Newspapers / The New Bern Mirror … / Feb. 19, 1971, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page Eight THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Friday. February 19, 1971 m=M EEN opics 'Stay on the Beam' to Be Topic Of Lecture by Eugene Depold Tyc IN NEW BERN TODAY I)(i| users in their twenties are aying that those of High sch(w)l age who turn to drugs are doiii)', it strictly for kicks, not because they are crusading for a cause, or lashing out against the (siablishment. A University of Kansas dropinit complained to a Chri.siian Science Monitor reporter that “High school kids drop' and then go to parties or rock concerts. We intelK ctualized, by contrast, When You Say It With Flowers . . Let Us Say It For You. EMMIE'S FLOWER SHOP 333 Middle St. Dial 637-3768 For Top Tunes by Your Favorite Recording Stars YOUR TiEN-AOE MUSIC CENTER IS HAWKS RADIO 4 APPLIANCE CO. 327 MIDDLE STREET Butteric & Simplicity Patterns and all types of notions and Dress & Suit Material. THRIFTY FABRIC SHOP Kinston Highway Dial 637-6565 You're invited to place your trust in New Bern's only pharmacy with three graduate pharmacists hcalih 1^ preciuus ... ici us help protect yours ^JicfedMctuiL 0^ PHARMACY NEW ISLLtM, N.C. and talked of meaningful things.” It was his reasoning, apparently, that resorting to dope makes sense if you’re, as he says, intellectualizing. Perhaps the thought has never occurred to him that it is quite possible to talk of meaningful things without getting turned on by a psychedelic drug. However, if he is right in his assertion that High school students use drugs solely for kicks, and not to whet their fury against the establishment, it makes the situation even more omnious. In such an environment, not only malcontents and misfits are attracted to narcotics, but teen agers who come from good home surroundings, and have no particular gripe against society. To be daring and curious isn’t something that is peculiar to young people of this generation. Youth, since the beginning of time, has been characterized by the urge to rebel against conformity. Grandma and Grandpa, when they were young, were impulsive too, and had ideas often frowned on by older people of their day. The big difference between then and now lies in the prevalence of youthful drug addicts. Then as now there was drinking of intoxicants among teen agers, but the percentage of imbibers was rather low. For Divine direction is more than a hazy intuition. When we truly listen to God and obey, we are led and guided in tangible, practical ways, explains Eugene Depold Tyc, C. S., of San Diego, California. Mr. Tyc’s lecture titled “Stay on the Beam” is to be given in the church edifice Tuesday, March 2. at 8 p. m., under the auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist, 406 Middle Street, New Bern. Admission is free and the lecture is open to the public. Mr. Tyc is a native of Philadelphia, Pa. He is a graduate of Drexel Institute of Technology. During World War II he served in the United States Infantry and Military Intelligence. He retired from business in 1957 to give full time to the healing ministry of Christian Science. Currently, Mr. Tyc is on tour throughout the United States and Canada as a member of The p:ugene depold tyc Christian Science Board of Lectureship of The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. Looking Glass ^ (Continued from Page D I Carson was unheard of, while Jack Paar had achieved phemonial success on the NBC Tonight Show that Carson would inherit. Actually, Steve one thing, very few youngsters had money available to buy bootleg whiskey, if they so desired. Use of dope by young people was unheard of, and few if any members of the older generation who read these lines ever personally came in contact with an addict. In any generation, dope is a deadly road to self destruction. Lovu Prices, Lew Overhead When you think of diamonds, think of Mike. Home of Keepsake Diamonds 222 MIDDLE 8T.. NEW BERN. N. C. S37-8778 Allen started it, then unwisely let NBC move him to Sunday evening as competition for Ed Sullivan. Ed slaughtered him. Yesterday was when, from time to time, sea planes would land on Neuse river at the end of Broad street, and everybody in town would go down to see the sight. Thousands of young New Bemians now on the local scene have never glimpsed one of the contraptions. Yesterday was when folks could hardly wait for the next issue of Good Housekeeping to come out, because they knew there would be another collie dog story in it by Albert Payson Terhune. It was Terhune, telling it for the truth, who related how an older collie buried a choice new bone in an extra deep hole, covered it with dirt, and planted a discarded, less attractive bone above it, in the same hole. This way he crossed up a younger collie who spotted the fresh dirt, dug down only to the top bone, and trotted away with what he thought was a prize confiscation. Yesterday was, like boarding house hash, composed of a wide variety of things. Mostly they added up to something pretty good. Top Ten Tunes In New Bern This Week 1 Bose Garden—Lynn Andenson. 2. I Hear You Knocking— Dave Edmunds. 3. Knock Three Times— Dawn. 4. If I Were Your Woman— Gladys Knight. 5. One Bad Apple—Osmonds. (>. Remember Me—Diana Ross. 7. Watching Scotty Grow— Bobby Goldsboro. 8. Precious Precious—Jackie Moore. 9. It’s Impossible—Perry Como. 10. Mama’s Pearl—Jackson 5. (This week’s Mirror pick for a future spot in the Top Ten is the Judy Collins rendition of “Amazing Grace.’’) CRAVEN COUNTY’S COl'NTRY AND W ESTERN FAVORITES 1. Flesh and Blood—Johnny Cash. 2. Rainin’ In My Heart—Hank Williams, Jr. 3. The Sheriff of Boone County—Kenny Price. 4. Help Me Through the Night—Sammi Smith. 5. Rose Garden—Lynn Anderson. 6. Joshua—Dolly Parton. 7. She Wakes Me With a Kiss Each Morning—Nat Stuckey. 8. A Woman Always Knows— David Houston. 9. Where Is My Castle— Connie Smith. 10. Guess Who—Slim Whitman. (This week’s Mirror pick for a future spot in the Top Ten is Tom T. Hall’s “One Hundred Children.’’) LANGSTON DRUG STORE Your Neighborhood Rexall Store Opposite Hospital PHONE 638-5141 FREE DELIVERY SERVICE SAVE CASH THE WHOLESALE WAY PLUMBING ELEORICAL HEATING BUILDING SUPPLIES General Wholesale Building Supply Co.
The New Bern Mirror (New Bern, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1971, edition 1
8
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