WEDNESDAY^ FEEEUARY 19, 1975 THE TRIBUNAL AID TIME Rev. R.M. White High Point Soil Erosion Control Ordinance FIRST IN A SERIES ON THE TEN COMMANDMENTS In the 20th chapter of Exodus, we find the Ten Commandments (laws). Many believe that this set of ancient codes is a lot of “hog-wash” -- never looking to them as the “nature of principles”. It is my conviction that to violate these codes is to bring disaster to the individual and society, as a whole. Let us take a concerned look at the First Commandment. EXODUS 20:3: “THOU SHALT HAVE NO OTHER GODS BEFORE ME.” We will call our discussions on the Ten Commandments in this series, “The True Guides For Your Life Ship”. This first commandment has a brief preface. “I AM THE LORD THY GOD....THOU SHALT HAVE NO OTHER GODS BEFORE ME.” This code, you see, begins with a great assumption. It assumes the reality of God. It begins by asserting that God is. The author of this code, whoever he may have been, makes no effort to prove God. He simply affirms him. In so doing, he is in harmony with all the other writers of the Bible. The psalmists do not argue about God. They realize Him and rejoice in His mercies. The prophets never undertake to prove God; they proclaim Him. This is emphatically true of Jesus. He lived in constant fellowship with the Father. He communed with him; he did his work through the might of his power. He revealed him, saying, “HE THAT HATH SEEN ME HATH SEEN THE FATHER.” But he never argues about Him. These psalmists and prophets do not take this position, I am sure, because there are no evidences of God. Of course, we cannot prove God by any sort of logic; yet, there are unmistakable evidences of his existence. This ordered universe with its infinite marks of intellgience is one tremendous evidence. If you tell me that you drive a car, and 1 ask you what make it is, I feel that I am asking a perfectly reasonable question. If you answer, “It is no make at all; it is the result of blind forces that had no pre-vision of what they were creating,” 1 will not conclude that you are wiser than I, but only that you are less sane. With the poet, we can slill hear God say: “Before the roaring loom of time I ply and weave the garment thou seest me by.” Of course, the conception of God that was prevelent when this code was written is not our conception. Man's conception of God has changed vastly since then. Since then, the Word has become flesh and dwelt among us, and we have been privileged to behold his glory. We have seen him gather little children into his arms. We have seen him bend over outcasts in love and mercy. We have seen him make every man’s burden his own. We have heard him say, “IF GOD WERE HERE HE WOULD BE DOING JUST WHAT I AM DOING. HE IS HERE IN ME, FOR HE HATH SEEN ME HATH SEEN THE FATHER.” But the fact that our conceptions of God change with the passing of the years, does not mean that God changes. Our conception of the universe has changed vastly since that far-off day. Their universe was a very small affair; ours stretches away into the infinite. When Ihc psalmist sang, “When I consider thy heavens, the work of Ihy fingers, the moon and the stars which thou has ordained, what is man that thou art mindful of him?" he thought of those stars and of that moon as very near and friendly little candles to light his way. We think of them today in a far different fashion. Yet they arc the very same stars and the very same moon at which the psalmist looked. In the same way, though our conceptions of God change, God abides, “the same yesterday, today, and forever.” Now in saying that God is ours for the taking, this ancient lawgiver speaks in harmony with the whole Bible. This affirmation sounds hearteningly in the Old Testament rises to a shout of victory in the New. Whalcver else we may miss, no man peed miss God. How insistent and appealing is this declaration upon the lips of Jesus! ^ ** * Should you like my views on certain religious questions or should you like to share your Christian experiences w'ith our readers, simply write: In Our Time” c/o THE TRIBUNAL AID, P.O. Box 921, High Point, N.C. 27261. HEAR: Brother Alfred G. Richard From 10 to 11 a.m. Daily Sunday 7—2 WEAL 1510 High Point- Man has not always been mindful of the awesome powers of nature. In his ignorance, either actual or convenient, man has often disturbed the land itself in ways that made it easy for the forces of wind and water to erode in an accelerated fashion. Indeed, a hard five-inch downpour of rain puts IRS Offers Statewide Toll-Free Telephone Service To Taxpayers Regardless of where you live in North Carolina, income tax return preparation is just a toll- free telephone call away. Residents of Greensboro can call Internal Revenue Service by dialing 274-3711. If you live in another area of North Carolina call 1-800-822-8800. This telephone service is avail able all year to furnish aid to tax- payers who have tax-related questions or problems. Most taxpayers should be able to prepare their own returns by following the instructions con tained in the tax booklet. How ever, if additional help is needed, a call to any one of the above numbers, toll-free, is recom mended. 135,770 gallons of water on an acre of land, and if the land is not properly protected, this water can carry off as much as 20 tons of topsoil per surface acre. This rich, fertile topsoil is lost leaving a sterile, hard-pan, and the run-off sedimentation causes pol lution of the waterways destroying the marine life therein and becoming unfit for human consumption. Sever Sedimentation can also block natural and artificial waterways causing detractive flooding. In recognition of the adverse aspects of soil erosion and sedimentation, the State of North Carolina has enacted a Soul Erosion and Sedimentation Control statute and an accompany ing enabling act which gives cities and counties the option of abiding by the State statute, or enaction their own ordinance to deal with the problem. The only restriction placed upon the cities and counties in enabling act is that their ordinances must be at least as restrictive as the State's. They are free to make it more stringent if they deem it necessary, however, the main point is that the local ordinance may not super cede the State statute if it is less severe than the State’s. The City of High Point accepted the offer to draft its own ordinance on soil erosion and sedimentation control, and, in conjunction with Greensboro and Guil ford County, drafted an ordinance known in the City’s jurisdiction as the City of High Point Soil Erosion Control Ordinance. This ordinance was passed by the City Council of High Point meeting in regular session on January 16, 1975, and later ratified by the North Carolina Sedi mentation Control Com mission in Raleigh. It is now the law. it) outreach Human Resources in Action in North Carolina ' Clay Williams tsm. Two recent PA(TE .'*> DEATHS KERNERSVILLE MR. CHARLES CHAVIS Mr. Charles Chavis, 64, of 308 North Cherry St., Kernersville, died in N.C. Baptist Hospital, Winston- Salem. Funeral services were held at St. Paul develop- procurement program is ments in the North Carolina being stepped up because Methodist Church, Kidney Program will give of the increasing number of Point. HAIZLIP S the 330 people in the state patients now existing solely FUNERAL HOME was in who have suffered total on dialysis. He noted that of‘I'l ^'■■'■angenienls. kidney failure, a better at the present time 330 are chance at life, according to on dialysis and about 200 Rodney Johnson, program more come into the HIGH POINT manager. Two mobile vans equiped with perfusion (stimulates a MR. FREDDY DEBERRY Mr. Freddv Deberry of come program each year. “Last year 50 cadaver machines kidneys were procured,” kidney's Johnson stated. “With human environment) have increased emphasis on Trinity, died in High Point been purchased for trans- procurement, we hope to Memorial Hospital. Fune- porting cadaver kidneys to get at least 75 in 1975. We l al services were held at the transplant centers at Duke, must remember, however. Miracle Temple Holiness Chapel Hill, Charlotte and that all kidneys procured in Church, Trinity. Burial Winston-Salem. “The move will enable us North Carolina are not followed in Greenhill Ce- transplanted in the state, metcry. MOORE'S FUNE- to serve larger hospitals North Carolina is included RAL SERVICE was in better, but more particu- in a 13-state organ-sharing charge of all arrangements, larly community hospitals network. If, after the whose participation in the kidney is tissue-typed, it is MR. WILLIAM MARTIN program has been sparse determined that the most due mostly to the lack of a suitable donor lives in Mr. William Martin, facility for maintaining and another state, the organ is formerly a resident of High transporting the organ, will flown there for transplan- Point, died in New Jersey, now be able to contribute to tation.” Funeral services were procurement Johnson said the ultimate conducted al Moore's the kidney effort,” Johnson said. “Probably the biggest reason we have been unable to get cadaver 'tidneys from smaller com- nunity hospitals,” Johnson •easoned, "is that person- lel at these institutions lave not been made ■ufficiently aware of our lesperate need for kid- leys." To remedy that problem hree transplant coordi- lators have been hired, 'he perfusion specialists, /ho will be stationed in the 'hapel Hill-Duke area, Charlotte and Winston- alem, will travel the state 3 attempt to establish rotocol among hospital dministrators and emer- ,ency room and intensive are personnel for the lurpose of identifying lotential donors. Johnson said the kidney solution to the program lies Funeral Service chapel by with the people who must the Rev. F.O. Bass. Burial be sufficiently aware of the followed in Greenhill Ce- need for kidneys for metcry. MOORE'S FUNE- transplantation, that they RAL SERVICE was in will make prior arrange- chargc of all arrangements, ments for donating their kidneys. MR. THOMAS “Our mobile vans have ROBERTSON th capacity to perfuse as many as four kidneys each Mr. Thomas Robertson up to two days,” said Dr. of Trinity, died in High Stanley Mandel, director of Point Memorial Hospital, the procurement phase of Funeral services were held the kidney program. “This at First Baptist Church of will allow us to serve the Trinity by the Rev. John most remote hospitals in Mason. Burial followed in the state and still maintain Greenhill Cemetery, the kidney in an environ- MOORE'S FUNERAL SER- ment as close as possible to VICE was in charge of all that of a human being.’' arrangements. Ijach machine-equiped van will be manned by one perfusion technician, a physician's assistant and/or nurse. Mandel said Di'Gel REUEvks ^Gasid continued on Page 6 Retired A&T Farm Supervisor Buried In Greensboro Rites Greensboro- Martin F. Holt, retired farm super intendent and superinten dent of buildings and grounds at A&T State University, died Feb. 9 in Cone Memorial Hospital after a long illness. He was 84 year old. Holt, who lived at 1011 Bluford Street, retired trom A&T in 1960 after serving in various capacities at the chancellor of A&T State University, said, “Mr. Holt made outstanding contri butions at A&T State University over the years. He remained a close friend of the university even after his retirement.” university for 42 years. Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy, He came to A&T in 1918 and for years operated the blacksmithing shop on the campus. In this role, Mr. Holt fabricated the metal used on some of the earlier buildings. Indigestion* ...it’s those times you suffer acid indigestion and painful gas, too. Dl-GEL® gives more com plete relief because it does what plain antacids can’t. It reduces excess acid; also contains Simethicone that gets rid of gas, too. Heartburn, painful gas go fast. Get Dl-GEL. We care... 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