Page Two
INGS MOUNTAf
hursday, April
Established 1889
I The Kings Mountain Heiald
206 South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountoin, N. C. 28088
A weekly newsps,per devoted to the promotion of the general welfare and published
for tha enlightenment, entertaintrmt and benefit cf the citizens of Kings Mountain
and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publishing House.
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086
under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Martin Harmon Editor-Publlaher
Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Sncietv F-iiior
Gary Stewart Sports Editor, News
Miss Deboie Thornburg Clerk, Botritk^cpet
Ray Parker
Rocky Martin
MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT
Allen Myert
Roger Brown
Paul Jackson
Herbert M. Hunter
• On Leave With The United States Army
M-AH. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
In North Carolina and South Carolino
One year six months $2.25; three months $1.50; school year $3.
(Subscription in North Carolina subject to three percent sales tax.!
In All Other States
One year $5; six months $3; three months $1.75; school year $3.75.
■ PLUS NORTH CAROLINA SALES TAX
TELEPHONE NUMBER — 739-5441
TODAY'S BIBLE VERSE
A-Tid fct'C ICitOIV th^t mTI ttiiiiyS ^OVlC
Ladies and Sports
On first thought, a program chair
man would reject immediately any sug
gestion that a spoils editor be booked
as the featured speaker for a ladies
night banquet.
But Lion Charlie Blanton did and
the results were most acceptable.
Bob Quincy, the Charlotte Observer
sports columnist, with a heavy dosage
of wit, beamed his speech to the ladies—
their increasing interest in sports, their
knowledge of sports, and their increas
ing participation in sports.
Just for a sample, a tale on Clam-
son s P'rank Howard as told by the late
Douglas (Peahead) Walker, of Wake
Forest, two gentlemen of the football-
coaching profession who lampooned
each other all then’ adult lives:
Ole Frank chews tobacco, Peahead
regaled, and somebody asked Mrs. How
ard why she, unlike most coacn's Wives,
accompanied him on football trips. Mrs.
Howard is supposed to have replied,
“I’ve got to. I’m sure not going to kiss
him goodbye.’"
Bob Quincy, native West Virginian,
kwrote sports at the Charlotte Ne^, was
^sports teleca.ster at WSOC-TV, succeed
ed the late Jake Wade as sports'^blic-
ity director at UNC-Chapel Hill, (hen
retui-ned to Charlotte with the Observer.
He told the Lions and their ladies
Tuesday night he has traveled 35,000
miles since last August in process of re
porting sports events in the Obseiwer.
He was asked, he said, what interested
him most in covering di.stant sports
events. He had replied, “Getting home.”
Clean Water, Again
For more than 20 years the State
jNorth Carolina has carried on a com-
rehensive program for water pollution
aatement and control.
. The program has made a great deal
of progress during this time, but there
is still a long way to go.
And the job is getting harder day
by day. Population growth, industrial
expansion, and increasing urbanization
compound the difficulty.
Throughout the years, the program
has suffered from the lack of State as
sistance to municipalities and other lo
cal governmental units to supplement
Federal assistance for building adequate
public facilities for sewage treatment.
"The lack of State a.sgistance also
has handicapped North Carolina’s ef
forts to assure safe and dependable pub
lic water supplies for more of its people.
Federal grants-in-aid for public
water supply systems have been and are
available. But in many instances local
governments cannot afford their share
of the cost.
The best available estimates are
that in the next five years, about $697
million will be needed to provide ade
quate public facilities for sewage collec
tion and treatment systems and for pub
lic water supply systems.
Of the total, $360 million will be
needed for water pollution control facili
ties and $337 million for water supply
systems.
The needs include new facilities,
improvement or replacement of existing
facilities, and replacement of old facili
ties.
Now the voters of North Carolina
have a chance to act directly for the
cause of clean water by supporting and
voting for the $150 million “clean
water” bond issue on May 6.
Congratulations to Jack Smith,
newly-elected commander of Frank B.
Glass post 9811, Veterans of Foreign
Wars, and the other newly-elected offic
ers.
■ yiSo i/ft/rt luve \hK iiorii. Rirnmuttu s:^S.
Future School Plonts
A few years ago Mayor John Henry
Moss -labeled one of the city’s major
needs as adequate housing and declared
a thousand new units i-equired.
A goodly number of citizens laugh
ed. Some put down the thousand as im
possible of attainment. Others opined a
thousand new units would glut the hous
ing market.
Items;
1) The goal of a thousand new hous
ing units is well on the way to attain
ment.
2) Housing in the Kings Mountain
area is verj' tight, in spite of the many
new homes built and occupied.
The corollary here is the mit-lond
thinking of the board of education, in
deed, worrying, about the impact of
new housing on future school population
and the companion question of school
housing for an anticipated influx of
school children. School housing is in
short supply now.
Principal in the thinking of school
officials is the construction of junior
high school adjacent to the high school
nn Phifer Road, where the Kings Moun
tain, school district already owns a suf
ficiency of land.
The new junior high school would
be for all eighth and ninth graders, re
moving Grade 9 from the present high
school building and relieving strain
there. The chain would continue: Central
plant would be a sixth-seventh grade
school for all children in the district in
these grades. Removal of the sixth
graders would free space in all of the
community schools in the district.
The price tag for the new school,
plus some improvements to existing
schools, is estimated at $2 million.
With the Kings Mountain sci-oo! dis
trict debt limit at $5,400,000 an i grow
ing, and net debt now outst' ng at
$500,000, the school officials :ee no
financing p)X)blem, either from debt
limit provisions of state law or from the
standpoint ox punishing of taxpayer poc-
ketbooks.
Back to housing: two builders alone
are constructing now 554 housing units,
less than responsible were it not con-
ccimed.
The board of education would be
Hurry is dictated both for impend
ing need and for what would be the final
item of district financing, which, again
by state statute, becomes past history
as of July 1, 1973.
The indicated plan makes sense.
Good News Here
Today’s Herald front page “lead”
news report is quite good news for Kings
Mountain.
The Teamster’s Union Pension Fund
owns the former properties of Neisco,
Inc., lock, stock and barrel and already
ai’e implementing plans to return the
four-plant complex to profitable produc
tion, implying steady, full-work-week
jobs for employees and the twin em
ployee benefit of job security.
When then-Massachusetts Mohair
Plush Company, acquired the former
Neisler Mills on December 15, 1955, em
ployment at the Margrace and Pauline
Kings Mountain plants totaled about
1200. Emplo3mient today is 400, a graph
ic description of the sixteen and one-
half year demise under the menage of
the Horvath brothers, which also wit
nessed the loss' of t'”’''-’ plants in the
initial seven-plant complex.
At December Jo, Neisler Mins
employed one-fourth of the^ working
population o\ Kings Mountain and one-
third the textile working population.
Had not it been for the influx of new in
dustry taking up the slack', the whole
community would have been economic
ally inert.
“We’ve got the business. We need
employees,” says new President Ervin
Rugendorf.
Good news, indeed!
MARTIN'S
MEDICINE
Viewpoints of Other Editors
HAS THE LEAD
By MARTIN HARMON
tic factor in the onset of cancer
is increasing, the U. S. govern-
rhe rnargin L iby no means is spending $1.8 billion on
overwhelming, but in Nw Bern researchers who think that a
and Craven County there is yiryg may .be the cul-prit, or that
Torrv indication that Hargrove predisposition to develop, the
y ’ (Skipper) Bowles ^ ahead of his disease is transmitted through a
then governor, invited representa- nearest rival, iPat Taylor, in their defective gene,
lives of Tar Heel press, radio, and race for governor,
television to Rfileigh to hear his
budget message to the General
Assembly, and with a follow-up
briefing and question-and-answer
KINGS MOUNTAIN
Hospital Log
VISITING HOURS
Daily 10:30 to 11:30 AAL
3 to 4 tM. and 7 to 8 P,M.
Back in 1963,
session at the Governor’s
Sion. Interspersed was a
Man-
buffet
Judging by icomments made by IWe are moving into an era
voters in all ago groups, Bowles irwre, recognizes that what makes
appears to 'be scorinig heavily of medicine which, more and
with his straight forward ap- a patient's heart heavy is just as
proach. -Being specific is consld- Important as wihat the EKIG
luncheon ’'The always - hungry politics, hut Skip- shows on his chart. After years
lupcneon. me axways nungry frankness has .gained him of 'being too research-oriented-
communications crowd accepted
the invitation in large numbers.
yardage.
in the sense that the germ, not
. . the patient, was the obsession--
jn-m action were faking place doctors are treating the whole
on the gridiron, instead of a cam- patient.
As the news folk filed into the paign trail extending from the
dining room to serve themselves mountains to the seas, Bowies
at the well-laden buffet, they could 'be cast in the ’role of a Lf.f P**,®
were handed king-sized dinner quarterback who spurns playing hjeir numlber, vvho doiiibt
this
plates by none other than Gov
ernor Sanford himself. As Ed
Itankin, already secretary to two
governors, and I reached plate
point, Terry leaned over to me
and said, “This vv'ay. Martin, I
won't miss spe-aking to anjibody.”
it safe.
m-m
phychosomatlc theory of cancer
can name friends who died of it,
This sort of offense can back- bone of whom had the character
fire. It is conducive to fumbles traits described as being part of
and Interceptions, ibut the fans the cancer personality. One fa-
love it. 'In the current guberna- mous example is Wake Forest
torial campaign (North Caro’iinx' football player Brian Piccolo,
sports minded citizenry seems Urn who went on to play for the Chi-
pressed. caigo Bears, and who died of the
,. . . . disease at 26. Non-aggressive?
One of the things going for Depressed? He had evetything
technique. He wasn t passing out Bowles is an asset that not many to live for and nothing to die
the aluminum-wrapped barbecues are born wih. Here in Dixie we about
but was firmly stationed on a di- call it the gift of gai'x As articu-
rcct route to the food taole ahead, late as he loquacious, he comes .
across strong on television. , -i—.i „ .,„....i.,n
m-m “ Icancer is found, researchers will
Candidate ■ for ■ President Terrv '"andWates for -North Car- learn that there are ooml'olna-
Olina’s highest office in our time tion of causes. That is, certain
ble.ssed with the abil- emotional states coupled with ex-
ity to put their thoughts into posure to a virus may spawn
The Governor hasn’t lost the
Lucille S. Blanton
'Mrs. Clark C. Boone
Mrs. C. iB. Bostic
'Ixah 'L. Camp
(Howard J. Champion
Sondra Kay Clary
Rufu.s C. Gantt
Edward O. Gore
iMrs. Wade Grant
Margaret M. Gray
■Salllo M. Hord
IBlandina Lovelace
Lawson Mitahem
Waller M. Moorhead
Waldo K. McGill
Katherine B. MicGinnis
Elizabeth L. McNeal
Artliur H. Patterson
Gilbert D. Patteirson
-Effie Mae Peterson
Elzie Lee Putnam
'Leila M. Robinson
Paul R. Sanders
Bertie B. Tnrttipson
'Virginia A. WiTnams
Mrs. Horace C. Allman
Mrs. Lamuel M. Camj)
(Bertha S. Ellison
Jack M. Wood
Oscar M. Boles _
Randolph J. Kos^'
Melela K-atherinc Bro.vn
Fred William Crockett
ICaray McKinney
Ruby P. White
Maynard C. Grason, Route ^
Clover, S. C. '|
Eddie Dt^an MdCraw, J!r, Route
1, Kings Creek, S. C.
John D. Pheagin, PO Box 95,
Bessemer City
■April Lynn McEntyre, ' Klng.-ik j
Mtn. B. C. Trailer Park,'Be.s.'em.'i%i^
City
Mrs. JamSi Paul Pettis. 931 N,
Highland St., Gastonia
Mrs. J. H. Thomson, 308 W.
Mtn. St., City
Tere.sa .4nn .Mullinas, PO Box
273, Grover
William Curry, 436 Queens
Court, Gastonia
Mrs. Paul L. Pressley, Jr., ,509
Wilson St., Ciity
Mrs. WilliamT Roper, Jr., 203
Fairview St., City
THIS IS
THE LAW
By ROBERT E. LEE
(Sponsored by The Lawyers
of North Carolina)
ANNULMENT OF MARRIAGE
Henry Brown, wealthy and
liighly re.specir^T^ian, met Marv
Green, an attraetiCe young wom
an, while attenJIiig a religious
convention.
looked none the worse for weai
m spite of the heavy schedule
■he’s been following since an
nouncing his candidacy a few
weeks ago, a schedule which has
carried him into eight states al
virtually all points of tlie United
States compass, not to mention
Cl lES-crossing his home Tar Heel
territory.
ADMITTED THURSDAY
Wesley F. Moure, Rl. 2, City
Mrs. Robert A. Pate, 506 Cres
cent Hill Drive, City
Elizabeth T. VVilleford, 809 W.
Mtn. St., City
ADMITTED FRIDAY
When the school kids at Cha
pel Hill and Duke started theii
petitions to assure that the San
ford name would be on the state’s
first-in-hislory primary ballot foi
president, I called Terry to en
courage him to get his feet wet.
On that particular evening, liow-
c.er, the Duke President was
speaking at Guilford College, but
I talked to his wife, the former
Margaret Rose Knight, a Kentucky
belle from Hopkinsville. Rjsi
words, and give impact to the 'cancer in one person. Another
pharases. Bowles can do it, and naan with the “cancer personal
is making the most of it. ity” may develop the disease be-
Up to this p-oint, he has shown ho also inherited a defelc-
no inclination to hedge, and on sette-
his way to what he hopes will be
victory has stepped on a goodly 'The researchers are saying
number of political toes. Ob- simply this: there may be a per-
viously, he feels the toes had it sonality type more prone to do-
coming, and th-at (citizens agree, velop cancer than others.
'Lashing cut at what he thinks
is wrong is nothing new for Skip- jt remains for the scientists in
per. In the general Assembly he the wong white coats to deter-
voiced strong opposition to the mine what physical factors con- City
retirement p*lan that legislators trilbute to a person’s developing Mary B. Graham, Route 2, Cher-
voted for themselves, and intro- disease--a disease that robs its rj-vllle
duced a 'bill to repeal it. victims of their dignity and shriv- Mrs. Grady C. Leopard, 205 W.
And certainly it is worti, not- els their bodies ibeyond recogni- Virginia Avenue, Bessemer City
— - - - .. , . . ° r\ a—oo.
Mary informed Henry that she
was a church worker and that
she had heeii on but a few dates
with men. She appeared very re
tiring and shy, and Henry had to
have numr>rou.s dates with hor^
before he could get even a good-1
night kiss. ”
She represented to him that she
was a virgin and had never used
intoxicating beverages or cigar
ettes. Henry married Mary.
James L. Bagwell, 320 S. RJiyne
St., Gastonia
Roy Campbell Boholer, Route 2,
City
Marvin William Brown, Route
1, City
'Espy B. Cooke, P.O. Box 329,
When they attempted to regis
ter at a resort hotel on the firsl
night of their honeymoon, the
night clerk refused to assign
them to a r(X)m.
The hotel clerk informed Henry
that prostitutes were not permit
ted to register at the hotel, and
that Mary had been thrown out
of the hotel as such only a few
weeks earlier.
ing that Bowles stood alone in
the State House against a bill
giving county commissoners au-
thoritj- to adopt a one-cent sales
tion.—Charlotte Observer.
O. Smart, 824
106
didn't sound too enthusiastic, as without a vote of the people.
is ty'pical of most wives when
their husbands think about en
tering the wilds of political cam
paigns. Rcse said only, “I don’t
know.” But any lack of enthusi
asm undoubtedly was based on Mirror,
more experience than most wives
have. Wife Rose had been through
two rough Tar Heel prim-u-ies
and a general ele'ction. Rose is as
smart as pretty, and would have
no difficulty arriving -at the math-
e.natical fact that one multiplied
Hence, it is no surprise .that he
appears determined to call a
spade a spade. In New -Bern and
Craven county, as of now, he is
the front runner.—New Bern
A NEEDLE FOR
THE DOCTORS
Mrs. Herbert
•Grace St., City
Mrs. Lawrence D. Styers,
Eitst Gold .-^t., City
Mattie W. Stowe, 825 N. Pied
mont Avenue. City
Upon further inquiries, Henry-
discovered that Mary was well
known among hotel men as a
prostitute, that she had been
convicted on such charges in the
evurls several timo.s, and was al
so an alcoholic.
ADMITTED SATURDAY
NOBODY TO DO THE JOBS
The most recent labor survey
the ^
The perversity in us always de
lights at the hight of some of
cur best-educated experts eating
a (bit of crow, as the medical
profession no-vv seems to be do
ing with regard to acntpuncture.
by fifty equals 50. The United
States number fifty states.
by the Emp-loyment Sc'curiay Western doctors have perfor(x>
Ccm-missi=n contained 'some in- dismistod it as superstitious Iro-d L. Thoipburg
‘terest;n=>’ twists. quackety, but now find them- x>t.. City
Harley R Gore, Route 1, City
Mandy McGinnis, Route 2, City
Shuford K. Peeler, Jr., 811 Mea
dow brook, City
Mrs. James M. Staley, 810 Land
ing St., City
Faye -M. Suttlcs, 1420 Second
St, City
601 W. King
Mary was definitely not the
kind (if girl she had represented
herself to be. She had never done
any dliurch work; In fa'ct, she
wa.s not even a ehuFeh memjber.
At Wednesday night’s post-bar-
tecue press conference, I learned
s..mehing I didn't kno'.v. To a
q’jss.ion c.mcernfng the cont. rul
ing conversation concerning pjs-
.sib:lity that Senator Ted Kennedy,
in spite of his discla-mers of ac-'
ceptance of the nomination,
might still be the nominee. Candi
date Sanford replied, “A candi
date doesn’t have to be nc-minat
cil to get delegate votes.” In oil
er words, a delegate who wished
cjuld cast his vote for John Due
and the vote would be recorded.
First, it appears that most of
us are working, tout it might -lx?
also added that for an instant
salary b-cost iwe need to move
acr.ss the river into neighboring
(Mecklenburg county.
selves launching h,;l research
projects to discover if it can't
after all be used as an anesthe
tic.
Paul W. Wa'llter*, Route 1,
Henry did not C(.'ntinup his
honeymoon wdth Mary. He aban
cloned her in the lobby of the
hotel on the first night of his
^married life. He li-as not slnfp
seen her. May Henry have hl.s
marriage annulled? >
Vergie Siolcc.s, llcouic 1,
thing
knew
(Gaston county, according
the SEC survey, has one of
lowest unemployment rates
counties of compara.le size
throughout the nation.
Terry was plain about the Tar
Heel primary ten days hence.
Should he fail to win it, such a
recult would materially weaken
his position as a possible dark
liorse w inner at Miami in July.
m-m
He referred to Senator 'Mike
Mansfield’s statement on the eve
of Sanford’s Washington head
quarters opening, when the Mon
tana Senator opined the fractur
ed field indicates likelihood a
new face will be sought and nom
inated, such as Governor Rueben
Askew, of Florida, or Terry San
ford of North Carolina. “I agree
with Senator Mansfield,” Terry
said,, "at least the second half
of it.”
'If there -was one
doctors absolutely
months ago, it -was that the an-
clerit practice of treating illness
for sticking needles into people
was utterly worthless, d'hon
came the demonstrations of its
se as an anesthetic in Peking
However, the average weekly 3 few months ago, and now one
paycheck is $116.34 hiere and doctor who witnessed it in China
$145.7.8 in the county across the reports, ‘Tt seems like every sin-
river. gle anesthesiologist in the U. S.
'Sfecklenb'urg, by comparison, ^ drying to get there.’
had a fat one per cent unem-
ploy.'nent rate as oppo sd to Gas- W’e shouldn’t pick on the poor
ton county’s 111 per cent. The doctors, we know, (when their
two counties rated one and two knowledge has served us so spen-
respectively in unemployment in didly. Still less do wo have the
the state. slightest intention of endorsing
The survey showed that even acupuncture for anything, let
with plentHul Jd'.s Gast n is alone for all the things supersti-
‘“till plagued by the largest short- ftocx has claimed .tor it. If there
age of experienced production L one thing we absolutely know,
workers -ince -World -VVar II. it i® that no one’s going to stick
And with the need for blue- any needles into us until it’s OK
collar workers, a surplus cf col- "'ith tiie goad old family physl-
•lege graduates is available for cian.
work.
The report further States that Even so, we 'can’t believe it’s
as a result of an earlier SEC lead for either mankind or the
survey there Ls need for skilled doctors themselves to have their
bricklayers and a grant of more (blind selif-assurance upset now
than $11,060 has been a-wrded and then. Even before Ping-4>ong
Gaston College to train 20 per- dlpl-imacy, it (bothered us to find
sons in that field. one doctor pushing and another
(How many of you college grads deploring, say, natural childbirth,
are ready for a brick laying each with the same a'ura of In-
course.—Gastonia Gazette. oontrovertable scientific and
personal authority.
ADMITTED SUNDAY
Maudie Costner, 1002 N. Oak-
wood St., Ga.stonia
Mrs. Oral Wayne Lail, Route G,
Shelby
Annie B, DulTfi, 107 E. Hartford
Ave., Bessemer City
Robert Lee l’i>aison, 1020 Elam
Ri>ad, City
Grace Ann PHTlocck, 18 Lincoln
St., York, S. C. ^
uvlildied Scoggins, Route 2, For
est City
Mrs. Marv in 11. Styers, 607 Clay
St., City
'Leroy Glenn Whiting, 3'J,5 W.
No. Tliere dot's not exist a’
.ground for an anulmenl cf the
marfkige. Mary is the legal wife
of Henry. He must maintain and
.support her.
■'PrenupLial unchastity" is not
a ground for annulment or divorce
in Norlti Carolina -and most
states.
Maryland Avenue, Bessemer City
Mrs. Harry Gene Westmoreland,
104 Kings Mtn. St., York, S. C.
Carl S. Bell, Ghosterfieid Court,
# 21, C'ity
'Mrs. Donald M. Byers, cto Ago
ny Acres, Route 1, Clover, S. C.
ADMITTED MSnDAY
Misreprespntation.3 or ctonccal-
ments tis to wealth, occupation,
rank, and character are not usual
ly ground-s for annulment.
If Mary should subsequent to
her marriage engage in prostilu
tk»« e. .stogie act of
arfult(>ry, her Tiusband would be
a'ble to obtain from her an abso
lute divorce decree on the groun.l
of adultery. This would be a mari-
laj cffcn.se commhted subsM'quenI
to Tnc marriage.
l.egally speaking, Henry was
not justified in abandoning his
bride at the beginning of their
licneymoon. ^Tle cannot after a
one year’s separation dissolve the
marriage by a divorce obtained
on the statutJty ground of one
(Mre. Donald Whittington, Stin
nett Acres Trailer Park, Bessemer
City
'Donald Eugene Hawkins, Rt. 4, year’s sdparatlon if Mary properly
Gastonia contests the action. The separa-
Bcrt Van Yah^ale, PO Box 223, tion wa.s occa.sloned by a willful
Bo.sscmor City' ~ ' abandonment on the part of the
•R.obert S. WilTiams, Ifll West husband.
Gcorgl-a Avenue, Bessemer City
(At the press gathering, Terry
fielded questions concerning his
Democratic opponents with fin
esse. He made only friendly re-
'.Tiarks about them and, particu
larly, would not chortle over the
problems cf Senator Ed Muskie,
the early season favorite and at
onetime an apparent shoo-in for
the Democratic ncmination.
IS UNHAPPINESS
A CANCER CAUSE?
I hope sometime to attend a
national political convention, pre
ferably as a working newsman
rather than delegate or spectator.
Indeed, I got quite excited about
going to Los Angeles in 1960, but
didn’t. I was glad I saved the
'money, as the convention provid
ed little entertainment from the
standpoint of contest for the nom
ination, the late President Jack
Kennp'.lv walking off with the
nomination on first ballot.
(Maybe 197^ is the “entertain
ment” year. There won't be any
first ballot victory.
-Being depressive, non-aggres
sive, over-conscientious and self-
sacrificing may be the death of
you.
While it is said that n,o.body
ever died of hard work, mount
ing evidence indicates that one’s
childhood and emotional com
position may make the difference
in whether he develops cancer.
A 'Glasgow pihysioian .surveyed
I1,(XX) cancer patients and found
many had been separated from
their parents before age 15 and
that, more than the average,
they had unhappy childhoods,
many of those studied al-'o had
marital and business difficul
ties. And a Rochester (Medical
Center doctor reported that a
significant loss—a joib. a loved
one—often preceded the onset of
the disease.
But all the professionals work
ing on the aspects of “the can
cer personality”—now categoriz
ed as “depressive, non-sacrific
ing’’—stress that the proof is far
'from conclusive.
\^ile evidence of a psychoma-
(Except that they carry it off
(better, for that matter, the doc
tors probably aren’t the worth
offenders. After all, they do knenv
quite a 'bit. One of tlie spectacles
of the last decade or so has -been
•watching reality deal successive
comeuppances to successive band-s
of self assured economists, who
know a little but not nearly as
much as they lead their political
friends to believe. Then there
are the rest of the social scien
tists, Who know almost nothing
at all, but invoke the authority
of science In advising us how to
raise children, cure poverty and
move mankind beyond 'freed(Mn
and dignity.
None of these claims should
be dismissed entirely, for even
in the social sciences there are
■modest practitioners m a king
modest but useful gains. In our
age, though, the prevailing mis
take seems Instead to (be ac
cepting too uncritically whatever
is claimed in the name of science,
and it’s ni'ce to be reminded that
not even doctors know as much
as they think they do.—Wall
Street Journal.
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