oa | President ns_mik WECU hosts Dr. Jenkins Vd y JANET PIERCE ) I k W | | | } | | | |l t Departn ( Ww j A study of students living in dorms O bog j and those living off campus ‘showed a FOUNTAINH raid k 1 correlation between dorms and grades, HW ga particularly in undergraduate levels,’ I I said Jenkins E rt wo pay pt neach t I H EC f ENKIN dent >stions ' pe NO SUSPENSIONS tudent said. “But,” he a th ? p y E JE te jue V k MEDICAL SCHOOL fae a Freaks challenge police W : fice Cl but equal play is denied ( ) Angrily yours A seeker of healthy fun all ntainhead eel and the truth shall make you free’ | Origin of the peace symbol By CATHY JOHNSON Mt es ns ot he Jenkins’ entertain at home Management — Castle Inn {Staff photo by Stephen Neal) THE PEACE SYMBOL will remain free for everybody's y feet ngt the peace 0 use, including corporations. The U.S. Patent Office J refused to give commercial trademark rights to two rh ' ce irae MN i I REAL encounter group...) 100 Hite helps aid students a : SP eye enc City Council studies proposal ' . having a bad trip oF By DR. LEO W. JENKINS Th pula n of t ft Greenv ha it ‘ Student Adv B ( M Very sincerely Faye Shoftner Managing Editor ee) poli N S ees of the University are be REAL opinions in The Forum e neise and to the point ceed 300 word le right to ed length REAL s. Tt igned with the 1 é : hoy f Whitley | vorably aderst Ww aK PAUL GOWER RELAXES between at : pe! A - ie : : os . : t r ; q ; j CAMPUS SCENES vee for a game of ‘Risk’ in the ya few hungred feet high, radi Fountainhead, Tuesday, Octobe Page 2 SGA President reviews weeken By BOB WHITLEY estivities, whe We have just completed a a floa r by most successful homecoming d y weekend Des little ecognill st confusion concerr 4 Dixon concert ur entertainment’ chairman, and went smoothly and was - special c generally well received by ou any hours student body. Cor auions planning th are in order ¢ entertamment na A ATC his committee. The perhaps the most difficult jot Stud el in the student governme ame WwW never ean 4h stude Ss ye s le doOUy ased W cal ir tea he se W k k 1 i ise \ as y s s whic N ( atulatie participa 43 W STUDENT BEHAVIOR Legislators chosen SENIOR CLASS Presid Vice s Edw Ask S ( K Tred ( P JUNIOR CLASS id Bob P. Vic SOPHOMORE ASS Pres Ss H Vic sic ( FRESHMAN CLASS President Jim W Vice-presic \ H WOMEN DORMITORY OFFICERS Fle Ma Umstea Mary Kath ( Umstea Mary Nell ¢ Slay k Ragsdale Becky Eng Jarvis \ Yop} Garrett B Kissi Gree Iv \ Bart G a Melis. DAY STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES \ Wad George Zellers Suzanne Jenk Moffette Antw Mike Alle MATH Jim Ear Kay Fly er Bob Bostror Edward Askew Diane Spry ia Britt Came Pa Whitten Carol Ki y Joy Bu ine Mary Lynne Osb John D. Fuit Miss Greeny David Nichols Steve App Coffeehouse established Approximately 10 people were talking, dancing, play cards, and eating Fr at the Pa Roor The oc the week R Cotteehouse lal to g students si 1 the weekends at ECI Originated by w Apollo 14 Flight aims for lunar ipland ib 4 Mau LANDING SITES This region i juite diffe ! flat landing sites of This site is in mare (sea) area nce thought to be lunar oceans The Fra Mauro Formatior blanket of debris that y ha me from as deep as 100 miles below the original lunar crust when Mare Imbriun the Sea Rains was created It was probably formed by both ballistic at the time of material t and by he yutward ejection of treme idous impac surge of gas and debris More than 700 miles across, th recognizable From its size and basin is the largest structure on the Moon apparent aging, lunar scientists believe it was caused by the infall of a huge swept up in the accretionary evolution the Moon near the time when Earth and the other planets were created SELECTED AREA for the Nationa Administration The area selected Aeronautics and Space Apollo 14 landing is character MRS Offic (Staff pnoto by Stephen Neal) INA HOCKETT, a secretary in the Alumni Affairs e, finds file work more comfo. table in pantsuit. in student election o,.retaries enjoy By YVONNE BASKIN Associated Press Writer) RALEIGH (AP) Don’t set a match to those piles of leaves you rake up in your yard this fall. It’s against the law Open burning of trash, whether in a municipal dump or in your backyard, has been outlawed along = with — the emission of black clouds from industrial smokestacks in North concentrated Carolina’s first ogram to preserve the quality of the state’s air The State’s new air quality standards went into effect July 1, and officials figure it will take at pollution control least three years and billions of ] do ars to bring every industry, municipality and institution o compliance QUALITY OF AIR Unlike the state’s efforts against water pollution, which North Carolina did not have an ney with the authority to make and enforce air quality standards until 1967 when the Department of Water and Air Resources was formed A major part of the work of began 17 years ago recent dress code °°: INDIVIDUAL W JACKIE STANCILL CHOICE By LINDA EBRON Control Division to date has mine just what been to dete For trash burning N.C. has air qual have been left to control upkeep of the antipollution equipment by car owners A properly tuned vehicle without any sort of emission control equipment emits 2,310 pounds of pollutants per 1,000 miles. Present federal standards for emission devices are designed to reduce that figure to 140 by 1980 The Department of Water and Air Resources plans to ask the 1971 General Assembly to put emission-control equipment under the automobile inspection program But this is only a_ start Routine inspections — could determine whether the equipment was still on the car and whether it worked at all, but highly specialized equipment is needed to test Its effectiveness in screening various pollutants Knight said his department eventually wants the authority to require that each motorist take his car in once a year fora test of the efficiency of its pollution-screening equipment The equipment for such testing is now too expensive to be feasible, but Knight said the probability is good that within the next four to five years someone will develop “a little, black box” to do the job “For now we must settle for the inspection,” Knight said yw, f The inventories show that in the east with example county of Tyrell population of only 3,800 and little industry the open burning of trash and automobile emissions account for about 90 per cent of al pollutants put Into the county’s air each year AUTOMOBILE Automobiles 781,144 3,051,587 pounds of carbon contribute pounds of — the monoxide, hydrocarbons particulate matter, nitrogen oxides and sulfur oxides released into the county s al annually The open burning of trash contributes another 193,883 pounds of pollutants Another 21,265 pounc sulfur oxides come residential, commercial anc institutional heating The results are some is of different ir he populated ity laws | xides in the regior Mecklenburg County, with a population of 337,800 and the largest number of automobiles more than a third 1 contributes of the carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons in the region OTHER COUNTIES The other counties in the regi are Cabarrus, Catawba Cleveland Iredell, Lincolr Rowan and Union in North Carolina and Chester ind York in South Lanca ials_ say the the ¢ the pow and open burning, as as other industrial municipal pe tion car t brought unde ntrol by th egulations put in force July Tt anda forbid tt ¢ si Jark smoke and re ing. except f 4 jcultura d certa phtolew ne e pantsuits are a fashion Southeast Asia.” requires the identification of junicatior tion of prison facilities patriation of the sick and ounded It has been in soutarvy. confinement would) only — the quality of North Carolina’s hey be and where the sources of die Ollution are Worth FE. Baker “We do not now t practical — relatively significant fluenced his — pollution oblem our Ww pantsu prot is to keep way,” said William Knight HEATING PROBLEM chief of the Air Pollution ee Control Division eating s “and our SOURCE d during the t state citizens m that his only control in the mobiles S t cretanes pa hits t Knight estimates that even if th blouses or sweater industrial process emissions are suits t be brought under control, 85 per ar s must cent of the air pollution would . remain most of automobiles secretary in the The fede Office commented which solves the which solves Me by requiring manufacturers to install them. But_ the i of hem lengths Angel Flight project concerns POW treatment the undersigned, are unofficially identified, the Government of are not allowed to write Vietnam to abide by the “Our reasons — are if he Geneva political, nor military ith regard to the — Strictly Prisoners of war in Fran Keeney Geneva Convention regular between the aS We expect prisoner rand his family, neutral the North Talks personally ed that over 1500 U.S are considered brief moment at least tf war of missing These prisoners are samples. 1,000 feet across and 150 feet deep. Blocks of original Imbrium material as big as automobiles can be seen scattered around the rim of the resulting crater, which has been given the unofficial name of Cone Crater spard and Mitchell plan to walk up its genily sloping outer wall, peer down inside, ake photographs and chip off samples of the ancient boulders white astronaut Stuart 4. Roosa orbits the Moon overhead in the Apollo 14 Command Module IMBRIUM BASIN Laboratory dating of the returned should show when the Imbrium formed and establish the age and physical and chemical nature of pre-mare material from deep in the lunar crust The formation takes its name from the S8-mile-wide crater Fra Mauro, which was named for a ISth century Italian monk and mapmaker. A map he made in 1457 shows the then-kKnown Mediterranean world with surprising accuracy samples basin was The landing site, 3 degrees 40 minutes south of the lunar equator and 17 degrees 29 minutes west of the center of the Moon as we see it from Earth, was the intended landing site of the unsuccessful Apollo 13 nission last April. It was retained for Apollo 14 because of its great interest to ientists New attention was focused on it recently as a result of radio signals from the seismic station the Apollo 12 astronauts set up 110 nile west of there last November Scientists believe these signals were caused by monthly moonquakes that appeared to riginate in the crater Fra Mauro when the Moon came closest to Earth a for the inconvenience of the But there is one great source Mf air pollution not covered by gulations which to concentrations ot vext few years from pollutants emitted into the air government has pre-empted the regulation of emission controdevices on cars states and Southeast Asia.” she added not but Carolina University feel we said cannot afford to do less than of our best in this effort,” she that said humanitarian Commander Angel Flight, “We know Hanoi is influenced by world opinion and criticism results of this drive are as large we hope the petition will be presented to Vietnamese delegation to the Paris Peace the “It is our aim that, for one a greater part of America can focus on the plight of our prisoners of | bli h 4 n IN public housing war and missing in action “Now people wouldn't settle testing. But they're going to have to eventually if the air ts to be cleaned up.” AIR MONITORING “But how do you define clean air? We need long-range data for all seasons in specific places — a permanent network industrialized Charl xid Metropolitan Area : includes nine North Carolit INCREASE STAFF and three ( wi the US. Depart counties f Health, Educatio An emissions inve ! W tandard this federally-designated a ; : hae abaell quality control region Wa 1 besid sult drawn up by the National A ee ; la Pollutior ( t paced . Wet de aa Administrator R “ “ve ations for the nt MAJOR SOURCES | emer th tandards as they take effe The two major sources ae F Gent pollution are ; } cf and funds motor vehicles and {ye ae A ; ( electric generating plants in the ; Div area The steam electric plant _ ‘ contribute 86 per cent of the INCINERATORS 197,500 tons of sulfur oxides Taxpay S| sbably als emitted each year, 67 percent” pave to ft bills { of air monitoring stations to on the determine the mean annual various pollutants in the air of a given place,” Knight said Knight's division oxides recently completed a set of “emissions inventories” for each county, eo ah « e listing the volume of various of each county every year by sources Gaston various transportation, stationary fuel combustion, refuse disposal, industrial processes and orative losses “We of the Angel Flight and Arnold Air Society at East Music clinic set ideas to “Choral Music Today” is the Committee on campus Friday, Nov. 6 resolutions Registration is prior to Nov. 4. The fee is $10 media per person 366,300 tons of —indust particulates: and 62 per cent of the 144.400 Motor vehicles contribute 93 per cent of the $31,300 tons of carbon monoxide, 70 per cent 91.700 hydrocarbons: and of the nitrogen oxides County, with 14 textile products plants and two power plants, contributes half say the new regulator of the sulfur oxides and a third =mean bond issues in) many of the particulates and nitrogen Democrats will meet The Executive Committee of the College Democrat Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. Oct. 28 in room 20] Wright Annex The committee will discuss plans for helping with a Walter B. Jones rally and will hear new resolutions Students wishing to voice opinions should present their — will also meet at theme of a one-day clinic for will put ideas into resolution choral directors to be offered form and present the the club for requested Voting and release to the news Democrat the for of nitrogen r 300 in the st have alternative t burning r tons of trash in open dumps Ree ceny Incinerators tart at $50,000 the cost of sanitary landfills depends or the cost of land. State officials will communities whelmingly denounced President Nixon's war policy a recent meeting Proposals were made at this meeting for a — coalition government for South Vietnam and withdrawal of American troops by June 30, 1971 The College Democrat Club 30 p.m Executive Nov. 3 in room 130 Rawl comuniice Albert J, Pestalion of the Speech and Drama Department will speak on the basics of Parliamentary procedure Everyone is invited to Club over. attend Income sets rent By HOLLY FINMAN (Statf Writer) “Anybody that’s poor” can qualify to live in public housing, said A.E. Dubber, executive director of the Redevelopment Commission Rent is determined by the family’s income For example, a family with none to two children earning a maximum of $1620 per year pays $27 a month rent. Public housing usually rents at 16 2/3 per cent of the total income and cannot exceed 25 per cent of the income, Dubber said HOUSING UNITS Over-income families are given notice to vacate but cannot be evicted until the Housing Authority finds safe, clean and decent housing for them to move to, said Dubber Housing units have from one to six bedrooms in the form of duplexes and single houses. Units are equipped with refrigerator, stove, hot water heater and modern baths. Tenants must have their own furniture, Dubber said Assets of public housing are cited in the Housing Authority Annual Report for 1969-1970. Police report that crime incidences have been reduced by SO per cent Only three fire calls have been made from the projects in the past five years. Seven active cases of tuberculosis existed in the areas tenants moved from. None have been discovered in the projects, the report notes. NEW INDUSTRY The report states that public housing provided safe, decent places to live, as well as emotional security for its tenants. The improvements are manifested by increased self respect evidenced by the care tenants take of their homes. Public housing can be compared to a new industry in Greenville, according to the report Sixteen jobs were created. The city has acquired at no cost: $283,000 worth of new streets, $242,000 worth of new utility lines $70,000 worth of sanitary sewers, $101,000 worth of storm drainage, and receives at least $22,000 a year in revenue, the report states GROWTH OF DEMANDS The Housing Authority would like t improve the Clarkstown area by constructing units on scattered sites instead of all in one location. These units would encourage home ownership. In other words, tenants will be able to rent until they are able to buy their house Any rent paid can be used toward making 4 down payment of about $200. Then he buys the house at | per cent interest, said Dubber The demand for public housing in Greenville has grown steadily since its beginning 10 years ago. At present, 453 tamily units are occupied Eight hundred families are on the waiting list Three housing projects are now completed and another one, Newtown, is now being planned. according to Dubber With the long waiting list to get into the projects, Dubber said that persons on GI bills would have the highest priority. Displaced persons who have to leave their present location because of urban renewal have the second highest priority. The aged and disabled make up the third priority group, said Dubber FUNDS Funds for public housing come from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development which lends the city money to buy land and build units, said Dubber. The city sells bonds to repay the mortgage. In about 40 years the mort e will be completely paid, and the housing will belong to the city. Dubber pointed out that the government atinues paying our deficit each year gee maes On the w H lack" | c Ty team We had arath ind down hills. | and a half. We a Not one of our crew ip and strear it, | th then I just had dip. It g would y could. ‘Severe! | out. Jack looked at turning red “Well look, Mike “Yeah, sure Jack the matter with the: getting to them INDIV Oh, there is Keitt ? “We did t Quitting Point.” We of the body weight hy we stop It’s like this. You you are « out. You see, no or does pa th supposed humans are quitter mean, no, y : Sisyphus 1 You know why he 1 Camus said, that ker t he see here we had not! this rock w to go and no time Ii least the goal wasn’t nature when you pas “Are you saying those logs were in Sisy phus forward. | wasn't t had no goal, at lea 1 ‘bey ‘behind tt 4 wrong tur I found tha could have whipped tall tree Ito wher “Then I played mentally replacing friend, whom [| hi However, the hos, anywhe ‘Then I was choking me slave in chains and heavy load of coal be broken and no | CORNSTALKS / autumn is here an laws County, with a ion of 337,800 and the vumber of automobiles ites more than a third monoxide and rbons in the region HER COUNTIES ther counties in the are Cabarrus, Catawba Iredell, Lincolr ind Union in North and Chest er and York in South pollution, car ntrol by the force July ard forbid th t dark ar ¢ ing. except fc rcultura erta . They al 1 nd sulf SREASE STAFF U.S. Der ht ati . dard and =f 1 W ‘ \ Wi j thei } take effe A nul aff and funds \ Pollu Cor NCINERATORS will probably n I i ¢ pali ! t tiv b F n open dumps nerators start at )0, and the cost y landfills depends or st of land. State officials e new regulations will bond issues in many unites ill meet ningly denounced nt Nixon's war policy it meeting rosals were made at this g tor a coalition ment for South Vietnam ithdrawal of American by June 30, 1971 College Democrat Club 7:30 pm 3 in room 130 Rawl so meet at J. Pe.talion of the and Drama Department eak on the basics of entary procedure yone is invited to rent $283,000 worth of new th of new utility lines, nitary sewers, $101,000 ge, and receives at least que, the report states DEMANDS ithority would like to wh area by constructing les instead of all in one would encourage home ords, (enants will be able able to buy their house e used toward making 4 out $200. Then he buys interest, said Dubber blic housing in Greenville ice its beginning 10 years family units are occupied es are on the waiting list sare now completed and n, is now being planned ting list to get into the that persons on GI bills hest priority. Displaced save their present location ‘newal have the second ged and disabled make up p, said Dubber JNDS housing come from the of Housing and Urban lends the city money to uts, said Dubber. The city he mortgage. In about 40 Il be completely paid, and to the city. Dubber novernment atinues # aa Qutward Bound experience Life needs goals By MIKE KOVACEVIC : f F This is tne i tward B 4 progra the way over I saw Jack Hey J i Ned. He is on the cross tear We had a marathon yesterday. Six miles up and down hills. | made it in less than an hour ilso ran every morning at six rew ever missed a run, We'd get for a dip, in a mountain stre nan, it was cold. First time | did t, 1 t Id die. I froze my balls off. But then | by without it, you know, | just had to get up in the morning to run and dip. It got to be like a drug. After every run we would y could. ‘Severe! out. Jack looked at me. 1 could feel my face turning red Well look, Mike, I'll see you.” “Yeah, sure Jack. See y yut as loud as we self and yelled What is u around the matter with these people’ This sun must be to then INDIVIDUAL THING He'll humans mei Sisyph You know why he did it Camus said, that kept S } rock was that see here we had 1 to go and no time least the goal wasn’t deten nature when you passed out “Are you saying that those logs were in Sisy phus SHORT-TERM GOALS ‘In a way know. It ist that I did it, I liked it learned thir 1 walk ped forward. | wasn't had no goal, at least I ar comr reas Y know se seve thir short-term goals like ‘Just over ond this curve,’ ‘to the next is boulder,’ ‘to the stream.” I took a wrong turn and got lost. I nearly cried that the road was blocked. I L hipped myself bloody “Th ntally replacing the logs with a wounded I played games with myself, by friend, whom I had to get to the hospital However, the hospital was just nowhere or Then I ripped my shirt because it any was choking me, and thought of myself as a slave in chains and being whipped carrying this heavy load of coal. But there were no chains to be broken and no blasted whip to be scorned (Staff photo by Karen Blansfield) CORNSTALKS AND PUMPKINS are a sure sign that autumn is here and Halloween is on the way. The Mushroom Georgetown Shoppes - 11 A.M 7P.M Even if I could have set a goal, | had to have a reason for reaching that goal. And my bloody shoulder was killing me. That damn strap was like a knife. Well, after 1 couldn't find < reason, I said; ‘Why not do it for the hell of it That reason is no reason for me. I can see being just for justice’s sake, or loving for love's sake appreciating beauty for the sake of beauty, but this ‘thing’ had to have a reason. After | couldn't find one, I quit walking. You know Keith, I haven't found a reason for living y« But after | stopped walking, | wished that | hadn't.” Keith sniffed and jerked his right shoulder “Hm, it sounds interesting, Mike. Look, | have to be on my way. I'll see you around Frank’s hair was over his shoulders and his beard was thick. He was glad to see me; so was I to see him. His eyes were red and had brownish-blue rings under them. He smoked nervously, his right hand shaking a little each time he brought the cigarette to his lips. His left hand juggled with some change in his pocket He was constantly shifting his weight from one foot to another I told him how high I had felt after I climbed Table Rock and Severe Route. I tried to explain the unexplainable feeling of excitement on top of Mt. Mitchell, watching the sun set and the oncoming storm: the fear that over ta body coming down from the top of the untain in the dark when the wind is blowing hard and the storm is coming on, the happiness th sight of the ¢ welcon resulting fron and the peo yund the fire, the cozy fee when you under the tent listening t« rain drops hitting the tarp when you are all snuggled up in a sleeping bag. L beside you and y« ONE-ROOM TRIPS Outside it is cold and wet; wind is whipping 1 are feeling warm around trying it’s best to invade your privacy and destroy your feeling of warmth. But the glad. The morning is but low tent holds up and you'r crisp and clear. The wind is still blowing tamed by now. You rub your hands and into them, waiting impatiently for the water t fled ] tastes s« boil. Nose and cheeks are all red: hair is r up by the wind. The hot oat-1 good. Then you drink hot ¢ leave. Behind you the put-out fire is still ee, pack and smoking Poor Frank didn’t understand me was convinced that grass, a pill or I wouldn't tr one- half a day mind h ibout the same effe of his “one-room trips of our trig Mt. Mitchell I failed with Frank that afternoor way | failed with John that evening brou with the “Way” ministry. He’s very big Word. When I told him that, or yuntain tops I felt clo yd than ir hurch, he oked a rback copy of the “New Testament” and fell silent On top of Mt. Mitchell I had prayed to God crew, and our families. | had thar all the things that He has given us. I Him t had prayed for Peace and understanding among the human kind, and had felt compassion and love for all of his creations John was still silent. Maybe he thought | should have found a church on t ot Mt Mitchell and prayed there. He didn’t want to hear my belief that it makes n¢ difference t¢ God where one prayed or how or when We probably don’t even have to pray. God probably will be content with us without our going to church, if we live justly, peacetully and lovingly, not destroying nature and not taking away from it more than we should “We have a meeting on Sunday at 8. Good to see you, Mike.” Quality work We do not pick up shoes Located College View Cleaners Main Plant SUMRELLS 421 Greenville Blvd (264 By —Pass) DINE INN or TAKE OUT Call Ahead For Faster Service Telephone 756-9991 AND DAIRY BAR 2713 EAST TENTH STREET FREE Private Dining Room Available We cash STUDENT OPEN 11 AM—8PM A_ bygone era The old lamplighter brightened the nights By The REV. MILTON KEENE I've seen him humping along through the haracters on the f light, a drama in winter dusk, a silhouette of a man with a 1as icipat with a kind of ladder slung over his shoulder, pockets bulging f earliest days when the with large sulphur-headed matche e cave leaped into light Moving from corner to i arkness slipped silently away darkening skies, like a giant spider sj Since he the drama has become a web, he would place his ladder against a witches, wires, and such post, climb the several rungs to the giant | witl mer light motely controlled by shade, lift the globe with one while he s which have never seen, like reached into his pocket with h the faces of little boys There would be a sudden spurt of light as apd he dusk he scratched fire into the h against the > in me rough iron of the pole, then a warm radiance i es: ft the as the gas mantle beneath the shade grew Ww j . but wher incandescent ark wly ds house ot He was the lamplighter, an important figure ing I reach in the pre-electric world of my childhood iby glass chimney ntique oil Nose pressed against the frosty window pane p the wick a fracti an inch I've watched him down the street, leaving a f Ww glow trail of warm, friendly light behind him Ot 1 h ar rounted He was part of a world that departed back wrought-l stand ir roor there in the nights and days of my boyhood. I k tc ¢ ax th t string can’t remember his last rounds through the back and revel in the poo! shadowy streets, but there must have been the i igh last time when he climbed his wooden ladder It’s as though th ttle boy who used t and brought light to our end of town, then flatte si he window on went home, and put his ladder away forever i “ watching for the Nor can I recall the first was gt efuses to say a last good-bye t tt the bringer of light nor w his wooden ladder and the third. It was just that he ther t £ w ehind a trail of he wasn’t g rke g street Film festival set <.. film « Hehowe HOW on sale Ticke for the Chi By SANDY OVERCARSH Ir taff Writer) 40-mi The Charlie Chaplin Film serves Festival will be shown in some Wright Auditor r n Wednesday, Oct. 28 In “The — Floorwalk The — silent include department — store ‘The Rink,” which lasts 40 Chaplin gets mixed minutes. It is set in 1916, ar look-alike d im at 8 pm. disastrous results this film floorwalker The highlights ’ ; a e demonstates his aity and insade a ale by ck (BORTION COLVSELIVG. INFORMATION grace a waiter who spends iaplin = ir endir an : his lunct our E assa dus p LER vi aN valles Gane a a : soa with th : Wn REF ERR AL SERVIC m The only film not set in “One A.M.” is au 1916 is “The Cure,” which which feat eee 19 perfo ; : ah _ Audi 1 4 ) a restricted locale and limited waters props. t £ media regi s. teler »spitais and cl hon THE ABORTION [VFORMATION AGENCY, INC. 60 WEST 86th STREET NEW YORK,NY 024 Shoney's Curb or Coffee Shop S ervice 212-873-6650 PM SEVEN DAYS A WEEK | Students W elcome come see us 264 By-Pass RESTAURANT No matter how long or how short your eyelashes are, they can only improve with Maybelline Ultra Lash Mascara. Because Ultra Lash lengthens and thickens each lash with every stroke. It works with a special formula hidden deep inside the brush that comes out only when it strokes your lash. Ultra Lash darkens and curls lashes. Separates them, too No matting. No messy fibers So why settle for long when you can have long, longer lashes with Ultra Lash Mascara from Maybelline. checks longest naan liffScnates. P.O. Box 80728. Lincoin, Nebraska 68501 1 Starr is not a singing Star OUNTAIN Ca entertainment section ’ aie ail pave eehouse features Bradstreet oe Coff \REN BLAN Union bicycles act ee (/RRLEAS pune SP aioN Wong Bel Ba Nee ps? | j | | | | *: vorneeie if ER DAVID BRA ! - “ , night this week except Wednesday In K house. Shows will be at 8 and 9 p.m TAILBACK GEOR pass from quarterba by parker and hart THE WIZARD OF ID MISUNDER [ “Cc & 5 BLANCH RODNEY 4, GWEN EVIL SPIRIT l k W I D wiZAk ‘ AIR MAIDEN, KAS FRUSTRATEC : WIZAPD KING ID OM NEEL NE Gai “SA — ne pers MECLESOME NA nt iit) &c\ a 1 < é YRA FON I i v Ce , By DON TRAUSNE Nea yn 4 ay) \" c 3) ‘ f (VON a \ nl , mers. mc oe NSA! (pm UH ; a “ Cone Poe Xe \ \ os . , May ) te Pa | | h as. ‘ To SS es MAN ciel “- v2 y. Ue EL < ey ——— —<— C76 | BOY, 1-27 A SQUARE | ‘ All single artists whose last name or performing groups whose first begins with AB or C are on sale CORN BALL ~~ 2 a we HERES ONE OF THE QUAINT DENIZENS || + OF “HE OKEFENOKEE SWAMP NO. 7 WEE FROM NEWSLIFE~-2 3 CNAT Choose from albums by such great artists as: A B C Allman Brothers The Band Creedence Clearwater Association Blood Sweat & Tears Cream Animals Beatles Crosby, Stills, N & Y gthitisin 0% aes , 4 RABBIT.” + AND WAT WOULD WS Voc -. VWensuch! oveearom Chet Atkins Burt Bacharach Canned Heat eg HAW HAW HAW Sg fouRaE J WOLD eee Area Code 615 Charlie Byrd Country Joe |Poeo 3 a giae oe \ AABBIT! ay & —IEARD kee pee Jes KNEE TROUBL i — YOUR OPINION? NN s Z Sea AT LA se Brian Auger Bread Johnny Cash “ ; Ne / YG a * Dave Brubeck Eric Clapton pe In Soy N S| @ ‘) vey, [= regular 4.98 regular 5.98 now only 3.24 now only 3.99 NOW AVAILABLE aR pane oe :? eNO (EI 9) 2 ae te 12 VOLUME pes ee 3 ie | gs BEETHOVEN SETS | FROM DGG 530 Cotanche Street > reo Aes a) open 10 x 10 1AM @ CHAPEL WILL @ RALEIGH @ ROCKY MOUNT ® seman © GREENVILLE: S % 2 } — . Richmond passes, ECU mistakes pave way By DON TRAUSNECK HUNGRY p for GAME RECORDS I CHANCE 38-12 SECOND SCORE W PIRATES SCORE defeat THREE TDO'S MADE MISTAKES W t PIRATE FLANKER DICK Corrada grabs him single seas ark of 39. Despite his one of tosses against Richmond that gave her however, Pirates lost, 38-12 Conteens " “s Pirate harriers seek rebound “ SOUTHERN CONFERENCE Team Standings V L . i The Citadel 3 0 RE by Hoy eveery negate Funnie 2d 1 will be Staff c by 5) aie ' Davidson 1 1 SEASON FINALE Wedr ay in * wm ! . 8 and 9 p.m TAILBACK GEORGE WHITLEY attempts to haul in William & Mary 1 1 iar pass from quarterback John Casazza against Richmond VMI 1 2 sar T Richmond 1 2 THE PIRATES rec B t | ti PIRATES WZ # THE - ooters jose, tie over weeKen ANG B : Saturday's Games : By DON TRAUSNECK PIRATES at Furman YAUGH! 2 2 QVERGROMS UZARD’ HAS PRAISE By-Pass Sunoco Richmond at The Citade! Davidson at VMI LEO’S PERCO Corner of |4th and Washington 758-0808 STUDENT DISCOUNT Discount Gas Greenbax Stamps Let’s Eat! Free Car Washing Facilities Available i Jack L. Tyler BIG VALUE DISCOUNT DRUGS Pharmacist & owner enw KNEE TROUBLE : 64 By “sonal 2800 EAST TENTH STREET Se ec eminence ieee armen: oam—9pm : TStiM DOWN | now 758.2181 ; ils - N Foreign Car Service we cash student checks § COMPLETE ‘ 1 3 Month Plan x Tune pand Boker OUR PRESCRIPTION PRICES § $37.50 tI orang Eacn Monin ARE THE LOWEST IN TOWN! , $15.06 Mont N ents =| PIZZA CHEF |... . ean 5 OWN OPINION § : S M d Thyre d Y i crocheneet [erUuUy >|. “CAR WASH SPECIAL AT 4 Ss N \ Delivery Service fy Fr 9AM. to 9 PM ; S/ wee N QWIK AUTO WASH Sat. 9A.M >M § [VU 1S N 752-7483 , N shoppe , aw a + \ ‘ ‘ 4PM to Midnight 5 Uist BAKERS—BAKERS DOZEN] § FACULTY SUN.-THUR. ‘eee ‘ 14 for the the price of Complete Car Wash $2.00 Y eeceenietuions § ff 12 to students with 1.D. Reg. .$2.50 Pizza, Spaghetti, Oven Burgers 2 § Rennie Gare ( r $1. \ hd cele ae j | Decorated Cakes, with aa fill-up (8 gal. min.) ; 756-2502 beeen Birthday, All occasion delivered to dorms greek houses We have Pastries, Pies, Cakes, and all kinds of pastry goods Pitt Plaza etc. Reg. $2.00 Reg. $1.25 , § k WE VACUME ALL CARS Present 1.D. Card for DISCOUNT __Offer good Mon. -Tue. -Wed. Outside Wash OrOr Orr“ Tel. 756-2343 __ LLLP ADAP LP OLP AP OAP AP OATOAP CP Wilt OPO IPD DALI ADV DO DAP ODP !APPADALAAP AP ALP AD DP and the truth shall make you © 5 ¢ Authorities write off good will of students for unknown reasons W ountaiInhesad free HOW ABOUT A LITTLE GAME OF BASKETBALL ? Edilovials and Commen tar y is in Hangu Draft experts discuss By JOHN STRIKER and ANDREW SHAPIRO “ need by - i th with Danie nS h Pe Ww | ake hu igi low ‘ W (it) I atu ar s th ) | i beliet G be the w lu words Pt id Fountainhead Robert R. Thonen Editor-in-Chief Wayne B. Eads Managing Editor Bev Denny David Landt Business Manager Associate Editor Becky Noble News Editor Karen Blansfieid Features Editor Don Trausneck Sports Editor \va Baker Adviser t 4 dent f a} ar a € Box ree ; arolina Advertising open rate $1.80 fied $1.00 for first word 58-6366 8-636 ate is $10.00 per year ——————————— art finitior t “religion training bieeelU the Court Jecided that Pe t dir Wr h f th that filled he God 4 aditionally religious Last June the Court took the same approach 4in in the Welsh case. Elliott Welsh’s beliefs ulfilled the In so finding, the ; vidual deeply and incerely e purely ethical or Ale oh et tent but that verthele hir duty of in any those beliefs ce y occupy hat individual ‘a place parallel to In traditio) t te i i Iti war fr dit 1 B i t Ww ie not beliet r i sirale a leve 1 . | beliet the Seeger te 1 in Welsh th they a 1 jing to the supreme law of the ul I would be legally justified 1 beli is.” Remember 1 are ally | nt of law, not ettling a metap! and lair t 1 i is entitled reat weight I followir ft 1 and Ke her 4 reli 1 beliet As a result of a imbe t bler nscience with which I ave be i 1 the past months,” e registrant w { leclare villir I violent ! in a made ir indertaking. My Jecisi t f what I believe to be ideratior f validity from the standpoint ve well ! nity servation 1 i] in the ted state truge maintain. | have 1 that wa fror the practical indpoir 1 self-defeating, and that portant ral standpoint, it 1 D his la Age se t quite “religiou D hink the letter is toc rt] I had ter reconsider tt il d ligious’’ C.O. You see tten by Daniel Seeger who was f t ut to the C.O. exemption by he t tes Supreme Cour j It ch 1 d re f 1 f at privilege nt t £ 4 4 t KS ne To Fou ad Tk t with I would like to ngradulate (sic) that “grea ind “glorious Sic t 1 the } tainhead Sics that they t to my last letter. The f the Mudhole Award 1 t the Kleor Empire Now to purpose at s second more-than-likely (sic) last lett the BC dump (Fountainhead). | would like t« ¢ adulate (sic) Miss “Shoffner™ (sic) apor (sic) the opening paragraph of her most recent letter to the F Garba ntainhead, | consider it a compliment coming from such an unbecc office as the Buccaneers (sic) mana editorship! However I will hasten to re Miss “Shoffne for paper tigers (sic) that word “dare” is Since the Buccaneer, the Fountainhead, and the M.R.C., (among others) and certainly the some of the biggest paper tigers on the enti ipus her use of the word is only expected. And since she is so concerned with giveing (sic) “valid” and “justifiable” “reasons” for the yearbook mistakes and high ratings (sic) | demand that they be published in the Fountainhead so that all might see them and decide the matter for themselves as the influx of those who inquire about the matter at her office might well be a strain on her health Time does not permit me to “air” all of my complaints and issue forth ideas on the matter. However, in addition to those given in my last letter I will state one more Why are a goodly number of pictures in the yearbook (like those of the fraternities) so rotten? Now I will grant you that the portraits otf hand (sic) 1 annulled this y It is really note that the Buccaneer has of the individual students were pretty good. But that has t year by the “no dress Morting to n taken leave of its sinses (sic) and gone a 1g, step futher (sic) towards barberic (sic) insanity The quallity (sic) of a good number of the pictures in the 1970 yearbook is siverely (sic) lacking. I shall leave Miss “Shoffner” (sic) with this thought: How so comicly amusing it is for the Buccaneer to be so “public, like a frog” telling its “name the livelong day to an admiring bog’ when there is nothing to “admire” it with (sic) but the New York City garbage dump! To the editors I remain disintfectantly (sic) yours; to Miss “Shoffner”, | remain not at all, William Von Klor PS. Since the editors consider themselves to be of such “repute” (sic) | shall consider the “Challenge” of my last letter to be in force with this one as well and look forward to seeing it in the Fountainhead in its entirety EDITOR'S NOTE: This letter is printed exactly as it was writte Errors in spelling and dicated by the insertion of ‘‘sic grammar are after each error. William Von Klor is not included the Registrar's list of students gistered for fall quarter. Fountainhead has en able to ascertain whether Von Klor is ty or staff member. It is Fountainhead’s y to print only th etters which are signed by the author. Names may be withheld spon the author's request. Until such time as Von Klor identifies himself to Fountainhead Fountainhead will be unable to print his letter To Fount ¢ We w 1 lik i I tol Castle Int { ! they ser to this paper, wt k , mall hair an alienat hipy ) : Does th ! V th sier i u ! fair to a i N ‘ slack the Jew t are differer Who | } ‘ V id wh \ t I ANAL he ¢ | t the righ Ou xt q Castle Innit t ! ain ong an es he d US { t | Oo S t oO ( 1 wl Sincerely Jeff Schimberg Steve Hahn Reviewers Tot \ ew } view Undeniably ! lev has fF 1 yrejudices and st I t work of ar achine must be ties it has are secondary. In a thetic qualities first. Its script, its cine chniques, the quality of These qualities should ig way. That is the functi fa vie. Any message 1 movie is 1 to be judged as a too will an artis than will a writ Teview a subjective, so ne movie be subjective Nothing is achieved in personally attacking a reviewer for his subjectivity. If the re rhas been as honest as he can be, the his job John D. Fulton Castle Inn To Fountainhead Concerning the article titled “Football” in today’s paper by the Manag itof Castle Inr I have a few short com ments to make Evidently there are still people who believe that those with long hair need baths, cause dissent and violence, and do not belong in the American society People should look beyond — outside appearance toward personalities. Not everyone in this world dresses alike, thinks alike, or wears his hair short There is a change taking place in the societies in all countries to dissolve this type of narrow-minded attitude, but basicly it must come from the soul of understanding We are all part of the One in the Universe Let us all look within ourselves and our brothers for peace and union Sincerely yours, Jacqueline M. Coggins Forum policy Students and employees of the University are urged to express their opinions in The Forum Letters should be concise and to the point Letters should not exceed 300 word The editors reserve the right to edit ell letter for style and errors and length All letters must be signed with the name of the writer. Upon the writs equest, his name will be withheld Space permitting every lett kK FOUNTAINHEAD will be printed subject t the above procedures Signed articles n this page refl tt ypinions of the writer and not necessarily th vf FOUNTAINHEAD East Ca eee ae ane Volume II Urbar Sul By HOLL p } IN \ B I { Whit SGA I \ \ Ha K NBC t | Whit COMPOSIT IC The B The Key and I alls their ed Rod Ket I Bob Tt or th B Presid I SGA Mike A Bake D Aff Dr. J \ int De Affairs, SR t l l Bak M S ) I | | wi