.____ 301 Welsh, Donald G., Bureau of MineS...._.__._.___ 411 Welsh, Edward oS Reconstruction Finance Corporation NS ES Se TS ie 482 Welsh, Margaret L., secretary to Representative LeCompte Br Edn ak A de aa 258 Wender, Harry S., District Recreation Board __ 522 Wendrich, Lawrence H., Senate Committee on Appropriations I SAS aR a 201 Wendt, Col. W. W., Munitions Board._..______ or Wenley, Archibald a. , Freer Gallery of Art_____ Wensinger, Maj. Gen. ‘Walter W., Headquarters, : Marine. Corps. 0riie Fg ania 3B id 92 Wentzel, Nelson B., Office of the Assistant Postmaster General __ _._...___._.____.._ 402 Wenzel, Mary Virginia Lee, Civil Service Com-TOR telmar a ry 452 Werner, Jack, Federal Communications Com-TASSIMO Ses hie Tn ns So Gl Sl Ei 457 Werper, Pauline B., secretary to Representative Werts, ee R., Office of Defense Manpower.__. 441 Wessells, Rexford G., District Purchasing Divi- Sion: Saas i Te OL a ay BIRR ri 520 Wessenauer, G. O., Tennessee Valley Authority _ 489 West, Benjamin d., House Press Gallery_______ West, John W., District Government _________ 519 Page West, Langdon C., Administrative Assistant to Senator Hennings... _ 4... si ain) cau 50 Lid Robert Rout, assistant to Secretary of 355 West, Lith E.: District Corporation Counsel calito suinind Public Utilities Commission _.____.__________ Westbrook, Parker, secretary to Representative i 1 eae, B30 I 60 ToiletAT Westcott, Raymond A., United States Attor- ney’s OMe. tue Lead 511 Westfall, Ted B General Accounting Office____ 299 Westman, Elsie M., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. ©... ri 459 Weston, Mrs. Charles H., District Minimum Wage and Industrial Board ________________ 521 Westphal, Albert C. F., House Committee on PoreigniAfaiesosl rans to EC ian 213 Wetmore, Alexander: Canal Zone Biological Area... ._..________.____. 486 Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development ________________ 472 National Academy of Sciences 476 National Advisory Committee for Aero- MALICE eo a a or ee dr ah 4 NationaliAir Museum. oi. i300ol 486 National Gallery of Art... HO NC I0 486 Smithsonian Institation. J... Seis...ol. 485 Wetzel, Maj. Gen. E. S., Office of Personnel____ 396 Wexberg, Dr. LeopoldE., District Health De- DATION. mm A DT AS 525 Wexler, Harry, Weather Bureau. ._._._______.____ 440 Weyer,G. A. P., International Monetary Fund. 351 Weyland, Lt. Gen. Otto P., Oversea Commands_. 398 Weymann, Col. Eduardo, Inter-American De- TenEe Board baie oe Ea aa 349 Wharton, C. A., District Unemployment Com-pensation Bosrd. ob ead ia 522 Wheeler, Clvas A., Jr., secretary to Representa- tive Belchep..i Joo i all dons lal la vig 253 Wheeler, Dan H., Office of Territories_.________ 412 Wheeler, Joseph ‘C., Office of Budget and Fi- FTE TL STIG Latta Sr FAB Oe INE A Ce 416 Wheeler, Raymond A. Bureau of Accounts..____ 404 Wheeless, Leon L., Office of Secretary of De- {HE ERO CS HE LE a al 3 Whelan. J. Joseph, Office of Price Stabilization. _ Whelden, C. H., Jr., American Red C Wherry, "Elizabeth, "administrative assistant to Senator Smith of New J OrSY. atl LL 2 Whipple, Capt. W. J., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy si lu eg co Gon CE i 0 Whitaker, Samuel E., judge, Court of Claims (lography) 2 fore Ui eiiuing UL Fal 503 White, Bennett S., Jr., Bureau of Agricultural Economic Et oe med on en ot 4 16 White, Charles Belden, 2d, District Corporation Connsgel’s:Office. on aye 523 White, Edward L., House document room._____ 291 White, Edwin IL. ., Fcderal Communications Commission. >. 00300 Uo 0 1000 UL oaala 4 White, Mrs. J., Office of Clerk of the House. We John d., Office of the Postmaster Gen- whit, I Lincoln, “Office of Assistant Secretary of Toterdor oo oal ul nu Aa ai 406 White, Lt. Gen. T. D., Office of Operations____ 396 White, ¥ L., Production Au- Tan National thori 4 White, iia A., Sr., National Production AUENOTILY. oo i eno ln a aT 437 White, William F., Federal Mediation on Conciliation Service AT ahr Ric A ‘Whiteford, Capt. W. R., Bureau of Medicine | and Surgery OS CR I a RE 387 Whitehair, Francis P.: Defense Management Committee... .---._.--373 Under Secretary of the Navy ________.________ 381 Munitions Board: oi. Col tae ll iin 374 Whitehurst, Ben, administrative assistant to Senator Malone... Laan. ooiliiiibeliili 251 Whitehurst, Elmore, Administrative Office of the United States CourtS..--------—-io-... 510 734 Congressional Directory Page Whitehurst, Mrs. John L., Federal Civil De-fense-Administration..._. 0 IDO00 345 Whisky, Richard P., Federal Trade Commis- Whitley, Capt. Charles M., Office of Under Secretary of the Navy. Lo. ...__. 381 _._..____ ‘Whitlock, Ira, secretary is Senator Hunt. __.__ 250 Whitman, Roy L., Official Reporter, House..__ 293 Whitman, Walter G.: Atomic ‘Energy Commission... __........._. 450 Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development________________ 472 National Advisory ommittee for Aero-NARLICR. Lo sn A RB IR LR OT 476 Research and Development Board____________ 373 Whitmore, A. J., International Pacific Salmon Fisheries Fp Whittemore, W. D., Export-Import Bank o Washington, -=la. oop 0 Sie o3abiUnrsil Wisin, Mak Gen. Lyman P., Oversea Bo: 3 Whittington. Banning E., press information, United States Supreme Courboaoni. uci 495 Wichers, Edward, National Bureau of Sindng ards Wickard, Claude R., Rural Electrification act ministration sr de a a a DR BE 427 Wickens, Aryness Joy, Bureau of Labor Sta-{5 Ce dad a A LOIRE A ARR eR RUE Fe BT 4 Wiecking, Ernest H., Bureau of Agricultural Beonomies. onl oad oa i La 416 Wiener, Myron, War Claims Commission._____ 490 Wiersema Harry, Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Wiggin, C. M., Jr., Board for Correction of Naval Records SEL are ni OUT is 382 Wiggins, A. Lee M., Office of Secretary of the TreaSury.a. ty ita iis dosti l la Janeas 364 Wigglesworth, Richard B.: Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise Committee... 218 Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy.______ 217 Wight, William L., Permanent Joint Board on Defense, Canada-United States.____________ 480 Wh Fav B., Office of Budget and Fi-Tos Wilberding, M. X., District Board for Registra-tion of ‘Professional Engineers... ...._ ...c. 522 Wilcox, Billy, secretary to Representative antaffooi Tose ai aa auld anatunatio 258 Wilcox, F. O., Library of Congress. ._.._...___.. 301 Wilcox, Edward E., Office of Secretary of the on avy 8 Wilcox, Y ands 0., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Soc CIR RA LA LT hg IRDCVL SI 201 Wilcox, W. W., Library of Congress_._......___ 301 Wiser, Tom V., Emergency Procurement Serv- Wilder, fo, M., National Institute oid t Standards TERR A NO OL OL ie Sap dd 0 AME Wilding, AnthonyW., Smithsonian Institution. Wilding, William G., deputy District budget Offer os ee, alt de NL sn ae 520 Wiley, Hon. Alexander: Foreign Service Buildings Commission_______ 361 Joint Committee to Discuss Problems with the Assembly of the Council of Europe... ___ 221 Wier Frank H., Food and Drug Administra- mation en i a A SE Wilkinson, F. D., Howard University ..._..___ 461 Wilkinson, H. A., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce. .. oti sande.ada 431 Wilkinson, Roy P., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce. __.____..._._.. 214 Wilkinson, W. T'., Washington city post office.. 528 Willcox, Alanson W., Federal Security Agency. 460 Willey, Harold B., deputy clerk, United States SupremetCourt.. ult iio neal gab 495 Willey, Harriet D., Senate Committee on Agri- culture and Porestry -. -ic cote soa ii: 201 Page Williams, A. J., Federal Maritime Board... ____ 433 Williams, Ben "M., Office of the ee Engineer SERGE RT BE Be T See 4 RS Selle on Williams, Betty D., secretary to District Com missioner ol. ol Rl Lo FE URE Co 519 Williams, C. D., Public Buildings Service______ 466 Williams, C. Dickerman, Solicitor, Department of Commerce. 24 HG Nps Ui pil al 429 Williams, Carthell, Office of the Doorkeeper____ 291 Williams, Dan G., International Exchange BOTVIOR. Linh nian did a rnin BOER THO 486 Williams, David, secretary to Representative Smith of Mississippi fart Sicsn Dn AHN 260 Williams, David C., Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia... _. 500 Williams, David F'., Civil Service Commission. 452 Williams, Donald A, Soil Conservation Service. 428 Williams, E. Bryan, Research and Develop-ment Beard... Liat] 00s LEER aa 374 Williams, Eleanore Dague, Office of Recorder OL Deed ob he i Sr BE 512 Williams, Erie, Carribean Commission... _.____ 451 Williams, Faith M., Bureauof Labor Statistics. 443 Williams, George S., administrative assistant to: SenatorWilllams.._.._._...0 0 00. 252 Williams, Gordon, International Monetary Pond ad) radidE SU 351 hkl Irene, secretary to Representative NAay CSEUR de IB SE 257 Williams, % ames C., Office of Sergeant at Arms, OMe. hh aa Bs SA TGA sls Williams, Jessie, Capitol Page School _________. 295 Williams, John H., Munitions Board... ________ 375 Williams, Mrs. JohnJ., The Congressional Club. 454 Williams, Julia M.., Government Patents Board. 469 Williams, Kenneth B., Board of Governors of Federal Reserve System i TERS A FER Nad he 45G Hil Lewis E., Housing and Home Finance Williams, its L., Jr., Office of the Surgeon General cons UU nd oilmnll Inuit 462 Williams, Capt. M., Office of Naval Material__ 385 Williams, Murat W., Under Secretary of State.. 356 Williams, Paul P., administrative assistant to Senator Hendrickson. 8000 ............._.c. 250 Williams, Commander R. A., Bureau of Sup- pliesiand Accounts. ou 0. ool Liou 389 Williams, Robert E., National Production Au- (IVELi EE SE A IR ENN Sh CR OES nes Li 437 Williams, Robert P., House Committee on Appropriations. anand nani gio hs 213 Williams, Ross, National Production Authority. 438 Williams, R. w., Federal Maritime Board _____ 433 Williams, Stanley P., Office of Secretary of Agriculture... oho bade Taint og Williams; Mrs. Velma @G., District Board St Bdueation...o biol. bicalinind Ja fai 521 Williams, W. J., Atomic Energy Commission... 450 Williams, Wash B., Columbia Hospital for WOMBH. ish iris dea Rand A RR LA SE S58 S 453 Williams, Wesley S., District Board of Educa-Tr eS r L RO nel nS SS Lat E Bd 3 Williamson, David, Mutual Security Agency... 475 Williamson, C. Aubrey, Office of Sergeant at ArmsrSenate ct tli dl ant TR 286 Williamson, Francis T., Bureau of European Zvi Eby Eran nh Red Cade en ein al Cid 358 Williamson, Commander I., Naval Gun Fac-Ge I. WEAR A UM Sp 391 Willis, George H.: Committee for Reciprocity Information_._._. 454 Office of International Finance. ________._____ 369 Williston, Sidney W., Office of Official Reporters of Debates... cll. JSR BETS 293 Willmette, Terese R., Office of Official Teporiers of Debates, HOUSe. ee -1203 ‘Willner, W.. H., Patent Office...0. 439 Willoughby, J ohn A., Federal Communications Commission...or LT 456 oo Wills, David H., International Monetary Fund. 351 Wills, Joseph E., Senate Press Gallery__...____. 573 Willson, Clifford H., Office of Secretary of the TH ROTC 2 rd La Vatu su es £3 So ash at aor oso 98 ‘Wilm, Harold G., Forest Service. ___._._......_. 425 Wilson, A. Hamilton, District Architects Office 521 Wilson, AT, Maritime Administration... 434 Indwidual Index Wilson, Charles E.: American National Red Cross... __________ Director of Defense Mobilization_____________ 339 National Advisory Board on Mobilization PoleVi db oe toaailn iy | JI maa 347 Wilson, Siitiora M., Library of Gonaress Nd 301 Wilson, Douglas S., Reconstruction Finance Corporations Zo oh pen ey aaa 482 Wilson, Edwin B., National Academy of Sci- ET{3 a I ee SS TEU TR TI i OF 476 Wilson, Col. E. H., Munitions Board ..________ 375 Wilson, Frank R., Bureau of the Census___..._ 430 Wilson, George A., Petroleum Administration for Defense... oven linbs fos Sos gang 407 Wilson, George F., Administrative Assistant to Senator 2.2 Knowland............._ 251 Wilson, George P., Jr., Defense Solid Fuels Ad-TISA ION coe ls sey ie a SEE Se 408 Wilson, H. Eldred, Office of the Sergeant at Arg, TIOUBC ermanne Ra EEE El 290 Wilson, Hewitt, Bureau of Mines______._______ 412 Wilson, Col. James W., Air Force Liaison Office Wilson, John C., American Red CTOSS.--WwW ilson, Leo B. , District Fire Department. __-Wilson, Louisa, Board of Immigration Appeals. Ww ilson, C., Extension Service. .....o.. i... Wilson, Marie, secretary to Representative Seely-Brown A esi hus La BEEN SNe nl 2 ‘Wilson, Milburn L., Extension Service.....____ Wilson, Paul M., House Committee on Appro- priations ON Oe RE NE Ns Ahn pl VERON 2 Wilson, Rear Adm. Ralph E., Military -Sea Transportation A eyEE bly Wilson, Robert S., American Red Cross. _._.___ Wilson, Maj. Gen. Roscoe C., Office of Opera-5 tions. a A SS al Wie mle ER Wilson, Sarah E., Public Utilities Commission__ 527 Wilson, ‘Thomas R., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic COMITOree. . ooooe somm oom ins 431 Wilson, William L., Si Civil Defense Ad-ministration pst aseon i dadaranel Toda ve 347 Wilson, William S., Jr., Office of the Legislative Counsel. Hotse.... 0. iaiereiSusy 0 293 Wiltord, Antoine, Caribbean Commission______ 451 Wiman, Cecil V., Office of the Assistant Post- master: General-cioo oun. salineAasait st 403 Wimpery, Harrington, Federal Power Commis-» olCRO eto eh aN Sd I ‘Winant, Frederick, Defense Production Admin- istration ns SSSI el in Cd EE aS 341 Winckler, Robert G., Federal Supply Service. 466 Winegardner, Reed M., Federal Civil Defense Administration. coor vis cnrisi nb Lo canals 347 Winfree, Archie M., Metropolitan Police Deparimento ol sop bruni peti sh nenoi than 526 Winfrey, Fred A., American Red Cross._.._.__-448 Wing, Lesher S., Wingard, Capt. WwW. Winiewicz, Jozef, Polish Ambassador_..._.______ 536 Winings, i Paul, Immigration ar.d Naturali-plo BervIen i a ee 400 Winkel, Adrian P., secretary to Representative McCarthy 258 Winkle, yy E., Bureau of Internal Revenue. 364 Winn, Robert H., ’ National Production Anno it Winnacker, Rudolph A., National iisiorial Publications Commission... Winslett, M. Y., secretary to RR be 260 Winslow, Joseph E., Civil Service Commission. 452 Winslow, Lorenzo S.: Commission of Fine Arts Commission on Renovation of the Executive Mansions 5 Saul lS pest pn he hE we rete 221 Winslow, Richard S., United States Mission to the United NOtONS. «oo asia an 362 release Winslow, Thacher, International Labor Organ-ization 35 Wine Willard, Committee on Purchases of Blind-Made Products. «oo 454 —-—---.——___ Winters, George ‘H., International Boundary and Water Commission, United States and IE Bes Se ha NR ab RR 472 Page Winters, Rhett Y., Agricultural Research Ad-TE EY SU I SG ERSiR 418 Wiprud, Arne C., Office of the Postmaster Gen-CT i TR 401 Wirth, Conrad L.: Commission for Construction of Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard. . 217 Bederal Fire Counelll oo soe guge dh uno 468 National Arboretum Advisory Council __.._.. 421 National Capital Park and Planning Com-CE pe rE a SeA Te TR 477 National Park Serviee. oc. Jo sod 00. init 410 National Park Trust Fund Boerd____________ 411 Wise, Lr 0O., District Insurance Depart-EN 2 Sa a Ta 526 wise, ‘Bri H., Interstate Commerce Commis-LAL a ub ae I NE 474 Wie Rafcri D., District Corporation Counsel’s i i pia a a Si me a mer mt REE TS 523 Wise, William C., Rural Electrification Admin-istration SE I AER 427 Wise, Brig. Gen. W. W., Office of Matériel. ____ 397 Wissman, Bert, Minority Policy Committee... 202 Withington, Rear Adm. Frederick S.: Atomic Energy Commission. = oi 0euo i 451 Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission. a. 2 cote tm adm 375 Wiihw, Robert B., Astrophysical Observa-a ep ee SAE ES Se BE kN Ee 486 With is E., secretary to Senator Hicken-looper SE i dE a ST WS AW Ie 250 Witt, Edgar E., Indian Claims Commission_._. 471 Wixon, Henry E., District Corporation Coun-Sel'sOffiee. li soit Sp on iid odin SE TL 523 Wofford, Mabel, House Committee on Foreign Affairs TR es a A Bae RE Rr i 13 ‘Wolcott, Helen B., Board of Governors of Fed-eral Reserve System NOSE NL lh TENT Cn) GPR 459 Wolcott, Jesse P., Joint Committee on the Eco-nomic Beporbas bite otal Coie 0 uy 219 Wolf, Alfred on Office of Secretary of the Inte-TOT. A Lb ois Sr Eg sh bo A 2 we BRE hr Hh 405 walls Ciatom B., secretary to Representative 5 eall 25 Wolfe, George R., secretary to Representative CUTS OE VISROITL = sie rtd es 255 Wolfe, James N., House post office... ______.____ 293 Wolfe, 1. Eugene, Office of Industrial Relations. 384 Wolfle, Sam, Patent Office... onceol 439 Wolfrey, William T., Jr., Bureau of Agricultural Beonomdes. olinofan A 415 Be SE Wolfsohn, Joel D., Office of Secretary of the INGerIOr, o.oo ms Smid roa a Sos Jabra ume 405 Wolhon, Harry L., International Monetary i Bs oh crm ee EE rE Ed i 5 Woll, "Matthew, Territorial Expansion Memo-Mm a A 218 olan, Stanley C., Office of Secretary of i Wola Capt. J. E. , Bureau of Supplies and ACCOUNS coor. sae so ey ey 389 ‘Womack, Don C., Senate Press Gallery.....___ 573 Wood, Carlton G5 Bureau of Foreign and Domestic CIOTDTIETON . caeaiasb tds 431 Wood, Claude E., administrative assistant to Sento ATACISON i nmi pe 249 Wood, Howard C., Subversive Activities Con-trol Beard idaho mires hn oe AAR 88 Wood, N. O., Jr., Office of Secretary of the TCRIOTS oo iron aiden ala AL 406 anisms Wood, Rear Adm. Russell E., Chief of Staff, Cloasl Guard. ii dienesSE SINE 366 Wood, Capt. Sanford B. D., Office of Judge Advocate General of the Navy. __.__________ 390 Wood, Wilma, secretary to Senator Jenner..._.__ 250 | Woodbury, Charles G.: Advisory Board on National Parks, etc_.__-__ 411 Bureau of Plant Industry, Soils, and Agricul- Tal ENE INeariNgG. orn imeem a AL 421 National Park Trust Fund Board._......_.___ 411 Woodhouse, Noel R. S., Office of the General Clouse: 2300 ts SSS Nee phd 384 Woodring, Dorothy E., secretary to Representa-tive NotbIad onAree eA 259 736 Congressional Directory Page Woodruff, Edith, secretary to Representative HinshawSean atia, ial utiEE] 257 ose Woodruff, Roy O., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation ET III Si 216 Woodruff, W. W., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Woods, Capt. E. 2. Office of the Judge Advo- cate General of the NaVY.. ol 20h odin: 390 Woods, H. E., Inland Waterways Corporation. 433 Woods, Tighe E., Office of Rent Stabilization__. 344 Woodside, Byron D., Defense Production Ad- MINISEEAEION. oi cn in mtr ne 341 Woodside, Robert G., American Battle Monu- ments Commission. ___.________ Hard RHCLL 447 Woodson, Joseph A., Bureau of Accounts______ 368 Woodward, Cliff, Farm Credit Administration. 423 Woodward, Ellen S. , Federal Security Agency... 460 Woodward, Newt, Office of clerk of House... 290 Woodward, Warren, secretary to Senator John- son of Texas PE Pe re Ee end id A 250 Woodworth, L. N., Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation Emin ra ns EB I 216 Woodworth, Lois W., secretary to Representa- tive Blagkney Lid J pal Clin 00 iil 253 Woody, Arthur E., Tariff Commission_._______ 488 Woody, Marjorie A., secretary to Representa- tive! Abbitt Bd. Jal Ld, SI Sl 253 Woolf, W. H., Bureau of Internal Revenue. ____ 365 Woosley, Clyde W., Defense Solid Fuels Ad- MINISEEAtION «a ae vt Sr 408 Wooten, Herbert L., “Public Housing Adminis- tration Se ar et rE de er ir A Lr 471 Worley, Eugene, judge, United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (biography). 502 Worrell, Rufus I., Office of Price Stabilization... 343 Worthley, Harlan N ., Research and Develop- ment Beard... ois TUL 374 Wrather, Stephen E., Tobacco Branch_________ 426 Wrather, William E., ' Geological Survey ........ 409 Wray, Louise, Assessor's Office. _____________ 519 Wright, A. Bruce, Office of Secretary of the Interior ARSE LEA IT SN AREAL A A ER CC 4 406 Wright, Clarence S., National Labor Relations 0h oar 00s. iT al Snags 7 Wright, Douglas G., Southwestern Power Ad- ministration SEL AR a TR SRN TSN 414 Wright, H. J., Office of Assistant Secretary of thelArmy i 2 00 C0000 eas 2200.3 378 Wright, Helen, Office of the Clerk of House_____ 290 Wright, J oseph S., Federal Trade Commission. 464 Wright, Leslie S. secretary to Senator Hill. ___. 250 Wright, Lo Kenneth, Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine... oo. J JlolilS00 ei 420 Wright, Marshall S.: Board on Geographic Names. ...__._.._..i.... 414 Office of Plant and Operations. _______..______ 417 Wright, Ralph, Assistant Secretary of Labor... 441 Wright, Dr. Theodore P., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. oo... 476 Wright, Wiley R., Civil Aeronautics Adminis-I VAL mE Lk ph gk fo SIE 1 EA 432 Wright, William Diggs, Office of Operating Pelion 360 Wright, Young J., District Engineer’s Depart-EEL 0 Ey i Sa pile oon Ry Rp UE St 524 Wrong, Hume: Canadian‘ Ambassador... or nti us 531 Far Eastern Commission... co ccavnmnnanns 456 Wurzlow, Frank W., Jr., secretary to Senator Blender oo oo ni er ie a a 250 Wyatt, Wolter, reporter, United States Supreme Br a EE ei aS er TY 495 Wylie, i A., Office of the Secretary of DIOTCNIN = rms spars ss soba amr sim SBI I HL 371 ‘Wyman, an C., Office of the Assistant Post-master Genera, 4 RE A I asi gis Ind 402 Wyman, John M., Federal Home Loan Bank System. ol. ones ol aed oiiidh 470 Wythe, George, Bureau of Foreign and Do-mestic'Commeree.. . 21 CULL ISL 0 ETT 431 X Xanten, William A., District Engineer Doparts, 1 ET Ds SO SS PCH Y Yakobson, Sergius: Legislative Reference Service. _________.__.._ 301 Reference Department, Library of Congress. 300 Rances, Patrick H., National Science Founda- ed ee be ed LA IRIE es A TILE LR EEO 479 rg hg You Chan, Korean Ambassador___. 534 Yarbrough, William’ T., National Security Resources Board... 339 Yardley, Edward, Committee for Reciprocity Information. 0. Cod li wid 0 200 I) 454 Yates, Brig. Gen, Donald N.: Interdepartmental Committee on Scientific Research and Development. ______.________ 472 Office of Development. [iL .. 0 C0000)J 396 Yates, Frank L., General Accounting Office... 299 Yates, Sidney R., Board of Visitors to the Naval Acad BIIEY creo tin i ebrer era W A L1 217 Yeagley, J. Walter, Reconstruction Finance Corporation... 5 0 0 WOT ating 482 Yingling, John H., secretary to Senator Ful-bright, COZ 000 0 OP a Ley FI bah 0g 250 Yingling, Roswell M., Office of Administrative Assistant to Secretary of the Army _________ 379 Yntema, Hessel E., Committee on Practice_._. 368 Yohalem, Morton E., Securities and Exchange Commissiontl LAL. LU sonia ig 3 York, Edgar J., Office of Assistant Postmaster General. 00 SEH G UG Jeb fra bp be ito 403 Young, Charles H., Tennessee Valley Authority. 489 Young, Capt. D. B., Office of Secretary of the Navy ps ER Sie wn LR Lon nh ae ET 381 Young, Vitae C., administrative assistant to Senator Smathers FE AS Se 0 SS 252 Young, Harold A., American Red Cross..._____ 448 Young, Howard Y, Defense Materials Procure- ment Ageney. 20. nL G00 J HRSG 10 340 Young, James W., Indian Arts and Crafts Board. oun saan JRXEGHEU 7 JREAIHGU 408 Young, John D., Office of Defense Mobilization. 339 Young, John L., Distriet Recreation Board.__.__ 522 Young, John Russell: District Commissioner... = Coin es Dain: 518 District Zoning Commission. ______________.__ 520 National Capital Housing Authority. _____.__ 477 National Capital Sesquicentennial Commis- ston U2 30g 3 LOTS) BO INI E00 20 Washington-Lincoln Memorial Gettysburg Boulevard Commission... .__________.___ 217 Young, Milton R., Board of Visitors to the Mili-tary’ Academy: i830 bord indhes Haid 21% Young, Ralph A., Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System______________._____ 45¢ Young, William A., House Committee on Ex-penditures in the Executive Departments_. 213 Youngdahl, Luther W., judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia. 508 Younger, Ella J., Freedmen’s Hospital _.______. 463 Yu, Kuo-Hwa, International Monetary Fund._ 350 Z Zadeikis, Povilas, Lithuanian Minister__.______ 535 Zagami, Placidino, Office of Official Reporters of Debates. lili ainsiiI ola 287 8 Zapple, Nicholas, Senate Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce.._.______.____. 202 Zeder, James C., Office of Technical Services.__ 439 Zeis, Paul M., National Production Authority. 438 Zellers, Charles N., District Board of Education. 521 Zempel, Arnold, Office of Secretary of Labor. __ 441 Zepp, W. J., National Production Authority___ 438 Zetek, James, Canal Zone Biological Area. ._.__. 486 Ziehl, W. H., Bureau of Customs_______________ 365 Zimmerli, O. A., Forest Service________ CAEL 424 Zimmerly, Harriet J., Office of Under Secretary olithe'Ady Force... 0) Lh: noo. DIES9018 394 Zimmerman, Esther H., District Government._ 512 Zimmerman, Commander Max E., Naval School of Hospital Administration _._______________ 391 Zimmerman, Virgil B., Office of Price Stabiliza- Zimmerman, William, Jr., Bureau of Land I a LU ML am GR a dade Teh stedia btn 408 Zinchenko, Konstantin I,, United Nations... _ 354 Individual Index Page Zinn, Charles J., House Committee on Judiciary. 214 Zims, Mrs. Sid, Combined Airlines Ticket Office. 297 Zinner, Paul, Bureau of Mines A Ea Se A LTE 412 Zuckert, Eugene M.: Assistant Secretary of the Air Force__________ 393 Defense Management Committee. __________ 373 Zue, Annabell, House Committee on Expendi-tures in the Executive Departments________ 213 O Page Zumwalt, Riley R., secretary to Representative Mackol Washington =o Zwemer, Raymund L., Reference Department, Libraryvoi Congress i oasis o.oo0 Zwerner, Adolph H., Housing and Home Fi-NANCE ATONOY . ih. ibn amt me i i ia Zychlinski, Louis Y. de, Office of the Assistant Postmaster General Date Due IR tet, RE if SR i U«S. Congress ET Official congressional directory x—. N i, 328.73 U58o0 v.82% PN N REFEAEROE DEPT. ind