Page Eight THE CAMPUS ECHO Monday, September 28, 1964 ''“1*1 „ Cage Season Opens Dec. 1 ‘’"•'t ^(_oniinue i om pdg ) ^ p’ PHILADELPHIA—A N o r th an effective ministn ministrative assistant to the president, dean of the faculty, director of admissions, and dir ector of public relations. Among student services posi tions recommended are counse lors, a financial aid officer, and assistants to the deans of wo men and students. Massie said the item for ad ditional faculty and staff mem bers is for the purpose of in stituting a remedial work pro gram at the college, explaining that more than 70 per cent of the freshmen entering the in stitution need some remedial work in readiiig, speech, math ematics, or English. Other items in the request were $78,288 for s u m m ie r school salaries; $65,000 for li brary books; $62,328 for main tenance service personnel; $40, 000 for temporary help, includ ing student assistants; and $16, 800 for general expense and other special purposes for the biennium. SG President (Continue from page 7) And there is another thing 1 want you to remember about your college education. It is not automatically going to make you a better person. I believe it is safe to say that each person who pursues cour ses in formal education is changed in some way. You, too, will be changed, even those of you who may never get your degrees for some reason. But unfortunately this change ^is not always for the better. Edu cation has the peculiar charac teristic of making one more tolerant, more patient, more broad-minded, and more capa ble of meeting the challenges of the day or more selfish, more narrow-minded, and more reactionary. We here at North Carolina College hope that all of you are going to be better people as a result of your ex periences here. But all the responsibility is not yours. Some of it rests with what I must call “powers that be”. You have the right to ex pect the most conducive atmos phere possible towards your a- cademic, social, and psycho logical growth. The world we live in is constantly changing and we must change with it, but we sometimes fail in our duty when we do not see the appliability of this fact to our own particular situation. We are not always aware of the fact that the great wheel of progress is often turned by the working of little ones. And so on behalf of the Stu dent Government and the stu dent body, it is my very great pleasure to welcome you to the sloping hills and the ver dant green, which we do not walk upon, the lovely blos soms’ beauteous sheen, which we admire with our eyes and noses and not with our hands, and the maroon and the grey which we proudly proclaim. NCC Basketball Eagles o- pens training for 1964-65 sea son on October 15, 1964 at 6:30 P. M. in the McDougald Gym nasium. Coach Floyd Brown is hope ful that his present Eagles are good contenders for the CIAA TEAM DATE Intra^Squad Game Nov. 21 Morgan State Dec. 1 Mt. St. Mary’s College 2 Va. State 5 J. C. Smith 8 Shaw University 12 St. Augustine 15 N. C. Classic 18-19 Holiday Tournament Jan. 1-2 Hampton 4 Va. Union 5 St. Augustine 19 Va. Union 9 A&T College 11 Fayetteville State 18 Winston-Salem State 30 Morgan State Feb. 1 Va. State 4 A&T College 6 J. C. Smith 9 Hampton 13 Fayetteville 16 Winston-Salem 18 Shaw 20 CIAA Tournament 25-27 Trouble In (Continue from page 4) pretty as it looked. The next hot day, he went over to play with John, and he said to John’s mother, “Please, Ma’m, may I try a nice cool slice of watermelon?” John’s mother said, “Why Rodney, David’s mother told me you didn’t like watermelon.” She gave him a nice cool slice, and he ate it all up. But he decided he wouldn’t say anything to Bill’s mother. He didn’t want everybody a- long the street to think that now he liked watermelon— maybe some d a y he wouldn’t like it again. And he decided he had a right to change his mind even if that did make people feel mixed up. Championship. The schedule for the 1964-65 Cage season opens officially December 1 with Morgan State College Bears in Baltimore^ Maryland. The schedule is as follows: PLACE Durham Baltimore Emettsbury,Maryland Durham Charlotte Raleigh Durham Winston-Salem Winston-Salem Hampton Richmond Raleigh Durham Greensboro Durham Durham Durham Petesburg Durham Durham Durham Fayetteville Winston-Salem Durham Greensboro F. H. Brown Basketball Coach A. & T. Aggies Meet Tenn. State GREENSBORO—The A&T College Aggies and the Tennes see State University Tigers tied in a big intersection of football games here on Satur day night, September 26. Kick- off time has been set for 8:00 P. M. at the Greensboro Me morial Stadium. The game originally schedul ed for the afternoon, is being moved under the arcs, accord ing to Dr. William Bell A & T’s College Atheletic Director. The Aggies will be looking for their third win in a row over the Tigers, a team which they defeated both in 1962 1963 for the first time in eight- starts. Carolina College student was among a group of twenty-four college students, predominantly Negro, from around the coun try who participated in a semi nar in New York City from September 2 through 9. The student Raymond Perry, was especially selected to attend the week long session that was sponsored by the Divi sion of Vocation of the Board of Christian Education of The United Presbyterian Church USA. During the week, the delegates saw first-hand what the church is doing as it at tempts to be relevant to the many forms of revolution going on in today’s world. The week’s schedule includ ed discussions with leaders of some of the Board’s Agencies of the United Presbyterian Church that are housed in the Interchurch Center. Outstandn ing among these sessions was one with Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, State Clerk of the Gene ral Assembly and its chief exe cutive officer. There were visits to two United Presbyterian churches in Harlem that are carrying on surrounding community. Then in a session at the American Broadcasting Company’s tele vision studios, the students heard of the kinds of frontier programming that the church is doing through its Division of Radio and Television. Dr. Clifford Earle, the Unit ed Presbyterian Secretary for International Affairs who has the status of a Non-Govem- mental Observer at the United Nations, arranged a discussion with the Hon. Waldo Emerson Waldron-Ramsey, delegate to U N from Tanganyika. A law yer, educated in Great Britain, Mr. Waldron-Ramsey drew on his wide knowledge of world history to provide insight and analysis to what is going on in Africa and how it has reflected what is going on in the United States. From this session, the group went to New York’s Municipal Building where they met with the President of the BorougU Council of Manhattan, the Hon. Edward R. Dudley. Mr. Dud ley, a Johnson C. Smith Uni versity graduate and a Pres byterian layman, shared some of his personal background with the students. WELCOME STUDENTS Welcome To THE YOUNG MEN’S SHOP DOWNTOWN AND NORTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER Two Stores — Two Convenient Locations STOCK WITH THE LATEST IN AUTHENTIC UNIVERSITY FASHIONS VISIT US SOON The Younf Men’s Shop We SeU GUITARS, TYPEWRITERS, LUGGAGE, \ ^ SUITS, OVERCOATS & RECORI^LAYERS i We Make Personal Loans PROVIDENCE LOAN OFFICE 106 E. Main Street Phone 682-4431 WELCOME STUDENTS AND FACULTY SPEIGHT'S AUTO SERVICE “ A Business With A SouV’ Theodore Speight, Proprietor W^e Offer: • SPEEDY ROAD SERVICE • CAR REPAIRS • GASOLINE AND CAR OIL • FUEL OIL PHONE 682-3575 Corner of Pettigrew and Fayetteville Streets Welcome, NCC Students and Faculty SCARBOROUGH & HARGETT (Incorporated) Morticians • Burial Protector PUm • “A Dignified Service In A Sympathic Way” 24 — Hour Ambulance Service — 24 Air-Conditioned and Radio Equipped Phone: 383-3721 - 383-3722 522 East Pettigrew Street Garrett-Parker Drug Store Prescriptions Filled 702 FAYETTEVILLE ST. Phone 682-1715 W. P. Wimberley, Phar.

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