PAGE6-C HERALD AND SEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Sunday, December 31, 1963 NOTHING SPECIAL Just Tell Me What's in Your Mind Q dubiiaL (Poojl Ways Needed To Curb Perils The revelation by Cuban economics czar "Che" Guevara that Cuba would have hi'iched an all-out nuclear attack against the United Slates in the event of war may proba bly be written oil as a particularly insane bit of bombast. The missiles and their warheads were Russian, manned by Russians, and it is cer tain the Kremlin would never have turned control of them over to Cubans and their un balanced leaders. They must have been aware, even before the President's warning, that any nuclear attack from Cuba would have brought U.S. retaliation against the Russian homeland. Nevertheless, Guevara's boast sends a chill down the spine. It also underscores the fact that the question of disarmament is not one that involves only the two nuclear giants. A small nation like Cuba, even with only a&cw nucJcar bombs, could set off World War 10 despite all the "fail-safe" controls the U.S. oj1 Russia may have over themselves. One nation with one Polaris-type subma rine somewhere at sea could precipitate war by launching a missile against either the U.S. or Russia. Unable to detect the source of the missile, the nation attacked would assume the worst. Pending disarmament, or at least a ban on weapons testing and manufacture, the President's recommendation for "instantan eous communication" with the Kremlin is something that can and should be followed up at once. White House officials have revealed that during the Cuban crisis, telegrams between President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev took from six to as long as 12 hours to be delivered. This is far too leisurely for safety- This "hot line" would probably be a tele phone or teleprinter (the President favors the latter) with a direct line between the two cap itals, manned around the clock and used only during real emergency situations. Such communications, which could be ex panded to include most major countries, may not bring the world closer to peace, but it would certainly lessen the chances of misun derstanding and rash action. Anything that does that is mandatory in a day when it takes only minutes for a missile to cross from one hemisphere to another. 'Send More Money' : An ancient joke tells of the amateur poker player who fell in with a group of pro fessionals, last his shirt, and wired home: "It's a:great game. Send more money." : The American taxpayer is now in the shoes of that hapless victim. : At the federal level, we hear much talk of income tax reduction though how this can be accomplished, in the light of eight or ten billion dollar annual deficits without shrink ing the dollar's buying power farther, is a question that would stump Socrates. That Aside, other federal plans, now in the press-on-regardless stage, call for a myriad of change's ip tax policy that would subject individual rfnd corporate taxpayers alike to an almost endless scries of expensive irritations, and bury us under a flood of tax forms. At the state level, there is, for the most part, a mad search for more lax revenues for welfare services, for schools, for high ways, for urban renewal (the current polite term for slum clearance), and for just about anything else anyone can dream up. Most barbarous of all is the scheme now in ef fect in some states, and planned by others whereby federal income taxes are not allowed as a credit against slate income taxes. Thus, the taxpayer pays a tax upon a tax, on money which he never really had at all. No man can foresee the end. But the way we're going, that "send more money" wire will have to go unanswered. The well runs dry. WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK It's Tough To Stay Home! ' n.v WASHINGTON STAFF Newspaper Knterprise. Assn. :WAS11!NGT0N (NEA) Pres ident Jnhn F. Kennedy doesn't al vfays have an easy time of it when the lie wants to spend a (jiiiet evening al Uic White House. I First l.aily Jacqueline was go if? to a performance o( the Amor if an Ballet and husband Jack de cided ho would stay at home. During the first act Jackie sent a Secret Service man tc phone the President that the ballet was so good he should tome over. Soon afterward, the President arrived at the theater, still in time to eni'y a goodly portion of 6ie night's performance. R u t While House security guards re pot tcdly were less prepared lor a flight out than the President. They ne all settled comfortably nr tlie evening with their shoes oil when Mis. Kennedy's call came In. Hecent commotion over news ' censorship has caused revival in some newspaper circles of the old proverb "The truth shall make you free." The rub is. say the critics. "You're not always lice (o eel it." ' Mary Travcis who completes llic folk song Irio of "Peter, Paul ind Mar,.," wiys she met the con (tmprsi.il James Meredith while pinking a concert appearance at pie Miss. Mary asked Meredith if he Ihousht that after all this time IhniKs were netting any better. Meredith replied: "II a man heals his wife R9 times, every week and then de cides he will beat her only (Hi. would you s.iy that's better?" Ar.soci.de Justice John M Har lot of the Supreme Court, listen ing with his colleagues to an in fmc lax case imolving a dance Jtudio. heaid wilh astonishment tliat some people buy "lifetime courses" entitling Ihrm to I2..HKI hours of instruction. "When they finish," lie said quietly Irom th bench, "they must be magnificent dancers." Air Force Chief of Staff (ion. Curi is E. 'May was 56 Nov. 15 lli.i Navy counterpart. Chief of Naval Operations Adm. George W. Anderson Jr., was 5i on Dec. 15. On Nov. 15 Anderson sent a gift to l.oMay. It was escorted by a bosun's male to pipe it aboard In the best Navy style. A Wave ohiror and Marine lieutenant col onel followed the gilt a 4 foot model ol the aircrall car rier Forrestal into LcMay's oili er oilier, then into bis inner ot flee, much to the amazement of Hie Air Force chief. (In Dec. 14, the Friday bcloie Anderson's birthday. I.cMay, not to he ouldune. sent a present. Fust came two kilted Air Force personnel, loudly playing b a c pipes. They were followed hy air police. Finally came the present, a model of the controversial long-range bomber ItS-70. Al a recent party of interna tional bankers in a Washington hotel, one of the waiters lold the dicjnliod money men. "You h-o-ple di ink more than anyone who comes hcie. except Ihe minimi ists" Fugcne Illack,. who retires as president ol Ihe World Hank on .Ian 1. tells one on himself aliout a checkup at the Mayo Clinic. He went out tor a llioi ough examination and was there for over a week. On Saturday nidil the staff doctors invited him to a 'eekend patty whuh they hold to relax their o.n tensions J'ait ot Ihe Inn was a poker came ttlack was invited to Ml in and to his chagrin, he lost more mon ey to the doctors at poker than they charged him for his physical examination. It all turned out ail right, however, for Blaik later was asked to become a financial adviser to Ihe Mayo Foundation, which handles its nmltimillion dol lar endowment that helps (iiimhc medical services for chanty pa tients. U.S. Information Agency work ers in Bolivia have lound a new use for old radio program tapes. Formerly the recordings were erased after being broadcast and Hie clean tapes used to record .suc ceeding programs. Now the old tapes are distribut ed to missions in remote moun tain areas of Bolivia. The priests broadcast the recordings on llieir public address systems The I'SIA programs, particular ly the anti-Communist ones, are broadcast outside the churches and on Ihe village squares, right along wilh Ihe priests' sermons and talks to their parishioners. POTOMAC FEVER Car-tin exchanges Cuban pr is oners lor medicine. Alter Iomiic his miv-iles, you have to admit tli.it CaMrn timk his medicine liko a lilt I o m, in. Thr government fail In con vict Jimmy Hotta. II be Kins to fltprr,r they're living Holla (or Hoh Kennedy io run agalnl in wt. Iluj.Mii replaces Amha!ador Zonn .it the C N Dunns the Cuban itims he vva guilty nf telling lit own whopinrs in stead of the Kremlin s. tter Matching JKK's pri t nr -nume on TV, KCC Km Newton Mi now acam proclaims television tn be a vast v asteUnd tor the lie publu ,11)5 llnlidav ode : 1 he ind U harp. The marrow chillv The snow's as deep a ( hrttlma b.llv .SucniiMs fne the Miholt mi' ule succevslully after live lai! urrv It proves that all we need ed up there with that thing uas a c.nw'e kv mils KLtTCHKK KM:iUX Letters To The Editor Zoning While reading letters to the ed itor under datelines Dec. 1(1 and Dec. 23, both signed "Name With held," it occurred to me that I hold a great regard for the person who writes an honest opinion on any subject and signs his name to his article. More people should avail them selves of the freedoms of speech and of the press. We here in Klamath Falls and Klamath Coun ty arc very fortunate in having a press which learlcssly expresses its views. A press which allows others to air their views through the letters sent to lite editor. H is my opinion that opinions worth writing to the editor are worth signing. 1 hold little regard (or the literary sniper who hides behind "Name Withheld." Should the person writing the "Name Withheld" letter, appear ing in the Dec. 19 issue of this paicr. care to he may certainly give away his animals for what ever purpose lie cares to. I hope he kccs his giving confined to his animals and in no way de signs to include mine in this give away. The person writing tlie Dec. 2.1 "Name W ithheld" letter will prob ably ind himself in no end of dilliculty locating his animals in town. However, there are still areas in the suburbs that arc tol erant toward persons keeping ani mals. All my neighbors have one or more animals. Some are kept year round, some seasonally. We live in peace with each other. I am aware of one or two restricted areas where the residents are not tolerant toward their quite inof fensive cat and dog keeping neigh bors. They are constantly bick ering with their neighbors about anything connected with the keep ing of pets. The property next to mine is for sale and I have no objection to you moving in with the whole passel of creatures you mention. I'll bet I can take all Ihe "whiff" you can take, so you do not worry me in the least. Don't snipe al a lady's statement ' and then hide behind "Name With held." Speaking about whiffs, how can the planners justify locating the MS area adjacent to the South Suburban Sanitary District's dis posal plant? Or along a river where a city has been known to empty raw sewage for days at a time? Some of the MS area is very marshy. In a south wind, fumes and odors from certain types of industries could, quite conceivably, drift through the city civic center, through tlic area occupied by some very preten tious motels. And. as the plan ners tell us, these offenders would only come to our area after we are zoned. Zoning would give them the protection they need against a public who could quite conceivably desire to recover for damage suffered. Our attention has been drawn by frequent "Industry on Pa rade" programs from the local TV station. From these we have ' been led to believe that present day industries are quite particular about the neighborhood they move into. I have been informed by a member of the Planning Board that annexation to the city is in evitable for the suburban area. Can justification be given for in cluding the vast area laid forth in the suggested areas as shown on the map that appealed in this paper recently? I am assuming that this entire area is the future target of the annexing group. The suggestion has been made in ap parent sincerity that this is the eventual, inevitable future of those who purchased property outside the city boundary. Those who were living with a belief that they were citizens of a free land. One in which they would take part in all future develop ment. A land that recognized the will of the majority of the people living in a given area to decide their own fate. To what degree the people are w illing to be reg ulated by any show of force may well become an issue of great imxrt. Frank Braman EDSON IN WASHINGTON . Reapportion Issue letting Wide Study fly nillTK BIOSSAT Newspaper Knterprise Assn. WASHINGTON NK. - In a matter of days the 30 governors, their legislatures and all federal and Mate judges will he citing a fieh batch nf recommendations on .slate legislative reapportion ment. Thec arc authored hy the Ad visory Commission on Inter-gcv-ernmcntal Relations, a 'Jti-mcmher !dy wliosr personnel runs from congressmen to county suhmvis ors The commission decided to look into the subject last spring alter the big stir caused by the Su preme Court's March 2H decision in the Tennessee ninoitionmenl .ae The commission's recommenda tions which coer the whole span of reapportionment p r o h I e m s. amount to a call tor major con tnulianal reform in this field. Keen interest in the proposals is expected Irom many of the state officials who will have them on their desks when the new leg islative season stalls in January. Anions the interested parties is Gov. Nelson Mmkeleller of New Yoik. een though his slate ahea d hjs aUipled a new 'apportion ment plan. What the commision promises Male apfxirtionment proceduies should nut he lett tn Matutoiy uh;m but should be clearly spc'ied out in st.ite constitutions. To assist tii.it purpose, coils! i tuuoiis should include a lixed pei ceniage turc to express the pop ulation dotation to be allowed lelween ihe anous legislative dii!icts. The eouunission suge.'-l 10 per ecu! This would apply, of eoutse. whcif annortionment is stnctiy on a population basis The "dratt Kuiuae" on th.s proposal indicated that vapue con stitutional phrases calling tor dis tricts "as nearly equal as pos Mble" have produced monumental headaches. Also deplored is the fuzincss over how and where dis trict lines are to be drawn. State legislatures are adjudged the best qualified acencics to do the reapportioning job. But it is urged that where they fad to act. or act improperly, a separate board e-r commission slioiild bo empowered to step in and do it. This proposal does not po as tar as prcvailinc arrangements in 14 states which have already fully or partly transient the apportion ment process trom their legisla tures to diltercnt boards and indi iduals in authority. Sla'e courts should be en dowed with jurisdiction over this field, and equipped with specific, powerful remedies to compel per formance when either the legisla ture or the relevant commission fails in its apportionment duties. Among suggested remedies: an order requiring elections at large; injunctions cither barring sched uled elections or hanning pay ment ol legislative salaries; mil hluation of unconstitutional reap portionment. It is adhed. however, thai bth federal ami stale courts steer clear of tmng to decree s.ocitic reapportionment formulas. Constitutions should spent y the frequency of reapportionment, and t.uhiir to meet the timetable s-lvMild bung switt alternative ac tion tiom an independent hoaid or the courts From time to time, a state's voleiv in sixtai referendum or at regular elections, should have a ihatue to voice their views on either nr or conhnuing appor tionment features. Joiner I have been following the let ters and the editorial in the Her ald and News very closely and will say this. I notice that all the letters and they are very few in favor of zoning the writer's name is withheld. This about shows they don't want their neighbors to know who they are. One stated that he or she would give up his cows and chickens if it would improve the community. May I suggest that if they arc so hot for zoning that they move to someplace where zoning is already in force. I consider if a person cares to build, or have livestock or pets and they violate no law against public sanitation, safety or de cency that's their right. The Herald and News took a partisan stand when they printed that editorial about calling names. Alter I read the editorial I im mediately joined the Tax Payers league. In the news report of the meet ing at the City Council room it was said the crowd was abusive and unruly. So were the patriots of 177t when England tried to force the stamp act. unwanted tea and all sorts of other forms of tyrannv on them. The mob as they were called at the Citv Council room sliowed a sparkle of the spirit of ITTfi. No. 1 wasn't one of them. Tlie crowd was so large I couldn't even get in so went home. Keep the spirit of I77H alive The whole trouhle is some people spend all their time worrying about their neighbors and have no time left tn tend to their own aftairs. How would the County Court . the Planning Commission and the Herald and News like to have us suburbanites tell them how lo ar range their huildings. bow large t icy sh"uld be. where to put the f,irn;ture etc In clo-ing I'll say Ilaus M.l iVr zoning. Planning Commission ard any other thing that abrtdrc liberty and with those who have such a long nose its alas m their neighbors af ta,;s Vitne not w ithhe'd Paul Kvereft PletfcrV Denver Avenue Here's something to get your day started right a statistic, of course. Seems that some bright fellow has figured out that the world's population, projected at its current growth rate (2.2 per cent per annum! to A.D. 2147, would allow something like six square feet 0 living space per capita. This is living? Not content with that gloom, he tried for panic by calculating that the weight of earth's population even tually would exceed that of the earth itself. Somebody'U have to get off! I have nothing against the greeting card Industry, but it seems just little silly to be getting Christmas cards from giant business corporations a couple of weeks before Christ mas. The only reason some peo ple have a secret sorrow is that the rest of us won't listen to them. A fellow was in town the other day trying to whet interest for an appearance of the Portland Symphony in Klamath Falls. Lord knows we can use all of this tyie of tiling wc can get our hands on. Trouble is, a sponsoring group is needed to assure the $2,500 guarantee. Although there is ev ery reason to think such a ven ture would be a financial success. it would require a good deal of selling and promotion. Now, if there is anyone with $2,500 left over after Christmas bills and in come tax, will he please step for ward? While we have not set a hard and fast rule on the length of let ters to the editor, we do wish they could be held to, say, about 300 words. We have published some extra long ones, because we don't like to edit them and risk chang ing the writer's intent. We like letters, and publish most of them. So keep them coming and short. Some of the so-called "comics" in our newspapers are no better than some of the tecvee shows we lament about. With the holiday season almost IW. B. S.) over, we're deep in the Initial phases of getting ready the Prog ress Edition. It is surprising even to us. lo consider all of the de velopments in the community in just one year's time. Incidental ly, if you have any ideas about content for the upcoming (Feb. 241 issue, we'll be glad to have I hem. I have 10 copies of the new proposed Oiegon Constitution available for those who want to look this most auspicious docu ment over. From the rumbling heard in Salem, it is evident that the legislators have some definite ideas about the ap proach to how the proposed Constitution is to be handled by them. Bigotry has no head and can not think, no heart and cannot feel. When she moves it is in wrath; when she pauses it is amid ruin. Her prayers are curses, her god is a demon, her communion is death, her vengeance eternity, her decalogue is written in the blood of her victims, and if she slops for a moment in her in fernal flight it is upon a kindred rock to whet her vulture fang for a more sanguinary desolation. From the comment I've heard around, there is some considerable dissatisfaction with the way the so-called dog ordinance is being enforced. Unless it is enforced right to the letter of the law, it's impossible to enforce at all. There is no middle ground in this situa tion. And I'm not sure that it is enforceable. A sportsman's w ife heard a yelp from the road in front of her house. She rushed out to find that a neighbor had run over and killed her husband's favorite dog. "Gosh, I'm sorry," the neigh bor groaned. "But I guess I'll have to tell him. Where is he?" The wife replied that her hus band was around back of the house, and the neighbor started to go around to find him. "Better break the news to him easy like." the wife called. "First tell him it was one of the kids." WASHINGTON REPORT Defense Policies To Come Under Attack By FILTON LEWIS JR. The defense policies of Jolin Kennedy and Robert McNamara w ill come under heavy attack dur ing the early days of Congress. A Senate committee headed by Georgia's Richard Russell will in vestigate plans to scrap the Sky bolt air-to-ground, medium-range missile. Delene experts, including Missouri's Stuart Symington, have indicated they will oppose the White' House plan. Members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are re ported to be furious with the Ad ministration's idea. Another Administration scheme, not yet officially announced, calls for an end to the Nike-Zeus anti missile progiam. Messrs. McNa mara and Kennedy have long been cool to Nike-Zcus. depHe the fact that Congress in !1 called for its development "with all possible urgency." Tests since then have indicated that the Nike-Zeus only pos sible defense against enemy ICBM's is capable of everything tlie Army claims it is. On July 19. a Nike-Zeus lired from the Mid-Pacific Island of Kwajclein intercepted an ICBM launched from Vandcnberg Air Force Base. Calif. A similar test was successfully completed Dec. 1J. Another ICBM "killed" 100 miles above Kwaje lcm after a flight of 5.000 miles. President Kennedy hinted, on his recent radio-TV "fireside chat." that Nike-Zeus might go. He said the problem of anti mis sile delcn: was essentially one of shooting a bullet with a bullet. If an enemy fires thousands of bullets at us. Mr. Kennedy said, this creates a problem "which we have not mastered yet." Army scientists say ihe prob lems can be mastered. They point out that a Nike-Zeus direct hit is not necessary lo destroy an enemy missile. The Nike-Zcus car ries a nuclear warhead. A torrent of radiation unleashed with its explosion would disable the ene my warhead. Should that result, the enemy missile would continue in fiisht, its explosive power gone. It would (.ill 10 earth, inert. ConffTssional supporters nf ?-ikc-tcus claim that it is more i ian an anti missile missile Call lornia Coccres.-man Geotce MiJ !cr. a mcmt'cr of the Committee on Science and .VstronatitKS. sas: Miidies already rr.r.d? hy Army show that Nike-Zcus tan be modified to make it a satellite kuier. " Miller says that Nike-Zeus could he altered to blast out of the sky Soviet "spy satellites." He feels that production of Nike-Zeus com ponents must begin immediately. South Carolina Sen. Strom Thur mond, a general in the Army re serves, scoffs at claims that Nike Zeus is "too expensive." "We can have Nike-Zeus pro duction for less than the cost of rebuilding a single city or indus trial complex. The cost is com parable to the cost of weapons systems developed in the past. And when human lives at stake are added to these facts, the an swer is clear and emphatic. W must start production of the Nike Zeus now. Further delay increas es our risk. We can no lonccr run the risk of being half-safe." Thurmond agrees with Lt. Gen Arthur Trudeau. retired chief of Army Research and Develop ment, who says: "It is a lot safer and. in the long run. cheaper lo build wea pons and not use them than it is to need weapons and not hava them." Al manac By I nitrd Press International Today is Sunday. Dec. 30. th 364lh day of 12 wilh one to fol low: The moon is approaching its first quarter. Tlie morning stars are Venus and Mars. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In Hill. Dr. Sun Vat-Sen wa? elected as the first president of (he Republic of China. In 1927. Japan dedicated tha first subway in the Orient, which covered a route of not quite two miles. In 1936. one of the most bitter labor and management leuds of all times was started when mem bers of the Automobile Workers I'nmn staced a "sit-down'" strike asainsl General Motors in b:d for reco;nition. In 1947. Rumania's King Mi chael agreed to abdiraie, savins he was ocinc forced off the throne by Kxai Communists aided by the Soviet t'nion. A thouihl for today tlie F.n: lish editor and poet Sir Herbert Read, said the period from 1919 to 19!9 was "ihe ne-man s-car between the wars.'"