<?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="00039455_0001"/>
ountAinheAd<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. i, No- 3I<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
January 27, I970<lb/>
iViva Jose Feliciano!<lb/>
ent against<lb/>
ies will be<lb/>
n-students<lb/>
ent.<lb/>
be tried by<lb/>
i Student<lb/>
:tion of the<lb/>
prohibiting<lb/>
jpting the<lb/>
s of the<lb/>
ructing oi<lb/>
services oi<lb/>
entitled tO<lb/>
Roosevelt<lb/>
cago were<lb/>
ted battery<lb/>
lerty after a<lb/>
e General<lb/>
oused with<lb/>
university's<lb/>
y cancelled<lb/>
i recruiters<lb/>
he school's<lb/>
reatened to<lb/>
dents have<lb/>
n campaign<lb/>
j of G. E.<lb/>
vard Co-op.<lb/>
?t<lb/>
9?rvle?<lb/>
acism.<lb/>
vhat<lb/>
By BECKY NOBLE<lb/>
(Photo by STEVE NEAH<lb/>
JOSE FELICIANO performs before a fascinated audience during Carousel<lb/>
Weekend.<lb/>
Cadets begin<lb/>
March-A-Thon<lb/>
Awe struck them dumb.<lb/>
No one moved. No one<lb/>
coughed.<lb/>
They stared frozen. . .and<lb/>
listened to a sensitive guitar<lb/>
play the "Theme for Romeo<lb/>
and Juliet<lb/>
So THIS is Jose Feliciano!<lb/>
Until now, Feliciano had<lb/>
seemed like any other singer.<lb/>
He played a guitar and<lb/>
shouted when he sang.<lb/>
Kis voice was nasal (he<lb/>
d re gged his I's like a<lb/>
Southerner) and his style was<lb/>
unusual.<lb/>
Few people knew much<lb/>
"I saw him on television<lb/>
orce. I don't like his style<lb/>
"Isn't he blind?"<lb/>
Feliciano's entrance wasn't<lb/>
sp3ctacular.<lb/>
Then a stocky young man,<lb/>
flunked by his wife, followed a<lb/>
Seeing Eye dog to the stage.<lb/>
Halfway up the steps,<lb/>
someone said, "Ladies and<lb/>
ge ltlemen, Jose Feliciano<lb/>
The people were curious<lb/>
about the blind boy with his<lb/>
dog, but the awkward shuffling<lb/>
made them ill at ease.<lb/>
The audience squirmed<lb/>
through his first few songs.<lb/>
Just who is this Feliciano<lb/>
character, anyway?<lb/>
All of a sudden the lights<lb/>
turned blue, and impatient<lb/>
faces stared fascinated as<lb/>
Feliciano played the "Theme<lb/>
from Romeo and Juliet<lb/>
The audience roared its<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
Feliciano had broken the<lb/>
ice.<lb/>
He teased the git Is and joked<lb/>
about his blindness.<lb/>
Respect grew as Feliciano<lb/>
demonstrated his versatility.<lb/>
He imitated a banjo on his<lb/>
guitar; he played with his left<lb/>
hand; he played with his right<lb/>
hand; he played folk songs,<lb/>
rhythm and blues, and Spanish<lb/>
crnn;<lb/>
? -a<lb/>
He rocked when he sang.<lb/>
He impersonated Barry<lb/>
McGuire, Gene Pitney, Walter<lb/>
Brennan, Tiny Tim and others.<lb/>
No one wondered about<lb/>
Feliciano anymcre.<lb/>
The blind m?n had shown<lb/>
his talent aid had pleased his<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
He received three standing<lb/>
ovations.<lb/>
He bowed with his wife and<lb/>
Seeing Ey dog and left in a<lb/>
roar of jpplause.<lb/>
Opinions were mixed.<lb/>
"Feliciano was great, but I<lb/>
thought my back would<lb/>
break<lb/>
"I'm completely amazed. I<lb/>
had no idea he was so talented.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
see page 2<lb/>
AFROTC CADETS will attempt to collect $2,700 for the March of Dimes<lb/>
during their 17th annual March-A-Thon.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039455_0002"/><lb/>
.  &amp;.<lb/>
J????<lb/>
Page 2 Fountainhead, January 27, 1970, Tuesday<lb/>
March-A-Thon<lb/>
finalized<lb/>
plans are<lb/>
Final plans are being made<lb/>
for the 17th AFROTC<lb/>
March-A-Thon Saturday.<lb/>
The March-A-Thon has won<lb/>
national honors for being the<lb/>
best March of Dimes project in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Every year the Drill Team<lb/>
marches without rest until the<lb/>
preceeding year's goal is<lb/>
exceeded by $100. This year's<lb/>
goal is $2,700.<lb/>
Cadets and Angels will be<lb/>
stationed at important<lb/>
intersections throughout the<lb/>
Greenville and Farmville area.<lb/>
They will be seeking donations<lb/>
from the passing motorists and<lb/>
pedestrians.<lb/>
Last year's goal was<lb/>
exceeded by $1,000 thanks to<lb/>
the generous support of<lb/>
university students, faculty,<lb/>
staff, and residents of Pitt<lb/>
County.<lb/>
The National Foundation of<lb/>
the March of Dimes has been<lb/>
so impressed with the march's<lb/>
success that it has sent the<lb/>
plans from ECU'S<lb/>
March-A-Thon to every<lb/>
AFROTC detachment in the<lb/>
nation in hopes of creating a<lb/>
nationwide March-A-Thon.<lb/>
The group of Cadets and<lb/>
Angels who "March so that<lb/>
others may Walk" hope that<lb/>
every person and organization<lb/>
on campus will consider this<lb/>
campaign worthy of their<lb/>
support, said organization<lb/>
chairman Cadet Capt. Gary<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Anyone wishing to<lb/>
contribute prior to the day of<lb/>
the March-A-Thon may send<lb/>
their donations to<lb/>
March-A-Thon, AFROTC<lb/>
Detachment No. 600, East<lb/>
Carolina University, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Appreciation dinner will<lb/>
have statewide telecast<lb/>
The Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Appreciation Dinner" will be<lb/>
broadcast Tuesday night by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill's television<lb/>
station, WUNC-TV.<lb/>
The station's mobile unit<lb/>
will video tape the program<lb/>
which will be shown on a<lb/>
statewide network at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, according to Dr.<lb/>
George Bair, director of<lb/>
educational television in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
"We are pleased to share in<lb/>
the effort to pay tribute to Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins Bair said. "We feel<lb/>
that it is part of our obligation<lb/>
to provide coverage of the<lb/>
events that are taking place in<lb/>
our state. It gives the<lb/>
educational television network<lb/>
the opportunity to heip the<lb/>
entire state share in the events<lb/>
that are taking place in various<lb/>
parts of North Carolina<lb/>
The appreciation dinner is<lb/>
being sponsored by the<lb/>
Greenville Chamber of<lb/>
Commerce and Merchants<lb/>
Association to recognize Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins for his leadership at<lb/>
ECU and in the community<lb/>
over the past ten years.<lb/>
Dr. Joe Pou, president of the<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce, said<lb/>
nearly 1,000 people are<lb/>
expected to attend the dinner.<lb/>
Chamber officials said the<lb/>
site for the dinner had to be<lb/>
changed to Minges Coliseum<lb/>
because of the heavy response<lb/>
to the open invitation.<lb/>
FIRST TO CONTRIBUTE-Martin Lassiter, IFC Treasurer,<lb/>
presents a $50 check to the March-A-Thon Project Officer,<lb/>
Cadet Capt. Gary Williams.<lb/>
Jenkins invites presidents<lb/>
to discuss communications<lb/>
(Photo by FRED NEWTON)<lb/>
'Have an accident? . . No thanks, I just had one<lb/>
President Leo Jenkins has<lb/>
issued an invitation to all<lb/>
presidents of community<lb/>
colleges, technical institutes<lb/>
and junior colleges in North<lb/>
Carolina to meet here<lb/>
Thursday to discuss<lb/>
communications between<lb/>
universities and two-year<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
"This idea grew out of an<lb/>
informal meeting with three<lb/>
community college presidents<lb/>
early this month Jenkins<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Representatives of 50<lb/>
two-year institutions have<lb/>
accepted Jenkins' invitation .<lb/>
"It should be made clear<lb/>
that this conference will be<lb/>
concerned solely with the<lb/>
Clinic to offer<lb/>
therapy for<lb/>
stutterers<lb/>
A clinic for stutterers,<lb/>
designed to benefit students<lb/>
and eastern North Carolina<lb/>
residents, will begin here in<lb/>
September.<lb/>
The center will be the first<lb/>
to offer therapy for stutterers<lb/>
in this part of the state.<lb/>
Dr. Hal J. Daniel, assistant<lb/>
professor of speech and hearing<lb/>
in the Special Education<lb/>
Department, has received a<lb/>
$5,000 grant from the Speech<lb/>
Foundation of America.<lb/>
The funds will supply the<lb/>
salary of two graduate students<lb/>
who will work with stutterers<lb/>
for one year.<lb/>
The graduate students will<lb/>
work with stutterers separately<lb/>
from those with other speech<lb/>
impediments.<lb/>
Daniel said he also hopes a<lb/>
summer camp for stutterers<lb/>
will be established.<lb/>
means by which ECU can be of<lb/>
service to our community<lb/>
col leges and tech nical<lb/>
institutes Jenkins said.<lb/>
Working with Jenkins in the<lb/>
preparation of the conference<lb/>
are William E. Fulford of Pitt<lb/>
Technical Institute, Ben E.<lb/>
Fountain of Lenior<lb/>
Community College and Clyde<lb/>
A. Ervin of Wayne Community<lb/>
College.<lb/>
"We believe that our<lb/>
two-year institutions are<lb/>
serving a demanding need in<lb/>
education in North Carolina<lb/>
and they need to be able to<lb/>
channel their promising<lb/>
students directly into a<lb/>
university system Jenkins<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Drug pay<lb/>
to be shown<lb/>
'The Concept"<lb/>
off-Broadway pay ' an<lb/>
presented at 8 p.m. Monday'<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
The play is , j?<lb/>
" y I: a dramatic<lb/>
explanation of the activities at<lb/>
Dayton House, a "halfway"<lb/>
house for ex-narcotics addicts<lb/>
in Staten Island, N.Y.<lb/>
The actors, all residents of<lb/>
Dayton, relive on stage a<lb/>
variety of situations which<lb/>
they faced when addicts and<lb/>
when recovering from drug<lb/>
addiction.<lb/>
After the play, tne<lb/>
performers will conduct a<lb/>
question and answer session<lb/>
aboi.t drugs or their personal<lb/>
experiences with them.<lb/>
Tickets for "The Concept"<lb/>
are on sale now in the Student<lb/>
Government Association office<lb/>
in Wright Annex. Student<lb/>
tickets are $1, adult tickets<lb/>
$2.<lb/>
"The Concept" is part of a<lb/>
drug education program,<lb/>
sponsored by the Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health Association. The<lb/>
organization will also conduct<lb/>
three Sunday evening study<lb/>
programs Feb. 8, 15 and 22,in<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial Methodist<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
Panel discussions and films<lb/>
are planned for these programs.<lb/>
The Feb. 8 program will<lb/>
include discussion on drugs in<lb/>
relation to law, schools and the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
On Feb. 15, a psychiatrist,<lb/>
physician and criminal<lb/>
investigator will describe<lb/>
narcotics problems that they<lb/>
encounter.<lb/>
The Pitt County Alchohol<lb/>
Information and Service Center<lb/>
will conduct the Feb. 22<lb/>
program on alchoholism.<lb/>
Class rings may be ordered<lb/>
through Thursday by students<lb/>
who have completed 96<lb/>
quarter hours.<lb/>
They may be ordered in<lb/>
Wright 303 from 3 to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Scott prefers voting age<lb/>
of 20 rather than 18<lb/>
By RICHARD DAW<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
RALEIGH (AP) Gov. Bob<lb/>
Scott said today he wouldn't<lb/>
oppose lowering the voting age<lb/>
to 18, although he has some<lb/>
reservations.<lb/>
Scott suggested a better<lb/>
voting age would be 20, one<lb/>
year less than the current age.<lb/>
Too Low<lb/>
Asked at a news conference<lb/>
about suggestions to lowei the<lb/>
age to 18, Scott said, "I ,iold<lb/>
that's a little too low<lb/>
But in reply to a further<lb/>
question, the governor said he<lb/>
would not fight a move to cut<lb/>
the age to 18.<lb/>
He noted that any such<lb/>
legislation passed by the<lb/>
General Assembley would have<lb/>
to be submitted to a<lb/>
referendum.<lb/>
"I suspect the impact of<lb/>
lowering the age would not be<lb/>
so great as some believe Scott<lb/>
added. f<lb/>
He said the great mobility o<lb/>
young persons, traveling<lb/>
between college and home<lb/>
instance, might keep ma<lb/>
from voting because<lb/>
residence requirements.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Democratic party's execute<lb/>
committee went on record l?<lb/>
week in favor of the lowered<lb/>
a9eHe probably wH, .?<lb/>
voters in this falls 11<lb/>
election a pending pro<lb/>
remove a 4 percent n?<lb/>
limit on several mon<lb/>
highway construction<lb/>
Wage Increase<lb/>
,pe the<lb/>
He would e'0' <lb/>
state's $1.25 m.nimurn<lb/>
increased, but he doesn<lb/>
exactly what the figure<lb/>
be.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039455_0003"/><lb/>
ay<lb/>
ept" .<lb/>
M ? an<lb/>
3V. will be<lb/>
'? Monday in<lb/>
um.<lb/>
a dramatic<lb/>
' activities at<lb/>
1 "halfway"<lb/>
otics addicts<lb/>
.Y.<lb/>
residents of<lb/>
on stage a<lb/>
tions which<lb/>
addicts ant)<lb/>
from drug<lb/>
P'ay. the<lb/>
conduct 3<lb/>
'rwer session<lb/>
heir personal<lb/>
hem.<lb/>
he Concept"<lb/>
"i the Student<lb/>
ciation office<lb/>
lex. Student<lb/>
adult tickets,<lb/>
is part of a<lb/>
n program,<lb/>
8 Pitt County<lb/>
lOciation. The<lb/>
also conduct<lb/>
vening study<lb/>
15 and 22, in<lb/>
al Methodist<lb/>
Dns and films<lb/>
lese programs,<lb/>
program will<lb/>
n on drugs in<lb/>
:hoolsandthe<lb/>
a psychiatrist,<lb/>
id criminal<lb/>
ill describe<lb/>
ms that they<lb/>
nty Alchohot<lb/>
Service Center<lb/>
the Feb. 22<lb/>
holism.<lb/>
ay be ordered<lb/>
iy by students<lb/>
mpleted 96<lb/>
e ordered in<lb/>
3 to 4 p.m.<lb/>
gage<lb/>
18<lb/>
eat mobility ?f<lb/>
nS( travels<lb/>
and home, f?r<lb/>
lt keep many<lb/>
because of<lb/>
ements.<lb/>
h Carolina<lb/>
rty's executive<lb/>
t on record last<lb/>
0f the lowered<lb/>
will submit to<lb/>
fall's 9eneral<lb/>
ing proposal to<lb/>
ercent interest<lb/>
ral million ,n<lb/>
ruction bonds-<lb/>
crease<lb/>
minimi <lb/>
,e figure fl"<lb/>
News briefs<lb/>
Tuesday, January 27, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
? The third term of evening<lb/>
college will begin Feb. 2.<lb/>
Registration will be Jan. 30,<lb/>
Feb. 2-3, from 8 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
on the first floor of Erwin Hall.<lb/>
Classes will begin 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Monday, Feb. 2.<lb/>
Courses will be offered in<lb/>
business, English, history,<lb/>
mathematics, geography, and<lb/>
health at $10 per quarter hour<lb/>
for Torth Carolina residents.<lb/>
Students not previously<lb/>
enrolled at ECU should apply<lb/>
immediately, Herman Phelps,<lb/>
jssociate dean, said.<lb/>
Or. Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
university president, and his<lb/>
family will be honored at an<lb/>
informal, "come-as-you-are<lb/>
reception acknowledging his<lb/>
tenth anniversary as president.<lb/>
The reception will be from 3<lb/>
to 4 p.m. in the University<lb/>
Union lobby on Jan. 27.<lb/>
Faculty, staff, and students<lb/>
are invited to meet the<lb/>
president informally.<lb/>
The are seven vacant seats in<lb/>
the SGA Legislature according<lb/>
to Len Mancini, speaker.<lb/>
Mancini said the vacancies<lb/>
are from: Cotton, Slay,<lb/>
Ayco .k, Greene, New Women's<lb/>
C and two day student seats.<lb/>
Anyone interested in filling<lb/>
one of the vacancies should<lb/>
apply in the SGA office on<lb/>
thirrl floor Wright Annex<lb/>
betw n 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
from Monday Jan. 26 through<lb/>
Frida Jan. 30 Mancini said.<lb/>
All applicants must have a<lb/>
"C" average.<lb/>
'nterviews will be held for<lb/>
all applying. Applicants will be<lb/>
notified of the time and place<lb/>
of the interview.<lb/>
The Symphony Band will<lb/>
travel to several Georgian High<lb/>
Schools on their 17th annual<lb/>
winter concert this month.<lb/>
Under the direction of<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, the band<lb/>
will play concerts in<lb/>
Jonesboro, Forest Park, and<lb/>
Atlanta during the three-day<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
Traveling by bus, the<lb/>
seventy select student<lb/>
musicians will leave the campus<lb/>
Jan. 28, and return Jan. 30.<lb/>
A Student Council for<lb/>
Exceptional Children (SCEC)<lb/>
has been founded here by<lb/>
David Alton Powers.<lb/>
The SCEA is a national<lb/>
organization which conducts<lb/>
projects to promote the<lb/>
welfare of the mentally<lb/>
retarded and handicapped<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Powers, a Special Education<lb/>
major, feels that handicapped<lb/>
children who are offered equal<lb/>
education can earn an income<lb/>
and become a contributing<lb/>
member of society.<lb/>
?The International Students<lb/>
will meet Feb. 2 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the Baptist Student Union.<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins hi.s<lb/>
been appointed to a three-yec.r<lb/>
term of the Allied Health<lb/>
Professions Committee of the<lb/>
American Association of S3te<lb/>
Colleges ad Universities<lb/>
(AASCU).<lb/>
AASCU President Hilton C.<lb/>
Buley call the Association "one<lb/>
of the more influential and<lb/>
important national<lb/>
orgainzations in the field of<lb/>
higher education<lb/>
YOUR Mot ha ' IS CALLING<lb/>
Earn money in your spare time as a salesman for<lb/>
W E C U<lb/>
? the ty ?<lb/>
57<lb/>
Stop by the second floor of the Joyner Library and talk to the<lb/>
'Tiger Killer'<lb/>
rtccrt ? A m- '7?M<lb/>
Hrtce <lb/>
turr?M<lb/>
A ceramics show is on<lb/>
display at the Mushroom<lb/>
gallery in Greenville from 3 to<lb/>
5 p.m. through Feb. 7.<lb/>
The show is presented by<lb/>
Rodger Wood, a ceramics<lb/>
instructor here.<lb/>
Wood, who joined the staff<lb/>
at the beginning of the school<lb/>
year, has been recognized as an<lb/>
outstanding ceramist in the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
He has received special<lb/>
recognition at the Seventh<lb/>
Annual Piedmont Craft<lb/>
Exhibition and at the Mint<lb/>
Museum in Charlotte.<lb/>
The public is invited to the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
There will be a Young<lb/>
Democrats meeting<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 28 in Rawl<lb/>
130 at 7:30 p.m. All members<lb/>
please attend.<lb/>
"The School of Home<lb/>
Economics will extend its<lb/>
graduate program to offer a<lb/>
Master of Science degree in<lb/>
Child Development and Family<lb/>
Relations, said Provost Robert<lb/>
E. Williams.<lb/>
Approved by the North<lb/>
Carolina State Board of Higher<lb/>
Education, the program will<lb/>
focus attention on theoretical<lb/>
knowledge in understanding of<lb/>
young children and families.<lb/>
are your<lb/>
contact lenses<lb/>
more work than<lb/>
they're worth?<lb/>
If you're tired of using<lb/>
two or more separate so-<lb/>
lutions to take care of<lb/>
your contact lenses, we<lb/>
have the solution. It's<lb/>
Lensine the all-purpose<lb/>
lens solution for com-<lb/>
plete contact lens care-<lb/>
preparing, cleaning, and<lb/>
soaking. ? Just a drop or<lb/>
twoof Lensine before you<lb/>
insert your contacts coats<lb/>
and lubricates the lens<lb/>
surface making it smooth-<lb/>
er and non-irritating.<lb/>
Cleaning your contacts<lb/>
with Lensine retards the<lb/>
buildup of foreign de-<lb/>
posits on the lenses. ?<lb/>
Lensine is sterile, self-<lb/>
sanitizing, and antisep-<lb/>
tic making it ideal for<lb/>
storage of your lenses<lb/>
between wearing periods.<lb/>
And you get a removable<lb/>
storage case on the bot-<lb/>
tom of every bottle, a<lb/>
Lensine exclusive for Bacteria cannot grow in<lb/>
proper lens hygiene. ? It Lensine.eCaringforcon-<lb/>
has been demonstrated tact lenses can be as con-<lb/>
venient as wearing them<lb/>
with Lensine, from the<lb/>
Murine Company, Inc.<lb/>
I<lb/>
that improper storage<lb/>
between wearings may<lb/>
result in the growth of<lb/>
bacteria on the lenses.<lb/>
Thisisasurecauseofeye<lb/>
irritation and could seri-<lb/>
ously endanger vision.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039455_0004"/><lb/>
,JM?'M-Mrft iiii?t ? ?<lb/>
Page 4, Pountainhead, January 27,1970, Tuesday<lb/>
"ZYN BRIDGE ??Z??<lb/>
their Sunday concert. The group's appearance brought to<lb/>
1970<lb/>
(Photo by CHAiiLfS GRIFFIN<lb/>
JOSE FELICIANO mounts the stage at Mmges<lb/>
Coliseum for his Carousel concert.<lb/>
Carousel Weekend provides enjoyment<lb/>
By KAREN BLANSFIELD<lb/>
Feature Writer<lb/>
it uvas a wpry pnjnvahle<lb/>
weekend. From the first play<lb/>
to the last concert, everyone<lb/>
had a good time.<lb/>
Even the weather<lb/>
was<lb/>
cooperative The freezing<lb/>
temperatures which had been<lb/>
dominating the area all week<lb/>
suddenly rose, and the warm<lb/>
sunshine put everyone into a<lb/>
Carousel mood.<lb/>
After the presentation of<lb/>
"Your Own Thing" on<lb/>
Thursday night, it was easy to<lb/>
see why the show has been a<lb/>
running success for over two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The excellent dialogue and<lb/>
musical score were backed up<lb/>
by an ingenious light show.<lb/>
Famous faces such as<lb/>
Humphrey Bogart, Pope Paul<lb/>
and William Shakespeare were<lb/>
projected onto the screen,<lb/>
accompanied by their "voices"<lb/>
making amusing comments. Its<lb/>
fast pace and originality<lb/>
combined with these to<lb/>
capture the attention of any<lb/>
audience, young or old.<lb/>
On Friday night, Jose<lb/>
Feliciano awed thousands of<lb/>
people with his amazing<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
The blind musician<lb/>
displayed his talent in a<lb/>
three hour concert, during<lb/>
which he played music ranging<lb/>
from Spanish songs to today's<lb/>
rhythm aid blues.<lb/>
Feliciano introduced "Point<lb/>
of View which he wrote to<lb/>
express his feelings that a<lb/>
man's love for mankind is the<lb/>
important factor, not his color<lb/>
MODEL M-4800 STEREOPHONIC<lb/>
COMPACT COMPONENT SYSTEM<lb/>
WITH AM-EM-FM STEREO<lb/>
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HOUR<lb/>
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Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
1 Hr. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
Complete 5 Piece Stereophonic Component System<lb/>
One Year Warranty on Labor and Parts<lb/>
THIS WEEK ONLY GET 5 FREE ALBUMS WITH THIS PURCHASE<lb/>
$169.95<lb/>
5 ALBUMS FOR $4.UU<lb/>
$.10 each<lb/>
AUTOMOBILE 8 TRACK TAPE PLAYERS $6995<lb/>
WITH SPEAKERS $79.95 <lb/>
FOR YOUR MUSIC BOOKS:<lb/>
SUPPLIES:<lb/>
ACCESSORIES:<lb/>
See the MUSIC SHOP<lb/>
FOR THE BEST SELECTION<lb/>
ORDER MUSIC AND ACCESSORIES NOT IN<lb/>
STOCK AT THE REGULAR PRICE<lb/>
0 7<lb/>
s t<lb/>
5 1<lb/>
He was led to and from tht<lb/>
stage by his Seeing Eye don.<lb/>
who bowed with him.<lb/>
At the end of his<lb/>
performance, he received a<lb/>
standing ovation by a wildly<lb/>
enthusiastic audience, and, at<lb/>
their demand, sang his hit<lb/>
version of "Lighl My Fire<lb/>
And when he finally left the<lb/>
stage, the people reached out<lb/>
to touch him as he passed by<lb/>
them.<lb/>
The famed slanstick comedy<lb/>
and sight gags of W.C. Fields<lb/>
entertained an audience in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium for five<lb/>
hours on Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The hilarious, bumbling antics<lb/>
and one liners kept them<lb/>
"rolling in ne aisles<lb/>
The Fi Ms humor is said to<lb/>
have be, 20 years ahead of ill<lb/>
time. Where else bt m oneot<lb/>
his films could yon start out<lb/>
a couple of bass fiddles<lb/>
wind up with a pile o-<lb/>
baby fiddles7<lb/>
The ending of Carouse!<lb/>
Weekend came with a concert<lb/>
by the Brooklyn Bridge o<lb/>
r -n Theif<lb/>
Sunday afternoon, m<lb/>
performance proved their<lb/>
ability as musicians, and th.<lb/>
light, happy med.ey pro,J<lb/>
good ending to a y<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
As one spectator put it<lb/>
was eat. The cone t <lb/>
good, the audience ?? 9<lb/>
and everyone seemed ton<lb/>
good time. I really i<lb/>
And?J<lb/>
general attitude ?<lb/>
Weekend, 19"0<lb/>
with<lb/>
nnrl<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAB<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
Try a delicious Bfa<lb/>
V Split or Sundae<lb/>
D -c - Greenvi"8<lb/>
264 By-Pass -<lb/>
<pb facs="00039455_0005"/><lb/>
Tuesday, January 27, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
RLES GRIFFlNj<lb/>
linges<lb/>
and from tht<lb/>
ing Eys don,<lb/>
him.<lb/>
n d of his<lb/>
te received a<lb/>
i hy a wildly<lb/>
liencc, and, a:<lb/>
inn hn hit<lb/>
??y ?<lb/>
?)ht My Fire'<lb/>
finally left the<lb/>
le cached out<lb/>
s he passed by<lb/>
aostick comedy<lb/>
of W.C. Fields<lb/>
'i audience in<lb/>
irium for five<lb/>
day afternoon.<lb/>
nimhling antics<lb/>
rs kept them<lb/>
isles<lb/>
,i is said to<lb/>
 s ahead of its<lb/>
;e but in oneoi<lb/>
j  start out<lb/>
of bass fiddl?<lb/>
with a pile ?f<lb/>
,g of Carouse!<lb/>
s with a concert<lb/>
Bridge on<lb/>
klyn<lb/>
.moon. Their<lb/>
,roved their fine<lb/>
icians, and W<lb/>
iedley provided;<lb/>
a to a good<lb/>
jtator put it. ?<lb/>
he concert was<lb/>
lience wasgow-<lb/>
seemed to have;<lb/>
eallyenioved'1'<lb/>
seemed to be the<lb/>
de for Carou<lb/>
970.<lb/>
:?ous Flavors<lb/>
ce Cream<lb/>
Banana<lb/>
icious<lb/>
or Sundae<lb/>
faust' will<lb/>
run tonight<lb/>
A film of Goethe's "Faust"<lb/>
ill be shown at 8 p.m. tonight<lb/>
Wright Auditorium as part<lb/>
f the International Film<lb/>
i ies.<lb/>
Photographed in an<lb/>
impressionistic style on a<lb/>
i m pie studio stage, it<lb/>
creates Gustaf Grundgens'<lb/>
historic program in the<lb/>
Deutsches Schauspielhaus in<lb/>
Hamburg and his later<lb/>
production at the City Center<lb/>
in New York.<lb/>
As on the stage, Grundgens<lb/>
iys the role of the devil,<lb/>
ephistopheles.<lb/>
With the black powers of the<lb/>
il behind him, Faust entices<lb/>
the beautiful Gretchen, who is<lb/>
le to resist at first, but<lb/>
finally succumbs to Faust's<lb/>
blandishments and expensive<lb/>
gifts. The latter are supplied by<lb/>
ephistopheles.<lb/>
The film is subtitled with<lb/>
me brief introductory titles<lb/>
in English. Peter Gorski is the<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Grant to provide<lb/>
language degrees<lb/>
rhe Department of<lb/>
?nance Languages will offer<lb/>
A. and M.Ed, degrees in<lb/>
Spanish and French next fall,<lb/>
iid P r ovosi Robert E.<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
A qrant of $16,516 for<lb/>
support of these programs was<lb/>
en to ECU by the State<lb/>
Board of Higher Education.<lb/>
Evers to speak here<lb/>
CHARLES EVERS well known civil rights leader, will<lb/>
lecture tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. This is<lb/>
his first speaking appearance in the state. Student and<lb/>
faculty will be admitted free with ID cards.<lb/>
Candt&amp;vjick Dnn<lb/>
Thursday Nirht STEAK SPECIALS<lb/>
SiKLOIN FOR TWO $7.95<lb/>
BEEF TIPS $2.75<lb/>
Friday K.ght SEAFOOD BUFFET $2.75<lb/>
WANT TO SET A<lb/>
CAREER OBJECTIVE OF<lb/>
$25,000 OR MORE IN<lb/>
ANNUAL INCOME?<lb/>
THIS IS A REALISTIC<lb/>
GOAL FOR ANY MAN<lb/>
ENTERING GRANT'S<lb/>
MANAGEMENT TRAINING<lb/>
PROGRAM.<lb/>
STARTING SALARIES<lb/>
FROM $477 to $585<lb/>
PER MONTH.<lb/>
WE ARE A RAPIDLY<lb/>
EXPANING BILLION<lb/>
DOLLAR RETAIL CHAIN<lb/>
OF OVER 1100 STORES<lb/>
WITH A REPUTATION<lb/>
FOR PA YING TOP<lb/>
INCOMES.<lb/>
ASK YOUR PLACEMENT<lb/>
DIRECTOR FOR A<lb/>
COPY OF OUR BROCHURE<lb/>
AND SIGN UP FOR<lb/>
AN INTERVIEW.<lb/>
DON HARRELL<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
FEBRUARY 3, 1970<lb/>
W T GRANT COMPANY<lb/>
214 N. Try on St.<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
4<lb/>
HATHAWAY<lb/>
SPOKEN<lb/>
HERE<lb/>
?<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
HATS<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
TO<lb/>
Miss Helen Parker<lb/>
Miss Parker, a junior, was;<lb/>
crowned Miss Greenville<lb/>
last Tuesday night, and<lb/>
will compete in the Miss<lb/>
North Carolina contest<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Mayor Charles Evers of<lb/>
Fayette, Mississippi, will<lb/>
lecture in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
at 8 p.m. tomorrow.<lb/>
Evers will speak on "What It<lb/>
Means To Care He is the first<lb/>
Negro mayor of Mississippi<lb/>
since Reconstruction.<lb/>
A leader in the civil rights<lb/>
movement, he is the Mississippi<lb/>
field director of the National<lb/>
Association for the<lb/>
Advancement of Colored<lb/>
People (NAACP).<lb/>
Tickets for the lecture can<lb/>
be picked up at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Admission will be by I.D.<lb/>
cards for students and faculty,<lb/>
$1.50 for staff, and S2 for the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Special rates of $1.50 per<lb/>
person are available to groups<lb/>
of 20 or more.<lb/>
Colonial Heights Soda Shop &amp; Restaurant<lb/>
Now Serving Meals<lb/>
Breakfast- 550 Dinner- 970<lb/>
Drink Included<lb/>
2711 E. 10th St. 752-6778<lb/>
J<lb/>
Color in Your Life<lb/>
Color is important in your everyday existence. Gloomy colors<lb/>
made you feel gloomy. Some colors lift your spirits. Certain<lb/>
shades used in tableware can<lb/>
make food look unappetizing. Bright colors make skin<lb/>
Other colors remind you of eruptions more noticeable,<lb/>
unpleasant experiences and Freckles are less prominent<lb/>
should be avoided whenever when warm colors are worn.<lb/>
possible. Hair color shou,d ,be<lb/>
Colors you wear depenc emphasized by wearing colors<lb/>
upon your figure and age. Your which contrast with it.<lb/>
personal coloring, the season The very latest in campus<lb/>
and your personality all help fashion is yours from THE<lb/>
determine which colors are SNOOTY FOX. We carry<lb/>
right for you. Of course, the Villager sportswear, Jody<lb/>
intensity of the shade will also dresses, Emily M dresses and<lb/>
play a part, since large figures sportswear, and Dusk.n kn.ts<lb/>
appear smaller in receding Our friendly staff is ready and<lb/>
colors while too slender qualified to serve you. Come in<lb/>
figures will seem more rounded today, THE SNOOTY FOX,<lb/>
in brighter hues. 203 East 5th St phone<lb/>
Women with clear, healthy 758-4061. Open da.ly 9:c<lb/>
ins can wear many colors. 6.<lb/>
FIDDLERS III<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
January 29<lb/>
The Tarns<lb/>
And Their<lb/>
Orchestra<lb/>
HOMECOOKED SPECIALS<lb/>
Serving the finest<lb/>
food in Greenville<lb/>
In the taproom or<lb/>
in the elegant din-<lb/>
ing room.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039455_0006"/><lb/>
??????'<lb/>
Page 6, Fountainhead, January 27, 1970, Tuesdav<lb/>
??????? ?.<lb/>
ARC initiates new program flying Hrgfij<lb/>
By KAREN BLANSFIELD<lb/>
Feature Writei<lb/>
"Psycho-drama is quite the<lb/>
coming thing in psychiatry<lb/>
said the Rev. J.H. Waldrop,<lb/>
co ordinatoi of treatment<lb/>
services foi the Alchoholic<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center (ARC)<lb/>
here.<lb/>
A psycho-drama program<lb/>
was recently started at the<lb/>
ARC, directed by Bob Chase of<lb/>
the ECU drama department.<lb/>
?The basis of<lb/>
psycho-drama Chase said, "is<lb/>
to help release a person from<lb/>
his inhibitions and open up<lb/>
more<lb/>
One ol the ways in which<lb/>
this is done, he explained, is<lb/>
thr , h S( lSitivitV training.<lb/>
Foi example, we get them to<lb/>
icate with their hands.<lb/>
This<lb/>
helps I get th i p<lb/>
5 bes les sp<lb/>
that is i sed<lb/>
?s<lb/>
in fab cated<lb/>
?: :? ? the<lb/>
:??<lb/>
? ? , c ;??.?'<lb/>
He eited an exa np i<lb/>
had o ecu red<lb/>
program<lb/>
"One g<lb/>
problem w ith a very d<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
"She was givi<lb/>
told to pretend thai 1 vas hi<lb/>
mother. She sta<lb/>
it calmly, then sh ? ot nc e<lb/>
worked up, and v ? sne<lb/>
began yelling and beat.n j on il<lb/>
"The she stopped .<lb/>
hugged it, as though feeling<lb/>
guilty. In this way she was able<lb/>
to express what she really felt<lb/>
about hei mother, which she<lb/>
hadn't been able to do befo<lb/>
l o w C h a s e said, t h e<lb/>
program is more on a<lb/>
level. sal -1 "s ??'? the<lb/>
 n ? of thing we ? e so<lb/>
far, he explained ? ? tried<lb/>
to ki I bject<lb/>
of drinking at the beginning,<lb/>
igin<lb/>
it in.<lb/>
For instanc n one<lb/>
;ai<lb/>
t or. H e<lb/>
the<lb/>
back<lb/>
to the<lb/>
back<lb/>
1<lb/>
? 3 HOL K SHIR1 SI K KI<lb/>
? 1 ? HOI R CLI V.MNG<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
PRIM INI RB SERVICI<lb/>
14th and Charles St. - Corner Vcross From Hardee's<lb/>
Complete I aundrv and Dr Cleaning Service<lb/>
ftei about the th<lb/>
of dc ig this nt ovei to<lb/>
the tab oked around,<lb/>
ched down and pulled out a<lb/>
bottle.<lb/>
"He took a swallow, then<lb/>
put it away and continued<lb/>
cleaning. He kept on doing<lb/>
this, getting higher and higher,<lb/>
until finally he emptied the<lb/>
bottle and sprawled on the<lb/>
chaii finished with his work<lb/>
vo students from the<lb/>
Drama Department, Lindsay<lb/>
Bo wen and Mark Ramsey,<lb/>
freq I , a rk with Chase in<lb/>
Aiut othei pi coming<lb/>
to it   ht now<lb/>
I is that if anyone<lb/>
see what is going on,<lb/>
and vatch from<lb/>
the observation room, which<lb/>
low<lb/>
 H e v e r, they must<lb/>
lerstai I that vhat they see<lb/>
so fidi ' md the must<lb/>
forgel ar, names that they<lb/>
n ght happen to h( ii<lb/>
He said that there is a great<lb/>
deal of interest in the program<lb/>
?? parl the patients<lb/>
? hasn't beei ng<lb/>
enough to assess its success<lb/>
he said. 'But f you judge it by<lb/>
the interest of the patients. I<lb/>
would sa . that it's a success.<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
better<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
?SSSS V.SVSW.SSSWAVWAWAW. VSVAV.VVVASSV<lb/>
VSVVNrV'WVVVSrV<lb/>
By DAN WILLIAMS<lb/>
In An Force ROTC there are<lb/>
two types of programs<lb/>
available. These two are<lb/>
designed foi the varied needs<lb/>
of students.<lb/>
The traditional four-year<lb/>
gram remains a part of the<lb/>
iege campus. It is divided<lb/>
into two distinct parts. The<lb/>
first is the General Military<lb/>
Course (GMC) and the second<lb/>
is the Professional Officer<lb/>
Course (POO.<lb/>
The GMC is composed of<lb/>
cadets in their freshman and<lb/>
sophomore years. It is in these<lb/>
first two years that the cadet<lb/>
receives his basic knowledge of<lb/>
the Air Force.<lb/>
During the junior and senior<lb/>
years, the cadet is enrolled in<lb/>
the POC. Prior to entry in this<lb/>
part of the program, the cadet<lb/>
attends a four-week summer<lb/>
encampment. This session is<lb/>
designed to give the student a<lb/>
better idea of ? hat life on an<lb/>
Air Foi illy lil e.<lb/>
Entrance into this last phase<lb/>
of the program is highly<lb/>
competitive, as the student<lb/>
st pass a medical exam, a<lb/>
qualifying test and an interview<lb/>
by a board of Air Force<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
Scholarships are available to<lb/>
 II qualified cadets in the<lb/>
four-year program. These cover<lb/>
full tuition, laboratory<lb/>
expenses, incidental fees and<lb/>
an allowance tor ?U(JKb<lb/>
Scholarship cadets also receive<lb/>
$50 per month in nontaxable<lb/>
pay. Applicants are selected on<lb/>
the basis of scores on a<lb/>
qualifying test quality of their<lb/>
academic work, and a rating by<lb/>
an interview board.<lb/>
I hese scholarships are<lb/>
awarded to cad' ts on a<lb/>
competitive basis regardless of<lb/>
the students academic year.<lb/>
The basic requirement for<lb/>
entrance into the two-year<lb/>
program is 2 academic years<lb/>
remaining at either the<lb/>
undergraduate oi graduate<lb/>
level, or a combination of the<lb/>
two. Applicants must pass a<lb/>
written exam, the Air Force<lb/>
Physical exam, and be selected<lb/>
by a board of Air Force<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
Then they musl attend a<lb/>
s i x - week s Field<lb/>
Training Course, designed to<lb/>
let them sample Aii Force life<lb/>
before entering the ROTC<lb/>
program at the ty.<lb/>
The mini mum service<lb/>
requirement for either program<lb/>
is 4 years or 6 years for those<lb/>
? ho c o m p I ete pilot or<lb/>
navigator training.<lb/>
LOST 'dan's browi wallet.<lb/>
Keep the money as a reward;<lb/>
even the wallet, but please turn<lb/>
in at the Union desk, or mail<lb/>
the cards and papers to me.<lb/>
Alton Bawling, 758 1820.<lb/>
vvvvlArt,?v?vvlAlSvr???v?<lb/>
203 E. 5th Street<lb/>
JUST ARRIVED!<lb/>
SHIPMENT<lb/>
OF<lb/>
MAHARAJAH<lb/>
Dresses<lb/>
All one of a kind, hand woven<lb/>
designs<lb/>
IN MIRRORS AND BEADS<lb/>
$15.00 to S23.00<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00039455_0007"/><lb/>
Tuesday, January 27, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 7<lb/>
h<lb/>
m,<lb/>
DOOKS,<lb/>
so receive<lb/>
?ntaxable<lb/>
elected on<lb/>
res on a<lb/>
V of their<lb/>
1 rating by<lb/>
r'ips are<lb/>
ts on a<lb/>
ardless of<lb/>
' year.<lb/>
t'ment for<lb/>
two-year<lb/>
wic years<lb/>
ther the<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
ion of the<lb/>
jst pass a<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
be selected<lb/>
Air Force<lb/>
attend a<lb/>
? Field<lb/>
esigned to<lb/>
Force life<lb/>
? ? ROTC<lb/>
trsity.<lb/>
n service<lb/>
er program<lb/>
s for those<lb/>
ot or<lb/>
 ? wallet.<lb/>
; a reward;<lb/>
please turn<lb/>
sk. or mail<lb/>
ers to me.<lb/>
1820.<lb/>
A ad<lb/>
d<lb/>
:ola<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pirates are slipping in conference<lb/>
by SONNY LEA<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
If ECU's Pirates want to get<lb/>
back into the thick of things in<lb/>
the Southern Conference<lb/>
basketball race, they had better<lb/>
improve their shooting and<lb/>
ballhandling.<lb/>
This proved to be the Pirates'<lb/>
downfall Saturday night at<lb/>
East Tennessee in a 79-65 loss.<lb/>
The Bucs were behind by 17<lb/>
at the half after hitting only<lb/>
eight of 26 field goals for a<lb/>
miserable 30 percent and they<lb/>
made 16 turnovers in the half.<lb/>
One good thing did happen<lb/>
though. Jim Modlin became<lb/>
the first East Carolina player<lb/>
ever to score 1,000 points in a<lb/>
three year career. With East<lb/>
Tennessee leading 9 1, Modlin<lb/>
connected on two free throws<lb/>
for his 999 and 1,000 points.<lb/>
Jim Gregory led the Pirates<lb/>
in scoring with 13 points while<lb/>
Modlin finished the night with<lb/>
12. Jim Fairley had 11 for the<lb/>
Pirates and Tom Miller got 10.<lb/>
But, now the Pirates set<lb/>
their sights on Richmond and<lb/>
VMI, their foes this week.<lb/>
They meet Richmond<lb/>
Thursday night in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum and travel to<lb/>
Lexington, Va Saturday night<lb/>
to play VMI.<lb/>
Richmond handed the<lb/>
Pirates one of their two<lb/>
conference losses earlier in the<lb/>
season by a 90-72 margin in<lb/>
Richmond. But, the Pirates<lb/>
were without the services of<lb/>
playmaker Miller in the game.<lb/>
VMI will give the Pirates<lb/>
problems at home. Earlier in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, the Bucs<lb/>
whipped the Keydets 108-66,<lb/>
but in the VMI fieldhouse they<lb/>
are much harder to beat.<lb/>
Now coach Tom Quinn and<lb/>
his Pirates will be working to<lb/>
retalliate against Richmond.<lb/>
The Spiders are 4-11 overall<lb/>
and hve won but one<lb/>
conference game, and that was<lb/>
against the Pirates.<lb/>
The Spiders are led by<lb/>
All-Southern guard Kenny<lb/>
Foster, who teams with guard<lb/>
Picot Fraizier, to make one of<lb/>
the t o u ghest guard<lb/>
combinations in the Jim Hewitt at center.<lb/>
conference. Hewitt, a 6-8 junior, was the<lb/>
In the frontcourt the Spiders big man for the Spiders against<lb/>
rely on Frank Owens and Stan the Pirates earlier with a 22<lb/>
Ryfinski at the forwards and point performance.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Join the JjQX2 Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By Pass)<lb/>
DIM INN or TAKE Ol 1<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 576 9991<lb/>
Swimmers continue wins<lb/>
with defeat over VMI<lb/>
The Pirates won all but two<lb/>
events and set six meet records<lb/>
in cl'fe: tir j Virginia Military<lb/>
Insititute, 67-36, in a<lb/>
conference swimming meet<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The Pirates 400-yard medley<lb/>
relay team of Ken Hungate,<lb/>
Steve Weissman, Wayne Norris<lb/>
md Jim Griffin, set a new<lb/>
standard of 3:50.61.<lb/>
Sary Frederick won the<lb/>
1 ,000 yard freestyle in<lb/>
10:52.33, another record.<lb/>
Paul Trevisan took the<lb/>
50-yard freestyle in 22.6<lb/>
seconds, still a third record.<lb/>
The fourth record was set by<lb/>
Norris, taking the 200-yard<lb/>
individual medley in 2:11.49.<lb/>
Paul Trevisan took the<lb/>
50-yard freestyle in 22.6<lb/>
seconds, still a third record.<lb/>
The fourth record was set by<lb/>
Norris, taking the 200-yard<lb/>
individual medley in 2:11.49.<lb/>
Kevin Tracy broke the<lb/>
record in the 200 yard<lb/>
butterfly, winning in 2:11.83.<lb/>
Larry Allman completed the<lb/>
assault on the records, winning<lb/>
the 200 yard breaststroke in<lb/>
2:27.47, just three-tenths of a<lb/>
second ahead of his opponent,<lb/>
in the most exciting race of the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Greg Hanes was a double<lb/>
winner, taking the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle in 1:56.35 and the<lb/>
100-yard freestyle in 51.09<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
Kevin Tracy broke the<lb/>
record in the 200-yard<lb/>
butterfly, winning in 2:11.83.<lb/>
Larry Allman completed the<lb/>
assault on the records, winning<lb/>
the 200 yard breaststroke in<lb/>
2:27.47, just three-tenths of a<lb/>
second ahead of his opponent,<lb/>
in the most exciting race of the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
Greg Hanes was a double<lb/>
winner, taking the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle in 1:56.35 and the<lb/>
100-yard freestyle in 51.09<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
Black Cat Sale<lb/>
Tuesday, January 27<lb/>
Store Opens 1 PM, Closes 9PM<lb/>
The Sale That Never Disappoints<lb/>
ALL FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS<lb/>
Y2 Price Or or Less<lb/>
IN THE PAPPAGALLO GALLERY<lb/>
Selected groups of Shoes and Rags<lb/>
Greatly Reduced<lb/>
222 East Fifth Street<lb/>
FIRST SHOP OFF THE ECU CAMPUS<lb/>
Use your Student Charge Account or Master Charge<lb/>
We remind you of our board plans for spring quarter beginning<lb/>
March 10, 1970.<lb/>
The fee for the 7 day board plan is $1 54.01 which represents a<lb/>
31 discount from the cash value.<lb/>
The fee for the 5 day plan is $129.60 which represents a 20<lb/>
discount.<lb/>
The board plan card may be procured at our Main Cafeteria<lb/>
Office.<lb/>
Cancellation regulations remain the same as for the first<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
ARASLATER SCHOOL AND COLLEGE SERVICES<lb/>
P.O. BOX 2714<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Fashon Fabric Colors<lb/>
For Spring 1970<lb/>
Do Your Thing With<lb/>
Red -<lb/>
White -<lb/>
Blue<lb/>
KETTLE CLOTH<lb/>
Prints and Solid Colors<lb/>
?WINDJAMMER<lb/>
Prints and Solid Colors<lb/>
?SERRANO LINEN<lb/>
Prints and Solid Colors<lb/>
SHOP IN THE LARGEST DEPARTMENT STORE IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
S,<lb/>
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U.S. must begin<lb/>
to reassess values<lb/>
rin; world is si kunod ea h lime a new reporl comes<lb/>
.? ross ihe wires from thai fuirl ol Nigeria called Biafra.<lb/>
In America the reaction is particularly strong. 1 he<lb/>
white ill.ii Amei ican businessman sits down in the den<lb/>
of his15 000 home He can't quite gel comfortable i )<lb/>
th.it $400 reclining chaii because he ate a bit too much<lb/>
l(K,Sl )W, fol dinner. He links the remote control unit<lb/>
foi his coloi television sel to come on. He wants to<lb/>
U:h the news<lb/>
,ii(.i Cronkite tells his viewei that in Biafra<lb/>
ho ; children lie dead in the streets with bloated<lb/>
stomachs and empt stares on theii faces. Swarms ol<lb/>
flies make j meal ol theii c ire is<lb/>
Cionkite also tells his viewei that jusl a few miles<lb/>
,ha.i Horn the dead children , Nigerian governoi is<lb/>
(jiviiK .i banquet with suckling pig caviai mi<lb/>
i h.unpagne<lb/>
! he Antei ican is 'd c be so<lb/>
; : til -?<lb/>
Iim i ins fialace a fev nile: ' n<lb/>
Amei ica I lo'<lb/>
Its that this ind ? - al doe: s s<lb/>
I as the igei A'hile h<lb/>
? n subi i ha homi ch I st. . ? ic<lb/>
h 11st across 1 ?v<lb/>
Mixon njde ii possible foi a c mplete<lb/>
; with 16 jeeps to be flown in to<lb/>
? toi i Biafra. We commend him foi this act ol<lb/>
nerc We feel that the majority of Americans back the<lb/>
I in this move It is altogethei fitting that the<lb/>
? countr in the world should aid us less fortunate<lb/>
h iends<lb/>
But oui nation has toe ong ignored problems right in<lb/>
i i own back ird. Wh doesn't Nixon send a<lb/>
,v ib hosp  unit into southside Raleigh,<lb/>
A ? I, . ?<lb/>
abo sh : poverty and alleviating human<lb/>
v se ' . .  - con  we send men to the moon.<lb/>
? that A'hi ? a? pi l th? first nan on the moo<lb/>
.? t ;?  . d cha ;r i . ig us a chance to focus<lb/>
ablems of America But before the astronauts<lb/>
. .?? . . ? v V ce Pi es dt  Sp i o Ag iev<lb/>
 ? . . conquest o1 . s<lb/>
's lv .ert .?. t co   oui<lb/>
"V<lb/>
HEW begins to focus '<lb/>
on college desegregation<lb/>
By Bll I CONNI I I N<lb/>
lllCll<lb/>
I ,hinttn Con<lb/>
Morth Carolina probably<lb/>
be asked to submit to the<lb/>
Departmenl of Health<lb/>
I ducation and Welfare (HI V I<lb/>
this yeai a plan foi<lb/>
desegregating the state's public<lb/>
colleges and univei sities<lb/>
Up to now, HI W has givi n<lb/>
only slight attention to highei<lb/>
education, having enough to<lb/>
woioi about in enforcing<lb/>
desegregation of the public<lb/>
second in schools But colleges<lb/>
? covered In the 1964 Civil<lb/>
Rights Act, too, and this will<lb/>
be iht1 yeai HEW begins taking<lb/>
? .it them.<lb/>
rhe college desegregation<lb/>
Ligram actually began in<lb/>
ig le its first<lb/>
? the iacia make i p of<lb/>
 ?? eges Since then<lb/>
. investigators<lb/>
sited 0i e than 300<lb/>
n 46 states<lb/>
Plans requested<lb/>
On the basis ol these studies,<lb/>
six st.ees have been asked to<lb/>
s u b m it d eseg i e g a t i o n<lb/>
pi.ins I ouisiana, Arkansas,<lb/>
Pennsy Ivan ia . M ississippi,<lb/>
Maryland and, only List month,<lb/>
Vn ginia.<lb/>
Leo F Panetta, dired )i ot<lb/>
HEW s Office foi Civil Rights.<lb/>
indicated in a report to<lb/>
Congress last tall that at least<lb/>
eight more states would lie<lb/>
required to turn in plans this<lb/>
yeai<lb/>
The odds are sti ong that the<lb/>
eight will include North<lb/>
Carolina and othei southern<lb/>
states which still have mam<lb/>
racially distinct colli<lb/>
campuses<lb/>
N.C. campuses<lb/>
HEW invesi gat ng ti ams<lb/>
a ready ha e isited 17 c lege<lb/>
and . " ?;? ca npuse; in<lb/>
North Care ia v st o1 th<lb/>
stati si pp '? ! ? .<lb/>
 : A n 5<lb/>
.  L. ? 1 t .<lb/>
? ??  ? lethe<lb/>
S fc S I f s<lb/>
-<lb/>
It .<lb/>
-<lb/>
proceedings against any state,<lb/>
en though Mississippi snd<lb/>
I o u isian a h av e b een<lb/>
predictably uncooperative.<lb/>
rhe cautious approach is<lb/>
necessary because college<lb/>
desegregation presents a far<lb/>
m0re complex problem for<lb/>
HI W than secondary school<lb/>
integration. Students select<lb/>
then own colleges. They are<lb/>
annot be, assigned fo<lb/>
tl n. es also have to be<lb/>
i oncerned with admission .aid<lb/>
pei foi mance standards.<lb/>
So fai (II "? is not requii ing<lb/>
an, specific approach to<lb/>
Collegi i egation. But it is<lb/>
m akin g n u m e r o n s<lb/>
lestions" to the states<lb/>
providing information on what<lb/>
othei state college systems<lb/>
hai e done to assui e eq lal<lb/>
educational oppoi tunity.<lb/>
Presumably, tins would lead<lb/>
students who want to study in<lb/>
,t pai ticular field to enroll at at<lb/>
institution regarldess of the<lb/>
previous racial identity of the<lb/>
campus. The college system<lb/>
would be desegregated by the<lb/>
Students' own career choices.<lb/>
Student choice<lb/>
Another desegi egat ion<lb/>
method often discussed,<lb/>
though not necessarily<lb/>
recommended, would ujmv<lb/>
high school seniors make their<lb/>
admission applications to a<lb/>
:entral office and then be<lb/>
assigned to onv of the<lb/>
state-supported campuses. An<lb/>
applicant would not be assured<lb/>
of netting the school of his<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, the states<lb/>
are reluctant to attemh' such<lb/>
and explosive v<lb/>
sial changes in then<lb/>
?' - S The. ai ?<lb/>
? o about the<lb/>
ial s . ess of such<lb/>
es and about the<lb/>
' ? s regation that<lb/>
steps, 's also concentration<lb/>
on mora immediate and<lb/>
attainable' 11<lb/>
In its campus investigations<lb/>
HEW has looked primarily f0;<lb/>
evidence of discrimination in<lb/>
recruitment am! admission of<lb/>
students, housing (on and off<lb/>
campus), si holarships<lb/>
extracurncul.il activities and<lb/>
job placement services,<lb/>
Many schools haw gotten<lb/>
HEW letters suggesting hov<lb/>
these activities i an be used to<lb/>
stimulate desi tion, For<lb/>
example, col re urged to<lb/>
recruit at predom mtly black<lb/>
schools as veil as white<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
"High ri<lb/>
HEW also itiraging<lb/>
southei n collegi s I ? more<lb/>
"high risk" si idi meai<lb/>
those, usually bk he do<lb/>
not meet norm idmission<lb/>
requii ements bui ho appear<lb/>
to have the ability, maturity<lb/>
and motivation I i i eed if<lb/>
given help<lb/>
Black studies : rams have<lb/>
posed an unusual problem for<lb/>
HEW officers  'he seek<lb/>
integi al ion, s black<lb/>
students have bei lemanding<lb/>
their own : ' and<lb/>
curriculum. HE basic rule,<lb/>
however, is that such programs<lb/>
are legal only if open to<lb/>
students of all races.<lb/>
Fraternities are another<lb/>
sensitive question, since man<lb/>
still maintain vhites-only<lb/>
membership ri rements.<lb/>
HEW's rule: Fraternities that<lb/>
discriminate are in . lolation<lb/>
only if they ai ?d ,n<lb/>
college owned b is or<lb/>
receive some col ? support.<lb/>
controvi<lb/>
college<lb/>
Dtica<lb/>
u d<lb/>
? phasized<lb/>
t said I<lb/>
ioi chai ? s<lb/>
? tl<lb/>
Write, please!<lb/>
Due to a lac- I etters,<lb/>
The Forum has i ' eared<lb/>
in the last thn ? isues. We<lb/>
urge membi<lb/>
? . ersit, t <lb/>
The Forum.<lb/>
the<lb/>
fount Ainhead<lb/>
Paul F. (Chip) Callaway<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Tom Peeler Managing Editor<lb/>
Robert Thonen  Business Manager<lb/>
Robert McDowell Coordinating Editor<lb/>
Keith Parrish Features Editor<lb/>
Benjamin BaileyNews Editor<lb/>
Alan Sabrcsky Niqht Editor News Analys<lb/>
Nay ?Ead, Product.on Manager<lb/>
David Landi Advertising Manage'<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
V- Schaadies CopY 8J<lb/>
lG" Ph0tlrdver<lb/>
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