Bound . of the Junior Class; Leo W. Jenkins; . this trio of young men wil] be among EC’s delegation to the NSAC which convened to- at Ohio State University. Tommy Mallison, (left) president of the SGA; Bryan Bennett, presi- and Bill Griffin, Editor of the EAST CAROLINIAN; will be joined teday by Miss Janice Hardison, Alumni Secretary; Bill Eyerman, summer schoo! SGA pres- Moore, Senate member. Ten aculty Resign Robert head Depart- iversity of M became a > 1. Dr. Joseph ide Garren, and YW e ot Malors Entertain lents Bloxt« | Student Counselors Work With Incoming Freshmen stu-|}iv challenging each freshman in- s|[ fe evening was Hats for and spring sea- odeled by the hostesses. designed professionally ie Pendley, a graduate van College, who ng her vocational certi- this summer in the Department. show. whom New Faculty Join English Department Fall Quarter Richard 1 leave of absence graduate study returning to re-join the English absence lecturing in Tur- | University, in Finland. The new faculty members will Ben Bridgers, BsA., Hendri lege, and M.A., the University Arkansas; B.A., Milwauk Ao ie N ege, Mrs. M.A., nivers McDowell, Methodist B.A., University, Margaret Pfeiffer Col of North Reil Southern M.F.A., versity} Caro- and Bart “No Time For Sergeants” Author list of new list Mac faculty Hyman, A. B., male to the any aspects of college life at FC during Orientation Week this Fall when twenty-five student counselors greet the freshman and work with them during the in- troductory period. Each of the carefully screened and sé@lected counselors will be assigned an orientation group. As counselors, their job will be to con- vey everyday campus knowledge to the incoming freshman. Counselors will be avatlable to }answer freshman inquiries and to | wer questions about education freshmen be introduced | School | Sergeants.” Miss Mary Ann Jones,; Unnversity; | Ann | ege, | A.B., M.A., | University, and graduate udy, Columbia University. In the UL. S. Army Air Corps he was a navigator instructor, and military service he was a! teacher in St. John’s Junoir High in 1949. Hyman best known for his highly successful and jpopular novel, “No Time for} follow- } is New Playhouse Director \ Edear R. Loessin, B.A., Univers- ity of North Carolina, M.F.A., Yale University, brings to his work with the East Carolina Play- much experience in pro- and community theatre groups in New York. John A. Sneden, Jr., B.A., M.A., University of North Carolina, from Davidson College where he was house fessional comes active in college drama. Mrs. Patricia R. Willis, B.S., fast Carolna College, who was a aduate assistant in the Carolina College English Depart- ment in 1960-1961, will return af- ter receiving her Master’s de- gree this summer at the Universi- ty of Tennessee. gr East | to explaining his presence at an institution of higher learning. Att the same time, the orientation pro- gram will offer some useful] in- formation about the college, so that the freshman can make some value judgements about the re- lative merits of different aspects of college life. The new program is being de- veloped which will do more than test schedule a freshman for his first quarter. It will enable him to do more then complete forms and find out where he can get his laundry done. Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, president of the college, will de- liver a speech today at the National Student Government Association at Ohio State U excerpts from Dr. Jenkin’s sp It 1a lege veal to all that genuine self gov- ermment among college students i highly significant. This, of cou presupposes extreme confidence in youth. i It is obvious that we are wit-|i nessing a new world struggling} to be born, with most of us tyem- | bling with fear. Although there jis no place to hide from this new age, it is significant to observe that our young ipeole seem to be the Jeast fearful. Many of our speakers and writers are likening this new age to a second indus- trial revolution. You will recall that the first industria] revolution substituted steam and coal for muscles. It freed men’s backs. The present revolution is substituting! electronic devices and new forms of energy to free both man’s back and his senses. This new revolution is being accompanied | a population and _ intellectual xplosion and by economic prob-| lems unheard of before. We are | nessing the development of a} strong friendship between science | and religion which, in itself, has historical uniquene: This may well result in the scientist seeing God clearly and the ologian looking upon science with less suspicion. } by more the- What does this have to do with | Student Self Government? We must operate within the condi- tions created by this new age. In some areas we have learned more in the past ten years than we have known throughout history. his is \particularly true in the areas of energy and communications. But man’s advances self gov- ermment and in his behavior pat- terns have not been as dramatic. This lack of uniformity in ad- vancement is causing many of our critical problems. We are trying in is the responsibility of col-® officials and faculty to re-j; ; almost nivers Printed below eech. are a twentieth 1 the tech $ The trans- f around the to eighty 1e world in one day e beyond our comprehen- to are we We arriving at a place where shall see considerably more democracy in terms of com- |forts of life but less political de- mocracy because we have permitted the media of mass communications to do our thinking. This trend will continue unless our college students make a desperate effort to project the individual and place him in a positon where his opinions become meaningful. Our academic {life and our stu- dent government, in particular, may be overwhelmed by mere num- bers if we cannot accept the prob- lems thrust upon us by the and jpopulation explos should not be lost of the fact that there are more col- lege students today than there were thigh schoo] students in 1920. We are seeing many first generation college people on our campuses today and yet, in spite of this, half the world stifll re- mains illiterate. There are stu- dent problems associated with size at confront colleges and stu- dent governments. On many cam- puses instead of working in co- operation we find the champions of liberal arts struggling for do- minance over vocationists and vice versa. College students should ‘remind the advocates of both that: they are just as anxious to learn FLOW to live as they are concerned | vith h to make a living. The roblem of the HAVES versus the HAVE-NOTS is not only a world- wide condition but one that exists (Continued on Page 4) ‘Buc Beauty’ Our last Bue Beauty of the summer is Durham’s Leroy Edwards. A Social Studies major, Leroy plans, after two more years of study, to teach history for high school students. An accomplished equestrienne, she also spends much time on the tennis courts. Page 2 Social Responsibility: ‘Holding Your Booze’? “College should be more than an academic marketplace tendering knowledge in exchange for tuition. “A good college education is not a smooth transaction, but rather a series of bewildering frustrations relieved by an occasional insight into the problems of the human con- dition. “The basic aim of education should be to confront the individual with learning experiences which will sensitize him so that he might better understand and appreciate his environment and the people in it. “Education should humanize the student’s values, bur- dening him with an intense concern for the society and the world in which he lives. “The educated man is equipped with a sense of in- justice and compassion which compels him to an involve- ment in social issues ranging from racial discrimination at home, to poverty and misery in the stunted economic orders of the under-developed lands, to the world-wide problem of nuclear weaponry. “Many observers of American higher education con- tend that our colleges are not graduating people who feel this social responsibility. They quote studies to show that much of today’s college generation shows a complete in- difference to social problems, preferring to devote their energy almost exclusively to the attainment of personal wealth and status. “Call it ‘Rugged individualism’ or whatever you will, but it does not bode well for the democratic society which makes claims on its citizens, especially its educated ones, to work for its progress and well-being. “The colleges, it is argued, are not prodding students into adult roles requiring them to function as thinking in- dividuals and at the same time as responsible members of society. Instead, the colleges often sponsor student pas- times which cater to his tendency to remain a child. The status symbols of the college student culture are often identical to those of the high school. “On this campus, for instance, admission to campus honoraries, themselves meaningless activities, is gained after one has compiled a requisite number of likewise mean- ingless activities. “Last summer one of our students went on a Freedom Ride because he wanted to challenge the injustice of seg- regated seating on Southern buses. He spent much of his vacation in a Mississippi jail as a result. “But the Freedom Riders accomplished their purpose when a ruling was won from the Interstate Commerce Com- mission banning segregated seating on interstate buslines. A socially significant issue had been decided because this University student and others like him felt responsible for working to an end the national disgrace of segre- gation. “But what is an activity like this worth in terms of recognition? Did our Freedom Rider get his picture in the yearbook, the chronicle of student achievement. “No, yearbook spaces are reserved for real attain- ments. If you’re really interested in making that gallery, set your sights high on somthing like Dorm King, Home- coming Chairman, or Silver and Gold member. “Yes, the phrase ‘social responsibility’ is foreign to much of campus activity, unless it is used to describe com- petence at quaffing alcoholic beverages without belching.” —(Editorial reprinted from the COLORADO DAILY) kast-€arolinian Published weekly by the students of East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina Member Carolinas Collegiate Press Association Associated Collegiate Press Bill Griffin EDITOR Keith Hobbs BUSINESS MANAGER Associate Editor _.............._..__. Walter Faulkner Managing Editors .. Monty Mills, Kaye Burgess Sports Editor --.—.... John Edwards Subscription Director 02. --_. Jackie Polk yesh Circulation Manager Jim Chesnutt Offices on second floor of Wright Building. Telephone, all departments PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6101, extension 264 Subscription rate: $2.50 per year. From the “Rubayait uf Omar Khayam.” “The moving finger writes, and, having writ, Moves on; nor all your piety not wit, Shall lure it back to cancel half a line. Nor all your tears wash out a word of it.” translated by E. Fitzgerald. ee EAST CAROLINIAN LITTLE WOULDN'T REPEAT LAST NITE'S PERFORMANCE AT THE 900K, \NORTH JAL— MY HOLIGE MOTHER IS WATCHING YOU.” Collegians Lead ‘Unconcerned’ Life By J. ALFRED WILLIS We are a happy people—Young; surrounded by that dark, warm womb known as college; protected by that mucus known as education. We are relatively unaffected by Aibany, Georgia; Moscow, (Russia; Christmas Island; Washington, LP. C. Nonviolent action, SANE nuclear policy, Medicare, United Nalitions, socialism, communism, John Birch, Freedom Center; Minutemen don’t even make in- teresting reading in the paiper for us. We are even unconcerned with the apparition of greener grass in Maine, California, New Mexico, or Wyoming, to say noth- ing of Europe or ‘Asia. Our con~- tentment can not even be shaken by near-by events—the SGA, dormitory regulations, cigar ashes in the cold plates. In a short while we shall receive a piece of paper that qualifies us to instruct the young in this art of opulent un- awareness. We live a quiet life. We take courses that will not cause too great of an imposition on us. We try to divide our interest impar- tially among all our classes; fear- ful least we become too initerested in one and the others will suffer. We try to have our first class as close to noon as possible and our Historian Lists ‘Must Reading’ Columbia University historian Allan Nevins (Pulitzer prizes for biographies of Grover Cleveland, Hamilton Fish) says these five books of history are “must read- ing” for every American: Carl Van Doren’s “Life of Ben- jamin Franklin” Paul Leicester Ford’s “The Many Sided George Washing- ton.” Gilbert Chinard’s “Life of Thom- mas Jefferson.” Ben Thomas’ “Life of Lincoln.” “Autobiography of (Roosevelt.” Nevins appeared before a House appropriations subcommittee as chairman of the government’s Civi] 5- War Centennial Commission. He offered the “must” list at the re- quest of Rap. Ben F. Jensen (R- Iowa), who observed, “Too little is taught our children in public schools, universities, and colleges, about the things that made this America the greatest land on earth.” —(Reprinted from “World” newspaper. Washington, D. C.) Theodore -- last diass close to noon as possible. We try to keep up with our class work. plagerizing from the library, copying our class- mates, and cheating. The fear of not being fully develoed drives us to seek outside stimulation such as drinking; seeing “momie” and “dadie” every week-end except the ones when we go to the beach; the famous college traditions of bull sessions in which we talk about the opposite sex punctuated by trips to the rest room; extra- curricular activities in which a popularity contest allows unlmited cuts and free trips to New York and Miami all for the cause of an ever floundering student gov- ernment. We remember the maxim that there is more to callege than grades. We accept peacefully progress. Women’s dormitory regulations will be printed on plain white paper instead of green. The Stadium will be complete inspite of the need for classrooms. We are glad to be ipart of a growing college where Austin Building will be torn down, trees choped down for dormitories, and the Mall occupied by a chapel. Truely our symbol is the Wright Cirele Fountain with its littered paper cups and tawdy lights. as BEST SELLERS FICTION . Ship of Fools, Porter (1, last week) Youngblood Hawke, Wouk (2) Dearly Beloved, Lindbergh (3) The Reivers, Fulkner (4) The Prize, Wallace (7) Another Country, Baldwin (9) Uhuru, Ruark (5) The Agony and the Eestasy, Stone (8) 9. The Big Laugh, O’Hara (10) 10. Franny and Zooey, (6) NONFICTION - The Rothschilds, Morton (1) My Life in Court, Nizer (2) . In the Clearing, Frost (4) - The Guns of August, Tuchman (3) Conversations Djilas (7) - Sex and the Single Girl, Brown (8) - One Man’s Freedom, Williams (9) Six Crises, Nixon (6) Men and Decisions, Strauss O Ye Jigs & Juleps!, Hudson (10) (Reprinted from “Time,” Aug. 10) DARD TN pw cow Salinger with Stalin, 8. 9. 10. rer fe By BILL WEIDEN Ra - Question: What do \, East Carolina’s HER ship program. Here at East ( have a long histor lethies is concerns teh larger college are just are we path. In the past a de-emphe beginnir walking Zatior basketball at Car This de-empha from involved Carolina ar ers. Also the Car 4 team was on NCAA pr a year, because eruiting «practices These seand tige of these sch Carolina. Just as tige of other schoo: lahoma, Arizona, and pn would you think of a grants a work schola athlete, and his jot elevator in the | the College Uni elevator. Don’t happen at ECC that we want I don’t bel thing wrong scholarship to a athletic ability, as good academie ab I lieve we should reeruit the letes, ike The possibilit, game-~ with the cation should be « Coaches high pressured s. season. If a stud teeid to come to ECC to be enticed t he will put capable of. If a st ECC on play a sport, | icated. Less t spent selling a sport ¢ more time cot improving his abilities these should 8o hs own ideas that may be ju ship program nee Scholarship ath] amateurs, and ship athletes. Mo. ional athletes dor money as a athlete. Yet the semi ean never play again, even thoug! the game more thar ship athlete. When this quest to several of our seh letes (football players ed that they wer amount of scholar be getting. I don football players, w! names to remain more than right fr are looking at the quest have a good beef if look at the qeustion point of view. Lets see the I of view that seme of have taken on this question Kirby Ward Junior S ies Major—“] think lina’s athletic sc gram needs to be imp! letes on scholarships need than a contract from r such as a good fi scholarships that cov en away due to injury of lete. This wovld also cruiting of ‘star’ high ers. Also, the program shot broadened to give bet : cial aid to athletes in spor °° | than football, baseball and bask bal.” Larry Weatherly, Senior el Major—‘There are not enous ny scholarships given and the . letie program is not supported * the alumni. The athletic progr must increase with the size ° (Continued on page 4) ath => = - ® Thursday, Inquirer W : kg. HER think of Scholar. August 16, 1962 EAST CAROLINIAN Page 8 Opinions Differ On US’s ‘Overcrowded’ College Are America’s colleges and uni- | N.Y.) College aid debate, 30 Jan., versities overcrowded? Opinions; 1962. are pro and con, but examine the " Possible East Nigerian Assignment Taylor Completes Final Phase Of Corps’ Selection Process Di- has Jimmy a hlet “There simply are too many myths about college admissions today ... (the problem) is hard- ly more than a statistical phe- nomenon. . . One high school sen- ior may become four college ap- plicants, but eventually he can be- come only one college freshman. “The overcrowding today is in the admissions offices. not in the freshman class (there is Cynthia Mendenhall, of the College Uni received ‘aylor, EC’s Corps olunteer, final of his selection process prior Nigerian assignment A May Jimmy president of the CU for the 1961- 1962 term; he has been active in Freshman If Jimmy is selected in the final phase of his training session, he will teach or perhaps assist a teacher from Nigeria for twenty- cne months. He will give, as well as receive, a great deal as a mem- ber of the President’s Peace Corps. Reprinted is Jimmy’s letter to Miss Mendenhall. “I got here (Los ‘Angels, Cali- fornia) July 1 and havent stopped weeks of ‘practice teaching at the} facts for yourself—are they fact Los Amgeles High School. I did] h? i mine in Typing, and I enjoyed Fadl Was NER aoe | very much, I had quite a mixture| “There are 8.7 million college- of races in my class and enjoyed working with each one of them. from Peace the word first concerning age youths in our country. In the 1960-1961 school year only 3.6] million of them were in college. | How many of the five million] youths could find no place? How many of them just did not have the money it costs? | “The selection process will con- tinue until the end of training. I| will not know until the iast of August whether or not I have been selected for sure. Naurally, I wiil| graduate, was activities since his aod Among -. He has also served as treas- be disappoined if I am not selected, | enough room for) every reason- of Pi Omega Pi, honorary 1ity. he has been a member Dean’s Council. he was elected to Who’s Who Students In American es and Universities. the Advisory W 2, James Milton Taylor 4 nen, /: At The On Campus starring John Gregson and Peter “Pursuit of the Graf Spee’— 7:30 p.m. tonight, Austin. i Generation’’—s August 21), Austin. Down ‘Lolita”—starring James Maso gust 16 at the State. ‘Two Weeks in Another Town’ rise, starts Thursday, August 1 Drive-Ins of Black Witch” Richard -starr "starring Boo vbrook. ‘Guns of Navarone”—starring t 19 at the Meadowbrook. “Ladies Man”—starring Jerry ring Don Foster, Saturday, August 18 at the Tice. Doris Day, lidnight Lace’’—starring tion. { tarring yet. Believe me, they keep you busy every minute of the day and up until 10 o’dlock at night much of the time. “Even though there is a lot of hard work and the going gets tough, I am really enjoying it very much. There are 90 of us at UCLA. I think I have ever met @ nicer group of people. We range in age from 20 to 64 and represent over 30 states. “J will be sent to the Eastern Region of Nigeria. The main lan- spoken in this region is Ibo. It is a tonal language and fairly difficult. Some of the! courses we are having to take are as follows: African Studies, Ameri- can Institutes and International Relations, Health, African Lit- erature, Art and Music, Physical | Education, Language, and Educa- | We just completed three con't guage Movies Patti McCormack, town n and Sue Lyon, starts Thursday, ‘starring Kirk Douglas and Cyd} 6 at the Pitt. ing Don Megowan and “Thunder ne, Saturday, August 18 at the Gregory Peck, starts Sunday, Au- Lewis and “Music Box Kid”— starts Sunday, August ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Don’t meet your Waterloo at typed typing errors with just an ordinary that simple to erase without a time, temper, and money! the typewriter—perfectly papers begin with Corrasable! You can rub out pencil eraser. It’s trace on Corrasable. Saves Your choice of Corrasable in light, medium, heavy weights and Onion Skin in handy 100- sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON PAPER CORPORATION (By errrerieco, ASS. however, I feel that the training | UCLA and all the new friends I have made has been a very re-| at wording experience.” Jimmy wil complete month and should be back ian assignment. @ Do U.S. movies weaken our image abroad? L&M gives you MORE BODY in the blend, MORE FLAVOR in the smoke, MORE TASTE through the filter. It’s the rich-flavor leaf that does it! his| training the latter part of ths in Vanceboro by August 30 or 31 for a short visit before his Niger-: “The (House) Committee on Ed- ucation and Labor believes that | the needs are so great and so im- jruediate that Federal assistance is required ... It is fair to say that, at this point, many colleges ean house their students but can- not educate them. Even at such eminent schools as Johns Hopkins teachers scrounge for classroom space.—Rep. Adam C. Powell (D-! oO Yes (No "02 O22veO1 SuRAW ¥ 1230911 Suaatia ably qualified candidate desiring admission. “Hundreds of other colleges (than the top 50) have vacancies, and almost every institution (in- cluding agressively seeks applicants.” the overcrowded ones) —Dr. Fred E. Crossland, Admissions director, NYU, in March issue, “Journal of Education Sociology” © What's the smart way for a cigarette HERE’S HOW MEN AND WOMEN AT 56 COLLEGES VOTED. 996" %9h"""""yoed YOS jenn 682" EP ON 6 zl" GIG %6b""%99" GIS" HE" NaWOM NaW EAST CAR OLIN IAN Thursday, Augu Seen SS ‘Chairless’ Entertainment ee | Languages Department i NG | Increases Regular Staff The Foreign Languages De- Labaume wil) teach French partment is adding four full-time, Dr. Mary Paschel of Wake } members, two of which are replace- | est, N. C., will be an asso, ments, to its present staff of seven | fessor of French and and two graduate assistants when | yeceived the B. 1A. degree ; the Fall Quarter of the 1962-1963 | Forest College and the } academic year begins in Septem- | . degrees from t} ber, announces Professor James, Car L. Fleming, ector. work st e jalize< +o the staff in- | Her exper instructor in 1, and the : Aes ag Ne Tor w facu members > Mr, Holmes Wilhelm of East eo ‘ : 0 from Guilford College and a floor—students spread blankets, pulled off their shoes and settled down to an t rts de 2 n e versatile Johnny Nash and Pat Dorn Orchestra last Wednesday was sponsored by the summer schoo! SGA entertainment series. College ansas, rovern- : a6? § assistant pro- to be a. bility apprecate ir iety. If there the context of the E : j iting | the < ce from t reeks “Tha i that works|be an assisiant professor pose of the institution. Ac $ n ice from the Greek Th t apeneice ies bis for fa is tl most perfect government ntrary to the over-all good, these man an and admini ativ t S, under which a wrong to the hum-} ‘€2¢ should encourage al] of is an affront to all. our ge students to take your college has a bad st stand against it. D. degrees 4 government, those of you| I believe our college students the University of Havana, Cuba. | school the purposes of an) \ want to make it better should | should seriously take on the politi- | Fror ‘ he was President | very poo : either les 5 cai fight the moral fight, and the of a] School of Teachers| ference ag ocratie PY jolg adage that the “tyranny of |economic and by so doing help | iy 2 Cl . Cuba, and from half its size gain oe i =a & Hanes ae Bae a - 16 a Minister its sperts to change those} he bad is made possible by the|©r¢ that , weak 01 5-1 as Minister its sperts | > of the good.” AS So f 1 Havana, Cuba. ; Seton ; e n the ited entire process I have seen many types of stu- in the Uni nt government. It is not my lone. , yaar of | States, Dr. Murad for eleven years sponsibili to recommend any | 1 F all, good sound | was President e University of e structure. There is some virtue ! past year he atement by General Von| that he will x yn is & E eacher of French an dSpani 1at the “form of gov-|" = aoe : : : Y Branc unimportant; the spirit} fool: and is a Slave. ! America has. al- lege Sov 1s 4 e. y ur z Hs SUS eho ,en divided into three types y man and to avoid being bigots, Mademoisel Ca i ees ry slaves stead. tice 4 atin if Paris ‘jtizens. Our colleges, in like Sikes eS Insteac take up} native aris, : : wwe the three groups challenge. nt the good|her baccalaureate degree fron -he minimum. citizen, the average aes | aS Haut Enseignement Com-|snou : : ae all ou ‘ ayes our s ‘les citizen, and the maximum citizen.}*" "77 : Cue aoe Je Filles, | ourselves but our chil-| Paris, and from EC, she received js Self gove RO eee is generally a chronic griper their children, and one|the M. A. degree is business edu- citizenry an tell t ‘ s first ducks all responsibility | } in put | of irst steps in this direction | ion. For two years, 1960-1962, |m undertaking 4 nust be meaning- | The average a nice fellow : ; : : z z eee s meke your student self gov-| she was recipi a graduate | scl ful, respected and must ess generally an unthinking voter and ke your student self gov ne wa ecipient of a graduate | s< fective and sincere on all our} 2 : : wh AL \ oates!ly get 2 5 1 : ae . vernment meaningful, genuine. ef-| “cllowship and was a special] teach- ight connectic dignity. Faculties an¢ ene who will participate in any | *‘ picnil Dee eft enuine. ef-| ‘cllowship and was a special] teac J right connectic trative staffs working ¥ he | cause only when he sees that it | 7 § must recogniz will probably succeed. The last, ae ony =e ' , Miss givin iliti j the maximum citizen, is in the group that made America possible. These are the people who are willing to struggle, to risk their status and sometimes their very lives, for that which is good and over-all good; right. We need more maximum number of stu-| citizens on our campuses to be- framewor. k of|come involved in our student gov- that made,ernment. We need leaders with ence of the col-| courage who are able to stand up and free themselves from the on where|vceices of the vociferous. We need jeaders who do not ery or gripe y pick up their marbles and go ne at each rebuff, leaders who responsibility of Y can struggle for that which is ent to create a ate where- | good, leaders who have the ability the students will want to do|to teach people as if they te ught) ngs on their ov x t col-| them, not leade who have the | ge, their state and their humility to give credit to others. se of you \ ] This is not too ambitious a responsibility to the ect for we have many such ] SERVED 24 HOURS Air Conditioned ir Conditione “Your pilot is Captain Smith- I'm your stewardess, Miss Kong.” Corner W. Sth & Dickinson 21 GREAT TOBAGCOS MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES ' AGED MILD, BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY