poem written a well known in 1926 ata | with Serge n Symphony S. consul at 909 when he in Nicaragua of creative n 1934, he ive literature dal in 1925, ond Harmon ries. This is a licies of the , welcome all Nixon, John ot the leaders n and racial or McGovern ge, Chairman ki the past 2 ss Park alive igel Boulton Jim Cribbs John Driver oley Ezzard Frank Lane Cenny Soule vid Windley old Worsley ut in tenor, of the ess their d to the O words to edit J length with the writer's d ‘tter to bject to ect the nd not ad or of ountainhead and the truth shall make you free’ Volume II, Number 65 Greenville, North Caroling Wednesday, June 30, 1971 Social Services Center facilities dedicated The Moyewood neighborhood Social Services Center was officially dedicated on Friday (June 25). Speakers for the ceremony were representatives of ECU, the city of Greenville, and other public officials ECU, through its Division of Continuing Education, is directing the programs at the Center. Mrs. Brenda H. Teel of the DEC staff is Center director According to Dr Middleton, dean of DEC “The primary purpose of the center is to provide an educational and social service Davic center for the residents of west Greenville and the Moyewood housing area “We hope that the Center will become a focal point for those people who need assistance, Some agencies have begun coming to the area on a regular bosis already, now that there is a meeting place.” The facility contains a large assembly room, reading rooms, small conference rooms, kitchen facilities and day-care facilities. The day-care facilities are not yet in operation however At the present time, Pitt Technical Institute, Pit Bedroom bil The controversial “bedroom bill” designed to stop college students from visiting dorm rooms of the opposite sex was killed in a Senate committee June 22 Wake Senator Jyles Coggins argued in vain for his bill which would wipe out college visitation privileges, saying, “I think we all know what happens and what goes on” in the dori. rooms. The Senate Higher Education Committee voted 1] to 4 against giving the bill a favorable report University officials from several schools appeared at a hearing on the bill last week to ask that the legislature leave the matter of dorm room visitation up to individual boards of trustees. Student remains Compiled from AP reteases and other sources. The Senate beat down efforts to bring to the floor Friday a bill that would have allowed college students at state supported institutions to decline to pay fees for student newspapers Two weeks ago the bill had been given an unfavorable report by the Senate Higher Education Committee, but Senator Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax, the bill’s sponsor, gathered enough support to get the committee’s minority report considered for action on the Senate floor Allsbrook introduced the A number of schools across the state, including the University of North Carolina, now have regulations which permit students to visit the dorm rooms of students of the Opposite sex during certain hours. Speaking in favor of his bill Coggins said, “I know it’s the tendency of some of you to say, ‘Oh, let’s let the University do everything they want, we're sophisticated and broadminded,’ which is a lot of hooey, just like those patronizing platitudes to young people, ‘Oh, let them make the decisions.” Referring to booklets distributed by the colleges on venereal disease and contraception, Coggins said County Department of Social Services, Pitt County Extension Service, Sheppard Memorial Library and neighborhood groups such as Girl Scouts and Senior Citizens are using the building. ECU President Leo Jenkins was one of the dedication speakers. He said that “The Moyewood Social Services Center can truly become an outstanding example of how local citizens, a city government, a university and other educational institutions, and various community agencies can cooperate for the benefit of the citizenry.” killed “When an 18-year-old chilc who’s never been away from home goes to school and they give him this book that tells them how to keep from getting pregnant and then invite them to go to their rooms and turn on the music and study it what do you think they’re going to do? Study Einstein’s theory?” Several senators appeared irked with Coggins’ remarks, and at one point when Coggins rose to speak in defense of his bill a second time, Senator Neil Jones, D-Anson, moaned: ‘‘For crying out loud.” Visitation at ECU was ended by the Board of Trustees in April after a lengthy verbal battle between students and administration on the subject newspaper bill . off Senate floor bill after the Daily Tar Heel, University of North Carolina’s newspaper, published a picture of two males in a homosexual embrace. The picture accompanied a story on homosexuality on the Chapel Hill campus. “Students who do not want this smut in their mailbox should not be required to pay fees for those newspapers,” Allsbrook said. The bill gained more support when the Fountainhead published four-letter obscenities in a cartoon attacking Leo Jenkins. Allsbrook circulated copies of both newspapers on the Senate floor while seeking support for his bill. fe ‘ After Senator Neil Jones, 4 D-Anson, a Duke University . alumnus attacked the bill Friday the minority report was laid to final rest. Jones said the bill “is < subterfuge to get the Daily Tar Heel and any other college newspapers. These newspape:s depend on the money from students to survive. They serve a good, useful purpose.” “I know a witch-hunt when I see one, and this is a witch-hunt,” he said. The Senate voted 21 to 15 against the minority report Jenkins doesn't give up Reprinted from Raleigh News and Observer of June 25, 1971. Hopes for a new art building have not waned at ECU. Dr Leo Jenkins announced last week he’s still pushing for the $3.7 million building even though the legislature’s joint appropriations committee has recommended it be not included in the state budget. Jenkins was the only university president in attendance last week when the joint appropriations committee unveiled the budget proposal + and Jenkins is the only president who has announced he'll fight to get a bigger slice of the budget for this school. ‘I reoret that the art building was not funded in the budget, but many members (of the General Assembly) have pledged their support to this project and they know its urgency,” Jenkins said. He added that should attempts to get the art building in the budget fail, it will be included in the proposed statewide bond issue. Operated in Gr Narce sheds his hair; reveals true identity EDITOR‘’S NOTE: The following article ran in the Goldsboro News-Argus, The Charlotte Observer, and other Papers. The version printed here is somewhat shortened but it has not been edited; the wording remains that of the editor of the News-Argus. Thus the perspective, explicit or implied, on police agents, drugs and what he terms the “hippie” culture is his and not necessarily ours. We reprint it solely as a revealing commentary on undercover drug agents and how they Operate. By EUGENE PRICE Editor Greensboro News-Argus GOLDSBORO Earl Manning has come in from the cold He was out there for two years hanging out in the dope dens, bedding down in the crash pads, scorned by the “straight’’ people, harassed by police and living in constant danger of the addicts and dope pushers with whom he ran Behind his scraggly beard and long hair and beads and hippie attire, Earl Manning was one of the straight people. He assumed the role of a hippie to spy on the dope world and serve as an informant for law enforcement agencies across the state of North Carolina. He did it on his own, without pay. Two years and almost 300 narcotics arrests later, Earl Manning is rejoining the world of the straight people. In the dope world the names Scotty Williams, Jim Walker, Chuck Duke, Chris Cox and John Everette were all beginning to merge into one person. And that one person was Earl Manning. And the dope crackdowns in Fayetteville, New Bem, Greenville, Goldsboro, Rocky Mount, Tarboro, Wilson, Buies Creek and Raleigh — and the sudden disappearances of Earl Manning, by whatever name, were beginning to be regarded as more than coincidence In short, he had blown virtually all of his covers. He sat in the office of the Goldsboro News-Argus. He was trim and neat in a business suit. His appearance was a far cry from that of Earl Manning who chatted with a newsman on the night of October 8, 1970. Tha: was the night the State Bureau of Investigation and local authorities swooped down on the Goldsboro dope dens and made 26 arrests many of them on heroin charges. Earl Manning had been working for months ip Goldsboro as an informant His methods here were typical of those employed elsewhere He had moved into the area and looked for a job. He found one first with a grocery store The store owner became on the mall. DO YOU KNOW THIS MAN? At the left is how undercover drug informer Earl Manning looked when he was supplying information to police in several eastern concerned over Manning’s activities. Whether he was an undercover man or a dope pusher, he was considered dangerous. Manning was fired. Later he was hired as a delivery man. He worked hard and despite his hippie appearance, the employer was satisfied with his new man’s performance. It was not easy for Earl Manning. For while he worked hard all day, he spent the nights hanging out in the haunts of dope pushers and dope ushers. He was readily accepted. There had been other cities and towns and he knew well the language of the people with whom he ran. As he lived in “crash pads” and made the nighttime rounds in the dope world, Manning passed a steady stream of information on to the State Bureau of Investigation. He arranged introductions between people who wanted to sell heroin and marijuana and a fellow hippie who was willing to make purchases. The fellow hippie in this case was a full-time undercover agent of the SBI When the crackdowns were made on the “crash pads” Earl Manning operated in th shadows, often using a portable two-way radio to tip officers as to whereabouts of fleeing dopesters. Then, as the jail cells filled, Earl Manning stole away in the night In the early morning of October 9, after the crackdown in Goldsboro, Manning glanced at the watch, set in the heavy WATERMELON FEASTS HAVE been a tradition at ECU for 15 years. They are sponsored by the Union with the help of the Department of Grounds. Feasts will be held on June 30, July 19, August 4 and 16 at 2:50 p.m. Buildings and Photo by Ros Mann leather band on his arm, and snapped, “I’ve got to get out of here before the sun comes up.” Where would he go” Manning grinned. “I have another ‘job’ waiting for me.” The “job” was in Greenville And a few months later the news broke of drug crackdowns there. By then, Earl Manning, or Scotty Williams or Chris Cox was crashing a pad somewhere else, laying the groundwork for still another crackdown He was not paid by any law enforcement agencies for his activities. He was, for the most part, self-supporting. A Wayne County group of private citizens and a Sunday School Association did send him some money once in appreciation of the work he had done Seldom was he known to local law enforcement officers As a result, they suspected him along with others of being a dope pusher or addict. He sometimes was arrested on the slightest infraction. “That's part of it. You can operate better when the heat is on you. Everybody seems to know who local police are putting the heat on. It helped me in my business.” For example, a fellow nformant in one town was told by a law enforcement agent to “try to make” two “big time operators” in the Fayettevile area. The informant confided in his roommate that the law was after the two operators The roommate, in turn, tipped off friends in college and very quickly hippies North Carolina cities, including Greenville. At right is how he looks today. contacted the two “big time operators” to warn them that the heat was on The “big time operators” were undercover agents and as a result of the “leak” they were readily accepted in the dope world. Who is Earl Manning? And why did he, on his own and without pay, go “out in the cold?” Earl Manning was born 26 years ago in Wilmington. “And it wasn’t with a silver spoon in my mouth,” he hurries to say His father is a disabled veteran. His mother works as a maid in the public school system of an eastern community He dropped out of high school to enter the Marine Corps and completed his education while in service. In the Marines, he managed to be where the action was. He served in the Dominican Republic during the revolution there and went on to Vietnam, where he rose to the rank of sergeant He was discharged from service in 1968. “I just got tired of it.” He accepted a job with Burns detective agency and “ran security” for General Electric in Wilmington One day he picked up an old friend who was hitchhiking. “He was ‘doing drugs’ and | became concerned about it. | confided in a law enforcement officer who might tell me what I could do “He was 4 sheriff's deputy He told me what a problem drugs had become and how Sen. Ervin proposed Ban lie detectors WASHINGTON, D.C. June 24 (Released by the Senate Constitutional Rights Subcommittee) — Senator Sam J. Ervin, Jr., (D-N.C.), today proposed that Congress ban the use of lie detectors for federal and private employment purposes. Ervin, chairman of the Constitutional Rights Subcommittee, called the lie detector “twentieth century witchcraft” and said its use was “destructive of individual privacy and constitutional rights.”” “Probably no instrument of modern times so lends itself to threats to constitutional guarantees as the polygraph the so-calied lie detector,” he commented. “Like the primitive tests of medieval times, this device, in ' punishable by a maxinuss ” penalty of $1,000 fine or ome the hands of unwise officials of the federal government, has been used to compel law-abiding American citizens to disclose all manner of personal information “They have been compelled to disclose such data despite the guarantees of the First Amendment which protect the rights of the individual to the privacy of his mind and to the free exercise of his right to speak as well as his right not to speak his thoughts Ervin’s bill, which is scheduled for introduction in the Senate today, would prohibit the use of lie detectors on applicants for employment or for purposes of denying promotions and clearances, or for discipline or dischamge. Wilful violations would be many kids were being hooked and ruined and said | could help if I could find out something about their operations.” Manning called again on his friend and asked how he might make money dealing in the drug traffic. Gradually he worked his way into the drug crowd and became one of them. “I never used any of it. I always insisted to them I'd like to make some money on it but didn’t care to use any of it,” he said He iearned the language and assumed the dress of the hippies Because some arrests are still pending in the city where he first started he is reluctant to identify it. But by the time he had finished there he had caught the attention of the SBI and other agencies Through them he learned of problems in other cities and towns and chose the ones where it looked like he might do the most good He worked as a short order cook, a service station handyman, a delivery boy, as night manager of a drive-in iamburger place and in other jobs. He supplied the SBI and at times other key law enforcement officers with a steady stream of information When a crackdown came in one city, Earl Manning beat it out of town before the smoke cleared. He would arrive in another city and immediately be accepted as being running from the heat of the crackdown year in jail or both. Persons subjected to lie detector tests in violation of the ban could also sue in federal court for money damages or other necessary rehei Along with scientific findings, court decisions and state laws, Ervin cited in support of his proposal 2 report issued last year by the Maritime Trades Depart of the AFL-CIO. The concluded that uss detectors amounts search and be of the nt self-iner mins flouting of Bi Bu rag rountainhead Wednesday June 30, 197] Jenkins in ’72 ? Vicky hates summer. When EDITOR’S NOTE: Rumor a vote to be elected in New school is out, Vicky plays in Control is a feature column, = York? the street with other kids. She beginning in this issue, which If we are going t i the stays in the neighborhood for will attempt to bridge the newly enfranchised young three hot months waiting for communication gaps between people to join our society school to start again in the fall various segments of the campus = whole-heartedly. we ought to Society labels Vicky Population, to provide answers — begin immediately to let them underprivileged” Her parents to difficult questions, to know that we intend to elec Correct misinformation and to people on the basis of thei confirm or deny the validity of credentials and not thei campus rumors. noney Questions may be addressed ON BOB MORGAN to any member of the He can go in either of tw University or Greenville directions the Senate or the com ty Siions Must governorship. fie Would be ar be submitted to the excellent candidate for either Fountainhead office (located — office He’s paid his dues over the lobby of Wright He's a man who has worked Auditorium) or mailed to P.O hard for our society for the last Box 2516, Greenville. Those 25 years. submitted by 12 noon Friday be answered in the following Wednesday's paper This week ECU President Leo Jenkins replies to Rumor Control questions GUBERNATORIAL PLANS can It eV attering that ere Ae SK people who feel la I iy iV the jual iuons this high fice I tship) | k rant . hav I ‘ i ) to everyone S is’ students 4 y id N 4s ounced our citizenship because we are involved with the University CAMPAIGN COST The thing tha neerns st (about politics) is to be eminded that it will cc $I candidate for the govemorship This is shocking because moves us fr tt Jeffersonian ideal, because we are, in effect, pricing this high out of the market middle-class citizens and even offic salthy to n alt derately w VV From a personal sta I plar do all I encourage our pr ipomt can te yple to reject is entire concept associating high office with the ability sums indeed be in this accumulate ney W the state tc e e may pioneer area by saying that ‘ttice hole chosen the basis of and not their noney rs are on their credentials ability to raise It must be very disturbing indeed to young people who have been taught about the American drean > land of equal opportunity, to read in the paper that it costs $100 million f i esidental campaign. H does one answer in terms of the American dream that Mr Nixon expended some $30 million to be ed? How dc idealistic young people the fact that Mr Rockefeller allegedly spent $6 comprehend ON FOUNTAINHEAD (Over the years) 95 per cent the paper has been excellent. It had wide coverage and good variety. But the other 5 per cent which got 1s bad publicity was all this ynkeying around with Hscenity BILE S@HE LL’ s RE ADMISSION urs isa government of aw B Sct was readmitted h the legal process. It is h seek this and it is our tion to cooperate pletely with the courts And we have every intention of doing that THE 26TH AMENDMENT ! am very much in favor of it, always have been. If we ask a young man to die for his country, he has a right to vote Intelligence does not ssarily follow age. A nan political science najor- typically |8-years-old who has studied our government has at least as ich knowledge as someone nuch older who has not THE YOUTH VOTE I think the youth vote will surprise a lot of politicians Young people will not fall into a block vote- all young people are not nor they all liberal Some politicians who try to conservative are identify with youth will be disappointed. Young people reject: people from another generation who put youthful clothing and play at being 18-year-olds, when the young people know that they are S0-year-olds We also make a_ terrible mistake trying to classify any age group into one category CRIME AMONG THE YOUNG We've got to have more and more recreational activities for on young people. There’s no point in bemoaning delinquency in a town that (young people) no more than a buildings to lean against otters few City girls go fromstreets to Rumor contro! warmth of Sunshine House By HOLLY FINMAN Statt Writer t are gone all day leaving Vicky tr to take care of herself. She is r only 12 years old, black, and only an example of hundreds of Greenville girls like her > Certain Greenville citizens > are trying to reach culturally ) deprived girls like Vicky, according to Mrs. D. C. Wade, the Board o for president of Directors Sunshine Operation Sunshine recruit girls from poor homes and white, between the ages 0 8 and 12 Sunshine house is open fron 10 am, to 4 pm day p.m. after school starts The goal of the Sunshine program is “to offer girls the center closes her eyes and allows to catch her. experiences that they can't 1965. The Rev. Bronson year,” she says have atihome,”saysMrs, Wade. sia ney opened the ~ fink Plant for Onertion “We want to teach them ‘0 Presbyterian Center for a group Sunshine are indefinite. “The accept themselves with pride of 10 girls. As the group grew Ultimate ocala to chavs a used teaonere 88: qr olfeants Were reared (ol permanent Girls’ Club in volunteers instruct the girls in admission, according to Mrs. Greenville.” she says cooking, sewing, hygiene and crafts. The group prepares their own food three times a day at the Sunshine house at Third and Pitt Streets. The Federal Program provides one meal and two snacks each day Juice and toast are served in the morning when the girls arrive, a balanced meal at lunch, and an afternoon snack About 50 are enrolled in this summer's program, but an average of 30 girls come to the house every day. Twice a week the to Memorial Gymnasium at ECU for swimming. ECU sororities serve Food group goes as volunteer swim instructors Every Thursday is trip day Not all the girls earn the right to go trips, Mrs. Wade says. “The trips are like rewards.’ If a girl misbehaves, she can lose the opportunity to take a trip to the beach, to Tryon Palace or to Raleigh Money for the trips, equipment and the full-time teacher come totally from the donations of citizens in Greenville. The yearly budget amounts to about $4,000, according to Mrs. Wade. The Sunshine house is furnished rent-free by Memorial Baptist Church. Oil is donated to heat the house in winter Operation Sunshine was started by two ECU women in on out-of-town President elected Students interested in working on the Student Union Committee met last week and elected Deborah Chavis to serve as acting president of the 10th Street widened By EMILY CARTER Staff Writer the For city of several years now Greenville and many ECU officials have been hoping the State Highway Department would widen Tenth Street, in order to relieve traffic congestion and make the street safer for student pedestrians Approval was finally given in March and construction is now beginning. According to James Lowry, physical plant director, the construction will greatly improve the safety ot eas a ae "WORKERS CUTTING DOWN TREES along Tenth Street in preparation for \ more usetul for everyone At present, Tenth is a highly congested two-lane street Students often complain that it is nearly impossible to cross at tush hours. Widening the street is becoming essential to improving the flow of traffic In the Lowry widening process says that no university property on the north side of Fenth Street will be involved However almost all nght-of-way land bordering on the north side will be used This land already belongs to “ a The only land belonging to ECU that will be involved is a small section of a parking lot area. The state has reimbursed ECU for the property An improved parking situation on both sides of Tenth Street is forseen as a result of the construction Also, a median strip will be placed in the street, to aid pedestrian crossing The Barrus Construction Company has already started work and according to Lowry the job may take two years to widening the street. Operation black In the summer, the each week The house will open at 2 f s n GIRLS AT THE SUNSHINE SCHOOL engage in a ‘‘trust exercise.” The girl in Wade. The program originally recruited only white girls The Operation no screens applicants. “We opened the this longer door to everyone “ ’ If JANIE REDDIC Student Union for the summer session. Miss Chavis served as record and dance committee chairman of the Union this past Spring Quarter Chairmen for the summer program events who will work with Miss Chavis are: Susan Jordan, the Union’s Program Director; Chess Tournaments, Sherri Phelps; Bingo-Ice Cream Parties. Janice Williams; Games Tournaments, Lee Brady Watermelon Mardant Music camp slated Approximately 200 junior and senior high school musicians are expected at ECL July 18-30 for the 18th annual Summer Music Camp, sponsored by the School of Music The young musicians will attend special sessions in band, chamber ensemble, jazz ensemble, conducting and Sue Feasts conposition-theory, and other music studies. Classes will be held in the AJ. Fletcher Music Center This year’s program will emphasize ensemble performance, ranging in size and style from duets to woodwind, brass, percussion and jazz ensemble Offered in connection with the camp is a Jazz Ensemble Workshop for band directors, which can be applied toward certificate renewal Housing, meals and health services for music campers will be provided in supervised campus facilities Camp officials are accepting applications from interested music students. Campers must be at least 12 years of age and must have studied a band instrument for at least one year Inquiries about qualifications and tuition should be sent to Herbert Carter at the ECU School of Music entrance K IS crowned ‘Miss Suns Since the house the Is not ina central Board of Directors is looking for other The ideal have three location houses in town situation is to a Photo by Hoss Mann herself to fall, trusting in the other girls different areas of reach more girls, according to Mrs, Wade The biggest problem facing the Operation is finding volunteers willing to offer their time and skills for a sustained period. “We have to constantly keep involving people or the program will lose momentum,” she concluded houses in town to = thine’ of the week. Photo by Ross Mann NC has high rate of college immigrants North Carolina has the fourth highest rate of net “immigration” of college Students in the nation according to UNC demographer Thomas E. Steahr of the Carolina Population Center at Chapel Hill Steahr, who recently made a Study of college student migration in the U.S. along with Calvin Schmid of the University of Washington, bases figures on data collected by the U.S. Office of Education between 1938 and 1968 North Carolina has always been among the “importers” of students, holding fifth place in the nation back in 1938, says his highest Steahr In 1968, 33,214 graduate and undergraduate students came to North Carolina’s public and private institutions from other states, while only 11,578 of North Carolina’s college students left to study elsewhere This means that for every North Carolina student who left the state to study elsewhere, approximately three students came in to replace him Only three other states, the District Columbia, Massachusetts, and Indiana, reported a larger number of net immigrants in 1968 than North Carolina of Drunk in public RALEIGH JUNE 24 (AP) Being drunk in public would no longer be a criminal offense under a bill approved Thursday by the House Judiciary Committee Pie Committee unanimously voted approval of the measure on motion of Rep Horton Rountree of Pitt County. It now goes to the House floor The bill is intended to relieve the state’s court system of the burden of dealing with “revolving door” drunks. It recognizes “alcoholism as a Rates A bill that would have reduced insurance rates for many young drivers in North Carolina was killed in the House Thursday Introduced by Representative John Ingram, D-Randolph, the bill would have forbidden discrimination chronic disease.” The bill provides that when an officer finds an intoxicated person in a public place, he may 1: take him home or to another person's home; 2: take him to a treatment facility to sober up or; 3: put him in jail for not more than 24 hours The bill provides that when 4 person is picked up for being publicly drunk a second time within six months he may be taken before a magistrate who could order him committed to a short-term treatment facility for detoxification same by age in fixing auto liability and collision insurance rates, In a lengthy debate before the vote Ingram told the House that he was fighting for an end to “discrimination that permits a drunk driver to drive cheaper than a safe driving youth who may be a veteran of Vietnam.” News briefs Med $1.4 million for operation of a one-year medical school at ECU was approved in the State Senate Tuesday. $350,000 for a medical school library was also given approval by the House The appropriations are a part of the $4.3 billion state budget for the 1972-73 biennium An amendment by Rep Hugh Campbell, D-Mecklenberg, to delete the ECU appropriation from the hudoot wae killed hy a 6K to 48 vote in the House Campbell told the House that in undertaking the medica! school at ECU the state was embarking on a course it could not afford. He said that Wie 18-year-o WASHINGTON (AP) — The Constitutional amendment to let 18-year-olds vote is on the edge of record quick ratification, well in time for millions of young people to cast ballots in 1972 elections Common Cause, which has been pushing the nationwide lobbying effort, claims the amendment definitely will achieve ratification, and soon Already 35° states have ratified the new voting age passed by Congress March 23 Only three more are needed to make it the 26th Amendment to the Constitution For all practical purposes, Condensed from a UP! story in News and Observer June 25. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate voted 72 to 16 Thursday to extend the draft for two years, with a demand for U.S. withdrawal from Indochina and checks on future major commitments of American troops overseas Acting less than a week before President Nix®n's fOnscription authority expires under law, the Senate passed CHAPEL HILL (AP) ~ One of the most colorful institutions of the Chapel Hill village may be on its way to becoming a thing of the past The Chapel Hill Board of Aldermen has enacted an ordinance, effective July 1, making it illegal for street venders to hawk their wares on any of the town’s public sidewalks For many years the flower ladies have sat under the shade of trees along Chapel Hill's Main street selling their home-grown daisies and corm flowers. In recent years, however, school one-year medical school at ECU was given “the very last priority’ by the board of higher education and that enlargement of the medica| school at the University of North Carolina and assisting the medical schools at Duke University and Wake Forest University were rated higher The budget must now go back to the Senate for concurrence in an amendment offered Monday to limit pay boosts of state officials ang 4 employees not unde: ihe personnel act. However, the portion of the budget effecting ECU has not been altered since the Senate first Bave its approval to the budget on June 25 Id vote it’s down to tWO since both houses of the Alabama legislature passed ratifying bills June 24. Only the technicality of having the Senate approve the House vefsion June 29 remains to make it official In North Carolina, where the State House already has passed the measure, the ratification bill was on Thursday's Senate Calendar, but was postponed until Tuesday Common Cause strategists say a number of states are in position complete the required 38 to Senate extends draft the bill But the Senate’s declaration of a “national policy” of total U.S. withdrawal from Indochina within nine months, subject to release of all American prisoners, was considered likely to be killed in compromise negotiations with the House Both versions of the bill extend the draft to June 30, 1973, and abolish deferments for college students. Street venders to go long-haired youth from the University of North Carolina, located there, have also set up shop on the sidewalk to hawk leather goods, Paintings and other wares Originally the Aldermen approved an ordinance banning the display of all goods on the sidewalk with the exception of natural home-grown or hand-made flowers That rule was overturned in the Superior Court of Orange County, however, when a leather goods vendor successfully challenged it on the ground that it was unlawfully discriminatory Narc’s identity unknown CHARLOTTE (AP) Police chief J.C. Goodman has declined to identify an undercover agent who shot an alleged narcotics dealer to death Goodman said the Policeman’s name was being withheld because of the nature of his assignment, but that it would be released in about two weeks. Goodman claimed the Policeman shot in self-defense after being attacked by a sharp instrument. The victim was HEW speaks WASHINGTON (AP) — The Department of Health, Education and Welfare announced today it has told 39 school districts in 1] Southern and border states it appears they must desegregate further by fall. The letters represent HEW’s first move to apply the April pro-busing decision by the Supreme Court to school districts that have desegregated under voluntary plans rather than court order The 39 school districts last week all have one or more schools “substantially disproportionate,” Said J, Stanley Pottinger, director of HEW’s office of Civil rights HEW has the Power, rarely used in the past year, to cut off federal education aid to districts that fail to comply with desegregation mandates. The 39 school districts include Lu mberton, Alamance, New Wake, Kinston Fayetteville, Bern, Pender, and Shelby, N.C . On the front page of last week's Fountainhead under the heed, “Secret Controversy continues,” was erroneously attributed to the New York Times. The article was written by Lowell Knouff of Fountainhead statt. The Quotes at the top of the pag? were taken from The Times Fountainhead regrets the error. Frankie Lee Dunlap, 18. He was shot twice in the upper chest The police chief said the policeman and another undercover agent who is not a Police officer made a deal with Dunlap in Freedom Park to buy $50 worth of heroin June 24. They were driving to a house to get the heroin, he said, when Dunlap recognized the undercover agent and a fight started. The car ran into a fence and Dunlop was shot No death WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court today reversed the death sentences of 35 Persons, including the electric chair sentence of Richard F Speck, who was convicted of murdering eight nurses in Chicago in 1966. In reversing the death penalties, the court cited its 1968 decision holding that Persons opposed to the death Penalty could not be excluded automatically from juries in apital cases. It also cited two other precedents in reversing one block of 20 death cases including Speck’s. CORRECTION: The article Pentagon pepe He ania cm eamo CH di mt ari hool medical school gt vas given “the very last ty’ by the board eal of education and that ‘ment of the medical at the University of and assisting ‘dical schools at Duke ity and Wake Forest ity were rated higher budget to the for ence In an amendment Monday to limit pay Carolina must now go Senate yt state officials and not under the However, the of the budget effecting s not been altered since ate yees el act first Rave it i to the budget on June yote n to tWO since both the Alabama re passed ratifying bills Only the technicality ig the Senate approve ise vefsion June 29 to make tt official orth Carolina, where te House already has the measure, the ation bill was on ys Senate Calendar S postponed until lon Cause strategists Imber of states are ir i to complete the 38 is draft ie Senate's declaration ional policy” of total ithdrawal from 4 within nine months to release of all in prisoners, was d likely to be killed ir ise negotiations with versions of the le draft to June 1 abolish deferments > students. $ fo go d-youth from. the of North Carolina ere bill 30 have also set up he sidewalk to hawk ods, paintings and s ally the Aldermen in ordinance banning of all goods on the ith the exception of home-grown flowers € was Overturned ir © Court of Orange however, when a goods vend challenged it nd that it) was discriminatory y e Dunlap, 18 He Wice in the u ice chief said the fi n and another 5 agent who is not 4 % +r made a deal with 3 Freedom Park to y th of heroin June were driving to 4 et the heroin, he A Dunlap recognized i, ver agent and 4 ; The car ran into 4 ; inlop was shot 1 ‘ feath | sTON (AP) — The ; urt today reversed sentences of 35 i : uding the electric : ce of Richard | j was convicted ol ; eight nurses in : 166 . sing the death : e court cited Its t on holding that : sed to the death ‘ 1 not be excluded from junes in : It also cited two ‘ ents in reversing f 20 death cases t ck’s y ON: The article } ge of last week's i under the head € \tagon papers v ontinues,”” was es tributed to the ; nes. The article / Lowell Knouft I ad staff, The i. top of the page , om The Tir g egrets the error Sandpits:pollution, death,and disease THE POLLUTION OF the “sand pits” is rapidly destroying its ecology. Aquatic By PAUL DULIN Been swim A little more than a month ago, the so-called “sand pits were essential clean body of water. At present, having been “discovered,” the pits are a polluted bacteria culture Although a sample of water has not been tested for a pollution the Pitt County Health Department say count, officials at there is no need for a count “If it’s stagnant, it’s definitely polluted.” said a Health Department official The “sand pits’ are an area located along the Tar River which many students have been using The as a re n area ‘pits” are sd out highway N.C. 30, approximately tiv miles fre campus. rural, unpaved road 1534 (1 that helps any) Stagnation is not the only Photo by Ross Mann life, once flourishing, is now nearing the vanishing point. ison the sand pits are When I polluted. An additional cause is bloated with beer, th pe ple urmating in its water over ! Gowr gobs of suntan oil, sweat, — relieve Nature and skin oils have put a scum Litter all around from on the surface of the water plenics parties. The that sometimes resembles a San bee 1 ilation has Francisco Bay oil slick zoomed t zero into. the The “sand pits,” now the hundreds, Broken glas adds to EZU swimming hole, were the hazard of the “beach” atmosphere initially a recreation spot for local youths and a few ECL students. But, as word spread by around May 5 over 200 people materialized at the paradise for swimming, diving jrinking, and ater The fraternities came ir as well as the “freak a ip. Rafts seem a luxury th att } the h class, who Wer fl yund all day with b Wa in hand, and upon finish triend d beer, drop the empty jumped directly the water or give water. Jot and it a toss toward the bank, dived headfirst Photo by Ross Mann CAST FOR OLIVER rehearses for first production. Musical to begin summer theatre By HARRIET FLANIGAN Oliver” be me theatre seasor ind the combined efforts of Edgar Loessin, director; Mavis Ray choreographer, Barry Shank musical director, and Robert Williams, set designer The first. stage production of this musical was in London in 1960. A movie version under the direction of Carol Reed appeared in 1969 with Ron Moody, Shani Wiallis, Jack Wild, and Mark Lester. This particular film won a number of awards that year: best direction, best adaptation of a musical, best movie, and best artistic direction The “Oliver was Lionel Bart Dickens’ novel Oliver Twist The bleak workhouse production of adapted by Chailes stage from urtain on intenor Oo opens the Bumble’s Oliver The boys where has resided birth file to the table singing “E ood Glorious Food For representing his tellow sufferers in an attempt to acquire more food, Oliver 1s declared a “‘persona non grata.’ He is. instantly apprehended while Bumble Corney, and the boys sing the disdaintul “Oliver.” Afterwards Bumble and Corney play around in the musical interlude ‘| Shall Scream.” Oliver ts then apprenticed to Sowerberry, an undertaker Afraid and all alone Olive sings the lugubrious “Where is Love Noah Claypole, a fellow employee Oliver into bell f severe t { ins away i p is, Oliv with “Consider Yourself.” The However his first spree to Dodger then leads Oliver to the ity wit r and Fagin, the ringleader of the Charlie Bat Oliver is nfamous gang of little crooks apprehended for their offense He is initiated into. their Oliver collapses and is taken lifestyle with “It’s a Fine home by Br The first Lite.’ At this ume he meets act curtain fal Nancy, Bill Sikes’ girl. Later In the second act, the Fagin sings “You've Got To curtain rises n the Pick A Pocket Or Two” serves underground tavern where 1s a crash course in the art of (Continued on Page 4) Oliver pick pocketing for 9OOOOO0CSOOO4 IZZA p< oe: FREE ase of O value (with coupon) Good after 9:00 p.m. only With purc (264 By-Pass) DINE INN or TAKE OU1 Call Ahead For Faster Service 756-0825 756 -9991 With purchase of one of equal value (with this coupon) Good after 9:00 p.m. only Mon. thru Thur. 421 Greenville Blvd {264 By Pass) 56-0825 756-9991 erases wr_oraeEoE@Etowowrn Unfortunately there inches landed pinched his spinal cord him to blackout immediately When Johnson came to, he was hospital expects to be there six more weeks. He is paralyzed from his shoulders down Johnson about for SIX where he broke three were of Johnson only water vertebrae in his upper back and ausing gasping for air. He asked his friend to administer mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Krause said that he did not know how, so Johnson gave him instructions. Johnson was taken to Pitt Memorial Hospital by ambulance still in the Lying in traction, he Johnson 1s Upon contacting Johnson’s mother, Fountainhead learned that the two boys had at first tried to go swimming in Minges only to find it closed. Their ~~ MALE HELP WANTED Student veteran. Sophomore, junior or senior. Part-time selling for 1970-71 class. Hour or part-time could lead to full-time career. Cali 8. L. Hunt, 752-4080. Thursday Friday: 8:30-12:00. SPINET PIANO BARGAIN Wanted responsible party to take over spinet piano. Can be seen locally, Write Credit Manager, P.O Box 241, McCletlanville, South Carolina 29458 “WANTED ENTERTAINERS Bands or individuals acle, General Deliv N.C: (919) 752-5 WANTED!!! Apply:Barn , Atlantic Beach Bring In This Ad And Pick Your Own "Garden Of Music’’ Savings (BRING IN THIS AD AND PICK OUT ANY second choice was th it Wh t Granted tha pits lid the right to ge After six more week f dove th traction, Johnson will begir 1 King at the the long ar @ 1 rehabilitation ar Host ( ne i walk and motivate his t Willis H Johnson, a track star in higl 1 7 j school, is fr Charlotte, NA apr ately Bil The major fact that Joh MeLaw v ing and many f¢ ple ha some wa i overlooked is that the deptt the r the “pits”? changes every 2 N« A rainstorm car ndir € J drastically, Wind-1 ith a car d la pull more sand int overnight On June Williams, a 20 at North Pitt | swimming with { “sand pits” off 30. Friends said into the deep wat to sink. He came back down about urine, suntan and body oils, sweat, and other man-made pollution is a blaant 208 east fifth street Something different in imported gifts and room Summer Hours Be Good To Your Ears—Get Into Into The To Pick l othe bottom Laure K Re age to. the Bobt ha tw ars V x | I he r 4 i riends in th ! ! lighway N< Highwa Williams wert G er and t st up and went ECU art instructor three times get nonprescr We special exciting on! moto by Hoss M. example of the pollution of the ‘‘sand pits.”” NuForm carefully selec today. And w We als variety of and ecolo Box 2556 11:00 AM. to 9:00 P.M. Phone THE RECORD BAR’S GARDEN OF MUSIC SALE tLe Os AVY —C~ Garden Ot Music We Came Ip Albums By Artists Of Fame The Prices Were Low, The Music Was Right Oh How Souls The Garden Has Filled Our With Da-lite... By "Ralph Record Bar (with a f le lot of help from his ALBUM OR TAPE THAT FALLS IN With This Ad: (Thru Sat. July 3) ANY 4.98 SERIES LP ANY 5.98 SERIES LP ANY 6.95 HIT TAPE & CHEESEBURGERS AT THE PIZZA CHEF (A%D DELIVERED TOO! We believe your privé € ¢ be your own. And wher comes to buy U 48 store t exactly priv POPULATION PLANNING ASSOC Gentiemer ONLY ONLY [4.19| Wednesday, June 3U, 14 bountauinead , Page o you ET CAN HAMBURGERS ECONTRACEPTIVES Muhammed Ali free himself, ready PHILADELPHIA (AP) onsequences. Muhammad Ali’s decision t Ali’s defense refuse induction into the Army draft evasior has caused him to live for four based, in part years with the threat of going that as a traveling bishop for to jail, a fate which was spared the Black Muslims he was him by a U.S. Supreme Court entitled tc ministerial decision today exemption from military duty In an 8-0 decision the court He also claimed that he, as a reversed Ali's conviction On — Negr was discriminated draft evasion, saying that the apainst due to the unbalanced record shows that his “beliefs — -aejal mpositior oh dratt are founded on tenets of the eras : j Muslim religion as_—_—he facthevinwened dadislon: the understands ther court said the government has His decision to resist’ pow fully conceded that Ali’s induction, he said, had been peljefs are based upon bound up in what he felt to be religious training and belief? his life’s purpose, and because gs set out’ in __ previous of this he felt at peace with conscientious objector cases No two dollar charge There have been many unfounded Tumors circulating around Stasavich said, “We are campus concerning a proposed — encouraging students to attend $2. surchar on student the games, not forcing them admission to football games and above their away by imposing this fee.” over regular Fountainhead regrets the activity fee. Fountainhead was error ¢ inting the rumor and informed by Clarence thanks Stasa h for his Stasavich, head of athletics, assistance in setting things that these rumors were totally straight State mentor resigns RALEIGH Edwards resigned June 25 as head football coach at North Carolina State University ending an 18-year career that sent his team to the top rung in the Atlantic Coast Conference standings three times. “Pve been thinking about it a long time,” Edwards said in confirming reports that he had submitted his resignation (AP) Earle resigning early this month The highly respected Edwards was dean of football coaches in the ACC. He was in Texas Saturday's all-star game sponsored by the American Football Coaches Association Edwards said he had recommended that his entire staff of assistants be retained by the university for the for Edwards, in a telephone coming season, and that one of interview from Lubbock, — his aides — whom he did not Texas, told The Raleigh Times identify — should become head he had first discussed with N.¢ coach State officials the possibility of THE FACE of this diver who has found his brakes are into a racing machine Donahue and Penske in the The problem this year is Javelin all the way through the who will beat the Javelin. The 13 race schedule, with : T-G team seems to have good Camaro peeking thro i ideas in converting the Camaro There are over in order that they will be aspects to : able to use the best Chevy America, but engine, the Z/28. The Dodge are short. may make a challenger out of been its Challenger, but it is being G, # left up to an independent and = # money is needed in the Trans-Am. To me, it looks tiag- ountainhead and the truth shall make you free Court to render landmark decisions in N.Y. Times case W! the Supreme Court returns its “landmark” decisions in tt ises of United States Vs. The New York Time and t i ted States Vs Was/ gton P t w deter whether the pubh ght to Know holds precedence over the g Ss power to ) 1 ) ‘ V Asc the public should be ower t the voters lassity documents t tt Bis Hing forma damag tl political iimt sor i Lat ubl images. If anyt s n ot 1 1 i iments g I Papers se V powers ¢ 5 Onceal vita i ro it s t \ dul t ( S have protect ] \ ) Washing P The | ( and S Py \ sed s ira publicat s based igon Papers dupicit fiv d stra s ding Nix d strat whic has vigorous ¢ suppress evidence of governr t Wi 1 g ta Por yn about l 1 Ss’ war 4ImMs anc Nar t Ind hina yr fli t I Yer irt s have bd fa ig t AUSe I dered l States helpless but because they was, and is isons by government news One newspaper has suggested that the ndictments against The New York Times and The Washir n Post should stvled the Nixon administration vs The People’s Right to Know, The Nixon stration has tried in every possible way to preserve the public’s ignorance by stopping the publication of the Pentagon Pap When confronted with mistakes and deceptions d by present and_ past government has sted for 2 no-fault policy attempting to ibsolve current officials ind their predecessors of blame in all ng by circulating deliberate tion or by classifving relevant d nents “top secret To adopt such a view ts, in the words Daniel Flilsberg, who courageously anded the documents to The Times ‘To see the conflict and our part in it is a tragedy without villains, war crimes withe criminals, lies without liars spouses and promulgates a view of srocess, roles and motives that is not grossly mistaken but) which nderwrites deceits that have served a cession of Presidents If there ever are any Congressional investigations of the government's conduct of Indochina, that have access to all the pertinent records, the blame will probably be shifted from the ormulators of policy to the ci pre were charged with bureaucr righ-level decisions. The ‘fficers of Executive Branch will junior eal criminals will > censured, and the go tree After all, that’s politics Two. anti-student bills killed in the Two controversial bills that would have greatly affected students’ lives were killed e General Assembly last week Wak ( ora Yahoo De rat les ¢ ins, saw his bedroon was designed stop lege students trom visiting t dormit r s of on of the opposite sex, killed in Senate imittec And § Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax failed lis Friday attempt to resurrect have allowed stude yn state-supported ¢ Pay campus newspa ¢ It is doubtful that the two bills killed last week can be revived this session, but the danger remains that they might be adopted at some tuture date The significan yt these bills can be seen by examining the parts of student life that they would affect. Coggin bedroom bill,” a Victorian attempt to wipe out visitation privileges on state-supported campuses, would hav ssoclation its’ freedom of < limited stude “T think we all know what happ what goes on (in the dorm rooms) Coggins said, indicating that he was xual aspects of preoccupied with the student associations He completely overlooked th idvantages that visitation privileges offer students who cannot afford to mov f General Assembly campus. Such a bill would discriminate nst poorer students. Whereas Visitation privileges now allow them to entertain, visit and study with members of the opposite sex in the relative privacy of their own dormitory rooms, Coggins’ bill removed this privilege Allsbrook’s proposal was a more insidious attempt to limit freedom of the press on college campuses. It was motivated by a Daily Tarheel cover story and photo on homosexuality at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Fountainhead cartoon containing a four-letter-phrase criticizing ECU President Leo Jenkins. Allsbrook hoped to make the part of student activity fees that went to support student publications optional for all students His attempt failed partly because it was an obvious effort to censor student newspapers by depriving them of monetary support. But mostly the bill as defeated because it would have set a dangerous precedent. By allowing the students to make one part of their activity fees optional, the legislators were Opening the door to other cuts Specifically mentioned were efforts to limit the use of student fees to support Fountainhead Robert W. McDowell Editor-in-Chiet Whitney Hadden Managing Editor David LaFone Production Manager Bob Malone Doris Foster Garry Gibson Ross Mann ira L. Baker Staff: Lee Armstrong, Susan Coleman, Bill Owens Business Manager Joe Applegate 1dvertising Manager News Editor Features Editor Sports Editor Photographer Advisor Paul Dulin, Lowell Knouff, Donna Webb, Bob Cox, Pegay Higgins, George Zellars, Robert Mi iner, Alice Fields, Harriet Flanagan, George Jackson, Maxim Tabory, Bob Burns, Steve Wiggs, David Barbour, Holly Finman, Claudia Older, Lynda Burns, Cathy Johnson, Richard Howard, Emily Carter, Dwayne Skeen, John Harrelson, Bev Denny, and Sam Beasey Published by students of East Carolina University, P.O Box 2516, Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Advertising open rate is $1.80 per column inch. Classified $1 00 for first 25 words. Telephone 758-6366. Subscription rate is $10.00 per year The opinions expressed by this newspaper are not necessarily those of East Carolina AH, WADDA THEY WANNA BRING ALL THIS Peace movement harrassed By |. F. STONE Reprinted from /F. Stone's Bi-Weekly (May 31, 1971) The government is moving from the policy of mass arrest. of demonstrators to mass harassment of the peace movement. The strategy is to tie up leaders and funds in a multiplicity of actions without worrying much about evidence, legality or the ultimate outcome. The tactics recall the indiscriminate “harassment and interdiction” tactics notorious in Vietnam, where the U.S. military doesn’t care how many villagers are hurt so long as a few guerrillas may be hit. These cynical tactics are effective up to a point, the point where the overkill swells the ranks of those the government is trying to crush. The negative effects are already apparent here in the District of Columbia, where passersby were swept up by the police, and many radicalized by their experience. A revealing statistic is that of the first 2,000 May Day arrest cases processed in the D.C. Superior Court, the vast majority were found not guilty or had the charges against them dropped. Of those who contested the charges against them only four were found guilty Of the May Day leadership, Rennie Davis and John Froines have been arrested for conspiracy, though no evidence of illegal plotting or planning was adduced at their preliminary hearing, only public statements. It is a strange conspiracy which is carried on in the open and on TV. Bradford Lyttle, a lifelong pacifist and a gentle creature, has been arrested on the preposterous charge of assaulting a policeman, he claims he was grabbed by the police from behind outside the Justice Department and did no more than drop his bullhorn. Significantly, this is an escalation from the original charge of disorderly conduct and prosecution has been taken over from the District U.S. Attorney by the Internal Security division of Justice. A special grand jury was about to be convened when we went to press and will no doubt be used, Harrisburg and Seattle style, to put all sorts of people through the wringer in an effort to elicit testimony under the threat of contempt The House Internal Security Committee has also swung into action. Its first defeat came when a Federal Judge, on appeal from the National Peace Action Coalition, ruled that the committee may no longer seize its bank records without giving it notice and an opportunity to challenge the legality of the subpoena. A similar preliminary ruling was made against Senate Internal Security last month in a suit by the Progressive Labor Party. These committees not only have access by Presidential order to income tax records but are the only agencies of government that subpoena bank records without notice to the owners. This is a curious way of manifesting their devotion (o private property, The House Committee (by reading the Trotzkyist Militant and the Communist Daily World) discovered some well-known Trotzkyists in the leadership of the Peace Coalition and some well-known Communists in that of the People’s Coalition for Peace and Justice. Neither fact is a secret, and we believe the country is too sophisticated, too bored with the Red menace and too hostile to the Vietnam war to be impressed by this replay of McCarthyism. We think the attempted smear will boomerang An 18-year-old testified that Fred Halstead, who was the Socialist Workers (Trotzkyist) candidate for President in 1968, seemed to be in charge of the NPAC office because “he had the key to the Coke machine.” The revelation may cost Halstead the nomination in 1972. The witness who turned him in said he had spent three nights at the NPAC office stuffing envelopes to find out what was going on for the Freedom Leadership Foundation, a subsidiary of the Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity started by a Korean anti-Communist guru. His ecstatic followers live in communes and hold an annual Mass marriage in Seoul. Sitting on the Committee, vigilant and militant, was the Birchite Congressman Schmitz of Califomia When a Birchite can use a Committee of Congress to expose Trotzkyites, U.S. politics need a psychiatrist Is there hope on the highways? By THE TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY Special to Fountainnead More than 55,000 men, women and children were killed in traffic accidents during 1970 However, experts see a glimmer of hope in this statistic In 1969 America’s highway death toll was 56,500 Much of the reduction in highway deaths, according to a survey by The Travelers Insurance Company, may be attributed to safety features which have been installed in new vehicles since 1966. In addition, according to the firm’s annual publication of street and highway svatistics, there may be a growing awareness by drivers of the need for safer driving, The publication, titled “Voice Behind the Wheel,” also notes that excessive speed was a major factor in more than 39 per cent of the traffic deaths in 1970. Nearly half of the auto fatalities occurred during weekends and/or during hours of darkness Though the number of deaths was down, the number of injuries from vehicular accidents was up. In 1969, some 4,700,000 persons were injured on highways in the United States. In 1970, the figure jumped to 5,100,000 Another fact contained in the booklet, one that has not changed much in several years, is that drivers under 25 years of age were involved in more than one-third of all accidents, fatal and non-fatal. Yet this group makes up only one-fifth of all licensed drivers Roger C. Wilkins, chairman of the board of The Travelers, suggests, in a preface to the booklet, that even with safer cars and highways, “it will be our acceptance of these safer automobiles, our continuing pressure on appropriate authorities, and our acknowledgment of individual responsibility that will insure that we reach our goal of fewer and fewer accidents on our streets and highways.” Schell speaks To Fountainhead It seems that a mistake of sorts is being made by most people in viewing my trial. Most think it is 4 case of freedom of speech or of the press. While it is true that these are issues, the heart of the matter to me is to what degree should the ECU administration act as a de facto judge and academic hangman to the students One of Judge Larkins’ reasons for issuing a temporary injunction reinstating Bob Thonen was the inequality of the justice administered in Our cases: 1, a suspended suspension, Thonen removal from school With the final trial date approaching in Thonen’s case, Dr. Jenkins made an effort by an application of equal justice, and so, | was also removed from school The administration of “justice” by the ECU administration without benefit of a trial is distressing witness the ouster of students arrested in the visitation demonstrations before guilt or innocence was proven and the harassment of a grad student acquitted of a drug charge The student who comes to ECU has the right to induce change in any way protected by the constitution, contrary to the belief of M.A Tony Harris in a much earlier letter to the Fountainhead And when school policy is found to be in conflict with the constitution, it is that policy and not the constitution which should be altered Bill Schell Thank you To Fountainhead Thank you very much tor the well written The Forum coverage you gave our motocross race in the Fountainhead on June 1, 1971. We have been delighted with the interest, enthusiasm, and support for racing that we have received from the University students and faculty Motocross racing is a fast growing new sport and we believe that eastern North Carolina has the ideal terrain for it. Through news coverage and articles like yours, we hope to stimulate enough interest to warrant more races of this type Thanking you again, we remain Very truly yours, Stan‘s Sport Center Stan Hathaway, Owner Shocking visit To Fountainhead During a recent visit to our capital city, Washington, D.C., I was lucky enough to see the now famous rock opera “Hair.” In the opera were nude bodies, long hair, loud music, erotic jestures, and dirty, dirty words. It was really a shock to see these things that are so foreign to my eyes and ears. I have never before seen such an alarming display of wanton freedom. Why, these people on the stage were down-right “abusive.” They slapped me in the face with every curse word imaginable. They showed me the privacy of their bodies, These young Americans were obviously not the typical well-bred Greenville youths. It’s too bad they didn’t have Leo Jenkins around to straighten them out when they were in school I wonder if these actors and actresses in “Hair” will be expelled from the United States? After all, isn’t it the only way to stop all this dangerous subversion? Shouldn't we just East Carolina U exterminate all of these free thinking little whipper-snappers who don’t have enough respect for their elders to get a haircut? Tl bet if Leo Jenkins was the president of these “United States,” he'd know what to do with this problem of today’s youngsters. (By the way, can a person be expelled from a country?) At any rate, | am sure that he would have the problem under hand. Of course, we wouldn't have to worry about having to pay $7.50 to see plays like “Hair.” Do you know, Fountainhead, that “Hair has been doing this sort of stunt for ne years? When will we see it stopped? Leo what to do about it ‘arly four Let's ask Truly yours, Terry Loflin eel ieamettiai The Forum Students and employees of University are urged to Opinions in The Forum Letters should be concis point Letters should not exceed 300 words The editors reserve the right to edit all letters for style and errors and len 7* All letters must be signed with ri name of the writer Upon the write , request, his name wit} he withheld be - Space Permitting, every letter to puntainhead will be Printed sub the above Procedures pee Signed articles on th Opinions of the neccessarily those the express their e and to the T's 'S Page reflect the Writer and Of Fountainh, niversity fot "ad Or of Gi July it dorns shamb! reme outstar the Al Hampt trom A Gre report Bruce plays Keybos group (Aries) guitari (Libra) (Pisces) Bopp take ot faraway get it printed of Atl Bird Br that Gre Volume | Americi can now elections student vote can b In Nor cannot rey they atten were resi they beg says that a outside tt resident 0! one yeat next gener particular 1 by the tim election in register to However every boar state, Alex