The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, December 09, 1963, Page 7, Image 7

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The Bulletin, Monday, December 1963
IRe proposes
DON BAGLEY & BEND MOBIL STATIONS
PRESENT
change back
on succession
. it i
8
NEW YORK (UPI)-Former
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TRUMAN-STYLE WALK President Johnson is shown as he adopted a custom made familiar
by former President Truman the morning walk. The President left his home and strode briskly
through the streets of Washington for about a mile before getting into his car and driving to
the White House, which he has now occupied.
Lodge says he
will consider
ike's proposal
SAIGON, South' Viet Nam
(UPI) Ambassador Henry Ca
bot Lodge said Sunday he would
"consider seriously" a proposal
from former President Dwight
D. Eisenhower that he seek the
Republican presidential nomina
tion, although he has no plans
at present to run.
Lodge, vice presidential nomi
nee in 1960, said he had no di
rect word of Eisenhower's ap
peal and declined to say how
he would reply to it. But there
were strong indications that
whatever his response, Lodge
would not leave his post here
until well into the new year.
"I have not received any such
message," he said when asked
about reports that Eisenhower
wanted him to return immedi
ately to the United States and
begin campaigning. "If I did re
ceive such a message," he add
ed, "I would consider it and
take a good hard look at it."
The 61-year old ambassador
said that at present "I have no
Intention of running" for presi
dent. He said he feels he can
do the most good by continuing
to serve here.
Informed sources here said
Lodge, who took up his post at
the end of August, would not
consider resigning for severaS
months because of the critical
situation in Viet Nam.
He has worked closely with
the new military junta, in
power only six weeks, and Is
believed to want to stay here
until South Viet Nam's effort
against the Communists has im
proved with the change of gov
ernment. Hoffa attorney
faces 3 counts
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) -A
local attorney for Teamsters
President James R. Hoffa has
been indicted on t h r e e counts
of tampering with juries in
volved in federal court cases
against Hoffa.
U.S. Attorney Kenneth Harwell,
who conducted the grand jury
probe, said "other matters"
were uncovered which require
further investigation by his of
fice and the FBI.
The federal indictments
charge Z.T. Osborn Jr. with
three attempts to bribe or influ
ence jurors in Hoffa's 1962 con
spiracy trial here and the union
leader's forthcoming trial on
,i'ry-tampering charges.
The indictments bring to $95.
000 the amount allegedly of
fered as bribes in the two cases.
Osborn, a former assistant
U.S. attorney who earned na
tional fame as the winning law
er in the historic Tennessee re
apportionment case, could be
sentenced to 15 years in pribon
if convicted.
When reached at his home
Friday night, he said: "I'm in
nocent, and I have the best
lawyer In the country Mr.
Jack Norman Sr. (of Nash
ville). I am entirely innocent,
Mr. Norman thinks I am inno
cent." The 44-year-old lawyer has
represented Hoffa since the
Teamsters' president went on
trial In 12 on charges of con
spiring to receive an illegal
kickback from a trucking firm.
That trial was declared a
mistrial when the jury was un
able to reach a verdict.
OFFICERS SET
PORTLAND (UPI) -Don Ge
ren of Eagle Point was elected
president of the Oregon Dairy
Council at the close of its an
nual meeting here Saturday.
Ralph Kircher and Art Hul
burt, both of Portland, were
named vice president and sec-rery-treasurer,
respectively.
,1
Maybe Russian women rate
Just foo equally with men
By Gay Pauley
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-The So
viet woman rates too equally
with the man and is waking to
some of the disadvantages of
the fact.
This was ons of the impres
sions Man Jinofsky said she
got from a month's tour of Rus
sia as the only woman member
of a U.S. television team pre
paring a documentary account
of the life of the Soviet woman.
'I would not want to be a
woman in Russia today," said
Miss Janofsky in an interview.
"The kind of equality she has
I don't want. . .she's had to sac
rifice femininity.
Brawny Beauties
'It would be doubtful if a 23-
year-old crane operator we
talked with would be treated as
a Southern belle. . ."
Miss Janofsky, whose parents
migrated from Russia in 1898
and settled in Towando, fa., ex
plained that the official equality
of sexes came with the Russian
Revolution 46 years ago.
She said "equality" today
means that the Russian house
wife who works and most
mothers do work to augment
the family income leaves the
house in the morning when her
husband does.
She drops the children off at
a day nursery, works all day,
picks up the children at the end
Visit turns
Pope into
popular hero
VATICAN CITY (UPI)-Pope
Paul's historic plan to visit the
Holy Land next month ap
peared today to have turned
him into a popular Roman
hero.
The pontiff was mobbed and
cheered Sunday when he rode
in an open car on a nippy day
to the heart of Rome to pray be
fore a statue of the Madonna
of the Immaculate Conception
on her feast day.
It was the most enthusiastic
popular reception of the sedate
pnd often self-conscious Pope's
young pontificate. It was also
the biggest turnout for the feast
of the Immaculate Conception
that Romans could remember.
The Pope first prayed at the
foot of a six-story high column
topped by a tall slender statue
of Mary. Fire department men
had scaled extension ladders to
deck the statue with bouquets
of flowers, as they do every
year.
The foot of the statue was
swamped by more flowers and
gifts Romans brought to the
Madonna. The singing and pray
ing lasted all day and thousands
of people passed by.
After praying, the Pope re
ceived olive branches stripped
from trees from the Garden of
Gethsemane where Christ was
betrayed by Judas into captivity
and crucifixion. The Pope will
visit the Garden on his trip to
Jerusalem.
The presentation was made
by Jordanian Ambassador to
Italy's Edmond P.A. Roch.
Jordan is one of the two coun
tries the Pope will visit in his
tour of holy places at the birth
place of Christianity Jan. 4-6.
The old city of Jerusalem Is in
Jordan.
PLANS LEGISLATION
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen.
Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y.,
plans to introduce legislation to
provide medical benefits for
U.S. residents who served in
the armed forces of Allies na
tions during World War IL
Keating said Sunday his
measure would limit the bene
fits to those veterans who have
been lawful residents of the
United States for at least 10
years.
of the day, and does the mar
keting.
The Russian way of life does
not expect the man to help at
nome, sne saia.
That," said Miss Janofsky,
"is equality with a vengeance.
But I got the impression the
Russian women are waking up
to the advantages of being fe
male. . .
Cosmetics For Comrade
Certainly, she sal d, the
awakening shows in things fem
inine such as lipstick, nail pol
ish, eye makeup and in getting
some color and style into cloth
ing instead of settling for drab
utility. It shows in the fact that
the daily hour and one-half
fashion shows staged at GUM,
the big Moscow department
store, always are jammed, she
said.
The government is aware of
the Soviet women's demand for
feminine fripperies and is re
sponding, she continued. Noth
ing is made and sold in the So
viet unless it's approved offi
cially. That's why such items
as uplift bras, nylon stockings
and perfume at popular prices
are meaningful, she said.
Miss Janofsky worked as as
sociate producer on the televi
sion show, "The Soviet Wom
an," to be presented Tuesday
night by Philco on ABC-Television.
All Occupations
She, producer Bill Weston,
and a camera crew visited
Moscow and Tbilisi and Batumi
in the Georgian province to
film women at home, in the
market, on the job. The women
included teachers, dentists, ar
chitects, doctors, the woman as
tronomer who heads the Rus
sian space satellite tracking
system, ballerinas, bricklayers,
barbers, mail women, janitors,
bus drivers, assembly line
workers.
They also talked with Rus
sia's first lady, Mme. Nina
Khrushchev, and with Eka
terina Furtseva, the only wom
an in the Russian Presidium.
' The things I'm saying are
only my impressions," said
Miss Janofsky. I hate these
people who become authorities
on a country after one brief
visit."
First Visit
Miss Janofsky said her
knowledge of Russian, learned
first as a child growing up and
in formal language study in lat
er years, was highly valuable
to the group which worked in
cooperation with the govern
ment's television committee. It
was her first visit to her par
ents' homeland.
"There are lots of Western in
fluences," she said. "Like pale
lipstick and wearing eye pencil
and hats among the babushkas.
"But I think they're selecting
things from us they like. . .not
doing it just because they're
Western.
"They know much about
Americans," she said, "and
want to know more. Almost al
ways, the Russian women want
ed to ask questions of us,
"If I said that I admired the
beauty of one part of Moscow,
they would say, 'Ah, but your
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Open
Saturday
President Dwight D. Eisenhow
er proposed today that the
presidential succession revert
to its pre-1947 order elimi
nating the speaker of the House
and the president pro tempore
of the Senate from third and
fourth place.
In an article in the Saturday
Evening Post, the former Chief
Executive said he preferred the
old order of passing the reins
of government from president
to vice president and then to
members of the cabinet accord
ing to the established ranks,
starting with the secretary of
state.
He said the revision of the
succession law in 1947, placing
the House speaker and presi
dent pro tempore of the Senate
ahead of the cabinet members,
"does not fulfill the require
ments of our times." He said
it was quite possible that the
majority leaders in the House
and Senate would not belong to
the same party as the presi
dent. "It would be possible for a
man to succeed to the presi
dency who is out of sympathy
with the aims and policies of
the administration and who
would find it necessary to
change the whole cabinet and
roster of policy officials," Ei
senhower said.
Instead, the succession should
provide "the least disrupting
transition" to presidential pow
er, Eisenhower said. There
should be insurance that the
party selected by the people to
head the executive branch will
continue to do so for the four
year presidential period.
"True, the speaker of the
House and the president pro
tempore are elected officials,
but the first has been elected
by a district and the second by
a state; neither necessarily re
flects the will of the whole elec
torate," Eisenhower said.
"For these reasons I believe
that the earlier order of succes
sion is a more logical one
which would keep the presiden
cy heading In the same politi
cal direction until the elector
ate has an opportunity to make
its further wishes known.
Eisenhower said the assassi
nation of President Kennedy
demonstrated once again that
the institution of the presidency
can continue firm and secure
although a political leader may
pass suddenly irom me scene.
He said he hoped the tragedy
would not make the White
House a prison.
"As our nation and the world
become more complex, more
and not less contact between
the President and the people,
and among leaders of nations,
is necessary," he said. "The
very fact of being president in
volves certain personal risks,
which I believe must be ac
cepted." Eisenhower said the risks
should be reduced without lim
iting the President's "neces
sary" freedom of movement.
He said helicopters could take
the place of the presidential au
tomobile for certain trips over
fixed routes and new safety
measures could be developed to
provide improved security in
motorcades.
Deer driven
from refuge
by dog packs
PORTLAND (UPI) -Packs of
dogs in north Portland have
driven deer from a game pre
serve and have made people
"afraid to leave the populated
areas at night," a park foreman
said today.
J. Howard Williamson said the
near-wild dogs, sometimes num
bering 40 to 60 in a pack, have
virtually driven deer from For
est Park in the St. John's bridge
area.
He said he rescued one doe
from the dogs which collapsed
at his feet.
Williamson added that he and
others employed in the 4,000-
acre forest area had found ske
letons of deer after they had
been chased over the brink of a
quarry.
"I would hate to think what
would happen to a child if the
dogs, excited, set out after
him," he said.
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