MGE-4 HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Ore. Friday, February 15. 1KJ EPSON IM WASHINGTON . . . Education Issue Gets Additional Confusion Born Too Late? A (Th Sacramento Be ) This is an age of mass technology and au tomation. Yet one out of every four who be gin high school in California will drop out be fore he gets his diploma. A tragic waste in op portunity in human capacity. 1 This fact known, the State of California is beginning to move in on the problem, even iE- tardily. Governor Edmund G. Brown wants Iq "find out what's wrong and how to keep IHcm in school." Slate Senator J. Eugene Mc Ateer of San Francisco wants to find out, too, and has introduced legislation to finance re search. The legislature should support this study. The dropout, as he has come to be called in professional education circles, is more than a problem to his school, his family, his com munityoftentimes even to the police. He is a problem to himself. :. Never has the demand for education been more severe in getting a job and, that job landed, in getting ahead. Never has the com petition for desirable jobs been more acute. Wiere a high school diploma opened many (The Sacramento Bee) United Stales Senator Clinton P. Ander son of New Mexico is readying a new wilder ness area bill for introduction in congress at an early date. The senate passed a similar measure in 1961 by the overwhelming vote of 78 to 8. Notwithstanding this clear senate mandate for action the house interior commit ted refused to let the bill go to the floor for a vote. The wilderness bill has assumed a sig nificance beyond its intent to set aside a part of the public domain for preservation in its natural state for the perpetual enjoyment of the people. It has become symbolic of the question of whether a comparatively small group of live stock grazers, miners, petroleum drillers and lumber operators can prevail against the wel fare of nearly 180 million other Americans. :: From ils original version the senate bill was watered down to an irreducible minimum bqyond which it no longer could have served the purpose of saving a part of America's still unspoiled wilderness from exploitation and deslruction by selfish private interests. Congressman Wayne Aspinall of Colorado explained the rcluclance of the house interior A Moral: Throw Away Illy JOHN (iOl'Ll) In-Thf Christian Science Monitor) 4 pjadsnme tidbit lcaxd al int from 111 printed page, and I learned that llw American pub lic carries 12' a million pounds ol keys in ils pockets and purses each day and loses three tons of them a week. .Something there is that doesn't like a key. and wouldn't tins he a splendid place il nobody ever had to link any thing tip? Tlie American public would weigh 12'j million pounds Iras, and everybody could laugh al locksmiths. We don't link up here, al all. The old house. Ihal burned, didn't 'en haxe locks on Hie doors; and when we buns tile entrances to cur new home I put Hie keys on a brad in a summer kitchen beam, anil there they are. They've never been down. Well, if some body comes with malice nlorc Ihnught. he'll Ret in, locked or unlocked. Hc.sidcs, if we locked tlie front and back doors lie rnuld conn? by the shed, and if we locked III shed door he mill d come by the cellar. There's al ways a ladder in the barn, and the Ustairs altic windows don't have locks. One lime we hid some city guest:, here and as we all stalled up for repose Hie lady said, "Aren't you going lo lock Ihe door?" I said c nevrr did. and she said for goodness sake she'd not sleep a wink all unlit if she thought a diwir was un locked. What would we do if a neighbor decided to walk in, she faid. I said he'd think it funny if we. had a door linked on him. But I went down and made as if lo look the front door, and she said she never slept nioif sound ly than she d'd Ihal nighl. tif course, I'd left the back door oen so Ihe dog could come In and mil , it was summertime, and she didn't know that. .Some n( Hie old-lime sluff has been under mined, bill there Is still a phil osophy in Maine that being put lo forcible entry is inhospitable. The wixl uuii it badiUuiuls) kit Very Black Future Wilderness Bill Readied committee by saying the wilderness legisla tion should be held up until congress enacts a measure defining the roles of congress and the executive branches of government in the field of land management. That is, to a large extent, so much hog wash. For as Dr. Ira Gabrielson, one of Amer ica's foremost conservation experts, pointed out, laws have accumulated on the books for nearly a century establishing clear-cut guide lines for Ihe use, management and disposition of public lands. In fact, in few areas of government are the rules spelled out more definitely, so it is obvious opponents of the wilderness bill have raised this as a stalling action in the hope the public demand for preservation of some of the nation's remaining wilderness will just naturally pass away. II is not apt lo. As the population grows and the traffic, noise, grime and smog of the cities increase, the desire of the people lo seek a respite in nature's wilderness will rise commcnsuralely. The greatest crime which this generation could commit against the generations to come would he not to take steps to set aside a por tion of the land to preserve America as it was for science and the enjoyment of the people. open should somebody get lost or caught in a storm, and a proper owner will leave the wtxxllxix full, Ihe lamps trimmed, and at least some Hour in a tin can. .Sometimes the hoars get Ihe flour. In bear country the man who links up a ramp, shutters Ihe windows and props Ihe shed door is inviting destruction, for hears don't like to ho locked mil. They'll leave a place looking as if a couple of sticks of dynamite went oil. Host thing lo do is tie the doors open with a rope, so Ihe wind caul blow them shut, and leave a hear feeling wauled. A hungry old black hear, coming nut ol his den in Ihe spring, doesn't hit latches and swing hinges he just whales on through. I suppose our old farm philosophy is much Ihe same -that if nnyliody comes he has some reason lor coming, and it looks unkind to make him stand on the cold stem while you unlock. .Summer people, with a deep sense ol possession, don't alwas understand this. Hack during the war a lohslerman hoe on his trawl warp and found he was lied inlo something he couldn't budge It In: nod out to be a stihm.u ine which was just pulling out to sea, so he jumiod ociboaid. Al most al once he (vrceived this was a January mistake, lor Hie (scan was even colder llian it is in Maine in .Inly, hut he kicked himself oxer to an ollshoie is land where Mr. and Mrs. Mone hags liom llighnosc Submits had a collage which they had cue Itilly locked up bcloie Ihey wont home. Tins lisheiman shook in his ( lollies so the ii r jingled like a glockenspiel and .suieed Ihe m! ualion. To him. lock and key were cold and disnt.il woids Then lie went down lo Hie beach and gol a rock alxxit Ihe i.e ol a clam basket, and he c.imo back and smaslvrd down all Itxir doois lo the collage, lie found I h i exercise wanned him up a good ilia, and gave him tune to make doors only a generation ago, today it barely suffices. The boy or girl who drops out will find applications will be rejected except for the most mundane and often menial tasks and the first question asked by a prospective employer will he "Education?" At the outset it was observed the dropout is a problem not only to all of society but to himself. He is. Often he is emotionally mixed up and this has contributed to his decision to leave school. He docs not know leaving school is no solution but he will find out as his frustration grows. He will become more and more discon tented as he learns his opportunities are sharply limited. Never will he know, unless he corrects his error, the sheer joy which comes with learning for learning's sake, and here he has missed as much in a spiritual sense as he has in material opportunity. No slate study will end all the dropping out. But the stale should be concerned about reducing the number of dropouts to absolute minimum. That Key! a careful decision about which portal he would finally enter. He selected one, went in. kindled a fire, found some llrooks Bros, yachting (lollies in a closet, decked himself out splendidly and warmly, and was able to find a few things in the buH'ry to eal. Alter that he broke three locks on the hoal house, trundled mil n dinghy, and made his way In the mainland, where he generated ipiile a hit of comment alxnit the summer people who lock col lages When the summer people came back in Ihe pleasantness of lale .tune Ihey reported to Ihe police that their collage had lieen broken into, but all the police man said was, "Kah. 1 know." I might add tli.it when Ihe sub marine came up Hie nel morn ing Ihey found a ring of lobsler hIs around lite conning, with a nylon line to a Jtrt-loot Hamblen boat, and that alter a lew dns the Coast (iuard brought the Itsli ernian Ins cratt. 1 thought you'd like lo know. Oh, I know another thing that Isrars on this I had an uncle who sailed as ship's cai filler lor some caiv and noon retire Ills-lit he used In make didd boes for people Siber rhesis. lonl chcsls, jewelry Ixtxcs auv kind ol litlle Ixix He'd make a bo and carry It around tor a gift, anil although he always built a lock mlo the lids he never delivered a key He lold them if they linked the thing then tixVd lose the key some day and lx in tumble. So he had all these keys hanging on nails in his shop wall, e.u h a souvenir ol some low!. Ixix lie had made, ami little tag' on them telling w hoc boxes they hi. Wrll. amongst many doein of keys on thai end of the slxp he had a couple of lags hang ing up lli.it looked a mile dil lerenl and altr.uled attention, and when vou lixikod al litem one o! them said "I th.uik-vou." and the nlhcr mx- s.ud, ' II - yon plcaso " Yv.iMt t that nice' IN WASHINGTON . The By RALPH de TOLEDAXO Since the Kennedy Administra tion took office, non-defense spend ing has risen from $34 billion a year to a requested $4:1. .1 billion for Ihe coming fiscal year. This is a sizable jump for an . Administration which has been preaching frugality. Fven in this day of runaway spending. $0.3 billion is no small sum. It al most equals what we pay on the national debt each year. The question asked is not wheth er non-defense sending has in creased too rapidly but whether lite increase was warranted at all. Congress has frequently ques tioned specific items and programs in Hie budget, but this dncument has become so complex that it is hard for a Senator or Represent a live In come lo grips with the laets and needs. This past week, however, a Democrat and a Republican Sen ator Millnn R. Young of North Dakota and Senator Sjssard Hol land of Florida oened the dixir a crack on the false urgency of While House requests lor funds. In Ihe closing days of the last session of Congress, the Budget Bureau sent lo the House and Sou ale a supplemental appropriation bill. Senator Young told his col leagues: "Representatives of the depart ment of the Federal government, testifying in behalf of these sup plemental appropriations, claimed that they were so urgently need ed that Ihey could not ossibly wait unlil the new Cungress con vened in January of l!v'l." House and Senate aiqiroved these riesxrately needed addition, al binds, though in slightly dif Miscellany ACROSS 1 Pipe r'i ion 4 Matt irate B Mountain n-Hmh windy hill" 12 Feminine name IS Wander IS Army training ar hool lft tlroumtwlt id Epistle 20 Bowling tones 21 Anger 22 All right 1 24 Indian M One 27 Creek letter SO R en pond 32 W ait till Ihe aim shines, M Regan 35 Mournful oil ml M Female taint ib ) 97 Huh card 39 Suhtanra 40 Nimble 41 Fastener 42 Page number of a book 4ft Made a law 40 Papal M Vine 52 t'arnett 63 Well (comb form) 54 English letter 5i Variety of bean M Heavenly body A7 Make mislakt now 1 Instrument 2 Single time 3 Reduce to pulp 4 Part of far 5 (ierman titlt fmenran invenior 7 Moe from mde to aid 8 ImpeMive w i e i3 I rr5 ri7 I vi i9 io n 12 ni 14 P5 is 19 rpr 21 r""22' 23 iin rti 28 29 U I Lil 30 3 p 32 33 42 43 44 pl'li 4 ' 48 49 ji0 " 51 53 4 53 56 57 Forgotten ferent forms. But ' Congress ad journed before the two bodies could agree on a conference re port ironing out the differences. The departments and agencies, therefore, did not get the $5."U million which they had so pas sionately argued for. And thai was the end of it. "We are now in Ihe second month of Ihe new i session i," Scn alor Holland pointed out on the Senate floor. "There has nol come lo our attention any request for supplemental appropriations at Ihe -present session of Cnngress lo lake care of the items repre sented by the earlier requesls which were included in that $.ViO million bill which was not enact ed." Senator Holland has twice reminded Ihe Director of the Budg et, but somehow, no one seems interested in the appropriation any more. Because the House and Senate disagreed a terrible thing, we are told by White House efficiency ex perts the American taiaycr saved more than half a billion dollars. Included therein was $1.5 million for the Food and Drug Administration. According to Sen ator Kefauver, Ihe entire nation was in terrible peril because the FDA lacked adequate funds. But the country has managed to sur vive, just as it would if $10 bil lion were trimmed from the non defense budget and another $" bil lion Irom the military budget. If Ihe truth he told, this would make almost no difference in Ihe workings of the Federal govern ment. Washington is sjxitted with agencies, created for a temxirary pui'ixiso. which continue In exist. They do make-work hut acluallv Answer to Previout Puizl exhibition 9 Piting bird 10 Window part 14 Manuscript! 17 F.lastir filament ibol.) 19 Vestige 23 Regents 24 Wraths 25 Snug retreat 26 Sfnitt reserve unit 27 Mournful 2ft Trnremoni 29 Superlative SI Hrrw holder 3S Reasoning 3ft Small hole 40 Mama s boy 41 Pacemaker 42 To a remote point 43 Composition 44 Word icomh form) 4fi One of rolumbua' ships 47 Constantly 48 Mamer 50 Certain enning doctors fh.) Half-Billion live in a kind of bureaucratic limbo. The Hoover Commission turned up agency after agency whose functions were being dupli cated or w hich could be more use fully and economically employed if merged with other Executive groups. Once an agency has been creat ed, however, it acquires a kind of immortality. When no work can be found for it, the agency en gages in "studies'" which are al ways described as vital. Discussing Ihe Case of the For gotten Half Billion, Senator Hol land summed up neatly: "If these various requests, and others which I shall mention, had been so criti cal as Ihey were painted tn us last year, the country would have come to an end by this time." The members of the House and Senate committees examining the President's $!I9 billion budget might well copy those words on their shirt cuds to he referred tn when next an Administration sjxikesman predicts national ruina tion if his appropriation is re duced. Al manac By I niled I'ress International Today is Friday. Feb. I."., the 4iilh day of li:i with 119 to fol low. The moon is approaching ils last quarter. The mornin; star is Venus. The evening slars are Mars. Salurn and Jupiter. Those horn on this day includes Susan B. Anthony, pioneer cru sader or women's rights, in IH30. tin this day in history: In I8M1. the US. ballloship "Maine" was blown up in Ha ana Harbor, inflaming American public opinion and presaging the Spanish-American War. In 1M.1, President elect Frank lin 1). lioosevclt narrowly escaped assassination in Miami when a lanalic fired several hullels. In PH2. Singapore loll seven days alter Ihe island fortress was imadrri bv the Japanese in World War II. In IWI. a I' A. mission railed iitnn dissident Congo lactams tn ne;otiale H'ace. The conciliation group called for a federal system in Hie Congo. thought for Hie day Fug lish author (I K. Chesterton said: ' The world will never starve for wonders; but only for ant of wonder." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Signs Huh the stop lights al Klfv enth and Tine now a topic n( dis union can anvone give me one gixl reason for the signals al Sit:i and F.lm streets' What a nuisance and what a wvte of tax payeis" money! Peihaps 1 car an hour crosses the intersection. Jim Vvman. By PETER EDSON Washington Coriespondent Newipaper Enterprise Assn. WASHINGTON' l.NEAl As Ihe House Education and Labor Com mittee carries on its scheduled two weeks' hearings on the Ken nedy administration's omnibus school and college aid program, a welter of conflicting and con tradictory proposals are emerg ing. This may indicate that every one agrees that something will have to be done to aid education at all levels. But it is obvious that a number of compromises will have to be made or nothing will be done. And this isn't any thing that will correct itself just by leaving it alone. Rep. Peter Frelinghuysen. R. N.J., ranking member of the House Education Committee, and some of his colleagues oppose the idea of an omnibus bill. They want it broken down into sejiarale parts: aid for primary and sec ondary schools, aid to vocational and specialized schools, revision of the present National Defense Education Act programs for aid to areas affected by federal gov ernment employment and exten sion of college student loans. The catch in this idea is that last year a half-doicn separate aid-to-cducation bills were before Congress, the way Representative Frelinghuysen wanls it now. The Senate reported out or passed most of these bills. But Ihe House Rules Committee finally told the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in effect: "You can have only one of these hills. Which one do you want?" The answer was they wanted them all. The House nevertheless passed only one a five-year low-interest loan plan for college construction. A compromise version of this, including a scholarship program, was worked out witn the Senate. Hut ' near the end of the session the House sent Ihis back to committee for reconsider ation and there it died. One of the quirks in the present situation is that Sen. Barry Gold water has come out for a na tional scholarship program to en able more high school graduates to attend college. The administra tion wanted some scnolarships last vcar but Congress balked. So the WASHINGTON REPORT . . Garment Workers' Leadership Closed By FIXTOX LEWIS Jit. hitc-maned. bicycle-riding Da vid Dubinsky rules with an iron hand a union, the International Ladies' Garment Workers, that contributed more than $200,000 to assorted Democrats seeking public office last fall. He controls the Liberal Party of New York, with out whose endorsement President John Kennedy may have consid erable difficulty carrying the Em pire State in 1W4. One of those particularly cogni zant of Dubinsky's power and in fluence is Labor Secretary Wil lard Wirlz. a personal friend of Adlai Stevenson. Wirtz. says Mis souri Congressman Tom Curtis, a Republican, refuses tn protest the discrimination against Ne groes and Puerto Ricans by of ficials of Dubinsky's IU1WU. On Nov. Ifi. Curtis wrote to Wirlz. enclosing a ropy of testi mony given to a House Commit tee last summer by Herbert Hill, labor secretary of Ihe National Association lor the Advancement of Colored People. It sX-lled out in detail discriminatory practices of the II.C.WU leadership. Curtis said: "I would be interested in know ing what actions are taken or con templated by the Labor Depart ment in connection with the charges which Mr. Hill has made in his statement to this Congres sional group." Secretary Wirlz didn't bother to answer Curtis lor one month. On Dec. 14. Wirtz replied staling that his department "strongly endors es the principle of equal oixir tuiiity." He quoted his predeces sor. Arthur Goldberg, to Ihe ef fect that "we faor. not only equal opporlunitites (or employment, but equality of opportunity in unions as well." Concluding. Wirtz rejieated that he did "nol believe it projr or equitable that Americans should be dco'ed any available employ ment because of race, color or sex." He did not mention what steps were contemplated tn com bat IIXjWU discrimination. He did not, in fact, mention the ILGWC at any time in his letter tn Curtis. Congressman Curtis says the Wirtz letter is "mere lip-service. Il is Ihe typical, if I may say so. lip-service given by tlie present executive and his administration in the White House to these seri ous mailers in an attempt tn turn them into votes " Note: According to Hill, tens of administration dropped the sub ject this year, except (or a re search program to see if it was necessary. , Two other Goldwaler ideas not in the administration program are lax relief for families with chil dren in college and a tax credit for Ihe part of state and local tax es paid to support primary and secondary education costs by the states. Best chance (or passage now is given to extension ot the National Defense Education Act, due to expire June .1(1. This program is 12 years old. Under its provisions, some 6(1.000 new classrooms have been built and local school board aid has been given to educating about two million children ol feoeral employ es and armed service personnel in affected areas. The total cost has been $2.85 billion. This type of aid congressmen like. General aid for primary and secondary school construction and increasing teachers' salaries is under scrutiny. The modilied Ken nedy program gives the states fi nal say on how ana where the money would be spent. The pro posal may find more support this year from congressmen who fear federal control o( local educalion. But this four-year. $1.5 billion program slill faces opposition be cause ils benclits would be con lined lo public schools. Parochial and most private schools would be excluded, except for classroom equipment loans, and they claim they are just as hard up Congressmen from predominant ly Catholic districts can be count ed on to make the same fight for this they did last year and In try to block aid for public schools unless everybody gels it. Lobbies on both sides of the aid-to-education issue have lined up to testify for ana against the Kennedy program. The opposition, as staled by U.S. Chamber of Commerce and like-minded organizations, is that massive federal aid is not needed. The support, from National Ed ucation Association and others, is that state and private resources are not adequate to take care of the seven million college, the B5 million primary and secondary school students expected to en roll in 1070. thousands nf Negrnes and Puerto Ricans Inrccd In join Ihe ILGWU tn gel jobs have been betrayed by their union. They are covered under contracts negotiated by the union that permit wages lower than the Federal minimum. Negroes are not permitted in three main locals whose members leccive high wages. These are IK-al 10. lor cutters: Uxal 60, lor pressors, and the pressors branch of Ixal ft!i. Number 10, incidentally, is the local which Dubinsky joined when he first came In this country in 1911. and which he later served as manager-secretary. Over a period of years. Negroes who are members of oilier lo cals have attempted to join Num ber 10. Almost without exception they have been turned down. On July 2. 12. the New Ynrk Stale Commission for Human Rights, which administers the Stale's Fair Employment Prac tices statute, found probable cause against Local 10 in the lest case of Ernest Holmes, a N'cgrn who had been reiwatedly turned ' down for membership. Holmes had boon rejected de siite the fact that he worked on Ihe cutting tables nf the union shop. After a 15-month investi gation Ihe Slale Commission found that there were virtually no nnn white members in the local. There is nol. said Hill, a single Negrn or Puerto Rican local man ager in the ILGWC. although membership of many locals i.1 overwhelmingly nnn-nhile. Many Incals. as a matter nf lact. are almost too per rent Negro or Puerto Rican. Even these, how ever, are run by white aides of Dubinsky. Hill pointed to Puerto Rico as another instance of ILGWU's Jim Crow -ins. The international un ion there operates two locals 'WH1 and 6iMi and all members are Spanish-speaking. Both of these locals, howeer, are denied Puer to Rican leadership Jerry Si hoen, a New York local official, was sent by Dubinsky tn run Ihe show. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Q-Hn long nonld It take man In reach Ihe nearest star? A If man could traiel at the '. speed of light-iw.nno miles per second it would take four and I half years to rrarn it.