?^ _ . to _
PEMBRCKE
ST^BtMVERSITY
By Gene Vinw
Director of Public Information
PSU Hittory Profettor to
Lead Educatort to Egypt
The U.S. Department of
Education has awarded Dr.
Jerome McDuffie, associate
professor of PSlTs Depart
inent of History, a grant of
approximately $60,000 to
lead a group of 14 college
and public school educators
to Egypt this summer for an
exchange of educational in
formation
in conducting what u?
described as a Fulbright
Hays Group Project, the
American educators will be
in Egypt for six weeks from
July 2-Aug. 14.
Lectures will be delivered
to the American group by
officials of the Egyptian
government, United Na
tions, and American embas
sy. Thetwo-and-a- half week
series of lectures will be
conducted in Cairo. The
American group will be
going into the field, visiting
farms to see the extent of the
Egyptian technology there
and also into the villages to
examine life there.
Dr. Jerome Mcuiqjw
"One of the main pur
poses of this study is to
examine the modernization
process in Egypt and com
pare it with what has been
takine place in southeastern
North Carolina," said
McDuffie, 47, a native of
Lumberton who has seen
first hand modernisation has
affected this region of the
state.
"We want to see modern
ization's impact on the reli
gion, education and culture
of the people of Egypt,"
pointed out McDuffie. "How
have the Egyptians faced the
changes brought by moder
nization and how have they
tried to resolve them? Per
haps we can learn from
them- and they from us."
McDuffie reflected on tne
changes in the last 35 years
in southeastern North Caro
lina. "The radio used to be
the main means of com
munication, there were few
cars, and society and the
political systems were diffe
rent In those years, you
lived close to where you
worked. It was unheard of
for a person to drive from
Lumberton to Fayetteville tio
work-or vice versa."
He said southeastern Nor
th Carolina can relate to
what is happening in Egypt
because "we have been
much like them--we have not
been part of mainstream
America. We have been
mostly agriculture, not in
dustrial, and many of our
young people have moved
away from where they grew
up."
McDuffie said his group
wants to make contacts with
educators in the Egyptian
public schools, colleges and
universities and "build up
some exchange program s
in the way of information,
letters and faculty exchan
ge." The PSU Department
of History is working on
similar exchange programs
with Pakistan, India, South
Korea, and Australia, said
McDuffie.
Hie American educators
will visit the pyramids, tra
vel down the Nile River, and
visit Alexandria as part of
the trip, but McDuffie em
phasized, "This is not a
sight seeing trip; it is a
working trip." Because of
the grant, the total expenses
for each person going will be
(425, said McDuffie.
Followup sessions will be
held as the group improves
the scope of Near East
studies in southeastern Nor
th Carolina. "We will be
going into the public schools
ind making presentations,
such as slide programs,"
said McDuffie. "We will
also be available to talk with
civic clubs, book clubs,
church groups, and univer
sity classes at various pla
ces."
This is the sixth trip led by
McDuffie. He has taken
groups on two trips to India,
two to Pakistan, and one to
South Korea.
PSU professors going in
clude: Grace Gibson, who
will be working in the area of
communicative arts; Dr. Ru
dy Williams, who will focus
on literature; Dr. Jeff Geller,
whose emphasis will be
philosophy and religion; and
Terry Hutchins, who will be
discussing business law.
"It will be a trip in which
the Egyptians and ourselves
will be sharing a lot of
information about our two
countries," concluded
McDuffie.
Pembroke Magazine
Featured in UNC Board of
Governors Quarterly
The new issue of the UNC
Board of Governors Quar
terly features a full page on
"Pembroke Magazine,"
founded by the late Norman
Macleod in 1969. The 18th
issue of the magazine, which
is published annually, is
newly off the press.
The article about the
magazine is written by Sam
Ragan of Southern Pines,
poet laureate of North Caro
lina and a good friend of
Maeleod, who was professor
emeritus of communicative
art# for PSU.'
Maeleod's picture is dis
played in the Board of
Governors publication, and
Ragan writes: "One critic
has ranked 'Pembroke Mag
azine' among the best litera
ry periodicals in North Caro
lina and among the top 10 in
the country."
Speaking of the present
editor of the magazine, PSU
professor Dr. Shelby Ste
phenson, Ragan writes: -
"Since becoming editor in
1979, Stephenson has con
tinued to keep 'Pembroke
Magazine* in the main
stream of American literary
magazines, gathering the
best from writers and artists
throughout the world while
expanding the contributions
of North Carolinians."
Two PSU Graduates at
Gift Presentation
When the Belk Founda
tion, Inc., last week present
ed a gift of $100,000 to PSU
for establishing an endowed
Belk Chair of Business and
Economics, two PSU gradu
ates were invited to take part
in the proceedings at Fay
ette ville's Cross Creek Mall.
They were John Nicholson
manager of the Belk store in
Lumberton's Biggs Park
Mall, and Kathy Gooden,
who is in charge of visual
merchandising for Belk at
Cross Creek Mall.
Nicholson, a native of
Rockingham, graduated
from PSU in '72 with a B.S in
business, while Miss Goo
den, "Miss PSU" in '82,
graduated from PSU in '85
with a B.A. in art
To subscribe
Call
521-2826
?Xl
THE COACH'S CORNER
?Ken John*"*
Swimming-Developing
Breathing Control .
So many experienced
swimmers hold their breath
while swimming four or five
strokes, then turn their1
head, blow the air out and
get air in. Sometimes they
get a mouthful of water,
simply because they have
not learned how to expel the
air into the water before they
turn their head to get air in.
They don't have time to get
the air out and in, in one
turning of the head before
they must take another
stroke, or they interrupt
their rhythm of their swim
ming stroke. The swimmer
must learn how to expel the
air before he or she turns the
head to get the new air in.
You learn rhythmic breath
ing in the shallow water
standing up, bend your
knees, go under and force
the air out through tight lips,
get all of the air out before
you come back up out of
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your air under water. You
must get rid of all of the air
before you come back up
because if you do not, you
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will destroy your rhythmic
breathing. Coordinate with
your arm stroke. You should
practice expelling air out on
every stroke cycle, then on
every two arm strokes, t
three, four and five-depend
ing on how fast or slow you
want or need to breathe. For
long distance you need to
breathe on every stroke, for
sprints youecuuld swim the
whole length of the pool on
one breath grabbing air just
before vou do your flip
need to learn breath control
from the start, plus learning
to level off in deep water
preferable on your beck, by
getting your ears under, kick
your feet and eelni away.
Learn to level off on your
front by using the "dog
paddle stroke." Don't go off
the diving board until you
learn to level off from the
perpendicular aa vou are not
SXfSSithZ
tUs position. PeopU drone
hn^BY^!jOH^ON
Hot all traffic I
rMuKlR
That'sWhy I
Recommend A
Thorough Exam
At Either The Sabella
Or Pembroke Clinics
Aher Any Accident
i , No Matter How
i Small It May
i Seem At The Time.
I Where To Go?
WALK DM...NO APPT&
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