PnPAnT XftlltllUM a .
""" PBtBOII MONDAY. JUNE 18, 1962 J
JFK Will Deal With Much Different Congress fee Fall
R VmrFWT I BTTOITT l..i t ...111 i-..--. . . .... ..
By VINCENT J. BURKE
Washington fUPD President
Kennedy will be dealing with
a much different congress
next year - regardless of the
outcome of next fall's battle
for control of the national leg
islature. No one can tell before the
Nov. 6 election whether Ken
nedy will have more or less
influence over the next con
gress. This will depend on
whether Republicans manage
to cut the present big margin
of Democratic control.
Regardless of the election
outcome, however, the sceond
Kennedy congress will in
some major respects have
more of a "new look" than
the first one.
For example:
-Farmers and others in
rural areas will have a small
er voice than ever before.
Conversely, voters in big
metropolitan areas will have
relatively greater representa
tion than ever before.
-Many key members of the
Republican "old guard" will
be gone. There will be new
top-ranking Republicans for
at least six House committees
and one Senate committee.
-It is almost certain that
there will be many more new
faces in the next congress
than appeared after the 1960
election which, ended eight
years of Republican control
of the White House.
Population Changes
A single cause is wholly, or
partly, responsible for these
prospective changes. In ac
cordance with the U.S. Con
stitution House seats for next
November's election have
been re-allocated among the
states on the basis of popula
tion changes during the last
10 years.
Although New York City's
metropolitan area is losing
three congressmen and Chi
cago and Philauelphia are
losing one each, the reappor
tionment will, on balance,
give more representation to
voters in urban suburban
areas and less to those in
rural areas.
Trie Los Angeles area will
gain four congressmen. The
San Francisco area will gain
two. Urban voters will have
a choice In determining who
occupies the other two new
House seats allotted to Cali
fornia. Miami and its outlying
Smocked Pillows
suburbs will have two instead
of one congressman. Tampa
and St. Petersburg, Fla., who
now share a congressman,
will each elect one in the
next congress.
On the other hand, the
rural states of Kansas, Ne
braska, Iowa, Missouri, Ken
tucky, Mississippi and Arkan
sas will lose a total of eight
House seats.
Both urban and rural vot
ers will have a voice in choos
ing the new congressmen to
be elected in various state
wide races. Michigan, Ohio,
Texas and Maryland are
among the states which have
decided to elect at large the
new congressmen they have
They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo
VE4ULIKE ' ""v. A"E ONLV ONES WWO "
l&-t NEWRESTORED 1 HIS NEW CAR ( APPRECIATE IT ARE
ZSyS JIT I FROM I TOE TOES ) HE DON T EVEM f OTHER CRACKED .
TfS-k SPECIAL PARTS M tSffliP-u..t i r P.' f
SfI HAND FOR5ED-Al lVAN-hIE,D9v5, hES MAKING UP FOR V r
Xl'Sy?0T-E.ir TEPEE SI BEARCAT COLLEGE BOVe
S- -.---JcW-I HE JUST BOUGHT A M
"lft miring the old
y y XLr &$ls0m ei auto the neighbor-
T , ' JTKV HOOD CHARACTER
, li SPENDS ALL MIS
fv TIME AND DOUGH
each been allotted, rather
tnan re-map their districts.
In the states where congres
sional districts have been re
mapped to reflect changes in
House renrpjjpntntinn mnnv
veteran incumbents have de
cided to retire rather than
undertake the chore of woo
ing favor of unfamiliar con
stituents.
Amonff those who hprnn.cp
of this, or other reasons, will
not be back next vpar arp
Chairman Brent Spence (D-
Ky.) of the House Banking
Committee and the senior Re
publicans on these other com
mittees - Appropr 1 a 1 1 o n s.
Ways & Means, Foreign Af
fairs. Education and l.ahnr
Government Operations, and
me committee on Un-American
Activities.
Four New Faces
Overall, a big shakeup Is
in prospect. In only 15 of the
50 states is there still a chance
that the identical Senate
House delegations now serv
ing will be returned to the
next congress. Moreover, it
already is certain - five
months before the election -that
next year there will be
a minimum of 44 new faces
in the House and four new
faces in the Senate next year.
And almost a dozen other
incumbents are running in
newly-mapped districts where
the odds are against their sur
vival. They will be defeated
if their constituents favor the
same political party for con
gress in 1962 as they did in
1960.
Thus, it is almost certain
that the number of new faces
in the House next year will
exceed by far the 55 that ap
peared after the 1960 elec
tion. There is a good chance
that the number of freshmen
will top the 81 new House
members that were elected
in the big Democratic sweep
of 1958.
This is so even though only
three House incumbents were
defeated among the first 171
to face the voters in this
Spring's primary elections.
Veteran Rep. Carroll D.
Kearns, Pa., senior Republi
can on the House Education
and Labor committee, was up
set by a newcomer in his bid
for the GOP nomination.
The other two incumbents
were defeated by incumbents
in a scramble for survival in
Alabama and Nebraska, each j
of which had to give up one
seat as a result of re-appor
tionment. Rep. Frank Boykin
(D-Ala.) lost out when he
ran last in a state-wide race
among Alabama's nine incum
bents. Nebraska combined the
districts of Republican Reps.
Ralph F. Beermann and Phil
Weaver. Beermann defeated
Weaver in the primary.
The senators who are not
seeking reelection are Repub
licans, Prescott Bush, Conn.,
and John Marshall, Butler,
Bd.; and Democrats Benjamin
A. Smith, Mass., and Oreon E.
Long, of Hawaii. Butler is the
senior Republican on the Sen
ate Commerce Committee.
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DEPOSITORY
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TIME: Jun 20, 1962, 2:00 P.M.
Mochanicil - Sheet Metal
June 20, 1962. 4.00 P.M.
Mechanical & General Sheer Metal
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