Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1963)
Foreign Report Top Editorial People Survey Global News By United 1’rfsn International Editorial writers of tin* world took up the pen on a variety of global matters this week. Most European newspapers .sized up the first half of President Kennedy’s current term of office, and also commented on the role • * World Mews IN BRIEF Kennedy Calls VP PALM BEACH (I P!) -Presi dent Kennedy has called Vice President Johnson td Palm Beach to map strategy for pushing the administration's 1903 legislative program through Congress John son arrived in Florida by plane from Detroit and went itnmedi ately to Mr Kennedy's vacation home for the first in a series of talks A White House press sec rotary said there was “no urgency 01 anything special" about a sud den change of plans by which Johnson met with Mr Kennedy Sunday instead of as originally scheduled Congress to Open WASHINGTON it PI) — Con pressmen are busy maneuvering to get their favorite candidates into key committees when the new session opens Wednesday One key battle will In* over the House Rules Committee, now- controlled by forces loyal to President Ken nedy's program Hut Conserva tive Republicans and Southern Democrats are trying to gain con trol of the committee, letting them battle up administration moves in such bills a.s medicare.! aid to education, and foreign aid In the Senate. Majority Leader Mansfield says there is sure to be an anti filibuster light early in this session. Reds Fighting MOSCOW (UPI)— The ideo logical dispute between the Soviet t'nion and Red China has flared up again with renewed charges that the other is deviating from accepted Communist belief The Soviets accused Red China of fostering •'dogmatic, divisive views" among Communist bloc nations The Communist New China News Agency, although not mentioning names, repeated charges that Khrushchev was wrong to withdraw from Cuba and termed the Soviet leader and Yugoslav President Tito "modern j i e\ isionists.” Bunche in Congo ELIZA BETHS V IEEE (UPI) —! I)r. Ralph Bunche says Katanga President Tshombe is a "spent political force" in Congo affairs Bunche, Deputy Secretary Gen eral of the United Nations, ar rived in Elizabethville to press the U N campaign against Tshombe. The UN official reject ed out of hand any possible talks with Tshombe. Strikes Questioned WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen ator Jacob Javits says Congress should consider the possibility of strengthening legislation dealing with strikes, including the possi bility of seizing struck industries. The New York Republican said in a television interview that the government has no effective na tional policy to deal with major strikes, or even with national emergency walkouts. Javits said the Taft-Hartley Injunction in such strikes hasn’t proved effec tive. New Plot Observed WASHINGTON (UPI)—U. S. officials are concerned about re ports of a Communist plot aimed at setting up a Castro-type gov ernment in Peru. But Washington apparently is satisfied with pre ventive actions taken by the rul ing military group in Lima. of the United States in Ihe turhu lent Con no situation. THE STOCKHOLM paper Tid ningen said 19H2 provided Fresi dent Kennedy with reason to sit hack in his favorite rocker and view past developments with sat isfaction. Calling him a “strong president”, the paper said “One has to go hack to the great Frank lin Roosevelt to find a president surrounded hy as much populari ty ” Alistair Cooke, writing in the Manchester Guardian from Falm Beach, Fla., said, "The president is visibly an older and wiser man than he was he came flown here only two years ago as president elect.” COOKE SAID the two years "has been long, to insure the president against slap happy im pulses." "The days are over when the United States will seek to pursue its best policy and try to be liked by everybody,” he commented. The newspaper Frankfurter A! legemeine praised departing North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion (NATO) Commander Gener al Lauris Norstad The newspaper said Norstad "would not have hesitated to defend freedom with the all destructing weapon.” Political Blood-Letting Set As 88th Congress Opens by (iROKGE .1. MARDER I nited Press International Come noon on Wednesday there’ll be the sound of slaughter at the Capitol end of Pennsly ! vania Avenue. The new, the 88th Congress, is just waiting for the gave) to fail | to start fighting. There’ll be some political blood-letting which could set the tone for the 88th Congress and the congressional reception of President Kennedy's New Fron tier Program, now ready for mid term launching. But the legislative battles will have to await the outcome of the opening session parliamentary skirmishes. In the House, the issue will be joined over the makeup of the rules committee, known as the traffic patrolman for House legis lation. In the Senate, the point of con troversy will be the filibuster ■ rules, and whether to make it easier to gag senators from talk ing a bill to death. Both are return bouts. The filibuster fight is perennial in the Senate So is the squab bling over th<j rules committee in the House, although the partic * ular form in which it now comes up is only two years old. At the heart of both issues is a determined drive by liberals to tear down, or at least, weaken, some of the parliamentary har riers in the path of welfare and civil rights legislation. To explain: The rules of Con gress, established over the years, are not aimed in the direction of easing the path of legislation, al though this may be the popular conception. The machinery of Congress is AP-UPI WIRE NEWS setup to grind slowly, carefully, even tortuously, to discriminate among the thousands of bills which find their way into the congressional hoppers. Only the most hardy survive, although many might get easy majorities if they ever came to a final vote. In the House, a powerful agen cy in the weeding-out process is the rules committee, which stands between legislative committer si and the House itself. Once a niil has survived the legislative com mittee where it is mulled over, debated, changed anrl given clear ance, it goes to the rules commit tee to await the green light for floor action. New Senator Picked OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI; -- Governor J. Howard Edmondson, scheduled to leave the executive mansion in eight days, today was named U.S. Senator from Okla homa. The 37-year old Democratic governor resigned and was named immediately to the Senate by his successor. 9,592 Visit Nuclear Ship Savannah PORTLAND (UPI)—A total of 9,592 people poured onto the Nuc lear Ship Savannah at Portland Sunday. THE HANDSOME atomic-pow ered merchant ship arrived in the city’s harbor Friday and will re main open through Wednesday. It is scheduled to leave for San Diego Thursday morning. More than seven thousand per sons toured the vessel on the first visiting dav Saturday. THE WHITE coated ship, which cost S53 million to build, is docked at Pier Four, Terminal Four Visiting hours to the public Monday are from noon to 4 p.m. Special technical maritime groups are scheduled to tour the craft from 9 a.m. to noon. Get Lucky PlasfCrazy Questions” DU UAon attakuo a mumn. emu nun. ncnco nun. First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you’ve done a "Crazy Question.” It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own. Send them, with your name, address, college and class, to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a $25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now! RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp will judge entries on the besis of humor (up to Vi), clarity and freshness (up to Vi) and appropriateness (up to Vi), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be awarded in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the entrants and must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 awards every month. October through April. Entries received during each month will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry received after April 30. 1963. will not be eligible, and all become the property of The American Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the contest, except em ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising agencies and Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees. Winners will be notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local regulations. I THE ANSWER: lopida |fey s euo/uy jo n ‘*!Aea ‘3 se|8noa isjuaiupede epuou suado }eg/v\ :NOIlS3n6 3H1 THE ANSWER: •n ®>*JS ueSiipiw ‘Xpues 1 ua* ijaSpjUJ e gpM xoq noA uagw )aS noA op jegM :NOIlS3fl6 3H1 THE ANSWER: "Don't Gi-Ve up the Ship •fl ssnaejXs ‘s>|oojqj3»se3 o ^UIIMS J.UBD noA op noA pinoMS :N0llS3nt> 3H1 THE ANSWER: ^agnatton 9S3||00 ajeis ojusuiejaes 'laiuatps suaucar £U9UJ0M jnoqi|M Aj^unOD e ||B0 noA op 1B4M • NOIlS3fli) 3HI THE ANSWER: n ajeis sexaj. hjjon 'XjcajoaM a Piejao <SJ9q}eej jsjij s,>(onp Xqeq e ||eo no* op *emaa :NOIJ.S3n£> 3Hi THE ANSWER: MYTH cjujo;i|i?o jo n *inoJi a euca i i\i\2 a|3u;m e Miwppe no* op moh :KI0IIS3n6 3H1 THE ANSWER IS: mi. nn^iiLn iw. Get Lucky the taste to start with... the taste to stay witn THE QUESTION IS: How does one discover fine-tobacco taste in a cigarette? Well, that was easy enough. Luckies are famous for taste. It’s the reason why we say: “Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers." (Why don't you say it a few times?) Find out for yourself why"Lucky Strike is the most popular regular-size cigarette among college students. Pick up a pack today! /f N ^ %a. r. («. Product of <Jh& ^'rmt'U&an acv<i£cc~\,cny}<irup — Uovxtcco us cur middle name