Article clipped from Morgantown Post

THE MORGANTOWN POSTMrs, H. C. GRt£R, President and PublisherWit liam A. Townes, General ManagerHklt;h»NS k OI ! LE. / dilora* * ** tfet W§ • Pnh.ifh-»| 4frrrffNfv a §alt;i Cmsrt utiffUMofiirtpwr Ett v a»nt K1u lt;a ff O e iegr Im. . m n*ii e* * 4: *■' * p*f • • » §*vih;#t - • » *••- '* »«••• * ** * nilt; ' V ' *• '■ ' • ■ '*• ’ . ' \ w v. 1 • » lt;• ‘ lt;• n. } « .lt;W m-.f 10 h iM- Ni mi r;b'lt;-! MM'I'* .••m-IHI trr* » M»t lt;1« »r* t» m* nt*.n«lM(,L I 01 RWednesday September 8, 1965A New Cast of Charactersnew *nst of little good has been a*v mplishcd there,i actcrs ha* moved 1 nti the headlines at the cost of billions ot I S dollars and\l V10SI ov 1 f sion t ad dr na. I 01 the moment at altogether too many .vc*t t h /*in arc turned on India,Pd KashmirPerhaps it is too much to believe that the world can soon return to a reasonable11 our part we should like to ap- semblance of peace But it is not too muchp d the way this new act is being treat- to fee! that the best ctlort on this behalfed Instead of having the I mud States will have to be made through the United• , ih. 1rj\. the I’ N Sccuritv Council Nations or else be allowed to go by de-endint Sccretarv General I I bant fault.C1 Eto Rawalpindi and New Delhi to seeMost of the poor markhatgedti)c can dlt;vj.i list the I n :cJ Viiion ’ * c 'C ccnMas be I I bant will accomplish noth- be ascribed to supplemental 'peace-whatever. Hut it the I nitcd Nations keeping activities whivh invthved theever amounts to much, 11 will have to get intervention of foreign military forcessome experience, and the fighting over despite the strong objections ol somemajor and minor members of the U N.I n!ev India arul Pak ^ tn c. n K per-k.in ur r como proper \ ur.hin 11n h.nh-From The Post FilesPostmortemstwenty Years Ago\ freak a dcr t killed I.lmo Trowh; . * •!?, of Fverett',*il!e,at !!■lt;■ Kopplt;company mine.He was snot ked unconscious hv a slate fa and run ovei by the motor he operated.Rogers tewelrv Store on HighSiren h.u! • tmtv: of watches and other lt;s -mien from a display wlmiew broken into during the night.Xmeru an force-' under Gen.Ma Ai’hm entered Tokyo and held a H ef fl ig ra.-ing ceremony.Patrorts of Halts School com-pleted a new sidewalk, an outdoor ha -kerb,til court and .inindoor name room there withvolunteer work.M1 - Mu ,e lt;ro* gv of Osage received word that her son. Pvt. \Vi;i im ( o*g\ died of wotimi* received in action in the Philippine**.( pi John Kudla of Westover was reported enrou'e home after serving two years with a para-iropper unit in Europe.Sgt. Theodore J. Straub married Miss Laura 1 Sabolo atSt. Theresa Catholic ChurchI nsign Jack Brannan of VVil-son Avenue left for San Fran-cisco to sail for duty in Japan.Phil Cavaretta of the ( hicapo I Tib* moved tnio the National League batting lead with a .361 average.Furthermore, other more spectacular suadcd they uic misbehaving in Ugh ngmeans of dealing with such situations hav« over Kashmir, no amount of militaryproved not only futile, but contributory intervention by outside forces, even underto new and ddlcrent delinquencies. 1 or a the I Y banner, is like y to coin mequick example, look. at \ ictnam and how them.^ t\ rsAgowaaptifteenRobert C. Fcittef pointed manar!*T of the 1 UNion ( onvak^cent Homo for ( hildrensucceeding Mrs 1st her Wal-Mr I rather had beenraven,4 : \ r ,sthe home Plans forr' »• *Pfil the ap st at* -Why Not Drop In?(eweno» formal openingJewish Community»uth High Streetd bv Rabbi Ed*The W.Va. Air National Guard\\f SH()I id l)Kf |o put in a plug for a comp *h if their count.cs ci d t c vo- 1S ,ik live fede-meeting that is going to be held in Mor- c’perating with one .mothergantown tomorrow. It has the rather elab- I here are to be talks ,r tomorrowsorate name of the VVest Virginia North sessions bv several leaders in regionalCentral Regional Development C onfer programs of one kind and another, butbut that shouldn't s^arc anybody the best hope of making such assemble*awav from the sessions scheduled to be useful is that thev w. I serve as a forummheld from 10 a m to 4 p m in the Agri- for la king things mer md spread ng ?' ccultural Sciences Building on the I vans- giod word through the va , .cncedale C ampuPublic oil is ia In have been e-pe* .lt; - u-Die purpose is quite simple and quite vited to the conference tomorrow hi.: theimportant. It is to bring people together sponsors will be cspcs • ! pleased ' afrom Monongalia, Preston. Marion, substantial number of private citi/ens IcclHarrison, Taylor, Barbour, and Lewis enough interested to come out 'or atCounties to talk over what they might ac- least part of the sessionsWe Cannot Wait That LongIp ' ixiisr, som r i hi Mi about the danger other elaborate structure to provide s.Ter ous intersection of Patteson Drive with and ingress Until that is possible,ihe Monongahcla Boulevard calls lor spending hundreds of thousands of do!ars. some temporary protective arrange merits had better be made It will be awhy not toe electric signals or even arrange to have a traffic oIInci on dutv at the intersection? Or at the w*r\ minimum an unmistakably conspicuous vs.lining sign might be erected telling motonMslong time before money of that kind is t|lal th,lt; ,s a very dangerous spot andavailable for building a sloverieaf or some cautioning them to shcsk it downSomething Else to Talk AboutI vis ir there s need to do a complete Indcr the theory of the CTtv Charter overhauling job on the Municipal Zoning under wludi Morgantown has operatedOrdinance, wouldn't it be belter to wait for more than two score years, the- prinei-awh ’e before tackling it'.’ I he community pal duties assigned to the Mayor are tohas been through a rather feverish period preside over the sessions of Council,of lalk and debate on zoning problems. There n no thought 111 the language ofthe most pressing of these problems ap Tie Charter to suggest he has any adnun-!ear to have been disposed of. Let s have istiative duties outside the Council•ervice.The Public Service Commission gave its permission for the town of Kingwood to purchase me propones of the Mountain State Water Company.A son was born Sept. 8. 19.T0. to Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Elliott of Fairmor Drive.The U H S. football team played a 7-7 tie with Phtlippi by coming from behind with a fourth-quarter touchdown.Ten years AgoA touch of autumn came toMorgantown with residents experiencing their coldest night inthree months with many homesand offices turning on furnacesalt; the temperature plummetedto 45.Monongalia County school pupils had their first full day of ( i*se* wish the overall en-r . .- • -it not n. u n t nar.ged from the 1! 880 of the prev ious year. A longshoremen's walkout wascom ■ the Port of New Yorkan estimated $1 million dailv~ 10a* it *piead to Baltimore and threatened other f ast (oast ports.Anno moment wa* made of the rr * age of M; . Mary Mav Yarorn ., daughter of Charles Yarom. of Ca**ville. and famesw - 91 orov Marlin, son of Mr. and Mrs lames Mart.n of Mona Wedding lues wi-o solemnizedin St. Ursula's Catholic ChurchMi Mar t a state troopei and his wife wore to make their home in the Lastern Panhandle of West Virginia.W ho*. ■ g had a day long program of *p('akir.g and entertainment rr r- nr the opening of the new S7 million 1 ort Henry Bridge spanning the Ohio River.Three games separated the first foai teams in the American League Leading in order were Cleveland, New York, Chicago, and Boston. In the National circuit. Brooklyn had aJ6-game h-ad over second-place Milwaukee.( moratorium until temperatures have Chambersexcept perhaps to sign ansubsided, and animosities have lost their endless series of proclamations in seasonsharp cutting edges.As a substitute, let s throw the floorand out.Would having he Mayor occupy an of-opcn to a discussion of the question lice in the City Hall tend to dilute thewhether some change in Morgantown's responsibility and authority of the Cityform of municipal government is involv- Manager, and confuse the public abouted in the proposal to tind an office in the the way municipal affairs are managed(Ti\ Had lor the Mavor.in Morgantown?Better Notice Neededf ro.m usr of our volunteer traffic ad-With special respect to the heavilyvisers conics the suggestion that painting travelled road between 1 aston and Cheatdouble yellow lines on the roads is in- Lake, our adviser xavs he has noticed•r msuflicicnt notice to motorists they arc not that nearly every ear violating the noto pass other cars where these lines ap- passing rule has a Pennsylvania license.Five Years AgoDonovan 11 Bond, University director of development, w a s elected national president of Phi Sigma Kappa social fraternity A luncheon in the Medical Center cafeteria ended a two-dav conference of the West Virginia Tuberculosis and Health Association.I he Kingwood High School vo-ag department had a banneryear at the State Fair. Some 72.fi per cent of its membersplaced one or more exhibits in agriculture 1- F A. classes.Pittsburgh was in first plat rIn the National League six games out in front of second-seeded St. Louis.All available rooms at most of Pittsburgh’s larger hotels were reserved in anticipation ofthe Pirates winning the pennant.pearI.I don't know what I fie law or theAt the very least, he says, the Road practice is in Pennsylvania. observes ourCommission should put up an occasional advt*er. but I cannot believe all thesesign of No Passing Zone or should Pennsylvania motorists are deliberatelyhave conspicuous notices that these violating our laws I would rather thinkdouble lines in themselves mean no thev haven’t been told, and 1 think we* *passing.vshould tell them.”DIFFERENT MODELSThe easiest way to tell a man’s nationality is to w a t c h him examine a car.If he feels the upholstery first, he's British.Jf he looks at the engine first, he’s German.If he sounds t h e horn, he’s Italian.And if he starts arguing about the price, he’s American. —Che-welah (W’ash.) Independent,Long Dull Hot Winter Ahead On The CampusBA Rl ssl I I B \KLRA \Ntwon closine. colldge stu-ti, hairleaders* promised will beThe more dedicated for the past two wre veterans of la-muM_ for ton cov6if* oVi a wide vanefeeIn« ___ _of practical mutter*, such as howto bum a draft card w:th maxi*tn summer va y are putting aside shav 1 girding for what stude A Long Hot Winter. tudents have already been taking tnstruc-at *evoral *lt;called f reedom Schools it vear'sI•dom from everything Missihtly's course strikes direct-at fundamentals. Her lecture s like thus: Government has-icm■1rtAt* A 1O! (0I aheadliftI 4IV 4•age and how to low b irn ng effily presidents.n, the sfi of the s_________rn Frarvois Villon tlt;J the philosoptrimum news construct s of univer*it!In additio; the history struggle fro Mario Savii of youth from Shirley Temple to L del ( a*tro He s also expected tc master a few chords on the guitar. Music helps to keep the sit-ins from drifting away to lab if the news photograph slow in arriving.failed. Whv? Because the alter-in government art* neverd evil, but al-i tApt * : d ( .*♦ r i/ • .voIn the nursery, parentsthat lifewa\evilhavNE of the mostJh, Vi I Vat-t^rded cf'.trses d^als w th techniques the s avoid hetngtudtAntVilicampus last year.Dane tells his gerous. Don’t k dit. When it gets•. * * ■ncsho hd iw toby television.\ i n’ . *■*:’'» ! 1w wSchool, this course * taught by U.emen- I),clt;-, 're 10-vear-oldi0hoth(-ad who e College StinksMovemerc so * , ■ **fu!lv di*-rupted ed i at on on the OakuraSprings Telev da*-es, is da yourself about you behind that lens, it'll ue all the muscle it has to hurt sou.■ifBut in the C.S M. Movement at Oakum sp: ng*. we learned that television, proper!', t..*ed, can do more to help us than all the police dogb in Birmingham.”Dane then demonstrates how the student hould protect himself when the TV camera* arrive. Rule one,” he says, is: Be dirty.If that camera starts com-.ng a; you and you’ve got on a plaid skirt and bobby socks or you’re wear-ng a clean shave and Shetland tweed, it will mur-d‘r you. 1 he audience will take one look at you and say, ’Look at that nice kid A kid l.ke that • -.n’t dangerou He’* rust havinga little fun while he waits togrow up.’And,” Dane continues, when television get* people to talking like that about you, you’re done for be uu*e you’re not going to convince anybody ?hat college stinks.” Dane’s recommendations When the i.amera eye cin e m. look dirty. Have some fleas hopping around your head. If you don’t look dirty , at least talk duty If you really believe in College Slinks or Life Stinks or America Stinks, or whatever vour movement iswall about, you’ve got to make that audience smell it.”the student t is a simple choice between good and bad Bv creating govern-;r.lt; • • .* rt *uch ea*v choices00cun never ex.st, the parents have - raved the .*? ;Jent who. therefore. ha* the dutv to remake theworld into a nursery.The familv has failed. W hy?10 — wThe story of the American fron-t.er wa* - he *torv of the struggle make a hostile w ilderness ho*-puable to family life (See Shane. Gunsmoke,” Randolph Scott ) What happened? Overpopulation, followed q. k-h bv the conviction that every-!odv • : e familv wa er t :.ed(E Hrto a college education.'7Till RLSl’LT Universitiesare so i rowded that the stu-d- nt ha* to go to lectures w th j.ihmi other students, thu* be ng : ad( to feel i heated of hi* right'lt; a good education, dhe family has betrayed the student, who ' terefore h;i* the duty to reduce oversized classes bv playing guitar chords until the photographers arrive.freedom from everythin merely sounds like a revolution-arv goal. No, we're not origin-a t all. ' Miss Nightly confides. In fact, we may be the most lt;raven generation of imitators n American history. (ontempt for government, for family, even 'in' : ght to dirty speech which lt;.- r der* started fighting for in th courts 50 years ago—in every th,ng. I ni afraid, all we’ve done is pure imitation of theolder generation.”It looks like a very dull Ionhot winter ahead.ClWords, Wit WisdomBy WILLIAM MORRISBELOW you will find 10 words, a few of which appear cl* i ep vt v fam . a Before you get overconfident, though, let it be known that there are a few traps for the unwary lurking behind tho e *imple - looking words. Try to match cath numbered word with the lettered word or phrase closest in meaning. Answers below.1, Tali*man: (a) social equal; (b) good luck piece; (c) talebearer.2. Filch: (a) side of bacon;(b) steal; (c) adorn.;t. Embellish ta take warlike action aga n*-. (b) bedei k;(c) extricate from difficulties.4. Amenity: (a) friendship;(b) enmitv. (c attractiveness.* iff5. Abdicate (a) resign one’s throne tb) careful plotting: tc) trump partner’s ace.6 Retrograde (a) grade above 20 degrees; (b depraved;(c) deteriorating.7 ! xtemporary (a on spur of the mome’*; lt;b) hard tof,;*Lotv. i. . careful!v rehearsed.8 Obdurate tat very fat:00(b) very stubborn; (c) scry flexible,9. Plexiform: (a) plastic-cUm*' 1 lt;h gracefully contour-ifed; (c) complicated.10. Verdure tat green-grow-lng planting (b) old *tyle velvet; (c) fertilizer.ANSWI RS lb I T AI Ls man); 2 b 11 ID H Lb (em-BFT. :*h); 4-c ( : MEN ih tee); 5-a (AB-c! iv f c (RLT-: uh-gravd); 7-a (ex-TEM-por-air-ee; 8 - b(OB dv nr t); 0 C (PH,X fo: :v 1 a lt;\ I R dvoot ».ihBARBSThe person m love with the 5o md of h * own voice needs a music appreciation courseWhat * keeping all tho*e folkswho u*od to blame unusual wcathi • on atomic explosions sosilent this year?You know, von don't HAVE' Vto be on (undid Camera tosmile!Thedread*store.one place a woman having a fit is a shoeThe palmistry lines on your hand don t affect your life a.s much as the dotted ones underyour signature.Around West VirgEditorial in Parkersburg SentinelA MORGANTOWN RESIDENT driving through Clarksburg,was so irked by the do-not-pass double yellow lines on long stretches of the highways near the Harrison County seat that he wrote a complaining letter to the editor of the Clarksburg Exponent.“I would like to pose a question, he wrote, to the peoplewho ordered the yellow lines.THOSE who have dismissedClem Dane and his fellow stu-dent-rights activists as Communists have missed the point of what the long hot winter is all about. Like most of his colleague*. Dane regards communism with the same contempt he holds for other outmoded social institutions, such as government and the family.Delia Nightly, who teaches the school's class in philosophy ofstudents rights, has difficultygetting this point across even to her most willing pupils. They come to me and say, ‘All right, this is the freedom school, and I’m all for it, but what do wewant freedom from?’How would you like to travel endless miles behind a truck, bus, Sunday driver, or even a garden tractor? What if you had a carload of noisy kids? Do ou think that you would go back home and tell all your friends that this is a great state to visit and vacation in? I am afraid that in most cases that the answer would be an emphatic NO.”That was from Louis C. Palmer of 406 Forest Ave., Morgantown.But the simple fact is that thehighways in Monongalia, Marion, Harrison, and Taylor Counties are so full of curves and so narrow that the double yellow lines are essential. The no-passing rule must be enforced because passing is extremely hazardous.Mr. Palmer’s complaint is undcr-Mandable, however, and something should be done about those roads.Fortunately something is being done but it will take more time than any of us have patience enough to endure. There will be a new U.S. Route 50 that will make passing less hazardous. There will be the new 1-79 which will replace U.S. 19 and will be a modern expressway. And in our part of the State we will have 1-77 to relieve us from the double yellow lines.In the meantime, we wish some passing lanes could be provided at intervals to permit passenger car traffic to get around the big trucks. Even temporary passing lanes would help.L.B.J. And IkeIn AgreementOn VietnamBy HOI MFS ALEXANDERDWIGHT 1 ISENHOWER. the(, 0 P.'s only eight year President except Ulysses Grant, hasluckily never learned to put hisparty above his country The Republicans can’t make him call tho conflict in Vietnam a Democratic blunder or Johnson’s war.” It's true that Ike. at the end of his term, was spending merely millions on foreign aid for South Vietnam, whereas I B.J. has been foii ed into the billion dollar area to fight areal wai But Mr 1 isenhower is too good a soldier to oppose his commander in chief while the guns are boom ng Beside*, a* lie has said, the situation in Southeast Asia has (hanged from what it was during h;spresidency.But the remarkable thing is that, the more it changes in \ letnam, the more the situa' onremain* the same When Air.! isenhower a- umed office in 1952, he took over the Truman policy of suppoi' ' . Tie 1 rench against the Communist Vie IMmh. I? was far from Ix’inga bargain counter operation. In19 J 5\ th( Rep ib! lt;an President nt $1 s billion to keep a losingagainst Com-war tn progressmunisnt.hen Mi John*on a imed office after the Dalla assassination, he took over the Kennedy polu v of supporting the Saigon government against theViet I or. I here i*n't any c1 eapway to conduct military operations. Johnson is now spending.o ,1 iate of ?! r h 'a n a Year.But if he gets it over w th soon, he won’t have laid out much more money than the 12 6 billion which Truman and Eisenhower *;tent jo. • v in lh 4.THF ONLY REASON Mr.1 .-bower ‘Ot VS spec !;' g f g-ure down to -?250 m .Ton in 1%0 wa* that the Western World took a shatter ng defeat from the Commur st n 1954 at Dien-bienphu Ike might just possrblvhave averted * ra.um tv if0he'd heeded his conservn'ive ad\ er*. m '.;! ng \ ce President Nixot and Admiral Rad-for ' r ! ! gc-e to the d relt; ti. c of Ameru an military power.At one point there was apl.t i tiled “Opera:.on V ulture,” wh . h called for ohl.teravng theVMmh forces bv unleashing 300 carrier based Navy bombersand 60 heavy Am Force bombersV.from the Philippine Nobodycan say what the lt;‘u t mighthave been B I lt;dent F isen-howcr did le*v than h.s r;gh'-wrng crit.is were demanding, and the next thin ’ we knew the negotiator were sitting down at Geneva to plan for“peace.WHEREIN d he .aiiorof the m t 66 - d.ffer m .t h frorrthat of the mid 50 ■ Mr. John son could readily cut down theexpense account f he wuthheltthe Navy and A r 1 orce *'rike* By reiving entirely on our Viet namese ali e* as wp relied en tlrelv on the Frem h ,n the Tru man - E *enhower period, wi could s’imble mto a Dienbien phu and couid stagger to a con ference table tn Geneva.Mr. Johnson has much thlt; identical choices, and is gettinj much the same criticism fron Republicans, that Ike received Nixon wanted us to do mori militarily, and so today doeCongressman Gerald Ford. John son has not admitted that hi critics are right, but he ha chosen to escalate. Yet the i ard in his hands are very much liklt; tlie cards that F.isenhow’er held The only thing we don’t know i whether the unconditional n« gotiations” which Johnson ask will take us in the end to th same sort of Communist peaceIt is not remarkable that Prelt;idents Johnson and Eisenhowe should be so like-minded abou Vietnam. It would be astonisfing if it were otherwise. Foboth of them shun a land wa in Asia, and both of them woulmuch rather spend millions o aid than billions on combat.It is only the timetable tha has changed. The European alies we had in the 50's are muc weaker now, and the majc Asian enemy, Red China, i much stronger. The two Pres dents have different parties, bt they have the same country-in very much the same fix tha it was a decade ago.DRESSED TO KILLMaybe clothes do make t hwoman but they break the ma—Danville (Ind.) GazetteCHECKMATEDA woman’s work is neverdone, especially by husbands.— Rodney (Ont.) Mercury.WATERLOOAlthough small boys are washable, most of them shrink from it. —Sparta (111.) News-Plain-dealer.Come to Order, IMeetiit
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Morgantown Post

Morgantown, West Virginia, US

Wed, Sep 08, 1965

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Mark P.

USA 21 Nov 2018

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