PAGE t-D HERALD Foreign Congress has wielded the ax so often on the foreign aid budget that the Agency for International Development is extremely de fensive in arguing for a 1864 fiscal year pro gram that actually calculates slightly smaller outlays. Anticipating the usual congressional as saults, AID officials have mustered perhaps an unprecedented array of selling points. Yet the view of seasoned observers is that these will not avail, and Congress will repeat its now customary performance cutting upwards of $1 billion from the program as it did last year. President Kennedy himself contributes, of course, to AID's new persuasions by assert ing in his budget message that foreign assis tance expenditures for fiscal 1964 are esti mated at $3.75 billion $100 million less than the current fiscal year. The President stresses, too, that the money will be used very selectively, favor ing projects "crucial to the rapid development of countries . . . important to the mainte nance of free world security, and which dem onstrate willingness and ability to marshal their own resources effectively." Frank M. Coffin, deputy AID administra tor, making the agency's case, bombards Con gress with these arguments. The foreign assistance budget request (not the same thing as expected expenditures) is down $13.5 million from last year and is a smaller part of the total federal budget. Foreign aid programs today constitute three-fourths of 1 per cent of the U.S. gross national product, whereas in the 1949-52 pe riod they represented one and a half per cent. The average cost of aid programs In the THESE DAYS Washington By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN . They are teaching something called the "new arithmetic" in the schools. The new arithmetic begins by introducing algebraic symbols into simple problems ol addition and subtraction. The idea behind this is to get firth-grade students to think about the real ities of balanced equations in stead of learning addition and subtraction by rote. When you say two plus "x" equals four, you have to figure out the meaning of addition lor your self. Maybe, if Uic new arithme tic takes hold, the politicians of 20 years hence won't be able to pull the wool over people's eyes when they toss grandiose budget and tax figures around. The po liticos may even learn not to de lude themselves. But at the present moment, when everybody talks arithmetic like parrots, lew lieople in Washington seem to understand the principles of bal ancing an equation when it comes to making programs for tax cuts and budget increases. The illusions fostered by pres ent arithmetical nonsense begin with President Kennedy, who must have worked (or a spell In Macy's basement in his youth. In Macy's basement they learn that a $I.!M price lag on tome thing sounds a lot cheapter than $2 price tag. With a subtle re course to department store psy chology, the President has put a B billion price lag on his budget instead of a flat $100 bil lion. POTOMAC FEVER White House roumel Ted Sor ensen says a tax cut will mean a Democratic victory in '(A. It's the old story. There's no pleasure without a little suflering. Twelve Kcnnrdvs watch Boh Kennedy argue his first ease before the .Supreme Court. The Justices better decide It Bob's way or next time he'll threaten them with the whrde family. The British want to build a tunnel under the English Channel. Thanks to De Uaullc. it's tlie only way they can sneak into the com mon market. ' In the automation age. It's an advantage to he a beautiful girl. One look and the older manager decides to lire some of the machines. doe Kennedy's name for W ash ington: Boys Town. Pro football probes player con nections Willi gamblers. There's some suspicion tho fellows us ing the phones on the sidelines are calling Iheir bookies FLETCHER KNEBEL AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. . Aid's Annual 1962-64 span is figured at slightly less than the 1949-52 average. Yet that roughly parallel sum came in the earlier period from a $305 billion average annual GNP. Today it comes from an estimated average $575-billion GNP. Economic aid puts mounting stress on loans rather than grants. Last year Kennedy asked that loans make up 51 per cent of the economic total, and Congress upped the ratio to 54. This time he wants the aid divided 59 per cent for loans, 39 per cent for grants. Finally, the point is made that aside from the Alliance for Progress, under which more money is sought this, time for Latin Ameri ca, the U.S. economic aid program for the world comes to $1.5 billion of the requested total of $4.9 billion in foreign assistance. Much of the rest, of course, is military assistance or support for military effort. Coffin says the Defense Department uses $1.5 billion in 11 days. There seems little chance, however, that tough congressional foes of foreign aid will buy these finely spun statistical arguments. They are usually Impressed more by hard-lo-cradicate evidences of waste, mismanagement and confusion in the program. They tend to favor military aid. The new budget has relatively more economic aid in it. And the estimated saving in expenditures would come from reduced military aid. Furthermore, lawmakers may get some new critical fuel almost at the moment the specific AID budget comes to them around March L For that is the target date for a re port from Gen. Lucius D. Clay's commission named by the President to take a hard look at foreign aid. Mathematics But two cents saved on a Macy's basement bargain won't even buy a useful postage stamp in 1963, and $1.2 billion saved on a federal budget can be wiped nut in a jilly by a Congressional deficiency appropriation. What is wrong with lax and budget figures as used in current discussion is that they ignore cash flow. To begin with, (lie only reality for the 1063 Congress, which can't commit its' succes sors, is the first phase of the President's proposal (or a three fold bite. For lata President Ken nedy hopes to get a tax cut of $fi billion. This money would be lelt in people's pockets to spend and invest. But when we balance nut the na tional cash flow equation in terms o the realistic new fifth-grade arithmetic, we quickly sec thai the President has no intention of leaving $6 billion to jingle in peo ple's pockets. In the firs', place. Hie social security whack at our paychecks went up on Jan. 1 and some people we know have already cut down on their house hold help to avoid paying out the required increase to servants. Secondly, postal rates have al ready gone up One rra';stic fis cal export, Eliot Janewny, has estimated that the government's increased take for social security and live cent stamps will deftly remove more than $2 5 billion from the people's pockets in l!K3. This means that only '15 billion of Kennedy's proposed $fi billion tax cut will hav-j any pow er lo flush the economy. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Teaching I would like to express mv opin ion on tlie ten-age models and oilier games which we have op portunity to buy today. What is the matter wilh you adults? A child's world is a world ol dreaming. If your children hae immoral thoughts toward these toys, (hey would probably have them regardless of the toys they play with. All (our of my children have teen-age models and they spend endless hours dressing tliem and enfoymg litem I wish I would have had hall the toys to play uith that are avail able to my children When you were a child, did you never dream you were a rince or a queeir What is the difler once between Ihis and protending you arc an Indian ready lo scalp or sltoot someone1 If you are going to try and hide the facta of lite from your children, you better lock them up ami not let tliem communicate with anyone else It is impossible. You can teach your children right from wrong Irene Kca Sunday, January 27, ISfiJ Battle Well, $3.5 billion is a sizeable sum. But, with a proposed budget deficit of $12 billion, it will not he a sum that can be reckoned in hard dollars. When a government goes into the red, it pays its bills with 1.0. U. slips, which are used by the banking system as a basis for inflationary credit. So the $3 5 billion in tax savings w ill be a "rotting" or a "melting" sum. Putting all the fol-de-rol into filth-grade algebraic form, as taught by the realistic "new" mathematicians, we get a mean ingful statement. On one side of the equation we place the pro posed lMtf tax cut of $6 billion. On the other and "balancing" side, we begin with the extra social security and post office bite of $2.5 billion, add to it an "x" to cover the depreciation of (he currency resulting from the $12 billion budget deficit, add a . "y" to account for lower depre ciation allowances to oil and gas and mining companies, add a "z" In cover the (act that busi nessmen are being scared by the lax collector into ordering the $1 blue plale special (or their clients at lunch instead of the M 50 steak, and the (akery of the promised (ax "r e 1 1 e (" comes lear. It ain't a goin' lo amount lo much. If industry continues to boom in low. as may well be Hie case, it will be because il buds new ways to cut costs and increase volume on ils own. Almanac By I nited Tress International Today is Sunday. Jan. 27. the 27th day of M with 338 to fol low Tlie moon is approaching Its first quarter. The morning stars are Venus and Mars. The evening stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Those born on this day Include Wollgang Mozart, great Austrian musician and composer, in 175S. tin this day in history: In lma. President Abraham Lin , coin issued general v nr order No. I. instructing Northern Army and naval duces to lie ready to make their first moves in the Civil W ar. In 18(H). Thomas E Edison was granted a patent lor an electric incandescent lamp. In l!M.l. the I'.S. Eighth Air Force staged' first all-Ametiean air raid o( World War II on (rf-r-many, bombing Wilhelnishavcn in broad daylight. In 1!J. a I S Hanger spme cr.itl missed the moon by 22.000 miles. A thought (or the dav Abraham Lincoln once said "Let us have faith that ndit makes michf, and in that fault let us lo the end dare to do our duty as we under stand it. ' Respite A- Me-1,. i WASHINGTON NOTEBOOK . . . kjl Kennedys Learn How It Is By WASHINGTON STAFF Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NEA) - Pres ident Kennedy, his brother Bobby and Chicago's Mayor Richard J. Daley are principals in the lat est presidenUal "boat story" go ing the rounds. According to this one, the three are on Lake Michigan in a small craft which capsizes offshore. There is just one life preserver. The President says: "We'll do this the democratic way. We'll take a vote to see who gets it." By PETER EDSON Washington Correspondent Newspaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON (NEA) - While President Kennedy in his State of tlie Union message puts tax reduction and reform as the most important issue, unemployment is still one of the most serious prob lems for the Kennedy administra tion, tlie new Congress, manage ment, labor and the national economy. Preliminary figures (or 12 sliow that unemployment dropped only 274.000 to an estimated 3 D million as of Doc. 31. Employment increased by I I million jobs during the year w hile tlie civilian labor force increased by (ton.000. Actually, nonlarm em ployment increased by 1.4 million jobs to a i7.o million total. But farm employment dropped by 300.000 to four million total at year end. Solving the slowly but steadily decreasing agricultural employment problem is one of the harder-lo-eure apsects o( the situ ation. Labor Secretary Willard Wirlz admits it is really surprising there are not more protests from the liHir million and more Americans w Im have been unemployed in the past two years. One reason given is that un employment is not general hut concentrated in depressed indus try and area pockets. Another reason there is not more protest is that unemployment insurance cushions tlie iniiact. Also, most of the unemployed are unskilled workers, the uneducated and young workei"s without job train ing or experience. Unemployment rates in these groups are twice as high as among skilled work ers Government programs lo reduce unemployment so (ar have been unable to do the whole job alone. Area redevelopment and manpow er training programs are just getting started. Not enough conli acts have been lei and construction started on the accelerated public works pro gram to create many new jobs. Congress took no action on the Kennedy administration youth employ n)ent opportunities pios al test year. It will be pre sented again to tlie new session. Il is aimed at ceciling more jobs and reducing high unemploy ment lor wickers under 20 Business leaders talk in opti mistic tones about Uie poNsibuity The results: One vote for the President, one for Bobby and seven votes for Daley. Francis Keppel, new commis sioner of education, was asked at his first Washington press con ference whether he is a "New Frontiersman." "I guess I'd better be!" he replied with some emphasis. Asked if he had taken up per manent residence in the capital yet, Keppel said no: EPSON IN WASHINGTON . . . Jobless Problem Is Still Major Concern that a tax cut will stimulate indus try to create new jobs. The same claim was made for the tax cred it on new investments and the new depreciation allowance schedules put into effect last year, but there hasn't been enough tune to measure their effects on employment and unemployment, if any. The other 6idc of this coin is that new investments may be channeled into labor saving ma chinery that will cut employment instead of reducing unemploy ment. W'irtz is of the opinion that something will have to he done soon to offset unemployment caused by automation. Organized labor leaders are counting on a tax cut (or low in come workers to stimulate con sumer spending enough to create more jobs. The other big pitch in the union's program is to reduce the work week to 35 hours so as to spread available jobs among more workers. Industry leaders oppose this as an effort to put over a disguised pay raise less work (or tlie same money. Wirtz also says. "I do not think this is tlie right answer." A factor that concerns h i m more is that about 7 per cent ol today's industrial produc tion comes Irom overtime work. This is slightly above unemploy ment rates of around 6 per cent during the last two years. If tlie unemployed could be giv en this work, everything might he dandy. But it isn't that easy. Much o( the overtime production is temporary like the current drive on manufacture of new models in tl)c auto industry. Most of the unemployed in chronically depres.sed aiwis aren't located where the overtime work is avail able and, besides, don't have the skills to do it Also, from tlie employer's point of view, it has been estimated that it costs up to $1,500 tlie first year to add a new- worker to tlie payroll. If a new worker has to be bid oft after a temporary woik rush is over, lie gels unemploy ment insurance, low or. tig the em ployer's rating. In some indus tries the worker would hae to be paid supplementary benefits. Tliose are jusl a lew o( the m.iny practical problems lh.it have to be solved beiixe unem ployment can he reduced to the manaceable proportions of a 4 vr cent rale or ie.-ss. "We have a 15-year-old daugh ter (Susan) whoso intellectual life we don't wish to confuse by moving in the middle of the school year." He paused a second, then add ed: "It's not only her intellectual life we don't wish to confuse." Roger Hilsman, a World War II Office of Strategic Services op erator and now State Department director of intelligence, is known as a man leery of predicting coups. The reason, as he explains it, is that, "a coup which you can find out about and predict will not come about because if you can find out about it, other people can find out about it, too, and take steps to prevent il." National Associalicn of Manu facturers first full-time president. W. P. Gullander, has decided not to change NAM'S name. Edi tor and Publisher, the newspaper trade paper, recently reported a suggestion from American News paper Advertising Executives that NAM wasn't aggressive enough and that it ought to be renamed "Makers of America." NAM'S staff did a little research on what the new initials might stand for and discovered that there was a prehistoric 12-foot bird which scientists had named "moa." It is now extinct. Air F'orce circles in the Penta gon have gagged uo the Skybnlt ballistic missile project cancella tions. They say it will be re placed by research into the bow and arrow. It's a tradition in the Navy that the first entry in a ship's log (or a new year must be in verse. In the best sea-going tra dition Cmdr. Edmund L. Castillo, who had the midnight to oa.10 watch on January I, l!i3, in As sistant Secretary (or Public Af fairs Arthur Sylvester's office in the Pentagon, wrote a three-page poem. Here are some sample lines: "Every court has displayed its professional jnkesmen. Should we be afraid to be Pentagon spokesmen?" "If the answer is cleared. you don't need to believe il. Just fill up your shovel, take aim and then heave it! Democracy's durable, newsmen are wise, Neither mufti nor khaki will deaden their eyts." Washington restaurateurs are all set (or the new federal in tome tax regulations on expense account deductions. One restau rant manacer has hired a blonde with a camera In take pictures of businessmen at lunch. The prints provide them with evidence for next year's tax report on their business entertainmtnl expens- A reporter's call to the office of Brooks Hays. White House aide on congressional liaison and for mer Arkansas congressman, brought this exchange: Hays himself answered the tel ephone. Said the newsman: "Oh. sorry. Mr. Hays. I thought I weld get your secretary." Replied Hays "Oh. no She's loo busy to answer the tele phone." 4 Letters To Answer In response to the Open Letter to Toy Dealers: As a toy dealer I feel called upon to state an entirely differ ent side of the matter of the type of toys now on the market. I am not defending myself or oth er toy dealers we need no de fensewe are only selling what the parents continuously ask for, what the parents tell us their, children demand because they have seen it on TV, heard it on radio, read it in magazines, etc.,. and yes, because it is an item that will sell. I must de fend the little teenage type doll which has been so severely criti cized. Do you really believe this doll has given your children any ideas they didn't have? Can it, a little 10 inch piece of, china or something similar, actually make suggestions to your children? There is nothing vulgar about this little toy. The child is merely projecting herself through the doll. Don't your realize your chil dren would probably Indulge in the very same conversation whether expressing themselves through a little doll or playing grown-up in their mommies clothing? This particular doll neither talks nor sings nor does anything, in fact. This doll is probably the least expensive doll we, and most other toy dealers, carry, so how can you, Mr. Mil ler, claim it is sold for greed or money? The worst I can say of tlie line is that her clothing is a little ex pensive, but many parents and, yes, children themselves make their own clothes for her. We do not sell this doll; it has been sold before it ever gets into the store. How many parents have come in, I wonder, stood at the door and asked if we have this particular doll, only to go elsewhere for it when we are out of the item? The small allotment we re ceive is mostly tagged with a "sold" sign (for a waiting custo mer) and never gets out to the counter. The favorite doll in the store, as far as my wife and I, as veil as our employes, are con cerned, is a little baby doll in a snow white dress who says Mama, and sells for under $3, nobody wants her because she doesn't do anything! The little lor big) talking dolls make such average remarks as "I love you"; if she's lying, who knows? I have in my warehouse some of the monster type toys which so many people called (or, but which 1 couldn't feel would be any advantage to any youngster. I am sure you w ill find the same situation with other toy dealers. As to cowboys and Indians, we make these products available to the child, if he wants them. Apparently he doesn't; very few parents ask for this type toy. The guns (I question their worth lo a child in his growing up) must be the Rilleman. W'yatt Earp, nr whoever is top man on the local TV channel at the lime. As to a child living in an adult make believe world haven't children, always lived in a dream world? Haven't tey always played "house" and mommy and daddy? Lsn't the teen age bracket a step before the mommy and daddy stage? Wouldn't you just as soon have your little girl play she is her teenage sister, whom she prob ably idolizes, as well as your lit tle boy playing he's a cowboy shooting off our now almost ex tinct Indian? Finally, may I point out that we do not sell the majority o( these toys: we simply make them available to the public who requests them. 'And even here we draw the line if we (eel the toy is a "monster" type toy1. Ernie Sessnm, Ernie's Toy Shop. Guesser Coinword puzzles I did make Words ten thousand for the take. Only twenty, no rhyme or reason To wm easy bucks this season. Words, roars glows a lucid kernel These words seem eternal. Combinations, a thousand used One word printed wrong. ABUSE. Only nuts like you and I Waste our time on this pie. I've grubbed the "diet" lor mean ing more To (ind the words and end up poor. Twisted meanings. I have learned My cars are wider and really burned. Be an idiot at your best And you too. ran win this test. Steven Peters. 1414 Oregon. Get Off 1( anyone were lo ask our pub lic officers how they came to be elected to office they no doubt would .say: "A majority of people had confidence enough in me to vote (or me ." Just how inconsistent can they get? Afier tliey have lieen elected to office land at Salem, too, slale officers as well1 they seem to (eel that this same majority o( people do not have sen- cnotieh to know wbetlier we want zoning forced down our throats! Were e richt in electing such people to oilier1 I wonder Tins law and any enforcement of it is a disservice on the part of The Editor those who brought such a law into being and as much so of those whom would force it upon us! It is unconstitutional. Accord ing to our national federal law we have a guarantee of life, lib erty and the pursuit of happi ness, our own happiness too if you please. Further for tlie minority who love the thought of zoning and the regimented way of life it should cause tliem less inconve nience let tliem trade for such zoned and regulated proper ty with some owner who would love to trade the well-regulated bliss for our yet unfiltered way of lite. Don't tell us it would not raise taxes! We know better! It would be classed as improved properly and that would be cause enough. Who would pay tlie wages and expenses of all tlie inspection and codes, regulations and all the thousand and one other ways of extracting money for the privilege of being regulated! Zoning is not Die answer to in dustry. Do something about the lax system we have here and you won't have any trouble attracting industry. No firm in sane mind would come here under the pres ent system. Give tliem a decent tax climate and some unfiltered sites upon which to build and and they will come! Zoning and a lot of other gov ernmental regulations are a creeping paralysis. It must be grand! The Communists even1 shoot people to help them enjoy their way of life and build walls to protect them so they cannot get away from what government knows is best for them! In closing, please get off our backs! and leave us in our peace. I want to see our American way of life stay what our forefathers intended it to be! We have the best national gov ernment in the world. Let's keep it that way! Ray I. Jones, 4058 Shasta Way, Suburbanite! Issue Defined For those who may be able to view the current zoning contro versy dispassionately, and for what it may be worth to learn the opinions of a professional in the field of industrial develop ment, I would like to pass along some thoughts on zoning expressed in a letter from D. T. Daggett, industrial agent for the Southern Pacific Co. in San Francisco. "Business men who are charged w ith tlie responsibility of selecting sites where their companies in vest large sums of money in new plant facilities want to be sure that they are: (1) locating in a city or town with a good business climate, and 2 that the intended plant investment will not be jeo pardized by conflicting land uses such as encroachment of homes or objectionable, nuisance-type in dustries. "Good community planning is evidence of good business climate. Conversely, a community with out a general plan to guide ils future growth or a zoning ordi nance lo enforce the restrictions implicit in the planning process is suspected of having a poor business climate, or at least a lack of leadership and understand ing of the mistakes that have been made in other places. "Industrial prospects expect protection for their intended plant investments, much the same as residential and commercial buy ers. This protection can be pro vided by zoning restrictions and in some cases by deed restric tions or covenants such as are applied in industrial parks. The Klamath Falls area is not at that stage of industrial develop ment where there is a demand for the amenities o( an industrial park, therefore it should be think ing of establishing a sound zon ing ordinance." George T. Callison Blue Plate I look at it now, on my shelf, and wonder, and ponder, if I could be half as brave, and self reliant, as those who came the long trail to our land here. Of the hardships, loyalty and dignity that brought it here, lo sit in safe security, many generations later, as bright and solid as when many years ago it came with master and mistress across the long trail from Tennessee to Oregon. There arc many years lo count and so many problems to sur mount. But we of today have no high wall to surmount or dividing us. with guns guarding it, to say you shall or shall not. Ours is a free world, that we may cross a street as we choose and not have to say, "May we?" We can pray to our own chosen God of belief for guidance and help without fear. So like my little blue plale that stands with so much dienity on my cupboard shelf, let us who are here now look back lo the time that tlie little blue plate crossed the plains. Tliey did not falter, or grow w-eak. although sometimes afraid. They knew they were going to a land of freedom, with hardship. Ixit their hearts wee true and brave even as the colors on my little bine plate generations later. Y Colleen Kile, 211 Nevada Avenue.