WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964 TNF mrYrulrr a iv n a i t.,v WEDESAYSETEBER30.194 A IA l.J ftft F U. 1 N L AA U'VLVUT!A. UA-~ PAGE THRER 9' Senate OK's Suc WASHINGTON (M}-The Senate ed Congress that the President wasI 'cession Measure repassed yesterday a proposed constitutional amendment that would provide for settling -ques- tions of presidential disability and filling vacancies in the vice-presi- dency. The measurem was approved by a roll call vote of 65 to 0 after Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss) pro- tested Monday's voice vote pass- age with only nine senators on the floor. The proposal was sent to the House, but no action on it is ex- pected in that chamber at this session of Congress. The amendment would permit a President to nominate a vice-pres- ident when a vacancy occurs in that office. The nomination would be subject to approval by a ma- jority vote of both branches of Congress. The proposal also would per- mit a vice-president to take over as acting President whenever the President informed Congress he was unable to serve, or the vice- president, with the support of a majority of the cabinet, inform- disabled. Supporters of the measure said they expect its approval by the Senate, even in the absence of House action this year, should give it added impetus in the next session of Congress. Senate Republican leader Sen. Everett M. Dirksen (R-Ill) yester- day backed a proposal of Demo- cratic leader Mike Mansfield (D- Mont) to give legislation on pres- idential security top priority when Congress reconvenes in January. Dirksen said in an interview that quick action in the waning days of this session on a single bill to make it a federal crime to assassinate a President or vice- president "might mean we would have to do our work all over again" next year. A White House committee on presidential safety-set up Mon- day to consider the broad recom- mendations of the Warren Com- mission-plans to get started soon on drafting proposals for congres- sional action early in the new ses- sion. In its report the commission said there were deficiencies in se- cret service preparedness for Pres- ident John F. Kennedy's visit tc Dallas. The commission called for "eoniplete overhaul" of the serv- ice's advance detection practices and closer liaison with the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation and other agencies. Mansfield said that new securi- ty measures should be "one of the first orders of business" when Con- gress reconvenes. Several bills to make it a fed- eral crime to kill a President or vice-president are pending before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The committee may act on an- other bill-introduced by Mans- field and Dirksen--to provide Se- cret Service protection for the Re- publican presidential nominee, Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz) and for the Republican and Democratic vice-presidential candidates, Rep William E. Miller (R-NY) and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-Minn). The legislation, if enacted, would extend such protection to all fu- ture candidates for those offices. The Democratic presidentia nominee, President Lyndon B Johnson, has the protection thai goes with his office.j The Warren Commission called for a drastic overhaul of the sys- tem of guarding the President and said that legislation making the murder of a President or vice-pres- ident a federal crime is needed tc avoid the "confusion" it said sur- rounded the entry of various gov- ernment agencies into the Dalla investigation. In a separate interview Mans- field said that since the presiden- tial panel will be weighing these questions, "it would be the bet- ter part of wisdom" to await its suggestions on "a broad new bill." The commission criticized the failure of the FBI to alert the secret service that Lee Harvey Os- wald, a one-time defector of known pro-Marxist leanings, was work- ing in a building along the route of the Kennedy motorcade. And thetcommission, while em- phasizing that there was no evi- dence that agents at the scene did less than expected of them, chided nine agents for drinking and stay- ing up late the night before - breaking the rules of the service. But Dirksen said that "not- withstanding all the allegations about some of the Secret Service being up late the night before, there was nothing on which Os- wald could have been detained and they could do no more than keep him under surveillance." GM-Labor TMeetings 'Go Slowly I -, DETROIT ()-Continued minor progress was reported yesterday by General Motors and the United Auto Workers union in negotia- tions to end a costly nationwide strike that has halted production of GM's new 1965 car models. Both sides agreed, however, the major stumbling block to getting an estimated 260,000 workers back on the assembly lines was a set- tlement of more than 17,000 out- standing local, at-the-plant de- mands. The strike was called, he said, over such non-economic matters as working conditions, union rep- resentation, production quotas and the company's disciplinary prac- tices. After a two hour morning ses- sion at the bargaining table, Louis Seaton, GM vice-president in charge of personnel, told news- men that the local level negotia- tions appeared to be moving "rath- er slowly." Meanwhile Seaton added the company may be forced to seek a court injunction against the UAW for "illegally preventing employes not involved in the strike" from entering the Chevrolet and Fisher Body Plants at Willow Run, Mich. KANSAS CAMPAIGN: Miller Blasts Security Actions By The Associated Press HUTCHINSON, Kan. - The Johnson administration ordered the destruction of "tools of infor- mation" valuable in uncovering security risks in the State Depart- ment, GOP vice-presidential nom- inee William E. Miller charged yesterday. It appears, he said, that the ad- ministration "may not want the Goldwater administration to learn next January what is in those files." In Washington the State De- partment said the files involved! were in field offices and were dup- licates of originals which are kept in Washington. Miller made the comment as he campaigned through Missouri and Kansas, encountering reports of polls that Sen. Barry Gold- water and himself are running be- hind in those states. Replies At a news conference, Miller has these replies to reporters'. ques- tions: -As vice-president he would be "another heart, another mind, another set of hands and legs'" for the President, represent hr on international missions, be a liaison man with Congress and be someone whom the President "trusts and believes in, who sharer his philosophy and principles." -He was opposed to the crea- tion of a Department of Urban+ Affairs in the federal governmen' because he and Goldwater intend-+ ed to reduce the scope of feder- al government, not extend it. -The crowds surrounding Presi-+ dent Lyndon B. Johnson during1 his New England visit were not necessarily evidence of politicai REP. WILLIAM E. MILLER Democratic opponent is "soft on Communism." "I charge that this administra- tion is soft on Communism and you know it," he said. On a Par Speaking to crowds which were about on a par with those who turned out for Nixon in 1960, Gold- water jabbed Johnson repeatedly as a man who craves more and more power and is willing to "blackmail"Congress to get hi way. Gov. James A. Rhodes, who had been criticized for failing to men- tion Goldwater's name in a speech at the Sept. 17 state GOP conven- tion at Columbus, introduced the senator at a trainside rally in Chillicothe, Ohio. Subtle President Johnson chose yester- day to pursue votes in a more subtle manner than the Republi- cans. He escorted the civilian chief of NATO to the undergrounc nerve center of the Strategic Air Command yesterday-to reinforec America's commitment to the At- lantic alliance. Johnson's trip to SAC head- quarters with Manlio Brosio, th( new secretary-general of NATO held important implications foi the future of relations with West- ern Europe and it bore at least an Indirect relationship to the presidential election campaign. In making the flight from Washington with Brosio, and fol- lowing it up with a deeply secret briefing for the NATO leader Johnson sought to offset ans thought that the United States l. downgrading t'he Atlantic alliance. ..,.. support. Robert F. Kennedy, cam- paigning for the U.S. Senate in New York, has drawn large crowds there "but so do the Beatles." Closer -In a Republican administra- tion, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoov- er would be brought closer to the top officials of government in ef- forts to put down crime. -Commenting on the Warrer Commission report, Miller said that additional steps could be tak- en to protect the President but mingling with crowds was a "cal. culated risk and a hazard of the occupation" of national politics. In Cincinnati, flailing at Presi- dent' Johnson as a power-grab- ber, Sen. Barry Goldwater capped a day of whistle stop campaign. ing across Ohio by charging his Council Permits Married Men To Become Deacons VATICAN CITY (MP)-The Vatican Ecumenical Council voted approval yesterday of an historic change to allow mature married men to become deacons with many of the duties of priests. But it refused young single men the right to marry after entering the deaconate. It will be up to the national bishops conferences to decide for ing across Ohio by charging his downgrading the Atlantic alliance. I -Associated Press BRITISH PRIME MINISTER SIR ALEC DOUGLAS-HOME (RIGHT) waves to a cheering crowd in Beeston, England. He lashed out yesterday at the Labor Party's stand on Britain's nuclear forces. He claimed that the party's policy of dependence on the United States would open Britain up to "nuclear blackmail.' Home's Conservative Party favors an independent nuclear deterrent. Home Attacks Labor Party's Policies LONDON W-)-Prime Minister Alexander Douglas-Home yester- day asserted the opposition Labor party would leave Britain power- less, exposed to nuclear blackmail and at the mercy of protective allies. Spokesmen for the Labor and Liberal parties, who favor phasing out Britain's nuclear arsenal, im- mediately challenged the Con- servative leader's statement. The Laborite defense specialist, Denis Healey, accused Douglas- Home of "nuclear jingoism." Ad- dressing a Yorkshire rally, Healey said the Prime Minister objected to labor plans for placing the country's fate in the hands of an- other nation. Yet the Conserva- tives had wanted Britain to fed- erate with the foreigners of the six Common Market countries. Liberal leader Jo Grimond hit at Douglas-Home's argument that Britain's international standing depends on possession of a nu- clear force. 'Not True' "It is not true," Grimond told a London meetting, "and it is a. direct incitement to every other country to try and acquire weap- ons if this was their only way of making their voices heard in the world." Douglas-Home, swinging through Norfolk county, told followers Britain's fate would be in the hands of "another nation"-mean- ing the United States--if Labor abandoned nuclear weapons. "In today's conditions," he said, "navies and armies would by themselves be powerless to move in the face of a nuclear threat." He also claimed Labor's defense plans would lead to a reintroduc- tion of the national draft, which most Britons dislike. Tempo The clash over defense policy came as the tempo increased in the campaign moving toward the Oct. 15 election. Science Minister Quintin Hogg -the former Lord Hailsham- backed up Douglas-Home's charges at a Liverpool news conference. "Britain has a vital role to play in America, Europe and the Com- monwealth in negotiating peace- ful solutions of international prob- lems," he cited. "We must not be reduced to the status of an American satellite." Hogg said life in Britain Harold Wilson's Laborites be unbearable and "people lynch them after a bit." Barrage under would would rage at the ruling party's handling of home affairs such as housing and living standards. Wilson assailed the government for what he said was its failure to control soaring land prices. rents and the cost of home-buving. "Until last weekend," Wilson said, "they would not have known the difference between a mortgage and the back-end of a camel." Mortgage rates became one of the issues in the campaign at the very start. Labor spokesmen have promised to bring them down. their own countries whether to have with married men. The bishops also will decide by what standard a married man applying to be a deacon is considered mature. The vote shared the spotlight at a council session marked by supporting action from all the U.S. bishops in attendance-per- haps 230-for a movement to exonerate Jews of Deicide (God killing) in the crucifixion. Pope Paul VI wound up the busy day by receiving in the Sistine Chapel 72 non-Catholic Christian observers to the council. He told them he waseplanning an inter- faith study center. I In the deacon vote the council drew the line at any changes many of the fathers feared might jeo- pardize the rule of celibacy for priests themselves. Most enthusiastic support for new deacons comes from areas such as Latin America, Africa and the Far East, where priests are in short supply. This is not the case in the United States and American bishops seem in general not par- ticularly concerned with the issue. Can't take a picture when the light's not right? a new permanent body of deacons While the Conservatives centrated on Labor's defense cies-Laborites aimed their con-I poli- bar- - w - - -- -.... - -~- *. -"- ESPECIALLY FOR YOU Your hair is unique, and our hair stylists are trained to make the most of its loveliness. A Jacobson permanent is custom blended to meet your need alone after your hair's texture and condition have been carefully considered . . . what ever style you prefer will look lovelier be easier to manage. For your most important beauty appointment, call 665-6111. World News Roundup By The Associated Press ARICA, Chile-President Charles de Gaulle, at the half-way point in his South American tour, boarded the French cruiser Colbert yesterday for a two-day cruise to Valpairsao. 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