June 4, 1969
The N.C. Essay
Page 2
From the Editor
As editor of the N. C. Essay I
would like to express my appreciation
to every member of our staff, our
advisor, and to the many people who
have contributed to the paper but
are not members of the staff, for
their efforts and time given this
year toward improving our school pa
per and giving it a beneficial func
tion for the school.
Next year I will again serve as
editor of the Essay and I am asking
that you consider serving on the Es
say staff. It has been very diffi
cult to work this year with such a
small staff but we did our best to
get a paper out each week. I could
not ask a staff of the same size to
do the work again next year. We
must have additional members for
both the technical work as well as
the actual editorial and literary
writing. Next year the journalism
class will meet three hours a week
and will receive full credit for
their work. We need help!
WHERE ARE
YOU GOING?
(Con't from page 1)
this summer. Jimmy Greenwood has
been signed on as a member of the
technical staff. Jimmy is a Direct
ing major. Dale Talley will be
dancing the leading Indian role.
Dale is a member of the Dance Dept.
The actors (all PRINCIPAL PLAYERS)
include David Wood, Sir Walter Ral
eigh; Tom Cavano, John Borden; Jill
Voigt as Elanore Dare; Gordon Minard
as Ananias Dare, and David Sutor as
the comic lead: Old Tom. Gris Goan
will handle the bad guy role of Sim
on Fernando. We understand that
many of this year's audience members
will be N.G.S.A. students. If you
have a chance - see Paul Green's The
Lost Colony I
STATE LAWS TO BE ENFORCED
(Con't from ipa^e 1)
--An account which remains unpaid
after the close of such period is
delinquent, and no grades, trans
cript of credits, or diploma may be
issued by the institution until the
delinquent account is paid.
--Any student who, having pre-re-
gistered for a coming period, i s
after two weeks of the new period,
found to have a delinquent account
for the previous period, is subject
to being dropped from the rolls un
less the account is paid.
--Accounts on which no payment has
been received within the last year
are to be submitted along with all
available pertinent information to
The Attorney General for collection.
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
TO TEE 1969 QRADUATIHG CLASS
NQRTE CABOLIKA SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
Each generation, shaped by forces outside and vlthln it, asks
the question It must ask. Some genentlons, concexned -with
the building of a nation, ask "Hov7" Other generations,
needing to set priorities for the future, ask "What?”
Tour generation has asked ”tfhy7"
As AmerLeans ve must together ask all of the big questions
and seek to find ansirers. Hov ve build a better Merlca,
vhat kind of nation tre nant, vhy ve pursue certain goals
Instead of others — these az« not problems to be faced by
one generation and Ignored by another. All of us must face
them.
A college educatlCQ In the humanities and sciences teaches
us that the real power to deal mth these problems cones
out of the human mind and the human heart. All power
mxist be disciplined by trained Intelligence and tempered
by compassion.
Each of you Is a center of power. Your professional or social
or religious or political activity vlll detexmlne the shape of
the future of your nation and of the vorld.
The question asked by your generation — Why? — Is one that
must be answered not only by the quality of your rhetoric but
by the quality of your lives. It iras in your collie years
that we were first made aware of those **pepple talking without
speaking, people hearing without listening.
What you have broo£^t and will continue to bring to American
life is not the sound of silence, but the sound of a generatlOK
which will woxk to ensure that, in the words of WiUia«
Faulkner, "...man will not merely endure: he will prevail."
SUBSCRIBE TO THE ESSAY !
FORMS WILL BE SENT TO YOUR PARENTS
THIS SUMMER ALONG WITH A COPY OF
THIS NEWSPAPER. HAVE THEM TO SUB
SUBSCRIBE FOR NEXT YEAR. THE COST
IS ONLY $5.00 PER YEAR.
These regulations teayraise pro
blems for graduating or transferring
students who will need their trans
cripts or grades immediately, but
who had planned to settle their ac
counts through summer wages. It may
be possible for these students to
obtain short-term bank loans which
would be repaid at the end of the
summer. Mr. Burton's office will be
happy to assist students in obtain
ing these loans.
Af
smsrs
FIZZAFAIILOI&
ye PuBlic house
We Serve
(Also Pizza)
Monday
AMATEUR NITE
Come
YOUR
THING
We need a banjo player and
a pianist for summer
supper hour.