{ title: 'The Ellicottville post. (Ellicottville, Cattaraugus Co., N.Y.) 1961-current, February 19, 1969, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1969-02-19/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1969-02-19/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1969-02-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92062048/1969-02-19/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Ellicottville Memorial Library
. . ,---· ···:-···--·· -.--~···;--.~q! .... '\'\' ~ ~ -· 1M£ .... ~1LLtc0TTVILLI .·.POST ?• :. ·\, ~ 'k·. •.-;·~i> \'' ...... f •' - ~. •. - I . Quote ' D~cat~ t(f'a proQessive.· prosperowf conunpnity · · Published ,by. The ElU.cottville Post, Inc · • 1 . W · . J;·. Trlmbl.~.~ Jr., Presi4--~nt . · · 1 · . '\ \ '~. 'l'rinit>I~ sec. • Treas> . · · of the We•• ·~ , \I belitt• 1~ti:e • ~t__: ~ lrit of ~t:ance in th.ts· \ • '. \. ', 0 ··~\ ' • · . Ev~ We . ay, at ~llicotf\lille, N'.e~ork, 14731 · . . -Bnter~- as secon~\Cl388rpjt~er No~6,.1884 at the r~ - E)Jftee ·at, Ellicottville,. N•···Y. under tl!tct,Act of March 3, 1871\ lip .. ·· .. _, .. ' eount&it,.:Mlilc:ll~ will Qot The rece.nt ~patioh~ of Mayor Earl ~thmlller poses a political . pJ:oblem for Ellicattvlne. Thi& might be a good opportunity to re;. · vive t1ie Democratic ~any. For many years in. tbe vil- lage and toWllShip,.a very ., . MEMSEaS OF STAFF . Earl I.. Cbamber,Jain, Foreman . . Eleanor Wagner, Grace Abriatis, Patricia Trimble · 1ub:iidt ··to be·· ~eaeid; b-.t: I ;.;.,.\rn.v:e ·llie,. lJ a fund:·of·gooct-...., iu thiJ . coUD~rr. wliieh cam&ot be . c:lecei,.ed.\ Member Cattaraugus County Newf!»aper Publishers Assn. New York Press Assn Natumal Eiitorlal Assn · WILLIAM J, TRI~LE, JR. EDITOR AND PUBLISHER of U:nknowu Authorship f-ew Democrats· }lave mel;, ~nts Cast a Long Shado in caueus and have always eadorsed the Repuplica.• candida~es. I don•t bla'Ille · them bec~use it is a difficult task to beat the Republican , machine in this town. Row ., The shadow of Edgar · Clark, ousted Ca.tt3r.augus CoUnty School Dis';rlct Super- int&:~.dent, will pass over the shoulder of his successor for many years to come. For 1if the Board of C~-operative Educational !services saw fit to dismiss a man wi~hout ·:re.ason 4Ju'ee years after it hired him, the· <Same thing can happe::1 to his successor. _The ~hl!bby treatment of Clark by the nine member board, which didn't seem to . 'k'::lOW the work·or .the programs they felt he wasn't a'drninisbe:ring properly, cas~s doubt on that body's judgement to recom- ~end a five millio:J. dollar building program :for vocational-techllical schools to th voters. ~ ever, their actioDB haV.:tm- It would seem there is more personal '~~uraged one-party nile vindic-.:ive::J.ess in the Clark removal than for-, any years. In fact, common sense. If it took the board three drove f voters h\ave s~ayed years to realize Clark's qualifications were away fro - the. polls o:t less than needed, the::t the board is to be election d~y ause there' faulted for being less thari \sharp''. If ~he ~roe ::1_0 choices d Repub dismissal stems from the superintoencie:tt's llcan VIct?ry was a own inability to sell the various districts on tne fact. This column enc State Plan for School Dis~ri<:t Reorga::tiza. ages ~ goo~, strong\Demo- · tion then BOCES and the constituen: crat ticket m the town and bo~ds are equally at fault. If the boar-d village -elections. Such .. a actio::1 stems from the sewerage fiasco at ticke! .would _give the voters the Sou1hern Center Vocational-Technical a choice wh1ch they now School, it is again leavhg itself open to th.e do not h~ ':e. A group of charge that it leaves some!hing to be de· ~oung, virile an(i hard work sired in the realm of its own directorship. mg Democrat who could ge: out the vote would surely attr-act a lot of voters !o ~ the bell<e!fit of this commun- THE HITCHING POST ity. Let's make.a big effort to get away from the one- par.:y rule that we have had for so many years. It has been done i:t the past a:1d can be done• now with a lot of effort, publicity and a Havi~g a little more latitude than S. I. Hawakaya at San FMncisco State College the Rev. Theoaore Hesburg of the Univer- sity of Notre Dame said he would allow campus demonstrators fiftee:1 mbutes :o meditate in their plight, suspend them, and ~ then give them an additional five minu';es to remove '.;hemselves before e'Xpelling them from the university. · Following the. expul- -sitr.I edict, 'the ''former- stude::1ts\ would be trespassers and would be dealt with ac- cordingly. • • • • Five will get you ten tha~ you will not hear much more about demonstrators at ND. • • • • The argument advanced by many li~r als in favor of gNlnting the vote to eightee:1 year olds, because \if they're old enough to :fight, they're: old eno~gt:l to V:o~''was ans- w~d piellly seundly 'l'icerilly by .one of the· columnists. Simply sta.ted, he asked, \Wha\; about the girls?\ • • • • • Governor Rockefeller must have bee:t tltinking out loud last week, when he said 11he state pumped money intO education in .the belief tft:lat \at some point quali~y edu- cation \vGuld be ~ached,'' However, that poont becGmes ever so elusive desptt~ the fact that during his tenure b office, thEI cost' of -edUcation has gone :rro.rn $610 mil.; lion per year to· $2 billion. - . . .... As Columnist Amelia Nugent observed . ,. · \Vt~ do~'t need more money for educati'OD; we need molle edueatio.\l- fm-. tha money_ u we'r€ already spe::lding.'' • • • • Results are.in fr-om the 1967-68 P~si- . dentiai Physical Fitness A ward pro~m. New York youngst~rs won 2,035. awards ..out of a recQrd total of .70,619; This figure, whe:t compare(! with the·state's ~'stu dent · · • is ·ratliet. · ,disl:lP:Poiw.ing (Cali'f.orilhl.rul~ t::.!:.!ltK.wl'rlmerJs): ))u.t testing :pr<J~cec:llim!S. ···~c_6.1~:!ril-~u\'\\-\~! .... _ the dispar- ])e.. PJi11rsical Edu /mirutY 'Ne.w York Associ a· SU~llcat:ion, and on whitb ~ The . \' ... '\' .. State ~ole, by Bill Tnmble •••• \You've bought a lot of the alibis from the educational es!ablishment.\ sam ~ door-to-door canvass. • • '€ 1ssue of bside Education. •••• All Letters to the Editor must be sign- ed by persons submittbg them. If the writer d£sires, a pseudonym may be re- ques':ed. •••• THE FINAL WORDS are from \Ans- werable to tbe People,\ in the NovembeT issue of the New York State Department of Health's Public~ion, \Health News.\ *The question was \Will we be wear- ing gas masks 25 years from now?\ *The a:l.Swer was: \If air pollutio:t control efforts .• were to be frozen at today•s level, the answer to your question would be alt>'Ungnaliflect, 'i'!es, by SB we will '811 wearing gas masks.' Howev~, New York State already has a good program designe<l to ~reven\ such a thing from happeni:Jg. As of 1968, New Yorit State has e'Xistttg l-egislation which institutes control of con- tamination' from all of the five major sources of -air pollution: transportatiO::l, in· dustry, generation of eleotricity, space he~t i::lg, and refuse disposal. *\lf we in New York, and th!E!> remain- dar' 1'if the nation; conti.\ltl-e to set maximum a·mbient air quality objectives for poilu· taaxtso,. fellow through with regulatio:lS de· signed to meet these objectiV~es, and fln.ally, enforce these regulations, we will no! have _to w~ar gas masks h25.~''-- ~--· .. \' . Ed Howe wrote: 'Behave yourseU; let others go to the devil, if they so .please. If . \ . you behave yourself and do wdl, that ·will · , be the most powerful preaching you can imiulge in; .noting your example, ri:iany on the way to the devil will turn ·back -~lind follow you to safety.' Let the advice sink in .. Fathe'rs often preaah.,to their so~. But the sans are in the position of EmersGn who once exclaimed, ~what you are speaks so loud ,that I cannot hear what you say!'• •••• • • • • Once upon a time winter was the quiet time o.f the year. The gentle fall of s:~ow deade:Jed the noise• of traffic and stopped the clat- ter of power la;Wn mowers. But that has all changed with the invention o.f the power ski-mobile. They set up a loud whine•, go all over the sidewalks, streets, -priwte lawns and shrub- bery. They have turned a quiet winter bto the :J.ois- i-est season of the year. . . . \ I think one way to stop 1:he riGd'' dn our i:olteg~s would be to deprive all rio- -ters from thei·r sch'Olarships, grants and lO'ans and to ex- pel them.. These rio.ters are a distant minority of. all students. I u::1d~rstand that in l>he eollege of about 28000 studen!s, only about 2000 are rioters. Ano.ther me,Ulod · shOilld be to furnish all boni ned: students w~ indentifi.;- cation cards a::i.d .to have guards ~ admittance to all who could ::tot show prop 16'1' identification. This r WQ.Yld keep, . non-students . oft the campuses. • •••••• . , ,, This column was soiPy to hear of flhe resignation of ·'Mayor Earl lleithmiller. Earl was a very good mayor but received very little co- operation from toW:J. and village> board members. ••••• Albany·-Openline. ; .. · \ . By 'Ale~ IJ.an .. jn 1 The 11¥.9 s~on of fu~ $tate Legi~~ur~·is about e month old atld it .seems fair to a$ wb:at, so far, has ~9een accomplished. ' -·-Not too much, Y'€t. · The three political par- ties :l.'i bo4;h houses .did have one skirmish, jmportan'; be- cause i~ was the first o::te of the year, :but its significan.1::e was more political than practical. In practical terms, as usual <;he taxpayer may lo!Je ou';. .J!! political terms Demo- cr&.ts b the Senate tore them selves apart in public and in the Assembly the Co:tser vatives were unwilling to pu~ their money where ';heir collective thoughts have been in past months and rni.Dority leader J<!S~ph Zar- etzik Sa'W'·httnself -publiCly humiliafed·by his ow mem bers, sbt of whon(got up to deno~ce--him f.Oi voting for the deficie:tcy bqdgei. ZarclZki,in ·his speech which officially closes de.. bate for the minOrity urged his fellow Democrilts,~ vote for the budget •. ~ Qnly a.'\te other of :the 24.: J)em\Qcrats did Sl). DemoCJ:atic sena;. tors ~re now ~~Y calling for hiS re:mo.val aalllinority leader. · f Republican Senate · Ma- l ority Leader Ear! W. Bryd- r . ges of Nta~ Falls may have (lverplaye(t his ha::td in seeking a ::tegotia.ted agree ment with Za1.1etzki over the deficiency budget. His hope years. was io gat enough · Demo- The subjectarou:J.d which cratic votes for it so that he all this took place was Gov- could release some of his ernor Rockefeller's deficien- more conservativ-e· members cy budget. from voting for the- deficien- Th ·4ictio:J.ary defines de- cy budget. Many were ficiency as something which against it but we:~.t alo::1g is \inadoequa!.;~ want¥og.\ wi<th Brydges for Senate - Which ·may be.~. good de- as opposed to home town - scrip~ion of what h~ened politics. Senators who go in the Legislature. along with Brydges always Deficie:1cy bl.ldgets are._\ get something in retUrn. normally used to give the · }3ut because Zaretzki was stabet more money to spend beat6zt down so hard by his whe::1 they have spent more OW::l side, Brydges may have than-authorized in a given destroyed! him. . Zaretzki fiscal year. will be ~ery difficult <to deal For example, las'; year the with from :~.ow on. Legisla:ure authorized the Rocke~l1er has said in spending of $680 million to private that what happened local governmeo:J.ts for wei- in the Assembly was g{)od, fare and medicaid. But by because it forced Republi- last September the well was can Speaker Perry B. Dury dry, so the deficiency budget J uk L I ea, r, of Monta , .. , to contained a:1 item for $178 get tough and whip every- million to pay the localities one, including Conserva· up to ~he end of the· current lives in line. fiscal year, March 31. DUIJ\'!>a is operatbg with The issue arotfn.d which a thin three-vote margin. It most of the public debate b. takes 76 votes to pass a bill both houses centered in fj}e there. He bas 78 Republi- budge1 was a $100 million can and CollS€rvative votes. item for the state museum Duryea was forced to a:ld library building for the whip everyone in J.ill!e• be- controversial South Mall cause Assembly minori:y state office building com- leader Stanley Steingut plex being build next to the held his f{)rces L'1 lbe and state capitol. ~. refused t let De .,.__ o any m...- S~ate Comptroller Arthur crats to vote for tbe bill. Levitt i~ the only DemOera~. P,.r ..,· tl....... tb 1 · 8 t\'\\l'<·~~•a..J atain~fa ma;ii~r&~omce,' A/V '<' 'lOP' Wiw.v,t_.-u Duryea who then cooled Levitt's ·pElt criticism is c,api off and put the pressure oo. tol constructio::J. spending. his o•\rn members· , some of When the session began, ~., .. Demt>cra~ic leaders in both whom did not wa:tt to vo~e for the bill houses said they were going Conser-Vatives, who have to \consult\ Levitt frequent · scN·amed about state spend- ·ly. b.g for years. cd who dis- The ®ba~ over the defi- like the g<>vernor r>oliti-cally ciency budget shows they buckled and voted for the are taking their cues from LeVItt. . They are going to governor~ bill.. use capital constructio:1 as To be sure, some i~ems tl}e issue fot future politi- wei:e cut out of Rockefellers . cal fights with Republicans bi.U., but not much. Duryea · a_nP Brydges. finally .cut $14 . ;:t;O:!:othlrous~sand __ .million out of~.~~_S_o~?h In the Se.na~. DemocraUe . Mall buili~bg. .. · I . I I .....