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December 06, 1963 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1963-12-06

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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6,1963

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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Moro Assembles Coalition;
Takes Office as Premier

Legislature To Act
On New Commission

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ROME (R)-Italian Premier Al-
do Moro's left-leaning government
of Christian Democrats and Marx-
ist Socialists took office yesterday
after weeks of bickering which
gave little promise of a stable fu-
ture.
The new coalition put Pietro
Nenni's Socialist Party back in
Politicians Eye
1964 Election
To Presidency
WASHINGTON (R)-Sen. Barry
Goldwater (R-Ariz) said yester-
day he is undertaking a "major
reassessment" of his presidential
prospects in the tangled political
picture left by the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy.
"I don't think my support has
changed from what it was," said
the Arizona conservative who
ranked No. 1 among potential Re-
publican nominees in public opin-
ionpolls taken before Kennedy's
death.
Meanwhile, plans are being
shaped to enter a slate of dele-
gates pledged to former Vice-Pres-
ident Richard M. Nixon in New
Hampshire's presidential primary
next March, the Washington Star
said yesterday.
This would be the start of an
organized effort to win the Repub-
lican nomination for Nixon, who
lost to John F. Kennedy in 1960
4 by a hairsbreadth.

the government for the first time
since 1947.
Palmiro Togliatti, minister of
justice until De Gasperi formed his
all-Christian Democrat majority
government in 1947, remained
alone yesterday as the major lead-
er of the opposition.
Political Wizard
Nenni, 72, political wizard who
has worked both sides of the street,
was back in his 1945 post as depu-
ty premier. He had been foreign
minister in 1946 and 1947.
Many of Nenni's own party fol-
lowed him back into the govern-
ment with reluctance or outright
hostility. They are the second
strongest party in the coalition of
Christian Democrats, Socialists,
Democratic Socialists and Republi-
cans.
Moro gave his own party 16
cabinet posts, including pro-NATO
Giulio Andreoitti in the key de-
fense ministry.
Budget Ministry
Six Socialists became ministers,
including Antonio Giolitti who got
the important budget ministry.
Democratic Socialistic leader
Giuseppe Saragat, whose party
split from the Socialists in 1947,
became foreign minister. His party
got two other cabinet posts, and
the little Republican Party was
given one.
Unease at the sharply-contrast-
ing new government lineup was re-
flected quickly. Major stocks on
the Milan market showed declines.
Several independent newspapers
questioned whether the alliance
could last six months.

Moro knit it together loosely,
under repeated threats of revolt
from the right wing of his own
party and the left wing of Nenni's
Socialists. It appeared in danger
of unraveling at the first severe
strain in parliament.
Extra Session
Initiates Plans
For. expansion
The second special session of the
Legislature yesterdayebegan the
first steps for the development of
a $35 million state building proj-
ect.
This action is in addition to the
implementation of the new con-
stitution for which the session was
called by Gov. George Romney.
The Legslature has set Dec. 19 as
the day it will adjourn and it is
already moving at a fast pace to
meet this deadline.
Although the inclusion of the
building project was not expected
in this session, it has received a
strong recommendation from the
joint legislative committee on cap-
itol building development.
The governor noted that "there
is actually some connection be-
tween the program and constitu-
tional implementation." He said
that the new offices are agencies
under the constitution and will re-
quire more office space and a
change in the "groupings" of the
state offices.

POPE PAUL VI
... unprecedented trip
Pontiff Aids
Peace Cause
JERUSALEM ()-The visit of
Pope Paul VI to the Holy Land
early in January was seen in this
divided city last night as a pil-
grimage to improve Roman Catho-
lic relations with Jews and Mos-
lems.
Some even expressed belief that
the Pope's unprecedented 1500-
mile journey might help to allay
anger and suspicion that wall off
Jews from the Moslem Arabs in
the volatile Middle East.
One concern expressed early
was for the safety of the Pontiff
in his brief travels thr~ough the
holy places, some in Moslem Jor-
dan, the others in Israel. Tempers
are high and Jew and Arab often.
shoot each other.
A Jordanian official said "the
most rigid security measures" will
be in force while the Pontiff
visits the holy places of Jordan
as a personal guest of Jordan's
King Hussein, a Moslem.
Neither in the Israeli section of
Jerusalem nor in the Jordan
quarter had any official word been
received from the Vatican of the
Pontiff's plans. Never before has
a Pope visited the Holy Land,
All officials knew was what
has been publicly announced-that
the Pope said in Vatican City
Wednesday he would make a brief
visit to the Holy Land "on behalf
of peace among men," and the
later Vatican statement that the
trip would be made in the first
10 days of January.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first
in a four-part series on the im-
plementation of the new Michigan
Constitution.)
By JOHN WEILER
The functions and the finances
of the new Civil Rights Commis-
sion will be one of the major
issues that the Legislature will
deal with during the present spe-
cial session on implementing the
new constitution.
Gov. George Romney asked
Monday night for three specific
actions to be taken by the Legis-
lature to "provide for the effec-
tive operation of the committee":
CRC Replaces FEPC
--Transfer of the present juris-
diction of the Fair Employment
Practices Commission to the new
CRC with the elimination of the
FEPC on January 1;
-"Transfer to the CRC of the
balance of the funds appropriated
to the FEPC for the current fis-
cal year" amounting to approxi-
mately $90,000; and
--"Supplemental appropriations
to the CRC" which Romney is
placing at an additional $90,000
for the remainder of the fiscal
year.
Rule-Making
Sen. Stanley G. Thayer (R-Ann
Arbor) noted yesterday that one
of the major issues that will come
from the new CRC is the question
of whether rule-making by the
commission is subject to the same
provisions of the Legislature as
other commissions or if, by na-
ture of its being a constitutional
commission, itis not under the
legislative authority.
Attorney General Frank Kelley
ruled in July that the Legislature
Lehman .Dies

has no power over the CRC, but
Thayer noted there is some ques-
tion as to whether this will be the
ruling of the Michigan Supreme
Court.
Rep. Lloyd Gibbs (R-Portland)
noted yesterday that "about all
that is left (for the Legislature) is
the appropriation of money for the
CRC."
May Ignore Legislation
He said that the new CRC will
have such broad power that it
could ignore almost any legisla-
tion passed if "it wanted to."
He commented that the new
CRC would be the combination of
the FEPC and a new agency and
that the commission would have
expanded powers from the FEPC.
Gibbs said that he does not see
any conflict between the local hu-
See COMMISSION, Page 5
b

dec. 2-dec. 8
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NEW YORK tom)-Former Sen.
Herbert H. Lehman, 85, once
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's
"right arm" and spearhead of a
Democratic reform movement that
overthrew Tammany Hall, died
yesterday of a heart attack.
Lehman, also four times gover-
nor of the state, served as war-
time head of the Office of Foreign
Relief and Rehabilitation and
later became Director General of
the United Nations Relief and Re-
habilitation agency. Lehman was
a determined battler for civil
rights and public housing and a
foe of racial segregation and im-
migration restrictions.

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World News
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By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON-A panel of the
President's Science Advisory Com-
mittee has entered a split verdict
on the desirability of building a
$150 million atom smasher for a
group of Midwestern universities,
including the University.
The divided opinion considerably
lessens hopes that funds for the
Madison accelerator would be in-
cluded in the next fiscal year's
budget, now being prepared by the
White House.
** *
MEMPHIS-The South's college
and school \accreditation body re-
moved a cloud of suspicion from
the University of Mississippi Wed-
nesday and ruled there is no
longer political intervention in its
administration.
CARACAS-Red terrorists freed
United States Col. James K. Che-
nault unharmed at dawn yester-
dayf, belatedly keeping a promise
they made when they kidnaped
him Nov. 27 to propagandize their
faltering fight against Venezuela's
government.
NEW YORK-Stocks rose to a
new record high with a fairly
heavy volume on the New York
Stock Exchange yesterday. Dow-
Jones averages showed industrials
up 8.35, rails up 0.30, utilities up
0.41 and 65 stocks up 1.94.

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