The Dallas Post Dallas, PA Wednesday, August 23,1989 5 Anderson Afield More and more people means less foom for wildlife By JOHN M. ANDERSON Folks nowdays are much ado about the right to life. It is a curi- ous fact that all this attention is focused on people as yet unborn. If you are out of the womb, nobody's gonna march and scream and wave banners proclaiming your right to catch a fish, breathe clean air, shoot a duck, or drink water that does not cause cancer. I was in Washington last week, arguing in favor of protecting and restoring our priceless rivers and marshes, and all the fish, birds, and mammals that live therein. People depend on them for food, recreation, flood protection, and other amenities that make life worth living. But when you get right down to it, nobody paid much attention to this meeting; - no TV cameras, no Sam Donaldsons or Diane Sawyers. My right to hunt and fish, and not have to worry about poisons in food, water, or the air, will not be tested in the Supreme Court. It was about 50 years ago, in the European Theatre of Operations, that men of the cloth (we called them chaplains in those days) solemnly assured us that it was our sacred duty to take the lives of as many young Germans as pos- sible. They made it plain that those misguided souls did not have any right to life because they were a threat to our own right to life. Ifyou don't like to hunt and fish, watch birds, or look at beautiful scenery, you may figutre it’s just as well that nobody raises a fuss over your right to do these things. On the other hand, the threat to your right to any kind of life in- creases steadily, day-by-day. Money spent for the Stealth Bomber and star wars is money spent to deprive others of their right to life. And the more we spend, the more our so-called enemies spend for the same purpose. The one over-riding cause of it all? PEOPLE. There are about 250,000 more people on earth today than there were yesterday at this time, and today’s count is 250,000 less than tomorrow's. In a week's time, world population growth is equivalent to a city the size of Philadelphia. Over a year, 90 million additional hun- gry mouths equate to another Mexico. About 90 percent of the increase comes in the so-called Third World Countries. They are also called “under-developed”, or “have-nots” nations. Whatever they're called, in 30 years they have added more people than the combined totals in North America, Europe, Japan, Russia and Oceania! Unlike my meeting with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, as hun- gry hordes stream across the Rio Grande and as thousands starve in refugee camps in Ethiopia, the TV cameras and reporters show us what's going on. We usually re- spond by sending boatloads of grain and rice, about $300 million worth in most years. And our congressmen are now introducing legislation to bring those displaced people in Hong Kong, Russia, Cambodia and else- where into the U.S. This seems to be the humane thing to do. Is it really? The root cause of all that misery is - if you'll pardon the expression - sex. Among the factors governing the rise and fall of nations, sex is Alexander the Great. Regardless of their food supply, sex can subju- gate hunger and cause folks to turn their backs on a bowl of rice, oysters Rockefeller, or even a chance to hunt ducks! We can’t do anything about that, because you can’t modify an instinct. Consequently, there are about 10 times more people on this globe than it can support, atleast health- fully and comfortably. Now instead of millions of tons of grain which only makes the problem bigger next year, why not send ‘em a few tons of birth control pills, offer free vasectomies, tubal ligations and condoms? Ever since our ancestors gave up hunting and gathering for a living and took to raising and stor- ing crops, our world population has been going up while the amount of land capable of supporting us has been going down. Whether or not a fetus has a right to life is a question that gets all our attention. A right to what kind of life is almost totally ig- nored. : John M. "Frosty" Anderson was Director of the Wildlife Department of the National Audobon Society Jrom 1966 until his retirement in 1987. The Dallas Post P. O. Box 366, Dallas, PA 18612, welcomes wedding and engagement announcements and photographs. For more information, call 675-5211. { | | i | | = , SHOP Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18701 Phone: (717) 825-2024 NUMBER Befty McDonald, OWNER the area’s finest Re .-"—,” Nat \ ) JE 0) RO} 20% Q Vp! Vp (® J ) 49) Ww o> Q p= V — 2 +s Q 0) Baked Lima Beans Tasty Macaroni Salad Delicious Potato Salad Luscious Pasta Salad Cole Slaw .............. veeeee Ib. $1.29 Not Responsible For Typographical Errors We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities MAC Accepted Here For All Purchases 675-0696 PLENTY OF DUCKS - At the western outlet to Harveys Lake there are ducks-a-plenty. But more development often means less room for wildlife. (Photo by Ron Bartizek) Water (continued from page 1) anything from the restaurants here at the lake unless it comes from a can,” said Bob Dennison, Wilkes-Barre. He said he fears the water around the lake may not be safe. “Restaurants mix water with everything they serve,” he said. “I really think local officials should show more concern.” Some other residents say they feel safe. Jim Drury, owner of Drury’s restaurant, says he has no concern over the water problem. “I have no concerns. We do not have our own wells,” he said explaining his water comes from the Dallas Water Company. “Our water is tested once a month by DER and the Dallas Water Company.” Dick Williams, Pole 126, said he feels the council and authority are doing their job well. “The council is notifying and testing Warden Place,” he said. Although he said he is concerned about the prob- "I feel sorry for those people. I hope they get it straightened out." Dick Williams Harveys Lake resident lem, Williams said he “is not ac- quainted with it.” “I feel sorry for those people (at Warden Place),” Williams said Monday. “I hope they get it straight- ened out.” He said the council and authority are doing exactly what the should. “Talk to the Warden Place residents and find out what it is,” he explained. Williams said he may have his water tested just to be safe, but does not expect to find any prob- lems. “Water here has been excel- lent, he said. “I feel the problem is local (to Warden Place).” == 3 a “He Mek 0 ’ = ; Gountry SKI(R SPORTS Two charged in lake hit and run boat accident By SCOTT A. DAVIS Post Staff Charges have been filed against two individuals in connection with a hit-and-run boat accident on Harveys Lake which sent two women to the hospital during the Fourth of July weekend. Gary A. Evans, 45, 324 E. Broad St., Nanticoke, and his girlfriend Adrienne Ratchford, 44, 72 Pu- laski St., Kingston were charged Friday with recklessly operating a watercraft, recklessly endangering another person, and providing false statements. In addition, both were charged with summary offenses including failure to submit a re- quired accident report and failure to render assistance to casualties. The charges were filed with District Justice Earl Gregory, Shavertown, by Harveys Lake Po- lice Officer Ron Spock and Fish Commission Enforcement Officer Claude Neifert. The charges follow almost two months of investigation stemming from a boat accident which oc- curred July 1 around 11:45 p.m. near Pole 140. Police allege that Evans and Ratchford were operat- ing a 1955 Chris Craft outboard motor boat, which Evans owns, that slammed broadside into a boat carrying five people, including a 6- year-old boy. Two women aboard the boat, Nancy Begala, Harveys Lake, and Adelia Demoulee, Port Orchard, Washington, were treated at Nesbitt Hospital for shock and facial injuries. Evans’ boat was allegedly operating without run- ning lights. According to police reports, Evans called the Harveys Lake Police Department on the morning following the accident to report his boat vandalized. In a statement submitted to police, Evans claimed that he tied his boat at Pole 142 around 9 p.m. July 1. Then, on July 2, he said he came down to show a friend his boat and discov- ered it underwater. The boat had a By SCOTT A. DAVIS Post Staff a minimal cost. bacterial contaminant. days. handed out as of Saturday. RT | Where to get water tested Residents of Harveys Lake concerned about the contamination | currently detected at Warden Place can have their water tested for For $12, The Kirby Health Center, located on North Franklin St., : Wilkes-Barre, will test residents drinking water for traces of Residents must pick-up a special container at the center, fill it with the water, and return the sample to the center. tr According to a spokeswoman at the center's lab, results from the test should be received by the resident in the mail within two The Harveys Lake Environmental Advisory Council is offering to have the test done. Residents must pick-up a container at the borough building and pay the $12 fee. About 50 bottles had been hole in the left side and Evans claimed he tried to patch it but could not. On July 3, Harveys Lake police said they received a call about a gas and oil slick on the water near Pole 142. The police discovered Evans’boat underwater tied to Pole 142. Neifert impounded the boat. According to reports, the State Police did a comparison test with broken glass and fragments and determined Evans’ boat was the one involved in the accident. Evans and Ratchford claimed in statements to the police that they were not involved in the accident. According to them, at approxi- mately 9:15 p.m. July 1, they got out of the boat and sat on the dock until about 10 p.m. Then, accord- ing to the statement, they both went up to his boat house. One of them returned to the boat about five minutes later toretrieve Ratch- ford’s purse. “Atabout 11 p.m. my" girlfriend went home and I re- mained at the house the rest of the evening,” Evans said in the state- ment. ho? Marion Attanasio. a neighbor of Pole 142, told police she saw Evans and Ratchford on the dock after 10:30 p.m. “I am not sure of the exact time, but I know it was after 10:30 p.m. Saturday evening. I saw Gary Evans and his girlfriend both in Gary Evans’ boat,” Attanasio told po- lice. She said that after midnight, she was awakened by loud talking and saw the police and a boat with a spotlight looking for something. “I also saw Gary Evans and his girlfriend looking down where the boat was tied. I could not see the boat but I could see the ties. When the police came back this way, uy and his girlfriend went up the Warrants will be issued through the mail to Evans and Ratchford for a preliminary hearing. No date had been set as of Monday. te, hd QUALITY SPORTSWEAR FASHIONS & EQUIPMENT at DISCOUNT PRICES! STARTING NOON Wed., Aug. 23 thru Sat., Aug. 26 SKI SALE! |. sat. 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