Fountainhead, January 11, 1972


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





ountamhead
Volume III. Number 21
and the truth shall make you free'
East Carolina University Gre?nv.n?. n c
January 11,1172
COL. JOHN DUFFUS, director of the
Aerospace Studies Program, said the response
to the recent recruiting drive has been very
(Still Photo by Ron M?nn)
favorable. Duff us also stated that many more
scholarships are now available to cadets.
Program launched
ByKATHY HOLLOMAN
Staff Writer
ECU's aerospace department has recently
launched a recruiting program aimed at
sophomores, according to Maor John Berrier,
recruiting officer
Bet tier remarked lhat the two-year ROTC
program "definitely has something to offer
sophomore students and the response has been
very gratifying since it began in mid-November
To qualify, a sophomore must pass the Air
Force Officer Qualifying Test and a physical
examination He is then enrolled in the program
which will include six weeksof field naming in
the summer
During tins period, the student's
transportation expenses to and from the
training base will he provided by the
depaiiinei 1 he student will also receive a
monthly sala'y of $100
The following fall, the student will enroll in
the 300 level Aerospace Studies courses and he
must remain a participant for six consecutive
academic quarters.
Each quarter the ROTC student takes three-
hours of classes and one hour of corps training
The courses deal with such topics as military
structure and leadership training as well as
communication skills and other similar fields
This year, the course is concerned with the
areas of Southeast Asia, space ventures and the
military judicial system
Uniforms and textbooks are furnished free to
each cadet
During the nine-month period, the cadet
receives $100 per month, double the previous
salary for junior and senior participants
Elighi training leading to the acquisition of
an EAA private pilot's license is also available
to men interested in the Air Force pilot training
program after graduation from ECU.
Requirements and opportunities are equal
for men and women in the cadet program
Not all activities are academic in nature,
however Extra curncular activities are also
encountered
Parties, intramural teams, service projects
and aid to the underprivileged are co-ordinated
by the cadets Also, frequent field trips are
held.
One of the biggest events is the annual
"dming-in a formal dinner attended by the
cadets, interested faculty, administration
officials and citizens of Greenville
Organizations such as "Angel Flight a
service-oriented sorority, and the
"Cadets-m Blue" drill team give the cadet other
outlets for this spare time
Upon graduation from ECU, the cadet is
commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S
Air Force with the length of duty depending on
his area of interest If he is a pilot trainee, he
attends flight school for one year and serves
four years of active duty after completion of
flight training
Other cadets serve four years of active duty
after graduation from the university. Those
wishing to do graduate work may obtain
permission to delay active duty until they
receive their second degree.
The newly -commissioned cadet can expect a
starting salary of $8,500 with qualified pilots
Oil flying status receiving $13,000 after three
years of duty.
A very favorable response to the recruiting
drive was noted by Colonel John Duffus.
commanding officer He cited the fact that
many more scholarships are being made
available to cadets. At present 28 students are
enrolled on ROTC scholarships. The current
enrollment in the Aerospace Studies Program is
130.
New laws come in with year
By BRUCE SAVAGE
Staff Writer
January I saw a new year being ushered in
Along with the new year, a new scries of drug
laws were brought to the scene
According to the new laws, any person 21
years of age or older who is convicted in North
Carolina of distributing a narcotic drug to
someone under 21 will receive a minimum
sentence of ten years in prison.
The sentence could range to life
imprisonment and a fine up to $15,000. As
with all laws, the sentences could be suspended.
LAWS PASSED
The laws which were passed last July contain
the following points
1 (Narcotic drugs have been classified into 6
categories. These categories are based on the
potential for abuse, the risk to public health,
and (he potential for the substance to produce
psychic or physiological dependence.
2)The laws authorize the North Carolina
Board of Health with the power to change the
classifications of the drugs and to add or delete
drugs as the circimstances merit
TWO PERSPECTIVES
3)The laws view drug abuse in two
perspectives-possession and distribution.
Possesion of more than five grams of
marijuana, or 25 tablets of amphetamines,
barbituates. and certain other substances, or
more than five fluid ounces of paregoric is
consider possesion with the intent to distribute.
This chaige carries the same punishment as that
foi distribution.
4(Persons under (he age of 21 who are
convicted of possesion of scveial types of
substances (marijuana, amphetamines and
barbiturates but not henon. LSD or codeine)
can have virtually all records of their first arrest
removed if they satisfactorily fulfill all the
requirements of probation.
Possession of marijuana
on a second offense is also
considered a misdemeanor.
5)The penalties under the laws differ
according to the drug and postesion or
distribution Herion, codeine, or LSD
conviction is considered a felony. Punishment
?f up to five years in jail and a fine up to
$5,000 is the maximum for the first offense. A
second offense carries a punishment of up to 5
to 10 years and a $10,000 fine Each
subsequent conviction carries a punishment of
10 years to life in jail and a fine up to $15,000
LESS PUNISHMENT
The penalties for distributing drugs which are
considered less harmful are the same as those
for herion, codeine, and LSD. Possession
constitu'es a lesser punishment.
Possession of less than 5 grams of marijuana,
25 tablets of amphetamines, barbiturates, and
certain other substances is onsdered a
misdemeanor on the first offense. Possession of
marijuana on a second offense is also
considered a misdemeanor.
Under the new laws anyone 18 to 21 years of
age who is convicted of distributing a
controlled drug to someone 3 years younger
than himself may be punished by up to twice
tb ' lie and prison sentence otherwise
authorized
Humphrey adds name
AP POLITICAL ROUNDUP
Sen Hubert H Humphrey added his name
yesterday to the already crowded field of
Democratic presidential candidates
The former vice president, who lost the 1968
election to Richard Nixon, planned to formally
announce his candidacy in Philadelphia after
filing for the April 25 Pennsylvania presidential
primary.
An aide said Sen Henry Jackson. D-Wash
also would file for the Pennsylvania primary
The deadline for entry was yesterday
Humphrey was scheduled to fly to
Tallahassee, Fla later yesterday to campaign
for votes in that state s March 14 primary.
OTHERS WERE THERE
Three other Democratic candidates were in
Florida over the weekend.
New York Mayor John Lindsay poke
Sunday to several groups in Tampa before
flying to Miami Beach to address the Zionist
Organization of America
During an appearance in a black section of
Tampa. Lindsay called for a "Coalition of
left-out people "
He told the Zionist organization that the
United States must do more to help Israel
Sen Edmund Muskie of Maine ended two
days of Florida campaigning Sunday with a
strong bid for support from the state's two
largest minorities, Jews and blacks.
He planned to fly to Springfield, III
yesterday where Sen Adlai E Stevenson Illwas
to endorse his candidacy
REQUESTED AUTHORITY
Muskie requested President Nixon to use his
authority to designate Soviet Jewish refugees to
Nixon into pot
(AP)-President Nixon announced today he
will seek re-election, that "I want to complete
the work we have begun "
He made it official by telling Ne Hampshire
campaign workers that he will allow his name
to stay on the ballot for the state's March 7
presidential primary Thai will be the first test
of voter sentiment in the 1972 presidential
sweepstakes.
Sources at the Western White House in San
Clemente. Calif , had said Thursday Nixon was
preparing to tell New Hampshire Gov Lane
Dwinnell that he approves of DwinneU's action
earlier this week entering Nixon's name in the
primary.
Nixon is in California for two days of
summit meetings with Japan's Prime Minister
Eisaku Sato
Sources at San Clemente declined to go into
detail on Nixon's campaign plans, saying only
that his reply to Dwinnell would be a low-key
message to New Hampshire voters that Nixon is
a candidate.
Israel as eligible lor American assistance And
he said that blacks and other minorities should
be considered by the next president tor "the
highest places in government
Rep. Shirley C hisholm of New York, who
has been appearing before black organizations,
women's groups and universities throughout the
state, spoke Sunday at Bethany church in
Jacksonville
"I know I won't get all the black vote's the
women's votes or all the young people's voies,
but I will get a goixl share ol support from all
three she said
WILL DROP BID
Republican Rep Paul N McClotkey laid,
meanwhile, he would drop his presidential bid
if he fails to get more than 15 or 20 per cent oi
the vote in New Hampshire's March 7 primarv
"If we do poorly-15 or 20 per cent- it would
be clear that I don't measure up as a
presidential candidate and I'd have to drop
out the California congressman said
N.H ALSO ENTERED
McClotkey, who opposes President Nixon's
Vietnam policy and conservative Rep John
Ashbrook of Ohio, who also has entered New
Hampshire's Republican primary. appeared on
separate segments of ABC's "Issues and
Answers "
Ashbrook said he will enter several other
primaries including Florida, "regardless of
what I do m New Hampshire "
Tobacco in danger
RALEIGH, (AP) German) is considering
legislation that would ban import ol tobacco
treated with inaleie hydrazide a chemical now
used on 95 per cent of the American flue-cured
crop and on much ol the burley crop.
If German) approves the ban, it would
spread to the icsi oi the European Community,
including Greal Bntain and associated countries
when the) become Common Market members.
This would mean I S tobacco growers
would have ti give up one of their most
populai chemicals or else stand to lose about
two-thirds ol theil foreign markets
Maleie hydrazide or Mh is used for the
control ol parasitic plant growths called
tuckers, When the chemical came on the market
in the 1950s it was hailed by growers as one of
the greatest discoveries in the history of
tobacco production because it eliminated the
laborious task oi removing as many as a quarter
million suckers per acre by hand
Employment program planned
There will be a Federal Empk) ment
Outlook Program at ECU on Jamuary 18
according to Fumcy James. ECT s placement
director
The program will last only one Jj ?
Personnel from Federal agencies in North
Carolina will be on hand to outline
opportunities in the area
Among those scheduled to attend are
representatives from the Civil Service
Commission, the Federal Highway
Administration. HEW. Audil Division the
Internal Revenue Service, the Marine Corps An
Station at Cherry Point. ,nd the Social Security
Administration
Individual and group interviews will be
conducted in Wright Auditorium from 9 00
a.m tu 1 2 noon and from 1 00 to 3 00 p.m.
All theise plannine to attend should report to
lames in the Alumni Building lercated beside
the student Cafeteria no later than 8.30
Tuesday morning
For lurthet details about the program,
contact Bob Jamison, by writing the U.S Civil
Service Commission. P O Box 25069. Raleigh
N.C oi phone 755-4420
New lit course offered
"Films as Literature" will c?ffer great
twentieth centruy films as art during spring
quarter.
This viewer's course will be a basis lor an
evaluation of various film genres from drama to
documentaries
Dr. William Slephenson. course instructor,
will explore the perception ol films for the
viewer and the development of cinematic
techniques
"Its part of an university's relevance to talk
of these things said Slephenson. who weirked
two years to bring this course type to ECU
The tenatively scheduled films include Paul
Newman's "Hustler "Stalking Moon one of
the first great westerns and a documentary on
the Sunsei Strip entitled "You arc What You
I at
Studying how stones change in form and
style from plays to novels to movies, the
students will view "The Prune of Miss Jean
Brodie "
Under foreign titles the Czechoslovakia film
"Shop em Main Street " will be shown.
The two hour elective will count three
quarter hours and meet three days a week. It
will have a prerequisite of two 200 level
literature courses or (he consent of the
instnictoi
Annual symposium planned
ECU's annual Latin American Symposium
will be held January 20-21. according te Dr.
I dwaui Leahy, co-ordinator of Latin American
Studies at ECU.
This year's symposium will feature
diplomats, educators and other experts m Latin
American affairs
The purpose of the symposium will be to try
to inform the people of this aiea about the
largly undeveloped trade potential that exist
between Latin America and eastern Neirth
Carolina.
It will be entitled "Latin America Emerging
Perspectives" and will include seven lectures on
U.S. Latin American relations. Castro's Cuba,
the investment climate in l-atm America,
American students at Latin American
universities and other related topics
Invitation have been sent to several hundred
persons ineastern North Carolina businesses and
industries.
Thomas Willis, director of the ECU Regional
Development Institute, said he expects a good
response to the invitations
Symposium speakers include
Dr. David Basile former acting Public
Relations Officer lor the US Department of
State in Ecuador and the present Chairman of
the Geography Department at UNC-CH.
Patricio Rodnques. First Secretary tor
Economic Affairs, Embassy ot Chile.
Dr. Neill Macaulay. University of Florida
professor who spent two years with Castio and
Che Guevara during the Cuban Revolution.
John H Crimmins, Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for Inter-American Affairs.
Anthony Furr, vice-president of Wachovia
International Investment Corp . Armistead I
Selden Jr Deputy Assistant Secretars of
Defense for International Security Affairs.
Dr Kcrmit King, former president of ibe-
University ol Liberia who is now with the II
Office of International Studies, and Dr Wilkins
Bowdre Winn. ECU professor of Latin
American history
Dr Macaulay will speak to the symposium
gathering on 'X'astro's Rise to Power " The 16
yeai old history preilessor not only spent twei
years in Cuba during the ic-volution. but he has
also written many hooks and articles on the
subject
He received 'us A.B in history front the
Citadel He went on to earn his M A at the
University ol South Carolina and in 1965 he
received his doctorate from the Universiiy of
1 lA.iS
Macaulay has done extensive rcseaich and
writing on 20th century revolutions
All lectures are free and open to the public
li'ctuics are scheduled at 10 am. 2 p.m
and 8 lp.m en Jan 20 and al 10 a in on Jan
21 in the Biology and Nuisini! Auditoiiums
DR NEILL MACAULY n one of the featured spent two years in uuoa during tne revolution
speakers to be present at the Latin American and has written many books and articles on
Symposium The 36 year old professor has modern revolutions I ?Ho?M?nni





I
I
5
I
idjit i ruuiiuuiiMM i iifstwy. fsnuary mi ?
Variety characterizes secretary's job
By BETSY HEADY
Staff Wfitir
l have twvei wan j dav that I dreaded to
COmC to woik I jutl love mv job and
every 'lung ii involvei
111I'm- jic the woids ol Mi Dora I amm.
secretary to Di Leo Jenkin's and a dedictted
and capable woman who is prool of the
statement that behind every great university
president is an efficient secretary
Although she is classified by the stale
department as an administrative assistant. Mis
I imm'l Junes covet a wide aiea "N ou name it
and I do it said the youthful sectetaiv
M; job consists of running this office as he
directs she explained "Tins includes almost
everything that involves Di Jenkins in
university life I have to make his
appointments, answei the phone, keep up with
his schedule and most ol all. make sine that he
s m here he is supposed to he on time
DYNAMIC PERSON
Sitting in hei modem and attractively
decorated offte. Mis I amm spoke of what it is
hke to work with a university president
"bveryday is unusual when you wmk with
Di Jenkins she said "He is a dynamic person
but I feel like it takes .1 special kindol person
to work with hint N ou can't get frustrated with
changes because there aie so many ot them in
this office He will make spin of the minute
decisions that have 10 be attended to then
"Di Jenkins is always on the go I tell him to
Jo one thing ai a time if he wants to get
anything accomplished Mans times I have said
to him that the hurrtedei he goes the tlowei I
go
"I ach day is a new challenge when vou work
foi Di Jenkins. Mis Lamm continued,
"because ol his demanding schedule we alw.ivs
Stay lust a little behind You might say we work
under 'informal pressure ' We know what work
we have to do but we do it in an informal
atmosphere We can laugh and joke and have a
good time while we aie getting the work done "
Mrs. Lamm's ob is not simply confined to
Dr Jenkin's office, however When the
president is out oi town on university business.
Mrs. Lamm looks iftei his house And often
when Dr Jenkins is in town and has a problem
at home he will call her Mrs Lamm laughed as
she recalled a time when Dr Jenkins called her
about a minor problem with his freezer
"One night I was at home and the telephone
:ang and it was Dr Jenkins she said, "it seems
that his freezer was broken and he wasn't sure
what to do about it so he called me to find
out "
NOT A MACHINE
With obvious admiration Mrs Lamm spoke
of Dr Jenkins.
home m ? ? '
v ?'
hnw Mo " ?? a" ?
unity affairs Wh.
t? wo.k ?nh W,IM ,l
. ??.
envtlle Won
ration
M ?? a highly
0,
I - w
to the m ?
it almost three years
ALWAYS HAPPY
Utl? M" ,J"1"1 "nly had erne yei
business school, she leeit th? mo, yuf'
Ition has COIIM from actually worki
hi -tii - "g ln
M) ob Is an education (n lief ??
,M.nnl "Ivrry day I learn something than
,i?ln i knw lirfore "
Perhaps Ihl key to Mis Lamm's success h
i out look Of) life and her work
MRS DORIS LAMM secretary to Dr. Leo
Jenkins, performs a wide range of duties in her
work She said she considers the most
"He is a down to earth man who is gentle
and kind to all people He gives you the
impression thai he is always in a hurry hut he
will alvvavs rr to find time to listen to youi
problems
"He has ,i keen sense ol humoi and he is fun
to work foi but he is human and gets upset and
disturbed like everyone else does Dt. Jenkins is
anything but the machine hat many people
believe he is
According to Dr Jenkin's personable
secretary, meeting and working with the
students is the most rewarding aspect of her
lob
"I itist love the feeling of helping a student
and being of whatever assistance I can be she
said "Nothing makes me an happier than
:1ns "
During her two-and-a-half years of working
in the president's office, Mrs Lamm has aquired
main 'children " "I feel that some of these
students who come in here are my own
children she said. "It's a good experience to
get to know them and it makes it all
worthwhile when you hear from one of them
and teahe that they care enough to remember
you even when they have their own lives
HUSBAND IS COOK
It would seem that with a job as interesting
and important as hers. Mrs. Lamm would have
little time for relaxation and fun. but this
(SUH Pnotm By Han Mann)
rewarding aspect of her fob to be meeting and
working with students.
energetic and attractive woman leads a private
life that is as fascinating as hei careei
"lor relaxation I play with my two
grancluldren and watch football games on
television, and whenever I have the chance I
like to crochet "
L'nlike most women, Mis I amm is nol the
cook in her home "My husband loves to cook
so I let him do om cooking Sometimes I s.iv
that I'm probably the only woman in the
I'nited States who helps hei husband in the
kitchen Since we both work this is one ol the
few times that we see each Other, so we te.illv
enjoy cooking together
A visit to the Lamm home on a Sunday
afternoon would ptohably find Mrs Lamm in
front of her television watching the football
games
"I love to watch football games and I hate it
when the season comes to an end she said
FAMILY COMES FIRST
Mrs. Lamm often actually play s football with
her four-year old grandchild
"Sometimes in the afternoon my grandchild
and 1 will turn the living room into a football
stadium and play football He'll be the center
and granny will be the quarterback and then we
will reverse positions We have great fun doing
this and I enjoy it as much as he does
"I don't care how busy I am. I'll always find
time to play with the grandchildren It doesn't
matter to me it it means doing the dishes at
midnight as long as I can play with them In my
Maharishi Mahesh
complete and dtd ic ated aorl
organization, I won't attend, si - -
Mis I amm tells an intf
how she unexpectedly found I
university
"in Mav ol 1952 nn husband and I i
daughtei hankie moved to Greenvillt
Wilson In out new neighborhood I met a
woman who was working foi tIn
was planning to resign I he neighbo sufj
that I take ovw in hei place but I had already
decided to stav at home since oui daughtei ?j-
only live yeais old
"Before I even had ? chance to tell hi I
didn't want the ob she had set up an interview
foi me with the regtstrai I went to the
interview and within two w, ks I
working with the college "
Mrs I amm worked in the registrar'l Uu
until I9S5 after which she started working tor
Dr Jenkins while he was dean and
vice president Aftet he became President ol the
university she joined him and has worked as his
"I thrive n responsibility and knowing that
It I am held tesponsih
Ug and work twice as hard to
m my work is imports
I (faction spread across her lice
v ike ol her hie "I have always
rw always been happy I don't
I would like to do but at least I get the
ss . things done My life has been very
u d rewarding to me
It is nol difficult to see why Mrs Lamm is so
well liked by both students and faculty Her
optimism and good nature were evident as she
said "You might as well smile because no one
wants to see you frown Besides you'll have t
lot mote friends by smiling "
In spue ol the tact that she is i
behind-the-scenes figute in the university hte
Mrs I amm is a successful and fascinating
individual She has combined charm,
understanding and intelligence to succeed not
-wily in hei careei but in hei private life as we.
'Australian Adventure' affords
intriguing insight of life style
Meditation following grows
By KATHY HOLLOMAN
Staff Wrier
Running away to Australia Escaping "down
under'1" Save your coins for the plane fare
while you take a look at Kenneth Richter's
"The Australian Adventure " Through his
movie Richter brings keen insight into the lives
of Australia's people and their surroundings. He
shows the excitement of living in a land of
kangaroos, kumquats, and koalas
Richter perfected his camera technique
during his travels into 60 countries He takes his
camera across the spectacular Great Barrier
Reel into a fast-moving game of Australian
football and inside the lives of opal miners.
From the rough life in the Outback to the
hustle bustle of cosmopolitan Sydney this film
ptesents a colorful interpretation of the
eontinnt
Richter's interest in films began while he was
studying astronomy at Harvard Laming part of
his college expenses through photography, he
became increasingly involved in motion
pictures He eventually decided to choose
moviemaking as a cateer.
Afiei shooting free-lance films for numerous
clients. Richter went to Hollywood where he
worked nearly five years on camera crews to
aquixe a knowledge of all phases of the motion
picture art
Because he feels that motion pictures are a
powcrlul medium lor promoting understanding
ECU Placement Service
he has traveled over a million miles recording
the lives of people in far-flung lands. To
accomplish this he has lived with tribes like the
head-hunters of Ecuador and the nomad
Berbers ol the Sahara
The film will be shown tonight in Wright
Auditorium at 8. Admission is by ID For
students and faculty, 75 cents for statf
members and SI for the public
KEN RICHTER
Editor s Note The SIMS' chapter of ECU is
sponsoring a lecture to be given on Thursday, Jan 13
at 6 and 7 30 p m. in room 104 ot the
Education-Psychology building, bv a teacher of
Transcendental Meditation trained personally by the
Mahanshi The lecture will introduce the technique
and explain when and where t can be learned
Whatever happened to Maharishi Mahesh
Yogi, the teacher of the Beatles and other
celebrities What exactly was he teaching and
what is he doing now? Lven though the
publicity has almost disappeared. Maharishi is
as active as ever spreading Transcendental
Meditation. TM as he calls it. training people to
teach TM. and guiding one of the largest
student organizations in the world
During the last five yeats, this organization,
the Students' International Meditation Society
(SIMS), has enrolled over 60,000 students on
over 400 campuses in the United States alone
Jerry Jarvis, director of SIMS, attributes its
rapid growth to the satisfaction and fulfillment
derived from the practice of Transcendental
Meditation
INNER SECURITY
Meditators say that TM has produced great
happiness in their lives, given them enormous
energy, increased their efficiency in work and
studies, and produced a deep sense of inner
security, well-being and peace of mind. One
meditator in Berkeley, Calif, said, "Since I
started TM there has been a constant, steady
improvement in my life. Things no longet upset
me very easily, there is less worry over
problems, I am more at peace with myself, I am
happier I enjoy life more, and I have greater
confidence in my dealings with others
Teachers of TM say it is a "simple technique
which takes the attention naturally from the
ordinary thinking level to the source of
thought, the reservoit ol energy and
intelligence The process automatically results
in the expansion ol the conscious mmd and lull
mental potential begins to be used in thought
and action
CONCENTRATION IMPROVED
The effects of Transcendental Meditation are
not only mental but physical as well
Reseaichets at Harvard Medical School, the
Brusch Medical Centei in Boston and Stanford
Research Institute, investigating the
physiological effects of Ttanscendental
Meditation, have found that 11 a tew minutes'
practice of TM produces a rest deeper than that
of sleep; 2) this deep rest helps eliminate stress
and tension; 3) physiological changes(incl
brain waves, blood pressure, metabolic rate and
blood chemistry) clearly suggest that a lourth
major state of consciousness is experienced
during Transcendental Meditation Ihcse
findings appeared in "Science the journal ol
the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, March 27, 1970
Because Of the test induced by TM and
subsequent release ol tension, a person
immediately begins to feel calmer and clearer in
his mild. A student from Yale reports. "In IM
I found that satisfaction I could nevei really get
with dtugs and othei things
Good results seem not to be limited to
students A 54-year old business executive
stated, "The ability to concentrate hat
improved, and intelligent perception foi
solutions to problems has increased "
Presently, the Science olreativs
Intelligncce, a college ptogram developed by
Maharishi in conjunction with some of the
country's leading educators, is being taught ?i
an accredited course on several college
campuses Some of the colleges which have
offered the course are Stanford University
sevetal campuses of the University of
California, and the University of Colorado The
course involves the principles and practice of
1 ranscendcntal Meditation
Why ate so many students beginning to
practice TM '
GET TOGETHER
"Something is missing explained Jarvis
"The young generation is aware more thananv
othei that something is missing Their elders are
aware .it it too Man today is trying in various
ways to improve his situation He is trying on
political, sociological, economic and humanistic
levels Mete iS a technique which directly
improves the individual and thereby begins to
improve all these aspects of life
simultaneously "
People today seem to be realizing that it is
m" enough fot a nun to try to find a better life
h trying to hange only his external situations
Many would say that ,Ml. 11)OSI ,mportant thing
is in gci yout head together" because unless
the individual man is "together" how can he
expeel his society ot the world to be" This is
basically the Mahariahi's message thai it is upon
'hi strength ,u. lnnfr xf ,h? ,h(
?ccotnpbshmentsol the outer man rest.
Meditators claim thai by practicing TM a ft
i morning and evening a person discovers
ll" tllily i" involved in unfolding his inner
ll IM van he learned and enjoyed by
snyont
Registered credentials offer some job security
By PAT CRAWFORD
Staff Writer
Jobs may be scarce, but an bCU senior has a
better chance of finding one if he registers with
the Placement Service on campus
The Placement Service, located in the
Alumni Building, attempts to find employment
for graduating seniors and alumni of ECU. The
service is free, and provides prospective
employers with a set of credentials for the
registered student. In addition, the service
arranges interviews for students on campus,
with representatives of school systems,
businesses and government agencies.
Furney K James, director of the Placement
Service since l7. believes in the security of
placement registration.
"It's very important that you register and
keep your credentials here he said, "not just
for this office, but for the placement offices of
all colleges having this service
STANDARD CREDENTIALS
Placement offices work on a reciprocal basis ?
a student registered at ECU is automatically
registered for the same service at other colleges
with the placement program. Should the
student move, his credentials will be considered
good at the next college
"This yeat said James, "we've registered 65
per cent of the graduating seniors, 1300
students, and 200 former graduates The data
obtained in the placement files also serves as
standard credentials or references, should the
student have need of them Data sheets are kept
on file for 10 years; if not used or updated,
they are destroyed.
"There are jobs lor those who have properly
prepared themselves said James, "and who
will go where the jobs are.
"It's important to prepare yourself for
something. I believe you prepare yourself by
doing well the job you're presently in. If you're
a school teacher, do well, and if you're still in
school, do well in that
DIFFICULT FIELDS
Some fields are still fairly open to
employment. In the teaching field, the better
opportunities are in special education,
industrial technology and industrial arts.
Non-teaching demands are in accounting,
business administration and government work,
particularly with the Social Security
Administration and Health. Education and
Welfare (HEW)
"lleie at I ast Carolina saUj James, "there ?
mote demand loi business administratlori
people to go mto tin- artas ol marketini
hanking and industrial management
The fine arts music, art and diama art
among the more difficult fields to iu
commercial employment in accordbu to
James.
"The way I see the line ails he said. "y?u
can make it if you're exceedingly Kod m
performing, or else Us dilli.uli to make j
living. You almost have to do it n, ?idiii.?,
another job
"The chances are bettei up north fliare'l
just not much of an an market in eastern Noiih
Carolina
ADEQUATE PREPARATION
James is lugly enthusiasm afcoul his own job
as director of the Placemenl Service
I Wrything I've ever done piepared me f?
th?)? l???!lyttlnevei thought ot being
I I'1 dim until one or lwo yea.s
' k job " James was a business
"IJI ? laugh, business to, three
e11111ludmA
I go) a fJagrta in school adminustiation he
?? ? thou) oi ,01 l)M ? . pilrK,pal
IW? ?"? United States Government
KUKlance and counseling M
uiage students to go m
court Imp
' r???IW andv-rvedasacounsek-r
,n ;uiwl school fort wo ma-
Jrr'1 M ?. expetu-nces as a
" , - -unselmg degiee have
, J' MUMheposm
' " ' Iduionto Ins abih.v James
?Wafwatffectuy





3
cars.
"V l?d one yeir of
a, oil of her
?t,u?"y working ,n
on m ,tlef. Jhe
rn wmtthing tha, ,
Lamm's luctew has
her work
and knowing thai
rid responsible for
rk twic a I
ork is import!
;ad icron h
hie "I have alwavs
rcn happs I don't
t at least I get the
hie has been verv
M
i Mrs Lamm is n
s and ftcull) Her
ett evident a she
lie because no one
sides you'll hac i
that she is i
he university -
I and fascinating
inbined charm,
ce to succeed M
pnvate life js awl
DWS
ith some of the
is being taught is
1 several college
leges which have
nford University
e University of
of Colorado The
s and practice of
nts beginning to
R
explained Jarvis
ire more than anv
y. Their elders are
trying in rariOW
i He is trying M
ic and humanistic
1 which direotlv
hereby begins to
pec ts of lif
ealiing that it is
' find a better lite
ternal situations
t important thing
" because unless
ler" how can he
Id to be" This is
ge that it is upon
r self that the
nan rest,
dicing TM a ft
person discovers
folding his inner
and enjoyed by
ty
nepared me lor
bought of being
I or two yeais
was a business
ismess foi three
nnisliatio"
i as a principal
es Cioveininei'1
I counseling in
idents to go n
J as a counsek'r
r? "
Kptfltnctl aJ
ng degiee lu
loi Ihe position
jbilm iai??
leU
News briefs
Policy adopted
???N.
SAN FRANCISCO Al The
Police Coiiiinusioii has adopted
i gun control pli, forbidding
olhcers to UM Iiiimimk, except
jv a last resort in felony cases
oi when a life is at slake
Ihe policy, adopted by the
CommJaton Wednesday night
and to lake effect Jan 19, is
the city's first set ol guidelines
loi police use of guns.
With one major exception
the guidelines to How
recommendations made last
month by Police Chief Donald
M Scott His suggestion that
policemen involved in latal
shootings be automatically
suspended pending an
investigation was strongly
opposed by Ihe Police Officers
Association and not adopted
by the commission
Campus activity changesjDraft meeting
scheduled
Members needed
Applications for University
Hoard aie being taken now
through Thuisdjy. January 20,
in the S(iA oltke, )03 Wright
One rcgualr member and one
alternate will be chosen.
Because ol the required
male-lemale composition of
the Board, only male students
need apply. Full time status
and a 2.0 average are required
Screening will be Friday.
January 21 andor Monday
January 24.
Deadline extended
All students, graduate and
undergraduate, who plan to
graduate winter quarter, will be
given a final opportunity to
make applications for
graduation.
Applications must be turned
in to the Registrar's Office by
January 14.
Ready for pickup
All students may pick up
then copies of the campus
directory at the Union
Announce
winners
Phi Sigma Pi National Honor
Fraternity held its annual
X" h r i s t m a s party for
underprivileged children on
December 16 The brothers,
along with their wives and
dates, entertained the
thirty-two boys and girls with
games, refreshments, and gifts
The party also included a
drawing to determine the two
winners of the Tod d
Scholarship fund-raising
drawing The winners were
Mrs Sam White, of Greenville,
and Ken Vetter. an tCU
student They each received a
C. E, PortaColor television set.
The brothers thank everyone
who contributed to the
scholarship fund
Information Desk
Please bring your I.D
activity cards with you.
and
Freedom on campus
includes the feeling ol students
at many schools that no one is
going to bother them about
smoking marijuana or using
drugs The statements of
administrators tend to
corroborate their view
But toleration ol marijuana
is not universal. Pout students
at the University ol Texas were
ancstcd in dormitory looms
this year for possession ol
marijuana
i cxas, like Kciii jiaic ami
many other schools, is dealing
with heroin lor (he first time
this school yeat as the use ol
hard drugs filters through the
college ranks to schools where
they were not a problem in the
past.
At the same time, students
say the use of hard drugs is
down significantly at schools
like Harvard and Berkeley
where it was widespread in the
past.
READING POPULAR
Sitting down with a hxk
has become an increasingly
popular occupation on campus.
For example, the
competition for spots in law
and medical schools has
increased tremendously as
students flock to careers that
Mil
chance foi n good
income while preserving ihe
social relevance they seek
50 LAW MED
More than 50 pei cent ol
last year's Stanford graduating
class said they wanted to go
into law oi medicine.
The ecology movement on
.mipus has experienced a stuli
not ol goals, but ol ways to
achieve them Recycling
projectl are still in vogue, bul
students are more Irequently
IJkllig I ouises lo learn how In
deal with the causes ol
environmental problems
I ven with quiet prevailing
now mi mosl campuses, many
administrators aie holding their
breathj
I li.m mor than a little
concern aboul what happen! it
these people working in the
sysieiii ir voting loi the lust
tune come away feeling it die
not work vjhI Paul Ginabenj
dean ol Itudentl ji Wim onsin.
A Symposium on the Draft foi tha REA1 House the
and Selective Service will be executive aecratary of the local
held tonight at I in the dialt hoard , and a local
' recruitei will be on hand to
basement of Aycock Hall ajMWM ans questions in thil
I Willis diatt counseloi area
Department adds course
The tconomics Department
has designed a course in
Environmental Economic! that
requires no previous
I COnomlci courses as
prerequisites Numbered Econ,
395 (Topic! in Economic!) the
three quarter hour course will
be ottered this Spring quarter
(I III 10 MM2 00) and will be
open to any undeigraduate m
any department
Beginning with a rial
outline ol economic anal, i
tor environmental problems.
Ihe COruK will diacuM land
walei jinj air pollution, the
ihortcomingi ol both the
marketplace and the
government in dealing with the
problem, and policy
alternatives foi environmental
contro
vvc mkc rrtuuLi iu
PRESENT
THIS FINE FILM!
who needs the world when you
own the moon end stars
Committee meets
The Committee on the
Status of Women will meet
January I I at 5 00 p in in the
conference room, 3rd floor
Wright Annex
A member of the North
( arolma Commission on the
I ducation and Employment ol
Vt o m en will speak All
Interested students aie Invited
to attend.
:?:?:?:?
:?:?:?:?:?
BUY
WMt
SAVE
Self-Service Gasoline
94 Octane 29.9
100 Octane 33.9
Full Service only
31.9 and 35 9
Four Locations fo Serve You
5th and Davis S. Memorial Dr.
210 W. 10th St. 14th and Charles
Italian Nite
North Dining Hall
Wed Jan. 12
Spaghetti Ravioli
Romantic Candlelitel
$1.25
per person
THE FRENCH
Carry Off the Goodies
Leonard Bernstein
'Mass'
2 records
?ZyS-s COi faO BV HE I I 'YE
? "x,xxX,xxxx?????? ???.??.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?X'X,Xv.vXxxx.??"?.? ????.?.?? wjluh d ut limc
-&p?& F?r Next To Nothing
LEONARD BERNSTEIN'S
THE RECORD BAR
Ralph's Raving Record Reductions
Alice Cooper KILLER' Kantner & Slick
'Sunfighfer'
Bangla Desh
3 record set
Rolling Stones
'Hot Rocks'
2 record set
5.99
10.50
3.79
3.79
3.79
Jesus Christ Superstar
original Broadway Cast
4.99
Isaac Hayes 'Black Moses1
2 record set
Any 3 Stereo Budget Classics
Don McLean
'American Pi
Bob Dylan Greatest Hits vol. II
Led Zeppelin IV
Faces 'Nod is Good
David Frye 'Nixon Superstar'
Bad finger 'Stright Up'
Peter Nero 'Summer 42'
Paul McCartney
'WINGS'
3.79
T. Rex
'Electric Warrior'
3.79
3.79
4.79
3.79
3.79
WILD LIFE
Paul & Linda McCartney
Denn S.wn D?nr i .?n?
T.REX
ELECTRIC WARRIOR
3.79
YES album 'Fragile
5.18 lisf now
2.99
3.29
these comparable tapes
5.29
where available
SEALS A CROFTS
YEAROF8UND?r
3.79
5.99
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COLUMBIA CLASSICS
5.98 list ?eKL per disc
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?i
3
3
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)
I
I
JOCK JULIAN
"NT
.JJ
vxHAT DD ICC tC
LAT NI6WT ?t?m
JVC ,M?( RcCMiC
;Rrtet Me on AflD Th?K
?jott to ?3ee jo?-mmy
by Tronic Lcetj
Model Abortion
Program
Imnu diate Help With N
WlCKERSHAM
WOMENS
Medical
Center
I l IMMIAI II
MICK : ION SI R ICE
1 ?! II I III) WITH t I K
METROPOI ITAN Ho il
I lnciiiallcd s.ili-iy rei
i
I gyne-
i and ti
CrniTal inrsthi ?
patient comfort
Low cost rtion
durca
Pregnant
Id ? ks I) f, Slr,()
up I" 14 ?ks I) ?, C, $25(1
14 24 i eeka S.ihnt' or
Mr. hanii .il Indui lion $4x
In ill .t m uri'U
pregnancy, Wickersham'i med-
leal lafet) standard! require
overnight hns;in.il itaj i
Preo professional cr Ices
available to .ilmrtnin patients
mi ludr psyi hiatric counseling
family planning ,md birth con-
trol N'ii referral noeded No
referral fee or ontnbution so-
ever Private Confiden-
tial No red taps
DIRECT SERVICE LINE
TO MEDICAL CENTER
(212) PLaza 5-6805
Call 8 AM !o 8 I'M
Mondays through Saturdays
X 'S HAR.D TO BEH&VE THAT TrtESE
RE TH-E &ET Tx-AE-S OP 00. LIVE S i
ARA MART
itcm vatnutA Convenience fftobe
HAROLD YOF K says: You too,
can be a VIP GET HIGHLY
Glen dale Courts Apartments is now involved ivitn HOWARD LEE tor
taking applications 3 Congress. 'Volunteer in Politics In
Bedrooms-$80.50. 2 Concert vote
Bedroom s-$ 7 2. 5 0, unfurnisned?
except kitchen appliances. Call
756-1975. Glen dale Courts
Apartments. Hooker Road, Apt.
B31.
r
THQ5t 8ASTARPS
'fiyfUT 5WIE plk
Efl?sijt& sewn
foMHZ olo rtR
iajfesrURAM - t
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FOR SALE
WANTED
Beit Buckles Mak.nq Belts' Need R,ae needed to Philadelphia
Solid Antioue Brass Buckles' $100 Wednesday. January 13tn or wan.
eacn or $9.00 asst. doen. lo renl a u, (or four days Ci
758-0638. 752-5371, Mike Kovacevlc.
xx:x.vx
FEATURING
milk, fruit juice, pepsi,
bread, canned goods,
cookies, cold cuts, bacon,
eggs, cheese, fresh fruits,
vegetables, soap powder
transcendental meditation
i
w-
:
?'?or
5ixWS:?H
Open Hon. thru Sat. till 6:30
X?'????????? v.v.vv ;?;???-??
Save StepsShop on Campus
Located at Jones Cellar

a taugrrt by
Mahaiishi
Mahesh
Yogi
Trwcwlwa nwdHation is natural epentanaoue
tachnioju. which aitow. aaaejj individual to eapendhie
conectous mind and Improve ail npKti o? Ufa.
Two Introductory Lectures
Thursday, January 13
6:00 and 7:30 P.M.
EP 104
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? j:?
Pirates pound VMI, 62-57;
Peszko, patience pave path
KT??
By DON TRAUSNECK
Sporit Editor
Patience proved a virtue for
the Pirates Saturday night as
Ray Pesko's 17 points paced a
: 57 triumph over the pesky
VMI Keydets
Playing beloie a home
crowd of nesrly 5,000, the
favored Pirates nearly threw
away their second game in
three nights after leading by
as many as nine points late in
the contest
However. Pesko put the
Pirates out of trouble with two
baskets in the final five
minutes Two free throws each
by Jim Fairley and Dave
Franklin didn't hurt the locals'
cause either after VMI closed
to within 54-51
ECU coach Tom Quinn, who
helplessly watched Thursday as
his team blew a 12-point lead
to lose to Richmond, 68-67,
must have thought he was
watching an instant replay
Still, Quinn was able to
breath a sigh of relief as the
Pliates pulled awa for then
fourth win in 11 games.
The coach attributed the
win to a slicing delense and the
individual work of Pesko and
Nick wiutc, uiin i ontributed
seven points
"They have a trying
offense he said "Hut our
entire team played well against
them h was good one to
win "
Following Pesko in scoring
fol the Pirates weie Jim I air ley
with 14 points and Dave
Franklin with 10. Al Faber,
who missed two days of
practice before the game, did
not suit up and his status with
the team was questionable
The Pirates, who travel to
St. Peters Wednesday night and
then return home Saturday
hoping to improve upon their
2-2 Sou the in Conference
record, had a rough tour during
the holiday break
After losing to the Citadel in
Charleston, 89-86, the Pirates
began a trip which carried
them more than halfway
accross the country to the Oral
Roberts Classic in Tulsa. Okla
1(1 did not laic too badly,
finishing third in the
tournament The Pirates beat
( oiinecticut in the consolation
game. 74-64, after losing to
I oyola of Los Angeles. 87-68,
in the opening round
Flbci and Jerome Owens led
the Pirates in the tournament,
scoring 4 1 and 28 points
respectively.
Then came Dayton in the
"Buckeye State" and the
Pirates put on a strong fight
only to lose, 86-72, despite
Faber s 22 points
The Pirates ended their road
trip on a successful note,
winning at Southern
Mississippi. 96-86. before
returning home for Thursday's
disaster with Richmond.
Against Richmond, the
Pliates held what seemed a
commanding lead al 6.V51
with 8 48 left. However, the
Spiders chipped away until Jeff
Snider laved in the winning
basket with only 14 seconds to
The Pirates called a time-out
and had a chance to win the
game but the evening ended
with a scramble under the ECU
board alter a missed shot
January 1 I. 1972, Fountainhead. Page 5
Wrestlers wrangle WCSU
(Photo by R oss Mann)
JIM FAIRLEY FINDS the going rough on his way to
the basket Saturday night. Nevertheless, he hit for 14
points to go with 22 and 21 he scored in two previous
ECU contests on the way to being named the Southern
Conference Player of the Week. The Pirate star also had
28 rebounds and played fine defense in the three games.
One ol the hottest wrestling
iquadi in the ountry will be m
Mmgesoliaeum tomorrow
nighi when the Piratei
entertain Wen Chcstei State at
8 p in
I In I' I lot. is currently
ranked 18th national!) In
Wrestling News I I though
4-0, is unranked.
Coached b Milt Collier,
Wealheatet State finished the
1970-71 season with a dual
marl ol 104 and a national
ranking ol 29th The squad is
Pi tl Gillespte, a juniot
who u js sixth .it I SO, and II
coach John Welboin is
expecting "a very tough
match
An exhibition is scheduled
foi 7 30 pan
The Pirates received a
morale booal foi ilns match
last weekend when the) swept
a quadrangular meet held in
Raleigh ECU heat tough
Auburn, 2-4-1 I . and crushed
host State. J7-4, and I he
lei, 43-3.
Bill Hill (twice). Roger
Lunds. Jim McCloe Roger
Ingalls, Dick O'Lena, Dan
Monroe and John Hubei all
recorded lulls foi the Piratei
IU lost only four of the 30
individual matches during the
das and three others ended in
diaws Monroe, Lundy,
McCloe. Hill. Huber and Bob
Vrooffl all won three matches
Bruce Hall and Tim Gay also
had a win apiece
I he Pirates did well during
the recent holiday as well,
competing strongly in the
Maryland Fereration
I uinament in Rockville, Md .
and the Wilkes Open in
Wilkes-Barre. Pa
At Rockville. the Pirates
Mailed Yale, Navy and
Shippensburg State in team
points but had an individual
winner in Monroe at 126
pounds
Host Carolina Saturday
Swimmers sputter in State snare
By IKE EPPS
Stall Writer
North Carolina State
displayed its nationally-ranked
power Saturday in swimming
to an 85-28 victory over 1(1
outmanned mermen
The talented Wolfpack took
firsts in all but two events, and
backed up these wins with five
second place finishes on their
way to setting foui meet
records.
"It's pretty tough to be
cheerful after a loss like this,
but we expected a rought
meet said Pirate coach Ray
Scharf "They out-scholar ship
us 16-1 and the talent is really
there
"The guys who won for us
did a good job and on the
whole, we turned in some
pretty good times he added
ECU WINS
Pirate wins came in the
50-yard freestyle on Paul
Trevtsan's 22.5 second finish;
and in the 200-yard individual
medley as Wayne Morris
recorded his best effort of the
year with a 2:03.36 finish
Norris also took third in the
200-yard butterfly with a time
of 2:03 46
Jim Griffin, who won the
team s "Apricot Award" for
the meet's best performance,
recorded his best times of the
season as he took second in
Freshmen
flub fifth
The Baby Pirates dropped
their fifth game without a win
this season. 71-68 to
Richmond's Baby Spiders
Thursday night, and will face
Frederick Military Academy
Saturday
The game is a preliminary to
the varsity contest and is
scheduled to start at 5:45 pjn.
In the loss to Richmond, the
Baby Pirates were led in
scoring by Tom Marsh with 19
points and Bob Ringer with 16
ECU led by as many as 14
points in the second halt and
seemed to have its lust
freshman win wrapped up but
the locals folded under
pressure.
both the 100-yard freestyle
and the 200-yard freestyle with
nines ol 48 X3 seconds and
I 48.09. respectively.
Gary Frederick took second
in the 1000-yard freestyle with
a time of 10.47.93; and his
5:12.01 earned him third in
the 500-yard freestyle. These
mark his best efforts of the
year.
Bobby Vail. Dave Kohler.
Steve Holt. Henry Morrow and
diet: Hinchman also had stiong
events and Ron Hughes, Dan
House. Dan Leller, Andy
?k
Photo by Ross Mann)
DIVER THAD SZOSTAK appears to be suspended in
mid-air as he goes into his dive off the low board in
Saturday's meet with State. Pirates bowed, 85 28, to the
nationally prominent Wolfpack.



?
?







?

?




?
?
?
Warn sfc?n
pt lil ? ?? ,oth & Evans
is open 7 A.M. to 1 A.M.
Get Your Dorm Floor on the
HAPPY STORE SCOREBOARD
"When Hunger strikes, We're Open"
Quick In 4 Quick Out Food, Milk a Drugs, Sundrie
B??r. Imported and Domestic
Wines, Champagne chilled
Party Beverages Below
Supermarket Prices

Huey's Now Open Sundays
If you Eat Food - TRY HUEY'S
located on Charles St. extention
adjacent to Mmges Col
MC Stocks?owner
ECU Alumnus NOW OPEN
All 7 Days Of The Week
Schmidt and Dave Williams
drew praise from Scharf for
their efforts in trying to upset
the Wolfpack.
'NO DISASTER'
"We had some great efforts
and so the meet wasn't a total
disaster he said.
In the one-meter drve. Jack
Morrow finished third. Doug
Emerson, fourth, and Thad
Szostak. fifth. Off the high
board. Morrow was second and
Emerson fourth.
Norris, Frederick, Hinchman
and Griffin composed the
400-yard freestyle relay team
which finished second in
3:21.67.
The loss brings the Bucs'
dual record to 1-2. They will
host Carolina in a very big
meet Saturday at 2 p.m.
I Faber still f
I with team I
:?'?
:?? Despite rumors to the S
.? contrary. Al Faber is still
ij-iwith the ECU basketball $
Steam I
j Head coach Tom Quinn ??
:?:? verified that fact from his 8
?:?: home last evening
ij; A 6-8 co-captain, Faber :j:
? through 10 games has led $
ijithe team in scoring with a
:j:14J average He has also 8
?hauled in 10.4 rebounds a ij:
$game to lead the Bucs. $
X $
??X,X,X"XX,X,X"W;
I HELP
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Monroe's pin in 5 44 was
the only fall recorded in the
finals and enabled him to be
named the meet's
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Mike Spohn. wrestling
unattached from ECU, was
thud at I 58 and Vroom took
fourth ai I ix O'Lena, Hall
and Glenn baker also
performed well for the Pirates
In the Will '?' ' fpen nown
as the "Rose Bowl of
Wrestling four of the ax
entered Pirates placed
Spohn lust in lasf year's
national champion in the finals
at 158 Monroe firuehed thud
in the I 26 class. Hill was third
at 177; and McCloe was fourth
at 142
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T
I
ountainhead
8UloUaA and tommenlaiy
and the truth shall make you fret'
Involvement a necessity
in upcoming campaign
i impaign promises have begun to
clutter the jh us the 2 presidential
gel den aj
For the firsl t all ECl students
will be eligible to participate in the
elections Some have ahead) become
actively involved with the candidates in
their bids foi their respective parties'
nominations
Howevei because the 1'itt i ounty
Board ol I is refuses to allow 1 I
students to registei to vote, students will
have to direct their support ol their
candidates in another mannei
Such support has already been shown
In the McCiovern supporters on campus
I hough M. i' n was unable to keep
his scheduled appearance because ol .1
senatorial obligation, he did come to
? t.ilk with students -it .1
reception latei that day ?
haps it is inconceivable to hope
that the rc-si of the candidates will make
.1 appearance before the student bod
However, students themselves can
present the platforms and philosophies
of tlnet respective candidates to then
fellow students
It is through the communication of
these tacts and promises that each
student will be able to form his own
conclusions of the candidates' platforms.
It is the responsibility o every ECU
student to learn the tacts before making
his decision
Obviously the Put County Board ot
I lections has no faith in the maturity of
ECU students in their abilities to make
decisions It is up to each student to
discredit this misconception
Active support of a particular
candidate is not the only solution A
genuine desire to find out about all the
candidates and then form conclusions
will play an important part in showing
not only the Pitt County Board of
' lections but the entire state that
students are mature enough to make
such decisions
Higher education affected
by student dress, attitude
EDITOR S NOTE The following article is tha
fust in a series which it being reprinted in
f- ouniaheed with The permission of Dr John
P East and Universitai magame Or East is a
tscultv member ot the ECU Political Science
depertm ent
By JOHN P EAST
Ma nvolved in college .md university
. avc become increasingly distressed b
??.mimed intellectual deterioration on nui
s s rhomas Motnar has analyzed it in
"The l-uturtr 01 Education institutions 61
'highet teaming" seem to be little more than
echnical training foi
even worse, in some isc
have become the revolutionary
??jv . the ;? ttam Utopia ki
?! the Jf. at N-si highei
- ihallow atul frivolous, jih! too
grading
is several years we lu- soon the
iui - alters j
ippearance, permissiveness
s and the uu reasuig
is il " It tolation
linoi Bgnificance bi
. kdi i ? the
they lake on mes
STUDENT SLOVENLINESS
ients tus goili
whl II ill
I
assi? the
M S3
ften exceeds s disregard
eanliness and
1
i'CltV
rhe petti ,
reels .1 pii,Hind
' - ?? ?. deny ing the
? ? rival
tequences
M w . . ? 1 c (hij question l
Hie modern
y all I jih! he
? n man s raves
s ' 1 - . I in lecent
? ? rgi iculttes for a l ?ing
:j
loco parenUs" on OUl campuses has been dead
lor sometime, however, the matter of
permissiveness in class attendance goes beyond
that to the very integrity ol the academe
process
l with personal slovenliness, indifference to
class attendance is evidence of the
aim mtellectualism on our campuses, tor it
shows a repudiation ol the personal discipline
and perseverance which are essential to
excellence in any pursuit, u luduig the world
.it learning and scholarship
ANALYZES SITUATION
Tlie next step tor college taculties may be to
k themselves from the need tor Jays
attendance, and then the American university
may expire In simply adourning "sine die
1 he most "in" thing jt present on our
?mpusea is the pressure lor "pass-fail" systems
l Ins is iiu- system that dllw, no distinction to
be made between the "A" and "D" itudcnt-the
studeni eithei Passes 01 I ails
It is .1 crude system in thai 11 minimizes the
possibilities nt drawing distui. nuns among
students on the basis ol demonstrated talent
and efforl I nany n is educational
egalitarianism, and its fetish foi leveling, at its
SS f si
BACKS SYSTEM
I he proponents oi "p.iss 1 jd ontend that it
will allow students to 'experiment" with
?vithoui the iiil and "pressure" .m
Othei letlc, tive jiuI serious observers ol the
campus scene see it otherwise s profesaot
George Douglas ol tin- I niversity ol lllinoiahai
succinctly stated It in The Intercollegiate
Review ' pass fall courae is simply dim thai
the studeni need put in only the smallest
amount ol effort la get by howevei nobly the
in utoi may be looked at m theory
I he (ruth in that students look Of) the
i.iss fail courae (quite practically) not as a ?ji
ot broadening intellectual horizons, but as a
was ot lightening ihr woik load " "I'avs fill"
denies an in liapenaabk Ingradtanl to quality
education namely, the puraull ol aoademit
excellence s with slovenltneas, and classroom
permissiveness ibe pre mi re foi "pass tail' is
evidence ol the continuing intellectual
deterioration on the American campus
The concept ol "in
-Xyc ?
fountAinhead
Jim Backus
8. s '??? i'a"vr'
Cathy Johmon
iditoi mChiw
Bob McDowell
Aci.trtistng Vjnjger
David Allison
kltnsgmg Editor
New tdit.w
I aaturaa fdittx
SftorSiEsMur
Pttoto Edtsor
Cirailaaan I
C leutlie Hum felt
Kenan Ula.Kftel.l
Don 1 lemiKK
M.s. Mann
Jaw Applfte
l?e L Baker
r Withes! bv stuttemi H East Carolina Un.vssrsnv PO etox
MA cireenville North Ceyol.se 171U4 Advert open 'it ??
St 90 oei column bath Oeesi'ead i? $1 00 o teat 'wat Zi eaOrdJe
SutKiiuliiM ite .1 SIOOO pev v?Sat Telesahon 'teg SJgej
tT.rtaJam lnrz
The student mouth
It's the right time
by Rick Mtz
It's not the shaggy halt nor the bell bottoms
nor the love beads nor the tie-dyed shirts that
give the student his image It's his mouth
The student mouth is a complex creature It
can shout at demonstrations, whimper through
1 ove Story, gasp in horror at the atrocities of
war But none of these gnes us away as
students It's the Meaningful Dialogue -? the
igag big talk and the spaced-out small talk -
that makes the student mouth - from tooth to
lip - the unique organ it is
Being a mouthy student. I decided to
investigate the subject. I decided to get right to
the throat ot the problem I asked a student
what he perceived student language to be.
The stud lingu' Man. that went out with
the fifties Rapping isn't where it's at. man It's
a big head trip And y.iu've got to have a good
head in order to have a good mouth Dig0 Got
the scene' It's a regular high "
INVESTIGATES LANGUAGE
Sutfenng from a regular low I decided that
perhaps the best way to investigate student
language was to observe it I rangled myself an
invitation to the Student l.ile Seminar
workshop party and picked up a few mouthy
nd bits there
I waikil through a beaded doorway and
Introduced myself to a tail, skinnv
poi I marked girl "And who jo- .u I jsked
"Who am I you ask ' she asked "I could
tell win I'm Delorei Shiumpte rhat's true
hue I am DelorCS Sfllumpla Yrs Yes You've
probably already guessed oi the famous
Nn.iik Shlumple i.nnii Some people all me
)rr Hi.i win, .mi I reallyI am the sun I am
the moon i mi i trtnga concoction ol
whalrwi sou want me lu be and what I am not
and what I would likI I i br I jm mv famous
Father's daughtet and be is mv son i JMI
comples ot complexes According to my
analyst, I am a profound combination ol
-?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:??
the opinions eoptsaaed an tSSI
ilv tttoear u? t?t Ca
kSNVvSiV.vNSNNsf?Nssfsssj,xsts?
Manager resigns
I o I ountalnhead
it is with tsMpregrel thai l hews irugned my
position with WEC1 Railio I leave the ollu e ol
genetal maiiagri onK aflei long .onsideiation
ot thr mallei
Mans paraoaal problemi base ,auril thu
decision I hope m lesign.ilion will not damage
any ot the tiiendslups I have established at
WMl and with Oth? ItudsMM heie al BCD I
alv batSM thai no one will think that this is
done with malice oi undii piessuir. becausr it
is not
I would like to thank, all ol those (teopk- who
have helped nve dunng my two and hall seat
association with the stjioii I hope thai the
student ol I as Carolina will continue lo
suppoit WHT
Carl D?v?
Thanks paper
To Kountauthead
I wotikl like to thank 1 ounUinhead foi :tv
tine wtileip thai was gieu lo the new SI. ?.
sual attairs committee V spessal thanks (fs
to Shens Bucturuin
I wvukl ilso like so say that th? commute
will b hassrta i mertung next ??k The
committee is opn lo the students and we ne?i
Jocasta and Oedipus, searching, searching,
searching for the right womb "Say she said,
pausing "Who did you say you are'1"
MEANINGFUL DIALOGUE
A group of mini shirts were standing around
talking about their home ec class Suddenly, a
large boistetous girl ? with sensitive eyes -
pushed her way into the crowd. "Hey, sisters
Let's have a little group dynamics here A little
meaningful dialogue My name is Betty and my
primary interest is people And, of course, the
on-going life process We've got to get
organized, sisters Let's have a little intense
on-going rap session here You're all good
heads Now get it together "
"Urn said a small blonde coed "I made a
relevant blouse the other day With a peace sign
on the left shoulder
"Hello I said to a sad-looking girl sitting on
a pillow "Talk to me "
"You married
"No
"You want to get1"
"Not really "
"I knew it' Reiection once again. Cecelia
she cried aloud to hersell "SI 5,000 it cost
Mom and Daddy to send me to school ?? that's
room boaid and tuition, bonks clothes and
pills That doesn't even include the nose oh.
the hau transplant, (he dermatologist's bills and
getting my ears pierced, which is alieady
sending Daddy lo the poor house " She
straightened out her Si I juirt.i chemise "All
that to send littlelei to college so she could
Imd a husband Well look at RM look al me.
will you' What good did it do1 Do I look
engaged to you7 l ook at my lett hand Do you
see an engagement ling' I vrn a nng niaik As
naked as Adam it I COUld only find Hun
What's wiling with me' Why ,?n'l I gel a
man
"You mean old man I Interrupted
"I don't like old men "
"No no no You've got to learn to talk with
it "
"With what' I shoud learn to talk1 SI.500
they spend on braces and he's telling me I don't
know how to talk
"The student jargon You've got to learn to
be hip - or is it hep0 Well, whatever Why don't
you go over to that guy sitting there with his
legs crossed and ask him how Felix is Ask him
if he's got an old lady Maybe you two can, ah,
groove together "
"Well, what the hell she said, getting up.
"It doesn't cost anything Thanks she said,
and then added. "Daddy-o
The kid and Cecelia were married two weeks
later in one of those terribly Now new
weddings in Central Park Cecelia wore gold
lame Correges boots Felix froze his navel off
Ciel's father is buying hirt a new one
"What are you doing here1" a bespectacled,
bebearded fellow said, grabbing my arm. "Why
are you wasting your time when there's a war
going on, killer1 People are starving in Africa,
glutton Women are discriminated against,
chauvinist pig Iducation needs reforming,
dummy There's crime in out big cities,
criminal The plight of the migrant worker,
racism, the drug problem And you're sitting
heie at a paity "
"But so are you I pointed out
'Thai's different he said "This is my
paity Excuse me " He walked ovei to another
guy "What are you doing here1 People are
statving in Africa, glutton
"I ai out. man the kid answered "Like,
inn, like, well, like, s know. ffOOV) . wow. like
man, like I can't lelate It's a teal bummet and
like all that but. wow
I had had enough Between all the relevance
and lelatmg. the head tups and the dead trips, I
deiide.l to like split I matched tight out of the
ivnty to the beat ol a different dtumnfrt
:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:??:?:?:?:?:
;?:?:?:? .xsSttStts: :? Ws'sss:sSsNsXsNv:y.
The Forum
W:ss:xn?xsx .s ?NsssJjvNxss
yOUI help
All students who would like to ,iu this
committee ate Invited to do ? lim oommtttes
has been set up loi thr puipoar ol lollcviion
and distribution ol inlotmatinu peilaiiilng In
sexual pioblems (i r pirsrudon and line of V'D
prevention ol unwanted pieguanuei
aboitionsl and duelled towaul 111 ntulrnls.
i ampus, and tuiiouuding aira
We waul iludrnls lo know wheie to go fo
help (il wanted) in the aiea, not wheie lo go
oul ol stale oi something
I his is impoilanl il is nredrd'
All Interested students please , oiHa, I
Michael tdwaids 'sr, J(, 'f,
SO A Day Stuitemt Has.
Miohaol I !?? it.
Urges students
10 Fnuiilainhead
Political apathy is a sub?cl olten mentioned
duung any discussion ot the youth vole Much
ot ihu apathy. I tetl. will t? .omeiud u,
action as eflectlye leadciship national ami
local, and emotional issues take hold lheie n
one aiea. boweyei that may pioe uniespn-iisiye
the cunem cviucnun ot some students towaid
estiMishmeut psdilus
Resolution is a ?isj ollen utd by il,t?
gioup but RM otlen as a Is iu in ? K,k un
than as a plan u ettecltve action Siudeut, b?U
bottom tiouaets do not a lesosuliou make'
RheioiK will not cuunteraol ihe .uneni
Nixon Mitchell gioumiwoik lot a systematic
nndeimiiung ot the Bill ot Rights
Ihe tadicals" aie uitelkvtualuing and
?coring heavy debating points against Spuo
gnew while loin soiiartsatiyes tit (Xing
SPOOeTtted to ihe Supieme Costrt leuakuig the
?o,ial pmcess lot the next geneiatton This
.iiiirni ivniium o sell defeating and duectly
assists Nixon m outllankuig the cft
I would uige that we students gel kafl our
non poliiual asies. mlomi ouisebes, rvgistet.
sole and woik loi ihse sandidates who will
put oui nation mlo the twentieth ,nturx
HoeMet L Caaassci
Forum Policy
Siuik-nts and cmpkiyes of ths' I'iirscruls aiv
urged hi WfsfCjej then tsgtMiM IN I
Lettetl shouWI rs- sXMistsc and lo the ?
LaMttX shonKI not ex,v MQ ?
nuisl bv iyVd 0 punted o
Ihe van is mum the ughl to -ju al
Ivll.is loi sly a giautuvilwal eitois and ?
Ml tenets . Hist r?? Mgtts nh tr?e tatsne c?r
mi vi I ivn ilw wine , st h na-s?
will M ssiihhv'j
N I f MI(giUtat e?. ? f Isj
I ?.ouainlH-ad ?ill tx pehttad SaalgM M ih
aboytm.l vllvsl the agfctaastOf ?'? ? ? .
ot IWixceSBld) ih.nsf ot ? j.
I ?? I aiotina I msctvly


Title
Fountainhead, January 11, 1972
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
January 11, 1972
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.149
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39595
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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