<?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="00039395_0001"/>
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last Carolinian<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
V i m i m i<lb/>
iJV<lb/>
East Carolina University, Greenville, X. C, Tuesday, February 11, 1969<lb/>
Number 34<lb/>
VKGIN OF EXCELLENCE"?Secretary of State Thad Eure (right) hands Schools of Business foundation<lb/>
charter to ECU trustees Chairman Kohert B. Morgan as business Dean James II Bearden (left) and universi-<lb/>
n president Leo W. Jenkins look on.<lb/>
School 01 Business Establish<lb/>
ECU Business Foundation<lb/>
?he East Carolina University<lb/>
Sch ol ol Business has established<lb/>
Ion to provide a "margin<lb/>
? Hence" in its growth and<lb/>
nent f educational, ser-<lb/>
? ? t arch programs.<lb/>
D Fames H. Bearden, dean of<lb/>
the B . inesa School announced the<lb/>
inon of' the Bast Carolina<lb/>
Busi ? ss Foundation as a North<lb/>
non-profit corporation.<lb/>
harter was issued by Sec-<lb/>
rel . oi State Thad Eure and pre-<lb/>
sented by him to Dean Bearden.<lb/>
ECU President Leo W. Jenkins and<lb/>
j.v ? : ity trustees Chairman Rob-<lb/>
ert B Morgan.<lb/>
Add To Resources<lb/>
A rding to Dr. Bearden, the<lb/>
foundation can add to business<lb/>
sch i il resources "a margin for ex-<lb/>
celli rice not otherwise available to<lb/>
us<lb/>
He explained, "Our program in<lb/>
the School of Business is an ex-<lb/>
pensive undertaking. While state<lb/>
contributions are significant, they<lb/>
do not allow full development of the<lb/>
potential. Therefore, we must count<lb/>
on financial support from outside<lb/>
. gular sources<lb/>
The foundation has the authority<lb/>
to receive, invest and use money<lb/>
and property for the benefit of the<lb/>
School of Business and its pro-<lb/>
grams. Objectives stated in the by-<lb/>
laws include support of program<lb/>
"that will best provide academic<lb/>
support to the business and finan-<lb/>
cial community programs "that<lb/>
will tend to produce graduates<lb/>
who possesss skills and qualifica-<lb/>
tions thought to be in demand" and<lb/>
such seminars, lectures or work-<lb/>
shops "as will best meet the needs"<lb/>
of students or businessmen.<lb/>
Four Classes<lb/>
The corporation will have four<lb/>
classes of members: associate mem-<lb/>
bers, contributors of $25 a year:<lb/>
participating members, $100 a year;<lb/>
enior member SI.000 a year; and<lb/>
life members. $10,000 or more.<lb/>
All members will be eligible to<lb/>
attend corporation meetings and re-<lb/>
ceive publications of the foundation.<lb/>
Participating, senior and life mem-<lb/>
ber- will have voting privileges at<lb/>
corporation meetings, to be held<lb/>
innually in May or June.<lb/>
Governing Board<lb/>
Affairs of the foundation will be<lb/>
governed by a board of al least<lb/>
three directors, including the dean<lb/>
of the School of Business. The<lb/>
board will elect six officers of the<lb/>
corporation each year for one-year<lb/>
terms: chairman of the board,<lb/>
president, senior vice president,<lb/>
vice president, secretary and treas-<lb/>
urer.<lb/>
Dr Bearden and two of his fac-<lb/>
ulty members, Dr. James L. Knipe<lb/>
and G. Waldron Snyder, are the<lb/>
official incorporators and initial di-<lb/>
rectors of the corporation.<lb/>
Student Legislature Approves<lb/>
Trial Period Ol Transit System<lb/>
con<lb/>
T<lb/>
sec<lb/>
Tu.<lb/>
or<lb/>
in<lb/>
ie trial period of the transit<lb/>
em has finally received the<lb/>
?  of the student legislature<lb/>
r i long study, a defeat in the<lb/>
I tture, restudy of the proposal,<lb/>
a student poll.<lb/>
rial period will begin the<lb/>
day of the spring quarter.<lb/>
v. March 11. During this<lb/>
'here will be two buses pick-<lb/>
up and discharging passenger<lb/>
from 7:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.<lb/>
These buses will carry students<lb/>
to and from (lass areas: Mimes,<lb/>
men and women's dormitories,<lb/>
Buccaneer Court. Pitt Plaza, and a<lb/>
downtown stop at Holly Street.<lb/>
Quirk Exit<lb/>
The buses will have a dual-door<lb/>
system, allowing for a Quick en-<lb/>
trance and exit They will have a<lb/>
i ating capacity of 56, with stand<lb/>
Sorority Starts Scholarship<lb/>
Tto<lb/>
Alpli,<lb/>
ated<lb/>
bain<lb/>
pn :<lb/>
er tl<lb/>
of a<lb/>
BTadl<lb/>
will<lb/>
I<lb/>
By SANDY HOLLAND<lb/>
North Carolina chapters of<lb/>
i Delta Pi Sorority have initi-<lb/>
a fund-raising project to ob-<lb/>
money for a new scholarship<lb/>
am. The scholarship fund, ov-<lb/>
.000 will be given in the form<lb/>
:if! to a deserving high school<lb/>
late planning to attend a Nor-<lb/>
os college.<lb/>
lidates for the scholarship<lb/>
'? considered in terms of<lb/>
average and financial<lb/>
i hey will be required to<lb/>
essay expressing their to-<lb/>
rn of college life. The re-<lb/>
111 be In no way obligated<lb/>
any d the money.<lb/>
. Is First<lb/>
iroiina is kicking off the<lb/>
an that will be<lb/>
A DP; Cl<lb/>
initial effort on the part ol North<lb/>
Carolina serves as an example that<lb/>
th r states will follow.<lb/>
The scholarship will be awarded<lb/>
this Spring for the following Fall.<lb/>
Next year chapters in every state<lb/>
will be giving individual scholar-<lb/>
hips bo fifty girls.<lb/>
Delta Omieron Chapter<lb/>
The Delta Omieron chapter of<lb/>
DPi on the East Carolina campus<lb/>
sponsored a chicken dinner for their<lb/>
fund raising project. Through the<lb/>
combined efforts of the sorority<lb/>
rirla and Alumnae nearly 300 din-<lb/>
ners were distributed m the Green<lb/>
 area foi . ofit of $200.<lb/>
X idditton Delta Omieron Is<lb/>
ship mud toiti-<lb/>
Hie Karen<lb/>
. will bo<lb/>
an adi'i<lb/>
ing room for approximately 20. to-<lb/>
taling 75 on each bus.<lb/>
The buses will be rented from<lb/>
Raleigh City Coach Lines for a 15-<lb/>
school-day trial period, costing<lb/>
$4800. Raleigh City Coach Line<lb/>
will be responsible for the driver.<lb/>
maintenance, insurance, and g i<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Routes and schedules are now be-<lb/>
am planned and will bo announced<lb/>
to the tudenl body by printing<lb/>
separate schedules tor each stu-<lb/>
dent to be distributed before the<lb/>
trial period begins. Being only a<lb/>
trial system, the cooperation ol the<lb/>
entire student body will be needed<lb/>
to make this system a success<lb/>
Students are asked to make sug-<lb/>
gestions during the trial and bo be<lb/>
patient.<lb/>
Student Vote<lb/>
If the students wish to have the<lb/>
transit system become permament,<lb/>
they will be given the chance to<lb/>
decide the day following the end<lb/>
of the trial period by a campus-<lb/>
wide referendum on Wednesday.<lb/>
April 2.<lb/>
A permanent, transit system will<lb/>
be cheaper than the trial system.<lb/>
The permanent system will allow<lb/>
g buses to operate for the .same<lb/>
price as the 2 buses cost to operate<lb/>
the trial jwriod. When the<lb/>
s passed by the student<lb/>
1.60 will be added to each<lb/>
I ivity fee begt next<lb/>
during<lb/>
item<lb/>
body, S<lb/>
SGA Approves<lb/>
New Statutes<lb/>
Statutes to the SGA Bill ol J<lb/>
concerning studenl pubheatioJ<lb/>
solicitation, and demonstratio<lb/>
were passed in Thursday's special<lb/>
meeting of the Legislature<lb/>
The Student Publications Aj '<lb/>
provides that 'Any student, or<lb/>
p of studi nfc . may dissecimi-<lb/>
. .? ? his, or Its, views by any means<lb/>
leemed appropriate as long as the<lb/>
name.<lb/>
?Any pamphlet, news-<lb/>
r, new paper, or tract whJ<lb/>
purp rts to represent the Univer-<lb/>
sity i r SGA, may not be issued<lb/>
thoul the express permission of<lb/>
te Publications Board.<lb/>
Charge Of Lying<lb/>
?Any studenl who violates thi<lb/>
.ict by disseminal fal e mater-<lb/>
ial, other than clearly stating per-<lb/>
il al opinion, as fact or by not<lb/>
citing authorship will be subji<lb/>
to action by the Honor Councils<lb/>
inder the basic charge of Iving<lb/>
The right of solicitation give<lb/>
recognized student organizations<lb/>
privileges of soliciting money on<lb/>
campu An "Act Defining Solici-<lb/>
tation" was also passed by the<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Solicitation will not be permitted<lb/>
in the dormitories and persons or<lb/>
organizations not defined in the<lb/>
al Organizations Act must se-<lb/>
cure a permit from the Division<lb/>
if student Affairs allowing them to<lb/>
solicil money.<lb/>
Peaceful<lb/>
The statute passed, called "An<lb/>
Act, for Lawful Assembly in-<lb/>
cludes the following:<lb/>
"The University recognizes the<lb/>
right of peaceful and lawful demon-<lb/>
strations on campus.<lb/>
Only : ganiaaijns as de-<lb/>
 i in the Legal Organizations<lb/>
Acl can i :gage in lawful demon-<lb/>
.on on campus. All other or-<lb/>
ganizations . must first receive a<lb/>
mit from the proper University<lb/>
,tl Division of Student Af-<lb/>
prerequiatte for engag-<lb/>
ing ui lawful demonstrations on<lb/>
campus. If such a permit shall not<lb/>
have been granted, then the dem-<lb/>
otion shall be considered to be<lb/>
vful.<lb/>
'Any form of dem instratloa by<lb/>
iny number of individuals which in<lb/>
ny way disrupts the normal opera-<lb/>
? on of the University shall be con-<lb/>
to be unlawful.<lb/>
Disrupt Operations<lb/>
"Demonstrations which disrupt<lb/>
normal operation of the Uni-<lb/>
hose which:<lb/>
?prevent students from going to<lb/>
class unhindered.<lb/>
prevent member: of the faculty,<lb/>
fi or administration from per-<lb/>
: irming the duties for which they<lb/>
?? ? re employed.<lb/>
prevent members of the Uni-<lb/>
Ity from engaging in job inter-<lb/>
views.<lb/>
impede classes that are in ses-<lb/>
sion due t i excessive amounts of<lb/>
noise.<lb/>
? cause damage to University<lb/>
property andor private property,<lb/>
?in any manner jeopardize pub-<lb/>
lic order and safety on campus.<lb/>
Off-Campus<lb/>
Off-campus demonstrations in<lb/>
which members of the University<lb/>
'students, faculty, staff) partici-<lb/>
pate, shall be considered to be law-<lb/>
ful only if they conform to the<lb/>
appropriate civil laws and statues<lb/>
governing lawful assembly<lb/>
'No Curlew' Dorms<lb/>
The administration has approved<lb/>
the Women's Residence Council's<lb/>
WRCt plan for "no curfew" dormi-<lb/>
tories.<lb/>
There will be two and possibly<lb/>
three such dorms next fall, ac-<lb/>
cording to results of a questionnaire<lb/>
sent to all women's dorms, Soror-<lb/>
ity houses, and the Buccaneer<lb/>
Courts. These dorms will be the<lb/>
two newest ones on the campus'<lb/>
extreme west end.<lb/>
Third Dorm<lb/>
Whether the third dorm. Greene.<lb/>
will be needed or not will be de-<lb/>
termined by a second questionnaire<lb/>
sent to the women students last<lb/>
week. This second questionnare will<lb/>
be a listing of all girls planning to<lb/>
occupy the "no curfew" dorms.<lb/>
In order to live in such a dorm,<lb/>
a women studen must be 21 years<lb/>
old by Sept. 1, 1969 or a junior<lb/>
or senior under 21 with parental<lb/>
permission, said Assistant Dean of<lb/>
Woman Carolyn Fulghum.<lb/>
S25 Per Year<lb/>
Also, there will be an additional<lb/>
cost of $25 per academic year to<lb/>
each girl living in these dorms,<lb/>
Final decision on the number of<lb/>
dorms needed will come this week<lb/>
after results of the second question-<lb/>
naire are determined.<lb/>
Any woman student who is in-<lb/>
terested in this program and who<lb/>
has not had the opportunity to sign<lb/>
the second questionnaire should go,<lb/>
this week, to the Dean of Women's<lb/>
Office, 214 Whichard Building.<lb/>
FINALLY PAS8E8?Nancj Sheppard. Gary Gasperini, and Richard<lb/>
Waters begin the pn ? ess of preparation for the trial transit system. It<lb/>
uill begin operation the tecond daj of spring quarter, Tuesday. March 11.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0002"/><lb/>
2?East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11. 1969<lb/>
a -<lb/>
ion<lb/>
Phone Company Policy?<lb/>
Have you ever been discriminated against?<lb/>
If you are a day student of this university ami have<lb/>
reached twenty-one year; of age, the chances are that you have.<lb/>
That discrimination occurs when the student attempts<lb/>
to obtain telephone service through he office of he local com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
According to the policy of the telephone company, a day<lb/>
student must be prepared to submit a deposit of fifty dollars<lb/>
before having a telephone installed. His only alternative, il<lb/>
he wants a phone, is to bring in a letter from some person<lb/>
who is gainfully employed stating that this person will<lb/>
sume responsibility should the student not meet his obligati<lb/>
It is the contention of the company that such regulations<lb/>
are designed to prevent students from destroying telephones<lb/>
and to prevent students from leaving the aren without paying<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
The theory of the telephone company is basically sound<lb/>
. . . but only as a theory. Its orginators failed to consider<lb/>
several aspects of the situation.<lb/>
Must students do not act in such a manner. The attitudi<lb/>
of must of Greenville's businessmen denies the contention thai<lb/>
most students act irresponsibly, for very few require such<lb/>
unreasonable deposts from students renting housing or estab-<lb/>
lishing charge accounts.<lb/>
The companies attitude is perhaps justified in the case<lb/>
of students who have not reached their legal majority, for<lb/>
law prevents them from being sued for nonpayment of debt<lb/>
incurred for such luxury itnms.<lb/>
The basic unreasonab ness of the company's attitudi<lb/>
becomes evident in the case of the student who is legally re-<lb/>
sponsible. North Carolina law provides that any person twei<lb/>
ty-one years of age or older is responsible for any deist '<lb/>
mijirht incur, regardless of whether they are classified as<lb/>
luxury or necessity items.<lb/>
The service station attendant down the street may have<lb/>
a telephone installed for a minimal deposit. The student, who<lb/>
is equally responsible for his debts, must pay fifty dollars<lb/>
for the same service, or else have someone write a letter as-<lb/>
suming responsibility, regardless of his having full lejrj :<lb/>
status as a citizen.<lb/>
The telephone company, of course, has the right to at-<lb/>
tempt to protect itself from nonpayment or abuse of its equip-<lb/>
ment. But are the measure employed justified in the light ? I<lb/>
circumstance?<lb/>
Pharmaceutical Company Welcome<lb/>
The addition of Burroughs Wellcome and Co Inc to<lb/>
the Greenville business community may well provide ECU<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins with an added weapon for his drive<lb/>
for the establishment of a medical facility on the campus.<lb/>
A well-known and respected pharmaceutical company.<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome has decided to place its manufacturing<lb/>
operation in Greenville and its research and administrative<lb/>
offices in the Research Triangle Park.<lb/>
The need for such medical facilities in the eastern part<lb/>
of this state need little reiteration. Dr. Jenkins, throughout<lb/>
this drive, has stressed that the doctor patient ratio of the area<lb/>
is one of the worst in the country. He has shown how the<lb/>
planned School of Allied Health Professions would both pro-<lb/>
vide some of the much-needed personnel and serve as a start-<lb/>
ing point for a full-scale medical school.<lb/>
Funds are the drawback, however, as the legislature has<lb/>
been reluctant to appropriate the necessary six million dol-<lb/>
lars for the project.<lb/>
The arrival of Burroughs Wellcome on the Greenville<lb/>
scene may well provide a turn in the tide in favor of the pro-<lb/>
medical facility forces, for the establishment of such a phar-<lb/>
maceutical industry in the East will bring with it a sizeable<lb/>
boost to the economy. It will also induce medical specialists<lb/>
to begin practice in Greenville, thus adding to the team of<lb/>
voices clamoring tor such a medical facility.<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome, in deciding to establish in Green-<lb/>
ville, indicated that they feel the much-needed medical school<lb/>
is at last on the way. and by go doing provided the impetus<lb/>
?ke the appropriation of the needed funds for<lb/>
the four<lb/>
idatioi project.<lb/>
? last Carolinian<lb/>
Published s?mi weekly by the student of East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
. Member<lb/>
Intrror??ri.te Press, Associated Collegiate Press, United States Student Press Association<lb/>
Subscription rate $5.00<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2616, East Carolina University Station Greenville N C<lb/>
Telephone: 762-8718 or 768-3428. extension jrcenv,lle' N c<lb/>
Thank You<lb/>
hii. ?<lb/>
W? the black student oi Ea<lb/>
Carolina University, wish to e<lb/>
, Bo all oi those<lb/>
tudents and m mbers of the facul-<lb/>
ty who provided valuable and im<lb/>
tanl aid hi observance of Black<lb/>
tory Week Important assist-<lb/>
, wafi giv( n by those who served<lb/>
? . ral consultants and by those<lb/>
i made loans of valuable art ob-<lb/>
i '<lb/>
We would like to exU nd pecial<lb/>
Di Watrous, Chairman<lb/>
th( Anthropology Departmei<lb/>
I Dr Parh-<lb/>
ECU Forum<lb/>
nan, Art; Dr. Ito, Biology; Dr. Kil-<lb/>
patrick. English; Dr. Dixon, Psy-<lb/>
chology; Mrs. Williams, Library<lb/>
Reference Room; Miss Mendenhall.<lb/>
University Union; and the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN. THANK YOU<lb/>
Bro. Bill Owens<lb/>
'Report Its Loss'<lb/>
Dear Fellow Students:<lb/>
For those of you who have been<lb/>
missing your Activity and ID<lb/>
cards for approximately four<lb/>
week , they might be at the Student<lb/>
Hani. It you accidentally left them<lb/>
there til iy are holding them until<lb/>
PL<lb/>
!<lb/>
you return with your new onfv<lb/>
seven dollars worth!<lb/>
In case you haven't re;ui the<lb/>
small print under your I D. picture<lb/>
reads in part, "Reoort I<lb/>
<lb/>
(or If found,<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs '<lb/>
Report ts i0Ss<lb/>
nail) tv Assistant<lb/>
Why<lb/>
own<lb/>
this<lb/>
the<lb/>
take<lb/>
any<lb/>
able<lb/>
don'<lb/>
the employees of our<lb/>
campus Student Bank follow<lb/>
policy or at least tun; it <lb/>
Losl and Found? V  doe5<lb/>
a little bit of one's time, but<lb/>
oi us students know how valu.<lb/>
these credentials are  order<lb/>
urvive In this town.<lb/>
Sincerely.<lb/>
D. R Maine<lb/>
University Operates Extensions<lb/>
l I l K1 BKOIUI<lb/>
: ? Carol<lb/>
ed only<lb/>
na University is not<lb/>
Greenville. There<lb/>
. n campuses of this TJhi-<lb/>
ed at the military base:<lb/>
Cherry Point. Camp Lejeune,<lb/>
Johnson in Golds-<lb/>
Opi the Division ol Con-<lb/>
i u ati m, these off-cam-<lb/>
nt : offer the equivalent of<lb/>
o-yeai ' ollege program for<lb/>
l thi military and the civilians<lb/>
; th area<lb/>
According to Continuing Educa-<lb/>
Dean David Middleton, ther-<lb/>
an usually more than 1100 people<lb/>
lied in these renters during the<lb/>
term.<lb/>
Junior College<lb/>
They offer a curriculum com-<lb/>
parable to any junior college and<lb/>
Computer Fights<lb/>
City Hall<lb/>
are fully accredited.<lb/>
Although they are designed and<lb/>
heated to provide a basic college<lb/>
education for service men, there are<lb/>
also many civilians enrolled in<lb/>
them. At Camp Lejeune ;tnd Cher<lb/>
ry Point usually about one-fourth<lb/>
of the students are civilians, and at<lb/>
Seymour Johnson as many as halt<lb/>
ne civilians.<lb/>
Many of the service men who en-<lb/>
roll m these centers go on to fur-<lb/>
ther their education even more<lb/>
Since they come from all over the<lb/>
country, the majority of then.<lb/>
transfer to other colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities.<lb/>
Middleton stated that the grad-<lb/>
uates of these centers tend to do<lb/>
above average work.<lb/>
Full Time Staff<lb/>
Each of these three centers is<lb/>
staffed by a full time administrator<lb/>
and teaching staff. In addition,<lb/>
some faculty members from the<lb/>
Greenville campus commute to the<lb/>
bases to teach special courses, and<lb/>
even a fe, approved instructors<lb/>
Irom the local areas are used.<lb/>
Flight Gong<lb/>
Middle Don stated that it was un-<lb/>
usual for the flight gon- to ring<lb/>
while these classes are in session,<lb/>
and for the entire class to '??? fly-<lb/>
ing over Africa a few hours later.<lb/>
Camp Lejeune had a problem<lb/>
when three-quarters of its -tudent<lb/>
body was evacuated dunn the Cil-<lb/>
ia Missile Crisis in 1962<lb/>
At Cherry Point, H is ? un-<lb/>
usual for the students in weekend<lb/>
flight training to use the libraries<lb/>
in Philadelphia. New York, and Bal-<lb/>
timore This center was established<lb/>
In 1965 and enrolls about 350. Its<lb/>
classes meet in Havelock Senior<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
Middleton stated tluw. the chief<lb/>
success of these extension cam-<lb/>
puses has been that they have<lb/>
reached so many military men Ap-<lb/>
projdmately 15,000 people who<lb/>
would otherwise have no opportun-<lb/>
ity to either begin or cjntinue col-<lb/>
lege work have been able to com-<lb/>
plete all or at least a portion of<lb/>
their junior college education<lb/>
through these centers<lb/>
says you can't<lb/>
All you need is a<lb/>
? ACPe-Whu<lb/>
light city hall?<lb/>
computer.<lb/>
Bruce Kusens, a student at<lb/>
Miami-Dade Junior College North<lb/>
proved that as he reeled off com-<lb/>
puterized facts and figures before<lb/>
a judge and jury in Okeechobee<lb/>
County, the FALCON TIMES re-<lb/>
port?<lb/>
Kusens, 19. was arrested for ex-<lb/>
ceeding a 70 miles-per-hour speed<lb/>
limit. The arresting officer, Corp.<lb/>
D. H. Gannon, said he clocked<lb/>
Kusens traveling at 80<lb/>
Certain of his innocence, Kusens<lb/>
?urned the situation into a mathe-<lb/>
matical problem and fed figures oi<lb/>
speed and distance into one of<lb/>
Miami-Dade's 15 million dollar<lb/>
computers. After weeks of pro-<lb/>
gramming, the computer reached<lb/>
a decision; The defendent was<lb/>
traveling at 69.7845 miles per hour.<lb/>
Kusens' programming was verified<lb/>
by a Miami-Dade physics professor.<lb/>
Acting as his own attorney, Ku-<lb/>
sens presented his data in court.<lb/>
He also showed the jury numerous<lb/>
a aids he had received in physics<lb/>
and engineering to prove himself<lb/>
an expert in the field.<lb/>
The judge ordered the panel to<lb/>
disregard any computer testimony<lb/>
? ince Kusens had applied all the<lb/>
facts to the IBM machine himself.<lb/>
But after nearly an hour of de-<lb/>
liberation, tne jury handed the<lb/>
court a verdict of not guilty.<lb/>
Whether the computerized evidence<lb/>
helped his case or not, only the<lb/>
jury knows for sure.<lb/>
"I can't help thinkng that if the<lb/>
judge had accepted it, and with<lb/>
the impact it had on the jury,<lb/>
maybe someday soon there will be<lb/>
teams of lawyers and computers<lb/>
aid Kusens.<lb/>
A Sense Ot Style<lb/>
By Don Pierce<lb/>
There will never be another like<lb/>
Portago. Don Alphonso Cabeza de<lb/>
Vaca y Leighton, the seventeenth<lb/>
Marguis de Portago, rushing<lb/>
through life with a fool's grin on<lb/>
his face, a fire in his eyes, and a<lb/>
cigarette dangling from the corner<lb/>
of his mouth.<lb/>
Portago had everything: money,<lb/>
charm, beautiful women, intelli-<lb/>
gence, and style. You could see<lb/>
Portago's style hi everything he<lb/>
did. Flamboyant, daring, he tackled<lb/>
life with the intent purpose of beat-<lb/>
ing fear and death into the ground<lb/>
The stories about Portago are leg-<lb/>
end now. Like the time he flew a<lb/>
borrowed twin-engined plane under<lb/>
a bridge on a bet, or the time he en-<lb/>
tered two bobsleds in the Olympics<lb/>
and missed winning a medal by a<lb/>
tenth of second?even though the<lb/>
week before he had gone off a bob-<lb/>
sled run at sixty miles an hour in<lb/>
his first time ever in a bobsled<lb/>
It was inevitable that Portago<lb/>
would turn to racing. He burst<lb/>
upon the Grand Prix scene literal-<lb/>
ly in flames, as he crashed and<lb/>
careened his way around the cir-<lb/>
cuits. Portago had no nerves; he<lb/>
would walk away from a 170 mile<lb/>
an hour crash as casually :us it<lb/>
lie were buying a newspaper. Other<lb/>
drivers feared him, if not for his<lb/>
skill, then for his courage. Por-<lb/>
tago never ran anything but flat<lb/>
out- to do less would not be his<lb/>
style.<lb/>
Drivers who raced with Portago<lb/>
knew that he would die. He had<lb/>
challenged the odds too many times<lb/>
and won; his number would not<lb/>
come up again. It was also true<lb/>
ODD<lb/>
BODKINS<lb/>
tliat Portago would not die in bed?<lb/>
you would not expect it of such a<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Li the Mille Migliak, 1957. Port-<lb/>
ago ran his last race against death.<lb/>
Portago had not wanted to rim the<lb/>
Mille; h felt uneasy about the<lb/>
race. Ferrari had a car, and Port-<lb/>
ago was obligated.<lb/>
Portago got Gunar Nelson, a<lb/>
close friend, to act as his navi-<lb/>
gator, and, the pair of them sped<lb/>
out of Brescia one misty morning<lb/>
in a thousand mile run through<lb/>
Italy. They sped through Paduo,<lb/>
Ancona. Rome, Florence, Bologna.<lb/>
Portago was doing well; he was in<lb/>
second place and gaining Maybe<lb/>
the odds would hold once more.<lb/>
They were thirty miles from the<lb/>
finish when the Ferrari roared out<lb/>
of Guilizollo, swerved, flew<lb/>
through the air, cut a telephone<lb/>
pole in half, and killed both Port-<lb/>
ago, ?uid Nelson. and eleven<lb/>
Italian peasants.<lb/>
Portago had beaten death all his<lb/>
life, but, m the end, he was forced<lb/>
to turn in his cards in a game he<lb/>
could not win. No one, not even<lb/>
Portago, beats death consistently:<lb/>
There is a moial in this It k<lb/>
that man should live with flare,<lb/>
with nerve, with courage, with<lb/>
style, to do what he wishes and not<lb/>
fear to challenge death. It is better<lb/>
? i tail trying to be the best, than to<lb/>
live the game of life on the bench<lb/>
The words of Jean Beh.a, dead<lb/>
9 years now after a racing acci-<lb/>
dent, best sum up this aspect of<lb/>
style: "Only those who do not<lb/>
move do not die; but are they not<lb/>
already dead?"<lb/>
op aos?,wuR fhct<lb/>
looks me a t<lb/>
Frederick the Gi<lb/>
jor 4(; years, frvm<lb/>
H(. had been a<lb/>
rince who loved r<lb/>
died "the ho<lb/>
vas deettoi<lb/>
different 1<lb/>
lood of thous<lb/>
, complex 1<lb/>
e ed ex<lb/>
political, an<lb/>
to life ag<lb/>
Playhou<lb/>
premie<lb/>
m ?num<lb/>
Sorrows of<lb/>
pens at 8:1<lb/>
?ht run u<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ick came<lb/>
La was<lb/>
the Holy<lb/>
'v his owi<lb/>
v, tna at<lb/>
 many fie:<lb/>
.cars of t<lb/>
Warrior- J<lb/>
fame secur<lb/>
ch, Frederic<lb/>
alition of<lb/>
it who w<lb/>
Prussia. L<lb/>
levoured, f<lb/>
ed Euror<lb/>
War. But t!<lb/>
nb.seque<lb/>
? h in h<lb/>
nakeup.<lb/>
the last yea:<lb/>
nsive mi<lb/>
ntinually In<lb/>
Bui he wit<lb/>
As he no<lb/>
an I ' have come<lb/>
?isfies bo<lb/>
saj vhat they plei<lb/>
? I please.<lb/>
The A<lb/>
Komlus<lb/>
. ted, docum<lb/>
? mpting th<lb/>
? only the<lb/>
ian history.<lb/>
i i ice of Fre<lb/>
acter's mi<lb/>
th ten ible finaliti<lb/>
 ometime N<lb/>
a graduat<lb/>
:<lb/>
Puttin<lb/>
Gf<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0003"/><lb/>
Playhouse Presents Premiere<lb/>
Ea?t Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11, 1969?3<lb/>
h your new ones<lb/>
rth!<lb/>
haven't re;Mi the<lb/>
er your I D. ,)icture<lb/>
?t, "Report its los<lb/>
mail) bo Assistant<lb/>
it Affairs<lb/>
e employ od our<lb/>
tudent Bank follow<lb/>
it least tun; it <lb/>
'ound? Y?- doe?<lb/>
, of one's tline, but<lb/>
nts know how valu-<lb/>
entials are fen order<lb/>
is town.<lb/>
ncerely,<lb/>
R Mant<lb/>
ns<lb/>
ht (iong<lb/>
ted that it was un-<lb/>
"light gong to<lb/>
ses are in session,<lb/>
ire class to be fly.<lb/>
a few hours later.<lb/>
e had a problem<lb/>
rters of it tudent<lb/>
ated durin; ??,<lb/>
is in 1962<lb/>
mt, it i-<lb/>
Ludenus in weekend<lb/>
0 use the lib<lb/>
New York and Bal-<lb/>
lter was establl ie<lb/>
-oils about 350. Its<lb/>
n Hatvelock<lb/>
ted that the chief<lb/>
?se extension cam-<lb/>
1 that they have<lb/>
f mihtary' men Ap-<lb/>
1,000 people who<lb/>
have no opportun-<lb/>
;in or continue col-<lb/>
been able to corn-<lb/>
least a portion of<lb/>
college education<lb/>
enters<lb/>
tyle<lb/>
uld not dK? in bed?<lb/>
expect it of such a<lb/>
Vligliak, 1957. Port-<lb/>
race against death.<lb/>
, wanted to rim the<lb/>
uneasy about the<lb/>
id a car, and Port-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Guiiar Nelson, a<lb/>
 act as his navi-<lb/>
pair of them sped<lb/>
one misty morning<lb/>
mile run through<lb/>
id through Paduo,<lb/>
Florence, Bologna.<lb/>
ng well; he was in<lb/>
ad gaining Maybe<lb/>
hold once more.<lb/>
irty miles from the<lb/>
Ferrari roared out<lb/>
swerved, flew<lb/>
r, cut a telephone<lb/>
d killed both Port-<lb/>
Lson. and eleven<lb/>
eaten death all his<lb/>
end, he was forced<lb/>
?ards in a game he<lb/>
No one, not even<lb/>
death consistently:<lb/>
loial in this It is<lb/>
lid live with flare,<lb/>
ith courage, vith<lb/>
t he wishes and not<lb/>
e death. It is better<lb/>
be the best, than to<lb/>
f life on the bench-<lb/>
Jean Behra, dead<lb/>
fter a racing acci-<lb/>
up this aspect, of<lb/>
hose who do not<lb/>
y, but are they not<lb/>
,v<lb/>
Fl-cdeTick the Great ruled Prussia<lb/>
, 4 years, frwm 1740 until 1786.<lb/>
' had been a sensitive young<lb/>
nrince who loved music?whom Vol-<lb/>
,l(-d "the hope of mankind"?<lb/>
as destined by fate to be-<lb/>
different king, a king with<lb/>
?1 of thousands on his head.<lb/>
omplex historical figure,<lb/>
i es i extraordinary mili-<lb/>
lcal, and artistic talents,<lb/>
, hfe again as the East<lb/>
, Playhouse presents the<lb/>
premiere of Romulus<lb/>
monumental new play,<lb/>
.hows of Frederick" The<lb/>
: s at 8:15 Wednesday for<lb/>
bt run in McGinnis Aud-<lb/>
u.<lb/>
k came ? i the throne<lb/>
i:i was an Insignificant<lb/>
the Holy Roman Empire.<lb/>
his own general, he at-<lb/>
tria at once and fought<lb/>
many fierce battles in the<lb/>
wars of the Austrian .Sue-<lb/>
Warrior-Monarch<lb/>
H. fame secure as a warrior-<lb/>
: Frederick was threatened<lb/>
by lalition of Austria. Russia<lb/>
ce who were bent on des-<lb/>
Prussia. Instead of waiting<lb/>
levanted, he attacked first<lb/>
iged Europe into the Seven<lb/>
War. But the price he paid<lb/>
subsequent victory was<lb/>
?h in his physical and<lb/>
. makeup.<lb/>
the last years of his life h?<lb/>
ntensive military maneuv<lb/>
ntinually inspected his king-<lb/>
don. But he withdrew from his<lb/>
As he noted, "My people<lb/>
ave come to an agreement<lb/>
atiSfies both. They are to<lb/>
vhat they please, and I am to<lb/>
I please<lb/>
The Author<lb/>
Romlus Linney nuuie an<lb/>
? i. documented search be-<lb/>
? mpting the play. What wre<lb/>
m : only tlie rich panoply of<lb/>
ian history, but also the liv-<lb/>
i nee of Frederick the Great,<lb/>
.liter's mind's eye view of<lb/>
thi '? rrible finalities of his life.<lb/>
 ometime North Carolinian,<lb/>
a graduate of Oberlin Col-<lb/>
the<lb/>
De-<lb/>
de-<lb/>
lege and the Yale School of Drama.<lb/>
An actor and director as well as<lb/>
a writer, he spent six summers in<lb/>
New England stock, and a year's<lb/>
work as a stage manager at the<lb/>
Actor's Studio in New York.<lb/>
He previously taught dramatic<lb/>
art at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina in Cha)el Hill and was<lb/>
Director of Pine Arts at North<lb/>
Carolina state. Mr. Linney is pre-<lb/>
sently on the faculty of the Man-<lb/>
hattan School of Mu.ic A critical-<lb/>
ly aclaimed novelist, his most re-<lb/>
cent book, "Slowly, By Thy Hand<lb/>
Unfurled" was published in 1965.<lb/>
la Title Role<lb/>
Cast m the title role of Linney's<lb/>
play i John Sneden, a theatre vet-<lb/>
eran well known to area audiences.<lb/>
Summer Theatre as well as Play-<lb/>
house patron . think of him in wo<lb/>
capacities a an actor and as<lb/>
reator 04 beautiful scenery.<lb/>
As a professor in The ecu<lb/>
partment of Drama and as a<lb/>
signer in the professional theatre<lb/>
Sneden is considered one oi the<lb/>
outstanding young theatre artist<lb/>
in the country.<lb/>
A Phi Beta Kappa graduate oi<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
he was a teacher oi theatre al<lb/>
Lenofcr Rhyne College and at David-<lb/>
son before coming to Greenville<lb/>
A character actor od great skill<lb/>
and fines.se. he played numerous<lb/>
roles with the Carolina Playmakers,<lb/>
n the outdoor theatre circuit in<lb/>
"The Lost Colony "The Stephen<lb/>
Foster Story and "Unto These<lb/>
Hills and indoors as a leading<lb/>
man in the Arrow Rock Lyceum<lb/>
Repertory Theatre in Arrow Rode.<lb/>
Mi- -ouri.<lb/>
Playgoer  Greenville will re-<lb/>
member him for roles in "The<lb/>
Mikado "Brigadoon "The Boj<lb/>
Prom Syracuse "Richard III"<lb/>
"Tlie Imaginary Invalid and<lb/>
"Stop The World I Want to Get<lb/>
Off<lb/>
Plays Opposite<lb/>
Playing opposite Sneden is an-<lb/>
other Greenville favorite, Amanda<lb/>
Muir. who plays Frederick's long-<lb/>
suffering wife, Elizabeth Christine.<lb/>
Miss Muir came Co East, Carolina<lb/>
last year to serve as Guest Artist-<lb/>
in-Residence with the Department<lb/>
of Drama, and stayed to become<lb/>
the wite of playhouse Director, Ed-<lb/>
gar Loessin.<lb/>
A veteran of stock, Off-Broad-<lb/>
way, Network television, and period<lb/>
of study with the internationally<lb/>
famous drama Coach, Lee Stras-<lb/>
berg, miss Muir received her aca-<lb/>
demic training at UNC where she<lb/>
won robust acclaim for her prow<lb/>
as an actress.<lb/>
Versatility<lb/>
With a long list oi theatrical<lb/>
credits that attest to her versa-<lb/>
tility as an actress, she has been<lb/>
featured with numerous companies<lb/>
uch plays as "Gigi "Anti-<lb/>
. ? "The Lark "A Streetcar<lb/>
Named Desire "The Importance<lb/>
?: Being Earnest "Picnic and<lb/>
rii? Comedy of Error<lb/>
In Greenville she ha; captivat-<lb/>
? i audiences with her portrayals<lb/>
Ellen in "Any Wednesday Gil-<lb/>
lian m "Bell Book and Candle<lb/>
and in the title role cA Jean Rp-<lb/>
eine's ?"Phaedra Last season she<lb/>
also staged the popular Playhouse<lb/>
production of "The Knack<lb/>
Joining these two for the pro<lb/>
auction is an all-star cast oi ?<lb/>
ts and faculty which al o fea-<lb/>
tures V York Actor. Frank Gfc-<lb/>
The c impus performance of<lb/>
"Frederick" promises to be whai<lb/>
? be best termed a "gala"<lb/>
affair, since important personages<lb/>
from all over the state and coun-<lb/>
try are expected to attend the open-<lb/>
ing performance and such note-<lb/>
worthy North Carolina authors ns<lb/>
Paul Green, Bernice Kelly Harris.<lb/>
William Styron, East Carolina's<lb/>
own Ovid Pierce, and Governor<lb/>
Bob Scott have been invited to the<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
ticket- for THE SORROW'S OF<lb/>
FREDERICK are now available at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office. Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
FREDERICK AND HIS QUEEN?John Sneden and Amanda Muir in a<lb/>
gripping scene from the East Carolina Playhouse university premiere<lb/>
production of "The Sorrows of Frederick" which plays at 8:15 nightly,<lb/>
I ebruary 12-15 in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Impressive Lineup Of Movies<lb/>
<lb/>
ROY C. DICKS<lb/>
This week's line-up of movies is<lb/>
most impressive. It includes two<lb/>
big Academy Award winners, a<lb/>
great classic, and the return of a<lb/>
beloved star.<lb/>
Beginning tomorrow, the 12th<lb/>
Candy" plays through tonight'<lb/>
at the Plaza Cinema, will be the<lb/>
film version of the Pulitzer Prize-<lb/>
Putting you first, keeps us first. '69 'amnro Sporl loupe, "The Hu<lb/>
m<lb/>
Igur<lb/>
Most of the cars that are con petitive with Chev-<lb/>
rolet are clamoring for you to b ly them now.<lb/>
Big deal. (You hope.)<lb/>
Chevrolet offers something even better than hope.<lb/>
Many popular items are priced less than a year ago.<lb/>
Such as Powerglide and large VH's. Head restraints<lb/>
are now standard. New advanced-design power disc-<lb/>
brakes are priced over a third less than our power disc<lb/>
brakes were last year.<lb/>
So we're offering a '69 Camaro Sport Coupe for less<lb/>
money than last year.<lb/>
$147.00 less if you equip it with the new 350-cuin.<lb/>
250-hp V8 (as compared with last year's 327-cuin.<lb/>
275-hp Eight), the Powerglide and power disc brakes,<lb/>
whitewalls and wheel covers.<lb/>
Help us deflate inflation.<lb/>
Show up at your Chevrolet dealer's Showdown.<lb/>
Vou'll win. mmtm<lb/>
Bat?don manufacturer's suggested retail prices,<lb/>
including federal excise tax and suggested<lb/>
dealer new car preparation charge.<lb/>
CHEVROLET<lb/>
Value Showdown:<lb/>
$147.00 less than<lb/>
last years Camaro with<lb/>
comparable equipment<lb/>
winning play "The Subject Was<lb/>
Roses Thl movie hails the re-<lb/>
turn of the great actress, Patricia<lb/>
Noil, in her first role since her<lb/>
tragic illness (she was last seen<lb/>
in her award-winning performance<lb/>
in "Hud) The film, which also<lb/>
stars Jack Albert son and Martin<lb/>
Sheen recreating their Broadway<lb/>
roles, is the story of a young vet-<lb/>
eran returning home to the Bronx<lb/>
alter WWII. His return rekindles<lb/>
the baffle between his possessive<lb/>
mother and his aggressive father<lb/>
for the favors of their son<lb/>
"West Side Story"<lb/>
"West Side Story me great<lb/>
American musical, will run through<lb/>
tomorrow night, the 12th, at the<lb/>
Pitt Theatre. Winner of 10 Acad-<lb/>
emy Awards, this film is a mast-<lb/>
see for everyone. Beginning Thurs-<lb/>
day, the 13th, the Pitt Theatre will<lb/>
be closed for approximately two<lb/>
weeks for renovation.<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
"Cool Hand Luke one of Paul<lb/>
Newman's best efforts of late, will<lb/>
be shown at the Friday Free Flick<lb/>
in Wright at 7 and 9 pm. Newman<lb/>
was nominated for best actor for<lb/>
his portrayal of minor offender<lb/>
sentenced to a chain gang. Sen-<lb/>
tenced for a relatively short time,<lb/>
he is the model prisoner until his<lb/>
mother dies and he is not allowed<lb/>
to go to her funeral. He escapes<lb/>
only to be caught again, but he<lb/>
undauntedly makes escape after<lb/>
escape until his fate is finally seal-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
David Copperfield<lb/>
Don't forget the International<lb/>
mm next Monday night, the 17th,<lb/>
in Wright at 8 pm. The film will<lb/>
be the early American classic,<lb/>
"David Copperfield from the<lb/>
famous Dickens novel. The film is<lb/>
gem of great performances by<lb/>
some of America's great film ac-<lb/>
tors, including Lionel Barrymore,<lb/>
Freddie Bartholomew. Basil Rath-<lb/>
bone. Elsa Lancaster, and last, but<lb/>
certainly not least W. C. Fields.<lb/>
Saad's Shoe Shop<lb/>
Prompt Servie<lb/>
Located? Middle Cottage Vtow<lb/>
Cleaners Mate Plant<lb/>
Grand Avmm<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavor<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 By-Pass, Greenville<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0004"/><lb/>
4?East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11, 1969<lb/>
legislature Puts Ofl<lb/>
Offset Motion<lb/>
Purcha.se of ?offset equipment for<lb/>
the "Bast Carolinian" was tabled<lb/>
for the second time in a special<lb/>
meeting of the SGA Legislature<lb/>
Thursday afternoon.<lb/>
Legislator Bob Robinson intro-<lb/>
duced an amendment to the origi-<lb/>
nal motion to purchase offset equip-<lb/>
ment and hire a full-time recep-<lb/>
tionist-secretary to operate the<lb/>
equipment,<lb/>
Tabled<lb/>
Since Robinson's amendment was<lb/>
tabled until the next legislative<lb/>
meeting, it was the feeling of the<lb/>
body that the entire matter should<lb/>
be brought on the floor at one time<lb/>
lather than voting on the motion at<lb/>
one meeting and the amendment<lb/>
at the next.<lb/>
The amendment allowed the Pub-<lb/>
lications Board to purchase IBM<lb/>
Select lie composing equipment and<lb/>
Varityper headlining and waxing<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
It further read that The Board<lb/>
is also authorized to employ one<lb/>
full-time employee capable 0f<lb/>
operating tliis equipment, to serve<lb/>
as its operator, and that this per.<lb/>
son be salaried on a scale com"<lb/>
parable to the salary of the sga<lb/>
executive secretry.<lb/>
Other Users<lb/>
The amendment also suiavsted<lb/>
that vther publications u ? the<lb/>
new equipment and schedule ma.<lb/>
chine time through the Publica-<lb/>
tions Board. A separate budgetary<lb/>
category entitled "Composing"<lb/>
would be created under the author-<lb/>
ity of the Publications Board.<lb/>
IBM sales representative, spoke<lb/>
to the Legislature and answered<lb/>
questions from the body.<lb/>
Jolui Morris, an IBM sale raan-<lb/>
rr. pointed out the immediacy<lb/>
ol news possible through use of<lb/>
the machines. He also explained<lb/>
'he terms of leasing the equipmen-<lb/>
Debate Team Returns<lb/>
OLD AUSTIN SOI VENIR?Mrs. Robert B. Morgan and President Leo W. Fenkiiis receive gavels<lb/>
on photographic plaques from IT&amp;E Club President Earl Bunch.<lb/>
Students Make Souvenirs<lb/>
mounted<lb/>
Unusual ouvenirs of East Caro-<lb/>
lina University's original classroom<lb/>
building have been made by ECU<lb/>
students for their president and<lb/>
board chairman.<lb/>
Salvaged<lb/>
Pine gavels turned from wood<lb/>
salvaged from Old Austin Building<lb/>
were given tj President Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins and trustees Chairman<lb/>
Robert B. Morgan. The gavels were<lb/>
mounted on photographs of Old<lb/>
Austin Building, demolished las<lb/>
summer to make room for new<lb/>
campus construction.<lb/>
Members of the industrial and<lb/>
Holhouser Speaks To<lb/>
Young Republicans<lb/>
State Rep. James Holhouser told<lb/>
the East Carolina Young Republi-<lb/>
can Club Thursday night that<lb/>
young people held the key to the<lb/>
future of the Republican party in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
'The Republican party has open-<lb/>
ed its arms wide to the young peo-<lb/>
ple of North Carolina; and young<lb/>
people are the ones who are pro-<lb/>
viding leadership for the Republi-<lb/>
can party said Hohouser.<lb/>
Holhouser, a 1956 graduate of<lb/>
Davidson and a 1960 graduate of the<lb/>
UNC law school, has served in the<lb/>
1963 and 1965 sessions of the Gen-<lb/>
eral Assembley as well as the cur-<lb/>
rent session. He is also chairman<lb/>
of the North Carolina Republican<lb/>
party. He lives in Boone, N.C.<lb/>
Largest<lb/>
Holhouser told the young Repub-<lb/>
licans that the N.C. Republican<lb/>
party is growing. It has the largest<lb/>
delegation in the General Assembly<lb/>
in 40 years.<lb/>
Even though there are no Re-<lb/>
publican representatives from the<lb/>
eastern part of the state, Holhouser<lb/>
is confident that the party will<lb/>
grow in the east.<lb/>
"There is a clear pattern of<lb/>
growth. Representation is about<lb/>
fifty-fifty from Greensboro west.<lb/>
but the party is also moving east<lb/>
The fact that N.C. gave Nixon<lb/>
a large percentage of its vote and<lb/>
that gubernatorial candidate Jim<lb/>
Gardner received 47 is very en-<lb/>
couraging.<lb/>
Republicans The Euture<lb/>
Harry Bagnal, senator horn<lb/>
Forsythe County and minority<lb/>
leader in the Senate, told the YRC<lb/>
"The future of North Carolina is<lb/>
in the hands of the Republicans<lb/>
Bagnal, leader of the 1968 elec-<lb/>
tion sweep in Forsythe County, said<lb/>
that for the first time the Repub-<lb/>
licans will initiate a legislative pro-<lb/>
m-am in the General Assembly.<lb/>
He felt this would be constructive<lb/>
for N.C. and would strengthen the<lb/>
party.<lb/>
During the question and answer<lb/>
period, Holhouser said that he<lb/>
favored lowering the voting age to<lb/>
18. "Such a measure will probably-<lb/>
pass ,if not in this session, then in<lb/>
the next<lb/>
A short business session was held<lb/>
at the close of the meeting, Presi-<lb/>
dent Charles White presiding. Plans<lb/>
were discussed for having the an-<lb/>
nual state convention of the YRC ar<lb/>
ECU this spring.<lb/>
Technical Education Club got the<lb/>
idea and made the gifts. They also<lb/>
made usable cherry wood gavels<lb/>
and presented them to Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
Chairman Morgan and Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent Robert L. Kolt.<lb/>
Bunch A Junior<lb/>
Earl W. Bunch of Rocky Mount,<lb/>
club president and a junior at ECU,<lb/>
presented the gifts at a campus<lb/>
dinner. Morgan, who is North<lb/>
Carolina's new attorney general,<lb/>
was unable to attend, but his wife<lb/>
accepted his gavels for him.<lb/>
Other students participating in<lb/>
the project were club vice presi-<lb/>
dent Stanley Peaden of Greenville,<lb/>
a senior; and gavel committee<lb/>
members Bob Pate of the I&amp;TE<lb/>
faculty, chairman; Herbert. F. Den-<lb/>
ton of Tarboro, a senior; Francis<lb/>
Foster of Littleton, a senior; Tom<lb/>
Graverick of Alexandria, Va and<lb/>
junior Ronald Sessoms of Tarboro.<lb/>
The local debate team returned<lb/>
Sunday night, Feb. 2 from the<lb/>
Mardi Gras Invitational Debate<lb/>
Tournament, Tulane University,<lb/>
New Orleans, disheartened by their<lb/>
mediocre record.<lb/>
Lack of Competition<lb/>
?The lack of frequent imercol-<lb/>
legiate competition and consequent<lb/>
unawareness of changing affirma-<lb/>
tive cases is our only excuse said<lb/>
Barry Dressel, team captain.<lb/>
ECU entered two teams in the<lb/>
tournament to debate this year's<lb/>
national collegiate debate topic,<lb/>
SHOULD EXECUTTVE CONTROL<lb/>
OF U.S. FOREIGN POLICY BE<lb/>
SIGNIFICANTLY CURTAILED?<lb/>
The number- one team, Barry Dres-<lb/>
sel and Bob Bowman, finished 59th<lb/>
among the 112 teams attending the<lb/>
tournament and the number two<lb/>
team, Nathan Weavil and Jim Mc-<lb/>
Cullough, finished 96th.<lb/>
The next tournament scheduled<lb/>
for the local talk crew is the week-<lb/>
end of Feb. 14-15-16 at Columbia<lb/>
University in New York.<lb/>
"To Do Better"<lb/>
"We are definitely going to do<lb/>
better in New York said Dressel.<lb/>
"We are in the process of writing<lb/>
a new case based on the diplomatic<lb/>
service and we think its a brand<lb/>
new idea, one that has not beer.<lb/>
heard before<lb/>
Students Elected<lb/>
Pour political science majors<lb/>
have been elected by a student<lb/>
election in the Political Science de-<lb/>
partment to sit on the first Stu-<lb/>
dent-Faeultv Advisory Committee<lb/>
a! ECU.<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
They are Linda Tetterton, Mitch<lb/>
King, Steve Morriaette and Bruce<lb/>
Summerfieid.<lb/>
Faculty members of the commit-<lb/>
tee are Dr. T. E. Yarbrough and<lb/>
Dr. H. A. I. Sugg.<lb/>
Express Themselves<lb/>
According to Yarbrough, the pur-<lb/>
pose of the committee is to give<lb/>
"undergraduate students in Jie de-<lb/>
partment an opportunity to express<lb/>
themselves in departmental matters<lb/>
of concern to stadents, and to air<lb/>
their grievances and offer sugges-<lb/>
tions for improvements<lb/>
How to Wrecognize a Wreal<lb/>
Wrangler.<lb/>
You have to look for the<lb/>
because it's silent<lb/>
"W<lb/>
Auto Specialty Company, Inc.<lb/>
917 W. 5th Street Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
FOREIGN CAR PARTS and<lb/>
ACCESSORIES<lb/>
All types of general repair work<lb/>
Radiator repair and service<lb/>
Pick-up and delivery service<lb/>
Phone 758-1131<lb/>
Why ffo further? Buy your drug needs from<lb/>
your University drug 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/>
Most Wrangler' leans have<lb/>
the "W" stitched on in<lb/>
plain sight, but other kinds<lb/>
of Wranglers are a little<lb/>
more modest.They're made<lb/>
just as well and they fit just<lb/>
as well, but the "W" is<lb/>
tucked away on a tag or<lb/>
label. You'll find it's worth<lb/>
looking for.<lb/>
These Wranglei j ansand<lb/>
sportswear of Dacron poly-<lb/>
ester and cotton. Permanently<lb/>
creased plaid slacks, $8.00<lb/>
Jacket, $7.00. Shirts $4.00 each,<lb/>
Tapered, permanently pressed<lb/>
jeans, $5.50.<lb/>
Wrangler Jeans<lb/>
and Sportswear<lb/>
with Dacron!<lb/>
White's Stores<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
DO UMENTS I<lb/>
brarj which is r<lb/>
By BRO. I<lb/>
Ii is not surp:<lb/>
petua symbol oi<lb/>
sive black genei<lb/>
students. Blac<lb/>
shirked the mov<lb/>
cation more rel<lb/>
man and have ex<lb/>
menus with unpn<lb/>
success. The ed<lb/>
merits for the I<lb/>
peak utility in<lb/>
thinking of the<lb/>
ration.<lb/>
The nucleus ?;<lb/>
education and<lb/>
tion is situated <lb/>
colleges and unr<lb/>
nation. In coop<lb/>
black, students w<lb/>
and economic I<lb/>
called "white<lb/>
white students<lb/>
the need for re:<lb/>
side to remedy t<lb/>
black man in so<lb/>
In reviewing '<lb/>
in the integratk<lb/>
role of the whit<lb/>
juncion with t<lb/>
and leaders shou<lb/>
md proper c<lb/>
the proper begir<lb/>
form movement<lb/>
the students are<lb/>
the society sho<lb/>
that the student<lb/>
win these probl<lb/>
then that these<lb/>
be formulated an<lb/>
students who fc<lb/>
and justice and<lb/>
edgeable positkn<lb/>
about the problt<lb/>
One of the se:<lb/>
By BRO. Al<lb/>
I.i the presid<lb/>
I960 and 1968,<lb/>
extremely close.<lb/>
American societ<lb/>
? ?? closeness in<lb/>
Black Power<lb/>
power" in the<lb/>
in the political ,<lb/>
To comprehen<lb/>
a look at. the A<lb/>
the polls must t<lb/>
earliest America<lb/>
'he Black man 1<lb/>
as far as his o<lb/>
a ballot in public<lb/>
cerned. In the<lb/>
'iay.s of America<lb/>
? was handici<lb/>
requirement fc<lb/>
vote. After the B<lb/>
for restricting tl<lb/>
d from propert<lb/>
;ax-paying qualil<lb/>
Even though<lb/>
were not aimed<lb/>
??'?ifically, thej<lb/>
how many<lb/>
Vll'i' able to pay<lb/>
TWa pattern fc<lb/>
American vote w,<lb/>
the release of a<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0005"/><lb/>
id that "The Board<lb/>
zed to employ one<lb/>
loyee capable 0f<lb/>
equipment, to serve<lb/>
and that this per.<lb/>
1 on a scale com<lb/>
salary of the SGA<lb/>
try.<lb/>
er Users<lb/>
lent aLso suggested<lb/>
blicatlona use lh<lb/>
and schedule ma-<lb/>
?ough the Publica.<lb/>
separate budgetary<lb/>
tied "Composing"<lb/>
id under the author-<lb/>
lications Board,<lb/>
presentativv . wke<lb/>
ture and answered<lb/>
the body<lb/>
an IBM sales jtian.<lb/>
jut the immediacy<lb/>
)le through use of<lb/>
He also explained<lb/>
ising the equipment<lb/>
Uunk its a brand<lb/>
that has nof. beer.<lb/>
ai science majors<lb/>
cted by a .student<lb/>
Political Science de-<lb/>
t on the first Stu-<lb/>
dvisory Committee<lb/>
sentatives<lb/>
da Tetterton, Mitch<lb/>
orrisette and Bruce<lb/>
oers of the commit-<lb/>
E. Yarbrough and<lb/>
Iff.<lb/>
Themselves<lb/>
Yarbrough, the pur-<lb/>
mmittee is to give<lb/>
students in the de-<lb/>
portunity to express<lb/>
epartmental matters<lb/>
itadents, and to air<lb/>
5 and offer sugges-<lb/>
veinents<lb/>
East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11, 1969?5<lb/>
Alternatives For The Black In<lb/>
A White Man's World<lb/>
DOCUMENTS DISPLAYED?This is one of the displays in Joyner Lt-<lb/>
lr which is commemorating "Black History Week<lb/>
fWhite Liberals' And<lb/>
Black Students Unite<lb/>
By BRO. BILL OWENS<lb/>
Ii is not surprising that the Im-<lb/>
petus symbol of the new progres-<lb/>
sive black generation is the black<lb/>
students. Black students have<lb/>
sparked the movement to make edu-<lb/>
cation more relevant to the black<lb/>
man and have executed these move-<lb/>
menus with unprecedented speed and<lb/>
success. The educational improve-<lb/>
ments for the black man find Its<lb/>
peak utility in the action and<lb/>
thinking of the young black gene-<lb/>
ration.<lb/>
The nucleus of the black social<lb/>
education and economic revolu-<lb/>
tion is situated on the campuses of<lb/>
colleges and universities across the<lb/>
nation. Ln cooperation with the.se<lb/>
black, students who work for social<lb/>
and economic reforms is the so<lb/>
called 'white liberals These<lb/>
white students who are aware of<lb/>
the need for reform work side by<lb/>
side to remedy the problems of the<lb/>
black man in society.<lb/>
In reviewing the progress made<lb/>
in the integration movements, the<lb/>
role of the white students in con-<lb/>
junction with the black students<lb/>
and leaders should not be overlook-<lb/>
ed proper credit given them<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
The college campus should be<lb/>
the proper beginning for these re-<lb/>
form movements. It is here that<lb/>
the students are educated as to ho.v<lb/>
the society should be. It la here<lb/>
that the student learns how to deal<lb/>
win these problems. It is logical<lb/>
then that these programs should<lb/>
be formulated and executed by those<lb/>
students who believe in equality<lb/>
and Justice and are in a knowl-<lb/>
edgeable position to do something<lb/>
about the problems of society.<lb/>
One of the serious drawback" in<lb/>
the progress of campus centered<lb/>
social reform organizations is the<lb/>
campus administrations. In the<lb/>
typical black college or university,<lb/>
'he paternalistic attitude of the col-<lb/>
lege administration stifles the stu-<lb/>
dents own opinion of the sickness<lb/>
of society and kill his attempt to<lb/>
remedy the situation through cam-<lb/>
paigns for reforms.<lb/>
On the typical white university<lb/>
campus, the administration is so<lb/>
public opinion conscious that it is<lb/>
highly critical and in most cases<lb/>
simply prohibits the students from<lb/>
participating in social reform acti-<lb/>
vities. It would seem that just the<lb/>
opposite would be true. For the mr-<lb/>
pose of an effective college ar lin-<lb/>
istration is to properly pr pare<lb/>
students for real life situations.<lb/>
But the college admiiiLstratio.<lb/>
bids the students from taking ac-<lb/>
tions to make this world a better<lb/>
place in which to live.<lb/>
Restrain Students<lb/>
But co.lege administrations are<lb/>
finding it increasingly harder to<lb/>
restrain students?black and white<lb/>
?in expressing their opinions and<lb/>
taking action about unjust situa-<lb/>
tions in society. The sit-ins, picket<lb/>
lines, walk-outs, and marches are<lb/>
almost weekly occurences across<lb/>
the nation on college campuses.<lb/>
This should suggest that the youti<lb/>
of today are not the apathetic, lazy,<lb/>
corrup people that they are often<lb/>
portrayed to be in news media &amp;nd<lb/>
by the older generation.<lb/>
Yet there is still much to be<lb/>
done. There are hungry stomachs<lb/>
to fill, jobs to be created, slums to<lb/>
clear and grievances to be examin-<lb/>
ed and acted upon. Who will be in<lb/>
the spotlight as leaders in these<lb/>
movements, the youth of today, the<lb/>
men of tomorrow.<lb/>
By SISTER JANICE HORTON<lb/>
Sometimes, the aspects of a child<lb/>
linger on in the sensitive person.<lb/>
A child trusts people more so than<lb/>
an adult because an adult has had<lb/>
the type of experience which en-<lb/>
ables him to know whether or not<lb/>
another man can be trusted. All<lb/>
persons are sensitive to a certain<lb/>
extent, but some more than others.<lb/>
Each person has his reason for<lb/>
being sensitive. For some, it is<lb/>
their red hair, for som?; their bew<lb/>
legs, for some, their funny names.<lb/>
As a person grows older, he learns<lb/>
to live with his features that<lb/>
cause him so much ridicule.<lb/>
But how does one live with a<lb/>
black skin in a world that is super-<lb/>
ficially a white man's world? What<lb/>
does one do? He can learn to feel<lb/>
inferior as he is being taught; he<lb/>
can ignore the world altogether:<lb/>
he can establish a blac identity;<lb/>
or he can try to live in a white<lb/>
man's world on white man's terms.<lb/>
Inferior<lb/>
All of these alternatives offer<lb/>
problems. To feel inferior would<lb/>
create a feeling of hatred for one-<lb/>
self and others in his race. To ig-<lb/>
nore the world as it is may create<lb/>
a "happy go lucky" person or a<lb/>
mental patient. To establish iden-<lb/>
tity would create pride for the black<lb/>
within, but it would cause conflict<lb/>
with the white people who do not<lb/>
understand the motives behind a<lb/>
black man's assuming pride in him-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
To live in a white man's world<lb/>
is the alternative which more of-<lb/>
ten results in the open minded<lb/>
blacks becoming prejudiced strong-<lb/>
ly against whites.<lb/>
A liberal white man may ask,<lb/>
"Why should a black man become<lb/>
prejudiced?" He must remember<lb/>
that all whites are not lik? he is.<lb/>
Some whites hate blacks to .such<lb/>
an extent that they refuse to try<lb/>
to change. Some whites may like<lb/>
blacks as fellow human beings but<lb/>
are afraid to show this because<lb/>
of what other whites may think<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
Present Truth<lb/>
The white man who is afraid to<lb/>
present his true feelings to the<lb/>
world around him presents instead<lb/>
a double face to an open minded<lb/>
black man who does not know<lb/>
whether to like white people or to<lb/>
hale them. Just as the white man<lb/>
is a product of his society, the<lb/>
black man is a product of his.<lb/>
The black man, who is Bearing<lb/>
adulthood, enters a world which<lb/>
has never before been open to him.<lb/>
The black man enters the white<lb/>
man's schools, jobs, and other as-<lb/>
pects of the white society. The<lb/>
part of the white society that he<lb/>
enters may be small, but the small<lb/>
things make the most lasting im-<lb/>
pressions upon a moldable mind.<lb/>
The black man intermingles with<lb/>
white liberals, "nigger haters and<lb/>
double-faced whites.<lb/>
The "nigger hater" poses no<lb/>
problem. The black man has been<lb/>
told that these whites exist, or he<lb/>
has come in contact with a "nigger<lb/>
hater" at some time in his earlier<lb/>
life. The liberal becomes accepted<lb/>
by the open minded black man.<lb/>
The double-faced whites become<lb/>
the black man's problem.<lb/>
Two-Sided<lb/>
The two-sided white man is gov-<lb/>
erned by what he thinks is con-<lb/>
doned by the white society. He<lb/>
wants to keep his white friends<lb/>
whom he thinks are prejudiced.<lb/>
They, in turn, may be just as he<lb/>
is, afraid of what he may say<lb/>
about them if they associate with<lb/>
blacks. Therefore, these white peo-<lb/>
ple show one face to the black and<lb/>
another to their white friends.<lb/>
For example, women students in<lb/>
dormitories establish a friendly re-<lb/>
lationship with each other. The<lb/>
black woman student begins to feel<lb/>
aa if she is a part of the dormi-<lb/>
tory society. Out on the campus,<lb/>
the black woman walks to class<lb/>
just as the other students and she<lb/>
speaks to friends that she meets.<lb/>
She sees one of her white "friends"<lb/>
who also sees her. The white girl<lb/>
turns her head to avoid speaking<lb/>
to her. Or the white business man<lb/>
has known the black business man<lb/>
for a long time. Both men call<lb/>
themselves friends. Yet, the white<lb/>
business man may never invite the<lb/>
black business man to his home.<lb/>
These little things are not notice-<lb/>
able unless one happens to be sen-<lb/>
sitive.<lb/>
Sensitivity<lb/>
Sensitivity is heightened in many<lb/>
ways. One way of heightening sen-<lb/>
sitivity is to imagine yourself a black<lb/>
man. Another way is to realize that<lb/>
all men have feelings.<lb/>
All men must realize the sensi-<lb/>
tivity of others and must strive to<lb/>
reach the goal wherein each con-<lb/>
siders the other as a man, not a<lb/>
black man or a white man, but<lb/>
as a mn.<lb/>
Today's Trend Toward 'Blackness'<lb/>
By BRO. JAMES WHITT1NGTON<lb/>
"I am a Black man, not a Negro<lb/>
This phrase is stimulated by the<lb/>
present day trend toward "black-<lb/>
ness" by young Negroes. They con-<lb/>
sider a Negro as being a black man<lb/>
in a white man's society, where<lb/>
he has been educated to the whitt<lb/>
man's ideals. He patterns his ac-<lb/>
tions, thinking, and life after the<lb/>
white man's definition of the per-<lb/>
fect way to live for the Negroes.<lb/>
The definition of a "Black man<lb/>
is an "Afro-American who recog-<lb/>
nizes his true heritage and also<lb/>
the faults of the present social sys-<lb/>
tems that he is subjected to He<lb/>
identifies with his race, its values,<lb/>
mores, culture and history, and ac-<lb/>
cepts them as his own. He is a<lb/>
proud man who works for the ad-<lb/>
vancement of his people and the<lb/>
liberation of the oppressed. Some<lb/>
people have the misconception that<lb/>
there is no difference between be-<lb/>
ing a Black man or a Negro. How-<lb/>
ever, in the modern sense, there<lb/>
is a difference which is just as<lb/>
plain as the difference between<lb/>
being "black" or "white The<lb/>
difference is not physical, however,<lb/>
but mental.<lb/>
Satisfied<lb/>
The Negro is satisfied with the<lb/>
present "status quo" he has ob-<lb/>
Black Power In Elections<lb/>
By BRO. CARLTON MADDEN<lb/>
I.i the presidential elections of<lb/>
I960 and 1968, the results were<lb/>
extremely close. One element in<lb/>
American society that determined<lb/>
the closeness in these elections was<lb/>
Black Power It was not "Black<lb/>
power" in the popular sense?but<lb/>
m the political sense.<lb/>
To comprehend what is meant,<lb/>
 look at the American Negro at<lb/>
the polls must be taken. From the<lb/>
earliest American period of time,<lb/>
the Black man has been restricted<lb/>
as far as his opportunity to cast<lb/>
a ballot in public elections was con-<lb/>
'erned. In the pre-Revolutionary<lb/>
days of American history, the Ne-<lb/>
11 was handicapped by property<lb/>
requirements for the "right" to<lb/>
vote. After the Revolution the basis<lb/>
for restricting the vote was chang-<lb/>
ed from property qualifications to<lb/>
tax-paying qualitfications.<lb/>
Even though these restrictions<lb/>
were not aimed at the Black man<lb/>
ifically, they did restrict him,<lb/>
01 how many American Negroes<lb/>
were able to pay taxes at this time?<lb/>
TMs pattern for restricting the<lb/>
American vote was intensified upon<lb/>
8e release of a significant number<lb/>
of slaves between 1792 and 1838.<lb/>
Several states, generally those con-<lb/>
fined to the South and border areas<lb/>
even altered their constitutions so<lb/>
as to exclude the Negro.<lb/>
Pattern Stopped<lb/>
This slowly emerging pattern was<lb/>
stopped by the Civil War. As a re-<lb/>
sult of this war, some four million<lb/>
Negro slaves were suddenly free.<lb/>
Almost overnight they had become<lb/>
citizens who possessed the right to<lb/>
vote It was during the post Civil-<lb/>
War period that the American Ne-<lb/>
gro used anti-South feelings to boost<lb/>
his political power. Such a use<lb/>
could be termed the original<lb/>
"Black Power" movement in Amer-<lb/>
As a result of this movement,<lb/>
several Negroes were elected u the<lb/>
Senate and House of Representa-<lb/>
tives North Carolina sent several<lb/>
black men to Washington as rep-<lb/>
resentatives. Among these were:<lb/>
John A. Hyman. a self-educated<lb/>
ex-slave bom in Waxrenton, North<lb/>
Carolina; James F. O'Hara, one<lb/>
of the most effective black con-<lb/>
(rressmen who sponsored one of the<lb/>
first bills to grant Negroes equal<lb/>
access to public facilities; Henry<lb/>
P Cheatam. a Henderson. North<lb/>
Carolina native with B.A. and M.A.<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
This early "Black Power" move-<lb/>
ment soon came to an end with<lb/>
the return of restrictive measures<lb/>
for the American Negro. Among<lb/>
such measures were the Grand-<lb/>
father clause, the poll tax and the<lb/>
literacy test. By 1902, not a single<lb/>
black man sat in either a state or<lb/>
federal legislature.<lb/>
Continues<lb/>
Despite all the restrictive meas-<lb/>
ures in effect, the American Black<lb/>
man, continued to press for his<lb/>
right to vote. From 1905-1908, W.E.<lb/>
B. Dubois fought hard for Negro suf-<lb/>
frage. He also played an important<lb/>
role in the eventual establishment<lb/>
of the N.A.A.C.P. It is with the<lb/>
help of this organization that the<lb/>
Black man in America was able<lb/>
to re-gain his suffrage rights.<lb/>
It was the N.A.A.C.P. that<lb/>
through the "Guinn vs. TJ.C court<lb/>
case had the "Grandfather" clause<lb/>
abolished. But with all the pro-<lb/>
gress that has been made to give<lb/>
the black man his fullest voting<lb/>
power, much still remains to be<lb/>
done to completely eradicate the<lb/>
limits placed on him a the polls.<lb/>
tained. He is satisfied with the<lb/>
second-rate education he receives.<lb/>
He is satisfied when his children<lb/>
receive second-rate housing and<lb/>
second-rated jobs. In other words,<lb/>
he is satisfied with a second-rate<lb/>
"existence Sometimes he works<lb/>
for reforms in these areas with<lb/>
some success. But reforms are not<lb/>
enough. Instead of merely reform-<lb/>
ing, his ultimate goal should be to<lb/>
revolut.onize.<lb/>
The Black man works for revo-<lb/>
lution. He wants to, and does,<lb/>
revolutionize the black man's po-<lb/>
sition in education, joos, hous-<lb/>
ing, and in the complete society.<lb/>
He believes in the dignity of the<lb/>
Black man as a man and has<lb/>
a genuine love for his race.<lb/>
Militant<lb/>
The Negro, when bringing about<lb/>
reforms, is sometimes called a<lb/>
"militant A miliant creates dis-<lb/>
turbances for his own personal<lb/>
gains. He does not have the well<lb/>
being of his people at heart. For<lb/>
example: When Dr. Martin Luther<lb/>
King was killed, some militant Ne-<lb/>
groes started bumng and looting.<lb/>
They were under the illusion that<lb/>
they were doing this to avenge the<lb/>
death of Dr. King. Actually, it was<lb/>
for their own personal gains. Ra-<lb/>
cial demonstrations which ended in<lb/>
riots should not be blamed on the<lb/>
black as a race, but on small groups<lb/>
of men.<lb/>
The Black man is a "revolution-<lb/>
ist His actions are justified by<lb/>
the fact that he considers the well-<lb/>
being of this people before him-<lb/>
self. His action may be hostile only<lb/>
to gain for his people, some things<lb/>
that would not be gained by nego-<lb/>
tiation. He seeks to protect Ms<lb/>
people and works to revolutionize<lb/>
the society to the recognition of<lb/>
ill men as men. He believes that<lb/>
the present social system must be<lb/>
broken down, and a new one built<lb/>
in its place. This system should<lb/>
start all men off on the same<lb/>
level, not one free and one a slave.<lb/>
Economic Gains<lb/>
Throughout he course of history,<lb/>
many Negroes have strived for per-<lb/>
sonal economic gains with the<lb/>
amount of change in the social<lb/>
make-up of the country as a whole.<lb/>
Many have been satisfied with<lb/>
hand-outs and lower classed jobs.<lb/>
He has, in a sense, been educated.<lb/>
The Black man strives to up-<lb/>
grade himself and his people. He<lb/>
accepts only what is his in society<lb/>
"but he fights to own what is<lb/>
rightfully his. He believes in inter-<lb/>
racial and Intra-racial equality. He<lb/>
is educated to manage.<lb/>
Every Negro is a potential Black<lb/>
man and only through unity among<lb/>
the Black people of the world will<lb/>
the ultimate goal of total equality<lb/>
be reached.<lb/>
Lift Every Voice<lb/>
The black people also have a na-<lb/>
tional hymn. Today the song is still<lb/>
sung, especially during Black His-<lb/>
tory Week. When the song was<lb/>
written by James W. Johnson, it<lb/>
expressed the desires of a depress-<lb/>
ed people. The hymn, "Lift Every<lb/>
Voice and Sing expressed that<lb/>
a faith the size of a "mustard<lb/>
seed" can move mountains. It ex-<lb/>
presses hope for a brighter tomor-<lb/>
row.<lb/>
LIFT EVERY VOICE AND SING<lb/>
Words by: James W. Johnson<lb/>
"Lift every voice and sing, Till<lb/>
earth and Heaven ring,<lb/>
Ring with the harmonies of Liberty;<lb/>
Let our rejoicing rise, High as the<lb/>
the Ustening skies,<lb/>
Let it resound loud as the rolling<lb/>
sea.<lb/>
Sing a song full of the faith that<lb/>
the dark past has taught us,<lb/>
Sing a song full of the hope<lb/>
that the present has brought<lb/>
us.<lb/>
Facing the rising sun of our new<lb/>
day begun,<lb/>
Let us march on till victory is won<lb/>
Stony the road we trod, Bitter the<lb/>
chastening rod,<lb/>
Felt in the days when hope unborn<lb/>
had died;<lb/>
Yet with a steady beat, Have not<lb/>
our weary feet,<lb/>
Come to the place for which our<lb/>
fathers sighed?<lb/>
We have come over a way that<lb/>
with tears has been watered<lb/>
We have come treading our path<lb/>
thro tbe blood of the slaught-<lb/>
ered,<lb/>
Out from the gloomy past. Till<lb/>
now we stand at last,<lb/>
Where the white gleam of our<lb/>
bright star is cast.<lb/>
God of our weary years, God of<lb/>
our silent tears.<lb/>
Thou who has brought us thus<lb/>
far on the way;<lb/>
Thou who hast by Thy might,<lb/>
Led us into the light,<lb/>
Keep us for ever in the path, we<lb/>
pray.<lb/>
Lest our feet stray from the<lb/>
places, our God, where we<lb/>
met Thee,<lb/>
Lest our hearts, drunk with the<lb/>
wine of the world, we forget<lb/>
Thee;<lb/>
Shadowed beneath Thy hand, May<lb/>
we for ever stand,<lb/>
True to our God, True to our<lb/>
native land<lb/>
.1<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0006"/><lb/>
6?East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11, 1969<lb/>
Black Political Party<lb/>
BROUGHT TO US?One of ECU'S Black Students makes ready a display in the Universitj Union. There also<lb/>
will be a special program Thursday night at 7:30 in Raw! auditorium entitled "Black Trace<lb/>
From Their Native Land Comes<lb/>
Today's Unwanted Revolution<lb/>
By BRO. BILL OWENS<lb/>
Prom the shores of Africa they<lb/>
came, some bought and many<lb/>
stolen, chained, bewildered, afraid<lb/>
in the white man's ships. Landed<lb/>
on a strange and different shore,<lb/>
)Ut still cnalned. Beaten md forc-<lb/>
ed to work the fields and care for<lb/>
the livestock and die on their knees,<lb/>
but till chained. Forced to envy<lb/>
the positions of animals and forc-<lb/>
ed to substitute metal chains for<lb/>
the heavy irons that slowed their<lb/>
work<lb/>
And then, ironically, a flash of<lb/>
light in a time of dark death md<lb/>
hard struggle; a war and emanci-<lb/>
pation. And then a return of the<lb/>
forgotten right to walk around free.<lb/>
Allowed to vote, later to be edu-<lb/>
cated. And then migration and ex-<lb/>
pansion and jobs and homes. Then<lb/>
a bloody fight for integration into<lb/>
society arid equality before the law<lb/>
And now, a black revolution. This<lb/>
is the story of the Afro-American.<lb/>
From The Shores of Africa<lb/>
From his native home, Africa,<lb/>
the black man was taken and<lb/>
chained and transported to another<lb/>
world. His native identity was stif-<lb/>
fled by the white man's complete<lb/>
dominance The black man was<lb/>
not allowed to talk  anyone of his<lb/>
same native Ian<lb/>
in large groups for observanci<lb/>
the black man's religii i<lb/>
was punishable with<lb/>
togs.<lb/>
All ;<lb/>
recognition of an <lb/>
than American were sup<lb/>
The slaves were forced to<lb/>
the English language only, foi<lb/>
white man knew that to take away<lb/>
the language of the African slaves,<lb/>
was one way bo break the bond;<lb/>
which kept them united and strug-<lb/>
gling.<lb/>
Next came an attempt, to destroj<lb/>
the African slaves' sense ol free-<lb/>
dom. But freedom is an idea that<lb/>
dies only with the man and so the<lb/>
slaves frequently sacrificed their<lb/>
lives for the freedom that they be-<lb/>
lieved in.<lb/>
"It Is ironic that these states<lb/>
set up to escape the oppressions of<lb/>
a master country and dedicated to<lb/>
freedom would Indulge in oppres-<lb/>
sion and become themselves mas-<lb/>
ters of the oppressed<lb/>
To The Cotton Fields of the South<lb/>
The slaves were subjected to un-<lb/>
conditional obedience and domina-<lb/>
tion. The forced superiority of the<lb/>
white man as the master and the<lb/>
slaves as property brewed hatred<lb/>
which still exists today in the hearts<lb/>
of many black descendants.<lb/>
The African slaves were forced<lb/>
to accept an inferior position and<lb/>
because of the complete dominance<lb/>
of the white man, many soon ex-<lb/>
pected that this position was per-<lb/>
manent. Not so With others Others<lb/>
like the organizers and worker<lb/>
the Underground Railroad thai fi<lb/>
hundred of slaves by secretly<lb/>
-sporting them to free terri-<lb/>
tory But thousands still tailed<lb/>
in the fields and were beaten and<lb/>
were hanged.<lb/>
The black ' man's native iden-<lb/>
tity was disguLsed and suppressed<lb/>
in the white man's culture and<lb/>
the color of his skm was the<lb/>
only recognisable characteristics<lb/>
of his native Africa. Slavery was<lb/>
growing, and the African as a man<lb/>
was shrinking.<lb/>
And then a flicker oi light. A<lb/>
Great Civil War. A war that meant<lb/>
only one thing to the black slave.<lb/>
that he was to be free. And so it<lb/>
was. His chains were broken and<lb/>
thrown away but not his troubles.<lb/>
The slaves were placed into a so-<lb/>
ciety of great complexity and to<lb/>
place an animal or piece of prop-<lb/>
erty into society to take the place<lb/>
of a white man, ix?ses serious prob-<lb/>
lems for the white man and the<lb/>
property. "But freedom breeds<lb/>
ambition, and ambition breeds pro-<lb/>
gress. The black man progressed<lb/>
To Second (lass itizenship . . .<lb/>
rhen came "citizenship" and the<lb/>
voting power and EDUCATION<lb/>
Though it was a white supp rted,<lb/>
white administered, white decided<lb/>
education, nevertheless, it was an<lb/>
i ducatii : rhi bl ick children were<lb/>
taughl . the glory of African<lb/>
lization in the history of man-<lb/>
:<lb/>
?tes. The black mind hungry 1 ? education, enl : like<lb/>
?  . I .<lb/>
e is eagerly cultivated<lb/>
lest p issible yield.<lb/>
Because<lb/>
? ' and<lb/>
of the rapid advance-<lb/>
lie eagerness of the<lb/>
lave for education and social and<lb/>
economic progress, the white man<lb/>
found It necessary again to resort<lb/>
I suppression of the black man.<lb/>
The most famous of the brutal<lb/>
white control organizations is the<lb/>
Ku Klux Klan. The Klan, however,<lb/>
and other organizations of its type<lb/>
were not strong enough. The black<lb/>
man progressed and he increased<lb/>
in number and he migrated across<lb/>
the country. He became farmers,<lb/>
craftsmen, and industrial workers.<lb/>
But everywhere the black man was<lb/>
exploited. His citizenship was not<lb/>
accepted.<lb/>
To Integration<lb/>
Ye.s, the Black man progressed.<lb/>
His education enabled him to eval-<lb/>
uate his proposed role and position<lb/>
in society, in his analysis, the black<lb/>
man found that he had no position<lb/>
in the white man's society. But,<lb/>
in order for the black man to en-<lb/>
j-v the protection and benefits of<lb/>
the law. in order for the black<lb/>
man to be educated and make the<lb/>
contribution, to society that he<lb/>
capable of making, lie must, first<lb/>
recognize i Integrated part<lb/>
ety and lie must be recog-<lb/>
i and treated a. her man<lb/>
In society. And so the integration<lb/>
movement began Dr. Martin Lu-<lb/>
ther King, the black man's minis-<lb/>
ter of nun-violence stands out in<lb/>
the early integration struggles in<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
A milestone in the struggle for<lb/>
Integration was the 1954 Supreme<lb/>
Court decision which destroyed the<lb/>
euphemism for inferior education<lb/>
of "separate but equal But to<lb/>
integrate the educational systems<lb/>
and public facilities accomplished<lb/>
little. He was merely tolerated?he<lb/>
wa nil exploited.<lb/>
He found that laws existing in-<lb/>
effectively on the books were of<lb/>
o value, that voting without fair<lb/>
representation, was often worst<lb/>
than not voting at all, that being<lb/>
hired only to dig ditches when his<lb/>
mind was capable of constructing<lb/>
tunnels accomplished little. And so<lb/>
integration and mere toleration<lb/>
were not enough. A complete revo-<lb/>
lution in the thinking of every<lb/>
American concerning the worth, ac-<lb/>
ceptance and assimilation of the<lb/>
Afro-American was necessary.<lb/>
To A Kevoltuion<lb/>
What causes a social revolution,<lb/>
great force or great men? The black<lb/>
man thinks that it take.s both. The<lb/>
great force, the black force, charg-<lb/>
ed with the powder of racism and<lb/>
add<lb/>
ignited with Hie park of an iden-<lb/>
Ity, of pride, and of a heritage.<lb/>
I here has emerged a new black<lb/>
n, an Afro-American person-<lb/>
mfied most actively in the young<lb/>
black generation whose values lie<lb/>
in Die complete liberation if their<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The young black generation is<lb/>
an impatient, tired generation; in-<lb/>
patient from the time it has taKen<lb/>
to gain complete freedom. Tired of<lb/>
the continual delays in the realiza-<lb/>
tion of total liberation. He is tired<lb/>
of the lag in law enforcement. He<lb/>
is tired of the lag in society.<lb/>
To the young black revolutionist,<lb/>
his life is a weapon.if the li.jera.tion<lb/>
of his people require that he give<lb/>
ithe gives it. John F. Kennedy,<lb/>
Dr. Martin Luther King, and Robert<lb/>
Kennedy were all great men who<lb/>
died for their beliefs. No matter<lb/>
how old they were, they were still<lb/>
an active part of the young revolu-<lb/>
tionist generation.<lb/>
We Shall Overcome . . .<lb/>
Whether the black man's struggle<lb/>
is a dream to make real, a moun-<lb/>
tain to climb, a sea to sail, or a<lb/>
liver bo cross, he must and will<lb/>
make that dream real, he must<lb/>
climb that mountain, he must sail<lb/>
'hat sea. and he must cross that<lb/>
river. The lives that have been lost<lb/>
in the struggle for liberation, must<lb/>
not be unavenged by failure.<lb/>
For America was founded upon a<lb/>
revolution and it must withstand<lb/>
Mns black revolution. For it is<lb/>
here, it .shall continue. "The Black<lb/>
hall overcome. He vv,il fight in the<lb/>
Congress, in the city hall, in the<lb/>
?oi and colleges, in the net .<lb/>
media, and in the -streets.<lb/>
Bro. Wm. Lowe<lb/>
The Black Panthers is a Black<lb/>
political party, which advocates a<lb/>
radical change in the political struc-<lb/>
ture of the American Society. These<lb/>
changes arc expected to be brought<lb/>
about by the clashes between "pow-<lb/>
er structure and the Black Pan-<lb/>
thers.<lb/>
This, then, is the story oi the<lb/>
Black Panthers.<lb/>
The Black Panthers was formed<lb/>
in the fall of 19 The organizers<lb/>
of the Black Panthers were Huey<lb/>
IV Newton and Bobby Searles. A<lb/>
predecessor to the Panthers, Soul<lb/>
Studen's Advisory Council was es-<lb/>
tablished by Newton. Tins council<lb/>
was established to develop biack<lb/>
leadership bo go to the black com-<lb/>
munity and serve the black com-<lb/>
munity in revolutionary manner.<lb/>
Symbol<lb/>
The Black Panther party used<lb/>
'he black panther as a symbol fol-<lb/>
lowing the example of the Lowdnes<lb/>
County Freedom Organization<lb/>
which was the political party of<lb/>
the South in Alabama. They chose<lb/>
the black panther because of the<lb/>
nature of the panther.<lb/>
The black panther doesn't attack<lb/>
anyone, but if lie's pushed into a<lb/>
corner he will certainly use self-de-<lb/>
fense and if the assailant is per-<lb/>
sistent then he'll wipe out his ag-<lb/>
gressor thoroughly, wholly, abso-<lb/>
lutely and completely.<lb/>
The organizers of the Black Pan-<lb/>
thers Party are young but exper-<lb/>
ienced with police matters. Huey<lb/>
Newton, a former law student, is<lb/>
supposedly the brains behind the<lb/>
Group He went to Meritt College<lb/>
tor 3 years and even went to law<lb/>
school for a while. Seals also went<lb/>
to Meritt College and later became<lb/>
a partner of Newton.<lb/>
Political Keasons<lb/>
The reason for organization oi<lb/>
the Black Panthers were political.<lb/>
Newton and Seals from their ob-<lb/>
servation concluded that it was<lb/>
necessary to organize a black polit-<lb/>
ical party in order for black peo-<lb/>
ple to seize control of various<lb/>
institutions within our community.<lb/>
They felt that the American po-<lb/>
litical arena had been somewhat<lb/>
fallaciously analyzed. They felt the<lb/>
crief themet of the black movement<lb/>
slice 1906 centered on a Very .<lb/>
tract thing called integration<lb/>
Huey Newton, Bbby Seals<lb/>
Eldrige Cleaver set hut!<lb/>
points which tin<lb/>
back.<lb/>
l I,<lb/>
Black Panthew<lb/>
I We want freed am .A. <lb/>
p wer i I determine the d<lb/>
"in- black communities.<lb/>
2. We want full employm ait for<lb/>
i. l pic.<lb/>
3. We w.mi housing  i tu<lb/>
shelter of human being:<lb/>
4. We want all black men<lb/>
exempt from military servi<lb/>
 We Want lie. u j<lb/>
black people.<lb/>
I). We want an end to<lb/>
bery i black people to tl<lb/>
community by white ra<lb/>
nessmen.<lb/>
7. We want an immediate<lb/>
police brutality and nn.<lb/>
black people.<lb/>
8. We want all bia k<lb/>
m city and county, state. ,? (1<lb/>
 ral jails to be released<lb/>
9. We want black peopli<lb/>
ed of crimes to be tried by mem-<lb/>
bers of the same  tcial, I<lb/>
historical and racial bai<lb/>
10. We want housing, wi<lb/>
clothing, we want educal<lb/>
want justice, we want pea"<lb/>
failed "rascist pig Ma<lb/>
are pictured by the Pantliei  ?<lb/>
?ccupation forces of the E<lb/>
menfebrutalizing Negro<lb/>
tog" contained protecting .<lb/>
interest and blocking Negro i<lb/>
' th( r c mmunitie<lb/>
Fear<lb/>
 i e is fear oi the extremism of<lb/>
Black Panthers to white and some<lb/>
black communities Some black<lb/>
psychiatrists .see it as a unifying<lb/>
factor m the black commu:<lb/>
White America sees the <lb/>
Panther to two ways. First we hav<lb/>
the young white liberal or <lb/>
He s3 the organization a<lb/>
means of getting the brothers to-<lb/>
gether. He back, the Black Pan-<lb/>
thers strongly. The other<lb/>
ments of the population are u<lb/>
ferent to the whole Black Pan!<lb/>
Party. As long as thev maki<lb/>
money, and their families are<lb/>
endangered, the Blacks can do w<lb/>
they want.<lb/>
God And Music: 'Second Heart'<lb/>
By JANICE McNEIL<lb/>
The two basic factors which have<lb/>
greatly influenced the Black Man's<lb/>
life have been God. and the black<lb/>
man's music. Music has been the<lb/>
Black Man's second heart. Musfc<lb/>
lias been a powerful inspirational<lb/>
factor in his survival. Music was<lb/>
the one thing the black man<lb/>
brought with him to America that<lb/>
he could identify with as charac-<lb/>
teristic of his native land and that<lb/>
he could freely express. The Black-<lb/>
slaves, chained together in the<lb/>
slave boats, chanted and beat oul<lb/>
African rhythm.<lb/>
After being sold a laves and<lb/>
placed on plantations, the Black<lb/>
Man .still had his music, tl<lb/>
be said that music was his re<lb/>
lease for "ptoned-up frustrations"<lb/>
The black man's emotions were<lb/>
clearly expressed to his music.<lb/>
Religions Music<lb/>
As far as categorizing the Black<lb/>
Man's Music, religious music was<lb/>
first. If a person of today could<lb/>
have walked over the cotton fields<lb/>
of the Old South, he might have<lb/>
heard the black man singing spirit-<lb/>
uals and hymns. Some of the songs<lb/>
were "Swing Low Sweet Chariot<lb/>
"Wayfarin' Stranger" and others.<lb/>
The Fisk Jubilee Singers were<lb/>
the first group to sing spirituals.<lb/>
The spirituals still live today in<lb/>
the souls of black man. Some of<lb/>
the more famous black gospel sing-<lb/>
ers of today include: Mahalia Jack-<lb/>
son, Clara Ward, Robert Martin,<lb/>
Thomas A Dorsey, and James<lb/>
Cleveland.<lb/>
rid<lb/>
Jazz<lb/>
The next category is jazz. Jazz<lb/>
was born in New Orleans. The late<lb/>
Jelly Roll Morton (1885-1941), Bud-<lb/>
dy Bolden, and King Oliver were<lb/>
among the early jazz (originally<lb/>
spelled "Jass") musicians.<lb/>
Today jazz still lives to black<lb/>
men such as Louis Armstrong, Duke<lb/>
Ellington, and Count Basie.<lb/>
Blues<lb/>
The Blues walked almost along<lb/>
beside the jazz, for they greatly in-<lb/>
fluenced each other The late Bes-<lb/>
Bmitta 1896-1937' was known<lb/>
The Empress oi tl nines<lb/>
Othei blues singers include Blind<lb/>
Lemon Jefferson, Ma Rainev. Nina<lb/>
Simone, Ray Charles and Etti<lb/>
James.<lb/>
The chief black music as fai a<lb/>
the young black generation of to<lb/>
day Ls concerned is the rock<lb/>
roll There are many black a<lb/>
in this category. Included m<lb/>
area are the Supremes, Ter<lb/>
tions, Aretha Franklin and i<lb/>
other<lb/>
'A Day Is Coming'<lb/>
By BRo. JOHNNY WILLIAM<lb/>
A day Is coming<lb/>
Maybe near, can not be far<lb/>
When the croota d get, traighti i<lb/>
I the establishment conn<lb/>
Bui when? Why not now '<lb/>
For time's clock is unwoui<lb/>
its hard to see a change<lb/>
And the crooked seem Heaven<lb/>
bound.<lb/>
We've tried and tried<lb/>
To resort to love, adverse to hate.<lb/>
Yet this deferred not the crooked<lb/>
Used my hide for purpose bait.<lb/>
Still with no malice<lb/>
We put our feet Co the test.<lb/>
But while in the sit-ins.<lb/>
For many Brothers, a final rest<lb/>
Where to from here?<lb/>
Africa, Aferica, America?<lb/>
Hard to decide, cause<lb/>
For all, its here for.<lb/>
Africa, why not?<lb/>
Once was my home?<lb/>
I did get along there<lb/>
Plenty of land to roam<lb/>
Aferica, why not?<lb/>
Could be my home-<lb/>
Have a lot in common?<lb/>
A homogenous genome!<lb/>
America, why not?<lb/>
It is my home?<lb/>
I helped to build its joy<lb/>
Got to have a piece of my own.<lb/>
Don't want it all<lb/>
Just want to be fair<lb/>
Of no relation to the glutton<lb/>
Just want my share.<lb/>
We've tried<lb/>
Some still didn't care.<lb/>
Still no changeful changes<lb/>
Now no Great Land is there<lb/>
?'ate ? h- its course,<lb/>
in II warned with its chime<lb/>
Now the have and the ?<lb/>
Leave equal prints in the  id<lb/>
time.<lb/>
WINNER'S?WlM<lb/>
I dis use plans<lb/>
God<lb/>
B) IHlf<lb/>
 M God<lb/>
I : cinema!<lb/>
will appea<lb/>
lay to v<lb/>
test of the<lb/>
? ipic of C<lb/>
will bt Ci<lb/>
doi iimenU<lb/>
of Go<lb/>
the world<lb/>
water course, tl<lb/>
F<lb/>
ii River<lb/>
. the firsl<lb/>
.(?: Ooddsu i<lb/>
British expl<lb/>
Compan<lb/>
While shooting<lb/>
rock cataracts<lb/>
both men capsize<lb/>
Yowell is sucked<lb/>
? i.d lost<lb/>
Goddard then<lb/>
and in the com<lb/>
Africar tribes.<lb/>
With his can<lb/>
thousands od sho<lb/>
biggest game<lb/>
scenes oi elepha<lb/>
and hippopotami<lb/>
tances of less th<lb/>
Other iilm higl<lb/>
Nor<lb/>
defi<lb/>
and<lb/>
like<lb/>
can<lb/>
H<lb/>
?196<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0007"/><lb/>
Party<lb/>
red on a irery ,(i)<lb/>
ed Integration<lb/>
. Bbby Seals<lb/>
?set forth<lb/>
he Black P<lb/>
Jasic<lb/>
nthers<lb/>
nine the di<lb/>
unities.<lb/>
ill employm<lb/>
lousing  th(<lb/>
i beings.<lb/>
U black men to be<lb/>
htary servii<lb/>
n end to  rob.<lb/>
Ewple in their owj,<lb/>
white ra<lb/>
immediate i<lb/>
and mu<lb/>
11 bl.K k mi held<lb/>
ty, state,<lb/>
released<lb/>
lack people<lb/>
be tried bj  m-<lb/>
tcial, relj<lb/>
?anal I)<lb/>
housing, wi<lb/>
tnt education<lb/>
wain peai i<lb/>
pigs the <lb/>
tie Panthei thi<lb/>
 of the E<lb/>
ig Negroe<lb/>
protecting<lb/>
cing Negr i<lb/>
tit's<lb/>
the extremism of<lb/>
M White ami v<lb/>
lea Some black<lb/>
it as a unifying<lb/>
-k communitj<lb/>
i sees the Black<lb/>
tys. First, we hav<lb/>
liberal or raid<lb/>
rganization<lb/>
' the brother<lb/>
- the Black Pan-<lb/>
The other<lb/>
nilation are .<lb/>
le Black Pai<lb/>
as they i:<lb/>
? families arc no'<lb/>
?lacks ran do what<lb/>
Heart'<lb/>
narles and Etta<lb/>
: music ;us fai a<lb/>
generation of to-<lb/>
is the rock and<lb/>
lany black at<lb/>
Included in this<lb/>
premos. Ten<lb/>
mklm and n<lb/>
Coming'<lb/>
V WILLIAMS<lb/>
iot bo far<lb/>
i gets .stl'ali<lb/>
nent conn<lb/>
iot now?<lb/>
is unwound<lb/>
change<lb/>
com Heaven<lb/>
ried<lb/>
adverse to hate.<lb/>
not the crooked<lb/>
purpose bait.<lb/>
ce<lb/>
So the test,<lb/>
it-ins,<lb/>
s, a final res;<lb/>
re?<lb/>
merica?<lb/>
luse<lb/>
r.<lb/>
le?<lb/>
re<lb/>
roam<lb/>
unon?<lb/>
tome!<lb/>
<lb/>
its joy<lb/>
ce of my own.<lb/>
ir<lb/>
the glutton<lb/>
re.<lb/>
care,<lb/>
changes<lb/>
i is there<lb/>
?e,<lb/>
1 its chime<lb/>
i the hai<lb/>
in the <lb/>
East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11, 1969?7<lb/>
WINNER'S? Winners of the local games tournament sponsored by the University Union met Thursday night<lb/>
i? diw iwb plan frtr the regional tournaments to be held February 20-22.<lb/>
Goddard Appears In Wright<lb/>
B) CHIP CALLAWAY<lb/>
 M Goddard, professional<lb/>
.1: cinematographer and lec-<lb/>
? ill appear here at 8 p.m.<lb/>
laj in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
lest of the lecture series.<lb/>
?pit vi Goddard's film-lec-<lb/>
will bo Congo Conquest<lb/>
dot ninentary details the ex-<lb/>
i oi Goddard as he ex-<lb/>
plores the world's second largest<lb/>
course, the 2,900-mile-long<lb/>
i1 o River<lb/>
?ho Jus; 450 miles of the<lb/>
rney Goddard is accompanied<lb/>
British explorer, Jack Yowoll<lb/>
Companion Lost<lb/>
While shooting the last series of<lb/>
rock cataracts in their kayaks,<lb/>
both men capsize in the water and<lb/>
Yowell is sucked into a huge whirl-<lb/>
pool and 1"K!<lb/>
Goddard then continues alone<lb/>
and in the company of primitive<lb/>
Africai tribet.<lb/>
With his camera he captures<lb/>
thousands od shots of some of the<lb/>
biggest game ever recorded?<lb/>
scenes oi elephant, lion, antelope<lb/>
and hippopotamus made from dis-<lb/>
tances of less than 50 feet.<lb/>
Other iilm highlights include the<lb/>
ancient native technique of cop-<lb/>
per smelting, the running of the<lb/>
Stanley Falls in dugouts; the coro-<lb/>
nation of a new Congo chief; a<lb/>
visit to the Topekes, a cannibalis-<lb/>
tic tribe; and the huge Zongo Falls.<lb/>
First To Explore<lb/>
Goddard is the first explorer in<lb/>
history to explore the ancient Con-<lb/>
from its fountain head to the<lb/>
Atlantic.<lb/>
He received a bachelor's degree<lb/>
in anthropology and psychology<lb/>
from the University of Southern<lb/>
California and is now working on<lb/>
his doctorate.<lb/>
Goddard has his own television<lb/>
show. "This Exciting World and<lb/>
has made numerous appearances<lb/>
on national television shows such<lb/>
as I Search for Adventure "Bold<lb/>
Journey and "True Adventure<lb/>
LOST: One girl's gold signet ring<lb/>
with gold chain. If found please<lb/>
contact Gary Wilfong, Room 280<lb/>
Aycock, 758-9350. Reward offered.<lb/>
FOUND: Watch in men's room<lb/>
on Graham 2nd floor, Feb. 3. 1969.<lb/>
Contact Chuck or Lloyd, 203C Scott.<lb/>
Any woman student interested in<lb/>
living in a "no curfew" dorm next<lb/>
fall, but who has not signed the<lb/>
questionaire distributed by the<lb/>
WRC, should go to the Dean of<lb/>
Women's Office, 214 Whichard<lb/>
Building, this week.<lb/>
The Society For the Advance-<lb/>
ment of Management will meet<lb/>
Wed Feb. 12 All members are re-<lb/>
quested to be present because of-<lb/>
ficers will be elected.<lb/>
There will be a general staff<lb/>
meeting of The Faculty Evaluation<lb/>
Wednesday night, Feb. 12, at 7:00<lb/>
in room 301 of the UU. There ar<lb/>
salaried positions open to students.<lb/>
Anyone interested please attend.<lb/>
Rip up our instructions<lb/>
on self-defense.<lb/>
After all,<lb/>
it's Valentine's Day.<lb/>
Normally, we insist that every man read the instructions on self-<lb/>
defense that we put in every package of Hai Karate" After Shave<lb/>
and Cologne. But we've got a heart. So on Valentine s Day, we d<lb/>
like every woman to tear our instructions to shreds. That way you<lb/>
can give your guy Hai Karate, with some instructions of your own.<lb/>
Hai Karate -be careful how you use it.<lb/>
Pierce' Novel Wins<lb/>
Acclaim 01 Critics<lb/>
Almost one year to the day after<lb/>
i-elea.se of its original hardback edi-<lb/>
tion, Ovid W. Pierce's critically<lb/>
and popularly acclaimed novel,<lb/>
"The Devil's Half will appear in<lb/>
a paperback edition oi more than<lb/>
100.000 copies.<lb/>
The novel, most successful of<lb/>
three books by the East Carolina<lb/>
University writer in rasidence, is<lb/>
expected to be released by Popular<lb/>
Library next week.<lb/>
Crtical Praise<lb/>
Released last February by Doub-<lb/>
leday, "The Devil's Half" met im-<lb/>
mediate critical praise, soon won<lb/>
widespread popularity and subse-<lb/>
quently sold out of the first edi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
As it was released, the book got<lb/>
this solid send-off from famous<lb/>
New York literary critic Orville<lb/>
Prescott: "This is the best novel<lb/>
I have read in many months. It<lb/>
is beautiful, moving and sad with<lb/>
all the dramatic intensity of hu-<lb/>
man grief and all the poetry of<lb/>
language and feeling which so rare-<lb/>
ly gets into fiction today . . . This<lb/>
is a book Turgenev and Chekhov<lb/>
would understand and admire<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
One of the most recent reviews<lb/>
was by Sylvia Stallings of the<lb/>
Washington 'D.C.i Sunday Star:<lb/>
"The Devil's Half strikes its roots<lb/>
firmly into Greek tragedy where<lb/>
life?or the Olympian Gods,( in an-<lb/>
other rime and place?is the tyrant<lb/>
that destroys us all His immediate<lb/>
setting is the South of the Recon-<lb/>
struction, but no mention is made<lb/>
of magnilias; the landscape is<lb/>
more that of Chechov's shuttered<lb/>
country houses or the dusty spaces<lb/>
of provincial French towns<lb/>
The book, according to Roy Mar-<lb/>
tion of the Greensboro Daily Rec-<lb/>
ord, "is the study of the human<lb/>
heart, written by a masterful<lb/>
scholar"<lb/>
"The Plantation"<lb/>
Pierce is the author of "The<lb/>
Plantation; and "On a Lonesome<lb/>
Porch works which gained him<lb/>
national recognition as a writer of<lb/>
fiction and twice won for him the<lb/>
coveted Sir Walter Raleigh Award<lb/>
for the best work of fiction by a<lb/>
North Carolina author.<lb/>
Pierce, a native of Halifax Coun-<lb/>
v and a graduate of Duke and<lb/>
H rvard Universities, joined the<lb/>
 culty of East Carolina in 1956.<lb/>
Kc<lb/>
'iiCo courses i"n litcrsxurs<lb/>
and creative writing at ECU and<lb/>
fiends most of h.s weekends at his<lb/>
own restored "Plantation" near<lb/>
Weldon where he does much of his<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
"THE DEVIL'S HALF" ? Ovid<lb/>
Pierce's most successful of three<lb/>
books will soon appear in a paper-<lb/>
back edition. One critic says the<lb/>
book "strikes it roots firmly into<lb/>
Greek history<lb/>
Winners Discuss Trips<lb/>
At a meeting' Thursday night,<lb/>
winners of the local tournaments,<lb/>
sponsored by he University Union,<lb/>
discussed plans for their rip to<lb/>
Charlotte.<lb/>
Out of 90 participating students,<lb/>
20 winners were chosen to go to the<lb/>
regional tournament, Feb. 20-22.<lb/>
The group will leave Greenville<lb/>
Thursday, Feb. 20 and will stay<lb/>
at the Holiday Inn in Charlotte<lb/>
until Saturday, Feb. 22.<lb/>
In Charlotte<lb/>
All tournament events will take<lb/>
place on the campus of the Uni-<lb/>
t BREAKFAST 55 ?<lb/>
I DINNER  IM 2<lb/>
 RIB bTEAK l.? J<lb/>
 QUICK SERVICE ? <lb/>
Private Dints Room<lb/>
FAMOUS FOR GOOD FOOD <lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
ANY ORDER FOR TAKE OUT <lb/>
???? ??????????<lb/>
versity of North Carolina at Char-<lb/>
lotte except for the bowling tour-<lb/>
nament, which will be held at the<lb/>
AMF Lanes<lb/>
The overall tournament director<lb/>
is Miss Gail Clay, Director, Uni-<lb/>
versity Center, University of Ten-<lb/>
nessee.<lb/>
Local ECU tournament directors<lb/>
include Adrian Pharo, Hank Byrne<lb/>
and Leo Buck. Miss Patricia May-<lb/>
nard, Advisor to the Intercolleg-<lb/>
iate Games Tournaments, will ac-<lb/>
company the winners to Charlotte.<lb/>
Winnerr<lb/>
ECU winners in men's bowling<lb/>
include Bruce Steinberg, Gary<lb/>
Weaver, Jim Miller, Glenn Gull-<lb/>
edge and Ron Cundiff. m women's<lb/>
bowling, the winners are Alice<lb/>
Gregory, Vicki Johnson, Jill<lb/>
Mowen, ' Gerry Harmon and Abby<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
Winners of the bridge tourna-<lb/>
ment are Rick Johnson, Judson<lb/>
Duffee, Danny Bell aid Jerry Boyd.<lb/>
Raymond No vicki, uihn Lippincott<lb/>
and Joe Gaddis are table tennis<lb/>
champions<lb/>
Chess tournament winners are<lb/>
Donald Rosser and Satoru Tanabe.<lb/>
The winner of the billiards tourn-<lb/>
ment is Anthony Reger.<lb/>
? 3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th and Charles St. Corner Across From Hardee's<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Serrlee<lb/>
?1969 Lceming Division, Chas. Pfizer &amp; Co Inc , New York, N. Y.<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co,<lb/>
5 Points<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Member F. D. I. C<lb/>
y<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0008"/><lb/>
8?East Carolinian?Tuesday, February 11. 1969<lb/>
East Carolina Pirates Upset<lb/>
St. Francis Frankies<lb/>
f?<lb/>
?ife' $.<lb/>
4fc V<lb/>
The Babj Bins' Jim Fairies goes up for a short juniper in the game<lb/>
against Laurinburg Institute, which East Carolina lost bj seven points,<lb/>
!lsi. Awaiting a possible rebound is Julius Prince (24). The Babj Bucs,<lb/>
down by as much a is points at 70-52 with 9:27 left in the game, rallied<lb/>
strong!) to outscore Laurinburg bj 31 to 16 in the next eight minutes to<lb/>
come within three points at 86-83 with only a minute to play. However,<lb/>
the Baby IJu s faltered in the last minute to let Laurinburg win. East<lb/>
Carolina missed lit free throws to account for the loss. Ronnie LePors led<lb/>
the Bucs with 18 points while Jim Fair ley had 17 and Julius Prince 15.<lb/>
LePors led the Bucs off the hoards with 16 retrieves, while I'airlev and<lb/>
Greg Crouse each snared 13 rebounds apiece<lb/>
East Carolina overcame some<lb/>
verj suspect foul shooting to reg-<lb/>
i : an upset victory over tough<lb/>
St Francisc College by 14-66. a<lb/>
j snapped their three-game los-<lb/>
m ihat the Frank had<lb/>
with a 100-70 walloping t<lb/>
p les jUSl owr tWO W(<lb/>
rhe Pirates relied on the foul<lb/>
pr ,duce enough point to<lb/>
i-come St. Francis' five field<lb/>
- dge and they mad it, but<lb/>
until alter thoroughly seal<lb/>
, pa tisan ci wd by missing 21 oi<lb/>
tl mpts.<lb/>
Die big difference was m the n<lb/>
bounding, where the Pirates out-<lb/>
Francis by 44-40.<lb/>
with Jim Modlin and Jim Gregorj<lb/>
h hauling down 14 for Easl Car<lb/>
: chipped in v<lb/>
t f hj b nmding nights<lb/>
with nil The Pii<lb/>
d Larry<lb/>
the Frai bounder<lb/>
.  ? only 11<lb/>
rebounds, just over lit under ;<lb/>
committed 33 fouls<lb/>
men march to the<lb/>
out, includ-<lb/>
: tie Frankies<lb/>
?vie<lb/>
:  area and<lb/>
how tpproval i<lb/>
hnicals were calli<lb/>
l'i.e i iti trailed ? ' oi<lb/>
' he Mine until tfa it the lead<lb/>
through th id half,<lb/>
: then they held il I re-<lb/>
in lei oi th( ame,<lb/>
!? ? Cai ilina jumped oui to an<lb/>
early 8-4 lead, but S t. Francis bat-<lb/>
?1. d back to score 7 traighl points<lb/>
il 11-8 lead as Lewis and Bill<lb/>
Sno : ill the v ork T ewis<lb/>
Baby Bucs fBe8t In Country<lb/>
By CARL TYER<lb/>
Carolina's cagers post a problem<lb/>
! ir any team th hi: year.<lb/>
and ECU is eption. The Baby<lb/>
Bucs tr. el to Carolina February<lb/>
22, and Coach Kirk Stewart feels<lb/>
this will be the supreme test of his<lb/>
freshman team this year.<lb/>
"They are fn shman<lb/>
team in the count in my opin-<lb/>
ion Stewart i unmerited, and we<lb/>
are going to go up there with win-<lb/>
ning on our mind<lb/>
This is Coach Stewarts third year<lb/>
at ECU. and his .second freshman<lb/>
team. Hailing from Silver Springs<lb/>
Maryland, he was an All Metro-<lb/>
politan player in High School and<lb/>
established a 51 points for a single<lb/>
game record that still stands in a<lb/>
Bellmomt Abby Tournament. After<lb/>
attending High Point College, where<lb/>
he played ba-sketball under Coach<lb/>
Tom Quinn. Stewart came to ECU<lb/>
to obtain his Masters in 1967. After<lb/>
completing his Masters in August<lb/>
of 67. he was signed as Quinns as-<lb/>
uit in September of the same<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Thi years freshman team now<lb/>
po ? 7-4 record, not includin<lb/>
Laurinburg.<lb/>
"We hould end the eason with<lb/>
a 12-4 oi rd if I hing<lb/>
fchi ? tated The<lb/>
Bab Bu lo not hav? in ?<lb/>
schedule I emaindi r of the<lb/>
season, ? pec ally with 'he Caro-<lb/>
lina team to face in their last en-<lb/>
counter. They also play Re<lb/>
Mount Olive and Chowan We<lb/>
looking forward to meeting Rich-<lb/>
mond again, we should have beal<lb/>
them in our first game, but<lb/>
early Coul trouble<lb/>
Stewart feels this years team has<lb/>
: Impr ivemenl ln e the<lb/>
inning ol the season, "e penally<lb/>
with our ball handling and defense<lb/>
"At least we can get the ball down<lb/>
court now "We still have im-<lb/>
pi vemenl to make, we need to cut<lb/>
down on our : tling, a problem<lb/>
which cost, us the Richmond<lb/>
?ame he said,<lb/>
The purpose of the freshman<lb/>
e on is to prepare as many boys<lb/>
as possible for tin varsity. "I feel<lb/>
we have four or five boys that are<lb/>
id varsity material Stewart<lb/>
commented " These include Greg<lb/>
Crouce, a 6-3 forward, or guard.<lb/>
Jim Fairlev, a 6-6 forward, R<lb/>
nie Lepors, a 6-6 center, mid Jul-<lb/>
ius Prince, a 6-1 guard.<lb/>
Prince hold down the top spot<lb/>
in coring for the Baby Bucs with<lb/>
a 16.1 avei followed by Lepors<lb/>
' ice with 14 3 and<lb/>
"Longw Guts  have<lb/>
also playi id ball for u and<lb/>
much impi ?v  i ??? 11<lb/>
 ? hall a 7 6 aver-<lb/>
improvemi nl. we ne? d<lb/>
our fund . .  i<lb/>
with foul hex d re<lb/>
?   Stewai' finallj stated.<lb/>
. one of his principal<lb/>
bs, and Stewart feels it has gone<lb/>
well this year. "We will have five<lb/>
: the best freshmen to hit the<lb/>
Ea it Carolina campus next year<lb/>
: think you can .see the improve-<lb/>
ment a good freshman team can<lb/>
make with our present varsity<lb/>
tiding of second in the Southern<lb/>
Conference, as opposed to eighth<lb/>
last year<lb/>
tapped in .i reb amd and Shodgra s<lb/>
a lumper to tie the game before<lb/>
Lewis hit on a free throw to put<lb/>
the Frankies on top at 9-8 with<lb/>
14:05 to go in the half.<lb/>
Snodgrass hit on anothi r jumper<lb/>
before the Pirate cored on a pair<lb/>
free throws by Jim Modlin I <lb/>
make it 11-10. Lewis nil from un-<lb/>
, rneath and Norm Van Ller scor-<lb/>
ed on a jumper to make it 15-10.<lb/>
Jim Kiel nan scored on a driving<lb/>
baseline layup, but a foul shot by<lb/>
Van Lier and a layup by Lewis<lb/>
pushed the lead out to 18 V2. the<lb/>
I-rankle. biggest lead of the hall.<lb/>
SI Francis then went to a slow<lb/>
down offense in what seemed to be<lb/>
i in to draw East Carolina OUl<lb/>
their zone defense The tactic<lb/>
 work as the pirates were<lb/>
? whittle away at the lead.<lb/>
The lead stayed between three<lb/>
tntil a final flurry<lb/>
ity m the waning mom,<lb/>
? he F rankle lead drop <lb/>
one point.<lb/>
Aftei St. Franc  i . I<lb/>
up to 24-19, the Pirates<lb/>
quick basket in a layup by<lb/>
and a jumper from thi<lb/>
by Keir to cut the lead dow n<lb/>
1-23.<lb/>
I the final ecom<lb/>
- d a bucket, with Tom Miller<lb/>
hitting for the Piratei righi at thi<lb/>
buzzer.<lb/>
Richard Keir scored for the Pi<lb/>
es to open the second half I i put<lb/>
l a t Carolina on top by one point<lb/>
at 27-26. Van Lier then proceeded<lb/>
,1 sink three straight field goals to<lb/>
return the lead to St. Francis at<lb/>
32-27, a five point spread<lb/>
The two teams then settled down<lb/>
and swapped shots for the nexl<lb/>
few minutes as the score moved tip<lb/>
to 42 38 with 13:18 to go m the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Pirates then started their<lb/>
urge that was to carry them to<lb/>
their 11th victory in 20 contests.<lb/>
Miller hit on a 'long jumper and<lb/>
Modlin tapped in a rebound to tie<lb/>
the game at 42-all. Gregory then<lb/>
hit on two free throws and then<lb/>
Modlin two more to push the lead<lb/>
out to 46-42 before Mike Copeland<lb/>
hit on a free throw for St. Francis.<lb/>
Eas1 Carolina then scored the<lb/>
next six points to take a nine point<lb/>
lead at 52-43. Keir hit on two free<lb/>
throws and then Modlin and Greg-<lb/>
.  : coi ed<lb/>
: ; i ?? the lead.<lb/>
After a Van Lier fn<lb/>
Modlin cored again to<lb/>
lead at ten pomts with a o:<lb/>
il 54-44<lb/>
Aftl . Si Francis cul<lb/>
down : eight point on<lb/>
free thr ?ws, the Pirau<lb/>
their lei I out to 12 o<lb/>
throw ? bj Gregory and l<lb/>
? M dlin ,it 60-48.<lb/>
The !? rankles cut the li<lb/>
. era! times, but the Pii .<lb/>
ilway equal to the task an<lb/>
. :i their margin to I<lb/>
Wil h le ' han two i Lnu<lb/>
p ? i held  68 58<lb/>
but a jumper by Guy K-<lb/>
' I t le1 !<lb/>
: il<lb/>
fi  al 68-64<lb/>
hii oi<lb/>
i free throv w il<lb/>
efl to pul the u<lb/>
-114<lb/>
c or i i ?<lb/>
? and Millei<lb/>
,i ? ? he was fo<lb/>
buzzer l et 1<lb/>
to il final mai<lb/>
Easl Cai rlina pul I i<lb/>
w action in<lb/>
w ith Jim Modle<lb/>
.? way Ton. M<lb/>
17. Jim Gre ory 14. and <lb/>
Keir 12.<lb/>
The Pirate w ill rain i.<lb/>
: iy night i ains! thi<lb/>
: d Spider ? and also on S<lb/>
I Fairfield<lb/>
Scoring:<lb/>
SI Francis<lb/>
E Carolina<lb/>
25<lb/>
SI Francis?(66)?Van Li<lb/>
l ewi -7. Si -20. Co<lb/>
Aden-4, Kerr-4, Morsel!<lb/>
Delphi, and Tabaka<lb/>
ECU 174 ' Thomp ion-4,<lb/>
17. Keir-12, Gregory-11 M<lb/>
and Klernan-4.<lb/>
Professional<lb/>
Typing Service<lb/>
Pat Berrv 756-0678<lb/>
WANTED: Students for part-<lb/>
time sales work during the school<lb/>
year, and changing to full-time<lb/>
during the summer if desired.<lb/>
Full-time work also available af-<lb/>
ter graduation for students who<lb/>
have been successful in this<lb/>
program; Must be ,11 years old.<lb/>
Please call Robert Colburn 752-<lb/>
1080. If no answer , all 756-4227.<lb/>
Join The J$$ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<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/>
?????????????jft<lb/>
tactuuu<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners tk Launderera<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanchi Sts. Greenville. N C.<lb/>
1 Hr I'ieHninj? ;i Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
SAVE TIME<lb/>
City Launderette<lb/>
813 Evans St Greenville<lb/>
Leave Four Laundry, v do It for you,<lb/>
Folding and 1-hr ori on Reauest<lb/>
Bring your Irv Cleaning and Shirts too<lb/>
Serving l i i Since 1949<lb/>
Down From the Burger Chef<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
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Mr. Advertiser<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
it pays you<lb/>
to advertise in the<lb/>
4<lb/>
last CarolinUul<lb/>
 4<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
For Advertising Assistance Contact j<lb/>
CLYDE HUGHES, Advertising Manager I<lb/>
or<lb/>
DON BENSON, Business Manager J<lb/>
uttice 15, Room 201 Wright Building j<lb/>
Phone 752-571 h" <lb/>
?<lb/>
s hoi il LD df.it:<lb/>
rhairman, listens wi<lb/>
H'e,l i. I .trolina du<lb/>
Bj LYNN H<lb/>
i laroUna has<lb/>
 inn the I<lb/>
Nati 08 win<lb/>
h 26th at<lb/>
BiU Hicks<lb/>
to serve a<lb/>
Ln his pt<lb/>
: ai eks earl<lb/>
. withdrawn<lb/>
fti ries of bac<lb/>
. between w<lb/>
ECU, including<lb/>
was calle<lb/>
East Carol:<lb/>
the Model <lb/>
Wi ?? Carolina 1<lb/>
mei' iree oondition<lb/>
b letter of apol<lb/>
Id cl ?se the<lb/>
<pb facs="00039395_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>