THE DALLAS POST, DEC. 21, 1972 ~ Page 4 A Greenstreet News Co. Publication " |Thissa 'n Thatta ~_ EDITORIAL ~ Christmas Stocking = Everyone was standing around the Dallas Post’s fireplace Tuesday afternoon waiting to have their picture snapped when who should appear in a cloud of soot but one slightly singed Santa Claus! The jolly old gent was making his official Christmas visit a little early, and after a suitable amount of ho-hoing, he left a Christmas stocking chock full of goodies for all the residents of the Back Mountain. In this very special stocking there were no lords a’leaping, no drummers drumming--not even a turtle dove or two. Instead, the stocking contained less frivolous items, gifts we will find useful ‘‘long after the price has been forgotten.’”’” In Santa’s stocking we found: - A traffic light and traffic signs for use at the intersection of Routes 415 and 309. Santa explained Elby’s, A realistic, serviceable bus schedule for the Wilkes-Barre Transit Company. Santa’s schedule has buses leaving for Wilkes-Barre from Dallas center every half hour on the quarter hour, and from Public Square for Dallas every 30 minutes on the hour and half hour. Sound too good to be true? It used to be the way the buses ran--before the transportation authority ‘‘improved’’ the schedule. Tons of road patching material for the pot holes along Tunkhannock Highway, Route 309. The high- 3 way, especially from the intersection of Centerhill Road out toward Noxen, has been dubbed the Ho each day. A sewer system for Harveys Lake Borough. Ei Virtually everyone agrees the system is needed at the Lake, but progress on the project continues at a snail’s pace. And nestled in the toe of the stocking is a sparkling Toby’s Creek, with clear water free of pollutants rippling merrily along and picnic ben- ches situated on its landscaped banks. What great gifts! » | Press freedom, as guaranteed by the United States Constitution, has become more and more elusive since the days when Vice President Spiro T. Agnew leveled his first blast at the “liberal Eastern press.” Since that time, and since President Nixon has gy the high tribunal. And three times the court has ruled that reporters must either reveal their confi- dential sources to grand juries during investiga- tions or go to jail. Three times the reporters have made the decision to take the latter course. : The press is generally angered against a growing legal philosophy which requires reporters to act as an investigative arm of grand juries, judges, legis- lative committees, and even entire federal agen- cies. Speaking for the three dissenters in the recent Supreme Court decision of Branzburg, Pappas and Caldwell, Justice Potter Stewart argued that the court “invites state and federal authorities to undermine the historic independence of the press by attempting to annex the journalistic profession as an investigative arm of government...when governmental officials possess an unchecked power to compel newsmen to disclose information received in confidence, sources will clearly be de- terred from giving information, and reporters will clearly be deterred from publishing it because the uncertainty about the exercise of power will lead to ‘self-censorship.’”’ From the standpoint that an informed citizenry 7 the future and therefore have more influence on their own destinies, it doesn’t make much sense that the wishes of our forefathers should be over- thrown by a lame duck administration. After all, those men who drafted our Constitution were ob- ~ viously concerned, as we are today, about crime and about national security. But they were equally worried about the transgressions of the govern- ment itself. Most reporters today would agree that press freedom has not seriously been hurt by the current move to wipe it out. But as more and more news- men go to jail in lieu of revealing their sources, and more and more editors in either the broadcast or printed media face such prospects, sources of in- formation are bound to dry up, leaving the public to suffer from that which it might never know. by H. H. Null, 111 It just never occurred to me that it could happen, but it did-the Shapp Chap did something right; and I would be a cad if I didn’t give him a little pat on the back for doing it. Mr. Shapp vetoed the anti-abortion bill, thereby putting a stop, for the time being at least to an attempt at utilizing the laws of the Commonwealth to enforce a religious notion on citizens who do not subscribe to the same views. The view that abortion is heinous murder is held by several religious denominations, most notably by some sections of the Roman Catholic Church (although not all) and that is their inalienable right; but to attempt to make this view part of our criminal laws and force it to be followed by those who are in sharp disagreement is to commit an act of intolerance as well as an attack on the principle of separation of church and state. A reading of history tells us of many such situations in the past. The Pilgrim. Fathers had a lot of blue laws (including one that barred Quakers from even entering their territory) and our own state still has some Almost everybody has read about the in- tolerance and discrimination of Oliver Cromwell and his Roundheads and con- versely, of Mary, Queen of Scots and her prejudice against Protestants. Or about Torquemada and the Spanish Inquisition. Or about the barbarity attendant on the European religious wars, which followed the Reformation. Or about how the Mormons were persecuted before they got to “Deseret’’, now Utah, and of how they per- secuted non-Mormons after they got there. All of this religious hatred and partisanship was supposed to have been healed under the U.S. Constitution, but recently things have been happening, which, if we are not lucky, can revive it in our own country and our own state. It seems that if and when a religion becomes rich and powerful, some of its more fanatical adherents get the idea that the truth lies only in what they believe and that they are acting virtuously if they can force their views on everybody else. Since this does not always sit well with equally fanatical people, who hold the opposite views, sooner or later comes the emergence of hate and, if un- checked, of violence, such as has been going on in Northern Ireland for many years. TRB from Washington Grandfather Lang was only a lad then, a tall, gangling lad, and he had forked down the hay for the critters, and paused only long enough to see the snow smothering the bar- nyard, and come back to the kitchen where the Squire was reading and his mother throwing another stick on the fire for the bath water. The children were in bed. He reached up to the shelf over the woodbox where there was string, and beeswax, and snuff, and candle ends and an awl and took down the red leather book I have before me now, “The Parlour Letter-Writer and Secretary’s Assistant consisting of Original Letters of every occurrence in Life Written in a Concise and Familiar Style-and Adapted to both Sexes to which are added Complimentary Cards, Wills, Bonds, &c.”’ It was by ‘R. Turner: Philadelphia, Thomas, Cowperthwait, & Co. 1842.” Squire Lang kept on reading but his mother at the sink asked him, for no good reason. “See Hannah at meeting, Frank?” “Uh-huh.” he said. He leafed through the little volume. After giving samples of letters the last page offered even more practical information: ‘‘Receipts for Making Ink -- One quart of soft water, four ounces of galls bruised small, one ounce of copperas, and half an ounce of gum. Let these stand in a stone bottle, near the fire, with a narrow mouth, to keep it free from dust; shake, or stir it well, once every day, and you will have excellent ink in about a month’s time, and the older it grows, the better it will be for use.” Footnotes by J. R. Freeman “I’m sorry I did it,” one Wyoming Valley flood victim said Thursday night during a meeting of the Flood Victims Action Council. He was commenting on his vote for President Richard Nixon in last month’s election. He's a typical flood victim who thought Mr. Nixon’s help was proper during recent flood recovery. That was before he received a letter the other day explaining that there had been a mistake made in Washington that even Mr. Carlucci, the President’s personal flood representative, had overlooked. And because of that ‘‘mis- take,” our flood victim friend had been dir- ected to send the money he received in the mini-repair program or his SBA loan back to the government. Our friend and other flood victims like him cheered a suggestion that they use the letters demanding the money back to build an old- fashioned bon fire in front of Mr. Carlucci’s former Wilkes-Barre office address. On the other hand, while federal officials boycotted the FVAC meeting, state officials did not and were unanimous in suggesting that flood victims should ignore the fed’s de- mands. And why shouldn’t they? For that reason, I am alarmed about the legislative effort to enact laws which will force anti-abortion views on others who believe no such a thing. I have read the arguments about abortion, pro and con. For instance, that it is murder, which it well may be in the sense that it is murder to kill anything that doesn’t want to be killed, such as swatting a fly, butchering a hog or electrocuting a murderer. These murders are beneficial to the human race, a proper subject for legislation. Killing a partly-formed human fetus can be of benefit to the human race by preventing the birth of an unwanted baby whose life, if spared, might be no bed of roses, anyhow. If this is murder, so is contraception itself. If the human race acts wisely, some way must be found to prevent the population growth that can be limited only by visits from the Four Horsemen of the Apocolypse. I don’t profess to know much about abor- tion, but would guess that it is not unac- companied by pain and would further guess that no woman really wants an abortion performed on herself, unless done for good reasons; so there isn’t much danger of abortion running rampant. Of course it should be controlled by law. But not by a harsh and cruel law, which would force a pregnant mother to endanger her own life by having the operation performed surreptiously and dangerously at the hands of an ignorant and unclean charlatan. An abortion law for the general welfare we should have, but not one based on religious ideas which are no more public business than the Jewish dietary laws. . I see by the papers that a legislator named Mullen from Philadelphia is the principal proponent of the anti-abortion law which Gov. Shapp vetoed and that Mr. Mullen is annoyed with our governor and hopes to chastise him by running against him in the next guber- natorial election. I would like Mr. Mullen to know that I'm not just enthusiastic about Shapp myself, but that if and when Mr. Mullen runs for governor, I could not con- scientiously vote for either of them. Mr. Mullen in all likelihood considers himself a knight in shining armor, waging a war on the infidel, but in my view he isn’t that at all. I tend to see him as a potential trouble maker. I want to see Caesar’s things Jfder=d to Caesar. oo - I whole-heartedly believe that this Com- monwealth and this country, for that matter, can endure and prosper only so long as religious tolerance is practiced in our legislatures. I have seen attempts by Prohibitionists to make their views part of the law-successfully for some years and I have seen what it did to national unity. More recently, I have seen churches interfering and trying to interfere in national policy, thereby weakening our whole country and endangering the security of our whole nation. I don’t want to see Pennsylvania turned into another North of Ireland. : i YOU MAKE ITSOERY that he and his eight tiny reindeer had Bag 2 near laws on the books that are based on ancient ky de 4 collision with a Mack truck while pulling out of religious blue laws. “TEDINVER [E87 5 NR A EL ...If you wanted red ink you used ‘three pints of stale beer (rather than vinegar) and four ounces of ground Brazil wood.” He knew the letters, some almost by heart; not ones like “From a merchant to his collector,” or “From a young tradesman, in reply to an unexpected demand for money,” but this one (with every noun capitalized) “From a Young Man commencing Business in New York, to his intended Wife in the Country, May 20th, 18--’; and, after that, “The ‘Answer, June 2d, 18--."” They were so real it was almost like eavesdropping. The parents of ‘A servant in New York” warned her, ‘‘In your behaviour to the other sex be modest and circumspect; a very little more than mere civility to them will lead to familiarities, which, if not timely checked, may end in your ruin here and hereafter.” The exemplary daughter replied that she would never lose sight of her duty, and the parents drove it home in the next letter, “The world is full of temptations and in New York, above all parts, those dangers abound...” A lively exchange, when you think about it, for a snowy Yuletide night, in South Lee, N.H. Frank trimmed the quill and found the well- aged ink. He spread the paper on the red gingham tablecloth. Squire Lang rustled the paper. ‘Let the boy alone, Ma,” he told his wife Charlotte. Frank looked at the romantic samples; there was not much privacy on a farm, not in winter anyway. Here was one, ‘From a Journeyman Tradesman to his intended Wife, March 6th, 18--,”’ beginning, ‘‘You know I am sober, and that I can earn nine dollars a week, which, added ‘to what I have saved, will enable us to live with comfort...” There followed the girl’s reply; she ac- cepted the proposal and added, ‘But dear James, should you ever lose sight of your present sober habits, and become a drunkard; or should you, as many wicked husbands have done, treat me ill after you have got me; then, dear James, I should break my poor heart...” Letters like these modeled the manners of an era and now, suddenly, they had a new meaning, solemn but exhilerating. He liked the solid sound of that ‘‘nine dollars a week’’! Think of it, $468 a year, in real cash; the man meant business. “From a Young Man to a Female, soliciting permission to pay his Addresses. November 22d, 18--. “Dear Maria -- The pleasure I have ex- perienced in your company, the few times I solicit another, or rather many more such opportunities. I am so perfectly pleased with what I have seen of you, that I entreat per- mission to cultivate a more intimate acquaintance. My circumstances are so far comfortable, as to warrant me in any step of the kind I may feel inclined to pursue; and in the earnest hope that you will favour me with a kind answer, I subscribe myself, Dear Maria, Your truly affectionate.” It was reassuring to read the reply, and Frank noted it again with satisfaction; it was dated next day: ‘‘Sir--,’ it began, ‘From the good opinion I have of you. I can offer no ¢ N 4 reasonable; objection to. your proposed acquaintance.’’ Then -it directed his solicitation to her parents, and concluded, archly, Li “That obtained, you will find nefffurther objection from, = Your sincere well-wisher.” There were two more letters in this helpful series. It was like a continued story, no, better -- this was real life, this was romantic do-it- yourself: ; The third letter was ‘‘From the Young Man to her Parents’; and, finally, ‘‘The Parent’s Answer,” beginning, “My young friend...” That sounded just right. The fire crackled; the cat purred. The Squire looked dignified even with boots off and feet on the settle, wearing stockings of wool grown, spun, dyed and knit on the place. He was born in 1791; one of 20 children; an Ensign in 1812. But now there was this cruel new war; if anybody went, who would work the farm? (He hired a substitute, a lad Frank’s age, who never came back.) Now the two exchanged glances; they understood each other. The mother pretended to work at the sink. La Frank Lang dipped the pen into te long flagon, consulted the ink-stained book, sucked in his cheeks, reddened under his mother’s unseen glance, and resolutely noted the model before him, headed, ‘‘The Young Man Proposes Marriage.” : “December 21, 1862,” he wrote. ‘‘My dear Hannah...” 4 y The feds were slow enough in coming for- ward to meet the demands created by the wrath of Agnes. When they came, it was only in piecemeal, and it has never been sufficient to even begin to return the region to its pre- flood state. Many flood victims think now that the election is over, that Mr. Carlucci brought only partial help and lots of propaganda which turned into a snow job more than a per- iod of total reconstruction in the valley. The FVAC has demanded from the start that full equity be given the victims of Agnes. Mim Matheson’s finger-shaking episode with HUD Secretary George Romney was only the beginning. As pointed out at Thursday’s meeting, for example, Wyoming Valley, which received at least 69 percent of Agnes’ destruction in the state last June, is only slated for less than 50 percent of urban renew- al funds to date. With roughly 18,000 homes and businesses damaged or destroyed, at a cost exceeding $350 million, it’s no wonder that flood victims have organized into a viable and concerned Flood Victims Action Council. Neither is it drastic action than shaking their fingers in the face of government officials. And as Con- gressman Daniel J. Flood would quickly agree, (he was one public official who did attend the FVAC meeting Thursday night) the organization is demanding attention. First of all, it is not representative of the public image left from Mrs. Matheson’s finger wagging episode of last summer, Secondly, it is not just a mish-mash of a few flood victims have run up against a snag in wading through the federal and state bur- eaucracy. Rather, Mrs. Matheson and her followers have become a cohesive, well- organized, viable and energetic force, politi- cally and otherwise, which in the near guture, as it becomes of age will prove an organiza- tion to he reckoned with. per year. Call 675-5211 for subscriptions. Editor Emeritus: Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks "Editor: Doris R. Mallin Advertising Manager: Dan lKoze