<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039452_0001"/>
17<lb/>
ch<lb/>
of<lb/>
ted to<lb/>
!y on<lb/>
Jt the<lb/>
-imbers<lb/>
Force,<lb/>
ard or<lb/>
he best<lb/>
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lottery<lb/>
eached<lb/>
ie with<lb/>
10 were<lb/>
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think<lb/>
' from<lb/>
:uum in<lb/>
have to<lb/>
light of<lb/>
udents<lb/>
:hoolto<lb/>
i year's<lb/>
Service<lb/>
ndatory<lb/>
t to be<lb/>
ecessary<lb/>
out of<lb/>
a 1-A<lb/>
riables<lb/>
b in all<lb/>
ind the<lb/>
ie rate,<lb/>
iber of<lb/>
ada and<lb/>
oing to<lb/>
iduction<lb/>
tance is<lb/>
largest<lb/>
v 10 per<lb/>
nt cases<lb/>
Service.<lb/>
! most<lb/>
is the<lb/>
f it is<lb/>
'resident<lb/>
iis New<lb/>
'Win<lb/>
e is safe.<lb/>
.ii, then<lb/>
itary<lb/>
225,000<lb/>
xon, who<lb/>
the war,<lb/>
lat draft<lb/>
loids not<lb/>
rst article<lb/>
t ount ainhe d<lb/>
  and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. 1.No. 28<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
January 15, 1970<lb/>
Police training program<lb/>
may be ready by '70<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
page 2<lb/>
Music professor plans<lb/>
electronic music concert<lb/>
? <lb/>
 page 10<lb/>
MARTIN LUTHER KING'S dream was to love and serve humanity. Fountainhead pays<lb/>
tTbute to this great man on his birthday. See story on pages 6 and 7.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0002"/><lb/>
TJTW-yWr<lb/>
Page 2, Fountainhead, January 15, 1970, Thursdav<lb/>
Reading day<lb/>
but probable<lb/>
By BENJAMIN BAILEY<lb/>
Now. t ditoi<lb/>
Reading day will not beheld<lb/>
during the remaining academic<lb/>
year, but the Calendar<lb/>
Committee seems favorable foi<lb/>
having them next year, SGA<lb/>
president John Sohofield told<lb/>
the Legislature Monday.<lb/>
Schofield said the the<lb/>
Calendar Committee had<lb/>
studied the possibility ol<lb/>
continuing Reading Says this<lb/>
yeai but teels the schedule<lb/>
cannot be practically altered<lb/>
with such short range planning.<lb/>
In other business, a new<lb/>
legislatoi. Miss Jem Jones, was<lb/>
approved by acclamation and<lb/>
appointed to office She<lb/>
represents Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
A bill passed allowing a pep<lb/>
ivind from the School of Music<lb/>
to he sent to the ECU-N.C.<lb/>
State basketball game tonight<lb/>
The bill specified this game<lb/>
only. Future legislation is<lb/>
expected to permit pep b<lb/>
travel to all instate games<lb/>
The bill introduced b<lb/>
Steve Sharpe passed on a roll<lb/>
call vote<lb/>
Another hill introduced b<lb/>
pe p ov ded foi ail SGA<lb/>
executive officers to be<lb/>
isti ed during Ac of each<lb/>
 eai to serve a I 2 month term<lb/>
istead .?' the present<lb/>
squelched<lb/>
for next year<lb/>
nine month term was defeated<lb/>
Legislators who opposed the<lb/>
bill indicated that they desired<lb/>
to wait for information from<lb/>
other schools which use a<lb/>
12-month term.<lb/>
Appropriations totalling<lb/>
$47,405 weie made by four<lb/>
lulls introduced by Jim Watts.<lb/>
They are: S36.915 to the<lb/>
Buccaneer for printing: S3,575<lb/>
to VVECU for new equipment;<lb/>
$4,232 to The Rebel for<lb/>
operation expenses foi winter<lb/>
quartei and $2,683.68 for<lb/>
external affairs tor operation<lb/>
expenses. A bill for the<lb/>
ratification of the constitution<lb/>
of GAP was introduced and<lb/>
sent to the Rules Committee<lb/>
for study. It is expected to<lb/>
return to the floor next week.<lb/>
A hill foi the ratification of<lb/>
the constitution of Sigma Tau<lb/>
Sigma a service fraternity, was<lb/>
also sent to the Rules<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Both bills were introduced<lb/>
b Steve Shai pe<lb/>
a resolution introduced b<lb/>
Rogei Tripp, was passed<lb/>
declaring Jan 15 as Big Atate<lb/>
Game Day , and provided foi a<lb/>
telegram to be sent to the<lb/>
p resident of N.C. State<lb/>
University " iming him of<lb/>
the ' esc . '<lb/>
Correctional Science Center<lb/>
may be approved for 1970<lb/>
By JUDY MORRIS<lb/>
Plans are being developed<lb/>
foi a Centei for the Study of<lb/>
Correctional Sciences and<lb/>
Police Administration.<lb/>
John R Ball, chairman of<lb/>
the Social Welfare department,<lb/>
said that he expects the<lb/>
proposal to be approved and<lb/>
funds made available by March<lb/>
1, 1970.<lb/>
The proposal is a joint effort<lb/>
on the parts of the Mid East<lb/>
Economic De elopment<lb/>
Commission and ECU.<lb/>
The Mid East Economic<lb/>
De elopment Commission is<lb/>
co ncei ne d w i t h the<lb/>
development of the economic<lb/>
and hi nan resc urces of Pitt<lb/>
County ad s?x othei<lb/>
surrounding counties.<lb/>
The p I a nni n g a nd<lb/>
development phase is expected<lb/>
 n 18 to 24 months<lb/>
during which time se<lb/>
educational activities, such as<lb/>
workshops with professionals<lb/>
in the field of law and order.<lb/>
v.ill begin.<lb/>
The undergrade,at- program,<lb/>
offering instruction in the<lb/>
c o r r e c t i o n a I a n d poll c e<lb/>
ninistration fields, is<lb/>
expected to begin in two years.<lb/>
The program will involve three<lb/>
phases: a degree-granting<lb/>
program research, and<lb/>
continuing education.<lb/>
The degree-granting aspect<lb/>
of the program will involve the<lb/>
awarding of a Bachelor of<lb/>
Science degree in Correctional<lb/>
Science andor Police<lb/>
Administration.<lb/>
This would involve a regular<lb/>
four-year progiam with two<lb/>
years spent in general college<lb/>
and two years in the<lb/>
correctional or administrative<lb/>
field.<lb/>
The degiee granting program<lb/>
c. Ml offer an educational<lb/>
. perience for students and an<lb/>
applied educational experience<lb/>
at correctional institutions or<lb/>
administrative offices.<lb/>
The second phase of the<lb/>
program will involve research<lb/>
foi which the federal<lb/>
government offers grants.<lb/>
The researchers choose a<lb/>
problem m law enforcement,<lb/>
crime or correction and try to<lb/>
discover its reasons and<lb/>
answers.<lb/>
The National Institute of<lb/>
Law Enforcement and Criminal<lb/>
Justice, of the United States<lb/>
Department of Justice, is<lb/>
offering grant of up to $10,000<lb/>
for research done in this field<lb/>
and also grants for doctorates<lb/>
provided that the doctorial<lb/>
dissertation is conducted on<lb/>
some aspect of aw<lb/>
enforcement or criminal<lb/>
justice.<lb/>
The third phase of the<lb/>
program is in the area of<lb/>
continuing education.<lb/>
This area will make it<lb/>
possible for graduates to<lb/>
continue to learn the latest<lb/>
developments in the field of<lb/>
correctional sciences and police<lb/>
administration<lb/>
Ball said, "The main<lb/>
objective of this program is to<lb/>
educate rather than train our<lb/>
police officers involved in these<lb/>
fields<lb/>
"With this education, police<lb/>
officers may earn more money<lb/>
and will better serve their<lb/>
community as an pnahler as<lb/>
well as an enforcer of the law<lb/>
said Ball.<lb/>
Mrs.Lamm-always being teased<lb/>
By KAREN BLANSFIELD<lb/>
Stafl <lb/>
Mrs Doi s La? is the k nd<lb/>
of pe -1 ' al  ' ases<lb/>
oves ' In fact she<lb/>
said I don '  .? hat t s<lb/>
x- to . ??? thoi t t<lb/>
Mrs - as een<lb/>
seci etai 1 fc D ;nkins<lb/>
foi the past . ?.  ha I<lb/>
. t  gh sh h as a :tt<lb/>
She started  - i at E<lb/>
- 1 952 " tht Ri strar's<lb/>
" ? Sh  ked then fo<lb/>
out three ears and then<lb/>
beca ne sec eta . fc Jenk ns<lb/>
h: ,vas then th )ear . '<lb/>
E C L V. h e n - - - a n e<lb/>
Pres '  stayed n the<lb/>
si rai s office ant ' 968<lb/>
 hen she  ted  - lg fc<lb/>
h n aga n<lb/>
S  e r e c a -   ? h<lb/>
a nusement the ' st I ne she<lb/>
working fc<lb/>
i . r. .  e? <lb/>
the : ne He zz ne nto m.<lb/>
office c ne nog ??? h e was<lb/>
buSN somethinq a<lb/>
asked me wanted I g: I ;<lb/>
s j je s saic<lb/>
yes and cont ? lo ng m<lb/>
, cm k ?"? t 5 m nutes a.er I<lb/>
suddenly -eae-c a: he had<lb/>
said, and I tore out and went<lb/>
f ing onei tc Di Messk s<lb/>
o" ce a e he sat as k<lb/>
and gentile as be<lb/>
said can't g to work<lb/>
asked Becat se do n't kn .?.<lb/>
 <lb/>
But<lb/>
h ri  ays I s .<lb/>
the best thin gs  s<lb/>
-<lb/>
P ?? ' ' - b .<lb/>
? 2 ? ?: i r i f 1<lb/>
Mrs, Dons Lamm loves working as Dr. Jenkins' secretary.<lb/>
h m ot me on m own He s<lb/>
not the ? look c-<lb/>
He give yc<lb/>
?<lb/>
and therefore  :?. tc dc<lb/>
oui res: He s . e ? ,<lb/>
. nderstarr d ng, and a n ice<lb/>
son tc .??? foi ani  tr<lb/>
She 'Oves id says<lb/>
It s the only job in which . e<lb/>
neve had a da here I didn :<lb/>
ird to 00? tc<lb/>
'? ob wot<lb/>
the . : ,?, thout the<lb/>
'o' e coo ting i<lb/>
beaut  i with us<lb/>
M?ut hei boss sh - Wed<lb/>
Being the ?. na - c perse<lb/>
s he has sometl<lb/>
the time That s  h <lb/>
s iteresl<lb/>
I I i<lb/>
-<lb/>
" - to die Jenkins chUd<lb/>
I like to call them partly<lb/>
m owm she said. Often,<lb/>
wher then oare-ts ae :? <lb/>
towr she sta.s at th<lb/>
: th them and occ.<lb/>
?- jns -? ands few them, such<lb/>
is tat ng one of them to the<lb/>
St<lb/>
5 - e ? e c a e  with<lb/>
a m u s em er: the : me when<lb/>
wjest, called the<lb/>
Ff - a-o said that he had to<lb/>
be 3: a bail game in 15<lb/>
m n.<lb/>
His mother and siste-s were<lb/>
?" ' " - rather was n<lb/>
conference, t eft my <lb/>
him t<lb/>
S<lb/>
"Th<lb/>
e SO;<lb/>
her two year old grandson,<lb/>
Chris, who is living with her<lb/>
temporarily while his mother<lb/>
finishes some classes here.<lb/>
She said, "I can't decide if<lb/>
he is keeping me younger or<lb/>
ing me older. But you C3n<lb/>
rest assured there's never a dull<lb/>
moment<lb/>
Another of her interests is<lb/>
cooking, although she admits<lb/>
that her husband is really a<lb/>
better cook than she is.<lb/>
"I can't imagine going into<lb/>
the kitchen  thi tut him.<lb/>
That s . here we usually spend<lb/>
out time together<lb/>
She added laughingly, "He<lb/>
said that her" we retire, we're<lb/>
going to build a house with a<lb/>
? tchen with two stoves-one<lb/>
' ? him and one for me '<lb/>
Mrs Lamm s favorite sport<lb/>
is football, and she is also very<lb/>
devoted to the band. "Quite<lb/>
frequently my husband and I<lb/>
will stop b the field and<lb/>
watch the band practice. We<lb/>
have chaperoned several band<lb/>
trips and thoroughly enjoy it<lb/>
To oro.e her devotion, she<lb/>
cited a time, several years ago,<lb/>
?hen ECU played<lb/>
eastern University in the<lb/>
Eastern Bowl Game in<lb/>
Pennsylvania.<lb/>
We drove all night, through<lb/>
one of the worst snowstorms<lb/>
i e ever seen The next day we<lb/>
.??atched the game in 20 degree<lb/>
weather with a stiff wind<lb/>
 -s " Oor 'aces<lb/>
smile.<lb/>
A committee to investigate<lb/>
the possibility of establishing a<lb/>
"Learning Laboratory has<lb/>
been named by Provost Robert<lb/>
E, Williams.<lb/>
Williams said that the studies<lb/>
and ex periences of the<lb/>
Mathematics and English<lb/>
Departments indicate that<lb/>
students who are not ready for<lb/>
basic work could be greatly<lb/>
helped through a<lb/>
developmental and<lb/>
supplemental program designed<lb/>
to erase academic deficiencies<lb/>
in particular areas.<lb/>
Williams said that the<lb/>
student's work in the lab<lb/>
would probably precede his<lb/>
enrolling in a course for .vhich<lb/>
he lacks preparation<lb/>
He said that a student who<lb/>
lacks background for Math 65<lb/>
usually is not helped by failing<lb/>
and then repeating the course.<lb/>
He needs something else, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The six-man committee K<lb/>
headed by Dr. John Davis<lb/>
Director of Institutional<lb/>
Research. It is anticipated the<lb/>
committee will consider the<lb/>
possible use of auto-tutoriaf<lb/>
devices and computer assisted<lb/>
instruction in the objected<lb/>
laboratory.<lb/>
GAP w as<lb/>
scheduled in the las: iss<lb/>
5 00 p.m. meeting So<lb/>
the Legislature<lb/>
meeting will be<lb/>
201<lb/>
GAP also ?sh<lb/>
announce a meel<lb/>
GreenviHe 27 on Fi 1<lb/>
at 1113 E.a-jj<lb/>
rectly<lb/>
for a<lb/>
3V in<lb/>
The<lb/>
, UU<lb/>
i to<lb/>
I the<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0003"/><lb/>
?:?; ?,<lb/>
id<lb/>
The<lb/>
n UU<lb/>
,? the<lb/>
? at 5<lb/>
Vienna Boys Choir<lb/>
program provides<lb/>
delight, amazement<lb/>
Thursday, January 15, 1970. Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
By CHRIS LOWDER<lb/>
. , oi Music Reporter<lb/>
In Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Tuesday night, the Vienna<lb/>
Boys Choir thrilled and amazed<lb/>
a capacity crowd. The group of<lb/>
tWentv boys, one of three<lb/>
Vienna choirs, ages 10 to 14,<lb/>
sang vith great precision and<lb/>
style. Alhert Anglberger,<lb/>
musi al director of the choir,<lb/>
superb as a pianist and<lb/>
conductoi.<lb/>
Of their program, several<lb/>
selei fions featured a soloist.<lb/>
Cocinite by Johann<lb/>
R ittei V. Herbeck, was<lb/>
beautifully pei formed by the<lb/>
soprano solo. However,<lb/>
because of his soloist qualities,<lb/>
his oice did not blend with<lb/>
thi othei voices to produce the<lb/>
sonoiity usually heard from a<lb/>
chon.<lb/>
The blend thai they lacked<lb/>
on tin f;i  part of the program<lb/>
completely negated in the<lb/>
Supervisor<lb/>
applications<lb/>
now open<lb/>
CU is now accepting<lb/>
m the new six year<lb/>
students<lb/>
)ro(ram foi school supervisors.<lb/>
The piogram, to begin next<lb/>
hich was approved by<lb/>
State Board of Highei<lb/>
1 tion recently removed<lb/>
pri ival from the State<lb/>
I ol I lucation<lb/>
Piovosl Robert E. Williams<lb/>
?"I thai a team liom the State<lb/>
 ol Educat i on a nd<lb/>
il Teachei Education<lb/>
 isi t ed the campus and<lb/>
reported thai the program here<lb/>
'i1 all state standards and<lb/>
guidelines. Only Appalachian<lb/>
State University and North<lb/>
Caiolma Central University at<lb/>
rham currently offer the<lb/>
program in the iate.<lb/>
Williams said that this new<lb/>
program will be staffed by<lb/>
sight faculty members who<lb/>
have had preparation in school<lb/>
administration and supervision.<lb/>
And had additional experience<lb/>
a1 both the public school and<lb/>
college oi university level.<lb/>
lo be eligible for admission<lb/>
' the program, a student must<lb/>
hod a Master's Degree and<lb/>
)i oi qualify to hold a North<lb/>
?; 3 r o I i n a Supervisor's<lb/>
Certificate. Applicants should<lb/>
have five years of school<lb/>
ixperience and have recieved a<lb/>
inimum score of 625 on the<lb/>
National Teacher's Exam. In<lb/>
add'tion, the applicant must<lb/>
esent three orofessional<lb/>
?ms of recommendatio<lb/>
i'liams said, "We are<lb/>
ell9h ffei this program<lb/>
 lh'1' " will be of gieat<lb/>
er)B"r to the school systems<lb/>
? North Carolina, particularly<lb/>
0 those m eastern North<lb/>
Carolina "<lb/>
humorous presentation of<lb/>
Jaques Offenbach's Herr Und<lb/>
Madame Denis. The one-act<lb/>
comic opera, having a very<lb/>
liberal and "American"<lb/>
translation, presented a very<lb/>
natural side of the boys, not<lb/>
seen before.<lb/>
In the third section, they<lb/>
presented several songs by<lb/>
Schubert and The Blue Danube<lb/>
by Johann Strauss. Although<lb/>
these compositions were<lb/>
performed with the same<lb/>
delicacy of the first selection,<lb/>
the height ol the evening was<lb/>
the encore, Oh, Susanna! An<lb/>
interview after the concert<lb/>
revealed that this was their<lb/>
favorite piece.<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Vienna Boys Choir performed before a capacity crowd in Wright A<lb/>
(Photo by Charles Griffin)<lb/>
uditorium.<lb/>
BECAUSE THERE IS NO<lb/>
RADIO FREE AMERICA:<lb/>
"Ours is the oniy publication which lets the rest of<lb/>
the world tell its story to the American people<lb/>
Malcolm Muir, Jr Editor in Chief<lb/>
You won't agree with everything you<lb/>
read in ATLAS. We don't. Each month we reprint<lb/>
exactly what the world press is saying. Pravda,<lb/>
Le Figaro, Der Spiegel, The Times of London,<lb/>
The Peking People's Daily- -and 600 more. And<lb/>
each month more senators, Cabinet members,<lb/>
international business leaders, newspaper edi-<lb/>
tors each month more informed people sub-<lb/>
scribe to ATLAS. Since just last year circulation<lb/>
has more than quadrupled, from 30,000 to<lb/>
125,000. We couldn't attract the people we do,<lb/>
if ATLAS wasn't saying something.<lb/>
It is.<lb/>
Consider just a few articles in our June<lb/>
issue. From France's newsweekly L'Fxpress,<lb/>
ATLAS translates a deeply provocative editorial<lb/>
called "The Risk France Runs It's written by<lb/>
L'Express's founder-editor, Jean-Jacques Ser-<lb/>
van-Schreiber. He warns: France and other<lb/>
Western nations must henceforth elect polit-<lb/>
ical leaders "at least as qualified as those<lb/>
chosen to rule industrial empires He care-<lb/>
fully then spells out democracy's classic<lb/>
malady.<lb/>
Next, an historic interview by the editors<lb/>
of Hamburg's enterprising Der Spiegel with<lb/>
Henry Ford II. In a burst of blunt candor, Ford<lb/>
acknowledges he was wrong in underestimat-<lb/>
ing German cars, wishes he had bought Volks-<lb/>
wagen 20 years ago. He finds the Germans<lb/>
sporting competitors. But he is "furious" with<lb/>
the Japanese. He promises to show them "what<lb/>
competitive fighting is<lb/>
From Stockholm's daily Dagens Nyheter,<lb/>
a delightful essay in which a gifted Swedish<lb/>
editor ponders a weighty question Why Amer-<lb/>
icans never call their new President "RMN<lb/>
From the East African Standard of Nai-<lb/>
robi, a startling, documented report on how<lb/>
France has quietly maintained top military and<lb/>
political power in eleven African republics.<lb/>
Also: From Prague's brave but now<lb/>
banned intellectual monthly, Listy, a powerful,<lb/>
beautiful, tragic fantasy. From Rome's L'Ex-<lb/>
presso, a dramatic charge by a rebellious schol-<lb/>
ar-priest. From The Jerusalem Post weekly,<lb/>
Israel's Art Buchwald states his terms for a<lb/>
Mid-East settlement.<lb/>
Each month you'll find humor, business<lb/>
forecasts, cartoons, fiction, the lively arts, sci-<lb/>
entific reports, editorials?articles on which<lb/>
future headlines will be based. Each month<lb/>
these are what 125,000 subscribers see in<lb/>
ATLAS.<lb/>
We publish ATLAS because there is no<lb/>
Radio Free America.<lb/>
We can because this is America:<lb/>
SEND ME A 12-MONTH INTRODUCTORY SUB-<lb/>
SCRIPTION TO ATLAS FOR $4.50  JUST HALF<lb/>
PRICE, STARTING WITH THE NEXT ISSUE.<lb/>
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P.O. Box 2961, Clinton, Iowa 52732<lb/>
Name<lb/>
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? Payment Enclosed<lb/>
Zip Code<lb/>
? Bi<lb/>
me<lb/>
1?042?12?177 15<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0004"/><lb/>
iMBBMP" '<lb/>
4 Fountainhead, Januarv 15 1970. 1<lb/>
. , Ann Lawyers dispute on<lb/>
Cleetwood restates rules of student ,academjc free(Jom.<lb/>
conduct after Rose High disruption<lb/>
Speaking to a student<lb/>
assembly Tuesday, Di. CC-<lb/>
Cleetwood restated nine basic<lb/>
tules of student conduct, in<lb/>
view of the second racial<lb/>
disturbance in three months at<lb/>
Rose High School.<lb/>
No fighting or threats,<lb/>
respect of teachers, attending<lb/>
classes and steps to a<lb/>
confrontation are covered in<lb/>
the nine basic rules.<lb/>
"Once we deal effectively<lb/>
th the uoublemakeis<lb/>
will be in fine shape. We all<lb/>
realize that the great majority<lb/>
of students, black and white,<lb/>
simply want an education. We<lb/>
are going to make this<lb/>
possible, said Cleetv.ood.<lb/>
Violations of these rules .<lb/>
result in summa suspension<lb/>
th oiobable suspens<lb/>
pending a formal hearing sa i<lb/>
Cleetwood. It s furl<lb/>
sed thai th si ue statui .<lb/>
violations s ubject '<lb/>
action said Cleel<lb/>
Tuesday afl si .a1<lb/>
i, ? s milling in the halls were<lb/>
urn to class or<lb/>
the grounds. Man<lb/>
A warrent foi a Negroe n<lb/>
student was signed b<lb/>
Cleetwood. charging disorderly<lb/>
duct. As of Wednesdav<lb/>
ning, the student was still<lb/>
m Pat County jail.<lb/>
Conf thi suspension<lb/>
of ten students, Pnncipli<lb/>
Glenn Co said, "Th? ,<lb/>
been suspended because of<lb/>
? - ?<lb/>
fracus. We wanted to get them<lb/>
out of the situation until a<lb/>
hearing can be set up i<lb/>
ran yet all the facts<lb/>
Othei action resulting from<lb/>
Monday's disturbance involve<lb/>
three warrents being served.<lb/>
A white teachei signed<lb/>
. ents against two female<lb/>
students charging<lb/>
derly conduct and assault<lb/>
A Negroe teachei signed a<lb/>
enl against a female<lb/>
v student on charges of<lb/>
disoi li ? onduct and assault.<lb/>
 three are out on bond.<lb/>
inspescified numbei of<lb/>
pohci stateioned at Rose<lb/>
Tuesda and Wednesday<lb/>
according to Police Chief T. E.<lb/>
Gladson<lb/>
Ae are playing it from a<lb/>
? standpoint foi everybody<lb/>
in Greenville said Gladson,<lb/>
enough people ovei<lb/>
there to keep things quiet<lb/>
CHAPEL HI LI (APIA<lb/>
Charlotte lawyei told a special<lb/>
trial committee last Tuesday<lb/>
night that the anti disruption<lb/>
policy of the UNC Board of<lb/>
Trustees is contrary to<lb/>
academic freedom.<lb/>
Adam Stem said this as he<lb/>
argued in defense of David<lb/>
B levins, UNC sociology<lb/>
professoi who is accused of<lb/>
violating the anti disruption<lb/>
policy by failure to meet with<lb/>
his Charlotte class on Oct. 15,<lb/>
Vietnam Moratoi mm Day.<lb/>
Stein argued thai the<lb/>
trustees had set up a policy<lb/>
that "reflects only the views of<lb/>
the tiustees nnd that view may<lb/>
he different from that of the<lb/>
faculty oi the stuHuts<lb/>
Fust arguments foi and<lb/>
against Blevins were made Nov.<lb/>
12 to the speck committee<lb/>
Play better fast<lb/>
Trade<lb/>
<lb/>
k i w i i iiiv<lb/>
( iilorms i I ? ?(?. V Kults<lb/>
ff?. under I v andswiadian pulcnls<lb/>
Don't invest another penny in obsolete golf balls<lb/>
 .until you check this offer!<lb/>
? - j f you r g fei with the where-<lb/>
II A ? -z ? ii ai brave the course with a<lb/>
prern urT : ?  :  ?; more mportant if you re<lb/>
fe,  ???  3bs iti .?? nl: perfect your<lb/>
e that v i have been lying 3 pu ?<lb/>
f balls that CUT go out of i jnd and lose<lb/>
3 jet) ; rs: r .e ?  I ng the<lb/>
Tl 3e ftei : it per dozen<lb/>
.<lb/>
-<lb/>
ns n we hav 3 rev   -ry new ONE-<lb/>
? : that sells for two dollars and I M .<lb/>
- That's a lot of money for a golf ball! But<lb/>
 ???  :e as much as common golf balls<lb/>
. he  s rr strokes off your score<lb/>
Here's what you'll doand what we II do.<lb/>
e Two Fifty s on the course Play them Make<lb/>
every effort to slay them Then at the end of thi<lb/>
days if Two Fifty s do not dramatically improve youi<lb/>
game drive farther, hit straighter. putt truer TRIM<lb/>
STROKES OFF YOUR SCORE just send them bark<lb/>
- and we II gladly trade Two Fifty s for any of the<lb/>
conventional balls listed below No questions aski<lb/>
we II cheerfully send them out post haste ai I<lb/>
postpaid<lb/>
Here s conviction' Any one TwoFif$y - may be traded in<lb/>
for any two of these time honored brands<lb/>
? ?? <lb/>
?<lb/>
- A '<lb/>
seei " ? TWO FIFTY m action<lb/>
 what we mear On every stro-Ke you gain blaz-<lb/>
?  ngan always round golf<lb/>
that ma a ns a lz center of gravity and<lb/>
ince all the time-wr-  means longer truer<lb/>
It<lb/>
h shots<lb/>
Here are the BIG differences<lb/>
TWC z FT ? 5 have no r 5tee - quid re to<lb/>
st-  :omp et? . ? mmating the nusiai :e I wob-<lb/>
ble ?the nast hara :er stic wound g f ba Is<lb/>
that aiffects the ght d1 even perfect and ne u ; ? i<lb/>
fectdi .? ei hngthemyardsofftheintendedmark<lb/>
You II enjoy more accurate putting.<lb/>
TWO FIFTY s perfect balance will give you greater<lb/>
accuracy The smooth indestructible surface will<lb/>
r-elp you putt right or the old cup<lb/>
No cover to cut.<lb/>
No stretching or snapping rubber bands-the hid-<lb/>
den villains that ultimately rob you of extra bounce<lb/>
for extra yards<lb/>
TWOFIFTYs last longer.<lb/>
Guaranteed m writing not to cut. craze, chio or even<lb/>
go out of round Of course if something does hap-<lb/>
pen to these little beauties-we II replace them at<lb/>
our expense<lb/>
Note: This is a pre-distribution offer. TwoFifty's<lb/>
will be sold through golf course pro shops only.<lb/>
it II (j upi?n bt'inl toi oni? Six or ? oozi<lb/>
'?. this great new golf ball at absolutely no risk<lb/>
must work for you-or we II trade oi : .?? , u i ash<lb/>
refund<lb/>
Whichareaofyourgamedo you want to strengthen<lb/>
in a single round? Drives, approaches, putting?<lb/>
Send for TWOFIFTY s today'<lb/>
Golden Golfer b<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
GOLDEN GOLFERS<lb/>
? i?? l<lb/>
( lltlltMl li .1<lb/>
trade<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Rush me my order postpaid'<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
appointed by UNC President<lb/>
William Friday to hear the<lb/>
charges. They were completed<lb/>
last Tuesday night.<lb/>
Robert Mellot. UNC Law<lb/>
School professoi representing<lb/>
the University, told the<lb/>
committee that it was not up<lb/>
to the committee to decide<lb/>
what constitutes academic<lb/>
freedom or freedom of speech ?<lb/>
"Blevins could have been<lb/>
more radical on Od 15 and<lb/>
have participated a nationwide<lb/>
strike Stein said, "but he did<lb/>
not do that. He took great<lb/>
pains to provide tor his class so<lb/>
that their education could<lb/>
continue that day<lb/>
According to testimony m<lb/>
the case, Blevins told his<lb/>
students that on Moratorium<lb/>
Day they could eithei (I) hold<lb/>
informal discussions amonq<lb/>
themselves, (2) go to the<lb/>
library and work on term<lb/>
papers he had assigned, or (3)<lb/>
participate in the moratorium.<lb/>
The evidence indicated the<lb/>
university sent a substitute to<lb/>
fill Blevins' plan; when it was<lb/>
learned he would not meet his<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Library begins<lb/>
new order system<lb/>
A co in puteri ed hook<lb/>
oi r jm mil system is now in<lb/>
effect at Joy net Library,<lb/>
accoi ding to D u ectoi of<lb/>
Library Services Wendell W<lb/>
Smiley<lb/>
The pi imai y objective of the<lb/>
system, known as BATAB, will<lb/>
be to i educe most of the<lb/>
i lei ical woi k involved in<lb/>
ordei ing hooks and to (? eep an<lb/>
accurate recorrl of each hook<lb/>
oi dei ed.<lb/>
it will also decrease the<lb/>
amount of time it takes foi the<lb/>
publishing company to fill the<lb/>
oi dei s<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
HATS OFF TO<lb/>
Gary Frederick<lb/>
Gary finished first<lb/>
in both the 1000<lb/>
and 500 yard<lb/>
freestyle events<lb/>
in last Friday s<lb/>
swim meet<lb/>
against<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
???'?:? SS<lb/>
?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0005"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
News briefs<lb/>
Thuisday, January 15, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
Ajhe Rebel, campus literary<lb/>
magazine, is accepting<lb/>
manuscripts for its winter<lb/>
edition.<lb/>
Editor Rod Ketner urges<lb/>
anyone in the University<lb/>
community to contribute short<lb/>
stories, poetry, reviews or<lb/>
prose to the magazine.<lb/>
Manuscripts should be sent<lb/>
to Box 2486, Greenville, or<lb/>
taken to The Rebel office in<lb/>
?15 Wright Annex.<lb/>
9 A six week bottle collection<lb/>
campaign resulted in a new<lb/>
color television being added to<lb/>
Belk Dormitory.<lb/>
Campaign proceeds,<lb/>
supplemented by MRC funds,<lb/>
purchased the first color set for<lb/>
residents of "The Hill' at<lb/>
factory cost of $427.<lb/>
Belk Hall was awarded the<lb/>
set by a lottery drawing Dec.<lb/>
16.<lb/>
Future plans include<lb/>
providing all of the men's dorm<lb/>
lounges with color T.Vs this<lb/>
year according to Assistant<lb/>
Dean uf Men C.C. Rowe, MRC<lb/>
adviser.<lb/>
"The priority given to this<lb/>
school will, of course, be as<lb/>
much enthusiasm and MRC<lb/>
entertainment and sevice as<lb/>
funds dictate, " Rowe said.<lb/>
The council's budget for the<lb/>
winter quarter is $1,000.<lb/>
9 ECU has been awarded a<lb/>
$1,000 matching grant for the<lb/>
second consecutive year by the<lb/>
National Endowment for the<lb/>
Arts. The grant has been<lb/>
matched by the SGA and is<lb/>
being used for an audience<lb/>
development project.<lb/>
According to Rudolph<lb/>
Alexander assistant dean of<lb/>
student affuirs and concert<lb/>
manager, the funds are being<lb/>
used in an effort to increase<lb/>
interest in the fine arts among<lb/>
all people of North Carolina.<lb/>
Free music concerts open to all<lb/>
North Carolinians are being<lb/>
funded by the grant.<lb/>
Alexander, who is in charge<lb/>
of the audience development<lb/>
project, applied for the grant<lb/>
through the Association of<lb/>
College and University Concert<lb/>
Managers(ACUCM.)<lb/>
"I am particularly pleased<lb/>
with our recieving the<lb/>
maximum grant for the second<lb/>
consecutive year Alexander<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"It indicates the continued<lb/>
recognition by the ACUCM of<lb/>
the outstanding Fine Arts<lb/>
Concert Series presented by<lb/>
the SGA here<lb/>
?The University Union is<lb/>
sponsoring in table tennis,<lb/>
bowling and billiards<lb/>
tournaments this week through<lb/>
Jan. 22.<lb/>
The men's singles table<lb/>
tennis will begin Jan. 14 at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in the student union.<lb/>
The men's doubles will begin<lb/>
Jan. 21 also at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Women's sing es table tennis<lb/>
will begin Jan. 15 at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Pocket billirds is slated for<lb/>
Jan. 20 at 6:00 p.m. at Ace<lb/>
Billiard Parlor on Cotanche<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
The bowling tournament is<lb/>
being held this week at Hilcrest<lb/>
Lanes.<lb/>
Join the ?f)f) Crowd x<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
I  (?? nvilU Itlvii<lb/>
l 2f4 H Pass)<lb/>
Dli INN ml AKh Oil I<lb/>
i all Mtc.ul r-or I aster Service<lb/>
?James A. Sear assistant<lb/>
professor of music and<lb/>
chairman of the<lb/>
Comprehensive Musicianship<lb/>
Project (CMP), has been invited<lb/>
to be a faculty member in the<lb/>
summer workshop in<lb/>
comprehensive musicianship<lb/>
for school music teachers.<lb/>
Three workshops are being<lb/>
held this summer under the<lb/>
auspices of the CMP. The CMP<lb/>
is associated with the Music<lb/>
Educators National Conference<lb/>
and is operating under a grant<lb/>
from the Ford Foundation.<lb/>
The workshops will be held<lb/>
at Wichita State University,<lb/>
George Peabody College<lb/>
forTeachers, and San Jose<lb/>
State College.<lb/>
As chairman of the CMP,<lb/>
Searl directed the experimental<lb/>
stages of the project and is now<lb/>
directing the comprehensive<lb/>
musicianship course which has<lb/>
become the core of the<lb/>
freshman and sophom ore<lb/>
music curriculum here.<lb/>
record bar<lb/>
discount records<lb/>
DURHAM ? CHAPEL HILL ? RALEIGH ? ROCKY MOUNT ? CHARLOTTE ? GREENVILLE<lb/>
DON'T MISS IT<lb/>
THE NEW BEATLES ALBUM<lb/>
EXPECTED THIS WEEK<lb/>
ATTENTION BUDGET CLASSIC BUYERS<lb/>
VOX STEREO ALBUMS<lb/>
REGULAR S4.98<lb/>
NOW ONLY $1.49<lb/>
PRESENTS <lb/>
THE RECORD BAR'S GIGANTIC ABC SALE<lb/>
ANY ARTIST ON ANY LABEL WHOSE LAST NAME OR NAME<lb/>
OF GROUP STARTS WITH THE LETTERS A, B, OR C<lb/>
ARE ON SALE THIS WEEKEND<lb/>
.<lb/>
HERBALPERT<lb/>
ALLMAD BROTHERS<lb/>
ANIMALS<lb/>
ED AMES<lb/>
EDDY ARNOLD<lb/>
LAURINDO ALMEIDA<lb/>
ERIC ANDERSON<lb/>
CHET ATKINS<lb/>
CANNON BALL ADDERLY<lb/>
JOAN BAEZ<lb/>
BEATLES<lb/>
BLOOD' SWEAT AND TEARS<lb/>
JAMES BROWN<lb/>
JERRY BUTLER<lb/>
BROOKLYN BRIDGE<lb/>
DANIEL BARENBOIM<lb/>
BLUES BREAKERS<lb/>
THE BAND<lb/>
BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS<lb/>
GLEN CAMPBELL<lb/>
JUDY COLLINS<lb/>
MARIA CALLAS<lb/>
CREEDANCE CLEARWATER<lb/>
CREAM<lb/>
CORELLI<lb/>
CTA<lb/>
JOHNNY CASH<lb/>
CHAMBERS BROTHERS<lb/>
PLUS MANY OTHERS REG. $4.98 NOW ONLY $3.35<lb/>
REG $598 NOW ONLY $4.19 REG. $6.98<lb/>
8 TRACK CARTRIDGE TAPES $5.49<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0006"/><lb/>
DBSiVHHPHmHBx<lb/>
Page 6, Fountainhead. January 15, 1970, Thursday<lb/>
A Tribute to<lb/>
<lb/>
 say toyouMmven t)<lb/>
rooted in the American Dream. I me a<lb/>
these truths to be self-evidenimmnen a.<lb/>
tt?i'<lb/>
M<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
?H?.<lb/>
slaves and the sons of formetsmmners<lb/>
the state of Mississippi, a state mm wit!<lb/>
freedom and justice. I have a II my <lb/>
skin but by the content of them<lb/>
Born January 15,1929<lb/>
f f<lb/>
-?<lb/>
?r.v ?js-t-<lb/>
low. The rough places will be M<lb/>
this faith we<lb/>
will be able to hew out oh<lb/>
and<lb/>
)in c<lb/>
Died April 4,1968<lb/>
rX<lb/>
struggle together, go to jail together,<lb/>
to<lb/>
be able to sing with new meaning, "let freedom ring.<lb/>
tedc<lb/>
SoWmlom<lb/>
of New York. But not only that. Let freedom ring from Stone Moun<lb/>
allow freedom to ring?when we let it ring from every city and every hamlet.<lb/>
??' <lb/>
men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing<lb/>
in , wodW Ne<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0007"/><lb/>
Thursday, January 15, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 7<lb/>
Luther King, Jr.<lb/>
a to youMmven though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply<lb/>
n Dream.<lb/>
we a<lb/>
dream that one day this nation will rise up, liveout the true meaning of its creed: "We hold<lb/>
'f-evidenul&amp;ien are created equal I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia sons of former<lb/>
? formuJ&amp;ners will be able to sit down together at the table of orotherhood. i have a dream that one day even<lb/>
i, a state:<lb/>
with the heat of injustice, sweltering with the heat of oppression, will be transformed into an oasis of<lb/>
have amy four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their<lb/>
t of thei(<lb/>
I have a dream that one day every valley shall be exalted , every hill and mountain shall be made<lb/>
will be M<lb/>
land the crooked places will be made straight. This is the faith that I go back to the South with. With<lb/>
ew<lb/>
outoii<lb/>
m of despair a stone of hope. With this faith we will be able to work together, to pray together, to<lb/>
to st<lb/>
wdom together, knowing we will be free one day. This will be the day when all of God's children will<lb/>
ring.<lb/>
St<lb/>
. MountM<lb/>
let. from 4<lb/>
1om ring from the prod,g,ous hilltops of New Hampshire. Let freedom ring from the mighty mountains<lb/>
Let freedom ring from every hill and molehill of Mississippi, from every mountainside. When we<lb/>
U every cty. we will be able to speed up that day when all of Gods children, black men and white<lb/>
the worm Ne9ro spiritual. -Free at last. Free at last. Great God a-mighty. We are free at last.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0008"/><lb/>
- <lb/>
Page 8. Founta.nhead, January 15, 1970, Thursday<lb/>
Pirates defeat Virginia Tech;<lb/>
break records, even score<lb/>
The swimming Pirates<lb/>
evened their record at 33<lb/>
M a nday night with a<lb/>
concincing 68-36 victory over<lb/>
Virginia Tech in the loser's<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
ECU set three pool records<lb/>
in winning nine events,<lb/>
including the two relays.<lb/>
Jim Griffin continued along<lb/>
his winning ways, taking the<lb/>
500 yard freestyle in 5:15.0,<lb/>
one of the new records.<lb/>
Wayne Norris won the<lb/>
1 ,000 yard freestyle in<lb/>
11:01.0, another pool record.<lb/>
The third record was set by<lb/>
the 400-yard medley relay<lb/>
team of Ken Hungate, Steve<lb/>
Weissman, Bill Lafferty, and<lb/>
Griffin, winning in 3:52.5.<lb/>
Paul Trevisan won the<lb/>
200-yard freestyle in 1:58.6<lb/>
with teammate Larry Allman<lb/>
placing second.<lb/>
Gaiy Frederick won the<lb/>
200 yard individual medley in<lb/>
2:13.5.<lb/>
Bob Baird won the 1-meter<lb/>
COME AT A GALLOP<lb/>
to this<lb/>
3<lb/>
Mmwt<lb/>
WELL-BRED CLOTHES<lb/>
w a<lb/>
?<lb/>
WMO<lb/>
A. Suitsreduced 14<lb/>
B. Sport Coatsreduced 14<lb/>
C. Outerwear, Allweather Coats<lb/>
and Topcoatsreduced 1 3<lb/>
D. Dress Shirtsreduced 13<lb/>
E. Sweatersreduced 13<lb/>
F. Pantsreduced 13<lb/>
offtnan's<lb/>
divein competition with<lb/>
156.85 points. The 3-meter<lb/>
event was cancelled.<lb/>
Mike Dolan won the<lb/>
200 yard butterfly in 2:13.3<lb/>
and Kevin Tracy finished<lb/>
second.<lb/>
Hungate won the 200 yard<lb/>
backstroke in 2:15.7 and the<lb/>
Pirates' 400 yard freestyle<lb/>
relay team of Allman, Dolan,<lb/>
Tracy and Steve Howard,<lb/>
completed the rout, winning in<lb/>
3:42.4.<lb/>
Next on the card for the<lb/>
mermen is a home encounter<lb/>
with conference foe V.M.I, on<lb/>
Jan. 24.<lb/>
Ken Hungate winner of the 200 yard backstroke takes a breather.<lb/>
Wrestlers<lb/>
will host<lb/>
Stoctuau<lb/>
l, Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Coi 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
I Hi. Cleaning<lb/>
3 Hi. Shirt Service<lb/>
 Frankincen: e u i i lyrth<lb/>
XY S' now hicnri in th , ?<lb/>
AlnhKQix aroma oi leathei (torn<lb/>
w<lb/>
Jim's workbench in the<lb/>
hroon Handcrafted<lb/>
? ? I md and Belts . .<lb/>
More good things for the<lb/>
Gentle People.<lb/>
The Mushroom<lb/>
"Trip" Spectacles Just Arrived<lb/>
t.<lb/>
W pleonine<lb/>
Lomr Orr I s<lb/>
264 by-pass<lb/>
opponents<lb/>
The Pirates' wrestling squad,<lb/>
sporting a perfect record, hosts<lb/>
the first of its two Military<lb/>
opponents at 3 p.m. Saturday<lb/>
when Fort Bragg comes to<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
The Fort Bragg squad is<lb/>
usually a strong power with<lb/>
several former college grapplers<lb/>
in its lineup. However, this will<lb/>
UK tilt; lllSl Oppui luimy low<lb/>
has to see them this season<lb/>
Still ahead for the Pirates,<lb/>
currently 3-0 in intercollegiate<lb/>
comperition, are five dual<lb/>
meets, including two at home,<lb/>
against Cherry Point Marines<lb/>
next Saturday and William and<lb/>
Mary, Feb. 20, and a<lb/>
quadrangular meet Feb. 7 in<lb/>
Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
Rounding out the schedule<lb/>
are the Southern Conference<lb/>
Tournament at William and<lb/>
Mary Mar. 6 7, and the<lb/>
N.C.A.A. Tournament at<lb/>
Evanston, III Mar. 27-28.<lb/>
LONDON<lb/>
EFFICIENCIES<lb/>
$95 UP<lb/>
((Mnforli'hl efficiencies with<lb/>
double lM-1 ??fa bed k"<lb/>
chenette. wall to wall carpH<lb/>
central heal - air conditiuninsi.<lb/>
all utilities'i?s1? 7'1'<lb/>
.Wi.v<lb/>
OLD LONDON INN<lb/>
2710 S. MEMORIAL DRIVK<lb/>
Italian Night Mon. Jan. 19<lb/>
Main Cafeteria &amp; Jones Cafeteria<lb/>
Spaghetti All You Can Eat<lb/>
$1.25 J<lb/>
Cor<lb/>
inD<lb/>
DURHAM<lb/>
University's Ac<lb/>
P?sed<lb/>
faculty memb<lb/>
Jan- 22<lb/>
considerate-<lb/>
in un<lb/>
rei '<lb/>
changes<lb/>
policy<lb/>
Novembei b<lb/>
faculty commH<lb/>
The b u<lb/>
recommended<lb/>
things, thai<lb/>
from the -<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
scholarships b<lb/>
basis of financ<lb/>
Art :<lb/>
plain<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
students enn<lb/>
and univers<lb/>
Carolina are<lb/>
the eiyht am<lb/>
Competil<lb/>
I InniPiClt <lb/>
Officials ol<lb/>
thai all ei<lb/>
submitted b <lb/>
The exhibi<lb/>
15 will be in<lb/>
Union GjH ?,<lb/>
St u d e i<lb/>
information i<lb/>
sale should .<lb/>
Ann<lb/>
Compel it mi<lb/>
n Gdl<lb/>
U i e r s 11 y,<lb/>
27607<lb/>
Eldridg<lb/>
and fa<lb/>
return f<lb/>
BERKELE<lb/>
Self exiled<lb/>
fugitive Eld<lb/>
his family <lb/>
US fron 0<lb/>
Black Pantht<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
A party<lb/>
Cleaver won<lb/>
undisclosed<lb/>
States but v<lb/>
he was to ai i<lb/>
Cleaver's<lb/>
son, N<lb/>
to arrive ii<lb/>
"in the ne<lb/>
Party's nat<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Cleaver<lb/>
country oi<lb/>
charging r-<lb/>
fight. He I<lb/>
return to<lb/>
winter as a<lb/>
?VAASAfWWrtAAVUVVVWVWWWW<lb/>
PIT'<lb/>
DA<lb/>
25 D<lb/>
Try a<lb/>
S<lb/>
264 BV<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0009"/><lb/>
Thursday, January 15, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
ds ch<lb/>
puke University athl<lb/>
nURHAM (AP) D"ke<lb/>
cademic Council,<lb/>
than 50<lb/>
l0sed of more<lb/>
Universi<lb/>
romp<lb/>
members<lb/>
2 2 to<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
Ja"<lb/>
cons<lb/>
deration<lb/>
will rneet<lb/>
resume<lb/>
of sweeping<lb/>
,e.sity athletic<lb/>
 ecommended last<lb/>
P?CV by a five-man<lb/>
faculty committee.<lb/>
The bulky report<lb/>
recommended, among other<lb/>
Ihlngs thai Duke withdraw<lb/>
from the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference and thai athletic<lb/>
scholarships be awarded on the<lb/>
basis of financial need.<lb/>
Dr. Barney Jones, head of<lb/>
the committee, said Saturday<lb/>
that the recommendation<lb/>
regarding the ACC was one of<lb/>
the "least vital aspects of the<lb/>
report" and he added that<lb/>
Duke's withdrawal was "a<lb/>
moot question, I don't know<lb/>
how the council would vote on<lb/>
the matter<lb/>
He asserted that<lb/>
consequences of such a move<lb/>
would have to be considered<lb/>
and "we would have to<lb/>
consider what we would do if<lb/>
we got out of the conference<lb/>
Regarding athletic ((rants,<lb/>
Jones said that it was his<lb/>
committee's intention that<lb/>
they be awarded on the basis<lb/>
of need by the ACC and also<lb/>
on a national scale through the<lb/>
NCAA regulation.<lb/>
"Obviously if Duke left the<lb/>
conference and either joined<lb/>
another conference or played<lb/>
independently, we do not<lb/>
propose to play teams that do<lb/>
not limit grants to those in<lb/>
financial need Jones said.<lb/>
He stressed that the athletic<lb/>
program does have value, but<lb/>
the committee wants to involve<lb/>
more students in athletics.<lb/>
It is his feeling that the<lb/>
matter should be referred to a<lb/>
broad base commission of<lb/>
Art ShOW Students are disappointed<lb/>
over rejection of proposal<lb/>
planned<lb/>
RALEIGH Undergraduate<lb/>
students enrolled in colleges<lb/>
and universities in North<lb/>
Carolina are eligible to enter<lb/>
the eiyht annual Student An<lb/>
Competition al N.C. State<lb/>
Universil.<lb/>
Officials ol the exhibit said<lb/>
thai all  ies must be<lb/>
submitted by Feb. 8.<lb/>
The exhibit, beginning Feb.<lb/>
15 wiH be in the Erdahl-Cloyd<lb/>
Union Galh<lb/>
Students wishing<lb/>
? nation on the exhibit and<lb/>
sale should write to the Eighth<lb/>
Annual Stude n t Art<lb/>
Competition, E i dahl Cloyd<lb/>
Union Gallery, N.C. State<lb/>
Ui ersil y, Raleigh, N C,<lb/>
27607<lb/>
Eldridge Cleaver<lb/>
end family ta<lb/>
return to America<lb/>
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)<lb/>
Self exiled black militant<lb/>
fugitive Eldridge Cleaver and<lb/>
his family will return to the<lb/>
US from Algeria "soon the<lb/>
Black Panthei party announced<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
A party spokesman said<lb/>
Cleaver would fly alone to an<lb/>
undisclosed city in the United<lb/>
States but would not say when<lb/>
he was to arrive.<lb/>
Cleaver's wife, Kathleen, and<lb/>
son, Naceo, burn last year, are<lb/>
'o arrive in Washmgon, D.C.<lb/>
the next few days the<lb/>
party's national headquarters<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Cleaver is wanted in this<lb/>
c?untry on a federal warrant<lb/>
barging him with unlawful<lb/>
Ht. He had been ordered to<lb/>
r?urn to state prison last<lb/>
Wlnter as a parole violator.<lb/>
WINSTON SALEM (AP)<lb/>
Wake Forest University<lb/>
students voiced disappoint<lb/>
ment last Tuesday when they<lb/>
heard that the school's<lb/>
executive committee had<lb/>
rejected a proposal which<lb/>
would have allowed female<lb/>
students to visit male<lb/>
dormitory rooms.<lb/>
The decision by the<lb/>
executive committee was made<lb/>
during the Christmas holidays,<lb/>
but the announcement was<lb/>
postponed until the students<lb/>
returned to the campus.<lb/>
PITT PLAZA<lb/>
DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 Delicious Flavors<lb/>
of Ice Cream<lb/>
'rYa delicious Banana<lb/>
Split or Sundae<lb/>
264 Bv Pass-Greenville<lb/>
the SGA, said he hoped the<lb/>
committee would pass the<lb/>
proposal, but he is glad the<lb/>
committee kept the issue open.<lb/>
The committee<lb/>
recommended forming a<lb/>
committee of students, faculty,<lb/>
administrators and trustees to<lb/>
consider steps to improve the<lb/>
social life at the university.<lb/>
The committee's report<lb/>
praised the student leaders for<lb/>
their serious and honest<lb/>
approach in presenting their<lb/>
arguments for the proposed<lb/>
James Cross, president of visiting.<lb/>
Hearing indicated delay<lb/>
on massacre charge<lb/>
FT. BENNING, Ga. (AP)<lb/>
A delay of up to 15 days is<lb/>
indicated in a hearing on<lb/>
several defense motions in the<lb/>
court martial of Lt. William L.<lb/>
Calley Jr.<lb/>
Calley, 26, of Miami Fla is<lb/>
charged in six counts with<lb/>
murdering 110 Vietnamese<lb/>
civilians, including 109 during<lb/>
a military operation in My Lai<lb/>
in March 1968.<lb/>
The hearing set for Jan. 20<lb/>
will be delayed because two<lb/>
policy<lb/>
faculty, students, alumni and<lb/>
trustees before a final<lb/>
determination is made.<lb/>
Army lawyers making an<lb/>
on-the-spot investigation of the<lb/>
alleged massacre will not return<lb/>
until Jan. 15, five days later<lb/>
than planned, a reliable source<lb/>
said Friday.<lb/>
The source said, however,<lb/>
that no date change is planned<lb/>
in a hearing set for Jan. 19 on<lb/>
whether Calley is to be<lb/>
prosecuted on another murder<lb/>
the Army alleges took place 1 Vt<lb/>
months before the alleged My<lb/>
Lai incident.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0010"/><lb/>
. X,W?.???-?W?M?<lb/>
Page 10, Fountainhead, January 15, 1970, Thursday<lb/>
H<lb/>
to give electronic concert<lb/>
Assistant Professor Otto W.<lb/>
Henry, director of the newly<lb/>
inagurated Ecectronic Music<lb/>
Studio at the School of Music,<lb/>
will present a recital of his<lb/>
electronic compositions<lb/>
Thursday, Jan. 22 at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
in the School of Music Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
The program will feature<lb/>
Henry's latest compositions;<lb/>
Phoenix Burning, Beethoven's<lb/>
Fifth, Seascape, and Liberty<lb/>
Bell.<lb/>
His music is scored foi 13<lb/>
percussionists and Moog<lb/>
Electronic Music Synthesizer.<lb/>
The ECU Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble directed by Harold<lb/>
Jones will assist in the<lb/>
performance of his work.<lb/>
A demonstration of the<lb/>
Moog Electronic synthesizer<lb/>
will conclude the concert. With<lb/>
the acquisition ol this famous<lb/>
instrument, the School of<lb/>
Music now has the largest and<lb/>
most completely equipped<lb/>
elections music studio in this<lb/>
state and region.<lb/>
Henry will use t h e<lb/>
synthesizei to compose music<lb/>
and effects for the ECU Drama<lb/>
Department's forthcoming<lb/>
production of "MACBFTH"<lb/>
and Brecht's "GOOD WOMEN<lb/>
OF SETZUAN<lb/>
The Moog synthesizer was<lb/>
used to create the well-known<lb/>
Switched On Bach recording.<lb/>
Henry, a composer and<lb/>
musiologist, joined the School<lb/>
of Music faculty in 1<lb/>
graduate of Boston University<lb/>
Henry has been ChairJV;<lb/>
the Dept. of Mu of<lb/>
Washington and Jefferson<lb/>
College and Associate Director<lb/>
at<lb/>
of the Electronic<lb/>
at Tulane Un<lb/>
Publications Board<lb/>
will hold hearings<lb/>
Foundation makes grant<lb/>
to Biology Department<lb/>
uic Studio<lb/>
J 'versiy. He has<lb/>
designed and built his<lb/>
electronic instruments<lb/>
last ten<lb/>
completed<lb/>
The special committee of<lb/>
the Publications Board will<lb/>
begin holding open hearings in<lb/>
mid-February to hear views on<lb/>
the purpose of the campus<lb/>
Publications Board.<lb/>
Mrs. Mary Sorenson, adviser<lb/>
to the Buccaneer, said that<lb/>
these hearings are designed "to<lb/>
give faculty and students who<lb/>
have suggestions or<lb/>
recommendations an<lb/>
opportunity to make them<lb/>
through the proper channel<lb/>
Ira L. Baker, chairman of<lb/>
the committee, outlined for<lb/>
the group last week the first<lb/>
steps necessary in creating<lb/>
policies for the Publications<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
The initial phase, now in<lb/>
effect, requires that each<lb/>
member read the information<lb/>
on publication regulations<lb/>
obtained from other<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
The Biology Department has<lb/>
received an S8.736 grant from<lb/>
the National Science<lb/>
Foundation for the<lb/>
establishment of a pre-college<lb/>
Student Science Training<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
The program will be from<lb/>
June 8 to July 10, 1970 for 24<lb/>
science-oriented<lb/>
secondary school students<lb/>
chosen for then high ability in<lb/>
biological science<lb/>
The program will offer a<lb/>
course in the principles and<lb/>
methods of study of heredity<lb/>
with emphasis on human<lb/>
heredity. It will include<lb/>
lectures and laboratory<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Union construction may<lb/>
begin by next summer<lb/>
Colonial Heights Soda Shop &amp; Restaurant<lb/>
Now Serving Meals<lb/>
I Breakfast- 550 Dinner- 970<lb/>
DrmK included<lb/>
2711 E. 10th St. 752-6778<lb/>
?<lb/>
Construction on the new<lb/>
Student Union cannot begin<lb/>
until the property site can be<lb/>
acquired from local property<lb/>
owners, according to F.D.<lb/>
Duncan, vice-president and<lb/>
business manager.<lb/>
Duncan said that he hopes<lb/>
the plans can be completed and<lb/>
the building begun by next<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
The three-story building, to<lb/>
be constructed at the<lb/>
(hingsgO<lb/>
better<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
intersection of Eighth and<lb/>
Charles St will extend east<lb/>
toward the library.<lb/>
Its designer, architect F<lb/>
Carter Williams, who designed<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, estimates its<lb/>
cost at S3 million.<lb/>
The new Union will provide<lb/>
offices for campus<lb/>
publications, SGA and the<lb/>
Student Bank. Recreation<lb/>
rooms for bowling, table tennis<lb/>
and billiards, as well as rooms<lb/>
for meetings, reading and<lb/>
storage, are included in the<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
own<lb/>
over the<lb/>
and has<lb/>
1 lar(e number of<lb/>
compositions in the electric<lb/>
idiom.<lb/>
Magazines<lb/>
feature ECU<lb/>
architecture<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, designed<lb/>
by architect F. CarterWitliarrrs<lb/>
has been featured lecently in<lb/>
two national magazines to<lb/>
depict an innovation in roofing<lb/>
i chnique.<lb/>
Both the October issue of<lb/>
"Civil Engineering" jnd the<lb/>
third quarter issue of "Modern<lb/>
Steel Construction" presented<lb/>
photographs which illustrated<lb/>
the new mathos, called the<lb/>
roof truss system<lb/>
By this met hud, the<lb/>
Coliseum roof was constructed<lb/>
on ground level, then raised<lb/>
inact to its position<lb/>
According to ' 'Civil<lb/>
Engineering this method<lb/>
enabled mechanical, electrical,<lb/>
and plumbing contractors to<lb/>
work on the ground. Because<lb/>
of this ground work, both<lb/>
m a cj a i n e s re p o i ted,<lb/>
competitive bids for the<lb/>
building indicated a savings of<lb/>
an estimated S70.000<lb/>
Cola Bottling Company, Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
hnootu<lb/>
Coats<lb/>
from<lb/>
b?2<lb/>
Coats<lb/>
like everything else, will be "coming through"softer<lb/>
w on I Soft, supple tailoring takes the place of hard<lb/>
vnich has dissappeared. ,  ?u?iHore are<lb/>
softness. Their shoulders are<lb/>
Some of the new coats wrap,<lb/>
others swing and many are<lb/>
) e 11 e d . But even when<lb/>
waistlines are elapsed with<lb/>
oelts they are nonrestrictive.<lb/>
And coats h a v e beer<lb/>
immed down! Shape has<lb/>
come back with flare and fit.<lb/>
They now suggest figure<lb/>
curves. There is a subtle<lb/>
softness about the new clothes.<lb/>
The contour flare is popular<lb/>
There are simple reefers,<lb/>
trench coats and coats like<lb/>
bathrobes! And of all things<lb/>
no linings! Thi<lb/>
narrow and they have shirt<lb/>
collars and gauntlet cuffs.<lb/>
One designer sums up the<lb/>
new coat silhouettes as<lb/>
unfluttery, uncluttery and<lb/>
t r i m!<lb/>
We are the store of national<lb/>
name brands-known for our<lb/>
fashion plus look' We are THE<lb/>
SNOOTY FOX, and we're<lb/>
ready to serve you, the college<lb/>
girl, with the finest in the latest<lb/>
fashions and accessories. Visit<lb/>
us soon, THE SNOOTY FOX,<lb/>
203 East 5th St phone<lb/>
s is why they 7584061. 0pen daily 9:30 till<lb/>
3rail look of ?<lb/>
? 3 HOUR SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
? I - HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th and Charles St. Cornel Across From HardeeS<lb/>
Complete I aundry and Dry (leaning Service<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0011"/><lb/>
What are you going to do with yourself over<lb/>
"reah?<lb/>
(Go to the Bahamas? Go to Panama City or Lauderdale? Or-worse vet-go nowhere?)<lb/>
3r ?v miv ?m?B???-? vhom von ran hemme acauamted. anc<lb/>
O.K here's something new: snow skiing. Dynamite.<lb/>
Now. the purpose of this hype is to get you to talk your folks into<lb/>
financing a little getaway to the mountains. Read on.<lb/>
Being from the South, when you think of skiing, you naturally think<lb/>
of water skiing. Forget it. This is snow skiing. The best. Ah, but you<lb/>
say that that means Vermont or Colorado or some other foreign<lb/>
place like that? Nope.<lb/>
We mean Beech Mountain, N.C. Yeah, North Carolina. Beech has<lb/>
the highest slopes east of the Rockies, and that includes Vermont.<lb/>
And Beech has ten different slopes, from beginner to advanced,<lb/>
with lifts to service each one. There are cozy places where you can<lb/>
get some good chow and something to drink, or maybe just sit<lb/>
around and get warm.<lb/>
Beech also has a lot of single people all over the mountain, all<lb/>
winter long. If you are male, that means that there are a significant<lb/>
number of females with whom you can become acquainted, and<lb/>
vice versa, if you can dig it. If you don't know how to ski, we'll teach<lb/>
you. If you don't have any equipment, we'll rent it to you, cheap.<lb/>
If you do have your own equipment, what are you waiting for?<lb/>
So here's the pitch:Beech Mountain features a gift certificate which<lb/>
entitles you to two days of skiing. The package includes your lift<lb/>
fees and complete equipment rental. All for under thirty dollars.<lb/>
(A lot less if you have your own skis and stuff.) You'll also get a<lb/>
jacket patch and a button which bears the catchy, ad game phrase<lb/>
"One Good Beechkommer Deserves Another Wear it proudly and<lb/>
all that jive Even when you figure up your own food, lodging and<lb/>
transportation, it's still cheaper than the Bahamas. Now, cut the<lb/>
coupon out write your name on it, etc and mail it to us. We'll<lb/>
shoot through with some brochures and stuff that will explain<lb/>
what's happening.<lb/>
Bahamas? P.C.? Lauderdale? Tell those scenes to kiss off. This<lb/>
winter, go to Beech Mountain and ski. End of ad.<lb/>
O.K.<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
i n nnnritr this skiinq business in my heart of hearts. $$?(<lb/>
md me all those brochures and things so I can ponder this sK.ing d <lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
ZIP.<lb/>
BEECH MOUNTA.N DEPT. -r. P. a 1? ?r?J-? ?? ?? ????0" ???<lb/>
nnt the mppkend of December 27-o, lyobj<lb/>
(This offer good anytime during the season except the weeKeno o - ? ?-????? MB mm I<lb/>
u- ???????? ? ????????????????????????Ia"111<lb/>
???????????????????????????<lb/>
,<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0012"/><lb/>
imHHHHHP'1'<lb/>
?w&amp;-&amp;&amp;<lb/>
Happy<lb/>
Birthday<lb/>
"Cowardice asks the question, 'Is it safe?'<lb/>
Expediency asks the question, 'Is it politic?' Vanity<lb/>
asks the question, 'Is it popular?' But conscience<lb/>
asks the question, 'Is it right?' And there comes a<lb/>
time when one must take a position that is neither<lb/>
safe, nor politic, nor popular, but he must take it<lb/>
because conscience tells him that it is right<lb/>
Rev. Martin Luther King, 1967<lb/>
Today is the birthday of a murdered American. A<lb/>
man born in the south, raised in the south, and<lb/>
killed in the south. He was repeatedly jailed, cursed,<lb/>
spit upon, stabbed, and, on 4 April, 1968, he was<lb/>
killed.<lb/>
But he was not an outside agitator.<lb/>
He was a Nobel Peace Prize winner.<lb/>
That there are those in this nation paying tribute<lb/>
to this man on this day is significant.<lb/>
That there are those in this nation that would<lb/>
bury this man and forget him is even more<lb/>
significant.<lb/>
That there are those in this nation who would<lb/>
leave him unburied is the most significant.<lb/>
Here was a man who preached nonviolence.<lb/>
He said in 1964: "Some of you have knives, and I<lb/>
ask you to put them up. Some of you have arms,<lb/>
and I ask you to put them up. Get the weapon of<lb/>
nonviolence, the breastplate of righteousness, the<lb/>
armor of truth and just keep on marching<lb/>
We, as a nation, are divided on many issues.<lb/>
We, as students, are divided on many issues.<lb/>
There are those who would burn down the<lb/>
establishment. There are those who would jail or<lb/>
otherwise remove the dissenters.<lb/>
Is it not time for each individual of this great and<lb/>
proud nation to reflect upon the words of this great<lb/>
American?<lb/>
Is it not time for each individual to judge the<lb/>
relative merits of cowardice, expediency, vanity and<lb/>
conscience?<lb/>
Is it not time for us to contribute to the dream<lb/>
of justice and equality for all one of the most<lb/>
substantial foundations of our country?<lb/>
Is it not time for a true lowering of voice?<lb/>
Is it not time for PEACE?<lb/>
The lottery<lb/>
m<lb/>
WASHINGTON (CPS)<lb/>
College newspaper editors<lb/>
aren't buying the draft lottery.<lb/>
Editorial reactions to the<lb/>
induction by- birthdate system<lb/>
initiated by the Nixon<lb/>
administration have ranged<lb/>
from halfhearted acceptance<lb/>
to anger at the government for<lb/>
making false promises, to<lb/>
outright condemnation of the<lb/>
draft in any form.<lb/>
Small college papers have<lb/>
been especially vehement in<lb/>
their denunciations. The Knox<lb/>
College Student saw the lottery<lb/>
merely as a deceptive<lb/>
packaging of the old draft, and<lb/>
as another example of the<lb/>
influence of the "bloated" dnd<lb/>
"corrupt" military on<lb/>
American life.<lb/>
"It is frightening, .to see the<lb/>
sickening contradictions<lb/>
between the ideals of free men<lb/>
and reality of the Selective<lb/>
Service System the Student<lb/>
wrote. "We are told that we<lb/>
must give up for a part of our<lb/>
lives our God given freedom,<lb/>
our individuality, our<lb/>
birthright as Americans.<lb/>
"Why? So that wc might<lb/>
protect ourselves from those<lb/>
who would take our freedom,<lb/>
our individuality , and our<lb/>
birthright The paper said the<lb/>
greatest threat to peoples'<lb/>
freedom, in the world today is<lb/>
the U.S. military. Knox College<lb/>
is a coed iibeiai arts school o<lb/>
about 1,300 in Illinois.<lb/>
The University News at St.<lb/>
Louis University, a private<lb/>
institution of some 6,000<lb/>
wrote: "The greatest misjustice<lb/>
of the former system still<lb/>
remains, that is the draft itself.<lb/>
Those who have previously<lb/>
opposed the draft will continue<lb/>
to do so. . .because they realize<lb/>
that the lottery still does not<lb/>
allow the freedom of choice<lb/>
with respect to military<lb/>
By RICK FITCH<lb/>
service<lb/>
Tying the draft into the<lb/>
Vietnam war, the paper said,<lb/>
"They (enemies of the draft)<lb/>
wonder what kind of perverted<lb/>
priorities this nation has<lb/>
established when its most<lb/>
precious resources system.d<lb/>
materials are dedicated to a<lb/>
foreign war of dubious value<lb/>
while mere lip service is paid to<lb/>
such pressing domestic issues as<lb/>
poverty, pollution and the<lb/>
cities<lb/>
The student newspaper at<lb/>
Lafayette College, a small mens<lb/>
liberal arts school in<lb/>
Pennsylvania, said the random<lb/>
selection of draftees is<lb/>
"infinitely fairer and more<lb/>
humane" than the old dydtem,<lb/>
but said a volunteer army can<lb/>
be the only real answer.<lb/>
"Yes, the new system is<lb/>
more equitable than the old.<lb/>
Yes those called should willing<lb/>
serve. But there is much more<lb/>
progress to be made<lb/>
At Hunter College in New<lb/>
York City, where the Selective<lb/>
Service Director has announced<lb/>
those with high lottery<lb/>
numbers aren't safe from<lb/>
induction, the student papei,<lb/>
the Envoy, demanded, "There<lb/>
is only one way to truly reform<lb/>
the draft system. Repeal it<lb/>
The Envoy compared the<lb/>
new system with a short story<lb/>
entitled "The Lottery" in<lb/>
which one person would be<lb/>
chosen at random each year to<lb/>
be senselessly stoned to death<lb/>
in the village square. "Now<lb/>
only nineteen- year- olds have<lb/>
to worry about dying the<lb/>
paper commented wryly. "The<lb/>
reform is like renovating the<lb/>
outside of a rotting tenement<lb/>
which should have been<lb/>
destroyed<lb/>
At one large state university,<lb/>
UCLA, the student paper<lb/>
voiced concern that the lottery<lb/>
m<lb/>
draft in general, and the war<lb/>
Vietnam. "There is no d<lb/>
that much of the opposition is<lb/>
th.s country to the Vietnam<lb/>
war can be attributed to the<lb/>
fact that the middle-class<lb/>
American boys were gettinq<lb/>
drafted and getting killed.<lb/>
"Now at least half and as<lb/>
many as two thirds of those<lb/>
not going to have to fight, or<lb/>
get killed, or go to Canada or<lb/>
jail said the Bruin, apparently<lb/>
believing the administration's<lb/>
orgiginal claims that numbers<lb/>
245-366 would be free from<lb/>
the draft.<lb/>
The Bruin called the lottery<lb/>
"probably an improvement<lb/>
over the old system of<lb/>
Selective Service, but not<lb/>
much<lb/>
THe University of Montana<lb/>
Kaimin wrote: "A modern<lb/>
form of Russian roulette, the<lb/>
draft lottery, marked<lb/>
thousands of young men for<lb/>
death and disfigurement when<lb/>
the birthdates were drawn. .<lb/>
.Leaving the mattei of life or<lb/>
death up to chance is hardly<lb/>
the most equitable method of<lb/>
selecting the men who will<lb/>
serve in the military<lb/>
The Daimin espressed the<lb/>
hope that ROTC will dwindle<lb/>
in sie to include only those<lb/>
with low lottery numbers, and<lb/>
the hope that draft resistance<lb/>
will increase so as to "shaft the<lb/>
drat i.<lb/>
The University of Maryland<lb/>
Diamondback attacked the<lb/>
lottery for not lessening the<lb/>
uncertainty faced by draft age<lb/>
males. Pointing out that the<lb/>
eccentricities of local boards<lb/>
make it nearly impossible for a<lb/>
registrant to know when or if<lb/>
he well be inducted, the<lb/>
Diamondback said the Nixon<lb/>
administration's effort to<lb/>
clarify the draft for young<lb/>
people "has failed miserably<lb/>
fW'tftri<lb/>
ountamhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make vou free<lb/>
Paul F. (Chip) Callaway<lb/>
Fditor-in Chief<lb/>
Tom PeelerManaging Editor<lb/>
Robert ThonenBusiness Manager<lb/>
Robert McDowellCoordinating Editor<lb/>
Keith Parrish Features Editor<lb/>
Benjamin BaileyNews Editor<lb/>
Jimmy Teal Night Editor<lb/>
Wayne Eads Production Manager<lb/>
David LandtAdvertising Manager<lb/>
Sonny LeaSports Editor<lb/>
Dianne Peedin Wire Editor<lb/>
Sharon SchaudiesCopy Editor<lb/>
Alan SabroskyNews Analyst<lb/>
Charles GriffinPhotographer<lb/>
Ira L. BakerAdviser<lb/>
Vo<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
uTHepe goes the neighborhood'<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039452_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>