<?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="00039465_0001"/>
K- '<lb/>
n policy<lb/>
d employees of the<lb/>
urged 10 express<lb/>
in "the forum<lb/>
ihould be concise;<lb/>
300 words.<lb/>
rs reserve the right<lb/>
ters for style errors<lb/>
? rs must be signed<lb/>
?ne of the writer.<lb/>
riter's request, his<lb/>
withheld.<lb/>
icles on this page<lb/>
inions of the writer,<lb/>
jcessarily those of<lb/>
or East Carolina<lb/>
<lb/>
7<lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
Zvl<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
CeH??f<lb/>
<lb/>
pfMi <lb/>
?iiiilf<lb/>
a, bog ?<lb/>
ounumhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
East Carolina University, P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C<lb/>
March 23, 1970<lb/>
lantarium<lb/>
On March 7, the Amer.can<lb/>
bciit Corporation Foundation<lb/>
trlotte presented to Dr.<lb/>
?kins a gift of $100,000.<lb/>
r eks later, the citizens<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina are<lb/>
anninga planetarium.<lb/>
-Along with a check, the<lb/>
Location gave us a challenge<lb/>
raise another $200,000 to<lb/>
Jy for a $300,000facility.<lb/>
u6 so we have begun<lb/>
Inkins said.<lb/>
DATE SET<lb/>
Jenkins said that Dr. Floyd<lb/>
jattheis, chairman of the<lb/>
e Education department,<lb/>
; reported that a tentative<lb/>
anstrjction date of about a<lb/>
fear fom now has been set.<lb/>
The Science Education<lb/>
ment wishes to have the<lb/>
laniarium built as close to<lb/>
u xsting science complex as<lb/>
lossible, hopefully facing<lb/>
enth Street said Mattheis.<lb/>
Of course said Jenkins,<lb/>
la go ahead for construction<lb/>
I<lb/>
7<lb/>
depends entirely on the time it<lb/>
takes to raise $200,000<lb/>
"We believe the educational<lb/>
value of such a tool is<lb/>
justification enough for its<lb/>
existence. And if that tool can<lb/>
double as a servant to the<lb/>
needs and interests of the<lb/>
community, then its existence<lb/>
cannot be decried Jenkins<lb/>
said.<lb/>
INVOLVEMENT<lb/>
Mattheis said that some<lb/>
2,000 students here will be<lb/>
immediately and directly<lb/>
involved with studies at the<lb/>
planetarium when it is<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
In addition, the planetarium<lb/>
will serve as a means of<lb/>
introducing the wonders of<lb/>
astronomy to thousands of<lb/>
elementary and high school<lb/>
pupils, as well as the public in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
When completed, the<lb/>
planetarium will compare<lb/>
(continued on page 2)<lb/>
This ?s an artists sketch of the<lb/>
proposed planetarium. The Amer.can<lb/>
Necessity<lb/>
Credit Corparation has presented a check<lb/>
of $100,000 with which to begin.<lb/>
jv<lb/>
?.<lb/>
jV<lb/>
DR. GEORGE WEIGAND, tells of his hobbies and<lb/>
nterests.<lb/>
"I guess it's just seeing<lb/>
something and wondering how<lb/>
it's done<lb/>
Dr George Weigand,<lb/>
director of the counseling<lb/>
center, leaned back in his<lb/>
swivel seat and smiled. He was<lb/>
speaking of his numerous<lb/>
hobbies.<lb/>
However, seeing students<lb/>
and wondering how to help<lb/>
them might have been just as<lb/>
fitting a statement for the<lb/>
active counselor to make<lb/>
Weigand sees the help needed<lb/>
by students as paramount to<lb/>
any other aspect of his work.<lb/>
Where his dedication to<lb/>
student problem-solving stops<lb/>
Weigand becomes a "dedicated<lb/>
hobbyist<lb/>
PASTIMES<lb/>
Among his many pastimes<lb/>
are wood carving and sawing,<lb/>
and making silver and copper<lb/>
ename. jewelry. He has also<lb/>
made such musical instruments<lb/>
as a lute, a cittern, and a<lb/>
minstrel's harp, and he is<lb/>
presently rebuilding a piano.<lb/>
He has built cabinets and a<lb/>
variety of furniture for his<lb/>
home and has installed his own<lb/>
By MARGE SIMPKINS<lb/>
stereo speakers. Weigand also<lb/>
dabbles in photography and<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
He kidded that he took up<lb/>
sewing "to understand what<lb/>
the home economics people<lb/>
were talking about He has<lb/>
since made a cape for his wife<lb/>
and jackets for his sons.<lb/>
Pointing out that many of<lb/>
his hobbies began with the<lb/>
incentive of pure necessity, the<lb/>
counselor added that "learning<lb/>
how" to do something new is<lb/>
half the fun.<lb/>
ORIGAMI<lb/>
Intrigued with origami, the<lb/>
Japanese art of paper folding,<lb/>
Weigand said he had made a<lb/>
"paper zoo and showed<lb/>
samples of tiny paper frogs and<lb/>
elephants.<lb/>
(continued on page 5)<lb/>
Fountainheadlines<lb/>
Men's Honor Council hands down decisions-page 4<lb/>
Bus system considered by city council-page 6<lb/>
Seminar on Broadcasting Career Opportunities-page 3<lb/>
Intramural softball begins-page 10<lb/>
Pirates open lacrosse season April 4-page 9<lb/>
Apathy threatens students and teachers alike-page 11<lb/>
Science Fair for high school and junior high school<lb/>
students-page 6<lb/>
Phred contemplates suicide in Phred's Phoibles-page 11<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0002"/><lb/>
 ???? ??<lb/>
? AAMM,<lb/>
laJgeTaciities Flinn featured as<lb/>
planned for ECU<lb/>
(continued from page I)<lb/>
favorable with facilities in<lb/>
Chesapeake and Newport<lb/>
News, Va.<lb/>
It will not be as large as the<lb/>
facility at Chapel Hill; but<lb/>
there is no other planetarium<lb/>
within 100 miles of Greenville.<lb/>
Outside of the planetarium<lb/>
chamber itself, the proposed<lb/>
plans for the facility include an<lb/>
exhibition room and an<lb/>
observatory.<lb/>
PLANETARIUM<lb/>
The main chamber will<lb/>
house the Model A-4-P<lb/>
planetarium, which is said to<lb/>
combine high precision and<lb/>
quality at a reasonable cost.<lb/>
Basically, this planetarium<lb/>
model consists of a star<lb/>
projector, automatic planetary<lb/>
motion analogs and projectors,<lb/>
and several auxiliary<lb/>
projectors.<lb/>
A full complement of stars<lb/>
down to magnitude 5.4 is<lb/>
projected for the entire<lb/>
celestial sphere with a wide<lb/>
range of intrinsic brightness<lb/>
and color in the significant<lb/>
bright stars.<lb/>
PROJECTIONS<lb/>
Also projected are the Milky<lb/>
Way, Magellanic Clouds<lb/>
Andromeda Galaxy, and<lb/>
Praesepe Cluster.<lb/>
All four essential<lb/>
motions-daily, annual,<lb/>
latitude, and precession are<lb/>
included at varying speeds,<lb/>
both forward and reverse.<lb/>
All projectors have horizon<lb/>
cutoffs which prevent<lb/>
projection below the horizon.<lb/>
The planetarium is designed<lb/>
to be used wit a 40 foot<lb/>
diameter dome. It would<lb/>
comfortably seat 120 adults.<lb/>
This would provide the use<lb/>
of a demonstration table under<lb/>
the dome using actually only<lb/>
270 degrees for the seating.<lb/>
The exhibition room would<lb/>
provide a place for scientific<lb/>
exhibits of all types.<lb/>
Some exhibits might be<lb/>
semi-permanent while others<lb/>
would be of short duration.<lb/>
USES<lb/>
Exhibits could be utilized to<lb/>
keep students and community<lb/>
up-to-date on the space<lb/>
projects as well as other<lb/>
current science interests.<lb/>
It could also be used for<lb/>
meetings by the addition of<lb/>
temporary seating. Storage<lb/>
space would be provided for<lb/>
small telescopes.<lb/>
OBSERVATORY<lb/>
The roof of the exhibit<lb/>
room would also serve as an<lb/>
o b se r vation deck for<lb/>
astronomy classes as well as<lb/>
groups of public school<lb/>
students and amateur<lb/>
astronomy clubs.<lb/>
The small observatory would<lb/>
be designed to house a<lb/>
reflecting telescope using<lb/>
approximately a 12 to 16 inch<lb/>
mirror.<lb/>
The telescope would be<lb/>
available for academic use as<lb/>
well as amateur astronomy<lb/>
groups in the area.<lb/>
The best possible location<lb/>
would be necessary for the<lb/>
complex to minimize the<lb/>
interference by campus and<lb/>
city street lights.<lb/>
m?. lecturer<lb/>
at League of Scholars meeting<lb/>
THE CROWNING OF BECKY LAEKY marked the<lb/>
climax of the 17th annual White Ball.<lb/>
By FRAN GIBBS<lb/>
Art lecturer Mike Flinn was<lb/>
guest speaker at an open<lb/>
meeting of the League of<lb/>
Scholars, Wednesday in Joyner<lb/>
Library Auditorium. Flinn<lb/>
incorporated a brief history of<lb/>
early modern art as an<lb/>
expression of the times and a<lb/>
discussion of major problems<lb/>
of today into his main topic:<lb/>
The Dilemma of Modern Man.<lb/>
Flinn introduced his talk by<lb/>
describing his own early<lb/>
experiences at a university and<lb/>
told how he finally came to<lb/>
choose his field of special<lb/>
interest. He said that after<lb/>
failing as a business student at<lb/>
the University of Oregon, he<lb/>
discovered that he was mainly<lb/>
interested in "ideas and<lb/>
changed his major to<lb/>
humanities.<lb/>
EUROPE<lb/>
A trip to Europe served to<lb/>
focus his interests upon art<lb/>
history. While attending<lb/>
graduate school in Oregon, he<lb/>
was assigned a paper on<lb/>
Surrealism, and one of the<lb/>
questions raised in his research<lb/>
was why twentieth century art<lb/>
is so different from what had<lb/>
gone before.<lb/>
As an introduction to his<lb/>
later discussion of current<lb/>
problems, Flinn then briefly<lb/>
traced the history of art as a<lb/>
reflection of social and<lb/>
political feeling from the time<lb/>
of the Industrial Revolution to<lb/>
the twentieth century.<lb/>
He said that the Industrial<lb/>
Revolution fostered a feeling<lb/>
of "positivism" about man's<lb/>
ability to manipulate his<lb/>
environment.<lb/>
ANTIQUITY<lb/>
Artists had always looked<lb/>
back to antiquity as a "frame<lb/>
of reference" for their work,<lb/>
White Ball<lb/>
held here<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega Service<lb/>
Fraternity held its 17th annual<lb/>
White Ball Saturday night in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Music was<lb/>
provided by the original<lb/>
Drifters.<lb/>
Becky Laekey, nominated<lb/>
by Theta Chi Fraternity was<lb/>
the White Ball Queen. She was<lb/>
honored in the Parade of<lb/>
Queens at intermission. White<lb/>
Ball Chairman George<lb/>
Georghiou estimated that<lb/>
several hundred people<lb/>
attended the dance and said it<lb/>
would be a matter of weeks<lb/>
before the total amount of<lb/>
money taken in could be<lb/>
determined. AH proceeds of<lb/>
the dance go to the Pitt<lb/>
County Crippled Childrens<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Johnny Karns of radio<lb/>
station WOOW was guest host<lb/>
and Dr. James Butler was<lb/>
Master of Ceremonies.<lb/>
and when the past no longer<lb/>
served as a frame of reference,<lb/>
and artists "started looking<lb/>
forward; they became<lb/>
self conscious and scared<lb/>
This feeling of uncertainty<lb/>
was true of the nineteenth<lb/>
century in general; for<lb/>
example, the writings of<lb/>
Darwin and Freud, when the<lb/>
effects of their work finally<lb/>
reached society, shook man's<lb/>
complacency about his<lb/>
previously assured feelings of<lb/>
superiority.<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
Flinn pointed out that the<lb/>
growth of the cities and the<lb/>
period of constant change in<lb/>
the nineteenth century<lb/>
changed the feeling of<lb/>
"positivism" into one of<lb/>
"negat.v.sm'that contained an<lb/>
"irrational streak In thefieW<lb/>
of art, for example<lb/>
Impressionists de-emphasized<lb/>
human beings in their<lb/>
paintings. In the twentieth<lb/>
century, artists were<lb/>
attempting to try something<lb/>
new. As the environment began<lb/>
to "dwarf man this<lb/>
phenomenon led to a "feeling<lb/>
of alienation; the artist felt<lb/>
that the world of the spirit had<lb/>
been neglected and that<lb/>
interpersonal relationships<lb/>
were beginning to die Oneof<lb/>
the artistic movements that<lb/>
represented a break with the<lb/>
past was Dadaism.<lb/>
(continued on page 3)<lb/>
Postal strike engulfs<lb/>
nation as millions wait<lb/>
The current postal strike has<lb/>
affected millions and could<lb/>
possibly engulf the entire<lb/>
nation before a settlement can<lb/>
be reached.<lb/>
"Only President Nixon can<lb/>
intervene and bring about a<lb/>
settlement said Gus<lb/>
Johnson, president of the New<lb/>
York Letter Carriers Union.<lb/>
"We have gone along a street<lb/>
of broken dreams for 19<lb/>
months with nothing concrete<lb/>
in the proposals he said.<lb/>
POSTMASTER<lb/>
Postmaster General Winton<lb/>
M. Blount stated that "I<lb/>
remain convinced that the vast<lb/>
majority of postal workers are<lb/>
loyal, dedicated citizens. I feel<lb/>
certain that they will accept in<lb/>
good faith their national<lb/>
officers' plea that they return<lb/>
to work at once, so that<lb/>
meaningful negotiations can<lb/>
commence<lb/>
The ultimate aim of the<lb/>
postal workers is passage of<lb/>
Post Office pay hikes and<lb/>
reform legislation now before<lb/>
congress.<lb/>
NO SETTLEMENT<lb/>
James H. Rademacher,<lb/>
president of the Letter Carriers<lb/>
union, said that if a settlement<lb/>
is not reached within five days<lb/>
of talks, he would call a<lb/>
nationwide strike, despite<lb/>
federal law banning strikes by<lb/>
government workers.<lb/>
In New York, where the<lb/>
strike originated Wednesday, <lb/>
post office spokesman said<lb/>
mail was already piled so high<lb/>
it would take 10 days tc<lb/>
(continued on page 3)<lb/>
Administrative Notice<lb/>
Maminiiuanvc ??? nuarter trow<lb/>
NOTE: Dormitory room rent will be increased to $90 per q<lb/>
$77 per quarter as of Fall Quarter 1970. for H<lb/>
All students (men and women) who desire dorm.to ,$ Qffice<lb/>
Quarter 1970 will be required to make deposits in trie jj-<lb/>
April 7 through April 13. Women students who plan i <lb/>
dormitory with self limiting hours will be required to ma -<lb/>
Monday, April 6. Interested women students who hav ntac1the<lb/>
information about the Self-Limiting Hours Dormitory snou $90fof<lb/>
Dean of Women's Office immediately. The required deposi is g<lb/>
the Self Limiting Hours Dormitory) of which $50 is rerun <lb/>
July 1 if the Housing Office is notified in writing prior to W? dornlitofy<lb/>
students may obtain dormitory room applications from t jflfa<lb/>
counselors in the buildings in which they live. Men stl,de"he bujdingsin<lb/>
dormitory room applications from the resident advisors in jcations<lb/>
which they live. Day students may obtain dormitory roo (he<lb/>
from the Housing Office. These applications must be pre <lb/>
Cashier's Office and marked "Paid" by the Cashier<lb/>
assignments will he made. ? fS,and 1?"<lb/>
Women students will sign up for rooms on April 9, . Do'rmjtofY wt,?<lb/>
Women students wishing to live in the Self-Limiting Hours ,<lb/>
are presently assigned to New "C" Dormitory will sign Qther women<lb/>
Dormitory Counselor on April 9 to remain in this doTvnto'gr will sign "P<lb/>
students wishing to live in the Self-Limiting Hours Dormi i<lb/>
in the dormitory counselor's office in New "C" Dormito . hey<lb/>
Women students wishing to remain in the same dorm't0nLejr dorm0<lb/>
are presently assigned will sign up for their rooms in rjSjngjuni?rs<lb/>
counselor's office on April 14. Graduates, rising seniors, aden0 0 these<lb/>
wishing to live in some other dormitory, as well as day s dormitory in<lb/>
classifications, will sign up in the counselor's office o gQ t0 the<lb/>
which they wish to live on April 15. Rising sophomores <lb/>
basement of Garrett Hall to draw for their assignment an<lb/>
dormitory office to sign up for their rooms on April I6- 0n APrl<lb/>
Men students will sign up for rooms in the lobby of Sc? uponAPrl<lb/>
14, 15, and 16. Rising seniors and graduate students wl J,ortson<lb/>
14, rising juniors will sign up on April 15, and rising sop<lb/>
16.<lb/>
Broac<lb/>
ill ht<lb/>
A Broadcasting &amp;<lb/>
Lortunities Seminar<lb/>
held in South Cafeter.<lb/>
April 3 from 3 a.m.<lb/>
Panelists, whose<lb/>
I will describe areas <lb/>
casting and vocation<lb/>
tunities, will conduct<lb/>
nar. It is sponsored b<lb/>
 sion of Continuing E<lb/>
the North Carolina (<lb/>
American Women in<lb/>
Television, Inc the<lb/>
Home Economics<lb/>
Department of D<lb/>
Speech.<lb/>
After registration<lb/>
9 a.m Dr. Robert<lb/>
president of ECU,<lb/>
Clinard, presidei<lb/>
AVVRT will welcome<lb/>
Richard Barron<lb/>
general manager of '<lb/>
and television ir<lb/>
Salem will give "Ai<lb/>
of Broadcasting" at<lb/>
Panels will begin<lb/>
with "Programn<lb/>
duction, On-the<lb/>
Engineering Mod<lb/>
Flinn ei<lb/>
and Vii<lb/>
continued from i<lb/>
Flinn stated th<lb/>
attempted to "ridic<lb/>
society" in their<lb/>
added that Dada<lb/>
"non-movement<lb/>
Yippies, and t<lb/>
comparable to a d<lb/>
"revolutions" of tc<lb/>
the Blacks and th<lb/>
in the concern over<lb/>
Concentrating<lb/>
problems, Flinn c<lb/>
two of the mos<lb/>
influences in Am<lb/>
last ten years are 1<lb/>
the increasing use<lb/>
the effects of<lb/>
Vietnam. He sa<lb/>
increasing use o<lb/>
heroin, especially ;<lb/>
children, must i<lb/>
Adm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0003"/><lb/>
J<lb/>
Fountainhead, March 23, 1970, Page 3<lb/>
turei<lb/>
ieeting<lb/>
m" to one of<lb/>
'that contained an<lb/>
streak In the field<lb/>
for example<lb/>
'ists de-emphasized<lb/>
)ein9s in their<lb/>
ln the twentieth<lb/>
, artists were<lb/>
to try something<lb/>
! environment began<lb/>
3rf man t<lb/>
n led to a "feeling<lb/>
on; the artist felt<lb/>
)rld of the spirit had<lb/>
ilected and that<lb/>
)nal relationships<lb/>
ning to die Oneof<lb/>
c movements that<lb/>
I a break with the<lb/>
adaism.<lb/>
nued on page 3)<lb/>
gulfs<lb/>
is wait<lb/>
at once, so that<lb/>
j negotiations can<lb/>
i"<lb/>
timate aim of the<lb/>
irkers is passage oi<lb/>
ice pay hikes and<lb/>
jislation now before<lb/>
ETTLEMENT<lb/>
H. Rademacher,<lb/>
of the Letter Carriers<lb/>
d that if a settlement<lb/>
;hed within five days<lb/>
he would call a<lb/>
i'de strike, despite<lb/>
m banning strikes by<lb/>
nt workers.<lb/>
N York, where the<lb/>
jinated Wednesday<lb/>
ice spokesman said<lb/>
already piled so high<lb/>
I take 10 days to<lb/>
o $90 per quarter<lb/>
.rmitory rooms for<lb/>
lin the Cashes 0?<lb/>
ho plan to live fa <lb/>
ed to make depos<lb/>
who have not ?-<lb/>
itorv fiftSSS<lb/>
d deposit is $60 ??<lb/>
JO is refundable prior?<lb/>
L to this date. Won<lb/>
n$ from their dornjjj<lb/>
Aen students may ob?<lb/>
litory room appje<lb/>
?"? bC PTfore ?<lb/>
, Cashier before<lb/>
ng Hours Dormitorv<lb/>
dormitory. Otne<lb/>
rs Dormitory .?? ,j<lb/>
'DormTtowh.ch?<lb/>
joms m trVe,r.cinajoniors<lb/>
seniors, and r,s.ng t<lb/>
as day stude oth<lb/>
?? of thB Too? ?<lb/>
iphomores wi" 9 ,he<lb/>
?. and then 9?<lb/>
iinen anu<lb/>
iriM6. MaHonAPril<lb/>
lents will ?9Jon<lb/>
,s,ng sophomor<lb/>
Broadcasters<lb/>
ill hold seminar<lb/>
A Broadcasting Career Op-<lb/>
portunities Seminar will be<lb/>
!Ke,d in South CafeterfcFr,day,<lb/>
April 3 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Panelists, whose addresses<lb/>
will describe areas of broad-<lb/>
casting and vocational oppor-<lb/>
tunities, will conduct the semi-<lb/>
nar It is sponsored by the Divi-<lb/>
sion of Continuing Education,<lb/>
the North Carolina Chapter of<lb/>
American Women in Radio and<lb/>
Television, Inc the School of<lb/>
Home Economics and the<lb/>
Department of Drama and<lb/>
SPeeCh- Q ??<lb/>
After registration from 8 to<lb/>
gam Dr. Robert Holt, vice<lb/>
president of ECU, and Ruth<lb/>
Clinard, president of the<lb/>
AWRT will welcome guests.<lb/>
Richard Barron, assistant<lb/>
general manager of WSJS radio<lb/>
and television in Winston-<lb/>
Salem will give "An Overview<lb/>
of Broadcasting" at 9:15 a.m.<lb/>
Panels will begin at 10 a.m.<lb/>
with "Programming, Pro-<lb/>
duction, On-the-Air-Talent,<lb/>
Engineering Moderator will<lb/>
be Peg Rayborn of WSOC-TV<lb/>
in Charlotte, with broadcaster<lb/>
panelists from throughout the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Immediately following this,<lb/>
the panel discussion will be on<lb/>
"Sales, Traffic, Continuity,<lb/>
Time Buying with Edward<lb/>
Bizelle from WFMY-TV in<lb/>
Greensboro as moderator, with<lb/>
a different set of panelists.<lb/>
After lunch in the cafeteria,<lb/>
a second set of panels begins.<lb/>
The first, "Freelance Broad-<lb/>
casting will be conducted by<lb/>
Clara Martin of WBIG, in<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
"Station Promotion-mer-<lb/>
chandising-Product Promo-<lb/>
tion" will be discussed by Jeta<lb/>
Pace from WFMY-TV in<lb/>
Greensboro, and her panelists.<lb/>
Another break at 3 p.m. will<lb/>
precede the final panel-<lb/>
"News-Public Affairs-Public<lb/>
Service with moderator<lb/>
Martie Johnson from<lb/>
WTVD-TV in Durham.<lb/>
At 4:30 a recap session will<lb/>
(continued on page 7)<lb/>
Microbiologist condemns<lb/>
man's spoiling of life<lb/>
 i r hrrihio rnnHitinns " makeup can be altered 1<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (AP)-Micro-<lb/>
biologist Rene Dubos said<lb/>
Wednesday the greatest danger<lb/>
facing man is "not so much the<lb/>
destruction of life as the spoil-<lb/>
ing of its quality<lb/>
"I doubt that all human life<lb/>
or any other forms of life will<lb/>
be destroyed Dubos said, "or<lb/>
even that we will experience<lb/>
major catastrophes - except, of<lb/>
course, in the event of a nuc-<lb/>
lear war<lb/>
Dubos spoke at a news con-<lb/>
ference and later at a sympo-<lb/>
sium on "Man and Environ-<lb/>
ment" at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Dubos called for "immediate<lb/>
action programs where ever<lb/>
possible" to combat damage to<lb/>
the environment.<lb/>
But, he added, "no real<lb/>
improvement in environmental<lb/>
quality can be achieved until<lb/>
we change our ways of life,<lb/>
because we are the environ-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
"Man can survive and multi-<lb/>
ply under horrible conditions<lb/>
he said, "despite shortages of<lb/>
food and amid pollutants<lb/>
Dubos rejected as "absurd<lb/>
and ethical monstrosity" the<lb/>
contention that man's genetic<lb/>
makeup can be altered to adapt<lb/>
him to new environments<lb/>
created by modern technology.<lb/>
"We must adjust the envi-<lb/>
ronment to man, not man to<lb/>
the environment he said.<lb/>
Postal unions vote<lb/>
for continual walkouts<lb/>
continued from page 2<lb/>
straighten it out if the strike<lb/>
were settled immediately.<lb/>
Postal unions in Cleveland,<lb/>
Boston, Chicago, Pittsbrugh,<lb/>
Minneapolis, Milwaukee, San<lb/>
Francisco and Los Angeles<lb/>
surburbs quickly followed the<lb/>
New York lead, voting to<lb/>
continue walkouts already in<lb/>
effect or to initiate new ones.<lb/>
Continuation of the strikes<lb/>
in the face of federal<lb/>
injunctions, already granted in<lb/>
some cities, could result in<lb/>
penalties of one year in jail and<lb/>
$1,000 in fines.<lb/>
The Wall Street financial<lb/>
community felt the blow as<lb/>
trad:ng volume dipped to 7.91<lb/>
million shares Friday on the<lb/>
New York Stock Exchange,<lb/>
lowest since Dec. 26.<lb/>
Postal workers in<lb/>
Winston-Salem and Charlotte<lb/>
voted Sunday to stay on their<lb/>
jobs for five days to await the<lb/>
results of negotiations planned<lb/>
by the federal government and<lb/>
the union.<lb/>
Charlotte union members<lb/>
called for "national unity"<lb/>
with an overwhelming voice<lb/>
vote, local leader Earl Clonger<lb/>
said following the meeting.<lb/>
Flinn emphasizes effects of drugs<lb/>
and Vietnam war on America<lb/>
continued from page 2<lb/>
Flinn stated that Dadaists<lb/>
attempted to "ridicule modern<lb/>
society" in their work. He<lb/>
added that Dadaism was a<lb/>
"non-movement" like the<lb/>
Yippies, and that it was<lb/>
comparable to a degree to the<lb/>
"revolutions" of today among<lb/>
the Blacks and the younq and<lb/>
in the concern over ecology.<lb/>
Concentrating on current<lb/>
problems, Flinn asserted that<lb/>
two of the most important<lb/>
influences in America in the<lb/>
last ten years are the effects of<lb/>
the increasing use of drugs and<lb/>
the effects of the war in<lb/>
Vietnam. He said that the<lb/>
increasing use of drugs like<lb/>
heroin, especially among young<lb/>
children, must represent "a<lb/>
lack of hope He added that<lb/>
he felt that many people "are<lb/>
doing drugs either because they<lb/>
feel impotent or because they<lb/>
feel they can go beyond reality<lb/>
and escape<lb/>
He discussed the<lb/>
disillusioning effects that war<lb/>
has had on society, not only<lb/>
today, but also at the time of<lb/>
World Wars I and II. Flinn said<lb/>
that "learning to live with the<lb/>
bomb is an example of how<lb/>
people can become "numb to<lb/>
horrible things One of the<lb/>
major problems in America<lb/>
today is the quality of life in<lb/>
the cities. Flinn described his<lb/>
impressions of New York<lb/>
Citythe filth, the feeling of<lb/>
danger, the despair in the faces<lb/>
of the people and the apathy<lb/>
and indifference.<lb/>
h linn stated that a<lb/>
"university experience" is a<lb/>
"critical learning period and<lb/>
he urged students to<lb/>
"investigage everything to see<lb/>
what interests you He added<lb/>
that this idea is often<lb/>
destroyed in education.<lb/>
Flinn warned against apathy<lb/>
and "compromising beyond<lb/>
the point of humanity He<lb/>
concluded by reminding his<lb/>
audience that "it was the<lb/>
'silent majority' in Nazi<lb/>
Germany that allowed six<lb/>
million Jews to die<lb/>
A multi-media Lenton<lb/>
Easter Worship Service will be<lb/>
held at the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union at 8 p.m. Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
ROCK CONCERT<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH EASTER<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
"TRACTOR"<lb/>
straight from New York's Fillmore<lb/>
phis "WILDFIRE"<lb/>
Columbia's new rock rage<lb/>
Myrtle Beach Convention Center<lb/>
2 Big Shows<lb/>
Salt, 8 p.m<lb/>
Sun. 4 p.m.<lb/>
Mrch 28th, 29th<lb/>
Admission: $2-TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM:<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH CONVENTION CENTER<lb/>
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C.<lb/>
WRITE TODAY<lb/>
ismsasmmsmmsssmemSSSmssmmmn<lb/>
RECORD BAR QUICKIE SALE<lb/>
(Monday through Wednesday only)<lb/>
The Beethoven Nine Symphonies<lb/>
conducted by Herbert Van Karaan<lb/>
with The Berlin Philharmonic<lb/>
DGG 8 Record Set Reg. $48.00<lb/>
Monday through Wednesday Only $23.95 (stereo)<lb/>
Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young<lb/>
"Deja Vu"<lb/>
Album Reg. $5.98 Now Only $4.19<lb/>
Tapes Reg. $6.95 Now Only $5.49<lb/>
S<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0004"/><lb/>
.WVVftf- Jin ?<lb/>
Page 4, Fountainhead, March 23, 1970<lb/>
Campus Hi-lites<lb/>
Lectures by Dr. von<lb/>
Dr. Alexander von Hase, a<lb/>
German lecturer and historian,<lb/>
will begin a series of three lec-<lb/>
tures here tonight.<lb/>
His schedule for tonight and<lb/>
Tuesday is:<lb/>
Monday, 8 p.m Education<lb/>
Psychology, room 129, "The<lb/>
Education System and the<lb/>
Student Riots in Germanv "<lb/>
Craighead to receiv<lb/>
Houston Craighead.<lb/>
assistant professor of<lb/>
philosophy, has completed the<lb/>
requirements for the doctor of<lb/>
philosophy degree at the<lb/>
Hase to begin<lb/>
Tuesday, 4 p.m Rawl<lb/>
Building, room 130 "German<lb/>
Resistance Against Hitler<lb/>
Tuesday, 8 p.m Library<lb/>
Aud i t or ium, room 21 4,<lb/>
"Germany Between East and<lb/>
West<lb/>
A question and answer<lb/>
period will follow each lecture.<lb/>
The public is invited to attend.<lb/>
e Ph.D. degree<lb/>
University of Texas.<lb/>
Craighead is a native of<lb/>
San Antonio, Tex. He joined<lb/>
the faculty in 1966.<lb/>
Stadium<lb/>
f Drive-in<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
HOUR<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotdnche Sts. Greenville, N, C.<lb/>
1 Hr. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
High school seniors<lb/>
awarded funds<lb/>
Ronald H . Baes,<lb/>
writer-in-residence at St.<lb/>
Andrews College, will lead his<lb/>
team of visiting poets in a<lb/>
public reading here in the<lb/>
Nursing School Auditorium at<lb/>
8 p.m Friday, April 3.<lb/>
Accompanying Mr. Bayes<lb/>
are Craig Smith, Waverly Land,<lb/>
Todd Davis, and John Lawson,<lb/>
St. Andrews students, and Dr.<lb/>
W.D. White of the St. Andrews<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
MATCH<lb/>
This program is part of a<lb/>
poetry match between St.<lb/>
Andrews and East Carolina<lb/>
University. The ECU Poetry<lb/>
Forum will return the visit<lb/>
April 17, readi ng in<lb/>
Laurinburg.<lb/>
Besides being<lb/>
Writer in-Residence at St.<lb/>
Andrews, Bayes is co-ordinator<lb/>
of the North Carolina Poetry<lb/>
Circuit.<lb/>
SPONSORED<lb/>
He is one of the small<lb/>
number of poets which the<lb/>
North Carolina Arts Council<lb/>
sponsors in public readings<lb/>
throughout the state The<lb/>
student poets represent the<lb/>
best who have been working<lb/>
with Bayes.<lb/>
Vernon Ward, d rector of<lb/>
the ECU Poetry Forum,<lb/>
promises a lively program. The<lb/>
public is invited.<lb/>
S.M.I. Recorded Self Im-<lb/>
provement courses and<lb/>
records. Business-Selling<lb/>
&amp; Motivational aids.<lb/>
Oscar E. Roberson<lb/>
Box 308 7954778<lb/>
Robersonville, N.C.<lb/>
We Care!<lb/>
Do You?<lb/>
Difference With A Purpose<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
tgma Hau jtgma<lb/>
April 7&amp;9 7:30<lb/>
West Second Street<lb/>
"Brotherhood gives us strength to serve<lb/>
the University and the community<lb/>
REFRESHMENTS<lb/>
Monthly dues: $3<lb/>
Rush fee: $15<lb/>
Six weeks rush period<lb/>
For A ddt tonal Information<lb/>
And Rides Call<lb/>
756-5963<lb/>
? ????? condensed news briefs<lb/>
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation sets fund<lb/>
A fund has been set up in<lb/>
the Nonh Carolina Cystic<lb/>
Fibrosis Foundation in<lb/>
memory of a student here who<lb/>
died in January.<lb/>
Mona Kay Wilson, 19, was a<lb/>
victim of this disease, which<lb/>
usually causes death before the<lb/>
age of 12. Mona was the<lb/>
second oldest person to have<lb/>
lived with it.<lb/>
The disease causes a<lb/>
malfunctioning at the glands,<lb/>
and usually affects one other<lb/>
organ. It also creates scar tissue<lb/>
in the lungs, causing portions<lb/>
to cease functioning.<lb/>
Men's Honor Coun<lb/>
Several cases involving<lb/>
textbook theft were among the<lb/>
those heard by the Men's<lb/>
Honor Council on March 19.<lb/>
One person was suspended<lb/>
for spring quarter on the<lb/>
charge of stealing a textbook.<lb/>
Two other cases involved the<lb/>
theft and sale of books. The<lb/>
persons involved were found<lb/>
guilty and suspended for spring<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
A student charged w;th<lb/>
forging an infirmary excuse<lb/>
At the age of 16, Mona was<lb/>
informed that she could spend<lb/>
12 hours a day in medication<lb/>
and exercises that might<lb/>
improve her condition, but she<lb/>
decided instead to live a<lb/>
normal life.<lb/>
She had received treatment<lb/>
and had participated in<lb/>
e x per i ments at Duke<lb/>
University, the main clinic of<lb/>
the United States Cystic<lb/>
Fibrosis Research.<lb/>
Contributions to the fund<lb/>
should be sent to Dr. Sophie<lb/>
Fischel, Box 4224, Catawba<lb/>
College, Salisbury, N.C.<lb/>
cil hears offenses<lb/>
was found guilty and received a<lb/>
suspended suspension through<lb/>
fall quarter of 1970, and an<lb/>
official reprimand.<lb/>
In another case, a student<lb/>
was charged with stealing 30<lb/>
packs of cigarettes. He was<lb/>
given social probation and an<lb/>
indefinite suspended<lb/>
suspension.<lb/>
A student who was charged<lb/>
with cheating was found not<lb/>
guilty.<lb/>
Sternberger Foundation awards money<lb/>
East Carolina will receive<lb/>
$1,600 annually for scholar-<lb/>
ships from the Sigmund Stern-<lb/>
berger Foundation of Greens-<lb/>
boro beginning next year.<lb/>
The funds, approved at a<lb/>
recent meeting, will be<lb/>
awarded to students who are<lb/>
North Carolina residents, pre-<lb/>
ferably from the Greensboro<lb/>
Guilford County area.<lb/>
The foundation specifies<lb/>
that the scholarships may be<lb/>
awarded in amounts and num-<lb/>
bers the ECU financial commit-<lb/>
tee finds appropriate.<lb/>
Visiting poets to hold reading<lb/>
Eleven high school seniors<lb/>
from North Carolina and<lb/>
Virginia have been awarded<lb/>
East Carolina Academic Scho-<lb/>
larships, Robert M. Boureaux,<lb/>
financial aid officer, has an-<lb/>
nounced.<lb/>
Selected by the University<lb/>
Scholarship Committee from<lb/>
42 applicants, the recipients<lb/>
will each receive a $4,000scho-<lb/>
larship-Si ,000 each year.<lb/>
Jbnooku<lb/>
?<lb/>
?Z<lb/>
Plaids<lb/>
-They<lb/>
Did you know there are two basic categories of plai ?<lb/>
are the even or balanced. And the uneven or unbalanced<lb/>
An even plaid is the same to<lb/>
the left and right. Also above<lb/>
and below a central bar. This<lb/>
holds true in both color and<lb/>
width of bars.<lb/>
With uneven plaids, the<lb/>
width of the bars differ<lb/>
crosswise and lengthwise.<lb/>
It is advisable to study a<lb/>
plaid skirt or suit carefully.<lb/>
Make certain that you will like<lb/>
the effect it produces on you.<lb/>
A tall thin figure could use a<lb/>
plaid with a dominant crossbar.<lb/>
A stout figure calls for a<lb/>
dominant lengthwise bar. Both<lb/>
are in the uneven category.<lb/>
See our wide variety<lb/>
plaids, including slacK ,<lb/>
A-skirts, and suits.<lb/>
Come and see? ?? fa<lb/>
fashions at THt <lb/>
FOX. We carry only e<lb/>
in dresses. ???<lb/>
and accessories, ana <lb/>
friendliest es sH00<lb/>
Visit us soon, THi- hofie<lb/>
FOX, 203 East 5th ? 0<lb/>
758-4061. Open daily ,<lb/>
6. Student charges aval<lb/>
? ???? ? ? ?<lb/>
Re<lb/>
By ROBERT McDO<lb/>
Reviews Edito<lb/>
You Made Me .<lb/>
Happy, iou Rawls<lb/>
ST427).<lb/>
You Made Me<lb/>
Happy 'S a smootr<lb/>
smooth to the point<lb/>
lifeless. The Rawls'<lb/>
(monologues, monot<lb/>
homes) is overworl<lb/>
again. The mal<lb/>
good-Randy Newma<lb/>
T. Jones, Dave Masor<lb/>
vocals are uninspired<lb/>
walking through this <lb/>
The title song <lb/>
better by Blood, S<lb/>
Tears (believe it<lb/>
"Feelin' Alright" cc<lb/>
well; "Hurtin<lb/>
bluesy, flows across<lb/>
patented, coffee-scah<lb/>
"Yesterday's <lb/>
"Let's Burn D<lb/>
Cornfield and "M<lb/>
Me Not to Come"<lb/>
foundation of a gooc<lb/>
set: relaxed vocals, s<lb/>
lines, nice changes o<lb/>
tempo.<lb/>
There is a hint of<lb/>
production in<lb/>
Children but the i<lb/>
album avoids the c<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
This album is goc<lb/>
if the audience is<lb/>
demanding. But th<lb/>
clearly not up to Re<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
By HARRY H<lb/>
Loadstone, L<lb/>
(BarnabyZ12 3500'<lb/>
This new group rt<lb/>
Andy Williams' new<lb/>
broken into the jazz<lb/>
by playing a style o1<lb/>
relies heavily on<lb/>
beat of drums, bra:<lb/>
Che<lb/>
has mov<lb/>
to back c<lb/>
next t(<lb/>
Enter from pa<lb/>
Jennis Whiteh<lb/>
Call Pegg<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0005"/><lb/>
Wmm<lb/>
Fountatnhwd. Mwth 23. ?70. Pa 5<lb/>
vs briefs<lb/>
ts fund<lb/>
of 16,MonaWas<lb/>
she could spend<lb/>
!V in medication<lb/>
es tnat might<lb/>
edition, but she<lb/>
tead to live a<lb/>
ceived treatment<lb/>
articipated in<lb/>
nts at Duke<lb/>
ie main clinic of<lb/>
States Cystic<lb/>
irch.<lb/>
?ns to the fund<lb/>
it to Dr. Sophie<lb/>
4224, Catawba<lb/>
?ury, N.C.<lb/>
offenses<lb/>
ilty and received a<lb/>
spension through<lb/>
of 1970, and an<lb/>
nand.<lb/>
' case, a student<lb/>
with stealing 30<lb/>
garettes. He was<lb/>
probation and an<lb/>
:e suspended<lb/>
who was charged<lb/>
g was found not<lb/>
ards money<lb/>
na residents, pre-<lb/>
the Greensboro<lb/>
nty area,<lb/>
ndation specifies<lb/>
lolarships may be<lb/>
imounts and num-<lb/>
l financial commit-<lb/>
ropriate.<lb/>
ading<lb/>
by the University<lb/>
Committee from<lb/>
,ts, the recipients<lb/>
eivea$4,000scho-<lb/>
100 each year.<lb/>
es of plaids? They<lb/>
balanced.<lb/>
,ngthw!se bar. Both<lb/>
ieven category.<lb/>
wide variety of<lb/>
ncluding slacks,<lb/>
d suits.<lb/>
e the XSJ<lb/>
at THE SNOOTY<lb/>
i, the latest<lb/>
"V onlV hoes<lb/>
sportswear, sn<lb/>
East 5th St- P<lb/>
Open daily 9,<lb/>
charges available I<lb/>
R<lb/>
d R<lb/>
Weigand's record shows<lb/>
competence in his vocation<lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
Reviews Editor<lb/>
You Made Me So Very<lb/>
Happy, L?u Rawls fCaP'to1<lb/>
ST-427).<lb/>
You Made Me So Very<lb/>
Happy 'S a smooth album,<lb/>
smooth to the point of being<lb/>
lifeless. The Rawls' "formula"<lb/>
(monologues, monotones, and<lb/>
homes) is overworked once<lb/>
again. The material is<lb/>
good-Randy Newman, Booker<lb/>
T Jones, Dave Mason-but the<lb/>
vocals are uninspired (Rawls is<lb/>
walking through this one).<lb/>
The title song was done<lb/>
I better by Blood, Sweat, and<lb/>
I Tears (believe it or not).<lb/>
"Feelin' Alright" comes over<lb/>
well; "Hurtin " slow and<lb/>
 bluesy, flows across in Rawls'<lb/>
patented, coffee-scalded voice.<lb/>
"Yesterday's Dreams<lb/>
I "Let's Burn Down the<lb/>
Cornfield and "Mama Told<lb/>
I Me Not to Come" form the<lb/>
I foundation of a good nightclub<lb/>
I set: relaxed vocals, strong bass<lb/>
I lines, nice changes of pace and<lb/>
I tempo.<lb/>
There is a hint of "Motown"<lb/>
production in "All God's<lb/>
Children but the rest of the<lb/>
album avoids the commercial<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
This album is good listening<lb/>
if the audience is not too<lb/>
demanding. But the album is<lb/>
clearly not up to Rawls' earlier<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
By HARRY HEAD<lb/>
Loadstone, Loadstone<lb/>
(BarnabyZ12 35004).<lb/>
This new group recording on<lb/>
Andy Williams' new label, has<lb/>
broken into the jazz rock scene<lb/>
by playing a style of music that<lb/>
relies heavily on the driving<lb/>
beat of drums, brass and little<lb/>
else.<lb/>
Their music has a tendency<lb/>
to "grow" on the listener,<lb/>
much like that of B.S.&amp;T.<lb/>
One track in particular<lb/>
seems to stand out as unique;<lb/>
that being the "A" side cut<lb/>
called "See the Light The<lb/>
remaining songs capitalize on<lb/>
this track by repeating its basic<lb/>
sounds.<lb/>
On the whole, the group<lb/>
hasn't gotten it together on<lb/>
this LP. Their attempt at<lb/>
blending rock, jazz, and soul,<lb/>
simply does not come across.<lb/>
The potential is there; the<lb/>
group will just need more work<lb/>
on arrangements, with an<lb/>
emphasis on instrumental<lb/>
blend.<lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
Reviews Editor<lb/>
Second Winter, Johnny<lb/>
Winter (Columbia KCS 9947).<lb/>
Ever see a three-sided<lb/>
album? If you haven't I'll<lb/>
show you my copy of Second<lb/>
winter (I wouldn't advise you<lb/>
to buy it).<lb/>
Johnny Winter (remember<lb/>
the albino, cross-eyed, etc<lb/>
etc bluesman from Texas)<lb/>
arrived in a whirlwind of<lb/>
publicity, wowed the festival<lb/>
crowds ("How did you get to<lb/>
be such a freak?"), and<lb/>
presently resides somewhere<lb/>
off the charts.<lb/>
Ever since Johnny Winter<lb/>
was discovered by Mike<lb/>
Bloom f ield-who also<lb/>
discovered the Electric Flag<lb/>
(where are they now?), Winter<lb/>
has been a publicity success<lb/>
and a musical failure. Sure, he's<lb/>
good-and fast-but he's also<lb/>
imitative of a whole tradition<lb/>
of black blues-singers who were<lb/>
better and more original.<lb/>
Some of Winter's vocals (see<lb/>
"Johnny B. Goode" on side 2)<lb/>
are indistinguishable from<lb/>
those of the original author<lb/>
(Chuck Berry, in this case).<lb/>
Winter's original compositions<lb/>
are lack-luster-more noise<lb/>
than genius.<lb/>
Winter is a progeny-and a<lb/>
victim-of the "Super Star"<lb/>
process; his publicity<lb/>
stimulated more admirers than<lb/>
his music.<lb/>
The talent is there, but<lb/>
originality is not. Compared to<lb/>
such blues masters as B.B.King,<lb/>
Muddy Waters and Bukka<lb/>
White, winter is just a pale<lb/>
imitation.<lb/>
STOLEN: 1 painting of sitting<lb/>
nude from Senior exhibit in<lb/>
lobby of the union. No<lb/>
questions asked, return to UU<lb/>
control desk. Needed for<lb/>
completion of credits for<lb/>
graguation. Or call 758-1737.<lb/>
409 Biltmore.<lb/>
LOST: Yashica-A twin lens<lb/>
reflex camera from the<lb/>
Fountainhead Office on<lb/>
Thursday or Friday. This<lb/>
camera belongs to the Science<lb/>
Department and is needed to<lb/>
complete a photography<lb/>
course. Return to the<lb/>
Fountainhead, no questions<lb/>
asked.<lb/>
(continued from page I)<lb/>
"The only time I watch<lb/>
television is when I really want<lb/>
to goof off Weigand said. He<lb/>
elaborated on the importance<lb/>
of active rather than passive<lb/>
activity. Television, he said, is a<lb/>
spectator's sport and being a<lb/>
spectator is about the most<lb/>
"passive activity" there is.<lb/>
Much of his work is a hobby<lb/>
for him, too. Weigand said he<lb/>
especially enjoys teaching a<lb/>
quarterly study course. Perhaps<lb/>
much of his enjoyment stems<lb/>
from the "learning how to"<lb/>
attitude he instills in the<lb/>
students who voluntarily seek<lb/>
the secrets of good study<lb/>
habits.<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
Weigand attended Johns<lb/>
Hopkins University, where he<lb/>
received his A.B. in<lb/>
psychology. He received his<lb/>
Ph.D. from the University of<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
While working on his<lb/>
doctorate, he taught at Virginia<lb/>
Military Institute for almost a<lb/>
year. Weigand was with the<lb/>
counseling center of the<lb/>
University of Maryland before<lb/>
coming here.<lb/>
His equally active wife,<lb/>
whom he met at a Baltimore<lb/>
prep school, delights in<lb/>
Greenville community work.<lb/>
Their four sons range in age<lb/>
from 16 to 23.<lb/>
Asked if he had any other<lb/>
hobbies, Weigand had a<lb/>
faraway look in his eyes.<lb/>
PORSCHE<lb/>
Thoroughly relaxed with his<lb/>
feet propped on his desk, he<lb/>
said, "Oh, yes, I took my<lb/>
number four son to see a<lb/>
Porsche the other day. You<lb/>
see, I have this thing about<lb/>
sports cars<lb/>
l<lb/>
Airs. T<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca-Cola Bottling Company,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
? 3-HOUR SHIRT SERVICE<lb/>
? 1 - HOUR CLEANING<lb/>
Hour Glass Cleaners<lb/>
DRIVE - IN CURB SERVICE<lb/>
14th and Charles St. - Corner Across From Hardee's<lb/>
Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service<lb/>
Chez Shirlee's Beauty Shoppes<lb/>
has moved from Georgetowne Shoppes<lb/>
to back of Old Greenville Beauty School<lb/>
next to the College Shop on 5th St.<lb/>
Enter from parking lot in rear of Georgetowne Shoppes<lb/>
Jennis Whitehurst, Patsy Manning, &amp; Peggy Leggett<lb/>
aer at your service.<lb/>
Call Peggy for a pleasing style on long hair.<lb/>
Tel. 758-2455<lb/>
Come to see us!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0006"/><lb/>
??HHH0?Wtfl'?'<lb/>
 ,fc ????? -<lb/>
C,1U ,<lb/>
Page 6, Fountainhead, March 23, 1970<lb/>
City Council considering<lb/>
subsidized bus system<lb/>
By BARBARA FUSSELL<lb/>
Greenville's City Council is<lb/>
considering subsidizing a bus<lb/>
system to service the city.<lb/>
A subsidy would guarantee<lb/>
the owner a profit because the<lb/>
city would have to maintain<lb/>
that profit in case thy system<lb/>
itself did not.<lb/>
Wooten said that in other<lb/>
small towns such as Wilson bus<lb/>
services have been unprofitable<lb/>
and at times costing towns<lb/>
large amounts of money per<lb/>
week. Thus, there is a slim<lb/>
chance the subsidy svstem will of the town<lb/>
be approved.<lb/>
If acquired, it would cover<lb/>
the major areas where there is a<lb/>
demand for traffic. The buses<lb/>
would transport people to<lb/>
places such as shopping<lb/>
centers, the<lb/>
Burroughs-Wellcome plant, and<lb/>
the hospital, Wooten said.<lb/>
If the City Council finds a<lb/>
desirable way of obtaining a<lb/>
bus system, ECU students<lb/>
would profit by the system,<lb/>
especially those who have<lb/>
part-time jobs in distant parts<lb/>
st"<lb/>
.?x-xx-w-<lb/>
X!X-xX'X-x-xXx?X'X:<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Great-Sounding<lb/>
Phonograph.<lb/>
Where is it?<lb/>
KLH designed the Model Eleven-W stereo<lb/>
phonograph to produce a maximum of music<lb/>
with a minimum of visible equipment.<lb/>
You will have to look hard to spot the<lb/>
Model Eleven-W in a room. Its control<lb/>
center is just a bit bigger than the records<lb/>
it plays, and the speakers are the size of<lb/>
shoeboxes.<lb/>
But you don't have to search for the<lb/>
sound. It's as big as all indoors-the kind<lb/>
of sound produced only by massive and<lb/>
expensive audio systems.<lb/>
The secret of the Model Eleven-W is a<lb/>
quality of engineering that no one ever<lb/>
thought of lavishing on something so<lb/>
small and unpretentious. KLH designed<lb/>
unique miniature speakers that can move<lb/>
more air (for really deep bass) than far<lb/>
larger console speakers, plus complemen-<lb/>
tary electronic circuitry that provides<lb/>
exactly the proportion of power the<lb/>
speakers need at different frequencies.<lb/>
i<lb/>
s<lb/>
As for what you can see, there is a cus-<lb/>
tom built Garrard record changer with a<lb/>
Pickering magnetic cartridge and diamond<lb/>
stylus. And the cabinetry, what little there<lb/>
is of it, is of genuine walnut veneers, not<lb/>
plastic or the kind of wood that might as<lb/>
well be plastic.<lb/>
Come in and search out the KLH Model<lb/>
Eleven-W. You will find its sound out of all<lb/>
proportion to its size and cost.<lb/>
liiillfililiiii I iilfil 1 I<lb/>
<lb/>
Hiiimiii if i i i 11 iiiiHiitf ti ii i it iiiBiumy<lb/>
VISITING STUDENTS AND faculty members took time out to listen as projects<lb/>
were explained.<lb/>
High school Science Fair<lb/>
displayed in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
The Northeastern District<lb/>
Science Fair for high school<lb/>
and junior high students, held<lb/>
Friday in the Memorial Gym,<lb/>
presented an array of various<lb/>
projects to visiting students<lb/>
and faculty members.<lb/>
Prof essor James D .<lb/>
Nicholson of the Science<lb/>
Education Department<lb/>
directed the Science Fair.<lb/>
WINNERS<lb/>
N i cholson announced the<lb/>
winners eligible for the State<lb/>
Fair at Duke University. They<lb/>
are:<lb/>
-Biological Science Senior<lb/>
Division<lb/>
Wolly Smith-Farmville High<lb/>
Steve Allen White-Havelock<lb/>
High<lb/>
Patsy Lynn Carraway-<lb/>
-Greene Central<lb/>
Patricia Joyner-Greene<lb/>
Central<lb/>
-Physical Science Senior<lb/>
Division<lb/>
Alton Privette Havelock<lb/>
High<lb/>
Joanne Moore-Greene<lb/>
Central<lb/>
Rodney Craig<lb/>
Smith-Southern Wayne High<lb/>
Marlene Dixon Hart-Greene<lb/>
Central<lb/>
-Biological Science Junior<lb/>
Division<lb/>
Vicky Ann Lee-Havelock<lb/>
High<lb/>
? ???????????a<lb/>
- v.v.v -<lb/>
????<lb/>
!?????????<lb/>
??:?:?:??:<lb/>
????.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ? ? a ? ? ??????????<lb/>
Greg Whitaker-Jones Junior<lb/>
High<lb/>
Physical Science Junior<lb/>
Division<lb/>
Walter Clark Grey,<lb/>
JrE.B.Aycock Junior High<lb/>
Richard H argarten-St.<lb/>
Mary's School<lb/>
PROJECTS<lb/>
The fair included projects<lb/>
such as "The Laser's Bright<lb/>
Magic "Water Pollution<lb/>
Analysis "A Homemade<lb/>
Tornado "A Hurricane<lb/>
Generator "Surfboard<lb/>
Hydrodynamics "Radio<lb/>
Astronomy "Extraction of<lb/>
Nicotine and "A Mini Brewer<lb/>
and The Color Organ<lb/>
??:?Vv<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
???????:?.?.?.?:??<lb/>
,vv.v.v?.w?x?C???WW?X'5'X'<lb/>
.Wv<lb/>
Sol Surf Shop 1<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, N.C.<lb/>
iVi't <lb/>
iVjyBj<lb/>
Jim Overlin - Surfboards Australia - Challenger<lb/>
Rick - Wayne Lynch(Australian Imports) - Oceanside <lb/>
New and Used Boards<lb/>
Rentals 1969 M0 I<lb/>
Surfing Accessories<lb/>
Open every weekend starting March 21<lb/>
The dep<lb/>
Sociology and S<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
University is c<lb/>
Urban Affairs C<lb/>
conference will e<lb/>
Plans have<lb/>
gather a represei<lb/>
of people<lb/>
community, the<lb/>
and the universi<lb/>
the major<lb/>
confronting our<lb/>
sought.<lb/>
The Green;<lb/>
of Commerce<lb/>
Community Sei<lb/>
North Caro<lb/>
Industrial<lb/>
co-sponsoring t<lb/>
ISSU<lb/>
Panelists w<lb/>
issues as emplc<lb/>
police and<lb/>
relations, sti<lb/>
movements,<lb/>
courts, and th<lb/>
university i<lb/>
revolution.<lb/>
Kenneth i<lb/>
professor of<lb/>
Rutgers Univer<lb/>
alienation and<lb/>
city.<lb/>
Police a<lb/>
relations will<lb/>
Ralph Spei<lb/>
department o<lb/>
Bennett College<lb/>
Political<lb/>
problems i<lb/>
government wi<lb/>
by Jimmii<lb/>
Greensboro Ci<lb/>
Tim Mills<lb/>
Randy Dixoi<lb/>
Join<lb/>
Gree<lb/>
nv<lb/>
Playcloth<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0007"/><lb/>
.i<lb/>
listen as projects<lb/>
Fair<lb/>
iseum<lb/>
taker-Jones Junior<lb/>
Science Junior<lb/>
Clark Grey,<lb/>
)ck Junior High<lb/>
d H argarten-St.<lb/>
iOl<lb/>
ROJECTS<lb/>
included projects<lb/>
l"he Laser's Bright<lb/>
"Water Pollution<lb/>
' "A Homemade<lb/>
' "A Hurricane<lb/>
)r "Surfboard<lb/>
lamics "Radio<lb/>
' "Extraction of<lb/>
and "A Mini Brewer<lb/>
lor Organ<lb/>
P<lb/>
llenger <lb/>
3ceanside I<lb/>
??<lb/>
 ?'<lb/>
SvSS<lb/>
MODEL <lb/>
OR LESS I<lb/>
Urban Conference<lb/>
conducted in Greensboro<lb/>
Fountainhead, March 23, 1970, Page 7<lb/>
The department of<lb/>
Sociology and Social Service of<lb/>
North Carolina A &amp; T State<lb/>
University is conducting an<lb/>
Urban Affairs Conference. The<lb/>
conference will end Friday.<lb/>
Plans have been made to<lb/>
gather a representative number<lb/>
of people from the<lb/>
community, the establishment,<lb/>
and the university; solutions to<lb/>
the major problems<lb/>
confronting our cities will be<lb/>
sought.<lb/>
The Greensboro Chamber<lb/>
of Commerce, the United<lb/>
Community Services, and the<lb/>
North Carolina A &amp; T<lb/>
Industrial Cluster are<lb/>
co-sponsoring the conference.<lb/>
ISSUES<lb/>
Panelists will discuss such<lb/>
issues as employment, housing,<lb/>
police and community<lb/>
relations, student protest<lb/>
movements, the city, the<lb/>
courts, and the role of the<lb/>
university in the urban<lb/>
revolution.<lb/>
Kenneth Kessin, assistant<lb/>
professor of sociology at<lb/>
Rutgers University will discuss<lb/>
alienation and lonliness in the<lb/>
city.<lb/>
Police and community<lb/>
relations will be headed by<lb/>
Ralph Speas from the<lb/>
department of sociology at<lb/>
Bennett College.<lb/>
Political Problems and<lb/>
problems of the city<lb/>
government will be approached<lb/>
by Jimmie Barber, a<lb/>
Greensboro City Councilman;<lb/>
Jack Elam, mayor of<lb/>
Greensboro; and Lawrence<lb/>
McSwain, President of the<lb/>
State Student Legislature.<lb/>
"The greatest emphasis of<lb/>
this conference is to have the<lb/>
full participation of poor<lb/>
people in all of its sessions, not<lb/>
just as observers and to be<lb/>
observed, but to express their<lb/>
views as panelists and by any<lb/>
other forum that is available<lb/>
during and after this<lb/>
conference said James I.<lb/>
Isler, chairman of the<lb/>
conference However, this is<lb/>
not an exclusive poor people<lb/>
conference, nor is it an<lb/>
academic affair, but a<lb/>
face-to-face meeting of persons<lb/>
who wish a broader view of<lb/>
urban problems<lb/>
Will be no fee<lb/>
(continued from page 3)<lb/>
be held by Elizabeth Wilson.<lb/>
Advanced registration is<lb/>
required and can be made in<lb/>
the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education in Erwin Hall. There<lb/>
is no fee.<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
SOUL, in conjunction with<lb/>
GAP and other organizations,<lb/>
is sponsoring a mass voters<lb/>
Registration &amp; Campaign in an<lb/>
effort to get 20,000 new voters<lb/>
in 22 counties comprising the<lb/>
1st Congressional District and<lb/>
Edgecomb Halifax, and Warren<lb/>
Countie. All people interested<lb/>
in helping are urged to attend<lb/>
an orientation session at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday in Ed-Psychology,<lb/>
room 129.<lb/>
Tim Mills<lb/>
Randy Dixon<lb/>
Donnie Dixon<lb/>
Jonny Weatherington<lb/>
M f ?$?<lb/>
Barber Shop<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
A &amp; P SHOPPING CENTER - E. 10th ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
fire Happening<lb/>
Join the JjJQ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By-Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 576-9991<lb/>
 Beach Bouitque<lb/>
Lots of tiny bikinisthat<lb/>
really take full advantage of<lb/>
those tanning rays All the<lb/>
latest exciting stylessarong<lb/>
wrapssidetiesand daring<lb/>
cut-aways. If a bikini isn't<lb/>
your style we've got lots of 2<lb/>
piece slip styles and swim shift<lb/>
toppers too Plus a complete<lb/>
selection of fun new beach<lb/>
fashions<lb/>
'Cliarge if<lb/>
or put it oe<lb/>
Lots of other things<lb/>
Are Happening Too"<lb/>
-THE PANT PLACE<lb/>
-WRANGLER LIMITS<lb/>
-BLOUSE BAZAAR<lb/>
-THE SHIFT SHOP<lb/>
Come in soon 2nd Floor<lb/>
town Greenville Open NigLtly Til 9PM<lb/>
Greenville's Only Bridal Shop ??X<lb/>
(prides Cgeautifui<lb/>
Cftcb fluid 3oW, UW<lb/>
230 GREENVILLE BLVD SUITE 2<lb/>
OIAL 756 1744<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA 27834<lb/>
21<lb/>
$m<lb/>
Hayclothcs, and Pants<lb/>
, and Pretty Party Somethings for lirides and After-Vives and Things.<lb/>
. jiMl m <lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0008"/><lb/>
fc,??W ??<lb/>
Page 8 Fountainheed March 231970<lb/>
Bucbalten<lb/>
B DON TRAUSNECI<lb/>
The baseba te first  n e of '?-  or ts h e se sc i - s <lb/>
' hi sdaN  oe thaca Co ege   A to prove<lb/>
blister Bombers 3-1,6-3<lb/>
XCt<lb/>
. v:<lb/>
rSSSSSWSSW<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
ountAinhed<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? the openthe 3. cs<lb/>
? ?'?: 'tV 3but x. d<lb/>
 ao oss- ?: n.?<lb/>
:  - ore than:?Ohto<lb/>
 f t e r Bria- McNee .<lb/>
: v r ?'? ?  . -the<lb/>
A'dr.dgeedh s<lb/>
.  , ?  ce<lb/>
5EATGROOM<lb/>
The p r-s o a: ed nn:i i<lb/>
? - :? - ? ? ? ? c  asthev secred<lb/>
j  e  ? n th r se ? 6 L<lb/>
 Speeder sta? t ed? <lb/>
.  - - - - - ; x ;was " t t? ?<lb/>
 A bad tf?'? ?.3<lb/>
- - - 7  ; ,?. ej H ? . J<lb/>
- : - - He scorecas  nrng<lb/>
r Don E dye banged a<lb/>
' " ' i , 2 5 -the<lb/>
?;<lb/>
L J?,<lb/>
Are you<lb/>
cut out for<lb/>
contact<lb/>
sports?<lb/>
- e fa cc j dr l handle.<lb/>
thaca got to Oxidine in the<lb/>
-Xrtti mning. scoring a run on a<lb/>
i v sand ched between two<lb/>
Hal Beard put the fire<lb/>
out to save the win for<lb/>
Ox id "i<lb/>
?re second game, the<lb/>
Bucs ca ne up n tne second<lb/>
a  ?3C3 3 -eady leading by<lb/>
, rtug Df a ivalk, an error, a<lb/>
 d pitch and a sacrifice fly.<lb/>
n ln? borne if of the<lb/>
second however Lvn Dov.d<lb/>
ej ?-  th a walk, Aidridge<lb/>
doubled 3 c Graver walked.to<lb/>
i'iv <lb/>
fill the bases. Dennis Vick drew<lb/>
another walk, driving in the<lb/>
P.rates' first run and starting<lb/>
pitcher Tim Barss sacrificed<lb/>
in another.<lb/>
4-1 LEAD<lb/>
Walks to Matt ftafker and<lb/>
Skip Taylor and a M-batsman<lb/>
brought in two more rum as<lb/>
the Bucs took a 4-1 eac in the<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
In the third the c rates get<lb/>
their final two r- is Aidndge<lb/>
delivered agai "5 rng a<lb/>
(cor: nuM x pmi 10<lb/>
:?:?:?:?:?:?<lb/>
? ?.??.?'<lb/>
From the sideline.<lb/>
Time for<lb/>
a break<lb/>
:?:?:?:<lb/>
m<lb/>
H By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
e Thursdarv aftemoc and the Easier brea ??? beupor,<lb/>
 Ajong m tfi those  the student bochj 3 stafl .?. <lb/>
Fouma nhead ? t3ve ac.a-tsge ol the time  tc rest dw<lb/>
Mear. re - es<lb/>
rlowever for :e -e'e s -c -es: Ths twne I beouf<lb/>
 i-ni  m :e sao I : -5 part ol Ihak .ar. or tc reprwent<lb/>
Fyd Care na University on the athletic f?W.<lb/>
The rsec team cufranth soon c a 2-1 record itw B<lb/>
   - ie, thaca eat .see a take 3  : ? r.<lb/>
ntmoutii Co Boa ttiaj eee Tve Feales a oto Nona<lb/>
ia-is Fr 3c. and Saturday and then travel tc natoti tc appoaj<lb/>
 "?r " 3<lb/>
:?ec<lb/>
i.<lb/>
-ga" roac<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
.?a-r 2' and Air 1 ar-c Iher : 3. -?: ?<lb/>
i:r 1 <lb/>
"5 5?3 3I<lb/>
? . .a -x -i -ZeCf  rtfcO ???<lb/>
host ne Trentor S3te 3: ' : - rndthen<lb/>
r: ?'? -3- -c '?' '? V33. The r?<lb/>
i ?,? oe held -r 3 and 4 at Greer-i e :<lb/>
,  : tpuxj hose Bow  Sraaa .?.?<lb/>
-   , ,te, and A 31 3 Man <lb/>
'3 !T 3 ?? SOJeC " 3 ? 3 :  T C ? '  -?s"<lb/>
S3 Sctri I3 3 ?  a  ?   -<lb/>
;  - ? ; r 3 - pr - a<lb/>
?3 i t : : :??" .i 3-3 -  - - J1<lb/>
?. -<lb/>
1 <lb/>
"3.3 Z . ? 3 : : opose " 3<lb/>
:  " 1. t  3 .3'ft. SO3<lb/>
: :  : :3 .3 ScC-3 .<lb/>
 ? 1  red as 3 1 an<lb/>
- - - jes<lb/>
LACROSSE IS<lb/>
The Pirates (<lb/>
Virqinia Tech.<lb/>
Athle<lb/>
Eleven of E<lb/>
athietes will be I<lb/>
1970 volume o<lb/>
Athletes of Amei<lb/>
The athlete<lb/>
Colson, Roge<lb/>
Gregory, Jim<lb/>
Griffin, Stu<lb/>
Taylor, Walter <lb/>
Ransome, Verm<lb/>
Tim Ellenberger.<lb/>
Colson has<lb/>
Carolina's leadi<lb/>
three years of v<lb/>
As a sophomor<lb/>
conference rushi<lb/>
he has brok<lb/>
Carolina career 1<lb/>
Bost has bee<lb/>
the varsity foot<lb/>
the past two ye<lb/>
captain last year<lb/>
PLAYER-OF<lb/>
Gregory, narr<lb/>
em Conference<lb/>
year in basketb<lb/>
more, averaged<lb/>
game last season<lb/>
Modlin led tl<lb/>
scoring departm<lb/>
with an average t<lb/>
For his three <lb/>
scored over 1,0<lb/>
first Pirate ever t<lb/>
Griffin, as a s?<lb/>
the top swimrm<lb/>
Southern Confe<lb/>
Open hoi<lb/>
The Sierra (<lb/>
vation and outir<lb/>
will hold an 01<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday ir<lb/>
103.<lb/>
Dr. Phillip A<lb/>
tory departmen<lb/>
conservation in<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Students ant<lb/>
been invited to?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0009"/><lb/>
iv<lb/>
-3<lb/>
5 Vick drew<lb/>
? "9 in the<lb/>
3nd starting<lb/>
a sacrificed<lb/>
D<lb/>
?'?aikef and<lb/>
hit-batsman<lb/>
?ore rum as<lb/>
sad m the<lb/>
 P rates got<lb/>
5 :? Abridge<lb/>
th? :a<lb/>
Fountainhead, March 23, 1970, Page 9<lb/>
r<lb/>
arv<lb/>
M jpOfl<lb/>
<lb/>
-be out<lb/>
- : rtprmnt<lb/>
<lb/>
r ;r : ? ml<lb/>
: i. yy<lb/>
  ocse<lb/>
- iVafca<lb/>
;?;<lb/>
y,<lb/>
Pirate stickmen will open April 4<lb/>
LACROSSE IS ONE of the roughest sports in America.<lb/>
The Pirates open the 1970 season April 4 against<lb/>
Virqinia Tech.<lb/>
Athletes honored<lb/>
Eleven of East Carolina's<lb/>
athietes will be honored in the<lb/>
1970 volume of Outstanding<lb/>
Athletes of America.<lb/>
The athletes are Butch<lb/>
Colson, Roger Bost, Jim<lb/>
Gregory, Jim Modlin, Jim<lb/>
Griffin, Stu Garrett, Skip<lb/>
Taylor, Walter Davenport, Bill<lb/>
Ransome, Vernon Tyson and<lb/>
Tim Ellenberger.<lb/>
Colson has been East<lb/>
Carolina's leading rusher for<lb/>
three years of varsity football.<lb/>
As a sophomore, he set the<lb/>
conference rushing record and<lb/>
he has broken the East<lb/>
Carolina career rushing record.<lb/>
Bost has been a starter for<lb/>
the varsity football squad for<lb/>
the past two years and was the<lb/>
captain last year.<lb/>
PLAYER-OF-THE-YEAR<lb/>
Gregory, named the South-<lb/>
ern Conference Player-of-the-<lb/>
year in basketball as a sopho-<lb/>
more, averaged 16.5 points a<lb/>
game last season.<lb/>
Modlin led the Bucs in the<lb/>
scoring department this season<lb/>
with an average of 18.5 a game.<lb/>
For his three year career, he<lb/>
scored over 1,000 points, the<lb/>
first Pirate ever to do so.<lb/>
Griffin, as a sophomore, was<lb/>
the top swimmer on the 1970<lb/>
Southern Conference champi-<lb/>
Open house set<lb/>
The Sierra Club, a conser-<lb/>
vation and outing organization,<lb/>
will hold an open house at 7<lb/>
p.m. Tuesday in Biology, room<lb/>
103.<lb/>
Dr. Phillip Adler of the his-<lb/>
tory department will speak on<lb/>
conservation in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Students and faculty have<lb/>
been invited to attend.<lb/>
onship team. In the conference<lb/>
meet, he captured the 100,<lb/>
200, and 500-yarH freestyle<lb/>
and anchored two winning<lb/>
relays.<lb/>
Garrett has been a star on<lb/>
the football field, where he<lb/>
started at safety, and on the<lb/>
baseball diamond, where he has<lb/>
been a starter at centerfield for<lb/>
the past three years.<lb/>
Taylor is a standout infielder<lb/>
with the baseball team and a<lb/>
needed powerhouse with the<lb/>
bat.<lb/>
FRESHMAN STAR<lb/>
Davenport, a freshman on<lb/>
the track squad where fresh-<lb/>
men and sophomores are plen-<lb/>
tiful, has captured the South-<lb/>
ern Conference indoor track<lb/>
record with a leap of 23' 51z"<lb/>
in the long jump.<lb/>
Ransome is one of East<lb/>
Carolina's top tennis players.<lb/>
Tyson was the key to the<lb/>
Pirates' conference champi-<lb/>
onship last season. This year, he<lb/>
will probably play number one<lb/>
or two.<lb/>
Ellenberger, a senior on the<lb/>
wrestling squad, has won three<lb/>
straight conference champ-<lb/>
ionships<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Good depth at midfield and<lb/>
a capable performer in the nets<lb/>
are the key strong points for<lb/>
the Pirate lacrosse team as it<lb/>
opens its 1970 season April 4<lb/>
against Virginia Tech.<lb/>
The game will start at 1 p.m.<lb/>
on the soccer field.<lb/>
Coach John Lovstedt has<lb/>
cited six outstanding<lb/>
midfielders and he intends to<lb/>
build two lines and shuffle<lb/>
them in and out to keep them<lb/>
fresh.<lb/>
David Lord, a transfer senior<lb/>
from Maryland, is a returnee<lb/>
from last year's squad. He<lb/>
scored eight goals and ten<lb/>
assists last season.<lb/>
SPEED AND AGILITY<lb/>
Tom Edington, a junior<lb/>
from McLean, Virginia, has<lb/>
QUUU bptCU aiiu oynny,<lb/>
according to his coach. Mike<lb/>
Lynch, a junior from Bay<lb/>
Shore, New York, is "real fast<lb/>
and good with a stick<lb/>
Other midfielders will be<lb/>
Bob Thorton, a freshman from<lb/>
Huntington, New York, and<lb/>
Tom Gregg and Chris Litty,<lb/>
freshmen from Maryland.<lb/>
In the nets for the Bucs will<lb/>
be Jim Frank, a junior from<lb/>
Huntington. Frank has been<lb/>
playing lacrosse for about ten<lb/>
years and has been praised by<lb/>
many coaches for his ability in<lb/>
the goal.<lb/>
STRONG ATTACK<lb/>
On attack, there are several<lb/>
fine performers, led by Eric<lb/>
Schandelmeier, a junior from<lb/>
Baltimore. Schandelmeier<lb/>
played three years at<lb/>
Catonsville and he was the<lb/>
third leading scorer in his<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Richard Fogle, a senior from<lb/>
York, Pa also figures to see<lb/>
plenty of action as do Wil<lb/>
Mealey and Don McCorkel.<lb/>
Mealey, a freshman from<lb/>
Maryland, played football and<lb/>
wrestled in addition to his<lb/>
LOANS: up to $4000 for four years for United Methodist<lb/>
students.HOUSING: for twelve male students, 503 E. 5th Street,<lb/>
kitchen privileges, $75 per quarter, reservations for summer and<lb/>
fall now being taken.<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE: Sat. nites, 8-1, films, music, refreshments.<lb/>
METHODIST CENTER: open 9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. for all ECU<lb/>
students, faculty, friends; study areas, TV, stereo, ping-pong,<lb/>
kitchen, chapel.<lb/>
CALL OR SEE: Rev. Dan Earnhardt, Director, for further<lb/>
information. ?.n<lb/>
THE WESLEY FOUNDATION<lb/>
501 E. 5th Street<lb/>
758-1528 or 758-1552<lb/>
participation in lacrosse in high<lb/>
school. McCorkel is a<lb/>
sophomore from Lancaster,<lb/>
Penn.<lb/>
Defense is probably the<lb/>
weakest point on the squad.<lb/>
However, once some of the<lb/>
players gain experience, the<lb/>
coach expects the team to<lb/>
"start clicking<lb/>
ALL-CONFERENCE<lb/>
Ed Glatzel is more than<lb/>
adequate in his position at<lb/>
right defense. A sophomore<lb/>
from Severna Park, Maryland,<lb/>
he was an All Conference<lb/>
performer at Ann Arundel<lb/>
Community College.<lb/>
Frank Sutton will probably<lb/>
play the crease defense. The<lb/>
Kinston, N.C freshman is a<lb/>
converted football player who<lb/>
came to East Carolina on a<lb/>
grant-in-aid.<lb/>
Randy Anderson, a senior,<lb/>
and Bob Schulze, a freshman,<lb/>
were also praised by the coach<lb/>
for their defensive potential.<lb/>
This is the first year East<lb/>
Carolina will field a lacrosse<lb/>
ouRi4kqold<lb/>
EAR-fllls COST SO<lb/>
UttIe AiNd look<lb/>
SO qREAT<lb/>
m<lb/>
Never such a dazz-<lb/>
ling proposition: our<lb/>
variety of 14K gold<lb/>
earrings for pierced<lb/>
ears. Dangles, posts,<lb/>
buttons . . . and they<lb/>
cost so little.<lb/>
best's<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
squad on the varsity level. As<lb/>
there is no conference title at<lb/>
stake, the Pirates will be<lb/>
competing as an independent.<lb/>
ee<lb/>
Beauty<lb/>
is<lb/>
how you feel<lb/>
You ever have one of those<lb/>
days when everyone says you<lb/>
look well, but you still don't<lb/>
feel pretty?<lb/>
Maybe it's because you're<lb/>
tired or troubled. Or maybe<lb/>
because it's the wrong time of<lb/>
the month and you just feel<lb/>
un-lovely.<lb/>
That's where Tampax tam-<lb/>
pons can help you. They can<lb/>
help take the mopey feeling<lb/>
out of your month.<lb/>
Because Tampax tampons are<lb/>
worn internally, there's noth-<lb/>
ing to slip or slide or chafe<lb/>
or show. No more wor-<lb/>
ries about accidents or<lb/>
odor. No self-conscious- <lb/>
ness. Only complete comfort<lb/>
and protection Clean, neat,<lb/>
discreet.<lb/>
Tampax tampons. To help<lb/>
you feel beautiful every day of<lb/>
the monlh.<lb/>
TAMPAX<lb/>
SANITARY PROTECTION WORN INTERNALLY<lb/>
MAOf ONLY BT TAMPAX INCORPORATED, PALMER, MASS<lb/>
NO BELTS<lb/>
NO PINS<lb/>
NO PADS<lb/>
NO ODOR<lb/>
ADVERTISED IN<lb/>
Deader's<lb/>
IV Digest<lb/>
gMHM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0010"/><lb/>
i?.i<lb/>
??, A4 ? !?.?? t '<lb/>
Kk<lb/>
Page 10, Fountainhead, March 23,<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
ByCARLCHESTNUTT<lb/>
The Softball intramural<lb/>
season began last week with<lb/>
three days of action.<lb/>
The intramural league<lb/>
consists of three seperate<lb/>
leagues: The American, with<lb/>
11 teams, the National with<lb/>
10, and the Fraternity League<lb/>
with 15.<lb/>
In the American League,<lb/>
Tukerstem's Raiders holds the<lb/>
top spot with a 2 0 record.<lb/>
They have defeated Skid Row,<lb/>
10-8, and the Aycock<lb/>
Bombers, 15-4.<lb/>
The Cold Turkeys and the<lb/>
Mets are deadlocked for the<lb/>
I970<lb/>
softball begins<lb/>
National League lead with 2-0<lb/>
records. The Cold Turkeys<lb/>
have defeated AFROTC, 9 6,<lb/>
after winning their first game<lb/>
on a forfeit. he Mets edged<lb/>
the Strikeouts, 4-3, and then<lb/>
crushed the Challengers, 13-7.<lb/>
FRATERNITY LEAD<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi and Tau Kappa<lb/>
Epsilon top the Fraternity<lb/>
League with 2 0 marks. A<lb/>
four-way tie exists for second<lb/>
place between Sigma Chi Delta,<lb/>
Phi Epsilon Kappa, Kappa<lb/>
Sigma and Theta Chi, each<lb/>
holding 1-0 records.<lb/>
Since the season is relatively<lb/>
new, it is too early to single<lb/>
out an outstanding team.<lb/>
Next week's action will be<lb/>
highlighted by a game between<lb/>
Tuckerstein's Raiders and the<lb/>
All Americans, both claiming<lb/>
undefeated records.<lb/>
In the National League, The<lb/>
Cold Turkeys will play the<lb/>
Babies and the Mets will play<lb/>
AFROTC (M) in what should<lb/>
be good, close games.<lb/>
Action in the Fraternity<lb/>
League will feature Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi again.t Phi Sigma Pi and<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon against<lb/>
Pelta Sigma Pi.<lb/>
???:<lb/>
nmv-m ?  (photo by Stephen Neal)<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA BASEBALL COACH Earl Smith<lb/>
anticipates action in recent game at University Field.<lb/>
Buc<lb/>
batsmen<lb/>
blister<lb/>
Bombers<lb/>
(continued from page 8)<lb/>
single, and Graver walked.<lb/>
After a sacrifice moved both<lb/>
runners up, Dick Corrada<lb/>
looped a fly ball which fell in<lb/>
center for a double, bringing<lb/>
both runners home, and giving<lb/>
the Bucsa6-1 lead.<lb/>
STOPPED COLD<lb/>
The story for the rest of the<lb/>
game was merely the ability of<lb/>
the Bucs to hold off the<lb/>
Bombers' surge. Ithaca came<lb/>
up with single runs in the<lb/>
fourth and fifth, each coming<lb/>
with two out. Sonny Robinson<lb/>
replaced Bayliss on the mound<lb/>
in the fifth and the Bombers<lb/>
were stopped cold from then<lb/>
on.<lb/>
Saturday's game at Chapel<lb/>
Hill against the North Carolina<lb/>
Tar Heels was postponed until<lb/>
May 14. The Pirates, now 2-1,<lb/>
next oppose Dartmouth at<lb/>
home, Friday at 2 p.m.<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
HATS<lb/>
OFF TO<lb/>
the Pirate bJJ<lb/>
team which took bo<lb/>
with Ithaca <lb/>
last week, -?<lb/>
6 3.<lb/>
lJl?<lb/>
T<lb/>
By DON I<lb/>
Special to Fc<lb/>
Lack of carir<lb/>
the biggest pr<lb/>
campus today,<lb/>
prevailing here c<lb/>
You just dc<lb/>
have no right n<lb/>
have gotten togi<lb/>
students' paren<lb/>
your students<lb/>
basic than the B<lb/>
You've denie<lb/>
the right to f?<lb/>
students are as<lb/>
themselves as y<lb/>
yourself. Being<lb/>
guts allows a pei<lb/>
you've made fa<lb/>
immoral.<lb/>
CHAIV<lb/>
Look, if yot<lb/>
wre, because<lb/>
your job, ther<lb/>
where you <lb/>
care-like sellin<lb/>
If you mess ur.<lb/>
and pans it's f<lb/>
when you "b<lb/>
classroom you<lb/>
lives. Look, if<lb/>
losing your jol<lb/>
and still teach.<lb/>
I've never<lb/>
hung-up peopU<lb/>
I've seen at E<lb/>
not like this a<lb/>
afraid it i<lb/>
everywhere seei<lb/>
If the answers 1<lb/>
be found on<lb/>
something w<lb/>
institution.<lb/>
Students sin-<lb/>
asking some o<lb/>
to care. You d<lb/>
anything up b<lb/>
your students<lb/>
neat rows,<lb/>
order; they car<lb/>
at.<lb/>
SYS1<lb/>
Have you e<lb/>
thought of wl<lb/>
system" really<lb/>
It's a meth<lb/>
notes go froi<lb/>
i4.<lb/>
<lb/>
FIRST,<lb/>
ENDS V<lb/>
Schwa<lb/>
BFATAJ<lb/>
NOW T<lb/>
&amp;ELON,<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0011"/><lb/>
Fountainhead, March 23, 1970, Page II<lb/>
Stephen Neal)<lb/>
arl Smith<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
ien<lb/>
lers<lb/>
m page 8)<lb/>
raver walked.<lb/>
 moved both<lb/>
D ick Corrada<lb/>
I which fell in<lb/>
uble, bringing<lb/>
me, and giving<lb/>
ad.<lb/>
) COLD<lb/>
the rest of the<lb/>
y the ability of<lb/>
hold off the<lb/>
. Ithaca came<lb/>
! runs in the<lb/>
i, each coming<lb/>
onny Robinson<lb/>
on the mound<lb/>
d the Bombers<lb/>
:old from then<lb/>
ame at Chapel<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
postponed until<lb/>
irates, now 2-1,<lb/>
Dartmouth at<lb/>
t 2 p.m.<lb/>
T<lb/>
h<lb/>
rs<lb/>
denv ed<lb/>
By DON LUBOVE<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead .<lb/>
Lack of caring seems to be<lb/>
the biggest problem on the<lb/>
campus today. I see apathy<lb/>
prevailing here on all sides.<lb/>
You just don't care. You<lb/>
have no right not to care. You<lb/>
have gotten together with your<lb/>
students' parents and denied<lb/>
your students a right more<lb/>
basic than the Bill of Rights.<lb/>
You've denied your students<lb/>
the right to fail. Now, your<lb/>
students are as afraid of being<lb/>
themselves as you are of being<lb/>
yourself. Being takes guts, and<lb/>
guts allows a person to fail, and<lb/>
you've made failure illegal and<lb/>
immoral.<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
Look, if you don't want to<lb/>
wre, because you don't like<lb/>
your job, then do something<lb/>
where you don't have to<lb/>
care-like selling pots and pans.<lb/>
If you mess up with the pots<lb/>
and pans it's not so bad, but<lb/>
when you "blow-it" in the<lb/>
classroom you mess up human<lb/>
lives. Look, if you're afraid of<lb/>
losing your job, you can care<lb/>
and still teach.<lb/>
I've never seen so many<lb/>
hung-up people in my life as<lb/>
I've seen at ECU. I hope it's<lb/>
not like this all over, but I'm<lb/>
afraid it is. Students<lb/>
everywhere seem to be so lost.<lb/>
If the answers to life are not to<lb/>
be found on campus, there's<lb/>
something wrong with the<lb/>
institution.<lb/>
Students simply seem to be<lb/>
asking some of their teachers<lb/>
to care. You don't have to give<lb/>
anything up by caring. All of<lb/>
your students can still sit in<lb/>
neat rows, in alphabetical<lb/>
order; they can still be "taught<lb/>
at<lb/>
SYSTEM<lb/>
Have you ever, teacher-man,<lb/>
thought of what the "lecture<lb/>
system" really is?<lb/>
It's a method whereby the<lb/>
notes go from the teacher's<lb/>
notebook into the student's<lb/>
notebook without ever going<lb/>
through the students head.<lb/>
When the lecture system was<lb/>
developed in the Middle Ages,<lb/>
the students had a chance to<lb/>
discuss. If you're lecturing at<lb/>
your students, you're not being<lb/>
relevant to them.<lb/>
Just think how it would be<lb/>
if everybody did just as they've<lb/>
always done, only now<lb/>
everybody would just care a<lb/>
little.<lb/>
APATHY<lb/>
What it comes down to is<lb/>
that students will take a lot of<lb/>
garbage-i.e. tests, attendence<lb/>
requirements, dorm rules, etc<lb/>
if you just care in return. But,<lb/>
if you don't care, they'll know<lb/>
it, and then you'll get that<lb/>
"apathy" you say you don't<lb/>
like.<lb/>
So many students tell me<lb/>
they just get "so tired of being<lb/>
taught at So many of the<lb/>
students here are just running<lb/>
around looking for someone to<lb/>
listen to them. When was the<lb/>
last time you, yeah, you,<lb/>
teacher-man, asked a student in<lb/>
a class what he or she thought?<lb/>
Or are you too busy<lb/>
"programming" your students<lb/>
to ask them any questions?<lb/>
Every day you and your<lb/>
students grow more bitter<lb/>
towards each other.<lb/>
You're too wrapped up in<lb/>
fear to take a chance on being<lb/>
human.<lb/>
FEAR<lb/>
Why does education have to<lb/>
be based on fear? Why can't it<lb/>
be based on something<lb/>
positive, like awareness?<lb/>
Can you tell the color of the<lb/>
eyes of even one of your<lb/>
students? I doubt it. You don't<lb/>
care enough about the human<lb/>
being in front of you to look.<lb/>
The students are just<lb/>
meaningless numbers to you.<lb/>
And you spout meaningless<lb/>
"isms" to them. And nobody<lb/>
cares.<lb/>
Damn-it! If students weren't<lb/>
meant to be aware they<lb/>
wouldn't have eyes, ears, or<lb/>
other senses for awareness.<lb/>
They know this, so when you<lb/>
tell them NOT to hear, to see,<lb/>
to feel, to taste, to touch and<lb/>
to think, but just to sit back<lb/>
and learnbe taught<lb/>
atthey tell you to "go to<lb/>
hell because they want to use<lb/>
their senses.<lb/>
They want to BE, not this or<lb/>
that, just BE. If you really<lb/>
cared, you would not tell him<lb/>
what to be, you'd just let him<lb/>
BE.<lb/>
Stop, for just a minute,<lb/>
telling your students whatever<lb/>
it is you're saying, and ask just<lb/>
one what he or she thinks. Who<lb/>
knows, you might learn<lb/>
something. Not something you<lb/>
can put on your resume, not<lb/>
something you can be paid in<lb/>
cash for, but maybe something<lb/>
you can just enjoy.<lb/>
RESPECT<lb/>
You say your students don't<lb/>
respect you. Who could respect<lb/>
someone who doesn't return<lb/>
that respect? You are a<lb/>
disrespectful bully to your<lb/>
students. Who can respect<lb/>
someone who beats them to<lb/>
death with meaningless facts<lb/>
and isms and exams, and<lb/>
ignores their humanity?<lb/>
The teachers tell me they<lb/>
think ECU stinks, and the<lb/>
students say the teachers stink.<lb/>
ECU, while not being ideal, has<lb/>
many gifted teachers and many<lb/>
students with good potential.<lb/>
But this potential is not being<lb/>
recognized. Or, worse, this<lb/>
potential is not being<lb/>
developed. "Force-feeding"<lb/>
facts, is not, nor will it ever be,<lb/>
education-not good<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Education, in essence, means<lb/>
"to make aware" Hey,<lb/>
teacher-man, when was the last<lb/>
time a student of your's<lb/>
became more aware as a result<lb/>
of one of your classes? I don't<lb/>
mean memorized, I mean<lb/>
aware, I don't mean<lb/>
"brown-nosed I mean really<lb/>
aware.<lb/>
PROGRAMMING<lb/>
Students should flock to<lb/>
educationand they do! It's<lb/>
just that you're not "where it's<lb/>
at Consequently, they go<lb/>
elsewhere to learn about what's<lb/>
really relevant to them-a thing<lb/>
called life. If they can't find<lb/>
meaning in class, they can<lb/>
always seek it in pot, or booze,<lb/>
or who knows what else.<lb/>
Out there is lifebeing. Here<lb/>
at school is just cold, sterile,<lb/>
inhuman programming. Listen<lb/>
to your students, teacher-man.<lb/>
If you don't want to be "where<lb/>
it's at" and care, then do<lb/>
yourself and your students a<lb/>
favor, and get the hell out of<lb/>
teaching. Go do something you<lb/>
like, go BE something you care<lb/>
about.<lb/>
BEHAVIOR<lb/>
Students will "behave<lb/>
themselves" when you allow<lb/>
them to; ideally-guide them, to<lb/>
BE themselves. Help them to<lb/>
develop and grow-don't<lb/>
hinder them. They've got<lb/>
enough obstacles at this point<lb/>
in their lives; they don't need<lb/>
any more.<lb/>
Why not try it in just one<lb/>
class and, if it doesn't work,<lb/>
we'll try something else.<lb/>
Because, if we don't do<lb/>
something to correct the<lb/>
current situation, then we're all<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
HUMANITY<lb/>
You can't "Not care" for<lb/>
years and not have something<lb/>
blowup in you face. To hell<lb/>
with your scholarship for one<lb/>
daysave humanity, yours and<lb/>
theirs.<lb/>
?Hf?ED, I'M THOOU6HLY<lb/>
DEPRESSED VF HAD<lb/>
IT WITH LIFE<lb/>
I'M GOIN&amp; TO<lb/>
EFND It ALL<lb/>
FIRST, J) MY TOoTHbRVSH<lb/>
Ends j p ihj thf hands of<lb/>
Schwartz, thpw r am<lb/>
SU&amp;JcrFD To A 5AvAfrcT<lb/>
atno By SCBJVAerz, aap<lb/>
NOa THE G(CL X Lover<lb/>
SELON6S ToSchwartz.<lb/>
I'M Going to<lb/>
Jump our our<lb/>
UrVDouJ<lb/>
RALPH You KNoaJ<lb/>
WE LIVE" ON THE<lb/>
FIRST FLOOa<lb/>
J<lb/>
You'll only skin<lb/>
YOUR KNEES ory<lb/>
THE BU5HcrS LIKE<lb/>
THE LAST TIME-<lb/>
You're correct when you say<lb/>
that the school's enrollment<lb/>
increases every year. But what<lb/>
you fail to acknowledge is that<lb/>
you're producing fewer and<lb/>
fewer satisfied customers. Even<lb/>
many of those who have<lb/>
"stuck-it-out" and graduated<lb/>
wonder if what they learned<lb/>
"on-campus" is relevant in the<lb/>
"out-side world<lb/>
CARE<lb/>
Although the teachers here<lb/>
seem quite competent<lb/>
(learned) in their subjects, they<lb/>
just don't seem to give a damn<lb/>
about the actual teaching of<lb/>
that subject. Why this is so, I'm<lb/>
not quite sure, but it's<lb/>
appalling.<lb/>
You so-called educators not<lb/>
only don't care, you're scared<lb/>
to death to try it. If you care,<lb/>
you have to get involved, and if<lb/>
you get involved there's a<lb/>
chance you may get hurt<lb/>
andor fail. And, in our<lb/>
success-oriented society, it is<lb/>
illegal and immoral to fail.<lb/>
Don't be afraid to take a<lb/>
chance on being human. It<lb/>
won't cost you your job. And<lb/>
don't use the excuse that "you<lb/>
can't fight city-hall Forget<lb/>
the past and what has or hasn't<lb/>
been done. Let today be the<lb/>
first day of the rest of your<lb/>
life. Start caring now!<lb/>
This article is written not<lb/>
only for those who are now<lb/>
teaching, but for those who are<lb/>
planning to teach.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Boyd, a<lb/>
geologist from Georgia<lb/>
Southern College, will speak on<lb/>
"Pleistocene Palynology"<lb/>
Tuesday in Biology, room 102<lb/>
at 6 p.m.<lb/>
"The Chemistry of Organic<lb/>
Multiple Anions" will be the<lb/>
topic of a lecture given by Dr.<lb/>
Marion Miles of N.C. State<lb/>
University on Friday, April 3<lb/>
at 3 p.m. in Flanagan, room<lb/>
209.<lb/>
o<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0012"/><lb/>
WWUd<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Losing SGA candidate<lb/>
calls threat to editor<lb/>
One of the chief complaints leveled at this<lb/>
newspaper in recent ninths has been that ,s d.d<lb/>
not give sufficient coverage to campus events.<lb/>
It has been charged that we have relied too<lb/>
much on copy furnished to us by other sources<lb/>
such as the Associated Press and other news<lb/>
services. <lb/>
This university has no journalism ma,or and thus<lb/>
qualified students have little to draw them here. In<lb/>
spite of this we I M instigated training programs<lb/>
and changed our focus to center on campus event<lb/>
We feel that one of the most important of these<lb/>
subjects is an objective and complete coverage of<lb/>
SGA activities.<lb/>
For this reason we have tried to present as much<lb/>
information on student government as possible and<lb/>
in add,tion we have taken a stand on the more<lb/>
important activities such as the recent SGA<lb/>
elections. .<lb/>
Now it seems that certain members and<lb/>
prospective members of the student government<lb/>
are upset over the fact that we have improved our<lb/>
coverage of SGA events.<lb/>
Following last Thursdays edition, one of the<lb/>
losing candidates for SGA office called this editor's<lb/>
home and stated to me that he would see me dead.<lb/>
Such action seems to this editor to be immature<lb/>
and asanine.<lb/>
If candidates for public office cannot stand the<lb/>
weight of unfavorable public opinion they should<lb/>
not even consider running for office.<lb/>
This editor would also like to make it clear that<lb/>
no threat, implicit or implied, will alter our<lb/>
coverage or change the opinions on the editorial<lb/>
page.<lb/>
Fountainhead extends<lb/>
wish for holidays<lb/>
This issue is our last until after the holidays.<lb/>
The entire staff of Fountainhead extends to all a<lb/>
sincere wish for a happy holiday.<lb/>
Our next issue will be published on April 9.<lb/>
In the meantime, the position of News Editor is<lb/>
"now open and qualified journalists who are<lb/>
interested in applying are invited to meet with the<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief on April 7 at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Candidates should possess some experience in<lb/>
news writing and editing and should be willing to<lb/>
devote a large amount of time to the position.<lb/>
The hours are long and the pay is poor, however<lb/>
the experience is sometimes rewarding.<lb/>
ounuinhead<lb/>
ROBERT R.THONEN<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
BENJAMIN BAILEY STEPHEN BAILEYJ<lb/>
Associate Editor Business Mager<lb/>
I Karen BlansfieldFeatures f?<lb/>
Don TrausneckSports Editor<lb/>
llraL.BakerAdv,sor<lb/>
Student newspaper published twee weekly at ?ast Carolina Un.versity,<lb/>
PO BomTsUTGreenville, North Carolma 27834. Adverting open<lb/>
nteXsvlerclumn inch. Phone 758366 or 758367<lb/>
??:<lb/>
??:?:?<lb/>
W<lb/>
The forum<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Your editorial of March 19<lb/>
stating that the 'silent<lb/>
majority' is to blame for<lb/>
environmental decay is an<lb/>
extremely gross generalization.<lb/>
By that one statement, you<lb/>
imply that the outspoken<lb/>
minorities, as well as other<lb/>
minorities-economic and<lb/>
otherwise-have led spotlessly<lb/>
clean lives. You imply that<lb/>
there are groups of people in<lb/>
this country who have never<lb/>
driven a car, smoked tobacco<lb/>
of any kind, spit, burnt<lb/>
refuse(including draft cards),<lb/>
tossed a beer can or similar<lb/>
items on the road, and have<lb/>
never performed the natural<lb/>
functions of the human body.<lb/>
Ah' What true saints these men<lb/>
are! -or are they women.<lb/>
You cannot blame the<lb/>
environmental problem on any<lb/>
one group or class of persons.<lb/>
We are all responsible-both<lb/>
myself and you dear editor are<lb/>
equally responsible. From the<lb/>
poor man's outhouse in the<lb/>
hills, to the late model car of<lb/>
the middle class, to the<lb/>
industrial wastes of the<lb/>
richman's factories, we are<lb/>
ALL responsible.<lb/>
Lee Roger Taylor, Jr.<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
After four years at this<lb/>
University, I see a University<lb/>
enveloped in tragedy. The<lb/>
bricks and mortar are here, but<lb/>
where is the spirit.<lb/>
Our faculty arms us with<lb/>
ideals, but portray themselves<lb/>
as meek men lost in a maze of<lb/>
books and vociferous<lb/>
ramblings. They huddle<lb/>
together in their offices and<lb/>
silently denounce<lb/>
administration and the war,<lb/>
but they offer not one<lb/>
evidence of action. Perhaps our<lb/>
faculty fear for their jobs?<lb/>
Well, if our faculty members<lb/>
consider ii honorable to<lb/>
compromise on jxr then let<lb/>
them renain huddled and<lb/>
dormen in the security of<lb/>
their offices.<lb/>
Our administration is<lb/>
perhaps the most capricious<lb/>
aspect of this University. I had<lb/>
always envisioned a university<lb/>
president as a fatherly type<lb/>
figure, which one would see<lb/>
strolling about campus,<lb/>
engaging in dialogue, or silently<lb/>
observing from the rear of a<lb/>
classroom. Possibly I have<lb/>
deceived myself as to the role<lb/>
of a university president? And<lb/>
maybe I should feel fortunate<lb/>
that I have seen our president<lb/>
three times from a distance.<lb/>
Students assume the role of<lb/>
freakish middle men. They are<lb/>
caught in the paradoxical web<lb/>
of activism and apathy.<lb/>
Sociologists present us with<lb/>
statistics on students,<lb/>
historians write about them,<lb/>
and psychologists try to<lb/>
understand them; but our only<lb/>
leadership are criminals and a<lb/>
baby doctor. At a peaceful<lb/>
protest, the apathetic with like<lb/>
views are either too lazy or too<lb/>
social conscious to share the<lb/>
same ground with the activist.<lb/>
The apathetic will not be so<lb/>
social minded when they share<lb/>
the same fox hole with the<lb/>
activist. Students must ponder<lb/>
whether to take mere<lb/>
hedonistic delight in their four<lb/>
year escape from the<lb/>
inevitable, or truly become<lb/>
masters of their fate.<lb/>
My remarks have been made<lb/>
in remorse rather than<lb/>
bitterness. Possibly I am a<lb/>
solitary fool and not one other<lb/>
shares my views. But if one<lb/>
faculty editorial would appear<lb/>
in the next issue of this paper,<lb/>
it would be a beginning. And if<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins would visit just a<lb/>
few classrooms each week, it<lb/>
would b a beginning.<lb/>
University professors should<lb/>
not have to be hermits in<lb/>
thought; nor should a<lb/>
university president be an<lb/>
unfamiliar man. If I am wrong<lb/>
and reaction is nil, then my<lb/>
dream remains only a dream.<lb/>
Gary Blackwelder<lb/>
WE<lb/>
NEED<lb/>
REIK)RTERS,<lb/>
REWRITERS,<lb/>
AND<lb/>
ONE<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
EDITOR-<lb/>
ARE<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
INTERESTED?<lb/>
rOUNTMSHEW<lb/>
OEEICES<lb/>
201<lb/>
WRIGHT<lb/>
BUILDING.<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
Students and employees of the University are urged<lb/>
to express their opinions in the Student Forum<lb/>
Letters should be concise and to the pom<lb/>
- Letters must not exceed 300 words. or<lb/>
 The editors reserve the right to edit all 'e<lb/>
style errors and length.<lb/>
- All letters must be signed with the na ?<lb/>
writer. Upon the writer's personal request.<lb/>
will be witheld. Djnioi,s ?<lb/>
Signed articles on this page reflect the op nhead<lb/>
the writer, and not necessarily those of Fou<lb/>
or East Carolina University.<lb/>
of the<lb/>
iame<lb/>
ai<lb/>
Vol. I, No. 42<lb/>
IWor<lb/>
Szer<lb/>
Violinist Henr<lb/>
ambassador, wil<lb/>
8:15 today.<lb/>
The Polish-bor<lb/>
a country he v<lb/>
helping to fine<lb/>
displaced by th<lb/>
generosity of tl<lb/>
refugees He n<lb/>
and became a ch<lb/>
Now, as Mex<lb/>
travels on a diplt<lb/>
music on his tot<lb/>
in popularizing<lb/>
throughout the<lb/>
Ponce's Violin C<lb/>
Symphony in its<lb/>
Szeryng was<lb/>
house of Chopir<lb/>
of five under his<lb/>
"i was a ch<lb/>
and only aftei<lb/>
 myself together<lb/>
A few montr<lb/>
 at the age of<lb/>
heard him play<lb/>
Szeryng's parem<lb/>
Carl Flesch.<lb/>
<lb/>
F.D. DUNCAI<lb/>
will retire in J<lb/>
<pb facs="00039465_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>