Talk on unionism,wages today at Carolina Inn A Conference snonsorprl hv Rnrli Industries, UNC and the UNC Department of Economics will be held today at the Carolina Inn to discuss unions and wages in North Carolina. The conference, which will begin at 9 a.m., will present opposing views to the questions of unionism and governmental policy regarding low incomes in North Carolina. Dr. Emil Malizia, associate professor of city and regional planning at U NC, will deliver a report based on a 1975 study he did for the N.C. Office of State Planning entitled "The Earnings of North Carolinians." Richard Potthoff, senior operations research analyst for Burlington, will speak on his paper, "A Study of the Determinants of Geographical Earnings Differentials." In his study, Malizia states that North Carolina workers receive lower wages than their counterparts in other states. "North Carolina workers produce more output in return for a dollar's wage than do United States workers in the same industry," Malizia's report states, The conference is open to the public and many public, church, business and union officials have been invited. MIKE COYNE Friday, October 14, 1977 The Daily Tar Heel 3 Anderson scuttles 'Citizens Against Succession' By United Press International RALEIGH A day after vowing to go to jail if necessary, L. Gene Anderson said he was dropping a campaign against a constitutional amendment on gubernatorial succession. Anderson said Thursday several recent developments prompted him to scuttle "Citizens Against Succession." After Wake County District Attorney Burely B. Mitchell Jr. said this week he would prosecute groups who did not file campaign financial data, Anderson said he would not file the material on behalf of the group and was prepared to go to jail. In a three-page statement delivered to reporters, Anderson said among the msse mm W HEMES M As the new South grows, some things change and some things don't. Good ol' boys keep what's good and change what's not. Their Rebel Yell is very, very good defi nitely a keeper. Folks in other parts have to play finders keepers for this fine bourbon is made and sold only beneath the Mason-Dixon line. Southerners drink to that. Drink to that with Rebel Yell, host bourbon of the South. Even though pea nuts have been around the South for a long time, they have been heavily publi cized only recently. v. z - .y Watermelon can preserve you in the sum mer or you can preserve it for the winter. It n If Catfish are among the more homely fish but are beautiful with hush puppies and Rebel Yell. r I I Dfifth " CODE """"" N. 123 ft S of. REBEL YELL 25 DEEP SOUTH Rebel Yell Distillery Louisville, Kentucky 90 Proof-Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey. THE GOOD OL' BOYS' BOURBON. raw 1f,xliMLm x 't . J i. jsf' 'Sl&.s, 1 S3US COS In the numbers game of mileage claims, 30 is a pretty good figure. For a car. But figures can be misleading. When it comes to saving energy, the kind of trans portation that gets the most people the farthest on the least fuel is the real winner in the mileage game. And when you start comparing miles per gallon per person, it's hard to beat the 250 mpgpp of a full bus. Sui's iMensy Next to fuel, repairs are your biggest car expense. Almost nothing you do with a car will bring on problems more than driving around town. An around town car can go through parts like candy, and wear out completely in a few years. Buses don't do that. They aren't made to trade in every two years or to junk after 100,000 miles. Buses are simple, efficient machines that last a long time. Some buses go millions of miles without major wear. Sous Yourself Money isn't the only thing' you spend when you drive a car. You also spend time. Your time. Driving. Sure, v driving can be fun. But not when you're fighting traffic or hunting for a parking place. So why spend your time driving when you can use it so much more sensibly on a bus? On a bus you can read, do homework, talk, snooze or watch the cars struggle in the four wheel world below. Face it. The bus is a better trip. CHAPEL HILL COMMUNITY TRANSIT It's the way to go. developments that prompted his decision was a letter from Mitchell, written before Anderson's stormy news conference Wednesday, in w hich Mitchell said he would not prosecute those who failed to comply up to the date of the letter. Anderson said he interpreted that to mean he could protect those who contributed funds earlier, but not anyone who might make a contribution in the future. news briefs He also said he had gotten legal advice that if he pressed his case he would be "subject to huge legal fees" and "the possibility of a prison sentence should my legal advisors be in error" about not having to report finances. The other development Anderson said played a role in his decision was "a news report Wednesday night that Mr. Mitchell would be happy to see me in jail." Hours after Anderson dropped the opposition movement, a former state representative, C. Kitchen Josey of Scotland Neck, obtained a temporary restraining order barring Mitchell, the state Board of Elections or the attorney general's office from enforcing the disclosure statute. The order was issued in Raleigh by Superior Court Judge James H. Pou-Bailey, who scheduled a hearing for Oct. 20 in Durham on whether the disclosure laws apply to campaigns for or against constitutional amendments. Nobel medicine prize STOCKHOLM - The 1977 Nobel Prize for medicine was awarded Thursday to three American doctors for their "brilliant. . .formidable" hormone research and for brain studies that could help mankind understand the link between body and soul. Half of the $145,000 award went to Dr. Rosalyn Yalow, 56, of the Veteran' Administration Hospital in New York City, for her work in diabetes research only the second woman to win the award since it was established in 1901. She had cooked breakfast and reported to her laboratory at 5 a.m. before learning of the honor. The other share of the award was divided between Dr. Roger Guillemin, 53, of the Salk Institute in San Diego, Calif., and Dr. Andrew V. Schally, 51, of the Veterani Administration Hospital in New Orleans, La., for independent research that has changed modern science's understanding of how the brain functions. Horton: UNC should be 20 to 25 black Black enrollment in the UNC system should be between 20 and 25 percent of the student population. Black Student Movement (BSM) President Byron Horton said .Thursday afternoon at a news conlerence. Horton called the conference to explain the BSM's reasons for demonstrating at University Day ceremonies Wednesday. "The demonstration was to publicize the issue of black discontent at UNC," Horton said. The BSM is dissatisfied with the University's rejection of the Department of Health Education and Welfare's (HEW) proposal to increase black enrollment in the UNC system by 150 percent in the next five years. Horton said. "Twenty to 25 percent of the student population would better reflect the fact that blacks comprise 30 percent of the population in North Carolina," Horton said. The University has termed the HEW proposal harsh, Horton said. "We consider the HEW proposal modest." Horton defended the quota system, which gives blacks preferential treatment in admissions. "I don't like the idea of quotas, but we need them now to make up for past inequalities against blacks," The UNC system could further its desegregation attempts while preserving the identity of predominantly black schools, Horton said. "UNC-Charlotte is an example of how the system can build a school from one which is unknow n and of low standards to one with high standards in five years. - ROBERT THOMASON "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE? Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25 Was it not Julius Caesar who wrote: "All Gaul Is divided into three parts"? And was It not the late Will Rogers who said that American History was divided into three parts: 1. The passing of the Buffalo; 2, The passing of the Indians; and the modern period, The passing the Buck? There is raging, rioting, rape, ruin, rebellion, crime, lawlessness, and anarchy just about ail over the globe! When you think of it and the causes and ask why, why, do you ever think of your own responsibility In the matter, or do you almost Involuntarily "pass the buck" to someone else: the Communists, The Rightists, Leftists, The President, The Senate, The House, The Supreme Court, Governors, Legislatures, or maybe the Ku Klux? But never once does the thought enter your mind that your own conduct and manner of life may sow the seeds that produce the harvest of such abominable conditions that are dangerous to your own home and loved ones, your means of livelihood, your government, your liberty and even life Itself! The Ku Klux was mentioned. A few years ago a certain man was walking through his home city's cemetery looking at the names of the buried folks remember Sam Jones' r omment: "The heart in your bosom Is a muffled drum,' beat ing a march for you to the cemetery!" He noticed the graves of two men who had been very prominent in that com munity in business, or civil and official life. Both of these men were known by many to be unfaithful to their wives and marriage vows, and cohabiting with other women. Suddenly there was quite a change tor the better observed In both cases. It was whispered about, sorter grape-vine fashion, that both men had been contacted by the Ku Klux and ad vised to cut out their devilment or they would be "taken on a ride" and served to a good thrashing, with maybe "tar and feathers for dessert." It is not known to this party how many lashes the laws of the Klux permitted, or If there was any limit at all, but It is to be feared they exceeded that of The Law of God that permitted "forty, save one"! If any who read this happen Jo be guilty of corrupting another's home, or some woman or young girl, may It be suggested that that Is the kind of medicine you need for what alls you, and It would be a picnic and light Indeed In com parison with that which God's word reveals Is In store for you unless you turn away from your evil and there Is genuine "repentance towards God and faith towards The Lord Jesus Christ." Oh, don't go to hell! But if you don't agree you may find comfort and encouragement from many a man and even O.D. men who tell you there Is no hell, and in this atomic age "The Ancient of Days Is out of date "I Do we not set ourselves up as more righteous than The Holy God Himself when regardless of how mean and low down one may get to be, yet his precious carcass must not be touched with the stroke of strap or whlpl I thank God that I had parents and a schoolteacher that did not consider my body so precious as all that. At times my "Jaws were boxed," and at others there was applied "behind" the brush, the strap, and the switch. If I had been deprived of that healthy medicine that I needed I fear I would be a lot sorrier than I have turned out to be, as Is. But I am not so sorry as to even now not strive to obey God's fifth Command: "Honor thy father and thy mother," to thank God for such parents and "to rise up and call them blessed." Hear The Word of God, The King of kings, and Lord of lords: "Withhold not correction from the child: tor it thou beatest Itlm with the rod, he shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with tne rod, and shalt deliver his soul from hell." Proverbs 23:13 and 14. That comes very near to just plainly saying: "Beat the hell out of him!" Doubtless the rod and tjup and fash used in "The Fear of The Lord" would In a short time cuf young and old folks delinquency fo a minimum. But no, no, this generation knows better, and we will "Break The Bands and Cast Away The Cords" of The Almighty." "Withhold not correction from the child ..." Proverbs 23: 1 3. P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031 MAf nor HAVE DOME TOO um. on you ffiHCM WD-TKM IS jai Joe Murmur and his brothers were pickpockets. c I PONT (WOR&rAR IME ftUFXnmX rod tut ir w U mr askp tou w ti u. UliAV uiiu UAtkr cm eeEAKfAir octp? ipa uxmr "tune UAif TUJO RMCMffc SltXi AHirA HlAFt , tietM. op oooo I4M im m Cupihc, POM!. V zC II J"V HI They worked all the county fairs. Unttrt TcBipfg Syndicate. Inc. How did people know their pockets were being picked? When a Murmur ran through the crowd. DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau KM. REASONS RK tLLHAVB SmmSOLAP&B 10 ADM!) ' PRASMATJCASW UlffltWe I CHILD SUPPORT? EMOTIONAL ASY0U MAY HAVB READ, MK. ONASSIS'S JOB AT VIKING PRESS IS MHKy IMPORTANT TO HERl NO ONE TREATS HERDIF- FEPENTIY THERE, AND THAT MEANS A&EATDEALTQIW! ill t.J& MM INfAaimiDVENlURSV SAY WAT THAT LITRE BOOK COMPANY PROBABLY MEANS MOPE TO HER TMN ALL WE TEA IN 6REECEI TIME FOR JUST ONE MORE QUICK QUESTION, MR. TREVOR! WHEPS DOeSAMAN OEMJP momuN6TALm 60 FROM HERE? mi, RIGHT NOU) I'M UP FORTHE ROD SIEUm BRfTTEKLMD CASE. ITS ONLY A I0 MILLION SUIT, BUT IT HAS A CERTAIN CACHET.. Mar. D I I . ii GREECE? o SO ANYWAY, WE PELT SHE SHOULD BEN A POSITION TO BUY tT! IS I SEE: HELL, TVS THE BEEN A PLEASURE PLEASURE HAVING YOU HERE WAS ALL ON "PROFILES ON MINE, PARADE: MR.TRE- Mm! urv I ..AND tUE HOPE YOUtL ACCEPT WIS I U1BBY T-SHIRT WOULDN'T WITH OUR COM- THINK OF PUmnsI fT.MAFXi I v to. w s (tea nay Go

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