<?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="00039323_0001"/>
our<lb/>
John Lowe<lb/>
the im<lb/>
id :? <lb/>
i  the  ?<lb/>
of overtin<lb/>
Ichn  i<lb/>
n the Pir.u 15<lb/>
tars Sign<lb/>
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1. line oach<lb/>
imii' I Trusl ? aid<lb/>
r, "He ha .<lb/>
and we an'<lb/>
leing<lb/>
r<lb/>
t're feel-<lb/>
1.<lb/>
t you up<lb/>
 so y<lb/>
got what<lb/>
ceptiort,<lb/>
bility I 3<lb/>
trongest<lb/>
ou car.<lb/>
t it's not<lb/>
uy wh.3<lb/>
1 every-<lb/>
eep hi<lb/>
Volume XLIII<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
"I)aid and Lisa Review p 3<lb/>
A W inter Campus P 4<lb/>
VPI Joins Tournamem p 6<lb/>
at Carolina University, Greenville, N. ? Tuesday, January 16, 1968<lb/>
Xumler 27<lb/>
EC Sends Four Delegates<lb/>
To Model UN In New York<lb/>
'liir National Model United N<lb/>
tions m New York City has select-<lb/>
olina students to<lb/>
ol repre ii<lb/>
?in' 1 - B 1 m the E<lb/>
nomii a cl Coui the<lb/>
EC'S own N.C.<lb/>
Model Security Council, the Uni-<lb/>
ippor-<lb/>
funity io end repr entatives to<lb/>
1 he national event to be held in<lb/>
York's Statler-Hilton Hotel on<lb/>
14-18. Students were chosen<lb/>
11 eveni upon the basis<lb/>
p vious work  eampus<lb/>
. tivities.<lb/>
Reid Overcash, EC tud nl<lb/>
? retary of extern<lb/>
Government Grants EC Money<lb/>
For Standards Improvement<lb/>
1 <lb/>
.?<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Fn (1 Waring pictured here with two members of the Pennsylvanians?<lb/>
Janii e Zoch and Deborah Truval?will entertain Thursday at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Financial Aid Available<lb/>
For Teaching Fellows<lb/>
 . planning ost-gi adu<lb/>
? m find personal encour-<lb/>
and financial su<lb/>
the many scholarship pro-<lb/>
of fered at East Carolina.<lb/>
a ii ble financial aid take<lb/>
fo: ? ?J scholarship teaching as-<lb/>
hips, 'oans, and fellowship<lb/>
Qualifications<lb/>
aions for aid varj with<lb/>
program; however, most pro-<lb/>
require the student to have<lb/>
1 verage in his under<lb/>
- : tudies, an acceptablt a<lb/>
? Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
d high academic promise.<lb/>
i iked how univer. Ity <lb/>
ted the scholarship pro-<lb/>
Bra<lb/>
of<lb/>
ieatl<lb/>
any-<lb/>
iffer-<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howe<lb/>
College of Arts and Sea<lb/>
"We have become a<lb/>
 recently (hat it ha<lb/>
i a drastic change In<lb/>
cholarships, course<lb/>
It is e pected that more<lb/>
.os will lie available<lb/>
?  a result of the chan<lb/>
: (lie institution. The new<lb/>
m will invite contributions<lb/>
pie who want to support<lb/>
Howell further commented,<lb/>
1 on problem thai admi 1-<lb/>
have a hard time findln<lb/>
'? in no large a crowd who<lb/>
or the programs students<lb/>
'ake the Initiative to a ?'?<lb/>
visors, department ch<lb/>
dean of their college 1!<lb/>
k they are eligible. I know<lb/>
qualified student<lb/>
r ichlug Assistanceshlp<lb/>
ching assistan:eship is one<lb/>
most widely utilized pro-<lb/>
EC. Participating students<lb/>
1 class, a lab. OT render<lb/>
Ice to the SChOOl While<lb/>
? for their M.A. In return<lb/>
Ive approximately $2000<lb/>
cover their eolleee ox-<lb/>
Funda are provided by the<lb/>
baa been an increase in<lb/>
?? -I teachin aaal f ince-<lb/>
lil ible over last year: how-<lb/>
the program cannot expand<lb/>
duo to the necessity for<lb/>
on of the recipients.<lb/>
r w Wilson National Fellowship<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson National<lb/>
lp Is among those avail-<lb/>
1 college graduates. This<lb/>
award is for first, year<lb/>
de study leading to a career<lb/>
Uege teaching. Students are<lb/>
1 (l by faculty ? lembers who<lb/>
nit names and records for na-<lb/>
oni I competition.<lb/>
Am EC student. Steve Clemment.<lb/>
was recipient of this award several<lb/>
ship, named in honor of a former<lb/>
. provides (4000 B year for<lb/>
v a. candidates and $500 a year<lb/>
Pli u. candidates. Recipients<lb/>
sttidy m the social science<lb/>
. at a gradual school In New<lb/>
Marshall Scholarship<lb/>
The Marshall Scholarship foi<lb/>
tudy al a university ;n the United<lb/>
Kit lom for a period of two aca-<lb/>
 the Danforth Grad-<lb/>
e teat taing career and<lb/>
forth Graduate P '?  hip for<lb/>
: who wish to become col-<lb/>
li e '? 1 hers, are am ng the many<lb/>
? mi . available to interested<lb/>
who qualify for then .<lb/>
East Carolina has been awarded<lb/>
a grant of $54,688 for a summer in-<lb/>
stitute to aid the Improvement of<lb/>
instruction I ?r di. advantaged child-<lb/>
ren living m rural and semi-rural<lb/>
ngs.<lb/>
Scheduled from June 12 to July<lb/>
30, the seven-week institute will<lb/>
enroll 32 teachers and elementary<lb/>
school supervisors of rural and<lb/>
semi-rural children in the first six<lb/>
grades from North Carolina, South<lb/>
Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
Its director, Dr. M. Helen Ingram<lb/>
of the ECU School of Education fac-<lb/>
ulty, said the 32 participants will<lb/>
be chosen from applicants through-<lb/>
out the three-state area. Those ?,2-<lb/>
lected will get stipends and depen-<lb/>
dency allowances.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ingram, the in-<lb/>
stitute program provdes "back-<lb/>
ground preparation for better<lb/>
understanding of the sociologi-<lb/>
cal and psychological prob-<lb/>
of the disadvantaged as<lb/>
well as curriculum centering on so-<lb/>
Ial studies and language arts<lb/>
Participants will be campus resi-<lb/>
dents for the entire seven weeks<lb/>
and will work together and with<lb/>
children in the development of the<lb/>
program of the institute.<lb/>
Funds for the institute will come<lb/>
from the National Defense Educa-<lb/>
tion Act through the U. S. Office<lb/>
of Education. The institute propos-<lb/>
es prepared by Dr. Ingram and<lb/>
iubmitted to the federal agency<lb/>
through the office of Dr. James L.<lb/>
White, ECU director of develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Dr. Ingram has served as sum-<lb/>
mer institute director for the past<lb/>
two years. Other staff members on<lb/>
the institute faculty will be drawn<lb/>
from ECU and other North Caro-<lb/>
lina colleges and universities.<lb/>
Teachers and elementary school<lb/>
supervisors interested in the insti-<lb/>
tute should write to Dr. Ingram at<lb/>
Greenville, P. O. Box 2926.<lb/>
work for the pa<lb/>
Oven 1 ? sophomore, was sec-<lb/>
! of the N C Model<lb/>
irity Council and 1 member<lb/>
? Mid-South Mode! U N !a?rt<lb/>
Franc!<lb/>
! the N C ' I del Se-<lb/>
uncil. Fran . da??? went<lb/>
d the<lb/>
rship institute.<lb/>
the mem-<lb/>
he EC college board team.<lb/>
n the economic com-<lb/>
? for Albania i<lb/>
: del U.N<lb/>
d Loyd. vi( ? ? ? Ql ot<lb/>
3.G.A . has US.<lb/>
tive to the N.C Model Se-<lb/>
curity Council. Lloyd received the<lb/>
award ' thl year's<lb/>
N C. <lb/>
The four EC stu el sill re-<lb/>
ceive an official briefing from the<lb/>
U.S. mission to the UN. on the<lb/>
first day of their New York visit.<lb/>
Open discussion on world food<lb/>
problems, over population, and the<lb/>
economic and social uses of outer<lb/>
space, according to Overcush, are<lb/>
expected to dominate model U.N.<lb/>
debates<lb/>
Dancer - Choreographer<lb/>
Shows Film On Ballet<lb/>
EC Summer Theatre Producer<lb/>
Announces New Season Playbill<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
University<lb/>
todas<lb/>
mer months bef<lb/>
summer Theatre<lb/>
Agnes de Mille, choreographer of<lb/>
such famous Broadway shows as<lb/>
Oklahoma' and "Brigadoon vis-<lb/>
ited the campus last Wednesday<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
Miss de Mille, the niece of the<lb/>
late movie producer, Cecil B. de<lb/>
Mille, was here by special invita-<lb/>
tion of Mavis Ray. EC ballet, teach-<lb/>
er, to present a program on ballet<lb/>
and Broadway dancing.<lb/>
Miss de Mille began by showing<lb/>
.1 45-minute film on the "History<lb/>
of Balletic Style" which was first<lb/>
seen on television's Omnibus"<lb/>
. : les a few years ago. The film<lb/>
urveyed more than 200 years of<lb/>
modern and classical bat, thi<lb/>
ildest, unbroken tradition in the<lb/>
Western arts. One intere : ?<lb/>
pect of the film was 'hat 11 Is the<lb/>
only recording of Mis de Mille's<lb/>
dancing.<lb/>
Alter the film, the ! Ihree<lb/>
hat Miss de Miller did U nim-<lb/>
bi is, ' a question and ansvei period<lb/>
was lead by Edgar Loesain 'Hrec-<lb/>
tor of the Drama Depart<lb/>
de Mille, displaying exceptional wit<lb/>
and poise, was the target for<lb/>
mil ua of luestioning from .1<lb/>
r sponsive jaience. Miss de tZUlu<lb/>
used this ne to tell just what is<lb/>
happening ja ballet and Briadway<lb/>
dancing txin nd what fhe future<lb/>
holds for them.<lb/>
In her answers, Miss De Mille<lb/>
said that "Colleges ha- becorn<lb/>
the patrons of the Am. She al-<lb/>
noted that North Carolina is tl<lb/>
second state to set . . irgi <lb/>
of money for the Al<lb/>
Miss de Mille,<lb/>
Roberts, has<lb/>
fluen e on t<lb/>
le, al? b Jerome<lb/>
in? major in-<lb/>
1  ibalel She<lb/>
at? aallet<lb/>
A- an au-<lb/>
Mille hiwritten the<lb/>
; b wk tout on<lb/>
pi<lb/>
11dil<lb/>
series<lb/>
?<lb/>
or ti<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
ou:<lb/>
tickets (<lb/>
I<lb/>
subi<lb/>
years<lb/>
The<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Herbert H. Lehman Fellow -<lb/>
 <lb/>
on for<lb/>
uc -? ' campus-connected<lb/>
npany.<lb/>
1. (I In ECU McGinnis<lb/>
next summer, the<lb/>
production In this<lb/>
The Boy- from<lb/>
" "The King and I<lb/>
Dolls "The Desert<lb/>
I I he odd Couple The<lb/>
OS Jul3 l-Aug. IT.<lb/>
 Edg ,1 R. Loessin, in<lb/>
rie . said season<lb/>
? 1) now on sale.<lb/>
lid former -ub-<lb/>
 ' ? irehase 1968 season<lb/>
p priority on choice<lb/>
. ts before Dec. 21.<lb/>
since Mien seating bas been as-<lb/>
ed on a first come, first served<lb/>
basis. . 1 ef<lb/>
Tlie producer said he. his stall<lb/>
nnd the Slimmer Theatre Advisory<lb/>
Board believe the 1968 ll?2?f<lb/>
productions Is a good one. We al-<lb/>
,?-(iv have some good loads in<lb/>
rntad" he said, "and we believe<lb/>
this schedule has outstanding<lb/>
, avVfor every theatrical taste<lb/>
' The Summer Theatre, bramchild<lb/>
ofTEhCU President Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
Wflfl established to 1964 on tne<lb/>
"t e,u h o, financial support from<lb/>
Several thousand Eastern North<lb/>
CTr?1hn;rplayed to summer auch-<lb/>
ences which now total more than<lb/>
Zm. It closed the 1961r season<lb/>
f? xceptlree use of McGUmis<lb/>
Sitorlum. Idle during the sum-<lb/>
DEBATE<lb/>
Resolved, That the defense of South Viet-<lb/>
nam is vital to the national interest of the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Tonight<lb/>
E-P Auditorium<lb/>
7:30 p. m.<lb/>
DR. JOHN EAST<lb/>
(Affirmative)<lb/>
MR. CLEVELAND BRADNER<lb/>
(Negative)<lb/>
<lb/>
Id choreographing Miss de<lb/>
? nas also danced in such<lb/>
s as "Rodeo" and "Three Vir-<lb/>
Her next project will be di-<lb/>
ng a new show called Rain-<lb/>
It iw on the Road<lb/>
The Great Debate<lb/>
Tackles Vietnam<lb/>
The question of United States in-<lb/>
volvement in Viet Nam wr. be de-<lb/>
bated by Dr. John East nd Mr<lb/>
Cleveland Bradner Tueeday, Jan-<lb/>
uary 16. ; 7:30 p.m. in the audi-<lb/>
torium of the Education and Psy-<lb/>
chology 1- ading.<lb/>
Originally proposed bj the Po-<lb/>
litical Science Club, the debate if<lb/>
co-sponsored by the Young Demo-<lb/>
Club, the Young Republican<lb/>
Club, and the Law Society.<lb/>
East, an Associate Professor in<lb/>
the Political Science Department,<lb/>
will defend the American position<lb/>
on the grounds that Communist<lb/>
aggression must be stopped when-<lb/>
ever it occurs. Bradner, Associate<lb/>
Professor of Philosophy, will pre-<lb/>
sent arguments against U.S in-<lb/>
volvement.<lb/>
According to Danny Bell, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Political Science Club,<lb/>
the debate will be informal with a<lb/>
question and answer period to fol-<lb/>
low.<lb/>
The session is open to th- public<lb/>
and all interested persons are urg-<lb/>
ed attend.<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00039323_0002"/><lb/>
2?East Carolinian?Tuesday, January 16, L968<lb/>
Go To State<lb/>
?<lb/>
i-<lb/>
f  r<lb/>
 ? ;<lb/>
Alright you suitcasera, here's someplace to go this week-<lb/>
end. The MRC is chartering a bus(es) Cor th ECU-N.C. State<lb/>
basketball game for Friday night. The team needs support,<lb/>
and the cost is inexpensive enough to take a date.<lb/>
The genera complaint heard during most athletic seasons<lb/>
is that the Pirate teams seldom get a chance to play the "big<lb/>
guys or, that when they do, no one can go to see them. Well,<lb/>
basketball season has changed that. North Carolina State, un-<lb/>
der anv circumstances, is a formidable opponent and one ol the<lb/>
big ones. The $2.50 game ticket and SI.50 bus fee seems<lb/>
nomical enough for a night out of town.<lb/>
The -indent body owes much to the Pirate baskel<lb/>
team; either directly'through enjoyment of the sport or in-<lb/>
directly in school prestige. The support of th MRC busing<lb/>
system can also bring about more eo tation<lb/>
to athletic games played off campus.<lb/>
The Pirates will give their all for a v i ?ver State, We<lb/>
ur all for OUR Pirates by getting to that game!<lb/>
Further information is available by visiting or calling the<lb/>
Men's Residence Council Office (in Scott D ' ry) this<lb/>
evening<lb/>
<lb/>
A Greek Ideal<lb/>
Hard times seem to bring out the b people.<lb/>
willing self sacrifice for the convenient ! happiness<lb/>
of others is clearly illustrated.<lb/>
Such was the ease with some meml Gre sys-<lb/>
tem during the recent "ice storm and such has been the cast<lb/>
with most sororities and fraternities thi<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
The Greeks are stereotyped by a few (usually ones<lb/>
know nothing or little about the system) as pseudo social<lb/>
party nuts, and a low-acadmic-average-typi<lb/>
tively speaking (even though this Editor is member of the<lb/>
Greek system), the sororities and fraternitie on this campus<lb/>
seem to be more aware of their relation to the 91 hool and<lb/>
an more conscious of academics and civic responsibilities,<lb/>
To take a specific instance, two fraternities, Sigma<lb/>
Delta and Phi Alpha Sigma took immediate action when the<lb/>
power went off in Greenville Wednesday night. Although one<lb/>
fraternity was in the middle of rush and thi othei busily study-<lb/>
ing for the coming mid-terms, brothers of both ran to dark-<lb/>
ened street corners and directed traffic in freezing rain and<lb/>
sleet for three and a half hours. Some did not even wait to<lb/>
put on proper rain clothing or take an umbrella. There were<lb/>
also reports of other fraternities helping to clear limbs and<lb/>
debris from the streets and to solicit help for those without<lb/>
lights.<lb/>
In another instance, shortly before Christina many of<lb/>
the fraternities an sororities gave of their time to put 071<lb/>
Christmas parties for underprivileged children and to buy gifts<lb/>
and staple items for those who could not afford them.<lb/>
Yes, there are some things wrong with the Greek system<lb/>
at East Carolina. The same is true on any campus where large<lb/>
student organizations exist. But the old stereotyped "keg and<lb/>
combo" ideas of EC fraternities is gradually becoming out-<lb/>
dated.<lb/>
What kind of weird kicks could the "frat men" possibly<lb/>
get out of exposing themselves to pneumonia just to keep<lb/>
people they don't know from having accidents? Why in the<lb/>
world would these "party goers" take the time to make<lb/>
strangers happy for a few moments?<lb/>
Perhr.ps it's the deep, personal satisfaction gained from<lb/>
working together, which can neither be explained nor com-<lb/>
pared with anything outside of close, brotherly or sisterly<lb/>
association.<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
TUESDAY: Workshop Theatre. UU 201, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY: UU Committee Meets, UU 114, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Poetry Forum, OA 11, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Concert Orchestra?Recital Hall. 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Workshop Theatre, UU 201, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Ring sale in UU Lobby, 9:00 a.m4:00 p.m.<lb/>
THURSDAY: Concert: Fred Waring, Wright Aud 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Ring sale in UU Lobby, 9:00 a.m4:00 p m<lb/>
FRIDAY: Basketball: ECU vs. N.C. State at Raleigh 7:00 pm<lb/>
last Carolinian<lb/>
Pnbliahad wmiweekly by the students of Ea?t Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
. . . Membsr<lb/>
I?nt?flWt? Press, Associated Collegiate Press. Ttnitsd States 3tud?nt Pros Assodatkn<lb/>
? Serviced by<lb/>
CmOrnimx Press Service, Intercollegiate Press Service. Southern IntareoUerlata<lb/>
Berries. Press Service of Associated ColleiriaU Press<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief i J. William Rnfty, Jr.<lb/>
Business Manager I Thomas H Rlackwelt<lb/>
Associate Editor I Phyllis G. Brldiceman<lb/>
Managing Editor I Marcy Jordan<lb/>
Snnsertption rate 16.oo.<lb/>
?ailing address: Box 2616, East Carolina College Station GreenvilW. M O<lb/>
Telephone: 76i-6716 or 768-J426, eztenatoi. t64<lb/>
MP"e8ENT?D FOR NATIONAL ADVBRTiaiNO BY A<lb/>
Nationai Educational Advertising Services fikV<lb/>
A DIVISION OF<lb/>
RKAOER-a DIGEST SALES &amp; SERVICES. INC.<lb/>
36Q Lexington A.e New York. N. Y. 10017<lb/>
I<lb/>
Reform Needed<lb/>
 student oi ECU.<lb/>
With the n cent th ml<lb/>
on campus, a greal<lb/>
number oj students haw felt the<lb/>
to express themselves<lb/>
,ii opinions. Al-<lb/>
though I have no1 had the oppor-<lb/>
many of these<lb/>
mid like, the<lb/>
I<lb/>
civil<lb/>
ro my surp ?s'u"<lb/>
i rimi-<lb/>
i. in ely as<lb/>
n tates.<lb/>
dents wh i believe<lb/>
their<lb/>
tempi of<lb/>
mpu to eliminate<lb/>
:? dged<lb/>
taken to achieve<lb/>
m even ? ons T<lb/>
, (i by night by<lb/>
the ar-<lb/>
Jan iry 9<lb/>
I ist Carolinian,<lb/>
denouncement<lb/>
?<lb/>
, legro ri ally<lb/>
held by<lb/>
di ? that<lb/>
howevi " atti-<lb/>
? friev-<lb/>
ould ii work for re-<lb/>
stent.<lb/>
are<lb/>
ly appreciative for the sup-<lb/>
they have been given,<lb/>
mt tl  campus believe<lb/>
hi n an a real many mon<lb/>
that there is a<lb/>
ECU Forum<lb/>
need for reform at ECU and thai<lb/>
these students will help to bring<lb/>
them aboii Those students and<lb/>
faculty members who do feel that<lb/>
discrimination on this campus<lb/>
should be terminated, thai the Ne-<lb/>
groes .?n this campus should be<lb/>
granted the equality that many per-<lb/>
sistently chum that they already<lb/>
enjoy, and that the Negro students<lb/>
on this campus should be consid-<lb/>
ered as ECU students rather than<lb/>
atending East Carolina<lb/>
University, are united to express<lb/>
their opinions, sue their support,<lb/>
and help make the theory i I equal-<lb/>
ity a fact m practice as well a : in<lb/>
words.<lb/>
Respectfully submitted,<lb/>
William Owen<lb/>
Try Militancy<lb/>
he Editoi<lb/>
Re the letter from Charles<lb/>
I i Chairman, Negro students<lb/>
i Committee.<lb/>
I would not be so foolish as to<lb/>
esl the committee's complaints<lb/>
n ' itally unfounded and that the<lb/>
Carolina University commun-<lb/>
xisis in state of complete<lb/>
racial Utopia.<lb/>
However, i am surprised that in-<lb/>
telligent people expeci an atmos-<lb/>
phere nt complete racial impreju-<lb/>
dici I am not I Iztag f ?r the<lb/>
prejudice that does exist. But<lb/>
nd perhaps here I run<lb/>
completely contrary to the popu-<lb/>
lar trend intelligent people should<lb/>
expect prejudice. We do not live<lb/>
perfed world.<lb/>
Furthermore. I would remind not<lb/>
only Orientals and Negroes, but also<lb/>
Slavics, Anglo-Saxons, and Jews.<lb/>
thai our '?race whatever it is. is<lb/>
,t vital part oi our individual<lb/>
sonalities. ft is not the sun:<lb/>
of personality, but a part that <lb/>
entwined with all the tther cl<lb/>
teristics and elements that<lb/>
not be separated. As a mar<lb/>
record, most Negroes are<lb/>
groovy, and I like them; wh<lb/>
mosl New Englanders, espi<lb/>
ones that have Ingrained in<lb/>
the fundamentalist theology of<lb/>
forefathers, I cannot stand<lb/>
Now as far as the smaller<lb/>
tor, or larger matter, of con<lb/>
respect and common court. n<lb/>
Is to be expected of ignorant<lb/>
that they will behave dlscourti<lb/>
ly. I. too, cannot get a than;<lb/>
out o pretty yirLs when I b<lb/>
to open the door for them. B<lb/>
it or not, Mr, Davis, they rui<lb/>
me, also!<lb/>
A<lb/>
Racial Paranoia<lb/>
r, McDowell<lb/>
 i ica is inv-lvad in a strug-<lb/>
gle against itself. Racial conflict<lb/>
and the advocacy of separatism by<lb/>
both races are destroying the coun-<lb/>
try's multi-ethnic atmosphere by<lb/>
dividing the people against them-<lb/>
selves. Riots and civic disorder are<lb/>
reating a climate of violence, in<lb/>
which destruction for Its own sake<lb/>
is becoming acceptable. Neither<lb/>
tunic realize, that such irres-<lb/>
ponsible action proves nothing ex-<lb/>
cept Its faction's immaturity. Re-<lb/>
sponsible leadership is being ignor-<lb/>
ed as vast segments of the popula-<lb/>
tion are choosing demagoguery ov-<lb/>
er reason. Many fail to realize that<lb/>
no one ever built a city by tearing<lb/>
it apart.<lb/>
Problem Of Assimilation<lb/>
The problem of race relations Is<lb/>
not so much a problem of Intern -<lb/>
tion as it is a problem of assimila-<lb/>
tion. The problem of race will not<lb/>
be solved until the stigma of race is<lb/>
removed not only from the law but<lb/>
also from the mind. We must all<lb/>
come to see ourselves not as black,<lb/>
white, or yellow but as MANKIND.<lb/>
On this campus, there is a trend<lb/>
toward superficial tolerance and<lb/>
token liberalization. We are adher-<lb/>
ing to the law without trying to<lb/>
solve the problem. The Negro stu-<lb/>
dent on this campus is tolerated<lb/>
but not respected. He is treated<lb/>
more as a Negro than as a human<lb/>
being; he is not being excluded, bat<lb/>
he is not being included either.<lb/>
Thus, we have solved the problem<lb/>
integration without attempting to<lb/>
correct the source of problem.<lb/>
Quasi - Liberalism<lb/>
Prejudice is still firmly rooted in<lb/>
the South and elsewhere despite<lb/>
the coat of whitewash with which<lb/>
politicians painted hemselves, at-<lb/>
tempting to disguise their conserv-<lb/>
atism as expediency. This sudden<lb/>
blossoming of quasi-liberahsm has<lb/>
failed to turn a weed into a flower.<lb/>
The problem of race will not be<lb/>
solved until an individual's value<lb/>
to society is judged on the lasis of<lb/>
his individual merit and not his<lb/>
racial o nation ' background. We<lb/>
must realize that Congress can<lb/>
change only the laws; it cannot<lb/>
change the people. No amount of<lb/>
legislation will change society if<lb/>
society is unwillinr to accept chan-<lb/>
ge. Thus, the racial double stand-<lb/>
ard will remain as long as society<lb/>
refuses to see that social responsi-<lb/>
bility is a part of its social moves<lb/>
rather than apart fror them.<lb/>
Society And Environment<lb/>
Society and environment determ-<lb/>
ine what a person win be just as<lb/>
heredity determines what he can<lb/>
be. We fail to realize that the indi-<lb/>
vidual is only an extension of the<lb/>
society in which he is reared and<lb/>
as such, is only a representative of<lb/>
that society and not the source of<lb/>
the injustices that occur within<lb/>
Sometimes we judge a person by<lb/>
how he was "brought up" and not<lb/>
in spite of it.<lb/>
Our society can never be free of<lb/>
prejudice until its members see<lb/>
themselves as mankind and treat<lb/>
race and nationi.1 origin as a per-<lb/>
son's background rather than his<lb/>
personality.<lb/>
The paranoia of race, the delu-<lb/>
sions of persecution and grandeur<lb/>
attributed to ethnic background,<lb/>
can overcome only when a person's<lb/>
value is based entirely on his merit<lb/>
as an individual.<lb/>
a "Dixie' goes i<lb/>
the ? can mean what j i<lb/>
terprel it to mean. Most i<lb/>
that T have mot at football .<lb/>
are too drunk even to be th.<lb/>
shout the aesthetic or non-ai<lb/>
nlng behind the song<lb/>
deepi e it reminds i<lb/>
heritage thai has its blemish<lb/>
that on the whole illustrati<lb/>
irdo i ei lent, original<lb/>
unique quality about it.  ?<lb/>
people would be proud ' ?<lb/>
Southern culture, in addit<lb/>
its originality and warmth in I.<lb/>
ture and art, has overcome<lb/>
problems in a shorter amou if<lb/>
time than perhaps any othei<lb/>
known I man; perhap<lb/>
the farthesl to go, still, but<lb/>
Ni ro. with his own distingu<lb/>
characteristics, has been and will<lb/>
be ,i major part of this ad<lb/>
incut.<lb/>
And. last, as far as the ign<lb/>
and the prejudiced: I would sug-<lb/>
I that you help them when<lb/>
ilble and pity them if all else fails,<lb/>
Hying to find and correct is<lb/>
incidents will only give them some-<lb/>
thing to thrive on. it has been my<lb/>
experience with preudiced people<lb/>
that when they label someone <lb/>
ferior, usually it is to prove their<lb/>
own superiority.<lb/>
And. one las) suggestion foi i ir<lb/>
committee: I might suggest that<lb/>
you channel your activities away<lb/>
from finding many isolated and<lb/>
relatively ineradicable ineie<lb/>
but turn to the Negro slums in<lb/>
Greenville, demiuiriing and working<lb/>
toward better and equal educati inal<lb/>
and economic opportunities for<lb/>
these people, and things so basic<lb/>
as taking direct action against es-<lb/>
tablishments where Negroes are<lb/>
still segregated from whites as in<lb/>
some of the restaurants, doctors and<lb/>
dentists' offices, and schoo: in<lb/>
Greenville and Pitt County. That<lb/>
would be a much larger ta. k but<lb/>
a much greater cause.<lb/>
Student's Name witheld upon<lb/>
request.<lb/>
The Watering Hole<lb/>
If the icy weather of last week<lb/>
is something to look forward to<lb/>
every year, I feel that I will be<lb/>
writing a "snowstorm' edition of<lb/>
the Watering Hole after every bliz-<lb/>
zard.<lb/>
 <lb/>
This snow really came as an un-<lb/>
expected shock to the Administra-<lb/>
tion of our beloved University,<lb/>
"snow" and "ice" are two words<lb/>
that they refused to acknowledge in<lb/>
tlieL vocabulary. Because of this<lb/>
they have not provided for any snow<lb/>
removal equipment in their budget.<lb/>
The Maintenance Department did<lb/>
not fare much better. It attempted<lb/>
to sand some of the campus walk-<lb/>
ways, but to no avail. Mother Na-<lb/>
ture came right along behind them<lb/>
and blithely covered the sand with<lb/>
crystal clear ice. So when unwary<lb/>
students and professor stepped on<lb/>
the supposed sand they found them-<lb/>
selves sailing off down the sidewalk<lb/>
towards fractures, simple bone<lb/>
breaks, and multiple cuts and con-<lb/>
tusions. Ah! the beautiful Winter<lb/>
Wonderland ! !<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Where there is snow there is in-<lb/>
evitably people trying to ride on<lb/>
sleds. Due to a lack of sleds in-<lb/>
genious university students made<lb/>
various sneak rais on the cafeteria<lb/>
to find the suitable substitute. The<lb/>
cafeteria has asked that all stu-<lb/>
dents who removed trays from the<lb/>
Pamlico Room will please return<lb/>
By Larry Mulvihill<lb/>
them immediately. No questions will<lb/>
be asked.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
"I Wish I Had Done That' De-<lb/>
partment: Yes, the owners of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store are now wish-<lb/>
ing that they had ordered a supply<lb/>
of candles due to the recent cam-<lb/>
pus power failures. To rectify the<lb/>
situation the Su. ply Store has or-<lb/>
dered twentyfive thousand candles<lb/>
to sell at a profit of three percent<lb/>
during the next power failure. Who<lb/>
Wants to bet that it doesn't snow<lb/>
here for another thirty years?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The University may havo seen<lb/>
the last of "Pseulo-man It seems<lb/>
that during the height of last week's<lb/>
snow storm lie s'epped outside the<lb/>
CU to catch a breath of fresh air.<lb/>
The wind began blowing through his<lb/>
starched fly-away collars, and act-<lb/>
ing on the principle of a glider,<lb/>
"Pseudo-man" soon became air-<lb/>
borne. He was last r.en flying over<lb/>
the belfry of old Austin.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Having exhausted the subject of<lb/>
snow, I'd like to comment on a<lb/>
subject in a slightly more serious<lb/>
vein. All students wishing to live in<lb/>
the dorms next fall must pay a de-<lb/>
posit of 60 dollars at the end of<lb/>
March. We wonder why they want<lb/>
so much so soon. Could It be that<lb/>
our beloved institution Is running<lb/>
out of money? I leave the question<lb/>
up in the air . . . Yuk! Yuk!<lb/>
Xhe film 'l'olynesiar<lb/>
and drama of fine p<lb/>
scene -<lb/>
By DIANE f<lb/>
"Pi lyneslan' Worlc<lb/>
adventure film, was<lb/>
Mr Stan Waterman<lb/>
r: Wright Aud<lb/>
'in and lect<lb/>
C( ? chiefly on<lb/>
Ian e, but ther<lb/>
DU oi underwat<lb/>
ir and v<lb/>
Mi Waterman elai<lb/>
simpl almost prin<lb/>
' II exists on t<lb/>
? 'hat the Pc<lb/>
 to keep thi<lb/>
d culture ;<lb/>
Ls are still<lb/>
and the F<lb/>
1 is restricted<lb/>
?M ! -mists are<lb/>
? the island<lb/>
Pee weeks, j<lb/>
for student<lb/>
' i live on t<lb/>
11 ban ix montl<lb/>
Pn i permission fr<lb/>
? rnment in Paris.<lb/>
 film showed t<lb/>
People in their nat<lb/>
ni"1' and there wen<lb/>
of the primitive worn<lb/>
P enl on the .zlaxi<lb/>
Deaian people glean<lb/>
livelihood from the s<lb/>
j&amp;an ex?iaine(j in di<lb/>
'he unique fishing<lb/>
Woyed by the island<lb/>
as they were used b;<lb/>
?'s hundreds of year<lb/>
Another way the ii<lb/>
lllt'ir living is by worl<lb/>
Plantations. Mr. Wat<lb/>
Wat the plantations<lb/>
tle mountains, once<lb/>
"tenders go up to<lb/>
<pb facs="00039323_0003"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
ur individual p, <lb/>
not the sun: ? <lb/>
.it a part thai<lb/>
. the rther ch<lb/>
nents that u<lb/>
I. As a niai<lb/>
egroe.s arc ull<lb/>
ic them;<lb/>
anders, espi<lb/>
Ingrained in<lb/>
st theology of<lb/>
nmot stand,<lb/>
the smaller<lb/>
latter, of con<lb/>
miuii oourte it<lb/>
of ignorant p<lb/>
have discourtc i<lb/>
t get a th<lb/>
rLs when I 1.<lb/>
for them. B(<lb/>
vis, they run<lb/>
of<lb/>
ally<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
xi . oe<lb/>
can whal<lb/>
can. Most :<lb/>
at football .<lb/>
en to bo th<lb/>
ic or non-ai<lb/>
the song.<lb/>
reminds i<lb/>
; ii-s blemi h<lb/>
j ilia i ?<lb/>
at, origin.?;<lb/>
)out it. th<lb/>
? proud bo i<lb/>
ture, in add<lb/>
warmth in i.<lb/>
s overcome<lb/>
horter a<lb/>
ps any other<lb/>
m: perhai'<lb/>
go, still, but<lb/>
own distin<lb/>
a: ? been and U<lb/>
of this advi<lb/>
ir as the ign<lb/>
ed: I would sug-<lb/>
) them where pos-<lb/>
?m if all else I<lb/>
id correct isolated<lb/>
 give them some-<lb/>
a. It has been my<lb/>
preudiced people<lb/>
label someone .a-<lb/>
Ls to prove their<lb/>
uggestion feu your<lb/>
Ight suggest that<lb/>
ir activities away<lb/>
any isolated and<lb/>
iicable incidents,<lb/>
Negro slums in<lb/>
uding and working<lb/>
I equal educational<lb/>
opportunities for<lb/>
d things so baic<lb/>
action against, es-<lb/>
ere Negroes are<lb/>
from whites as in<lb/>
irants, doctors and<lb/>
and school in<lb/>
itt County. That<lb/>
h larger ta. k but<lb/>
a use.<lb/>
ame witheld upon<lb/>
lole<lb/>
ry Mulvihill<lb/>
. No questions U1<lb/>
Done That" De-<lb/>
he owners of the<lb/>
tore are now wish-<lb/>
l ordered a supply<lb/>
i the recent cam-<lb/>
's. To rectify the<lb/>
ply Store has or-<lb/>
thousand candles<lb/>
I of three percent<lb/>
lower failure. Who<lb/>
.t it doesn't snow<lb/>
thirty years?<lb/>
may hav? seen<lb/>
:o-man It seems<lb/>
:ight of last week's<lb/>
epped outside the<lb/>
eath of fresh air.<lb/>
lowing through his<lb/>
r collars, and act-<lb/>
oiple of a glider,<lb/>
;oon became air-<lb/>
t r.en flying over<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?d the subject of<lb/>
o comment on a<lb/>
htly more serious<lb/>
wishing to live in<lb/>
ill must pay a de-<lb/>
rs at the end of<lb/>
er why they want<lb/>
Could it be that<lb/>
itutlon is running<lb/>
leave the question<lb/>
. Yuk! Yuk!<lb/>
East Carolinian?Tuesday, January 16, 1968?3<lb/>
Quality Presentation Marks<lb/>
Story Of fDavid And Lisa'<lb/>
jbe film Polynesian Worlds' presented excellent examples of the beauty<lb/>
and drama of fine photographic techniques, especially In the underwater<lb/>
srem<lb/>
University Union Shows<lb/>
Modern Art Exhibit<lb/>
K CHARLOTTE MELTON<lb/>
i.tnuary Art Show in th<lb/>
l: ;? Union is a collection of<lb/>
abstract oil paintings by Charles<lb/>
P. Mullen and pottery by J. Roland<lb/>
Laffei<lb/>
Thi i is Charles Mullen's 49th pro-<lb/>
i art show. A member of<lb/>
the Art Club of Erie. Pennsylvania,<lb/>
e Craftsman's Guild of Pitts-<lb/>
burgh Mullen has won numerous<lb/>
prize in Pennsylvania and New<lb/>
York art shows.<lb/>
Mullen obtained his Bachelor of<lb/>
Scieii! e in Art at Edinboro State<lb/>
Colles in Pennsylvania and studied<lb/>
painting at the Cleveland Institute<lb/>
of Art in Ohio. In 1962, he earned<lb/>
his Master of Education degree in<lb/>
Art Education from Pennsylvania<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
 ?aching experiences include<lb/>
13 year in public schools of Craw-<lb/>
ford county, Pennsylvania, and<lb/>
classi for the Warren Art League<lb/>
Center. Presently he is Assistant<lb/>
Professor of Art at Edinboro State<lb/>
College.<lb/>
ramies ;<lb/>
? by Roland Laffertj wh<lb/>
works have been on display at the<lb/>
Penn ylvania Craftsman's Guild An-<lb/>
nual Craft Show for seven con-<lb/>
years. Three times he has<lb/>
secured first prize in ceramics.<lb/>
Other awards lie has received in-<lb/>
clude first place in Ceramics and<lb/>
first place in Professional Abstract<lb/>
Oils at the Bestor Plaza Show at<lb/>
Chataqua, New York.<lb/>
He has also displa; ed work at<lb/>
the Syracuse National Ceramic<lb/>
Exhibition and at Edinboro State<lb/>
College.<lb/>
With a B.S. degree from Edin-<lb/>
bore State College, Lafferty con-<lb/>
tinued his education at Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania State University and the<lb/>
Cleveland Institute of Art. He did<lb/>
graduate study in ceramics at Al-<lb/>
lied University.<lb/>
Inquiries about the purchase of<lb/>
the abstract oils, pottery, and ce-<lb/>
ramics may be made at the Union<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Film Received Three<lb/>
International Awards<lb/>
"David and Lisa which appear-<lb/>
ed last Monday night in Wrig) t<lb/>
Auditorium as another addition to<lb/>
the Foreign Film series, proved to<lb/>
be highly unusual, tasteful, and<lb/>
.somewhat frustrating experience.<lb/>
Produced on a low budget in l?53<lb/>
by Frank Perry and Paul Heller,<lb/>
'lie film was the recipient of three<lb/>
distinctive awards: Best Novice Di-<lb/>
rector 'Frank Perry) at the Venice<lb/>
Film Festival, and Best Actor and<lb/>
Actress iKeir Dullea and Janet<lb/>
Margolin) at the San Francisco<lb/>
Film Festival.<lb/>
movie was adapted fron<lb/>
 ombinatlon novel and case itudy<lb/>
by a Brooklyn psychiatrist, Dr.<lb/>
I aac Rubin. It focuses on two in-<lb/>
mates at a school for eriously dis-<lb/>
turbed adolescents who, through<lb/>
mutual affection, start each other<lb/>
on the way to sanity.<lb/>
Characterization<lb/>
Unfortunately, being a story<lb/>
about two persons in a situation<lb/>
which is unusual by virtue of de-<lb/>
gree alone, the movie lacked suf-<lb/>
ficient details of character chat<lb/>
add depth to personality and<lb/>
events in a story on such a concen-<lb/>
trated level. The audience had<lb/>
little with which to ideatify, and,<lb/>
consequently, scenes that could have<lb/>
been very powerful and moving<lb/>
slipped by like a day when you<lb/>
never wake up.<lb/>
Nevertheless, Keir DuIiea as<lb/>
David and Janet Margolin as Lisa<lb/>
portrayed heir characters so con-<lb/>
vincingly that one never really be-<lb/>
came aware of how one knew about<lb/>
them until the film was over and<lb/>
enough time had passed to reflect<lb/>
on the overall impact.<lb/>
As a documentary, the film was<lb/>
equally frustrating in that it lacked<lb/>
sufficient factual data concerning<lb/>
the nature of their maladies, the<lb/>
degree and previous causes of their<lb/>
illness, and the cure entailed to<lb/>
J<lb/>
Waterman's Various Adventures<lb/>
Portray Polynesian Paradise<lb/>
??p.<lb/>
adven<lb/>
Mr I<lb/>
aaae<lb/>
By DIANE EGNOK<lb/>
. i.siaii Worlds, a travel-<lb/>
film, was presented by<lb/>
tan Waterman last Tuesday<lb/>
Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
im and lecture were con-<lb/>
chiefly on the Polynes-<lb/>
e, but there were a large<lb/>
? I underwater scenes that<lb/>
tor and variety to th(<lb/>
la is "in ot the few<lb/>
left in the world con-<lb/>
? 'ions that have been un-<lb/>
by man. Some of the<lb/>
. ranges on the Polynesian<lb/>
re so thickly forested that<lb/>
i sible to penetrate them:<lb/>
ions have never been seen<lb/>
. except by aerial photo-<lb/>
Waterman elaborated on the<lb/>
almost primative culture<lb/>
xists on the islands. He<lb/>
that the Polynesians have<lb/>
(to keep their simple, un-<lb/>
ted culture partly because<lb/>
are still French pos-<lb/>
anrl the French uovern-<lb/>
ta restricted Immigration<lb/>
irlsts are permitted to<lb/>
i the islands for no mnre<lb/>
ree weeks, and it is im-<lb/>
for students, or private<lb/>
' i live on the islands for<lb/>
' n ix months without ex-<lb/>
I permission from the French<lb/>
nent in Paris.<lb/>
film showed the Polynesian<lb/>
in their natural environ-<lb/>
ed there were many scenes<lb/>
primitive woricing conditions<lb/>
Present on the Elands. The Poly-<lb/>
nesian people glean most of their<lb/>
livelihood from the sea. Mr. Water-<lb/>
J"a" explained in deta'i many of<lb/>
oi unique fishing meuds em-<lb/>
Ployed by the islanders now, just<lb/>
i; ,h' v were used by their ances-<lb/>
,s hundreds of years ago.<lb/>
Another way the islanders make<lb/>
lllt'i living is by working on vanilla<lb/>
Plantations. Mr. Waterman stated<lb/>
!1;it the plantations are high on<lb/>
?je mountains, onco a year me<lb/>
"waders go up to cross-pollinate<lb/>
every blossom on the plants by<lb/>
hand. A few weeks later they pick<lb/>
the beans, then carry them many<lb/>
miles down the mountain to the<lb/>
market<lb/>
The underwater scenes in the<lb/>
iilm were delightful, capturing on<lb/>
film much of the abundant marine<lb/>
life in the dear waters around the<lb/>
Polynesian Islands.<lb/>
Mr. Waterman, a graduate<lb/>
, tmouth College, said after the<lb/>
Him that he Is a professional<lb/>
photographer. The main purpose<lb/>
: the film, esp-cially the under-<lb/>
lies, was to show "The<lb/>
many interesting and fascinating<lb/>
ipecta of diving and photography.<lb/>
His film, which took a full year<lb/>
to prepan was sponsored by the<lb/>
National Geographic Officeof<lb/>
Naval Research. It originally con-<lb/>
sisted of 35,000 feet of film on land<lb/>
and in the sea. The actual filming<lb/>
time was 600 hours, approximately<lb/>
half of which were underwater.<lb/>
Mr. Waterman appeared to cu<lb/>
audiences last year with a lecture<lb/>
film entitled "3,000 Years Under<lb/>
The Sea He is currently working<lb/>
on a film entitled "The Endless<lb/>
Summer" which will be a full<lb/>
length feature film sponsored by<lb/>
the CBS television network.<lb/>
FAMOUS FOR GOOD FOOD<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
ANY ORDER FOR TAKE OUT<lb/>
GIRLS: Come In and See Our Novel Items<lb/>
Also Jewelry and Cosmetics.<lb/>
MERLF NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO<lb/>
210 E. 5th Street<lb/>
Peopit<lb/>
meat.<lb/>
of tilt<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
Fvervone buying a diamond wants the best diamond<lb/>
they can get for the lowest price. That is why they come<lb/>
? l Wp brv all of our diamonds loose, unset, direct from<lb/>
th cutter' We eliminate the broker, manufacturer and<lb/>
wholesaler. This means that our diamonds are sold below<lb/>
the usual wholesale price.<lb/>
This we can do because our diamond department is<lb/>
mnenised by a highly trained professional diamond<lb/>
specialist. Let him save you money.<lb/>
Lauteres Jewelers<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
? a. a Tcwplprs Certified Gemologists<lb/>
Beg,9ter1;EORGE LAUTARES ECU '41<lb/>
I<lb/>
satisfy the layman's knowledge.<lb/>
However, it appears as though<lb/>
the film had an entirely different<lb/>
purpose, that being the presenta-<lb/>
tion of a delicate love story in a<lb/>
tasteful manner?and that it did.<lb/>
An excessive amount of medical<lb/>
data, flash-back history, or ex-<lb/>
planatory dialogue probably would<lb/>
have hindered more than helped<lb/>
Technical Production<lb/>
Special notice iould be given to<lb/>
the excellent technical production<lb/>
from an aesthetic point of view. The<lb/>
cinematography, which usually<lb/>
proves to be a downfall in low-<lb/>
budget motion pictures was ex-<lb/>
ceptionally creative. The sound<lb/>
uack was never obtrusive ?which<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pi<lb/>
Ranked Fourth<lb/>
In National Index<lb/>
Delta Zeta Chapter began the new<lb/>
?oar ranked fourth nationally<lb/>
among the 136 chapters of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Pi in the Chapter Efficien-<lb/>
cy Index, which measuras each<lb/>
chapter in scholarship, membership,<lb/>
professional activities, finance, and<lb/>
general activities.<lb/>
The brothers expressed that they<lb/>
are proud to be in this high posi-<lb/>
tion and will continue to work to-<lb/>
ward the top.<lb/>
etimes become the downfaU<lb/>
of high-budget motion pictures)<lb/>
but almost always served a. an<lb/>
excellent musical-mirror of the psy-<lb/>
chologically complicated scenes.<lb/>
At this point the question in-<lb/>
variably arises. The initial mess-<lb/>
age is clear: people can get well,<lb/>
make the necesary adustments, and<lb/>
go on living a sane life Beyond<lb/>
that, there were several smaller<lb/>
but perhaps more important im-<lb/>
plications, such as the lack of com-<lb/>
munication in the family, the bla-<lb/>
tantly unhealthy environment that<lb/>
produces mental illness, and so-<lb/>
ciety's ignorant scorn of 'he mental-<lb/>
ly distrubed.<lb/>
All in all. it is n )t n ira uo under-<lb/>
stand how "David and Lisa" has<lb/>
influenced more -ecenf nation pic-<lb/>
tures?both nat: foreign.<lb/>
AD CORRECTION<lb/>
The Phi Alpha Sigma Rush,<lb/>
advertised for last week, was<lb/>
rescheduled for Thursday of<lb/>
this week from 7 p.m. until 16<lb/>
p.m. at the house.<lb/>
JB'I<lb/>
'ii'als<lb/>
v, ????<lb/>
Saad's Shoe Shop<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
Located?Middle College View<lb/>
Cleaners Maia Plaat<lb/>
Grand Avense<lb/>
??<lb/>
???"?<lb/>
"<lb/>
'A 6 i<lb/>
M<lb/>
??"? ???<lb/>
JONES-POTTS MUSIC CO.<lb/>
BALDWIN PIANOS and DRUMS<lb/>
MUSICAI INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS<lb/>
Large Selection of Stereo Tapes<lb/>
and Carrying Cases<lb/>
RECORDS?Stereo and Monaural $3.95<lb/>
SHEET MUSIC<lb/>
408 Evan? Street, Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
?t?y<lb/>
I<lb/>
SPECIAL NOTICE<lb/>
If you are considering a church vocation, you are<lb/>
invited to attend a week-end of dialog and inquiry at<lb/>
Union Seminary and the Presbyterian School of Chris-<lb/>
tian Education in Richmond, Va. Feb. 2-4. All expenses<lb/>
will be paid by the Seminary and the E.C.U. United Cam-<lb/>
pus Ministry. This is a "no string" invite.<lb/>
The keynote speaker will be a southern congressman<lb/>
who resigned his seat when his state elected a strong<lb/>
segregationist governor. If you are interested in accep-<lb/>
ting this invitation, contact Rev. Matney at The Den.<lb/>
Students of any or no denomination are encouraged<lb/>
to accept the invitation.<lb/>
NOTICE TO LIST TAXES<lb/>
Every person owning property January 1,<lb/>
1068, whether real or personal, is required by<lb/>
the Laws of North Carolina to list such for<lb/>
tax purposes during the month of January.<lb/>
Property must be listed in the township in<lb/>
which it is located.<lb/>
All male persons between the ages of 21<lb/>
and 50 are required to list for Poll Tax during<lb/>
the same period.<lb/>
Anyone, especially newcomers, having<lb/>
questions concerning their responsibility to<lb/>
list should contact the office of the Tax Super-<lb/>
visor, Telephone 752-4711.<lb/>
Failure to list carries a penalty of 10 of<lb/>
the tax and a possible fine.<lb/>
Persons living in Greenville Township may<lb/>
list at the Pitt County Courthouse from 8:30<lb/>
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday<lb/>
and from 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon on Saturday.<lb/>
R. S. MOYE<lb/>
Pitt County Tax Supervisor<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039323_0004"/><lb/>
4?East Carolinian?Tuesday, Januarv 16, 1968<lb/>
?T<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?&amp;$ '<lb/>
"O<lb/>
?<lb/>
??vv.<lb/>
Wright Fountain, encircled with snow, becomes th campus center ! winter beaut<lb/>
 g<lb/>
-Ti f<lb/>
<lb/>
r-<lb/>
?  '<lb/>
S<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Wright Circle i. deserted as students seek shelter from the ra<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
Photos By Walt Quade<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
used heavj damage, I he glistening<lb/>
,iil(l?(l lovelin<lb/>
bbbbp<lb/>
IFCElects<lb/>
AsNew Pi<lb/>
Mm ler "i<lb/>
Ideni of<lb/>
11 fir the<lb/>
chool year.<lb/>
prej idit<lb/>
y, is B<lb/>
iew of fie th Mosler i William Austi<lb/>
.la preside<lb/>
nity<lb/>
. : hip fro<lb/>
, ? Jarrw i B.<lb/>
? ?;? the c<lb/>
. ; coon<lb/>
ternity a<lb/>
?  ing OS<lb/>
<lb/>
ire forti<lb/>
? n<lb/>
<lb/>
come<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
b a siies "f spei la!<lb/>
ek" hold<lb/>
AKD Inaugr<lb/>
e A dm in h<lb/>
officers f .<lb/>
Pell ? National EM<lb/>
i? fraternity, w<lb/>
have the names<lb/>
 arolina 1'niversi<lb/>
who qualify for me<lb/>
Ible f'?r mem<lb/>
late niiis! be<lb/>
. lologj major or<lb/>
must have mainlai<lb/>
i general scholai<lb/>
of B" for all undf<lb/>
In tte courses i<lb/>
H average in al<lb/>
aati ?r graduate c<lb/>
I I?Jr, v.<lb/>
mi candidates<lb/>
i omplete at least<lb/>
of coOege cours<lb/>
shall have also C<lb/>
least 15 (juarter 1<lb/>
rlology, including<lb/>
course in statistics<lb/>
ol .K lal research.<lb/>
Names of all s<lb/>
qualify should be <lb/>
rv Blirk, Presidenl<lb/>
i Williams, facult<lb/>
Mr. Enabetfa Joi<lb/>
t ir Room 226, OI<lb/>
If yon or a fri<lb/>
notify one of the<lb/>
?entatives of Alpha<lb/>
t.v Immediately.<lb/>
50,000 summi<lb/>
tudents arc<lb/>
1968 Summer E<lb/>
tory" just off the<lb/>
ra throupi<lb/>
ed l tea and Ca.<lb/>
mnmer job o<lb/>
summer ca<lb/>
ummer the<lb/>
lies, tnd<lb/>
Plications n<lb/>
ire  mor<lb/>
than last<lb/>
i r in man;<lb/>
: 1100 to $200<lb/>
 elorg, r<lb/>
? help con<lb/>
demand. Scu<lb/>
special<lb/>
and fly-tying<lb/>
tctors are amor<lb/>
needed<lb/>
?' ummer Emplo<lb/>
n'ay he oru<lb/>
W to Natirnal<lb/>
 ? i('Pt. C, Box 32<lb/>
?Wo 45232. Mark "i<lb/>
filling in Dec<lb/>
A student photographer braves the elements to capture the aesthetic<lb/>
Value of winter.<lb/>
ECO students frolic k on the mall as the campus enjoys an unexpected holiday.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039323_0005"/><lb/>
IFC Elects KA<lb/>
As New President<lb/>
Mo ier "i . denl ofHi<lb/>
i for theilnder ol<lb/>
hool year.<lb/>
.(-ntof Kappa Al-<lb/>
is rjunior math<lb/>
r new officer elected to<lb/>
Mn i-r as vice i<lb/>
m Austin Jr of h I<lb/>
pn ? ?"? ??' mb <lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
. : hip fl<lb/>
? Jam : B. I fallo<lb/>
: CU, the o runcil d i<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 a series f special eenta called<lb/>
held 1<lb/>
AKD TnaufiTiirates<lb/>
Nen<lb/>
Administration<lb/>
Dell<lb/>
orari<lb/>
have<lb/>
East fai-oli)u;iMTuc(lav, January 10, J8?5<lb/>
ol coordinating cam-fraternity a? ? 1?<lb/>
nting on U??'M,<lb/>
Dean Mflfl<lb/>
ire fortunat<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
leader hip ll<lb/>
come<lb/>
?4<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
10<lb/>
m<lb/>
officers of Alpha Kappa<lb/>
National Sociology Ron-<lb/>
fraternity, would lik- to<lb/>
the names of all East<lb/>
Carolina University students<lb/>
?li,i qualify for membership. To<lb/>
be eligible for membership, each<lb/>
ididate must be either a so-<lb/>
rlolog? major or minor and<lb/>
most have maintained at least<lb/>
i general scholastic average<lb/>
nf "B" for all undergraduate or<lb/>
graduate courses as well as a<lb/>
ii tverage in all aadergrad-<lb/>
n:iti ,ir graduate courses in so-<lb/>
lolof j.<lb/>
Ml candidates must have<lb/>
complete at least five quarters<lb/>
of college course-work and<lb/>
-Ji.i 1J have also completed at<lb/>
least 15 quarter hours in so-<lb/>
ciology, Including a basic<lb/>
course in statistics or methods<lb/>
ni sot ill research.<lb/>
Names of all students Who<lb/>
qualify should be given to Bar-<lb/>
ry Blick, President, Dr. Melvln<lb/>
I Williams, faculty sponsor; or<lb/>
Mrs. i:iiabeth Jordan, secre-<lb/>
tarj Room 22G, Old Austin.<lb/>
If ou or a friend qualifies.<lb/>
notify one of the above repre-<lb/>
sentatives of Alpha Kappa Del-<lb/>
ta iin mediately.<lb/>
Employment Guide<lb/>
Compiles Job List<lb/>
Ot 50,000 .summer jobs open to<lb/>
tudents are listed in the<lb/>
tt8 Summer Employment Di-<lb/>
' just off the r "ess.<lb/>
Empl yen throughout the Unit-<lb/>
' ? tea and Cauada who llsl<lb/>
immer job openings include<lb/>
summer camps, nati nal<lb/>
ummer theatres, restau-<lb/>
iches, tnd business. Thay<lb/>
plications now.<lb/>
re  more summer jobs<lb/>
than last year. Salaries<lb/>
in many jobs?an i'1"<lb/>
? $100 to $200 for ttie season.<lb/>
unselora, resort workers,<lb/>
?? h?lp continue to be in<lb/>
tnand. Scuba divers, ham<lb/>
special education stu-<lb/>
fly-tying and origami<lb/>
are among many oihers<lb/>
Linda Moyei and Undsaj Bowan perform in "Snowangel" Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday nights at 8:15 p.m. in IT 201. "Comin' Through The Rye"<lb/>
is the other one-acl b be presented bj the Workshop Theater these two<lb/>
nights,<lb/>
Added<lb/>
Chills,<lb/>
Holiday Brings<lb/>
Drinks, Falls<lb/>
need<lb/>
i ?,<lb/>
tor<lb/>
sent<lb/>
Ohii<lb/>
immer Emplor-ment Direc-<lb/>
tnay he orcerel by mail;<lb/>
S3 to Naticnal Directory Scr-<lb/>
Dept. c, Box 320C5, Cincinnati,<lb/>
5232 Mark "i ash" for first-<lb/>
iailing in December.<lb/>
Winl "(i l"<lb/>
ville. Manj udents found<lb/>
v caused by the<lb/>
? leel. and snow, a uon-<lb/>
hance to catch up on their<lb/>
d drinking.<lb/>
i: . residents of the University<lb/>
? Greenville found themselves<lb/>
downed trees and power<lb/>
as though they were crossing<lb/>
mine fields.<lb/>
The weather also brought a re-<lb/>
change of conversational<lb/>
? .pic- from "B that professor<lb/>
B ?. Is ?' cold outside<lb/>
Recreational activities were<lb/>
? i the conditions. The hard<lb/>
 sledding conditions<lb/>
Men on the Hill bor-<lb/>
and slid down<lb/>
the embankment in front of Jones.<lb/>
Anothei enterprising young man<lb/>
, his car and pulled<lb/>
iwn Clark Street.<lb/>
The more (taring would let the<lb/>
.slick roads turn their cars for<lb/>
them, son With less than de-<lb/>
sirable result ?<lb/>
The power failure plunged the<lb/>
campus mto panic as the fresh-<lb/>
men girl awaited their first pan-<lb/>
ty-raid. The inclement weather,<lb/>
alas, foiled this plot.<lb/>
The stalwarts in the Buccaneer<lb/>
offlce ed to pass the time in<lb/>
son" until candles could be brought<lb/>
ln, and work on their deadline con-<lb/>
tinued. , , m<lb/>
Students also found that the storm<lb/>
WRC Ruling<lb/>
nuarj 9, 1968<lb/>
Academic Record: 123 hours, 269<lb/>
 D ? 2.181 average.<lb/>
' n, cinlinary Record: Visiting af-<lb/>
?.r hours- l demerit, 3 minutes<lb/>
"  a?!ien 3 minutes late af-<lb/>
 doors Were locked and wearing<lb/>
a del ents, broke closed<lb/>
'fn in'trow after being<lb/>
 !fJemSite. 3 minutes late<lb/>
SS doors locked demerit<lb/>
I of incident: December 14.<lb/>
Ba -ic Charge: Stealing<lb/>
Specific charge: Selling a stolen<lb/>
textbook<lb/>
Verdict: Guilty ?,??j<lb/>
Deposition: Official reprimand<lb/>
;ind definite suspeon until the<lb/>
end of Winter Quarter 1968.<lb/>
ECU Students Attend<lb/>
Ravi Shankar Recital<lb/>
involved them in aiding the citi-<lb/>
zens of Greenville. The brothers<lb/>
of Sibma Chi Delta and Phi Al-<lb/>
pha Sigma directed traffic in the<lb/>
snow when loss of power blacken-<lb/>
ed traffic lights.<lb/>
Some students living off camp as<lb/>
or in sorority or fraternity houses<lb/>
had just regained electricity Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Rally To Raleigh<lb/>
MRC will be chartering four<lb/>
buses to take students to the<lb/>
EC-NC State Game, Friday,<lb/>
Jan. 19. These buses will be<lb/>
available for men on the hill<lb/>
&amp; their dates with second prior-<lb/>
ity to other students.<lb/>
Money is due in the MRC<lb/>
Treasurer's office, Scott Dorm,<lb/>
by 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan-<lb/>
uary 16. Cost is $1.50 per per-<lb/>
son. State Is on semester<lb/>
break so possibly EC can get<lb/>
more students to the game than<lb/>
N.C. State!<lb/>
Further information may be<lb/>
obtained from the MRC Treas-<lb/>
urer's Office.<lb/>
CONCERT NOTICE<lb/>
The String Orchestra per-<lb/>
forms Wednesday at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
in the recital hall of the music<lb/>
building.<lb/>
A number of East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents braved now and ice to at-<lb/>
tend a lecture-demonstration and<lb/>
recital presented by world renown-<lb/>
ed Indian sitanst Ravi Shankar in<lb/>
I's Memorial Auditorium<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday nights.<lb/>
Wednesday nieht'8 lecture-dem-<lb/>
onstration included an explanation<lb/>
of different kinds of Indian music.<lb/>
taped examples of ra; i.s and vari-<lb/>
ous other forms, and demoastra-<lb/>
tions by Shankar on sitar, his<lb/>
drummer, and a woman on a dul-<lb/>
cimer-like instrument.<lb/>
Indian Musical Scale<lb/>
After an opening prayer to the<lb/>
Guru and th lighting of in<lb/>
which burned throughout tl<lb/>
ing, Shankar. seated on a quilt-<lb/>
ivered platform, explained the<lb/>
and scale dii of In-<lb/>
dian music. Measures, he said.<lb/>
from three to 103 beats, most<lb/>
of them falling in'o the four to<lb/>
16 group. The Indian musical<lb/>
? mj ised of 22 notes, 10 full<lb/>
? otes and 12 mi?<lb/>
This facel was Ului trated by a<lb/>
demonstration in which the drum-<lb/>
mer imitated the sound cf Shank-<lb/>
ar's voice on two small round<lb/>
drum . which he tunec with a silver<lb/>
hammer.<lb/>
Deposit Fees Rise<lb/>
Students in residence Spring<lb/>
Quarter 1968 desiring dormi-<lb/>
tory rooms for the Fall Quarter<lb/>
1)68 will he required to make<lb/>
a SfiO.OO deposit in the Casher's<lb/>
Office between the dates of<lb/>
March 18 and March 22.<lb/>
This Involves a change in pro-<lb/>
cedure since, in the past, a<lb/>
S10.00 deposit was required at<lb/>
the time the student signed up<lb/>
for a room with the balance of<lb/>
the deposit ($50.00) to be paid<lb/>
by June 15.<lb/>
Students making the ?60.000<lb/>
deposit between the dates of<lb/>
March 18 and 22 will be allowed<lb/>
to sign up for a dormitory room<lb/>
during the week of March 25-<lb/>
29. The actual dates on whicn<lb/>
each classification may sign<lb/>
up for a room and the proced-<lb/>
ure to be followed will be given<lb/>
at a latr date. The Dean of<lb/>
Women's office will inform the<lb/>
women students as to the pro-<lb/>
cedure they are to follow, and<lb/>
the Housing Office will inform<lb/>
the men students.<lb/>
Disciplined Improvision<lb/>
Shankar explained that Indian<lb/>
deal music la not written<lb/>
down, that it is a form of improvi-<lb/>
on requiring rigid discipline.<lb/>
The group performed a 15 u 20<lb/>
minute portion of a raga, a lorm<lb/>
which i usually at least one hour<lb/>
of improvisation in three parts: a<lb/>
mam theme, a response in which<lb/>
the the drums, and a<lb/>
a to the primary theme.<lb/>
Lecl irinj on .he sitar, Shankar<lb/>
noted the ab ence of harmony and<lb/>
counterpoint in Indian music, dis-<lb/>
monstrating some of<lb/>
the sounds which can be produced<lb/>
on the instrument. He explained<lb/>
? the 22 are tuned in<lb/>
ps of lour, six, and<lb/>
i tve strings, to three different<lb/>
elen music.<lb/>
(i Indian<lb/>
music is now being accepted on its<lb/>
own ? er than as part of<lb/>
leal trend, add-<lb/>
that he hoped it would continue<lb/>
? i spread,<lb/>
ted three<lb/>
ins irom the audi-<lb/>
enci during the<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Stadium Expansion<lb/>
Contracts Awarded<lb/>
Coi bavi been awarded for<lb/>
fir t  es ol an expansion pro-<lb/>
ecl which will enlarge the set.ting<lb/>
capacity of Ficklen Stadium to<lb/>
about 20.000.<lb/>
Vice Pre ident F. D. Duncui said<lb/>
the Welch Pile Driving Corporation<lb/>
of Virginia Beach, Va won the<lb/>
contract for foundation piling with<lb/>
a bid of $29,750.<lb/>
He said Chapin Construction<lb/>
Company of Greenville has the<lb/>
contract at $8,049 for removal of<lb/>
temporary bkachers to make rcom<lb/>
for the new concrete-and-steel<lb/>
north stands.<lb/>
The Welch and Chapin contracts,<lb/>
according to Duncan, should be ful-<lb/>
filled within about 45 days.<lb/>
Actual construction of the north<lb/>
stands, and expansion of the press<lb/>
box atop the south stands, will be<lb/>
started as soon as possible after<lb/>
the pile-driving work is completed.<lb/>
Officials say the entire project<lb/>
will be finished in time for next<lb/>
football season. The stadium's pre-<lb/>
sent capacity, including temporary<lb/>
seating, is 16,000.<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/>
1806 DICKINSON AVE. 758-1964<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Students Sporte Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
?K<lb/>
?I<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
'I<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i!<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
??<lb/>
u<lb/>
niversity 1-Hour Cleaners<lb/>
CORNER W. 4th and GREENE STREETS<lb/>
lit<lb/>
'Speed With Quality"<lb/>
HONDA TO BE GIVEN AWAY<lb/>
Friday, February 2nd, 6 p. m.<lb/>
STOP BY TO REGISTER NO PURCHASE<lb/>
NECESSARY<lb/>
-<lb/>
yrYrTY?yYYVtVY1flf'll'Y'ltJlt'r??????M???????<lb/>
fr?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039323_0006"/><lb/>
6?East Carolinian?Tuesday. January 16, 1968<lb/>
II<lb/>
I i<lb/>
V ' . ?<lb/>
VI<lb/>
'Mi'<lb/>
Earl Thompson, former cage star at Sue Bennet Junior College and Kppe<lb/>
Hieh. is uni' of EC's mosi outstanding players ii tln season.<lb/>
Sports Lowe Down<lb/>
Bucs Meet W&amp;L Here<lb/>
By John Lowe<lb/>
When this paper comes out. the<lb/>
Bucs wil' have played their fourth<lb/>
straight road game last night. The<lb/>
road trip was only supposed to be<lb/>
a three game trip, but Saturday<lb/>
night's postponement moved it out<lb/>
to a four game trip.<lb/>
The Pirates, winners in two out<lb/>
of three games on their road trip<lb/>
will try for three out of four in<lb/>
their best showing on the road in<lb/>
many years. The Pirates, after<lb/>
their make-up game with Washing-<lb/>
ton &amp; Lee, play N.C. State in Ra-<lb/>
leigh on Saturday and East Tennes-<lb/>
see State the following Monday.<lb/>
Need Wins Badly<lb/>
The Bucs need wins over the<lb/>
Citadel and W&amp;L to keep up their<lb/>
momentum for their clash with<lb/>
N.C. LJtate.<lb/>
Anyone Guess Who<lb/>
Now that Vinrginia Tech has join-<lb/>
ed the yet unnamed ECU tourney<lb/>
to round the field out to seven<lb/>
teams, I wonder what school will<lb/>
become the eighth and final con-<lb/>
testant. I've heard the names of<lb/>
Clemson and the Air Force Acad-<lb/>
emy floating, but thai Is mostly<lb/>
pure 2ueswork. No one really<lb/>
knows except for .e selection co: l-<lb/>
mittee which Is headed by Coach<lb/>
Quinn.<lb/>
How abou ii Coach, who's it<lb/>
onna be?<lb/>
Prosh in Action<lb/>
The Baby Bucs will be playing<lb/>
nst Chowan Junior College to-<lb/>
night. The Buc will be seeking<lb/>
their second straight win and their<lb/>
second win over Chowan,<lb/>
The Baby Bucs will also travel<lb/>
up to Raleigh in a return engage-<lb/>
ment with the Wolf lets who beat<lb/>
them In an earlier same by two<lb/>
points at 81-79.<lb/>
Indoor Track Team on the Go<lb/>
The Pirates sent eleven men up<lb/>
to Washington, D.C for National<lb/>
Indoor track meet, and then on ix<lb/>
Richmond for the Chesterfield In-<lb/>
' tiona meet, This is the largest<lb/>
contingent, invited to such meets<lb/>
fi m East Carolina. The East Caro-<lb/>
lina track program is on the move.<lb/>
Baby Buc Cagers Win<lb/>
Over Papooses 106-81<lb/>
The Baby Bucs, sparked by Jim<lb/>
Gregory's 30 points and Kenny<lb/>
Hartzler's 24 point.s, completed a<lb/>
sweep over William &amp; Mary by belt-<lb/>
ing the Papooses by 106-81. It<lb/>
marked the third time this season<lb/>
that the Baby Bucs had gone over<lb/>
the century mark in recording a<lb/>
fin.<lb/>
In the first half, the Baby Bucs<lb/>
held onto a 49-41 lead and then<lb/>
came out roaring in the second half<lb/>
as they outscored the Papooses by<lb/>
17 points to win going away.<lb/>
Besides Gregory with 30, and<lb/>
Hartzler with 24, Chuck Lemmons<lb/>
had 12 points.<lb/>
For the Papoo i Steve Da<lb/>
had 27 p ' :<lb/>
1 'd 13 poi<lb/>
The Baby Bucs n me will be<lb/>
on January 16, at Chowan Junior<lb/>
College The Baby Bucs defeated<lb/>
the Braves In their opener by 90-63.<lb/>
ECU 49 57 ? 106<lb/>
W&amp;M 41 40 ? 81<lb/>
ECU-106?Gregory 30, Dunn 9,<lb/>
Wyche 9, Hartzler 24, M.Killop 7,<lb/>
Logan 5, Haubenreiser 8, Daugher-<lb/>
ty, Lemmons 12, Sermons 2.<lb/>
W&amp;M-81?Anderson 9, Janacaitis<lb/>
13, Kins 7, Brown 8, Dodge 27,<lb/>
nan 5. Arnea<lb/>
4. Johnson 2, Lynch 5.<lb/>
1, Parham<lb/>
Miller's Free Throw Seals<lb/>
Pirates'Win Over Indians<lb/>
Bj JOHN LOWE<lb/>
Tom Miller sank two loul<lb/>
for a 71-67 lead with ten seconds<lb/>
left in the game and it proves to<lb/>
be the difference as the Pirates<lb/>
hung ?n t.) win by one point at<lb/>
71-70. over William and Mary.<lb/>
Captain Vlnce Colbe.i had led<lb/>
the Pirates to a 14 point bulge, and<lb/>
then m the span of 2:30. he was<lb/>
called for lour straight fouls and<lb/>
fouled out of the game with 12:26<lb/>
From that point on, the Pi-<lb/>
rates had to struggle before finally<lb/>
sealing the win over the Indians on<lb/>
Miller's two clutch free throws.<lb/>
Be ides pulling their SC record<lb/>
up to 2-3, and their overall mark<lb/>
to 4-6, the Burs wen- the first SC<lb/>
team to beat the Indians on their<lb/>
home c ? ? '  i '?" '? 65 ?<lb/>
At the star'<lb/>
lead changed back and forth with<lb/>
both teams taking tour point leads<lb/>
 ;?. mem, With a little<lb/>
. : two minutes left In the first<lb/>
half, the Bucs went on a 14-2 spurt<lb/>
to take a 34-26 h ill ime le id Col-<lb/>
bei: eight ol the Pirates 14<lb/>
points in the h half-<lb/>
time.<lb/>
hi the second half, the Bucs be-<lb/>
gan to pull away as they outscored<lb/>
the Indians 11-5 and forged Into a<lb/>
45-3 load With 15:10 loft in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Seconds later, Colbert commit led<lb/>
his second foul, and then in the<lb/>
next 2:30. he fouled out with 12:26<lb/>
left in the game. The Indians, us-<lb/>
ing a full-court press, fought back<lb/>
and cut the Buc lead to a 49-44<lb/>
with 11:45 left, on a layup by<lb/>
Daughterty.<lb/>
The Bucs continued to fight as<lb/>
the lead went back oul to ix on i<lb/>
Charlie Alford tap-in, but William<lb/>
.v Mary sliced the lead back down<lb/>
to live at 53-49 The Hues buill the<lb/>
Ii back up to 56-49 with 8 45 left<lb/>
n. Earl Thompson hit on b I re<lb/>
a and Miller hit on a jumper<lb/>
The le id stayed fairly even until<lb/>
jini Rama and Bob Sherwood hi!<lb/>
r William Si Mary to cut it down<lb/>
. (J4. ,i<lb/>
With 1:45 left, Sherwood hil on<lb/>
a rebound to make it 68-67 The<lb/>
Pirates tried t?? control the ball and<lb/>
Alton! was fouled with 34 left. He<lb/>
hit on the first shot ol a one-on-one<lb/>
mailer; to make it 69-67. William<lb/>
&amp; Mary then missed on a one-on-<lb/>
one and the Hue came up with the<lb/>
?ball- With ten seconds left,<lb/>
Miller was fouled and he then won<lb/>
me with his tw free throws.<lb/>
C<lb/>
. i<lb/>
14.<lb/>
Iv<lb/>
Sherwood hit with ?<lb/>
M and wa fouled. Hi<lb/>
the shot and get a i<lb/>
I r a bucket, but th<lb/>
i in and the Pirates won b<lb/>
Charlie Alford led the Bu<lb/>
s with ii' point Colbi ri<lb/>
18 and Miller added 10.<lb/>
Hob Sherwood was high<lb/>
 the game with 2 p<lb/>
? . follow) d i v Jim Pan<lb/>
m Panneton with 14 m<lb/>
? : j with 10.<lb/>
FCU 34 37 ? 7:<lb/>
W&amp;M 26 44 ?<lb/>
KCU-71?Thompson 6, All<lb/>
li.ert 18, Modlin 6, MUlei<lb/>
landlelt 3, Campbell 3<lb/>
W&amp;M-70 Sherwood 21.<lb/>
u la 11 y io Downing .<lb/>
Tavi<lb/>
nt 2<lb/>
John<lb/>
R<lb/>
VPl Joins Tourney<lb/>
Virginia Tech has become the<lb/>
ixth 'cam to enter the East Caro-<lb/>
lina ity holiday basketball<lb/>
tourn i cheduled for next i)i -<lb/>
cember<lb/>
The VPl '? am joins Baylor ol the<lb/>
Southwesl Conference, Cornell of<lb/>
the Ivy League, Delaware of the<lb/>
Mid-Atlantic Conference. Virginia<lb/>
ol the Atlantic Coast Conference,<lb/>
and William &amp; Mary of the Sou-<lb/>
thern Conference.<lb/>
??The addition of Virginia Tech<lb/>
to our field adds to the growing<lb/>
prestige of the tournament Dr.<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins, president of East<lb/>
Carolina said.<lb/>
"With the addition t one other<lb/>
Buccaneers Defeat Bulldogs<lb/>
19-10 In Weekend Wrestling<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
wrestling team defeated the Citadel<lb/>
last Saturday night in Charleston<lb/>
S.C by 19-10. It was the first loss<lb/>
in 13 matches for the Bulldogs, the<lb/>
defending southern Conference<lb/>
champions.<lb/>
The Buc matmen won every<lb/>
match but four, losing two and<lb/>
drawing two others. The Pirates<lb/>
are now 2-1 on the season. The<lb/>
only team to defeat the Pirates.<lb/>
N.C. State, has lost to both Pirate<lb/>
victims, Duke and the Citadel.<lb/>
Summary:<lb/>
123 lbs.?Tom Ellenberger (ECU'<lb/>
defeated Gordon Brandis, 4-0.<lb/>
130 lbs.?John Wood (C) defeated<lb/>
Howard Metgar, 4-3.<lb/>
137 lbs.?Tun Ehenuerger iECU'<lb/>
defeated Mike Light, 6-5.<lb/>
145 lbs?Ron Rich (ECU) defeat-<lb/>
ed John Childress, 4-2.<lb/>
152 lbs.?EH Steers (C defeated<lb/>
Stan Bastian, 1-0.<lb/>
160 lbs Sam McDowell 'ECU'<lb/>
defeated Tom Bull. 4-2.<lb/>
167 lbs.?Cliff Bernard 'ECU'<lb/>
drew with Mike Armstrong, 2-2<lb/>
177 lbs.?Mike Mi y (ECU) de-<lb/>
feated Wyndham Manning. 5-4.<lb/>
Unlimited ? Wayne Lineberry<lb/>
(ECU drew with Bill McKillop,<lb/>
1-1.<lb/>
team to 1 ompl<lb/>
field, I think our first toi<lb/>
onk with any In thi<lb/>
We have a wide range of<lb/>
i'al representation and every<lb/>
? ti red expects to have an<lb/>
-landing team next year<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn, who has<lb/>
as chairman of the selection<lb/>
mittee, said there are several out<lb/>
atnding teams involved in c<lb/>
(?ration for the final spot<lb/>
? urnament.<lb/>
"I feel we le been extr<lb/>
foi tunate in lining up tc 1 mpe-<lb/>
tit ion wo have for the tour<lb/>
because many of the tourna:<lb/>
have their fields lined up I<lb/>
three years in advance<lb/>
"I'm very happy vo get VPL<lb/>
I hey expect to have one of ' i<lb/>
tter tean s In 968-69<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins srJd the four-<lb/>
1 ommitee which is judging the cor<lb/>
1.1 t to name the tournament is not<lb/>
 Its econd phase in reducing the<lb/>
number of contest entries.<lb/>
"The list Is now dovn to 20 pro-<lb/>
posed names, and we hope to have<lb/>
.1 consensus on the name for the<lb/>
? lurnament within a few days Dr<lb/>
Jenkins said.<lb/>
The winner of the contest will<lb/>
a $100 check from East Carolii<lb/>
president.<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co.<lb/>
5 Points<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Member F. D. 1. C<lb/>
Join The J$? Crowd<lb/>
Pizza M<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/>
JANUARY 17th GAME<lb/>
WITH W&amp;L HAS BEEN<lb/>
CANCELED AGAIN.<lb/>
Students and<lb/>
Faculty<lb/>
Living "Off<lb/>
Campus" <lb/>
Can NOW Get "CHARLES" Potato Chips<lb/>
Delivered To Their Homes or Apts.<lb/>
Tel. This Aft. or To-nite for Regular Home Delivery of<lb/>
"Fresh" Potato Chips in The Stay Fresh 1 lb. Can.<lb/>
Dial PL 8-1948<lb/>
CONTACT FELLOW STUDENT JIMMY SMITH<lb/>
or Go By 301 Biltmore Street.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
$<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
The D<lb/>
e uen<lb/>
401 E. 9th Street<lb/>
By special request from so many stu-<lb/>
dents, we are now having supper-conver-<lb/>
sation groups four nights wet kly. Monday-<lb/>
Thursday nights at 5:30. Also, because of<lb/>
the excellent response, the menu will be<lb/>
different each night?and Hie "conversa-<lb/>
tion" features will change nightly.<lb/>
COMING UP:?talk about "I a Wom-<lb/>
an discussion of "Discrimination at<lb/>
ECU "changing theological patterns<lb/>
Catholic-Jewish-Protestant dialogue, plans<lb/>
for a week-end in New York City (enter-<lb/>
tainment and enlightment) : entertainment<lb/>
features; and some nights, just food and<lb/>
relaxation.<lb/>
Welcome to ALL students of any race,<lb/>
creed, color, or faith.<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
S?i??MMMMMMMMiiiiMMiMi.MfrmTrTTTmTITTTTTTTTTTTMM?<lb/>
Bj BEV JOT<lb/>
Ushment 0<lb/>
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closing h<lb/>
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Linda Pic<lb/>
legislator<lb/>
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a done<lb/>
to be op<lb/>
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hman le<lb/>
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dertag tl<lb/>
other<lb/>
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Bradn<lb/>
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? Nam debal<lb/>
numbers to<lb/>
bate over the<lb/>
everyone, tl<lb/>
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p ?? building<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
The . sue was resol<lb/>
, ? ? ? i South Viet<lb/>
national int<lb/>
r (tates. On tl<lb/>
tide, Dr. John East 0;<lb/>
b aying, "Th<lb/>
of freedom is a 8<lb/>
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in Viet Nni<lb/>
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bad<lb/>
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military<lb/>
demands n<lb/>
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to prop<lb/>
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In Viet Nam<lb/>
sible alterna<lb/>
closing tin<lb/>
destruction 1<lb/>
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baU-d the question<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039323_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>