R Ister of )tcd
8 Y
W^S.^Etalw^Mrs. Margaret
Hall Jones Wallace, Mrs. Hazel
Kernegay, L. H, Fussell and
Mrs. Gertrude Pope for 85
years of sendee.
Duplin farmers favor tobacco
quotas by 97 1/2 * vote.
v | -%* '
RALEIGH. H. C. ? One new
member and six members re
cently reappointed to the N. C.
Board of Science and Techo
logy were sworn in as the
board met in Raleigh today.
Secretary of State Tad Eure
administered the oath of office.
The new member is Dr. Ralph
W. Cummings of N. C. State
University, who replaces Dr.
Harold F. Robinson.
Members reappointed are Dr.
Paul M. Gross of Duke, who
serves as board vice-chairman;
Dr. Marcus E.Hobbs, Duke pro
vost; Dr. William F. Little and
Dr. John C. Morrow of the
University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill; Dr. Robert W.
Train and Dr. Arthur C. Men
ius, Jr^of N. C. State Univer
sity. Dr. Menlus represents
the N. C. Atomic Energy Ad
visory Committee on the board;
the others represent their re
spective institutions.
Governor Scott is ex officio
chairman of the board. Other
board members currently ser
ving are Dr. George E. Nichol
son. Jr., of UNC; William S.
Yeager of Winston-Salem and
David Jarema of Raleigh, re
presenting industry; Senator
Elton Edwards of Greensboro,
and former Senators C. Crank
Griffin of Monroe and Adrain
Shuford of Conover, represen
ting the General Assembly.
The board approved three
grants to support research at .
institutions across the state.
The largest grant, 1160,000,
Cypress Cr?A.
20 tears Ago
Sleet and snow predicted (or
DUSr SmL- ?- R- aU?rd
r Kenans vflle win first place
rw?*
I ad by Lions Club In Wauac H
went to Research Triangle &>" I
'T m.T' pr'o.S'^ I
At ivmu ?01 "lp ? "2?!;
rtftw under construciion.
^T?t of W.T00 went to I
I ,le University, to study the I
I possibility of speeding the ri ?
? ^ofWo^tre,??j|
? ?uh enthylene. This nmthodB
? U now successfully used, on ?
I some fruit. .. I
I BTi president George ner
I ben pointed out that previous ?
fr^to the institute by the
General Assembly and the boa
I rd had been Instrumental In
bringing more than $33
of TSrch revenue into Monh
I Carolina. He stated that lab
I oratory Instruments obtained
I under the new grant would be
I used by all divisions of the
Institute on a variety
I research programs.
number of direct con^rn to
state Institutions and agencies.
?SyitOTf'jwot"Pnjytt rnrt.
r |2 Is [5 [5 [5 15 [5 |to in pa"
*ZZZZZZiZZZZZZ
IS It
zzz wz~z~%zz~z
to V *77, 22 ZZ?
g2__
SiEE?#EEPp|
|P^^B ??
ACMP0
1. Shoot TOUT
catch with
it.
7. Container*
to bail
13. Soap
h.8SM?
inatru
ment.
15. He mjt:
' ' ^Dmtmake
17.rtminlne
pronoun
fJ 18. High tMa.
. 19. Feminine
? eetment; j
30. And oth
34. Remove
seed from
wbeat.
38 . Relax e
knot.
38. Make over.
29. Wharf to
fish off.
30. Twelve ?
? and true
(Jury).
St. Uncle Sam's
woodsmen
(3 wds.).
40. Regret.
41. In that
Diaot.
43. Bawl like
a cow.
^ seeda"^
47. What roe
!??
48. Decay.
49. Thing, in
lew.
DOWN
1. Converted
one's chips.
2. Amperage
3. Anchoring
in a marina.
4. Big deer.
5. Line of
rocks off
shore.
6. Orphan
7. Group of
fish.
8 . Girl in a
mixed
school
9. Globe.
10. Ballpark
single (2
wds.).
11. Diver for
valuable
oysters.
13. Put una
on.
16. Big weight.
31. Beef.
33. Perforat
ing
35. Perches.
37. Started
the game.
31. Holy Rom
an emperor
33. Towed.
33. Big fllly.
34. Monk. '.
35. Excel.
36. Bead
justed, |
37. Campflre
coal to ex
38. Cosmetiff
re-:
38. Tunea.
?MMRRi
RMCh for " t
I& ? :i| ?, ? ??sf ' * iM'-'Ji- .. -,\,A
?
DAINTY MM ID
I Motftr Mixtd
I . BKBAE |
The' pos Itive voce in favor oT
the water and sewer bonds
yesterday indicated a substan
tial vote for progress on the
part of Kenansville residents.
With the addition of die sewage
system and expanded water sys
tem. we can expect the economic
growth of the community to in
crease at an accelerated rate.
Like few other towns, we have
a fine fire department, rated
Number One in the state in 964;
an excellent hospital, now un
der expansion that provides ex
cellent patient care services;
and Liberty Hall, famed Ken
an restoration that is rapidly
getting state and national reco
gnition. The Kenansville com
munity may become the histor
ical and cultural center of the
region in years to come. His
torical James Sprunt Institute
is expanding its educational of
ferings for post-high school
students. Pew towns can boast
of these facilities and yet
maintain the lowest tak rate
in the county. No other mun
icipality in Duplin County, has
as low a tax rate as does Ken
ansville.
Now is the time for the town
officials and residents to con
sider other projects that will
enhance the economic and so
cial growth of the Kenansville
community.
SeSmel
DUPLIN PUBLISHING
CO., INC.
?kk M0DICK, PUBLISHER
Iwmlt, N. C.
JZL.
Second Claw Postage
e
28349
I ? Mm!1- ** ClTt.-$Lm
I SSul m?c,IrSS
(?NATO*
SAMERVIN
? SAYS ?
WASHINGTON - - As Congress
begins the final month of the
current legislative session, the
major problem continues to be
the enactment of appropriations
bills.
CWy five of the thirteen re
gular money bills have been sent
to die President for the fiscal
year which began July 1. Fe
deral departments have been
operating for months under con
tinuing resolutions Which per
mit agencies whose appropria
tions have not yet been enacted
to continue operation at tfia
same level as 4tl< year. The1
five re^ar money bills which
those which fund public works,
Independent agencies, and the
Treasury-Post Office, Interior,
and Agriculture Departments.
Two other appropriations are
in Senate-House conferences.
These are Mils providing mon
ies for the State-Justice-Com
merce Departments and Con
gress itself. The military con
struction and District of Colum
bia money bills are now on the
Senate Calendar, but the tax
reform bill under debate has
delayed action on them.
Three appropriation bills are
still awaiting House action. Un
der Congressional protocol, the
Senate must defer action on
them until the House acts. Two
of these measures are highly
controversial. These are the
Defense Department appropria
tion. which constitutes the lar
gest single item in the fiscal
1970 budget, and the foreign
aid appropriation. In recent
years, the foreign aid bill has
often delayed adjournment.
One other appropriation bill
may become the center of ooo- J
trorersy in the remaining days '
of the session. This is the
Health, Education, and Welfare
money bill which provides Fed
eral aid for public school des
egregation. As written by the
House, HEW funds shall not be
used to force Southern schools
to Integrate on penalty of losing
Federal funds. Whether this
House provision will remain in
the bill is uncertain. Previous
House actions dealing with this
subject have come to a stand
still in the Sentate. This year,
however, with Federal decrees
requiring more and more bus
ing of students into non-neigh
borhood schools, the public is
intensely interested in the pro
blem. As the readers of this
column know, I recently offered
a resolution to permit freedom
of choice by parents and stu
dents in the selection of the pub
lic school they attend.
The appropriations logjam
ha raised questions as towhe
Congress will move more rap
idly on several of these bills.
Even so, I would anticipate that
when the Senate completes ac
tion on essential appropriation
bills, there will not be enough
time at this session to clear
the calendar of all of the pend
ing major bills. While this vir
tually assures that Congress
will have a full agenda to deal
with at the opening of the next
session, the delay on some of
these measures may have some
virtue. Any good legislation
requires thorough considera
tion before it becomes a law.
i line ian
all he ??; 1* ro ec
over, yl - ibackvrtths
eles pe and ta< the Eg)
tiai tanks ecu: g. Mos an
to the radio shad; and called
r*?"' *"*mmm
Bivnuuinstitummcr"
:lal airline flights or scheduled
ocean vessels between the
United States and Cuba but as I
recent flight from that country
to Canada carried some Inter
esting passengers. They were
Americans who had defected to
Cuba and who had decided to
come home and face the music.
Most had criminal charges
pending against them for air
plane hijacking or for other
offenses committed before their
departure, to short, they were
not just political refugees but
were also fugitives from
justice.
It is significant to note that
in Cuba they were not impri
soned, but were allowed at least
some degree of freedom. In
returning to America they faced
almost certain imprisonment.
Their choice of an American
prison over Cuban freedom
speaks volumes about what kind
of a way of life each of these
nations offers its citizens.
Years ago, the late President
John Kennedy made the point
that the Berlin Wall was a
monument to communism's fai
lure. I t was built not to pre
vent people from democratic
nations f r am enter tag E as t Ger
many but to keep the people of
East Germany from leaving.
blow up the fa
tanks Quid I us
wer hat of he iy cross
ad he
The ill el Into ie
ind the igyptts rere (U
wr
he father
Virtually all of the young Amer
ican servicemen who defected
to Communist China after the
Korean War eventually chose to
return home in disgrace instead
of continuing In that country in
a way of live obviously calcu
lated to make them happy.
Of die hundreds of thousands
of immigrants who have left
their homelands and sought a
new way of life during the years
since World War n, the over
whelming majority have sought
to migrate to America or one
of the democracies of Western
Europe. Migration to the Iran
Curtain countries has been neg
ligible.
It would seem to me that
some of America's young peo
ple, such as the group which
Is talking about traveling to
Cuba to help with the sugar
harvest and those who recent
ly hoisted the flag of the Viet
Cong during the Washington
demonstrations, could learn a
great lesson from studying the
pattern of movement of people
who have had a choice during
the past two decades; those who
have had a first hand taste of
Communism. Such people have
overwhelmingly voted with their
feet and have chosen demo
cracy.
I I llll II IIIM Illl In
to freedom R? reryfact t f
from the cross Jesus cried,
??Father, forgive them, for they
know net what they do " In
dicates that man la incapable
of escaping the slavery of sin
within himself.
Man's tendency also is to
rely on the military establish
ment to bring him security.
I believe that our nation should
be and should remain militarily
strong in our present world,
but I believe man has need for
a much deeper security than that
which comes from having rock
ets with nuclear warheads poin
ted at our every enemy. Man
needs inner security and peace,
and this cannot come from con
centrating all our migh t on our
enemies with oUr own men
made weapons God takes care
of the enemies of the soul?
if we have surrendered our
selves to him. We try to fight
the battle He has offered to
fight for us . That Is why we
fall.
The task of every Christian
is to move toward greater lib
erty and freedom, which is the
noblest promised land of all.
God is still a miracle working
God. I've seen Him in action!
A. recmly a; ,^,l
I mobile
i home
moving y
I Call 293-7165
lofivsr Edwards
| I BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE THIS FINE DISPLAY ^