The East Carolinian, May 1, 1969


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





April 29, 1969
coverage enabled
participation and
husiasm to rise to its
ly years.
I did not have the
1 the first election
to you before your
adline. I confused
g time and failed to
tistics to you. This
pen again,
again for your help
ition.
Dan Summers
Elections Chairman
h,
nee to your letter of
would like to say
my belief you
I the boundaries of
Educated people
se discretion in
time and place for
c.
Robert K. Adams
rights are dead
it the hands of a
legislature which
"No" to the
n.
in dying when the
on set up the
star" chamber for
ses.
Jeathly ill upon the
JJC, where four of
itudents ?re being
it most vile of all
king the cafeteria
e they being tried
torse crime, that of
white like the
s.)
I up the ghost last
when our naive
It that their only
tas a "lack of
on and refused
sir past sins, or to
us, I'm sure, have
rning our loss
haps we should set
ment for public
the east Carolinian
L't us Hn t, fud. think . spiak ,tf mit9 . ??
willingness
to
comtemplate
what
is
happening.
?McLuhan
By PHYLLIS BRIDGEMAN
Because education is a clear reflection of American
society, student commentors - in spite of their
u n f a m i I i a r i t y with the grand old
philosopher-educators like Dewey, Pestalozzi, or
Herbart - are verbally venturing into educational
reform more and more. Only the willfully blind will
not see why.
Join this magic carpet ride, as we THINk about the
likes of R. Buckminister Fuller, 100k at McLuhanese,
e-x-a-m-i-n-e a theory of David Riesman, and
c,o,n,t,i,n,u,o,u,s,l,y WONDER what
c-o-n-n-e-c-t-i-o-n of relevance our 4444 years in
training have with our idea of "the real world" we are
about to enter
"History as she is harped. Rite words in rote
order -Steve Schapiro
Bill Hicks
The student protests at the University of
California al Berkeley started in September, 1964
0ver political activity and speech, but complaints
out education were soon stimulated. Since then the
camor for a redefinition of the purposes of higher
education has echoed over numerous campuses, like
e wroosh" of dominoes after the game has
started.
They've learned one thing and perhaps only
?ne thing during those twelve years.
They've forgotten their algebra. They're
opelessly vague about chemistry and physics.
hey've grown to fear and resent literature.
hey write like they've been lobotomized. But,
s- can they follow orders! Freshmen come
jj to me with an essay and ask if I want it
0 ded and whether their name should be in the
"PPer right hand corner. And I want to cry and
them a"d caress their poor tortured heads
- errY Farber at Cal State, Los Angeles.
,jjai "deLs,andln9 the battlecry of "meaningful
ready dnd "alternative choices" may come more
T with a glance at today's student.
Levant C?lle(,e Student nas ,ittle more choice ?f
does h' educational alternatives in his career than
authorit'S k'd brother. for rnost colleges are as
an inst tanan as 9" schools. Outside of the choice of
u,l0? ?f higher learning and a field within it,
the horizon on student influence sinks into a tranquil
Sargasso Sea.
"The college student is far less able to influence
his relationships with teachers and administrators
than he is able to retort and otherwise respond to his
parents Whether the teacher shocks him, or ignores
him or bores him, or awakens him to new vistas, or
patronizes him. or argues with him, or is friendly to
him, the student is dependent on the teacher's mood
and interest
Martin Meyerson goes on to say in The Ethos of
the American College Student: Beyond the Protests"
(from "The Contemporary University: USA) that
administrative action also binds our student,
particularly and obviously by control of his
extracurricular life.
YOUTH WANT ROLES
The dialogue from the student's view of alternative
choices finds a root in why the student has turned his
back on the unreality of the classroom in his search
for truth. As Marshall McLuhan says, The
classroom is now in a vital struggle for survivaltw.th
the immlsely persuasive 'outside' world created by
"ew mfo matLPa. media. Education must shift from
ruction, from imposing of stenc.ls, to discovery
VTTyouni today reject goals. They want roles
r n-L E-S. That is, total involvement.
"The dichotomy between the home environment
and he classroom (any classroom) the source of
he st. Today's TV kid who's turned on and tuned
n to the latest global happenmgs - I Spy
multicolors and Harlem race riots. Grant Park at the
Democratic Convention and smoldering Vietnam
villages, "Mission Impossible" and the Paris peace
talks-is bound to be a bit bewildered by the orderly,
structured environment of an educational system
conceived way back then.
Which is not to say one should ignore that system
or the pholosophy behind it ? on the contrary, let's
taketat"IOOk
LOOK AT THE SYSTEM
Two things that are wrong with that 19th century
educational environment come to mind immediately.
First, when the student can see for himself the
inherent uncertainty in real life, the traditional
teacher would have him believe that questions are
closed and soluble.
And second, educators would like to can
fragmented, classified patterns of information for
consumption when, as Robert Theobald says, "The
individual fact, the individual relationship cannot be
valid at electronic speeds of communication
("Education for a New Time from the "Journal" of
the United Churches of Christ Council for Higher
Education, March, 1967).
Theobald also appropriately points out,
"Education has not yet caught up with the fact that
the educational pattern of the past, in which it was
assumed that the old know and the young must learn,
is no longer valid. So long as the speed of change was
(continued on page 5)





Page 2
The East Carolinian
May 1, 1969
?
? ?

Bank executive Robt. Holding
to address senior banquet
Robert P. Holding Jr chairman of the board for First-Citizens
Bank and Trust Co will address the Senior Banquet Tuesday.
One of the state's leading
executives in banking will be
the guest speaker at the East
Carolina University Senior Class
banquet next Tuesday night,
May 6.
He is Robert P. Holding Jr
chairman of the board of
First-Citizens Bank and Trust
Company with home offices in
Smithfield.
The banquet, which will
include presentation of awards
to outstanding members of the
Class of '69, is scheduled at 6
p.m. at the Greenville Country
Club.
Stephen C. Morrisette of
Elizabeth City, Senior Class
president, announced Holding
as banquet speaker ,nd said the
EC profs Watrous, Peterson
to observe and study Africa
Two East Carolina
University professors will
observe ans study in Africa this
summer as part of a 2-year
program sponsored by the
American Association of
Colleges for Teacher Education
(AACTE).
Dr. Blanche Watrous,
professor of anthropology, and
Mrs. Janet Petterson, assistant
professor of geography, leave in
June. They will visit in Senegal
and Ghana, then study for
several weeks at University
College, Nairobi, Kenya. Visits
to Ethiopia and Egypt will
conclude their study of the
African continent.
ECU is one of 15 American
universities selected by the
AACTE to receive grants for
the development of African
studies.
To prepare for this summer's
program, Dr. Watrous and Mrs.
Petterson attended the UCLA
African Studies Center last
summer. They studies Swahili
and contemporary political,
social and artistic developments
in Africa.
Dr. Watrous, who joined the
faculty in 1964 to direct
anthropological studies, will be
making her second trip to the
African continent.
Mrs. Petterson and her
husband, Dr. Donald Petterson
of the ECU geography faculty,
have contributed over 100
articles on Africa to the
Encyclopedia Britannica.
Dr. Watrous and Mrs.
Petterson are members cf the
Committee on African Studies
formed at East Carolina
University last fall. The
committee has established a
program of African studies with
a cognate minor to be added to
the ECU curriculum next fall.
This spring, the committee
organized and conducted the
first ECU African Culture
Festival, featuring authoritative
speakers on African culture as
well as movies and exhibits of
art and crafts.
Other members of the
committee are Dr. Kathleen
Stokes, political science; Dr.
Emily Farnham, art; Dr.
Anthony Stampolis, economics;
Dr. Ralph Birchard, geography;
Dr. Kathleen Dunlop, history;
Mrs. Gladys Howell, sociology;
Edgar R. Loessin, drama and
speech; Otto Henry, music; and
Dr. Norman Rosenfeld, English.
SGA Legislature approves ID's for campus
ministers, ok's presidential appointments
Members of the Campus
Ministerial Society (CMA) will
be issued special ID cards to
attend itudent gatherings which
require ID cards.
The bill was passed in a
meeting of the SGA Legislature
Monday evening.
John Dixon, who introduced
the bill, said that the request
came from the CMA after being
barred from previous campus
gatherings.
Speaker Bill Richardson
explained that the ID will not
allow full student privilages to
the CMA. Only gatherings
which require just an ID card
for admission will honor the
cards, which will be signed and
issued by the SGA president.
A resolution to create the
position of Secretary to the
Legislature was passed and sent
to the Rules Committee for
study.
A sample of opinion, the
resolution, if acted upon, would
create an office in addition to
the elected SGA secretary. The
Secretary of the Legislature
would be fully responsible to
the Legislature and elected by
the body.
Members of the Artist Series,
Election's Committee,
International Films Committee,
and Lecture Series Committee
were approved by the
Legislature. The members
include:
ARTIST SERIES
Artist Series: Cathy
Norfleet, chairman, Ruth
Parrish, Chip Callaway, Jennifer
Salinger, David Dalton, Bill
Suk, James Twyne, and faculty
members Dean R. Alexander,
Miss Janice Hardison, Robert
Hause, Carlten Bins, Dr. Irving
Lawrence, and Miss Grace
Ellenberg.
ELECTIONS COMMITTEE
Elections Committee: Phil
Dixon, charman, Dan Summers,
Mike Saylors, Ann Griffin, Bill
Shaw, Jim Coggins, Wilber
Chestnut, John Cooper, Sip
Beamon, Tommy Lloyd, Chuck
Brownfield, Richard Folsom,
Parks Isenhauer, Billy
Richardson, Cam Snipes, Steve
Davis, J.C. Dunn, the four
Men's dormitory lieutenant
governors, and the 10 vice
presidents of the women's
dormitories.
INTERNATIONAL FILMS
International Films
Committee: Joseph Goodwin,
charman, Gregory Smith,
Marsha Earp, Robert Kershaw,
John Keely, Linda Lytle,
William Suk, and Neil Hopper.
Lecture Series Committee:
Bill Owens, charman, Ike
Puzon, Harriet Powell,
Benjamin Currence, Theodore
Chagaris, Steve Hubbard, Sam
Beasley, Chuck Bromfield, and
Ann Pettit.
PHOTOGRAPHER
In other business, Ed Holt
was accepted as a member of
the Movie Committee.
"The East Carolinian " was
granted the services of the
University Photographer
through a bill introduced by
Bev Jones.
seniors are "delighted to have a
man of Mr. Holding's
prominence to address us on
this occasion, which is a main
highlight of our four years at
East Carolina
Holding, a native of
Smithfield, is vice president of
the American Bankers
Association and past president
of the N.C. Bankers
Association. He is president of
Seashore Transportation
Company of New Bern and
chairman of the board of the
Bank of Fuquay and the Bank
of Candor.
His is the director of
Carolina Telephone and
Telegraph Company, the
Citizens State Bank of Biscoe
and the Peace College of
Raleigh Foundation. He also
serves as a trustee of Peace
College.
Holding began his banking
career in Smithlield in the
home offices of First-Citizens.
He later went to the Bank of
Fuquay and while living in that
community he served on the
municipal board of
commissioners, as mayor of
Fuquay Springs and as
chairman of the Wake County
Hospital Authority. The
Fuquay-Varina Chamber of
Commerce named him "Man of
the Year
A graduate of Wake Forest
University, he is a veteran of
World War II with four years in
the Navy.
Students list 'gay' demands
(ACP)- Althought most
student protesters are deadly
serious about achieving their
demands, some groups are
making their points in other
ways.
Six blind students at the
University of North Carolina
have demanded blind professors
and braille textbooks. Although
they admitted their protest was
made "to take the wind out of
the black student movement
they also suggested blinding
everyone so no one "would
know what's black and what's
white
A group of students at
Queens College (N.Y.) who call
themselves Irish Revolutionaries
Interested in Scholastic Help
(IRISH) issued a series of
demands to the college and
took over a campus building
used for storage. Their demands
included the observance of St.
Patrick's Day as a holiday and
establishment of a Gaelic
studies program.
A group of students at the
University of Wisconsin at
Madison presented a list of
demands from the "Homophiles
of Madison" requesting the
establishment of a homosexual
studies department and the
institution of "gay" social
events.
A new counter-revolutionary
organizatn formed at Wichita
State University calls itself
SPASM-the Society for the
Prevention of Asinine Student
Movements.
Pitt Agricultural Workers
donate scholarship funds
An annual scholarship of
$400 for rural Pitt County
students attending East
Carolina University has been
established by the Pitt County
Agricultural Workers' Council.
Beginning with the 1969-70
school year, one scholarship
will be awarded annually until
the fund is exhausted. The
recipient will be selected on the
basis of need by the ECU
Student Financial Aid
Committee.
JENKINS GETS CHECK
In ceremonies at ECU
recently, council president Paul
W. Bailey of Greenville
presented the first $400 check
to ECU President Leo W.
Jenkins
The Agricultural Workers'
Council is composed of
representatives of 16 Pitt
County organizations,
including:
15 FIRMS INVOLVED
Agricultural Extension,
ASCS, FHA, Vocational
Agriculture, Conservation and
Development, Pitt-Greene
Production Credit Association,
Soil Conservation, Home
Economics, Farm Bureau, Farm
Placement, RE A, Pitt Technical
Institute, Welfare Department,
Social Security, Pitt
Development Commission and
bank representatives.
UMOC starts
TGISWeekend
Who is the Ugliest Man on
Campus?
This is what the Mens
Residence Council is deciding in
the UU lobby today and
tomorrow.
This is an annual affair
sponsored in the spring by the
MRC to kick off "Thank God
It's Spring" (TGIS) weekend.
Penny voting will be used to
determine who the UMOC is.
The proceeds will be donated to
the United Fund.
The winner and his date will
receive free admission to the
MRC dance at the "Id"
Saturday night and will be
guests at the MRC Banquet to
be held at a la ar date.
The dance Saturday night,
from 8 to 12 p.m will feature
Bill Deal and the Rhondells,
back by popular request.
MENSTUDEN
Scott Hall
house the rr
there is an ov
Jones Hall will
Procedure to
up:
1. Pick up a
application
Housing Office
2. Take tha
a S39.50 paym
Session of Sur
the Cashier's
stamped "Paid.
3. Returr
Housing Off
assignment.





May 1, 1969
I Peace College of
Foundation. He also
s a trustee of Peace
ig began his banking
n Smithiield in the
fices of First Citizens.
went to the Bank of
ind while living in that
ty he served on the
i p a I board of
oners, as mayor of
Springs and as
of the Wake County
I Authority. The
Varina Chamber of
:e named him "Man of
Juate of Wake Forest
, he is a veteran of
ir II with four years in
demands
to the college and
;r a campus building
itorage. Their demands
the observance of St.
Day as a holiday and
ment of a Gaelic
oqram.
jp of students at the
of Wisconsin at
presented a list of
:rom the "Homophiles
;on" requesting the
lent of a homosexual
lepartment and the
i of "gay" social
counter-revolutionary
formed at Wichita
liversity calls itsel'
ie Society for the
i of Asinine Student
s.
arkers
funds
5, Farm Bureau, Farm
, REA, Pitt Technical
Welfare Department,
Security, Pitt
;nt Commission and
sentatives.
C starts
Weekend
; the Ugliest Man on
is what the Mens
Council is deciding in
lobby today and
s an annual affair
in the spring by the
:ick off "Thank God
" (TGIS) weekend.
ot.ing will be used to
who the UMOC is.
ids will be donated to
Fund.
iner and his date will
ie admission to the
nee at the "Id"
night and will be
he MRC Banquet to
i la r date,
rice Saturday night,
12 p.m will feature
and the Rhondells,
pular request.
May 1. 196g
"T" urn j jjjj ? Tne East Carolinian
Journalism frat' organized
A national honorary president of the tratern t ?????fclfli
Page 3
of
recei
A national honorary president of the tratern t
journalism fraternity, Alpha Phi Honorary memhorch
U. i? charter a ,oca, be present "??
chapter here and at the same ed i tor-emeritus f h
time induct the largest number GoHsboro News Araus LSI
charter members ever person for whom th M
Ved at one time by the Belk Journalism Collection here
fraternity. is named, Ashlev R c
T?e Delta Nu chapter ?? ?,itor and ? ?
APG will receive its charter Washington New r, ,
May 4. at 4 p.m. in the Sitton editoriaT
Room. Umversity R a I e i q Te w Tn
and 28 active. Observer-Ra,e,gh ill
honorary Da?id j. Whichard. editor of .he
Sunday,
Buccaneer
cafeteria,
associate
members will be inducted. Greenville Reflect
The charter will be presented member of th? n ?
bv Dr. Leo W. Jenk.ns, Board of Trustees
president of the Un.vers.ty. and Charter student members
the induction ceremony will be include the following: Paul F
presided over by Ira L. Baker, Callaway, Jr Mr. Airy, Beverly
national president of APG and a M. Jones, Princess Anne Md
teacher of journalism here. Martha R. Almon, APC?' New
Accepting the charter in York; Don E. Benson
behalf of the local chapter will Goldsboro, Mrs. Nelda S Lowe'
be Paul F (Chip) Callaway, Jr Greenville; John W. Lowe Jr '
Geenv.lle; Janes C. Hord
Calotte; Faye Shoffner
Gr ham. Gwen Strickland
" le'9h; Anna Sturm,
Greenville; Robert W
McDowell, Raleigh; C. Abraham
Kalaf. Jr Atlantic City, N.J,
John R. Reynolds, Statesville
Also Robert B.Robinson III
Garysburg; Patrick K. Berry'
Jacksonville; Phyllis Bridgeman'
Martmsburg, West Va Donna
Mce Dixon, Rt. 3, Grrenville-
L'nda Ivey, Siler City, and
Keith Parnsh, Roanoke Rap.ds
Mr. David J. Whichard will
make the address following the
induction of members, and a
social hour will conclude the
festivities.
AIPha Phi Gamma was
founded at 0h,o Northern
University Dec. 11, 1911 as a
national recognition fraternity
for student publications.
Outing Club to sponsor
float race on Tar River
effort to arouse
n canoeing and
In an
interest
outdoor activities, the ECU
Outing Club is sponsoring a
float race down the Tar River
Sunday, May 11.
The race is open to anyone
who is interested.
Three classes of floating
craft may be entered in the
race. The first class consists of
canoes and kayaks. The second
class is to be composed of
rowboats. The third class will
consist of non-motorized drum
and rubber rafts, inner-tubes,
surfboards and "almost
anything that floats
Because of the differences in
speeds in the three classes, the
canoes and kayaks will begin
the race at 11 a.m. Sunday at
the Falkland Wildlife Access
Area.
Watercraft in the other two
categories will begin the race at
1 p.m. at the North Carolina
Wildlife Access Area near the
Greenville airport.
The race will end at the east
end of the retaining wall below
the Green Street Bridge.
State laws require that all
persons participating in the race
wear life preservers.
Prizes will be given to the
winners in each class. An
additional prize will be given
for the most unusual floating
craft.
For entrance information in
this race contact Dr. Stan Riggs
in the Geology department or
Michael Upchurch at 602-D
Ernal Street.
Campus Hi-lites
condensed news briefs
?All students wishing to
reserve a dormitory room for
the First Session of Summer
School of 1969 may do so on
May 8, 1969.
MEN STUDENTS.
Scott Hall will be used to
house the men students. If
there is an overflow of Jcott,
Jones Hall will be used.
Procedure to follow in signing
up:
1. Pick up a dormitory room
application cad from the
Housing Office on May 8.
2. Take tha application with
a S39.50 payment for the First
Session of Summer School to
the Cashier's Office to be
stamped "Paid
3. Return application to
Housing Office for room
assignment.
WOMEN STUDENTS:
ln9lis Fletcher and Mary
Greene dormitories will be used
to house the women students
Procedure to follow in signing
up:
. Dormitory students pick
up dormitory room application
rom Dormitory Office. Day
fudents P'ck up applications
'rom Housing Office.
S-jQ Take aPPljcation with a
SB.50 payment for the First
ssl?n of Summer School to
Ihe Cash.er's Office to be
stamped "Paid
3 Take application to the
?r7,orVnwfHchyouw?shto
,vef0fr9om assignment.
K.Wooten
Dlfect?' of Homing
?Students voiced their
UPP?rt for the transit system
lna referendum Tuesday.
(oThe voting was 1613 votes
o retain the system and 245
tes to abolish it. Only 22 of
ne student body voted in the
re,erendum.
Student Government
hesdent John Schofield said
had hoped for a larger
w.tu1 but he was weM Pleased
WIIh me results.
C?mpetative bids to
determine which company will
provide the service will be in
my office May 16, Schofield
said.
Final plans will be made
after these bids are in.
? Students may pick up a copy
of the 1969 Buccaneer
beginning Monday between
Jarvis and Fleming Hall from
95.
Each student must have his
ID and activity cards.
The 1969 Buccaneer, the
largest yet, has 528 pages with
the first 32 of the book entirely
color.
The yearbook features
uniquely different Greek and
classes sections from yearbooks
of the past.
All faculty members may
pick up their copy of the
yearbook in the office of Dean
Tucker.
Faculty may pay a 55 fee or
present a fee receipt.
Students must pay a S3 fee
for each quarter our of school
during the 1968-69 year in
order to receive a copy of the
new yearbook.
? The office of the Dean of
Student Affairs is now
accepting applications for the
position of summer school
editor of The East Carolinian.
Any interested persons
should send a letter of
application to the Dean of
Student Affairs, Dr. James
Tucker, immediately.
Anyone needing additional
information should see Editor
Chip Callaway at The East
Carolinian office, second floor,
Wright Building.
?Thi
e Buzbee Players of
Campbell College will present
"The Lady's Not For Burning
a comedy in three acts, at the
Baptist Student Center on May
7, 1969, at 7:30 p.m.
The production is sponsored
by the United Campus Ministry,
and no admission will be
charged.
The story of a woman
believed to possess the powers
of withcraft, the play is written
by Christopher Fry. Portrayed
by Nancy Lewis, the witch
cunnignly alters these opinions.
Also intwined in the plot is
Thomas Mendip, a discharged
sailor, played by Tony Lyerly.
He attempts to persuade Roy
Shulman, the mayor of Cool
Clary, England, to hang him.
Richard, an orphaned clerk, is
played oy Michael Ferguson.
Alison Elliot, a young lady who
becomes entangled in the toss
up of romances which occur, is
portrayed by Edie Green.
Applications are now being
accepted for the following
positions on the 1970
Buccaneer staff: business
manager, all section editors and
general staff members. Students
may apply with the SGA
executive secretary, room 302,
Wright annex.
The Legislature will meet
Monday at 5 p.m. on the third
floor of Wright to discuss
proposed changes to the judicial
system. The Blue Ribbon
Committee will preside over
discussion. All interested
students are invited.
Mr. Nick Holmes will be
featured in the University
Union Coffee House, Monday
thru Saturday, in room 201 of
the UU, 8 to 11 p.m.
Holmes plays rhythm and
blues, folk, and hard rock on
the guitar, bass, and piano. He
gained his experience as lead
singer and guitarist for the
Serendipity Singers, composing
their latest songs before he left
the group.
Holmes accompanies himself
on the guitar, his playing
influenced by Arlo Guthry and
Josh White.
He includes many standard
folk songs in his performance,
believing that "any song that
draws emotion and creates a
visual image is good
Admission is free and
refreshments will be served at
intermission.
? A car wash will he beld at
Cecil's Texaco Saturday, May 3,
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m
sponsored by the Baptist
Student Union. One dollar per
car will be charged.
On Sunday, May 4, 1969,
the Greenville Boys Club Horse
Show will be held at the Pitt
County Fair Grounds. Highway
13 North, beginning at 1.
?Mary Caroline Riddle,
chairman of the scholarship
committee, presented the Ruth
E. White Scholarship in the
dean's honor Tuesday night at
the WRC meeting.
Miss White was recognized
for her faithful years of service,
loyalty, and leadership as a
student, counselor, and dean.
She graciously accepted,
remarking that she was actually
"speechless
The new officers of the 1969
WRC were introduced as
follows: Chairman Edna
Cascioi, Vice Chairman Sandra
Eckles, Secretary Cynthia
Edwards, and Treasurer Marilyn
Owens.
Along with the new officers,
the new WRC members took an
oath by a candlelight ceremony.
? in conjunction with Pirate
Jamboree, the MRC will have a
dance Saturday night at the ID
from 8-12 p.m. "Bill Deal and
the Rondells" will entertain. A
charge of $1 per couple will
admit MRC members with a
card. Other students will be
charged $4 per couple.
Maul? ro MaqS
cbuiio b0boye(:S
c- Morh?ad fcltq.
fWfc MQtyROOM
ii AM- 7 rM - Open Sondat,Mac ?. Z-SM.
Join The J$fl Crowd
Pizza Iffl
42! Greenville Bha.
(264 By-Pass)
DINE INN or TAKE OUT
Call Ahead For Faster Service
Telephone 756-9991
? 3-HOUR 8HIBT SERVICE
? 1-HOUR CLEANING
Hour Glass Cleaners
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE
14th and Chariot St Corner Acrnw Fn
Complete Laundry and Dry tarntat





Page 4
The East Carolinian
May 1, igeg
l
K
Archie Bell & the Drells to
highlight Greek Week
The Intertraternity Council
will hold its annual Greek Week
Monday, May 5, through
Saturday, May 10.
During this week the
fraternities compete in a variety
of events and entertainment.
The pledges of each
fraternity will participate in the
Greek Games Monday. These
games consist of such events as
a sack race, three legged race
and the 60 yard dash. Each
fraternity will present skits at 8
p.m. on Tuesday night in
Wright Auditorium.
The overall winner of skit
night and Greek Games will be
awarded a Greek Week trophy.
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. the
IFC will hold its awards
banquet at the Greenvill Moose
Lodge. The IFC Queen will be
announced at this meeting. A
dozen other various
Interfraternity trophies, ranging
from scholarship to atheletics
will also be awarded. A track
meet is scheduled for 3 p.m.
Monday, May 12 at the campus
track.
Friday night, the fraternities
will have a show and dance at
"Bob's Barn The "Tempests"
and the "Marlboros" will
provide the entertainment.
StttcUuHi
Drive-In
Cleaners & Launderers
Cor 10th & Cotanche Sts Greenville, N.C.
1 Hr Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service
"Archie Bel! and the Drells"
will appear Saturday afternoon
along with Peggy Scott and Jo
Jo Benson. Saturday's
entertainment will be an open
air concert at Bill Mosier's farm
near Falkland.
Gary Phipps, IFC president,
invites anyone interested to the
events at no charge. The
entertainment is open to college
students, however, bids cost
$10 each for the weekend.
Myrtle Beach will be the site
of the Pi Kappa Alpha "Dream
Girl" weekend. Entertainment
qill be provided by Chester
Mayfield and the Manhattens
and by the Alpacas. Wednesday
night the PiKAs had a cocktail
party at which various awards
were given.
The 1969 Dream Girl is Miss
Nancy Sink of Alpha Delta Pi
. . . Nancy Sink
sorority. Brother of the year is
Craig Soua, who currently
serves as treasurer of the
fraternity. The pledge of the
year is Mike Jarrell.
The Scholarship award went
to Mike Madagan, who has
maintained a 3.6 average in the
Business Department.
Theta Chi fraternity will
hold its beach weekend this
May 2 and 3 at Kitty Hawk.
The Fabulous Affairs will play
both nights in the Orvill Wright
ballroom.
Saad'sShoe Shop
Bring yourshoes to usfor
prom ptservice.We
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CollegeView Cleaners
Main Plant
10c552-bedroom,Ritz
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You Do Not Have to Be
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'A Trip1 termed
as exuberant
Colorfull, exuberant,
i m a g i native
inventive-superlative.
Only adjectives can be used
to describe Mavis Ray's jazz
ballet "A Trip" which was
performed for the first time last
weekend as part of the
Contemporary Arts Festival.
The premere performance of
the ballet, written by ECU
dance instructor Mavis Ray
after the cartoon antics ofv the
Beatles' "Yellow Submarine"
characters, was well received.
The special effects, lighting,
costumes, and settings were
superbly coordinated to
compliment the musical score.
Congradulations are in order to
all involved.
Morpheus of the underworld
(Noel T'Sani), Heroine (Gwen
Spear), and Sugarcube (Eric
McCullough) are to be
commended for outstanding
performances.
Individual performances in
the supporting cast were
generally excellent, although
too numerous to mention
individually.
Congratulations to Mavis
Ray and cast for proving again
that creativity is and thriving at
ECU.
Designer peau de soie,
ull-length wedding gown with
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1968 Volkswagen fastback
the big one) Beige coler
MVIFM stereo radio. This is a
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jmmediately-Phone 758 6650
during day or 752-5682 after 6
D.m. Doug Newborn P.O. Box
im
YEAR'S FUNNIEST PICTURE
You'll Howl with Laughter
Calervdar-
adull town until
Sheriff McCullough
took over
u
JCHEROKEE PRODUCTIONS Presents
SUPPORT
YOUR v
LOCAL
SHERIFF
Gj COLOR by DeLuxe United Artists
STARTS FEATURES
FRIDAY 2:00-3:45 5:30
7:15-9:00
Last Times Today
"PHAEDRA"
A VIOLENT DRAMA
OF
PROFANE LOVE
FEATURES: 1-3-5 7-9
May 1- IS
In the his
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May 1, 1969
rfull, exuberant,
g i native,
-superlative,
adjectives can be used
ibe Mavis Ray's jazz
A Trip" which was
d for the first time last
i as part of the
orary Arts Festival.
emere performance of
it, written by ECU
istructor Mavis Ray
cartoon antics ofv the
"Yellow Submarine"
, was well received.
)ecial effects, lighting,
and settings were
l coordinated to
mt the musical score,
lations are in order to
;d.
eus of the underworld
lani), Heroine (Gwen
ind Sugarcube (Eric
iugh) are to be
ed for outstanding
ices.
ual performances in
(porting cast were
excellent, although
nerous to mention
ly.
tulations to Mavis
cast for proving again
ivity is and thriving at
ier peau de soie,
wedding gown with
usion veil- Size 10
all Sandy 758-4970
Volkswagen fastback
one) Beige coler.
tereo radio. This is a
er car in excellent
ion. Must sell
?ly-Phone 758 6650
i or 752-5682 after 6
g Newborn P.O. Box
UNNIEST PICTURE
lowl with Laughter
Zalendar-
11 town until
:f McCullough
ook over
E PRODUCTIONS Presents
y DeLuxe United Artisl
FEATURES
2:003:455:30
7:15-9:00
Times Today
HAEDRA"
LENT DRAMA
OF
:ANE LOVE
RES: 1-3-5 7-9
fRIOUS BEAUTY
In the history of education, the most striking
phenomenon is that schools of learning,
which at one epoch are alive with a ferment of
genuis, in a succeeding generation exhibit
merely pedantry and routine. The reason is,
that they are overladen with inert ideas.
Education with inert ideas is not only useless: it
jS( above all things, harmful Every
intellectual revolution which has ever stirred
humanity into greatness has been a passionate
protest against inert ideas.
-A.N. Whithead
(continued from page l)
relatively slow, this was a perfectly valid
assumption
"But the enormous speed of change in our time,
brought on by the cybernetic revolution, necessitates
a total change in this structure. We have created a
situation in which we cannot assume that simply
because somebody has been studying an lssue a( ms
life, he knows it best
So somewhere in this dialogue, the student will
probably echo McLuhan: "Mere instruction will not
suffice
"There are children playing in the street who
could solve some of my top problems in
physics,because they have modes of sensory
perception that I lost long ago
-J. Robert Oppenheimer
?????? ?????????????????why????????????????????????
"Progressive people in
the '30's said it was possible to use education to shape
the future to determine what kind of society we're
going to be living inbut at that time they aidn't
have the technology to pull it off according to
Harry Silberman, a researcher at System Development
Corp. in Santa Monica, California.
So what is the cybernetic revolution that Theobald
says will mean "total change" in the education
structure?
It is the electric technology-computers, et
al. that supplants the former mechanized
technology. And it was the age of mechanization and
even prior to it that conceived our 19th century
educational system.
Close your eyes and drift back to your grammar
school classroom. You're biting your lower lip and
grappling with a fat, black pencil.
"Now I want you to rewrite your stories on good
white paper, and let's see what nice, neat papers you
can turn in. Pay special attention to your penmanship
and be sure your hands are clean
This teacher from our 19th century system
undoubtably got enough pretty white papers to fill
the class bulletin board, but what of originality?
Unwittingly she thwarted a creative drive by
emphasizing, not the content of thoughts, but writing
them down.
"Youth instinctively understands the present
environment- the electric drama. It
livei mythically and in depth. This is the reason
for the great alienation between generations.
Wars, revolutions, civil uprisings are interfaces
within the new environments created by
electric informational media
McLuhan
?fl extremely provacative when McLuhan tells us
that the nature of the media by which
wecommunicate molds our society more than the
content of the communication. It seems almost to
Pport our little grammar school teacher.
But no! The cybernetic revolution of which
obald and others speak means something quite
Afferent.
Tr?e mechanical technology of alphabet and print
encouraged the age of the specialist, the detached.
he electric technology moves toward unification and
lnvolvement in the age of the unspecialist.
Aa for the neat penmanship on our teacher's
J white paper shows the reluctance of our
9ducation system to move into the new
elect'callyconfigured world.
VISUAL SPACE
. s Vlsual men (the technology of the alphabet and
th'u aS fra9menters of activities, as habitual
lnkers n bits and pieces, as specialists - we reflect
l,r,ear departmentalizing so characteristically
Page 5
"Come into my parlor said the computer to
the specialist -McLuhan
R Buckminister Fuller -inventor, architect,
engineer, designer, mathematician, cosmogist, and one
of our leaders into the age of the "unspecialisfurges
us to stop competing with the computer for
everything is a matter of accelerated education "
PJ
ae0 ?Y step in vjsua space
1 ls a uniform, connected, continuous process,
the cybernetic revolution has made it too slow to
- c?mpletely relevant or effective.
X WAMT Yuu-wamtvoo-
Wnt Woo-iwMtr
Let the computer do the memory work of the
brain, in contradistinction to the mind, which is the
one that looks for generalized patterns. Specialization
(the isolated fact, the isolated relationship) is the
antithesis of generalization and adaptability-two
areas that characterize man (as opposed to the studies
of extinct creatures that have been shown to be
victims of their overspecialization).
ACTIVISTS OF THE GLOBAL VILLAGE
Yet it won't be this brilliant man in his 80's or
90's that will take care. It will be the student activists
of the global village?the ones who were demanding
"meaningful dialogue" and "alternative choices"
while McLuhan's globe got "shrunk in the wash with
speeded-up information movement from all
directions
Fuller, Theobald, McLuhan, and others all agree
that ours is a world of "allatoneness We are
inundated instantly and continuously with
information. We don't act; we react.
This world requires us to move from the visual
habit of data classification to gestalt patterns of
recognition. Not block by-block or step-by-step, but
active instant interplay with everyone and everything.
And we are profoundly involved with one another
in this global village of simultaneous happenings.
What if the student cannot involve and relate the
educational scheme into his experience of this
electronically processed world?
Mystification and disgust, alienation and apathy,
powerlessness and irrelevancy-when this is driven
home, the apathetic becomes the cynical. That, no
less, is the necessary condition for any revolution-be
it the rationale of civil disobedience or the politics of
confrontation.
"If there is anything at all that seems likely to
drop this country's urban universities into the
Twentieth Century, it is probably the spectre of their
pillars silhouetted by the flames of the ghetto. It is
not happenstance that a week after Martin Luther
King Jr 's murder, universities all across the country
were referring to "King Day" and were instituting
scholarships memorials, and special recruiting
programs for the ghetto black. Nor is it happenstance
that a month later ponderous Columbia was in
shambles after ignoring the concerns of its Harlem
neiqhbors " (Frank Browning for U.S. Student Press).
BETWEEN BERKELEY AND COLUMBIA
Four years separate Columbia from Berkely.
Campus outbreaks have grown in number and
seriousness since then. It began with Berkely s.t-ms,
but the violence has progressed "to the point of arson
and the importation of guns into campuses, (from
-How Columbia Pulled Down Its Pillars by Nicholas
von Hoffman, The Washington Post, June 16, 1968).
increasingly, it boils down to the e.ement of t.me
and change. The time is right; change is rmmment
"What we refuse is not without value or
importance. Precisely because of that, the
refusal is necessary .There is a reason which we
no longer accept, there is an appearance of
wisdom which horrifies us, there is a plea for
agreement and conciliation which we will no
longer heed. A break has occurred. We have
been reduced to that frankness which no longer
tolerates complicity
-Maurice Blanchot, "Le Refus" in
"Le 14 Juillet no. 2, Paris,
October, 1958.
engenders a paradixical combination of euphoria and
paranoia and leads otherwise
Reisman and partner Christopher Jencks maintain
that education is a clear reflection of American
society.
Over the past century, America has adopted an
uppermiddle class ethos which emphasizes
competence, interest, and achievement. The aurhors
term it "meritocratic
SOCIAL MOBILITY MYTH
Riesman and Jencks devote much space in this
work to the popular myth that education is a means
to upward social mobility in our electric technology.
Underlining the function of education in this
context, they point out that it is not teaching but
professional socialization.
It is the middle-class child who has been lovingly
taught "competence, interest, and achievement
The schools of the lower-class neither prepare him
for, nor encourage him to go to college.
So it appears that academia spawns frustration
both within and without its haven from the electronic
world.
So the kinks aren't all worked out. We've only
begun to dream of what the cybernetic revolution can
do for us!
For the first time, technology makes it possible for
us to feed, cloth and house the whole world. It can
enable us to have factr at our finger tips and free our
minds from petty arithmetic. There's a new and
almost certainly better world within our grasp.
One thing is for sure-Vietnam, Berkeley, Dallas,
and Memphis have shown that fact-stuffed, liberal,
automated America simply isn't working.
: "Only the hand that erases can write the true thing
Meister Eckhardt:
? :
Listening learning. Learning is easier than
unlearning, according to Theobald. Cultures and such
tend to perpetuate themselves even when changed
conditions make them imappropriate and amenable
to change.
Which means that people don't move-they are
moved. Moving speed speed of change the
cybernetic revolution

?men-

David Reisman, emr
nent sociologist and co-author
"The Academic Revolution describes in it that
"something about a college, as about a natron, that
Hello , Class (cue1.),
? frfA ,tvif? f)tVV
TtftcHFR
"(The) question boils down to: Do you prefer
being an American individualist with all the hazards
involved; or do you prefer to be a citizen of a
spineless nation which?eventually ?may have a
Krushchev as a president. Do you favor a bungling
do-nothing, know-nothing America
"To survive, we must stop acting like a nation of
sheep; instead we must once again become patriotic
revolutionaries. We must move and grow with
changing events The nation which stands still,
apathetically hoping that everything will be all right,
has surrendered its chance of survival. An accelerating
history will roll over it (William J. Lederer, "A
Nation of Sheep").
Is it too simple to say students arc Americans,
too? Our electric technology calls for total
involvement.
A better world is at our finger tips. Education and
the cybernetic revolution must come to terms, or
other Vietnams, Berkeleys, Dallases, and Memphises
will instantaneously and continuously happen in our
electronic world.





?
Page 6
The East Carolinian
May 1(
i

EC splits doubleheader with VMI
LEXINGTON, VA East
Carolina split a doubleheader
with resurgent VMI that
practically elimated them from
the race in the southern division
of the conference, as the
Keydets won 8-6 before the
Bucs took the nightcap by 5-2.
East Carolina jumped out to
a 2-0 lead in the first inning as
Dick Corrada singled with two
out and then stole second.
Carey Anderson walked and
Skip Taylor scored both
runners with a triple to make it
20.
The Keydets came back in
their half of the first for a run
as Art Bushey led off with a
walk and Rowe followed,
reaching on an error. Tom
Catlett walked to load the bases
and Tim White drove in VMI's
first run with a fielder's choice
that forced Catlett at second
while Bushey scored.
In the second inning, the
Keydets added another single
tally to tie the game. Randy
Crocker singled, moved to
second on a wild pitch and then
down to third when Vernon
Beitzel reached on a fielder's
choice. A balk was then called
against Mitchell Hughes, the
Bucs' starter, to score Crocker
with the tying run.
The pesky Keydets took the
lead for good in the third with
another single tally. Catlett
reached on an error and moved
to second when White followed
with a hit. J.C. Hanks then
singled in Catlett to give the
Keydets a 3-2 lead.
VMI BREAKS GAME OPEN
In the fifth inning, the
Keydets broke the game wide
open with a three-run uprising.
White walked and then moved
to third on Hank's double.
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Frank Cleaton then scored both
runners with another double
before scoring on an error as
Steve Friski reached base to
make it 6-2.
After a walk, Catlett reached
first on a fielder's choice and
moved to second on a hit by
White and then scored on
another single by Hanks to
make it 7-2 in the sixth inning.
The Bucs got a run back in
the seventh as Len Dowd
singled, moved to third as
Sonny Robinson reached on an
error, and then scored on
Bobby Norman's sacrifice fly.
But the Keydets weren't
through as they scored their
final run in their half of the
seventh to make it 8-3. Friski
doubled, and then scored on
two successive ground outs with
Beitzel getting the rbi.
East Carolina finay awoke
in the eighth, but it was a little
too late. Taylor singled and
then Dennis Vick swatted a
two-run homer to make it 8-5.
The Bucs scored their final run
in the ninth inning. Rusty
Edmundson walked, moved up
on an error, and scored after
successive singles by Corrada
and Anderson for the Buc's
final run in a dismal 8-6 loss.
WIN NIGHTCAP
The Bucs then came back to
salvage the nightcap and snap a
seven-game VMI winning streak.
The Pirates took the lead
with single tallies in the first
and second innings to take a 2-0
lead.
Rusty Edmundson walked
and moved to second on a wild
pitch. Jimmy Lanier's single
moved Edmundson to third
where he scored on Bobby
Norman's out.
In the second, the Pirates
scored as Dave Shields reached
on an error and then scored
when Mike Van Landingham's
single to center got away from
the outfielder.
KEYDETS TIE GAME
VMI came back with single
runs in the second and third to
tie the game. Tim White singled
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and moved to second when J c
Hanks walked. Rod Shu then
singled in White for the Keydets
first run. In the third, VMI tied
the game as Jerry Fresia and
Art Bushey both walked to
start things off. Steve Friski
reached on a fielder's choice
and an error on Tom Catlett's
grounder scored Fresia with the
tying run.
From there on out, however,
the Bucs held the Keydets in
check and didn't allow another
run to score.
In the fourth, the Bucs
moved back into the lead with
three singles. Stan Sneeden
singled and moved up on Dave
Shield's hit. Lanier then singled
to drive in Sneeden with the
tie breaker.
In the seventh inning, East
Carolina wrapped up their
scoring with two runs for the
final 5-2 margins. Skip Taylor
walked and Wayn Vick singled,
with Taylor moving to third.
Dennis Vick then scored Taylor
with a sacrifice fly and a single
by Sneeden brought in Wayne
Vick with the fifth and final
run.
East Carolina plays a
doubleheader this Saturday
against The Citadel. Game time
is 1 30 p.m.
(Rental
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Citizens Band Radio
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Call Ron Nichols at
752 6733
Trailer For Rents,
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urnished includes T.V Dishes,
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Call 758-3328
If you would like to advertise contact: Don Benson, Business Manager or
Ron Nichols, Advertising Manager; Office 201-B Wright Bldg 752-5716.
Display Ads:
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Contract Ads:
$1.40 per column inch
WHY NOT LET PEOPLE SEE
WHAT YOU HAVE TO
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ADVERTISE IN THE
EAST CAROLINIAN





Mav 1. 1969.
ed to second when J c
?lked. Rod Shu then
i White for the Keydets
In the third, VMI tied
e as Jerry Fresia and
hey both walked to
ngs off. Steve Friski
on a fielder's choice
irror on Tom Catlett's
scored Fresia with the
there on out, however,
held the Keydets in
d didn't allow another
re.
e fourth, the Bucs
ick into the lead with
igles. Stan Sneeden
id moved up on Dave
it. Lanier then singled
in Sneeden with the
r.
seventh inning, East
wrapped up their
ith two runs for the
margins. Skip Taylor
id Wayn Vick singled,
lor moving to third,
ck then scored Taylor
xifice fly and a single
in brought in Wayne
i the fifth and final
ens Band Radio
ale. DeWald with
ayette hand mike.
Ron Nichols at
S733
Call 758-3328
less Manager or
Idg 752-5716.
Lambda Chi wins
ninth league game
Pagr 7
Swim team sets 11 conference records
n Fraternity League softball
last week Lambda Chi
sti etched their
string to a 9-0
action
Alpha
undefeated
record by overcoming Phi Beta
Lambda, 8-3.
Sigma Phi Epsilon remained
in second place despite losing
their first game 3 to 0 at the
hands of Pi Kappa Alpha. Sigma
Phi defeated Theta Chi in their
next game by a score of 4 to 2
to strengthen their record to
8-1.
Three teams have pulled
close into competition for
second place with 7-2 records.
They are Phi Epsilon Kappa
who took a forfeit from Theta
Chi and drabbed Kappa Alpha
14 toO.
Pi Kappa Alpha smashed
Delta Sigma Phi by a 15 to 2
score and knocked off Sigma
Phi Epsilon with a score o 3 to
0. Pi Kappa Phi stayed in
contention by edging Sigma Chi
Delta. 7 to 5, and Tau Kappa
Epsilon, 5 to 3.
In sixth place with a 5-2
record is Phi Kappa Tau, who
dropped their only game by a
14 to 10 contest with Delta
Sigma Pi.
In seventh place is Delta
Sigma Pi, who slipped by Alpha
Epsilon Pi by a 9 to 8 thriller
and Phi Kappa Tau by a 14 to MaV 3
The ECU swim team took
the Southern Conference
championship this year, making
this their fourth straight
victory. In formulating these
This Week in Sports
at ECU
Thursday, May 1-
Tennis-Atlantic Christian
Collee. Hill Tennis Courts.
Friday, May 2-
Track-N.C. State Meet
Raleigh, N.C.
May Day!
Rally on the Mall
Drop criminal charges
against Black Students
Thursday, May 1, 1969
at 300 PM On the Mall
10 decision. Those two wins
made Delta Sigma Pi 4-3 on the
year, giving them their first
winning record since tt-ey began
to climb from twelfth place
three weeks ago.
Just behind in eighth place is
Kappa Sigma with a 5-4 record
after taking a forfeit from the
Arnold Air Society.
b a
Universtiy
The
Field.
Base
Citadel-(2)
1:30 p.m.
Track-N.C.
Raleigh, N.C.
Monday, May 5-
Baseball-N.C.
University, at Raleigh, N.C
Golf-Southern Conference
Tournament at Pinehurst, N.C.
State Meet.
State
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wins, eleven Southern
Conference records were
broken by the team. These are:
1000 yd freestyle, 10:48.4,
Gary Frederick;
200 yd freestyle, 1:49.50,
Jim Griffin;
100 yd. freestyle, 49.0, Jim
Griffin;
500 yd freestyle, 5:01.76,
Jim Griffin;
1650 yd freestyle, 18.17,
Gary Frederick;
100 yd breaststroke, 63.1,
Steve Weissman;
200 yd Ind. Medley,
2:05.57, John Sultan;
400 yd Ind. Medley,
4:38.26, John Sultan;
400 ye Medley Relay,
3:46.5, Downey, Allman,
Hanes, Sultan;
400 yd free ,elay, 3:18.46,
Griffin, Orrell, Moynihan,
Frederick;
-800 yd free relay, 7:28.80,
Griffin, Orrell, Moynihan,
Frederick.
ECU placed first, second,
and third in four of the meets.
In all" others excepting the 200
yd breaststroke, they had at
least one place. VMI gained first
place here with William and
Mary placing second and third.
The class totals for the
1968-69 Dual Meet were:
Frosh-351
Seniors- 20514
Juniors? 81
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11:00-9:00





Ted Kennedy calls for aid
Elsewhere on this page is a letter to Dr. Leo W.
Jenkins from Senator Edward M. Kennedy requesting
that the students here join in a relief campaign to
send food, drugs and vitamins to the starving and
wounded victims of the NigeriaBiafra civil war.
At the end of February, UNICEF had shipped
more than 62 million pounds of food to the area.
Since this time this organization has continued to
pour thousands of dollars of relief goods into Nigeria,
straining an already insufficient budget.
According to Senator Cfnles Coodell of New
York, who recently visited the area this UNICEF aid
must be increased. Unless something dramatic is
changed almost immediately, a minimum of 1 million
and probable 2 to 2.5 million Biafrans will die in the
next 12 months.
In an attempt to help the United Nations help the
war victims, thousands of Americans contributed over
$725,000 for emergency relief. More than $100,000
of this money came from college students.
Today the need for supplies is more crucial than
ever before.
Concerned Americans are realizing this fact and
are reacting to the emergency situation by sending
contributions to the U.S. Committee for UNICEF
with the notation that these funds are to be used for
NigeriaBiafra relief.
The Student Government Association and The
East Carolinian are now planning a campaign for this
campus to raise money for relief in this war ravaged
land.
An announcement as to the date and time of this
campaign will be announced in the next issue of this
newspaper.
The East Carolinian urges all students to give as
much as possible in this campaign to help end the
needless suffering of thousands of innocent Africans.
Apathy strikes here again
Recently a wave of student apathy has struck the
campus that makes some involved students and
administrators shake their heads in disbelief. Never in
the history of this university has this apathy been
more evident than in the past two weeks.
Two weeks ago Dr. Leo Jenkins, president of the
university, asked for student assistance in the battle
for a doctorate program here. About 150 students
turned out for an organizational meeting of County
Clubs at Jenkins' home.
At that time, County Club meetings were
scheduled for last Tuesday so that students from each
county in the state could become involved in a
program to help the university better their education.
Tuesday came and no more than 50 people
attended these meetings. Some students who were
supposed to help organize these clubs did not even
bother to attend.
"The Rebel campus literary magazine, sponsored
an Eastern North Caro!iiw Arts festival last weekend
to give an outlet for stuaents interested in the fine
arts. One of the reasons this festival was planned was
that the students here have complained in the past
about a lack of an academic and literary atmosphere.
When such an outlet is planned as the ENCAF, a
scant few have enough interest to put forth the energy
to make an entry in the competititon.
This editor could go on in enumerating the many
instances of student apathy evident on this campus.
The students keep on airing their grievances but when
they are afforded the opportunity to alleviate the
problems about which they gripe, they do nothing.
the east Carolinian ,
"Latus dara to read . think . speak and writ a GC W
Editor in-Chief Pau, F (Chp) Callaway'
Bus.ness Manager Don BensQn
Managmg EditorBevery M Jones
Product.on Manager Chuck Kaaf
Co-News EditorsSandy Hoand
Jimmy Teal
Features Ed.torRobert w McDowe
Sports Editor Car J
TWyatt Brown
ConSultant Ira Baker
" Just think of it, my boy. One day this will all be yours. "
ecu forum
Dear Editor:
I wish to commend the two
hundred and fifty college
student body presidents and
editors for then responsible,
moral stand in opposition to
the war in Viet Nam. I am
especially proud that the
student body president of
U.N.C Wayne Hurdei, was
amonq this group.
We sincere persons who feel
that America has completely
left the path of individualism
since World War II greatly
appreciate Mary McGrory's
article "The New Patriots" in
the April 25 editorial of the
"News and Observer Many of
us have tried through peaceful
means for the last four years to
correct the inborn unfairness of
the present draft system and
most especially our illegal,
immoral participation in the
Viet Nam civil war.
We reject violent means to
gain our ends, but we are
continually punished for this
refusal. The result has often
been jail sentences and ruined
careers for sincere Americans
whose only crime has been
opposition on moral grounds to
America's imperialism (whether
good intentioned or not1)
We see more and more of
our colleagues turning to
violence out of frustration. This
frustration results when
democratic processes are
supressed by politicians who are
unresponsive to the public they
serve. Instead of seeing the state
serving the individual, we are
shocked to see the individual
being forced to serve the state!
Where is our Lockian
philosophy? Has it been swept
away by the rise of military
power in the United States? We
are fearful.
Fred Bohmuller
Dear Editor:
On several occasions I have
seen a Nazi flag dramatically
displayed from two separate
student rented homes. I do not
question the freedom of these
students to so display any flag
they choose, however, it does
bother me when I try and find a
reason for their actions. Are
they sincere advocates of the
Nai doctrine7 If not, is it a
game that they are playing or
are they trying to make
themselves feel superior by
associating themselves with
such a fascist symbol7 It is
deeply disheartening that there
are students at this University
that are so willing to do
anything for a laugh.
A Friend from Florida
Dear Editor:
I would like to clarify the
intent of the petition now being
presented to the student body
in the UU lobby.
The petition deals solely
with the charges now pending
m the state court which stem
from the arrests of the four
black students in the North
Cafeteria on April 1st.
Michael Breslin
To the MRC,
As the outgoing SGA
Elections Chairman, it is my
hope that my successor will
have a more workable
relationship with the newly
elected MRC Vice President and
his elections committee that the
Men's Residence Council as a
whole has been very eager to
cooperate with me in every
election this year.
The night before the
referendum on the transit
system, the MRC elections
committee headed by Steve
Hall, met and voted not to get
students to man the polls on
the Hill for the referendum
Tuesday.
The committee's reason was
that they were noi notified in
time to obtain poll-sitters. I
found out late Wednesday that
the referendum would be run
for sure on Tuesday, April 29.
The following day, an article
appeared in last Thursday's
edition of The East Carolinian
stating explicitly when, where,
and what time to vote.
On returning to school from
a weekend at home, I called
each of the women's dorms to
make sure the polls would he
open on Tuesday. I might add
that most of the dorms had
already prepared for the
Tuesday referendum. I was
unable to contact Hall because
of the installation changes in
the new campus phone system.
However, Monday at
approximately 830 p.m , I did
reach Hall to remind him of the
referendum and to make sure
the polls would be open the
next day. It was at this time
that the MRC elections
committee was called together
and they voted not to man the
polls.
In just two and one half
hours, next year's SGA
Elections Chairman and I
recruited boys to man the polls
for all four dorms. It seems very
unlikely that the Lieutenant
Governors would have had any
trouble at all asking boys to
tend the polls for their
respective dorms much less four
dorms. I might add that three
of the four Lieutenant
Governors volunteered to sit at
the polls Tuesday.
Although I will be the first
to admit that the time before
the election was short, I
qu?stion that an elected
can vote not to
their duties and
committee
carry out
obligations
May I suggest that the MRC
Constitution be amended in
order that the duties of the
Lieutenant Governors of each
dorm be more explicitly
defined so that when he takes
office he will know exactly
whom to see and what to do.
Again, I hope that the
Election Chairman for next
year can communicate and
work more closely next year to
alleviate such misunderstanding.
Good Luck!
Dan Summers
Elections Chairman





Title
The East Carolinian, May 1, 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
May 01, 1969
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.06.01.11
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/39411
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