(UNTITLED)

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP72-00450R000100260019-4
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 4, 1999
Sequence Number: 
19
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 15, 1966
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP72-00450R000100260019-4.pdf155.73 KB
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TIME MAGAZINE 15 April 1966 force in public education (Time, cover, the current inflationary surge may Caper Approved For Rule ~/~~ ;}tQ Ll 0 r arict oiiYri Watiit`fgtbi t# ?2~ b n sl porarily cut off federal school aid to paychecks in May and, together with Chicago and threatened the same for last January's boost in social security other cities that had been slow to into- taxes and recent reimposition of tole- grate. Henry's resignation was accepted phone and automobile excises, should effective May 1, while Keppel's lay for put a crimp in consumer demand. Bank the time being in Johnson's In basket. credit has been slowing, and industry's Tots Teeth. At week's end, arriving heavy investment in capital growth over exuberantly in Texas for the Easter hol- recent expansion. yeaw will permit lower rate of iday, Johnson announced new plans to plant Preliminary figures expand the Great Society. At a bill- the first quarter of this year point to a signing ceremony to celebrate a two- slight slowdown in the economy's fever- month extension of the medicare regis- ish rate of growth: tration deadline-held characteristically "Healthy Warmth." More important at a federally financed home for the for the near future is a leveling off of aged in San Antonio-Johnson said he food prices, which have accounted for would ask Congress next year for "in- most of the inflationary push in the last creased insurance benefits, across the year. Figures released last week showed board, for 21 million beneficiaries" of that the Wholesale Price Index, con- social security, plus free dental services sidered the most reliable gauge of in- under medicare for children up to the flation, held firm last month for the first age of six. time since October. "At the moment," After some politicking, the Johnsons says Ackley, "I would describe the sit- then accompanied Daughter Luci and uation as one of healthy warmth. But I Fiance Pat Nugent at a Good Friday would also immediately add that it's service in San Antonio's Roman Catho- necessary to keep a careful eye on it, lie San Fernando Cathedral, later flew to watch for too high a temperature or to the L.B.J. Ranch for a long Easter too fast a rise." weekend. There they were joined by A significant, though statistically un- Daughter Lynda, looking as radiant as measurable, factor in Ackley's optimism her father and sporting a jeweled gold must be the Canute-like figure of Lyn ring on the third finger of her left hand. don Johnson, who more than any other A gift from her current beau, Actor President has thrown the full force of his George Hamilton, who had also joined office and his own mighty powers of the family for the weekend, the ring, persuasion against the tide of inflation. White House aides averred, stood for Though Ackley is less of an innovator "friendship," not connubial intent. than Heller, whom he succeeded a year d h if u ~o and is the temperarnen- a L.L.J. HONORING COST CUTTERS Escape for the nonce. THE PRESIDENCY Effulgent Interlude For all the gnawing uncertainties of the situation in Viet Nam, Washington's least harassed man last week seemed to be Lyndon Johnson. In and out of the White House, the President was trading quips with visitors, tugging elbows, wad- ing into crowds for handshaking and n..hrazos. The President's prose matched effulgent mood. ';ailing the Boat. Presenting a gold medal to Teacher of the Year Mona D tvton. in the Cabinet Room, Johnson expressed his delight in escaping for the none from "battles and soldiers and the bitterness of war," praised the Tucson first-grade teacher for having "taken the treat outdoors as her classroom and the great desert as her desk."' At an Agri- culture Department ceremony honoring cost-cutting employees, Skipper Johnson likened the Administration's campaign against waste to "bailing a boat-you have to keep at it; there is no time to rest." Mockingly, he scolded the Agri- culture men for not equaling the White tlouse's 100% participation in a sav- ings-bond drive: "Maybe i was a little lrMorc persuasive with them than I can be wviiii you." With Congress in recess, among the few items of business to cross the Pres- ident's desk were the resignations of federal Communications Commission Chairman E. William Henry and Assist- ant }IEW Secretary Francis Keppel,. Memphis Lawyer Henry, who as FCC chief since 1963 has stung A. T. & T. with a still-in-progress study of its rate setup but soft-pedaled his predecessors' criticism of the TV industry, is anxious to return to private practice. In three years at IIEW, Keppel made its Office of Education the nation's most innovative THE ADMINISTRATION Councilor to Canute "To say that we have no need for a tax increase is becoming easier and easier," declared a White House econo- mist last week. His remark reflects a growing confidence within the Adminis- tration that it can avert serious inflation without boosting taxes, that President Johnson's stubborn refusal to do so will prove in coming months to have been not only politically astute, but economi- cally wise as well. If this confidence is borne out-in the face of mounting war costs and the free-spending mood of Congress-the nation can thank Gard- ner Ackley, the self-effacing former Uni- versity of Michigan economist who de- vised the President's anti-inflationary strategy last January. "More Information." Ackley, 50, and his two colleagues on the President's Council of Economic Advisers have, in fact, been in a very lonely minority. Nearly every leading economist-not excluding Walter Heller, Ackley's bril- liant predecessor as council chairman- as well as influential members of the banking and business communities, has backed a tax boost as the surest way to keep the boom in balance. "We have," Ackley insists, "better and more com- plete information than they do." Ackley's information indicates that xER0 ;copy` g , an tal opposite of the President, he is by economic instinct perhaps even more in the Johnson mold. Be has made the coun- cil an even more zealous watchdog of the economic guidelines, pushed it into an ever more active role as a shaper of the economy. If Ackley's council proves to have been right about inflation, that role will be more active yet. ECONOMIC ADVISER ACKLEY Alone in the mold. TIME, APRIL 15, 1966 I, ~, Approved For Release 1999/10/1 3 CIA-ROP72-0045OR000100260019-4