<?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="00039416_0001"/>
Do You MflW flboin-<lb/>
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MR? IWIN.<lb/>
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JYODSmilfCRUH!<lb/>
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HOW TO LOVE f<lb/>
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; of Casimir Pulaski<lb/>
deus Kosciusko, who<lb/>
istrumental in the<lb/>
in Revolution, be<lb/>
d holidays.<lb/>
? demand that more<lb/>
idents be recruited by<lb/>
 m i n i st ration as<lb/>
ve students.<lb/>
demand that more<lb/>
ofessors be hired to<lb/>
ty in proportion to<lb/>
ler of Polish students,<lb/>
demand that the use<lb/>
i jokes be refrained<lb/>
all school functions<lb/>
hey are an insult to<lb/>
:ter.<lb/>
? demand that the<lb/>
loys choir and other<lb/>
entertainment be<lb/>
5 campus.<lb/>
demand that a Polish<lb/>
id culture course be<lb/>
Ve demand that<lb/>
allow us to sit in the<lb/>
le class and take part<lb/>
class, and that<lb/>
financial aid be<lb/>
to needy Poles, and<lb/>
?ver seen a Pole who<lb/>
edy?<lb/>
?e that there will be<lb/>
t attempt by the<lb/>
d students to meet<lb/>
ids because we do<lb/>
any trouble on our<lb/>
Bob Jaronczyk,<lb/>
Al Kaplinski<lb/>
m policyl<lb/>
udents, faculty<lb/>
td administrators are<lb/>
press their opinions<lb/>
the ECU Forum,<lb/>
s presented on this<lb/>
?lely those of the<lb/>
:ers and editors of<lb/>
Carolinian. Signed<lb/>
letters on this page<lb/>
oitinions of the<lb/>
not necessarily<lb/>
e East Carolinian.<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
 imr? tn rtaH think tnmmk ?-v  - m w m m<lb/>
'Lit us dart to road. think , sptak and writa<lb/>
jQL 44 No. 17<lb/>
May 20, 1969 <lb/>
Disneyland is Homecoming theme<lb/>
with Warwick and Fifth Dimension<lb/>
<lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
Cramming is a refined art here;<lb/>
examination schedule announced<lb/>
 see page 2<lb/>
White lectures Wednesday evening<lb/>
on influence of Marshall McLuhan<lb/>
<lb/>
see page 6<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0002"/><lb/>
?Pay 2<lb/>
77?e EastCarglinian<lb/>
Homecoming 1969 to feature<lb/>
Warwick and 'Fifth Dimension'<lb/>
y 20, 1969<lb/>
Fantasy, excitement, a<lb/>
parade, and fun are the<lb/>
projected highlights of<lb/>
Homecoming 1969-<lb/>
"Disneyland-A Tribute to Walt<lb/>
Disney<lb/>
Homecoming will run<lb/>
November 6-9 and will feature<lb/>
everything from a pep rally<lb/>
and a bonfire to a football<lb/>
game and finally<lb/>
entertainment from "Dionne<lb/>
Warwick" and "The Fifth<lb/>
Dimension<lb/>
Letters to Art Disney,<lb/>
director of Disneyland, for<lb/>
suggestions of various themes,<lb/>
such as Jungleland or dinasour<lb/>
land, which the Parade and<lb/>
Decorations might portray,<lb/>
and to various dignitaries of<lb/>
the school and state have<lb/>
already been sent by the<lb/>
Special Events Committee.<lb/>
The Committee has tried to<lb/>
expand Homecoming 1969<lb/>
with cooperation and<lb/>
participation from interested<lb/>
businesses as well as campus<lb/>
organization in an effort to<lb/>
By GAIL BURTON<lb/>
HIGHLIGHTS<lb/>
A Pen Rally and Bonfire<lb/>
will open Homecoming 1969<lb/>
Thursday night, November 8<lb/>
at 6.30.<lb/>
Friday's activities center<lb/>
around Dionne Warwick who<lb/>
will give a concert that night in<lb/>
Minges, singing all of her<lb/>
newest and golden hits.<lb/>
A Parade of an anticipated<lb/>
hundred floats, cars, and bands<lb/>
with themes ranging from<lb/>
Donald Duck to Fantasyland<lb/>
has been planned by Bob<lb/>
Whitley to begin Saturday<lb/>
morning, November 8 at 10<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
Dignitaries will be riding in<lb/>
cars from Greenville merchants<lb/>
as well as those of students,<lb/>
while bands from all over the<lb/>
state play in competition for<lb/>
trophies awarded to the top<lb/>
two bands.<lb/>
involve as lany people as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
Saturday afternoon ECU's<lb/>
football team is scheduled to<lb/>
tackle Davidson in an<lb/>
action-packed game. Half-time<lb/>
activities for the game have<lb/>
been planned by the Special<lb/>
Events Committee.<lb/>
Along with crowning the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and<lb/>
presentation of her court,<lb/>
half-time will also award<lb/>
trophies to the winners of the<lb/>
best house decorations and the<lb/>
best float.<lb/>
In an effort to raise spirit<lb/>
and evoke total participation<lb/>
from all students and<lb/>
organizations, an overall<lb/>
trophy is being planned for a<lb/>
combination winner of the<lb/>
best float and the best house<lb/>
decorations.<lb/>
Saturday night is being left<lb/>
open for campus organizations<lb/>
and parties.<lb/>
"The Fifth Dimension" will<lb/>
conclude Homecoming 1969<lb/>
in a concert in Minges<lb/>
Auditorium Sunday,<lb/>
November 9 at three p.m.<lb/>
Educational cram calendar,<lb/>
an updated ECU study guide<lb/>
It was bound to happen.<lb/>
After all, this is the age of<lb/>
instant coffee, automatic<lb/>
dishwashers and TV dinners.<lb/>
In keeping with this trend,<lb/>
students have developed<lb/>
instant education-sometimes<lb/>
known as cramming.<lb/>
Crammir,u has been refined<lb/>
to art form, and to cram well<lb/>
one must first learn the<lb/>
language involved. We define<lb/>
the essential terms this way:<lb/>
TERMINOLOGY<lb/>
Cram?to jam your head so<lb/>
full of facts the night before<lb/>
an exam that all this<lb/>
knowledge will burst back out<lb/>
all over your exam paper.<lb/>
To pull an all-nighter ?to<lb/>
stay up from the time the<lb/>
party breaks up until the hour<lb/>
of the exam the next day. This<lb/>
time is usually devoted to<lb/>
cramming.<lb/>
Bennies - the magic little<lb/>
pills that keep your mind<lb/>
Course<lb/>
All<lb/>
French I, German I<lb/>
Spanish I<lb/>
German 11<lb/>
Geography 15<lb/>
Business 140<lb/>
Business 141<lb/>
Business 254<lb/>
Business 255<lb/>
ByCHIPCALLAWAY<lb/>
bright and clear through the<lb/>
fuzzy-wuzzy hours of the<lb/>
morning<lb/>
To pop a pill - the act of<lb/>
dropping a Benny.<lb/>
A Bear - an exam that<lb/>
defies cramming.<lb/>
Ace it - when the cram<lb/>
pays off.<lb/>
Frog (Flag) it - when the<lb/>
cramming process fails you,<lb/>
usually used in conjunction<lb/>
with a Bear.<lb/>
Crack a book - (vulgar) to<lb/>
study.<lb/>
WHO CRAMS?<lb/>
Who resorts to cramming?<lb/>
First, the All-American type<lb/>
who will later succeed in<lb/>
business without really trying.<lb/>
Second, the pseudo-intellec-<lb/>
tual who spends his evenings<lb/>
solving the Vietnam war and<lb/>
the racial problem saying he is<lb/>
too busy educating himself to<lb/>
worry about class assignments.<lb/>
Third, believers in<lb/>
philosophy, "eat, drink, and<lb/>
be merry, for tomorrow you<lb/>
EXAM SCHEDULE<lb/>
Regular Hour<lb/>
8 am<lb/>
9 am<lb/>
10 am<lb/>
11 am<lb/>
12 noon<lb/>
1 pm<lb/>
2 pm<lb/>
3 pm<lb/>
4 pm<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
All<lb/>
may die Many of them,<lb/>
indeed, find they are dead on<lb/>
the day of exams.<lb/>
THREE WAYS<lb/>
They approach the<lb/>
cramming process in one of<lb/>
three ways. First, by learning<lb/>
one-fifth of :he material<lb/>
presented, then writing down<lb/>
all they know, no matter what<lb/>
the professor asks.<lb/>
Second, by feigning<lb/>
profundity-learning obscure<lb/>
words and using them<lb/>
repeatedly throughout the<lb/>
exam.<lb/>
Third, by the "kiss-up<lb/>
approach the<lb/>
shiny-apple-to-the-professor<lb/>
routine. Any of the three, is<lb/>
used well, should result in an<lb/>
A, the dean's list, and top<lb/>
honors at graduation.<lb/>
And if the crammer does<lb/>
not learn anything in the<lb/>
process:<lb/>
Well, as Benjamin Franklin<lb/>
said (or was it John Paul<lb/>
Jones?) "Ignorance is bliss<lb/>
Date<lb/>
May 27<lb/>
May 27<lb/>
May 30<lb/>
May 30<lb/>
May 28<lb/>
May 28<lb/>
May 29<lb/>
May 29<lb/>
May 29<lb/>
May 26<lb/>
May 26<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
May 24<lb/>
Exam Hour<lb/>
8-10 am<lb/>
3-5 pm<lb/>
8- 10pm<lb/>
T3 pm<lb/>
8-10 am<lb/>
3-5 pm<lb/>
8-10 am<lb/>
11-1pm<lb/>
3-5 pm<lb/>
5-7 pm<lb/>
7:15-9:15 pm<lb/>
9-12 am<lb/>
9-12 am<lb/>
9-12 am<lb/>
2-5 pm<lb/>
2-5 pm<lb/>
MISS DIONNE WARWICK wil<lb/>
Friday night of Homecoming 1969<lb/>
appear in concert on<lb/>
ECU to receive grant;<lb/>
Af ill aid 'special'students<lb/>
An ECU professor has<lb/>
received a grant to participate<lb/>
in a project to train college<lb/>
professors for teaching<lb/>
emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Dr. Leon E. Johnson,<lb/>
assistant professor of health<lb/>
and physical education, has<lb/>
been awarded a $2,000 grant<lb/>
from the National Institute of<lb/>
Mental Health. The grant will<lb/>
finance his participation this<lb/>
summer in the Temple<lb/>
Univeristy-Buttonwood Farms<lb/>
Project at Quakertown, Pa.<lb/>
The project, sponsored at<lb/>
Temple by the NIMH, will be<lb/>
concerned with the methods<lb/>
and techniques in working<lb/>
with emotionally disturbed<lb/>
children in the field of<lb/>
physical education and<lb/>
recreation.<lb/>
PROJECT EXPECTED HERE<lb/>
Johnson said a similar<lb/>
internship project is expected<lb/>
to be introduced at ECU<lb/>
within the next two years. It<lb/>
would also be sponsored by<lb/>
the NIMH.<lb/>
The Temple project is<lb/>
scheduled June 23 to Aug. 15.<lb/>
A native of Woods Cross,<lb/>
Utah, Dr. Johnson joined the<lb/>
ECU faculty in September,<lb/>
1967. He holds MS and EdD<lb/>
degrees from the University of<lb/>
Utah and West Virginia<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Beta Sigma Gamma<lb/>
initiates 23 members<lb/>
One of ECU'S newest<lb/>
honorary fraternities, Beta<lb/>
Gamma Sigma, has initiated 23<lb/>
new members, students in the<lb/>
School of Business.<lb/>
Gamma Chapter of North<lb/>
Carolina of Beta Gamma<lb/>
Sigma was chartered here last<lb/>
spring. The fraternity honors<lb/>
business students who have<lb/>
achieved outstanding<lb/>
scholastic records. Membership<lb/>
is extended to juniors whose<lb/>
standing is in the upper five<lb/>
per cent and to seniors in the<lb/>
upper 10 per cent of their<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
Dr. Donald C. Rocke,<lb/>
associate professor of business<lb/>
and secretary-treasurer of the<lb/>
chapter, said ECU is one of<lb/>
three schools in the state<lb/>
awarded a chapter of the<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Beta Gamma Sigma is the<lb/>
only honorary society for<lb/>
business students recognized<lb/>
by the American Association<lb/>
of Collegiate Schools of<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Students imitated into the<lb/>
fraternity include:<lb/>
Effie Vick, Sara Smithwick,<lb/>
Roland Farmer, Jr Susie<lb/>
Miller, Henry Williamson, Jr<lb/>
Gerald Walsh, Sheila Riggs,<lb/>
Robert Rives, Jr Lawrence<lb/>
Talton, Edward Carlson, James<lb/>
Madagan, Peggy Gardner,<lb/>
Percy Winslow, Julia Brinkley,<lb/>
Dr. L. H. Zincone Jr Victoria<lb/>
Bridges, Margaret Williams,<lb/>
Cameron Cox, James Davis,<lb/>
Victoria Harper, Bruce<lb/>
Romano, Mary Kruslicky.<lb/>
Glee Club<lb/>
to present<lb/>
concert<lb/>
The Men and Women's Glee<lb/>
Clubs of East Carolina<lb/>
University will present a joint<lb/>
concert in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Thursday night at 8:15.<lb/>
The Women's Glee Club<lb/>
will perform works of Franz,<lb/>
Mozart, Delta-Lobas, and four<lb/>
of the Brahms Liebeslieder<lb/>
Waltzes.<lb/>
The Men's Glee Club will<lb/>
perform sacred music of<lb/>
William Byrd and Anton<lb/>
Bruchner and folk songs of<lb/>
Europe and America.<lb/>
? Alpha<lb/>
elected it<lb/>
1969 la;<lb/>
Presider<lb/>
V ice-pi<lb/>
Cundiff.<lb/>
Assisti<lb/>
will be<lb/>
secretary,<lb/>
serving as<lb/>
? Alpha<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
campaign<lb/>
for the A<lb/>
Stationing<lb/>
well-tra<lb/>
Five-Point:<lb/>
AP0 emb<lb/>
service pro<lb/>
Officers<lb/>
for the 19(<lb/>
Herman Al<lb/>
Miller, '<lb/>
Danny<lb/>
vice p re<lb/>
Georghioi<lb/>
secretary;<lb/>
treasurer,<lb/>
recording si<lb/>
chaplain;<lb/>
historian; a<lb/>
sergeant-at<lb/>
50' by 10'<lb/>
Air cond<lb/>
Washer, C<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Shady Kr<lb/>
7!<lb/>
"Ol<lb/>
Carnal<lb/>
Metric starte<lb/>
UnlV 350 r<lb/>
J?ndit'?n, he<lb/>
?'9h'Y Qua<lb/>
FENCH<lb/>
SRUrTl?ier Sessi,<lb/>
"at?, 758-<lb/>
rrangements f<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0003"/><lb/>
May 20, 1969<lb/>
ir in concert on<lb/>
)tionally disturbed<lb/>
in the field of<lb/>
education and<lb/>
rmer, Jr Susie<lb/>
y Williamson, Jr<lb/>
sh. Sheila Riggs,<lb/>
es, Jr Lawrence<lb/>
ard Carlson, James<lb/>
Peggy Gardner,<lb/>
?w, Julia Brinkley,<lb/>
ncone Jr Victoria<lb/>
argaret Williams,<lb/>
ax, James Davis,<lb/>
Harper, Bruce<lb/>
Glee Club will<lb/>
:red music of<lb/>
d and Anton<lb/>
folk songs of<lb/>
nerica.<lb/>
The<lb/>
T"i fasf CW.W<lb/>
Greek scene<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
 Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity<lb/>
has elected its new officers for<lb/>
Fall 1969.<lb/>
The new president is Craig<lb/>
Souza from Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Vice president is Jimmy Bost<lb/>
from Charlotte, N.C. Next<lb/>
year's treasurer is David Landt<lb/>
of Raleigh. The secretary is<lb/>
William Hawthorne from<lb/>
Charlotte, also.<lb/>
? Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity<lb/>
elected its new officers for Fall<lb/>
1969 last week. They are,<lb/>
President, Ronnie Roth;<lb/>
Vice-president, Ronnie<lb/>
Cundiff.<lb/>
Assisting these two men<lb/>
will be Peter Greenspan as<lb/>
secretary, and Gary Prager<lb/>
serving as treasurer.<lb/>
? Alpha Phi Omega service<lb/>
fraternity conducted a street<lb/>
campaign Saturday, May 17<lb/>
for the Arthritis Fund Drive.<lb/>
Stationing themselves in such<lb/>
well traveled areas as<lb/>
Five-Points and Pitt Plaza,<lb/>
APO embarked on its final<lb/>
service project of the year.<lb/>
Officers elected last week<lb/>
for the 1969 70 tenure include<lb/>
Herman Allen, president; Glen<lb/>
Miller, 1st vice-president;<lb/>
Danny Rappucci, 2nd<lb/>
vice president; George<lb/>
Georghiou, corresponding<lb/>
secretary; David Tutterow,<lb/>
treasurer; Steve Hayes,<lb/>
recording secretary; Pat Marsh,<lb/>
chaplain; Danny Scott,<lb/>
historian, and Jimmy Everett,<lb/>
sergeant-at arms.<lb/>
? Three members of Delta<lb/>
Zeta social sorority were<lb/>
honored at the chapter's<lb/>
recent annual formal Dream<lb/>
Girl dance.<lb/>
Dream girl of the Zeta<lb/>
Lambda chapter for 1969 is<lb/>
V'ckie Lee. A senior<lb/>
geography major frQm<lb/>
K'nston, Vickie is the daughter<lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. Ashley S Lee<lb/>
of Kinston.<lb/>
Carol Julian of Washington,<lb/>
D-C a French major and<lb/>
two-t.me sorority president<lb/>
received the outstandint senior<lb/>
of Zeta Lambda award. She is<lb/>
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Paul R.Julian of Greenville.<lb/>
The chapter's annual Helen<lb/>
Snyder Award, presented to<lb/>
the member who best<lb/>
exemplifies the spirit and ideal<lb/>
of Delta Zeta, went to Carol<lb/>
Mabe of Winston Salem.<lb/>
Miss Mabe, a junior<lb/>
commercial art major, is public<lb/>
realtions and publicity<lb/>
chairman for the chapter. She<lb/>
was recently selected to edit<lb/>
the "Wheels of Sisterhood an<lb/>
annual publication of the ECU<lb/>
Panhellenic Council for<lb/>
freshmen girls.<lb/>
? The East Carolina Club of<lb/>
the Society of the Sigma Xi<lb/>
has announced presentation of<lb/>
research awards to four<lb/>
students. The awards are given<lb/>
annually to students<lb/>
presenting the best research<lb/>
papers on their individual<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
In the graduate division,<lb/>
Joseph F. Holson, Jr of<lb/>
Georgetown Del master's<lb/>
candidate in biology, won first<lb/>
place with his paper on "The<lb/>
Teratogenic Potential of LSD<lb/>
in the Albino Rat<lb/>
Runner up in the graduate<lb/>
division was James A. Cook of<lb/>
Blanch, also a biology master's<lb/>
candidate, with his paper on<lb/>
"Regulation of Urease Levels<lb/>
in Jackbean Cotyledons<lb/>
In the undergraduate<lb/>
divison, Rose Mary Peele of<lb/>
Aurora, majoring in chemistry,<lb/>
won first place with her paper<lb/>
on "Diels-Alder Additions of<lb/>
OQuinodimethanes to<lb/>
Quinones<lb/>
John R. Buck of Ayden, a<lb/>
biology major, was runner-up<lb/>
Wlth "is paper on<lb/>
Implantation and Subsequent<lb/>
Embryonic Development<lb/>
Following d-Amphetamine<lb/>
Sulfate Injuction in Female<lb/>
Hooded Rats<lb/>
? The Society of Sigma Xi is<lb/>
a national honorary society for<lb/>
the encouragement of original<lb/>
investigation in pure and<lb/>
applied science.<lb/>
Officers for the coming<lb/>
year are Dr. Irvin Lawrence,<lb/>
Biology, President; Dr!<lb/>
Thomas Sayetta, Physics,<lb/>
President-elect; and Dr. H.<lb/>
Daniel Stillwell, Geography,<lb/>
Secretary-Treasurer.<lb/>
ECU'S 1969 70 cheerleaders have elected their new<lb/>
squad officers. They are (l-r) Debby Sheehan<lb/>
treasurerPeter Greenspan, Pirate; Bob Rankin, head<lb/>
cheerleader; and Susan Walton, Secretary.<lb/>
Nine year old soloist<lb/>
to perform operas<lb/>
? Kappa Delta Sorority held<lb/>
its annual White Rose Ball on<lb/>
May 10, at the Greenville<lb/>
Woman's Club. The White<lb/>
Rose Ball is given in honor of<lb/>
the formal pledge class of the<lb/>
sorority.<lb/>
The highlight of the evening<lb/>
was the announcement of<lb/>
pledge awards which were as<lb/>
follows: Best Pledge, Wanda<lb/>
Magurean; Best Scrapbook,<lb/>
Carolyn Branch; and<lb/>
Scholastic Award, Wanda<lb/>
Petty.<lb/>
Table decorations consisted<lb/>
of model KD pins encircled by<lb/>
ivy. Music was provided by the<lb/>
Illusions of Fayetteville.<lb/>
Solos by a nine-year-old<lb/>
violinist will highlight two<lb/>
concerts this week by the<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra.<lb/>
Pamela Bath, daughter of<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bath of<lb/>
Greenville, will perform in<lb/>
concerts today.<lb/>
A student in the fourth<lb/>
grade of Elmhurst School,<lb/>
Pamela is taught violin by her<lb/>
mother, Mrs. Joanne Bath, a<lb/>
private teacher and violinist<lb/>
for the ECU Symphony. Dr.<lb/>
Bath is an associate professor<lb/>
of music here.<lb/>
The evening concert, which<lb/>
is open to the public, will<lb/>
feature solos by Sandra<lb/>
Watson, soprano and assistant<lb/>
professor of voice in the<lb/>
School of Music. She will sing<lb/>
three operatic solos.<lb/>
are<lb/>
the<lb/>
The concerts, which<lb/>
free, are sponsored by<lb/>
College of the Albemarle.<lb/>
Robert L. Hause, conductor<lb/>
and music director of the<lb/>
orchestra, will conduct both<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
Hause is a cum laude<lb/>
graduate of the Univeristy of<lb/>
Michi gan where he earned the<lb/>
bachelor's and master's<lb/>
degrees. He is recognized as<lb/>
one of the outstanding young<lb/>
conductors in the south.<lb/>
The Symphony Orchestra is<lb/>
composed of students and<lb/>
faculty at the university and<lb/>
professional performers living<lb/>
in the Greenville area.<lb/>
It presents five concerts<lb/>
each year, including an annual<lb/>
concert during the<lb/>
Contemporary Arts Festival.<lb/>
FLARE-LEG PANTS<lb/>
For Rent<lb/>
50' by 10' Furnished Trailer<lb/>
Air conditioned. Study,<lb/>
Couples; $85.00<lb/>
Washer<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Shady Knoll Trailer Park<lb/>
7582333<lb/>
BEST PRICES PAID<lb/>
All kinds-sizes empty bottles<lb/>
See or Call<lb/>
Toni Robertson-Roz Lipzius<lb/>
2nd Floor Slay Hall?<lb/>
752 9930<lb/>
'f68 Yamaha<lb/>
C,C35Srer Wage rack,<lb/>
mJr ? m,les excellent<lb/>
J'rt'V Qualified<lb/>
sFuENCH rV, First<lb/>
Rmer Session, Reasonable<lb/>
"ates- 758-1920,<lb/>
rrangements Now!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
May20. !969<lb/>
20, 196!<lb/>
?<lb/>
? <lb/>
; ?<lb/>
'a .<lb/>
.<lb/>
Campus Hi-IHes<lb/>
<lb/>
 Take initiative, add one<lb/>
contest with a special<lb/>
enticemtnt of a S25 prize, and<lb/>
East Carolina University comes<lb/>
up with nothing less thatn a<lb/>
100-proof Fight Song for next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The contest is a project of<lb/>
the Spirit Committee whose<lb/>
main purpose is the<lb/>
establishment of a Fight Song<lb/>
for 1969.<lb/>
All entries will be accepted<lb/>
by the committee the first<lb/>
three weeks of Fall quarter<lb/>
1969.<lb/>
After being reviewed and<lb/>
judged, a prize of $25 will be<lb/>
given to the winning<lb/>
contestant.<lb/>
? An exhibition of 24 works<lb/>
by artist Dr. Emily Farnhum<lb/>
will be on display through May<lb/>
31 at a local art shop gallery.<lb/>
Dr. Farnham is professor<lb/>
and chairman of the art<lb/>
history department in the<lb/>
School of Art.<lb/>
The show, at the Mushroom<lb/>
in Greenville, features a series<lb/>
of watercolor collages and a<lb/>
1960 series of watercolor<lb/>
paintings called "Clouds Over<lb/>
Virginia In addition, there is<lb/>
a group of silk screen prints, or<lb/>
serigraphs.<lb/>
? A Lenoir County coed,<lb/>
Edna L. Cascioli of Grifton, is<lb/>
new chairman of the Women's<lb/>
Residence Council.<lb/>
Miss Cascioli, her vice<lb/>
chairman Sandra Echols of<lb/>
Scotland Neck, and treasurer<lb/>
Marilyn Owens, of Jamestown,<lb/>
were installed to head the<lb/>
council for the 1969-70<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
Members at large on the<lb/>
council are Maria Castillo of<lb/>
Washington, D.C Anne<lb/>
Hickson of Alexandria, Va<lb/>
and Christine Smith of<lb/>
Aiiington, Va.<lb/>
The officers, who were<lb/>
elected each spring, were<lb/>
installed by outgoing chairman<lb/>
Nancy Riddle of Asheville.<lb/>
The council also includes the<lb/>
presidents of each women's<lb/>
dormitory.<lb/>
? Anyone interested in<lb/>
working this summer move it<lb/>
on up to The East Carolinian<lb/>
office and apply for positions.<lb/>
If stairs are to much of a strain,<lb/>
call 758-6366 and ask for<lb/>
Chuck Kalaf or Patience Collie.<lb/>
? A grant of $26, 171 to the<lb/>
School of Allied Health<lb/>
Professions has been<lb/>
announced here.<lb/>
The funds were awarded by<lb/>
the Allied Health Manpower<lb/>
Division of the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Heath,<lb/>
Education and Welfare for the<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
Described<lb/>
condensed news briefs<lb/>
improvement grant by<lb/>
program director Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
Monroe, dean ot the health<lb/>
school, the funds will be used<lb/>
to improve equipment and<lb/>
staff in teaching of medical<lb/>
technology and dietetics.<lb/>
Dr. Monroe said the grant<lb/>
was originally awarded two<lb/>
years ago and has been<lb/>
renewed annually on the basis<lb/>
of application by the school.<lb/>
as<lb/>
basic<lb/>
H. L. HODGES &amp; CO Inc.<lb/>
Student Sport Headquarters<lb/>
Dial PL 2-4156<lb/>
Saad'sShoe Shop<lb/>
Bring yourshoes to usfor<lb/>
prom ptservice.We 1<lb/>
DELIVER. Located 1<lb/>
CollegeView Cleaners f<lb/>
Main Plant<lb/>
Big Daddy' Good Sands CHUCK WAGON wiches. BBQ and<lb/>
Hamburger plates. Orders to Go phone 752 2135 E. Tenth St. Next to Kwik<lb/>
Pik ? <lb/>
BUY' QUALITY<lb/>
DIAMONDS At WHOLESALE<lb/>
A Written Guarantee with Every Diamond<lb/>
Call 752-3246<lb/>
ECU Representative<lb/>
RICHARD DUPREE  504 E. 12th St.<lb/>
StcwUiuu<lb/>
Drive-in<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N.C<lb/>
1 Hr Cleaning 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
? A mall concert with a<lb/>
difference will be played here<lb/>
Thursday, May 22 at 5 00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The ECU Varsity Band will<lb/>
perform lively marches to an<lb/>
audience which will have the<lb/>
opportunity to "grade" the<lb/>
Band's performance. These<lb/>
audience ratings will be<lb/>
considered when the Band<lb/>
members receive their<lb/>
quarter's grades in Band.<lb/>
All student faculty<lb/>
members, staff rnt nbers, and<lb/>
friends are invited to come to<lb/>
the concert and audit and<lb/>
grade the Varsity Band.<lb/>
According to George<lb/>
Knight, Rand director, the<lb/>
program will feature British,<lb/>
Spanish, and American<lb/>
marches. Knight emphasized<lb/>
that the concert is to be<lb/>
strictly an informal<lb/>
presentation.<lb/>
The Varsity Band is<lb/>
composed of 65 musicians of<lb/>
various academic majors.<lb/>
NOTICE TO JUNE GRADUATES<lb/>
Now you can buy a new or used<lb/>
car at SPECIAL SAVINGS and a SPECIAL<lb/>
FINANCE PLAN for graduates only<lb/>
Irst payment not due until June 20th<lb/>
e<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
&amp;s Ox<lb/>
o<lb/>
vS<lb/>
The Mini-Brute<lb/>
S<lb/>
"Let us solve your transportation problems<lb/>
F0LGER BUICK &amp; OPEL<lb/>
117 W. 10th St.<lb/>
758-1123<lb/>
 water<lb/>
hanging in t<lb/>
Building show<lb/>
the way it nevi<lb/>
It is labeli<lb/>
view of East C<lb/>
College, H.<lb/>
architect and<lb/>
the college m<lb/>
Way it wa' picl<lb/>
The story<lb/>
whi it was dc<lb/>
shows huildii<lb/>
never built fo<lb/>
interesting ch<lb/>
early history ol<lb/>
The school v<lb/>
More and<lb/>
Were having to<lb/>
each year for I;<lb/>
ECTC were<lb/>
meet the need<lb/>
was intended, i<lb/>
be enlarged<lb/>
About 19<lb/>
Robert H Wr<lb/>
that if East C;<lb/>
take in all appl<lb/>
eventually have<lb/>
of 1,500 studen<lb/>
Facilities, he<lb/>
enlarged to be<lb/>
that many si<lb/>
people were sk<lb/>
was more than<lb/>
enrollment at tf<lb/>
Except for 1<lb/>
the wings of .<lb/>
si?e of facilit<lb/>
increased abo<lb/>
were at the op<lb/>
Appropri<lb/>
? r<lb/>
M ? ?<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0005"/><lb/>
Jfov 20, 19rq<lb/>
20, 1969<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
d news briefs<lb/>
vement grant by<lb/>
director Dr. Edwin W.<lb/>
dean ot the health<lb/>
the funds will be used<lb/>
rove equipment and<lb/>
teaching of medical<lb/>
gy and dietetics,<lb/>
lonroe said the grant<lb/>
iginally awarded two<lb/>
ago and has been<lb/>
annually on the basis<lb/>
cation by the school.<lb/>
lall concert with a<lb/>
ce will be played here<lb/>
y, May 22 at 5:00<lb/>
ECU Varsity Band will<lb/>
lively marches to an<lb/>
I which will have the<lb/>
nity to "grade" the<lb/>
performance. These<lb/>
:e ratings will be<lb/>
ed when the Band<lb/>
us receive their<lb/>
grades in Band,<lb/>
student faculty<lb/>
i, staff mt nbers, and<lb/>
re invited to come to<lb/>
"icert and audit and<lb/>
l Varsity Band,<lb/>
rding to George<lb/>
Band director, the<lb/>
will feature British,<lb/>
i, and American<lb/>
Knight emphasized<lb/>
1 concert is to be<lb/>
y an informal<lb/>
ion.<lb/>
Varsity Band is<lb/>
i of 65 musicians of<lb/>
:ademic majors.<lb/>
<lb/>
Watercolor' shows ECTC as it never was'<lb/>
A watercolor drawing<lb/>
hanging in the Maintenance<lb/>
Building shows East Carolina<lb/>
the way it never was.<lb/>
It is labeled "Aero plane<lb/>
view of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College, H.A. Underwood,<lb/>
architect and engineer yet<lb/>
the college never looked the<lb/>
way itwa' pictured.<lb/>
The story of the drawing,<lb/>
whi it was done, and why it<lb/>
shows buildings that were<lb/>
never built forms one of the<lb/>
interesting chapters in the<lb/>
early history of ECU.<lb/>
The school was too little.<lb/>
More and more students<lb/>
were having to be turned away<lb/>
each year for lack of space. If<lb/>
ECTC were to adequately<lb/>
meet the needs for which it<lb/>
was intended, it would have to<lb/>
be enlarged<lb/>
About 1920, President<lb/>
Robert H Wright calculated<lb/>
that if East Carolina were to<lb/>
take in all applicants, it would<lb/>
eventually have an enrollment<lb/>
of 1,500 students.<lb/>
Facilities, he said, must be<lb/>
enlarged to be able to handle<lb/>
that many students. Some<lb/>
people were skeptical - that<lb/>
was more than three times the<lb/>
enrollment at that time.<lb/>
Except for the addition of<lb/>
the wings of Jarvis Hall, the<lb/>
size of facilities had never<lb/>
increased above what they<lb/>
were at the opening in 1909.<lb/>
Appropriations were<lb/>
granted for a new dormitory in<lb/>
1921. Before that dormitory<lb/>
could be built, a decision<lb/>
would have to be made on<lb/>
how and in which direction<lb/>
the expansion would go.<lb/>
STUDIES<lb/>
Accordingly, landscape<lb/>
studies were done by Louis L.<lb/>
Miller and submitted in July<lb/>
1922.<lb/>
Miller recommended that<lb/>
the center of the campus be<lb/>
moved to the east, and be<lb/>
constructed around a trafic<lb/>
circle and fountain, which<lb/>
were to be built later. This was<lb/>
on the edge of the campus, but<lb/>
the college had an option on<lb/>
the adjoining property.<lb/>
After a study of these<lb/>
recommendaions, they were<lb/>
submitted to the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the new<lb/>
dormitory (Fleming) was<lb/>
begun. There wer not enough<lb/>
funds to build the wings, so<lb/>
they were to be added later.<lb/>
When ECTC was granted<lb/>
S 1,025,000 for permanent<lb/>
improvements on March 2,<lb/>
1923, work began in earnest.<lb/>
H.A. Underwood of Raleigh<lb/>
was hired as architect for the<lb/>
expansion work.<lb/>
Following the Miller<lb/>
suggestions, Underwood set<lb/>
about making a detailed study<lb/>
and architectual plans for the<lb/>
oroposed hi iilHinets.<lb/>
The completed expansion<lb/>
plans called for a campus of 24<lb/>
buildings to be erected in three<lb/>
rows.<lb/>
Fronting Fifth Street were<lb/>
to be the following buildings:<lb/>
a girls' dormitory (Wilson),<lb/>
Administration-Classroom<lb/>
Building .Old Austin), and<lb/>
3rd floor north, now open for<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Just look for the light in the<lb/>
window. Inquire at desk for<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
THE WELL CRAFTED LEG<lb/>
A reminder that it i?, after all. our most famous g'?$<lb/>
trousers in every possible fabric, color and pat errriui <lb/>
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offinanfem<lb/>
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uiree girls' dormitories (Jarvis,<lb/>
Fleming, and Cotten). Across<lb/>
"Wright Oval" were to be a<lb/>
library (Whichard), and two<lb/>
teachers' dormitories (Only<lb/>
one, Ragsdale, was built).<lb/>
Immediately behind these<lb/>
buildings was to be another<lb/>
row. Behind these were to be<lb/>
eight faculty houses (four of<lb/>
these now face Eighth Street),<lb/>
a hospital, the power<lb/>
plant-laundry, and an athletic<lb/>
field with a quarter-mile track.<lb/>
Along with some of the<lb/>
early Underwood reports was<lb/>
submitted a water color<lb/>
drawing of the future campus.<lb/>
This drawing was<lb/>
"rediscovered" during a<lb/>
renovation of Old Austin in<lb/>
the 1950's. J.N. Caprall, then<lb/>
head of the Maintenance<lb/>
Department, saved the drawing<lb/>
The amount of the 1923<lb/>
appropriations limited the<lb/>
amount of the Miller-Under-<lb/>
wood plans that could be<lb/>
completed. When other<lb/>
appropriations were granted in<lb/>
1929, newer and more<lb/>
up-to-date plans were drawn<lb/>
up and followed.<lb/>
Today, only the drawing<lb/>
remains to remind us of how<lb/>
ECTC was supposed to look.<lb/>
CITY LAUNDERETTE<lb/>
813 Evans St Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Leave your laundry, we do it for you.<lb/>
Folding ? 1-hr. Laundry Service<lb/>
Laundry 9V2 lbs. 83c, Folded 93c<lb/>
DRY CLEANING and SHIRTS<lb/>
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Jjest's<lb/>
402 EVANS STREET<lb/>
752-3175<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0006"/><lb/>
?' "<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
White lectures Wednesday on 'McLuhan'<lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
Perhaps the greatest single<lb/>
influence on the science of<lb/>
communication in the<lb/>
twentieth century has been the<lb/>
work of one man, Marshall<lb/>
McLuhan.<lb/>
McLuhan's "Understanding<lb/>
Media" and "The Medium Is<lb/>
the Massage" are canonical<lb/>
books in the study of media<lb/>
technology.<lb/>
McLuhan, the man, his<lb/>
insights, and his contributions<lb/>
to the art of mass<lb/>
communication, will be the<lb/>
subject of a lecture to oe<lb/>
presented by Dr. William<lb/>
White, assistant professor of<lb/>
history at East Carolina<lb/>
University, Wednesday, May<lb/>
21, at 8 p.m. in room 214 of<lb/>
Joyner Library on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
MCLUHAN-WATCHER<lb/>
White, a veteran<lb/>
'M c L u h an-watcher<lb/>
commented on the complexity<lb/>
of any attempted analysis of<lb/>
McLuhan's work:<lb/>
"McLuhan rightly comes<lb/>
under many headings. His<lb/>
career has spanned many<lb/>
areas<lb/>
White sees McLuhan's<lb/>
primary role as that of a<lb/>
synthesizer of "other peoples'<lb/>
work" whose contributions lie<lb/>
in his insights into the<lb/>
philosophy of media<lb/>
technology.<lb/>
"One of McLuhan's greatest<lb/>
advantages according to<lb/>
White, "is the fact that he is<lb/>
not an American. He's a<lb/>
Canadian<lb/>
As an outside observer,<lb/>
McLuhan has been able to gain<lb/>
a true sense of perspective on<lb/>
that which White termed "the<lb/>
fantastic impact of media<lb/>
technology in American<lb/>
society<lb/>
KLH<lb/>
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TURNTABLE: Garrard<lb/>
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CONTROLS: Bass and<lb/>
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SPEAKERS: Two of the<lb/>
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FLEXIBILITY: Inputs for<lb/>
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Tape recordings may be made<lb/>
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SUGGESTED PRICE:<lb/>
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automatically, whether on<lb/>
automatic or manual.)<lb/>
The M?del Eleven is stereophonic. It can fill a<lb/>
living room with the kind of sound once availabe only<lb/>
from massive, expensive and decidedly importable<lb/>
sound systems. As a matter of fact if we hadn't been<lb/>
able to make it do that we wouldn't have built it<lb/>
You can take any portable, but how many can you<lb/>
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nc,<lb/>
"The most profound thing<lb/>
that he has done is to set his<lb/>
point of view (in<lb/>
"Understanding Media") "vix.<lb/>
a vix with General Sarnoff of<lb/>
Record Corporation of<lb/>
America<lb/>
TV-NO CAN-OPENER<lb/>
"In the late 1930's when<lb/>
RCA was trying to produce<lb/>
commercial television<lb/>
apparatus, Sarnoff made a<lb/>
statement that television was a<lb/>
neutral medium and, like a<lb/>
can-opener, it could be used<lb/>
for good or evil. It can be used<lb/>
to open a can of soda, or it can<lb/>
be used as a murder weapon.<lb/>
In other words, the end<lb/>
conforms the means<lb/>
McLuhan contradicted this<lb/>
statement, White said, by<lb/>
asserting that "elaborate<lb/>
technological inventions are<lb/>
not only manipulated by their<lb/>
operators, but they have<lb/>
feedback potential upon their<lb/>
operators. The notion of<lb/>
technological feedback is<lb/>
really McLuhan's greatest<lb/>
insight<lb/>
White sees McLuhan as a<lb/>
great innovator: whose<lb/>
conclusions, like the<lb/>
conclusions of other<lb/>
innovators such as Herbert<lb/>
Marcuse and Cyrus Gordon,<lb/>
are subject to speculation.<lb/>
QUACKERY AND INSIGHT<lb/>
"Four-fifths of McLuhan's<lb/>
work (like Marcuse's and<lb/>
Gordon's) is according to<lb/>
White, "probably sheer<lb/>
quackery. But one-fifth of his<lb/>
work is such an important<lb/>
insight that anyone who wants<lb/>
to be germane to the twentieth<lb/>
century cannot afford to<lb/>
overlook it<lb/>
White sees McLuhan's<lb/>
second great contribution as<lb/>
the realization that: "Nuances,<lb/>
subtle changes in the cultural<lb/>
patterns in the great industrial<lb/>
states, are first exhibited by<lb/>
the artist, not the intellectual,<lb/>
the professor, the poll-taker,<lb/>
or the statistician. Basically<lb/>
the artist feels the first<lb/>
dawning of a new cultural<lb/>
entity, a new cultural milieu<lb/>
White concludes that<lb/>
McLuhan uses both these<lb/>
insights in formulating his<lb/>
"final great conclusion<lb/>
which is "perhaps best stated<lb/>
in one of his newer books<lb/>
"War and Peace in the Global<lb/>
village<lb/>
UNITARY TRIBE<lb/>
"He lays out, in great<lb/>
detail, the fact that modern<lb/>
technology is driving people<lb/>
closer and closer to the point<lb/>
that they are actually<lb/>
participant in each others' lives<lb/>
to the degree that a whole<lb/>
nation, such as the United<lb/>
States, Canada, or Great<lb/>
Britain- any industrialized<lb/>
nation, becomes a unitary<lb/>
tribe living in a global village<lb/>
This is the "ultimate<lb/>
conclusion as White sees it,<lb/>
that McLuhan reaches.<lb/>
White's study of McLuhan<lb/>
has extended over a number of<lb/>
years and includes an analysis<lb/>
of the manner in which<lb/>
McLuhan makes his<lb/>
presentation: "Hr uses th<lb/>
typical existential approach<lb/>
He states his views on the first<lb/>
page- the rest of the book is<lb/>
merely a restatement and<lb/>
reapplication of these views"<lb/>
White stated that<lb/>
McLuhan's sense 0f<lb/>
perspective is so keen that<lb/>
"the people of the twenty-first<lb/>
century will consider him one<lb/>
of the great commentators of<lb/>
our century<lb/>
No newcomer to the<lb/>
television medium, White has<lb/>
made over 100 television<lb/>
appearances. In addition, he<lb/>
has written several articles on<lb/>
McLuhan for publication.<lb/>
The lecture Wednesday<lb/>
night will be illustrated by<lb/>
slides reproducing McLuhan's<lb/>
choices of photographs and<lb/>
artwork indicative of "new"<lb/>
media techniques.<lb/>
White emphasized the<lb/>
importance of McLuhan's<lb/>
contributions to the science of<lb/>
media technology: "I think<lb/>
McLuhan will become a major<lb/>
source of doctoral<lb/>
dissertations in the years to<lb/>
come. He will be a major name<lb/>
to reckon with<lb/>
McLuhan's techniques and<lb/>
conclusions have become<lb/>
primary works in the field of<lb/>
mass communication. His<lb/>
influence over media<lb/>
innovations is growing more<lb/>
pervasive every day. Soon the<lb/>
entire world will begin to feel<lb/>
the effects of McLuhan's<lb/>
message about the medium,<lb/>
according to White.<lb/>
YOU LOST $30 THIS YEAR<lb/>
DON'T LOSE MORE<lb/>
students' re?rthlWitn9Ht0ta K?SVhe " f0r VOUr text books P?ses to other<lb/>
students. Let these students buy directly from you and not the middle man.<lb/>
the blUe bOOk Jhe. bl"e book of ified ads will advertise your<lb/>
nf textbooks in a special section. Not only do you sell far<lb/>
Vted m?re' but the buYer can buy r less.<lb/>
??<lb/>
ads<lb/>
The cost of this service is surprising, 112 of what you<lb/>
have been paying-just $.25 for each book.<lb/>
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Sizes Petite, Med. Med. tall, Tall<lb/>
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We will deliver.<lb/>
The sprini<lb/>
were honored<lb/>
night with 48<lb/>
four squads t<lb/>
as letter winne<lb/>
Highlight <lb/>
was recognitic<lb/>
team, which w<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
joining the sw<lb/>
the champions<lb/>
current school<lb/>
The track<lb/>
second in tl<lb/>
baseball's final<lb/>
undeterminei<lb/>
finished sixth.<lb/>
PRAISES <lb/>
Athletic dir<lb/>
Stasavich laude<lb/>
for their effc<lb/>
particularly hig<lb/>
of Coach Johr<lb/>
his golf team.<lb/>
Stasavich po<lb/>
Welborn also gu<lb/>
wrestling team 1<lb/>
in the confere<lb/>
team had finish<lb/>
pitt pf<lb/>
dairy<lb/>
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8 VqIu? Discour<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0007"/><lb/>
???;?<lb/>
'A<lb/>
May 20. I96?.<lb/>
 t?n wins Southern Conference title for 1??<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
entation: "Hr uses the<lb/>
cal ex.stential approach<lb/>
tates his views on the first<lb/>
the rest of the book is<lb/>
V a restatement and<lb/>
plication of these views"<lb/>
'hite stated that<lb/>
Luhan's sense 0f<lb/>
)ective is so keen that<lb/>
people of the twenty-first<lb/>
iry will consider him one<lb/>
ie great commentators of<lb/>
entury<lb/>
0 newcomer to the<lb/>
sion medium, White has<lb/>
1 over 100 television<lb/>
trances. In addition, he<lb/>
written several articles on<lb/>
han for publication.<lb/>
ie lecture Wednesday<lb/>
will be illustrated by<lb/>
reproducing McLuhan's<lb/>
is of photographs and<lb/>
rk indicative of "new"<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
ite emphasized the<lb/>
rtance of McLuhan's<lb/>
Dutions to the science of<lb/>
technology: "I think<lb/>
tan will become a major<lb/>
c e of d o c t oral<lb/>
ations in the years to<lb/>
He will be a major name<lb/>
on with<lb/>
.uhan's techniques and<lb/>
jsions have become<lb/>
 works in the field of<lb/>
communication. His<lb/>
?nce over media<lb/>
ions is growing more<lb/>
'e every day. Soon the<lb/>
vorld will begin to feel<lb/>
ffects of McLuhan's<lb/>
1 about the medium,<lb/>
ig to White.<lb/>
R<lb/>
ks passes to other<lb/>
? middle man.<lb/>
advertise your<lb/>
y do you sell far<lb/>
112 of what you<lb/>
ok.<lb/>
ihades $1.33<lb/>
Sportsbanquef held S0dnaracch? fit<lb/>
The spring sports teams<lb/>
were honored here Thursday<lb/>
night with 48 members of the<lb/>
four squads being recognized<lb/>
as letter winners.<lb/>
Highlight of the banquet<lb/>
was recognition of the golf<lb/>
team, which won the Southern<lb/>
Conference Championship,<lb/>
joining the swimming team in<lb/>
the championship fold for the<lb/>
current school year.<lb/>
The track team finished<lb/>
second in the conference,<lb/>
baseball's final position is still<lb/>
undetermined and tennis<lb/>
finished sixth.<lb/>
PRAISES GOLFERS<lb/>
Athletic director Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich lauded the athletes<lb/>
for their efforts, but was<lb/>
particularly high in his praise<lb/>
of Coach John Welborn and<lb/>
his golf team.<lb/>
Stasavich pointed out that<lb/>
Welborn also guided the Pirate<lb/>
wrestling team to second place<lb/>
in the conference. The golf<lb/>
team had finished second the<lb/>
year before by three strokes<lb/>
and won the chanpionship this<lb/>
year by seven strokes.<lb/>
Dr- Leo Jenkins said the<lb/>
golf team's championship is<lb/>
another step in marking the<lb/>
Pirate athletic program one to<lb/>
be reckoned with<lb/>
"It is my sincere wish to<lb/>
have champions or<lb/>
championship contenders in all<lb/>
sports Jenkins said. "We will<lb/>
continue to strive in upgrading<lb/>
all our programs<lb/>
1969 Letter Winners:<lb/>
Golf: Mike Schlueter<lb/>
Marshall Utterson, Vernon<lb/>
Tyson, Joe Tyson, Ray<lb/>
Sharpe, Vance Whicker and<lb/>
Phil Wallace.<lb/>
Tennis: Graham Felton, Bill<lb/>
Ransome, Bobby Vick, Bruce<lb/>
Linton, Mike Grady, David<lb/>
Guilford, and Bill Van<lb/>
Middlesworth.<lb/>
Track: Robert Alexander,<lb/>
Barry Beasley, James Cargill,<lb/>
Jerry Covington, Lanny Davis,<lb/>
Paige Davis, Joe Day, Joe<lb/>
nop<lb/>
ks<lb/>
)-H<lb/>
uou<lb/>
Furcron, Donald Jayroe<lb/>
James Kidd, Rob Paul Ty<lb/>
Roork, Neill Ross, Ken Voss<lb/>
Bill Wooten.<lb/>
Baseball: Roy Tayor(<lb/>
Leonard Dowd, Stanley<lb/>
Sneeden, Ken Graver, Wayne<lb/>
Vick, Dennis Vick, Richard<lb/>
Corrada, Jerry Rawls, Jimmy<lb/>
Lamer, Carey Anderson<lb/>
Robert Norman, David<lb/>
Shields, Russell Edmundson<lb/>
Rick Glover, Mitchell Hughes<lb/>
Ron Hastings, Willie Robinson'<lb/>
John Weaver, and Bob Fisher!<lb/>
'Bucs' adds<lb/>
third session<lb/>
A third session has been<lb/>
added for the second annual<lb/>
Buccaneer Basketball school to<lb/>
be held at Minges Coliseum on<lb/>
the East Carolina Campus this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn said the<lb/>
first session will be June 8-14,<lb/>
the second June 15-21, and<lb/>
the third July 20-26. Tuition<lb/>
for each session is $60 for<lb/>
dormitory students and $32<lb/>
for day studen Inquiries should<lb/>
be mailed to Kirk Stewart,<lb/>
camp supervisor, Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, Greenville, North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
ijitt plaza<lb/>
dairy bar<lb/>
25 Delicicis Flavor<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a Delicious Banua<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
64 By-Pass, Greenville<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha won the<lb/>
Fraternity League's regular<lb/>
season race with an 11-1<lb/>
rrcord for the year. They<lb/>
edged out Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
for the title despite Sigma Phi<lb/>
having handed Lambda Chi<lb/>
their only loss of the year<lb/>
during the last week of play.<lb/>
Going into the last week of<lb/>
regular season play. Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha boasted a perfect<lb/>
11-0 record while Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon remained in<lb/>
contention by compiling a 9-1<lb/>
record. On Monday Sigma Phi<lb/>
crushed Mpha Epsilon Pi by<lb/>
an 18-3 score and headed into<lb/>
the showdown with Lambda<lb/>
Chi the next day with a chance<lb/>
to tie the standings. They<lb/>
appeared to take control of<lb/>
the race by defeating Lambda<lb/>
Chi by an 8 to 2 tally. This<lb/>
finished the regular season for<lb/>
Lambda Chi but Sigma Phi had<lb/>
one game to play which gave<lb/>
them a chance to take sole<lb/>
possission of the first place<lb/>
position. Sigma Phi was<lb/>
disappointed however, as they<lb/>
were tripped up by Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau 5 to 3. This made Sigma<lb/>
Phi 11-2 for the year and gave<lb/>
Lambda Chi first place.<lb/>
In third place behind Sigma<lb/>
Phi, Pi Kappa Phi finished with<lb/>
a 9-2 record. In fourth place<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau compiled a 7-2<lb/>
record. Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
finished in fifth place with a<lb/>
9-3 record. Phi Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
finished in sixth place with a<lb/>
8-4 record. Delta Sigma Pi<lb/>
took seventh place with a 6-4<lb/>
record whil Kappa Sigma<lb/>
finished in eithth place with a<lb/>
7-5 record. Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
rounds out the winning teams<lb/>
with a 5-4 record, good for<lb/>
ninth place.<lb/>
The Yankees finished<lb/>
strong with a perfect regular<lb/>
season 9-0 record to clinch the<lb/>
Independent League Softball<lb/>
Championship.<lb/>
The Yankees rolled past the<lb/>
Coach and Four by an 8 to 3<lb/>
margin and the Braves by a 7<lb/>
to 3 tally and then knocked<lb/>
off their closest challenger.<lb/>
They knocked off the Way<lb/>
House by an 8 to 6 score to<lb/>
close the regular season<lb/>
undefeated.<lb/>
The Way House finished in<lb/>
second place with a 7-2 record<lb/>
followed by the Rebels in<lb/>
third place with a 6-2 record<lb/>
and the Scotts in fourth place<lb/>
with a 7-3 record. Tied with<lb/>
5-3 records for fifth place are<lb/>
the Coach and Four, the<lb/>
Turkeys, and the Monarchs.<lb/>
? 3-HOlS 8HTKT SKBYICB<lb/>
? 1-HOUB CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DEITE-Df CURB SEKVICK<lb/>
Mb ui Claries 81<lb/>
Cwnplete UumAfy and Dry<lb/>
Join<lb/>
The Jj? Crowd<lb/>
Pizza m<lb/>
421 Trecnville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Paaa)<lb/>
DINE INK or TAKE OUT<lb/>
L'al! Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 766-9991<lb/>
ECU GIRLS :<lb/>
This summer live in air conditioned comfort at<lb/>
BUCCANEER COURT<lb/>
approved housemother<lb/>
contact<lb/>
Mrs. Nancy Singleton<lb/>
b6-3561<lb/>
We think our prices are the<lb/>
lowest in town<lb/>
Come see-Come save<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS<lb/>
2 locations m Greenville<lb/>
B9 Vol rv 2 locations m oreenvwe<lb/>
fyVon! r!lco?n? Drugs 2800 E.lOthW fill prescriptions<lb/>
,u Discount Downtown 319 Evans St.<lb/>
WHY BUY YOUR DIAMOND FROM US9<lb/>
There are over 28.000 jewclei-s. retail and wholesale, who will be glad to sell you a dia.<lb/>
mond.<lb/>
First of all we have successiully passed a diamond grading examination. Such know-<lb/>
ledge cncbler. us to buy loose diamonds diiect from the diamond cutter thereby eliminating<lb/>
the broker, manufacturer and wholesaler.<lb/>
Second, you the customer will 'ie shown the exact quality and grade of the diamond<lb/>
you purchase.<lb/>
Last, because of our knowledge of diamond f rading and market prices, we buy at the<lb/>
lowest price. The cost to our customer is actually BELOW the wholesa'e level. In fact, bnng<lb/>
us th? picture of any diamond jewelry you select from any wholesale catalog and we will<lb/>
duplicate it for less than the shown wholesale price. We have done this on many occasions.<lb/>
We know diamonds. We know the diamond market.<lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELERS<lb/>
Registered Jewelers ? Certified Gemologist AGS<lb/>
414 Evans 5treet<lb/>
SEE GEORGE LAUTARES ECU 1941<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
? ft<lb/>
<lb/>
Outstanding 'profs' cited<lb/>
As students throughout the country cry out for<lb/>
educational reform course relevancy, student<lb/>
involvement and better faculty members, a question<lb/>
arises in this editor's mind about what a faculty<lb/>
member Cyi do to quell this unrest and return<lb/>
normalcy to the nation's universities.<lb/>
The stereotyped professor is iittle more than a<lb/>
professor. He attends lectures, gives notes, grades<lb/>
tests and assigns grades for the student's quarterly<lb/>
work. As for becoming involved with the student and<lb/>
trying to inspire him to greater intellectual<lb/>
achievements, the stereotyped professor does not.<lb/>
But there are many exceptions to this rule. The<lb/>
editorial board of The East Carolinian would like to<lb/>
cite the following professors and administrators as<lb/>
flagrant violators of the "apathetic faculty" rule.<lb/>
The following faculty members were singled out<lb/>
because of their unusual teaching ability, their ability<lb/>
to inspire their students, their willingness to involve<lb/>
themselves with the students' problems and their<lb/>
all-around excellency in their profession.<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Hester, Chairman of the Department of<lb/>
English;<lb/>
Ira L. Baker, Professor of Journalism, Department<lb/>
of English;<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, Assistant Dean of Student<lb/>
A fairs;<lb/>
Miss Grace Ellenburg, Asst. Professor of French,<lb/>
Department of Romance Languages;<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, Chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Drama and Speech;<lb/>
Herbert Carlton, Asst. Professor of Political<lb/>
Science;<lb/>
Miss Janice Hardison, Asst. Professor of English;<lb/>
Dr. William White, Asst. Professor of History;<lb/>
Dr. Ralph Napp, Assoc. Professor of Sociology;<lb/>
Dr. E.C. Simpson, Professor of Biology;<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand, Director of Counseling<lb/>
Services;<lb/>
Dr. Fred Irons, Director of Student Health<lb/>
Services;<lb/>
Dr. Jean Lowry, Professor of Geology;<lb/>
Dr. Phillip Adler, Assoc. Professor of History;<lb/>
Dr. J. Ray Lanfear, Asst. Professor of Philosophy.<lb/>
Dr. Jack Thornton, Assoc. Professor of<lb/>
Economics;<lb/>
Dr. Fred Sorensen, Assoc. Professor of<lb/>
English.<lb/>
Disproportionate raise seen<lb/>
The struggle to n-et the rising costs of higher<lb/>
education in Norf- Carolina is again expressing itself<lb/>
in a General As: ,ibly drive for higher out of state<lb/>
tuituin rates at the universities and colleges of this<lb/>
state.<lb/>
House Bill 1001 is "an act to increase and fix tuition<lb/>
fees for nonresident students in certain state<lb/>
insitutions of higher education<lb/>
This bill, which was referred to the House<lb/>
Committee on Higher Education on May 8, was<lb/>
sponsored by 65 members of this august body.<lb/>
In this committee it now rests. And rest it should<lb/>
for an examination of the operative clause of this bill<lb/>
reveals that the proposed change is to increase<lb/>
nonresident fees to "an amount equal to seven times<lb/>
the amount of tuition charged to resident students"<lb/>
at the Consolidated University and "an amount equal<lb/>
to six times the tuition fees charged to resident<lb/>
students" at the Regional Universities.<lb/>
If the bill is reported favorably from committee, it<lb/>
would put the tuition rate for going to school at ECU<lb/>
on a par with that at Duke University.<lb/>
This editor has heard the comments of many out<lb/>
of state students who insist that if this raise in tuition<lb/>
is approved, they will be financially unable to go to<lb/>
school at this university. This would indeed be<lb/>
unfortunate for this university and for other state<lb/>
supported schools in the state as many of these<lb/>
students are active in student government.<lb/>
The question comes back to whether the state can<lb/>
afford to educate students from other states We ask<lb/>
the question "Can the state of North Carolina and the<lb/>
public institutions in this state afford to lose these<lb/>
students.<lb/>
ecu forum<lb/>
i<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
The time has come to look<lb/>
upon East Carolina as a<lb/>
university and not as a college.<lb/>
When an academic institution<lb/>
is afforded the name<lb/>
"university this is something<lb/>
that should not be taken<lb/>
lightly. A growing educational<lb/>
community must expand in all<lb/>
ways, and not just acquire an<lb/>
outward appearance.<lb/>
Our university has gone<lb/>
further in the past five years<lb/>
than any other school of<lb/>
higher education in North<lb/>
Carolina. We have seen the<lb/>
enoumous changes in the<lb/>
physical plant and in the<lb/>
academic curriculum in the<lb/>
past two years, but in order to<lb/>
be a "university" we must also<lb/>
change in other ways.<lb/>
It seems that in the past<lb/>
years, campus politics have<lb/>
been dominated and dictated<lb/>
by a few select members of<lb/>
one of the select parties. I<lb/>
believe that these select<lb/>
members were and are<lb/>
primarily concerned with<lb/>
relationships between and<lb/>
among themselves. I do not<lb/>
feel that these select people<lb/>
had or have any type of<lb/>
working relationship with the<lb/>
majority of the student body.<lb/>
It is time for a change. It is<lb/>
time for the entire student<lb/>
body to understand that it as a<lb/>
whole should be involved in<lb/>
student politics. It is time that<lb/>
the independents of this<lb/>
"university" unite and show<lb/>
the "select few" that we<lb/>
actually care.<lb/>
Robert K. Adams II<lb/>
Editor's Note:<lb/>
This letter was written in<lb/>
reply to a letter in the May 16<lb/>
issue of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Jeronczyk and<lb/>
Mr. Kaplinski,<lb/>
As a member of the black<lb/>
minority of this fine liberal<lb/>
University, I can symphathize<lb/>
with all your demands. I am<lb/>
quite sure they were written<lb/>
because you, as a minority at<lb/>
ECU, feel that you are being<lb/>
discriminated against.<lb/>
Amazingly, our black<lb/>
demands and your Polish<lb/>
demands seem to coincide.<lb/>
Could there possibly be a note<lb/>
of sarcasm? Or do you truly<lb/>
believe in the theoretical<lb/>
democratic policy and<lb/>
academic freedom?<lb/>
Both our groups share in<lb/>
the belief of nonviolent<lb/>
tactics. Your serious demands<lb/>
for the selling of Polish<lb/>
bowling shirts and the serving<lb/>
of Polish Kilebasi and<lb/>
delicacies is likened to our<lb/>
demand for better wages and<lb/>
treatment of the non-academic<lb/>
employees. Your inference to<lb/>
insulting Polish jokes is similar<lb/>
to our demand for Dixie and<lb/>
Confederate flag insulting our<lb/>
integrity. agree<lb/>
wholeheartedly that other<lb/>
students who need financial<lb/>
aid should have more<lb/>
assistance. And your plea for<lb/>
sitting in the front of the<lb/>
classroom is as pressing as our<lb/>
demand for elimination of<lb/>
professors' discriminatory<lb/>
practices. Honestly, what<lb/>
could be worse than sitting in<lb/>
the back of a dull classroom,<lb/>
or having a professor<lb/>
mispronounce "Negro"?<lb/>
I am very happy to see that<lb/>
you are also interested in<lb/>
stimulating the apathetic<lb/>
minds of the majority of our<lb/>
students. What could be more<lb/>
rewarding than having the<lb/>
Warsaw Boys Choir or<lb/>
controversial speakers<lb/>
discussing the major social<lb/>
problems of our day? It is<lb/>
good to know that the<lb/>
mainstream of our society has<lb/>
pushed aside your heritage,<lb/>
and you too would like your<lb/>
proper place in the history<lb/>
books of the United States<lb/>
Who knows? Maybe we can<lb/>
join forces for our common<lb/>
cause of justice and academic<lb/>
freedom and our problems<lb/>
may be speedily solved.<lb/>
Karen Bethea<lb/>
JForum policy<lb/>
All student f.iculty<lb/>
members, and administrators are<lb/>
urged to express their opinions<lb/>
in writing in the ECU Forum<lb/>
When writing letters to the<lb/>
Forum, the following procedure<lb/>
should be followed-<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/>
the east Carolinian ,<lb/>
lit us dare to read . thhk. speak and mitt  GCw<lb/>
Editor-in Chief pau p. (Chip)Callaway<lb/>
Business Manager  Don Benson<lb/>
Managing EditorPhyllis Bridgeman<lb/>
Production Manager Chuck Kalaf<lb/>
Assistant layout Patience Collie<lb/>
Michael Atkins<lb/>
Co-News EditorsSandy Holland<lb/>
Jimmy Teal<lb/>
Features EditorRobert W. McDowell<lb/>
Sports Editor  Carl Tyer<lb/>
AdvisorVVyatt Brown<lb/>
Consultant  ra Baker<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0009"/><lb/>
. What could be more<lb/>
ig than havinq the<lb/>
Boys Choir or<lb/>
versial speakers<lb/>
g the major social<lb/>
; of our day? It is<lb/>
:o know that the<lb/>
am of our society has<lb/>
aside your heritage,<lb/>
too would like your<lb/>
)lace in the history<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
nows? Maybe we can<lb/>
es for our common<lb/>
justice and academic<lb/>
and our problems<lb/>
leedily solved.<lb/>
Karen Bethea<lb/>
m p<lb/>
ol<lb/>
ICY<lb/>
tu dents, faculty<lb/>
ind administrators are<lb/>
xpress their opinions<lb/>
n the ECU Forum,<lb/>
rriting letters to the<lb/>
! following procedure<lb/>
allowed-<lb/>
should not exceed<lb/>
The Editorial Board<lb/>
right to edit letters<lb/>
to this requirement.<lb/>
ers must be signed<lb/>
ame of the writer.<lb/>
ipon the author's<lb/>
s name may be<lb/>
tides on this page<lb/>
opinions of the<lb/>
tot necessarily those<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
man ,<lb/>
? ? ecJ,<lb/>
ll F. (Chip)Callaway<lb/>
Don Benson<lb/>
. Phyllis Bridgeman<lb/>
Chuck Kalaf<lb/>
. . . . Patience Collie<lb/>
Michael Atkins<lb/>
Sandy Holland<lb/>
Jimmy Teal<lb/>
obert W. McDowell<lb/>
Carl Tyer<lb/>
 Wyatt Brown<lb/>
 Ira Baker<lb/>
T<lb/>
N<lb/>
0)<lb/>
T<lb/>
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(0<lb/>
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Z Q ?<lb/>
Q S ?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039416_0010"/><lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
t<lb/>
??<lb/>
j<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
June 20. iqpg<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834<lb/>
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, president of East Carolina University.<lb/>
Governor Scott<lb/>
visits Greenville<lb/>
By SONNY McLAWHORN<lb/>
"What I'm saying, ladies and<lb/>
gentlemen, is that if we're going<lb/>
to have these things, we are<lb/>
goingto have to pay for them<lb/>
That's the way North Carolina<lb/>
Governor Bob Scott described<lb/>
his tax program in a Saturday,<lb/>
June 14 speech at the Greenville<lb/>
Airport.<lb/>
Scott, at the last stop on a<lb/>
whirlwind tour around the state,<lb/>
was making a last-ditch effort<lb/>
for his revenue package program.<lb/>
The bill suffered a major setback<lb/>
Thursday when it was<lb/>
recommited to the House<lb/>
Finance Committee. Scott<lb/>
vowed he would "take his<lb/>
program to the people" as his<lb/>
father (Gov. Kerr Scott) had<lb/>
done twenty years ago when a<lb/>
road bond measure appeared<lb/>
doomed.<lb/>
East Carolina University is a<lb/>
major beneficiary of the funds<lb/>
to be provided if the tax bill is<lb/>
passed. Included are funds for<lb/>
the proposed two-year medical,<lb/>
as well as for the ECU Institute<lb/>
in Dare County.<lb/>
The administration's tax<lb/>
program includes a five-cent levy<lb/>
on each package of cigarettes, as<lb/>
well as small taxes on whiskey<lb/>
and beer.<lb/>
Pitt County Reps. David Reid<lb/>
and Horton Rountree opposed<lb/>
the measure, on the grounds that<lb/>
Scott could find another source<lb/>
of revenue instead of a<lb/>
nickel-a-pack tax on cigarettes.<lb/>
Reid made the motion which<lb/>
sent the bill back to the Finance<lb/>
Commitee.<lb/>
Funds from the $95.5 revenue<lb/>
package are earmarked for<lb/>
education and health programs<lb/>
throughout the state, especially<lb/>
projects affecting mental health<lb/>
and higher education.<lb/>
University president Leo<lb/>
Jenkins introduced Governor<lb/>
Scott to the crowd of 300<lb/>
assembled at the airport.<lb/>
Dear Students:<lb/>
Welcome to East Carolina University. You and many other American<lb/>
students in universities across the country who today enjoy the finest<lb/>
educational facilities ever offered to any student at any time at any<lb/>
place in world history.<lb/>
You will find that we here are all concerned with one big<lb/>
objective-the dignity of man. As you matriculate here, it is important<lb/>
that you discover the importance of learning to live as well as the means<lb/>
of making a living. In whatever profession you choose, you should seek<lb/>
to become first of all an educated person and then to become a good<lb/>
teacher, lawyer, musician, doctor.<lb/>
In order to achieve this wider goal beyond professionalism, you will<lb/>
need to learn to act purposefully and responsibly both for<lb/>
self-improvement and for social betterment. Thus will you come to<lb/>
realize your fullest individual and corporate dignity, the highest goal of<lb/>
our institution here as it reflects the American dream.<lb/>
I feel confident that you will join all other students in participating<lb/>
in campus activities while striving for academic attainment, and that<lb/>
you will do this in a manner to bring dignity, honor, and respect to<lb/>
yourselves, your family, and your university.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
? CAJfOAA<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins<lb/>
Astudent'sguid<lb/>
to government<lb/>
As incoming freshman you<lb/>
will be filled with queries and<lb/>
confusion. To help you settle in<lb/>
your new life and get into the<lb/>
mainstream of University<lb/>
life.here are a few explanations<lb/>
of campus organizations.<lb/>
j<lb/>
Ill<lb/>
Student Government Association, 1969-197fJ<lb/>
SoSm ?b W?-tllV' Vice-Preside"t; Carolyn Breedlove, secretary; John<lb/>
Schof.eld, present; S.p Beamon, historian and Gary Gasperini, treasurer<lb/>
STUDENT GOVERNMENT<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association is composed of<lb/>
representatives elected by the<lb/>
student body from within it's<lb/>
own ranks. This organization<lb/>
oversees the disbursement of<lb/>
student funds, enactment of<lb/>
student pol icies, and<lb/>
establishment and enforcement of<lb/>
student regulations. The SGA<lb/>
also serves as the supervisory<lb/>
agent for all campus<lb/>
publications, the entertainment<lb/>
series, and all recognized<lb/>
organizations and activities. As<lb/>
Freshmen you are urged to seek<lb/>
positions as SGA legislators or<lb/>
class officers during the fall<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
For those interested, the<lb/>
campus has two political parties.<lb/>
These are the Student Party and<lb/>
the University Party. Howev9r,<lb/>
participation in campus politics<lb/>
is not limited to these two<lb/>
parties.<lb/>
ECU JUDICIAL SYSTEM<lb/>
The Men's and Women's<lb/>
Honor Councils, the Men's and<lb/>
Women's Judiciaries, form the<lb/>
Judicial Branch of the SGA. The<lb/>
Honor Councils hold<lb/>
jurisdiction on all cases which<lb/>
involve direct violation of the<lb/>
Honor Code. The Judiciaries<lb/>
hold original jurisdiction on all<lb/>
cases which do not involve an<lb/>
Honor Code violation and which<lb/>
do not involve the suspension or<lb/>
expulsion of a student.<lb/>
During the past year, a new<lb/>
University Evaluation Board , a<lb/>
new University Board, and a<lb/>
revision of the Review Board were<lb/>
approved and made a part of the<lb/>
SGA constitution.<lb/>
The University Evaluation<lb/>
Board will deal exclusively with<lb/>
drug violations and shall be<lb/>
composed of a psychiatrist, a<lb/>
psychologist, and a medical<lb/>
doctor.<lb/>
The University Board will deal<lb/>
with violations of riot and<lb/>
demonstration regulations of the<lb/>
university and referred<lb/>
jurisdiction from other councils.<lb/>
The Review Board shall act as<lb/>
the final appelate body on all<lb/>
cases except those from the<lb/>
Women's House Councils and<lb/>
the Men's Residence Council<lb/>
Court.<lb/>
The WHC and MRC cases will<lb/>
be referred first to the<lb/>
(continued on page 6)<lb/>
The purp<lb/>
student-owned<lb/>
THE EAST CA<lb/>
campus events<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0011"/><lb/>
1969<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 20. iqpg<lb/>
de<lb/>
r<lb/>
all cases which<lb/>
olation of the<lb/>
"he Judiciaries<lb/>
isdiction on all<lb/>
not involve an<lb/>
ation and which<lb/>
e suspension or<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
st year, a new<lb/>
tion Board , a<lb/>
Board, and a<lb/>
view Board were<lb/>
ie a part of the<lb/>
ty Evaluation<lb/>
clusively with<lb/>
and shall be<lb/>
psychiatrist, a<lb/>
id a medical<lb/>
3oard will deal<lb/>
of riot and<lb/>
ulations of the<lb/>
id referred<lb/>
ther councils.<lb/>
?rd shall act as<lb/>
! body on all<lb/>
se from the<lb/>
Councils and<lb/>
ice Council<lb/>
IRC cases will<lb/>
rst to the<lb/>
age 6)<lb/>
Campus publications strive<lb/>
to inform student population<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
The purpose of the<lb/>
student owned and operated<lb/>
publications is twofold. The<lb/>
four main publications on the<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
campus strive to provide all -<lb/>
students with information<lb/>
about the events and people<lb/>
around them and to give the<lb/>
students an opportunity to<lb/>
express themselves in a variety<lb/>
of ways through journalism.<lb/>
Several hundred students are<lb/>
involved in the writing,<lb/>
editing, making-up, typing,<lb/>
and planning of these four<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
The student .ewspaper is<lb/>
now beginning its 44th year<lb/>
of publication as the<lb/>
"students' voice" of campus<lb/>
affairs and opinions.<lb/>
Operating under the theme of<lb/>
"Let us dare to read, think,<lb/>
speak and write the East<lb/>
Carolinian strives to provide<lb/>
the students with factual,<lb/>
unbiased information about<lb/>
events concerning students,<lb/>
and to giving them a chance<lb/>
to express their opinions<lb/>
through the use of its ECU<lb/>
Forum.<lb/>
New plans for the fall<lb/>
publications, edited by Paul<lb/>
F. (Chip) Calloway, include<lb/>
three publications weekly<lb/>
which will be delivered to<lb/>
each dormitory, the main<lb/>
cafeterias, the library, and<lb/>
designated areas in Wright<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Last spring two new<lb/>
aspects of the publishing of<lb/>
the paper were begun. The<lb/>
East Carolinian gained a "new<lb/>
look" with the use of offset<lb/>
printing, and gained financial<lb/>
independence from the SGA.<lb/>
Now it depends on advertising<lb/>
and subscriptions for funds<lb/>
for operations.<lb/>
The newspaper covers a<lb/>
variety of news including<lb/>
campus events, sports,<lb/>
organizational news, state and<lb/>
national news of interest to<lb/>
1 students, editorials, and<lb/>
advertisements.<lb/>
Letters to the Editor are<lb/>
Printed in the ECU Forum.<lb/>
?Pln'?ns for or against an<lb/>
ideal or topic are welcomed in<lb/>
this popular and widely read<lb/>
section of the paper.<lb/>
Any interested ECU<lb/>
student may apply for a<lb/>
position on the staff of the<lb/>
East Carolinian by contacting<lb/>
the editor or managing editor<lb/>
on the third floor of Wright<lb/>
Building. Salaried positions<lb/>
may be available.<lb/>
THEBUCCANNEER<lb/>
The Buccanneer, the ECU<lb/>
yearbook is released in the<lb/>
spring of each academic year.<lb/>
It attempts to capture the<lb/>
events of the school year in<lb/>
book form to provide a<lb/>
valuable memory book and<lb/>
historical record for the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
This year's Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
will be Miss Donna Dixon,<lb/>
who hopes that the<lb/>
Buccanneer will receive an<lb/>
Ail-American rating.<lb/>
Staff membership is open<lb/>
to all interested students,<lb/>
regardless of their<lb/>
classification and generally<lb/>
consists of approximately 30<lb/>
persons, some of whom are<lb/>
salaried.<lb/>
The editor usually holds an<lb/>
organizational meeting at the<lb/>
beginning of the school year<lb/>
to obtain i n terested<lb/>
personnel.<lb/>
The office is located on the<lb/>
third floor of Wright Building<lb/>
and interested students should<lb/>
apply for a position on the<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
THE REBEL<lb/>
The Rebel, the award<lb/>
winning literary magazine of<lb/>
ECU, provides students with<lb/>
an opportunity to express<lb/>
themselves through fiction,<lb/>
poetry, satire, and art.<lb/>
Published by students once<lb/>
a quarter, with an occasional<lb/>
supplementary issue, The<lb/>
Rebel has won recognition as<lb/>
one of the nation's best<lb/>
college publications. It has<lb/>
received Ail-American ratings<lb/>
for many past issues.<lb/>
Rodney Ketner will edit<lb/>
this year's magazine. Students<lb/>
are encouraged to apply for a<lb/>
staff position and to submit<lb/>
their literary<lb/>
Rebel.<lb/>
work to The<lb/>
Computer takes over<lb/>
umpus registration day<lb/>
THE KEY<lb/>
In an attempt to keep<lb/>
students informed about<lb/>
organizations, policies, and<lb/>
activities of ECU, and to serve<lb/>
as a reference book on those<lb/>
things, The Key is distributed<lb/>
to each student once a year.<lb/>
Included in the publication<lb/>
are short descriptions of all<lb/>
services, activities,<lb/>
departments, and<lb/>
organizations on this campus.<lb/>
Also covered by The Key are<lb/>
the regulations for both male<lb/>
and female students, an<lb/>
explanation of the judiciary<lb/>
system, the General Election<lb/>
rules, and the constitution of<lb/>
the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
This year's editor of The<lb/>
Key, Bob Robinson, hopes<lb/>
that The Key will be released<lb/>
to the students soon, but a<lb/>
delay in publication occurred<lb/>
this past spring due to some<lb/>
late revisions in the Judicial<lb/>
System.<lb/>
Publications compose an intergal proportion of ECU<lb/>
extra-curricular activities. Students are encouraged to<lb/>
participate in these campus communication media.<lb/>
WECU fills S'x speakers named<lb/>
radio airway for lecture series<lb/>
frenzied, new,<lb/>
talent seeking<lb/>
Registration Day-long lines<lb/>
and endless frustrations. But an<lb/>
"wHy new vista has just been<lb/>
Jd before yr You've been<lb/>
Jpapated fro, the drudgery<lb/>
nJ!C?ndary education and<lb/>
pusned into a<lb/>
COniPuterized<lb/>
world.<lb/>
excfiaT name haS been<lb/>
'BM Tfirf f?r a number and an<lb/>
where C?mputer wiH te" Vou<lb/>
h ? 90, when to go and<lb/>
(to. yet tnere- This<lb/>
CT'Zati0n is s??what<lb/>
Love V?Ur own advisor-<lb/>
your advisor and he will<lb/>
VOU your<lb/>
WECU Radio is operated by<lb/>
and for the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University, with<lb/>
programming directed by the<lb/>
sounds that the younger<lb/>
generation wants to hear.<lb/>
A Top 57 survey (taken<lb/>
from the fact that the station<lb/>
broadcasts on 570 Khz) is<lb/>
composes each week of the<lb/>
top songs across the country<lb/>
and sent to various radio<lb/>
stations throughout North<lb/>
Carolina and posted in<lb/>
conspicuous places around the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
LONG RANGE PLANS<lb/>
Long range plans tor the<lb/>
station include purchasing a<lb/>
'sound module' (a large glass<lb/>
enclosure which houses a small<lb/>
studio and an announcer) to<lb/>
be located near the University<lb/>
Union and remote broadcasts<lb/>
from the mall to sponsor<lb/>
dances and fund raising drives.<lb/>
WECU broadcasts 12 hours<lb/>
a day during the summer<lb/>
months and longer during the<lb/>
regular sessions of school.<lb/>
During Exams, the station<lb/>
plays solid 'old gold' music<lb/>
twenty four hours as a service<lb/>
for the ECU students.<lb/>
ANNOUNCERS<lb/>
Operating by the<lb/>
carrier-courier method of<lb/>
transmission, WECU does not<lb/>
require Federally issued<lb/>
licenses for its announcers,<lb/>
9ive<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
alloted three<lb/>
every second Tuesday<lb/>
of each third month.<lb/>
Time will become the most<lb/>
improtant part of your campus<lb/>
life. There just doesn't seem to<lb/>
be enough of it. You can spend<lb/>
a year wandering around the<lb/>
campus and stll not see it all.<lb/>
This will make itself evident on<lb/>
"tS describe, 6as, h.u,h N does encourage<lb/>
Carolina perfectly. Activities<lb/>
range from politics to athletics<lb/>
in every form and there is even<lb/>
occasional studying done, but<lb/>
this part of ECU is extremely<lb/>
well hidden.<lb/>
Freshmen-learn to move fast<lb/>
for the giant flunk-out monster <lb/>
lurks in the beer halls.<lb/>
Any interested student may<lb/>
apply for a position on the<lb/>
staff of WECU by contacting<lb/>
the station manager, program<lb/>
director, or chief announcer<lb/>
on the second floor of Joyner<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association has announced six<lb/>
speakers for its I969-I970<lb/>
Lecture Series.<lb/>
Beginning September 18,<lb/>
Stewart L. Udall, former<lb/>
Secretary of the Interior,will<lb/>
speak on "The Value<lb/>
Revolution: Changing<lb/>
America's Priorities<lb/>
October I, Stanton T.<lb/>
Friedman will lecture on<lb/>
"Flying Saucers Are Real<lb/>
This will be an interesting<lb/>
lecture when one considers<lb/>
the pro's and con's of the<lb/>
UFO's sighted by many<lb/>
people throughout the world.<lb/>
One of the highlights of the<lb/>
series will be "An Evening<lb/>
with Bennett Cerf" which will<lb/>
come October 28.<lb/>
John Howard Griffin,<lb/>
editor of Black Like Me, will<lb/>
speak November 13, on the<lb/>
black man's struggle in the<lb/>
deep south as he sw it while<lb/>
disguised as a black man.<lb/>
Griffin dyed his skin and<lb/>
changed his mode of dress to<lb/>
get the. true story of the<lb/>
Negro people when he<lb/>
traveled throughout the south<lb/>
to write his famed novel,<lb/>
Black Like Me.<lb/>
"Witchcraft, Vodoo, and<lb/>
Cannibalisr i in Africa" will be<lb/>
the subject of Jean-Pierre<lb/>
Hallet's lecture on March II.<lb/>
Hallet, famed as a traveler,<lb/>
will describe what he saw<lb/>
while traveling in the jungles<lb/>
of Africa.<lb/>
Harrison Salisbury will<lb/>
round out the series with a<lb/>
talk on "America, Russia,<lb/>
China: Triple Alliance or<lb/>
Three-Way War?" April 6.<lb/>
Dean Rudolph Alexander,<lb/>
Assistant Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs, put the 1969-1970<lb/>
Lecture Series in these words,<lb/>
"This series has, in my<lb/>
opinion, the most variety,<lb/>
with many more well known<lb/>
speakers than we've ever had<lb/>
before here at East Carolina<lb/>
The 1969-1970<lb/>
Travel-Adventure Series, like<lb/>
the Lecture Series promises to<lb/>
be one of the best ever at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"Rainbow Lands of<lb/>
Central America" will open<lb/>
the film series as Thayer<lb/>
Sould shows his films,<lb/>
South America, Panama,<lb/>
Costa Rica, El Salvador, and<lb/>
Guatemala are the main<lb/>
countries visited.<lb/>
January 26 brings<lb/>
distinguished explorer ,<lb/>
scientist, author, lecturer, and<lb/>
photographer. Dr. Arthur C.<lb/>
Twomey and his film "East<lb/>
Africa" to ECU.<lb/>
Ken Armstrong,<lb/>
award-winning corresponderit<lb/>
and documentary film<lb/>
producer, wrings "Vietnam"<lb/>
to ECU February 10.<lb/>
Armstrong brings his objective<lb/>
film to clarify the unique<lb/>
problems involved in Vietnam<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Robert C. Davis travels by<lb/>
plane, boat, jeep and foot<lb/>
across Iceland in his March 19<lb/>
film, "(credible Iceland<lb/>
Geza de Rosner returns to<lb/>
East Carolina for the third<lb/>
time with a new film entitled,<lb/>
"The Navel of the<lb/>
World-Easter Island This<lb/>
film, the last of the series,<lb/>
probes Easter Island,<lb/>
controversial corner of the<lb/>
world, located more than two<lb/>
thousand miles from the<lb/>
nearest mainland, and sixteen<lb/>
hundred from the closest<lb/>
inhabited island.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0012"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Four years of<lb/>
obligation<lb/>
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and black<lb/>
militants are right: in order for a student's education to<lb/>
be meaningful, he must participate. Students have right<lb/>
and a responsibility to participate in all areas of their<lb/>
education.<lb/>
It is the manner of this participation which<lb/>
determines the difference between responsible<lb/>
adherrence to due process and violent abridgement of<lb/>
individual rights. It is the newspaper's duty to encourage<lb/>
the former and discourage the latter.<lb/>
The danger of tyranny, either from the right or from<lb/>
the left, is omnipresent in the American way of life. The<lb/>
one sure way of avoiding dictatorship is the<lb/>
participation of an informed populace in all levels of<lb/>
political process.<lb/>
As freshmen at East Carolina, you have four years of<lb/>
obligation, four years of responsibility to maintain and<lb/>
protect the rights and privileges that others have won<lb/>
for you.<lb/>
These rights have not been easily won. Most of the<lb/>
rights and privileges that students take for granted are<lb/>
the result of many hours of work by a few students for<lb/>
the benefit of the entire student body.<lb/>
Students are seldom completely aware of what they<lb/>
already have here at ECU. We have one of the finest<lb/>
student judiciary systems in the nation. Our Student<lb/>
Government Association is responsible for distributing<lb/>
the second largest student budget in the the nation.<lb/>
Each student has ready means of access to all campus<lb/>
officials?something they didn't have at Columbia<lb/>
University where even the student body president had<lb/>
to wait months to see the president of the university.<lb/>
The channels of communication between students<lb/>
and faculty, between students and administration, are<lb/>
open. We have had a student-faculty-administration<lb/>
forum for discussion and action for over a year. Our<lb/>
Student Bill of Rights is one of the few such documents<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
What's it all worth? Not a thing, unless the students<lb/>
accept their responsibility from past students for future<lb/>
students in maintaining and protecting the rights and<lb/>
privileges that it has taken so long to obtain.<lb/>
Our vested interest<lb/>
"The East Carolinian" has a vested interest- and we<lb/>
are proud of it and tenacious in its exercise.<lb/>
We have a vested interest in truth which we maintain<lb/>
by accurate reporting and knowledgeable analysis of<lb/>
news.<lb/>
We do not have a responsibility to report the majority<lb/>
opinion- or the minority opinion, the opinion of the<lb/>
student body, the faculty, the administration, or the<lb/>
advertisers.<lb/>
We do have a responsibility to present thf truth based<lb/>
on the facts as we know them, to provide impartial and<lb/>
objective coverage of the news, and to comment<lb/>
intelligently on the facts.<lb/>
The views expressed in the editorial columns of "The<lb/>
East Carolinian" represent the views of the Editorial<lb/>
Board and are editorially and financially independent of<lb/>
special interest because we believe that the functioning<lb/>
of a free press in a free society is a sacred trust which<lb/>
cannot- and must not be abbrogated to benefit private<lb/>
ambitions or special interest.<lb/>
We believe in a functioning press, free to serve the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Perhaps the best expression of our purpose is<lb/>
provided by Edmund Travis:<lb/>
A free press is the protagonist<lb/>
and preserver of all rights, the<lb/>
foe and destroyer of all<lb/>
tyrannies. It insures every good<lb/>
cause a hearing and every false<lb/>
doctrine a challenge. It is the<lb/>
servant of Religion, Philosophy,<lb/>
Science and Art, the agent of<lb/>
truth, justice and civilization.<lb/>
Possessing it, no people can be<lb/>
held in intellectual or political<lb/>
bondage. Without it none can be<lb/>
secure agamst any form of<lb/>
enslavement.<lb/>
.1.9 .? -<lb/>
ecu forum<lb/>
Dear Incoming Freshman,<lb/>
Today you officially become<lb/>
students of East Carolina<lb/>
University. This in itself speaks<lb/>
highly of you, for you are a<lb/>
member of a very select group.<lb/>
For every three applications<lb/>
received, only one was accepted.<lb/>
Your average SAT scores are the<lb/>
highest ever on this campus. For<lb/>
this fact, you are to be lauded.<lb/>
I could very easily launch into<lb/>
a discourse on the long, hard<lb/>
road that awaits you and the<lb/>
final culmination four years<lb/>
from now. I could just as easily<lb/>
prepare you for the great<lb/>
adjustment that you must face<lb/>
in September. However, I feel<lb/>
that this would be superfulous.<lb/>
It is something that the<lb/>
individual must face by himself.<lb/>
In no small way, the shock of<lb/>
September will determine the<lb/>
course for the remainder of your<lb/>
life.<lb/>
As President of your Student<lb/>
Government Association, I<lb/>
would like to take this<lb/>
opportunity to tell you of this<lb/>
body -its functions and its<lb/>
perspectives.<lb/>
To govern a campus of 9,500<lb/>
people is no small stake. Facing<lb/>
this responsibility, the many<lb/>
people who serve in the SGA, in<lb/>
the Executive, Legislative, and<lb/>
Judicial branches, are deadly<lb/>
serious in their work. Our<lb/>
budget is approaching $330,000,<lb/>
which is the second largest SGA<lb/>
budget in the nation. The source<lb/>
of our income is dependent<lb/>
upon a specific allotment from<lb/>
the general Activity Fee. From<lb/>
this, approximately one-third is<lb/>
spent on entertainment, which<lb/>
ranges from current popular<lb/>
groups to lectures to popular<lb/>
movies. The remainder of this<lb/>
sum goes toward current SGA<lb/>
projects, which benefit the<lb/>
student body as a whole.<lb/>
At this time, I would like to<lb/>
mention one special project in<lb/>
particular which will begin Fall<lb/>
Quarter. Following a trial period<lb/>
lasting three weeks and an<lb/>
overwhelming endorsement by<lb/>
the students, the SGA will fund<lb/>
a transit system. The system is publish. It is this book that<lb/>
composed of city buses, which explains the University to you.<lb/>
n ?l? r?? !? u u It includes every facet of campus<lb/>
will make regular runs through  <lb/>
campus and to certain l,fe" You are resP?nsible for<lb/>
off-campus locations. reading this book' 0f especial<lb/>
i  a m ? -l importance, is the campus code,<lb/>
I would like to enumerate the K <lb/>
??? e?. a by which you are bound to<lb/>
organization of your Student .  . <lb/>
r??? a .? tu follow, f, by some chance, you<lb/>
Government Association. The , .  ,<lb/>
Cw? n u, u ? -i x are taken before a judicial body<lb/>
Executive branch is composed of .  , , .<lb/>
Draij?? m o -j for vio ation of this code, you<lb/>
a President, Vice-President, ,<lb/>
:???? t afe responsib e for your action,<lb/>
Secretary, Treasurer, and . K<lb/>
ii;?? ai i a i ? whether you are aware of the<lb/>
Historian. Also included in this <lb/>
kro? . ?.??i. xx- violation or not. Ignorance is no<lb/>
branch are the respective officers<lb/>
of each class. Sf' kh<lb/>
T. . ? ,  The SGA is a dynamic body.<lb/>
The legislative branch is  ? .<lb/>
. .If you have an interest in<lb/>
composed of representatives . ?,?<lb/>
?, ? . . , . government, please feel tree to<lb/>
from each dorm and from the  . ' H onQ rlnh.<lb/>
. . . .  , stop by Room 303, Wngnt<lb/>
day students. It is the duty of . K   ?Dnn,?<lb/>
t , . JX  Annex. We need capable people<lb/>
this body to radify all .  , TT JZU.H<lb/>
Drn   . ' and can find a spot that will suit<lb/>
Presidential appointments,<lb/>
-? ? .  your interests.<lb/>
appropriate all money, and ?. .<lb/>
 . , Sincerely,<lb/>
approve policy effecting the . . c . I<lb/>
student body. John Schofield ,<lb/>
The judiciary is composed of () mill pollCY<lb/>
several courts of differing ? I<lb/>
jurisdictions. It is comprised of All students, faculty<lb/>
?u .? . , u i members and administrators OT<lb/>
the individual house councils, ?"???. ?<lb/>
? j - ? u ?, u. urqed to express their opinions<lb/>
and joint Honor Councils, the u,?c" l" ?h- j<lb/>
nn;llor ?.? Qnrr ??,4 u? ' in writing in the ECU Forum.<lb/>
University Board, and the WnenHwritjng ,etters to the<lb/>
Review Board. I might add at f foowmg procedure<lb/>
this point, the Southern ould be followed.<lb/>
Universities Student utters should be concise<lb/>
Government Association, of  ?.<lb/>
 .  and to the point.<lb/>
T?L?t J Tm f? "Length should not exceed<lb/>
that the judicial system of ECU words Jhe EdjtorJa Board<lb/>
IS classified as an area of reserves the right to edit letters<lb/>
excellence. , . cmpnt<lb/>
T, ? A x. to conform to this requirement.<lb/>
I he SGA also finances five  . . , k t;oned<lb/>
. , -All letters must be signeu<lb/>
publications, the East  t tha writer<lb/>
  with the name of the wruer.<lb/>
Carolinian, the newspaper; the ?  ailthor's<lb/>
o l . However, upon the autnor <lb/>
Buccanneer, the yearbook; the '  mai he<lb/>
Course Guide, The Rebel, the "?  name <lb/>
literary magazine; and The Key.  artjces of) thS page<lb/>
The last publication mentioned, reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
The Key, is perhaps the most author, and not necessarily those<lb/>
important publication that we 0f "The East Carolinian<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
"l?t us dan to r$ad. think , sptak and writt ??g<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief Robert W. McDowell<lb/>
Business Manager Cherry Stokes<lb/>
Managing EditorPhyllis Bridgeman<lb/>
Production ManagerLewis Cutler<lb/>
News Editor Gail Burton<lb/>
Features EditorWhitney Hadden<lb/>
Sports Editor  Carl Tyer<lb/>
Consultant  . Ira Baker<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0013"/><lb/>
Page<lb/>
ish. It is this book that<lb/>
ains the University to you.<lb/>
eludes every facet of campus<lb/>
You are responsible for<lb/>
ing this book. Of especial<lb/>
Ktance, is the campus code,<lb/>
which you are bound to<lb/>
iw, If, by some chance, you<lb/>
taken before a judicial body<lb/>
violation of this code, you<lb/>
esponsible for your action,<lb/>
her you are aware of the<lb/>
tion or not. Ignorance is no<lb/>
se.<lb/>
le SGA is a dynamic body.<lb/>
ou have an interest in<lb/>
rnment, please feel free to<lb/>
by Room 303, Wright<lb/>
jx. We need capable people<lb/>
:an find a spot that will suit<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
John Schofield.<lb/>
rim policy<lb/>
II students, faculty<lb/>
bers, and adminisratjrs are<lb/>
i to express their opinions<lb/>
iting in the ECU Forum.<lb/>
hen writing letters to the<lb/>
m, the following procedure<lb/>
Id be followed-<lb/>
Letters should be concise<lb/>
o the point.<lb/>
Length should not exceed<lb/>
words. The Editorial Board<lb/>
tes the right to edit letters<lb/>
nform to this requirement.<lb/>
XII letters must be signed<lb/>
the name of the writer.<lb/>
ver, upon the author's<lb/>
jst his name may be<lb/>
eld.<lb/>
Hied articles on this page<lb/>
t the opinions of the<lb/>
r, and not necessarily those<lb/>
he East Carolinian <lb/>
tmto(?!L,<lb/>
. . Robert W. McDowell<lb/>
Cherry Stokes<lb/>
. , .Phyllis Bridgeman<lb/>
Lewis Cutler<lb/>
Gail Burton<lb/>
 ! Whitney Hadden<lb/>
Carl Tyer<lb/>
Ira Baker<lb/>
Expect something<lb/>
different<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 20, 1969<lb/>
By GAIL<lb/>
Fantasy, excitement, a<lb/>
parade, and fun are the<lb/>
projected highlights of<lb/>
Homecoming 1969-<lb/>
"Disneyland-A Tribute to Walt<lb/>
Disney<lb/>
Homecoming will run<lb/>
November 6-9 and will feature<lb/>
everything from a pep rally<lb/>
and bonfire to entertainment<lb/>
from "Dionne Warwick" and<lb/>
"The Fifth Demension<lb/>
Letters to Art Disney,<lb/>
director of Disneyland, for<lb/>
suggestions of various themes,<lb/>
such as Jungleland or dinasour<lb/>
land, which the Parade and<lb/>
Decorations might portray,<lb/>
and to various dignitaries of<lb/>
the school and state have<lb/>
already been sent by the<lb/>
Special Events Committee.<lb/>
The Committee has tried to<lb/>
expand Homecoming 1969<lb/>
with cooperation and<lb/>
participation from interested<lb/>
businesses as well as campus<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
HIGHLIGHTS<lb/>
A Pep Rally and Bonfire<lb/>
will open Homecoming 1969<lb/>
Thursday night, November b<lb/>
at 6:30.<lb/>
Friday's activities centb<lb/>
around Dionne Warwick who<lb/>
will give a concert that night<lb/>
in Minges, singing all of her<lb/>
newest and golden hits.<lb/>
A Parade of an anticipated<lb/>
hundered floats, cars, and<lb/>
bands with themes ranging<lb/>
from Donald Duck to<lb/>
Fantasyland have been<lb/>
BURTON<lb/>
planned by Bob Whitley to<lb/>
begin Saturday morning,<lb/>
November 8 at 10 a.m.<lb/>
Dignitaries will be riding in<lb/>
cars from Greenville<lb/>
merchants as well as those of<lb/>
students, while bands from all<lb/>
over the state play in<lb/>
competition for trophies<lb/>
awarded to tie top two bands.<lb/>
GAMES<lb/>
Saturday afternoon ECU's<lb/>
football team is scheduled to<lb/>
tackle Davidson in an<lb/>
action-packed game. Half-time<lb/>
activities for the game have<lb/>
been planned by the Special<lb/>
Events Committee.<lb/>
A Hong with crowning the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and<lb/>
presentation of her court,<lb/>
half-time will also award<lb/>
trophies to the winners of the<lb/>
best house decoration and the<lb/>
best float.<lb/>
In an effort to raise spirit<lb/>
and evoke total participation<lb/>
from all students and<lb/>
organizations, an overall<lb/>
trophy is being planned for a<lb/>
combination winner of the<lb/>
best float and the best house<lb/>
decorations.<lb/>
Saturday night is being left<lb/>
open for campus organizations<lb/>
and parties.<lb/>
"The Fifth Demension" will<lb/>
conclude Homecomming 1969<lb/>
in a concert in Minges<lb/>
Auditorium Sunday,<lb/>
November 9 at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Believe It<lb/>
Sounds Unlimited<lb/>
is<lb/>
Pitt County'<lb/>
Sound Source<lb/>
MISS DIONNE WARWICK will appear in concert on Friday night of Homecoming<lb/>
iyby<lb/>
Three gigantic weekends<lb/>
planned for the school year<lb/>
The Student Government 1969-1970 school year. The<lb/>
Association has announced a entertainment committee has<lb/>
varied selection of popular decided to aim for three big<lb/>
entertainment for the weekends this year instead of<lb/>
oLe Mr<lb/>
rnne<lb/>
BEAUTY SHOP<lb/>
103 E. 4th St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
Phone: PL 8-1551<lb/>
ITEMS FOR<lb/>
THE ROOM<lb/>
Soap Dishes<lb/>
Wastebaskets<lb/>
Towel Racks<lb/>
Curtain Rods<lb/>
Small<lb/>
Electrical Appliances<lb/>
'Largest Fabric Center in Greenville'<lb/>
having a number of small shows<lb/>
throughout the year. Dean<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander , Asst. Dean<lb/>
of Student Affairs, who is in<lb/>
charge of entertainment has said<lb/>
that the list of shows is far from<lb/>
complete and that more will<lb/>
hopefully be scheduled in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
The U.S. Army Field Band and<lb/>
Soldier's Chorus will perform<lb/>
here on September 17. This<lb/>
promises to be an exciting show<lb/>
and an enjoyable experience.<lb/>
Banjo music, with its rising<lb/>
interest on college campuses, is<lb/>
a very exciting soudnd that<lb/>
attracts people of all musical<lb/>
tastes.<lb/>
The first weekend of<lb/>
November, Homecoming<lb/>
Weekend, is being billed as one<lb/>
of the best weeekends at ECU.<lb/>
Highlighting the weekend will be<lb/>
the Fifth Dimension and Dionne<lb/>
Warwick, nationally famed<lb/>
recording stars.<lb/>
Carousel Weekend, relatively<lb/>
new on campus, January 22 and<lb/>
23, promises to equal H ecoming<lb/>
with Jose Feliciano in top<lb/>
billing, along with the musical<lb/>
show "Your Own Thing<lb/>
East Carolina is growing and<lb/>
so is its entertainment. It's up to<lb/>
you, the students, to ask for the<lb/>
groups that you want. Dean<lb/>
Alexander hifiy recommends<lb/>
that students attend the<lb/>
programs scheduled and the<lb/>
SGA promises to have more<lb/>
bookings in the Popular<lb/>
entertainment line in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO.<lb/>
STUDENT DESK LAMPS - GREETING CARDS<lb/>
Student Stationery - Professional Filing Supplies<lb/>
Drafting and Art Supplies - School Supplies<lb/>
214 East 5th Street 752"21'D<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0014"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 20, ig69<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
(continued from page 2)<lb/>
appropriate judicial board and<lb/>
then to the Review Board if a<lb/>
case exists. The Review Board is<lb/>
the highest student ourt and<lb/>
whuse decision is subject to<lb/>
change only by the president of<lb/>
the university.<lb/>
WRC<lb/>
The purpose of the Women's<lb/>
Residence Council is to insure a<lb/>
uniform interpretation and<lb/>
enforcement of women's rules,<lb/>
and to promote a high standard<lb/>
of conduct among coeds. The<lb/>
WRC has been instrumental in<lb/>
bringing about changes in the<lb/>
women's dress code, revising the<lb/>
off-campus housing policy of<lb/>
women, and adding late minutes<lb/>
to dormitory closing hour<lb/>
regulations.<lb/>
The Women's House Councils<lb/>
have original jurisdiction over<lb/>
minor rule infractions that<lb/>
occur in or around the dorm<lb/>
and are not covered by a higher<lb/>
court.<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
The Men's Residence Council<lb/>
maintains an efficient system of<lb/>
student government in the<lb/>
dormitories. Among many,<lb/>
many services offered, the MRC<lb/>
operates a recreation room in<lb/>
the basement of Aycock<lb/>
dormitory and a coin-operated<lb/>
laundry in Belk. It also<lb/>
sponsors two dances each<lb/>
quarter, intramural track meets,<lb/>
softball, baseball, and an open<lb/>
forum discussion once a month<lb/>
on the Hill.<lb/>
The MRC Court has original<lb/>
jurisdiction and referred<lb/>
jurisdiction over all men's<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
i?"<lb/>
ui?<lb/>
to<lb/>
?iou?oRt<lb/>
fceV <lb/>
OMl<lb/>
V<lb/>
JW 1-<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
V,v<lb/>
(Home i'n VHAft UaiwI sdenc! a<lb/>
COMfORTAblE AfTERINOON, A Z<lb/>
EXAMl'lNiNq dl'AMONds :V<lb/>
WITh ONE Of OUR EXPERTS. <lb/>
OR SeIeCT A flNE J&amp;W UATCk<lb/>
or a RAvishi(q jeweL<lb/>
buy a piECE of chiiNA vVtf<lb/>
fOR A fRIENd. A Sl'lVER<lb/>
qifT For a bRidE. M ue Ihave<lb/>
A , ; lAyAWAy plAN, fREE<lb/>
:m dEllVERy, CONVENIENT<lb/>
chARqE ACCOUNT TERIVIS i<lb/>
y<lb/>
t y<lb/>
s<lb/>
EVERyThiNq TO MAkE A VISIT TO<lb/>
OUR STORE A rlAppy EXpERJENCE.<lb/>
est's<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
402 EVANS STREET<lb/>
752-3175<lb/>
dormitory regulations and any of college life. Answers to<lb/>
conduct unbecoming an East questions can be found in rul<lb/>
Carolina student in or at the KEY along with tne i<lb/>
. . ' uies and<lb/>
Dormitory. regulations by which the stude<lb/>
These are just a few highlights niust abide.<lb/>
New students<lb/>
face summer<lb/>
orientation<lb/>
New students arriving in<lb/>
Greenville for Orientation or<lb/>
Pre-College Counseling face an<lb/>
intensive program designed to<lb/>
acquaint them with campus life.<lb/>
For two days, they will go to<lb/>
meetings, take tests, and meet<lb/>
and mix with fellow freshmen.<lb/>
The new students will arrive<lb/>
on campus Tuesday night and go<lb/>
to dormitories where they will<lb/>
receive their Orientation<lb/>
protfolios and receive their room<lb/>
assignments. The portfolios are<lb/>
probably the most important<lb/>
thing in their life for the next<lb/>
two days, as they contain<lb/>
everyting that the freshmen will<lb/>
need rom their full schedules to<lb/>
ID cards.<lb/>
Tuesday night at 9 o'clock<lb/>
they go to Wright Audtorium<lb/>
for their first meeting. Dr.<lb/>
Donald Baiiy Dean of General<lb/>
College will talk to them about<lb/>
his department, probably one of<lb/>
the most important subjects<lb/>
since most of them will<lb/>
preregister through that<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Wednesday their time will be<lb/>
taken up in meetings with<lb/>
various Deans, taking their<lb/>
placement tests, having their<lb/>
ID's made and attending a<lb/>
conference with upperclassmen<lb/>
who will try to impart some of<lb/>
their experience to the new<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Wednesday night the campus<lb/>
ministry will hold open<lb/>
discussions on "Campus Values"<lb/>
with the new class. Here the<lb/>
students will choose the topic<lb/>
they wish to discuss and the<lb/>
ministers will guide it.<lb/>
Thursday they will meet to<lb/>
receive the results of the test<lb/>
they took. After that will attend<lb/>
another session with the upper<lb/>
classmen and then will<lb/>
preregister.<lb/>
The pre-registration session is<lb/>
perhaps the most important part<lb/>
of the Orientation program and<lb/>
is the reason that the program is<lb/>
held in the summer.<lb/>
Pre-registration assures the<lb/>
student that when he arrives on<lb/>
campus he will have some<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
James Mallory, Dean of Men,<lb/>
has said that this Orientation<lb/>
program is one of the best in the<lb/>
country and saves the student<lb/>
and the University a great deal<lb/>
of time and trouble.<lb/>
Join The JjQjp Crowd<lb/>
Pizza Ira<lb/>
421 Greenville Rlvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call head For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 766-9991<lb/>
NOW IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
A NEW AUDIO CENTER FEATURING<lb/>
STEREO<lb/>
Components<lb/>
New and Used<lb/>
EXCLUSIVE NAMES SUCH AS KLH, MCINTOSH, KEN-<lb/>
WOOD, DUAL, SCOTT, FISHER, BOZAK, AR, TANDBERG,<lb/>
AND SONY.<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
SALES &amp; SERVICE<lb/>
Evans k 12th Sta.<lb/>
752-3651<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0015"/><lb/>
june 20, 1969 I June 20, 1969<lb/>
?ege life. Answers to many<lb/>
ons can be found in THE<lb/>
along with the rules and<lb/>
tions by which the student<lb/>
Jbide.<lb/>
lents<lb/>
nmer<lb/>
on<lb/>
made and attending a<lb/>
ence with upperclassmer,<lb/>
'ill try to impart some of<lb/>
experience to the new<lb/>
Inesday night the campus<lb/>
Jtry will hold open<lb/>
?ions on "Campus Values"<lb/>
the new class. Here the<lb/>
ts will choose the topic<lb/>
vish to discuss and the<lb/>
;rs will guide it.<lb/>
rsday they will meet to<lb/>
the results of the test<lb/>
ok. After that will attend<lb/>
r session with the upper<lb/>
nen and then will<lb/>
ister.<lb/>
pre-registration session is<lb/>
; the most important part<lb/>
Orientation program and<lb/>
eason that the program is<lb/>
in the summer.<lb/>
jistration assures the<lb/>
that when he arrives on<lb/>
s he will have some<lb/>
s Mallory, Dean of Men,<lb/>
d that this Orientation<lb/>
i is one of the best in the<lb/>
and saves the student<lb/>
University a great deal<lb/>
and trouble.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
NVILLE<lb/>
MATURING<lb/>
D<lb/>
nts<lb/>
id<lb/>
MCINTOSH, KEN-<lb/>
, AR, TANDBERG,<lb/>
South<lb/>
752-36S1<lb/>
An overview of campus life<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
A senseof style<lb/>
Five years is a long time to be<lb/>
anyplace, much less in college. I<lb/>
was here five years to the day<lb/>
about a week ago, and I am now<lb/>
leaving this place a much wiser<lb/>
and more considerate soul than<lb/>
when I entered. I am only hve<lb/>
to try to give you an idea of<lb/>
what college life is like, and let's<lb/>
start off by forgetting all the<lb/>
travel book things about college<lb/>
that you read in the brochures<lb/>
(each student will be expected<lb/>
to spend one hour each night per<lb/>
subject on his studies stuff like<lb/>
that).<lb/>
FINISHING SCHOOL<lb/>
I might as well break the news<lb/>
to you now as later. I know of<lb/>
only two people who got out of<lb/>
college on time (in four years)<lb/>
without going to summer school.<lb/>
Most people I know had to go to<lb/>
at least one summer school to<lb/>
graduate on time, and some had<lb/>
to go a full extra year. You<lb/>
might chalk this suspect record<lb/>
up to the fact that I might have<lb/>
particularly dumb friends, but I<lb/>
don't think that is the case. At<lb/>
any rate, I am told it is not<lb/>
impossible to graduate on time,<lb/>
and there are bunches who do it,<lb/>
so be advised that it can be<lb/>
done.<lb/>
THE ETERNAL LINE<lb/>
Another unpleasant subject I<lb/>
must take up with you is the<lb/>
lines. There are long, hot,<lb/>
dreary, wet lines in college, for<lb/>
everything from ID'S to<lb/>
yearbooks and popular<lb/>
entertainment. There is no way<lb/>
to escape the line problem on<lb/>
this campus unless you are a<lb/>
very clever and a good talker.<lb/>
There is nothing quite so<lb/>
miserable as standing in the<lb/>
drop-add line for five hours<lb/>
waiting to get on course, only to<lb/>
fmd that the guy in front of you<lb/>
iust picked up the course. Misery<lb/>
?s a closed-out course<lb/>
A FEW GREAT ONES<lb/>
One of the nice things about<lb/>
coleoe is professors. Most are<lb/>
good, few are bad, and the few<lb/>
really great ones will fill you with<lb/>
Such desire and eagerness to do<lb/>
We" that you will hardly<lb/>
recognie yourself. When you<lb/>
 a great professor, you will<lb/>
By DON PIERCE<lb/>
know it right off and you will<lb/>
work your head off trying to<lb/>
please him. Great professors are<lb/>
one of the nice things about<lb/>
college, and they will make you<lb/>
feel as if you are really getting<lb/>
your money's worth. I could list<lb/>
a few of the professors that I<lb/>
have bud who I feel are great,<lb/>
but any such list is generally<lb/>
arbitrary, as what is one man's<lb/>
sugar is another man's poison.<lb/>
A WARNING<lb/>
One other thing to warn you<lb/>
about is homework. Teachers in<lb/>
college are concerned with only<lb/>
their course, and they expect<lb/>
you to do the work, no matter<lb/>
how much outside work you<lb/>
have to do in your other courses.<lb/>
Plan ahead, work a little every<lb/>
day, and you will not get stuck<lb/>
at the end of the quarter with<lb/>
three thousand pages to read and<lb/>
four term papers due.<lb/>
I a m going to give you some<lb/>
advice on class cutting. I am and<lb/>
was notorious for cutting class,<lb/>
so you will have to take my<lb/>
advice at face value. Do not cut<lb/>
class unless necessary, even in<lb/>
courses where you are given<lb/>
unlimited cuts. Some teachers<lb/>
don't care whether or not you<lb/>
come to class, but, by and large,<lb/>
most expect regular attendance,<lb/>
and regular attendance is not<lb/>
calssified as once a week.<lb/>
SUN AND SAND<lb/>
There will come a time, in the<lb/>
spring when the sun is stroig<lb/>
and the wind is just right and the<lb/>
waves are breaking at the beach,<lb/>
that you will throw concern to<lb/>
the winds and hit the beach. If<lb/>
you loose QP's, or get an egg on<lb/>
a big test, do not go crying to<lb/>
the teacher. Take it like an<lb/>
adult, and cry at home. Some<lb/>
things must be done for the soul,<lb/>
and taking a day at the beach is<lb/>
one of them.<lb/>
Along these same lines, do not<lb/>
toadie up to teachers and<lb/>
become teacher's pets. Most of<lb/>
them have been teaching long<lb/>
enough to know these ploys and<lb/>
what worked wonders in high<lb/>
school will draw blank smiles<lb/>
and low grades here.<lb/>
?lje Jtnttwn<lb/>
Live Band Every Night<lb/>
103 ?? 4th Street<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
SANDWICHES<lb/>
Open11am-12pm<lb/>
(Sunday-Thursday)<lb/>
11amem (Friday and Saturday,<lb/>
COTANCHt and CORNbLL HEIGHTS<lb/>
A FEW BOMBS<lb/>
Popular entertainment,<lb/>
concerts, movies, and lectures<lb/>
are one of the bright spots in<lb/>
college life. Popular<lb/>
entertainment here is generally<lb/>
of a fairly good level. In the past<lb/>
we have enjoyed The Beach<lb/>
Boys, the Buffalo Springfields,<lb/>
the Lemon Pipers, the Four<lb/>
Seasons, the Buckinghams, Ray<lb/>
Charles, Louis Armstrong, the<lb/>
Platters, Glenn Yarborough, and<lb/>
other top groups. There have<lb/>
been a few really bad bombs<lb/>
(Chad and Jeremy for<lb/>
homecoming two years ago), but<lb/>
the level of entertainment her<lb/>
remains high. You pay eight<lb/>
dollars a quarter for pop<lb/>
entertainment and the free flick<lb/>
and lectures, so go to as many of<lb/>
these things as you can and get<lb/>
your money's worth. A part of<lb/>
your college education is to<lb/>
enlighten you culturally.<lb/>
A BIT HARDER<lb/>
College students work a bit<lb/>
harder than others their age, and<lb/>
so on weekends they usually<lb/>
blow it out. Blowing it out often<lb/>
means getting loaded, but<lb/>
remember that in the eyes of the<lb/>
college, what ever you do, drunk<lb/>
or sober, you are accountable, so<lb/>
get into trouble and then pass it<lb/>
off by saying that you were<lb/>
drunk. It won't work.<lb/>
There is an excellent athletic<lb/>
program at ECU. The football<lb/>
team is continually in<lb/>
contention for the Southern<lb/>
Conference title, and Tom<lb/>
Quinn had done wonders with<lb/>
the basketball team. These are<lb/>
the two big sports, but our<lb/>
baseball team has been a<lb/>
conference leader for many<lb/>
years now, our track team is<lb/>
Lecturer Harrison Salisbury of The New York Times<lb/>
(see story on page 3)<lb/>
gaining fast, and our golf team<lb/>
just won the southern<lb/>
conference golf championship.<lb/>
MINOR SPORTS<lb/>
Don't neglect the minor<lb/>
sports like lacrosse, crew, and<lb/>
Soccer. These so-called minor<lb/>
sports are minor only in<lb/>
attendance, not in action. The<lb/>
boys who play these sports work<lb/>
just as hard as any other athlete,<lb/>
and the sports are both exciting<lb/>
and quick to watch. For boys<lb/>
who were not quite big enough<lb/>
participate in intercollegeiate<lb/>
athletics. Don't overlook them.<lb/>
Part of a college education is<lb/>
not just the mere attainment of<lb/>
a degree, but the experience of<lb/>
going to college. This experience<lb/>
should involve you in student<lb/>
life, the more you participate in<lb/>
college, the more you are going<lb/>
to get out of school. Become<lb/>
involved, if you don't like<lb/>
something, change it and do<lb/>
something about it. Join the<lb/>
various committees, go to the<lb/>
concerts, help on the paper and<lb/>
the yearbook. Get involved with<lb/>
this school and you will really<lb/>
enjoy your stay here,<lb/>
for football or not quite tail<lb/>
enough for basketball, the minor<lb/>
sports are an excellent vay to<lb/>
ONE LAST THING<lb/>
One last thing that deserves to<lb/>
be mentioned. Since I first came<lb/>
here, the enrollment in this<lb/>
school has almost doubled, and<lb/>
it will rise again in the next four<lb/>
years. With this increase in<lb/>
enrollment, there has. been more<lb/>
and more computerization of<lb/>
the student. This<lb/>
computerization of the student<lb/>
is a necessity, but don't ever<lb/>
forget that there are people<lb/>
behind the computer who will<lb/>
do almost anything to help you<lb/>
out during your stay here. There<lb/>
is always someone to talk to<lb/>
about your own particular<lb/>
problems. You are not alone.<lb/>
After the misery is over, the<lb/>
lines are gone through for the<lb/>
last time, the last term paper<lb/>
finished, and the last concert has<lb/>
been performed, you will leave<lb/>
this college, hopefully with a<lb/>
degree. In the final analysis, you<lb/>
will get out of this college<lb/>
exactly what you put into it.<lb/>
Shoney's Welcomes<lb/>
ALL FRESHMEN<lb/>
and all ECU students<lb/>
FRESHMAN SPECIAL<lb/>
With this coupon<lb/>
1 Big Boy 1 Pepsi<lb/>
490 Reg. 750<lb/>
(Good on curb only)<lb/>
Dine in your car<lb/>
or the coffee shop.<lb/>
R.C. Pease, Mgr.<lb/>
 <lb/>
S<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0016"/><lb/>
June 20, 1969<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
SGA prOteCtS Drop-add hints<lb/>
student rights<lb/>
Student rights are now<lb/>
protected by the SGA. A Bill of<lb/>
Rights originated by a group<lb/>
called Gap, supported by a<lb/>
petition signed by over a quarter<lb/>
of the student body, is now a<lb/>
part of the SGA constitution.<lb/>
This action is in keeping with<lb/>
the current national interest in<lb/>
the area of student rights.<lb/>
Almost every important national<lb/>
educational association has<lb/>
either helped to write or has<lb/>
endorsed the Joint Statement on<lb/>
the Rights and Freedoms of<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
The Bill of Rights that was<lb/>
adopted by ECU'S Student<lb/>
Government Association was<lb/>
based on this authoritative<lb/>
report, as was the Bill of Rights<lb/>
adopted at the University of<lb/>
Michigan.<lb/>
FORTUNATE<lb/>
At present, only a few schools<lb/>
in the country have been<lb/>
successful in gaining any kind of<lb/>
concrete protection of student<lb/>
rights. Students at several<lb/>
schools in North Carolina have<lb/>
attempted to establish a bill of<lb/>
rights and have been so far<lb/>
hindered by their school<lb/>
administrations or by their<lb/>
student government associations.<lb/>
ECU is therefore extremely<lb/>
fortunate to have been able to<lb/>
estab lish a strong and clear<lb/>
outline of student rights. The<lb/>
Bill of Rights went into effect<lb/>
last Spring Quarter, and already<lb/>
major changes in our judicial<lb/>
system have been started.<lb/>
GAP<lb/>
It was last summer, near the<lb/>
end of July, when work on the<lb/>
Bill of Rights betan. A<lb/>
student faculty group, Gap, had<lb/>
just been formed and it went to<lb/>
work immediately on the issue<lb/>
of student rights.<lb/>
Students traveled to other<lb/>
schools to study their progress in<lb/>
judicial systems and related<lb/>
areas. Copies of the Joint<lb/>
Statement on the Rights and<lb/>
Freedoms of Students vveie<lb/>
examined and debrtd each<lb/>
week by the members of Gap<lb/>
and invited guests, such as the<lb/>
Dean of Men and the president<lb/>
of the SGA.<lb/>
Gradually, a bill of rights was<lb/>
formulated and went through six<lb/>
revisions until the members of<lb/>
Gap were satisfied.<lb/>
Constitutional lawyers were<lb/>
consulted and finally a finished<lb/>
Bill of Rights was published and<lb/>
circulated on campus<lb/>
registration day of Fall Quarter.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
After four weeks of<lb/>
petitioning, the bill was<lb/>
presented to the SGA?endorsed<lb/>
by 2,600 students. The SGA<lb/>
Legislature spent more than<lb/>
three weeks studying the bill in<lb/>
committee. When it was finally<lb/>
reported out, it was adopted<lb/>
with only minor changes, and<lb/>
work began to revise regulations<lb/>
and the judiciary system in order<lb/>
to comform to the Bill of<lb/>
Rights.<lb/>
In Article IX. Bill of Rights of<lb/>
the SGA constitution, the<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Association "recognizes and<lb/>
undertakes to guarantee" sixteen<lb/>
rights of students.<lb/>
These rights include freedom<lb/>
from unreasonable invasion,<lb/>
search, and seizure in the dorms;<lb/>
freedom of the press; right to<lb/>
due process in disciplinary<lb/>
procedures? and many other<lb/>
important provisions.<lb/>
Since the bill went into effect<lb/>
at the first of Spring Quarter,<lb/>
I969, a number of judiciary<lb/>
hearings on compus have dealt<lb/>
with questions of violation of<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
(ed. note: If we are to protect<lb/>
the rights that we have<lb/>
established this year, every<lb/>
student must be concerned with<lb/>
his rights and the rights of his<lb/>
fellow students.<lb/>
The Bill of Rights can be<lb/>
found in the new Key under<lb/>
Article IX of the SGA<lb/>
constitution.<lb/>
All students should become<lb/>
familiar with these rights, and if<lb/>
any student feels that his rights<lb/>
have been violated by another<lb/>
student, by a branch of the<lb/>
SGA, or by the Administration,<lb/>
he should contact the president<lb/>
of the SGA and the East<lb/>
Carolinian.)<lb/>
Drop Add is probably one of<lb/>
the most frustrating experiences<lb/>
that the new student will face at<lb/>
the University.<lb/>
The only reason that this is<lb/>
so, is that most people don't<lb/>
take time to find out and follow<lb/>
the proper procedure. If the<lb/>
student would do this he could<lb/>
probably cut his drop-add in<lb/>
half.<lb/>
If a student is not satisfied<lb/>
with his schedule he should see<lb/>
his advisor immediately. As most<lb/>
of the new students are in<lb/>
General College, their advisor is<lb/>
Dr. Donald Bailey whose office<lb/>
is Room 204 in the Old Gym.<lb/>
The student's advisor will fill<lb/>
out a drop add form which the<lb/>
student should bring with him to<lb/>
the drop-add center alrng with<lb/>
the cards from any courses he is<lb/>
dropping. The student must have<lb/>
the cards because if he doesn't<lb/>
drop courses at the same time he<lb/>
adds them, he will usually be<lb/>
carrying an overload of hours<lb/>
and will not be allowed to checK<lb/>
out.<lb/>
If the student has his<lb/>
drop-add form, his drop cards,<lb/>
and his schedule, he is ready to<lb/>
be admitted to drop-add and<lb/>
should go to the door marked<lb/>
entrance.<lb/>
Here are a few rules that the<lb/>
student should follow once he is<lb/>
in drop-add. He should-<lb/>
1. Be early! All courses are given<lb/>
out on a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
2. Have a catalogue with<lb/>
him -especially if he just wants<lb/>
extra hours. It is impossible for<lb/>
the people working in drop-add<lb/>
to know what a student does<lb/>
and does not need. A student<lb/>
may be seriously hampered by<lb/>
accepting any course he can get.<lb/>
3. Ask for courses by number!<lb/>
Very few of the people working<lb/>
the card trays are students.<lb/>
Those that are may or may not<lb/>
be working with their majors.<lb/>
Someone who asks, "Is<lb/>
pre-Columbian art history<lb/>
open?" will very likely be<lb/>
answered with a puzzled look.<lb/>
The student who follows all<lb/>
the above suggestions is still<lb/>
likely to find drop-add a<lb/>
frustrating experience, but he<lb/>
may be able to speed the process<lb/>
up.<lb/>
fCT- ? <lb/>
ONE OF MANY students signs the petition sponsored by GAP<lb/>
rfffl?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Hello , Class (click1),<lb/>
U ftfM VtW ftv<lb/>
EaffeUW<lb/>
Enjoy Good Food<lb/>
A Special Every Day<lb/>
WELCOMES FRESHMEN<lb/>
on Fifth Street<lb/>
AIR CONDITIONED<lb/>
Combo on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday I<lb/>
Open from 11am to 12pm<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR FRIDAY: 204:30<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0017"/><lb/>
June<lb/>
20, 1969<lb/>
nts<lb/>
Id go to the door marked<lb/>
nee.<lb/>
ire are a few rules that the<lb/>
?nt should follow once he is<lb/>
apadd. He should<lb/>
early! All courses are given<lb/>
rt a first-come, first-serve<lb/>
lave a catalogue with<lb/>
especially if he just wants<lb/>
hours. It is impossible for<lb/>
eople working in drop-add<lb/>
tow what a student does<lb/>
toes not need. A student<lb/>
be seriously hampered by<lb/>
ting any course he can get.<lb/>
k for courses by number!<lb/>
few of the people working<lb/>
card trays are students.<lb/>
that are may or may not<lb/>
arking with their majors.<lb/>
eone who asks, "Is<lb/>
Columbian art history<lb/>
?" will very likely be<lb/>
red with a puzzled look.<lb/>
e student who follows all<lb/>
above suggestions is still<lb/>
y to find drop-add a<lb/>
ating experience, but he<lb/>
ie able to speed the process<lb/>
-mrr<lb/>
"<lb/>
:lLO ; CLRSS (click1),<lb/>
MH VfjOfc ftVV<lb/>
aasasfi il<lb/>
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33<lb/>
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1ER LONG<lb/>
dio<lb/>
so'<lb/>
Larrv Sprinkle<lb/>
Bruce<lb/>
ood Food<lb/>
I Every Day<lb/>
iday, and Saturday '<lb/>
11am to 12pm<lb/>
FRIDAY: 204:30<lb/>
The East Carolink<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
all greek<lb/>
by<lb/>
Becky Noble<lb/>
The Fraternities and Soroties<lb/>
f East Carolina University<lb/>
welcome all freshmen to the<lb/>
campus. Any interested persons<lb/>
should feel free to visit any of<lb/>
the fraternities or soroties in<lb/>
order ro meet and get to know<lb/>
the groups.<lb/>
Greek fraternities and soroties<lb/>
are organizations of students<lb/>
living together, working<lb/>
together, and having fun<lb/>
together. A loyal circle of<lb/>
friends, fraternities and soroties<lb/>
maintain their distinctive<lb/>
characteristics with individual<lb/>
chapters rituals and<lb/>
observances.<lb/>
These Greek orgainizations<lb/>
aid the development of moral,<lb/>
social, and intellectual character,<lb/>
and offer good living conditions,<lb/>
and facilities for an active social<lb/>
life to their members.<lb/>
Greek spirits are highlighted<lb/>
in the annual Greek Week, which<lb/>
features skits, field events, and<lb/>
entertainment. This spring the<lb/>
Greeks were entertained by<lb/>
Peggy Scott and JOJO Benson,<lb/>
the Tempests and the Marlboros.<lb/>
The Battle of the soroties incites<lb/>
team spirits when the eight soro-<lb/>
tiescompete in the various<lb/>
amusing field events of Lamba<lb/>
Chi Alpha Field Day and Sigma<lb/>
Chi Delta Derby Day.<lb/>
The Greeks band together at<lb/>
Christmas time for the annual<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta All Sing.<lb/>
Fraternities and soroties also<lb/>
participate in numerous service<lb/>
projects, such as clothing drives,<lb/>
parties for underprivileged<lb/>
children, the Red Cross Blood<lb/>
drive, and individual national<lb/>
philanthropies.<lb/>
Bast Carolina has twelve social<lb/>
fraternities. These fraternities<lb/>
are governed by the<lb/>
I nterfraternity Coucil, which<lb/>
coordinates such activities as<lb/>
rushing, pledging, and initiation.<lb/>
The IFC is composed of three<lb/>
representatives from each social<lb/>
fraternity. The fraternities are:<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi, Delta Sigma<lb/>
Phi, Kappa Alpha, Kappa Sigma,<lb/>
Lamba Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Chi<lb/>
Delta, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Theta<lb/>
Chi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi.<lb/>
There are eight soroties which<lb/>
are governed by the Panahellic<lb/>
Coucil. This coucil plans Formal<lb/>
Rush, guides the activities of the<lb/>
sororities, and publishes "Wheels<lb/>
of Sisterhood This winter, a<lb/>
Junior Panhellic of pledges was<lb/>
organized. The eight sororities<lb/>
ar e : Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi, Chi Omega, Delta Zeta,<lb/>
Kappa Delta, and Sigma, Sigma,<lb/>
Sigma.<lb/>
The decision to join a<lb/>
fraternity or a sorority is up the<lb/>
indid al, and should be based on<lb/>
how closely the organization<lb/>
conforms to the that person's<lb/>
standards of life. The Greek way<lb/>
of life is a rewarding and<lb/>
gratifying experience. It is also a<lb/>
huge investment in loyalty and<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
Greeks meet together for entertainment.<lb/>
The Miss Venus contestants know where it's all at !<lb/>
Greeks Mix for a Christmastime social<lb/>
Gomplimentary 0k-up<lb/>
mtRLE noRmfln cosoietics Jfrsson<lb/>
216 toil Fifth Street - '<lb/>
PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Welcome Freshmen!<lb/>
We Invite you to shop with us for all<lb/>
your back to school needs<lb/>
Welcomes Freshmen<lb/>
Students Favorite One Stop<lb/>
Dining And Entertainment<lb/>
Facilities<lb/>
Complete Menu, Pizza,<lb/>
Sandwiches, Dancing,<lb/>
Live Entertainment<lb/>
One Block from Campus<lb/>
on Fifth Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0018"/><lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
June 20<lb/>
19G9<lb/>
Sports scene unfolds<lb/>
This may be the year to top<lb/>
them all in East Carolina sports,<lb/>
and new arrivals to the campus<lb/>
may have come just in time to<lb/>
see the scene unfold.<lb/>
First on everyone's mind is<lb/>
most likely, the surprising<lb/>
basketball team Coach Tom<lb/>
Quinn produced last year, and<lb/>
what will happen this year. But<lb/>
before basketball gets I ere,<lb/>
football will make its debut, and<lb/>
a better season is hoped for by<lb/>
Coach Clarence Stasavich and his<lb/>
troop.<lb/>
A Careful forecast<lb/>
Last year's griciron team did<lb/>
not exactly come through as<lb/>
predicted, finishing third in the<lb/>
conference as opposed to the<lb/>
number one spot they were<lb/>
predicted to hold. Preseason<lb/>
forecasters last year heavily<lb/>
favored the Pirates to capture<lb/>
the Southern Conference crown<lb/>
List year, so this year they will<lb/>
be a little more careful before<lb/>
making any prognostications. We<lb/>
will let the Pnates take their<lb/>
games as they come, hoping for<lb/>
the best.<lb/>
The Pirates have five home<lb/>
and away games scheduled this<lb/>
year, with East Tennessee<lb/>
starting things off September 20.<lb/>
Next comes Louisianna Tech<lb/>
here September 27, and The<lb/>
Citadel, here October 4. Both<lb/>
are night games. On October 18,<lb/>
the Bucs travel to Richmond to<lb/>
meet the '68 Southern<lb/>
Conference Football Champs,<lb/>
and they are on the road again<lb/>
to Southern Illinois October 25.<lb/>
November I sees Furman here<lb/>
and November 8, Davidson,<lb/>
again night games. November 15<lb/>
the Pirates travel to Marshall,<lb/>
and on November 22, the<lb/>
football season ends with<lb/>
Southern Mississippi here. Last<lb/>
SUBJ: GROOMING '69<lb/>
It is an art, best acquired with our kind of attire. Every college<lb/>
gentleman wishes to be thought correct in dress, and the Pro-<lb/>
prietor assures it. In suits, in sports apparel, in furnishings<lb/>
alike, our label is the hallmark of traditional good grooming.<lb/>
Bassweejuns  from $20.00 College Hall Suits from $85.00<lb/>
Cox Moore of England Sweaters from $14.95 Corbln Pants .  from $?1 on<lb/>
Weather R0gue Rainwear from $35.00 G.nt Sh ?   i.ZnW<lb/>
o?ftn tin's<lb/>
JENJS VVfAR<lb/>
?<lb/>
year, Southern Miss, handed the<lb/>
Pirates one of their worst defeats<lb/>
in the school's history wjtr1 a<lb/>
65 0 lashing. No doubt, the Bucs<lb/>
will be out for revenge.<lb/>
Tough basketball schedule<lb/>
will have<lb/>
The dust<lb/>
settled on<lb/>
hardly<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
before Coach Tom Quinn and<lb/>
his team will open their toughest<lb/>
basketball season in the history<lb/>
of the school.<lb/>
This year's schedule will see<lb/>
the Pirates tackling four Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference teams, along<lb/>
with Southern Conference<lb/>
power Davidson.<lb/>
With his returning stars, plus<lb/>
rising sophomore hopefuls, and<lb/>
transfer players, Quinn will be<lb/>
out to capture the Southern<lb/>
Conference crown he and his<lb/>
team tried for so desperately for<lb/>
in '68 '69.<lb/>
Shooting gets pretty tough<lb/>
Gamecock clash<lb/>
After hosting Western<lb/>
Carolina December I, Roanoke<lb/>
College December 3, and<lb/>
Atlantic Christian December 6,<lb/>
the Bucs will face their first real<lb/>
test against national power<lb/>
South Carolina. If Minges<lb/>
Colisium is ever going to see a<lb/>
capacity crowd for a basketball<lb/>
game, it should be the night of<lb/>
December 10 when the<lb/>
Gamecocks invade the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The Bucs then travel to<lb/>
Ridhmond and Duke University<lb/>
December 13 and 15, along with<lb/>
Wake Forest Decembei 17.<lb/>
Georgia Southern comes to<lb/>
Greenville January I, then the<lb/>
Pirates travel to George<lb/>
Washington January 2.<lb/>
Davidson at home<lb/>
Furman and Virginia Military<lb/>
Institute play here January 6<lb/>
and 10, before East Carolina<lb/>
travels to Charlotte to meet rival<lb/>
Davidson. The Bucs are<lb/>
fortunate to have Davidson on<lb/>
their schedule this year. Last<lb/>
year they had to go into the<lb/>
Soughern Con ference<lb/>
Tournament without meeting<lb/>
Davidson during the regular<lb/>
season, and Coach Quinn felt his<lb/>
(continued on page 11)<lb/>
tod down, eyeo<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0019"/><lb/>
20, 1969<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
thern Miss, handed the<lb/>
e of their worst defeats<lb/>
hod's history w,th a<lb/>
ng. No doubt, the Bucs<lb/>
t for revenge.<lb/>
basketball schedule<lb/>
list will have hardly<lb/>
on Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
aach Tom Quinn and<lb/>
vill open their toughest<lb/>
season in the history<lb/>
ool.<lb/>
;ar's schedule will see<lb/>
s tackling four Atlantic<lb/>
nference teams, along<lb/>
uthern Conference<lb/>
ridson.<lb/>
is returning stars, plus<lb/>
homore hopefuls, and<lb/>
'layers, Quinn will be<lb/>
apture the Southern<lb/>
e crown he and his<lb/>
for so desperately for<lb/>
gets pretty tough!<lb/>
c.<lb/>
necock clash<lb/>
hosting Western<lb/>
December I, Roanoke<lb/>
December 3, and<lb/>
nristian December 6,<lb/>
ill face their first real<lb/>
nst national power<lb/>
jrolina. If Minges<lb/>
; ever going to see a<lb/>
owd for a basketball<lb/>
ould be the night of<lb/>
; r 10 when the<lb/>
;s invade the ECU<lb/>
ics then travel to<lb/>
and Duke University<lb/>
3 and 15, along with<lb/>
rest Decembei 17.<lb/>
Southern comes to<lb/>
January I, then the<lb/>
travel to George<lb/>
January 2.<lb/>
dson at home<lb/>
and Virginia Military<lb/>
lay here January 6<lb/>
?fore East Carolina<lb/>
harlotte to meet rival<lb/>
I. The Bucs are<lb/>
d have Davidson on<lb/>
ule this year. Last<lb/>
had to go into the<lb/>
n Conference<lb/>
it without meeting<lb/>
during the regular<lb/>
Coach Quinn felt his<lb/>
inued on page 1 1)<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
lead down, eye on the ba<lb/>
I<lb/>
w<lb/>
1<lb/>
L<lb/>
A long race<lb/>
ied  page 10)<lb/>
I have done better<lb/>
oinst thent in the Tournament<lb/>
they had been able to play<lb/>
i earlier in the year. This<lb/>
the, v.i el that chance,<lb/>
lit of course it will be on the<lb/>
fidson home court. Getting<lb/>
Wildcats away from their<lb/>
is a feat hard to accomplish.<lb/>
IAfter Davidson, comes N.C.<lb/>
(ate away on January 15 to<lb/>
Mid out the toughest of the<lb/>
Irate opponents on their first<lb/>
pound.<lb/>
iThen there is always<lb/>
?mming, with the Aqua-bucs<lb/>
pig for then fifth straight<lb/>
iference title, and golf, going<lb/>
their second straight<lb/>
Inference title after capturing<lb/>
pir first ever in '69. Wrestling,<lb/>
'the rise in past years, owes<lb/>
?xh to Coach John Welborn<lb/>
iding the grapplers to a second<lb/>
pace finish in the conference in<lb/>
? the best in the history of<lb/>
 school.<lb/>
I Track will be hoping for more<lb/>
PM competition power this<lb/>
w and hoping they can<lb/>
pve their second place finish<lb/>
last year. Lacrosse comes<lb/>
m the spring, playing on a<lb/>
'basis. Finally, there is the<lb/>
testioncrew.<lb/>
Crew destroyed<lb/>
lr destroyed the entire ECU<lb/>
P Program in early June,<lb/>
ID'n9 out approximately<lb/>
U?0 dollars worth of<lb/>
7ment in one flash. Along<lb/>
went a building program<lb/>
wht Coach Vic Pezulla has<lb/>
 Workmg for the past few<lb/>
??Crew finished third in the<lb/>
.  Conference in '69, but<lb/>
J,r! that Wlth a sih Place<lb/>
r1" Dad Vail regatta in<lb/>
E,es P '8' 3 S?rt of' World<lb/>
of rowing. Twenty-two<lb/>
COmPeted in the regatta,<lb/>
e Bucs had to scramble to<lb/>
toth??meets in order to make<lb/>
ntne finals.<lb/>
Ration is stiM open as to<lb/>
-ebuiiwu wMI be available<lb/>
r"dthe Crew program.<lb/>
All<lb/>
e$tini<lb/>
?n all.<lb/>
it will be an<lb/>
CaCus tk' f?r SP?rtS fanS<lb/>
A haJus- Ths year's freshmen<lb/>
? something to which<lb/>
rC8fl '?ok forward.<lb/>
Four yards in a cloud of dust<lb/>
A difficult situation<lb/>
tUlte ohemtan<lb/>
ptagtattrani<lb/>
ckomc $tfo Jitattimts<lb/>
Get Away From The Ordinary<lb/>
Enjoy Greenville's Finest Foods<lb/>
In Our Quiet Intimate Atmosphere<lb/>
208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
One Block From Campus<lb/>
Welcome to ECU<lb/>
Freshmen!<lb/>
And Wecome to Greenville!<lb/>
Where it's Belk Tyler's<lb/>
Fashion Headquarters For<lb/>
Campus Bound Gals and Guys.<lb/>
We invite You to visit<lb/>
our 2nd Floor Sportswear dept.<lb/>
where Fashion styles really<lb/>
Turn-on<lb/>
If it's Newif it's the<lb/>
"IN-LOOK You'll find it<lb/>
first at Belk Tyler<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Open Mon.Jhurs &amp; Fri. 'til 9 PM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039416_0020"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>