<?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="00039471_0001"/>
<lb/>
all<lb/>
women<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
'They didn't have to<lb/>
s was a rare situation<lb/>
t see an institution<lb/>
lat it discriminates<lb/>
dly wait to get back<lb/>
She filed complaints<lb/>
and against the City<lb/>
A few days later,<lb/>
Jational Organization<lb/>
lar complaint against<lb/>
ITS.<lb/>
ished civil rights<lb/>
such complaints are<lb/>
Department's Office<lb/>
Compliance, then<lb/>
:e for Civil Rights for<lb/>
Iready been on the<lb/>
11 get to the others<lb/>
recommend to each<lb/>
jresif any-that must<lb/>
crimination "and the<lb/>
tion" against women.<lb/>
t take action, it could<lb/>
:ral comtracts-though<lb/>
:ases will reach that<lb/>
pproach. Mrs. Sandier<lb/>
the only weapon we<lb/>
Se ' against American<lb/>
Sandier, universities<lb/>
nen in admissions to<lb/>
graduate schools, w<lb/>
hiring teachers and<lb/>
)aying and promoting<lb/>
nds, for example, that<lb/>
" in Sradl'alCuSt 1<lb/>
positions is the san<lb/>
t the percentage o U-<lb/>
,men is the same as "<lb/>
-Mrs. Sandier ?j"J<lb/>
colleges to agree<lb/>
Philadelphia PU"<lb/>
r hiring agreemen<lb/>
in their admission a<lb/>
r of Congress. V<lb/>
? the WEAL<lb/>
??PP?rt,ngu HL that it<lb/>
 ! Turing<lb/>
that federal tain<lb/>
linst univcrsi"<lb/>
ountAinhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
East Carolina University. P. O. Box 2516, Greenville. N. C.<lb/>
April 27.1970<lb/>
fires burn<lb/>
By SHARON SCHAUDIES<lb/>
Two fires in the SGA offices<lb/>
on third floor Wright Building<lb/>
brought more than six fire<lb/>
trucks to the Student Union<lb/>
Saturday night and Sunday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Skip Morris at the Union<lb/>
Desk reported Saturday night's<lb/>
fire While locking second floor<lb/>
doors, he smelled smoke and<lb/>
went to the third floor to<lb/>
investigate. He found a chair<lb/>
that had been used as a throne<lb/>
for the White Ball Queen and<lb/>
the SGA mailboxes burning in a<lb/>
small hallway in front of the<lb/>
treasurer's and vice president's<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
PUT OUT FIRE<lb/>
lie and another boy<lb/>
attempted to put out the fire<lb/>
with eight fire extinguishers<lb/>
before the firemen came.<lb/>
The building was evacuated<lb/>
when the firemen arrived. The<lb/>
last two fire trucks left at 12:10<lb/>
a.m. after more than an hour's<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The fire singed the doors of<lb/>
the two offices and melted the<lb/>
cover on the florescent lights. A<lb/>
hole was cut in the wall by the<lb/>
firemen to prevent the fire from<lb/>
spreading into the walls.<lb/>
SECOND FIRE<lb/>
The second fire was found<lb/>
about 3 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
Steve Sharpe, SGA treasurer,<lb/>
said that he went to his office at<lb/>
2 p.m. to study. He said that he<lb/>
smelled smoke and went<lb/>
downstairs to see what had<lb/>
happened.<lb/>
At the same time someone<lb/>
saw smoke leaving Wright<lb/>
Auditorium and called the Fire<lb/>
Department. Jenness Allen,<lb/>
assistant chief of the Greenville<lb/>
Fire Department and Sharpe<lb/>
decided that the air<lb/>
conditioning unit should be cut<lb/>
off. Allen said the air<lb/>
conditioning was distributing<lb/>
the smoke throughout the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Bob Sprinkle, from the<lb/>
maintenance department,<lb/>
turned the unit off. Allen,<lb/>
walking past the legislature<lb/>
room, said that he saw smoke<lb/>
billowing out of the ducts in the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Allan unlocked the door and<lb/>
detected intense heat coming<lb/>
from two of the five closets in<lb/>
the room. Sharpe and Allen<lb/>
opened the doors and saw<lb/>
flames.<lb/>
A second fire truck was called<lb/>
about 4 p.m. The fire was<lb/>
extinguished in about two hours<lb/>
with 7 firemen working. No<lb/>
(continued on page 2)<lb/>
unii ?? ?w. crinn Music Festival Auditorium.<lb/>
will open the Spring Music r-estival ???<lb/>
Musical concerts set<lb/>
 W ? W ? P . , . he Norman Dello Joio's. 'Songs of<lb/>
? ?c rnmmissioned by me " v?? k.mH on an<lb/>
By BARBARA KNEHER<lb/>
The Symphonic Band,<lb/>
directed by Herbert L. Carter,<lb/>
will perform in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday. The performance<lb/>
marks the beginning of the<lb/>
Spring Music Festival which will<lb/>
last until May 3rd. The<lb/>
Symphonic Band recently<lb/>
completed a tour of Atlanta,<lb/>
Ga<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
will include a new work by Paul<lb/>
Cooper, guest composer. The<lb/>
work'Sinfonie III: Liturgies<lb/>
commissioned by the<lb/>
University of Massachusetts<lb/>
Fine Arts Council, and is being<lb/>
performed here for the second<lb/>
time. Mr. Cooper's piece is one<lb/>
of sound rather than straight<lb/>
meter and rythms, making it a<lb/>
new listening experience.<lb/>
OTHER WORKS<lb/>
Other works on the program<lb/>
are "Masquerade by Vincent<lb/>
Persichetti, a contemporary<lb/>
Norman Dello Joio's. "Songs of<lb/>
Abelard which are based on an<lb/>
early 15th-century romance.<lb/>
Soloing for this work will be<lb/>
Donna Stephenson. Also<lb/>
included will be "Suite of Old<lb/>
American Dances a 1940 piece<lb/>
by Robert Russell Bennett.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Lambda, an<lb/>
honorary music society, will<lb/>
perform Thursday night in the<lb/>
Recital Hall. The performance<lb/>
-will include pieces by<lb/>
MYSTERY SURROUNDS the origin of the early morning<lb/>
fire in the SGA.<lb/>
Fountainheadlines<lb/>
Several musical performances will be given page 4<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend brings festivities page 9<lb/>
Cumulative effects of polution unknown - page II<lb/>
Crew ranks as old sport page 10<lb/>
Hosts of records broken page 10<lb/>
Palmist and spiritual consultant compared page 6<lb/>
"Meatball a Spaced-Out Odessey" emerges as winner of the<lb/>
FAC's first annual film festival - page<lb/>
The performance will include<lb/>
several small ensembles<lb/>
composed primarily of<lb/>
outstanding faculty. It will also<lb/>
include a premier of Michael<lb/>
Cunningham's "Trigon, Opus<lb/>
31which will be performed by<lb/>
James Houlik, tenor saxophone,<lb/>
to whom it is dedicated.<lb/>
THIRD PERFORMANCE<lb/>
The third performance,<lb/>
Friday, will be by the West<lb/>
Point String Quartet which has<lb/>
gained prominence through its<lb/>
performances of contemporary<lb/>
music.<lb/>
The first work of the program<lb/>
will be Paul Cooper's String<lb/>
Quartet No. 4 "Quartet No. 4<lb/>
was written as a requiem for<lb/>
John F. Kennedy<lb/>
dedicated to the<lb/>
Quartet explained Mr<lb/>
"The quartet seems<lb/>
been written mostly<lb/>
subconscious, after<lb/>
Stanly<lb/>
Cooper.<lb/>
to have<lb/>
by my<lb/>
a long<lb/>
(continued on page 4)<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0002"/><lb/>
??.????????? ?????"?<lb/>
Page 2, Fountainhead. Monday. April 27,1970<lb/>
Fre caused smoke damage<lb/>
and burned SGA records<lb/>
(continued from page 1)<lb/>
damage was done in the<lb/>
legislature room, although the<lb/>
doors to the two closets will<lb/>
have to be replaced. Sharpe said.<lb/>
One of the closets contained<lb/>
possible evidence of arson. The<lb/>
contents of the closet were a<lb/>
stack of bulletin board letters<lb/>
that had not been damaged by<lb/>
the fire and a pile of papers that<lb/>
had only been partially<lb/>
damaged.<lb/>
STARTED IN CLOSET<lb/>
A few inches from the papers<lb/>
was a blackened area on the<lb/>
wall. The baseboard of this area<lb/>
had been separated from the<lb/>
wall for a length of about eight<lb/>
inches.<lb/>
Between the baseboard and<lb/>
the papers were pieces of glass<lb/>
and the lid of a jar which Sharpe<lb/>
recognized as a pint-size<lb/>
mayonaisse jar.<lb/>
An unidentified fireman<lb/>
stated his belief that the fire had<lb/>
begun in this closet and then<lb/>
spread to the other. He also<lb/>
expressed his belief that it was<lb/>
an act of arson.<lb/>
MAY BE ARSON<lb/>
SGA President Bob Whitley<lb/>
and Vice-President Phil Dixon<lb/>
learned about the fires at 11 pjn.<lb/>
Sunday, after returning from a<lb/>
conference in Memphis,<lb/>
Tennessee.<lb/>
Sharpe stated "All the<lb/>
evidence, with the glass in the<lb/>
closet and the fact that two fires<lb/>
occured within 18 hours, point<lb/>
to the possibility of arson.<lb/>
"I only hope that no<lb/>
individual who may have a<lb/>
personal vendetta to the SGA or<lb/>
someone in the SGA is<lb/>
attempting to strike back at<lb/>
individuals where there have<lb/>
been personality conflicts.<lb/>
DANGER IN FIRE<lb/>
"An arson is not only<lb/>
endangering the lives of one or<lb/>
more people but is also<lb/>
attempting to destruct property<lb/>
owned by the state of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"If arson is involved, state<lb/>
statutes have been broken, and<lb/>
if the individual or individuals<lb/>
responsible for the arson are<lb/>
caught, they might find<lb/>
themselves with a new residency<lb/>
in the state penitentiary.<lb/>
SBI CALLED<lb/>
"I want this to remain a<lb/>
Student Gove rnment<lb/>
Association, not a Smoltering<lb/>
Government Association<lb/>
Vice-President of the<lb/>
University, F. D. Duncan,<lb/>
expressed the desire to "try and<lb/>
find out what happened ; d<lb/>
how it happened He added<lb/>
that he had called the State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation.<lb/>
DAMAGE<lb/>
He mentioned the damage as<lb/>
"not extensive" but he said that<lb/>
some partitions and doors will<lb/>
have to be replaced, and that<lb/>
cleaning and painting would be<lb/>
a "fairly big part of it<lb/>
Congress may pass<lb/>
18 year-old vote<lb/>
By FLOYD NOR R IS<lb/>
College Press Service<lb/>
WASHINGTON (CPS) The<lb/>
main congressional opponent<lb/>
has backed down, and the 18<lb/>
year-old vote is given a good<lb/>
chance of passage in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Representative Emanuel<lb/>
Celler (D-Mass.), the powerful<lb/>
chairman of the House Judiciary<lb/>
Committee, has decided to<lb/>
support the Senate version of<lb/>
the Voting Rights bill even<lb/>
though he does not approve of<lb/>
the Mansfield amendment<lb/>
lowering the voting age to 18,<lb/>
effective January 1, 1971. Celler<lb/>
had previously promised to<lb/>
"fight like hell" to stop the<lb/>
Mansfield amendment.<lb/>
SENATE VERSION<lb/>
The Senate version is<lb/>
basically an extension of the<lb/>
1965 act, which brought about<lb/>
tremendous increases in Negro<lb/>
registration throughout the<lb/>
south. The House version,<lb/>
passed over Celler's objections,<lb/>
is a much weaker bill which<lb/>
would remove significant<lb/>
enforcement powers which the<lb/>
federal government now has in<lb/>
southern states.<lb/>
The House version is similar<lb/>
to the one proposed by the<lb/>
IT'S ALL OUT. Firwwi pack up their gear for the second time Sunday after being<lb/>
summoned to a new fire.<lb/>
Otto Henry produces article on music<lb/>
and composition for Moog Synthesizer<lb/>
Otto W. Henry of the School<lb/>
of Music has recently published<lb/>
a composition and an article on<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Henry's article, titled 'The<lb/>
Electrotechnology of Modern<lb/>
Music appears in a special<lb/>
issue of Arts in Society. The<lb/>
article deals with the effects of<lb/>
electronic technology on music<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Henry's composition,<lb/>
"Liberty Bell for ten<lb/>
percussionists and Moog<lb/>
Electronic Music Synthesizer,<lb/>
will be published by Media Press<lb/>
of Champaign, IU. "Liberty<lb/>
Bell" was written for Harold A.<lb/>
Jones and the ECU Percussion<lb/>
Ensemble and was performed<lb/>
during Henry's recital in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
Henry is an assistant<lb/>
professor of musicology and<lb/>
ethnomusicology and directs the<lb/>
new ECU Electronic Music<lb/>
Studio, which contains the<lb/>
famous Moog Synthesizer<lb/>
Henry composed electronic<lb/>
music for the recent<lb/>
productions here of Mactetfi<lb/>
and The Good Woman of<lb/>
Setzuan.<lb/>
Henry is a graduate of Boston<lb/>
University. He has recently<lb/>
completed a dissertation on<lb/>
electronic music and will receive<lb/>
his doctorate from Tube<lb/>
University this June.<lb/>
Some environmentalists say breast<lb/>
feeding can be harmful to babies<lb/>
Nixon administration last year.<lb/>
It's relatively weak features<lb/>
were seen as part of the<lb/>
administration's Southern<lb/>
Strategy.<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
The House now has the<lb/>
choice of concurring in Senate<lb/>
amendments, which would send<lb/>
the bill to the White House, or<lb/>
of rejecting them, which would<lb/>
send the bill to a House-Senate<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Celler fears that if the bill is<lb/>
sent to a conference, the<lb/>
emerging bill would be a<lb/>
compromise which would<lb/>
weaken the civil rights sections.<lb/>
Because of this fear he is now<lb/>
willing to accept the section<lb/>
lowering the vote.<lb/>
KEY QUESTION<lb/>
The key question now is<lb/>
whether House Republicans,<lb/>
who joined with Southern<lb/>
Democrats in passing the weaker<lb/>
House version earlier this year,<lb/>
are willing to now support the<lb/>
tougher provisions of the Senate<lb/>
version. Lobbyists for the 18<lb/>
year-old vote believe they now<lb/>
have sufficent Republican<lb/>
support to guarantee passage,<lb/>
but the vote will probable be<lb/>
close.<lb/>
By LINDA CLEVELAND<lb/>
On most campuses across the<lb/>
nation, Earth Day was<lb/>
successful in making the public<lb/>
aware of most environmental<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
However, some statements or<lb/>
views were not as clear or<lb/>
correct as others.<lb/>
One such case concerns a<lb/>
button rmpaign by the<lb/>
Environmental Teach-in stating<lb/>
"Warning: Breast Milk May Be<lb/>
Harmful to your Child's<lb/>
Health<lb/>
This button campaign<lb/>
received much criticism,<lb/>
especially from La Leche<lb/>
League International (LLLI), an<lb/>
organization promoting good<lb/>
mothering through<lb/>
breastfeeding.<lb/>
HUMAN MILK BEST<lb/>
Marion Tompson, LLLI<lb/>
president, charged that the<lb/>
Environmental Teach-in "is<lb/>
already panicking mothers into<lb/>
abandoning breastfeeding<lb/>
"By massive use of a button<lb/>
campaign, implying that<lb/>
mother's milk is harmful to the<lb/>
child's health because of the<lb/>
presence of DDT in the milk<lb/>
Mrs. Tompson added, "the<lb/>
Environmental Teach-In singled<lb/>
out the one food that is<lb/>
generally agreed upon by<lb/>
medical experts to still be the<lb/>
best for the baby<lb/>
Dr. Herbert Ratner, a public<lb/>
health director and member of<lb/>
La Leche's Medical Advisory<lb/>
Board, stated that when<lb/>
investigations had been made,<lb/>
"leading authorities on DDT in<lb/>
food and breast milk have been<lb/>
unanimous in concluding that<lb/>
present day human milk for the<lb/>
infant when available remains<lb/>
the ideal and preferred food for<lb/>
infants<lb/>
NOT ON INCREASE<lb/>
'California's Health a<lb/>
public health magazine, stated<lb/>
recently "We concluded from<lb/>
our studies of excretion of DDT<lb/>
in milk that these quantities<lb/>
have been in mother's milk for<lb/>
the past two decades and that<lb/>
these levels are not on the<lb/>
increase<lb/>
In a letter sent to La Leche<lb/>
members, Mrs. John F.<lb/>
Froehlich, executive secretary,<lb/>
stated that "So far no ill effects<lb/>
have been found in babies<lb/>
because of DDT and breastfed<lb/>
babies continue to thrive<lb/>
healthily at the breast. This is<lb/>
the most reassuring fact we<lb/>
have<lb/>
SUGGEST RESTRAINT<lb/>
Mrs. Froehlich also wrote<lb/>
that several doctors have<lb/>
suggested that mothers refrain<lb/>
from use of bug sprays in the<lb/>
home because their effects are<lb/>
long-lasting.<lb/>
Dr. Goran Lofroth, first to<lb/>
call attention to DDT in breast<lb/>
milk, stated in a paper that<lb/>
"human milk docs indeed<lb/>
contain DDT, as does the milk<lb/>
of every mammalian species<lb/>
investigated He also wrote<lb/>
that "newborn infants will<lb/>
undoutably have DDT in to<lb/>
tissues at the time of birth.<lb/>
CAREFUL DIET<lb/>
Dr John Poorbaugh, of the<lb/>
Ecology Center at Berkeley<lb/>
stated recently that "the rnu<lb/>
mother can minimize herW<lb/>
intake by avoidance of exces<lb/>
?????"<lb/>
exercise ot tare<lb/>
contact with homes or grtj<lb/>
where DDT or other <lb/>
pesticides are used.<lb/>
Stress should be pW?J<lb/>
on the fact that there fcflj<lb/>
breast milk but that the o .<lb/>
way we get DDT in our <lb/>
from other food? ??<lb/>
according to Mn.<lb/>
Koonce Jr an LLLI <lb/>
BETTER THAN FORM<lb/>
Even with DDT in ni<lb/>
mi,k1 Drit f better r<lb/>
considers it tar b,e<lb/>
formula. It ' bojy<lb/>
immediately, alwaysj <lb/>
temperature, raw tani<lb/>
contains many<lb/>
nutrients, digests mote <lb/>
promotes w;isordersand<lb/>
bacteria, prevents M ,<lb/>
may ne'P<lb/>
am<lb/>
cholarsl<lb/>
Icholarships up tc<lb/>
:h are available tc<lb/>
iiors and seniors wh<lb/>
in the South and <lb/>
abiding interest in n<lb/>
irk. Applicants must<lb/>
awards committee<lb/>
tend to pursue a<lb/>
jly or weekly new<lb/>
that their intei<lb/>
orkshops t<lb/>
Workshops to de<lb/>
jdership skills of pr<lb/>
(rses have been schec<lb/>
June 8-12 and June<lb/>
The Division of C<lb/>
ucation is a<lb/>
iplications for e<lb/>
fudenfs he<lb/>
Two students in t<lb/>
Home Economic<lb/>
rards for ou<lb/>
bomplishment at t<lb/>
feting of the N. (<lb/>
sociation last weeki<lb/>
Carolyn Counce r<lb/>
iusic honoi<lb/>
JFive students in thi<lb/>
jsic will be indue<lb/>
ippa Lamda, mi<lb/>
ciety, in ceremoni"<lb/>
The chosen are<lb/>
idewall<lb/>
(Bells, bottles an<lb/>
gs and string thii<lb/>
le of the work d<lb/>
Greenville Sid<lb/>
kow on Friday am<lb/>
The show, which<lb/>
the Greenville .<lb/>
feature exhibits<lb/>
st Carolina's fines<lb/>
eluding Roger Wo<lb/>
kU Tabar Ror<lb/>
:C Varsity<lb/>
ntinued from page 1<lb/>
ished first in th<lb/>
th in the entin<lb/>
ssociation!<lb/>
East Carolina w<lb/>
?wing unknown t<lb/>
Dwcr in one sho<lb/>
bnarily to the gr<lb/>
t e v e Mabel<lb/>
ountcastle, Browr<lb/>
jller. Dave Wil1<lb/>
ikligan. Bob F<lb/>
indley, and Rick I<lb/>
Prospects for thi<lb/>
ry encouraging u<lb/>
hen a fire wiped <lb/>
infections,<lb/>
may<lb/>
build<lb/>
breast cancer. ? bringS<lb/>
rly <lb/>
physical enjoymei<lb/>
mother and baby-<lb/>
motherly love <lb/>
Join th<lb/>
Piz<lb/>
(<lb/>
DIN I<lb/>
Call Ah<lb/>
Teh<lb/>
dM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0003"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
?L n<lb/>
kinday after being<lb/>
riusic<lb/>
thesizer<lb/>
which contains the<lb/>
Moog Synthesizer<lb/>
composed electronic<lb/>
for the recent<lb/>
ons here of MaM<lb/>
e Good Woman of<lb/>
r is a graduate of Boston<lb/>
ty. He has recently<lb/>
ed a dissertation on<lb/>
ic music and will receive<lb/>
?ctorate from Tulane<lb/>
ty this June.<lb/>
breast<lb/>
babies<lb/>
DDT, as does the ml<lb/>
?y mammalian species<lb/>
ed He also wrote<lb/>
newborn infants wi<lb/>
bly have DDT in their<lb/>
t the time of birth<lb/>
:arefuldiet<lb/>
ohn Poorbaugh, of the<lb/>
Center at Berkeley,<lb/>
scently that "the nrt<lb/>
can minimize her IP<lb/>
by avoidance of excess<lb/>
d meat in her diet andby<lb/>
, of care in <lb/>
' With homes or gardens<lb/>
DDT or other W<lb/>
ies are used<lb/>
. should be pM<lb/>
fact that there isDDT?<lb/>
milk but tM "the ?<lb/>
Z' ? K<lb/>
.?, an LLU <lb/>
:ER THAN FORMULA<lb/>
 nnT in m?the<lb/>
D N?es Ne?<lb/>
la- " ' ,i bo<lb/>
lately- J U<lb/>
,ture, raw an?<lb/>
ins LU<lb/>
tes growth  ders.nJ<lb/>
M n? brf<lb/>
t cante r. bringS<lb/>
jrly l?ve a<lb/>
al enjoyment<lb/>
r and baby.<lb/>
, both<lb/>
ampus Hi-lites<lb/>
Monday. April 27,1970. Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
condensed news briefs<lb/>
fcholarships available<lb/>
Scholarships up to $1,500<lb/>
ch are available to college<lb/>
tiiors and seniors whose roots<lb/>
in the South and who have<lb/>
j abiding interest in newspaper<lb/>
brk. Applicants must convince<lb/>
awards committee that they<lb/>
lend to pursue a career in<lb/>
ly or weekly newspapering<lb/>
that their interests and<lb/>
forkshops to be<lb/>
(Workshops to develop the<lb/>
Idership skills of professional<lb/>
Irses have been scheduled here<lb/>
r June 8-12 and June 22-26.<lb/>
The Division of Continuing<lb/>
lucation is accepting<lb/>
plications for enrollment<lb/>
aptitudes are such that they are<lb/>
likely to become leaders in the<lb/>
field.<lb/>
Applications for Ralph<lb/>
McGill scholarships must be<lb/>
postmarked not later than May<lb/>
1.<lb/>
Application blanks may be<lb/>
obtained by writing the Ralph<lb/>
McGill Scholarship Fund, Box<lb/>
4689, Atlanta. Georgia 30302.<lb/>
held for nurses<lb/>
from registered nurses in<lb/>
administrative, supervisory or<lb/>
teaching positions in hospitals<lb/>
or liscensed nursing homes in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Participants may receive four<lb/>
quarter hours credit toward the<lb/>
BSN degree at ECU.<lb/>
Math institute in the planning<lb/>
An $11,236 award from the math.<lb/>
Ldents honored for work<lb/>
Two students in the School<lb/>
Home Economics received<lb/>
rards for outstanding<lb/>
complishment at the annual<lb/>
eting of the N. C. Dietetic<lb/>
sociation last weekend.<lb/>
:arolyn Counce received an<lb/>
award of $350 and Lee Bearden<lb/>
received a $100 award.<lb/>
It is the first time that two<lb/>
students from a single school<lb/>
received outstanding<lb/>
accomplishment awards from<lb/>
the association, officials said.<lb/>
National Science Foundation<lb/>
has been made to the<lb/>
Mathematics Department<lb/>
toward financing an in service<lb/>
institute for junior high teachers<lb/>
of math.<lb/>
The math institute has been<lb/>
scheduled from September 9,<lb/>
1970 through May 26,1971. The<lb/>
institute will consist of weekly<lb/>
classes in modern math, devices<lb/>
and techniques of teaching<lb/>
mathematics to adolescents and<lb/>
modern theories of learning<lb/>
'Moderator1 magazine is failure<lb/>
Chickering blames industry's the end of 1969 and changed to<lb/>
failure to communicate as the<lb/>
"spiritual" death of the<lb/>
Moderator.<lb/>
The Moderator staff quit<lb/>
singing "We Shall Overcome" at<lb/>
The institute is open to<lb/>
teachers and supervisors<lb/>
presently working with at least<lb/>
one course in junior high<lb/>
mathematics in any public,<lb/>
private or parochial school. Nine<lb/>
quarter hours of credit may be<lb/>
earned toward teaching<lb/>
certificate renewal or graduate<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Each participant will receive a<lb/>
travel allowance, book<lb/>
allowance and free tuition. Only<lb/>
30 applicants may be chosen for<lb/>
the institute. .<lb/>
"The Truth Shall Make You<lb/>
Free<lb/>
Chickering hopes to come up<lb/>
with some type of successor to<lb/>
the Moderator in the fall -<lb/>
something for the seventies.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
HUMANITIES ROLE<lb/>
Dr. Richard Capwell, dean of<lb/>
the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, will represent ECU at<lb/>
a conference in the Role of<lb/>
Humanities in Higher Education<lb/>
in Chapel Hill, April 24-25.<lb/>
CONTINUING EDUCATION<lb/>
The School of Home<lb/>
Economics and the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education have<lb/>
received a grant of $10,000 to<lb/>
provide "Follow Through"<lb/>
Supplementary training for 25<lb/>
persons enrolled in the ECU<lb/>
extension center at Goldsboro.<lb/>
MARCHING PIRATES<lb/>
Auditions for the feature<lb/>
twirler position with the 1970<lb/>
ECU Marching Pirates will be at<lb/>
8 p.m. May 5 in the Music Hall,<lb/>
room 105.<lb/>
Buccaneer hosts Get Toget her<lb/>
lusic honor society inducts five<lb/>
Five students in the School of<lb/>
: will be inducted into Pi<lb/>
ppa Lamda, music honor<lb/>
ciety, in ceremonies on April<lb/>
Birmingham Morlan, William<lb/>
Claude Baker Vincent George<lb/>
Brown, Plummer Alston Jones<lb/>
Jr. and Mrs. Kathleen Devie<lb/>
The chosen are Mrs. Jane Tyson.<lb/>
lidewalk Art Show planned<lb/>
Bells, bottles and bangles,<lb/>
gs and string things will be<lb/>
me of the work displayed at<lb/>
Greenville Sidewalk Art<lb/>
Low on Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
The show, which will be held<lb/>
the Greenville Art Center,<lb/>
feature exhibits of some of<lb/>
st Carolina's finest craftsmen,<lb/>
hiding Roger Wood, Pat Hall.<lb/>
lott Tabar Ron Calhoun.<lb/>
Kelly Adams and others.<lb/>
These artists' works were<lb/>
recently on display at the first<lb/>
Carolina Designer Craftsmen<lb/>
Fair in Raleigh.<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Ann Davis, a<lb/>
senior in the School of Art. will<lb/>
also present an exhibit of her<lb/>
works April 26-May 2. The<lb/>
exhibit will be on the third floor<lb/>
of Rawl.<lb/>
C Varsity crew shows gains<lb/>
bntinued from page 10)<lb/>
ished first in the South and<lb/>
th in the entire Dad Vail<lb/>
sociation!<lb/>
East Carolina went from a<lb/>
wing unknown to a national<lb/>
iwer in one short year, due<lb/>
imarily to the great desire of<lb/>
teve Mabel, Dennis<lb/>
lountcastle. Brown Mims, Dick<lb/>
Killer. Dave Williams, Hank<lb/>
likligan. Bob Fuller. John<lb/>
Bindley, and Rick Logan.<lb/>
I Prospects for this year looked<lb/>
ferv encouraging until last June,<lb/>
when a fire wiped out the entire<lb/>
crew program. Then Coach<lb/>
Pezzulla resigned.<lb/>
Terry Chalk assumed the<lb/>
coaching duties, only to<lb/>
discover that five of last year's<lb/>
varsity were not out for crew.<lb/>
Consequently, his major<lb/>
problem this season has been a<lb/>
general lack of experience.<lb/>
One asset, however has been<lb/>
the return of Al Hearn to<lb/>
rowing. The varsity has shown<lb/>
steady improvement in each<lb/>
successive race, and they hope<lb/>
to reach their season peak at the<lb/>
Dad Vail Regatta.<lb/>
"Get Together" is what it's<lb/>
called.<lb/>
The Buccaneer is the place,<lb/>
and the Men's and Women's<lb/>
Residence Councils are the<lb/>
sponsors.<lb/>
Beginning April 29, there will<lb/>
be a "Get Together" night at<lb/>
the Buccaneer each Wednesday<lb/>
evening so the campus women<lb/>
and the men of the hill can get<lb/>
acquainted.<lb/>
The two Residence Councils<lb/>
have been trying to find a way<lb/>
to get the men and women on<lb/>
campus together, and this is<lb/>
their solution.<lb/>
Each week a different men's<lb/>
and a different women's dorm<lb/>
will be "special guests" at the<lb/>
Buccaneer to mix, mingle, and<lb/>
"Get Together These "guests"<lb/>
will not have the Club<lb/>
exculsively, for everyone else<lb/>
STARTS SAT<lb/>
NIGHT 11:15pm<lb/>
"Go see 'Putney Swope.<lb/>
Tells it like it's never been<lb/>
told beforeJudith Crist<lb/>
will be invited also.<lb/>
The Councils hope this will<lb/>
help answer the problem of lack<lb/>
of social interchange between<lb/>
the men and women of ECU.<lb/>
"Special guests" on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 29, will be<lb/>
Jones and Umstead Dorms, but<lb/>
everyone else is invited, too.<lb/>
BEADED INDIAN<lb/>
HEADBANDS<lb/>
NON STRETCH<lb/>
MADE TO ORDER<lb/>
ALSO BEADED JEWELRY<lb/>
CALL 752-3274<lb/>
WEEKDAYS<lb/>
BEFORE 7 P.M<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/>
Join the $$ Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By Pass)<lb/>
DIN1 INN or TAKE OU1<lb/>
Call Ahead lor Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 570<lb/>
"PUTNEY<lb/>
SWOPE<lb/>
The Truth and Soul Movie<lb/>
(X) NO ONE UNDER 18<lb/>
ADMITTED.<lb/>
Four "Beats"<lb/>
You W probably heard at least four ways in which the term"Beat<lb/>
is used in recipies. Can you recall them!<lb/>
You've probably heard at<lb/>
least four ways in which the<lb/>
term "beat" is used in recipies.<lb/>
Can you recall them?<lb/>
' Just plain beat means to<lb/>
mix briskly with a spoon, hand<lb/>
beater or electric beater. This is<lb/>
usually enough to mix all<lb/>
ingredients thoroughly.<lb/>
Beat lightly usually applied<lb/>
to eggs; it involves sufficient<lb/>
light beating with a fork to mix<lb/>
whites and yolks completely.<lb/>
Beat stiff refers to egg<lb/>
whites: they are beaten with<lb/>
electric or rotary beater unti<lb/>
almost dry and until peaks will<lb/>
hold their shape when beater is<lb/>
lifted up through the whites<lb/>
Beat until peaks are formed<lb/>
also refers to egg whites; when<lb/>
this state is achieved, the beaten<lb/>
whites are still moist and shiny<lb/>
but form small peaks when the<lb/>
beater is lifted up.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
4.J??iVW '<lb/>
?- ,??<lb/>
<lb/>
Severs musical performances will begin, I 'Meat<lb/>
c<lb/>
V<lb/>
-?:<lb/>
<lb/>
5j$ed ' HtOl Ch<lb/>
toderscs i 'The kt Maiden 5:i-r<lb/>
i n d Rim tk -kornkov't<lb/>
1 ate<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Reg $5.98 Now $4.19<lb/>
Reg $4.98<lb/>
Now $3.35<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Reg $4.98<lb/>
Now $3.35<lb/>
ON<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
?9 ta h?r? for<lb/>
Any three<lb/>
$4.98 Albums<lb/>
ONLY $9.98<lb/>
PAUL<lb/>
9Tt "?.S?C ?5TV3<lb/>
Single legislature advocated<lb/>
for Connecticut University<lb/>
 -rwwv 3 x ?-g-cir ;  i -<lb/>
- - - - c ' "?' ? - ' - i-1 - "3?X<lb/>
? - i" . ? ? .? ? ? - ?<lb/>
"Ij ?<lb/>
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ndoned t ptaaapd "? t<lb/>
 -   ?.  ; saaecfKu! " <lb/>
 - : ? Hoe<lb/>
; - . ?i<lb/>
 <lb/>
?3<lb/>
Re 15.98<lb/>
Now $4.19<lb/>
Reg $4.98<lb/>
Now $3.35<lb/>
-  em<lb/>
-? and <lb/>
. - ? ? . ?<lb/>
by  ? ? - ' '<lb/>
: -IT. ? ?<lb/>
'  r: " - ra . "  ?<lb/>
. - ?: staare ? tcptair<lb/>
 "r5 - ? - 2. -  - "?<lb/>
in: Sii Seaau ?"?<lb/>
: s"  d c ? - - ? -<lb/>
? :i ??: kooc a ed<lb/>
- - - - - - ; ? ; " '<lb/>
GiantDGGSal<lb/>
by your request one more week<lb/>
REG $5.98 NOW $3.98<lb/>
- - iZ i4! E $<lb/>
: i" - : i: B- : ' " <lb/>
? ; C ? -<lb/>
-? bl :? - ? ? i<lb/>
. : : ?: !<lb/>
?  - ?  -<lb/>
Colleges fad<lb/>
various ills,<lb/>
SN5  - -<lb/>
Open Nffes<lb/>
ra 9<lb/>
530 Cofonche St.<lb/>
1<lb/>
r?HMir?l liar<lb/>
4 isceaat rcc?rcs aai tapes<lb/>
. : : . " -<lb/>
: ' ?<lb/>
<lb/>
" - - i<lb/>
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- - - - "  t:C-<lb/>
? . - -<lb/>
<lb/>
 - i <lb/>
-<lb/>
.<lb/>
wmni<lb/>
By WAYNE<lb/>
The Fine Arts<lb/>
first annual student<lb/>
proved to be a<lb/>
success Saturday r<lb/>
films entered by<lb/>
producers provided<lb/>
of some 330 pei<lb/>
solid two 1<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
The festival ope<lb/>
8:15 with a fill<lb/>
Kershaw enti<lb/>
Adventures of h<lb/>
This animated fl<lb/>
Miss Xyster as she<lb/>
her journey, and i<lb/>
eaten by the prodi<lb/>
TWO FAll<lb/>
Second on the a<lb/>
Albert Dulin<lb/>
"Bolero It was<lb/>
to say the leas<lb/>
dressed up as co1<lb/>
around Charlotti<lb/>
finally met nea<lb/>
library for the<lb/>
third party inter<lb/>
fun, and they dre<lb/>
a cowboy and tfo<lb/>
around together,<lb/>
almost having fun<lb/>
"Dark Lad<lb/>
improvement. Sc<lb/>
in a classroom ai<lb/>
going surfing on<lb/>
two-foot waves<lb/>
Coast. Finally he<lb/>
class and went si<lb/>
four or five mini<lb/>
he quit, walked<lb/>
turned around ai<lb/>
ocean, and the<lb/>
None too soon!<lb/>
16mm I<lb/>
The fourth sel<lb/>
Days in the His<lb/>
Force brought<lb/>
to life. The oi<lb/>
entered in th<lb/>
consisted of c<lb/>
flicks about I<lb/>
aviation that th<lb/>
simply spliced t<lb/>
result was a ve<lb/>
meaningful com<lb/>
history of the a<lb/>
means of aert<lb/>
then as a means<lb/>
ending with se<lb/>
modern-day<lb/>
destruction. A<lb/>
PRO'<lb/>
"Industry oi<lb/>
prophesy on tl<lb/>
much industri<lb/>
and the resi<lb/>
problem. Thr(<lb/>
around in gas r<lb/>
looking at the<lb/>
that had pile<lb/>
 cuT<lb/>
TRIP TO<lb/>
12-September<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
Chapel Hill. I<lb/>
FURNISH<lb/>
rent. Sumrrn<lb/>
males. Call 7<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0005"/><lb/>
Monday, April 27,1970, Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
liven<lb/>
??i<lb/>
? yt n <lb/>
advocated<lb/>
Universe<lb/>
? - -?r f<lb/>
? . . a<lb/>
i?ft'<lb/>
- ? P<lb/>
" -?? - as apdbk '<lb/>
 - ?F?<lb/>
?? ? jZ<lb/>
lieges face<lb/>
rious ills<lb/>
o - '?? :<lb/>
? ? 88<lb/>
.  ?<lb/>
? ? . :<lb/>
at-<lb/>
.<lb/>
i<lb/>
'Meatball,<lb/>
winner of<lb/>
By WAYNE EADS<lb/>
The Fine Arts Committee's<lb/>
first annual student film festival<lb/>
proved to be a resounding<lb/>
success Saturday night. Twelve<lb/>
films entered by their student<lb/>
producers provided the audience<lb/>
of some 330 persons with a<lb/>
solid two hours of<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
The festival opened at about<lb/>
8:15 with a film by Rock<lb/>
Kershaw entitled "The<lb/>
Adventures of Miss Xyster<lb/>
This animated flick followed<lb/>
Miss Xyster as she flew through<lb/>
her journey, and ultimately was<lb/>
eaten by the producer. Fine!<lb/>
TWO FAILURES<lb/>
Second on the agenda was the<lb/>
Albert Dulin production,<lb/>
"Bolero It was a bit strange,<lb/>
to say the least. Two guys<lb/>
dressed up as cowboys walked<lb/>
around Charlotte until they<lb/>
finally met near the public<lb/>
library for the showdown. A<lb/>
third party intervened in their<lb/>
fun, and they dressed him up as<lb/>
a cowboy and the three walked<lb/>
around together. Wow. I was<lb/>
almost having fun.<lb/>
"Dark Lady" was no<lb/>
improvement. Some clown sat<lb/>
in a classroom and dreamed of<lb/>
going surfing on those fantastic<lb/>
two-foot waves of the East<lb/>
Coast. Finally he sneaked out of<lb/>
class and went surfing for about<lb/>
four or five minutes. In the end<lb/>
he quit, walked up the beach,<lb/>
turned around and sighed at the<lb/>
ocean, and the film was over.<lb/>
None too soon!<lb/>
16mm FLICK<lb/>
The fourth selection, "Happy<lb/>
Davs in the History of the Air<lb/>
Force brought the show back<lb/>
to life. The only 16mm film<lb/>
entered in the contest, it<lb/>
consisted of old commercial<lb/>
flicks about the history of<lb/>
aviation that the producer had<lb/>
simply spliced together. But the<lb/>
result was a very funny, often<lb/>
meaningful commentary on the<lb/>
history of the airplane first as a<lb/>
means of aeronautical study,<lb/>
then as a means of warfare, and<lb/>
ending with several frames of<lb/>
modern-day planes of<lb/>
destruction. A very good film.<lb/>
PROGRESS<lb/>
'Industry on Parade" was a<lb/>
prophesy on the result of too<lb/>
much industrial development<lb/>
and the resulting pollution<lb/>
problem. Three guys walked<lb/>
around in gas masks for a while<lb/>
looking at the garbage and filth<lb/>
that had piled up since the<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
TRIP TO EUROPE. June<lb/>
I2-Scptember 8. Very few seats<lb/>
remaining. Call 933-5271,<lb/>
Chapel Hill. N. C.<lb/>
FURNISHED HOUSE for<lb/>
rent. Summer andor fall. 4 6<lb/>
a spaced-out Odessey' emerges as<lb/>
the FAC's first annual film festival<lb/>
industries of the nation had<lb/>
become so progressive, but<lb/>
ended up fighting over a rusty,<lb/>
already opened can of beans<lb/>
that they found, and they all<lb/>
died when they ripped each<lb/>
other's masks off. A sad<lb/>
commentary on the state of<lb/>
things to come, but a good film.<lb/>
EPILOGUE'<lb/>
"Epilogue another Albert<lb/>
Dulin production, showed the<lb/>
true art of the producer. A<lb/>
worthy endeavor, this film<lb/>
depicted the world as it would<lb/>
be after a nuclear holocaust.<lb/>
War continued, but only in<lb/>
small groups and with the<lb/>
simplest of arms. The opposing<lb/>
forces, dressed in black or grey,<lb/>
fought for some time until a<lb/>
third party, dressed all in white,<lb/>
exterminated them all. Then he<lb/>
proceeded to climb to a<lb/>
mountain top and brood over<lb/>
the situation of the earth. The<lb/>
ending was mysterious, for the<lb/>
man in vhite, after going on a<lb/>
rampage himself, found a<lb/>
jack-in the-box, and smiled<lb/>
idiotically at the audience as the<lb/>
screen went black. This was the<lb/>
best film up until this time. The<lb/>
cinematography was certainly<lb/>
the best of all the films entered,<lb/>
with the exception of<lb/>
"Meatball<lb/>
"Hot Air a three or four<lb/>
minute flick by Richard<lb/>
Griendling, brought loud<lb/>
acclaim from the viewers. Very<lb/>
few of us had had the<lb/>
opportunity to watch an actual<lb/>
live operation on a football to<lb/>
remove a faulty valve. The<lb/>
doctor slipped when he<lb/>
attempted to sew it up, ut his<lb/>
finger, blood gushed forth, and<lb/>
the doctor died. There was<lb/>
blood all over the film, and the<lb/>
doctor seemed in a state of<lb/>
despair, at least until he died,<lb/>
and the film ended.<lb/>
MODERN SLAVERY<lb/>
Cliff Lane's film, "The<lb/>
Runaway depicted a runaway<lb/>
slave as he fled for his life<lb/>
through the woods as two white<lb/>
men, one armed with a shotgun<lb/>
and the other with a noose,<lb/>
chased after him. They caught<lb/>
him, and the one with the<lb/>
shotgun killed him. The Black<lb/>
actor died in fine style. Sound<lb/>
familiar? The setting was near a<lb/>
big city of today. Skyscrapers<lb/>
loomed in the background. This<lb/>
was some kind of commentary.<lb/>
CHILDHOOD<lb/>
The ninth film was another<lb/>
Griendling creation, A<lb/>
Feeling It showed children<lb/>
playing in a park in the<lb/>
summertime, and created a<lb/>
feeling of happiness and brought<lb/>
bick memories of one's own<lb/>
childhood. But the atomic blast<lb/>
at the end destroyed all that,<lb/>
and even made you wonder if<lb/>
that was what the world was<lb/>
coming to. Certainly the<lb/>
producer was social-conscious in<lb/>
this endeaver. Another good<lb/>
film.<lb/>
SHOWSTOPPER<lb/>
Finally came the<lb/>
showstopper. the epitome of the<lb/>
festival. After "Meatball a<lb/>
Spaced-Out Odyssey the rest<lb/>
was downhill. Produced by Ken<lb/>
Finch, the film was all about the<lb/>
adventures of our hero, zero<lb/>
bluitt played by Ben Runkle,<lb/>
who happened to be taken in by<lb/>
an android. It all happened one<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon when a<lb/>
meteor, or spaceship, or<lb/>
something from outer space<lb/>
appeared on a collision course<lb/>
with earth and then went into<lb/>
earth orbit. The military didn't<lb/>
know what this creation of the<lb/>
devil might be, so they dubbed it<lb/>
"meatball and said it must be<lb/>
destroyed. They built their most<lb/>
sophisticated spaceship ever, put<lb/>
an android man in it to guide<lb/>
the operation, and sent it after<lb/>
the meatball.<lb/>
ANDROID<lb/>
The android, a man named<lb/>
Frank, chickened out and went<lb/>
to zero's house, where he found<lb/>
zero smoking dope, and he<lb/>
indulged also, but it was obvious<lb/>
that he had never done much<lb/>
dope. So when zero was flying<lb/>
high, he went outside with<lb/>
Frank, and Frank put some kind<lb/>
of weird rig on him, and he flew<lb/>
off. He never got off the<lb/>
ground. He finally fell on his<lb/>
face beside some spaceship,<lb/>
cause he didn't have much say<lb/>
about it. So he got in, and the<lb/>
general came on the screen and<lb/>
told him he was on his way into<lb/>
orbit in place of Frank, who<lb/>
seemed to have gone AWOL.<lb/>
Told him he had been smoking<lb/>
grass and chasing chicks long<lb/>
enough and it was time he did<lb/>
something for his country. Said<lb/>
he wished he was in zero's<lb/>
shoes, and so did zero, but he<lb/>
took off by remote control.<lb/>
HAYWIRE MISSILE<lb/>
They went into orbit, and<lb/>
fired a missle to destroy<lb/>
meatball, but it went haywire<lb/>
and destroyed the earth, and the<lb/>
earth floated by in a sea of junk.<lb/>
So zero proceeded on to<lb/>
meatball in order to find out<lb/>
what it was. and the baby in<lb/>
outer space grabbed him. The<lb/>
Meatball Theme played as the<lb/>
(continued on page 8)<lb/>
males. Call 752-2862<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
( ,? .cola Bottling Company, Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0006"/><lb/>
?MM?ix ???-????.?<lb/>
<lb/>
Pant o. Fountainhead, Monda April 27,1970<lb/>
MADAME LORRAINE HAS been for over 20 yearv Just in case you want<lb/>
cing palmistn an inherited gift your fortune told.<lb/>
<lb/>
Madame Lorraine, palmist, began<lb/>
practice by reading tea leaves<lb/>
5 5 A5A A 'vt<lb/>
CisTk lJvK<lb/>
-? T<lb/>
i<lb/>
- - - -<lb/>
. . ? - . -<lb/>
-<lb/>
 - <lb/>
The<lb/>
RACliANCE<lb/>
iN t'h? ROUVd<lb/>
.? . lumber S<lb/>
 . hj teU nae ? m re<lb/>
Wd " she smiled ' If<lb/>
i in more e.? ;  igs<lb/>
 . ; - iTlU ?  j- ' ? ' - - -<lb/>
S3 re id n?<lb/>
PALMIST<lb/>
MiuJTVg L i piiTUS<lb/>
. ???-?; t?: f<lb/>
3   - " .?<lb/>
 ?; ;  ?  He: :  '<lb/>
<lb/>
" - r - i' - - - ? ' ? - ?<lb/>
MADAME RANDOLPH IS not a mysterious consultant;<lb/>
she is just a friend.<lb/>
MadameRandolph<lb/>
is not a witch<lb/>
By JUDY UANGLEY<lb/>
Lot life Tr.r'i iifir<lb/>
the mon  mm : o problem<lb/>
people consult  e i?:ut.<lb/>
It has bees b jrher pc p -<lb/>
 dam and Ee. and  .<lb/>
is, said Madame Lee Ri rpfc<lb/>
? i . ' . .<lb/>
Their  ' ? rr readings.<lb/>
ac ? - ;   <lb/>
 ? whet oe rists<lb/>
Midan - .<lb/>
She does " " ' - - '<lb/>
stranger v htsj t be at<lb/>
I  . fee tngs but Toa<lb/>
 at in some weird ? rid<lb/>
- i  .r" said lauah-<lb/>
talk in her pac ? Lag room.<lb/>
Far from eerie it beaut<lb/>
furnished with ight greet arpet<lb/>
ind soft -  chaii tt a just<lb/>
? ? . fnec: ise. and she a<lb/>
jusl Ice a friend thet<lb/>
T u  is invooe<lb/>
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SLY HUMAN<lb/>
7 tC hCf i?'zi' ? - <lb/>
:? i bei ? .e be  greeted<lb/>
. i fnetsdh - . iressed<lb/>
ryooe tfa She : ea<lb/>
ia J " -  sc . dai k ?<lb/>
:? S3  : -i r t  ?<lb/>
: ?  . men .r.zn : j ?<lb/>
Madame Raixi r aid<lb/>
-G:c has me ?th<lb/>
speda fee it c<lb/>
SOT A HEALEF<lb/>
  . - ' - ' ? ?<lb/>
; ?.? ' - ' ? - "?<lb/>
i: h. -  ? r: : . ? - '??<lb/>
thawing I  " ?- ?<lb/>
isi er lie to l : : <lb/>
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Monday, April 27,1970, Fountainhead, Page 7<lb/>
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Tmkerbell snows true gut z;rrfM ?-?.?<lb/>
(continued from page 6)<lb/>
Washington. DC. and Syracuse.<lb/>
New York from people who had<lb/>
consulted her and were still<lb/>
seeking advice.<lb/>
?' l've never had an)<lb/>
complaints she remarked lt<lb/>
people have faith and believe in<lb/>
me. then the results are usually<lb/>
positive<lb/>
She recalled telling a nurse<lb/>
who works at the Robersonville<lb/>
Clinic that she would marry and<lb/>
have four children, a prediction<lb/>
which came true Also, she said<lb/>
an ECU student who would not<lb/>
believe what she told Kim<lb/>
almost went crazy worrying<lb/>
over her predictions<lb/>
DIVINE HEALER<lb/>
Madame Lorraine believes<lb/>
"your live is written in youT<lb/>
hand when you are born and it<lb/>
never chances, and everyone has<lb/>
a different pal "<lb/>
"1 am also a divine healer<lb/>
she addec "One man was in the<lb/>
hospita and th d  rs had no<lb/>
p? foi him He . six feet tall<lb/>
and ther weighed  pounds. I<lb/>
told his wife t( bnng him t me.<lb/>
Within six weeks he was<lb/>
The mediu n alsc s. she can<lb/>
nd<lb/>
?ct ser:e f w p<lb/>
are interested ir . ntaci -<lb/>
rh<lb/>
iead "<lb/>
She savs she h3S experienced<lb/>
ESP (extra-senson percept:<lb/>
She contends that if she<lb/>
concentrates on one person she<lb/>
can usualK read their thoughts<lb/>
When she met her husband she<lb/>
said she "knew- they would<lb/>
marrv and she "knew" what sex<lb/>
each' of her children would be<lb/>
before the were born.<lb/>
"Gifts of palm reading, mind<lb/>
reading and he like are all<lb/>
inherited traits Madame<lb/>
Lorraine emphasized, "A person<lb/>
cannot be trained in these<lb/>
fields<lb/>
TINKERBELL<lb/>
Her son and daughter have<lb/>
delved into it slightly, but she<lb/>
feels that her three-year-old<lb/>
granddaughter. Tmkerbell. has<lb/>
the "true" gift. Tmkerbell has<lb/>
never been to England, but it<lb/>
someone says 50 dollars she says<lb/>
that is 10 pounds.<lb/>
Madame Lorraine does not<lb/>
adhere to the beliefs of<lb/>
astrology. She says that the sun.<lb/>
stars and particularly the moon<lb/>
affect people's lives, but<lb/>
regardless of when one is born.<lb/>
Also, she does not believe in<lb/>
reincarnation.<lb/>
"1 am not a gypsy she<lb/>
concluded. "1 only want to help<lb/>
people who believe 1 can help<lb/>
According to her local radio<lb/>
advertisement. Madame<lb/>
Lorraine is located on Highway<lb/>
64. Bethel. Look for her trailer<lb/>
and hand sign she has been<lb/>
there for over 20 years so she<lb/>
MUST be good<lb/>
(continued from oaqe b)<lb/>
ended. Fantastic.<lb/>
Undoubtedly the best creation<lb/>
in the entire festival.<lb/>
The next to the last film.<lb/>
"Coming Home was about a<lb/>
soldier with a limp who came<lb/>
home from the war, and found<lb/>
the town deserted. Not a very<lb/>
good film, but it might have<lb/>
meaning for those who want to<lb/>
look for it<lb/>
The final film was entitled<lb/>
"The Time Sucker and was<lb/>
another animated flick, this<lb/>
time done by Rock Kershaw. It<lb/>
was a pretty good story of how<lb/>
some dude saved the earth and<lb/>
time by saying some magic<lb/>
words to the monstrous time<lb/>
Fortune telling is divine gift<lb/>
n6) a 11 th?m if thev were to know everything.<lb/>
(continued from raoe 6<lb/>
about the problem. When this<lb/>
the person that<lb/>
occurs, she tells<lb/>
she is unable to advise them.<lb/>
She said there are even times<lb/>
when she refuses to see people<lb/>
because she draws a mental<lb/>
blank.<lb/>
Madame Randolph's mother<lb/>
and grandmother were also per-<lb/>
sonal consultants, and she stud-<lb/>
ied under her mother by observ-<lb/>
ing her consultations.<lb/>
"She stressed that her main job<lb/>
is to stud) and learn all she can<lb/>
about people to help them.<lb/>
She pointed out that her<lb/>
? -her was very well known in<lb/>
the area before her dea'h.<lb/>
"Members of the Sheriffs<lb/>
Departmei I ai d th p lice used<lb/>
would tell them if they were<lb/>
taking the investigation in the<lb/>
right direction, and at times<lb/>
gave them new information<lb/>
MOTHERS FOOTSTEPS<lb/>
When her mother became ill.<lb/>
Madame Randolph took over<lb/>
her "practice She became<lb/>
aware of her special feelings<lb/>
because she was extremely over-<lb/>
sensitive, even as a child. For<lb/>
instance, she said she knew<lb/>
when friends were lying or being<lb/>
deceitful to her. "Sometimes 1<lb/>
wish 1 didn't know she said.<lb/>
Although she is not a fortune<lb/>
teller, she does believe that God<lb/>
gives some people these powers.<lb/>
However, she stressed that<lb/>
nobody is always right because<lb/>
d does not mean for people<lb/>
TH8<lb/>
BALLAD Or<lb/>
CABLE<lb/>
IIOGUC<lb/>
NOW THRU WED<lb/>
I l XI RICH ? BKU T<lb/>
to know everything.<lb/>
She believes that there are<lb/>
very few people born with these<lb/>
special powers and that many<lb/>
crack-pots are riding on the<lb/>
reputation of a few just to make<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"1 don't claim to know every-<lb/>
thing by any means, but the<lb/>
things 1 do know. I'd bank my<lb/>
life on she said.<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
Madame Randolph is the<lb/>
mother of five children, and she<lb/>
quite candidly admits that she<lb/>
has the same problems as every<lb/>
other parent. "My children rebel<lb/>
at times too she said.<lb/>
However, she feels that often,<lb/>
though not always, truly delin-<lb/>
quent children are the result o<lb/>
delinquent parents who did not<lb/>
spend time with the children<lb/>
when thev were growing up.<lb/>
Madame Randolph charges<lb/>
five dollars for a consultation.<lb/>
She does no advertising, and<lb/>
most o her clients are referred<lb/>
to her b former clients.<lb/>
"1 just wish there were some-<lb/>
one in town that 1 could talk<lb/>
to she sighed. "Like 1 said, we<lb/>
all need guidance in this con-<lb/>
fused world, and it is hard to<lb/>
understand things about your-<lb/>
self. You know, like not being<lb/>
able to see the trees for the<lb/>
forest "<lb/>
sucker. A good idea, but poorly<lb/>
animated.<lb/>
Having shown all the fi<lb/>
the FAC awarded the prizes'<lb/>
Albert Dulin won the camera<lb/>
and film from Ross' Camera<lb/>
Shop for the cinematography of<lb/>
"Epilogue Everyone agreed<lb/>
that this was deserving.<lb/>
Richard Griendling won the<lb/>
$25 fourth place prize for his<lb/>
film. "Hot Air The $50 third<lb/>
place prize went to Albert Dulin<lb/>
for "Epilogue Second place<lb/>
went to Rock Kershaw for the<lb/>
first film. "The Adventures of<lb/>
Miss Xyster He received the<lb/>
prize of $75 for his efforts.<lb/>
WINNER<lb/>
The first place prize of $100<lb/>
went to Ken Finch for his film.<lb/>
"Meatball A Spaced-Out<lb/>
Odyssey This was certainly<lb/>
deserving also; as a matter of<lb/>
fact it was the only film in its<lb/>
class and was the only one that<lb/>
could have won.<lb/>
The Fine Arts Committee<lb/>
must be congratulated for their<lb/>
work in making this festival<lb/>
possible. Thev did a fine job.<lb/>
Next year should by all rights be<lb/>
much better. And anyone who<lb/>
wants a technical review of the<lb/>
festival should contact them.<lb/>
Maybe you can learn something<lb/>
that might be valuable in<lb/>
making a film for the Second<lb/>
Annual Student Film Festival<lb/>
next year. Viva la Fine Arts<lb/>
Committee'<lb/>
Candidate sees<lb/>
need for issues<lb/>
Editor's note:<lb/>
The following is a statement<lb/>
made to Fountainhead by Jerry<lb/>
Paul, a Greenville lawyer who is<lb/>
running for a seat in the State<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
-I have been increasing!) and<lb/>
continuously concerned about<lb/>
the weekly casualty reports<lb/>
from Vietnam. At thi<lb/>
despite statements<lb/>
present d minis<lb/>
STARTS THURSDAY<lb/>
A COCKEYED -iVifi-f I<lb/>
MASTERPIECE vmfc Mm<lb/>
V:<lb/>
.?((?<lb/>
R<lb/>
MSTRtCTfD<lb/>
o.a'C a-<lb/>
Teachers Wanted<lb/>
Southwest Teachers<lb/>
Agency<lb/>
1303 Central N.E<lb/>
Albuquerque N.M 87106<lb/>
24th year placing teachers<lb/>
in the ENTIRE West<lb/>
Member NAT A. Free registration<lb/>
by the<lb/>
n seems<lb/>
we are m danger ?: becomj<lb/>
involved in Laos and cam<lb/>
This involvement has been go?n<lb/>
on and increasing without the<lb/>
consent of Congress<lb/>
"The State Legislature she<lb/>
become involved in<lb/>
question. . if elected, will<lb/>
this issue ??<lb/>
 3fiH nersuauc<lb/>
introduce a in <lb/>
North Carolina State u?J<lb/>
to pass a bill s.mi.it 10 ? <lb/>
recently passed t .<lb/>
M a s s a c h u s e t t<lb/>
Legislature<lb/>
this<lb/>
raise<lb/>
to<lb/>
the<lb/>
fcffiWi<lb/>
<lb/>
THE IROI<lb/>
Brann, lea<lb/>
Doug Ingle<lb/>
Jai<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
Greenville v<lb/>
weather ha:<lb/>
flowers an<lb/>
everyone's<lb/>
Along w<lb/>
come a var<lb/>
warm weath<lb/>
This com<lb/>
prove to be<lb/>
as ECU s<lb/>
Jamboree V<lb/>
iRor<lb/>
The Ir<lb/>
perform in<lb/>
Thursday n<lb/>
of years aj<lb/>
men who i<lb/>
were roam<lb/>
hills and<lb/>
searching<lb/>
bottles in c<lb/>
money to<lb/>
however, tl<lb/>
Hum<lb/>
prov<lb/>
By M.<lb/>
The Mo<lb/>
Hungarian<lb/>
Hoffman a<lb/>
strated by i<lb/>
ster Press. 1<lb/>
it was a<lb/>
some fable:<lb/>
childhood,<lb/>
tion of Hui<lb/>
remarkable<lb/>
collaboratii<lb/>
IMrv<lb/>
How th<lb/>
being is al;<lb/>
Gyuri Bin<lb/>
during the<lb/>
came to th<lb/>
Here he<lb/>
German ti<lb/>
who trans<lb/>
glish. Thes<lb/>
tape recor<lb/>
Hoffman v<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0009"/><lb/>
cake<lb/>
Monday, April 27,1970, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
idea, but<lb/>
poorly<lb/>
n all the fa<lb/>
ded the prizes<lb/>
von the camera<lb/>
1 Ross' Camera<lb/>
nematography of<lb/>
veryone agreed<lb/>
serving.<lb/>
idling won the<lb/>
ice prize for his<lb/>
" The $50 third<lb/>
it to Albert Dulin<lb/>
Second place<lb/>
Kershaw for the<lb/>
e Adventures of<lb/>
He received the<lb/>
r his efforts.<lb/>
INNER<lb/>
ace prize of $100<lb/>
"inch for his film.<lb/>
A Spaced-Out<lb/>
us was certainly<lb/>
; as a matter of<lb/>
le only film in its<lb/>
the only one that<lb/>
n.<lb/>
Arts Committee<lb/>
ratulated for their<lb/>
ing this festival<lb/>
y did a fine job.<lb/>
uld by all rights be<lb/>
And anyone who<lb/>
lical review of the<lb/>
Id contact them.<lb/>
in learn something<lb/>
be valuable in<lb/>
n for the Second<lb/>
ent Film Festival<lb/>
fiva la Fine Arts<lb/>
ate sees<lb/>
r issues<lb/>
ing is a statement<lb/>
ntainhead by Jerry<lb/>
villa lawyer who is<lb/>
a seat in the State<lb/>
en increasingly and<lb/>
concerned about<lb/>
casualty reports<lb/>
un. At this point<lb/>
atements by t'ie<lb/>
ministration seems<lb/>
t to be - - lhil<lb/>
I becominj<lb/>
a0s and Cambodia.<lb/>
nent has been going<lb/>
?easing without the<lb/>
ongress<lb/>
e Legislature should<lb/>
nvolved in <lb/>
if elected, will raise<lb/>
. b seeking t0<lb/>
and persuade the<lb/>
inaState Legislature<lb/>
U similar to the one<lb/>
. bj Ih<lb/>
. ' State<lb/>
,i - l l <lb/>
1<lb/>
The<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
THE IRON BUTTERFLY Ron Bushy, drummer; Erik<lb/>
Brann, lead guitar, vocalist; Lee Dorman, bass guitar; and<lb/>
Doug Ingle (front), lead vocalist, organist and leader.<lb/>
NORTHERN UNIFORMS WILL flourish in Gap bring their sound to East Carolina<lb/>
the South as Gary Puckett and the Union Friday night as part of Jamboree Weekend.<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend brings festivities<lb/>
  .i.i eAt iD??,n ?, inin a m i<lb/>
Spring has arrived in<lb/>
Greenville with full force. The<lb/>
weather has grown warm, the<lb/>
flowers are in bloom and<lb/>
everyone's spirits are sky-high.<lb/>
Along with springtime has<lb/>
come a variety of festivals and<lb/>
warm weather activities.<lb/>
This coming weekend should<lb/>
prove to be another festive one,<lb/>
as ECU sponsors its annual<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend.<lb/>
IRON BUTTERFLY<lb/>
The Iron Butterfly will<lb/>
perform in Minges Coliseum on<lb/>
Thursday night. Only a couple<lb/>
of years ago, the four young<lb/>
men who make up this group<lb/>
were roaming the Hollywood<lb/>
hills and Sunset Strip area,<lb/>
searching for empty coke<lb/>
bottles in order to raise enough<lb/>
money to buy food. Now.<lb/>
however, their financial worries<lb/>
are in the past.<lb/>
"We were determined said<lb/>
bass guitarist Lee Dorman. "We<lb/>
believed in ourselves and in our<lb/>
sound<lb/>
"HEAVY"<lb/>
The group achieved<lb/>
recognition about two years ago<lb/>
with their First album "Heavy<lb/>
However, they are most famous<lb/>
for their record<lb/>
"In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida which<lb/>
won them a gold album.<lb/>
This record has already been<lb/>
acclaimed as a creative master<lb/>
piece.<lb/>
"It's a song that represents<lb/>
and means a lot of things to us<lb/>
said Doug Ingle, vocalist and<lb/>
organist for the group.<lb/>
'In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida' means<lb/>
just what it says. And we're<lb/>
saying that when two people<lb/>
learn the meaning they can<lb/>
spend their whole lifetime in<lb/>
happiness<lb/>
Gary Puckett and the Union<lb/>
Gap will also be a part of<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend. They will<lb/>
' give a concert in Minges on<lb/>
Friday at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
In only a few years, this<lb/>
group has produced several hit<lb/>
records, including 'Woman,<lb/>
Woman" and "Young Girl<lb/>
both of which won Gold<lb/>
Records.<lb/>
Student and student guest'<lb/>
tickets for the Iron Butterfly are<lb/>
$1.50, and $1 for Gary Puckett.<lb/>
All public tickets are $3. They<lb/>
will be on sale through Friday at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
UNION ACTIVITIES<lb/>
On Saturday the fun will<lb/>
continue with a Pirates<lb/>
Jamboree Treasure Chest of<lb/>
Outdoor Activities, sponsored<lb/>
by the Union.<lb/>
The festivities, to be held on<lb/>
the Mall, will begin at about<lb/>
10:30 a.m and continue all day<lb/>
and into the evening.<lb/>
The activities will include a<lb/>
folk festival, a pie-eating<lb/>
contest a bingo party and a<lb/>
square dance, among other<lb/>
things. The day will wind up<lb/>
with a street dance, featuring<lb/>
"Liquid Smoke' from 9-11 p.m.<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend promises<lb/>
to be a lot of fun, and should<lb/>
provide a good start for the<lb/>
"lusty month of May<lb/>
Susan Carter displays purity<lb/>
- . . r A .si.to if Ka?<lb/>
ByBILLSCHELL<lb/>
Wonderful Deeds and<lb/>
Adventures Susan Carter (Epic<lb/>
B N 2 6 510) Streetnoise, Julie<lb/>
Driscoll, Brian Auger and the<lb/>
Trinity (Atco SD2-701).<lb/>
Susan Carter is possibly the<lb/>
best female jazz-blues singer of song apart and puts it back<lb/>
the past ten years. Julie together in ways that give a new<lb/>
Driscoll is not quite as good, but perspective to the material.<lb/>
Hungarian folk tales told in translation<lb/>
provide reader engrossing entertainment<lb/>
 , .l? ??? Tkic mQV he th<lb/>
By MAXIM TABORY<lb/>
The Money Hat and Other<lb/>
Hungarian Folk Tales. By Peggy<lb/>
Hoffman and Gyuri Biro. Illu-<lb/>
strated by Gyuri Biro. Westmin-<lb/>
ster Press. 158 pages. $4.50.<lb/>
It was a rare pleasure to read<lb/>
some fables often told to me in<lb/>
childhood. This English transla-<lb/>
tion of Hungarian folk tales is a<lb/>
remarkable achievement of the<lb/>
collaborating authors.<lb/>
IMMIGRATION<lb/>
How this volume came into<lb/>
being is also a fascinating story.<lb/>
Gyuri Biro left his native land<lb/>
during the 1956 re ;lution and<lb/>
came to the U.S.<lb/>
Here he told these tales in<lb/>
German to his American wife<lb/>
who translated them into En-<lb/>
glish. These rough versions were<lb/>
tape recorded and sent to Mrs.<lb/>
Hoffman who molded them into<lb/>
their present form.<lb/>
Although I was brought up in<lb/>
a Hungarian town, 1 also had<lb/>
continuous contact with vil-<lb/>
lagers and absorbed much of<lb/>
their customs and legends. Now<lb/>
I feel that this essence of<lb/>
our romantic past has enriched<lb/>
my life.<lb/>
TRANSLATION<lb/>
This flavor comes through in<lb/>
the translation. In my opinion,<lb/>
the text and the illustrations<lb/>
truly capture the spirit of the<lb/>
original.<lb/>
Peggy Hoffman is an exper-<lb/>
ienced children's writer. Her<lb/>
onomatopoeic language is<lb/>
eminently suitable for reading<lb/>
at story hour.<lb/>
I find the literary structure at<lb/>
least as good as that of the<lb/>
original and occasionally even<lb/>
better. Her lively style perme-<lb/>
ates the text. This may be the<lb/>
secret of her success.<lb/>
Biro's drawings blend well<lb/>
with the stories and admirably<lb/>
complement the characters and<lb/>
events.<lb/>
LANGUAGE<lb/>
Professor Joseph Remenyi<lb/>
writes in his essay. Modern<lb/>
Hungarian Literature in English<lb/>
Translation: "There are few<lb/>
Hungarians who speak and write<lb/>
English with perfection, and<lb/>
fewer non-Hungarians who<lb/>
know the Hungarian language<lb/>
perfectly. This fact bears a share<lb/>
of the responsibility for the lack<lb/>
of competent translators. It is<lb/>
difficult to find truly depend<lb/>
'able translators whose rendering<lb/>
does not interfere with the<lb/>
pleasure one rightly expects<lb/>
from plays, novels, and poems.<lb/>
I wouldn't want to live on the<lb/>
difference.<lb/>
PURE VOICE<lb/>
Carter has a pure voice with a<lb/>
range and depth of emotion that<lb/>
must be heard to be believed.<lb/>
Far too long Janis Joplin has<lb/>
been looked to as the best in<lb/>
blues. Carter shows Joplin up<lb/>
for what she is-a toneless,<lb/>
screeching mama with a huge<lb/>
booze capacity.<lb/>
Where Joplin would merely<lb/>
shout and scream; Susan Carter<lb/>
interprets, putting new meaning<lb/>
into the blues. She brings out<lb/>
everything in lyric and puts all<lb/>
her heart into the melodies,<lb/>
evoking memories of Billie<lb/>
Holiday.<lb/>
The best music on the album<lb/>
comes from a tribute to Billie<lb/>
Holiday written for Carter by<lb/>
Laura Nyro. LauraNyro'ssongs<lb/>
and Dick Halligan's flawless<lb/>
arrangements combine with<lb/>
Carter to make something that<lb/>
makes you cry.<lb/>
Julie Driscoll has none of the<lb/>
vocal purety of Carter. Her<lb/>
quality could almost be called<lb/>
nasal nasal like Miles Davis'<lb/>
trumpet is nasal. She takes a<lb/>
JAZZ SINGER<lb/>
Driscoll is a true jazz-singer,<lb/>
improvising with a deftness and<lb/>
a style that is, again, much like<lb/>
Miles Davis. "All Blues" is a<lb/>
Miles Davis tune which brings<lb/>
out the similarities between the<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Brian Auger is one of the<lb/>
finest keyboard men in jazz or<lb/>
rock.<lb/>
'STREETNOISE'<lb/>
The music on Streetnoise is<lb/>
great (well, most of it), but of<lb/>
particular interest is "I Got<lb/>
Life" which uses a 74 meter.<lb/>
This meter is like 44 really; if,<lb/>
when you dance, one leg is<lb/>
shorter than the other. The<lb/>
really amazing thing is that the<lb/>
group functions so smoothly in<lb/>
that wicked meter: nothing is<lb/>
stilted, everything flows very<lb/>
well.<lb/>
These albums are the<lb/>
much-talk ed-about fusion of<lb/>
jazz and rock through the<lb/>
common root of blues. The<lb/>
mark of great music is that each<lb/>
time you hear it. you find<lb/>
something new. These albums<lb/>
never grow oldthey are classics.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0010"/><lb/>
Page 10. Fountainhead, Monday. April 27J970iVvwX'?<lb/>
ICourruinheAd<lb/>
 Sports<lb/>
f The schedule, April 27-30:<lb/>
<lb/>
?y.<lb/>
Mondav - Golf vs. The Citadel<lb/>
Tuesday - Tennis vs. Atlantic Christian College, at Wilson.<lb/>
Wednesday - Golf: Southern Conference Tournament<lb/>
(at Pinehurst. N. C); Baseball at Furman (doubleheade<lb/>
Thursday - Golf: Conference Tournament<lb/>
Tennis: Conference Tournament (at Davidson, N. C.)<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
r)<lb/>
FUN THINGS ARE<lb/>
HAPPENING ON<lb/>
OUR 2nd FLOOR"<lb/>
Looking for the widest<lb/>
selection of blouse and shirt styles to go with all<lb/>
those skirts and culottes? Head to our second<lb/>
floor! That's where you'll find all the latest<lb/>
fashions in crepes, voiles and easy-care dacron<lb/>
cotton fabric blouses and body shirts in all the<lb/>
new colors and prints. Fill out your skirt wardrobe<lb/>
from our wide selection of new spring and summer<lb/>
A lines dirndles, flare styles and scooters. Blouses<lb/>
5.99 to 16.99, Skirts and culottes 3.99 to 12.99.<lb/>
Our models are ECU sophomores from Annandale,<lb/>
Va. Standing, Shelia White: Blouse 7.99; Skirt<lb/>
9.99. Sharon White: Blouse 6.99; Scooter skirt<lb/>
7.99.<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
????:?:?:<lb/>
. ? ? ? ?j<lb/>
?:?:?<lb/>
X:Xv<lb/>
???:?:?:<lb/>
??Xv<lb/>
? ???<lb/>
M<lb/>
Crew ranks<lb/>
as old sport<lb/>
By RICK LOGAN<lb/>
Crew is the oldest<lb/>
intercollegiate sport in America.<lb/>
The distances in rowing events<lb/>
are arranged by a regatta ?<lb/>
committee, and range from<lb/>
about half a mile up to 4 miles<lb/>
in the United States and<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
A 2.000-meter course appears<lb/>
to be the most common<lb/>
distance. The time required to<lb/>
cover such a course usually<lb/>
ranges from 6 to 7 minutes.<lb/>
depending on water and weather<lb/>
conditions.<lb/>
RACING SHELLS<lb/>
Modern racing shells are made<lb/>
for singles doubles, four-man<lb/>
crews and eight man crews. The<lb/>
lightweight boats are usually<lb/>
made of cedar planks, less than<lb/>
one eighth of an inch thick.<lb/>
Eight-oared shells weigh<lb/>
approximately 285 pounds.<lb/>
Shells are always built long<lb/>
and narrow. The eight-man<lb/>
shell, for example, is more than<lb/>
60 feet long and only 2 feet<lb/>
wide.<lb/>
Varying with the type of shell<lb/>
is the size and weight of the<lb/>
tough spruce oars. Sweeps<lb/>
generally weigh about five<lb/>
pounds and are 12 feet long.<lb/>
NEW IN SOUTH<lb/>
Crew is a relatively new sport<lb/>
in the South. In 1966, East<lb/>
Carolina became the first college<lb/>
in the state to start a rowing<lb/>
program, which was directed by<lb/>
Andre Brousseau.<lb/>
Facilities that year, however,<lb/>
were horrible. Practices were<lb/>
held in "little" Washington, and<lb/>
they had to row in shells that<lb/>
were 35 years old. Their only<lb/>
races that season were against<lb/>
some high schools in<lb/>
Washington D. C.<lb/>
IMPROVEMENTS<lb/>
1967 saw many improvements<lb/>
in the crew program. An old<lb/>
tabacco warehouse in Greenville<lb/>
was converted into a boathouse.<lb/>
and a new shell was also<lb/>
purchased.<lb/>
They entered their first<lb/>
intercollegiate races and beat a<lb/>
few mediocre crews. For the first<lb/>
time, the crew rowed in the Dad<lb/>
Vail Regatta in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Progress for the crew<lb/>
continued the next year. Vic<lb/>
Pezzulla became coach.<lb/>
Furthermore, some big new<lb/>
recruits joined the crew. Again,<lb/>
the varsity beat some average<lb/>
crews, but they were still unable<lb/>
to compete with the rowing<lb/>
powers from the North.<lb/>
EXPERIENCE<lb/>
More important, however,<lb/>
was the fact that these powerful<lb/>
newcomers were gaining<lb/>
valuable experience, which paid<lb/>
off in the future. The junior<lb/>
varsity boat had a fine season.<lb/>
finishing high in its class at the<lb/>
Dad Vail Regatta.<lb/>
196? was a bannei yeai foi<lb/>
the Pirate varsity crew. It<lb/>
(continued  ?<lb/>
:$ft&amp;<lb/>
From the sideline:<lb/>
Host of<lb/>
records broken<lb/>
by DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Ray Scharf who this year coached the Pirates to their fifth<lb/>
straight Southern Conference swimming championship, has spent<lb/>
the past few painstaking weeks compiling the records the team<lb/>
broke along the way.<lb/>
In swimming to a 7-6 dual meet record, the Bucs were led by<lb/>
freestyler Jim Griffin. Griffin scored a total of 209! points for the<lb/>
season and set four new varsity records, in the 100, 200. 500. and<lb/>
1000-yard freestyle. He won the 100. 200. and 500-yard events in the<lb/>
conference meet and set new standards in each.<lb/>
After his outstanding regular season, Griffin became the first<lb/>
swimmer ever to qualify for the nationals for East Carolina. He<lb/>
placed 19th in the 100 and 24th in the 200.<lb/>
Wayne Norris. who was the leading J. V. scorer with 156 points.<lb/>
finished second behind Griffin in that category. He broke four<lb/>
freshman records, in the 1000-yard freestyle, 200 and 400-yard<lb/>
individual medley and 200-yard butterfly.<lb/>
POOL RECORDS BROKEN<lb/>
Two pool records were broken. Paul Trevisan set the mark in the<lb/>
50-yard freestyle with a time of 22.3 seconds and Bob Baud scored<lb/>
262.15 points in the 1-meter dive. 30 points better than the old<lb/>
mark.<lb/>
Bill Lafferty. Larry Allman. Greg Hanes, Gary Frederick.<lb/>
Trevisan. Norris and Baird all had a hand in breaking ten old varsity<lb/>
records while Ron Tobin and Trevisan also set new freshman marks.<lb/>
In conference action, nine new records were set. In addition to<lb/>
Griffin's performances, Lafferty, Allman, Hanes. Trevisan. Norris.<lb/>
Frederick and Baird helped to make this the best team in East<lb/>
Carolina's swimming history. Each of these men holds or shares a<lb/>
new conference record.<lb/>
And there is a lot to look forward to in Pirate swimming, as well.<lb/>
The Pirates do not lose many men through graduation this year. In<lb/>
fact there were only six seniors on this year's swimming and diving<lb/>
squads Lafferty, Baird. Dave Phillips, Steve Weissman, Sonny<lb/>
Culbreth and team captain Ken Hungate.<lb/>
RETURNING SWIMMERS STRONG<lb/>
With the rest of the performers returning next year, it appears<lb/>
that the Pirates will once again have a strong swimming squad. The<lb/>
tentative schedule for 1970-71 calls for 13 dual meets, including such<lb/>
powers as Army. Maryland, and, of course, North Carolina, which<lb/>
has beaten the Bucs 16 straight times.<lb/>
The latest and the last member of Mike McGee s football<lb/>
staff is Albert Ferguson who will head the offensive line. He nas<lb/>
been on the staff at the University of Maryland, where he coached<lb/>
the defensive line. th<lb/>
Tom Miller was honored as the Most Valuable Player on Hie<lb/>
varsity basketball squad and Al Faber was awarded the honor to<lb/>
the freshman team. Both received trophies at halftimc of Saturday<lb/>
Purple-Gold game.<lb/>
TRACK BEATS N.C. STATE<lb/>
Bill Carson's track team became only the second Pirateteamto<lb/>
beat North Carolina State this year when it turned we .<lb/>
74-70 Saturday. Previously, only John Welborn s wrestling squa<lb/>
had defeated the Wolfpack. . . . jthin<lb/>
Two Southern Conference champions will be determinedfW<lb/>
the coming week. Coach Welbom's golf squad journeys to nn <lb/>
N.C. Wednesday for the conference tourney while Bill W <lb/>
take his tennis team to Davidson lor their tourney,<lb/>
tournaments will last three days. - ? scaie<lb/>
Gary McCulloch and Eric Schandelmeier are staging a <lb/>
race tor the scoring lead on the lacrosse team. McCullocn<lb/>
goals and five assists for 21 points while Schandelmeier Has h<lb/>
and ten assists for 20 points.<lb/>
Buc rowers finish third<lb/>
race, with a time ot 6:0<lb/>
Coach Chalk stated that the<lb/>
annual regatta would probay<lb/>
be held elsewhere in the tu<lb/>
because of the ternble w<lb/>
nditions in Charleston-<lb/>
In addition to its basketball<lb/>
team. Jacksonville has built<lb/>
another powerful unit, its<lb/>
varsity crew. Last Saturday they<lb/>
won the championship of the<lb/>
Intercollegiate Rowing<lb/>
Association at The Citadel.<lb/>
Viiginia finished a close second<lb/>
in the final heal<lb/>
1 lie Pnate varsity captured<lb/>
third place in the consolation<lb/>
cited the Pirates' general<lb/>
experience and lack -<lb/>
the water this veai as<lb/>
reasons foi then defeat<lb/>
ack ot<lb/>
f time<lb/>
the i"ain<lb/>
ICur<lb/>
By ROBER<lb/>
Even the n<lb/>
ecological<lb/>
optimistic whe<lb/>
specific polutic<lb/>
specialized solu<lb/>
The cum<lb/>
interrelated eff<lb/>
thermal, noise<lb/>
pollution are n<lb/>
time. The c<lb/>
from all forms<lb/>
precipitated ar<lb/>
crisis" so ser<lb/>
ecologists i<lb/>
imminent door<lb/>
and all other<lb/>
unless drastic<lb/>
undertaken<lb/>
restore natural<lb/>
the earth's eco<lb/>
PESJ<lb/>
Pessimistic<lb/>
mankind a t<lb/>
barring accid<lb/>
otherwise -<lb/>
economic gre<lb/>
population ex<lb/>
predict that t<lb/>
will be ext<lb/>
centuries - m<lb/>
the failures<lb/>
attempts to<lb/>
and presei<lb/>
enviroment.<lb/>
The 1970s a<lb/>
for the fight a<lb/>
industrial<lb/>
population gi<lb/>
to proceed<lb/>
scientists pred<lb/>
MASSIV<lb/>
"In 1980,<lb/>
die in one m<lb/>
the United St<lb/>
inundated<lb/>
pollution. In<lb/>
every man, w<lb/>
the (northen<lb/>
have to wear<lb/>
to survive<lb/>
animals and i<lb/>
be killed out<lb/>
man will live<lb/>
Air polluti<lb/>
linked to <lb/>
ailments, inc<lb/>
In Londoi<lb/>
attributed to<lb/>
the descent i<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
WAR<lb/>
In Los An<lb/>
New York <lb/>
are issued pe<lb/>
asthmatics<lb/>
sufferers to s<lb/>
out of the sm<lb/>
Industrial<lb/>
strong enoug<lb/>
and erode stc<lb/>
The Unit<lb/>
Health Serv<lb/>
any comi<lb/>
population c<lb/>
has an air po<lb/>
In large<lb/>
the amount<lb/>
increases<lb/>
person brej<lb/>
City's air<lb/>
benzopyrene<lb/>
hydrocarbon<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0011"/><lb/>
aWKSSSSSSSSSft5<lb/>
Monday, April 27.1970, Fountainhead, Page 11<lb/>
ken<lb/>
SfiSji<lb/>
1 to their fifth<lb/>
lip, has spent<lb/>
rds the team<lb/>
:s were led by<lb/>
points for the<lb/>
200. 500, and<lb/>
d events in the<lb/>
came the first<lb/>
t Carolina. He<lb/>
nth 156 points.<lb/>
le broke four<lb/>
and 400-yard<lb/>
the mark in the<lb/>
b Baird scored<lb/>
:r than the old<lb/>
ary Frederick.<lb/>
 ten old varsity<lb/>
reshman marks.<lb/>
. In addition to<lb/>
revisan. Norris.<lb/>
;t team in East<lb/>
olds or shares a<lb/>
imming, as well.<lb/>
ion this year. In<lb/>
ming and diving<lb/>
eissman. Sonny<lb/>
year, it appears<lb/>
ming squad. The<lb/>
s, including such<lb/>
Carolina, which<lb/>
vIcGee's football<lb/>
;ive line. He has<lb/>
here he coached<lb/>
le Player on the<lb/>
;d the honor for<lb/>
me of Saturday's<lb/>
d Pirate team to<lb/>
umed the trick.<lb/>
s wrestling squad<lb/>
etermincd within<lb/>
ieys to Pinehurst,<lb/>
: Bill Dickens will<lb/>
tourney. Both<lb/>
i aging a fii?<lb/>
dcCulloch has 16<lb/>
leier has ten goals<lb/>
i third<lb/>
,e of 6:02.<lb/>
k stated that the<lb/>
would probably<lb/>
iere in the future<lb/>
?e terrible wate<lb/>
Charleston. ?.<lb/>
es'general la ?<lb/>
I tack of time?<lb/>
yea. . the main<lb/>
ii defeat<lb/>
1<lb/>
Cumulative effects of pollution unknown<lb/>
yyvyyy.<lb/>
;v.v.v.v.v.Vj:j<lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
Even the most apocalyptic-<lb/>
ecological forecasts are<lb/>
optimistic when they deal with<lb/>
specific polution problems and<lb/>
specialized solutions.<lb/>
The cumulative and<lb/>
interrelated effects of air, water,<lb/>
thermal, noise and radiation<lb/>
pollution are not known at this<lb/>
time. The combined effects<lb/>
from all forms of pollution have<lb/>
precipitated an "environmental<lb/>
crisis" so serious that many<lb/>
ecologists are predicting<lb/>
imminent doom for humanity<lb/>
and all other forms of life<lb/>
unless drastic measures are<lb/>
undertaken immediately to<lb/>
restore natural balance to all of<lb/>
the earth's eco-systems.<lb/>
PESSIMISM<lb/>
Pessimistic predictions give<lb/>
mankind a mere 35 years -<lb/>
barring accidents, nuclear or<lb/>
otherwise - of unrestrained<lb/>
economic greed and unchecked<lb/>
population expansion. Optimists<lb/>
predict that the human species<lb/>
will be extinct within two<lb/>
centuries - mainly as a result of<lb/>
the failures of inadequate<lb/>
attempts to control pollution<lb/>
and preserve a liveable<lb/>
enviroment.<lb/>
The 1970s are a crucial decade<lb/>
for the fight against pollution. If<lb/>
industrial expansion and<lb/>
population growth are allowed<lb/>
to proceed at current rates,<lb/>
scientists predict:<lb/>
MASSIVE DEATHS<lb/>
"In 1980, 10,000 people will<lb/>
die in one metropolitan area of<lb/>
the United States, which will be<lb/>
inundated by a cloud of<lb/>
pollution. In ten to fifteen years<lb/>
every man, woman, and child in<lb/>
the (northern) hemisphere will<lb/>
have to wear a breathing helmet<lb/>
to survive outdoors. Most<lb/>
animals and much plant life will<lb/>
be killed out. In twenty years,<lb/>
man will live in doomed cities<lb/>
Air pollution alone has been<lb/>
linked to various respiratory<lb/>
ailments, including lung cancer.<lb/>
In London, deaths were<lb/>
attributed to air pollution after<lb/>
the descent of a "killing smog"<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
WARNINGS<lb/>
In Los Angeles. Chicago, and<lb/>
New York pollution warnings<lb/>
are issued periodically to advise<lb/>
asthmatics and respiratory<lb/>
sufferers to stay home and keep<lb/>
out of the smog.<lb/>
Industrial air pollutants are<lb/>
strong enough to corrode metals<lb/>
and erode stone.<lb/>
The United States Public<lb/>
Health Service estimates that<lb/>
any community with a<lb/>
population of 50,000 or more<lb/>
has an air pollution problem.<lb/>
In large metropolitan cities<lb/>
the amount of air pollution<lb/>
increases significantly: "A<lb/>
person breathing New York<lb/>
City's air inhales as much<lb/>
benzopyrene, a cancer-inducing<lb/>
hydrocarbon, as he would if he<lb/>
smoked two packs of cigarettes<lb/>
a day" (Robert A. Low).<lb/>
Industry is currently<lb/>
consuming twice as much<lb/>
oxygen as the environment is<lb/>
capable of replacing.<lb/>
Moreover, industries'<lb/>
overproduction, wasteful<lb/>
manufacturing processes and<lb/>
planned obselescence for their<lb/>
products contribute additional<lb/>
and unnecessary solid<lb/>
wastes to the environment.<lb/>
AFFECTS OXYGEN<lb/>
senior ecologist at Brookhaven<lb/>
National Laboratory says:<lb/>
'limits must be defined: the<lb/>
limits of the biosphere, the<lb/>
oceans, continents, estuaries,<lb/>
cities, and of the agricultural<lb/>
and natural ecosystems that<lb/>
support them; the limits of<lb/>
power development of water<lb/>
DISASTER TAKEN LIGHTLY also the limits of man are to<lb/>
Traces of DDT have been<lb/>
found in some species of marine<lb/>
animals 1,500 feet below the<lb/>
antarctic, where DDT has never<lb/>
been used. Residues of solid and<lb/>
chemical wastes have destroyed<lb/>
ocean channels and breeding<lb/>
grounds for marine animals.<lb/>
Oil spillage from offshore<lb/>
wells has added to the problem,<lb/>
destroying thousands of seabirds<lb/>
and millions of fish. Scientists<lb/>
estimated that if the Torrey<lb/>
Canyon, an oil tanker which<lb/>
broke up in the North Sea, had<lb/>
been carrying herbicides, the<lb/>
entire plantlife population of<lb/>
the North Sea would have been<lb/>
Water pollution also affects<lb/>
the amount of available oxygen.<lb/>
Solid and chemical wastes in<lb/>
waterways and estuaries are<lb/>
upsetting aquatic food chains<lb/>
and destroying whole species of destroyed,<lb/>
plant and animal life. Pollution Accidents, like the Torrey<lb/>
from inland waterways Canyon disaster, are all too<lb/>
accumulates in oceans where it frequent, and their ecological<lb/>
drastically affects life cycles of consequences are too serious to<lb/>
many marine plants, including be taken lightly.<lb/>
diatoms which produce 70 per<lb/>
cent of the earth's oxygen (the<lb/>
other 30 per cent is produced<lb/>
by the earth's forests, which are<lb/>
presently declining).<lb/>
The effects of water pollution<lb/>
are also responsible for creating<lb/>
mutant strains of plants and<lb/>
animals which are poisonous or<lb/>
harmful to man.<lb/>
VIRUS DISEASES<lb/>
Harry P. Kramer, director of<lb/>
the Taft Sanitary Engineering<lb/>
Center in Cincinnati, reports:<lb/>
"A few years ago the only<lb/>
water-born virus diseases were<lb/>
hepatitis and poliomyelitis.<lb/>
Today there are over one<lb/>
hundred<lb/>
Conditions along the<lb/>
Mississippi River south of St.<lb/>
Louis are so bad that "state<lb/>
health departments and the<lb/>
Federal Public Health Service<lb/>
have posted signs forbidding<lb/>
people to even eat lunches along<lb/>
the banks of it. let alone go<lb/>
wading in the water or water<lb/>
ski. The concentration of<lb/>
infectious bacteria in just the<lb/>
spray from the river, when<lb/>
deposited on a person's face or<lb/>
lips, can cause typhoid, colitis,<lb/>
hepatitis diarrhea or infections<lb/>
in the bloodstream<lb/>
The Mississippi, America's<lb/>
greatest river system, is beyond<lb/>
reclaiming. So are the Great<lb/>
Lakes. Lake Erie is "biologically<lb/>
dead" except for a mutant<lb/>
species of carp that lives on<lb/>
poisons and bottom-dwelling<lb/>
worms; the other lakes are<lb/>
rapidly being "killed" by<lb/>
untreated human and industrial<lb/>
wastes.<lb/>
EXTINCTION OF SPECIES<lb/>
The residual effects of<lb/>
pesticides and herbicides have<lb/>
caused and are causing the<lb/>
extinction of whole species of<lb/>
plants and animals. Brown<lb/>
pelicans, peregine falcons, and<lb/>
bald eagles, to name a few, have<lb/>
large quantities of DDT in their<lb/>
systems and eggs and are, in<lb/>
some areas, no longer capable of<lb/>
reproducing.<lb/>
NUCLEAR ACCIDENTS<lb/>
The crash of an Air Force jet<lb/>
in Spain several years ago<lb/>
increased apprehensions that a<lb/>
nuclear "accident" might<lb/>
contaminate a large continental<lb/>
area - with residual effects<lb/>
causing mutations for<lb/>
generations to come.<lb/>
The disposal of atomic wastes<lb/>
in tunnels under the city of<lb/>
Denver has caused earth<lb/>
tremors, an ominous warning<lb/>
that deadly atomic pollution<lb/>
might yet be released into the<lb/>
atmosphere through an earth<lb/>
fault.<lb/>
Thermal pollution has<lb/>
affected the hearing of millions<lb/>
of Americans. The New York<lb/>
Times state (November 23,<lb/>
1969) that "well-informed<lb/>
scientists reckon that if city<lb/>
noise continues to rise as it is<lb/>
presently rising, by one decibel<lb/>
a year, everyone will be stone<lb/>
deaf by the year 2000<lb/>
FOOD SHORTAGE<lb/>
Overpopulation poses a<lb/>
serious threat to world stability.<lb/>
Unless massive programs of<lb/>
birth control are implemented<lb/>
in both underdeveloped and<lb/>
industrial nations, the world will<lb/>
face a serious food shortage<lb/>
before the year 2000.<lb/>
In the United States the<lb/>
population is expected to<lb/>
double in the next 30 years:<lb/>
Arthur Godfrey tells us that<lb/>
"double our present population<lb/>
means more than four hundred<lb/>
millions of Americans. We have<lb/>
only five hundred million<lb/>
arable, usable acres of soil upon<lb/>
which to raise our food No<lb/>
technology in the world is going<lb/>
to coax enough food out of one<lb/>
acre to feed one human being<lb/>
one year<lb/>
DEFINE LIMITS<lb/>
Every nation of the world<lb/>
faces the same problem: a<lb/>
population increase<lb/>
disproportionate to the increase<lb/>
in food and industrial resources.<lb/>
As George M. Woodwell,<lb/>
be explored, the limits of social<lb/>
and political systems<lb/>
NO PLACE TO GO<lb/>
Eric Severaid eloquently<lb/>
summarized the problem in a<lb/>
newscast April 14,1970:<lb/>
"There are three astronauts<lb/>
out in space. Their water and<lb/>
oxygen are running low, so they<lb/>
are returning to life. We too are<lb/>
astronauts on this spinning<lb/>
planet, the Spaceship Earth.<lb/>
And our water and oxygen are<lb/>
getting lower, but we have no<lb/>
place to go<lb/>
Scientists are beginning to<lb/>
realize that controlling the<lb/>
effects of pollution is not<lb/>
enough - the economic and<lb/>
political systems that create the<lb/>
conditions and profit incentives<lb/>
for polluters must be governed<lb/>
by the basic considerations of<lb/>
environmental life.<lb/>
SOLUTION ? NOW<lb/>
If the problems of pollution<lb/>
are not solved in the 1970's, the<lb/>
growth rate of industry and<lb/>
population will make them<lb/>
impossible to solve in the<lb/>
coming decades. The tide of<lb/>
pollution cannot be reversed:<lb/>
America's rivers and likes will<lb/>
never be pure again but they<lb/>
can be made cleaner than they<lb/>
are. Atmospheric pollution can<lb/>
be reduced, and nuclear noise<lb/>
and thermal pollution can be<lb/>
avoided.<lb/>
The planet will never be the<lb/>
same but it won't be worse.<lb/>
ADEQUATE FUNDING<lb/>
The fight against pollution<lb/>
requires adequate funding from<lb/>
federal, state, and local<lb/>
government, as well as revenue<lb/>
from taxation and fines of<lb/>
polluters. Only a massive<lb/>
expenditure can preserve a<lb/>
liveable environment. Without<lb/>
public concern and public<lb/>
monies, the environment will<lb/>
self-destruct in the next 35<lb/>
years.<lb/>
UNC-C girls<lb/>
panty-raid men<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (AP) About 50<lb/>
girls from the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Charlotte sta-<lb/>
ged a "panty raid" on the men's<lb/>
dormitory next to their own<lb/>
dorm.<lb/>
The girls apparently were act-<lb/>
ing in reprisal against - on in<lb/>
glee at - a panty raid conducted<lb/>
by a group of men students last<lb/>
week. Both raids were campus<lb/>
firsts for the young school.<lb/>
Tuesday night the marauding<lb/>
women assembled outside the<lb/>
men's dorm shortly after mid-<lb/>
night and shouted: "We want<lb/>
tee-shirts<lb/>
That quickly evolved into,<lb/>
"We want shorts" and that's<lb/>
when the men responded by<lb/>
tossing some underwear out the<lb/>
windows.<lb/>
ti iktiblt<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
A A Port,<lb/>
you this <lb/>
THE LAteEL<lb/>
Poes Not<lb/>
BRtH<lb/>
DON'T KN6W HOW TO TELL<lb/>
. . . BUT,THE ? BC ' o?v<lb/>
of sc Powders<lb/>
TAND FO<lb/>
CONTROL  "<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0012"/><lb/>
?fl?A ?4?-w?????fc<lb/>
????' ?? ?. ???? ?<lb/>
Arsonist must be caught<lb/>
if SGA fires were set<lb/>
The fires yesterday and late Saturday night in the<lb/>
student government section of the union de.5<lb/>
explanation. .<lb/>
One such fire could possibly be explained as<lb/>
iccidental but two separate fires within twelve hours<lb/>
of each other in the same section of a building seems<lb/>
to indicate arson.<lb/>
And yet there is nothing of great importance<lb/>
pending in the student legislature<lb/>
Nothing of any great importance is even planned<lb/>
for the near future.<lb/>
Hard feelings and bitter relations do exist between<lb/>
some members and former members of the student<lb/>
government, however there is little to indicate that<lb/>
any specific person would consider such drastic<lb/>
retaliation.<lb/>
Nonetheless these fires did occur and an<lb/>
investigation is underway.<lb/>
We would hope that the investigation reveals that<lb/>
the fires were a fluke of fate and arson was not the<lb/>
cause.<lb/>
If, however, arson was the cause we would strongly<lb/>
urge those conducting the investigation to use every<lb/>
means at their disposal to apprehend the arsonist.<lb/>
Such action as setting fire to student offices<lb/>
reflect not only a complete disregard for common<lb/>
decency but also indicate an immature and sick mind.<lb/>
Cambodia should not<lb/>
receive military aid<lb/>
The embattled government of Cambodia has<lb/>
requested military aid from the United States in<lb/>
defending its country from Communist agression.<lb/>
It is obvious that Communist agression is taking<lb/>
place in Cambodia and that without military help of<lb/>
some kind the present government will not long last.<lb/>
At the same time grim reports o Vietnamese<lb/>
civilians being shot in cold blood by Cambodian<lb/>
Government troops indicates an attempt at whipping<lb/>
up national ferver by representing these foreign<lb/>
nationals as a fifth column.<lb/>
The evils oi<lb/>
5 6A firtl .<lb/>
Artol or Acetic<lb/>
9<lb/>
.v.v.v.y.<lb/>
vxix-xv<lb/>
:?:?:?:?.<lb/>
?WAViVAWH??<lb/>
existing totalitarian Communist<lb/>
3 are not to be ignored, however, if in the<lb/>
attempt at combating these evils an equally<lb/>
totalitarian government is supported and promoted<lb/>
then nothing will be gained.<lb/>
Let us not loose sight o the fact that our efforts in<lb/>
Southeast Asia are supposed to be in support ot<lb/>
Democracy.<lb/>
To the innocent victim of totalitarianism it matters<lb/>
not whether it be from the right or the left.<lb/>
ounutnhead<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
This letter is in reference to a<lb/>
mandatory courseLibrary<lb/>
Science.<lb/>
I will agree that a basic<lb/>
understanding of the library is<lb/>
necessary for a college student.<lb/>
However. 1 would venture a<lb/>
guess that every first quarter<lb/>
freshman has been in a library<lb/>
and understands how to go<lb/>
about finding research material.<lb/>
Library Science should take<lb/>
this basic knowledge and use it<lb/>
to orient freshmen to the facili-<lb/>
ties at Joyner Library. However.<lb/>
Library Science doesn't do this.<lb/>
In the switch from lib ran<lb/>
orientation to full accreditation<lb/>
as Library Science, far too much<lb/>
assanine trivia has been added to<lb/>
make the course worthwhile.<lb/>
The final exam comes off as a<lb/>
bad morning game show, with<lb/>
the most ridiculous questions<lb/>
determining a student's grade.<lb/>
Twenty-five percent of my final<lb/>
grade was questions on where<lb/>
specific books were located in<lb/>
the library . Is book "A" located<lb/>
in the far left hand book shelf<lb/>
of the reference room of the<lb/>
library?<lb/>
Apparently, knowing and<lb/>
applying the Dewey Decimal<lb/>
system to Joyner Library to<lb/>
find these books doesn't count.<lb/>
There were no questions on the<lb/>
system in the entire exam. Some<lb/>
people must think knowing the<lb/>
exact location of books in the<lb/>
Joyner Library is mandatory for<lb/>
furthering a person's education<lb/>
and graduating from ECU. 1<lb/>
don't.<lb/>
- 3'e<lb/>
ree<lb/>
STEPHEN 3AILEY<lb/>
Bus -ess Va-agef<lb/>
Co-News Ea ton<lb/>
Features Ed-roc<lb/>
Sons Ec to<lb/>
AdViSCX<lb/>
ROBERT R TMONEN<lb/>
Editor in-Chief<lb/>
Sharon Sctiaud.es and Linda Cleveland<lb/>
Karen Biansf.eld<lb/>
Donald Trausneck<lb/>
Ira L Baker<lb/>
Student newspaper pobi-shed twice Caro 'a<lb/>
Un.vervty. PO Box 2516. Gre.nv.He. Nor 0 2783<lb/>
Adverting op 'a -s $1 80 or column ,nch Phone 758-6366 or<lb/>
758-6367 ?????<lb/>
?ne opinions expressed t? I<lb/>
are not nscHttrir, tnose of EmU Carolina Lin ersitv<lb/>
Daryl Powell<lb/>
Dear Editor;<lb/>
Last Wednesday I was re-<lb/>
moved from a very important<lb/>
; ass by order of Dan Wooten<lb/>
. the Housing Traffic office<lb/>
because I had not removed a<lb/>
par irvcj st ? from my car.<lb/>
I explained to the traffic<lb/>
?? :e about three weeks be-<lb/>
fore this irtci " :ar<lb/>
IS out c ? HT and I <lb/>
The Forum<lb/>
be unable to scrape the park-<lb/>
ing sticker from it until Easter<lb/>
Vacation.<lb/>
Obviously they forgot this<lb/>
explanation and they deemed<lb/>
this parking sticker of a car<lb/>
six hours away from Green-<lb/>
ville important enough to re-<lb/>
move a student from class.<lb/>
Now it is easy to examine<lb/>
this university's values. Park-<lb/>
ing stickers on a car 200 miles<lb/>
away are more important than<lb/>
a student's education.<lb/>
Chip Callaway<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Hurrah, for Earth Day! It was<lb/>
definitely an experience. 1 was<lb/>
enlightened to the horror of our<lb/>
situation as 1 watched the<lb/>
Saviors of our planet smoke and<lb/>
throw papers, bottles, and<lb/>
cigarette butts on the Mall.<lb/>
David Dussia<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Earth Day at ECTC was, as<lb/>
most demonstrations go here, a<lb/>
smashing success.<lb/>
To recap the event briefly: a<lb/>
sample of students gathered on<lb/>
the mall to be bored andor<lb/>
informed by various politicians,<lb/>
teachers, scientists, and<lb/>
quasi -experts on ecology.<lb/>
Now its over, and everybody<lb/>
but a very small few who are<lb/>
really concerned about ecology<lb/>
will put their buttons and green<lb/>
crepe paper arm bands in their<lb/>
college scrap books.<lb/>
Everybody will remember<lb/>
April 22, 1970. And that's that.<lb/>
lm not trying to knock Earth<lb/>
Day. whose effect just might be<lb/>
to wake up people to an<lb/>
unpleasant reality.<lb/>
What 1 can't believe, or more<lb/>
closely stomach, is the<lb/>
outstanding administration we<lb/>
have at ECTC. Of course they<lb/>
eae consent to Earth Day<lb/>
activities here, you'd have to be<lb/>
pretty straight or pretty stupid<lb/>
deny that problem's<lb/>
existence<lb/>
But another i which<lb/>
affects all of us as drastically as<lb/>
ecology is the Viet Nam war.<lb/>
Did our c onccrned<lb/>
administration approve any of<lb/>
the Moratorium Day activities<lb/>
with the same vigor as Earth<lb/>
Day0 Will teachers be fired or<lb/>
legally prosecuted for cancelling<lb/>
classes on Earth Day Of course<lb/>
not<lb/>
But for Earth Day. the<lb/>
administration provided one of<lb/>
it's outstanding members as a<lb/>
speaker. He was a good<lb/>
example. He wasn't sure<lb/>
whether he was at Emerald Isle<lb/>
or in New Bern, and he didr.t<lb/>
prepare anvthing to say because<lb/>
he doesn't like to speak to<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
In spite of this administration<lb/>
which tries to prohibit any form<lb/>
of dissent let us not lose sight<lb/>
of a problem of equal<lb/>
magnitude as ecology-<lb/>
Is there a student in this<lb/>
school who doesnt know<lb/>
someone who either served<lb/>
was killed mV.et Nam M doubt<lb/>
U I agree with Earth Day go<lb/>
But I cannot gje equ<lb/>
consideration to both ot these<lb/>
issues. ??<lb/>
After all. do the news services<lb/>
list the weekly -sualt.es a<lb/>
fatalit.es caused by dirty<lb/>
highways, smog.?"<lb/>
I hope for PeLarivAllmi?<lb/>
the members ot '? ,<lb/>
Studies Con.rn.tw ,<lb/>
marvelous job in m<lb/>
African Symposium<lb/>
1 think they did an e<lb/>
job in choosing the three g<lb/>
speakers. Dr Fraser. Dr. I<lb/>
and Dr. deBly. wh0<lb/>
' ?? sure lhj,Jf,T3t.enJ<lb/>
11 met ltr<lb/>
the sessions will W <lb/>
that lt aS V tadatECl-<lb/>
interesting we have ha.<lb/>
Let us hope<lb/>
other such prog<lb/>
1 am SUa "nouehtoitl<lb/>
were fortunate en ? <lb/>
I By KAREN BLANS<lb/>
I f you happen to se<lb/>
kolmes pass by on he<lb/>
L, would most likel<lb/>
er tor a student.<lb/>
Miss Holmes, the I<lb/>
j, nSelor of Umstead<lb/>
pique in that sh<lb/>
tningest counselor 01<lb/>
Surprisingly, howev<lb/>
lot major in com<lb/>
e She earned a<lb/>
tree from Mcthodi<lb/>
Fayctteville, and<lb/>
jtegree from Ap<lb/>
University.<lb/>
FAVORSCHA<lb/>
When she discover<lb/>
lai 1 he 10 was a<lb/>
ftpninH! here, she <lb/>
?pp! because she<lb/>
mir ? good chance tc<lb/>
llege students.<lb/>
"I thought it was?<lb/>
iDiild truly like she<lb/>
Holmes is i<lb/>
lost of the wome<lb/>
Ihat .ire in so much c<lb/>
You have to char<lb/>
time .he said. "I<lb/>
flunk you should pi<lb/>
50 List when hri<lb/>
ia<lb/>
THE UNIV<lb/>
Wright Auditor<lb/>
perform in the<lb/>
Lamdba Thurs<lb/>
Hall, both at 8:<lb/>
LarrV<lb/>
Ve5tal<lb/>
<pb facs="00039471_0013"/>
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