<?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="00039314_0001"/>
i . ( is an all around<lb/>
laying tringback, he tlw<lb/>
Pirate leaden la ki k.in<lb/>
?????????? <lb/>
V.tlum<lb/>
e XLHI<lb/>
Easl Carolina University, Greenville, X. ? Tuesday, November 7, 1967<lb/>
Number 18<lb/>
Music Variety Hits Campus<lb/>
Concert Spans Four Centuries<lb/>
By MARGK SIMPKINS<lb/>
, , , nting music which spans al-<lb/>
centurtes, the Bast Can.<lb/>
 ,ty school of Music an-<lb/>
h, second appearance ol<lb/>
i don ol The Wind En-<lb/>
 rdnesday. November 8<lb/>
;n . isic building's Recital Hall<lb/>
 at t: 15 Wednesday eve-<lb/>
, oncerl Will be the en-<lb/>
econd In a series of per-<lb/>
durlng the year Tl ?<lb/>
. lina University Wind En<lb/>
rganised in 1966 b:<lb/>
II ? ((inductor. Herbert L.<lb/>
c . mall wind and pen<lb/>
: made up of select S<lb/>
 players, the group's i<lb/>
pose is to perform th<lb/>
? ire of many periods<lb/>
; .  Department<lb/>
. ual approach to wine:<lb/>
provides for highly diversi-<lb/>
Interesting programs<lb/>
gram will include pie -<lb/>
composers as: Howard<lb/>
i 1942?, Aaron Copland<lb/>
Smetana il848. Mehul<lb/>
Alan Hovhaness 'i960 J<lb/>
. Chance il963. Jan P<lb/>
sv linck (1601V Samuel Scheldt<lb/>
K lb ilevskv 11937 and Her-<lb/>
Bielawa (1966).<lb/>
number, "Symphony N<lb/>
P irvat I" by Alan H<lb/>
ill be a first In m<lb/>
xclustvely for winds, tih<lb/>
I a in manuscript form.<lb/>
v nl cht's performani e will<lb/>
all . irk the first, time 'N<lb/>
P : h:ts been played in the<lb/>
n<lb/>
by<lb/>
Hi n<lb/>
(179?<lb/>
Mi Hi .i,i vrote this sym-<lb/>
? Kashmir on<lb/>
It may be de-<lb/>
i al picture of life<lb/>
H ? Through<lb/>
B has re-<lb/>
? oi the<lb/>
: ontemporary<lb/>
from some ol<lb/>
i the world.<lb/>
the descrip-<lb/>
Ui Nan Pi rvat" very<lb/>
: Hovhaness is a keen ob-<lb/>
. " ? nd in has the<lb/>
. ity to relate his<lb/>
and thence to<lb/>
life. 1 the fierce moun-<lb/>
i high un-<lb/>
appi ?:?. the cacophony<lb/>
an incredibly<lb/>
ii ? .The music is<lb/>
it, and clang -<lb/>
the listi tier is carried<lb/>
 n Himalayan<lb/>
ily<lb/>
Of particular interest will be the<lb/>
performance of Herbert Bielawa's<lb/>
Spectrum As part oi the corn-<lb/>
work under a Ford Foun-<lb/>
 i ctrum" wa<lb/>
 ihi pring of 1956 when<lb/>
mj ? r-in-residence<lb/>
I In Hou iton, Texas. It is<lb/>
bced media ? pre-re-<lb/>
? ipe of electronic sounds<lb/>
. i music.<lb/>
An I the concei<lb/>
i perfom ? ? student<lb/>
? pei ' Roth rmii  Appi<lb/>
loisl rith the ensembli<lb/>
T troduction and Capric-<lb/>
A<lb/>
NE'<lb/>
Philadelphia<lb/>
Performs Th<lb/>
iu BEV CABAWAN<lb/>
Mews Editor<lb/>
Chamber Symphony of Phil-<lb/>
which will apear in Wright<lb/>
ium Thursday at 8:00 P.M<lb/>
uded by Hie reviewer for THE<lb/>
YORK TIMES as having,<lb/>
 r proficiency, alertness<lb/>
and perfect Intonation<lb/>
,n Hie Artists St I les for<lb/>
, season, this ensemble ag i i<lb/>
Symphony<lb/>
ursday<lb/>
Dosed<lb/>
fiie<lb/>
tempo<lb/>
 and Schubert ail<lb/>
with tin' Idea of the in-<lb/>
1 balance of an orchestra<lb/>
the Chamber Orchestra.<lb/>
i ton Brusilow considers<lb/>
? have the widest<lb/>
spertoire. It includes mu-<lb/>
ail the main perils -<lb/>
Classical, Romantic, and<lb/>
sh<lb/>
an<lb/>
ard<lb/>
ber<lb/>
plo<lb/>
an<lb/>
ii<lb/>
lusical<lb/>
Ea -<lb/>
runs<lb/>
si and ?<lb/>
Cham-<lb/>
he variety In the<lb/>
? - m : available<lb/>
The first and<lb/>
ip were a chamber quu<lb/>
i monic orchestra.<lb/>
'hough most Aim ricans<lb/>
irchestra as uaving tin<lb/>
Of 105 players, the<lb/>
S3 mphony of Philadelphia em-<lb/>
only 36.<lb/>
With a full complement oi strings<lb/>
winds, brass, and percussion.<lb/>
til larger than most cham-<lb/>
irchestras with a usual total of<lb/>
lembers,<lb/>
ice Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven.<lb/>
- in its programs.<lb/>
rounded the Chamber<lb/>
Philadelphia to trans-<lb/>
? reality. There<lb/>
' aever been a per-<lb/>
i ber symphony in<lb/>
?hi- members of<lb/>
. tra svould get togeth-<lb/>
, na concerts, The ma-<lb/>
, schedule as well as<lb/>
urne ere two of<lb/>
his arrangement.<lb/>
-born Brusilow be-<lb/>
i ie . ons at the age of<lb/>
sixteen he was studying<lb/>
der Pierre Monteux.<lb/>
for io years, including<lb/>
;  as conductor of<lb/>
Cisco Symphony.<lb/>
?ins<lb/>
cio" by<lb/>
? ran- fer<lb/>
i Fniversi<lb/>
senior at<lb/>
crunch.<lb/>
??????<lb/>
John Barnes Chance. A<lb/>
student from Wichita State<lb/>
v. Rothermicb b now<lb/>
E Commenting on Roth-<lb/>
his teacher, Dr. Charles<lb/>
Bath, stated, "He I extern ively ta-<lb/>
lented He is the winner of last<lb/>
. State Concerto Program and<lb/>
: layed '? ith the '?' t C<lb/>
Symphony<lb/>
Chance wa : n<lb/>
in Greensboro, N C<lb/>
Foundation Comp<lb/>
i a guest composer ov<lb/>
Com)' e<lb/>
in residence<lb/>
a.s a Ford<lb/>
was alsi<lb/>
the E.c.u. campus foi rue Anni<lb/>
Contemporarj Music Festival<lb/>
Also featured in the concert will<lb/>
be The Faculty Brass Quintet made<lb/>
up ol Harry Shank, James Searl<lb/>
Roberl Hei e. Hutu Stuckey,<lb/>
James Parnell These faculty mem-<lb/>
bers will perform "Canzona B<lb/>
gamasca" by Samuel Scheldt.<lb/>
Conductor Carter stated. "Thi<lb/>
Is a wonderful experience for all ol<lb/>
us - to play and perform these<lb/>
completely ('iff.<lb/>
music. It lends<lb/>
our musicians!<lb/>
fion<lb/>
. hi program<lb/>
?lit styles of wind<lb/>
real flexibilil<lb/>
nd Intel<lb/>
pen to the pu<lb/>
no<lb/>
idmission is charged.<lb/>
Student<lb/>
annual<lb/>
jffaag ??-<lb/>
i and faculty of the School of Music prepare for the second<lb/>
performance if The Wind Lnsemble.<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
Greeks Plan Annual All-Sing<lb/>
"Fun In Faiitasyland" is the<lb/>
theme ol this year's All-Sing where<lb/>
the fraternities and sororities of<lb/>
East Carolina exhibit their many<lb/>
talents in the form of songs, skits,<lb/>
oui various other presentations.<lb/>
The All-Sing, sponsored annually<lb/>
by the Alpha Xi Delta Sorority, will<lb/>
be held tonight in Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium at 7'JO p.m. for anyone who<lb/>
wishes to see anything from the<lb/>
?'any to the serious side o1 the par-<lb/>
ticipating groups. All social frater-<lb/>
nities and sororities excepting the<lb/>
Sigma Nu's, the Pika's, and the<lb/>
Kappa sigma's will be represent d<lb/>
Mpha Xi Delta will start the pro-<lb/>
? ram by singing but will not be con-<lb/>
ildered a part of the competition.<lb/>
First place plaques will be given<lb/>
in three divisions: one for the best<lb/>
sorority performance, one for the<lb/>
best fraternity exhibition, and one<lb/>
for either the best music fraternity<lb/>
(Phi Mu Alpha or for the best,<lb/>
music sorority (Sigma Alpha Total.<lb/>
I ast year's winners were the Sig-<lb/>
fea'S "the Theta Chi's, and Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Iota. Tentative judges this<lb/>
vear are two ECU faculty mem-<lb/>
bers and a Greenville merchant.<lb/>
Sugar Bear" of WOOW Radio<lb/>
will be announcer for the show, and<lb/>
the Jockers 7 band will back up the<lb/>
singers and provide entertainment<lb/>
for intermission.<lb/>
Kevin Foley, over-all chairman,<lb/>
with Jan Cleveland and Mary Del<lb/>
Oalup as co-chairmen, have made<lb/>
all arrangements to give the audi-<lb/>
ence a show well worth their time.<lb/>
a there is no admission charge<lb/>
and freshmen women are excused<lb/>
from closed study, a larce turn-out<lb/>
is expected.<lb/>
TICKETS NOW AVAILABLE<lb/>
'Serendipity Singers'<lb/>
Gym 8:15<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
November 10<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0002"/><lb/>
iir-<lb/>
?<lb/>
2?East Carolin<lb/>
Tt; sdaj No s ml er 7. 1967<lb/>
Phyllis To The Rescue<lb/>
id "i)iis<lb/>
with no<lb/>
staff<lb/>
to<lb/>
On this highly orgai ed and busy campus so many stu-<lb/>
dents with really great talents go unnoticed or unpraised.<lb/>
Usually, as is the case with publications the person whose<lb/>
name appears on an article or in the masthead is the only<lb/>
one receiving any form oi recognition.<lb/>
Since the spae is m'rn to steal, 1 wish to steal a little<lb/>
for what 1 consider a t otch newspaper staff. There is<lb/>
no wrong in giving praise where praiso is due and I in-<lb/>
tend to do just that.<lb/>
The opei-ation oi' a newspaper (yes even the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN) i more complex than anyone outside of the<lb/>
field would e er suspect. Deadlines must be met. jobs per-<lb/>
formed, hours and hours of planning. And when the un-<lb/>
expected occurs, one merely has to take it as the expected<lb/>
and keep going.<lb/>
This Editor through the courses of viruses<lb/>
etc. was stricken out cold, isick) quitj sudd<lb/>
time to make plans of substitution.<lb/>
Without hast- or worry the heorine among the .<lb/>
(in this case Phyllis Bndgeman, Associate Editor) rose P.<lb/>
the cause and assumed both the Editor's responsibilities along<lb/>
with her own.<lb/>
To make a long serial short, 1 wish to thank Phyllis, who<lb/>
will be aiding as Acting Editor for the remainder of this<lb/>
quarter, and the entire stuff,<lb/>
It is simple to on one's job or that of another if the task<lb/>
is planned in advance. But it is a rare person who can walk-<lb/>
in and pick up one of the most difficult and unwanted of<lb/>
extra curricular tasks and carry on in a smooth manner,<lb/>
rhis person is rare enough to deserve special recognition<lb/>
Thanks again Phyllis and to all of the staff.<lb/>
Return To Regionalism<lb/>
East Carolina's Board of Trustees voted to raise tuition<lb/>
rates next fail. The approval was, in effect, a second to the<lb/>
-North Carolina Legislature's recommendation for a budget<lb/>
increase. In-state students will pay an increase from $150 to<lb/>
168 yearly, while out-of-state students face a rise from S4(P<lb/>
to $600.<lb/>
We well recognize the position of a state-supported school<lb/>
to its rodent body East Carolina is expected to take care of<lb/>
its own and then look outside the state. We realize, too, that<lb/>
the suggestion was made upon consideration of EC's low<lb/>
?,52?ate- 2 is a!s0 note(i that North Carolina gives earh<lb/>
student a tuition grant of approximately $750, and out-of-<lb/>
Htaters should be expeced to pay a little more than residents<lb/>
But why should the increase be such a disproportionate<lb/>
rise for the out-of-state student? The estimated seventeen<lb/>
per cent of EC students who fall under this classification will<lb/>
3rYS?.2 66 .qmirt?r next fal1' hile ??Men2 S<lb/>
only a $6 charge in the same period.<lb/>
The implications are that East Carolina University may<lb/>
bcome in a sense isolated before it's even two years old We<lb/>
need the 'new blood" that other parts of the country' can<lb/>
bring It is the diversity of thought and habit that lends the<lb/>
connotation of "university" instead of "college" to an Sistt<lb/>
.ution of higher learning, regardless of whether it's in fact or<lb/>
m name. L<lb/>
tn FrThidelthe iU?mma of the tnsfer student who came<lb/>
to EC this year with an eye on the low tuition rates Next<lb/>
year is too late to move again, but the fees must still be paid<lb/>
-somehow Anothei sad but true fact is that scholarships for<lb/>
out-of-staters are always limited. '???ups ioi<lb/>
Perhaps the tragedy cf it all is not so much that out-of-<lb/>
h? ? 'n f0r,C?d t0 seek hiher education elsewhere<lb/>
but that East Carolina will crawl back into the category of<lb/>
regional college If our enrolment shows only flittKver<lb/>
seventeen per cent now of non-residents, what win it c vindle<lb/>
asoecftf bSS!?? Tte ,? Iace? PerhaP the<lb/>
"JSPnrifrS n H ? indudes both West Coast and<lb/>
isew England applicants matters very little to some but even<lb/>
the geographically .loser students from Virginia "outhcTro<lb/>
lnm, New Jersey, or Washington, D. C. offer an additional<lb/>
dimension to the idea of "university BaaraoMl<lb/>
? ?,??? the Board of Trustees was complying with the<lb/>
Lecture s recommendation (which was made after ex<lb/>
ZS' a Wh?1?) i?T a bud? incSse?Vs t not"<lb/>
possible that the increase could be spread out more fkirfy?<lb/>
Without changing the amount, the Board couldn<lb/>
fcHaot toeJSE,4?  WttaSh'jS up<lb/>
xees not including the special dormitory fees wVuVh o?<lb/>
registration, medical fee, and student activity fee<lb/>
This is not to say that the Board of Trustees ought to<lb/>
in stte and out-of-state students. We merely assert that such<lb/>
C't-TT wilin the i?? ST. ttSS<lb/>
ECU Forum<lb/>
Get To The "People"<lb/>
reai Mr. Stout:<lb/>
i w. uld like to i ay that I was<lb/>
yery impressed with your ideas con-<lb/>
erninj academic freedom, but I<lb/>
; quite a lot of ido.ilim also.<lb/>
Oro cannot legislate cure and con-<lb/>
cern. The people who are pushing<lb/>
so strongly for freedom on this<lb/>
campus should also make more of<lb/>
an effort to Incite the students here<lb/>
to involvement.<lb/>
P is n progressive idea to have<lb/>
some faculty members living in the<lb/>
dormitories, but in reality would<lb/>
it actually serve a useful purpose?<lb/>
Some of the professors on this cam-<lb/>
pus have more than welcomed per-<lb/>
sonal contact with the students.<lb/>
Others would not exert any elfort,<lb/>
but they would be willing if some<lb/>
students bothered to make the ef-<lb/>
fort. Shut you worked with faculty<lb/>
members in drafting the list of pos-<lb/>
sible changes that you submitted<lb/>
to the special committee, you<lb/>
Should be aware that some profes-<lb/>
sors have a progressive view for<lb/>
this college<lb/>
My main complaint is that you<lb/>
seem to feel that certain superficial<lb/>
changes will alter the whole atmos-<lb/>
phere of this place. People do not<lb/>
need to live next door to someone<lb/>
in order to feel closer to them.<lb/>
When the people on a campus be-<lb/>
fjm to push for new freedoms they'd<lb/>
better be sure that the leaders are<lb/>
not alienating more than they are<lb/>
drawing to the movement. Also,<lb/>
the people who often push for free-<lb/>
doms can be the ones who want per-<lb/>
sonal glorification rather than bet-<lb/>
terment of the system for the people<lb/>
involved in it. If you are really in-<lb/>
terested in the progressive programs<lb/>
being started here, concern your-<lb/>
self more with the acceptence osic I<lb/>
of the pass-fail system and more<lb/>
seminars than housing. One final<lb/>
point: get to the people ? not all<lb/>
people who go to school here are<lb/>
nothings,<lb/>
Mira Mlra<lb/>
without further enforced control<lb/>
No student ought to be dismissed<lb/>
or suspended from school because<lb/>
oi his behavior if he is maintaining<lb/>
iiis grades at the proper level. The<lb/>
ole concern of the university<lb/>
hould be the academic standing of<lb/>
the student. All actions of the stu-<lb/>
dent outside of academic matters<lb/>
ought to be the concern of the in-<lb/>
dividual student. The cafeteria and<lb/>
dormitories should not be given<lb/>
more authority over the students<lb/>
than an equivalent outside business<lb/>
would have.<lb/>
I recommend that the cafeterias<lb/>
drop the idea of enforcing dress<lb/>
standards while eating and pick up<lb/>
the idea of providing a form for<lb/>
approving or disapproving of the<lb/>
food in the cafeteria.<lb/>
I feel, also, that the residence<lb/>
councils should have no more au-<lb/>
thority than moving unruly stu-<lb/>
dents from one area to another, or<lb/>
refunding a portion of their rent<lb/>
and removing them from the dormi<lb/>
not from the University!<lb/>
This University would brli<lb/>
itself nation-wide or workl-v<lb/>
spect it it became the first Southi<lb/>
ern school to encourage inl iUaj<lb/>
and free contact between students<lb/>
and Instructors. We can brii, thj.<lb/>
about by encouraging the forms.<lb/>
tion of an Experimental College in<lb/>
creasing seminars, and all .II)(<lb/>
the students and faculty to<lb/>
informal dialogues in extracurr :u.<lb/>
lar activities. Certainly, we could<lb/>
improve the response of students<lb/>
to rules and to courses of m true-<lb/>
tion that were brought about bj an<lb/>
improved co-ordination between in-<lb/>
dent government and faculty<lb/>
The greater voice the two b <lb/>
have in the University, the i<lb/>
it will be for the University ii the<lb/>
long run: for to ignore either will<lb/>
bring about problems that we a<lb/>
can do without.<lb/>
Charles Griffin<lb/>
Shucking Tradition<lb/>
Sir:<lb/>
I realize the difficulty of appeas-<lb/>
ing the requirements of parents,<lb/>
keeping a board of trustees and a<lb/>
legislature happy with events on<lb/>
campus. We feel that Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
is doing this job with skill and dis-<lb/>
cretion, i cannot find fault with<lb/>
the piactical aspect of administra-<lb/>
tion, nor can I find fault with anv<lb/>
particular person in this system<lb/>
What does concern me is the at-<lb/>
titude of the school towards the re-<lb/>
sponsibility of the students to them-<lb/>
selves. An eighteen year old ought<lb/>
to be able to arrange his own life<lb/>
I must congratulate the staff of<lb/>
WECU radio for their recent UNI-<lb/>
CEF Campaign. Not only for their<lb/>
collection of money, which was<lb/>
praiseworthy, but for the fact that<lb/>
they did not mention the word UU<lb/>
once! Iastead they referred to the<lb/>
Union by its proper name. . .CU.<lb/>
The radio station deserves a 10,000<lb/>
watt increase in their transmitter<lb/>
output.<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
A new sandwich is on sale in the<lb/>
Soda Shop. It is a University Salad<lb/>
Sandwich, and has 10 per cent<lb/>
more celery and 25 per cent more<lb/>
mayonnaise. Progress marches on-<lb/>
ward.<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
Our last censor editor (Miriam<lb/>
Ticklebreath) has been fired. It<lb/>
seems she was too lenient (?) with<lb/>
some of the items in my column<lb/>
Mrs. Sweet Polly Purebred is her<lb/>
replacement. She is an attractive<lb/>
mnety-seven-year-okl divorcee and<lb/>
ex-housemother from Muffmouth<lb/>
Idaho. Good-luck Polly Baby<lb/>
 <lb/>
Starting next week, the Higher<lb/>
Arts Committee will begin its first<lb/>
annual film festival. First we will<lb/>
see six of Gene utry's most fam-<lb/>
ous movies. Next in line are the<lb/>
adventures of Roy Rogers and Dale<lb/>
Evans, featuring Gabby Hayes<lb/>
This year Wilson Hall will be<lb/>
demolished and in ite place will be<lb/>
erected a new ten-story high rise<lb/>
apartment building to house all the<lb/>
housemothers and members of the<lb/>
WRC. Also in this apartment com-<lb/>
plex will be the new office of C. D.<lb/>
Stout. Mr. Stout has been adopted<lb/>
as the official mascot and pet<lb/>
the Women's Residence Counci'<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
A former Editorial Editor of the<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN is now serving<lb/>
a five to ten year stretch in the<lb/>
Campus dungeon for contributing to<lb/>
the delinquency of an ECU coed.<lb/>
He was tried and convicted by the<lb/>
housemother tribunal, xor bringing<lb/>
his date in ten minutes after sun-<lb/>
down.<lb/>
Since I wrote an article condemn-<lb/>
ing the practices of telephone op-<lb/>
erators, I have received many com-<lb/>
ments from Greenville City Opera-<lb/>
tors. At least, these ladies took<lb/>
time to read the paper. However<lb/>
he question remaining in my mind<lb/>
right now is "Where are the Cam-<lb/>
pus Operators?' Somebody told<lb/>
me that the operators are becom-<lb/>
mi; a rare breed. They are slowly<lb/>
disappearing and. like the Dodo<lb/>
bird, thety will soon be extinct.<lb/>
We shall mourn their passing<lb/>
In Depth Report<lb/>
Student Power At East Caroli<lb/>
Published aemiweekly by the rtudont. ?( p ?<lb/>
" rrpHB. united States Student Prow Annotation<lb/>
0?n?u Pr?. S.rvlce, 10011 T?. hLn. . ?.<lb/>
fame Pres, fcSJET oftg?? Pr?<lb/>
Solwcription rate SR 00<lb/>
Student power is not an unfamil-<lb/>
iar term nor is it a new concept.<lb/>
It is no newer than Black power<lb/>
or Labor power or the influence<lb/>
any minority exerts on their gov-<lb/>
ernment, the mass media, and the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
In the past, the force of the<lb/>
minority evolved when certain<lb/>
members of the minority first<lb/>
realized what their problems were<lb/>
and then began to do something<lb/>
about it.<lb/>
Six and one half million college<lb/>
students, compose the minority<lb/>
they are the participants in the<lb/>
United Sates' largest, growth in-<lb/>
dustry?education, with $18 bill-<lb/>
ion expected to be spent in 1967-<lb/>
68. And what is happening is very<lb/>
simple?certain members of that<lb/>
minority are beginning to do some-<lb/>
thing about their problems.<lb/>
Now, someone may ask what has<lb/>
tnta got to do with a change in the<lb/>
women's dress regulations at East<lb/>
Carolina University. It has every-<lb/>
thing to do with it.<lb/>
In an effort to understand the<lb/>
full implications of the women's<lb/>
success in getting their dress regu-<lb/>
latons changed let us review the<lb/>
events:<lb/>
From almost the establishment<lb/>
of the previous regulation, which<lb/>
refused women the right to wear<lb/>
slacks, etc changes in the regu-<lb/>
lations were the empty promises<lb/>
of student government politicians<lb/>
There was much talk and no action<lb/>
Then earlier this fall, several<lb/>
girls took the initiative to get the<lb/>
'?egulations changed. Over eighteen<lb/>
wh!1001, R,rLs signed a Pe"tion<lb/>
SSSu h fred women student<lb/>
should be allowed to use their own<lb/>
discretion in wearing slacks, jeans<lb/>
and bermudas on w off campus<lb/>
Jne giris presented their peti-<lb/>
 l0 fSteve Moore, student got-<lb/>
'?nment president. The advisory<lb/>
JOMd to the student governmen<lb/>
then suggested the code be<lb/>
vised to road that women students<lb/>
?o'u;umrSerstrr<lb/>
initiative? gls to tak the<lb/>
Student governments eet w<lb/>
!? saris AJt<lb/>
 "?' ?v Ban, imTth"Z'<lb/>
att?MSs sv<lb/>
dent government u"<lb/>
At the meeting Duncan stout, a<lb/>
ma<lb/>
Bv John Reynolds<lb/>
"Jversity student, said that '?. . .<lb/>
' );l!h' O" encouraged the<lb/>
?initiation and faculty to con-<lb/>
he L reStrict thi f?doni in<lb/>
the interest of public opinion<lb/>
I eh ded in Stout's report of re-<lb/>
o m needed at East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
versity were; phins for a pass-fail<lb/>
?  experimental college:<lb/>
ways to reduce lecture time in the<lb/>
?,ooni- vision of the student<lb/>
closed ,rT0Val of curfews and<lb/>
to i, ' ' revision of dormi-<lb/>
, ;(lll"v'n- s: institution of<lb/>
-ln,ati?nal dormitory structures;<lb/>
n)n  le-wide stduent organiza-<lb/>
Most important in the light of<lb/>
What has been happening at ECU<lb/>
takr' now StUdent P?wer wiH<lb/>
'?renceh0  this first<lb/>
eaffwW T dem?nstrated its<lb/>
ant hp t to discover the problems<lb/>
" workSS?f the scents and<lb/>
?toSwiS" in effecting a<lb/>
wakim ,? a ,good indication, is<lb/>
Se7mu2 S. ,a.St t0 the ro,e ihat<lb/>
?tuaentLwT in the answering of<lb/>
of ? ?hKms ?d the fulfilling<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
w students' needs.<lb/>
Iclnts have demonstrated,<lb/>
"? l the drPSS code Petition.<lb/>
InitiativeV? willins to take the<lb/>
?ast Sout ? ?'le eIse does" And'<lb/>
the studenfc 'T is PVWence that<lb/>
and  ill" ll7 thPir Problems<lb/>
?olveaer? H win take to<lb/>
fV<lb/>
uppe<lb/>
 th<lb/>
. pub<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
bus<lb/>
!<lb/>
 repn<lb/>
upperc s!n<lb/>
infl '<lb/>
rds<lb/>
Alp. <lb/>
univei<lb/>
D<lb/>
-not<lb/>
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Brii<lb/>
ECU'<lb/>
low<lb/>
oi Mi<lb/>
l minis<lb/>
hi .1<lb/>
Who<lb/>
Kl s 1<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
 S(<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
 .<lb/>
I hi, ti a mi<lb/>
and ' '<lb/>
le :<lb/>
Ij, ? t.itnbc<lb/>
deal<lb/>
nut'<lb/>
I. ?<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
Mr "?1!<lb/>
Si Hill, i<lb/>
I j ihc has<lb/>
I<lb/>
BUCC :<lb/>
KEY md a<lb/>
M<lb/>
:<lb/>
r v All<lb/>
and Mrs. M<lb/>
1S  senior<lb/>
Science and<lb/>
vert as pres<lb/>
has been a<lb/>
judii iary O<lb/>
visorj Coun<lb/>
?:? ? ? Par<lb/>
n:il A!fairs,<lb/>
eh ?<lb/>
orary S iciol<lb/>
1 n Pa si<lb/>
Mr and Mr:<lb/>
? i m Ls a<lb/>
II<lb/>
dent Union,<lb/>
and the SG<lb/>
Is at pri ent<lb/>
and businesi<lb/>
BE!<lb/>
Donna Le<lb/>
Mi nd Mr<lb/>
Washington,<lb/>
and uident<lb/>
EBii iisi<lb/>
Ragsdale H<lb/>
ofl es of p<lb/>
treasurer of<lb/>
has been a<lb/>
Michael J<lb/>
and Mrs. All<lb/>
vill was a<lb/>
pr ? tm, tl<lb/>
Staff, Delta<lb/>
team. Phi<lb/>
Bowl team.<lb/>
Mod 1 UN. .<lb/>
e is a<lb/>
i w v trai<lb/>
El ibeth<lb/>
Of " and<lb/>
0l ? ii ill.<lb/>
H<lb/>
K!<lb/>
M<lb/>
md<lb/>
She<lb/>
1?'<lb/>
ha<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
lar<lb/>
11<lb/>
:ii ?<lb/>
and<lb/>
Ana<lb/>
Cooke<lb/>
cie<lb/>
Judl<lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
i iiei<lb/>
1-<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
age i<lb/>
? oi<lb/>
I<lb/>
pn<lb/>
? lean<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
John Des<lb/>
Mi nd Mi<lb/>
B Moi<lb/>
inr .ii busir<lb/>
from Amer<lb/>
in the top I<lb/>
at both set<lb/>
the dean's 1<lb/>
ager In Jar<lb/>
Sylvia G<lb/>
of Mr. and<lb/>
of Durham,<lb/>
dent Nurses<lb/>
ta Pi Sore<lb/>
Tau Pi Ur.<lb/>
marshal fc<lb/>
Ruth El<lb/>
of Mr. and<lb/>
ing of Gre<lb/>
student, a i<lb/>
ent of two<lb/>
a member <lb/>
is the 1967<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0003"/><lb/>
East Carolinian?Tuesday, November 7, 1967-<lb/>
vlng them from the 4<lb/>
m the University!<lb/>
niversity would brini<lb/>
on-wide or world-wide<lb/>
I became the first So<lb/>
si to encourage im <lb/>
contact between<lb/>
lctors. We can brii,<lb/>
encouraging the foi<lb/>
Experimental Collej<lb/>
seminars, and ali<lb/>
its and faculty to<lb/>
lialogues in extracurr<lb/>
ie.s Certainly, we<lb/>
lie response of stui<lb/>
nd to courses of In<lb/>
rere brought about 1<lb/>
o-ordination between<lb/>
?nment and faculty<lb/>
iter voice the two b<lb/>
ie University, the In<lb/>
for the University in<lb/>
for to ignore either<lb/>
it problems that wi<lb/>
thout.<lb/>
Charles Griffin<lb/>
to<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ith-<lb/>
"nal<lb/>
tits<lb/>
'his<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
, 111-<lb/>
'? ItlR<lb/>
elop<lb/>
" 11-<lb/>
ulci<lb/>
??tits<lb/>
rue.<lb/>
1 an<lb/>
tu-<lb/>
tter<lb/>
?he<lb/>
will<lb/>
all<lb/>
r Wilson Hall will be<lb/>
and in ite place will be<lb/>
lew ten-story high rise<lb/>
uilding to house all the<lb/>
rs and members of the<lb/>
in this apartment com-<lb/>
the new office of C. D<lb/>
Stout has been adopted<lb/>
ial mascot and pet<lb/>
s Residence Counci'<lb/>
Editorial Editor of the<lb/>
'LINiAN is now serving<lb/>
m year stretch in the<lb/>
?eon for contributing to<lb/>
mcy of an ECU coed<lb/>
1 and convicted by the<lb/>
? tribunal, ior bringing<lb/>
:en minutes after sun-<lb/>
ite an article condemn-<lb/>
tices of telephone op-<lb/>
?e received many com-<lb/>
3reenville City Opera-<lb/>
st, these ladies took<lb/>
I the paper. However<lb/>
remaining In my mind<lb/>
'Where are the Cam-<lb/>
rs?" Somebody told<lb/>
operators are becom-<lb/>
reed. They are slowly<lb/>
and, like the Dodo<lb/>
vill soon be extinct,<lb/>
urn their passing.<lb/>
olina<lb/>
?hn Reynolds<lb/>
ient, said that  . .<lb/>
' has encouraged the<lb/>
and faculty to con-<lb/>
ict this freedom in<lb/>
 public opinion<lb/>
Stout's report of re-<lb/>
t East Carolina Uni-<lb/>
Plans for a pass-fail<lb/>
xperimental collepe:<lb/>
lecture time in the<lb/>
ion of the student<lb/>
al of curfews and<lb/>
revision of dormi-<lb/>
ules: institution of<lb/>
dormitory structures;<lb/>
tie stduent organiza-<lb/>
mt in the light of<lb/>
happening at ECU<lb/>
student power will<lb/>
ration, in this first<lb/>
1 demonstrated its<lb/>
scover the problems<lb/>
of the students and<lb/>
hem in effecting a<lb/>
vernment. if Blick's<lb/>
good indication, is<lb/>
ist to the role that<lb/>
in the answering of<lb/>
'S and the fulfilling<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
have demonstrated,<lb/>
ress code petition.<lb/>
billing to take the<lb/>
e else does. And,<lb/>
"t is evidence that<lb/>
lize thPir problems<lb/>
it it will take to<lb/>
Who's Who' Honors Outstanding ECU Students<lb/>
. QtB in Ameri<lb/>
Colleges Tin<lb/>
Uni-<lb/>
 bast Carolina Utai-<lb/>
??: las: ini'H 'uve been<lb/>
?. l868 edition ol tli.<lb/>
lbUcatdon.<lb/>
:?!  i??,?.? 1<lb/>
<lb/>
 mrlu.l. blo raphi<lb/>
 outstandin<lb/>
throughout the nation.<lb/>
. , Qttog the univi<lb/>
(18 ??Who's Who" an<lb/>
?.? who have out i<lb/>
ui"1 . rdJg m scholarship, leader-<lb/>
Spanish<lb/>
.<lb/>
Log<lb/>
ship<lb/>
to the<lb/>
<lb/>
tee ?<lb/>
EC'<lb/>
low<lb/>
I i<lb/>
ol Mi<lb/>
i-<lb/>
 hip and contribution?<lb/>
 ity, They were nomi-<lb/>
 honor by a commit-<lb/>
ents, faculty member'<lb/>
ImlnlstraUve officials here.<lb/>
hi igraphlcal sfcetche ol<lb/>
Who's Who" nominee<lb/>
di ?<lb/>
nut<lb/>
fort<lb/>
n<lb/>
Sew<lb/>
ved<lb/>
Elizabeth Adams, daughtei<lb/>
Margaret a lama of Bath.<lb/>
I scholar at ECU. She has<lb/>
lecretary of Oamma B I<lb/>
? : oi Pi Omei b Pi. par-<lb/>
aa of the student P<lb/>
. ate Of Model UN. She<lb/>
: member of the .student<lb/>
Sigma Tau Sigma, Pin<lb/>
bda, College Union Siu-<lb/>
 anterbury, Rules Con -<lb/>
 Vice Chairman of B<lb/>
 Club.<lb/>
. Ann Barrow, daughter ol<lb/>
Mrs. John V. Barrow 1<lb/>
is a senior Engl h ma-<lb/>
, ha ? served as an orienta-<lb/>
elor, a member of the<lb/>
? i ;?? ? :i. editor of the<lb/>
key md ? repreaentatlve to the<lb/>
JN. She is a member of the<lb/>
ta sorority.<lb/>
1 v Allen Bllck, son oi Mr<lb/>
? . Milton Blick of Raleigh,<lb/>
jj senior majoring in Political<lb/>
l  and Sociology. He has ser-<lb/>
presldent of Jone Dorm.<lb/>
n a member of the Men'<lb/>
Judiciary Council and Dean<lb/>
visorj Council, Chairman of the<lb/>
? Party, Secretary ol Inter-<lb/>
nal Affairs, and has recently been<lb/>
selecti ri as a member of the hon-<lb/>
S K-iology fraternity.<lb/>
I  Paschal Breedlove. Bon of<lb/>
Ml ind Mrs. Irvin P. Breedlove of<lb/>
Durham is a business major. He has<lb/>
boon a member of the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent Union, the ECU Crew. SGA.<lb/>
and the SGA Executive Council. He<lb/>
present, Senior Class president<lb/>
and business manager of the RE-<lb/>
BE1<lb/>
II nna 1 ee Cherry, daughb<lb/>
M. I Mrs. Henry Lee Cherry oi<lb/>
W hington, has served as secretary<lb/>
and tudent counselor of Slay Hall<lb/>
She was also a student counselor in<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall. She has held the<lb/>
offices of president, secretary<lb/>
tie; urer of Sigma Tau Delta,<lb/>
has been a mar shall.<lb/>
Michael John Conley, son of<lb/>
and Mrs. Albert P. Conley of Green-<lb/>
ville was a member of the honors<lb/>
pro im, the EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
staff Delta Sisma Pi, the debate<lb/>
team. Phi Sigma Pi, GE College<lb/>
Bowl foam, and a delegatae to the<lb/>
and<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Modi<lb/>
jor.<lb/>
coun<lb/>
pre<lb/>
1 if<lb/>
H<lb/>
Kl V<lb/>
M<lb/>
UN. A senior economics ma-<lb/>
e is a member of the cross-<lb/>
v track team.<lb/>
ibeth Warren Cooke. daughter<lb/>
and Mrs. W. C. Cooke Jr.<lb/>
ihville, h:?s served a.s vice-<lb/>
of Cotten Hall, chairman<lb/>
udent counselors in Gotten<lb/>
d sistant Editor of tne<lb/>
chief marshall and<lb/>
?f Alpha Phi sorority.<lb/>
te is a Senior math and<lb/>
cience major.<lb/>
th Pay Cramer, daugn-<lb/>
nd Mrs. Robert E. Cra-<lb/>
iville is a senior m-<lb/>
rench and Spanish. She<lb/>
Juc<lb/>
ha<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
nean's List every quarter<lb/>
freshman she maintained<lb/>
n<lb/>
ai<lb/>
and<lb/>
An<lb/>
i -auge in the foreign<lb/>
ign language fraternity.<lb/>
: pre ently attending ?ta<lb/>
rican University at BaltellO,<lb/>
Mex , ?(<lb/>
Dexter Daughtrldge, son 01<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Daughtrldge of<lb/>
1. Mount, is a senior majoi -<lb/>
tap in business. He transferred nere<lb/>
from American University and w?<lb/>
ta the top 'en per cent of his Class<lb/>
at both schools. He was named w<lb/>
tho dean's list and was a hall man-<lb/>
ager In Jones Dorm.<lb/>
Sylvia Gwvn Foushee, dniiRhtei<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. Sam L. Foushee<lb/>
of Durham, is a member of the stu<lb/>
dent Nurses Association, Alpha Del-<lb/>
ta Pi Sorority, and President<lb/>
Tau Pi Upsilon. She has been<lb/>
ttarshall for three years.<lb/>
Ruth Ellen Fleming, daughtei<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Flem-<lb/>
ing of Greenville, is a dean's nsr<lb/>
student, a merit scholar, the recipi-<lb/>
ent, of two scholarship awards, ana<lb/>
a member of Sigma Tau Sigma, sne<lb/>
18 the 1967 North Carolina College<lb/>
or.<lb/>
 ? . 01 ol<lb/>
id il Win ? m-Sa-<lb/>
? 1 ucation major<lb/>
? bei . b of the<lb/>
1 immander of<lb/>
ety, group com-<lb/>
FROTC and a<lb/>
? Dean's Advisory<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
'?: :i i: i k . daugh-<lb/>
Mi B v Hend-<lb/>
h Eteach, Dela-<lb/>
ware,  Major. She<lb/>
enator foi two<lb/>
1 activities have in-<lb/>
clude .ate cheerleader, pub-<lb/>
ir her class for<lb/>
and  : man of her<lb/>
ind chairman<lb/>
1 committee<lb/>
Hi 01 Oi<lb/>
' H ett, Sr, "i<lb/>
Nev. Bed) A ma h ma-<lb/>
He i . pin Sigma<lb/>
Pi H Presi lenl oi Gymna -<lb/>
? oi  Industrial<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Mi I j Holt, 1<lb/>
rau Pi Upsilon. Alpha<lb/>
N ' : the Student Nurses<lb/>
ft iation. She has also been a<lb/>
: three yea<lb/>
Rebei ca Mae Holder, daughter<lb/>
: M Mrs. C P. Holder of<lb/>
;enior Nursing ma-<lb/>
staf 1<lb/>
Student<lb/>
m. She h<lb/>
. ? nd orien-<lb/>
tation co  elor, wphomore cl<lb/>
? ? a chool SGA re-<lb/>
presentative.<lb/>
joAnne House, daughter ol Mr<lb/>
Mn. S. G. House of Wilson.<lb/>
has erved the SGA as a freshman<lb/>
repn sentative, a legislator and his-<lb/>
!i. She received tlie award for<lb/>
: the top four SGA<lb/>
- .she is a senior art ma-<lb/>
jor and member of Chi Omega.<lb/>
Mar'ha Hi by Humphrey. dau?h-<lb/>
?. : : Mr, and Mrs. Webster I<lb/>
Humphrey of Kinston, was a student<lb/>
ad .i member of Gam-<lb/>
ma Beta Phi. She is a member of<lb/>
Phi Alpha The and is doing grad-<lb/>
? i work iv re in history.<lb/>
D irorthy lean Joyner, daughter<lb/>
? Mr and Mrs. E. T. Joyner ol<lb/>
Rocky Mount, has been a marshall<lb/>
for two years, Vice-Chairman of<lb/>
Women's Honor Council. President<lb/>
n i Corresponding secretary of Al-<lb/>
pha Phi, Editor of the 1966 KEY.<lb/>
mber of Publications Board.<lb/>
member of SGA Special Events<lb/>
c immittee, and a student counselor.<lb/>
Miss Judith Ann Joyner, daugh-<lb/>
ter Of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Joyner<lb/>
? Parmville is a primary educa-<lb/>
tion major and a member of Al-<lb/>
pha Phi" Sorority and has served<lb/>
as ? marshall for three years. .<lb/>
was a student counselor, an orien-<lb/>
tation counselor and an SGA repre-<lb/>
sentative. She was secretary of her<lb/>
junior class.<lb/>
Thomas Henry King, son of Mr.<lb/>
md Mrs. H. P. King. Jr. of Ahos-<lb/>
.u is a senior art major. He is<lb/>
dent if the University Union<lb/>
and fi rmi rly served as Fine Arts<lb/>
n and a member of the<lb/>
nter-Dormitory Council.<lb/>
K berl Alien Koehler of Kinston,<lb/>
a senior history major. He has<lb/>
 fr, ?  ! and varsity foot-<lb/>
nember of the Lutheran<lb/>
?ion. president of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi, a member of the<lb/>
,( ? 1 ommlttee,<lb/>
? I Bl iity evaluating<lb/>
lommittei  PW Beta Kappa<lb/>
honoree. He is now a member of<lb/>
the hlstwry honors program, a<lb/>
story honors scholarship recipi-<lb/>
ber of Ph. Alpha<lb/>
m tin Lassiter, son of<lb/>
MandM. Glenn Y, Laaslterof<lb/>
.t-lareeand sophomore clasapreai<lb/>
of<lb/>
a<lb/>
dent. He was also a member Oi the<lb/>
chapel choir, the colli ge singers,<lb/>
the Marching Pirates, the varsity<lb/>
c i the college choir.<lb/>
muel Blair Lilly, son I M<lb/>
and Mrs. Cyrus T. Lilly oi New-<lb/>
port, is a physical education ma-<lb/>
jor and was a member of the bas-<lb/>
ketball team and president oi Phi<lb/>
Ep lion Kappa.<lb/>
John Kinnion Meares ol Roanoke<lb/>
i' ipid  has served as SGA Summer<lb/>
School President, on the Honor<lb/>
Council, President and Treasurer<lb/>
of YRC, Vice-President of Fresh-<lb/>
man Class. Chairman and trea lur-<lb/>
er of the Student Party, on the<lb/>
Budget Committee, SGA Legisla-<lb/>
tuie. on the Attorney General's<lb/>
Staff, Model UN Debate Team.<lb/>
Orientation Counselor, Viet Nam<lb/>
Blood Drive, and on the Editorial<lb/>
staff EAST CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
Boyce Stevenson M ore Jr son<lb/>
? Mr and Mrs. B S Moore of<lb/>
Cleveland, is the presidenl of the<lb/>
SGA and lias been vice-president,<lb/>
easurer, and dormitory repre.en-<lb/>
alive, and chairman of the Budget<lb/>
Committee. He has been treasurer<lb/>
for the InteDormitory col nc and<lb/>
a member of the Honor Council. He<lb/>
s a membei oi the Dean Uivisory<lb/>
mcil, Student Party Treasurer,<lb/>
trea urer oi the Vietnam Btood<lb/>
Drive chairman oi Rowan County<lb/>
dub He is a senior business ma-<lb/>
Bobby Scot Ober, son ol Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs Paul M. Ober of Edenton.<lb/>
received the scholarship award from<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi. a group which he<lb/>
d as national student repre-<lb/>
, ntative of the Beta Kappa Chap-<lb/>
 He is a senior majorinq In bu-<lb/>
siness education.<lb/>
Margaret Steele Rumbley, daugh-<lb/>
ter of Mr. R. A. Rumbley. Sr. of<lb/>
Greenville, is a member of Chi Beta<lb/>
Phi and president of Phi Upsilon<lb/>
Omicron. She attended summer<lb/>
session at the University of Michi-<lb/>
m, and is a senior majoring in<lb/>
institution management.<lb/>
Howard George Salenius. of<lb/>
Greenville, a senior History ma-<lb/>
jor is ? member of Phi Alpha<lb/>
Thei 1 Vice-Ch drman of Men's Ju-<lb/>
diciary, Chairman of 'he Delega-<lb/>
tion to the Model UN, Young Re-<lb/>
publicans Club, and Chairman of<lb/>
Men's Hotter Council. He has made<lb/>
either the Honor Roll, Dean's List<lb/>
or all A's every quarter in school<lb/>
John Alexander S'taley Jr son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Staley of<lb/>
Morehead City, is vice-president of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi. prseident of Math<lb/>
Honors Institute, president of the<lb/>
Math Honors Association, math club<lb/>
member and a member of the SGA.<lb/>
A senior majoring in mathematics<lb/>
and physics, he has been named<lb/>
an outstanding student in both and<lb/>
has been named to the Dean's List.<lb/>
Thornton Green Stovall Jr son<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Stovall<lb/>
of Stovall, is president of Phi Sig-<lb/>
ma Pi Fraternity and treasurer of<lb/>
the Physics Club. He was on thr-<lb/>
Math Honors Program, president of<lb/>
the Granville Comity Club, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Dean's Advisory Council<lb/>
and an orientation counselor.<lb/>
Charlene F. Teitelbaum, daugh-<lb/>
ter of Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Tietel-<lb/>
baum of Richmond, Virginia, ha.s<lb/>
-erved as treasurer of Women's<lb/>
Glee Club, Secretary and Vice-<lb/>
President of the Hebrew Youth Fel-<lb/>
lowship. Chairman of Women's<lb/>
Residence Council, Constitution<lb/>
committee, and President and Vice-<lb/>
president of Fletcher She is a<lb/>
senior speech therapy major.<lb/>
Anitra TodC, daughter of Mr<lb/>
and Mrs. F. A. Todd of Wendell, is<lb/>
chairman of the Women's Honor<lb/>
Council, secretary of the Securitj<lb/>
Council for the Model UN and sec-<lb/>
retary of Alpha Delta Pi. She i.s a<lb/>
enlor education major.<lb/>
Lena Johann Vaughan, daughter<lb/>
Of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Vaughan of<lb/>
Rocky Mount, is the chairman of<lb/>
the Women's Judiciary, and secre-<lb/>
tary of the Alpha Phi sorority<lb/>
which she has also served B v e-<lb/>
president. She has been a member<lb/>
of the SNEA, the BUCCANEER<lb/>
staff, the Women's Rules Commit-<lb/>
tee, Ring Committee, orientation<lb/>
counselor, and chairman of Wo-<lb/>
men's Judiciary Constitution Com-<lb/>
mittee. She is a primary education<lb/>
major.<lb/>
James Ah on Walker, son of Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Frank P. Walker of Ox-<lb/>
ford, is a senior business major.<lb/>
He is treasurer of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Fraternity.<lb/>
Benjamin Thomas Webb, son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs Milton W. Webb of<lb/>
Morehead City, is a student In<lb/>
graduate school at ECU. As an un-<lb/>
dergraduate he served as president<lb/>
of his Junior and Senior Classes<lb/>
He was also a member of Chi Beta<lb/>
Phi Psi Chi. Kappa Alpha and the<lb/>
Deans Advisory Council.<lb/>
Sandra Kaye Wentzel, daughter<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Wentzel of<lb/>
Raleigh, an English major, has<lb/>
erved as president of Alpha Delta<lb/>
Pi. treasurer of Freshman Glass,<lb/>
Sacretary, cay student representa-<lb/>
tive, member oi Executive Com-<lb/>
mittee. Entertainment Committee<lb/>
? nd Ring Committee for the SGA.<lb/>
She has also been a member of the<lb/>
Deans Advisory Council, the Stu-<lb/>
Student State Legis-<lb/>
nd Executive Sec-<lb/>
retary of Mid South Model U.N.<lb/>
Theodore Walker Whitley. son of<lb/>
Mi and Mrs. T. L. Whitley of<lb/>
: mbei ol Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha, played freshman basketball<lb/>
and freshman and varsity base-<lb/>
ball if" a dean's lisl student.<lb/>
James HilUard Young, son of Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. J. W. Young, Jr Ahos-<lb/>
eni 11 English major, has<lb/>
held three editorships on the BUC-<lb/>
CANEER. He has also been an edi-<lb/>
? jr for the EAST CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
He is a member of Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
fraternity and the SGA.<lb/>
MERLF NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO<lb/>
mE OF THE 3 STEPS TO BEAUTY<lb/>
216 E. 5th Street<lb/>
SteuuuHi<lb/>
 my Drive-In<lb/>
m Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
ferfl r r 10th &amp; Otanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
1 jir. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
tcrnitv, sorority, group,<lb/>
individual wishing to<lb/>
j miniate in the BCC-<lb/>
queen contest must<lb/>
or before Friday, No-<lb/>
ll. All entries must be<lb/>
the Bit CANKER of-<lb/>
ecn the hours of 1:0<lb/>
p.m Monday through<lb/>
An entrance fee of<lb/>
-??quired for each can-<lb/>
Any fra<lb/>
club, ?r<lb/>
enter a I<lb/>
(ANKER<lb/>
do so on<lb/>
vcmber i<lb/>
made at<lb/>
flee betw<lb/>
and 5:00<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Sa.OO is<lb/>
didate.<lb/>
the qneen will be selected by<lb/>
a panel of Judges at a tea, given<lb/>
at the home of Dr. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
on Monday. November 13. Con-<lb/>
testants will be judged on beau-<lb/>
ty, poise, and general person-<lb/>
ality.<lb/>
First Choice<lb/>
Of The<lb/>
Engageables<lb/>
They like the smart styling and<lb/>
the perfect center diamond<lb/>
 a brilliant gem of fine<lb/>
:olor and modern cut. The<lb/>
name. Keepsake, in your<lb/>
ring assures lifetime satis-<lb/>
faction. Select yours at your<lb/>
Keepscke Je.veler's store.<lb/>
He's in the yellow pages <lb/>
under "Jewelers.<lb/>
AS<lb/>
REGISTERED <lb/>
DIAMOND PlNGS<lb/>
HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING<lb/>
Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage-<lb/>
ment and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for<lb/>
only 25c. Also, send special offer of beautiful 44-page Bride's Book.<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
-Zip.<lb/>
I KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 13202<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0004"/><lb/>
4?foii CaioliKin -Tuiilay, November 7, 1967<lb/>
I<lb/>
Bjerre Presents<lb/>
Paradoxical China<lb/>
Mao Tse-Tung, leader oi the<lb/>
Communist Chinese, Is reported to<lb/>
have said; ' when a child is born<lb/>
we must noi say there Is one more<lb/>
to feed. We must say thai there<lb/>
axe two more arms to work for<lb/>
China<lb/>
This wie of the many un-<lb/>
censored Insights presented by Jens<lb/>
Bjerre. famous Danish author and<lb/>
film producer, as he brought the<lb/>
people of Rod China before the<lb/>
ECU community in his exclusive<lb/>
film lecture in Old Austin Audi-<lb/>
torium last Thursday night<lb/>
The film "Red China which<lb/>
was edited by Bier- Denmark<lb/>
is in demand all over the United<lb/>
States. Along with a blunt Interpre-<lb/>
tation in pictures of the way Chi-<lb/>
nese people view Americans. Bjerre<lb/>
brings his own perceptives Into fo-<lb/>
cus, for the American public.<lb/>
There arc more than 700 mil-<lb/>
lion Chinese working for China "<lb/>
Bjerre said. '?That is more than<lb/>
one-fourth of the world's popu-<lb/>
lation more than the Cmited<lb/>
Spates. th? Soviet Union. England<lb/>
Prance, West Germany, Poland and<lb/>
Japan put together<lb/>
Communists took over China in<lb/>
1949. the nation was battered to<lb/>
pieces from the Japanese inva-<lb/>
sion, the civil war, corruption and<lb/>
disorder. He estimated that from<lb/>
1900 to 1945, an average of ten<lb/>
million Chinese starved to death<lb/>
each year.<lb/>
"Today in China there is work-<lb/>
food and social security benefits<lb/>
for every individual ho said. "The<lb/>
Chinese have solved these basic<lb/>
at the cost<lb/>
dom<lb/>
I In- loss of freedom, as Bjeri<lb/>
Views it. apparently has not g<lb/>
affected many sections it Cl<lb/>
Society simply because freed<lb/>
 ; was eniojed bj :<lb/>
number oi educa<lb/>
. had no pracl<lb/>
'? to the vai I m tion,<lb/>
he explained. "For centurii<lb/>
peasants were defensele:<lb/>
the mercy of nature, tin<lb/>
and w rlords An : h tod; i<lb/>
 icietj the Chine i<lb/>
:ind in '? e 'treed m' and<lb/>
have evei<lb/>
fore "<lb/>
Bjei e ? inphasized I h<lb/>
film lecture that the people<lb/>
11 ust and ii ite is systematical<lb/>
rected againsl the enemiet<lb/>
Chiang Kai shek, the United i<lb/>
administration and lately I e Rus-<lb/>
sian revisionist s.<lb/>
Most Chinese are firmly<lb/>
vinced thai the United States will<lb/>
attack their country Bjerre said<lb/>
"Therefore millions of studi<lb/>
children, peasants and wo<lb/>
every corm r oi the coun rj<lb/>
the militia to learn till<lb/>
guerrilla warfare, to fire <lb/>
and to throw a hand ere<lb/>
The fih i presented Chim<lb/>
land of paradoxes and contradic-<lb/>
tions. And Bjerre stated thi<lb/>
are people commune!<lb/>
talism. In Shanghai aloi ?<lb/>
90.000 former owners of bit<lb/>
and factories draw an in om<lb/>
five per cent annual<lb/>
old holdings, but onlj<lb/>
these former owners liv W<lb/>
they die, the holdings become the<lb/>
iroperty of the state.<lb/>
Bjerre Mated thai .<lb/>
lish world -  .<lb/>
ind the Wesl mi<lb/>
their mutual fe ? :?<lb/>
'Mi  . nd I ' ?<lb/>
fear he said.<lb/>
"Peace can onlj<lb/>
leai ni<lb/>
ird<lb/>
? e<lb/>
Hard rock n roll and nul music is the specialty of this group called<lb/>
rough the Looking filass I lie.v will entertain at the "Orasser"<lb/>
liutsdaj evenin on the Ia!l Group members ae Ralph Lilly. Warren<lb/>
tti jv. John it ???. fact Humphries, and Gary Johnson.<lb/>
Just This<lb/>
Californians Know Now<lb/>
 Califor-<lb/>
te and<lb/>
were novel to a<lb/>
: Ltlantic i oast.<lb/>
.l tip out of the<lb/>
.linked down again<lb/>
quickly into valleys and there were<lb/>
manj , . itiating easide cliffs,<lb/>
down black stone led<lb/>
water, with foaming<lb/>
i line rocks tickled<lb/>
retri ating convlu-<lb/>
I ? o ean laughed a<lb/>
pray t<lb/>
i i anty and<lb/>
peted with smooth<lb/>
itone. instead of sand. All<lb/>
? ? alle v the Sierra Nevadas.<lb/>
ran e crouched<lb/>
i ually with nod-<lb/>
JENS BJERRE<lb/>
Surf Tournament<lb/>
 "Holiday Classii suri tonr-<lb/>
iiaiii. nt is to be held Nu<lb/>
J6 at Atlantic Beach, N <lb/>
Trophies will be awarded In all<lb/>
ions, and special trophies<lb/>
?ill be awarded lor "Wave oi<lb/>
the Day ' and 'Wlpeoul ol (Ik<lb/>
Daj Entrj fees will be $3.00<lb/>
For more information contact"<lb/>
Pal Marsh at los Jones Hall oi<lb/>
write Miss Judy Stiles, 111<lb/>
Midyette Vve . Morehead ' iti<lb/>
S. C.<lb/>
ilhouetted, atop<lb/>
??'? rock or sand, was<lb/>
peppei ed with posies. Ge-<lb/>
??- I poppies (no, not that<lb/>
Wild ana varieties ol<lb/>
it-leaved bio soms red-<lb/>
1 he roadsides.<lb/>
1 lalifornia think? while<lb/>
? '????' i ?? en anything like Cali-<lb/>
? i did nol occur I i me that<lb/>
??? w re curious about the<lb/>
By Judi Bradford<lb/>
tth They had never seen a to-<lb/>
r field and did not know what<lb/>
a swamp looked like. Did we really<lb/>
pick cotton, and how hot does it<lb/>
gel m the summer. What kind of<lb/>
dances do we do? Tell me about<lb/>
the moonshiners. Do southern stu-<lb/>
dents know about marijuana and<lb/>
how many underground newspapers<lb/>
do we have0<lb/>
The truth has spread a little far-<lb/>
ther: Now Californians know that<lb/>
we don't really sit on our proverbial<lb/>
verandas sipping mint juleps and<lb/>
whipping the slaves.<lb/>
And of ECTC University! Eight<lb/>
west coast residents recognized us<lb/>
and each one was male and each<lb/>
has memorized the list of the ten<lb/>
besl "party schools" in the United<lb/>
.States published two or three years<lb/>
ago m "Playboy" or "Esquire" or<lb/>
some similar publication<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all<lb/>
representatives and officers of<lb/>
WRA on Thursday nijrlit. No-<lb/>
vember !), at 6:00 pm in the<lb/>
gym. All representatives are<lb/>
urged to be p-esent as pictures<lb/>
will be taken.<lb/>
Join The JfJJJ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza too<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
nffirs?o?vUlager:nCet0n  is bating at North Elmham<lb/>
Ladi M w PANE HOSE $1.49<lb/>
y. Light Blue, Green, Copper,<lb/>
pie, Bone, and White.<lb/>
Come<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Also We Flave Ladies FISH NET HOSE<lb/>
In All Colors<lb/>
FREE CUSTOMER PARKING<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
if<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Students Sports Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
?????1l<lb/>
The Mush Room<lb/>
in<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
521 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Phone 752-3815<lb/>
Donna E. Tabor<lb/>
. PRINTS, PAINTINGS, SCULPTURE<lb/>
k V1' STUDENTS and FACULTY<lb/>
Candles (including strawberry) ? Cards<lb/>
WRAPPINGS I . Gordon Fraser and K,<lb/>
COME<lb/>
Souse<lb/>
?pen ?'? n !<lb/>
A XL<lb/>
?0 a m.<lb/>
:00  m.<lb/>
Hard Rock Group<lb/>
I Mays At Grasser'<lb/>
A Her Next Pep Rally<lb/>
On Thursday. November 9<lb/>
conjunction with the pep i<lb/>
the last home football<lb/>
"Grasser" will be held on 'th!<lb/>
mall from 7:00 until 7:15 a ??<lb/>
called "Through the <lb/>
Glass will entertain with <lb/>
rock "n" roll and soul music ri<lb/>
performers will be dre . ed<lb/>
Revere costumes.<lb/>
The SOA Is donating y, ? <lb/>
the event presented by the  ?<lb/>
Residence Council, and 1500<lb/>
nuts, 700 cups of coffee, and on<lb/>
cups of hot chocolate will be<lb/>
The purpose of the ev<lb/>
the men students to meet th<lb/>
eds. to get dates and Creati<lb/>
for this last home same of th<lb/>
son. Freshman students on<lb/>
study will be allowed bo attend th<lb/>
festivities.<lb/>
The idea of the "Grasser' was<lb/>
taken from Michigan state Univer<lb/>
sity. Lansing Michigan, where Sl)ch<lb/>
socials take place frequentlj<lb/>
dent participation will Indicate our<lb/>
support of the Pirates and will<lb/>
hopefully lead to more such oc-<lb/>
i asions.<lb/>
Exchange Offers<lb/>
European Studies<lb/>
Association for Cultural Exchange<lb/>
-A new and exciting opportunity In<lb/>
England is now offered to Coliege<lb/>
students wanting to spend next sum-<lb/>
mer in Europe in an Interesting<lb/>
way.<lb/>
You may help t0 reveal th e-<lb/>
crets of a Roman villa, an iron-age<lb/>
hill fort or the structure of a medi-<lb/>
eval town or Anglo-Saxon cathedral<lb/>
before they disappear, perhaps for<lb/>
ever. Expanding housing programs.<lb/>
city centre redevelopment and new<lb/>
highway projects in Britain to-day<lb/>
have opened up many new possi-<lb/>
bilities for archaeological investi-<lb/>
gation.<lb/>
Von may help in this important<lb/>
work, earn credits, made intcrna-<lb/>
nal friends and receive valuable<lb/>
training in archaeology, bv joining<lb/>
a prom-am sponsored by the Asso-<lb/>
ciation for Cultural Exchange, the<lb/>
Britii h n m-profil organization.<lb/>
Volunteers first Join a three-week<lb/>
eminar for training in British ar-<lb/>
chaeology and excavation techni-<lb/>
?' Queen's College, Oxford.<lb/>
? up into small groups<lb/>
? more weeks "digging"<lb/>
? ici ! site. Total i<lb/>
,h, : 725 dollars, m-<lb/>
md-trip air transporta-<lb/>
 ?' ' " ?'? York. Part scholar-<lb/>
ly to suitable stu-<lb/>
?'? l ?' "B" plus average<lb/>
Write now for further details to<lb/>
United States Representative: As-<lb/>
sociaton for Cultural Exchange.<lb/>
539 West 112th Street, Now York<lb/>
?'0025. do; mg aplication date is ex-<lb/>
peered to de beginning of January<lb/>
WANTED - Expert typist for<lb/>
part-time employment-2 hoars<lb/>
per week. Billing and insur-<lb/>
ance forms. Reply, typi711<lb/>
est Sixth Street.<lb/>
For Sale One uw-d FTigi-<lb/>
aaire refrigerator, go0d ,?ndi<lb/>
tlon. Call W2-5629 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
For S.  ono (ouh on(<lb/>
?ove seat, one end table, two<lb/>
( all 758-3873.<lb/>
For ent ? new 12' X 45'<lb/>
mobile home in Shady Knolls<lb/>
Mobile Estates. Couple only.<lb/>
 all 752-78(16 after fi p.m.<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
.J1 rn? s interested jn FARN-<lb/>
!?;?. $65? an ,IOlJ" FART<lb/>
IIME with an enterprise NEW<lb/>
o the Oreenvffle area, Con-<lb/>
"th St. Ph. 752-4955 after 9:00.<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banana Split<lb/>
oi Sundae<lb/>
264 By Pass, Greenville<lb/>
??.?????<lb/>
: '<lb/>
'<lb/>
???? We<lb/>
? ii no<lb/>
I in- nonstrosit; .<lb/>
N" -I'n p.irkini<lb/>
I i ? iinuteman<lb/>
Balli li Missile. S<lb/>
'in ill 7n llinii.n<lb/>
Mil man i a ke;<lb/>
foi n ml siles an<lb/>
1 ' hich : ives th<lb/>
ful deterri<lb/>
trike.<lb/>
? -r<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0005"/><lb/>
ck Group<lb/>
Grasser'<lb/>
?1 Pep Rally<lb/>
iv. Novembej g ?<lb/>
ith the pep rauy <lb/>
i???<lb/>
M????t??m<lb/>
i<lb/>
irol .<lb/>
-Tuesday, November 7, 1967?5<lb/>
V<lb/>
c football<lb/>
be held 01<lb/>
?up<lb/>
i until 7:15. A<lb/>
ugh the <lb/>
mtertain with d<lb/>
ul soul music iv<lb/>
1 be dressed<lb/>
OS.<lb/>
donating $75.00 for<lb/>
tented by the <lb/>
Cil, and 1600<lb/>
of coffee, ai<lb/>
colate win in<lb/>
"i the event<lb/>
its to meet thi<lb/>
es and creati spirit<lb/>
ne same of th sea.<lb/>
students oil<lb/>
ilowed bo attend the<lb/>
the "Qrasser" was<lb/>
hlgan State Iniver-<lb/>
Ichigan, where such<lb/>
ee frequentlj<lb/>
?n will indie uur<lb/>
Pirates and wU<lb/>
tn more sue 1<lb/>
:e Offers<lb/>
n Studies<lb/>
Cultural Exchange<lb/>
Iting opportunity in<lb/>
('tiered to College<lb/>
to spend next sum-<lb/>
in an inten<lb/>
10 reveal tin e-<lb/>
1 villa, an iron-age<lb/>
ruchire of a medi-<lb/>
lo-Saxon cathedral<lb/>
spear, perhaps for<lb/>
housing programs,<lb/>
elopment and new<lb/>
in Britain to-day<lb/>
many new p ssi-<lb/>
leological Investi-<lb/>
ln this important<lb/>
ts, made Interna-<lb/>
i receive valuable<lb/>
y, by joining<lb/>
?red by the A o<lb/>
'al Exchange, the<lb/>
' organization.<lb/>
join a three-week<lb/>
Ing in British ar-<lb/>
Kcavation technl-<lb/>
College, Oxford.<lb/>
into small groups<lb/>
weeks "digging"<lb/>
?? 1 Bite. Total 1<lb/>
? 7L) dollars, in-<lb/>
J air transporta-<lb/>
?rk. Part scholar-<lb/>
e to suitable stu-<lb/>
plus average<lb/>
urther details to<lb/>
'resentative: As-<lb/>
tural Exchange.<lb/>
treet, New York<lb/>
nation date is ex-<lb/>
mlng of January<lb/>
?pcrt typist fur<lb/>
yment-2f hoars<lb/>
'?: and insiir-<lb/>
I. typists-1711<lb/>
1.<lb/>
ne mod Frigi-<lb/>
r- ffood eondi<lb/>
'9 after 6 p.m<lb/>
ne ouch, one<lb/>
?nd table, two<lb/>
id" TV stand<lb/>
new 12' X 45'<lb/>
Shady Knolls<lb/>
Couple only,<lb/>
'r fi p.m.<lb/>
DE<lb/>
sterl in EARX-<lb/>
?OlJU PART<lb/>
iteiprise NEW<lb/>
e area, Con-<lb/>
nbach 513 E<lb/>
)55 after 9:00.<lb/>
ZA<lb/>
:y bar<lb/>
Flavors<lb/>
ream<lb/>
3anana SpUt<lb/>
lae<lb/>
rreenville<lb/>
? 4 444444444 4 44444444.4444 444 444444 ?444.44444444 . 44.44444 4.4 4.4. <lb/>
<lb/>
M- ? ? ? r-rr-rT T-TT T.T.q. T. q. n. T  -1 TTTT TT-r-r-r t tt r -r-rr-r-rr<lb/>
issile Display Spotlights AFROTC Week<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
irolina will be<lb/>
lisp<lb/>
il<lb/>
Week "<lb/>
! . ?  ?<lb/>
: : ' N' '?' <lb/>
Otl Includ'<lb/>
I ;c. and<lb/>
 44 444 44  jm 4 m ?  .f444HHtMMHH???HM?4?M??M???'<lb/>
y 4<lb/>
. Work' activil<lb/>
,? 10 00 a.m. Wedi 1<lb/>
ning day ci<lb/>
I r 1 tei n North CaroUna<lb/>
imes have nol<lb/>
?: il attend. The<lb/>
will be held<lb/>
?. Mi He<lb/>
: kesman the<lb/>
iTC I pi<lb/>
? ? : ? dis-<lb/>
? ?? ' Easl Carolina<lb/>
? ' ? tnori aware<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
he said<lb/>
VPROTC<lb/>
?'?? United States Air<lb/>
' Saturday<lb/>
Day. At 1:00<lb/>
'? i rente of campus<lb/>
? iven briefings con-<lb/>
tivities ol AFROTC.<lb/>
? ? idets will lead<lb/>
:  ; ' n a guided tour i the<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
' ui the parents will<lb/>
? freshments and enter-<lb/>
: ?"? by the Angel Flight and AF-<lb/>
' 3TC Drill Team<lb/>
D irin "AFROTC Week" all stu-<lb/>
sufficiently impressed<lb/>
? - Col. Carty in New<lb/>
'm 127 to learn more about<lb/>
The University Party will<lb/>
meet tonight at 7:30 in the Li-<lb/>
brary Auditorium. Refresh-<lb/>
ments will be served.<lb/>
The MRC needs 2 boys to<lb/>
work in the poolroom at Ay<lb/>
cock for si.00 an hour, (all<lb/>
iiuford Davis in 307-D Belk.<lb/>
THE ULTRA-MODERN F-111 can fly low-speed, ground support missions or, with wings retracted, become a<lb/>
supersonic fighter. It is capable of low-level attacks against heavily defended targets. It travels at twice<lb/>
the speed of sound and resembles a deadly ballet.<lb/>
ATTENTION FALL<lb/>
GRADUATES<lb/>
Cap and gown reservations<lb/>
should be plated no later than<lb/>
November 21.<lb/>
Student Supply Stores<lb/>
II<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
li.i<lb/>
nonstrosity, now showing in<lb/>
Vustin parkin" lot. is the Air  ,  ,  ? ?<lb/>
 , ? -HI i; S Hustle ihoimh onl one-third the sie of the massive B-52,<lb/>
Miaeteman Intere11ntii1enl.il n i? ao nnun, ?'?"s ' ? <lb/>
in deliver a nu le.ir payload over intercontinental distances twice as<lb/>
 1 i n speed i more than i 300mph at 35,000 feet. In 1963 a B-58<lb/>
m Hunker Hill AFB, Indiana flew nonstop from Tokyo to London in<lb/>
lours, the Inmost supersonic flight in history.<lb/>
Mi-siie. Weighing between<lb/>
"7 it thousand pounds, the<lb/>
nan is a key portion of the<lb/>
mi ? lies and maimed bomb-<lb/>
ii h 1 ives the United States<lb/>
ful deterrent against an<lb/>
trike.<lb/>
RENTAL FURNITURE SERVICE<lb/>
RENT NEW FURNITURE<lb/>
WITH OPTION TO BUY<lb/>
YOUR SELECTION<lb/>
Good Selection Of New or Used Furniture<lb/>
CASH. CREDIT. LAY-A-WAY, RENT<lb/>
SHEPARD-MOSELEY<lb/>
FURNITURE CO.<lb/>
j.806 DT( KTNSON AVE. 758-1954<lb/>
ih 1<lb/>
Fore'<lb/>
able<lb/>
and<lb/>
flu .<lb/>
?t .Il<lb/>
It Phantom, one Of the Air<lb/>
fastest fighter Interceptors,<lb/>
n 1 target at speeds in<lb/>
1 MOO mph. It  also cap-<lb/>
farrying such weighty items<lb/>
siles, fuel tanks, rockets,<lb/>
bombs. It has the<lb/>
reept and d troj ?n<lb/>
v time, inyw <lb/>
?St ,u altitude.<lb/>
D I AMONDS<lb/>
Fveiroi ? buying a diamond wants the beat diamond<lb/>
they can get for the lowest price. That is why they come<lb/>
" We i i v all of our diamonds loose, unset, direct from<lb/>
.vp "ttcr We elirrinate the broker, manufacturer and<lb/>
holesaler I'his means that our diamonds are sold below<lb/>
the usual wholesale price.<lb/>
This as can do because our diamond department is<lb/>
Aised by a highly trained professional diamond<lb/>
sup<lb/>
m-i'iali<lb/>
t-1 him save you money.<lb/>
.aurares Jewelers<lb/>
iM Evans Street<lb/>
.1 jeWelers Certified Oemologists<lb/>
iRGE LAUTARES ECU Ml<lb/>
1 Hour Martinizing<lb/>
111 E. 10th Street<lb/>
1 Hour Dry Cleaning<lb/>
3 Hour Shirt Service<lb/>
<lb/>
jBJJI ooooOQQQOQQQQ0QQ08flQ0BQC89Q9PQ B.Q.P.P.8 t 8 8 8 fc<lb/>
CA5 MoJfcb Uquucru<lb/>
QKJLoJbkn UjdiixMC,AVtoi,pWvy4-OAA.<lb/>
IMOMAUJuJi oJ-JMi- Obij tAwKJVWVft<lb/>
Hdb Luiicft JldtmA uw Abtfx ?u qjjxm. Aid<lb/>
30)( llOO BALT07MP.(203<lb/>
OFFBK.VOLP rVHER?TPR.OHI61TeD BV LAW<lb/>
?The National Brewing Co. of Balto Md. at Balto Md.<lb/>
also Phoenix ? Miami ? Detroit<lb/>
yjnnrTinroTroTnreTT<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0006"/><lb/>
6?F:ivi Carol'nian? Tu<lb/>
esnav<lb/>
November<lb/>
Workshop Experiments With<lb/>
Latest One-Act Productions<lb/>
B) MARC? JORDAN<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Carlin ' bjec1 Ive Case<lb/>
and an adaptation oi William Gold-<lb/>
man's "Temple of Gold" were the<lb/>
two beautifully-staged p<lb/>
in the second In a series oi Work-<lb/>
shop Theatre one-a<lb/>
sented last Wedn rid Thurs-<lb/>
day evening<lb/>
Commission Specifies<lb/>
Use Of Launch Area<lb/>
Im '?'?- life Com-<lb/>
mission Boating Accesi Are;<lb/>
tin- Gre tiville Airporl : r pui<lb/>
become ? nsive problem for<lb/>
the North Carolina Wildlife R<lb/>
mrces Commission. Beer drink-<lb/>
arget shoot-<lb/>
ing, trash dumping, and sign thefts<lb/>
has caused mi to<lb/>
jump;<lb/>
were<lb/>
bal<lb/>
launching<lb/>
AJI<lb/>
that the Divisii<lb/>
Sup<lb/>
crack down on thesi<lb/>
is a<lb/>
the!<lb/>
laui<lb/>
or part<lb/>
An;<lb/>
parking, drinkin<lb/>
tai<lb/>
ful and the pi In<lb/>
these activities on these ??ill<lb/>
be prosecuted.<lb/>
Enforce Divii i ol<lb/>
Wildlife Ri<lb/>
Hcits thi<lb/>
Depai Highway P<lb/>
E ' C irolina<lb/>
and the generaJ public in making<lb/>
are<lb/>
ts.<lb/>
?<lb/>
uple oi I li<lb/>
m a chaptei of I<lb/>
?<lb/>
n-evitl iRicl<lb/>
rerry Trevitl Gaj<lb/>
y is an illiterate whore<lb/>
di perately wants love Unsure<lb/>
il Raymond's love and believing<lb/>
 is duly, she r<lb/>
i pas lovei Ray-<lb/>
uioni  ?' i<lb/>
 ? ? i  I  i<lb/>
, making her woi<lb/>
liscover her<lb/>
ed with a iai b cau i<lb/>
lie is bored i he (i ies, "When you<lb/>
ind find out she's<lb/>
reallj : 'h re, whal righl do you<lb/>
? , ited<lb/>
ial aid<lb/>
fully convi<lb/>
Hobbs,<lb/>
?<lb/>
il with<lb/>
Reader's Digc si<lb/>
?<lb/>
ap-<lb/>
kleej<lb/>
brokei<lb/>
rel and i<lb/>
? tl<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
luci<lb/>
reedin eak<lb/>
l nelines<lb/>
ij ro<lb/>
they<lb/>
u<lb/>
or then<lb/>
: i the otl<lb/>
ich<lb/>
ihe girl's drooping lip and blink<lb/>
fthil( ;he hates his habil<lb/>
pulling lii- i ai and sci<lb/>
The y iung n an 0 i ij Bowi n<lb/>
?ells time and the young woman<lb/>
Evi lyn Marshall sells feelini<lb/>
Dung's Famous rwo-counter Em-<lb/>
im. AI al luncheon date, where<lb/>
they talk to each otl m behind<lb/>
mannequins iBob Tompkins<lb/>
: d Marcia Edmun on . each starts<lb/>
bis irritating habits while thi other<lb/>
is confessini his true feeling<lb/>
thai they finally exi i aming<lb/>
bate al each - manne-<lb/>
quin ? Him and Hei<lb/>
me to life and express their<lb/>
und - ve to each other<lb/>
e way the ed ti<lb/>
nd couldn't<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
B<lb/>
iry-train-<lb/>
I ? ensitivity i<lb/>
-<lb/>
tin hi;<lb/>
 er-blink-<lb/>
Griffin, ai<lb/>
ly customer who has<lb/>
tits whal<lb/>
il will become. I<lb/>
? i<lb/>
mds<lb/>
ol thi<lb/>
e ol<lb/>
Mali tched woman<lb/>
bi omi<lb/>
elled her i<lb/>
?<lb/>
. for<lb/>
, ma Is nd her at-<lb/>
tempt strai li thi sali lady.<lb/>
i la salesladj (Evelyn Marshall) t IK the audience about<lb/>
irritating habits nl ml?ing his rar and scratching his tee<lb/>
the<lb/>
th.<lb/>
lie<lb/>
<lb/>
m- i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
u<lb/>
Mil ml<lb/>
I mm MlPt<lb/>
( I i iV V I fl l<lb/>
TAKE A NOTE<lb/>
PLEASE!<lb/>
Attention:<lb/>
All E. C. U. Co-eds<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT<lb/>
JUST ARRIVED!<lb/>
"BABY CABLE"<lb/>
CARDIGANS<lb/>
12.00<lb/>
? W ite Navy<lb/>
? Sizes 36-42<lb/>
? The season's most<lb/>
popular sweater.<lb/>
Is Raymond rrcvill Kit hard Bradneri finishes reading Hamlet tu hi<lb/>
"lie (Gay Hobbsj, she rrie? because "It's so goddamned beautiful<lb/>
Foundation Steers EC<lb/>
In Quest For Quality<lb/>
s?!i?<lb/>
?-t<lb/>
BRITISH<lb/>
voque<lb/>
OPEN THURSDAY,<lb/>
FRIDAY, and MONDAY<lb/>
NITES 'till 9<lb/>
The Ens' Carolina University<lb/>
Foundation was formed for the<lb/>
further enri hment of the school<lb/>
towards becoming one of the truly<lb/>
ieat universities according to Dr.<lb/>
I eo Jenkins . president of the Uni-<lb/>
 ersitj<lb/>
The purpose oi the foundation<lb/>
as stated in the Articles of Incor-<lb/>
poration is ? to aid, strengthen and<lb/>
further in i very proper and use-<lb/>
ful way th ? work and service <lb/>
East, Carolina University, and to<lb/>
develop and utilize the ties of In-<lb/>
terest, ympathy and affection ex-<lb/>
iting between the Univer ity and<lb/>
its alumni and friends throughout<lb/>
the State tnd Nation<lb/>
The foundation is authorized to<lb/>
accept, ho i. administer, Invest and<lb/>
di burse all funds given by per-<lb/>
sons or corporations. All fund re-<lb/>
ceived shall bi used for educatl mal<lb/>
purpose . ; nd n part oi the i i I<lb/>
'? il oi I he corporation shall go<lb/>
 the carrying on oi propaganda<lb/>
ir otherwise attempting to influence<lb/>
li ?; lation.<lb/>
"he foundation is a non-profit<lb/>
?? Ranization. The affairs and busi-<lb/>
m ? oi the corporation shall be<lb/>
ducti d bj h B iard oi Dii 11<lb/>
'?'?  hal con 1st ol n mem-<lb/>
bers of thi corporation.<lb/>
included on the Initial hd ol<lb/>
1 Erector ; are Dr. Jenkins and p 11<lb/>
Duncan, original incorporators;<lb/>
Robert B. Morgan, chairman of<lb/>
thi tin.lees; Troy B. Dodson and<lb/>
David j. Whichard, II, tru tea ;<lb/>
W. C. Monk, Farmville; and John<lb/>
T. Minges, Greenville.<lb/>
The final membership of the cor-<lb/>
poration will consist, oi io mem-<lb/>
be They will be the president of<lb/>
the University, vice president, busi-<lb/>
: i manager, chairman of the<lb/>
Hoard of Trustees, three members<lb/>
to be elected from the Board of<lb/>
Trustees in addition to the chair-<lb/>
man, and 14 members to be elect-<lb/>
ed from "other friends of East<lb/>
Carolina University by the mem-<lb/>
bers of the corporation.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins said the creation of<lb/>
the foundation is another forward<lb/>
tep in the i limb ,i Easl Cat<lb/>
University to reach for the si<lb/>
A Campu Development c<lb/>
il ha bee el up to servi<lb/>
local advia i j board to the I i<lb/>
(loll.<lb/>
i he De i lopment Council, <lb/>
President Leo v Jenkin b<lb/>
Mian, begin with 19 membei<lb/>
the pi" Ision thai others In<lb/>
ersil : ustei<lb/>
? di d<lb/>
As an i ro m to<lb/>
? m. E will , It i make rec<lb/>
? ? ' approa h<lb/>
? ? : he U'U er.  '<lb/>
In Id ? Presiednl Jen<lb/>
. : ii ber ? of  i Devi<lb/>
1 i ci Earl !? Bi<lb/>
Si hoo of Music; Dr. I<lb/>
R  wmi, ? d' m, School ol B<lb/>
'? ' I Juncan, vice-pre<lb/>
manager; Willia<lb/>
erman, din ctor of alumni af-<lb/>
Dr Alton V. Pim h. i<lb/>
faculty; Dr. Welli<lb/>
ii ? Gj ? dean School of '? '<lb/>
Dr. Robert I Hi I vii -pn<lb/>
dean; Henry B Howard,<lb/>
sector oi public relations; ?<lb/>
'i Howell, dean, College ol<lb/>
? I and S ;ii nee . and Dr. Do<lb/>
?' Joni . di an, school of E<lb/>
i ion.<lb/>
Al o Included are Dr. David J<lb/>
iddloton, dean, Division of <lb/>
tinuing Education; sieve M<lb/>
president, student Government As-<lb/>
sociation; Dr John o. Reynol<lb/>
dean, Gradu ite school; Dr. Jami i<lb/>
H Tucker, dean of student affairs.<lb/>
Ml Eva W Warren, dean, School<lb/>
'i Nui In Dr. James L. White.<lb/>
directoi of development; Dr. Rob-<lb/>
? 11 W William , Jr dean of aca-<lb/>
demic affairs; Thomas W. Willis-<lb/>
director, Regional Development in-<lb/>
stitute.<lb/>
Serving on a subcommittee to<lb/>
recommend immediate courses of<lb/>
action arc Dr. Jenkins, Dr. Brown-<lb/>
Ing, Dr. Jones, Dr. White and Wil-<lb/>
lis. Dr. White la secretary to the<lb/>
council<lb/>
EDITORS NOTE; I<lb/>
( ,? student on<lb/>
7a statements is<lb/>
?, arting<lb/>
, rl, in acaden<lb/>
Kfoiiw ??i,?l,?<lb/>
uan.d reaeUon to<lb/>
,u ,? mi campos, ?<lb/>
,ru .m.ini demons<lb/>
1  WALTER <lb/>
, 11. - ?-???- rS<lb/>
 OC<lb/>
ors ha<lb/>
? demoe<lb/>
ip camp<lb/>
? speake<lb/>
 pe.<lb/>
which l<lb/>
nost hbe<lb/>
, academlt<lb/>
 ecent pr<lb/>
across<lb/>
. to the<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
.V.UP posltlo<lb/>
in thi ' resc<lb/>
LAC-SSOC C<lb/>
At Duke lTni<lb/>
Sits-In Affair<lb/>
The Duke Universit<lb/>
Chapter stageda sit-<lb/>
erulterj from the Nav<lb/>
Uon with Stop the<lb/>
an October<lb/>
fVppr ximately 30 I<lb/>
part ? ??? ,he I<lb/>
which ? i dilv a<lb/>
an ftnti-war booth wh<lb/>
official cancelled t<lb/>
? th? N ivy<lb/>
It was generally felt<lb/>
erpecl encj and desire<lb/>
vtrslty to avoid a<lb/>
?;? Oil 1 AC-SSOC<lb/>
 I I .  pOStpOniD<lb/>
 , tl recrulten<lb/>
i m the Monc<lb/>
day 1 wini the U<lb/>
Wash! Marine r<lb/>
decided  would be 1<lb/>
their planned interive<lb/>
Duke I.AC-SSOC lnl<lb/>
it clear that its acti<lb/>
one- : Deration i<lb/>
Stop tl ! Waft Wee<lb/>
rt ol the i<lb/>
policj taking i<lb/>
insl any individua<lb/>
? in di 11 tly connect<lb/>
v refl rt At present<lb/>
d iit-ins atrai<lb/>
ed : cruiters t<lb/>
Dow Chemical Comp<lb/>
'?Wl i .in we lose w<lb/>
hie annual drive foi<lb/>
irou campus.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0007"/><lb/>
East f'aroliniai'?Tuesday. November 7, 1067?7<lb/>
out tin- salesman'<lb/>
teeth.<lb/>
ing Hamlet to liw<lb/>
ined beautiful<lb/>
lS<lb/>
EC<lb/>
ality<lb/>
: Ea it Carolin<lb/>
. ch for the st s<lb/>
ivelopmenl C un-<lb/>
up to serv as a<lb/>
ard to the founds-<lb/>
en) Council<lb/>
Jenkins as cl<lb/>
. 19 membei<lb/>
group to the I<lb/>
 will explore<lb/>
ipproac<lb/>
Music; Dr. E<lb/>
s. School oi B<lb/>
an, vice-presi<lb/>
Willi.i:<lb/>
r (it alumni<lb/>
V. Pinch, ch it<lb/>
Itj . Dr. Wellii g-<lb/>
n. School 'if A I<lb/>
It, vice-presi<lb/>
B Howard, di-<lb/>
i- relations; "?<lb/>
? in, Collegi oi<lb/>
; and Dr DOU<lb/>
school oi Ed<lb/>
ire Dr. David 3<lb/>
Division of Con-<lb/>
:i; Steve Mo i<lb/>
Qovernmenl As-<lb/>
?hn (). Reynolds<lb/>
chool; Dr. James<lb/>
if student affurs.<lb/>
Ten, dean, School<lb/>
Jamca L. White,<lb/>
-pment; Dr. Rob-<lb/>
Jr dean of aca-<lb/>
honias W. Willis.<lb/>
Development in-<lb/>
subcommittee '<lb/>
?diato courses of<lb/>
lkins, Dr. Brown-<lb/>
 White and Wil-<lb/>
secretary to Use<lb/>
4AUF, NSA Adopt Position Naval Aviation Teams Arrives<lb/>
Condemning Military Protest Next Week For ,lllerview8<lb/>
 . NOTE; )l Umelj in<lb/>
 studenta on campus are<lb/>
  i, e nts issued l or<lb/>
???'?" upportlnj greater stu<lb/>
?? - )n academic freedom<lb/>
llt iiottinfi article indicates the<lb/>
ft" " ' rp;l( ? t? militarv re<lb/>
"??'  ?,iiv and the subs<lb/>
'rlVlnit demonstrations<lb/>
' ;) iVALTER GRANT<lb/>
?? preas Service<lb/>
 ociation oi Unt-<lb/>
il ors has conderi i ?<lb/>
? demonstration de-<lb/>
campus Interview<lb/>
? speaker! invited to<lb/>
,m speaking,<lb/>
jphich has long been<lb/>
nost liberal organiza-<lb/>
, Eidemic community,<lb/>
 i n( protest al i ??<lb/>
across the nation<lb/>
' , to the principles of<lb/>
? , edom.<lb/>
i' position was Issued<lb/>
H resolution adopt-<lb/>
LAC-SSOC Chapter<lb/>
At Duke lTniversity<lb/>
Sits-In Affainst Navy<lb/>
The Duke University LAC-SSOC<lb/>
 ? ged a sit-in against re-<lb/>
JXn from the Navy in conjunc-<lb/>
? Stop the Draft Week<lb/>
an October 16.<lb/>
iately 30 Duke students<lb/>
?r . : in the planned Bit-in<lb/>
uich  i ipidly transformed Into<lb/>
anti-wai booth when University<lb/>
cancelled the invitation<lb/>
to the Navy<lb/>
It v. m rally felt that political<lb/>
expedit n y and desires of the Uni-<lb/>
versity ?? avoid a confrontation<lb/>
LAC-SSOC group led to<lb/>
the  ? m postponing the appear-<lb/>
V   recruiters on the Duke<lb/>
i  the Monday and Tues-<lb/>
day following the Mobilization in<lb/>
Washing on, Marine recruiters also<lb/>
decide . would be best to cancel<lb/>
their planned interivews<lb/>
Duke I AC-SSOC Intends to make<lb/>
II clear thai its action was not a<lb/>
on - I ? Deration as a part of<lb/>
gto ? Draff Week, but is in-<lb/>
parl of the definite group<lb/>
:i  taking direct, action<lb/>
ny individual or organisa-<lb/>
tion directly connected with the<lb/>
tar efl rl At present plans call for<lb/>
continued sit-ins against any arm-<lb/>
recruiters as well as the<lb/>
Dow Cl emical Company.<lb/>
In the near future. the Duke<lb/>
LAC-SSOC will be conducting a<lb/>
Wi Won't Go campaign aimed I<lb/>
:? ? ti (!??' taxations, of non-co-<lb/>
with the draft. Active<lb/>
ill be given to the Dur-<lb/>
  . pel Hill Resistance as well<lb/>
Duki University Law student.<lb/>
Bucrr. rieger, who has announced<lb/>
hit inl ntion to refuse his Induc-<lb/>
 foi early December.<lb/>
1<lb/>
i or-<lb/>
? cy-making board<lb/>
ted repre-<lb/>
Studenl A.<lb/>
' Edvs rd Schwartz<lb/>
?. u n he<lb/>
1 ? u nt.<lb/>
tiom by in-<lb/>
to prevent<lb/>
to the ' ampus<lb/>
' thi opera-<lb/>
thi lurse<lb/>
i obstruct<lb/>
nembei of the<lb/>
and campus<lb/>
?' I I true-<lb/>
learning and<lb/>
i" All omponents oi<lb/>
??? - " ire under<lb/>
? ? prob i ? il<lb/>
? ? ?? - from these tacti<lb/>
?n, through Its vai ue<lb/>
? ? mi mbei<lb/>
? ? nl Faculty mem-<lb/>
In sev-<lb/>
I recent protests.<lb/>
lc AAUP po  m i mes in the<lb/>
I protests against<lb/>
recruiters from the armed services<lb/>
from other organizations con-<lb/>
ected with the military, some of<lb/>
rati ms have been suc-<lb/>
recruiters from<lb/>
du  Intel views or in tem-<lb/>
down a building<lb/>
where military research is conduct-<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ftol . Waes, associate see-<lb/>
: the AAUP, said, "We're<lb/>
all for dissent. But we think all<lb/>
persi rdlesi oi their beliefs.<lb/>
should h . the same freedoms.<lb/>
I lur i oncern is that the larger free-<lb/>
dom ifreedom of speech' not be<lb/>
ed away by particular forms<lb/>
.I protest which we think may be<lb/>
a challenge to that larger freedom<lb/>
Van War emphasized that the<lb/>
VAUP has been promoting greater<lb/>
lemic freedom for ?students. The<lb/>
inization is one of five behind a<lb/>
i int .statement on the rights and<lb/>
doms of students. This state-<lb/>
es such rights as a stu-<lb/>
ti ni role in policy-making and due<lb/>
process for students in disciplinary<lb/>
les.<lb/>
In endorsing the AAUP stand,<lb/>
Schwartz said, "While there are<lb/>
iome points where we . N'SA would<lb/>
support ii student strike if It was<lb/>
ecessary to achieve a tactical ob-<lb/>
tive for student power or edu-<lb/>
ial reform, we can in no way<lb/>
upport demonstrations where the<lb/>
ml is to prevent students from<lb/>
ng recruiters or to expel re-<lb/>
ters from campus because of<lb/>
the organization which they repre-<lb/>
hwartz explained his view by<lb/>
"In what way does the<lb/>
 ?'? ??, n pt to rid the university<lb/>
whom they oppose<lb/>
 the right S frequent at-<lb/>
 ban Communists from<lb/>
the campus?"<lb/>
He added that there are ways<lb/>
oi nfrontlng recruiters, even sit-<lb/>
ting down in front, of them, without<lb/>
blocking the passage of students<lb/>
who want to speak with them<lb/>
Schwartz said he has proposed<lb/>
that "any recruiter coming to cam-<lb/>
pus be required to participate in<lb/>
an open forum to answer questions<lb/>
it students so request If the re-<lb/>
cruiter refuses to meet this re-<lb/>
quirement, then he should not be<lb/>
permitted on the campus, he added.<lb/>
Schwartz' proposal would seri-<lb/>
ously affect military recruiters,<lb/>
who generally are not permitted to<lb/>
discuss important military policies<lb/>
like the Vietnam war. The war is<lb/>
the primary concern of the student<lb/>
protests.<lb/>
Explaining his proposal, Schwartz<lb/>
said. "The ground here would i<lb/>
flee the recruiter's unwillingness to<lb/>
adhere to the standards of an aca-<lb/>
demic community rather than the<lb/>
nature of he recruiter's political<lb/>
affiliation<lb/>
The AAUP resolution, adopted by<lb/>
the Council during a closed meet-<lb/>
ing last weekend, did not mention<lb/>
any institutions where protests have<lb/>
been held or any particular organi-<lb/>
zations, such as Students for a<lb/>
Democratic Society, which have<lb/>
been sponsoring the demonstrations.<lb/>
The EC Law Society will have<lb/>
a meeting on Wednesday, No-<lb/>
vember 8. at 7:00 p.m. in Rawl<lb/>
201. Anyone desiring to join the<lb/>
society is cordially invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
ii f ? ;V ??V ' ' - .? it' ii k<lb/>
'1 w!??- mw:<lb/>
? ?,<lb/>
College men having an inclina-<lb/>
tion towards flying as a career will<lb/>
have the opportunity to check with<lb/>
the Naval Aviation Information<lb/>
Team which will be at East Caro-<lb/>
lina November 14-16, 1967.<lb/>
The team, headed by Lieutenant<lb/>
Commander Austin, will adminis-<lb/>
ter the Aviation Qualification Test<lb/>
to interested men to determine their<lb/>
potential for Naval Aviation. Quali-<lb/>
fied students will be flown to the<lb/>
Naval Air Station, Norfolk at their<lb/>
convenience. There they will take<lb/>
their flight physical, fill out an<lb/>
application for a naval officer<lb/>
commission and get a closer look at<lb/>
the Navy itself.<lb/>
Students passing the qualification<lb/>
test will be given an indoctrination<lb/>
flight in the T-34 "Mentor" at the<lb/>
local airport or during their visit<lb/>
at NAS Norfolk.<lb/>
Along with the well-known grad-<lb/>
uate programs for AOC's 'pilots)<lb/>
and Naval Flight Officers, the AV-<lb/>
ROC program allows the qualified<lb/>
applicant to complete his pre-flight<lb/>
training while in college and re-<lb/>
ceive his commission upon gradu-<lb/>
ation.<lb/>
See the team while they are on<lb/>
campus. They are most willing to<lb/>
help you find a gratifying career<lb/>
in Naval Aviation.<lb/>
Unrest Plagues All-American City<lb/>
In Century's Worst Race Riot<lb/>
? WECO Bdi0 n,et 'ts ff01"<lb/>
"How can we lose when we're s incerc. w crew and a gen-<lb/>
?K annual drive for CNICEP, thanks to a<lb/>
'tou (ampus.<lb/>
DAILY TAR HEEL (Chapel Hill)<lb/>
-Dawn came grimly to this All-<lb/>
America City Friday in the after-<lb/>
math of what has been called North<lb/>
Carolina's worst race riot of the<lb/>
century.<lb/>
In the police station a weary<lb/>
young man (an auxiliary police-<lb/>
man who had been called in) rub-<lb/>
bed a hand across his beard-stub-<lb/>
bled face and told about how he<lb/>
had to go to work in an hour driv-<lb/>
ing trucks.<lb/>
All that night he'd been chasing<lb/>
looters in a paddy wagon, wheeling<lb/>
corners and through alley-ways. He<lb/>
said he'd brought so many of them<lb/>
to the police station that he'd lost<lb/>
count.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
IN OTHER parts of the sprawl-<lb/>
ing police headquarters, men wear-<lb/>
ing armpatches proclaiming Win-<lb/>
ston-Salem an All America City<lb/>
1959-1964 sorted through rapidly-<lb/>
growing piles of confiscated weap-<lb/>
ons and loot.<lb/>
The strange assortment ranged<lb/>
from homemade guns to a color<lb/>
television console.<lb/>
It was dawn at last, bur, almost<lb/>
everybody concerned was too weary<lb/>
to care.<lb/>
Mayor M. C. Benton Jr. Friday<lb/>
clamped an 11 p.m. - until-dawn<lb/>
curfew on the entire city except<lb/>
for the expressways through town.<lb/>
About 80 persons were in jail and<lb/>
others were being arrested and<lb/>
booked for rioting in two areas of<lb/>
this cigarette manufacturing cen-<lb/>
ter last night. A check showed 44<lb/>
persons injured, including eight, po-<lb/>
licemen.<lb/>
Fire Chief C. L. Williams said fire<lb/>
damage alone in the city last night<lb/>
amounted to more than $5no.noo. He<lb/>
said the department answered 50<lb/>
fire calls by midnight.<lb/>
"This is the worst happening<lb/>
that's come to my attention in my<lb/>
life-time in North Carolina snid<lb/>
Thad Eure. North Carolina's vet-<lb/>
eran secretary of state. Sam Rag-<lb/>
an, veteran Raleierh editor, histori-<lb/>
an and writer, said it was the worst<lb/>
racial violence in the state since<lb/>
the bloody Wilmington race riots in<lb/>
1898.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
THE SMASHED windows of the<lb/>
coffee shop gaped only a few yards<lb/>
from where a national guardsman<lb/>
and a highway patrolman stood<lb/>
guard over the already-looted win-<lb/>
dows of a clothing store.<lb/>
The streets were almost deserted<lb/>
by then ? except for the riot-<lb/>
armed troops manning the road-<lb/>
blocks which apepared to be every-<lb/>
where.<lb/>
Here and there a cluster of local<lb/>
police, state troopers and guards-<lb/>
men huddled together around a<lb/>
crude kerosene heater. On other<lb/>
street corners solitary guardsmen<lb/>
waited out the end of their lonely<lb/>
vigil ? fingers never moving from<lb/>
the triggers of their rifles.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
IT HAD been in this area that<lb/>
the worst of the rioting had raged<lb/>
earlier in the night. But when<lb/>
the first light of dawn came to the<lb/>
riot-wracked business district, the<lb/>
rioters had already moved to the<lb/>
suburbs ? or to the city jail.<lb/>
It was only a little past 5 a.m.<lb/>
and a weary chief of police faced an<lb/>
equally weary group of reporters.<lb/>
He told them what they already<lb/>
knew or had guessed: Scores of ar-<lb/>
rests, dozens of injured ? among<lb/>
them eight policemen, two of whom<lb/>
had suffered heart attacks.<lb/>
But that wasn't really what dawn<lb/>
was all about.<lb/>
The shattered windows, their<lb/>
merchandise spilled into the streets<lb/>
gave better testimony of what had<lb/>
happened than any statistics.<lb/>
Besides, at that point nobody ?<lb/>
not even the police ? knew ho<lb/>
extensive the damage was.<lb/>
Ii was still almost completely<lb/>
dark when the first people began<lb/>
going to their jobs. The city buses<lb/>
were the first vehicles to go through<lb/>
the barricades.<lb/>
Normalcy was returning slowly,<lb/>
and it was only then that people<lb/>
realized that what had gone before<lb/>
had been real ? all too real.<lb/>
An old Negro man sat on the<lb/>
toop of a store which had gone un-<lb/>
touched in one of the worst-hit<lb/>
areas. His face was buried to hi<lb/>
hands. 4:<lb/>
if she doesn't give it to you<lb/>
? get it yourself!<lb/>
JADE EAST<lb/>
Cologne, 6 oz $4.50<lb/>
After Shave, 6 oz $3.50<lb/>
Deodorant Stick, $1.75<lb/>
Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz $8.50<lb/>
Sprav Cologne, $3.50<lb/>
Buddna Soap Gift Set, $4.00<lb/>
Cologne, 4 oz $3.00<lb/>
After Shave, 4 oz $2.50<lb/>
?<lb/>
mnjwMMrmmim-<lb/>
'??????<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0008"/><lb/>
8 Easl Carolinian-?Tuesdav, November 7, 1967<lb/>
Buccaneers And Clock Stop<lb/>
Paladins 34-29 n Home Game<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
ilk<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
I<lb/>
Butch Cobon bvrst through (he Furman line foi a sizeable gain in<lb/>
the fame last Salurdaj night t?n bj th" Pirates bj M 29. Colson<lb/>
had his besi i.i with over lo yards rushing.<lb/>
Fal City, Lambda Chi<lb/>
Capture Championships<lb/>
? KOXAI I) VIXCLX'I<lb/>
mi ? ?<lb/>
the<lb/>
I<lb/>
Phi :<lb/>
of thi<lb/>
Raid<lb/>
their ch i? e,<lb/>
th Floor J<lb/>
ui champion<lb/>
now ? ingli bour-<lb/>
ns in the<lb/>
mi Li ??? ; I<lb/>
fankeo t with 55 i<lb/>
i<lb/>
" Hi<lb/>
ch to i<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.hi G<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wresist,<lb/>
' Offi ;<lb/>
larai East lendii<lb/>
iplined, poti i ? won a<lb/>
football game Saturday nighl In<lb/>
ien stadium downing Purman<lb/>
University 34-29 Purman cami<lb/>
n way back to icare the Pirates<lb/>
and force the offense to make an-<lb/>
ither pressun drive One wonders<lb/>
how "the cannon" survived an on-<lb/>
slaught ol 34 point by the Bucs.<lb/>
The Pirates foi nd week<lb/>
the early s ore and seemed corn-<lb/>
placement. Clyde Hewell, the Pur-<lb/>
man quarterback, fumbled on the<lb/>
play of the game, and George<lb/>
Wheeler pounced on the ball. The<lb/>
?? marched 22 yards to<lb/>
. pitalize i n the break in three<lb/>
Bute! rod with<lb/>
1:18 gom me on a<lb/>
Don Tyson id<lb/>
m making it 7-0 (<lb/>
-<lb/>
 match b itween 30<lb/>
the two teams.<lb/>
i hi<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
eeled off a<lb/>
?? can-<lb/>
thC<lb/>
o in the<lb/>
I ???. ?:<lb/>
!l-0.<lb/>
tack ? on<lb/>
Harriers Wind Up<lb/>
With 10-1 Record<lb/>
? :<lb/>
with rui<lb/>
run-<lb/>
?<lb/>
if Ch<lb/>
?<lb/>
run-<lb/>
minuti<lb/>
hi<lb/>
; i<lb/>
? cap-<lb/>
.?onth. find-<lb/>
fewel<lb/>
i Pir: efense,<lb/>
pa es and<lb/>
pushii Paladins into I'<lb/>
bbie Hahn, all-confer-<lb/>
pd the touchdown on<lb/>
. yard recep ihnny<lb/>
ted the ball<lb/>
and 'he Pi<lb/>
rate: li li unk to 21-<lb/>
In just tliree minute thi Pii<lb/>
i by 2 poinl B<lb/>
 who pii ked up 105 yard in<lb/>
the fir ?; tie, ati up most ol<lb/>
the yards on a 47 yard run He<lb/>
took the ball the final five yard .<lb/>
id Pui man on the<lb/>
28-7<lb/>
Hen th den ? tapped<lb/>
?In kickofl and<lb/>
14 ? - h<lb/>
, ? '<lb/>
; d up<lb/>
pdle<lb/>
al will<lb/>
fee 1<lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
md I<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
colli ;<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
ran all i <lb/>
trei<lb/>
I<lb/>
foui and<lb/>
Bui wen<lb/>
from i<lb/>
Then came the itandai<lb/>
ol the pa I three games<lb/>
font led bj v I on tra<lb/>
and -Jim Shul<lb/>
.(1 wide hole, in Purn<lb/>
ckei i vn.se and<lb/>
Hui hes i if time<lb/>
: ? i le a clu<lb/>
- i Grant with 16 i<lb/>
H i failed u<lb/>
it convei .<lb/>
How oil : k con<lb/>
?<lb/>
H<lb/>
C. 63<lb/>
' II<lb/>
ii-<lb/>
I<lb/>
' i<lb/>
? t.itili<lb/>
I h<lb/>
li<lb/>
?<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
:l ?<lb/>
mei So<lb/>
A: tO th(<lb/>
Di n Van Clu<lb/>
. oral)<lb/>
. Audi<lb/>
Ing the<lb/>
Hough<lb/>
. the So<lb/>
i<lb/>
KODEL<lb/>
Mr, Wrangler?<lb/>
Wremember,<lb/>
the "W" is silent.<lb/>
??<lb/>
White's Stores<lb/>
Greenville, n. C.<lb/>
the o<lb/>
the Bi<lb/>
. mond<lb/>
. The<lb/>
Villiam and<lb/>
the Piratei<lb/>
tie. The<lb/>
ne I ?: 11 n i tie contest<lb/>
ECU ? Baptist College<lb/>
(4.0 M1I03)<lb/>
2 Martin<lb/>
3 J:<lb/>
ECU 22:53<lb/>
ECU 23:04<lb/>
4 Tayloi<lb/>
 Goode<lb/>
8 <lb/>
7 Ri<lb/>
8 Dibling<lb/>
g Osbo<lb/>
0 <lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
BC<lb/>
BC<lb/>
BC<lb/>
23:04<lb/>
23:10<lb/>
23:58<lb/>
24:10<lb/>
24 <lb/>
ECU 24:37<lb/>
ECU 24:41<lb/>
HC<lb/>
24:45<lb/>
SHIRLEY' S<lb/>
BA RRKR<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Catering to Students and<lb/>
Specializing in razor cut-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Wo now have five barbers<lb/>
to satisfy your grooming<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
STOP BY AND SEE US<lb/>
SOMETIME<lb/>
1 'pen 7 a.m. to i p.m.<lb/>
IVIonThurs.<lb/>
Friday 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 7 a.m. to 12 Noon<lb/>
? I" I a isl Carolina defensive line reacts to a Purman iii VVaym<lb/>
Lineberry (62), Paul Hutehins i65), and Don Tyson (74), move<lb/>
the tackle. The Pirates held Furman to 55 yards rushing<lb/>
Sports Lowe Down<lb/>
Offense W(ts The Game<lb/>
Uv Wes Summer<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Wes Snmnerhe stn ngth to protect thi I<lb/>
is sitting iii for Sports Editor Johnhe pocket in the fir 1 1 ?<lb/>
Lowe this issue. ;im 1 have to scramble In thi<lb/>
By WES SUMNERnd ' rhis seei<lb/>
Substituting; for John Lowe?el v ith his ? Ishi<lb/>
Surp ? i .in Integral parl oliallj effei tive with 1<lb/>
m ? ? : lotball, and Purmin the ecoi<lb/>
proved then elvei to be firm c i verts to th ? li men! ol urpi iii knani'i. Anyone?<lb/>
? u Purpli Paladins combined the ;rolin i fan i i oul<lb/>
resourcefulni s i ot their coachii with th ron ability  ! ' ? h oi- the iowi rful Pi pinpoinl the Pi;  )? :? R ibbl I! ? short ippropriate nil kn mes air : ' tented dynam ? Bute! i ? d pinp Hugl<lb/>
8t ? ?  . <lb/>
t tm : m<lb/>
1 " i i the Paladins<lb/>
? i that the Bucs<lb/>
'?'? Wit ' e middle tin iback<lb/>
pace ovi the center<lb/>
ie Purman<lb/>
? ? ?' ' could run.<lb/>
rhaps, wa the pi in-<lb/>
I i m man coaching I ft<lb/>
I'hich "no i ed that the Plrat<lb/>
I utilize a pass defense des<lb/>
i prevent the long pass, in the<lb/>
the Citadel, the long<lb/>
what cost the<lb/>
Buccaneers the game, and thej<lb/>
were aiming to eliminate the po -<lb/>
sibility of thai happening again chill-ci<lb/>
Furman. however, did not have th<lb/>
1 Jimmy Adki<lb/>
, from ii: .<lb/>
hi i ami<lb/>
'?ill be gladly : ;cepted<lb/>
:?? : ts depart ment oi the I<lb/>
'AROl INIAN, whei<lb/>
' ie i quick! i i<lb/>
1 he ci im I ?. I in ed the<lb/>
; 'tm day night<lb/>
poo<lb/>
week's i nfll I pi mii i to b<lb/>
ifferent. There should b<lb/>
hrilli ? ? itisfv<lb/>
will try<lb/>
teeming '<lb/>
Uso hi<lb/>
t .? policy<lb/>
he resu<lb/>
?? nsificatioi<lb/>
he war<lb/>
hter <lb/>
, Her la<lb/>
i ? appi li<lb/>
Vml<lb/>
the Unitec<lb/>
? years 1<lb/>
In 1963,<lb/>
 proti ' '<lb/>
m i '??: lem<lb/>
ret;<lb/>
D.C after<lb/>
thi Viet I<lb/>
t-nam, Di<lb/>
tei oi Po<lb/>
H also<lb/>
i Vietnam<lb/>
 h College 1<lb/>
v America's fi<lb/>
? the targes; thai<lb/>
<pb facs="00039314_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>