"EDITORIAL Remedies Remember the old W.C. Fields line: “I went to Philadelphia last night but it was closed?’’ Or the time he said he wanted his epitaph to read: ‘On the whole I'd rather be in Philadelphia.’ These and many of the other jokes and cracks about Pennsylvania, and the city of Philadelphia in ‘particular, are largely the result of the state's Sunday ‘blue laws.” As of late in the Back Mountain area there has been much talk and a great deal of controversy over the observance of these dubious statutes. Basically the main problem with the existing or- dinances is that they are either not being enforced at all or they are being enforced discriminately and unfairly. By now word has reached the ears of many a Sunday shopper that one particular Back Mountain business, the Unclaimed Freight Company, was personally affected, and most recently fined, for selling items in violation of the Common Law Penal Code. Prior to that time, the Unclaimed Freight store received a warning to desist Sunday retail sales. It is worth mentioning that the establishment seemed to become a marked target because their Sunday patrons were taking all the parking spaces in that vicinity. On one hand, we can say that the problem was ‘legally’ solved “by the book.”” But from an ethical viewpoint, there is more than just a hint of something very unsettling about the nature of this “settlement.” If the disharmony centered about the blue laws for a solution sounds like a shot-in-the- dark means of remedy. The fact that it hit its mark makes it even less acceptable. Laws, as protective agents of all our rights, demand precision and discernment. If we begin to “‘coin’’ legal solutions for each new case that becomes an issue without fully con- sidering the technicalities behind the action, the results are bound to become more than.a problem of enforcement. Mean Month T.S. Eliot, the poet, was wrong. April is not the cruelest month. February is. Several reasons for that conclusion must be noted now that this blasted month is upon us. First off, take the name itself. The mind of man has yet to determine just how February should be pronounced. Is it Feb-brew-ary? Or is it Feb:bu- ary? That mystery has endured almost as long as the Great Pyramid and is a whole lot less satisfying to speculate about. February also comes right in the dead of winter. There is even a quaint occasion to signal this: Groundhog Day on February 2—which, in Penn- sylvania, is made much of. The game is that if the critter sees his shadow, winter will endure. But if he doesn’t, a mild trailing off is in sight. As we see the matter, all of this is a lot of responsibility to put on a dumb animal, and the record shov s that regardless of what he sees, the weather doesn’t change. It’s awful; bleery mornings and leaden evening skies. Those occasional sunny days don’t bring the promise of spring but a painful reminder that we’re only halfway there. Three American presidents were born in February—Abraham Lincoln, George Washington and William Henry Harrison. There is some glow in that. But the month brings another holiday, Valentine’s Day, that’s a bother. No matter whom youremember, there’s always someone you forget. The seeds of this month’s nastiness can be traced to its name. February comes from the Latin word meaning to purify. The Romans purified them- selves in February to prepare for the festivals marking the new year. But Julius Caesar moved the beginning of the year from March to January, making February the second month. So there’s no cause for purification. In some parts,'it’s not even safe to peel off the long underwear. About the only thing February has going for it is thatit evens up the calendar by adding a day every fourth year. But this year, it isn’t even doing that. There is just no excuse for February.. : --Dottie Beckham Thissa 'n Thatta by H. H. Null, III Whatever hidden intelligence planned and created the world; for reasons not di- vulged to any of us, saw fit to plan things so that each thinking mortal was endowed with a conviction that he or she was the holder of the truth and everyone else could only approach that truth in varying degree, according to how close they came to total agreement. Whatever the creator had in mind, the upshot has been a series of conflicts that brought forth news- papers, daily evidence of the fact. Mostly in fun, I have written that there are two points of view: mine and the wrong one; but I have a hunch that just about every- one else has the same philosophy, whether or not they admit it. Newspapers are only a method of making a living by recording this at profitable intervals. Probably the key is self interest and the reason for it seems to be the development of a fighting interest in survival, through the evol- utionary process. The abstract truth is just another thing to be ignored. I could use just about any newspaper to advance my thesis, but I will choose today’s because it is at hand and fresh in my mind. For instance: The U.S. Senate, which is controlled by Democrats, wants to investi- gate the bugging of Democratic Headquar- ters by Republican gumshoes, but doesn’t want Democratic bugging of Republicans looked into. One would think that if it is the right thing to do to investigate Republican skullduggery, it would be only fair to investigate Demo- cratic skullduggery, but not so. Plainly the reasoning of the Democrats is that the Repub- licans might find something and what they find might injure Democratic chances in some future election, so it must be prevented, if possible. - And these people of both parties are sin- cere in'their reaction. In their minds, they are simply coming up with an answer to a pro- blem, which threatens, so answering a pro- blem must be right. A sense of fairness only comes into play when it involves no problems. No problems for the thinker, that is. If it in- good. It is possible to look at their problems with complete fairness. Then, on the same front page, we have an item relating that two Democratic senators, dick) ‘and Thomas J. McIntyre, of New Hampshire (whoever he is) came forth with a statement that the fuel shortage exists be- cause the major oil companies allowed home TRB from Washington change if President Nixon can permanently win over organized labor to his coalition, as he has large parts of the South through his Southern Strategy. We shall know more about it after this week for the top brass of the AFL- CIO is meeting for a fortnight at the swank Americana Hotel at Bal Harbour, Florida. George Meany and about 35 of the executive council will be on hand and Mr. Nixon is sending down cabinet spokesmen including, of course, the colorful new secretary of Labor, Pat Brennan and George Shultz and others. He may pop in himself as he did to the Teamsters’ convention in Florida in mid-1971 when he was staying at nearby Key: Biscayne. Mr. Nixon’s wooing of labor is one of the most breath-taking political romances of modern times. Off hand, it would seem like a union of opposites but this isn’t necessarily so; Disraeli--to whom Mr. Nixon likes to compare himself--found that a lot of two- fisted English workers loved his jingoistic imperial adventures and, in the same way, Mr. Nixon attracted Pat Brennan, head of the New York Building Trades Council. The latter got fame by bringing out his construction stration for the Vietnam war that put ‘“har- dhat”’ into the vocabulary, and roughed up a lot of those effete long-haired peaceniks. The delighted President invited Pat to the White House and later made him secretary of Labor. The country isn’t aware of Brennan yet, but it will be. Most of the Nixon cabinet crowd are drab, faceless men but Brennan, the Bronx painter, has color enough for three. | Guest Editorial Politics Changing, ; (from the Bedford Gazette) We can remember the day when candidates in these old hills didn’t have positions. It was “me’’ against “him” and the prevailing political advice was, “If the fish didn’t open his mouth he wouldn’t get caught.” A'letter from a young voter opens this issue, and it deserves a fuller response. Why don’t the candidates speak more to the issues? Why can’t the voter make an intelligent choice? The obvious answer is practical politics. The name of the game is to get elected. If it becomes necessary to prepare yourself, and explain yourself, to get elected, then they’ll do it. We have seen candidates--and very suc- cessful ones--do no more than place a few perfunctory ads in the papers, send out a man to tack up a few posters, and go around shaking hands. Behind the scenes, there is maneuvering, money is passed, workers lined There is evidence that it won’t work as well now. Yet old habits break hard, and some federal approval for price increases. The news story doesn’t say what the heads of the oil companies think about this charge, al- though I am sure they would not agree and it doesn’t say what the ecology and environ- ment freaks have to say about it, although the truth would certainly involve them. At least it does, according to my way of thinking, and I feel that I have as much right to put my oar in as the two senators, although Ihave no axe to grind, or at least a very small one—a regard for the truth. Still everybody thinks they are right—me and the senators and the oil company. The newspapers make a profit from printing our opposing views. Next we have a strike of the entire Penn Central Railroad, which injured and incon- venienced thousands of people. The reason for it, according to union heads is that the offi- cials of Penn Central have stated that they are going to put into effect a court order which allows them to cut away 6,000 jobs, which they assert are not necessary. The re- sult would be to cut the cost of operating the bankrupt railroad by millions of dollars and would be a step toward bringing it back to fin- ancial health. So again we have a lot of differ- ent opinions, all stemming from sincere thinking. Company officers think it is impor- tant to get the company out of bankrupcy, union officers think it is important to keep the men working whether or not it bankrupts the company, inconveniences and imposes fin- ancial losses on the customers, defies the courts and damages the whole company. The judge thought that he was being fair and honest. What I think doesn’t much matter but I favor putting the public and country first. Then, shoved inside the paper, a horrible catastrophe in Alameda, Calif., (a Navy jet hit an apartment house and set it afire, killing everyone within it), there is mention of another strike, that of the Philadelphia school teachers. This strike defies a court order to return to educating Philadelphia’s children and again I am sure that the union leaders think it more important to gain their ends EN than it is to educate the city’s children, keep- within the taxpayers’ means of paying them and obeying the laws of the land. Again I am sure that the school directors think that they are doing right by opposing this and that the judge thought himself right in feeling that the majesty of the law is more ijfgortant that whatever rights the strikers thra# they have. My own thoughts, in case anyone is inter- ested, are that teachers who defy our laws should not be permitted to teach school at all, because they cannot be expected to ground their pupils in respect for the law or patrio- tism. I feel they should be declared un- employed and be given back their jobs only when they come with some repentance on their lips and some patriotism in their hearts. And soit goes. Everybody thinks they are right and were so created as the sparks fly upward. Of course, everybody can’t be right and so the so-called democratic process was evolved—people are supposed to be governed by the majority. I just wonder if a creator wants it that way and arranges it differently. red — J 0) ; UV 3 2 %Z ae { x : J 2 7% / . 2 . | NN or _ | \ | # U \ a on [7 oh 'VINH DIN 03 OG NR QUON PgR HOOPHING oe! PRUNGPHONGIVAN QUONG BHI 7 V SOPS to Al:Smith and thinks like Archie Bunker. The affluent Brennan ‘craft unions are celebrated for keeping out blacks and they may feel at home in the administration as does the white South. In the Brennan con- firmation hearings it came out that one cute way the steamfitters had of limiting un- desirable apprentices was to give examinations requiring them to identify, for example, Salvador Dali, and to define what words like ‘‘debutante’” mean; a good thing for steamfitters to know. Actually, about 70 percent of the construction tradesmen enter the industry through the backdoor, by routes other than the formal five-year apprentice system. This discussion is not meant as an attack on organized labor which has kept the flag of progressivism afloat many and many a time when it was abandoned by others. The question is, however, whether George Meany’s tacit alliance with Mr. Nixon in the presidential election is for keeps. In 1972, for the first time since the Roosevelt New Deal ‘coalition 40 years ago, large numbers of unionists deserted the Democrats. Whereas Humphrey got 56 percent support in 1968, the Gallup poll showed Mr. Nixon got 50 percent in 1972. Is this going to last? Can the President make it worthwhile? Personally, we think it’s doubtful but the President has many allurements and knows how to use them. Take the case of the teamsters. They are the country’s biggest union, although not in the AFL-CIO. Former president Jimmy Hoffa was convicted in 1964 of tampering with a jury, and of defrauding the union’s pension Labor fund’ of ‘nearly $2 million. He got a 13-year sentence. Mr. Nixon commuted the sentence in 1971 with the stipulation that he shouldn’t engage in union activity for 17 years. A new book by former FBI-man Walter Sheridan who participated in the conviction The Fall and Rise of Jimmy Hoffa) tells of the tremendous teamster lobby to get Hoffa sprung. The US Parole Board unanimously rejected clemency three times in two years. Then Mr. Nixon acted, without consultation with the judges who sentenced Hoffa, the prosecutors who convicted him, or the criminal division of his own Justice Depart- ment A cordial White House-Teamsters relationship developed before this. Mr. Nixon helicoptered over to see Hoffa's successor, Frank Fitzsimmons, inaugurated in Florida, and reportedly offered him the labor post in his cabinet before Brennan. Fitzsimmons was the only labor member of the old Phase II Pay Board who didn’t resign last March when truculent Meany marched out. The in- ternational brotherhood have all-out support to the Nixon reelection, and, by a coincidence, the White House withdrew proposed com- pulsory - arbitration legislation aimed at transportation disputes like those of the teamsters just about the time of the Teamster endorsement. A nice gesture. A sympathetic president has a lot to offer. As another labor case there is the minor but interesting incident of the Seafarers In- ternational Union, recently referred to in a New York Times editorial. In 1970 the union heads were charged amidst considerable fanfare by Attorney General Mitchell with candidates, even now, don’t really want to go on the record with their views. We believe that an increasing number of today’s voters-- and more pointedly, tomorrow’s voters-- appreciate candor in politics. The old game of “political stumping’’ won’t work much longer, if it works now. People know what rhetoric means. Issues themselves are sometimes elusive: Seldom is there a definable issue which separates men definitively. More often, the gut issue is the accumulation of beliefs and actions which makes up the man; yes, we're saying the quality of the man is the central issue in many races. All possible candor--or probing and ex- posure, if a man won’t volunteer his views~is necessary to spotlight the essential dif- ferences. The parties have an obligation, and so do the candidates, to put themselves into public. view. But they won’t accept that obligation until the public demands it. The present system is only an illusion. There is very little real exposure. Rhetoric abounds. It’s better than it used to be, but still far from satisfactory. : What must be done, to get at the purer politics we’d like to see, is elimination of the charge and counter-charge atmosphere. When Bud Shuster says there is a 2 percent element which degrades the process, he is right. Both sides have it, and both should eliminate it--but they haven't, partly because the public tolerates it. People don’t like smear, and innuendo, and they vote the op- posite very often. That doesn’t stop the 2 percent from trying, and we have some real experts around here. That’s the way some illegally, conspiring to contribute, $750,000 to phrey. The charges languished tWo years and a Federal judge finally dismissed them for failure to prosecute, and ‘gg Justice Department decided not to appea¥. By one of those amusing coincidences that are so much stranger than fiction, the union borrowed $100,000 from the Chemical Bank of New York (whose chairman is on the Nixon finance committee) five days before the election and contributed the same amount to--guess who-- the Nixon campaign! The Nixon committee ignored its legal obligation to make the gift known within 48 hours and waited nearly three months... (Contemplating events like this you can’t help wondering if the Watergate defendents who have pleaded guilty but who have stayed mum about who sponsored the affair, will remain in jail for the full sentence, if and when they go.) Well, now we come back to I Meany, who is as honorable and honest ase is testy. We don’t always agree with him, but we admire and like him. At Bal Harbour, Fla., he will huff and puff, we imagine, about the new Nixon thalidomide welfare budget (all its offspring are mutilated programs). But he will note, too, certain sops to labor. The wage and price controls of Phase II are replaced with the less restrictive Phase III, with which Meany is cooperating. Then, too, a genuine trade unionist is secretary of Labor. Above all the administration hints at a tough action against cheap foreign imports. McKinley wooed workers with a high tariff; why shouldn’t Nixon? campaigns have been run for decades. You never see it in the news, but nasty letters are circulated, rumors started, back-room deals made. : da One of the messages of 1972. that the people are disgusted with “‘politicians’’. Until those who care about the political process get it out of the mud and into the pure air of the open forum, people will remain distrustful. We see some steps in that direction, but we are not encouraged by their lack of haste. per year. Call 675-5211 for subscriptions. president; and Doris Mallin, secretary-treasurer. Mrs. T. M. B. Hicks, editor Emeritus J. R. Freeman, managing editor Doris R. Mallin, editor Dan Koze, advertising. manager Sylvia Cutler, advertising sales °