<?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="00039370_0001"/>
el;<lb/>
21<lb/>
iproved<lb/>
don't think their<lb/>
( showings mean<lb/>
3 Oil! Wfir?<lb/>
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J P I' i N  I<lb/>
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'OITER<lb/>
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LOVE<lb/>
Toda<lb/>
?8 tml in<lb/>
SHIP<lb/>
ect<lb/>
of two<lb/>
: collar<lb/>
ncl the<lb/>
red ?<lb/>
a host<lb/>
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last Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
r0iume XLIV<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, N. C, Tuesday, October 15, L968<lb/>
Number 0<lb/>
Hottelet Reports Vietnam<lb/>
S&amp; Eyewitness Of (Conflict<lb/>
i c. Hottelet, who has es-<lb/>
hnnself in the top rank<lb/>
correspondents and politi-<lb/>
caj servers oi<lb/>
 ECU on<lb/>
for an<lb/>
Wright<lb/>
t-v<lb/>
<lb/>
md radi<lb/>
Monday. O<lb/>
tddress at B 00<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
? tanding CBS New i<lb/>
was assigned to Vietnam<lb/>
tical summer months ot<lb/>
Well known for his radio and<lb/>
 of the United Nation,<lb/>
News, during his tay he<lb/>
 at first hand the peo-<lb/>
i mail their problems<lb/>
they are solving them.<lb/>
 : with military and po-<lb/>
, ? .md also spent con-<lb/>
 tune in side-by-side, day-<lb/>
living with combat GIs.<lb/>
 return, Dick Hottelet<lb/>
a kept busy covering the<lb/>
Nations sessions for CBS<lb/>
eluding the debate on the<lb/>
ieli dispute. Bis reports<lb/>
? on nation-wide television<lb/>
oi the regular CBS news<lb/>
and whenever something<lb/>
riy newsworthy occurs in<lb/>
Nations.<lb/>
his assignment in i960 bo<lb/>
e United Nations for CBS<lb/>
Hottelet has been on<lb/>
ii for van hi: crisis at the<lb/>
? rs of the world organi-<lb/>
n mg them former Soviet<lb/>
Khrushchev's tumult- -tir-<lb/>
nce and the diplon<lb/>
over Cuba, the C<lb/>
 Vietnam.<lb/>
? ; i ned rep rter .<lb/>
wid! experienc In his<lb/>
?? h-Pi Ida: m ws pro-<lb/>
? from New York<lb/>
and m his Sunday<lb/>
news broadcast on theBS Radio<lb/>
Network<lb/>
During the last few year . Hotte-<lb/>
!ei has reported for numerous CBS<lb/>
Newi  ci il ana the CBS R<lb/>
i ? i He ha covei ed do-<lb/>
i i ' tories, uch as Presiden-<lb/>
tial conventions, campaigns and<lb/>
i lection and the integration pr b<lb/>
lem, while foreign assignments<lb/>
have ikon him to Latin America,<lb/>
Africa, Europe and the Middle<lb/>
p fi re his U.N gnmenl.<lb/>
Hottelet erved as Bonn (Germanyi<lb/>
correspondent from 1951 to 1956<lb/>
the second ot two extended tours<lb/>
of duty in Germanv. After grad-<lb/>
uatins from Boklvn College In<lb/>
New York. Hottelet first entered<lb/>
Germany in 1937 as a graduate<lb/>
student at the University of Berlin.<lb/>
He broke off his studies to join<lb/>
the United Press Bureau there.<lb/>
Even before World War II broke<lb/>
out, newsman Hottelet trudged be-<lb/>
Ide Nazi troops goose-stepping into<lb/>
Czechoslovakia, then entered Poland<lb/>
with the first wave of war corres-<lb/>
pondents after Hitlt<lb/>
crossed the border.<lb/>
Too outspoken in his positii<lb/>
? - i Na 'i Hottelet wa ai r 11 'd bj<lb/>
Reich in 1941 on a trump-<lb/>
d-wn ? After<lb/>
mont tlitai y conJ ? ?<lb/>
? he notorious Alexander platz and<lb/>
Mo he was exchanged for<lb/>
,i Nazi new man held by the U.S<lb/>
Juste Department. H <lb/>
o ? ears working for the Of-<lb/>
. of War information in London,<lb/>
I Italy<lb/>
The n  rtei (oined CBS N<lb/>
in ?  . try, 1944, i"<lb/>
Ninth Air Force bomber I<lb/>
attacked Utah Beach six minutes<lb/>
before H-hour, he emerged with<lb/>
the firs! report ot the sea-borne<lb/>
Ion oi Normandy.<lb/>
I iter in he war Hottelet, assign-<lb/>
i I to the U.S. First Army, covered<lb/>
he Battle ol the Bulge and then<lb/>
made the Rhine crossing. He para-<lb/>
chuted to safety when his plane<lb/>
tick by enemy flak.<lb/>
in other important reporting<lb/>
ob , Hottelet has covered the<lb/>
Geneva conferences on Vietnam,<lb/>
the 1955 four power summit meet-<lb/>
ing, the c ronation and elections<lb/>
in F: gland, Presidential visits to<lb/>
Latin America, the move toward<lb/>
independent government in Poland<lb/>
after the Hungarian revolt, and the<lb/>
confl ci n the Congo.<lb/>
Ticket i free) are available in<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
NOTED NEWSCASTER?Richard C. Hottelet, renowned newscaster and<lb/>
commentator, will be on campus Ocober 28 for a lecture at eight p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium. Tickets will be required for the show<lb/>
be picked up in the Central Ticket Office this week,<lb/>
will be assessed.<lb/>
No service charge<lb/>
British Blockbuster Musical Hits<lb/>
EC Stage With 'Oliver' Opening<lb/>
OLIVER, the big British block-<lb/>
ter musical hit, based on<lb/>
Charles Dickens' famous OLIVER<lb/>
rWIST, opens the 1968-69 season<lb/>
of the Fast Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
Oct iber 22-25.<lb/>
rhi presentation will not only<lb/>
include the show's abundant songs<lb/>
I . : ime popular favoi<lb/>
ignal cast's record-al-<lb/>
bum and many playings on radio?<lb/>
d D ken compelling tale of<lb/>
e v n-k-house boy who became a<lb/>
lV, . but also the spectacu-<lb/>
lar scenic effects, representing<lb/>
London's acrid underworld of the<lb/>
nineeenth century, that contribut-<lb/>
ed to the show's success in New<lb/>
York for two years in 1963<lb/>
1964. and in London for five ye<lb/>
inning in i960.<lb/>
The bounding talents of one m<lb/>
Lionel Bart, supplied the book, the<lb/>
music and the lyrics that tu<lb/>
Dickens' darkly poignant story into<lb/>
this dollickmg musical con<lb/>
Bart, an Englishman, transform-<lb/>
ed the grim elements oi D<lb/>
tale into light entertainment with<lb/>
only minor adjustments here and<lb/>
ere. The squalid scenes painted<lb/>
by the novelisl show up in the mu-<lb/>
sical as a tavern for rowdy revel-<lb/>
ry, the bleak workhouse where or-<lb/>
phans are penned up and starved<lb/>
becomes the site for a chorus of<lb/>
ragamuffins, beating spooas in<lb/>
empty cruel dishes, to belt out a<lb/>
rousing chorus of "Food. Glorious<lb/>
Pood Pagin's lair is chanced fron<lb/>
i sinister hideout into a fairy-tale<lb/>
ogre's den.<lb/>
! yndon Fuller, a Kinston school-<lb/>
boqs, will be seen in thi .cal's<lb/>
ippealing title role, Mark Ramsey<lb/>
Fag in. the droll professor of<lb/>
Pickpocketry who tells his urchin-<lb/>
, 11 to "Shut up and drink yer<lb/>
In Marchia Edmundson as the<lb/>
ted and sultry Nancy fwith the<lb/>
ortunity to ing thi bow's<lb/>
is t r h ong 'A I ?ig As He<lb/>
? Me" ind CI Fox as<lb/>
  Siki<lb/>
mpkins v, -  the<lb/>
ley Artful Doge Jim Flem-<lb/>
Mr, Bumble th<lb/>
? : use beadli Sail VS<lb/>
collab irator in underfeeding or-<lb/>
phan : Gregory Smith and Nancy<lb/>
Keller, the . piteful family f un-<lb/>
takers to whom the quaking<lb/>
Oliver is briefly apprenticed: and<lb/>
Cullen Johnson as the wealthy Mr.<lb/>
Bi ? olow. All are ECU students.<lb/>
?- it the least import. irt of<lb/>
ihe cast will be the I barrel-<lb/>
I scampering kin portraying<lb/>
t first the denizens oi th work-<lb/>
house, an dlater Pagin' -upils;<lb/>
? thievery.<lb/>
Car Wash, Ice Machine Rank<lb/>
High In MRC Improvements<lb/>
"Hill"<lb/>
i ?n ? nuns campus symbolizes the spirit of the<lb/>
PROGRESS ON IIIIX-The look of the new dorm on thmen s . i j roin.operaled laundry and<lb/>
thin fall, as new facilities are being introduced every wees. "?????? r a?? k- ????<lb/>
th(   a ?iH?r.?.iiv  cantons wag has soj<lb/>
?vruivc.cta m mi.i.? mut- ?"? ?  - eik Notable are tlie new ruin-opriaKu  .?<lb/>
Is fall, as new facilities are being introduced ever wct? ? npw resldellco hall be named<lb/>
? new basketball courts. Incidentally, a campus wag has Mij.j.eMen<lb/>
iv.I ?iLa iI? . <lb/>
? ?? rt lni I1MII VUUI ?.T. ?"?? ?<lb/>
Gardn r since it is opposite Scott<lb/>
ECU Sends 22-Member Delegation<lb/>
To State Student Legislature<lb/>
By JOHN SCHOFIELD<lb/>
in February, the thirty-second<lb/>
annual session of the North Caro-<lb/>
Una state student legislature will<lb/>
 held. As the name Implies, this<lb/>
ci; OeneraJ Assembly com-<lb/>
I delegations from most of<lb/>
and universities with-<lb/>
? Oi North Carolina.<lb/>
a long and sometime<lb/>
il hi tory The firsl i es-<lb/>
In 1945. S.S.L. passed a resolu-<lb/>
tion to invite -negro colleges.<lb/>
which drew much criticism from<lb/>
l(T0SS the state. The decision held<lb/>
and because of it. in 1947. toe first<lb/>
uld only session In Its historj was<lb/>
T held Even with this Interrup-<lb/>
  , North Carolina State Stu-<lb/>
on-<lb/>
kind in the<lb/>
s am<lb/>
!<lb/>
President of the S.S.L. for 1968-69.<lb/>
This year's delegation of twenty-<lb/>
two members will be the largest<lb/>
ever sent from East Carolina. With<lb/>
the impetus preserved from the<lb/>
thirteen who will be returning from<lb/>
last year's delegation, the group<lb/>
?ill be aiming for the Best Bill and<lb/>
? Ion awards.<lb/>
m .n effort to pressrv the fine<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
ed, as mai<lb/>
ldr<lb/>
tllna has<lb/>
s<lb/>
deem will<lb/>
?id on Thurs-<lb/>
ALnnlications<lb/>
By DORIS FOSTER<lb/>
Recently a poll of achievement<lb/>
was taken by the Men's Residence<lb/>
Council a.s to the desired improve-<lb/>
ments of the men's dorms by the<lb/>
men themselves. Ranking top<lb/>
among the many suggestions are<lb/>
the installation of weight rooms, a<lb/>
coin-operated car wash, and ice<lb/>
machines in all the dorm.s. The<lb/>
MRC is now working on these sug-<lb/>
gestions.<lb/>
Dedicated to making Itself truly<lb/>
representative of the men they<lb/>
serve, the MRC ha.s brought about<lb/>
many improvements. Among these<lb/>
is the coin-operated launderette<lb/>
now located in Belk dormitory. This<lb/>
serves as an iron-TV room and<lb/>
laundry pick-up location. Another<lb/>
MRC project, the paved basketball<lb/>
court, consisting of two back-to-<lb/>
back courts, Ls near completion. The<lb/>
MRC is responsible for bringing the<lb/>
validity of these improvements to<lb/>
the attention of the administration,<lb/>
which financed the projects<lb/>
Formerly thought of as a body<lb/>
that did little or nothing, Dean<lb/>
Rowe. advisor. ;ind the present<lb/>
MRC mernb striving to fos-<lb/>
Idea of going forward with<lb/>
ents and bt<lb/>
x eacn m<lb/>
"the hill<lb/>
il. t "<lb/>
v.RC arc<lb/>
improve the Imi<lb/>
V. Re .<lb/>
st? ve Hall, vice presidei I N rmajn<lb/>
Masters, recording secret Tohn-<lb/>
i y Corros, commun cre-<lb/>
tary; and Roy Range treasurer.<lb/>
w. iking on the student level with<lb/>
the council Is ther advisor C. C.<lb/>
Rowe. assistant Dean of Men. striv-<lb/>
ing to make this year ttM best.<lb/>
the organization is on 'one<lb/>
as if- support.<lb/>
Voting Begins For<lb/>
Homecoming Queen<lb/>
Elections for the Homecoming<lb/>
Queen finalists will be held Tues-<lb/>
day and Wednesday, October 15 and<lb/>
16, in the Union Lobby. Pictures of<lb/>
all candidates will be posted to the<lb/>
Union on the days of the voting,<lb/>
which will be conducted by ballots<lb/>
instead of pennyvoting.<lb/>
Six finalists will be selected from<lb/>
approximately forty to fifty candi-<lb/>
dates, and they will ride on a surrey<lb/>
type float provided by the Industrial<lb/>
Arts Department in the Homecom-<lb/>
ing Parade<lb/>
The float, plus a horse-drawn<lb/>
carriage provided by Mr Bruce<lb/>
Stokes of Stokestown, North Caro-<lb/>
lina, is to be used at half-time of<lb/>
the football game. Miss Nancy New,<lb/>
. ? n. will ride tn the<lb/>
carrii<lb/>
H r11? coming Chairman, Miss<lb/>
ourages every-<lb/>
to eote for their for<lb/>
t Queen.<lb/>
? ? ? <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0002"/><lb/>
a- -<lb/>
2?East Carolinian?Tuesday, October 15, 1968<lb/>
Greenville Grabber ? Censored<lb/>
Last week ;? masked assailant accosted two coeds on<lb/>
their way back from a nearby eating establishment, reviv-<lb/>
ing much of the speculation that surrounded the infamous<lb/>
"Greenville Grabber" incidents of nearly two years ago.<lb/>
Although the fright of the two unfortunate young ladies<lb/>
was the only result in last week's instance, a great deal of<lb/>
mystery -till surrounds the case.<lb/>
Whe this office learned of the incident, a reporter;<lb/>
was assigned to the story in order to provide coverage for<lb/>
the East Carolina student body. However, when it was sug-<lb/>
gested by a leading administration figure who was contact-<lb/>
ed for comment on the incident that the investigating offi-<lb/>
cers had requested that, in the interests of aiding their in-<lb/>
vestigation, the story not be published, the EAST CARO-<lb/>
LINIAN complied with that wish.<lb/>
However, by the next morning the story had been pub-<lb/>
lished in one of the state's dailies, and by that night had hit<lb/>
the Greenville newspaper.<lb/>
It is indeed seldom that this student publication is ask-<lb/>
ed to comply with the desires of the Greenville Police De-<lb/>
partment in keeping the happenings of a particular incident<lb/>
quiet. When such a request is made, it is usually the policy of<lb/>
this newspajer to honor those wishes.<lb/>
However, after the events had been made public in two<lb/>
daily newspapers, the Greenville Police Department denied<lb/>
that any such request had been made, a statement which<lb/>
seems to be authenticated by the release of the information.<lb/>
Censorship is never a very pretty word when it is used<lb/>
in connection with the dissemination of valid news. In this<lb/>
case, it has however, become quite obvious that sorneon<lb/>
wished that the story not be released to the student press.<lb/>
Wher. a case of this nature is taken ini considera-<lb/>
tion, censorship takes on a particularly ugly tone. Any such<lb/>
action by officialdom in this kind of case could result in a<lb/>
repetition of the incident. This fact alone shows the short-<lb/>
sightedness of the person responsible for that action, for it<lb/>
takes more than an official memo to sufficiently warn coeds<lb/>
of the danger of such poorly lighted areas at night.<lb/>
It is not the intent of this article to show maliciousrie?<lb/>
on the part of any of the persons involved in the case. It is.<lb/>
intended to point out that mistakes can be made, even at<lb/>
official levels.<lb/>
And wh such mistakes have a high potential for fu-<lb/>
ture catastrope, those responsible should have the courage<lb/>
to admit their errors, if for no other reason than to prevent<lb/>
a recurrance of the act.<lb/>
?I$t Carolinian<lb/>
???? C?r.M?? ValT?ral?y<lb/>
Published semiweekly by the students of East Carolina Ur'versity,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
IntercoQairiate Press, Associated Collejdate Press. United States Student Press Association<lb/>
Serviced oy<lb/>
CoDsetat Press Service, Intercollegiate Press Service, Southern Intercollegiate Press<lb/>
Service, Press Service of Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
ECU Forum<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
News Editors<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Editorials Editor<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Circulation Manager<lb/>
Delivery<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
Layout Staff<lb/>
Reporters<lb/>
Photographers<lb/>
Cartoonist<lb/>
Wes Sumner<lb/>
Abbey Foy<lb/>
Richard Foster<lb/>
Dale Brinson<lb/>
Nelda Lowe<lb/>
Janet Fulbright<lb/>
Chloe Crawford<lb/>
Whitney Hadden<lb/>
John Lowe<lb/>
Dton Benson<lb/>
Butch Roberts<lb/>
Gerald Robertson<lb/>
David Dail<lb/>
Mary Jane Phillips<lb/>
Dave Spence<lb/>
Chuck White<lb/>
Kenny Winston<lb/>
James Hord<lb/>
Reid Overcash<lb/>
Walt Whittemore<lb/>
Diana Foster<lb/>
Bob Lindfelt<lb/>
Walt Quads<lb/>
Butch Roberts<lb/>
Charles Mock<lb/>
Subscription rate S6.00<lb/>
address: Box 2616. East Carolina University Station Greenvfll. i r<lb/>
Telephone: 7K-B716 or 768-8426, extension?M,i?" N C<lb/>
Gunho-Seco Singers<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
Last year 1 wrote a letter to the<lb/>
East Carolinian questioning the in-<lb/>
telligence of a group of students<lb/>
on campus. Today I enclose an-<lb/>
other letter of that caliber.<lb/>
Hw Intelligent is a group oi<lb/>
i ackllng hens, led by a combina-<lb/>
tion Lil' Abner-Gomer Pyle ma-<lb/>
rine, who hiss at the introduction<lb/>
of the campus chaplain: talk an<lb/>
make noise during the prayers<lb/>
oJ<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
AH who are interested in at-<lb/>
tending the State Student Legis-<lb/>
lature, please fill out an appli-<lb/>
cation in Room 303. Wright<lb/>
Annex.<lb/>
local ministers and a local ppjMt.<lb/>
he carrying of signs readig<lb/>
' -Avoid the Draft; Join Now b<lb/>
?boys" who are not physical<lb/>
stable to go through the miluarj<lb/>
?shot line" without passing out<lb/>
a group of "boys" who come out<lb/>
,(, protest a peace vigil and to edge<lb/>
on a possible campus not. who pu<lb/>
down the intelligence of a federa<lb/>
court judge: to jeer an expectant<lb/>
mother: who mock and shout at<lb/>
the scripture of the Holy BIBLE,<lb/>
and worst of all, walk upon the<lb/>
thoughts and beliefs of another hu-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
In closing, I would like to say<lb/>
that the "black eye" has been<lb/>
given to the image oi East Caro-<lb/>
lina University, but by the "Gung-<lb/>
ho-Seco Singers' 'and their blind<lb/>
followers!<lb/>
Respect fully submitted,<lb/>
Ojaham Jones<lb/>
To The Left<lb/>
By WHITNEY HADDEN<lb/>
According to plans last week. I<lb/>
should be giving reasons tor my<lb/>
.upport of Bob Scott's campaign<lb/>
lor governor. Due to the events<lb/>
that have since transpired, I<lb/>
would rather make a few remarks<lb/>
concerning a prayer vigil for con-<lb/>
science held last Thursday.<lb/>
A number of people were caught<lb/>
ofl guard by the type and quality<lb/>
of the statement made by those<lb/>
involved in the vigil. Unfortunate-<lb/>
iv. the statewide press coverage<lb/>
was grossly slanted against the<lb/>
vigil. There was little emphasis-<lb/>
placed in the papers on the pur-<lb/>
pose of the vigil, or the admirable<lb/>
conduct of the participants in the<lb/>
race of a great deal of rude, vul-<lb/>
 and ignorant heckling<lb/>
To star' off with, let me point<lb/>
o the purpose and plans for the<lb/>
vigil. Duncan Stout, a former East<lb/>
Carolina student was tried Thurs-<lb/>
day. October 10 for refusing in-<lb/>
duction to the armed forces on the<lb/>
.rounds of philosophical conscien-<lb/>
tious objection to all wars. He did<lb/>
not qualify, like so many like him<lb/>
in the past, for conscientious ob-<lb/>
jection on religious grounds. Al-<lb/>
though he had been in Canada for<lb/>
several weeks, he came back to the<lb/>
US when he received his induction<lb/>
notice and complied with the se-<lb/>
lective service regulations up to<lb/>
the point where he refused to step<lb/>
forward and take the oath.<lb/>
Stout could have stayed in Can-<lb/>
ada, accepted I-A classification, or<lb/>
evaded the moral i.ssues involved<lb/>
in several ways. He chose an al-<lb/>
most certain five years in jail, a<lb/>
ten thousand dollar fine, the loss<lb/>
of the vote in most states, and all<lb/>
of the handicaps of looking for a<lb/>
job with a felony on his record.<lb/>
He chose this on the grounds that<lb/>
his conscience demanded that he<lb/>
resist an unjust law.<lb/>
Conscience calls on different peo-<lb/>
ple to follow different courses. Of-<lb/>
ten times the road one must fol-<lb/>
low in order to obey the dictates<lb/>
of his conscience is lonely and<lb/>
hard. Today, there are all too<lb/>
many people taking the easy way<lb/>
out. They follow the course of ex-<lb/>
pediency and convenience rather<lb/>
-han the more rugged demands of<lb/>
conscience.<lb/>
No matter what one thinks of the<lb/>
philosophical and political views<lb/>
which caused Duncan Stout to give<lb/>
up so much for the sake of his<lb/>
integrity, I can not see how any-<lb/>
one could not respect the man for<lb/>
his courage. It would have been<lb/>
easy to evade the draft by flight<lb/>
or by convenient deferments, and<lb/>
yet Duncan choso the hardest road,<lb/>
the road mapped out by his own<lb/>
personal convictions.<lb/>
It was out of deep respect for<lb/>
this unusual and vital brand of<lb/>
courage that sends some men into<lb/>
battle for their beliefs, and other<lb/>
men like Duncan into jail, that<lb/>
the vigil was formed. It was a<lb/>
prayerful plea for the day when<lb/>
the individual conscience of a per-<lb/>
sacred by all<lb/>
tines just back from Viet<lb/>
 World War II veteran.<lb/>
Nam,<lb/>
nd a<lb/>
number of people who felt that<lb/>
they could support the war and<lb/>
our Vigil at the same time in what<lb/>
was described as an anti-Vietnam<lb/>
"draft dodge vigil<lb/>
It was ignorance that caused<lb/>
signs to appear that called Stout<lb/>
a communist; that branded minis-<lb/>
ters, professors, and .students alike<lb/>
as hippies.<lb/>
It was ignorance that caused a<lb/>
lovely young girl, several months<lb/>
pregnant to be slapped in the face<lb/>
with a raw egg.<lb/>
It was courage that caused Dun-<lb/>
can Stout to face a jail sentence.<lb/>
It was coinage that caused some<lb/>
of the vigil participants to volun-<lb/>
teer for service in Viet-Nam.<lb/>
It was courage that kept the<lb/>
vigil participants from shouting<lb/>
back at those who were there t<lb/>
humiliate and intimidate them.<lb/>
It was courage that kept the<lb/>
vigil paiticipants from losing their<lb/>
cool and striking back when they<lb/>
were bruised and belitled by eggs,<lb/>
rocks, and ice from the crowds<lb/>
surrounding them.<lb/>
This is the courage that the vigil<lb/>
was held for. This is the courage<lb/>
that allows a man to maintain his<lb/>
integrity in the onslaught of com-<lb/>
promise, personal attack, and hu-<lb/>
miliation. Perhaps those who were<lb/>
involved in the cowardly antics of<lb/>
the pro-war, pro-draft demonstra-<lb/>
tors during the night were hit be-<lb/>
low the Bible-belt. If not, they<lb/>
should reread the Beatitudes.<lb/>
Sight-seeing<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
A few nights ago. several of my<lb/>
dorm sisters were heard singing<lb/>
from their windows in Cofcten HaTl.<lb/>
They were singing 'he Marine<lb/>
Hymn in response to the appear,<lb/>
a nee of the AFROTC guys who had<lb/>
come to the Conscience Vigu,<lb/>
Among those hearing the patriotic<lb/>
strains was a very masterful cam-<lb/>
pus policeman. Having no sym-<lb/>
pathy for the poor girte, just re-<lb/>
leased from the near-unbearable<lb/>
confinements of closed study. Su-<lb/>
per Cop immediately chared into<lb/>
the dormitory.<lb/>
His right to invade the privacy<lb/>
of so many girls at 10:00 pm with-<lb/>
out warning is within itself very<lb/>
doubtful. His action taken in the<lb/>
dorms is certainly questioned. He<lb/>
merely charged up and down the<lb/>
halls, sight-seeing. I supp. t<lb/>
It seems both unfair and com-<lb/>
pletely urn "cessary lor a police-<lb/>
man to enter the women housing<lb/>
facilities on so minor a crime. Why<lb/>
could he not report the incident<lb/>
to the housemothers and let them<lb/>
handle it? Goodness knows, the<lb/>
housemothers are extremelv cap-<lb/>
able in most situations!<lb/>
I agree that the singing was not<lb/>
in good taste, but it certainly did<lb/>
not merit the rash action of this<lb/>
policeman.<lb/>
Caught Unprep<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
urges all students, faculty mem-<lb/>
bers, administrators, and mem-<lb/>
bers of the University commun-<lb/>
ity to express their opinion in<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Th EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
editorial page is an open forum<lb/>
in which such articles may lip<lb/>
published.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor, which<lb/>
may be rebuttals to previous<lb/>
articles or any short, opinion-<lb/>
ated articles will be printed un<lb/>
der the heading of ECU Eorum.<lb/>
Letters must be typed and sign-<lb/>
ed by the author. Authors' nam-<lb/>
es will be withheld by request.<lb/>
Letter's should be addressed to<lb/>
ECU Forum, r-o the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
The editors reserve the right<lb/>
to edit for clarity and length.<lb/>
However, the intent of the ar-<lb/>
ticle will not be altered.<lb/>
Signed articles on this page<lb/>
reflect the opinions of the au-<lb/>
thor and no necessarily those<lb/>
of the EAST CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
Unsigned articles are written<lb/>
by the editor.<lb/>
be held<lb/>
son will<lb/>
mankind.<lb/>
However, there are always those<lb/>
who refuse to listen, who read<lb/>
into the meaning of peoples ac-<lb/>
tions false and malicious motives.<lb/>
It was ignorance that caused one<lb/>
newspaper to include three Ma-<lb/>
Wooll I say anybody who don't want to kill is unAmerka?,<lb/>
unchristian and a danger to the human Race!<lb/>
LINES ?K WN?Both<lb/>
ja'vs peace vigil on tl<lb/>
support for their view!<lb/>
,?????<lb/>
t Pizzas li<lb/>
?917W.5<lb/>
F<lb/>
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ore i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0003"/><lb/>
o. several of my<lb/>
e heard singing<lb/>
s in Cotten Hall.<lb/>
,lng 'he Marine<lb/>
i to the appear-<lb/>
rc guys who had<lb/>
tanscience Vigu<lb/>
?ing the patriotic<lb/>
t masterful cam-<lb/>
laving no sym-<lb/>
?r girls, just re-<lb/>
near-unbearable<lb/>
losed study, Su-<lb/>
ely charcvd into<lb/>
irade the privacy<lb/>
?t 10:00 pm with,<lb/>
dthin itself very<lb/>
on taken in the<lb/>
y questioned. He<lb/>
p and down the<lb/>
. I supp.<lb/>
unfair and com-<lb/>
?y lor a police-<lb/>
women housing<lb/>
nor a crinn Why<lb/>
ort the incident<lb/>
ers and let them<lb/>
3688 knows, the<lb/>
extremelv cap-<lb/>
it ions!<lb/>
i singing was not<lb/>
; it certainly did<lb/>
sh action of this<lb/>
t Unprepared<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
s, faculty mem-<lb/>
tors, and mem-<lb/>
ersity commun-<lb/>
heir opinions in<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
an open forum<lb/>
articles may he<lb/>
i Editor, which<lb/>
als to prerletu<lb/>
short, opinlon-<lb/>
1 be printed mi<lb/>
of ECU Forum.<lb/>
typed and sign-<lb/>
?. Authors' nam-<lb/>
eld by request,<lb/>
be addressed to<lb/>
-o the EA8T<lb/>
?serve the right<lb/>
ity and length,<lb/>
itent of the ar-<lb/>
e altered.<lb/>
?s on this page<lb/>
ions of the au-<lb/>
ecessarlly those<lb/>
CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
es are written<lb/>
East Carolinian?Tuesday, October 15, 1968?3<lb/>
Vigil Recognizes Dignity<lb/>
Of Conscience-Not Defiance<lb/>
LINKS I)R "i<lb/>
toft peace<lb/>
support for<lb/>
<lb/>
YVNBoth sides were quite adequately represented at Thurs-<lb/>
vigil on the mall, with both showing up in force to provide<lb/>
their views toward the Viet Nam war.<lb/>
By CHLOE CRAWFORD<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
"To kill or not to kill, that is<lb/>
the question Or is it? What is<lb/>
the real, the true question? To<lb/>
fight or not to fight? War or no<lb/>
war, To withdraw or not to with-<lb/>
draw? Or to serve or not to serve?<lb/>
On Thursday of last week groups<lb/>
of students expressed their an-<lb/>
swers to these questions. A "Silent<lb/>
Vigil" was held on the mall from<lb/>
10:00 A.M. til 11:00 P.M. The lead-<lb/>
er of the protest was Tom Dean,<lb/>
who commented that, "We are<lb/>
sitting in silence, not in protect<lb/>
but in statement that we recognize<lb/>
the dignity and integrity of a man's<lb/>
conscience. Whereas, no one here<lb/>
is advocating a defiance of law, we<lb/>
stand for draft reform where one<lb/>
can conscientiously object to selec-<lb/>
tive draft. I believe in sociological<lb/>
J<lb/>
r-<lb/>
s<lb/>
xMm<lb/>
as well as theological convictions<lb/>
as a means for deferment.<lb/>
In World War Two Great Britain<lb/>
practiced a program of selective<lb/>
objection where individuals could<lb/>
find other places of service for their<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"Today in the United States we<lb/>
have nine hundred people in jail<lb/>
for objecting to the draft.<lb/>
"I think we are fighting a mono-<lb/>
lithic, Communistic monster that<lb/>
doesn't exist, fOn this statement<lb/>
Dean asked me to please ask what<lb/>
he meant by this. I did and he<lb/>
replied, "The people of the United<lb/>
States don't know what they are<lb/>
fighting. Communism is classed as<lb/>
one enemy of the country, when<lb/>
we have several distinct and dif-<lb/>
ferent kinds of Communism. But<lb/>
we are fighting ONE monster<lb/>
For added atmosphere a Peace<lb/>
insignia and a DOVE were nailed<lb/>
to surrounding trees.<lb/>
The vigil, however, did not con-<lb/>
tinue without dissent. A group of<lb/>
anti-protest protestors held signs<lb/>
saying, "If you don't like it here,<lb/>
go to Russia, "Avoid the Draft,<lb/>
join up and "Real men serve,<lb/>
Cowards Protest<lb/>
The leader of this group was<lb/>
Vann Hestor. He and his wife had<lb/>
made up the signs the night be-<lb/>
fore when they heard of the pro-<lb/>
test. Hestor stated that, "I believe<lb/>
in the war and in what we are<lb/>
lighting for. It is the moral re-<lb/>
sponsibility of a man to fight for<lb/>
his country. We've lived here thus<lb/>
far and enjoyed the advantages of<lb/>
freedom and democracy, why<lb/>
shouldn't we fight for these privi-<lb/>
leges for others as well as our-<lb/>
selves?<lb/>
?Those who have already serv-<lb/>
ed will give you the straight story.<lb/>
They know.<lb/>
"I'm here because I feel I have<lb/>
the obligation to stand up for what<lb/>
I believe in. The ones who are<lb/>
holding the signs are all volunteers<lb/>
who feel as I do<lb/>
The trial of Duncan Stout, for<lb/>
whom the Vigil was supporting,<lb/>
has been postponed for two weeks.<lb/>
We are anxious to see what the<lb/>
verdict will be.<lb/>
Police Cooperation  Nil<lb/>
Greenville Grabber Strikes<lb/>
j 111 E. 5th Street<lb/>
i Pizzas H Price Wednesday 7:00 P.M. to 10;00P.M. J<lb/>
Entertainment Tuesdays 8:00 P. M. to 10:00 P. M.<lb/>
Your Favorite Domestic and Imported Beverages<lb/>
l PIZZAS SANDWICHES DINNERS LUNCHES<lb/>
I Hours: 11:30 A. M. - 11:30 P. M.<lb/>
$<lb/>
Auto Specialty<lb/>
Company, Inc,<lb/>
Phone 758-1131<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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By CHLOE CRAWFORD<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Blood-curdling screams were<lb/>
heard by girls in Umstead Dorm<lb/>
Monday night, October 7, about<lb/>
6:40 P.M. as the Greenville Grab-<lb/>
bed struck again. Two East Caro-<lb/>
lina coeds reported to police Mon-<lb/>
day night that a masked man grab-<lb/>
bed them as they walked along a<lb/>
railroad track near the campus.<lb/>
The girls, Jan Talbert 18, of<lb/>
Maryland and Martha Gibson, 19.<lb/>
of Laurinburg, said the man was<lb/>
wearing what appeared to be a<lb/>
stocking over his face. They said<lb/>
he appeared to be white and came<lb/>
from bushes along the track.<lb/>
The girls stated that the man<lb/>
grabbed one girl, but she fought<lb/>
him and fled, with the other girl<lb/>
going in the opposite direction.<lb/>
Neither of the two girls was injur-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The campus and areas near the<lb/>
university were the scene of three<lb/>
reported attempted assaults last<lb/>
year. Two girls reported attempts<lb/>
on the campus and a third off cam-<lb/>
pus. No arrests were made in any<lb/>
of the incidents. Those were re-<lb/>
ported as Negro attackers.<lb/>
No statement from the Green-<lb/>
ville City Police could be obtained<lb/>
917 W. 5th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Foreisn Car Parts and Accessories<lb/>
? All types of general repair work<lb/>
? Radiator repair and service<lb/>
? Pick-up and delivery service<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ftt<lb/>
CRO<lb/>
tMMANU' AUUBtO<lb/>
tNCINl<lb/>
? 4 ? MMHMHHHHMHHH <lb/>
Largest production engine rebuilder<lb/>
in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By-Pass, Greenville<lb/>
from the officer hi charge of the<lb/>
investigation. The officer said that<lb/>
I must go through the Chief-of-<lb/>
Police, who was not available.<lb/>
I regret not having printed this<lb/>
article for the information of stu-<lb/>
dents before, but due to no co-<lb/>
operation from administration,<lb/>
Campus police, or Greenville City<lb/>
Police, no fact-based article could<lb/>
be printed. (Except in the Daily<lb/>
Reflector and The News and Ob-<lb/>
server).<lb/>
MRC Moves On<lb/>
Basketball Courts<lb/>
And New TV<lb/>
The Mens Residence CouncU held<lb/>
its first meeting on Tuesday, Oc-<lb/>
tober 8. Among topics discussed<lb/>
were the building of an eight court<lb/>
basketball court in the area beside<lb/>
Belk Dorm. The MRC is happy to<lb/>
report that the pool room in the<lb/>
basement of Aycock Dormitory Is<lb/>
a tremendous success, and that<lb/>
there will soon be a new television<lb/>
set available for the men of Scott<lb/>
Dormitory. Also at this meeting<lb/>
the MRC court was elected. This<lb/>
year's edition of the court consists<lb/>
of Dean Fragakis, Harold G. Zell-<lb/>
ers, Joe McNally, and Jim Davis,<lb/>
with Ed Streetman serving as court<lb/>
clerk.<lb/>
There is currently a poU being<lb/>
conducted by the Mens Residence<lb/>
Council of all the men on the hill<lb/>
as to their preferences for pro-<lb/>
jects to be undertaken by the MRC.<lb/>
We are happy to report that this<lb/>
Year's Mens Residence Council, is<lb/>
already a great success and will<lb/>
try to make life easier for the men<lb/>
of the "HTLL<lb/>
teuuiuu<lb/>
Drive-ln<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
1 Hr. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Sesrvice<lb/>
Join The JjJJ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza tail<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 766-9991<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
. a. <lb/>
' I<lb/>
 .<lb/>
;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0004"/><lb/>
.1?East Carolinian ?Tuosila .Jktobei 15, 1968<lb/>
YDC Jumps On<lb/>
HHH Bandwagon<lb/>
rin "f tn('<lb/>
Young Democrats club met Tues-<lb/>
daj October 8. with David G-od-<lb/>
frey presiding Mr Godfrej an-<lb/>
nounced that Bill Davis ha<lb/>
elected College Federation Pr<lb/>
 :i; the state YDC Convention<lb/>
in Payetteville. He and Ms '<lb/>
left Thursday bo work a coll<lb/>
co-ordinators lor the Humphrey-<lb/>
Muskie campaign In North Caro-<lb/>
lina and pan oi South Carolina.<lb/>
Man Caraway wa I chair-<lb/>
man ol the ECU co oup for<lb/>
the Humphrey-Muskie ticket<lb/>
Arrangements were made for th<lb/>
Bob scott rally. November 2, to<lb/>
Minges Coliseum; Tom Bland<lb/>
elected chairman for tins commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Raymond Live on propo ?<lb/>
anti-Wallace resolution which<lb/>
unanimously accepted by the mem-<lb/>
bers.<lb/>
The meeting was then adjourned.<lb/>
The YDC will meet .mam Wednes-<lb/>
day, October 16, at 7:30 p.m Raw!<lb/>
130. Everyone is cordially invited<lb/>
to attend ! !<lb/>
LAW SPEAKER?Dr. Leo VV. link-<lb/>
ins, president of the university, is<lb/>
slated to address the ECU Law So-<lb/>
eietv this week.<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
The Lambda Chapter of (iam-<lb/>
ma Beta Phi held its first meet-<lb/>
ing September 30, in U.U. 206.<lb/>
The president. George Bright<lb/>
conducted the meeting in which<lb/>
the members selected campus,<lb/>
local, state, and national pro-<lb/>
jects for the year. Dennis Chest-<lb/>
nut was elected as vice presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
The chapter will meet again<lb/>
on Tuesdav, October 15 at 7:00<lb/>
P.M. in VV. 206. ALL MEM-<lb/>
BERS WISHING TO RETAIN<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP IN THIS OR-<lb/>
GANIZATION MIST ATTEND<lb/>
THIS MEETING!<lb/>
Sigma XI will meel on Thui<lb/>
October 17 in Flanagan 317 Thi<lb/>
business meeting will begin at 7:30<lb/>
and at 8:00 Dr. Charles Gilbert.<lb/>
M D Pathologist at Pitl Countj<lb/>
Memorial Hospital will speak OH<lb/>
THE Rh-FACTOR<lb/>
The emphasis in this talk will be<lb/>
on research in the area and evo-<lb/>
lution and progress in treating<lb/>
hemolytic diseases in the new-born.<lb/>
Special emphasis will be given to<lb/>
progress made in recent montru<lb/>
regarding immunization against<lb/>
erythroblastosls<lb/>
The public is invited to attend<lb/>
this lecture.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Room for Rent, private entrance<lb/>
and bath. 1205 E. Fifth Street.<lb/>
Contact: Mrs. G B Merritt 752-<lb/>
4658<lb/>
Austin-Healey Sprite. MK III.<lb/>
1966, good condition, tires like<lb/>
Drafted?must sell. Blue Book<lb/>
? $1120. Any reasonable offer<lb/>
refused 752-7042.<lb/>
? M SALE?Jaguar XKE Coupe.<lb/>
British Racing Green, Mint Condi-<lb/>
tion. Complete Maintenance records<lb/>
k( pt. Call Nights 752-4847.<lb/>
We arc- now able to provide stu-<lb/>
dents of ECU with special rate<lb/>
loans under North Carolina law.<lb/>
Money for educational purposes.<lb/>
even it" under 21. Great Southern<lb/>
Finance. 405 Evans Street?752-7117<lb/>
Jenkins Stresses Pre-Law<lb/>
For EC In Society Address<lb/>
 ? m,w Jersey State Department I . certain rules or 1<lb/>
With his gradual ion from Rut-<lb/>
gers University, Columbia Dnlver<lb/>
sity and New York University, and<lb/>
tl;1ving completed graduate work<lb/>
il Duke, Dr Leo W. Jenkms be-<lb/>
an admirable career m the<lb/>
field of education. He was a publi(<lb/>
school teacher and Dean In a hJ fh<lb/>
, hool in New Jersey where lie also<lb/>
became a professor of Political<lb/>
Science and History at Montclail<lb/>
Teachers College. Later Dr. Jen-<lb/>
kins became Assistant to the Com<lb/>
oner of Higher Education In<lb/>
;?. x,v. Jersey Stale Depart men!<lb/>
 education. In 1947. Jenkins be-<lb/>
came Dean of East Carolina Col-<lb/>
e B position from which he rose<lb/>
to his present position as the dis-<lb/>
tinguished President of East Caro-<lb/>
lina University.<lb/>
 can be seen through the ca<lb/>
 0i Dr. Jenkins, bis Idea tor<lb/>
success has been the advancement<lb/>
of education. It has been Illustrat-<lb/>
ed ipecifically in his career at<lb/>
East Carolina University that<lb/>
through education and adherence<lb/>
certain rules or laws, progregg<lb/>
can be well acclaimed.<lb/>
Dr Jenkins will be introduced<lb/>
by SGA President David Lloyd Dr<lb/>
Jenkins will speake on "How flight<lb/>
er Eriuation Can Help A Pre-Tjaw<lb/>
student<lb/>
This meeting or the East, Car?.<lb/>
Una Law Society will be held in<lb/>
the Browning Room of the Raw!<lb/>
Building at 7:30 p.m October 16<lb/>
968.<lb/>
All interested persons are united<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Held Over for<lb/>
Second Big Week<lb/>
Are You Praying?<lb/>
All Seats $1.25<lb/>
Shows: 2:00, 4:30,<lb/>
7:30 and 9:30<lb/>
PLAZAv<lb/>
Cinema<lb/>
PITT PLACA SHOPPING CENTtK<lb/>
Now Showing<lb/>
"THE<lb/>
YOUNG<lb/>
RUNAWAYS"<lb/>
"Yon Can't Stop<lb/>
Them"<lb/>
In Color<lb/>
Shows: 1:20, 3:15,<lb/>
5:10, 7:05 and 9:00<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
 <lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
LUMS<lb/>
Corner 10th and Cotanche Streets<lb/>
2 blocks South of New Girls Dorm<lb/>
Free Pepsi with Hot Dog or Sandwich.1<lb/>
This offer valid Sunday, October 13, 1968  '<lb/>
Wednesday, October 16, 1968<lb/>
Your favorite imported or domestic beverages.<lb/>
 <lb/>
 Hot Dogs steamed in Beer - with Sherry flavored. <lb/>
All cooking with a European twist.<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
10:30 a.m. to 12:00 midnight Monday-Thursday<lb/>
10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday<lb/>
12:00 noon to 10:00 p.m. Sunday<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
SPECIAL DINNERS<lb/>
Orders to Go: Phone 758-2446<lb/>
No date necessary on weekends.<lb/>
.?:<lb/>
'The<lb/>
an<lb/>
'aCtion was spiritec<lb/>
x ,lll(l State with the<lb/>
Paj<lb/>
N. Greene<lb/>
Good i<lb/>
$1.0<lb/>
Meats of all k<lb/>
Seafood?'<lb/>
Biggest<lb/>
Good<lb/>
Don't JustG<lb/>
Special 0<lb/>
With a fill-i<lb/>
you a card t<lb/>
1, Ext<lb/>
GAF<lb/>
FILL-<lb/>
Ricks<lb/>
Corner N<lb/>
Commit n<lb/>
Charles <lb/>
Darwin Wj<lb/>
1114 N<lb/>
College Cot<lb/>
10th<lb/>
Flemings I<lb/>
10th Str<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 m<lb/>
LEAVE<lb/>
RETUR<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
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5<lb/>
I<lb/>
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DE<lb/>
LEAVE?C:<lb/>
R<lb/>
G<lb/>
C<lb/>
P<lb/>
R<lb/>
S<lb/>
V<lb/>
Purchase<lb/>
Building<lb/>
"MMHMMMMMHHHf"<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0005"/><lb/>
East fWlinian?Tuesday, October 15, 1968?5<lb/>
laws, P<lb/>
med.<lb/>
be Introduced<lb/>
)avid Lloy, q<lb/>
on "How mg<lb/>
oln A Pn I<lb/>
the East Caix<lb/>
jvill be held m<lb/>
n of the Raw!<lb/>
m Octobi r 16,<lb/>
sons are Invited<lb/>
S"<lb/>
10<lb/>
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ft<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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wic<lb/>
h.<lb/>
ages,<lb/>
ored.<lb/>
arsday<lb/>
lay<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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Baby Bucs Drop N. C. State<lb/>
In First Encounter: 17-7<lb/>
NCS<lb/>
11 First Downs<lb/>
37-16-2 Passes<lb/>
11 Rushing Yardage<lb/>
262 Passing Yardage<lb/>
68 Return" Yardage<lb/>
841.4 Punts<lb/>
4 Fumbles Lost<lb/>
98 Yards Penalized<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
19<lb/>
16-8-1<lb/>
223<lb/>
89<lb/>
142<lb/>
8-32.5<lb/>
2<lb/>
)8<lb/>
The<lb/>
Una<lb/>
?? miirited in this first football clash between East Caro-<lb/>
.ictin wa ?i? ???-<lb/>
y,l(1 Uie with the Baby Bucs winning 17-7.<lb/>
Payne's Restaurant<lb/>
N. G'eene Street at the Foot of the Bridge<lb/>
Good Old Fashion Home Cooking!<lb/>
$1.00 Special Every Day<lb/>
Meats of all kinds. Vegetables seasoned just right.<lb/>
' Seafood?21 Shrimp in a basket only $1.50<lb/>
Biggest and Best Sandwiches in Town.<lb/>
Good Food, Friendly Service<lb/>
East Carolina's Baby Bucs stak-<lb/>
ed themselves out to an early 17-0<lb/>
lead over the N.C. State Wolflets<lb/>
in the first half and then held on<lb/>
under a stiff passing barrage by<lb/>
State's Gary Clements to hand the<lb/>
Wolflets their first loss of the sea-<lb/>
son as they won by 17-7.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs tallied ten points<lb/>
In the first quarter as two Wolf-<lb/>
lets miscues twice gave them the<lb/>
ball m State territory. The Baby<lb/>
Bucs drove in for a touchdown<lb/>
and a field goal for their ten points.<lb/>
On the second play of the game,<lb/>
Ralph Betesh recovered a State<lb/>
fumble by Peter Blockin on the<lb/>
State 35 yard line. After the first<lb/>
plav lost a yard, the Baby Bucs<lb/>
Btarted to move, and drove the 36<lb/>
Don't Just (Jet vour Car Wet, Get It Washed at the Qwik Car Wash!<lb/>
Special Offer from MOORE-KING-SULLIVAN, Inc.<lb/>
And Their PURE OIL DEALERS<lb/>
With a fill-up (8 gals, minimum) the dealers listed below will give<lb/>
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yards in seven plays with Bill Wal-<lb/>
lace scoring on a one yard plunge<lb/>
with 11:54 left in the first quarter.<lb/>
Lonzo Custer converted and East<lb/>
Carolina had a quick 7-0 lead.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs' Matt Walker, a<lb/>
defensive halfback, covered a State<lb/>
fumble by Tjmmy Siegfried after<lb/>
a bone-jarrmg tackle by BeteBta on<lb/>
the Wolflets' 49. The Baby Bucs<lb/>
took 14 Plays to get to the five<lb/>
yard line where State held, and<lb/>
on fourth down, Custer came in and<lb/>
connected for a 22-yard field goal<lb/>
for a 10-0 lead with 49 left in the<lb/>
first period.<lb/>
At the outset of the second quar-<lb/>
ter the Baby Bucs again were driv-<lb/>
ing for paydirt as they moved<lb/>
down to the State five yard luie,<lb/>
but a bad snap on a fourth down<lb/>
play caused tailback Richard Elliot<lb/>
to be thrown for a 14 yard loss<lb/>
back to the 19 where State took<lb/>
over. ,<lb/>
The Wolflets couldn't move, and<lb/>
with a fourth and 17, they kicked<lb/>
on fourth down. Chuck McClrntock<lb/>
who returned five punts for 62<lb/>
yards, brought this one back 1'<lb/>
yards to the State 39.<lb/>
On the first play. Wooley passed<lb/>
17 yards to William McLean for a<lb/>
first down. Two more running plays<lb/>
by Ronnie Peed and Wallace net-<lb/>
ted another first down at the five<lb/>
yard line. Wallace hit for two<lb/>
yards on two carries and Wooley<lb/>
carried down to the one yard line.<lb/>
On fourth and goal, with the Sate<lb/>
team ready for a line buck by<lb/>
Wallace Wooley snapped a pass<lb/>
to Mike Aldridge for the score on<lb/>
a one-yard pass. Custer converted<lb/>
and the Baby Bucs led by 17-0 with<lb/>
6:13 left in the half<lb/>
Indicative of the tough Baby Buc<lb/>
defense was that State was held<lb/>
to only 19 yards in total offense<lb/>
for the first half.<lb/>
In the second half, the Wolf-<lb/>
lets' defense perked up and held<lb/>
the rushing minded Baby Bucs to<lb/>
only six first downs while then-<lb/>
own offensive team moved for nine<lb/>
first downs, mostly on the passing<lb/>
Ricks Service Center<lb/>
Corner Ninth &amp; Evans Streets<lb/>
Community Service Center<lb/>
Charles Street &amp; 264 By-pass<lb/>
Darwin Waters Service Station<lb/>
1114 North Greene Street<lb/>
College Court Pure Service Sta.<lb/>
10th Street Extension<lb/>
Flemings Pure Oil Service Sta.<lb/>
10th Street &amp; Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
Streeter's Pure Service Station<lb/>
W. Fifth &amp; Cadillac Streets<lb/>
Tenth &amp; Evans Pure Oil Station<lb/>
10th &amp; Evans Streets<lb/>
Holiday Service Center<lb/>
415 Memorial Drive<lb/>
Qwik Car Wash<lb/>
1003 S. Evans Street<lb/>
arm oi Gary Clements.<lb/>
The third period was scoreless,<lb/>
as neither team was able to mus-<lb/>
ter a drive of any consequence.<lb/>
In the fourth quarter, State<lb/>
started throwing on almost every<lb/>
down and began to move. Clements<lb/>
repeatedly hit for good yardage, but<lb/>
penalties and some crucial dropped<lb/>
nasses hurt the Wolflets' attack.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the Wolflets showed<lb/>
a potent passing attack, gaining<lb/>
262 yard through the airways with<lb/>
Cements passing for almost 200<lb/>
yards<lb/>
The Wolflets' lone score came<lb/>
early in the fourth quarter. The<lb/>
drive began in the third period<lb/>
on the State 27. Clements hat Tim<lb/>
Foley for 20 yards and a first<lb/>
down After an incomplete pass,<lb/>
Clements hit Skip Saffores for 14<lb/>
yards and another first down as<lb/>
the third period ended.<lb/>
Six plays into the fourth quarter,<lb/>
Clements hit Jim Parsons with a 12<lb/>
yard scoring pass Mike Charron<lb/>
converted to make it 17-7 with<lb/>
13:46 left.<lb/>
For the remainder of the game,<lb/>
the Buc defense held the pass<lb/>
minded Wolflets in check. The<lb/>
closest that State could come was<lb/>
on the last play of the game when<lb/>
Cements uncorked the bomb to<lb/>
Parsons for 43 yards down to the<lb/>
East Carolna 18 yard line.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs rushed an incred-<lb/>
ible 78 times for 223 yards with<lb/>
Wallace leading the way with 71<lb/>
yaras on 29 carries. Ronnie Peed<lb/>
got 48 yards on 18 carries and Pete<lb/>
Wooley got 59 yards on eight<lb/>
rushes<lb/>
Wooley hit on four of eight at-<lb/>
tempts for 46 yards and one touch-<lb/>
down while Snyder hit on four of<lb/>
six attempts for 43 yards.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs next face Cho-<lb/>
wan here on October 25.<lb/>
Scoring:<lb/>
NCS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
0<lb/>
10<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
0 7?7<lb/>
0 0?17<lb/>
Cross-Country Scoreboard<lb/>
Harriers Win Number Seven<lb/>
The East Carolna cross-country<lb/>
team ran its record up to a perfect<lb/>
7-0 mark this season by winning<lb/>
three uines last week.<lb/>
On Wednesday, the harriers de-<lb/>
feated N.C. State and Old Dominion<lb/>
by scores of 24 to 33 and 15 to 50,<lb/>
respectively. On Saturday, the har-<lb/>
riers defeated Baptist College b<lb/>
Saad's Shoe Shop<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
Located?Middle College View<lb/>
Cleaners Main Plant<lb/>
Grand Avenue<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
5<lb/>
: NEW SERVICE I<lb/>
TRAILWAYS STUDENT EXPRESS<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
LEAVES Every Friday from Main Campus Cafeteria<lb/>
RETURNS Evlry Sunday Night from Trailways Bns Terminals direct<lb/>
to Campus<lb/>
DEPARTURE SCHEDULES<lb/>
25 to 34.<lb/>
In the three-way meet in Ra-<lb/>
leigh, Gareth Hayes of N.C. State<lb/>
set the pace over the five mile<lb/>
course with a time of 26:8. East<lb/>
Carolina captured the next three<lb/>
places as Don Jayroe, Ken Voss,<lb/>
and Neill Ross finished second,<lb/>
third, and fourth respectively. The<lb/>
Bucs took eight of the first twelve<lb/>
places to win easily<lb/>
Against Baptist College here in<lb/>
Greenville. Jayroe came in first<lb/>
with a record time of 2 :58. Butch<lb/>
Good and Carl Britt finished sec-<lb/>
ond and third for Baptist College<lb/>
with Neill Ross and Ken Voss close<lb/>
in at fourth and fifth.<lb/>
Rounding out the top ten for East<lb/>
Carolina were Lannie Davis,<lb/>
seventh; Joe Day, eighth; Jim Kidd.<lb/>
ninth: and Greg McNerney, tenth.<lb/>
The Pirate harriers are running<lb/>
against Virginia Tech today in<lb/>
Blacksburg, Virginia.<lb/>
FAMOUS FOR GOOD FOOD<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
ANV ORDER FOR TAKE OUT<lb/>
MMMMMMM<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
RETURN SCHEDULES<lb/>
On Campus Arrival<lb/>
LEA&amp; 9:45 p.m. (non-stop) ? ?;? ??<lb/>
Charlotte 6:00 p.m. ?ne-stop) 11.10 p.m<lb/>
?bZ7D0CP'6oOTmTd rect) 1100 p.m <lb/>
i'ii xmiw Arrive<lb/>
LEAVE?Cafeteria 5:15 p.m. Friday QQ<lb/>
Raleigh (non-stop)  g:3() pnli<lb/>
Greensboro (non-stop) ? 1Q.15 pm<lb/>
Charlotte (one-stop)  ? 4Q pm,<lb/>
Petersburg, Va (non-stop)  <lb/>
Richmond, Va. (one-stop)  9.4g pm<lb/>
?tt???!2? at CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE in Wright<lb/>
Purchase Tickets and Make Reservat.on atCEN<lb/>
Building Each Thursday 9:00 a.m. to 4.00 p.m<lb/>
Tw?;lurav? easiest Travel on eartn<lb/>
11:00 p.m. 1:<lb/>
11:00 p.m. ?;<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU Billiard<lb/>
Parlor<lb/>
Relax and enjoy pool on<lb/>
nice clean tables at the<lb/>
home of the Regional<lb/>
Straight Billiard Tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Come by and chat with<lb/>
"Ole Buck<lb/>
519 Cotanche St.<lb/>
?<lb/>
0<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
??'<lb/>
?<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0006"/><lb/>
6?East Carolinian?Tuesday, October 15, 1968<lb/>
Bui Cagers Begin Practice<lb/>
In Drive For Tournaments<lb/>
players will greei Coach Tom Quinn<lb/>
Tuesday when the Pirates begin<lb/>
practice a! Mln<lb/>
' iliseum.<lb/>
Quinn lias rheduled his firs)<lb/>
oul i??? ne minute pasl mid-<lb/>
ht, the morning of October 15.<lb/>
"We intend to ei the jump on<lb/>
everybody if we can " Quinn said<lb/>
"Not only that, the boys are eag-<lb/>
er to get to work<lb/>
ncluded in the squad are threi<lb/>
. from last year, five letter-<lb/>
men, tour junior college transfers<lb/>
and five sophomores. One of thi<lb/>
emen is returning .serviceman<lb/>
Richie Williams who starter<lb/>
into the Navy.<lb/>
Qun : g his<lb/>
son with East Carolina with his<lb/>
usual optimistic outlook<lb/>
"We expect to be better,<lb/>
says. "And we plan to<lb/>
much betl have<lb/>
the past two seaso<lb/>
Quinn's first year here he l<lb/>
nine in a row at the begining<lb/>
Last year it was five which means<lb/>
? tting over this early slump<lb/>
the Pirates went 9-12 for the n<lb/>
atoder oJ the year.<lb/>
"Possibly one reason foi<lb/>
irts those two years involvi<lb/>
ihe number of new faces we had<lb/>
introduce Quinn said. "1<lb/>
ar, I think the situation will be<lb/>
different, although I couldn't name<lb/>
one of my five starter now it T<lb/>
had to. I could make some educat-<lb/>
ed guesses, but that's all they'd<lb/>
be, guesses<lb/>
Good guesses, however, would in-<lb/>
clude Earl Thompson and Jim Mod-<lb/>
lin. Thompson, a 6J senior guard<lb/>
and co-captain and leading scorer<lb/>
last year, figures to be an Impor-<lb/>
? cog for the Pirates. He '<lb/>
eked hard to improve his weak-<lb/>
and perfect the shots a<lb/>
move that made ham one of the<lb/>
exciting players In recenl<lb/>
at East Carolina. Nfodlln, a<lb/>
, junor from Jamestown. N ('<lb/>
came on strong al the end ol I<lb/>
on and played what Quinn con-<lb/>
i is his best game against Wi<lb/>
Virginia in the Southern Confe<lb/>
i nee tournament.<lb/>
rhe other co-captain i Richard<lb/>
Bullets Romp Hawks<lb/>
For 117-88 Victory<lb/>
Jack Mann and Earl M nroe, two<lb/>
former North Carolina basketball<lb/>
tars paced the Baltimore Bullets to<lb/>
a 117-88 romp over the Atlanta<lb/>
Hawks Saturday night in a game<lb/>
played at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
i I rmer nuke ; ar, and<lb/>
Monroe, who played t r Wlnston-<lb/>
e, led the<lb/>
Bullets wit! !4 poinl re-<lb/>
Ij<lb/>
H  an foi<lb/>
uarti the Bullet<lb/>
tl ' the<lb/>
? i ouldn ? un-<lb/>
cide<lb/>
 V <lb/>
mi Bullets mad<lb/>
v ?<lb/>
'? the Riil-<lb/>
he H<lb/>
ven terms ii ,<lb/>
bands several<lb/>
<lb/>
p ? 07 left '<lb/>
quartei Mi .<lb/>
ahe thafi(<lb/>
i B .<lb/>
'?'  ? '  . i <lb/>
B<lb/>
added two free throws each for a<lb/>
20-15 lead<lb/>
The two teams exchanged buck-<lb/>
tor the remainder ol the quar-<lb/>
er as the score ended at 26-19<lb/>
The Bullets then broke<lb/>
quickly In the second quarter to a<lb/>
3-19 lead and the Hawk<lb/>
i could ? i ints<lb/>
of the streaking Bull<lb/>
At halftone, thi re wa i8-41<lb/>
md al the et d oj<lb/>
er, I was 92-61.<lb/>
; i he final <lb/>
out core thi Bulli  nlj<lb/>
by two points, as the Bulli I<lb/>
heir final exhibition game,<lb/>
i r for the Bullets<lb/>
th 18 Kevin<lb/>
' ' Man-<lb/>
'? he H ? Imo<lb/>
rith<lb/>
rge Li hman with 13.<lb/>
H 19 22 20 27 88<lb/>
26 32 34 i<lb/>
3, Hudson 7. i i hmann 13.<lb/>
ilas 4, and Waller 2 88<lb/>
?n 18, Loughei ;<lb/>
 23, Orn 4 Un-<lb/>
 8 Quick 9<lb/>
? 3-HOT7R SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1-HOTTR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
I4fh and Charieg gt. Corner Across From Hardee<lb/>
Complet. Laundry and Dry Cleaning ServW<lb/>
Why go further? Buy your dru needs from<lb/>
your University dru store!<lb/>
? Revlon Costmetics ? Ladies Hose<lb/>
? Drugs ? Magazines<lb/>
Cigarettes $2.10 per carton<lb/>
Georgetown Sundries<lb/>
Hours: 8:30 a. m. - 7:00 p. m.<lb/>
Located Georgetown Shoppes<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co,<lb/>
 Point<lb/>
Greenville, n q<lb/>
I. C.<lb/>
Kier. a ti-4 senioi from Durham,<lb/>
who was Quinn's sixth man lasl<lb/>
start d " everal occa-<lb/>
ms The third returning starter<lb/>
guard Tom Miller, a 5-11 junior<lb/>
from Oxon Hill, Maryland.<lb/>
Most likely prospect off the fre h<lb/>
man (earn to eraek the starting<lb/>
five is Jim Gregory, a 6-7, 205<lb/>
pound product of Elbert, W.Va<lb/>
Gregory averaged 252 with the<lb/>
yearlings and has the potential to<lb/>
become an outstanding player<lb/>
Rick Collins, al 6-9 and 190, from<lb/>
Milwaukee. Wise Jim Kiernan, 6-0<lb/>
155 from New York. Aubrey Wil-<lb/>
. 6-5. 130 from Detroit and<lb/>
Richie Williams, 6-2, no, Muncie<lb/>
Ind are the junior college trans-<lb/>
"Probably the two most impoi<lb/>
factors for us will bo the tour-<lb/>
laments Quinn says "Our Eas-<lb/>
ern Carolina Classic ju; I aftei<lb/>
Christmas serves as exti'a motlva-<lb/>
. for the first half ol the iea-<lb/>
and the Southern Conference<lb/>
tournament will have the ante ef-<lb/>
fei ? for the second half.<lb/>
The boy have talked all sum-<lb/>
mer about the tournaments. We<lb/>
know Davidson has the outstand-<lb/>
ing team in the Southern Confer-<lb/>
once, but we could knock them off.<lb/>
With a good record, no mater how<lb/>
the .Southern Conference comes out,<lb/>
we'd have a chance at the NTT<lb/>
Why buy your Diamond Prom us? There ai<lb/>
28,000 jewelers, retail and wholesale, who will '?<lb/>
to sell you a diamond.<lb/>
First of all, we have successfully passed a<lb/>
grading examinationsuch knowledge enables<lb/>
buy loose diamonds direct from the diamond cutti<lb/>
eliminate the broker, manufacturer, and wholesa<lb/>
Secondly, yon the customer will be shown th<lb/>
quality and grade ol the diamond yon buy.<lb/>
Last, because of our knowledge of diamond<lb/>
ing and market prices we 'my at the lowest price<lb/>
price to the customer is actually BELOW the wh<lb/>
level?in fact, bring us the picture of any dia<lb/>
jewelry yon select from any wholesale catalog<lb/>
will duplicate it for less than the shown whole<lb/>
We have done this on many occasions. We kno<lb/>
monds. We know the diamond market.<lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELERS<lb/>
R( iisti red ? uu l rs  (' rtifu l Gi ynolocisl<lb/>
111 Evans Street<lb/>
See Geo. Lautares ECU Class of 1941<lb/>
Special credit tei ns foi ECU students.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
ru!<lb/>
ad-<lb/>
Hie<lb/>
s.k<lb/>
aond<lb/>
!&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp; ??<lb/>
IN A CRISIS, it takes courage to<lb/>
be a leader . . . courage to .peak out<lb/>
. . . to poinl the way  to say,<lb/>
"Follow Me In a crisis, it takes<lb/>
action to survive . . . the kind of de-<lb/>
cisive action that come from ,i man<lb/>
Of sound instinct, as well as mtelli-<lb/>
gen<lb/>
If America is to survive this crisis<lb/>
? ? ? if the youth of America are to<lb/>
inherit a sane and even promising<lb/>
world, we must have courageous,<lb/>
constructive leadership. The kind of<lb/>
leadership that only George C.<lb/>
Wallace?of all Presidential can-<lb/>
didates?has to offer. That's why<lb/>
young Americans who really think<lb/>
support Wallace.<lb/>
THEY KNOW that n takes c<lb/>
age to stand up for America agains<lb/>
the pscudo intelleetu.il profess<lb/>
the hippies, the press and the ent<lb/>
liberal Establishment. And they1<lb/>
got that courage.<lb/>
I housands and thousands of<lb/>
tomorrow's lenders ?the thinking<lb/>
young men and women of Americ<lb/>
who have courage and who arc<lb/>
willing to a c t ? a r e joining<lb/>
YOUTH FOR WALLACE. You<lb/>
should join. too.<lb/>
There are no dues. Send in the<lb/>
coupon to receive your membership<lb/>
card, the YFW Newsletter and I<lb/>
copy oi STAND UP FOR<lb/>
AMERICA the story of George<lb/>
C. Wallace.<lb/>
ifouth for Wallac<lb/>
1 am ware 1,1 ?J i i<lb/>
1629 K St N.W.<lb/>
Q Washington, D.C. 20006<lb/>
(202) 296-8192<lb/>
years old and pledge to support G(<lb/>
lca '? na me mj membersh"<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
c . Wallace for President,<lb/>
?n VO! 111 FOR-WALLACE and the<lb/>
PKINT NAMB<lb/>
XLIV<lb/>
1MW SET?On Satu<lb/>
the I. nmn Pipers will<lb/>
will be a service chai<lb/>
Ti ke are $3.06 and s<lb/>
Office Uirong-h Octob<lb/>
Comp<lb/>
(?radii<lb/>
ten<lb/>
.ind es<lb/>
? i ided upsi<lb/>
 . for East (<lb/>
u tab<lb/>
Placement Ser<lb/>
? K .lamps.<lb/>
' linjj -alar;<lb/>
i ord-keeping<lb/>
ca mall<lb/>
ind at<lb/>
graduate ,<lb/>
o esttmal<lb/>
: Arts<lb/>
?to work<lb/>
'i ? with<lb/>
. (XI<lb/>
 . 11<lb/>
i a ?<lb/>
an ac<lb/>
- een $8.4<lb/>
? ledian ol aroi<lb/>
iceounl<lb/>
nlv In re<lb/>
f?67 the top<lb/>
i  year, f<lb/>
to $8,400<lb/>
'Hi Jam th<lb/>
I liscusatng salarb<lb/>
C Joim<lb/>
With Bi<lb/>
A program leading<lb/>
1  with a major in fc<lb/>
join  nly seven in<lb/>
'Sl:i baa been initia<lb/>
Carolina University, it<lb/>
pd this week.<lb/>
A' ? ?"dlng to assist<lb/>
or ijnda W. Lil<lb/>
?course of studies "ei<lb/>
? kground in r<lb/>
htmiistry and<lb/>
biology<lb/>
Little continued,<lb/>
; the proarra<lb/>
1 i take course!<lb/>
 hemlstry, radii<lb/>
r- und<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039370_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>