Fountainhead, October 27, 1970


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





?
hursday, (htohei l')7o
?orum
raid
tpproximately 12 30 a.m.
vsmen's dormitories by
from "up on the lull
is a friendly gesture and
ed bv a majority oi Hie
lents Something like tins
"monotony" and adds a
omecoming.
e a few people who had
e of i! According to the
tail membei oi the
would think the dorms
alien beings ()i i ourse
it Ing down
I uill choose to vail it in
influence his careei
re I Jose Before
lion at l l decides to
(governor, tor example),
ow to handle a simple
having to drag out the
olice vii police, house
;ade rs (i l!
Angrily yours,
A seeker of healthy fun
a
ure to li.e the I asi
n Football Ieam .is
l;nda Including the
forty-nine, We never
ire immaculately attired
group oi young men.
lem had Jose trimmed
.eitamlv was not an
pie-type in this group
the homes from which
chool lhe represent
e in order to Coach
issociates It is evident
iles foi then bovs ami
ns
Wilhamshurg and then
tunan Team at William
he young men thanked
Believe us. it was our
r visit, our statt all
has a great deal going
Management Castle Inn
The preceding letter is
ssion from the Suffolk
i970i
neer
v'on Klor's" letter in the
ivimis to me that he is a
an, especially as a judge
parent interest in the
d like to invite him no
I dare him to come to
nplaintS ahout last v ear's
ideas he might have lor
uhar with the location of
trout doors ot Vtight
I the left-hand stairs Our
, past the doors to the
rs ate
l:nda 11 Oil 1 : DO
10 00 It these
ry to him, contact me at
ange t meel with you at
?day Friday or 00
he come on I uesday or
I have time to talk, and
o give linn "justifiable
leer getting such a high
fC him valid reasons foi
ik
man enough to vok e In-
to people who can di
namely the Buccaneei
rislt. I will be looking
Very sincerely
Faye Shoffner
Managing Editor
eesof the University art
opinions in The Forum
mcise and to the point
ceed 300 words
l? ngiit to edil all letter-
length.
agned with the name of
riter's request, his name
every letter
I be pruned subject to
,lts page reflect the
ind not necessarily those
r I "1 arolina
President opens mike
WECU hosts Dr. Jenkins
By JANET PIERCE
(Star i
I' I I'tesidenl I eo Jenkins and Hob Whitley
s. President wen- guest speakers on Open
Mike lasl week I his spontaneous and
unrehearsed program is hosted by (ail liavis
and comes ovei will each Wednesday night
from 9 io lo p.m
huimg the program students call the station
?it 758-61 I and direct then questions to the
guest I here is no hunt to the topic
Ihe lust filler ol the evening asked Jenkins
il Ik would be seeking the gubernatorial
nomination in 1972 He answered negatively bui
said n was quite a compliment to him
personally
NO SUSPENSIONS
When asked about Illinois that some
participants in the recent panty raid hail been
suspended from school, Jenkins said, "No one
has been suspended to my knowledge I he final
reports "t any suspensions would have to come
igh my office, and I have received none
lie added that he knew ol no serious charges
and i'n drunkenness or "ugliness during the
raid II lenkins asked the caller, "Don'l
you think it was a little juvenile? You are
supposed to be ai college foi si .
Ills statement that girls standing in the
windows o! ihe dorms dunng the pant) laid
would be expelled was merely a satciv measure.
Jenkins said However, when asked what he
would do il he weie a girl with 600
outside ihe dorm, he admitted he would
probably go to the window
One sophomore asked Jenkins, "VMiv do
sophmon-s have to stay in ihe dorm
According to Jenkin a study was made by the
Directoi ot Admissions and the Resean h
Department oi students living in the dorms and
those living oil cam, us "It show.
correlation between dorms and grades.
particularly in undergraduate levels" Jenkins
said
A study of students living in dorms
and those living off campus "showed a
correlation between dorms and grades,
particularly in undergraduate levels
said Jenkins.
Iheie ue two pjy phones on each floor, the
student said "but he added, "there are only
lour working in the dorm wo are missing and
another takes your money Jenkins assured
the student that he would check into the
situation with the phone company
One controversial topic discussed was
visitation. Although one hoy complained that
there was not enough "1 it. both Jenkins and
Whitley said that there were two sides to the
question Some boys and mils did not want
visitation. Concerning the topic. Jenkins said.
"We've come a long way m live years
Othei students commented on visitation
ne said that everyone he knew favored it and
anothei said that all the girls in Greene Dorm
favored it U io
One dorm student complained that copiet ol
Ihe Rebel had not been properly distributed
According to the student, he had received only
twi i copies in ' ? I
understand that
ited the
I OUNTAINHI VD
( , m ising Whitli
vie was overwhelmingly foi n In an ?? a
student whi thought
buses. Whitley said that hopefully tl
from the refrigerators would bi
thud bus
One studer plained thai the
I OIN I AIMII D was supposed.ti I
newspaper and asked. '
I news' So fai I have noi seen the SGA
tion return- Al' j fine, but
knothei criticized the report oi the
Homecoming entertainment lor excluding the
organist, Perry Walt
Guess Wi. i
MEDICAL SCHOOL
One student asked Jen! u 'Why
fountain so low Jenkins agreed that
he beautiful when it hat!
He said he would make j note to d
It
Other topics discussed included Ml
foi a medkai school, the future Department ol
( riminology. the contn ivei ? laying
"Dixie" at ball
Schi I B iness, and the review il
the Homecoming parade
One final eallei thanked Jenkins fi
"Open Mike He told her that he would like to
he invited ti dorm I I
session
ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free
V olume II. Number I"
Greenville, Nonhan
uesdav. Oci I
Sfan said rebellious
Origin of the peace symbol
?
(Statt photo by Stephen Neal)
THE PEACE SYMBOL will remain free for everybody's
use, including corporations. The U.S. Patent Office
refused to give commercial trademark rights to two
competing companies.
REAL encounter group
helps aid students
will have facilities and stall to
help anyone who feels he has a
drug problem, with particulai
emphasis on helping someone
who is having a bad trip on a
hallucinogenic drug
Anothei important area In
which Rl AI will serve the
youth ol the community is in
possible suicide cases Ihe
psychologists on the adult
advisory committee will screen
and train certain staff members
of Rl Al m the methods ol
coping with suicide calls I here
will be a named Staff membei
oi members on call 24 hours a
day at REA1 headquarters
Most ol these siati members
will also be named m fust aid
Kl Al had its beginning as
an encountei group and will
sponsoi siuiilai type groups foi
anyone in terested in
participating Ihe purpose oi
an encounter group is lo
dis, uss problems and find
possible solutions th "uh
discussion
One ot the hig: 'si problems
fat ing Kl l is finances I he
iniation is hoping foi
contributions from interested
members ol the community In
addition, there is a financial
committee working on wavs
tor members io raise money
Ihe SGA contributed Ssoo to
Rl 1 lo help get the group
star i
Kl Al s phone number is
?- 'issn : 152 9485
By CATHY JOHNSON
Ihe peace symbol cannot be registered as the
trademark ot a single company a spokesman
for ihe l s Patent Office disclosed recently
Ihe ageric based Its decision ?? the
extensive ust ot the sign and the number ol
companies - ;eking its registration
Ihe Intercontinent Shoe Corp ol New York
and LUV, Inc . were competing tor commercial
trademark rights tor the pi-jc symbol,
according to the patent offic e
Ihe sign, widelv used as an arm war proles!
symbol, has been the subject ot much
controversy by those who view it as an
"anti-Christ" and Communistic infiltration
product
Ihe right-wing fundamentalists label the
sv mbol as "ihe broken aoss' oi ihe anti-Christ
In the July 1968 issue : 1 r, ? Enterprisi
these people attacked lime magaine as
promoting 'he Communist infiltration by using
a pictui oi ,i bearded youth wearing the
broken j? and labeling il as the 1968
(collegeI graduate on its June 7, 1968 covei
I lies also believe the garment mdustrv
furthers the sabotage ol Vmerican and Christian
morale by producing clothing bearing ihe pea e
sign, according to ihe article
The svmhol. tiisi used in modification in
America as the nuclear disarmament sign, is
actually an outgrowth ol the witch's foot" oi
"crow's toot a common symbol ol the devil,
according 10 the Book oj Sivns by Rudolph
Koch
Ihe Star-News newspapei in Padadena, CaJ
(Ocl 24, 1968) carried the following
bv
ed
information concerning th rigii
sign.
" r inverted lot l mlike the
so-called Aider m i 'blem ?.h
in tat used - M
rebels against the monolithic Christian
Catholic Church (though probabl;
Luther and Calvin I
'Such rebels th e church
"anti-Christ
The article explained that th ?
which also resembles a B-52 bombei and a
"chicken trak" is also used by Oldsmobile
I his does not imply any relationship with
chickens, bombers oi ars. the Star-News
explained
I he s mbol's tirst use as ? pe I
Ihe late ll)40s when it was used '
I ugland led by Lord Bertrand Russell
It was developed by superimposing the
semaphore larrn and Hag) code signs tor V
(both arms out like an inverted "V")
(one straight up. the other down), standing lor
"nucleai disarmament
rldermaston is a town 5 i miles fi
I ndon and the home oi ihe tomu V
Research establishment
One mar disturbed by the populai '
peace sign, wrote in a letter to the edit
Manchester Union Leadet newspapei in
Manchester, N II saving that the pea
svmhol ot "ihe linger' He also said that the
"new partv" svmhol should be made illegi
shipping through the mail ' i ihe
obscene connotations I urthermore. he feels it
should definitely not be allowed on ihe I
ballot
ibta" photp by Stephf" Nean
ECU PRESIDENT LEO JENKINS and students' questions on WECU's 'Open
SGA President Bob Whitley answer Mik
Freaks challenge police
but equal play is denied
Rl y a recent addition t"
ihe II campus, is i
crisis-control centet foi the
youth ol Greenville, and
univeisilv siudeiits in
particulai Beginning as an
encountei group, Rl 1 has
expanded into an organization
molded to serve as a centet
where young people with
problems .an receive help
without teai ol exposure to
parents or to authorities.
Ihe ongianl encountei
group talked to doctors,
lawyers, psychologists, and
othei such persons, whi in
turn generated interest bv
talking io othei adults n
adult advis.uv committee was
ioniied rhis committee helped
io organize the group and to
get the tentative support ol ihe
Greenville I' lii Department
and Nau otlCS So.Uad
Rl is headed bv an
executive board insisting ol
seven students Ihe members
ol ihe executive bond
appointed bv the original
encountei group, drew up
Rl Al , ?iistilulion and gol
the : iui i ready
lo fui ?
I I, adult advisoiv
committee I Rl l is made
nig number ot
mats who (rain
ihe siati members ol RIM to
which
Rl l headquarters
City Council studies proposal
By DR LEOW JENKINS
Ihe population of the city oi Greenville has
been considerably increased ovei ihe last tew
yens, largely due to the fact that ECl has
double its enrollment during the last decide
At present, we have more than 10,000
students on oui main campus in Greenville, and
out student body comprises about one-third ot
the population oi Greenville
According to some reports, ECl is
Greenville's second biggest business, second
only lo the tobacco mdustrv.
And while relations between the city and the
campus have been notably good m the past
some steps might he taken to improve them and
ensure that good rapport between "town and
gown" can be continued into the future
Such a solution might well be the recent
proposal bv Boh Whitley, president ot ihe ECl
Student Government Association Wedtacussed
this beforehand, and I agree that the plan has
merit
Ihe proposal suggests that a Student
dvisop, Board to the Greenville City Council
be established In ordei to promote a better
relationship between students and the citizens
of Greenville
Whitley's proposal has been favorably
received bv the members ot the Council It
provides lor several students and Hie SGA
president to serve as a liaison between the
campus and the community
One student would seise as chairman, but
Vthitlev savs this position would probably he
loo time-consuming a task to be taken by the
SGA l'i' sideni
Not only would ihe proposed Student
Advisors. Board to the (its Council keen
students better informed about the comn it ty
but it would also give the students ?
in city governmei t. si t of tl
vote here
It the Board were established, it would be
ihe tiisi ot us kind in North I I I '?
establishment ot similai idvisory
been met with gieal siKscss in collegl
?In state oi i aliforma
Already, action is being taken to set u
Student dvisor ua Greenville Mi
frank M Wooten Jr has appointed
prominent and civic-minded sinens as v
representatives to woik with student
Government personnel to form an advisory
board
We are sure that then joint effort will be
successful East Carolina University is noted
among universities and colleges all ovei ihe
nation as having an efficient, complex and
responsible Student Government Association
In carrying out then vanous functions, the
students in the S(, demonstrate theii
capability and maturity while acquiring
valuable experience which should be ot service
io them as they graduate from 11 I and assume
leadership roles in society
According to an S ?
secretary Randy Hoi
this rime seek lo have u
Board be given powei t
Council. although si,el:
conceivably be a rnattei ot
Ihev ask merely ti
.uivisorv group and li be able todisv
matters, since manv of th, I
decisions due, ilv aff? : 11 I
spokesai.
tl SGA d not at
- Student Advisory
to v,ie in then
h. a powei might
rse in the future
be considered as an
ioIic V
GAP
MINGES UNAVAILABLE
I
B
- P
? ?
POl ICE RELUCTANT
?
"We were just trying to show that
police are people instead of machines "
-
- ?
As
. i ?
be:
1
?
?
'
Jenkins'entertain at home
E( I
?
P
S
:
v
Ihe P
the
, . f, the F
Mrs
M
- I
Mrs. I

; I
M
M
v
Met - an. Vv
Residence
? Thursday
nigh' M s Nancy
lew ? well
Miss I Mrs Ida
-
isisted
t lend ervui
. wets.
?
a hicli
and
CAMPUS SCENES
PAUL GOWER RELAXES between
classes for a game of "Risk" in the
Union.
1





Page 2, Fountamhead. Tuesday Octobei 27,1970
SGA President
reviews weekend
BvBOB WHITLEY
We have iust completed a
most successful homecoming
weekend. Despite a little
confusion concerning Sunday's
concert, out entertainment
went smoothly and was
generally well received by OUI
student bod Congratulations
are in ordei foi Russ Uzzell,
entertainment chairman and
his committee Then job is
perhaps the most difficult job
in the student government for
never can all students be
pleased with in
entertainment, and often times
they heai from only those who
are displeased I honestly feel
they luve attempted to please
as many students as possible
whuh is theii job
Congratulations are also in
oidei foi all organizations who
participated in this year's
festivities, whethet by building
a float oi b making house
decorations Special
recognition should go to Phil
Dixon, homecoming parade
chairman, and Kati Howze,
special events chairman, foi the
mam hours they put in
planning tins year's festivities.
STUDENT BEHAVIOR
Student behavioi at the ball
game was very good. Out
student body wants to do all it
can foi out team in the stands.
It is a shame to see oui players
knock heads on the field, doing
then very best foi out school
while some lew individuals in
the stands rum all the team has
done foi the school I Ins was
not the case Saturday; our
student body was one to be
proud of, 83 was out team
For frg?h fryrninq- i
N.C. has air quality laws
Outward fi
(St?ft pnoto by Stephen Neal)
MRS. INA HOCKETT, a secretary in he Alumni Affairs
Office, finds file work more comfo. table in pantsuit.
Legislators chosen
in student election secretaries enjoy
recent dress code
1 he class officers and legislatiis tin the 1970-7 1 sessionhave been
selected and are as followsWllh numbei ol votes
si MORI 1 Vss
PresidentJohn i oopei20
ice-president1 Jwaul Vskew-
SecretaryCarol Kin16.1
TreasureiCameron Payne351
Jl NIORCI VSS
PresidentBob Parkei216
Vice-president(dona Unit267
SOPHOMORI t 1 SS
PresidentSusan Hunti 1 1
Vice-presidentdreg Copley401
FRESHMAN Cl VSS
PresidentJim Ward589
Vice-presidentValerie Hutcherson574
WOMI N DORMITORV OFFICERS
FletcherCindy Maultsby124
I insteadMao Kathry n CascioliSI!
U insteadMary Nell Cavin
SlavJackie Hawkins64
RagsdaleBecky Engleman1 14
JarvisAmy Yopp30
GarrettBeveiiy Kissingei33
GreenIvorie Anthony98
GreenBarbara Ann GrodzickiHis
FlemingMelisa Thrasher39
CottenRene Auget
DAY STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES
Virginia WadsleyGeorge Zellers
Suzanne JenkinsMoffette Antwan Toiv Hams
Mike Allen"MATH"
Jim EarlyKay Flye
Rod KetnerBob Bostrom
Edward AskewDiane Spry
Gloria BrutCameron Pay ne
Walt WhittemoreCarol Kimrey
Jos Bumgardnerla; Lynne Osbom
John D Fulton"Miss Greenville"
David NicholsSieve pple
By JACKIE STANCILL
(Stan mil I
Since wintei quartei ol the
1967-68 school year, women
students have been allowed to
vveai slacks, culottes, and
shorts to i lass
I Ins year, foi the first lime,
secretaries in some university
offices are enjoy ing a more
lenient dress co('e which
permits them to wear pantsuits
to work
INDIVIDUAL CHOICE
Whethet oi not secretaries in
,i particulai office may weai
pantsuits is left to the
discretion of theii individual
bosses, according to Provost
Robert Vt Williams.
Williams stated that to his
knowledge no official word has
to be "handed down" about
office attue.
"I would not presume to tell
anv one what to vveai to work
he added "I would only
require that they be
presentable
Registrar Worth 1 Baket
sa id that practical
considerations influenced his
decision to allow pantsuits
HEATING PROBLEM
"We have a heating
problem he said, "and our
office is often cold during the
wintei Besides that, our girls
do a lot ol file work, stooping
and bending, and pantsuits are
more comfortable foi this
Baker added that Ins only
restrictions are that secretaries
wear actual pantsuits. not
slacks with blouses oi sweaters
Jackets to the suits must be
worn and tunics and vests must
he buttoned
One secretary in the
Regisliar's Oft ice commented
that the pantsuits aie a fashion
compromise which solves the
dilemma of hem lengths
By YVONNE BASKIN
(Associated Press Writer)
RALEIGH (API Don't set
a match to those piles of leaves
you lake up in your yard this
fall It's against the law.
Open burning of trash.
whethet In a municipal dump
or in your backyard, has been
outlawed along with the
emission oi black clouds from
industrial smokestacks in
Noi ih Carolina's first
concentrated piogram to
preserve the quality of the
state's ail
The State's new air quality
standaids went into effect July
I, and air pollution control
officials figure il will take at
least three years and billions of
dollars to bring every industry,
municipality and institution
into compliance.
QUALITY OF AIR
Unlike the state's efforts
against water pollution, which
began 1? years ago. North
Carolina did nol have an
agency with the authority to
make and enforce air quality
standards until 1967 when the
Department of Water and Air
Resources was formed.
A major part of the work ol
the department's air pollution
Control Division to date has
been to determine just what
the quality of North Carolina's
air is and where the sources of
pollution are
"We do not now have a
relatively significant air
pollution problem out
problem is to keep it that
way said William Knight,
chief of the Air Pollution
Control Division
SOURCE
But there is one great source
of air pollution not covered by
current state regulations which
will cost citizens money to
control in the next few years
automobiles.
Knight estimates that even if
industrial process emissions are
brought under control. 85 per
cent of the air pollution would
remain most ol it from
automobiles.
The federal government has
pre-empted the regulation of
emission controdevices on cars
by requiring manufacturers to
install them. Bui the states
have been left to control
? upkeep of the anttpollution
equipment by cat owneis.
A properly tuned vehicle
without any sort of emission
control equipment emits 2.310
pounds of pollutants per 1,000
miles. Present federal standaids
for emission devices are
designed to reduce that figure
to 140 by 1980.
The Department of Water
and Air Resources plans to ask
the 1971 General Assembly to
put emission-control
equipment under the
automobiU inspection
program.
But this is only a start.
Routine inspections could
determine whether the
equipment was still on the car
and whethet it worked at all.
but highly specialized
equipment is needed to test its
effectiveness in screening
various pollutants.
Knight said his department
eventually wants the authority
to require that each motorist
take his car in once a yeai tor a
test of the efficiency oi its
pollution-screening equipment
The equipment for such
testing is now too expensive to
be feasible, but Knight said the
probability is good that within
the next four to five years
someone will develop "a little,
black box" to do the job.
"For now we must settle for
the inspection Knight said.
"Now people wouldn't settle
for the inconvenience of the
testing. But they're going to
have to eventually if the ait is
to be cleaned up
AIR MONITORING
"But how do you define
clean air We need long-range
data for ail seasons in specific
places a permanent network
of air monitoring stations to
determine the mean annual
concentrations of various
pollutants in the air of a given
place Knight said.
Knight's division recently
completed a set of "emissions
inventories" for each county,
listing the volume of various
pollutants emitted into the air
of each county every year by
various souices
tianspoitation, stationary fuel
combustion, refuse disposal,
industrial processes and
evaporative losses
The inventories show foi
example, that in the eastern
county of Tyrell. with a
population ol only 3300 and
little industry. the open
burning of Hash and
automobile emissions account
for about 90 pet cenl ol all
pollutants put Into the
county's air each veil
AUTOMOBILE
Automobiles contribute
2.781.144 pounds ol the
3,051.587 pounds of carbon
monoxide. hydrocarbons,
paniculate matter, nitrogen
oxides and sulfur oxides
released into the county's an
annually.
The open burning of trash
contributes another 193,883
pounds of pollutants
Another 21.265 pounds ol
sulfur oxides come from
residential, commercial and
institutional heating.
The results ate somewhat
different in the highly
populated and heavily
industrialized harlotte
Metropolitan Area, which
includes nine North Carolina
and three South Carolina
counties.
An emissions inventory foi
this federally-designated an
quality control region was
drawn up by the National Air
Pollution Control
Administration
MAJOR SOURCES
The two majoi souices ol
pollution in the legion are
motor vehicles and the live
electric generating plants in the
aiea
The steam electric plants
contribute 86 per cent oi the
197.500 tons of sulfur oxides
emitted each year. 67 per cent
of the 366.300 tons of
particulates; and 62 per cent ot
the 144.400 tons of nitrogen
oxides.
Motor vehicles contribute 93
per cent of the 531.300 tons of
carbon monoxide. 70 per cent
of the 91.700 tons of
hydrocarbons and 23 per cent
of the nitrogen oxides
Gaston County, with 114
textile products plants and two
power plants, contributes half
of the sulfur oxides and a third
of the particulates and nitrogen
oxides in the region
Mecklenburg County, with a
population of 337,800 and the
largest numbei ol automobiles
contributes more than a thud
ol the carbon monoxide and
hydrocarbons in the region
OTHER COUNTIES
I he othci counties in the
region are Cabarrus, Catawba.
Cleveland, Iredell, Lincoln,
Rowan and Cnioii in North
Carolina, and Chester,
1 ancaStei and York III South
Carolina
State officials viy the
pollution from the powei
plants and open binning, as
well as othei indtistnal and
municipal pollution, can be
brought undei control by the
regulations put in force July I
I he standards forbid the
emission ol dark smoke and
any open burning, except foi
recognized agricultural
practices and certain
right-of-way clearing They also
control paniculate and sulfui
dioxide concentrations
INCREASE STAFF
When the I s Department
ol Health. Education and
Welfare develops standards foi
the control oi other specific
pollutants. besides Sulfui
dioxide and particulates, the
Boaid ot Wltei and Ail
Resources will develop
regulations foi then control
I he enforcement oi these
standaids as thev take effect
will require a continuing
increase in stall and funds foi
the An Pollution Control
Division
INCINERATORS
raxpayers will probably also
have to tool the bills tor
industrial pollution control
equipment in the form ol
higher consumer prices
Also, some 300
municipalities m the slate have
been told to find some
alternative to binning then
trash in open dumps
Incinerators start at
S50.000. and the cost oi
samtaiy landfills depends on
the cost of land State officials
say the new regulations will
mean bond issues in many
communities
Angel Flight project concerns POW treatment
Democrats will meet
Coffeehouse established
Approximately 100 people
were talking, dancing, playing
cards, and eating Friday night
at the Pamlico Room
The occasion was the tirst
weekly Pamlico Room
Coffeehouse and Social to give
students something to do on
the weekends at ECU
Originated by a tew
concerned students. the
Pamlico Room Coffeehouse is
not sponsored by any existing
student organization
The Pamlico Room
Coffehouse will be a regulai
friday evening event,
beginning at 7.30 p.m. and
lasting until I 2 30 a.m.
Admission is free, and all
students are welcome
By LINDA EBRON
(Stall -?? ?? ?
Hie National Vngel Flight
project foi this y eai is a drive
to gel signatures foi a pennon
requesting North Vietnam to
honor the provisions ol the
Geneva Convention. Booths
will he set up in the lobby ol
the Student Union this week
for this purpose'
Ibis project is undertaken
on the national level at over
100 colleges and universities
across the country At fast
Carolina, the ROTC cadets and
Arnold rir Society are working
with Vngel Flight to solicit
8,000 signatures foi the
petition, which reads
"We the undersigned,
petition the Government of
North Vietnam to abide by the
terms of the Geneva
Convention with regard to the
American Prisoners ol war in
Soi.theast Asia "
The Geneva Convention
requires the identification ot
each prisoner. regular
communication between the
prisi mei and his lannly. neutral
inspection of prison tacilities
and repatnation oi the sick and
wounded It has been
confirmed that over 1500 U.S.
citizens are considered
prisoners of war oi missing
action These prisoners are
kept in solitary confinement.
are unofficially identified, and
are not allowed to write.
"Our reasons are not
political, nor military, but
strictly humanitarian said
Fran Keeney. Commander of
Angel Flight. "We know that
Hanoi is influenced by world
opinion and criticism. If the
results of this drive are as large
as we expect, we hope the
petition will be presented to
the North Vietnamese
delegation to the Parts Peace
Talks personally.
"It is our aim that, for one
brief moment at least, a greater
part of America can focus on
the plight of our prisoners of
war and missine in action in
Southeast Asia she added
The Executive Committee of
"We of the Angel Flight and ,he College Democrat Club w,
Arnold Ait S0Ctet) at Las. mec ! 4J?kP.J?"
fi W. I 1, ill r tS
room 201 Wnght Annex
The committee will discuss
Carolina University feel we
cannot afford to do less than
this effort she Pns for helping with a Walter
our best in
said
B Jones rally and will hear
new resolutions.
Students wishing to voice
opinions should present their
ideas to the Executive
"Choral Music Today" is the Committee. The committee
theme of a one-day clinic lor will put ideas into resolution
choral directors to be offered form and present the
Music clinic set
on campus Friday, Nov. 6.
Registration is requested
prior to Nov. 4. The fee is $10
per person.
resolutions to the club for
voting and release to the news
media.
Democrat Club ovei-
whclmingly denounced
President Nixon's war policy,
a recent meeting.
Proposals were made at this
meeting for a coalition
government for South Vietnam
and withdrawal of American
troops by June 30. 1971
The College Democrat Club
will also meet at 7:30 p.m
Nov. 3 in loom 130 Rawl
Albert J Pe.tahon of the
Speech and Drama Department
will speak on the basics of
Parliamentary procedure.
Everyone is invited
attend.
to
AdoHo 14
Flight aims for lunar samples
In public housing
Income sefs rent
The Apollo 14 astronauts, scheduled to
make man's third lunar landing next
February, hope to bring back rocks gouged
from deep inside the moon where, scientists
believe, a smaller moon Ol large meteorite
slammed into it four to five billion yeais
ago.
Alan B Shepard and Edgar D. Mitchell
will aim theii pider-legged lunar module al
a hilly upland region, called the
Formation, about 50 miles n
crater Fra Mauto
LANDING SITES
This region is quite different
landing sites of Apoll
Fra Maun
rth of the
the
is quite uinereni from
flat landing sites of Apollos II and 12
This site is m mare (sea) areas once
thought to be lunar oceans.
The Fra Mauro Formation is a blanket
of debris that may have come from as
deep as 100 miles below the original lunar
crust when Mare Imbrium the Sea ol
Rains was created
It was probably formed by both ballistic
ejection of material at the time of the
treme idous impact and by the outward
surge of gas and debris
More than 700 miles across, the Imbrium
basin is the largest recognizable impact
structure on the Moon. From its size and
apparent aging, lunar scientists believe it
was caused by the infall oi a huge mass
swept up in the accretionary evolution of
the Moon near the time when Earth and
the other planets were created.
SELECTED AREA
1.000 feet across and 150 feet deep. Blocks
of original Imbrium material as big as
automobiles can be seen scattered around
the rim of the resulting crater, which has
been given the unofficial name of Cone
Crater.
Shepard and Mitchell plan to walk up its
gently sloping outer wall, peer down inside,
take photographs and chip off samples of
the ancient boulders while astronaut Stuart
A. Roosa orbits the Moon overhead in the
Apollo 14 Command Module
IMBRIUM BASIN
Laboratory dating of
samples should show when
basin was formed and
physical and chenuca
the returned
the Imbrium
stablish the age and
nature of pre-mare
?.
The area selected
Aeronautics and Spa
Apollo 14 landing
a few h
i u it! ted
for the National
Administration's
characterized by ridges
feel high, radiating from the
I mhrium
valley s.
I he blanket
buried under youngei rubbl
churned un bv more t
Near the landing point.
impacts has pierced the co'
a bn natural dritt, leaving
now lies
lunar soil
meteorites.
ol tl
layer, like
vity nearly
matenal from deep in the lunar crust
The formation takes its name from the
58-mile-wide crater Fra Mauro. which was
named for a 15th century Italian monk and
mapmaker A map he made in 1457 shows
the then-known Mediterranean world with
surprising accuracy.
The landing site, 3 degrees 40 minutes
south of the lunar equator and 17 degrees
2?- minutes west of the center of the Moon
as we see it from Earth, was the intended
landing site of the unsuccessful Apollo 13
mission last April. It was retained for
Apollo 14 because of its great interest to
scientists.
New attention was focused on it recently
as a result ol radio signals from the seismic
station the Apollo 12 astronauts set up 110
miles west ol there last November.
Scientists believe these signals were caused
by monthly moonquakes that appeared to
originate in the crater Fra Mauro when the
Moon came closest to Earth.
By HOLLY FINMAN
(Staff Writer)
"Anybody that's poor" can qualify to live in
public housing, said A.E. Dubber, executive
director of the Redevelopment Commission.
Rent is determined by the family's income.
For example, a family with none to two
children earning a maximum of $1620 per year
pays $27 a month rent. Public housing usually
rents at 16 23 per cent of the total income and
cannot exceed 25 per cent of the income,
Dubber said.
HOUSING UNITS
Over-income families are given notice to
vacate but cannot be evicted until the Housing
Authority finds safe, clean and decent housing
foi them to move to, said Dubber
Housing units have fiom one to six bediooms
in the form of duplexes and single houses. Units
are equipped with refrigerator, stove, hot water
heater and modern baths. Tenants must have
their own furniture. Dubber said.
Assets of public housing are cited in the
Housing Authority Annual Report for
1969-1970. Police report that crime incidences
have been reduced by 50 per cent.
Only three fire calls have been made from
the projects in the past five years. Seven active
cases of tuberculosis existed in the areas tenants
moved from. None have been discovered in the
projects, the report notes.
NEW INDUSTRY
The report states that public housing
provided safe, decent places to live, as well as
emotional security for its tenants. The
improvements are manifested by increased self
respect evidenced by the care tenants take of
their homes.
Public housing can be compared to a new
industry in Greenville, according to the report.
Sixteen jobs were created. The city has
acquired at no cost S2X3.000 worth of new
streets. $242,000 worth of new utility lines.
$70,000 worth ot sanitary seweis, $101,000
worth of storm drainage, and receives at least
$22,000 a year in revenue, the report states
GROWTH OF DEMANDS
The Housing Authority would like to
improve the Clarkstown area by constructing
units on scattered sites instead of all m one
location. These units would encourage home
ownership. In other words, tenants will be able
to rent until they ate able to buy their house
Any rent paid can be used low aid making a
down payment of about $200 Then he buys
the house at I per cent interest, said Dubber
The demand for public housing in Greenville
has giown steadily since its beginning 10 yeais
ago. At present. 453 family units are occupied
Eight hundred families are on the waiting list
Three housing projects are now completed and
another one. Newtown, is now being planned,
according to Dubber.
With the long waiting list to get into the
projects, Dubbet said that pcisons on Gl bills
would have the highest priority. Displaced
persons who have to leave their present location
because of urban renewal have the second
highest priority. The aged and disabled make up
the third priority group, said Dubber
FUNDS
Funds for public housing come from the
federal Department of Housing and Urban
Development which lends the city money to
buy land and build units, said Dubbet l"he city
sells bonds to repay the mortgage. In about 40
years the mortgage will be completely paid, and
the housing will belong to the citv Dubbci
pointed out that the government outinues
paying oui deficit each veai
Lif
By M
EDI r OH'S N l I
?rtlcis VKIIttfil, by ,
In li iiutvvara
lum nr
On the Wl
"Hey Jack I y
country team
"We had a marath
and down lulls I m
and a halt We also
Not one ol OUI ciew
up and run. then gi
stream nd man. it
it, I thought I'd die
then I couldn't gel I
just had to get up i
dip. It got to be like
would yell out crev
could. 'Severe " I
cut. Jack looked at
turning red.
"Well look. Mike.
"Yeah, sure Jack,
the matter with the;
gelling to them.
INDIV
Oh. there is Keith
"We did this tin
Quitting Poinl ' We
ol the body weight.
we stop.
"It's like this You
you are completly
out. You know wh
see, no one does pa
that point "
"Is that supposed
humans are quitteis
mean, no; you sec, il
Sisyphus rolling thi
You know why he
Camus said, that kep
this rock was that he
see here we had notl
to go and no time li
least the goal wasn't
nature when you pas
"Are you saving
those logs were in
Sisyphus
SHORT
"In a way. yes,
know It's pist that
I did it. I liked it. E
learned something
shut my mind oil
could have walkci
when I stopped. I
my sell out oi doi
forward. I wasn't t
had no goal, at lea'
commitments; no
know as well as I d
things has no meani
"I tried to set sh
this hill and 'beyc
tall tree 'behind tl
I took a wrong tun
when I found tha
could have whipped
"Then I played
mentally replacing
friend, whom I hi
However, the hos)
anywhere. "Then I
was choking me. a
slave in chains and
heavy load ol coal
be broken and no
CORNSTALKS
autumn is here an





laws
n the region
lenburg County, with ?
Ion of 337,800 and the
mmhei ot automobiles
ites more than a thud
carbon monoxide and
rbons in the region
HER COUNTIES
othei counties in the
ire Cabarrus, Catawba,
id. Iiedell. Lincoln,
and Union m North
j, and Chester,
ei and York in South
i
official! vis the
11 from the powet
and open burning, as
, othei industrial and
ml pollution, can be
undet control b the
mis put in force July I
standards forbid the
n nt daik smoke and
en bin ning. except lor
icd agricultural
;es and certain
u.i clearing They also
particular and sulfui
concentrations
:rease staff
i the I s Department
?alth. Education and
develops standards foi
ntrol ot othei specific
nis. besides Sulfui
and particulates, the
t Watei and -u
ces w ill develop
ions foi then control
enforcement ol these
ds as they take effect
require a continuing
e in stall and funds foi
ui Pollution Control
NCINERATORS
payers will probably also
to fool the bills ior
rial pollution control
nenl in the form ol
consume! prices
ii. some 100
ipahties in the state have
told to find some
itive to burning then
n open dumps
nerators suit at
X). and the cost ot
y landfills depends on
st of land State officials
le new regulations will
bond issues in many
unities
rill meet
ningly denounced
?nt Nixon's war policy
it meeting.
osals were made at this
g tor a coalition
ment tor South Vietnam
ithdrawal ol American
by June 30. 197
College Democrat Club
so meet at 7:30 p.m
in loom 130 Rawl.
J Pe.talion of the
and Drama Department
ieak on the basics of
entary procedure
vone is invited to
rent
$283,000 worth ol new
th of new utility lines,
tut at v sewers, S 101,000
ige. and receives at least
lue. the report stales
DEMANDS
ithonly would like to
wn area hv constructing
les instead of all in one
would encourage home
ords. tenant! will be able
able to buy their house
e used tow aid making a
Hit $200 Then he buys
interest, said Dubber
ibhc housing in Greenville
ice its beginning 10 years
family units are occupied
es are on the waiting list
s are now completed and
n, is now being planned.
ting list to get into the
that persons on Gl bills
jiest priority Displaced
:ave their present location
mewal have the second
ged and disabled make up
p. said Dubber.
JNDS
housing come from the
ol Housing and Urban
lends the city money to
iits. said Duhbei flic its
he mortgage. In about 40
II be completely paid, and
ong io the city Dttbbet
ie government outinues
h yeat
Qvtward Bound experience
Tuesdjs Octobei 27,1970, Fountainhaad,Page3
A bvaone era
Life needs goals The old lamplighter brightened the nights
By MIKE KOVACEVIC
tOlTOR'S NOTE. Tri ,Mne seconder mree
??? I wrltUn by a student who pa.ticloated
lummli utva Bou" program (hit past
On the ss.n ovei I saw Jack.
lies Jack I yelled. He is on the cross
country team
"We had a marathon yesterday. Six miles up
ami down lulls I made it m less than an hour
?i'i i hall We also ran every morning at six.
Not one of oui crew ever missed a run. We'd get
up and run, then go foi a dip. in a mountain
stream nd man. it was cold First lime 1 did
it I thought I'd die I froze my balls oft Hut
then I couldn't get by without it. you know. I
jusi had to get up in the morning to run and
dip. It got in be like a drug. After every run we
would yell out crew name out as loud as we
could. 'Severe " I forgot myself and yelled
out, Jack looked at me. I could feel my face
turning red.
"Well look. Mike. I'll see you
"Yeah, sine Jack See sou around What is
the matter with these people ' This sun must be
getting to them
INDIVIDUAL THING
Oh. there is Keith He'll understand
"We did this thing called 'Fatigue Point,
Quitting Point ' We put logs on our backs, hall
ol the bods weight, and sse walk up hill until
we stop.
"It's like this You are supposed to stop when
you are completly fatigued, just plain fagged
out You know what I mean" Howevet sou
see, no one does pass out. We all quit before
that point "
"Is that supposed to indicate that all of us
humans are quitters Keith asked "Yeah; 1
mean, no; you see. it's an Individual thing. Like
Sissphus rolling this rock uphill to eternity.
You know why he did it The only reason.
Camus said, that kept Sisyphus alive and rolling
this rock was that he could scorn n all But you
see hete we had nothing to scorn and no place
to go and no time limit. No goal whatever. At
least the goal wasn't determined by you, but by
nature when you passed out
"Are you saying thai sou people carrying
those logs were m a harder position than
Sisyphus
SHORT TERM GOALS
"In a way. yes. I mean no. hell. I don't
know It's iiist that I hated it at first;but, aftei
I did It. I liked it. and wanted to do it again. I
learned something though, If I could have just
shut my mind oil and thought ol nothing, I
could hase walked forevei Because, Keith,
when I slopped. I didn't have to. I talked
ms sell out of doing it You know, walking
forward I ssasn't tired at all It's just that we
had no goal; al leasl I didn't No goals and no
commitments; no order and no reason You
know as svell as I do. life ssithoul those seseral
things has no meaning.
"I tried to set short-term goals like 'just ovei
this lull and beyond this curse "to the next
tall tree behind this boulder 'to the stream '
I took a wrong turn and got lost I nearly cried
when I lound that the road was blocked I
could have whipped my sell bloody
"Then I played games with myself, by
mentally replacing the logs with a wounded
friend, whom I had to get to the hospital.
However, the hospital was just nowhere or
anywhere "Then I ripped my shut because it
was choking me. and thought of myself as a
slase in chains and being whipped carrying this
heavy load of coal Hut there were no chains to
be broken and no blasted whip to be scorned.
Evan if I could have set a goal, I had lo have a
reason foi reaching that goal. And my bloody
shoulder was killing me. That damn strap was
like a knife. Well, alter 1 couldn't find a
reason. I said; 'Why not do it for the hell ol n
That reason is no reason for me. I can see being
just for justice's sake, or loving for love's sake,
appreciating beauty for the sake of beauty, but
this 'thing' had to have a reason. After I
couldn't find one. I quit walking. You know
Keith. I haven't found a reason for living yet.
But after I stopped walking. I wished that 1
hadn't
Keith sniffed and jerked his right shouider
"Hm, it sounds interesting, Mike. Look. I
have lo be on my way. I'll see you around
Frank's hair was over his shoulders and his
beard was thick. He was glad to see me; so was I
to see htm. His eyes were red and had
brownish-blue rings under them. He smoked
nervously, his right hand shaking a little each
time he brought the cigarette to his lips. His left
hand juggled with some change in his pocket.
He was constantly shifting his weight from one
foot to another.
I told htm how high I had felt after I climbed
Table Rock and Severe Route. I tried to explain
the unexplainable feeling of excitement on top
of Mt. Mitchell, watching the sun set and the
oncoming storm: the fear that over takes your
body coming down from the top ot the
mountain in the dark when the wind is blowing
hard and the storm is coming on. the happiness
resulting from the welcome sight of the camp
and the people around the fire, the coy feeling
when you are under the tent listening to the
rain drops hitting the tarp when you are all
snuggled up in a sleeping bag. Lucy is close
beside you and you are feeling warm
ONE ROOM TRIPS
Outside it is cold and wet; wind is whipping
around trying it's best to invade your privacy
and destroy your feeling of warmth But the
tent holds up and you're glad. The morning is
crisp and clear. The wind is still blowing but
tamed by now. You rub your hands and blow
into them, waiting impatiently for the water to
boil. Nose and cheeks are all red. hair is ruffled
up by the wind. The hot oat-meal tastes so
good Then you drink hot coffee, pack and
leave Behind you the put-out fire is still
smoking.
Poor Frank didn't understand me In his
mind he was convinced that grass, a pill or a tix
brought about the same effect I wouldn't trade
all o his "one-room trips" for one- half a day
of our trip to Mt. Mitchell,
I tailed with Frank that afternoon, the same
was I failed with John that evening John is
with the "Way" ministry. He's very big on the
Word When I told him that, on mountain tops.
I felt closer to God than in any church, he just
looked down at a paperback copy ol the "New
Testament" and fell silent
On top of Mt. Mitchell I had prayed toG "1
for our sress. and oui families. I had thanked
Him lor all the things that He has given us I
had prayed foi Peace and understanding among
I he human kind, and had felt compassion and
ove for all ol his creations.
John was still silent Maybe he thought I
should have found a chuich on top of Ml.
Mitchell and prayed there. He didn't want to
hear my belief that it makes no difference to
God where one prayed or how or when
We probably don't even have to pray. God
probably will be content with us without our
going to church, if we live justly. peacefully and
lovingly, not destroying nature and not taking
away from it more than we should.
"We have a meeting on Sunday at 8 Good to
By The REV MILTON KEENE
I've seen hun humping along through the
winter dusk, a silhouette ol a man with a
ladder slung over his shoulder, pockets bulging
with large sulphur-headed matches
Moving from corner to corner, beneath
darkening skies, like a giant spider spinning a
web. he would place his ladder against a lamp
post, climb the several rungs to the giant light
shade, lift the globe with one hand, while he
reached into his pocket with the other.
There would be a sudden spurt of light as
he scratched fire into the match against the
rough iron of the pole, then a warm radiance
as the gas mantle beneath the shade grew
incandescent.
He was the lamplighter, an important figure
in the pre-electric world of my childhood.
Nose pressed against the frosty window pane.
I've watched him down the street, leaving a
trail of warm, friendly light behind hun
He was part of a world that departed back
there in the nights and days of my boyhood. I
can't remember his last rounds through the
shadowy streets, but there must have been the
last time when he climbed his wooden ladder
and brought light to our end of town, then
went home, and put his ladder away forever.
Nor can I recall the first dusk when he was
not the bringer of light, nor the second, nor
the third. It was just that he was there, then
he wasn't.
Film festival set
He was one ol the last characters on the
stage in the great drama of light, a drama in
which man has participated with a kind ol
religious awe from the earliest days when the
dee darkness of a stone cave leaped into light
and the heavy daikness slipped silently away
Since then, the drama has become a
business of circuits, switches, wires, and such,
with cornet lights remotely controlled by
timing mechanisms which have never seen, like
id lamplighter, the faces of little boys
pressed against window panes in the dusk
1 suppose it's an old-fashioned urge in me
an unwillingness to part with some of the
warm, tender, ways ol yesterday but when
darkness slowly descends upon oui house on
autumn evenings, often I reach for a match.
light the ruby glass chimney of our antique oil
lamp, turn up the wick a fraction ot an inch
and feel the warm glow on my face
Or. I may turn to the giant candle mounted
on a wrought-iron stand in the family room.
strike a match and coax the reluctant string
into flame, then sit back and revel in the pool
ol ruddy light
It's as though the little boy who used to
flatten his nose against the window on
autumn and winter evenings, watching for the
lamplighter, refuses to say a last good-bye to
the familiar loim with his wooden ladder and
bulging picket! who led behind him a trail of
light in the darkening streets
By SANDY OVERCARSH
(Statt Writer)
The Charlie Chaplin Film
Festival will be shown in
Wright Auditorium at 8 p.m.
on Wednesday. Oct. 28.
The silent films include
"The Rink which lasts 40
minutes. It is set in 1916, and
in this film Chaplin
demonstrates his agility and
grace as a waiter who spends
his lunch hour at a
roller-skating rink.
The only film not set in
1?16 is "The Cure which
takes place m 1917. This is
possibly one of the funniest of
Chaplin's short films,
combining last action and
subtle pantomime Chaplin
arrives at a spa to lake the rest
cure accompanied by a trunk
lull of liquor that gets dumped
into the retort's restorative
In "The Fireman another
40-minute film, a firehouse
serves as the springboard for
some chaotic antics, often with
disastrous results to properly
In "The Floorwalker
department store customer
Chaplin gets mixed up with a
look-alike dishonest
floorwalker. The highlights
include a ballet done by-
Chaplin in fending off an
assailant, and the marvelous
episode with the escalator
"One A.M is a unique film
which features a solo
performance by Chaplin.
except for a brief scene with a
cab driver. In this movie
Chaplin engages in a losing
contest with a folding bed in
his strangely decorated home
The last film. "The
Pawnshop takes advantage ol
a lestncted locale and limited
props
Chicago
tickets
now on sale
Tickets for the Chicago
concert Saturday. Nov. 7. are
now on sale in the Central
Ticket Office.
Pi.ces are $1.50 foi
students. S2 for faculty. and
S4 for the general public One
thousand student guest tickets
will be on sale at SI 50 These
tickets are for non-ECU r
only LCI students should
bring their ID's and activity
cards.
The Central Ticket Office is
located on first floor Wright
Auditorium, and is open from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
Fridav.
Attention students .?
ordered Jass rings during the
week ol Septemb
through Octobei 2 Please
stop by the KinyJj
Student Union immediately
and see Martha de Witt. Ring
Salesman, or leave word in
the Student Government
Office (758-6262) where sou
can be contacted Bring your
receipts with you I his is very
urgent. Your shipment ot
order forms and payments
have been los' in the mail
iBORTIOi rOlNSELKG. INFORMATION
hi) lEFKMUL SIMMS
V irti ins up U 24 weeks ol pregnancy arc-
now legal in New York State There are no
residency restrictions at cooperating hospitals
and clinics Only the consent ol the patient
and the performing physician is required
II foi thml kou are pregi suit your
: ?? t delay. Early abortii ms .ire
simpler and sater.
iu need information or prol ' ?? issist-
including immediate registration into
available hospitals and clinics, telephone
THE INHIM IFM.M.4TI0 tew, Iu.
160 WEST86th STRH-T
i ss ORK. Y Y 10024
212 - 873-6650
s KM TO I0P.M
St VI S I) si S A SS k
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IS
h
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v
Page I I mntainhead I uesda) i'
Songs are well-written
Starr is not a singing star
founuinhead
entertainment section
By WOODY THURMAN
RmgoSta
Populai isic is a
field i l
pool
ihen than
i b i
I! Si,i! :
III ! ?
S
iw ind
hard
luuk
this
s-
.1
it'orma i lu' now
Coffeehouse features Bradstreet
Be
V
S I
Ill llli
. u I By KAREN BLANSFIELD
? -
, , io i uv ? e Hj I Bradstreet. a
nusician from
ing nightK
s , week in the University
next i nj u d final
am ol the
Union bicycles Bradstreel who was bom in
? , ?' foik-singei
such While he does
the songs ol such
irtists N Bob 1
James fayloi and ! I
II II, ,? .1 ,v ? n , ihs "ll ' ' J lal
and lie learned to pla an old slight quarrel ov no oos n
that someone had given was an unfortunate split which it sh
lain rben he bought a guitai I still regret he said do
and played with local folk Bradstreel is iigned with '
at high school R( bul lias not relea Brai
s and on local radio. an5 records yet He has foi the tieai
rhe more he played, the more performed at several
he realUcd his desire to and universities , .
perform, and decided t
he added "because
i ill not
I i meet
. people.
I nion
iiht
G
s
; n
&L
v

W
DAMN ?
Tc '
Ht.C ACCENT
? - Ml T HAVt
M4jN0e?5'faep VbU !
into singing full-time. mi luu
HONESTY IN MUSIC Montana
"I went to i el s '
year he said, "bul I decided Urm
that must, was more importani foroni
to me than invthing sol nevei on a iiumbei ol I shows and
i s and
went back
He feels that man) ol the I
university students today are Wherevei he
ol then reasons I During a
being there ?
"I think thai
expected o they V' '? ' '
? , deep I '
rhrough the skilll ?
u I Btadstreel
New bands
a ill we iu
r u I ! isk Depa " vears without rhe I ?' M-lr
called hu
ho sounds I.I
nUnUe ' "PLANS TO WRITE
S
md we h i
si
R
write and elas
"It's haul traveling around
high
I
I
K
TOP TEN
M
?
i as! I
? Jacl
w
I
Rigl N I
a mts Vie K D
Suga
Si Ran Jai 'sTa
- . K sie. Dial
K
? ? S ? ?'? '?? ' ?
. p ?
What rhey've Done
1 i M Song Ma Now Seeker;
i
.
; is
NO RECORDS
fj
phy which most i
ii
"Tl ? une when I
?
,
Bradstreet I merly w ked
with l . Dave Steel I '
year. ? '
iS'a" oh"tn by Rn? B'opny)
FOLKSINGER DAVID BRADSTREET will be
performing every night this week except Wednesday in
the Union Coffeehouse Shows will be at 8 and 9 p.m.
THE WIZARD OF ID
THE RECORD BAR'S
A - B - C SALE
All single artists whose last name or performing
groups whose first begins with AB or C are on sale
Choose from albums by such great artists as:
by parker and hart
1
&YVEN
a t-A a v? DON. s
. . ?. POK CtONEY
Rodney
COWAfi?D
C"Tfe
0 .
EVIL SPIRIT
PPuVCMeP
A
B
c
Allman Brothers
Association
Animals
Chet Atkins
Area Code 615
Brian Auger
The Band Creedence Clearwater
Blood Sweat & Tears Cream
Beatles Crosby, Stills, N & Y
Burt Bacharach Canned Heat
Charlie Byrd Country Joe
Bread Johnny Cash
Dave Brubeck Eric Clapton
h63? OB OP mi ouaiht otHizen5
Of& QKiffHOMt 5WAMP SOW
that ac &oy W a 6CUA8I
-A5s' SOTanVTinS "5 PO60- A RAPBr-
?-Cu1?eNHA-aU? ANWiVS
regular 4.98
now only 3.24
regular 5.98
now only 3.99
NOW
AVAILABLE IN PART
THE 76 ALBUM
?2 VOLUME
BEETHOVEN SETS
FROM DGG
i6 sA'Osi, ASA"n
As? OvQ JgegA??
POfiO Al?A90'
wgp opinion
e se
M?V61.lf?.
HAW
ffABBlT'
MAW I"
!6
as; AvATwoy-P ? Y
? AsOVtBOPOWH
ffSli?i
ISZAfiP'
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y
iSuSe lAlKBTAUtttfOHf.S
S 3?$ L R 'A?:E I' -
BEETHOVEN
EDITION 1970
;ts soe Aj'e j5-p
TM $ ??A7 T?OS
S'AWAeC'CAN
? A-?S '????- Pitny V ?H NO THANK VOU.
CA.MIZ 06AVW Ak M. ? I , AOCJP NflX) etHAKWW
? eveoypopy iwrmjP
1 Nl$ OWN OPINION
c. ? .
'to
r know ?6u ;
r"?i- Bt 'Mi
t i " cfour ?tu - ?l?
? ? - ??(
1 I or
530 Cotanche Street
open 10-10
i
record bar
discount records
RKAM ? Cn?Kl Mill ? R?lfl6H ? BOCKT MOUNT ? CMABlOIrt ? GRIIHVItll
W r
. u
3i
y
Richi
pav
By DON TRAUSf
KK HMOND Va
( .11 ill Cn.
brick wall here Satui
ended up in .1 hi
When all ihi
iver. the Pirates had gi
with a !8-l2 deleal
seventh stratghi ll
?? over a twi
.1 battle foi the '
1 onlerenee cellar
II opponent 1
was the Richmi 1 I Spi
like the Pirates, the
were looking foi th
?1
TAILBACK GEOF
pass from quarterbai
Booter:
By DON TRAUSNE
. itiEdiloi
11 w.is j long week
coach John I ovstedt'
soccei team as the 1'h.i
ame and l
the Id nold
ftei losing ii
l ruversit ol North
I :idj. the Pir.ll-
It a 1-1 lie In ui
! m S indaj
Fhe Hot) ol
? ent was a
in with th
hulli ? ; i !
ui'ie seeking to
three-game wmli
the Paladins w?
nst North Carol
Pirates lost ihcir lourt
season
leadii . r. Steve I
jstained ai
game
KNEE TROUBLI
I iquirt wh
Students Europe
Employment oppi
Write for mformatic
60a Pyle Street Ne
PIZ
De
4PA
Pizza, Sp
529





eet
Ided
I'm
I
hi I nnn
een, nighi
- n ? p in
. '
i '
?
(to ft Roy B'OOhy)
ET will be
Wednesday in
8 and 9 p.m.
HMGH'OlWIStm
UZARP'
-

K0rAUtttfMf
?UAVN A5"
own OPINION
? ? .
N
1 ,u Wow
Richmond passes, ECU mistakes
pave way for 38-12 defeat
Sports
1
Tuesday, October 27 1970
1
By DON TRAUSNECK
? . . .
Kit HMOND , bast
( arolina's football Pirates hil a
brick wall here Saturda) and
ended up in ,i big Spider's web
When il ihe fighting was
Pii
with a 18-12 defeai then
seventh straight this seasi
lenth ovei .i two eai span m
a battle foi the Soutl
i onlerence cellar
ECU's opponent tins time
was the Richn i : Spiders and,
the Pirates, the Spiders
were looking foi their lust
conference w n ul the season
HUNGRY
1 like the Pirates, howevei
the Spiders already had won a
non-conference game (21-6
ovei North Carolina State in
the season openei i and were
hungr aftei five losses Mike
then
I tt the 14.500 fans on hand
t" witness the 22nd annual
National l"obacco 1 estiva!
l "i them Richmond
eis the game
nted a break from the
ial as the Spiders
dominated all facets ot pla
and i apitalized on the
inline; IUS Pirate errors I a
) i) halftime lead
Foi Ml coach Mike McGee
and his players, though, the
game represented just a little
liii more frustration as the
Pirates passing more than ever
before in history, just seem
unable to come up with that
big lust victory
Quarterback John Casazza
the Pirates, that isi just when it pts h.issj.j
seemed that 1(1 might be in Ihe Pirates tallied jgam
the midst of a scoring drive after Richi ide the score
( asaZZa had passed the J8-6, I! ,isaa hit starting
Pirates to the Richmond 33 on split-end Tim Dameron with a
a drive that began on the ECU 29 vard I I) pass Sp ?
20 second down pass
howevei. was intercepted by
Bill Matsko and returned to the
Richmond 40
? seven-play drive was
ended when Keith (lark kicked
and flanker Dkk Corrada a 27-yard field goal foi the
seconds were left oi tl
alter that Si
THREE TDS
?ttei the game McGee had
much to say about Richmond
quarterback Charlie R I
who threw foi
continued their assault on the Spiders to give them a 10-0 touchdowns foi -
Pirate passing records as
as.i.i hit on 21 oi -H lor
270 yards andorrada caught
seven foi 84 y aids
GAME RECORDS
?Ml three figures foi the
quarterback represent new
Single game marks foi the
lead
SECOND SCORE
Seven plavs later Wayne
hisl intercepted a high
( asazza (lass and legged it S3
vatds lor the second
ti luchdown.
tumble led to Richmond's
Pirates In addition, he has third touchdown jmi then an
passed foi 1,113 yards this onside kick recovered hv the
veai still anothei mark Spiders led to the fourth as the
( orrada, in increasing his Pirates found themselves on
league leading reception ti short end of a 31-0 count
set a mark in that McGee must have wondered
Ihe ' the when the hall would end lor.
most passes taught m a single even in the closing seconds, the apitahed on
7 v ards
"We knew Richard
itstand j quai tei
coming into the game and he
only strengthened il i
opinion " lie said "Hi "
the bomb probably as well a-
The coach also attrib ite :
the loss ' ? the disappi ii
second period
'MADE MISTAKES"
"We just made
mista) aftei an thei ii i
second auartei
was 37, set bv Dav
Bumgainer in i4
I he only two
? short "i the careei
Spiders had a chance to score
again as ihev recovered another
I l I tumble
Bv the end of the first halt.
record ol "4 catches also set the Pirates had lost the ball five
b Bumgarnei when he played times on tumbles and
from 1962 ' 1964 orrada is interceptions and had been set
sure to pass that mark against back 31 yards on penalties
Furman Saturday PIRATES SCORE
I he Richmond game was The second halt was a little
decided in one 15-minute
period the second quartei
when the Pirates made several
Costly mistakes to put the
game out ol their teach
CHANCE
Richmond's lead was
S tl A
(St photo by Don TraujnecM
TAILBACK GEORGE WHITLEY attempts to haul u,
pass from quarterback John Casazza against Richmond.
bettei tor the Pirates as they
scored twice while holding the
Spiders to a mere seven points
but it was too late t i d
ECU's iiis! score came with
14 23 left in the game as
?nd ol the lust fullback Btllv Wallace bulled
quartei and 'here was still a ov I the three-yard line
chance foi the Pirates if they oi a ie i landg a play
could gei an attack going But. assaza's pass toorrad I
bv halftime, even the most ihe extra points was broken up
aide; ; II supporter hadn't a ' the goal line,
faint hope that the Pi: Ihe score climaxed a
could come back for the upset ten-play, 63-yard drive which
Ihe nightmare began (foi included live passes in seven
The loss P
to last plae in the inferi
with an 0-2 record ECI
only team not to have w i i
There are two mi '
lor the Pirates to gain
glory in the Southern
t nfi rence 'his year a1
furman Saturdav and
against Davidson Nov 21
?xwxxv:v
"southern conference'
Team Standings
PIRATE FLANKER DICK Corrada grabs
one of tosses against Richmond that gave
a pnotG Dy UO ' rauSnecK)
him single season mark of 39 Despite his
heroics, however Pirates lost, 38 12
Pirate harriers seek rebound
against Carolina here today
Booters lose, tie over weekend
The Citadel
Furman
Davidson
William 8. Mary
VMI
Richmond
PIRATES
W
3
2
1
1
1
1
0
L
0
1
1
1
2
2
2
By DON TRAUSNECK

It was a long weekend foi
coach John Lovstedt's II
soccei team as the Pirates lied
game and lost anothei on
the ECU field
ttei losing to
1 ruversity ol North (
I lay. the Pirates were
held t .i 1-1 tie by undi
I urman S
Ihe story ol both
disappointments was a general
lack ol offensive punch mixed
in will: the aggressiveness ol
both opponents 1 he I ai Heels
weie seeking to hall a
three-game winless skid while
the Paladins were aftei theii
lust Wll
Vgaii ?' N rtl Can lina, the
Pirates lost their fourth game
m ell .is then
leading s :r. Ste? I .
KNEE TROUBLE
uquire. who has had
history I Knee trouble,
stretched some tendons early
in the second period and will
be out ol action until
Saturday, when the Pirates
host Davidson in a kev
Southern ? inference game
When I uquire went out. the
Pirates were trailing by only
I-ii but the injury seemed to be
a big blow to the Pirates from
then on
Only minutes alter the
. the I ii Heels converted
two scores within less than two
minutes ,md left the field w ith
.i 5 ii lead
North arolina coi tinned
issault in the second hall
and I ouis Bush scored three
the came to spaik the
I Heel attack
HAS PRAISE
itet the game. I ovstedl
had much praise lor the l.n
Heels and said they "looked
sharp " He stressed then 'iall
ntrol as being the majoi
factoi in the UNC win
It looked like 11 would be a
different story against Furman
Ihe Pirates mmped at the
kukoll and seemed to he
the game at the
into double overtime The
Pirates had the biggest
iipportunity to score, however
as a shot with 15 seconds
remaining in the final overtime
Saturday's Games
PIRATES at Furman
Richmond at The Citadel
Davidson at VMI
I '
at th(
L'niversi Sortl
I tiesda ?
II ?- ?
i i
SEASON FINALE
I h i
:ompetition I
. .
tmal dual n
1 he ECI
hampered b a l
Lanny D ?
numbei t? :nan durm.
year Davis w as
? pete against V.pi aiachian
? irt thi Pn
BIG BOOST
?
lutsei with some fine passing hit the lop ol the Furman goal
and control
Davi SI n
h I adden alter
ins! period
ored the first
rates as he
from Mike
1 IS ol the
Alter this goal, however,
things started going w ri mg foi
the Pirates as Furman got
opportunities one alter anothei
iii front ol tlu Pirate goal
Goalie Rick 1 mdsay turned
back main ol these on
fantastic saves
BREK THROUGH
I lie Paladins finally broke
through to tie the game with
5:58 remaining in the final
quartei as Nick Vitto hit from
light in front
fhat was all the scoring lor
ihe came as the teams went
and bounced awav
Prior to Saturday's game
with Davidson, the Pirates will
take then 2-4-2 record to
Wilmington Wednesday lor a
battle with Wilmington
College
LEO'S PERC0
Comer of 14th and Washington
7580808
STUDENTDISCOUNT
Discount Gas
Greenbax Stamps
Free Car Washing Facilities Available
t
Students Europe for Christmas, Easter or summer'
Employment oppoitunit.es Charter flights, discounts
Write for information Uir maill Anglo America Association
60a Pyle Street Newport ! W . England
PIZZA CHEF
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4PM to Midnight
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5
See the New Owners
'Max and Thyra
Stephenson
Mon I n 9A M to 9 I'M
Sat 9A.M to 1 PM
THE
SLENDERELLA
6 Greenville Boulevard
By Pass Sunoco
264 B, Pass a "d Enm Si
Featuring
AC and GM
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Drawing Each Month
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758-2181
wc cash student checks
OUR PRESCRIPTION PRICES ARE THE LOWEST IN TOWN
Let's Eat!
loot for In ought
Bv JOHN TYBURSKI
JERRY'S CAFETERIA
Cloves
Zanzibar '
Phone
756-2502
things gO
wirth
Coke
i Bottling Corns
He. NX
uueet
hoppe
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14 for the the price of
12 to students with I.D.
Decorated Cakes.
Birthday, All occasion
etc.
delivered to dorms
greek houses
We have Pastries, Pies, Cakes,
and all kinds of pastry goods
Pitt Plaza Tel. 756-2343
56K5?vd?v5
VSStr -
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CAR WASH SPECIAL AT
QWIK AUTO WASH
& EVANS
ECU STUDENTS & FACULTY
Complete Car Wash $2.00
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Present .D. Cord for DISCOUNT
Offer good MonTueWed.





Count ainhead
fklifoUaA (md1(?ommtm(a
P and the truth shall make you free'
Authorities write off good will
of students for unknown reasons
Paw 6, Fountainhead, fuesday, Octobei 2
Several issues ago this newspapei
proposed thai the loeal minions of the
law and thv il long-hairs get
l" ol sotthall m ordei to
instrate i i ea( h group that the
othei group was indeed composed ol
hum
Ii was brought out thai sucl i
had been pla ? H stoi rexas at
the instigation ol .1 police otficei and
1h.1t the precinct headquarters had
actively i I lime
is success
I In . sal was picked up b the
1 r
Pitlmint)
;i addition to
i?ctt i ? stead
,il ,1 .1 basketball
was planned to take place
Vie no 1 .m
Sow it I ' only has the
P sed ii
butatherine
v
:irls to participate
ise she did
not want her girls involved with .1
"controversial group "
We cannot help but feel that this
attempt, on the part ol students, to n
to bridge the gap between students and
establishment ha resulted in failure
merely because ol the lack ol
imagination and intelligence on the part
ol those establishment members
involved
We would like to note that ECl
President I eo Jenkins was approached
about the game and he not onl)
approved ol the idea, but he actively
participated in the planning stages
Ii is sad to think that such an
innocent activity as .1 basketball game
should be thought ol as so horrible that
main of those perspective!) involved
should feel the necessity of tucking their
tails between then legs and running
scared
It is almost as it the Greenville Police
irtment has "written off" the good
will ol the college community and is
willing to eist as .1 mechanical monster
responsible onl) for locking people up.
HOU ABOUT A LITTLE
Gajae OF BASKET BALL?
The Forum
Alienation
In Fountainhead
We would like to ask the management ol the
Castle Inn. in reference to the lettei they senl
to tins paper, whai makes .1 person with long
hail an alienated, hippie type person?
Does the fact thai you have long haii nie.in
Revolution faces our generation
Bv JAMES B EICHLING
x States
ion. but any
S
need '
. here
1 he
.1 his son .11
goven I world
?? ilitary
k foi .mother
1 ?? Global ?'?
bod)
"wh; ed
i rotation is lar from an
; . ? The ma ? a) not
. might even
' came
promises to Jo away with all the vocal agitator
and gel back to true "Americanism "
Communisl evolution would he easily
rationalized b) the middle .kiss workman He
would see that the present government lakes
fort) pei cent of a company's profit (b) taxes
and tax-exempt programs. indirectl)
government sponsored), so wh) not take it all?
lie might say. "Lei the rich bastards go without
the top ol the profit and gie it all to the
people
Another revolution ma) present ilselt as very
passive and damnabl) subtle Technology ma)
surpass man himsell A silent computoi with
intellect and power enough to leave man
behind, without the sense to pull the plug I he
ultimate 111 calculation is presented
Programmed birth to be followed by
programmed learning so as not to dare let man
understand Ins creative soul Death would be
nothing more than a statistk recorded on a
microfilm tape, and man a tool, capable ol
pushing .1 button and nothing more
Anarchist revolution is anothei possibility
I heie is ol course no leal future in anarch) $
nice .is it might be, there would alway s be some
idiot i come along and "hung us altogethei
Hut still it would be nice while it lasted, with
onl) the earth foi an individual to live and love
and die with Just to use the propel terms; man
w ould go "ju natural
majoi world religion ma) take .1
revolutionary bannei It all people leai a single
force, the) might be drawn into worship ol a
single God Hie woild would then see it's his!
day ol true civilization A third parts. sa .111
alien space ship, might just do the tuck. It this
seems a bit skeptical, it must be understood b
the reader that this writei iews the onl)
national religion in the United Siaies today as
paranoia
Man is the onlv child of her's that treats her
Hangup is in wording
Draft experts discuss CO status
Bv JOHN STRIKER and ANDREW SHAPIRO persuasive. Is not determinative A tar more
Man secrei Os objective test was announced by the Supreme
. , . 5e . ? kept c " Court in Seeger ndei this test, the
igjou requirement ol "religious training and belief
ret 1 Os -an be fulfilled bv "a sincere and meaningful
the word belief which occupies in the life of its possessoi
??rehgj a place parallel to that tilled bv the God ol
A . ? till ve h a part ol the those admittedl) qualifying foi the CO.
A I Se Servi I , . ? ?? that exemption
ition in war With this formula in mind, consider the
, t "I ol religious beliefs expressed bv one Forest Petei, a
. has I een co-defendant with Daniel Seeger in United
,nierpi ? the Sui States 1 Seeger "Since human life is for me a
pjV ? ; Seeger, the final value Petei wrote in his CO
c I that a draft hoard's questionnaire, "I consider it a violation ol
a nether the beliefs moral law to take human life In so tar as this
professed ire sincerely held and conviction is religious, it has been best
wi scheme of things, described as follows 'Religion is the
o consciousness ol some power manifest in nature
I . t0 ,ho registrant whicn helps man in the ordering ol his hie in
this harmony with its demands (it) is the supreme
fjfl , intended expression of human nature it b man thinking
his highest feeling his deepest, and living his
best ' "
. ?? ,e i ins trial (foi refusing induction) Peter
gistranl ife " testified "I think my actioni are probably
?I rmination ,ard motivated most thoroughly bv a feeling of
II i?. relationship and love toward other living
m. objects in the world, and in seeing these other
and role if his beliel fl I living objects I can narrow it down closer; I can
his beliefs no matte rtl lox.d define it as a belief in the mystery of the heart
as his "religion ' "In siish an of them, the essence "I being alive, and my
? nai area the Supreme I ourt respecting and loving this livingness in othei
warned "the claim ol the objects and human beings I suppose you
that his beliel is an essential part ol .1 religious could call that a belief in God These just do
faith must be given great weight " not happen to be the words I use "
01 entrant's claim, while Despite the words Peter did use, his beliefs
?
fountainhead
Robert R. Thonen
Editor in-Chief
Wayne B. Eads David Landt
Managing Editor Bev Denny Business Manager
Associate Editor
Becky Noble ?"? Edi,or
Karen Blansfield Feature. Editor
Don Tr.ufn.ckSports Editor
Ir. Baker Advr?r
Published bv students of East Carolina University. P O. Bon 2516. Greenville,
North Carolina 27834 Advertising open rate i $180 per column inch.
Classified $? 00 for first 25 words Telephone 758-6366 or 758-6367
Subscription rate is $10 00 per year
The opinions expressed by this newspaper
are . those of East Carolina University
J
were held to be "religious" undei the Supreme
Court's definition ol "religious training and
belief In pan ol the Seeder opinion, the Court
decided that Peter's beliefs occupied in his own
scheme ol things a place parallel to that tilled
bv the God ol a more traditionall) religious
person
1 ast June the Court took the same approach
again in the Welsh case. Elliotl Welsh's beliefs
also fulfilled the Seegei test In so finding, the
Court ruled: "II an individual deeply and
sincerel) I olds beliefs thai are purel) ethical or
moral in source and content but thai
nevertheless impose upon him a duty ol
conscience to refrain from participating in any-
war at an) time, those beliefs certainly occupy
m the life of that individual 'a place parallel to
that filled by God' m traditional religion
Because Ins beliefs function as a religion in his
life, such an individual is as much entitled to a
'religious' conscientious objectoi exemption
as is someone who derives his conscientious
opposition to wat from traditional religious
convictions
B) now you can see that whether or not
youi beliefs are "religious" is purely a legal
question. It youi beliefs meet the Seegei test
as reaffirmed In Welsh then they ire
"religious" according to the supreme law oi the
land therefore, you would be legally justified
in calling vour beliefs "religious" Remember,
you aie really pressing a point oi law. not
settling a metaphysical debate, anil youi claim
iliat youi beliefs are "religious" is entitled to
"great weight
Try to read the following letter written to a
dralt boatd and decide whethei the language
reveals "religious" belief! "As a result ot a
number ol problems ot conscience with which I
have been preoccupied foi the past months
one registrant wrote. "I am bound to declare
myself unwilling to participate in any violent
militar) inflict, oi in activities made in
preparation foi such an undertaking. My
decision arises from what I believe to be
considerations of validity from the standpoint
of the welfare ol humanity and the preservation
ot the democratic values which we in the
United States are struggling to maintain. I have
concluded that wai. from the practical
standpoint, is futile and self-defeating,and that
from the more important moral standpoint, it is
unethical
Does this language seem not quite "religious"
to you Do you think the letter is too overtly
secular? H so. you had bettei reconiidei the
legal definition oi a "religious" '?)? You ?e,
the letter was written by Daniel Seeger who was
found to be entitled to the C 0. exemption bv
the United Stales S preme Court.
with such ingratitiude. Green plants, fish, and
huds somehow know then Mother's rules and
abide in love and tolerance. Perhaps it would
have been that way tor man it some distant ape
hadn'l decided to gtow a thumb and evolve
Damn his hair) hide'
All these revolutions are presented foi us to
pondei It is man's duty to choose one and
work foi it. Ii is unfortunately man's privilege
to do nothing, and man so often sticks to his
lights
Buccaneer
To fountainhead
I"o start out with I would like to
congradulate isici that "great" and "glorious"
classic ol all trash-can-alleys the
I ountainhead on the numbei oi sickly "Sics"
thai they tell to he so essential to my last
letter. The Fountainhead gets the Mudhole
Award for slaying so true blue to the Kleon
I mpire
Now to purpose at hand in this second, and
more-than-likel) (sic) last lettei to the E.C U
Garbage dump (Fountainhead), I would like to
congradulate (sic) Miss "Shoffner" isiu apon
(sic) the opening paragraph ol her most recent
lettei to the fountainhead I consider it a
compliment coming from such an unbecoming
office as the Buccaneers (ski managing
editorship! Howevei I will hasten to remind
Miss "Shoffner" (sic) that the word "dare" is
tor papei tigeis
Since the Buccaneer, the fountainhead. and
the M.R-C, (among others), are some of the
biggest and certainly the most laughable
papei tigers on the entire E.C I campus her
use ol the word is only to be expected And
since she is so concerned with givemg (sic)
"valid" and "justifiable" "reasons" foi the
yearbook mistakes and high ratings (sic) I
demand that they be published in the
Fountainhead so that all might see them and
decide the matter for themselves as the influx
ot those who inquire about the matter at her
office might well be a Strain on her health
lime does not permit me to "air" all of my
complaints and issue forth ideas on the
matter However, in addition to those given in
my last letter I will state one more
Why are a goodly number o pictures m the
yearbook (like those o the fraternities) so
rotten Now I will grant you that the portraits
ot the individual students were, offhand (sic)
pretty good But that has been annulled this
year by the "no dress policy " It is really
comforting to note that the Buccaneer has
again taken leave of its smses (sic) and gone a
step futher (sic) towardsbarberic (sic) insanity.
The qualhty (sic) ol a good number of the
pictures in the 1970 yearbook is siverely (sic)
lacking I shall leave Miss "Shoffner" (sic) with
this thought: How so comicly amusing it is foi
the Buccaneer to be so "public, like a frog"
telling its "name the livelong day to an
admiring bog" when there is nothing to
"admire" it with (sic) but the New York City
garbage dump'
To the editors I remain disintectantly (sic)
yours; to Miss "Shoffner I remain not at all.
William Von Klor
PS. Since the editors consider themselves to
be of such "repute" (sic) I shall considet the
"Challenge" of my last lettei to be in force
with this one as well and look forward to seeing
il in the fountainhead in its entirety.
EDITOR'S NOTE This letter is printed exactly
as it was written Errors m spelling and
grammar are indicated bv the insertion of "sic"
after each error. William Von Klor is not
included in the Registrar's list of students
registered for fall quarter Fountainhead has
not been able to ascertain whether Von Klor is
a faculty or staff member It is Fountainhead's
policy to print only those letters which are
signed by the author Names may be withheld
upon the author's request Until such time as
Von Klor identifies himself to Fountainhead.
Fountainhead wttl be unable to print his letters
?
you are no longer
a pan ot societ) loda) ' Is
the alienation ol these people fair?
Is il fait to alienate the Negio because he is
black oi the Jewish people because then beliefs
aie different?
Who has the light to decree what is normal
and what is not normal? Apparent!) the
management "t theastle Inn believes il has
the right to do so
Oui next question to the management ot the
( astle Inn is to define a hippie
U a hippie a person excuse me a thing
with long hair and does this thing also advocate
the destructioi ot the i s government and
does this inhuman monstei also have to g' so
fai as to smoke thai deadl) plant with its roots
m Hell, marijuana oh shame' Shool all the
hippies, pinko, communist inspired deviates
who would date to break lii.it law'
Oui last question to theastle Inn is when
do on plan to eel out ol youi 18th century
name ot mmd and finally realize that it is not
the physical pails to a person thai make him
good oi bad lull the wa) a person lives and
Heats his fellow man"
Sincerely,
Jeff Schimberg
Steve Hahn
Reviewers
I I ountainhead
A reviewer, a critic, should at all times
attempt to give as honest a critique ot the work
being reviewed as he call.
Undeniably, each reviewei has personal
prejudices and shortcomings.
A review ol a Work ol art is necessanly
subjective A machine must be functional, any
aesthetic qualities it has aie secondaiv In a
movie the aesthetic qualities come lusl Its
script, its cinematic techniques, the quality ol
Us acting ate primary These qualities should
entertain in an aesthetically pleasing way 1 fiat
is the function ot a movie Any message in the
movie is secondary, it it is to be judged as a
work ol ail.
esthetic qualities aie subjective I he)
appeal to different people in varying wavs
White, a "honkie will approach a movie
different!) than will a Black, a "nigger" so
too will an artist approach a movie differently
than will a writer, a philosopher, a sociologist, a
psychologist, etc
The problems which I'hilhs Simpson
complains ol in the icviews of William K Day
ate, in tact, the veiy qualities which make a
review a review As the aesthetics ol a movie are
subjective, so necessanly will a review ol that
movie be subjective
Nothing is achieved in personal!) attacking a
reviewer foi his subjectivity. II the reviewer has
been as honest as he can be, then he has done
his ob.
John D. Fulton
Castle Inn
To Fountainhead
Concerning the article titled "football" in
today's paper by the Management ol Castle Inn.
I have a lew short comments to make
Evident!) there are still people who believe that
those with long ban need baths. C8USC dissent
and violence, and do not belong in the
American society.
People should look beyond outside
appearance toward personalities. Nut everyone
in this world dresses alike, thinks alike, oi wears
his hair short.
There is a change taking place in the societies
in all countries to dissolve this type oi
narrow-minded altitude, but basicly il must
come from the soul ot understanding
We are all part of the One in the Universe.
let us all look within ourselves and our
brothers for peace and union.
Sincerely yours,
Jacqueline M. Cogglns
Forum policy
Students and employees of the University are
urged to express their opinions in The Forum.
Letters should be concise and to the point
Letters should not exceed 300 word.
The editors r 'serve lire light to edit all letters
for style and errors and length.
All letleis must he signed with the name ol
the writer. Upon the writer's request, his name
will be withheld
Space permitting, ever) lettei to
FOUNTAIN AD will be printed subject to
the above procedures.
Signed articles on this page reflect the
opinions ol the writei and not necessarily those
of FOUNTAINHEAD oi last Carolina
Universitv
NEW
Volume II
Urbar
h
EDITORS NC
G r' ?
Nove" ii. i
Financial a:
Housing
launched I
Mil.
Commission w
I eb v 195?
only this pasl )
I lie (
members appo
by the City
into the toll,
ci inducts
v. h I handles r
project pro
coordiii.i'
spei ialisi
needed to hai
projects
Sul
By HOLl
? ?
"I he Publi
i he supreme I
publ ii a I loiis.
Hie ke Net
the Board, ii
from what it
at c ol ding
representatives
I he functii
control public
salaries, and se
? ?I editorial p
Whitley SGA I
" s it exisl
do this,
According t
maioi reason
weakness is
Having the e
managers and
ampus pubh
Board is h
presidents o!
NBC on the I
Whitlcv
COMPOSITIC
I he Buccar
1 he ke and I
all represented
then editors
Rod Ketner, I
Hob Thonen, n
o n t h e B I
President, Boh
SGA legislati
Mike Mien, a
journalism ins
Baker; Deal
Affairs )i Jj
Assistant De
Affairs, S Rud
and a d v i s
publications I
Ira I Bakei
Maiv Son
Ovid Piero I
James V. Bu





Title
Fountainhead, October 27, 1970
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
October 27, 1970
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.78
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/39502
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