PAGE 6-A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath FaJU, Oregon Wednesday, January I, 1063 EPSON IN WASHINGTON . . . Farm Bureau Argues For Less Controls Herald anb3!?Urj$ "Relax, Maybe It's Nothing Serious!" Zoninq Hassle Needs. Clarification- Among the confused points at hand in the proposed zoning issue is the allegation that there was no opportunity for discussion prior to the hearings now being conducted. While we do not have the exact schedule at hand, our recollection is that considerable newspaper publicity was tended the several area meetings held in schools and other public buildings during mid-and late-1962. We do not know the degree of attention given the topic by other communications media, but assume that it was ample, by their standards. In addition, notice was sent by students of the various schools to their parents of the proposed sessions, which had as their objec tive a detailed explanation of what was to be included in the proposed zoning regulations. It is obvious that not all persons affected have children in school. However, we consider the other efforts at publicizing the meetings as adequate in most circumstances. It is regrettable, as much as it is a fact, that most persons affected did not take the op portunity to let themselves be heard at these important pre-hearing conferences conducted by the Planning Commission. Had the proper persons taken advantage of this opportunity to inform themselves and be heard, we are cer You Have No Social Security Reserve (The Corvallis Gazette Times) While the nation speculates on the chanc es of a tax reduction in 1963, most people are overlooking a whopping $2 billion tax boost that is already on the books. It will get almost every working American and every employer. It is, of course, the boost in social security taxes voted during the 1961 session of Congress. The rise in payroll deduction is from three and one-eighth per cent to three and five-eighths per cent on the first $4,800 of earnings. This is matched by the employer so the total increase is one per cent. The maxi mum tax for the year thus goes up from $150 to $174, or 16 per cent. This is the ninth boost in Social Securi ty rales since the system became a law back in 1935. It is a tax boost of $24 for everyone working who makes $4,800 a year as well as a tax boost for every employer for the same amount for each employee. It should also be noted rates are scheduled for another hike in 1966 and again in 1908. If Mr. Kennedy's medicare plan, which is wrongly tied to Social Security, goes through this session of Congress, it is anyone's guess what it will do to the rates paid by employers and employees. No one can make a good esti mate of the increases because no one knows how much the program would cost. Millions of Americans live under the il lusion they carry insurance by virtue of their payments into the Social Security fund. Noth ing could he farther from the truth. Actual THESE DAYS What Are By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN When it comes In civil liberties, or the "hVrul" definition there of, we seem to have a double standard. To begin, when the supporters of desegregation invaded lunch rooms and chain stores in the Car olina last year, civil libertarian students in far-distant Providence, R.I., started a scholarship fund for Negro hoys and girls who had the misfortune In be ex polled from cnllcse (or taking pail in the Southern sit-in demon strations. And there was a rash of sympathy picketing in the north of chain variety stores which had been following segregation poli cies in their branches below the Masnn-Dtxon line. For alt sincere civil libertarians, the author of this column, who, happens to be the staunchest sort of believer in the free iecch pro vision of the first amendment, has a great deal of sympathy, peace ful picketing in defense of free expression of opinion sliould al ways be supported. But why is it that the passion for civil liberties is seldom extended to those who fall afoul of the local police be cause of anti-Communist demon strations? The double standard in the de fense of picketers by civil liberta rian groups has been very much in evidence ever (.incc "0 right wing demonstrators were pounced upon on Dec. 15. 19fi2, for invading Klein's Store in Vonkers, N.Y.. with signs that called attention to goods on (he slielves lhat had al legedly been manufactured in countries east of the Communist lion Curtain. Among the invaders tain that many of the areas of the present con troversy never would have developed. There seems to be a popular miscon ception that property owners were not accord ed the opportunity to be heard, and that they were not asked about their feelings in the mat ter. As a matter of fact, at all of the meetings held by the Planning Commission, much was made of the attempt to obtain attitudes and ideas both pro and con on the matter and degree of zoning. Another misconception comes from the allegation that zoning will increase taxes in the suburban area, or areas affected. The subject of taxes is always a fuzzy area. But it is not possible to say that zoning, per se. is the cause of any increase in taxes. Taxes in Oregon are determined by the market value of the property involved. In Klamath County, property is assessed for tax purposes at 25 per cent of the market value. The fact that the land is in one zone or another makes no dif ference in establishing the tax base. It can reasonably be argued that an increase in the market value of a piece of property can in crease the tax base. The two might not be re ciprocal, but certainly it can be agreed that , there is an area of consonance that cannot be overlooked. ly, there is no guarantee you will ever get back the money you and your employer pay into your Social Security account. Benefits are not paid out of an accum ulation of reserves, as they would be by a private insurance company, but are financed almost entirely out of current tax income. No reserve is accumulated and no element of pre payment is involved. If a private insurance company ran its finances the way the Federal government runs this program its officers would be jailed for the next 2000 years. From this little dissertation we don't want people to get the impression we are op posed to Social Security. Not only is it a vast welfare umbrella, protecting to some extent those people who are not able to or won't put aside money for their old age. but bene fit checks are cashed and the money is quickly spent. Its effect on the national economy is akin to that envisaged in the old Townsend Plan. The system keeps money in circulation, contributes heavily to consumption of goods and indeed has become a major prop under the economy. We do object to its not being known as a tax, which it is, we object to the illusion created in the minds of the people that they have their own fund set aside for their old age. Benefits will he paid only so long as the Federal government is able to pay them out of current taxes. If this is no longer possible, we presume the whole economy and perhaps the government will he kaput anyway. Civil Liberties? of Klein's were members of the New York Conservative Party. Although the anti-Communist dem onstrators were, by all reports, dignified and orderly in their march on Klein's, detectives failed in a couple of instances to han dle the invaders gently. Eight of the demonstrators were held tor an hour and a half and ar raigned later in the day on charg. es of disorderly conduct. A cou ple of days later the charges were amplified to include allegations of prolanity and molestation of the Klein shelves, although on lookers had failed to note any evidence of such unseemly be havior. Well, the trial of the anti-Corn-mumsl demonstrator. w a s set lor Jan. 7 in Vonkers. Although we live in hopes, we doubt very much that the new national student movement, a co alition of college civil rights sup porters who are busy planning boycotts against companies which discriminate against minority groups in their hiring practices, will take any part in the delense of the eight antiCom.ounists There is. of course, a legal doubt that tlie first amendment guarantee of the right o( dee speech can be used constitution ally to cover the invasion of pri vate properly. As the late Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once said, nobody has the right lo slmut "fire" in a crowded the ater unless there really happens lo be a fire. The right to control behavior in a theater belongs lo the owners of the premises, who make tlie rules governing the us ago of their own property, P r e sumably, the owners ot the Klein Slore in Yonkers have a compar able righl lo lay down the "rules of the road" for traffic in Iheir aisles. Rut if the case for Klein's in Yonkers be conceded, the same Constitutional dispensation should be accorded the owners of ham burger stands and drug store soda fountains in the South. If there is (o lie a limitation on the reach of the provisions of the first amend ment, that limitation should lie the same everywhere. Contrariwise, if the defense of free speech carries into the interi ors of chain stores and coffee shops in North Carolina on the ground Uiat shops and restau rants arc "public conveniences.'' then lhat delense of free speech should carry inide tlie portals of Klein's Store in Yonkers. In a democratic republic, what is fair for one is or should be fair for all Human nature being what it is, it is probably unrealistic lo expect our civil libertarians to rise above the parochial perspec tive, of "civil liberties for our side " As they recall il. Voltaire was talking through his hat when lie said. "1 wholly disagree with what yon sa, bill I will delend to the death vour t ight lo say it." They think thai Voltaire, that sly old fellow, had a menial reserva tion and they have consequent ly amended Ihe Voltairean dic tum to read: "1 may have mixed Icelings about what you say. hut if you can prove to me thai my nx has Uien gored I will deleiul lo live death your righl lo help my side with your Insistence on free speech for jour.elt " IN WASHINGTON . . By RALPH de TOLEDANO Individual liberties are being eroded in this country, Supreme Court Justice William O. Doug las has warned. He puts tlie blame on arbitrary government acts, censorship, and the failure of Washington correspondents to swarm all over the Federal es tablishment in their search for the facts. i Ironically, a 90-line Associated Press report of these charges de voted the first 63 lines to Mr. Justice Douglas's remarks on tlie Fifth Amendment, then added two paragraphs on what "much of the interview" stated.) That the most ultra-liberal mem ber of the high court should so criticize the Kennedy Administra By SYDNEY J. HARRIS Everyone knows that words change over the centuries, and even over the decades. But what is puzzling, even to specialists in language, is the way in which some winds change to mean exact ly their oppositcs. 1 thought of this the other morn ing, when my little girl remarked at breakfast that something was "crummy." A "crummy" hat or a "crummy" game is one to be despised and disregarded; yet it was not always so. As late as the turn of Ibis cen tury, a British word-hook defined "crummy" as "jolly good." "She's a crummy woman" meant a fine, handsome woman, well - fleshed and amiable. The crummy part of bread is the fleshy or main part; it is the opposite of crusty, meaning hard and ill-tempered. In his fascinating book, pub lished last year, "Your English' Words," John Moore observes that a "casually" was at one lime an accident, and now it is used al most exclusively lo mean the vic tim of one. "Painful" once meant taking pains; now it means giv ing hurt. ' Scan." not too long ago, meant 10 examine minutely, or lo look at scarchingly; but Ihe word has now turned topsy-turvy, and when asked "Did you read the docu ment"", we reply, "Well, 1 only just scanned it." One of Ihe most interesting changes taking place right bclore our eyes, as it were, concerns Ihe word "literally." In Ihe past, "literally" meant the opposite of "figuratively"; it meant, actuallv, really, in a quite laclual sense. Rut nowadays people say "He was literally burned up about it." when Ihey mean "liguratively" burned up about il; and I have little doubt that a lew decades hence, literally will have pushed figuratively out of llie dutionarv A "tobacconist" used to mean Ihe smoker, and nol the seller of tobacco, as it does today. A "type writer." when the machine was first invented, meant Ibe tvpist and nol Ihe machine itself. "Port ly" used lo mean digmhod. now 11 implies a kind of laughable ro tundity. "Silly" meant bles-ed. rather than foolish. And "awful" referred to the majesty of God's works, rather than the modern 1'ifei Freedoms Being Eroded tion is an indication of the pres ent atmosphere In Washington. For events of the last 12 months have tended to show that when Robert F. Kennedy told a group of Presi dential convention delegates in 19H0, "we are a young group that's going to take over the country," he wasn't fooling. It has become one of the grim mer Washington jokes to warn any critic of the Administration, ' "You'd better watch out whea you file your income tax." Those who thought it amusing to sec Roger Blough and the steel com panies being subjected to the massive punishment of White House and Pentagon pressure are having some , sober second thoughts. Corporations doing busi- STRICTLY PERSONAL sense of "frightful" or "ghastly." Perhaps the most complete re versal of meaning in the English language, however, is the word "maudlin," which now describes a certain sort of self-pitying drunk. The word comes from Mary Mag dalene 'pronounced "maudlin" in England I w ho anointed Jesus' feet. It is worth keeping in mind that most words change for Ihe worst over the years, and that a "cun ning villain" used to mean mere ly a peasant of honest skill. POTOMAC FEVER Kennedy vows lo make a tax cut his No. 1 goal. He's gelling sick and lired of forking over all his money to that follow in the White House. Britain has Its worst blizrarrf In Inn years. One American visitor reports the weather's so had. It's aitnnst as cold outside his London hole! as It Is In. Things are looking up (or Ihe Republicans. They think they may have a 'M candidate who sounds like a record. In Brazil, inflation is so rousing lhat Brazilians are boasting they have the linesl money paper can buy. Politics Is Ihe art ot appear ing to do something between elections. Castro calls Kennedy a "vulgar pirate cheif." The Administration just can't trust Castro. I'nder the agree ment, he wa supposed to save that kind of talk for the 'M campaign. FLETCHER KNERKL QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q What Is a distinctive fea ture of the cllmhini perrh. na tive of Asia and Africa? A It possesses special breath ing equipment which permits il to leave the waier and journey overland in quest ol a new place lo live. ' ness with the government have learned to keep their thoughts to themselves. Any complaints over improper actions can lead to cancellation of contracts or Worse. Muzzling of the military aroused a few intellectuals. It was almost funny to see the high brass humbled by Secretary of Defense McNamara's "whiz kids" and Assistant Secretary Sylves ter's blue-pencil brigade. But now the scientists are feeling the sharp edge of that ax. Two eminent phy sicists, Drs. James Van Allen 'discoverer of the Van Allen radi ation belt in space i and James Warwick, are complaining bitter ly over the treatment they re ceive from the President's Sci ence Advisory Committee. Reflecting the thoughts of many scientists, Dr. Van Allen charges that the committee has become such "a big and authoritarian machine that it decidedly intimi dates" non-government scientists like himself. He and Dr. War wick charge that in coming to de cisions, the President's Advisory Committee acted "in haste" and under political pressures which had nothing to do with available scientific data. They note lhat one report of the committee ig nores evidence to the contrary of its position. Although the Pentagon is buttoned up like a submerging submarine, the evidence grows that the President's decision lo scrap the Skybolt missile was reached on the advice of Secreta ry McNamara. Just taking what is on the record, it seems obvious thai had the Pentagon applied the same kind of thinking to the mis sile and space programs, there wouldn't be a single U.S. satel lite in space and tlie Soviet Union would have a preponderant ICBM IRBM lead over Ihis country. Early experiments in any high ly sophisticated weapons system are expected to turn out a large proportion of failures. (Think of Ihe difficulties we had with liquid fuel rockets.) But as openly as anything is ever said these days at Ihe Pentagon or the While House, it is being pointed out lhat the Skybolt decision was made as part of an overall plan to reduce drastically the Air F'orce and to bring alioul Ihe eventual disband ing of Ihe vitally important Stra tegic Air Command. Against the best military advice, the "whiz kids" have decided that manned planes are "obsolete" and there's nothing anybody can do lo change Iheir minds. The most effective force against Ihese efforts to make the Execu tive Branch monolithic and all powerful has been Ihe Congress. Bui if Ihe Administration has its way. the Mill Congress will be come a rubber-stamp for White House proposals. A wave of prop aganda has been pouring out of the Executive offices. Its intent is to "prov e" lhat the present leg islative process is "outdated" and must be changed so that the Ken nedy Administration can move ahead with vigor. Pressure is being put on both House and Sen ale to scrap rules which have grown out of many years of expe rience, This is why. increasingly, even the best friends of the Adminis tration are tearful that the new year will bring a state of affairs in which the President's wish is automatically father lo Ihe deed. By PETER EDSOV Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NEA)-Secre- ' tary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz and American Farm Bureau Fed eration President Charles B. Shu man started a little argument the other day which is worth keeping alive for a little further research and analysis. At AFB's annual convention in Atlanta. Shuman delivered a de nunciation of organized labor. There is nothing new in this. Be cause the unions have made nu merous attempts to organize farm labor, the big commercial farm ers are against them. Also, organized workers in (arm food and fiber processing plants, demanding and getting higher , wages and better working condi tions, are believed by farm oper ators to be responsible for raising consumer prices, while higher wages in industry raise the prices of things farmers buy. The AFB convention then went on record in a series of resolu tions against industry-wide bar gaining, the union shop, seconda ary boycotts, featherbedding and all tlie other things the National Association of Manufacturers have been against for years. Farm Bureau resolutions also asked for repeal of the wage hour laws, opposed further liber alization of minimum wage laws, unemployment insurance benefits and railroad retirement. Finally, they asked that unions be brought under the anti-trust laws. But the Farm . Bureau did in vile Labor Secretary Wirtz to ad dress Ihem, to get his measure. Three days later he told Shuman and his convention that, "Sure ly, those interests which unite American labor and American ag riculture are much stronger than those which divide them." He went on to say that while there was little possibility of quickly reconciling their conflicting views, tlie subject should be explored. One of the first fields which might be explored profitably is who gets the most out of govern mentthe farmers or labor? From the Farm Bureau's reso lutions, there are too many laws on the books favoring labor. But a look at United States budget analyses indicates that there are far more laws on the books bene WASHINGTON Longshoremen Seek Philippine Unionism By FULTON LEWIS JR. Hawk - nosed Harry Bridges, whose word js law on West Coast docks, has entered the export busi ness. He will export to (he Philip pine Islands his own peculiar brand of trade unionism. Ameri can labor leaders are familiar with that brand: his International Longshoremen's and Warehouse men's Union was kicked out of the CIO as Communist-dominated. Three of Bridges's top aides re cently left the islands with gran diose plans to help tlie "down, trodden" Philippine dock work ers. They returned to Honolulu to advise that since Philippine "in dustry is similar lo ours and deals with some of the same peo- , pic." the ILWU should make an all-out effort to organize Phil ippine workers. They said thai one Philippine colleague fell ILWU aid could re sult in 150.000 new unionists in three areas. Philippine newspa pers say the ILWU delegation helped spark "politically motivat ed" dock strikes on the Manila watcrlront. II is by no means the first lime that ILWU officials have en gaged in "politically motivated" strikes. In 195.1, during the Kore an War, ILWU officials brought Hawaiian induslry to a screech ing halt. On June 13 of that year 50 per cent of Hawaii's pineapple work ers, 90 per cent of the territory's sugar workers, and all 1.700 long shoremen walked off their jobs in protest against the Smith Act conviction of Jack Hall, ILWU regional director. Hall, many times identified as a Communist, was convicted of conspiracy to teach and advocate Ihe violent overthrow of the U.S. Government. He remains Hawaii an regional director lo Ihis day. During Ihe 1953 walkout, two Korea-bound U.S. transports were among those ships affected. Re ferring to this incident, a Honolu lu paper reported: "Tlie dock areas were hardest hit. Longshoremen stayed off the job at Pearl Harbor' for three days, toe longest shutdown of civilian stevedoring operations ever called at the naval base. Sailors passing cargo from man lo man worked two Korea-bound transports at Pearl Harbor yes fiting agriculture than benefiting labor industrial, organized labor, that is. If you take everything that the 1963 budget classifies as Agricul ture and Agricultural Resources, funds requssted by the President for tlie fiscal year total $5.8 bil lion dollars, or 6.3 per cent of the total budget. The big item here is $4.5 billion for farm income stabilization and the Food for Peace subsidies, which benefit farm producers. Other items are $438 million for land and water resources, $234 million for rural electrification loans, $198 million for farm own ership loans and $380 million for research. If you look at everything which the Budget Bureau classifies at Health, Labor and Welfare, the total comes to $5.1 billion, or only 5.5 per cent of the total budget. But $2.8 billion of this is for public assistance, which goes to rural as well as urban people, $1.4 billion for health services and research, which also bene fit all the people. The total here is $4.2 billion not chargeable just to labor. There is also an item of $291 million for the school lunch pro gram. City and country children both benefit from this, but farm ers get paid for producing the food that goes into it. So this item should probably be charged to the agriculture budget. What is left is $354 million for labor and manpower services and $225 million for vocational rehabil itationa total of only $579 mil lion or a little over 'i of one per cent of the budget, and about a tenth of what goes for agricul ture. The Budget Bureau makes an other special analysis of expendi tures which provide aids or serv ices to special groups. It estimates aids to agriculture for this year at $5.35 billion. It estimates aids to labor at $31 million, mostly for extended unemployment compen sation and $60 million for man power training for a total of $91 million. Department of Labor also points out that its Employment Service, which places several million farm workers a year, is really paid for by a lax on industrial em ployers, not by farmers. REPORT terday and were to continue working the ships until the job is finished." Bridges talked of another strike in 1959 testimony before the House UnAmerican Activities Commit tee. He was asked by Commit tee Counsel Richard Arens if he would call a strike to prevent U.S. supplies from reaching Chi ang Kai-shek in event of war be tween Ihe Communist and Na tionalist Chinese. Bridges an swered: "If I felt doing that would keep the United Stales from going into such a suicidal enterprise and meaning the loss of life in the United States, my position at the moment would be, I think I would." Such is the man now export ing trade unionism to a valued ally, the Philippine Republic. Administration lobbyists have won a major convert in their campaign to repack the House Rules Committee, rie is Georgia Rep. Phil Landrum who, t w o years ago, voted against an Ad ministration proposal to increase that committee by three mem bers, and give control to t h e While House. Landrum, co-author of the Lan-drum-Griffin Act, will this year go along with the President on "packing." Reason: He has been . offered a seat on the powerful Ways and Means Committee for voting "right." Al manac fly United Press International Today is Wednesday. Jan. 9. Ihe 9th dav of 19fi.t with 35fi to follow. The moon is lull. Tlie morning stars are Mars and Venus. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1788. Connecticut ratified tlie Constitution. In 1793. tlie first successful bal loon flight in the U. S. was made by Jean Pierre Blanchard over Philadelphia. In 18t;t, Mississippi seceded from the Union. In 1945. Gen. Douglas MacAr Ihur's promise "I shall return" was fulfilled as American soldiers invaded Luzon in the Philippine Islands.