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BROWN_A.txt
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The Fulton County Grand Jury said Friday an investigation
of Atlanta's recent primary election produced "no evidence" that
any irregularities took place. The jury further said in term-end
presentments that the City Executive Committee, which had over-all
charge of the election, "deserves the praise and thanks of the
City of Atlanta" for the manner in which the election was conducted.
The September-October term jury had been charged by Fulton
Superior Court Judge Durwood Pye to investigate reports of possible
"irregularities" in the hard-fought primary which was won by
Mayor-nominate Ivan Allen Jr&. "Only a relative handful
of such reports was received", the jury said, "considering the
widespread interest in the election, the number of voters and the size
of this city". The jury said it did find that many of Georgia's
registration and election laws "are outmoded or inadequate
and often ambiguous". It recommended that Fulton legislators
act "to have these laws studied and revised to the end of modernizing
and improving them". The grand jury commented on a number
of other topics, among them the Atlanta and Fulton County purchasing
departments which it said "are well operated and follow generally
accepted practices which inure to the best interest of both governments".
#MERGER PROPOSED# However, the jury said it believes "these
two offices should be combined to achieve greater efficiency and reduce
the cost of administration". The City Purchasing Department,
the jury said, "is lacking in experienced clerical personnel
as a result of city personnel policies". It urged that the city "take
steps to remedy" this problem. Implementation of Georgia's
automobile title law was also recommended by the outgoing jury.
It urged that the next Legislature "provide enabling funds
and re-set the effective date so that an orderly implementation of
the law may be effected". The grand jury took a swipe at the
State Welfare Department's handling of federal funds granted for
child welfare services in foster homes. "This is one of the
major items in the Fulton County general assistance program", the
jury said, but the State Welfare Department "has seen fit to distribute
these funds through the welfare departments of all the counties
in the state with the exception of Fulton County, which receives
none of this money. The jurors said they realize "a proportionate
distribution of these funds might disable this program in our less
populous counties". Nevertheless, "we feel that in the
future Fulton County should receive some portion of these available
funds", the jurors said. "Failure to do this will continue to place
a disproportionate burden" on Fulton taxpayers. The jury
also commented on the Fulton ordinary's court which has been under
fire for its practices in the appointment of appraisers, guardians and
administrators and the awarding of fees and compensation. #WARDS PROTECTED#
The jury said it found the court "has incorporated into
its operating procedures the recommendations" of two previous grand
juries, the Atlanta Bar Association and an interim citizens committee.
"These actions should serve to protect in fact and in effect
the court's wards from undue costs and its appointed and elected
servants from unmeritorious criticisms", the jury said. Regarding
Atlanta's new multi-million-dollar airport, the jury recommended
"that when the new management takes charge Jan& 1 the airport
be operated in a manner that will eliminate political influences".
The jury did not elaborate, but it added that "there should
be periodic surveillance of the pricing practices of the concessionaires
for the purpose of keeping the prices reasonable". #ASK JAIL
DEPUTIES# On other matters, the jury recommended that: _(1)_
Four additional deputies be employed at the Fulton County Jail and
"a doctor, medical intern or extern be employed for night and weekend
duty at the jail". _(2)_ Fulton legislators "work with city
officials to pass enabling legislation that will permit the establishment
of a fair and equitable" pension plan for city employes.
The jury praised the administration and operation of the Atlanta
Police Department, the Fulton Tax Commissioner's Office, the Bellwood
and Alpharetta prison farms, Grady Hospital and the Fulton
Health Department.
Mayor William B& Hartsfield filed suit for divorce from his
wife,
Pearl Williams Hartsfield, in Fulton Superior Court Friday.
His petition charged mental cruelty. The couple was married
Aug& 2, 1913. They have a son, William Berry Jr&, and a daughter,
Mrs& J& M& Cheshire of Griffin. Attorneys
for the mayor said that an amicable property settlement has been agreed
upon. The petition listed the mayor's occupation as "attorney"
and his age as 71. It listed his wife's age as 74 and place
of birth as Opelika, Ala&. The petition said that the couple
has not lived together as man and wife for more than a year.
The Hartsfield home is at 637 E& Pelham Rd& ~NE.
Henry L& Bowden was listed on the petition as the mayor's attorney.
Hartsfield has been mayor of Atlanta, with exception
of one brief interlude, since 1937. His political career goes back to
his election to city council in 1923. The mayor's present
term of office expires Jan& 1. He will be succeeded by Ivan Allen
Jr&, who became a candidate in the Sept& 13 primary after Mayor
Hartsfield announced that he would not run for reelection.
Georgia Republicans are getting strong encouragement to enter
a candidate in the 1962 governor's race, a top official said Wednesday.
Robert Snodgrass, state ~GOP chairman, said a meeting
held Tuesday night in Blue Ridge brought enthusiastic responses
from the audience. State Party Chairman James W& Dorsey
added that enthusiasm was picking up for a state rally to be held Sept&
8 in Savannah at which newly elected Texas Sen& John Tower
will be the featured speaker. In the Blue Ridge meeting,
the audience was warned that entering a candidate for governor would force
it to take petitions out into voting precincts to obtain the signatures
of registered voters. Despite the warning, there was a
unanimous vote to enter a candidate, according to Republicans who attended.
When the crowd was asked whether it wanted to wait one
more term to make the race, it voted no- and there were no dissents.
The largest hurdle the Republicans would have to face is a
state law which says that before making a first race, one of two alternative
courses must be taken: _1._ Five per cent of the voters
in each county must sign petitions requesting that the Republicans be
allowed to place names of candidates on the general election ballot,
or _2._ The Republicans must hold a primary under the county unit
system- a system which the party opposes in its platform.
Sam Caldwell, State Highway Department public relations director,
resigned Tuesday to work for Lt& Gov& Garland Byrd's
campaign. Caldwell's resignation had been expected for some
time. He will be succeeded by Rob Ledford of Gainesville, who has
been an assistant more than three years. When the gubernatorial campaign
starts, Caldwell is expected to become a campaign coordinator for
Byrd.
The Georgia Legislature will wind up its 1961 session Monday
and head for home- where some of the highway bond money it approved
will follow shortly. Before adjournment Monday afternoon, the
Senate is expected to approve a study of the number of legislators
allotted to rural and urban areas to determine what adjustments should
be made. Gov& Vandiver is expected to make the traditional
visit to both chambers as they work toward adjournment. Vandiver likely
will mention the $100 million highway bond issue approved earlier
in the session as his first priority item. #CONSTRUCTION BONDS# Meanwhile,
it was learned the State Highway Department is very near
being ready to issue the first $30 million worth of highway reconstruction
bonds. The bond issue will go to the state courts for a
friendly test suit to test the validity of the act, and then the sales
will begin and contracts let for repair work on some of Georgia's
most heavily traveled highways. A Highway Department source
said there also is a plan there to issue some $3 million to $4 million
worth of Rural Roads Authority bonds for rural road construction work.
#A REVOLVING FUND# The department apparently intends to make
the Rural Roads Authority a revolving fund under which new bonds would
be issued every time a portion of the old ones are paid off by tax
authorities. Vandiver opened his race for governor in 1958 with
a battle in the Legislature against the issuance of $50 million worth
of additional rural roads bonds proposed by then Gov& Marvin
Griffin. The Highway Department source told The Constitution,
however, that Vandiver has not been consulted yet about the plans
to issue the new rural roads bonds.
Schley County Rep& B& D& Pelham will offer a resolution
Monday in the House to rescind the body's action of Friday in
voting itself a $10 per day increase in expense allowances. Pelham
said Sunday night there was research being done on whether the
"quickie" vote on the increase can be repealed outright or whether
notice would have to first be given that reconsideration of the action
would be sought. While emphasizing that technical details were
not fully worked out, Pelham said his resolution would seek to set
aside the privilege resolution which the House voted through 87-31.
A similar resolution passed in the Senate by a vote of 29-5.
As of Sunday night, there was no word of a resolution being offered
there to rescind the action. Pelham pointed out that Georgia
voters last November rejected a constitutional amendment to allow legislators
to vote on pay raises for future Legislature sessions.
A veteran Jackson County legislator will ask the Georgia House
Monday to back federal aid to education, something it has consistently
opposed in the past. Rep& Mac Barber of Commerce is
asking the House in a privilege resolution to "endorse increased federal
support for public education, provided that such funds be received
and expended" as state funds. Barber, who is in his 13th
year as a legislator, said there "are some members of our congressional
delegation in Washington who would like to see it (the resolution)
passed". But he added that none of Georgia's congressmen specifically
asked him to offer the resolution. The resolution, which
Barber tossed into the House hopper Friday, will be formally read
Monday. It says that "in
the event Congress does provide this increase in federal funds", the
State Board of Education should be directed to "give priority"
to teacher pay raises. _COLQUITT_- After a long, hot controversy,
Miller County has a new school superintendent, elected, as a
policeman put it, in the "coolest election I ever saw in this county".
The new school superintendent is Harry Davis, a veteran
agriculture teacher, who defeated Felix Bush, a school principal and
chairman of the Miller County Democratic Executive Committee.
Davis received 1,119 votes in Saturday's election, and Bush
got 402. Ordinary Carey Williams, armed with a pistol, stood by at
the polls to insure order. "This was the coolest, calmest
election I ever saw", Colquitt Policeman Tom Williams said. "Being
at the polls was just like being at church. I didn't smell
a drop of liquor, and we didn't have a bit of trouble". The
campaign leading to the election was not so quiet, however. It was
marked by controversy, anonymous midnight phone calls and veiled threats
of violence. The former county school superintendent, George
P& Callan, shot himself to death March 18, four days after he
resigned his post in a dispute with the county school board. During
the election campaign, both candidates, Davis and Bush, reportedly
received anonymous telephone calls. Ordinary Williams said he,
too, was subjected to anonymous calls soon after he scheduled the election.
Many local citizens feared that there would be irregularities
at the polls, and Williams got himself a permit to carry a gun
and promised an orderly election. Sheriff Felix Tabb said the
ordinary apparently made good his promise. "Everything went
real smooth", the sheriff said. "There wasn't a bit of trouble".
_AUSTIN, TEXAS_- Committee approval of Gov& Price Daniel's
"abandoned property" act seemed certain Thursday despite the adamant
protests of Texas bankers. Daniel personally led the fight
for the measure, which he had watered down considerably since its
rejection by two previous Legislatures, in a public hearing before
the House Committee on Revenue and Taxation. Under committee
rules, it went automatically to a subcommittee for one week. But
questions with which committee members taunted bankers appearing as witnesses
left little doubt that they will recommend passage of it.
Daniel termed "extremely conservative" his estimate that it would
produce 17 million dollars to help erase an anticipated deficit of
63 million dollars at the end of the current fiscal year next Aug&
31. He told the committee the measure would merely provide means
of enforcing the escheat law which has been on the books "since
Texas was a republic". It permits the state to take over bank accounts,
stocks and other personal property of persons missing for seven
years or more. The bill, which Daniel said he drafted personally,
would force banks, insurance firms, pipeline companies and other
corporations to report such property to the state treasurer. The escheat
law cannot be enforced now because it is almost impossible to locate
such property, Daniel declared. Dewey Lawrence, a Tyler
lawyer representing the Texas Bankers Association, sounded the opposition
keynote when he said it would force banks to violate their contractual
obligations with depositors and undermine the confidence of bank
customers. "If you destroy confidence in banks, you do something
to the economy", he said. "You take out of circulation many
millions of dollars". Rep& Charles E& Hughes of Sherman,
sponsor of the bill, said a failure to enact it would amount "to
making a gift out of the taxpayers' pockets to banks, insurance
and pipeline companies". His contention was denied by several
bankers, including Scott Hudson of Sherman, Gaynor B& Jones
of Houston, J& B& Brady of Harlingen and Howard Cox of Austin.
Cox argued that the bill is "probably unconstitutional"
since, he said, it would impair contracts. He also complained
that not enough notice was given on the hearing, since the bill was
introduced only last Monday.
_AUSTIN, TEXAS_- Senators unanimously approved Thursday the bill
of Sen& George Parkhouse of Dallas authorizing establishment
of day schools for the deaf in Dallas and the four other largest counties.
The bill is designed to provide special schooling for more
deaf students in the scholastic age at a reduced cost to the state.
There was no debate as the Senate passed the bill on to the
House. It would authorize the Texas Education Agency to establish
county-wide day schools for the deaf in counties of 300,000 or
more population, require deaf children between 6 and 13 years of age
to attend the day schools, permitting older ones to attend the residential
Texas School for the Deaf here. Operating budget for the
day schools in the five counties of Dallas, Harris, Bexar, Tarrant
and El Paso would be $451,500, which would be a savings of $157,460
yearly after the first year's capital outlay of $88,000 was absorbed,
Parkhouse told the Senate. The ~TEA estimated there
would be 182 scholastics to attend the day school in Dallas County,
saving them from coming to Austin to live in the state deaf school.
#@# {DALLAS MAY GET} to hear a debate on horse race
parimutuels
soon between Reps& V& E& (Red) Berry and Joe Ratcliff.
While details are still be to worked out, Ratcliff said
he expects to tell home folks in Dallas why he thinks Berry's proposed
constitutional amendment should be rejected. "We're
getting more 'pro' letters than 'con' on horse race betting",
said Ratcliff. "But I believe if people were better informed on
this question, most of them would oppose it also. I'm willing to stake
my political career on it". Rep& Berry, an ex-gambler
from San Antonio, got elected on his advocacy of betting on the ponies.
A House committee which heard his local option proposal is expected
to give it a favorable report, although the resolution faces hard
sledding later. #@# {THE HOUSE} passed finally, and
sent
to the Senate, a bill extending the State Health Department's
authority to give planning assistance to cities. #@# {THE
SENATE}
quickly whipped through its meager fare of House bills approved
by committees, passing the three on the calendar. One validated acts
of school districts. Another enlarged authority of the Beaumont
Navigation District. The third amended the enabling act for
creation of the Lamar county Hospital District, for which a special
constitutional amendment previously was adopted. #@# {WITHOUT
DISSENT},
senators passed a bill by Sen& A& R& Schwartz
of Galveston authorizing establishment in the future of a school for
the mentally retarded in the Gulf Coast district. Money for its construction
will be sought later on but in the meantime the State Hospital
board can accept gifts and donations of a site. #@# {TWO
TAX REVISION}
bills were passed. One, by Sen& Louis Crump of
San Saba, would aid more than 17,000 retailers who pay a group of
miscellaneous excise taxes by eliminating the requirement that each return
be notarized. Instead, retailers would sign a certificate of correctness,
violation of which would carry a penalty of one to five years
in prison, plus a $1,000 fine. It was one of a series of recommendations
by the Texas Research League. #@# {THE OTHER BILL},
by Sen& A& M& Aikin Jr& of Paris, would relieve real
estate brokers, who pay their own annual licensing fee, from the $12 annual
occupation license on brokers in such as stocks and bonds. #@#
{NATURAL GAS}
public utility companies would be given the right
of eminent domain, under a bill by Sen& Frank Owen /3, of
El Paso, to acquire sites for underground storage reservoirs for gas.
#@# {MARSHALL FORMBY} of Plainview, former chairman
of
the Texas Highway Commission, suggested a plan to fill by appointment
future vacancies in the Legislature and Congress, eliminating the
need for costly special elections. Under Formby's plan, an
appointee would be selected by a board composed of the governor, lieutenant
governor, speaker of the House, attorney general and chief justice
of the Texas Supreme Court.
_AUSTIN, TEXAS_- State representatives decided Thursday against
taking a poll on what kind of taxes Texans would prefer to pay.
An adverse vote of 81 to 65 kept in the State Affairs Committee
a bill which would order the referendum on the April 4 ballot, when
Texas votes on a U&S& senator. Rep& Wesley Roberts
of Seminole, sponsor of the poll idea, said that further delay in the
committee can kill the bill. The West Texan reported that
he had finally gotten Chairman Bill Hollowell of the committee to set
it for public hearing on Feb& 22. The proposal would have to receive
final legislative approval, by two-thirds majorities, before March
1 to be printed on the April 4 ballot, Roberts said. Opponents
generally argued that the ballot couldn't give enough information
about tax proposals for the voters to make an intelligent choice.
All Dallas members voted with Roberts, except Rep& Bill
Jones, who was absent.
_AUSTIN, TEXAS_- Paradise lost to the alleged water needs of Texas'
big cities Thursday. Rep& James Cotten of Weatherford
insisted that a water development bill passed by the Texas House
of Representatives was an effort by big cities like Dallas and Fort
Worth to cover up places like Paradise, a Wise County hamlet
of 250 people. When the shouting ended, the bill passed, 114
to 4, sending it to the Senate, where a similar proposal is being sponsored
by Sen& George Parkhouse of Dallas. Most of the fire
was directed by Cotten against Dallas and Sen& Parkhouse. The
bill would increase from $5,000,000 to $15,000,000 the maximum loan
the state could make to a local water project. Cotten construed
this as a veiled effort by Parkhouse to help Dallas and other large
cities get money which Cotten felt could better be spent providing
water for rural Texas. Statements by other legislators that
Dallas is paying for all its water program by local bonds, and that less
populous places would benefit most by the pending bill, did not sway
Cotten's attack. The bill's defenders were mostly small-town
legislators like J& W& Buchanan of Dumas, Eligio (Kika)
de la Garza of Mission, Sam F& Collins of Newton and Joe Chapman
of Sulphur Springs. "This is a poor boy's bill",
said Chapman. "Dallas and Fort Worth can vote bonds. This would
help the little peanut districts".
_AUSTIN, TEXAS_- A Houston teacher, now serving in the Legislature,
proposed Thursday a law reducing the time spent learning "educational
methods". Rep& Henry C& Grover, who teaches
history in the Houston public schools, would reduce from 24 to 12 semester
hours the so-called "teaching methods" courses required to
obtain a junior or senior high school teaching certificate. A normal
year's work in college is 30 semester hours. Grover also would
require junior-senior high teachers to have at least 24 semester hours
credit in the subject they are teaching. The remainder of the 4-year
college requirement would be in general subjects. "A person
with a master's degree in physics, chemistry, math or English,
yet who has not taken Education courses, is not permitted to teach in
the public schools", said Grover. College teachers in Texas
are not required to have the Education courses. Fifty-three
of the 150 representatives immediately joined Grover as co-signers
of the proposal.
_PARIS, TEXAS (SP&)_- The board of regents of Paris Junior
College has named Dr& Clarence Charles Clark of Hays, Kan&
as the school's new president. Dr& Clark will succeed Dr&
J& R& McLemore, who will retire at the close of the present
school term. Dr& Clark holds an earned Doctor of Education
degree from the University of Oklahoma. He also received a Master
of Science degree from Texas ~A+~I College and a Bachelor
of Science degree from Southwestern State College, Weatherford,
Okla&. In addition, Dr& Clark has studied at Rhode Island
State College and Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
During his college career, Dr& Clark was captain of his basketball
team and was a football letterman. Dr& Clark has served
as teacher and principal in Oklahoma high schools, as teacher and
athletic director at Raymondville, Texas, High School, as an instructor
at the University of Oklahoma, and as an associate professor
of education at Fort Hays, Kan&, State College. He has served
as a border patrolman and was in the Signal Corps of the U&S&
Army.
_DENTON, TEXAS (SP&)_- Principals of the 13 schools in the Denton
Independent School District have been re-elected for the 1961-62
session upon the recommendation of Supt& Chester O& Strickland.
State and federal legislation against racial discrimination in
employment was called for yesterday in a report of a "blue ribbon"
citizens committee on the aid to dependent children program.
The report, culminating a year long study of the ~ADC program in
Cook county by a New York City welfare consulting firm, listed 10
long range recommendations designed to reduce the soaring ~ADC
case load. The report called racial discrimination in employment "one
of the most serious causes of family breakdown, desertion, and ~ADC
dependency". #"MUST SOLVE PROBLEM"# The monthly cost
of ~ADC to more than 100,000 recipients in the county is 4.4 million
dollars, said C& Virgil Martin, president of Carson Pirie
Scott + Co&, committee chairman. "We must solve the problems
which have forced these people to depend upon ~ADC for subsistence",
Martin said. The volume of ~ADC cases will decrease,
Martin reported, when the community is able to deal effectively
with two problems: Relatively limited skills and discrimination
in employment because of color. These, he said, are "two of the principal
underlying causes for family breakups leading to ~ADC".
#CALLS FOR EXTENSION# Other recommendations made by the committee
are: Extension of the ~ADC program to all children in
need living with any relatives, including both parents, as a means of
preserving family unity. Research projects as soon as possible
on the causes and prevention of dependency and illegitimacy.
Several defendants in the Summerdale police burglary trial made
statements indicating their guilt at the time of their arrest, Judge
James B& Parsons was told in Criminal court yesterday.
The disclosure by Charles Bellows, chief defense counsel, startled
observers and was viewed as the prelude to a quarrel between the six
attorneys representing the eight former policemen now on trial.
Bellows made the disclosure when he asked Judge Parsons to grant
his client, Alan Clements, 30, a separate trial. Bellows made the request
while the all-woman jury was out of the courtroom. #FEARS PREJUDICIAL
ASPECTS# "The statements may be highly prejudicial to my
client", Bellows told the court. "Some of the defendants strongly
indicated they knew they were receiving stolen property. It is impossible
to get a fair trial when some of the defendants made statements
involving themselves and others". Judge Parsons leaned over
the bench and inquired, "You mean some of the defendants made statements
admitting this"? "Yes, your honor", replied
Bellows. "What this amounts to, if true, is that there will be a free-for-all
fight in this case. There is a conflict among the defendants".
_WASHINGTON, JULY 24_- President Kennedy today pushed aside other
White House business to devote all his time and attention to working
on the Berlin crisis address he will deliver tomorrow night to the
American people over nationwide television and radio. The
President spent much of the week-end at his summer home on Cape Cod
writing the first drafts of portions of the address with the help of
White House aids in Washington with whom he talked by telephone.
Shortly after the Chief Executive returned to Washington in midmorning
from Hyannis Port, Mass&, a White House spokesman said
the address text still had "quite a way to go" toward completion.
#DECISIONS ARE MADE# Asked to elaborate, Pierre Salinger, White
House press secretary, replied, "I would say it's got to go
thru several more drafts". Salinger said the work President
Kennedy, advisers, and members of his staff were doing on the address
involved composition and wording, rather than last minute decisions
on administration plans to meet the latest Berlin crisis precipitated
by Russia's demands and proposals for the city.
The last 10 cases in the investigation of the Nov& 8 election
were dismissed yesterday by Acting Judge John M& Karns, who
charged that the prosecution obtained evidence "by unfair and fundamentally
illegal means". Karns said that the cases involved a
matter "of even greater significance than the guilt or innocence"
of the 50 persons. He said evidence was obtained "in violation of
the legal rights of citizens". Karns' ruling pertained to
eight of the 10 cases. In the two other cases he ruled that the state
had been "unable to make a case". Contempt proceedings originally
had been brought against 677 persons in 133 precincts by Morris J&
Wexler, special prosecutor. #ISSUE JURY SUBPENAS# Wexler
admitted in earlier court hearings that he issued grand jury subpenas
to about 200 persons involved in the election investigation, questioned
the individuals in the Criminal courts building, but did not take them
before the grand jury. Mayer Goldberg, attorney for election
judges in the 58th precinct of the 23d ward, argued this procedure
constituted intimidation. Wexler has denied repeatedly that coercion
was used in questioning. Karns said it was a "wrongful act"
for Wexler to take statements "privately and outside of the grand
jury room". He said this constituted a "very serious misuse"
of the Criminal court processes. "Actually, the abuse of the
process may have constituted a contempt of the Criminal court of Cook
county, altho vindication of the authority of that court is not the
function of this court", said Karns, who is a City judge in East
St& Louis sitting in Cook County court. #FACED SEVEN CASES#
Karns had been scheduled this week to hear seven cases involving 35
persons. Wexler had charged the precinct judges in these cases with
"complementary" miscount of the vote, in which votes would be taken
from one candidate and given to another. The cases involved
judges in the 33d, 24th, and 42d precincts of the 31st ward, the 21st
and 28th precincts of the 29th ward, the 18th precinct of the 4th ward,
and the 9th precinct of the 23d ward. The case of the judges
in the 58th precinct of the 23d ward had been heard previously and taken
under advisement by Karns. Two other cases also were under advisement.
#CLAIMS PRECEDENT LACKING# After reading his statement discharging
the 23d ward case, Karns told Wexler that if the seven cases
scheduled for trial also involved persons who had been subpenaed, he
would dismiss them.
_WASHINGTON, FEB& 9_- President Kennedy today proposed a mammoth
new medical care program whereby social security taxes on 70 million
American workers would be raised to pay the hospital and some other
medical bills of 14.2 million Americans over 65 who are covered by
social security or railroad retirement programs. The President,
in a special message to Congress, tied in with his aged care plan
requests for large federal grants to finance medical and dental scholarships,
build 20 new medical and 20 new dental schools, and expand child
health care and general medical research. The aged care plan,
similar to one the President sponsored last year as a senator, a
fight on Capitol hill. It was defeated in Congress last year. #COST
UP TO $37 A YEAR# It would be financed by boosting the social security
payroll tax by as much as $37 a year for each of the workers now
paying such taxes. The social security payroll tax is now 6
per cent- 3 per cent on each worker and employer- on the first $4,800
of pay per year. The Kennedy plan alone would boost the base to
$5,000 a year and the payroll tax to 6.5 per cent- 3.25 per cent each.
Similar payroll tax boosts would be imposed on those under the railroad
retirement system. The payroll tax would actually rise
to 7.5 per cent starting Jan& 1, 1963, if the plan is approved, because
the levy is already scheduled to go up by 1 per cent on that date
to pay for other social security costs. #OUTLAYS WOULD INCREASE#
Officials estimated the annual tax boost for the medical plan would
amount to 1.5 billion dollars and that medical benefits paid out would
run 1 billion or more in the first year, 1963. Both figures would go
higher in later years. Other parts of the Kennedy health plan
would entail federal grants of 750 million to 1 billion dollars over
the next 10 years. These would be paid for out of general, not payroll,
taxes. #NURSING HOME CARE# The aged care plan carries these
benefits for persons over 65 who are under the social security and railroad
retirement systems: _1._ Full payment of hospital bills for
stays up to 90 days for each illness, except that the patient would
pay $10 a day of the cost for the first nine days. _2._ Full payment
of nursing home bills for up to 180 days following discharge from
a hospital. A patient could receive up to 300 days paid-for nursing
home care under a "unit formula" allowing more of such care for those
who use none or only part of the hospital-care credit. _3._ Hospital
outpatient clinic diagnostic service for all costs in excess
of $20 a patient. _4._ Community visiting nurse services at home
for up to 240 days an illness. The President noted that Congress
last year passed a law providing grants to states to help pay medical
bills of the needy aged. #CALLS PROPOSAL MODEST# He said his
plan is designed to "meet the needs of those millions who have no wish
to receive care at the taxpayers' expense, but who are nevertheless
staggered by the drain on their savings- or those of their children-
caused by an extended hospital stay". "This is a very
modest proposal cut to meet absolutely essential needs", he said,
"and with sufficient 'deductible' requirements to discourage any
malingering or unnecessary overcrowding of our hospitals. "This
is not a program of socialized medicine. It is a program of prepayment
of health costs with absolute freedom of choice guaranteed. Every
person will choose his own doctor and hospital". #WOULDN'T
PAY DOCTORS# The plan does not cover doctor bills. They would still
be paid by the patient. Apart from the aged care plan the President's
most ambitious and costly proposals were for federal scholarships,
and grants to build or enlarge medical and dental schools.
The President said the nation's 92 medical and 47 dental schools
cannot now handle the student load needed to meet the rising need
for health care. Moreover, he said, many qualified young people are
not going into medicine and dentistry because they can't afford the
schooling costs. #CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCHOOLS# The scholarship plan
would
provide federal contributions to each medical and dental school equal
to $1,500 a year for one-fourth of the first year students. The
schools could use the money to pay 4-year scholarships, based on need,
of up to $2,000 a year per student. In addition, the government
would pay a $1,000 "cost of education" grant to the schools for
each $1,500 in scholarship grants. Officials estimated the combined
programs would cost
5.1 million dollars the first year and would go up to 21
millions by 1966. The President recommended federal "matching
grants" totaling 700 million dollars in 10 years for constructing
new medical and dental schools or enlarging the capacity of existing
ones. #MORE FOR NURSING HOMES# In the area of "community health
services", the President called for doubling the present 10 million
dollar a year federal grants for nursing home construction. He asked
for another 10 million dollar "initial" appropriation for "stimulatory
grants" to states to improve nursing homes. He further
proposed grants of an unspecified sum for experimental hospitals.
In the child health field, the President said he will recommend
later an increase in funds for programs under the children's bureau.
He also asked Congress to approve establishment of a national
child health institute. #ASKS RESEARCH FUNDS# The President said
he will ask Congress to increase grants to states for vocational rehabilitation.
He did not say by how much. For medical research
he asked a 20 million dollar a year increase, from 30 to 50 millions,
in matching grants for building research facilities. The President
said he will also propose increasing, by an unspecified amount, the 540
million dollars in the 1961-62 budget for direct government research
in medicine. The President said his proposals combine the "indispensable
elements in a sound health program- people, knowledge,
services, facilities, and the means to pay for them". #REACTION
AS EXPECTED# Congressional reaction to the message was along expected
lines. Legislators who last year opposed placing aged-care under
the social security system criticized the President's plan. Those
who backed a similar plan last year hailed the message. Senate
Republican Leader Dirksen [Ill&] and House Republican Leader
Charles Halleck [Ind&] said the message did not persuade them
to change their opposition to compulsory medical insurance. Halleck
said the voluntary care plan enacted last year should be given a fair
trial first. House Speaker Sam Rayburn [D&, Tex&]
called the Kennedy program "a mighty fine thing", but made no prediction
on its fate in the House.
_WASHINGTON, FEB& 9_- Acting hastily under White House pressure,
the Senate tonight confirmed Robert C& Weaver as the nation's
federal housing chief. Only 11 senators were on the floor
and there was no record vote. A number of scattered "ayes" and
"noes" was heard. Customary Senate rules were ignored in
order to speed approval of the Negro leader as administrator of the housing
and home finance agency. In the last eight years, all
Presidential appointments, including those of cabinet rank, have been
denied immediate action because of a Senate rule requiring at least
a 24 hour delay after they are reported to the floor. #ENFORCE BY DEMAND#
The rule was enforced by demand of Sen& Wayne Morse [D&,
Ore&] in connection with President Eisenhower's cabinet
selections in 1953 and President Kennedy's in 1961.
_OSLO_ The most positive element to emerge from the Oslo meeting
of North Atlantic Treaty Organization Foreign Ministers has been
the freer, franker, and wider discussions, animated by much better mutual
understanding than in past meetings. This has been a working
session of an organization that, by its very nature, can only proceed
along its route step by step and without dramatic changes. In Oslo,
the ministers have met in a climate of candor, and made a genuine
attempt to get information and understanding one another's problems.
This atmosphere of understanding has been particularly noticeable
where relations are concerned between the "colonialist" powers
and those who have never, or not for a long time, had such problems.
The nightmare of a clash between those in trouble in Africa, exacerbated
by the difficulties, changes, and tragedies facing them, and other
allies who intellectually and emotionally disapprove of the circumstances
that have brought these troubles about, has been conspicious by
its absence. #EXPLOSION AVOIDED# In the case of Portugal, which
a few weeks ago was rumored ready to walk out of the ~NATO Council
should critics of its Angola policy prove harsh, there has been
a noticeable relaxation of tension. The general, remarkably courteous,
explanation has left basic positions unchanged, but there has been
no explosion in the council. There should even be no more bitter surprises
in the ~UN General Assembly as to ~NATO members' votes,
since a new ad hoc ~NATO committee has been set up so that
in the future such topics as Angola will be discussed in advance.
Canada alone has been somewhat out of step with the Oslo attempt
to get all the allied cars back on the track behind the ~NATO
locomotive. Even Norway, despite daily but limited manifestations against
atomic arms in the heart of this northernmost capital of the alliance,
is today closer to the ~NATO line. On the negative
side of the balance sheet must be set some disappointment that the
United States leadership has not been as much in evidence as hoped for.
One diplomat described the tenor of Secretary of State Dean Rusk's
speeches as "inconclusive". But he hastened to add that,
if United States policies were not always clear, despite Mr& Rusk's
analysis of the various global danger points and setbacks for the
West, this may merely mean the new administration has not yet firmly
fixed its policy. #EXPLORATORY MOOD# A certain vagueness may also
be caused by tactical appreciation of the fact that the present council
meeting is a semipublic affair, with no fewer than six Soviet correspondents
accredited. The impression has nevertheless been
given during these three days, despite Mr& Rusk's personal popularity,
that the United States delegation came to Oslo in a somewhat
tentative and exploratory frame of mind, more ready to listen and learn
than to enunciate firm policy on a global scale with detailed application
to individual danger spots. The Secretary of State
himself, in his first speech, gave some idea of the tremendous march of
events inside and outside the United States that has preoccupied the
new administration in the past four months. But where the core
of ~NATO is concerned, the Secretary of State has not only
reiterated the United States' profound attachment to the alliance,
"cornerstone" of its foreign policy, but has announced that five
nuclear submarines will eventually be at ~NATO's disposal in
European waters. The Secretary of State has also solemnly repeated
a warning to the Soviet Union that the United States will
not stand for another setback in Berlin, an affirmation once again taken
up by the council as a whole. #CONFLICT SURVEYED# The secretary's
greatest achievement is perhaps the rekindling of ~NATO realization
that East-West friction, wherever it take place around the
globe, is in essence the general conflict between two entirely different
societies, and must be treated as such without regard to geographical
distance or lack of apparent connection. The annual spring
meeting has given an impetus in three main directions: more, deeper,
and more timely political consultation within the alliance, the use
of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (when
ratified) as a method of coordinating aid to the underdeveloped countries,
and the need for strengthening conventional forces as well as the
maintenance of the nuclear deterrent. This increase in the
"threshold", as the conventional forces strengthening is called, will
prove one of the alliance's most difficult problems in the months
to come. Each ally will have to carry out obligations long since laid
down, but never completely fulfilled.
_WASHINGTON_ The Kennedy administration moves haltingly toward a
Geneva conference on Laos just as serious debate over its foreign policy
erupts for the first time. There is little optimism here
that the Communists will be any more docile at the conference table
than they were in military actions on the ground in Laos. The
United States, State Department officials explain, now is mainly
interested in setting up an international inspection system which will
prevent Laos from being used as a base for Communist attacks on neighboring
Thailand and South Viet Nam. They count on the aid
of the neutral countries attending the Geneva conference to achieve
this. The United States hopes that any future Lao Cabinet
would not become Communist dominated. But it is apparent that no acceptable
formula has been found to prevent such a possibility. #POLICIES
MODIFIED# The inclination here is to accept a de facto cease-fire
in Laos, rather than continue to insist on a verification of the
cease-fire by the international control commission before participating
in the Geneva conference. This is another of the modifications
of policy on Laos that the Kennedy administration has felt compelled
to make. It excuses these actions as being the chain reaction to
basic errors made in the previous administration. Its spokesmen
insist that there has not been time enough to institute reforms in
military and economic aid policies in the critical areas. But
with the months moving on- and the immediate confrontations with the
Communists showing no gain for the free world- the question arises:
How effective have Kennedy administration first foreign policy
decisions been in dealing with Communist aggression? Former
Vice-President Richard M& Nixon in Detroit called for a
firmer and tougher policy toward the Soviet Union. He was critical
of what he feels is President Kennedy's tendency to be too conciliatory.
#~GOP RESTRAINED# It does not take a Gallup poll to
find out that most Republicans in Congress feel this understates the
situation as Republicans see it. They can hardly restrain themselves
from raising the question of whether Republicans, if they had been
in power, would have made "amateurish and monumental blunders" in
Cuba. One Republican senator told this correspondent that he
was constantly being asked why he didn't attack the Kennedy administration
on this score. His reply, he said, was that he agreed to the
need for unity in the country now. But he further said that it was
better politics to let others question the wisdom of administration policies
first. The Republicans some weeks ago served notice through
Senator Thruston B& Morton (~R) of Kentucky, chairman
of the Republican National Committee, that the Kennedy administration
would be held responsible if the outcome in Laos was a coalition
government susceptible of Communist domination. Kennedy administration
policies also have been assailed now from another direction
by 70 Harvard, Boston University, Brandeis, and Massachusetts Institute
of Technology educators. #DETENTE URGED# This group pleads
with the administration to "give no further support for the invasion
of Cuba by exile groups". It recommends that the United States
"seek instead to detach the Castro regime from the Communist bloc
by working for a diplomatic detente and a resumption of trade relations;
and concentrate its constructive efforts on eliminating in other
parts of Latin America the social conditions on which totalitarian
nationalism feeds". Mr& Nixon, for his part, would oppose
intervention in Cuba without specific provocation. But he did recommend
that President Kennedy state clearly that if Communist countries
shipped any further arms to Cuba that it would not be tolerated.
Until the Cuban fiasco and the Communist military victories
in Laos,
almost any observer would have said that President Kennedy had blended
a program that respected, generally, the opinions voiced both by
Mr& Nixon and the professors. #AID PLANS REVAMPED# Very early
in his administration he informed the Kremlin through diplomatic channels,
a high official source disclosed, that the new administration
would react even tougher than the Eisenhower administration would during
the formative period of the administration. Strenuous efforts
were made to remove pin pricking from administration statements. Policies
on nuclear test ban negotiations were reviewed and changed. But
thus far there has been no response in kind. Foreign aid programs
were revamped to give greater emphasis to economic aid and to
encourage political reform in recipient nations. In Laos, the
administration looked at the Eisenhower administration efforts to show
determination by sailing a naval fleet into Southeast Asian waters
as a useless gesture. Again and again it asked the Communists
to "freeze" the military situation in Laos. But the Communists
aided the Pathet Lao at an even faster rate. And after several
correspondents went into Pathet Lao territory and exposed the
huge build-up,
administration spokesmen acclaimed them for performing a
"great service" and laid the matter before the Southeast Asia Treaty
Organization. ~SEATO was steamed up and prepared
contingency plans for coping with the military losses in Laos. But
the Communists never gave sufficient provocation at any one time for
the United States to want to risk a limited or an all-out war over Laos.
(Some ~SEATO nations disagreed, however.) There
was the further complication that the administration had very early concluded
that Laos was ill suited to be an ally, unlike its more determined
neighbors, Thailand and South Viet Nam. The administration
declared itself in favor of a neutralized Laos. The pro-Western
government, which the United States had helped in a revolt against
the Souvanna Phouma "neutralist" government, never did appear
to spark much fighting spirit in the Royal Lao Army. There
certainly was not any more energy displayed after it was clear the United
States would not back the pro-Western government to the hilt.
If the administration ever had any ideas that it could find an
acceptable alternative to Prince Souvanna Phouma, whom it felt was
too trusting of Communists, it gradually had to relinquish them.
One factor was the statement of Senator J& W& Fulbright (~D)
of Arkansas, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
He declared on March 25 that the United States had erred a
year and a half ago by "encouraging the removal" of Prince Souvanna.
_WASHINGTON_ The White House is taking extraordinary steps to check
the rapid growth of juvenile delinquency in the United States.
The President is deeply concerned over this problem and its effect
upon the "vitality of the nation". In an important assertion
of national leadership in this field, he has issued an executive
order establishing the President's committee on Juvenile Delinquency
and Crime, to be supported and assisted by a Citizens Advisory
Council of recognized authorities on juvenile problems. The
President asks the support and cooperation of Congress in his efforts
through the enactment of legislation to provide federal grants to
states for specified efforts in combating this disturbing crime trend.
#OFFENSES MULTIPLY# The President has also called upon the Attorney
General, the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and
the Secretary of Labor to coordinate their efforts "in the development
of a program of federal leadership to assist states and local
communities in their efforts to cope with the problem. Simultaneously
the President announced Thursday the appointment of David L&
Hackett, a special assistant ot the Attorney General, as executive
director of the new Committee on Juvenile Delinquency and Youth
Crime. His sense of urgency in this matter stems from the
fact that court cases ond juvenile arrests have more than doubled since
1948, each year showing an increase in offenders. Among arrests
reported by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1959, about
half for burglary and larceny involved persons under 18 years of age.
East Providence should organize its civil defense setup and begin
by appointing a full-time director, Raymond H& Hawksley, the
present city ~CD head, believes. Mr& Hawksley said yesterday
he would be willing to go before the city council "or anyone
else locally" to outline his proposal at the earliest possible time.
East Providence now has no civil defense program. Mr& Hawksley,
the state's general treasurer, has been a part-time ~CD
director in the city for the last nine years. He is not interested in
being named a full-time director. Noting that President Kennedy
has handed the Defense Department the major responsibility for
the nation's civil defense program, Mr& Hawksley said the federal
government would pay half the salary of a full-time local director.
He expressed the opinion the city could hire a ~CD director
for about $3,500 a year and would only have to put up half that amount
on
a matching fund basis to defray the salary costs. Mr& Hawksley
said he believed there are a number of qualified city residents
who would be willing to take the full-time ~CD job. One of these
men is former Fire Chief John A& Laughlin, he said. Along
with a director, the city should provide a ~CD headquarters so
that pertinent information about the local organization would be centralized.
Mr& Hawksley said. One advantage that would come to
the city in having a full-time director, he said, is that East Providence
would become eligible to apply to the federal government for financial
aid in purchasing equipment needed for a sound civil defense
program. Matching funds also can be obtained for procurement of
such items as radios, sirens and rescue trucks, he said. Mr&
Hawksley believes that East Providence could use two more rescue
trucks, similar to the ~CD vehicle obtained several years ago and
now detailed to the Central Fire Station. He would assign
one of the rescue trucks to the Riverside section of the city and the
other to the Rumford area. Speaking of the present status of
civil defense in the city, Mr& Hawksley said he would be willing
to bet that not more than one person in a hundred would know what to
do or where to go in the event of an enemy attack. The Narragansett
Race Track grounds is one assembly point, he said, and a drive-in
theater in Seekonk would be another. Riverside residents would
go to the Seekonk assembly point. Mr& Hawksley said he was
not critical of city residents for not knowing what to do or where to
assemble in case of an air attack. Such vital information, he
said, has to be made available to the public frequently and at regular
intervals for residents to know. If the city council fails to
consider appointment of a full-time ~CD director, Mr& Hawksley
said, then he plans to call a meeting early in September so that a
civil defense organization will be developed locally. One of
the first things he would do, he said, would be to organize classes in
first aid. Other steps would be developed after information drifts down
to the local level from the federal government.
Rhode Island is going to examine its Sunday sales law with possible
revisions in mind. Governor Notte said last night he
plans to name a committee to make the study and come up with recommendations
for possible changes in time for the next session of the General
Assembly. The governor's move into the so-called "blue
law" controversy came in the form of a letter to Miss Mary R&
Grant, deputy city clerk of Central Falls. A copy was released to
the press. Mr& Notte was responding to a resolution adopted
by the Central Falls City Council on July 10 and sent to the state
house by Miss Grant. The resolution urges the governor to have a
complete study of the Sunday sales laws made with an eye to their revision
at the next session of the legislature. While the city
council suggested that the Legislative Council might perform the review,
Mr& Notte said that instead he will take up the matter with Atty&
Gen& J& Joseph Nugent to get "the benefit of his views".
He will then appoint the study committee with Mr& Nugent's
cooperation, the governor said. "I would expect the proposed
committee to hold public hearings", Mr& Notte said, "to obtain
the views of the general public and religious, labor and special-interest
groups affected by these laws". The governor wrote
Miss Grant that he has been concerned for some time "with the continuous
problem which confronts our local and state law enforcement officers
as a result of the laws regulating Sunday sales". The
attorney general has advised local police that it is their duty to enforce
the blue laws. Should there be evidence they are shirking, he has
said, the state police will step into the situation. There
has been more activity across the state line in Massachusetts than in
Rhode Island in recent weeks toward enforcement of the Sunday sales
laws. The statutes, similar in both the Bay State and Rhode Island
and dating back in some instances to colonial times, severely limit
the types of merchandise that may be sold on the Sabbath. The
Central Falls City Council expressed concern especially that more
foods be placed on the eligible list and that neighborhood grocery
and variety stores be allowed to do business on Sunday. The only
day they "have a chance to compete with large supermarkets is on
Sunday", the council's resolution said. The small shops "must
be retained, for they provide essential service to the community",
according to the resolution, which added that they "also are the source
of livelihood for thousands of our neighbors". It declares that
Sunday sales licenses provide "great revenue" to the local government.
The council advised the governor that "large supermarkets,
factory outlets and department stores not be allowed to do business"
on Sunday. They "operate on a volume basis", it was contended,
"and are not essential to provide the more limited but vital
shopping needs of the community".
Liberals and conservatives in both parties- Democratic and
Republican- should divorce themselves and form two independent parties,
George H& Reama, nationally known labor-management expert, said
here yesterday. Mr& Reama told the Rotary Club of Providence
at its luncheon at the Sheraton-Biltmore Hotel that about
half of the people in the country want the "welfare" type of government
and the other half want a free enterprise system. He suggested
that a regrouping of forces might allow the average voter a better pull
at the right lever for him on election day. He said he was "confessing
that I was a member of the Socialist Party in 1910".
That, he added, was when he was "a very young man, a machinist and
toolmaker by trade. "That was before I studied law. Some
of my fellow workers were grooming me for an office in the Socialist
Party. The lawyer with whom I studied law steered me off the Socialist
track. He steered me to the right track- the free enterprise track".
He said that when he was a Socialist in 1910, the party
called for government operation of all utilities and the pooling of
all resources. He suggested that without the Socialist Party ever
gaining a national victory, most of its original program has come to
pass under both major parties. Mr& Reama, who retired as vice
president of the American Screw Co& in 1955 said, "Both parties
in the last election told us that we need a five per cent growth
in the gross national product- but neither told us how to achieve it".
He said he favors wage increases for workers- "but manufacturers
are caught in a profit squeeze"- and raises should only
come when the public is conditioned to higher prices, he added.
Indicating the way in which he has turned his back on his 1910 philosophy,
Mr& Reama said: "A Socialist is a person who believes
in dividing everything he does not own". Mr& Reama, far from
really being retired, is engaged in industrial relations counseling.
A petition bearing the signatures of more than 1,700 Johnston
taxpayers was presented to the town council last night as what is hoped
will be the first step in obtaining a home rule charter for the town.
William A& Martinelli, chairman of the Citizens Group
of Johnston, transferred the petitions from his left hand to his right
hand after the council voted to accept them at the suggestion of Council
President Raymond Fortin Sr&. The law which governs
home rule charter petitions states that they must be referred to the
chairman of the board of canvassers for verification of the signatures
within 10 days and Mr& Martinelli happens to hold that post.
Mr& Martinelli explained that there should be more than enough
signatures to assure the scheduling of a vote on the home rule charter
and possible election of a nine member charter commission within 70
days. He explained that by law the council must establish procedures
for a vote on the issue within 60 days after the board of canvassers
completes its work. A difference of opinion arose between Mr&
Martinelli and John P& Bourcier, town solicitor, over the exact
manner in which the vote is handled. Mr& Martinelli has, in recent
weeks, been of the opinion that a special town meeting would be called
for the vote, while Mr& Bourcier said that a special election
might be called instead. Mr& Bourcier said that he had consulted
several Superior Court justices in the last week and received
opinions favoring both procedures. He assured Mr& Martinelli and
the council that he would study the correct method and report back to
the council as soon as possible. Mr& Martinelli said yesterday
that the Citizens Group of Johnston will meet again July 24 to
plan further strategy in the charter movement. He said that the group
has no candidates for the charter commission in mind at present, but
that it will undoubtedly endorse candidates when the time comes.
"After inspiring this, I think we should certainly follow through
on it", he declared. "It has become our responsibility and I
hope that the Citizens Group will spearhead the movement".
He said he would not be surprised if some of the more than 30 members
of the group are interested in running on the required non-partisan
ballot for posts on the charter commission. "Our most immediate
goal is to increase public awareness of the movement", he indicated,
"and to tell them what this will mean for the town". He expects
that if the present timetable is followed a vote will be scheduled
during the last week in September. Some opposition to the home
rule movement started to be heard yesterday, with spokesmen for the
town's insurgent Democratic leadership speaking out against the home
rule charter in favor of the model municipal league charter.
Increasing opposition can be expected in coming weeks, it was indicated.
Misunderstanding of the real meaning of a home rule charter
was cited as a factor which has caused the Citizens Group to obtain
signatures under what were termed "false pretenses". Several signers
affixed their names, it was learned, after being told that no tax
increase would be possible without consent of the General Assembly
and that a provision could be included in the charter to have the town
take over the Johnston Sanitary District sewer system.
Action on a new ordinance permitting motorists who plead guilty
to minor traffic offenses to pay fines at the local police station may
be taken at Monday's special North Providence Town Council meeting.
Council president Frank SanAntonio said yesterday
he may ask the council to formally request Town Solicitor Michael A&
Abatuno to draft the ordinance. At the last session of the
General Assembly, the town was authorized to adopt such an ordinance
as a means of making enforcement of minor offenses more effective.
Nothing has been done yet to take advantage of the enabling legislation.
At present all offenses must be taken to Sixth District
Court for disposition. Local police have hesitated to prosecute them
because of the heavy court costs involved even for the simplest offense.
_PLAINFIELD_- James P& Mitchell and Sen& Walter H& Jones
~R-Bergen, last night disagreed on the value of using as a campaign
issue a remark by Richard J& Hughes, Democratic gubernatorial
candidate, that the ~GOP is "Campaigning on the carcass
of Eisenhower Republicanism". Mitchell was for using it, Jones
against, and Sen& Wayne Dumont Jr& ~R-Warren did not
mention it when the three Republican gubernatorial candidates spoke
at staggered intervals before 100 persons at the Park Hotel.
The controversial remark was first made Sunday by Hughes at a Westfield
Young Democratic Club cocktail party at the Scotch Plains
Country Club. It was greeted with a chorus of boos by 500 women in
Trenton Monday at a forum of the State Federation of Women's Clubs.
Hughes said Monday, "It is the apparent intention of
the Republican Party to campaign on the carcass of what they call Eisenhower
Republicanism, but the heart stopped beating and the lifeblood
congealed after Eisenhower retired. Now he's gone, the Republican
Party is not going to be able to sell the tattered remains to the
people of the state". Sunday he had added, "We can love Eisenhower
the man, even if we considered him a mediocre president **h but
there is nothing left of the Republican Party without his leadership".
Mitchell said the statement should become a major issue
in the primary and the fall campaign. "How can a man with any degree
of common decency charge this"? he asked. The former secretary
of labor said he was proud to be an Eisenhower Republican "and proud
to have absorbed his philosophy" while working in his adminstration.
Mitchell said the closeness of the outcome in last fall's
Presidential election did not mean that Eisenhower Republicanism
was a dead issue. #REGRETS ATTACK# Jones said he regretted Hughes
had made a personal attack on a past president. "He is wrong to
inject Eisenhower into this campaign", he said, "because the primary
is being waged on state issues and I will not be forced into re-arguing
an old national campaign". The audience last night did
not respond with either applause or boos to mention of Hughes' remark.
Dumont spoke on the merit of having an open primary. He