The East Carolinian, March 14, 1969


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





the east Carolinian
Let us dare to readjhink , speak and write
Vol. 4, No. 1 Lfij jx
The East Carolinian
Friday, March 14, 1969
Black students demand ten immediate
policy reforms of EC administration
1K
"V
see page 3
ated
2t
K

avk Black StudSHS Praised For Strong Stan,
sn.kvh s.i(xiiim ' a
psiaieg ojy sasnduie) urj jiujoq x aj!03!p'J -
"In alien able rights never meant Negroes Kl
9
a AVIS

s
-v
? ? ? '? N
N IW
2?
-si
3
c :

I Um i
i ?
c r
I '? (J ?, REvOLT
3

rv
cr
0
3 Negro Leadei
Speak at Sessioi
On Voter Actio
The Reconstruvtio,
,v freedfmi's false pro),
sjsajojj sndiuir)
Black Political Power In America
?LACK AMERICA
Quinn named Southern Conference
Basketball Coach of the Year
see page 2
Van Cliburn appears in concert
tonight in Wright Auditorium
see page 4
Miss Carolyn Fuighum to assume
duties as dean of women
see page 2
News analyst Howard K. Smith
to speak here Monday evening
e e page





Page 2
The East Carolinian
Friday, March 14,1969
4

?.?
t
K
missvnroiyn fuighum Renaissance Quartet to pefomi Thursday
East Carolina appoints Dean of ECU Music building
Women to succeed Ruth White
Carolyn Fulghum has benn
named Dean of Women at ECU.
She will succeed Dean Ruth
White, who will retire in July
after 19 years in the post.
An East Carolina graduate,
Miss Fulghum returned to ECU
in September, 1962, as an
educational counselor on the
Dean of Womem's staff She
became assistant dean of women
in July, 1966.
According to Dean White,
Miss Fulghum is "very well
qualified for the position"
because of her educational
background and her experience.
Prior to her tenure at ECU, Miss
Fulghum taught for three years
at Rosewood High School in
Wayne County. She holds BS
and MA degrees from ECU.
"I accept the appointment as
the greatest challenge of my
life the new dean said. "My
association with Miss White as
her assistant has made me deeply
aware of both responsibilities
and opportunities inherent in
this position.
"It is my earnest desire to
achieve such relationships with
other areas of the
administration, the faculty and
the student body as will
promote the best present and
future interest of our
university
Miss Fulghum is a member of
the National Association of
Women's Deans and Counselors,
the N.C. Association of Women's
Deans and Counselors, the N.C.
Personnel and Guidance
Association and the N.C. State
Employees Association. She was
the 1966-67 president of the
Greenville Business and
Professional Women's Club.
Two programs of early music
will be presented on March 16
and March 20. The first of these
will be a concert of Medieval
Sacred music given by ECU's
Collegium Musicum. The
program will be on Sunday,
March 16, at 3:15 p.m. in the
music building. Featured will be
works for boys' choir,
instruments, and ensembles
In addition to music wirtten
by such composers as Byrd,
Gibbons, Issaac, and Dearing.
the complete music for a French
Medieval Mass, the Machuat, will
be performed.
The pieces will be played on
copies of the original Medieval
and Renaissance instruments
such as recorders, krumhorns,
and kordholts. Participating will
be the instrumental ensemble
under the directon of John
Tyson, and the madrigal
ensemble under Carlton King.
The second concert,
sponsored by the SGA and the
School of Music, will be a
program by the Renaissance
Quartet. The concert will be the
first of the 1969 Chamber Music
Festival series, and will be
presented Thursday, March 20,
in Wright Building at 8:15 p.m.
The Renaissance Quartet is
composed of Raymond Lynch,
Barbara Mueser, Robert White,
and Morris Newman.
by George Weigand
Lutenist Raymond Lynch
took up the lute after attaining
considerable skill on the guitar.
He studied guitar under Eduardo
Saing de la Maya at Barcelona,
Spain. Lynch is credited with
several compositions; one of
which, "Refractions for
Orchestra was premiered by
the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.
Robert White has also worked
with the Pro Musica as a tenor
and in the NBC TV opera "Boris
Godovnov and in the
premieres of Menotti
"Labyrinth and Hindemith's
"Long Christmas Dinner
Morris Newman has workec
with many performing group:
and has long displayed hi:
Barbara Mueser is the
Quartet's viola de gambist. She is
the former vice president of the
Bamba Society of America, and
has performed with the New
York Pro Musica.
virtuosity on recorder
krummhorn, bassoon, anc
shawm.
Included in the repertoire ol
the ensemble is a wealth ol
music from England, France
Spain, Italy, and Flanders frorr
the period known as the
"Golden Age" of thest
countries. Any exp ure to the
music of this period will make
this claim understandable.
It is due to the efforts of such
groups as the Renaissance
Quartet, that the relatively
forgotten and, until recently,
unexplored field of early music
is gaining a new and well
deserved popularity.
Quinn named basketball
Coach of the Year
by Carl Tyer
defensive action. Then there was
Earl Thompson's great defensive
game against George Washington
in the tournament, holding Bob
Talent to his lowest point total.
This feat brought on a
conversation between Thompson
and representatives of the Los
Angeles Lakers of the NBA.
Coach Tom Quinn nosed out
Davidson Coach Lefty Driesell,
25 20, for Southern Conference
Basketball Coach of the Year,
int the balloting last Monday.
The main thing that brought the
honor to Quinn was the
"mystery team" from East
Carolina that finished second in
the Conference, when they were
predicted to finish sixth.
"I feel it is a real honor that
the press would elect me as
Coach of the Year Quinn
stated. "The players are
responsible, along with Coach
Stewart, who helped me so
much during the year
Quinn called his group a
"mystery team" because no one
player remained a star during the
year. One week it would op Tom
Miller and his outside jting,
or one week it would be Jim
Modlin, Jim Gregory, or Richard
Keir for their rebounding or
"They did surprise me in
some instances against some of
the teams we played Quinn
stated. "They are a very
compatible group, and a good
group to work with
"We started jelling in theJ
Classic. Those three straight
games did us a lot of good. We
finally settled on our sorting
pivot man, and Gregory started
rebounding better
A great deal has been said
about Coach Quinn and his
rebuilding job in East Carolina
basketball. Advancing from sixth
to second place in the
conference, and for the first
time making it past the first
round of the conference
tournament is certainly a
product of Quinn's rebuilding
job. Then to top it all off, the
Pirates came back from a 13
point deficit to down George
Washington in the semi finals
and meet the mighty Davidson
Wildcats in the final;
After all this, what is left?
After all he has accomplished,
Quinn is now looking to next
year, and the prospects of doing
better.
'I would be very
disappointed if I felt this were as
far as we could go, and if it
were, I would leave right now
Quinn commented. "We have
more recruiting to do, and two
spots to fill for next year's
team
Other advancements must be
made besides player spots to fill.
East Carolina is the only team in
the conference that does not
have three basketball coaches.
With the loss of Richard Keir
and Earl Thompson, Quinn has a
hard job ahead of hirri to fill
their vacancies. The present
freshmen team will supply
candidates for the spots, along
with a junior college transfer, if
he were "starter material only
Quinn added.
Freshmen players Jim Fairley
and Ron LePors could fill Keir's
spot, with Fairley getting the
nod if he improves his strength.
Mike Dunn is also being
considered but he needs to
mature in his playing and not be
as sporadic. "I will be looking
them over in the fall Quinn
added, "since we need more
depth for next year's team





ay, March 14,1969
Friday. March 14, 1969
The East Carolinian
Page 3
hite has also worked
i Musica as a tenot,
BC TV opera "Boris
and in the
of Menotti
and Hindemith'j
mas Dinner
wman has worker
performing group:
?ng displayed hi:
Black students demand campus reforms
on recorder
i, bassoon, anc
n the repertoire ol
e is a wealth ol
England, France
and Flanders frorr
known as the
ge" of these
ly exp ;jure to the
period will make
lerstandable.
the efforts of such
the Renaissance
at the relatively
d, until recently,
eld of early music
i new and well
ilarity.
d leave right now
riented. "We have
ng to do, and two
I for next year's
ancements must be
player spots to fill.
is the only team in
ce that does not
ketball coaches.
ss of Richard Keir
npson, Quinn has a
ad of hirn to fill
ies. The present
jam will supply
r the spots, along
college transfer, if
ter material only
slayers Jim Fairley
rs could fill Keir's
airley getting the
'roves his strength.
t is also being
ut he needs to
playing and not be
I will be looking
the fall Quinn
we need more
year's team
by WHITNEY HADDEN
Black students here await
Administration response to a list
of 10 reforms they have
demanded.
The demands were presented
to University President Leo
Jenkins on March 3 by a
committee claiming to represent
the more than one hundred
black students on campus.
In a letter of explanation
accompanying their petition, the
black students called the
demands "reasonable and totally
fulfillable
The letter further states that
although they will take "every
opportunity for discussion and
planning they will "undertake
any and every action necessary "
to obtain their reforms.
Johnny Williams, Roosevelt
Morton, Thomas Enoch, Audrey
Daniels, Daisy Albritton, Joe
Taylor, and Bill Owens formed
the committee which presented
Jenkins with the demands.
Williams, president of
SOULS, commented that the
demands were far less sweeping
than many students would like
to have seen.
In order to .eserve unity,
the radical students claim to
have tempered demands
rather than risk alienating the
more moderate. "I consider
myself moderate claimed
Williams, "but I feel that
moderates are in the minority on
campus
Bill Owens, a sophomore,
agreed that the mood of the
majority of black students was
"militant and that all are
determined to see these demands
met.
He explained further that
previous attempts at reform have
been made, but have achieved
only small success.
In the Winter Quarter of
1967-68, the black students
presented a list of grievances.
The SG A set up a
Race Relations Board that
produced, according to
Owensno obser ole response"
and was "of no value as a
communicative instrument
Apart from these actions, a
number of individual complaints
and appeals have been made to
We, the Black Students of
East Carolina University,
therefore insist that immediate
positive actions be taken upon
all of the following demands:
Black Instructors:
Black instructors in
proportion to black students on
campus in the same ratio as
white instructors to white
students on campus.
Black instructors to teach
courses in all departments.
Black Studies Program With
Emphasis on Humanities:
Black instructors to teach
hlack courses.
White instructors may teach
purely African courses, but
black instructors will teach these
courses also.
Black students on the
committee to form the black
studies program.
More Financial Aid for Black
Students:
Rearrangement of the
financial budget to fit black
students. The present program is
designed for white students
whose families are better able to
supplement their educational
expenses.
Recruitment of More Black
Students:
A special program set up so
that black students will recruit
black students under the same
conditions as the present
recruitment program for white
students.
Recruitment of More Black
Athletes.
Discontinuation of all Negative
Racial Practices on Campus:
Ban "Dixie" immediately.
Removal of Confederate flags
on state-owned buildings (except
for private rooms).
Equal application of housing
rules according to printed
University codes.
Penalty for instructors for
overt racial discrimination in
classrooms.
Improvements in
Maintenance Department:
Staff privileges for the
maintenance workers.
At least three black workers
in supervisory position with
higher wages.
Increased pay for
maintenance workers.
Collective bargaining board
set up so that the maintenance
workers may state their
grievances.
Black Speakers on Campus.
Legalized Participation in Civil
Rights Demonstrations:
F reedom from suspension
even if student demonstrations
result in jail sentences.
Financing of Black Students to
Attend Conferences
Representing East Carolina
University by the
rifwpmment Association
professors and administrators.
When asked about the
influence on ECU black students
from the black student
movement and recent protests at
Duke and at other universities,
Owens repliedWe have done a
great deal of research into black
studies programs, and other
racial reforms at many
campuses. We have talked with
students and followed the
movement closely.
"But as to our demands, we
are independent and very
serious; this is not the result of
any T.V. psychosis and we are
not seeking confrontation for its
own sake. Most of these
demands have been presented to
this campus before. These
grievances are long standing and
we are tired of waiting for action
to be taken on them
The purpose of the demands
has been stated as threefold: "1)
to stimulate a better racial
atmosphere on campus; 2) to
change existing University
policies which, because of rapid
changes in the social and
educational requirements of
society, are now unfair,
obsolete, and short sighted; and
3) to state positive
improvements that must be
made for the black students at
East Carolina University
Foremost among the
demands are the hiring of black
professors, the establishment of
a "black studies program more
financial aid for black students
and improvements in the
recruitment of black students to
East Carolina, improvements in
the Maintenance Department,
and the discontinuation of all
"negative racial practices" on
campus.
The blacx students seem to
be united in their demands and
in their determination to see
them accepted.
One student standing in the
president's office as the demands
were presented and explained,
stated that Jenkins was calm and
polite with the committee, and
that he seemed very interested in
the list of demands. No official
Administration statement has
been made as yet.





"
Page 4
The East Carolinian
Friday, March 14, 1969
FINAL ATTRACTION-Van Cliburn will appear in concert at
8:15 on March 14. He will be the final attraction of the 68 69
artist series.
Cliburn concert tonight
The winner of the famed
Tchaikowsky Music Festival in
Moscow, Van Cliburn, will
appear in concert at 8:15 p.m
Friday, March 14, the final
attraction of the 1968- 69
Artists Series.
Cliburn, a native of
Shreveport, La learned to read
music long before he learned to
read words.
He first played in public at
the age of four at Shreveport's
Dodd College. At twelve he was
the winner of a state-wide young
pianist's competition, playing
Tchaikowsky's B flat Minor
Concerto with the Houston
Symphony.
Debut
The same year he made his
Carnegie Hall debut as winner of
the National Music Festival
Award.
Later in life other laurels
came his way: a Julhard School
Scholarship, the G.D Dealey
Award in Dallas, Texas, the
Kosciuszko Foundation Chopin
Award, a grant from the Olga
Sama"ju Foundation and, upon
grad lation from Julliard with
highest honors, he received the
Carl M. Reodei Memorial Award
and the Frank Damrosch
Scholarship.
said, "He is the real and brilliant
successor to Rachmaninoff
Harold Schonberg, critic of
the New York Times wrote,
"Cliburn stands revealed as the
pianist whose potentialities have
fused into a combination of
uncommon virtuosity and
musicianship
Public admission to the
concert will be by season ticket
only. There will be a 51 service
charge for student tickets.
Levintritt Award
One of his most important
victories came in 1954 when he
won the coveted Levintritt
Award, the most important
award obtainable in American
music for pianists.
Upon returning from the
Moscow competition, Cliburn
was accorded New York's first
ticker-tape parade for a
musician, congratulated by
President Eisenhower, given a
testimonial luncheon by the
mayor of New York and
elevated to the top in classical
music record sales.
Cultural Ambassador
When Cliburn returned to the
Soviet Union as a cultural
ambassador for the United
States State Department, the
great Russian musician Neuhaus
H
n p?re
ol
I'm - A Need Some Help
We need several young students,
male or female to do part time
or full time work. Apply in
person at the Pizza Hut of
Tenth Street.
by Robert L. Short
"The Parables of Peanuts
is filled with wonderful
guotes and is a real de
light to read from begin-
ning to end. I could not
possibly be more pleased
? Charles M. Schulz,
creator of Peanuts"
Coth, $4.95 ? Paper, $1.95
At all bookstores
? , "i an uuuKMOr
rpj Harper & Row
tail
Summer theatre continues
An "East Carolina University
Summer Theater Boosters'
Club" has been organized by
Greenville residents in an effort
to "guarantee the continuance
of the Summer Theatre in this
area
According to Summer
Theatre general manager and
associate producer James
Slaughter, 27 local residents
have become charter members,
installing Greenville physician
Ed Clement as president.
"Finest"
Dr. Clement said the
forthcoming Summer Theatre
season will be "the finest in its
history and described the
boosters' club as an organized
effort "to secure the Summer
Theatre as the continuing yearly
cultural highlight of this area
Schfidulp
Scheduled for production
during 'Summer Theatre '69"
are "The Pajama Game" (July
7-12), "The Pirates of Penzance"
(July 14-19), "Bye Bye Birdie"
(July 21-291, "Carousel" (Aug.
1-9), and "A Funny Thing
Happened en the Way to the
Forum" (Aug. 11-16).
Season tickets are now nn
sale at the Summei Theatre B"v
Office at ECU. Membership in
the Boosters' Club is open to all
interested theatre patrons.
TEACHERS
300 Vacancies Elem & H.S
PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY
VIRGINIA
Salary: $6700. $11,055.
On Campus March 24, 1969
Page '?
do you gtnrom here?
It'll take about three minutes to fill out and mail this
coupon. It might be the most important three minutes
of your life.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Training Officer, Personnel Department
Virginia National Bank, P.O. Box 600
Norfolk, Virginia 23501
I'd like to know about career opportunities at Virginia
National Bank. Please send your booklet.
Name
College
Address
City
State
Class
Zl
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
J
for r
?? ii ?? t
000 have
-
I
i
. (I t r
and n
i '
ext tl
. i n
a , ol
?! , fa il
; 0
ed by
; . US
'
Playti
(W
lo
Ou
Ins
yoi
I
the
Act
thai
f
Itfl
insi
is a
Try
Wh





lay, March 14, 1969
ACHtRS
cies Elem&H.S.
ILLIAM COUNTY
IRGINIA
6700. $11,055.
s March 24, 1969
P.iq
The I ast Carolinian
$251,000 East Carolina University award
for modern Development Evaluation Clinic
iract! U italin i moi e than
iqi n ded foi
new building
I arolina Uni ersity
?lopmenl I al lation Clinic
denl and busii i
,qei f- D Duncan
ncefj thai vork on the
and modei n one stoi
. i! begin within the
. . ? tleks.
(. (. i struction
. ol Greenville
:i , ?.? ility with a general
? ,t $171,509. rhe
h local ed oi
. ol .i 70 acre ti acl ol land
. ed by U S. Highway 43
the U S. 264 Bypass in
Lab
rding to Di Malene
ol the clinic, the
? ,? ol greal
value to El
North Carolina 'It will be lab
foi students in psychology,
social elfan g and
'and il
? -
hand: ? dren
thn ? ;tern North
Carolii
as established in
Novi mbei I964 rates
from formei I CU faculty
residi . nlding. Be
the presem limitations to
ation ol the clinic, Di Irons
there is a aiting Iis1 of
ovei 100 applicati i
Evaluation
Purpose ol tin; clinic is to
p i o v i d e d e v e I o p m e n t a I
11 u.it ion .1 nd
11 ea tmenl foi handicai i i
children in Eastern North
Carolina.
800 square-foot
ol du: new facility will be
imination and observation
ms, psychological testing
rooms, ' lassrooms, laboratories
and .1 k itchen.
Contracts
Othei contracts announced
t od a y include: K inston
Plumbing and Heating Company,
plumbing, S18.446.47 Bolton
An Conditioning Company of
Raleigh, heating and air
conditioning, $40,090; Watson
S ??????
f.
a ?
Playtex invents the first-day tampon
(We took the inside out
to show you how different it is.)
Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardboard
Inside: it's so extra absorbent it c en protects on
your first day. Your worst day!
In every lab test aeainst the old cardboard kind
the Playtex tampon was always more absorbeni
Actually 45$ more absorbent on the average
than the leading regular tampon.
Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you.
It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect ever)
inside inch of you. So the chance of a mishap
is almost zero! ? , ;? ?
? :vfast; ,? ? li playtex
why live in the past' r x .
tamjxms
Electrical Construe'
Company of Wilson, electrical,
$21,595. A reserve of S21,000
will pu rch a se m o ; able
equipmenl foi the facility.
Architects for the building an;
Lyles, Bissette, Carlisle
Wolff of Raleigh.
Funds for the new clinic were
made available by grants from
the N.C. Medical Care
Commission and the federal
government.
Construction, Duncan said, is
expected to be completed by
next January.
325
Friday, March 14, 1969
an i ii ? ?
BILL LU ? ?- ? lALI l, INL
presents
I ERTAII
)R YOUNG AMERIC
xclusively:
The Tarns Rev e
Classics IV
Tommy Roe
e South & The believers
Swingin' Medallions
Billy Joe Royal
Candymen
Movers
Sensational Epics
Tip
James Ganq
December's Children
and many others
Call Collect
Ric Cartey
Jack Martin
404 237-6317 or 233-3962
Or Write
P.O. Box 9687
Atlanta, Georgia, 3031J3
ttmyA
"Remember,
we re nonviolent,
so be careful of your
after shave
?;ild-eyed coeds can turn any peaceful demonstration into a
full-scale riot, so be careful how you use your Hai Karate After
Shave and Cologne. But just in case your hand slips, we include
instructions on self-defense in every package. (If you're a paci-
fist, maybe you'd better read the instructions twice.)
Hai Karate-be careful how you use it.
? ' zei & Co . Inc . N'A srk, N.Y





"M
Page 6
Tho East Carolinian
Friday, March 14
K
Applications are now being
taken tor the position of
Editor-in-Chief of the 1970
"Buccaneei Submit your
application to Dr. Tucker, room
201, Whichard building no later
than March 21.
Lost: Tan, grain clutch
billfold at the Coach & Four on
Friday, March 1. If found please
call 758-9712 and ask for Janet,
room 338. Many necessary
credentials were lost. Reward is
offered.
Applications for positions on
Women's Honor Council foi
spung quarter aie being taken in
the Student Government Office.
Women of junior status only
may apply. Deadline for
applications is March 18.
The University Party will
hold a working meeting Tuesday
at 8 p.m. in Wright to prepare
campaign materials for the
upcoming SGA elections. All
party members put on your
working britches and come help
the party1
Have you supported the
White Ball yet? Tickets are
available from Alpha Phi Omega
brothers and pledges, and will be
sold in the UU lobby March
17-21.
Gamma Beta Phi Society, a
national service fraternity, will
have a rush party at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, March 18 in room 206
of the Union. Any student with
a 2.5 academic average is eligible
for membership. Formed to
promote scholarship, the
fraternity helps acquire books
for the library and awards a
S1000 scholarship annually to
an incoming freshman.
Found: one pair pair of
prescription glasses left in a
Cheveolet station wagon on
March 5 when Carroll E. Collins
of Raleigh gave two hitch-hiking
EC students a ride from Wilson
to Farmville. Contact Caroll E.
Collins at his office in Williams
Hall, N.C. State University
(755-2851) or at his home, 1431
Nottingham Drive (787-3657).
Deadline for filing for the
SGA executive offices, marshal,
and women's judiciary is
Monday, March 17. Candidates
must file by 5 p.m. in the SGA
office, third floor of Union. The
mandatory meeting of all
candidates will be Monday,
March 17 at 6:30 p.m. in the
Library auditorium.
"The Policy Prospects of the
Nixon Administration" will be
Dr John P. ast's topic in a
speech to the Political Science
club on Wednesday, March 19 at
8 p.m. in room 201, Nursing
building.
PITT PLAZA
DAIRY BAR
2") Delicious Flavors
of Ire Cream
'i Delicious Banan-i
Walter Jones
1969
$310,000 grant to be used for
Flanagan renovation
Congressman Walter Jones
recently announced a $310,000
federal grant for the renovation
of Flanagan Building. It will be
for the use of the chemistry,
general science, and technical
education departments.
The grant is a supplement to
a $620,000 appropriation by the
1967 general assembly for the
improvement of Flanagan.
The three departments will
expand into the space used by
the physics, biology, and Home
Economics departments. The
School of Home Economics has
moved into its own building.
The physics and biology
departments will move into the
new science complex which will
soon be completed.
Dr. Jenkins termed the grant
as "vital to the University's plans
for future development of its
chemistry program
? 3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE
? 1-HOUR CLEANING
Hour Glass Cleaners
DRIVE-IN TURK SERVICE
1 t'Ir!cs St. Corner ?? i rtaidce
?Ti -v ).I ' vir-
NOW IN GREENVILLE
A New Audio Center Featuring
STEREO
Comp orients
New and Used
EXCLUSIVE NAMES SUCH AS KI H, MCINTOSH, KEN-
WOOD, DUAL, SCOTT, FISHER, BOZAK, AH, TANDBERG,
SONY, ALTEC, HOSE, REETILINEAR, CROWN
,ii
Works All Day, Plays All Night
After a hard day's dictating to your Sony 124 CS stereoj
Cassette Corder you get a rest. But your faithful Sony is
still on duty ? standing by to bring you your favorite selec-
tions at home, hotel room, plane, or car. And the beauty of
this new Sony cassette stereo system is that it fits into a
briefcase-size carrying case, external speakers and all.
Push button operation, pop-in and-out cassettes, and Sony-
matic Recording Control make the 124 CS simple and fun
to use. A regulated speed DC motor ensures constant tape
speed. There's never a power supply worry with the 124 CS
?use it on AC, car battery, four flashlight batteries, or Sony
rechargeable battery pack. Come in today, and let us show
you the one that plays all night. It's the playful one!
Only $179.50
SONY
Tha Taprway to Stereo
?
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH
3 LISTENING ROOMS TRADES CONSIDERED
SALES & SERVICE
Evaiis & 12th St. Daily 9 am-6 pm 752-3051
"O'Kaysions" at White Ball
The annual White Ball,
sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega
fraternity, will feature music by
the "O'Kaysions" of Wilson at
their semi-formal dance
Saturday, March 22, at 8 p.m. in
Wright Auditorium.
APO's traditional fund-raising
is now in its fifteenth year. The
money raised throuth sale of
tickets and "penny votes" for
White Ball Queen will be
donated to the Pitt County
Crippled Children's Association.
A display of photographs of
candidates for White Ball Queen
will be set up in the University
Union next week. Boxes will be
placed under each contestant's
picture, and voting will be
recorded by the number of
penny votes each candidate
accumulates. The girl who
gathers the most votes will be
crowned queen at the dance.
In the past, the ball has been
a formal affair held during
winter Quarter. This year's show
and dance will be a spring
semi formal.
Despite the change of date
from winter to spring, the
central purpose of the dance, to
raise fund: for crippled children,
remains unchanged.
Tickets are $4 per couple.
The brothers of Alpha Phi
Omega urge students to cast
penny votes for the queen and
attend the White Ball.
'elk Tyfer
it'shnp'ciiiny!
rs
PANT
DRESSING
A
"C
V
K
comes on strong
This is the season of
the wild new look in
pant dressing. Pants
may be flared, boxy,
harem, straight or
shiny. Anyway . . .
they go everywhere in
the wildest, way out
pants ever. Come in
and see our collection
of the new pant look
we think we have
just what you want.
priced from
5.99
v
m
nr
to
&IXi
14.99
m
a
sk about our
onvenient
lay-away plan.
in downtown Greenville.
penMonday,Thursday and
riday nights til 9p.m.
Page 'i
'The Res
yAide Picture
()nr of se
eastern pi em
Pitt Theatre.
Over six
viewed this f
viewer msi
today's yout
We live
neaily on
population
young peopl
meaning an
life. Adults
?fe
wu a i iii nci
Thi
thh
the
wo
too





if
' -
riday, March 14, 1969
ite Ball
votes each candidate
lates. The girl who
:he most votes will be
queen at the dance,
past, the ball has been
il affair held during
uarter. This year's show
ce will be a spring
lal.
B the change of date
inter to spring, the
urpose of the dance, to
i: for crippled children,
nchanged.
s are $4 pet couple,
irothers of Alpha Phi
irye students to cast
?tes for the queen and
3 White Ball.
(er
o
t
T
IT
SSING
on strong
s the season of
ild new look in
Jressmg. Pants
)e flared, boxy,
i, straight or
. Anyway . . .
o everywhere in
ildest, way out
ever. Come in
;e our collection
! new pant look
e think we have
'hat you want.
m
id fro
.99
to
.99
)out our
ent
y plan!
ville.
r and
.ni.
: ??!?
'The Restless Ones a Woild
Wide Picture's film release, made
one of several simultaneous
. astern premiers yesterday at the
Pitt Theatre.
Over six million people have
viewed this film which takes the
viewer inside the world of
today's youth and their parents.
We live in a nation where
neai Iy one half of the
population is under 25, and
young people are searching for
meaning and purpose in their
life. Adults find themselves a
The East Carolinian
Friday, March 14, 1969
the frustrating
part oi the
genet ation gap,
"The Restless Ones" presents
a refreshing approach to these
problems. It deals with the inner
struggles of patents and teens
caught in the pressures of the
present.
This motion picture has been
widely acclaimed by civic leaders
as a most effective and needed
tool to help curb the growing
problems in today's society.
t
e
e
$
Endorsement has been
received from the governors of
Montana, Wyoming, California,
Vermont, and former North
Carolina Governor Dan Moore.
"The Restless Ones' is the
story of a near-typical family
with the same problems that are
faced by nearly every American
home. It begins with a wild ride
down a busy street and a tangle
with the "long arm of the law
An unsuspecting parent
answers the phone to find that
his son is in jail, which initiates
the separation of the story's two
threads by the "generation gap
message
The film's basic message is
that parents can do something to
bridge the gulf between
themselves and their children.
The youth's solution to inside
pressures does not lie in riot,
rebellion, or freedom from
responsibility.
Johnny Crawford, who
played in the television series
"The Rifleman is cast as the
teenager whose parents are just
"too square to understand
Tickets for "The Restless
Ones" are on sale at the Pitt
Theatie box office.
East Carolina
to represent
United States
ECU will represent the
United States at the Deep South
Model United Nations in Miami,
Fia this weekend.
Topics of debate will include
the Middle-East crisis,
Portuguese territories, the
Korean legal questions, and
many other topics of importance
to today's world.
The delegation includes Bob
Adams, Danny Bland, Bill Hicks,
Jack Hart, and Reid Overcash.
jerry s
cafeteria
Corner of 8th and Evans
vlonday 11:30-2:00
Tuesday Saturday 11:30-2:00
4:30 8:00
Sunday 1:30-2.00
SALADS.MEAT, VEGETABLE'
AND DESERTS.
Join The ftfl Crowd
Pizza M
421 Greenville Blvd.
(264 By-Pass)
DINE INN or TAKE OUT
Call head For Faster Service
'elephone 756-9991
Looking For A Management
Career in:
? Supermarket Operations
? Personnel
? Real Estate
? Distribution
? Transportation
? Merchandising
The Kroger Co. may have just what
you're looking for?Kroger is the 4th
largest retailer in the world . . .
and still growing.
If your interests lie in any of the
fields listed above we would like to
meet you.
Our representative will visit your
campus March 20, 1969.
Make an appointment at your placement
office now for an interview with him.





Page 8
77f ??? Carolinian
Friday, March 14, iggg
t
I
JBTr'A m
Dream Girl'
A lo?
? ? Ilia st ii the
rheta Chi
. at F ast Carolina
University.
Nineteen
Lucy
Johnson, a sophomore at ECU,
? selected from a finalist court
of five as the new dream girl.
The selection ade and
announced by the members of
the ECU chapter at their annual
"Dream Girl" dance held
recently at the Gieenville
Country Club.
A graduate of Robersonville
High Schoo, h she was a
band majorette, Lucy is the
daughter of Mrs. Paul Johnson,
207 Halifax St a ston. At
ECU she is an elementary
education ma
A Ip h a
Beta
Alpha
Steve Huwell of Garysburg
has assumed duties as president
of East Carolina University's
chapter of Alpha Beta Alpha,
national undergraduate library
science fraternity.
Howell, a junior library
science major, is also presently
serving as recording secretary of
Phi Sigma Pi national honorary
fraternity and as floor manager
in ECU's freshman dormitory.
A 1966 graduate of Roanoke
Hapids high school, Howell is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy I.
Howell of Garysburg.
federal grant
Federal grants totaling
S52.500 for the Fast Carolina
University School of Education
include the largest program
development grant ever received
I) the university.
Dr. John T. Richards,
assistant professor of special
education at ECU, said the funds
include a program development
grant of S 18,600 for
development of a master's
degree program foi teachers of
children with learning
disabilities, and a 533,900 grant
for establishment of two
graduate fellowships and eight
senior and three junior
traineeships in teaching the
mentally retarded.
He said t h e p r o g r a m
development grant, one of four
a vyarded to universities
throughout the United States, is
the largest ever to ECU. Also,
the fellowship and traineeship
grant is the first of its kind ever
for the university.
Dr. Richards will direct the
two programs, which are to
begin next Soptembei f unds are
to be awarded by the- U S. Office
1 f Education in Ii me
Tenth Annual Springs Traveling Art
Show March 30.
The Tenth Animal Springs
Traveling Am Show is the
featured exhibh on the thud
flooi of Rawl Building through
March 30.
The mobile exhibition
tures the r.oiks of 35 artists
selected from 504 entries in the
1968 Springs Ait Contest.
The Spi ings Art Contest and
Show was initiated in 1947 by
Col. Elliot White Spnngs,
ent of the Springs
mization. Spi ings began the
series of exhibitions by hiring
nationally known artists and
illustrators to sketch the winners
of the "Miss Spnngmaid" beauty
contest.
In 1958 Springs sponsored a
contest and show for the
Lancaster County, S.C Art
Association. The contest was
expanded in 1959 to allow
entries from any artist who lived
in North or South Caiohna.
Spi ed in 1959, but the
show has continued and has
become ;he lartest and most
repri ? ? non-juried ai t
show in the Carolinas. The show
currently offers S1.5000 in prize
morn .
Prize Winners
The top prize winners of the
1968 Springs Art Contest are
featured in the exhibition.
First prize went to Nell
Lafaye, a native of Columbia,
S.C. and a member of the
faculty ol the University of
South Carolina. Fust prize
honors include the purchase of
hei work, "Ponte de Vecchio
an oil painting.
John T. Acoin, a native of
Patterson, N.J. who teaches
sculpture in the School of
Architecture ai Clemson
University, won second prize
h his sculpture Wai ioi 11
A po I y met portrait,
"Anniversary" by Bobbee Snidei
Linville, captured thud prize
Fouith prize was awarded to
J. Baidin, a consistent prize
winnei in regional and national
art competition who won fust
prize in tht 1961, 1962, and
1963 Spgs shows. Bardin's
entry is - i oil painting, "Sunset
Dunes
The show includes a
lithograph, 'Synthesis by J.
Howard Jones, a graduate of
East Carolina University who
now resides in Pembroke.
First Prize?(Ponte de Vecchio) by
Nell Lafaye
Happy
Birthday
Chuek!
M
Second Prize-?(Warriorll) by John
T. Acorn
Putting w first, keeps us first.
If Chevrolet cant haul it,
maybe you'd better leave it.
Umdir Sev??Iet's hood our truck line. Chevrolet dealer's -md get a
you'U find the biggest We have the right connec- ldyound
standard V8 m its field-327 ions for your trailering too. And put it in a Chevrolet
cubic inches of it. Or, you can Like body frame frailer ???
order all the way up to our hitches and trailer wiring ?3TvWTT7
.J90-hp 427-cubic-inch VH. harnesses. muAW
An(LiLa11 hJlu jjj S- So (lrJfi(,own t( your Sports-Recreation Dept.






iday, March 14, iggg
frgjl?i????????i. 7fte fast Carolinian
National Endowment Arts Grant
East Carolina University is provide a Chamber Mus.c 3xpected to enrich the
? f three colleges in North Festival on Mirrh 10.01 Tk? ? .
Friday, March 14, 1969
East Carolina University is
one of three colleges in North
Carolina to receive from the
National Endowment for the
Arts an audience development
project matching grant for 1969.
Local project director,
Rudolph Alexander, announced
today that the maximum grant
of $1000 had been matched by
the Student Government
Association of the University to
provide a Chamber Music
Festival on IVhrch 19-21. The
grant and matching funds will
make it possible to have two
outstanding chamber ensembles,
THE FESTIVAL WINDS and
THE R EN AISSANCE
QUARTET on campus for
master classes, lectures, and
concerts during the Festival.
Enrich
An audience development
program at a university "is
torn Coupe
r trailering
HAVE
SOME-
THING
TO
SELL?
v ADVERTISE
IT
IN THE
EAST
CAROLINIAN
FOR ASSISTANCE CONTACT:
DON BENSON: BUSINESS MGR.
RON NICHOLS: ADVERTISING MGR.
OFFICE 201 B WRIGHT BLDG.
752 5716
expected to enrich the campu;
:oncei t offerings by one or mori
additional programs or short
residences by urtists Alexander
said. The Association of College
and University Concert Managers
has worked with the National
Endowment for the Arts for the
past two years on this project,
and only those colleges and
universities that have
demonstrated major efforts on
their own to up-grade their
concert series over the last five
years have been considered for
grants.
Delighted
Alexander saidThe Artists
Series Committee and Student
Government Association of East
Carolina University are delighted
to receive the grant because it
represents, national recognition
of the excellence of our concert
series and is another indication
of the scope of the University's
services
Lectures
The Chamber Music Festival
Program Director, Dr. W.
Edmund Durham announced
that the Festival opens with an
8:15 p.m. concert by The
Festival Winds, Wednesday in
Wright Auditorium. On
Thursday morning master classes
and lectures will be conducted
by the ensemble in the School of
Music Building.
The Renaissance Quartet will
present a concert on Thursday
evening at 8:15 p.m. in Wright
Auditorium, and they complete
the Festival's activities with
master classes on Friday
morning in the School of Music.
Both concerts are open to the
public free of charge.
How to Wrecognize a Wreal
Wrangl
I
You hove to look for the "W"
because it's silent
Most Wranglerjeans have
the "W" stitched on in
plain sight, but other kinds
of Wranglers are a little
more modest.They're made
just as well and they fit just
as well, but the "W" is
tucked away on a tag or
label. You'll find it's worth
looking for.
These sportback slacks, $7.00.
And the jeans $5.50. Both per
manently pressed and creased.
All incarefree Fortrelpolyester
and cotton. Shirts from $4.00 to
$5.00.
WranglerMeans
and Sportswear
in Celanese Fortrel.
WHITE STORES H.c.
i?tiull
Lecture series presents
Howard K. Smith
Howard K. Smith,
internationally known television
commentator and author will
speak here Monday, March 17,
at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium
as a feature of the Lecture
Series.
The topic of Smith's address
will be "The Changing
Challenges Facing America
Smith has probably received
more journalistic awards than
any other American newsman.
These awards include many
Overseas Press Club Annual
awards, including four
consecutive awards for "best
reporting from abroad and the
1967 OPC Award for "best TV
interpretation of foreign
affairs for his program on
Vietnam, "One Man's Opinion
his own wounded soldier son,
entitled, "A Father, A Son and
War
Smith is currently seen and
heard regularly over ABC-TV
but is limiting his television
appearances to complete a book
on American politics. His other
books include: "Last Train from
Berlin "The State of Europe
and a new book, "Washington,
D.C published by Random
House in 1967.
During most of his years with
CBS, Smith served as chief
European correspondent until he
returned to the U.S. to take over
assignments as moderator,
commentator or reporter on
most of the major CBS News
efforts, including "CBS
Reports "Face the Nation
two D Commentator Awards;
the Sigma Delta Chi award for
news writing; an Emmy Award
for writing "CBS Reports: The
Population Explosion
Since joining ABC News in
December, 1961, Smith became
the only working newsman ever
to win the Paul White Award,
the only commentator to win
the DuPont Award twice and
was nominated for an Emmy for
"Howard K. Smith: News and
Comment his ABC-TV
Program that ran for 17 months.
For more than a year Smith was
the anchorman for ABC's
program, "SCOPE a regular
weekly review of the Vietnam
war.
During the summer of 1966
Smith went to Vietnam to be
presented in an interview with
"Eyewitness to History" and
"The Great Challenge and
narrated numerous news
specials. In 1957 he became CBS
News Washington correspondent
and in 1961, was appointed
chief correspondent and
manager for the Washington
Bureau.
Smith, a native of Ferriday,
Louisiana, was graduated from
Tulane University. He went to
Germany to study briefly at
Heidelberg University, beginning
what was later to become an
intensive study of Nazism. He
won a Rhodes Scholarship and
studied at Oxford until the
outbreak of World War II.
Public tickets for the lecturo
can be obtained at Central
Ticket office for $2. Student
tickets are free.
PIZZA CHEF
NOW
Home and Dorm Delivery Service
Dial 752-6656
4 p.m. til Closing MonSat.
1 p.m. til Closing: Sun.
50c Charge for Delivery
Guitar lessons taught once a
week price $2.00 per lesson. For
(additional information call
Mike Yates at 758-1239.
TYPING SERVICE
Call 756 0846





I Friday, March 14.
Page 10
The East Carolinun
Friday, IVlarch 14, lg
K
Coach Carson views good prospects Lacrosse club begins
for school's outdoor track season fourth season
"Out indoor season was a
success in that we advanced in
the confei ence, and our
freshmen proved their ability on
the track commented Coach
Bill Carson on East Carolina's
second place finish in the
Southern Conference Indoor
Track finals held at William and
Mary, March 1.
William and Mary ran away
ith the meet, with a total of
114 points, while ECU was next
with 42.
The Pirates broke one record
when Paige Davis finished the
440 with a new conference mark
of 50.3 seconds. The old record
was 51.8.
Other ECU men to place were
Ken Voss, picking up eight
points with a third in the mile
run, a second in the two mile,
and running a leg in the two mile
relay, which finished second.
James Kidd took a second in
the open 880, with a time of
1:56.3, and Jim Cargill placed
second in the triple jump, and a
second in the high hurdles.
Carson now look to the
outdoor season, which open
March 15th for East Carolina
when Baptist College visits.
Carson feels the outdoor
season will be a good one for his
team, but knows this year's team
will lack strength in the field
events.
"We lost a javelin prospect
,mi! a long jumper Carson
stated.
This year's team has six
returning lettermen, but with a
loss of the field men, dual meet
competition appears to be a
major setback foi victories,
especially in conference
competition.
Four lettermen were lost in
field events, with Bill Frisbey,
Dennis Moody, Al Peeples and
Bucs take the initial
On Thursday, the Bucs won
three of the four events, setting
records in all three with two of
them being set twice.
Griffin started the meet off
with a bang as he erased the
mark set last year by West
Virginia's Louis Garcia in the
500-yard freestyle in the prelims
and again in the finals. After
erasing Garcia's mark of 5:12.51
with a 5:07.14 clocking in the
prelims, he then shattered his
own record with a fast 5:01.75.
The next event again saw the
record fall twice as Sultan did it
in 2:06.28, breaking the old
mark set by West Virginia's
Clifton Hutchinson last year in
2:07.34. Then in the finals,
Sultan covered the distance in
2:05.59 to give the Bucs their
second school mark in as many
tries.
VMI's George Costigan, who
was top seeded in the 50-yard
freestyle, won his specialty as
expected with a fine time of
:22.40. Steve Weissman nipped
second seeded Robert Kennedy
of W&M to finish second with a
time of : 22.71. Kennedy
finished third with :22.73.
The Aqua Buc's 400-yard
medley relay team won in
convincing fashion as Andy
Downey, Larry Allman, Greg
Hanes, and John Sultan swept to
a new record of 3:46.59. The
old mark of 3:47.23 was set by
the Bucs last year.
The highlight of the first
day's action was the
disqualification of the Davidson
and VMI teams in the relay
event as the electronic judging
machine made its presence felt.
Davidson and VMI misfired on
their exchange of swimmers to
cause the disqualification.
Six records fall
On Friday, the Bucs set four
more school marks along with
two conference records to
continue the slaughter.
William and Mary's George
Collins won the 200-yard
butterfly, getting into the act by
breaking the record twice. The
old mark of 2:05.7 was shared
by Collins and EC's Dave
Hamilton since 1966, but the
Indian took the record for
himself. After doing the 200
yards in 2:05.56, he came back
with a superb time of 2:03.88.
In the 200-yard freestyle, the
Bucs saw the record broken
several times in an unusual
sequence. First, team co-captain
Bob Moynihan broke the mark
set by VMI's Ed Rimm in 1964
of 1:52.9 with a time of 1:52.42
in the first prelirr inary.
fid mm ate Gary Frederick
clipped the old mark with
1 52.57, but just inr,sed beating
Moynihan. Griffin then removed
ill doubt by going the distance
in 1:49.80 in the final
preliminary heat before winning
the event with a time cf
1:50.11.
The 100 yard breaststioke
saw something similar as Steve
Weissman broke the old standard
of 1:04.59 set last year by-
Clifton Hutchinson with a mark
of 1:04.19. James Wilder of VMI
reset the mark with a time of
1:02.72 in a preliminary heat,
but Weissman nosed out Wilder
to win the event in 1:03.10.
Andy Downey took the
100-yard backstroke in :58.25
for the only event that went by
without some semblance of a
record.
Sultan came back to win the
400 yard individual medley,
setting the record twice while
doing it. After breaking his old
mark of 4:42.17 with a time of
4 40.27 in the prelims, he came
roaring back to take the finals
with d clocking of 438 84.
Lee Mauney not returning.
Carson does have a good crop
of freshmen to look to, along
with a junior college transfer,
Bruce Rafferty.
Out of 28 men on the team,
17 are fresh, while three are
seniors.
Ken Voss, and Don Jayroe
are expected to have good
seasons this year in the distance
events. Along with Kidd in the
half mile are Lanny Davis in the
sprints, James Cargill in the
hurdles, and Ty Roork in the
high jump.
"With such young men on the
team, we hope to advance in the
future, and continue to advance
in recruiting this year Carson
fit icily stated.
After Baptist College, the
i e a m competes in t h e
rws-Pi'xl mont Relays March
32, then in the Florida Relays
March 20. They then host
Colgate April 2 and the State
Hecord Relays April 5.
Three away from home meets
i,re then scheduled with the
Citrdel April 8. Florida State
University April 12, N.C. State
University April 19, and Virginia
Tech April 22. The last three
events are aloo away, with the
Carolina Relays April 26, N.C.
State University Meet Hray 2-3,
and the Southern Corference
meet May 8-9.
The Lacrosse Club will begin
its fourth season in Match. The
Club is not officially recognized
as a team, even though it draws
its membership from East
Carolina and its competition
from other schools.
The 24 members of the Club
shaie all the expenses of its
operation, according to Coach
Bill Dickens. The boys pay for
their own equipment, travel, and
othei expenses.
It is hoped that within the
next several years the Lacrosse
Club will be able to join the
Athletic Department as a team,
said Dickens.
Lacrosse, a game invented by
the American Indians, is played
on a field 110 yards long and 60
yards wide with a net like goal
15 yards from each end. Each
player is equipped with a
"crosse a stick somewhat
resembling a shepherd's staff
that has webbing in the hook.
The object of the game is to
use this crosse to throw a hard
rubber ball into the opponent's
net. and the swinging crosses
make the game rough indeed.
The field and goal are like
those used in hockey, the
strategy is like that of
basketball, and the time limit
and physical contact is like that
of football.
This year's Lacrosse Club is
composed of 24 members. They
are Kirk Voorhees, Gary
McCullough, Jim Frank, Rob
Williams, Bill Mosier, and Pete
Katburg.
Also on the Club are Boh
Bassett, Richard Cassisi, Randy
Anderson, Don Pierce, Don
Wheeler, and Paul Weathersbee
Other members are Danny
Wilmer, Mike McGuirk, Jeff
Lowe, David Haye, David Loid,
Leroy Nichols, Neal Kulp, Ron
Cundiff, Tom Edrington, Eric
Orrell, Paul Monroe, and Jim
Merryrnan.
The Club's seven game
schedule includes the Univeisity
of Pennsylvania, here, Match 13;
Oberlin College, here, April 2;
George Washington in
Washington, D.C April 12; and
Roanoke College in Roanoke,
Va April 19.
Other matches are to played
against Duke University ir
Durham, April 22; and against
William and Mary twice, here
April 26, and in Wilhamsburg,
Va May 10.
Last year the Club had a 4 5
record. This year's squad should
finish with an even better
record, Dickens said.
EC opens golf season
Grappleis today with Campbell
East Carolina's grapplers
placed second in the Southern
Conference Wrestling
tournament held at William and
Mary this past week-end. William
and Mary took first place with
87 points while ECU had 83.
Tim Ellenberger, of East
Carolina, retained his 1968 title
in the 130 pound class.
The Indians did not sew up
the title until Scott Cum
defeated Cliff Bernard of ECU in
the 177 pound class in an
overtime with a 3-1
mark. East Carolina members
who placed are:
123 pounds: John Wood,
decision, Tom Ellenberger,
(ECU), 12-2.
130 pounds: Tim Ellenberger
(ECU), decision, Dean
Cromartie, (Davidson), 13 0.
137 pounds: Dave Greenberg,
(GW), decision, Robert Gorbo,
(ECU), 11-10.
145 pounds: Dan Bastain,
(ECU), decision, Ollie Carr iherf,
(WM&M),6-2.
152 pounds: Tom Bull (C),
decision, John Carroll, (ECU),
12 1.
177 pounds: Scott Curzi,
(WM&M), decision Cliff Bernard,
(ECU), 3 1.
East Carolina opens its Golf
schedule today with a match
with Campbell at the Brook
Valley Country Club here in
Greenville.
This year's team is expected
to be one of the best in the
school's history, with seven
returning lettermen. Last year,
the team finished second in the
conference, posting a 14 2
record. Coach John Welborn is
again coaching the team, serving
his second season as golf coach.
Before coming to ECU,
Welborn was the assistant
wrestling coach at Appalachian
and was director of athletics at
Alexandria Central High School,
Alexandria Bay, N.Y.
13 members
The team is made up of 13
members, seven of them
lettermen.
The lettermen are Wally
Howard, a junior from
Greenville, and a fine fifth and
sixth man on last year's team.
Mike O'Brian, a junior from
Greensboro, who was first man
for Guilford High School, and is
considered one of the finest
players to ever attend ECU.
Mike Schlueter, also rom
Greensboro, is a senior who has
led the team for the past two
years. In the past, he has played
the opponent's best man and has
done very well.
Joe Tyson, a junior from
Durham, and his twin brother
Vernon, who was named the
best sixth man in the Southern
Conference last year, also return.
Marshall Utterson, a senior from
Atlanta, Ga who came to ECU
in his junior year from Mt. Olive
Junior College, where he was the
most valuable player, alternated
between first and second man
last year.
Finishing out the returning
lettermen is Jack Williams, a
senior from Hickory, who has a
lot of competition in golf
tournaments in Eastern North
Carolina.
Other members of the team
are: Bob Elks, John Long, Joe
Robertson, Ray Sharpe, Phil
Wallace, and Vance Whitaker.
In Friday's final event. East
Carolina's team of Jim Griffin
Eric Orrell, Bob Moynihan, and
Gary Frederick won the
800-yard freestyle relay with a
record time of 7:28.80, clipping
just over ten seconds off the
mark of 7:38.86 set last year by
West Virginia. The electronic
machine disqualified William &
Mary and VMI for failure to
exchange swimmers properly.
WILLIAMS RESTAURANT
519 Dickinson Ave.?Across From State Bank
Complete Line of Foods
Breakfast Meals Short Orders Sandwiches
Orders to Go
Your favorite domestic and imported beverages.
Hours: 6:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday-Saturday
"Fast and Friendly Service"
Phone 758-48-16
(Back row left t
coach, George
with the '69 tean
Anderson.
EAST
We must make n
and the savings a
Dow
Man
Downtown





111!
Prld3V,March14,1969
The East Carolinian
Page 11
ay, March 14, 1969
al contact is like that
ii 's Lacrosse Club is
if 24 members. They
Voorhees, Gary
I, Jim Frank, Rob
till Mosier, and Pete
the Club are Boh
chard Cassisi, Randy
Don Pierce, Don
id Paul Weathersbee.
nembers are Danny
like McGuirk, Jeff
d Haye, David Lord,
ioIs, Neal Kulp, Ron
on) Edrington, Luc
I Monroe, and Jim
lull's seven game
eludes the University
ania, here, Maich 13;
liege, here, April 2;
Wash in g ton in
, DC, April 12; and
I liege in Roanoke,
9.
atches are to played
uke University ir
pril 22, and against
'A Mary twice, heie
ind in Williamsburg,
I
r the Club had a 4-5
: year's squad should
i an even I letter
:ens said.
ason
? ell
one of the finest
I ever attend ECU.
hlueter, also from
i, is a senior who has
am for the past two
ie past, he has played
nt's best man and has
veil.
son, a junior from
md his twin brother
iho was named the
man in the Southern
i last year, also return.
tterson, a senior from
a who came to ECU
ir year from Mt. Olive
ege, where he was the
ble player, alternated
rst and second man
g out the returning
is Jack Williams, a
i Hickory, who has a
ompetition in golf
Is in Eastern North
lembers of the team
:Iks, John Long, Joe
Ray Sharpe, Phil
d Vance Whitaker.
URANT
State Bank
ds
Sandwiches
1 beverages.
day-Saturday
ii
ice
Aat
(Back row left to right) East Carolina's assistant Baseball
I coach, George Williams, and head coach. Earl Smith, pose
I with the '69 team's co-captains, Wayne Vick, and Carey
I Anderson.
-
EAST CAROLINIAN
SPORTS
SALE
We must make room for our Spring merchandise arriving daily,
and the savings are yours.
Lamb's Wool
Sweaters
l2 price
V-neck, cardigan, Turtleneck
one group
Shirts y2 price
Downtown Shop Only
one group
SHOES
15.99
one group
SUITS
&
SPORT COATS
'2 P
rice
rF?trfa&ttfc'
MEN'S SHOP
Many more items on sale so shop earlv plaza
Downtown 111.00 to 9:001
Smith's optimism high as Pirates
schedule meet with Blue Devils
Coach Earl Smith will send
his baseball Pirates into the field
of battle tomorrow afternoon
against the Duke Blue Devils in
Durham.
The Pirates, who posted 20
regular season wins against nine
losses last year, lost Vince
Colbert and Dennis Bruke, their
two top pitchers and slugging
outfielder Jim Snyder to
graduation, yet Coach Smith
says "we'll likely have a better
team this year than we had in
1968
This optimism is due no less
to the fact that there is a lot of
experience and a bevy of good
pitching prospects among seven
new freshmen.
Slated to take up the slack
left by graduation, Smith will
rely on Mitchell Hughes, Ron
Hastings and Randy Glover.
"They have the most
experience on the staff and
naturally are expected to be the
ones who will take over Smith
says. Other experienced hurlers
who will be back are Wayne
King, John Weaver, Sonny
Robinson, and Bicky Woodard,
Windup Big Victory
by John Lowe
who was the top reliefer for the
'68 Pirates.
"Two freshmen hurlers, Jim
Craver and Bob Fisher have
looked good so far Smith says.
Craver won the New Jersey state
title for Mt. Lakes, N.J. in '68,
while Fisher is a lefthander from
Alexandria, Va where he was
the top lefty with Edisel Martz's
Bomb'rs of Northern Virginia.
In the game against Duke on
Saturday, Glover, Hughes, and
Hastings will each take
three inning stints on the mound
in preparation for next week's
heavy schedule which will
feature five games in five days,
starting against Ithaca College on
Wednesday at 3 p.m.
All the infield positions will
be manned with experienced
personnel, which should improve
over last year's leaky defense.
At first base, returning
letterman and co-captain Wayne
Vick gets the nod, with Ken
Graver backing him up. Dennis
Vick will anchor down second
base with Jerry Rawls in the
backup role although he could
play at any time. Richard
Corrada, who has recovered
Aqua-Bucs swim away
with Virginia laurels
After the goldfish had been
emptied out of the pool,
Saturday's competition began
with the Bucs adding three more
records to their laurels.
Gary Frederick won the
1,650-yard freestyle, clipping 27
seconds off the mark set last
year by Louis Garcia of West
Virginia with a time of 18.17.81,
as East Carolina swept the first
four places in the event.
Jim Griffin set his third
individual mark of the meet, this
time in the 100-yard freestyle.
The old mark of :49.13 set by
Ed Rimm of VMI back in 1964
was tied in the prelims, but
Griffin undid it all with a
clocking of :49.00 for the win.
John Sultan won the
200 yard backstroke with a
non record time of 2:07.71 as
the Bucs again swept the first
four places.
James Wilder of VMI
captured the 200 yard
breaststroke in 2:19.9 and
George Collins of W&M took the
100 yard butterfly in 54.31
before the Bucs rebounded to
take the last two events in the
meet.
Doug Emerson and Bob Baird
finished one two in the
one-meter diving event as
Emerson corralled 337.38
points.
Ir. the final event of the meet,
the team of Jim Griffin, Bob
Moynihan, Gary Frederick, and
John Sultan won the 400-yard
freestyle relay in record time,
bettering the West Virginia mark
of 322.73 set last year with a
blistery 3:18.46.
Bucs Hit the Road
Fresh from their
overpowering victory, the
Aqua Bucs took to the road for
the Eastern Seaboard
Championships held at Yale
University in New Haven,
Conneticutt this weekend. Next
stop for the Aqua-Bucs will be
the National Championships for
the University Division to be
held at Indiana University up in
Bloominton, Indiana, on March
27, 28, and 29.
from an operation will start at
shortstop for the Pirates, while
Jimmy Lanier will cover third
base.
David Goins and Bobby
Norman will back up at second,
third, or shortstop.
In the outfield, co-captain
Carey Anderson returns to his
spot in left, while another
returnee, Stu Garrett, gets the
nod in center. In right field,
Dave Shields wil start. Russ
Edmundson and Jerry Rawls are
the backup men.
Behind the plate, the Pirates
have three candidates, Roy
Taylor, who started most of the
games last year, and Len Dowd
who played in ten games return.
Stan Sneeden, a promising
freshman, will be catching some.
Dowd can also play the outfield
and Taylor at first base.
LOOKING GOOD
"The pitching has looked
good, the defense should be
better, and the overall hitting
should be improved Smith
says. "Everything considered, we
should be better
SATURDAY LINEUP
The probable starting lineup
for Saturday's game: Corrada, ss;
Lanier, 3b; Garrett, cf;
Anderson, If; W. Vick, lb;
Shields, rf; Taylor or Dowd, c;
D. Vick, 2b; and Glover, Hughes,
and Hastings, p.
HOME SCHEDULE
The Pirates open their home
schedule with a two day stand
against Ithaca College on
Wednesday, March 19, and
Thursday, March 20. Carolina
comes in on the 21st with
Virginia coming in March 22 and
23.
'I
1I
Doug Emerson of East Carolina is shown in his
winning form during the Southern Conference
Swim meet.





Page 12
The East Carolinian
Friday, March 14
? 1969

, 1
-


Litera scripta ma net,
verb urn imbelle per it.
The written letter remains, the weak word perishes.
Words have never accomplished anything. It is what happens
after the words that changes the status quo, moves mountains,
and discovers worlds. Therefore, the purpose of a good newspaper
is not to dwell in the abstract but to begin with the idea in mind
that after words come action, and with action something concrete
will be established.
There has been criticism in the past of the SGA, of the
administration and faculty. Students have shouted for academic
reform. There has been criticism of prices and parking and
pre-registration, MRC and women's regulations. Students have
complained about the Lick of academic societies and political,
radical an 1 reactionary organizations on campus. Students say we
should be more in touch with our neighboring colleges and
universities, our community, state, nation, and world.
Students have said we should do more. Said, and that is all.
Words, and that is all.
The 'Eist Carolinian' is your voice. We are interested in at! the
issues. We feel there is no such thing as apathy on a campus if
everyone is busy working toward a goal instead of talking. We will
research the issues, delve into their possibilities, and take action.
We will begin with words, but with the help of students who are
willing to organize and work, we will continue through to the
concrete.
Why does one write an editorial? What should an editorial say
about the "policy" of "The East Carolinian"? In looking back
over volumes of bound "East Carolinians here is what past
editors have said: "this is a student newspaper and we take this
opportunity to encourage students to exercise their rights
through it" - "Our responsibility is to the student, for without
him this paper would not exist - "With your support there is
nothing we can't do-without your support, nothing can be done"
- "The newspaper needs people - "There comes a time in the
term of every college editor when he must ask for the support of
the student body
In each issue these editors asked for the support of their fellow
students. The amount of reaction from those students (and the
way the paper was received) decided the fate of each newspaper.
Some editions became the effective voice of the students.
Those issues left their difinite impression on the history of our
university. Other editions were doomed to a special muteness - at
times because the newspaper staff was deaf to student voices; at
times because there were no student voices.
In looking back over issues of those mute papers one feels a
special kind of sadness. Instead of concrete impressions on their
times, one finds emptiness. Instead of viewing with pride what
organized students sought and accomplished, one witnesses the
vacuum of passcd-up opportunities.
There is a lesson to be learned from those past editions. One
lesson is that this editorial will end up saying the same thing that
editorials in the past have said - the paper is your voice. Use it.
The present and the future are waiting.
There is excitement on our campus.
It is the excitement of fresh young men and women moving
about the campus. And it is the tallness of our fresh minds.
It is the excitement in our past when Dr. Robert H Wright
told our forerunners that "we will give to the rising generation
the purest inheritance of the nation and better preparation than
has ever been given to any preceding generation
In our hands lies the future which must somehow be
transformed from dreams into reality.
Perhaps this is the challenge of the present.
Study reveals student gripes
concerning book store prices
by James Hord
"Too expensive
"You ran't sell them back
after the quarter ends
"Much cheaper at State and
Carolina
These were a few of the
comments made by ECU
students concerning the buying
and selling of textbooks at the
ECU Student Supply Store.
In. a survey conducted by
"The East Carolinian
concerning the buying and
selling of textbooks, the most
common complaint was the
extremely high prices that
students felt they were paying
for the books. Many students
felt as if they were being "taken
in" by the exorbiant prices.
Many students also
complained about the fact that
the book store would not buy
their used books back after the
quarter ended, for various
reasons.
According to senior
geography major Darrell
Atkinson, his "biggest gripe"
was that the book store refused
to purchase his used books, even
though sometimes the same
book was going to be used the
following quarter.
Also, he felt that textbooks
were a "bit cheaper downtown
One irate student commented
that "most of the books here are
new He wondered why they
hardly ever had used books for
sale.
He saidI'm sick and tired of
having to purchase three or four
new books every quarter, even
though the latest edition of the
book was printed in 1966 or so.
It's ridiculous
One hard-luck case was the
French major we interviewed.
He pointed out that he got stuck
with between $17 and $20
worth of books each quarter
that he was unable to resell.
Another case was the
problem encountered by Larry
Huggins, sophomore education
major. He said that one of the
clerks refused to purchase his
used books because "they
looked a little damaged
One additional problem a few
students complained of was that
the clerks checked a chart and
told them that a particular book
was not going to be used the
following quarter. But the next
quarter, the same book was
used.
According to Miss Bev Jones,
a junior English major, "The
profit from the sale of books
and supplies is supposed to go
for scholarships, yet it's almost
impossible to obtain a
scholarship around here
especially for out of state
students.
"If the profits do q0 f0r
scholarships, I think most of the
students are having a hard
enough time paying for their
own education without having
to help put their classmates
through college she added.
Most of these complaints are
not without justification. In
fact, Chip Callaway, editor of
"The East Carolinian" puichased
a textbook for $6 95, but
discovered that the suggested
price on the dust cover was only
$5 75
In the 1968 69 catalog, the
purpose of the Student Supply
Store is given. Couched in
unequivocal terms, it states:
"Students may buy and sell used
textbooks in the store, thuj
saving considei bly on hook
costs
N?'ed we s;t" more?
ecu forum
Published semiweekly by the students of East Carolina University
Greenville, North Carolina
Member
Intercollegiate Press, Associated Collegiate Press
Editor-in-Chief . . . pa?i p ru; . n
D Kaul h. (Chip) Callaway
Business Manager . . n? B
r- .? Don Benson
Managing Editor D? , ?, ,
Pr, . " Beverly M. Jones
Production Manager . ri , ? , .
m M Chuck Ka af
News Editor . . r . . , .
cr , r Gerald Roberson
Features Editor Robert w
sports Editor ? .
Carl Tyer
Subscription Rate-$5.00
Box 2516, ECU Station, Greenville, N. C. 27834
Telephone 752-5716
National Educational Advertising Services HS
A DlVI01 ON Q F Tr
READER ? DIGEST RALES 0, SERVICES. INC
3fcO Lennqlnn Av . Nw York, N y, 10Q17
Dear Students:
Now that both political
parties have nominated their
slate officers for the spring
election, it is up to you, the
student body, to elect the most
qualified candidates to lead our
Student Government next year.
I would like to make two
requests of each student. Firstly,
if you qualify and desire to seek
an Executive office this spring,
come by and file in the SGA
Office before 5:00 p.m. during
the week of March 10-17.
Although you might not have
the organized support of a
political party, with good
organization and a determined
effort you will have an equal
chance of winning. Secondly, if
you are unable to run for an
office, choose a candidate or an
entire slate of candidates, and
support them all you can. Go
out and campaign for the
candidate of your choice! Talk
to your friends' Help create
some enthusiasm in the
campaign! Break down the
"walls of apathy at ECU In
other words advertize and
support your SGA.
Election Day is Tuesday,
March 25. The polls will be open
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. There
will be several additional
precincts open to help reduce
the time it takes to vote at the
crowded polls. Besides the bailot
box in the U U lobby, new polls
in the lobby of the Pamiico
Room and in the lobby of North
Cafeteria will be opened for the
spring election.
We again plan to make the
studio of WECU-TV as Election
Central. There will be several
closed circuit sets available in
the University Union and Soda
Shop for students to view the
election returns. Flanagan 209
and 317 will be available for the
two political parties to have
their post election celebrations.
We hope to have the Day
Student ballots tallied and
posted by air-time (7 p.m.) of
the broadcast. In addition we
hope to have the SGA executive
ballots tallied by 9 p.m.
Dan Summers
Elections Chairman
Requirements
Dear Editors:
Recently there has been some
complaining about E.C.Us
foreign language requirements
for most students. I think that if
we, as students,stop to ponder
the value of knowing one or two
foreign languages, we can
understand why the University
justifiably exacts this
requirement of us. One never
knows if in the future he may
marry a German girl, live in
Spain, or eat in a French
restaurant. Obvious situations
like these might make the study
of foreign language generally
useful useful to all of us.
Of course there are many
other more specific benefits to
be der ved from foreign language
study,for instance, I have
personally found my study of
foreign language to be very
beneficial, due to the French IV
cirriculum and due to the skill of
my instructor, Miss Ellenberg;
from this course I have chiefly
gained a better understanding of
the French as a culture and as a
nation. I have also gained a
better understanding of French
literature's condition humane, a
deeper insight into my
personal "human condition
Certainly there are many other
students who have likewise
benefited from learnign another
language.
I think that if every student
who has the opportunity to
study a foreign language would
take advantage of that
opportunity to better himself,
he would not be able to later say
that the course involved tedious
hours wasted, but rather fruitful
hours which he consciously and
conscientiously used for his own
self improved.
Doubtless some embittei
student will answer this lettei
intimating that I am disillusmed
Doubtless that student derived
from his foreign language study
exactly what he put into it little
or nothing.
Mike Edmondson
Vorum policy
All students, faculty
members, and administrators are
urged to express their opinions
in writing in the ECU Forum.
"The East Carolinian"
editorial page is an open forum
in which such articles may be
published.
When writing letters to the
Forum, the following procedure
should be followed-
Letters should be concise
ant to the point.
-Length should not exceed
300 words. The Editorial Board
reserves the right to edit letters
to conform to this requirement.
-All letters must be signed
with the name of the writer.
However, upon the author's
request his name may be
withheld.
Signed articles on this page
reflect the opinions of the
author, and not necessarily those
of "The East Carolinian





Title
The East Carolinian, March 14, 1969
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
March 14, 1969
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.06.01.01
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39401
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy