<?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">
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<pb facs="00039401_0001"/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
Let us dare to readjhink , speak and write <lb/>
Vol. 4, No. 1 Lfij jx<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
Black students demand ten immediate<lb/>
policy reforms of EC administration<lb/>
1K<lb/>
"V<lb/>
see page 3<lb/>
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"In alien able rights never meant Negroes Kl<lb/>
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3 Negro Leadei<lb/>
Speak at Sessioi<lb/>
On Voter Actio<lb/>
The Reconstruvtio,<lb/>
,v freedfmi's false pro),<lb/>
sjsajojj sndiuir)<lb/>
Black Political Power In America<lb/>
?LACK AMERICA<lb/>
Quinn named Southern Conference<lb/>
Basketball Coach of the Year<lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
Van Cliburn appears in concert<lb/>
tonight in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
see page 4<lb/>
Miss Carolyn Fuighum to assume<lb/>
duties as dean of women<lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
News analyst Howard K. Smith<lb/>
to speak here Monday evening<lb/>
e e page<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14,1969<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
t<lb/>
K<lb/>
missvnroiyn fuighum Renaissance Quartet to pefomi Thursday<lb/>
East Carolina appoints Dean of  ECU Music building<lb/>
Women to succeed Ruth White<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum has benn<lb/>
named Dean of Women at ECU.<lb/>
She will succeed Dean Ruth<lb/>
White, who will retire in July<lb/>
after 19 years in the post.<lb/>
An East Carolina graduate,<lb/>
Miss Fulghum returned to ECU<lb/>
in September, 1962, as an<lb/>
educational counselor on the<lb/>
Dean of Womem's staff She<lb/>
became assistant dean of women<lb/>
in July, 1966.<lb/>
According to Dean White,<lb/>
Miss Fulghum is "very well<lb/>
qualified for the position"<lb/>
because of her educational<lb/>
background and her experience.<lb/>
Prior to her tenure at ECU, Miss<lb/>
Fulghum taught for three years<lb/>
at Rosewood High School in<lb/>
Wayne County. She holds BS<lb/>
and MA degrees from ECU.<lb/>
"I accept the appointment as<lb/>
the greatest challenge of my<lb/>
life the new dean said. "My<lb/>
association with Miss White as<lb/>
her assistant has made me deeply<lb/>
aware of both responsibilities<lb/>
and opportunities inherent in<lb/>
this position.<lb/>
"It is my earnest desire to<lb/>
achieve such relationships with<lb/>
other areas of the<lb/>
administration, the faculty and<lb/>
the student body as will<lb/>
promote the best present and<lb/>
future interest of our<lb/>
university<lb/>
Miss Fulghum is a member of<lb/>
the National Association of<lb/>
Women's Deans and Counselors,<lb/>
the N.C. Association of Women's<lb/>
Deans and Counselors, the N.C.<lb/>
Personnel and Guidance<lb/>
Association and the N.C. State<lb/>
Employees Association. She was<lb/>
the 1966-67 president of the<lb/>
Greenville Business and<lb/>
Professional Women's Club.<lb/>
Two programs of early music<lb/>
will be presented on March 16<lb/>
and March 20. The first of these<lb/>
will be a concert of Medieval<lb/>
Sacred music given by ECU's<lb/>
Collegium Musicum. The<lb/>
program will be on Sunday,<lb/>
March 16, at 3:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
music building. Featured will be<lb/>
works for boys' choir,<lb/>
instruments, and ensembles<lb/>
In addition to music wirtten<lb/>
by such composers as Byrd,<lb/>
Gibbons, Issaac, and Dearing.<lb/>
the complete music for a French<lb/>
Medieval Mass, the Machuat, will<lb/>
be performed.<lb/>
The pieces will be played on<lb/>
copies of the original Medieval<lb/>
and Renaissance instruments<lb/>
such as recorders, krumhorns,<lb/>
and kordholts. Participating will<lb/>
be the instrumental ensemble<lb/>
under the directon of John<lb/>
Tyson, and the madrigal<lb/>
ensemble under Carlton King.<lb/>
The second concert,<lb/>
sponsored by the SGA and the<lb/>
School of Music, will be a<lb/>
program by the Renaissance<lb/>
Quartet. The concert will be the<lb/>
first of the 1969 Chamber Music<lb/>
Festival series, and will be<lb/>
presented Thursday, March 20,<lb/>
in Wright Building at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
The Renaissance Quartet is<lb/>
composed of Raymond Lynch,<lb/>
Barbara Mueser, Robert White,<lb/>
and Morris Newman.<lb/>
by George Weigand<lb/>
Lutenist Raymond Lynch<lb/>
took up the lute after attaining<lb/>
considerable skill on the guitar.<lb/>
He studied guitar under Eduardo<lb/>
Saing de la Maya at Barcelona,<lb/>
Spain. Lynch is credited with<lb/>
several compositions; one of<lb/>
which, "Refractions for<lb/>
Orchestra was premiered by<lb/>
the Dallas Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
Robert White has also worked<lb/>
with the Pro Musica as a tenor<lb/>
and in the NBC TV opera "Boris<lb/>
Godovnov and in the<lb/>
premieres of Menotti<lb/>
"Labyrinth and Hindemith's<lb/>
"Long Christmas Dinner<lb/>
Morris Newman has workec<lb/>
with many performing group:<lb/>
and has long displayed hi:<lb/>
Barbara Mueser is the<lb/>
Quartet's viola de gambist. She is<lb/>
the former vice president of the<lb/>
Bamba Society of America, and<lb/>
has performed with the New<lb/>
York Pro Musica.<lb/>
virtuosity on recorder<lb/>
krummhorn, bassoon, anc<lb/>
shawm.<lb/>
Included in the repertoire ol<lb/>
the ensemble is a wealth ol<lb/>
music from England, France<lb/>
Spain, Italy, and Flanders frorr<lb/>
the period known as the<lb/>
"Golden Age" of thest<lb/>
countries. Any exp ure to the<lb/>
music of this period will make<lb/>
this claim understandable.<lb/>
It is due to the efforts of such<lb/>
groups as the Renaissance<lb/>
Quartet, that the relatively<lb/>
forgotten and, until recently,<lb/>
unexplored field of early music<lb/>
is gaining a new and well<lb/>
deserved popularity.<lb/>
Quinn named basketball<lb/>
Coach of the Year<lb/>
by Carl Tyer<lb/>
defensive action. Then there was<lb/>
Earl Thompson's great defensive<lb/>
game against George Washington<lb/>
in the tournament, holding Bob<lb/>
Talent to his lowest point total.<lb/>
This feat brought on a<lb/>
conversation between Thompson<lb/>
and representatives of the Los<lb/>
Angeles Lakers of the NBA.<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn nosed out<lb/>
Davidson Coach Lefty Driesell,<lb/>
25 20, for Southern Conference<lb/>
Basketball Coach of the Year,<lb/>
int the balloting last Monday.<lb/>
The main thing that brought the<lb/>
honor to Quinn was the<lb/>
"mystery team" from East<lb/>
Carolina that finished second in<lb/>
the Conference, when they were<lb/>
predicted to finish sixth.<lb/>
"I feel it is a real honor that<lb/>
the press would elect me as<lb/>
Coach of the Year Quinn<lb/>
stated. "The players are<lb/>
responsible, along with Coach<lb/>
Stewart, who helped me so<lb/>
much during the year<lb/>
Quinn called his group a<lb/>
"mystery team" because no one<lb/>
player remained a star during the<lb/>
year. One week it would op Tom<lb/>
Miller and his outside jting,<lb/>
or one week it would be Jim<lb/>
Modlin, Jim Gregory, or Richard<lb/>
Keir for their rebounding or<lb/>
"They did surprise me in<lb/>
some instances against some of<lb/>
the teams we played Quinn<lb/>
stated. "They are a very<lb/>
compatible group, and a good<lb/>
group to work with<lb/>
"We started jelling in theJ<lb/>
Classic. Those three straight<lb/>
games did us a lot of good. We<lb/>
finally settled on our sorting<lb/>
pivot man, and Gregory started<lb/>
rebounding better<lb/>
A great deal has been said<lb/>
about Coach Quinn and his<lb/>
rebuilding job in East Carolina<lb/>
basketball. Advancing from sixth<lb/>
to second place in the<lb/>
conference, and for the first<lb/>
time making it past the first<lb/>
round of the conference<lb/>
tournament is certainly a<lb/>
product of Quinn's rebuilding<lb/>
job. Then to top it all off, the<lb/>
Pirates came back from a 13<lb/>
point deficit to down George<lb/>
Washington in the semi finals<lb/>
and meet the mighty Davidson<lb/>
Wildcats in the final;<lb/>
After all this, what is left?<lb/>
After all he has accomplished,<lb/>
Quinn is now looking to next<lb/>
year, and the prospects of doing<lb/>
better.<lb/>
'I would be very<lb/>
disappointed if I felt this were as<lb/>
far as we could go, and if it<lb/>
were, I would leave right now<lb/>
Quinn commented. "We have<lb/>
more recruiting to do, and two<lb/>
spots to fill for next year's<lb/>
team<lb/>
Other advancements must be<lb/>
made besides player spots to fill.<lb/>
East Carolina is the only team in<lb/>
the conference that does not<lb/>
have three basketball coaches.<lb/>
With the loss of Richard Keir<lb/>
and Earl Thompson, Quinn has a<lb/>
hard job ahead of hirri to fill<lb/>
their vacancies. The present<lb/>
freshmen team will supply<lb/>
candidates for the spots, along<lb/>
with a junior college transfer, if<lb/>
he were "starter material only<lb/>
Quinn added.<lb/>
Freshmen players Jim Fairley<lb/>
and Ron LePors could fill Keir's<lb/>
spot, with Fairley getting the<lb/>
nod if he improves his strength.<lb/>
Mike Dunn is also being<lb/>
considered but he needs to<lb/>
mature in his playing and not be<lb/>
as sporadic. "I will be looking<lb/>
them over in the fall Quinn<lb/>
added, "since we need more<lb/>
depth for next year's team<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0003"/><lb/>
ay, March 14,1969<lb/>
Friday. March 14, 1969<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
hite has also worked<lb/>
i Musica as a tenot,<lb/>
BC TV opera "Boris<lb/>
and in the<lb/>
of Menotti<lb/>
and Hindemith'j<lb/>
mas Dinner<lb/>
wman has worker<lb/>
performing group:<lb/>
?ng displayed hi:<lb/>
Black students demand campus reforms<lb/>
on recorder<lb/>
i, bassoon, anc<lb/>
n the repertoire ol<lb/>
e is a wealth ol<lb/>
England, France<lb/>
and Flanders frorr<lb/>
known as the<lb/>
ge" of these<lb/>
ly exp ;jure to the<lb/>
 period will make<lb/>
lerstandable.<lb/>
the efforts of such<lb/>
the Renaissance<lb/>
at the relatively<lb/>
d, until recently,<lb/>
eld of early music<lb/>
i new and well<lb/>
ilarity.<lb/>
d leave right now<lb/>
riented. "We have<lb/>
ng to do, and two<lb/>
I for next year's<lb/>
ancements must be<lb/>
player spots to fill.<lb/>
is the only team in<lb/>
ce that does not<lb/>
ketball coaches.<lb/>
ss of Richard Keir<lb/>
npson, Quinn has a<lb/>
ad of hirn to fill<lb/>
ies. The present<lb/>
jam will supply<lb/>
r the spots, along<lb/>
college transfer, if<lb/>
ter material only<lb/>
slayers Jim Fairley<lb/>
rs could fill Keir's<lb/>
airley getting the<lb/>
'roves his strength.<lb/>
t is also being<lb/>
ut he needs to<lb/>
playing and not be<lb/>
I will be looking<lb/>
the fall Quinn<lb/>
we need more<lb/>
year's team<lb/>
by WHITNEY HADDEN<lb/>
Black students here await<lb/>
Administration response to a list<lb/>
of 10 reforms they have<lb/>
demanded.<lb/>
The demands were presented<lb/>
to University President Leo<lb/>
Jenkins on March 3 by a<lb/>
committee claiming to represent<lb/>
the more than one hundred<lb/>
black students on campus.<lb/>
In a letter of explanation<lb/>
accompanying their petition, the<lb/>
black students called the<lb/>
demands "reasonable and totally<lb/>
fulfillable<lb/>
The letter further states that<lb/>
although they will take "every<lb/>
opportunity for discussion and<lb/>
planning they will "undertake<lb/>
any and every action necessary "<lb/>
to obtain their reforms.<lb/>
Johnny Williams, Roosevelt<lb/>
Morton, Thomas Enoch, Audrey<lb/>
Daniels, Daisy Albritton, Joe<lb/>
Taylor, and Bill Owens formed<lb/>
the committee which presented<lb/>
Jenkins with the demands.<lb/>
Williams, president of<lb/>
SOULS, commented that the<lb/>
demands were far less sweeping<lb/>
than many students would like<lb/>
to have seen.<lb/>
In order to .eserve unity,<lb/>
the radical students claim to<lb/>
have tempered  demands<lb/>
rather than risk alienating the<lb/>
more moderate. "I consider<lb/>
myself moderate claimed<lb/>
Williams, "but I feel that<lb/>
moderates are in the minority on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Bill Owens, a sophomore,<lb/>
agreed that the mood of the<lb/>
majority of black students was<lb/>
"militant and that all are<lb/>
determined to see these demands<lb/>
met.<lb/>
He explained further that<lb/>
previous attempts at reform have<lb/>
been made, but have achieved<lb/>
only small success.<lb/>
In the Winter Quarter of<lb/>
1967-68, the black students<lb/>
presented a list of grievances.<lb/>
The SG A set up a<lb/>
Race Relations Board that<lb/>
produced, according to<lb/>
Owensno obser ole response"<lb/>
and was "of no value as a<lb/>
communicative instrument<lb/>
Apart from these actions, a<lb/>
number of individual complaints<lb/>
and appeals have been made to<lb/>
We, the Black Students of<lb/>
East Carolina University,<lb/>
therefore insist that immediate<lb/>
positive actions be taken upon<lb/>
all of the following demands:<lb/>
Black Instructors:<lb/>
Black instructors in<lb/>
proportion to black students on<lb/>
campus in the same ratio as<lb/>
white instructors to white<lb/>
students on campus.<lb/>
Black instructors to teach<lb/>
courses in all departments.<lb/>
Black Studies Program With<lb/>
Emphasis on Humanities:<lb/>
Black instructors to teach<lb/>
hlack courses.<lb/>
White instructors may teach<lb/>
purely African courses, but<lb/>
black instructors will teach these<lb/>
courses also.<lb/>
Black students on the<lb/>
committee to form the black<lb/>
studies program.<lb/>
More Financial Aid for Black<lb/>
Students:<lb/>
Rearrangement of the<lb/>
financial budget to fit black<lb/>
students. The present program is<lb/>
designed for white students<lb/>
whose families are better able to<lb/>
supplement their educational<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
Recruitment of More Black<lb/>
Students:<lb/>
A special program set up so<lb/>
that black students will recruit<lb/>
black students under the same<lb/>
conditions as the present<lb/>
recruitment program for white<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Recruitment of More Black<lb/>
Athletes.<lb/>
Discontinuation of all Negative<lb/>
Racial Practices on Campus:<lb/>
Ban "Dixie" immediately.<lb/>
Removal of Confederate flags<lb/>
on state-owned buildings (except<lb/>
for private rooms).<lb/>
Equal application of housing<lb/>
rules according to printed<lb/>
University codes.<lb/>
Penalty for instructors for<lb/>
overt racial discrimination in<lb/>
classrooms.<lb/>
Improvements in<lb/>
Maintenance Department:<lb/>
Staff privileges for the<lb/>
maintenance workers.<lb/>
At least three black workers<lb/>
in supervisory position with<lb/>
higher wages.<lb/>
Increased pay for<lb/>
maintenance workers.<lb/>
Collective bargaining board<lb/>
set up so that the maintenance<lb/>
workers may state their<lb/>
grievances.<lb/>
Black Speakers on Campus.<lb/>
Legalized Participation in Civil<lb/>
Rights Demonstrations:<lb/>
F reedom from suspension<lb/>
even if student demonstrations<lb/>
result in jail sentences.<lb/>
Financing of Black Students to<lb/>
Attend Conferences<lb/>
Representing East Carolina<lb/>
University by the<lb/>
rifwpmment Association<lb/>
professors and administrators.<lb/>
When asked about the<lb/>
influence on ECU black students<lb/>
from the black student<lb/>
movement and recent protests at<lb/>
Duke and at other universities,<lb/>
Owens repliedWe have done a<lb/>
great deal of research into black<lb/>
studies programs, and other<lb/>
racial reforms at many<lb/>
campuses. We have talked with<lb/>
students and followed the<lb/>
movement closely.<lb/>
"But as to our demands, we<lb/>
are independent and very<lb/>
serious; this is not the result of<lb/>
any T.V. psychosis and we are<lb/>
not seeking confrontation for its<lb/>
own sake. Most of these<lb/>
demands have been presented to<lb/>
this campus before. These<lb/>
grievances are long standing and<lb/>
we are tired of waiting for action<lb/>
to be taken on them<lb/>
The purpose of the demands<lb/>
has been stated as threefold: "1)<lb/>
to stimulate a better racial<lb/>
atmosphere on campus; 2) to<lb/>
change existing University<lb/>
policies which, because of rapid<lb/>
changes in the social and<lb/>
educational requirements of<lb/>
society, are now unfair,<lb/>
obsolete, and short sighted; and<lb/>
3) to state positive<lb/>
improvements that must be<lb/>
made for the black students at<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Foremost among the<lb/>
demands are the hiring of black<lb/>
professors, the establishment of<lb/>
a "black studies program more<lb/>
financial aid for black students<lb/>
and improvements in the<lb/>
recruitment of black students to<lb/>
East Carolina, improvements in<lb/>
the Maintenance Department,<lb/>
and the discontinuation of all<lb/>
"negative racial practices" on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The blacx students seem to<lb/>
be united in their demands and<lb/>
in their determination to see<lb/>
them accepted.<lb/>
One student standing in the<lb/>
president's office as the demands<lb/>
were presented and explained,<lb/>
stated that Jenkins was calm and<lb/>
polite with the committee, and<lb/>
that he seemed very interested in<lb/>
the list of demands. No official<lb/>
Administration statement has<lb/>
been made as yet.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0004"/><lb/>
 "<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
FINAL ATTRACTION-Van Cliburn will appear in concert at<lb/>
8:15 on March 14. He will be the final attraction of the 68 69<lb/>
artist series.<lb/>
Cliburn concert tonight<lb/>
The winner of the famed<lb/>
Tchaikowsky Music Festival in<lb/>
Moscow, Van Cliburn, will<lb/>
appear in concert at 8:15 p.m<lb/>
Friday, March 14, the final<lb/>
attraction of the 1968- 69<lb/>
Artists Series.<lb/>
Cliburn, a native of<lb/>
Shreveport, La learned to read<lb/>
music long before he learned to<lb/>
read words.<lb/>
He first played in public at<lb/>
the age of four at Shreveport's<lb/>
Dodd College. At twelve he was<lb/>
the winner of a state-wide young<lb/>
pianist's competition, playing<lb/>
Tchaikowsky's B flat Minor<lb/>
Concerto with the Houston<lb/>
Symphony.<lb/>
Debut<lb/>
The same year he made his<lb/>
Carnegie Hall debut as winner of<lb/>
the National Music Festival<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
Later in life other laurels<lb/>
came his way: a Julhard School<lb/>
Scholarship, the G.D Dealey<lb/>
Award in Dallas, Texas, the<lb/>
Kosciuszko Foundation Chopin<lb/>
Award, a grant from the Olga<lb/>
Sama"ju Foundation and, upon<lb/>
grad lation from Julliard with<lb/>
highest honors, he received the<lb/>
Carl M. Reodei Memorial Award<lb/>
and the Frank Damrosch<lb/>
Scholarship.<lb/>
said, "He is the real and brilliant<lb/>
successor to Rachmaninoff<lb/>
Harold Schonberg, critic of<lb/>
the New York Times wrote,<lb/>
"Cliburn stands revealed as the<lb/>
pianist whose potentialities have<lb/>
fused into a combination of<lb/>
uncommon virtuosity and<lb/>
musicianship<lb/>
Public admission to the<lb/>
concert will be by season ticket<lb/>
only. There will be a 51 service<lb/>
charge for student tickets.<lb/>
Levintritt Award<lb/>
One of his most important<lb/>
victories came in 1954 when he<lb/>
won the coveted Levintritt<lb/>
Award, the most important<lb/>
award obtainable in American<lb/>
music for pianists.<lb/>
Upon returning from the<lb/>
Moscow competition, Cliburn<lb/>
was accorded New York's first<lb/>
ticker-tape parade for a<lb/>
musician, congratulated by<lb/>
President Eisenhower, given a<lb/>
testimonial luncheon by the<lb/>
mayor of New York and<lb/>
elevated to the top in classical<lb/>
music record sales.<lb/>
Cultural Ambassador<lb/>
When Cliburn returned to the<lb/>
Soviet Union as a cultural<lb/>
ambassador for the United<lb/>
States State Department, the<lb/>
great Russian musician Neuhaus<lb/>
H<lb/>
n p?re<lb/>
ol<lb/>
I'm - A Need Some Help<lb/>
We need several young students,<lb/>
male or female to do part time<lb/>
or full time work. Apply in<lb/>
person at the Pizza Hut of<lb/>
Tenth Street.<lb/>
by Robert L. Short<lb/>
"The Parables of Peanuts<lb/>
is filled with wonderful<lb/>
guotes and is a real de<lb/>
light to read from begin-<lb/>
ning to end. I could not<lb/>
possibly be more pleased<lb/>
? Charles M. Schulz,<lb/>
creator of Peanuts"<lb/>
Coth, $4.95 ? Paper, $1.95<lb/>
At all bookstores<lb/>
?  , "i an uuuKMOr<lb/>
rpj Harper &amp; Row<lb/>
tail<lb/>
Summer theatre continues<lb/>
An "East Carolina University<lb/>
Summer Theater Boosters'<lb/>
Club" has been organized by<lb/>
Greenville residents in an effort<lb/>
to "guarantee the continuance<lb/>
of the Summer Theatre in this<lb/>
area<lb/>
According to Summer<lb/>
Theatre general manager and<lb/>
associate producer James<lb/>
Slaughter, 27 local residents<lb/>
have become charter members,<lb/>
installing Greenville physician<lb/>
Ed Clement as president.<lb/>
"Finest"<lb/>
Dr. Clement said the<lb/>
forthcoming Summer Theatre<lb/>
season will be "the finest in its<lb/>
history and described the<lb/>
boosters' club as an organized<lb/>
effort "to secure the Summer<lb/>
Theatre as the continuing yearly<lb/>
cultural highlight of this area<lb/>
Schfidulp<lb/>
Scheduled for production<lb/>
during 'Summer Theatre '69"<lb/>
are "The Pajama Game" (July<lb/>
7-12), "The Pirates of Penzance"<lb/>
(July 14-19), "Bye Bye Birdie"<lb/>
(July 21-291, "Carousel" (Aug.<lb/>
1-9), and "A Funny Thing<lb/>
Happened en the Way to the<lb/>
Forum" (Aug. 11-16).<lb/>
Season tickets are now nn<lb/>
sale at the Summei Theatre B"v<lb/>
Office at ECU. Membership in<lb/>
the Boosters' Club is open to all<lb/>
interested theatre patrons.<lb/>
TEACHERS<lb/>
300 Vacancies Elem &amp; H.S<lb/>
PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY<lb/>
VIRGINIA<lb/>
Salary: $6700. $11,055.<lb/>
On Campus March 24, 1969<lb/>
Page '?<lb/>
do you gtnrom here?<lb/>
It'll take about three minutes to fill out and mail this<lb/>
coupon. It might be the most important three minutes<lb/>
of your life.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Training Officer, Personnel Department<lb/>
Virginia National Bank, P.O. Box 600<lb/>
Norfolk, Virginia 23501<lb/>
I'd like to know about career opportunities at Virginia<lb/>
National Bank. Please send your booklet.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
College<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
Class<lb/>
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and n<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039401_0005"/><lb/>
lay, March 14, 1969<lb/>
ACHtRS<lb/>
cies Elem&amp;H.S.<lb/>
ILLIAM COUNTY<lb/>
IRGINIA<lb/>
6700. $11,055.<lb/>
s March 24, 1969<lb/>
P.iq<lb/>
The I ast Carolinian<lb/>
$251,000 East Carolina University award<lb/>
for modern Development Evaluation Clinic<lb/>
iract! U italin i moi e than<lb/>
iqi n ded foi<lb/>
  new building<lb/>
I arolina Uni ersity<lb/>
?lopmenl I al lation Clinic<lb/>
denl and busii i<lb/>
,qei f- D Duncan<lb/>
ncefj thai vork on the<lb/>
and modei n one stoi <lb/>
.  i! begin within the<lb/>
. . ? tleks.<lb/>
(. (. i struction<lb/>
. ol Greenville<lb/>
:i , ?.? ility with a general<lb/>
? ,t $171,509. rhe<lb/>
h local ed oi<lb/>
. ol .i 70 acre ti acl ol land<lb/>
. ed by U S. Highway 43<lb/>
the U S. 264 Bypass in<lb/>
Lab<lb/>
rding to Di Malene<lb/>
ol the clinic, the<lb/>
? ,? ol greal<lb/>
value to El<lb/>
North Carolina 'It will be  lab<lb/>
foi students in psychology,<lb/>
social elfan g and<lb/>
'and il<lb/>
? -<lb/>
hand: ? dren<lb/>
thn ? ;tern North<lb/>
Carolii<lb/>
as established in<lb/>
Novi mbei I964 rates<lb/>
from formei I CU faculty<lb/>
residi . nlding. Be<lb/>
the presem limitations to<lb/>
ation ol the clinic, Di Irons<lb/>
there is a aiting Iis1 of<lb/>
ovei 100 applicati i<lb/>
Evaluation<lb/>
Purpose ol tin; clinic is to<lb/>
p i o v i d e d e v e I o p m e n t a I<lb/>
11 u.it ion .1 nd <lb/>
11 ea tmenl foi handicai i i<lb/>
children in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
800 square-foot<lb/>
ol du: new facility will be<lb/>
imination and observation<lb/>
ms, psychological testing<lb/>
rooms, ' lassrooms, laboratories<lb/>
and .1 k itchen.<lb/>
Contracts<lb/>
Othei contracts announced<lb/>
t od a y include: K inston<lb/>
Plumbing and Heating Company,<lb/>
plumbing, S18.446.47 Bolton<lb/>
An Conditioning Company of<lb/>
Raleigh, heating and air<lb/>
conditioning, $40,090; Watson<lb/>
S ??????<lb/>
f.<lb/>
a ?<lb/>
Playtex invents the first-day tampon<lb/>
(We took the inside out<lb/>
to show you how different it is.)<lb/>
Outside: it's softer and silky (not cardboard<lb/>
Inside: it's so extra absorbent it c en protects on<lb/>
your first day. Your worst day!<lb/>
In every lab test aeainst the old cardboard kind<lb/>
the Playtex tampon was always more absorbeni<lb/>
Actually 45$ more absorbent on the average<lb/>
than the leading regular tampon.<lb/>
Because it's different. Actually adjusts to you.<lb/>
It flowers out. Fluffs out. Designed to protect ever)<lb/>
inside inch of you. So the chance of a mishap<lb/>
is almost zero! ? , ;? ?<lb/>
? :vfast; ,? ? li playtex<lb/>
why live in the past' r x .<lb/>
 tamjxms<lb/>
Electrical Construe'<lb/>
Company of Wilson, electrical,<lb/>
$21,595. A reserve of S21,000<lb/>
will pu rch a se m o ; able<lb/>
equipmenl foi the facility.<lb/>
Architects for the building an;<lb/>
Lyles, Bissette, Carlisle<lb/>
Wolff of Raleigh.<lb/>
Funds for the new clinic were<lb/>
made available by grants from<lb/>
the N.C. Medical Care<lb/>
Commission and the federal<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Construction, Duncan said, is<lb/>
expected to be completed by<lb/>
next January.<lb/>
325<lb/>
Friday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
an i ii ? ?<lb/>
BILL LU ? ?- ? lALI l, INL<lb/>
presents<lb/>
I ERTAII<lb/>
)R YOUNG AMERIC<lb/>
xclusively:<lb/>
The Tarns Rev e<lb/>
Classics IV<lb/>
Tommy Roe<lb/>
e South &amp; The believers<lb/>
Swingin' Medallions<lb/>
Billy Joe Royal<lb/>
Candymen<lb/>
Movers<lb/>
Sensational Epics<lb/>
Tip<lb/>
James Ganq<lb/>
December's Children<lb/>
and many others<lb/>
Call Collect<lb/>
Ric Cartey<lb/>
Jack Martin<lb/>
404 237-6317 or 233-3962<lb/>
Or Write<lb/>
P.O. Box 9687<lb/>
Atlanta, Georgia, 3031J3<lb/>
ttmyA<lb/>
"Remember,<lb/>
we re nonviolent,<lb/>
so be careful of your<lb/>
after shave<lb/>
?;ild-eyed coeds can turn any peaceful demonstration into a<lb/>
full-scale riot, so be careful how you use your Hai Karate After<lb/>
Shave and Cologne. But just in case your hand slips, we include<lb/>
instructions on self-defense in every package. (If you're a paci-<lb/>
fist, maybe you'd better read the instructions twice.)<lb/>
Hai Karate-be careful how you use it.<lb/>
? ' zei &amp; Co . Inc . N'A srk, N.Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0006"/><lb/>
"M<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Tho East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14<lb/>
K<lb/>
Applications are now being<lb/>
taken tor the position of<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief of the 1970<lb/>
"Buccaneei  Submit your<lb/>
application to Dr. Tucker, room<lb/>
201, Whichard building no later<lb/>
than March 21.<lb/>
Lost: Tan, grain clutch<lb/>
billfold at the Coach &amp; Four on<lb/>
Friday, March 1. If found please<lb/>
call 758-9712 and ask for Janet,<lb/>
room 338. Many necessary<lb/>
credentials were lost. Reward is<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
Applications for positions on<lb/>
Women's Honor Council foi<lb/>
spung quarter aie being taken in<lb/>
the Student Government Office.<lb/>
Women of junior status only<lb/>
may apply. Deadline for<lb/>
applications is March 18.<lb/>
The University Party will<lb/>
hold a working meeting Tuesday<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wright to prepare<lb/>
campaign materials for the<lb/>
upcoming SGA elections. All<lb/>
party members put on your<lb/>
working britches and come help<lb/>
the party1<lb/>
Have you supported the<lb/>
White Ball yet? Tickets are<lb/>
available from Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
brothers and pledges, and will be<lb/>
sold in the UU lobby March<lb/>
17-21.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Society, a<lb/>
national service fraternity, will<lb/>
have a rush party at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, March 18 in room 206<lb/>
of the Union. Any student with<lb/>
a 2.5 academic average is eligible<lb/>
for membership. Formed to<lb/>
promote scholarship, the<lb/>
fraternity helps acquire books<lb/>
for the library and awards a<lb/>
S1000 scholarship annually to<lb/>
an incoming freshman.<lb/>
Found: one pair pair of<lb/>
prescription glasses left in a<lb/>
Cheveolet station wagon on<lb/>
March 5 when Carroll E. Collins<lb/>
of Raleigh gave two hitch-hiking<lb/>
EC students a ride from Wilson<lb/>
to Farmville. Contact Caroll E.<lb/>
Collins at his office in Williams<lb/>
Hall, N.C. State University<lb/>
(755-2851) or at his home, 1431<lb/>
Nottingham Drive (787-3657).<lb/>
Deadline for filing for the<lb/>
SGA executive offices, marshal,<lb/>
and women's judiciary is<lb/>
Monday, March 17. Candidates<lb/>
must file by 5 p.m. in the SGA<lb/>
office, third floor of Union. The<lb/>
mandatory meeting of all<lb/>
candidates will be Monday,<lb/>
March 17 at 6:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Library auditorium.<lb/>
"The Policy Prospects of the<lb/>
Nixon Administration" will be<lb/>
Dr John P. ast's topic in a<lb/>
speech to the Political Science<lb/>
club on Wednesday, March 19 at<lb/>
8 p.m. in room 201, Nursing<lb/>
building.<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
2") Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ire Cream<lb/>
'i Delicious Banan-i<lb/>
Walter Jones<lb/>
1969<lb/>
$310,000 grant to be used for<lb/>
Flanagan renovation<lb/>
Congressman Walter Jones<lb/>
recently announced a $310,000<lb/>
federal grant for the renovation<lb/>
of Flanagan Building. It will be<lb/>
for the use of the chemistry,<lb/>
general science, and technical<lb/>
education departments.<lb/>
The grant is a supplement to<lb/>
a $620,000 appropriation by the<lb/>
1967 general assembly for the<lb/>
improvement of Flanagan.<lb/>
The three departments will<lb/>
expand into the space used by<lb/>
the physics, biology, and Home<lb/>
Economics departments. The<lb/>
School of Home Economics has<lb/>
moved into its own building.<lb/>
The physics and biology<lb/>
departments will move into the<lb/>
new science complex which will<lb/>
soon be completed.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins termed the grant<lb/>
as "vital to the University's plans<lb/>
for future development of its<lb/>
chemistry program<lb/>
? 3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN TURK SERVICE<lb/>
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A New Audio Center Featuring<lb/>
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Push button operation, pop-in and-out cassettes, and Sony-<lb/>
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"O'Kaysions" at White Ball<lb/>
The annual White Ball,<lb/>
sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
fraternity, will feature music by<lb/>
the "O'Kaysions" of Wilson at<lb/>
their semi-formal dance<lb/>
Saturday, March 22, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
APO's traditional fund-raising<lb/>
is now in its fifteenth year. The<lb/>
money raised throuth sale of<lb/>
tickets and "penny votes" for<lb/>
White Ball Queen will be<lb/>
donated to the Pitt County<lb/>
Crippled Children's Association.<lb/>
A display of photographs of<lb/>
candidates for White Ball Queen<lb/>
will be set up in the University<lb/>
Union next week. Boxes will be<lb/>
placed under each contestant's<lb/>
picture, and voting will be<lb/>
recorded by the number of<lb/>
penny votes each candidate<lb/>
accumulates. The girl who<lb/>
gathers the most votes will be<lb/>
crowned queen at the dance.<lb/>
In the past, the ball has been<lb/>
a formal affair held during<lb/>
winter Quarter. This year's show<lb/>
and dance will be a spring<lb/>
semi formal.<lb/>
Despite the change of date<lb/>
from winter to spring, the<lb/>
central purpose of the dance, to<lb/>
raise fund: for crippled children,<lb/>
remains unchanged.<lb/>
Tickets are $4 per couple.<lb/>
The brothers of Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega urge students to cast<lb/>
penny votes for the queen and<lb/>
attend the White Ball.<lb/>
'elk Tyfer<lb/>
it'shnp'ciiiny!<lb/>
rs <lb/>
PANT<lb/>
DRESSING<lb/>
A<lb/>
"C<lb/>
V<lb/>
 K<lb/>
comes on strong<lb/>
This is the season of<lb/>
the wild new look in<lb/>
pant dressing. Pants<lb/>
may be flared, boxy,<lb/>
harem, straight or<lb/>
shiny. Anyway . . .<lb/>
they go everywhere in<lb/>
the wildest, way out<lb/>
pants ever. Come in<lb/>
and see our collection<lb/>
of the new pant look<lb/>
 we think we have<lb/>
just what you want.<lb/>
priced from<lb/>
5.99<lb/>
v<lb/>
m<lb/>
nr<lb/>
to<lb/>
&amp;IXi<lb/>
14.99<lb/>
m<lb/>
a<lb/>
sk about our<lb/>
onvenient<lb/>
lay-away plan.<lb/>
in downtown Greenville.<lb/>
penMonday,Thursday and<lb/>
riday nights til 9p.m.<lb/>
Page 'i<lb/>
'The Res<lb/>
yAide Picture<lb/>
()nr of se<lb/>
eastern pi em<lb/>
Pitt Theatre.<lb/>
Over six<lb/>
viewed this f<lb/>
viewer msi<lb/>
today's yout<lb/>
We live<lb/>
neaily on<lb/>
population<lb/>
young peopl<lb/>
meaning an<lb/>
life. Adults<lb/>
?fe<lb/>
wu a i iii nci<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
thh<lb/>
the<lb/>
wo<lb/>
too<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0007"/><lb/>
if<lb/>
' -<lb/>
riday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
ite Ball<lb/>
votes each candidate<lb/>
lates. The girl who<lb/>
:he most votes will be<lb/>
queen at the dance,<lb/>
past, the ball has been<lb/>
il affair held during<lb/>
uarter. This year's show<lb/>
ce will be a spring<lb/>
lal.<lb/>
B the change of date<lb/>
inter to spring, the<lb/>
urpose of the dance, to<lb/>
i: for crippled children,<lb/>
nchanged.<lb/>
s are $4 pet couple,<lb/>
irothers of Alpha Phi<lb/>
irye students to cast<lb/>
?tes for the queen and<lb/>
3 White Ball.<lb/>
(er<lb/>
o<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
IT<lb/>
SSING<lb/>
on strong<lb/>
s the season of<lb/>
ild new look in<lb/>
Jressmg. Pants<lb/>
)e flared, boxy,<lb/>
i, straight or<lb/>
. Anyway . . .<lb/>
o everywhere in<lb/>
ildest, way out<lb/>
ever. Come in<lb/>
;e our collection<lb/>
! new pant look<lb/>
e think we have<lb/>
'hat you want.<lb/>
m<lb/>
id fro<lb/>
.99<lb/>
to<lb/>
.99<lb/>
)out our<lb/>
ent<lb/>
y plan!<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
r and<lb/>
.ni.<lb/>
: ??!? <lb/>
'The Restless Ones a Woild<lb/>
Wide Picture's film release, made<lb/>
one of several simultaneous<lb/>
. astern premiers yesterday at the<lb/>
Pitt Theatre.<lb/>
Over six million people have<lb/>
viewed this film which takes the<lb/>
viewer inside the world of<lb/>
today's youth and their parents.<lb/>
We live in a nation where<lb/>
neai Iy one half of the<lb/>
population is under 25, and<lb/>
young people are searching for<lb/>
meaning and purpose in their<lb/>
life. Adults find themselves a<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
the frustrating<lb/>
part oi the<lb/>
genet ation gap,<lb/>
"The Restless Ones" presents<lb/>
a refreshing approach to these<lb/>
problems. It deals with the inner<lb/>
struggles of patents and teens<lb/>
caught in the pressures of the<lb/>
present.<lb/>
This motion picture has been<lb/>
widely acclaimed by civic leaders<lb/>
as a most effective and needed<lb/>
tool to help curb the growing<lb/>
problems in today's society.<lb/>
t <lb/>
e<lb/>
e<lb/>
$<lb/>
Endorsement has been<lb/>
received from the governors of<lb/>
Montana, Wyoming, California,<lb/>
Vermont, and former North<lb/>
Carolina Governor Dan Moore.<lb/>
"The Restless Ones' is the<lb/>
story of a near-typical family<lb/>
with the same problems that are<lb/>
faced by nearly every American<lb/>
home. It begins with a wild ride<lb/>
down a busy street and a tangle<lb/>
with the "long arm of the law<lb/>
An unsuspecting parent<lb/>
answers the phone to find that<lb/>
his son is in jail, which initiates<lb/>
the separation of the story's two<lb/>
threads by the "generation gap<lb/>
message<lb/>
The film's basic message is<lb/>
that parents can do something to<lb/>
bridge the gulf between<lb/>
themselves and their children.<lb/>
The youth's solution to inside<lb/>
pressures does not lie in riot,<lb/>
rebellion, or freedom from<lb/>
responsibility.<lb/>
Johnny Crawford, who<lb/>
played in the television series<lb/>
"The Rifleman is cast as the<lb/>
teenager whose parents are just<lb/>
"too square to understand<lb/>
Tickets for "The Restless<lb/>
Ones" are on sale at the Pitt<lb/>
Theatie box office.<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
to represent<lb/>
United States<lb/>
ECU will represent the<lb/>
United States at the Deep South<lb/>
Model United Nations in Miami,<lb/>
Fia this weekend.<lb/>
Topics of debate will include<lb/>
the Middle-East crisis,<lb/>
Portuguese territories, the<lb/>
Korean legal questions, and<lb/>
many other topics of importance<lb/>
to today's world.<lb/>
The delegation includes Bob<lb/>
Adams, Danny Bland, Bill Hicks,<lb/>
Jack Hart, and Reid Overcash.<lb/>
jerry s<lb/>
cafeteria<lb/>
Corner of 8th and Evans<lb/>
vlonday 11:30-2:00<lb/>
Tuesday Saturday 11:30-2:00<lb/>
4:30 8:00<lb/>
Sunday 1:30-2.00<lb/>
SALADS.MEAT, VEGETABLE'<lb/>
AND DESERTS.<lb/>
Join The ftfl Crowd<lb/>
Pizza M<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call head For Faster Service<lb/>
'elephone 756-9991<lb/>
Looking For A Management<lb/>
Career in:<lb/>
? Supermarket Operations<lb/>
? Personnel<lb/>
? Real Estate<lb/>
? Distribution<lb/>
? Transportation<lb/>
? Merchandising<lb/>
The Kroger Co. may have just what<lb/>
you're looking for?Kroger is the 4th<lb/>
largest retailer in the world . . .<lb/>
and still growing.<lb/>
If your interests lie in any of the<lb/>
fields listed above we would like to<lb/>
meet you.<lb/>
Our representative will visit your<lb/>
campus March 20, 1969.<lb/>
Make an appointment at your placement<lb/>
office now for an interview with him.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0008"/><lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
77f ??? Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14, iggg<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
JBTr'A m<lb/>
Dream Girl'<lb/>
A lo?<lb/>
? ?  Ilia st ii the<lb/>
rheta Chi<lb/>
. at F ast Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Nineteen<lb/>
Lucy<lb/>
Johnson, a sophomore at ECU,<lb/>
? selected from a finalist court<lb/>
of five as the new dream girl.<lb/>
The selection ade and<lb/>
announced by the members of<lb/>
the ECU chapter at their annual<lb/>
"Dream Girl" dance held<lb/>
recently at the Gieenville<lb/>
Country Club.<lb/>
A graduate of Robersonville<lb/>
High Schoo, h she was a<lb/>
band majorette, Lucy is the<lb/>
daughter of Mrs. Paul Johnson,<lb/>
207 Halifax St a ston. At<lb/>
ECU she is an elementary<lb/>
education ma<lb/>
A Ip h a<lb/>
Beta<lb/>
Alpha<lb/>
Steve Huwell of Garysburg<lb/>
has assumed duties as president<lb/>
of East Carolina University's<lb/>
chapter of Alpha Beta Alpha,<lb/>
national undergraduate library<lb/>
science fraternity.<lb/>
Howell, a junior library<lb/>
science major, is also presently<lb/>
serving as recording secretary of<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi national honorary<lb/>
fraternity and as floor manager<lb/>
in ECU's freshman dormitory.<lb/>
A 1966 graduate of Roanoke<lb/>
Hapids high school, Howell is<lb/>
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy I.<lb/>
Howell of Garysburg.<lb/>
federal grant<lb/>
Federal grants totaling<lb/>
S52.500 for the Fast Carolina<lb/>
University School of Education<lb/>
include the largest program<lb/>
development grant ever received<lb/>
I) the university.<lb/>
Dr. John T. Richards,<lb/>
assistant professor of special<lb/>
education at ECU, said the funds<lb/>
include a program development<lb/>
grant of S 18,600 for<lb/>
development of a master's<lb/>
degree program foi teachers of<lb/>
children with learning<lb/>
disabilities, and a 533,900 grant<lb/>
for establishment of two<lb/>
graduate fellowships and eight<lb/>
senior and three junior<lb/>
traineeships in teaching the<lb/>
mentally retarded.<lb/>
He said t h e p r o g r a m<lb/>
development grant, one of four<lb/>
a vyarded to universities<lb/>
throughout the United States, is<lb/>
the largest ever to ECU. Also,<lb/>
the fellowship and traineeship<lb/>
grant is the first of its kind ever<lb/>
for the university.<lb/>
Dr. Richards will direct the<lb/>
two programs, which are to<lb/>
begin next Soptembei f unds are<lb/>
to be awarded by the- U S. Office<lb/>
1 f Education in Ii me<lb/>
Tenth Annual Springs Traveling Art<lb/>
Show March 30.<lb/>
The Tenth Animal Springs<lb/>
Traveling Am Show is the<lb/>
featured exhibh on the thud<lb/>
flooi of Rawl Building through<lb/>
March 30.<lb/>
The mobile exhibition<lb/>
tures the r.oiks of 35 artists<lb/>
selected from 504 entries in the<lb/>
1968 Springs Ait Contest.<lb/>
The Spi ings Art Contest and<lb/>
Show was initiated in 1947 by<lb/>
Col. Elliot White Spnngs,<lb/>
ent of the Springs<lb/>
mization. Spi ings began the<lb/>
series of exhibitions by hiring<lb/>
nationally known artists and<lb/>
illustrators to sketch the winners<lb/>
of the "Miss Spnngmaid" beauty<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
In 1958 Springs sponsored a<lb/>
contest and show for the<lb/>
Lancaster County, S.C Art<lb/>
Association. The contest was<lb/>
expanded in 1959 to allow<lb/>
entries from any artist who lived<lb/>
in North or South Caiohna.<lb/>
Spi ed in 1959, but the<lb/>
show has continued and has<lb/>
become ;he lartest and most<lb/>
repri ? ? non-juried ai t<lb/>
show in the Carolinas. The show<lb/>
currently offers S1.5000 in prize<lb/>
morn .<lb/>
Prize Winners<lb/>
The top prize winners of the<lb/>
1968 Springs Art Contest are<lb/>
featured in the exhibition.<lb/>
First prize went to Nell<lb/>
Lafaye, a native of Columbia,<lb/>
S.C. and a member of the<lb/>
faculty ol the University of<lb/>
South Carolina. Fust prize<lb/>
honors include the purchase of<lb/>
hei work, "Ponte de Vecchio<lb/>
an oil painting.<lb/>
John T. Acoin, a native of<lb/>
Patterson, N.J. who teaches<lb/>
sculpture in the School of<lb/>
Architecture ai Clemson<lb/>
University, won second prize<lb/>
h his sculpture Wai ioi 11<lb/>
A po I y met portrait,<lb/>
"Anniversary" by Bobbee Snidei<lb/>
Linville, captured thud prize<lb/>
Fouith prize was awarded to<lb/>
J. Baidin, a consistent prize<lb/>
winnei in regional and national<lb/>
art competition who won fust<lb/>
prize in tht 1961, 1962, and<lb/>
1963 Spgs shows. Bardin's<lb/>
entry is - i oil painting, "Sunset<lb/>
Dunes<lb/>
The show includes a<lb/>
lithograph, 'Synthesis by J.<lb/>
Howard Jones, a graduate of<lb/>
East Carolina University who<lb/>
now resides in Pembroke.<lb/>
First Prize?(Ponte de Vecchio) by<lb/>
Nell Lafaye<lb/>
Happy<lb/>
Birthday<lb/>
Chuek!<lb/>
M<lb/>
Second Prize-?(Warriorll) by John<lb/>
T. Acorn<lb/>
Putting w first, keeps us first.<lb/>
If Chevrolet cant haul it,<lb/>
maybe you'd better leave it.<lb/>
Umdir Sev??Iet's hood our truck line. Chevrolet dealer's -md get a<lb/>
you'U find the biggest We have the right connec- ldyound <lb/>
standard V8 m its field-327 ions for your trailering too. And put it in a Chevrolet<lb/>
cubic inches of it. Or, you can Like body frame frailer ???<lb/>
order all the way up to our hitches and trailer wiring ?3TvWTT7<lb/>
.J90-hp 427-cubic-inch VH. harnesses. muAW<lb/>
An(LiLa11 hJlu jjj S- So (lrJfi(,own t( your Sports-Recreation Dept.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
iday, March 14, iggg<lb/>
frgjl?i????????i. 7fte fast Carolinian<lb/>
National Endowment Arts Grant<lb/>
East Carolina University is provide a Chamber Mus.c 3xpected to enrich the<lb/>
? f three colleges in North Festival on Mirrh 10.01 Tk? ? .<lb/>
Friday, March 14, 1969<lb/>
East Carolina University is<lb/>
one of three colleges in North<lb/>
Carolina to receive from the<lb/>
National Endowment for the<lb/>
Arts an audience development<lb/>
project matching grant for 1969.<lb/>
Local project director,<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, announced<lb/>
today that the maximum grant<lb/>
of $1000 had been matched by<lb/>
the Student Government<lb/>
Association of the University to<lb/>
provide a Chamber Music<lb/>
Festival on IVhrch 19-21. The<lb/>
grant and matching funds will<lb/>
make it possible to have two<lb/>
outstanding chamber ensembles,<lb/>
THE FESTIVAL WINDS and<lb/>
THE R EN AISSANCE<lb/>
QUARTET on campus for<lb/>
master classes, lectures, and<lb/>
concerts during the Festival.<lb/>
Enrich<lb/>
An audience development<lb/>
program at a university "is<lb/>
torn Coupe<lb/>
r trailering<lb/>
HAVE<lb/>
SOME-<lb/>
THING<lb/>
TO<lb/>
SELL?<lb/>
v ADVERTISE<lb/>
IT<lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FOR ASSISTANCE CONTACT:<lb/>
DON BENSON: BUSINESS MGR.<lb/>
RON NICHOLS: ADVERTISING MGR.<lb/>
OFFICE 201 B WRIGHT BLDG.<lb/>
752 5716<lb/>
expected to enrich the campu;<lb/>
:oncei t offerings by one or mori<lb/>
additional programs or short<lb/>
residences by urtists Alexander<lb/>
said. The Association of College<lb/>
and University Concert Managers<lb/>
has worked with the National<lb/>
Endowment for the Arts for the<lb/>
past two years on this project,<lb/>
and only those colleges and<lb/>
universities that have<lb/>
demonstrated major efforts on<lb/>
their own to up-grade their<lb/>
concert series over the last five<lb/>
years have been considered for<lb/>
grants.<lb/>
Delighted<lb/>
Alexander saidThe Artists<lb/>
Series Committee and Student<lb/>
Government Association of East<lb/>
Carolina University are delighted<lb/>
to receive the grant because it<lb/>
represents, national recognition<lb/>
of the excellence of our concert<lb/>
series and is another indication<lb/>
of the scope of the University's<lb/>
services<lb/>
Lectures<lb/>
The Chamber Music Festival<lb/>
Program Director, Dr. W.<lb/>
Edmund Durham announced<lb/>
that the Festival opens with an<lb/>
8:15 p.m. concert by The<lb/>
Festival Winds, Wednesday in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. On<lb/>
Thursday morning master classes<lb/>
and lectures will be conducted<lb/>
by the ensemble in the School of<lb/>
Music Building.<lb/>
The Renaissance Quartet will<lb/>
present a concert on Thursday<lb/>
evening at 8:15 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium, and they complete<lb/>
the Festival's activities with<lb/>
master classes on Friday<lb/>
morning in the School of Music.<lb/>
Both concerts are open to the<lb/>
public free of charge.<lb/>
How to Wrecognize a Wreal<lb/>
Wrangl<lb/>
I<lb/>
You hove to look for the "W"<lb/>
because it's silent<lb/>
Most Wranglerjeans 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 sportback slacks, $7.00.<lb/>
And the jeans $5.50. Both per<lb/>
manently pressed and creased.<lb/>
All incarefree Fortrelpolyester<lb/>
and cotton. Shirts from $4.00 to<lb/>
$5.00.<lb/>
WranglerMeans<lb/>
and Sportswear<lb/>
in Celanese Fortrel.<lb/>
WHITE STORES H.c.<lb/>
i?tiull<lb/>
Lecture series presents<lb/>
Howard K. Smith<lb/>
Howard K. Smith,<lb/>
internationally known television<lb/>
commentator and author will<lb/>
speak here Monday, March 17,<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
as a feature of the Lecture<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
The topic of Smith's address<lb/>
will be "The Changing<lb/>
Challenges Facing America<lb/>
Smith has probably received<lb/>
more journalistic awards than<lb/>
any other American newsman.<lb/>
These awards include many<lb/>
Overseas Press Club Annual<lb/>
awards, including four<lb/>
consecutive awards for "best<lb/>
reporting from abroad and the<lb/>
1967 OPC Award for "best TV<lb/>
interpretation of foreign<lb/>
affairs for his program on<lb/>
Vietnam, "One Man's Opinion<lb/>
his own wounded soldier son,<lb/>
entitled, "A Father, A Son and<lb/>
 War<lb/>
Smith is currently seen and<lb/>
heard regularly over ABC-TV<lb/>
but is limiting his television<lb/>
appearances to complete a book<lb/>
on American politics. His other<lb/>
books include: "Last Train from<lb/>
Berlin "The State of Europe<lb/>
and a new book, "Washington,<lb/>
D.C published by Random<lb/>
House in 1967.<lb/>
During most of his years with<lb/>
CBS, Smith served as chief<lb/>
European correspondent until he<lb/>
returned to the U.S. to take over<lb/>
assignments as moderator,<lb/>
commentator or reporter on<lb/>
most of the major CBS News<lb/>
efforts, including "CBS<lb/>
Reports "Face the Nation<lb/>
two D Commentator Awards;<lb/>
the Sigma Delta Chi award for<lb/>
news writing; an Emmy Award<lb/>
for writing "CBS Reports: The<lb/>
Population Explosion<lb/>
Since joining ABC News in<lb/>
December, 1961, Smith became<lb/>
the only working newsman ever<lb/>
to win the Paul White Award,<lb/>
the only commentator to win<lb/>
the DuPont Award twice and<lb/>
was nominated for an Emmy for<lb/>
"Howard K. Smith: News and<lb/>
Comment his ABC-TV<lb/>
Program that ran for 17 months.<lb/>
For more than a year Smith was<lb/>
the anchorman for ABC's<lb/>
program, "SCOPE a regular<lb/>
weekly review of the Vietnam<lb/>
war.<lb/>
During the summer of 1966<lb/>
Smith went to Vietnam to be<lb/>
presented in an interview with<lb/>
"Eyewitness to History" and<lb/>
"The Great Challenge and<lb/>
narrated numerous news<lb/>
specials. In 1957 he became CBS<lb/>
News Washington correspondent<lb/>
and in 1961, was appointed<lb/>
chief correspondent and<lb/>
manager for the Washington<lb/>
Bureau.<lb/>
Smith, a native of Ferriday,<lb/>
Louisiana, was graduated from<lb/>
Tulane University. He went to<lb/>
Germany to study briefly at<lb/>
Heidelberg University, beginning<lb/>
what was later to become an<lb/>
intensive study of Nazism. He<lb/>
won a Rhodes Scholarship and<lb/>
studied at Oxford until the<lb/>
outbreak of World War II.<lb/>
Public tickets for the lecturo<lb/>
can be obtained at Central<lb/>
Ticket office for $2. Student<lb/>
tickets are free.<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
Home and Dorm Delivery Service<lb/>
Dial 752-6656<lb/>
4 p.m. til Closing MonSat.<lb/>
1 p.m. til Closing: Sun.<lb/>
50c Charge for Delivery<lb/>
Guitar lessons taught once a<lb/>
week price $2.00 per lesson. For<lb/>
(additional information call<lb/>
Mike Yates at 758-1239.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE<lb/>
Call 756 0846<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0010"/><lb/>
I Friday, March 14.<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
The East Carolinun<lb/>
Friday, IVlarch 14, lg<lb/>
K<lb/>
Coach Carson views good prospects Lacrosse club begins<lb/>
for school's outdoor track season fourth season<lb/>
"Out indoor season was a<lb/>
success in that we advanced in<lb/>
the confei ence, and our<lb/>
freshmen proved their ability on<lb/>
the track commented Coach<lb/>
Bill Carson on East Carolina's<lb/>
second place finish in the<lb/>
Southern Conference Indoor<lb/>
Track finals held at William and<lb/>
Mary, March 1.<lb/>
William and Mary ran away<lb/>
ith the meet, with a total of<lb/>
114 points, while ECU was next<lb/>
with 42.<lb/>
The Pirates broke one record<lb/>
when Paige Davis finished the<lb/>
440 with a new conference mark<lb/>
of 50.3 seconds. The old record<lb/>
was 51.8.<lb/>
Other ECU men to place were<lb/>
Ken Voss, picking up eight<lb/>
points with a third in the mile<lb/>
run, a second in the two mile,<lb/>
and running a leg in the two mile<lb/>
relay, which finished second.<lb/>
James Kidd took a second in<lb/>
the open 880, with a time of<lb/>
1:56.3, and Jim Cargill placed<lb/>
second in the triple jump, and a<lb/>
second in the high hurdles.<lb/>
Carson now look to the<lb/>
outdoor season, which open<lb/>
March 15th for East Carolina<lb/>
when Baptist College visits.<lb/>
Carson feels the outdoor<lb/>
season will be a good one for his<lb/>
team, but knows this year's team<lb/>
will lack strength in the field<lb/>
events.<lb/>
"We lost a javelin prospect<lb/>
,mi! a long jumper Carson<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
This year's team has six<lb/>
returning lettermen, but with a<lb/>
loss of the field men, dual meet<lb/>
competition appears to be a<lb/>
major setback foi victories,<lb/>
especially in conference<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Four lettermen were lost in<lb/>
field events, with Bill Frisbey,<lb/>
Dennis Moody, Al Peeples and<lb/>
Bucs take the initial<lb/>
On Thursday, the Bucs won<lb/>
three of the four events, setting<lb/>
records in all three with two of<lb/>
them being set twice.<lb/>
Griffin started the meet off<lb/>
with a bang as he erased the<lb/>
mark set last year by West<lb/>
Virginia's Louis Garcia in the<lb/>
500-yard freestyle in the prelims<lb/>
and again in the finals. After<lb/>
erasing Garcia's mark of 5:12.51<lb/>
with a 5:07.14 clocking in the<lb/>
prelims, he then shattered his<lb/>
own record with a fast 5:01.75.<lb/>
The next event again saw the<lb/>
record fall twice as Sultan did it<lb/>
in 2:06.28, breaking the old<lb/>
mark set by West Virginia's<lb/>
Clifton Hutchinson last year in<lb/>
2:07.34. Then in the finals,<lb/>
Sultan covered the distance in<lb/>
2:05.59 to give the Bucs their<lb/>
second school mark in as many<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
VMI's George Costigan, who<lb/>
was top seeded in the 50-yard<lb/>
freestyle, won his specialty as<lb/>
expected with a fine time of<lb/>
:22.40. Steve Weissman nipped<lb/>
second seeded Robert Kennedy<lb/>
of W&amp;M to finish second with a<lb/>
time of : 22.71. Kennedy<lb/>
finished third with :22.73.<lb/>
The Aqua Buc's 400-yard<lb/>
medley relay team won in<lb/>
convincing fashion as Andy<lb/>
Downey, Larry Allman, Greg<lb/>
Hanes, and John Sultan swept to<lb/>
a new record of 3:46.59. The<lb/>
old mark of 3:47.23 was set by<lb/>
the Bucs last year.<lb/>
The highlight of the first<lb/>
day's action was the<lb/>
disqualification of the Davidson<lb/>
and VMI teams in the relay<lb/>
event as the electronic judging<lb/>
machine made its presence felt.<lb/>
Davidson and VMI misfired on<lb/>
their exchange of swimmers to<lb/>
cause the disqualification.<lb/>
Six records fall<lb/>
On Friday, the Bucs set four<lb/>
more school marks along with<lb/>
two conference records to<lb/>
continue the slaughter.<lb/>
William and Mary's George<lb/>
Collins won the 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly, getting into the act by<lb/>
breaking the record twice. The<lb/>
old mark of 2:05.7 was shared<lb/>
by Collins and EC's Dave<lb/>
Hamilton since 1966, but the<lb/>
Indian took the record for<lb/>
himself. After doing the 200<lb/>
yards in 2:05.56, he came back<lb/>
with a superb time of 2:03.88.<lb/>
In the 200-yard freestyle, the<lb/>
Bucs saw the record broken<lb/>
several times in an unusual<lb/>
sequence. First, team co-captain<lb/>
Bob Moynihan broke the mark<lb/>
set by VMI's Ed Rimm in 1964<lb/>
of 1:52.9 with a time of 1:52.42<lb/>
in the first prelirr inary.<lb/>
fid mm ate Gary Frederick<lb/>
clipped the old mark with<lb/>
1 52.57, but just inr,sed beating<lb/>
Moynihan. Griffin then removed<lb/>
ill doubt by going the distance<lb/>
in 1:49.80 in the final<lb/>
preliminary heat before winning<lb/>
the event with a time cf<lb/>
1:50.11.<lb/>
The 100 yard breaststioke<lb/>
saw something similar as Steve<lb/>
Weissman broke the old standard<lb/>
of 1:04.59 set last year by-<lb/>
Clifton Hutchinson with a mark<lb/>
of 1:04.19. James Wilder of VMI<lb/>
reset the mark with a time of<lb/>
1:02.72 in a preliminary heat,<lb/>
but Weissman nosed out Wilder<lb/>
to win the event in 1:03.10.<lb/>
Andy Downey took the<lb/>
100-yard backstroke in :58.25<lb/>
for the only event that went by<lb/>
without some semblance of a<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Sultan came back to win the<lb/>
400 yard individual medley,<lb/>
setting the record twice while<lb/>
doing it. After breaking his old<lb/>
mark of 4:42.17 with a time of<lb/>
4 40.27 in the prelims, he came<lb/>
roaring back to take the finals<lb/>
with d clocking of 438 84.<lb/>
Lee Mauney not returning.<lb/>
Carson does have a good crop<lb/>
of freshmen to look to, along<lb/>
with a junior college transfer,<lb/>
Bruce Rafferty.<lb/>
Out of 28 men on the team,<lb/>
17 are fresh, while three are<lb/>
seniors.<lb/>
Ken Voss, and Don Jayroe<lb/>
are expected to have good<lb/>
seasons this year in the distance<lb/>
events. Along with Kidd in the<lb/>
half mile are Lanny Davis in the<lb/>
sprints, James Cargill in the<lb/>
hurdles, and Ty Roork in the<lb/>
high jump.<lb/>
"With such young men on the<lb/>
team, we hope to advance in the<lb/>
future, and continue to advance<lb/>
in recruiting this year Carson<lb/>
fit icily stated.<lb/>
After Baptist College, the<lb/>
i e a m competes in t h e<lb/>
rws-Pi'xl mont Relays March<lb/>
32, then in the Florida Relays<lb/>
March 20. They then host<lb/>
Colgate April 2 and the State<lb/>
Hecord Relays April 5.<lb/>
Three away from home meets<lb/>
i,re then scheduled with the<lb/>
Citrdel April 8. Florida State<lb/>
University April 12, N.C. State<lb/>
University April 19, and Virginia<lb/>
Tech April 22. The last three<lb/>
events are aloo away, with the<lb/>
Carolina Relays April 26, N.C.<lb/>
State University Meet Hray 2-3,<lb/>
and the Southern Corference<lb/>
meet May 8-9.<lb/>
The Lacrosse Club will begin<lb/>
its fourth season in Match. The<lb/>
Club is not officially recognized<lb/>
as a team, even though it draws<lb/>
its membership from East<lb/>
Carolina and its competition<lb/>
from other schools.<lb/>
The 24 members of the Club<lb/>
shaie all the expenses of its<lb/>
operation, according to Coach<lb/>
Bill Dickens. The boys pay for<lb/>
their own equipment, travel, and<lb/>
othei expenses.<lb/>
It is hoped that within the<lb/>
next several years the Lacrosse<lb/>
Club will be able to join the<lb/>
Athletic Department as a team,<lb/>
said Dickens.<lb/>
Lacrosse, a game invented by<lb/>
the American Indians, is played<lb/>
on a field 110 yards long and 60<lb/>
yards wide with a net like goal<lb/>
15 yards from each end. Each<lb/>
player is equipped with a<lb/>
"crosse a stick somewhat<lb/>
resembling a shepherd's staff<lb/>
that has webbing in the hook.<lb/>
The object of the game is to<lb/>
use this crosse to throw a hard<lb/>
rubber ball into the opponent's<lb/>
net. and the swinging crosses<lb/>
make the game rough indeed.<lb/>
The field and goal are like<lb/>
those used in hockey, the<lb/>
strategy is like that of<lb/>
basketball, and the time limit<lb/>
and physical contact is like that<lb/>
of football.<lb/>
This year's Lacrosse Club is<lb/>
composed of 24 members. They<lb/>
are Kirk Voorhees, Gary<lb/>
McCullough, Jim Frank, Rob<lb/>
Williams, Bill Mosier, and Pete<lb/>
Katburg.<lb/>
Also on the Club are Boh<lb/>
Bassett, Richard Cassisi, Randy<lb/>
Anderson, Don Pierce, Don<lb/>
Wheeler, and Paul Weathersbee<lb/>
Other members are Danny<lb/>
Wilmer, Mike McGuirk, Jeff<lb/>
Lowe, David Haye, David Loid,<lb/>
Leroy Nichols, Neal Kulp, Ron<lb/>
Cundiff, Tom Edrington, Eric<lb/>
Orrell, Paul Monroe, and Jim<lb/>
Merryrnan.<lb/>
The Club's seven game<lb/>
schedule includes the Univeisity<lb/>
of Pennsylvania, here, Match 13;<lb/>
Oberlin College, here, April 2;<lb/>
George Washington in<lb/>
Washington, D.C April 12; and<lb/>
Roanoke College in Roanoke,<lb/>
Va April 19.<lb/>
Other matches are to played<lb/>
against Duke University ir<lb/>
Durham, April 22; and against<lb/>
William and Mary twice, here<lb/>
April 26, and in Wilhamsburg,<lb/>
Va May 10.<lb/>
Last year the Club had a 4 5<lb/>
record. This year's squad should<lb/>
finish with an even better<lb/>
record, Dickens said.<lb/>
EC opens golf season<lb/>
Grappleis today with Campbell<lb/>
East Carolina's grapplers<lb/>
placed second in the Southern<lb/>
Conference Wrestling<lb/>
tournament held at William and<lb/>
Mary this past week-end. William<lb/>
and Mary took first place with<lb/>
87 points while ECU had 83.<lb/>
Tim Ellenberger, of East<lb/>
Carolina, retained his 1968 title<lb/>
in the 130 pound class.<lb/>
The Indians did not sew up<lb/>
the title until Scott Cum<lb/>
defeated Cliff Bernard of ECU in<lb/>
the 177 pound class in an<lb/>
overtime with a 3-1<lb/>
mark. East Carolina members<lb/>
who placed are:<lb/>
123 pounds: John Wood,<lb/>
decision, Tom Ellenberger,<lb/>
(ECU), 12-2.<lb/>
130 pounds: Tim Ellenberger<lb/>
(ECU), decision, Dean<lb/>
Cromartie, (Davidson), 13 0.<lb/>
137 pounds: Dave Greenberg,<lb/>
(GW), decision, Robert Gorbo,<lb/>
(ECU), 11-10.<lb/>
145 pounds: Dan Bastain,<lb/>
(ECU), decision, Ollie Carr iherf,<lb/>
(WM&amp;M),6-2.<lb/>
152 pounds: Tom Bull (C),<lb/>
decision, John Carroll, (ECU),<lb/>
12 1.<lb/>
177 pounds: Scott Curzi,<lb/>
(WM&amp;M), decision Cliff Bernard,<lb/>
(ECU), 3 1.<lb/>
East Carolina opens its Golf<lb/>
schedule today with a match<lb/>
with Campbell at the Brook<lb/>
Valley Country Club here in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
This year's team is expected<lb/>
to be one of the best in the<lb/>
school's history, with seven<lb/>
returning lettermen. Last year,<lb/>
the team finished second in the<lb/>
conference, posting a 14 2<lb/>
record. Coach John Welborn is<lb/>
again coaching the team, serving<lb/>
his second season as golf coach.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU,<lb/>
Welborn was the assistant<lb/>
wrestling coach at Appalachian<lb/>
and was director of athletics at<lb/>
Alexandria Central High School,<lb/>
Alexandria Bay, N.Y.<lb/>
13 members<lb/>
The team is made up of 13<lb/>
members, seven of them<lb/>
lettermen.<lb/>
The lettermen are Wally<lb/>
Howard, a junior from<lb/>
Greenville, and a fine fifth and<lb/>
sixth man on last year's team.<lb/>
Mike O'Brian, a junior from<lb/>
Greensboro, who was first man<lb/>
for Guilford High School, and is<lb/>
considered one of the finest<lb/>
players to ever attend ECU.<lb/>
Mike Schlueter, also rom<lb/>
Greensboro, is a senior who has<lb/>
led the team for the past two<lb/>
years. In the past, he has played<lb/>
the opponent's best man and has<lb/>
done very well.<lb/>
Joe Tyson, a junior from<lb/>
Durham, and his twin brother<lb/>
Vernon, who was named the<lb/>
best sixth man in the Southern<lb/>
Conference last year, also return.<lb/>
Marshall Utterson, a senior from<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga who came to ECU<lb/>
in his junior year from Mt. Olive<lb/>
Junior College, where he was the<lb/>
most valuable player, alternated<lb/>
between first and second man<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Finishing out the returning<lb/>
lettermen is Jack Williams, a<lb/>
senior from Hickory, who has a<lb/>
lot of competition in golf<lb/>
tournaments in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Other members of the team<lb/>
are: Bob Elks, John Long, Joe<lb/>
Robertson, Ray Sharpe, Phil<lb/>
Wallace, and Vance Whitaker.<lb/>
In Friday's final event. East<lb/>
Carolina's team of Jim Griffin<lb/>
Eric Orrell, Bob Moynihan, and<lb/>
Gary Frederick won the<lb/>
800-yard freestyle relay with a<lb/>
record time of 7:28.80, clipping<lb/>
just over ten seconds off the<lb/>
mark of 7:38.86 set last year by<lb/>
West Virginia. The electronic<lb/>
machine disqualified William &amp;<lb/>
Mary and VMI for failure to<lb/>
exchange swimmers properly.<lb/>
WILLIAMS RESTAURANT<lb/>
519 Dickinson Ave.?Across From State Bank<lb/>
Complete Line of Foods<lb/>
Breakfast Meals Short Orders Sandwiches<lb/>
Orders to Go<lb/>
Your favorite domestic and imported beverages.<lb/>
Hours: 6:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday-Saturday<lb/>
"Fast and Friendly Service"<lb/>
Phone 758-48-16<lb/>
(Back row left t<lb/>
coach, George<lb/>
with the '69 tean<lb/>
 Anderson.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
We must make n<lb/>
and the savings a<lb/>
Dow<lb/>
Man<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0011"/><lb/>
111!<lb/>
Prld3V,March14,1969<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
ay, March 14, 1969<lb/>
al contact is like that<lb/>
ii 's Lacrosse Club is<lb/>
if 24 members. They<lb/>
Voorhees, Gary<lb/>
I, Jim Frank, Rob<lb/>
till Mosier, and Pete<lb/>
the Club are Boh<lb/>
chard Cassisi, Randy<lb/>
Don Pierce, Don<lb/>
id Paul Weathersbee.<lb/>
nembers are Danny<lb/>
like McGuirk, Jeff<lb/>
d Haye, David Lord,<lb/>
ioIs, Neal Kulp, Ron<lb/>
on) Edrington, Luc<lb/>
I Monroe, and Jim<lb/>
lull's seven game<lb/>
eludes the University<lb/>
ania, here, Maich 13;<lb/>
liege, here, April 2;<lb/>
Wash in g ton in<lb/>
, DC, April 12; and<lb/>
I liege in Roanoke,<lb/>
9.<lb/>
atches are to played<lb/>
uke University ir<lb/>
pril 22, and against<lb/>
'A Mary twice, heie<lb/>
ind in Williamsburg,<lb/>
I<lb/>
r the Club had a 4-5<lb/>
: year's squad should<lb/>
i an even I letter<lb/>
:ens said.<lb/>
ason<lb/>
? ell<lb/>
one of the finest<lb/>
I ever attend ECU.<lb/>
hlueter, also from<lb/>
i, is a senior who has<lb/>
am for the past two<lb/>
ie past, he has played<lb/>
nt's best man and has<lb/>
veil.<lb/>
son, a junior from<lb/>
md his twin brother<lb/>
iho was named the<lb/>
man in the Southern<lb/>
i last year, also return.<lb/>
tterson, a senior from<lb/>
a who came to ECU<lb/>
ir year from Mt. Olive<lb/>
ege, where he was the<lb/>
ble player, alternated<lb/>
rst and second man<lb/>
g out the returning<lb/>
is Jack Williams, a<lb/>
i Hickory, who has a<lb/>
ompetition in golf<lb/>
Is in Eastern North<lb/>
lembers of the team<lb/>
:Iks, John Long, Joe<lb/>
Ray Sharpe, Phil<lb/>
d Vance Whitaker.<lb/>
URANT<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
ds<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
1 beverages.<lb/>
day-Saturday<lb/>
 ii<lb/>
ice<lb/>
Aat<lb/>
(Back row left to right) East Carolina's assistant Baseball<lb/>
I coach, George Williams, and head coach. Earl Smith, pose<lb/>
I with the '69 team's co-captains, Wayne Vick, and Carey<lb/>
I Anderson.<lb/>
-<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
We must make room for our Spring merchandise arriving daily,<lb/>
and the savings are yours.<lb/>
Lamb's Wool<lb/>
Sweaters<lb/>
l2 price<lb/>
V-neck, cardigan, Turtleneck<lb/>
one group<lb/>
Shirts y2 price<lb/>
Downtown Shop Only<lb/>
one group<lb/>
SHOES<lb/>
15.99<lb/>
one group<lb/>
SUITS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
SPORT COATS<lb/>
'2 P<lb/>
rice<lb/>
rF?trfa&amp;ttfc'<lb/>
MEN'S SHOP<lb/>
Many more items on sale so shop earlv plaza<lb/>
Downtown 111.00 to 9:001<lb/>
Smith's optimism high as Pirates<lb/>
schedule meet with Blue Devils<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith will send<lb/>
his baseball Pirates into the field<lb/>
of battle tomorrow afternoon<lb/>
against the Duke Blue Devils in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
The Pirates, who posted 20<lb/>
regular season wins against nine<lb/>
losses last year, lost Vince<lb/>
Colbert and Dennis Bruke, their<lb/>
two top pitchers and slugging<lb/>
outfielder Jim Snyder to<lb/>
graduation, yet Coach Smith<lb/>
says "we'll likely have a better<lb/>
team this year than we had in<lb/>
1968<lb/>
This optimism is due no less<lb/>
to the fact that there is a lot of<lb/>
experience and a bevy of good<lb/>
pitching prospects among seven<lb/>
new freshmen.<lb/>
Slated to take up the slack<lb/>
left by graduation, Smith will<lb/>
rely on Mitchell Hughes, Ron<lb/>
Hastings and Randy Glover.<lb/>
"They have the most<lb/>
experience on the staff and<lb/>
naturally are expected to be the<lb/>
ones who will take over Smith<lb/>
says. Other experienced hurlers<lb/>
who will be back are Wayne<lb/>
King, John Weaver, Sonny<lb/>
Robinson, and Bicky Woodard,<lb/>
Windup Big Victory<lb/>
by John Lowe<lb/>
who was the top reliefer for the<lb/>
'68 Pirates.<lb/>
"Two freshmen hurlers, Jim<lb/>
Craver and Bob Fisher have<lb/>
looked good so far Smith says.<lb/>
Craver won the New Jersey state<lb/>
title for Mt. Lakes, N.J. in '68,<lb/>
while Fisher is a lefthander from<lb/>
Alexandria, Va where he was<lb/>
the top lefty with Edisel Martz's<lb/>
Bomb'rs of Northern Virginia.<lb/>
In the game against Duke on<lb/>
Saturday, Glover, Hughes, and<lb/>
Hastings will each take<lb/>
three inning stints on the mound<lb/>
in preparation for next week's<lb/>
heavy schedule which will<lb/>
feature five games in five days,<lb/>
starting against Ithaca College on<lb/>
Wednesday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
All the infield positions will<lb/>
be manned with experienced<lb/>
personnel, which should improve<lb/>
over last year's leaky defense.<lb/>
At first base, returning<lb/>
letterman and co-captain Wayne<lb/>
Vick gets the nod, with Ken<lb/>
Graver backing him up. Dennis<lb/>
Vick will anchor down second<lb/>
base with Jerry Rawls in the<lb/>
backup role although he could<lb/>
play at any time. Richard<lb/>
Corrada, who has recovered<lb/>
Aqua-Bucs swim away<lb/>
with Virginia laurels<lb/>
After the goldfish had been<lb/>
emptied out of the pool,<lb/>
Saturday's competition began<lb/>
with the Bucs adding three more<lb/>
records to their laurels.<lb/>
Gary Frederick won the<lb/>
1,650-yard freestyle, clipping 27<lb/>
seconds off the mark set last<lb/>
year by Louis Garcia of West<lb/>
Virginia with a time of 18.17.81,<lb/>
as East Carolina swept the first<lb/>
four places in the event.<lb/>
Jim Griffin set his third<lb/>
individual mark of the meet, this<lb/>
time in the 100-yard freestyle.<lb/>
The old mark of :49.13 set by<lb/>
Ed Rimm of VMI back in 1964<lb/>
was tied in the prelims, but<lb/>
Griffin undid it all with a<lb/>
clocking of :49.00 for the win.<lb/>
John Sultan won the<lb/>
200 yard backstroke with a<lb/>
non record time of 2:07.71 as<lb/>
the Bucs again swept the first<lb/>
four places.<lb/>
James Wilder of VMI<lb/>
captured the 200 yard<lb/>
breaststroke in 2:19.9 and<lb/>
George Collins of W&amp;M took the<lb/>
100 yard butterfly in 54.31<lb/>
before the Bucs rebounded to<lb/>
take the last two events in the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Doug Emerson and Bob Baird<lb/>
finished one two in the<lb/>
one-meter diving event as<lb/>
Emerson corralled 337.38<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Ir. the final event of the meet,<lb/>
the team of Jim Griffin, Bob<lb/>
Moynihan, Gary Frederick, and<lb/>
John Sultan won the 400-yard<lb/>
freestyle relay in record time,<lb/>
bettering the West Virginia mark<lb/>
of 322.73 set last year with a<lb/>
blistery 3:18.46.<lb/>
Bucs Hit the Road<lb/>
Fresh from their<lb/>
overpowering victory, the<lb/>
Aqua Bucs took to the road for<lb/>
the Eastern Seaboard<lb/>
Championships held at Yale<lb/>
University in New Haven,<lb/>
Conneticutt this weekend. Next<lb/>
stop for the Aqua-Bucs will be<lb/>
the National Championships for<lb/>
the University Division to be<lb/>
held at Indiana University up in<lb/>
Bloominton, Indiana, on March<lb/>
27, 28, and 29.<lb/>
from an operation will start at<lb/>
shortstop for the Pirates, while<lb/>
Jimmy Lanier will cover third<lb/>
base.<lb/>
David Goins and Bobby<lb/>
Norman will back up at second,<lb/>
third, or shortstop.<lb/>
In the outfield, co-captain<lb/>
Carey Anderson returns to his<lb/>
spot in left, while another<lb/>
returnee, Stu Garrett, gets the<lb/>
nod in center. In right field,<lb/>
Dave Shields wil start. Russ<lb/>
Edmundson and Jerry Rawls are<lb/>
the backup men.<lb/>
Behind the plate, the Pirates<lb/>
have three candidates, Roy<lb/>
Taylor, who started most of the<lb/>
games last year, and Len Dowd<lb/>
who played in ten games return.<lb/>
Stan Sneeden, a promising<lb/>
freshman, will be catching some.<lb/>
Dowd can also play the outfield<lb/>
and Taylor at first base.<lb/>
LOOKING GOOD<lb/>
"The pitching has looked<lb/>
good, the defense should be<lb/>
better, and the overall hitting<lb/>
should be improved Smith<lb/>
says. "Everything considered, we<lb/>
should be better<lb/>
SATURDAY LINEUP<lb/>
The probable starting lineup<lb/>
for Saturday's game: Corrada, ss;<lb/>
Lanier, 3b; Garrett, cf;<lb/>
Anderson, If; W. Vick, lb;<lb/>
Shields, rf; Taylor or Dowd, c;<lb/>
D. Vick, 2b; and Glover, Hughes,<lb/>
and Hastings, p.<lb/>
HOME SCHEDULE<lb/>
The Pirates open their home<lb/>
schedule with a two day stand<lb/>
against Ithaca College on<lb/>
Wednesday, March 19, and<lb/>
Thursday, March 20. Carolina<lb/>
comes in on the 21st with<lb/>
Virginia coming in March 22 and<lb/>
23.<lb/>
'I<lb/>
1I<lb/>
Doug Emerson of East Carolina is shown in his<lb/>
winning form during the Southern Conference<lb/>
Swim meet.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0012"/><lb/>
Page 12<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Friday, March 14<lb/>
? 1969<lb/>
 <lb/>
, 1<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
Litera scripta ma net,<lb/>
verb urn imbelle per it.<lb/>
The written letter remains, the weak word perishes.<lb/>
Words have never accomplished anything. It is what happens<lb/>
after the words that changes the status quo, moves mountains,<lb/>
and discovers worlds. Therefore, the purpose of a good newspaper<lb/>
is not to dwell in the abstract but to begin with the idea in mind<lb/>
that after words come action, and with action something concrete<lb/>
will be established.<lb/>
There has been criticism in the past of the SGA, of the<lb/>
administration and faculty. Students have shouted for academic<lb/>
reform. There has been criticism of prices and parking and<lb/>
pre-registration, MRC and women's regulations. Students have<lb/>
complained about the Lick of academic societies and political,<lb/>
radical an 1 reactionary organizations on campus. Students say we<lb/>
should be more in touch with our neighboring colleges and<lb/>
universities, our community, state, nation, and world.<lb/>
Students have said we should do more. Said, and that is all.<lb/>
Words, and that is all.<lb/>
The 'Eist Carolinian' is your voice. We are interested in at! the<lb/>
issues. We feel there is no such thing as apathy on a campus if<lb/>
everyone is busy working toward a goal instead of talking. We will<lb/>
research the issues, delve into their possibilities, and take action.<lb/>
We will begin with words, but with the help of students who are<lb/>
willing to organize and work, we will continue through to the<lb/>
concrete.<lb/>
Why does one write an editorial? What should an editorial say<lb/>
about the "policy" of "The East Carolinian"? In looking back<lb/>
over volumes of bound "East Carolinians here is what past<lb/>
editors have said: "this is a student newspaper and we take this<lb/>
opportunity to encourage students to exercise their rights<lb/>
through it" - "Our responsibility is to the student, for without<lb/>
him this paper would not exist - "With your support there is<lb/>
nothing we can't do-without your support, nothing can be done"<lb/>
- "The newspaper needs people - "There comes a time in the<lb/>
term of every college editor when he must ask for the support of<lb/>
the student body<lb/>
In each issue these editors asked for the support of their fellow<lb/>
students. The amount of reaction from those students (and the<lb/>
way the paper was received) decided the fate of each newspaper.<lb/>
Some editions became the effective voice of the students.<lb/>
Those issues left their difinite impression on the history of our<lb/>
university. Other editions were doomed to a special muteness - at<lb/>
times because the newspaper staff was deaf to student voices; at<lb/>
times because there were no student voices.<lb/>
In looking back over issues of those mute papers one feels a<lb/>
special kind of sadness. Instead of concrete impressions on their<lb/>
times, one finds emptiness. Instead of viewing with pride what<lb/>
organized students sought and accomplished, one witnesses the<lb/>
vacuum of passcd-up opportunities.<lb/>
There is a lesson to be learned from those past editions. One<lb/>
lesson is that this editorial will end up saying the same thing that<lb/>
editorials in the past have said - the paper is your voice. Use it.<lb/>
The present and the future are waiting.<lb/>
There is excitement on our campus.<lb/>
It is the excitement of fresh young men and women moving<lb/>
about the campus. And it is the tallness of our fresh minds.<lb/>
It is the excitement in our past when Dr. Robert H Wright<lb/>
told our forerunners that "we will give to the rising generation<lb/>
the purest inheritance of the nation and better preparation than<lb/>
has ever been given to any preceding generation<lb/>
In our hands lies the future which must somehow be<lb/>
transformed from dreams into reality.<lb/>
Perhaps this is the challenge of the present.<lb/>
Study reveals student gripes<lb/>
concerning book store prices<lb/>
by James Hord<lb/>
"Too expensive<lb/>
"You ran't sell them back<lb/>
after the quarter ends<lb/>
"Much cheaper at State and<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
These were a few of the<lb/>
comments made by ECU<lb/>
students concerning the buying<lb/>
and selling of textbooks at the<lb/>
ECU Student Supply Store.<lb/>
In. a survey conducted by<lb/>
"The East Carolinian<lb/>
concerning the buying and<lb/>
selling of textbooks, the most<lb/>
common complaint was the<lb/>
extremely high prices that<lb/>
students felt they were paying<lb/>
for the books. Many students<lb/>
felt as if they were being "taken<lb/>
in" by the exorbiant prices.<lb/>
Many students also<lb/>
complained about the fact that<lb/>
the book store would not buy<lb/>
their used books back after the<lb/>
quarter ended, for various<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
According to senior<lb/>
geography major Darrell<lb/>
Atkinson, his "biggest gripe"<lb/>
was that the book store refused<lb/>
to purchase his used books, even<lb/>
though sometimes the same<lb/>
book was going to be used the<lb/>
following quarter.<lb/>
Also, he felt that textbooks<lb/>
were a "bit cheaper downtown<lb/>
One irate student commented<lb/>
that "most of the books here are<lb/>
new He wondered why they<lb/>
hardly ever had used books for<lb/>
sale.<lb/>
He saidI'm sick and tired of<lb/>
having to purchase three or four<lb/>
new books every quarter, even<lb/>
though the latest edition of the<lb/>
book was printed in 1966 or so.<lb/>
It's ridiculous<lb/>
One hard-luck case was the<lb/>
French major we interviewed.<lb/>
He pointed out that he got stuck<lb/>
with between $17 and $20<lb/>
worth of books each quarter<lb/>
that he was unable to resell.<lb/>
Another case was the<lb/>
problem encountered by Larry<lb/>
Huggins, sophomore education<lb/>
major. He said that one of the<lb/>
clerks refused to purchase his<lb/>
used books because "they<lb/>
looked a little damaged<lb/>
One additional problem a few<lb/>
students complained of was that<lb/>
the clerks checked a chart and<lb/>
told them that a particular book<lb/>
was not going to be used the<lb/>
following quarter. But the next<lb/>
quarter, the same book was<lb/>
used.<lb/>
According to Miss Bev Jones,<lb/>
a junior English major, "The<lb/>
profit from the sale of books<lb/>
and supplies is supposed to go<lb/>
for scholarships, yet it's almost<lb/>
impossible to obtain a<lb/>
scholarship around here<lb/>
especially for out of state<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"If the profits do q0 f0r<lb/>
scholarships, I think most of the<lb/>
students are having a hard<lb/>
enough time paying for their<lb/>
own education without having<lb/>
to help put their classmates<lb/>
through college she added.<lb/>
Most of these complaints are<lb/>
not without justification. In<lb/>
fact, Chip Callaway, editor of<lb/>
"The East Carolinian" puichased<lb/>
a textbook for $6 95, but<lb/>
discovered that the suggested<lb/>
price on the dust cover was only<lb/>
$5 75<lb/>
In the 1968 69 catalog, the<lb/>
purpose of the Student Supply<lb/>
Store is given. Couched in<lb/>
unequivocal terms, it states:<lb/>
"Students may buy and sell used<lb/>
textbooks in the store, thuj<lb/>
saving considei bly on hook<lb/>
costs<lb/>
N?'ed we s;t" more?<lb/>
ecu forum<lb/>
Published semiweekly by the students of East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Intercollegiate Press, Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief . . . pa?i p ru; . n <lb/>
D  Kaul h. (Chip) Callaway<lb/>
Business Manager . . n? B<lb/>
 r- .? Don Benson<lb/>
Managing Editor D? , ?, ,<lb/>
Pr, . "  Beverly M. Jones<lb/>
Production Manager . ri , ? , .<lb/>
m   M Chuck Ka af<lb/>
News Editor . . r . . , .<lb/>
cr , r  Gerald Roberson<lb/>
Features Editor Robert w<lb/>
sports Editor  ? . <lb/>
Carl Tyer<lb/>
Subscription Rate-$5.00<lb/>
Box 2516, ECU Station, Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Telephone 752-5716<lb/>
National Educational Advertising Services HS<lb/>
A DlVI01 ON Q F Tr<lb/>
READER ? DIGEST RALES 0, SERVICES. INC<lb/>
3fcO Lennqlnn Av . Nw York, N y, 10Q17<lb/>
Dear Students:<lb/>
Now that both political<lb/>
parties have nominated their<lb/>
slate officers for the spring<lb/>
election, it is up to you, the<lb/>
student body, to elect the most<lb/>
qualified candidates to lead our<lb/>
Student Government next year.<lb/>
I would like to make two<lb/>
requests of each student. Firstly,<lb/>
if you qualify and desire to seek<lb/>
an Executive office this spring,<lb/>
come by and file in the SGA<lb/>
Office before 5:00 p.m. during<lb/>
the week of March 10-17.<lb/>
Although you might not have<lb/>
the organized support of a<lb/>
political party, with good<lb/>
organization and a determined<lb/>
effort you will have an equal<lb/>
chance of winning. Secondly, if<lb/>
you are unable to run for an<lb/>
office, choose a candidate or an<lb/>
entire slate of candidates, and<lb/>
support them all you can. Go<lb/>
out and campaign for the<lb/>
candidate of your choice! Talk<lb/>
to your friends' Help create<lb/>
some enthusiasm in the<lb/>
campaign! Break down the<lb/>
"walls of apathy at ECU In<lb/>
other words advertize and<lb/>
support your SGA.<lb/>
Election Day is Tuesday,<lb/>
March 25. The polls will be open<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. There<lb/>
will be several additional<lb/>
precincts open to help reduce<lb/>
the time it takes to vote at the<lb/>
crowded polls. Besides the bailot<lb/>
box in the U U lobby, new polls<lb/>
in the lobby of the Pamiico<lb/>
Room and in the lobby of North<lb/>
Cafeteria will be opened for the<lb/>
spring election.<lb/>
We again plan to make the<lb/>
studio of WECU-TV as Election<lb/>
Central. There will be several<lb/>
closed circuit sets available in<lb/>
the University Union and Soda<lb/>
Shop for students to view the<lb/>
election returns. Flanagan 209<lb/>
and 317 will be available for the<lb/>
two political parties to have<lb/>
their post election celebrations.<lb/>
We hope to have the Day<lb/>
Student ballots tallied and<lb/>
posted by air-time (7 p.m.) of<lb/>
the broadcast. In addition we<lb/>
hope to have the SGA executive<lb/>
ballots tallied by 9 p.m.<lb/>
Dan Summers<lb/>
Elections Chairman<lb/>
Requirements<lb/>
Dear Editors:<lb/>
Recently there has been some<lb/>
complaining about E.C.Us<lb/>
foreign language requirements<lb/>
for most students. I think that if<lb/>
we, as students,stop to ponder<lb/>
the value of knowing one or two<lb/>
foreign languages, we can<lb/>
understand why the University<lb/>
justifiably exacts this<lb/>
requirement of us. One never<lb/>
knows if in the future he may<lb/>
marry a German girl, live in<lb/>
Spain, or eat in a French<lb/>
restaurant. Obvious situations<lb/>
like these might make the study<lb/>
of foreign language generally<lb/>
useful useful to all of us.<lb/>
Of course there are many<lb/>
other more specific benefits to<lb/>
be der ved from foreign language<lb/>
study,for instance, I have<lb/>
personally found my study of<lb/>
foreign language to be very<lb/>
beneficial, due to the French IV<lb/>
cirriculum and due to the skill of<lb/>
my instructor, Miss Ellenberg;<lb/>
from this course I have chiefly<lb/>
gained a better understanding of<lb/>
the French as a culture and as a<lb/>
nation. I have also gained a<lb/>
better understanding of French<lb/>
literature's condition humane, a<lb/>
deeper insight into my<lb/>
personal "human condition<lb/>
Certainly there are many other<lb/>
students who have likewise<lb/>
benefited from learnign another<lb/>
language.<lb/>
I think that if every student<lb/>
who has the opportunity to<lb/>
study a foreign language would<lb/>
take advantage of that<lb/>
opportunity to better himself,<lb/>
he would not be able to later say<lb/>
that the course involved tedious<lb/>
hours wasted, but rather fruitful<lb/>
hours which he consciously and<lb/>
conscientiously used for his own<lb/>
self improved.<lb/>
Doubtless some embittei<lb/>
student will answer this lettei<lb/>
intimating that I am disillusmed<lb/>
Doubtless that student derived<lb/>
from his foreign language study<lb/>
exactly what he put into it little<lb/>
or nothing.<lb/>
Mike Edmondson<lb/>
Vorum policy<lb/>
All students, faculty<lb/>
members, and administrators are<lb/>
urged to express their opinions<lb/>
in writing in the ECU Forum.<lb/>
"The East Carolinian"<lb/>
editorial page is an open forum<lb/>
in which such articles may be<lb/>
published.<lb/>
When writing letters to the<lb/>
Forum, the following procedure<lb/>
should be followed-<lb/>
Letters should be concise<lb/>
ant to the point.<lb/>
-Length should not exceed<lb/>
300 words. The Editorial Board<lb/>
reserves the right to edit letters<lb/>
to conform to this requirement.<lb/>
-All letters must be signed<lb/>
with the name of the writer.<lb/>
However, upon the author's<lb/>
request his name may be<lb/>
withheld.<lb/>
Signed articles on this page<lb/>
reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
author, and not necessarily those<lb/>
of "The East Carolinian<lb/>
<pb facs="00039401_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>