id a movie IONS FOR STUDENT MMITTEES—Applications ion Committees will be gh Friday, March 30 in ure in the Student Union. ested in working in the | is strongly urged OF SCEC—The Student Exceptional Children ganizational meeting pril 4 at 6:30 p.m. in » will be a speaker, is on to {0W—The second annual noir County Crafts and show will be held Sat., n 2-8 p.m. at Fairfield er in Kinston. The show demonstrations, exhibits n. Handmade crafts and I be demonstrated by nvited. There will be NO Devid Matthews CHALLENGE TO COME VELAC TO - OW TO DEFY FATE oF FLAC... AND EARTHS JOUR CHALLENGE 1S ACCEPTED -- whe BE THERE / so ce win a5 sin vie ale aie oie | tapes ateo Cassett:: e: 752-1383. $10.00, Complete & $10, Tables-$3 & nd Leslie $175.00. s. Call 758-0716 or 2619. 2 EE inet piano. Can be P.O. Box 241 0: ee > rock titles. Some s. A good buy at ton Ogle 246 Slay $< kK. Must Sell, Best iii d. Age six weeks | edat, Ip to. Fore RON ree schola ental fees, ang ’ last 3 years Cars, a tax-free th scho| rolarshiy 5an Air For her with heng 1 and meq I ar er 98 VOLUME IV, NUMBER 43/GREENVILLE, N.C./TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1973 SGAPresidential candidates comment on campaign issues (Editor's note: The following excerpts were transcribed from @ taped press conference conducted by Fountainhead’s news staff and attended by presidential candidates Bodenhamer, Saunders and Twilley. Walter Estes was unable to attend) FOUNTAINHEAD: The first question we'd like to ask is directed to Frank. You plan to have a spirit committee - isn’t there already such a committee on campus? SAUNDERS: Yes, but that committee is under the Student Union, I think East Carolina suffers from a great lack of esprit de corps...Interests are diversified here, and the present committee can’t handle all it should. It’s very evident that the esprit de corps here has been lower than it’s ever been. I think we could come up with some concrete ideas on how to build thisback up. FOUNTAINHEAD: What about the teacher rating scale? According to your proposal, teachers would be rated according to the grades that they gave. Don’t you feel this rating scale would locate the ‘easy graders’ more than it would actually grade the teacher? SAUNDERS: The only way that you can rate a teacher without getting into personal opinion is this way, making it all black and white. Students might say, ‘I had him before...he’s crummy, but this way it’s all right there. FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you feel that the student should grade the teacher according to whether he likes him or according to academic standards? SAUNDERS: I think there should be a good mixture between both. With this type of rating scale...well, there are some who want a good grade; there are some who want to learn. This way it’s given and open to the students’ decision. CO-ED DORM FOUNTAINHEAD: Bill, about the co-ed residence hall...is there any strong possibility of that actually coming about? BODENHAMER: Yes, we have seven endorsements on that. We are not going to take applications for Garrett Hall (proposed co-ed dorm) until May 15. We have an endorsement from the Dean of Women, Dean of Men, SGA, WRC, Dean of Students, Vice-President of Business Affairs, and we're really pushing hard for it. I'm asking for it on an experimental basis of one year. If it’s run correctly, and everything goes smoothly, we can continue it... FOUNTAINHEAD: How is this dorm to be set up - will it be Opposite sexes on every other floor, or every other room...? BODENHAMER::Therewill be a partition right down the middle of the dorm. After visiting hours, a door between the sides will be closed. On the girls’ side, after hours admission will be just as it is now in unlimited hours dorms...police will be there to open the door. The men’s side will be open all night long. FOUNTAINHEAD: What do you feel the advantages would be in having such a dorm? BODENHAMER: There are many advantages-social aspects group activities-all surveys show there is an improvement in these co-ed dorms. Studying habits, appearance, loudness, all of this show improvement according to surveys I've encountered. I've studied 18 schools having this system. FOUNTAINHEAD: What about the student loan fund - has that been made much use of? BODENHAMER: Yes, it has. I think it should be increased...since it’s a regenerating fund, it’s always there - but | do think that interest should be added, say after 30 days Let me stop for a minute here and say something about the spirit committee...the Board of Trustees and the Board of Directors recently put the spirit committee under the Athletic Department. FOUNTAINHEAD: How is that going to affect it? BODENHAMER: Well, the Student Union and the Athletic Department were having too many conflicts...not quite conflicts, but the spirit committee was felt to operate much better under athletics. SAUNDERS: Let me add something. I probably used the wrong terminology when I spoke earlier about a spirit committee. It’s not just athletic spirit I’m talking about - I’d say it was overall esprit de corps. I'd probably have to change that name later on.. STUDENT COUNCILMAN TWILLEY: In the past month or so, they've laxed requirements for students to register in Greenville. As a result, some off-campus students who have no definite plans to leave Greenville, and who feel Greenville is their home, will be registering. We will be pushing for this, and for a student concilman on City Council. (A question arose among the candidates as to whether a student councilman had participated in City Council business in past years) TWILLEY: Now, if you'll look back on Bob Whitley's (SGA) administration, Randy Honnet sat on the City Council. We didn’t have one under Rob Luisana’s administration, but Honnet was there under Whitley’s and I believe under Glen Croshaw’s administration SAUNDERS: They started something like this back in 1965...Members sat in, but there hasn’t been anything where they could actually speak out at the meeting. They could give City Council members ideas, but they have never been able to exercise anything but the same rights a Greenville citizen would have at the meeting. FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you disagree with that, Bill? BODENHAMER: I've spoken to Mrs. Mildred McCrath, a councilman, and she said that we have had members there in previous years, and that he does have the right to speak out TWILLEY: One thing I think you should remember - according to Robert’s Rules of Order and parliamentary procedure, if you're not a member of a committee you have to be given the right to speak by a member. If there is one objection on that committee, that person cannot talk. As a member, he would have the right to the floor, the right to speak...Now, one vote out of 11 might not seem like much - » big thing is that it would be his floor and his right to speak. but th INHEAD: So you're pushing for the full status of a student on the City Council? TWILLEY: The person we have in mind is not a student now. If a person could be found who was maybe not a student, but sympathetic toward students and student government, and who could represent that to Greenville, we could establish this close contact with the people. FOL INHEAD: Frank, do you have any comment on that? SAUNDERS: Well, I'll tell you - one way you could get around that (having a student member) would be if you had a sympathetic faculty member - whether he were young or old. A faculty member involved with the activities of East Carolina could help fill the void That would get around some of the problems of having a student member approved. He might be more conservative - but I think that he might be able to get his point across better to the council. They might be more apt to listen to him than toa student.. BODENHAMER: We have one on there now. WECU EXPANSION "FOUNTAINHEAD: Bill, about this WECU radio suggestion of yours...you suggest Wthat it go over the air. Right now it’s a carrier, or cable, station - have you looked @into the expense or the FCC angle of it? : *BODENHAMER: They'd have to go FM...I think the main problem in cost is that ay ey have very few ads. Most of the advertising is concentrated in three or four ‘department stores. If they did go over the air, advertising would increase - it Would be self-supporting after about three years. EFOUNTAINHEAD: In that case, would you be looking into raising or spreading *Out salaries? Right now, only the top-ranking people over there are on salary. DENHAMER: I would still say the top members should be paid salary.. MAUNDERS: Now one thing you have to take into consideration is that, (Bcording to the FCC, disc jockeys have to have an FCC rating before they can go the air. | don't believe you're going to find many ECU students who have a ing - they'd go downtown to work for a radio station instead. You're going to SGA CANDIDATES THE WAY THINGS STAND PRESIDENT - Bill Bodenhamer Walter Estes Frank Saunders Robert Twilley VICE- PRESIDENT - Frieda Clark Bob McKeel SECRETARY - Sandra Langley TREASURER - Mike Edwards Kathy Holloman BILL BODENHAMER FRANK SAUNDERS AAR REFERENDUMS The student body will be asked to decide the following when they vote in Thursday’s elections 1. Do you favor the elimination of the 2.0 grade point average as a requirement to be a candidate for public office at East Carolina University? ( Yes/No) 2. Do you favor an amendment to the Student Government constitution to do away with the popular election of Marshals and to be replaced with the applicants who have the highest grade point average above the required 3.0? (Yes/No) 3. Whereas the name of ‘The Rebel’ no longer reflects the image the magazine portrays, the name should be changed to ‘Morpheus’. ( Yes/No) Editor's note Following are presidential cz pressed by the remaining three candidates Many books go out of date in two years. The professors should have the alternative to change books whenever they feel the r aterial is outdated. There’s not much sense in ning materia! fr yutdated book. Professors don’t chage books unless they have good reason to Requiring them to keep a certain book for two years could decrease their effectiveness in teaching a particular course. What’s more important - quality education or a few dollars in books? The book co-op is a better solution Fountainhead covers ECU news sufficiently. In my opinion, news of interest outside the ECL ampus would make interesting reading. ECU isn’t some secluded island; students are interested in outside news as well as intra campus news run into a lot of problems with rating and salaries - but there are a lot of problems we have on campus that are more important. I think it’s great to have East Carolina over the air - but let’s try to solve our internal problems first. | think that’s pretty secondary to a lot of other problems FOUNTAINHEAD, ‘CHANGED’ FOUNTAINHEAD: Bill, how do you feel about the status of Fountainhead? BODENHAMER: | feel that Bo Perkins is a pretty good « itor - I understand him more than I have those in the past. When I say the paper should concentrate on campus news, I mean student news, like the University of Michigan University of Florida...everything concerning students. This is the kind of paper I'd like tc see FOUNTAINHEAD: Do you intend to exert pressure on Fountainhead or the new editor - what do you plan to do? BODENHAMER far as putting pressure, | think the students should be the ones to do that unk Fountainhead has changed a lot - in the past, you'd see one week of campus news and nothing the next week SAUNDERS: Bill, I'd like to ask you a question on that. Some he articles the print that aren't directly related to this campus - some of these articles have been good articles, like the ones on abortion. | think that’s as East Carolina-oriented as you can get. The things Fountainhead prints ¢ t pertair students as East Carolina students only. I think it’s good to bring in things like that from outside, which do have an effect on students here FOUNTAINHEAD: About this proposal for a column in the Four tainhead, Bill how do you plan to do this? BODENHAMER: The SGA is allotted 150 free inches of space per quarter much does that come to? TWILLEY: About half a page, I think FOUNTAINHEAD: That would be between seven and eight columns BODENHAMER: When I talk about an SGA Column, I’m not speaking of ‘The WRC meets tonight at 7:00 - I’m talking about what service sororities have done, what the WRC has done - their accomplishments, not just their meeting times BOOKSTORE AND CO-OP FOUNTAINHEAD: All three of you say something about the book co-o BODENHAMER: I don’t say anything FOUNTAINHEAD: Two of you say something about the book co op, then. How is the bookstore going to react to this? Do you think they’re going to put any pressure on this? TWILLEY: No, I don’t think so. Because there’s been apathy among students regarding this, and because the co-op doesn’t have what you might call ‘instant money’, | don’t think they'll be in that much competition with the bookstore However, if it were to hurt the bookstore in the future, you've got to set your priorities. Just think - last year they used to pay their own taxes; this year, on top of what they're usually making, they're charging four cents on the dollar extra. Their profits are so tremendous that ! don’t think the co-op expansion could hurt them SAUNDERS: The success of the co-op bookstore depends upon the participation of the students. | wouldnt say that the co-op could handle 10,000 students nght now - the Vets Club had no permanent room alloted to the co-op. If it grew to maybe two-thirds of the student body, it might exert pressure on the bookstore, but I doubt if this would happen in the next two or three years. The co-op is strictly a convenience for the students; it only sells books, not cards or fraternity decals or notebook paper, so it would be no competition is those areas. FOUNTAINHEAD: Bill, do you have something to say about that? BODENHAMER: I think the co-op is really good for about 300 people...beyond that, I can’t see how it would work. If it got much larger, it would be too complex, with cards being put in for sales...The thing I'd like to see is a requirement that all teachers in survey courses use the same textbook for two years. This could save students at least $25,000 per quarter. I’ve talked to Mr Moore, and he is behind this. Now, the only people you'd have trouble with is the professors - they'll say ‘You're taking away my academic freedom.” (Bodenhamer outlined proposals for a book rental system and for the two-year book use requirement in survey courses) FOUNTAINHEAD: Not all students are taking survey courses - only freshmen and sophomores BODENHAMER: In the upper-level courses you're into your major - you'll probably keep those books. But you don’t want to keep a biology or music book if you're a business major...1’m not against the book co-op, but I don’t feel it can work beyond 300-500 people SAUNDERS: If we had advertising, we could boost that figure to 10,000, hire a staff and still come out ahead. And if the SGA allotted funds to the Vets Club for the specific use of the co-op, profits could go back into the SGA and you could } reinvest student money BODENHAMER: I'm not against the book co-op. But in the other plan, you can have a better system, not hire a new staff and make the bookstore more efficient at the same time SAUNDERS: What I’m saying is that we can get the money to make the book co-op work for 10,000 students - in your system and in this system TWILLEY: I've got a question about this...have you found out how often survey course texts are changed? BODENHAMER: Teachers are changing survey texts about every quarter - | was down in the bookstore about three days in a row finding out about this TWILLEY: | can’t see that. Biology’s been using the same text for about three years now, history books are going on a second year BODENHAMER: Editions have been changed TWILLEY: I don’t see where editions have changed that often - this is the second year for some SAUNDERS: I'd say 95% of these survey teachers have kept the same book this year and last year BODENHAMER: Now, the problem in history, say, 1s that you've got six different teachers teaching survey, for example. These six different teachers have six different books - you could cut this down to one or two books for survey required in a department If we went on this system, we could buy books cheaply from other places second-hand books. That’s where these books you sell back go - they're sitting in these companies’ warehouses. You could save the student a lot of money by buying up these used books and making use of them for more than one quarter ‘COLLEGE FOR EDUCATION’ SAUNDERS: The Board of Trustees charges each faculty member to give the best grade of education possible. If a book comes out and the teacher feels that it would help the student better grasp that knowledge, the Board charges the faculty member to get that book to help increase the students’ knowledge Your system’s good as far as saving money goes, but in doing this you may be cutting down on the amount of knowledge education a student may get. | won't say you'd be cutting down greatly - but you will cut down when every year there are new discoveries made in math, or biology, or chemistry...Now, we can keep a chemistry book for 30 years and students will be getting an education in chemistry - but I feel that the quality of education would go down Whether anyone wants to agree with it or not, college is for education. J think social life and education should be intermingled - but when you come right down to the brass tacks of it, we're here to get an education. If we can get it by going to another book, we should do it BODENHAMER: | feel that people who are in chemistry or math or upper level courses should be allowed to change books every quarter if ‘hey want...I'’m saying that when a teacher ooks at a book to use, he should be sure it’s good enough - (Continued pn page 4) , ! Loggins and Messina enchant exuberant crowd Re Manic gaiety pervades theater opening IT’S LATER THAN YOU THINK. Make jogging fun and easy. = ) iy PIZZACHEF |[f VOTE Now Open in our New Location# Thur, Apri Corner of 5th St. & Cotanche St pril 5 We Have DELICIOUS for PIZZA LASAGNA . SPAGHETTI SANDWICHES SGA Officers MRC Officers DELIVERY SERVICE WRC Officers 5-10p.m.7DAYSA Marshall WEEK. 752-7483 Allow 30-45 Minutes for Your Order to Arrive \ LY Lo uy one Muskee JUnIOr a yt ») mn eee =e fol) Los © ro eG fol, + iW eZ asm nae c= ' ! | ! Rio 6 AE a ONY oe OO gs a : SG LASSIELGD ve Campus Calendar ———_ Tuesday, April 3 Sunday, April 8 Se Mita, Api oie aa ae ok - : Tena ee co Tuesday, April 10 te ea : : ‘ a ee Thursday, April 5 FOR Al | Naan ‘ oe mF in ore oe ae Rriday, en . : Wednesday, April II ee , re Saturday, April 7 14th St. ajoins campu aw: § , F n ALt 4 tw + ' 3 pr 2 woven belts. Betsy Purvis 141 Ragsdale 152-9334 acrosse: £ TRIES CCGG IOC GEICO OIC SII IOI A AIK ROCK ‘N SOUL List price Our price $5.98 $3.59 HEARTWOOL NEW PERSU NEW SEATRAIN ERIC CLAPTON ( NEW BYRDS ~ ORIGI * 4053 be $10.00 mplete 5 & $10, Tables $3 & BOB SEGER BLACK LITTLE FEAT DIXIE NEW PROCOL HARUM NEW DOOBIE BROS cA NEW BLUE OYSTER CULT TYRANNY V NEW BLACK OAK ARKANSAS RAUNCH N RO! 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COMMUNITY HEALTH EDUCATION An important announcement to every student in the health professions NEW SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. THEY COVER TUITION AND RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL. Dr. Patricia Dunn, MEMORIAL GYM 201—B Mr. Donald R. Dancy, ALLIED HEALTH 302 Mi iss Vivien Edwards, ALLIED HEALTH 304 OQz270OUl LL LLLLLLLLLPLLLLLLLLELLLLLLLL LL LLL LLLLL LL LLL LLL LLL LL LLL A LLL PL LLL LL LALLA LLL LPP LL LL ILLL ALL LLL Ly SLELSS LLL. PLLA I rn SLLLLLLALLLPA LLL A ASSL ALL LAL ALAS LLLL LS \ N N N N , N A \ N N N N S N N Dr. Tom Johnson, MINGES COLISEUM 165 \ N N \ N N N N 8 N & ASML PLL BAL LSA on sdiael ( Hostage presents light’ view of Irish life Pr ace (Rick e) and Rio Rita spoil thew grand fun this way World War I song that was a defiance of uv 1 \ 1) wh« Shamefacedly they turn away from the death ‘The bells of Hell = go eca ivorites ypening sight of the lastest victim of man’s lust ting-a-ling-aling, for you but not me.” igh Tog with Mr. Mulleady, they for military thrills The play ends as he walks offstage i 4 a tang \ TROIS tc refrain of whistling jauntily ‘ We're here because we're queer because Or is he a victim? Is he perhaps, Maybe it's a dream, but it’s a beautiful we're here that brought down the instead, the triumphant spirit of men’s one as Behan wrote it. It was worth t refusal to bow down to others’ stupid being there to see in) McGinnis ee cruelty? Before the audience’s eyes Auditorium last week. Hope you made DIRECTOR'AND VOCALS COMMENDED Leslie rises to his feet and sings the old it Both director John Cannon and vocal coach Helen Steer are to be commended for the mani ety of the mghtlong e goings-on. If any fault could be found Ice Skatin with the work of either, it was simply that song and speech flowed into each ysther at so quick a pace there was no hance for the audience to laugh without 46 yo og ill locig wht came test. At times, seo, i YES” in Greenville aw was hard to see just why part of a song i was sung and the rest put into speech, At \ least: such switches complemented the delirious dream-deeling of the play, 1 A 1 ee If you will support it, please fill out and return this questionnaire Unfortunately the fun ends abruptly Portree nnn nnn nn nnn nn nnn nnn 5 with the arrival of the police, who have somehow got wind og Leslie’s presence NAME Phe lights go out, and guns blaze in the ADDRESS darkness When they are through, Leshe } : cae NUMBER IN FAMILY mysteriously The Irish amazed that he should dead-accidentally lies uselessly, pathetically dead stand round him Our family would like to Ice Skate | would like to Ice Skate ' ! 1 ' ' ' ' 1 ' J ' ' ' ' i Estimated number of times ! would skate ' WEEK MONTH YEAR ' ' 1 ! 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Maybe I’m twisting your words around, but you're SAL you don’t have at you're saying 1s MEN’S RESIDENCE COUNCIL lw not so ) 1 Q f *@ z as you get a J — that it’s not important what you learn so long as you get a little bit of (MRC) CANDIDATES Suppose a Psych book is put to use in 1968, fall quarter, 1969 is its second year, students who take the course in Spring of 69 will be stuck with that book That’s your problem all over again BODENHAMER: Yes, someone will have to pay eventually - just like the student who has to buy a new book at the beginning. But you'd be saving all these other people money in between PRESIDENT - Joe Johnson Dave Rosenberg Ron Sharples TREASURER - Don Rains CORRESPONDING SEC. - Bill Harrison RECORDING SEC. - Car! Richardson GOV. OF BELK - Alan Reimann GOV. OF SCOTT - Leon Brown GOV. OF JONES - Dade Sherman GOV. OF SLAY - Mike Tucker Jimmy Williams OF AYCOCK - Dave Winstead SPEECH, STREET FIGHT... FOUNTAINHEAD: One thing we'd like to ask what kind of contact will you have with the students before election besides picture handouts and publicity? Do you pla speech, debate, street fight...? SAUNDERS: | don’t know about the other candidates 6 places a nigh fraternities, sororities jorms. | f any type of but I speak in about 4 to after I’m finished there, I go over to the > women’s dorms a lot more receptive than the men’s dorms - my udent unity, and I find the men’s dorms a lot more students will sit and listen to you z and ‘Tonight will be SGA Meet-the-Candidate ch apathy that you wouldn’t get much of a student No one’s asked about my proposal to drop 12:00 classes...Old Dominion versity (in Virginia) tried this and found quite a rise in student unity...As it is you may never see your roommate on campus during the day idents here are all over everywhere and never together. By eliminating 12:00 classes, students would congregate at the Crotan, CU, anything everyone would GOV said WOMEN’S RESIDENCE COUNCIL (WRC) CANDIDATES FIRST VICE -PRES. - Debbie Dalton Cynthia Robbins SECOND VICE-PRES. - Jackie Whisenhunt St ‘ “Sp I mere * a4 be together, en masse. I'd like to see the done because next year when SGA enol mg am pmoty Lee elections roll around, out there on the Mall at 12:00 would be the perfect time to ‘ NG SEC. - Oma Faye Daniels hold some sort of debate FOUNTAINHEAD: Rob, what are you doing for your campaign besides giving ut handouts and the coverage given you by Fountainhead? Do you plan any speeches, debates or public presentations before the students? T'WILLEY the students The main thing is just to try to make myself as available as possible to I haven't planned any big convention hall-type thing cause the main obstacle to doing something like that is apathy on the part of the students SAUNDERS: I've been speaking mainly to small groups, fraternities and going to the dorms. I've found I see the candidates get air time on W , SOrorities an get to more students that way. I'd like to U to answer questions coming in over the phone SMALL GROUPS BODENHAMER I'd like to see a debate but because of the small amount of people that would turn out for something like that, I think Fountainhead would cover the issues better, But I've just been speaking mainly to small groups. FOUNTAINHEAD: Frank, you stated earlier you would like to see classes at 12 noor ited next year if elected. Have you looked into how long this would extend classes into late afternoon and what students think of this? SAUNDERS: I’ve had students come elimin up to me and ask the same question, wanting to know if this would mean they would be in classes until 9 o'clock at night. The majority of lab classes that meet from two to four or four to six would be the ones mostly affected by this This free hour for would me nan extra hour of classes in the afternoon, but would mean a students to be together FOUNTAINHEAD: Rob, what do you think of this idea? PWILLEY: Well I’m in Biology, and I’ve seen days there where I’ve had classes from eight in the morning until six at night and I think having a break at noon would be a great idea, but I don’t really see what all this has to do with the SGA BODENHAMER: | agree with what he says about the importance of being united, but | don’t see what cutting 12 o'clock classes has to do with it SAUNDERS: When people are together they can talk about these things. Having that one hour every day at lunch would give the students a chance to be together, and this would result in a more united student body en dear rb; — WOULD YOU BELIEVE pHoNDA x. 250K liberal financing tailored to fit the COLLEGE STUDENT'S budeet Around Campus INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE—Free for all Faculty, Staff and Students, by ECU Accounting Dep't. and the IRS V.L.T.A. program, Wright Aud. Lobby, 4-7 Mond. thru Thurs., 4-6 Friday, and 9 to Noon Saturday morning. VETERAN'S CLUB MEETING—The ECU Veteran’s Club will meet on Tuesday, April 3, Room 130 Rawl. The May Social and SGA elections will be discussed, Interested veterans are invited —ELECTRONIC MUSIC CONCERT- Gershon Kingsley’s First Moog Quartet, a leading ensemble of electronic music performers, will appear in concert at East Carolina University Tuesday, April 3. The concert is the conclucing event of the 1972-73 Student Union Artists Series, and is scheduled for 8:15 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. The Quartet performs conventional musical forms as well as entirely new sounds with the aid of four small but complex Moog sythesizers. Public tickets are available at the campus Central Ticket Office. Whenever a Navy plane is under electronic ontrol, that plane is in the hands of a Naval Flight Officer. Na candidate for Naval Flight Officer training you'll need some very special qualifications. First, you must really want to fly, even if you've never flown before. You'll also need a college degree and the kind of mind that works well with math land physics urally, as a Waiting at the end of program is a Navy Commission and the Golde Wings of a Naval Flight Officer. By then you be an expert in areas like Jet Navigation and Airborne Control your training equipped to do your job wherever you go But whatever your specialty, travel wil be part of your life. And so will challenge responsibility, achievement and reward The benefits aren't average either, A Naval Flight Officer can earn up to $10,000 spor completion of flight school. The pay after three years is up to $14,500 There 5 also 4 program the newest! STAN'S SPORTS CENTER 1025 evans st ph# 658-3013 HOTLINE: jumt arrived SUILBOUPS from s695° (Be a special kind of Navy Flyer. Be a Naval Flight Officer. Send coupon to: Lt Wallace Mangum, Navy Officer Programs, P.O. Box 2506, Raleigh, N. C. 27602, OR CALL COLLECT (919) 832-6629 my beatles are all scratched... the record bar has them all on f sale this week, including the new : ~ Beatle Antholo = | ...alSO Bed ovponiys7490q bith a all Pink Floyd, including _ STUDENT NURSES ASSOCIATION—Filing for elections of Student Nurses’ Association officers for 73-74 is being held now. Elections will be held at the Nursing Building during the departmental meeting, Monday, April 9. Those wishing to run may leave their name in NB212. All applications must be in by Friday, April 6 HEBREW YOUTH FELLOWSHIP—The Hebrew Youth Fellowship will hold a meeting Wednesday, April 4 at 8 p.m. at Friar Tuck's —STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN—The SCEC is. having an organizational meeting on Wednesday, April 4 at 6:30 p.m. in EP102. There will be a speaker, refreshments and a movie —BALDICER GAME-The Baldicer Game will be played during the Walk for Development meeting. The location is the Baptist Student Center. The game will be played at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 3. for obtaining 4 masters degree at no cost. The Navy gives its Naval Flight Officers the best If that’s the kind of career you're looking & for, and if you think you've got what it takes to be a Naval Flight Officer, send in the coupon Please send more information on what it be a Naval Flight Officer Name Age Agaress City State Zip PINK FLOYD PINK mt is @n fn @, T a Pg ' a. e ° | a a | 4 i ¢ Lj 1 6 r | , e LO C