m fife m Making One question is naturally foremost in our minds today: "What will the new year bring?" What will it bring the world, our na tion, our communities, our families and ourselves as individuals? The question is natural because we so often seem to think of the future as an un folding of events that remain hidden until the appointed hour for them to occur. Perhaps tha.t is why many are fasci nated by those who claim to be able to peer beyond the veil of the future; why there are probably more fortune tellers in the 20th century than at any previous time; why, when something happens, people so often say, "Ah, yes, it was fated." On the other hand, we may be thor oughly rationalistic and take little comfort from a view that has everything foreor dained, foredoomed. Yet there may still be the tendency to wonder: "What will the new year bring?" The question should be: "What do I in tend to bring to the new year?" VP Dilemma Confronts LBJ Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON I XE A Choosing a 1964 vice presiden tial running mate may be a more delicate task for President Lyndon B. Johnson than it has been for any presidential nom inee in recent decades. He has some odd dilemmas. Most leading Democratic pro fessionals, including southern ers, take it for granted that Johnson, with his Texas base, will pick a liberal perhaps a Catholic from a northern in dustrial state. Such states are expected to be his hard battle grounds in 1964. But many party leaders see the President's needs as much more special than this. Their views, sampled by this report er in a check of states coast to coast, suggest he may be looking for a remarkable com posite of youth and wide expe riencewith a clear line of in heritance from the late John F. . Kennedy. On the experience factor there is no dissent. The shock of Ken nedy assassination seemed to settle that issue. New Jer sey's Gov. Richard Hughes sums it: "I don't think the country will ever again accept a lightweight as a vice presidential nomi nee." No such general agreement exists on the matter of the can didate's youth. Yet several vet eran professionals were deadly serious in stressing its impor tance for Johnson in 1964. Says one: "There was a tremendous in volvement of young people with John F. Kennedy. They feel a heavy loss. They believe power is back in the hands of older politicians again and they're un happy about it." A newcomer to the Demo crats' professional corps goes farther: By LEON DENNEN Newspaper Enterprise Anslyst UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. 'NEA i Foreign affairs prog nosticators and crystal baH gaz ers predict further relaxation in East-West tension in 1964. Moscow's "pinpricks" in Ber lin will continue, of course. There will also be sporadic roups, "revolutions" and "wars nf liberation" in the usual trou ble spots of Asia. Africa and Latin America. However, they are not expect ed tx) alter the course of events set in motion by President Ken nedy in 1963. Mounting conflict between Russia and Red China and the critical economic situation in the Communist world will do much to deter Moscow and Peiping (icm embarking on any milita rv rr .i!itiral adventures that .- 'ikely m threaten peace. T'lrr il no doubt that 11 ric'-;- rc.-i ban arecmcn' ''iart?l 1:te begsr.nin: o! a itcp Icrwanl in the relations be ''vcen te Free World and the Soviet b! c It brought some hj-s to a world a tcjr of an ai.m.c comuil. However, tne great traeedy of the century befell civilized men when an assassin ended . the life nf .tnhn kennedv, '"If i Most Of 1964 This is more than a mere cataloging of resolutions having to do with personal hab its or attitudes towards those around us. It involves more than a code of personal ethi cal behavior, good though that is. It has to do with the very purpose of our existence, whatever we may conceive that purpose to be. It is the difference be tween a negative acceptance of whatever comes and a positive determination to shape the future closer to the heart's desire. This positive outlook should function both in our most immediate and closest re lationships, right on up to our duties as citi zens of local and national communities. The question was stated in another way by the late President Kennedy in his in augural address: "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your coun try." This is a question we should ask our selves regularly, and especially on this first day of a brand new year. "What do we intend to make of 1964?" "if we don't come up with a young one for vice president, we're going to be in serious trouble." Just how young is young enough, these party men do not make wholly clear. It is pre sumed they would prefer a can didate under 50. Significantly, some Republi can politicians who freely as sailed Kennedy now talk about finding a youthful prospect much like him for .their top spot next year. ' Both parties are mindful that by 19C4 some five million more' young people will be of voting age than was the case in I960 It is a rich market. The question of a candidate's possible identity with what many political figures now are, calling the "Kennedy tradition"" ' may prove the toughest of all Johnson's dilemmas in naming, his running mate. " " The key to the puzzle is At torney General Robert F. Ken nedy. A Democrat of national stature says: . "I would think the one mar riage Lyndon Johnson has got to make is with Bobby Kenne- V In this man's judgment, the attorney general is the inheri tor of the late president's man tle "and no one else is." To some, this means the younger Kennedy should be high on the list of vice presi dential prospects. To others it simply means "He's got to be in the campaign somewhere." presumably in full support of Johnson's choice (or the No. 2 place. Robert Kennedy himself is as yet giving no clue to his future political intentions. They may take shape slowly. But he can appreciate his special status, and the value to Johnson of his personal network of political contacts. THE GLOBAL VIEW... Thaw' Forecast the authors of the tent ban agreement. But even in tragedy an essen tial truth about America was revealed to friend and foe alike: Democracy is steadfast in the United States. President Lyn don B. Johnson, in a few short weeks, has proven that a free nation provides an able leader for just such tragic contingen cies. While the world greeted Ihp treaty. President Kennedy cau tioned: "It is only a first step step toward rea son, a step away from war . . . But it will not cause tlie Com munists to forego their ambi tions or eliminate the danger of war." These are also the views of President Johnson who pledged to continue the Kennedy policirs in international affairs. Communist Cuba will remain a major problem (or American foreign policy. However, hy rnd ol 1953. Fidel Castro ; ap peal and influence tad substan tially dirrunuhed and he is ex pected to lose more ground m 1964. Castro's- subterMon an! ter rorism is uurej-inriy slimy laLr.; Latin American s'n'n t join together in an effort to curb him. The te5t will come in nil-rich Venezuela. Cuba's No. 1 tar:et If all sncs we H in Vene Studies of Southern sentiment confirm early guesswork: the attorney general's name on a Johnson ticket might cost the President a sizeable part of his evident heavy Southern support. Bobby Kennedy, even more than his older brother, has been a symbol to southern segrega tionists of the federal govern ment's pressures on civil rights. In the South and elsewhere, too, he served from the outset es-'a lightning rod attracting heavy ; charges that otherwise might have been directed at his brother. - These factors explain w h y politicians disagree so strong ly as to the specific role the at torney general should play next year. Outside the South, howev er, his importance to the John son cause is broadly accepted. His name will likely be on all vice presidential lists for months to come. The other principal pros pects make up a now familiar roster: Sens. 'Hubert Humphrey and Eugene McCarthy of Min nesota, Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver (who is relat ed to the Kennedys by mar riage), U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson, New York's Mayor Robert Wagner, Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown of California. The word from key sources is that friends and supporters al ready are actively working for the two Minnesota senators, Wagner and Brown. There are even a few riffles for Undersec retary of Commerce Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., though he is on no one's "serious" list. Stevenson is a relatively re cent "mention." He has expe rience, demonstrated capacity, name value as a two-time pres idential nominee. But he will be 64 next year and his link with the "Kennedy tradition" is un clear. Nor are his desires known. In 1964 zuela between now and March when (President - elect Leoni takes office, communism will have suffered a serious setback in the Western Hemisphere. ' The year 1963 witnessed a change in the leadership of three major NATO nations: President Kennedy, Britain's Prime Minister Macrr.illan and West German Chancellor Ade nauer were succeeded by John son, Home and Erhard. But the new leaders are expected tn continue the polirie of their predecessors. To be sure, there i3 dissension in the North Atlantic Alliance. But as a top Western diplomat said. "The NATO nations stand solidly together against commu nism though seemingly divided on how U cope with peace." President Johnson, a skilled negotiator and realistic politi cian w ill meet with French 'President De Gaulle and t h traders of West Germany. Italy and Britain m an effort in it on ii difference: Finally, in 1304, as in the pre vious year, idealistic y o u n j Americans serving in the Peace Corps will devote their tinv. i'ior and talents generously lor (lie aJvanccmcnt d human de cency and social and economic progress in the undeveloped na tions of Asia, Alrica ami l.atin America. EPSON IN WASHINGTON . . . Rights Proponents See Long Road Ahead Bv PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) - The honest but discouraging word is that no one has any accurate idea when civil rights reform legislation will emerge from Congress in 1964 or what will be in it if it is passed. There is a long, hard fight ahead. There was considerable jubi lation among liberals in Wash ington when Judge Howard Smith of Virginia, chairman of the House Rules Committee, fi nally said he would open hear ings Jan. 9 on the bill approved by the House Judiciary Commit tee. Smith is personally opposed to this bill. He has requests from a score of other congress men who want to testify against it and he expects more. There will be some witnesses for the bill, too. Hearings, may run through January. House majority leader Car! Albert, D-Okla., is more opti mistic. He thinks the hearings might run two weeks and that the House will pass a bill by the end of January. Either way, and assuming that the bill eventually passes the House, it will then have to clear the Senate. And no one can write a timetable on that ac tion. Republican House whip Leslie Arends of Illinois speaks f o r many in Congress when he says that President Johnson will have to work out some kind of compromise .with the southern ers to get a J)ill through I h e Senate. The imponderable question is. What compromise? If it is a compromise that ' satisfies the southern senators, it -won't satisfy the Negroes nr. the leaders of nearly a hun dred church, labor and civic or ganizations working actively for a new deal on civil rights. Senate segregationists include the most skilled parliamentari ans in Congress, They can he counted on to use again every delaying tactic in the book of rules to dam up or water down the provisions of whatever bill the House passes. Civil rights leaders took a terrible beating in the Congress in recent weeks. They had del uged congressmen with letters and telegrams, phone calls and personal visits to get 218 signa tures on a discharge petition. This was to bypass Rules WASHINGTON REPORT . . Leftist Seeks Oswald Not By FULTON LEWIS JR. WASHINGTON A New York Democrat named Mark Lane has set out to prove Lee Har vey Oswald innocent in the murder of John Fitzgerald Ken nedy. Lane, who ran unsuccessfully for Congress a year ago, has filed a 10,000-word brief with the Warren Commission that tries to show Oswald innocent. The brief was published in its entirety last week by the Na tional Guardian, a far left pub lication once termed by Con gress a "virtual official propa ganda arm of Soviet Russia." Lane has a long record of left ist activity. He was a member of the pro-Communist Ameri can Labor Party from 1948 to 1952. He has been active in the National Lawyers Guild, serving as a member of the group's Executive Board from 1953 lo I9."4. Lane has addressed rallies nf the National Committee to Abol ish the UnAmcrican Activities Committee, a group cited by a Congressional Committee as Communist-controlled. He spoke before another pro Communist group, the Citizens Committee for Constitutional Liberties, only two months ago. In that speech he praised the Communist Party for fighting racial discrimination. former member of ihe Ni w York State Assembly. Lanr caf up his seat lo cliallen.f Hep Leonard Farbstein in the Democratic primary a year ajo In that campaign Lane received the support of Owen Lattimore, a fnrmer New Deal adviser. Lat 'imore was indicted twke by a federal grand jury, but the in dictments were dismissed. Other backers of L;jhi in tl'Si l' Conusessittml s3 lJ)jJ!l til: i- m M til at . '- Committee consideration of the bill and bring it directly to the House floor for debate and a vote. They failed by approximate ly 60 signatures. They wanted Congress to stay in session dur ing the Christmas holidays just to consider civil rights. They failed on that, too. But there was no retaliation. The "Christmas boycotts" which some of the more aggressive Negro leaders had advocated were not called. On the whole, civil rights leaders have acted responsibly and respectably. They may not do so indefinite ly. 11 may take another March on Washington far less peaceful than the first one, with active lobbying, picketing and demon strations in other cities, to con vince Congress that a weak, compromise civil rights bill will not be enough. On the other side of the ar gument, there are some things In be said in defense of both Democrats and Republicans who did not sign the petition for discharge. Sen. Richard B. Russell. D Ga., anti-civil rights leader in many previous battles, jumped on House GOP leader Charles llalleck of Indiana for his re vision of the original House bill ' to make it more workable leg islation. But if Halleck had not done this, the bill wuuld have been loaded with extremist pro visions that made certain its defeat. Also, Judge Smith may not have been too dilatory in bring ing the final House Judiciary Committee bill before his Rules Committee. As Rep. Jerry Kurd, H-Mich., points out, it took the Kennedy administration 29 months Jan uary 1961 to June 196.1 to send Us civil rights proposals to Con gress. It took four months more, In Oct. 29, for the House Judiciary Committee to draft the bill it finally approved. It look anoth er month, to Nov. 21, to get Part I of the Judiciary Commit tee report on the bill to House members and two weeks more, to Dec. 4, to get Part II distri buted. In the rush of last - minute business to adjourn Congress, there just wasn't time to give this controversial legislation any consideration at all. Proof Guilty Benjamin Dreyfus, a San Francisco lawyer identified un der oath as a member of the Communist Party. Angus Cameron, former edi tor and vice president o.' Little, Brown, book publishers. He resigned after Louis Budenz had identified him as a Com munist. Hubert T. Delaney, a for mer judge with a long record of left-wing activities. Steve Max, who ran the Stu dent Committee for Mark Lane. Max attended the Youth Festi val at Vienna, Austria, in 1959. Jomo Kenyatta, the one-time Mau Mau who heads the newly independont nation of Kenya, has been entertaining a notori ous guest. He is Chen I, Communist Chi na's war-like Minister of For eign Affairs. Marshal Chen vis ited Kenyatta on the day Kenya received its independence, Dec. II. He brought with him the best w ishes of Mao Tsc-tung and Chou En-lai, who have long backed tlie cause of self-determination for Kenya. He invited Kenyatta to Red China and plugged the Commu nist line in international affairs. Several days later Kenya's UN delegate launched into a bitter attack on the West and demand ed admission In the world body tor Red f'hiiw Liberal Democrats are furi ous at their party's House lead ership. Speaker McCormack. Majority Leader Albert, and Majority Whip Bosas each re fused to sign a discharge peti tion that would get the Civil IfcQhte, M nst l Irulas 7flffiHWJ tiS iV fl at man. ' PAGE JB HERALD Thoughts For New Year's Day - Time Is By DON OAKLEY Man, like all living things, is a creature o time. All that live are subject to it; none can es cape its relentless pulsing cy clesexcept perhaps such low ly forms as bacteria and amoe bae, which divide and rediviilc and redivide again, deathlessly. When wc jK'i sonalize lime, es-. pecially at this season, it is an old man swinging a long, inex orable scythe that no one can forever avoid. Yet in many ways, we have mastered time. As the only ani mals with a cultural as well as a biological inheritance, we pre serve our own todays in books or on tape or stone and pass them on to countless tomor rows. Or wc measure time and di vide it into small pieces and hang it on the wall, or split it into even tinier bits mid strap it to our wrists. We use time, wisely or not, and it is the only commodity which we can spend prodigally and yet receive a fresh 6upply of every new day for a time. At regular intervals, we set aside a portion of time called a day to celebrate the passage of another longer portion called a year. That day marking the beginning of the next portion is called New Year's Day. To say, "at regular intervals," however, sounds strange. Why not "once every year?" But what is a year? 11 mere ly happens to be the number of days it takes for the earth lo circle the sun; and a day happens to be tlie time needed for the earth to spin once upon its axis; and minutes and sec onds are arbitrary divisions of a day. This limn of ours is good only . , Actually, there it test bun Treaty bat BERRY S WORLD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Oregon l-9--64-Hike iKSJigir, . .-- An Earthly Creation on this planet; it would be "nut of time" on any other. If we venture into deeper realms of astronomy, we can dizzy ourselves with figures and the strange things that happen to "lime."' For instance, our solar sys tem is pacing out its own cy- de. speeding through space - in tltfc general direction ol the constellutiun Lyra at something like liO miles a second. (Of course, we will never reach Lyra, some 156 trillion miles distant, for it too is moving.) Our Milky Way galaxy is it self a timepiece billions of stars revolving about a center duskily obscured by interstellar gas, revolving once every 21)11 million years. Thus if wc reckon from the creation of the sun, currently guessed to have occurred about 10 billion Icarth) years ago. our sun, dragging its planets along with it, has made that vast cir cumnavigation but no limes. Happy golden anniversary, sun. Then, too, in space we liecome involved in the unfami liar logic of relativity where time can shrink or lengthen and a space traveler return home younger than his twin who stayed behind; where It is meaningless to speak of simul taneous events on different stars because each star and its plan ets if it has any) and any crea tures on those planets are locked within their own proper time. For "time" is g sequence of events, and relativity says that to different observers 'if their velocities relative' to one an other are great enough), the se quence of events will vary. What is past for one may nut yet have happened for another. Umking into the heavens on tery little evidence that the fouled up the tutather." Wednesday, January 1. 1964 a starry nighi.'we have to re mind ourselves that what we sec is not the universe at "pres ent" as it "is" but a mosaic of the universe it various stages in its history. It is a view of the cosmos unique to our earth and our "time." A star shining resplenden t to our eyes may long auo have ceased lo exist in ,its ow n prop er time. Conversely, light from a new born star may not reach the earth until the days of our great - great - great - great grandchildrenor not until the sun is burned nut and the earth is gone find only motes of dust remain as unseeing witnesses to the coming of the light. All of this, of course, has Ut ile to do wilh our lives upon tin's local planet. Time for us is mostly a sequence of obliga tions, and we have precious lit tle time between obligations to spend on philosophic meander ings. If we are forced lo think nliiiut it. w'e will admit that we arc pretty insignificant things in the universe and that our New Year's Day is a rather parochial event, to say the least. Bui we also know that if we arc hound hy time, we are also timeless. We have minds that are unconstrained by the stric tures nf relativity theory, that ran leap backward and forward in history at will, that can cross the unmissable gulfs nf spacft and return again, and never mind the limitations nf the speed of light. Such mind - stretching is good ' exercise occasionally. And though the stars keep their se- crets, some of us like to think thai somewhere, some "time" out there, other minds have made the same jouniev. A! manac Ily United Press International Today is Wednesday, Jan. 1, Ihe first day of 1964 wilh .165 to follow. TikIjv is New Yr;ir's Day. The moon is approaching its lust quarter. The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. On this day in history In I86J. President Lincoln sign Ihe Emancipation Procla mation. In 1!IH2, Michigan Ix'at Stan ford. 49-0. in the first Hum- Bowl game. In 191.1, the U.S. Purer! t'n4 vslem brjan nierating. In I9t2, some ?" nations and the United Stiles siiiM in Washington a declaration fnim ing the nucleus of Ihe United Nations organization. A h"u?ht for the day Amer. .Vir 'sv;i;ist .and poet Ralph ftJDVflBVjin sul: "Nothing W05Wl'-Tjiif but yuur-