<?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="00039419_0001"/>
22 to<lb/>
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Bob!<lb/>
the east Carolinian<lb/>
"Let us<lb/>
dare to read, think, speak, and write<lb/>
44 No 21<lb/>
Jiast Carolina University g<lb/>
reenville, N. C.<lb/>
July 2, 1969<lb/>
Construction creeps east<lb/>
providing campus face-lift<lb/>
Pile drivers have given way to steel beams and thick cables<lb/>
on the eastern end of campus: East Carolina continues to build<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Tearing down the old and raising the new<lb/>
seems to be the current trend of campus<lb/>
construction.<lb/>
Along with the new science building, several<lb/>
dormitories and classroom buildings, the<lb/>
Development Evaluation Clinic and Day Care<lb/>
Center for Handicapped Children has become the<lb/>
newest project of ECU's Expansion program.<lb/>
The Biology and Physics departments,<lb/>
presently located in Flanagan, will move to the<lb/>
new Science building by September I, 1969. This<lb/>
move allows for needed expansion of the<lb/>
Chemistry Department as well as Biology and<lb/>
Physics. Chemistry will now move into the<lb/>
vacated rooms of the old Science Building.<lb/>
A new general classroom building, that will be<lb/>
nearly twice as large as Austin, is expected to oe<lb/>
completed for fall quarter. It will be located<lb/>
between Memorial Gym and the new Music<lb/>
Building with an estimated cost of 2.9 million.<lb/>
The new building will house the 9<lb/>
history, sociology, political science and German<lb/>
departments which were previously loc<lb/>
Austin, joyner Library, Graham, and the Nursing<lb/>
Buildings.<lb/>
Dormitory expansion entails two new high-rise<lb/>
buildings for both men and women.which will<lb/>
accommodate approximately 900 students.<lb/>
Estimated costs will run close to $3 million.<lb/>
The university's electrical distribution system<lb/>
is being replaced. The improved underground<lb/>
distribution system will serve to provide<lb/>
increased capacity for the expanding campus.<lb/>
On the lighter side, a new soda shop is being<lb/>
built near the Nursing Building. This octagonal<lb/>
structure will be finished in October and will be a<lb/>
needed relief for all students.<lb/>
ECU has requested funds in addition to the<lb/>
$10 million currently being spent on academic<lb/>
improvements from the North Carolina State<lb/>
Legislature. If approved a new building to house<lb/>
the School of Art will be constructed where Old<lb/>
. Austin once stood.<lb/>
University Vice-Presidert and Business<lb/>
Manager, F.D. Duncan expressed an urgent need<lb/>
for more construction. He is quoted as saying,<lb/>
"Despite the fact that we are continuing to<lb/>
expand, we need more buildings<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0002"/><lb/>
� � <lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
t<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
Vogues' summer concert<lb/>
scheduled for ECU mall<lb/>
Ju�V2969<lb/>
The Vogues, Warner<lb/>
Brothers-Reprise recording stars,<lb/>
will appear in concert on the mall<lb/>
of ECU on Tuesday, July 22 at<lb/>
eight o'clock p.m. The concert is<lb/>
free.<lb/>
This group has a long list of<lb/>
record hits, including some<lb/>
eleven million sellers.They have<lb/>
recorded several albums and<lb/>
have appeared on major<lb/>
television shows such as Ed<lb/>
Sullivan, Mike Douglas, Red<lb/>
Skelton, and the Glen Campbell<lb/>
show.<lb/>
TOP RECORDINGS<lb/>
The Vogues have been voted<lb/>
among the nation's top five<lb/>
record groups due to their many<lb/>
hit records including "Turn<lb/>
Around-Look At Me" (a<lb/>
million-seller), "You're The<lb/>
One "Five-O'clock World "<lb/>
Magic Town and more<lb/>
recently, "No Not Much<lb/>
Other recordings include their<lb/>
edition of "My Special Angel<lb/>
"Till "Earth Angel "Please,<lb/>
Planned for Sent. 10<lb/>
Mr. Sun "Woman Helping<lb/>
Man and "The Impossible<lb/>
Dream<lb/>
Members of the Vogues are:<lb/>
Bill Burkette, lead baritone; Don<lb/>
Miller, baritone; Hugh Geyer,<lb/>
first tenor, and Chuck Blasko,<lb/>
second tenor. Backing up the<lb/>
group are guitarist, Marty Mundy<lb/>
and drummer, Greg Shannon.<lb/>
BIG BREAK<lb/>
The group began about eight<lb/>
or nine years ago in Turtle<lb/>
Creek, Pa. They had one hit,<lb/>
"Which One Will It Be" but after<lb/>
this, things slowed down because<lb/>
the group literally disappeared<lb/>
from the music scene to get<lb/>
service and school out of the<lb/>
way.<lb/>
The Vogms' big break came<lb/>
as a result of an incident at the<lb/>
recording studio and a<lb/>
subsequent hit record. A<lb/>
promotion head, Jack Hakim<lb/>
heard the group recording a song<lb/>
and liked the way they sounded<lb/>
so he signed the group to record<lb/>
with CO &amp; CE Records. The<lb/>
song was "You're the One" and<lb/>
quickly rose to No. 2 on the<lb/>
record charts across the country<lb/>
LEGITIMATE SOUND<lb/>
In their concert act the Vogues<lb/>
usually include their current hit<lb/>
songs and special material such<lb/>
as a Mancini or Tijuana Brass<lb/>
medley. They also sing some<lb/>
standards such as "September in<lb/>
the Rain "Just in Time and<lb/>
"Bewitched, Bothered and<lb/>
Bewildered Their act usually<lb/>
includes some satire .<lb/>
Don, the baritone singer,<lb/>
spoke for the group and<lb/>
explained about their style.<lb/>
"Our music at the start was<lb/>
definitely "Rock 'n RollAt<lb/>
this point, we've incorporated<lb/>
the legitimate sound for our<lb/>
night club and college concert<lb/>
act with this format because<lb/>
anything we've come up with<lb/>
has a sound which has been<lb/>
identified with the "Rock<lb/>
Sound<lb/>
Activity fees boost transit system<lb/>
Dreary early morning walks<lb/>
to class in the rain will end for<lb/>
most students on Sept. 10, when<lb/>
transit service will begin for East<lb/>
Carolina students. Either two or<lb/>
three buses will be in operation<lb/>
between the dorms, Minges<lb/>
Coliseum, Buccaneer Courts, Pitt<lb/>
Plaza, and Wright Circle.<lb/>
Service will begin at 7:30<lb/>
a.m. and run until 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
with an option in the contract<lb/>
for an extension of service until<lb/>
9:00 p.m. if there is a demand<lb/>
for it. The contract may also<lb/>
contain a clause enabling ECU to<lb/>
obtain charter service at a<lb/>
� educed rate.<lb/>
Three companies have given<lb/>
bids for the contract. The SGA<lb/>
will decide which to accept this<lb/>
week. ECU will be the second<lb/>
school in North Carolina to have<lb/>
a transit system. However,<lb/>
UNC's transit system operates<lb/>
on a different principle; the<lb/>
student must pay a dime each<lb/>
time he gets on the bus.<lb/>
East Carolina's transit system<lb/>
will be financed by a two dollar<lb/>
additior to the student activity<lb/>
fee, which was approved by the<lb/>
student body in a referendum<lb/>
spring quarter. The student will<lb/>
pay nothing when he gets on the<lb/>
bus, and he may ride as often as<lb/>
he wishes. The system will cost<lb/>
$39,000 a year, part of which<lb/>
may be donated by interested<lb/>
merchants in Pitt Plaza. This<lb/>
plan was approved by the Board<lb/>
of Trustees on May 29, 1969.<lb/>
The present transit system is<lb/>
the result of a trial transit<lb/>
system of last spring quarter.<lb/>
Beginning the second day of<lb/>
spring quarter and running for<lb/>
fifteen days, the Raleigh City<lb/>
Coach Lines provided two buses<lb/>
for a total of $4,800. This<lb/>
covered costs of maintenance,<lb/>
insurance, fuel, and the drivers.<lb/>
The trial transit system was a<lb/>
huge success, ending on a<lb/>
Thursday after two weeks of<lb/>
clear, sunny weather.<lb/>
"The Voques" brinq their "pop-rock" sound to<lb/>
ECU campus Tuesday, July 22.<lb/>
Institute planned as<lb/>
miniature 'Spain'<lb/>
Carty leaves for Colombia<lb/>
Lt. Col. Douglas F. Carty, a<lb/>
professor of Aerospace studies at<lb/>
ECU will retire July 31, after<lb/>
almost 28 years in the military<lb/>
and three years of service at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Col. Carty began his military<lb/>
career in the Army Air Corps<lb/>
during World War II. He left the<lb/>
Army in 1947 when the Air<lb/>
Force became a separate branch<lb/>
of the military.<lb/>
His career has been mainly<lb/>
concerned with COUNTER<lb/>
INTELLIGENCE and college<lb/>
assignments.<lb/>
His college assignments have<lb/>
included August Anna, Texas A<lb/>
&amp; M, Brooklyn College, and<lb/>
ECU. He has been at ECU since<lb/>
June 1966.<lb/>
ECU is Col. Carty's second<lb/>
ROTC assignment, the first<lb/>
being August Anna.<lb/>
CHANGES IN ROTC<lb/>
According to Carty, the<lb/>
greatest change in the ROTC<lb/>
program over the pastl5 years<lb/>
has been the steady continuing<lb/>
emphasis on the academic<lb/>
quality of the program through<lb/>
the cooperation with the Board<lb/>
of Visitors, composed of Deans<lb/>
and Presidents, in their<lb/>
supervision of the curriculum.<lb/>
The new ROTC curriculum is<lb/>
one of psychological and<lb/>
sociological approach to<lb/>
leadership and management in a<lb/>
manner complimentary to that<lb/>
of the Business Department.<lb/>
The junior and senior level<lb/>
courses now use a dialogue<lb/>
method of teaching where small<lb/>
groups numbering no more than<lb/>
15 give the student an obligation<lb/>
to participate actively in<lb/>
classroom discussion.<lb/>
Col Carty hopes to see more<lb/>
individual research in areas such<lb/>
as effective leadership or the role<lb/>
of the home environment in<lb/>
relation to effective leaders of<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
NEED FOR ROTC<lb/>
When asked why ROTC<lb/>
should be promoted, especially<lb/>
today with the growing dissent<lb/>
on college campuses to the<lb/>
program, Col. Carty stated:<lb/>
"We need the continuing<lb/>
influx of civilian minded young<lb/>
men in the military so that we<lb/>
will not develop a military caste<lb/>
which is divided from the main<lb/>
of civilian life<lb/>
Continuing he said, "It will<lb/>
be a bad day for the country if<lb/>
the. military is forced to raise its<lb/>
3wn officers, especially when<lb/>
one considers that 90 of our<lb/>
The Spanish Institute is a<lb/>
select group of Spanish teachers<lb/>
throughout the U.S. They are<lb/>
chosen on the basis of their<lb/>
personal and professional<lb/>
qualifications to attend East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Other qualifications for the<lb/>
program include two years of<lb/>
college Spanish and a bachelors<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
Each applicant is required to<lb/>
sign the "Polabora de Honor" or<lb/>
"Word of Honor" which states<lb/>
that they will not speak<lb/>
anything but Spanish unless it is<lb/>
absolutely necessary. Violation<lb/>
of this code results in their<lb/>
dismissal from the institute.<lb/>
The purpose of the program,<lb/>
headed by Mr. Gary Ambert, is<lb/>
to increase their teaching<lb/>
effectiveness.<lb/>
The thirty five members o<lb/>
the institute work on all phase!<lb/>
of the Spanish language including<lb/>
civilization, linguistics, and<lb/>
conversation. In conclusion of<lb/>
their program they receive nine<lb/>
quarter hours credit in graduate<lb/>
school.<lb/>
In essence, the institute has;<lb/>
created for itself a miniature<lb/>
Spain, providing for its<lb/>
participints a practical<lb/>
knowledge of the Hispanii<lb/>
world.<lb/>
The students arrived on June<lb/>
I7 and will remain at East<lb/>
Carolina until early August.<lb/>
University party launches<lb/>
'Coins for Crew' project<lb/>
Col. Douglas F. Carty<lb/>
officers come from civilian<lb/>
schools<lb/>
After retirement Carty plans<lb/>
to become an evangelist. He will<lb/>
begin by going to Colombia,<lb/>
South America for a short trip<lb/>
during the month of August.<lb/>
Carty and his wife, who is a<lb/>
Russian language expert, have<lb/>
been invited to participate in a<lb/>
Holy Spirit Teaching Mission in<lb/>
Russia beginning in June of<lb/>
1970.<lb/>
Carty is an Independent<lb/>
Evangelist, not connected with<lb/>
any specific church or<lb/>
denomination.<lb/>
Col. Carty leaves ECU with<lb/>
the following message. "I think<lb/>
the world is suffering from<lb/>
about every ill possible and I<lb/>
think God has an answer to<lb/>
every single problem. That<lb/>
answer is Jesus Christ<lb/>
Support for the rebuilding of<lb/>
the ECU Crew has been<lb/>
blossoming all over campus.<lb/>
Money is being collected in a<lb/>
room to room campus drive<lb/>
initiated by the University Party<lb/>
and interested students.<lb/>
oins for Crew" will be<lb/>
launched Monday evening at<lb/>
eight to help collect funds to<lb/>
help rebuild the Crew whose<lb/>
equipment was devastated by<lb/>
fire earlier this summer.<lb/>
FIRE CREATES FEAR<lb/>
The fire destroyed the<lb/>
warehouse where the equipment<lb/>
was stored and all of its<lb/>
contents, but it created a fear in<lb/>
the minds of those affiliated<lb/>
with the East Carolina Crew<lb/>
program, hat all may have been<lb/>
lost for Crew in the future at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Volunteers will canvas all the<lb/>
dorms asking for contributions<lb/>
with a $15,000 goal. All<lb/>
solicitors will carry cards!<lb/>
identifying them as legitimate!<lb/>
representatives of this campaign<lb/>
Stands are being erected in thea<lb/>
CU to allow day students to helpj<lb/>
out.<lb/>
CONTRIBUTIONS SOUGHT<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins sent<lb/>
letters all over the state asking<lb/>
for support and contributions!<lb/>
for the Crew.<lb/>
SGA legislators passed a bi<lb/>
yesterday transfering $2,262.9<lb/>
from the marque fund to th<lb/>
Crew to help it rebuild. They ar<lb/>
also in the process of contactm<lb/>
contributors to the Gratificatio<lb/>
Project to see if these func<lb/>
might also be used for Crew.<lb/>
Currently ranked sixth in th<lb/>
nation, the Crew has defeated<lb/>
such crews as Purdue, Marietta<lb/>
Rollins, University of Virginia<lb/>
and Notre Dame; a credit to it sj<lb/>
coach, Vic Pezulla.<lb/>
John Schofield<lb/>
newly elected ex(<lb/>
Sou?a, vice presid<lb/>
President Ariai<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0003"/><lb/>
Ju�V2969<lb/>
-2,1969<lb/>
TheEwt Carolinian<lb/>
legislators provide funds<lb/>
for ailing Pirate Crew<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
ck" sound to<lb/>
d as<lb/>
n<lb/>
by Mr. Gaiy Ambert, isj<lb/>
crease their teaching J<lb/>
eness.<lb/>
thirty five members oil<lb/>
ititute work on all phases!<lb/>
Spanish language including!<lb/>
ation, linguistics, and!<lb/>
sation. In conclusion ofi<lb/>
rogram they receive nmef<lb/>
hours credit in graduate<lb/>
ssence, the institute has<lb/>
for itself a miniature!<lb/>
providing for itfl<lb/>
: i p i nts a pi actical<lb/>
;dge of the Hispanic!<lb/>
students arrived on June!<lb/>
will remain at East!<lb/>
) until early August.<lb/>
launches<lb/>
project<lb/>
irs will carry cards!<lb/>
ng them as legitimatej<lb/>
tatives of this campaign<lb/>
ire being erected in the!<lb/>
low day students to helpl<lb/>
BUTIONS SOUGHT<lb/>
?nt Leo W. Jenkins sent<lb/>
I over the state asking<lb/>
ort and contributions<lb/>
ew.<lb/>
legislators passed a billj<lb/>
i transfering $2,262.94<lb/>
; marque fund to the<lb/>
lelp it rebuild. They are<lb/>
ie process of contacting<lb/>
ors to the Gratification<lb/>
to see if these funds<lb/>
3 be used for Crew.<lb/>
itly ranked sixth in the<lb/>
he Crew has defeated<lb/>
t as Purdue, Marietta<lb/>
University of Virginia<lb/>
i Dame; a credit to it<lb/>
c Pezulla.<lb/>
Robert K. Adams, Summer School President is sworn in by John<lb/>
Schofield.<lb/>
The summei school SGA met for the first time Tuesday, July<lb/>
I, Along with the task of swearing in the various officers and<lb/>
electing the speaker of the house, the new SGA handled a busy<lb/>
agenda.<lb/>
John Schofield, President of regular session SGA, swore in the<lb/>
newly elected executive officers: Robert Adams, president, Craig<lb/>
Soua, vice president; and Nancy Cannady, secretary.<lb/>
President Adams thpn swore in the summer school Legislature.<lb/>
The first business for the Legislature to handle was the<lb/>
election of the speaker of the legislature. Wayne Eads,<lb/>
independent, and Brian Vandercook, University Party, were<lb/>
nominated with Eads winning the position.<lb/>
In an effort to help the Crew to rebuild itself after a fire nearly<lb/>
deviated the entire program, John Schofield moved that the<lb/>
SGA Marque Fund be transferred to the Crew.<lb/>
Following the swearing in of officers and the election of the<lb/>
speaker, the new Legislature moved on to an agenda concerning<lb/>
various items of business, the ECU Crew, and Biafra.<lb/>
LEGISLATURE E LECTS SPE AKE R<lb/>
The Marque Fund envolves $2,262.94 which had been held<lb/>
bV the Student Government for the past six years. The summer<lb/>
school SGA unanimously passed the motion.<lb/>
Wayne Eads takes oath after being elected Speaker of the Leqislature.<lb/>
Another motion put before the newly elected Legislature was<lb/>
that the Gratification Project's funds also be transferred to the<lb/>
Crew.<lb/>
MOTION AWAITS CONSENT<lb/>
The motion was defeated pending permission from downtown<lb/>
merchants who contributed specifically to the Gratification<lb/>
Fund, and therefore not available to the Crew without their<lb/>
consent.<lb/>
Further on the agenda was a motion for the SGA to purchase<lb/>
as Addressograph offset duplicator. This motion was pushed to<lb/>
the Budget Committee for its approval.<lb/>
Another item of business was to change the time and day<lb/>
which the Legislature meets. The meeting was changed to<lb/>
Tuesday at 3:00 p.m. of each week.<lb/>
The final business of the day was the endorsement by the SGA<lb/>
of a Biafra Fund Drive begun by Walt Wittemore and The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
So�a. Vice-president, and Nancy Cannady,Secretary, take office.<lb/>
Newly elected legislature assumes duties.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Left in the Wright window<lb/>
i<lb/>
5<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
w<lb/>
Dorm counselors fight barefeet<lb/>
"Would somebody please tell<lb/>
me why it is that dorm<lb/>
counselors have such a big<lb/>
hangup with bare feet?"<lb/>
Over and over again I have<lb/>
heard worried students ask that<lb/>
question. Since the concern on<lb/>
campus is always great over<lb/>
issues like this, I feel that it is<lb/>
my duty in this column to try to<lb/>
explain the situation and help<lb/>
fellow students to decide for<lb/>
themselves on what they stand.<lb/>
Controversy is not to be<lb/>
feared in the East Carolinian,<lb/>
and therefore we will leap into<lb/>
this problem; all the while,<lb/>
inviting dissent.<lb/>
FEET ARE BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
Feet are beautiful, or so I<lb/>
once was led to believe.<lb/>
I have a godson who is just a<lb/>
little over one year old. He was<lb/>
even younger when he first<lb/>
discovered his feet. The thought<lb/>
never crossed my mind that<lb/>
there could be anything wrong<lb/>
with that, and so we used to sit<lb/>
around for the longest time<lb/>
playing happily with our feet<lb/>
and having just a great time<lb/>
That was before I found out<lb/>
about feet straight from a dorm<lb/>
counselor.<lb/>
You see, feet that are not<lb/>
properly covered are improper.<lb/>
This seemed like a tautology of<lb/>
sorts when I was first confronted<lb/>
with the idea.<lb/>
FEET ARE UGLY<lb/>
You have to understand, girls,<lb/>
that there are a few parts of the<lb/>
human body that are not fit to<lb/>
be seen by the naked eye except<lb/>
in the privacy of one's home.<lb/>
State Bank<lb/>
and Trust Co,<lb/>
5 Points<lb/>
Greanrffl N. C.<lb/>
Member F. D. I. C.<lb/>
By WHITNEY HADDEN<lb/>
and then only under certain<lb/>
circumstances.<lb/>
This is more true of women<lb/>
than of men. It is against the<lb/>
rules for a girl to be seen<lb/>
barefoot in the dorms or on<lb/>
campus. There is no such rule<lb/>
for men.<lb/>
This must be because men's<lb/>
feet are not quite as ugly and<lb/>
also it is less likely that the sight<lb/>
of a man's feet will lead a girl<lb/>
into lustful thoughts and<lb/>
therefore place the young man<lb/>
in a possibly embarrassing<lb/>
situation<lb/>
A young lady's feet are<lb/>
exceptionally sexy and<lb/>
therefore, quite obviously,<lb/>
hideous.<lb/>
SHOES MORE SEXY<lb/>
So this is why it is that After aM young men are<lb/>
although one could prefer that often in tne obby of the dorm<lb/>
young men discreetly cover their and the jmpression that<lb/>
"pieds" (ahem), it is even more less-well-brought-up girls create<lb/>
vital that young ladies wear<lb/>
some form of garment over their<lb/>
lower extremities whenever they<lb/>
should chance to be in public.<lb/>
(One of the more "swinging"<lb/>
housemothers added that shoes<lb/>
and "such-like" were really and<lb/>
truly more sexy since they left<lb/>
more to the imagination)<lb/>
RULE REASONABLE<lb/>
From this line of reasoning, it<lb/>
is easy to see the rationale for<lb/>
what was before a rather silly<lb/>
and seemingly trite rule.<lb/>
Girls are not allowed to leave<lb/>
the dorms if their feet are not<lb/>
properly covered for fear that<lb/>
they could thus unthinkingly do<lb/>
irreparable damage to their<lb/>
reputation, and possibly hurt the<lb/>
image of ECU.<lb/>
Uni<lb/>
vcrsity<lb/>
Book IhXcBange<lb/>
New oelerlion<lb/>
IPennanfs, Pillows<lb/>
ana JrVts<lb/>
odo Oo Cotanche<lb/>
by running back and forth w<lb/>
undresseo feet, can affect th<lb/>
attitude that these young me<lb/>
have toward the rest of the ojr<lb/>
In this light, the ruling m J<lb/>
by the dorm counselors in j<lb/>
effort to "clarify" the dre<lb/>
code, seems perfectl<lb/>
reasonable.<lb/>
SUPPORT MEASURES<lb/>
I cannot understand the girl<lb/>
who have complained to mJ<lb/>
about the dorm counselor'i<lb/>
threat to revoke the dress codj<lb/>
(if girls did not stop violating th<lb/>
barefoot rule) so that girls wouli<lb/>
lose their "bermuda privileges<lb/>
Someone has to make thd<lb/>
rules, and if the giils on campuj<lb/>
are not all as well brought up,<lb/>
to know better than to appear in<lb/>
public with bare feet, then I foj<lb/>
one should hope that the dorr<lb/>
counselors take strong measure<lb/>
to protect our college'<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
In support of these measures!<lb/>
I plan to publicly hum rn<lb/>
Wright fountain wading card<lb/>
and I have already hound my<lb/>
godson's feet.<lb/>
� 3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
� 1-HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE-IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th mad Charles 81 Comer Acran From HaroWc<lb/>
Complete Lomtdry and Dry Cloantnf Serrloe<lb/>
Goodbye to all my friends<lb/>
keep the cards and letters<lb/>
coming<lb/>
don pierce<lb/>
The Better<lb/>
Mousetrap<lb/>
Headquarters for<lb/>
Hathaway shirts<lb/>
Proctor s TIRATES DEN"<lb/>
Ask anyone who owns KLH stereo equipment about its per-<lb/>
formance and value. Then seek out the Model Twenty-Four and<lb/>
judge it critically for yourself.<lb/>
You won't have trouble finding one in a store. Just follow that<lb/>
well-beaten path. . .<lb/>
K<lb/>
isiiiii<lb/>
� �Ml<lb/>
I<lb/>
Harmony House South<lb/>
SALES &amp; SERVICF<lb/>
Cvans ft 12th SU.<lb/>
7:)2kM<lb/>
Ja<lb/>
I like jaz<lb/>
that it is fi<lb/>
pick itself u<lb/>
the near fat<lb/>
the death of<lb/>
(Birdland, tr<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Jazz is<lb/>
mostly due t<lb/>
the jazz festr<lb/>
up in cities<lb/>
across the Un<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
But, to th<lb/>
am talking ab<lb/>
Jazz Festiva<lb/>
doors down<lb/>
really went a<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
program wei<lb/>
Ray Charles,<lb/>
Dave Brut<lb/>
Mulligan, Sui<lb/>
George Bens'<lb/>
the M.Gs, R<lb/>
rock group kr<lb/>
Family Stor<lb/>
program was<lb/>
Oav is ant<lb/>
Unlimited,<lb/>
concert turn<lb/>
best of the<lb/>
later explaii<lb/>
George Bens<lb/>
guitarist start<lb/>
and a fine sta<lb/>
young, talen<lb/>
the heir to t<lb/>
Wes Montgorr<lb/>
Benson so<lb/>
Montgomery,<lb/>
thrown in, I<lb/>
natural, I'm t<lb/>
admired the<lb/>
Benson had a<lb/>
player was e<lb/>
conrprt was o<lb/>
DUKE El<lb/>
Next on tl<lb/>
young piani<lb/>
Herbie Handc<lb/>
quartet H<lb/>
excellent f<lb/>
harmony, but<lb/>
avant garde fo<lb/>
do a very toi<lb/>
"Eye of the I-<lb/>
drummer dest<lb/>
his ability to<lb/>
Handcock's d<lb/>
thumper from<lb/>
showed it.<lb/>
Next on thi<lb/>
aiways elec<lb/>
Ellington. Elli<lb/>
stje to the<lb/>
ovation, and t<lb/>
do his thing, v<lb/>
d�ing for do<lb/>
n�w. The sou<lb/>
0d Ellington <lb/>
and it is con<lb/>
that class is alv<lb/>
Ellington r<lb/>
old standards<lb/>
Tra'n "Satin<lb/>
ar,d showed u:<lb/>
truelV universa<lb/>
 keeping<lb/>
Ell,ngton shov<lb/>
HON<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0005"/><lb/>
i i ;X"M ' Cd5' Carolinian<lb/>
Sfeet I JaZZ feSf'Va' bec�mes rhyfhrrTriof<lb/>
IVJ 1 ByDONPlERHF <lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
unnmg back and forth wit<lb/>
esseo feet, can affect th<lb/>
Jde that these young m<lb/>
toward the rest of the girl!<lb/>
I this light, the ruling ma<lb/>
he dorm counselors, in<lb/>
t to "clarify" the dre<lb/>
e. seems per f ecth<lb/>
nable.<lb/>
UPPORT MEASURES<lb/>
annot understand the girlj<lb/>
have complained to m<lb/>
the dorm counselor!<lb/>
t to revoke the dress cod)<lb/>
Is did not stop violating th<lb/>
)ot rule) so that girls would,<lb/>
heir "bermuda privileges!<lb/>
meone has to make thi<lb/>
and if the gh Is on campu<lb/>
)t all as well brought up i<lb/>
aw better than to appear m<lb/>
: with bare feet, then I f0j<lb/>
lould hope that the dorn<lb/>
elors take strong measure<lb/>
protect our college'<lb/>
ition,<lb/>
support of these measures!<lb/>
n to publicly burn my<lb/>
t fountain wading cardj<lb/>
have already hound my<lb/>
Vs feet.<lb/>
Ibye to all my friends<lb/>
the cards and letters<lb/>
ng<lb/>
don pierce<lb/>
I like jazz. I am glad to see<lb/>
 jt is finally beginning to<lb/>
pick itself up offthe floor after<lb/>
the near fatal blow caused by<lb/>
the death of the big jazz clubs<lb/>
(Birdland, the Roundtable) in<lb/>
Mew York.<lb/>
Jazz is prospering now,<lb/>
mostly due the healthy state of<lb/>
singers, Tony Watkins and<lb/>
Shirley Witherspoon, who did a<lb/>
five song set that had everyone<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
in<lb/>
Roland Kirk has to be seen to<lb/>
be believed. He strides on stage<lb/>
with two or three saxes strung<lb/>
hopping, around his neck, a transistor<lb/>
c 111 ngron s performance <lb/>
highlighted by the presentation<lb/>
of a Centennial Medallion from<lb/>
the President of<lb/>
Hampton<lb/>
Institute, another fitting honor<lb/>
the jazz festival, which is poping to the Duke who has done s<lb/>
up in cities large and small all much for jazz<lb/>
across the United States.<lb/>
FRIDAY NIGHT BEST<lb/>
But, to the point, and what I<lb/>
am talking about is the Hampton<lb/>
Jazz Festival. TK-y broke the<lb/>
doors down at Hampton, and<lb/>
really went all �t to put on an<lb/>
outstanding show. On the<lb/>
program were Duke Ellington,<lb/>
Ray Charles, Herbie Handcock,<lb/>
Dave Brubeck and Gerry<lb/>
Mulligan, Sun Ra, Nina Simone,<lb/>
George Benson, Booker T. and<lb/>
the M.Gs, Roland Kirk, and the<lb/>
rock group known as Sly and the<lb/>
Family Stone. Also on the<lb/>
program was the elegant Miles<lb/>
Davis and Young Holt<lb/>
Unlimited. The Friday night<lb/>
concert turned out to be the<lb/>
best of the lot, for reasons I'll<lb/>
later explain. At any rate,<lb/>
George Benson, a young jazz<lb/>
guitarist started the evening off<lb/>
and a fine start it was. Benson is<lb/>
young, talented, and probably<lb/>
the heir to the throne left by<lb/>
Wes Montgomery.<lb/>
Benson sounded a lot like<lb/>
Montgomery, with a little Szabo<lb/>
thrown in, and this is only<lb/>
natural, I'm told, since he much<lb/>
admired the late Montgomery.<lb/>
Benson had a good set, his flute<lb/>
player was excellent, and the<lb/>
concert was off to a aood start.<lb/>
DUKE ELLINGTON<lb/>
on the program was a<lb/>
piano player named<lb/>
Next<lb/>
young<lb/>
Herbie Handcock along with his<lb/>
quartet Handcock showed<lb/>
excellent finger work and<lb/>
harmony, but was a little too<lb/>
avant garde for my tastes.Me did<lb/>
do a very tough number called<lb/>
"Eye of the Hurricane" and his<lb/>
drummer deserves mention for<lb/>
his ability to pound the drums.<lb/>
Handcock's drummer was tub<lb/>
thumper from 'way back and he<lb/>
showed it.<lb/>
Next on the program was the<lb/>
always elegant Mr. Duke<lb/>
Ellington Ellington strolled on<lb/>
stage to the sound of a large<lb/>
ovation, and then proceeded to<lb/>
do his thing, which he has been<lb/>
doing for close to forty years<lb/>
now. The sound was the same<lb/>
old Ell<lb/>
and<lb/>
'hat cl<lb/>
mgton we know and love,<lb/>
11 is comforting to know<lb/>
ass is always in style.<lb/>
old<lb/>
Ellington ran through all his<lb/>
 standards, "Take the A<lb/>
Train "Satin Doll and others,<lb/>
and showed us that his sound is<lb/>
truelV universal.<lb/>
Jn keeping wjth these times,<lb/>
"Won showed off two classy<lb/>
Ell<lb/>
Ellington is in a class by<lb/>
himself, and is always a pro, and,<lb/>
as you know, royalty is different<lb/>
from you and I.<lb/>
After Ellington there was a<lb/>
short intermission and then<lb/>
Young Holt Unlimited came on.<lb/>
Red Holt and Eldee Young were<lb/>
former sidemen with Ramsey<lb/>
Lewis for thirteen years, so you<lb/>
can imagine the sound that they<lb/>
have. Also in their group was<lb/>
Ken Chaney, a Canadian pianist,<lb/>
and Cleo Griffin, a trumpet<lb/>
player.<lb/>
HAS TO BE SEEN<lb/>
The Young Holt sound was<lb/>
very Ramsey Lewisish and<lb/>
r'thymical. Holt gave the crowd<lb/>
some thrills with a tremendous<lb/>
drum solo, and Eldee Young<lb/>
proved that all bass players are<lb/>
lead guitarists at heart by<lb/>
picking out "Elenor Rigby" on<lb/>
his cello. Young-Holt went<lb/>
offstage to their own<lb/>
composition, "Soulful Strut"<lb/>
and the stage was set for the<lb/>
appearance of Roland Kirk.<lb/>
Kirk's first song was a happy,<lb/>
jilting, vibrating number, and<lb/>
after some applause from the<lb/>
fans, Kirk yelled into the<lb/>
microphone, "you people who<lb/>
ain't clapping now, will be by<lb/>
the time I finish<lb/>
was radio, a couple of whistles, and a<lb/>
flute. Kirk is a<lb/>
multi instrumentalist, but not in<lb/>
the usual sense as that most<lb/>
multi instrumentalists play their<lb/>
instruments one at a time and<lb/>
Kirk plays them all at once. It is<lb/>
worth mentioning that Roland<lb/>
Kirk is blind.<lb/>
Roland Kirk knows his stuff,<lb/>
and he went into high gear. Kirk<lb/>
blew hard, fast, and melodic,<lb/>
and by his second song had them<lb/>
dancing in the aisles. People<lb/>
crowded the fences separating<lb/>
the stage from the audience and<lb/>
before long everyone in the<lb/>
place was dancing. Kirk never<lb/>
slowed his pace, only sped it up,<lb/>
and when he hit "Volunteer<lb/>
Slavery all hell broke loose<lb/>
with many loud screams, shouts,<lb/>
and a moan or two thrown in for<lb/>
harmony.<lb/>
Kirk left the stage to cries of<lb/>
"more, more" and it is safe to<lb/>
assume that they know Roland<lb/>
Kirk in Hampton now. It was, I<lb/>
believe, the outstanding<lb/>
performance of the evening and<lb/>
of the concert.<lb/>
CROWDED STAGE<lb/>
It was left to the explosive<lb/>
Sly Stone and his family to<lb/>
finish the job that Kirk had<lb/>
started, and the job was left in<lb/>
good hands.<lb/>
After twenty minutes or so,<lb/>
during which Sly had troubles<lb/>
with his organ, Sly and The<lb/>
Family started to pour it on.<lb/>
Soon, everyone was dancing, and<lb/>
then Sly hit 'Everyday People<lb/>
The people rushed out of the<lb/>
Join The JjQjfl Crowd<lb/>
Pizza M<lb/>
42! 7reenvi!Ie Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Paae)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
(Jail Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 756-9991<lb/>
Attention: Students<lb/>
and Faculty<lb/>
CITY LAUNDERETTE<lb/>
Leave your laundry, we do it for you.<lb/>
1 Hr. Fluff Dried Laundry Service<lb/>
Includes soap and bleach<lb/>
Laundry 9 B 83c, Folded 93c<lb/>
DRY CLEANING and SHIRTS<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Down from Burger Chef<lb/>
Jerry's Cafeteria<lb/>
TtTmon-friandsun<lb/>
,1:30 2:30,4:30 8:00<lb/>
HOME COOKED FOOD! r0ND'DlNING ROOM<lb/>
SEAFOOD  TAKE-OUTS - AIR . nF 8th AND EVANS<lb/>
stands, ran over some of<lb/>
Hampton's finest, and crowded<lb/>
down in front of the stage,<lb/>
dancing and singing and having a<lb/>
big ole time. Fun.<lb/>
Sly refused to let up, and if<lb/>
you have ever heard him, you<lb/>
know what that means. His<lb/>
music has a big, pulsating beat,<lb/>
and it throbbed into the<lb/>
audience unrelentlessly, and<lb/>
when that happens, you gotta<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
PRODUCER WORRIED<lb/>
Backed by twenty-thousand<lb/>
dollars worth of sound<lb/>
equipment Sly hit them hard<lb/>
and then he, his brother, and his<lb/>
bass player, jumped into the<lb/>
crowd to get everyone up<lb/>
dancing. They did. Sly got up on<lb/>
some chairs and began singing<lb/>
"higher and higher" and the<lb/>
crowd really got torn up and<lb/>
another group rushed the stage.<lb/>
Sly went back on stage, did<lb/>
his thing some more, and<lb/>
watched the patrons as they<lb/>
crawled on stage to dance with<lb/>
him. George Wein, festival<lb/>
producer, looked a little<lb/>
worried, so he gave the word to<lb/>
Sly to cool it, and they did,<lb/>
leaving the crowd in a rythym<lb/>
riot and finishing off the first<lb/>
night's performance in a bang,<lb/>
literally. Fun.<lb/>
HEAVY SINGING<lb/>
Saturday afternoon old pro<lb/>
Ray Charles entertained, and<lb/>
what can you say about Ray<lb/>
Charles except that he is great<lb/>
and always will be. "Georgia on<lb/>
My Mind" went over big, but<lb/>
then, so does everything that<lb/>
Charles sings, and his group was<lb/>
tremendous as usual. The<lb/>
Raelets socked it to everybody<lb/>
with some very heavy singing<lb/>
and dancing, and things ended<lb/>
up with "What'd I Say" and Ray<lb/>
went home. Verdict: great.<lb/>
Saturday night had Miles<lb/>
Davis, Gerry Mulligan and<lb/>
Brubeck, Nina Simone, Booker<lb/>
T and Sun Ra. Before the next<lb/>
dance, let me set the scene for<lb/>
you. It was hot (in the 80's and<lb/>
the crowd was restless and tired.<lb/>
DAVIS SPARKLING<lb/>
The fashionable Mr. Davis led<lb/>
off the show and he turned in<lb/>
his usual sparkling performance.<lb/>
By God, it's good to see a<lb/>
professional at work, especially<lb/>
one of the caliber of Miles Davis,<lb/>
and Davis gave the crowd some<lb/>
soul-stirring solos in his<lb/>
tremendous set.<lb/>
Brubeck and Mulligan were<lb/>
(cont'd, on page 7)<lb/>
ECU Students ��<lb/>
The WHOLESALE OUTLET<lb/>
is open for you <lb/>
We have your favorite beer<lb/>
KEGS AVAILABLE TO<lb/>
FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES,<lb/>
AND ALL GROUPS FOR<lb/>
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OLESALE �pen 1212 dai,y<lb/>
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Across from Union Carbide<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039419_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
i �<lb/>
Human error causes<lb/>
delay in counting<lb/>
Human error in the voting<lb/>
last Tuesday for Student<lb/>
Government Association officers<lb/>
and legislature resulted in a<lb/>
disrupted computer, and votes<lb/>
being recounted by hand.<lb/>
ECU was the first school in<lb/>
the nation to acquire the<lb/>
computer, and the only school<lb/>
in the southeast to have the<lb/>
Optical Reader.<lb/>
The importance of the<lb/>
computer is seen not only in its<lb/>
use in campus elections, but also<lb/>
in test grading, pre-registration,<lb/>
and freshman orientation.<lb/>
Even with the breakdown and<lb/>
the mistakes in the tallying of<lb/>
votes, the computer still cut the<lb/>
work of the Election Committee<lb/>
in a third.<lb/>
During past elections the<lb/>
results were never known before<lb/>
two or three in the morning.<lb/>
With the use of the computer<lb/>
the time is cut to eleven thirty at<lb/>
the latest, saving not only time<lb/>
but also the manpower needed<lb/>
to tally the votes by hand.<lb/>
Summer elections had been<lb/>
designated as the trial run of the<lb/>
computer to see if it was a<lb/>
feasable solution to the late<lb/>
hours and confusion in the past.<lb/>
The major problem occurred<lb/>
when the computer invalidated<lb/>
those votes which were marked<lb/>
with incorrect markings.<lb/>
Through testing, and retesting,<lb/>
all the major problems have been<lb/>
realized and solutions are being<lb/>
worked out in time for fall<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
Among the suggested<lb/>
improvements for fall elections<lb/>
are more space between<lb/>
candidate names, clearer<lb/>
instructions on the card and<lb/>
possibly even a class on how to<lb/>
mark your ballot correctly.<lb/>
HOME BUILDERS SUPPLY CO.<lb/>
"All Kinds of Building Materials<lb/>
2000 DICKINSON AVENUE<lb/>
.GREENVILLE . N.C.<lb/>
L UMBER PAINT CEMENT<lb/>
BRICKS ROOFING<lb/>
BUILDER'S HARDWARE WINDOWS. DOORS<lb/>
Now open until 12 P.M.<lb/>
Is serving your favorite beverages<lb/>
From 8-12 P.M.<lb/>
In a quiet and intimate atmosphere<lb/>
208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Howard leaves to<lb/>
assume new position<lb/>
Henry B. Howard, Director of<lb/>
Public Relations, has resigned his<lb/>
position at ECU, effective July I.<lb/>
He resigned to take a position in<lb/>
the public relations department<lb/>
of Burlington Industries in<lb/>
Greensboro, N.C.<lb/>
Howard was the first full time<lb/>
director of the News Bureau. He<lb/>
came to East Carolina in 1963 as<lb/>
a graduate of UNC School of<lb/>
Journalism and as an<lb/>
experienced reporter previously<lb/>
associated with the Greenville<lb/>
Daily Reflector.<lb/>
Under Howard's direction,<lb/>
the physical plant of the News<lb/>
Bureau has expanded from<lb/>
several rooms in Rawl Annex to<lb/>
its present location in one wing<lb/>
of Erwin Hall.<lb/>
More employees were<lb/>
necessary to the expanded<lb/>
operations of the News Bureau.<lb/>
This need has been filled to a<lb/>
great extent by student workers.<lb/>
Student participat. jn in the<lb/>
functioning of the Bureau has<lb/>
been stressed by Howard.<lb/>
Plans for a monthly ECU<lb/>
news summary were also begun<lb/>
under Howard. The first issue is<lb/>
scheduled for release in the fall.<lb/>
Use of computers by the News<lb/>
Bureau is also scheduled for<lb/>
expansion in the near future.<lb/>
While at ECU, Howard also<lb/>
served as publicity director for<lb/>
the Summer Theater, the Coastal<lb/>
Plain Development Association<lb/>
and several community projects.<lb/>
During this time he also received<lb/>
the Cert.ficate of Merit from the<lb/>
American College Public<lb/>
Relations Association.<lb/>
At this time replacement for<lb/>
Howard has not been announced.<lb/>
2,1969<lb/>
Henry Howard<lb/>
Students choose<lb/>
Summer School Queen<lb/>
Thursday, July 10<lb/>
Summer School Queen will<lb/>
be chosen Thuisday, July 10, in<lb/>
an election that promises to be<lb/>
more enjoyable than its political<lb/>
counterparts.<lb/>
Though elections in the past<lb/>
have bee1' conducted by "peny<lb/>
voting ballot voting will be<lb/>
used for this summer's election<lb/>
In honor of the elected<lb/>
Queen, a student dance is<lb/>
scheduled for Saturday night,<lb/>
July 12.<lb/>
In the past the dance has<lb/>
always been held on campus, but<lb/>
FOR SALE: SPINET PAINO<lb/>
Wanted, responsible party to take over low monthly payments on<lb/>
a spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write credit Manager, P.O<lb/>
Box 64I, Matthews, N.C.<lb/>
HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, Inc.<lb/>
FOUR LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
WITH PRICES TO SAVE YOU MONEY<lb/>
No. 1 West End Circle<lb/>
No. 226I2 East 10th St.<lb/>
No. 390I West 5th St.<lb/>
No. 44th St.<lb/>
StcteUuMt<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Co' 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
1 Hr Cleaning 3 Hr Shirt Service<lb/>
things go<lb/>
better<lb/>
with<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Company<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
this year it will move to an<lb/>
off campus location.<lb/>
The change is an efforl by the<lb/>
Summer School SGA to<lb/>
encourage more student<lb/>
participation and to diaw a<lb/>
larger crowd.<lb/>
Any organization wishing to<lb/>
sponsor a candidate for Summer<lb/>
School Queen should contact<lb/>
Craig Souza in the SGA office<lb/>
by Monday, July 7.<lb/>
Details on the location of the<lb/>
dance and the band will he<lb/>
announced later in the week by<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
THE E<lb/>
ASTC<lb/>
AROL<lb/>
IN IAN<lb/>
Paying Positions available<lb/>
for.<lb/>
Reporters<lb/>
Advertising salesmen<lb/>
Contact:<lb/>
Cherry Stokes<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Faye Coggins<lb/>
Ad Manager<lb/>
My first reai<lb/>
Poets East<lb/>
Fo7u"m Series S<lb/>
ambivalence<lb/>
publishers (f(<lb/>
purposes the v<lb/>
be either<lb/>
presumptuous<lb/>
humorous, sine<lb/>
the price for<lb/>
French franc<lb/>
pounds as wi<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
My fust<lb/>
surface one, o<lb/>
closer perusal c<lb/>
Seven revealed<lb/>
write with ambi<lb/>
verve.<lb/>
SELFLESS<lb/>
Al f red W;<lb/>
handle his CO<lb/>
greatest confii<lb/>
foim is the mc<lb/>
poetry has the<lb/>
that is reminiso<lb/>
For me, h<lb/>
unt it led) p<lb/>
Chronicling the<lb/>
ends in .1 mim<lb/>
of selfless and s<lb/>
The layout 1<lb/>
is a bit unfort<lb/>
poem is long an<lb/>
the backside of<lb/>
have been prin<lb/>
pages<lb/>
DIVERSE SUE<lb/>
Robert McD<lb/>
the most rliv<lb/>
mattei and a<lb/>
could view poet<lb/>
his "The One<lb/>
and "Orpheus:<lb/>
would exist a<lb/>
with his othe<lb/>
somewhere in tt<lb/>
The fust, a<lb/>
is a fleeting<lb/>
incorporates thu<lb/>
The second de<lb/>
theme in a ran<lb/>
lines of mixed<lb/>
forced) rhyme<lb/>
both aresomeh<lb/>
MOST AM<lb/>
Of the fiv<lb/>
Hallman is the<lb/>
and the hardes'<lb/>
Her poems s<lb/>
y this, since<lb/>
entitled "The<lb/>
Credo") of ext<lb/>
of her metapho<lb/>
Her "New V<lb/>
ls thematically r<lb/>
sense excellenci<lb/>
vayue stanas.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0007"/><lb/>
oward<lb/>
;e<lb/>
Queen<lb/>
10<lb/>
it will move to an<lb/>
is location<lb/>
ange is an effort by the<lb/>
School SGA to<lb/>
i(je more student<lb/>
ion and to draw 3<lb/>
vd.<lb/>
rganization wishing to<lb/>
candidate for Summer<lb/>
lueen should contact<lb/>
ta in the SGA office<lb/>
y, July 7.<lb/>
on the location of the<lb/>
d the band will be<lb/>
i later in the week by<lb/>
1EE<lb/>
STC<lb/>
ROL<lb/>
IAN<lb/>
ositions available<lb/>
ters<lb/>
tising salesmen<lb/>
ry Stokes<lb/>
less Manager<lb/>
Coggins<lb/>
lanager<lb/>
jar River Poets'<lb/>
Words to be shared<lb/>
By ALBERT PERTALION<lb/>
A PERSONAL POET<lb/>
My first reaction to Tar River<lb/>
Poets (East Carolina Poetry<lb/>
Trn Series Seven) was one of<lb/>
ambivalence: I felt the<lb/>
publishers (for all practical<lb/>
purposes the writers as well) to<lb/>
be either unabashedly<lb/>
presumptuous or optimistically<lb/>
humorous, since they had listed<lb/>
the price for this number in<lb/>
French francs and English<lb/>
pounds as well as American<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
My fust reaction was a<lb/>
surface one, of course, and a<lb/>
closer perusal of Series Number<lb/>
Seven revealed five poets who<lb/>
wnte with ambition, feeling, and<lb/>
verve.<lb/>
SELFLESS AND SELFISH<lb/>
Allied Wang appears to<lb/>
handle his concepts with the<lb/>
greatest confidence. Even his<lb/>
form is the most consistent. His<lb/>
poetry has the quiet assurance<lb/>
that is reminiscent of Frost.<lb/>
For me, his third (all are<lb/>
untitled) poem is best.<lb/>
Chronicling the close of a day, it<lb/>
ends in a numble juxtaposition<lb/>
of selfless and selfish love.<lb/>
The layout of Wang's poems<lb/>
is a bit unfortunate. His ninth<lb/>
poem is long and is continued on<lb/>
the backside of a page, it should<lb/>
have been printed on opposing<lb/>
pages<lb/>
DIVERSE SUBJECT MATTER<lb/>
Robert McDowell's poems are<lb/>
the most diverse in subject<lb/>
mattei and approach. If we<lb/>
could view poetry as a spectrum,<lb/>
his "The One time Reformer<lb/>
and "Orpheus: A Death Song"<lb/>
would exist at opposite ends<lb/>
with his other poems falling<lb/>
somewhere in the middle.<lb/>
The first, a scant three liner,<lb/>
is a fleeting concept which<lb/>
incorporates the title in its pun.<lb/>
The second developes a classic<lb/>
theme in a rambling sixty nine<lb/>
lines of mixed (and, at times,<lb/>
forced) rhyme schemes. But<lb/>
hoth are somehow effective.<lb/>
MOST AMBITIOUS<lb/>
Of the five poets, Carol<lb/>
Hallman is the most ambitous<lb/>
ard the hardest to understand.<lb/>
H(t poems smack (I hate to<lb/>
V this, since one poem is<lb/>
entitled "The Existentialist's<lb/>
Credo") 0f extentialism. Some<lb/>
of her metaphors are gruesome.<lb/>
Her "New World Synthany"<lb/>
ls thematically ponderous, but I<lb/>
sense excellence lurking in its<lb/>
va9ue stanas.<lb/>
1 106 SUNBI A<lb/>
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Wh.tney Hadden is, perhaps,<lb/>
the most personal of the five<lb/>
poets in Series Number Seven.<lb/>
He mainly writes of or to<lb/>
specific persons, quietly<lb/>
reminiscing or gently chiding.<lb/>
His poems reange from near<lb/>
haiku to a mixed form,<lb/>
prose like work about<lb/>
Sally sweet salvation army lass.<lb/>
My favorites are (Whitney<lb/>
wouldn't pick these) "For<lb/>
Alice" and "And Somewhere in<lb/>
an Ancient Pew<lb/>
A STRANGE MIXTURE<lb/>
Linda Faye Bryant's poems<lb/>
close this collection of Tar River<lb/>
Poets. Hers are the most literal<lb/>
in imagery and explicit in<lb/>
meaning.<lb/>
They are also a strange<lb/>
mixture of sophomonc<lb/>
sensuality and sophisticated<lb/>
anger. The wryest is "Station to<lb/>
Station Call<lb/>
There are several handsome<lb/>
(but redundent) photrnraphs by<lb/>
Edward Stroud in Sei les Number<lb/>
Seven. I think they are of the<lb/>
Tar (what else') River. Vernan<lb/>
Ward edited this series.<lb/>
The Tar River Poets is on sale<lb/>
by the East Carolina University<lb/>
Poetry Forum and should have a<lb/>
wide reading, particularly by<lb/>
East Carolina students and<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
The poets in this collection<lb/>
have a great rapport with ideas<lb/>
and words, these ideas and<lb/>
words ought to be shared.<lb/>
debuted<lb/>
new group. Brubeck tried<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
c�nt-d. from page 5,<lb/>
next on tap, and they had a<lb/>
9ood set, but not as good as the<lb/>
one they had at Charlotte a year<lb/>
ago when they first<lb/>
their<lb/>
hard to get something<lb/>
out he couldn't, the weather was<lb/>
hard on him, and it was left to<lb/>
Gerry Mulligan to give some<lb/>
great solos. Their drummer<lb/>
turned in a tremendous solo and<lb/>
bassist Jack Six was his usual<lb/>
shck self on bass.<lb/>
LACK OF RESPECT<lb/>
Nina Simone followed<lb/>
Brubeck and she tried to get<lb/>
something started but couldn't<lb/>
as the crowd was too noisy and<lb/>
very disrespectful. Proud,<lb/>
arrogant, and yes,<lb/>
temperamental, Nina Simone<lb/>
poured out her soul to the<lb/>
crowd, and almost got them<lb/>
going on "Oh Happy Day but<lb/>
it was not to be and she took her<lb/>
soul and went home. A great<lb/>
shame, as Nina Simone is one of<lb/>
the greatest of performers and I<lb/>
do wish the crowd had showed a<lb/>
little respect.<lb/>
SUN RA BOMBS<lb/>
Booker T. and the M.Gs<lb/>
came after Nina and did a fairly<lb/>
short set of six songs, ending up<lb/>
with "Time is Tight" and then<lb/>
leaving. Booker is a very good<lb/>
organist, and he will do more<lb/>
a?z stuff in the future. I'm sure.<lb/>
Last on the two-day program<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
was Sun Ra and his Solar<lb/>
Arkestra. If Sly had them<lb/>
running for the stage, then Sun<lb/>
Ra had them running for the<lb/>
es. To be blunt. Sun Ra<lb/>
bumbed. He started off with<lb/>
some weird music where there<lb/>
was no melody and everybody<lb/>
did their thing and it just didn't<lb/>
work. Too bad, as I expected<lb/>
better from Sun Ra. George<lb/>
Wein tells me that Sun Ra has a<lb/>
cool sense of humor, so maybe<lb/>
his act was a put-on. I hope so.<lb/>
At any rate, the Second<lb/>
Hampton Jazz Festival was a<lb/>
smashing success overall, and I<lb/>
think that it'll get better bye and<lb/>
bye. The hot weather on<lb/>
Saturday hurt the performances<lb/>
of the musicians, and that was<lb/>
too bad, but, these things<lb/>
happen.<lb/>
Next on tap: the Atlanta Pop<lb/>
Festival. See you there.<lb/>
Is there<lb/>
intelligent<lb/>
life on<lb/>
earth?<lb/>
Is there a part of the world<lb/>
where a whole generation has<lb/>
grown up safe from armed ag-<lb/>
gression�where people are free<lb/>
to build the life they want?<lb/>
Yes. In the part of the world pro-<lb/>
tected by NATO. Support NATO<lb/>
�and build on it.<lb/>
If NATO wasn't here,<lb/>
maybe we wouldn't<lb/>
be here either<lb/>
L<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039419_0008"/><lb/>
Joe College<lb/>
Election analysis<lb/>
<lb/>
IS<lb/>
dead<lb/>
A famiiar presence is suddenly missing from the<lb/>
college campus. After years as the "All American"<lb/>
institution personifying the anti-intellectual current that<lb/>
characterizes American academic endeavor, "Joe<lb/>
College" has quietly vanished from the scene.<lb/>
You remember Joe College. He was the boy that<lb/>
made the Andy Hardy movies believable, archetypal<lb/>
older brother who returned home from one of our<lb/>
"ivy-clad" institutions to be outwitted by his elders at<lb/>
every turn. Moral: common sense is more valuable than<lb/>
book I'arning" any day.<lb/>
That platitude began to outwear its credibility in the<lb/>
fifties when hundreds of intellectually serious students<lb/>
rejected the "values" and cliches of American academic<lb/>
life for a bohemian existence outside of the universities.<lb/>
The "beatniks" of the fifties were ridiculed and<lb/>
condemned, but never explained.<lb/>
The sixties began with the evolution of the "new<lb/>
left" from the clubbed and calloused bohemians who<lb/>
had lost their innocence, and sometimes their lives, in<lb/>
the jails of Alabama and Mississippi. The survivors form<lb/>
the hard core nucleus of today's new left.<lb/>
These "New Puritans as one critic aptly designated<lb/>
them, attack America's social problems with the fervor<lb/>
of abolitionists and the practical politics of a Tammany<lb/>
Democrats. They were never "McCarthy's childre<lb/>
They lost their dreams long before Chicago.<lb/>
Drawn, for the most part, from college and university<lb/>
students of the sixties, the leadership of the new left<lb/>
exercises a critical attitude toward domestic problems<lb/>
that is both scientific and libertarian, an attitude<lb/>
passed down from the "new critics" of the thirties.<lb/>
Radicalism in America is largely a university<lb/>
phenomena. The campus provides the nucleus of the<lb/>
new left's leadership- and the source of many of today's<lb/>
most pressing problems. The involvement of educational<lb/>
institutions in research concerning chemical and<lb/>
biological warfare, counter-insurgency techniques, and<lb/>
industrial development for units of the<lb/>
military-industrial complex has been criticized as<lb/>
complicity with imperialism in Southeast Asia and<lb/>
exploitation on the home front.<lb/>
Confrontation between campus militants and<lb/>
administration and trustees has been brought into<lb/>
immediate prominence. Outbreaks of violence on<lb/>
college campuses have been the objects of concern by<lb/>
some-and paranoia by many.<lb/>
People are asking themselves whatever happened to<lb/>
Joe College - that champion of the fun-loving,<lb/>
semi-athletic anti-mentality who managed to rise above<lb/>
his education to make something of himself in the real<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Joe College is dead. It makes no difference whether<lb/>
he was politicized in Chicago or murdered in the jungles<lb/>
of Vietnam.<lb/>
Rumors that he is alive and well within the ranks of<lb/>
the "silent majority those invisible types who define<lb/>
"college" as the four years between high school and<lb/>
military service, will never be substantiated. Apathetic<lb/>
students, like "good Germans leave no mark in the<lb/>
course of history.<lb/>
Joe College is dead, and hopefully buried. His place<lb/>
at the universities has been taken by millions of students<lb/>
who look upon their education with an attitude of<lb/>
seriousness.<lb/>
the east Carolinian ,<lb/>
"Lit us dara to nri. think . spaak and writs CCiA<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief Robert w McDowell<lb/>
Business Manager Cherry Stokes<lb/>
Managing EditorSonny McLawhorn<lb/>
Production Manager Lewjs Cuter<lb/>
News Editor Gail Burton<lb/>
Features EditorWhjtney Hadden<lb/>
JP05 Editor Carl Tyer<lb/>
Consu,tant Ira Baker<lb/>
W N�Cionai<lb/>
JL<lb/>
Adams breaks all rules - and wins!<lb/>
By BOB ROBINSON<lb/>
"What happened!?"<lb/>
That is the reaction of many<lb/>
campus politicians to Robert K.<lb/>
"Mad dog" Adams' win in last<lb/>
week's campus election.<lb/>
According to orthodox<lb/>
standards, Adams did not do any<lb/>
of the things he should have<lb/>
done to win. He broke just<lb/>
about every campaign taboo<lb/>
there is. He was discounted as a<lb/>
winner by the "old pros"<lb/>
throughout the week. Only at 4<lb/>
p.m. on election day did<lb/>
politically sensitive barometers<lb/>
stop registering Mancini and<lb/>
begin to drift slowly toward<lb/>
Adams.<lb/>
Why did Adams win? Does<lb/>
his victory show any emerging<lb/>
political trends?<lb/>
Probably the main factor in<lb/>
the Adams victory and the<lb/>
independent sweep is the<lb/>
different characters of the two<lb/>
presidential candidates, and the<lb/>
different make-up of the<lb/>
summer school electorate. individual pitted against the rich<lb/>
Adams was definitely the and powerful machine. Tied ud<lb/>
more aggressive of the two. His somewhere in this factor was a<lb/>
approach to people was much feeling of resentment against the<lb/>
University Party's political<lb/>
more dynamic than Mancini s.<lb/>
He also was probably more in<lb/>
tune with the mood of the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
CAMPAIGN STYLE<lb/>
To borrow a word from<lb/>
another columnist, the style of<lb/>
summer school is more casual<lb/>
than regular session. Students<lb/>
feel uncomfortable in ties and<lb/>
long pants, and shoes make their<lb/>
feet hot. Subconsciously they<lb/>
felt that someone wearing this<lb/>
type of get up was foolish. Also,<lb/>
they are less serious during the<lb/>
summer and the very name<lb/>
"Mad dog" evoked light hearted<lb/>
images.<lb/>
The main variable was style,<lb/>
unorthodox methods for<lb/>
unorthodox times.<lb/>
Less important factors also<lb/>
entered in and contributed to<lb/>
the victory.<lb/>
One was sympathy The poor<lb/>
monopoly.<lb/>
NEW TRENDS<lb/>
The last factor brings us to<lb/>
the question, are any new<lb/>
political trends emerging? In this<lb/>
writer's opinion No The<lb/>
coalition that Adam's put<lb/>
together for his victory does not<lb/>
exist in sufficient strength in<lb/>
regular session to be a<lb/>
permanent factor.<lb/>
In the fall when the political<lb/>
parties suggest that the voters<lb/>
"Leave the driving to us the<lb/>
voters will.<lb/>
Also, the people in the party<lb/>
system are pragmatist. The-? will<lb/>
examine this campaign closely,<lb/>
find their mistakes, and adjust to<lb/>
prevent any reoccurance of<lb/>
them.<lb/>
It was a fine campaign<lb/>
would like to congra<lb/>
"Mad dou" on a well e<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
HKJ I<lb/>
u late<lb/>
ecu forum<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I want to take this<lb/>
opportunity to congratulate Bob<lb/>
Adams, Craig Souza, and Nancy<lb/>
Cannady on having been elected<lb/>
to the Student Government<lb/>
executive offices. Hopefully<lb/>
more than the usual interest in<lb/>
the Student Government has<lb/>
been generated as a result of this<lb/>
election. If this is indeed the<lb/>
case, then the ultimate net result<lb/>
will only serve to advance the<lb/>
cause of student government on<lb/>
this campus.<lb/>
I have always had strong<lb/>
personal convictions about the<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
Association. I deeply believe in<lb/>
it and in all of the positive things<lb/>
it stands for. I feel confident<lb/>
that each of the victorious<lb/>
candidates (Bob, Craig, and<lb/>
Nancy) will do well in their<lb/>
respective office. I wish each of<lb/>
them the best of luck in their<lb/>
endeavours within the SGA.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Len Mancini<lb/>
Dear Students:<lb/>
At this time I would like to<lb/>
thank the many people on this<lb/>
campus that supported me<lb/>
throughout my campaign and<lb/>
elected me to the office of<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Everyone participated fully<lb/>
and everyone deserves an equal<lb/>
share of the credit for my<lb/>
election. The support of an<lb/>
entire student body is extremely<lb/>
necessary for a well-workinq<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
I believe now we can see that<lb/>
a united student body can take<lb/>
an active part in student<lb/>
government elections.<lb/>
Thank you again for your<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
Robert K. Adams<lb/>
Dear Students,<lb/>
On Tuesday, June 24 I was<lb/>
elected to SGA Legislature<lb/>
through the support of<lb/>
interested students of ECU. At<lb/>
this time, I wish to express my<lb/>
sincere gratitude not only to<lb/>
those students who supported<lb/>
my candidacy, but to each and<lb/>
every student who felt enough<lb/>
involved in FCU affairs to<lb/>
participate in the election at all.<lb/>
An involved student body is<lb/>
necessary in order for the SGA<lb/>
to function effectively.<lb/>
In addition to thanking all<lb/>
those who voted in the general<lb/>
election, I wish to thank the<lb/>
memhers of the Legislature itself<lb/>
for electing me Speaker of the<lb/>
Legislature. I feel that this is a<lb/>
job second in importance, and in<lb/>
the amount of work involved,<lb/>
only to the Presidency of the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
The fact that this is a summer<lb/>
school legislature makes it no<lb/>
different. The functions of this<lb/>
legislature are the same as those<lb/>
of any SGA legislature. Perhaps,<lb/>
in a sense, the present legislature<lb/>
is more important than the<lb/>
regular legislature. This is<lb/>
because the summer school<lb/>
sessions provide a perfect time<lb/>
for experimenting with new<lb/>
forms and structures, and<lb/>
providing innovations for the<lb/>
following year. Hopefully, this<lb/>
legislature will prove that point.<lb/>
In the past, the summer<lb/>
school SGA has a tradition of<lb/>
doing practically nothing. They<lb/>
have stayed with routine<lb/>
administrative work and have<lb/>
neglected policy-making<lb/>
decisions. However, I strongly<lb/>
believe that this legislature must<lb/>
set a precedent for the future by<lb/>
being an exception to this rule.<lb/>
I would like to see this<lb/>
legislature become actively<lb/>
involved in policy making. And<lb/>
the legislature does not need to<lb/>
stick only to decisions on<lb/>
matters over which they have<lb/>
direct control. It is time for the<lb/>
legislature to expand.<lb/>
Matters which are not<lb/>
directly under SGA control i an<lb/>
be acted on through resolutions<lb/>
which state the opinion of this<lb/>
body. The influence of the SGA<lb/>
is a powerful force, and the<lb/>
legislature is obligated to tin<lb/>
student to use that influence foi<lb/>
the benefit of the student.<lb/>
And speaking of students,<lb/>
there are very few students who<lb/>
understand the structure or the<lb/>
functions of the SGA The<lb/>
student body put each of us<lb/>
here, and they are at least<lb/>
entitled to know what we are<lb/>
doing. Thus, the SGA should<lb/>
work toward a closer<lb/>
relationship with the student<lb/>
through improved<lb/>
communications.<lb/>
For the benefit of any<lb/>
interested student who may have<lb/>
fresh ideas on any facit of<lb/>
student government, beginning<lb/>
on Monday, July 7, I will keep<lb/>
office hours from 13 p.m. in<lb/>
room 310 Wright Annex. Your<lb/>
ideas may be presented to me<lb/>
for consideration at that time.<lb/>
Wayne Eads<lb/>
Speaker, SGA Legislature<lb/>
Dear Students,<lb/>
We wish to express our<lb/>
sincere appreciation for all the<lb/>
support given to us in the recent<lb/>
SGA election. There are many<lb/>
individuals who merit a special<lb/>
word of thanks for their time<lb/>
and successful efforts spent<lb/>
working on our campaign. To<lb/>
these individuals and all the<lb/>
students of ECU who have<lb/>
shown their confidence in us by<lb/>
electing us to our offices, we are<lb/>
indeed grateful.<lb/>
We shall strive to carry out<lb/>
our duties efficiently with you,<lb/>
the student body, in mind.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Nancy Cannady<lb/>
Craign Souza<lb/>
<pb facs="00039419_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>