<?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="00039476_0001"/>
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ounuinhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Vol. l,No. 52<lb/>
East Carolina University. P.O. Box 2516, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
May 14, 1970<lb/>
? <lb/>
Establishment of a traffic<lb/>
council to serve as an appeals<lb/>
board for campus motorists<lb/>
headed a busy session of the<lb/>
legislature Monday.<lb/>
The traffic council consisting<lb/>
entirely of students has the<lb/>
power to reverse campus traffic<lb/>
tickets should one win his<lb/>
appeal.<lb/>
SOUNDING BOARD<lb/>
The council will also act as a<lb/>
sounding board for complaints<lb/>
and suggestions concerning<lb/>
campus traffic.<lb/>
Students appointed to the<lb/>
Board are Pam Myers, Roger<lb/>
Tripp and Nancy Cannady.<lb/>
In other business, a joint<lb/>
legislative and executive<lb/>
committee was established to<lb/>
give aid to students who are<lb/>
members of a miniority group<lb/>
and have trouble renting off<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
IMMEDIATE HELP<lb/>
These students could appeal<lb/>
the Fair Housing Act and FBI<lb/>
agents would investigate the<lb/>
cases, a procedure requiring<lb/>
usually four months.<lb/>
This committee, as part of<lb/>
the minority affairs office, may<lb/>
be able to give immediate help<lb/>
to these students, secretary of<lb/>
minority affairs Bill Owens said.<lb/>
The legislature voted support<lb/>
of the housing petition signed<lb/>
by over 4,000 students.<lb/>
The petition calls for two<lb/>
men's dorms to be exchanged<lb/>
with two women's dorms,<lb/>
liberalization of visitation hours,<lb/>
improvements in telephone<lb/>
service, legalization of hot plates<lb/>
and popcorn poppers and<lb/>
upgrading of the old dorms.<lb/>
MRC support helped in<lb/>
positive debate for the<lb/>
resolution's passage.<lb/>
CHAIRMEN APPROV<lb/>
SGA committee chairmen<lb/>
for 1970-71 appointed by SGA<lb/>
president Bob Whitley were<lb/>
approved by the legislature.<lb/>
They are as follows: Russ<lb/>
Uzzell, Popular Entertainment;<lb/>
Gary King, Lecture Series; Carol<lb/>
Steele, Popular Films; Betty<lb/>
White, Artist Series; Judy<lb/>
Morris, Student Polls; and Kati<lb/>
Howze, Special events.<lb/>
ArrKUrnlA I lU<lb/>
Several appropriations bills<lb/>
introduced were sent to the<lb/>
appropriations committee for<lb/>
study to be considered next<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The bills would appropriate<lb/>
funds to the following<lb/>
organizations; WECU, pep band,<lb/>
cheerleaders and spirit<lb/>
committee, ECU Playhouse,<lb/>
Fountainhead, transit system,<lb/>
the Buccaneer, photography<lb/>
budget, office of external<lb/>
affairs, office of internal affairs<lb/>
and the special events<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
A bill passed changing the<lb/>
date of SGA officer and staff<lb/>
salary payments to be once each<lb/>
month instead of twice<lb/>
quarterly.<lb/>
RESOLUTION<lb/>
The legislature voted against<lb/>
considering a resolution<lb/>
against the Nixon<lb/>
Administration's Southeast Asia<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
They also voted not to<lb/>
consider a bill which would<lb/>
abolish all grade average<lb/>
requirements for serving in an<lb/>
SGA office.<lb/>
Boats' invade Tar<lb/>
KING HENRY II (C.aude Wooing ?"??<lb/>
the French princess Alais (Nancv New) to be h,s wife.<lb/>
P'iv<lb/>
In the grand tradition of the<lb/>
ECU namesake. Greenville will<lb/>
be invaded by way of the Tar<lb/>
River on Sunday.<lb/>
The event is the second<lb/>
annual float race. Anything that<lb/>
can float is qualified to enter.<lb/>
The only rule is that each<lb/>
member of an entry have a<lb/>
certified life preserver.<lb/>
To help even up the odds, the<lb/>
entries will be divided into three<lb/>
classes. They will be: paddled,<lb/>
rowed, and open. No motor<lb/>
driven vessels will be eligible to<lb/>
enter.<lb/>
Beyond that the vessels<lb/>
design is up to the creativity of<lb/>
the captain. In the past, inner<lb/>
tubes, steamboats, and beer cans<lb/>
have made up the major portion<lb/>
of some vessels.<lb/>
The winner will be the tirst<lb/>
vessel from each category to<lb/>
travel from the launch ramp at<lb/>
the Old Jail to the promenade<lb/>
below the Green Street Bridge.<lb/>
oat race<lb/>
The condition of the crew is not<lb/>
considered in the determining<lb/>
the winner.<lb/>
The piizes for each first place<lb/>
will be a case of his favorite ice<lb/>
cold beverage. An additional<lb/>
prize will be a portable cooler<lb/>
from Ross's Camera Shop for<lb/>
the best picture of the day's<lb/>
action.<lb/>
The race is open to everyone<lb/>
for an entry fee of $1. It will<lb/>
begin at 11 o'clock.<lb/>
And as the entries float down<lb/>
the scenic Tar River. LOOK<lb/>
OUT FOR THE QUICKSAND<lb/>
AND ALLIGATORS!<lb/>
-Si<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0002"/><lb/>
mmMiMimi-ir&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
SGA will not renew Spring ring sale planned<lb/>
 " .i ).?iiv thai th tffi.i:t order a rino r?r h-jv? r <lb/>
SUSGA membership<lb/>
The seventeen) mual<lb/>
Southern Universities Studen<lb/>
Government Ass ?<lb/>
I St SG l C tKn ?<lb/>
p 22-25 in M<lb/>
rer nessee Eas -<lb/>
Universit) c as ?<lb/>
Bob Whittev SGA Pre <lb/>
j<lb/>
Vio<lb/>
p<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
.<lb/>
kIc.<lb/>
 ? . res me, I ast<lb/>
Carolina remains the onl) large<lb/>
ass - at The<lb/>
uthei North Cai - s<lb/>
i  as the p<lb/>
LARGEST BUDGET<lb/>
East C ai 4tna de eg-<lb/>
i 3 sed i I<lb/>
pla<lb/>
N x<lb/>
ad I ? la<lb/>
p . ?ri ? <lb/>
<lb/>
; n Basi<lb/>
B.<lb/>
its, ssi<lb/>
??<lb/>
p05<lb/>
 v<lb/>
<lb/>
TOO LITTLE SUPPOR"<lb/>
SL'SGA i<lb/>
- ; ?<lb/>
S<lb/>
'<lb/>
T<lb/>
 -<lb/>
5 JW<lb/>
s<lb/>
stuck<lb/>
-<lb/>
n ??<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
S '? p i ?<lb/>
s ittk reason<lb/>
nbei<lb/>
?3 ??<lb/>
hot ;he :us: time a ring sale<lb/>
w ill be held : m students<lb/>
npktmg t hours spring<lb/>
quartet<lb/>
Previously, isint: juniors had<lb/>
mtil -i: quartet to<lb/>
E rings<lb/>
The ring sale : te cated<lb/>
bb) at the ring<lb/>
jasi Wednesday mi<lb/>
T- irsdarj Ma 20-2<lb/>
V rep res wn Balfoui<lb/>
C rnpam ? n on hard to<lb/>
ISSC a ith their orders<lb/>
AVOID OVERLOAD<lb/>
reason foi the spnng sale<lb/>
aoid the overload ol<lb/>
th fa Daring Fa<lb/>
i ig ? 400-501<lb/>
 ? . students ; have<lb/>
- p lints a ring defect<lb/>
E ing .je on<lb/>
Ma : Ma) 2 from -  i<lb/>
4 p "<lb/>
OFFICIAL RING<lb/>
secretar)<lb/>
?. - said As a<lb/>
'? a I isl<lb/>
?e L G. Ball<lb/>
The' - - - Mnpanv<lb/>
i eon .xMing<lb/>
inform students, that the o'Ticiai<lb/>
FCl ring I a symbol ot<lb/>
academic achievement and<lb/>
should be worn with pride <lb/>
An student who wants to<lb/>
<lb/>
order a ring or have one repaired<lb/>
should contact Can Summers m<lb/>
room 311. Wright Annex from 2<lb/>
to 5 p.m Monda through<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
THE MEN'S AND WOMEN'S GLEE CLUBS will ixesem ?<lb/>
spring concert tonight at 8:15 in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
ECU student selected<lb/>
for College of Europe<lb/>
jo? ?<lb/>
nth Ball<lb/>
Samuel Parker Trov. an El c<lb/>
Master's Degree candidate, has<lb/>
beet- selected l - attend th.<lb/>
College Europe it; Brugges.<lb/>
Beisurr tor r academic vea-<lb/>
Recital will be held<lb/>
St. Andrews poet will<lb/>
read at Poetry Forum<lb/>
trombonist uc:<lb/>
s<lb/>
i r.emx-preset . : <lb/>
Sunda Reciu -<lb/>
HBBT - . - - grar - . ature tN<lb/>
prerraei f a c ' i bv<lb/>
G : : K teel ECU!<lb/>
m p rt-residenc i<lb/>
? it rts r - Theme : ?<lb/>
WfSchoenberg the title a 1 i ?? ii j n u s u a<lb/>
; nbtnai r I rtstrumenc<lb/>
? . p i a r - <lb/>
 . K<lb/>
 b f .<lb/>
? . - ?.s quart <lb/>
f Barrv Shan, and J Seai<lb/>
 .<lb/>
 : tsayej and tou<lb/>
 irews<lb/>
. - read her?e<lb/>
auditot the Scho<lb/>
s nf at 8:0 la)<lb/>
 5 "There -<lb/>
adrrussi .? arge, and i put .<lb/>
ts  rdsafly invited<lb/>
d ? fdinai f the<lb/>
Sort Cai na Poeo<lb/>
Wriw n-Residefi itSt<lb/>
 j-e-i Hts ? )fk has rr.arec<lb/>
in many lead - Kgazo a arvo a<lb/>
. im? ' " B wrse<lb/>
EXCHANGE READING<lb/>
N J - -<lb/>
JOE HAMBRICK<lb/>
irtl - <lb/>
Waved) Land<lb/>
"odd Dbt lohn Laws<lb/>
-? ; i ;xchang<lb/>
 Poetr) Forui"1- sl i<lb/>
hose Jad in<lb/>
? ih: School '<lb/>
Musk at S- Andrews on April<lb/>
?"<lb/>
GOOD GROUP<lb/>
Despite the i that St<lb/>
Andrew has j student bod ot<lb/>
tewer than j thousand students.<lb/>
s good and appreciative<lb/>
audience turned out to hear the<lb/>
ECU group read The ECL<lb/>
visit ir were giver, dinner and<lb/>
rrea:a; as w u panie<lb/>
before iinne- and after the<lb/>
reading posmg  .niiienge to<lb/>
FCl in hospitality as weD as in<lb/>
p-eT.r<lb/>
The Poetry I . ' opes that<lb/>
i . j nber I FCl students<lb/>
? . : -? gree; :hesc<lb/>
rom Si Ai - ?-<lb/>
I970J97I<lb/>
Trov who visited Brugges and<lb/>
the college last summer said,<lb/>
Brugges. a bea il I medieval<lb/>
city. b located neat five<lb/>
Fur pean capttoIs fac t which<lb/>
will allow for extensive travel<lb/>
and an excellent environment<lb/>
? t academic resea ;<lb/>
SPECIALIZATION<lb/>
European studies will " it be<lb/>
j new field for I<lb/>
anticipates reserving his St A in<lb/>
political science this summer.<lb/>
Hi field ot concentration is<lb/>
comparative government with a<lb/>
specialization in Western<lb/>
European governments<lb/>
THESIS<lb/>
His thesis, which<lb/>
researched in Europe<lb/>
summer, deals with<lb/>
i n t ernationai c o pci il ?<lb/>
aspect of the democratic<lb/>
Socialist parties in ?ese'r:<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
Trov. a l?r graduate Ekffl<lb/>
College was the first presidenl<lb/>
 Pi'Sigj-u ypha, uV<lb/>
political science I<lb/>
sv.Kietv here<lb/>
as<lb/>
last<lb/>
the<lb/>
Hamilton will read paper in Holland Attorney General<lb/>
speaks at dinner<lb/>
era. (program<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
C<lb/>
The?<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
?- :<lb/>
w<lb/>
Bv LEO W JENKINS<lb/>
I at<lb/>
 -<lb/>
I a-<lb/>
Unn init) arejustl)<lb/>
pi id ai state! v mey<lb/>
Gene ra Hoi Robei B<lb/>
M ga ? isons<lb/>
r an ? standing legis at<lb/>
 ? ? 11 o r n e <lb/>
L111 i ngi i civic - ;<lb/>
rj - cm a i a<lb/>
- rTic? Bob M<lb/>
?e- Jeer . mteres<lb/>
?ode growth ai<lb/>
h s instituooc H. b i<lb/>
nsptrationa ea - a<lb/>
GEORGE F HAMILTON<lb/>
He n imed faitJ<lb/>
conscient.ousiv as AairrnM<lb/>
the ard of Trustees ' tan<lb/>
Carolina for a B <lb/>
h wa fitting that Uw e<lb/>
evenme he as the H<lb/>
the annual Senior (<lb/>
honoring those who wil<lb/>
graduated next m<lb/>
A voting -un hi:ri"<lb/>
Morgans subject was "?<lb/>
the young smoag<lb/>
challenged em<lb/>
senous<lb/>
He ? . t0<lb/>
M:<lb/>
?SGA<lb/>
backi<lb/>
In an interview 1<lb/>
iahitley, SGA pr<lb/>
?that the Associatio<lb/>
?Governments is s<lb/>
Rational Referendi<lb/>
Referendum is to be<lb/>
?t is to give studenl<lb/>
Kxpress their <lb/>
Wixoifs policy o<lb/>
mrc question is: I<lb/>
?with the decision<lb/>
?United States grou<lb/>
?Cambodia?<lb/>
LETTERS:<lb/>
Robert Adams<lb/>
?Legislature, and<lb/>
Betters to Congres<lb/>
?Ervvin, and all<lb/>
?Carolina Repre<lb/>
?Washington exp<lb/>
?views on the<lb/>
lincident. An exc<lb/>
letter is as folkv<lb/>
hundred years, A<lb/>
? known that tax;<lb/>
I representation i;<lb/>
I War without rer<lb/>
? far worse<lb/>
EXPLAINS SI<lb/>
Speaking abou<lb/>
I campuses acros;<lb/>
I Whitley said, "i<lb/>
will not call<lb/>
strike He gavi<lb/>
explaining his s<lb/>
"i don't think<lb/>
representing the<lb/>
student body<lb/>
there are other<lb/>
Morgar<lb/>
' (continued from pai<lb/>
national office.<lb/>
In this respec<lb/>
a word of ad<lb/>
issues rather th;<lb/>
asked them t<lb/>
candidates for p<lb/>
on issues and<lb/>
constructive star<lb/>
The Attorne<lb/>
spoke of the ba<lb/>
Senioi<lb/>
The Gamn<lb/>
Carolina chii<lb/>
Gamma Sigrm<lb/>
initiates and<lb/>
scholarship awa<lb/>
third annual b<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Di Leo W.<lb/>
featured speake<lb/>
Beta Sigma<lb/>
national honoi<lb/>
icty for ou<lb/>
in business ed<lb/>
at iCV is ont<lb/>
hapters of the<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
RECIP<lb/>
Kelly Stuart<lb/>
recipient of t<lb/>
Scholarship aw<lb/>
student, King<lb/>
"Mr. Fu 11<lb/>
I xecutive" on<lb/>
Phi Beta Lamt<lb/>
president and<lb/>
Omicron Delt;<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0003"/><lb/>
led<lb/>
 one repaired<lb/>
an Summers in<lb/>
t Annex from 2<lb/>
?nda through<lb/>
i will presenta<lb/>
itorium.<lb/>
ected<lb/>
jrope<lb/>
sited Bruggesand<lb/>
? summer said<lb/>
?autifu medieval<lb/>
ited neai five<lb/>
oh a uch<lb/>
extensive travel<lb/>
ent environment<lb/>
sea<lb/>
LIZATION<lb/>
jdiCb will nol "<lb/>
for Tro <lb/>
rung his MA in<lb/>
:e this summer,<lb/>
concentration is<lb/>
ivernment with a<lb/>
I in Western<lb/>
nments<lb/>
ESIS<lb/>
which mts<lb/>
n Europe last<lb/>
a Is with the<lb/>
i cooperative<lb/>
the democratic<lb/>
es in Western<lb/>
? of Elon<lb/>
ic first president<lb/>
pfa the oati<lb/>
eoce honorary<lb/>
al<lb/>
er<lb/>
ed fi '?'?' ? y<lb/>
, as chai<lb/>
Trustees East<lb/>
m: thai &amp; yji'<lb/>
a ? ; speak<lb/>
iorC ass<lb/>
 do<lb/>
1 rTK<lb/>
nai ? V:<lb/>
VI .<lb/>
?ct arcs wc nw<lb/>
long <lb/>
?n<lb/>
to enter pd ?<lb/>
Thursday. May 14, 1970. Fountainhead, Page 3<lb/>
?GA President Alexander on Concert Board<lb/>
backs referendum<lb/>
?<lb/>
In an interview Tuesday, Bob<lb/>
hitley, SGA president, said<lb/>
lhat the Association of Student<lb/>
fcovernments is supporting a<lb/>
Rational Referendum Day. The<lb/>
Referendum is to be held Friday.<lb/>
It is to give students a chance to<lb/>
tx press their views about<lb/>
fjixon's policy on Cambodia.<lb/>
?The question is: Do you agree<lb/>
Lull the decision to dispatch<lb/>
I<lb/>
(<lb/>
iited States ground troops to<lb/>
mbodia?<lb/>
LETTERS SENT<lb/>
Robert Adams, speaker of the<lb/>
legislature, and Whitley, sent<lb/>
?letters to Congressmen Jordan,<lb/>
Eiwin, and all the North<lb/>
;arolina Represenlitives in<lb/>
IWashington expressing their<lb/>
?views on the Cambodian<lb/>
incident. An excerpt from the<lb/>
jletter is as follows: "For two<lb/>
ihundred years, Americans have<lb/>
I known that taxation without<lb/>
representation is totalitarian.<lb/>
War without representation is<lb/>
far worse<lb/>
EXPLAINS STATEMENT<lb/>
Speaking about the strikes on<lb/>
i campuses across the nation,<lb/>
Whitley said, "as President. I<lb/>
j wiH not call for a student<lb/>
! strike He gave two reasons<lb/>
explaining his statement. One,<lb/>
"1 don't think I would be<lb/>
representing the majority of the<lb/>
student body Two, "1 think<lb/>
there are other ways students<lb/>
can voice their opinions.<lb/>
He related one such incident<lb/>
"I was impressed with the<lb/>
action of MIT students. They<lb/>
canvassed the surrounding<lb/>
neighborhood asking people to<lb/>
write their congressmen and<lb/>
representitives The idea was to<lb/>
get people to express their<lb/>
opinion on the Cambodian<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
Whitley will hold a press<lb/>
conference at 4 p.m. May 19 in<lb/>
the Legislature room. The<lb/>
meeting is open to the<lb/>
newspaper staff, the radio staff,<lb/>
and any other interested<lb/>
persons.<lb/>
Honorary society<lb/>
The German and Russian<lb/>
Department has announced its<lb/>
membership in Delta Phi Alpha,<lb/>
national German Honor Society.<lb/>
The local chapter is Eta Mu.<lb/>
The purpose of Delta Phi<lb/>
Alpha is to encourage and to<lb/>
recognize excellence in the<lb/>
study of German and to provide<lb/>
incentive for highe; scholarship.<lb/>
The fraternity aims to<lb/>
promote study of the German<lb/>
language literature and<lb/>
civilization and endeavors to<lb/>
emphasize those aspects of<lb/>
German life and culture which<lb/>
are of universal value and which<lb/>
contribute to man's search for<lb/>
peace and truth.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, assistant<lb/>
dean of student affairs, was<lb/>
recently installed for a<lb/>
three-year term on the<lb/>
Executive Board of the<lb/>
Association of College and<lb/>
University Concert Managers.<lb/>
MEMBERSHIP<lb/>
The board is composed of 14<lb/>
members from more than 400<lb/>
colleges and universities in the<lb/>
United States and Canada. At<lb/>
last week's meeting in Madison,<lb/>
Wise, the Board installed new<lb/>
members and planned events for<lb/>
the coming year.<lb/>
According to Alexander, the<lb/>
board approved a committee to<lb/>
plan a regional training<lb/>
conference to be held in Raleigh<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
PROPER SELECTION<lb/>
This program would help<lb/>
students and faculty members in<lb/>
the Southeast to gain know-how<lb/>
in selecting and contracting<lb/>
entertainers. Alexander said.<lb/>
He feels that the conference<lb/>
will be of great benefit, because,<lb/>
"the pop concert field is<lb/>
exploited by managers and<lb/>
agents, in their dealings with<lb/>
students. Students get taken for<lb/>
dollar after dollar because of<lb/>
lack of proper selection<lb/>
The board also approved<lb/>
plans for its annual conference,<lb/>
to be held in New York in the<lb/>
fall also.<lb/>
Ut-IHO. ill hi ? ? ?-??rv-  -<lb/>
Evaluation clinic will<lb/>
move to new building<lb/>
 . .ii r i tu:?nA o -ro al<lb/>
The Developmental<lb/>
Evaluation Clinic is scheduled to<lb/>
move into its new building by<lb/>
the middle of June.<lb/>
The new facility, under<lb/>
construction since last fall, will<lb/>
be the first of its kind in Eastern<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Serving North Carolinians in a<lb/>
27-county area, the clinic is<lb/>
open to any children who have<lb/>
sensory impairments, learning<lb/>
disabilities, or mental handicaps.<lb/>
Dr. Malene G. Irons, director,<lb/>
of the clinic, stated. "It's a<lb/>
beautiful building and we are all<lb/>
excited about moving in<lb/>
In its new building, the clinic-<lb/>
will have appropriate physical<lb/>
resources to structure different<lb/>
group therapy situations for<lb/>
parents of children with<lb/>
emotional disturbances, and<lb/>
with certain difficulties.<lb/>
This would also relate to<lb/>
parents of culturally deprived<lb/>
children, parents of children<lb/>
with hearing loss, parents of<lb/>
retarded children, and other<lb/>
specific groups.<lb/>
Association of Student Governments<lb/>
President calls nationwide student<lb/>
referendum on Cambodian situation<lb/>
?w" ? r.? u? ?a of longer survive that dangerous<lb/>
Morgan speaks on rights<lb/>
(continued from page 2)<lb/>
national office.<lb/>
In this respect, he gave them<lb/>
a word of advice: "Run on<lb/>
issues rather than slogans He<lb/>
asked them to insist that<lb/>
candidates for public office run<lb/>
on issues and take a positive,<lb/>
instructive stand on them.<lb/>
The Attorney General also<lb/>
spoke of the basic rights of the<lb/>
people in our democracy and<lb/>
said these rights must be<lb/>
respected. The people of<lb/>
America must be protected and<lb/>
guaranteed and given security<lb/>
under the law. he said, and must<lb/>
be afforded fair play in the<lb/>
courts and in the market place.<lb/>
It was a challenging, timely and<lb/>
pertinent speech.<lb/>
Senior award dinner held<lb/>
The Gamma of North<lb/>
Carolina chapter of Beta<lb/>
Gamma Sigma honored its<lb/>
nitiates and 1970 senior<lb/>
scholarship award winner at its<lb/>
third annual banquet Tuesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins was the<lb/>
featured speaker.<lb/>
Beta Sigma Gamma is a<lb/>
national honorary scholarship<lb/>
lociety for outstanding majors<lb/>
business education. Gamma<lb/>
? ECU is one of only three<lb/>
hapters of the organization in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
RECIPIENT<lb/>
Kelly Stuart King was named<lb/>
recipient of the 1970 Senior<lb/>
Scholarship award. A dean's list<lb/>
student, King was selected as<lb/>
Mr. Future Business<lb/>
Executive" on the state level by<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda. He served as<lb/>
president and vice president of<lb/>
Omicron Delta Epsilon Honor<lb/>
Society in Economics. He is a<lb/>
member of Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Honorary fraternity. Phi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Honor Society and Beta<lb/>
Gamma Sigma.<lb/>
He was presented a plaque by<lb/>
Dr. James Bearden. dean of the<lb/>
School of Business.<lb/>
In his address. Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
challenged the students and<lb/>
graduates to m a ke<lb/>
breakthroughs in business,<lb/>
economics and other fields such<lb/>
as government.<lb/>
ADVANCES<lb/>
Citing great technological<lb/>
advances during the past<lb/>
generation, he said "We are in<lb/>
trouble because we haven t<lb/>
learned to live in a manner<lb/>
becoming the greatest nation<lb/>
the world has ever produced.<lb/>
He said there is a need for<lb/>
leadership now more than ever<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Editors Note: Duane Draper,<lb/>
President of the Association of<lb/>
Student Governments ? a<lb/>
s trietly non -political<lb/>
organization - made a<lb/>
statement on May 8 calling for a<lb/>
nationwide student referendum<lb/>
on the Cambodian situation.<lb/>
SGA President Bob Whitley<lb/>
has requested that we publish<lb/>
Draper's statement together<lb/>
with an ECU official Ballot in<lb/>
an effort to ascertain the<lb/>
feelings of the students on this<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Please mark your opinion,<lb/>
tear out the ballot, and deposit<lb/>
in the ballot box in the CU or<lb/>
re mm to Fountainhead offices.<lb/>
Draper s remarks follow.<lb/>
The rising tide of national<lb/>
horror makes passivity a<lb/>
difficult option for any<lb/>
American. Tragic situations<lb/>
leave little opportunity for<lb/>
indifference or the luxury of<lb/>
indecision. This is especially<lb/>
true on the campus.<lb/>
The American student is an<lb/>
anomalie. Perhaps no group in<lb/>
society so passionately craves<lb/>
institutional change yet remains<lb/>
too pathetically organized tc<lb/>
produce it.<lb/>
REPONSE CONFUSED<lb/>
Students dedicated to sot<lb/>
progress cannot establish th<lb/>
own priorities, let alone those<lb/>
society. Students so skptical<lb/>
the functioning of Anic-<lb/>
democracy have yet to esf<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
America's response I<lb/>
student community ha<lb/>
equally confuse<lb/>
inconsistent. Students<lb/>
congratulations for quesj<lb/>
but admonitions for acth<lb/>
Students have sh<lb/>
silence and anonymit"<lb/>
"fifties" which war-<lb/>
'consensue" for the era of<lb/>
protest and mobilization which<lb/>
is being labeled as the minority<lb/>
voice of a small core of<lb/>
extremist radicals.<lb/>
The time has come for<lb/>
American students to rise above<lb/>
the labels imposed on them by<lb/>
both the self-styled student<lb/>
spokesmen! and national<lb/>
political leaders.<lb/>
No longer can students be<lb/>
merely spoken for or spoken of.<lb/>
No longer should students be<lb/>
merely polled or randomly<lb/>
sampled.<lb/>
LACK OF UNITY<lb/>
Students, independent of the<lb/>
middle men. should resolve their<lb/>
own minds concerning the issues<lb/>
that plague us and proceed to<lb/>
the work of their resolution.<lb/>
The lack of unity and<lb/>
organization that denotes the<lb/>
American student community ts<lb/>
the key to our impotence.<lb/>
The expressions of dissent are<lb/>
often regarded as minority<lb/>
attitudes: the expressions ot<lb/>
silence are often regarded as<lb/>
majority attitudes.<lb/>
longer survive that dangerous<lb/>
delusion that the majority of<lb/>
students are passive creatures<lb/>
intent on "gaining an<lb/>
education" and remaining<lb/>
relatively passive to the perils<lb/>
that engulf us.<lb/>
Students must seize and<lb/>
destroy that pernicious<lb/>
assumption which stymies our<lb/>
effectiveness.<lb/>
SUBMIT VERDICT<lb/>
1 wish to summon all students<lb/>
to discard our individual<lb/>
penchant for ideological<lb/>
independence and to submit the<lb/>
great immediate issue of our day<lb/>
to a democratic and<lb/>
unquestionable verdict by the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
For America's students to<lb/>
finally submit to a rational and<lb/>
fair determination of our<lb/>
opinions would be a significant<lb/>
step toward the results we<lb/>
envision.<lb/>
Demonstrations somehow<lb/>
become twisted as the product<lb/>
of the minority, opinion polls<lb/>
are suspect and assailed.<lb/>
Jjins short of a broad<lb/>
storage between weanngs may resua <lb/>
the growth of bacteria on the lenses<lb/>
This is a sure cause of eye irritation and<lb/>
in some cases can endanger your vision<lb/>
Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is<lb/>
sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.<lb/>
Just a drop or two of Lensine, before you<lb/>
insert your lens, coats and lubricates it<lb/>
allowing the lens to float more freely in<lb/>
the eye's fluids. That's because<lb/>
Lensine is an "isotonic" solution,<lb/>
which means that it blends with<lb/>
the natural fluids of the eye.<lb/>
LENSINE<lb/>
Let your contacts be the<lb/>
convenience they were<lb/>
meant to be. Get<lb/>
some Lensine, from the<lb/>
Murine Company, Inc.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0004"/><lb/>
iMM'ii i ? IXlMtPTWHril<lb/>
<lb/>
Page 4, Fountainhead, rhursday. Ma) 14. 1970<lb/>
Referendum set on Cambodian situation<lb/>
(i ? intinued from page 3)<lb/>
movement of individual student<lb/>
expression can shake the myths<lb/>
about the student community<lb/>
The Association of Student<lb/>
Governments will sponsoi May<lb/>
15, Referendum Day, foi a<lb/>
n a t io nal i efei endum on<lb/>
President Nixon's decision to<lb/>
become militarily engaged in<lb/>
Cambodia.<lb/>
Referendum Day will and<lb/>
must be conducted in a fashion<lb/>
of total fairness.<lb/>
The question has been<lb/>
worded in fair and unbiased<lb/>
fashion:<lb/>
"i)ti you agree with the<lb/>
I nited States decision to<lb/>
dispatch ground troops to<lb/>
Cambodia?"<lb/>
T h e el eci ion will be<lb/>
conducted by sin dent<lb/>
governments and campus<lb/>
newspapers across the nation.<lb/>
INFORMATION<lb/>
Today information and<lb/>
instructions were an mailed to<lb/>
every Student Body President<lb/>
and student newspapei editoi in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
We call on every group and<lb/>
faction on American campuses<lb/>
to su ppoi i a ml acti ely<lb/>
pai ticipate in Referendum Day<lb/>
The procedures ol the<lb/>
operation are contained in the<lb/>
information sheets you have<lb/>
received. I he results will be<lb/>
made public at the earliest<lb/>
possible time<lb/>
11 is out goal not to<lb/>
proselytize, but to provide a<lb/>
broad, open and democratic<lb/>
channel for students to<lb/>
convincingly express themselves.<lb/>
The direct action to bring our<lb/>
visions of change to reality will<lb/>
be done by others; but the<lb/>
mission oi getting students<lb/>
togcthci m an unimpeachable<lb/>
democratic process must begin.<lb/>
COURAGE NEEDED<lb/>
II students lack the coinage<lb/>
to icsi the rhetoric of change to<lb/>
a massive vote of the student<lb/>
community, then we shall<lb/>
continue the labor without<lb/>
success.<lb/>
True democracy functions<lb/>
only on the grounds of mass<lb/>
participation in its voting<lb/>
process. We ask the national<lb/>
student co m m unity to<lb/>
demonstrate its effectiveness on<lb/>
this single crucial issue.<lb/>
You own the sun<lb/>
Child of Aquarius. Sun worshiper<lb/>
Coppertone takes you back to nature with a<lb/>
deeper, darker, richer tan  faster.<lb/>
And there's a Coppertone tan that's just<lb/>
naturally right lor you. Eleven fabulous<lb/>
blends. Make Coppertone a part of<lb/>
your bag . .beach<lb/>
bag, that is.<lb/>
Physic a<lb/>
Amsterdam.<lb/>
Therapy Department oi the<lb/>
School of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions, will present<lb/>
his paper Comprehensive<lb/>
Management of the Hand<lb/>
Injurod Patient" a! the World<lb/>
Confederation<lb/>
Therapists i n<lb/>
Holland<lb/>
The presentation will be<lb/>
directed at the problems<lb/>
experienced by persons who<lb/>
have suffered severe hand<lb/>
injury why management<lb/>
these patients must be ol a<lb/>
comprehensive nature, and how<lb/>
the physical therapist can best<lb/>
meet the needs ol such a<lb/>
program.<lb/>
ie universiiv i rson<lb/>
Carolina, a nd direct oi oi<lb/>
Physical Therapy at the Hand<lb/>
Rehabilitation (enter in Chapel<lb/>
Hill prior to joining the ECU<lb/>
faculty<lb/>
Since coming to Greenville,<lb/>
he has been developing the<lb/>
Department ol Physical Therapy<lb/>
as .i new major open to men and<lb/>
women Students entering then<lb/>
junior veai are being accepted<lb/>
into the new program which<lb/>
w 11 i begin operation in<lb/>
September<lb/>
Hamilton pointed out the<lb/>
real need foi physical<lb/>
t hcrapist. in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and throughout the<lb/>
Coppertone<lb/>
P I or a totally different sun<lb/>
expericne e tr new Coppertone<lb/>
arming Buttero oa buttet and<lb/>
( oc onul oil Wild!<lb/>
w<lb/>
Duke head<lb/>
lauds student<lb/>
involvement<lb/>
CHARLOTTE (Ap, U<lb/>
week f from classes will h!<lb/>
871 Duke University ?<lb/>
Wh0 Wan to work "<lb/>
congressional elect,<lb/>
campaigns this fall, the school<lb/>
new president said Sunday<lb/>
Terry Sanford, a form<lb/>
North Carolina governor who<lb/>
was inaugurated as the ru,<lb/>
president this spring, said details<lb/>
ol the program were beto<lb/>
worked out by tJJ<lb/>
administration of the<lb/>
7 ,000-student priva<lb/>
institution.<lb/>
He added he'd like to see<lb/>
other schools do the same,<lb/>
Princeton, at least, plans a<lb/>
similar arrangement.<lb/>
Last week Sanford told<lb/>
student demonstrators who<lb/>
opposed President Nixon's<lb/>
decision to escalate the war in<lb/>
Southeast Asia into Cambodia<lb/>
"Don't come tearing down your<lb/>
university and your society 'He<lb/>
advised that they instead work<lb/>
in the tail's political campaigns<lb/>
where they might be able to<lb/>
change national policy.<lb/>
The Democrat spoke Sunday<lb/>
to day care center advisers in<lb/>
Charlotte. He said peaceful<lb/>
assemblies by students opposed<lb/>
to the war in Cambodia are "a<lb/>
beneficial thing for the nation"<lb/>
and have a wholesome effect"<lb/>
n national policy.<lb/>
PAHADfc OP I<lb/>
test last week<lb/>
n<lb/>
APT'S FOR RENT<lb/>
Why pay SI30-SI60 per<lb/>
month when furnished<lb/>
apartments are available for<lb/>
$110? Two minutes from<lb/>
campus, includes carpet,<lb/>
central vacuum and<lb/>
air-conditioning, laundry<lb/>
and drink machines.<lb/>
Scottish Manor<lb/>
Apartments, Lewis and 4th<lb/>
Streets, call 752-269L<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
TOUR CAROLINAS<lb/>
Visit Myrtle Beach<lb/>
Great Smoky Mountains<lb/>
Ft. Sumptei<lb/>
0 D Beach<lb/>
Nags Head<lb/>
and many other<lb/>
swinging places<lb/>
The Richards Company, nc.<lb/>
offers; I -$550 monthly salarj<lb/>
2-Scholorship program<lb/>
-Transportation furnished<lb/>
4-1-obik contact lyi<lb/>
employment r<lb/>
GettoknowN.C.andS.C<lb/>
RlSl band Visit ltho<lb/>
doctor, lawyer or<lb/>
businessman one y<lb/>
textile oi furniture<lb/>
the next and an army cap<lb/>
or sargent the following t<lb/>
Ove. 18, a self-starter, J?<lb/>
aPPearance an abso.u<lb/>
To enroll in out w?<lb/>
Ra.e.gh (9 9) 8<lb/>
Charlotte (704) ?'? <lb/>
The R.chards Co 0<lb/>
112 S. Tryon St<lb/>
Charlotte, N C.<lb/>
The Men's and <lb/>
lubs of ECU will<lb/>
inual spring cone<lb/>
15 p.m. in Wrigh<lb/>
 The Men's<lb/>
Bonsisting of 48 s<lb/>
 early every<lb/>
epartment on the<lb/>
Perform both<lb/>
jpular music ran<lb/>
liddle Ages to<lb/>
Bncluded will be<lb/>
s "Where is 1<lb/>
Oliver" and the 1<lb/>
long, "Down in th<lb/>
I The Women's G<lb/>
?8 in number, will<lb/>
Hide variety of<lb/>
pstrumental ac<lb/>
Included are the<lb/>
laria" and "Slee)<lb/>
What is the p<lb/>
Classic si<lb/>
foremost in fas<lb/>
But simplicity<lb/>
monotony.<lb/>
This accent s<lb/>
one or two pi;<lb/>
more is likely<lb/>
impact. A tasti<lb/>
costume might<lb/>
brown thrce-p<lb/>
one strand of<lb/>
orange beads.<lb/>
The accessi<lb/>
over all costu<lb/>
simple with<lb/>
lines. Basic g;<lb/>
be chosen f<lb/>
workmanship<lb/>
jewelry. A<lb/>
items arc worl<lb/>
GEORGE F.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0005"/><lb/>
f lrom classes win t!<lb/>
' Duke University st<lb/>
' Want '? work ,<lb/>
gremonil eiectio<lb/>
a.gns th.s fall. theschools<lb/>
president said Sunday<lb/>
 Sanford, a f0rrnet<lb/>
h Carolina governor who<lb/>
inaugurated as the Duke<lb/>
dent this spring, said details<lb/>
the program were being<lb/>
rked out by th;<lb/>
i i n i st ra t ion of the<lb/>
OO-student private<lb/>
tut ion.<lb/>
- added he'd like to see<lb/>
r schools do the same.<lb/>
:eton. at least, plans a<lb/>
ar arrangement,<lb/>
ist week Sanford told<lb/>
lent demonstrators who<lb/>
used President Nixon's<lb/>
(ion to escalate the war in<lb/>
hcast Asia into Cambodia:<lb/>
n't come learing down your<lb/>
?rsity and your society He<lb/>
;ed that they instead work<lb/>
le fall's political campaigns<lb/>
e they might be able to<lb/>
ge national policy.<lb/>
le Democrat spoke Sunday<lb/>
lay care center advisers in<lb/>
lotte. He said peaceful<lb/>
nblies by students opposed<lb/>
ie war in Cambodia are "a<lb/>
ficial thing for the nation"<lb/>
have a wholesome effect"<lb/>
ational policy.<lb/>
APT'S FOR RENT<lb/>
 pay SI30-SI60 per<lb/>
nth when furnished<lb/>
rtments are available for<lb/>
i? Two minutes from<lb/>
ipjs, includes carpet,<lb/>
itral vacuum and<lb/>
;onditioning, laundry<lb/>
i drink machines<lb/>
o t t i sh Manor<lb/>
irtments, Lewis and 4th<lb/>
jets, call 752-2691.<lb/>
ITUDENTS!<lb/>
OUR CAROLINAS<lb/>
Visit Myrtle Beach<lb/>
Ireat Smok) Mountains<lb/>
Ft. Sumptei<lb/>
O I) Beach<lb/>
Nags Head<lb/>
and man) other<lb/>
swinging places<lb/>
Richards Company, nc.<lb/>
rs; .$550 monthly salar)<lb/>
?Scholorship program<lb/>
Transportation furnished<lb/>
-Public contact tyi<lb/>
loymenl cr<lb/>
eltoknou S.C.andS.t-<lb/>
hand Visil with<lb/>
or. lawyer or<lb/>
inessman one day,<lb/>
ile or furniture wo<lb/>
next and an army cap"<lb/>
argent the following W<lb/>
r W a self-starter. ?<lb/>
? an absolu<lb/>
enroll in our vauti<lb/>
ings program caU<lb/>
?igh 919) 834-308?<lb/>
-uftte (704) 3761501<lb/>
R'fardSsCt?'s"tel8-3<lb/>
S. Tryon St ?<lb/>
lotte, NC<lb/>
KAHAUfc OP DEMONSTRATORS begin their march to<lb/>
protest last week's bust of the Freedom House.<lb/>
Glee Clubs will sing<lb/>
The Men's and Women's Glee<lb/>
ubs of ECU will present their<lb/>
Jinual spring concert tonight at<lb/>
1:15 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The Men's Glee Club,<lb/>
Dnsisting of 48 students from<lb/>
early every school and<lb/>
epartment on the campus, will<lb/>
perform both serious and<lb/>
jpular music ranging from the<lb/>
piddle Ages to the present,<lb/>
picluded will be such favorites<lb/>
B "Where is Love?" from<lb/>
)liver" and the Kentucky folk<lb/>
3ng, "Down in the Valley<lb/>
The Women's Glee Club, also<lb/>
8 in number, will also present a<lb/>
iride variety of music with<lb/>
fcstrumental accompaniment.<lb/>
icludcd are the Brahm s "Ava<lb/>
laria" and "Sleepytime Bach<lb/>
in arrangement of the famed<lb/>
Swingle Singers.<lb/>
Brett Watson and Beatrice<lb/>
Chauncey are the directors of<lb/>
the Men's and Women's Glee<lb/>
Clubs, respectively.<lb/>
The concert is free and open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
Chemistry seminar<lb/>
Dr. Sam Pennington of the<lb/>
Biochemistry Department at the<lb/>
University of Missouri Medical<lb/>
School will present the last of<lb/>
the weekly seminars sponsored<lb/>
by the Chemistry Department<lb/>
Friday at 3 p.m. in Flanagan,<lb/>
room 206.<lb/>
All interested persons arc<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
iflflc Tifer<lb/>
THE CIRCUS<lb/>
is coming<lb/>
This Thursday<lb/>
Fashion<lb/>
What is the proper way to select<lb/>
Classic simplicity is<lb/>
foremost in fashion selection.<lb/>
But simplicity does not mean<lb/>
monotony.<lb/>
This accent should occur in<lb/>
one or two places. Anything<lb/>
more is likely to diminish the<lb/>
impact. A tastefully accented<lb/>
costume might be a beige and<lb/>
brown three-piece suit with<lb/>
(me strand of medium-length<lb/>
orange beads.<lb/>
The accessories, like the<lb/>
over all costume, should be<lb/>
simple with clean, classic<lb/>
lines. Basic garments should<lb/>
be chosen for quality and<lb/>
workmanship and so should<lb/>
jewelry. A few expensive<lb/>
items are worth far more than<lb/>
Thursday, May 14, 1970, Fountainhead. Page 5<lb/>
Students and citizens march<lb/>
to protest Freedom House arrests<lb/>
Flair'<lb/>
and wear accessories9<lb/>
several items of gaudy,<lb/>
costume jewelry. Woods and<lb/>
plastics are acceptable but are<lb/>
meant for daytime wear.<lb/>
Gloves should be worn<lb/>
with coats, suits and hats.<lb/>
They should not be carried<lb/>
for "effect<lb/>
We are the store ot<lb/>
national name brands<lb/>
known for our fashion-plus<lb/>
look! We are THE SNOOTY<lb/>
FOX, and we're ready to<lb/>
serve you, the college girl,<lb/>
with the finest in the latest<lb/>
fashions and accessories. Visit<lb/>
us soon, THF SNOOTY FOX.<lb/>
203 Fast 5th St phone<lb/>
758-4061. Open daily 9:30 til<lb/>
6.<lb/>
About 50 people assembled<lb/>
on the Mall Monday to march in<lb/>
protest of a police raid on a Rl.<lb/>
1. Wintcrville residence called<lb/>
the Freedom House<lb/>
The group marched from the<lb/>
campus, along Fifth Street, up<lb/>
Evans Street and on the Pitt<lb/>
County Court House lawn.<lb/>
Sherrif Ralph Tyson issued<lb/>
the permit for the March<lb/>
Monday to Jan Underwood.<lb/>
Similar permits for Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday were granted but<lb/>
were not fulfilled.<lb/>
The persons arrested during<lb/>
the raid were Randy Marker. 19<lb/>
and Robert Geisler. 17.<lb/>
Geisler stated that the police<lb/>
would not show a warrant and<lb/>
had harassed residents of the<lb/>
house on many occassions.<lb/>
The march was peaceful and<lb/>
orderly, according to a Police<lb/>
Department spokesman.<lb/>
The SGA will hold an open<lb/>
Press Conference Tuesday at 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
All students are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Give your<lb/>
contact lenses<lb/>
a bath<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
,n order to keep your contact lenses as<lb/>
comfortable and convenient as they were<lb/>
meant to be, you have to take care of<lb/>
them. But until now you needed two or<lb/>
more separate solutions to properly<lb/>
prepare and maintain your contacts. Not<lb/>
with Lensine. Lensme is the one lens<lb/>
solution for complete contact lens care.<lb/>
Cleaning your contacts with Lensine<lb/>
retards the buildup of foreign deposits on<lb/>
the lenses. And soaking your contacts in<lb/>
Lensine overnight assures you of proper<lb/>
lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case<lb/>
on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine<lb/>
It has been demonstrated that improper<lb/>
storage between weanngs may result in<lb/>
the growth of bacteria on the lenses<lb/>
This is a sure cause of eye irritation and<lb/>
in some cases can endanger your vision.<lb/>
Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is<lb/>
sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic.<lb/>
Just a drop or two of Lensine, before you<lb/>
insert your lens, coats and lubricates it<lb/>
allowing the lens to float more freely in<lb/>
the eye's fluids. That's because<lb/>
Lensine is an "isotonic" solution,<lb/>
which means that it blends with<lb/>
II the natural fluids of the eye<lb/>
mm Lei your contacts be the<lb/>
I convenience they were<lb/>
I meant to be. Get<lb/>
J5j some Lensine, from the<lb/>
3) Munne Company, Inc.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0006"/><lb/>
i?WIMM.4MXIM?<lb/>
 <lb/>
Page 6, Founl inhead. Thursday, Ma) 14. 1970<lb/>
'age o, rouni iinneau, munuj. .?iu? ? ? ?<lb/>
Campus Hi-htes<lb/>
con<lb/>
Teacher training program gets award<lb/>
ECU has received an award ot<lb/>
$33,900 foi its program tor<lb/>
preparation oi teachers oi the<lb/>
mentally retarded.<lb/>
The award, from the Bureau<lb/>
oi Education for the<lb/>
Handicapped of the IS. Office<lb/>
oi Education, provides graduate<lb/>
fellowships and undergraduate<lb/>
trameeships.<lb/>
Dr. John T Richards.<lb/>
chairman oi the Special<lb/>
Education Department said<lb/>
junior yeai trainees will receive<lb/>
a stipend oi $300. Senior level<lb/>
trainees will recieve a stipend ol<lb/>
S800 for the senior academic<lb/>
eai in addition to having<lb/>
tuition and instructional tees<lb/>
paid tor b) program support<lb/>
funds. The award includes three<lb/>
junior sear grants and eight<lb/>
senior yeai trameeships.<lb/>
ARA will continue in service<lb/>
ARA food service will<lb/>
manage ECU cafeterias again<lb/>
next year, according to Harr<lb/>
Pitts, director of dining services.<lb/>
Pitts said that ' as far as 1<lb/>
know now" the administration<lb/>
is planning to renew the ARA<lb/>
contract.<lb/>
Asked if steps were being<lb/>
taken to regain popularity for<lb/>
cafeterias. Pitts said that<lb/>
suggestions by the student Food<lb/>
Committee are bengconsidered.<lb/>
Frequent criticisms, he said.<lb/>
were location, lack oi<lb/>
atmosphere, having to wait in<lb/>
line, and high prices.<lb/>
Pitts pointed out that<lb/>
reopening South Cafeteria could<lb/>
force a rise in prices, to cover<lb/>
inflation and additional wages.<lb/>
Pitts expressed mixed<lb/>
emotions about the possible<lb/>
effects oi dorm refrigerators on<lb/>
cafeteria business, but felt that<lb/>
more students living on campus<lb/>
next year will mean more use of<lb/>
cafeterias.<lb/>
a<lb/>
Stactiwu<lb/>
Drive-In<lb/>
Cleaners &amp; Launderers<lb/>
Cor. 10th &amp; Cotanche Sts. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
1 Hr. Cleaning 3 Hr. Shirt Service<lb/>
Artists in national displays<lb/>
bones, was accepted by the jury<lb/>
Two faculty-artists in the<lb/>
School oi Art have work<lb/>
exhibited in two national shows<lb/>
Gwen Jones received a cash<lb/>
award for her drawing "What if<lb/>
we had junk yards for People"<lb/>
in the 4th Annual Drawing and<lb/>
Small Sculpture Show, a<lb/>
national exhibition currently<lb/>
open at Del Mar College. Corpus<lb/>
Christi. Texas.<lb/>
Another of Mrs. Jones'<lb/>
works, a macrame design with<lb/>
for the show<lb/>
Peter Jones' drawing, "Day<lb/>
Dream" was also accepted for<lb/>
the Del Mar show.<lb/>
James T. Demetrion. director<lb/>
of the Des Momes Art Center,<lb/>
Des Moincs Iowa, selected a<lb/>
drawing by Peter Jones for the<lb/>
current i6th Annual Drawing<lb/>
and Small Sculpture Show at<lb/>
Ball State University. Muncie,<lb/>
Indiana.<lb/>
Education plans kindergarten<lb/>
The kindergarden conducted<lb/>
by the ECU School of<lb/>
Education will offer a six-week<lb/>
session this summer for the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Open on a first-come,<lb/>
first-serve basis, kindergarden<lb/>
director Mrs. Anita Brehm will<lb/>
receive applications for the<lb/>
session which opens June 8 and<lb/>
ends July 14.<lb/>
Twenty pre-school children<lb/>
will be accepted for the summer<lb/>
program at a cost of $22.50<lb/>
for the entire session.<lb/>
The kindergarden will be held<lb/>
from 9 a.m. to noon each day in<lb/>
the kindergarden facility on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Music workshop planned<lb/>
Financial aid from three<lb/>
foundations will enable the<lb/>
School of Music to hold a<lb/>
workship focusing on new<lb/>
strategies and techniques for<lb/>
teaching music June 22-July 3.<lb/>
The Mary Reynolds Babcock<lb/>
Foundation of Winston-Salem,<lb/>
the Burlington Industries<lb/>
Foundation of Greensboro and<lb/>
the Presser Foundation of<lb/>
Philadelphia are providing a<lb/>
major portion of the funds for<lb/>
the workship, an outgrowth of<lb/>
the Manhattanville Music<lb/>
Curriculum Project (MMCP).<lb/>
Featured in the workship will<lb/>
be composer-pianist Dr Lionel<lb/>
Nowack of Bennington College,<lb/>
Vermont, and Miss Barbara<lb/>
Hurley of New York, a MMCP<lb/>
consultant. Both have earned<lb/>
national reputations for their<lb/>
work with the project.<lb/>
Baker assumes editorship<lb/>
"To Ira L. Bcker. may his<lb/>
torch be ever bright<lb/>
So said Dario Politella.<lb/>
retiring editor of 'The<lb/>
Collegiate Journalist in his<lb/>
farewell editorial as he passed<lb/>
on the torch of editorship. The<lb/>
magazine appeared a few days<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Baker will assume editorship<lb/>
of the magazine this fall. The<lb/>
Journalist is the quarterly<lb/>
magazine of Alpha Phi Gamma,<lb/>
national journalism fraternity.<lb/>
He had been national<lb/>
president of Alpha Phi Gamma.<lb/>
Carwash planned<lb/>
The Student Nurses<lb/>
Association (SNA) will sponsor<lb/>
a car wash 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday. The car wash will be<lb/>
located at Cecil's Texaco on<lb/>
14th St. A washing will cost<lb/>
SI.25 and vacuuming will cost<lb/>
$.25.<lb/>
Join the J$C Crowd<lb/>
Pizza Inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By Pass)<lb/>
DIM l i 1 KI OU I<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
telephone 57o otW<lb/>
things gO<lb/>
better<lb/>
Coke<lb/>
Coca Cola Bottling Company, Inc.<lb/>
Greenville, N.c.<lb/>
ROAST BEEF,<lb/>
PASTRAMI<lb/>
CORNED BEEF<lb/>
densed news briefs<lb/>
Banquet held<lb/>
Phi Bei a Lanbda closed it.<lb/>
l'M970 year with X<lb/>
held at the Candlewi k ?<lb/>
Saturday May 9.  ?n<lb/>
The guest speaker at the<lb/>
occasion was Dr. James Bassler<lb/>
of the Scho.1 of Bus<lb/>
Receiving awards at this annual<lb/>
event were Nancy Bittner and<lb/>
Connie Lambert for thej<lb/>
outstanding service to the dub<lb/>
The scholastic award went to<lb/>
Kelly King, and the most<lb/>
outstanding Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
senior award went to George<lb/>
Roberts.<lb/>
A special award called the<lb/>
Walter Allen Howard Memorial<lb/>
Accounting Award went to<lb/>
Edward L. Fox for his<lb/>
achievements in the Accounting<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
display in Union<lb/>
An exhibit of color<lb/>
photography is now on display<lb/>
in the Union Gallery. The<lb/>
exhibit is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Faculty Photography Club.<lb/>
A highlight of the show is a<lb/>
picture of the solar eclipse in<lb/>
totality as caught by Dr. Ray<lb/>
Jones of the School of Bus.ness.<lb/>
Other faculty members whose<lb/>
work is on display are Dr. R.E.<lb/>
Cramer, chairman of the<lb/>
Geography Department; Dr.<lb/>
Dan Stillwell. also of the<lb/>
Geography Department; and Dr.<lb/>
J. W. Thorton, of the School of<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
The show will be in the<lb/>
Union Gallery for the remainder<lb/>
of the week.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
The Department of Social<lb/>
Work has been accepted lor<lb/>
constituent membership in the<lb/>
Council on Social Work<lb/>
Education. <lb/>
John Ball was notified that<lb/>
acceptance was voted "because<lb/>
of the strong and autonomous<lb/>
soc.al work faculty as well as<lb/>
the program's commitment to a<lb/>
liberal base.<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
?A Thousand Clowns a<lb/>
United Artists DramaiJ<lb/>
starring Jason Robards<lb/>
Barbara Harris will be sh<lb/>
9 p.m. Saturday ? <lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
SILENT FILMS<lb/>
Two free silent films. <lb/>
the Sh.ek- starring Rud<lb/>
Valentino and ChartW<lb/>
-The Gold Rust, ha g<lb/>
postponed until Monday<lb/>
p.m in Wright Aud.tor.um.<lb/>
STREET DANCE<lb/>
The Union's annual<lb/>
Dance honoring tWr d<lb/>
will be held between, R?'<lb/>
Wright Friday. May 15 rrotn <lb/>
'?The W arm-<lb/>
semi-psychedeH.souS<lb/>
will be featured. The g<lb/>
played recently a. the Id-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0007"/><lb/>
? II<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Thursday, May 14. 1970. Founfaintfead, Page 7<lb/>
Beta Unbda closed it,<lb/>
at the (andlewick .Jo<lb/>
day May 9.<lb/>
e g'st speaker at the<lb/>
?n was Dr. Jamcs Bassler<lb/>
he School of Business.<lb/>
iving awards at this annual<lb/>
were Nancy Bittner and<lb/>
me Lambert for thejr<lb/>
anding service to the club<lb/>
ie scholastic award went to<lb/>
King, and the most<lb/>
anding Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
r award went to George<lb/>
;rts.<lb/>
special award called the<lb/>
?r Allen Howard Memorial<lb/>
unting Award went to<lb/>
ard L. Fox for his<lb/>
vements in the Accounting<lb/>
rtment<lb/>
be featured. IJ?<lb/>
ed recently a. the Id<lb/>
Playhouse productions require many services<lb/>
 ninw.nn Much of the lumber others and this cc<lb/>
By BEN STEWART<lb/>
If you've been wondering<lb/>
where that theatre-minded<lb/>
roommate of yours has been<lb/>
spending his time this year, you<lb/>
might check McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium. It could be that he<lb/>
has been rehearsing for the next<lb/>
production, building sets or<lb/>
making costumes for the ECU<lb/>
Playmakers.<lb/>
TYPICAL PRODUCTION<lb/>
The typical dramatic<lb/>
production at the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse requires the services<lb/>
of about 60 persons, not<lb/>
counting the set workers and<lb/>
technicians, according to<lb/>
Playhouse General Manager<lb/>
James Slaughter. He added that<lb/>
an estimated 4,800 man-hours<lb/>
of work go into each play and<lb/>
only a small percentage of the<lb/>
workers get any financial<lb/>
reward.<lb/>
Just what is necessary to<lb/>
stage a dramatic production?<lb/>
First, the plays must be selected<lb/>
for the year. This is done by a<lb/>
committee composed of the<lb/>
director, general manager and<lb/>
scenic designer.<lb/>
SELECTION<lb/>
Selection of a play is based<lb/>
argely on its educational and<lb/>
;ntertainment value. Slaughter<lb/>
aid. "We try to hit a happy<lb/>
nedium between the two<lb/>
After a play is selected,<lb/>
aditions are held, open to<lb/>
udents, faculty and staff. Then<lb/>
rehearsals get under way. held<lb/>
five nights a week for a three to<lb/>
four week period depending on<lb/>
the difficulty of the play. Each<lb/>
one lasts from three to four<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
COSTUMES<lb/>
While rehearsals are in<lb/>
progress, costumes are<lb/>
assembled by costume designer<lb/>
Mrs. Margaret Gilfillen and<lb/>
student assitants. Out-of-town<lb/>
trips arc sometimes necessary to<lb/>
secure the desired costume<lb/>
material.<lb/>
During the weeks preceding<lb/>
the opening of a play. Andrew<lb/>
Gilfillen is busy working on the<lb/>
sets and lighting for the<lb/>
production. Working with the<lb/>
set designer and planning the<lb/>
production is his main problem,<lb/>
G ilfillen said. He added that he<lb/>
spends from 60 to 80 hours a<lb/>
week working on each<lb/>
production. Much of the lumber<lb/>
used in building the sets is used<lb/>
more than once. Gilfillen said,<lb/>
and emphasized that he must<lb/>
stay within a budget for the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Replacements for lighting<lb/>
must be obtained from such<lb/>
places as Chicago and New<lb/>
York, although most material<lb/>
used in the sets can be obtained<lb/>
locally.<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. today. This is their<lb/>
last performance until<lb/>
Commencement.<lb/>
The Choir recently sang at<lb/>
the Music Educators National<lb/>
Convention in, Chicago. To<lb/>
receive an invitation a group<lb/>
must submit a taped<lb/>
performance. This is considered<lb/>
one of the highest honors a<lb/>
choir can have.<lb/>
MUSIC MAJORS<lb/>
Most of the group are music<lb/>
majors and upperclassmen. The<lb/>
group is open to the general<lb/>
college by audition only. The<lb/>
choir is under the direction of<lb/>
Dr. Charles Moore.<lb/>
Included in tonights<lb/>
performance will be the world<lb/>
premier of Dr. Gregory<lb/>
Kosteck's "Oration Jeremiae<lb/>
Prophetae' This piece has<lb/>
iens<lb/>
more aaq oent ruse<lb/>
coc sAMorss' num.<lb/>
COL. SAMDEH5 Httn-i P<lb/>
Kmtiif kif ft<lb/>
'tikfrkhf<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
on orders of $10<lb/>
or more<lb/>
East Fifth Strvrt Ext.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C<lb/>
Phonr 752-5184<lb/>
others and this cost of<lb/>
production must always be kept<lb/>
in mind, the general manager<lb/>
related. He cited "Macbeth" as<lb/>
an "elaborate production" while<lb/>
Dos Passos "USA" was much<lb/>
easier to stage.<lb/>
PLAYS WORTH EFFORT<lb/>
Concert Choir plans to<lb/>
perform in Recital Hall<lb/>
The Concert Choir will give variety of musical techniques as<lb/>
its spring concert in Recital Hall well as singing. There is some<lb/>
chanting, shouting, and<lb/>
whispering. Besides the regular<lb/>
choir Kosteck uses four french<lb/>
horns.<lb/>
ALSO ON PROGRAM<lb/>
Also on the program is E.<lb/>
Davies' "Six Songs from the<lb/>
Ark" which will be directed by<lb/>
Peggy Starkey, a senior in the<lb/>
School of Music. Other numbers<lb/>
include "Festival Te Deum" by<lb/>
B. Brittan. and Michel Legrand's<lb/>
"Umbrellas of CherbanV<lb/>
Bruce Frazier arranged the<lb/>
instrumental parts and will<lb/>
direct the performance of<lb/>
"Umbrellas<lb/>
Tonight's performance will<lb/>
include four french horns, a<lb/>
trumpet, a clarinet, a flute,<lb/>
drums, a saxaphone, and two<lb/>
pianists.<lb/>
The public is invited.<lb/>
Is a dramatic production<lb/>
worth all the time and effort<lb/>
involved? Slaughter believes that<lb/>
EXPENSE the ECU Playhouse productions<lb/>
are "definitely worth the time,<lb/>
expense and effort He said<lb/>
that most people in the theatre<lb/>
would not consider any other<lb/>
type of life.<lb/>
The percentage of students<lb/>
a 11 e nding a dramatic<lb/>
performance here is higher than<lb/>
on many other campuses,<lb/>
Slaughter Slaughter said. He noted that<lb/>
approximately 15 per cent of the<lb/>
Once the rehersals are under<lb/>
way. a member of the cast may<lb/>
drop out becuase of illness or<lb/>
the need to devote more time to<lb/>
his studies. When this happens,<lb/>
someone must be found to<lb/>
substitute for the person.<lb/>
"Fortunately, the leading<lb/>
character is usually not the one<lb/>
who drops out<lb/>
asserted.<lb/>
Some<lb/>
expensive<lb/>
shows are<lb/>
to produce<lb/>
more<lb/>
than<lb/>
students attend the<lb/>
show at the Playhouse.<lb/>
average<lb/>
CIRCUS<lb/>
coming<lb/>
This Thursday<lb/>
WOODSTOCK<lb/>
SOUNDTRACK<lb/>
S0UNDTRACK-<lb/>
Woodstock<lb/>
Cotillion SD<lb/>
3-500<lb/>
The music and stars of 'he dim bo.oK.ce<lb/>
?s "Woodstock" will ??i P'?? ?n<lb/>
.qual smash it 'he oealer level via this<lb/>
exceptional 3 record set. Featured. o?<lb/>
ours are Sly &amp; the Family one he<lb/>
Who Joe Cocker, Santana, Ten Years Atter.<lb/>
Sebastian, Baei, Hendrix and many more<lb/>
that will spiral this delux package r.ght<lb/>
up the chart<lb/>
Expected Thursday<lb/>
plus The Who live of Leeds9<lb/>
new Jackson 5 album<lb/>
?C4'OIl IN"<lb/>
1 discount records<lb/>
and tapes<lb/>
???xv<lb/>
I<lb/>
?K<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0008"/><lb/>
(t .???? I ??<lb/>
mPB4?A x WJkN) - f l4-iwff A??<lb/>
? ???- ?-?'<lb/>
Page 8, Founttinhead, Thursday, May 14, 1970<lb/>
k"ik<lb/>
By ALAN COREN<lb/>
Editor's note: This article was reprinted from the April issue of<lb/>
Moderator Magazine.<lb/>
Gently, an ivory disc of Californian moon rose over the dark<lb/>
knuckle of Bodega Head, striking soft phosphorescence from the<lb/>
still Pacific and picking out the slogans pasted the flanks of a<lb/>
ramshackle convertible parked beside the highway. HANDS OFF<lb/>
VIETNAM! they shrieked: BAN THE BOMB! LET MY PEOPLE<lb/>
GO!<lb/>
Behind the wheel sat tanned, cadaverous, liberal sophomore<lb/>
Wiley Folkenflik Jr champion of civil liberties, archenemy of<lb/>
HUAC and Hoover, militant angel of SANE and CORE, a man<lb/>
whose name turned whole sororities white overnight. Where Wiley<lb/>
walked, suburban shutters slammed and Young Americans for<lb/>
Freedom turned their badges to the wall in fear and trembling. And<lb/>
female students, terror and wrestling in their untested bosoms,<lb/>
watched, quaking deliciously, as his shadow passed.<lb/>
THE FACTS OF LIFE<lb/>
One such maiden sat beside him now, Dulalia Freeport, blonde<lb/>
Baptist cheerleader, slim of leg and lush of texture, pure, smooth<lb/>
and tempting as an unnibbled peach, who dreamed of some day<lb/>
raising a son to be the first Ail-American footballer to put a chapel<lb/>
into orbit around Uranus. As she sat now. shrinking, beside the<lb/>
awesome Folkenflik, her soul cried out at her own folly: she had<lb/>
eaten his Tastee Whamburger. she had sipped his Joo-C-Frute but<lb/>
at what cost? What final reckoning?<lb/>
In the heavy midnight silence, Folkenflik spoke suddenly.<lb/>
'They're building a nuclear reactor up there he said, pointing.<lb/>
"Don't you think that's a lousy thing for a government to do?"<lb/>
Dulalia gasped. She bit her tender lip.<lb/>
"Please, Wiley she muttered quickly. "Don't talk that way. I<lb/>
mean, Em not that kind of girl. I mean, I think you ought to know<lb/>
that. If we're going to date one another. I mean<lb/>
Folkenflik laughed, a dark, sophisticated, liberal laugh.<lb/>
"Why ever not? Hell, Dulalia. you're almost eighteen. We're<lb/>
adults, you and I. Nuclear power is a fact of life<lb/>
THING LEADS TO ANOTHER<lb/>
She looked desperately at the shining sea.<lb/>
"I know. Wiley, But once a boy and girl start talking about<lb/>
about peaceful uses of atomic energy, that kind of thing, well,<lb/>
pretty soon they'll be discussing discussing bombs or something.<lb/>
Or or integration. It's how these things start. I've heard from<lb/>
other girls. You don't find out until it's too late. I think I should tell<lb/>
you, my mother warned me about boys like you. I mean<lb/>
Wiley sighed a weary, experienced sigh.<lb/>
"Dulalia, I want you to understand I respect you as a person.<lb/>
Not just another girl to discuss Red China with. They're a dime a<lb/>
dozen, that kind of girl. I want a relationship. Ther's nothing sordid<lb/>
about discussion, Dulalia, Why, your own mother and father do it,<lb/>
I'm sure <lb/>
"Please, Wiley,you mustn't say thTngs like that<lb/>
"There's nothing to be afraid of. Discussion can be a very fine, a<lb/>
very wonderful experience. A person isn't mature until he or she has<lb/>
engaged in political intercourse. Trust me, Dulalia<lb/>
THE GIRL ALWAYS PAYS<lb/>
"It's this way, Wiley She murmured at last. "I've been brought<lb/>
up to believe that people oughtn't to talk about Vietnam or Negroes<lb/>
or Socialised Medicine or anything until after they're married. Until<lb/>
they know what they're doing She looked down at her hands. "It's<lb/>
always the girl that pays, Wiley. I mean, only last week Myra<lb/>
Duesenberg went out in four with that terrible Morris Fisch, the one<lb/>
who's always handing out leaflets and everything, and they're in the<lb/>
back seat of this sedan, and it's pretty dark, and suddenly this<lb/>
Morris Fisch turns to her and says: 'Myra, don't you figure we ought<lb/>
to negotiate with the Viet Cong?' And before she knew what she<lb/>
was doing, she'd replied. Well, right after that they pulled over to<lb/>
the side of the road, and they all started discussing. All four of<lb/>
them<lb/>
Dulalia fell silent among her private fears. Far off, a fire flared<lb/>
suddenly on the dark beach, silhouetting the tiny figures beside it.<lb/>
"Oh, Wiley she murmered, "Just look at that dreamy moon<lb/>
"It's too much he said, sighing professionally. "And just think<lb/>
that's the same moon that rises over the Da Nang Peninsula<lb/>
"Gosh, Wiley, I never thought of it that way. D'you suppose<lb/>
those awful Peking trained Marxist lickspittle VC terrorists hold<lb/>
hands under it, just like us?"<lb/>
"Depends on whether the war-orientated escalation-committed<lb/>
Pentagon lackeys happen to be bombing them at the time, I guess.<lb/>
Gee, Honey, don't you feel that the unjustified strafing of Haiphong<lb/>
ii<lb/>
is leading the US further and further into a position of<lb/>
confrontation that will make withdrawal ultimately inconceivable?'<lb/>
"Oh, Wiley, who knows? Maybe truce negotiations won't be<lb/>
possible until the Viet Cong are zapped to the point of accepting the<lb/>
impossibility of military victory<lb/>
"But surely, Dulalia, continued bombing of North Vietnamese<lb/>
non-combatants will only strengthen their determination not to<lb/>
yield? Meanwhile jeopardising our chance of permanentising the<lb/>
Sino-Soviet rupture, and welding the Communist bloc more<lb/>
dangerously together?"<lb/>
Dulalia felt, her cheeks bloom with a new, exciting warmth.<lb/>
"Never she cried. 'The split goes far beyond political<lb/>
considerations! It signifies the inevitable mutual alienation of<lb/>
Occidental and Oriental life-processes. Don't you see, Wiley, it's<lb/>
it's "<lb/>
"Yes?" he breathed, "Yes?"<lb/>
"It's a RACIAL QUESTION<lb/>
THE FIRST TIME<lb/>
As the soprano cry rang out against the velvet night, Wiley<lb/>
Folkenflik Jr turned to gaze upon the face of Dulalia Freeport.<lb/>
They stared into one another's eyes for a long, startled moment.<lb/>
And then the terrible silence broke on a single sob.<lb/>
"Please, Dulalia he breathed in his lowest register. "Please<lb/>
don't cry<lb/>
The sweet shoulders shook, and the Beatle faces on her sweater<lb/>
grimaced weirdly with the sudden ripplings of the nubility beneath.<lb/>
Words slipped between her sobs.<lb/>
"I I'm sorry I can't help it. I've never I've never done this<lb/>
before. You you do believe that, don't you Wiley? It was the first<lb/>
time<lb/>
"Easy, honey" he murmured. "The first time is always the<lb/>
worst Dulalia brushed a hand across her melting eyes.<lb/>
"How many times, Wiley? I mean, how how many girls have<lb/>
you discussed things with? Before me?"<lb/>
"I don't know. Dulalia. But that doesn't matter. They don't<lb/>
count. It was never like this before. Never as good. Was it was it<lb/>
good for you too?"<lb/>
She hesitated, afraid. She looked into his eyes. She nodded.<lb/>
"I'd like to go home now Wiley she said, very quietly.<lb/>
AND NOWJHE PARENTS<lb/>
As the dilapidated car drew up beside the impeccable anonymity<lb/>
of 146758 Chestnut Avenue, a light snapped on in an upper window.<lb/>
"Oh heavens Dulalia whispered.<lb/>
"Shall I come in with you?"<lb/>
"No The sweet chin dimpled bravely. "I shall face them<lb/>
alone<lb/>
Her parents were standing three paces inside the door,<lb/>
dressing-gowns over their nightclothes, trembling between rage and<lb/>
apprehension.<lb/>
"What kind of a time do you call this, Dulalia?" cried her father.<lb/>
"What did he do to you?" she shrieked. "What did he do to my<lb/>
baby?"<lb/>
Henry Clay Freeport blanched, adrift in a world not his.<lb/>
"Oh God he moaned to the empty air, "and me a Rotarian<lb/>
Broken, he crept upstairs.<lb/>
IT'S NEVER TOO LATE<lb/>
He was still awake, staring unblinkingly at the ceiling, when his<lb/>
wife slid into bed beside him an hour later.<lb/>
"It was that Folkenflik boy she said. She blew her nose<lb/>
erratically. "They talked about Vietnam. And the H-Bomb. And<lb/>
Rap Brown<lb/>
Freeport groaned.<lb/>
"Will he marry her?"<lb/>
He feSi her shrug.<lb/>
"Who knows?" she muttered. "Who knows with youth?"<lb/>
"Ach cried Freeport at the dark walls "There's so much<lb/>
goddamned youth about. Everywhere. Insidious. Threatening<lb/>
"Maybe we should have talked to her earlier. About the Far East<lb/>
and ICBMs and strategic proliferation, that kind of thing. Maybe<lb/>
we're to blame, Henry<lb/>
Curious stirrings moved through Freeport. Things that decorum<lb/>
and practicability and middle-age had long suppressed. He looked<lb/>
for a definition of his feelings towards Folkenflik, and found envy.<lb/>
It had been so long. His head turned on the pillow.<lb/>
"Muriel he murmured, in a low, strange voice, "how do you<lb/>
feel about Formosa?"<lb/>
She started, snatched a glance at him, giggled girlishly.<lb/>
"Oh, Henry" she simpered, " don't you think we're both a little<lb/>
old for that sort of thing?"<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
You've come a long way, baby <lb/>
You ve got your own cigarette ?0w ul<lb/>
Sound familiar? WellhiscommercrJ<lb/>
equality with men. Not until 1920 when!<lb/>
finally given voting privileges and along,<lb/>
This transformation of women occumlJ<lb/>
seeking changes too. They won't settleftr<lb/>
want more.<lb/>
In the tradition of the early 1900'U<lb/>
Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, thet<lb/>
Liberation Movement to combat femalek<lb/>
Present organizations that evolved kj<lb/>
Organization for Women), which hasbeenre<lb/>
eliminate discrimination; SCUM (Societvfor<lb/>
"biologically deficient and socially daw<lb/>
"enemy" and look forward to the Uli<lb/>
(Women's International Terrorist Conspirjcyl<lb/>
bras in protest against the 1968 Miss Amehol<lb/>
image of female beauty be abolished.<lb/>
E DOUBL<lb/>
The organizations deal with many<lb/>
particular "evil" the women are trying<lb/>
standard<lb/>
People consider the youth of today sexuaE<lb/>
still persecuted more than men for their pen<lb/>
In one community, a well-knowncollege?<lb/>
ridiculed her, while the comments directed<lb/>
had it in you Of course, this reaction isnoj<lb/>
high percentage of them.<lb/>
In a recent magazine article, Vivian Gomel<lb/>
concerning their views on sex.<lb/>
"The Feminists are right she said In<lb/>
determined by the roles they play, and lovti<lb/>
and positions, and often void of any recop<lb/>
iron-bound social laws, can one know what ill<lb/>
WHAT<lb/>
She continued to say that she was tootiri<lb/>
attitudes would be eliminated and there waif<lb/>
will be greeted with resentment from no one<lb/>
The idea of both sexes "doing what cornef<lb/>
accomplished than ridding the resentment.<lb/>
An eight-year-old girl came home once mil<lb/>
swimming with a 10-year-old neighborhoodboj<lb/>
bathing suit, yet her clothes were dry. Italian<lb/>
"Why did you go swimming without anyc<lb/>
"Jimmy does it all the time the girl encder<lb/>
"You are a young lady the mothersaidr<lb/>
rjTUDES NEB<lb/>
It appears the word "gentlemen" is only??<lb/>
more than just women voicing their opto<lb/>
realization that ALL are created equal-?J<lb/>
women she .Id also be considered wrong ?<lb/>
Not only do parents' and peers attitudes<lb/>
those of the double standard men. W"<lb/>
"Condemnatory behavior on the parto<lb/>
going as far sexually as they might wani<lb/>
many potential sex partners because or<lb/>
Isa word to the wise sufficient?<lb/>
Hope docs lie in the future for ? .<lb/>
continuously and people with it. An <lb/>
can happen when you've got your own w<lb/>
??'?! r??n I S. l<lb/>
: ?;<lb/>
!<lb/>
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lenient are NOW<lb/>
passage of mi<lb/>
n), which believ<lb/>
Ists, who consid<lb/>
family unit; ai<lb/>
liose members bi<lb/>
inding that the i<lb/>
?female relation;<lb/>
the still-existir<lb/>
bant. Her parent<lb/>
e like, "I didn't<lb/>
case but it prot<lb/>
ne of the libera<lb/>
;n and women<lb/>
In, full of ritualu<lb/>
ss How, under<lb/>
ind what is rolel<lb/>
the time when<lb/>
of the natural<lb/>
ithcr about the f<lb/>
? knew she had i<lb/>
"skinny dipped<lb/>
Bother screamed.<lb/>
Yhy can't I?"<lb/>
It proves that<lb/>
attitudes; it<lb/>
tiat is considere<lb/>
Jal women need<lb/>
Iropologist Ira L<lb/>
males keeps mar<lb/>
tible standard ma<lb/>
cs toward such s<lb/>
because the w<lb/>
a long way, ba<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0009"/><lb/>
nd<lb/>
Thursday, May 14, 1970, Fountainhead, Page 9<lb/>
ion<lb/>
7t to today,<lb/>
ne a long, long way.<lb/>
I struggle of women to gain<lb/>
m amended, were women<lb/>
fivileges.<lb/>
ago. Today's women are<lb/>
jy can call their own. They<lb/>
Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia<lb/>
; 60's started the Women's<lb/>
ement are NOW (National<lb/>
Jie passage of many laws to<lb/>
L), which believes men are<lb/>
ists, who consider men the<lb/>
family unit; and WITCH<lb/>
ose members burned their<lb/>
inding that the commercial<lb/>
lemale relationships. One<lb/>
the still-existing "double<lb/>
lay be true, but women are<lb/>
writ. Her parents and peers<lb/>
e like, "I didn't know you<lb/>
case but it probably is in a<lb/>
ne of the liberation groups<lb/>
:n and women now are is<lb/>
In, full of ritualized gestures<lb/>
s&amp;. How, under the present<lb/>
md what is role?"<lb/>
the time when the archaic<lb/>
of the natural self which<lb/>
refreshing and more easily<lb/>
ithcr about the fun she had<lb/>
knew she had not taken a<lb/>
"skinny dipped<lb/>
lother screamed,<lb/>
toy can't I?"<lb/>
I<lb/>
It proves that it will take<lb/>
attitudes; it involves the<lb/>
hat is considered wrong for<lb/>
jal women need revising, but<lb/>
ropologist Ira L. Reiss said,<lb/>
lales keeps many girls from<lb/>
ible standard male eliminates<lb/>
es toward such sex partners<lb/>
because the world changes<lb/>
a long way, baby, and a lot<lb/>
Editor's note: The information in the following articles was<lb/>
obtained from the Community Sex Information and Education<lb/>
Service<lb/>
This method may be used by<lb/>
Catholics. The idea of the rhythm method is to avoid intercourse<lb/>
during the days each month when a woman can become pregnant.<lb/>
In most women these are the three or four days before and after<lb/>
ovulation, which usually is about 14 days before the next menstrual<lb/>
period begins. To use the rhythm method a woman should (1) keep a<lb/>
written record of her menstrual cycle for 12 consecutive months:<lb/>
count the first day of menstruation as day I of the cycle. At the end<lb/>
of 12 months, she can figure out how many days were in her shortest<lb/>
and how many in her longest cycle. (2) she subtracts 18 from the<lb/>
total number of days in her shortest cycle. This determines the first<lb/>
fertile, or unsafe, day of the cycle. (3) she then subtracts il from the<lb/>
total number of days in her longest cycle. This determines the last<lb/>
fertile day of the cycle, or the day on which her unsafe period ends.<lb/>
The rhythm birth control method is far from 100 per cent<lb/>
reliable.<lb/>
A woman takes a pill each day,<lb/>
usually for 20 or 21 days each month, to prevent ovulation. This is<lb/>
the most reliable and most popular birth control method used by<lb/>
American women today.<lb/>
Birth Control pills have now been fully tested and are being used<lb/>
daily by millions of women. For young women birth control pills<lb/>
are probably about as safe as aspirin, unless the woman has personal<lb/>
or family evidence of blood clotting or female cancer problems.<lb/>
Pills also provide for a spontaneous and natural sexual-love life<lb/>
with a most effortless method of birth control. They cost less than<lb/>
$2 per month, but they require a doctor's prescription.<lb/>
. DIAPHRAl.M ND IE L OR Up to about four<lb/>
hours before intercourse, the woman inserts into her vagina a<lb/>
personally fitted two to three-inch diameter rubber cap or<lb/>
diaphragm which fits over the opening to the womb to prevent<lb/>
sperms from entering.<lb/>
The diaphragm has a sperm killing jelly or cream around it. The<lb/>
diaphragm is removed the next day after a douche.<lb/>
This birth control method is very safe and reliable, and it is<lb/>
usually best for women who cannot take birth control pills.<lb/>
4. 1NTRAUTERINE DEVICES flUD)A tiny spring or coil is<lb/>
inserted by a doctor into the womb (uterus) and is left in for<lb/>
months or years. Doctors do not completely understand why this<lb/>
method prevents pregnancy.<lb/>
Intrauterine devices cannot ordinarily be used by women who<lb/>
have not had at least one child, since their unstreched wombs often<lb/>
push out the devices. These devices have from 1 per cent to 5 per<lb/>
cent failure rates depending on the kind used.<lb/>
CONDOM "RUBBER This prophylactic fits over the man s<lb/>
organ to catch his discharge. This birth control method often fails<lb/>
because the condom breaks, due to high pressure on its tip. This<lb/>
pressure and the danger of breaking can be reduced by twisting the<lb/>
tip of the condom before putting it on.<lb/>
Condoms also fail due to sperm leakage around the top<lb/>
Lubricated skins are the best condoms. Condoms provide the best<lb/>
protection from venereal disease.<lb/>
Generally, they are not very reliable.<lb/>
6 SPFRMKIDAl JELLII 0AMS'<lb/>
SUPPOSITORIES These are inserted into the vagina by the woman<lb/>
before intercourse. This method of birth control has variable<lb/>
reliability, depending on the product, the amount used, when and<lb/>
how used and whether it is reused before each intercourse.<lb/>
Be sure the word ' spermicide" is on the label before using the<lb/>
product for birth control.<lb/>
With this method the male organ is<lb/>
K'Sy HHttSLTL and ,3, spenns can swim into .he<lb/>
vagina from outside and thus cause PX; s of<lb/>
, ? This unreliable method of birth contra<lb/>
.he woman washing her 2"t?tS? uf<lb/>
ss? wsrsrsr wtt ?and?<lb/>
immedrately after intercourse smce V? "<lb/>
sperms are killed. jnvoves , pie.<lb/>
painless operation which is inexpensive and can be done m a<lb/>
doctor's office.<lb/>
The man's vas deferens tube is cut (or blocked) to prevent<lb/>
sperms from being added to his fluid before climax.<lb/>
Usually this process in no way affects a man's normal sexual<lb/>
activities he still has a normal orgasm which ejaculates seminal<lb/>
fluid, but the fluid is free of sperms.<lb/>
Sensible information<lb/>
regarding abortion<lb/>
Abortion is removing a fertilized egg from a woman before it can<lb/>
live on its own; i.e before the sixth month of pregnancy. It is one<lb/>
of the most commonly used methods of birth control in the world<lb/>
today, especially in Europe and Asia.<lb/>
In the United States, there are more than one million abortions<lb/>
performed each year. About one out of every four pregnant women<lb/>
has an illegal abortion.<lb/>
An abortion usually cannot be performed until a woman is five<lb/>
weeks pregnant, because until then the fertilized egg is too small to<lb/>
be seen. An abortion is best done between the fifth and the ninth<lb/>
week of pregnancy, and cannot be done after the 12th week.<lb/>
In the hands of an experienced doctor, an early abortion is<lb/>
usually very simple and safe - from five to ten times safer for the<lb/>
woman than giving birth to a baby or having her tonsils removed.<lb/>
10,000 WOMEN KILLED EACH YEAR<lb/>
After a pregnancy has been confirmed, there are absolutely no<lb/>
pills, drugs or anything a woman can take or do to herself which will<lb/>
cause her to abort safely. The myth that pills or shots might cause<lb/>
an abortion has been spread by a few unethical doctors who charge<lb/>
high prices for such drugs and by women who "thought sure" they<lb/>
were pregnant when in fact they were not.<lb/>
Abortionists who are not doctors are killing about 10,000 women<lb/>
in the United States each year, because they usually do not have the<lb/>
drugs equipment or experience to prevent pain, bleeding and<lb/>
infection. Such non-doctor abortionists are often used by people<lb/>
with little or no income and by those for whom the worry of an<lb/>
unwanted pregnancy, as well as the economic pressure, are enough<lb/>
to persuade them to run the risk of such abortions.<lb/>
Non-doctor abortionists usually use the "packing method The<lb/>
womb is packed with a rubber tube or cloth to force the womb to<lb/>
expel its contents.<lb/>
THE "D AND C METHOD"<lb/>
Anyone receiving such an ill-advised abortion should consult a<lb/>
physician either before or after the operation for an examination<lb/>
and advice concerning the necessary antibiotics and other<lb/>
medication. <lb/>
Doctors who perform abortions in the United States usually use<lb/>
the "D and C method The natural opening to the womb is first<lb/>
Dilated and then the fertilized egg is gently pulled or Curetted out.<lb/>
Some doctors use the newer, usually painless, and much safer<lb/>
vacuum-suction method of abortion, in which the contents of the<lb/>
womb are emptied in two or three minutes with a tube by a<lb/>
carefully controlled vacuum-suction. It is probable that there has<lb/>
never been a death caused by this vacuum method of abortion in<lb/>
millions of uses. M dications are given to the woman to prevent<lb/>
pain, infection and bleeding.<lb/>
ABORTIONS DO NOT PREVENT CHILDREN<lb/>
Due 'o the present law, illegal abortions done by doctors in the<lb/>
United States are almost never done in hospitals. They are usually<lb/>
done in the doctor's office and are finished in about an hour, after<lb/>
which the woman is able to walk out and go home to have a normal<lb/>
menstrual period for the next few days. Such abortions do not<lb/>
prevent the woman from having more children at least no more<lb/>
than having a baby does.<lb/>
Women seldom have serious psycno.ogical side eitects<lb/>
afterwards, unless they are unsure beforehand that it is the best<lb/>
thing to do in the circumstances.<lb/>
ABORTIONS ARE EXPENSIVE<lb/>
Doctors who perform abortions charge from $300 to $1,500. The<lb/>
average price is between $400 and $500. Even legal abortions cost<lb/>
an average of $500 to $800 each, since, in addition to paying the<lb/>
doctor, it is usually necessary to pay his consultants or assistants, a<lb/>
psychiatrist, the hospital, the anesthesioligist. and to buy drugs and<lb/>
follow-up care. . . , , ,<lb/>
In the United States there are two organizations which help<lb/>
women find reasonably priced medical abortions here and abroad.<lb/>
One of these is the Society for Humane Abortions; the other is The<lb/>
Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion, consisting ot JU to w<lb/>
ministers and rabbis in 11 large cities.<lb/>
-ft<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0010"/><lb/>
ft(k A, M?i ???-dt- .?? ??? ?<lb/>
Pa<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
'?'<lb/>
V<lb/>
a<lb/>
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wti<lb/>
in -<lb/>
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eat<lb/>
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V<lb/>
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'Exams for the examined' give relief from old<lb/>
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Put or passes not inf<lb/>
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The fottowMf exa ttfotthe<lb/>
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The M - Fai ? -x<lb/>
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Th, . Dixot exam You<lb/>
inSwe r questions to the next<lb/>
 exams<lb/>
yv, v Kpx exam The<lb/>
, ittk biased but<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
Thi- .U-k.i O'ssk exam<lb/>
You take l m absentia<lb/>
Geord Wailaa ixam<lb/>
Oi a<lb/>
questions<lb/>
same thing<lb/>
The H Rap Brown exam<lb/>
The exam keeps being<lb/>
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still waiting<lb/>
classrooms still watting<lb/>
The Ton) Curtis exam The<lb/>
professof gets caught cheating<lb/>
Y nte'in elpjS<lb/>
The Abbv HoSr<lb/>
exam and vou l?<lb/>
WKanfbgd <lb/>
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The<lb/>
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You're mterrupted every ten The b.rth c1 I<lb/>
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The Tasv Riders' exam will be rxjpopqu,<lb/>
The draft exam h<lb/>
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 u have to<lb/>
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PEACEFL<lb/>
to protest<lb/>
DUST<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0011"/><lb/>
Thursday. May 14. 1970. Fountainhead, Page 11<lb/>
The AWy Hoffm,<lb/>
exam. and you JJ1<lb/>
AmerKannagdUnn<lb/>
Tfh? P?t ofn? e,<lb/>
professor refuses tofcjl<lb/>
Tht birth conuoli<lb/>
lVhe exam and ho<lb/>
"?benopopqunm<lb/>
The draft exam Yoj,<lb/>
cut class that dav<lb/>
SONY<lb/>
ou never neard it so gooc.<lb/>
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E DECKS,<lb/>
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Woolman and Roulston sparkle in lion in Winter'<lb/>
<lb/>
?????<lb/>
 if (I<lb/>
- Jtm<lb/>
The "young lions" squabble over succession to the throne,<lb/>
ichard the Lion-Hearted (Lindsay Bowen), center,<lb/>
reatens the doltish John (Mark Ramsey), left, while<lb/>
eoffrey (Gregory Smith), right, intervenes.<lb/>
R<lb/>
first of peace vigils held<lb/>
The Greenville Citizens<lb/>
?United for Peace held the first<lb/>
?of a series of weekly silent peace<lb/>
?vigils at the post office<lb/>
?yesterday afternoon.<lb/>
About 22 people gathered at<lb/>
Ithe post office for the vigil,<lb/>
?vhich was marked by<lb/>
?non-violence.<lb/>
Mrs. Jerry Paul, group<lb/>
?Spokesman, stated that the<lb/>
?purposes of the group arc to<lb/>
bppeal to all the citizens of<lb/>
Greenville to become actively<lb/>
involved in the work of peace,<lb/>
and to dramatize the awesome<lb/>
cost in lives and human misery<lb/>
of the Vietnam war.<lb/>
"Forty-two thousand of our<lb/>
best young men have perished<lb/>
and a whole country ravaged by<lb/>
a warring army Mrs. Paul said.<lb/>
Another purpose is to<lb/>
emphasize the need for<lb/>
non-violent and peaceful<lb/>
(continued on page 14)<lb/>
4<lb/>
rno<lb/>
<lb/>
t'A<lb/>
PEACEFUL PROTESTORS stand vigil at the Post Office<lb/>
to protest the escalation of the Vietnam war.<lb/>
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DUSTIN HOFFMAN IN 'MIDNIGHT COWBOY<lb/>
Claude Wollman and Miss<lb/>
Rosalind Roulston. as Henry<lb/>
and Eleanor, sparkle in the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse production of James<lb/>
Goldman's "The Lion in Winter<lb/>
an explosive comedy about the<lb/>
Christmas-time intrigues of the<lb/>
feudal royal family of King<lb/>
Henry II of England.<lb/>
Guest Director Robert Chase<lb/>
does an excellent job of guiding<lb/>
what he calls a "cooperative<lb/>
experiment in theatre<lb/>
encouraging the experienced<lb/>
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The Yuletide setting of holly<lb/>
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the celebrants, the king, and<lb/>
queen of England, their three<lb/>
sons, and the king of France and<lb/>
his sister- Henry's mistress and<lb/>
the promised bride of Henry's<lb/>
heir.<lb/>
The seven struggle for power,<lb/>
dominion and land, each seeking<lb/>
to outwit the others and,<lb/>
through alliance and intrigue, to<lb/>
establish one of Henry's sons as<lb/>
heir apparent to the kingdom of<lb/>
England and its wealthy French<lb/>
possessions.<lb/>
PROMISES AND PROVINCES<lb/>
Promises and provinces are<lb/>
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Eleanor of Aquitane, duel to<lb/>
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(Mark Ramsey) and Richard the<lb/>
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will not have it divided by a<lb/>
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WOOLMAN A VERTERAN<lb/>
A veteran of many amateur<lb/>
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and the title role in tb?<lb/>
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"Macbeth Wollman commands<lb/>
the stage, filling it with the<lb/>
Lion's roar and power.<lb/>
(continued on page 14)<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039476_0012"/><lb/>
v? "<lb/>
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2. Fountamhcad. Thmda ? May i4- 0 ?<lb/>
Anyone desinng to be a sportswnter for Fountainhead next<lb/>
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Bucs tune up with 3-1 win<lb/>
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rhe Camels scored first,<lb/>
reaching startei Tim Ba less foi<lb/>
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Qualified previous Employees would have opportunity<lb/>
for Management.<lb/>
All who would be interested fill in the next few lines<lb/>
and mail promptly in order to receive first<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
School address<lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Home address <lb/>
Phone <lb/>
Date available for interview<lb/>
Date you could begin<lb/>
Area you prefer to work . .<lb/>
Mr. James R. Kirkman, Jr.<lb/>
District Manager<lb/>
817 American Building<lb/>
201 S. Tryon St.<lb/>
Charlotte, N. C. 28202<lb/>
Greenville's Only Brida! Shop<lb/>
ride<lb/>
vsiiiy ??<lb/>
Buc rowers<lb/>
end season<lb/>
By RICK LOGAN<lb/>
1 he lasi arolina crew<lb/>
finished 15th ol 36 entrants in<lb/>
the Dad Vail Regatta held in<lb/>
Philadelphia lasi weekend<lb/>
r(1 be eligible to entei the<lb/>
finals.  crew must place thud<lb/>
oi bettci in the preliminaries.<lb/>
The Pirates finished fourth in<lb/>
i ho ii heat, missing the<lb/>
qualifying time b one second,<lb/>
rhe winner in the varsity race<lb/>
was Si Joseph's, followed by<lb/>
Georgetown, rrinity,<lb/>
Massachusetts. Worchestei<lb/>
Poly technical Institute and<lb/>
Jacksonville.<lb/>
FOUR NEW ROWERS<lb/>
With lour new men rowing in<lb/>
the boat, coach Terry Chalk was<lb/>
pleased with the Bucs' effort.<lb/>
They were competing against<lb/>
the best crews in the association<lb/>
and those other crews would<lb/>
have a freshmen boat for men<lb/>
with no collegiate experience<lb/>
said the coach.<lb/>
The coach also admitted that<lb/>
the crew did not have an<lb/>
outstanding season. However,<lb/>
considering the numerous<lb/>
obstacles it had to face, the<lb/>
performances were better than<lb/>
expected.<lb/>
An initial lack of equipment<lb/>
and facilities at the beginning of<lb/>
the year caused much hardship<lb/>
and loss of valuable time in<lb/>
training for the year. The<lb/>
general lack of experience foi<lb/>
PRIOR TO the Dad Vail Regatta, the varsity crew could<lb/>
be seen practicing daily.<lb/>
the oarsmen was another barnei<lb/>
the crew had to surmount.<lb/>
Prospects for a good crew<lb/>
next year are very good. Only<lb/>
coxswain Steve Mabel will be<lb/>
lost through graduation. Bill<lb/>
Lewis. Dick Fuller. Bob Fuller<lb/>
Gary Campbell. Bruce Garmon.<lb/>
Al Hearn. Bill Powell and Hank<lb/>
Milligan will return to form the<lb/>
nucleus of next year's crew.<lb/>
NEW BOATHOUSE EXPECTED<lb/>
In addition, a new boathouse<lb/>
is expected to be built tins<lb/>
summer and a new four-man<lb/>
shell has been ordered for next<lb/>
year to supplement the crew's<lb/>
three eight-oared shells.<lb/>
Chalk hopes to have freshman<lb/>
and junior varsity crews next<lb/>
year in addition to the varsity<lb/>
and he is in the process of a<lb/>
strong recruiting program,<lb/>
hoping to attract students with<lb/>
high school rowing experience.<lb/>
Football club<lb/>
officers chosen<lb/>
Don Stewart, state-wide<lb/>
sponsor of the event, spoke to<lb/>
candidates for Fast Carolina's<lb/>
football club and explained the<lb/>
program at a meeting held<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
To coordinate campus-wide<lb/>
participai ion in the club. Mike<lb/>
Lynch was elected president of<lb/>
the club and Donald Trausneck.<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
In order to play, a person<lb/>
must be willing to contribute to<lb/>
the team financially as well as<lb/>
supply his own equipment.<lb/>
Insurance will probably be<lb/>
handled by the Pilot Life<lb/>
Insurance agent in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
who has promised to offer the<lb/>
club a special group rate.<lb/>
The club will next meet<lb/>
Monday at 7 p.m. in theCU.<lb/>
1<lb/>
COLLEGE MEN<lb/>
Earn your way through college on Vita Crafts College Income plan. Gam<lb/>
valuable business experience, above average earnings (up to $240 a week)<lb/>
and company prizes. Positions open in and around Raleigh, High Point,<lb/>
Greensboro, Charlotte, Burlington, Winston Salem, Albermarle and Concord.<lb/>
For appointment for interview, write Summer Employment, Box 1431,<lb/>
Salsbury, North Carolina 28144. Include best time for interview, home<lb/>
address and phone.<lb/>
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
y eautif ul<lb/>
230 GREENVILLE BLVD , SUITE 2<lb/>
DIAL 756 1744<lb/>
GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA 27834<lb/>
Piayclothes, and Pants, and Pretty Party Somethings for lirides and After-Vives and Mings.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0013"/><lb/>
Thuisday. May 14. 1970. Fountamhead. Page 13<lb/>
irsity crew could<lb/>
dinate campus-wide<lb/>
n in the club. Mike<lb/>
elected president of<lb/>
J Donald Trausneck.<lb/>
to play, a person<lb/>
ling to contribute to<lb/>
inancially as well as<lb/>
iwn equipment.<lb/>
! will probably be<lb/>
b the Pilot Life<lb/>
igent in Chapel Hill,<lb/>
romised to offer the<lb/>
al group rate,<lb/>
ib will next meet<lb/>
7 p.m. in the CU.<lb/>
?:?:?:?:<lb/>
THE YEAR 1969 saw the last use of the ancient single wing at East Carolina.<lb/>
 Pv From fhe sidelh.e:<lb/>
m I -<lb/>
?.?-?'<lb/>
I<lb/>
iW<lb/>
The year in review<lb/>
?:?:?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?55<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Although the year 1969-70 presented East<lb/>
Carolina with only two conference championships,<lb/>
it was perhaps one of the most exciting years in<lb/>
the athletic history of our school.<lb/>
The big stories were the transition from the<lb/>
single wing to a new pro-type offense and the<lb/>
departure from the coaching ranks of one of the<lb/>
most successful coaches in college football.<lb/>
The Pirate swimming team once again proved its<lb/>
domination over other schools in the Southern<lb/>
Conference and the baseball team swept to its<lb/>
36th straight winning season.<lb/>
One of the top high school footballers ever to<lb/>
play the game turned down eiglit other nationally<lb/>
prominent schools to attend East Carolina on a<lb/>
grant-in-aid and still more prospects flock to this<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Two new varsity sports were added to our<lb/>
ever-expanding intercollegiate program and a third.<lb/>
still played on a club level, achieved strong<lb/>
recognition East Carolina's highly regarded<lb/>
karate club.<lb/>
BUCS HAVE WON 90, LOST 68<lb/>
East Carolina's varsity teams to date have<lb/>
ammassed a record of 90 wins and only 68 losses<lb/>
a winning percentage of .570 and, in addition<lb/>
to the inference titles in swimming and baseball,<lb/>
have captured three second-place finishes, three<lb/>
thuds, one fifth and one sixth.<lb/>
Let's take a look at the year season by season:<lb/>
Unknown at the time to most football fans,<lb/>
when East Carolina began the 1969 season it was to<lb/>
be the last year of the ancient single wing at our<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The Bucs started off with a disappointing loss at<lb/>
Last Tennessee in which they failed to score and<lb/>
lost a 7-0 heart-breaker in the final period.<lb/>
The next three games were pretty much the<lb/>
same as East Carolina lacked the offensive punch it<lb/>
needed to hold off Louisiana Tech (with Terry<lb/>
Bradshaw). The Citadel or Richmond.<lb/>
Finally, the Bucs broke the victory ice, spoiling<lb/>
Southern Illinois' homecoming with a 17-3<lb/>
triumph. They extended their winning streak to<lb/>
two the next weekend as they edged Lurman.<lb/>
24-21, in the mud and rain.<lb/>
DAVIDSON BRINGS HEARTBREAK<lb/>
Then came the game which, I am sure, will be<lb/>
remembered for years to come for the heartbreak<lb/>
it left among Pirate fans.<lb/>
Mighty Davidson, Southern Conference leader,<lb/>
was in for homecoming and it meant a breakeven<lb/>
in the conference if the Bucs could pull an upset.<lb/>
And it looked quite possible too. Late in the<lb/>
second quarter the Bucs were surprisingly and.<lb/>
even to the staunches! fans, unbelievably ahead.<lb/>
27-0!<lb/>
The upset was not to be. Gordon Slade rallied<lb/>
the Wildcats to a 42-27 triumph ending the<lb/>
winning streak. For all intents and purposes, the<lb/>
Marshall and Southern Mississippi games were lost<lb/>
that same bleak afternoon.<lb/>
Shortly after the season ended, coach Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich announced his resignation so that Ik<lb/>
could devote his full time to his duties as Athletic<lb/>
Director. i<lb/>
Mike McGee answered the call to service and<lb/>
quickly vacated his assistant coaching position a<lb/>
Minnesota. In only a few short months lie naa<lb/>
organized ;? capable supporting staff and signed<lb/>
By DONALD TRAUSNECK :<lb/>
Ail-American Carlester Crumplcr from Fike High<lb/>
in Wilson, N. C.<lb/>
About the same time the varsity team was<lb/>
completing its 2-7 campaign, the freshmen, under<lb/>
Bill Cain, were knocking heads around for a 4-1<lb/>
record.<lb/>
John Lovstedt's soccer team was making its<lb/>
presence known, although the booters wound up<lb/>
with a sub-par 34-1 mark. Bill Carson's<lb/>
cross-country squad, suffering from the loss,<lb/>
through injuries, of its top seven runners, had to<lb/>
settle for a 3-5 finish.<lb/>
The winter proved a different story, however, as<lb/>
more Pirate squads proved themselves winners.<lb/>
MERMEN CAPTURE FIFTH STRAIGHT<lb/>
For the fifth straight year, the swimming squad<lb/>
captured the conference championship.<lb/>
Sophomore freestyler Jim Griffin became the first<lb/>
Pirate ever to qualify for the nationals as he<lb/>
rewrote the Pirate record book.<lb/>
The basketball team didn't fair too badly,<lb/>
either, although the season ended too abruptly<lb/>
with the loss to Richmond in the first round of the<lb/>
playoffs. The cagers had completed the regular<lb/>
season in second place.<lb/>
John Wclborn's grapplers finished second only<lb/>
to William and Mary in the conference after<lb/>
beating the Indians in the regular season. Their<lb/>
final mark for the year was a very respectable<lb/>
9-1-1.<lb/>
In the short time it took to roll up the hoops<lb/>
and roll out the infield, the Bucs were stirring up<lb/>
victories once again.<lb/>
Led by Ron Hastings, who has been among the<lb/>
,op three pitchers in the nation all year long the<lb/>
Pirate nine has logged 19 victories against only 11<lb/>
defeats going into yesterday's game at Duke. I he<lb/>
Bucs still have the regionals ahead, at Gastoma, N.<lb/>
C May 28-30.<lb/>
The golf squad capped a fine 11-3 campaign<lb/>
finishing only six strokes behind Furman m the<lb/>
Southern Conference tourney.<lb/>
Bill Dickens' .letters finished with a<lb/>
disappointing record of 5-10 but were able to pu<lb/>
up a good fight all year as evidenced by the fact<lb/>
that they won 67 sets, the same number that they<lb/>
had lost.<lb/>
TRACKMEN THIRD IN CONFERENCE<lb/>
The outdoor track squad, with a little more<lb/>
experience, finished with a dual meet record of 3<lb/>
and once again placed third in the conference,<lb/>
losing second by a point, as the indoor squad had-<lb/>
The two newest members oi the va.s.ty<lb/>
contingent were the crew and lacrosse teams.<lb/>
' The crew, coached by Terry Chalk, had a fairly<lb/>
successful (8-5) year but failed to quahfy for the<lb/>
finals in the Dad Vail regatta last weekend<lb/>
For their first year in varsity competition John<lb/>
Lovstedt's stickmen finished with a fine 44<lb/>
record A disappointing sudden-death overtime<lb/>
t William and Mary spoiled what would<lb/>
otherwise have been a very good yea.<lb/>
A review of any sports season would not be<lb/>
COIl ,c unless there is some mention ot what the<lb/>
of 1969-70, onlv the wrestling squad will really<lb/>
fie I on.he loss of key graduates so the year of<lb/>
70 71 shouldi offer the same brand of excitement,<lb/>
only more ot it.<lb/>
PIRATES CAPTURED<lb/>
their fifth straight<lb/>
conference swimming<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
MIKE McGEE replaced<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich as<lb/>
football coach after<lb/>
disastrous 1969 campaign.<lb/>
LED BY sophomore Jim<lb/>
Fairley (32), Bucs<lb/>
outrebounded tall<lb/>
Jacksonville.<lb/>
5NCJ: AGAIN, Earl Smith led the Bucs to a winning<lb/>
campaign as he also posted his 300th career w,n as a<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0014"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
Set and niiisic for play show creative abilities<lb/>
oei dim inuaii? mi pi?7  ,????<lb/>
(continued from paqe 11)<lb/>
Miss Rosalind Roulston is<lb/>
superb as the seething. sarcastic-<lb/>
Eleanor, matching Henry's<lb/>
thunder and wit with salty barbs<lb/>
and innuendos. As the captive<lb/>
queen, she trys to thwart Henry's<lb/>
will by installing Richard as<lb/>
Henry's heir in place of John<lb/>
and upsetting Henry's plans to<lb/>
marry Alais (Nancy New).<lb/>
The three quarrelsome,<lb/>
perverted sons- John. Richard<lb/>
and Geoffrey (Gregory Smith)-<lb/>
compete for the royal legacy<lb/>
the kingship, the title to the<lb/>
wealthv province of Aquitane.<lb/>
and the right to marr the<lb/>
French princess Alais.<lb/>
The sons form alliances with<lb/>
each other, their parents, and<lb/>
young King Phillip ' Fiance<lb/>
(Ben Cherry) in an effort to<lb/>
obtain the crown.<lb/>
FICTICIOUS CHARACTERS<lb/>
"The people in this play,<lb/>
their character and passions,<lb/>
while consistant with the facts<lb/>
we have, are fictions according<lb/>
to the author James Goldman.<lb/>
And the characters are powerful<lb/>
fictions indeed.<lb/>
1 mds.iv Bowen is outstanding<lb/>
as the la tenth-homosexual<lb/>
Richard, the prince of slaughter<lb/>
who inherited his father's brawn<lb/>
but lacked his father's brains.<lb/>
Mark Ramsey gives an excellent<lb/>
performance as the pimply<lb/>
John, "the family nothing<lb/>
chosen by his father to rule, but<lb/>
lacking the strength and<lb/>
intelligence to manage a<lb/>
kingdom- or even his vital<lb/>
functions.<lb/>
Gregory Smith is coldly<lb/>
calculating as the treacherous<lb/>
Geoffrey, the middle son.<lb/>
unloved by cither parent,<lb/>
seeking to rule in order to prove<lb/>
his manhood. Ben Cherry, as the<lb/>
youthful, petulent Phillip, is sly<lb/>
and scheming, aligning his<lb/>
military might to best<lb/>
advantage, eagerly waiting to<lb/>
gather the spoils from the royal<lb/>
in-fighting.<lb/>
THE ONLY PAWN<lb/>
Nancy New plays Phillip's<lb/>
the action, as an<lb/>
n'in<lb/>
lnSenue, an<lb/>
object of ba.tei who l?Ved<lb/>
Henry despite his betrayals. Her<lb/>
comment characterizes the<lb/>
action: "We have no Ronians<lb/>
(here), and we have no<lb/>
Christians- but the rest of the<lb/>
arena we have<lb/>
The set- the interior rooms of<lb/>
Henry's winter retreat at<lb/>
Chinon, France is beautifully<lb/>
designed by John Sneden.<lb/>
Margaret Gilfillan's elegant<lb/>
costumes create an atmosphere<lb/>
of medieval pagentry.<lb/>
Incidental music, performed<lb/>
live by the Collegium Musicum<lb/>
at the beginning of each act. and<lb/>
tapes of 12th-century English<lb/>
and Italian pieces complement<lb/>
the production.<lb/>
"The Lion in Winter'<lb/>
continues nightly through May<lb/>
16 at 8:15 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium. Tickets are onsale<lb/>
the theatre box office.<lb/>
Tickets are free to students. Si<lb/>
to faculty, and S2 to the public.<lb/>
No arbitrary<lb/>
classifications<lb/>
RICHMOND Va. (AP) The<lb/>
4th U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
Appeals re-emphasized its<lb/>
position today that draft boards<lb/>
may not arbitrarily deny the<lb/>
classification of conscientious<lb/>
objector without giving its<lb/>
reasons for doing so.<lb/>
The court reversed the<lb/>
conviction in the LS. Court of<lb/>
the Western District of North<lb/>
Carolina o( Charley Steele<lb/>
Simpson Jr and Bobby Gene<lb/>
Purdue of failing to accept<lb/>
induction into the armed forces.<lb/>
Judge Herbert Boreman said<lb/>
in a concurring opinion that a<lb/>
local board must articulate its<lb/>
reasons" for denying the<lb/>
conscientious objector<lb/>
classification to a man who has<lb/>
presented a prima facie case<lb/>
being entitled<lb/>
classification.<lb/>
to<lb/>
such a<lb/>
ocia<lb/>
By DON LUBi<lb/>
ienation is lea<lb/>
in I<lb/>
jfl we accept thi<lb/>
then ncrc lj<lb/>
thing can and w<lb/>
Animate it. <lb/>
tl0n is eliminati<lb/>
jenating future<lb/>
ie gone<lb/>
you find yours<lb/>
e0 bored,<lb/>
are. unable<lb/>
ions. etc. the<lb/>
ablv alienated,<lb/>
you need mm<lb/>
ii i harmful to<lb/>
if ou dance apa<lb/>
no i. you an<lb/>
Led. If you ei<lb/>
m. violent souni<lb/>
?actions of any<lb/>
pagtiate to deade<lb/>
thmyoi. are probab<lb/>
GAME CONSi<lb/>
f you enjoy<lb/>
stadia ilil an<lb/>
Mrvoed to a gre<lb/>
liei to be a spei<lb/>
pipant.<lb/>
ive you ever i<lb/>
ncious we a<lb/>
s of everythu<lb/>
3kc as though it<lb/>
JH a real proble<lb/>
gMJbl.ng. drugs ai<lb/>
Gjjne' arc distn<lb/>
?u '?. s<lb/>
ajjfetituies for invol<lb/>
STERILE<lb/>
Hsc. art studen<lb/>
?niquc into the<lb/>
?puv they are al<lb/>
luce sterile ar<lb/>
on every thir<lb/>
Bronment is<lb/>
flhap. they<lb/>
Brar.iu their<lb/>
Tty have eyes th<lb/>
lot see. They<lb/>
sensory impi<lb/>
ho are alienate<lb/>
?<lb/>
Peace vigil f<lb/>
(continued from page U)<lb/>
protest.<lb/>
Mrs. Paul said that if anyone<lb/>
were to come to ihe vigils and<lb/>
indicate any intention o<lb/>
violence, she'would ask htm to<lb/>
The vigils will be held every<lb/>
Wednesday from 12 to I ?"<lb/>
President Nixon withdraws W<lb/>
forces from Cambodia.<lb/>
She added that they had sen<lb/>
. telegram to Present Nixon<lb/>
on ruesday, telling himjW<lb/>
they had pledged themseW<lb/>
the vigils until he withdrew J<lb/>
roops from ambod.a. a<lb/>
' i , rurhaDS even<lb/>
jossibly aftei thai pe?"P haS<lb/>
until the Vietman wa<lb/>
Ediiorships oPenig<lb/>
Rebel magazine ani<lb/>
school editor ol I ouni ,n<lb/>
Applications imlst , ' lhan-<lb/>
the SGA office not latei<lb/>
p.m. Monday,May ?'<lb/>
tNXIETY AND<lb/>
lienation exi<lb/>
jjgpa and poiit<lb/>
te leehngs of<lb/>
ijpp rootfi<lb/>
BcilH<lb/>
HEY P<lb/>
RA.PH<lb/>
Course<lb/>
JRRfV&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0015"/><lb/>
les<lb/>
' the ollly pawn" in<lb/>
? as a" ingenue, an<lb/>
barter who bed<lb/>
ite his betrayals. Her<lb/>
characterizes the<lb/>
e have no Roman$<lb/>
and we have no<lb/>
but the rest of the<lb/>
ave<lb/>
the interior rooms of<lb/>
winter retreat at<lb/>
ranee is beautifully<lb/>
by John Sneden.<lb/>
Gilfillan's elegant<lb/>
create an atmosphere<lb/>
I pagentry.<lb/>
al music, performed<lb/>
! Collegium Musicum<lb/>
nningot each act.and<lb/>
12th-century English<lb/>
i pieces complement<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Lion in Winter'<lb/>
nightly through May<lb/>
5 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
n. Tickets are on sale<lb/>
theatre box office.<lb/>
; free to students. SI<lb/>
and $2 to the public.<lb/>
irbitrary<lb/>
lifications<lb/>
D Va. (AP) The<lb/>
Circuit Court of<lb/>
re-emphasized its<lb/>
day that draft boards<lb/>
arbitrarily deny the<lb/>
n of conscientious<lb/>
without giving its<lb/>
doing so.<lb/>
ourt reversed the<lb/>
in the LS. Court of<lb/>
rn District of North<lb/>
of Charley Steele<lb/>
Jr and Bobby Gene<lb/>
f failing to accept<lb/>
into the armed forces.<lb/>
Herbert Boreman said<lb/>
irring opinion that "a<lb/>
d must articulate its<lb/>
for denying the<lb/>
ntious objector<lb/>
on to a man who has<lb/>
a pnma facie case of<lb/>
n tit led to such a<lb/>
on.<lb/>
ice vigil<lb/>
from pane<lb/>
11)<lb/>
tul said that if anyone<lb/>
ome to the vigils and<lb/>
any intention ?<lb/>
she 'would ask him to<lb/>
dig will be held every<lb/>
v from 12 to I until<lb/>
Nixon withdraws W<lb/>
m Cambodia<lb/>
jed th.ii the<lb/>
n to President<lb/>
<lb/>
tern<lb/>
ad sem<lb/>
Nixon<lb/>
mi that<lb/>
to<lb/>
?niselves<lb/>
he<lb/>
pleuiicu M<lb/>
until he withdrew<lb/>
,hodia, <lb/>
roin<lb/>
I<lb/>
tattat.f'<lb/>
Vietman ? "J<lb/>
?ships open<lb/>
ons must t?<lb/>
office not latci<lb/>
,day,Ma 18-<lb/>
dan<lb/>
?-?-???-?-???-?-?.<lb/>
Thureday, May 14, 1970, Fountainhead, Page IS<lb/>
fcocial and poltical climates produce alienation<lb/>
By DON LUBOV<lb/>
knation is learned, not<lb/>
n<lb/>
we accept this premise,<lb/>
there is hope that<lb/>
somihing can and will be done<lb/>
Eliminate it. And when<lb/>
lion is eliminated, the risk<lb/>
fcnating future generations<lb/>
Ac gone<lb/>
jfyou find yourseli to some<lb/>
ee bored, apathetic.<lb/>
are. unable to make<lb/>
fens, etc then you arc<lb/>
jably alienated,<lb/>
you need music so loud<lb/>
it is harmful to the senses.<lb/>
Wyou dance apart from you<lb/>
her, you are probably<lb/>
ated. If you enjoy violent<lb/>
m, violent sounds or violent<lb/>
c'tions of any kind that<lb/>
Irate to deadened nerves,<lb/>
you are probably alienated.<lb/>
GAME CONSCIOUS<lb/>
you enjoy the sports<lb/>
Um you are probably<lb/>
olvcd to a great degree. It<lb/>
;iei to be a spectator than a<lb/>
pipant.<lb/>
ive you ever noticed how<lb/>
Concious we are We make<lb/>
s of everything. We view<lb/>
as though it is a game<lb/>
a real problem We love<lb/>
ling, drugs and alchohol.<lb/>
arc detractions, not<lb/>
pivements. They are<lb/>
kit ites for involvements.<lb/>
STERILE ART<lb/>
se. ail students who cram<lb/>
lique into their heads, but<lb/>
use they are alienated, they<lb/>
e sterile art. But then,<lb/>
everything in their<lb/>
?fonment is sterile, so<lb/>
?laps they are really<lb/>
faying their surroundings.<lb/>
have eyes that will not or<lb/>
iot see. They are suffering<lb/>
sensory impotence, as are<lb/>
Mio are alienated<lb/>
IXIETY AND DESPAIR<lb/>
Klienation exists wherever<lb/>
and political climates<lb/>
fcte feelings of anxiety and<lb/>
Bail rootlessness and<lb/>
kcunts. or isolation and<lb/>
apathy. Man, m this society, has<lb/>
divorced himself from nature,<lb/>
his fellow man. and his own real<lb/>
self. Think about all the<lb/>
sensitive children who give early<lb/>
proof of their potentialities and<lb/>
are then sacrificed like rams on<lb/>
the altars of conformity.<lb/>
COMPLACENCY<lb/>
Complacency has become the<lb/>
ideal of the democratic way of<lb/>
life. We used to have an ideal to<lb/>
work for and a compromise to<lb/>
settle for.<lb/>
Now we substitute the<lb/>
compromise for the ideal,<lb/>
leaving us with only a<lb/>
watered-down compromise to<lb/>
live with collectively.<lb/>
The collective mind is the<lb/>
greatest enemy of individuality<lb/>
and freedom of thought and<lb/>
action. The collective mind is<lb/>
like water that always seeks the<lb/>
lowest level of gravity. The<lb/>
unahenated person struggles out<lb/>
of this process to seek a higher<lb/>
level of individual sensitivity<lb/>
and perception.<lb/>
CHANGE<lb/>
What can and must be done<lb/>
to eliminate alienation from<lb/>
man and from society9 We will<lb/>
have to change how and what<lb/>
we teach, whether as parents or<lb/>
as teachers.<lb/>
Education means "to make<lb/>
aware It does not mean, either<lb/>
at home or in school, "to<lb/>
program Individual awareness<lb/>
does not fu human beings for<lb/>
the mindless and mechanical<lb/>
actions of modern industry. Nor<lb/>
does it reconcile them to a<lb/>
leisure devoid of constructive<lb/>
purpose, it does not leave them<lb/>
satisfied with passive<lb/>
entertainment Awareness<lb/>
"makes waves" in tts growth<lb/>
and substitutes individuality for<lb/>
conformity and imitiation. We<lb/>
must begin to make people<lb/>
aware of their real selves; and<lb/>
they must accept their<lb/>
individuality and bask in it<lb/>
not run from it They will have<lb/>
successes and failures, but they<lb/>
will be themselves.<lb/>
The alienated cannot accept<lb/>
failure in themselves or in<lb/>
others. Failure, if rightly<lb/>
understood, spurs a person<lb/>
toward eventual success. Failure<lb/>
is not immoral. "Drop-out" is<lb/>
not a dirty word. The final step<lb/>
is to make failure illegal. When<lb/>
this happens we will be able to<lb/>
replace football with gladiators.<lb/>
ACCEPT WEAKNESS<lb/>
Instead of teaching our<lb/>
children to hate themselves for<lb/>
failing on the outside, let's teach<lb/>
them to love themselves for<lb/>
being themselves. We don't<lb/>
ignore weakness when we love<lb/>
but we do learn to accept, live<lb/>
with it. and overcome it in<lb/>
ourselves and others.<lb/>
Fear of failure, fear of being<lb/>
oneself, often leads to hatred<lb/>
and violence. You cannot love<lb/>
another if you do not love<lb/>
yourself. And you cannot love<lb/>
yourself if you feel inadequate<lb/>
and full of failure.<lb/>
FLEXIBLE IDEAL<lb/>
Instead of a rigid, central and<lb/>
authoritarian ideal, let us have<lb/>
one that is flexible, individual<lb/>
and permissive Instead of<lb/>
forcing children to produce<lb/>
objects, let us allow them to<lb/>
produce joy. Let's develop<lb/>
education aimed not at leaching<lb/>
people how to make a living but<lb/>
at teaching people how to live.<lb/>
It is necessary that the<lb/>
individual, at all ages, share in<lb/>
those decisions, social and<lb/>
political, that determine the<lb/>
quality and direction of his life<lb/>
The institutions of our society<lb/>
now serve not the people who<lb/>
do the work but the people who<lb/>
collect the profits.<lb/>
HAPPINESS CRUSHED<lb/>
Can you really blame the<lb/>
student for joining the revolt<lb/>
against the Establishment' As<lb/>
the "rebels" see it. government<lb/>
has grown so enormous and the<lb/>
weight of laws so heavy that<lb/>
individual happiness which is<lb/>
what the system was originally<lb/>
designed to nourish is being<lb/>
crushed The adults arc<lb/>
convinced that we cannot<lb/>
survive without all this<lb/>
structure. Their children are<lb/>
willing to try.<lb/>
TRUTH<lb/>
The student had thought of<lb/>
the university as a community<lb/>
concerned not with power,<lb/>
force or fraud, but with<lb/>
discovering the truth and<lb/>
proclaiming it the truth about<lb/>
himself (his real self) and others.<lb/>
The fight on the campus is<lb/>
really about whose needs the<lb/>
university is intended to serve<lb/>
the administration's or the<lb/>
student's<lb/>
NEW VALUES<lb/>
Eventually, if we are to<lb/>
survive as a species, we will have<lb/>
to adopt totally new values. It is<lb/>
unacceptable to say "life has<lb/>
always been this way While<lb/>
this statement is true, it is<lb/>
equally true that life, if it is to<lb/>
continue, can no longer "be this<lb/>
way" To continue as we have<lb/>
been going is a form of<lb/>
collective suicide.<lb/>
Schools will have to become<lb/>
as public libraries are now: any<lb/>
and all may come, stay as long<lb/>
or short a time as one cares to,<lb/>
attend what classes one wishes<lb/>
to attend, and not be judged.<lb/>
Transcripts will have to show<lb/>
only those classes attended, and<lb/>
not judge what was learned.<lb/>
Parents, teachers, all of us,<lb/>
will have to stop programming<lb/>
people to be this, that or the<lb/>
other thing. We must allow<lb/>
human beingssimply to Bl<lb/>
When this has been done, and<lb/>
individuality and personal<lb/>
happiness and worth reign<lb/>
supreme, apathy and alienation<lb/>
will disappear and humanity will<lb/>
come alive, possibly for the first<lb/>
time ever.<lb/>
Writer urges changes<lb/>
(continued from paqe 16)<lb/>
unilaterally, all U S. forces<lb/>
from Southeast Asia'7 Put the<lb/>
radical, violence- advocating<lb/>
student leaders in charge of U.S.<lb/>
domestic and foreign policy? If<lb/>
a democratically elected<lb/>
Government, with all its vast<lb/>
apparatus of experienced men in<lb/>
charge of its I unctions, cannot<lb/>
be trusted to conduct the aflairs<lb/>
of this country, then the<lb/>
country is at the brink of chaos.<lb/>
Tins is precisely what some ot<lb/>
the violent radicals want to<lb/>
bring about Lenin's Mao<lb/>
Tse-tung's. or their own.<lb/>
At this dramatic moment of<lb/>
the United State' history, 1<lb/>
plead with well-meaning,<lb/>
idealistic, reform-minded<lb/>
American youths here and<lb/>
elsewhere to distinguish<lb/>
themselves from those who<lb/>
ruthlessly and irresponsibly<lb/>
themselves being either outright<lb/>
traitors o' the cause ot<lb/>
American or vainglorious<lb/>
fanaticists exploit your<lb/>
idealism, urging you to<lb/>
meaninglesslv destroy property<lb/>
and pushing you into the clubs<lb/>
and bullets of the guardians of<lb/>
the Establishment This writer,<lb/>
having lived under more than<lb/>
one form of "establishments<lb/>
including some o the most<lb/>
radical ones, can attest to you<lb/>
that your Establishment<lb/>
imperfect as it may be in many<lb/>
respects is one o( the best<lb/>
that the human race has ever<lb/>
produced. Work constructively<lb/>
at its improvement, instead of<lb/>
harassing its functioning.<lb/>
Grant received<lb/>
The University has received<lb/>
an award of $33,900 for its<lb/>
program for preparation of<lb/>
teachers of the mentally<lb/>
retarded. r<lb/>
The award by the Bureau of<lb/>
Education for the Handicapped<lb/>
of the U.S. Office of Education<lb/>
will provide graduate<lb/>
fellowships and undergraduate<lb/>
trameeships. according to Dr.<lb/>
John T. Richards, chairman ol<lb/>
the Special Education<lb/>
Department of the School of<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
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Every college and university in the nation has been<lb/>
requested by the Association of Student<lb/>
Governments, a strictly non-political o rganization. to<lb/>
participate in a national student referendum on the<lb/>
use of American ground troops in Cambodia.<lb/>
Elsewhere in this issue you will find the statement<lb/>
made by the president of the ASG and an official<lb/>
ballot.<lb/>
The question has been worded in a fair and<lb/>
unbiased fashion and the purpose is simply to<lb/>
ascertain the opinions of the nations students.<lb/>
Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with<lb/>
the action in question we would strongly urge you to<lb/>
carefully read the statement and together with your<lb/>
own individual knowledge make a decision and mark<lb/>
a ballot.<lb/>
As the president of ASG so aptly puts it;<lb/>
'The time has come for American students to rise<lb/>
above the labels imposed on them by both the<lb/>
self-styled student spokesmen and national leaders<lb/>
We have too long let others indicate our feelings<lb/>
for us. Now we have an opportunity to express our<lb/>
opinions individually without being subjugated to<lb/>
allusions of minority voice of extremist radicals or an<lb/>
unspeaking silent majority.<lb/>
The time and opportunity has come for the<lb/>
personal, individual voice of students to be heard.<lb/>
Use it.<lb/>
Fountainhead requests<lb/>
student help ard ?eas<lb/>
We would like to take this opportunity to request<lb/>
students interested in journalism to consider working<lb/>
on the staff of Fountainhead next year.<lb/>
Many of the present staff members will not be<lb/>
returning next year and several important positions<lb/>
must be filled.<lb/>
In order to begin publishing early in fall quarter it<lb/>
will be necessary to formalize staff planning by the<lb/>
end of second session of summer school.<lb/>
In addition we would like to know what the<lb/>
general student body feels would improve the student<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
There are many different designs and formats for a<lb/>
newspaper and many different possibilities for<lb/>
improvement.<lb/>
We could change the size of the newspaper, for<lb/>
instance, from tabloid to full size. We could use<lb/>
better paper or more color.<lb/>
In order to begin planning now tor next year's<lb/>
paper, please write or stop by and let us know what<lb/>
you the students feel we should do to improve the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
Only by letting us know can we ever hope to fulfill<lb/>
your expectations of your newspaper.<lb/>
ounumhead<lb/>
and the truth shat make vou free<lb/>
ROBERT R THONEN STEPHEN BAILEY<lb/>
Editor in-Chief Business Manager<lb/>
Sharon Schaudies and Linda Cleveland Co News Editors<lb/>
Karen Blansfield Features Editor<lb/>
Donald Trausneck Sports Editor<lb/>
Ira L BakerAdvisor<lb/>
Student newspaper published twice weekly at East Carolina<lb/>
University, PO Box 2516, Greenville, North Carolina 2 7834<lb/>
Advertising open rate is $1 80 per column inch Phone 758-6366 or<lb/>
758367. ???<lb/>
The opinions expressed by this newspaper<lb/>
are not necessarily those of East Carolina University<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
We are poor unfortunate<lb/>
freshmen who are not writing in<lb/>
complaint of the policy of<lb/>
Fountainhead or the Kent<lb/>
slayings or the Asiatic war as<lb/>
most of the letters in the Forum<lb/>
seem to be.<lb/>
Wc would like to complain<lb/>
about something far more<lb/>
important in its proximity, that<lb/>
of the ruckus and "hell-raising"<lb/>
on the hill, particularly between<lb/>
Jones and Aycock.<lb/>
It seems that if we are forced<lb/>
to live in these facilities on<lb/>
campus, we should have better<lb/>
enforcement of the rules against<lb/>
creating a disturbance.<lb/>
We have been awakened more<lb/>
than half a dozen times at 2 or 3<lb/>
in the morning to the sound of<lb/>
firecrackers, motorcycles and<lb/>
hopped-up cars, and profanity<lb/>
between the dorms.<lb/>
Naturally, the hall proctors<lb/>
and residents can't be<lb/>
everywhere at once and they do<lb/>
about as good a job as they can<lb/>
in our dorm but there are those<lb/>
pigs on every floor who insist on<lb/>
creating such a disturbance<lb/>
when they have no assignments<lb/>
?<lb/>
By JOSEPH DAUGMAN<lb/>
One cannot revive the dead<lb/>
ones, but it is very urgent to<lb/>
eliminate the underlying<lb/>
primary causes that may lead to<lb/>
repetition of similar tragedies. I<lb/>
have in mind those four young<lb/>
lives snatched away supposedly<lb/>
by guardsmen's bullets at the<lb/>
Kent State University campus.<lb/>
We have heard the eloquent<lb/>
pica by the father of one ol<lb/>
those victims, implicitly blaming<lb/>
the Establishment. One does not<lb/>
argue with mourners. We are<lb/>
inclined to be less sympathetic<lb/>
with the student activist who<lb/>
concluded his necrolog with the<lb/>
words. "Don't stop here<lb/>
Shall we. then, disarm the<lb/>
police and the National Guard<lb/>
Recall "right now' and<lb/>
(continued on paqe I5<lb/>
e Forum<lb/>
or don't want to do them and<lb/>
prevent others from doing<lb/>
theirs.<lb/>
We don't see as how there is<lb/>
anything Fountainhead can do<lb/>
about this mess but we hope<lb/>
that those animals who insist in<lb/>
being so inconsiderate toward<lb/>
everyone else's rights will read<lb/>
this and realize how childish and<lb/>
immature their actions make<lb/>
them seem.<lb/>
Robert Herrick<lb/>
Bruce Brant<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
What is East Carolina going to<lb/>
do about the situation in this<lb/>
country today? Are we going to<lb/>
sit around on our apathetic asses<lb/>
for the rest of our lives? Are we<lb/>
going to let the administration<lb/>
and our government push us<lb/>
around forever0 The time to do<lb/>
something and get changes made<lb/>
is now. We are fooling ourselves<lb/>
if we think that things will<lb/>
change when we're out of<lb/>
school. The time for change is<lb/>
now. The students of this<lb/>
country are tired of being<lb/>
pushed around. We are tired of<lb/>
being fed the same old bullsht.<lb/>
We as students have this country<lb/>
listening and looking. The time<lb/>
to move peaceably is now.<lb/>
Schools around the country<lb/>
are closing down in order to<lb/>
gain some authority in the say<lb/>
so ol their schools and the<lb/>
country. Thousands went to<lb/>
Washington in order to show<lb/>
that they cared. They did not<lb/>
do this violently It was a<lb/>
peaceable demonstration. The<lb/>
president was scared and the<lb/>
students got what they wanted.<lb/>
Lets show some support at this<lb/>
school and make the<lb/>
administration give us a say so<lb/>
in what happens. If it can be<lb/>
done by just talking then let's<lb/>
talk but if it can't there is only<lb/>
one way to get change and that<lb/>
is to STRIKE'<lb/>
Michael S. Jordan<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
At the rally May 6th there<lb/>
were many students among the<lb/>
ones protesting who caUediil<lb/>
calm, peaceful aciioi<lb/>
self-control, and compron<lb/>
"Peace, man. that's where!<lb/>
at" and the rest of the bit<lb/>
that still blinds so many o!i<lb/>
"conscientious young people'<lb/>
It is time that wc stoptaito,<lb/>
peace, love and flowers.Tin<lb/>
days are gone forever.<lb/>
have been demonstrating ipij<lb/>
the War for ten years, and to j<lb/>
where it has gotten us. We si<lb/>
more involved now than ew<lb/>
before. All this is c?<lb/>
knowledge Students are f?(<lb/>
with the necessity of<lb/>
other means to make Iw<lb/>
their ideas to i<lb/>
pig-government. It is time iw I<lb/>
we take our protest tot<lb/>
streets. Men. women, i<lb/>
children are dying in Vietna<lb/>
Cambodia, and all ovet <lb/>
world every minute Mm<lb/>
wait. Rhetoric, discuss<lb/>
debate are all anachronic?<lb/>
easv for us to compromise1<lb/>
be patient for change (IN<lb/>
oppression and desuuew'<lb/>
far away. It's time ?<lb/>
eyes and realize what-<lb/>
genuine alternative is teftl<lb/>
afraid well discover gl<lb/>
answer is in the streets. W<lb/>
tell ? that they W?<lb/>
violence with violenc<lb/>
we should first re <lb/>
commits the first volenc<lb/>
then take the 0 ?<lb/>
ourselves AtkinS<lb/>
Ken DuU'<lb/>
<pb facs="00039476_0017"/>
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