Nrm !2rrtt-€raiiftt (Jminlu fublir UlIiraiB The NEW BERN nwLimiDwiilaY A Tm MART or ^;^^NNORfH —I'4?C % b VOLUME 12 NEW BERN, N. C., FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1969 NUMBERS. It's high ttme one of those so-called experts on child psy chology told distraught New Bern parents what to do about Junior’s first barbershop hair cut. Nojuvenlle upheaval Is ever more violent. Though the storm Is tempor- arv, It leaves Mom or Dad (us ually the former) emotionally bankrupt. What It does to the poor barber Is too horrible to dwell upon. Look Into the clipper wleld- er’s anguished eyes, and you’ll realize he suffers more than anyone else. However, from the sound of things you would thinly the kid, not his parents and the barber, is being subjected to un bearable pain. Actually, the screams don’t stem from real or imaginary hurts. The child Is a victim of genuine fear, liberally sprinkled with a seasoning of temperament. And fear In itself Is often more agonizing than reality. There Is the strong possibil ity, of course, that a lotoflltUe boys who are carted to a local tonsorlal parlor for shearing are more spoiled than scared. Quite a few are actually terri fied on the first trip, but hav ing escaped with ears intact, the fears should diminish with subsequent visits. Even so, it is a matter of r ecord that numerous kids keep right on acting up. Parents, aware of this unhappy fact, think of all kinds of excuses to wish the grim expedition of each other. So much so that Junior increaslnidy takes on the ap pearance of a neglected poodle. Ask any New Bern barber, and he’ll tell you that a child invariably braves better if Mom isn’t present for the or deal. For one thing, the average mother is quick to give advice on how her offspring’s cranium should be attended to, and most of the advice is impractical and inadvisable. If a barber is a good bar ber, and most of the ones in our town are, he’ll do all right by Junior. If he isn’t, giving ad vice isn’t going to improve the situation to any measurable ex tent. Besides, proud mothers are apt to sympathize with their dear little darlings, and sym pathy at such a time as this is the wrong kind of medicine. The kind of therapy one might suggest would be a well applied spanking, but punishing a child publicly is a questionable po licy. The barber, in his secret heart, could find deep satis faction in taking care of both ends of the squirming little screamer, but he isn’t going to volunteer his services. Pew parents would react favorably to such an offer. We simply aren’t built that way. Of course, barbers have kids of their own, and these kids cut up o\er cut offs Just like the son of a butcher, a baker, or a candlestick maker. In fact, the greatest commotion in a barber shop this town ever saw occurred when a certain bsu*- ber sheared his own child for the first time. Yes, we need a psychologist to solve the problem, but first it ml(^t be a good idea to see how the psychologist gets a- long himself when he heads for (Continued on page .8) 0om^UteHt .deadcMAifi.« can & Onco^tAc “JHaU in purposeful experience. Sea Gull considers that a camp’s operating efflcISncy iT coLSS“wTth“ of its leadership, and for this reason has painstakingly develoned a staff thit **“®H*y “"'P*."*. program Witt partl^lar ampgaste on a^manahl" Sea Guil'^anta “2 aT—•• Hoiwcuiar empnasis on seamanship. Sea Gull wants its camnam tt UkaC ptaSa amonTthliia^m S tom“mw.‘'’ and helplnrttem