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BRONX NEWCOMER—New York City’s Bronx Zoo, the
new home of a rock hyrax named Patti in, is a long way
from its old one. The hyrax, the first the zoo has had in
15 years, comes from Central Africa and is a curious
mixture of features, with front teeth of a rodent and
back teeth resembling those of a rhinoceros. Patti is the
gift of author Joy Adamson, above, with zoo director
byrax william G. Conway, and is named after a gin-drinking
featured in Miss Adamson’s best-selling story of
an African lioness, “Bom Free.”
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iH* GRIFFIN, GEORGIA
Lighter Side
They Have Passion
For Little He tails
By DICK WEST
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) —We
have in this country a large
body of experts who analyze
and Interpret trends and events
in other countries.
One thing they have in
common is a passion for little
details that the average obser
ver might overlook.
A cautiously worded para
graph on the back page of an
obscure Russian publication,
the seating arrangement in the
reviewing stand at the May
Day Parade, the failure of a
certain official to attend an
embassy reception in Moscow.
To the Kremlinologist, these
items are more than potential
material for a trivia quiz. They
may signal an important policy
shift, an impending government
shakeup or a crisis in the
wheat program.
It is to be assumed that the
Soviet Union and the other
countries have similar experts
who sift through seemingly
insignificant happenings in the
United States In search of
hidden meanings.
If so, they must be going nuts
over President Johnson’s deci
sion to have Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey throw out
the first ball at the opening
game of the baseball season.
If you put your ear to the
ground you probably can hear
Boris, Feodor and Sergei trying
to figure out what was really
behind that development.
Sergei: “The White House
has tried to create the
impression that the President
was very busy and didn’t want
to interrupt his Easter vacation
at his ranch to fly back to
Washington for the ceremony.”
Boris: "Hah! That’s a cover
story if I ever heard one.”
Feodor: “Right. There must
be more to it than that. Maybe
Humphrey has seized control of
the presidency.”
Sergei: “I don’t believe
that.”
Feodor: “Well, would you
believe he has seized control of
the vice presidency?”
Sergei: “No. I think it is
wrong to view this in terms of
a power struggle. What do you
think, Boris?”
Boris: “I agree. It is more
likely that Johnson is so sure of
his position he doesn’t feel be
needs the publicity.”
Sergei: “Perhaps. On the
other hand, would be deliberate
ly run the risk of alienating
baseball fans in a congressional
election year?”
Feodor: "Definitely not. Only
a major crisis would keep him
from making the first pitch
himself.”
Boris: "Good thinking, Feo
dor. It narrows down to two
possibilities—either the United
States is preparing to bomb
Red China or the President has
a sore arm."
TRIPLE PLAT
ANGLETON, Tex. (UPI) —
The lights went out here
Wednesday when:
1. A truck smashed into a
utility pole.
2. A power conductor failed a
few hours later.
3. A bird nest caused a short
in a 12,000-volt power line.
HUSKY THIEVES
DENVER (UPI) —Police are
looking lor husky thieves who
stole 10 tons of nails worth
$7,800 from a warehouse.
TOOTHY PROBLEM
LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)
— George W. Rushing, 44,
arrested on a charge of petty
theft, told jailers the reason he
had no teeth was that his upper
and lower plates were being
held by a Sayre, Okla., court to
lieu of a $15 fine for loitering.
1,
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Unless Chairman Adam Clayton Powell of the House
Labor Committee has a sudden change of heart, one of organ
ized labor’s top priority items—the “common situs” picketing
bill—might be delayed quite a while.
A good deal more is involved than the mercurial Powell’s
whim. The measure is caught in a variety of cross currents.
The hill’s purpose is to remove existing court-imposed
restrictions upon union picketing at construction sites. Build
ing trades unions are the sole intended beneficiaries. This
gives the bill narrow scope, but nevertheless it has broad
labor backing. Democratic
The and liberal Republican votes for easy
House passage are at hand. Yet many House members are
reacting to the “common situs” proposal with a curious com
bination of nervousness and annoyance.
THE MOST SKITTISH are freshman Democrats, mostly
liberals who belong in labor’s corner and would vote for the
bill. Making their first bid for re-election, they are not eager
to stick their necks out on any issue that spells clear trouble
for them.
That is the key. They are hearing from the bankers and
other businessmen back home whose financial support they
need in their campaigns. Home-bailiwick business communi
ties calls have by the been contractors’ put to writing efficient letters lobby. and making telephone
These Democratic newcomers in the House do not like the
heat at all. But they are not the only members of the House
who are upset. The annoyance affects a good many older
hands in both parties.
Their pained response is: “When is the Senate going to be
first, for a change, in taking the heat?”
Their common feeling is that the Senate leaves too many
tough Senate initiatives to the House. They would like to see the
act first on “common situs” picketing. At the moment,
Adam Powell is playing their game by not asking for action
on a bill which is already on the House calendar.
A NOW-RESOLVED MAJOR DISPUTE within labor’s own
ranks threw up a roadblock to action for a considerable time,
but the measure has enjoyed consistent bipartisan support
and is widely thought of as “unfinished business” on Capitol
Hill.
The measure would permit a union having a dispute with
a line single subcontractor at a construction site to place a picket
around the entire project operation, even though the
general contractor and other subcontractors are not directly
involved.
holding In the Supreme Court’s Denver Building Trades case, up
a National Labor Relations Board ruling, such picket
ing was deemed a secondary boycott—as defined, and banned,
by the Taft-Hartley law. The ban was intended to free inno
cent neutrals of involvement in labor controversies.
The present bill exempts construction picketing from this
ban, on the theory that everyone working on a common budd
ing project is really engaged in a single enterprise and no
secondary boycott is involved.
News Commentary
Double Meaning
Of Demonstration
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
In a southern suburb of
Jakarta one day this week,
student workers walked off the
job on what was to have been a
lasting monument to President
Sukarno and demanded that the
money be spent instead for the
relief of the Indonesian people.
The student action had double
significance.
It was symbolic of a new
spirit emerging in an Indonesia
attempting to regain its place
in a world abandoned by
Sukarno and determined
through austerity to drag itself
back from economic ruin.
It was a further rejection of
Sukarno, whose vanity led him
to construct monuments at the
expense of the welfare of his
100-million people.
This was a fantastic project.
It was designed to house what
Sukarno in his own jargon
called Conefo, meaning the
conference of new emerging
people, a project enthusiastical
ly endorsed by the Red Chinese
and started with their aid.
The conference was to be
held this August and was to be
the beginning of an organiza
tion rivaling the United Na
tions. Building plans called for
a resemblance to the U.N.
headquarters in New York.
Besides a secretariat and
assembly hall, it was to include
housing for delegates, six
separate bungalows for heads
of state, a chapel, shopping
center, restaurants and a night
club.
Courted for participation in
Conefo were Afro-Asian and
Latin American nations, plus
members of the Soviet bloc.
Once more in Sukarno’s
jargon, these were called the
struggling to escape domination
by the Olefos, the old esta
blished nations led by the
United States.
This was not the end of
Sukarno’s grandiose plans to
transform Jakarta into a world
capital, nor the only place the
money went while Indonesia's
exports fell, industry and
transportatn facilities went to
pot and the burden of hardship
daily fell more heavily upon the
Indonesian people.
Rising above Djalan Tham
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★ WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
Skittish House Is Stalling
On Situs Picketing Bill
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent
Assn.
rin, Jakarta’s main street,
were the five-story Salrinah
department store being built by
the Japanese and a 25-story
skyscraper trade and travel
center complete with a pent
house nightclub.
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STOP AT SIGNS
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (CPI)
— State Sen. Alvin C. Weingang
Wednesday introduced a resolu
tion urging fellow lawmakers to
stop "degrading the beauty of
the land" with political signs
and posters.
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TO BE GIVEN AWAY
SATURDAY - MAY 14
4
10
lost dog —Mrs. I*»
DENVER (UPD
rel Johnson says her lost dog
shouldn’t be hard to find. It
described as brown, black
was mixture of
and white, a Alaskan
German shepherd and
husky who answers to the name
of Whisky.
Thursday, April 14, 1966