Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 229, Ed. 1 Monday, November 9, 1964 Page: 3 of 34
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES Monday, Nov. 9, 1964 3,
I IVutional Affairs
Nixon Pushed for GOP Task
Ruling Slated
WASHINGTON (P — Many
Republicans
influential
- 1
On Red Curb
Chafee of !Iatfic/! oi (0‘
We did it before, survey.
The survey, reaching GOP
after 1936,’* he says. Mar-
tn has been speaker of the officials in all sections of the
U. S. House twice, and five
Goldwater
Wirephoto >
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Barry
were
try as a man to be reckoned'
with in the next four years, i
Oklahoma State Chairman
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“I heard ,more good things
about Nixon this time and
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Gov. John H.
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WASHINGTON IPP — Michigan Gov. George Romney
has criticized Richard M. Nixon for his criticism of New
York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller.
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PENNCAAEL
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SAVINGS & IOAN
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Fog Bypassed
LONDON (UPI) — Dozens
of international flights by-
passed London Monday
when thick early morning
fog blanketed the city. The
fog cut visibility to less than
a half mile.
i
actively for Goldwater, was |
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Ford Pushes Bargaining
DETROIT (UPI) — Ford Motor Co., and the United
Auto Workers Union embarked Monday on intensive bar-
gaining with three struck plants in an effort to prevent
parts shortages from crippling non-struck Ford plants.
Local bargainers for both management and union at
the three plants were summoned to Detroit for central-
ized negotiations under top management and union offi-
cials
The representatives called in were from the Ford
stamping plants at Chicago Heights, Ill., and Buffalo. N.
Y . and the Aluminum foundry at Sheffield, Ala , key
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out which Ford's assembly plants might eventually grind
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man, said the party should Scranton "fine leaders whi
regroup around " someone, should play a part in re
who will represent the true building thciparty. Robert
consensus of the conserva-iCorber, Virginia state chair-
WASHINGTON (UPI) — A house subcommittee has
criticized the government for piling up currency re-
serves in foreign countries while a gold and dollar drain
is still a major problem for U. S. financial planners.
In a report issued Sunday, the foreign operations
and government information subcommittee of the gov-
ernment operations committee said the United States
had $2.9 billion in local currencies tied up in 83 countries
as of June 30, 1963.
Most of these reserves are the result of sales made
to foreign countries under the “Food for Peace” pro-
gram. The program requires the proceeds of the sales to
be spent in the countries involved.
who campaigned j
Johnson's land-
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Jap Leader
Takes Oath
by Republicans ,
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SHEPHERD MALL PENNEY'S 23RD AND VILLA. Shop 9:30 "Til 9 p.m. ,
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he yield control of the party
machinery as the result of
the shattering impact of
1
tives.” He named Nixon and
Scranton as possibilities.
Minnesota National Com-
mitteeman George Etzell
forecast that Nixon will play
a strong future party role.
Next to Nikon. Romney,
who won re'-election handily
if he had been the nominee
again." Peterson said.
Benjamin F Dillingham,
Hawaii national committee-
I pat) re-
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nation, disclosed little enthu-
times chairman of GOP sinom fer onother nreciden-
National conventions. (AP tial race by defeated Sen ! er
■ . »•
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Ad
d
And to any of his fellow Republicans who had been
criticizing defeated GOP presidential candidate Barry-
Goldwater and calling for new party leadership. Romney
had this to say as barbs continued to ricochet around the
GOP:
“I think that Sen. Goldwater has demonstrated in
the past his concern about the Republican Party as a
whole and I think it’s premature to assume it’s going to
be necessary to find some way around Sen. Goldwater "
Romney, who had declined to endorse Goldwater s
candidacy, was a big winner last Tuesday in his bid for
re-election as governor — a victory that has stirred
some speculation that he might be a future Republican
presidential nominee possibility.
As for Nixon. Romney said: “When you’re trying to
unify something you don’t begin to say things that will
create greater feeling and division. You undertake to in-
clude those who are in a position to make a contribu-
tion."
across the country expect
Richard M. Nixon to play a
leading role in rebuilding the
GOP for what most of them
think will be a strong 1966
comeback.
Nixon, the 1960 presiden-
tial nominee, and GOP Gov-
ernors George Romney of
Michigan, William W. Scran-
ton of Pennsylvania and
Nelson A. Rockefeller of
New York were most fre-
quently mentioned as pros-
pective leaders of this come-
back in an Associated Press
Party can be re-
f •
fi,
MILWAUKEE (P — Negotiators striving to reach a
contract settlement between the Allis-Chalmers Manu-
facturing Co. and the United Auto Workers Union were
reported to have made progress in a solid weekend of
bargaining but failed to meet a strike deadline.
The full impact of the strike by 10.700 farm imple-
ment workers at five plants in four states was not ex-
pected until the start of Monday’s shifts, when the union )
said full-force picketing would start even as talks were 1
set to be renewed.
Marathon talks began Saturday morning and contin-
ued past the strike deadline of midnight Saturday. At
that hour token picketing was begun at the main plant in
suburban West Allis.
TOKYO (P — Japan’s new
Premier Eisaku Sato was
sworn in Monday night along
with a cabinet in which he
was the only important new-
member.
Sato retained all the minis-
ters in the government of his
predecessor, ailing Hayato
Ikeda. Two minor cabinet of-
ficials were replaced.
The retention of Ikeda’s
cabinet underlined the ex-
pectation Sato would contin-
ue Ikeda’s policies, includ-
ing his pro-Western, anti-
Communist foreign policy.
Sato, 63, and an economic
expert, formed his cabinet a
few hours after parliament
elected him to succeed Ike-
da. After four years in of-
fice, Ikeda resigned because
of a throat tumor. Both he
and Sato are members of the
ruling Liberal Democratic
party.
In the voting in the lower
house of the Diet (parlia-
ment), Sato received 283
votes, Socialist Jotaro
W"• 5
Or ■ 1
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TRENTON N. J (UPI)
— The New Jersey legisla-
ture Monday takes up a
unique, Republican-spon-
sored move to dodge phys-
ical reapportionment by
weighing the votes of its
- members according to
population.
Backers contend the pro-
posal would satisfy the U.
S. Supreme Court’s deci-
sion requiring apportion-
ment on a population ba-
sis it would give each sen-
-■ ator and assemblyman a
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CONGRESSMAN Joseph
Martin jr. says the Repub-
e "eye , J l
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WASHINGTON (P — The supreme court agreed
Monday to rule on constitutionality of a federal law bar-
ring Communists from serving as officials of a labor un-
ion.
The ruling was asked by the justice department in
an appeal from a decision by the.U. S. Circuit Court in
San Francisco. The circuit court said the law constituted
an invalid restraint upon freedom of association protect-
ed by the constitution’s first amendment.
With this holding, the circuit court overturned con-
viction of Archie Brown, who was indicted on a charge
that he served as a member of the executive board of
Local 10, San Francisco, of the International Longshore-
men’s Union while a member of the Communist Party.
Brown had been sentenced to six months’ imprisonment.
Kawakami got 137. Suehiro Monday morning to the U. S.
Nishio of the Democratic-So- Weather Bureau, excluding
cialists got 23, and Sanzo No-
saka. a Communist, got 4. I Alaska and Haw aii, was 16
The 250-member upper ay Williston. N D The high-
house, voting simultaneous- est reported Sunday was 87
ly, gave Sato 146 votes, at McAllen, Tex
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Mothers Complain
NOTTINGHAM, England
(UPI) — Mothers are com-
- plaining about ragmen who
have been collecting their
wares from young people in
exchange for pinup pictures.
mml.
while Johnson was carrying Nixon as poleniil leaders.
Michigan, was most often Gox H’onryl 1010°
mentioned as the future par- lahoma listed (in John A.
Iove of Coloraclei. Nalk O.
t
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man, predicted that "some-
one n the image of Gov.
Romney" will emerge on
top.
Rep. Stanley R Tupper
(R-Maine) named Rokefell-
er, Romney. Ser inion. Chaf-
ee, Henry Cabot Lodge and
number of votes based on
the population of his coun-
ty.
The Republicans hoped I
to gain adoption of the ,
weighted voting plan Mon- l
day through a simple leg-
islative rules change They
appeared to have a good
chance of winning approv-
al in the state senate,
where they have a solid
majority, but a tough fight
was expected in the house
where the GOP has only a
32-28 margin
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John W. Tyler, commented:
“I think we’re going to see
an awful lot of .Mr. Nixon
real quick. I think he’s
the only man who can pull
the party together.” •
South Carolina State
Chairman J. Drake Edens
jr. said Nixon “is the man
you have to watch in the
party.” Robert L. Pierce,
Wisconsin national commit-
teeman, observed that “Nix-
on looks good,” in party for-
tunes at this point. Wiscon-
sin State Chairman Talbot
Peterson said he thinks the
reins of national party con-
trol should be handed to
Rhode Island, also re-elected and Nixon 1
against the Democratic who should Ic
trend, called Romney and building.
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 229, Ed. 1 Monday, November 9, 1964, newspaper, November 9, 1964; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1845417/m1/3/: accessed June 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.