,mw4 - jo ASSOCIATION Publkhad Evtry Ttiunday at R aaford, IC. 21376 119 W. Uwood Avmim . Subscription Rata* In Advant* Par Yaar - 34.00 0 Month* - f 12.25 3 M onth* - SI.2J PAUL DICKSON Pubilahar-EdJtor SAM C. MORRIS Canara! I LAURIE TELFAIR Raporttr MRS. PAUL DICKSON SocWty Editor Socond-CUt* Pott*** Pitd it Rasford. N. C. Your Award - Winning Community N awapapar "It if better to light one cand k then to curse i 'he darkness" THURSDAY .JUNE 25,1970 County conven tion a sltep forward Last Saturday's County Democra tic convention was better attended tl tan moat, and was conducted in accorda nee with new party rules without a s jeat deal of excitement. Further, some < jf its aspects could be reasonably interp reted as adding up to progress in racial harmony in the party in Hoke G junty. Biggest difference in procedur e from years past was the requirement t .0 elect officers, delegates, committeeir (en and alternates by the whole cor ivention instead of in the executive cot nmittee,' pr in caucus of delegates to state or district conventions. Delegate s to the convention from the pre ch icts were required to "reasonably re' fleet" the make-up of registered Democ ratic voters in the precincts as to age, sex . and ethnic background, and these app< *ared to do this. Officers, delegates, etc., chosen by the convention were required tc continue this "reasonable" reflection. Most of the voting, as could have bsen expected, stuck largely to racial lines, but what we see as a step forward for the county as well as for the Democratic patrty in the county, is the fsct that not all of it was along such lines. In several instances white delegates split their votes, and in other: blacks were able to disagree with one another. This is not a giant step, to be sure, but it is a step toward the day when well all be abl e to vote for or against a person with our eyes shut, not knowing or caring what color he is, just voting our opinion of his fitness and ability foi the position we are voting to fill. Toward re storing the life of reason Amid all the dissension , especially on the campuses, a modest t >ut potentially significant sign of hope is emerging: A number of thinking peop le, regardless of ideological predilection; <, are reasserting the imperative need for a return to reason and order in the public discussion and the pub lie be havior. Most so-calle d co nservative intellectuals have be .en say ing that all along, but recent * veeks hiave seen a number of libera' cleaning luminaries agreeing in no uncertain terms. A notable example v vas Harvaird President Nathan Pusey's e- xcoriation of the New Left elements or , campus coupled with his insistence tl iat academe; rediscover "the civilized w: jy," Now at hand j Ls an article in the New Republic by A Jexander M. Ilickel of the Yale Law Sc hool, and it i.s a somber assessment in deed. "No sane person," writ es Professor Bickel, " can condone riots by constructic ,n workers or by police, and certainly not killings. Bun a price is inevitably going to be paid for destroyir ,g the order of so ciety. If the streets \ jelong to the peoj; >le, they are going t o belong to all the people, not just ycut and drive out reasoned analysis, in which passionat e assertion is not autoi matically seen as h igh - minded and pr esumptively riight. while dispassio nate judgment is d enounced as insensitiv e and presumptive!>y immoral." Granti ng, in his opinion, that those young p< ;ople who criticize the war and vurious i nstitutions are correct in a lot of what they say. Mr. Bicke l rejects the idea that t they are right about repression in this a runtry. 'The society is free arid open, if flawed and gravely troubled. What repress* rn there is is impos-ed, as often as not, by the young in the universities, where their pressure for ideological orthodt >xy and a kind of emotional solidari ty threaten to achieve what Joe McCaet hy never did." In tl lis scholar's opinion, the place to begin restoring order in upeech and action is the university; he thinks the heads of leading universities should annou nee their intention to institute a refon n which is the precondition of all othe r reforms, namely the use of 'disci' pUnary power to keep discourse and action within the bounds of order. Ha i ruts it simply and forcefully: M INo more vundulism; no more assaultive, vicious speech: no more incitement to violent action; no more bit Hying, simulated or actual. If the rtsflsertlon of this minimum of authority should bring strife and violence In the abort term, us it may, it sdil be laae itrife and lesa viola nee than is otherwise in store for us." This and some of the other strong liberal statements of the day are in essence certainly true, and they are interesting in a couple of other connections as well. They afford a sharp and welcome contrast to the pusillanimity with which numerous administrators and faculty members were greeting the radical students' violence and "non - negotiable" demands only a couple of years ago. Had this kind of common sense prevailed then, much spiritual and material damage might have been averted. Moreover, there is increasing recognition among the liberals that they are partly at fault. That, in Professor Bickel's words, "we have listened - quietly, even solemnly, as if it were rational - to incredibly loose talk about the obsolescence and rottenness of our society and all our institutions, and have come to parrot it in order to propitiate a sizable number of young." We would go further. A whole generation of largely liberal dominated higher education has done a good deal to discredit, in the minds of not a few young people, that society and those institutions. Not that the universities should have been uncritical mouthpieces for the "American way"; rather that they should have been better vehicles to free intellectual inquiry and not so much indoctrinators of a particular liberal view. In any event, change seems to be in the air. It is probably too soon to say that a liberal - conservative coalition of men of reason is coming into being. It is nonetheless clear that more intellectuals are speaking out not particularly because they consider themselves liberals or conservatives but because they treasure the life of reason and order and see it tragically threatened. And that alone is cause for encouragement - for the future of the university and for the future of America. -The Wall Street Journal A fact sheet on inflation should lessen our nausea when we read the astronomical fees athletes receive when they turn professional, says Mr. Buck Herzog. writer for the Milwaukee Sentinel. In 1931, he says. Babe Rutf received a sulary of S80.000 from the Yankees; in 1967 Willie Mays was paid S125,000 by the Giants. Who was bettei off? Herzog points out that on hi) S80.000 salary. Ruth paid SI 1,500 ir federal income taxes, giving him a take home pay of 568,500. On Mays SI 25,000 tulury. only S52.000 wuslefl in take - home pay after federal income taxes. In addition, consumer pricei today ore about 2.2 times as high ai they were in 1931. In terms ol purchasing power. Mays' salary wai worth only about a third of Ruth's. Today, if Mays were to receive as much purchasing power as the Babe did in 1931 ($68,500) he would have to be paid $454,000. 'I'm not going to marry either one of you' Hampsters Make Good Pets Would Anyone Like One? By Laurie Telfair Last Christmas we became the owners of two golden hampsters, Henrietta and Hortense, who have lived since then in a cage set on a divider between the living room and the dinning room where they have a clear shot at both rooms in which to hurl their seeds and litter. The creatures were brought by Santa as the pets for the two girls in the houshold, but the feeding and cage cleaning quickly became the work of the adults. Hampsters do, however, make rather nice, trouble-free pets. They don't, as a species, rate much space in the Hoke County library, where I went to find out more about the animals. There are a couple of books written on the subject but these are not included in the county's library collection and the encyclopedia give them small mention. Hampsters are natives of Asia and Europe. The golden hampster, which is popular as a pet. comes from Syria and was introduced into England in 1931 and into the United States in 1936 as a lab animal. They all come from a single litter that was discovered in Aleppo, Syria in 1930 and cultivated at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. They are prolific creatures. I have heard that a female will produce a couple of litters in six weeks time, with a gestation period of 16 days for the young. There are usually from seven to a dozen babies in a litter and the female will produce several litters during her first year after she matures at about six weeks of age. As each of her babies reaches six or seven weeks, they are ready to reproduce so the hampster population can very quickly get out of hand. We thwarted Nature by buying two sisters. in the kitchen, but we couldn't They evidently felt a trifle find our cat. We could hear thwarted themselves though meows and finally located the and about two weeks ago cat stuck behind the washing proceeded to try to chew each machine where she must have other up. We now have them in chased the hampster. separate cages until the wounds completely heal. ..The two are easy to care for. ...... They eat sunflower seeds, They have doubled in size jettuce( raisins. corn, rice and since we got them right after jugh They store as much as they were weaned and are now ^ can sluff ^to themselves about five inches long. They jn their two pouches and have always had quite different are double in size personalities with Henrietta vvhen both pouches are full. being shy and stand-offish and Thejr cage came equipped with H o r t ense being much an automatic watering jar but friendlier. Henrietta and Hortense have Hortense is also an escape never learned how to drink artist and quickly learned to from it and use instead a jar open the cage door with her top. teeth and slide out before the door falls shut. She has gotten Hortense has become very out of her cage twice during friendly and will ride in a shirt the night and spent most of the pocket and allow the children time running from the cat and to carry her around. I,1].0. Hi! Their wounds are nearly first time she was out she was now and we wiU 't ? ' LC by them back in the same, cage the dog when we found her. ^"week ,f they atin^n-t gVt The second time she escaped along together - Well, would we found her running around anyone like a hampster? STORIES BEHIND by William S. Penfleld WORDS Names The syllable "ley" appears at the end of a number of Anglo-Saxon names. It is a variation of "lea," which means meadow. The name Beverley is an example. "Bever" means meadow, and "ley" means meadow. In Bradley, "Brad" is a contraction of "broad." The name Bradley was given originally to someone who lived in a broad meadow. The "Ash" in Ashely is the name of a tree. Ashley means ash meadow. The name was given to a person who lived in a meadow in which ash trees grew. f-m Philosopher Creek 1 Dear eanar: According to an article I read in a newspaper last night which I'd pulled off the side of my tractor earlier in the day after it was blown there by a warm summer breeze - I've always said if you leave a tractor standing in one spot long enough it'll pay off, how many newspapers have you seen a moving tractor catch? -? the mayors of most of the big cities of the nation met in a convention the other day and nearly every one of them reported the same thing: they're out of money. "The cities are simply out of cash," they said, "and if we don't get help we face bankruptcy." The answer, they said, was for Washington to spend leu on the military, big highways and form subsidies and give the difference to the cities. Since Washington knows alt cities want military protection, that every one of them wants more highways leading into them, and that farm subsidies are being cut anyway, the answer may not lie with Washington. The mayors, in fact, are behind the times. They do not see the trend of civilization. I'll explain. Whe the first glimmering upsurge of civilization in this country began, a man in trouble had to look mostly to himself. Then as more people moved In he could look to his neighbor, then to the court house, then to the state capital, and finally to Washington. Now everybody is looking to Washington to much Washington has to look the other way. But which way? Obviously what Washington needs it some plaoe diflnite to look itself, and right there is where I have a solution to offer. What everybody needs is a world capital where we all can look when we're out of money. The mayors ought to realize that when their citizens turn to them and they turn to Washington, Washington's got to have some place to turn also. 1 don't know where to put this world capital, probably on some island as we sura don't want it around here. Not in Raeford. How would you feel if all the big city mayors thraw up their hands and said the job was too big for them and Washington has got to help, and Washington in turn thraw up its hands and said it waa too big for it and it guessed it would have to look to Raeford? Yours faithfully. Just One Thing After Another By Carl Coarch Thin U no substitute for courtesy. It pays to tr?at ?viryom politely. A rieint issue of > trad* Journal told of an incident that ocourrtd In San Francisco not to lon| ago. A door-to-door talaaman was palling thi window of a downtown rial ntati office and taw a picturi of an a part mint houM that wat offend for tali. Hi itand at It for a long timi, thin opened the door and walked In, his broomi over hit ihoulder. "No broomi today!" one of the clerki inilde laid, curtly, and waved the man out. The next day the peddler uw the ?ami building pictured In the window of another real estate operator. When he went In a clerk stepped forward, said politely, "Is there something kwe can do for you?" and when the broom salesman left the office he had made arrangements to buy the apartment house - for S600,000 cash. You never know! But it does not hurt to take the trouble to find out. A man told me some time ago of an incident in which he was involved which in a smaller way parallels this. He said that several years ago he was in Norfolk for the purpose of buying a building lot on the beach somewhere in that vicinity and went into the office of a real estate man whom he knew but had not seen in some time. He inquired for Mr. H. and the elderly bookkeeper, the only employee in the office at the time, looked up from his work, said rather gruffly tltal Mr. H. was out but would be back after a while. He did not invite the caller to sit down, to my friend said he stood for a moment, then noticed for a moment, then noticed that the bookkeeper was checking the bank account from the stubs of the checkbook. "The old gentleman had a method 1 had never seen used before that time. As he checked off the cancelled vouchers he stapled the paid check to its stub. At least 1 thought that wti the proccM and thinking It wai a good Idaa, I leaned over to nuke eure. When I did. the old man Hopped hla work, deliberately doled tlte book and looked at me at though to aay, "Thta l? none of your business, sir!" Of courie. lie liad a right to do that, but he wai 10 boorlih about it that I was startled for a moment. Then I got mud! I said to him. "I was not trying to pry Into your business; I was merely Interested In your method." I then turned on my heels, left the office, went to another place and purchased a lot." I asked him.if lie ever suid anything to the niun's employer about the discourtesy. "No." he replied. "I was afraid he might reprimand the old fellow and maybe tire him. and I did not want that to happen, though I was plenty hot when I left that office." A news story from Hiawatha, Kansas, tells of a new implement company opening in tliut town - the firm name "Trupp and Kill." No joke about it, they say. Virgin Kill and Sheriff W. F. Trapp decided to go into business together. The following item comes from Jan Struther's book, "A Pocketful of Pebbles:" "I think the word freedom needs defining. A car owner probably considers he lias the freedom of the road. So he lias, up to a certain point. He can go where he likes and as far as his gasoline takes him. But he isn't free to drive on the wrong side of the road or to drive dangerously fust or to stop deua without warning. A few simple rules are necessary...It is only by obeying these rules that a driver earns his right to enjoy the freedom of the roads. And it's only by cutting out such things as rumor ? mongering, destructive criticism, and personal peevishness that we are going to preserve our right to enjoy freedom of speech." CiTill^ A1 BLUE ? ? ? People & Issues VOTING AGE ~ The Act of Congreu lowering the voting age to 18 will not become effective until next year and will not apply to the 1970 Congressional elections. The constitutionality of the act will be tested and it may be that the U.S. Supreme Court will declare it unconstitutional, which many people feel will be the final result. OPINION POLL - Last week's elections in Great Britain where the Conservative Party recaptured control of Parliament when the Opinion Polls were saying that Prime Minister Harold Wilson and his Labor Party were out front should serve as a caution flag for those who put their full confidence in the opinion polls which have become quite popular in recent years. Straw votes, while usually, pretty accurate, like straws in the field, are easily blown over which is just what happened in Great Britain last week. CENSUS ?? In many communities throughout the state, and likely the nation, complaints are coming in that not near all the people were counted in the 1970 census. People take pride in 'community growth and people are just about as scarce as hen's teeth who take pride in population decline. For some reason it appears that the Republicans have not been able to do quite as good a job counting the people this year as took place ten years ago when John F. Kennedy was in the White House. BILL-DRAFTING ? Our good friend, Senator Hector McGeachy of Fayettevilk has said that the expenditure of SI00,000 to set up facilities for legislators to draft bills in advance of the opening of the 1971 General Assembly could shorten the session by a month. We doubt that the expenditure will shorten the aesslon by as much ai one day. Without this $100,000 expenditure legislators in the past have been invited to have their bills prepared and ready by the Attorney General's bill drafting department. Very few have taken advantage of the invitation and we doubt that the SIOO.OOO expenditure will make a day's difference. SEVEN YEARS OLD - The comprehensive system of technical institutes and oommunity colleges officially came into July 1,1963. Today, 54 technical institutes and community colleges are located across the state from Morehead City in the East to Murphy in the West, with nearly 100 percent of the state's population in commuting distance of one ol them. Last year enrollment IS.Ted to nearly 250,000 students, with predictions for this year even higher. Dr. I.E. Ready, director of the Department of Community Colleges speaks of these institutions in this way: "All of these institutions offer adults, 18 years old and older, elementary and high, school level studies that they missed out on before. And these institutions arc all prepared to provide people with the skills needed to get employment and to move up to higher paying jobs. They also provide training in technical skills that will attract higher paying industries and will raise the income level of the people in this state. In addition to all this, the community colleges offer the first two years of academic college credit work." In a speech made this year, Dr. Dallas Herring, State Board of Education chairman, explained the diversity found on a technical institute to community college campus, saying: "An institution that will take in an 80 ? year ? old man who can't read and write, but who has a consuming desire to learn how to read the Bible and anything else he can get his hands on is a very special kind of institution. But It's even more special when you say the same institution is teaching a data processing technician ..." To our way of thinking the greatest surge forward in public education in North Carolina during the past 30 years has been through the technical institute ?