1
Highlight State Welfare Deputy Com- missioner Spoke ID Canton Thursday.—Page 14. Weather Clear and cold tonight with frost likely. Lows in up- per 20s nad low 30s. Satur- day sunny and a little milder. Highs in upper 50s and mid 60s. VOL. 26, NO. 3355 SepublicaD Established 1831, Journal Established 1868 OGDENSBURG, N.Y., 13669, FRIDAY, MAY! 4, 1971 Daily entered Ax Second Class. Matter Post Office Ogdensburg. N.S SINGLE COPY 1 5c Rocky Considers Bill - Draf tin; In PLAN PARISH DINNER Norman Gore;, extreme right, chairman of the social com- mittee of the St. Mary's Cathedral Parish Council, goes over final plans for the an- nual parish dinner at St; Mary's Academy Wednesday evening. The dinner will begin at 6:30 p.m. and all parishioners are urged to attend. Those attending arereminded to bring table service and covered dish. From left to right: Mrs. Anna Rapin, Sister Elizas beth Ann, administrator of Bishop Conroy School; Mrs. Anna Lepcio, Francis Fitz- gerald, Norman Gore. A committee of the various organizations of the church are working on the preparations for the dinner. (Staff Photo) ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) Gov. [Rockefeller is seriously consid- ering a unique bill-drafting tac- tic that would force the. legisla- ture to raise state taxes to pay for anynew spending ventures. It is designed to enforce the edict he laid down Wednesday —that taxes would have to be increased if the lawmakers want to supply more money for parochial schools or restore cuts in financial aid for local gov- ernments. Many of the legislators dis- pute Rockefeller's decree, argu- ing that the school money, at least, could be found some- vhere within the $7.7-billion budget. Thus he fears that the legislature might send him the spending bill and challenge him lo veto it. When reporters asked what he vould do in such an event, the * ' governor snapped, "I'm not go- ng to talk about an iffy ques- Egyptian Shakeup Seen To Solidi By THEASSOCIATED PRESS Observers today viewed fflie sweeping shakeup in the Egyp- tian Cabinet as a purge by President Anwar Sadat to solid- ifiy his control. Sis cabinet ministers, in- cluding the defense minister, T. Gen. Monamed Fawzi, rev signed Thursday night along, vrith three high-ranking offic- ials of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's- only political party. Cairo Radio broadcast a Statement by Industry Minister Aziz Sidy, a Sadat supporter, appealing to the Egyptian people to maintain national un- ity "in the face of those trying to sow sedition in Dhe ranks." Sadat scheduled a broadcast tonight. It was the first manor breach among Egypt's leaders to come to the surface since Sadat took over in September after tine death of President Gamal Afo- del Nasser. The rit began with Sadat's Iring of AM Sabry, his pro-Soviet vice president, ear- Mer this month. Although more dismissals or resignations had been expected, Israelis and otter Arab watch- ers were surprised at the ex- tent of the snakeup and espe- cially by lie resignation of Fawzi, who was not known to have any pronounced political learnings. Intoned sources said he apparently had been work- g smoothly -with Sadat on strategy against Israel. Israeli experts on Aral) af- fair said z2. of tkos<. -sao re- signed leaned toward extremist and pro-Moscow lines. "This is a bitter pill which the -Soviets •will faave to swallow—and still keep silent," wrote Oded Zarai of tie newspaper Haaretz. Staid Yaari of the semi- official Davar said the shakeuip Another of those quittingwas Egypt's top policeman, Interior Minister Shawari Gumah. His resignation was tie first an- nounced, shortly after Sadat de- creed an immediate end to all special police surveillance m- cJodiDig wiretapping. (Jamah Was replaced by Mahmoud Sa- lem, former governor of Alex- andria. Other cabinet ministers who resigned were Sami Sharaf, the dfoief of lihe intelligence serv- ices; Housing Minister Saad Zayed; Electricity Minister Helmi ©1 Said, an Information was "tantamoumt to a coup i Minister Mohammed Fayek. d'etat," and the key to future developments was in the hands of the army. Sadat prefaced the .purge with a series of visits Tuesday and Wednesday to army com- manders and troops along the Suez Canal front, evidently to assure himself of their support. And he named tie army chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Mohammed S'adek, to" replace Fawzi and promoted Mm to lieutenant general. The shafceup was seen in Bei- rut as an obvious attempt by Sadat to rid himself of his polit- ical foes. Fayek was particularly close to Sabry. The fliree officials of t i e Arab Socialist Union who re- signed were members of a pow- er group formed by Sabry. Ifoey were Labib Shukair, speaker of fflie National Assem- bly; Abdel Mohsen Afoul Nur, secretary general of the party. and Dia Bdin Daoud, the par- ty's No. 2 man. Their resigna- tions bad been rumored earlier this week. Sabry had opposed Sadat on a number of issues, including his dialogue with, the United States over a possible settle- ment with Israel. Favors Granting Boards Power To Grant Tenure After 30 Days ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A clear to all school boards that brought about by the so-called mw !_„_ „£ VU~ ««~~:»1 I A ^ ^ H tl*»*~* tirtrfn +Vin rtfvntay +r» ft^Gnt T^QTTIAT* T OUT TTlof law nrfYWirlPQ ' eTS. ion." But fiscal sources confided ater that thegovernor was fanning a preventive maneuv- sr of his own. He device was ;aid to be unprecedented but egally permissible. What the governor might do, they ex- ilained, is to insist that the pro- losed appropriation and the supporting tax to pay for it be included in the same bill. The legislature thus could not have me without the other. For example, the first section of the bill could appropriate $15 •million for the parochial schools. This is the amount that would have to be supplied in the state's present fiscal year to in- itiate a $30-million aid increase during the next school year. The second .half of the bill would provide for a tax increase—pr% sumably the 20 per cent in-' crease in theliquor tax that Rockefeller once advocated. It would yield about $15 million. Similarly, if the legislature wanted to restore revenue-shar- ing aid to' local government to the pre-cut level, the bill de- signed for that purpose would appropriate $76 million in its first section. The second section 1 would contain a commensurate lax increase presumably the 2-cent-a-package cigarette tax and the 1-eent-a-gallon gasoline tax that Rockefeller had pro- posed. They would yield a total of about million. Says Plunge Into Political Action VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Paul VI insisted today that all Christians plunge into .political action. He said they should use tfhe Gospel's ideals to conquer problems "that put tihe very future of man in jeop- ardy." The pontiff warned Christians against embracing Marxism and urged caution toward so- cMisra and Western liberalism or capitalism. He said Chris- tians should go "beyond every system" to assert "the specific character of the Christian cen- tribuition for a positive trans- formation of Society." The . 73-year-old pontiff sounded his call in a 10,000- word document that summed up and built upon the public and social and political pro- nouncements of Ms nearly eight-year reign. The document was "an. apostolic letter," sim- ilar to an encyclical, addressed to Maurice Cardinal Roy of Ca- nada, the president of the Vati- can Commission Justice and Peace. The Vatican said Cardinal Roy's commission would put pressure on national confer- ences of bishops to make de- tailed analyses of conditions in tiheir countries and suggest spe- cific solutions. In the letter Pope Paul also House. many over rapid change. Questions ttiat spring from these sources, he declared, most' "take first place among the preoccupations .of Chris- tians,, so ffliat with other men Uhe latter may dedicate them- selves to. solving tire new diffi- Move Under Way To Turn Tide In Troop Reduction Proposal oulties which put the very fii-| ture of man in jeopardy." He said he meant his apostolic let- ter as "a fresh and insistent call to action" for all Chris- tians. "It is not enough to recall, principles-, state intentions, point to crying injustices and utter prophetic denunciations. These words wil lacK real weight unless they are accom- panied for each individual by a livelier awareness of personal responsibility and by effective action." WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres- ident Nixon has recalled his top military commander in Europe and the IT.S. ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organi- zation to help defeat a Senate move to halve U.S. European troop strength. The President met with a group including former Secre- tary of State Dean Acheson and three former NATO command- ers to plan strategy for a quick campaign to pressure wavering senators before Wednesday's crucial votes. A Republican opponent oi the amendment by Senate Demo- cratic Leader Mike Mansfield said a Nixon administration head count looks "very bad' and added the administration might have difficulty in defeat- ing such an amendment in the Thursday night. Its details were not disclosed, but the Maryland Republican was known to feel he would have to move closer to the Mansfield position for his sub- ititute to have any chance of winning. Key behind-the-scenes roles are Being played by Dr. Henry Kissinger, the President's top national security adviser, and Secretary of State William P. Rogers. Rogers spoke with a number of senators by phone and paid a brief, unannounced visit to the Capitol Thursday to confer with 'deplored file mindless pursuit of progress and profit" and suggested a switch' Jrolhi eco- nomics to politics as Hie basis It was offered, earlier in the week . by Mansfield^ #s an amendment to the" pending bill to extend the draft, due to ex- for human aotivity, to achieve P ire member of the special legisla- tive panel that proposed the newly enacted, five-year teach- er tenure law says he now is convinced that local school boards should be allowed to grant tenure to teachers after 30 days. Republican Assemblyman H. Clark Bell of Woodstock told a reporter Thursday that district officials should be given the re- sponsibility to make up their own minds on the often contro- versial matter without interfer- ence from the state. "If a board wants to retain a teacher," Bell said, "then it ought to be free to grant him tenure whenever it wants." The only restriction would be that the teacher had to be em- ployed by the district for at least 30 days. Bell commented in response to an inquiry about an amend- ment he filed to the teacher ten- ure bill passed by the legisla- ture in early April as part of a so-called mandates package. Gov. Rockefeller signed the tenure legislation a week after it gained approval in the Senate and Assembly. The law took ef- Sect May9. The statute has been interprets ed in different ways, however. The result, Bell said, is that some school officials are grant- ing tenure as they see fit. The amendment that Bell pro- ved this week would make it Since the legislators have to vote on each bill as an entity and may not vote only for sec- tions of a bill, they would, be caught in an all-or-nothing web. Obviously, many of them would be profoundly unhappy — but the alternative is that Rockefel- ler would be unhappy. Rockefeller could try toim- plement the strategy by sending such bills to the legislature him- self or by persuading the legis- lative leaders to introduce them. At this stage in the session, rank-and-file lawmakers may not introduce bills of their own without permission of the lead- not national goals, but the well- being of all men. He urged that nations adopt a charter to free women from sexual discrimination, but he also upheld women's role at "tie heart of the family." The Pope also: Lashed racial discrimination wherever it is practiced. Charged that big cities foster "discrimination" and suggest- ed a need for small, congenial units on the street or neigh- borhood level. 80th anniversary of the Roman Catholic church's first great so- cial encyclical, Rerum Nopa- rum—of New Things issued by Pope Leo XIII in 1891 to defend tiie working man against the evils of the Industrial Revolu- tion. The letter today was titled Ocfogeskna Advenies, of the 80tlh Anniversary. Pope Paul led ofif his mes- sage with a pessimistic ap- praisal of the gaps between rich and poor nations, the con- tinuance of totalitarian terns, tihe violence of revolu- tionaries., the confusion' of Republican Leader Hugh Scott told reporters Thursday: "I have as near a certainty as a man could have that the President would veto the draft bill if it has the Mansfield amendment in it. "The President will not and cannot accept a forced reduc- tion of forces." The first vote Wednesday will come on a substitute proposed by Sen. Charles McC. Mathias Jr., R-Md., endorsing Nixon's decision to keep U.S. troop strength in Europe at its present level of about 300,000. If the Mathias amendment fails, and indications are that it will, at least two other Republi- cans, Sens. Peter Dominick of Colorado and Jacob K. Javits of New York, have proposals urging troop withdrawals but leaving the final decision to the President. The Mansfield amendment will come up for a vote only if all the proposed substitutes fail. Despite increasing indications the White House will accept no compromise, Mathias report- Mansfield and Sen. John C. Stehnis, D-Miss., chairman of the Armed Services Committee and floor manager of the draft bill. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler disclosed Nixon had asked Gen. Andrew JV Goodpaster, commander of NATO forces, and Ambassador Robert Ellsworth to return home for consultations. Before he left Europe, Good- paster told a news conference in Mons, Belgium, t-hat with- drawal of tf.S. troops would lead to the destruction of NATO. Stalin TBILISI, U.S.S.R. (AP) - Communist party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev praised Joseph Sta- lin today.. Speaking, in the capi- tal of Georgia, where"' Stalin was born, Brezhnev bracketed Stalin's name with that of Le- nin as a prominent revolution- ary leader. The nationally 'televised speech was. part of ceremonies marking the 50th anniversary of Soviet rule in Georgia. Later on in his address, Brezhnev spoke about the at- mosphere created by "over- coming the cult of personality," an official code word for Stalin- ism. But unlike his last speech re- ferring to Stalin, in November 1966;. Brezhnev made no state- ment of allegiance to the deci- sions of the 20th party Con- gress, the 1956 meeting where then Premier Nikita Khrush- chev condemned Stalin's crimes and promised there would be no return to the past. The public mention of Stalin's name today was greeted by thunderous applause from the thousands of party workers and officials at the ceremony. "The history of the revolu- tionary struggle in Georgia is unbreakably connected with the edly sent it a new proposal history of the revolutionary movement of the Russian people," Brezhnev said. "All people of the Caucasus, -with- the activity- &B§> S^aehing of Vladimir Lenii%~ ipjfeiher with prominent revolutionaries Georgian proletariat produced, Joseph Stalin . . . and others were engaged in the struggle." Since Khrushchev's over- Ms successors throw, have slowly but progressively per- mitted what internal critics of the regime call "re-Staliniza- tion." Probably because of internal resistance to Stalin's rehabilita- tion, Brezhnev and his associ- ates have had to proceed slow- ly. There were reports before the recent 24th party congress that Stalin's star would rise again at that gathering, but his did not happen. It was significant that Brezh- nev chose Stalin's birthplace to evoke his name. The Khrush- chev line has never been popu- lar in Georgia, where Stalin is still a hero. But any declaration by the party's general secre- tary, the most powerful man in the Soviet system, has over- tones of official policy, and the fact that his speech was tele- vised nationally added to its significance. they have the power to grant tenure, at their discretion, "as an inducement to attract or re- j areas of public employment. tain a teacher deemed to be Taylor Law. That law provides for coUective negotiations in all The fiscal sources explained that the school-aid and revenue- outstanding." Asked to elaborate, the as-jure put on the bargaininglable lemblyman said he saw no along with other issues. m m he personally sharing measures could not be mt ob j ect to having ten . combined in one package be- h b i i tbl £» us e there is a legal prohibi a teacher and then giving; him » ™ ^^ ^tThouid be tenure as early as a month aft-^ { {feri er the teacher had been in the- ,„ . ' QCa * „ district. The period aon there is a legal prohibi- against presenting more reason five-year contained probationary in the law a maximum I early tenure as a way of getting 'him to come into the district. "After all," he said, "that's would be merely time by which the board had to reach a decision on granting tenure, he added. Bell served on a subcommit- tee appointed by Assembly Speaker Perry B. Duryea earli- er this year to study state re- quirements imposed on local governments and local school districts. The committee recommended 'unmandating" several require- ments and called for an exten- sion of the probationary period required before a teacher can gain tenure. It was extended from three to five years. In addition, the panel decided to abolish tenure for supervis- ory personnel in elementary and secondary schools. The change was defended as a way of balancing bargaining equity between professional I basically do to attract faculty." m]l Bulletin ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - The Court of Appeals, New York's highest court, today ruled the 1971-72 state budget constitu- tional. In doing so, the court turn- ied down the appeal of the Civil Service Employees Associa- tion to have the $7.69 billion budget declared invalid and force the legislature to rewrite it in greater detail. The CSEA had charged that the budget failed to meet state constitutional requirements be- cause it authorized lump-sum spending by state department executives. The CSEA said the school employes and their em- constitution required more de- ployers to reflect changes^M in file budget The only such measure left is the annual supplemental budg- et a catch-all bill introduce:, o- ward the end of the annual ses- sion. The leaders have said they would not want to jeopardize that measure by inserting high- ly controversial items into it. Rockefeller gave some hint of his strategy at the news confer- ence when he said that de- cisions on the school-aid pro- gram and methods of financing it would be "wrapped up." "Does that mean one bill, Gov- ernor?" a reporter asked. He replied, with a little smile* "Yes, that is what I would have to assume." INDEX Women's Page Page 4 TV Korner Page 7 Classified Page 8 Sports Pag« 10 Editorial Page 11 Jack Anderson Page 11 Comics Page 12-13 GIRLS' CHORUS PERFORMS Members of the girls chorus at Bishop Conroy Memorial School, directed by Joan Dalton and accompanied by Helen Messina were part of the entertainment Wednesday evening at St. Mary's gpa during the home and school meeting. Members of the group are Janice Baseman, Patty Brandy, Ann Cardinal, Terry Hand, Oathy Hill, Kathy LaRose, Mary Lashomb, Barbara Law* rence, Kristen McGraii, Jane Montpetit, Elinor O'Reilly, Alice Pirie, Tammy Carroll, Susan Davis, Mary Frances Kusior, Ellen Langley, Mary LeBeau, Martha LeGault, Jean Seymour, Laura Seymour, Mary Traynor and Kim Vine. (Como PJioi>)

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Page 1: In - nyshistoricnewspapers.orgnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84031165/1971-05-14/ed-1/seq-3.… · ng to talk about an iffy ques-Egyptian Shakeup Seen To Solidi By THE ASSOCIATED

HighlightState Welfare Deputy Com-

missioner Spoke ID CantonThursday.—Page 14.

WeatherClear and cold tonight

with frost likely. Lows in up-per 20s nad low 30s. Satur-day sunny and a little milder.Highs in upper 50s and mid60s.

VOL. 26, NO. 3355SepublicaD Established 1831,Journal Established 1868 OGDENSBURG, N.Y., 13669, FRIDAY, MAY! 4, 1971 Daily entered Ax Second Class.

Matter Post Office Ogdensburg. N.S SINGLE COPY 1 5c

Rocky Considers Bill - Draf tin;

In

PLAN PARISH DINNER — Norman Gore;,extreme right, chairman of the social com-

mittee of the St. Mary's Cathedral ParishCouncil, goes over final plans for the an-nual parish dinner at St; Mary's AcademyWednesday evening. The dinner will beginat 6:30 p.m. and all parishioners are urgedto attend. Those attending are reminded to

bring table service and covered dish. Fromleft to right: Mrs. Anna Rapin, Sister Elizas

beth Ann, administrator of Bishop ConroySchool; Mrs. Anna Lepcio, Francis Fitz-gerald, Norman Gore. A committee of thevarious organizations of the church areworking on the preparations for the dinner.(Staff Photo)

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Gov.[Rockefeller is seriously consid-ering a unique bill-drafting tac-tic that would force the. legisla-ture to raise state taxes to payfor any new spending ventures.

It is designed to enforce theedict he laid down Wednesday—that taxes would have to beincreased if the lawmakerswant to supply more money forparochial schools or restore cutsin financial aid for local gov-ernments.

Many of the legislators dis-pute Rockefeller's decree, argu-ing that the school money, atleast, could be found some-vhere within the $7.7-billion

budget. Thus he fears that thelegislature might send him thespending bill and challenge himlo veto it.

When reporters asked what hevould do in such an event, the

* ' governor snapped, "I'm not go-ng to talk about an iffy ques-

Egyptian Shakeup SeenTo Solidi

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSObservers today viewed fflie

sweeping shakeup in the Egyp-tian Cabinet as a purge byPresident Anwar Sadat to solid-ifiy his control.

Sis cabinet ministers, in-cluding the defense minister,

T. Gen. Monamed Fawzi, revsigned Thursday night along,vrith three high-ranking offic-ials of the Arab Socialist Union,Egypt's- only political party.

Cairo Radio broadcast aStatement by Industry MinisterAziz Sidy, a Sadat supporter,appealing to the Egyptianpeople to maintain national un-ity "in the face of those tryingto sow sedition in Dhe ranks."

Sadat scheduled a broadcasttonight.

It was the first manor breachamong Egypt's leaders to cometo the surface since Sadat tookover in September after tinedeath of President Gamal Afo-del Nasser. The r i t began withSadat's Iring of AM Sabry, hispro-Soviet vice president, ear-Mer this month.

Although more dismissals orresignations had been expected,Israelis and otter Arab watch-ers were surprised at the ex-tent of the snakeup and espe-

cially by l i e resignation ofFawzi, who was not known tohave any pronounced politicallearnings. Intoned sources saidhe apparently had been work-

g smoothly -with Sadat onstrategy against Israel.

Israeli experts on Aral) af-fair said z2. of tkos<. -sao re-signed leaned toward extremistand pro-Moscow lines. "This isa bitter pill which the -Soviets•will faave to swallow—and stillkeep silent," wrote Oded Zaraiof tie newspaper Haaretz.

Staid Yaari of the semi-official Davar said the shakeuip

Another of those quitting wasEgypt's top policeman, InteriorMinister Shawari Gumah. Hisresignation was tie first an-nounced, shortly after Sadat de-creed an immediate end to allspecial police surveillance m-cJodiDig wiretapping. (JamahWas replaced by Mahmoud Sa-lem, former governor of Alex-andria.

Other cabinet ministers whoresigned were Sami Sharaf, thedfoief of lihe intelligence serv-ices; Housing Minister SaadZayed; Electricity MinisterHelmi ©1 Said, an Information

was "tantamoumt to a coup i Minister Mohammed Fayek.d'etat," and the key to futuredevelopments was in the handsof the army.

Sadat prefaced the .purgewith a series of visits Tuesdayand Wednesday to army com-manders and troops along theSuez Canal front, evidently toassure himself of their support.And he named tie army chiefof staff, Maj. Gen. MohammedS'adek, to" replace Fawzi andpromoted Mm to lieutenantgeneral.

The shafceup was seen in Bei-rut as an obvious attempt bySadat to rid himself of his polit-ical foes.

Fayek was particularly closeto Sabry.

The fliree officials of t i eArab Socialist Union who re-signed were members of a pow-er group formed by Sabry.Ifoey were Labib Shukair,speaker of fflie National Assem-bly; Abdel Mohsen Afoul Nur,secretary general of the party.and Dia Bdin Daoud, the par-ty's No. 2 man. Their resigna-tions bad been rumored earlierthis week.

Sabry had opposed Sadat ona number of issues, includinghis dialogue with, the UnitedStates over a possible settle-ment with Israel.

Favors Granting Boards PowerTo Grant Tenure After 30 Days

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A clear to all school boards that brought about by the so-called mw

!_„_ „£ VU~ ««~~:»1 I A ^ ^ H tl*»*~* tirtrfn +Vin rtfvntay +r» ft^Gnt T^QTTIAT* T OUT TTlof l a w nrfYWirlPQ ' eTS.

ion."

But fiscal sources confidedater that the governor wasfanning a preventive maneuv-sr of his own. He device was;aid to be unprecedented butegally permissible. What thegovernor might do, they ex-ilained, is to insist that the pro-losed appropriation and thesupporting tax to pay for it beincluded in the same bill. Thelegislature thus could not haveme without the other.For example, the first section

of the bill could appropriate $15•million for the p a r o c h i a lschools. This is the amount thatwould have to be supplied in thestate's present fiscal year to in-itiate a $30-million aid increaseduring the next school year. Thesecond .half of the bill wouldprovide for a tax increase—pr%sumably the 20 per cent in-'crease in the liquor tax thatRockefeller once advocated. Itwould yield about $15 million.

Similarly, if the legislaturewanted to restore revenue-shar-ing aid to' local government tothe pre-cut level, the bill de-signed for that purpose wouldappropriate $76 million in itsfirst section. The second section1

would contain a commensuratelax increase — presumably the2-cent-a-package cigarette taxand the 1-eent-a-gallon gasolinetax that Rockefeller had pro-posed. They would yield a totalof about million.

SaysPlunge Into Political Action

VATICAN CITY (AP) —Pope Paul VI insisted todaythat all Christians plunge into.political action. He said theyshould use tfhe Gospel's idealsto conquer problems "that puttihe very future of man in jeop-ardy."

The pontiff warned Christiansagainst embracing Marxismand urged caution toward so-cMisra and Western liberalismor capitalism. He said Chris-tians should go "beyond everysystem" to assert "the specificcharacter of the Christian cen-tribuition for a positive trans-formation of Society."

T h e . 73-year-old pontiffsounded his call in a 10,000-word document that summedup and built upon the publicand social and political pro-nouncements of Ms nearlyeight-year reign. The documentwas "an. apostolic letter," sim-ilar to an encyclical, addressedto Maurice Cardinal Roy of Ca-nada, the president of the Vati-can Commission Justice andPeace.

The Vatican said CardinalRoy's commission would putpressure on national confer-ences of bishops to make de-tailed analyses of conditions intiheir countries and suggest spe-cific solutions.

In the letter Pope Paul also House.

many over rapid change.Questions ttiat spring from

these sources, he declared,most' "take first place amongthe preoccupations .of Chris-tians,, so ffliat with other menUhe latter may dedicate them-selves to. solving tire new diffi-

Move Under Way To Turn TideIn Troop Reduction Proposal

oulties which put the very fii-|ture of man in jeopardy." Hesaid he meant his apostolic let-ter as "a fresh and insistentcall to action" for all Chris-tians.

"It is not enough to recall,principles-, state intentions,

point to crying injustices andutter prophetic denunciations.These words wil lacK realweight unless they are accom-panied for each individual by alivelier awareness of personalresponsibility and by effectiveaction."

WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres-ident Nixon has recalled his topmilitary commander in Europeand the IT.S. ambassador to theNorth Atlantic Treaty Organi-zation to help defeat a Senatemove to halve U.S. Europeantroop strength.

The President met with agroup including former Secre-tary of State Dean Acheson andthree former NATO command-ers to plan strategy for a quickcampaign to pressure waveringsenators before Wednesday'scrucial votes.

A Republican opponent oi theamendment by Senate Demo-cratic Leader Mike Mansfieldsaid a Nixon administrationhead count looks "very bad'and added the administrationmight have difficulty in defeat-ing such an amendment in the

Thursday night.Its details were not disclosed,

but the Maryland Republicanwas known to feel he wouldhave to move closer to the

Mansfield position for his sub-ititute to have any chance ofwinning.

Key behind-the-scenes rolesare Being played by Dr. HenryKissinger, the President's topnational security adviser, andSecretary of State William P.Rogers.

Rogers spoke with a numberof senators by phone and paid abrief, unannounced visit to theCapitol Thursday to confer with

'deplored file mindless pursuitof progress and profit" andsuggested a switch' Jrolhi eco-nomics to politics as Hie basis

It was offered, earlier in theweek . by Mansfield^ #s anamendment to the" pending billto extend the draft, due to ex-

for human aotivity, to achieve P i r e

member of the special legisla-tive panel that proposed thenewly enacted, five-year teach-er tenure law says he now isconvinced that local schoolboards should be allowed togrant tenure to teachers after 30days.

Republican Assemblyman H.Clark Bell of Woodstock told areporter Thursday that districtofficials should be given the re-sponsibility to make up theirown minds on the often contro-versial matter without interfer-ence from the state.

"If a board wants to retain ateacher," Bell said, "then itought to be free to grant himtenure whenever it wants."

The only restriction would bethat the teacher had to be em-ployed by the district for atleast 30 days.

Bell commented in responseto an inquiry about an amend-ment he filed to the teacher ten-ure bill passed by the legisla-ture in early April as part of aso-called mandates package.

Gov. Rockefeller signed thetenure legislation a week afterit gained approval in the Senateand Assembly. The law took ef-Sect May 9.

The statute has been interpretsed in different ways, however.The result, Bell said, is thatsome school officials are grant-ing tenure as they see fit.

The amendment that Bell pro-v e d this week would make it

Since the legislators have tovote on each bill as an entityand may not vote only for sec-tions of a bill, they would, becaught in an all-or-nothing web.Obviously, many of them wouldbe profoundly unhappy — butthe alternative is that Rockefel-ler would be unhappy.

Rockefeller could try to im-plement the strategy by sendingsuch bills to the legislature him-self or by persuading the legis-lative leaders to introduce them.At this stage in the session,rank-and-file lawmakers maynot introduce bills of their ownwithout permission of the lead-

not national goals, but the well-being of all men.

He urged that nations adopt acharter to free women fromsexual discrimination, but healso upheld women's role at"tie heart of the family."

The Pope also:Lashed racial discrimination

wherever it is practiced.Charged that big cities foster

"discrimination" and suggest-ed a need for small, congenialunits on the street or neigh-borhood level.80th anniversary of the RomanCatholic church's first great so-cial encyclical, Rerum Nopa-rum—of New Things issued byPope Leo XIII in 1891 to defendtiie working man against theevils of the Industrial Revolu-tion. The letter today was titledOcfogeskna Advenies, of the80tlh Anniversary.

Pope Paul led ofif his mes-sage with a pessimistic ap-praisal of the gaps betweenrich and poor nations, the con-tinuance of totalitarianterns, tihe violence of revolu-tionaries., the confusion' of

Republican Leader HughScott told reporters Thursday:"I have as near a certainty asa man could have that thePresident would veto the draftbill if it has the Mansfieldamendment in it.

"The President will not andcannot accept a forced reduc-tion of forces."

The first vote Wednesday willcome on a substitute proposedby Sen. Charles McC. MathiasJr., R-Md., endorsing Nixon'sdecision to keep U.S. troopstrength in Europe at itspresent level of about 300,000.

If the Mathias amendmentfails, and indications are that itwill, at least two other Republi-cans, Sens. Peter Dominick ofColorado and Jacob K. Javitsof New York, have proposalsurging troop withdrawals butleaving the final decision to thePresident.

The Mansfield amendmentwill come up for a vote only ifall the proposed substitutes fail.

Despite increasing indicationsthe White House will accept nocompromise, Mathias report-

Mansfield and Sen. John C.Stehnis, D-Miss., chairman ofthe Armed Services Committeeand floor manager of the draftbill.

White House Press Secretary

Ronald L. Ziegler disclosedNixon had asked Gen. AndrewJV Goodpaster, commander ofNATO forces, and AmbassadorRobert Ellsworth to returnhome for consultations.

Before he left Europe, Good-paster told a news conferencein Mons, Belgium, t-hat with-drawal of tf.S. troops wouldlead to the destruction ofNATO.

StalinTBILISI, U.S.S.R. (AP) -

Communist party chief LeonidI. Brezhnev praised Joseph Sta-lin today.. Speaking, in the capi-tal of Georgia, where"' Stalinwas born, Brezhnev bracketedStalin's name with that of Le-nin as a prominent revolution-ary leader.

T h e nationally 'televisedspeech was. part of ceremoniesmarking the 50th anniversaryof Soviet rule in Georgia.

Later on in his address,Brezhnev spoke about the at-mosphere created by "over-coming the cult of personality,"an official code word for Stalin-ism.

But unlike his last speech re-ferring to Stalin, in November1966;. Brezhnev made no state-ment of allegiance to the deci-sions of the 20th party Con-gress, the 1956 meeting wherethen Premier Nikita Khrush-c h e v condemned Stalin'scrimes and promised therewould be no return to the past.

The public mention of Stalin'sname today was greeted bythunderous applause from thethousands of party workers andofficials at the ceremony.

"The history of the revolu-tionary struggle in Georgia isunbreakably connected with the

edly sent it a new proposal history of the revolutionary

movement of the Russianpeople," Brezhnev said.

"All people of the Caucasus,-with- the activity- &B§> S^aehingof Vladimir Lenii%~ ipjfeiherwith prominent revolutionariesGeorgian proletariat produced,Joseph Stalin . . . and otherswere engaged in the struggle."

Since Khrushchev's over-Ms successorsthrow, have

slowly but progressively per-mitted what internal critics ofthe regime call "re-Staliniza-tion."

Probably because of internalresistance to Stalin's rehabilita-tion, Brezhnev and his associ-ates have had to proceed slow-ly. There were reports beforethe recent 24th party congressthat Stalin's star would riseagain at that gathering, but hisdid not happen.

It was significant that Brezh-nev chose Stalin's birthplace toevoke his name. The Khrush-chev line has never been popu-lar in Georgia, where Stalin isstill a hero. But any declarationby the party's general secre-tary, the most powerful man inthe Soviet system, has over-tones of official policy, and thefact that his speech was tele-vised nationally added to itssignificance.

they have the power to granttenure, at their discretion, "asan inducement to attract or re- j areas of public employment.tain a teacher deemed to be

Taylor Law. That law providesfor coUective negotiations in all The fiscal sources explained

that the school-aid and revenue-

outstanding."

Asked to elaborate, the as-jure put on the bargaininglablelemblyman said he saw no along with other issues.

m m h e p e r s o n a l l y sharing measures could not bemt o b j e c t t o h a v i n g t e n . combined in one package be-

h b i i t b l £»use there is a legal prohibi

a teacher and then giving; him » ™ ^ ^ ^ tThouid betenure as early as a month af t -^ { {fer ier the teacher had been in the- ,„ . ' QC a * „district.

Theperiod

a o nthere is a legal prohibi-

against presenting more

r e a s o n

five-yearcontained

probationaryin the lawa maximum

I early tenure as a way of getting'him to come into the district.

"After all," he said, "that's

would be merelytime by which the board had toreach a decision on grantingtenure, he added.

Bell served on a subcommit-tee appointed by AssemblySpeaker Perry B. Duryea earli-er this year to study state re-quirements imposed on localgovernments and local schooldistricts.

The committee recommended'unmandating" several require-

ments and called for an exten-sion of the probationary periodrequired before a teacher cangain tenure. It was extendedfrom three to five years.

In addition, the panel decidedto abolish tenure for supervis-ory personnel in elementary andsecondary schools.

The change was defended asa way of balancing bargainingequity between professional

I basicallydo to attract faculty."

m]l

BulletinALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - The

Court of Appeals, New York'shighest court, today ruled the1971-72 state budget constitu-tional.

In doing so, the court turn-ied down the appeal of the CivilService Employees Associa-tion to have the $7.69 billionbudget declared invalid andforce the legislature to rewriteit in greater detail.

The CSEA had charged thatthe budget failed to meet stateconstitutional requirements be-cause it authorized lump-sumspending by state departmentexecutives. The CSEA said the

school employes and their em- constitution required more de-ployers to reflect changes^M in file budget

The only such measure left isthe annual supplemental budg-et a catch-all bill introduce:, o-ward the end of the annual ses-sion. The leaders have said theywould not want to jeopardizethat measure by inserting high-ly controversial items into it.

Rockefeller gave some hint ofhis strategy at the news confer-ence when he said that de-cisions on the school-aid pro-gram and methods of financingit would be "wrapped up."

"Does that mean one bill, Gov-ernor?" a reporter asked. Hereplied, with a little smile*"Yes, that is what I would haveto assume."

INDEXWomen's Page Page 4TV Korner Page 7Classified Page 8Sports Pag« 10Editorial Page 11Jack Anderson Page 11Comics Page 12-13

GIRLS' CHORUS PERFORMS — Members of the girlschorus at Bishop Conroy Memorial School, directed by JoanDalton and accompanied by Helen Messina were part of theentertainment Wednesday evening at St. Mary's gpa duringthe home and school meeting. Members of the group areJanice Baseman, Patty Brandy, Ann Cardinal, Terry Hand,

Oathy Hill, Kathy LaRose, Mary Lashomb, Barbara Law*rence, Kristen McGraii, Jane Montpetit, Elinor O'Reilly,Alice Pirie, Tammy Carroll, Susan Davis, Mary FrancesKusior, Ellen Langley, Mary LeBeau, Martha LeGault, JeanSeymour, Laura Seymour, Mary Traynor and Kim Vine.(Como PJioi>)