seminar 1968

Upload: doug-ferguson

Post on 06-Apr-2018

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/3/2019 Seminar 1968

    1/1

    '" V ''*

    P A G E I)FOlJIt H I K L : M A M < * . I / M A . om o SUNDAY , OCTOBER 27, 1968The Two Worlds of QuemoyEighty thousand Nation-a l is t army t roops ca r r yo u t m i l i t a r y exercisesan d stand guard in un-d e r g r o u n d for t i f icat ionsto wi thstand Comm unistrockets and ground-to-g ro u nd m i s s i l e s . R e d sfire at Q u e m o y on a l t e r -na te days .

    Al though th e c i t izens ofQ u e m o y lire wi th in eye-s ight o f the Commun istChinese mainland, theyd e v o t e t hemse lves topeacefu l pu rsu i ts l ikef ishing an d farming.Fish c a t c h e s have in -creased f rom 772 ton sin 1958 to 3,000 tonslast year. Corn yieldswere up to 2,500 tonslast y e a r f rom 105 tonsj us t te n years ago.

    'Win And Get; Out9

    Lyi ng l e s s than tw om i l e s f rom the Com-munist Chinese c o a s t ,57,900 civilians live un -de r the muzzles of Redar t i l le ry on Quemoy,National ist China'slargest o f fshore island.While a military wor ldexists underground, lifeO P the sur face fo l lowspeaceful pursuits. Ne wwells a n d ir r igationprojects have caused anagricultural boom.

    Wallace Says' Set Limit'I f Paris Negotiators FailB U F F A L O , N.Y. (AP) -George C. Wal l ace says theUni t ed States should set at ime l imit on the Paris peaceconference and go a f t e rmil i t ary vic to ry in Vi e t n a m ifnegotiators fail to meet th edead l ine .Wal l ace , the A m e r i c a nIndependen t par ty candida tefor Pres ident , re ite ra ted tha the hopes for a negotiated set-t lement. But he said he is con-vinced th e North Vie tnamesear e using the peace talks "forpropaganda purposes and torebuild that portion of Northwe ' re no t bombing

    how he would goVietnamn o w . "Askedabou t i nc reas ing pressure onth e North Vietnamese tonegotiate acceptable terms,th e former Alabama governorrepl i ed:"Well ,want to

    6Whistle-Stop' Era Waning?* *Nixon Victory Special cLost Of Kind?

    By RICHARD E. LIGHTNERCOLUMBUS (UPI)-Thend of an era probably ca mla te l a s t Tuesday night whe:"The Nixon Victory Special'A d v c r t i i e m e n t

    Notlc* I* hereby given thateffective October 27, 1968 thedistributorship a g r e e m e n tbetween John Bozarth, Ada,Ohio, nd the John D. Brush &Co., Inc., Rochester, New York,for the sale and distribution ofKeep-Safes, manufactured byJohn D. Brush & Co.,nc., iscanceled and t e r m i n a t e dpursuant to the terms of saidagreement, and as of said dateno further Keep-Safes will beshipped or sold to the said JohnBozarth by the John D Brush &Co., Inc., for sale or distribu-tion by him or to fill or com-plete any orders for Keep-Safesthereafter taken by him.

    pulled into Union Station atToledo.Wilbur E. Henry J r .m a na g e r of public relationfor the Association oAmer ican Railroads, told th inewsman the Nixon t ra in was"the last of its kind."Swaying with th e train as itsped along 247 miles of steel,Henry said there probablywould no t be enough cars in1972 to put such a train:ogether."The trend is for passengerservice to decrease," saidlenry, "and I seriously doubt; h a t in four years there willbe the equipment available toable to pu t together a trainlike this."If he is right, then cam->aigns an d the i r entourages oflewsmen an d aides will beunited to the high -speed,suspended animation of jetrave l i n the f u ture .The views on the value ofcampa igning by train differ.The veterans feel the Nixonwhistle stop came off as a

    S A V E 300$$ N O WO N T H E A L L N E W

    9

    SPECIAL"700 T R A C T O RMl six* 1969/ MOIWpOVWfTractor with32" Rotary Mow*ri

    "glowing tribute to the jetplane an d television" whilethe "cub reporters'" felt 11provided a .bond between thecandida te and the people heseeks to represent."If the Nixon special servedan y unu sua l purpose , i t was toemphasize 20 years of travelprogress," wrote U PI Whi teHouse Reporter MerrimanSmith, who whistle - stoppedmore tha n 100,000 miles withPresidents Truman a n dEisenhower and their op-ponents.Smith pointed out Nixon'may h av e se en 1 0 0 , 0 0 0jersons during the course oflis trip" bu t that one 15-minute television show wouldhave brought him in contact'with (Moans by t h emillions."But to this newsman, on hi sfirst, an d perhaps last, whistlestop tour, th e c a m p a i g nspecial gave the candidate af i rst hand look at the pro-blems Nixon seeks to conquerand the people he wants toserve.Th e landscape flitting pastthe windows wa s made up ofth e f a rms he must help, th erivers an d lakes he must freeof pollution, and the decayingcities he must rebuild.When the train stopped insmall communities, such asDeshler with its population of2,000, it gave th e arearesidents a chance to see apresidential candidate in theflesh. An estimated 1,500waitedDeshlerWhen the end does come,

    tha t he lped draw biggercrowds.Franklin D. Roosevelt, whorode more than 350,000 miles,liked to have th e train pulaway j u s tspeech. It as hewa s a ended adramat i ctouch that went over big withthe audi ences , but newsmenwere often left at thetelegraph office.Truman conduc ted perhapsthe most memorable and suc-cessful whistle stop campaign ,[n 1948, he covered more th an21,000 miles, delivering morethan 300 "give - em - hell"speechs.Sometimes m i s h a p s oc -curred. Dur ing Dwight D.Eisenhower's 1952 campaign,a crowd of some 20,000trampled public a d d r e s swires . By the t ime the damagehad been repaired, th e trainhad a r r ived and was ready toleave' ' W h o o ps ," E i se nho we rcried out to the astonishedcrowd as the train started tomove. "They're taking meaway."

    o f course , I don ' ttalk abou t mili tarystrategy and tactics becauseI I'm not a mil i ta ry man . But if.I were pres ident an d peace

    i ta lks hadn ' t conc luded and wedon ' t have an honorable set-t l ement bv the t ime of thene w admini s t ra t ion, then Ithink we ough t to set somet ime l imit in the matter ofnegotiations, an d then if theydon ' t solve and settle the mat-te r honorably , then we oughtto win a mili tary victory withconventional weapons and ge tout of Vietnam. 'In outlining his views onVietnam an d other campaignissues to a team of AssociatedPress/ editors, Wallace said he"would ask the Joint Chiefs ofStaff what mili tary action weshould t ake ," to defea t theenemy in Vietnam."I would lean heavily uponthem and probably accepttheir advice," he said.Wallace, interviewed Oct. 4in Buffalo where he stoppedovernight dur i ng a swingthrough seven key northernstates, said ending the waran d mainta in ing l aw andorder at home were th e majorissues of the campaign.

    He was asfeed how he woulddeal with four types of crimea n d d isor de r: O r g a n i z e dcrimeespecially offenses byyoung people desperate formoney to buy drugs , racialstri fe, includin g riots, and stu-dent demonstrations againstthe war.Wallace emphasized that he

    secutor can show that "ef-fective steps were taken tosecure t h e consti tutionalprivilege aga ins t s e 1 i n-crimination."Among other things, th ecour t held tha t a suspec t hasa r i ght to remain si lent, tohave a l awyer present dur ingpolice interrogation, and to beinformed tha t any s ta tementhe makes can be used aga insth i m .Othe r than seeking t ooverturnWallace t h e s esaid he decisions,had nospecific plans for combatingcrime, bu t wouldvigilance by the urge moreJ u s t i c e

    several hoursto see Nixon.

    at

    some historian will probablywrite a book about elec-tioneering by train. It will,most likely, be a b ig bookbecause it will span more tha n120 years.

    ELECTRICSTART $59995

    I

    S e e O u r W H E E L H O R S E" L E T I T S N O W " S p e c ia ls N o w !"700" T R A C T O R .

    W I T H 32 MOWER ANDSNOW-DOZER BLADEWENEEDTRADE-INSNOW

    The campaign train can beda ted back to P r e s i d e n tWilliam Henry Harrison in' 1840. Between then and 1968, a' number of candidates used;them to campaign.Stephen A. Douglas usedone in 1858 during "The GreatDebates" with Abraham Lin-coln an d William JenningsBryan, and set a record wheni he m a de 24 speechs in one dayin 1896.Warren G. Ha r d i ng was thefirst candida te to have at ra in ' s rear platform riggedwith a loudspeaker, a novelty

    Demos CenterOpen At KalidaKALIDA A Pu tna mCounty "Humphrey F o rPresident" Democratic head-quarters has been openedhere , nex t to the B lack AngusSteak House on Main Street.Rick Kuhlman an d DanielKidd are co-chairmen. Theyannounced th e headquar terswill be open dai ly from 9 a.m. to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.I n f o r m a t i o n o n a l lDemocratic candidates will beavailable, the co - chairmensaid.

    ARREST OFFICIALVIENNA, Austria (UPI)Austrian authori ties Saturd ayannounced the arrest of agovernment official, J o s e fAdamek, on charges of spyingfor an unna m e d eastern Com-munist power. Adamek, 42 ,ha d worked for the AustrianFederal Press Service for 20years.

    Depar tmen t , and ca l l upon alllaw enforcement agenc i es tocrackdown on the t ra f f i c inmari juana , LSD and otherdrugs .Asked how, he would goabou t prevent i ng o r put t i ngdown racial disorders, in-cluding rioting an d looting,Wal l ace said police should be"allowed to use wha tevermethods ar e necessa ry to pre-vent the breakdown of lawan d order an d then if it doesbreak down, they ought to beallowed to use wha tevermeasures a re necessa ry tostop it."" I d on ' t want to see a s i tua -tion exist where people ju st goout and want to knock peoplein th e head," he s a i d"However, sometimes whenyou knock a few in the head , i tsaves having to knock manyin the head, and I think strongmeasures in the beginningsave lives."Wal l ace was asked if hethought police should beallowed to shoot to stop

    thinks f ighting crime andkeeping the peace a r eprimarily the responsibility ofthe states. B u t he claimed,nonetheless, that his electionas president would bringabout stronger l a w e n -forcement.A victory at the polls, hesaid, would be "a moral boostto th e policeman" and "amandate to the off icials backin the states to stand withtheir police and not handcu ffthem."The candidate, blaming U.S.Supreme Court d e c i s i o n slimiting police powers in ques-tioning suspects, said "it isalmost impossible to convictanybody of any crime no whighest to the

    he would recom-from thelowest."Asked ifmend to Congress that itoverturn two of the court'smost controversial rulings,the so-called Escobedo an dMiranda decisions, Wallacereplied:"Yes. I would. I said thatm a ny times. I thi nk those tw odecisions have helped bring

    Wallace wouldn' t s a ywhether hi s a m e n d m e n twould cover other local in -stitutions, al though he said"hospitals also ought to be ex-clusive of federal control."Neither would he say whetherh e ' d ask Congress to repealthe civi l rights act outlawingracial discrimination in publicaccommodations.'I don' t advocate that peo-ple not be public ac -commodated at any place,"said W allace, "but I do objectto governme nt supervising thebusiness and I don't think thelaw is good."

    On another keydomestic inflation, Wal lacesaid he would combat it bycu t t ing government spending ,specifically 'for foreign a i d ,welfare and -poverty pro- ,grams. But a t the same t ime,he said he'd take f u nd s no wused fo r some poverty pro-grams to f inance a publicworks program and "employable-bodied people ir th ebuilding of highways an d th_building of streets, sewers,drainage systems w h i c henhance wealth and propertyvalues and he lps to createt rade and commerce .

    looters and arsonists. "Tostop a riot and looting anddestruction of property an dthe committing of arson,yes," he said. "Yes. If that'sthe only way i t can be done,ye s "While defending the right todemonstrate in opposition tothe Vietnam war, Wallacerei terated hi s position tha t th efederal government should'seek indictments a g a i n s tthose wh o make speechescall ing for Communist victoryan d those on college cam-puses, the few tha t do raisemoney an d blood an d clothesfor the Communists"actionwhich he called "overt actsoftreason."Turning to one of his ownmajor campaign themes, localcontrol of public insti tutions,Wallace said his proposed LfnncitllfinT'll **mtmrl-mA*%4- +** rconsti tutional amendment togive the states absolute powerover public schools wouldpermit each state to choose

    SEMINAR SPEAKER - Dr.Richard L ineback ( le f t ) .Bowling Green State U niversi ty philosophy departme ntchairman, addressed th e ini tial Lima Senior High Schoolstudent semina r program Thursday. He discussed "A nIntroduction to Philosophy." Student modera to r for theseminar was senior Douglas Ferguson, 552 S. Woodlawn.Main topic for the year-long seminar is "Some Le ssons inPhilosophy." (News Photo)

    the kind of school system itit**Tnw4-_I \rwanted.Including a ' r a c i a l l y - l w ,TPSaterl nnp" 'egregated one?" Inc luding any k ind theywanted to have," Wallacerepl ied , " i nc luding having onelike they have in Washington,which is a jungle . . ."MINI CRISIS

    CAIRO fUPI)Police chiefZaky Elag said Saturday girlswho wear miniskirts in publicwill be charged with indecentexposure and offending publicmorality. He said the situationreached crisis proportionsT h u r s d a y when t wominiskirted girls disruptedtraffic for an hour.

    C O N G R A T U L A T I O N SO N T H E

    G o o d H o u s e k e ep i n g H o m eWe were happy tofurnish the Stewart

    Warner heat pump, airconditioner and theLightolier Fixtures

    S T A T EE L E C T R I C215-219 E. NORTH ST .

    LIMA, OHIO

    4444 .'4444444444444444444444444

    GANGLAND ROUNDUPPARIS (UPI)Pol iceabout the increase in thec r ime ra te and they really, in, effect, made second classar-i ci tizens of the policemen in

    C O N G R A T U L A T I O N Srested 350 persons for ques- our country."t ioning ea r ly Sa turday in a n > Th e 1964 Escobedo decision.attempt to halt a series of I coupled with the Miranda rul-gangland-style shootings thathave killed three persons an dwounded several others.

    in g tw o years later, preventthe use of confessions asevidence unless thepro-H O W T O B U Y A N EW H O M E A N D SAVE M O N E Y !

    Hvbfeefl't ImplementAda. Oo Study NmcrrC , Ohio

    Odcr*-vrM Oho

    Detpties ImplementDtlph* * O 1" 1 *>

    fUttri* Seles fni Seme*

    Homer Generator & St*rtrrKenton

    Lima FarmI.1TI* O>

    Hwlwai*i Ohi

    Honrt yew opportunity to ow n a quality new home at*elowest possible cost. UNIfads answpnsuif!100% FINANCING. Paydown what you can afford. Low interest rates mean big savings* NOPAYMENTS FOR 6NONUSThen make low monthly payments, BEAUTIFUL,ARCHITECTURALLY DESIGNED HOMES. Pick the style you like or use your ownplans. EXPERT CARPENTERS do al heavy construction. EXTRA DOLLARS SAVED. Youonbeipwith the finishing work andsave many extra dollars.

    fffTERHATlONAl H O M E S AR E B ETTER T O L IVE IN...E A S I E R TO B U Y !

    To Butturff Builders on TheirOPEN HOUSE

    Showing th eP E A S E G O O D H O U S E K E E P I N G P L A N

    W e a t Fidelity ar e proud to have been chosen to furnishth e unusu al Brick as recommended by Good Housekeep-ing. Se e Fidelity for a wide variety o f Brick an d other

    82=3 .quality building material .

    fJ

    48-3542

    MOORE'S INTERNATIONAL HOMES DML tat S&S, S MMH* AM., taroke, *.2*014tte JM Mt to*aDT u r n

    MKvat to jO-1Z

    international homesF I D E L I T YCM! I BiiMm Sipply

    33S I. Nig* 223-W7S Umo, OhJo 'A

    K W S P A P L R l