<?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="00039473_0001"/>
iiUl<lb/>
. ,<lb/>
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Curr.ctti<lb/>
C ountamhe &amp;d<lb/>
P  and the truth shall make you free<lb/>
I  4?<lb/>
East Carolina University. P.O. Box 2516, Greenville. N.C<lb/>
Mav 4.1970<lb/>
?-s ?<lb/>
t <lb/>
' :<lb/>
lay will open May 13<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
NEW CLAUDE Woolman, Lindsay Bowen, Mark<lb/>
y Rosaline Roulston and Greg Smith rehearse for<lb/>
the Lion in Winter Tickets for the production are free<lb/>
tudents with ID'S, $1 for faculty and staff and $2 for<lb/>
le public.<lb/>
By JAMES SLAUGHTER<lb/>
Rehearsals are coming to a<lb/>
close for the Last Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse production of James<lb/>
Goldman's 'The Lion in<lb/>
Winter" which opens in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium May 13<lb/>
for a four-night run. A<lb/>
delightful, historical<lb/>
comedy-drama, the play was the<lb/>
vehicle for the motion picture<lb/>
of the same name which earned<lb/>
Katherine Hepburn an Oscar as<lb/>
best actress.<lb/>
SCRIPT OF PLAY<lb/>
The script of the play focuses<lb/>
on the trials and troubles of<lb/>
King Henry' 11 ot England with<lb/>
his wife and three sons over the<lb/>
choice of his successor (there<lb/>
being no rule of promogenituie<lb/>
in those times to guide him).<lb/>
The action takes place in the<lb/>
year 1183 thirteen years after<lb/>
the king had had all that trouble<lb/>
with Thomas a Becket.<lb/>
The story spins out from a<lb/>
Christmas gathering at Henry's<lb/>
castle in Chinon, France<lb/>
logical enough because in those<lb/>
days an English king ruled more<lb/>
territory in France than U<lb/>
England.<lb/>
The royal family gathered<lb/>
together includes the king's<lb/>
three sons, Richard (the one<lb/>
later called the Lion-Hcarted),<lb/>
wily Geoffrey and petulant young<lb/>
John to be played by Lindsay<lb/>
Bowen, Gregory Smith, and<lb/>
Mark Ramsey who are all<lb/>
scheming to be chosen as the<lb/>
king's successor.<lb/>
Also on hand is Henry's<lb/>
estranged wife, Eleanor of<lb/>
Aquitaine to be played by<lb/>
Rosalind Roulston. whom the<lb/>
king has kept locked up in a<lb/>
prison for years after she tried<lb/>
to lead a revolt against him.<lb/>
Henry's mistress is also present,<lb/>
a sweet French princess named<lb/>
Alais, to be played by Nancy<lb/>
Nhu, with whom he taunts the<lb/>
queen. And the young King<lb/>
Phillip of France, to be played<lb/>
bv Ben Cherry. Claude<lb/>
Woolman, who played the<lb/>
title-role in the Playhouse<lb/>
production of "Macbeth" in<lb/>
February, is featured as Henry.<lb/>
ATMOSPHERE<lb/>
Amid an atmosphere filled<lb/>
with the threats of daggers,<lb/>
swords and torture-dungeons<lb/>
just below-stairs. these seven<lb/>
play games of conspiracy with<lb/>
acid tongues and witty words.<lb/>
Said New York critic Walter<lb/>
Kerr. 'Mr. Goldman and his<lb/>
subjects have contrived among<lb/>
them a little game, a game in<lb/>
which the subjects will pretend<lb/>
to be Henry 11 of England and<lb/>
his court but in which they will<lb/>
always let us know exactly how<lb/>
much they are pretending by<lb/>
winking at us with words.<lb/>
Tickets for 'The Lion in<lb/>
Winter which is being directed<lb/>
by Robert Chase and designed<lb/>
by John Sneden. are available at<lb/>
the McGinnis Auditorium box<lb/>
office beginning Thursday. The<lb/>
tickets are free to students with<lb/>
I.D. cards. $1.00 to faculty and<lb/>
staff, and $2.00 to the general<lb/>
public.<lb/>
CU represents Romania<lb/>
1 National Model U.N.<lb/>
rep<lb/>
m<lb/>
coli<lb/>
the<lb/>
Urn<lb/>
;Yo.<lb/>
lie'<lb/>
aw<lb/>
the<lb/>
itu<lb/>
po<lb/>
understanding of the countries<lb/>
they represented, the delegates<lb/>
were invited to the individual<lb/>
consulates on Thursday for<lb/>
mission briefings by members ot<lb/>
the consulate staffs.<lb/>
CORDIAL WELCOME<lb/>
The ECU delegation was<lb/>
cordially welcomed at the<lb/>
Romanian consulate where the<lb/>
Romanian representative spent<lb/>
over two hours discussing the<lb/>
complicated problems of his<lb/>
countries foreign policy The<lb/>
jng sense of independence<lb/>
Fountainheadlines<lb/>
Dean Mallory to he dunked - page 5<lb/>
Union Gap sees changes - page 5<lb/>
Bucs capture southern division crown - page 9<lb/>
Rebel receives Excellence Award - page 2<lb/>
Liquid smoke performs at street dance page 7<lb/>
Lennon launches art career - page 4<lb/>
R? cord enrollment next year - page 2<lb/>
Catacombs Coffeehouse reopens page 5<lb/>
By BOBTHONEN<lb/>
.dents from ECU,<lb/>
enting Romania, joined<lb/>
1200 delegates from<lb/>
across the country at<lb/>
annual National Model<lb/>
Nations meeting in New<lb/>
I week.<lb/>
N'MUN activities were<lb/>
i d to stimulate an<lb/>
a of the problems of<lb/>
ited Nations and aquaint<lb/>
with the political<lb/>
f member nations.<lb/>
an aid for greater<lb/>
in Romania and the reactions of<lb/>
the Romanian government to<lb/>
the Sino-Soviet conflict were<lb/>
explained in detail.<lb/>
Later that day the delegations<lb/>
returned to the NMUN<lb/>
headquarters where they<lb/>
separated into the six<lb/>
represented General Assembly<lb/>
committees to begin the actual<lb/>
sessions.<lb/>
The Social and Humanitarian<lb/>
Committee dealt with such<lb/>
problems as the Palestinian<lb/>
refugee problem in Israel. The<lb/>
Political Committee discussed<lb/>
nuclear arms limitation and the<lb/>
admission of the People's<lb/>
Republic of China to the U.N.<lb/>
which was again defeated.<lb/>
ECONOMIC COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Economic Committee<lb/>
considered such problems as<lb/>
redevelopment. A multi-national<lb/>
project for the use of the<lb/>
Danube River as a source of<lb/>
hydro-electric power was<lb/>
paSSn the Trusteeship<lb/>
Committee, a Lebanese<lb/>
resolution was passed<lb/>
continued on P-Q- ?"<lb/>
- f!rTF?FD STUDENT peers over the newly<lb/>
?ondRfel?n tne girls' sunbathing area behind New<lb/>
Dorm C.<lb/>
I<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039473_0002"/><lb/>
At<lb/>
v.<lb/>
Rebel receives Excellence<lb/>
Award from IMC Arts Council<lb/>
S XX I<lb/>
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-f i :s<lb/>
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c   xi I sinr.uiat ire<lb/>
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aN ENGROSSED SPECTATOR survey tht m<lb/>
Sidewalk An Sow hed test vee?end ? the Green<lb/>
Art Onter Category of entries rangec from or-feso<lb/>
amateur photography to cra3 ?-? ?rribh<lb/>
excelier<lb/>
Next year's record enrollment will<lb/>
require record state appropriation<lb/>
x<lb/>
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Three students killed<lb/>
11<lb/>
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Student arrested<lb/>
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-J- i t - f .<lb/>
- : : -tttf ' . .<lb/>
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VISTA<lb/>
will recrurt<lb/>
representatives<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
- "  : . ! . "<lb/>
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-AT -s-<lb/>
Degree program gets grant<lb/>
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?- - -<lb/>
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 s - E E s<lb/>
. - -<lb/>
Biology<lb/>
The Biolog<lb/>
scheduled two<lb/>
8 and May 20.<lb/>
Dr. John D.<lb/>
of the Duke<lb/>
Laboratory a<lb/>
speak on "M<lb/>
the Environir<lb/>
Friday in Biok<lb/>
The speaker<lb/>
Robert Feron<lb/>
Geogra<lb/>
Dr. Daniel<lb/>
Geography<lb/>
specialist in<lb/>
Brazil, pre<lb/>
'Recreational<lb/>
Neglected<lb/>
American<lb/>
national con<lb/>
Environ<lb/>
ECU has fc<lb/>
its environme<lb/>
programs<lb/>
Conservation<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Dr. John<lb/>
Institutional<lb/>
he collected<lb/>
about the<lb/>
departmen<lb/>
Geography,<lb/>
well as fr<lb/>
Development<lb/>
Charles Q.<lb/>
Developmen<lb/>
Demi<lb/>
Student c<lb/>
the limeligh<lb/>
SOULS, am<lb/>
SDSWSA<lb/>
Democrati<lb/>
Student Al<lb/>
for a joint n<lb/>
The mei<lb/>
tonight at<lb/>
Student Un<lb/>
A spoke;<lb/>
indicated t<lb/>
new studei<lb/>
a pproved<lb/>
appropriate<lb/>
into considi<lb/>
At a mei<lb/>
a group of<lb/>
Vetera<lb/>
This is<lb/>
students<lb/>
Administra<lb/>
they m<lb/>
certificatio<lb/>
during the<lb/>
enrollment<lb/>
VA c<lb/>
programm<lb/>
check this<lb/>
school y<lb/>
certificatic<lb/>
has been r<lb/>
Educe<lb/>
.<lb/>
-<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0003"/><lb/>
 surv?Y tht m<lb/>
2end M v? Gr?N<lb/>
3-ge:<lb/>
frnM<lb/>
Z'Z'Z&amp;Ti<lb/>
ent will<lb/>
priation<lb/>
K . -<lb/>
  i priority Mf<lb/>
7. - yt ??<lb/>
4 ; . ? : i-<lb/>
 - ' ' rK1;<lb/>
.  . - : ton  I<lb/>
: :  rtsd ?'??<lb/>
? in as tsooii<lb/>
b art - ? ? i-<lb/>
tatives<lb/>
ampus<lb/>
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tad ? "  <lb/>
- s -<lb/>
.1<lb/>
- rfadl<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
<lb/>
- . . ? -<lb/>
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: "AT DNS<lb/>
??.?-ts<lb/>
'<lb/>
Campus Hi-lites<lb/>
Biology schedules seminars<lb/>
The Biology department has<lb/>
scheduled two seminars for May<lb/>
8 and May 20.<lb/>
Dr. John D. Costlow director<lb/>
of the Duke University Marine<lb/>
Laboratory at Beaufort, will<lb/>
speak on "Meroplankton and<lb/>
the Environment" at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Friday in Biology, room 103.<lb/>
The speaker for May 20 is Dr.<lb/>
Robert Ferone. Senior Research<lb/>
M ic robiologist with the<lb/>
Burroughs Wellcome Company.<lb/>
His topic is "The Use of<lb/>
A nt i m e t a b o1i t e s in<lb/>
Chemotherapy and will be at 1<lb/>
p.m in Biology 103.<lb/>
Dr. Carlton Heckrotte,<lb/>
associate professor of biology, is<lb/>
in charge of the seminar series.<lb/>
All interested persons are<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
ECU Foundation gets grant<lb/>
   . T-l- - .1 D D C,rOct 'ill<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Foundation has received a gift<lb/>
of stock worth about $10 00<lb/>
from two Greenville men,<lb/>
principle owners of the Little<lb/>
Mint chain of quick-service,<lb/>
drive-in food establishments.<lb/>
The donors R. R. Forest and<lb/>
Wilbur Hardee presented the<lb/>
stock gift to President Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins and the foundation's<lb/>
director Reynolds May. in<lb/>
ceremonies in the president's<lb/>
office.<lb/>
NC Academy of Science meets<lb/>
Geographer presents Brazil paper<lb/>
Dr. Daniel H. Stilwell of the Americanist Geographers at Ball<lb/>
Geography Department, a<lb/>
specialist in the geography of<lb/>
Brazil, presented a paper.<lb/>
-Recreational Geography a<lb/>
Neglected Field in Latin<lb/>
American Studies" at the<lb/>
national conference of Latin<lb/>
State University. Muncie,<lb/>
Indiana Friday and Saturday.<lb/>
The conference reviewed<lb/>
geographic research in Latin<lb/>
America and formulated<lb/>
research agenda for the 1970s.<lb/>
liailVMiai w?.?<lb/>
Environmental programs studied<lb/>
ECU has forwarded reports of<lb/>
its environmental and economic<lb/>
programs to the state<lb/>
Conservation and Development<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Dr. John Davis, director of<lb/>
Institutional Research, said that<lb/>
he collected program reports<lb/>
about the work in the<lb/>
departments of Biology;<lb/>
Geography, and Geology, as<lb/>
well as from the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute and Dr.<lb/>
Charles Q. Brown, director of<lb/>
Development and Planning.<lb/>
These reports give detailed<lb/>
information about the work<lb/>
these groups have done<lb/>
concerning the economics and<lb/>
environmental problem.<lb/>
They will be studied by the<lb/>
Governor's Committee on<lb/>
Economics and Environment.<lb/>
Roy Sowers of the Department<lb/>
of Conservation and<lb/>
Development is chairman, and<lb/>
Dr. James Bearden of the<lb/>
School of Business is vice<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
Dr. Grover Everett. Dr. Edgar<lb/>
Heckel. and Jack Derrick of the<lb/>
Chemistry faculty attended the<lb/>
annual meeting of the North<lb/>
Carolina Academy of Science in<lb/>
Raleigh recently.<lb/>
Dr. Heckel presented a paper<lb/>
Extension programs<lb/>
ECU will offer the freshman<lb/>
year of college credit by ex-<lb/>
amination at Martin Technical<lb/>
Institute, Williamston and Hali-<lb/>
fax Technical Institute, Weldon<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
By enrolling in this program,<lb/>
before the Chemistry Section of<lb/>
the Academy. His topic was<lb/>
"Radiolytic Processes in<lb/>
Mixtures of Cyclobutane and<lb/>
Perfluorocyclobutan in the Gas<lb/>
Phase<lb/>
will offer credits<lb/>
a student may complete up to<lb/>
48 quarter hours of college<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The contract program makes<lb/>
it possible for the University to<lb/>
grant transfer credit for courses<lb/>
satisfactorily completed.<lb/>
Monday. May 4. 1970. Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
condensed news briefs<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ENGLISH CONFERENCE<lb/>
Dr. Bart Reilly of the English<lb/>
Department attended a<lb/>
conference on Literature and<lb/>
Theology at the University of<lb/>
Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
The subject of the<lb/>
Conference was "The Changing<lb/>
Images of Modern Man<lb/>
Health program gets director<lb/>
? , u u morativn nrnoram of ECU<lb/>
Harry Bernard Campbell, a<lb/>
regional social work consultant<lb/>
for the N. C. Department of<lb/>
Mental health, has assumed<lb/>
duties as director of the Mental<lb/>
Health Training Institute here.<lb/>
The training institute,<lb/>
established last year as a<lb/>
cooperative program of ECU<lb/>
and the Department of Mental<lb/>
Health, develops and operates<lb/>
continuing education and<lb/>
inservice training programs for<lb/>
mental health and allied health<lb/>
personel in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Yarbrough to present paper<lb/>
Demands will be presented<lb/>
Student demands are again in<lb/>
the limelight as leaders of GAP,<lb/>
SOULS, and a new chapter of<lb/>
SDSWSA (Students for a<lb/>
Democratic SocietyWorkers<lb/>
Student Alliance) have called<lb/>
for a joint meeting.<lb/>
The meeting will be held<lb/>
tonight at 9:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Student Union.<lb/>
A spokesman for the groups<lb/>
indicated that at the meeting<lb/>
new student demands will be<lb/>
approved and plans of<lb/>
appropriate action will be taken<lb/>
into consideration.<lb/>
At a meeting last Wednesday,<lb/>
a group of 40 students listed 30<lb/>
demands.<lb/>
The approved demands, the<lb/>
spokesman said, will be<lb/>
presented to President Jenkins<lb/>
at a later date this week.<lb/>
Among the demands are the<lb/>
ten Black demands presented to<lb/>
the administration last Spring.<lb/>
These demands include more<lb/>
financial aid and more recruiting<lb/>
of Black students.<lb/>
Under consideration are<lb/>
definitions of a University and<lb/>
of Black equality.<lb/>
Several professors and<lb/>
administrators have been listed<lb/>
for dismissal also.<lb/>
Dr. Tinsley Eugene<lb/>
Yarbrough of the Political<lb/>
Science Department will present<lb/>
his paper, "Mr. Justice Black<lb/>
and Legal Positivism at the<lb/>
1970 meeting of the Southern<lb/>
Political Science Association in<lb/>
Gatlinburg, Tennessee in<lb/>
November.<lb/>
According to Yarbrough, the<lb/>
paper will present the<lb/>
arguement that the key factor<lb/>
influencing the judicial<lb/>
decision-making of Justice Hugo<lb/>
Black of the U. S. Supreme<lb/>
Court is not to be discovered<lb/>
through an examination of his<lb/>
policy preferences but in his<lb/>
acceptance of a particular view<lb/>
regarding the nature of law and<lb/>
the judicial function.<lb/>
NCFCR holds meeting<lb/>
John Cooper, Junior class<lb/>
president, was appointed<lb/>
research chairman of the N. C.<lb/>
Federation of College<lb/>
Republicans (NCFCR) at the<lb/>
first state executive meeting at<lb/>
Wake Forest recently.<lb/>
Also attending the meeting<lb/>
from here were Jim Godfrey,<lb/>
vice-chairman of NCFCR and<lb/>
Connie Whisnant,<lb/>
co-chairwoman.<lb/>
NCFCR officers made plans<lb/>
for a state-wide kickoff rally for<lb/>
all Republican candidates for<lb/>
office.<lb/>
Veterans must return certification cards jheafre i$ selling season tickets<lb/>
This is a reminder to all<lb/>
students receiving Veterans<lb/>
Administration Beneifits that<lb/>
they must return their<lb/>
certification of attendance cards<lb/>
during the last month of the<lb/>
enrollment period.<lb/>
VA computers are<lb/>
programmed to prepare the final<lb/>
check this spring for the 1969-70<lb/>
school year only after the<lb/>
certification of attendance card<lb/>
has been received<lb/>
What's more, if the card is<lb/>
not returned at the end of the<lb/>
current quarter the student<lb/>
cannot be automatically<lb/>
enrolled under the G. I. Bill<lb/>
next quarter.<lb/>
The VA pointed out that<lb/>
failure to complete and return<lb/>
the certification card will<lb/>
automatically stop all future<lb/>
payments to the veteran,<lb/>
serviceman or dependent.<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre, in its goal to sell 3,000<lb/>
seasons tickets before the<lb/>
opening of the seventh season,<lb/>
still must sell 1.000 before July<lb/>
8 according to<lb/>
Producer Director Edgar R.<lb/>
Loessin.<lb/>
The seasons tickets are $i8<lb/>
for the five productions but<lb/>
group rates and additional guest<lb/>
ticket plans are available.<lb/>
Kappa Phi's elect Rose Ball Queen<lb/>
Miss Morgan is presently the<lb/>
president of Delta Zeta<lb/>
Sorority. She was elected at a<lb/>
Education majors get awards<lb/>
Two elen.en.ary education basis of character, personality.<lb/>
majors have received Mary Mor-<lb/>
row Scholarships from the<lb/>
North Carolina Classroom<lb/>
Teachers Association for next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Juniors Dotti Lois Gaskins<lb/>
and Deborah Gail Debnam were<lb/>
awarded the scholarships on the<lb/>
scholastic achievement, evidence<lb/>
of promise as a a theacher and<lb/>
financial need.<lb/>
The scholarship was establish-<lb/>
ed in memory of Mary Frank<lb/>
Morrow who served as first<lb/>
president of the organization.<lb/>
Brenda L. Morgan ot<lb/>
Roanoke, Va. a rising senior<lb/>
has been elected Rose Ball<lb/>
Queen of Pi Kappa Phi for<lb/>
1969-1970<lb/>
Music majors<lb/>
Two students from the<lb/>
School of Music swept first and<lb/>
second places in the National<lb/>
Association of Teachers of<lb/>
Singing (NATS) regional<lb/>
auditions at Rome.Ga.<lb/>
First place winner Donna<lb/>
Stephenson, was named<lb/>
meeting of the judges in Myrtle<lb/>
Beach. S. C.<lb/>
given honors<lb/>
honored singer at the NATS<lb/>
banquet following the auditions<lb/>
and was chosen of of five<lb/>
regional winners to perform at<lb/>
the group's national convention.<lb/>
Second place in the regional<lb/>
auditions went to June Laine.<lb/>
AEROSPACE AWARDS<lb/>
Captain Andrew H. Gibbons,<lb/>
assistant professor of Aerospace<lb/>
Studies, was one of 17 winners<lb/>
of Arnold Air Society's Out-<lb/>
standing awards for aerospace<lb/>
educators announced this week<lb/>
at the 22nd National Conclave<lb/>
in Anaheim, Calif.<lb/>
OFFICERS ELECTED<lb/>
Barbara Myrick was recently<lb/>
installed as president of the<lb/>
ECU section of the N. C. Home<lb/>
Economics Association. Other<lb/>
officers installed included: Ann<lb/>
Bobo, vice-president; Ellen<lb/>
Altmen. secretary: Patty<lb/>
Stanley, treasurer and Alma<lb/>
Harper, reporter.<lb/>
COMPUTER SUPERVISOR<lb/>
William E. Little has been<lb/>
appointed supervisor of<lb/>
Computing Center operations<lb/>
here. For the past two years.<lb/>
Little has been computer<lb/>
operations supervisor at North<lb/>
Carolina State University at<lb/>
Raleigh.<lb/>
CHEERLEADERS<lb/>
The cheerleaders for the year<lb/>
1970-71 are Allen Chan, Lee<lb/>
Cheezum. Peter Greenspan, Ed<lb/>
Holt. Reggie Ryals, Tommy<lb/>
Stevenson, Charles Tillery,<lb/>
Debby Buff, Rohnda Casey,<lb/>
Debbe Falls, Cyndra Hollard,<lb/>
Carla Patrick, Lynn Rapone,<lb/>
Susan Walton and Babs Winn.<lb/>
GREEK OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
The Panhellenic Chapter will<lb/>
hold open house for all students<lb/>
during Greek Week The eight<lb/>
Houses will be opened from 2<lb/>
p.m. to 4 p.m. on Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday. All interested<lb/>
students are encouraged to<lb/>
attend any or all of these<lb/>
functions.<lb/>
SPEECH GRANT<lb/>
A grant of $16,000 has been<lb/>
received for expanding the staff<lb/>
and faculities of the speech and<lb/>
hearing clinic. The grant was<lb/>
made by the U. S. Office of<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
MEETINGS PLANNED<lb/>
The Christian Science College<lb/>
Organization meets regularly on<lb/>
campur on Monday nights at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in Union room 203.<lb/>
All students and faculty<lb/>
members are welcome.<lb/>
ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all<lb/>
persons interested in organizing<lb/>
a campus league for<lb/>
environmental action. The<lb/>
meeting will be tonight at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Biology Building, room<lb/>
201.<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0004"/><lb/>
mPPPV?MHMM4MMHPIP<lb/>
,? ? f n ??<lb/>
WHAT DID<lb/>
bill McDonald<lb/>
do to make<lb/>
headlines<lb/>
plenty fop one thing he wrote more than si 000.000 worth of life<lb/>
insurance during 1969. that means a lot of protection for a lot of<lb/>
people in the greenville area we're proud of his accomplishment<lb/>
-nd thankful to you his policy holders who helped keep us one of<lb/>
the fastest growing big life insurers.<lb/>
$TO fflfim m Emm cm<lb/>
East Carolina's a<lb/>
eek got off the<lb/>
riday and wi<lb/>
rough the end <lb/>
ith a<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
Tomorrow nigr<lb/>
jght A program<lb/>
its, performed I<lb/>
ledges, will be <lb/>
right Auditorium<lb/>
open to the publ<lb/>
On Wednesday<lb/>
:00 the Anr<lb/>
?inquet will be<lb/>
Union<lb/>
By BARBARA<lb/>
i What do you<lb/>
?ays at ECU fin<lb/>
? rehearse a<lb/>
fes<lb/>
"That's what<lb/>
ye'd do said G;<lb/>
?he Union Gap, '<lb/>
net some groovy<lb/>
Puckett the I<lb/>
jjnger with rough<lb/>
id quick wit<lb/>
Irtist. During F<lb/>
lonccrt. he play<lb/>
nd perform<lb/>
ccompanying hi<lb/>
litar.<lb/>
"How did I i<lb/>
as all hit an(<lb/>
fooling around<lb/>
iroughout high<lb/>
College, 1 became<lb/>
The<lb/>
RAdiA<lb/>
IN TrHE R<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0005"/><lb/>
Monday, May 4.1970. Fountainhead, Page 5<lb/>
ean Mallory will be dunked at Greek carnival<lb/>
East Carolina's annual Greek<lb/>
Lek got off the ground last<lb/>
riday and will continue<lb/>
Lugh the end of this week<lb/>
lith a host of different<lb/>
Ctivities.<lb/>
 Tomorrow night is "Skit<lb/>
light A program of original<lb/>
Its, performed by fraternity<lb/>
jedges, will be performed in<lb/>
fright Auditorium at 8 p.m. It<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
On Wednesday evening, at<lb/>
1-00 the Annual Awards<lb/>
Lnquet will be held at the<lb/>
Fiddlers III Restaurant. At that<lb/>
time numerous trophies will be<lb/>
awarded by the Board of<lb/>
Trustees, including the coveted<lb/>
trophies for service and<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
A carnival will be held on the<lb/>
Mall from 4:00 till 10:00<lb/>
Thursday afternoon. Boothe<lb/>
and various activities such as the<lb/>
greased pig contest will be held.<lb/>
A highlight of the carnival<lb/>
will be participation by Dean<lb/>
James Mallory, Dean of Men, on<lb/>
the dunking stool Dean<lb/>
Mallory will permit himself to<lb/>
be dunked each time a patron of<lb/>
the carnival hits the target.<lb/>
Greenville merchants are<lb/>
adding to the carnival by<lb/>
donating prizes for a raffle. The<lb/>
drawing will be held at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday. Merchants<lb/>
participation are Belk -Tyler,<lb/>
Campus Corner, Coffman's,<lb/>
College Shop, Proctor's, The<lb/>
Record Bar, Snooty Fox,<lb/>
Steinbeck's and Tetterton's<lb/>
Jewelers.<lb/>
On Friday Bob's Barn in<lb/>
Greenville will be the setting for<lb/>
a dance from 8-12 p.m with<lb/>
music by the Drifters.<lb/>
Greek Week will conclude on<lb/>
Saturday with an open air<lb/>
concert at the Dave Mosier farm<lb/>
on the Falkland Highway. Music<lb/>
for the concert will be by the<lb/>
Delphonics.<lb/>
Catacombs Coffeehouse<lb/>
reopens under new director<lb/>
nion Gap foresees format changes<lb/>
By BARBARA FUSSELL<lb/>
What do you do for three<lb/>
jays at ECU find a nice, quiet<lb/>
(lace, rehearse and get some<lb/>
lest'<lb/>
 "That's what we thought<lb/>
Led do said Gary Puckctt of<lb/>
Ihc Union Gap, "but we really<lb/>
liet some groovy people here<lb/>
; puckett the tall, thin lead<lb/>
Knger with roughed good looks<lb/>
Ind quick wit is a versatile<lb/>
Irtist. During Friday night's<lb/>
loncert. he played the organ<lb/>
nd performed a solo<lb/>
Accompanying himself on the<lb/>
guitar.<lb/>
"How did I get started? It<lb/>
Ivas all hit and miss. After<lb/>
looting around with music<lb/>
Ihroiighout high school and<lb/>
Rollege. 1 became involved with<lb/>
The<lb/>
?)o<lb/>
i<lb/>
RAdiANCE<lb/>
IN TrlE ROUINd<lb/>
)est's<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
it he said. "I intended to be a<lb/>
psychologist, but it looks like<lb/>
I'm not<lb/>
ON TOUR<lb/>
In May The Union Gap will<lb/>
begin circulating various clubs<lb/>
with performances at the Copa<lb/>
Cabana highlighting their tour.<lb/>
New innovations such as a<lb/>
15-piece band and the addition<lb/>
of gospel singers will become<lb/>
part of "The G;<lb/>
Four of their"oldie goldies"<lb/>
will merge as an eight-minute<lb/>
medley and only "Young'Girl<lb/>
which they consider their<lb/>
biggest record, will be done in<lb/>
its entirety.<lb/>
CHANGES<lb/>
"A change is going to come<lb/>
Puckett remarked, smiling. "It's<lb/>
exciting and I'm really hap,?y<lb/>
about it<lb/>
(continued on page 7)<lb/>
FJy DAVID WENDELIN<lb/>
After about a year of closed<lb/>
shop, the Catacombs Coffee<lb/>
House has been reopened. The<lb/>
Catacombs, located in the<lb/>
basement of the Methodist<lb/>
Student Union at the corner of<lb/>
5th and Holly Streets, is under<lb/>
the supervision of Rev. Daniel P.<lb/>
Earnhardt.<lb/>
The Coffee House was open<lb/>
to the public a few years ago,<lb/>
but it had to close up because<lb/>
all the students who ran it either<lb/>
graduated or left the area.<lb/>
Now the directorship has<lb/>
been turned over to Rev.<lb/>
Earnhardt, and on May 2 a small<lb/>
group of people gathered to<lb/>
watch movies and talk.<lb/>
Three movies were shown<lb/>
which dealt with the problem of<lb/>
man's attitude towards man.<lb/>
Although the movies were<lb/>
rather old, they nevertheless<lb/>
raised important facis about<lb/>
"what man has made of<lb/>
man The first movie.<lb/>
entitled"Boundary Lines was<lb/>
an animated depiction of the<lb/>
innate impulse of man to draw<lb/>
destructive boundary lines<lb/>
between himself and his<lb/>
neighbors.<lb/>
The main theme of the movie<lb/>
was that man. throughout his<lb/>
adolescence and maturity, has<lb/>
continued to draw these<lb/>
destructive boundary lines<lb/>
which inevitably lead to discord,<lb/>
misunderstanding and<lb/>
(continued on page It)<lb/>
(kTyfer<lb/>
V<lb/>
?.?<lb/>
?li<lb/>
m&amp;im&amp;<lb/>
? Y<lb/>
J<lb/>
?jT<lb/>
Li<lb/>
-A<lb/>
A<lb/>
'<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Beach Weather<lb/>
Is Here<lb/>
Shelia and Sharon White, ECU<lb/>
sophomores from Annandale, Va<lb/>
model fun beachwear styling from<lb/>
Belk Tylers Beach Boutique" on 2nd<lb/>
floor. Shelia wears beach pants from<lb/>
High Tide 9.00; over a matching<lb/>
bikini swinsuit 15.00. Sharon wears a<lb/>
two piece style from High<lb/>
Tide 16.00. Her knit cover-up is<lb/>
10.00. Just an attractive sample of the<lb/>
many swimwear styles, cover-ups and<lb/>
beach fashions waiting for your<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
All of your favorite name brands too!<lb/>
High Tide Bobbie Brooks 'Sand<lb/>
Castle 'Beach Party ln Swimwear<lb/>
'Barnacle Bill Sirena 'Jantzen<lb/>
"Roxanne 'Jr. House<lb/>
io<lb/>
YOU CAN<lb/>
CHARGE T<lb/>
OR USE<lb/>
OUR<lb/>
LA Y-A WA Y<lb/>
PLAN<lb/>
Open Nights Till 9PM<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0006"/><lb/>
4rfJ)l.lFP,l,?'M<lb/>
U-Ut4i t iV?<lb/>
Pace 6. Fountainhead, Monday. Ma) 4. 170<lb/>
age o. rouniamiicau, wivmiuut. ? ?.?. ?? ? ? a<lb/>
'In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida' shakes Minges crowd<lb/>
AS THE IRON Butterfly broke into night's concert the audience jumped to its<lb/>
'In-A-Gadda-Da-Vidda' at Thursday feet roaring approval.<lb/>
IlT '<lb/>
I<lb/>
Photos by.<lb/>
Charles Griffin<lb/>
7<lb/>
"?? V-<lb/>
:C f.<lb/>
<lb/>
Vv<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
From The<lb/>
5th DIMENSION<lb/>
THE 5TH DIMENSION<lb/>
GREATEST HfTS<lb/>
REG $5.98 REG $6.95<lb/>
NOW $3.99 NOW $5.49<lb/>
PLUS ALL 5th DIMENSION ALBUMS, TAPES AND<lb/>
CASSETTES ON SALE<lb/>
ALBUMS REG $4.98 TAPES REG $6.95<lb/>
NOW $3.35 NOW $5.49<lb/>
530<lb/>
COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
10-9 DAILY<lb/>
record bar<lb/>
discount records and tapes<lb/>
By ROBERT MCDOWELL<lb/>
LEE ARMSTRONG<lb/>
1 he Iron Butterfly shook<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Thursday<lb/>
night. More than 3,000 people<lb/>
danced in the isles, stood on<lb/>
chairs or bounded bleachers<lb/>
during the climactic<lb/>
"In-A Gadda Da-Vidda<lb/>
U s i n g in a i m u m<lb/>
amplification, the Iron Butterfly<lb/>
mesmerised the audience<lb/>
probably a third of the crowd is<lb/>
still slightly deafened. But the<lb/>
overall audience response was<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
East Carolina crowds are not<lb/>
noted tor their musical<lb/>
sophistication: the walk out in<lb/>
the middle ol songs, whistle and<lb/>
howl during selections and . in<lb/>
general, shov very little respect<lb/>
for performers.<lb/>
LACK OF ENTHUSIASM<lb/>
The Iron Butterfly was<lb/>
clearly affected by the<lb/>
audience's lack of enthusiasm:<lb/>
the audience sat passively while<lb/>
the Butterfly put on a<lb/>
t r e m e n d o u s s h o w .<lb/>
Consequently, the performance<lb/>
was shortened (from their usual<lb/>
concert time of over two hours<lb/>
to an hour and a half) and<lb/>
"In-A-Gad da-Da-Vidda" was<lb/>
limited to 25 minutes (it usually<lb/>
runs about 45 minutes).<lb/>
Friday night Gary Puckett<lb/>
and the Union Gap performed<lb/>
in Minges Coliseum We don t<lb/>
know anybody who went to see<lb/>
them (except Barbara Fussell).<lb/>
so we can't tell you anything<lb/>
about the concert.<lb/>
T,K Sat"rday nishi<lb/>
8 LN?id Smnl,<lb/>
Illri1 out to he k<lb/>
"stand" Vs mmi. LIT<lb/>
the dancers m<lb/>
, Uf e crowd watched the<lb/>
band, and half the Cro<lb/>
watched the few who dance<lb/>
Nobody watched the owS<lb/>
maybe the should havebecato<lb/>
the crowd kept saying m<lb/>
grass. I sweai 1 smell grassh<lb/>
could have been incense y<lb/>
wouldn't know.<lb/>
lf1 spite of the student<lb/>
apathy, there were those who<lb/>
took advantage t the excellent<lb/>
music (a rarity in Greenville)<lb/>
And Liquid Smoke were g<lb/>
exciting as they were good<lb/>
especially when the lead im<lb/>
went wild on a single cnn?<lb/>
drum.<lb/>
? "?"?W<lb/>
single coup<lb/>
AFTER-CONCERT JAMS<lb/>
From all reports, the bed<lb/>
entertainment ol the weekend<lb/>
was the after-concert jams at j<lb/>
local nightspot which featured<lb/>
members of the Iron Butterfly.<lb/>
the Union Gap. the Huckleberry<lb/>
Mud flap. Warm and Liquid<lb/>
Smoke in jazz and rock<lb/>
improvisations<lb/>
Pirates Jamboree was a bus<lb/>
(witness the large number el<lb/>
students that Hocked to the<lb/>
beaches or to Carolina fix<lb/>
Jubilee Weekend). Jamboreei<lb/>
similar to Homecoming when<lb/>
a large number of studentsgc<lb/>
home.<lb/>
a<lb/>
SfactiUAl<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
IHr. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
Let's Eat!<lb/>
flood &amp;i thought<lb/>
out a<lb/>
American Cuisine<lb/>
American cuisine has a varied background  l <lb/>
memories brought over by English. French. Spa<lb/>
settlers.<lb/>
African slaves and<lb/>
Scotch-Irish and German<lb/>
colonists made their<lb/>
contributions too. So did<lb/>
many other national groups.<lb/>
The English brought<lb/>
seedlings from Europe so<lb/>
they could have apple pie for<lb/>
dessert. Chowder came over<lb/>
with French settlers. Our<lb/>
cookies had their start with<lb/>
the Dutch-made koekjes<lb/>
Puritan settlers, not<lb/>
 ??? ting to cook on Sunday s,<lb/>
the view, cookme<lb/>
process<lb/>
.u , makes Boston<lb/>
that makes u<lb/>
baked beans delta<lb/>
favorites as waliw<lb/>
ttaee-fried potatoes<lb/>
cottage<lb/>
h<lb/>
German<lb/>
Xi<lb/>
and<lb/>
introduced<lb/>
settlers.<lb/>
Creole cookery<lb/>
blending ol Frencn<lb/>
Amencan uional group<lb/>
influenced<lb/>
Arnerican<lb/>
Just about any<lb/>
you can nanit<lb/>
in some ?<lb/>
cuisine<lb/>
iai<lb/>
Liq<lb/>
at<lb/>
While the<lb/>
cloudless sky<lb/>
from their<lb/>
popped out i<lb/>
E C Union<lb/>
series of<lb/>
entertainmer<lb/>
on the mall.<lb/>
Folk singe<lb/>
series of e<lb/>
providing nr<lb/>
dinners by.<lb/>
Highlight!<lb/>
AND AW<lb/>
three-legg<lb/>
J<lb/>
RO<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0007"/><lb/>
'd<lb/>
lrdaV stree,<lb/>
d the bandstand. f0rmi<lb/>
the crowd watched4.<lb/>
,m alf e crow<lb/>
d the fe 0 danced.<lb/>
y watched the crowdbm<lb/>
the shouldhavebecam,<lb/>
wd kern saving " m<lb/>
sweai I smell grass t<lb/>
have been incense "p<lb/>
(Vt<lb/>
SP of the student<lb/>
? there were those who<lb/>
dvantage if the excellent<lb/>
(a rarit) in Greenville).<lb/>
Liquid Smoke were jj<lb/>
g as they were good.<lb/>
IK Anon the lead singer<lb/>
y wl<lb/>
a single coup<lb/>
"ER-CONCERTJAMS<lb/>
n all reports, the bes<lb/>
tinmen t oi the weekend<lb/>
e after-concert jams an<lb/>
lightspot which featured<lb/>
.?rs of the Iron Butterfly<lb/>
lion Gap, the Hucklebeny<lb/>
ip. Warm and Liquid<lb/>
e in jazz and rod<lb/>
'isations<lb/>
tes Jamboree was a bust<lb/>
ss the large number oi<lb/>
ts that flocked to tht<lb/>
?s or to Carolina for<lb/>
? Weekend 1. Jamboree is<lb/>
to Homecoming whet<lb/>
? number o students go<lb/>
UUAi<lb/>
aunderers<lb/>
?eenville, N. C.<lb/>
3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
ie<lb/>
kground li two<lb/>
?h. Spanish and M&amp;<lb/>
enc<lb/>
ss that makes B??<lb/>
i beans delicious. SuJ<lb/>
waffles and<lb/>
rites<lb/>
n'tatoes<lb/>
were<lb/>
"HSd by<lb/>
) d u c e u n <lb/>
rs<lb/>
cole<lb/>
dine<lb/>
.er<lb/>
was<lb/>
,j French <lb/>
shluisine with tJio<lb/>
I West liwia,ly<lb/>
?onalgfouP<lb/>
ime has<lb/>
lam<lb/>
can na <lb/>
some <lb/>
re<lb/>
Liquid Smoke performs<lb/>
at street dance here<lb/>
Monday, May 4,1970, Fountainhead, Page <lb/>
While the sun shone in a<lb/>
cloudless sky. and girls watched<lb/>
from their dorm windows or<lb/>
popped out to join the fun. the<lb/>
U C Union played host to a<lb/>
series of field events,<lb/>
entertainment and two dances<lb/>
on the mall.<lb/>
Folk singers began the lively<lb/>
series of events at noon by<lb/>
providing music to eat chicken<lb/>
dinners by.<lb/>
Highlights of the events<lb/>
following the singing were a bed<lb/>
race, water balloon toss,<lb/>
pie-eating contest, and a bit of<lb/>
chocolate syrup dabbling aptly<lb/>
called "chocolate mess<lb/>
Afternoon activities ended<lb/>
with a huge squaredance on the<lb/>
mall, termed a giand success for<lb/>
the two or three hundred<lb/>
students who attended and<lb/>
participated.<lb/>
In the evening the Liquid<lb/>
Smoke played before a throng<lb/>
of people assembled between<lb/>
Wright and Rawl. This crowning<lb/>
event of the day drew crowds of<lb/>
students, many of whom<lb/>
sported the sun tans of the<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Union committee members<lb/>
say this will become an annual<lb/>
slate of events, though it is<lb/>
hoped more students will attend<lb/>
the field events in the future so<lb/>
their success will be greater.<lb/>
AND AWAY WE go! The bed race and the excitement of Saturday's field day, part of<lb/>
three-legged race added to the fun and Jamboree Weekend<lb/>
ROAST BEEF<lb/>
Tim Mills<lb/>
Randy Dixon<lb/>
Donnie Dixon<lb/>
Jonny Weatherington<lb/>
?? f ?$?<lb/>
Barber Shop<lb/>
752-3318<lb/>
A &amp; P SHOPPING CENTER E. 10th ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
Union Gap sees changes<lb/>
(continued from page 5)<lb/>
A new album. "The Union<lb/>
Gap's Greatest Hits will be<lb/>
released within two weeks and<lb/>
two more, one recorded live at<lb/>
the Whiskey-a-go-go. will be<lb/>
released soon.<lb/>
"I am also going to do a solo<lb/>
album Puckett said. "I want<lb/>
to go into my own head. It will<lb/>
be totally different, yet totally<lb/>
the same. Some 36 strange, but<lb/>
beautiful instruments will be<lb/>
used<lb/>
The Union Gap took their<lb/>
name from a small town in<lb/>
Washington State. "It is just a<lb/>
turn in the valley and there is<lb/>
only one way you can get<lb/>
through it said Puckett.<lb/>
If Gary Puckett and The<lb/>
Union Gap perform with as<lb/>
much enthusiasm everywhere as<lb/>
they did here, they deserve a<lb/>
rest. Their program, consisting<lb/>
of their old favorites such as<lb/>
"Woman.Woman" as well as<lb/>
new ones, captivated the<lb/>
audience and received a standing<lb/>
ovation.<lb/>
Gary Puckett left ECU and<lb/>
Jamboree Weekend with this<lb/>
comment: "The word of the<lb/>
century, people, is happiness<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
rth<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca-Cola Bottling Company. Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
In<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0008"/><lb/>
(.???? iiim??i ?4MW?M<lb/>
?<lb/>
A jmi.4M'? ????.?? .T.??-UHt?H1 <lb/>
<lb/>
Page H, Fountainhead. Monday. May 4, ll)70<lb/>
A lot of people who<lb/>
are now saying Schlitz<lb/>
Malt Liquor served on the<lb/>
rocks with a lemon twist is<lb/>
a spectacular, refreshing<lb/>
neat great,wonderful idea,<lb/>
used to say it was a lousy,<lb/>
stupid, bad, dumb idea.<lb/>
Also very Rood straight<lb/>
ucs<lb/>
yhe Pirates<lb/>
jastings' pitching<lb/>
Hctory t'ver Davic<lb/>
?jrst game<lb/>
of<lb/>
loubleheader and<lb/>
Kcxt weekend's<lb/>
Bonfcrcnce playof<lb/>
fcistis. Va.<lb/>
I Hastings went t<lb/>
tattering six hits fc:<lb/>
GARY McCUL<lb/>
defender in Satu<lb/>
Indians.<lb/>
Buc rowei<lb/>
o VCU aj<lb/>
In its last race b<lb/>
Baii Regatta<lb/>
Rhampionship of r<lb/>
?rarsity crew lost<lb/>
Commonwealth<lb/>
fcngth Saturday.<lb/>
The winning ti<lb/>
was 7:11 compare<lb/>
?he Bucs. The w;<lb/>
?oujIi resulting in<lb/>
Whan usual for the<lb/>
Friday, coach<lb/>
?discovered that I<lb/>
?been rigged in<lb/>
Season resulting ii<lb/>
?nuch power. Tl<lb/>
?directed before S<lb/>
?but there was no<lb/>
lo get accustome<lb/>
nigging.<lb/>
? ??? ff&amp;mm<lb/>
r.rhhtjwirn. Co M'lwauMv and othei great t<lb/>
Join th<lb/>
DINl<lb/>
Call Al<lb/>
Tel<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0009"/><lb/>
Monday. May 4. 1970. Fountainhead. Page 9<lb/>
ucs capture Southern Division crown<lb/>
The Pirates rode Ron<lb/>
fastings' pitching to a 4-1<lb/>
jiciory over Davidson in the<lb/>
jrst game of Saturday's<lb/>
fcubleheader and moved into<lb/>
jext weekend's Southern<lb/>
inference playoffs at Fort<lb/>
lustis, Va.<lb/>
Hastings went the distance,<lb/>
Lttering six hits for his seventh<lb/>
win of the season. The only nm<lb/>
off him was unearned and came<lb/>
as the result of u bad throw in<lb/>
the infield.<lb/>
The playoffs will pit the<lb/>
Pirates against either William<lb/>
and Mary or George<lb/>
Washington, who will square off<lb/>
for the Northern Division title<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
GARY McCULLOCH (24) evades William and Mary<lb/>
defender in Saturday's 7-6 sudden dr .th overtime loss to<lb/>
Indians.<lb/>
Buc rowers lose<lb/>
o VCU again<lb/>
In its last race before the Dad<lb/>
lail Regatta the "world<lb/>
Championship of rowing" the<lb/>
?rarsity crew lost to Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth by a boat<lb/>
length Saturday.<lb/>
The winning time for VCU<lb/>
was 7:11 compared to 7:17 for<lb/>
Hie Bucs. The water was very<lb/>
lough resulting in slower times<lb/>
?than usual for the two shells.<lb/>
Friday, coach Terry Chalk<lb/>
lliscovcred that the boat had<lb/>
?been rigged incorrectly all<lb/>
?season resulting in the waste of<lb/>
anuch power. The error was<lb/>
Corrected before Saturday's race<lb/>
?but there was not enough time<lb/>
lo get accustomed to the new<lb/>
Jigging.<lb/>
Pirates third<lb/>
William and Mary once again<lb/>
took the team championship<lb/>
but Furman stole the show for<lb/>
second place, edging the Pirates<lb/>
by a point for mnner-up honors in<lb/>
the Southern Conference Track<lb/>
and Field championships<lb/>
completed Saturday.<lb/>
The Indians, perennial<lb/>
powerhouse in Southern<lb/>
Conference track, set a modern<lb/>
record, scoring 116 points.<lb/>
Furman was a distant second<lb/>
with 53 points compared to<lb/>
52&amp; for the Bucs. Trailing these<lb/>
three were The Citadel with 22,<lb/>
Davidson, 21, VMI, 16, and<lb/>
Richmond, 7<lb/>
Walter Davenport was the<lb/>
only double winner for the Bucs<lb/>
as he captured the<lb/>
championship in the long jump<lb/>
and the triple jump.<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/>
lt!S.<lb/>
Join the Jflfl Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By Pass)<lb/>
DINE INN or TAKE OUJ<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 570 Wl<lb/>
?&amp;?,<lb/>
The Pirates faced these teams<lb/>
earlier' in the season and it<lb/>
resulted in a split decision.<lb/>
LOSE TO INDIANS<lb/>
William and Mary edged the<lb/>
Bucs. 54. in Williamsburg, Va<lb/>
as a Buc rally in the ninth fell<lb/>
short. The following afternoon,<lb/>
Ron Hastings hurled a five-hitter<lb/>
as the Bucs trimmed George<lb/>
Washington, 2-0. in Washington,<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
It the Bucs get by their<lb/>
opponent in the playoffs, it will<lb/>
be ihe fourth time they have<lb/>
been in the regional playoffs.<lb/>
They received an at-large bid to<lb/>
compete for the title in 1964<lb/>
and in 1966 and 1968 they<lb/>
represented the Southern<lb/>
Conference as champions.<lb/>
FOUR IN SECOND<lb/>
Saturday, the Bucs were in<lb/>
command all the way, scoring<lb/>
four runs in the second inning<lb/>
of the opener. They succumbed<lb/>
in the nightcap, 4-3, as the<lb/>
Wildcats rallied in the late<lb/>
innings.<lb/>
Dennis Vick led off the Buc<lb/>
second with a single to leftfield.<lb/>
After Stu Garrett walked, both<lb/>
runners advanced on a wild<lb/>
pitch. Dick Corrada then singled<lb/>
to short, his second of four hits,<lb/>
to score Vick with the lead run.<lb/>
Lyn Dowd sacrificed,<lb/>
bringing Garrett in with the<lb/>
second run, and Bryan McNeely<lb/>
doubled to center driving in<lb/>
Corrada. Skip Taylor walked,<lb/>
and Larry Walters followed with<lb/>
a single to right, bringing in<lb/>
McNeely with the final run.<lb/>
NO MORE RUNS<lb/>
The Bucs threatened the rest<lb/>
of the game, putting runners on<lb/>
in every inning but the thirc.<lb/>
However, they could not muster<lb/>
any more runs.<lb/>
In the first, they had loaded<lb/>
the bases with nobody out as<lb/>
Corrada led off with a single and<lb/>
Dowd and Stan Sneeden<lb/>
followed with bunt singles. That<lb/>
was it for the threat as a<lb/>
fielder's choice at the plate and<lb/>
two harmless outs ended the<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
University<lb/>
Book<lb/>
Exchange<lb/>
HATS OFF<lb/>
TO<lb/>
The Pirate baseball<lb/>
team, which won the <lb/>
Southern Division<lb/>
championship of the<lb/>
Southern Conference j<lb/>
by spl itting a<lb/>
doubleheader with<lb/>
Davidson Saturday.<lb/>
The second game saw the<lb/>
Bucs start off as though they<lb/>
would have everything go their<lb/>
way. Lyn Dowd walked in the<lb/>
first and then came home on<lb/>
Hal Baird's homer to left giving<lb/>
the Bucs a 2 0 lead.<lb/>
TAKE 3-0 LEAD<lb/>
In the third, the Bucs made it<lb/>
3-0 when Baird doubled and<lb/>
scored on Walters single.<lb/>
Wayne Post, who had<lb/>
replaced Sonny Robinson on the<lb/>
mound in the second after the<lb/>
latter had suffered arm trouble,<lb/>
was in control until the Wildcats<lb/>
exploded for three runs in the<lb/>
fifth to tie it up.<lb/>
Davidson scored what proved<lb/>
to be the winning run in the<lb/>
sixth on an error, a single and a<lb/>
walk. Don Oxidine who pitched<lb/>
the last 1-13 innings was charged<lb/>
with the loss.<lb/>
The Bucs will host<lb/>
Willmington College Tuesday<lb/>
afternoon as a tuneup for the<lb/>
divisional playoff.<lb/>
fountainhead<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
The schedule, May 4-7<lb/>
Tuesday - Baseball vs. Wilmington College (University Field).<lb/>
Wednesday - Lacrosse at Randolph-Macon (Ashland. Va.).<lb/>
1<lb/>
Gant's latest. A flamboyant dress shirt with a big, bold,<lb/>
wide collar. In stripmgs and colorings that register an<lb/>
elegant new mark in gentlemen's shirtings. Skillfully<lb/>
tailored from collar to cuff in soft, cotton broadcloth<lb/>
imported from England. Trim tapered body. $00. The<lb/>
go-with Gant tie. $00.<lb/>
TRIM TAPERED BODY $10.00<lb/>
THE GO-WITH GANT TIE $8.50<lb/>
oPftnans<lb/>
MEN'S WEAR - 315 EVANS STREET<lb/>
UNIVERSITY SHOP ? 218 EAST FIFTH STREET<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0010"/><lb/>
iui' I r A,?<lb/>
<lb/>
Page 10. Fountainhead. Monday. M<lb/>
History initiation<lb/>
Phi Alpha rheta. the honoi<lb/>
societ) in history, will initiate<lb/>
new members at 6:45 p<lb/>
Wednesday in the I nion room<lb/>
206<lb/>
Di Robert Gowen. the<lb/>
Histon Department's Modem<lb/>
sian historian, will be the guest<lb/>
speakei All members are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
i 4. 9 "0<lb/>
WhariP<lb/>
your<lb/>
excuse:<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
ing<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
c<lb/>
the<lb/>
n<lb/>
could have gone water ski-<lb/>
? swimming or to a dance<lb/>
 Ins - ve spent<lb/>
tse feeling -orry for<lb/>
;elf. And wh ' lust be-<lb/>
lt was one ol thosi<lb/>
? s? How silly. A lol of<lb/>
? are out then i ing<lb/>
? - ? l<lb/>
anc? - Ihey use rampax<lb/>
ha<lb/>
T npux ti an '???<lb/>
illy s ?. carj swim or<lb/>
dari ?? m si ? ' S you<lb/>
pi, ;? bulkypads<lb/>
or t? litali " give you<lb/>
aw rampax tamp ns art so<lb/>
eas<lb/>
tim<lb/>
. - ? ? ? the first<lb/>
-4 . ' 11<lb/>
Bucs lose to Indians<lb/>
in sudden death, 7-6<lb/>
Bob Woolridge's goal in the<lb/>
 minute of the sudden-death<lb/>
overtime pci ? d Sal irda<lb/>
ed William and Mar to<lb/>
defeat the Pirate av sse squad<lb/>
- . o in its final home ga 1<lb/>
the season<lb/>
I kg ?? v- scoi e nullified a<lb/>
great gai ie b P?rate stai L '<lb/>
McCulloch win sv ed<lb/>
goals and a fine comeback<lb/>
which sav the Pirates s<lb/>
twice in the final<lb/>
t was the third l ss I<lb/>
Pirate stickmeri this se<lb/>
Earliei the) defeated the<lb/>
11 v. 7-5. on the Ind<lb/>
turt.<lb/>
BUCS SCORE FIRST<lb/>
1 ast Cai In ??? tallied ? rsi<lb/>
when McCulloch scored after<lb/>
1:49 of the f rst period Three<lb/>
minutes later. Mc  ch s ?<lb/>
g the Bucs a 2-0 lead<lb/>
Vftci William M)d Man. tied<lb/>
game at the half, making it<lb/>
2-2. Mike Lynch connected<lb/>
from i n front to give the Bucs<lb/>
.e again,<lb/>
fhe Indians scored three<lb/>
times in the disastrous third<lb/>
period to take a 5-3 lead and set<lb/>
stage foi the Bucs<lb/>
neback<lb/>
LEAD IN OVERTIME<lb/>
ftei tying the game in<lb/>
regulation McCulloch scored<lb/>
with 2 40 remaining in the<lb/>
second overtime to give the<lb/>
Bucs a 6-5 lead.<lb/>
The Indians tied it up less<lb/>
than -i minute later to send the<lb/>
me into a sudden death<lb/>
i .crtime Woolridge's goal came<lb/>
shortls thereafter.<lb/>
ur d<lb/>
A i u makt<lb/>
careful shopper<lb/>
Shopping for a ne cress<lb/>
r suit should be tun.<lb/>
However, no matter what you<lb/>
seled. tr everything<lb/>
before buying. Do this<lb/>
regardless of how much of a<lb/>
hurr you are in.<lb/>
Do this regardless of how<lb/>
much of a hurr you are in.<lb/>
Sometimes a girl will need<lb/>
a new dress for a special<lb/>
occasion. She will leave the<lb/>
selection to the last minute.<lb/>
Rush Shopping<lb/>
othes selections hurriedly I r art ? ua<lb/>
Ther. she will make a rush<lb/>
purchase.<lb/>
As a result the dress may<lb/>
never be worn the second<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Prepare for social events in<lb/>
advance. Always a How<lb/>
enough time to think over<lb/>
carefully what you want<lb/>
Then allow enough tune to<lb/>
make the selections. Avoid<lb/>
rush shopping<lb/>
Hi Fmm the sideline: " v<lb/>
The unforgettable 1<lb/>
Earl Smith<lb/>
By SONNY LEA<lb/>
Guest Columnist<lb/>
Editor's Note: Sonny Lea is a sophomore English major. Theforw,<lb/>
Spt rts Editi r , t ' mntainhead now devotes his m of-claa hoursto<lb/>
his job us assistant to Sports Information Director John Monttm<lb/>
He's feisty, he's arrogant, he's funny but he's a winner. In his<lb/>
profession he's got to be a winner. He's a coach.<lb/>
Thirty-one years and 420 games after his start, EClTs head<lb/>
baseball coach Earl Smith chalked up his 300th career win.<lb/>
The memorable moment came about on March 19 in the first<lb/>
game oi a doubleheader with Ithaca College when his Pirates won.<lb/>
3-1. His career record now shows 315 wins against 129 losses whichir,<lb/>
baseball talk "ain't bad<lb/>
Smith like all successful coaches started from the bottom and<lb/>
worked his wa up playing the role oi a nomad moving from<lb/>
place to place. He began coaching in the fall of 1939 after receiving<lb/>
his degree from East Carolina Teachers College in a small Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina town called LaGrange.<lb/>
 v he gained more<lb/>
experience he moved on to<lb/>
bigger and better places like<lb/>
Burlington and Gastonia.<lb/>
His coaching career came to<lb/>
an abrupt halt with the start of<lb/>
World War II and Smith served<lb/>
as aCPO in the Navy. Following<lb/>
the wai. he came back to Last<lb/>
Carolina to begin work on his<lb/>
masters degree.<lb/>
While working on his degree<lb/>
m )u454h Smith served as<lb/>
basketball and baseball coach.<lb/>
This was his first taste of college<lb/>
c aching and he has remained<lb/>
?? th it ever since<lb/>
H, ich in three sports at Campbell, then a W<lb/>
college For seven vears. he coached football, basketball arj<lb/>
b tseb ill it nine three conference championships in football and<lb/>
taking two teams to the National Junior College Tournament<lb/>
Imuh'returned to East Carolina for good ,n 1953 as an assistant<lb/>
ich in football, basketball and baseball. He held these post<lb/>
until 1959 when he bacame head basketball caoch Hemovedc<lb/>
: baseball coach in 1963, giving up his basketball duties, when<lb/>
Jin Mallorv gave up the baseball job to become Dean ol Mem<lb/>
The deacon of the Southern Conference baseball iC??<lb/>
in the old adage that "experience builds knowledge, mat<lb/>
reason for plaving professional baseball from 193942.<lb/>
HE PLAYED PRO BALL TO LEARN THE GAME<lb/>
-1 didn't plav pro ball to make the big leagues Srnith<lb/>
?Besides, I couldn't run. I plaved to learn the game so 1 cou?<lb/>
Smith plaved in the old Costal Plain League, the North <lb/>
League and the Bi-State League. It was in the Bi-Mate<lb/>
he was c? aching in Burlington that he met Mallorv (<lb/>
V a third baseman and catcher. Smith is Still<lb/>
whether his fielding or his hitting was his besl asset <lb/>
-In 1940 mv legs went bad and 1 couldn't run. 70Pirates<lb/>
.calked awav from the practice field aftC' running .<lb/>
through a workout "1 hud to hit a solid 300 becau l(C$<lb/>
an) infield hits As far as fielding goes. I could held ai<lb/>
it m) problem was getting to it. for the<lb/>
owmg his playing career. Smith became a w<lb/>
ubs His best picks never made it past in ?<lb/>
t?s;<lb/>
COACH EARL SMITH<lb/>
Fol<lb/>
Chicagi<lb/>
Ci<lb/>
nrfne Hooks is"0<lb/>
he) are doing pretty well for themselves toda) ut ? ,or Ulr,leu<lb/>
athletic director at Wake Forest I'mversitv<lb/>
ind Mo Bauer Uai<lb/>
irecti<lb/>
director at Wake r-oresi uiwci??j -??- MoUIlt<lb/>
r at North Carolina Weslev an College in KocKy<lb/>
1953, Smith began a scouting career<lb/>
e CianGav<lb/>
both<lb/>
lord<lb/>
in io.v mnn neaan a souiimi, w- stars as "8J'<lb/>
lewY rk and San Francisco. He signed such ? Ran(iy<lb/>
errv oi Williamston, Jim Rav Hart oi Hv' oCubs.<lb/>
lundlev. of Bassett Va . now a catcher with thel. B a<lb/>
Smith ended his association when Easl jywish?ouki<lb/>
iber of the NCAA, something the Giants '  nitcl<lb/>
have never happened Afterall. he got them an<lb/>
in Perrv and an outstanding mt.elder in Hart<lb/>
Smith's rates! asset as an athlete was his<lb/>
became,<lb/>
ish w?u<lb/>
anding Pilt<lb/>
still spirit in<lb/>
to m<lb/>
sk J"V<lb/>
the teams he plav ed on He alw a S plav ed to w in<lb/>
He hasn't chanced this feeling as a coach el plays<lb/>
I arl Smith is a winnei Heai<lb/>
bi'Jj<lb/>
By RC<lb/>
John Le<lb/>
from o<lb/>
exhibitio<lb/>
Lennon's<lb/>
York and<lb/>
adverse c<lb/>
deserved.<lb/>
Lennon<lb/>
as a musi<lb/>
him w?<lb/>
attempted<lb/>
as an arti<lb/>
literary ai<lb/>
A sam<lb/>
was publ<lb/>
(issue 11)<lb/>
crude an<lb/>
detailing<lb/>
and Y<lb/>
love-mal<lb/>
compoi<lb/>
appropria<lb/>
?X'WK'Xv<lb/>
D<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
By<lb/>
Severa<lb/>
Poetry,<lb/>
recently<lb/>
writing c<lb/>
at St. An<lb/>
The c<lb/>
located<lb/>
Laurinbu<lb/>
a lake. I<lb/>
of a<lb/>
Student-<lb/>
warm ai<lb/>
are some<lb/>
was Mr.<lb/>
teaches<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Propo<lb/>
showed<lb/>
readings<lb/>
Woo<lb/>
power!<lb/>
Vernon<lb/>
didactic<lb/>
impres<lb/>
reading!<lb/>
especial<lb/>
Trainer'<lb/>
Thrc<lb/>
15<lb/>
m<lb/>
I0'<lb/>
he will te<lb/>
v ou.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039473_0011"/><lb/>
ttable<lb/>
ith<lb/>
Monday, May 4,1970, Fountainhead, Page 11<lb/>
ngtish major. 7,eomier<lb/>
?h'soittof-classhouruo<lb/>
Oirector John Momm<lb/>
ul he a winner. In his<lb/>
ach.<lb/>
r his start, ECU'S head<lb/>
Oth career win.<lb/>
n March 19 in the first<lb/>
?e when his Pirates won.<lb/>
gainst 129 losses which in<lb/>
d from the bottom and<lb/>
nomad moving from<lb/>
all of 1939 after receiving<lb/>
ollege in a small Easter:<lb/>
ACH EARL SMITH<lb/>
Campbell, then I junta<lb/>
football, basketball and<lb/>
pionships in football and<lb/>
r College Tournament in<lb/>
nxi in 1953 as an assistant<lb/>
11. He held these positions<lb/>
all caoch. He moved on to<lb/>
is basketball duties, when<lb/>
come Dean of Men.<lb/>
c baseball coaches believes<lb/>
knowledge That waste<lb/>
m 193942.<lb/>
RN THE GAME<lb/>
g leagues Smith recak<lb/>
nhegamesolcouldcoact<lb/>
i League, the North<lb/>
n the Bi-State League wh?<lb/>
tMallory.<lb/>
nith is still undecided on<lb/>
best asset ,<lb/>
1n-t run-Smith recalled<lb/>
? 300 because I dta?g<lb/>
ouldncldanv.h.ngl<lb/>
kVJCmtks.sno<lb/>
ity and Mo Bauer ?s?<lb/>
q, -kv Mount.<lb/>
efie in Ko ? bolh<lb/>
r with the GanM<lb/>
4  -h stars as uJ' ,<lb/>
&amp;ned such l d Randj<lb/>
 u ? ikerton anu<lb/>
,ianis probaoij <lb/>
hem an outstanding P<lb/>
, his ability to mstiU sp<lb/>
dtowi. anyboJ<lb/>
coach eitnei <lb/>
nei He always<lb/>
I Everybody's talking: ? MUN delegates express<lb/>
Lennon launches art career?l disappointment in Nixon<lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
John Lennon may soon suffer<lb/>
from overexposure. The<lb/>
exhibition of a suite of<lb/>
Lennon's lithographs in New<lb/>
York and London drew much<lb/>
adverse criticism - all of it<lb/>
deserved.<lb/>
Lennon whose ample talent<lb/>
as a musician and author made<lb/>
him world-famous, has<lb/>
attempted to launch his career<lb/>
as an artist on the basis of his<lb/>
literary and musical reputation.<lb/>
A sample of the lithographs<lb/>
was published in Avant Garde<lb/>
(issue 11). The drawings are<lb/>
crude and puerile expressions,<lb/>
detailing the manner of John<lb/>
and Yoko Lennon's<lb/>
love-making. Moreover, the<lb/>
compositions are more<lb/>
appropriate for a bathroom wall<lb/>
than a gallery showing.<lb/>
Lennon has always favored<lb/>
avant-garde productions and has<lb/>
succeeded in stretching the<lb/>
language in his books - In His<lb/>
Own Write and A Spaniard in<lb/>
the Works. His artistic efforts<lb/>
fail because they are pretentious<lb/>
and poorly executed.<lb/>
Hopefully, Lennon's fans will<lb/>
see the shuck and recognize it<lb/>
for what it is a mediocre<lb/>
attempt at art.<lb/>
If John Lennon's descriptions<lb/>
of love-making are crude and<lb/>
degrading attempts at art, G.<lb/>
Legman's encyclopedia of oral<lb/>
copulation is finest satire - part<lb/>
truth and part foible.<lb/>
Legman's treatise<lb/>
Oragenitalism: Oral Techniques<lb/>
in Genital Excitation (Julian<lb/>
Press, $15) is a light treatment of<lb/>
a touchy subject. Legman avoids<lb/>
tedious repetitions and describes<lb/>
the various types of love-making<lb/>
with wit and fervor.<lb/>
His anecdotal style is a<lb/>
delight to the reader who is<lb/>
bored by medical descriptions<lb/>
and illustrated manuals of<lb/>
"love<lb/>
Legman's catalogue of<lb/>
positions, from the<lb/>
perpendicular to the sublime,<lb/>
includes the common and the<lb/>
absurd. One exercise has the<lb/>
participants performing<lb/>
impossible acrobatics while<lb/>
coated in green paint.<lb/>
For the prurient interest and<lb/>
the prurient ego, there is no<lb/>
more interesting book. Legman<lb/>
details his survey of bizarre and<lb/>
entertaining sexual attitudes,<lb/>
while remaining marvellously<lb/>
tongue-in-cheek throughout.<lb/>
? ? ?-? ? ? ? ?.?.?.???.???????? ????.?.?????.? ??????????"?? "??"?"??:?:? -?:?:?:?:?:?-?.?.?.?-?-?.?.?????? -?-?-? -<lb/>
VwonlW? ???-???-??-?<lb/>
I Poets visit St Andrews<lb/>
By MAXIM TABORY<lb/>
Several members of the ECU<lb/>
Poetry. Forum spent a day<lb/>
recently with the creative<lb/>
writing class and student poets<lb/>
at St. Andrews College.<lb/>
The college of 900 students is<lb/>
located on the outskirts of<lb/>
Laurinburg, N. C. over-looking<lb/>
a lake. It has all the advantages<lb/>
of a small institution.<lb/>
Student-professor relations are<lb/>
warm and informal, and there<lb/>
are some co-ed dorms. Our host<lb/>
was Mr. Ronald H. Bayes who<lb/>
teaches poetry and creative<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
Proportionally more students<lb/>
showed an interest in our<lb/>
readings than at ECU.<lb/>
READINGS<lb/>
Woody Thurman was<lb/>
powerful and penetrating.<lb/>
Vernon Ward's romantic and<lb/>
didactic works made a lasting<lb/>
impression. Edna Fisher's<lb/>
readings were well received,<lb/>
especially the popular "Animal<lb/>
Trainer" sequences.<lb/>
Through Anita Brehm s<lb/>
outstanding redention, ideas<lb/>
became alive, pulsating with<lb/>
beauty. This writer's symbolic<lb/>
poems, dealing with today's<lb/>
problems, won the concentrated<lb/>
attention of the public. The<lb/>
searching but also humorous<lb/>
verses of Richard Capps induced<lb/>
responsive laughter.<lb/>
REACTION<lb/>
After the program, at the<lb/>
home of Bayes, we shared<lb/>
cultural experiences. Literary<lb/>
publications of the college were<lb/>
shown and discussed. The<lb/>
editors talked about future<lb/>
plans. The informal, friendly<lb/>
relations between the faculty<lb/>
and students turned us green<lb/>
with envy.<lb/>
One just may wonderECU<lb/>
is getting bigger. Is it also<lb/>
getting better? Do we make here<lb/>
an honest effort to resolve<lb/>
problems stemming from<lb/>
strained relations within that<lb/>
unromantic triangle of<lb/>
Administration Faculty<lb/>
Students?<lb/>
Our student body of 10,000 is<lb/>
still growing. Is expansion a<lb/>
blessing or a curse for the<lb/>
individual? Can one do "his own<lb/>
thing when everybody is<lb/>
gradually pressed into colorless<lb/>
conformity through<lb/>
mass-education?<lb/>
These thoughts were on my<lb/>
mind on our way home. We left<lb/>
St. Andrews grateful for the<lb/>
warm reception and with the<lb/>
realization that big universities<lb/>
can learn from the small ones.<lb/>
(continued from page I)<lb/>
condemning the Southern<lb/>
Rhodesian government but was<lb/>
later withdrawn in hopes of a<lb/>
stronger resolution.<lb/>
The Special Political<lb/>
Committee meetings were<lb/>
mainly exercises in Parlimentary<lb/>
procedure. One resolution<lb/>
passed excluded the "Big Four<lb/>
Powers" from a role in the<lb/>
Middle East peace talks.<lb/>
Other activities took place in<lb/>
the Security Council where they<lb/>
considered and defeated a<lb/>
resolution sponsored by Zambia<lb/>
condeming the "racist minority<lb/>
regime in Salisbure " and called<lb/>
for self determination and<lb/>
independence for the people of<lb/>
Zimbabwe. The measure<lb/>
received nine votes for and one<lb/>
against with five abstentions;<lb/>
however, the lone vote against<lb/>
was that of the United Kingdom<lb/>
which with the United States,<lb/>
U.S.S.R China and France has<lb/>
the power to veto any action.<lb/>
Meeting in full session the<lb/>
General Assembly acted on<lb/>
resolutions passed by the<lb/>
various committees and also<lb/>
considered measures submitted<lb/>
directly.<lb/>
CAMBODIA CONSENSUS<lb/>
Before final adjournment a<lb/>
consensus of the body regarding<lb/>
the situation in Cambodia was<lb/>
submitted and passed by a large<lb/>
majority. The consensus was;<lb/>
"We, many of the students of<lb/>
NMUN, wish to express<lb/>
dissappointment in President<lb/>
Nixon's policy of escalating the<lb/>
East Asian conflict and<lb/>
extending the war into<lb/>
Cambodia. We would like the<lb/>
Security General to hold one<lb/>
minute of silent meditation to<lb/>
show that we hope a peaceful<lb/>
solution to the Indochina<lb/>
situation will be swiftly<lb/>
accomplished<lb/>
Many dignataries attended<lb/>
the conferance including Abdel<lb/>
Halim Badawi. Counselor of the<lb/>
UN mission of the United Arab<lb/>
Republic and the Right<lb/>
Honorable Lord Caradon,<lb/>
minister of state for foreign and<lb/>
Commonwealth affairs of the<lb/>
British Mission to the UN.<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
Many letters and telegrams of<lb/>
support were received by such<lb/>
public figures as President<lb/>
Nixon and Governor<lb/>
Rockafeller.<lb/>
Vice-President Spiro Agnew<lb/>
also sent a telegram which read;<lb/>
"My personal regards to those<lb/>
attending the annual National<lb/>
Model United Nations and best<lb/>
wishes for a successful session. I<lb/>
commend your innitive and<lb/>
leadership in establishing<lb/>
meaningful communications<lb/>
between people. With the<lb/>
assistance of dedicated young<lb/>
adults of your caliber our goal<lb/>
of world peace and harmony<lb/>
will become a reality<lb/>
Catacombs shows politically oriented films<lb/>
(continued from page 5)<lb/>
eventually war and death. What<lb/>
the world needs now, the movie<lb/>
went on to show, is a circular<lb/>
line which would unite and<lb/>
envelop all people as one.<lb/>
The second movie, 'The<lb/>
Christian in Politics was very<lb/>
old and dealt with the idea of<lb/>
the political arena as the<lb/>
workshop for the Christian. The<lb/>
scene was Middleburg, U.S.A.<lb/>
with the typical local<lb/>
government corruption and the<lb/>
committment of a Christian to<lb/>
clean things up.<lb/>
The last movie was entitled<lb/>
"Almost Neighbors This<lb/>
movie, although rather old also,<lb/>
brought out problems that still<lb/>
face us today. It dealt with a<lb/>
familiar middle class family who<lb/>
began to realize that there were<lb/>
other people in the world who<lb/>
were not as well off as they<lb/>
were.<lb/>
The Catacombs plans to keep<lb/>
the coffee house open<lb/>
permanently, but long range<lb/>
plans are still uncertain.<lb/>
Immediate plans include short<lb/>
films dealing with the topic of<lb/>
war, peace and man on May 9.<lb/>
On May 16 The Catacombs will<lb/>
show the well known film "The<lb/>
Mouse That Roared Rev.<lb/>
Earnhardt said that these<lb/>
activities will be geared towards<lb/>
the May 16 Fayetteville<lb/>
demonstration against the<lb/>
Vietnam War at Fort Bragg.<lb/>
Everyone is invited to come<lb/>
to The Catacombs for these<lb/>
events and although there is no<lb/>
set time for the activities to<lb/>
start, 9 p.m. is usually when<lb/>
things begin to happen.<lb/>
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By KAREN BL<lb/>
A crowd of<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>