PAGE TEN THE MICHIGAN lbAll V 7 T TT'i Q" A'%r Y A I"T A n*V 14? l fb&* -- ,-.1111- 11.\ I.U .Et U.lNJ.5 Uj11 f -r * t1a ., 4 1'lLL:SDAY, JAiNUARY 16 It, 1969 9 Welfare, Integration Go to Supreme Court Sihanouk Asks Stronger ICC Border Controls I r WASHINGTON (P) - The Su- preme Court ranged far and wide yesterday, its first public session of 1968, by staking out for deci- sion by June controversial areas of welfare law, church state rela- tions and school integration., Along the way, the court ap- proved the merger of the Penn- sylvania and New York Central Railroads - the biggest business consolidation ever-and strength-, ed the labor department's hand in supervising union elections. Follow Old Tradition The justices followed an old tradition and issued scores of rul- ings in one swoop. They had closed down for a year end recess almost a month ago and returned to public session yesterday with the following decisions:, 0 State laws that bar new resi- dents from receiving welfare aid for a specified time will be ex- amined in light of recent federal court rulings that they violate constitutional rights, including the right to travel. 1 A New York state law that re- quires public school systems to lend textbooks to parochial and private school pupils will be mea- sured against the Constitution's ban on establishment of religion. " The Penn Central merger, put before the Interstate Commerce Commission for approval in March 1962, finally got the high court's blessing in a 7-1 decision. Douglas Dissents Justice Abe Fortas, who takes a dim view of excessive court inter- ference with the judgments of regulatory agencies in business cases, announced the decision. Justice William O. Douglas dis- sented. Fortas said, "we find no basis" for upsetting the ICC's approval of the merger. "We do not in- quire," he said, "whether the mer- ger satisfies our own conception of the public interest." An 8-0 decision by Justice Wil- liam J. Brennan Jr. agreed with the department that lower fed- eral courts had taken too narrow a view of its powers under the 1959 Landrum Griffin Law. Once an election has been found invalid, Brennan said, the STAMP IT! IT'S THE RAGE afn NAr"1 $ REGULAR TvsrA MODEL ANY $2 3 LINE TEXT The finest;INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL POCKET RUBBER STAMP. %/" x 2". Send check or money order. Be sure to include your Zip Code. No postage or handling charges. Add sales tax., Pftutshipment. Satisfaction Guaranteed THE MOPP CO. P. 0. Box 18623 Lenox Square Station ATLANTA, GA., 30326 department has the right to over- see new elections to make sure "officers do in fact hold office by reason of a truly fair and demo- cratic vote." In a surprising action that may have significant implications, an Illinois man who has been under death sentence for eight years was given a hearing on a claim that allowing prosecutors to strike pro- spective jurors who are opposed to capital punishment deprives defendants of a fair trial. NEW DELHI. India (W) - The International Control Commission for Cambodia met in Phnom Penh yesterday to consider a request from Prince Norodom Sihanouk for a strengthening of the commission's machinery to safeguard his kingdom from bel- ligerency, a Foreign Office spokes- men reported. He said the commission chair- man, V.V. Paranjpe, an Indian, had notified his government of Sihanouk's request, made in a let- ter. Other members of the com- Soviet-Polish Talks End; Seek Communist Summit, mission are Canadian and Polish. The spokesman said the Indian government had been informally in touch with "concerned coun- tries" and would move in the mat- ter soon. The spokesman would not iden- tify the "concerned countries" but sources said they include the Unit- ed States, Britain and the Soviet Union. The latter two are cochair- men of the Geneva Convention of 1954 under whose directives the commission is acting Foreign Office sources said Si- hanouk was in touch with the So- viet Union and Poland, both of which oppose strengthening the commission in Cambodia. The informants said strength- ening the commission couldbe done by a majority of two-Can- ada and India-but New Delhi would "like to carry Russia and Poland also with them to enable smoother functioning." The Foreign Office spokesman said that by strengthening the commission the international group could help safeguard Cambodia's neutrality. Chester Bowles, the U.S. ambas- sador to India, went to Cambodia last week to confer with Sihanouk about the commission and the U.S. contention that the Communists fighting in Vietnam were using Cambodian territory as a sanctu- ary. WARSAW, Poland (P) - Top Soviet and Polish Communist leaders have just ended three days of secret talks in Poland, an of- ficial announcement disclosed yes- terday. One possible objective was to generate steam behind a Soviet drive for a world Communist meeting to deal with problems provoked by the feud between Moscow and Peking.. Current Discussions The official Polish Press Agency said the leaders exchanged "views on the current international sit- uation and the situation in the international Communist a n d workers' movement." The Soviet side was represent- ed by Leonid I. Brezhnev, general secretary of the Soviet party; Pre- mier Alexei N. Kosygin and Pres- ident Nikolai V. Podgorny. On the Polish side were Wladyslaw Gom- ulka, the party chief; Premier Joseph Cyrankiewicz; President Edward Ochab and Zenon Klisko,' a party Central Committee secre- tary. For World Unity The agency said both sides ex- pressed a wish to strengthen "the unity of the world Communist movement in the struggle against imperialism." B y imperialism, they meant the United States. Poland supports the Soviet Union's efforts to harvest as big a front of Communist unity as possible at the conference and at Student or Teacher to do library research at University of Michigan Library Prefer library science major, $3.00 per hour. Write M.I.S., P.O. Box 5129, Grosse Pointe, Michigan 48236 a preconference consultative meet- ing next month in Budapest. The leaders may have discus- sed ways to swing a number of national parties over to the idea of a conference, parties such as those in Romania, Yugoslavia, Cuba and North Vietnam, who oppose it because they consider it an attempt by the Soviet Union to dictate policy. The Polish Press Agency report said the talks resulted in a com- plete unity of views and were held in party like atmosphere of full understanding and cordial and sincere friendship.# DO PRIESTS Cut Ribbons at Civic Affairs? wrestle with Bookkeeping? *Balance the Budg? Shuffle Papers? Let's face it. There are some things that have to be done. In that we differ from no other priest. But - the Paulist feels he can rise above the everyday tasks that must be done. Because he is an individual and is treated accordingly, he is free to de- velop his own innate talents to achieve his goals. Individuality is the keynote of the Paulists. We depend on the individual to make his own unique con- tribution. We welcome it. We all profit by it. The Paulist is a modern man, free from stifling formalism, a pioneer in using contemporary mediums and techniques to be of service to God and man. 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