<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038889_0001"/>
F<lb/>
or<lb/>
(Mr<lb/>
fans<lb/>
r<lb/>
:<lb/>
1 ' <lb/>
! )ates Set For '65-66<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
east Carolina college, greenville, n. c, thursday, august 5, 1965<lb/>
nuniotM1 59<lb/>
Uni<lb/>
nion<lb/>
MELON<lb/>
ST<lb/>
Wall<lb/>
ursday,<lb/>
JSl<lb/>
V<lb/>
v<lb/>
 tti tttttt<lb/>
ff<lb/>
R<lb/>
BJou - s,<lb/>
lin ('oats<lb/>
V I Cho I-<lb/>
lllmd<lb/>
29th<lb/>
fton<lb/>
R<lb/>
end ing latent, re-<lb/>
 " and bop Irama is<lb/>
66 v nterta nment<lb/>
 C2an ina Col<lb/>
" Vss I on<lb/>
ch has 2o'<lb/>
hed ed from S ptem-<lb/>
 from Louis<lb/>
rmstrong to British<lb/>
N  I 3 ell and<lb/>
Gypsy' t<lb/>
 chestra<lb/>
ons, tiht<lb/>
 I -v four<lb/>
p N : -   Le<lb/>
 Fine ' S <lb/>
: i teries<lb/>
tedule es .<lb/>
U s<lb/>
1 h ch w :11 be .<lb/>
th pun Th<lb/>
S<lb/>
ck  kV right Ui-<lb/>
ol North Africa fiten-tecture by<lb/>
Robert and Marion Auburn, April 4;<lb/>
huon-i. film-tecture by Phillip<lb/>
talker. May 2<lb/>
Vrrangements for obtaining sea-<lb/>
 ts to the entire schedule or<lb/>
the tour separate series will<lb/>
nnouneed m early September<lb/>
ise ol limited seating capacity<lb/>
n the auditoriums used for the pro-<lb/>
'i :; limited Dumber of<lb/>
 ts are made available for sale<lb/>
i rai public each y ir<lb/>
SGA Report<lb/>
main topic under<lb/>
Student Govern-<lb/>
held its weekly<lb/>
August 2, at 4:00<lb/>
Sn teman instal<lb/>
m hedu ed i<lb/>
 is  un-<lb/>
ttei End<lb/>
m . F<lb/>
shman enta-<lb/>
Modern Folk Quartet,<lb/>
tters . 5, 7 p m<lb/>
 8 15 p m. homecoming<lb/>
as Armstrong, Nov 19;<lb/>
I Orchestra, Fcb l.<lb/>
.this March 3; Rog<lb/>
ad Fats ixm-<lb/>
M-heduled at<lb/>
Wright Auditorium)<lb/>
. Got 14 Royal<lb/>
 : So lJ: New York<lb/>
Quintet, .Ian 19; Houston<lb/>
Orchestra, March 16<lb/>
I" . ter Series ail sched-<lb/>
p m. in McGinnis Au-<lb/>
;ypsy, " (Vt 27-30, The<lb/>
8-11. ' Th Night of<lb/>
Fen 2-5: opera to be<lb/>
tier date March<lb/>
 Father May 4-7<lb/>
 scheduled at 8<lb/>
ht A u m unless<lb/>
ted- H. Holbnk.<lb/>
f Mark Twain, Oet 4. 8:15<lb/>
rium Ba-<lb/>
 ire-film by Dick Roddy.<lb/>
n Odd ns:in udi-<lb/>
Karl R Mundt of South<lb/>
Kim rica - Ja-<lb/>
i ture by J mes<lb/>
- <lb/>
rell Bank<lb/>
i Hbsi ' ' :<lb/>
'I inia to<lb/>
: im eoture by Bill<lb/>
Je <lb/>
Monej vas the<lb/>
n as me<lb/>
ment sstw ation<lb/>
; mi et :  v.<lb/>
p m.<lb/>
Pr sidenl Ste e<lb/>
led Angel Ooston to fill the vacancy<lb/>
left by Mary Cooper The body ap-<lb/>
ed an appropriation of $130.00<lb/>
new print dryer for Puhlioa-<lb/>
- Photographer Joe Rrannon.<lb/>
Vfter th i jh discussion, it was<lb/>
led not to allocate $33.00 to pay<lb/>
the projectionist for showing the<lb/>
mpus movies three extra times i<lb/>
for the band campers. It was noted<lb/>
 ' the School oi Musk has been<lb/>
ng for these showings in the<lb/>
pasl Whitty Bass suggested that<lb/>
th s would he an undue burden to<lb/>
 on the Student Government.<lb/>
The Legislature voted to give Bill<lb/>
Peck twenty dollars to write a de-<lb/>
scription of the jobs of the ex-<lb/>
ecutive officers, full-time salaried<lb/>
officers And all publications' of-<lb/>
ficers Peck will lx? directed to get<lb/>
the necessary information from the<lb/>
people involved, and to compile the<lb/>
data in his report<lb/>
The entertainment for next year's<lb/>
or Weekend was discussed A<lb/>
ng of $2.100 00 was placed and<lb/>
sibte performers listed were Bo<lb/>
Diddley, Fats Domino. Chuck Jack-<lb/>
son, and Maxine Brown. The mem-<lb/>
bers present seemed to favor Fats<lb/>
omino, ail it was decided to book<lb/>
him for the evening of Saturday.<lb/>
Vpril 30. 1966. It was noted thai all<lb/>
tnsactions involving S. G. A. ex-<lb/>
penditures must be concluded by<lb/>
M-rnday. August 9.<lb/>
The annex to Wright Building, which I cilities for offices as well as rooms I will be ready for use when<lb/>
is scheduled for completion in Sep-lfor committee meetings and a new return for Fall Quarter.<lb/>
tember, will contain expanded fa-i student lounge. These new facilities<lb/>
.indents<lb/>
Business Dept. Adds Instructors<lb/>
Jack W.<lb/>
trom te<lb/>
a firmer<lb/>
In<lb/>
Extra ISS5<lb/>
BUCCANEERS<lb/>
Are For Sale<lb/>
Buccaneer" Office<lb/>
The School of Business a: Fast<lb/>
Carolina will have seven new faculty<lb/>
members expanding the instructoral<lb/>
staff to 46, when the 196566 school<lb/>
year opens next month.<lb/>
Dean Elmer R. Browning said four<lb/>
of the new members are additions<lb/>
and three are replacements.<lb/>
New appointees are Frank P. De-<lb/>
Felice who comes to ECC from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina: Dr.<lb/>
Marjorie P. Guy, former Ohio stat-<lb/>
istician with the department of high-<lb/>
ways; Joseph A. Hill, who will leave<lb/>
the University of Florida where he<lb/>
In !d a fellowship: and<lb/>
Thornton, who joins FCC<lb/>
University of Missouri.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph V. Romffla,<lb/>
associate professor of economics at<lb/>
the University of Florida, will re-<lb/>
place Dr. Bryrn White. Freddie H.<lb/>
Reasrdon of "Greenville, a teaching<lb/>
fellow iin the School of Business last,<lb/>
school year, will replace Sher J.<lb/>
Rana for the fall quarter: and Dr.<lb/>
Arnold II. Sutin. a native of Brook-<lb/>
lyn. N. Y who came to FCC in<lb/>
June from Augusta College, is re-<lb/>
placing Bob L. Myers.<lb/>
Another faculty member. Don R.<lb/>
Borthwick, has resignel.<lb/>
DeFelice. who joins the business<lb/>
school as associate professor of eeo-<lb/>
nmics, earned an AB degree from<lb/>
Michigan State University and an<lb/>
MBA from the University of North<lb/>
Carolina where he is currently a<lb/>
PhD candidate.<lb/>
Dr. Guy has bachelor's, master's<lb/>
:nd doctor's degrees from Ohio State<lb/>
University. A former dean at Web-<lb/>
ber College and later a research<lb/>
and statistical analyst in Ohio, she<lb/>
comes to 'ECC as associate professor<lb/>
of business statistics.<lb/>
Hill, a PhD candidate at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Florida next December,<lb/>
received AB and MA degrees from<lb/>
Mexico City College. He joins the<lb/>
business school in the ield of<lb/>
management at the rank of associate<lb/>
professor. His teaching experience<lb/>
includes Mexican business law at<lb/>
his alma mater and international<lb/>
economics at the University of Mex-<lb/>
ico.<lb/>
Thornton has an AB degree from<lb/>
Blackburn College and expects to<lb/>
receive his PhD from the University<lb/>
of Missouri this month. A former<lb/>
research assistant and instructor at<lb/>
Missouri, he will become an associate<lb/>
professor of economics at ECC.<lb/>
Dr. Romita. a PhD graduate of<lb/>
the University of Madrid in 1953.<lb/>
earned his MRA degree from the<lb/>
University of Pennsylvania after re-<lb/>
ceiving a BS from the American<lb/>
International College in Springfield,<lb/>
Mass. His teaching experience in-<lb/>
cludes posts at Rollins College as<lb/>
associate professor of economics and<lb/>
at St. Jhn's University School of<lb/>
Commerce as instructor. The author<lb/>
of a number of publications, he will<lb/>
be teaching economics at ECC with<lb/>
the rank of associate professor.<lb/>
Reardon. a native of Tallulah, La<lb/>
has a bachelor's degree from Louis-<lb/>
iana State University and expects a<lb/>
master's degree from ECC this<lb/>
month. His non-academic experience<lb/>
inclules employment at the First<lb/>
National City Bank of New York<lb/>
and at Mosely Brothers toe. of<lb/>
Creenville.<lb/>
Dr. Sutin earned LLB and LLM<lb/>
degrees from Brooklyn Law School,<lb/>
and AB from Brooklyn College and<lb/>
a doctorate in juridical science "SJD<lb/>
from New York Law School. He is<lb/>
a candidate for the MBA degree<lb/>
from Siena College. A former visit-<lb/>
from Siena CoDege.<lb/>
College Union Brings Magic<lb/>
Hunior With Smith Family<lb/>
 highlight of the College Union<lb/>
summer program comes to East<lb/>
Carolina with the "Saucy Sorcery"<lb/>
show, scheduled for 8:15 p.m Mon-<lb/>
day, August 16 at air-conditionel Mc-<lb/>
Gmnis Auditorium under the au-<lb/>
spices of the College Union.<lb/>
Designed chiefly for laughs and<lb/>
r taxation, this hour and a half<lb/>
stage presentation is headed by the<lb/>
world-trtaveled magician-humorist C.<lb/>
Shaw Smith and his company (of<lb/>
Smiths "They're on the payroll al-<lb/>
ready, so why not let'em work?"), I<lb/>
featuring wife Nancy, who gives'<lb/>
musical background for the evening<lb/>
of combined conjuring and comedy.<lb/>
Joining the husband-wife team<lb/>
this summer are the five young<lb/>
Smiths, each of whom has a special<lb/>
musical, magical and-or mirthful<lb/>
part in the proceedings. This is the<lb/>
fifth annual junket for the whole<lb/>
family. Other college and university<lb/>
tours have taken them from Carolina<lb/>
to the Grand Canyon, throughout the<lb/>
Great Lakes region, the New Eng-<lb/>
land area and the Southland, in-<lb/>
cluding forty of the fifty states.<lb/>
This production shows the tailents<lb/>
of 16 year-old Shaw, Jr 15 year-<lb/>
old Curtis, and 'Nancy. 12. Grahaim.<lb/>
10, and Mary Mig, five and a-half.<lb/>
"At each performance we vanish<lb/>
one young Smith into thin airwhich<lb/>
is always more difficult than using<lb/>
thick air cliadms Father Smith.<lb/>
Actually in addition to using rab-<lb/>
bits, doves and the like, the Smiths<lb/>
use the children to "ride a broom<lb/>
into space vanish from a sus-<lb/>
pended position in full view of the<lb/>
audience, appear from a doll's house<lb/>
which moments before was shown<lb/>
empty and "do things that it would<lb/>
be difficult for rabbits to learn<lb/>
without formal sehooling contin-<lb/>
ues tfie flather. "tFrankiry, we think<lb/>
Ithe show is oute, corney and friend-<lb/>
llyand is quite seriously designed<lb/>
for entertainment that the campus<lb/>
family can enjoy<lb/>
Most of Smith's entertainment<lb/>
background has been slanted to-<lb/>
ward adults. This year's version of<lb/>
Saucy Sorcery" is meant to appeal<lb/>
to college and university students<lb/>
first, with the whole campusfac-<lb/>
ulty, married students, and total<lb/>
family groupsincluded<lb/>
While in college Davidson he<lb/>
helped defray, educational expens<lb/>
with appearances of various kind<lb/>
And during World War II. known as<lb/>
King Colin 'complete with beard1.<lb/>
he traveled over 125,000 miles, en-<lb/>
tertaining 2,000,000 service men in<lb/>
the United States and twenty-seven<lb/>
different countries around the world.<lb/>
A.P. and U.P. newsmen called his<lb/>
unit "The troupe that wouldn't go<lb/>
home<lb/>
A native of Mt. (Hive, .C . Smith<lb/>
has keen interest in drama and stu-<lb/>
dent life in general, he has long<lb/>
ibeen associated in the educational<lb/>
field. He has been a teacher of Eng-<lb/>
lish, general secretary of a campus<lb/>
Y.M.C.A a military school com-<lb/>
mandant of cadets, college union<lb/>
and placement director land coordi-<lb/>
nator of student activities, while<lb/>
maintaining his name and reputation<lb/>
as a speaker, magioiian-humorist and<lb/>
master of ceremonies mainly in en-<lb/>
tertainment circles in this half of<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
Besides the seven Smiths, mem-<lb/>
bers of the audience will be called<lb/>
on to add to this specM campus fun<lb/>
on August 16. "A little humor can<lb/>
do wonders in this time of tension<lb/>
says Smith. "It's a great gift to-<lb/>
day to be able to laugh with other<lb/>
people and especially at ourselves<lb/>
The College Union invites mem-<lb/>
bers of the College family their<lb/>
guests and friends of the College to<lb/>
this evening of fun land entertain-<lb/>
ment, Monday, August 16, &amp;t 8:15<lb/>
p.m. in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038889_0002"/><lb/>
2east Carolinianthursday, august 5, 1965<lb/>
Radio Racketeers<lb/>
Everyone is aware of the fact that the Greenville busi-<lb/>
ness community and the college students cerform complemen-<lb/>
tary functions. The merchants provide us with necessities,<lb/>
luxuries, and diversions. We reciprocate with our coins which<lb/>
expand the economy of the area. Greenville, despite its largre<lb/>
tobacco market, is generally thought of as a "College Town<lb/>
. -luring the regular school year, the student body makes<lb/>
up over Mirth of the population of the city.<lb/>
Being aware of this economic fact of life, most local busi-<lb/>
ness strive to cater to the students as much as possible. On<lb/>
e whole, they are successful, and we are appreciative. How-<lb/>
ever, in one particular case this mutually beneficial relation-<lb/>
p is being broken. One of the local radio stations has been<lb/>
sponsoring a contest for some time. The prize is a boat out-<lb/>
fit  a worthwhile addition to any student's collection. We<lb/>
venture that at least one-half of the patrons of this station<lb/>
and its sponsors are college students. Despite this, the station<lb/>
some unknown reason, chosen to hold the drawing for<lb/>
the craft during the break between Second Session and Fall<lb/>
Quarter. Obviously, this will exclude most college students<lb/>
m the competition for the prize.<lb/>
The managers of this radio station would be quite upset<lb/>
i: the shoe were on the other foot: that is, if the students<lb/>
were to refuse to listen to this station or to patronize busines-<lb/>
ses advertised on this station. They would claim that they<lb/>
were being unfairly discriminated against.<lb/>
Why, then, do they discriminate against us<lb/>
Who's To Blame?<lb/>
The tragedv of the Vietnamese civilian is one for which<lb/>
U.S. must accept a large part of the responsibility. These<lb/>
people are caught in the middle of the fight between the South<lb/>
Vietnamese and American troops and the Viet Cong. While<lb/>
war has been a way of life for these people in recent years,<lb/>
the atrocities committed against the civilian population ap-<lb/>
pear to be increasing in both number and ferocity. These<lb/>
atrocities range from burning villages and destroying food<lb/>
to killing women and children.<lb/>
Some in this country would attempt to excuse our ignomin-<lb/>
ious role in this tragic war on the grounds that the U.S. is<lb/>
fighting to defend the liberty of the Vietnamese people. No<lb/>
doubt this argument would sound absurd to the Vietnamese<lb/>
villager who has had his home destroyed, and has had several<lb/>
members of his family killed. It is unlikely that he is concern-<lb/>
ed with, what is to him a vague abstraction, such as freedom,<lb/>
when he is forced to consider where his food is coming from,<lb/>
where he is going to stay now that his home has been destroy-<lb/>
ed, or when the next bomb will drop on him and what re-<lb/>
mains of his family.<lb/>
It is surprising that the American people, who spoke out<lb/>
with much indignation when the Russian soldiers killed Hun-<lb/>
garians in the streets of Budapest and when Castro shot coun-<lb/>
ter-revolutinaries, are seemingly indifferent to the inhuman<lb/>
-crimes that are being perpetrated against the civilian popu-<lb/>
lation of Vietnam.<lb/>
Is There An Edsel On The Faculty?<lb/>
A recent issue of Harper's magazine contains an interest-<lb/>
article entitled "Is There A Teacher On The Faculty ?" The<lb/>
ithor laments the sad state of higher education in the United<lb/>
ate and suggests that some objective means of evaluation<lb/>
of teachers would be helpful.<lb/>
His first criticism is that teachers are neither rewarded<lb/>
for good teaching, nor punished for poor teaching. Instead of<lb/>
providing incentive for improving the quality of lectures, ad-<lb/>
ministrators usually base their evaluation of instructors on<lb/>
the volume of research and published material. Thus, salaries<lb/>
are based, to a large degree, on this tangible evidence of<lb/>
scholarship. Secondly, he claims that the faculty "no longer<lb/>
has such contact with the students outside the classroom, and,<lb/>
all too often, only a formal and perfunctory one inside it<lb/>
We believe that this criticism is relevent to this campus,<lb/>
as well as to colleges in general. We have witnessed many un-<lb/>
productive hours in classes led by teachers who, for whatever<lb/>
reason, were not doing their jobs well. This is simply a waste<lb/>
of valuable time and money. Perhaps we are not in a position<lb/>
to work miracles overnight, but this does not mean that we<lb/>
should give up in despair. It seems to us that the best instru-<lb/>
ment for measuring the effectiveness of instructors is the stu-<lb/>
dents themselves. The obvious objection to this is that students<lb/>
may not be capable of objective criticism, or that they may<lb/>
allow personal prejudice to affect their evaluation. However<lb/>
anyone who has spent a reasonable length of time on this<lb/>
campus knows who the good teachers are and who the poor<lb/>
teachers are. This information is gathered by personal exper-<lb/>
ience and by campus gossip. If it could be gathered scientifical-<lb/>
ly and made available to all students, the good teachers would<lb/>
have overcrowded classes, while the poor ones would have a<lb/>
light load. The result would be the replacement of the noorer<lb/>
faculty members by better teachers, and an overall imnrove.<lb/>
ment in the quality of our education. improve-<lb/>
If a student perferred an 'easy" instructor to an inter-<lb/>
estmg and provocative one, the loss would be his own. If how-<lb/>
ever, the student is desirous of a good education, he 'would<lb/>
be more apt to get what he wanted under such a system<lb/>
, busly  wuld be some injured feelings amonir<lb/>
the faculty members under such a system but "think hnth!<lb/>
designers of the Edsel must have felt" the<lb/>
Perspective<lb/>
Reporter Good jft<lb/>
ou seem to be havC'VS<lb/>
tafcors give us i<lb/>
troub<lb/>
JlKt A-ha<lb/>
Reporter<lb/>
lem here<lb/>
Policeman These<lb/>
is<lb/>
People<lb/>
magine that? TheV J?<lb/>
lh0 arf? tatSN<lb/>
p'ac" "f look'<lb/>
ok Pnva , )pem -<lb/>
Mwfk-g&amp;b<lb/>
&amp;flh"j<lb/>
Reporter B<lb/>
Picketing on- i teValk'S<lb/>
Ihey' ,<lb/>
Policeman<lb/>
Letters To The Editor f <lb/>
this sidewalk<lb/>
own mci<lb/>
<lb/>
To the editor:<lb/>
Eisenhower said, according lo last<lb/>
night's paper, that the people should<lb/>
not question the government's Viet-<lb/>
nam policy because the government<lb/>
has sources of information not open<lb/>
to them. 1 assume this is the rea-<lb/>
soning that most of our legislators<lb/>
and governors accept, but I question<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Although military information must<lb/>
often be kept secret, there are many<lb/>
unclassified facts to work on. For<lb/>
instance, according to the New York<lb/>
Times, the Saigon government is<lb/>
giving the death penalty for spread-<lb/>
ing reports destructive to the mo-<lb/>
rale of the war. Such a letter as this<lb/>
would be a capital offense. We ex-<lb/>
pect that sort of law from Com-<lb/>
munists  that's why we want to<lb/>
contain them  but we have a right<lb/>
to expect something better of the<lb/>
government we support. Another<lb/>
fact open for all to see is the re-<lb/>
sounding failure of the South Viet-<lb/>
nam-US war operation. When bil-<lb/>
lions of dollars and millions of men<lb/>
have not been able to get anywhere<lb/>
against an enemy poor in material<lb/>
resources, the citizen may well douK<lb/>
the efficiency of the tactics used.<lb/>
I believe democracy is (he Ameri-<lb/>
can way of life. I believe it is the<lb/>
responsibility of a democratic peo-<lb/>
ple and its legislators to balance the<lb/>
advice of the military against the<lb/>
advice of experts in other fields<lb/>
'available, though almost drowned<lb/>
out by wiar reports and justifications.)<lb/>
I believe there are better ways to<lb/>
help the people of South Vietnam<lb/>
than by supporting a corrupt, dic-<lb/>
tatorial government by military<lb/>
means. Let's stop murmuring help-<lb/>
lessly,  . .Communism. . .no re-<lb/>
treat. .  and start thinking!<lb/>
Edith Webber<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
An Assembly of Unrepresented<lb/>
People to Declare Peace will be held<lb/>
hi Washington on August 6-9. This<lb/>
gathering will be concerned primarily<lb/>
with the war in Vietnam, but it will<lb/>
also focus on such topics as civil<lb/>
rights, HUAC, "right-to-workM laws<lb/>
poverty, and other areas of current<lb/>
concern.<lb/>
August 6 is the 20th anniversary of<lb/>
the Hiroshima bombing. On that dav<lb/>
a demonstration protesting U s in-<lb/>
volvement in Vietnam and the Do-<lb/>
mjiuan Republic will be held at the<lb/>
White House. The 7th and 8th will be<lb/>
devoted to work shops and discus-<lb/>
sions which are to be held on the<lb/>
grounds of the Washington Monu-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
AUugUSJT9th ta he 'mi annwersarv<lb/>
of the .Nagasaki bombing. On this<lb/>
the concluding day of the activities<lb/>
thei participants "will assemble and<lb/>
walk toward the Oap&amp;oa with the in-<lb/>
tention of eonvenang the Assembly<lb/>
in the House if Representatives and<lb/>
SEE ? Congress has the<lb/>
right to declare war in our names<lb/>
t, The wgamzers of the assembly<lb/>
have stated that "in Mississippi and<lb/>
Washington the few nuake the de-<lb/>
cisions for the many. Mississippi<lb/>
Negroes are denied the vote; the<lb/>
vtoioe of the thirty percent of Amer-<lb/>
icans now opposed to the unde-<lb/>
clared war in Vietnam is not heeded<lb/>
and all Americans are denied access<lb/>
to facts concerning the true military<lb/>
and political situation. We must<lb/>
make it plain to the Adrrumstrataon<lb/>
that we will not be accomplices too<lb/>
a war that we did not declare<lb/>
Bob Ma lone<lb/>
Sir<lb/>
Forty years ago a college student<lb/>
was someone to admire and re-<lb/>
spect. But today nearly 50 per-<lb/>
cent of all persons between tilt ages<lb/>
ot eighteen and twenty-four are in<lb/>
or have attended college. Because<lb/>
of the increased attendance of stu-<lb/>
dents from all walks of life, the Mi-<lb/>
dividual student is not getting the<lb/>
attention he feels he deserves. To<lb/>
combat this lack of attention he<lb/>
grows a beard, she grows long hfair.<lb/>
and they both get involved with<lb/>
groups or organizations they know<lb/>
little about.<lb/>
This is evident in the fact that so<lb/>
many students are joining groups to<lb/>
picket this and to picket that An<lb/>
example of this was this past Etas-<lb/>
ter when fifteen thousand college<lb/>
students went to Washington to pro-<lb/>
test our current policy in Viet Nam<lb/>
Many of these students probably dmd<lb/>
not even know whether our con-<lb/>
flict was with North Viet Nam or<lb/>
South Viet Nam. They had heard<lb/>
that there was going to be a gath-<lb/>
ering of students in Washington ov-<lb/>
er the holidays and they wanted to<lb/>
be included in the fun. Once they<lb/>
were up there, they picketed every-<lb/>
thing from Civil Rights to Viet<lb/>
Nam. Everybody was running around<lb/>
drinking beer and comparing thear<lb/>
their newly acquired bearded friend's<lb/>
college with ftheir newly acquit<lb/>
bearded friend's college. It made no<lb/>
difference to them what they were<lb/>
picketing. Because as long as they<lb/>
were picketing something they were<lb/>
considered a part of the ingroup<lb/>
And at night, when thev tooik off<lb/>
their serious masks, it is fairly safe<lb/>
to assume that many of these long-<lb/>
haired coeds and their bearded<lb/>
friends had something on their minds<lb/>
other than Civil Rights or Viet Nam<lb/>
There is no doubt that some of<lb/>
these students were sincere in their<lb/>
efforts and actions. But their sin-<lb/>
cerity was greatly overshadowed by<lb/>
the actions of the majority of stu-<lb/>
dents. The sad fact is that most of<lb/>
these students iare reailry intelligent<lb/>
and could rattle ofif same complicat-<lb/>
ed chemical formula, easily work a<lb/>
difficult math problem, or recite a<lb/>
quote from Hamlet. But only a few<lb/>
knew the real consequences of the<lb/>
issue to which they wene picketing<lb/>
Actually they are only hurting the<lb/>
efforts of the sincere students when<lb/>
they lay in the streets and get ar-<lb/>
rested<lb/>
Bfll Beery<lb/>
east Carolinian<lb/>
Published weekly by the students of East Carolina College<lb/>
Greenvolle, North Carotoa ,<lb/>
 Member<lb/>
Oawainas Collegiate Pres Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
co-edHors<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
layout editor<lb/>
greek editor<lb/>
feature editor<lb/>
columnists<lb/>
wayne dark<lb/>
Jim farmer<lb/>
henry Wallace<lb/>
kaveh borzooei<lb/>
robert duncan<lb/>
carrie tyson<lb/>
mike conley<lb/>
Joyce tyson<lb/>
pat arnold<lb/>
I joe br annon<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
 - -  Subscription rat $3.50<lb/>
Reporter; In   ,<lb/>
the hite power aructurefaLl!<lb/>
lie pay your sala v  '<lb/>
policeman: Wl , Jj<lb/>
fact, I don't kno .   , b<lb/>
out Mr Charlie ' Udo<lb/>
Reporter That- .0<lb/>
dag you have ti ' <lb/>
Policeman Ye u Brute r<lb/>
rs into 'urn , m <lb/>
jiewa. mask? Boy U it snarp'<lb/>
heres my new bully club. It ha<lb/>
lead :n the end BesJ of aflU<lb/>
new cattle prod, it sure a 2<lb/>
job done Mr Oiarfe hjg J<lb/>
thes Hangs He sure ise<lb/>
guy. and smart, too Why he's m<lb/>
church, a memb- ,e John Birr-<lb/>
Society and an Evatted Cyclops I<lb/>
ne Ku Klux Klan How's that <lb/>
beine a success f<lb/>
Reported Wnat's that medal fri<lb/>
Policeman I this for cltfe<lb/>
initiators. I'm real good at that<lb/>
Reporter You s  Sfee the:<lb/>
that would be<lb/>
Policeman. Wh here comes m<lb/>
old Mr. Charlie toa<lb/>
Mr Charlie: Hellt, Red. I m<lb/>
it's time you broke up that demrc<lb/>
stratum. Those people are :re$p&amp;<lb/>
srn mi my property. Go get 'urn<lb/>
boy<lb/>
 Policeman. Anything you say, Mr.<lb/>
Charlie I've been atiting for i<lb/>
chance to use my new bull)- cM<lb/>
and cattle prod. Besides. Brute here<lb/>
is ready for some action. Come on,<lb/>
Brute.<lb/>
Mr Charlie; Red is die best dame<lb/>
iohceman I ever had. He real;<lb/>
knows how :o keep these agitators in<lb/>
theu pJace Look a: horn club urn.<lb/>
Course he's got a real good dog to<lb/>
help him out. Old Brute chews 'hip.<lb/>
up in a minute Together those ftT<lb/>
will learn them agitators that they<lb/>
can't come down here stimug up<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
Reporter. Rut aren't you break-<lb/>
ing the law by Treating those <lb/>
pie that way?<lb/>
Mr Charlie. Son, down here we<lb/>
make our own laws, understand?<lb/>
see you are writing a story about<lb/>
our little town. A lot of these re-<lb/>
porters that come down here w<lb/>
all kinds of lies about us. You k<lb/>
sure and fceK the truth about B<lb/>
you hear?<lb/>
Reporter. I ?ertarK a Bl do feat<lb/>
Mr Charlie<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Bulletin<lb/>
THURSDAY, August 5<lb/>
Watermelon Feast on the Mall -<lb/>
3 P.M.<lb/>
Pitt  'The Third Day"<lb/>
State  "Operation Crosstx<lb/>
FRIDAY. August 6<lb/>
Movie. "Thirtysix Hours" &amp;1C<lb/>
Austin, 7 P.M.<lb/>
Pitt  "The Third Day"<lb/>
State  "Operation Crossbow<lb/>
MONDAY, August 9<lb/>
Play: BRIGADOON Call week .<lb/>
SGA Meeting in Rawl 1 4 P,i<lb/>
Pitt  "Mirage"<lb/>
State  "Operation Crossbow<lb/>
TUESDAY, August 10<lb/>
College Union Committee Meettfc<lb/>
Raw! 105, 3 PM.<lb/>
Pitt  "Mirage" -<lb/>
State - "Operation Cr098<lb/>
Watermelon Feast on the a"<lb/>
3 PM- . pM<lb/>
Movtie: "PienicM Old Austin, 7 <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, August 11<lb/>
Bingo Ice-Cream Party,<lb/>
7:30 P.M.<lb/>
Pitt  "Cinderella"<lb/>
State - "Sons of Eat? Elder<lb/>
Ch.<lb/>
Thrl<lb/>
The European<lb/>
tjeeo a subject<lb/>
 United S<lb/>
has probably<lb/>
tor in the econ<lb/>
tern Europe h<lb/>
over six yearsf<lb/>
Ttoe dream o<lb/>
members since<lb/>
eventual Politn<lb/>
have been tai<lb/>
Iphere and n<lb/>
M.arket leaded<lb/>
to move towarl<lb/>
the basis of ed<lb/>
member statd<lb/>
exception. ChaJ<lb/>
everybody's n<lb/>
not interested<lb/>
v-hich France<lb/>
power.<lb/>
The action<lb/>
recent Commi<lb/>
on agriculturv<lb/>
Aho have haj<lb/>
Grande Char<lb/>
The French.<lb/>
threatened to<lb/>
Market if thejj<lb/>
n agriculture<lb/>
cies. This, ofl<lb/>
an empty thi<lb/>
mies of all<lb/>
osely tied<lb/>
Stud<lb/>
 Editor-<lb/>
threat the<lb/>
to the accr<lb/>
lina College,<lb/>
opinion poll<lb/>
our eampu<lb/>
elected at<lb/>
Question:<lb/>
opposed to. thj<lb/>
er Ban Law<lb/>
sons?<lb/>
Sandra Cui<lb/>
law at all.<lb/>
imow about<lb/>
try to avoid<lb/>
Emma Lou<lb/>
the law. By<lb/>
ccllege fie si<lb/>
for himself<lb/>
trying to im<lb/>
Ceresy Jon<lb/>
:ean enough<lb/>
speakers on<lb/>
think their sf<lb/>
tbad influence<lb/>
Jane Loflei<lb/>
have freedon<lb/>
includin.s co<lb/>
onlv fair to<lb/>
Bill Pritchl<lb/>
:ical law. It<lb/>
of the legisij<lb/>
sponsibrlity<lb/>
pass fair an<lb/>
this iaw<lb/>
able. Freedo<lb/>
rial to collet<lb/>
B. Dent:<lb/>
islators or &amp;<lb/>
to dictate e<lb/>
Coloradl<lb/>
Speake<lb/>
The follow!<lb/>
a recent<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
the Univers<lb/>
being reprin<lb/>
the national<lb/>
to this uniquj<lb/>
1CPS <lb/>
study commi<lb/>
Carolina Goi<lb/>
meeting to<lb/>
the debates<lb/>
speaker baj<lb/>
campuses oi<lb/>
versity sysw<lb/>
The only<lb/>
country. th(<lb/>
hibits any ki<lb/>
son who<lb/>
Amendment<lb/>
ing from si<lb/>
of a state<lb/>
A commit<lb/>
sociation ofl<lb/>
has official!<lb/>
nor that th<lb/>
face loss of<lb/>
is not repeaj<lb/>
it is unable<lb/>
diemic progi<lb/>
men predict<lb/>
if the school<lb/>
Several hi<lb/>
of the Univi<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
puses hsave<lb/>
ing repeal<lb/>
The c<lb/>
its findings<lb/>
fore the fal<lb/>
era accr<lb/>
has proi<lb/>
islotive<lb/>
recommends<lb/>
<pb facs="00038889_0003"/><lb/>
ecti<lb/>
ve<lb/>
M<lb/>
s<lb/>
K<lb/>
' '<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
' moo<lb/>
<lb/>
 -<lb/>
 - I<lb/>
i<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
'<lb/>
Bulletin<lb/>
4<lb/>
r! T-<lb/>
9<lb/>
 HI i week<lb/>
Hiw! 106 a 4 P ?<lb/>
Cross<lb/>
mttee Me"<lb/>
M<lb/>
rfioo Cr08sb<lb/>
on the <lb/>
gust l!<lb/>
n Party.<lb/>
WfJ<lb/>
Ch. DeGaulle Presents<lb/>
Threat To Eur. tfnitv<lb/>
v<lb/>
the tx-onomic boom which Wes-<lb/>
ipe has enjoyed now for<lb/>
'vtrs<lb/>
B BILL CALTFR<lb/>
uropean . onunon Market has solut<lb/>
subject of great interest m I mir rLH if EurP Econo-<lb/>
ed States and Europe. It Wo, il 5 be &amp;-<lb/>
been the principal fee- fir n-n   wavier, show how<lb/>
the wnfe 1S Uilfcr- t0 o <lb/>
mi of the Common Market a7 Fren nuclear force, design-<lb/>
since its inception has been I SLlfupp!a? Unit States as<lb/>
Political unity Major steps! 2fcloT EurPe- has been devel-<lb/>
taken m the economic I l atJgreat cost to the French<lb/>
ind most of the Common<lb/>
i tiers believe it is time<lb/>
owa political union on<lb/>
 equality among the six<lb/>
states, with one glaring<lb/>
bar es DeGaulle: almost<lb/>
sas these days, is fifration of equal states tied to-<lb/>
ri in any Europe b?1 m political and economic<lb/>
F - not the dominant Parnwy Whether this dream can<lb/>
ever be realized or not. it is certain<lb/>
ons o! the French al the Sf1 , a lon8 as The Grande<lb/>
moo Market conference. ;irles runs Prance, it will re-<lb/>
surprised even those iTilam a dream.<lb/>
eel with "Le Other men and nations have tried<lb/>
harles these past years to pui their stamp on Europe with<lb/>
- ny wordsJdisasterous results and President<lb/>
mion O'aaile should realize that nei?S<lb/>
France nor any other country will<lb/>
ntera P" ' ' r dominate a healthy, prosperous<lb/>
was mostly Europe. Europe can indeed be a<lb/>
 re nee the econo- third force in the world<lb/>
the members are 90 t it is<lb/>
 J together that any d -<lb/>
People, for the sole purpose of dis-<lb/>
oymg T mted States influence and<lb/>
in Euro dmi!rvant Pwer<lb/>
For centuries men have dream-<lb/>
a united Europe with a con-<lb/>
hut only<lb/>
a united Europe in which<lb/>
each nation is an equal member.<lb/>
Students Air Gag Law Views<lb/>
Because oi the law proves it should not be up co the<lb/>
Speaker-Bambaw poses i legislators<lb/>
tian of East Caro- Hosia Dennis: It seems to me that<lb/>
anlcoliege .students are mature enough<lb/>
to listen to any ideas without being<lb/>
swayed by Communisi propaganda.<lb/>
I think it would be terrible if ECC<lb/>
lost its accreditation.<lb/>
Cynthia Heath 1 believe that Com-<lb/>
munists should be allowed to speak<lb/>
as ion as they don't take a pro-<lb/>
communist line. Over all. students<lb/>
e mature enoush to recognize pro-<lb/>
paganda.<lb/>
Sandy Woodfin 1 don't approve<lb/>
Lou Newman: I am against L, thls' bw , don-t thmk !t would<lb/>
f thj tame one reaches k (lls.JSterous f Communists were<lb/>
e -nould be able to judge allowed t0 speak m our campus.<lb/>
whether a speaker s students can make their own deci-<lb/>
ndoctrmate him ,Rs bout the truthfulness of a<lb/>
-peaker<lb/>
variouv students on<lb/>
i- These students were<lb/>
v.rfdom<lb/>
re you in favor of, or<lb/>
v rth Oarotina Speak-<lb/>
What are your rea-<lb/>
i: I don't like the<lb/>
 I thmk it is better to<lb/>
 rt Communism than to<lb/>
I e issue.<lb/>
BEAUTY<lb/>
Beauty is in nature-<lb/>
Dew drops fallen upon an<lb/>
opened bud,<lb/>
Ice crystals patterned on<lb/>
a frosty window pane,<lb/>
Stars twinkling as diamonds<lb/>
placed agasinst velvet sky<lb/>
on a summer's eve.<lb/>
Moonlight shammering a<lb/>
silver streak on a mid-<lb/>
night sea,<lb/>
Rosy clouds with saver<lb/>
lining iat dawn,<lb/>
Sunlight sparkling on<lb/>
rocky mountain streams,<lb/>
Silver rauin drops and mist<lb/>
enshrouded willows of<lb/>
early spring.<lb/>
Beauty is in the young-<lb/>
A babe's first smile,<lb/>
A kitten tangled in yarn.<lb/>
A young colt frisking in<lb/>
a pasture.<lb/>
The limpid brown pools of<lb/>
A small child with<lb/>
a calf's eyes,<lb/>
pattering feet, laughter<lb/>
and tears,<lb/>
A women with enhancing<lb/>
curves, soft lips and<lb/>
silken hair.<lb/>
A man-muscular, resolute<lb/>
and unafraid.<lb/>
Beauty is in the Arts-<lb/>
A painting by Renoir.<lb/>
A sonnet of Elizabeth<lb/>
Barret Browning,<lb/>
A Chopin sonata.<lb/>
The ballet 'Swan Lake<lb/>
The carved beauty of<lb/>
Micheailangelo's Pieta.<lb/>
And yet. what is beauty?<lb/>
Can any man say more<lb/>
Than it is love? The<lb/>
perfect love of God and the<lb/>
imperfect love of man-living, grow-<lb/>
ing,<lb/>
fulfilling the Creator's purpose<lb/>
for life.<lb/>
By Pat Arnold<lb/>
east Carolinianthursday, august 5, 19653<lb/>
Power Struggle Seen<lb/>
In SE Asian Conflict<lb/>
<lb/>
The war in South Vietnam looms<lb/>
larger every day 'as a major con-<lb/>
frontation between the U.S. and<lb/>
Red China. There can be no doubt<lb/>
that the struggle in Vietnam is bas-<lb/>
ically a power struggle between the<lb/>
U.S. and China.<lb/>
However, there is another struggle<lb/>
going on over Vietnam that could<lb/>
Jhave a profound effect on the war<lb/>
as well. This is the sometimes hid-<lb/>
den and secret contest between the<lb/>
Russian and Chinese (murumists<lb/>
over who is to be the dominant<lb/>
Communist power in Asia.<lb/>
The Russians are faced with a<lb/>
rather awkward situation in Viet-<lb/>
nam. They appear to have little<lb/>
desire for a large scale war in Viet-<lb/>
nam, and feel they must actively<lb/>
support the North Vietname e in<lb/>
order to maintain their influence<lb/>
in Asia and throughout the Com-<lb/>
munist World. The Chinese have<lb/>
consistently attacked the Russians<lb/>
in public for their alledlged failure<lb/>
to support the Communists in Viet-<lb/>
nam. They have insinuated that the<lb/>
Russians are secretly co-operating<lb/>
tary operations, and it would be un-<lb/>
fortunate if he is able to pressure<lb/>
the Russians into giving this large<lb/>
scale aid.<lb/>
The next few months will be a<lb/>
crucial period in international rela-<lb/>
tions for the United States, China,<lb/>
and Russia. Victory in Vietnam for<lb/>
the Chinese supported Viet Cong reb-<lb/>
els would have a profound effect on<lb/>
the Communist as well as the free<lb/>
world and could serve to weaken<lb/>
the already precarious position of<lb/>
leadership which the Russians hold<lb/>
in the Communist movement. Should<lb/>
the U.S. be defeated in Vietnam<lb/>
the Chinese would fac z the most<lb/>
powerful propaganda weapon possi-<lb/>
ble for asserting themselves as a<lb/>
dominant power in the world,<lb/>
they have actively hindered the Rus-<lb/>
sians in the sending of supplies to<lb/>
North Vietnam. A recent shipment<lb/>
of Soviet supplies was delayed for<lb/>
days before it was allowed to cross<lb/>
Chinese territory.<lb/>
We haw today a struggle betw<lb/>
a first generation Communist lead-<lb/>
ership in China still retaining a war-<lb/>
with "United States Imperialists" j like attitude toward the "imperial-<lb/>
- Wo should be Amer-<lb/>
allow Communist rl I)arden: students lire not<lb/>
our campus. don t  ature enough to recognize propa-<lb/>
speeches would have any g lf it uvre not a ma1tcr of<lb/>
ences on tne students here. aCcrednation, I would be in favor<lb/>
thmk people shouldJof ktvpin? this law.<lb/>
arry Brown: I thmk the law was<lb/>
 passed by a group of men who be-<lb/>
eved that this innovation would<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
The other day when Jackie<lb/>
Collins left his gold-colored,<lb/>
1965 Ford peacefully parked on<lb/>
a downtown street, a big, nasty<lb/>
garbage truck came by with a<lb/>
pail hanging on its side. The<lb/>
pail scraped Jackie's car rudely<lb/>
leaving a terrible gash. Jackie<lb/>
requests that the considerate cat<lb/>
who left a note in his car say-<lb/>
ing that he witnessed this tragic<lb/>
event contact him at 746-6521.<lb/>
in trying to bring aibout a peace set-<lb/>
cement, a betrayal of the "funda-<lb/>
mental interests of the peace loving<lb/>
people of the world<lb/>
While the Chinese rant in public<lb/>
tibout the failure of the Russians<lb/>
to support the struggle in Vietnam,<lb/>
must have the help of the Russians<lb/>
for any sustained large scale mili-<lb/>
ists" and the leaders of Russia<lb/>
who are more restrained and cau-<lb/>
tious in their attempts to spread<lb/>
communism. The Chinese seem to<lb/>
believe that they have little to lose<lb/>
by pursuing an agressiive warlike<lb/>
policy in Asia and fear a general<lb/>
war much less than the Russians.<lb/>
However, Mao well realizes tnat he<lb/>
m o! speech everywhere<lb/>
campuses. It<lb/>
h iar other <lb/>
It is an urnprac- benefit the schools of this state. But<lb/>
It makes a mockery out . icy should realize that in<lb/>
 ve proo The re- nr .t:re.( the law is utterly asinine.<lb/>
. . of the legislature is to 'There  no Question that this law<lb/>
md reasonable lawB, and snmd and will be abolished It is<lb/>
s neith r nor reason- 1T a matter of how much pressure.<lb/>
n of speech is essen- agitation and red tape the iegisla-<lb/>
nd unversitie Urs are willing to tolerate.<lb/>
Fh is whether leg- sandee Denton: 1 am opposed to<lb/>
 educators have the rightly ;m because ft forbids Oom-<lb/>
 x- ies T'niumsts to speak about anything,<lb/>
 no! just politics. I think this is un-<lb/>
- rimination.<lb/>
Doug Owen: I am opposed to it<lb/>
se it might have a detrimental<lb/>
effed on the accreditation of this<lb/>
ed ;n school<lb/>
rhe Colorado Steve<lb/>
can be ot value m preventing<lb/>
the influencing of students by sub-<lb/>
I olorado U. Views<lb/>
Speaker Ban Law<lb/>
of<lb/>
is<lb/>
Wallace: I feel that thus<lb/>
in -<lb/>
new -<lb/>
v. orado R<lb/>
i)un nfl'versive elements<lb/>
Fred Wers Tins is an absorb<lb/>
l m th.d smacks of facism. It is an<lb/>
mber insuli to the intelligence of American<lb/>
here as<lb/>
en<lb/>
x speciad nme-nn<lb/>
on gel up by Nortn<lb/>
nor Urn Moore ts now<lb/>
rj to find a solution to<lb/>
and protests o <lb/>
- ban law, in effect on all<lb/>
4 North Carolina 6 ura-<lb/>
. system. . <lb/>
iy one of its land n e<lb/>
'he twxi-vear-old la pr<lb/>
. known Communist or per-<lb/>
, has mvoked the W<lb/>
4 during a loyadty hear<lb/>
m speaking on any campus<lb/>
-ate institution,<lb/>
ommittee of the Southern As-<lb/>
Free Movie<lb/>
36 HOURS<lb/>
Eva Marie Saint<lb/>
James Garner<lb/>
Austin Auditorium<lb/>
7:00 p. m.<lb/>
people<lb/>
on of<lb/>
<lb/>
officially 'mf6.tToJ<lb/>
that the state iMMfJ.<lb/>
m" ciar<lb/>
took iote SS!Sams<lb/>
sal hundred faculty <lb/>
the University of ciZm-<lb/>
anel Hill and srn23-<lb/>
b Ihm signed petitions ornano-<lb/>
repeal of the law -nniinr<lb/>
TheTommssion hopes m ST<lb/>
f ndmgs by TS?wJL<lb/>
'are the fall meeting of "<lb/>
accrediting erfal ieV<lb/>
onused to jaUa on<lb/>
recommends '<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
!<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
FOLK MUSIC OF BRUCE ALEXANDER<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Phi? Special Guest Appearance By<lb/>
BILLY STINSON<lb/>
Couples Only Both Friday and Saturday Nights<lb/>
THE ENTERTAINERS (Formally The Sunsetters) <lb/>
In CONCERT At The<lb/>
SATURDAY, NIGHT, AUGUST 7<lb/>
THE BARNACLE<lb/>
Will Feature<lb/>
THE ENTERTAINERS<lb/>
All Labor Day Weekend<lb/>
 I The sprite little butterfly Shetland<lb/>
suit that can play so many parts in yourhither-<lb/>
thither life. And its as light as a handkerchief<lb/>
on your shoulders. Tailored with Infinite care by<lb/>
John Meyer. Fully lined. In blueberry, redberty,<lb/>
glen green, peat brown, scone, blue skye,<lb/>
loch blue. Sizes 6 to 16. $40.00<lb/>
fgffT,yT'l"rTTTlfl,r1Mli1 muumumuuumMUMMM"MMauiiumit1t1tMUMM,rtf,r,trry't't<lb/>
<pb facs="00038889_0004"/><lb/>
4east Carolinianthursday, august 5, 1965<lb/>
i<lb/>
 <lb/>
1SS<lb/>
Me<lb/>
9<lb/>
Kat<lb/>
<lb/>
Rate emphatically announces that<lb/>
site hates all men and never intends<lb/>
to marry.<lb/>
After being influenced bv 9<lb/>
monetary gain, Petrurhi?<lb/>
that he will woo the iiery Kaf<lb/>
Play Review<lb/>
Dr. Frank Adams<lb/>
Banters and musicians contribute to<lb/>
:r- excellance of the play.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Adams is<lb/>
a member of the East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege English faculty and a regular<lb/>
reviewer of musical drama for the<lb/>
college news bureau.)<lb/>
The only possible objection to the<lb/>
current production of the East Car-<lb/>
olina Summer is that it ends too<lb/>
soon. It's over at 10:45. If the au-<lb/>
dience had its way. "Kiss Me. Kate"<lb/>
would run until dawn.<lb/>
Sometimes everything works, and<lb/>
this time it does.<lb/>
Of course. "Kiss Me. Kate" has a<lb/>
lot going for it: a pointed, wditty<lb/>
book by old pros Sam and Bella<lb/>
Spewack. an abbreviated but solid<lb/>
contribution from William Shakes-<lb/>
peare Don't underestimate him<lb/>
and the sophisticated genius of Cole<lb/>
Porter, whose astonishingly clever<lb/>
lyrics "He rhymes "heinous with<lb/>
"Coriolanus "puberty" with 'Shu-<lb/>
berty") and magical music are a<lb/>
constant delight.<lb/>
Add to this Richard Dale's adroit<lb/>
direction of a large 'and expert cast.<lb/>
Marc Belfort. a born Petruchio. is<lb/>
 fine Fred Graham, and Cole Por-<lb/>
ter's music is duck soup for his<lb/>
magnificent voice. His satirical<lb/>
"Wunderbar" duet with Lilli and<lb/>
his solos. "I've Come tG Wive it<lb/>
Wealthily in Padua" and Were<lb/>
Thine That Special Face are flaw-<lb/>
less.<lb/>
Barbara lone is suitably shrewish<lb/>
both as Katherine and as Lilli Vam-<lb/>
essi, but beautiful as either. Her<lb/>
' 1 Hate Men" is wonderful  and<lb/>
wonderfully punctuated.<lb/>
Sally-Jane Heit is a charming hoy-<lb/>
den, who uses her lovely eyes and<lb/>
mouth, the latter a singer's dream,<lb/>
to splendid effect. Either her "I'm<lb/>
Always True to You" or her "Tom,<lb/>
Dick or Harry" alone would make<lb/>
a happy evening's entertainment.<lb/>
The director himself, Richard<lb/>
Dak, is handsome and dashing both<lb/>
as Bill Oalhoun and as Lucentio.<lb/>
whose sok Rose Dance is the high<lb/>
point of the evening's dancing, all<lb/>
of which without exception is excel-<lb/>
lent.<lb/>
Graham Pollock and KelLey Alex<lb/>
onder, if not totjally convincing as<lb/>
gangsters, are fiaultless as enter-<lb/>
tainers, and their "Brush Up Your<lb/>
Shakespeare" coud go on for an<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
The costumes are magnificent (al-<lb/>
ter all, the Renaissance was the<lb/>
(heyday of costume), most by their<lb/>
opulent color, and some by their<lb/>
dramatic all-white (in the exquisite<lb/>
ly lovely "Were Thine That Special<lb/>
Face" number) or flashing black and<lb/>
white in the finalle). One costume<lb/>
is conspicuous by its scarcity.<lb/>
John Sneden's sets are a feat fo:<lb/>
the eye, imaginative, brilliant, rich<lb/>
One duplicates the cover on the sea-<lb/>
son's souvenir program, two use<lb/>
the manner of the French painter<lb/>
Buffet, and the Renaissance scenes<lb/>
suggest the Renaissance's own Bot-<lb/>
ticvelli. All are dazzling.<lb/>
It's hard to believe there could be<lb/>
a show in which the lines are so<lb/>
amusing, the scenes so absorbing.<lb/>
the songs so memorable, the dances<lb/>
so charming, the casting so apt. the<lb/>
pace so swift, the pleasure so great.<lb/>
"Kiss Me, Kate" is the hit show<lb/>
of the season. It should be held<lb/>
over until Labor Day.<lb/>
Don't miss it.<lb/>
Although they will not court Kate,<lb/>
 suitors vie for the attentions<lb/>
 fcr younger stter.<lb/>
Kate's father promises to be .er<lb/>
generous to anyone who will man<lb/>
fcis spirited daughter.<lb/>
Clowns dressed in colorful fS0f<lb/>
set a mood of gaiety in "f <lb/>
ahough the<lb/>
v ght Auditoi<lb/>
vi.vtrve at<lb/>
Peter Nero's perl<lb/>
Bight. The setl<lb/>
Von' could have<lb/>
after Mr. Nero oej<lb/>
her it did not<lb/>
' night club" mai<lb/>
his enthralling pi<lb/>
nude the evening<lb/>
summer entt<lb/>
Admirarnly<lb/>
drums and bass<lb/>
I looked at you<lb/>
ildn't turn a<lb/>
All I could say<lb/>
Ooo baby be by.<lb/>
000 baby bab<lb/>
Since then all th<lb/>
1 have dreams<lb/>
And if they con<lb/>
Ooo baby baby<lb/>
I o baby baby<lb/>
love to hear<lb/>
near<lb/>
:h day of<lb/>
nd when the d<lb/>
w baby baby<lb/>
oo baby baby<lb/>
oo baby baby<lb/>
Ooo baJby baby<lb/>
He ain't no an<lb/>
But that's ail<lb/>
He ain't no ang<lb/>
But that's aU<lb/>
well, I don't wai<lb/>
round his hea<lb/>
My sugar baby <lb/>
instead<lb/>
He got a little<lb/>
his soul<lb/>
He ain't no an<lb/>
Hut I don't cai<lb/>
He ain't no ai<lb/>
But I don't cai<lb/>
He didn't fly do<lb/>
white wings<lb/>
lie .blew in from<lb/>
bad Cadillac<lb/>
EC Stndej<lb/>
America<lb/>
Thirty-six m<lb/>
Carolina study<lb/>
excursion throu<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Routed in 19<lb/>
tour left here<lb/>
turn Aug. 13.<lb/>
frin ends, the ,<lb/>
trough Alabai<lb/>
&amp;ia, Colorado,<lb/>
sas, Kentucky<lb/>
sippi, Missouri,<lb/>
da. North CeaH<lb/>
Texsas, Utah, Vj<lb/>
giniia.<lb/>
The tour off<lb/>
Of college crt<lb/>
ECC Exbensfoi<lb/>
vision's sixt<lb/>
Study Tour,<lb/>
director of the<lb/>
Partrnent, is<lb/>
<pb facs="00038889_0005"/><lb/>
9<lb/>
r"n '1 ov.<lb/>
r lh he<lb/>
r<lb/>
Kate<lb/>
WH<lb/>
Iff?<lb/>
mi - r<lb/>
L<lb/>
iy to <lb/>
east Carolinianthursday, august 5, 19655<lb/>
Dope Wave Hits Campuses<lb/>
crowd tiki not nil<lb/>
  ium  was an ap-<lb/>
 ' noe thai gnw ted<lb/>
s performance Monday<lb/>
 WrtgfM in trans-<lb/>
e been better, but<lb/>
legan his firai num-<lb/>
 matter. His relaxing<lb/>
manner, together uith<lb/>
,Fano arrangements,<lb/>
i hisxhiuht of the<lb/>
Lertainment series<lb/>
 i aooorapaniod b y<lb/>
 bass. Nero improvised<lb/>
on ueh familiar themes as "Over<lb/>
h Hambou "Porg- and Bess<lb/>
sm Night and Day After listen-<lb/>
 to this excellent performer, it<lb/>
is easy to understand why Billboard<lb/>
Magazine ranked nun as the num-<lb/>
ber three instrumental soloist among<lb/>
college students. His skills were<lb/>
certainly well exhibited in the vari-<lb/>
ed program he presented Monday,<lb/>
and i: was obvious that he created<lb/>
many new Peter Nero fans here at<lb/>
Bast Carolina.<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA - (OPS' The<lb/>
New York Times this spring report-<lb/>
ed that "from one-fifth to one-half<lb/>
ot the 12,500 students. . .at Harvard<lb/>
 will have tried marijuana' while<lb/>
there. All Cambridge broke loose.<lb/>
Harvard Dean, John U. Monro,<lb/>
via the Times letters column, insist-<lb/>
ed that this just was not so, and<lb/>
Dr. Dana Farnsworth of the univers-<lb/>
ity health service was quoted by the<lb/>
Crimson to the effect that. "The<lb/>
crisis in drug traffic has been great-<lb/>
ly exiaggerated by people without<lb/>
accurate information<lb/>
Upswing of Drug Cases<lb/>
Last month a University- of Califor-<lb/>
nia-Berkeley student was arrested<lb/>
for marijuana possession, and last<lb/>
week a University of Pennsylvania<lb/>
s-enior was similiarlv arrested and<lb/>
held under $10,000 bail. Stiate police<lb/>
investigators arrested five Brandeds<lb/>
University undergraduates last fall<lb/>
in a mar juana raid on campus. The<lb/>
use of marijuana by some students<lb/>
j t Cornell University in March led<lb/>
to the second investigation of cam-<lb/>
mis n.iricotics .raffie i less than<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
The Harvard concern led Boston<lb/>
police and New York Stiate Bureau<lb/>
of Narcotics Control to hold semi-<lb/>
nars for college administrators. The<lb/>
New York Bureau reports Time has<lb/>
co'leceted evidence of marijuana use<lb/>
at 15 upstate New York campuses.<lb/>
An Oklahoma psychiatrist testified<lb/>
before the House Commerce Com-<lb/>
mittee that some college students<lb/>
By MARK LONO<lb/>
issue not be distorted by the press.<lb/>
The Highlander found another con-<lb/>
cern, in the feet that, in connection<lb/>
with the drug investigation, 'the<lb/>
university has used types of evi-<lb/>
dence and "trial procedures to de-<lb/>
cide his (the student arrested) fu-<lb/>
ture with the University which no<lb/>
law court in the United States would<lb/>
tolerate I<lb/>
"Heightened Awareness' with LSD-25<lb/>
.At Berkeley, the Daily Caliifornian<lb/>
printed a first person account of the<lb/>
LSD experience. The writer explain-<lb/>
ed: "fortunately for us adults there<lb/>
is an avenue, however temporary,<lb/>
which by-passed social structure in<lb/>
the journey to heightened aware-<lb/>
ness and improve consciousness. The<lb/>
vehicle in which we Cain travel on<lb/>
this road is LSD25. With this arti-<lb/>
ficial add. I could once again open<lb/>
my !eyes to the beauty on details<lb/>
and nufances of color and design<lb/>
His article went on to document<lb/>
the joys of LSD, a contrast to some<lb/>
of the experiences related else-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
"Dexedrine" Consequences<lb/>
At the University of Colorado, three<lb/>
students were hospitalized for atro-<lb/>
phic poison following a session of<lb/>
drinking "belktdonna tea Stories<lb/>
of students passing out during exams<lb/>
as a result of drug use are wide-<lb/>
spread.<lb/>
At Penn State, a student was very<lb/>
confident that she had done well on<lb/>
a post-LSD exam, only to find later<lb/>
that she had written her name as<lb/>
the answer to each question.<lb/>
A highly ranked graduate student<lb/>
at the University of Oklahoma who<lb/>
had been taking dexedrine to help<lb/>
him prepare for his last final, wrote<lb/>
the entire 3-hour examination on<lb/>
one line of a blue book. He told a<lb/>
friend as they wfalked out of the<lb/>
classroom that he thought it was<lb/>
the best paper he had ever written<lb/>
Imaginative Books For<lb/>
Unimaginative Readers<lb/>
Contemporary Lyrics<lb/>
Our Legacy<lb/>
were earning $200<lb/>
.pep pills' to their classmates. The<lb/>
Texas Department of Public Safety<lb/>
reported eight cases of illegal pos-<lb/>
session involving college students<lb/>
last year. A health center offical at<lb/>
the University of Texas reported a<lb/>
pronounced upswing" in university<lb/>
students' use of the drugs recently.<lb/>
Problem Not Only In U.S.<lb/>
Editor's Note:<lb/>
Realizing that the average Bast<lb/>
Carolina student is too busy with<lb/>
class assignments to itake time to<lb/>
select a well-rounded reading list,<lb/>
we are publishing this handy biblio-<lb/>
v omunw. graphy which we hope will be of<lb/>
a week selling value to you in wading through the<lb/>
tons of books being forced upon you<lb/>
by the publishing companies. Do<lb/>
not attempt to read all of the books<lb/>
listed. This would be too much of<lb/>
a strain on even the brightest of<lb/>
you. Simply select a few which ap-<lb/>
peal to you and try to work them<lb/>
in before Fall Quarter 'begins.<lb/>
C.P.S. 'Power and Politics in<lb/>
Viet-Nairn" bv Henry Cabot Lodge.<lb/>
Canadian schools, too, face the A handy loose-leaf binder with semi-<lb/>
you one di<lb/>
rn awa<lb/>
ay wa<lb/>
I f'V.<lb/>
:<lb/>
 rhe midnights<lb/>
Nils of you<lb/>
 .  me true<lb/>
. baby,<lb/>
babj<lb/>
 a oi- civ- 1 " bo <lb/>
r the ye <lb/>
the d. nere<lb/>
baby<lb/>
baby.<lb/>
VJ<lb/>
Yeah, he said he made his bread<lb/>
playing rock in' roli<lb/>
I ain't no angel, angel<lb/>
But I don't want nobody out you<lb/>
I ain't no angel, angel<lb/>
But nobody else will do<lb/>
He ain't no angel<lb/>
But that's all right<lb/>
He ain't no angel<lb/>
But that's all right<lb/>
You know he sleeps til sundown<lb/>
and he keeps me up all nigh-<lb/>
And when it comes to lovin<lb/>
That bov is out-a sight<lb/>
Yeah, you know he makes me lose<lb/>
mv self-control<lb/>
He "ain't no angel<lb/>
But that's all right<lb/>
Song Hits Magazines<lb/>
<lb/>
angel<lb/>
s ail right<lb/>
10 angel<lb/>
A. right<lb/>
 vant a kwe with a b to<lb/>
s head<lb/>
baby wears a stringy orim<lb/>
e bit of devifl d.vn m<lb/>
problem. The University of Toronto<lb/>
Health Dept. reported in February<lb/>
that drug overdoses were responsi-<lb/>
ble for the deaith of at least two<lb/>
students there last year. Three Uni-<lb/>
versity of British Columbia students<lb/>
have been arrested this year on mari-<lb/>
juana possession charges. A leaf-<lb/>
let advocating the legalization of<lb/>
marijuana has been distributed on<lb/>
the UBC campus.<lb/>
At the University of Manitoba,<lb/>
eight "pot" users told about thedr<lb/>
drug experiences to a campus news-<lb/>
paper reporter. The Manitoban print-<lb/>
ed the story, along with a school<lb/>
official's lament that "Oh, God for-<lb/>
bid that it has come to Manitoba<lb/>
A student was arrested fo drugs<lb/>
possession on tne Riverside campus<lb/>
of the University of California, and<lb/>
an Associated Press reporter rush-<lb/>
ed there to get his story. The UGR<lb/>
Highlander reveaded that the re-<lb/>
porter was disappointed in his in-<lb/>
terviews with students. Hie had hoped<lb/>
to obtain avid defenses of the use<lb/>
of marijuana, but found that the<lb/>
only student concern wias that the<lb/>
weekly mailings included. Price,<lb/>
author, and country of origin subject<lb/>
to change without notice.<lb/>
"A House is Not a Home" by<lb/>
Robert F. Kennedy. Includes a spec-<lb/>
ial section called "A Visitors Guide<lb/>
to New York" with pronounciation<lb/>
guide and methods of Pizza eating.<lb/>
"The Crisis in .Higher Educa-<lb/>
tion la Symposium with Clark Kerr,<lb/>
Robert Hutchens, and Edmond Mun-<lb/>
ro debating faculty parking.<lb/>
"Language and Meaning" by Bar-<lb/>
ry Goldwater. Invaluable guide to<lb/>
the art of saying two contradictory<lb/>
things in one sentence. Shows how<lb/>
to utter a flatly declaritive state-<lb/>
ment and. upon being corrected,<lb/>
maintaining "That's what I really<lb/>
meant Also contains a bonus guide<lb/>
to jet plane flying.<lb/>
"Mass culture and Excellence in<lb/>
the American Community" by Lyn-<lb/>
don B. Johnson. A blistering attack<lb/>
by the President on tasteless exibi-<lb/>
tionism in American public life. In-<lb/>
cludes suggestions for entertaining<lb/>
heads of state with rodeos, and hill-<lb/>
billy singers, and instructions by<lb/>
Lady Bird on how to equip your<lb/>
house with Muzak.<lb/>
"Small-Town Tramp" by Nathan-<lb/>
iel Hawthorne. This bold author rips<lb/>
the cloak of New England respecta-<lb/>
bility, revealing the sordid, sinful<lb/>
passions that rage beneath.<lb/>
"Lust at Sea" hy Herman Mel-<lb/>
ville. What Was the strange, per-<lb/>
verse piassion that drove the cap-<lb/>
tain to challenge society's conven-<lb/>
tions? What was the elusive mys-<lb/>
tery behind his peg-leg? Here are<lb/>
the answers, blazing across the page<lb/>
"Strange Flesh" by Upton Sin-<lb/>
clair. He found himself sinking into<lb/>
unspeakable filth and depravity<lb/>
Read the novel that shocked a gen-<lb/>
eration.<lb/>
 no angel<lb/>
re<lb/>
I m angel<lb/>
re<lb/>
v down from heavw ith<lb/>
on his back<lb/>
From &amp;? to"<lb/>
lac<lb/>
Best Jewelry Company<lb/>
Invites You To Come In and See Their Complete Line of<lb/>
Gifts For All Occasions<lb/>
Charms, Bracelets, Billfolds<lb/>
Serving E. C. C. Students Since 1907<lb/>
Zrirkirrkirkirkirkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk<lb/>
EC Students Tour<lb/>
merican Southwest<lb/>
.six members of J&amp;<lb/>
 i study tour A!5T5<lb/>
m through the Southwestern<lb/>
I States. <lb/>
.n1 in 10 states and Mexico. U<lb/>
Ft here July 16 JjL2<lb/>
m 13. Before tteeducrfwg<lb/>
ends, tho group w "rStfor-<lb/>
vh Alabama, rteona-<lb/>
JPPH Missouri, w,(SarXa,<lb/>
North OearoJma. 5f2STVir-<lb/>
Utafe Virginia and w<lb/>
e tour offers oJbvXe<lb/>
of eouM credit. Sponsored w<lb/>
Biq Value D<lb/>
;ion's sixth<lb/>
vteion. "fcan<lb/>
m sixth "?V Cramer.<lb/>
-our TV. nJtJrv de-<lb/>
tor of the ECC gengrapby r<lb/>
unent, is tour director.<lb/>
<lb/>
SHEAFFER CARTRIDGE PEN<lb/>
Regular Price $1.49<lb/>
Our Price 67<lb/>
SHEAFFER BALL POINT PEN<lb/>
With Refill<lb/>
Regular Price $1.79<lb/>
Our Price 67<lb/>
)ippity-Do HAIR SETTING GEI<lb/>
by Gillette<lb/>
Regular Price $1.25<lb/>
Our Price 2 for $1.50<lb/>
5 PERSONNA BLADES<lb/>
Regular Price -&amp;<lb/>
BERMA SHAVE<lb/>
Regular Price .79<lb/>
Total Both $1.77<lb/>
Our Price for Both .98<lb/>
kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Week of Aus. 5th<lb/>
SHIRTWAIST DRESSES<lb/>
Villager<lb/>
Pamela Martin<lb/>
Ladybug<lb/>
Buy One At Regular Price<lb/>
GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
BATHING SUITS<lb/>
Villager<lb/>
Leeweed<lb/>
Lanz<lb/>
Buy One At Regular Price<lb/>
GET ONE FREE!<lb/>
Use<lb/>
Your<lb/>
Charge<lb/>
Account<lb/>
222 E. 5th Street<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
From<lb/>
9:30-6:00<lb/>
'TyVTVTTYVVVyfVYTTYYYTYVVYYirVlf<lb/>
<pb facs="00038889_0006"/><lb/>
BHHHBBB<lb/>
6east carolmianthursday, august 5, 1965<lb/>
New Buildings Give Evidence Of Campus Expansion<lb/>
Vlusie building, which is<lb/>
i . let ion next Jul.<lb/>
much needed extra<lb/>
Ihe rapidh growing School<lb/>
! he nei facilities, being<lb/>
. approximate cost ol 2.5<lb/>
will contain about<lb/>
ooras, ritj teaching<lb/>
stu  lassrooms. This<lb/>
1 tdd much t<lb/>
at campus, tt is<lb/>
d on Tenth Street, cast t the<lb/>
i v j t <lb/>
 s<lb/>
.p"<lb/>
EC School Of Art Increases Faculty<lb/>
3 exp -on. botl BOC graduates are<lb/>
Final Production Of Summer<lb/>
Theater. Brigadoon Begins<lb/>
month  chool<lb/>
Dr Welling iraj i ot<lb/>
- an-<lb/>
il ritments of five<lb/>
Two will be additions<lb/>
repL.<lb/>
. e accepted one-<lb/>
said.<lb/>
. Iph Eugene Ja-<lb/>
Joplin, M .vho<lb/>
from P <lb/>
tnd E<lb/>
who<lb/>
i '<lb/>
 .1<lb/>
At-<lb/>
appointees<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
sU V Crawley h is moved<lb/>
Monday. Tickets<lb/>
SGA Oltioe.<lb/>
Available In<lb/>
?m chairman ol the sculpture de-<lb/>
lent 1 man of the figure<lb/>
and drawing department in the art<lb/>
.v be replaced in sculp-<lb/>
ture by : while Robert S Ed-<lb/>
miston, a facultj rnerniber here since I Sci6nCG Workshop For<lb/>
NASA Conducts Space<lb/>
of<lb/>
ol<lb/>
Teachers This Week<lb/>
1962, will become the chairman<lb/>
pture depart ment.<lb/>
ire briei biogr ;phies<lb/>
the fiv new I : -<lb/>
cobs, who joins the si<lb/>
ass tant professo I education.<lb/>
v degree from Joplin <lb/>
,iu i the RS and MEd ichers m i1h' sPace Science Work-<lb/>
Problems confronting educators to-<lb/>
!day by the onset of the Space Age<lb/>
re being studied this week by 36<lb/>
NSF Sponsors Classes In Biology<lb/>
Thirty-one high school students I -<lb/>
and edghi teachers an1 attending the<lb/>
Co-operative College School Pro-  i<lb/>
gram sponsored by the National tory<lb/>
Science Foundation. These students<lb/>
and teachers are busy learning the<lb/>
experimental approach to biolog<lb/>
Much of their time is spent experi<lb/>
menting in !ab: however, they also<lb/>
find time for lecture sessions which <lb/>
are devoted to the development of p<lb/>
concepts. N<lb/>
The course is scheduled for six<lb/>
hours a day, five days a week Eight I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
'Prince5 Breaks Two<lb/>
ttenclaiut Marks<lb/>
v of Mis- shop at East Carolina<lb/>
e is . Phi i c indid it<lb/>
or his Sponsored by the National Aero-<lb/>
cher ; aut cs and Space Administration<lb/>
 n and directed bv an associate pro-<lb/>
Bo- fessor ol science education a East<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
lessor o! science<lb/>
ina, Dr Floyd E. Matth is.<lb/>
the<lb/>
-<lb/>
shop is designed to familiarize<lb/>
teachers in gnades one through eight<lb/>
h the roles a iation and space<lb/>
in developing the<lb/>
rriculu I the elementary and<lb/>
secondary schools<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
    mas-<lb/>
a ihe I  sity<lb/>
 nstructor ai EOC<lb/>
A- -i( a native of Hollywood, Oalif .<lb/>
the has exhibited his works in more<lb/>
d t Fri than 20 art shows in several states.<lb/>
 graduate assistant in MX s<lb/>
r ! .school ot Art durum the 196465!rl.<lb/>
of 4,a08 tor tcademic year Toler was awarded'g within the atmosphere and in<lb/>
mances last week set -he BS and MA degrees here Vie is SJace' numan factors in space ex-<lb/>
average attendance- , friv lance commercial artist and IP'ora,ton alK e search for extra-<lb/>
The in. first oi as type at<lb/>
HU, began Monday and will close<lb/>
this weekend. The rigid schedule<lb/>
for participants has included formal<lb/>
present aliens on what makes a rock-<lb/>
et go. sending men to the moon,<lb/>
characteristics and problems of<lb/>
laboratory sessions of two hours<lb/>
 ich are held weekly. A one hour dis-<lb/>
cusi n period is to be scheduled<lb/>
for each laboratory session The fo<lb/>
lowing concepts will be developed<lb/>
during the discussion sessions: th<lb/>
unity of life, the c 'Uu i tsis oi<lb/>
life processes, the di ers  I life<lb/>
kinds of organisms and th<lb/>
gical relationships, and th <lb/>
mental and heredJtar i  ml<lb/>
life.<lb/>
The stud nt is not thon ugh one<lb/>
he completes the thirty hours o<lb/>
cla s and I ib work He has to sp<lb/>
four -o six hours a week doin <lb/>
side reading The 'each rs m "<lb/>
a group for four to six hours a<lb/>
discussions intend d to: 1<lb/>
uate the progress oi the course, id<lb/>
S! t<lb/>
a<lb/>
; terrestrial life.<lb/>
-rformance. jo:ns hls alrTna miicv  h(k rank f j<lb/>
The previous single performance instructor. OM   . ,<lb/>
I 77(1 and the nrevioi mn    , other assignments were develop-<lb/>
01 o and the puuoos top Ilss Vaff. also a graduate assist-1 ing projects suitable for classroom<lb/>
Th e,wr f manager - h. KCC " 'nsc't'r dividual experiments<lb/>
iaid atten-<lb/>
dance for the season through Sat-<lb/>
urda night's finale of "The Stu-<lb/>
nt Prince" totaled 20.86. after a<lb/>
i of 32 performances<lb/>
Audiences have atveraged 707 a<lb/>
night for the season to date, not<lb/>
counting an unexpectol second week<lb/>
of "Camelot Including that ex-<lb/>
tra week, when audiences dipped<lb/>
considerably below capacity, the<lb/>
season average was 652 a perform-<lb/>
ance through "The Student Prince<lb/>
New attendance records have been<lb/>
established several times this sea-<lb/>
son, the second for the EOC Sum-<lb/>
mer Theater. Audiences have run<lb/>
more than 30 per cent ahead of last<lb/>
season's.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? f'<lb/>
CHARGE ACCOUNTS<lb/>
INVITED<lb/>
Taff Office Equipment Co.<lb/>
5th StreetOn Your Way Uptown<lb/>
DESK LAMPS. NOTE BOOKS, NOTE BOOK<lb/>
PAPER. PENS and PENCILS. COLUMNAR.<lb/>
SHEETS, GREETING CARDS, ART SUP-<lb/>
PLIES, and ENGINEERING SUPPLIES.<lb/>
  MAAAOMr<lb/>
a <lb/>
North<lb/>
B<lb/>
T-<lb/>
Johnson -<lb/>
tighten <lb/>
nd re<lb/>
 '<lb/>
ren .<lb/>
thos"<lb/>
the present<lb/>
may chiange<lb/>
President<lb/>
draft c<lb/>
thirty-flHv iti<lb/>
Viet Nam <lb/>
tli at the <lb/>
draft call w<lb/>
hundred anci<lb/>
hundred twe<lb/>
l:nder the<lb/>
dents will tv<lb/>
full seineste<lb/>
by their coil<lb/>
will be exem<lb/>
The reel<lb/>
men, McCacJ<lb/>
Sie us a be<lb/>
they are chi<lb/>
or maybe dt<lb/>
The cofie<lb/>
"meains a<lb/>
at North<lb/>
will send us I<lb/>
he is a fu<lb/>
dent wtoen<lb/>
faU. If he<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>