Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Nov. 18, 1959, edition 1 / Page 2
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They Know (Continued From Page One) help.) Yea. They Know Question: Do high school kids ever get hold of beer? Girl Number One: Beer? Don’t you mean hard liquor? Question: Well, either one. Girl Number One: All you have to do is go to a bootlegger. Question: Do you mean a young girl in high school could go to a bootlegger and get what she want ed? Girl Number One: No, the boys go. Question: Did you know the names of bootleggers? Girl Number One: Yes. The boys could borrow cars and get it. Question: How else could they get something to drink? Girl Number One: They’d bor row ID cards from the older boys. Or somebody older would buy it for them. Question: Do bootleggers care about the age of those they sell to? Boy Number One: Just so you got the money, you get what you want. Question: Where could you go to drink? Girl Number One: When 1 was in school, it was a motor court. Or out into the country. Question: Don’t I near something about beach parties? Girl Number One: My parents never let me go down to parties on the beach except with the fam ily. 1 guess they knew what they were like. You could hear talk when everybody got back. They made it big or small, you know. Question: This was in the sum mer? Girl Number One: Mostly after tire Junior-Senior. Most of it was that the boys got drunk. There was chaperoning by the girls’ par ents but they didn’t know. The boys would be out. The girls and toys didn’t stay together. Question: So parents can’t really stop the drinking very easily? Girl Number One: They do il right in front of the children so I don't see how' they expect them not to. Question: You didn’t drink did you? Girl Number One: No. Question: Did any of the girls'? Girl Number Two: Some of them Question: Enough to get drunk? Girl Number Two: Well— Question: Well, did they fly high enough they could have used wings? Girl Number Two: Yes. Question: Can all this bo fixed if the parents will keep the kids undei look and key? Girl Number One: That’s the trouble Parents try to be too strict, and they’ll drink themselves, but they don't have enough for teen agers to do. If they let them have more parties— Question: There’s not enough ac tivities going on? Girl Numoer One: In the summer time, they ought to fix a dance place so we wouldn’t have to go to —- and ---—. The pa vilion would be fine. Question: Don’t you have any good place? Girl Number One: Williams Lake : ;i nice place. Mr. Williams keeps things underhand out there. It's about the only decent place there is to go to dance. But it’s 15 or 18 miles. This Sunday, a Dunn minister, the Reverend Ernest C. Russell, said from his pulpit that teenagers here are able to get hold of liquor, either legally or illegally. Chief of roliee Alton Cobb, a member of his congregation, said frequent checks are made on town beer joints to see that they aren’t sell ing to under-age customers—but beer can be sold to those who are 18. Despite a flurry of night checks, no infractions have been found and Cobb believes the tav ern men watch the age of patrons pretty closely Once in a while a teenage drink er is spotted around town by police Mostly not. It's quite pos sible that Dunn has a better re cord in this than most towns. But it’s certain that those who learn to drink don’t usually get their (first nip at age 21. Create Diversions I The liquor filters back. It’s not a question of supply and demand. In all generations, there Is a cer tain amount of demand. It becomes a question of supply An<j as Mr. Hussell says, “I don’t know where they get it but they get it.” Perhaps if those adults who tend to set the direction for a town could look back for a moment on their own high school days, they would take seriously the advice of our anonymous Girl Number One who says that the drinking would n’t go as far as it does if rocrea, lions were more numerous. Of course that wouldn’t end it It doesn't end. If all the fruit-jars in the world were busted, there'd still be 16-year-olds holding out their hats for a jolt of something fierce. 11 there is a perfect solution foi this, it would probably be a great surprise to all the juvenile court justices ad over the land. Hut there is a way of compre hending a little better what the teenage set is up to, where they’re going. That way is to have some respect for them and to treat their complicated brains for the very complicated brains they are. On television last night, in “The Many Loves of Dobie Giilis,” this prototype of the keen adolescent told a giri she couldn’t have him because, “I belong to all women.” That’s it exactly. The healthy teenager feels like there’s an aw ful lot of himselr. There is. He has to be given the kind of full facilities and ardent attention that will help him express his many sides. If that is done, there's just a chance he won’t be repeatedly (xpres.slng the side that wants ta get loaded. Labor Bill (Continued From Page One) a stalemate which led directly and almost immediately to t lie nomination of Adlai E Stevenson. Reuther is No. 2 man in AFL CIO. The organization' published this week a pamphlet on the rec ord of the last session of Con gress. With emphasis on labor legislation. This pamphlet gives a friendly plug to Kennedy, despite the Machinists. The pamphlet centers Big Labor's fire on what | the union leaders regards as Big ! Labor’s enemies. They are: pres- j ident Eisenhower, his Cabinet, hi.s White House staff and Vice Pres ident Richard M. Nixon. They; were, Big Labor says, the chief lobbyists for the Landrum-Griffin, j, bill. That, perhaps, is a fact. The pamphlet also notes tliai the fa vorable Landrum-Griffin vote was in part in response to air ava lanche of mail from angry citi zens. It was an avalanche which Big Labor could not match, de- ; spite its 15 million members. The division in the labor movip ment over assessment of blame for the Landrum-Griffin hill is likely greatly to reduce the influ ence of la nor leaders at next l year’s Democratic national con vention, They have had in the past a veto power in Democratic conventions. , They used it in 1952 on' Aihen W. Barkley. Barkley accused them of choosing programs and candidates to gain "greater con trol over i he machinery and pol icies of the Democratic Party.” j Miss America (Continued From Page One) ion ever get a whiff of the royal! perfume but Dunn’s pageant is j traditionally a big one. The first Miss America to visit here was Marian Ann McKnight, i whose eincher for acclaim was a wet-lipped travesty on the tech niques of Marilyn Monroe. She j was followed by the stately Mari- i lyn Van Derbur. The Jaycees had an acceptance from last year’s | Mis-- America, Mary Ann Mobley, ; but she took sick at iust the \ wrong time. Also invited here lor the pag- i cant will he North Carolir.i-':. own Judy Klipfel. Nale Kramdl DUNN, N. C Published By ’^rORD PUBLISHING COMPANv At 311 East Canary St'Mt tntr-'ed as second-class matter tn the Po6t Office In * •' under ihe laws of CongTesa. Act. of March 3. 18?« Every afternoon. Monday through Friday. Second-class postage paid at Dnnn. N. C. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By CARRIER: 25 cents per week »N TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND Rl RAL -X)DTE5 INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA: $8.00 per year: $1-50 for six months; $3.00 for'three months IM’T-OF-STATE: $10.50 per year tn advance; $6.50 for nix month*, $4.00 for three months OLD FASHION THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY at BELK'S in DUNN LADIES SPORTSWEAR LADIES WOOL SKIRTS Gored and Straight Styles Solids & Plaids. 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The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 18, 1959, edition 1
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