tftiun of National Educa the Hair. H. V. Wheeler, the Evening Star Holy ~ jAfek as a theme, "Study for Growth" the minister |k>int*4 out the fact that persons need education to cope with the twanging pattern* of these times; He said "we were obligated to help our children develop Christian attitudes and principles." He also said that the home, the church and the school must all blend their forces to bring about wholesome living. Special music was rendered by the Senior Choir, Mrs. Louise McNeill, directing. Rev. Wheeler is serving his eighth year as pastor of fivenlhg Star and la a graduate of the Bible Training Institute of Goldsboro, s school supported by his denomination. Coats Soldfcr Gets Bronze Star Meda* FORT KNOX, KY. - Army Staff Sergeant Uthey E. Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Norris, Route J, Coats, received The Bronze Star during ceremon ies at Port Knox, Ky„ Nov. 1. Sergeant Norris received the award for meritorious (achieve ment. * Urt sergeant, assigned as an in structor in Headquarters Detach ment, 3d U. S. Army Noncommis sioned Officer Academy at Port Knox, entered the Army in August It44. Norris attended Coats High School. His wife, Esther, is with him at Fort Knox. Dies In Florida Ralph Qodwin, 52, a former re sident of Route 4, Dunn, died Monday night in Jacksonville, Fla. He was born in Harnett County, sem of Mrs. Nancy Monds Cfodwin of Route 4, Dunn, and the late W. J. “Tom" Godwin. He attended the Dunn schools and had been living in Jacksonville for the past five The body will be returned to Cro martie Funeral Home here for fun eral services to be held Thursday at 3:00 p. m. from Long Branch Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Leonard Drew, pastor, and the Rev. - J. Edward Johnson will officiate and burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. Surviving in addition to his moth, er ate, his wife, Mrs. Maxine Le yepre, Mfhere he wned aiyi operated a |nH>e» ahwp. - T n of the Mrs. Herb t‘, one [ley of We are not inclined to alter our forecast, voiced last summer, that the study commission appointed jointly at that time by Governor Moore, Lieutenant Governor Scott and Speaker of the House Pat Taylor would come forth With a report tantamount to a recom mendation that the communist speaker ban law be repealed. After all, as we mentioned back in August, sit Of the nine members of the commission are reliably reported as being strongly opposed to the law. This is not the first time that q committee ap pointed to study a political question has been stacked at the outset. Nor will it be the last. And, we readily acknowledge that this is part of the art of politics. So we are by no means astonished at the se quence of events. We shall not be dismayed at the commission1* report, nor even if the members of the legislature aceept it and act in accordance with the commission's recommendations. We have tried to de. fend the law and its intent every step of the way. We have had our say. What does disturb us is the technique employed by the news media in attempting to confuse the people on this issue. The emphasis placed on statements by opponents of the law, no matter how inconsequential, has made mockery of fundamental rules of journalism. On the other hand significant developments among those who favor the law have been ail but ignored. As a case m point, the news media cu..unue to emphasize the threat by the Southern dissociation of Colleges and Schools that the accreditation of North Carolina's colleges will be lifted if the communist sp eaker ban law is not repealed. It is to the credit of Colonel William T. Joyner, a member of the speaker ban study commission, that he brought to light the fact that the Southern Association does not possess the authority, under its charter, to lift the accreditation of any institution because of the law. If this disclosure by Colonel Joyner has been reported by any major news paper or press association, we are not aware of it. Nor has it been mentioned, for example, that the , chaos on the campus of the University of California at Berkeley occurred within weeks after that institution lifted the ban it once nad prohibiting communist sp eakers on its campus. Copies of the investigation con. ducted by the State of California into the shocking disorder at the University of California have been available for weeks to all news media. But hardly a whisper of this information has been made available to the people. Instead, the major news media have been busily engaged in reporting speechs and resolutions by persons Or groups who want the law repealed. Even the warnings of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, who is concerned about communist activities on the campuses of America, have been virtually ignored and sometimes scoffed at. For still another example, we have at hand a copy of a letter dated October 12, 1965, and mailed to g* Wy member ot the Qmeral Assembly, if the author of the letter had favored repeal of the communist speaker ban law, it would no doubt have been regarded as front-page news. But since the writer of the letter defends the speaker ban law. and expresses hope that it will not be repealed, not a line -. to our knowledge -- has been published about in the major newspapers of the state. Jacksonville, Fla.; two brothers, Pat and Tommy Godwin, both of Dunn; four sisters, Mrs. Hugh Barbour of Route 3, Four Oaks, Mrs. Clayton Rugged two-three plow power j attractor three-cylinder engines, gas or el... smooth! Comfortabl# and convenient to operate. ion»—Power-shift ten-Bpeed range eight-speed; economy Williams of Erwin, Mrs. George J. 1 Jernigan, of Route 4, Dunn, and Mrs. Ottis Godwin of Route 4, Dunn, seven grandchildren. Jimmy Walker In "Lunday Lane" SEVENTH U. S. ARMY, Germany (AHTNC) — Army Pvt. Jimmie Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Walker, Route 1, Bo* 292, Erwin, N. C., and other members of the 3d Armored Cavalry Regiment par ticipated In Exercise ‘Lundy Lane" ln Germany, Sept. 14. Exercise ‘‘Lundy Lane" was a joint British-American field train ing exercise that stressed close sup port and liaison between the two military forces. Walker, regularly assigned as a rifleman In Troop A of the regi ment’s 1st Reconnaissance Squad ron near Baumholder, Oermany. re ceived basic tralnisg at Fort jack son, S. C. On Their Merry Way WASHINGTON (TTPD-Ilrltalll's royal tourists—Princess ||Argaret and her husband, the Sari of Snow don—set forth today on what Washingtonian* call the "high school senior class" tour of the capital. ■ ’ XX ' The tiny, blue-eyed princess and her husband arrived from Tucson. Aria. Monday, ghe promptly wow. ed the city’s usually unflappable press corps with a smile and a toss of her "Cleopatra hat" at a mons er reception in a jammed ho tel ballroom. Their first official act today was a visit to Arlington National Ce metery to place a wreath bn the grave of John P. Kennedy. After that, they were to motor to George Washington’s home down the Potomac at Monnt Ver non, swinging back through the city fr hurried glimpses of tre Capitol, ths ment. fctod Mrs. Lyndon »• Johnson, Vic* President Hubert H. Humphrey, Defense Secretary Robert S. Me Namara and tJhdariHsretary of State George W- Hall and their Wives were invited to a British Inbassy luncheon in the princess' honor. The couple’* afternoon plana In cluded a short private aerVic* at Washington National Cathedral Episcopal). A hectic round of receptions, | teas, dinners, plaque unvellings I and three plantings was schedul ed for Margaret and her husband j before they leave Thursday for j New Yorh City. WASHINGTON — The 89th Con gf-ess, however one views its out put at legislation tor the first session, is certain to have a pro found effect Upon government for the next generation. The approval Of Federal aid to elementary and secondary schools marked a major shift in govern mental policy and educational fin ancing. Approval of medicare under the Social Security system ended a 20-year battle for Federal health care on a massive scale. The au thorization of rent subsides for low income families although funds were denied, opens a new concept in the administration of Federal housing programs. These were some of the many enactments that dis tinguished this session and broujht comparisons with the legislative session of 1933-1934. Of economic in.erest at home was the approval of revisions In agri cultural programs. These included a four-year extension and revision of cotton, wheat, feed grains, and dairy programs, and a strengtlien .ng of the tobacco programs with me change to acreage-poundage qu otas. The later measure troubled me a great deal because of its economic impact on North Carolina, it was apparent that the old sys tem of acreage control was not working. Th re was a Congression al demand that a change be made, md I am pleased that excellent co operation by all concerned brought a necessary bill to fruition. The immigration bill whioh is now the immigration act, demanded much of my time prior to its pas sage. I am a great believer in the national origins quota system, be cause I believe it was based upon a wise understanding of our coun try and its people. However, I soon found that I was in a small min ority in holding this view. I de cided that the best course to fol low was to work toward improving the Administration's bill and to de vote my energies in that manner instead of toward fighting for a lost cause. As a consequence, con cessions were made which I think made the immigration act better in some respects than the old law. It places a limitation on Western Hemisphere immigra ion for the first time, and it sets forth string ent skill requirements for the ad THANKSGIVING THUR NOV. vuiwn S9J* fICE «E8BHflD $EH$ tjHp m W . mission of aliens. In the area of constitutional changes, there was the proposed constitutional amendment on Pre sidential inability and succession, which I co-sponsored. It makes a needed revision by writing out pro cedures to govers this most com plex area of government. If rati fied by the requisite number of states, it will overcome 176 years of uncertainty in the transfer of Executive power and strengthen constitutional government. One of the most widely support ed enactments was the $4.7 billion Federal excise tax reduction. In the first general revision of these World War II levies, Congression al sentiment simply said that these taxes could no longer be justified. The waning days of the session saw compulsory unionism become a major issue The battle was waged over a move to repeal Section 14(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act. I fought the proposal because compulfiyry unionism is based upon the as tounding proposition that the right to work is a right which the union may seU and which an individual American must buy if he Is going to be permitted to earn a living. To me, the proposition is unten able. It Is unlikely that Congress will choose to broaden Federal activities during the next session at the ac celerated pace It did this session. The country will welcome a breath er. Larson Heard At Campbell What does it mean to be human? This question was focus of discus sion at Campbell College Nov. 3-4 during a two-day visit by Arne Lar son, assistant director of the De partment of Medicine and Religion Of the American Medical Associa tion. , Larson spoke to the college as semblies and conferred with mem bers of the faculty particularly concerned with health and guid ance. As field manager for his depart ment, the A*vlA officer is involved in a continuing national tour to discuss with groups responsible for public leadership and service the developing emphasis on the whole person by proiessioeals concerned with human health. Ue and his associates are parti cularly concerned, he said, to es tablish channels for closer working relationship between physicians and ministers. The various professional people, he snowed, have tended to work in their own tight compartments in dealing with individuals who need help. Clergyman, physician, social worker — all have tended, he said “to cut man up Into a Jigsaw puz zle." The realization is growing, he said, that trouble In any one part of man's being — body, mind, or spirit — affects his whole person, and thus concerns all of the spe cialists responsible for helping him. They must work together, he stress ed. Formed In 1961 The AMA Department of Medicine and Religion was formed five years ago with Dr. Paul B. McCleave, Chicago educator, as its first di rector. Larson Joined it in 1963,, and two more field men have been added since. Larson reported that all of the state medical societies have accepted responsibility to promote physician clergy relationships and have set up committees t° function in this area. Over 700 medical societies have experienced from one to ten programs Involving Joint presenta tions on the subject by physicians "Pieta" Arrives Back In Italy NAPIES Italy CUPP-—Michel angelo’s “Pieta” came home today after a visit of two years tp the United States. The statue was the centerpiece of the Vitican Pavil ion at the New York World’s Pair. The trip to Italy was made aboard the Italian liner Crtstoforo Colonsbo. The ship docked here | this morning and the special crate containing the statue was placed I aboard a truck en route t° the | Vatican where it will be replaced ' in St. PUeter’s Basilica. % and clergymen. The AMA official said that his organization Is eager to help ar range for speakers on this subject anywhere that concerned people meet in larger groups. The matter is Increasingly In the foreground, he indicated not on,y ln medical association meetings, but tor col lege campus assemblies and in the state meetings of church bodies, Parent - Teachers organizations and other educational groups. Inquiries by groups wanting a speaker may be addressed to Arne E. Larson, Department of Medicine and Religion. American Medical As sociation, 535 Dearborn Street, Chi cago, Illinois, 60610. WEDNESDAY: Roast pork bar I becue, cole slaw, candied yams, cookie, school roll, milk and but ter. THURSDAY: Italian spaghetti, lettuce and tomato, green peas, fruit cup, school roll, milk and butter. FRIDAY: Fish stick, cole slaw, beaus cheese wedge oookle com bread milk ago butter. Record Ads Pay Jhs (Daily (R&co/id DUNN, N. C Publishing B» RECORD PUBLISHING COMPANY 406 E- CUMBERLAND ST DUNN, N. C. ZIP CODE 28334 Entered second-class matter In the Post OffJce in Dunn. N. C. under the laws. ol Congress. Act ot March 3, 1878. Irerj Afternoon, Monday through Friday. Second-class postage paid st Dunn. N. C. •UT-OF-STATK — $10.50 per year In advance; $6.50 for ala montfci-i $4.00 lor three month* pins tax. SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 far three months. BE CARRIER — 35 CENTS PER WEEK iN TOWNS NOT SERVED BY CARRIER AND RURAL ROUTE® INSIDE NORTH CAROLINA — $8.00 Per Year; 34.50 for six months: 4 COURTESY AND SERVICE IS OUR POLICY Current ■ / Dividend 74 Pates PBK * * COMPOUNDED ^ ^ «, .Aiwi’ERLY 'hvutmint Yc> io.ooo ys; INSURED SAVINGS ANY DAY IS A GOOD DAY TO SAVE AT HOME SAVINGS 106 E. Broad St. 801 Main St. & LOAN ASSOC. Dunn, N. C. Islington, N. C. R. L. Cromartle, Jr., Seel Mrs. Billy Ray Matthew*. Mgr amaan» «wa« —*—w—rieriii mnaaticaaD—mi You want performance, comfort, and lots of glamour at a reasonable price? Well, mister, meat Monaco... the most dazzling car in the '66 Dodge lineup of dazzlers. Here’s a car JiMt^ got evefythmg-and we mean every thipg-exeept a luxuriously sized price tag. 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