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Democrat and Chronicle du lieu suivant : Rochester, New York • Page 26

Lieu:
Rochester, New York
Date de parution:
Page:
26
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

ROCHESTER DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE on Sunday, Nov. 29. 1964 GOP Concedes Democrats to Keep One Seat Continued from Page IB A sixth assembly district would hinge on a decision to enlarge the Assembly from its present 150 members. mi mm COCHEBTER ym Dine by candlelight in jWrfr TkfJ- I f- our Tower Restaurant JOT, I F'V If Eastman School of JtrC Ik iOSk Music trio. iS A "I'm for a fair reapportionment," Rosenberg said yesterday, "but I also want to make sure the best interests of my district are protected." The quest for GOP voting strength could lead Republi 0 'rL II JHf if Democrats, still in the mi nority at the special session can be expected to oppose solidly any Republican reapportionment plan.

The Republican leadership also may run into trouble in its own ranks. To comply with the Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" decision, the reapportionment plan is expected to reflect population shifts from rural to suburban and metropolitan areas. Republican assemblymen from rural counties can't be expected to look with favor on any plan that would throw them into new districts with other counties. Two or three legislators could be lumped into one new district and have to resolve the party nomination in primaries. Another difficulty facing the Republicans is that Assembly Speaker Joseph F.

Carlino and Senate Majority Leader Walter J. Mahoney were defeated for re-election. As "lame duck" leaders, they are not likely to command the party loyalty and discipline they enjoyed in past sessions. Rosenberg Sole Winner Assemblyman S. William Rosenberg of Brighton was the only Monroe County Republican to retain his Assembly seat.

He won by 6,800 votes- compared to his plurality in 1960. It's natural for Republicans to look at Rosenberg's 2nd District as a likely spot to pare GOP voting strength to be grafted onto weaker districts. It's just as natural to expect Rosenberg to resent it. cans to extend Monroe Coun ty legislative districts beyond the county line, taking in pockets of Republican voters in area rural counties. This move, too, could lead to boundary wars with Republican legislators from the rural counties.

Goddard Sees Trouble Assemblyman J. Eugene Goddard, the East Rochester Republican who was defeated in the Nov. 3 balloting, feels' the Republican leaders will have trouble selling any proposal that does away with the present provision for one assemblyman for each county. To maintain the one assemblyman per county set up, the reapportionment plan would either have to expand the size of the 150-member Assembly or give legislators from smaller counties a fraction of a vote. The Auburn meeting is one of several being held across the state by a task force of GOP leaders, including State Chairman Fred A.

Young, Senator Mahoney, Speaker Carlino and Sol Corbin, counsel to Gov. Rockefeller. It will take all their skill and considerable negotiation to work out an acceptable reapportionment plan. The first round of negotiations will begin in Auburn Tuesday. an ankle at one stage, and jumped again in six months.

Following Thanks giving weekend festivities here, Father Gerry took his sister, Mary Gefell, a Xerox Corp. employe, to Atlanta. There they were to pick up Father Joe and head on a vacation in Florida. R. T.

French Co. Maps Offer The R. T. French Co. tomorrow will make known its latest proposals to 400 striking employes.

French and the United Packing House Workers met yesterday until 2 a.m. Mario Barbato, president of Local 450, said negotiators "were no nearer to settlement than they were a month ago." The company then announced it would mail letters this weekend to inform its strikers of "some new proposals and to clarify the company's position in general." The letters will cover economic and non-economic issues. Local 450 has been striking since Oct. 3. Chaplains Parish: Much of S.

Korea m- aiu.J. 1 tA; Wa Continued from Page IB As the brigade's top chap-plain, he holds regular consultations with men of all faiths. He only "supervises" Protestant services. "I recall once, when the chaplains' schedule became disrupted, how an enlisted man took over a Protestant service. Did a good job, too." Col.

Gefel said missionaries are doing an excellent job in Korea "where many natives are half-starved." "Christianity is on the increase among Koreans," he said. Col. Gefell is being reassigned, after a 13-moith duty tour in Korea, to the chaplain agency of the Combat Development Command at Fort Lee, Va. After completing studies at St. Bernard's Seminary, he was assistant pastor at St.

Alphonsus Church in Auburn and at St. Michael's in Newark. After entering the Chaplain Corps, he was graduated from the Army's Command and General Staff School. No armchair officer, he earned his master jumper's rating by 41 airborne jumps at Fort Bragg, N.C. broke i Mi Mwmmm GIFT-WRAP HER drUtW II in a cosy nhj QUILTED ROBE 7 I mR rC 1 frV m- Roks your Chroma, heS lv Y' i'ifPti fcather-liglu and comfy can be.

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Années disponibles:
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