EDITORIALS Never Forget That These Editorials Are The Opinion Of One Man -———-: And He May Be Wrong More for Schools? The Lenoir County School System which is already far and away the most expensive school system in this gen eral area wants a king-sized! boost in its budget for the coming school year in sofar as county funds are concerned. This year from county funds the sys tem is spending $798,677.45. For the coming school year it is asking $1,213, 263.05. An increase of $425,585.60 which comes out at something like a 53 per cent increase. This is one budgetary request that should have the very closest study by the board of county commissioners. Last year the Lenoir County School System spent $488.46 per pupil, compar ed to $452.76 in the Kinston School System, $449.11 in the Jones County System, $452.76 in' the Craven County System, $423.72 in the Pitt County Sys tem, $452.74 in the Greene County Sys tem and $433.07 in the Wayne County System. This also does not take into consid eration that the $449.11 spent in the Kinston system included the special 2} cent school tax levied against all real and personal property in the Kinston Graded School District. The proliferation of all school sys tems is a financial scandal that the pub lic has next to no understanding of and the extravagant expansion of the Lenoir County system is one of the very worst examples of this fiscal lunacy. —WHen such a subject is brought up at "the local lewd the stock answer is and has.been that the extravagant difference between the expenditures tor the Lenoir County schools and the Kinston schools l« transportation for pupils. A But this excuse doesn’t wash since the Craven, Greene, Pitt and Wayne county systems also haul their pupil: to and from school and they make ou1 witli far less money than the Lemon Counity system. It is considered sacriligious in manj circles to question any expenditure foi education at any level but it is long past the time when the taxpayers amc most especially those who allocate tht taxpayers’ money began understanding that quantity education has nothing ir common with quality education. School officials who are concerned with academic affairs as well as fiscal affairs might also benefit from a briei contemplation of this truism. Tobacco Gotterdammerung There must be furious lightning and terrifying thunder in that corner oi Valhalla, where the Tobacco Kings wail out eternity: R. J. Reynolds Tobaccc Company is dropping tobaeeo from-its name. In an unprecedented act of total cowardice, when the tobacco empire is under its worst attack in this era the world’s biggest maker of dgarets has chickened out, and with chicfeem chow mem among other things. It attempts feebly to explain its abject cowardice in full page ads which whine away that 14 per cent of the gross business oi that hUlioohdollar giant is now in ‘non tobacco” products. Old Man Did; Rn-noldn mnat bo spiltdi lug ami .iipilillmg tobacco juice ell over God’s half acre Silent Blessings Among the expenses born by the tax payers, either through the direct med ium of taxation or the indirect costs of donations to medical establishments is tin assortment of silent blessings that most of us are not aware of and none of us fully appreciates. In the 20-yetir period from 1949 through 1968 consider some of the dram atic victories in the battle against dis ease as reported for North Carolina by the state board of health: Diptheria cases fell frpm 950/to none. Measles dropped from 17,330 to 324 cases. Polio dropped from 229 cases to one, and' in that 20-year period a peak for polio was hit in 1950 when 756 cas es were reported. / Another child - killer, streptococcal pharyngitis which preludes scarlet feyer fell from 1,838 cases to 772 with tne peak being reached in 1954 with 2,687 cases; Whooping cough which killed a tot of small children and frightened/ many more young parents into early graves fell from 1,398 cases in ’49 to 53 cases last year and reached its peak with 3,352 cases in ’50. Tuberculosis, the terrible wjhite plague at the turn of the century, fell in North Carolina from 3,402 cases in ’49 to 1,247 cases last year. These are only a few of the areas in which communicable diseases have been brought more nearly under con trol, and is so short a period. Equally dramatic changes in the area of all of medicine have been experienced in this brief pair of decades. Anothr 20 years will quite likely see other terrors of the medical world brought under control. Of course, there is as yet nothing on the medical horizon that tends to offer eternal life to anyone. Not even heart transplants when1 they have been prov en more successful can accomplish that. Putting new motors on an old chassis works for a period but after a while that old foody is just completely worn out and time inevitably will take its toll. But the child killers and the terrible communicable diseases are now under a measure of control no one dared dream possible a generation ago. No Comment Needed to feel that The figures speak for themselves and editorial comment is meaningless, so we tender that Gonorrhea case reports fell from 16,173 in North Carolina in 1949 to just 8,583 in 1962, but since that year reported gonorrhea cases have risen’ to 15,026 in Not-So-Fair Tar Heelia. On People Counting Some interesting guess-work is being done even before the 1970 census is tabulated. Interesting bits of this spec ulation include:. Grade school enroll ment is dropping and will continue to drop. People talking about building a lot of elegant new grade school builds mgs riright -take passing note of this- and spend more time improving the teach ing being done rather than, exerting most of their effort into the expensive art of edifice erecting. I’m quite sure I join every other American in great pride over the al most unbelievable efforts that have been made so far in the exploration of space and in the most recent trip of three brave, resourceful Americans to the moon. But I’m also very sure that I join a great many Americans in wonder ing whether a disproportionate amount of money is not now being spent in this effort. I suspect that there were many /subjects of Ferdinand and! Isabella in 15th century Spain 'who would have questioned their wisdom in spon soring the exploration of what was then outer space by an Italian sailor named Christopher Columbus. History now confirms that the tiny investment Spain made in those cour ages voyages of Columbus paid the Span insh Empire the biggest dividend of any of any investment Spain ever made and elevated Spain to the highest rank among world powers. But that was almost 500 years ago and most of us can see little comparison between the voyages of Columbus and the voyages of our 20th century astro nauts. But there are many. Now to a majority of us there appears to be very little to be gained from putting a man, or a thousand men, on the moon. But whether the moon is made of gold, green cheese or cheap rock! there is one tremendous dividend we Americans have already unconscious ly been receiving from this effort: That dividend is technological. Miniaturiza tion' has opened new doors for nearly every field of engineering that touches our daily lives. Making smaller and more powerful and more dependable things that we use everyday in business and in our homes. But the biggest dividend is a combi nation of the philosophical and techno logical. . . and it should offer us the greatest consolation for both the imme diate and distant future of our nation, and the world. And that is the certain knowledge we have as a result of the fantastic success of this space explora tion that nearly every problem of man kind — except the basic moral problems — can be solved when the weight of brains and resources are devoted to such problems. We hear a great deal about water and air pollution, and they are major prob lems, but the amount of money and manpower and brain power that have been devoted to these basic problems is a trifle. . .and I feel sure that amaz ing strides will be made in this area in the immediate future and much of this comes as a direct spin off of . the re search that has been done n the space program. — lftMijnmg is anotner promem mi au toe world. . . but new materials, new meth ods and new viewpoints bom in the space program are very likely to bring about a red: revolution in the entire building industry, arid ibis is also an expectation that lies very near to band. Even such mundane things as garbage disposal which may seem remote, in deed, from apace exploration, may be given a big helping band from some