Times Wins Press Award Of the many non-daily newspapers in North Carolina, only a handful won prizes in the annual Press con test of the North Carolina Press As sociation during 1971. The Transyl vania Times was awarded third prize for spot News reporting, and we made good showings in the other divisions. The awards were made last Thursday night by Governor Bob Scott at the annual Awards Banquet at Chapel Hill. The Times has now won 41 top awards, both state and national, during the pant 29 years. We are especially happy to win prizes in news reporting. The first responsibility of a news paper is to gather, prepare and dis seminate all the news on and un biased, accurate basis, without fear or favor. While each member of the staff of The Transylvania Times is naturally quite gratified that we are again recognized by outside judges as producers of a top-flight newspaper, we feel no sense of gloating nor any tendency to complacency. Rather do we consider the latest award as a challenge to continue to publish the' best and most - modern weekly newspaper possible. The award received by The Times is a compliment to the staff, and more particularly, it is a result of the fine cooperation and support of our readers, our advertisers, our correspondents and the citizens gen erally of Brevard and Transylvania county. Groundhog Day For those who are not ready to ac cept the judgment of weather satel lites and all the other scientific para phernalia of projecting the weather, that time-honored prophet of the elements —the groundhog — will soon make his appearance. .Febru ary 2nd is the critical day. If the old fellow sees his shadow, he goes underground for six more weeks of winter. Whether the groundhog’s performance has ever been studied officially by a govern ment body is unknown, and it would probably make very little difference to the groundhog and his faithful followers if it had. Groundhog Day is one of those rites that demonstrate the essential simplicity of human nature — a sim plicity that instinctively rebels when confronted with the enigma of the scientific answer. Most of us are happy with the groundhog’s way of doing business, but somehow we have to find room in our minds to ac commodate knowledge that will for ever be beyond the reach of the poor old groundhog. Just as a precaution, however, it might be a good idea to see how the groundhog fares with his shadow on February 2nd. It always pays to be on the safe side. An Illogical Tax Measurement There has appeared in the Con gressional Record some figures from a report by the Legislative Refer ence Service of the Library of Con gress showing that some oil com panies spend more on national ad vertising than they do on federal in come taxes. The companies listed spent $600, 347,000 on taxes and $48,119,199 on national advertising. Twoi of the companies, spent $9,728,000 on taxes and $22,021,841 on advertis ing. The implication is that those spending more on advertising than taxes were somehow guilty of wrongdoing—which is silly. It is a logical supposition that cer tain companies, in seeking to build up sales in a highly competitive enterprise, would spend more for adversing than they pay in federal taxes. It is not yet unlawful for the management and stockholders to spend more to build business than the enterprise pays in taxes, even at the risk of loss. The oil industry is one of the nation's heaviest taxpay ers, in some states up to 60 per cent of the retail price of gasoline is taken in taxes by government. Let us hope there is no new plkh to limit advertising expenditures of free enterprise that could conceiv ably dry up profits, jobs and income taxes to support government. Paragraphics... The fellow said his wife is an angel — always up in the air about something. A baby girl is a frail craft on the sea of life—and the older she gets, the craftier she becomes. There is no such thing as an un happy marriage — it’s the living to gether afterward that causes the trouble, Matrimony was probably the first union to defy management. The Transylvania Times ■v IOC Broad St Brevard, N. a The Transylvania Pioneer, established 1887; The French Broad Voice _ 1888; The Brevard Hostler, established 1881; The Sylvan Valley News (later News), established 1886; The Times, established 1831; Consolidated 1888. 88718 A STATE AND NATIONAL PRIZE - WINNING NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY pp??.... let .»•' wm. X- - ID M. ANDERSON — Publisher — 1M1 • UM mmJ W M. ANDERSON, Publisher JOHN L ANDERSON, Editor-Gen. Mgr. BtUL P. NORMS, Adverting Mgr. MBS. MARTHA STAMEY, OOm Mgr. MRS. KATE ROWE, dwk . h«Awd« GAL HENRY HENDERSON. IfacMBlwl Sunt. JSSTpN PHJU4W, Printing Dept Heed GORDON BYKD, Campogitgr D. C. WILSON, Printer JOHN HAWKINg, Printer SMATOB^ ' SAM ERVIN ** SAYS * WASHINGTON — The 92nd Congress, which convened for the second session last week will consider many of the old issues in a variety of new forms. Much of the unfinished business as usual* relates to proposals to expand the pow ers of the Federal Government and most of these measures would also require some in crease in funds to finance the new programs. At least three of President Nixon’s top priority legislative goals — welfare assistance guarantees, revenue sharing, and a modified national health insurance plan — would chan nel large sums of Federal mon ies in new directions. Whatever the fate of these bills, and each of them encountered opposi tion at the last session, it is already clear that social - wel fare constitutes the most ex pansive segment of the Feder al budget. It is not very like ly that there will be any change in this trend at this session of the Congress. Moreover, there is much evi dence that Congress will devote a major share of its energies to the consideration of bills which will, if adopted, expand the powers of the Federal Govern ment. Measures incorporating a variety of consumer protections, a comprehensive plan to shift the insurance industry over to national no-fault coverage of automobile damage claims, and legislation to expand the pow ers of the Equal Employment Opportunities Commission sug gest the range of resolutions of this nature. Almost at the cutset of this session, the Senate will consider the proposal to grant the EEOC the power to issue “cease and desist” decrees against busi nesses who are alleged to hire or fire employees on account of racial bias. 1 oppose this bill because I think that when we lessen the ability of an em ployer to choose his employees we also lessen his ability to make the decisions which will enable him to compete in an intensely competitive world market. Our industrial base is under serious challenge and last year for the first time since 1803 this nation incurred an ov erall trade deficit (exports ver sus Imports). When we delve into causes, we find that vir tually every busineas in our land now receives a vast amount of unsolicited advice from Federal bureaucrats, and, in my judgment^ laws which rob businessmen of their de cision - making power are al ready having a serious effect upon the vitality of many Amer ican firms. Congress is also likely to get new requests for Federal mon ies to bolster various industries such as our railroads. The Na tional Railroad Passenger Cor poration, a Federal agency, is expected to ask for new moneys to keep the AMTRAK system alive. A major bill to aid the entire transportation industry with Federal financing is being studies in the House Interstate and Foreign Commerce Com mittee. The water-pollution control bill which won Senate passage at the last session has yet to receive House approval. The Administration is seeking some changes in that measure, but the prospect is that some new legislation clamping down on water pollution will be approv ed before the year ends. Inflation and unemployment will continue to be issues, buit it is uncertain as to what spec ific legislation they will trig ger. Congress with its last ses sion approval of Presidential authority to control wages and prices may let the matter rest with that effort. However since this is a Presidential election year, there may be a push to bring out a minimum wage bill. Congress, will also wrestle with another increase in Fed eral expenditures, and there is already the prospect that the President will propose new taxes to provide additional revenues, .. _ a All this adds up to the pros pect of a busy session. THE EVERYDAY COUNSELOR BY DR. HERBERT SPAUGH My wife is of great assistance to me in writing this column. A careful reader of newspaper’s and magazines, she clips stories for me which she thinks will offer the basis for a column. She understands my thinking processes and keeps me well supplied with clippings, many of which appear in this column. I have before me now a newspaper clipping of an Associated Press dispatch from Omaha, about the relative value of shower baths and tub baths. She received considerable satisfaction in placing this story on my desk, as she is a devotee of tub baths, while 1 prefer showers. Sometime ago, Dr. Howard A Busk, chairman of the depart ment of physical medicine and rehabilitation at New York Uni versity, told a University of Nebraska Medical College audience that it takes four times as much energy to take a shower as a bath. He also confirmed something many a bed-ridden patient has suspected: It requires twice as much energy to use a bed pan as it does to waft to a bathroom. Dr. Rusk told his audience that one way the two million Amer icans crippled by heart disease can conserve their over-taxed hearts is by taking a bath Instead of a shower. All of this has to do with conserving physical energy. But far more of us get into trouble by extensive use of nervous energy than Wf do with physical energy. Excessive worry incapacitates far more, people than excessive physical work. Nervous exhaustion is far more dangerous than physical exhaustion. Nature has a way of compensating far physical overwork by natural sleep. But the victim of nervous exhaustion finds sleep very difficult and usually has to call in the services of a physician in order to be aWe t® ttccp. i ; 1 i.'i i.it.isvljl If it is important for one suffering frees heart disease to con serve his energy by changing from a shower to a tubs hew much EDITORIAL PAGE THE TRANSYLVANIA TIMES PAGE TWO Thursday, January 27, 1972 (Editor’s Note: Letters mast be brief, signed, typed or writ ten legibly on one side of pa per. We reserve the right to re ject, edit, or condense. Letters should be received by The limes by Monday mornings.) January 20, 1072 Mr. John Anderson, Editor The Transylvania Times Broad St. Brevard, N. C. 28712 Dear Mr. Anderson, We the residents of See Off Communi ty are concerned about the overcrowded bus situation, also with Mrs. Jane Evett's letter recently. It seems the solution to this problem is taking students off of one bus and putting them on another. This has happened to us. We have 42 students in the community who ride our bus. This does not include students outside of our com munity. Now it seems that we have 15 more riders which brings the total on our 14 year old bus to 90. If any of our readers have driven on highway 276 between 7 and 8 in the morn ing they know the driving condition: Fog, plant workers, transfer trucks, curves with gullies on one side and banks on the other, to name just a few. With that many chel den on the bus, 1 wonder how many read ers will feel as we do? That IS something to worry about The school day is a long day for chil dren, especially those in the lower grades. All of us realize this, but what about when you have to get your child up to catch the bus on half hour earlier in order to get a seat. Some parents do this now so the child won’t have to stand 7 to 10 miles to school, holding on to books, lunch and try ing to keep from falling. I wonder if you can imagine what happens sometimes? We agree with the Cedar Mtn. Com munity that something needs to be done about the overcrowded busses of our area. But not the solution that has been by those in authority. Sincerely. Mrs. Melvin Tinsley Route # 1 Brevard, N. C. January 19, 1972 Mr. John Anderson, Editor The Transylvania Times. Broad Street ti Brevard, North Carolina 28712 Dear Mr. Anderson: Before I get to my subject matter, I would like to thank Mrs. Jape Evett for ex pressing her opinion about the school bus situation and about busing in general. I agree with her very much, because while I was going to school I road the bus many times and know what it’s like. My parents felt the same way when we rode the bus. I’m sure that you and all of the citizens of Transylvania County are aware of the beer commercials on television and radio, and that the Scouts and their leaders go around and pick up trash — including beer cans for roadside judging. Think of how that’s influencing the people — including the children! Beer commercials should be “cut out” completely, except those that show the harm ful effects of drinking and the consequences involved. The Bible says: "Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived .thereby is not wise.” — Proverbs 20:1. Jesus said: “Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord hath made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season? Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he cometh shall find so do ing. Verily I say unto you, That he shall make him ruler over all his goods. But and if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My lord delayeth his coming: And shall begin to fight his fellow-servants, and to eat and drink with the drunken; The lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looketh not for him, and in an hour that he is not aware of, And shall cut him asunder, and appoint him his portion with the hypocrites: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.” — Matthew 24:54-51. I Thessalonians 5:6.7 says: “Therefore let us not sleep, as do others; but let us watch and be sober. For they that sleep sleep in the night; and they that be drunken are drunken in the night.” I believe in participating in the com munity, but, I don’t believe that we should put the Scouts and Scout leaders out to pick up beer cans. If they do, they ought to dump them out in front of those peo ples’ yards and in front of those stores that I mentioned before, or, why don’t we get those welfare people out to pick up trash instead of the Scouts? v You know that commercial that says, “Let Dumps Be Eliminated”? There should be several that says, “Drinking Is Immoral”, “Tune Off Drinking — Tune In To dlrist”, or, "Keep America Beautiful — Let Drink ing Be Eliminated!”. Sincerely yours, (Miss) Mary Beth Blythe P.O. Box 32 Cedar Mountain, N. C. 28718 Guest Column f You Can't Beat Five Of A Kind By ■ LARRY SMITH La Folktte Press La Follette, Tenn. Our household increased by another beautiful, healthy baby girl in the wee hours Wednesday morning. Her name is Heather Allison, and she was born at 1:49 a.m. in Fort Sanders Pres byterian Hospital, Knoxville. Weight was 7 pounds 7 ounces, making her the largest baby among our five girls. Both mother and daughter are doing great. And given time and tender loving care, dad no doubt will recover, too. The old axiom that experience makes a task easier just doesn’t apply to having children. For despite the best of care and facilities, there always is apprehension as the hours drag by slowly. It is an intensely personal time. Then comes news that it’s over . .. both are Am .... it’s another daughter, chubby, black haired, pink, sucking mightily on her right fist. How do you describe the emotions tkat corns a time like that: joy, relief, pride . . . they’re all there, and more, mixed in a recipe that must be experienced to be ful ly understood. They’re what make up a deep-rooted love for wife and children that has grown in strength and intensity through years of ups and downs. There’s concern, too. What kind of mark will this new life make on her world? What will her world be like when she’s old enough to make her own decisions? What am I — what are you — doing to make our world a fit place for this child and for your children to grow up in. Those are serious thoughts that sur face in the early hours’ silence. They are hard questions that have no easy answers. But the answers must come. Above all, though, there is hope . . . and faith ... that come what may there is more good than bad in our world, that we and our children and their children will rise to meet each new challenge, that the human character is strongest when put to Certainly, but aren’t new beginnings the time for idealism. KckOfJV The Old Mansion daily traffic rush in going to work from a secluded residence in some fringe area of m \ L. Perry observed in an News and Observer, the can be brought