<?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="00039300_0001"/>
<lb/>
;?i run Kic<lb/>
Statistics<lb/>
It IWill<lb/>
191<lb/>
53211<lb/>
32:?<lb/>
i-10<lb/>
i i pted0<lb/>
213'<lb/>
?45<lb/>
?0<lb/>
38<lb/>
xquisite<lb/>
ERGED<lb/>
FIRINGS<lb/>
1 Kt .Gold<lb/>
i for I<lb/>
tely designed<lb/>
 Gold.<lb/>
t Jewelers<lb/>
bvans atreei<lb/>
a! 752-3508<lb/>
i2.69<lb/>
2.69<lb/>
it Reg. Price<lb/>
LAZA<lb/>
Bern Highwaj<lb/>
riZING<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
HICKEN i<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
IVERY ON ;<lb/>
?<lb/>
OK MORE i<lb/>
5184<lb/>
Trfed<lb/>
Bit<lb/>
Volume XLIII<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, N. C, Thursday, September 21, 1967<lb/>
Number 4<lb/>
?????????????iHH<lb/>
Chad And Jeremy<lb/>
Sing Homecoming<lb/>
By BILL DUIGUID<lb/>
- Altr a successful Ian and Sylvia<lb/>
Concert on September 6, ECU stu-<lb/>
deni have a number of good shows<lb/>
to look forward to 'his tall. On Par-<lb/>
ents' Day. October 7. both parents<lb/>
and students will enjoy a concert by<lb/>
plenn Yarbrough. Homecoming en-<lb/>
tertainment will include Chad and<lb/>
Jeremy on both Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day nights and a dance with the<lb/>
Kingsmen on Saturday night, Octo-<lb/>
ber 28. On November 10, the Seren-<lb/>
dipity Singers will entertain with<lb/>
their variety show. On December<lb/>
7, Ray Charles and his orchestra<lb/>
Will perform here.<lb/>
I A accepted by the students in<lb/>
the referendum presented la,st year,<lb/>
there will be a 50 cents charge for<lb/>
ticket ?; for any concert costing<lb/>
over three thousand dollars. The<lb/>
Only concert carrying this assess-<lb/>
ment is the Chad and Jeremy con-<lb/>
Cert.<lb/>
 As the entertainment schedule<lb/>
for the winter and spring is not<lb/>
completed, the Entertainment Com-<lb/>
mittee is running a student opinion<lb/>
poll on popular entertainment next<lb/>
week. When you go to vote in the<lb/>
fall SGA elections on September 27.<lb/>
be sure to pick up and fill out this<lb/>
poll indicating your preferences.<lb/>
Any information you would like<lb/>
Bonceming c-nU rtainment may be<lb/>
acquired by .seeing a member of<lb/>
the Popular Entertainment Commit-<lb/>
tee or Dean Alexander al the Cen-<lb/>
tra! Ticket Office.<lb/>
MR( Filing Dates<lb/>
Close September 25<lb/>
Filing for Men's Residence Coun-<lb/>
cil elections for Governor and Lt.<lb/>
Governor will continue through<lb/>
Monday, September 25 until 12:00<lb/>
Boon.<lb/>
Interested dormitory men may<lb/>
Hie by writing their names, credit<lb/>
hours, quality points, and the of-<lb/>
fices for which they are filing.<lb/>
File is may be left at any time un-<lb/>
til deadline date in the mail box in<lb/>
front of the MRC office in Scolt<lb/>
Dormitory.<lb/>
Flections will be held Thursda.<lb/>
September 27 in each of the dorm-<lb/>
itory lobbies.<lb/>
Newspaper Staff<lb/>
Welcomes All<lb/>
By MARCY JORDAN<lb/>
I Tile EAST CAROLINIAN will hole!<lb/>
a reception for all .students inter-<lb/>
ested in joining the staff or in leam-<lb/>
tae how the newspaper operates on<lb/>
Sunday, September 24, from 2:30<lb/>
to 1:00 p.m. in 201 Wright Build-<lb/>
in Now staff members will be in-<lb/>
troduced, and refreshments will be<lb/>
served<lb/>
Students will be introduced to all<lb/>
areas of the EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
from news, sports and features<lb/>
writ me; to lay-out, printing, and<lb/>
Hailing. Interested faculty mem-<lb/>
ijrr ; are also invited to attend.<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN is a<lb/>
Wice weekly newspaper published<lb/>
by the .students on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursdays. The paper serves ap-<lb/>
proximately 10.000 students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff of the college and is<lb/>
the only contact excluding class<lb/>
that many individuals have with<lb/>
the institution, not to mention the<lb/>
OUtide world. The paper's goal is<lb/>
to serve the student body.<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN has ap-<lb/>
proximately 35 members but needs<lb/>
a preat many more people. There<lb/>
are several positions open on the<lb/>
news, sports, and features staffs.<lb/>
- Editor-in-Chief, Bill Rufty com-<lb/>
mented, "We want everyone who<lb/>
is willing to work to join the staff.<lb/>
There are many opportunities open<lb/>
lb college journalists. The only pre-<lb/>
requisite is a desire to learn. Any<lb/>
students or faculty members inter-<lb/>
ested in seeing how we operate are<lb/>
also welcome io attend the recep-<lb/>
tion "<lb/>
?v<lb/>
Morrisette Presides<lb/>
As Newest Speaker<lb/>
STEVE MORRISETTE<lb/>
By DAVID CULLEY<lb/>
In the second meeting A the<lb/>
SGA Legislature, the in I order ol<lb/>
business was to elect a new Speak-<lb/>
er. Steve Moore. SGA President.<lb/>
xplained that the election of a new<lb/>
peaker was necessary because<lb/>
Courtney Andrews, who was elected<lb/>
o ti : Speaker last spring,<lb/>
could not return to school for per-<lb/>
onal reason<lb/>
Two men. George Francis and<lb/>
Steve Morrisette, were nominated.<lb/>
After discussion, a vote was taken<lb/>
ind Steve Morrisette was elected.<lb/>
Morrisette's ilrst act as Speaker<lb/>
?.as to appoint John Stayley bo<lb/>
erve as chairman of the Rules<lb/>
Committee and George Francis as<lb/>
Parlimentarian.<lb/>
Stayley then moved that the Leg-<lb/>
islature approve the Mathematics<lb/>
Honor Association constitution. With<lb/>
some discussion the constitution<lb/>
as approved.<lb/>
Under committee reports, Dickie<lb/>
Davies, Chairman of the Telephone<lb/>
Placement Office Services<lb/>
Available To Seniors, Grads<lb/>
Plai emi nl services are available<lb/>
? . all graduates of East Carolina<lb/>
University and graduate oi othei<lb/>
institutions who have complete<lb/>
at leasl fifteen hours of course work<lb/>
at East Carolina. Forms for :<lb/>
'ration and information for<lb/>
pleting these forms may be obtain-<lb/>
ed from the Placement Service Oi<lb/>
fice. It is requested that you come<lb/>
to The office in person during the<lb/>
?30 -<lb/>
irms.<lb/>
with<lb/>
 e hours - 8:00 - 1230<lb/>
3:00 to secure the necessar;<lb/>
?  -irs are aske ! ' i regisl<lb/>
the Placement S rvi i ,<lb/>
Once your completed file is in<lb/>
the Placement Office, prospective<lb/>
: iyers may obtain copies of<lb/>
your cred n Lai by calling or writ-<lb/>
ing the Director. It will not be nec-<lb/>
essary tor you to give names of<lb/>
ulty members when emplo<lb/>
s<lb/>
New Baptist Student Union<lb/>
Features Auditorium, Stage<lb/>
The new Baptist Center which<lb/>
will be completed before Thanks-<lb/>
giving. Will offer East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty a wide variety of<lb/>
tacilities.<lb/>
The new center, which will be<lb/>
air-conditioned, will have a large<lb/>
lecture auditorium with stage and<lb/>
special lighting equipment for plays.<lb/>
several meeting rooms, an art gal-<lb/>
cry, and plenty of room for social<lb/>
and study activities. Randy Mis-<lb/>
hoe, directc of the BSU, and ECU's<lb/>
Baptist chaplain suited that the<lb/>
center would be open to any group<lb/>
who can make use of the opportun-<lb/>
ities offered.<lb/>
Until completion of the new cen-<lb/>
ter, located at the corner of Law-<lb/>
I May house Director<lb/>
Names Cast Members<lb/>
For Coming' Play<lb/>
Playhouse" director Edgar Loes-<lb/>
sin has announced the following<lb/>
ca.st members and production staff<lb/>
for the forthcoming production of<lb/>
?'A Funny Thing Happened on the<lb/>
Way to the Forum<lb/>
Senex, Cullen Johnson; Domina.<lb/>
Lynda Moyer; Hero, Richard Braci-<lb/>
ner; Hysterium, Taylor Green;<lb/>
Pseudolus, R. Gregory Zittel; Er-<lb/>
ronius, Mark Ramsey; Miles Glo-<lb/>
rious, Martin Lassiter: Lycus, Ben-<lb/>
jamin Cherry.<lb/>
Tintinabula, Debbie Williams:<lb/>
Panacea, Anita Johnson; the Gem-<lb/>
mae, Ann Wilson and Vicki sum-<lb/>
mers; Vibrata. LynnDodson; Philia,<lb/>
Jenny Shipp; the Proteans, James<lb/>
Fleming, Dickie Wilson, and Con-<lb/>
well Worthington.<lb/>
Director, Edgar Loessin; Chore-<lb/>
ographer. Mavis Ray: Music Direc-<lb/>
tor, Brett Watson; Sets, John Sne-<lb/>
den; Lights, Georg schreiber; Cos-<lb/>
tumes, Mary Stephenson.<lb/>
i-i.ee and 10th Streets, the BSU<lb/>
v.ill be meeting at 404 E. 8th Street.<lb/>
The Union is interested in any<lb/>
ECU student who wants to become<lb/>
an active part of an organization.<lb/>
All students are welcomed to at-<lb/>
tend the Monday night suppers at<lb/>
5:45 followed by informal worship<lb/>
services, or the Wednesday night<lb/>
forums at 5:45. This invitation also<lb/>
include- any special social activi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
The Honda Man'<lb/>
Tries For Six<lb/>
By it. W. GOLLOBIN<lb/>
Can lightning strike six times in<lb/>
the same place? Stan the Honda<lb/>
man hopes not. Lightning, thunder<lb/>
.aid rain have struck his dirt track<lb/>
the la,st five times ho scheduled<lb/>
motorcycle races.<lb/>
However, optimist, that he is,<lb/>
'he'd have to be' he's planning his<lb/>
races again for Sunday, Oct. 1.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Hurricanes Beulah.<lb/>
Dorla. and Chloe lurk off the coast.<lb/>
The races are open to anyone<lb/>
with any caliber motorcycle that<lb/>
(ares to try his luck. Riders get in<lb/>
free. Spectators, speculators, and<lb/>
sadists get in for $1.50.<lb/>
A number of ECU students are<lb/>
exacted to enter in hopes of being<lb/>
carried home beside a trophy or<lb/>
perhaps being awarded one post<lb/>
humously .<lb/>
Riders will be segregated by ex-<lb/>
perience into two classes. The rank<lb/>
beginners in one class and the pro-<lb/>
fessionals and would-be pro' in<lb/>
the other.<lb/>
The excitement, madness, and<lb/>
mayhem will start Sunday. Oct. 1,<lb/>
at 1:00 p.m. at Play Meadows a-<lb/>
cross the river. If it rains, you can<lb/>
still come on out and hear the Hon-<lb/>
da Man cuss.<lb/>
request eference. GIVE PLACE-<lb/>
MENT SERVICE ONLY. Your file<lb/>
:? kept m our files for jo year<lb/>
For your convenience in obtain-<lb/>
ing information on school .systems,<lb/>
government agencies, and business<lb/>
linns we have a Reading Room in<lb/>
the Sun Parlor of the Alumni Build-<lb/>
ing lP-re you will find brochures,<lb/>
pictorial resume and descriptive<lb/>
literature which has been secured<lb/>
for YOU.<lb/>
As a registiant for Placement<lb/>
Service, you will be notified when<lb/>
interviewers are scheduled to visit<lb/>
the campus and given opportunities<lb/>
to sign up for these interviews.<lb/>
Many recruiters come to the cam-<lb/>
pus during the school year seeking<lb/>
both teaching and nonteaching per-<lb/>
sonnel. The list of interviewers<lb/>
grows longer each year as the Uni-<lb/>
ver ity receives national recogni-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Vacancies are reported to the<lb/>
Placement Service Office daily and<lb/>
those who are registered with us<lb/>
are notified of these vacancies in<lb/>
their respective areas of interest.<lb/>
The Director is available for<lb/>
counseling interviews with regis-<lb/>
trants who need information about<lb/>
job opportunities in business, gov-<lb/>
ernment, and education. With the<lb/>
increasing complexity of the world<lb/>
of work from year to year, it is<lb/>
necessary to keep abreast of the<lb/>
changes In order to make wise<lb/>
profession; ! choices.<lb/>
C mmittet - - om-<lb/>
mittei had tudii biiity<lb/>
: obtaining ? Ai I tlephone<lb/>
Service for thi SGA indi-<lb/>
cated that oi - of<lb/>
; vice available only the state<lb/>
Widf .Service was The<lb/>
Legislature decided I ? i sfei the<lb/>
les tion back to th i for<lb/>
further investigation.<lb/>
Caroline Riddle m ??  it a<lb/>
? immittee be e tabli he I ? tand-<lb/>
trdize the SGA mileage chart Her<lb/>
motion was passed and she was ap-<lb/>
pointed as committee chairman.<lb/>
The next meeting ot the SGA<lb/>
Legislature wil! be M ? Sept-<lb/>
ember 25 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Russian Student iJol!s<lb/>
Rank JFK On Top<lb/>
NEW YORK. Sept. in ? John F.<lb/>
Kennedy ranks first on a. list of<lb/>
Americans most popular with Rus-<lb/>
sian university student- i special<lb/>
poll revealed today.<lb/>
Results of the poll, conducted<lb/>
this summer among 1,000 university<lb/>
students by the Soviet Novosti Press<lb/>
Agency, were published in report<lb/>
appearing in the current issue of<lb/>
Look magazine. The Gallup organ-<lb/>
ization conducted a i poll a-<lb/>
mong 500 US colleiu- tdei<lb/>
Both polls, take naga-<lb/>
zine's special issue on Russia show<lb/>
thai American and Socle- student<lb/>
?:?"?? surprisingly littli<lb/>
: -ies.<lb/>
The Russian student ranked au-<lb/>
thor Ernest Hemingway as their<lb/>
next most poular Ame- ,ith<lb/>
Mark Twain. Franklin D. Roo.se-<lb/>
velt, William Faulkner and Louis<lb/>
Armstrong following in that order.<lb/>
When asked to name America's<lb/>
greatest political leaders Soviet<lb/>
tudents listed Abraham Lincoln<lb/>
first, JFK second and FDR third.<lb/>
Fhe poll among Russian students<lb/>
indicated that most of them learn<lb/>
about the United States through<lb/>
the translated works of American<lb/>
authors. More than any other book<lb/>
they could name, the Soviet col-<lb/>
legians listed John Steinbeck's<lb/>
Travels With Charley as giving the<lb/>
most comprehensive view of Amer-<lb/>
ica.<lb/>
The 500 American students poll-<lb/>
ed by Gallup ranked Russia's cos-<lb/>
monauts a.s the Soviets they most<lb/>
admire: then came Soviet Premier<lb/>
Alexei Kosygin, Lenin. Dostoevsky,<lb/>
Tolstoy and Vladimir. Nabokov, the<lb/>
author of Lolita (who lef: Russia<lb/>
in 1919).<lb/>
Listing their most admired Rus-<lb/>
sian political leaders. D.S. students<lb/>
picked Kosygin number one by a<lb/>
wide margin, this perhaps oecause<lb/>
he is currently in office A trickle<lb/>
of votes turned up for Soviet Com-<lb/>
munist Party chief Leonid Brez-<lb/>
hnev and for Soviet Foreign Min-<lb/>
ister Andrei Gromyko<lb/>
Syndicated Columnist<lb/>
Lectures Next Week<lb/>
Peter Lisagor, syndicated colum-<lb/>
nist of the CHICAGO DAILY NEWS<lb/>
Washington bureau, will lecture<lb/>
Monday, September 25, at 8:00 to<lb/>
Austin Auditorium as East Caro-<lb/>
lina's second guest in the Fine Arts<lb/>
Lecture Series. His subject will be<lb/>
? LBJ's Use of Men and Materials<lb/>
Noted for his style, detachment,<lb/>
and vast knowledge of national af-<lb/>
fairs, and quoted by government of-<lb/>
ficials of all ranks, Lisagor has de-<lb/>
voted 16 years to reporting Wash-<lb/>
ington news.<lb/>
Through a varied career that in-<lb/>
cludes travel to every continent<lb/>
and coverage of events of major sig-<lb/>
nificance in the past 25 years, Lisa-<lb/>
gor covered World War n as a com-<lb/>
bat correspondent in London, Nice,<lb/>
Paris, and Frankfurt, and witness-<lb/>
ed the final collapse : Hitler's<lb/>
government.<lb/>
His post-war career included cov-<lb/>
erage of most of the crucial devel-<lb/>
opments at home and overseas.<lb/>
More recently Lisagor's analysis<lb/>
have dealt with the war in Viet Nam<lb/>
and the political and economic tur-<lb/>
moil of South Viet Nam<lb/>
At home, along with steel and<lb/>
coal strikes and human interest<lb/>
stories, he has covered every na-<lb/>
tional political eovention during his<lb/>
journalistic career, as well as the<lb/>
United Nations General Assembly<lb/>
over the same time span<lb/>
A graduate of the University of<lb/>
Michigan, Lisagor was born in West<lb/>
Virginia, lived and worked in Illi-<lb/>
nois, Michigan, Minnesota, Califor-<lb/>
nia, New York. Virginia, and D C.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039300_0002"/><lb/>
??"<lb/>
2?East Carolinian?Thursday, September 21, 1967<lb/>
To Get Involved . . .<lb/>
Both rumors and fact have been flying about national<lb/>
student organizations trying to locate chapters here on the<lb/>
East Carolina campus. This summer a field agent from the<lb/>
Southern Student Organizing Committee (S.S.O.C.) contact-<lb/>
ed interested students on campus. Communications had been<lb/>
set up with the National Student Association (NSA) and then<lb/>
apparently broken by SGA President Steve Moore's Policy<lb/>
Statement against affiliating with such an organization. Last<lb/>
spring several members of the Young Republicans Club made<lb/>
efforts to establish an EC chapter of Young Americans for<lb/>
Freedom tYAF). Contacts have also been made to and come<lb/>
from such organisations as Student Nonviolent Coordinating<lb/>
Committee (SNCC). Students for Democratic Society (SDb),<lb/>
and Southern Union of Student Government Associations (SI -<lb/>
' Before continuing, we will explain and limit our topic to<lb/>
na1 ional student organizations as being a nation-wide group(sj<lb/>
of studeni chapters working for a common national or region<lb/>
al goal or goals which have direci bearing on the students.<lb/>
Th( se organizal ions ai e usually political in aspect<lb/>
It would be rather naive and petty to get into a discus-<lb/>
sion i f the validity of specific organizations. Student organiza-<lb/>
tions are usually so varied that a student with any political<lb/>
beliefs can find one of these organizations suitable for his tal-<lb/>
 The question is if the SGA executive opposes affiliation<lb/>
with national organizations, what course can the students<lb/>
take? Of course the- SGA Policy Statement was concerned with<lb/>
the SGA affiliation with such organizations.<lb/>
The chief reason for Moore's opposition to this a)filiation<lb/>
is that i1 will take legislators' time away from local campus<lb/>
nroblems focusinc them more on the national level. Consider-<lb/>
ing however, the amount of work involved in -citing up na-<lb/>
tional organizations on campus, it stands to reason that estab-<lb/>
lished student leaders would take the initiative. .Many of these<lb/>
student leaders already considering national groups are in the<lb/>
Btudent legislature. Therefore, rather than working within the<lb/>
framework of the SGA, th se people would have work outside<lb/>
of the student government, thus perhaps weakening theSGA.<lb/>
What should be considered, and onsidered well. is the<lb/>
fact that due to their vast number, national organizations on<lb/>
the ECU campus appear to be inevitable Could campus prob-<lb/>
lems at East Carolina better '??" 'w with many<lb/>
student bodies who have the same problems? Would it be eas<lb/>
er to in prove i or own camnus situations by working collec-<lb/>
tively for solutions, rather than maintaining an SGA "isola-<lb/>
tionism" policy.<lb/>
We of the EAST CAROLINIAN wish to offer several al-<lb/>
ternatives and suggestions However, due to the campus-wide<lb/>
significance of national student organizations, the Editor<lb/>
would ik( ' invite studen suggestions both pro and con in<lb/>
the Letters to the Editor. 'I his is a campus - wide decision and<lb/>
von the students should make that decision.<lb/>
Y'all Come Sunday<lb/>
I would like to taki th opportunity, as Editor, to invit<lb/>
all students and interested faculty to the EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
reception this Sunday fr :301 1:00 in our offices in roon<lb/>
201 Wright Building. C I i wspapers are strange and in-<lb/>
teresting br "I- of animals (or vegitabJ or minerals. tak<lb/>
your pick).<lb/>
Seriously however, newspaper work is both challenging<lb/>
and rewarding. We of the EAST CAROLINIAN wish to share<lb/>
these experience with as many as possible. Whether you are<lb/>
inteiested in working with us or just curious as to what the<lb/>
heck goes on up here anyway, come see us Sunday.<lb/>
Campus Bulletin<lb/>
Friday. Sept. 22 7-no P.M. &amp; 9:00 P.M. Movie ? "The Appa-<lb/>
paloosa" Wright And.<lb/>
Saturday, Sept. 23 2:00 P.M. Football with Univ. of Richmond<lb/>
Thei e<lb/>
Mondaj Sept. 25 8:00 P.M. Lecture Series ? Peter Lisagor<lb/>
Wrighl And.<lb/>
Track ?? E.C.U Andrew College (cross country)<lb/>
Monday 3 t. J5 8:00 P.M. University Union COFFEE<lb/>
thr HOI eaturing "The Steve Baron Trio"<lb/>
Saturdaj U.U. 201<lb/>
Frida- " lf,V Wright Aud.<lb/>
Int<lb/>
imiweckly by the students of East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
'tpsb, Associate CoVegiate Press, United States Student Preea Association<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Rewrite Editor<lb/>
Editorial Editor<lb/>
Co-News Editors<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Layout Editor<lb/>
Circulation Managers<lb/>
Assistant Business Mnnager<lb/>
Subscription Manager<lb/>
Advertising Managers<lb/>
.1. William Rufty. Jr.<lb/>
Phyllis G. Bridgeraan<lb/>
Jim Young<lb/>
Thomas H. Blaekwell<lb/>
Francine Perry<lb/>
.Tnhn Sultan<lb/>
David Culiey<lb/>
Murcy Jordan<lb/>
! andra Rabhan<lb/>
John Lowe<lb/>
BID Ropers<lb/>
Piit Arnold<lb/>
Rick Crutch field<lb/>
Ita Culhertson<lb/>
Ppggy Dcbnam<lb/>
Bob Molvin<lb/>
Rum Neeiy<lb/>
An Objective View<lb/>
The 'Hippies' Part III<lb/>
By John Sultan<lb/>
n<lb/>
Bv JOHN SULTAN<lb/>
What Is reality? Reality is what<lb/>
exists Independent of ideas con-<lb/>
cerning it; in Other words, trees,<lb/>
cows, building's, on men all exist<lb/>
Independent of anyone's ideas con-<lb/>
cerning them. The hippie takes<lb/>
drugs to escape reality, but why<lb/>
(ioes the hippie drop out from so-<lb/>
ciety altogether? The hippie drops<lb/>
out of society because of the dou-<lb/>
ble standard most Americans are<lb/>
living Each member of society,<lb/>
with fei exceptions, is entwined in<lb/>
the practical - moral dichotomy.<lb/>
The hippie r fuses to face the dic-<lb/>
hotomy and flees to a culture re-<lb/>
i mbling the middle ages. Instead<lb/>
of progressing, the hippie remains<lb/>
stagnant and content in the paint-<lb/>
ing "i Dusters or the carrying oi<lb/>
mail The hippie cannot cultivate<lb/>
the genius he may posess<lb/>
i he practical - moral dichotomy<lb/>
can be expressed best, by the com-<lb/>
parison of the business tycoon and<lb/>
the serial worker. The business<lb/>
man make-  large profit, but the<lb/>
successful business man is consid-<lb/>
ered ruthless in his actions towards<lb/>
other men. The social worker us-<lb/>
ually lives in object poverty'Which<lb/>
ts considered impractical, but the<lb/>
social worker is considered moral<lb/>
in his dealings with other men. The<lb/>
dichotomy is now evident: practi-<lb/>
cality and morality are considered<lb/>
distinct oppositcs. A person can-<lb/>
r be practical or moral at the<lb/>
same time; In other words, actions<lb/>
and honesty are not related<lb/>
The best example to refute the<lb/>
dichotomy is the business man. a<lb/>
proprietor to survive must product<lb/>
and sell in order to live He must<lb/>
be practical m order to produce.<lb/>
and he must be moral in dealings<lb/>
 ), others to gain long range ben-<lb/>
? it he is fraudulent in his<lb/>
dealings he will lo.se business and<lb/>
his survival. If this business mail<lb/>
decides to build a factory, he can-<lb/>
not cease to be practical or moral<lb/>
in his dealings with the increased<lb/>
production. The best knowledge in<lb/>
(1 to existence must be used<lb/>
in an ethical or fair manner to<lb/>
gain the most prosperity.<lb/>
It must be noted that practicality<lb/>
does not mean infringement on an-<lb/>
Off The Cuff<lb/>
Elections-Lett &amp; Right<lb/>
Jim Young<lb/>
By<lb/>
11 ?<lb/>
p i<lb/>
. i subversive campus political<lb/>
machines are back, in action as fall<lb/>
ions draw nearer. Propaganda<lb/>
again in the air and brain-<lb/>
prevaili in all dark corn-<lb/>
?  i aucasse; are vogue I<lb/>
 i,i ?. pasmod-<lb/>
;? kin Is oi placi<lb/>
. i Partj bosses convi i<lb/>
? the Independents<lb/>
in the if and the University Par-<lb/>
? the Ratbskellei<lb/>
ii you ee thi m mes of party i an-<lb/>
n he ballot with which<lb/>
, tn nol familiar don't worry<lb/>
partiei do nol h nov<lb/>
? hem ? it!<lb/>
There was<lb/>
art would<lb/>
ceni hi<lb/>
ty) They<lb/>
te for onlj<lb/>
a rumor thai<lb/>
enter the<lb/>
Women's De<lb/>
were to run<lb/>
position<lb/>
their p<lb/>
DO<lb/>
litii al<lb/>
mation<lb/>
candi-<lb/>
Dean<lb/>
'i (<lb/>
Subscription rate S5.00<lb/>
?afllnr address' Box ISIS, East Carolina CoIIere Station. Greenville, N C<lb/>
Telephone. PL 2-57:0 or PI, 8-3426, extension 264<lb/>
een havi b en a mode<lb/>
nformits on campus durini<lb/>
i v. weeks of school. Ev-<lb/>
OSinj the same kind :<lb/>
li nt, and shampoo, And.<lb/>
 il ever heard of college<lb/>
tudents using 200 gallons of Bab<lb/>
oil -ort of makes you wonder.<lb/>
no? We thank the SGA for our<lb/>
Campus Pacs.<lb/>
By this time of the week, ev-<lb/>
le has sobered up from the<lb/>
William and Mary game and is<lb/>
ready to really tie one on at Rich-<lb/>
mond. We had good school spirits<lb/>
'some of which were bought in<lb/>
Greenville and some in Virginia<lb/>
and we hope that they will still be<lb/>
available for the rest of the season<lb/>
It. has been brought to my at-<lb/>
tention that many students are dis-<lb/>
appointed with the name change ol<lb/>
the old College Union to the Uni-<lb/>
versity Urn on. Why not be differ-<lb/>
? nt (and we are different). It's the<lb/>
mail unimpressive schools like the<lb/>
University of California, the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Missouri, the University<lb/>
of Minnesota, and Georgia Tech<lb/>
that still have a College or student<lb/>
Union. Even the University of Ig-<lb/>
norance and Imbecility at Chapel<lb/>
Hill does not have a UU.<lb/>
I heard a rumor today that a rep-<lb/>
representative of NSA National Stu-<lb/>
dent Association) was trying to es-<lb/>
tablish a chapter here on campus.<lb/>
Beware, you haven't got a chance.<lb/>
There's a CIA agent in every de-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
As of last Saturday, there has<lb/>
been a marked change in the Har-<lb/>
ris Survey Presidential ratings. The<lb/>
new releases indicate that LBJ<lb/>
holds 10. percent of the public fav-<lb/>
or, Governor Regan 13 percent, Geo-<lb/>
rge Wallace 3 percent and Coach<lb/>
stasivich 70 percent. The rest are<lb/>
undecided.<lb/>
As for news from alumni, it is<lb/>
reported that PFC Jim Kimsey<lb/>
(U.S. Army has almost finished<lb/>
his basic training, lost forty pounds,<lb/>
and is campaigning for the post oi<lb/>
Commanding Officer of Fort Ben-<lb/>
ning. Georgia.<lb/>
Student Government President.<lb/>
Steve Moore, told me today that he<lb/>
 seriously considering taking a<lb/>
po ition with Dr Weigand in the<lb/>
Counseling Department, as he has<lb/>
beei holding guidance sessions in<lb/>
i office every day Steve oom-<lb/>
nented thai these sessions were<lb/>
the benefit of the depressed,<lb/>
supressed, and oppressed or anyone<lb/>
. who wanted to work in the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
Tn closing I would like to pass on<lb/>
:?(! about campaigning to the<lb/>
i andidates in the forthcoming elec-<lb/>
tion. I'll not use my advice, as it<lb/>
may not prove too successful 'ha.<lb/>
Nevertheless, I give you the<lb/>
 i ol one who controlled many<lb/>
?e a "II you wish to win the<lb/>
ympathy of broad masses then you<lb/>
tell them the crudest and<lb/>
mo ' stupid thini i Adolph Hitler,<lb/>
Mi In Kampf.<lb/>
Until next week, be good, have<lb/>
fun take vour choice.<lb/>
i ther man's right to life, liberty,<lb/>
or happiness. The theft of anoth-<lb/>
er's property is not practical, for<lb/>
once the property is gone or pro-<lb/>
ducer destroyed, a thief must pro-<lb/>
duce or cease to exist. Practicality<lb/>
is the adoption of rational means<lb/>
to a certain end. It is practical to<lb/>
include flour to the production of<lb/>
bread, and not practical to include<lb/>
rocks. It also must be noted that<lb/>
morality means hottest, honorable<lb/>
dealings with men.<lb/>
The hippie, then, escapes to the<lb/>
lower culture to avoid the dilemma.<lb/>
Most Americans try to go half-<lb/>
way: the hippie goes to one ex-<lb/>
treme, since the mainstream of to-<lb/>
day's "intellectual thought" flows<lb/>
toward the moral ed of the dic-<lb/>
hotomy, the hippie elimates prac-<lb/>
ticality as immoral and enters the<lb/>
moral, tribal life The hippie,<lb/>
therefore, cannot produce goods<lb/>
or services to improve his standard<lb/>
of living as practicality is immoral.<lb/>
The hippie genius, then, cannot be<lb/>
cultivated as he lives in a stagnant<lb/>
culture.<lb/>
It is, therefore, the default of<lb/>
the so-called "intellectual" lead-<lb/>
ers and citizenery of this country<lb/>
that has caused the hippie move-<lb/>
ment. It is the practical - moral dic-<lb/>
hotomy that must be refuted. Since<lb/>
practicality and morality cannot be<lb/>
separated, it is right practically<lb/>
and morally to produce machines,<lb/>
buildings, and automobiles for one's<lb/>
own benefit. Reality must be dealt<lb/>
with practically and morally, al-<lb/>
though there are some who try not<lb/>
to deal with reality by the use of<lb/>
fraud, etc. Hence, the contradiction<lb/>
represented by the practical - mor-<lb/>
al dichotomy must be refuted by<lb/>
the Intellectuals and each indivi-<lb/>
dual In order to set American<lb/>
clety free from contradiction.<lb/>
The hippie does not have to<lb/>
"Drop out The hippie can pain:<lb/>
deliver mail, or write poetry in the<lb/>
framework of American society.<lb/>
and the hippie can benefit greatly<lb/>
from other ideas. All the hippie<lb/>
must realize is that practicality<lb/>
and morality are not separate. If a<lb/>
painting Is practical, a means to<lb/>
uci ? ? ful survival, then it is moral<lb/>
? it is correct to paint and ex-<lb/>
change fairly with men for other<lb/>
benefits. The hippie, despite bai l<lb/>
errors, can return successfully to<lb/>
society and be happy. It is the job<lb/>
of intellectuals and each Individual<lb/>
to set the stage<lb/>
Informal rush<lb/>
lie eight sororiti<lb/>
Hollowing is a rep<lb/>
ies and new ple<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Kappi<lb/>
The first rush <lb/>
hursday, Septen<lb/>
d after a nigl<lb/>
ink Panther" a:<lb/>
hows, "bunny-<lb/>
ailed kitties, ai<lb/>
ent the "big nig<lb/>
A formal tea s<lb/>
nd party. Wrier<lb/>
ut September 9,<lb/>
accepted. New 1<lb/>
Branscome, Han<lb/>
Berlach, New Be<lb/>
din. Fayetteville<lb/>
umberton; Lini<lb/>
ity; Gra:e Re<lb/>
ebbie Sheehan,<lb/>
arilyn stricklan<lb/>
Rico: and Cile<lb/>
e.<lb/>
Kappa Delta <lb/>
nd transfer stu<lb/>
viting them to<lb/>
an afternoon tea<lb/>
New officers a<lb/>
nd Carol Graj.<lb/>
lma Taylor, IV<lb/>
an.<lb/>
On September<lb/>
ined the Phi K;<lb/>
Alpha<lb/>
Alpha Xi Dei<lb/>
irush on Tuesday<lb/>
"the sorority houi<lb/>
fes are: Betsy 1<lb/>
Weycutt, Ann Rei<lb/>
?jfEusan Carey, an<lb/>
The Gamma P<lb/>
fltcently organized<lb/>
Jfor the mothers<lb/>
? pledges.<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Urtertained the K<lb/>
Alpha Xi's at a i<lb/>
home on Wednes<lb/>
er 20. Mr. Dau<lb/>
us of UNC at<lb/>
Kappa Sigma, v<lb/>
trv is an alumnu<lb/>
ta<lb/>
b<lb/>
Chi (<lb/>
ECU Forum<lb/>
The Real Hippie<lb/>
Rho Zeta Chaj<lb/>
leld its fall inl<lb/>
lay and Wedne:<lb/>
The theme ot<lb/>
v, as a Hawaiian<lb/>
ish party was<lb/>
pOmega House.<lb/>
During the su<lb/>
Borority house w<lb/>
fnew furniture <lb/>
Ithe living room.<lb/>
On September<lb/>
man from Cha<lb/>
Mims from Harr<lb/>
initiated.<lb/>
Alph<lb/>
!) ar Mr. Sultan,<lb/>
I have just read your newspaper<lb/>
article on hippies, and now I have<lb/>
begun to wonder. You see, I have<lb/>
spent the last year in and around<lb/>
San Franciscos' Haight-Ashbury.<lb/>
After reading your article, I would<lb/>
like to know what research you<lb/>
bs e your article on? Have you read<lb/>
any other articles besides what have<lb/>
appeared in Time or Life? They are<lb/>
good magazines but, hardly a fair<lb/>
approach to the situation at hand<lb/>
The drugs LSD Mescaline. S<lb/>
T.P. and others are used by a min-<lb/>
ority. Marijuana on the other hand<lb/>
used so widely I would hardly<lb/>
attribute it to the hippies. Mari-<lb/>
juana and its more powerful rela-<lb/>
tive, hashish, have been widely us-<lb/>
ed m all parts of the world since<lb/>
written history began.<lb/>
The phrase "Turn On, Tune In,<lb/>
Drop Out" was coined by Doctor<lb/>
Timothy Leary, and although he is<lb/>
a drug advocate, he is not the spok-<lb/>
esman for the hippie majority.<lb/>
The hippies are not always trying<lb/>
to escape reality. A great deal of<lb/>
them are college educated, upper<lb/>
middle-class and they have all had<lb/>
their chances at what you call re-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
You furthermore state that hip-<lb/>
pies are not a productive member<lb/>
of society. I consider this com-<lb/>
ment in error. I worked with quite<lb/>
a few of them this summer and<lb/>
have seen many more at work as<lb/>
postal clerks, deliverymen and<lb/>
many other jobs.<lb/>
They are doing more to change<lb/>
our present way of life than you or<lb/>
T are. Their art, music, and ideas<lb/>
are entering every facet of Ameri-<lb/>
i an life<lb/>
The hippies arc condemned for<lb/>
their two basic hang-ups with our<lb/>
society. These two points in ques-<lb/>
tion are the use of drugs and the<lb/>
advocation of free love.<lb/>
In closing, Mr. Sultan, I would<lb/>
like to say that we should clear up<lb/>
our own "campus pill poppers" and<lb/>
"arboretum snugglers" before ar-<lb/>
ticles are written about another<lb/>
part of our generation whom you<lb/>
collectively call the hippies.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Larry Mulvihill<lb/>
Women Unite!<lb/>
Su-<lb/>
it ls to the credit of he admin-<lb/>
istration of this school that men<lb/>
students are not bound by obsolete<lb/>
rules and have a minimum of re-<lb/>
strictions except for those which<lb/>
encroach upon the rights of others<lb/>
Unfortunately, this is not so with<lb/>
our female students. Though nof<lb/>
the only one, my primary issue con<lb/>
cents the rules concerning female<lb/>
attire.<lb/>
I find the "no-shorts, no-slack?<lb/>
? except  n covered by a rain-<lb/>
coat i" idea quite archaic for a?<lb/>
otherwise progressive school. The<lb/>
girls will suffer no more lascivious<lb/>
glances than they already do, so<lb/>
the Puritanical members of the<lb/>
sch ' and its faculty need not wor-<lb/>
ry<lb/>
understand that the Dean of<lb/>
Women is a fair, just, and under-<lb/>
standing woman who only awaits<lb/>
some young lady with initiative to<lb/>
approach her with a petition sign-<lb/>
ed by enough girls in agreement<lb/>
with the thoughts expressed in this<lb/>
letter to indicate that it is the wili<lb/>
of the majority. And so I hand the<lb/>
issue to just such a girl.<lb/>
John Rachel<lb/>
On September<lb/>
?Phi held inforn<lb/>
fashion .show as<lb/>
fehi's modeled<lb/>
College Shop .<lb/>
Official pledg:<lb/>
18 included: Be<lb/>
mond. Va Mar<lb/>
! derson, N. C:<lb/>
Wake Forest, N.<lb/>
ler. Adelphi.<lb/>
i Trotter. Charlo<lb/>
Raleigh; Donna<lb/>
jand Dottie Wall<lb/>
(boro<lb/>
Sitfma Sij<lb/>
The Sigmas he<lb/>
jParty rush at<lb/>
home.<lb/>
New pledges ii<lb/>
SHIR<lb/>
BAF<lb/>
SF<lb/>
Catering to<lb/>
Specializing<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
We now ha<lb/>
to satisfy 3<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
STOP BY i<lb/>
SOM<lb/>
Open 7 a.<lb/>
Mon.<lb/>
Friday 7 a<lb/>
Saturday 7 a<lb/>
<pb facs="00039300_0003"/><lb/>
?Jfp '?'<lb/>
III<lb/>
)hn Sultan<lb/>
IT'S ALL GREEK<lb/>
East Carolinian?Thursday, September 21, 1967?3<lb/>
ight to life, liberty,<lb/>
The theft of anotli-<lb/>
is not practical, for<lb/>
erty is gone or pro-<lb/>
rd, a thief must pm-<lb/>
bo exist. Practicality<lb/>
n of rational menus<lb/>
nd. It is practical to<lb/>
to the production of<lb/>
; practical to include<lb/>
must be noted that<lb/>
us honest, honorable<lb/>
men.<lb/>
ihen. escapes to the<lb/>
0 avoid the dilemma<lb/>
ms try to go half-<lb/>
pie goes to one ex-<lb/>
lie mainstream of to.<lb/>
jtual thought" flows<lb/>
oral e.id of the dic-<lb/>
lippie climates prac-<lb/>
noral and enters the<lb/>
life. The hippie,<lb/>
nnot produce goods<lb/>
improve his standard<lb/>
acticality Ls Immoral,<lb/>
nius, then, cannot be<lb/>
le lives in a stagnant<lb/>
fore, the default <lb/>
"intellectual" lead-<lb/>
npry of this country<lb/>
ed the hippie move-<lb/>
practical - moral du<lb/>
lust be refuted. Since<lb/>
id morality cannot be<lb/>
is right practically<lb/>
;o produce machines,<lb/>
automobiles for one's<lb/>
leality must be dealt<lb/>
lly and moTally. al-<lb/>
ire some who try not<lb/>
reality by the use of<lb/>
nee. the contradiction<lb/>
i' the practical - mor-<lb/>
must be refuted by<lb/>
als and each indivi-<lb/>
to set American<lb/>
in contradiction.<lb/>
does net have to<lb/>
rhe hippie can paint.<lb/>
r write poetry in the<lb/>
f American society.<lb/>
as benefit greatly<lb/>
dra All the hippie<lb/>
is that practicality-<lb/>
are not separate. If a<lb/>
radical, a means to<lb/>
vival. then it is moral<lb/>
KJl to paint and ex-<lb/>
with men for othi<lb/>
hippie, despite basic<lb/>
eturn successfully to<lb/>
? happy. It Ls the job<lb/>
s and each individt <lb/>
m<lb/>
 Informal rush has been held by<lb/>
the eight sororities on campus. The<lb/>
following is a report on the activi-<lb/>
ties and new pledges of the sorori-<lb/>
Hies.<lb/>
Kappa Delta<lb/>
' The first rush party was held on<lb/>
?Thursday, September 7. It was styl-<lb/>
ed after a nightclub with "The<lb/>
ink Panther" as the theme. Floor<lb/>
shows, "bunny-like" waitresses<lb/>
called kitties, and pink cocktails<lb/>
lent the "big night out" flavor.<lb/>
A formal tea served as the sec-<lb/>
"Ifond party. When bids were given<lb/>
cut September 9. nine new pledges<lb/>
accepted. New KD's are Betty<lb/>
' BraJiscome, Hampton, Va Maine<lb/>
Geiiaeh, New Bern: Sharron Har-<lb/>
din. Fayetteville; Linda Hatcher.<lb/>
Lumberton: Linda Maness, Siler<lb/>
Citv; Grate Roberts, Morehead:<lb/>
peijbie Sheehan, Springfield, Va<lb/>
jUarilvn Strickland, San Juan, Puer-<lb/>
to Rico: and Cile Sutton. La Gran-<lb/>
ge<lb/>
Kappa Delta welcomed ireshmen<lb/>
"and transfer students to ECU by<lb/>
inviting them to the KD house for<lb/>
an afternoon tea on September 10.<lb/>
New officers are Barbara Spano<lb/>
Kind Carol Gray, treasurers, and<lb/>
, Alma Taylor, Membership Chair-<lb/>
: man.<lb/>
On September 11, KD's enter-<lb/>
tained the Phi Kappa Tau Fraterni-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
I Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta held informal<lb/>
gjrush on Tuesday, September 12 at<lb/>
? the sorority house. The new pled-<lb/>
ges are: Betsy Bone, Wanda Hon-<lb/>
iveycutt, Aim Reinhardt, Gail Lea.<lb/>
Susan Carey, and Martha Cross.<lb/>
The Gamma Phi chapter has re-<lb/>
1-cently organized a Mothers' Club<lb/>
for the mothers of all sisters and<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Daughtry en-<lb/>
tertained the Kappa Sigmas and<lb/>
jLAlpha Xi's at a patio party at their<lb/>
jS'home on Wednesday night, Septem-<lb/>
ber 20. Mr. Daughtry Ls an alum-<lb/>
H?ius of UNC at Chapel Hill and a<lb/>
? Knppa Sigma, while Mrs. Daugh-<lb/>
trv is an alumnus of Alpha Xi Del-<lb/>
gin.<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
Rho .eta Chapter of Chi Omega<lb/>
ield its fall informal rush Tues-<lb/>
ay and Wednesday.<lb/>
The theme of Tuesday's party<lb/>
as a Hawaiian Luau. Wednesday's<lb/>
(rush party was a tea at the Chi<lb/>
Omega House.<lb/>
During the summer months the<lb/>
soiority house was redecorated and<lb/>
new furniture was purchased for<lb/>
the living room.<lb/>
On September 13th Cynthia Chap-<lb/>
man from Charlotte and Sandra<lb/>
Mims from Harrisonburg, Va, were<lb/>
initiated.<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
9 an condemned for<lb/>
lie hang-ups with our<lb/>
? two points in quc-<lb/>
use of drugs and the<lb/>
free love.<lb/>
Mr. Sultan, I would<lb/>
at we should clear up<lb/>
lpus pill poppers" and<lb/>
inugglers" before ar-<lb/>
ritten about another<lb/>
generation whom you<lb/>
ill the hippies,<lb/>
merely,<lb/>
ry Mulvihill<lb/>
ien Unite!<lb/>
? credit of the admin-<lb/>
this school that men<lb/>
not bound by obsolete<lb/>
ve a minimum of re-<lb/>
sept fur those whid<lb/>
n the rights of others<lb/>
y, this is not so with<lb/>
students. Thougn not'<lb/>
my primary issue con-<lb/>
ies concerning female<lb/>
"no-shorts, no-slack-<lb/>
n covered by a rain-<lb/>
quite archaic for an<lb/>
ogressive school. The<lb/>
fer no more lascivious<lb/>
they already do, so<lb/>
cal members of the<lb/>
s faculty need not wor-<lb/>
nd that the Dean ol<lb/>
fair, just, and under-<lb/>
nan who only awaits<lb/>
lady with initiative to<lb/>
r with a petition sign-<lb/>
to girls in agreement<lb/>
lights expressed in this<lb/>
fate that it is the wili<lb/>
ity. And so I hand the<lb/>
such a girl.<lb/>
m Rachel<lb/>
On September 13 and 14, Alpha<lb/>
Bphi held informal rush. Using a<lb/>
I fashion show as their theme, the<lb/>
? Phis modeled clothes from the<lb/>
? College Shop .<lb/>
Official pledging on September<lb/>
? 18 included: Beverly Balton. Rich-<lb/>
imond. Va Marsha Langston, Hen-<lb/>
;dei.n. N. C: Mary Ella Dodd.<lb/>
iwake Forest, N. C . Pauline Koh-<lb/>
Iler. Adelphi. Maryland; Terrie<lb/>
? Trotter, Charlotte: Gayle Shaw.<lb/>
? Raleigh; Donna Britt, Farmville:<lb/>
land Dottie Walker, North Wilkes-<lb/>
Iboro<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
The Sigmas held a Polynesial Pool<lb/>
?Party rush at Mrs. Ray MingeV<lb/>
home.<lb/>
New pledges include: Linda Bok-<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S<lb/>
BARBER<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Catering to Students and<lb/>
Specializing in razor cut-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
We now have five barbers<lb/>
to satisfy your grooming<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
STOP BY AND SEE US<lb/>
SOMETIME<lb/>
Open 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Friday 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 7 a.m. to 12 Noon<lb/>
kan, Richmond, Va Mary Wright<lb/>
Sisters initiated September 11 are<lb/>
Claudia Holland, Goldsboro, N. C,<lb/>
and Ann Partridge, Orlando, Fla.<lb/>
Edmundson, Rocky Mount, N. C;<lb/>
Susan Stamps, Havelock, N. C; and<lb/>
Cindy Bryant, Charlotte, N. C.<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Delta Zeta's informal rush, with<lb/>
a Hawiian theme, netted the fol-<lb/>
lowing pledges: Wanda Kerns, sop-<lb/>
homore, Charlotte, N. C; Martha<lb/>
Barnhardt, junior, Davidson, N.<lb/>
C; Linda Olsen, sophomore, Fort<lb/>
Bragg, N. C; Cindy Monroe, sopho-<lb/>
more, Charlotte, N. C; Loretta<lb/>
fJlum, junior, Myrtle Beach, S. C;<lb/>
and LaVerne Massey, sophomore.<lb/>
Raleigh, N. C.<lb/>
Delta Zeta was feted Saturday<lb/>
by an all-day social at the Pi Kapp<lb/>
house.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Gamma Rho chapter is composec<lb/>
of thirty-eight brothers and one-<lb/>
pledge. The Kappa Alpha officers<lb/>
for this year include Bill Mosier,<lb/>
President; Ralph Fuller, Vice-<lb/>
president; and Danny Evans, Sec-<lb/>
retary-Treasurer.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Iota Upsilon Chapter currently<lb/>
contains thirty-four active brothers<lb/>
and seven pledges.<lb/>
Leading the Lambda Chi's this<lb/>
year are the following officers:<lb/>
President, Bill Austin; Vice-Pres-<lb/>
ident, Gens Bang; Secretary, Don-<lb/>
nie Simmons: and Treasurer. Paul<lb/>
Roseman.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Gamma Eta Chapter currently<lb/>
has thirty-two brothers and three<lb/>
pledges. Officers for the year in-<lb/>
clude President, Phil Privatte;<lb/>
Vice-President, Hank Woodburn;<lb/>
Secretary, Chuck Stucky: and<lb/>
Treasurer, Ken Chalk.<lb/>
?ive brotherhood of thirty-two ac-<lb/>
tive members, five bull pledgee<lb/>
and two regular pledges. Current<lb/>
officers include President. Jim Fos-<lb/>
ter; Vice - President. Paul Ross<lb/>
Treasurer, Bob Dowd; and Secre-<lb/>
tly Phil Goodman.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
On this campus Pi Kappa Phi Ls<lb/>
represented by Beta Phi Chapter<lb/>
The Beta Phi Chapter consists o.<lb/>
thirty-two active brothers and foul<lb/>
pledges.<lb/>
Officers are Bill Dryden. Presi-<lb/>
dent; Cam Frazier. Treasurer; Bil!<lb/>
Marks, Secretary; Reese Helms<lb/>
Warden: and David Carter. Chip-<lb/>
lain.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi<lb/>
This years brotherhood consist<lb/>
of twenty-two brothers and two<lb/>
pledges. Current officers are the<lb/>
following: Piesident. Ronnie Kalla-<lb/>
man; Vice-President, Gary Dyer<lb/>
Secretary. Howard Marguhe- and<lb/>
Treasurer. Ellis Dosik.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Theta Pi Chapter of Kappa Sig-<lb/>
ma is East Carolina's newest na-<lb/>
tional fraternity. Currently the bro-<lb/>
therhood consists of twenty-two<lb/>
brothers, nine pledges, and three<lb/>
social affiliates.<lb/>
The President of the fraternitj<lb/>
is Larry Paisley.<lb/>
Theta Chi<lb/>
Epsilon Iota Chapter of Theta<lb/>
Chi national currently has an ac-<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavor?<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banana Split<lb/>
or Sundae<lb/>
264 By Pass, Greenville<lb/>
Wachovia Bank &amp; Trust Co.<lb/>
5 OFFICES IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
READY RESERVACCOUNT<lb/>
with (heck Guarantee Card<lb/>
F. D. I. C.<lb/>
Mill Outlet Salesroom<lb/>
i.appa Sigma John 'ie Intetfrate nitj Council bi EC newest national<lb/>
11 aternitv.<lb/>
J<lb/>
H. L. HODCES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Students Sport? Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
MEN'S ALPACAS<lb/>
Pullovers .$11.75<lb/>
Cardigans $13.75<lb/>
LADIES SVY EATERS $4.75 and UP<lb/>
LADIES WOOL SKIRTS $6.00 and Up<lb/>
LADIES WOOL SHIFTS $11.25 and Up<lb/>
"THREE'S NO PLACE<lb/>
LIKE THIS PLACE<lb/>
NEAR THIS PLACE<lb/>
SO THIS MUST BE<lb/>
THE PLACE<lb/>
506 Evans St Across from Pitt Theatre<lb/>
.????????????????????????????????-?????????????????<lb/>
SHOPMON THURS FRI.<lb/>
NIGHTS 'till 9 P. M.<lb/>
w ' Come On In!<lb/>
and see our large selection of<lb/>
MEN'S SWEATERS<lb/>
Coat Style, V-neck and Pull-overs<lb/>
priced to fit that hudget<lb/>
12.00 - 22.00<lb/>
? Bernard Attmann<lb/>
? Jantzen<lb/>
? Arrow<lb/>
? Robert Bruce<lb/>
? Puritan<lb/>
? Andover<lb/>
t whmmi mm mm ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039300_0004"/><lb/>
4?East Carolinian? Thursday, September 21, 1967<lb/>
Candidates Gather<lb/>
For Role Briefing<lb/>
By BOB ROBINSON<lb/>
The candidates running in the<lb/>
Fall elections met In Raw Audi-<lb/>
torium Tuesday night to have the<lb/>
rules of candidacy explained to<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Sue Yow. elections chairman,<lb/>
opened the meeting and called the<lb/>
roll of those who had filed for<lb/>
:on. as attc-ndanco at this meet-<lb/>
ing was mandatory for all candi-<lb/>
dates. As their names were called,<lb/>
the candidates answered by an-<lb/>
nouncing whether they were run-<lb/>
Student Party, University Par-<lb/>
ty, or independent.<lb/>
Following this was the distribu-<lb/>
tion of the forms on which each<lb/>
candidate must list the expenses<lb/>
he will Incur during his campaign<lb/>
Mi Yow4explained that each can-<lb/>
didati 6 'end only $20 during<lb/>
tii,  and that the proper<lb/>
i ? in filled In to show<lb/>
compliance with this rule.<lb/>
Before .she dismissed the<lb/>
Miss Y. quoted the rules about<lb/>
posters and behavior at the polls.<lb/>
She reported that the election will<lb/>
he Wednesday, September 27. Day<lb/>
students will vote in the lobby of<lb/>
the University Union, and the dorm<lb/>
students will vote in the lobbies of<lb/>
their dorms<lb/>
UP Discusses Election<lb/>
In Thursday Meeting<lb/>
?<lb/>
- -i<lb/>
ftj<lb/>
- (, candidates mi<lb/>
I 1.lined to them.<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
,? ?jRh? to have the rules of randidac? ex-<lb/>
STUDEN1<lb/>
OFFICIALS NEEDED<lb/>
For intramural sports. You<lb/>
oe paid for each game you ofi<lb/>
ate.<lb/>
V?WW4UW?-?-?W?? ??????????????'<lb/>
ftf<lb/>
lV<lb/>
ss<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
x is<lb/>
.&amp;<lb/>
M<lb/>
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X<lb/>
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-tr<lb/>
??<lb/>
???<lb/>
??<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
I tt Bv<lb/>
3.lfi<lb/>
rj-<lb/>
?i b-<lb/>
5<lb/>
wt<lb/>
a young intelligent collection<lb/>
of all the things you need<lb/>
 for back to school<lb/>
SOLD EXCLUSIVELY AT<lb/>
will<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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"Come to the Spirit Com-<lb/>
mittee meeting 1 ucsday. Sept-<lb/>
ember Hi at 6:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
SGA Conference Room (3rd<lb/>
floor Wright)<lb/>
The Draft<lb/>
Dr.harles Price of the EC!<lb/>
historv department will lead a<lb/>
discussion on 'The Draft and<lb/>
Dissent" ;it a dinner session<lb/>
sponsored by the United Minis-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
According to Rev. Bronson<lb/>
Matney, Presbyterian chaplain.<lb/>
the session is open to all in-<lb/>
terested students at 5:30 Mon-<lb/>
day, September 25, at the "Den"<lb/>
at 101 E. Ninth Street.<lb/>
A Bar-B-Q chicken dinner will<lb/>
be served prior to the discus-<lb/>
sion at a fee of Si.00 per plate.<lb/>
By E. NORTAMTTON<lb/>
nit, selection of candidatesi for<lb/>
? elections was the mam<lb/>
bushSs of the University Party<lb/>
meeting Thursday night.<lb/>
I Francis, party cliairmam<lb/>
???,i the old members back<lb/>
?ul extended a special welcome to<lb/>
 ???.?. Francis explained<lb/>
some of the history of the party<lb/>
  the students. "As with<lb/>
erything starting out, there had<lb/>
to be a backbone of two or three<lb/>
eopli to gel it -tatted, but this<lb/>
 r want this to be your party<lb/>
Von must tell us what you want<lb/>
one we are open to suggestions.<lb/>
Francis then appointed Jim<lb/>
Youni as campaign chairman and<lb/>
Lee BlackweU as publicity chair -<lb/>
ian for the Pall election.<lb/>
sieve Beaman, UP SGA Legis<lb/>
lature floor leader, and Patty Lar-<lb/>
on, UP secretary-treasurer, joinee.<lb/>
Francis in welcoming the fresh-<lb/>
men and urged them to run and.<lb/>
Student Party<lb/>
tx part of the campus<lb/>
-rancis then said that the chav<lb/>
would entertain a motion to change<lb/>
the word "College" to "University '<lb/>
In the pramble to the party's consti-<lb/>
tution, This was passed'by accla-<lb/>
?nation.<lb/>
The slate oi candidates chose<lb/>
at tin meeting were: Jean Ham-<lb/>
mond Stephen Rousso, Julie Hud-<lb/>
son, Barbara Herndon, Kitty Og-<lb/>
and Dan Sumner, all run-<lb/>
for Day Student Representa<lb/>
Chris Smith, Umstead; Bar-<lb/>
Atkms, Cotten; Jackie Da-<lb/>
Bagsdale; Richard Wi<lb/>
and Steve Beaman, Aycock; an<lb/>
George Clegg and Larry Newtor.<lb/>
rones, Those chosen to run fo:<lb/>
of lieers were: Terry Huh-<lb/>
Sophomore Class Preslden<lb/>
. r. Gai perini, Freshman Pre<lb/>
ent; Steare Davis, Fre.shman Vic<lb/>
? IdenH Jimmy Keeter, Fresh<lb/>
man Treasurer; and Donna o ??<lb/>
i ?'reshman Secretary<lb/>
burn<lb/>
:iiia,r<lb/>
? Ives<lb/>
bara<lb/>
niel,<lb/>
Members Select Nominees<lb/>
The Student Party selected its<lb/>
candidates ior the tail elections a'<lb/>
its meeting last Sunday night.<lb/>
Bill Duiguid opened the meeting<lb/>
in the place of Party Chairman<lb/>
John Meares who had been delayed<lb/>
with car trouble. Duijuid opened<lb/>
the floor to nominations for Day<lb/>
student Representative.<lb/>
After having nominated all but 3<lb/>
of the necessary 16 people, it wa<lb/>
voted to accept the nominees by<lb/>
icclamation.<lb/>
John Meares then arrived and<lb/>
supervised the selection of the res:<lb/>
of the slate. The candidates select-<lb/>
ed at the meeting were: Cathy<lb/>
Webb. Caroline Riddle, Leslie Gen-<lb/>
zardi, Gwynn Garrett, Brenda Hud-<lb/>
on, Bill Richardson, Ada Sanfor.<lb/>
jean Harvey. Arlene Murrhy, Vivla:<lb/>
Depaola, Piun Smitli. Pete Boogei<lb/>
donk, Linda Starr Plemmons, Jan<lb/>
? - Bickham, Sue Hunnicutt an<lb/>
Mary Del Galys for Day Studei.<lb/>
Representative.<lb/>
Dormitory R<lb/>
Karen Wagner,<lb/>
Minis, Flemini<lb/>
Garrett; Terry<lb/>
otati es ar?<lb/>
Wilson Sand'<lb/>
, Jane Rickett-<lb/>
Trotter. Umstoad<lb/>
MERLF NORMAN (X)S:TI(, STUDIO<lb/>
HOME OF THE 3 STEPS TO BEAUTY<lb/>
1(: E. 5th Stir<lb/>
Now Showing Through Sept. 26<lb/>
"Barefoot In The Park"<lb/>
Starring Jane Fonda<lb/>
STATE THEATRE<lb/>
Carol Cashlon and Gail Adam.<lb/>
New Dorm; Debbie Nbrsworthy and<lb/>
? Coe, Fl( tcher<lb/>
Those running foi lass ofiicei<lb/>
Freshman class: Ike Puzor<lb/>
Ident; Jon Rogers, Vice-Pres:<lb/>
dent; Pace Swindell. Secnestarj<lb/>
Sophmore class Anne Hendershol<lb/>
:?' e ident; Ruth Gwynn Vice-Prei<lb/>
denl Betsy Lawsoo Secretary<lb/>
Turcotte Treasurer. Juni i<lb/>
Carleen HJortsvans, Presi<lb/>
iii Linda Starr Plemmons, Vice-<lb/>
? lident; Gwynn Garrett, Seen<lb/>
tary; Donna Jean Salles, Tie.<lb/>
er. Senior class: G. Martin La.<lb/>
dent; Caroline Riddle. Seen<lb/>
Brenda Bullock T' isuri i<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Ml freshmen and npperefaUB-<lb/>
men interested in playing vars<lb/>
ily tennis should meet with<lb/>
( oacfa Welborn tonight, Thurs-<lb/>
day, Sept. 21 it 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the (ivm,<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
Mr. Advertiser<lb/>
it pays you<lb/>
to advertise in the<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
For Advertising Assistance Contact<lb/>
TOM BLACKWELL, Business Manajcer<lb/>
(? 4?- ?<lb/>
<lb/>
or<lb/>
BOB MELVIN, Advertising Manager<lb/>
Office B, Room 201 Wrighf Building<lb/>
Phone 752-5716<lb/>
Mize<lb/>
For ft<lb/>
an<lb/>
an<lb/>
St:<lb/>
ev<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
nf<lb/>
It or<lb/>
Lys<lb/>
nee<lb/>
ft<lb/>
P<lb/>
tl<lb/>
tr<lb/>
ti<lb/>
e<lb/>
PRECIS, N. Y. -<lb/>
lite group, Mil<lb/>
itimated three<lb/>
g, and still gro<lb/>
be one yoursc<lb/>
become one a:<lb/>
is the fellow<lb/>
5 a new hi-fi<lb/>
some other ell<lb/>
I Mizewell bi<lb/>
limited to bul<lb/>
lateur radio and<lb/>
zewells today ai<lb/>
I-sensitive photo<lb/>
is. electronic bun<lb/>
and homes, h<lb/>
le-talkies, auto<lb/>
b, and dozens of<lb/>
of tin Mizev<lb/>
sc.i Alliwi Radi<lb/>
On, h last year S<lb/>
of hi-fi, recoi<lb/>
itions instrument.1<lb/>
mics equipment<lb/>
I of component<lb/>
An important p<lb/>
les is electronic<lb/>
idgetry in kit fo<lb/>
om a $4.50 cryst<lb/>
,pular with Boy<lb/>
.ait badges ? to<lb/>
ory oscilloscope.<lb/>
night-kits(R) i<lb/>
dkies, Short Wav<lb/>
sensitive photo<lb/>
. an electronic m<lb/>
introl, lab kit.s foi<lb/>
, ; . solid-state atl<lb/>
&amp; timing light 1<lb/>
Knents, Citizens 1<lb/>
K iteur commui<lb/>
Ki ? instrument<lb/>
? i-ji's The compai<lb/>
? by ? el<lb/>
urers<lb/>
ime Mizewells<lb/>
; kit.? Ins<lb/>
atalo<lb/>
i tpacitors re<lb/>
omponent th<lb/>
Befon I m<lb/>
: ? wr<lb/>
? . . bome-1<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
? ibbyists hi<lb/>
parts in t<lb/>
ill compul<lb/>
ome hit<lb/>
to<lb/>
hi<lb/>
 etters,<lb/>
I and l)<lb/>
till by Mi<lb/>
?'?? :)?<lb/>
epartment<lb/>
on, main<lb/>
i ply for trend<lb/>
thi<lb/>
ibably hen<lb/>
best- elle<lb/>
audit i ce<lb/>
ts, CB-radio an<lb/>
ai il the<lb/>
themseh<lb/>
ee Flick<lb/>
Brando In <lb/>
Marlon Brando '<lb/>
ippaloosa the re<lb/>
Ick.<lb/>
k wa the last<lb/>
larlon Brando, "C<lb/>
piis new film is q'<lb/>
Mot itself is simp<lb/>
i,l .1,  horse is<lb/>
p. ,i bandit chief1<lb/>
track him to the<lb/>
the 1870's and<lb/>
ust the ht<lb/>
The picture is d<lb/>
Pune ("Xpcrea<lb/>
Ihock mil of somt<lb/>
tsual camera woi<lb/>
throws away all<lb/>
lamera techniques<lb/>
Ihinas like sho?itii<lb/>
towards a cabin<lb/>
rlass; juxtaposes<lb/>
Inormous, brilliani<lb/>
lome of the wildi<lb/>
UP shots to catc<lb/>
pmotional respons<lb/>
Collfgo Artist<lb/>
or Art invite a<lb/>
to attend the<lb/>
meeting of CAS<lb/>
at 7:00 P.M. ir<lb/>
I'hi Beta La<lb/>
all interested 1<lb/>
and minors, incl<lb/>
A membershl<lb/>
held in the cent<lb/>
September 10-<lb/>
until two.<lb/>
??ryH4??<lb/>
???mifmmm:wW<lb/>
riPiWUpftHMf<lb/>
<pb facs="00039300_0005"/><lb/>
ection 'Mizewells Set Trends<lb/>
eting For Modern Hobbyists<lb/>
East Carolinian?Thursday. September 21, 1967?5<lb/>
c campus<lb/>
said that the chaV<lb/>
i a motion to changt<lb/>
ege" to "University"<lb/>
to the party's consti-<lb/>
aa passed" by accla-<lb/>
. aodidates chose<lb/>
r were: Jean Ham-<lb/>
'rousso, Julie Hud-<lb/>
Herndon, Kitty Og-<lb/>
:i Sumner, all run-<lb/>
Student Represents<lb/>
nifh, Umstead; Bar-<lb/>
Cotten; Jackie Da-<lb/>
 Richard Wab<lb/>
aman, Aycock; as<lb/>
and Larry Newton,<lb/>
i?n to run :<lb/>
were: Terry Huf:<lb/>
?re Class Presiden<lb/>
li, Freshman Presi-<lb/>
ivi. Freshman Vic<lb/>
imy Keeter, Fresh<lb/>
 and Donna C<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
ranees<lb/>
Brenda Huc-<lb/>
irdsoa, Ada Sanforc<lb/>
rlene Murrhy, Vi1a<lb/>
Smith, Pete Hooger,<lb/>
arr Plemmona, Jan-<lb/>
Sue Hunnicutt and<lb/>
ys for Day Studer.<lb/>
atatives ar?<lb/>
r. Wilson Sand:<lb/>
lg; Jane Ricked-<lb/>
: Trotter. Umstead<lb/>
and Gail Adam.<lb/>
sbbie Norsworttay and<lb/>
letchei<lb/>
lass officer<lb/>
Ike Puzor<lb/>
Rogers Vice-FresJ<lb/>
Swindell. Secretary<lb/>
Anne Hendersho<lb/>
 owynn, Vice-Prc:<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
e Treasurer. Juni:<lb/>
i Hjortsvans, Presi<lb/>
arr Plemmons, Vice-<lb/>
ynn Garret. Secre<lb/>
ean Salles, Treasui<lb/>
i. G. Martin La. ?<lb/>
?oline Riddle, Seen<lb/>
Buliov Treasurer<lb/>
otice<lb/>
en and npperclaao-<lb/>
ed in plsjrlBg vars<lb/>
shiiulii meet with<lb/>
?rn tonight, Thurs-<lb/>
!1 it 0? p.m. in<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
he<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ll'RECIS, N. Y. ? Once a small<lb/>
d elite group, Mizewells are now<lb/>
estimated three to four million<lb/>
k-ong, and still growing. You may<lb/>
hvn be one yourself; if not, you<lb/>
y become one any day. "Mize-<lb/>
Mi" is the fellow who, when he<lb/>
teds a new hi-fi or short wave<lb/>
It, or some other electronics device.<lb/>
lys I Mizewell build it myself<lb/>
bice limited to building their own<lb/>
bateur radio and hi-fi equipment,<lb/>
t v.elLs today arc building su-<lb/>
?s- sensitive photo exposure me-<lb/>
?. electronic burglar alarms for<lb/>
iiul homes, home intercoms,<lb/>
fclkie-talkies, auto engine analy-<lb/>
V1 and dozens of other electronic<lb/>
of tht Mizewells Is Chicago-<lb/>
tsed Allied Radio Corporation.<lb/>
last year sold $70 million<lb/>
brth of hi-fi, recording, commun<lb/>
ation i Instruments and other elec-<lb/>
Miiic equipment and many car-<lb/>
5 if components for Industry<lb/>
important part of Allled's<lb/>
lies is electronic equipment and<lb/>
i,licetry in kit form Kits range<lb/>
??m a $4.50 crystal radio set ?<lb/>
bpular with Boy Scouts seeking<lb/>
ierit badges ? to a $250.00 labor -<lb/>
t .iy oscilks,cope. Allied's own<lb/>
Jnight-kits(R) include Walkic-<lb/>
Bides, Shorr Wave receivers, su-<lb/>
?M-nsitive photo exposure mc-<lb/>
kr, an electronic moto-speed - light<lb/>
ii-tiol. lab kit.s for dozens of pro-<lb/>
f, : solid-state auto analyzer and<lb/>
Etc tuning light kits, hi-fi com-<lb/>
ments. Citizens Band and Radio<lb/>
?mateur communication equip-<lb/>
ment instrument kits and many<lb/>
fhers The company also sells kit.<lb/>
by  r electronic manu-<lb/>
cturers<lb/>
Some Mizewells don'l work with<lb/>
 : kits. Instead, they shop<lb/>
:i catalog: for the transis-<lb/>
c ipacibors, resistors and oth-<lb/>
imponent they think they'll<lb/>
Before long, these do-il<lb/>
v, lit in" to brag a-<lb/>
bome-brewed devici<lb/>
 thing eagei elec<lb/>
?  ts have not attempt<lb/>
- In the catalog. fi<lb/>
. omputers tandard<lb/>
j ime high sch i ?1 scienci<lb/>
 dtchen table elei<lb/>
?  . hobbyist Mizewell<lb/>
. ? i Man populai<lb/>
 ? ? ere be<lb/>
: . and buill o Mizewell!<lb/>
, or even :?0 yeai<lb/>
Hi-fi ystem for example,<lb/>
tilt by Mizewells Ion<lb/>
follow new developments in elec-<lb/>
tronics.<lb/>
Some current Mizewell fads,<lb/>
whl h portend future widespread<lb/>
public popularity: inexpensive ca-<lb/>
pacity - operated burglar alarms<lb/>
which ring a bell or turn on lights<lb/>
when any warm body approaches<lb/>
and disturbs their electrical field<lb/>
low-voltage switches which allow<lb/>
you to turn all house lights on or<lb/>
off with one bedside switch; and<lb/>
solar - powered batteries so called<lb/>
"free power").<lb/>
The tiny silicon-wafer sun bat-<lb/>
tery converts sunlight into a frac-<lb/>
tion of a watt of electricity, even<lb/>
on a shady day 'it works on light ?<lb/>
an electrical light will cause it to<lb/>
produce power). One Mizewell last<lb/>
year built a panel of hundreds of<lb/>
mi batteries to power his auto, us-<lb/>
ing a one-horsepower electric mo-<lb/>
tor instead of the car's gasoline-<lb/>
powered engine<lb/>
Although a large part of its Mize-<lb/>
wells are mature family men, sup-<lb/>
pliers can count on a fast-growing<lb/>
group of College men for future<lb/>
business. After watching laser<lb/>
beams, computers, and radio-con-<lb/>
trolled satellites on TV, the young-<lb/>
er crowd i.s eager to order a<lb/>
"breadboard kit" and try building<lb/>
a far-out electronic device nobody<lb/>
has seen before.<lb/>
Even this group is treated with<lb/>
respect. The average high-school-<lb/>
ige buyer is interested in the low-<lb/>
er priced equipment, like $15 walkie-<lb/>
talkie kits and $25 short wave re-<lb/>
t fivers, however he soon graduates<lb/>
tfi the $100-$300 class, and buys lab<lb/>
oscilloscopes, 4-track stereo tape<lb/>
recorders and .solid-state 120-watt<lb/>
hi-fi stereo kits.<lb/>
Prospective Mizewells should keep<lb/>
in mind a number of basic rules:<lb/>
Benin with, simple projects and<lb/>
work into more difficult ones. A<lb/>
od starting point are lab kits<lb/>
which permit many experiments<lb/>
from one ki.<lb/>
Always use a well - lighted work<lb/>
pace ? someplace where your<lb/>
project won't be disturbed when<lb/>
you're not working on it.<lb/>
Have proper tools This is al-<lb/>
way Important with any job. Sup-<lb/>
lien aic happy to be of help.<lb/>
KZlfyp.<lb/>
F<lb/>
 1 i r?<lb/>
goo i<lb/>
, g s lole<lb/>
? p rtmenl st re ih<lb/>
on, manufacturei <lb/>
r, , iy for tn nd . They know that<lb/>
rear's Miz well fa '<lb/>
HI probably become nexl<lb/>
U best-seller. The I i i '???'<lb/>
rowing audience of hi-fi enthus-<lb/>
 ts, CB-radlo and Amateur-band<lb/>
listener . and the licensed "Ham'<lb/>
I tteui themselves, arc quick r<lb/>
Yee Flick Features<lb/>
Brando In Western<lb/>
, Marlon Brando will star in "The<lb/>
Hp ,i,M,sa the regular Friday free<lb/>
As wa the last western starring<lb/>
Jfarlon Brando. "One-Eyed Jacks.<lb/>
piis new film is quite unusual. The<lb/>
?lot itself is simple. Brando's Ap-<lb/>
iloo  horse is stolen from him<lb/>
? a bandit chieftain, and Brando<lb/>
racks him to the Mexican border<lb/>
' the 1870's and guns him down.<lb/>
lust the half of it.<lb/>
The picture Is directed by Sidney<lb/>
. Purle ("Ipcre.ss File and Is<lb/>
full i some of the most un-<lb/>
bual camera work on film. Fune<lb/>
throws away all the conventional<lb/>
Jamera techniques and instead does<lb/>
Ihini a like shooting a man runnintr<lb/>
towards a cabin through frosted<lb/>
Mass; uxtaposes a face with an<lb/>
Snormous, brilliant candle, and uses<lb/>
lome of the wildest looking close-<lb/>
HP shots to catch just the right<lb/>
motional responses.<lb/>
College Artists of the School<lb/>
or Art Invite all new students<lb/>
to attend the organizational<lb/>
meeting of CASA this Thursday<lb/>
it 7:00 P.M. in Bawl 339.<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda welcomes<lb/>
all interested business majors<lb/>
and minors. Including freshmen.<lb/>
V membership drive wlB be<lb/>
held in ihe center hall of Rawi,<lb/>
September 10-21 from n,ne<lb/>
until two.<lb/>
Salenius &amp; Elam Preside<lb/>
Over Men's Honor Council<lb/>
Two upperclassmen at East Car-<lb/>
olina University have been elected<lb/>
to top offices of the Men's Honor<lb/>
Council, the highest student court<lb/>
for men on the campus.<lb/>
ECU Dean of Men James B. Mal-<lb/>
lory announced that Howard Sal-<lb/>
enius, a senior history major from<lb/>
Greenville and Chicago, 111 is the<lb/>
new chairman and will preside at<lb/>
Council sesions.<lb/>
Serving with him for the 1967-<lb/>
'68 school year will be William Ho-<lb/>
ward Elam of Charlotte. vice-<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
The two officer arc among eight<lb/>
members of the Council which are<lb/>
called into session involving men<lb/>
students. It is one of the most re-<lb/>
spected governing bodies on the<lb/>
campus and has jurisdiction in cas-<lb/>
i s in which suspension or ex<lb/>
pulsion is likely.<lb/>
Salenius served last year as vice-<lb/>
chairman of the Men's Judiciary<lb/>
Council and as chairman of a del-<lb/>
egation to the Model United Na-<lb/>
tions. He is a member of the Young<lb/>
Republican Club at ECU.<lb/>
Elam. a business major, is a<lb/>
senior at ECU. He is a member of<lb/>
Theta Chi social fraternity and a<lb/>
past rush chairman of the Inter-<lb/>
Fraternity Council<lb/>
Candy Apples<lb/>
Dieners Bakery<lb/>
BedingfieUTs<lb/>
Pharmacy<lb/>
Five Points<lb/>
RENTAL FURNITURE SERVICE<lb/>
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WITH OPTION TO BUY<lb/>
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Good Selection Of New or Used Furniture<lb/>
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1806 DICKINSON AVE. 758-1954<lb/>
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Wed. Niidit 5:00-6:00 Charles and 7th St. -<lb/>
South of New Women's Dorm<lb/>
6:00-7:00 Between the Cafeteria.<lb/>
Library  8th St.<lb/>
Thurs. i ht 5:00-6:00 On 5th St. at or near<lb/>
Admin Bldff.<lb/>
6:00-7:00 On 5th St. at College Entrance<lb/>
to Garrett<lb/>
Uok For The "Cktrfes Chips" Truck<lb/>
Phone 758-1948 for Off-Campus Delivery<lb/>
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September 25-29<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039300_0006"/><lb/>
6? East Carolinian?Thursday, September 21, 1967<lb/>
Sports Lowe Down<lb/>
Everybody Be There<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Bv John Lowe<lb/>
nfai HUGHES<lb/>
Hughes, Colson Will Present<lb/>
Problems To Richmond Team<lb/>
Eai Can Una s senior tailback<lb/>
Neal Hushes reached back into his<lb/>
sophomore year to pull out a line<lb/>
performance against William and<lb/>
Mary Saturday and joined hands<lb/>
with sophomore fullback Butch<lb/>
Colson to lead the pirate win. 27-7.<lb/>
Two years ago, Hughes was boost-<lb/>
ed as a fine tailback prospect. In<lb/>
his fii t game he went 73 yards<lb/>
for a touchdown on his first day<lb/>
from scrimmage. But later in the<lb/>
game, he was injured and lost some<lb/>
of his confidence on offense' after<lb/>
that Hi a ved to a defensive<lb/>
halfback po i Ion and proved to be<lb/>
a standout playei He excelled at<lb/>
pass ? fei (and i eturning punts<lb/>
and kickoffs. He was used sparing-<lb/>
ly on offense, but never seemed to<lb/>
show the spark he once had.<lb/>
This fall, as practice got under-<lb/>
way, Hughes began to regain his<lb/>
form of two years ago. He impress-<lb/>
ed the Buc coaches, but they were<lb/>
Spiders Outlook<lb/>
Appears Cloudy<lb/>
By BRUCE 8UMMERFIELD<lb/>
(Ed. Note) This is the lirst in a<lb/>
series of articles which will fea-<lb/>
ture a report of the Fast Carolina<lb/>
football opposition on the following<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
As Coach Prank Joner, sees it.<lb/>
the outlook at the University of<lb/>
Richmond is not so rosy for this<lb/>
sea.son. Jones is in the second year<lb/>
of a four year rebuilding program<lb/>
The Spider coach, who is also ath-<lb/>
letic director. has a tougher sched-<lb/>
ule than last year's 2-8 team.<lb/>
It seems trite and even ports<lb/>
writer in the area ha , . but,<lb/>
Richmond must ride the talented<lb/>
arm of Buster O'Brien Larry Bun-<lb/>
ich hs graduated and there is no<lb/>
runne. of his quality to replace<lb/>
him. O'Brien, a Notre Dame trans-<lb/>
fer, completed 99 of 200 passes<lb/>
year. The offense will run from an<lb/>
"I" with wide flankers and feature<lb/>
halfbai . itching short passes.<lb/>
O'Brien is nol a -sprint-out" quar-<lb/>
terback and throws well only when<lb/>
he receives excellent protection.<lb/>
Hi favorite receivers will be Den-<lb/>
nis Wiley, Don Everetl tnd Mike<lb/>
Bixones.<lb/>
Sophomores will dominati<lb/>
i th Spiders try to show up<lb/>
? that gave up 263 points lasl<lb/>
II should be noted that the<lb/>
Carolina freshmen of last yeai<lb/>
beat these rising sophomores at<lb/>
Richmond by a 19<lb/>
In the first game eason<lb/>
Richmond was beaten by West: Vir-<lb/>
ginia 27 to 6. The East Carolina-<lb/>
University of Richmond game shou-<lb/>
ld provide a good measuring stick<lb/>
of the two conference crown con-<lb/>
tenders. West Virginia had an easy-<lb/>
time in their run over the Sniders.<lb/>
East Carolina must put constant<lb/>
pressure on O'Brien and stop his<lb/>
passing attack. The offense must<lb/>
force mistakes on Richmond's sop-<lb/>
homore-laden defense. This writer<lb/>
predict East Carolina by three<lb/>
touchdowns<lb/>
reluctant to let him leave the de-<lb/>
fensive unit.<lb/>
Saturday, against the Indians, he<lb/>
got his fresh start and earned a<lb/>
starting berth for this weekend<lb/>
against Richmond Moving to the<lb/>
offensive unit, Hughes made sev-<lb/>
eral spectacular runs, especially<lb/>
one which probably was the key to<lb/>
the win. On a third and seven situ-<lb/>
ation, he broke Ion e around right<lb/>
end and wen: out of bounds just<lb/>
inches beyond the first down mark-<lb/>
er to keep the drive alive. The<lb/>
Bucs moved from there to brake<lb/>
open a 7-7 tie and win.<lb/>
Hughes also picked up one touch-<lb/>
down, a 14 yard ramble. He at-<lb/>
tempted ust three passes and hit<lb/>
on two of them.<lb/>
Colson, meanwhile, came off the<lb/>
bench mid way through the first<lb/>
quarter when starting fullback Geo-<lb/>
rge Gay .suffered a broken leg.<lb/>
rhe hard-running sophomore<lb/>
made the Indians sorry the rest of<lb/>
the game He carried the ball 28<lb/>
times and picked up 133 yards, In-<lb/>
cluding two touchdowns. He scored<lb/>
the tie breaker in the fourth period<lb/>
from a yard out, then picked up the<lb/>
tinal one on a 40-yard romp.<lb/>
A standout as a freshman, he<lb/>
was the team's leading rusher, aid-<lb/>
ing the 5-0 sea on. He looked good<lb/>
continually during the spring and<lb/>
fall practice, pushing for a start-<lb/>
berth.<lb/>
BI.TCH COLSON<lb/>
Join The JjJJJ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza M<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
OINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
?2<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co.<lb/>
5 Points<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Member F. D. 1. C.<lb/>
By JOHN LOWE<lb/>
Last Saturday, about a thousand<lb/>
ECU students went to see the Pi-<lb/>
rates beat William and Mary by<lb/>
27-7. With the weather conditions<lb/>
That prevailed last Saturday, the<lb/>
ize of the crowd was very coin<lb/>
mendable. Who says there is DO<lb/>
spirit at ECU? This Saturday, the<lb/>
Bucs travel to Richmond, which Is<lb/>
closer than WiUiamsburg, to meet<lb/>
the Spiders in a Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence game, iet's get everybody oul<lb/>
and go on up to Richmond to whoop<lb/>
it up and cheer the Bucs on to<lb/>
another victory.<lb/>
Measure l'p<lb/>
This game will be b fairly good<lb/>
yardstick to compare West Virgin<lb/>
ia. the preseason favorite In the<lb/>
conference, with East Carolina. I ai '<lb/>
week. WVU walloped Richmond by<lb/>
27-6. WVU played a team that w:i<lb/>
still running ragged and trying to<lb/>
get rid of some fat. With two weeks<lb/>
more practice, and one game under<lb/>
their belts, WVU had a big ad-<lb/>
vantage over the Richmond Spiders.<lb/>
The Bucs wont' have it so easy.<lb/>
Richmond figures to be ready for<lb/>
the Hues.<lb/>
Tickets On Sale<lb/>
rickets for the game against<lb/>
Richmond may be purchased from<lb/>
the Athletic Ticket Office in Me-<lb/>
morial Gymnasium for $2.00. The<lb/>
ticket, price will cost more if you<lb/>
buy your tickets in Richmond You<lb/>
may also purchase ticket, for the<lb/>
game against Davidson on Septem-<lb/>
ber 30, 1967. for $1,75, at the Tic-<lb/>
ket Office.<lb/>
Game lime i 8:15. at the Rich-<lb/>
mond City Stadium, What say we<lb/>
get a lot oi rooters up there ;<lb/>
give'em K?II<lb/>
For those oi you who are head<lb/>
lug up I ' Richmond, here i.s th<lb/>
complete Buc roster. Tear it or<lb/>
ind take it with you.<lb/>
Anyone For CREW?<lb/>
Then will be a meeting for i<lb/>
boys interested m Crew today a:<lb/>
4:00, room 105, in Memorial Gyre,<lb/>
nasium. Anyone interested Bh u!<lb/>
be there Freshmen may parUc.<lb/>
pate in this port, and no previotj<lb/>
experience in Crew is needed Yo.<lb/>
will receive your training on dn<lb/>
land m the ra big shell. Than<lb/>
room 106 oi 'he gym for al:<lb/>
intere '  ew<lb/>
Intramural Football Begins<lb/>
By RONALD VINCENT<lb/>
Intramural football began Mon-<lb/>
day, September 18, with a full slate<lb/>
of games. Kappa Alpha defeated<lb/>
Sigma Chi Delta, 32-7, Lambda<lb/>
ciu Alpha defeated Pi Kappa Al-<lb/>
pha, 13-0. Pi Kappa Phi won over<lb/>
Alpha Kappa Psi by 33-0, Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon defeated Kappa Sigma<lb/>
13-0, Theta Chi defeated Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau 12-6, and Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
upended Alpha Epsilon Pi by 12-6.<lb/>
Bill Mosier and Dale Gidley lead<lb/>
Kappa Alpha in their Q2-7 rout of<lb/>
Sigma Chi Delta. Gidley threw<lb/>
three touchdown passes and Mosier<lb/>
cored twice in the victory.<lb/>
Lambda Chi used the combina-<lb/>
tion of Bill Dickens to BUI Austen<lb/>
to defeat Pi Kappa Alpha 13-0.<lb/>
Austen caught two touchdown pass-<lb/>
e; from Dii ken m the win.<lb/>
Glenn Gulledge threw two touch<lb/>
down passes to Wayne Murschell t.<lb/>
lead Alpha Phi Omega past Alphi<lb/>
Epi lion Pi, 12-6. Goldfish sc :p<lb/>
he only touchdown for AEPi.<lb/>
J. Burli on passed for four t<lb/>
downs in leadini Pi Kappa Phi pat<lb/>
Vlpha Kappa Psi, 33-0. David Cai<lb/>
ter caught two of Burleson's heal<lb/>
es for touchdowns and Mike Mc<lb/>
Quirk Intercepted two passe, ??<lb/>
aid m the victory.<lb/>
Stevenson and Hughes each u ,r<lb/>
ed once to lead Sigma Phi Epsila<lb/>
oast Kappa Sigma by a score r<lb/>
13-0.<lb/>
Goodman ran for one touch; m<lb/>
and passed for one score to sp.tr<lb/>
rheta Chi past Phi Kappa Tau U<lb/>
o. Gurganu pa sed to Mowry f<lb/>
the lone Phi Kappa Tau score<lb/>
1 Hour Martinizing<lb/>
m R. 10th Street<lb/>
1 Hour Dry Cleaning<lb/>
3 Hour Shirt Service<lb/>
JONES-POTTS MUSIC CO.<lb/>
BALDWIN PIANOS and DRUMS<lb/>
MUSICAI INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS<lb/>
Large Selection of Stereo Tapes<lb/>
and Carrying Cases<lb/>
RECORDS?Stereo and Monaural $3 95<lb/>
SHEET MUSIC<lb/>
108 Evan Street, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
ARE YOU READY?<lb/>
ARE YOU READY<lb/>
FOR?<lb/>
Are You Ready<lb/>
For<lb/>
THE CATACOMBS?<lb/>
"WE'LL BE READY FOR YOU<lb/>
? ?:? i<lb/>
Tue Catacombs - a student<lb/>
coffee house serving the<lb/>
I 'niversity<lb/>
501 E. 5th Street<lb/>
on the corner of<lb/>
Holly and 5th<lb/>
8 p.m. - 11:30<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Sundays<lb/>
Snacks - Conversation - Entertainment<lb/>
Volume XLIIJ<lb/>
Thus year the ,<lb/>
will represent t<lb/>
cadet corps in<lb/>
parade, several (<lb/>
and the annual 5<lb/>
local March of<lb/>
Sponsored by t<lb/>
ciety and advisee<lb/>
Tadlock, Jr th<lb/>
lected over two<lb/>
m last year's Mi<lb/>
of the Pitt Count<lb/>
ye : the toam w:<lb/>
contuhutions am<lb/>
last year's total.<lb/>
The drill tean<lb/>
Phil<lb/>
At J<lb/>
By RA<lb/>
Dr Cleveland<lb/>
I Philosophy Depf<lb/>
I at the Baptist S<lb/>
Wednesday night<lb/>
tians didn't know-<lb/>
sou ice materal o<lb/>
discuss it rations<lb/>
ing to let anothe<lb/>
and you're sa<lb/>
crumbs he obs<lb/>
Lloyd F<lb/>
?Mardi '<lb/>
In the second J<lb/>
ence of the year<lb/>
Vice-President L<lb/>
cussed new idea;<lb/>
Homecoming.<lb/>
"Mardi Gras" <lb/>
I Homecoming the<lb/>
? that East Carol!<lb/>
? coming as a univ<lb/>
?gala weekend fil<lb/>
?clowns, costumes<lb/>
one of the threi<lb/>
di Gras parades<lb/>
the "King Rex"<lb/>
tion to a Homec<lb/>
Feign over the f<lb/>
ex will also be c<lb/>
ominations for B<lb/>
fthe Homecoming<lb/>
Pe voted upon by<lb/>
be thety vote t<lb/>
feueen, Lloyd saic<lb/>
?was not conceived<lb/>
kway from the Hoi<lb/>
?nit is simply a n<lb/>
put the Mardi G<lb/>
uccessfully.<lb/>
The Homecomi<lb/>
losely follow la<lb/>
lod i.s hoping f<lb/>
hiding almost twit<lb/>
s last year's pai<lb/>
oming Committei<lb/>
he MRC to build i<lb/>
ith two thrones<lb/>
arry the six fini<lb/>
oming Queen a<lb/>
hrones, King Rc<lb/>
"omecomlng Que<lb/>
i.ii)Miiiim,im?<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039300_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>