PAGE-I HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falll, Ore. Friday, January 4, 1963 EDSON IN WASHINGTON . STAR BRIGHT School For Foreign Policy Training Set Our Right To Know Reverberations are still being felt over the government's handling of the news in the Cuban crisis. The issue involves one of the basic ten ets of a democratic system: the people's right to know what their government is doing and, ultimately, to approve or disapprove. :" While no one demands the uncontrolled release of news particularly military news during a national emergency that might be of benefit to an enemy or cause a disastrous reaction among the public, there are fears ihat a new philosophy is developing in Wash ington that advocates not only withholding, put manipulating news to achieve desired re sults. ; A Defense Department official has, in fact, stated that the government has a right jot only to withhold information but even to. release false information if it will aid the national security. This question of "right" is a difficult one. A government probably has the "right" to do many things even to sacrifice half the population to save the other half from destruc tion. I In dire emergency, there is no time to in form the public on matters that require top level, split-second decision; .there is no time to debate and discuss and arrive at a national consensus. Governments and government officials, however, are often wrong, and the label "emergency," like "secret" or "classified," has an insidious way of coming to be used as a screen to deflect the searchlight of legiti mate public questioning. In a democracy, the people's representa tives or executives have a solemn duty to guard against any encroachment upon the people's right to know. That this is not always easy is no reason to slip into the opposite ex treme of deciding it is better if the people know nothing or know only something that is not true. World War II amply demonstrated that American news media were capable of volun tary censorship and co-operation with the gov ernment in information involving the national security. Certainly they are not now to be made into messenger boys of official prop aganda. A nation is most secure whose people are most fully informed and aware of the realities their leaders must deal with. A nation ceases to be free when its people are considered by their leaders as untrust worthy, immature and something to be manipulated. The Rules Changers (The Christian Science Monitor) New Frontiersmen in the American Con gress now are preparing to test whether in fact their side won or lost the last election. The test will bo particularly crucial in the House, where much of President Kenne dy's "must" legislation of the last Congress was staved off by a strong conservative coa lition. Liberal strategy centers once again on loosening the conservative hold on the House Rules Committee the routing center for all bills coming to the floor for a vote. In 1961 followers of the President suc ceeded in increasing the size of the Rules group from 12 to 15 members. But despite this aid, the House voted down a majority of the President's basic bills. , The liberals now contend that while those votes reflected the uncertain division of the country after a close presidential election in 1960, the 1962 midterm election endorsed the President's program. : This assertion remains strictly conjec tural. : But the liberals logically claim that they will only have a chance to test whether Con gress has heard the nation speaking with a different voice if the full Congress gets to vote on Kennedy bills. So they propose tn attempt three things as soon as Congress opens in January: 1. Increase membership of the Rules Com mittee to 15 again. 2. Establish a 21-day discharge rule that would force the Rules Committee to send up for a floor vote after that period any meas ure already approved by another House com mittee. 3. Establish a similar 7-day discharge rule to prevent delay of bills already passed hy both houses but awaiting action by a joint Senate-House conference committee. We do not believe there is anything sacred about the rules or size of the Rules Committee. But we are concerned about changing so many caution and stop signs to green lights at once. The two discharge rules make sense. There is no reason why measures duly in vestigated and approved by specialized com mittees should not at least reach the floor for general debate and voting; or why measures approved by a majority of both houses should then be pocket-vetoed by a tiny minority of the legislators. But, given some such safeguards against indefinite sidetracking, there seems to be no reason for the New Frontiersmen to seek to pack the committee in their favor as well. Suc cess in that effort would mean they could vote measures to the floor more hastily, or place upon them special rules regarding their amendability. The democratic system is not served by cutting all the checks and balances in order to level a roadblock. THESE DAYS Scapegoats Take Blame . Hy JOHN CHAMBERLAIN ; -This Is the limn (or resolutions 8i0 stocktaking. I haven't boon al;the job of writing a daily col umn for lone enough lo know what I should nviko resolutions about, hut in taking stock for the future I find, amid a welter of penis, one thing that is vastly encouraging: we have a Presi dent who is willing to admit mis takes. In looking back on the Ray of Pigs catastrophe, when air cover was withheld from the brave Cubans who stormed the beach only to tall into Castro's clutches. President Kennedy has confessed that he vrsonaIly pulled a booboo. This, unless I have been asleep at certain important juncture during the past half century, is something that is absolutely un precedented. Tlie standard high level proce dure has been to admit nothing and, when things have obviously gone wrong, to pick out a conve nient scapegoat and let him go. (q the samlicl.il block. Nobody in high places, for ex ample, has confessed to mak ing a mistake at Yalta. Nobody has stepped forward to take the blame for the plnsical isolation of West Berlin from the rest of Die Free World. Nobody has ac cepted responsibility for confusing lhe Chinese Communists with the southern agrarians who put Thom as Jefferson into the White House in IBM. The list might be extended aimost to infinity, but it is only charitable to limit it to a few examples. While we are on the subject. however, it would be fair to re call that some of the sacrificial goats are still in the land of the living. It is still not ton lale (or tendering the sort of ajo! ogies lo them that might make tlicir declining days a little hap pier than they ace tMherwi.se likely to be. There is old Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, (or example. He lives in Groton. Conn., not far from the Electric Hoat Company ship, yards in which the atomic sub marines air outfitted. Amid the bustle of preparations (or a pos sible naval war ol the (utiire. he broods upon naval campaigns of the past which he was com pelled, as a sacrificial goat, to tit out. Vet what did Admiral Kimmel, victim o( the Jafvane.se attack on Pearl ll,irlr, do lo deserve the role of goal? Far more was known in Washington than at Kim mel's post in Hawaii about the imiM-iKling plans of the Japanese during that fust ominous week of lecember in P41. The admu.il's iieriors, Irvm Commander in Chief Roosevelt and Admiral Har old Stark on down, knew on Dec. It from a cracked Japanese code message that war was coming somehow, somewhere, the next day, hut no move was made to warn Pearl Harbor. t'nwilling lo shoulder the blame for passiveness themselves, the Washington authorities fouled ev erything off on Kimmel and on the Army commander in Hawaii. U. (Jen. Waller Short, tieneral Short is now dead, and no apol ogy can reach lum, but Kimmel Is very much alive and still waiting vindication from those who might offer it to him. Another sacrificial victim who still walks the earth is Gen. IXiug las Mac Art bur. He was removed from his Pacific command for having the temerity and the fore sight to insist that the Chinese Communists were committed lo riding an imperialist tide that could easily engulf the whole world, (tut nobody has ajxiloguod to lum. or otherwise moved to remove the single official blot on his oUicnvise immaculate name. The business of insisting on jus tice (or sacrificial goats is an un rofitahle one, for nobody likes to listen to a catalogue of reproach es that cctws that ancient re liant of "I told you so." II is far better when tlie author of a mistake speaks up and absolves the sacrificial goat on his own. After tlie Hay of Tigs disaster, certain changes were made in the Criiti.il Intelligence Agency. Some C I A people who had favored a "hard'' approach to Castro dis appeared Irom familiar haunts along the Potomac and tlie nat ural conclusion was that they were being punished for advocat ing that air cover be extended to the Cuban invaders. H ancient precedent had continued to pie vail. Ibe injustice lo Uie "hards" in the CIA would never have been corrected. However, the mir acle has happened: President Kennedy has mferentially con fessed that tlie C I A. "hards'" weie right alter all. Is fer - -M:L .unr-J'' rwtf' i i" : : . " . -v. . Cr"C " m v 1: Letters To The Editor Provisions To the interested citizens' of this community and also lo those not too concerned. County zoning will directly or indirectly affect all. Tlie citizens of Springfield, Ore., due to lack of knowledge, lack of proper information had actually voted for a zoning prrogram (urban renewal!. It took about 2 years to yet rid of it. These are some of Uie reasons why the people of Springfield had voted it out in 1961. They didn't feel that It was right and just to have orderly, well kept properties declared blighted and deteriorat ed, and property owners being forced to sell their property not for a public purpose, but lo Private Developers. They didn't feel it was just to take from innocent citizens their homes and force them to leave property Ihey had owned and lived on for 25 or more years and at a price set by the court, in many cases less than half what it was worth. They didn't feel it was just to have un limited authority given to "inspec tors" to order changes such as more w indows, more rooms, larg er rooms or hallways, changes in location of bathrooms and lava tories, houses painted, reroofed, etc. In a recent Portland, Ore., news paper this was one of their news items. "County Zoning Violators lo Face Legal Action." "Hard Core" objectors who resist coun ty zoning ordinances were warned of possible legal action. The plan ning commission has a file of 100 to 150 "Known violators." Mostly (he violations consist of failure to obtain a building permit or construction that does not meet building or zoning ordinances. Continuing offenses may result in a fine of $100 per day, up to a total of $1,000. Non-continuing offenses could result in a $500 fine." Is this what we want in our community? In the "Blue Book" Revised M STRICTLY PERSONAL By SYDNEY 1. HARRIS The proper way to compliment a woman is not on what she has or is, but on what she has not or wants to be. The beautiful woman wants lo be assured that she is bright, and the bright wom an that she is attractive. For everyone has a desire to be, in a certain way, somebody else. This, of course, is as true ol men as of women although men pretend not to be so susceptible to flattery. There is no point in Idling a man Ihat he is good in something alout whtch he knows he is good; he will sim ply regard you as a fool. But tell the minister llial his sermon was logical and well reasoned as a legal brief, and he will put f up and rcsvnd, "You know. I did think of taking up the law once " When General Wolfe was about to conquer Quebec, he sighed Unit he would gladly have given up all his military victories if only he could have written Gray's "El egy." Likewise. Frederick t h e Great scorned those who praised bis martial feats: he wanted to be a French literary man rather than a Prussian general or. al any rate, a part of him wanted to be. and deeply desired assur ance Uiat he could have been Goethe took his literary genius for grained, on the other hand, and yearned (or immortality as a scientific innovator he foolishly thought that his "theory of light and colors" would outlast his poetry, and wasted a great dc.ll of time in defending his trivial discoveries. Isaac Newton, on the other hand, thought thai his profound scientilic work was less impor tant than his research into Bibli cal history, which any schoolboy could have emulated. The latter has been totally forgotten by now . while Newton s scientific explora tions remain a landmark of West ern civilization Sir Arthur Sullivan dismissed his music for Uie Savoy operettas as airy nothings, and hoped that his fame would rest nn his more ambitious works: but he has reached immortality only as the latter half of Gilbert i. In our time. Artur Schahel. Uie eminent pianist, desired praise not for his incomparable renditions of Mo zart and Beethoven, but for the atonal modern music he com posed, which is not worth one cadenza of a Mozart concerto. The man who makes vast sums of money wants to be regarded as a discriminating art collector: the Shakespearean actor wants to be tliougbt of as an astute (inan cial manipulator. And who knows what dreams Einstein had when he picked up his fiddle and scratched out a tune? POTOMAC FEVER .IKK is the magician of the year: First man to win the Or ange Bowl outstanding plaver award without leaving the bench lor a game lost 21) months earlier. Businessman's Interpretation of Internal Revenue Boss Can lin's new expense account rules: If two executives can figure nut over lunrh hnw tn get Caplin fired, they can bolh deduct the meal. Well, al least the calendar peo ple are optimistic about the fu ture. They not only run the linvj calendar all the way through lec. HI. but they even put a lit tle I!i4 calendar on tlie back page lievewing his holiday bills, one fellow savs it in t Ihe running into debt Ihat hurts, but tlie run ning into creditors The missile each armed srrv. tee pines lor ts one powerful enough tn demolish its sister services' budget demands. I mtod Nations planes slrafp a Katanga air base in the Congo One thing about our ss!e. We nev er quit just because were not sure whv we started Fl-ETVHER KNERF.L Draft on Klamath County Zoning Ordinances, prepared for Uie Klamath County Planning Commis sion by the Bureau of Municipal Research and Service, April 1961, it seems that it all depends on how our "neighborhood police pro tectors" will interpret the ordi nances. Do you feel you want to be ordered not only how, where and when you can put your buildings, fences etc., but also the kind of material you have to use, disre garding the fact that it may be completely out of your purchas ing power? I've been told, as others have been told, that in an S-A zone i Suburban Agriculture! and S-R zone I Suburban Residential) you may have your animals. Zoning will have no ill effects on the 4-H program. By the way, there are 48ti enthusiastic youngsters enrolled in animal projects. Many have more than one animal ex hibit. Check out for yourself the re quirements pertinent to these zones. (Page 9 of Uie previously mentioned "Blue Book.") 1. The front yard shall be a minimum of 30 feet. For build ings containing a conditional use the setback shall be a minimum of 40 feet. For buildings housing fowl, rabbits, cows, horses or other domestic animals the front yard shall be a minimum of 70 (cel. 2. The side yard shall be a minimum o( 10 (eet. For build ings containing a conditional use the side yard shall be a mini mum of 30 feet. For buildings housing fowl, rabbits, cows, hors es, or oilier domestic animals the side yard shall be a minimum of 50 feet on the side abutting a streef and 25 feet on Uie side abu ting a lot. So figure it out for yourself Ihat in order to comply with Uie "Blue Book" setback require ments, front yard minimums, etc.. your animals will be eliminated no because you won't be al lowed to have them, but because due to the "squeeze method" of setback requirements, you simply won t have room for them! We. the citizens of Klamath County, have Uie advantage of knowing some of the hardships, hectic and tense moments that another community has gone through, and one other has it to bear. So let us use this knowledge to make sure it doesn't happen lo our community! Ann Frei, 3209 Crest. Program I wish to express my thanks lo our police department for the wonderful work they are doing for our children, in teaching them the respect for firearms, their proper use and care, and in mak uig good marksmen out of them. They have devoted much time and patience to Uiese boys and girls, and will give them a great er understanding and respect tor our police, whom they soon learn have an interest in their safety and welfare. I feci sorry for anvone who oVes not know the pleasure of hunting and fishing, and dreaming along a river bank. When a child learns these things, and to love them, he will also feel nearer to his Creator. '. hope more children will take advantage of this course when it i available again Mrs. Louis Mandros, 4U'i Trinity St. By PETER EDSON Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NEA) Presi dent Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk have made a complete reversal on past foreign policy In putting their O.K. on a National Academy of Foreign Af fairs. The big idea is that it will train personnel from all govern ment departments in the conduct of foreign policy. Such an idea has been kicking around Washington for years but it has always been rejected. Trying to establish a government foreign policy trade school, it was felt, would narrow the outlook of dip lomats. It would set up too rigid a curriculum and put too many fixed ideas into official training. It was considered better to send rising government officials (or postgraduate research and train ing in existing universities. The new enthusiasm for doing the twist on this past policy and establishing a National Academy of Foreign Affairs comes from three principal sources. A presidential advisory panel headed by Vice President James A. Perkins of the Carnegie Corp. has recommended il. A Committee on Personnel for the New Diplo macy, headed by former Secre tary of State Christian A. Herter, has recommended it as one point in a much broader report on for eign service reorganizaUon re quested by Rusk. Incidentally, Perkins was a member of the Herter committee, too. But Uie principal impetus for this comes from a heterogeneous group of 12 senators and seven congressmen from left, right and center. For three years they have been advocaUng establishment of a "U.S. Freedom Academy" to educate government officials and private citizens on international communism and how to combat it. Their idea was to create a U.S. counterpart to the Russian politi cal warfare schools. In short, it was to train government officials how to fight the cold war and win it. One of the prime movers of this idea was Alan Grant Jr. of Or lando. Fla. Through the Council on Communist Aggrescion, which has considerable labor and liberal backing, Grant interested Rep. Walter Judd. R-Minn., in the idea. He interested Sen. Karl Mundt, R-S.D., and he got Sen. Paul Douglas, D-Ill., to co-sponsor it. Together they got senators like Dodd, D-Conn.; Goldwater, P. Ariz.: Case, R-N.J., and otliers. They got their Freedom Acade my bill through the Senate at the end of 1960, but it died in the House. It got no place in the last Congress, but it will come alive in Uie next one. A Gallup poll shows 69 per cent support, 14 per cent opposed. So Kennedy has assigned Rusk to prepare legislation and he has assigned Under Secretary for Ad ministration William H, Orrick Jr., formerly an assistant attor ney general, Yale whiz kid and Stanford lawyer, to organize an interdepartmental group to work it out. The administration idea is to set it up on a somewhat broader basis than the Mundt - Douglas Freedom Academy bill. The Na tional Academy of Foreign Af fairs would not do away with the War College, Annapolis, West Poinl or Uie Air Force academies. It would not even replace Uie State Department Foreign Serv ice Institute or other specialist schools which have been training government officials for overseas service for some years. It is Congress which will really write Uie ticket on this. While Congress is considering this idea, they might also take a look at a leaf from Uie book of Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver. He has found that a lot of his two-year volunteers would make good State Department material. There may be the germ of an idea here for one course in the new national academy. Perhaps the way to learn to be a good dip lomat is to go get the feet wet and Uie hands calloused by asso ciation with the common people of the underdeveloped countries o( the world, instead of trying to learn how to combat communism in a lecture room or out of a book. This would be in the best tradition of the "Ugly American." WASHINGTON REPORT . . . Commies Infiltrate Peace Organizations By FULTON LEWIS JR. Members of the House Un-American Activities Committee may be proud. Their recent investiga tion into so-called peace groups was eminently successful, if the anguished cries of assorted left ists from New York to Moscow are any indication. Soon after Radio Moscow broad cast a withering blast at Ameri can "w itchhunters," members of Congress began receiving mail from back home. Investigation showed that many of those who w ircd Washington to protest about the hearings were Communist Party members. With disclosure that various peace groups had been heavily infiltrated by Communist agents, the committee was subject to a new barrage of left-wing pro tests. I. F. Stone, a veteran Commu nist fronter who edits a four page Washington Newsletter, set the tone: The HUAC investiga tion was "the dirtiest such affair suite Uie days of McCarthy." The National Guardian, de scribed by a Congressional Com mittee as "Ihe virtual official propaganda arm of Soviet Rus sia." made the hearings its ma jor story. The "L'nAmcritans' at tack" was a vicious smear against peace-loving women, the publica tion reported in a story that be gan on page one and rambled on to page eight. "Tlie Militant" is a fanatically left-wing rag. published "in the interests of Uie working people" in New York. "HUAC w itchhunt ers" were roasted in a page one "Militant" story that praised peace leaders for defying t h e committee. The "Weekly People." published by the Socialist Labor Party, saw the HUAC hearings as an attack by "the vested interests" upon the peace movement. Note: Committee investigators discovered that Communist functionaries were following the order of party boss Gus Hall when Uiey infiltrated certain peace croups. Less than two years ago. on Jan. :n. ism. Hall told tlie I S Communist Party's Na tional Committee: "It is necessary to widen Uie struggle for peace, to raise its level, lo involve far greater num bers, to make it an issue in ev ery community, every people's organisation, every labor union, every church, every house, every street, every point of gathering of our people. . . . "It is imperative to brine every onemen, women, youth and yes. even children into the struggle. "It is essential to give full sup port to Uie existing peace bodies, to their movements and the strug gles they initiate, to building and strengthening their organizations. "It is also necessary to recog nize the need for additional peace organizations . . . above all. Com munists will intensify their work (or peace and their efforts to build up peace organizations." That many Communists had fol lowed those instructions to the letter was clearly demonstrated by the committee. That the com mittee then came under frontal attack was not unexpected. Texas' John Tower, slated sev eral months ago to become chair man of the Senate Republican Campaign Committee, will not get Ibe job. The reason: Northern liberals objected to Tower, a Southerner. The main job of Uie committee chairman is lo raise (unds, and only one Senator raised more money for his party last year than did Tower: the outgoing chairman. Barry Goldwater. Kentucky's Thruston Morion, a former GOP National Chairman, can have the position. Reelected by a comfortable majority in I9iv2. he knows party leaders and workers across the country. Al manac By United Press International Today is Friday. Jan. 4. Uie fourth day of 13 with 31 to follow. The moon is approaching its lull phase. The morning stars are Mars and Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this day include Sr. Isaac Newton, discoverer of the law of gravity, in 1842. On this day in history: In I854. Sen. Stephen' A Doug las introduced into the Senate a bill containing proposals for the organization of the Nebraska Ter ritory. In 18Rj. Dr William W. Grant of Davenport. Iowa, performed the first appendectomy in medi cal history with Uie patient mak ing a complete recovery. In 18!'. Utah became the 45lh state to be admitted into Uie Union. A thought for the day: Ameri can humorist James Thurber said: "Early to rise and early to bed makes a male healthy and wealthy and dead."