TAGE HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore. T""J,y'J"1"yi!JM EDSON IN WASHINGTON Good, Hard Work ; The personal stock-taking that is sup posed to accompany the average American's plunge into a new year might well include the question: . ' Is the individual's capacity or willing nessto do hard work, even to endure hard ship if necessary in performance of duty, di minishing in this country? .f: As to the matter of capacity to endure Hardship, Albert Biderman of the Bureau of Social Science Research, Washington, says the evidence indicates the ordinary American has plenty of it. In a paper given before the American Association for the Advancement of Science at a Philadelphia meeting, Biderman said United Slates prisoners' behavior in the Ko rean war offers proof. Despite highly publicized instances of American captives succumbing to suffering and to the pressures of their captors, most United States soldiers, said Biderman, showed a great ability to take it. The wonder may be that so many survived. Any one of us can perhaps find ample evidence, too, that hard work has not exactly gone out of fashion in the United States. Dedicated workers abound in our space and defense efforts, in many less spectacular channels of government; in professions like the law and journalism and medicine, in in dustry, on the farms. The 18-hour day is still a reality in many places. Yet there are in our life today many, many manifestations of a vastly different atti tude toward work and hardship. As scientific progress has steadily freed us from the back-breaking physical labors once necessary for the barest existence, more and more of us seem to have seized upon this liberation as a kind of permanent pass through life. Thus some Americans have moved from the excessive ease granted by parental indul gence to snap courses in school, to soft jobs stressing security but not challenge and re sponsibility. Crime has many causes some of them different in different periods of history. Yet one enduring cause is the desire of some to gain the fruits of labor without working. With our great material abundance providing more "fruits" than ever, this particular soft ap proach appeals to increasing numbers. What many of the nonworkcrs seem to want is not only the material benefit but the status that, in this country, goes with having things. The new commissioner of United States education, Francis Keppel, aimed a shaft at such people when a newsman asked him whether teachers in America deserved a high er status. He replied: "I hold to the old-fashioned view that status should be earned." Such a comment ought to touch a deli cate nerve among Americans who think it can be bought, or stolen, or faked, or achieved by a variety of other shortcuts. Generally speaking, we Americans no longer need to labor in the salt mines to gain the necessities. But we will be on the downhill road if really large numbers of us should ever conclude that status need not be earned, that men can live well without goals of achieve ment which require hard, testing, challenging work. Don't Be A Carrier (Tha Lot Angelas Times) Last week, in the southern area of the city, a 2-year-old baby came down with polio, and is still desperately ill. i Anyone who reads this possibly could be to blame. Because any of us could have given polio to that baby. Polio can be eradicated completely. Med ical science today has the know-how to elim inate it. It only requires that people individually co-operate in the Sabin oral vaccine immuni zation program. If a majority of the people in Los Angeles County obtain the Sabin polio dosages, polio will not recur here in our gen cnition. X There are more than 500 clinics open today in Los Angeles County to give Type II polio vaccine to all applicants. From 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., the Los Angeles County Medical Assn. is making Sabin oral vaccine available all over the county. : There is a clinic within five minutes' drive of every family in the county. 11 won't take five minutes to register and receive the vaccine. And it's five minutes back home. Surely any family can take 15 minutes to make sure that no one in the family group will ever be horribly crippled by polio. Even more important, the Sabin vaccine makes certain that anyone who takes it is not a "carrier" of polio. Many people arc, without knowing it. Sabin vaccine is given by mouth, on a cube of sugar or in a sip of syrup. No needle is used. The dosage is free, although a 25-cent donation is accepted to help cover costs of the serum. Reflect on this: that 2-ycar-old baby who came down with polio last week probably got it from a carrier. It could have been any body who did not take his Sabin vaccine. Any one who neglected this precaution could have been responsible. Isn't that reason enough for taking 15 minutes to go to the nearest clinic today for a free, painless immunization against polio? THESE DAYS . . . Everybody A Winner Here By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN Once there were three of them. Tlieir names were Joseph Sranlnn. Clinton G"ldcn and Harold Rut tenborg, and tliey formed a yeasty and somewhat dissident element in tlie high counsels of the I'mled Steel Workers of America. Around Pittsburgh they were known as the productivity hoys, the ones who wanted the members of the steel union to cooperate w ith em I lovers in working out amicable rosl-outting programs as the basis for earning higher hourly wages. For years the Three Musketeers ot Productivity preached their goj. pel of "cflicieney haring." For yean tliey tried to mitigate Uie harslwess of class war feeling when the union was squaring off to make its demand on manage ment. They wanted labor to help mnke steel companies so profit ;iIHe that Uiere would be money to sli) e between workers and stock Mdcrs without raising Hie ton !r,'c price of stce) to the con sumer. Wlien lie was still abvc. Presi dent Philip Murray of the Tinted Fieri Workers kept the Three Mus keteers of Productivity on edge with a promise. "Some day," so he cryptically told Seanlon. But Pin! Murray died, and meanwhile the steel union went right on ask ing (or increased, wages and high er fnngc benefits without regard nlher to hourly ellieiency or the inflationary impact of its demands on Hie price of steel. True enough, Joe Seanlon had some minor successes; he worked out a few cost-cutting programs with s"me small Heel fabricators, notably jn Ohio. One company, tie Adanison Tank Company, put in a plan Uwl enables) Ms employ es, ail members of Uie steel union, to get their share of the profits arising from an employer worker efficiency drive. But the high command in tlie steel union remained privately contemptuous of Scanlon's evangelism. Tired of batting his head against a stone wall. Joe Seanlon resigned from the union and bclook himself from Pittsburgh to Cambridge. Mass., where lie joined tlie faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech nology and gave a course in labor management relations. The other Musketeers also felt tlie hopelessness of their position. Clml Golden retired to write books: Harold Ruttenberg. after a sojourn in Washington with Uie War Production Board, became a steel nvasler lor Cyrus Eaton in Portsmouth, Ohio. Well, the years rolled on, and tiolden and Seanlon both died. The one remaining Musketeer. Harold Hutlenberg. prove! to be a whiz in business He made himself enough money as a steel master to buy a company which mode well-drilling equipment for sale all over Uie wwld. But Uie itch to got back into the business of work, mg out labor-management effi ciency programs for the sleel in dustry was loo strong for Harold nutlenheig. He sold ins well-drilling equipment lompany and put Hie money into supermarkets, to prov ide a source of im ome (or Ins large family. Then lie formed something called Hum. million. Incorporated, and set out to advise employers on working out volunt.uy programs with workers to Hie end ol achiev ing "a common objective o( in creasing productivity " David McDonakl, Uie man who had succeeded Philip Murray as president ol the L'niled Steelwork ers of America, was not entirely pleased when he learned about Kuttenbci g's new activity. Around Pittsburgh he has been quoted as saving that Hiitlenherg was li v ing to humiliate him. and that Rut teuoerg's new advisory company should lie called, not Ilumanation. Inc.. but "Humiliation, Inc." But in the Pittsburgh area sleel fab ricating companies, unable to pay high union wages, kept going out of business. And membership in the Dnited Steelworkers of Amer ica kept shrinking. The facts of Ide were going against David Mc Donald. It was not long before McDon ald, swallowing his pride, was con descending to ask Ruttenberg to help save some companies -that employed members of the sleel union. Real cooperation, however, has been hard to achieve in Hie Pittsburgh region: Hie shadow o( distrust between the steelworkers and management has gone too deep But just the other day the Pittsburgh area was electrified to hear that Tinted Stcebvorker em ployes of the Kaiser Mccl Cor poration on the distant Pacilic coast had voted to adopt a labor contract calling for workers to receive a share of production cost savings. This, a non-inllatioiviry agreement, is tlie lu st of its kind in a basic steel company. What this signifies is that tlie old ideas o( Hie Three Musketeers ol Productivity have a( last tak en rool, Joe Seanlon and Clint l,olden didn't live to see it But H.tivld Rultontvig is aiive to sa vor a victor) Hi.it should hiun.li ate no one In Hns instance lalr. ni.in.iixmcnt and tlie consumer ail stand to w 111. Here's How Proposed Tax Cut Shapes Up By PETER EDSON Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON INEAl - Presi dent Kennedy's belief that tax tuts now will mean "tens of bil lions of dollars more each year in production, profits, wages and public revenues," is based on what happened after the last big lax reduction in 1U54. That was a $7.4 billion cut. Five billion dollars of it came from ex piration of Korean War taxes. It repealed excess profits and some excise taxes. It introduced a 10 per cent cut in individual income taxes right across the board. It also adjusted depreciation sched ules and introduced dividend cred its benefiting business $24 bil lion a year. With individual in come tax receipts reported at f'M billion for fiscal 1953, the 10 per cent tax cut was $3 billion. Total tax receipts o( $64.7 billion in fiscal 1033 dropped a little to $64.4 in 1054, the year the cut was made. This was followed by a sharp drop to $60.2 billion in 1935. but Uiat was caused by the post-Korean War recession from July 1953 to May 1954. There was a rapid build-up af ter that. Gross national product of $365 billion in 1953 dropped $2 billion in the 1954 recession, but rose to $397 billion in 1955 and $419 billion in 1956 a 15 per cent rise for tlie two years. Tax re ceipts for 1956 rose to $67.9 bil lion. Corporate profits, which were $38 billion in 1953 and dropped to $34 billion during the 1954 re cession, rose by nearly $11 billion to $44.9 billion in 1955. The unemployment rate, 5.6 per cent, or 3.6 million out of a labor force of 54.5 million in 1954, dropped to a rate of 4.2 per cent, or 3 8 million out of a la bor force of 67.5 million in 1956. The only two postwar years that the United Stales has had rela tively full employment were 1935 and 1956. Whether the 1954 tax cut can be given credit for all of this is questionable, (or the good effects didn't last. There was a further recession in 1953-59 and a further setback, or at least slow growth, beginning in I960 and continuing even now. The Kennedy administration bases its present case on the the ory that a tax cut now is what's needed to boost the economy. A tax cut is expected to have a much greater impact now than in 1954, because of economic growth in the last 10 years. Gross national product of $554 billion for 1962 is 60 per cent higher than in 1953. Personal income tax payments of $45.7 bil lion in 1962 are 50 per cent high er than in 1953. So the equivalent of- a 10 per cent tax cut now would mean that HOW A TAX CUT WOULD AFFECT YOUre Single Person Present Proposed Dollar Percentage Income Tax Tax Reduction Reduction $ 3,000 $ 422 $ 318 $ 104 24.6 5,000 818 642 176 21.5 7,500 1,405 7,116 289 20.6 10,000 2,096 1,668 428 20.4 20,000 6,412 5,088 1,324 20.6 Joint Return With No Dependents $ 3,000 $ 300. $ 210 $ 90 30.0 5,000 660 488 172 26.1 7,500 1,141 879 262 23.0 10,000 1,636 7,284 352 21.5 20,000 4,532 3,606 926 20.4 Joint Return With Two Dependents $ 3,000 $ 60 $ 42 $ 18 30.0 5,000 420 296 124 29.5 7,500 877 663 214 24.4 10,000 172 7,068 304 22.2 20,000 4,124 3,282 842 20.4 Treasury Department table, above, gives Income In all eases as annual Income before exemptions -and deductions. All cases presume a standard deduction. $4 5 to $5 billion more would ba made available for consumer spending during the first year the cut is in full effect. There is, of course, a delayed reaction to any shot in the arm the economy receives from a tax cut. Tax experts figure mat 93 per cent of consumer income after taxes is spent, 7 per cent going into savings. But experience shows that even where there is a sharp rise in purchasing power, there's always a lag in actual spending. The length of the lag cannot be predicted. It may take half a year or more after the tax cut is in effect be fore spending habits change meas urably. This makes it difficult to predict when there will be busi ness expansion to take care of the expected increase in demand. Businesses that figure they will get a certain per cent of the in creased spending power generat ed by a tax cut may start to build up inventories fairly soon, but ex panding plant capacity to meet the demand is even trickier for businessmen to figure. An industry now operating at 80 per cent of capacity won't ex pand immediately. If now operat ing at high rate, an industry might expand plant capacity more rapidly. President Kennedy's plan for making the tax cuts apply grad ually over a three-year period is intended to limit the impact on the federal budget. If a first year $6 billion tax reduction out of a total $10 billion planned tax cut is approved by Congress, that will be to stimulate business. The increased tax receipts from this new business are then expect ed "to pay for" the remaining $4 billion in tax cuts, without in creasing budget deficits after the first year. IN WASHINGTON 5? War Aqainst Congress STRICTLY PERSONAL By RALPH de T01.EDANO To hear Hie talk on the New Frontier, Congress is the town drunk, bully, and gimfighter all rolled into one. Every policy goof since January. 1961 is blamed on the men and women who inhabit the offices on Capitol Hill. The failure of unemployment to re spond to the "cures" concocted by tlie White House economic pill rollers? Congress is at fault, lic fusal of the voters to buy a medi care program which can wreck Social Security? You guessed it. Congress again. But it isn't just the legislators who arc to blame. The Wash ington press has suddenly fallen prey to a rash of "interpretive" stories which state openly and flatly that Congress is an "anti quated" institution, a creaking rel ic of the prejudices and limitations of the Founding Fathers. Why? Because it doesn't give the Ad ministration everything it wants. Because it insists on examining and debating the President's pro posals. Because it occasionally takes seriously its Constitutional duty lo hold the purscstrings. Legislators who have server! with distinction for many years i who have forgotten more about the politics and the economics of the I'nited States than the "young group" in Hie Executive have yet In learn i arc being described as doddering idiots who should cash in their legislative chips and al low those of tltcir Juniors who have the right kind ol vignr to take over the nation's governance Consider the case of Senator Richard Russell. As chairman of the Senate Armed Services Com mittee, lie can boast though he never does of a greater and more detailed knowledge of America's military and defense problems than any other civilian today. He is highly respected by the Joint thiols of Stalf and by career De fense Establishment officials. But he disagrees with Dciense Sec retary Jiobert McNamara, "Big Bob" to the Pentagon people now trying to give bun a jovial image. The Administration would like to push the Richard Russells, the Harry F. Byrds. and the other men who have made a career of the Senate out of their positions ol inllucncc. Therefore. Hie big campaign - directed from 1WX) Pennsylvania Avenue and from the Attorney General's oflice is to scrap a seniority system which has prevented the hot-heads from de stroying the complex Congression al engine by stepping on the gas at every crossroads. If the seniority system were abolished, it would be done in the name of "democracy." This is the argument being advanced by those who favor tearing up the Constitutional provision which gives the states the sole right to determine qualifications for vot ing The New Frontier wants to abolish, by Federal statute, state laws that require literacy tests for voters. Hep. F.manucl Cellcr il).. X V will introduce a bill under which anyone w ho bus completed six grades of school would be con sidered literate for voting in Fed eral elections. His bill would need only a majority vote for passage, in contrast to the constitutional amendment for such purposes offered last year. It is argued that the literacy test is used to prevent Negroes from voting in the South. But there are already Federal powers to compel a state to apply its electoral laws without regard to race. -Abolition of literacy laws, however, will give us a Congress far more subject to the kind of pressures which the President can always inspire among the unin formed. The call for "democracy" has a slightly hypocritical ring coming from an Administration which be lieves in "managed" news. The give - away comes from James MacGregor Burns, who can claim (o lie the almost-official historian of the Kennedy Administration. In his new book, "The Deadlock of Democracy." Professor Burns lets the cat out of the bag: "The cure for democracy, people used to say, is more democracy. A half-century of hard experience has shown this cliche to be a dan gerous half-truth. The cure for democracy is leadership respon sible, committed, effective, and exuberant leadership." The kind ot leadership, perhaps, which doesn't need those stubborn and stupid men on Capitol Hill or which know what's best for you and me, and will give it to us whether we want it or nnf i 1 I l rh By SYDNEY J. HARRIS We divide the world along the grain of our infirmities. What ever it is that we feel we most lack, or need, becomes Hie boun dary line between L's Here and Those Out There. Illness chronic or disabling illness is the most striking ex ample of this division. To some one who is really ill, seriously and for a considerable time, all other loyalties and animosities are submerged beneath the sense of separateness between the Sick World and the Well World. To the poor perhaps not so much in America, where econom ic mobility is possible, but in most other countries Hie social order is irrevocably divided into Hie Haves and Have-Nots. The lack of funds, the lack of food, makes every other division seem artificial and meaningless. This, of course, is the great fulcrum by which communism has moved half the world. And to the Black, especially to day, color is the absolute line of demarcation. The world is a color world, sharply and simply: all other distinctions are at bottom temporary, superficial and in the end meaningless. Thus, whether our basic infirm ity or incapacity, is physical, eco nomic or social, it is this cleav age that determines our view of ourselves and of mankind and that eventually perverts any real idea of "brotherhood." which is more of a slogan than a feeling. Our brothers, in point ol act. are only those w ho share our lacks, who feel our needs, who stand under tlie same threat. When is a nation most "united"? When under attack. The American Revolution united the colonists as peace never could; the Civil War solidified the peoples of the North and South: Naziism gave Hie British people a sense of solidarity and unani mity not seen since then. It is one of the profound para-,' doxes of human nature that sep-' arateness creates unity; it is Ihe Other that makes us One. And this concept of oneness comes only in times of crisis, through hate, enmity, depriva tion, discrimination, conflict and fear. Such negative feelings are what engender our positive vir tuesour loyalty, our heroism, our unselfishness, our willingness to subordinate Hie individual inter est for the common good. There are few heroes of peace, there are few martyrs of love. Perse cution held the Jewish people to gether (or 5.000 years; accep tance might dissolve them in a goneraUon. It is Those Out There who keep L's Here identifiable and ready to fight for our rights, or our wrongs, or simply our survival. THEY SAY... Al manac By t nited Prrss intrrnalinnal Today is Tuesday. Jan. 22. the End day of 19R3 with 343 to fol low. The moon is approaching its new pha.-e. The morning stars are Venus and Mars. The evening stars are Mars. Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this day include the English romantic poet. Lord 3ron in 1788. On this day in history: In ITS!), the first American nov el was published in Boston, writ ten by Sarah Morton and called "The Power of Sympathy." In 1POI, Queen Victoria of Ens land died, ending the lonscst reign of any sovereign over a civilized nation. In 1017. President Woodrow W il son seeking a quick end to World War I asked for " peace without victory." In 1!2. President llerbtt Hoover enacted into law a meas ure establishing the Reconstruc tion Finance Corporation. A thought f"r the day The late President woodrow Wilson once s.i.d: "Thcie is such a thir.c as a man being too proud to fight." The best antidote for nervous ! tension and intellectual intemper-' ancc is physical fatigue. Heart specialist Dr. Paul Dud- ' ley White. So long as Communist policy is double-faced our response must he dnuhle-handed. Lord Home, British foreign sec retary. People who watch such shows as Ben Casey and Dr. Kildarc can be difficult patients on occasion. They learn a little bit about rare diseases ... and they think Ihey know a great deal. -Dr. Peter Molt, of New Yerk'l Brllrvue Medical Center. Religion is strong in America, but a good deal of it is a kind of rather vague religious sentiment. Arlhur Michael Ramsey, Arch bishop nl fanleihury, after three. week visit. I reluse lo answer the question on the grounds that the answer micht tend to incriminate, de grade and get me killed. Daniel Cohen, reluctant wit ness In a New York rnhbery trial. I te'd Mr Khrushchev that I didn't intend to talk to him about music, so we discussed Hie cotton industry in Tashkent. Composer Igor Stravinsky, vis iting Russia lor the first lime In it sears.