OTHER EDITORS SAY WRAL-TV VIEWPOINT On Baptist Committees Perhaps it was Mr. Dooley, the Irish wit, who first defined a committee as being a group of the incompetent appointed by the unwilling to do the unnec essary. Mr. Dooley may not have been a Baptist, but he knew a thing or two about Baptist com mittees. At the time of the recent Bap tist State Convention, we put aside the temptation to com ment upon a couple of petty and petulant resolutions brought forward by the convention’s so called Public Affairs and Christ ian Life committees. The gents who compose these committees, it seems, do not like to hear opinions on television and ra dio with which they do not agree. So, they offered a handy solution: Just let the Baptist State Convention call on the fed eral government to increase its control over broadcasters.. It hardly seems necessary to reflect upon the absurdity of the position of those behind these resolutions. We know some of the gentlemen personally. They have been absurd before and we would not, for an instant, deprive them of their right to absurdity in the future. In the first place, they seem always to display a talent for providing a curious sort of slapstick com edy when they march, as so of ten they do, onto the political stage. The rest of society has a right to smile, perhaps, at these men who know not, and know not that they know not. It is not comfortable, how ever, to witness these men as they engage in comical conduct instead of logical persuasion. Still, it is an interesting devel opment that those who are the prime beneficiaries of free speech in our society would so unhesitatingly make a spectacle of themselves with a demand that free speech be whittled upon by an all-powerful govern ment. But so be it. The moving hands of the committees wrote, and having written, moved on to a slumbering, disinterested con vention which, with machine like detachment, voted aye. The Baptist State Convention, in one grand sweep, voted approval of something it neither understood nor had considered. It boggles the imagination to contemplate so large a group so manifestly unaccustomed to public thinking. One hardly 1 dares to imagine what other kind of resolutions might have been slipped under the door to win the approval of such a sleeping giant of a group. Such is the work of a committee; such is the frustration of a conven tion. One need not wonder, then, at the bewilderment of Mr. Har ry Severance, who this year serves as president of the North Carolina Association of Broad casters. Mr. Serverance sought first to obtain reasonableness from the camp of the Baptists. Then he sought justice. He re ceived neither. He sent a tele gram remarking upon such gra tuitous attacks by the Baptists upon the one medium of com munication that does most to serve the cause of religion. He recited the fact that broadcast ers of North Carolina give free ly of their time and facilities for such service. And he requested that the Baptists at least give a hearing to broadcasters before letting the ink dry on the res olutions. Nothing doing, said the Bap tists in reply. The convention had neither the time nor the inclination to correct any mis takes it had made. After all, said the Baptists, we weren’t talking about broadcasters of North Carolina; we were talking about broadcasters of the na tion. Whereupon Mr. Severance, having done his best to reason with the self-righteous, turned away from the affair, wondering if the Baptists knew what they were talking about, much less whom. It was, all in all, a re markable performance. On one hand, the Baptist State Conven tion rejected federal aid on the valid grounds that it would lead to federal controls. On the oth er, it struck a blow against free dom of speech, by inviting furth er federal controls to silence voices with which some few Baptist convention committee members personally disagree. The total picture is a study in awkward absurdity, a spraddle legged attempt to walk on both sides of the street at the same time. Perhaps even the Baptists real ize that if you want something hopelessly confused, just turn it over to a committee. If you are planning to build a new home. If you are planning to sell your farm. If you are planning to buy or sell any kind of real estate. Contact the real estate man who wants to make just a a small profit. M. BAILEY BARROW REALTOR REAL ESTATE SALES - BUILDER - BROKER 2004 N. Queen Street Kinston, North Carolina Phone JA 3-6981 ' " ■ & WHEN YOU NEED AMBULANCE SERVICE CALL Garner’s Funeral Home DIAL JA 3-2124 or JA 3-2125 Ambulance Equipped With Oxygen For Emergency Use jj® “COURTEOUS , 'ANTS” Ki How to Save Money on Fertilizer Buying Outlined by Man Who Knows “You can save on your ferti lizer bill with soil tests this Fall.” One of the safest ways to know what fertilizer to use is printed on the soil tests results sheets coming from the soil test ing division of the N. C. Depart ment of Agriculture. Dr. Preston Reid, director of the service to farmers, says: “Close adherence to recommen dations of the soil service from NCDA is the safest bet. ‘Gesti mates,’ or using rule-of-thumb calculations, might work only some of the time. Soils analyses made from good, dry samples taken on the farm, and fertilization accord ing to the results, may be one of the answers to lots of the prob lems we have with getting max imum yield from our acres, he said. “Whether, insect damage, and improper cultivation can al so complicate the production of large, quality crops,” he added. “Just recently we have assert ed a strong program for soil sampling for the coming crop seasons in 1965,” he said. “We have materials, instruction sheets, shipping boxes and soil containers in the hands of coun ty agents. We also have plac ed a large number of informa tion sheets with these import ant agricultural workers in the 100 counties.” “Just as dairymen keep ex acting records on their cows’ production, just as livestock producers keep close records on their animals’ gains, so should each farmer carefully plan for the coming season with good soils records. “If we do not have the infor mation on the sheets supplied with the sample boxes, analyses by our laboratory workers can not be properly developed into recommendations for fertiliza tion by our agronomists. Each farmer’s soil receives the best of attention — at the ‘test-tube’ stage of analysis, - and again when that soil sample is studied for recommendations consider ing the .crops >to-be planted, ac cording to the latest soils re search.” PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Continued from Page 2 Minister of Indonesia is a man named Sukarno. That’s all the name he has. People who lack family, lack the most basic root; for without a sense of family there can be no sectional or na tional identification; and ob viously without identification with a culture there is no cul ture. As a noted local exponent of the arts and “culture” re cently pointed out: “One cannot buy a ticket to culture!” More on the way every day! Thanks for waiting! Your wait for one of these new 1965 Chevrolet& is about over—and we want to thunk you for your patience. Come see us now. When you get behind the wheel, you’ll be glad you waited! ’65 Chevrolet It’s longer, wider, lower. It’s swankier, more spacious. You could mistake it for an expensive car—if it weren’t for the price. Y»5 CflfiVPffo Fresh-minted styling. V8’s available with up to 350 hp. A softer, quieter ride. And it’s as easy-handling as ever. Coupe *65 Chevy H Clean new lines. Fresh new interiors. A quieter 6 and—V8’s available with up to 300 hp. 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