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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1963)
r uot m tionE noo;.:o pmi?ed VIIil CBFER KEtMOIE TIIAIl A11Y CiOEl ML EI TiS OTLD? One reason stands out above all others. People know they get better results with Super Kem -Tone. Why? Because It's never too thick, never too thin. Flows on quickly, easily, smoothly. You save money too, because one coat covers and one gallon does the walls of an average room.'SvSuper Kem -Tone is giaranteed washable keeps its beauty for years. There are hundreds of lovely decorator colors, so you can choose exactly the shade you want.svYears of research and experience by Sherwin-Williams, world's largest paint manu facturer, make Super Kem -Tone the wall paint you can depend on for beautiful results. It's the easiest way to lovelier rooms! SUKI KIU.TONC II AVAHAill AT HADING PAINT. HAIDWAUt MAIDING SUPW AND DEPARTMENT JTOHS EVEtVWHEK 1 h ki 1 1,1 m F W : Mo S SUPER v1? v 'K I I BOBBY KENNEDY JIMMY HOFFA f Continued from page 5) cuaed by rumor and hearsay. The Department of Justice denies these charges. Now let's take a look at Robert F. Kennedy. Upon entering the enormous office of the Attorney General on the third floor of the Department of Justice, you are im pressed by its majesty. You glance at the water colors and gay crayon drawings on the paneled walls, unmistakably done by his younger children, then you notice the six-foot-by-six-foot, 300-pound mahogany desk, behind which sits the smiling, boyish-looking, ruddy-faced, 37-year-old Attorney General. He stands up, and now he appears taller than his five feet-ten. He is coatless and his shir sleeves are rolled up above his elbows. Because of hi; powerful forearms, he seems heavier than his 170 pounds He may have -noticed your glance at the drawings, an he'll grin and walk easily toward the wall and tell yoi about them. And if you're an old sports writer sizing hi up, you are reminded a bit of a young boxing champion! for Kennedy moves with the same effortless grace. The General Physical-Fitness Buff Kennedy is an incurable addict on the subject of phys; cal fitness. He gets up just after six each morning am either hops on a horse for an hour's workout, ice skatel furiously with his older children, or if the weather fr bad, hurries to the Pentagon to play some tough squash or handball. When he can't find anyone to join him in some strenuous physical activity, he will walk a brisk flve-ani-' a-half miles in an hour (par for any course). And on Feb. 9, he hiked a celebrated 50 miles in 17 hours! Bobby has the shoulders of a blacksmith, and if one can say it without disrespect to a Cabinet member, he has belly like a washboard. A fight between Kennedy and Hoffa would be interesting for an aficionado of the sport to watch. When Kennedy stops talking about his kids' drawings " and sits down again behind that big desk to discuss the problems of the Department of Justice, he no longer seems boyish. Actually, he now looks older than his 37' years, for he is deadly earnest about his job. Ethical lawyers seldom discuss the merits of cases they or their associates are going to prosecute. So when I asked the Attorney General, "Are you out to get Jimmy Hoffa? Do you have a special unit in the Department of Justice to deal with HoffaT" his answer was predictable: "No to both questions. But, of course, we have a group in the Department that is working within the whole field of labor-management racketeering." f "Your department has indicted Jimmy Hoffa several times," I said, "but you never seem to be able to get conviction." "That's right," he said, ignoring the implied question in my statement. "But he's under indictment now. 1 haven't discussed him since I was made Attorney Genera, and I don't feel that I should get into any discussion now.! As he talked of some 50 labor racketeers, most from the ranks of the Teamsters Union, who had not only been in dicted but tried and convicted during the past two year, his voice was clipped, cold. His eyes narrowed as he talked about Teamsters Union men his assistants had sent to jaO for embezzling union funds, for obstructing justice, for - transportation of counterfeit bonds, for accepting illegal payments from employers, for hijacking. Listening to him now, he neither looked nor sounded young, and I remembered what one of his assistants hat told me: "Don't let the Boss fool you. He's the toughest guy who ever sat in that office." I'm hot selling either Bobby Kennedy or Jimmy HoffS short. They are two very tough men and before they art finished fighting, someone is sure to get hurt family WMfcly, May 5, 1M