PAGK-4 HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Sunday, January 20, 3 Winter Fashion for the Congo NOTHING SPECIAL fedikfdaL (paqsL (W. B. S.I Q The Spoon-Fed Generation : You can find a hatful of theories about Hie causes of juvenile crime. The trouble wiih most of them is that they seem only partial explanations. : For example, such usually cited factors as poverty, bad housing, broken homes, racial discrimination and poor schooling obviously don't play any role in the substantial amount o( crime committed by well cared for young sters in U.S. suburbs. The playwright Arthur Miller, writing not long ago in Harpers, searched hard for a real common thread, one which would bind togeth er juvenile crime not just in this country but all over the world. It runs high in Europe even in the Soviet Union. Miller believes he has found the bond. He thinks it is an all pervading boredom, a strange kind of emptiness of the mind and spirit. ; This, he says, is not the boredom of Idle ness alone, though there can be little doubt that the joblessness of ill-trained youngsters contributes. : The emptiness he speaks of comes from an absence of challenges, a lack of genuine, meaningful conflicts, a failure to test the in dividual's will and capacity. The poor man's son sees the government, with some erratic exceptions, providing wel fare checks. The rich man's son sees his fath er providing cars, television sets, cameras, at the asking. : When does cither young man learn he niust earn the rewards of life? : In this grand age of excuse and permis siveness, the youth, rich or poor, is forgiven virtually all his errors by the courts, the wel An (Oregon-Statesman, Salem) : J. W. Forrester Jr., publisher of the P.endlcton East Orcgonian, enjoyed a holiday a), the Oregon Coast recently and upon his rbturn wrote the following in his column "Of Cabbages and Kings": . We have never regretted leaving the coast to come to Eastern Oregon but getting back to the coast for only a day or two is always good for the spirit. Like the big sky of Eastern Oregon the Pacific Ocean is a tonic for the soul. The rain-dwellers of Western Oregon might well turn this about. Although our roots burrow deeply in the soil of the Wil lamette Valley, no one can consider himself a "compleat" Orcgonian without an occasion al pilgrimage to the beauty which lies cast af the Cascades. Negotiable By JOHN GOl'l.D In The Christian Science Monitor One of the bread bakers has put a hip, billboard on the slate mad. and it gladdens the passing world with the important news that the shortening now being used con tains 21 per cent less fat. Thus we course the accelerated journey of our wonderlul times. This extra bonus of nonfat-fat will make us all want to buy this fine product. - In my youth about the only bonus I can think of that derived from canny purchasing was the Utile pieces of paslclioard lhat separated the layers of Shredded Micat. These were handy for many things, and none went to waste. Oh. dun't let this sound like a gratuitous endorsement of shredded wheat biscuits, which I never particularly liked. What I'm endorsing is the basic mar keting principles of Shredded Wheat, who simply sold shredded wheats, and didn't nice us In buy Uiem because we got paHr to do school work on. Those won derful little sheets of cardboard were never figured into Ihc deal. I'm back in the days of rooked cereals, naturally. We usually had oatmeal, laced with molasses and lied down with pan cream, and D was cooked all night in a double-boiler, which was an imple ment of homemaking now almost forgotten. Now and then, lo spue up the outlook, the oatmeal shift ed to cornmeal mush, and may be to a wheat cereal. Whichever it was. it got dipped by a long handled spoon Into a soup plate, and if we didn't eal it we wouldn't get any Iried potatoes, eggs and meat, biscuils and pie. But there were already several dry cereals on the market, which were considered all right for sum mertime, when a person could eal light. We children considered H a treat to tackle, occasionally, t lie novelty of pulled wheals, ahrodded wheats, and corn flakes. And 1 always had a preference fare agencies and social workers, the indul gent parents. Few if any demands are made upon him. In this situation, it is suggested, he manu factures excitement by venturing into daring and often brutal crime. The "senseless" as sault perhaps makes sense only as a momen tary release from boredom. Parents, indeed the whole adult world, cannot be relieved of heavy responsibility for creating the vacuum in which today's young sters thresh about often so wildly. But nei ther can the young be absolved of blame. One individual who seems to see things this way recently addressed teen-agers through the columns of a Washington news paper. To young folk bemoaning their sad lot, he wrote: '.'GO HOME! Hang the storm windows, paint the woodwork. Rake the leaves. . . . Shovel the walk. Wash the car. Learn to cook. "Help the minister .... Visit the sick. As sist the poor. Study your lessons. And then when you are through and not too tired read a book. "Your parents do not owe you entertain ment. . . . The world does NOT owe you a living. You owe the world something .... your time and energy and your talents, so that no one will be at war or in poverty, or sick, or lonely again. "In plain simple words: GROW UP. Quit being a crybaby. Get out of your dream world. Develop a backbone, not a wishbone. And start acting like a man or a lady. . . ." For parents and children alike, these words make a cracking good reading lesson with which to begin a new year. Integrated State Time has stood still in much of that vast region. Whereas Nature has covered the work of the ages with a verdure of soil and greenery west of the mountains, in Eastern Oregon the upheavals of eons past are still exposed for all to wonder at. In the minds of some, Oregon is two states divided by the Cascades. Certainly, in terms of climate, and somewhat in terms of eco nomics, the division is evident. It crops up politically, too. We prefer to think of the two parts as complementary rather than separate. As trav el becomes easier, each section draws increas ingly on the other's recreational resources. In industry, when a company diversi fies and expands so it no longer has to rely on other companies, it is said to be integrated. Oregon, thanks to the diversity within its uni ty, is integrated rccrcatinnally. Shredded for shredded wheals because of the sheets of paper. 1 am happy to report there has been no great change, for to document this splen did report I went to Ihe store and bought the lust package of shredded wheat biscuits we've had in the liousc in 40 years, and the separating stationery is still to be had. It was truly a won derful thing, to find in this mael strom of change, lhat one small ish nialter has been faithful. I feel I Ins strongly overcomes the nor mal editorial reluctance to give lice publicity to a commercial venture. Paper wasn't too easy lo come by back in those times. We were always frugal with what we had. and did our sums small jo we'd have room. Mother used to keep a shredded wheat card behind Hie mirror in the kitchen, (or her egg records. I remember Father used a whole sheet one time to send a note to Mori Guptill. say ing. "Will you come Sal. and help me with the well." and Mother chided him fust lor using a whole sheet for such a short message, and then for writing a note at all because Mori couldn't read any way. Word of mouth would have been good enough, and the shred ded wheals would have lasted that much longer. Shredded Wheat paper was ne gotiable. A man came one eve ning and wanled to borrow money from my uncle to buy a mowing machine, and I'm le wrote out a note on a shredded wheat slip letter, my uncle needed Ihe mon ey, so he discounted the note at Ihe bank. Somehow this implies an integrity lhat comlorls me as I contemplalc in later limes Ihe new kind of bread thai has 21 icr cent less fat in Ihe fal. I can aver, loo. that shiocMcd wheals had a cultural cnnlrilui lion I mean over and above the homework we did on them. They made an authoress of my moth er. (or one thing. Mother never Wheat wrote much of anything except notes lo my leaehers. but the clean shape of the shredded w heal teased her into excellence, and she comiKised notes that deserve historical attention. At first she used to write, "Please excuse John for being late, he was de lajed." But these ripened into masterpieces of composition: "Honored and esteemed sir In Ihe vast press of matutinal obli gations; coupled with the reluct, ance of a water pump to thaw out by reasonable persuasion, time elapsed until my son (ell upon a dclicit schedule. Please be so good as to make allowances, etc." Well, my father had an o d d business that kept him away from home a week at a lime, and then lie would be home lor a week, and while he was away the barn clinics were all mine. I would hear Ihe school bell ringing de mandingly across the fields, and while my mates were gathering (or opening exercises 1 would still be coaxing a calf to drink, or try ing to get Ihe hay thrown down Mother would have a nole ready by my dinner bucket i( one were needed, ami I would come chain ing inlo school and hand it to the principal. It was on a shredded wheat lli.it my mother wrote the gre.ile-t noloto-a-ioachor of all lime She had palicnlly explained to Hie gentleman that family cucum stances obliged me to slick to the last, and that while she re gretted my frequent tardiness she was dving the best she could and his understanding would be appreciated. My father, also, had put in a word of explanation, lint Ihe principal slill thought he was obliged lo pursue Ihe mailer, and one day he gave me a nole to take home to Mother w Inch said, "Isn't there something we can do lo get John to school on time "' Mother used a whole slueclded wheal. She wrote, back. "IVm t si.ut until he gets theie " ;.,rr-" wmmm k . t-.. . . sSiSrswas V-s-'.-..:, IN WASHINGTON By RALPH de TOLEDANO To read Ihe newspapers, every thing is over for Katanga but the wake. President Moise Tshombe is finished and the U.N. has suc ceeded in substituting chaos for order. Forgotten completely is Dr. Albert Schweitzer's humanitarian warning that "if Katanga is un willing lo be reunited with the Congo, Ihc U.N. should respect its wishes and not try to impose its own will at any cost." Here in Washington, however, the big question is how Congress By SYDNEY J. HARRIS In Charles Osgood's brilliant new book. "An Alternative to War or Surrender" which could just ly be subtitled. "Neither Red Nor Dead" the author, who is di rector of the Institute of Com munications Research at the Uni- vcisily of Illinois, devotes an opening chapter to what he prop erly calls our "Neanderthal Men tality." Prof. Osgood points out that Ne anderthal Man died out in large part because he had little pa tience with paradoxes and puz zles, because he lived in the past and was unable to adjust to changing conditions. Then the au thor lists four of Ihe principal paradoxes in the world today: 1. "The greater the destructive capacity of the weawns in our hands, the less most people seem to worry about it." 2. "While feverishly engaged in a nuclear arms race, both sides express peaceful intentions and Icrvcnt holies that these weap ons will never be used." .1. "The more nations spend for what they call 'defense. Ihe less real security their people have." 4. "The greater a nation's mil itary power, the less seems lo he its Ireedom of initiative in foreign policy." Consider, for instance, the third paradox, aUiut "the more arms. Ihe less security." As Prof. Os good says, "Who will deny that over the past 10 years we have been steadily increasing our ex penditures tor weapons? And who will deny that now we aie really levs sale, less secure, less defend ed than ever betore in our nation al history'.' "The reason for this." he ex plains, "is lo be found in a basic fact about military technology in a nuclear age. This is the fact lhat offensive capability has com pletely outstripped delcusive ca pability. Policy makers are fond of talking about great defensive 'shields' or 'umbrellas.' but these delenses are more in men's minds than their weapons. Defense in tins nuclear age adds up to little more than mutual (car." Only by recognizing Ihe Nean derthal within us can we hope lo control him. Ihe author warns We cannot avoid global war by denying the threat, by ignoring the paradoxes, by adopting slo gans and attitudes lli.it are total Is outmoded. Nor can we avoid war by "frightening Ihe living daylights out of people" with s Katanga Story Ended? will react to the Administration's support of U.N. aggression in Af rica. There are Democrats and Republicans in both Houses who are not happy over America's role in the Congo crisis, and they have a number of interesting questions to ask. Representative Donald C. Bruce ilnd.l, for example, has been ask ing why the State Department and the U.N. should be siding with the corrupt and anti-democratic central Congolese government. He has no firm answers, but he is disturbed by what he has so far STRICTLY PERSONAL apocalyptic visions of the world's extermination for this only makes people dig their heads deeper in the sand. "An Alternative to War or Sur render" offers some practical, sensible alternatives lo Red or dead. It should be studied care fully by all who do not want to perish like the Neanderthals. POTOMAC FEVER One thing about JFK's slalc-of-the union message. Democratic speech-writers never have to grope around for enough problems to pad out the text. Experts predict the economy will move sideways in I DM. Just ai Gov. Pat Rrown boasted: ev erything's sliding toward Cali fornia. Right-wingers hold a two-day conference in Washington. They didn't dare stay around the New Frontier any longer or somebody might sneak in and give them a government subsidy. Psychiatrist: The fellow who keeps track of your social inse curity number. The temperature drops to IS below In Lai Vegas. They're river-doing this business of a cold deck. Trouble with the Republican party, it can never seem to got equal time in this population ex. plosion. THEY SAY... Roth sides should pull back their forward troops from actual contact with each other un Eu rope1. . . . Both in Berlin and elsewhere there are loo many soldiers about. They are a most awful nuisance. Field Marshal Montgomery. The person from Ml to 73 ye.us old is an advanced middle ager now Homes for the aged are no longer places for retirement Morris ZrldlUh nl New York School f Social Work. discovered. Without making any charges, he offers the following evidence: 1. Katanga's importance to the rest of the world involves the rich cobalt and uranium mines in that country. 2. A European cartel has for some time cast covetous eyes on the Katanga mines. With Presi dent Tshombe out of the way, this cartel will probably pre - empt these valuable properties. 3. Fowler Hamilton w as a direc tor of this cartel until he became the Administration's foreign aid chief. He was succeeded by his law parlncr in this enterprise. 4. Undersecretary of State George W. Ball, prior to becom ing a part of the Administration, handled the law business in this country for the cartel. His former law firm is still active in t h e business, 5. Bo Gustaf Hammarskjold, brother of the late Secretary-General of the U.N., is also a director of this mining cartel. 6. Sturc Linner was executive vice president of one of the com panies in the cartel. He is now a U.N. representative in the Con go, and therefore partly respon sible for the events of the last months. 7. Sven Schwartz is an officer of the cartel. He is also an adviser to the United Nations in the Con fto. 8. Another officer of the cartel was connected in an advisory ca pacity to the U.N. in the Congo. In short, present and past of ficials of the United States and the United Nations had connec tions with a company which stood to gain by the ruthless destruc tion of President Tshombe and the subjugation of an independent Katanga. Neither Mr. Bruce nor those members of Congress who are troubled by these facts be lieve lhat the U.S. officials in volved were trying to make a fast buck. But it often happens that previous associations condi tion a man's thinking. In the case of the U.N. officials. Ihe motiva tion is a little harder to explain. Without beating to death the conllict-of-intercst theme, it is ob vious that a coupling of the dol lar sign with the ideological com mitment of officials such as Secretary-General U Thant creates an explosive mixture. There is a certain irony to the exploration of these factors. For the anti-Katanga and anti-Tshom-be forces at the U.N. and in the Administration have made tre mendous use of the term "mer cenary" in alluding to Mr. Tshom lie's Belgian advisers. In describ ing any activity of the Katangan army or Mr. Tshombc's civilian officers, it has been made to ap pear that many thousands of Bel gians were running the country as agents of "white imperialism." That there have been in the past year fewer than 500 Belgians help ing to administer Katanga is a fact that will not be learned from the feverish U N. propaganda. Don Bruce in the House and Thomas J. Dodd iConn. i in Ihe Senate would like a thorough in vestigation of the men and mo tives behind the Administration's sordid involvement m the Katanga-Congo crisis Whether Presi dent Kennedy s representatives in Congress will permit such an in quiry is a matter lor conjecture. II they do. it will be quite an education.it performance Congratulations to the recipients of the awards, and to the Jaycees for their selection of Jim Mon teith as Klamath Falls Senior Citi zen of the year and John Heil bronner as the Junior Citizen. Both are richly deserving. Lest any reader get the wrong impression 1 still regard festoon ing of trees and yards with bath room tissue as stupid, ill-consideredsomewhat akin to tipping over outhouses, putting cows in the schoolhouse, or buggies on top of the highest building in town in the old days. Ah, but, it was fun. wasn't it? Even with equal, opportunities, some people just aren't equal to them. It is a most gratifying thing lo observe the speed and orderliness w ith which the proposed intercom munity hospital is proceeding. Of inestimable worth is the fash ion in which doctors of the com munity have closed ranks to as sure the development and ultimate success of the project. We must bear in mind that the medical pro fession in Klamath Falls has for years provided the facilities for the practice of medicine. This is a unique situation, and I don't blame the doctors one bit for yielding to an opportunity to get rid of the burden of operating hospitals. Too, I've never observed such unrestrained enthusiasm on the part of the public to accept the responsibility and the challenge to get a Job done as has been exhibited thus far in the organi zation of the fund-raising cam paign. If that enthusiasm and interest is maintained, I haven't the slightest doubt that what ever goal is finally needed, we'll get the money. Incidentally, a word of caution about the monetary goal might be in order. The suggested minimum goal of $723,000 to be raised lo cally is predicated on the hope and assumption that the project will qualify for federal funds through which one-half of the to- WASHINGTON REPORT . . Committee Studies Radio Station Aims By FULTON LEWIS, JR. Quietly, behind closed doors. Senate probers have opened an investigation to determine wheth er or not Communists have suc ceeded in infiltrating a three-station radio network. The Senate Internal Security Subcommittee began hearings last week on the Pacifica Foundation, which operates radio stations in New York, Los Angeles, and Berkeley, Calif. One of the first witnesses was Peter Odegard, a California pro fessor who serves as a foundation director. He is said to have an swered all questions -put to him. Not so Dorothy Healcy, a regu lar commentator for the past throe years over station KPFX, the Los Angeles outlet. Mrs. Healey. a paid organizer of the Communist Party and Southern California district chairman, refused to an swer committee queries. Another witness was Pauline Schlinder, a Los Angeles widow who has contributed funds to the station. For Mrs. Schlinder, ac tive in the fight to secure "jus tice" for atom spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg a decade ago, this was her second appearance before a legislative body. Ten years ago, she appeared be fore a committee of Ihe Californ ia Slate Senate investigating Com munist activities in Los Angeles. She refused to cooperate at that time. Stations of the Pacifica Foun dation are devoted lo "exploring the bases of a peaceful society." Among regular commentators for Ki'FA in Berkeley is William Mandel. who look the Fifth Amendment before a Senate Com mittee when he was asked if he had engaged in sabotage or es pionage against the United Stales. In subsequent testimony, before the House Un-American Activi ties Committee, in t0. Mandel boasted that he "killed Senator Joe McCarthy." then defied com mittee members and refused to answer questions about his party activity. Communist Party "historians." Herbert Apthcker. editor of "Po litical Affairs." has broadcast a series on Marxism over the Los Angeles station. Thai series was later issued as a pamphlet i"The Nature ot Revolution the Marxist Theory of Social Change"' by New Century Publishers, official publishing house of the Commu nist Party. W. E. B Dubog-. an admitted tal cost would be borne by the fed eral government 'our own money coming back to us somewhat di luted i. If the project docs not qualify under this federal grant, it would then come under Hill Burton funds another form of federal largesse. Under Hill-Burton, the project would qualify for only one-third of the total cost. This, of course, would mean that more money would have to be raised through local sources eith er public subscription, or a bigger bond mortgage arrangement. It is possible that we would have to raise an additional $200,000 or so, if we do not qualify for the one half federal grant. There are an awful lot of busi ness people if you include those who are interested In every body else's. Another kind of population ex plosion has been going on in re cent years. This is the tremen dous increase in the use of bank checks. According to a leading check printing company, some 15 billion checks were written, cashed, and cancelled in 1962 a 500 per cent increase over 1940. Those who like staggering sta tistics can chew on these: All these checks could form a paper blcjchct covering 57,000 acres; if put oo a scale they would weigh 52 million pounds; put one on top of the other they would make a stack 1,000 miles high; if placed end to end they would reach 1,654,000 miles past the moon. Since checks go through from nine to 18 bank operations before finding their way back to the writ er, banks and clearing houses would have been smothered long ago by this huge output were it not for the aid of electronics. About 80 per cent of checks are now imprinted with symbols in magnetic ink which can be "read" by processing machines at the rate of many thousands an hpar. Unfortunately, most of us find that the new checks are fully as elastic as the old kind. They still bounce from an overdrawn account. Communist, has used network fa cilities to present laudatory pic tures of Soviet Russia and Red China. Another familiar figure on the network is Carey McWilliams, ed itor of the Nation, who over the years has compiled an extensive Communist front record. He has been chairman of the subversive American Committee for the Pro tection of the Foreign Born, sponsor of the Civil Rights Con gress, a member of the Ameri can Peace Mobilization, an officer of the National Federation of Con stitutional Liberties, a contribu tor to New Masses. The list goes on and on. Monthly Review, a Marxist magazine, was granted time on Pacifica stations for a scries of programs called "If This Be Rea son." The first commentator was Corliss Lamonl, who has a Com munist front record. Pacifica recently presented Jack Levine. a one - time FBI agent, in a two-and-onc half hour attack upon the bureau and its chief, J. Edgar Hoover. Levine was subsequently thrown out of a Congressional hearing when, as a member of the audience, he became hysterical and demanded the investigation be called off. Immediately after President Kennedy initiated his blockade of Cuba last October, a panel of three professors took to the KPFA airways. Stanford's Paul Barsn said the blockade was no more than an excuse for a "bloodbath" and "rape'' of Cuba by the Pres ident. Raran. who has called Fi del Castro "one of the great men of tins century," denied any bel ligerent plans on the part of Cas tro or Nikita Khrushchev. KFPA came under fire in 19"4 for a broadcast in which four drug addicts extolled the virtues of marijuana. The program was part of a series called "Concepts of Freedom" which earlier that year had presented the Daily Worker's Moscow correspondent. The New York station WB.W last year presented a panel of homosexuals on their peculiar ways of life and love QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q To what sovereign was the fabulous Kohinonr Diamond first presented? A Queen Victoria It now repos es in Queen Elizabeths crown.