PAGE-4 HERALD AM) NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon Monday, November II, 1161 -WILLIAM S. WHITE.. dibucd (paqsi , Paging The Oldtimers Another era has ended. Modern innovation has finally caught up with the obsolete, cumbersome sysiem ot city ordinances which were used to govern the actions of the residents of Klamath j Falls, i ! The city recently accepted a small i compact booklet of 573 pages which not ! only summarizes all the. currently existing J city ordinances, but clarifies the wording j on many of them, and eliminated many. The cost to the taxpayer ran Into a few thousand dollars, but it was a long overdue overhauling. However, we note with some mild as tonishment that no longer docs the city outlaw certain types of dancing as it did under the old set of ordinances. A furore was raised a few years back -when a councilman was elected to the coun- - sill nnrl uric trS rA ne nnnrt 4n AnmniA rn. peal of the ordinance which outlawed such dances as the Turkey Trot, the Moonlight Waltz and others while still permitting such dances as the twist or jitterbugging. However, this was never done and the law remained on the books. Specifically, it staled, "To prohibit any person or persons to engage in any immoral dance or dances commonly known or termed or designated as the Turkey Trot; Rag Letters Open Letter I would like to write to each of you individually, but I do , not have the time nor help to do so, and must use this meth od of tolling you about a situa tion which now exists in our uni versities which is grossly un fair. My neighbor and his son, who attends Portland State, .were discussing the possible . higher tuition costs, and then mentioned that some out-of-state, students paid exlra fees and some did not. I did not be lieve this could be true, but the boy said graduate students from other states were not charged the regular (ccs f o r non-residents. I decided to check, and two days later in Eugejie I found it was true and (lie graduate stu dents from out of state aro not charged Uk extra $ti00 a y c a r which undergraduate students pay. I was told this was the pol icy at all universities in t h e Oregon system. I then wrote to Washington and California to find out if this was true tlierc. Tlie answers came back yesterday, and in both cases the out-of-slalc grad Sweet Life On How Three Girls Escaped Loneliness In Hv mi i. M..rmiMirk- s Newspaper Enterprise An. tors with amatory impulses . jn I iiiwi nmu a mmiMininn. ; ship in the nation's capital by ji n u... Btlfllff It I Play-for-pny company can al- ' most invariably be arranged I through a bellboy or taxi driv er, which Ss evidence, of a new climate here. A few years ago . . the ground rules w ere so strict . ; that no Washington hotel cm ploye and few cab jockeys, no matter how sympathetic, would have risked steering a Strang , . er Into a casual commercial ; ! affair. ' Even a atroll'on tlie street ;! now can lead a prcsenlable i male into temptation, prufes ', sional or otherwise. And Uierem ! lies the story behind most ot ' the District of Columbia's pros , tilulion. While some of tlie par . ty girls are full-time filles de Joie, more are government girls who romp for remuneration '. out of sheer boredom and frus- tration. "A girl like me doesn't have much chance here." an attrac tive but not beautiful govern lament girl from the South said. ;I "There are a lot more single young women than men in Washington. Most of tlie boys Dance; Moonlight Waltz; Dip; Glide-Over The-Waves; Heads Together; The Walk Back; The Rough Dance; The Bunnie Hug, or a dance of like character and provide by penalty for punishment of persons engage ing in such dances as well as the promoter permitting such dances." The new codification eliminates all reference to types of dancing, merely clari fying the hours for dancing, the licenses re quired and the circumstances. This is probably all well and good, but it serves to raise two questions. First, the new codification should be examined carefully to determine just how much latitude the Michie Company took with other ordinances of long standing in the city. We have no doubt that the company was well qualified for the job, and has un doubtedly modernized ordinances and made them applicable to today's times, but let's make certain. Our second point may not be so easily answered, but perhaps there are some old timers who could explain to us what the dances such as Heads Together, the Walk Back, the Rough Dance and the Rag Dance were. What made them so immoral? Maybe we can revive an old dance rage and get rid of the twist or whatever it is they're dancing these days. To The Editor uate student pays the extra fee just tlie same as everyone else who is a non-resident. In Wash ington it amounts to $r00 a year for non-residents and $300 f o r residents, a difforence of $.100 per year. In California the dlt erence is even greater, be cause residents pay $120 per year and those from out - of state pay $020, or $500 more per , year. As I understand the Oregon tuition, the in-state student pays $330 a year and tlie out-of-state , student pays $900, except that the out-of-state graduate s t u dent has the extra fees waived. When 1 was in Eugene 1 called the higher education of fice to find out how many stu dents were given this special rate. Tlie secretary who talked with mo said tlierc were about 3.000 Rraduate students at Ore gon and Oregon State, but could not tell me how many were from out-of-state. She finally said it would probably run 50 per cent or higher. If this is true, (lien it is a matter of simple mallicmatics to see that these students arc being granted special rates which amount to $l million a year. This is a sizable amount of money at any time, and par- Potomac: 2 you'd like lo go out with are lied up with girls a lot prettier than I am and those that aren't don't make enough mon ey to lake you any place. "So. Washington has become a pretty lonely place for me. If I had known what it was go ing to be like I would never have left my home town, or I might have gone lo New York or Chicago or some oilier big city where Ihcro arc more ways to seiid your spare lime JP ROOMMATES THREE: "The Rlrls, bored with television and lack of dales in the b.che. lor-sc.rce District, started their part-time activities in, as they said, self-defense." ticularly so when educational leaders are talking about charging even higher rates. Why is this done? Our edu cational leaders say some stu dents may be forced out of school by higher rates, yet they let one group of students go to our schools $1 million cheaper each year than their own schoolmates. I also remember last year they raised the out of stale rates to the point where the regular student from another state was supposed to be pay ing his own way. I also have heard it cost more money to teach graduate students, w h y should tltcy be allowed to go to school cheaper than our own students? This is unfair to the students from Oregon, and it Is unfair to tho students from other states who do pay the extra charge. If Washington and Cali fornia niako the charge, why not Oregon? Double standards arc not fair anywhere in gov ernment, let alone in an edu cational institution. If our schools won't do any thing, perhaps it is time our elected leaders do. Edward 1). Anderson, Portland. and mine men to scnd it with." Three girls from different pails of tlie Middle West keep a fashionable apartment in tlie northwest section of tlie capital whore they entertain a "select" group of men from time lo lime. The girls banded togetlior and started their limited part lime activities in self-defense, according lo one of litem. A graduate of a good state col lege, slie explained: : h 1 1 iV-JV. 1 LEADS DRAFT Peter O'Donnell, left, national chairman of the Draft Goldwater Committee and Republican State Chairman of Texas, is shown in an undated photo. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Arii. ) right, is shown during a recent press conference in New York, Goldwater IV . . . Goldwater Draft Moving By HARRY FERGUSON WASHINGTON (UPI) - Any body who doubts Sen. Barry Goldwater's appeal to millions of voters should visit the Na tional Draft Goldwater head quarters here. The mail and tlie money pour in from ail over the country and petitions asking Goldwater to run for President, accompanied by $1, already have produced $70,000. This is a voluntary organiza tion, formed without Goldwa ter's advice or consent, and is headed by Peter O'Donnell, an investment business man from Dallas, Tex., who also is state Republican chairman. On July 4 O'Donnell staged a Goldwater rally at the National Guard Armory here with an audience of 9,000 persons from 44 stales. Another source of income for (lie committee is tlie sale of campaign supplies. You can buy Goldwater auto bumper stickers, color posters, copies of the senator's books, ball point pens, lapel buttons, pictures of Goldwater in all shapes and sizes and necktie clasps. The committee has 14 regular em ployes, lots of volunteer help ers and occupies office space on Connecticut Avenue for which it pays $1,000 a month rent. Officially, Goldwater docs not recognize this organization and will not do so until he is ready , to announce his candidacy for the nomination. It can be asJ sumed, however, that O'Donnell can get the senator on the tele phone any time he has some thing important to discuss. Leaving out the activities of the Draft Goldwater Committee tlie senator's presidential cam paign until recently was a hap hazard affair. In recent weeks all that has been changed. William Flytho, a former newspaper man, has been installed as speech writer and general assistant to Gold water's hard pressed press sec retary, Tony Smith. Denison Kitchcl, whose official title is manager of the Goldwater Cam paign for lie-election to the Sen ate, have moved from Phoenix to Washington and is beginning to think on a national scale. One of Kitcliel's projects is to compile a microfilm library of what Goldwater has said in two books, 800 speeches, count less press conferences and nu merous television interviews and speeches. It will be card "We were all living in dingy rooming houses, and we were pretty miserable. All of us come from small towns where we knew everybody and had plenty of social life. Here we had noth ing until wo got together at work and decided lo take this place. "Once we got together in a decent place, things were bet ter but still not good. We didn't have any place to go or any thing lo do evenings. Watching I & t indexed so you can push a but ton and find out what Goldwa ter said on every conceivable subject and to whom he said it. This is a precaution against Goldwater being forced to sit down and eat an unpalatable meal consisting of his own words. The latest to join the Cold water camp is Edward A. Mc Cabc, a 45-ycar-old Washington lawyer who was an administra tive assistant to President Ei senhower from 1956 to 1960. His title will be research director and he will assemble a group ' of consultants to advise Gold water on pre-convention strategy. " WASHINGTON CALLING . Oft By MARQUIS CHILDS ST. LOUIS With all of tlie South gone this is the private admission of Democrats at the highest level when they consid er strategy for 1964 Border States such as Missouri take on the utmost importance. President Kennedy carried the state in 1960 by just under 10.000 votes. At the same time Gov. John Dalton, a Democrat, was elected with a majority of around 300,000. That whop ping difference is attributed to the religious issue in Protestant out-state Missouri, which is nor mally Democratic in the tradi tion of tlie South. Soundings show that the reli gious issue will not be a factor next year, the President having bent over backward to avoid any semblance of partisanship. The award to the President by tlie Protestant Council of the City of New York the first lime a Roman ' Catholic has ever received such an award was one bit of evidence. But if tlie specter of the reli gious issue has been laid to rest, another ghost out of the political graveyard threatens In haunt the '64 campaign and tlie polilicos fear that its pow ers to scare and intimidate may be greater than the appre hension over a Catholic in the While House. Busy Washington television and listening to rec ords gels pretty tiresome after a while. And women just can't go out by themselves here." Crimes of violence, especially muggings or yokings, as they call them in the district have become so prevalent that police officials have advised citizens to stay off tlie street at night unless they absolutely have to be abroad after dark. "The only men who wanted dates and could afford them were older, mostly married men who were after only one thine. I guess 1 started t h e whole business. I decided that if some old goat was going to paw me. he'd have to pay for it. My first dale of that kind was with one of the bosses at Hie olfice and suddenly 1 had my share of the rent money. "After that it got easier and easier. The other two girls started dating for money when a nice man I had as a steady customer had a couple of out oftowncrs visiting him. They wanted to go out on the town and 1 talked my apartment mates into going along. The men from out of town just look it for granted llwil they had to pay. They almost had to force money on the girls, but they wouldn't have lo use persuasion now." A house detective j es. they gel into tlie business, loo in . .. ... , Some Goldwater men already are at work out in the country. Sen. Norris Cotton, R-N.H., is in charge of strategy in his na tive state. William T. Know land, former Republican senator from California, heads a Goldwater advisory committee on the West Coast. It is impossible to estimate the total amount of money that is being donated to the Goldwa ter cause. Tlie Draft Goldwater Committee says it needs much more money than it is receiv ing, but there never has been a political organization yet naive enough to concede it had all the financial backing it wanted. South Lost To Dems Needless to say, this is the racial conflict and the grow ing urgency and impatience of Negro leaders to close the gap between white and Negro standards in every field. Sit-down demonstrators de manding jobs in tlie Jefferson Bank and Trust Company here were arrested and given sen fences of a year in jail and sub stantial fines after they violat ed a court injunction. They next turned their fire on City Hall for keeping city funds in tlie bank. A group of demonstra tors carried their protest to tlie treasurer's office and slept on the marble floor just outside his door throughout the night. Mayor Raymond Tucker seems to have done a conscien tious job of trying to bring the two communities together for common progress. He named a Commission on Equality of Job Opportunity, headed by the very Rev. Paul C. Rcincrt, president of St. Louis University, and Chancellor Thomas H. Eliot of Washington University. A ma jor goal is to w ork toward mak ing up educational deficiencies so that as jobs open up for Ne groes they will be qualified to fill them. For all tlie anger and the anguish that have gone, for example, into the bank demon stration, it seems questionable whether qualified Negroes could troduced a real pro in the cock tail lounge of the not quite re spectable hotel where he works. This one had a sense of humor, and she'd been around. "Just lucky, 1 guess," was her answer when she was asked the inevitable question" of how she got in such a business. "I'm just doing what comes naturally, and gelling paid for it," she said. An extremely attractive girl who said she was 22, she was not led astray by the boredom of Washington. "I was hustling long before I came here, since I was 15." she said. "I came to Washington because tlie pickings are good, if you're good looking. Broken down girls can't get by here bo cause there's too much amateur competition. "Joe here screens the custo mers for me." she said, indicat ing tlie house detective. "He doesn't send me anybody I wouldn't like. I charge a minimum of $20 and get more if I can. On a good week I'll lake in $300 or more, and I don't even have to file income lax." Joe, Ihe house detcciive. said later that he didn't have to do much screening (or her. "I just send 'cm to her," he said. "I've never seen a guy with moncv yet that she didn't W.c." 3 Alliance Becoming Big Gaseous Fraud By WILLIAM S. WHITE WASHINGTON The Alli ance for progress, the most generous program for the safe ty and health of Latin America ever to come from the mind of man, is rapidly becoming in stead a gaseous fraud. It is not succeeding. It is not halfway succeeding. It is not quarter-way succeeding. It is, in fact, a dead dream this pro posal for the expenditure of 20 billion American dollars in the next 10 years to shore up the economy and the physical secu rity of our neighbors to the south. In return for all this we have asked not one foot of anybody's territory; not one dime's worth of anybody's favored treatment in trade; not one ounce of any body's special loyalty to the United States. We have asked only that the recipients of this American largesse make honest efforts to end both right-wing rich-bossism and left-wing Cas troism in Latin America. B u t while the Latins are willing to take our money, they are not willing to take cither our ad vice or the bare minimal pre conditions we have laid down for this proposed outpouring of the wealth of the United States. That the dream was fading had long been apparent in the sour snail's pace in Latin America's part of the bargain. That the dream has now actual ly died has been made perfect- . ly plain in two developments in the two most powerful countries in South America. In Argentina the government of President Arturo Illia pro ceeds to the repudiation of oil be found to fill a half-dozen jobs in the bank. As city officials try to cope with the situation and ease the tensions they are aware of shifting attitudes that may in the not-too-distant future in crease their troubles. What they sense is a rising resentment among those who have occupied the middle ground of indiffer ence on the race question. We won't have lawlessness and vio lencethis is how solid citizens who have not concerned them selves with the issue one way or the other arc said to be re ading. If this is, in fact, happening in St. Louis with its large Ne gro minority, what about out stale where tlie traditionalist approach on relations between the two races has so long pre vailed? One answer is the growing number of Goldwater bumper stickers in the boot-heel counties of Missouri's Little Dixie. Knowledgeable Dem ocrats have been s.-ying for some time that if the election were today Senator Goldwater could carry the state against President Kennedy. That may be only the panicky reaction of officeholders w h o tend to magnify graveyard whispers into roars of popular protest. But they have another reason for concern in the entry in the political lists of a new comer. Ethan A. H. Shcpley, a leading citizen, former chair man of the Federal Reserve Board of St. Louis and former chancellor of Washington Uni versity, is running for tile Re publican nomination for gov ernor. Already in the thick of a state-wide campaign, he speaks with incisive vigor of the need to build a party organization from the ground up in a state that, to all intents and purpos es, in recent years has had a one-party sysiem. As Ihe. Re publican nominee, taking o u I after the Democratic machines in Kansas City and St. Louis. Shepley would attract independ ent voters. On the other hand. Sen. Stu art Symington, up for reelec tion next year, has proved such a potent vote-getter that in the past the problem has been to find someone to run against him. That is tlie current dil emma of Republicans who ad mit privately he is probably un beatable (or a third term. If with tlie South gone, or most of it as Democratic stra tegists add and therefore states carried narrowly in 1960 must be held ii is just as imper ative to add other states that were narrowly lost. One is Ken tucky, normally Democratic, which Richard Nixon carried by 80.000 votes. But there the re cent election indicated a close division over the race issue. These are the imponderables being weighed in Washington and around the country as '64 approaches. contracts in which United States companies have tied up $300 millions in a brilliant re storation of a national oil indus try. Now that it is restored, it is to be taken over by Argenti na in brazen international thie very. (And this is the country which, along with all others in Latin America, had so long clamored for "the help of American investment.") In Brazil President Joao Gou lart covertly sneers at the Al liance for Progress, in the very meeting called to consider its work, and neglects even to mention Ihe contributions of the United States to Latin-American stability. Instead, he calls on the Latin countries to unite among themselves which ra ther leaves us out to pro mote their "own" trade and aid. If what is now undeniably happening in Brazil and the Ar gentine will not convince our reformers at home that we are on the wrong track in Latin America and long have been surely nothing will. Four successive American adminis trations Roosevelt's, TriJ man's, Eisenhower's, and now Kennedy's have proceeded on a fatal assumption based upon exaggerated past Ameri can guilt for a long-vanished era of "American gunboat dip lomacy" in that part of the world. Because a lifetime ago we did. indeed, sometimes push the Latin Americans around it has been concluded that we must pay for these old sins even un to the second, the third and the fourth generation. Essentially American policy has been this: Since Latin America is poor and backward, the United Slates is exclusively to blame. Ergo, we must shovel out aid and yet more aid. But we must never demand much for it in return, not even a decent re spect from the beneficiaries. So we have gone on year on year swallowing Latin insults and Latin ineptitude; and, in Cuba, swallowing the establishment in this very hem isphere of an armed and hostile Communist state. Why? Be cause, having tireless regard to our past sins, we must never, never "intervene in the affairs" of the countries to the south. How, then, do we get off the wrong road and onto the right road? Well, we begin by con sidering our own interests, an awareness that Latin "liking" for us is vapidly worthless un til it is preceded by Latin re spect for us. We begin by cracking down on seizures of American investments made in good faith. We proceed by in sisting upon our right and our unavoidable duty lo lead this hemisphere, not merely to bank roll it like some soft, indulgent good-time Yankee sugar daddy. This is the only way that can end in strength and honorable candor in this hemisphere. And it is the only way that could, jusl possibly, end at length also in the defeat of the forces of political disunion and economic chaos that are playing into So viet hands. Al manac By United Press International Today is Monday, Nov. 18. the 322nd day of 1963 with 43 to follow. The moon is approaching its first quarter. The evening stars are Jupiter Saturn and Venus. On this day in history: In 1833, the United States adopted Standard Time and tje nation was divided into ifr lime zones. In 1903. the United States and Panama signed a treaty which led to the building of the Pana ma Canal. In 1939, John L. Lewis was elected president of the Con gress of Industrial Organiza tions. In 1960, the U.S. Navy pa trolled the Caribbean to guard against a Cuban invasion of Central America. A thought for the day For mer President Thomas Jeffer son said: "Never buy what you do not want because it is cheap; it will be dear to you." THEY SAY... The quick brown fox jumped over tlie lazy dog's back. First message over the new 10. 000 - mile "hot line" between Washington and Moscow. The scare-type campaign hopes lo frighten, intimidate or just plain bully the motorist into driv ing safely. . . . This is an at tempt to ram safety down the motorist's Ihroat. a Americas Automobile Assa.