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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1963)
h Family Weakly May 5,1963 ,lolcJ " vKitJiun reporters analysis oj the two I 11 - The Battle of the Century: iuugu men engagea in a KnocK-aown, drag-out fight ' in which one of them is bound tn oet hurt Rv niTEWTiw DfVKimnc IN 1923 promoter Tex Rickard im ported a huge, shaggy-haired Argen tine named Luis Firpo to battle Jack Dempsey for the heavyweight title. Canny Rickard billed the imbroglio, "The Battle of the Century," and the Polo Grounds in New York was jammed with the credulous who thought that the crude South American had a chance against the champion. The Battle of the Century was vicious enough, but it took only two rounds for Dempsey to render Firpo very uncon scious indeed. Ever since 1957, however, a fight has been go ing on between Robert F. Kennedy and James R. Hoffa which has a much better right to be called the Battle of the Century than the two-round af f. ',r promoted by Rickard. It began when Bobby Kennedy, as chief counsel for the awkwardly named Senate Select Commit tee on Improper Activities in the Labor or Man agement Field, headed by Sen. John McClellan, submitted Hoffa to several grueling sessions be fore a tv audience estimated at 25 million people. (Only 82,000 saw the Dempsey-Firpo fight) Previously the Committee had gotten rid of Dave Beck as president of the Teamsters Union, and this, ironically enough, brought Hoffa to the presidency. To stretch a point, it might be said that indirectly the Committee placed Hoffa in the driver's seat Then the Committee set out to get the aggressive head of 1,900,000 teamsters. Hoffa spent 18 tough sessions before the Com mittee with counsel Kennedy doing most of the questioning. Unlike many of his associates, Hoffa did not. seek sanctuary in the Fifth Amendment. He was questioned about some of his unsavory aids, about an alleged attempt to bribe a Com mittee investigator, about the allegation that he had tapped telephones of his subordinates. On' the stand Hoffa was unco-operative and slippery; time after time he resorted to the "I don't remember" technique. Kennedy kept after him relentlessly, but Hoffa, like a good boxer, deflected the verbal blows with evasive tactics. He was patronizing toward Kennedy. At one point he said, "But look, Bobby boy, you just don't understand these things." Kennedy went white with anger. There are those who say that it was that gibe which made Kennedy resolve to get Hoffa at all costs. Hoffa emerged from the hearings battered and bruised but reasonably intact. Kennedy had proved beyond doubt that many of Hoffa's aids were gangsters, but there was no evidence that Hoffa himself had ever been a strong-arm man or that he had been derelict in dealing with the huge union funds virtually at his disposal. THE BOBBY V ".-f,t'v,.V'J ."''" ' 1 KENNEDY And so the Senate Rackets Committee (as it generally was known), finished its hearings with 20,000 pages of written testimony, with the ap proval of the television public, and with an im petus that projected tenacious, -tough-minded Bobby Kennedy into the office of Attorney Gen eral of the United States. The Washington cor respondents who once called him Bob or Bobby now call him General, the traditional title ac corded the head of the Department of Justice. On him the title looks good; his maturity is at tested to by every Department of Justice lawyer I know (including a former member of the staff whom I once called "Whizzer" but who is now Mr. Justice Byron White of the Supreme Court). Hoffa, too, has gained in experience and ma turity. His grip on the enormous Teamsters Union seems stronger than ever, and a dozen times he has publicly defied the Attorney General and labeled his efforts as nothing but a "personal vendetta against Hoffa and. his union." (Hoffa likes to refer to himself in the third person.) Hoffa sincerely believes that the Attorney Gen eral and his 1,700 lawyers will not be happy until he is not only removed from office but also help ing to sew mailbags behind the unresponsive bars of a Federal penitentiary. The Stakes Are High for Both Washington, D.C., is a city which has no indus try ; it doesn't produce food or first-division base ball teams its only product is gossip. Drop into the sophisticated Jockey Club or visit the Na tional Press Club or (if you're silly enough) at tend the daily round of diplomatic, press, politi cal, or social cocktail parties, and you'll hear a lot of gossip a great deal of it concerning the feud between Kennedy and Hoffa. It is generally agreed that this is a fight to the death. The stakes are high. If Hoffa loses, he will no longer be thfi most important union official in the country. If Kennedy loses, it could cost him the Presidency in 1968 (according to the betting in Washington, he is at present a shoo-in for the nomination). The Attorney General has denied that this is a personal feud. He has not commented publicly on the Hoffa affair since he took office nor would he discuss his feelings toward Hoffa when I talked to him recently. Not even off the record. I saw Hoffa the same day in the imposing Teamsters Union building at 25 Louisiana Ave., just 1,900 feet from the Department of Justice building, and for once Hoffa had no arrows to shoot at Kennedy. In the past he has been quite free in attacking him, but during my visit he smilingly refrained from discussing personalities. Few people in Washington seem to be neutral AJ.TJL1YXA liurm rii i u iu this real Battle of the Century. When I was a sports writer 100 years or so ago, I was taught that the only way to judge the merits of two heavyweights was to maintain a high degrca of objectivity. Suppose we use the same yardstick in trying to evaluate these two fighters battling in the judicial ring. Physically and mentally they are well matched. "v great staying power. Jimmy Hoffa weighs just under 180 pounds and stands five feet, five-and-a-half inches. He is barrel-chested and has strong hands heritages of his early years of unloading heavy boxes from freight cars. Physical fitness is a fetish with-hira ; he spends half an hour each morning doing push-ups, and he neither smokes nor drinks. When he laughs, which is often. , unu alio ttiiilq LtrCllI gleam, and his hazel eyes laugh, too. His hair is coal black, and it is hard to believe that he is 50. When you hear him make public speeches to his "boys" at a Teamsters' convention, he gives the impression of being an angry man, a self appointed prophet, and a rabble rouser. But have lunch with him in the magnificent fourth-floor cafeteria in the Teamsters building (workers in s the building call it, with considerable validity, the best restaurant in Washington), and you'll find Jimmy Hoffa a relaxed man of considerable charm, warmth, and humor. His conversation is not limited to union mat ters. He reads all kinds of books; and when he discusses some recent serious novel articulately and intelligently, it is difficult to accept the fact Unt U: 1 1 i! , . . - uioi ma loimai education enaea in tne seventh grade. Immaculately and quieUy dressed, impec cably barbered, he doesn't seem to have a trace left of the tough, snarling youngster who de clared war on employers after his father coughed himself into an early grave, his lungs coated with coal dust The Family Men Hoffa's home life is not unlike that of his op ponent He was married in 1936 to Josephine Poszywak, and they have two children, Barbara Ann, 24, now married, and Jimmy, Jr., 20. In 1939 Hoffa built a $6,800 brick residence in De troit. Today, although his salary is $50,000 a year (plus the kind of expense account any important business executive is given), he still lives in that modest house. He travels a great deal, but when ever he can get away from Teamster affairs, he -hurries home to his family. Like Bobby Kennedy, he is devoted to them and, like Kennedy, no breath of scandal has ever clouded his family re lationship. Hoffa is known as a one-girl man, and "Jo" is his girl. She often accompanies him to conventions, not because she is interested in 1 Author of ',ow" if "london Diary," "Drwi IMworiol," "Courtroom," and If forthcoming autobioarapfiy, "By Quontlq RoynoMi" union affairs, but because she likes to be with her husband. If this picture of Hoffa seems too flattering, let me emphasize that it is the picture most of his close associates have of him; it is also the impression any reasonably objective observer gets. I am not trying to fit a halo on Hoffa's head the thing wouldn't fit. I have no idea what goes on behind the bright, charming facade which he shows the world. Neither the Senate Rackets Committee nor the judicial charges leveled against him the past two years have been able to shatter his confidence or his apparent contempt for the Attorney General. Hoffa's confidence is bolstered by the fact that Kennedy has hauled him into court three times, and each time he has walked out a free man. He had a close call in a Nashville, Tenn., Federal Court, where he was accused of taking a round about payoff from a trucking firm. The case ended in a "hung" jury, which was castigated by the presiding justice. If at First You Don't Succeed . . . Another test is imminent in the so-called Sun Valley case. Hoffa was indicted by a Florida grand jury for allegedly misusing a half-million dollars in Teamster money to develop a model city for retired persons in Sun Valley, Fla. The indictment was thrown out on the technicality that Negroes had been excluded from the grand jury. Kennedy has reinstated the indictment, this time ?riully avoiding legal pitfalls. This trial will have far-reaching significance for both men. Despite his pleasant private image, there is no doubt that Hoffa is the toughest, most ruthless labor leader of his time. He lacks the broader social vision which characterizes a man like Wal ter Reuther, head of the United Automobile Workers. Some of Hoffa's officers and many others with whom he does business would be more at home on "The Untouchables" television show than in any legitimate business. But the rank and file of the Teamsters' membership seem to have the happy faculty of ignoring the company Hoffa keeps; after all, they say, he negotiates better contracts for them than any of his counterparts in the union movement. Hoffa is bitter toward Kennedy and his lawyers because he feels that, although unable to convict him in a court of law, they have convicted him in the public mind through legislative investigation. Union lawyers charge that the Senate Committee did in effect damn scores of men, including Hoffa, without giving them an opportunity to present their case. Edward Bennett Williams, Hoffa's brilliant attorney, has insisted that Hoffa and other officials of the Teamsters Union were ac ( Continued on page 6) Family WMklu, May J, 1M1 S