PAGE- HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falli, Oregon Tuesday, January I. 1913 EDSON IN WASHINGTON . . . Cuba Ransom Reveals Problems Of Castro Zoning Hassle Prompts Clarification It would appear from our letters to the editor, and from comment from citizens that' there are several principles at stake In the present hassle about zoning in county areas. While it might be possible to discuss the areas of principle involved, it is doubtful that anyone can present logical argument against the results that can be and generally are attained when zoning is effected. The Herald and News is firmly committed to the principle that zoning is good. We would qualify this only to comment that it must be properly effected. While numerous letters to the editor have been published without comment, we feel con strained at this time to set straight some of the obvious distortions and erroneous conclusions -that have crept into the discussion both in the letters and in other public forums. We have no desire to become argumentative in this presentation. We are certain that well meaning citizens will welcome presentation of the facts regardless of their viewpoint in any area of discussion., It is in this light that we take up point-by-point discussion in these col ums some of the issues involved and some of the questions raised in the controversy up to this point. Not all of this material can be con tained in this one article, so other points will be taken up as we go along. Probably this can be done best in a sort of informal question and answer style of format. To start with, we'll take up the recent , letter pointing up the difficulties encountered in Springfield, Ore., which actually was not a zoning situation, but concerned urban re-' newal two entirely different things. 1. The claim is made that zoning and urban renewal are the same thing. Not so. Zoning and urban renewal are two entirely different things. They are authorized under separate laws, rim by separate boards, ini THESE DAYS Auto Production Hiked By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN In 1055 Detroit sold more than 7.1 million cars. The following year the automobile market ' dropped way off and the motor manufacturer! have been shell shocked ever since. " So battle-weary and cautious have they been that, when the car sales figures for 1062 promised to J-each seven million for the first time in seven years, the immedi ate response to such unaccus tomed Rood fortune was to predict a drop-back for 11H13. Just re- , cently. however, some of the more adventurous Detroit bigwigs have rliircd to veer to the side of op timism, American Motors Presi dent Roy Ahernethy litis predict ed tnat seven million cars will be sold in 13 making the first two hack-tn-wnrk soven-million-car years in history. And Chairman Frederick Ronner ol General Mo tors has also put on some rose colored spectacles when looking at Uie sales prospects for Uic new year. This column has no business trying to function as a market tip sheet, but it would like to go on record right now In saying that, barring a drastic political-cum-military disaster, Detroit will never sell fewer than seven mil lion cars In any year of the fu ture. The seven-million floor is implicit In the statistics. It is also implicit In the new way of life of the American people, who are THEY SAY... We have words th.it mislead, such as "free enterprise" or "capitalism" or "socialism " The sslcm . , . which we call capi talism is very close In what oth ers call socialism. Holh woids should be thrown out . Dr. Charles Frankel, Colum bia 1'nlvrrslty pmlrssor of philosophy. When lli federal government gets behind it and everybody knows It is absolutely fair, it isn't gambling. Harry 8. Truman, advocating a national lottery to help pay off the public debt. It false heroics to put your foot down aid your siren on, lump ing everyone will stand back and admire you. . iJ W. Stevens of the Inter national Assn. of Fire Chiefs, slating that more firemen die In trallle accidents on the way to lire than In fighting fires. tiated by separate agencies, and are created for different purposes. Zoning has for its goal the preservation of property values and the direction of orderly community growth. The purpose of urban renewal is to eliminate blighted areas. 2. Springfield did not vote out its zoning ordinance. The city of Springfield was zoned Sept. 15, 1947, and is zoned today. There has been no attempt as far as we'know to do away with zoning. The writer has consider able acquaintance with former Mayor Ed Harms, and it is our impression that Spring field has attempted for the past couple of years to establish a planning office; they presently receive planning services from the Lane County planning agency. 3. It is claimed that zoning requirements are such that they state the kind of material an owner would have to use in constructing a building. Not so. The zoning ordinance con tains no provisions as to the type of materials to be used in construction. Zoning applies only to the use of the land. 4. It is alleged that zoning will squeeze animals out of the suburban area. This is an incorrect assumption in that the ordinance only provides that adequate space shall be provided for farm animals. As a matter of fact, only a very small area would have any animal restrictions. In those areas with animal restrictions, the owners would be able to keep all existing animals and replace all exist ing animals In perpetuity. Other points will be discussed in future comment herein. An important factor to bear in mind in this controversy is that affected property owners will have the right to vote if the proceedings carry that far (and we are hopeful that they do). A certain amount of hysteria has been introduced into this situa tion. Responsible citizens should consider the objectives and seek ways to bring the matter back into proper perspective. spread out In a suburban patlcrn of living that makes two cars to the middle-income family a virtu al necessity. First, let us look at the stalls tics. With more than 70 million cars on the roads, Detroit has only to tap the replacement mar ket lo sell seven million in a year. Some automobiles may last long er than a decade, but when they do they usually gravitate into the hands of teen-age Unkercrs who, with a genius for cannibalizatinn, keep old jalopies going by flesh, ing them out with stuff from the junkyard. The 10-year-old car may not he a candidate for a scrappage statistic in every ease, hut in being passed on to junior it is virtually certain to be re placed by mom and dad for adult use, so it need not figure in a discussion of new car sales pros pects. Thus the auto replacement floor would seem lo be guaranteed at seven million, which is snme Uung that sltould normally be reached without aggressive sales manship. Even beyond the seven million figure the dealers should not have very much trouble in the near future. For the big war and post-war baby boom seems about to pay off. with an ex panded rush of young couples in their earliest 20s coming Into Uic market for cars. The population statistics won't permit a drop back for the Detroit of the mid dle and late 1960s. Admittedly. It is no longer a matter of keeping up with I he Joneses in automobiles: people are willing to drive anything that will time, which means that old cars are kept going (or a long time. Any look at a commuter slop on any railroad that feeds working males into a metropolis will show a most ramshackle col lection of automotive junk whose sole virtue is that it still moves. Rut you may be sure that lor ev ery jalopy that is parked all day while the male member of the family is busy working in Ihe city, another and newer car is taking the housewife to the shop ping center or Die children to mu sic lessons or rehearsals (or Ihe school play. Nor is the second car Ihe properly of the affluent (ew. The (act Is that at least half of all the non-farm families in Amer. ica have "disposable" or alter ta. income of $.vnno in $llmi a year. Since people will notori ously g0 without other things lo achieve the utmost in personal mobility, this means that about 20 million lamilies can take two cars in their stride with help from a little judicious linancing. The opportunity to upgrade the $.".0(Xi $10 000 family's second car into something newer and belter beck ons the aggressive dealer, and if the promised federal tax cut ma terializes Detroit might find it self wilh a record eight-million-car year to Its credit. This could happen in 1963 if Congress would only hurry up its schedule on tax reform. At the tag end of Die 1920s, the car market fell off suddenly be cause everyone in the middle income group had finally gotten ,a car. and no car. outside of a . few of Mr. Ford's Model T's. was very old. There was no re placement market in the early IMOs, which was one reason for Ihe virulence of Ihe depression. But the replacement market to day otters a broad and well defined cushion. And since slecl, aluminum, rubber, glass and syn thetics all rest lo some extent on the automobile replacement cushion, this is a good augury for Ihe economy. Any year in which Detroit sells seven mil lion cars is bound to be relatively prosperous. And the seven-million-car year is almost certainly with us to stav. POTOMAC FEVER Reading the "highest authority" stories from Palm Beach, one New Frontiersman boasts mat he crews on Uie only' ship of state that leaks at the top. Fidel Castro blasts the U.S. again. Ilememher Ihe good old days when a Cuban heel was a part of a shoe? Governor Rockefeller's second inaugural address strikes a middle-of-the-road note. You're not quite sure whether he wants to run against JFK in '64 or against Lyndon Johnson for the privilege of getting on a ticket with Kenne dy. There's some talk of collecting binds lor ransoming Cuban pris oners again. After three times, we gel permanent possession of Uiem. No wonder the ladies look so happy. With the end of Ihe ma jor bowl games, they're glvro television back to Ihe women. Bulletin, Palm Beach: It can be reported en Die highest an tlxrity. as IW opens, thai Presi dent Kennedy thinks. This is not necessarily true of all members ol his administration. FLETCHER KNt'BLX mm Letters To The Took The Tour. Before I go into this "tour." I wish to state that I have only the greatest, love for Klamath Falls now and have had for a good number of years, also, I do not want to step on anyone's feet or insult them in any way. The "tour" 1 speak of is the one Don Sloan mentioned in let ters to the editor. Herald and News dated Monday, Dec. 31, 12. 1 went down Altamont Drive. Summers Lane, Homcdale Road and Shasta Way, and I did find the realities that Mr. Sloan's let ter stated were present, howev er, I went a little farUier. I went lo Ihe zoned area in town to see what it was like. At the foot of our new viaduct I saw a junk yard; from our court house I saw a huge pile o( saw dust across the street; 1 went down Commercial. Broad, Sec ond, Third, Oak, Walnut streets and saw the same things that I see in our suburban area. I went down Main Street and was hit up several times for mon ey. On Main Street at night cars race with no regard for life or limb. I drove a good many streets that have paved "bumps." No, Mr. Sloan, do not kick the suburban area, please find out a little more about it first. Shasta Way 100 (eet wide, 40 years ago! Boy, you just don't know it was paved in tlie late 30s. (South Sixth Street .wasn't (our lanes until 1947.) IX you had gone out ' in the suburban area 40 years ago and said we must zone you would have been laughed out of Uie state for no one dreamed that Klamath Falls would expand as far as it has. Just for the record in 1939 when my folks built a tar paper By SYDNEY J. HARRIS A 7-ycar-old boy I know know very well left a note on his fath er's dresser just before Christ mas, asking (or an Eastern Ring-Necked Snake lor a pet. At Ihe end of Ihe exhaustive re cital about Ihe snake's virtues, its amiability, its well-bred feed ing ll.ihils, and ils all-round suit ability as a member of the house hold, the boy appended a P S. to the note "1 speld some words rong." he wrote, "becase I did not stop to think "t The boy didn't get the snake. I am sorry to report, owing lo Uie horrified objections of his mother, a woman oi overwhelm ing sensibility. But his falher would have brought him a whole nest of idcfanged pythons as a reward for that wonderful Post Script. "1 did not slop to think." How many of us would ecr say that" How many of us would exhibit the candor, the modesty, the blithe confession of thoughtless ness When I spell a word wrong in Ihe column, and it happens In get into print, I b'ame the type setter, or the prool -reader, or rcn-i( possible the dictionary lor betraying my literacy. More importantly, when 1 make a mistake in judgment or taste or naliMtion. it would not occur to me to say. "I did not stop to shack on Miller Avenue we were the fourth ones on that street some even lived in tents! Soon thereafter others came out and built. Now there is not a shack where the folks live but a nice house that would be acceptable in any district, also, tents are no longer in existence. This is ihe way the suburban" area waj built, like our great country a little at a time, a few boards and nails and you have a home (shack lo you, home to me and others!. After World War II this area began to really grow until we were in a spot and had to get proper sewer facilities. More and more people came' with fine homes, some built then looked, and saw a shack and yelled, "Why doesn't someone do some thing about the shacks?" (Joe Blow lived Uicre; he was there first. ) Yes, there is an old slaugh terhouse south of Uie new Cath olic Church and in the area of fine new homes, as it has been for 40 years or longer. I do not care if the suburban area is zoned or not, but I do care if I have a right to vote or object in any way except as I am told by Mr. Blackman's state ment in Uie Herald and New s dat ed Dec. 31, 1962, quote "The, purpose of these public meetings will be to hear testimony from all interested residents living w ith in hearing areas, not to answer questions." unquote. This in my thinking is not just nor proper in the freedom we are supposed lo be living in. I have no doult that some day our suburban area will be zoned as it is laid out. However, we shall never be kicked into it; we shall only be zoned with grace and the liberty of doing so. There are a good many people still liv- STRICTLY PERSONAL think." Instead. I will usually find some defense, or explana tion, or rationalization, that glibly shifts the blame from me lo something outside me I was giv en the wrong information, or I was misinterpreted, or I really meant it in another context. What we lose as we grow older is the marvelous freshness and honesty of youth that is not afraid or ashamed to say. "I did not stop to think." I have no doubt at all that this is w hat Jesus meant when he said that "a lit tle child shall lead us " Because only this spirit, which dulls as we grow older, can show us the right road to our true selfhood. Millions of words have been written on how and what children can learn from us; but little has been said about what we can learn from children. Yet the edu cation that a p.iren: with open eyes, ears and mind can get from a growing child is incompar-, ably more Important than the edu cation a child can get from all its formal training. What we get ut Uie child has nol been damaged in early years' is a portrait of our lost Eden, of a land in which shame and vanity and self-decei' have barely begun to erect their bristling bar ricades. In a (ew yers. of course, the child will become more like us; thai is lo say. he will be "educated" and skilled in ortho dox hypocrisy. Editor ing in Uie suburban area who will yell like stuck hogs if it is done otherwise, I wish to say ig closing that Washington,' D.C., as Mr. Sloan stated, is zoned. However, within walking distance of the Capitol are shmis, "Our National Dis grace," quoted from David Brink ley's Journal on television. J. R. Gustafson, 1724 Dayton. Endorsement It is with increasing concern and astonishment that I have read in the past few weeks various let ters to the editor, expressing un qualified, severe opposithn to the proposed Klamath County Zon ing. The fact that Uie newspaper has been flooded with letters taking this stand, and the fact that the newspaper account of last Wed nesday night's planning commis sion meeting reported only one individual expressing himself in favor of zoning, has moved me to write this letter placing myself on record as being in favor of wcll planned county zoning. A wxrd to those vast numbers of you that are in favor of zoning: Let's not keep those thoughts to ourselves; I propose Uiat we in dividually and strongly express ourselves in favor of the proposed planning at the respective meet ing allocated to our particular real property area. The opponents of Klamath Coun ty zoning have attacked the prin ciple of zoning or planning by our county continuously since this proposal, has been brought he lore the public. Little or no rec ognition or expressions of appre ciation have been given to the members of the County Planning Commission. Mr. Blackman and other county officials who have worked months and long hours trying to make this "planning for the future" a reality. Again, to the proponents of well planned county zoning, we must act; the time is now. We can't wait for Uie "the other fellow" to do this for us. Let's state our opinions pubUcly here and now. William E. Chilcotc, 1504 Patterson Street. Sabin Fortunately Sabin Pofio Vaccine has been developed and has been' approved by the United States Health Service. It is easily ad ministered in a sugar cube. Sabin Polio Vaccine has been made available to children and adults in community wide drives in nearby Jackson and Siskiyou counties, as well as many other places throughout Uie United States. The Klamath County Health De partment advises that there were no polio cases in Klamath Coun ty in 1982 Will il take a tragedy lo wake us up? How can we make Sahin Polio Vaccine available 't all in a com munity wide drive this year" Britla Franz QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q What acid is present la sour milk? A Lactic. Q I'ow many people were lost In Ihe Titanic disaster? ' A-ln all. 1.517. Q What basic American prin ciple was established through the trial of Teter Zenger? A The right of freedom of the press. By PETER EDSON Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NEAl-It will take six months to complete deliv ery of the second half of $33 mil lion worth of food, drugs, medi cal, dental and surgical equip ment lo Fidel Caslro as ransom for the 1.113 Bay of Pigs inva sion captives already released and returned to the United States. What the Cuban Communist pup pet gets out of it is a two-year supply which Russia and the Red bloc countries were not able to give him in return for sugar. It makes up a 230-page list of over 10.000 items. Scarce foods, particularly baby foods, make up $30 million of the ransom. They were supplied by 22 United States food processors whose participation in this mercy operation has not been fully ap preciated nor given the credit de served. They were contacted through the Grocery Manufacturers of Ameri ca, Inc., by their president, Paul S. Willis, of New York. Their con tributions, because of their bulk, will make up most of the ship ments in coming months. The list of foods to be supplied is a sorry confession of the run down condition of Castro's Com munist economy. A partial list of what it has not been able to supply the Cuban peo ple includes: shortening and cook ing oils, diet foods, onion, tomato and chicken soups, canned meats, vegetables and fruits, white flour, baking soda, breakfast cereals, juices, cake mix, puddings, gela tin, cocoa, dehydrated potatoes, soda crackers, macaroni and noo dles, canned corn with peppers, evaporated milk. The other $23 million ransom is payable in medical supplies. Greatest demand was for anti biotics, blood plasma, steroid hor mones, insulin, tranquilizers, tet anus toxoids and antitoxins. Brand names were specified for most items. They were taken from two-year-old catalogs. Some items requested are no longer in pro duction. Modern substitutes were provided. Principal suppliers were 66 members of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association, whose president is Eugene Bcesley of In dianapolis. Not all the 140 mem bers of the trade association make items on the Cuban list. But through their Washington office under Dr. AusUn Smith, phone calls went out that rounded up WASHINGTON Udall Tactics Rouse Congressional Ire By FULTON LEWIS JR. To Secretary of Uie Interior Stewart Udall, as subUe a lob byist as Sonny Liston, falls the task once again of lining up votes to pack the House Rules Commit tee. Two years ago the House voted 217-212 to increase that committee by three votes and give control to Administration lack ics. It was Udall. wheeling and dealing in the early days of that session, who picked up enough votes to give President Kennedy victor;'. Republicans and Democrats alike received the Udall calls. The Interior Secretary was blunt. In a call to Colorado's Rep. J. Ed gar Chenoweth, Udall brought up Uie frying pan Arkansas recla mation project, one of great im portance to Chcnoweth's constitu ency. Word was passed to the Congressman that, unless he vot ed right, the project would be against packing anyway. Rep. Alton Lennon. a North Carolina Democrat, accused Udall of blackmail. One of the Interior Secretary's top aides. Orren Bea ty Jr., told a newspaper, "The rightsville Beach plant i in Len non's district' is one of the llth hour decisions subject to review." That plant, a multi-million dollar federal project, was then under Administration consideration. The story added that the deci sion was lied up with the fight over liberalizing the Rules Com mittee. Lennon, in a telegram to l'dall. wrole: "This suggested threat of blackmail of a member of Congress is inconceivable and I behove it will be rightfully re sented by the lair-thinking people of North Carolina and America." Republican Hep. William Hen ry Harrison of Wyoming c"t a call (rom l'dall that he said le!t him flabbergasted Rep. Charles Teague. a Cali fornia Republican, ca'led L'dail's lobbvmg campaign the gvralcst and most successful lie had seen in Ins six-year House career He told of a Republican colleague, lacing possible extinction at tlie hands of a IVmocralic reappor tioning committee, who was in formed that his district would re main sate if he voted right He toid the message bearer to jump in tlie lake Other members of the Admin-f: the initial $11 million shipment in short order. Thirty five manufacturers of medical, surgical, dental and vet erinary equipment and seven sup pliers of miscellaneous X-ray ma chines and laboratory equipment also contributed. A list of the 130 donor com panies and Uie amounts of their products contributed for the ran som will be announced by the American Red Cross as soon as clearances are obtained. Departments of State, Justice and the Internal Revenue Service have given assurances Uiat the 130 firms will not be prosecuted for their cooperation under trad ing with the enemy, anU-trust and income tax laws. AU dona tions will be considered tax-deductible contributions to the Amer ican Red Cross at wholesale val ue. Back of Uiis tremendous opera tion, executed in a few days, was a complicated financial transac tion for completion of the ran som payment. A $33 million letter of credit had to be obtained to assure Cas tro that the balance of the ran som beyond the down payment would be forthcoming. This was arranged through Royal Bank of Canada, in Montreal, as banker for Cuba. It was guaranteed b'y two $26.5 million letters of credit from Bank of America in San Francisco and Morgan Guaranty Trust of New York. Finally, the American Red Cross and Ameri can individual supply firms were bonded by Continental Insurance Co., of New York. Castro's insistence on all this financing explains in part his de mand for an additional $2.9 million cash ransom just before the final 400 prisoners were released. When Castro released the first 60 ill and wounded prisoners last April, he was promised a $2.5 million ransom payment by Uie Cuban Families Association, through Royal Bank of Canada. When the Cuban Families could not raise this amount, Castro slammed shut his prison doors on further releases. He got his blood money, plus, interest, in Uie final holdup after New York Attorney James Dono van thought he had completed ar rangements for the release of all prisoners. The list of donors of this $2.9 million ransom, raised by Ally. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy and Gen. Lucius Clay, still has to be smoked out. REPORT istralion learned quickly from Udall. On June 12, 1962, as tin House considered an Administra tion proposal lo hike the national debt limit to 303 billion, Roy Lin Ion, a Defense Department bu reaucrat, telephoned Wally Ed wards, Washington representative o( the Chrysler Corporation. He asked Edwards to find out how Michigan Republicans were go-' ' ing to vole on the debt ceiling and added: "If they do not vote for the 308 billion, defense contracts in Michigan may be curtailed. The Missile B program in which your corporation. Chrysler, is interest ed, could be in jeopardy." When Edwards approached Rep. Gerry Ford. Michigan Re publican, he was told: "I hope this won't embarrass you. I hope and trust it will not embarrass your corporation in its bona fide ef fort to compete in bidding for de fense contracts, but I want you to know that House Republicans in Michigan are not going to be blackmailed by this kind of ap-, proach (rom the Department of Defense." Al manac By United Press International Today is Tuesday, Jan 8, Ihe Slh day of 19M with 337 to fol low. The moon is approaching its full phase. " The morning stars are Mars and Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. (in this day in history: In 1815. General Andrew Jack son won the battle of New Orleans killing some 700 British troops and wounding 1.400 more In lStvT, Congress enacted legis lation providing suffrage for Ne groes in the District of Columbia In 1917. tiie United States Su preme Court upheld , tlie Webb Kenyon Act which prohibited the shipment of alcoholic beverages from "wet" to "dry" states. A thought (or the day Ameri can President Abraham Lincoln said: "Truth is ihe best vuidic- lion against slander."