Newspaper Page Text
Page 16
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, August 16, 1972
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Faculty 1972-73
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MIAMI BEACH—Two protesters make their point during a Republican Party Platform sub-committee hearing. (UPI)
Republicans struggle
for 1976 party control
By DANIEL RAPOPORT
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Re
publicanliberals and moderates
struggled today to preserve a
tentative victory achieved in a
contest over control of the 1976
GOP presidential nominating
convention.
The convention’s Temporary
Rules Committee called a 10:30
a.m. EDT meeting today to
consider a proposed revision in
the current method of allocat
ing votes to state delegations
for future conventions.
The liberals won adoption of
their proposal on the first round
Tuesday by a 6-5 vote of a
subcommittee. The proposal
favors big states and was
pushed by reformers. Edged
out by the subcommittee was a
system put forth by two
conservatives, Sen. John Tower,
R-Tex., and Rep. Jack Kemp,
R-N.Y.
The Tower-Kemp plan—billed
as the “Miami Compromise”—
was aimed at assuring that old
line Republicans have the
balance of power at future
conventions.
Looming in the background,
much like they did in the recent
Democratic convention, are the
courts. A U.S. district court
judge in Washington issued a
ruling to bar the convention
from renewing the current
method of apportioning delegate
votes.
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A MAINTENANCE man finds himself with a spec
tacular view as he works on a reconstructed version of
H.M.S. Bounty, harbored at St. Petersburg, Fla.
The Current Procedure
For some 20 years, each state
has been assigned delegates
equal to its electoral votes and
picked up a limited number of
extra votes for electing a
Republican governor or U.S.
Senator. Six bonus delegates
are awarded to every state that
is carried by the Republican
presidential nominee in the
previous election.
It is these six bonus votes
that the court struck down,
arguing that they disregarded
the size of the presidential vote
and thus discriminated against
Republican voters from the
larger states.
Liberals supported a plan,
drafted by Sen. Charles H.
Percy of Illinois, that would
eliminate the bonus system and
base delegate allocations on
Republican voting strength in
congressional districts.
Tte Tower-Kemp plan would
reduce the bonus to three votes
plus 40 per cent of a state’s
electoral vote if it went for the
Republican presidential nomi
nee.
The 12-member subcommittee
spent tlie day analyzing compu
ter printouts of both plans,
along with 14 others. When it
was finished, it chose one of the
14 others—a proposal conceived
by its chairman, William S.
Powers of Denver.
Solid Victory
Convention reformers picked
up a solid victory when a
subcommittee voted unanimous
ly in favor of a rule change to
direct state parties to “endea
vor” to achieve a 50-50 split
between men and women in
future delegations.
Five days before the conven
tion opens and exactly a week
before the delegates give Nixon
their overwhelming—if not una
nimous—vote for renomination,
there were other developments:
—The Platform Committee
neared completion of hearings
on recommendations for the
principles on which Nixon will
campaign, with a warning by
the liberal Ripon Society that
voters expect Nixon to make
good on a 1968 campaign pledge
to end the Vietnam War.
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JEAN WESTWOOD, the
recently chosen Democratic
national chairwoman, has
started her new job off with
a bang—l’affaire Eagleton
and its aftermath.
FRANZ SCHUBERT
Famed composer Franz
Schubert was born on Jan. 31,
1797, and died in 1828.