The NEW BERN j, -V s,;Sv feM. ^r ^ CAkw 5^ Per Copy VOLUME 3 NEW BERN/N. C., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1960 NUMBER 26 It’s an ill wind that doesn’t blow some good, and in the case of Hur ricane Donna a few rather humor ous stories were left in her wake We can’t vouch for the authenti city of the tale, but it seems that a local woman who imbibed rather deeply during the blustery Sun day in question was so thoroughly saturated that she slept through it ail Monday morning she discovered that she didn’t have any lights. Fuming, she called City Hall and . blew her stack. Told that the lights were off all over town, and would n’t be on for some time, she wanted to know what the big idea was. The big idea, she discovered rather be latedly, was something that reach ed a velocity of 105 miles an hour right over her head, while she was “sleeping one off.’’ Then there’s the story of a man I heer who called the Red Cross of fice the morning after Donna’s vis it, and asked for emergency disas ter relief. His severe loss, as he reported it, was a television aerial blown down, and broken windshield ] on his pleasure boat. Incidentally, very few birds lost I their lives in the storm here in • New Bern, apparently. It has al- ways seemed miraculous to us, but S they manage to get a death grip on ■' the branch they’re clinging to, and refuse to be dislodged. Most of the tiny feathered creatures that died * In the hurricane were killed whenl the trees they were perched in top- j pled to the ground. Since the storm, the number of] birds here appears to be at an all- time low. Where they went we can’t say for sure, but they can’t be blamed for being a little dubious about living along the Carolina coast during September. Squirrels had a rough experience too at the hands of Donna, but they didn’t elect to move out of town like the birds. We don’t profess to be able to read a squirrel’s mind. However, our guess as to why they decided to stay put wasdhe realiza tion that they have a supply of food stored here. Squirrels are greedy hoarders, like the ant. They stack away far more food than they can ever eat, and would hate to pull up stakes and leave it. Newspapers are to blame as much as anyone else for the fact that most of the headlines on hur ricane damage went to beach prop erty. Governor Luther Hodges, as usual, sped to the seashore as quickly as possible to survey the havoc wrought there. Radio and television, like the press, empha sized the spectacular. Generally overlooked by all con cerned, until later, was the terri- ‘ fic loss suffered by many a farm er. The finest crop in years, and - a good soybean crop, got badly bat tered, but such things don’t make as good reading or show up in pic tures as dramatically as a cottage with the roof blown off, or a cause way damaged. Radio has been soundly criticized in some quarters for the manner in which it gets up a full head of steam long before a hurricane is an actual menace to our area. No doubt about it, the mike boys real ly whoop it up on the airlanes, and quite a few folks get genuinely frightened without cause. _ However, newspapers are often accused—and in some instances rightly so—of exaggerating trage dies, crimes and other events, and they also gave Hurricane Donna a heavy play. Peculiarly, Donna co operated by becoming a threat aft er all, thereby justifying the great (Continued on Pago 8) IN TUNE WITH TIMES—Believe it or not, this exclusive Mirror picture snapped at the ninth annual Coastal lina Dairy Show here is an unposed one. Look closely and you’ll see that Rodney Price of Grantsboro has a transistor radio functioning on the hindquarters of his champion Ayr shire, as he prepares her for competition. That’s one way to get “mooed” music while you work.—Photo by Billy Benners. ’ Mentally Retarded Children Getting Their Chance Now How does it feel to be the par ent of a mentally retarded child? Only a small percentage of New Bern’s mothers and fathers have that experience, and they alone know what it’s really like. Certainly all of us should be heartened by the increasing aware ness that developing the full po tential of a handicapped youngster is not just a famiiy matter, but a community, state and national re sponsibility. New Bern’s school officials have recognized this fact, and for three years now there has been a class for educable children who have an I.Q. between 50 and 70. No new teachers have been allotted in the last two years, since the supply authorized by the last State Legis lature was quickly exhausted. However, another teacher is hop ed for here to supplement the present one, and long range plans call for an expansion of the pro gram to include trainable retarded children, who are so designated be cause their I.Q. is lower than the educable child’s—ranging from 30 to 50. Educable children are being taught the basic needs of living, such as making change, having a sense of direction, and in some in stances the capacity for limited reading. The trainable child usual ly doesn't get beyond the ability to attend to his simplest needs. Superintendent Harry MacDon ald and members of the school board are keeping pace with the ever-mounting interest in the men tally retarded. “They have been neglected since the beginning of time,” says MacDonald, “but at long last something is being done about it. The need is immediate, the challenge great, and the prob lem complex,. but it deserves our full effort and support.” Mrs^ Lee Anderson, a free-laAce writer who lives in Seattle and does articles for various magazines, including Ladies Home Journal, has a handicapped son. More eloquent ly than anyone else, she has de scribed her feelings in a- letter written to Bobby. Here it is, and it is our sincere hope that each of you who read it will be inspired by these lines of faith, courage and mother love: Dear Bobby: You will never read this letter, for you are a child with a handi cap. You are like many, the cere bral palsied, the mentally deficient or retarded, or any of the other awesome words that mean you are n’t normal. You weren’t blessed with a problem that could be over come, but we were blessed with you! People might wonder at that statement and then, with the help of modern psychology, decide it is my way of adjusting to the prob lem. This is right. But it isn’t merely a crutch to lean on when I get tired. I couid never convince them how honestly I feel we were blessed. You see, Bobhy, many parents don’t take care of their normal children. Could He choose them to care for a child who needs love? He must have thought we were worthy of His trust. That is why I feel we were blessed with you. liie people I could not convince don’t know you as I do. They’ve never looked down on your sleep ing face and wept because God made the curve of your cheek and the shadow of your lashes as per fect as any other child. He made the sweet baby quality about you that has lasted too long. I look at you in sleep and wish I’d been more patient. I wish 1 had accepted what you offered as it was, rather than compared it with what it should have been—like the time you finally managed to scoot across the room in your inimitable fashion, instead of walking as I wanted you to. From now on, I’il be thankful you have the will to cross the room in any way you can. Others don’t know how much you’ve brought me. They don’t feel that you cling because I am your support—physically, mentally, spi ritually and emotionally. Yet they know that each of us must feel needed to be happy. You need me more than an ordinary child—so I am more needed than an ordi nary mother. They haven’t known the necessi ty that opens the door to added knowledge, deeper feeling and a clearer perspective. Making it nec essary to help you has made me a better person. You’ve taugh me compassion, tenderness, accept ance, tolerance, and the art of en joying each small pleasure to the fullest. You’ve shown me how to laugh when I wanted to cry; to smile when I wanted to scream; to live when I wanted to die. m « >K * IT WAS IMPORTANT FOR ME to learn to teach you. But some ■ how, through the years, things were reversed and you taught me I think that’s what God intended, for you did your teaching without the power of speech. Many look on a child like you and think, “God did this.” Per haps He did give you a terrible problem, but He mercifully kept the knowledge from you. You’ll never know you’ve missed the thrill of making a home run on the school playground or the fear of failing before your friends, the painful joy of a first date, the con fusing emotions and problems when your body outgrows boyhoods and hesitates before stepping up into manhood. You will never see toe horrible sights of war, the mutila tion of body and mind that leave grown men as helpless as you are now. Yes, dear, God has been kind in many of the things you are de nied. You, and those like you, have other things that aren’t given,,to all children—a world of your own that I sometimes glimpse when you “M- low” me in, a world of serenity in comparison to the one in which the rest of us live. You have an insur ance against being responsible for someone else’s injury or death; a protection against causing us heart break (because parents still love even after their children commit inexcusable crimes). You and I have been spared those indescriba- bie tragedies. You can commit no sins, because you are incapable. i9 4c * « WHY DO I WRITE THIS, when you will never read it? Perhaps I write to clarify things for myself. Maybe it’s an attempt to help oth er parents understand who have a (Continued on Pogo 3)