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I letters lame of is name Tr to to the ct the essarily arolina Pe pavanen ae For Volume Hl, Number 69 Summer School ountainhead and the truth shall make vou free’ Greenville, North Carolina 1971 Wednesday August 4 Fire threatens Flanagan Monday approximately 10 “potential bomb” existed on the ECU campus. night, at 15, a That was the description given by Dr. Donald Clemens, chairman of the Chemistry Department, of the chemical fire that occurred on the third floor of Flanagan The fire apparently started in a chemical storage closet due to a chemical reaction between unknown contaminant and potassium chlorate, a very explosive substance The fire was first discovered some GREENVILLE FIREMEN WERE called to the campus Monday night in by a janitor who informed the ECL The police then alerted the Greenville fire department, who responded with three trucks. The Rescue Squad also responded to the call with an ambulance Due to the heavy chemical smoke, the required to use an exhaust fan to clear the floor before they began the search for the fire Clemens arrived at the scene and assisted the firemen in combating the enlarging fire Clemens stated that if the police firemen were fire had gone undetected for response to a floor Flanagan. another ten explosive resulted However due to the “alert Janitors and a very alert system of reporting the fire not only to the fire department, but to the chairman of the department as well,” the damage was limited to the storage closet only. Clemens said that whereas the damage was confined to hundreds of dollars, the potential damage was of thousands of dollars. minutes, a very fire would have Dean Beardon charges false weather clearance (AP)- The vice the Governor's Charlotte chairman of Advisory Committe Economics and Enviornment, was quoted Saturday as stating that the National Hurricane Center “failed to give the proper designation to the weather disturbances” that occurred as nerve gas was carried to sea in the Atlantic Ocean a year ago “LT could point out numerous ironies which, when all viewed together, appear to stack up to something more than just coincidence,” said committee vice-chairman and ECU Dean of Business Education James Bearden Bearden made the observations during an environmental seminar at the annual meeting of the on Radio-Tel Directors Association of Carolinas. Bearden Army officials the controversial nerve gas would not be towed to sea without a “weather clearance” predicting 96 hours of good weather However, he said that when the tow began from the Sunny Point Ordinance Depot on the Cape Fear River on Aug. 16, 1970, an intense storm developed off the North Carolina coast Bearden said that winds of 75 miles-per-hour were recorded at Morehead City on the and about 85 miles-per-hour winds to the northeast. He alleged that the National Hurricane Center termed the disturbance a News the evision that that stated promised coast “wave” rather than a tropical depression or hurricane because the high winds were not sustained. However, said Bearden, he has reconnaissance plane data which indicates the winds were sustained “I don’t think there was a possibility of getting a 96-hour clearance on the basis of the data I have,” stated Bearden Bearden recalled that the dumping operation was postponed several times because of bad weather, and that a tropical depression did exist in the Atlantic, but that it ‘miraculously dissipated to a wave” the day before the gas put to sea The dumping operation was carried out without reported incident Congressional committee agrees to extend draft By BRUCE SAVAGE Staff Writer The hopes of many young men between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five may have been shattered by a congressional committee For a while it seemed that the selective service of the United States would be a thing of the past. However, on Friday, July 30, a congressional conference committee agreed on a two-year draft extension bill Some hopes were raised: by Senate action on 22 conference June 22, when, by a vote of 57 to 42, _ the Mansfield amendment was , added to a bill to extend the } Selective Service Act after the June 30 expiration date. The amendment stated that it was “the policy of the United States” that a deadline be set for withdrawal of US from Indochina not later than pine months after the Benactment of the measure, ith the provision that all U.S ar prisoners’ release be cured within ninety days forces However, the House of Representatives refused to go long with the amendment. following the arrangement for ch disagreements in the Ongress, a conference mmittee was called the last month the nference committee was ble to reach any accord on issue of setting a date for Hthdrawal. With the pirationof the draft on Tune 30, local draft boards all over the nation virtually closed shop, confining activities to regular paperwork Then on Friday the committee gave approval to a compromise which urged President Nixon to set a date for total U.S. troop withdrawal from Indochina, but without a deadline. However the agreement by the conference committee does not insure quick extension of the draft The bill, with its amendment, will now go back to the House, where passage is likely. It will then return to the Senate, where its fate is uncertain. Senate anti-war forces have vowed to filibuster against the compromise bill If no agreement has been reached by Friday, the bill will have to wait until September The Congress adjourns for a summer vacation on Friday, August 6. Such quick action by | the Congress is doubtful. Therefore the draft will have , to wait another month before extension and another month before the next call-up But don’t be surprised if people are siill drafted. The Selective Service says it still has the power to draft those men whose deferments expire and those who turn 18 If and when resumes, changes expected *The President will be permitted to end student deferments. Freshmen of the 1970.71 class will be allowed the draft are to be to retain deferments; students entering later are not expected to get them *After the draft notice has been mailed, men will no longer be able to volunteer for one of the other services. *Pay for recruits could double to more than $5,000, largely as an incentive for volunteers, *For the first time since 1961, a congressional limit will be imposed on draft calls 270,000 over a 24-month period ending July 1, 1973 While the extension legislation provides the major barrier to the continuation of the draft, there are other problems, basically the increase in appeals and the evasion of the draft and the refusal of men to serve The appeals focus mainly on the conscientious-objector question. Already, the number of men holding the CO status is believed to have doubled in the past year from 40,646 last June to an onofficial estimate of 75,000 at present. CO claims alone range from 7,000 to 10,000 a month The appeal also applies to the health qualifications. In January, 1970, the rejection rate was 18.5 per cent. Twelve months later it has climed to 28.6 per cent Draft experts say these rejections generally reflect a more intensive effort by the young men to seek professional, legal and mei help in their xaminations \ Library gains new wing Hopefully, construction can, be started on the new wing of Joyner Library early in 1972 so that the proposed addition may be occupied late in 1973 or early 1974 The request for a $3.2 million appropriation for the addition was made to the General Assembly in 1971. At present, the budget has been said to have been cut to $3.1 million The starting date for construction depends upon the acquisition of the property where the building will stand Sam Underwood, the property owner of the land needed for the site, presently has filed suit against with an injunction to prevent selling his land for the university The building is to be situated across Eighth Street so that the street would have to be closed. During the past year houses have been tom down along Eight Street to make room for the new library addition and the new student union Preliminary plans have been made for the new addition so that it will more than double the present size of Joyner Library The proposed addition will house the undergraduate library so that the old building can be used for the Library the state Science research Department and work. The old building will also still house the stacks for the entire library The undergraduate addition will consist of four floors. The ground floor, which will be below ground level, will connect with the microfilm section of the old library. It will house the reference room, the periodicals room, and the documents collection. This area will provide about 300 study stations The main floor ‘of the addition will house the public catalogue, the general service desk and the reserve reading room, which will provide 200 study stations. The third and fourth will house approximately 100,000 volumes on open shelves and provide 500 study stations and 12 private study stations A one-story walkway will connect the old library with the new addition. Within that walkway will be the catalogue and check-out desk for both areas of the library. Plans are made so that there will be one entrance to the building and another opening for an exit so that better control can be kept on the regulation of books The radio and_ television stations will remain unchanged on the second story of the old library floors Marijuana could have some medical potential CHAPEL HILL (AP)- Research at the University of North Carolina has shown that the main ingredient in marijuana does not appear to be addictive and it may be possible to use it in place of the currently used addictive pain-killing drugs The most active ingredient is code named THC, which stands for delta-9-tetrahydro- cannabinol Dr. William L. Dewey of the university's medical school said “marijuana may have potential for treatment of hypertension.” “In tests here animals’ blood pressure has been reduced significantly for up to four hours. It is an unusual drug to reduce blood for that long,” Dr. Dewey said “Our studies have shown that THC has analgesic pain-killing effects in mice, rats and possibly in dogs,’’ Dewey said. Researchers here believe that effects of THC on the brain are “mainly depressant, though there may be some stimulatory activity.” However, Dewey says he believes it might be useful as an anti-depressant since users have reported a “heightened sense of well being’’ while on marijuana. “We talk in contradictions when speaking of this drug,” Dewey said. “Some clinically useful antidepressants sedate lab animals.” While it is possible that marijuana or THC may not themselves have medical value, chemicals related to them may have Among the candidates for study are the chemicals into which the body changes THC THC is not soluble in water so the body changes it into water soluble compounds, which may be active prior to being excreted Two of these “metabolites” are now known. To find others and study their effects when given seperately is one of the goals of UNC researchers THE PROPOSED ADDITION for the wing on Jovner librarv will undergraduate library. house the by ‘74 O “ ia . 4 i ene EN - ome Construction is scheduled to begin early in 1972. Falcon’s deliberate crash reveals much information By BILL STOCKTON AP Science Writer SPACE CENTER. Houston CAP) Detection. of deliberate crash of Apollo 15°s lunar lander by moonquake meters at three widely separated points on the moon is frosting on the cake for lunar the Sclenusts. The lunar lander Falcon’s violent death late Monday was detected 30 miles away at the seismometer which David R Scott and James B. Irwin left at the base of the Apennine Mountains where they landed earlier in Falcon. The crash also registered 700 miles to the south the Apollo 12 seismometer left in the Ocean of Storms in November 1969 on and on the Apollo 14 seismometer left in the lunar highlands at Fra Mauro last February The response of the three instruments excited scientists waiting to see if it would happen It was the latest achievement for Apollo 1S- a mission lunar experts say may bring more fundamental knowledge about the moon than all past moon landings combined. Th achievements include -Possible discovery of a piece of the original lunar crust -Samples of bedrock that might lie just beneath the moon’s surface -Discovery of probable layering in the sides of Hadley Rille Scientists trying to determine how the moon was formed as a way of finding the origin of the solar system “That's exciting. That's just very nice,” Dr. D.W Strangway, a geophysicist at the Manned Spacecraft Center said when the Apollo 12 and 14 instruments began recording seismic waves generated by the Falcon’s crash, which equaled an explosion of more than two tons of TNT The waves had reached the closer Apollo 15 sxeismometert several minutes earlier “It suggests are you can see impacts on the moon from very, very far away. This has been a subject of considerable controversy,” Strangway said The principal scientist working with the seismometers, Dr. Gary Latham of Cojumbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Geological Laboratory, was studying the data last Monday and was unavailable for comment But before the crash he said detection by the Apollo 12 and 14 instruments would be strong evidence that present theories about the interior of the moon are correct These theories are that the moon’s interior is a broken, crumbled material that scatters the waves intensely and the material becomes more dense with increasing depth Crashes of previous lunar landers and spent S4B booster rockets have been only short distances from seismometers As a result. seismic waves they generated gave data on the interior of the moon to a depth of only about 50 miles. But detection of seismic waves generated by the crash of an object 700 miles away might give soundings as deep as 150 miles. Data from other experiments has suggested there might be a mantle or lunar shell at this depth Detection of the mantle, if it exists, would help in determining if the moon ever had a liquid core Scott's report Sunday during a lunar excursion that he had found a piece of coarse-grained anorthositic rock led to speculation it might be a piece of the original lunar crust The crustal rock might have been carved out of the moon’s primordial surface more than 4 billion years ago when an object probably 50 miles wide gouged the S00-mile-wide Imbrium Basin Anorthosites are composed largely of aluminum, calcium sodium and silicates. Some scientists think they might represent crustal material ECU will become ‘barrier-free’ This fall ECU will become the first barrier-free state supported campus in North Carolina ‘*Barrier-free” means that barriers which prevent physically handicapped individuals from easy access will no longer be an obstacle on the Greenville campus Ramps and handrails to aid physically handicapped persons, such as wheelchair occupants will be installed Other adjustments will also be made The barrier-free condition at ECU is being made possible by a grant from the N.C Department of Vocational Rehabilitation, with 20 percent matching funds from ECU According to Dr. Sheldon Downes, coordinator of Rehabilitation Counselor Education at ECU, there are many barriers, things which physically able people take for granted, which prevent handicapped people from easy movement and access Take curbs, for example Some 70 walkway ramps at ECU will be installed to provide easy accessibility over curbs to sidewalks which can safely facilitate wheelchair movement about campus And then, there are restrooms which must be augmented. Some 55 toilets -- mens and womens which need to be outfitted with handrails and adjustments in partitions so that they may be used by wheelchair users. Some drinking fountains will be lowered and a limited number of showers in dormitories will also be adjusted Although ECU will be the first, there are plans to soon make UNC-CH and UNC-Asheville also barrier-free Pitt Technical Institute, also located in Greenville, will get some barrier-free construction this year With the new eastern North Carolina Vocational Rehabilitation Center to be located adjacent to the new Pitt County Memorial Hospital with ECU's newly formed School of Medicine and very active Allied Health Department which trains physical therapists, and the vocational rehabilitation training center in the School of Education, Downes sees Greenville soon becoming a center for training the bodies and minds of those who have permanent or temporary physical handicaps. Downes hopes to see ECU eventually make other adjustments on the campus to more easily facilitate convenient living for the handicapped He hopes to see items such as telephones and lowered in the dorms for use by the physically handicapped However, he warns that even these seemingly simple changes require financial resources mirrors “We hope to have a special section in the library, too, which will be equipped with tape recorders and books in Braille for the blind.” he adds. At the present time, ECL has several sightless students on campus. This fall, at least two students will be entering ECL who are totally dependent or wheelchairs for mouvation Downes has emphatically stated that all students who are THE BARRIER-FREE PROGRAM to be initiated at ECU this include some 70 ramps to provide movement around easy wheelchair physically handicapped at ECL must be independent. He says “We have found that most of the handicapped persons, such as those in wheelchairs, do not need attendents. Most of them could function quite well on their they would. We encourage independence. We will not permit attendents on the campus.” According to own, if ECU vice fall will campus. The barrier-free condition at \ ECU is being made possible by a; from the N.C. Departm Vocational Rehabilitation with cent matching funds from ECU president and business manager, C.G. Moore, the N.C Department of Vocational Rehabilitation is providing $35,200 of the necessary $44,000 the barrier-free construction and ECU is providing the remaining $8,800 Moore says that the funded construction at ECU will begin as soon as plans have been approved for t iY al to a ’ aire, vere ven as ified ical ixon f the Sen the al I uj SE ar H bi Fountainhead, We Page 2 r. Abernathy to open lecture series DR RALPH ABERNATHY, noted civil rights leader, will visit the ECU campus on Tuesday, October 19, to dnesday August 4 971 speak on “Civil Rights and Black Power.” Adzug declares war WASHINGTON (AP) Rep Bella Absug ts asking Con to declare war on the sex prefix The New York Democrat wite of a stockbroker, is doing her thing for women's liberation by preceding her signature with “Ms.” She figures that can be taken Mrs. or Miss if reference ist be made ata But women, she said, should be considered as “individuals and not wives of individu ‘Women are harassed d DY government inte ns as to their marital status told the House Thus. thousands of government forms which make up red tape equire women to designate Miss or Mis while men apparently. are sufficiently described by the term M Each time a woman is either required to ‘ Mrs. or Miss, “she is reminded that ident eived only by he also by her y is pe not sex but her marital status,” Mrs. Abzug such “governmental curiosity does not apparently extend to the men.” She justification suid, but private lives of no idle there is “for such said If + A Snes : SH microform Encyclopedia library Brittanica ECU LIBRARIAN WENDELL Smiley (right) discusses the use of ECU’s new fosity about women. In number of be ompleted by anyone the the United its eliminauon will do view of the vast forms which must associated States, much to enhance the personal espect tor the individual Thus introductior prohibit of the | she prepared tor today a bill to “instrumentality ited States from using any as a prefix to the name of any person any title which indicates marital status,” as well as a resolution designating Aug. 26 as Women’s Equality Day to commemorate the day in 1920 when women first won the right to vote Discrimination against wome! employment, she said, permits supervisors to rationalize extensively- ‘usually on the basis that a narried women is apt to get pregnant, or she is a ‘second breadwinner, or some other insubstantiated myth.” Under her bill, Congress rH aiiy iederai agency would be blocked from indicating anyone's marital status in correspondence, records, coertificates or written documents 19,000 with an consultant Dr. Ralph Abernathy will begin the 1971-72. lecture series by speaking on “Civil Rights and Black Power” on Tuesday, October 19 Denms Hopper, who gained fame as co-star with) Peter Fonda in “Easy Rider,” will follow on Thursday, October 28 speaking on “I Love Making Movies Heywood Hale Broun, reporter-at-large for CBS News, will January 17, to speak on his expenences as a appear correspondent Also appearing on the Lecture Series will be Norman Baker and Peter Nero, Baker will speak on “The Voyages of Ra | and Ra UH” January 26 Nero will give a lecture- demonstration on February 2 First the Popular Entertainment schedule will be the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band on Parents Day, October 2 October &, Alex Taylor and the Nitty Gritty Dirt’ will Fred Martin jazz, on dies of stroke ‘Gynsy’ ends theater season Dr. Frederick Carlyle Martin, director of graduate studies in the Romance Languages department, died suddenly at his home Monday evening of an apparent heart attack Martin came to ECU in 1960 with degrees from Emory University and the University of North Carolina. He had earlier taught at Furman University and UNC-CH At ECU he taught Spanish and French courses and later served as coordinator of Spanish language courses In 1969 he became director of graduate studies for the Romane Languages Department and launched the Spanish graduate program in 1970. Before his death, he was preparing for a French graduate program for 1971-72. He served as chairman of numerous committees in the Romance Languages Department and was also a member of the Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Sigma lota, Pi Delta Phi, and Pi Kappa Alpha. The funeral was conducted in Greenville after which the body was to be retumed to Martin’s home city, Augusta, Ga. for burial. The library collection will contain volumes dealing with the subject of American civilization. Library receives collection “The Library of American Civilization.” a new microfiche library of about 19,000 volumes on the subject of America from its beginning to the outbreak of Worid War I has been added to Joyner Library More than 150 college and university libraries are currently receiving this collection of resource titles, published by Library Resources, Inc., of Chic 1 subsidiary of Encyclopaedia Britannica “Many of the books in this collection are rare, others are out of print, and not all are available in even the finest libraries,” said Wendeil W Smiley, ECU's Director of Library Services. Each volume in the Microboook Library is reproduced on a single 3 x S-inch a film card, a form of microfiche. There are up to 1.000 pages on a single fiche, an achievement of high * reduction photography which reduces individual pages 55 to 90 times Each fiche in the Microbook Library can be stored, retrieved, and circulated as are books. Ordinarily volumes in the Library would feet of shelf most actual the 19,000 Microbook occupy 2,000 space In Microbook form. the entire collection is stored in 30 card files which measure less than eight cubic feet Microbook titles are read on a desk reader or a small, portable reader. Most material displayed on the desk reader is enlarged to greater than original size on an 8 1/2 x [12-inch screen, making it actually easier to read than the original volume and centered on the using control selected screen knobs Hard copies of Microbook Pages, similar to Xerox copies of printed pages, can be made using a special reader-printer which will shortly be available in the ECU library ECU acquired the Microbook library at about five percent of its estimated cost in book form two Future collections, now in the development stage, include a collection of English literature, featuring microform reproductions of medieval manuscripts and early printed folio and quarto editions of Shakespeare's plays. According to Ernest Connelly, director of Joyner Library's Public Services, ECU will purchase each forthcoming microfiche collection as soon ; Individual pages are easily | as it becymes available appear in concert Pat Paulsen, John Stewart and Jennifer will perform on October 30. Bread will appear at Homecoming, November 5. The Popular Entertainment Committee is in the process of securing other entertainment for the Homecoming weekend. The Artist Series will begin on Monday, October 18, with the Sierre Leone National Dance Troupe. The schedule for the rest of the year will be as follows The World’s Greatest Band - November 16 Jerome Hines - January 19 London Symphony Orchestra - February 8 Grant Johannesen and 9 Issac Stern - May 1 The Travel-Adventure Film Series will feature films of international scope. The countries of Australia, Korea, Holland, and others will be highlighted in this series. Jazz April 6 By HARRIET FLANAGAN Staff Writer “Gypsy” the last show of the Summer Theater season will open August 10. This show, based on the memoirs of Gypsy Rose Lee, was first produced in 1959 with Ethel Merman in the title roll The script for the ECU show is by Artur Laurants with music by Jules Stein (“Funny Girl") and lyrics by Steven Sondeim (“Forum,” “Follies,” “West Side Story”). The action begins in Seattle in the early twenties. Baby Louise and Baby June are rehearsing for a kiddie show in a vaudeville theatre (“May We Entertain You”) supervised by their domineering mother. Her children’s success in show business is Rose’s life. Leaving Seattle, Rose collects some boys for an act and under her driving direction, June and Louise enter vaudeville as “Baby June and her Newsboys’. On tour she meets Herbie, a former candy salesman, and she charms him into becoming their agent. The years have passed, June and Louise are now much ef DENNIS HOPPER, COSTAR of “Easy Rider,” will lecture on the subject, ‘) Love Making Movies” at ECU on October 28. older, although Rose keeps their ages secret. On Louise's birthday, Herbie lands the act on the Orpheum Circuit and Rose is overcome with gratitude (“Mr Goldstein, I Love You”). Despite their success, Herbie wants Rose to retire and marry him A producer offers to make June a star; however, Mama Rose violently refuses, and June and Louise lament their hard life on stage and their troubles with their strong-willed mother (“If Mama Was Married”). The act continues, and one of the boys, Tulsa, shows Louise a new routine he has worked out for himself and a girl (“All I Need Is A Girl”). It is later learned that June and Tulsa have eloped. Rose is crushed. She accuses June of desertion. However, she summons her indomitable Strength and endeavors to make a star out of Lonise (“Everything Is Coming Up Roses’). Act one closes on this note. Vaudeville is dying and so is the act even though “Madam Rose’s Toreadorables” are substituted for the “‘Farmboys.’’ Nevertheless, Rose assures Herbie and Louise that they will stay “Together.” Benz receives PhD Carlton R. Benz, associate professor of speech at ECU, has been awarded the PhD degree from Wayne State University, Detroit. A specialist in television broadcasting, Benz wrote his doctoral dissertation on the effects of time-compressed speech upon the comprehension of a visually oriented TV lecture His research indicated that Students viewing a televised lecture compressed one-third of the original presentation time could comprehend and remember the lecture material as well as students who viewed the lecture presented at the normal rate of speed. Benz is director of closed-circuit TV operations at ECU. Prior to his appointment to the ECU faculty in 1966, he taught at Stephen Austin State College (Texas), Indiana State University and Wayne State College (Nebraska) He has also worked at television stations in South Dakota and Kansas and in advertising in New York. Eric Slaughter calls for recycling trash By MITZY BRYANT Staff Writer Does it bother you to find paper and aluminum cans on your favority resting place? How about broken glass bottles where you trod barefoot ? Eric Slaughter, a graduate student in the Biology Department, has come up with some ideas which might possibly solve these problems. One idea Slaughter has in mind is to have civic Organizations in Greenville set up deposit areas for a waste Paper drive. Newspapers and possibly magazines could be taken to a paper company and sold for a profit. But transportation costs in getting the papers to the companies would cut the profit considerably, according to Slaughter. “The city would have to be shown that there would be a profit,” said Slaughter. He added that one solution to the problem may be to put all the money brought in as profit into a fund for setting up recreational parks Slaughter stated that it may also be possible to include aluminum cans in the drive Companies able to handle the cans are located in Charlotte and Norfolk, Va. which would call for shipping by train Another idea of Slaughter’s is to set up an environmental council. “Parks, urban renewal, sanitation, all things would come into play under a council of this type,” said Slaughter. The best way to get mobilization on these environmental problems is to start a recycle campaign through the environmental council, according to Slaughter. “There are many project-oriented groups waiting for ideas,” said Slaughter. “All they need is for someone to hand them the ball.” As a long-range idea Slaughter said regional incinerators could be set up to burn what materials could be burned. The heat could be captured and used as a power source. In the fall Slaughter plans to begin work with the campus ecology club (ECOS) for the environmental projects ‘Together students, faculty, and city people can form a dedicated, powerful and politjcal group,” he said Unwittingly, Herbie books the act into a second-rate burlesque house, where Rose is shocked by the destitute performers. Louise talks her mother into remaining and is instructed by three strippers in the elements of their work (“You Got to Have a Gimmick”). The headlining stripper is arrested. Rose, determined to make Louise a star, shoves her into the act to Herbie’s disgust. He angrily leaves. Pasty, the stage manager, introduces Louise by accident as Gypsy Rose Lee, obviously the title adhered Louise is an enormous success, growing in confidence and stature as her talents come into play. The music Rose chose for her is “Let Me Entertain You.” Months later Louise is famous and popular everywhere and is headlining at Minsky’s. However, Rose is still interfering and she and her daughter quarrel bitterly. In the empty theatre Rose endeavors to work out her problem - her ambition, her disappointments, her neglect by her own family (“Rose’s Turn”). Gypsy joins her and there is mutual understanding In this production Sally-Jane Heit will be performing as Rose, Jane Barrett as Louise, Linda Marks as June, Skip Aronson as Herbie, Jim Miller as Tulsa, and Pat Pertalion, Camille Hardy, and Baillie Gernstein as the strippers U.C. announces schedule News WASHINGTON (AP)- A group of delegates (0 the White House Conference on Youth used President NIXON oday ace! f failing to respond to the of conference “Paramount among concerns and frustrations 1s the total and tragic silence of the President of the United States regarding this conference Wh group told a Senate subcommittee hearing on conference followup “We want a total end to the Dr. Burden Dr. Hubert W. Burden, a native of Elizabeth City, has been appointed assistant professor of anatomy in the ECU Medical School. Dr Michael R. Schweisthal chairman of the anatomy department made the announcement Burden comes to ECU from Tulane University Medical School, from which he received the PhD degree. He received the AB in 1965 from Atlantic Christian College and the MA in biology from ECU in 1967 Burden has done extensive research in the area of anatomy and physiology of the mammalian ovary. The research, results of which have been published in national medical journals, was funded our Briefs Nixon failed to respond war in Southeast Asia, now,” a spokesman for the group said “We want an emphasis on the needs of the people: 4 guaranteed annual income, not loans to Lockheed; an end to discrimination, not a Southern strategy “We want food for hungry children, not subsidies for wealthy farmers. We want protection of civil liberties, not whitewashing of campus Killings appointed through grants from the Us Public Health Service and the National Institute of Health He is a member of the honorary societies Chi Beta Phi and Sigma Xi, an associate member of the Southern Society of Anatomists and a member of the Society of Zoologists He selected as a National Institute of Health predocatora}trainee in anatomy, 1968-71 “We are most pleased to have a native of eastern North Carolina on our teaching staff to help develop and implement the School of Medicine at East Carolina,” Schweisthal said Burden’s appointment is effective at the beginning of the fall quarter American was Profs attend meeting Two ECU Medical School professors are attending international medical conferences during the summer Dr. S Putnam is presenting a paper related to his work in neurology at the International Physiological Conference currently in progress in Munich, Germany Putnam will by joined by Jerome The University College oi the Division of Continuing Education has announced its schedule of evening courses offered for the fall term The University College offers an opportunity for individuals within commuting distance of the University to earn their first two years of college credit toward the Baccalaureate Degree or to take occasional courses by attending classes at the University at night. Many individuals may enroll for day classes through the University College. It is also possible for students to transfer trom the Dr. Irvin E. Lawrence Jr. at the Tenth International Embryological Conference which will be held in Glasgow, Scotland, Aug. 30-Sept. 3 The Embryological Conference, which is limited to only 400 participants from all over the world, will be conducted on the campus of the University of Glasgow University College to the regular day program at ECU Students over 21 years of age need not take an entrance examination to be admitted to the University College Application for admission should be made by August 25 Educational offerings for the fall term include basic courses in biology, business, English, geography, history, math, political science, and psychology. Four and five-hour credit courses will meet twice weekly from 6:30 - 9:30 p.m Courses beginning Sept. 8, are offered Monday through Thursday evenings. Nader seeks punishment of lax federal employees WASHINGTON (AP)- Consumer advocate Ralph Nader called Thursday for punishment, including possible dismissal, of federal employees who fail to carry out existing consumer laws “Within the amorphous federal bureaucracy,” Nader said, “it will get the kind of attention no other product safety legislation could.” Testifying before a Senate Commerce subcommittee exploring proposed consumer legislation, Nader also urged expanded criminal penalties for industry giants found guilty of distributing dangerous products. Nader cited the Agriculture Department as ‘‘willfully refusing to enforce the laws” by not properly notifying Americans that thousands of potentially poisoned chickens are on the market. “Let's assume some People were harmed,” Nader said, adding it’s doubtful any department employee would be punished Any new legislation, Nader said, should include a provision allowing citizens to hold civil servants in regulatory agencies accountable for their actions, Overseeing such a sanction levying process would be the Civil Service Commission or a similar agency, Nader said With few reservations, Nader said, he supported a Senate sponsored bill before the a super five-+ consumer commission, provide for a high-level consumer advocate and take away many consumer related problems from the Welfare Depariment. Something must be done, Nader said, to change what he called the current policy of placing the “burden of proof on the victim instead of the perpetrator.” CONSUMER ADVOCATE RALPH Nader has called for punishment of federal employes who do not carry out existing consumer laws. He has endorsed a bill » hich would set up a five-man consumer commission and would committee which would set Up | commission. place consumer-related problems under the Hy By The Pr Minh, Palme Q7165) In h Prison | Harriss Ho as * a drago: It is little y deal a frail-loc gigantic world’s in a strugel modern This of quatr the ch; which w captivi China ja Not limitatic work, th with ma statemer How severe depriva escape fi of prisor The blossoms away. Lic an By [ F ECU's productic was as | productic was basic a subst choreog and excel Howey marred b not exi dramatic | The r Gregory clown v cheeks. P; the 107 Dixie's fai girls look: renditions New Yor boys ca versions 0! Part of is that th and anyth with this ° break the Prince’s ki The | adequate, wrong mo often too number ¢ actors we stage, the: At other Aronson's BOB SEV’ listens to ' z +* « +* * = PRAHA RARER RER AREER RB Re Als. Tak Be eRe! iefs He writes of prisonexperiences By WHITNEY HADDEN Managing Editor The Prison Diary of Ho Che /ts opening and its withering continues all unnoticed, lice.” Throughout the poems, Ho Wednesday, August 4, 1971, Fountainhead, Page 3 Eugene McCarthy still e e M late ee respond Poin es ii'momestnnm ocareneseiann SOMethING Of an enigma Q7165), $1.25 SH ana floats into the depths of the a serenity that seems In his introduction to The prison, Telling the inmates there of impeturbable The Prison Diary is an theast Asia, now,” a Prison Diary lary « A ‘ ‘ for the group said Hinriee apd ye ee life s injustice and sorrow affirmation of the power of the By SAUL PETT But mostly he has indicated he wn ee Aen ger re al nt an emphasis on Ho as “a poet with the aaulear For Ho. the “body is in human spirit to face hardships, AP Special Correspondent does not feel the party will Pepa ve a ek hatte : 4 J r on A e e of the people: a aa prison, the mind escapes and to grow from them WASHINGTON (AP). As he prove responsive. Mostly, he 4S¥™pUons. Assume. he said a dragon.” outside.” He dwells on the ground, the fire bums red in Listening to the pounding of did in the chamber of the some wise, some funny, some talks about a new party that 80 million people will vote annual income, not — ‘ “ sukhseatrani aca ts ia bach el ae sounds and smells of life going rice outside, Ho observes United States Senate, he has a In 1968, the McCarthy ty is An gar ee ion, not a Southern deal about the Aneta SIR EGE le Wale inature HOW. much, the ice muse Way OLanitng nand.dntiing candidecy \wavoyered xa candidate, that the ave ta Gaiicekintivaan ahs raants on the people around him, and suffer under the pestle out of the sum of our vision. a — profound discontent in the “again ROTATE RETR nt food for hungry gigantic war machine of the De ian scones (ust hee But, after the pounding, it distant, casual man who floats, country. Now, there are signs far idifferen in program than not subsidies for world’s mightiest nation at bay anxious to rejoin comes out white like cotton like a butterfly and stings like a that the discontent may be Nivontoane ney sot ee de 4 arises We. Win faval tDavde anal (Geratt Wearily to the wood the The same thing often bee and is gone wider, if not deeper. and no yy), ¢ altel Be Be of civil liberties, not Struggle unprecedented in birds flv, seeking rest, happens to men in this world He is like the patror © ionger confined io the young Walla co : f tone hing of campus modern times _ deross the empty sky a@ Misfortune's workshop tums British pub who shows up with — and the blacks. A recent Roper cube ed ; a vite iff , Thien Nt avecllestien lonely cloud is drifting, them into polished jade. some regularity, who takes a poll, for example, indicated i ee ae ae a or dustraintandnersekenein Far away in a mountain Ho is somehow able to lethargic interest in the bar talk that two-thirds of Americans equal oa TEES nee ‘ the classical Chinese style village a young girlgrinds out harden his mind and will like from his end of the bar. taking — think the country has lost its parties. That leaves 70 jail i wilehiwais written aurnm ets maize steel, and yet retain his part but not becoming a part — direction, that “things have iy . ANAAG we ig When the maize is all sensitivity and concern- his of, who drops a few remarks pretty seriously gotten off on SO'eS 1 be divided between inte captivity in various South i k Nixon. Brand X Democrat and China jails during World War I the oven humanity- in the face of the most brutal and dehumanizing nasty, and floats out again, a the wrong track A new liberal party could a new liberal candidate. A man Not withstanding the ° ould win with only 25 on ints from the US etkatenir ar ant He a Ho combines a sensitivity conditions. He is indeed a poet farniliar man of mystery, 4 win, says Richard Goodwin be a ri with only 25 millior me ‘ ‘ F ate vote i Ith Service and the UTR: {Ke Brisco Dia vit FIle born of deprivation with a with the soul of a dragon type known in the pubs as political theoretician and Eh 5 at te forte first stitute of Health with fan oWwerful aetiny a strength of will hardened by People who come out of “Our regular stranger.” tactician, “by putting together ss ae ie be Be 4 ‘i al sa ew 1 member of the ate Ie y nica adversity. The soft images of prison can build up the With all that we have seen of 4 series of discontents, the "™* ee e te ay Hy : 4h om cieties Chi Beta Phi How can a man deal with nature and the haunting counsy, Eugene McCarthy over the emerging prongs of a RECE i id 1 ve 1s ti Of Xi, an associate sateen Nae a a Wfl ; passages in which he talks of Misfortune is the test of years, he remains someone we middle-class revolution ei . f only ; ba: fe ° of the Southern deprivation Hee eas his heartache and loneliness are people's fidelity only see but don’t know, a Mc@arthy tuhze Hes tlio Legen ‘bet wiehed He C oes he ~ . id OU million are lkely to go for Anatomists and a Segara USING GER ned balanced with the harsh Those who protest at unique, cloudy enigma in a poet-politician. chatting ‘al : an ; ay : a : \ 7 realitie > ere a9 f ‘ é ‘ re ne liberal party neti. Amerters of prison? ee Met Ee Mee a Gee ay ct ie bee ee ee tee weaken, mete ee candida. Than, te elt tvs , ies each night the irons devour 7 Now he floats in again, this Inive of C t Oologists The rose at evening deprivation and a strength of will hardened by adversit asia eps ege lene Ree meee at he University ot Colored? ys million 16. be: pleked” Wp s selected as a blossoms, and then it fades He is a “poet with th Hh YY adversity. the legs of people.” and each When the prison doors are time talking of a new political in Boulder, offered a Id d whe ! i astitute of Health a : polis oaks e soullof a dragon. morning, ‘once awake, opened, the real dragon will fly Patty to take over the White compelling diagnosis of the “™* “- hE: ie th ae dat Breniratnes 4A everyone starts on the hunt for our, House in 1972. He stirsa ripple = current American political boven ¥ te re ye he Ba ‘ sritic: € expected to give the ne 68-71 of interest. His many critics anatomy 2 Boe ie most please: smile knowingly. Clearly, they “The center of the Paty man enough strength in st pleased to Ld e 4 a {Meee . i ; the big Northern states to carry ye of eastern North J tin makeu mar ] h say, McCarthy has less of a Republican party,” he said, “is praia eee ree ara 5 Vajol n 1e e wea our teaching staff a e / | In base than ever, not even a still Main Street, the Chamber * ri dig a ; college slop/and implement Senate seat; the war fadesasan of Commerce. the small sai rive vealesauettinn Es of Medicine at East 2 4 wv r) issue; his own personality owners. The center of the ieee . i ‘ q th at Ka a 0) B iments” | €@n Otherwise ‘well done’ production chins anata este Boca pannel be mat she he ae disillusioned once but, in his Jabor union men, who are also MONEY vote can a new party S appointment is candidate get.” says McCarthy turn, disillusioned some or property owners. All around < i the beginning of ; fe many of them himself. Thus . ie reeonegp* The diagnosis may strike ter By DAVID McGRAW Day With Me,” the singers him. ii y ae BU ceteris Meus ever tne pang people as being more Staff Reviewer came off like a lineup in a Jack Zittel’s portrayal as the ‘he skepticism of the critics young, the poor. the blacks, plausible than the man making Webb Production leader of the two New York ie on, inhibited only Don the professional people, the j)" 'p example, a veteran Se Ps : a i i sobering memory: in ‘ a out ¢ : ECU's Summer Theatre Again, the dance numbers con-men needs polishing, but D teh Aa ae business \ianagers out of jobs, Washington reporter, who ¥ lacked and he has the potential for on ixote did, at least, the people who want change ’ P eting production of “The Red Mill” was as good as an amateur spontaneity enthusiam. This was not Mavis developing his role into a knock over the windmill but feel politically impotent admires McCarthy and thinks his is “the best mind I've met : : e ay’s fault. Her choreograph show-stealer. A few Now McCarthy is back, “These are the groups in Lawrence Jr. at the ue ore By ea eR ey nights and Zittel will ieee saying that unless the two both parties ready to whirl off around here”. a judgment nternatio nal a substantial cast, good dancers were never clumsy, just audience rolling in the aisles. major parties offer the voter a from the center. What wehave echoed among many S gical Conference choresenahy wae. inain awkward. Their movements teal choice next year, a new shaping up is a revolt of the politicians, academic and ye held in Glasgow, 8 phy, g singing cdi acialatareaneeadenl The timing of both Sevra party must be formed with a insecure against the secure, government people- says this ug. 30-Sept. 3 and excellent sets aan a the noe fay and Zittel was right on the commitment to end the war security being measured in “If I had to go over the rapids However, the play was mark. This team could turn out realistically and finally not both economic and_ political with my wife and children, I marred by flaws that should glittering feet made was e Z on miny Oogical not exist at this level of enough to overshadow any to be the high spot of the merely “to change the color of terms might not want McCarthy in which is limited to dramatic production good performances. At times it entire season if they work on the corpses”, a party that On another occasion, charge of the raft but if I , a. would reform American chatting with a reporter needed a damned thoughtful articipants from all world, will be on the campus of ty of Glasgow shedule College to the rogram at ECU over 21 years of t take an entrance to be admitted to ersity College The make-up was awful Gregory Zittel looked like a clown with his bright red cheeks. Paul Buche appeared as the 107th resurrection of Dixie’s famed Grey Ghost. The girls looked like Busby-Berkly renditions of a 42nd _ street New York hooker. And the boys came off as modern versions of Howdy Doody. Part of the spell of a musical is that the actors look right, and anything out of harmony with this “rightness” is sure to was so noisy that the dancers sounded like Hippopotami Generally, individual performances were better than any I have seen this season. Stuart Aronson’s Governor of Zeeland and Adriana Amelias’ Juliana were the bright spots of the show He fit his role very well, bringing to it a good voice and fine movements. Amelias’ voice filled McGinnis like it hasn’t been filled in a long time. She was excellent The comedy team of Zittel Jane Barrett as Tina and Elizabeth Kirpatrick as Gretchen were good. Barratt wasn't quite as lightheaded as her role demanded, however. The atmosphere of “The Red Mill” was loose. The entire production needs polishing. A few more nights, perhaps, and the dissonant parts should mesh together, forming an entertaining production. The thythm of this “boy wants inaccesible girl and gets her in the end” musical is fast. With political processes and reorder national priorities. He does not say that he expects or wants necessarily to lead such a movement himself The answer depends on thie wording of the question. Does he want to run again ? “Oh, I don’t know. I'm pretty scarred up from the last time.” After the scars and the tedium- he was bored much of the time- of the last campaign, does he really have the stomach for another? “Oh, I don’t know skeptical about a new party's came up chances, McCarthy COLOR SPECIAL! FROM SLIDE OR NEGATIVE BROUGHT IN ON analysis of the problem, I sure would go to him.” 20% DISCOUNT ON FILM PROCESSING ri i Pee eee a cern ae and Robert Sevra has the the antics of that pair of I’m yey compenive, a THURSDAY & FRIDAY = al offerings for the The lighting, though potential for making people con-men trying to avoid jail, know, says RD uy lude basic courses adequate, often presented the laugh Sevra had conquered his Aele ot ae Sete aid a ae ae up and down, a business. English, d. The | q stiffness by midway of the first ove affair, the play has a lot to . : Risto, po Mcrae uate or reign act, had copied some of Zittel’s offer. But only if the cast can eeu has png science, and number of times when two Movements and had become a come one in this Re eels ee srnatics # cu Sour and five-h aa I fair buffoon. However Sevra’s ou rt offe ring C) y wulneer take stage, they were ina shadow, facial expressions hindered his MARK RAMSEY, THE simple-minded sheriff once director/producer Loessin’s bag @ lag eg a 6:30 - 9:30 pm At other “times, for instance 800d vocal delivery. Hopefully, again baffles the Burgomaster, Paul Buche. y nee this is good corn Mrs. ne Figetina ce he comidens 506 Evans St. nis ne 8, a Aronson’s “Everyday Is Ladies working with Zittel will help resky. Pee Sine aracteertiy ynday through nings. Student teachers host party THE RECORD BAR Some 90 Wahl-Coates Mrs. Beth Alexander, Mrs. School students, members of Suzanne Buck and Miss ee nent last year’s fourth grade, were Suzanne Jenkins. BA c K TO T H E R O O TS 9 i a guests of honor at a summer aire, goodbye party at the home of i were Dr. and Mrs. Leo Jenkins last The King Arthur Taproom even (2S Thursday afternoon and Holiday Inn Restaurant - ae i as Hostesses for the party were sified ‘three recent ECU graduates Will Be Open on Sunday ical. must be done. who did their student teaching lixon » change what he with the guests They were JAZZ = FOLK > BL U ES f the rent policy of ee Sen ae yas eae TAPES REDUCED ies } instead of the : FREE PIZ ALBUMS & = CHOOSE FROM THE SOUTH'’S LARGEST INVENTORY INCLUDING. Pp I Wit purc ase Of one OF ¢qua. 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ONLY * + ‘ * x Your Favorite Beverage * With purchase of one of equal ‘ : rs value (with this coupon) ¥ * b * Good after 9:00 p.m. only 4 * z : : ; Mon. thru Thur. x n-Aimospnere With A Se == ee a BOONES a Relax In Our Polynesia e Pp ‘ 421 Greenville Blvd {264 By~ Pass) 7 Brew And Free Popcorn ‘ by Ha nas called for + Also: * 756-0825 756-9991 ‘ot carry out x ° Pe a bill \ hich + Take Out Beverages At Our Reasonable Prices +» } mission and PRP PPPOTITTTT TTC ttle eee eee eee dent under the \ t Viet vet claims ARVN ‘hard put to take up fight’ (Continued from page ¢ rentals ist speech to the people of rang a bell and there was just as we calmly shrugged off — other men in Vietnam prisoners, the killing of bleaching behind them in the seeking their liberation from We watched the uted this imturv. you can see that nobody there to service that) the loss of 700,000 lives in We veterans can only look — prisoners, all accepted policy sun in this pate is any colonial influence States falsificat t body he says, and says clearly, “but man and so he died of — Pakistan, the so-called greatest with amazement on the fact by many units in South Finally L his al Nat aa whatsoever, but also we found ounts, in fact th fication he iss gentlemen, the issue, convulsions disaster of all times that this country has been Vietnam. That ts what we are has ee Ee : oll that the Viethanere who we of body We listened c Vunisn and the 1 understand 57 percent of But we are here as veterans unable to see there ts tying to say It is part and dishonor hey ye ed Hy had enthusiatically molded While ha how jues wheth twe all those entering the VA to say we think we are in the absolutely no difference parcel of everything to pea i Wi haath o itenourown litibe werehacd wos Id th yack ¢ wil ve that country to the hospitals talk about suicide midst of the greatest disaster of between ground troops and a An American Indian friend ie ys He his outed put to take up the ‘ai ciaak nemy Was a ik W i whether or not Some 27 percent have tried, — all times now because they are — helicopter crew, and yet people — of mine who lives in the ean re Ae Lee ter Wa re the threat we were supposed ugh su weapons against we w y to give it hope to be ind they try because they sul dying over there-not just have accepted a differentiation Nation of Alcatraz put it to me uae ie fhe MN E wee saving them from rental hu yeing iN people.” But the pointis come back to this counuy and Americans but fed them by the very succinctly. He told me veterans or that we L We found eet Dadol { sing Weapons aga hey a ta tree people now they have to face what they Vietnamese-and we are administration how as a boy on an Indian Nam, We do not tah their didn't en know the those people which | d inder us. They are nota free did in Vietnam, and then they rationalizing leaving that No ground troops are in reservation he had watched testimony. Our own scars and difference between believ s y Ww eople, and we cannot figh ome back and find the country so that those people Laos so it is all right to kill television and he used tocheer stumps of limbs are witness RO IHIRUTIERO ane GRIER G i t gow Ww mmunism all over the world Laotians by remote control, the cowboys when they came enough for others and for They only wanted to work ghting he | 1 I think we should have learned = But believe me the helicopter in and shot the Indians, he ourselves rice paddies without theater. We watched wt it lesson by now crews fill the same body bags then suddenly one on . We wish that a merciful God helicopters strafing them and ha Is because a But the problem of veterans and they wreak the same kind stopped in Moe an Me could wipe away our own bombs with napalm bu general said that hill has ¢ es beyond this’ personal of damage on the Vietnamese my God, Lam doing to t Hs memories of that service as their villages and thearing th tak and afte sing OF probl yecause u- think and Laotian countryside as people the very same une 4 easily as this administration has country apart. They wanted P f w s they j ster in this country anybody else, and the was done to my people,” anc wiped away their memories of everything to do with the wa hil “ e of Uncle Sam President is talking about he stopped. And that is Wine us. But all that they have done particularly with this foreigr | says “I want allowing that to go on for We are trying to say, that we and all that they can do by this presence of the United States ide y Ing man comes many years to come. One can think this thing has to end denial is to make more clear f America, to leave ther M1 it of school and says. only ask if we will really be We are also here to ask,and «than ever our own alone peace, and they hat is fine, | am going tc . \ “ satisfied only when the troops We are here to ask vehemently, — determination to undertake practiced the art of survival by “ serve my country,” and he goes yy Ay ay! march into Hanoi where are ne i: Boo of a one last mission-to search out siding with whichever military Ir Vietnam and he shoots and wh i wh N We are asking here in country vere is the and destroy the last vestige of force was present at a ind because didn’t » kills and he does his job. Or \' NK Washington for some action, leadership We are here to ask this barbaric war, to pacify our particular time, be it Vie ow many American maybe he doesn’t kill, Maybe cue action from the Congress of — where are McNamara, Rostow, own hearts, to conquer the Cong th Vietnamese bodies w lost to prove that) he just goes and he comes the United States of America Bundy, Gilpatric and so many hate and the fear that have Americal p ind so there were back, and when he gets back to which has the power to raise others? Where are they now driven this country these last We found alsc Hamb Hills a Khe his ¢ finds that he and maintain armies, and that we, the men whom they ten years and more, so when { America Sahns Sts and Fir sn’t ted, because the which by the Constitution also sent off to war, have returned? 30 years from now our dying in those rice { Base 1 larg ps of unemployed in has the power to declare war, These are commanders who brothers go down the street want of support from the Now 1 th he country-it varies depending We have come here, not 10 have deserted their troops, and without a leg, without an arm, allies. We saw first hand how e who fougt here ist yn who you get it from, the the President, because We there is no more serious crime or a face, and small boys ask nies from American taxes Watch quietly while A va veterans Administration says believe that this body can be in the law of war. The Army why, we will be able to say was used rrupt ves a ost so that we car 1S percent and various other responsive to the will of the says they never leave their “Vietnam and not mean a dictatorial re tha \ i sources 22 percent-but_ the people, and we believe that the wounded. The Marines say desert, not a filthy obscene nany people u ntry arroganc t Vietnamizing the — largest corps of unemployed in will of the people says that we they never leave even their memory, but mean instead the had a one-sided t wl Vie his country are Veterans of should be out of Vietnam now. dead. These men have left all place where America finally was kept free by ind Each day to tacilitate the — this war, and of those veterans We are here in Washington the casualties and retreated turned and where soldiers like d th Isnest Pia son ey: Wal 33 percent of the unemployed also to say that the problem of — behind a pious shield of public us helped it in the turning yf casua W States washes h are black. That means one out this war is not just a question rectitude. They have left the avaged equally Vietnam som of every ten of the nation’s v vt of war and diplomacy. It is. real stuff of their reputations Thank you bombs and sear« his life’ s inemployed is a veteran of JOHN F. KERRY a member of the Executive Comittee = part and parce! of everything nissions, as Wellas States doesn't have to admit Vietnam of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, spoke recently to that we are trying as humar 1g sm, a s u nat the entire The hospitals across the the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, asking for beings to communicate to Hr country won't, or can't meet “immediate withdrawal” of all U.S. Forces from South people in the country the 5, SO ‘ e have made their demands. It is not a Vietnam. question of racism, which ts las 1 qu n of not trying; they rampant in the military, and so I 1 ying tha nw t got the appropriations, indifference of a country that can go on killing each other for — many other questions such as t 1 se are his words \ i ntly died a doesn’t really ¢ years to come the use of weapons, the We saw America lose her sense the first President to lose a had a tracheotomy in Suddenly we are taced with Americans seem to have hypocrisy in our taking CHICAGO (AP)- Comedian protest the war f morality as she ac Wa California, not because of the 4 very sickening situation in accepted the idea that the war su mbrage in the Geneva Dick Gregory, down to 102 Later the civil rights and very cooly a My La j We a but because there this country, because there is is winding down, at least for Conventions and using that as pounds, says he will fast “for antiwar activist joked with refused to give up the im f nk 4 Ww enough personnel to no moral indignanon and, if the Americans, and they have justification for a continuation 10 years if necessary” but he newsmen American soldiers who hand do you st e mucus outof his tube — there is, it comes from people — also allowed the bodies which — of this war when we are more will not eat solid food until the “T think I’m going to enter it chocolate bars and chewing = mar low and he suffocated to de who are almost exhausted by were once used by a President guilty than any other body of — war in Southeast Asia comes to the Boston Marathon. By that gum Jo you ask a man to be the last Another young man just their past indignations, and I for statistics to prove that we violations of those Geneva anend time, I'll have gone more than We learned the eaning nistake’ But died in a New York VA know that many of them are were winning that war, to be Conventions; in the use of free Gregory marked the 100th a year without eating. Brother, free fire ynes. shooting y do that, and = Hospital the other day. A sitting in front of me. The used as evidence againsta man fire zones, harassment day of his fast Sunday by that'll really be blowing some anything that moves, and w foing i with thousands — trend of mine was lying in a country seems to have lain who followed orders and who interdiction fire, search and running 15 miles in a South minds.” watched while America placed f rationalizau fit you bed two beds away andtnedto down and shrugged off interpreted those orders no destroy missions, the Side park He began the The Boston Marathon is 26‘ a cheapness on the lives of help him but he couldn't. He something as serious as Laos, differently than hundreds of bombings, the torture of all-liquid diet in April to miles. STUDENTS: SUPPORT OUR ADVERTISERS - THEY HELP BRING YOU THIS NEWSPAPER. DON'T BE ALARMED, ~~ MADAM ! IT'S MERELY A Crown OF STUDENT CUSTOMERS Flock- ING TO ANOTHER FOUNTAINHEAD Look WILLARD- IT'S A DEMONSTR ATION! G pop toda I gene grou of u class T is fi Gol Eve tune see t the cour w disp! chip Bi the Grat wher win Gran tour festi whic colo make And spor super Al Richi Nick] and Nam name custo true f ma ARN past ¢ Uniil auto-r slowly, intense fans chara individ victory In super-hi covered into an Emer numbe thus far Trevin already British, and dor cocky, Jack Trevino regulati Open a: next di off. On prankst rubber Everyb left-han J id them in the ; 2 cool Nicklaus was not at his On September 11, ECl warel Nusnbeeelfadodelly for try Golf is one of the most usual ease, and lost to Hore THISdG AL OIORlén Hoe ue, ee administration popular sports in America Mexican-American Trevino. Stadium here in Greenville (21 ; ise ds per game) Fee aa ba! ; On another occasion Trevino This “Armed Forces Night” Number 1 nationally for five have attempted The old Scottish game has a cursed after coming up short game will be the debut of head — seasons in pass ie fense (97.4 id the sacrifices general appeal to almost all age on an iron shot. A woman in football coach Sonny Randle yards per sane) NuinbEE 6 his country. In groups, but the mere expense the gallery blurted out: “How and high school “standout natisniily fa five seasons in and fear they of the game tends to ethnically dare you.” Trevino, unvexed, Chine Gautni faeces ved ae MiG eny that we are classify the game's participants, turned around and apologized: reloads aes Ty eee