iwley says: apost invariably happens you have bad law — not infait and blatantly discrim ntatfity but also vaigue and am biguous and contradictory — there is an almost inescapable tendency to look upon it as a challenge to ingenuity, a game to be played, a game to be won by }' cleverness and guile. In that dn cumstances, the very unfairness of the law 'becomes an accepted imbrtil justification to break it, evade *t or aivoid it.” , In Jus article, which was based on s speech he delivered before the Pennsylvania Bar Association, Mr. Hawley traces the way an honest mind is likely to work when anesthetized by income tax forms — gome front the five-dol lar deduction for “entertainment” when taking a Mend to lunch, to the $5,000 trip to Europe “justi fied” by the fact that an organi zation with which he is associated holds a convention there. ' StatingWs belief that there are liiimifioju Af Mwmaetule aM /n„k iiunoreas at tnousancrs oc out ia»* something doing about it. We would like to restore personal Integrity to this nation we love. We would Hke to return ty the guidance of -ethics and morality that has always been, and always must be, the cornerstone of a workable American democracy. And since we, as laymen, look to the practice of laiw as the pursuit i of justice, we look to the Ameri can bar for that leadership. We heme we will find it.” g| To which we say, Amen, but. . . In our opinion, although law yers would have to have a major hand in wonting out the details : of tax reform, we feel that even more might be done about it if the editors of the grass-roots newspapers of this country would become aroused over the situation and would rise up to fight for tax legislation which would be re spected by the American people. The American Press ,S' FIGHTING WORDS ' 4 "tfe net believe anytWng you reed In the newspapers. They ere utterly untrustworthy. Read the editorial page end you Will know whet you will find in the news columns. The two always support one another. Their lying Is .home that this a*«n<»i>tfa>n W>t so * ;i TFT* '■ • , .v ^ f No individual editor can be his brother's keeper — but he can vigilantly govern the policies of his own newspaper so that read* ew of all categories wffl feel that, so far as their own hometown newspaper is concerned, news is bandied with the utmost fairness to aH concerned.- 7 < THE AMERICAN PRESS PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Cent. Prom Page 6 is ten times worse than the school ruling. ■ 1 can understand the negro de sire to have everything for. him self and his family that anyone else has. I have the same desire. But I also have patience enough to understand that many things are dented me and my children mat otners nave. Most of all I would not want to obtain by legal claptrappery something that would jeopardize the property, the safety and perhaps the life of anyone else. Hie supreme court knew, and 'knew very well that no amount of federal fuss and fury could eli minate the social distinction be tween the white and black man in the South, or for that matter anywhere else in the nation. |— an ex-member of- the knew the pedpof such a policy In the Deep South. Conspiring to incite a riot is a violation of the criminal laws. The supreme court unanimously entered into such a conspiracy. In order to, placate international political leaders, starry - eyed idealists,, and power hungry do mestic politicians tins select com mittee of nine pensioned politi cians on the supreme court bench knowingly and with rrialice afore thought issued an order that can not be enforced .without blood shed and that'Will neither serve the best interests of those it seeks to protect or conquer. The negroes are caught between the brutal millstones of judicial bigotry -national (political pres sures and the much more ominous Worth Noting and Remembering It is wise to decide now whom you will call when the need for a funeral director variSes. In making your decision, ty-iMirtl nrii4 tirhn €r\i trtVif i1-.{ Homeland, who fougnt tneir tens the rights of the majority, and far above that they believed In the rights of the individual. If this seems to conflict with the holy crusade for minority rights be ing Waged today it is because your reasoning is skin deep. You may ask, Ho# can a man believe in individual rights and still say that a black man’s child has no right to attend sebool with white Children? Very simply and upon the ?ge-old concept that no man’s rights can infringe upon the general welfare. Rightly or wrongly but very sincerely the white southerner believes that it would not be in the general welfare of | the South—black or white—to eradicate the. color line in edu cation, in religion, in marriage'or in society. What’s more the South erner has been solid enough in his beliefs along that line to write them into the law of his once $mamj I sovereign states. In the North ! where such beliefs are held with equal fervor they say their posi tion is more tenable because they lade the courage to say so in their written law. With them rac ial segregation is an un-written, cruel, economic instrument For every'fear, pain or drop of Mood from this 20th century car pet baggery the nine morons on the supreme court stand indicted and alone with them the leaders Of both our cheapened political parties. Kins toman Coot. From Pago 1 Able Stevens and 24 year-dd Alexander Sutton, both of New Bern. Sutton is a student at A & T College in Greensboro. Both Mon day denied any knowledge of the New Bern shooting but each was indicted for assault-wilh a deadly weapon with intent to kill. COLEMAN REAPPOINTED Kinston .Architect William A. Coleman Monday night was re appointed to the City Planning Board for a five-year term. Cole man has served on the Kinston board since it was first organized •and the aldermen Monday night expressed their thanks to him in dividually and to the planning beard collectively for the ser vices they are rendering to their community. PARROTT sms: VICTOR > GRAIN OATS BARLEY vWhen and how be planted? Except in the high est elevations of the mountains.