Fountainhead, November 3, 1970


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





Jatf
Forum
d
lean when on the fronl pagwol
). ECU student bod) presideni
lion concerning Ins poinual
lid inactivity by responding "I
much to do right here and this
itudeni govern nenl will be
mmitted to E( U "
lean when in the same issue ol
is an aiiHle concerning each
idence on the othei and the
y '
too much to do right here
lean when in the same issue a
lettei about the repressionol
i and who recognizes .nc
ing "non-representative
re oui student government will
nean when in the same issue
i a moratorium on classes ?
student hodv presideni in
ments recently handed out b)
dio to Kent State students and
ted to 1(1
i that there csists a very
fused world ouiside ol "ECU"
i V?hitle won't recognize
S(,A President
Sincerely yours,
Carlton M Hadden
rial
as very clever and well done I
agreement with much ol the
sure the editoi that I was
the safety ol some ol ie
standing in theii indows I
icerned about the rcac tion a
ueis and I am very cognizant
every student here, without
here as a guest ol the North
1 ach student is given a
11)7 dollars
ni increasing unemployment
savers become eiy concerned
teii money is not being spent
lot inconceivable tor them to
a not care to finance panty
il writet was correct in saying
am concerned about the
i Carolina voters
that it H over-reacting, wi
enl an injuries, then it was a
tortal wntei had taken time to
one was thrown and broke the
e ol the policemen's cars. Ii
in injury oi death. I am arvjid
rve classified this as innocejit
soring the point, I want to By
igreement with much t the
Dr. Leo Jenkins
itors
to the attention of the MR(
, in New Dorm have been out
v of the time this veai i
overed, through reports, that
t the elevators' constant
lot a faulty elevatoi but the
of them by the residents ol
t only misuse, but deliberate
ilism by sonic irresponsible
mi the cause This is becoming
in the dorm J
y has had to fix the elevators
ons and has warned the MR(
erale tampering with elevators
he university will discontinue
evatois Ihis means that ?' :
suffei because ol ihese "high
cannot see how college men
mile acts, as it only hurts the
and could restikt our chances
' privileges for residents o the
Mark W .son
ii policy
nployees of the University are t
their opinions in The Forum. ?,
be concise and to the point
not exceed 300 words.
ervc the light to edit all Utter
s and length
it be signed with the name oi
the writer's request, his name
itting, every lettei to
l will be printed suhect lo
ires.
; on this page reflect the
riter and not necessarily those
Hi AD oi I asi Carolin;
?v-
t&&4 '
ountamhead
md the truth thall make vou free
Sov, ?
?
Weather and Pirates 'wash out1 homecoming.
ECU dumps Fu
'
PIRATE TAILBACK GEORGE lineman for crucial yardage in Saturday's
Whitley (20) runs over Furman game.
By DON TRAUSNECK
(Si ' ' '? '
OKI 1 NVN LI S For thi
tans looking ndei then
Saturday was a bleak das But foi
football team, the day
ter.
1 oi on that day a tei losinj
games ol the season and 10 in a
two-year span, the Pirates finally put
together and upset high-riding Furmai
M was j big win foi coa h Mike M G
his players-theii first one. in fact it
Vnd on this lay I
many heroes foi the Pirate
l.es Strayhorn scored his first
the season as he rushed ovei
out in the rti fl
(, IZZ0 ? . ?
tween a Pirate win and a scoreless tie
Bills Wallace was called
$4 times in the game and I
i .? ) , , u In. iliud KMl- ard-Plus
foi a total ol i. yards, nis miru . i
outing "i the season
ict. the juniot fullba ?
N t
?
H
i
I ? B
I
.
?
Ii
Whitley (20) runs over Furman game.
Crabtree to face charges
for 'indignant' response
? ? " J , MulHoIland time was 2:30 a.m. The offense "unfo.
-I i.d the officei what Fatnei Charles MuiHollana. ?me - .omrm,led "Bui oi is u
? iccTAiiriii I ? ? i i si , Ineed heie was omiiiiiii-u
-
Cai '
? ?

.
By JACKIE STANCILL
office
said 11
. , lhtree interview with FOUNTAIN
w,H appea. it G HI D I ' wa
District Court Nov. P to I
lignant t
police officei
, rab? charged with was perfectly
L'haplam M cnargea n? through.
Gabriel's Catholic Church against he p a, a g ?
,luk. lhe officers searched fo, ol the state and in violation
tl to book him with, city ordinance 18-10 if
, , (bt Crabtree maintains that hi
te? me nl dKl ?ho U,C , ,ITL lid persecute .he bos. II
rtW ' , I rhey jUtou ?? S , w . wil, be
1 ? tset. the Mat
?
P
:
.
I
P
: said ,A , , will be -
T not tell me an attorney not behave indignantly. He had Lherchat
G ? I ca"Cd, Z : me been studying for a mid-term, L noiytaS first dov
C deSection 18-10 "hKh ar. and he wenl out for a walk t wake J? I ' "
? ?' , f ?
lea, shoved me in ? ? A,R h, remained about
? ii it Il i l.
the bask seat and shined his
Sat .
v
i,
i
lhe.
idei
the
VA I
flashljghi face ' rabtree
th, 1 "He asked me il I w'
d i ' ? had dope
ask
dlJ h
reads
fhe defend ; above
did willfully
?ant whe
police asked him foi
some identification, foi which
he refused to do so (sic), to wit
SOULS take action
By IVORIE ANTHONY
? gl Iti a as
the soring and w intei ol
It l
w inti
( ;

ui
. . . i ? (sH by
rvable action was
children
CO ORDINATOR
sol is was designati
? Work is also being done
tng the hues ol ghetto
momics
soils now has
representatives in various facets
ol s(' 1' has also placed
is finalists foi Homecoming
ills ol
MUCH ACCOMPLISHED
SOULS (Society fl mted
,i.ied duiine the wuiui
oi stale Queen the past two years
d SOBl lohnny Williams, formei
i tern president ol sol is. said
North"carolina the following "Since soils sees the
wintet sol IS then staited a American society asabasicauy
drive to get 20.000 new black racist institution, it realizes
voters registered in the that the real strength of black
quail
)u" I
h " the
Racial Grievance Committee
Charles Davis was its first
president
I ndei Davis leadership
much ws accomplished.
sol is ventured out from the
university campus into the
ing out
imarily in
lhe black
, increased
the black
, result Work
. black candidates.
. .1 I law Mils wni
(
Dav, left during the
? vork as a
community organizei in a
ghetto Johnny Williams was
,l,?. elected president He
, i ,n i lts until
served .
ndei his
poverty stricken 22-county
area. .
DEMANDS PRESENTED
Since no action was taken
people
lies in
the black
community: therefore, it is
. lually initiating new
programs to aid the black
community in which they ai
ss district He q i
2( d Fathe.
MulHoUand arrived and posted
S 50 bond. , . i.ttion tl
FOUNTAINHI VD talked p.Itota? dquot"
?i assas
- , ? ?? Question all persons al
"mi d-mannered persm 4ut '
Fathei MulHoUand "His design
temperament is to follow the ATT0RNEy CONDEMNS
establishment and follow
?!U,hl"u represent Crabtree in
Fa,he, Mull.oll.md added Nov 9 In a tele,
that Crabtree was probab y JJVNHEAD he
shocked by confrontation with r ()l ,N J .
the officers, and his shock was considers city
, , . i hv the unconstitutional
probably interpreted bs c fo
vagueness Paul explained "It which i
violates lust Amendment vKl W
-The macsate told me rights, it is repugnant to the comjnii
p0UCemen have a right to ask Ninth Mnendmen. ? d. ,? -
people where they are going at equal protect on as
' JO in the morning lathe, the Fourteenth mendmen'v"
MulHoUand said, "but I think is overbroad arbitrary a
No 9 fot walking down the thousands ol instances stmtiai
"foi NTA1NHEAD ' "When officers assume such
ted Greenville City a divine standard that
?
:
"
I
P Furman It
p
I ?
i
m
. p ,ed
-
-
Mtl
Pet, w
?he
Stravhon
'
go.
It took Strayhorn two p
?
w all in the I
. ? md
? PraL.
hdown oi lJ0
That was trttw Furman altho
:? . r Ho-
the Pel-
Pirati ? in a row
t West Virgil . M
r, c lav in Ficl adium
UCI
MRC forms committees
- n will be
he V.Ki
w hie i
II
whicl
?
Belk
a
tart
f East t
?
VISITATION COMMITTEE
Recei
qciilt.
iea: :
hej an by :
. have
tat ion
? efore
lurt at ' r actioi ?
officers as hostility
RIGHT TO ASK
facilities
Visit
i the
Th
men C t Rowe. the i aies anc
dorms,
g on the
MRt hen in
SGA-MR student loan fund
eontacieu vhvvm.iv - ??.? , , ,
Police C'h.et T E Gladson, cant be spoke back
n the original grievances wholeheartedly accepted It , , y Ju,k,a ?? , out's is i,gomnment ol
presented by the black hopes to do its part in securmg - personally and not of laws, he said
SOITS then lota liberation of aU the black j j ? ,?' be ,n '??" M"
votei rcgistratH
w
? . alls in
New sterilization
method found
ii. ii i
Shirodkat
Jim Mitchenei i membei ol
G lv- steering committee, said
GAP will supporl Crabtree
"The fact is a regulai citUen
like (rabtree can walk down
the street and be arrested
Mitchenei said "He's a strict
d he has Catholic conservative and not a
spring
.soi LSet
DELEGATES SENT
g
Dun the tall o? 1968
SOULS sent delegates to the much stiU needs to be done
B)a k Student Leadership
Conference It also participated
h P Peoples march on
Washington and the N
March from the Mountain
lhe VaUey" sponsored
b' ,he southern Christian
l , de, ship Conference M
lin worked in eol.t
students
presented the administration people
the "10 Black Demands" dining
early spring ol 1969 lhe
demands included it bl.uk
studies program
2) b lack recruitment
program ()s x(, s i l'i
3) humane treatment tor the Indian gynecologist says performed the operation on 10 campus raaia
black non-academic employees " developed a reversible women and has studied the He'saUwand
i? hi, l- imieis , ??? iii, tor fniii "Crabtree d
4) blacK lecturers female sterilization operation
5) equal application ol rules provide a new
in housing a ? ? to fight
6) financing ol black iAcipopukm,?,
conferences ,k, operation consists ol
7) black instructors ? Wn naplike layei ol
8) black atheletes
9) removal oi discrimination "T and sewing the
in the classtns 10) banning w iR ueM
ol racial practices promoted by
the University ction was taken
?n some ol tl 3r?ds. but
women carefully fo. foi "Crabtree doesn't ??" ?
i k ,ii Utiillls MlUlUiiU
months since then bell-DOll? n .
NO SPERM added "He S shaven, and he
He said he hasn't found a doesn't have long haii
single sperm in the wombs of CRABTREE questions
the women. But he noted that CRABTREE
,isSue from the top and bottom nu?e studs is needed to md traou
out whethe, sperm can Rnd ak his ,
the was into the uterus bv asked How aw
,? i ihe shield coud have just irriea a aaw
eoiin! aiound ttu siihoj s
trough w space left ba -ansc - 'no,
during the operation to allow ?? walked K,k
that
in' fronl ol the cervix, the
entrance to the uterus
FIFTEEN MINUTES
I), N Sh lodkai natural fluids to drain from the
BLACK ORIENTED described the operation u,otUs
,rx? MS -E
last spring Undei his a local anesthetic if , woman thus sterilized for walking down the street?
c o n i t n u eu develonei o an Shuodkai said, a j
black-community oriented It world as the deveiopei u ,hr s
downtown I've dom
plenty o( times
-Why do oui taxes pay
officers to arrest decent people
thes
Sl , s is instrumental in
r U' h I k
is still striving to get 20,000
additional blacks registered A
tutorial society and black
history program is now being
registratioi
I
ind began workinn a luv
orevenl simply undo the stitches in the
shield ove, the cervix oi i ake
miscarriages n ? nll to
Speaking here al a meeting a hole m it to allow .
of The Family Planning erne, the utenid
Association ol the Americas, pregnancy
been given authority
overuse it
Violation o( ? city ordinance
il misdemeanoi foi which
the maximum penalty is
tine and JO days it tail
. ??.
CAMPUS SCENES
V
2
f
(Stall pnoto by S???? N??l
SOCIAL SCIENCE building provides for
students who tend toward suicide a new
way of relieving exam tension.





Page 2 I .urntainhe.lv! fuesday Novembet i
Grand Jury exonerates National
Guard from quilt of Kent murders
anything aboul it good example ol this
Individual emphasized
Wind Ensemble to debut
?
'?
If you '
I
n tains
a at
By I.M TERHUNE
K'PSl i ? ;jU'1'
ihe Ohio V ' 1c I-11 1I l,K'
k Mate in the
uraiy. indicting
n decided to throw
.it tlu hem with M Ids; the
I War Meas 's Act
i,v has suspi ?
k ! them
the
?
uilig;t the
as a
anmid
lalHMv

s !

-
lei
till
PURPOSE STATED
Kei :
c . ure and
I
GOVERNMENT LIES
while
ii killed
while
A
?' I- '
" expect
ally to
-
its
CHEERS FOR MURDER
We 'ai ;? ? '?' ?
Ke ay irdered
W VI .
King murdered and heard people rejoice nd
foi those who still believed Robert Kennedy's
ca eet w.i ended in the same fashion Soon
after, we witnessed the NB( live-and-in-eoloi
telecasi ol the Wat in the Sheets ol Chii
with a ast 'i thousands who were trying the
Vmericat Wav foi the last lime Now we were
being J ssd ourselves
Wi saw political irials conducted in the
apers lathet than in courts, and a ju
ne's peets that existed only in the written
jivun tits I the constitution I he W'ai in
lVCS I he poverty goes on 1 ei we
are expected to believe when Nixon says peace
irner. when he says, attei ten ot
I invocation thai culminate in
street lighting and bombs, thai he will listen to
What do ihe think they will accomplish
ln vii Perhaps that which hasn't been
nplish in any othei way
I he history ol this country tellsol vciv few
ibot unions nd
n is revoluttonarv change thai is called for.
ise there is hall assed lil
century Wi
et have the luxu
; the factors that motivate the
Weatl hat can be uisily critiqued
l hey inhabit a political cornel ct
. nsitive to the needs ol its
?A lid not ehoi
? haltering wa
this ' ted in Whai is
hnul the Weathermen al this
point in the dt ' K' ' s 's K'
i then tactics
BOMBING TACTICS
p ? ? ? isolate the i.k tit ol
U.
ICc ij
Weathe
th tspe. ?
u mibingsbv
a si
. ?. ?
In scare techniques perpetrated

. . .
?
lso.
lucati
table in effect
highly
p tentionally I
While the desl il propen
ttraj es th ?? wh ?ell socialized into the
Way the destruction ol life makes
1 it is extremely
luct ive
jSOMB POLITICS
: ithet langet ol the excessive use ol
bombings as a political tactk is the obvious
thei people grabbing a piece ol
the action Any bombing that takes place now
indeed, any explosion at all is immediately
blamed on radicals, whethet n is. in fact, an act
It possible foi right-wing groups,
the government oi I apolitical psychopath
on the street to commit any tminbei ol
outrages in the name ol all the radicals in this
and the radicals are unable to do
Ml
anything aboul il good example ol this
occurred in Orange County on the Irvine
campus iinieisii .ai was binned Around
the same time that evening, a person was found
i rawford Hall with revolvei and
ammunition, apparently set on shooting Tom
Hayden who happened to be speaking there
Several days later, the Stanford Research
Institute greenhouse (greenhouses??) were
destroyed somehow the cause is disputed
Few radicals oi even liberals would want to
assassinate 1 om 1 l.i den
Something like this tends to male one
suspicious ol the source of the othei violent
displays, coming as they did from this pocket
ol conservatism that has seen Minulemen doing
manuevers in the hills ol the Irvine Ranch
BOMBS ALLOW DISTORTION
fhe le.ulei ol the Brazilian guerilla
organization Vanguardia Populat
Revolucionaria I adislav Dobor. explained why
Ins group did not use bombs "We do nol use
forms ol violence thai can be twisted by the
government II people heard thai we use
bombs the government would do exactly what
the I S does in Vietnam, and what the French
did in Mgcria I hex would pul a few bombs in
Rehouse on a Saturday afternoon, when it
full ol children. nd then we would have
the entire population running aftet us in the
streets We choose very selective targets whose
cannot be disio ted by the
Random bombings which kill ot threaten
,iii people create in this country a mood
ol to.it and the reactionary repression that is
contingent upon such feat Right-wing groups
can easily augment the repressive climate by
staging : th right sort ol bombings in
the name l the Weathermen oi radicals in
general
MOVEMENT SUFFERS
Instances ol this have certainly occured
already Hut .beds ol bomb threats were called
Maun County following the
bombing ol the courthouse It is inconceivable
that they were all Weathermen-inspired. When
acts ol sabotage and provocation are
irresponsibh chosen and effected, the
movement cannot help bill suffci
Ol still j ugeney is the tendency ol
it politics from pet
ethics 1 his is dangerous in a revolution foi the
people I bi et . i d in il a truly
live political, cultural and
rge While maintaining
committment to change ition it is
imperative that the importa ' lost sight
ol
REVOLUTION FOR LIFE
II those who are grappling to save the people
do not have a cleat sense ol themselves as
human bemgs. then the revolution is worthless
and while the leaders may be capable and
politically astute, they will not be human, and
m the end may be as mechanistic as theii
predet essors
1 he revolution must nol be a revolution ol
death, ending in a totalitarian police state. Only
the revolution ol life can liberate
"let me say. at the nsk ol seeming
ridiculous, that the true revolutionary isguided
In great feelings of love" CheGuevara
A new instrumental group in
the ECU School ol Musk will
make us debut -ii campus
Ihuisdas night .H S IS nm
I lie 50-membei Symphonic
Wmd Ensemble, undei the
baton oi Herberl Carter, will
present a concert ol works b)
Gossec, Hovhaness, Sullivan.
Vaughan Williams. Benson.
Copland and Sousa
I Ins is the tnsl public
performance ol the Ensemble,
which was recently formed to
be the School of Music's
touring and recording band
1 he Sy mphonic V? md
Ensemble is aver) select group
w li ose members, mostly
ad anced upperclassmen
among EC! student
instrumentalists, were chosen
on the basis ol auditions
Many of the members also
play in the brass and
woodwind sections ol the I CU
Symphony Orchestra
"The effect ol this smaller
band ensemble is a more exact, f
.IT1 'Ul HFRRFRT CARTER works with the Wind Ensemble in
more transparent musk than , , a,)( u.
the usual band, because there is ch Carter describes , h life in the
only one brass player pei part ft .
rathei than multiple brass ' , ,
"The individual performer is wnlle. r 1
emphasized, and this lends Classical Period dreams
itself to more sensitive MAqrHFrc cTRESSED ' Pa,1a.de,l
MARCHES STHfcbbtu
plav Hie . ,
ii I ? I I ihe
In form, instrumentation, naliy desgiud II
oltkial band ol the I leiuii
Republic, Ihe suite is
composed ol marches I John PI
variations upon the typical S i Sla
march rhythm patterns St I will do
Anothet piece u, be I
works written for the medium peito.med is "The Solitary h"
ol the wind and percussion Dancer written foi wind band concert is complete,
ensemble s opposed to ensemble by Warren Bens,
transcriptions of music written contemporary composei who Sousa vhich I
foi largei groups visited the !( 1 campus a few learned ye
-hc refinement ol the vca S i nd members
Ensemble's repertoire will be It calls foi such effects as Besides tin concert
demonstrated in Htursday hand-dap ' mg by week the In
night's concert, scheduled foi tl le players includes an invitation
Wrighl uditorium. .n Copland's "R ? S ' '
The firsl item on th. p . Musk Educato. I I
program is five-movement the'program It is a series ol Durham in laic Nov.
Environment crisis Prophet
requires emphasis
and approach to the literature,
the 1(1 Symphonic Wind
Ensemble is comparable to the
no t e d last m a n W i nd
Ensemble
It plavs mosth .Micmal
Hooks to succeed Jorgensen
Di M
lull-tune
Jr.
II -
DISTINCTIVE SERVICE
ol the d t and also ha
ea i s
"He has served us with
distinction foi main yeat
said Di Leo W. Jenkit
president, in am
administrative id
? understand and fully
I), Jorgensen i
ti teaching
taughl will
benefit "
STRONG TRADITION
DR. N.M. JORGENSEN (left), chairman of the
Department of Health and Physical Education for
23 years, plans to return to teaching at the end of
postle i J
itness began I
irn m ? con,
I'lO'l lie
whitli niV'
II
Itah SiaL i mas
Di Jenkins ac
Hide.
availabk Di '
certainly will
tradition "I a - li
in l lie.il'
de
mi
I. "W
tinue th
the current academic year. He will be succeeded as
chairman by Dr. Edgar Hooks (right), a native of
Fremont, N.C.
0 ECU foi 1968-69 ai ampbell College In 1964 he
He received his bachelor's won the Outstanding Service
University ol North Carolina Vdvancemenl School.
and a doctorate in education Winston-Salem
from George Peabody C
eceived his bachelor's degree antj masterVdegrees from the w.ud ol th
APPRENTICESHIP BEGINS
I tide
: much-repeated fn
? ? nay degree fron
? . tl unless he and his di -
n0Wt0SWim state University In college he Vlshuk f??
ithlete, was director ol recreation md
MAJOR PARADOX .ball, track intramuralS lo, the I 5 Hooks is iniediate pas,
jndwrestling Seventh miiv in Germany president of the North Carolina
lomensen's philosophy was Dr. Jenkins emphasized that , ?u,r he was directoi ol Association fo. Health.
,t1 . . widelv-auoted the decisioi to relinquish the physical education, intramural Physical Education ana
We ' ?d"P chairmanship was jSor and baseball coach a. Recreation, and holds
. en's wish, in order to B?vtioI1 High School, numerous othe. offices It.
irk it has Vmeri t is tl levote full time to teaching Salisbury N ' assistant similai state and national
firEdirfand ?tS. said Hook, will
, Til Tv-i OUTSTAND.NGPAST ST" coach at Vt.an.ic assume adstrat ?dutj I.
,d themselves Christian Coll and the department mediately as
rofessot and Directoi .pi apprenticeship to succeeamg to
ii-
thi
rnuessoi an Ir "i-i .
Health md Physical Educatittfi the chairmanship next Jury
EcMoo, Mot The fon g
statameni was presflnwcl to the ad
hoc committee on General Collegi"
Requirements by Tom Raymond
Raymond a second year gra Kt
teaching assistant in the ECU
Biology denartment and Chatrman
of the environmental action gro.in
ECOS. Inc
There is a g i a v e
eiiviionment.il viists before us
The problems ol survival thai
mankind has laid upon himsell
aie both deep and complex
These problems have stemmed
out of man's lack ol
understanding and appreciation
ol the life support systems that
sustain his own spec ies
foi example, there is a
great amount ol emphasis m
the American educational
system on stressing the
clearness ol the American
Democracy and the sacrifices
that have been made to sustain
it so that it may remain what it
is today
Why is there no. equal
emphasis on the study ol man S
environment We are
dependent on a frail biosphere
to breathe and live, but how '
We have exploited our
natural resources and tinned
them laigely into unusable and
non-degtadable waste
Can evety American college
graduate state why he must
have clean air to breathe and
clean watei I o dunk' Does
every American college
graduate know why Ins own
biosphere should be respected,
and how '
It should be noted thai
within the next tew years more
than fifty per cent ol the
nation's young people will
attend college and universities
at some time II we ate truly
concerned about the quality ol
the environment and the
quality of life, this concern
must be illustrated and
participated in by out
educational system
EXCESS NOT ANSWER
I xperts are not the solution
Shoe stores are full ol excess
engineers We are in need ol
generalists, who are aware ol
the scope of the problems
before us, to work along side
ot the specialist I would like
to quote a statement bv the
eminent Microbiologisl
Environmentalist, Di CUt'
Dubos, in one ot Ins recenl
publications "A society that
blindly accepts the decisions ol
experts is a sick society on its
wav .0 death The time has
come when we must produce.
alongside specialists, anothet
Jass ol scholars and citizens
who have broad familiarity
with Ihe facts, methods, and
objectives ol st lence and thus
arc capable ol making
euts about scientific
policies Pet sons h k al
the interface of sci
victv have become essei tial
si in p I because all
everything that happens in
soiictv today is influenced by
sc ience
RELEVANCE NEEDED
Always found a. the top ol
the list ol the college student's
demands today is the civ foi
relevance, espec ially in . ourses
and cun ic ulum I his relev
can begin to be achieved as
witnessed by the initiatio
black studies programs here
and at seveial progressive
universities across the n t.ion
t I ast Carolina there are
seveial relevant courses being
olteted and planned, but how
van then potential be realized
when the student is shackled
bv high general college
requirements and often
irrelevant course prerequisites'
While handing out course
c.u.ls at registration this pas.
summer, an official university
notice was passed to me Stit
that, "No student has the
inherent right lo choose Ins
own courses" I i this
relevance' Is ihis fait ' Is this
any way to urn a supposedly
progressive university?
We ol ECOS ask that this
committee review these archaic
high g eneial college
requirements and reduce them
substantially so thai relevance
can begin to he achieved, and
I ast Carolina University can
lultill us stated objective "1 o
be cognizant ol new knowledge
and to be evei ready to meet
the challenge ol new ideas
Suit filed
RICHMOND (AP)
$50,000 suit has been hied
against the Virginia Electric
and Powe. Co bv a Fluvanna
County couple who contend
the company's Bremo lilutt
plant is tlleg.illv polluting thcit
environment
Ihe sii it was filed in
Richmond 1 aw and I quity
( .mil bv lienlon II Pollok, an
attorney, and his wife Kelts
KOHI Kl I i l'i
i" v ear-old mimstet -
by pn .set it as "a
sell procla
schi.i victed
by a Crawl I inty jury
live
invi ilvin
I ? ? . ?? n jury
dehberatit minu.es
found the Rev Duk II
count ol aauuery i i
fornication. j three counts
ol adultery
Si ? lent, it e was delayed bv
Supcriot Court Judge Gei
B ulpeppet III pei
additional invcsltgaliot
SHOWS NO EMOTION
Home, who founded ih
Zenith Baptist t hurch in a
small comn ad
middle Ci i tow dt
virtually no emotion as .he
jury relumed its vei.lict He
. he had throughout much
ol the three dav tual. w ith his
hands clasped on an
Bible
His wife, a small, thin-faced
woman, and his daughtei were
in th ni
Ihe trial, which attracted
standing room crowds, as
spiced bv two days ol detailed
testimony bv more than ;(l
persons, including three
attractive sisteis who were the
principal witnesses foi the
prosecution
INTERCOURSE CHARGED
I w.i i the three testified to
haing sexual intercourse with
Home seveial nines since the
summet ol I1
Ihe youngct girl, howevet
told the jury .hat she had only
received "adjustments to
relieve sexual tension" from
the man Defense witnesses
including seveial married
couples, contended the charges
against llntiie wete placed as a
form "I "revenge "
I he v test it led the
complaints were brought bv
the guls' mothet aftet the
church stopped college
Scholarship assistance to the
I year-old and Home publicly
admonished hei in church foi
aggressive sexn.il hehavioi
Vssl Hist itj I red Hasly
m his , losing argument
described Home as "A
sell proclaimed prophe. and
schola
a genius wli" held
the members ot t,c Zenith
Baptisl hurch within his
HIS slK ,il pi ?,
li"11 is an ordained Baptisl
ministet who formerly held a
pastorale in Macou G;
Oldest.
SO!
Si
By PHIL DIXO
North t arolina'
Student I egislature (5
oldest continuing assi
Us kind in the I nile
begins its 34th sessi
month to continue its
ol forward looking I
proposals
SSl s lust meet
called to ordei on
One ol the earliest
law-making bodies ol
in the country, the
I egisla I ivc- ssenib
debated, and disuissi
the spotsoihstp ot tl
Carolina state Collegi
teams
MODEL LEGISLA
I he idea foi a
legislature made up o
representatives from
around the state w,o
into being by Pro! I
1'aget who seived a-
tor the Assembly ft
years. Gov. Hoey addi
1937 conclave. Sect
State Iliad line
parliamentarian, and r
firs, das was a
Assembly rejected a i
urging President R.?
seek a thud teim IJ
I his move is c
significant because
tuning, only one yea
election to a second t
At the As sen
following year, part
w
open Frida
COLC
100 Kan.
FALLS IE
thi
be
c
I .view
M an imp
inq youri
we're o
largest lr
interview





fuesday, Novembi ' ???hi.nnjj?Ui?!
debut
h the Wind Ensemble in
)tnmg performances.

ike ranch life in the
Jreams
p .11.1 d e s
I
he b
ihe d,i s if wa
?ss ih
l I ,hi I"
V
ii whicl
I K '
he plaed in ihi
' ' '
ncd st
isa"s owi band members
Jesides the corner! this
?k the I nsemble's schedule
hides an invitatioi
:? h rth Carolina
m4 I ducaton Conl
N ?
?rophet
ROM Kl Ga I l'i
?year-old mimstei. des
prosei -?s "a
I priH .
lolai has bi n convicted
jraw lord ml ?
: il turpitude
1 he II r in jur
hi minutes
Re Dick H
huh ' duller) aiK'
rniealion. and three
adulter)
ncing was delayed bj
iperioi Court Judge (i
i ulpeppei III i"
iditional iro stij. ttii i
SHOWS NO EMOTION
Home, who founded the
.?mill Baptist t hurch in -1
nail communii adioinii - this
:i returned its verdicl Hi
he had throughout much
i the three da) trial, with his
.aid clasped on an upen
ible
Hi wife, .i small, thin-faced
oman, and his daughtei were
i the couri
I he trial, which attracted
tanding-room crowds, u
piced b) two days ol detailed
estimon) b more than $0
icrsons. including three
(tractive sisters who were the
irincipal witnesses fui the
iise. ution
INTERCOURSE CHARGED
I ? ol the three testified to
sexual intercourse with
lorne several nines since Ihe
uniinei ol ll)
Ihe youngci girl, howevei
old the jury thai she had onl)
eceived "adjustments to
clieve sexual tension" from
he man I defense w itnesscs.
ncluding several married
.copies, contended the charges
igainsi Home were placed .is .
form "I "revenge
I he led il led the
complaints were brought b)
the girls' moihei aftei the
church slipped college
scholarship assistance lo the
21 year-old and Home publicly
admonished hei in church foi
aggressive sexual behavioi
-i KM tt) I red Hast)
in his i losing argument
described Home as "A
sell proi lamied prophet and
scholai ,i genius who held
the members ol the Zenith
Baptist hurch within Ins
Ills slk.il pi
Home is an ordained Baptist
mmistei who former I) held a
pastoral! in Macon (
Oldest ;pptinuina assembly
SSL marks progress
By PHIL DIXON
Not In.n ulina's State
Studeni I egislature (SSI i the
oldest continuing assembl) ol
Us kind in the 1 lined Slates.
begins its 34th session next
month to continue iis heritage
"i forward looking legislative
proposals
SSI s lust meeting was
sailed to mdei on N"s 12.
1937
One ni the earliest student
law making bodies ol 11s type
in the country, the Student
Legislative Assembl) met,
debated, and discussed undei
the jponsorhsip ol the North
Carolina State College forensic
teams
MODEL LEGISLATURE
I he idea foi a model
legislature made up ol student
representatives from colleges
around the stale was brought
Into being b) Pud I dw in II
Paget who served as sponsoi
lor the AssembK foi several
veais Gov Hoe) addressed the
1937 conclave, Secretary ol
State I had line served as
parliamentarian, and before the
tust da was over, the
AssembK rejected a resolution
urging President Roosevelt to
seek a third term, (24 to 2 J)
1 his move is especial!)
significant because ol its
liming, onl) one veal aftei his
election to a second term.
At the Assembl) the
tollowmg vear. part affUiatii
was significant Ihe Raleigh
News and Observer reported
that the student legislature
"convened on a note ol
harmony that resulted parti)
from the fact that onl) three
Republicans were present ' A
resolution which has become
familial to recent legislatures,
that ol abolition ol the House
Un-Ameri an Activities
ommittee, was first
introduced in the 1938 session
Ihe group declared by a 49-38
vote that a particulai
c omm 11 tee invest igating
un-American activities was
"detrimental to our democratic
government
NEGRO COLLEGES INVITED
Ihe ssembl continued to
give voice to studeni opinion
on contioveisi.il issues
throughout the years ol World
Wat II In 1941 the Studeni
I egislature was declared more
conservative than the regulai
General AssembK. in I1
I had lute stated thai the
group was "a valuable and a
worthwhile organization
(,ov Cherr) and othei
dignitaries followed sun with
praise foi the students, and the
SSI granted awards to Pagi I
and to Eure
Ihe SSI. faced a yeai i t
controvers) in 1945 A plan
introduced b) a i niversit) ol
North Carolina student to
invite Negio colleges was
passed by a vote ol 11048, and
?? gcroiS the state came
numerous letters ol criticism
Many, including Di Frank
Graham, president ol the
( onsolidated I niversit) of
North (anihna. supported the
students In repl) to a
statement that the students did
m,t know what they were
doing, one student delegate
?j "A lot ol us ate veterans
and we do nol need to be told
what we I ought foi
Ihe decision stood, but the
next session was marked b the
absence ol representatives. In 1947 the
Assembly was cancelled lor the
tust and only tune since its
inception the race issue being
a piimaiv reason
INTER RACIAL MARRIAGE
In ll)4S Capitol Square
was once again brightened by
the young laces and ideas ol
student legislators The
organization, now officially the
Stale Student I egislature ol
North arolina, operated
rathet smooth!) from 1948
until 1957, when, in its 21st
session, both the House and
Senate passed a resolution
concerning inter-racial
marriages
1 heouncil ol State.
headed b) Gov. Hodges, acted
to restrict the Legislature, but
its annual session was not
discontinued
I he 1965 group drew severe
criticism from man) people as
,i result ol some of the bills
introduced by several schools
whkh had a ?r) modern
forward looking tenoi Ihe
196! session seemed to set a
pn edeni foi SSI legislation.
because since then a wealth ol
controversial, far-reaching bi
have been introduced ai
quite a number ol them have
actually been adopted b) the
State 1 egislature
his yeai marks the 341
session ol the SSI . the oldest
continuing assembly ol its kind
m the lulled Slates
APPLICATIONS
Applications are now being
accepted in the SGA office foi
this year's delegation II
deadline lor applying will be
nuirs Nov 12. at 5 p.m
Selections will be based on
previous experience, interest
and knowledge ol slate
government. A tesi
parhamentaiy procedure and
state politics will be given to
each applicant luithet infi I
mation should be directed to
Geoffery Knowles, Office ? t
External Affairs, or Phil Dixon,
TRICK OR TREAT! Halloweenn night brought on an
assortment of ghosts, goblins and other strange creatures
in Greenville. And along with the children
s Vice-President
V in v icc-rie-siuc m
Week promises good rushes
n?AVTVNnALL wee rhumb" up I i -? Pi Kappa
WIG NOOK
open Fridays til 9-2719 East Tenth St - AUCOIOiS
COLONIAL HEIGHTS SHOPPING CENTER
100 Kanelcalon Wigs $18.88 value NOW $14.88
FALLS 18" &22" $23.88 value NOW $19.88
things gO
b($ith
By KAY TYNDALL
. t r a,t?r)
The past week on the greek scene has bee
bus) one and the week coming up will provide
even more highlights ol greek life
Saturday afternoon saw ihe beginning ol
rush parties foi sororit) formal rush It is
amazing how so main girls still managed to
look so great despite the drizzling ram whkh
soaked the weekend The first rush parties
held Saturday and Sunday afternoons
week holds even more in store with skit pi
tonight and Wednesda) night and preferential
parties later in the week.
The coming weekend will bring happiness
and excitement for sorority women and rushees
as bids go out, and new pledges and sisters ol
the individual sororities greet each othei on the
Certainly this week of sororit) rush will he
hedic. But il will be a memorable one with the
largest number of girls evei participating in
formal rush
raternities too are in the spotlight
week rhumb! up for P ? ?
le Bowl
Thumbs down on pelt) techni

I ii i '? grat ila ' ?'
go on with ii
Perhaps i
reasonable degrei r
good cleai hilarii is ' in like that
the Pi Ka i ??
saves students fi
Climbing the wall to escape tl
stud The students 01 ai I
ling the parade seemed to be enjoy
? sel)
This coming weel
Omega service fraternit) ???
annual contest foi the ugliest : impus.
S orities, fraternities, and othei
'organizations will I iidates
Selection is based on the greal
pennv voles receive II
lor youi favorite ml) I
ne ot the APO
came the freaks, dressed in costumes rang
witches to soldiers. Despite the damp
Halloween seemed to be the usual spooky fun
Children learn
what they live
He le :
Hi
?
child
H
He
ing from
weather
II
II a
Dorothy Law Nolte
Coke
i Buttling Company. '
Fraternities too a.e in the spotlight tnis ? ?c s ?mm U ???? tf? f
w. . Ian c?-?alMuS,C,an St"VeS ,0r h?neStY
J1" IUU &, Ru DAVID BRADSTREET
.Pizza inn
421 Greenville Bhd
(264 By Pass)
DINE INN or IAKl 01 I
Call Ahead For Faster Service
Telephone 756-9991
By DAVID BRADSTREET

1 ' ??? ?
from 1
performed
n Coffeehous 1 -
like most "i ? -
expected
Bradstreel wanders
is It !?
hat I
Interview your
interviewer.
,nterv,ew,nq lsn'1 jus. a chance .0 dgptay ftl
get Information about employers. Don waste ?l. AS?:
1 Do you have a training program? Describe it.
2 What specific responsibilities are trainees given.
3 What percentage of your management .
are products oi a training program?
come from a specific area or school r1
hold graduate degrees?
4 What percentage of your management openings are
filled from within?
5 If I join your firm and decide to change fields, can it
be done within your firm.
6 What's the cost of living and the housing situation
where I'd be employed?
medical !Insurance, company-paid retirement plan?
8 How does your company's size and growth compare
with others in your industry.
9 What is your company doing in the way of public
10 HoTdoes your employee turnover rate compare with
other companies? ,
11 There must be some negative aspects of the ,ob you re
offering. What are they?
t with I He
unquenchable thirst I
peanui rid vitamin
lei weight
i
?
It
i.
.
ing
who
two vt
?
not
he V
Student, Europe for Christmas. Easter or summer'
ituaenu k rhartpr fliQM' discounts
Employment opportunities Charter tiignts
Ante for mformat.on l.ir ma Anglo Amer.ca Association
60a Pyle Street Newport I W England
LEO'S PERCO
Corner ol I4rh and Washington
7580808
STUDENTDISCOUNT
i viewing the intervi
8 an important step in ?
wFre one of th,
largest insurers, a Wat
interview is a good wa,
investigate a number of i-
. . ? y we havi
port ? ' ' :

datapn
rments. law. ma
and underwriting. Cu-
be on your campus
mbeI 4, 1970. Arrange
an interview through your
ment Office. Then bring
your questions.
INSUIANCI
When you know
it's for keeps
Happily, all your special moments togel
symbolized forever by your enga "d
weddmg rings If the name. Keep?? ' 'he
nng and on the tag you are assured of fine quality
and lasting satisfaction The engagement
diamond .s flawless, of superb color, and precise
cut Your Keepsake Jeweler has a selection of
many lovely styles He's in the yellow
pages under "Jewelers "
Keepsake
REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS
rHOw"To7r77o"uR"ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING
I
I
good war iw ?
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES
nglon 111





ftnterfatnmmt fag? ji faceess 6nemies have faces
Page 4. Fountainhead. Tuesday, Novembe, WTO I llW ? V V W ? W ? ? w ,ove,nment attempted to
Brautigan speaks
government attempted to
i am.iii studies. b , Amer can
?? ssinrss pSS"5"us
finally comes to light
Documented in this book that the people oi Vietnam are
,re tales ol massive on the side ol the Viet Cong
By ROBERT WOOD McDOWELL
Rit hard Braut
Authors ? unit theii voi
ithei
destroy then Vti
!
. i . out In
: i ?, I
unforgetta
Richa Brautiga
his
1
i
I think oi all the people
lost inside oi ou
Brautigan e nces a tendei regard foi life
throughout Ins work His romanticism is
impressionistic approach
mderstatemenl
,1 the simple things ol life to
, e man ol Ins humanity Hie beauty
Brautigan in life s simple
By WAYNE EADS
I in Ind h hina Story, written
Unearned kZ Scholars completely kid to waste many '
Published by Bantam Hooks, square mile, of Vietnam at on athe, . and
l"0 $1-25 bombing rhere are tale, ol ; (nem JU. also rhe real
Vietnam A household massive a tacks from B-52 s he puppet regun pj . v u
word v word which brings to bearing antipersonnel wens ? (o CX ? what they are
mind vision, ol brave American bombs which ipUnttH upon ana revealed
5oldiers fighting desperately release and are designed to kiil Aorfd
through the night in unknown and maim the very.portion deaJhe Cllinmit(ec carefully ?, ' 'K . every mencan
nee paddies in ordei to save which th pohticians hum fc o ,u. .
the free world from the hey are tying to jjy Thm entjfe ndochina region from ?? in the ,
international ,i pnnirv fhe . .i rhe I
i ni in u nis t-pl o t -f or-
Corruption, of burning villages the turn of the century. The Southeasl v rhe 1
? i. .I. ,ii in,l tit' t I, hi1
ile am
SIMPLE STYLE
pan. Brautigan s u try is
vs. having haiku flavoi hut
I i' em" is .i good
s - le and point ol

REDEEMING FEATURE
It's so nice
: ning
somel
?hen
A ovi them
I ove
ikes j
?
idings
ike? oei sevei
I nt ol
;n writing
'?tA , order to save them from the French occupation and the States government has been
violent-conquesl word n, making entire subsequent step-up ol timed brainwashing its people loi
which brings to mind American ' ?? akes and StateS involvement following (wenty.five years, and its
righteousness, and B (r, massacre 0, Dienbienphu foreign poljc) has been built
black-pajama-clad vi witn evil f tc ,e and are given careful consideration. ?? mytn ,?,a the secret lean
l00kS f L'mc E7 of the concentration cam rhe history is correct the men ,e
across the Kuitis ucean, ?o, , ,i? v,h, wrote n are not qu.us-s pomuuns
desiring to swim the channel whichjhese People taken 4 moreaboul th actual ?,?,???
und rape our mothers and
With the coming off-yeai
elections foi the House ol
Representatives and the
Senate, and in light ol the fact
,)ut 8-yeai olds will soon he
able to vote this book is ol
tilTiel importance And every
public office-holdei al the
lia(jona level in this counto
should be required lo read The
Ind K-hina Story
Not thai ii will change the
world rhe United States will
continue to fight its wai foi
lne liberation ol an unknown
fhtcJ.
MhUs
5
Chicago tickets
?
daughters and do untold othei
unthinkable things.
Sound familiar? Not quite.
Only the mosi malicious ol
hypocrites stil! trys to make
the world believe that Bui
what is the true story ol the
Indochina war0 What is the
history ol thai grief-stricken
kind' Who is fighting there.
e Means and Sou Ih
Vietnamese againsi VC rebels
and North Vietnamese? Who
are the Viet Cong? Why is the
United States spending
countless billions ol dollars in
Jo I en so ol the South
Vietnamese government? What
methods are we using to fight
a wai .is this one? What is
in store foi the future?
I a nswei the aboe
questions is the purpose ol this
hook .i documented and
is ihe people do
-?HLmmm ? ? - ?-3 i llX
THE WIZARD OF ID
?
I lilt ?
S I !
I ?
TME" IDEA IS
APM((?ABL?" BUT
I DON'T TrtiNKTAE
WORLD IS i?fADYFoR
A JOHNNY "6RASS"S??P-
aowiiTOwa tlttimit
STARTS THURS.
BOOKS
Compiled by
Publishers Weekly
fici
. Story Segal
1 S
: i
i A
; it i
I Reich
Top ten
.cholarly work ol research
and there is jnne he the Committee ol
ncitement al! Concerned sian Scholars rhis
Business Philadelphia
in llo in an effort to deal up
I jK CHK (,? sound tn( many misconceptions and
be unique . stakcn "facts" fli
I incorporating aroUnd about a land and .1 wai
1.1. blues, rock, symphonies about which most Western
is half a dozen othei peoples knew absolutely
i HIC VGI l has no one
? this hand into
A lid be
prive the members ol the m (ne jungjes ol Vietnam, and
is theirs tn 0 give some understanding
Ticki the concert may wj,y they are fighting
be purchaa the Central agajnst the fai superioi forces
Office at S1.50 foi western military might
students, M foi the publk and combined with the military ol
faculty and stafl tne jc jacb- government ol
South Vietnam
? ins
DESTRUCTION
they wanted to prea
? I the "laeeless enemies"
fB
AND fURfrlBR'
y' note, 1 mM?
A VoUNCj RAT
SHOULD LOOK
'JGON3 T? THE7"
SCHOOL OF HIS
PAEEMTi'CHOtCfc
752-7649
!? IDA'S & M HM SD
SPA 1
sliotts
Record Bars
FIRST ANNIVERSARY SALE
Features
ALL COLUMBIA AND EPIC PRODUCT
NOW ON SALE
DYLAN"
REG. S4.98 Now Only S3.34
Now only $4.19
I Want To Take You Higher'
"Everybody Is A Star
Stand1"
"Life"
Fun"
"You Can Make It If You Try"
"Dance To The Music"
Everyday People"
"Hot Fun In The Summertime"
"M'Lady"
"Sing A Simple Song"
"Thank You Fnletnnme B? Mice Elf Agin'
REG. $5.98 Now Only S4.19
v ?i t
JOHNNY WINTER AND
?. OMG

(XXivCXXX
55JSoocxxxxxxxxxoooocoooooxoooooo
Play
f
rr
MAKING ONE of h
Furman, Pirate ful
finds a big hole in
To Bullpups
Baby
i II I st)S S
ECU'S Baby Pit
then fourtl -
sKiils this seas, n ?h
lost to the Hullpups
me.
' V
-
A -J
FLANKER DICK
career receptions i
in the first half of
BIG VA
2800 F.
we
OUR Pi
ARE Th





ices
,ii attempted u
out ii the American
, dei to whip them
aiort" i"?dlsastrou
polic) Hw truth
es to light
ie coming off-yeai
foi the House "I
natives and the
l lighi ol the fact
olds will soon be
lte ibis book is "i
jortance nd every
ffice-holdei at the
?vel in tins country
required to read llif
Sum
,1 n will change the
e United States will
lo fighi it- wai foi
ion oi an unknown
Southeast Asia, but
the people do
put a stop i" it
a Johnny h?rt
K

J
(mLJ
i.
.i
, THATS
- ? '
if. .wsi:
1 THE
'J.JA- .
J7N I
s5" ?
n
.1 w
w s 1rI
-v c
XMK
MOTHIMPOtH.
oooooo oooooo
)UCT
RAND
?tl bar
ecord8
BUNT ? CMAHlOlIf ? GRKNVIIU
?oxo??ooooooo
'Players had courage of lions'
MAKING ONE of his 34 plunges against
Furman, Pirate fullback Billy Wallace
finds a big hole in the Paladin defense.
(bta'T pnoio oy siepnen ixeaij
Pirates won, 7-0, as Wallace gained 127
yards on the ground.
To Bullpupi
Baby Pirates lose fourth
i il Kl l slos S (
Ml- Baby Pirates dropped
then fourth game in as mans
stalls this seas when they
lost I" the Bullpups I 1 lie
Citadel, N-7 F-ndas afternoon
I he only bright spol foi the
Bab Pirates was the passing
is. yards) and rushing (23
yards) o( quarterback Carl
(Stan photo by Stephen Neai)
FLANKER DICK CORRADA set a school record of 75
career receptions with this grab of a John Casazza pass
in the first half of game with Furman Saturday.
Summerell,
Next game tor the frosh will
be Nov. 13 when they travel to
Richmond to face the
freshman Spiders In that game
ihe final one ol the year -
the Baby Pirates will be
attempting to avert a wmless
season
Against the Bullpups. ECU
could manage a lead only once.
That came in the first half as
Kenny Moore climaxed a
60-yard drive with a five-yard
touchdown run to make it 7-3.
Game site
switched
DAVIDSON. N.C Hie
Davidson-East Carolina
football game, scheduled foi
Not 2 ai Foreman Field in
Norfolk. Va . has been
switched to Davidson's
Richardson Field
The announcement was
made recently by Davidson
Athletic Director Tom Scott.
Scott said the change was
madeaftet Tidewater Realtoi
Bowl. Inc. the sponsoring
agencv in the Norfolk area
withdrew from its contract
committment to back the game
in the Virginia city
No official reason tor the
withdrawal has been received,
according to Scott Howevet
written communication stating
Tidewater Realtor Bowl's
position on the game is
expected this week
By DON TRAUSNECK
(Spi rti I dil if
?' I his was the most
emotional game I've ever been
a par' ol I lie players had the
courage ol lions
Sin.li weie the woids I EC!
head football coach Mike
McGee Saturday afternoon
altei his team had played the
spoilers and upset the Furman
Paladins. 7-0.
The game, played in
rain-soaked Sirnne Stadium in
Greenville, S C, was the main
attraction for Furman's
homecoming weekend and. it
the Paladins had won. they
would have moved into a tie
With Ihe Citadel foi the
Southern Conference lead
CITADEL LOSES
he (' i tadel lost to
Richmond in another league
game Saturday
"I have great respect for
Furman said McGee.
"Ihey're a bettei team than I
anticipated
Despite the fact that
Furman entered the game with
a four-game winning Streak and
the Pirates had an unenviable
seven-game losing skid, the
Pirates were not to be denied
on this wet afternoon
?DEDICATED'
"It's a group ol men that
dedicated themselves to
turning things around said
2-0-1 in SC
the iash in the team's
dressing aftei he had
been carried ofl the held b Ins
jubilant play ei
I hi- oach had plenty ol
praise for his men, as well he
should alter such j tremendous
victory
"The llei.se contl
ball and kept il awa
funu; he said The
defense played magnificently
McGee singled i iul
his . iffensive perfoi
theii part i in the Pirates lust
win ol ihe seas. .1. aftei 10
straight setbacks
Iwo-yeai span
"RAN WELL"
"All the backs ran well.
particularlv Strayhorn Wa
and Whitlev he said
He was referring to 1 ?
Strayhorn, who scored the
game's only touch .
fullback Billy Wallace, who
gained 21 yard oi -4
including 12 straight il
stretch; and George Whitley.
w rushed foi 2 yard
caught iw . passes foi ai
19
The ke to the P
success Salurdav wjs th
that they didn't mal
ostly errors during the .
"Vte have beer
sophomore mistakes all
long and they have bee killing
us said McGee
(Saturday i. they didn t -
sS
? Ibta' Stephen Nea'
BALL ELUDES GRASP of Dick Corrada
as he tries valiantly to reach pass from caught four passes, all ,n the first half, as
quarterback John Casazza. Corrada Pirates upset high riding Furman.
Pirates like Furman, rain
Booters triumph
Coach John Lovstedt's ECU
booters returned to the
friendly confines of the
Southern Conference and went
away with a 3-1 victory over
Davidson Saturdav morning
It was only the third win for
the Pirates against five losses
and two ties but boosted their
conference mark to 2-0-1.
Mike McFadden scored all
three Pirate goals as he-
connected on two pei i
shots and a goal kick.
In an earlier game last w ?
the Pirate booters lost to
Wilmington College. 3-1 In that
game. Rick Lindsav prevented
a rout as he made 13 5t
Seahawk shots
" t I
I P
?
-
?
.
and p
then first v
ENDS STREAK
Ihe win ended a 10 c
vered
. illy- it
that the Pirates last del n
I 24-21 las:
Well maybi not tl
i The Paladins finishf
? "
-
Pll
red to beat
Lasl
PRESSURE
I I' '
I
a as
: (14-7)
I i !
. -
Sports
i
Tuesday November 3 1970
j WANTED FOR SALE
yenMe fieofiJe
THE PIRATES
TABLE
ownea & operated by
HUEY
v? wit
!
'?Mu. 3"
The Mushroom
Georgetown Sboppes 11 A.M. 7 P.M.
Jack L. Tyler
Pharmacist
& owner
BIG VALUE DISCOUNT DRUGS
2800 EAST TENTH STREET
9am- 9pm
758-2181
wc cash student checks
OUR PRESCRIPTION PRICES
ARE THE LOWEST IN TOWN
CLASSIFIED
On Thursday or 1-ndav.
October 15th or 16th, (just
before Homecoming) three
Ge neral I lee trie heat
pumps weie removed from
the rear ol the apartment
house at 514 las! Eighth
Street. A reward is ottered
foi any information leading
to t h e p o s i t i v e
identification ol the person
oi persons seen removing
the heat pumps Any
person having information
is requested to write to V
G Whitakei Box 527,
Greenville, N (
SWIM'S BiSIflUfilT
HID Dfllfiy Bflfi
2713 EAST TENTH STREET
I (?s I One woman's
watch Universal make with
initials KLW on back Lost
in vicinity ol Green Springs
paik Saturday, October 24.
II found, please contact
Karen Wilson, 709 Green
Dotni. 758-9917
FREE
Private Dining Room Available
We cash STUDENT hecks
OPEN 11 AM-8PM
Huev's Restaurant
Charles St ExtAdiacent to rail
roadunderpass & Minges Col
Announcing
In addition to our reg. 13 courses,
on Thur. Fri. Sat. we serve
FRESH SEAFOOD
SPECIALS
Fri.& Sat. meals $130 including
2 vegatabtes bread, & tea
owned and operated Tel.
by analumnus of ECU 756 ? 4808
PIZZA CHEF
Delivery Service
752-7483
4PM to Midnight
SUNTHUR.
Pizza, Spaghetti, Oven Burgers
529 Contanche St.
WAST El I REM
i
K)K SAL1
? M
Bai 5
WANT1 D ?
FOI "si 1NHI D classified
? ? KaU- 1 I
-4rCr47-0-&
hoppe
BAKERS-BAKERS DOZEN
14 for the the price of
12 to students with I.D.
Decorated Cakes,
Birthday, All occasion
?T C?
delivered to dorms
greek houses
We have Pastries, Pies, Cakes,
and all kinds of pastry goods
Pitt Plaza Tel. 756-2343
CAR WASH SPECIAL AT
QWIK AUTO WASH
TENTH & EVANS ST
ECU STUDENTS & FACULTY
Complete Car Wash $2.00
Reg. .$2.50
Complete Car Wash $1.50
with gas fill-up (8 gal. min.)
Reg. $2.00
Outside Wash -??
Reg. $1.25
WE VACUME ALL CARS
Present ID. Card for DISCOUNT
Offer good MonTueWed.
JnflE
EA5T
SWANK ,NC -SoU Dittributor





I
ountainhead
and the truth shall make you free'
Overpadding of athletic program
has critics lacking in motivation
When A Motto performs in the
great operu houses ol the world, she
plays to overflowing crowds When
she appears at FCU. she looks out
from the stage al empt) seats
W. have heard students and faculty
alike complain in great numbers that
i he .it hletii program at 1(1 is
overpadded bs thousands ol dollars
and thai this money should be
directed towards expanding
improving the quality ol more .trtistic
rhe seem to be saving that more
lecturers should lecture, more sn
should sing, and m k groups
should rock I1. sa ople vis
that .1 versitv loi
? deepening ol the spirit
a that football teams are
totally irrelevant to I ol a
uniersit I hc say thai sharing the
experience ol the artist with the
artist is invaluable to cultural growth
and should be supported even more
than the football team.
We wi nld lik to remind tl
people ol .i lew facts ol lite
First, tl trol the
money whieh brings the artists to
our campus exhibit an adding
machine mentality. I"ha! is, the
aesthetic quality of a performance
means little to them. Ihs remain
unmoved by the beautiful.
Second, as the situation stands
now, the success of a program in the
arts is determined wholly In the
number ol people who attend the
performance "he democratic way.
sou know
Perhaps if people had stood
outside of Wright Auditorium to heai
Anna Moffo. she would already be
engaged to sing here next sear
We sympathize with the laments ol
thirsty art mongers, hut we ask you
this where were you when Anna
Moffo sang, when Van ClibHrn
played, when the Osipo dancers
danced '
We would like to remind you that
until the concert hall is filled to
overflowing a I an artistic
performance, the adding machine
mentality will remain unmoved and
we will have the current emphasis on
what is now pleasing the masses
Experts review draft
piov idi
he has
By JOHN STRIKER AMD ANDREW SHAPIRO
?
q . ibei is high (270) I want to
? draft vulnerability behind
Come Jai l?7l. but my local board placed me
in class II S this yea h ? ?ui earliei
eolumi that you w aid its to
change the m ,lu' M-S
eni on students who do not want it
Whal has happened? It's getting late
In an earliei column we pointed out that
undei "in interpretation ol the law. a student
stmuia not he placed in class ll-S during any
academic yeai unless he has requested the
defern i that ?? : w time, the
Selective Sen ce Sy i We said in
the column that "w? will first seek to convince
the Selective Service System toaltei its present
policy" before bringing a class actioi in court
in force a change Fortunately, the class action
will not he necessary Oi Ocl 23, 1970. local
board memorandum ' was issued li
i whethei
tins
.en . . . ? i request in
wiiung. to be taken out ol class IIS Upon
quest loval from
is s ard should promptly
place ? in slass l-A: the p tness being
necessary ii phsh the change
. Dec ;i n . ini who is m class
I ?; IX-s $1 and whose lottery numbei has
not been reached will fall into a lowei priority
group on Jan I and will be. foi all practical
beyond the draft Be sure to send
youi lettei bs registered mail, return receipi
requested and keep a copy ol u for youi own
records
0 My draft board has five members Only
! up foi my personal appea i last
a ??. Is tins ill' .
Ml five members do not have to attend
caring ("he regulations allow the board
ite one or more members who will
meei with you The designeets) will then report
back to the othei membi fl i your
appearance
You do have a righl vith al least one
board member Mils pi tw : ed m a
recent case where thi - h allowed to
meet only with the draft board clerk rathei
than ,i board membei The court ruled that the
i ied his light to a
pers nal appearance rherefore, his indu
ordei was invalid
y I. uu automatically tail youi physical it
ij weai contact lenses? - No, not
automatically Contacl lenses disqualify a
registrant only In what the Army calls
"complicated eases requiring contact lenses for
adequate correction ol vision Complicated
c ises mas include defects such as corneal scars,
an irregulai astigmatism oi keratoconus. ft
the existence ol any ol these
complications should be documented by a
phy sician
It you weai contact lenses, you should
remove them at least 72 hours prioi to youi
physical Otherwise the Army may have to
retain you at the examining station in order to
test youi eves Army regulations authorize
retention foi up to three Jas
Q lhe last mailing address 1 gave my dial I
board was my dormitory room Now 1 ve
moved off-campus to live in my girlfriend's
apartment. I'm not going to report this new
mailing address, but 1 just want to know
whethei I'm doing something illegal
A Not .is fat as the mail goes. Technically
speaking, the regulations do require each
registrant "to keep his local board advised at all
timei ol the address where mail will reach
him Ibis requirement, howevei Joes not
compel the registrant to report every change in
mailing address He can, instead, arrange to
haw mail forwarded, without informing the
diatt board oi his new forwarding address.
The Supremeourl has decided that a
registrant does not have to remain in one place
or inform the draft board ol every new mailing
address. He can keep the board advised ol the
address where mail will reach him if, acting in
good faith, he leaves a chain ol forwarding
addresses, with the reasonable expectation that
he will receive mail in time to comply with it.
0 I am using to fill out the "Special Form for
Conscientious Objector" (SSS 150), but I am
not satistied with some of the wording on the
form I heard that Elliott Welsh, the C 0. in
the recent Welsh ease, altered the form to sun
Ins beliefs What exactly did he do and was it
illegal'
A. In series I of the form, a C O. must sign a
printed statement that begins: "I am. by reason
ol ms religious training and belief,
conscientiously opposed to war In any form
Welsh signed this statement only altei he
crossed ut the words "my religious training
and Welsh wanted to emphasize that he did
not considei his system ol ethics "rehgious
However, the Supreme Court vindicated
Welsh's beliefs. regardless ol how he
characterized them, they were ?"religious" in
the eyes of the law Had Welsh chosen to call
his beliefs "religious he would have made a
decision in his ta? r even easier However, the
fact that he rejected the word "religious" could
not be used as the determining facti i against
him. Failure to use the word is. according to
the Supreme Court, "a highly unreliable guide
for those charged with administering the CO
exemption" Dralt boards must decide foi
themselves whether a registrant's beliefs fulfill
the legal definition ol "religious training and
beliel "
fountAinhead
Wayne B. Eads
Managing Editor
Robert R. Thonen
Editor-in-Chief
Bev Denny
Associate Editor
David Landt
Business Manager
Gary Pndgen News Editor
Karen Blanjfield Features Editor
Don TrauneckSporti Editor
Ira Baker Adv.ter
P ,h shod by students of East Carolina University P O Box 2516, Greenville,
North Carolina 27834 Advertising open rate $1 80 per column inch
Classified $1 00 for first 25 words Telephone 919 758-6366 Subscription
rate is $10 00 per year
56ME KlNt OF dunnO. l?Ti)u
COWCEKT TONIGHT. J5EE WHA13
'you Groyi &m'? XN ?
T
o

l&
('i

sSS
The Doctor's Bag
By Arnold Werner M O
(Copyright 19 p,?
i.il ESTION: I am
M) problet
there is still paii i. Also. I a
ible to havi ' I
reach a climax :
love my
feel I should enga
sak I- -I. r "1" li repeated
pan, and the inability to reach a clii
would app i'1' as ' l
i xtremely eonc
a ho must
ti have .in erection
oman can
. . regardless
. . indication thai
ids mv to
nually
lack
attempts
t Orgasm
and
ti itement
fore
siological
sWl l
sexually excited in ord
and participaH in intci
phs sicalls ; I
of hvi
you do 1
belies e thai
excited durii
.?I vagii al
painful experience svh
sexual intercourse with
becomes impossible I
lack ol climax i
is preseni. bui p
relations begin. pre
and emotional preparatii i sm
lie technical p ? ' was easy
to answer, but the re - -al ;li
youi relationship with You mij
considei sharing sou: fi
about intercourse with him. It takes quite a
while foi mosl p ' feel at easeand enjoy
sexual relations Mans couples find that sexual
re la i in.is iv more satisfactory to, both when it
is mutually desired and the emotion
physical aspects ol a relati. nship are lulls
understood.
Mans unmarried i - iexual
inn rcourse. oth tn key to a
successful relationship in tl i ? lepends
mo. .
on wli.it
I xpresston in Man iag
1 I) . Bantai i Bo -
discussion ol sexual technique Ira Reiss's
"Premarital Sexual Standards it i Free
Press, paperback, provide
along a different lit
'New Left
threaten
exuai
line ?.
client
are
By JAMES HORD
Freedom ol p I 'Ins country has
always be preca lorn. It has been
threatened a times by righl wing and lefl wing
extremists, presidents men ol congress, and
now bs the government as the I-Bl. the I S
Anns, and the CIA ies are now
compiling largi d ?$? information on
private citizens who rind ret soi to dissent
against policies i i th government People who
pate m lawful demonstrations, sign
petitions a rl ??unpopular causes are
being watched vernment
I tie information in these dossiers is being
? re I by iters The .
speech comes from the
possibility ? ' " I ired information
v computei will be
able to retrieve this ii formation and it mas fall
into the "wrong hands Creditors and
busim '?' rmatton
and use it ' ' the citizei
may be tions may be withheld,
and seums clearances withdrawn
formei membei ol the I S
ntellig i - gatl ring ig whowasa
to the "X Left Dest tated th ii several
securit ready been with
fro ctviliai becaus I theii "participation in
i;l I si ION I .mi almost 19 years ol age and
have noi experienced nocturnal emission ("wet
dream") Is there something wrong with me'
VNSW1 R Wcl dreams are much less common
: I nely absent in a man who masturbates
ly oi is having regulai sexual intercourse
Sim st all i n past eai K adolesc ence are
the othei oi both. I assume sou
fall into this gi ip Ninety nine percent ol men
v.ui'i be ssrong!
Following are excerpts from two letters
which are hopefully from pacifists
Ql 1 STIO "I base heard that SUgal diabetes
is reason foi being drafi deferrable Will
drinking ol honey prioi to urine analysis result
m an indk .u. I I iabetes
"Ten years ago I had pneumonia and
recovered completely however, last October I
contracted the disease again and was
hospitalized foi one week In Decembet I was
hospitalized again with pneumonia. Is
pneumonia a chronic disease' Am 1 more
iusceptable now as a result ol previous
exposure, and. is this a reasonable basis tor
military rejection oi medical discharge?
ANSWER lhe lust question tails into the
category ol wishful thinking Diabetes is reason
enough to be rejected by Selective Service. The
normal person cannot produce sugai in his
urine bs drinking hones oi .ms othei means.
1 ry again.
I he second question is more worrisome.
Repeated episodes ol pneum nia .m occui
with certain underlying diseases In such eases
chronic illness can result, oi is present. I would
suggest careful evaluation bs a physician foi the
presence ol abnormalities that would make sou
susceptable to repeated pulmonary infections.
This mas svell be a reasonable basis tor
rejection oi discharge from the military.
I nfortunately. u can also mean that sou base a
veis serious disease and you might pietei being
111 the position oi trying to drink hones
Desk'will
freedom
The effect o keeping dossiers on private
citizens who dissent in a lawful manner is not a
beuelki.il one Mans citizens who would
otherwise express their views on many issues
aie afraid to do so Mans citizens who express
their views on unpopulai issues do so with lhe
knowledge thai they mas somehow be
penalized, oi jeopardized in the future because
ol their activities In othei words, a "chilling
effect" on freedom ol expression is now
coming about because of governmental
intervention into the area ol civil liberties.
What light does the federal government have
to keep large amounts of information of private
citizens who have nevei broken a lass The only
reason given is that it is in the interest of
national security This is not good enough
When freedom of speech is impaired, and
peace-loving citizens are afraid to speak out.
then the country is in serious danger. Big
Brother may already be with us
Clearly, the U.S. Army should get out ol the
field ol collecting data on individual citizens
II ? aims has never been noted for its
protection ol individual rights, oi any thing else
democratic Surveillance ol lawful political
activity bv ans governmental agency does not
well tor the future ol democratic
II ,i ielv
Page 6, Fountainhead, fuesday. Novembei 3.1970
The Forum
lo Fountainhead
Deal Mi Von Klor.
Youi letters concerning the Buccaneer, the
Fountainhead, and the MK( are sic, sic, sic,
literally'
Sincerely
Gary L. McCullough
Features Editor, Buccaneer
MRC Representative (4th floor Belkl
Grump box
To Fountainhead
Scarcely a das goes bs thai each one ol us
doesn't have a lew derogatory remarks to say
about the University, its rules and regulations,
the obscure w.n ii is run and who has a s.iv in
what And that's ail that gets done We bang
our heads against avvall ol ied tape
lhe Women's Residence Council has placed a
"(.tump Box" in the lobbv of the t I I lie
WRC is the group who lengthened women's
curfew hours, said we ean now legally cook in
the dorms, wiped out the sign in and sign out
cards, got rid ol some of the freshmen rules and
the "Parental Permission Slips" (i.e women
had to base written permission from then
patents foi such trips as being allowed to nde a
motorcycle while al ECU), there are mans
more changes thai have been made wilh the
help of WRC and Dean fulghum. and there aie
many more which need to be made I his is the
purpose of the Grump Box
lhe gripes that are put into the box will
periodically be punted in the Fountainhead,
and the wrc will try to do something about
them oi retei them to the right bauds Kindly
be serious about this thing, the Establishment
doesn't dig obscenity and othei assorted
garbage, and sour complaint is more hkels to
be aeted upon if slated purely
More powei to the people
Sue Bowermaster
Correcton
I o fountainhead
This lettei is written in reply to Mi Hadden's
criticism ol SGA President Bob Whitley. First
of all. I do not know whethei he attended the
student involvement ulls but its purpose was,
among othei things, to make possible a dialogue
between the SGA .md our student bods. The
statement he referred to was taken completely
out ol context and does not Include the answer
in its entirety.
Whitley was asked whs the SGA does not
take stands on national and political issues
He answered that the SGA was the governing
bods ol our student body and should definitely
be committed to ECU. He went on to sas thai
as individuals, he and other students should
lake active parts in polities and national
problems From this dialogue, there arose the
idea of polling the student b. Js and then the
SCiA "officially" stating the position of our
student bods to congressmen, etc. Whitley
agieed with the suggestion and plans to eauy
through svith it
I hope this helps Mi Madden understand the
statement more completely even though he
mas disagree svith it I hated to see sueh a
misconception come out of a sets detinue
attempt to help student-SGA communication.
Randy Honnet
Why not?
To Fountainhead:
II "Doctor's Bag" is so great, whs has it
been absent from the last few issues'1
Jackson Smith
Forum policy
Students and employees of the University aie
urged to express their opinions in The Koiiun.
Letters should be concise and to the point
Letters should not exceed 300 words.
The editors i -seise the righl lo edit all tetters
foi stsl- and errors and length
All leiteis must be signed with the name of
the writer Upon the writes request, his naine
will be withheld
Space permitting. every leliei lo
FOUNTAIN!II D wall be printed subject to
the above procedures
Signed articles on this page relied the
opinions ol the wntei and nol ncvcsvinlv those
of FOUNTAINHEAD oi East Carolin;
University.
I
Pu
By
Stude
student pi ess was
meeting of the EC
Fountainhead fc
Publications Boan
by Board financia
treasurer, and D
Fund advisoi lo tl
certain staff inenit
Sharpe and Th
for Fountainhead
clerk, calling
unnecessary. They
of the staff photi
regarding Ins salai
Also al issue i
oveiseers to sign
who aie not I
Fountamhead's ec
"The situation
SGA have the
newspapei funds l
cannot continue
quality of work
guarantee them tl
FIN
Monev foi li
transferred eails t
Fountainhead scorj
Howevei. all
countersigned by '
by either blocks p.
Sharpe explain!
student pei quai
receives S10 pel si
Volume II
Disl
in
By
A black FCU s
filed suit against
in the I'niversi
profanity to a If.
for creating a put
Dixofl has I
Galloway for
commission ot pi
Galloway too
Boaid following
the Greenville db
The charges sti
Oct. 17 Homec
party claims to I
accounts of the
court and in inte
Gallowas said
by Dixon and
returned the bU
Galloway provol
chest three time
two did exchangi
HE
James B. M;
hearing will be
Thursday, Nov.
The Universi
which one stu
another. Accon
original junsdic
and demonstra
jurisdiction froi
general.
Following C
40 to 50 blacks
office with thei
complaints coiii
Kenneth G
account oi the
interview
A few minut
"one of our sti
very serious crt
BLACK ST
for SGA vie
I





Title
Fountainhead, November 3, 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
November 03, 1970
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.80
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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