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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 10

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

10 THE RECORD, 8, 1967 A-10 Name In The News declaration that he was again able to serve. Vacancies in the Vice-Presidency would be filled on nomination by the President, subject Presidential Succession Amendment Is Hi ear Law if a majority of the heads of executive departments sent Congress a declaration of Presidential inability. The President would resume power by sending Congress a STATE HOUSE EXPANSION HIT I to confirmation by Congress. Bernstein Thinks Policy, Turns To Details Later tution on disability and succession' but it fills the two most important and glaring ones. The first is the lack of a procedure by which the Vice-President can take over the duties of the Presidency if the President becomes so disabled he cannot handle them.

The second is a means for filling immediately the office of Vice-President when the office becomes vacant for any reason. The Amendment provides that the Vice-President would take over as acting President if the President stated in writing he was unable to carry out the duties of the office. The Vice-President also could take over All honey is sticky. Golden Blossom Honey is inger-lickin' sticky. Washington, (AP) Within weeks the U.S.

Constitution is expected to get its 25th amendment. It would provide transfer of power if the President became disabled. And it would provide for filling a vacancy in the office of the Vice-President. To date, 36 State legislatures have ratified the Presidential disability and succession amendment. Two more must do so.

The Constitution requires approval by three-fourths (38) of the legislatures. The author of the proposal in the Senate, Birch Bayh (D. Ind.) predicts the amendment will gain the votes it lack by the end of March. It goes into effect automatically with the 38th ratification. A spokesman for the American Bar Association, which recommended the amendment and has been watching its progress, has also predicted its quick approval.

Congress gave its final approval in July, 1965. Bayh said in an interview that the amendment doesn't fill all the gaps in the Consti Legislative Complex Called Wasteful Trenton Assemblyman Joseph J. Maraziti Morris) yesterday went on record against the proposed legislative complex behind the existing State House, "The plan calls for expenditures of $2.7 million for destruction, not construction," Maraziti said. He asserted that plans called for the destruction of three-fourths of the State House building, including the Senate and Assembly chambers and a large number of offices. According to the Assemblyman, $10.5 million will be required to build a new Assembly and Senate chamber and office building.

Maraziti said that while expansion was necessary to accommodate the increased legislature, he opposed the proposed plan. tV 1 Ft imtm 4 EE i I staff director of a New York City Bar Association special study on the federal conflict-of-interest laws. He was chosen by President Johnson as a member of his 1964 Presidential Task Force on Transportation and of the 1966 Presidential Task Force on for State and Local Government. Bernstein is a director of the Social Science Summer Institute in Israel and a member of the Visiting Committee of the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard.

A member of about a hal? dozen well-known professional organizations, Bernstein also has been active in the American Civil Liberties Union, he is on the Academic Council of the Hebrew University, and he was chairman of the American Faculty Committee on the Israel Fellowship Program. Stick with us. CONFIDENCE POPULARITY FREE TRIAL LESSONS NOW! the honey with beezaz! urruy FRANCHISED STUDIO 111 Main St. Hackensack Dl 3-7343 MARVIN BERNSTEIN Buddy Betty Dranow By DAVID SCHMERLER (The Record Trenton Bureau) Trenton During the past few weeks a graying Princeton scholar named Marver Hillel Bernstein was called upon to solve two of New Jersey's most difficult problems and helped in finding a solution to a third. Marver H.

Bernstein was made chairman of the Public and School Employees Grievance Study Commission late last month. This group was appointed by Governor Richard J. Hughes to find a way to avoid strikes by increasingly militant teachers and public workers. The next day Bernstein was a participant in a roundtable discussion with Transportation Commissioner David J. Goldberg and other experts.

They were trying to find a way to get $100 million worth of highways New Jersey needs but can't afford. And yesterday Chief Justice Joseph Weintraub picked Bernstein as the 11th member of the State Reapportionment Commission. The five Democrats and five Republicans on the Commission reached a complete deadlock in their efforts to define 40 Assembly districts for this year's legislative election. Bernstein will cast the tie-breaking vote in the Commission's coming deliberations. LIKES IDEAS Bernstein is not completely nonpartisan he is registered as a Democrat in Princeton.

But Weintraub has said that no one with much knowledge of reapportionment is nonpartisan. The man he appoints will, however, have the ability to be impartial, Weintraub said last week. The new Reapportionment Commissioner is a man who likes to inject new ideas into a discussion, which should make him particularly valuable to the bogged-down reapportionment group. For example, he told Goldberg's roundtable that the trouble with highway departments is they are too full of engineers. Highway officials are too concerned with perfect engineering and never even think of a road's social impact and never try to relate a highway to broad questions of public policy.

Bernstein, who became 48 and a Commissioner on the same day yesterday, has been thinking about broad questions of public policy for a long time and for some of America's most prestigious institutions. His biography in "Who's Who In America" runs inches of small print A native of Mankato, Bernstein received his bachelors' and master's degrees from the University of Wisconsin. He joined the faculty at Princeton in 1947, and was awarded his Ph. D. there in 1948.

He has been a teacher at Princeton ever since and now is dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs there. He has been a consultant to the United States Bureau of the Budget, the Economic Stabilization Agency, the Connecticut Commission on State Government Organization, the State Comptroller of Israel, the Brookings Institution, and the federal Civil Service Commission. Bernstein has been a visiting professor at the Brooking! Institution, Columbia University, and Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He was associate Hr TUTuit with this coupon b.e.r. 28 mhWWffZt Irar CLIP 1 URGE WHITE EGGS li hM" I ICEBERG LarflefnA Hi If 1 LETTUCE THE SI? i GRADE A I1 ZTX JSWORDFISH STEAK Jtslig4 1 CALIF.

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Pages Available:
3,310,435
Years Available:
1898-2024