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Griffin Daily News
7
Thursday, July 15,1971
Gambrell ;
pushes
reform
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
David H. Gambrell, D-Ga.,
Wednesday proposed giving
“little people” a full voice in
politics by applying one-man,
one-vote apportionment princi
ples to the selection of party
leaders.
Gambrell, the Senate’s new
est and only non-elected mem
ber, also proposed requiring
strict fairness rules at national
political conventions and mak
ing bribery of convention dele
gates a federal crime punisha
ble by as much as three years
in prison and a SIO,OOO fine.
In introducing the legislation
—his first as a U. S. senator—
Gambrell said it was designed
to erase the tradition that na
tional political conventions are
“the private affair of the polit
ical upper crust” and clear the
way for truly representative se
lection of delegates to the Dem
ocratic and Republican conven
tions a year from now.
“The introduction of com
pletely democratic processes of
delegate selection is very likely
to result in the selection of
many ‘little people’ and those
without previous political identi
fication. If these conventions
are to be responsive to public
sentiment, and are to gain in
public confidence and respect,
the selection of such persons is
very much to be desired.”
He said in recent years na
tional party conventions have
come to be regarded as “a cut
and-dried performance with a
predetermined grand finale 0r...
a raucous public spectacle
more akin to a cowboys and
Indians movie” due to their
composition and conduct.
Gambrell, a Democratic state
chairman in Georgia before his
appointment to the Senate fol
lowing the death of Sen. Rich
ard B. Russell in January, said
reform of the convention proc
ess and party structure is “ur
gently required in the public in
terest.”
Under his bill, delegates to
both GOP and Democratic con
ventions—and members of the
party national committees —
would be apportioned among the
states strictly according to pop
ulation. Within the states, dele
gates and national committee
men would be allotted on the
same basis and selected by
“democratic process.”
Currently, convention dele
gates are allotted to the states
basically along population lines
but weighted to reflect party
strength according to complex
formulas. Delegates are select
ed by a variety of means.
National Committees are com
posed of two members from
each state, regardless of size.
Noting both major parties are
now defendants in lawsuits chal
lenging their apportionment of
convention delegates, Gambrell
said the issus is too critical and
time is too short to wait for the
courts to act.
More
busing
okayed
COLUMBUS, Ga. (UPI) - A
federal judge approved Wednes
day a plan that would require
increased busing of students in
order to desegregate the Musco
gee County school system.
U. S. District Court Judge J.
Robert Elliott, who earlier had
been critical of the new deseg
regation plan, said the proposal
submitted by the Muscogee
School Board would require
“considerably more transporta
tion.”
The plan was ordered after
the U. S. sth Circuit Court of
Appeals court ordered a plan
that would conform with the Su
preme Court’s ruling in Swann
v.Charlotte-Mecklenburg(N.C.)
Board of Education.
Under the plan, freedom of
choice would be abolished and
the system would consist of a
racial ratio of 70-30 white to
Hack in elementary schools and
75-25 white to black and junior
and senior high.
Teachers with the longest pe
riod of service would be allowed
to remain in the school they are
presently located in, or may
choose another school on the ba
sis of seniority.
“The plan as it is presently
proposed insures the desegrega
tion of the faculty and if im
plemented as presented, no dis
crimination will result,” Elliott
said in his order.