Fountainhead, February 16, 1971


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





Sex educator speaks
laAy
link its time ;i lot oi others
Thank you,
Daniel Hoehne
concern
lents, we feel the time has
ipporl tor David Edwards
St, legislators to show a
the students he represents
mid he held against David
backing of the campus
at ion that David is only
ional gain, it can hardly he
David is a third quarter
dilating in Match
embeis ol the SGA would
i it David Edwards would
mietly. humbly. without
tlous attempts to draw
f we. his constituents,
nd the causes lor which he
417 Scotr
Bag
lv eat a lull meal Mostly I
any thing thai happens to
me an over-abundance oi
don't particularly .are foi
old woman. 5 11. ? inches,
ood health
person in good health
s as diabetes OI ulcers) the
is quite unimportant and
individual desires Social
a! it is we all tend to go
als a day although some
ell with one 01 two and
toui or five So. the
speak ol boils dow n to
ating more than w hen you
iny case the odds ol doing
ei a pei iod oi g ouple ol
ke eating a balanced diet
inexpensive foods are very
e and cheap meals an.
mg the thing you could
i dried milk, which is
nous, and substitute fruits
is much easiei it you do
and have time to shop
?ms in supei markets II
iod cookbook specializing
y nutritious recipes. I'd
nit it
settle an argument my
aving lie claims that man
ical disease from sheep,
i then enjoyment during
ices Mow evei. I refuse to
ould get thai hoiuv t an
le venereal disease, he s
"that horny' he's nght.
:ontactS between humans
i (which , an also refei to
is among humans i Sheep
ie mentioned when this
Ins is probably related to
the loneliness nl being a
sie to most p.ople smli
re thought to be not
OUntAMhead Air sex anxieties,
and the truth shall make you free'
Volume II. Number 7
Greenville. North Carotin:
I uesday. February 16, 191
unify sex attitudes
British poet to read
his poetry at Forum
BILL BUTLER, POET from England,
will read his verse tomorrow night in the
(Photo by Ken Finch)
Nursing Building Auditorium.
Bill Butler, a poet from Brighton. England,
will read his verse in the ECU Nursing School
Auditorium at 8 p.m Wednesday. Feb 17.
Butler, author of seven books, has had poems
published in "Harper's Magazine "The
Spectator "Galley Sail Review "Fantasy"
and "Science Fiction" and other English and
American magazines Among his books are
"The Gertrude Stein Cookbook "My One
Leaf Head and "Byrne's Atlas He has also
written articles for the Manchestei Guardian.
The Scotsman, and The Spectator
Not always a resident ol England. Butler was
born in Spokane. Wash, in 1934 and was
educated in California. Montana, and Florida
He attended San Francisco Conservatory of
Music. San Francisco State College. University
of Montana, and University ol Washington
His public readings include a series for
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and others
at various English I niversities and in the San
Francisco Bay area.
His local reading is jointly sponsored by the
North Carolina Poetry Circuit and the ECU
Poetry Forum.
There is no admission charge and the public
is invited.
Dr Mary Caldei
I nformation and I i . ai ion (
i nited Stati ? i si K US)
sexuality Wednesday nigl
I
Si l( I ' . a non pi
formed in I w4 i i ti ital
lives as wholi nun ai I i inj
machines i sed hermits neithei
exploiters n
I ntil rei em ?
my tholi igy ? II
has I"
his iellow man said aider ne 1
individual to ex
sex-related
the n
In ordei I rrect tl
t alden ne sa; I we hi i iId I w ing
Unify out knowledge ai
?
Feel frei
Realize thai iexuality
humai
as male oi female
Re.
role and
Refra . ple legal! ?
morally by thei
reac' poi ibility and .roue
drive rathei than equate sexual . with
emotional maturity
?ppi the general moral attit .
sexual relationships
Educate tne parents on how to accept their
roles as sex educa
In supporting sex education in schi
Calderone I the fact thai SEK I S
does not want to take away parents' rigl I
nei
I
By
? .
?
I
I:
Jividuais !
understanding
behalf
between n
studei
Life i
discus
City council asks
Fountainhead ban
Riot weapons prove effective
By PHYLLIS DOUGHERTY
(StaM Writer)
"Theobscene material being published by the
Fountainhead and its distribution in
Greenville" was requested to be stopped by the
Greem die City C ouncil on Feb 4
By a unanimous V0te,( n Manager Harry I:
Hagerty was directed to write a letter to ECU
President Leo Jenkins requesting that "the
obscene material be curtailed
Hagerty said that "the indiscriminant
distribution" was being disputed. The request
was made b five decent leaders who object to
this kind of tilth being distributed among oui
young people. There was no official complaint
registered . to my knowfedgesaid Hagerty.
The request came after the publication ol a
comic strip by Ken Finch in the Fountainhead.
Feb. 3. Certain four-letter words were
concluded to be "repulsive to most of the
citizens. We don't need those kind of words
said Hagerty.
"The Council concurred that the material
being used in this publication was obscene
There is no plan to "pass a city ordinance
against obscenity unless there is a state law to
support it said Hagerty
"All obscenity laws were declared
unconstitutional because of a lack of a suitable
definition of what is obscene
The City Council adopted a resolution
supporting a new obscenity law in North
Carolina and requesting the legislators
representing Pitt County to enact one as
quickly as possible"
BERKELEY. Calif. (AP) Two new
weapons designed to hurt but not kill rioters
proved their effectiveness against rock-throwing
demonstrators this week, police report.
One. dubbed the "stun gun is a pistol-sized
weapon that fires canvas "bean bags" full of
bird shot or a load of wooden pellets
The other is a 12-guage shotgun shell called a
"ricochet round which is fired low to send
two golbs of putty-like plastic bouncing oil the
ground into rioters legs
"They're meant to smart plenty said a
police spokesman But they will not break the
skin -
range
Boii devices ??- ; foi the Mrs tune
Thursday in dlspe; 10 antiwar
. the entiy
Vietname u to Laos
DELIVERS A WHACK
The stun gun. used by sheriffs deputies.
delivers a whack 'like a blow from a fi
spokesman said I he bean bags can be treated
with a dye that will "mark" a demonstrator in a
crowd for later arrest
Undersherifl I i Houchins said Friday
live stun gun rounds were fired when
CAR PELTED
"Then ar wj- being pelted wit ks
bottles and
-
?
? Petei M
been . . in m using i - while
they are supposed to be noniethaJ thev might
cause death or serious miury ai close ?
No injuries were i
stun gun oi ricochet rounds
Bill intends to ban
closed meetings
RALEIGH (AP) Gov Bob Scott declined
Wednesday to endorse a legislative bill that
would ban closed meetings in local and state
government, but he said he had no objections
to it
"I would say throw all meetings open" it the
news media reported "fully and completely" all
that transpired, Scott told a news conference
He said that in the haste to beat deadlines,
newsmen do not always report the story fully
"So much happens in meetings Scott said.
"that the public gets a distorted view ol what
happens "
I he idea ol public meetings is valid, he s.iul
hut tin re are exceptions lo this, which he listed
as transactions of land that could "inflate
property costs" and meetings when
personalities are involved
Hie governoi told newsmen the question ol
closed meetings is a matter lor the legislature to
decide
In reply to another question on the matter,
Scott said. "I'd say at the slate level that slate
officials have been just as honest as the press in
reporting what has happened in closed
meetings "
"So often paitial information is reported to
large masses and creates false impressions
Scott said.
In saying the facts aren't always reported
accurately. Scott criticized a "major newspaper
editorial" which suggested he should have
walked the two blocks from the Executive
Mansion to the legislative building instead oi
riding in the state's No. 1 limousine.
Scott said he did not ride in No. 1. He added.
"My wile and thiee guests rode in it 1 wasn't
involved in it at all
The governor, who recently endorsed U.S.
Sen Edmund Muskie of Maine as the preference
foi the Democratic presidential nomination,
was asked if he would like to he a vice
presidential candidate in l7o "I hat's a long
way off he replied. "Let's see who's going to
be the presidential candidate
Asked about his future plans. Scott said
"My plans aie to finish out my term if I'm not
impeached "
Not committed
to med school
RALEIGH (API GOV. Bob Scott said
Wednesday he is not committed to a medical
school at ECU "or any other site" in North
Carolina.
The governor told a news conference he has
previously said additional manpower is needed
in health services, including more doctors
"This may take the form of another medical
school, but the ECU proposal would not
graduate doctors Scott said It would be a
two-year medical school, he noted, leading to a
doctor's degree.
A recent report by a visiting team from the
American Medical Association and the
Association it merican Medical Colleges said a
pioposed medical school a' ECU could not be
given accreditation this fall
Alter the report was released Dr Leo
Jenkins. ECU president, said he had been given
reasonable assurance accreditation would come
in lu2 if funds foi the school are provided bv
the General Assembly
ked about this phase ol the report, s
said Jenkins had told . im the same thing I he
governoi said he didn't expect accreditation to
come now. adding this is something that is done
just before a medical school is reads to accept
students
"I wew the icport more as a guidance on
what is to be done Scott said
Given highest rating
Resident composer
wins at festival
I) i Greg - k ? eck ECU's 1 rdei !?
eomposer-in-residenct has won the lu"l Delius lived neai la ?
Festival w i
His "i ycles I I r nsemble . Th? f a ?
was given the night itii - at the annual merchant !?. ius wa
festival, held in Jacksonville. Fla Jan 17-Feb young compost
10 Florida Hedk I at I
Other winning composers were Judith Lang Kosteck is th ?
Zain . nd international aw.
Karl Mirendt ol Athens I i Mains among thei the B . I
ol London, 1 ngland, Bernard I Vward. the Spoleto I
Brooklyn. "t ind Rodi ej ? Baldw aw N
Park Calil a tion
1 esth a Kosteck has studied
Missouri, New j . New II. Maryland and Michigai
Virginia and Massachusetts. wer? givei specia I -
mention by orchestras a
The annual I' ;
musk and I - the late He I I
1
Administration called
WASHINGTON (AP) War critics on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
contending the Nixon administration is vague
about long-range plans in Vietnam, are seeking
a declaration that all American tones will be
withdrawn at some date in the future
Backing foi such a statement ol intent
appeals gaining ai the expense ol I proposal oi
Sens George McGovern, D-S I) . and Maik O
Hatfield R-Ore . to end U.S involvement by
Dec 31.
However, Secretary oi Slate William P
Rogers, alter telling the committee Tuesday the
current South Vietnamese invasion oi Laos will
help speed t S withdrawal, said such a
declaration is unnecessary
"The President has alieadv said it Rogers
told newsmen "Our policy contemplates a
withdiawal ol all out tones from South
Vietnam Rogers said
Sens lacob K laviis R-N N . and Church
said Rogers became vague when pressed on
whether the United States places troop
withdrawals ahead of maintaining the South
Vietnamese government
'The answer always is that he thinks we can
have both Chinch said
Although J.ivits and Church supported the
McGovern-Hatfield amendment a year ago,
both indicated reservation, this time "There
aren't the votes in Congress to legislate a
termination dale Ch irch said
The switch m goals from specific limits on
1 S operations in Indochina to a bioadei
statement of purpose coincided with the
generally muted reaction to the Laotian
operation
Sen George D. Alken of Vermont, senior
Republican on Foreign Relations who had been
critical of the blackout sunounding the
operation's carts stages said after Roger's
appearance: "I am inclined to believe it will
work
Vague'
But Sen .1 W. Fulbnght. D-Ark . committee
chairman, said he still has "grave questions
about it "
Rogers and Secretary oi Defense Melvin R
Land, in their Capitol Hill appearances
Tuesday, emphasized Nixon administration
optimism the operations m Laos and Cambodia
will assure U.S troop withdrawals will continue
aftei the Mas 1 target oi :S4.iXX) is reached
and. who made separate appearances before
the Senate and House Armed Services
committees, said the I S backed attack are
running on schedule and will enable the
administration to meet 01 beat .he plan to
withdraw mOOO more American troops by
Mav I
"Ihe fact is Rogers told reporteis "we will
have Americans by and large out o combat
roles by the middle of this year He declined
to give an exact date Of the 284,000 Hoops
due to remain in Vietnam after May I. about
45,000 ac combat personnel
campus
scenes
tf-noto Oy Ken Finch)
RAYS OF SUNLIGHT beam on William
"Bill" Cox as he sweeps the balcony of
Wright Auditorium,





Fountainhead, February 16, 1971, page j
Prof calls abortions
of humanity'
Campus briefs
By MARILYN MOODY
"How do you hand she say s. 'II
sou don'i give m i 'llinil!
suicide u 'II l d abortion. I
will go to an illegal abortionist isked Di
Jarosla I Hulka W ai the Family
1 ifc Conference " ib ?
Hulka is a tne
Depai iieni
School ol Medicine, at t x
( arohna ai i hapel Hill
professoi Dei ! M ?i;hi t1'
Health, in the Sch Health and
assot lina Popu
( entei also it UN CH
Hulka naruI
which must
served " He said tha
preferrab!)
abortion than I'oi
pei foi in it
Hulka
"interrupi
viability " A
the baby
reaches .1 w is.
of picgn.uk)
K
Hulka stati
5(K - u
weighing
LEGAL RIGH
fetus acqu
Until '
existi
sometl
time
N 'lina
Although Hulk;
into thi
h
I
must i
Out ill 70 pregnancies thai are actually
anted, 10 are lost in .1 mensti mI flow
because the woman's body failed to record the
pregnancy
50 PER CENT LOST
ol the 60 that are left, 10 are
aneously aborted before 1- weeks "hese
regnancies do not contain the fetus because
at this time only the afterbirth tissue has
, ,1 I lie total numbei ol pregnancies that
are li 12 weeks is 50 pei com ol the
1
( p until 12 weeks, the pregnancy is a soft
physically speaking, said Hulka ihis
mce is "technically easy to remove
Hulka states that aftei 12 weeks the pregnancy
chnicatlv more difficult to remove This
.??? i, dty iv the reason two different
ion methods are used, stated Hulka
Bel ire 12 wi - elapsed, abortion is
Hulka I 'irst a doctoi
definitely determine pregnancy "his is
.i' said Hulka. because pregnancy tests
? the pregnancy has been
?d the doctoi should urge the patient
on since an abortion is
.1 early in pregnanc v
! ? . ?d to abort . pregnant
weeks is .1 vacuum method With this
method, a plastk tub I 'd in the vagina
1 . im is turned on Hie suction from
uum collapses the uterus and
ileteh empties it in 1-5 minutes Very
ising this method. This
method icienl in Yugoslavia where
ns are not performed aftei 12 weeks
I he death rate in Yugoslavia foi this vacuum
abortu ; twt oul ol 100,000 according I ?
FETUS SENSITIVE
? pregnancy reaches 12 weeks the
, rocedure is more difficult as well as
ius Doctors tell a patient seeking an
on aftei 12 weeks to come bask in the
I6th week Between 12-16 weeks, the fetus is
:v sensitive stage and abortion would not
iccot ling to Hulka
Between 16-20 weeks, the uterus is slightly
than normal It can he felt through the
I ibortion method used durum this
Pot law proposed in N.Y.
NEW YORK (AP I
unde
state legislal
sse ' : -
thai he was
?
? : j
l
s with liquor,
- I
v
S . . . '
Democra
that naniuana
Antlv
M
appeared ai a news conference with Leichtei to
supp- gislation along with Ira Glasser,
executvie directoi ol the New York Civil
Liberties I nion and Civil court Jiulgi Martin
Stechei
1 .liter's hill would establish a state
:ontrol authority to license, and
ite growers, producers, manufacturers and
ma.
authority would also enforce regulations
setting the strength of marijuana sold at retail
equire a warning my package 01
:ne: ol n . egarding possible ill
on the health ol the usei
Marijuana would be sold at retail only in
licensed liquor stores and all present rules and
ations pertaining uc h stores and the
supervisor) pow ?? state would apply
Leichtei said
Greeks compete for Allsing honors
By BOBBY RIPPY
Lam la Chi AVlpha
Phi son ritj i -
thine th lal A i Xi Delta
Feb 9
? ?,
comtf mpla.V
eeds Now tl
pi isented'
music
Lambda I i iiner.
:omp ed
Hawkins
containing My SaA I
"S ?:? - Day' brought to hah; then hopes that
all wars w ill end some da)
Alpha Phi. the sororit) winner, presented a
musical on the conservation problems ot today.
emphasizing the effects of pollution on today's
world
Phi Kappa lau stepping down from its
three year igi i winner, placed second with a
show ol lights and music, stressing the need for
Id peace
( hi Omega sorority finished second in
rity competition with a patriotic show.
singing "Battle Hymn of the Republic
fhe Allsing ended with the Alpha Xi Helta's
?ill out into the
irkness and inn! the answer
tune consists of inserting a needle through the
skm into the uterus and injecting 200cc of 20
pei cent salt solution Hulka remarked that the
amount of salt is "equivilant to a lull shaker
The dangei would come it the needle were
inserted wrong and the saline solution were
injected somewhere other than the uterus.
IVath could lesult in this case. If a professional
performs this abortion, however, it is usually
successful Hulka said. "I have never regretted
using this method "
Obstetricians do not like to perform
abortions aftei 12 weeks for personal reasons
Hulka stated that, after all. doctors enjoy
delivering babies Before 2 weeks, the
pregnancy does not resemble a baby, however.
aftei 12 weeks the fetus lakes shape.
COST VARIES
he cost of a legal abortion vanes In North
Carolina, where an abortion is required to be
performed in a hospital, the cost of an abortion
bet.uc 12 weeks is approximately $MX) In New
York, the same abortion, performed in an
out patient clinic, costs S 1 50
Hulka also explained the non-medical oi
illegal abortion This method consists of
inserting a son mbbei cathetei into the vagina
and leaving it in foi a dav Ol un Baclena
forms and progresses from the vagina to the
Uterus The uterus is very sensitive and combats
against the bacteria by contracting. The
pregnancy is thus expelled
Although 3 out of 4 abortions done this way
are successful, Hulka said that the fourth
woman develops complications which often
lead to death This death rate is one of the
reasons thai doctors are fighting the
non-medical abortion
Hulka said that although there are currently
no "do-it-yourself" abortion methods on the
market, many are being tried He believes that
it will not be long before at least one method is
perfected This would lake the decision oi
performing an abortion out of the doctor's
hands and place it entirely in the hands of the
pregnant woman Hulka concluded "If a
woman cannot make her own decision whether
or not to have an abortion who can
Certainly not the doctors or the theologians
President paints
By JOHN WALLACE
(Stan Writer)
A painting of l)i Leo Jenkins depicting a
"Wintet Landscape" is on display now at the
Greenville Art (enter on livans Street
The painting is one of 40 from the W1TN-TV
permanent collection oi over 100 works, tha!
have been selected for this representative show
The entire show will continue through March
2 Gallery hours are Monday through Friday
from 0 a m to 12 p.in and 2-5 p.m. and
Saturday 9 30 a m ? 12:30 p m
The Art (enter is anticipating two annual
events in the neai future: the Graduate Art
Show late in April and the Sidewalk Art Show.
April 30 and May I The Sidewalk Art Show is
open to professionals, amateurs, and students
Participation is welcomed.
Coed
'makes'
spaghetti
GREENSBORO (APi The
trial of a University oi North
(arohna at Greensboro coed
who leaped nude into 50
pounds of spaghetti has been
postponed until March 9.
Pat O'Shea was charged with
"unreasonably disturbing" the
publk with her jumj into a
giant plattci of spaghetti sauce
that two other students had
prepared as their modern art
exhibit at the Wealherspoon
Art Gallery Jan. I 1
The case was to have been
tried I uesday in Guilford
( ounty District Court.
The leap apparently was
Miss O'Shea's idea and was not
planned as part of the exhibit
The prudent tpeakt
Students earn honor ro
Approximately eighteen pei
cent of ECU's students last
quarter made high enough
grades to earn places on the
university's official honor lists
A total of 1.798 students
were officially commended on
the three honors lists The
honoiees include 1.428 North
Carolinians and 370 from out
of state
Most elite among the honoi
students are the 14? who made
all A's Next are those who
in ide the Dean's List by
earning a solid B-plus average
with no grade below C.
The Honor Roll includes
those students who made a B
average with no grade below C.
Key editor
Application foi editorship ol
I he Key foi 1971-72 will be
open foi the remainder of
winter quarter The Student
Affairs Office in Whichaid is
handling all applications.
Applicants must be full-time
students with a 2.0 average and
cannot be on academic
probation
Applications for editorship
of the Rebel will be closed
Wednesday
Play auditions
The ECU Playhouse will
hold final auditions tonight for
Tango a modern
serio-comedy by the Polish
playwright, Slawomir Mrozek
Auditions are scheduled to
begin at 7:30 pm. in McGinnis
Auditorium
"Tango Mioek's first
full-length play, is described by
a Playhouse spokesman as a
"Shavianesque drama oi
ideas " It examines our
nostalgia for the morality and
formality that the Bohemian
revolution in this country has
destroyed.
It features wit. action,
suspense, interesting chaiacters
four men and three women,
and a degree of pertinent social
comment.
Directed by ECU drama
professor Albert Pertalion. the
production is to run March
24-27
Pertalion notes that all roles
are open, and that ECU
students, faculty and staff, and
anyone within a commuting
distance of Greenville is
welcome to try out for roles in
the play.
Scripts are available foi
study in the ECU Libiary's
reserve reading room
REAL meets
There will be a meeting of
REAL Wednesday at 7 p.m. in
the legislature room in the CU.
All membeis and those who are
interested in crisis intervention
please attend
National Gallery in London.
will narrate the series The
series will be held in the
Nursing Building auditorium
Admission is free.
Art exhibit
Lower vote
Senator Phil Kirk will be
introducing a bill in the N.C.
legislature next month to lowei
the voting age to 18 for all
state and local elections. The
voting age has been lowered to
18 for national elections, yet
N.C. has yet to extend this
right for state and local
elections.
The ECU Y o u n g
Republicans Club is sponsoring
a petition which will be
presented to Senator Kirk
when he introduces his bill
next month Sign the petition
in the (T across from the
bookstore dooi
'Civilization
Sir Kenneth Clark's
"Civilization" will be presented
on film at ECU for seven
consecutive weeks beginning
Feb. 19 at 8 p.m. The North
Carolina State Art Society will
spoiisoi the series.
The first part of the series
will feature "Frozen World a
synoptic view of the 1.000
years between the fall of Rome
and the rise oi the Great
Gothic
The second part, Feb. 21. at
3 p in will feature "The Great
Thaw
Clark, former director of the
Victoria I Davis, senioi m
the School oi An al E( I
presenting an exhibition ol arts
and crafts work in the
University Union, Feb 14 20
I he exhibit ion is being
presented in partial fulfillment
of the requirements foi the
bachelor degree The public is
invited
1 x a m p K's of w caving.
m a c t a in e . wood-craft,
enameling, batik and
leather , i.itt will comprise the
show
NASA corps
v? J Little Jr . a I95
graduate from ECU, is a
member of the civilian
that helped put Apollo 14 in
space.
Little is directoi of research
and development resources in
the Office of Manned Space
Flight. National Aeronautics
and Space Administration
(NASA) in Washington. I) (
Soy supply
I A P i A n invei
requested by Gov Winfield
Dunn of Ienncssce turned up
at least a 5-year supply ol so)
sauce at the Stale Penitentiary
"If they serve Chinese food
three times a day tor the next
five years said Purchasing
Commissionei Howard Kesley,
"they just possibly can exhausl
the supply of sov sauce on
hand
And. Keslev said, anothei 40
gallons of soy sauce were
found at Cloverbottom School
foi the Retaided
"Somewhere in Tennessee
he said, "there's got to he the
world's gieatest soy sauce
salesman
Former inmate
slams system
CHAPEL HILL. N.C. (AP) A former
inmate of North Carolina's juvenile correction
system says he was treated like an animal while
confined at the Cameron Morrison Training
School near Rockmgham in I7-(iy
Russell Ross. 18. of Winston-Salem related
his experiences during a university sponsored
panel discussion Tuesday on juvenile
correction.
Ross said lie was beaten bloody with a heavy
board when he was at the Morrison training
school. He enteied at the age of 14
"It wasn't just me. It was all of us he said
"We were treated like animals and pretty soon
we began to believe we were animals
Ross confronted Juvenile Correction
Commissioner Blane Madison during the
discussion and asked him, "is that anv way to
rehabilitate me
"It certainly is not Madison replied. "It's
completely contrary to policy and I regiet veiy
much that it happened to von
"You may regret, but not as much as 1 did
when it was happening Ross said
State band clinic here
Over l?0 band students from 40 eastern
North Carolina schools were on the 1(1
campus this past weekend to participate in the
annual ECU Band Clink
The ECU School of Music has been the host
of the eastern division of this slate-wide event
for over 30 years
And band member from the participating
schools is allowed to try for a position in the
clinic bands through audition
These auditions took place earliei tlu yeai
The clinic was sponsored by the North
Carolina Music Educators Conference and the
ECU School ol Music The chairman of the
clinic was ECU's director of bands. Herbert
Carter
On Friday night, the band students heard j
concert presented by the ECU Symphonic Wind
Ensemble. The performance was followed bv a
reception
The climax to the weekend came Saturday
night when the visiting musicians presented a
conceit in Wright Auditorium Most of the
students had never seen the music which was
played before the beginning of rehearsals on
Friday Thus, the success of the performance
demonstrated the exceptional skill of those
selected.
ECU continues to grow
Ru I fin Jenkins
By Leo Jenkins
ECU! continual process of growth and
expansion has been particularly significant this
year Oui campus has been extended some ISO
miles to the north of Greenville and about the
same distance to the southeast. The lhO mile
line runs from Weldon near the Virginia state
bordei through Williamston, Washington, and
New Bern to Morehead City, on the coast
I his wide extension ol oui instructional
facilities is made possible through the combined
efforts ol ECU's Division of Continuing
Education and the stalls of five technical
institutes, which have cooperated to otter a
freshman yeai college pn gram in Five diverse-
areas of Noitharohna
At Beaufort, Carteret, (raven. Halifax and
Martin Technical Institutes, more than 200
students are enrolled m treshman year college
work
Under contracts with the five cooperating
technical institutes, the ECU Technical
Institutes Program operates this way.
Potential students learn of the program
through publicity originating from the technical
institutes Institute faculty give them
counseling and detailed Information prior to
registration
I hose who meet the requirements foi
entrance apply to ECU ihiough the technical
institute registrars, and all applications aie
processed by the Dean of Admissions here at
ECU. iist as in the case ot out on-campus
applicants
Registration is conducted each quarter by
the staff of the ECU Division of Continuing
Education, at the institutes. All physical
facilities, such as classroom space, aie furnished
by the institutes; and all instruction is done by
full and part-time members of the ECU faculty
I he administration ol all the details involved
in the program is accomplished through the
close working relationship which exists between
the st iff ot the institutes jnd the staff of ECU.
Without this harmony of coordinated action,
such a venture as ECU's Technical Institutes
Piogram would not be possible.
The advantages offered by the piogram to its
students ire weal Students are able to
complete the freshman year of college work In
their own communities, at considerable
i
financial savings.
They gain enormous benefits from that yeai
ol college-level education and aie in good
position to determine what then plans foi the
future should be rhose who decide to continue
then college studies may then iransfei to oui
campus or to one of oui oft campus Resident
Centers, or to anothei college oi university
Thus far, the results ol this cooperative
program have been immensely gratifying, and I
am sure that many f those currently enrolled
in the program will be cage I to pursue then
education a) a SCMll)r msl?ulM l)( nighei
learning
We acknowledge the considerable efforts
made by our partners in the program, the
presidents and faculties ol the live technical
institutes Without then cooperation with us.
tC U could not bung college classes to people in
tneii areas, many of whom would not be able
to attend college otherwise.
We at ECU regard this new program as one oi
ine best opportunities to fulfill our function as
indicated by our Institution's mono "To
Serve





d, February 16, 117I
Pa
Pi-Jl
I uuntainhead, I ebruai y I 6, iy I
nor ro
II
National Gallery in London.
will narrate the series The
series will be held in the
Nursing Building auditorium
Admission is tree.
Art exhibit
Victoria I Davis, seniot m
the School of Art at EC!
presenting an exhibition ol arts
and crafts work in the
University Union, Feb 14On
The exhibition is being
presented in partial fulfillment
ol the requirements foi the
bachelor degree The public is
invited
1 samples ol weaving,
in a c rame, wood-craft,
e n a m eling, b a 11 k and
leather-craft will comprise tin-
show
NASA corps
w J Little Jr . a I95
graduate from ECU, is a
member of the civilian coi
that helped put Apollo 4
space
Little is directoi nt reseat
and development resources
the Office of Manned Spai
Flight. National Aeronaut i
and Space Admiiustratic
(NASA) in Washington. I) (
Soy supply
grow
i enormous benefits from that yeai
evel education and aie in good
determine what then plans foi the
d be. Those who decide to continue
? studies ma then transfei to oui
o one ol out off-campus Resident
o another college 01 university
i the results ol this cooperative
e been immensely gratifying, ami I
t many of those currently enrolled
rani will be eager to pursue then
t a senior Institution or highei
rwledge the considerable efforts
ur partners m the program, the
nd faculties ol the live technical
ithout then cooperation wiih us.
ot bung college classes to people in
many ot whom would not be able
lege otherwise.
regard this new program as one ol
'?'lunities t. inltill our functional
? our Institution's motto "To
( A Pi An inventory
requested by Go Winfield
Dunn of Tennessee turned up
at least a 5-year supply ol soy
sauce at the State Penitentiary
"It they serve Chinese food
thiee times a day lor the next
live yeais said Purchasing
Commissioner Howard Kesley,
"they just possibly can exhaust
the supply ot soy sauce on
hand "
And. Keslev said, another 40
gallons ol soy sauce were
found at Cloverbottom School
foi the Retaided
"Somewhere in Tennessee "
he said, "there's got to he the
world's greatest soy sauct
salesman
md clinic here
band students from 40 eastern
lina schools were on the ECU
past weekend to participate in the
Band Clinic
School of Music has been the host
n division of this statewide event
ears.
I member from the participating
lowed to try for a position in the
through audition
itioni look pla.e earhei this eai
c was sponsored by the North
isic Educators Conference and the
1 ol Music The chairman ol the
ECU's director of bands, Heibeit
. night, the band students heard a
snted by the ECU Symphonic Wind
he performance was followed b a
i to the weekend came Saturday
the visiting musicians presented i
Wright Auditorium Most ot the
I never seen the music which was
re the beginning of rehearsals on
s. the success of the performance
J the exceptional skill of those
o
p
e
n
?
i
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Foreign visitors observe ?j?
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ie been visitors .it men .ire in the United St.ites to observe
eeks fhe two foreign American-style education
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ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free
Sexual problems discussed
wcmtneniaw
rhe firsl lture ol the conference ol
,l,c FamiJ Life Council, held here
Wednesday represents .1 much needed
Provemem in this area's attitude
towards problems ol , sexual nature
Vl onl was the firsl lecture well
?"u'luK'd hl" 'I had the support and
?"dorsement of many campus and city
? 'ilk ials
Mao alderone. direcfoi ol the
SlA formation and Education Centei
01 lh' United States (SI l US), spoke
0,1 K' s luimaii sexualitj and
hou " affects 0111 lives She describes
sex 'ls recently being at the mere) ol
yHiology. 1 oik tales and
misinformation She went on to
tk'scribc "u affects of an unnatural
aosphcrt around sex as
homosexuality, ovei population and
marital maladjustment.
rhese facts bunt sex along with
man others have been known lor a
long time, howevei the same mythology
and misinformation has contributed to a
large scale covering up ol them in this
region
Religious altitudes and moral beliefs
have conributed to keeping these facts
from the public and thus helping to
prolong the problems
rhe change in attitude reflected by
the open and supported discussion Dr
(alderone gave shows that people are
beginning to be aware of the
seriousness of the problems We hope
that future lectures on this subject are
well attended and listened to by tln.se
who come into contact with them
?-?- ? ? . 1 ? v. ' 1 1 i?i
New column begins
By DANIEL E WHITFORD
Hl liV'lbl Ye' rim is a new column which
will add U Fountainhead a small voice from a new
IZT1 U' KCtei li rna.ism ,s
?" the issues from different perspectives so
hai 'he reader can use his own evaluation to judge
'be 'ssues fo. himself. Sincere thanks go fo
fdllorn-Chief Bob Thonen and Fountainhead fo
'hPp"r'un,ty,0Pn'the viewpoint ,hat you
will be leading m this column.
M ihis time, instead ol unleashing m irusti
?c pen on some worthy issue. I will attempl to
'orewarnyouofwhat to expect in future columns
MH'UK 'his column will presen. Urn writers
viewpoints on the proposed SGA reca'felection
"Pf Policies, women's curfew, allocation of
?adeni activity lees. Jenkj .
ademicpohtical situation Fountainhead's
"? ol tout lettei words, new general college
requirements, race relations 1 in S(
accomplishments (01 non-accomplishments") and
anj new issues of importance to the student bodv
1h.1i may arise
It is hoped here thai .his column will not be
labeled left-wing 01 right-wing, since there j,
Probablj no one. all ol whose views can be so
arbitrarily categorized Depending upon the
Par'iculai issue 1 hand, Ihis writei will take
viewpoints ranging from very liberal to very
conservative, it viewpoints can be so defined On
many issues, the viewpoint expressed here w, be
very sunilai to the viewpoints expressed by othe.
Fountainhead writers Bui on mam othe. issues
this column will present a viewpoint that you have
never seen in I ountainhead
Ims ?.? the hope of this write, to make any
earth-shattering statements in future columns nor
is 11 expected that this column will way the
balance of public opinion one way oranothe. It is
only expected thai this column will present a
viewpoint
Certainly, when you find one controversy you
are going to find ai leas, two viewpoints If this
column can but add another viewpoinl to .hose
expressed by other writers, its purpose will be
Small voice
Debate begins on draft
By JOHN STRIKER AND ANDREW SHAPIRO
Hearings on extending the draft began recently
"i Washington and this reporte. was present
serious effort is being made by some Congressmen
'oe?n?f the draft when the present law expires
next July 4s the debate begins, the publicity
'avor ol a volunteer army may lull you into
complacency What follows are this reporter's
notes tro,? the beginning ol the hearings Form
youi own conclusions and plan accordingly
Stennis began the hearings before his
committee by announcing his views before
suffering a single witness "I do nol oppose the
volunteei army concept as an ideal he confessed
I 'he sake o. those youthful idealist;
who had crowded the chamber an hour before the
hearings began "But the voluntary objective is to
mei' ? reality I don't wanl to play
"P'holanteer army concept to the point where
? tool the American people and fail to pass a
meaningful draft law " '
Aftei this prologue the firsl witness. Secretary
? Defense Melvin land, responded w ?
"ministration's position -What you a
enng today M, Chairman, is a legislative
proposal ol the highesi importance People no!
arms or equipment, no) buildings o. computers
not any of the hardware requirements of"defence
defers PriCeleK " 'iSS "?"
And people not arms equipmenl were.
ZZ'J' 'he "bM ,he Administration'
legislative proposal Known formally as Senate Bill
? - . thai proposal would extend until July
1 - ' Power to draft "the priceless vital asset
ol our national defenses" you
Assuming a two-yea. extension ol the draft
Stennis asked whether Laird , ruld agree to an
??'I ceilmg ot 150.000 draftees Such a ceilina
is part oTSen Kennedy's new draft ret hill
Laird squirmed evasively beneath the
m-dhgh.S "Veil. 1, we can ge, a so a.n;
ncrease fo, firsterm enlistees, then. 1 believe
daf? calls ,n 1972 will be lower than 1971. which
will be lowe, than 1970 163,000 draftees Bui
here are so many variables, like the inflationary
sP,al' .hal lcaimmit myself to any statutor
ceiling -
V'j 5"m! '?' ?' Stennis lamented
't"1'11 ?" ?en committed to
venture, 150.000 ceiling for even the second yea.
of the new draft law Assume you do get aU the
henef?? re asking for a ncwlraft army vk,
you then be willing to agree .o statutory ceilina
ol 150.000 or even 163.500?' rycemng
Now land stopped squirming At las, Stennis'
question had been based upon a hypothetical
" c S" La"d s J"swer need b no more
vatid than Stennis assumption "Why yes Laird
stated unequivocally, "j we get all the benefits
we san meel a ceiling in calendar year 1972 "(Nol
?? Congress will eve, pass the ceding proposed
by Kennedy.) '
Among the benefits to volunteerism sough, by
the Administration are those which may result
'rorn barracks improvement, enhanced
recruitment, increased ROTC enrollment and
combat bonus pay. Of course the prime
inducement to, volunteerism will supposedly come
J? S9M million in military JJ g
(effective in fiscal yea. 1472, rate 0f basic
pay to, first-term enlistees may be increased bv
-v Ipercent from $1344Q
-H 40 per month.
This paltry pay increase caused Sen Goldwatei
viabl disappointment. "We don pay .he man
who, sticks his head out before the enemy with an
M-16 as much as we pay hired domestics in this
l r y A5?,Percentincrea?is not enough
ower ranks.We must do more. The Romania?
ofJP'o3n? ' C Pa'd eir s?ld,crs the ?????
i'l i 10,000 in our 1446 money
Following Secretary Laud's testimony Sen
Stennis eulogized: "It we're going into the
marketplace to get an army, we'll get some good
men; but we'll get a good many who'll make no
more than a paper army. We'll ge. too high a
proportion ol dropouts, or ne'er-do-wells or
whatever
"We're putting the money on the wrong horses
the men at the lowest ranks with only two years
ot service. Too many of ihese men will wash out
when we try to buy an army. We ought to put the
money where the higher ranks are. the corporal.
and the sargean.s. These are .he second-termers
the proven ones
This volunteer service will lose the basic spun
ol he modern American army, provided by the
cmlian who conies into serve his country and
comes oul a bel.er man lor it. We're abandoning
the basic instinctual spirit, the backbone ol our
army, by putting the emphasis on money "
"As an ideal I would suppo the volun.ee,
army concept, but as a practical matte, won't
work out Let's be .eahst.c and extend .Ins
draft tlung fo. four years and see what you can do
with volunteer incentives Just to extend this draft
tor two years ,s impractical
"The army's al the bottom of the ladder of
vo lun.eensm and the voluntary concept will
destroy he army We've go, a war go.n" on. And
mgota to fight this voluntary concept as long a.
I ? ? I ountainhead
Lasi rhursday one small voice cried out aboul
"u 'r"h J" assorted junk on ou.
Purple-trashcan-littered-campus Well, listen small
voice In about a month you are going to go out ol
your mind Every single candidate for an SGA
legislative office is starting righi now to print up
enoutf'Propaganda sheets to cover this place like
one big birthday present complete with string
a,nd s,aPles ever conceivable hook and tree
Nov. 'his mass mess would not be so bad except ii
ProbabI rain and you could find som
paste you might be able to make one large pape.
machie sculpture This would be great becauieit
would Promptly be carted ofl as an eyesore and
we ould be left with a virginesque campus
Ot course you, small voice, and know whal
will happen in reality. The great leaders ol oui
campus, once they lose ,? win. will forget abou.
he so many reams ol pape, they spent so much
time and money in preparing Ihese will he let, to
h'u"n th?? ol us who have a fetish fo. clean
grassy malls and Intel,as trees
view0 'he las, thai this once-a-yea.
happening is the climax to year long littering ol
he campUS, I would like to make this suggest
o the present Legislature (Are any of you reading
h? I A simple law modelled afte. the presen
federal anti-pollution laws would be a logical sten
wd he, w,?eseenliSgS
campus must pay a fine, sav $25. One reporting
said violation receives hall the fine small
committee should be set up for considering these
violations I he Tines would be used to finance the
committee and whatever is leftover be used to help
such av,?es s the Biology Department's
mvestigation ol the local mill dischanjes into
campus related streams
Novv the illogical approach is this I those
candidates, who are determined to piaster this
campus with their handbills posters etc do ? ?
clean up thei. junk. Why should maintenance have
oi clean away youi garbage? I will help anyone
"fereied pick up .hose so related papers and
dump the total collection back on the stobTduring
their firstiSCA Legislative meeting thereafte
me a 58-5740 or see me in the Art Departmen
When you people organize you. campaign
ommittees should he a very simple matte, fo
assign someone to pick up your posters after the
ckv ? oveJ Vou can always nve then, fo,
Pre-game bon-fire next fall or something
'I the Legislature would somehow make my
proposal enforceable you would make clean
environmeni advocates and poo, people verj
Sincerely (as I can be),
Yona Creech
The Forum
fndors policy ?,?
lo Fountainhead
In response to the resent controversy on the use
le?" words in our paper. I can only reply
bv overwhelmingly endorsing the editor-in chiefs
Mews and criticisms on this important matter
I say our paper because that ,t precisely what it
is Failure on the part of the student body to
openly and vigorously support the views of the
editor wall allow another chunk ol students' ngh.s
and needs to .all into the groping hands ol the
administration.
' hope the student body realizes the
consequences of the Fountainhead becoming a
'enkins Journal and that their apathetic moans
can only lead to .he ultimate and inevitable
victory of the administration and the deterioration
the meaning ol "government by and for the
people and in this case- "freedom of speech "
Must we remind ourselves that learning to govern
and control ou, own lives is basic in an atmosphere
ol individualism and learning to think for
ou, selves
I" Fountainhead
. front of Belk dormitory one third of the way
from the street towards the steps facing the I as.
-arolina campus j, small "ditch-like hole"
running horizontally across the cement sidewalk
msure ail of the men in Belk are familiar with
? ' Poses be very dangerous area even
?hough ,t is only eight to 12 inches deep When
Med w?h water which ? very often, itmuddJ
PPearance resemble, rhe cement I feel .ha. this
area has been neglected and through negligence
could bring on a lawsuit, if an injury should fesu"
rom its continued presence I would like to see
tms area filled and cemented promptly
Thank you.
The 8 O'clock Ankle Breaker
Glenn Kuiper
Pressing issue
P
Dave Ittermann
Managing Editor
Robert R. Thonen
Editor-in-Chief
Bev Denny
Associate Editor
Mike Duncan
Business Manager
?'? by students of East Carni,? n
or,h Caro?na 27834 Advert ?? B?" 25'6'
eh Class $, 00 for ?S?T VT ?,e 'S $1 80 ?er
8nr.?i,$10.00pwyw Telephone 758-6366
. PWMdby th,s newspaper
Warily those of East Carolma Un,vers,ty
I" Fountainhead
Al one time I thoughi the Founuinhead was
going to shape up into a ven good student
newspapei Youi policies and stands regarding fire
hazards on campus as well as the welcome art
structure on campus were very commendable
Howeve time passed, and the tiue Fountainhead
came to surface I'm referring to the Fountainhead
that takes glee in slandering certain S(,A officials
in almost every issue and foists its opinions on
what has to be a highly impressionable student
body I. s time we let ou, beleaguered SGA
Officials alone; I assure you that they are doing
their best to represent the students Its now tune
'or the Fountainhead to aid .he students How
about some articles on the University policy ol noi
?'lowing students to move exam dates even when
they have three on the tame day ' Or, how about
some articles on the policy i ,?? allowing
students to drop a courtt because of a "bad"
teacher? Still anothei area that could he explored
is the feasibility of using Rebel (who knows where
I is) funds foi some constructive purpose Are
Ihese nol more pressing issues to ECl students
'ban vhanging what they may a? side, to be ven
good SGA? These issues aie much more what we
consider students rights
Bill Shelton
Mike Roab
Jay McCabe
Al Peoples
Lee Askew
?'f
Appalled by action
I" Fountainhead:
During the recent concerts of Jimmy Webb and
John Hartford. I was appalled a. .he students that
talked out in the middle of the John Hartford
concert It was true that John Hartford had a lew
J.lf,cules in performing, such as the loss of his
bass in Baltimore, and lack of time for an adequate
??"? - 'eel you'had
'town from New York to Richmond through
beavy snow storm, d.iven here to perform before
an unpauen. audience only to have par, of the
audience noisily leave during the middle ol one ol
youi song,? They couldn't wait tor the song to
end so that the clapping would cover the clatter of
walking down the bleechers. Even a. the end ol
he concert people were m such a burrs to leave
they couldn't clap for an encore which
fortunately, followed anyway
II the students of fas. Carolina wan. bette
shows, either ,hey m show more respect or si,
in the hack where they may walk out quietly
Susan Turner
Donna Butrick
Absurd comment
1" Fountainhead
In reference to an article written in the Feb 11
issue by Ml Owen and Mr. Lean. I have but one
comment, "It was completely absurd " rhey
misrepresented and used oui of context anything
that I might have said I suggest you recheck youi
sources ol information
The MR( has tried (and I hope will continue)
to suppo the mie.es. of the "Men on the Hill "
As lor you, revolution, the MRC is part of an active
revolution to improve the facilities and the way ol
life for dormitory students Just look around and
you will see evidence ol MRC action everywhere
ice machines, colored I Vs. basketball courts
lighted' tennis courts, a p, ???? ?, the
basemen, ol Aycock, a new lobby in Jones
c? 'king privileges, visitation, etc.
Open your eyes Mr. Owen and Mr. Lean You
must be blind it you can see any progress Much
0t ihis progress was achieved by working with the
administration, label ? -rubber stamp" oi
whatevei you like, it is still progress.
As lo, the Visitation penalties that were
established a lew weeks ago Evidently you know
little abou. our Jucicial system As staled in the
Key, "It is the MRC's responsibility to enforce
dormitory rules and regulations " I ntU we set up
these pen.ili.es. all visitation violations were tried
before the Join, Men and Women's Juciciary
which is comprised ol Day students as well as
Dorm students
Hie MRC is now working foi 7 day visitation
new lobby and basemen. IuiiuIuk and facilities
and has planned dances lor winlei and spring
quarters Indeed, the MRChascomea long way in
fighting to, the rights ol the "Men on the Hill "
I Suggest that Ml Owen and Ml I can use some
ol the energy resulting from the hoi aii bulging
Iron, then mouths to some up with some
construe live ideas
Gary King
MRC President
Nicky Rat
To Fountainhead
In the Feb 2 Issue of your paper appeared a
cartoon Nicky Ra, by Mr Hum, ,? which he
-?mplamed abou, being "forced" oul ol ,
Greenvdle theate, On the night to which he ? ?
'vie,ring, the projectionist was supposed to make
an announcement at the end ol the eight o'clock
show, asking,he audience to please exit through
he exit doors a. ,he back ol the auditorium by
the screei
rhe projectionist instead told the people toexii
,hf, 'he front doors, which was' no,
intended announcement and which confused most
of he people The purpose of the announcement
as I explained to M. Burns (while he ranted and
raved m thelobby of the theater), was since we
had abou, 5h0 people watching the movie and
f 3f?? ?a?8f outside in the cold and rain
waning to come in foi the next show togei those
inside out to their cars as quickly as possible after
the movie, and to ge, those outside in rhe
?icemen, was made al the veiv end he
mov? ("Catch 22"). when Captain Yossarian is on
a raft trying to sail to Sweden fhei 0und
on e filmai .ha. time, and none ol the movie
was sin
" ,llls announcement vused anyone im
enwnce then I extend to them mynceres
apologies, bui oui man, concern was to get the
poop e waning u,s,dei, ,s ,(1iukh a. possible I,
Mr Bums hd been one ol the people waiting
"l"st ,he " probabl would
ZfffiJ?! "einit able to get inside fas
enough-M. Burns claims that he was "forced" ou,
iihhC?Lbef0rMhemoviewas?ver.ye,?h
dictionary defines the word as ?? lsl. lln , ,
"?w'orPu?h ??y main strength Going by this
V1d I ; emberanyone
going mto the audience with gun , dub "
brute strength, and forcing patrons ou bu
understand thai Mr. Burns, being pe '
iSTSLui hr bhsi
i i,? , ?nisii i am unaware
I have enjoyed reading your newspaper in the
Pas. because I believed that you printed ritl
as they happened without tiSSS
Hti'bi'?-M-p,ekeM,
-Ko;?r;
rasist organizations
Sincerely,
Donald Morsp
Ass.stant Manger. Paa Cmema
Forum Policy
Students and employees of the Universitvw
urgecUo express ,he? oP,n ,? ,?e ?&
Letters should he cons, and U, ?lc pom,
Letters musl no, exceed 0X1 words
The eduors reserve ,he eh, to cd.r .1,
letters for style errors and length
the w,?er Upon the writer's perwnal requesi
his name will be withheld ??UW1
S.gned rtWei or ,ru. m n(ket
opinions ol ,he wnier and nol ?
those ol Lounumhead ,? llT
University asl (u






MRC visitation crisis im
administration promises
By GARY L McCUL LOUGH
i
'?'? ?
PRs
llin
the Ho a r d
esta bl ishme
nent
?ncc (
should
uas
students
conn
' ' '? uests that
?I'll!
? ' i ask
?
to th
theii
? to WOITI
om I 2
March and a
the MRC and the
iwitable
tation hours
I irsl e si
last
m to 2 a.m.
I he MRC I fcutive ouneil worked
during the summer to have visitation set up
iday and Saturdays on a permanent
During fall quarter ol this year the
incil made its seven day a week
visitation proposal.
in response to this proposal. Dr. Jenkins
appointed an ad hoc committee to be
chaired b Dr. James H. Tucker, deai ol
student affairs. Other committee members
were Deans James B. Mallorv and Carolyn
A. Fulghum, John R. Ball. Dr Miriam B.
Moore, Gary Kim Dottie McGee, and Bob
Whitley
It was with the creation of this
committee that dissention from the Men's
Residence Council and many male residents
first arose
The MRC had many complaints with the
committee. While Council representatives
were invited to speak at two meetings, thev
were not allowed to vote, and the MRC's
only voice was G i King, president of the
rtcil.
Many representatives did not feel that
was fulfilling ills duties, tor his policy
froi : eginn ing seemed one of
1 lie Council also felt that
with the establishment of the ad hoc
its power to legislate rules and
the governance of i le
sidence halls was being
faeult) members
five to three, the
MR' I that its proposal would not he
- - the Council s tit to assist
mittei wh itever way s possible
a request tor specific
?? isitation violations, the
MR( proposa as that
had ; i .
that undei MRi
main
iolations
I ven so, the administration h.is been
1
?V. -r
willing to mal
extending visital
noon until curfew ai
on the Sunda;
Now. howevei. the
has come to an end.
some ompromise.
sends from I 2
visitation
:nd.
? compromise
A confrontation on
i
March 9 seems at this point impossible to
avoid, unless Dr. Jenkins agrees to the
MRC's action. To do this would mean that
Dr. Jenkins is disregarding the
recommendation ol his own committee and
the opinions of so many parents who
expressed their opposition to visitation.
On the other hand, the administration
has already begun to take action. One hall
Procter who serves on the MRC and
strongly endorsed the Council's proposal
has already been asked to resign his
position.
The dissent which has been brewing for
main months is rapidly reaching a climax.
Unless a compromise is readied quickly,
students win- follow the MRC's policy face
being written-up, while the administration
may be heir to ill-feelings and bad
publicity
-SNKfc ,
' ?, i
b JL , , '
?.
DEAN OF MEN JAMES MALLORY sits on
the steps of Whichard and comternplates the
problems involved in visitation in the men's
dormitories. He has offered a third alternative
? V'jL 1
. J&t
solution to the current entanglement: a
four day visitation plan. See related interview
on this page.
ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free'
illume II uiiihei 3ti
Greenville, North (
Mi nday. M,
MRC president Bixon sets forth
'reasonable' visitation proposal
By TIM BIXON
(MRC President)
The MRC is asking for visitation in the
dormitories. Our proposal is not asking for
anything unreasonable or more than other
schools with visitation rave. The MRC
proposal is as follows:
Subject to the following provisions and
limitations, individual student rooms in
men's undergraduate residence halls and
houses may be used for informal social
activities and study dates in which
members of the opposite sex are-
entertained b residents A Open house
activities may be held daily on those
dates in which the University is
offiv lall iii session.
B Ml Open House must take place
thin the hours here prescribed. The
following hours are subject to updating
in accordance to keep pace with
change in cuis curfew hours for the
school year 1970-71. Those hours are
subject to review by the MR(
visitation committee starting May I.
1971. The hours for visitation are as
follows
Sundays through Thursdays: 12
noon until 12:30 am
Fridays and Saturdays 12 noon
until 2:00 a.m.
( Ihe MRC visitation committee
has the authority to extend hours in
case ol special group activities in
accordance with extended hours of
women's dorms.
D. This agreement does no
supercede other University
requirements concerning closing hours.
E. It shall be stated in the Key that
Fast Carolina University has visitation
and that it shall not be held
responsible for any incidents by
students. All v tions will come
under the jurisdiction of the MRC
court
Rules end Regulations
A. Policies concerning visitation will
be distributed through the appropriate
C. The hours between 12 noon and
6 p.m. shall not require supervision
That is. that the appointed officers
shall only work during the hours of (
p.m. until the end of visitation.
D . It is the individual's
responsibility toconduct himselfin
accordance withthe Honor Code-as
stated in the Key
Penalties
The following penalties are reserved to
the MRC court for offenses against this
agreement:
1. Fine It should first be decided
if the fine would hurt the individual or
the parents of said individual. It the
fine would hurl the parents, then
.mother method of penalty shall be
used, fhe fine is at the discretion of
the court and has a maximum of S20.
2. Social Probation
3. Referral to higher court
Other schools m the state have what we
are asking for Robert W. Fisher, assistant
Housing Director at North Carolina State
University at Raleigh, said that "in effect,
each individual residence hall may have an
open house at any time between the hours
of 12:00 noon and 2:00 a.m He also said.
"in my opinion the poliev has worked very
well " Frederick W Schroeder, Jr Dean of
Men at the University of NorthCarohna.it
Chapel Hill says thai the policies used so
tar are "in general good" but he admits
that they have some problems with the
enforcement of the violations by the
student officials.
The Administration at last Carolina
I niversity seems to ignore views from the
other Universities despite the fact that they
write and ask lot their opinion. East
Carolina University administrators do not
want to listen to anything that they do not
agree with. This institution is backward in
its thinking and does not know how to
catch up to the times. Ihe MRC is giving
the administration Ihe means to catch up
but we are ignored or overruled. This
situation has to slop Support the MRC on
March 9.
Legislator calls students 'islands'
urges support in protest
i HanneVs l
B l!i
stud ?
? tl
Hi. ,
ill mi
lit ilH
dorm
t wo
able
t"rms ol
By CINDY MAULTSBY
(SGA L c q i s I a t o i )
During a recent series of interviews, this
legislator was appalled at the fear, lack of
information, and passivity she found
among the women dormitory students.
Mai y did not know anything about the
MRC and WRC plans for visitation.
Whether this ignorance is labeled lack of
communication or apathy is unimportant.
What is important is that it does exist and
must be bridged.
Even more surprising than this lack of
information were the expressions of fear
about the administration's power to punish
individuals that were prominent.
However knowingly or unknowingly it
was done, fear of the administration has
been formulated on this campus Many
students were afraid to sign a letter to the
editor of the Fountainhead which stated
that the women dormitory students
supported both the residence councils'
programs concerning visitation They were
afraid thai th administration would eithei
pell i In m oi take awa v I I
brainwashing and autocracy could exist on
a 20th century university campus It is
especially disconcerting that this is even
evident in a student orientated and treated
organ such as the Fountainhead Perhaps
most shocking is the fad that it exists in
the students' oven column created foi the
express use of voicing their opinions.
Many people have criticized ECU as
being the largest high school in the state.
Before taking the defensive, each student
should look closely at his environment.
EC has been known to have the worst
audiences, spectators, and team supporters
in the state. It also has the most apathetic-
student body. Not only does the average
student not want to do anything, but he
also does not even care to know anything.
I hypothesize that the average ECU
student is the closest living example of the
immortal words. "No man is an island
Here, each student is indeed an "island
unto himself afraid to bridge the gap
between the administration and tin-
in .m
ii 'In ship
h
strai
?ii opmii ns
students I his i an be situ no Ic
area than that ol visitation policies
I m m Hi,it I might have "stepped on
many toes" liv now II I have . then at Irast
I have a complished part of my purpose to
make more people raise their heads and see
what is happening Then, each student ma
finally realize that what is happening
concerns his own rights and privileges as an
individual Therefore, every student needs
to help s ollet lively
Absolute individuality never won a
battle; collective bargaining is much more
effective.
On March 9 the MRC plans to open the
Men's dorms for daily visitation. The
administration must think that the student
of this University is either interested or a
little bit concerned about visitation. They
believe fornication and visitation go hand
in hand. They fail to realize that the
majority of the students here are politically
classified as adults. It's about time that
they were morally treated as adults.
If any member is interested in helping
the MRC in its fight against the
administration, please either contact me or
come to a meeting that will be held in the
student union room 2(o on Monday.
March 8 at 1 p m Many important things
will hr happening Any support thai can
help will be greatly appre iated
mm
ECU BOARD OF TRUSTEES will meet on Tuesday. March 9 in
Raleigh to consider the complete situation involving visitation in the
men's dormitories. ECU President Leo Jenkins will present a proposal
which wasg.ven to him recently after a study was made by the ad hoc
committee. The MRC has offered an alternative proposa! opening the
dorms for seven-day visitation starting on March 9 due to their
rejection of the ad hoc comn.ittee's report A confrontation hopefully
will result in a solution to the problem.
-i ?? ??in icjum ma suiuuun iu ine pr joiem.
Administration members
comment on visitation
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is an interview between
Dean of Men James Mallory, Dean of Women Carolyn
Fulghum. and Fountainhead representative Jim Eichling
The interview took place March 2 in Dean Mallorys
office. Also present were Assistant Dean of Men C.C.
Rowe and Dean of Student Affairs. James Tucker Both
of these men expressed concurrence with those
sentiments expressed by Dean Mallory.
Fountainhead: What is being done
concerning visitation on the hill?
Mallory: The Board of trustees will
meet Tuesday, March 9 in Raleigh. At this
time, a recommendation will be presented
to them by President Leo Jenkins who in
turn was presented the recom nendation bv
the .nl hoe committee
Fountainhead: Whal was tht
i ommittee's recommendat i
Mallory: I he i ommittee i
in essence, thai visitation be alii
,A : ????; . Frid 5 rday. and S
Fountainhead: I
to visil on the hill I .
subject io punishment, such as lit:
I 1) cards'?
Mallory: v II let's put it this way ! he
visitation rule for the visistation policy that
may exist is still in effect and will be in
effect until some action is taken by the
Board
Fountainhead: Couldn'l the MRU
passage of this bill be termed a 'gation oi
the prev ions polk :
Mallory II MRC has no right
supersede any policy All policies thai
? hange rules and regulations musi
approved hv thi
'I iding thai they only wanl o to
loin day
Fountainhead: Isn'l il true that the
constitution as stated in the Key sas (hat
all regulations ate subject to changes by he
MRC and or the administration?
Mallory: That's right but they forgot to
put m this year's (Key) one of the most
important things They forgot to put in
"approved bv the administration There is
no such thing as autonomy, period. Dr.
Jenkins as President ol this institution
approves all actions of all organizations and
all committees.
Fountainhead: (once ruing the
questionnaire, why was it sent out to the
parents instead of students
Mallory: Because we feel as long as
parents pay the bill they are entitled to
have their policies known. The committee
used these as a guideline.
appointed tht
Fountainhead: Wh
mittet '
Mallory: Di Jenkins. It was consisted of
faculty administration and students.
were the students
Fountainhead. Wh
on the committee '
Mallory: The president ol the SGA, the
president ol the MRC and the president oi
the WRC
Fountainhead: What authority do
parents have Does tlu- administration
undei tin- assumption that students il?' nol
pay school expenses and that someone else
is footing the bill?
Mallory: liven if the students were
footing 100 per cent of the bill, your still
have lines of delineation and demarcation
and you still have to have reasonable rules
and regulations.
Fountainhead: Why is that"
Mallory: Because it's that way anywhere,
it's that way in society. Do you think that
when you leave ECU that you're going to
go out and do what you want and not be
bound by any rules and regulations'
Fountainhead: Well, if 1 were renting an
apartment I'd have the right to haw
whoever 1 want to visit me
University basically renting apartment-
the hill '
Mallory: ,u nol renting apart n
Courts have already ruled thai d
MRC Representative Luisana speaks out
on
visitation controversy
EDITOR'S NOTE Rob Lursana. MRC Governor of Tyler
Dormitory has been a leading force behind the MRC
drive for wen day vi?tatton Fountainhead contacted
tutsan for his views on the finer points of the
controversy Our questions and his answers follow.
hhor.il they were the .kMui WVdm-sd
HMl.lv -
III
Q Do youthniK thead hoc committeewas
fairly comtosed '
A. Noout otthe seven committee
members tlienfoui administralloll
officials, pus ( King and Dottie MtGee
rep resen ting thei dministrationTh-
students were itnted by Bob Whitley
who doesnI In e indorm
0 Weno Stl!rised by the adhoe
committeedecisi
Yes.it was bart to believe that si?veil
intelligentpeople thave reachedthe
decision thev made
Q Whalwas thisdecision made Inthe
ad hoc committee'
A ThevdecidedH w.is all nght foithe
men to associate wih the opposite seon
weekendsand justto prove how reallv
(J What do you think made
committee decide on Wednesda
? The only explanation I've heard is
that it's Prince Spagetti Day.
Q. What action has the MR( taken in
response to the ad hoc committee decisio i'
A We did what we probably should have
done long ago. We passed i bill providing
foi visitation from I 2 noon til girls i urfev
seven dav s a w I
() How do you think the administrati n
will react to whai the MK( has done1
I havi h ard nooffii ial w rd yel I im
Bixon and myscli are m etna- with lb
lenkinson March 8 to discuss the situation
Q. If )i lenkins offer you i
compromise solution on the Xth would von
accept if
Ihe only answei Di Jenkins call give
that is acceptable to mvselt is lor him to
accept the hoars laid down b the MkV
0 If there are police waiting to arrest
anyone who enters the dorms on the th
with a girl are you willing to risk arrest?
A Yes. it it comes down to that
action will set
ics ol student
Q Do you think the MK(
a precedent foi othei brant
govet nment?
A CiofT. I hope so
i) Is the WKt' supporting you '
A I'm sun- Dean Fulghum will tell the
WRC what they are supposed to think
about the situation So I doubt that we will
receive much help from them
(J Dean Mallory has said that there is no
principle involved in this conflict Has the
MR based its action on an) principles?
A Well. I can think ol al least three
offhand I Is the University going to have
complete control over the personal lite oi
its students' 2 Are student governments
going to be Heated as puppets bv the
administration or are they actually going to
be allowed to govern? 3. Are we going to
assume the role of human beings before or
after our roles as students'
the ait ion
of suppoi t
Q. The SGA is supporting
taken bv the MRC What type
are thev giving you?
A Just foi them to endorse what we
have done is a help. But bob Whit ley has
told me the StiA would handle any legal
expenses and would post bond tor students
who were arrested
(.) A numbei ol administration officials
say th it visitation is a privilege and not a
right
A That could depend on youi definition
of privilege If you're eray enough to
think that it's a privilege to talk to another
person in the privacy of your own room.
then you're probably crazy enough to call
it a pi iv ilege
Q How heavily do you think the
questionnaire which was sent to the parents
ol students influenced the committee's
decision
A. I was told by a number of people
including Dean Fulghum that these
questionnaires would not influence the
decision of the m hoc committee but ii
appears thai it was a majoi factoi in ?
decision.
Q. Briefly, how would you describe the
current social situation at this university?
? rhis country possesses the technology
to place men on the moon Here at EC! wi
haven't progressed fat enough socially to
Inn! two people of the opposite sex m the
same dorm Does that answei voui
question'
living is not the same as apartment and due
to the unique relationship between the
University and the student that certain
restrictions and certain openness exist.
Fountainhead: Do you think that open
visitation will lead to more promiscuity?
Mallory: I don't think the word moral
ever came up as far as 1 know.
Fountainhead: Are there no morality
issues involved
Mallory: One of the big things that the
committee noted, and we checked all the
dormitories, was a total lack of facilities o
really have adequate visitation.
Fountainhead: Whal kind of facilities are
you referring to. lavatories?
Mallory: Facilities, period. You have two
beds, two desks, two chairs, two closets.
th il's ii VkI the roms are small.
Fountainhead: I his question is probably
wall, bul what does "ail ho "
Mallory: Ad hoc is a committee with a
special function.
DEAN OF STUDENT AFFAIRS JAMES TUCKER
Fountainhead: One shot only, so to
speak '
Mallory: One shot only, exactly right
Once your recommendations are made,
then an ad hoc committee is dissolved. I
leel that after the board of trustees gets our
recommendation and studies the whole
picture that this whole thing will be
i esolved.
Fountainhed: What did you personally
nimend to them
Mallory: Four-day visitation and definite
changes in supervisio This. o course, will
be worked out between the MRC and the
administration.
Fountainhead: Sonic MRC members are
hitter towards the WRC's apparent apathy.
Has the WRC shvec awav from this issue
If so. why '
Mallory: because, the women don't want
visitation
Fulghum: Thev Ye got ex.i, liv what they
' now so iu as know, because l'
heard no complaints from the women
students .a all They did ask for mght
visitation which they got They got
visitation from 12 p.m. to one hour before
curfew. That's all they asked for. 1 think
women are a little more concerned about
their privacy than men They're taking into
consideration those students who are
absolutely against it
Now. I'm sure that not 100 per cent o
the women are satisfied because you're not
going to get a plan where the women are
100 per cent satisfied. Consensus oi'
opinion from women students right now is
that they're satisfied with it Usually, when
there's a rule as up in the air as this one.
you'll pet someone in to complain about it
Iii- heard not om- complain.
I askiil women students in cihi.iI .is
. lassi - ii M.u thev th mphl
? isl ied with u
Fountainhead It has I
try morality bv
IU v
si iainis"
Mallory Oh. Lordy, how ridiculous can
be I Iu i ilea ol e iu o .
horn h in a free and democratii
society when kids are free to come and eo
.is ihev please, is ridiculous Ifwekeptkids
behind bars foi 24 hours a j like thev do
m Central Prison. 1 might buy that Hut
these kids come and go as thev pie.is.
lhev've got all the freedom in tht world
And that's the most ludicrous, absurd Hung
I've evei heard ol in my lift You have to
admit that
Fountainhead: How would you compare
this to I uropean universities'
Mallory: Most universities look upon
visitation as a privilege, nol a right lhev
hesitate to permil on a university campus
thai which is not condoned in sot utv
Fountainhead: Is visitation nol
condoned in society '
Mallory In most schools and society in
general, it is not condoned foi the boys to
go to the girls' bedroom
Fountainhead: ouldn'l the kev to
visitation be taken from di students who
are members oi the academic community
and who have open visitation
Mallory: Y u don't take the key from
anybody. You try to do wha; you think is
right, within reason. Ihe president I to
set up a workable plan A: first the me i ?n
the hill wante-J pcciai occasions, then
on -Saturda then weekends, and now
seven aays a week, and probably soon.
24-h urs a day
Fountainhead: What would you
personally want
Mallory: My personal likes don't enter
into it. I legislate on the basis oi tact, not
on the basis of like and dislike
Fountainhead: It has been rumored that
women's curfew w II be abolished soon.
Would thai make 24-hour visitation
possible?
Mallory: Definitely not. "here is no way,
?ls far as cerned. and I'm speaking
personally, that 1 would e or
recommend 24-hour visitation Chapel Hill,
Duke and State have turned thumbs down
on it. Thev operate in a framework.
Fountainhead: In comparison is ECU
noted tor its academic climat
Mallory: I just wish someone,
somewhere, would come across with some
idea ol how it could improve academic
climate, not just here, bul c It
seems that the word acaderr
etc. is being pushed off because 1 feel, and
I'm led man is a
total n
Fountainhead
rumen 1 I
'
!rn 1.1 .is ?, j
Mallory: ikin ? rules should
?? '?' rath efforl and this is the way we
i peratt rhere'sixn isinglt rule in the Key
that wasn't put there without students
having the majority so-say
DEAN OF WOMEN CAROLYN FULGHUM
Fountainhead: Isn't the Key invalid now
because the administration only allows
those regulations they approve?
Mallory: The Key might be invalid iust
like this visitation policy might be invalid,
but, until the lioaid ol Trustees appoints a
new one. the visitation policies on Fridays
and Saturdays will be in effect and it will
be enforced
Fountainhead: Do you think the MRC
has been lenient with the administration
They granted the administration 30 days to
make a decision at the end of which time
the MRC could assume that the power had
been delegated to them as specified in the
Key
Mallory: The MRC knows that they do
not change an existing University policy
without approval oi the president and or
the Board
Fulghum: The MRC" was merely told
thex woue pii- President JcnVans tYteu
ii-i .?miiH'nl.il ii'ns Within Id a.m. nol lli.it
ihrv iii'iif.i receive .i decision from the
Boa
Mallory I I
Student
?
has R
him ? al ion to b? carried to
the B u ts bav k. we will work
within tl iework ol the decisions
Board a chance I'll tell
one thmg I1 I niversity will not sit idly
l-v il a I nveisity policy is totally
disregarded You can rest assured ol that
We use Ihe parents .is a I'exible guide.
because it we are bound to what the
parents said, you wouldn't have any
visitation Ovei 70 per cent ot the parents
agains( visitation in any form and
most parents ol girls over 21 were even
more vehement than those ot youngei
ones
ilei all. vou do come to college Io get
.w education .nd vou do have to stadv
and it would have been awfully hard for me
when I w.is 18 oi 19 to do some serious
studying with a girl in my room all the
time
Fountainhead. What it she's helping you
slUllV '
Mallory: I can see where that would be a
motivational device, but also, where it
wouldn't be in the next six cses It
depends on the individual and the girl It
the students give Ihe boaid a chance. I
think that everything will come out fine





ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free
Students to provide guidance
for administrators
s students at II n. indebted
to this kind and loving administration
foi guiding us from the pal ?! sin
and corruption li fair,
therefore, to itification In
: 11 the
administration thai :i has
un. unless, like ill lathei who havu
liis son awa from the pit falls into the
hole tumsell. the ad
are fooled In the fo
following rules, therefore, should be
established as soon as possil
Women adminstrators are to be in
theii homes b) los which w ill
be 12:30
on weekends Vt idn
?' ?ved
.ire is( liil out .in
oft -ca in pus pi e in: I receive
permission from .ill wi
latei than 10 a.m n ing
?n woman adi has
not been in a position ol authority for at
leasl in. years will be considered .1
nan s sut h, she is ubjet 1 to
"Closed Office which means that she
must he i iy weeknighl
from 7 p 111 until 10 p m Dunn this
time she maj receive no visitors, nor an
local tel? : calls. She may be
allowed I the library music hall,
01 gymnasium, or go with 01 without .1
date (o special activities Ml freshmen
women administrators will not be
allowed to venture out ol hei bedroom
alter closing hours except to use the
lavatory. n violations ol these rules
t 1II result in severe punishment,
including demerits, pro hat ion.
restriction, and loss ol "brownie points
All administrators who have not been
in a position ol authority for at least 15
years will be expected to live in
dormitories "hey art also expected to
abide by all dormitory regulations. I he
may cook in then rooms, but the art
Administration denies
visitation is a right
By PH-LIP WILLIAMS
IStj'
1 he lines are clearly drawn now in the
visitation dispute 1 here appear to be two
opposing camps, both equally
self-righteous, both equally sure of public
support, both hopeful of victory
The Men's Residence Council's main
contention is that visitation is a right, not a
privilege The administration takes an
opposing stance
The MRC contends that because
freshmen and sophomores are required to
live in the dorm, and because they arc
paying rent comparable to that in normal
privately owned rooming complexes, the
men on the Mill have certain inalienable
rights, not to be abridged by academic and
social standards imposed without consent.
The administration answers these
challenges In asserting "You knew the
rules when you came here 1 ou didn't have
to come to ECU "
I his callous attitude
U n a 11 1 m o u s I y b v
administrate in ol liciah
the students hav
So
ma tier
out good
sed almost
tanking
d those are the
deal with daily
intentions arc-
proclaimed from higher up in the
administration, they will not be reality for
the students.
It's very true that no one was forced to
come to ECU.
But that is a very poor rationale for
av tiding social progress, and denying
reasonable opportunity for change
Dormitories arc symtomatic of an older
idea of University education, one no longer
creditable, that of total University
regulation of student life. The vestigial
remnants of this school of thought as
applied to ECU is the heart of nearly all
M RC-administration quarrels
The only lasting solution to these
quarrels is direct negotiations between the
administration and truly representative
student leaders, of the students' choice.
These bargaining sessions are essential to a
speed) and ji. " ttlei it.
Student government must be guaranteed
a place in university life. Student
government is a cruel hoax so long as it
exists "at the pleasure o! the President of
the University "
Dr Jenkins, are you listening' All your
chickens done come home to roost
Negotiations essential
for just settlement
question
idividual
ation or
Msts as a
By CECIL MYERS
Recent events have caused ai
lumber ol ECU student- t
whether this university exisl
development through high
whether this university actually,
political stepping stone tor its President, an
excuse for the institutionalization ol the
moral dictates of some zealous but
hypocritical old puritans and as a factory
to mass produce a plastie product which
should be labeled "a genuine reproduction
of the ECTC graduate ot ! 9 J9 "
These students see more and more that
the very modern buildings, and the glorious
plans for a med school, and all the printed
propaganda hailing ECU progressiveness is
simply a grand facade to cover up the
inadequacies created by the Jenkins Plan to
become a replica of UNC at Chapel Hill
overnight.
This recipe for instant university has left
much to be desired The students have been
short changed because an important
ingiedient called "student freedom" has
been ft out and the ECU cake is therefore-
rising "whopsided "
Whiie frantic lobbying is going on before
the N.C. General Assembly to give ECU
greater status through more legislation the
Op.lojt? protest action
the
students, alter being
administration, have sought the same
legitimate means to attain a more natural
and enlightened environment by passing
visitation legislation comparable to that ol
Chapel Hill and the other schools thai the
administration is so anxious to copy
However, the proof is in the tasting and
when the students tried to cut themselves
their slice of the cake it suddenly collapsed
as if it had been inflated by hot air. The
threats and intimidation that have ensued
has revealed to many students the raw
political ambitions of President Jenkins,
the unhealthy and artificial attitude toward
and obsessive emphasis on sex by the Dean
of Men and Women, and the very evident
put off (which was covered up by the
rhetoric put-on) tactic of the Ad-Hoc
Committee.
However if these students have
misinterpreted these recent events there-
will be no doubt left Tuesday when the
doors will be opened on the hill for all
students, regardless of sex. Dr. Jenkins and
his subordinates in the administration will
prove their true intentions when they bar
the doors as they have threatened or realize
intervisitation has been long overdue and
back the MRC legislation. The season for
strawberry statements is over.
Confrontation now
bad strategy ?
By JAMES LEE
natters nt s own hands
the I niversity, or anywhere for that
last resort only
MR ! ebruary
1
open
m on
proposal because
request thai the committee's report he-
rejected and thai the MRC's plan, which is
lar more reasonable and has overwhelming
student support, be submitted to the
trustees.
Even it Dr Jenkins turns down the
he will have I foi ed to make .1
ind to tal isitation
I MR will I to truthfully saj
r 1 ui I o w in
lenl rights bul to 1 p 1 the dorms
its own I he council cannot lake this
lion now because the administration
has not made a decision on visitation.
I idministration should also know
? : able to
I
M be g itlv
thi
that ih.
'
fountA?nhed
Robert R rho
!
Dave IttermannMik' Duncan
Bev Denny
Riytla Do'ighfrtyNews f rfitor
Karen RlansfieMFeatures rl.toi
Don TrauvieclSports Editor
Ira Bake.Arlvrspr
?
-
?ufiad $1 00 ,
Subv1 $10 00
rvsi?a?
are 00
not to use units ovei 1.1)00 watts
Mcoholit comsumption in dormitories is
loi hidden and thev are not to engage in
any form of hazing 01 gambling An
atmosphere conducive to administrative
paperwork is to b. maintained at all
times Male administrators may receive
women administrators as guests, but
only during approved hours ol visitation
of Fridays and Saturdays; guests must be
registered, room doors must remain
open, hall proctors must be on duty . and
room check must be held prior to
visitation letters will be sent to the
parents ol the administrators, ot course,
to request their opinions.
We hope that no administrator will
feel that his maturity, is being questioned
by our imposition ol ilk above
regulations. Quite to the contrary, these
1 eg 11 1.1 t ions should allow t he
administrator to be responsible foi
himself as long as he does what we tell
him to do.
and
$ommenlaAfy
Challenge
To Fountainhead:
Although people are probably getting
tired of seeing David Edwards say this in
the school paper or that about the SGA.
some of its members and general apathy on
campus. I find 11 once again necessary to
write the Fountainhead to clear up or start
a controversy.
First, in relation to the letter submitted
by Kill Shelton and friends, I have a
comment You are attacking the
I ountainhead mainly lor things I have said,
not it
Secondly, I never sav or rather nevei try
to sa something I cannot back up. I am
not perfect and neither is the paper But I
do know the paper is honest and I can
vouch foi myselt too, it it makes any
difference (No. 1 do nol work for the
1 omilan ? blicationl
Vu
I S(.A 1
agree 11 you accept the assumption thai
thev left the students alone not too far
al let then election.
You also ask lor some articles on the
policy of not allowing students to drop a
course because ol a "bad" teacher
Gentlemen, I have already got a resolution
introduced and passed 11 the SGA to do
just that. Weren't you at that meeting
Concerning the Rebel and using the
money for other constructive purposes
(while the Rebel would be on a voluntary
subscription basis). 1 introduced that about
four months ago: it was tabled for two
more months and then not allowed to be
even debated on. Weren't you at those- SGA
meetings either?
I do agree with you that these are more
pressing issues to ECU students than
changing what may be a very good SGA.
But if you had ever gone to a SGA meeting,
you would find out that pressing issues are
not important, but rather relatively
unimportant issues, such as whose turn it is
to argue (not debate) or whose turn it is to
leave the meeting early. (An average of
from 10 to 15 legislators leave the meetings
early)
Usually our most pressing issue in the
SGA is whether we have a quorum or not.
So before you begin to cut down the
Fountainhead, remember it is one of Ihe
few things on this campus which serves the
students' best interests.
See you at the next SGA meeting.
David Edwards
SGA Legislator
Finch-haters
To Fountainhead:
To all the Finch haters
I simply want to state thai if anyone on
this campus can thaw up a better cartoon
than Finch, then do it lo hell with your
opinions iusi do a bettei job
Chris Williams
Baffled
111 I ountainhead:
It's completely b e y o n d m y
understanding why the administration
presumes the right to regulate the private
life ot students Visitation as all other
affairs ol the student should be decided by
tlu representative bodies ol the students,
not by administrators a n d t he
i ommunities.
Walt Drake
It's not July
lot ountainhead
On I tie- 4th i.i ol lulv at I 2 noo
; sit ol the sun's heat is a i.ilhei
hing ituation One can wear a bathing
suit and remain comfortably warm, and
fourteen hours ol tobai co bai ninj I, 1
one wiili a somewhat fetid odor; then h is
' tibl 1 .1! may assume thai a cool
: .howei i onii
Bul mi the i null.n . this is nol ih Ith
dav 1 ii lulv and the sun isn't out al II 0
p m I ui thei mi i w In ? bai ns ti ba co in
the winter is. tins is winter, below
freezing temperatures, heavy apparel, and
iusi merely making an attempt to survive
the weather
Now that wf realize the season ol yeai
(his is. can we rtov. assume thai "cold"
showers are iusi too cool?
Wednesday nigh I lib 10 1971.
Avni k dormitory suffered the loss ol hoi
m atei
It is now I hursday night and the hoi
watei has not vet been restored I In
dormitory stu :
ol mild nanii I very residenl has been
Warning: Thi. cartoon may bo objoctionabl. to .omo pooplo
"HlGurS ' HERE'S ft UTHE AUMBt C60KFD op "
just 'tor ?$ "Bf1 ?" THB HUL- S? JF L,y,N
IN THEs 0U DORnS HAS 0-07- YOU noiM , JUST
SV& 775 TO YOUKSEIF AND bWtVB( ME YOU lL0f I
FEEL 8? TVER jrttANWHIU t bK0iHUb Of rHi AutyN. '
?Or-
.0,1
. M 1
L
fi
t, "?
'GOT DErA OL' OORrA 6lUES ACftifV
JV JTT5 ft CK1 5
G-6TT4 END W5 FMJTfATWN
G6TT AlrrKE THfCr-IRATION
GfVE VS 2H-H00R VtsiTrVRoN ?
V
WALKH 7ff? STREfTS-flO i?E 'fo'lo, y?LIK7A ?B f? -SoV"rficflrATfti JT
lOoKM' FoK AfOOK? D0H7CW mow, I 0T 7Vf GtlS UiUCt H? Et GAG fi AMGGtfssmJLm
-?'
X BET HIS B?HMlCib BE LtSS SEVSAT)M,
IF THIS 160SY PORW Mi COEDtKHrbftfii
HATTft STUDY AU NWT B(V 2 CAW EVErf
GktSE Aly ia0T ROCMtAfijE S UQHTMQ fi FfiRT
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WfcTWE CUWEp "BH5 SttWTlQti,
M?-J2J? ft ET -OF.
cmuz&L&N!
THE FORUM
denied the right ol at least one warm
shower in the last 28 hours. As a result,
many students have resided in filth and
grime. ,
In essence, showers are cold in Ay cock
dormitory and its residents need and
demand an immediate solution. Someone
please turn on the hot water.
Name Withheld
Don't tread on us
1 o Fountainhead:
I back up the M K concerning visitation
Constitutionally speaking we have the
power to regulate visitation It laws and
regulations are not followed by the
students, the administration does have the
power to stop the -indents' illegal actions
Hut as it stands, the administration is in
.1! posit i. ? top mi ictio is
11
in a our rights. res
: ur oi'si itution. 01
Chris Williams
Time for action
To Fountainhead
Hie MK( is doing the right thmg toward
visitation. The administration had their
chance, now it is time lor the MRC to take
action. 1 think the men are in full support.
Name Withheld
Find out facts
To Fountainhead:
It is time that the students learn that
"our beleaguered SGA officials" have been
left alone for too long and this is proven in
the SGA's continual sidestepping of
controversial issues.
A group of students in the last issue said
that this newspaper slandered certain SGA
officials. That is a pretty serious charge in
itself. To slander someone you must first of
all tell a lie about them. Go to a SGA
meeting and you will see that truely
nothing gets done. It is about time that
people, like this newspaper and David
Edwards, got on the SGA's back and tried
to make them get something done. If
someone isn't doing the job then get nd of
them
H Ibis means printing the truth about
them then do it Its time this school got oil
its ass and started to take a step forward
towards progress. Why musf we follow the
administration's policy of outright
backwardness so as not to hurl the political
aspirations of a certain president of this
institution?
I agree with the ideas about doing
something about the administration's
policy of not allowing students to change
one of their exams if they have three on
one day 01 the policy ol not allowing a
student to change a course because he Mas a
bad teachei (ves administration, believe 11
?' ECU has ninir luw) teachers! Bul
ultimately all ot these things must be
passed by the SGA in the form of a
resolution to the administration telling
them how we I eel.
Now any S( thai won't accept a
petition signed In more than 15 pei cent ol
the students calling for new elections is not
likely going to represent the students and
confront the administration with these
issues It is really easiei for them 10 just sit
and do nothing which is iusi about all thev
gel done I know people will disagree with
me but instead oi cussing me out, go and
tell v 1 'in SGA representatives how you I eel
I he only way they will do then job is if
wi the students, tell them how we feel and
maki sure thev y theii job
I -m nrgi all students to come out and
"hen the elections come up M
von know who you ire voting foi
Maybe next yeai wi won't have the mess
thai wt have this ve.n
Sincerely,
Jeff Schimberg
Out of dimes
I I ountainhead
I've pia. tii ally given up n v ing to u. h
friends al Belk by phone In ont week I
1 ailed lust flooi Belk ten tunes and was
cithei greeted with obscene remarks 01
hung up on all ten limes I he eleventh
time in di speratiori, I i ailed the second
I finally found a kind son! to help
I was beginning to wondei sin e
1 'ed, if I was going to have to ? lil
il visitation u gy personally to find
(he guv I was tivmg to reach H then that
would have been futile, since my intention
in calling was to find a ride home for the
weekend
A friend of mine is having the same-
trouble with the guys on first floor Scott
She has called there lour times with the
same results I had at Belk. May he after she
enriches the phone company with seven or
eight more dimes she'll find one decent
guy.
A paradox llu-sc guys who spout trash
and hang up on us certainly must enjoy
receiving then own phone calls. Don't they
know there are other guys m the dorm'
Maybe they'll change their ways when an
emergency call doesn't reach them because
i'i)c ol the other inconsiderate clods forgot
to glow up too
My apologies to the guys who have some
manners. I wish more of you men would
keep the clods away from the phones
Fed Up And Out Of Dimes
Coed Memorial Fund
I o I ountainhead
I he Physical lherapy Students would
like to express their appreciation to all
those who participated in and contributed
to the bake sale for the Linda Faye
Arrington Memorial Fund
A loan will be given to a Physical
lherapy student each year in menory of
Linda Arrington who was recently killed in
an automobile accident. Linda was a
student in the first class of Physical
Therapy at Fast Carolina which began in
the fall Of 1070.
June Gardner
that the wan would be profitable. As to the
actions for opening the dorms on the ninth
of March, this action is commendable,
pending on the forth coming decision by
Dr Jenkins
If the administration has shown its true-
colors it is time foi the men on the hill to
take a stand. For visitation is a right all
dorm residents already have but the men
are merely being stalled from having this
pseudo-progressive antiquated
right bv
moralists
David McGee
Mike Moore
Terry Bridges
David Lacey
Paul Gower
Proposal
To Fountainhead:
To every decision there is both rational
and emotional aspects involved. Last
spring, the Board of Trustees first realized
the growing numbers of students moving
out of the dormitories Their response to
this mass exodus was to force all
sophomores to live in the dorms. This
action proved to be more a financial
defense mechanism, and not altogether
rational. In the words of Lincoln, "Force is
all-conquering, but its victories are
short-lived Force tends to be emotional
rather than rational, and it is this emotional
gesture which necessitates sophomores to
live in housing conditions which they find
1.11 from satisfactory Force of any means
evokes immediate retaliation Illis is
merely human nature
i this tune we would like to oiler this
rational solution to the Hoard ot Irustees
Rather than coercive action, we feel that
dormitory conditions should be made such
thai person would want to live in them:
more specifically, turn the dorms into
apartment complexes, where both
visitation and all manners ol conduct are
self-regulating. Were tins the course ol
action to be used, the dormitories would
easily be idled 11 is a well established faef
that ih. 1 osi ol dormitory housing is fai
in o 1 i- economically feasible than
oil i.niipus living the point being thai
the administration could easily appease
their financial difficulties, and al the same
time, too, ease the financial difficulties ol
those persons otherwise living of! campus
Ihe ve.n 1970-71 has marked the lust
time in I ast t arolina history thai the Men's
Residence Council has proved a powerful
organization capable ol representing the
men on the II ill 111 v ears before
sophomores desiring change in the dorms
found 11 easiei to move out ol Ihe
dormitories than Io work foi change within
the existing system I his year, sophomores
hav no othei alternative bul to voice 1 hen
opinions through the MR( Prool ol this
poinl lies in in, fa, 1 thai a large majoi il
ol the Mist is composed ol sophomores,
and to put it mildly, thev arc dissatisfied
In shoi 1. we iind thai tins is hardly .1
time loi administrative emotionaliing I he
ol the MR( are the rational
a lams ol the men on ihe Hill I Ik nun on
the I li d sll . Ilae.ee and vv e feel thai thi
1 I m mistral 1011 should .1 i n iv, ledgi tin
desires ol the majority We find tins to be
both 1 rat ional and ex
.1 ii ralu soiui ion
( Ja k (in,nd
Mi-it Representative
True colors
11 ? I ountainhead
I lii a. tion laki n bv the 1 R( in
quest toi visitation on the hill
I he waii foi ?0 days was wasted
hul it was the honest hon bv lh MRt
Calf for support
lo I OUI1I II
MRi
Ihe adm mist rat 101
visitation Ihe issue ol visitation stalled
approximately eighteen months ago
I hiough these months, the progress has
been relatively slow and unsatisfying. I his
vear the matter was turned over to the ad
hoc committee appointed by President
Jenkins.
Although the committee has reached a
decision, it was entirely unacceptable to
the MRC On March 9, the MRC is opening
the dormitories from 12 noon until curfew
every day. This plan has met some
opposition by the administration and no
doubt it will be opposed more heavily by
the administration on the 9th of March. As
President of the MRC. I ask your support
of the activities of the MRC.
Tim Bixon
President of the MRC
Not deadwood
To Fountainhead:
Ihe recently-announced policy of no
exam schedule changes for whatever reason
must head the list of the "long train of
abuses and usurpations" (T. Jefferson) of
the rights of ECU's students by its
administration Several friends of mine
have schedules which list three exams in
one day. These students are upset,
naturally, but have assumed an attitude of
"so what can be done now and have-
resigned themselves to preparing for. and
maybe surviving, the ordeal Mv roommate,
tor example, has three tests in one day, two
m live hour classes and one in a four-hour
course She was told by a (acuity membei
thai the provost had informed him that the
new policy was 111st like an academic
requirement, and that any student who
could not meet it had "no business being
here" I wish to take issue with thai
statement.
I h e e x a 111 s c h e d u I e s .1 r e 1101
requirements, such as the exams
themselves bul are set up to meel
.iieuiiisianii.il necessities numbei ol
. lasv ins . 1, I hi- schedule u hi, h a
iH.ii ni received ffom the compute! is
often deteimined by chance and not bv
request I (or you out there) might draw
thiee exams in one day next time I have
often spoken against the University's laxilv
in gelling rid of the "deadwood" floating
around campus, but I am not deadwood I
am a sophomore and have been on the
Dean's list evei since I came to ltl
Frankly, however, I would contemplate
suicide d I were faced with such a prospect
as m.inv students are lacing now i I. a
straight v student, have .tn business li
Mi Williams'?
v d the Fountainhead should
attempt l - bi ing iboul a re ei sal
vvhkh could ! rous lo :
phv si al and motional well being ol b
11 adeniii allv weak and strong St mi
must not be forced
stability merely
? beyond 1 hen .
nna M Highsmith
Oo own laundry
I very inoi ning as I di iv i past 1 h,
I.Hindi v and view 11 - ick vonn1
forth its thtt k blacl I say to mv sell
I) thai thing li only I had 1 lid lo
I then I think the only w 1
? IO I s poilutel is I
the si to lU h i ontl ibuloi II von
v mil Ian mil lo this la ihlv then
ICGiy'
polluter, indirectly but nevertheless a
polluter o the air we are breathing.
I protest strongly that I have to breath
this mess from your dirty laundry. You
(dormitory students who use the facility!
get clean laundry and we all get dirty lungs.
Ironically dormitory students are forced to
pay a laundry fee whether they use it or
not. They pay with their lungs and their
poeketbook. Why not protest payment of
this fee and do your own laundry much
more inexpensively and help clean our air'1
Artista J. Marchioni
Petition
lid also
P 1
i o Fountainhead
As members ol the WRC . we support the
i MRC visitation plan lor open dorms.
Since the University expects its students to
JCl a I and e co n omit
: 11 a
ponsibihties as adults
1 aslarolina has t inally reached
university status in name It remains to be
seen how long it will take lor it to reach
university status in policy, action, and
government. The MRC has taken a giant
step forward and we. the undersigned,
follow and support them
Cathy Kahn
Cindy Maultsby
Maureen Sedgley
Dyar G. Bready
Fara Hassell
Sarah E. Cecil
Katrine Kelly
Susan Liery
Sharon L. Maffitt
Betsy Simpson
Nancy Matthews
Deborah Crumpler
Frances Best
Sue Hooper
Susan Gail Cudle
Anita Lewis
Linda Sloan
Betty Gurganus
Shurett Akers
Cathy James
Lynn Luetscher
Cathie Cabaniss
Claudia Brinn
Peggy White
Cathy Robinson
Gloria Motte
Alta Cummings
Susan Shankle
Sylvia Whitesell
Claudia D. Helms
Vicky Lynn Greenway Marilyn Sue Hurdle
Shirley Newton
Nancy W. Perdue
Andi Simerson
Susan Davis
Linda Rue
Chris Mackay
Connie Mitchell
Beth Early
Karen Herman
Barbara Bates
Mary Lea
Cynthia Baldndge
Joyce Gibbs
Sandra Grantham
Ruth Cust
Lynn Hardy
Margaret Donharl
Brookie Haislip
Linda Taylor
Gail Stephens
Peggy Bennett
Gloria Culbreth
Ann Saywer
Kathy Perry
Gwendolyn Vinson
Claudia McMullen
Ruzalia Clark
Susan M.ill
Vickie Showtety
Laurie Anderson
Laurel Greene
Ann Walker
Jane Wynne
Betty Freeman
Sandra Green
Rayne Powell
Karen Mischke
Valerie Millet
Olivia Whichard
Jewel Adams
Karen D Riso
Katharyn Poplm
K,tr?n Jeinigan
Shai on Colem
Pam Hankin
Beth Matthews
Anne Kilpatrick
Pat Gamble
Helen Gill
ai,1 Wootten
Susan Mills
Lynn Millm
Barbara Kipps
Teri Ameer
Barbara Saunders
Marcy Meurs
Gail Melson
Patie White
Marcia Eubanks
Vicki Warner
Laura Bosher
Patty Halsey
Denise Jones
Linda Chappetl
Brenda Barnes
Marcia Pierce
Karla McLawhorn
Vashti Phelps
Carol Sutton
Kathy Wood
Vicki Long
Michele Hill
Janet Whitworth
Laura White
Cynthia Syars
Margaret Cole
Karen Bethel
Connie Baher
Faye Burton
Pat Loesche
Jane Arnold
Bonnie Tyson
Judy Simman
Barbara Hill
Sarah M Heath
Joy Livesay
Nancy Nicklin
Stephanie Scarborough
Carol Mance
Nancy Brtzzie
Judy Bass
Arlene Bi
Nancy Hoopei
Betsy Storm
Phy'
Harriette M
Brenda B itchelor
'son
Sue .loidan
Hand
? yloi
Forum Policy
Students and employe
student
Forum
I etters sli,Mile ? md t )nr p,m?
Ifiir-rv must nol fxceetl $00 words
The edit. ihr righl to edit all
tellers foi style emus and length
All letters must be signed with the na.
Ihe wulet Upon ihe write! i penon! requesr
his name will he withheld
Signed aftkles on this page reflect the
?H of the writer atxi not nev.esianlv
ihost of I ountainhead or lui (arolina
sity





Title
Fountainhead, February 16, 1971
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
February 16, 1971
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.96
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39520
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Cite this item
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