Fountainhead, June 14, 1972


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





fountainhead
? and the truth shall make you free'
Student presidents meet here
to discuss important problems
GREENVILLE. N CAROLINA
VOLUME III. NUMBEH 57
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1972
By GARY CARTER
Ami N?wi Editor
The controversial issue ol student's rights
received extensive attention from the student
presidents of seven North irolina universities
when they met in conference .it ECU last
Sattitday Also receiving attention were
academic and activity lees, in loco parentis, and
several othei aieas ol concern to students of the
state's universities rhesa Items were collected
into a petition which will be presented, by the
presidents. lo theonsohdated Board of
Governors, hopeful) in their fust meeting on
July 7
Probably, the most far-reaching activity
came in the area ol bask student rights. The
student leaders efferei, within their document,
a uniform Bill ol Student Rights and
recommended that it be adopted hy the
ao-called 'super hoaid " According to the
creators ol the bill, it will be presentedin the
inteu-st oi preserving the rights of all students
as citizens, under the Constitution ol the
United Stales and the Constitution of the State
of North Carolina, and preventing disruption
and discontent on the university campuses
Foremost among the rights mentioned in the
body of the hill are the freedom ti( speech,
freedom ol the press, and the right to
peacelully assemble Also covered here is the
right ol free speech for speakers, regardless ot
the person's "political ot idealogical
affiliations
Each student, according to the document,
shall he guaranteed the right to privacs in the
regard to search and seizure According to the
presidents, it the seaich is conducted by
university officials, a 24-hour notice must be
given II the search is conducted by civil
authorities, proper notice must he given to
university officials and resident advisors
Also contained are the rights ot students to
"form, join and participate m any group
without restrictions Each student shall also
he able to solicit funds foi recognized
organizations and have the privelege ol using
any campus facilities, subject only to uniform
regulations.
In making certain that students aie awaie ot
all uniform rules and regulations, the student
leaders requested that the Board order all
university administrations to publish and
distribute all regulations and policies also
assuming the cost lot such publications
Seeking more student voice in the formation
of university policy, the group urged thai
Student! be given j voice 111 such policy
enacting and also, that students he able to
inquire into all actions ol the universities which
affect them
Students should, according to the presidents.
have knowledge ol all information and records
compiled on them by the university This
would include the content and location ol such
records and. also, the manner in which they can
be used 1'iuler the bill a student will be able to
view such records and challenge "the salidiU
and tight of existence ot the information and
records
Also assuming a large portion on the hill is
the judicial system recommended by the
leaders Undei the proposals, students would be
tiled toi violations "In an independent and
impji tlal judiciary" and shall have the right lo
pidicial due process
Finally, under this section ot the petition, is
the statement thai students shall be evaluated
only on the basis ol then academic
performance It is also stated that no rule or
regulation may discriminate against students on
the basis ol "race, religion, sex, ethnic origin,
political beliel or affiliation
Several othei key issues concerning students
?I the now consolidated universities leceivcd
exteusne attention The conglomerate ol
student oifiudls proposed that the Board
i ar an tee that 'Student Admis Feet be
considered student hinds to he appropriated by
duly elected representatives from the student
body " li was lurthei requested that these
lees, and student governments themselves, be
immune from control of anv sort by the various
administrations and Boards of Trustees
In legaid to the doctrine oflnloco praentts.
the student group entreated the Board ot
Governors to recognize that the principle of
serving as "parental authority" is no longer
applicable on the various campuses across the
State Student voice ui enacting and revising
residency regulations was also requested.
Academic fees, which were drasticly
increased during the last state legislative session.
were also treated by the student body
presidents They plan to ask the Board to
petition the State Legislature to reduce the fees
to the level of the 1970-71 academic year By
taking such an action, the presidents feel that
"cultural exchange and educational enrichment
in institutions ol liighei learning across the
stale could be insured
Among the institutions represented were
I I Appalachian State. UNC Charlotte,
IGreensboro, UNC -Chapel Hill, NC
( entral and Pembroke State The presidents
plan to contact other schools across the state
concerning the petition and present it to the
Hoard ol Governors tor consideration
Remaining marchers convicted in court-
receive light sentence for illegal parade
photo b? bill riedelli
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT, Rob Luisana was one of the seven student
presidents who met in conference at ECU last Saturday to discuss and find solutions
to grave problems facing today's college students
Deposits and enrollment discussed
By BRUCE SAVAGE
Staff Wrtttr
Ten ECU students and one non-student were
found guilty Monday in Pill County District
Court on charges stemming from a May 11
ann-wai protest march One ECU student was
found not guilty on the same charges
The march, which was organized in protest
to the escalation of the war in Vietnam,
resulted in the arrest of I 7 people on charges of
"paiading without a permit
hive of the seventeen defendants were found
guilts on June 5, and were sentenced to thirty
davs oi S 10 tines plus court costs, amounting
to a total of S31
Gregg Holt. Kenneth Foscue, Richard
Conway. I dward Gaiwood, Jamie Lee. and
Pnscilla Carvei entered a "not guilty plea to
the charges Linda Medhn. also an ECU student,
pleaded "not guilts to a charge ol "tailuie to
disperse
The prosecution led olt'with the testimony
of police officer Leon Harden Daiden testified
that at 8 30 p.m on Mas II. approximately
100 people with signs and candles matched two
by two from the ECU campus onto city-
property, in the vicinity ol the (.eorgetowne
Shoppcs He testified that he informed the
crowd that they were violating the city
ordinance which bans the assembly of three oi
more persons on city property with the intent
lo parade unless priol notification of 76 hours
is given and a permit obtained.
Darden continued by staling that he asked
the crowd to put down their signs and to
disperse At this point, part of the crowd
continued around him and the other officers
present, many still carrying signs and candles
He displaced two signs ("STOP THE
BLOCKADI and ?All WE ARE SAYING IS
GIVE PEACE A CHANCE") which he said
were taken from the crowd after being ordered
to disperse
He concluded by stating that approximately
sixty of the crowd continued to march and
then began arresting those i th the signs
Greenville Police Chiel Edward c, Cannon
was also called by the ptosecution He testified
that when he atrived at the scene, the
demonstrators were mat clung up Cotanche
Street in single file with candles and signs
Officer William Perry testified that none ol
the group had signs or candles when they
reached Cotanche Street, and that they weren't
shouting oi yelling as stated by Darden
Other prosecution witnesses included police
officers Gleary Warren and Sheriff Oakely
Linda Medhn opened the defense by stating
that she was in the vicinity ol the jail where she
was ai rested because she was concerned about a
11lend and wanted lo know what had happened
to him She said thai Sheriff Oakely told her to
leave the area and she was in the process of
leaving when another officer arrested net
Richaid Conway continued by stating that
he was with the march until the order to
disperse was given "When I heard the ordet I
decided to leave and go to the Attic where I
was 1,1 meet my wile at 9 00 p in I was walking
lowaid the Attic when an officei approached
(See MARCHERS on .j 3)
Correction
In the Wednesday. June ') issue ot
Fountainhead, a mistake was made in the story
concerning the convicted marchers The next to
the last paragraph reads. 'At this point.
Wheelet interrupted Darden It should read
"At this point. Wheeler interrupted
McPherson " Darden is a Greenville Police
Officer; McPherson was the counsel lor the
defense
By MICHAELJACOBSON
Stmfl Wntr
Students that did not nay the required S50
deposit to certify their return next fall will
suffer no penalty
According to Mr Worth Baker, registrar.
"The registrars office will not cancel any
schedule if the $50 was not paid " This does
not mean, however, that anv rules will be
stretched concerning registration next tall He
continued by saying. 'The four o'clock
deadline tor registration that has prevailed in
the past will continue to prevail
The number of waivers requested jnd
granted to students who felt they had a
hardship case in paying the deposit was not
available Robert Boudreaux. financial aid
officer, was not available tor comment
Robert L'ssery. head ol Institutional
Research, staled that 10.110 students are
expected for the Fall session 2.200 ot these
students will be freshmen along with 650 new
transler students
The 2,200 freshmen students will be visiting
the campus to: Orientation throughout the
summer The Ireshmen will be shown around
the campus hs student workers
Student help in directing Oriental n are
headed hv James Mallory. Dean ol Mei
acqune then )obs hv application Jim Hicks
student co-ordinatoi foi freshmen orientation
stated. 'Applications were made to Dean
IfatloryS office and he did wbal he warned lo
do with them
Robe I uisana. SGA president, said that he
did life an application with the Dear's 'ttue
Rick Atkinson, SGA vice-president, did not
know thai he had been hired and he did not file
an application with Dean Mallory Mark Brown.
si, treasurei was 'he as' workei ti be hired
and he was not available lor comment
Others working ' ? Dean Mallors are Boh
Robinsoi SGA attorney ccicai Lei Mancim.
Julia s SOI I iwuij lei (.ail Stanford and
I i SGA president
rhere are two lull time employees-Steve
and Ron Scronce Both Howell and
S ce work lull lime as counselors on the
Hill
I pai ? ? a it k rj ai t paid hy the
?sit
said that las! yeai the workers
receivi K foi the entire orientation
program, hut he did know what ihe pavment
s lid he this sea!
(H we assistant dean ot men. said that
the woikc-s will receives I 60 pei hour "jus) as
ans othei student w F
that SI 000 was eisen to the
the Si
In questioning luisana about tl U S1 i
appreciation he stated. 'Its was done pr
the time I took office Atkinson said
lust tiadilional 'he mot
Appropriations foi the SI 000 was made hv
the s(. I cgislature
Dormitory dedicated in honor of alumnus
GREENVILL1 Ihe 10-etory women's
dormitory on the last Carolina I'nivcisity
campus known since its construction as "New
C" 'Sunday became the Sarah E Clement
dormitory, named and dedicated in honot of a
distinguished and dedicated alumnus
The building is the newest dormitory tor
women on the campus It was completed in
1969 at a cost of SI.4 million, contains 86,044
iquaie teet ot space and houses 400 students
ECU trustee voted last January to name the
dorm fot Miss Clement who died in May. 1?70.
A 1915 graduate of East Carolina, she was a
lifelong school teacher in Oxford. NC She
retired from the teaching profession in I960
She was a benefactor of schools, churches and
orphanages and included a bequest of $50,000
to Fast Catolina in het will
The formal ceremony, attended by telatives
Of Miss Clement, was opened by Dr Leo
Jenkins, ECU ptesident. who later entertained
the visitors at his home N.C Attorney (ieneral
Robert Morgan presented rematks, and the
portrait honoring Miss dement was unveiled by
Miss Laura Yancey Attorney General Mo.gan
accepted the presentation on behal. ol the
University Morgan is chairman ol the V.CV
trustees
but problems just begin
IPHOTO BY BILL RIEDELLI
NEW "C" DORM was renamed last Sunday for a distinguished and honored
alumnus of ECU
"The intercom is alwavs broken said one
resident ol newly-dedicated Clement Hall 'The
flOOl has giant ciacks in it in the lohhs
A superficial investigation by .
Fountainhead reportet evealed thai the
dormitory counselors were experiencing ci
difficulties in paging residents "Aftei thi
lew words, il tlist goes hup hup. hup " one
counscloi reported
James Lowry, Director ol Physical Plant,
stated that to the best ot his knowledge
nothing was wrong with the Intercoms in
Clement "Ot course the counselors invariably
follow the wrong procedure in reporting'
ditlu nines with the systems he said
According to lowis. the cracks in (he floor
ot Clement are the result ot ihe methi
Construction not Ihe quahlv "You're alw.ns
taking a chance with this typt ol onttru
that the floor will crack
1 owr) pooh poohed residents' fears thai the
dormitory was in rail dangei ol structural
damage 01 collapse as a popu'at rumol has
CRACKS APPEAR SHORTLY after
construction.
charged He emphasized thai thi cracks in 'he
lobbs floor, which leave a gap ol one inch in
have nothing to do with the condition
the Structural support ot Ihe building
IA
2
'2





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CORNER OF lOtK COTANCHE
Phone: 758-Z446





fountainhead
and the truth c-ho ?l x.
and the truth shall make you free
GREENVILLE, N.CAROLINA
VOLUME III, NUMBER 57
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14, 1972
Student presidents meet here
to discuss important problems
By GARY CARTER
Am. N.w, Editor
The controversial issue of student's rights
received extensive attention from the student
presidents of seven North Carolina universities
when they met in conference at ECU last
Saturday Also receiving attention were
academic and activity fees, in loco parentis, and
several other areas of concern to students of the
state's universities. These .terns were collected
into a petition which will he presented, by the
presidents, to the Consolidated Board of
Governors, hopclully in their first meeting on
July 7.
Probably, the most tar-reaching activity
came in the area of basic student rights. The
Student leaders offered, within their document
? uniform Bill ol Student Rights and
recommended that it be adopted by the
so-called super board " According to the
creators of the bill, it will be presentedin the
interest of preserving the rights of all students
is citizens, under the Constitution of the
United States and the Constitution of the State
of North Carolina, and preventing disruption
and discontent on the university campuses .
Foremost among the rights mentioned in the
body of the bill are the freedom of speech,
freedom of the press, and the right to
peacefully assemble Also covered here is the
right of free speech for speakers, regardless ol
the person's 'political or idealogical
affiliations "
Each student, according to the document,
shall be guaranteed the right to privacy in the
regard to search and seiuie According lo the
presidents, if the search is conducted by
university officials, a 24-houi notice must be
given If the search is conducted by civil
authorities, proper notice must be given to
university officials and resident advisors
Also contained are the rights of students to
"form, join and participate in any group
without restrictions Each student shall also
be able to solicit funds ? recognJzed
organizations and have the pnvelege of using
any campus facilities, subject only to uniform
regulations
In making certain that students are aware ol
all uniform rules and regulations, the student
leaders requested that the Hoard order all
university administrations to publish a?d
distribute all regulations and policiei aS()
assuming the cost for such publications
Seeking more student voice in the formation
of university policy, the group llrge(j tha,
students be giver, a voice in such policy
enacting and also, that students be able to
inquire into all actions of the universities which
affect them
Students should, according to the presidents
have knowledge of all information and records
compiled on them by the university This
would include the content and location of such
records and. also, the manner in which they can
be used Under the bill, a student will be able to
view such tecords and challenge "the validity
and right of existence of the information and
records "
Also assuming a large portion on the bill is
the judicial system recommended by the
leaders Under the proposals, students would be
tried for violations "by an independent and
impartial judiciary" and shall have the right to
liidicial due process
Finally, under this section ol the petition, is
the statement that students shall be evaluated
only on the basis of their academic-
performance It is also stated that no rule or
regulation may discriminate against students on
the basis of "race, religion, sex. ethnic origin
political belief or affiliation "
Several other key issues concerning students
of the now consolidated universities received
extensive attention The conglomerate of
student officials proposed that the Board
guarantee that Student Activity Fees be
considered student funds to be appropriated by
duly elected representatives from the student
body It was further requested that these
tecs, and student governments themselves, be
immune from control of any sort by the various
administrations and Boards of Trustees.
In regard to the doctrine ofinloco praentis
the student group entreated the Board of
Governors to recognize that the principle of
serving as "parental authority" js no longer
applicable on the various campuses across the
slate Student voice ui enacting and revising
residency regulations was also requested.
Academic fees, which were drasticly
increased during the last state legislative session,
were also treated by the student body
residents They plan to ask the Board to
petition the State Legislature to reduce the fees
to the level of the 1970-71 academic year By
taking such an action, the presidents feel that
"cultural exchange and educational enrichment
in institutions of higher learning across the
state" could be insured
Among the institutions represented were
ECU, Appalachian State. UNC Charlotte
I (-Greensboro. UNC-Chapel Hill, NC
Central and Pembroke State The presidents
plan to contact 0,her schools across the state
concerning the petition and present it to the
Board ol Governors for consideration
Remaining marchers convicted in court-
receive light sentence for illegal parade
STUDENT BODY PRES,DENT Rob Lu?ana ?? one JZ'SZ?
pres-loot, who m?t In colerena al ECU la? Saturday to d?cvm and f ,od ?lot,o?
to grave problems facing today's college students
Deposits and enrollment discussed
By BRUCE SAVAGE
Staff Writar
Ten ECU students and one non-student were
found guilty Monday in Pitt County District
Court on charges stemming Irom a May 11
anti-war protest march One ECU student was
found not guilty on the same charges
The march, which was organized in protest
to the escalation of the war in Vietnam.
resulted in the arrest of I 7 people on charges of
"parading without a permit "
Five of the seventeen defendants were found
guilty on June 5. and were sentenced to thirty
days r SIO fines plus court costs, amounting
to .i total of $31.
Gregg Hoff, Kenneth Foscue. Richard
Conway, Edward Garwood. Jamie Lee, and
Priscilla Carver entered a "not guilty" plea to
the charges Linda Medlm. also an ECU student,
pleaded "not guilty" to a charge of "failure to
disperse
The prosecution led off with the testimony
of police officer Leon Darden. Darden testified
that at 8 30 p.m. tin May II. approximately
100 people with signs and candles marched two
tby two from the ECU campus onto city
property, in the vicinity of the Georgetowne
Shoppes Me testified that he informed the
crowd that they were violating the city
ordinance which bans the assembly of three or
more persons on city property with the intent
to parade unless prior notification of 76 hours
is given and a permit obtained.
Darden continued by stating that he asked
the crowd to put down their signs and to
disperse At this point, part of the crowd
continued around him and the other officers
present, many still carrying signs and candles.
He displayed two signs"STOP THE
BLOCKADE and "ALL WE ARE SAYING IS
GIVE PEACE A CHANCE") which he said
were taken from the crowd after being ordered
to disperse
He concluded by stating that approximately
sixty of the crowd continued to march and
then began arresting those with the signs
Greenville Police Chief Edward G Cannon
was also called by the prosecution He testified
that when he arrived at the scene, the
demonstrators were marchuig up CoUnche
Street in single file with candles and signs
Officer William Perry testified that none of
the group had signs or candles when they
reached Cotanche Street, and that they weren't
shouting or yelling as stated by Darden.
Other prosecution witnesses included police
officers Gleary Warren and Sheriff Oakely.
Linda Medlm opened the defense by stating
that she was in the vicinity of the jail where she
was arrested because she was concerned about a
friend and wanted to know what had happened
to him She said that Sheriff Oakely told her to
leave the area and she was in the process of
leaving when another officer arrested her.
Richard Conway continued by stating that
he was with the march mtil the order to
disperse was given "When I heard the order I
decided to leave and go to the Attic where I
was to meet my wife at 9:00 p.m. I was walking
toward the Attic when an officer approached
(Se? MARCHERS on 04 9? 3)
In the Wednesday, June 7 issue of
Fountainhead. a mistake was made in the story
concerning the convicted marchers. The next to
the last paragraph reads. 'At this point.
Wheeler interrupted Darden. . " It should read
At this point. Wheeler interrupted
McPherson " Darden is a Greenville Police
Officer: McPherson was the counsel for the
defense.
By MICHAEL JA COBSON
Staff Writer
Students that did not pay the required $50
deposit to certify their return nest fall will
suffer no penalty.
According to Mr Worth Baker, registrar.
"The registrars office will not cancel any
schedule if the $50 was not paid " This does
not mean, however, that any rules wdl be
stretched concerning registration text lall He
continued by saying. 'The four o'clock
deadline for registration that has prevailed in
the past will continue to prevail "
The number of waivers requested and
granted to students who felt they had a
Hardship case in paving the deposit was no)
available Robert Boudreaux. financial aid
officer, was not available for comment
Robert Ussery. head ot Institutional
Research, stated that 10.110 students are
expected for the Fall session 00 ot these
students will be freshmen along with 650 new
transfer students
The 2,200 freshmen students will be visiting
the campus for Orientation throughout the
summer The freshmen will be shown around
the campus by student workers
Student help in directing Orientation are
headed by James Mallorv. Dean ol Men. and
acquire their jobs by application Jim lluks.
student co-ordinatoi tor freshmen orientation
stated. Applications were made to Dean
Dormitory dedicated in honor of alumnus
MWIory'i office and he did what he warned to
do with them "
Robert Luisana. SGA president, said that he
did file an application with the Dean's office.
Rick Atkinson. SGA vice-president, did not
know that he had been hired and he did not file
an application with Dean Mailory Mark Brown.
SGA treasurer, was the last worker to be hired
and he was not available for comment
Others working tor Dean Mallory are Bob
Robinson. SGA attorney general. Len Mancini,
Julia Wilson. Fdwina Lee. Gail Stanford and
Tom Cla . former SGA president
There are two full time employees-Steve
Howell and Ron Scronct Both Howell and
Scronce work lull time as counselors on the
Hill
The part time workers are paid by the
University.
Luisana said thai last eai the workers
received a feeol 5.100 lor the entire orientation
program, but he did know what the payment
would be this yeai
( ' Rowe assistant dean of men. said that
the workers will receive Si r0 per hour iust as
any other student workei J.ies Roue also said
thai $1,000 was gisen to the orientation
prograi In the Si,
In questioning luisana about thus S.
appreciation, he stjted. 'Its was done prior lo
the iime I took office Atkinson said. "It's
iust traditional to giye the mone)
Appropriations fot the S I .000 was made by
tin S(, I ccislatuie
A
2
'2
GREENVILLE- The 10-story women's
dormitory on the East Carolina University
campus known since its construction as "New
WC" -Sunday became the Sarah E. Clement
dormitory, named and dedicated in honor of a
distinguished and dedicated alumnus.
The building is the newest dormitory for
Women on the campus. It w?. completed in
1969 at a cost of1.4 million, contains 86,044
aquaie feet of space and houses 400 students
ECU trustee voted last January to name the
dorm for Miss Clement who died in May, 1970.
A 1915 graduate of East Carolina, she was a
Ufelong school teacher in Oxford, NC. She
tetired from the teaching profession in I960.
She was a benefactor of schools, churches and
?rphanages and included a bequest of $50,000
to East Carolina in her will
The formal ceremony, attended by relatives
Of Miss Clement, was opened by Dr. Leo
Jenkins, ECU president, who later entertained
the visitors at his home NC Attorney General
atobert Morgan presented remarks, and the
portrait honoring Miss Clement was unveiled by
Miss Laura Yancey Attorney General Morgan
accepted the presentation on behalf of the
University Morgan is chaimian of the ECU
trustees
but problems just begin
(PHOTO BV BILL RIEOELLI
NEW "C" DORM was renamed last Sunday for a distinguished and honored
alumnus of ECU
"The inteicom is always broken said one
resident of newly-dedicated Clement Hall "The
floor has giant cracks in it in the lobby
A supeituial investigation by a
Fountainhead reporter revealed that the
dormttorv counselors were experiencing certain
difficulties in paging residents "Alter the first
few words, it just goes hup. hup. hup " one
counselor reported
James Dmry. Director o! Physical Plant
stated that lo the best of his knowledge
nothing was wrong with the intercoms in
Clement "Ol course, the counselors invariably
follow the wrong procedure in reporting"
difficulties with the systems, he said
According to Lowry. the cracks in the float
ot Clement are the result ol the method of
construction, not the quality "You're always
taking a chance with this type ol construction"
that the floor will crack
Lowry pooh-poohed residents' fears that the
dormitory was in real danget ot structural
damage ot collapse as a popu'ar rumot has
CRACKS APPEAR SHORTLY after
construction.
chatged He emphasized that the cracks in the
lobby door, which leave a gap of one inch in
plascs. have nothing to do with the condition
ot the structural support of the building





"

h
I
How is 'The Way' belief extraordinary?
By BHIH I PARHISH
Feature! r rtilix
trie Ord
ind i efully d
iii.iikil area I in- m,ini,t i . , red up
for Eric to gently But his
I
with In- openn iut with the
smack nl Ins hod) against the pitiless earth
I ii, h.is just recent!) been removed from a
lull ,asi Nli he was not removed In
mhi 11inis wrapping. E?ru actually lurvived Ins
i 800 fool free fall
Hi- attributes Ins survival lo ,i ferveni belie I
in God which he found .it rhe Wav Biblical
Research t'entei I in , here in Greenville
'The V.i is ,i Biblical research and teaching
ministr) designed to stud) the Bible ninutel)
ii isem ihe inherent act urai
w. n " 1
, ied out ? n h ihe Intention ol
ihe Word I G d on ihe foundation ilui it is
i hat n ins
help ou according to the Reverei
i nihan directoi ol I he Wav here
I Ik Wa) fellowship a non-d
non profit organization, attracts all
especial!) j liege age I ndei
direction ul n foundei jiuI president Di
jctoi Paul Win n ille I he Wa) has i
intcrnation i Its headquarte ?
presentl) located oi ? N
K
C.ii i ni thei ege outreach lies in
Greenville I I I asl I i ilina I mversm
Here botl ind students alike,
including I ru have discovered I he
"minute accurac) ?? hrough its
ministry and 'Powei dam I iving "
POWER FOR ABUNDANT LIVING
rov mdanl 1 i n is the
foui da H B Its
presentation enables the student ghtl)
divide the tt "Onh oui
end '? put the Word togethei instead
tearu asserted Reverned Mo nihan
u it the inside and . -
rathei ha - fed idea and
lit it m
Di Weirw illi .
the past -v
necessar) keys lo a id the Word
I he Wa
"?' Its
reseai ch has din n al 'd jII the i
Conflict of Interest
1 111!
ind tnitteachings
I i Bibl
Moynihan
with - e
I hi W '?
that the w
P wei foi
ists ' ?'? hours ol
entrated stud) with audio and vid
supplemented bv textbooks I Ik- iost foi this
I hree weeks foui nights a
i - I ree hours .i rught, the students
rid i In . I.is, i luating with the
i three houi i ollege course I he
ise is i" give the student thi ?
with which lo "open" the Bible to know God
JESUS FREAK.
K . rid M . i il ai feels that tin- "Jesus
God but the)
k "The) sj come on and let
Jesus iii without s.r. - M ,1 it Ihe
Children ol God - ligious group, wenl
- i Wa wships in South
irl b just takmg hei jih!
vi utg something to the same effect ou ve got
lo learn how lo lei God in oi u kind ol tougl
Wi it temp ting to tell people how "
IK- alto explained that nuns churches are
just hkc the "Jesus freaks" ,md that man) ol
these same people leel I'he Way approach lo
the Word is wronjj "Thf aie hkc the Dead
Sea Ihej have and receive much information,
bui the) give none out When we give, we
receive rhai li the I ?? (Bible) Reverend
M ? Ihan asserted
FERVENT BELIEF
I his ferveni belie! in God's W id is the most
striking characteristic of the people ol The
Wa) IIh-ii delving Into the Bible never ceases,
and then beliel in linn continue! to glow
Howevei it is not an easy life to realize "Some
ol the people who have had tins class think God
is come to hand an abundant life to them on a
silvei platter, but believing is an action verb
Vou've goi to do something Reverend
M nihan stated with finality
Reverend Moynihan, ? formei last arolitu
student and swimming athlete, did nol always
see God a he does now Nl ik- I oniherlin. a
foundei ol the Greenville Way, had heard about
rhe Wa) before it arrived here Being Reverend
Moynihan's college roommate, fomberlin tried
V h o t o D y H
Rev Doug Emerson takes his turn as director of the Greenville Way Home due to Rev.
Moynihan s recent transfer to New York
Legislators evoke scrutiny
E dil? s Note The foltuwmy i memo horn
Common C?u 2100 Main Street N W Washington
DC 20037 it ha? do with conflicts of interest in
wmich an official has a personal stake In the matters on
which he must aci officially This organization
requests that all interested people inquee
immediately
lhe II I episode, the Illinois race tra ?
? " minal conviction ol the Speakei
ol the House ill fexas and a dozen other
startling revelations in the . i i reai
the- issue ol ethi i ibtic
I can smell i it a kn aid the hue
Paul Powell formei lllinoi Si retar) il Stati
and membei oi the legislature loi 10 years who
on a salais ol nevei more than $30,000
annually left an estate ii tome $2 million
including $800,000 in hills shoe I
breilcases and strongbox n his hotel
:lol His salt irl mid be the slogan foi
office holders wn hltu the line
between their private financial interest
then public dunes I ties live consciOUSl) OI
not.hs anothei Powell aphorism "There'sonl)
one thing w irse than a defeated polii
that's a broke
There will dways be rascals who steal from
the publk nl! We are :oncerned here with
something less obvious and h i lefme
public officials not dishonest b) nature caught
UP genuine i nflict bet wee i the possibilit)
ol private gain and thei I ,h.
publk mi
( ommon I hat conl
interesl wdl diminisl . ,u js
told the extent and
private in interesl w
legislation to require full d
,n,ereMs P?bfficials Disclosuri will
II" Citizens lo ludgewl ,istn ihei,
Publk servants are infhi . personal
i onsideratii ns
LAW AND BANKING
Conflicts ol interesl are mosl serious in two
aieas law. and banking
Ihe possibilit) 1 doing financial favors foi
legislators through then law rirms is
limitless and generally invisible IFlorne"
orporan ,? union that wants a senator's
vole happens to place a big chunk s ega
business with the senator's law n,?, lhas
hardly illegal Ihe senatoi hinisell mas ,? ma
11' ,l case hui he shares the financial
benefit
I ut seven members ol the Congress oi the
t nii.d States are actively associated with a law
firm An) membei olongress who continues
law practice Violates the American Bar
Associations code -ii professional
lesponsibihl v
Seven members oi the House Banking and
Current v 'onttee and seven members of the
House W.ivs and Means Committee are known
??? i - thei financial
rhese committees deal with issues
ifound interest to financial institutions
sside I ? ? , teen committee
there arc rte othei House
who have holdings in hanks or othei
ial institutions, including thirty-three
on the board ot directors ol - ich
? ?? ? Ni Representatives Charles Rapei
Jones, K and Richarson Preyei are known
directors in at least
LAX RULES
P sent Senate rules require so little
sure that ii is impossible ?? letermine the
financial holdinf itions oi senators.
S it ? Herman
ralmadge (D-i the Senate Finance
' Harrj Byrd, Jr (D-Va.l
I ? ' ommittee have bank
holdings md B I and Senator John Md lellan
(D-A lor,
1 ' ' ' a number
l tteesii quest
t received in a
? h information should be
P"bl il nstituei ti dv
it. and contii
l,j' ' tl in states ii rhereii
,n"u'SM" ittei thai is
rig. In l ,ii ?
Senate
,ud,cu ' -ttiec there wrote lab leaden
hiding
lav. ictice and
icross
RECOMMENDATIONS
H is difficult to legislate ethical conduct It
ls mo like) ii when legislate,
concludes that deviatifrom a Inch standard
I come promptly to the
I his onstituents And the beat way
??g thai about is to spread his potential
?lM nthepubli, record
spenlii lecoiiimendatioiis oi
' '??? Im Inenihers ot 'ongu-vs ,ls
'esttmon) last fall before the
Senate subcommittee which is now studying
the( ase and Spong hills
' e offlcial should disclose the source ef
" folding (company, organization
otber), the nature ol the interesl ,M?cks
h?ls real property, othei I He would not have
,llvl lollai amounls. hut would
disclose any holding worth at least SI.000 and
mld indicate for each holding whether it was
worth more than sio.ooo. more than $soooo
01 more than Sio.ooo
2 rhe official should dJacsOat a broad list ol
O'hei Hems. iBchtlinj pmtess.onal services
provided, offices and ditectorahsps held, and
isaoctations with individuals ot firms lobbying
ot doing business with the government
' No member ol Congress should engage in
the practice ol law oi retain association with a
law firm while in office.
4 I egjslators serving on a committee whose
jurisdiction includes matters in which they have
a financial interest should divest themselves of
the interesl oi resign from the committee.
5 11 anv vote involves i possible conflict ol
interest tor a member ot Congress, he or she
should declare the possible conflict before the
vote is ast
The same principles mav he applied, with
some modifications, to state legislatures and
other governmental bodies
Marines pray
for war in prayer
K I'Sl "When w. had to go and eat we went to
the mess hall and we had to veil 'kill at the top
ol our lungs three times before we were allowed
I" eat
These are the words ol an ex I S Marine
describing a pan ol his training al the Marine
Boot (amp on I'airis Island. S( I his particular
Marine deserted following his lour ol duty in
Vietnam in l'fiX and now lives in Sweden His
observation and those oi men like him, are
recorded m Mark I an'i "Conservations with
Americans" (Simon and Schuster N V . 1970):
"We used to run around saying. VC. Vf.
Kill. Kill. Kill, (.otia kill. Gotta kill. Cause it's
lun Cause it's fun "
this same Marine told oi a prayer posted in
every barracks on Parns Island It's a prayer
for war. Evers night before we went to bed at
night at nine o'clock we had to pray that
there'd be a war, so that the ManneCorps
could alwa ? he on the move, because that was
then job. lo light
The text ot the piayer foBows
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
I Pray the LORD the W'AR to Keep
So MARINES can come and Save the Day
And I Can Earn My God Damn PAY
God Bless the United States
God Bless the Drill Instructors
t.od Bless the Marine( orps
Though I Walk Thru the Valley
In the Shadow oi DEATH
I fear no EVIL
For I Am the Biggest
' iddest Mother Fucker
In the Valley
Deep basses, hearty baritones, and melodious tenors sing with gusto weekly within The
Way home study center.
to coax Reverend Moynihan to travel with him
to I he w.iv headqua ike Tu
Abundant I Iving" His reply m.is Ii you
believe that crap when you gel back I'll m it
out " He did "When I got into it, it blew m)
mind
TONGUES AND PROPHECY
A new awareness to oi a ieviv.il ol toi
and prophec) has begun anew Being two ol the
nine manifestations ol the Hoi) Spirit, toi gues
and prophec) are a real part t Ihe vv One
Sunda) evening service, accompanied b) news
ol liivs accident, bounced along with
lull ot optimistic o). with an intense Bible
stud to complete tht Neai the
meeting's end. two were .ailed on to give
tongues .tnd interpretation and one I
prophec) Without an) pause oi commotion,
each person stood and the manifestations were
given Miss Gail Walker, the prophetess and
sistei in-lav, ol Reverend Moynihan related hei
beliel that the manifestation is God's presence
and that she onl) moved her lips, breathed, and
believed in ordet foi the words to come out
I he meeting ended, but prayei foi I rk
continued well into the night
Ihe Word stales that God's Will is foi us to
prospei ai jood health 'Some think h
is God's Will i sick, hut why do they
foi treatment? Il people truly
believed that it is God s V, ill foi us lo die, then
the ?- : n a ,1,1 jump he noted Here
Ins the dil' I ???, ii .?
FANATICS
I In Vt.iv fellowship in Greenville has often
?lied i group ol fanatics I ately. it has
realized that "Bible beating" is no) the w.n
people, and the) have begun a more Open
1 Ri verend Moynihan defended Hie
s. b) saying that scientists are nol called
fanatics but indeed thev are in ordei to
research as much as the) do "itu-v gel totally
?involved, hut il von do thai about the Word ol
? "uic an idiot a weirdo It a doctoi
spends his entire life in research and luids thai
smoking ,jh kill you, then he's nol a fanatic;
he's helping von he s
Reverend related thai there are two types o(
believing-poative and negative "Whatever you
believe will happen Feai is negative believing.
Satan wants us to die, and thai is nol God's
Will As lone .is we believe positively, nothing
will happen n- us "
Does Eric's survival verify that belief?
Woman doctor is legend
SEATTLE, Wash ?P?Di Pal Smith
returned i non the battlefields of Vietnam
deposited two young a lopted Montagnard
children and promptly said she must gel h.Kk
to take aie ol hei people I he 46-year-old
doctoi. who h i s bee nu known as t he
"grandmother" ol the Montagnard tribesmen ol
South Vietnam, acknowledged huis.l.iv night
that she plamlv was worried about the futu
the beleaguered war "tie area
Di Smith's hospital in K fui w as
overrun by the North Vietnamese offei sive and
so the pulled back to Pleiku, 2i miles to the
south
"Things m general are going to pie.es " sk-
told newsmen as she arrived from lion,dulu on
the last leg oi hei trip Iron, s.n.
'There are anothei new lull million refugees
in South Vietnam I had hopes foi
but I've been feeling verv pessimistic lately I lie
North Viet namese have a potential It
appraised rightly
Despite the danger. )r Smith vnd she must
return
"I must get hack to Pleiku back tomy
Several
people
Di Smith, who cut her eyeteeth as a voung
physician volunteering foi emergent v work
dining Mood communal strife in Marian
County, Kentucky, it almost a legend in
Vietnam where she has built up ? medical
reputation over a 18-yeai span
It's my IIIi- " she said
I he S e a : 11 e a i e a where she was reared
provfck voluntary contributions up to 140,000
a yeai foi the work she does in Indochina
Di Smith brought with hei 5-year-old Det
and S year-old Wir, two Montagu aid boss
1 hen mothei was killed hv a Viet long mortar
shell and then lather disappeared in combat.
Jem Smith, a brothel ol the doctoi who has
five children ol his own ranging from ages 5 to
21,will take care ol the bovv
"Wha' s two mote ' he asked
I :ei get ling hei new waids sell led Dr
Smith said she would return to her hospital in
Pleiku, now stalled bv three American doctors,
one American nurse, an American tdrmnistratoi
and one Swiss muse
1972
freshman
exclaim
the
traditional
"Is
that
me?"
over
ID
cord
results.
B
I (
severe
eaily
two
rveej
' siimn
f
'i tin
' M
tght
Mth ,
a n d
I SI
111
theli
-mid
?cum
who
jl
w in '
pouni
Bucj
s.nitr
a
in th
imnri)
their
the ii
hnles
s
J
td.tl
?omfc
1191
ar v
is t
ejrvip'
?WcU
Bv
A
Tl
I she d
I box i
foil I
I V o u
treat
at th
S
studt
ilIC
enoi
inves
t o I
overc
lt!
s us
deatl
I)
se i
w






o
? til llliil!
'ithin The
"Some think it
ii win da rhej
li trul)
ui i" die, then
le noted Here
mIIi- has often
I ?tely, it lus
ot the w.n to
n .1 more open
defended I he
iu- not called
III "idol to
iej l'ci totall)
B
t
!(
severe
caily
I Wll
a e e k
simin
Af
In tin
I t ?
ighl
Mill .
.1 ml
I St
In
'hcT;
uld
? curt?
? hi i
MlllJ
W III f
pout)
BueJ
Smith
a
in iIk
imiiri)
their
I he li
link's
li
t the Word "itdiw
It -i diklor?omfc
ind hnds thatAright
not a fanatic;US i
.?'
? two type! nfA? cu
Miatevei you
ive believingBy
is not (md'sfi
vely, nothing
t B
wlief?Jan.
rtpoi
Take
radmi
Aci:

nan-
li as a oungcon i
rgenc) workcook
e in Marianichoi
a legend inaWsi
p a medical- 1 i
lr
ISB
was i e a i e dbe
to S4U.000?see
ichimM
ear-old Del? as 1
gnard bo) sfat t
ong mortardaugl
combatbiajt ?one
lot v?ho has
in ages N i-1lone v
Tl
1 she d
j box i
settled Di
tour
hospital in
y o u
an doctori
treat
Irrrinistrator
at th
S
studt
c i r c
enoi
inves
to r
overt
alth
SUS
Jeatl
O
SCI
-
Wednesday, June 14
freshman orN,nt.t.or, continues all day
Zl Un'0n ' ??'?" ? 2 50 P M ?? th.
??Z SZSEJRzLemmon'w ta ,hn ,n
ECU cycle club holds
second century ride
L W72. Fountainhead Page I
S 1972.1 intainhc
ummer theatre opens
Thursday, June 15
Freshman orientation continue
?na,ch.d from ,?.? famX V?Unfl " "
The Un.on will sponior B
creamwHibervedtoaHberr, n'?n ?
fricfciy, June J6
Mover Magic Chr.st.an featuring Pw Seller, and R,nflo Starr
will be shown at 8 00 P.M ,n Wngh, Aud.torium
Saturday, June 17
FCU's Carolina Cycle Club
will hold its second 100-mile
ride this Sunday, beginning at
7 00 AM at Wright Fountain
The excursion will encompass
about ten hours of riding with
stops for drinks and lunch
An automobile will follow
the riders to pick up any that
cannot complete the entire
distance In the last 100-mile
ride, held last December,
everyone who began the trip
also finished, "including the
mother of four children
There will be a lunch .top in
Kinsion and various other
stops for drinks during the
course ol the ride, and riders
can also bring their own drinks
and lunch if they wish
According to (harks
Bernicr. leader ol the cycle
group, the ride will proceed a!
a steady I 2-itiph pace, with no
racing. He further states,
"Anyone who can ride 15
miles in less than one hour can
complete the centurv ride
without any problems " There
will be a $2 00 registration fee
tor the ride
GntbpV" ? - ?? ?
Tuesday, June 20
The Union w.ll sponsor another watermelon feast on the Mall at
at. OU r .M.
Another freshmen orientation begins
Baseball: ECU vs. Lou.sburg College at Harrington Field. Game
time is 7;30 P.M.
George Wallace to
bargain for platform
Wednesday, June 21
Freshmen continue to learn the truth, of this mighty institution
of learning throughout the day
Move: Let Scare Jessica to Death" will be shown at 8:00 P M
in Wright Auditorium
Classified
ADVERTISING CORNER
HOUSING
Stadium Apartment on 14th St. between Men's Do?
Mmge. Furmshed. modern, and a,r conditioned. Walk.n. distance
,rcm campus Call 752 5700 or 756-4671.
Furnished house for rent, up to six boys. Sunvnsrsnd FaH
quarter Call 752 2862
HELP WANTED
Full time help for lummer. male and fomale Students can make
53.000. Long hair no problem Call 762 2939 between
9 00 12 00
Go Go Girl? wanted Non Topless. Snort hours excellent pay
Call 758 3396
Entertamert wanted. Folk, aui, comedy, etc. Solo,
woup Call 758 3396 for auditions.
duo. or ?si
MISC FOR SALE
Aater beds at a fantastic price. Just received 500 water bads witn
5 year warranty Regular $49 95. now only $15 96 Call 752-4053
or come to United Freight Co 2904 E. Khh Street.
For Sale 35 mm SLR outfit, Praktica, 3 lenses and all eaeas.
$95 00 Call Dr Roberts. 758 6800
300 new tires, fully under warranty. Prices start at $16.00.
Wholesome to everyone United Freight Co 2904 E 10th St.
Sex and space
may not be compatible
RAl.FIGH(AP)A North-
Carolina State University
scientist has evidence that sex
and space flight are not
immediately com pat ible-at
least not for male wasps.
Dr Daniel S. Grosch. NCSU
geneticist and leader of a
NASA project to determine
what happens to insects which
are shot into space, emphasizes
there ate still many unknown
factors associated with
long-term space flight
I n experiments with
wasps to determine results of
space flight on reproductive
behaviotand efficiency,Dr.
Grosch noted that males ate
disoriented and unable to find
the female 01 to consumate
in tei course for some time
following a trip into space via
biosatellite.
After their return to earth,
he said, some male wasps are
disoriented for as long as 13
hours.
On the other hand, he said,
the female does not display
any temporary loss of
reproductive ability.
Dr Grosch and a team at
Oak Ridge, Tenn have formed
no definite conclusions as to
the precise cause of
disorientation of the male
wasp He observed that factors
other than weightlessness and
vibration of space flight may
be responsible for the wasps'
confusion.
MIAMI AP)- Alabama Gov.
George Wallace, partially
paralyzed from an assassination
attempt, will be coming to
Miami Beach to bargain lor the
presidency and a platform
when the Democrats converge
here next month, his campaign
director said.
A MAJOR FORCE
Predicting Wallace will be a
major force at the convention,
Charles Snider called a news
conference to "let everybody
know George Wallace will be
coming to Miami "
"Most Democrats and party
bosses now realize that Gov.
Wa I lace is going to have to
participate in the election or
the Democratic ticket doesn't
have a chance in November
said the strategist credited with
modernizing the Wallace
campaign and steering it away
from the third-party route
Wallace opted foi in 1968.
POPULICT ISSUES
With the majoi Democratic
presidential hopetuls sounding
'more and more like Gov
Wallace" on certain populist
issues such as tax reform.
Snider hinted Wallace would
not mount a third-party bid
He indicated major platform
concessions to the Wallace
philosophy would close the gap
and make it possible for the
wounded governor to endorse
the Democratic ticket
Questioned about Wallace's
possible support ofa
Democratic ticket headed by
front-running presidential
hopeful Sen. George
Mc Govern. Snider said:
"Governoi Wallace is
withholding his comment on
this until the other candidates
make their positions known
MARKED DIFFERENCE
' 'T here is still a marked
difference between the
positions of Governor Wallace
and some of the other
candidates on the war, amnesty
for draft dodgers and the
legalization of marijuana This
will give you an idea of some
of the things these candidates
might have to change before
they could have Governor
Wallace's support
Senator Hubert Humphrey
of Minnesota, defeated by
Mc Govern in the crucial
California primary, abandoned
his flat opposition to Wallace
as a possible running mate.
POSSIBLE V P.
In Houston. Texas, during
appearance at the National
i overnon' conference.
Humphrey told the press: "I
have said repeatedly if a man
ould accept the platform he'd
be eligible in my book for
vice-presidential nomination
Snider stressed Wallace "is
not i n t cies t ed in the
vice-presidential nomination in
any way but conceded that
'some of the Southern
governors are in the process of
trying to get Governoi Wallace
on the paity ticket " Snider
aid the extent ot Wallace's
pei aonal pan icipation during
the July 1043 conclave had not
yet been determined but "if
there isanywayatall.we
expect him to take his turn at
the podium
RECOVERING
Wallace was shot while
campaigning at a Laurel. Md
shopping center last month
Since the shooting, which left
him paralyzed from the hip
down, he has been recovering
in a Maryland hospital, but
Snidei said Wednesday, the
governor will be moved to an
Alabama hospital within the
next 10 days if he continues to
improve.
TERMPAPERS
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f(et TERMPAPtA CATALOG
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Inventory Clearance Sale
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Save $100.00 Reg $299 96 NOW $199.95 C
African Lecture ?
Education, traditional
music, and ritual will be the
topics of a lecture cosponsored
by the African S udies
Committee and Africa Institute
for Public School Teachers, to
be held Wednesday, June 21, in
Rawl
David Rubediri will speak
on "Education and New
Thinking in East Africa
Today ?nd Adolphus
Turkson will discuss
Traditional Music and Ritual
,n Ghana The lecture is free
and will becan at 8 15 p.m.
Transcendental Meditation
An introductory lecture
into Transcendental Meditation
will be held Thursday, June 16.
This lecture is designed to
introduce those interested to
the principles and ideas behind
the process of meditation. The
discussion will be conducted
by e qualified teacher who
received instruction from the
Mahareshi Yooj It will be hetd
, t 8 P M in
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interested persons are invited
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: RADIO SHACK
TANDY CORP
PITT PLAZA Open: 10 to 9
$C$C!ftJlJeOOEKKii
Since early March,
producer-director Id Loeasin
h a s been auditioning
performers foi the ninth season
"I the EmirolinaSummer
Theatre He has interviewed
more than i.OOOmen and
omen I rom Sew York to
Honda in his efforts to bring
the best available talent to
( reenville. Today, general
manager Michael Hardy
announced the names of four
leading performers who will be
on stage 1 n M c G i n n i n
Auditorium this summer.
The first is former Miss
North Carolina. Patricia
Johnson, from Raleigh
Johnson will play leading roles
in the first three shows of the
season FIDDLf.R ON THE
ROOK. ONCE UPON A
MATTRESS, a n d I 7 7 6 .
Summer Theatre favorite
Sally-Jane He it will be
returning again this summer,
having scored pievious
successes in HELLO. DOLLY1
and. last year. GYPSY
From New York. Minnie
Caster is scheduled to play the
Carol Burnett role in ONCE
UPON A MATTRESS Caster
graduated from East Carolina
University, and went on to win
the outstanding actress award
at Yale Un iversity before
starring professionally in the
Oft Broadway production of
YOU'RE A GOOD MAN.
CHARLIE BROWN She will
also be remembered by-
Summer Theatre audiences
ft om her performances in
OKLAHOMA and her Mammy
Yokum in LIT ABNER.
1A
2
72
John Sneden. who designed
the scenery for the first seven
seasons of the Summer
Theatre, is a surprise addition
to t he company this ear
Sneden will play the role of
Ben Franklin in the award
winning musical 1776.
The big question at this
point is who will be cast in the
Zero M ostel role. Tev in
f IDDLJ R OS IHI ROOI
Loessin has rejected numerous
applicants for the role so lar.
and is in close contact sv ith
New York sources on several
confidential possibilities
Season tickets foi the
summer theatre are currently
on sale at the McGinnisbox
(?h?to ?y Bill Riedell)
office ai Slfc foi adults and
112 SO for children 12 years
and under The complete
season includes FIDDII R ON
Till ROOI ON I UPON A
MATTRESS; 1776; I DO,I DO.
and THE FANI ASTICKS.
Reservations can be made by
writing box 2712 in Greenville
01 calling 75X-6390
Marchers receive day sentences
(Continued from pjoe 1)
me and asked "Where are
you going0- I didn't answer
him and the officer saidOh.
you're one of them' and
gabbed me "
Edward Oarwood testified
that be was arrested on Evans
Street as he walked by hunselJ
When asked what prevented
hi in from reaching his
destination, the Federal
Building located on Evans
Street, Garwood responded.
"Office Darden
Bob Malone a non-student,
testified that nothing was said
aboui the candles when the
order to disperse was given He
further stated. 'The reason a
permit was not obtained was
due to the tact that a previous
attempt had failed and that the
spontaneity ot the march was
nece ssa i y to show oui
opposition to the escalation 0
the war
The other defendents
testified in their on behalf
After hearing the testimom
of both sides. Judge Charles H.
Whedbee sentenced the
defendants to one day in jail
Since all had already served the
one Jay in au, they were Iree
Michael Murdoch pleaded
"not guilty and testified lhai
lie was in the process ol sSjavang
the seem- when arrested Judge
Whedbee found rum noi guilty
The remaining three
students. Frank Tursi. Ralph
Epps. and Mike DiGullio.
pleaded not guilty and waived
evidence Tiles were tound-
guiliy and sentenced to one
das n jail Since Having already
served a day in (ail, they were
.llv 'rlu.
Bob MaJom. Ivenneih
Foscue, and PrucilUarvei
gave notice of appeal
Freshmen can tour paper
Any
freshmen interested in working
for Fountainhead next year,
are invited to tour the office
during their visit.
Fountainhead is locd above
Wright Auditorium and is open
24 hours a day
ANY 3 STEREO LPS Or
Cartridge
Cassette
a
F
WITH ABSOLUTELY NO OBLIGATION TO BUY ANYTHING EVER!
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Ym. Ufc your pack of thaw groof Mi ngtit now' CTsoom any 3 Steroo LP? (svortri up to $20 94 or e-y I Sttrvo T?o? (c?r1f?jsx or uttema tvorth uP to S13 96) TREE vou- evotcomsi
??? from ffacorti Club o America ivtton yov iot it m km. iitei.ms rrwmborahip M of $5 00 Tou can rjotor your Mtactw or FREE it?m ne choow 'rom an aaparwlexl lt later 1 you can't
find 3 LP? or 1 Taps Htm Wa malm tht amai-inf offsw to irrtrooHaca you to ??? oory rocord and Up club oftonng guf?nts?ed discount ot 33"iN to 7?. or all taboH -with no obligation or
commitment to buy anytfxnaj avor At ? rnnnbtr of ttw? ono-of ? fcind club you will bo ab?a to ordor an, rocord or Up commoir.ari available) or- savory labol-mclud-ng all mu?cai pro
tfOftCM Mo autofnattc abipmonH. rto card to rotum Wt thip only emot you ordor Moneryback guarantee if not tatiafsod
MS ISAAC tUTtl
lourr
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later i? Tl CASt
127 lit
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bacca L IT? ?
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sjttiAr LA IT! ??aa l? I? CUI
Tt raw ?"fh lore
mm l? ? "
MJW Hi MM
VLA ATA CAM L, tn c?
T?a TXMalltVUT
llllOvartwrt
Tana I lit cms
MINUMI
Mtwrt Man
I LA ?Tt CUI
M Mil OiaetAUt
Caid
l- LA T ??'
Tti ?COAIMaiO ?M
TIMlTfiT HICMC
varta la
IN TWAII DK HlgMT TTt ITH MtHti0l
ide- Sittwitl AeitaclKini
ucbata Lp ara c?Si itn .?? na ts?,
AT LAST A RECORD AND TAPE CLUB WITH NO "OBLIGATIONS ONLY BENEFITS1
Ordinary rtcofA and tape rtut make you 1 loos
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at us! prre to fsjtfii: .ou- otmatwrt i-fl ?' yen.
forgal to itturn tfsair monthly ttrt tHtT lent
raw an item yaw ioa t want ?o ? ?' ?' M
ltd H tat oi I'tA m e'facl to- ma, be
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Wa ? re itigett aH4abai ratotd and tape ciestb
m lAe ?torid C??aote any tr 0' tape tra'ttidges
and ctitetlei m-od"n n relaaiti n-
enepi-0"s laa? as mtny. ? M Ae or no
tetorttons tt ? t yv W aatidt Oitravnts tie
tuAAkkJTIlo ? hiCh AS Tf Off ?o? afeiays
save tt lettt Jjt, Tg tt batt teiian far at
ion tl ??(
M td'ttttTit tmAMIHTi
W'tTi ovi Cltat bert tit no cards what o? mull
return to erevtnt sniament of vnente fi o
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ng ptM cards eacn month to tht otte tlnbi
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how cam art illkt all picoao
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SA1CIAL IMnOWCTM ktllMtAW'l' OTFIt
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itre wurlf up to 70 W tnd MAI ' upf- ??
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entities you to I'ffTiWI MCHBCASHIP and ?oc
nevt' par rnatnti ut ?t Tow n.?n htet
t"tedt more thf mtde up to' tht nominf
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H? T0V CAMCNMAI II
if tou prt't' you mas i-Mrt you' ntmserJiifv
to om ot yo?r "td't c?'Ai Wf '?o to' ?'
?trent plans CHaik iO?r prtftrtPt end mi W
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I DOR WHAT yOU 8(1
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iou brand ??? is end tap's it A'uoitnts up
' ttj lt?t' IHI than 11 off
? ftt Biaat Maittr IP aad Tapt Cataiaa 1
lit LAt
tlitttrs
thouitndl of to 'tadi'y tveilatXe
n( hsdsta tort.fn all awiicti catagsviai
? nut disc aad Tape SaiAA Tht Club t own
Mefiimr and speripi Clttb it't annosinetmenti
situel 'fini'i tfbaj you "ewi tn rust issued
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here woMh up to 170 94 with absoluteU no
obiittton to buy anything tear'
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srt.poed same day rt(pivtd orders from the
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it po? trtn I abioivttir delighted with our An
l ounts up tr 79V 'ttuin ittmi within 10 days
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Maite' IP A tapt Catalog tnd Our A tape Cwide tt
ths Sot a Mtmotrsh'p 0tf( Alto ltng -at the 3
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This ant,ties mt to bus an t, or tapes at discounts
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Itpes nt rear 1, Qu0) tt not t, "itltlr delighted
' may return items ebo?? within dtts lo? mm
ditle refund of membership tr,
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cark
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Ail Servicemen write lot lac ???
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?5 0t memOe'ship mailing end handling fee If eeth
All ih tnd tape leitrtad will ?e aMed
CbeeA ana amors Cleat lAatta thssrg?
m??iCaw laprtsi AaeaUeaaesaawa
Eaptral(an
?iTjm
w
. '





Pagi i A
How is The Way' belief extraordinary?
Bv BRUf t PARHISH
Features ' dm
I rii Ordei i juinped i Ihe imall airplane
and glided gracefully downward toward Ihe
ked area. The world ? i ipened up
foi I iu in gently lighl upon its turl Bui Ins
exhilarating flight was to end abrupt!)
?anil itic opening ??' his parachute bul with ihe
mii.i. k "i his bod) against the pitiless
I iu has ins' recentl) been removed from j
lull cast No he was not removed Mom .1
minium wrapping Erk actually survived Ins
1 800 I ee fall
He attributes Ins survival to .i fervent beliel
in ihI which he found at 1 In Way Biblical
Researi h Centet In. here in Greenville
I he w n is .1 Biblii al research and tea
ministr) designed to studs the Bible minutely
and to present the inherent accuracy of God's
Word as n was original!) Givei I deavoi
is carried oul with the intentioi ol "teaching
the Word ?! God on the foundation thai it is
accurate that it his together, and that I
help you according to the Reverend Ri
Moj niliaii J rectoi ol I he Wa)
rhe Wa) fellowship a uon-denoininational,
nun profit organization an .1, is ill
especiall) ihosi ndei the
direction ol its founde 1 udeni Di
1 Paul Wiienille I he w.n ha
1nie1n.1110n.1l proportions lis headquarters are
present!) locate Pa Mew
Knoxt ille 1 lh 1
I1 rt il 1 hen l? illege outreach lies jn
Greenville hom ol I asi I 1 lina I niversit)
Here I rnts alike
including I 111 ha the
' minute aci . 1 y ot ihe Bible through its
ministr) and "Power I dani I iving
POWER FOR ABUNDANT LIVING
Povi bundanl I h
foundation foi the Way's Bible stud) Its
presentation enables the studet ightl)
divide the ? "Only oui mil
endeavors t put the Word together instead ol
tearing 1 apart isserted Reverned M
We ik 'in the inside and
rathei than is .1 preci ncerved iJc.i 1
lit 11 111
I i A,m die .in, his asi
he past ? rars n Bibhca
iiei essar) m'm to act uratel) W
F he Wa) believes thai
organizatii 1
1
.iis, repani iei ind i-ontradii nous caused b) the
various translations, versions ind misteachings
ol man l he original version ol ihe Bible is not
available Reverend Moynihan related but
with .ill the manuscripts that are available we
can .11 lea hi il rhe Wa) is .1
staunch defendei ol its beliel thai the Word
cannot . ontradn 1 itsell
I he foundat 1 rse, "P wei foi
, 1.1m I ivin lists 'i 16 hours ol
concentrated stud) with audio and video aids,
supplemented in textbooks rhe cosi foi tins
class is $65 101 three weeks foui nights .1
week ind three hours .1 night the students
.111 en, these classes graduating with the
, rhe
rpose is to gh e the student the kev s
0 "open" the Bible to know God
iim al,
mill wh
JESUS FREAKS
Reverend M . I ' ;P ;hr 'Jelus
1 ! definitel) "int God but the)
i;i, setbai - ?a) come on and lei
lesus in without saying how ow do it rhe
Children ol God, also .1 religious group, went
int0 ? 1 he V? i) fellowships in South
( aiolina, startled ? iusl taking hei and
sav. ins something 1 the same effi ? Vou've got
to learn how to let (lod in a It's kind ol tougl
We're attempting to tell people how "
il, also explained ihat man) churches are
just like the "Jesus lieaks" and that mam of
these same people teel rhe Way's approach to
the Word is wrong "They are like the lv.nl
s, .1 the) have and receive much Information,
but the) eiw none out When we give, we
receive lli.n is the I ,iw (Bible) Reverend
Moy nihan .issei teil
FERVENT BELIEF
I Ins lei win cliel m God'sWord is the most
striking characteristic ol the people of The
Wa) I tun delving into the Bible nevet ceases,
and then beliel in Hun continues to grow
Howevei il is not an eu) life to realize "Some
ol the people who have had this class think (iod
is going i" hand an abundant life to them on a
silvet plattei bul believing is .in action verb
1 lot to do something Reverend
Mo) nihan stated with finality
Reverend Moynihan, a formei East Carolina
student and swimming athlete, dui not always
see God as he does now Mike lombeilui. a
foundei ol the Greenville Way. had heard about
rhe Wa) before it arrived here Being Reverend
Moynihan's college roommate, fomberlin tned
Deep basses, hearty baritones, and melodious tenors sing with gusto weekly within The
Way home study center
(Mnolo D V Hoi M r . u
Rev Doug Enierson takes his turn as director of the Greenville Way Home, due to Rev.
Moynihan s recent transfer to New York
to coax Reverend Moynihan to travel with him
to The Way headquarters to take "Pow
Ahundan living" Ifis rcpl) w.is II you
believe thai , ap when y gel back, I'll u 11
oul " He dui "When I gol into il it blew m)
muni
TONGUES AND PROPHECY
A new awareness to 01 .1 revival ol tongues
ami prophec) has begun .mew Being two ol the
nine manifestations ol the Hoi) Spirit, tongues
and prophec) are a real pan ol rhe vav One
Sunda) evening service, accompanied b) news
ol 11 ic s accident, bounced along with
lull ol optimistic joy, with an intense Bible
study to complete the agenda Neat the
Hirelings end. two wen called on to give
tongues and interpretation and one foi
prophec) Without an) pause immotion,
e.iih person stood md the manifestations were
given Miss Gail Walker, the prophetess and
sister-in-law ol Reverend Moynihan, related hei
behei thai the manifestation is God's presence
and 1l1.1t she onl) moved h allied, and
believed in ordei foi the words to come oul
Ihe meeting ended, but prayei foi Erk
, ontinued well into tl 5 night
Ihe Word si.ites that God's Will is fa us to
pei and be in good health "Some think it
is God's Will foi us to be si,k, but win do tln-v
see .1 dot toi foi treatment? Ii people trul)
believed that iI is God's Will for us to die, then
the suicide rate would jump he noted Here
lies the dilleieii,e in bclieing
FANATICS
I lie Wa) fellowship in Greenville has often
been called a group ol fanatics Lately, it has
realised thai "Bible beating ' is not the w.i to
ie.i, h people and they have begun .1 more open
approach Reverend Moynihan defended rhe
.i b) saying thai scientists an- not called
fanatics bul indeed they arc in ordet to
research as much as the) do "The) gel to tall)
?involved, bul it you tl" thai about the Word ol
God you're an idiot, .1 weirdo Ii a doctoi
spends lus entire life in research and finds that
Mil 'king can kill you, then he's not i fanatic;
he . helping you. he's cool
Reverend related that there are two types of
believing positive and negative "Whatevei you
believe will happen I e.n is negative believing
Satan wants us to die, and that is noi God's
Will s long as we believe posilivelv nothing
will happen to us "
Does Eric's survival verify that belief?
B
t?
K
leveaj
early
two
week
siimn
Af
n tin
! NO
nlghj
ith .
.1 ud
I-H
In
the Ti
mid
i gait
who
siructj
win I
pouaj
Hu,s
Smitr
(a
in the
innial
tl. ir
the li
hitlej
s
fj
tditc
?omU
kright
Ie to
S S

By
A
Conflict of Interest
1
1
Legislators evoke scrutiny
Woman doctor is legend
F .1 ?-? 1 Note The following is a memo Irons
Common Cause 2100 Main Street N W Washington
D C 20037 it has do wvrttv conflicts ol interest, in
?rtich an otficial has a personal stake in the matters on
which he must act officiallv This organization
requests that all interested people inquet
immediately
Ihe n I episode the Illinois race track
sandals, the criminal conviction ol the S
ol the House in !e.is .md a dozen other
startling revelations in thi
the issue ? 'ivials
I an smell the meat acookin, said 'he late
Paul Powell, formei Illinois Secretary il Mat,
and member ol the legislature tot JO years ?vl
on a salaiv ol nevei more than S0.000
annually, left an estate it Mime S2 million
including $800,000 m bills m shoe
1 red cases and strongboxes slashed in lus hotel
closet His sail ould be the slogan '
office holders everywhere who blut the line
between their private financial interests and
then public duties Ihe. ? jously Ol
not, by anothei Powell aphorism "There's only
one thing worse than a detealed politii iai
that's a b
Iheie will always rascals from
the public till We are oncerned here with
something less obvious and I , fine
public officials noi dishonest b
up in a genuine conflict between the possibility
ol private gain and theii du ??? the
pubik interest
( ommoi ' i thai
interest will diminish onl) when the public is
told the extent and nature ol publi
private financial interests V. ,
legislation to require full disclosure ol financial
interests o! public officials Disclosure will
allow .inens to judgi , ti ms b) then
publk servants are influenced hv ,??
considerations
LAW AND BANKING
t onfiicts ol interest are most serious in two
areas law and banking
rhe possibility i doing financial favors foi
legislators through llier, law JJuns is almost
limitless .md generally invisible n tome
corporation oi union that wants senatoi i
vote happens to place ? big chunk ol its legal
business with the senator's taw firm, that's
hard!) illegal rhe senatoi himsell ma) oi may
not ion, I, iin case, bul he shares the financial
benefit
I niv seven members ol the Congress ol the
United States are a livel) associated with a law
firm Any memhci of Congress who continues
law practice violates the American Bai
s s ii i i a 11 ii v code o i pi ofessional
lespoiisihilu v
Seven member l the House Hanking and
Currenc) Committee and seven members ol the
House W.ivs .md Means Committee are known
to have i. anks oi othet financial
institutions rhese committees deal with, issues
ind interest to financial institutions
those fourteen committee
ne othei House
have holdings in hanks oi ilher
financial institutions, including thirty-three
whi the board ol directors oi such
institutions N. Representatives Charles Rapei
k N and Rtcharson Preyei are known
lirectors in al least one bank
LAX RULES
Present Si il lies require
little
disclosure thai it is impossible in determine the
financial holding senators,
although it is knowi t , Senatoi Herman
I i '?; adge i lit i ? thi Senate 1 inance
1 mittee and Senatoi M.tr ? ?. B r J Jr (D-Va I
ol Finance C mmittee have bank
holding ,? . Byi I in I Senatoi John Met lellan
111 ? i i
1 ' phone ails ti of a number
ofsenatorsoi thi financial committees in quest
luntar) disclosure were not received in a
it Such information should be
P"bl' i i tituents should ask foi
? the) get an
flie situation in slates is - I re ,s
a shamelessness about the mattei n ,
? ilifornia last yeai state
U Song, i ? the Senate
' Wl le laboi leaders
had bai-i: ? : itJIng
ting his la ?i
icross
with ?
RECOMMENDATIONS
It is difficult to 'egislate ethical conduct It
1 ' )l lK '?' 1" when a lemslaio,
that deviations from a lug), standard
conduci would come promptly to the
attention 0I his constituents And the beat way
,l Bbo" ? lo spread lus potential
conflicts ol interest on the public reci
? he specific irmmmsndetiatu o,
' onCause foi members oi Congress is
presented u, testimony last tall before the
Snat ? itee which is now studying
the ase and Spong bills
' ITte Offfciil should disclosa Ihe source of
income o. holding (company, organization
lu;r mture ol ihe interest (stocks
Is real property, othei I He would not have
to disclose specific dollai aniounls. hut would
disclose my holding worth al least si ooq and
would indicate foi each holding whether i was
worth more than S 10,000. more than $50,000
Ol more ihj? ?:s(j(X)0
? I be official should disclose a broad list o
other items, including professional services
provided, iffices and directorships held, and
associations with individuals oi firms lobbying
; ing business with the government.
I No member ol Congress should engage in
the practice ol law oi retain association with a
law firm while m office
4 Legislators serving on a committee whose
jurisdiction includes matters in winch they have
a financial interest should divest ihemselves ol
the interest oi resign from the committee
5. Il any vote involves a possible conflict ol
interest tor a member ol Congress, he or she
should declare the possible conflict before the
vole is cast
The same principles may be applied, with
sortie modifications, to state legislatu'es and
other governmental bodies
Marines pray
for war in prayer
(t'PS) "Wher w. had lo go and eat we went to
the mess hall and we had to yell kill at the top
of our lungs three times before we were allowed
to eat
These are the words of an ex-l'S Marine
describing a part ol his training at the Marine
Bootamp on Parns Island, S.C This particular
Marine deserted following his tour ol duty in
Vietnam in lM and now lives in Sweden His
observations, and those ot men like him. are
recorded in Mark 1 an s "Conservations with
Americans" (Simon and Schuster N V , 1970)
"We used to run around saying. "VC, VC.
Kill. Kill. Kill. Gotta kill Gotta kill. 'Cause it's
fun, Cause it's fun "
This same Marine told ol a prayer posted in
every barracks on Parns Island "It's a prayer
tor war. Every night before we went to bed at
night at nine o'clock we had to pray that
there'd be a war, so that the Mannet orps
COlild always be on the move, because that was
then job. to fight "
The text of the piayer follows
Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep
I Pray the LORD the WAR to Keep
So MARINES can eome and Save the Day
And I Can Earn My (.od Damn PAY
God Bless the United States
God Bless the Drill Instructors
God Bless the Marineorps
Though I Walk Thru (he Valley
In the Shadow ot DEATH
I fear no EVIL
For I Am the Biggest
B iddest Mother I ik ker
In the Valley
SEATTLE. Wash P Mr Pat Smith
returned from the battlefields ol Vietnam
deposited iw,? young idopte I M mtagnard
children and promptly said she must gei hask
to take i ai e ot her people I he 4o veai .dd
d o 11 o r . who has become known as the
"grandmother" ol the Montagnard tribesmen ol
South Vietnam, a, know ledge.1 rhursday mglu
that she plainly was worried about the future ol
the beleaguered wat one area
D t Smith's hospil a I 11. K rum was
overrun by the North . tnamese offensive and
so she pulled baik lo I'leiku 25 miles ?
south
'Things in general are going to pieces she
told newsmen as she arrived from Honolulu on
the last leg ol hei trip from s.o.
'There are anothei new hall million refugees
in South Vietnam I had hopes foi the S
hut I've been feeling very pessimisti lately rhe
North Vietnamese have a potential IKJ one
appraised rightly
Despite the danger. Dl Smith said she must
return
"I must get back to I'leiku back to mv
Several
people
Di Smith, who cut her eyeleeih as a umng
physician volunteering foi emergenc) work
during bloody communal strife in HarIan
( ount) kent tick v . is almost a legend in
Vietnam where the has built up a medical
reputation ovei a IX-veai span
"It's ms life " she sjid
I he Seattle ai ea where she was reared
provides voluntar) contributions up to $40,000
a yeai foi the w,uk she does in Indochina
Hr Smith brought with hei 5 year-old Det
and 3-year-old v n i w o Montagnard boys
1 heir mother was killed hv a letottg mortal
shell and their lather disappeared in combat
Jerry Smith, a brother ol the doctor who lias
live children Oi lus own ranging from ages 5 to
2 will rake care ol the bo)i
"Wlia" . iw mure ' he asked
Alter gelling her new wards settled, Dl
Smith said she would return to hei hospital in
I'leiku now stalled bv three American doctor!
one American muse an American sdrmnistratoi
and one Swiss muse
1972
freshman
exclaim
the
traditional
that
me?"
over
ID
card
results.





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bui m i a c , i j
?thin The
Some tlunk it
i win J ilif
people truly
is to die. then
e noted line
rilie li.is often
I aids, it has
ol the way to
i .1 more open
li' ? led I he
re not called
in ordet to
ey, gel total!)
t the Word ol
li .i do toi
B
t?
Wednesday, June 14
i (
levesj
eatly
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not a lanatic.OK ,
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hatevei you
ive believiniBy
is not God'sfi 1
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H-licfJan.
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i
nem
h is j youngoonl
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hm-
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Irrhnistrttoi
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set
Fre.hr
The Ur
imanonent.tioncont.nue. all d?v
J will HH.n.or a w.t.rm.ton fe.? at 2 50 P.M on th.
Wnoh, AsTd SU"e" tXn9 J'Ck Lemm0 ? ??
"right Auditonun at 8:00 P.M
ECU cycle club holds fi.m 4li
7 dumiuer theatre
second century ride
lunt u 1972 I uuntatnhcad Pane
agi
opens
Thursday, June 15
Friday, June 16
Maeta Jvlagic chrrstian featuring P Seller, and -In. Star
will be ,hown at 800 P.M ,n Wrioht Auditorium
Saturday, June 17
Baseball: ECU vs. C
Gametime is 7:30 P.M
Tuesday, June 20
ECU's Carolina Cycle Club
will hold its second 100-niilc
ride this Sunday, beginning at
7 00 AM at Wright Fountain.
The excursion will encompass
about ten hours of riding with
stops for drinks and lunch
An automobile will foBosv
the riders to pick up any that
i cannot complete the entire
distance. In the last 100-mile
ride, held last December,
everyone who began the trip
also finished, "including the
mother ol four children
There will be a lunch stop in
Kinston a ml various other
stops for drinks during the
course of the ride, and riders
can also bring then own drinks
and lunch if they wish
According to Charlet
Bernier. leader ol the cycle
group, the ride will proceed at
a steady 12-mph pace, with no
racing He further states,
"Anyone who can ride 15
miles in less than one hour can
complete the century ride
without any problems " There
will be a $2 00 registration fee
lor the ride
ampbell College at Harrington Field
The Union wi
2:50 PM
sponsor another watermelon feast on the Mall at
Another freshmen orientation begins
Baseball: ECU vs. Louisburg College at Harrington Field. Game
time is 7:30 P.M.
Wednesday, June 21
Freemen continue to learn the truth, of this mighty .restitution
of learning throughout the day.
Movie "Let s Scare Jess.ca to Death" will be shown at 800 P M
in Wright Auditorium
Classified
ADVERTISING CORNER
George Wallace to
bargain for platform
HOUSING
Stadium Apartment on 14th St. between M.n's Dorm, and
M.ng Furn.?hed. modern, and .ir conditional Walking dtanc.
from campus Call 752 5700 or 756-4671.
Furnished house for rent, up to Ha boy Summar .nd Fall
quarter Call 752 2862
HELP WANTED
Full time help for ummtr, male and femai Student, can mafc.
53 000 Long hair no problem Cell 762 2939 between
9 00 12 00
Go Go Girls wanted fslon Toplee, Short hour, excellawit pay
Call 758 3396
Entertainer, wanted Folk, pit, comedy, eta. Solo, duo, or small
group Call 758 3396 for audition
MISC FOR SALE
Alter beds at a fantastic price Just received 600 water bads with
5 year warranty Regular $49.95, now only $15 96 Call 752-4063
or come to United Freight Co 2904 E. Khh Street.
For Sale 35 mm SLR outfit, Prakt
$95 00 Call Dr Robert 758 6800
iea, 3 tansa. and all
300 new tires, fully under warranty. Prices .tart at $16 00.
Wholesome to everyone United Freight Co 2904 E lOrh St.
Sex and space
may not be compatible
RALEIGH (AP)A North
Carolina State University
scientist has evidence that sex
and space flight are not
immediately compatible-at
least not for male wasps.
Dr Daniel S. Grosch. NCSU
geneticist and leaderofa
NASA project to determine
what happens to insects which
are shot into space, emphasises
there are still many unknown
factors associated with
long-term space flight
In experiments with
wasps to determine results of
space flight on reproductive
behavioiand efficiency. Dr.
Grosch noted that males are
disoriented and unable to tind
the female ot to consumate
intercourse for some time
following a trip into space via
biosatellite.
After their return to earth,
he said, some male wasps are
disoriented for as long as 13
hours.
On the other hand, he said,)
the female does not display!
any temporary loss of j
reproductive ability.
Dr Grosch and a team atj
Oak Ridge, Tenn have formed!
no definite conclusions as to j
the precise cause ofl
disonentationofthemale!
wasp He observed that factors!
other than weightlessness and!
vibration of space flight may
be responsible for the wasps'
confusion.
MIAMI AP?- Alabama Gov.
George Wallace, partially
paralyzed from an assassination
attempt, will be coming to
Miami Beach to bargain for the
presidency and a platform
when the Democrats converge
here next month, his campaign
director said
A MAJOR FORCE
Predicting Wallace will be a
major force at the convention,
Charles Snider called a news
conference to "let everybody
know George Wallace will be-
coming to Miami "
"Most Democrats and party
bosses now realize that Gov.
W'a I lace is going to have to
participate in the election or
the Democratic ticket doesn't
have a chance in November
said the strategist credited with
modernizing the Wallace
campaign and steering it away
I rorn the third-party route
Wallace opted for in 1968
POPULIST ISSUES
With the major Democratic
presidential hopefuls sounding
'more and more like Gov.
Wallace" on certain populist
issues such as tax reform.
Snider hinted Wallace would
not mount a third-party bid
He indicated major platform
concessions to the Wallace
philosophy would close the gap
and make it possible for the
wounded governor to endorse
the Democratic ticket.
Questioned about Wallace's
possible support ofa
Democratic ticket headed by
front-running presidential
hopeful Sen George
M c Govern, Snider said
Governor Wallace is
withholding his comment on
this until the other candidates
make their positions known
MARKED DIFFERENCE
' 'T here is still a marked
difference between the
positions of Governor Wallace
and some of the other
candidates on the war, amnesty
for draft dodgersand the
legalization of marijuana. This
will give you an idea of some
of the things these candidates
might have to change before
they c ould have Governor
Wallace's support '
Senator Hubert Humphrey
of Minnesota, defeated by
McGovern in the crucial
California primary, abandoned
his flat opposition to Wallace
as a possible running mate
POSSIBLE VP.
I n Houston , Texas, during
an appearance at the National
Governors' conference.
Humphrey told t he press "I
have said repeatedly if a man
would accept the platform he'd
be eligible in my book for
vice-presidential nomination
Snider stressed Wallace "is
not interested in the
vice-presidential nor nnation in
any way but conceded that
'some of the Southern
governors are in the process of
trying to get Governor Wallace
on the party ticket " Snider
said the extent of Wallace's
personal participation during
the July 10-13 conclave had not
yet been determined but "if
there is any way at all. we
expect htm to take his turn at
the podium
RECOVERING
Wallace was shot while
campaigning at a Laurel. Md ,
shopping center last month
Since the shooting, which left
him paralyzed from the hips
down, he has been recovering
in a Maryland hospital, but
Snider said Wednesday, the
governor will be moved to an
Alabama hospital within the
next 10 days if he continues to
improve.
TERMPAPERS
tvp.cl A rtie' riave a minimum
BS 8? leU
F??c TERMPAPtrt CATALOG
?Thp,jsn(J J're-Klv on f'lei
CALL TOIA FREt
v .en n in country TO! .Mo,
-i.ition tnd ratal md itaUms
eoo-aaoee:
o call Coiia t JO' b!6s77C.
EOUCATIONAL BtSEABCM INC
? , a ? nm A a Suite 169'
Washington DC 20015
CAMPUSINOTES
F? TwTe Wjfe, vt? W??!w? wS.aWaiK ? ??aT?tWbkJ&im&Ft
M
Inventory Clearance Sale
African Lecture .?
Education, traditional
music, and ritual will be the
Transcendental Meditation
An introductory lecture
into Transcendental Meditation
I
H
B
R
H
topics of a lecture cosponsored wj be held Thursday, June 15.
by the African Studies . d$jgnid ,0
introduce those interested to
the principles and ideas behind
ALLIED 395 Custom Made by PIONEER
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Committee and Africa Institute
for Public School Teachers, to
be held Wednesday, June 21, in th poc 0f meditation. The i
discussion will be conducted,
by a qualified teacher who
Rawl.
David Rubadin will speak
"Eduction and New
in East Africa
on
Thinking
Today and Adolphus
Turk.on will discuss
Traditional Musk and Ritual
in Ghana The lecture is free
?ndwillbecanat8:15p.m
received instruction from the
Mahareshi Yogi It will be held
. t 8 P M in
Education-Psychology KM. All
interested persons are invited
to attend
MC 1000 SPEAKERS reg $50 00 each now $60.00 set
CHANNEL ADAPTER reg $59 95 now $29.95
Tape, Patch Cords, Shure Needles and
Cartridges available'
I
B
i
? RADIO SHACK
TaNOt CORP
Since early March,
producer director Id LoeMifl
has been auditioning
performers fot the ninth season
"I the I ISI t a olma Summer
Theatre He has interviewed
more t han 1.000 men and
women from New York to
I l"iida in his efforts to bring
t he best available talent to
Greenville Today, general
manager Michael Hardy
announced the names of four
leading performers who will be
"ti stage in McGinn in
Auditorium this summer.
The first is former Miss
North Carolina . Patricia
Johnson . from Raleigh
Johnson will play leading roles
in the first three shows of the
season FIDDLER ON THE
ROOF, ONCE UPON A
MATTRESS, a n d I 7 7 6 .
Summer Theattc favorite
Sally-Jane Heit will be
telurrung again this summer,
having scored previous
successes in HELLO. DOLLY'
and, last year, GYPSY
From New York, Minnie
Gaster is scheduled to play the
Carol Burnett role in ONCE
UPON A MATTRESS Gaster
graduated from East Carolina
University, and went on to win
the outstanding actress award
at Yale U niversity before
starring professionally in the
Off Broadway production of
YOU'RE A GOODMAN,
CHARLIE BROWN She will
also be remembered by
Summer Theatre audiences
from her performances in
OKLAHOMA and her Mammy
Yokum in LI'L ABNER.
JA
2
72
1
?n
f
o
I
is
I
II
i
John Sneden. who designed
the scenery for the first seven
seasons of the Summer
Theatre, is a surprise addition
to t he company this ear
Sneden will play the role of
Ben Franklin in the award
winning musical 1776.
T he big question at this
point is who will be cast in the
Zei M ostel role. Tew, m
1 IDDL1 R ON I III roof
I oessin has rejected numerous
applicants lor the role a
and is in close omtact w ith
New York s,urces on several
confidential possibilities
Season tickets t or the
summer theatre are currently
on sale at the McGini . box
(fioto by Bill Rirclall)
office at $18 tor adults and
$12 SO for children 12 sears
and undei 7 he complete
season Includes FIDDl i-r on
III! KOOl 0NC1 UPON A
MATTRESS 1776:1 DO, 1 DO.
and 1 HE FANTASTICKS
Reservations can be made by
writing Box 2712 in Greenville
Ol calling 7.MQ0
Marchers receive day sentences
(Continued from page 1)
me and asked 'Where are
you going0' I didn't answer
him and the officer saidOh.
you're one ol them' and
gabbed me "
Edward Carwood testified
that he was arrested on Evans
Street as he walked by hunsell
When asked what prevented
him from reaching his
destination, the Federal
Building located on Evans
Street, Garwood responded,
"Office Darden
Bob Malone a non-student,
testified that nothing was said
about the candles when the
order to disperse was given IK
further stated. 'The reason
permit was not obtained was
due to the fact that a previous
attempt had failed and that the
spontaneity of the inarch was
necessary to show out
opposition to the escalation ot
the war
The other defendenrs
testified in their on behalf
After hearing the testimony
of both sides. Judge Charles H
Whedbee sentenced the
defendants to one day in jail
Since all had alreads served the
"in da in jail, they were tree
to 0
Michael Murdock pleaded
"n.t guilts' and testified that
he was in the process ol leasing
the ecetM when arrested Judge
Whedbee found liun not guilty
The remaining three
students. Frank Tursi. Ralph
I pps and Mike DiGullio
pleaded not guilty and waived
evidence They were tound-
guilts and sentenced to one
das in iaii Since having already
served a day m iai ihey were
jIsi I H'k'JM '
Bob Malone, Keniieiri
ostue, and PnsciJlaarver
gave notice ot appeal
Freshmen can tour paper
I
A n y
freshmen interested in working
for Fountainhead next year,
are invited to tour the office
during their visit
Fountainhead is loc-r-d above
Wright Auditorium and is open
24 hours a dav
PITT PLAZA
Open: 10 to 9
Tea take Hat PK of tfteat treat M. MM now' Chooee an, 3 Stereo L"? (.ortr. UB to S20 M or an, ! Stereo Tape (cart"0?aor caaietta -o"0 ? .13 ??l "EE "V ZTZ5
S t?nT aZjtliOut. of Hrrinta wtieo ??i wo at the lo. nfetima T,embenh,p fee ot .5 30 Too can deter your laMctron of FUEE item, and cnooae from an eipandM Hat later ,f you can t
.TTtS?LaraeTn?.aVtLm?nJiJH, tTlSSm tSZ the on r?ord -no tap. clot, offers, (uar.nteeo d,?coonn of 33'SN to 79-c on all labe?,tn no oNt,on o.
SmmS to tSSSamETtTl mZ?? gyjTCTJaS tm 3 be .?? to order .n, ord o, tape co-mere a,?l.bl. on ?en, l.b-indud.n, all rauecal pref
orancae No automat shipment, no card, to return We ?h,p on ?h.t ytx, order Moneybart tue.entee it not tithed
wen
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AT LAST A RECORO AHD TAPE CLUB WITH NO "OBLIGATIONSONLY BENEFITS!
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?rt?i a 't teti us-a ? tiit own1 Th. mah
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tr"t plMI ??? TOsir pf?ffnte a?d tH
?rMi ariotfnt nwfnbef o" tti t oupim
l 00 WHAT TOO .
? FWfl HtPlirn MMrt,ia Carp uartfts
rou brand n?w .at pM tapes at discounts up
b H) fl?nr li Tar ;?, o?f
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th,i Spe IM Mmt?rh,(! ,)if- Alto sand n th 1
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up to plus a sinaii maihn ??4 handiir
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CMPkl IT to ray credn cprl
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I
7
r
r
3
rV hot sK'nMC
I'VE 60T 3P0 UOCX.
pLlp OUT ND nLL
TH& REM- HOUSE;
Bu
to
By I
Spoi
ECU ret
severe Inning
??ai I li ism's
iw.i gamci
week'i actk
Summer Bawl
Aftei liisiii
n the openei
S Wilmmgi
night; the Pira
Mill an 11-2 1
iiid l hen lo
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pounding out
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"VOU KNOW IT AND 1 KNOW ft, BUT DOES HE KNOW IT?
PET SHOP
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Associated Pri
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Bucs recover from hitting slump
to win two; face Carolina tonight
Wednesday June 14,1972.Fountainhead I
By IKE EPPS
Sporti Editor
ECU recovered from a
evere hitting draught and two
?Jils losses to win theil lasi
? taincs in (he opening
rveek'l action the
Suminci Baseball I eague
Altei losing 4 1 toiroUni
'i the openei and then 2 0 i
N( Wilmington the following
night, the Pirates bounced bai I
Aith an I I ii Campbell
and then topped Louisburg
i 8 to even then record
In I uesday 'i openei againal
theTai Heels ol I the Buci
?'tiki manage but three hits
icainsi strong Mike Merritt,
who went all the way and
siiuck out seven lor the 4-1
mn Meanwhile, the Heels were
pounding out 14 Wtl against
Hues Bill Godwin and Russ
Smith
( BTOlina pushed acioss uins
in the second, third, and fourth
iiiings. while the Buci s.ored
their lone talley in then hair of
the filth
Merritt held the Pirates
hit lea through the first three '
"iningi until Jimmy Paige
hammered a single ? ,?.
fouth, hut the inning ended
With him stranded
I he lene But run was
unearned in the fifth, which
Ron Staggs led with a
double to lett Me moved on to
third when R? leggett got on
?n error.and then he scored
?is Smith also was sate from an
erroi
I he onK othet Pirate hit
came in the eighth when Ralph
1 ?? singled Godwin
absorbed the loss tor I t
The following night against
7 hits
I N Wilmington, the Buci
again could get nothing going
as they were held to five hits
by the Seahawks'Paul Fulton,
who was credited with the 20
win
loimny o,ns went all the
way lo, II a?d slruck u(
six, but Hue errors and timely
Seahawk play handed him the
loss.
The two teams felt each
other out tor three innings
I I'NW talhed in the
fourth I heir first run came
when Allen Smith singled to
center, driving in Greg Dalton
from second.
They grabbed an insurance
run in the fifth as David
I Sandlin singled to center to
score Fulton
The Pirates threatened m
the I our t h when Mike
Bradshaw tagged Fulton for his
first hit. and l.arry Walters
walked But then with two out.
the next batter flied out to halt
the threat.
Again in the tilth the Pirates
came close, as Rick McMahon
moved around to third, only to
die there with an infield out.
School kids and
I hen in the sixth. II
threatened when Jimmy Paige
bunted salely to first, only to
be put out when Walters' single
forced him at second Wallets
was moved on to third on Ron
Staggs' single, but again the
inning ended with a Buc runner
stranded
Ron Leggett led the Pirates
at the plate lor the game with
two hits
DUMP CAMPBELL
The Bucs finally got things
going on Friday as they
unloaded on Campbell for 12
hits and collected their first
win of the summer by 112
Steve Herring collected the
win for ECU as he went seven
Hillings before being relieved
by Russ Smith. Herring gave up
two hits and struck out seven
belore retiring. The Camels got
one more hit off Smith
After two idle innings, the
Pirates got things together with
three runs in the third, font in
the fourth, two m the sLXth.
and am ther two in the eighth
The third got started when
Ron Leggett singled and moved
store
ended
,e I on Herring'i
Sacrifice Mike Hu.Kdaw
walked, and he and I .
hoth su?ed when Jimmy Paige
Masted a double Ralph i
followed wild a single I
Paige and the inning
with l( I up - o
Ihe fourth began with I I.
loading the bags on a McMahon
single, a Leggett hit and a
Herring walk Bradshaw s hit
scored McMahon and Leggett,
and Jimmy Paige's single
loaded the bases again Herring
was then oul on fielder
choice by Lamm, and I arry
Walters hit to score Bradshaw
drugs
Bangkok don't mix
Iditor's Nola The parent! ire
fartably well off The kids ?re
right and well tmhaved Why. then
I o many students at the biggest
IS school of its type oversees on
ssVugs ' The answer is as elusive as
9 cure
By PETER O'LOUGHLIN
Associated Press Writer
BANKOKAP)Mary
Ine , 10th grade Teacher
ported her sleeping in class.
iken to the school nurse, she
?tJmit ted to smoking heroin
As lion suspended limn school
And referred to the Filth field
f iospital for psychiatric help "
The extract, with the girl's
tine changed, is from a
nfidential school report It
tttuld apply to doens of high
schools in the 1'nited States It
dwesn't
r-l t comes I r o in the
Hitei national School Bangkok
ISB wheie '0 st usletits have
been suspended tm ding abuse
Slice September
? M.n s lane, the 16-year-old,
was luckier than her class mate
It t o i si n i Patty, the
Ighter of a 1 S Air Force
tjor. was lound de id in a
be I y back lane in Bangkok
e wet night in April
NEEDLES
BThe autopsy did not prove
died from drugs, although a
it hypodermic needles was
md on hei bod ? But the
jungster had been under
Itmenl fot heroin addiction
Ihe I S Arms Hospital
he was the fifth ISB
lent to die since October in
: u instances mysterious
High to Jt' I lor a medical
estigation Si i.e was proved
have been caused by
irdoses ot detectable drugs,
though narcotics we
ipe c t e d in so me oi t he
ths
) pinions s jr about the
lousness ol the diug
I
problem at ISB. the biggest
school ol us type m the world.
( ompared to an equivalent
high school in the Tinted
States "the nuiiibei is less, but
the problem is greater because
of the tragic circumstances
said ISB superintendent Dr
Stuart Phillips
Tragic circumstances in this
case mean heroin.
Since September. 125 ISB
students have been treated for
psy chiati is disoi der s at the
Fifth Field Hospital Ol these.
60 were on heroin I heir ages
ranged from 13 ol 16 Of the
60, half were sent hack to the
U.S. for further treatment
Some w e r e a d m 111 e d to
psychiatric hospitals
ENROLLMENT
T'le IBS has ul 7 students in
t he hi; h school, and 525 in
iiinioi high. The lower school
enrollment brings the total
student b odv to 3 .058 on
whom 90 pei cent are
Americans, mostly uependents
0 1 m i I i t aiy and U.S.
government officials
The number ot students
treated for heroin is almost 7
per cent oi the high school
student body But estimates ol
drug use in the school are lar
higher than that
"Our ml 01 niation is that
between I 0 per cent and 40
per cent of the kids are taking
one form of diug or another
Mostly it's marijuana said an
official involved in narcotics
suppression.
Superintendent Phillips. 57,
w ho spent 30 years in the
Oakland. California, school
system as teacher, principal
and superintendent, before he
came to Bangkok in l?6Q.
admits "getting good haid facts
is difficult
l)i Phillips savs the school
is unusual in that there is
virtually no poverty problem
among families, there are few
one parent families, discipline
is good and vandalism non
existent
"Academically, the kids are
excellent he said.
II the kids are bright, well
behaved and well to do. why
then, is there such a serious
drug problem
AVAILABILITY
The most common reason,
given by teachers, military
officers, patents, narcotics
officials and some of the
students, is availability
'Bangkok is the main
conduit for the opium and
heroin produced ill Burma,
Laos and Northern Thailand
said one C.S. Diplomat.
'YOU CAN BUY IT
ANYWHERE IN Bangkok
Anywheie includes the dead
end street called "Soi 15" on
which the high school campus
is located At one end of the
street on a muddy canal is a
duty . run down, clapboard.
Thai noodle shop known to the
kids as the Schack
"You can get any amount
ot pot you like said a student t
sipping a coke at the Shack.
"Or you can buy from the
street vendors
HEROIN
Heroin is just as easy to get.
The kids buy it from Thai
taxi drivers who line up on the
narrow street outside the
school. They buy what is called
a SS-dullar vial. It contains
about half an ounce of pure
heroin which in the U S. would
be worth $500.
Asked why the U.S. Mission
did not ask the Thai police to
arrest the pushers in the street,
S. Embassy Mission
Coordinator Robert Lindquift,
whose job includes supervising
narcotics control, said:
"The Thai police do patrol
the area . They arrested some
kids outside the Shack
The kids, however, were
American and were not
charged
But no pushers have been
arrested, although a student
can buy heroin as easily as ice
cream outside the school.
The $5 vials of heroin
bought from the taxi drivers
can be sudden death
Said a narcotics official who
has been in the business 16
vears
"In the states, if you get 30
per cent pure heroin, you're
doin' good. On the streets back
home, it averages 5 to 10 pei
cent Here its 90 to 96 per cent
pure
Most kids smoke it, but
some have tried injecting it
Hell, you can't inject 90 per
cent stuff It's gonna kill you
BOREDOM
But availability may not be
the sole reason, or even the
major one for ISB students
taking to dope Oilier theories
put forward bv parents,
ministers, and doctors include
loneliness, noredom.
unhappmess at home, or just
the strain of living in an alien
city like Bangkok
"Something's wiong said
Major George Kojak. a bouncy
U.S. Army psychiatrist at the
Fifth Field Hospital in
Bangkok "I've never seen
anything like it
"Heroin is a symptom of
problems at home Kojak
said
The teen-agers complain
they have nothing to do in
Bangkok. School starts at 7:30
a.m. and finishes at 2 p.m
"My biggest problem is
staying out of trouble said a
17-year-old senior.
"The only place to go is the
Teen Club. If you don't like
that, you've had it
TEEN CLUB
The Teen Club, built by the
U.S. military command with
non-appropriated funds, has
500 members aged between 13
and 19 It offers a swimming
pool, tennis courts, snack bar,
pin ball, and table tennis.
Some kids don't like it
because they say it is too
a u i h oritai ian and has too
many rules, including one that
prohibits amatory
emotionalism military
parlance for necking.
Apart from a
military-sponsored Youth
Activities Council and a school
program offering confidential
counselling to students who
voluntarily seek help for drug
problems little has been done
to assess the size and causes of
drug abuse in Bangkok or woik
out a program that might
prevent it
More teen-agenare
voluntarily seeking treatment,
Kojak said But there wasa
danger, because of the growth
of heroin use. that the U S.
authorities would panic and
say. "We have to catch 'em "
"If that happens, it will go
underground again he said
put ECU up 7-0.
and Paige to
Alter two unearned runs in
Ihe sixth, and twoamel runs
in the seventh, the Pirates
ended their scoring spree with
two in the eighth
Paige reached first with his
third hit. Walters double
right, and they both scored
when John Narron doubled to
make the final (alley 11-2
LEADERS
Leading hitters foi the Bucs
were Paige with three hits and
two RBI's. Walters two hits
and two RBI's. and Bradshaw
with two hits and two RBI's
Again against Louisburg on
Saturday, the Pirates found the
range with the bat as they won
1 1-8 m a hitter's delight
The Bucs out-hit Louisburg
16-15, with the Pirates' timely
plays being the difference in
this see-saw battle.
Tommy Toms went lor all
but one out for ECU to collect
the win
For the first three innings,
although unable to muster up
much offense, the Bucs put
down several Hurncan threats
to hold the score at 0-0.
Then in the fourth, the Bucs
collected two runs on scoring
singles by Ralph Lamm and
Ron Staggs The Hurricanes
came right back with three
runs to ko ahead in their half
ol the trame
ECU tied H in the filth as
?.
?'iv
MIKE Bradshaw lashes a hit in last night's win o
Appalachian The Bucs will face Carolina
' ?
X,
ver
tonight at Chapil Hill
a??
v srl4
l'ulo oy B'llRiedeo)
l-1 ? Leggett scored whet, the
I ouisburg catcher tried to pick
him ofl second, but threw the
ball away
In the sixth down 4 3 after
anothei Louisburg icore, the
Buci went ahead with two
runs.
Larry Walters led ofl the
inning with a home run to tie it
at 4-4
Ron Staggs followed with a
single and moved to thud
wild pitch Rkk McMahon got
on with a walk, and as he and
Staggs tried a double steal.
sixth the
this time
singled in
make the
Larry Walters
.blasts homer
Stag sughi Whe
I tried I McMal
m the
Hurricane Nome
with the leading run
'? hi: in the
Pirati i run;
when Rail
Mike Bradshaw t
talley 6-4
Kiks moved ahead 7-4
in the eighth as rroy I asoi
singled and moved on with
Ml Main.i I sacrifice, and was
driven in when pitcher Toms
singled
I uisburg roared hack m
four runs in then halt ol the
inning to take the lead by -
?Coring on doubls and singles
The Bucs then rallied in the
top ol the ninth tor tour runs
to insure the win
Jimmy Paige led ofl with a
single, Vvalteis readied tirst on
an error . and Staggs was
walked to bad the bags I ssori
then singled in Paige for the
tying run
McMahon attempted a hum.
but tie popped up to the
piicher. who in nun uied to
double W riteri ofl third His
throw waa wild, and Walters
home with what turned
he winning run
IIk- final twi Pirate runs
IS 1 oms smcli . in Siaggs
and I asoi
fhe eame ended in a rush as
the Hurricanes threatened
again m the ninth putting rwi
it. scoring
Bill Godwin ame on with
two out and collected the save
final Louisburg
hatter to fly
I Ol the gams II was led
at the plate by an outstanding
I ms He
complemented his fine pitching
efforl with three hits and thiee
RBI's to help his own cause
Bradshaw. Paige Lamm,
Walters. Staggs. and Lason all
collected two hil ad foi the
Bucs
The B u c s hosted
Appalachian Stale last night,
and tonight they travel to
( hapel Hill to take sin t
again at 7 30 (n I tiday. they
will navel lo Wilmington, and
Will leium home Saturday
nighl at 7 10 lo faceampbell
JA
2
72
I
I
IS I
is I
- I
"I
? I
I
i
I
ARMONY HOUSE SOUT
Downtown Greenville
BSsHMrl





Countamhead
Wand the truth shall make you free
Court decision places responsibility
UfaUHfo

c
s
wmntenii
to
r
p
b
One ol this weel rous I nited
si id's Supreme Court decisions stands
out .is ,i landmark 01 perhaps .1
depression olonstitutional justu
blac k Pe nns) Ivanian. an influential
leadei ol the state's legislative bod) was
turned down in hisattempl to crack one
ol the List and most stjlw.ni holds ol
discriminator) 1 's the private
club
In .1 6 ; dei ision thi ; i uled thai
the club 1 Vfoose lodge did not have to
sei v ,? i h ma n sin he w .1 s .1
member I applied
-hip
11 at the
posse lal
,l have been sufl'n
lor governmi
rs ol
polic)
I heourt did not view the liquor
license js making the state .1 part) to
discrimination, and in doing so,stopped
iivil rights groups' last ditch attempt to
breech the racial sanctit) ol bona fide
private s luhs
"he work ol bringing about equal
opportunit) has too often been
consigned sole!) to the realm ol the
courts and lavs b) the average American
When law's long arm has been tested and
found insufficient, the spirit of the law
must depend upon the public approval
and support Hopefully, this sharp
remindei of the civic dut) ol .ill
Americans to enforce the lav. and .vk
equal justice .is independent agents ol
1 hal l.i w can bring about .1 new ?
awareness and concern that has been
? g in more recent c.us
(
r4? V OfRisriAW
"?r
Cocaine reaches epidemic proportions
v
.
I
I
? .
M
1
.
M 1
Irecl price
? - ? ig ol heroin rum anywhere from $3 to
N s rk City ma he on the verge ol j
lemii 1 harles t pdike Assistant
' States Wtorne) foi the Southern
New York, told the panel cocaine it
1 .is prevalent .is her,mm in Sew
ficall) he said it'i "about J i
traffb in Sew ). rk
Ri thwax ol the Cniiiin.il
'he 1 Mew York, also a panelist,
? haia. une js 'the drug ol the rich
But. tin ? ,n) rlcr)
" a ? ? - ommented, on
? that the judicial attitude
possession has now gone full
He noted thai in cases involving 1
' i iantit) ol marijuana, the
District Mtorney in Manhattan, "without any
prompting" from the court, always moves to
idjourn in contemplation ol dismissal Die
tion amounts t" an automatic dismissal alter
m months it the . been no further
.1 e nature
s . York State 1 egislature has
Sew York City th uncil
B ? it 1 As
1 ' Vssistant District Vtt, ime) ol
New York ?. Richard It Kuh told the
panel, what thi li ms is that
ghoul the Suie all ,ases mKink: small
is ,it marijuana in effect tall within the
jurisdk tioi I 11 n lepai tmei ts
be referred to these departments and he
eligible foi dismissal alter six months il
furthei infractn in is on re
- 'J whethei this more relaxed polk)
that marijuana is much less of a pr. ??
now than it wa ? nonths .n ;
Rothwax M
Pros ?"? have Friends it not
'hemse . Inere
? whicl ai
' 1
'?' ? ho lid like ' set th( State
reduce the possession of marijuana
lation status on the
" books (a that the District
ssoi latioi arguing for the second
ir) laims that the general
? ittii ide toward marijuana has ahead)
the police department, where
marijuana arrest figures are decidedk down
I he full text ol the panel discussion, which
. h nutters as "drops) evidence,
?r ol informanu u narcotics cases, and the
"ik: ol addicted drug users and sellers
' t published in the Spring issue of
temporary Drug Problems
fountAinhead
Phihp E Williams
Editor in chief
Debbie Crumpler
Business Manager
Frank I ursi
Bruce Parrish
aisarter
Ike I pps
Bill Riedell
David Willson
Managing Editor
Newi Iditor
features Editor
Bulletin Editor
Sports Iditor
Photo hditor
Founta.nheed re, tha, ? cr.no. be re,Pon?bl. for return.n, m.Ur ,ubfnittwl
for publ.cat.on At, mater Mbrn,nwi bmmnM prop( of J
reserve, the r for unm?ed publ.Cion wrth.n ,? ?? hTLTZ
cornption for nmmU pub.?hed or ?rv,ces rendered svt be voKt ? J?Z "
wrtb.n 60 day, of ????, No ltaff ?.?,? ? ZiZZZ
any ma.er.a. The opm-on, express. ,n ?h? newspaper ?. not IIZJmSZ ?
Fountamhead or East Carolina University.
Pubhshed by the .tudent, of East Carolina Urvrvemty under th, auspice, of the
Student Pubhcation, Board Advert,?, open rate ? $1 80 per column ,?ch. Lrtfle
are $1 00 tarttoto 25 word, Subscr.pt.on rate h $1000 yeerty P.O. Box 2516
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone 758?366
la
Sure. I know you were rushed, but couldn't you find ANY other teacher?????
Washington Merry-go-Round
Government agents still stalk Alger Hiss
A ? . ? J. .
By JACK ANDERSON
The f HI is still SUlking a ghost from the
past Me is 67 scar-old Alger Hiss
Hiss is ihe formei state Department official
h' in 1948, was named b) Whittaket
Chambers as a card-carrying comrade Hiss
denied the charge and. lor that matter, is still
denying it But a urv didn't believe him and
sent him to jail tor King about n
Whethei he is a Communist or not, he would
be the last man the Russians would now call on
to spy tor them Nevertheless, the I Bl still tiles
'egular reports on him now that he's out of
prison
One report noted, tor example, that Hiss was
livin with a woman in Manhattan under
another name Agents have also run checks on
his bank accounts at the Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Company in New York
On one occasion, Hiss lectured at the Sew
School tor Social Research in New York, and
the FBI scanned the school's publications
suspiciously
About four sears ago. Hiss went abroad for
the first time since the I'MO's When he
returned, an I Bl agent using a "suitable
pretext phoned him Ihe inquiring Oman
learned that Hiss "intended to give additional
lectures . enjoyed his trip and did not appear
to have anv definite plans at this time to visit
1 urope in the near future
Apparently the FBI is so short of new spies
that it must occupy its tune watching the old
has-beens
SOME SACRIFICE
DcnoLiatic National Chairman Larry O'Brien
has made much of the fact that he serves
without salary His apparent sacrifice has given
him leverage wuhin the bankrupt party thai a
paid chairman might not have But.O'Brien's
sacrifice may be more illusion than reality
O'Brien is a friendly, outgoing man who has
always had a taste for good living Although he
gets no pav virtuallv all his personal expenses
aie paid by the party He is provided a
chauffeur-driven car, his rent at the plush
Sheraton Park Apartments is paid and he eats in
the best restaurants in town-all courtesy ol the
parts
What's more, his air travel bills are also
charged to the party, often including tickets for
his wife Not long ago. O Brien and his wife and
two aides, one of them a secretary, (lew
first class from New York to San Juan. Puerto
Rico After several days in the sun, they caught
a plane to Chicago Mrs 0 Brien sontinued on
to Aspen, Colorado, for some time on the ski
slopes
Party officials insist that Mrs O'Brien's fare
to Colorado will be paid by her husband
personally And they say she only travels with
her hushand when her presence is needed for
official functions
But Democrats who are being asked to bail
the party out of its $9 million debt might
wonder
HOW TO SELL A WAR
President Nixon would like the Vietnam War
to go away until after the election If he can't
accomplish this, he hopes to keep he
controversy below the boiling , otnt.
The President has had some success n
Moscow, he got the Russians to agree secretly
to phase down their material support to North
Vietnam In turn, he agree to decrease our
support for Saigon
But at home he is preparing a propaganda
effort to counter the political ciiticism The
State Department, for example, recently called
a meeting of what is known as the
Inter-Departmental Group on Foreign Policy
Information.
Attending, however, were a lot of peope
who have nothing to do with loreign policy
Robert Beattv tor example, showed up Beattv
happens to he the Assistant Secretary tor Public
Allans at the Department ol Health. Education
and Welfare
Beattv accepted a package ol material on
how to sell the President's Vietnam policy He
then attached his own covering memorandum
and distributed it to HFW bigwigs Included in
the sales package were "positive talking points
prepared by the State Department . and
suggested paragraphs lor insertion to speeches
as desired "
One ol the talking points states "We should
ensure that eserv employee of all our agencies
tullv understands the facts, and that your
principal and senioi Milkers should take the
Opportunit) to stress these essential tacts "
Then there followed a short course on how
to sell the war
ELECTION NOTES
President Nixon has rejected a
recommendation from the Secret Service that
he confine his campaigning this year to
television appearances The Secret Service,
unnerved over the shooting of George Wallace
has warned that the President cannot be fully
protected in a crowd He had already decided
to limit his campaign appearances, not because
ol the risk but because he thought it would be
better politics to attend to his personal duties
He informed the Secret Service, however, that
he expects to make a number of appearances
WHO KNOWS what evil Anderson does
and that he tullv intends to mingle wnh the
crowds
President Nixon ordered his political
lieutenants to help deteat his own congrewnan
John Schmit. in the California Republican
primary The ultra conservative SJimit in
commenting on the Presidents Peking
pilgiimmage, said he wasn't opposed to Nixon's
visit to China, but was onl) opposed to his
coming bask ihe President was furioi
directed aides to help arrange Schmitz's
replacement Schmit was nosed out in the
pnmarv b) Andrew H.nshaw who ud the
Presidents quiet supp.ni
:??:
3WX:
:?:?:??:
The Forum
It's a dog's life
To Fountamhead
Recently, ms wile and I decided to vISi
Oreenville's friendly animal shelter We had
heard public service announcements concerning
il on the radio and thought it would he tun to
get another doc
Upon arriving at this helter we noticed
?chute? at tha pte for receiving animals
when the "dogcatcher" wasn't ,n II wu ?
interesting novelty, especially for animal lovers
We proceeded into this novel place, only ,? t?,j
ourselves being waved back by one of the two
dogcatchera The other one was busy about,
particular structure, a concrete box with two
doors
Suddenly, the siskening odo, ol some
noxiOUS gas crept ??? ,)UI n?srs
the dogcatchen" said to us. aim g,ecfu?.
'ha- we were "gonna heu so,?e sell ln,
?e -namely, the last desperate velp,?,Ih(:
gavsed dogs We heard the yellmg' " .jj,
and then we heard the s.lence the "shelte "
??quiet except for. couple of puppi
My wife and . looked on ?, disbelief W,
a5ked l"V" ,h "dogcatchenf why ?
massasre of Stn the animals quartered the
too Pase He stated tha, there wa, no mone
ava,lab.e to teed the dog, , alkrd ??"
P?h.p, a ??le mor. ,? money ,ould b
directed toward maJntahU the JZ
answered that, "none othi, money" w?u d
paid-oward the upkeep of unclaimed '
Now, ,?k. what kind o man ?,?? be ln
animal shelter And. what kind,
?? ?- animal shelter" T
only difference between, his pe and Daccau
is that dgs are exterminated hen I ttai i i
line line to most animal lovers
Greenville, youi true nature shim
youi facilities 01 the live dog, left, hoe
. iu 10.000 nhab tai li ifl I ? i
realize that gas is cheaper, but so are those who
condone and use it I would rather ?
with animals than wnh the people who ? Id
gas them
B v was we saw ih, i
wanted among the corpses just wl
dog's puppies will be. it so put ihem down
those nose little chutes
Robert W Smith
Forum policy
AH students facuh) members and
administrators ?, ?, (, n
opinrons in writing to the Forum
rhe editorial page K ,i:i ?.? i()lll?, hen
' opinions ?ias be published
Uwfrted editorial! reflect the opruons ol
?? Mltor-uvchtef. and not necemrih tl - ?l
H? entire staff or student bod)
W inx to the Forum the U lowing
procedure should be used
L?v should b, .on and to ihe ,??
I elters should be typed double spasc! .ind
mould not exceed WO words
l?would be rtgned with the na
2 au,hl" 1 ?h? endorser, . por, the
SI. s,Knf" ?? -
JSJrSrjim r k
Mt?2
Imiversits


Title
Fountainhead, June 14, 1972
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
June 14, 1972
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.182
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39629
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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