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Tito Looking Past His Death
By PHIL NEWSOM
EPI Foreign News Analyst
President Josip Broz Tito of
Yugoslavia, nearing 77, is
seeking to insure an orderly
succession of power after his
death.
Acknowledging that “some of
us are rather advanced in
years,” Tito told surprised
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delegates to the ninth congress
of the Yugoslav Communist
party that henceforth national
policy making will be in the
hands of a new 15-man
executive bureau drawn from
Yugoslavia’s six republics, and
two autonomous provinces.
Excluding Tito, average age
of the new bureau’s membership
is 48.
The recently concluded con-
Commentary‘
i
gress also:
Adopted a 25,000-word resolu
tion on "socialist development
in Yugoslavia” containing not
one single mention of Marxism-
Leninism.
Ofcve its loudest cheers to the
Romanian delegation which
defied a Soviet ban on
attendance by any Warsaw Pact
nation.
Denounced Intervention
Heard Tito once again den-
ounce Soviet claims to the right
nf military intervention in the
affairs of any nation within the
so-called Socialist common
wealth.
The comparative youth of the
new policy-making bureau’s
membership, with high techno
logical and academic Creden
tials, is to insure that economic
reforms and social gains Os the
last few years do not fall to the
not-so-tender mercies of pro-
Moscow conservatives.
Yugoslavia has its troubles.
It has the freest press of all
Communist countries.
It has what has been
described as a “self-manage
ment system” in industry which
gives worker councils and their
elected professional managers
the say in production schedules
and the worker a Share in
profits. '
Deep National Rivalries
But it also has a nationality
problem. The five national
groups are Serbs, Croats,
Slovenes, Macedonians and
Wednesday, April 9, 1969
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JOCKEYING the family budget, Tuetdee Testa shop!
for produce at a Bayside, Queens, supermarket with her
husband Al and daughter Alicia. When she Isn’t being
a housewife, the tt-year-old woman works as a jockey
and recently made her race-riding debut at Aqneduet.
BRUCB BIOBSAT
Moynihan Off, Running
On Problems of Cities
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the “Democrat in the base
ment” at the White House is working out well so far.
In his role as staff chief of the Urban Affairs Council, a
co-ordinating inter-departmental organization created by
President Nixon to tackle urban problems across ail lines,
Moynihan evidently is applying successfully his talents as
a generalizer.
The cabinet members who take part in council meetings
once a week like him. Says a Moynihan friend:
“He shows them the mountaintop. This flamboyant Irish
man with his colorful language gives them the big picture.
It gets them away from the gray bureaucracy, with its
jargon and its interoffice memos, where they have to spend
most of their time.”
Moynihan also appears to be enjoying excellent relations
with the President. The latter obviously wants the Har
vard urbanologist to stay around a long while and seems
to go out of his way to make him feel at home.
For his part, Moynihan, while knowing this, Is said to
be careful not to presume on this or to try in any way to
exert extra leverage because of it. He has good access to
the President, which is not something everyone in the
White House establishment can claim.
As Urban Affairs staff director, Moynihan Is able to get
his own ideas thrown into the general Council mix at meet
ings, in agenda preparations and so on. And he had a real
hand in development of programs and policies.
There may have been a time when Moynihan saw his co
ordinating role in the urban field as much bigger than it is.
There were suggestions from some top sources on the eve
of Nixon’s inauguration that the visible ris» of economist
Arthur Burns to pre-eminence as the President’s chief
domestic programer had somewhat unsettled Moynihan.
Whatever the truth of that, he reportedly is reasonably
content with his present lot.
Even before that matter developed, liberal friends of
Moynihan were busy forecasting that he would last only
three to six months in the White House before disenchant
ment would take him away.
He himself listened to those predictions with amusement.
The plain fact is he likes action close to the seat of power
and may well have no difficulty in staying on until ecu
demlc commitments compel his resignation at the end of
two vears’ service.
Speculation that swirled around his head at the outset of
the Nixon regime has moved on to engulf others. To the
extent that recent published reports depict an inside power
struggle of growing intensity, the guessing is probably
pretty much off the mark.
Not that there is no contest for power. It is inevitable in
a White House which today represents such a huge power
focus, and this reporter often has called attention to the
shifting battle tides. Yet it is easy to exaggerate the
struggle.
Mountenegrins. It also has a
dozen minority groups ranging
from gypsies to Albanians and
Czechs. Rivalries and jealousies
run deep.
On the economic side, the
dinar is rated as practically a
hard currency, selling in Rome
for almost the same as in
Belgrade. Industrial production
has multiplied 10 times over
mt.
But unemployment is rising
as industry attempts to meet
the competition of free enter
prise and unsnarl years of bad
7 more
dtutoiy,
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Griffin Daily News
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
NEA Washington Correspondent
management.
Politically, the Yugoslavs
believe the Soviets never again
can turn the clock back on
liberalization, even in Czechoslo
vakia. But, within the Soviet
Union itself, they see a new rise
of Stalinism, and they fear a
frustrated Kremlin leadership
could result in desperate
measures, including an invasion
oi Yugoslavia.
In that case, they promise
there will be another Vietnam
in Europe.
2