sire Bcttet NORTH CAROLINA WESLEYAN COLLEGE Rocky Mount, N. C. U. S. POSTAGf PAID PanMl No. 217 Rocky AAounl, N. C Nofi-Profit Organiution VOL X NO. XX FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1969 Pi Epsilon’s Man, Students Criticize Cafeteria Music, Is Ugliest Tom Mowbray, Presi dent of Wesleyan’s Omi- cron Rho Chapter of Al pha Phi Omega, announ ced last Friday that “Bubbles” Music, Pi Hp- silon Sorority's candidate for Ugliest Man On Cam pus, had had the honor confirmed by the voters„ Music won when, with only a short time left for voting, the two fraterni ties threw their support to Pi Epsilon, topping the leading candidate until that time, Dave Siple, who represented Wesleyan Players. Funds raised by the UMOC contest will be used by APO to further their activities with the Stoney Creek Fire Dept„ and Rescue Squad. Spring Assemblies To Begin This Week Jess Blackman, SGA President, and Dr, Wilde, Dean of Students, announ ced recently a series of five Tuesday morning as semblies to be held this spring. The programs center primarily on the social alienation of youth and on the use of drugs by youtho The formats of the presentations include color films, lectures, and discussions. ^ Speakers will include Dr. Louis Harris, Associate Pro fessor of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Uni versity of North Caro lina at Chapel HilL Dr. Harris is a leading au thority on hallucionogen- ic drugs. The March 18 and 25 assemblies will be open forums for students; at these assemblies any student may speak on any subject of his choosing, though he must notify Jess Blackman in advance of Above: Barbara Brown, one of the students inter viewed in examination of cafeteria. his desire to speak, Blackman calls the open forums “an opportunity for any student to get things off his chest; ” a question - and - answer period will follow these speeches. Honors Award Convo cation, April 10, will con clude the Spring Assem bly Programs, according to Blackman. Attendance at these assemblies, he said, will be on a volun tary basis. Library Gets Photocopier Bound volumes of the Congressional Record covering the years 1964-66 have recently been added to the per iodicals collection of the Wesleyan College Li brary. The volumes, which contain Congress ional speeches, debates, 3^nd a record of votes on bills in both House and Senate, cover the 2nd ses sion of the 88th Congress and the 1st and 2nd ses sions of the 89th Con gress. Later this year the iibrary will receive bound volumes covering the 90th Congress (1967-68). The set includes a de- ailed subject index, his- ory of all bills and rese ctions passed, and a cu- niulative daily digest of action in both houses of ongress. These volumes were obtained through the courtesy of Senator B, jerett Jordanj, junior j®‘^^tor from North Caro- thf beginning of 91st Congress in Jan- jary of this year, the li- ary has received daily issues of the Congres- from the ice of Congressman L. ountain. The current NCW Students Help Clinic By TOM MOWBRAY Several Wesleyan stu dents have volunteered to be big brothers and sis ters for underprivileged children in both Nash and Edgecombe Counties. The idea for such a program originated with the Wesleyan Chapter of the Student National Edu cation Association. Staff members of the Edge combe - Nash Mental Health Clinic came to a issue of the Record is kept in the browsing room, and back issues are shel ved in the stacks. Wesleyan College Li brary has also recently obtained a new coin-ope rated photocopier, which students can use for copy ing class notes, personal papers, etc., as well as reference books and per iodicals. Said Mr. Stew art, Librarian: “We hope that the addition of this equipment will give stu dents more freedom and convenience in their work,” regular meeting of the S.N.E.A. and introduced the program. Response has been good but there are still many more chil dren who would benefit from the type of “tutor- friend” relationship which this program seeks to promote. Student volunteers are briefed as to the specific problems of the case which they are to work with as a means of di recting their efforts. Af ter this consultation, the student is allowed to pro ceed in any manner he wishes. Tutors set up a regular schedule of meetings ac cording to the time which best suits both the tutor and his pupil. The tutor usually finds himself very much invol ved with the problems of his student. Drawing on experience gained through his adolescent years, the tutor advises on a basis of friendship rather than on the au thority of a parent, doc- (Continued on page 2) By MARSHA For the past several weeks. The DECREE has printed different views concerning the food and services in the cafeteria. This week the students themselves were inter viewed, Approximate ly fifty students were ask ed their opinions of the food and services in the cafeteria. Probably the most praised items served in the cafeteria were thela- sagna, spaghetti, and iced tea, while the ham burger served “under different names” was probably the least ac claimed. About half of the stu dents stated that a good assortment of food is a- vailable in the cafeteria. Most of them agreed that it could be much better if some of the grease were removed, if it were cooked in a greater va- WHITE riety of ways, and if it were kep t warm throughout the serving time. Although few students complained about the at titude of the people in the serving line, most of them did admit that the student attitudes toward the help were not always the most desirable. Many students ex pressed the need for a greater variety in bever ages and recalled the few times lemonade had been served and asked that this drink be made available more often. Students, who are forced by necessity to eat lunch in the cafeteria af ter one o’clock because of a twelve o'clock class, complained about the shortage of food and the lack of enough time in which to eat. (Continued on Page 2) CANADIAN POET TO APPEAR HERE Ronald Bates, a lead ing Canadian poet, is scheduled to appear here at 8:00 p.m. March 3 in the Experimental Thea tre, Holding the B.A., M. A., and PhD, degrees from the University of Toronto, he is Associate Professor of English in the University of Western Ontario. He will read from his books of poetry, including The Wandering World, Changes, and The Unima ginable Circus. Bates* reviewers have written of his work: “There is nowhere in The Wa_ndering_ World that we do not feel a contact with a richly suggestive intel ligence. We go from the open world of endless space to the contained world of the mind, and from exploration to self- knowledge ...” Writes Northrop Frye: “Mr. Bates seems to me a ro mantic poet, in the sense that he often uses ab stract and unvisualized language but is keenly sensitive to evocative sound. Gregory To Youth.. '^Save The Nation* By GLENN RHODES Recently, we attended “A Night With Dick Gre gory,” presented by the Duke University Afro-A merican group in Duke’s Page Auditorium. Mr. Gregory is a successful comedian who is now a committed activist for a “Humane world.” In 1968 Mr. Gregory ran for president, receiving many thousands of votes. Several thousand peo ple listened to his mix ture of comedy and ser ious message to the youth of America. He called this generation “prob ably the most morally dedicated and committed group of youth in his tory.” Later he stated, “You youngsters, you’ve got a big job — the job of^saving this country.” “I say to you young sters as you work to change the system, please let your number one point of order be these col leges and universities a- cross the country. Please, please make them meaningful, and they will go out 100% to educate you, but not to indoctri nate ..,Ninety-eight% of all colleges in America do not know how to edu cate, but they do know how to indoctrinate.” Mr. Gregory compli- (Continued on Page 3)