vernight I} win the pigs’ curs \SH W political stration as wermmment ton EMANt Use ountainhead and the truth shall make you free’ Construction NEW ROAD WILL miss Clement Dormitory by twelve feet. (see story above and to right) ACC must raise gate (AP)-Starting with the 1973 — season, Atlantic Coast Conference schools will guarantee visiting football teams $40,000 or SO percent of the gate whichever is greater. The minimum guarantee now ts $35,000 The decision to raise the minimum came last Thursday at the end of a two-day meeting of ACC athletic directors, assistant athletic directors, fund raisers and sports information directors. The meeting was held at North +5 Carolina State. peat ice } ed a riage eninge 3 In addition to raising the minimum “guarantee the athletic directors appointed toa Committee to reivse the conference's football contract to liberalize game expenses and establish ticket prices. The group also appointed a committee to study insurance costs ACC Commissioner Bob James of Greensboro said, “We're all concerned about ip oliticians sp _John Connally (AP)--Former Treasury Secretary John B * Connally, a Democrat and close ally of President Nixon, has fired a verbal barrage in what promises to be a continuing White House campaign assault on Senator George McGovern, | The Democratic presidential nominee President Nixon has said he will avoid public involvement in politics until after next month's Republican convention, But he let Connally use the front lawn of the Western White House on Friday to take roundhouse swings at McGovern before cameras and microphones Identifying himself as a life-long Democrat | who never bolted the party ticket, Conally said he will not support McGovern and will try to rally Democrats behind Nixon. Conally took aim at McGovern’s pledge to bring home all American troops and war S prisoners from Southeast Asia within ninety days after his inauguration if elected $ “Obviously,”” said Connally, “a president on the United States has no capacity, no power to bring home prisoners of war in the hands of the * North Vietnamese “It is an unfair statement, and it is a statement that, frankly, sabotages the efforts of this administration and of the peace negotiators in Paris to try to bring the war to an end...” Connally came here to report to Nixon on a thirty-five day tnp around the world b undertaken at the President's request ke pe pat : % Asked about continuing speculation that Nixon might tag him to replace Vice President E Spiro T. Agnew on the GOP ticket, Connally F said he doesnT want the job and doesn’t expect it will be offered ' ‘Skipper’ Bowles (AP)--Democratic gubernatorial nominee grove “Skipper” Bowles says he will vote for the McGovern-Eagleton ticket, but he dicated he would avoid any entanglement the national Democratic campaign : “Senator McGovern’s nomination doesn’t ge my campaign plans one bit,” Bowles d Friday. “I’ve taken no part whatsoever in the costs of insurance for travel, medical care and catastrophe insurance, and we have appointed a committee to review these costs and try to economize yet still get the best protection possible in this area The committee will report at the next meeting of the group in November at the University of Virginia In other action, the athletic directors decided that schools will be allowed to suit up fourteen instead of twelve players at the ACC Basketball Tournament in March. The move is designed to let teams bring in some players from the junior varsity squads The group also decided that although the conference will have a baseball tournament next season, point standings for the Carmichael Cup will be based on regular season play and not on results of the tournament SENATOR GEORGE McGOVERN the selection of the Democratic nominee. My time has been spent in running for governor, and, believe me, that’s a fulltime job “When I filed for governor, | swore on the Bible to vote for the party’s nominees, and I'm certainly going to do that,” he said Sam Ervin (AP)--Senator Sam Ervin said he had always supported the Democratic presidential ticket and he has no reason to think he might do otherwise this election year The North Carolina Democrat said at his home in Morganton that several of his Republican commenting on the nomination of Senator George McGovern believe it would be bad to have a liberal Democrat in the White House Ervin said if there were a liberal president, then “the GOP members of Congress could start voting like sensible people--a thing they haven't done since Nixon became President.” friends, Jimmy Carter (AP)--Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter, one of Senator George McGovern’s most persistent Southern critics, said last’ Thursday the Democratic presidential candidate may be able to carry the South in November Construction began last week on the Central Business District Loop ir Greenville Construction had been slated to begin us November of 1970, but has been held up since that time by a lawsuit involving the former mayor of Greenville, Frank M- Wooter The road will begin on the east side of Reade Street and extend toward Clement Dormitory curving in a loop around Georgetowne Shoppes It will eventually come out on Pitt Street. When finally completed the circle will serve as a by-pass for the downtown mall area The new road is almost certain to create some problems for the store owners in that area. Several of these owners were contacted and asked their feelings of the road One woman, who asked not to be identified, said. “I don't think it’s necessary. It’s costing a gr deal of federal money which could be better spent. It’s a shame to tear down hi uses and trees to pour concrete. | think at will hurt my business, too. To re-route traffic on a by-pass seems to me to be defeating the purpose of the downtown renewal--to encourage shopping Abortion faces (AP)--Just) one year ago, advocates of legalized abortion were riding a favorable current of state legislation and court decisions that seemed to point to an irresistible trend Alaska, Hawai, Washington and New York had greatly liberalized their laws, virtually providing abortion on request. Thirteen other states and the District of Columbia allowed abortions under certain circumstances. More than thirty other states were considering new abortion legislation But today, a full-fledged counteroffensive is gathering force in an election year that has politicians stepping warily on an emotional and politically sensitive issue Right to Lite committees have tormed in virtually every = state, = conducting = mail campaigns, educational programs, protests and lobbying drives in legislatures. So successful were their efforts that only one state, Florid , has enacted abortion changes this year, and a liberal law in New York was retained only by Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller’s veto of the repeal act The Democratic National Convention's platform committee defeated a proposal for a legalized abortion plank. “We can’t be known as the abortion party,” one committee member commented Carter told newsmen McGovern is moving closer to positions that could be accepted by Southern voters. He said McGovern appears to be willing to seek what Carter called equal treatment of the South under federal civil rights laws McGovern and Senator Henry M Jackson of Washington received 14% votes each from the Georgians in Wednesday night balloting for the nominee. Representative Shirley Chisholm of New York received 12, Alabama Governor George Wallace 11 and the other vote went to former North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford Carter had projected accurately the vote before the nominating session. He endorsed Jackson on Tuesday, almost certainly swaying delegation support for the senator. Carter made Jackson's nominating speech, stressing his stand for a strong defense policy The governor was among several others who spent two hours with McGovern at a breakfast meeting Tuesday McGovern what would be necessary for hum to carry Georgia and the rest of the South Carter said he told McGovern he should insert a strong defense plank and stress the work incentive aspects of any weltare reform proposal The governor was in the van guard of a Stop He said later that he told McGovern among governors at the National Governors’ Conference at Holston, attempting to enlist the aid of others “1 think we succeeded in slowing him down and making him clarify his position on the issues,”’ Carter said. “He reversed himself on tax reform and welfare, at least an indirect :esulh of our efforts to slow him down. If we had net been active, he would have ridden through without having to talk to people like me “1 doubt if he would have paid much attention to the South,” said Carter McGovern’s own supporters in the delegation were far from certain that he could carry Georgia. “It will be very tough, I can’t kid you about that,” said Eugene Bianchi of Atlanta, an Emory University profes The Wallace delegates saw no chance for him. “I don’t care who he puts on the ticket,” said Mrs Phyllis Farrell of Savannah. “There's all this talk about how leftist he is. The people in my district told me that if he’s the nominee, they'l! lead a Democrats for Nixon move in Georgia egins on by-pass Several ott erchants expr that the road would, in fact, be shopping enter, One merchant new road will double the ar space now available ar of the stores from the Accordar redevelopment Commission, tt to Larry Holt of the Greenville Jate of the segment of the loop betwe Street and Cotanche 1s set for January of | Holt said that a temporary walkway to be used during the construction period is to be built t provide access trom the dormitories t shopping center. However, the decision t the walkway is the perogative A permanent walkway built after final onstruction, t Holt, only about half of the needed money on hand at the moment. “I hope that the university, the students and the Student Government Association will contribute t building of the walkway in the event sufficient tunds are not available for it’s completion,” said Holt opposition Senator George McGovern, the Democratic presidential nominee, has called abortior rm a “no win issue” and contends it should be left up to the states President Nixon said publicly he couldn't square “abortion on demand...with my personal belief in the sanctity of human life, including the lite of the yet unborn. “urist business, but is neither begins nor ends at life, including thr life of the yet unborr The strength of the opposition in New York came as a surprise to many reformers e were really caught off guard) Back in 1970, we thought the abortion issue in New York was secure and that progress throughout the country would be automatic,” said Linda Zimmerman, national coordmator for the Woman's National Abortion Action Coalition WO-NAAC. ‘It came as a shock. I think abortion reform will be a long and difficult campaign, with some defeats ahead I'm sure.” In addition to New York, many other state legislatures have felt the pressures of organized opposition This past year, moves for liberalization were defeated in Georgia, Indiana, Rhode Island, Colorado, Delaware, Maine, Kansa, lowa, lilinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Connecticut eak out on Demo nominee Hugh Scott (AP)--Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said today Senator Geor McGovern’s tax reform plan “is going to hurt the average American guy and hurt him a lot Scott told the Senate that the plan as vriginally presented would not just mean higher taxes for the rich but also for middle-income Americans “He is revising his plan and we must wait to the Pennsylvanian said see the new versi McGovern.s orginal plan would end various deductions and exemptions and put into effect a system of tax credits as an alternative Mike Mansfield der Mike Mansfield welcomed Senate Democratic commented that he searching criticism of the proposals of the Democratic presidential nominee e will be ready to do the same for the proposals of the Republicans,” he said GREENVILLE N. CAROLINA VOLUME II1, NUMBER 61 WEDNESDAY, JULY 19 1972 U.S. Enrollment declines (AP)-Dr William Friday, president of t) 16-campus University of North Carolina, said last Saturday that the number of applications enrollment of state-supported schools is or he decline Friday also agreed with results of a nationa rvey which found that 87 percent of United States llege and universities still had penings this month for fall Although I haven't checked the figures ir the past few weeks, it is my understanding there are available spaces in all institutions with the exception of Appalachian State and the iniversity here at Chepel Hill,” Friday said The national survey, conducted by the National Associatior College Admissions Counselors, estimated that there are 300,000 t 500,000 current student openings in US colleges and universities The survey attributed the large number of »penings economic conditions, changes in draft laws that no longer make college attendance necessa avoid mibtary service growing doubt ab the value of a college degree and the breaking of “lock step” school attendance Friday said, “The economic factor and the mobility of today’s students are especially important considerations. Increasing numbers ! students are getting out to work for awhile Agnew for Pres? (AP)--Vice President Spiro Agnew says if he decides to seek re-election as vice president it will mean he is keeping open his options for an eventual bid for the presidency In a copyright story in the Manchester Union Leader, Agnew indicated that President Nixon had not yet advised him whether he would ask Agnew to be his running mate Agnew said it was a decision the President “should make on a cold, realistic, political basis without any feelings of personal affinity for the individual, because what really is going to market here is the welfare of a party and its ability to remain in power to effectuate its policies.” Agnew’ said he had made decision to seek the presidency “You could rely on the fact that if I’m a candidate for vice president, | want to at least preserve my options about where I’m going to eventually seek the presidency,” he said accused of fake withdrawal (AP)--Pravda accused the United States Monday of faking its withdrawal from Vietnam and called for peace negotiations on the basis of Communist proposals “no cold, hard “There is no Pentagon withdrawal whatsoever from Vietnam ‘American units are simply moving to other position,” commentator Vitaly Konionoy wrote in the Soviet Communist party newspaper He said the missions of troops removed from ed by US. forces in Vietnam were being assur other parts of the Pacific area “But the courageous Vietnamese people and patriots of Laos and Cambodia have inexhaustible will for victory the article continued “The facts show ever more convincingly that the Pentagon will not be able to get a military solutior to the problem in Vietnam The only way to a peace settlement is the way of negotiations, the effective basis of which 1s provided by the world known proposals of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of the Republic of South Vietnam and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam Students form campaign drive for George McGovern McGoverr candidate for President now has a campaign Senator George Democratic organization centered in Pitt County. The organization, named Eastern North Carolina Coalition tor McGovern, was recently created by several students at ECU A spokesman for the Coalition, Nick Maddox, says that although the organization is a recent spontaneous effort, it has already formed ties with the McGovern base in Charlotte. As of now the group activities are based solely in Pitt County. However organizers hope that a network of McGovern workers can be built up in the entire eastern part of the state The plans of the Coalition have been set up on a two phase basis. The first phase will be to enlist as many people as possible to carry on the work of the Coalition. To kick off this drive, a meeting has been called for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in room 20! of the Student Union. Says Maddox, “We're only wanting people who will work and put in some time on the campaign ther hopes to mount. an extensive voter registration drive in the Pitt County area, and to seek out Democratic regulars to aid with moral-political and financial support According to Maddox, information on voter registration lists is still being held by Ed Griffin in Charlotte McGovern campaign in North and South Griffin is the co-ordinator of the Carolina “Right now we're in limbo,” says Maddox “There have been no arrangements made as yet for speakers, but we hope to organize a McGovern rally sometime this Fall. We're going to have to be funded from our own pockets. until we can obtain some support from the regular Democrat contributors Students’ interest in helping the Coalition are urged by Maddox to come to tonight's meeting or to contact the Methodist Campus Ministry LINA ER 2 wo 1972 ot a office being dINION sarily sity isior 9 CU te ER ERR tt eg we a> y 2 we've just receitred more of those wonderful Olof Daughters’ CLOGS for Pappagallo ‘ND THE AA/V i) A V of Schmilsson RECORD BAR Fé / DAVID BOWIE TWE RISE AND FALL OF ZIGGY STARDUST AND THE SPIDERS FROM MARS, DAVID BOWIE The Rise and Fall of Spiders trom Mars ATURE VAEZN IEE should prove to be a successful musical in the Summer SS ee : : Riggan Shoe Repair Shop 111 W Theater opens second musical ved her royal lineage, and hence, eligibility uty a spoiled prince, by being unable to sleep atop twenty soft mattresses because a tiny hard pea was nested under the bottom one, is niivened by a sizeable assortment of jaunty titties that have won wide popularity with disk jockeys and juke-box addicts One of these, entitled “Happily Ever After,” be sung by Miss Gaster, expresses the show's fairy The Ss, struggling against odds to win the complains that Cinderella had a wench with a wand rooting for her in the wings and Snow White had that whole gang working for her from start to finish, whereas she, Winifred the Wocbegone, is getting absolutely no help at all One of Miss Gaster’s other songs is the broad parody a take-off on all e “L want to Go Back to Dear Old X-Area” songs. Winitred longs for her native swamp try, singing “In my soul is the beauty of he t She also sings a rollicking number © bogs to express how she feels after sassy satire on Stories ince tor a mate Swamps of Home,” ‘She swimming the moat three times to reach the e in pursuit of the prince she wants to alled arty With Jim Carlson she sings a mocking duet with its ttle (°Song of Love”) and lyrics only a than those of many ve ballads which are sung straight New York theatregoers found two of the ce-orchestrations as charming as the show s songs with-words, the lively “Very Soft Shoes” 1 ‘Spanish Panic’ in which the court jester assembled knights and ladies engage in a larious forward swoop while steadily losing nore: platitudinou i anc und One of the show’s outstanding numbers is to be sung by Sally-Jane Heit, in which she voices all her diabolical thoughts about frustrating her son's marnage with the “Sensitivity Aspiring princess. Her words seem never to stop having no punctuation at all, and uproariously reveal a talkative woman going on and on and ONCE UPON A MATTRESS is directed by bdgar R Loessin Richard Lyle is horeographing the dances, Barry Shank 1s serving as musical director, and Robert T Willams is designing the King Arthurish battlements, tournament tents, mattress-filled bedroom and the wizard’s — spider-intested laboratories of the castle Tickets can be reserved by calling 758-6390 ‘ the office in| McGinnis fitortum (open daily from 10:00 a.m - 9:00 tr stopp box g by \ & Shoe Store Fourth Freshmen Orientation Al OWF ZIGGY STARDUST SPIDERS FROM MARS Free Flick “Gun Fight equired VICTOR 7 lected feature STARMAN” ae / PITT PLAZA OPEN N/TES 1 a || BL record bar | 4 az discount records and tapes BANKAMERICARD i. 230 Klaus Voorman Nicky Hopkins JIM Price Bobby Keys Peter Frampton if Cast Appearances by ie: 3.68 TAPE 4.99 hated. (R) For R you kiddin’ me “ ! Cassett player Headphone 6 High ee Records and Tapes Wednesday, July 19 m in Raw! 130. SB 102. SC 103 Auditorium Curtain time is 8.15 pm i J Stereo Component Units (6) New Co and record 8 tract Quality speakers $479 95, now $269.50. United Freight 2904 £ insihdinaindindinaiadindigsiasin ass : YOU ARE IN OVEN-BURGER COUNTRY AT THE PIZZA CHEF LPIZZA CHEF | TRY ONE ON SERVICE SUN.-THURS. 5-11 752-7483 ae eee WHITE WITCH will be on the mall to give a concert next Wednesday night at 8:00 p.m sponsored by the Student Union. Wednesday, July 26, the Student Union will sponsor a free concert on the mall. The concert will 8-10 “Whitewitch”. This band has played with Alice Cooper and plays primarily the same type of last from pm. and will feature music. There will be tree refreshments | everyone, so grab a blanket and a friend and come on out, In case of rain, the concert will be held in Wright Auditorium WNCT features history of Rock It is, in purest terms, a documentary study Over 13,000 dedicated man hours were expanded in the of the evolution of “Pop” music research, writing, recording and production of this highly acclaimed spectacular Both and educational, The History of Rock & Roll will allow an audience to relive in $0 hours an important facet of our entertaining American culture. From the grass roots to its the musically through more than two decades of highlighted by present day form, History progresses change exciting actual Interviews with those who helped make it all happen Critics trom all over the United States have stated “the History of Rock & Roll is the best WNCT will be carrying this documentary each Sunday documentary ever made on the subject for the next 10 weeks The Tampa Operations Florida quotes which should very well tell the story of the History of Rock & Roll for WLCU in the tollowing manager has submitted “One of the most impressive and humorous examples came when one of our jocks pulled into a service station for gas and the attendant was hesitant to come out to the pumps until he nits AM & FM ' Mponent ECU Summer Theatre es TELL \\ atch type player, record changer @ 150 watt output Reguiar § Free Concert 10th St 752-4053 \ the concert w Offers 7 items with 2 vegetables & drink -$1.45 Offers 7 additional items including FRESH SEAFOOD daily with 2 vegetables & drink $165 Alto Kosher Corn Beef, Selami, Pastrami and delicious Roast Beet on bidet RARER LT ITIL IL ET ETE aid” tor the first time, and was patting his f to a somewhat different. than 1} hymn tempo “Several of the deejays took time to answ Most of 1 comments can be summarized by the caller wt incoming calls at) random said. “How the Hell am 1 supposed to get a sleep tonight? “A jock left me a note which read could hear it in any store you went int parking lots of shopping centers, at highwa Intersections from other cars..it seemed whole city had stopped tor “The History Rock & Roll “One caller complained that he'd planned a party and no one showed up. When he tried t find out what happened, he discovered all t! people he'd invited were at home listening “Leven received a personal report of as St. Petersburg business. which — told employees to ‘come in around noon Monday because we know you're going to stay up t listen ‘In summary, | can only repeat my opening The History of Rock & Roll ha surpassed my pes as an unqualified paragraph wildest h success. Onginally | was dubious about three runs within a seven-month period. Now there is was sure our man had his car radio on so he no doubt" wouldn't miss part of the program Ve urge our readers, excuse the corn, “to try “One staff member noticed a young man in it, youll ike it’ church Sunday who was wearing a “hearing oak €e Calend campus Calendar Saturday, July 22 day in Wright and from 7.00 ¢ 8 00 Classes All 3-hour courses ECU Summer Theatre Once Upon A Mattress M in Wright Auditorium at B00 pm ID Cards Auditorium. Curtain time is 8.15 5 ECU Summer Theatre Once Upon A Mattress n McGinnis Sunday, July 23 Auditorium Curtain time is 8 15pm Summer Music Camp Concert in Wright at 3.00 p.m Thursday, July 20 Monday, July 24 Freshmen Onentation All day in Wright Auditorium ECU Summer Theatre Opening night { 1776 M Union Bingo. ice Cream Enjoy the cool fur Room 201 19 Wright Auditorium Curtain time is 8:15 pm Annex Tuesday, July 25 ECU Summer Theatre “Once Upon A Mattress McGinnis Auditorium. Curtain time is 8:15 p.m 10 Cards made in Wright Auditorium trom 3.00 4 00, . Freshmen Orientation in Wright, Raw! 130, SB 102, 8 1031 Friday, July 21 pn +9100 pm Baseball ECU Pirates host UNC-—Wilmington at Harrington Field Sesshelt: ECU heats Loulsbure at He Fidd: Gamacine Game time is 7 30 p m purr Movie “Lawrence of Arabia’ in Wright Auditorium at 8 00pm ECU Summer Theatre 1776" Curtain time is 81 ECU Summer Theatre Once Upon A Mattress McGinnis Wednesday, July 26 Fresnmen Onentation A 102 trom 7.00 pm day in Wright and in Raw! 130, SC 1 8 00pm White Worer O pr 4 ibe held in Wrght Audite " 1776" Curtain time is 8:15 Huey’s--Charles Street Adjacent Minges 756-4808 Open Saturday Support your Alumni Friend Good Things for Gentle People Our new gallery Opens July () lor future anno meement Svs vd evevuevesuvudeEY Wevevesy ered labs flirt of hel | dow the rap had I ther spig grou A saun toile sme] that quic! Tr black shuff prep. chop bent white Pa was t him t Kitch keep Th witho windc the fi will Th butan rustin, G odir a Wo other, It the fl the fo meal Ar Joh appoin newly Art Poinde the Flc Art Poin a roon display student and 4 Vi (AP five-foc Portsm named Saturd: Naked Rosela' Miss represe pagean $1,000 was V won, 3 contes contes about newsm Mis creden weighs Pu (AP Route arreste charge weapo! Poh playing Dee K Charlo arose Dillard mouth Ken Ca: (AP busine: on a March over t The Olson was hi sixty d But days missin; Inspec the L Atlan: Police appear “ht situath are un anybo The Counce Monda taken to pay B:00 p.m nents { nend and ort will be g hist 5 than th } to answ i if aller wh get a | t int highw med istory old Monday 1y uf opening Roll ha qualified ut three there 1s to try marcas Reporter spends day as migrant By TOM WELLS Associated Press One by one the migrant laborers climbed frory their dirty cots te Prepare for a day ot backbreaking work in the helds Fach door of man peeked out the his shanty to peer at the sky Steel gray clouds sped rapidly across the island, but it had stopped raining The dozen or so men took their turns at the single water Spigot poking out of the ground in front of the shacks And one by one they sauntered to the outdoors toiletsina shed nearby The smell was so bad in the privy that | gapped and ran out as quickly as possible The cook, a 76-year old black man called Godine shuffled around the kitchen Preparing a breaktast of pork chops, eggs and grits. Godine is bent by the has years and white hair Part: of the morning ritual was to tease the cook and for him to threaten the men with a kitchen knife as he tried to keep the room clear The kitchen was in a shack without glass or screens in the windows. Flies buzzed around the food and landed on it at will The shanty had an ancient butane-operated stove and a rusting refngerator in one end G odine’s flimsy cot a work bench were in in the other end I tried not to think about the flies crawling busily over the food and wolfed down my Godine’s skill meal. | found made it tasty Some of to their shacks the men returned await On conditions in the word helds Others gathered in front of a small country Store a few hundred yards from the camp I joined five other men in picking green beans from the Store owner's field until another white farmer arrived to take us away for the day By then it am. It is usually 930 am get started was about 10 about 9 or before the workers That gives the sun enough time to burn off some of the heavy dew the from CLOps. The had the cucumbers, and it was still too rain ruined wet to pick tomatoes. We were headed for the cabbage fields the had experienced with cabbage. The farmer- a bull-necked, thick armed rotund man wearing a thin-browed straw hat-- showed how a cutter should peel back Few of men the outer leaves of the cabbage hold it to one side and slice the stalk It looked simple. But before the day was over my body would ache from inching in a stoop the position — along quarter-mile Jong rows. A gusty wind whipped the gray clouds away, and soon the sun created an outdoor steam bath in the wet field There was no drinking water Some of the men licked water from the worm-infested there cabbages. Conversations about and tor home, friends prospects for work tomorrow dwindled as the sun bore down hotter and the rows seemed to Art chairman named has been the Union John Poindexter appointed chairman of newly formed Student Art Exhibits Poindexter is former curator of the Florence (S.C.) Museum of Art Poindexter hopes to obtain Committee 4a room on campus tor use in displaying student art. ‘The student body needs to know and appreciate art as a The Intends to said also creation,” he new chairman sponsor art “Happenings These will be designed to allow students to try their own hands at creativity Applications are now being accepted membership on the Art Exhibits Committee in 214 of the All students are welcome to join for Room Union the committee Virginian wins title (AP)}Carol Tucker, a five-toot blonde trom Portsmouth, — Virginia was named Miss Nude World Saturday, in the pageant at the Naked City camp near Roselawn, Indiana Miss Tucker, 24, who represented Canada in the pageant, walked off with the $1,000 first prize. She said she she won, and that she entered the About thirty contestants participated, while 4,000 newsmen-watched was very surprised that contest as ajyoke about spectators--and presented She Miss Tucker credentials. of 36-24-35 weighs 110 pounds and has Puts hoof in (AP)-Marvin Dillard, 32, of Route 11, Charlotte arrested last weekend yf assault with a deadly was on @ charge weapon-~a horseshoe Police Dillard playing horseshoes with Jack Dee Kennedy, 41, of Route 9 said was Charlotte, when an argument arose’ Kennedy told officers Dillard struck him in_ the mouth with a horseshoe Kennedy suffered a broken Cash gone (AP)-When a strolling businessman found $600 lying on a downtown sidewalk last March, he over to police The Olson, was told that the money was his if it wasnt claimed in turned the money businessman, — Harris sixty days more than sixty But now, days later, the money ts missing According to : William Corbett of Inspector the Department of Internal Affairs Section of the Detrott Police Department, the money appears to have been stolen ‘It’s a most > Corbett said situation, anybody The Council Detroit agreed informally Monday that $600 should be taken from the police budget to pay Olson unfortunate ‘We are unable to put the blame on Common green eyes The first’ runner-up Judy Day, 23, Milwaukee, who India in the was represented contest Judges in included the Johnnie Wilkinson Archie pageant Ray, and singer June personality actress television Campbell of the “Hee Haw” series. Dick who City Promoter Drost Naked contestants figure, beauty and poise Drost will stage the fourth Miss Nude contest at Naked City 12. Last Valerie owns said the were judged on annual American August winner year's was Craft, a Chicago entertainer mouth jaw, broken teeth and a tongue injury. He was hospitalize ! in satisfactory condition WNCT THE BIG 1070 eve produced. . the Very fascinating The Orson Welles and his Mercury Man landed or the plains of New Jersey and awfully get lonper Within an hour the wind fied down. Everyone was soon Jrenched in sweat The farmer would not be pinned down on how much he would pay the workers Vil see how you boys do There yrumbling among the he said with a thin smile was some men, but they needed work In the the workers clamored so much for afternoon water that the farmer sent one of his regular employees with a truck to get some. The water in the large metal container with 4 spigot in the bottom left silt in the bottom of the red plastic cup that was passed around When we knocked off work at 5S p.m our crew of six cutters had chopped about 30,000 pounds of cabbape, 600 bags of SO pounds each The farmer paid $1.75 an hour The men had been hoping for $2 an hour but hearing they would get only $1.50, they were satisfied Each man made $10.50 that day Back ollapsed on their shade of They said little as at the labor camp the men ots OF sat squatting in the the shanties they stared emptily at the garbage-strewn campyard Several had the poor man’s ocktail-half pints of red wine They cost 75 cents a bottle at the country store The the tomato fields the next day men would return to and they would be glad of it Tomato picking is easier than cutting cabage. And there is no danger of slicing a finger 1 told photographer arrived that | was the men before a a4 newsman They were surprised, but pleased, that the outside world cared about their lives ‘Do what you can, will you? Sammy said As mosquitoes became the retreated to their cots for a few mintues of active men rest before the insects came in to feast WATER BEDS Many colors to choose from $15.95. 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EAST CAROLINA’ Student Stereo Center THOSE WHO ARE ‘REALLY INTO SOUND WANT MARANTZ SPECIAL $40.00 savings on Marantz 2230 AM-FM Receiver with Marantz Imperial 5 speakers LINA ER 2 1972 ot 4 office being inion ssarily ty.) isior 9 of d to ip as Was SIX don the ttle and vei ids the ot the fin ich tly an ven efit ind ountainhead and the truth shall make you free Roadway placement lacks University city co-ordination ( il derway " ville W it’ le yrward Redevel ( ssi ( tral Business District pr I t bvic signs ! ! f t ' s the row lis! ! ses alc Cota D work is already taking pla i1S¢ th area betw Fletch und ¢ dent Dormitories and G zetown Shoppes ly Is area, t ire beir rooted bank ts t iW Walls b vel jake ym for a roac It ‘ ronic at a project t begin with such d actions Loop Road Ss the stret yt highway will be called, will ¢ ect t of Reade St t wit! d Streets area, with th sulin nt th dow business more asily. The road tself wil t wide, and will pass between th d ot Georgetown Shoppes and Cle t Hall with a scanty 10 to 12 spat ach sid jevelopment ect has bee jail rs Vears. a 1 it al that tones ‘ ted berately so close t 1 id. Certainly a vab imag \ Power failure illuminates M fa ick t situa I power failure lett most of the 1m} with t lights including Fountainhead’s office. When we called Maintena Department they SI tha we abd t W k t 2g Ww Democrats hedge on ticke 4 verpass for p trian trattic across the road?Loop Road promises to be or ! Greenville’s es ind tainly th fic alone woul so sort of sa ¢ Thi Brashness Award shot « t t Red mission of sugs SGA ¢ trit to th We see a re rSGA thi 41Sc but) what w Vist fit t t from what the Redev Commission and t University might xpect The lack Jinati betw the Central Business Distt pr ind the University’s plac dor nes and classroc sults | lear t loser tudents I sad of using student \ subsidize and perpetuate poor plar ind capricious judger busses and building walkways, w SGA should taken th ffensiv repeated acts of irresponsit campus layout. W have continually advocated bus blackmail (either administration chips in for bus costs or will run to the Allied Healtt and Minges) as a means to student) voice in campus planning, and we contend that SGA yatch work ac istration mistakes ts i Wa tudent funds their stair areas. In t onfusior yut in one dorm a halt. Fire alarms and intercoms became inoperable In the Student Union, dozens of students were taken by surprise when the lights suddenly dimmed. The only lighted areas in Wright Building were the > and, of all places, the interior k store, which was closed for lajor trag support id w st B verett Jordan in th tate Der rat Democratic primary contest for tt t bh ft oncerning nominat will — fac OF th tt port t at al Democrati intry’s most itspoken reactionaries McG bag! ticket November, Jesse Helms. But unlike Or I r Helms, whose conscience compelled hin um Hargrov to switch parties because “he thought the D rat rG r ind voted Republicar Galifianakis Bow Zed wit nent that apparently is rotating with tt in t la pledged port tt breez Db rat n \c betore tk : What a choice! On tt ne hand w But thay h ost resting er leds eu He, oe iene Canoe Ente Is too brittle to bend to the reality of th “ ame t w : =f : and, we have a te isk ‘cgay man wh seems willing t t ket posi x catah. ted ff g jerat rogr It r t that all tt 1 1 il la ) at andidates will t tes Senat I kis, who handil sted i a iu ountainhead Philip E. Williams Mick Godwin Business Manager Editor-in-chief Tim Wehner Managing Editor Reid Overcash Advertising Manager Bo Perkins Bill Riedel Mike Edwards. F submitted for Ountainhead regrets that it cannot be responsible for ret News Editor Photo Editor Circulation Manager urning material publication. All material submitted becomes property of Fountainhead, which reserves the right for unlimited publication within its pages. All checks in compensation for material published or services rendered will be void if not picked up within 60 days of issuance. No staff member is empowered to guarantee publication of any maternal. The opinions expressed in this newspaper are not necessarily those of Fountainhead or East Carolina University Published by the students of East Carolina University under tha auspices of the Student Publications Board. Advertising open rate is $1.55 per column inch classifieds are $.50 for the first 25 words. Subscription rate is $10.00 yearly. P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Telephone 758-6366. ’ QA to Find Out ,, you're up here Y Gener, ‘ Yippies plan to set Miami convention on ear By JACK ANDERSON Vacation time is rapidly coming to a close for the radical movement in Miami Beach The same loosely organized group of Zippies and Yippies who cavorted and sunbathed during the Democratic Convention are now holding serious strategy sessions aimed at President Nt Republican Convention next month My s yng-hair embarrassing on during the ce for this information is my own { teen-age son, Kevin, who infiltrated the radical mov nt while | was in Miami Beach for the Democratic Convention Kevin tells me that zany Abbie Hoffman, a yippie all seasons, has held a number of summit. meetings with his unpredictable >nants Kevin was present when Hoffman was seeking yut-maneuver tederal snoopers. For electron efit of snooping devices, et in their gaudy one set of plans { frends would r and lay out plotters would slip outside and ately draw up a different strategy basic aim of the radicals, reports Kevin, sober-sided Republican a carnival of confusion GOP SNOOPS e. the Republicans have done some 1 turn the Cor t vention int Miam: Beach on ther own through the Conventon Hall among all th 1 er this month, | spotted two top Republicans. They were GOP Vice Chairman Dick Herman and his assistant, Jim ice personnel, the two xplained they were actually sizing up facilities sale. Posing as. ser Nn preparat their own convention in Both Hermar ecurity at the convention, They have and Gale are worned about acted Republican security agents to work losely with Mu Beach Police Chief Rocky ince, the hefty, jovial cop who is now dluating contingency plans to handle what looks like a raucous week with the dicals While aintaining cordial relations with Yippie leaders, Pomerance has kept in constant touch with the FBI Pomerance receives FBI Pp intensely e reports from every major city in the nation ot known radicals leaving for Miami In addition, Florida police have staked ut all th nforming him major roads coming into Miami They are keeping a running tally of the cars, carrying potential trouble-makers into the state FINGER-LICKIN’ GOOD Fried chicken magnate, Colonel Harlan Sanders, passed out free fried chicken and paid $3500 for wastepaper baskets at the Democratic Convention. But we have learned that the old Southern gentleman ts a Republican at heart Underneath the Colonel's long coat, he wears a hig, gold “Richard Nixon in 72” tie lasp. The Colonel told us he is glad the Democrats like his chicken. But he believes the Republicans will do the most finger-licking good for the country BATTLING QUEEN BEES Although the Women’s Caucus struggled valiantly to present a united front at the Democratic Convention, we have learned that a major power struggle is brewing inside the ! yuses and campers JACK ANDERSON women’s lib movement between the Caucus’s two middle-aged queen bees--Bella Abzug and Betty Friedan Militant feminists, who feel they were shortchanged during the Democratic credentials and platform fights, are telling insiders that battling Bella Abzug and glonous Glona Steinem used old machine-like politics to deliver the women’s vote to McGovern Betty Friedan, who tounded the Women’s Caucus two years ago, 1s reportedly very upset over Bella's partisan attitude toward McGovern Betty has told friends privately that Bella has failed the women’s cause because she won few if any, concessions from McGovern for her support END OF A DREAM Hubert Humphrey, the happy warrior of national politics, has seen his life-long quest for the presidency come to a frustrating end Humphrey has spent the last twelve years coming in second in national politics. For four years, he served as the nation’s number two man under Lyndon Johnson only to come in second by less than one percent to Richard Nixon in 1968. This year, Hubert has come in again-this time to his one-time second next-door neighbor, George McGovern Have these defeats embittered Humphrey Will he work hard for McGovern’ predict that Humphrey will devote himself fully to electing McGovern president. In a politician like Humphrey, the basic instincts never die. He will campaign as hard for McGovern as he would for himself. COMPUTER ASASSIN PROFILES Trying to predict who, where and when a man will attempt to kill a president is an impossible job The Secret Service has tackled it by setting up a computerized file of potential assassins. The trouble is, they have gotten a little carried away The agency's files contain the names of scores of potential president killers, whom most people always thought were harmless Take, for example, former baseball great Jackie Robinson. Five days after President Nixon took office, Robinson joined a small group of blacks who stopped by a White House gate and asked to see the President It’s doubtful that Jackie Robinson knew it, but the Secret Service was taking notes. Wrote Special Agent Thomas Schriver: “The reason they wanted to see the President was that they wanted more jobs tor the black people and also wanted the President t define black capitalism.” It sounds like a fairly mild form of protest But the Secret Service went ahead and established a computerized file on Robinson He is now officially recognized as a threat to the President of the United States “ The Forum Apathy disproven To Fountainhead To the student body Monday night, Fountainhead held an oper house and waited with eager anticipation ¢ sign on to its staff the many vocal people who have so long dended the paper's attempts to involve the students in campus activities Notices were put up and an ad was placed on the editorial page inviting all interested students to apply for the many paying positions available on the staff for summer and tall The lone student who showed up at the meeting sent the current optimistic stat! members into spasms of joy We considered the fact that no one took advantage of such a Open opportunity to initiate a change in th Paper an endorsement by the student body the present editonal pohcies and procedure Fountainhead In the future we will ignore the student minority as 4 bunch of lonely people who find their sole satistactior their names in the paper attached to fla etiors, We further take this opp. express our appreciation to ECU's stud their support and to apologize tor } 4V wrongly accused them of being ay What we have so long tak was in fact absolute contentment A Statter (name witht Forum policy All students, facult administrators are urged t Opinions In writing to the f The editorial page is a; such opinions may be publishe Unsigned editorials efle the editorin-chiet, and poy the entire staff or student hoa. a‘ When writin ¢ to the | t procedure should be used cat Letters should be oo; : | I Letters should be tynod should not exce: gas). 1300 w Letters should the author and ot} : request of the sipny th withheld ile, Signed artic), OPINIONS Of the those of F 1 : e University The Executiv: ranking several p quite stic SGA meeting | and for | fequisitio by the | system Atten: Council advisor Clifton Affairs Lusiar channels order authorit; Tequisiti: Dr. 1)! | fequisitic | that the | the chie! been bec SGA ve: onganizat that was responsi Coz (AP) lawyer Montana been ind allegedly federal sti The 32 in Billing vice presi persons © The i things tha ’ funds for Also ¢ goach Jo William business 1 For ¢ Athletic athlete basketbal The u of 1970, Lewis. 1 working ¢0-consp: On ar MBsisiant * student © that he : program In adc student $220 in earnings allegedly departm: Rober could no official s indictme Copie Al Sever Carolina announ Director The | Cain fr mewly ¢ | Athletic Cain © four ye i rt-ti Prates Ae Organi: ; This