Working |ip Quito A Lather Never Forget That Those Editorials Are The Oiinion Of One Man, ----. ..—And He May fie Wrong. Course in Ethics? wb uuai mat evtaiy aapeiri m. education is devoted in principle to the leaching of ethical conduct, but we won der, in the light of current events if greater stress is not needed in this sphere. Young men and women conning from col lege into the main stream of the business (community may understandably be puzzled when 29 major corporations plead guilty to grand larceny of millions, of dollars from) the public. College students who haye attempted to wit/ cvtnsgc ttiannoa wc » play, while non-athletic scholars must pay their way still find it difficult to under stand why a man has te seH his interests in all companies doing business with the Igovernment if he miters the executive branch of government, but may—aa in the lease of Oklahoma Senator Kerr—keep a huge interest in companies that are mak ing millions from government contracts. Conduct cannot be ethical for one man! and un-ethieal for another. Change is Needed . While tne'JNorm Carolina uenerai Assem bly is wrestling with the problem of re districting congressional and assembly1 seats it ought to give serious study to a long-needed change in the system of legis lative allotment for the state as a whole. ■Both bouses of the General Assembly are predicated upon population, which certain ly should not be. The federal pattern which {guarantees each state equal representation in the senate and proportionate represen tation based on population in the house is Meal for countless good reasons. We suggest that each county in North Carolina be allocated one senator and that representation in the hoCtse be based on population with one member for each coun ty up to 100,000 population and an additional member for each increment of 100,000 of population. This system would give Buncombe, Ouim-, foerland, Durham, Forsyth, Gaston and Wake counties two jrepresentatives, Guil ford and Mecklenburg three awl all other (counties one each. T (collection, but in the high-pressure where meet tax bills are boiled this •principle comes out in rugged couch Tents, chvaaends and sales of produce be taken in the same fashion. One man earns $50 a wedk hi a factory, another man earns $50 per week by selling produce from las faun*. Why abouldn’tboth pay their toes the same fashion? Bookkeeping is offered as an excuse, but it seems to be a very weak one when books are already being kept on every mother’s son amongst us. r' A man has a house to town that oo«t' $20,000 sad it’s pa tbe tax book* tor $6,000. 4 man has a fanm in the country that cost $80,000 and if* on the tax books for $6,000. Is an "ad valorem’1’ to really a to “*t valne”f ' S&' thus almost ending c ent indirectly. ^ No jury should haw an*Vu criminal case except to find or guilt. The present < sees over half of the offenders trial tufted loose by jorte* law leaves no discretion in the i of a convicted drunken driver, Hm makes the Jury both judge and jury. A person convicted of premeditated mur der, rape or first degree anon should be put to death—not for the effect it will have on society as a whole but for the effect-it will have on that particular individual. If be or sbe is put to death that positively pre vents diem from doing the same crime 09 in. ' i , 'l 6 ' v. .. '.v. . M w# • .f, • -A v* To this Ust of just subject to capital p advantage of'that'person who is under the drug. Some may say that toe present laws pertaining to rape cover tow, but an over dose of an aphrodisiac would eliminate the forceful aspect that must-be present to sus tain the 'simple.rape char®*. . j , Juries should not h&vfe the right to recom mend mercy. Prosecutors should be given Campaign oratory from Terry Sanford last year fairly oozed with pious proclam ations for the ‘“little man”, the underpaid teacher, the. small business man and .toe struggling fanner. •* That was last fall, hut how the spring rains are washing away somb of the white wash that covered the real body of the Sanford “Go Forward” program. No tax on the big fish who footed toe bill' for “Terry's Grass Boots Oampaigb,” Tax oh toe poorest, because they wouldwamt to share” in the progress of the state. Tax on food (cynically because everybody has .to eat), tax on fertilizer because tobacco farmers have to use so much, tax oh cars raised because we have fongottejr how to walk, tax on medicine because sickness is inevitable, and expensive, tax bn factory, machinery because North Carolina is trying to attract new industry and nothing will attract an industry so quickly as a new tax, but of ail toe stupid and calloused taxation tax°©n all supplies purchased by counties,' cities and the state government ... Talking tax money out of one pocket and stuffing it in another may be good exercise tout it’s damned poor economics . when one Conors the attrition on the poor tax dol lar that takes place each time its passes through; any level of government. /Ibis archly-conservatlve Kinston claque has been operating far ^some years now tout Mossomed into its most furious activity after a recent visit to tiio stow ty patron saint of anti-communism, Herbert. iPhi&rtck. Tbfe young socialist, who spied on the communists for the FBI (and Who has made a fortune ton tt. patriot ism, getting $850 for Us ooe-nd«Jit stand in Kinston) shook the loeal conservative* In a single sortie over Kinston she suc tc ceded in I. Establishing that a big seg tmeot of the local branch of the American Medical Association iwas opposed to the church, the government and, incidentally, to communism. ^ 2. That somehow the coming of Du Pont to Lenoir bounty was coincidental to this po Mtical revolt. Eastern North Carolina has long been viewed by the Democratic Over lords pf Tar Heelia as a bulge feudal fief dam in which the peasants eat'their hum- • ble pie, and vote the straight Democratic