AC,E A HERALD AM) NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Thursday, February T, IKS Letters To The Editor New Sidewalk Superintendent Spreading California has roughly 40 per cent of the nation's missile and space work, clustered mainly around the huge scientific-educational complexes in th San Francisco and Los An geles areas. Massachusetts, offering an even more spectacular scientific center around Boston, also stands hich. And it has attracted much related industrial effort in such fields as elec tronics. New York figures somewhat in this same picture. So, on a smaller hut growing scale, do Maryland and Virginia, where industries keyed to space-missile research have sprung up around the focus of the government es tablishment itself. Suddenly, however, men in government are indicating their concern that these efforts have been concentrated too narrowly speak- iuS in .,..111 wi 6-bi npiij -u,.vi. tional institutions. Mentioned in President Kennedy's new education message, and set forth in his 1964 budget, is a proposal to spread the scientific educational base so' wider participation in the most advanced government and industrial pro grams may be possible. Specifically, the President wants some $90 million for the coming fiscal year about three times the current allotment to per mit the National Science Foundation to extend its program of matching grants for the im provement of science facilities at institutions of higher education. What the government wants to do, say some top officials, is get away from awarding grants to schools sirnply on the basis of pres ent excellence. The net effect of that practice THESE DAYS . . . Machinists Exhibit Hy JOHN (IIAMM.IU.A.N Columnists have lwrn likened in cminlcr-puiKheis in the pri.e fight game: they gel slugged with a hi! of news and thev strike . bark in anger or in scorn. Tim ' Jahnr news of Jalc has brought forth .in extraordinary measure of Ibis column. stie counter-punch-irig. Rut today (his particular col umnist feels like cheering a un ion decision. Specifically, Ihe In- . ternalional Association of Machin ists is to be commended for ac cepting a contract with Iho Lock heed Aircraft Corporation that omils the union shop clause. Thus a long, potentially hitter struggle over a wholly metaphysical boon has been avoided in an important foment of the aerospace indus try. There never was any senj-e In the movement to rxlnrl the compulsory union simp from Lock heed, for Ihe management of Ihe company has always respected ; . hot s new to organize Last l.ill. when a government "(act Hid ing" tmatd under the chairman ship of I'tolessor (ieoige Taylor of Ihe t'niversily of Pennsylvania lernmniendcd Ihe compulsory nn mn for aerospace companies wherever two-thirds of the work rts oted or it, Chairman Courl l.nult S. dross ol l-ockhecd pro levied that it was morally wrong to ur a ote to force even a smgel person to belong to any oi gam .it mn Hut he made it plain in a letter In Unkheed em ployes that he had nothing againM (lie Machinists, with whom he had been dealing lor years on a basis of mutual respect. "We have behind us twenty ' five years of collective bargain ing with unions," so dross wrote "We were Ihe first California air , crall manufacturer In sign a contract with the union ... We have never denied Ihe undoubted contributions unions have made lo working conditions and indu.- ' trial practices, They have grown , m strength .and gererally have ' served their niemhers well. We have never declined In bargain ' in good faith with unions repie t senling our own employes . . . We are not antiunion. But ' ! are anti-compulsion" In lighting the urcr lo compul ,1 smn. 1u khecd w hich is. nn i- rienlally. the company lhal de- eloped Ihe t'-2 Inch altitude roc ' (innaissance plane that has served the nation so well over Cuba look ils coi vuale life in its hands For I'reident Kennedy had thiown his influence on the side of tiie Taylor board recommenda tions, and just last IVtemhcr Ihe Defense Department's Arthur Sl vester announced, with an omi . nous implication, that all tulure Lofkherd contracts with Ihe null ; I. try would have lo he approved ; by high-ranking and politically ; appointed-secretaries If. after the ; termination of the lalt-Ilailley no-strike breathing spell, a long ' fclnk had idled the Ickheed Our Science is to make the already busy, high-rated in stitutions, like Harvard, Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology, Stanford and the Universi ty of California, bigger and busier still. The administration would like to put some of this particular grant money into schools and regions where today there is merely a potential for development. No specific examples are cited by of ficials, But North Carolina's not altogether unheralded "research triangle," a budding industrial development fed by three nearby schools, is perhaps a good illustration of the "potential" in some sectors. This 4,600-acre project could conceivably be a thriving site one day. Already it has made a modestly good start. Other schools and other regions are deep ly envious of the big "magnet" areas around Boston and the Pacific coast. They seek to emulate the North Carolina example and build ambitiously from scratch. Rightly or wrongly, many political lead ers have the idea that the economy of their areas will not prosper as they want it to do unless they can get into the electronics-space-missile vanguard. Aides say the President also sees major economic value if more regions can take part. No one can quarrel with this goal. A balanced effort nearly always has much to recommend it. It needs to be noted, however, that there is also much potential political benefit from a spreading of favors in this field. Conversely there is danger as rumblings in some places indicate in dispensing grants too narrowly. So this particular program could have many charms for many people. Some Common Sense manufacturing plants in Califor nia and its installations at rocket centers from Cape Canaveral to Hawaii, the government could have killed the company simply by awarding ils contracts lo other manufacturers. Fortunately, the Machinists Un ion sensed the good laith of Ihe Ijockheeri management in rela tion lo collective bargaining issues bearing in such items as wages, fringe benefits and vacations. They also sensed thai Ihe temper of California aerospace labor is anti-compulsion, for in three oilier companies General Dynamics. North American and Hyan the unions had not been able to mus ter Ihe requisite two-thirds maj ority in a vote on the compulsory union shop clause. So, hy giving ground on the issue of compulsion, the Machinists have forestalled Ihe sort of hlccding struggle that has been going on in Cleveland. hio. where the members ol Ihe Newspaper Guild hn.e been beat ing their brains out trying lo c lort Ihe union shop from manage ments I hat are friendly enough on most other bargaining issues. At Lockheed Ihe management Music and Dancing ACROSS I "Doing the turkry f trot 8 "Swing partner'' 1? Verdun opera U Pronien - 14 Sri bud 15 Two 16 Indian weight 17 Shred IB Vat W Scalier 21 Indonesian of Mindanao 2? An his' (nnifi 24 0iifil 2$ feminine a puliation ?7 Krqiiire 2ft KxplOMV HO Itarrm room II r'th 3'J Kiner knot 11 ViaK S.SShPi-nfoWi TH Spainh dance 40 TrrnblcneM 4.' I.imb 4 I Oriental guitar 4.'i Native metal 4rt (ireclr, portico 4 Fairy fori 4! Arabian gulf to Trial M Wapilt M Hmal Kalian family name M le-l point M Hop' kilna DOWN 1 Sample 2 Orrmonv 3 Danish eaport 4 Kind o( dance 5 Starve (t Kuropran mcr 7 Sruimh tutlle 1 I i 13 14 I lb 16 17 j 18 9 ilO 111 n i6 n ' 2S rTrn 17 1 2TY. AM 38 39 40 41 42 J-Ji3 44 j45 41 4 48" "49 5!3 51 51 51 5? 35 7 Know - How has agreed lo suggest to new em ployes lhal they "give considera tion" lo joining Ihe union. But this is a far cry from coercion, for the genuine anti-joiner can still growl a "so what?" and go on. with his job. The fact that the drive lo union compulsion has been checked by a direct rebuff lo Washington should give impetus to .Senator Barry Goldwatcr's pro posal (hat action on the union shop issue should he confined lo stales which specifically permit compul sory union membership contracts to be negotiated. If the federal government wuold only keep its lingers nut of collective bargain ing on the matter ot compulsory union mcmlcrship, the issue might die the death it deserves in any free country. Alter all. even David Dubin sky of the International Ladies Garment Workers, who believed in fighting for the closed shop as a tactic, recognized that some hu man hemes just wit' not be com w lied W hen he encountered a ''natural anarchist" in one of bis dosed shop establishments, he winked and let him fco on working without signing up. Answer lo Praviout Pun It EOT! JQR4TI YVW'T'S JTjTTYi .MO.S.tHAHA Aft i ft oKI mte Affirmative Kmhelhshed i Joined t'iihion atresh 1 lefatitf 1 Maneler i I lire Harvester S mhoi (or tellurium t Pre pom t ion .1.1 Strong point M Ne arlv .1ft Fats a wiiv .17 MoM painful .18 Thrash .19 t.uhricator 40 Chores 41 t. rates 44 Ceramic piece 47 Consumed 49 Cameroon With i-1 ft ' ' - 'ft 'i - s (Ji! !tfss7ff nTTi-j3 IN WASHINGTON . . . Efts Dp 0 By RALPH de TOLEDAXO Two words describe the reac tion of past and present mem bers nf 1 he Joint Chiefs of Staff to Defense Secretary McNamara's statement on American military policy: utter shock. For he has told Congress in secret testimony that it is no longer U.S. defense policy to be able to obliterate the Soviet Union if it attacks us. In other words, Mr. McNamara has said that though e are spending $.V1 billion in defense, we do not plan to have in readi ness the kind of deterrent whiih lias held the Soviet Union at bay. All we intend lo do. according lo the new strategy, is to "reduce the power of any (oliow-on attack" By SYDNEY .1. HARRIS Purely Personal Pre jurfice : The way a mart traditionally maintains his self -respect is by rioins a difficult job and dmnq it well; and the widespread los of self-ropert in the modern u-orld is larpely owing In the increasing number of jobs that can be done simply, perfunctorily, mechanical ly, uselessly, and under no com pulsion lo be done well. (iiven power, an intolerant ideal ist can become more oppressive Ih.tn any tyrant: it was the intol erant idealists of the French Rev olution who created the ReiRn of Terror, which an avowed tyrant like Napoleon, wilh n less exalted iew of mankind, would have had too much sense to inflict. Those who are fond nf asking thnmrlvr Ihe jejune question. "U Hie worth living?" rare ly pause tn ask themselves the enrollarv question, "Is death worth Hying?" Marriase has been called a tie." hul it is more like a belt, whu'h cannot be too tiplil 'or it binds' and cannot be too looe or it f.ills'; and marriages that fail are those which have only one nntvh in the belt, so that it cannot be loosened or lightened In ad-u.-l to the changing weights and pressures of the relationship. Among l lie hardest advice to Mlow is that given by (leorge Macdonald when he said. "H you luxe a disagreeable duty to do at twehe o'clock, do not blacken nine and ten ami eleven and all between with the colour of Iwehc " Hrlorr e lire prnui) of eon. (rolling our passions, il might Ho well tn ask nunrlve nhrth rr our control Is so slrnns or our painn so wrak. Kvrn genius ha. it limita tion. F.inMein could nut find the unified tK-ld Hwoia he was look ing for a'l hts lite, but tupid;t is mtimte there is no fancy or belief th.it marks the boundary ol human credulity, ami some man can always be found who will carry uie banner of stupidity across a new frontier. The d i ttere iht bet w re n t i ie Si M by Ihe Communists. The key word is "reduce." If the Communists wish to hit us again, this new military doctrine says, we will not prevent it by any kind of massive retaliation. Spelled out, it means that Sec retary McNamara is willing io trade a series of missile strikes with the Soviet Union. This will be good news to Comrade Khrush chev. He now knows that should he clobber us with missiles, we will not immediately wipe the So viet Union olf the face of the earth. Mr. McNamara's new' slrategy is the latest of a series of mili tary plums we havf handed to STRICTLY PERSONAL cynic and Ihe skeptic is this when confronlcd with something lhal seems too good to be true, the cynic says that it isn't good, while Ihe .skeptic says that it isn't true. Experience Ik nol the best, but the worst, teacher for those with closed minds; as someone has observpd, a cat who has sat on a hot stove will nevrr sit on a hot stove again hut It won't stl on a cold stove, either. True forgiveness doe not con sist merely in burying the hatch et; it must include forgetting the burial - place. POTOMAC FEVER rians for a tunnel under the Knglish Channel are faltering. If De Gaulle ever condescends tn visit Britain, he intends lo walk cross. James Meredith derides on another term at Olf Miss. He hears they have brand new history class where they study The War between The Slates without re-enartint it. South Dakota's Gov. C.uWirud vetoes a bill to require car cat belts. It violates the freedom of Ihe seas: Th right of every man to sail through his own windshield. Thincs are so touch in Europe's Common Market, they won t even let an Englishman buy French post cauls. Kennedy asks production con trols and subsidies tor larmrrs. I, ike his predeersnr. IKK lis urrs the best way In handle the farm problem Is to pass II along tn a successor untainted hv solu tions. The admimtrations ta cut and deficit plan is baed on t h e found principle th.d the public ami tbf g,,Nernrn'nt should never go broke simull.moously. Fl .ETCHER K.NEKKL the Communist bloc. It is a strat egy developed hy a group nf "whiz kids," imported by the Ad ministration, w ho barely know one end of a rifle from another but are very handy with an IBM com puter. These "experts" have swept aside the Joir.t Chiefs and their military experts. In today's Pentagon, a lifetime of experience with war and its weapons is a black mark. It should be poinled out that Secretary McNamara's brain storm, however shocking, comes as no real surprise to the Joint Chiefs ipast or present'. B it by bit, they have seen him moving in a direction which may spell catastrophe. That the stubborn Mr. McNamara is acting out of the best of motives makes the pill no easier to swallow. But look at Ihe record. The American ace-in-tlic-hole was its power to hit every major target in the Soviet Union at a moment's notice, should Comrade Khrushchev embark on any mili tary adventures. Uncertainty as lo when and how the U.S. would move was prime factor in keep inc the Kremlin reasonably in line. Then Ihe egghead planners de cided that we should inform the Soviets that we would never use our strategic nuclear weapons un less we were attacked first. It was necessary to make this an nouncement, we wer.: assured, in order to keep Prime Minister Nehru and Ihe pipsqueak under developed nations nappy. It was also mighty reassuring to the men of the Kremlin. Short of launch ing their missiles, it gave them a Iree hand. But this was not enough. The Pentagon, at the Administration's behest, then announced that in any retaliatory move, the United Slates would aim at strictly military targets. We would nol allcmpl to hit any cities or great population complexes. "Amen." said Ihe Kremlin and moved Ihe nerve cenlers for its missile bases to Ihe centers nf big cities where they would be sale from attack. By the stroke ol a press rclca.-e. Ihe "whn kids" had given th Kremlin a privileged sanctuarv from which it could organize and command a nuclear blitz. Bui the men of the Kremlin remained nervous. They knew th.it the striking power of the Straleor Air Command and the missil punch nf our IRBM bases in Eu rope and Turkey, iar nvre effec tive in the gray ponod between war and peace, tied them doifn We are now dismantling those overseas bases, -.vstcmaticaKy cutting SAC down to sie, and dcprivtnc ourselves and our al lies of the Skybolt missile As we stand now the Soviris know exactly what we have and what we intend lo do with it We must build enough 1CBM instal lations to meet every eventuality however much it may cost. The Soviris can plan tbrir offensive stidtecv at a mininvim cost Thry can pick the time ai.d the p!aie. They know that if they hit us hard, we will relaliali with a slap on the wrist and wail In sre what the;r next move will tie Tins may he what the IBM machines aovisc. But it has our best mill ury minds in a stale of fear Thev know tli.it no electronic computer Ins vet won a war or defended a nation. Manipulation I enjoy Frank Jenkins' writ ing about the resources of the Jef ferson Empire, his travelogues, and his comments on a number of other things. But I get so tired of seeing conservatives like him get so mystified in print over deficit financing that I'm finally moved to protest. I'm sure it can't actually be as mystifying to him as he pretends, lie has his con stitutional right to be against it, but hardly a moral right to claim to be unable to understand what he can understand, if I'm nol mistaken. Now, it's perfectly true that if he or 1 live beyond our means for an indefinite time we'll go bank rupt, unless we make some mon ey to make up the deficit, and if we get caught making that is. creating money, our printing presses will be confiscated and we'll do some time in the pokey. But the government is author ized by the constitution to make create money. It has seen fit to interpret this authorization to delegate the making of money tn hanking institutions, from which it may then borrow. I personally question this inter pretation. It seems to me that the government should extend credit to itself when it needs it, and avoid paying interest to the banking institutions. Perhaps if the trainers of (he constitution could have seen ahead a century or so they would have specifically included the ex tending of credit as well as the coining of money as functions of Ihe government only. Maybe this only shows my economic ignor ance. But there's no use starting to cite economists to prove our points. The conservatives have their economists, and the deficit financiers have theirs. My point is that while deficit financing might be wrong, it is net necessarily an irresponsible system leading inevitably to disaster. It is just a way of the government's regu lating the amount of money avail able in relation to the amount ol business tn be done in the country. It may be, as 1 believe it is, a too round about way, but it is a way. People can. and will, argue from now on as to whether the supply of money is being made too small or too great, because no syslem has yet been devised that is fair to everybody. Rut as for the argument that dclicit financing will lead the country lo disaster. I used to believe it. too. but the last .10 years have worn Ihe argument out. If it does lead tn disaster, it will be because EPSON INI WASHINGTON . . . President Proposes Vast Education B By PETER EPSON' Washington Correspondent W ASHINGTON ' NEA -President Kennedy's special mes sage on education sets forth a 25 pnint program said to be the most comprehensive ever presented lo Congress. Costs nf Ihe prosram for the fiscal year beainmng July I are put at ?I2 billion, with actual expenditures of $14.! million the first year because 't takes time lo cot coing. No official estimates are made for costs hi later years, hut a gimd guess is S" billion or mine for Ihe three to five years Ihe program covers. The great nucslioi. "is this ex pense necessary'.'", will be heard acain from those who be lieve that all federal aid lo ed ucation is wrong and that tins problem should be left In local communities, the slates and pri vate institutions. But the t oiled Slides Office of Education has marshaled an im posing array of statistics to show lhal the great grow.n nf the pop ulation, the scientific and tech nological advances nf modern liv ing make necessary more and higher education than existing in stitutions, with notable exceptions, on supply. As Ihe President's mes sage points nut. a M billion na tional outlay for education in 1!W has become a $2.1 billion annual outlay in the early KWs. By 1970 high school attendance should in crease by SO per cent, college enrollment should double. Still. Ihe n.ilion will be shorl W.noo holders of doctoral degrees for advanced teaching And the short age can be met omy by expand ing Ihe entire educational machine at every level. This i what Ihe President pro poses, fiom bottom io top Widest interest wi i probably center on slrengtheninj elemen tary and secondary education. First year authorization would be sg.S billion, with $1.5 billion spent m the first vear of a four- ear program. Giants would be made lo the states lor essential c.assroom con struction, removal of fire or health h.izards, and raisin; teachers' salaries in public schools The t.iies would dcteim ne how the money would be spent. Allocations it is misued, not because it is disastrous in itself. Hubert Herndon Box 522, Lakeview. Dolls The dolls of today which walk and talk are for children of any age. because too often motherhood is not made attractive enough for little girls. A doll who walks and talks is a good toy, because it teaches a little girl to handle awkward things and still have fun doing it. Many other examples could he given concerning the types of dolls of today. People who run down the toys of today are nothing but jealous. There is nothing more wonderful to see than a child happy, and a child doesn't have to have every thing lo be happy. It's not toys that make the kids the way they are today. It's the parents who are too busy to teach them right from wrong. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bryan Kind Act My wife and I would like to laud the kindness and helpfulness of two Klamath Falls citizens. They are Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Herron. two residents of which your city can be proud. Wednesday, Jan. 30, at about 3.30 p.m. we hit ice on a turn below Salt Creek Falls in the Wil lamette Pass and slid into a ditch. My wife received a broken nose and a bad cut on her cheek and was bleeding badly. She is a bleeder which caused us even more concern. I walked to the highway and tried to flag down a car for assistance. After several cars had gone by, Mr. and Mrs. Herron stopped. They took us to Oakridge to a clinic and waited while my wife was examined and patched up. Then they insisted that they drive us into the Sacred Heart Hospital in Eugene rather than wait for an ambulance to be sent all that way. They saw us safely into the hospital and inln the hands nf competent medical per sonnel before they would consent to be on their way. It renews one's faith in humani ty to meet two such people who care enough about their fellow men In help them, even though they were complete strangers and even though they had nothing tn gain. Klamath Falls should indeed be proud to have Mr. and Mrs. Leon ard Herron as residents of its fair city. W. Aaron Pfaff, 3fil2 S.E. Crystal Springs Blvd. Portland 2. Ore. In segregated schools would be left to the courts. Science, malhemat.es and mod ern language equipment would be furnished by continued grants lo public schools and loans to non profit schools. Government aid lo federally affected public school districts would be continued four years more. The second part of the program would be to improve higher ed ucation facilities, fm which $."S million is asked. $26.8 million In be spent Ihe first year. A three year. $1 billion annuai construction loan program for needed educa tional facilities is proposed. Grants lo Ihe smtes totaling $50 million the first year would he made for enlargement of jun ior college facilities Two-year training programs for science and engineeting techni cians would be financed in col leges. College libraries and grad uate schools would be aided, and foreign language instruction doubled. Third part nf the program is tn improve Ihe quality of education, for which $-17 million would be asked. $9 5 million to be spent the first year on teacher train ing, educational res'srch and the collection nf educational statis tics. To aid college and university students, $118 million is request ed. $.i5 million to he spent Ihe first year. The present student loan fund would be enlarged, new government insurance would be offered on private education loans of up to $10,000 each. Vocational education, training for handicapped chiWen and the mentally retarded would be ex pended by a new money request nf $.17.5 million. $12 5 million expend ed the first year. Finally, university extension courses, adult education and pub lic library grants to all areas of a state would be e.spended st new appropriation cost n( $."2 mil linn The administration wants this whole package enactn! as a single bill, nol broken up into separate parts. This killed it last year when the rules rommiHee would ap prove only one. Aid for medical edwation would, however, be handled as a separate bill this vear.