Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 262, Decatur, Adams County, 6 November 1963 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
Says Goldwater Need Not Back Segregation By LYLE C. WILSON L’nited Press International The stop-Goldwater elements
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of the Republican party had an almost unanswerable argument against the senator's nomination for president by the Republicans. It was this: That Goldwater would be compelled to seek Southern white segregationist votes to be elected; that he would be compelled to cater to the white segregationists to an extent that would forever put the racist brand on the party of Abraham Lincoltf? that the GOP dare not permit that.
The stop-Goldwater elements of the Republican party had that almost unanswerable argument. But perhaps they do riot have it any more. Putnam has just published from the typewriter of Ralph de Toledano ‘‘The Winning Side,” sub-titled ‘‘TSfe Case for Goldwater Republicanism.” De Toledano undertakes with persuasive figures to answer the charge that Goldwater would be compelled to espouse segregation and to take the Republican
a THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
party with him if he were nominated next year for president. Chapter 11 is entitled “Surprise in 1962.” In it the author asserts : Opposed,, Economic Policies “All surveys of the 1962 election showed that southerners turned, to the Republican party because they opposed the ecoriomic policies of the Kennedy administration and the national Democratic party. Race was at most a tangential (divergent, erratic) issue except with the
white, rural, low-incqme voter who considered the Negro a rival for his job. “The 1962 results promised much for the Republic a n future. The GOP votes came from the sector of the (Southern) electorate most likely to assume a dominant role in years to come—the urban middle class.” The foregoing is the theme of De Toledano’s argument that a Republican candidate can do pretty well in the South without
becoming a racist demagogue. He cites Alabama where Republican James Martin almost defeated veteran Democratic Sen. Lister Hill. Hill’s margin was 6,800 votes. Hill’s support came from the rural areas De Toledano asserts that Southern Democratic strength in 1962 was based on the unlikely combination of the Negro and rural segregationist vote. Republican Martin, says De Toledano, carried every major
Alabama city and in counties of more than 100,000 averaged 53.6 per cent of the vote. In the lesser counties, where segregationist feeling may be assumed to be highest, Martin’s share was 46.2 per cent of the vote. aint22ivn.liki,%ifvs n ... . De Toledano found the same pattern in South Carolina and Texas. In the North he found the suburban vote generally rising while the city vote stood still. And he found the Republican share of. suburbia going up, too. Os the trend as he computed it, North and South, De Toledano concluded: “The election (1962) statistics indicated that the Democratic party might have to admit its minority position if the trend continued.” De Toledano calculated that the Republicans had polled 4.3 per cent fewer Northeastern votes in 1962 than in 1960. But in 39 non-Southern states the Republican vote had been 49.5 per cent, an increase calculated by the author at 15.7 per cent. The Democratic vote declined slightly, by 0.15 per cent. These figures and conclusions will be challenged, of course. They and De Toledano’s book are important, however, because GOP conservatives urgently need a valid defense against the charge of racism. Cites Initiation In Investment Group By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) — Peter Lind Hayes, the comedian, has this gag where he says “I made a killing in the market today. I shot the manager of the A&P.” We Wall Street types don’t think that is very funny. When you get to be a captain of finance, you realize that money is a serious subject. I have only recently become an investment tycoon, but I can already feel my attitude changing. Few experiences are more exhilarating that being one of the movers and shakers of the capitalistic system. When you walk in the footsteps of old J. P., not to mention old John D., you walk tall, man. You feel like going out and cornering corn before breakfast. Form Investment Club My initiation into the mystique of high finance came when I joined a group of my colleagues in forming an investment club for purposes of bolstering our already substantial fortunes. Being all plungers by nature, we agreed to put $lO per month apiece into a common fund and use it to play the market. Until such time as the capital gains start rolling in,however, we felt it prudent to hold onto our newspapering jobs. The first decision facing the shareholders was whether we should be bulls or bears. We all started out as bulls, but after a couple of months some of us turned intp rabbits. It has been my observation that the speculative instincts of a financier tend to diminish as the sum he is risking increases. At the $lO level, he is an advocate of venture capital. But at S3O, he becomes a blue chip man. ' " Eye Savings & Loan After our club had been operating foift - months, and the individual investment had risen to S4O, there was strong sentiment for withdrawing from the market and switching to a savings & loan account. What I like best about being a financial baron is sitting in on the meetings where fateful issues are resolved. We never act without solid information oh the stocks we purchase. At our last meeting, one member urged sinking a big chunk of our assets in the stock of a company that makes razor blades. Interrogation by the other members showed the soundness of his proposal. He was basing his recommendation on the fact that he had tried one of the blades and had gotten a smooth shave.
a. - 'dW3 fc*- * x i HRT? ■ *< W fi£ t . • gSSKgkj' \ j CP»i' WITH INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR-Exchanges of idX from many lands spiced the picnic fare at the 6th annual International Family Day picnic in Berkeley, Calif Thou sands of foreign students and families playing host tn thnm gathered from Bay Area campuses and communities fw the People-to-People-sponsored get-together.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1963
Decentralizing Authority In Church Scored VATICAN CITY (UPI) - James Francis Cardinal Mclntyre of Los Angeles told the Ecumenical Council today that a proposal to decentralize authority in the Catholic Church is a “radical change” which might “endanger the unity of the church.” Cardinal Mclntyre, one of the most conservative members of the U.S. hierarchy, spoke for the first time at this session of the council as the fathers opened debate on a new docu* ment which would enhance the authority of bishops to run their own dioceses. It also would grant official recognition and real legislative powers to national conferences of bishops, such as the U.S. National Catholic Welfare Conference. Paul Cardinal Richaud of Bordeaux, France, led a long list of Western European liberals who strongly defended the idea of national episcopal conferences, and argued that the document should go even further in freeing bishops from undue interference by the Roman Curia. Today’s debate, coming after a four-day council recess, indicated that the new documents will generate at least as much controversy as the one on the church, which the fathers discussed for four weeks previously at this session. Cardinal Mclntyre indicated he was particularly anxious about the proposal to grant official recognition and juridical status to national conferences of bishops. He said this would entail dangerous consequences for the unity of the church. Cardinal Richaud replied that there is no question of allowing national episcopal conferences to settle questions of faith or doctrine, but he said they are far more competent than Vatican bureaucrats to judge where adaptations are necessary to local Situations. He mentioned decisions on the use of modern languages in Catholic worship as an example of issues that should be left to national conferences of bishops. The proposals -for a sweeping decentralization of- authority in the church was contained in a document which was described as a “declaration of independence” for bishops. \ ■ n -‘l' * JMJk ..JjyL % ■BkrAk -Im. HF >j DRIPPING BEAUTY—Tuesday Weld comes throughdripping wet but attractive, after her battle with the sound stage• produced elertients in a new film, “Soldier in the Rain,” - “What is this, an investment club or a barber shop?” cried a heckler from the rear. I never knew there was a dis-
