Newspapers / Jones County Journal (Trenton, … / March 12, 1970, edition 1 / Page 3
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It seems to me the decent peo ple of America might do well to take a day off to pay their respeets to George Wallace. No th$ig overly spectacular, you understand —1 a fire-racker, pa rade in each town would do nice ly, thank you, and perhaps an oom-pah carnival wherever the' mood truly soared. For let us not forget, it is. the Little Judge who has. forced the present titillating disairray in the phalanx of the integration ists. He and none other is the bogey man in the liberal dose! George Wallace is the name, and don’t you forget it; ta-ra-ra-boom de-ay. Of course, I give a nod to • Mississippi’s John Steaais — he did a fine piece of work in hav ing had adopted his equal-perse cution amendment. But it would be hut a passing nod; I don't have any idea the amendment will become law or that integra tion win be pressed in the North equal in degree to that in the South. I think the Stennis amendment win die in confer ence. Nice effort, though, Big John, and thankee. J? No, sir. It is George Wallace. The threat of Wallace made a jaw-bone believer of Nixon in 1968 and the threat Wallace pos es for 1972 is the meat in to day’s evolving poUtical coconut If Nixon can’t dispose of Wallace before ’72, as Nixon well knows, Nixon will have had it; his re election wiU become highly im probable/ * * ♦ And there you have the sup porting reason for the decision of Albert Brewer, Alabama’s present governor, to contest George Wallace’s bid for re election to the post Wallace made famous. Nixon wants Wallace dead in the political graveyard, and Brewer is the convenient Da vid. Albert Brewer is a very nice, an inoffensive person, a gentle man, who, on his own. would have no chance of defeating the ebullient Wallace. But The Quiet Man is not run ning barefoot. Last fall, George Wallace was told by those who hate him best that there would be $7,000,000 — as I remember the fi tniTe — available to defeat him if he ran for re-election as governor of Alabama. The fools! You know what George Wallace told ’em? He said that was fine, be was glad to have the figure. He coilld use it to tell the Alabama elec torate the Yankee Left Wing was making of him the second big gest industry in Alabama; if .- -—a. 1.1- . ——— -31 —^ -J . A——. wnax tflcy ssiu pruvcfl tii ucj in 1970, he. Wallace, would mean more to Alabama prosoeritv than the Birmingham , steel mills Thev will never learn. ■ New.* that $7.0110 000 (if it is a reality Is not of Nixon’s doin'* and not of Brewer’s doing either. But it fits nioely into,the ammuni tion pouch being filled to Stop Wallace. And what will happen is that Wallace will hammer Brewer to death With it: Nor is N that the end. | Brewer is picking uo some curious bedmates; The NAACP, political factor. Fat chance! Remember Stone wall Jackson and his famed Val ley Campaign? Stonewall lick ed three federal armies in a space of 30 days. Watch Wallace do the same: The NAACP, the Limousine Conservatives, and the Birmingham Bigwigs — with Brewer thrown in as a soupcon. And there is nothing Nixon can do about it. They can’t stop Wallace. He is coming like Stonewall. Two tickets to the parade and to the carnival, please. Dancing girls, if available. WHAT IS THE ANSWER? by Henry E. Garrett, Ph.D. PROFESSOR EMERITUS - COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PAST PRESIDENT AMERICAN PSYCHOLOCICAL ASSOCIATION Dr. Garrett, I have Men refer ence to The Armed Forces Tests. What era these tests end wliat do Hieyjtry to prove? A: The Armed Forces Tests are those tests given inductees to determine where best each per son will fit in the military 6 March ’70 Editor Sir: Your lead article of March 5 (Overcome By His Own Rhe toric) is the best summation of integration’s failure I have ever seen. We are on the road hack; there is no doubt of it. But before we can really get under way, Southern communities must appreciate the necessity of clean ing their own stable. The man you so aptly took to pieces, Dean Jesse McDaniel is a prime example of what (and who) must go. Such as this man have done more to destroy the educational (as opposed to training) system of this land than have any other breed of cat. These are the scalawags of our day.» These are the needle points that have scheme of things. Chiefly, they test the abstract intelligence of the test taker, his degree of ap titude in dealing with ideas, symbols, numbers, etc. The tests don’t “try to prove” any thing but understandably cer tain results have been tabulat ed. More than 22 million young people have taken these tests and the results to 1966 (the lat est figures I have) show that, nationwide, 19 per cent of white adults failed to pass. Sixty-eight per cent of Negroes failed. been used by the miscegenation ists to imbue us with their pois on. One hundred years ago, there was raging in the South a race war that was almost unbelieva ble in its viciousness. This war was the aftermath of the War of Northern Aggression and was created and fostered by some thing we know in history as The Loyal Leagues. These “leag ues,” in turn, were the get of something indignous to the North, known as The Union Leagues. The Loyal Leagues were set in motion by agents from the North who preached to Southern Negroes much the same sort of rot your own man 1 preaches today The independent schools of Kinston might do worse in the study of American history than to learn of this covered-over epoch in the life of this nation. Again, congratulations on a piece much needed and very well done. Sincerely, JOHN J. SYNON Horson Lewis and John H. Smith on Guided Missile Ship Navy Senior Chief Petty Of ficer Horson S. Lewis, husband of the former Miss Nancy L. Ho ward, of Kinston, is now serv ing aboard the guided missile crosier USS Albany, homeport ed at Mayport, Fla. Navy Petty Officer Third Class John H. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Smith of 1907 Green briar Road, is also now serving aboard the USS Albany. ONE HIGH STANDARD The same thoughtful consideration and complete dignified service is accorded all regardless of the cost of the funeral selected. Garner's Funeral Home Dial JA 3-2124 or JA 3-2125 Kinston, N. C. Wind song high pile shag, 14 decorator colors and 14 multi-colors. 12'and 15'widths. 9.99 sq. yd. installed I There’s a Horizontal Trend, baby. And we've got it. In depth. Trend Mills carpet of Kodel polyester comes in dozens of decorator colors and multi-colors, styles and textures. But that's not all. Horizontal Trend is long-wearing, easy-to care-for, stain-resistant and really resilient. More fibers in every square inch give you more carpet for your money. So come on in and lie down on the. Horizontal,Trend of Kodel. 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Jones County Journal (Trenton, N.C.)
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March 12, 1970, edition 1
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