Page TWO THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1964 ,Rim Off, Madison County Style ■LOT liS Southern Pines North Carolina imtemplated. We will try to keep this a good mAm taking over The Pilot no changes axe coni.*-***^*" * - - ^ tn taking over me e concerned. Wherever there seems to be Pis® paper. We will try to make a little money lu, AnH we will influence for the piblic good we will try to do it. And an occasion to use our treat everybody alike.” - m kS? ‘kj' James Boyd, May i'.3, 1941. When ‘The Bads’ Ride ffigh ..r.: sm North Carolina justice will not sink or swim according to how things come out in Madison County. It is far too strongly based to be in jeopardy. The culprits will be shown up for what they are and dealt with according to their deserts, we are convinced. Nevertheless, the smog of mean, grasping trickery and brutal vio lence will long linger in the mountain air, to seep out over the good name ot the whole state. And deep in the heart of this ugly evil smelling cloud lurks a cackle of ridicule that will be hard to take. Hard to take, but impossible to avoid. In fact, the whole mean mess up there on the edge of the Smokies, with its stolen ballot .boxes, disappearing records, men with guns place. Most of them are run by conscien tious people fully aware of their respon sibilities and executing them in accord ance with the law. But behind all the polling places are the politicians ^d politics. We place no quotes around that misused term. Since Andrew Jackson set up his party-and-patronage system, poli tics is here to stay. After all, our de mocracy, run by means of politics, has turned out better than any other kind of government. . In Madison County the Bads got in the driver’s seat. It is a fact that in many, many counties and communities ■ and Moore County has been no exception— the hierarchy of political power lacfe a visible head, and that’s a bad thing. The head is there, the powerful influence m, H Wm ■JiiSSi IS m mmm threatening the state’s representative, is jjegply felt, but the source of the influ- such a parody on the nation’s most be loved form of entertainment that even those who are suffering from this sham^ ful affair can hardly forbear to join in the derisive cackle, even as the headlines spread out over the nation. State justice will take care of Madison County and its political machine and its Big Bad Boss; but the rest of us had best not turn away from the uncomfort able scene. There’s a lesson in it. There are probably few polling places where affairs such as this could take ence, the men with the real power, re main behind the scenes. They make no statements, they get few pictures m the papers, their moves are made through the small coterie around them, and their names are seldom mentioned. Their rule is sometimes good; too often it is not. Power corrupts and secret power cor rupts a thousand-fold. That’s the lesson of Madison County where secret power burst like a festering sore when the Bads rode high on Primary Day three weeks ago. m I/,’ V/ ■yk Camp Easter: Heart-Warming Project — ^ news item elsewhere in today s lists many of the large donations which have made possible construction of major installations at the camp. Others have contributed much in time and fi nancial gifts, large and small. Thousands of Tar Heels, in fact, who have bought Easter Seals over the past several years have a stake, if only a few cents worth, in the creation of Camp Easter Opening of Camp Easter in the Pines, the camping facility for the handicapped where 32 children will arrive for the first summer session on Monday, is an out standing event for the Sandhills. The camps conducted by the North Carolina Society for Crippled Children and Adults for several years, at rented locations elsewhere, have always struck us as fine human-service projects. Now that Camp Easter is ready to operate just north of Southern Pines, our good will toward the camp is redoubled. Where else, how else could children in wheel chairs, in braces or on crutches— from throughout North Carolina—ever be able to enjoy a camping experience, if it were not for this wonderful project initiated by the “Easter Seal Society?” And not only enjoyment is involved. The children will receive skilled therapy a phase of the operation here that will receive more and more attention as time goes bj^, with the possibility that the facility will become a year-round center for treatment of the handicapped. GLOOMY PROSPECT FOR U.S. AND WORLD A British Look At Sen. Goldwater (From The Manchester Guardian) Nowhere in the United States is typical of the rest of the coun try; but Los Angeles is less typi cal than most places. That is the central fact to be nr iriori+Via+n fln0nnlp at the reckoned with in assessing the We are pleased that a tlagpole at tne . outcome of the Repub- camp will be Lean convention. For it was Los the long and devoted efforts on behalt ot the camp by Mrs. Graham Culbreth and Dr. H. A. Peck, both of Southern Pines. Generally recognized also, with grati tude, is the work of William P. Davis of this community who, like Mrs. Culbreth, is a member of the Society’s state board of directors. In its planning, its development, its construction and in the great service it will render. Camp Easter is a heart warming undertaking. We are proud and happy that it is located here and wish it continued success. Nobody could run for Governor m North Carolina these days without advo cating efforts to bring in new industry and expand existing industries. Richardson Preyer and Dan K. Moore, who are seeking the Democratic guber natorial nominationn in a second primary to be held June 27, are each on record in favor of an industrial program. Preyer’s program calls for “a massive Angeles County which gave Sen ator Goldwater his victory in the California primary and in spite of the tumult and shouting which the primary let loose, the fact re mains that he has not done nearly so well in the other contested primaries he fought. He has now amassed almost enough delegates at the convention to give him the nomination on the first ballot; but most of them represent the wishes of hardcore Republican ac tivists, not of ordinary Republi can voters. For this reason if for no others, his nomination cannot yet be taken for granted. Hard-headed In spite of the ballyhoo, an American Presidential convention is usually a fairly hard-headed affair, in which a sober analysis of public opinion cuts more ice than ideological commitment— whether of Left or Right. It is true that conventions have some times been stampeded by oratory, but more often than not the stampede has gone in the direc tion of the candidate whom a would also have favoured. The question before the Repub licans will be whether a sober analysis favours their choosing a candidate from their extreme Right wing; and there is no doubt that the obvious answer will be “No.” This is not to say that Sen ator Goldwater will lose the nom ination, for it is now rather late in the day to groom an acceptable alternative Alarming In the last few days Senator Goldwater has been described in distinctly alarmist terms on this side of the Atlantic. Much of the alarm is justified. Senator Gold- water is an extreme conservative in domestic policy, and a narrow minded cold warrior in foreign policy. Some of his wilder state ments imply that he would like to dismantle the Welfare State, halt the struggle for racial equal- ity_at least so far as it has been furthered by the Federal Goyern- jnent—turn his back on the inter nationalism which has character ised American foreign policy since the war, and generally wind up the twentieth century. If the unthinkable happened and he reached the White House the Western alliance might disinte grate; even if he were over whelmingly repudiated in the election his nomination would cause a severe loss of confidence Contrasting Approaches Reveal Candidates Dan Moore is making much of his busi ness and industrial experience—that is, his several years as an officer and general counsel with the giant Champion paper company in western North Carolina. So it is in order, on this matter of encourag ing industry, to point out that Champion, several years ago, successfully undertook one of the greatest drives ever staged m the state to keep an industry OUT of -■ — - i.-- -c , 1 North Carolina—another large paper ui. liac ucnnaivAatc wi.wxii x* _ state-local program for new and expand- ^ seeking to locate a plant in the sober analysis of public opinion among the allies, at least so long ed industries,” expansion of Industrial ^ C. area, where the jobs it Education Centers to provide people with provide were badly needed, skills for new industries and better-pay- found in Moore’s program ing jobs and (note this) a minimum wage commitment on the minimum wage of $1, keeping farm and other exemp- conviction that the 20 existing Industrial Education Centers need furth er expansion to provide the skills so vital to industrial operations. A related blank in the Moore program is the other side of the Development com —Conservation. The big state department that handles industrial matters is named “Conservation and Development”—^yet the Conservation aspect of this major De- as the campaign period lasted. All this means that a Goldwater victory at the convention would be a gloomy prospect, for the United States and the world. But some of the comments which have been made on the California pri mary result have gone farther than this in a way which confuses the true issues at stake. By impli cation at least. Senator Goldwater has been compared to “Dr. Strangelove,” the neurotic and not-quite-de-Nazified German scientist played in a recent film by Mr. Peter Sellers; his rallies have been compared to Fascist rallies in Europe in the thirties; it has been suggested that his supportsrs from the “Radical Right” might eventually become outright Fascists. But Fascists be lieve in the total State, while Senator Goldwater and the vast majority of his supporters want to reduce the power of the State to the minimum. And Fascists beat up their opponents, while Senator Goldwater—for all his verbal violence—obviously re spects the Constitution and has not indulged in McCarthyite smear tactics. Stupid, Not Sinister If the Republicans nominate him it will show that they are a good deal stupider than most peo ple thought. It will not show any thing more sinister than that. Salut, le Vild Vest! Over in France, we are told, there is a good deal of anti- Am,erican feeling but a week ago there appeared in the Christian Science Monitor what seems irre futable evidence that this “anti- Americanism” may be a figment of the imagination. It seems that a resourceful group of young folks, great boosters for the United States, every one, decided* they would somehow get themselves a trip over here. The question was; how to get the money? They didn’t go to the Funds, or the Marshall Planners or Official dom, but they put themselves and their bright brains to work— and lo and behold they produced something that not only raised the money but was a complete wow of a success. Noting how their people went wild over Westerns on film or TV, they devised a stupendous plan. They would create a Wild West town and charge admission. They thought they’d at least make a start on their Overseas Fund. There were ingenious artists and workmen among them and the idea attracted more. The gang got together and went to work. They didn’t have any friends in high places, but soon acquired some. Among them, was the mayor and council of the Paris suburb of St. Germain en Laye who offered them a site in the magnificent forest, former ly the King’s Domaine surround ing the ancient palace of King Henri IV. There they built, a la movie set. a complete American Far West town: main street, false-fronted stores, gambling saloons, jail, and' all. They had everything down to the last hitiching post, with cowboys strolling and riding through the street. (They were real, too; cowboys from the French coun ty of Camergue on the edge of Spain where they raise the prize bulls.) The gang put a notice of the opening in the papers and that day the members stationed them selves at the gate with their small money boxes ready. Result: the money boxes al most immediately had to be ex changed for barrels, as all of Paris came. Special trains had to be run, special guides hastily organized. There were more than 15,000 people the first day; the next, the number tripled or quadrupled and then the gang lost track. They had to close ,at the end of the week from sheer exhaustion. All of France had heard about it and all of France was going to get to see it, or bust. But the gang busted first—after they had raised enough money to pay their wonderful trip many times over. Anti-American feeling? Not so you’d notice it in St. Germain en Laye. But that wasn’t quite the end. There were two more visitors. After the place closed, the ghost of Henri IV and the ghost of Marshall Wyatt Earp, of Tomb stone, Arizona, met and had a stroll through the forest talking over old times, when Men Were Men. “Why’n’t yu come over with those youngsters?” Earp invited. “Ahha,” replied the monarch, “Maybe that I do!” “Just get in touch with Gil more”, said Earp. The Public Speaking tions. Moore’s program as outlined in a long, detailed brochure sent out earlier in the campaign and in another widely distri buted not long before the first primary- stresses seeking out new industries, ex panding existing industries, encouraging small local businesses, and also two pro posals that bear some close scrutiny: “1 Expand the state’s full-time staff partment’s work, an aspect that turns up of ‘industry hunters’ ” and, “2._Locate a a major plank in the Preyer platform. qualified, full-time Resident Industrial Development Specialist in each Congress ional District. . . ” We had been under the impression that the State had an adequately large staff of “industry hunters”—a post which, to be effective, demands a particular abil ity that makes it hard to fill. Moreover, we can’t understand what Congressional Districts have to do with location of in dustrial development specialists. Some districts might need a full-time worker and some might not. Certainly all dis tricts would not need one at all times. The proposal brazenly holds out the promise of 11, (there are that many dis tricts) political plums, each no doubt with a fat salary attached. It would seem to us that the dozens of volunteer local, county and area industrial development committees, working with a relatively small number of experts out of Raleigh, could adequately handle the industry lo cation problem. The picture of 11 politi cally appointed “specialists” (we frankly don’t believe that many really competent people could be found in the state) com peting for industry on the basis of Con gressional Districts strikes us as absurd. has been ignored by Moore. At least we can find no mention of it in the six columns of fine print that comprise the most extensive summary of his program yet issued. Preyer, on the other hand, plugging his “Land and People” theme again and again, states in his program summary, “We must protect our state’s heritage, both natural and man - made . . . the soil, the water and the air we breathe . . . the forests, the wildlife and the sites of the great events of the past.” New efforts, he notes, must be made “to clean up our streams and our air from pollution.” Could it be that Moore’s reluctance to touch on these matters is related to the notorious pollution of the Pigeon River by the Chamipion company — a violation the company was forced to remedy, but only after it had long put its profits and convenience ahead of the welfare of natural resources? In these less publicized points from the programs of the two gubernatorial candi dates, we find contrasting approaches, diverging emjphasis—attitudes that may offer the voter a key to what sort of Governor each would become. School Situation Should Be Studied Carefully To the Editor: As a citizen of Pinehurst I at tended the joint meeting of the cit izens of Aberdeen and West End last Friday evening to discuss the consolidation of schools in area HI. Although there are many ques tions still to be answered, I rec ommend that the citizens of Pine hurst and Southern Pines hold a joint meeting and ask the School Boards to explain to the citizens of this area why a city adminis trative unit is more advantageous than becoming a part of the coun ty unit. It will be a disgrace for the cit izens of Moore County to pay for the construction of more than one school building in the southern end of Moore County. Funds will not be available to maintain these schools unless we have an in crease in taxes. How many people can afford to pay more taxes? If there are advantages to a city unit over the county system. West End and Aberdeen should look! in favor on this system. Before millions of dollars are spent unwisely, the people of this area deserve a complete study of this problem. What happened to the survey that was to be made by George Peabody College? Our children deserve the best in education, but we should not build two consolidated schools within the radius of six miles. This plan will be outdated within ten years. School buildings last for a long time, but school offi cials come and go. WALLACE W. O’NEAL Pinehurst Platform. Not Man. Most Important To Republicans To the Editbr; I don’t mind if I am the one to put you straight in your specula tions on Republican politics, as expressed in the editorial, “No Omaha Beach,” last week. I am a conservative and the Republican precinct chairman for North Southern Pines. You, dear editor, are what is presently termed a liberal. Most liberals and conservatives recognize the same problems in our society and in our nation. The principal difference between them lies more in their approach to these problems than in any solutions proposed. (1) . General Eisenhower is not the leader of the Republican Party. I regret there was a time when we expected pohticai direc tion from him and he was found lacking. (2) . The MAN is not the “most important affair” facing us, but the choice of PLATFORM. Re publicans also have been known to jump party lines when plat form was in question. A platform embodying Conservative princi ple based upon individual dignity and not upon group dignity will be the rallying point for all Republicans, even the Big-City variety. Candidates and parties ma.y come and go but principles endure. A generally accepted platform will make enthusiasts out of moderates. (3) . “If, from a Democratic standpoint” it seems immaterial to you who the opposing candi date is, let me assure you that this question is not as important to us as you seem to think, since if our candidate fails to bear the refulgent banner of conservative principle we conservatives will not hesitate to put up another man. In any event our object is not to stop Scranton, Rocky or Barry but to stop L.B.J. (4) . How shameful it is of you to intimate that Eisenhower lacks courage! At least he is man enough to keep his mouth shut when to speak would serve no good purpose. Please note Fri day’s AP dispatch from Gettys burg. Ike said there would be no need for a convention if the choice was a foregone conclusion. (5) I’m fairly certain that you realize that if Barry is our choice, LBJ will have all he can do to defend Welfare Statism against an opponent who will clearly de fine the issues. The President is the leader of his party, not of the people. Please confine yourself to the antics of the Democrat contenders in North Carolina. You have all you can handle in this area at the moment. We Republicans will handle our problem when we meet in July. D. A. DREXEL Southern Pines Tact Demonstration of tact, as re counted by our recent Polish vis itor: Gomulka, head of government in Iron-Curtain Poland, went into the brand new supermarket of Warsaw one day to buy some tea. He asked what brands they had. “Only the best, your honor,” said the manager. “We can give you Russian tea or China tea.” “Hmmmm, well,” said Gomul ka, “I believe I’ll take Polish cof fee.” THE PILOT Published Every Thursday by THE PILOT, Incorporated Southern Pines, North Carolina 1941—JAMES BOYD—1944 Katharine Boyd C. Benedict Dan S. Ray C. G. Council Bessie C. Smith Editor Associate Editor Gen. Mgr. Advertising Advertising Second-class Postage paid at Southern Pines, N. C. Mary Scott Newton Business Gloria Fisher Business Mary Evelyn de Nissoff Society Composing Room Dixie B. Ray, Michael Valen, Thomas Mattocks, J. E. Pate, Sr., Charles Weatherspoon, Clyde Phipps. Subscription Rates Moore County One Year $4.00 Outside Moore County One Year $5.00 Member National Editorial Assn, and N. C. Press Assn.