<?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="00039547_0001"/>
TT<lb/>
VOTE<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
<lb/>
ountamhead<lb/>
aGf" f?e truth shall make vou free'<lb/>
Volume II. Numbei 4:<lb/>
dieenville. North arolina<lb/>
March JO 19"<lb/>
SGA opens dorms;<lb/>
visitation a reality<lb/>
STUDENTS WAIT AT circulation desk<lb/>
for books to be sent down from the<lb/>
stacks. Undergraduates are not allowed<lb/>
in the stacks without permission. Says<lb/>
(Stiff photo by Ross Warn)<lb/>
librarian, chaos would be the inevitable<lb/>
result.<lb/>
What's wrong with our Library?<lb/>
By SUE BOWERMASTFR<lb/>
(Stdtl W r ?<lb/>
loynei Library can be .1 seis confusing place<lb/>
the first time you walk in Mso the second.<lb/>
third, fourth and fifth times<lb/>
I he first thine you notice is the absence ol<lb/>
hooks Where are they? On the left is the<lb/>
reserve room, and on the right is the reference<lb/>
100m The hook sou want would not be in<lb/>
eithei place<lb/>
So you go to the circulation desk ami wait<lb/>
and wait fot someone to notice you When thev<lb/>
do. you ask how to find youi hook, and they<lb/>
tell you to fill out a call slip<lb/>
B) this time you aica scared to death by the<lb/>
enormity ol the situation, so vou turn around'<lb/>
and lease 111 a bewildered toe<lb/>
More often than not. sou learn "the tacts ol<lb/>
hbiais ' on the street. The stacks aie closed,<lb/>
which means onls graduate students and<lb/>
faculty members are allowed to go up among<lb/>
the books and browse<lb/>
That's not the was thej did it in<lb/>
Chocovvmints Youi reaction mas he one of<lb/>
annoyance Don't they nust sou'<lb/>
"This is not the case. ' said Mis Dorothy<lb/>
Evers. Circulation Librarian The stacks arc<lb/>
not closed foi capricious reasons<lb/>
There are lour levels ol stacks, which house<lb/>
approximately 500,000 hooks. Each level<lb/>
represents hall a floor, and the conditions are<lb/>
vciv compressed It looks like a labyrinth.<lb/>
The classification system which dictates the<lb/>
exact location ol each book is quite<lb/>
complicated, and it a book is misplaced on the<lb/>
shell 11 might as well bi missing The student<lb/>
worket who receives the call slip and goes to get<lb/>
the book would sec ;h t it was not there and<lb/>
would send the card b ck. assuming it was out.<lb/>
When a book is out, the student assistant or<lb/>
the librarian behind the desk must be able to<lb/>
tell the student where the book is. when it will<lb/>
be back, and whether he can place a personal<lb/>
reserve on it<lb/>
II the student bods were allowed to enter<lb/>
the stacks, chaos svould be the inevitable result.<lb/>
Mrs Pvcrs said<lb/>
"I'm nol even sure that fire safety<lb/>
regulations would be met if everyone was<lb/>
permuted to he up in the stacks she said<lb/>
The stacks are seriously cramped, and<lb/>
emergency shelves are constantly being tucked<lb/>
awa in the corners.<lb/>
"If you bus more books, where are you<lb/>
going to put them' You make room said John<lb/>
Brut, a library science major who holds the<lb/>
position ot stacks supervisor.<lb/>
"II all circulating and overdue books were<lb/>
called back at the same time, there would not<lb/>
be room lor them all said Mary E. Williams.<lb/>
Reserve Librarian<lb/>
?noihei major complaint that many students<lb/>
have is receiving overdue notices on books they<lb/>
haveaueady returned.<lb/>
"Sometimes there area as many as 500<lb/>
overdue books at a time said Dorothy Evers.<lb/>
"Kirst we have to search for each book to make<lb/>
sure it has not been returned. Then we type out<lb/>
the notices, xerox them, stuff them into<lb/>
envelopes, make sure ol the addresses, and mail<lb/>
them Meanwhile, the student teturns the<lb/>
book<lb/>
When a book is returned, the card tor it is<lb/>
destroyed The books are sorted according to<lb/>
the level of which thev belong, and then they<lb/>
are taken there to be reshetved. Ai the same<lb/>
time, books are constants bsil 3 called for, and<lb/>
sometimes the stall can't get the books back on<lb/>
the shelves fast enougltt to .ind them again and<lb/>
loan them nut<lb/>
The library's staff is stretJied thin, especially<lb/>
during "term-paper time Everybody comes<lb/>
for their books at once and they arc irritated<lb/>
when they have to wait.<lb/>
The staff is aware of the complaints of the<lb/>
students. They have set asloe a time to hear<lb/>
them and explain vhy th.ngs are the vas they<lb/>
are.<lb/>
Soi" mmes things can be changed JThe<lb/>
circulation desk is now staffed until ll instead<lb/>
of 8 p.m This v. as clone mainly to Benefit night<lb/>
students who work and cannot get to the<lb/>
library befcr?. the circulation desk closes.<lb/>
Every Tuesday, from 1 I a.m. until 12 noon.<lb/>
stud:nts can come to room 214 f Joyner<lb/>
Library to voice their complaints They will<lb/>
receive satisfaction either in an explanation of<lb/>
conditions r in a change if this is possible.<lb/>
Students are encouraged to g 1 a,id ilk about<lb/>
their gripes The first two meetings had a total<lb/>
attendance of "e. not counting the reporter<lb/>
If you have a complaint or a suggestion, go<lb/>
and tell them aTjout it They'll be waiting for<lb/>
vou.<lb/>
By BECKY NOBLE<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
The SG A Legtsl<lb/>
dormitories open in keeping with the MK<lb/>
visitation proposal m a resolution offered<lb/>
Monday by Tim Bixon Ml( presidi<lb/>
The dorms will be open from 12 noon until<lb/>
curlew, seven das s .1 week accordti<lb/>
SGA and theMRC<lb/>
I he resolution reads "Whereas the MR is<lb/>
the governing bods of the Hill and wheres<lb/>
MK( had declared the dorm open foi visitation<lb/>
be it resolved thai the SGA Legislature<lb/>
declares the dormitories open as in keeping<lb/>
with the MR( visitation proposal foi the hours<lb/>
from 12 noon until curlew, seven das a week<lb/>
as declared on March 9, 1V'7I I his resolution<lb/>
nullifies L R 17-1 "<lb/>
The resolution which was nullified said that<lb/>
the SGA supports the MR and Wki<lb/>
complete and tree visitation It demanded an<lb/>
administrative policy concerning visitation<lb/>
within 2 hours, with an ultimatum that the<lb/>
resolution would he published statewide<lb/>
The resolutions came aftet President bob<lb/>
Whitley asked that the legislature officially<lb/>
reprimand ECU President Leo Jenkins foi<lb/>
"putting off the decision on visitatiot<lb/>
Whihey. "I think we've been the victims ol a<lb/>
psychological victors on the pan ol Jenkins "<lb/>
In othei legislation, a new set ol rules weie<lb/>
passed governing the operation ol the Popular<lb/>
Entertainment Committee The new rules were<lb/>
said to he "vcis progressive" by SGA treasure!<lb/>
Steve Sharpe<lb/>
According to Populai Entertainment<lb/>
Committee chairman Ross Uzzle, the financial<lb/>
prospect lor entertainment is hopeful of<lb/>
bringing the best<lb/>
ifflcient aft ;<lb/>
l zzle said that aftei an initial investment ol<lb/>
1 , 1<lb/>
ommtttee w:l! n<lb/>
hi SGA foi annual allocations<lb/>
 the legislature voted 10 pas a uniform<lb/>
iaic il v pei daj  students representing I' I<lb/>
ai all official student conferences, tn-stati and<lb/>
OUt-of-State Sin I a das has been paid<lb/>
foi in-state confereni ?<lb/>
The legisiatuie again tabled a bill for an<lb/>
abortion loan fund foi co-eds The tund of<lb/>
Si olio would allow any co-ed to borrow up to<lb/>
$400 interest-free to be repaid within six<lb/>
months<lb/>
the sessii 11 .Iom aftei tw and<lb/>
a hall hours with Fletchei dorm representative<lb/>
Cindy Maultshs announcing "I wan: i" invite<lb/>
all of sou to 9th floor Tyler foi suppei<lb/>
immediately following the meeting<lb/>
1 as week the legislature voted to give S4o0<lb/>
ti HI M the crisis-intervention .enter m<lb/>
ville<lb/>
The icsised constitution was brought before<lb/>
the legislature by the Rules Committee<lb/>
It was decided that the constitution would<lb/>
be gradually voted on. article by article, over a<lb/>
period of several meetings.<lb/>
SGA President Boh Whitley stated that the<lb/>
constitution should be passed belore the SGA<lb/>
election so that the new executive officers<lb/>
would not be confronted with the issue<lb/>
Publications Board chairman Steve Seal<lb/>
suggested that the revised constitution be<lb/>
passed as soon as possible so that it would be<lb/>
available to be printed in the new Key<lb/>
Chimes work erratically<lb/>
due to tape cartridge<lb/>
By MARILYN MOODY<lb/>
(Star W nter)<lb/>
What has happened to the chimes' The<lb/>
director ol the physical plant doesn't know<lb/>
The associate dear, ol student affairs doesn't<lb/>
know The Student Government Association<lb/>
doesn't know<lb/>
Who does know '<lb/>
The director of the Electionics Department.<lb/>
Charles Cowan, knows The electronics<lb/>
department is responsible foi keeping the<lb/>
chimes in working condition<lb/>
The chimes aie in working condition right<lb/>
now The problem is with the tape cartridg<lb/>
which the sound is recorded<lb/>
According toowan. the tape worked fine<lb/>
until the powei failures started Some ol the<lb/>
failures caused the tape to "get .hewed up" hs<lb/>
Consumer legislation a must, says Morgan<lb/>
I<lb/>
By MARTHA GREENE<lb/>
(Sta't Writer I<lb/>
I luce young men need money to build an<lb/>
apartment complex I lies are conned by a<lb/>
suppo.edls legitimate brokerage firm<lb/>
An illiterate, poverty striken family in a rural<lb/>
aica is defrauded hs so,ailed public health<lb/>
officials<lb/>
A pooi mothei needs a cheap sewini<lb/>
machine to make hei children clothes She Is<lb/>
deceived hs a false advertisement and pressured<lb/>
into buy ing a machine she cannot afford.<lb/>
These innocent people aie pist a lew ol the<lb/>
hundreds deceived by fraudulent "fly-by-night"<lb/>
operators, according to Robert Morgan, N.C<lb/>
attorney general<lb/>
Morgan, who spoke at the Political Science<lb/>
Club meeting, March 23 feels that additional<lb/>
legislation is necessary to protect the public<lb/>
I mm illegitimate companies and deceptive<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
The shoit but outspoken attorney general<lb/>
began the lusl consumei protection<lb/>
commission shortly aftei taking office In 1968.<lb/>
He is now pushing fot lupporl ol a consumer<lb/>
protection bill undei consideration in the<lb/>
Senate<lb/>
"I'm planning to be the cleanup .nan<lb/>
Thursday says Morgan, who wants to have the<lb/>
last word on the bill<lb/>
To show the urgent need foi consumei<lb/>
protection, he cites the lust case brought to his<lb/>
attention as attorney general<lb/>
Three young men needed 120,000 to build<lb/>
an apartment complex fot college students<lb/>
They went to I.uboio Brokerage and applied<lb/>
lot a long-term loan I he men were told they<lb/>
would be charged seven pei cent interest which<lb/>
must be Immediately paid to the company<lb/>
They could get a short-term loan front a bank<lb/>
and when the apartment complex was finished,<lb/>
the money needed would be made available to<lb/>
them<lb/>
First Citizens Hank where thev applied foi<lb/>
the short-term loan, investigated the brokerage<lb/>
firm finding the company fraudulent. The<lb/>
young men sought Morgan for help.<lb/>
"I had to advise these men practically, as a<lb/>
lawyer, that prosecuting the compnay<lb/>
criminally would take more time and money<lb/>
than the could afford reflects Morgan.<lb/>
"I decided something must be done to<lb/>
protect these men and other innocent people<lb/>
like them<lb/>
The new Consumer Protection Commission<lb/>
prosecuted the case and exposed the company<lb/>
as fraudulent<lb/>
The commission found the brokerage had<lb/>
made some twenty transactions like this case<lb/>
collecting apptoximately $140,000 without<lb/>
making the first loan<lb/>
"We found innocent consumers being<lb/>
defrauded of ovei a million dollars cites<lb/>
Morgan.<lb/>
Another example described by Morgan is<lb/>
thar of Apex Builders who traveled to tural and<lb/>
low income sections. They told the people they<lb/>
were from the public health department II Un-<lb/>
people did not have inside plumbing In their<lb/>
homes, they would be forced to boatd up the<lb/>
homes. However, the company agreed to install<lb/>
the plumbing at a low cost<lb/>
In Pamhco County, notes Moigan, a family<lb/>
lived in a little frame house, built 20 years ago,<lb/>
which cost them SI 300 The family was<lb/>
confronted by this company which ended up<lb/>
charging them $4400 for the plumbing.<lb/>
"The plumbing was done in an<lb/>
unprofessional, fraudy manner" says Morgan<lb/>
"In one house a toilet was installed on the back<lb/>
porch without any enclosure whatsoever<lb/>
"We were able by pressuie ol public opinion<lb/>
to force ihein to cancel several contracts<lb/>
However, there's no telling how many people<lb/>
were affected "<lb/>
Fraudulent companies are not the only ones<lb/>
who deceive the public, according to Morgan<lb/>
Reputable business firms entise the public with<lb/>
full-page advertising of "one-time only" prices.<lb/>
Morgan describes an example of a woman<lb/>
who needed an inexpensive sewing machine to<lb/>
make hei children clothes for school<lb/>
She drove a considerable distance from her<lb/>
home in response to an advertisement from<lb/>
Unclaimed Freight. Instead of showing the<lb/>
sewing machine advertised, the salesman<lb/>
pressured hei into bus nig a machine ot a<lb/>
foreign make which she could not pas fot<lb/>
"The woman could not afford to expose the<lb/>
frauds, neithei could the small merchant down<lb/>
the stteet who ssouid base ordinarily received<lb/>
her business comments Moigan<lb/>
"We took the company to court, had them<lb/>
change their name and restrained them from<lb/>
taUe advertising "<lb/>
Mans times the individual can not atioid to<lb/>
expose a target company sas- Morgan rhose<lb/>
cases become the duty ol the attorney general's<lb/>
office<lb/>
ROBERT MORGAN, N.C. Attorney<lb/>
General, tells political science students<lb/>
that consumers are deceived by<lb/>
"fly by-night" operators. Morgan, who is<lb/>
pushing for support of a consumer<lb/>
protection bill under consideration in<lb/>
the Senate, says he plans to be a clean up<lb/>
man for consumers.<lb/>
(SUM photo bv ?o?t Mann)<lb/>
the machine and break Alter the tape was<lb/>
spliced, it did nol work well<lb/>
The tape Cowan is referring to is not the<lb/>
original t. pe sent from the manufacturer. It is a<lb/>
similar tape cartridge n;ade bs dubbing chimes<lb/>
from the larger original tape The original tape<lb/>
chimed for 24 hours The smallei tape chimed<lb/>
onls from 8 a m until 4 p.m<lb/>
The re.isi n tor making the smaller cartridge<lb/>
ssas that the large: tape was continually missing<lb/>
cues and ;himing wrong, according to Cowan<lb/>
When thr happened, someone had to go to the<lb/>
building and re.ue it With the target<lb/>
tape, it too' a long time to recue The smaller<lb/>
1 ipe takes ; me. hut 1101 as much<lb/>
S netii lei I cut of! the machine when It<lb/>
needs recumg because something else m ist be<lb/>
done said Cowan 'There is not much<lb/>
involved to fix the machine, but it takes time<lb/>
Due we were over there almos all da' because<lb/>
it kept b eak 11 g<lb/>
Cowai finally took the tape out ol service in<lb/>
December "until anothci tape could be<lb/>
prepared '<lb/>
It onls .ikes about two h mrs to dub a not hei<lb/>
tape Why has it uk 1: almost three mo iths"<lb/>
Threr arc onls two men in chai ;e i)l all the<lb/>
electronic equipment on campus Charles<lb/>
Cowan and James Carrington There have been<lb/>
nls two men foi the entire eleven scats that<lb/>
Cowan has bee: here These two men aie in<lb/>
charge ol the W equipment foi all<lb/>
departments WECI closed-circuit I V station.<lb/>
all intercom systei - ?? campus as well as extra<lb/>
public acidiess systems whCM needed dl 'idco<lb/>
tape machines, all mu ica! electronical<lb/>
equipment Then, isn't enough) lime ti I eep<lb/>
running i?vei to cheel on the chimes w<lb/>
thime thev miscuc. 01 to run ifl a new tape<lb/>
cartridge each time one is Heeded<lb/>
Vccording to Cowai it would be seis eas.<lb/>
I01 a student to take are of the chimes "A<lb/>
student smild make a tap cartridge it he knew<lb/>
what to do Ihe cartridge machine is similat to<lb/>
thoes used 111 radio stations I w 'iild be glad to<lb/>
train a student " Cowan also could tiam a<lb/>
student t cue the tape when it missed  cue<lb/>
"Sometimes there iswish i" inter) a<lb/>
cartridge lo musk The machine must be<lb/>
specially programmed foi these II a student<lb/>
opeiated the machine there might be more<lb/>
vaiiety 111 chimes more miusk<lb/>
The chimes are working again<lb/>
Charles Cowan asked the students who woik<lb/>
lot WECI radio to dub a new tape cartridge<lb/>
The 10b fell to Carl Davis<lb/>
When asked his opinion on the chimes. Davis<lb/>
said that someone should "investigate the<lb/>
possibilities ol getting it to work reliably " He<lb/>
feels that "the company that builds the<lb/>
equipment should also be icsponsible for their<lb/>
tapes, it they arc not working correctly<lb/>
Davis felt thai the idea ol a student being<lb/>
put in charge of the chimes was good, but that<lb/>
the student would have to be paid He did not<lb/>
feel that a broadcasting student would be<lb/>
interested because most btoadcasting students<lb/>
do not have the time<lb/>
"Anyone could be taught how to do it Not<lb/>
necessarily 111st a btoadcasting student "<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039547_0002"/><lb/>
hrtHMMtafluflai<lb/>
P ig I ountiinhead Mai h K) I97<lb/>
Campu? briefs<lb/>
 lompy? Driers<lb/>
Cafeteria has 'image problem'Getshi9hest honor<lb/>
I ,? Mat 4hlborg, ? ??? day period Succeufu<lb/>
By BECKY NOBLE<lb/>
I u s . afeteria<lb/>
serious decline in<lb/>
VC<lb/>
I liis decline i<lb/>
developed in the<lb/>
Noi ih .11 olina,<lb/>
i . Iltor)<lb/>
hai been experiencing a<lb/>
customers during the patl<lb/>
illows .1 trend winch has<lb/>
target urban universities in<lb/>
South arolina, Georgia,<lb/>
rennessee, and I lorida<lb/>
s" s-us Harry Pitts, direct01 ol dining<lb/>
services here foi VRAServices Pitts estimates a<lb/>
deciease oi i 20 pei cent ol the customers<lb/>
ovei the past vea. He cues numerous reasons<lb/>
Coi 1(1 's problems, which he says are<lb/>
prevalent at the othei universities.<lb/>
"Right now, .is opposed to five years ago,<lb/>
last food franchises have increased around the<lb/>
campus notes Pitts He approximates 75-85<lb/>
eating places within a five-minute drive ol<lb/>
v ampus<lb/>
Vlso. more students have cars on campus,<lb/>
which enables them to gel to these othei places<lb/>
easily<lb/>
vIl1 reason which keeps students away<lb/>
from the cafeteria is that they now have<lb/>
retrigerators in theii rooms and many tunes<lb/>
they cookintheii rooms, continues Pitts.<lb/>
" I he cafeteria is also suffering from an image<lb/>
problem says Pitts "It has no atmosphere "<lb/>
He points out thai students were forced to eat<lb/>
in cafeterias in grade school, junioi high, and<lb/>
high school and that they were mod of<lb/>
cafeterias and attracted to places with bettet<lb/>
atmosphere<lb/>
I he solution is to nuke the cafeterias place<lb/>
the student would want to go. according to<lb/>
Pitts llns would include such things as booths<lb/>
and private dining areas, a more attractive color<lb/>
scheme, .m. redecoration ihat would give a<lb/>
more pleasant atmosphere thai students would<lb/>
like Pins suggested selling beer to "give the<lb/>
students what they want<lb/>
Vnothei suggestion, offered Pnis by an an<lb/>
student, is to display the student' work in the<lb/>
cafeteria, and even have an classes remodel the<lb/>
cafeteiia<lb/>
However, says Pitts, it will take money which<lb/>
the cafeteria does not have,<lb/>
Pnis thinks that also using menus and<lb/>
specials might improve the situation, and favors<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
He suggests that the Pamhco Room be<lb/>
redecorated and the adjacent areas be filled<lb/>
with such games, as ping-pong tables, pinball<lb/>
machines to provide a lounge area lor the<lb/>
cafeteria situation.<lb/>
He foresees one central cafeteria and ?<lb/>
smaller one lot the future .Presently North and<lb/>
Jones cafeterias and the Pamhco Room are In<lb/>
use. Pitts says (his could gel smallei il the new<lb/>
Student Union eliminated the requirements of<lb/>
lood services in the Pamlico Room<lb/>
The following are the results ol a food<lb/>
preference survey, which was mailed in, that<lb/>
the ARA Services conducted on campus this Promoted<lb/>
year. It gives the preference and the number<lb/>
who suggested it<lb/>
I in da Mas Ahlboi g<lb/>
graduate student In the<lb/>
Political Science Department,<lb/>
is the first ECU student everf<lb/>
to complete the graduate<lb/>
comprehensive examinations m<lb/>
political science "with<lb/>
distinction<lb/>
I he e xaminal ions were<lb/>
recently administered ovei a<lb/>
CAMPUS CAFETERIAS fail to<lb/>
attract students, according to<lb/>
Harry Pitts, director of dining<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The ultimate solution, according to Pitts,<lb/>
would be to build a new. attractive cafeteria<lb/>
and put il either in the dorms or in a more<lb/>
accessible location However, he says, this<lb/>
would cost millions ol dollars, and il still might<lb/>
not work<lb/>
Speaking of the ARA lood service. Pitts,<lb/>
sas. "We accept the contract and go into a<lb/>
place with no atmosphere It's the school's<lb/>
responsibility to fix it up. but maybe we should<lb/>
pul more money into it ourselves<lb/>
ECU has a contract with ARA Services, from<lb/>
which u gels a pet centage ot the sales.<lb/>
Chiton Moore, business manager, declined to<lb/>
tefl what the percentage is because ARA is on a<lb/>
competitive bid basis<lb/>
Says Puts. "We hope to make a 2 profit<lb/>
alter taxes However, he adds, that thev might<lb/>
not<lb/>
Moore quotes the amount ECU received<lb/>
from July 170 through February o-7 as<lb/>
$28,752.52<lb/>
According to Moore, the school furnishes<lb/>
facilities and most of the equipment in the<lb/>
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)<lb/>
services. Students are able to<lb/>
drive to hearby restaurants which<lb/>
have more atmosphere.<lb/>
building. The employees are hired by ARA<lb/>
Services, not by the school. There are<lb/>
approximately 80 employees, according to<lb/>
Pitts, including about 35 students.<lb/>
Pitts listed some of the expenses of the<lb/>
cafeteria as maintain an ce of such a large<lb/>
building, theft of utensils 210 trays, costing<lb/>
$2.50 each, were found in Jones Dormitory ai<lb/>
the end of last spring quarter, and tax on soft<lb/>
drinks which costs the cafeteria about S200 a<lb/>
week.<lb/>
He feels that the prices at the cafeteria are in<lb/>
line with any other increases in food prices<lb/>
elsewhere<lb/>
The produce, fruit and vegetables comes in<lb/>
almost daily, says Pitts. The meat, except<lb/>
frozen hamburgers, usually comes in daily too.<lb/>
We buy much more frequently than when the<lb/>
state ran the cafeteria he adds.<lb/>
When asked about the future of the cafeteria<lb/>
in relation to the new Student Union. Pitts was<lb/>
uncertain as to just what might happen. Me said<lb/>
he was not tanuhar with exactly what kind of<lb/>
lood service the Student Union would have but<lb/>
that it would probably have a bearing on the<lb/>
organic foods. 10<lb/>
more in salad except old vegetables, I.?<lb/>
more hair nets, male and lamalc. 4<lb/>
smaller tossed salads, 4<lb/>
fresher coffee, I<lb/>
toothpicks, 2<lb/>
too much chicken and hamburger steak.<lb/>
meat prices too high, .?<lb/>
larger servings, 12<lb/>
dirty silver and glasses, 3<lb/>
soggy toast. 4<lb/>
breakfast servings too small, 0<lb/>
better at Jones, I<lb/>
want Coke machine, 5<lb/>
dislike salad dressing, 4<lb/>
more ice cream variety, I<lb/>
more choice of dessert, 2<lb/>
loo high, o<lb/>
keep food warm, 8<lb/>
open another line, 0<lb/>
more specials at lunch and dinner, o<lb/>
more seasoning, 4<lb/>
stay away from type food in Pamlico, I<lb/>
more variety, 8<lb/>
clean off (ables more quietly, 2<lb/>
The caferteria makes available to all sludenis<lb/>
a board plan, the "14-meal Plan " for SIM a<lb/>
quarter a student is entitled to any 14 meals a<lb/>
week up to the limn of $.65 lot breakfast,<lb/>
$1.10 for lunch, and $1.25 foi dmnei Athletes<lb/>
are on a 20-meal plan<lb/>
P:lts says that the 14-meal plan seems to be<lb/>
too much many limes, so he is considering a<lb/>
10-meal plan The cafeteria no longei uses meal<lb/>
tickets<lb/>
Puts recently teturned from a sales<lb/>
promotion workshop for ARA s southern<lb/>
region held at the University ol South Carolina<lb/>
at Columbia. The purpose was 10 discuss ideas<lb/>
for improving the cafeteria sen ices and<lb/>
increasing the company "s sales<lb/>
Pi Frances Daniels, "t the<lb/>
School ol Business, has hern<lb/>
promoted from assistant<lb/>
P1 o 1 esso 1 10 associate<lb/>
professot<lb/>
II e 1 promotion was<lb/>
announced In Dl Audiev<lb/>
De in psey . d e part mental'<lb/>
chairman<lb/>
Major symphony<lb/>
I (l composer-in-residence,<lb/>
Dr. Gregory Kosteck, recently<lb/>
completed his lust sv mphony<lb/>
foi large orchestra on a<lb/>
commission from Temple<lb/>
I University<lb/>
kosteck desc ribes the work<lb/>
as a "majoi i reative effort<lb/>
Cast into three movements, the<lb/>
s mphony lasis about twenty<lb/>
minutes in performance<lb/>
I he sv mphony ? ill be<lb/>
premiered bv the Temple<lb/>
University Orshestra in<lb/>
Philadelphia late this fall I he<lb/>
conductoi will be Keith Biown<lb/>
oi the Temple University<lb/>
School ol music faculty,<lb/>
Commenting on his lust<lb/>
symphony, Kosteck remarked,<lb/>
"Every once 1 n a w hile<lb/>
composers desire to sum up<lb/>
then creative efforts and<lb/>
discoveries of the past few<lb/>
veils Such is the case w nh mv<lb/>
sv mphonv<lb/>
lul<lb/>
, 0 in p I e I 1 o n o I 1 h<lb/>
examinations Is 1 prerequisite<lb/>
loi the master's degree it EG<lb/>
Miss Ahlhoig is 1 graduate<lb/>
lellow in the political science<lb/>
department, assigned lo an<lb/>
I 1 professot as teaching and<lb/>
research assistant<lb/>
Biology Students<lb/>
l ICI Men sludenis in<lb/>
l)i I .nine's winter quartet<lb/>
b 1 ology 2 2 1 C lass, your<lb/>
assistance is necessary to help<lb/>
cleat a fellow student oi in<lb/>
honoi council offense Please<lb/>
answer this il ou look the<lb/>
v. heduled exam Contact<lb/>
at 7 5 8-5447<lb/>
Sandy II<lb/>
immediately<lb/>
Home fc officers<lb/>
I he Student North Carolina<lb/>
Home Economics Association<lb/>
announced their slate of<lb/>
officers foi I" I 72 a: the<lb/>
March meeting held last week<lb/>
1 he are as follows president,<lb/>
nn Bobo; vice president.<lb/>
l"iis llelsmg. secretary, Call<lb/>
Brinson; 1 reasurei, Para<lb/>
Nankin, and reporter, Susan<lb/>
Graft<lb/>
I atei m the meeting Robert<lb/>
Fuldner, a furniture designei<lb/>
from Brovhill Furniture<lb/>
( ompany, presented a program<lb/>
entitled "A Look into the<lb/>
World ol Furniture<lb/>
Ids program also included<lb/>
ihe different types ol materials<lb/>
used to manufacture furniture.<lb/>
and the different styles<lb/>
available today<lb/>
Poetry readings presented Children master stringed instruments<lb/>
by three N.C. writers<lb/>
By JENNY JONES<lb/>
1 Staff Writer)<lb/>
1 led North Carolina poets will give<lb/>
readings .11 ECl on A il ; Guy Owens. Sam<lb/>
Ragan, and Campbell Reeves will present some<lb/>
ol theii work at 8 p.m in the Nursing School<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
- nsored h the NArts Council and the<lb/>
11 Poetry Forum, these poets are well<lb/>
known nationally as well as in the state<lb/>
according to Vernon Ward, advisor tor the<lb/>
Poetry I orum<lb/>
Owen has been published widely in such<lb/>
magazines as The Saturday Review and<lb/>
"Poetry Magazine" said Ward.<lb/>
Hie authoi of three novels and "The White<lb/>
Stallion and Other Poems Owen has also<lb/>
published two other novels and a collection ol<lb/>
verse, "The White Stallion and Other Poems<lb/>
 professor of English ai N.C. State<lb/>
University, the Raleigh poet is also the founder<lb/>
and editoi ol "The Southern Poetry Review<lb/>
according to Ward<lb/>
Sam Ragan. who was for several years ihe<lb/>
Uterarj editor of the "The News and Observer "<lb/>
is the author of the award-winning book of<lb/>
poetry, "The Tree in the Far Pasture<lb/>
According to Ward, Ragan is now the<lb/>
ewspape and editor Qf .Tf)e<lb/>
' 'nes Pilot. He also conducts a writers'<lb/>
workshop on the campus of C State<lb/>
I mversiiv each week.<lb/>
A native of Australia. Mrs Campbell Reeves<lb/>
is the author ol "The Bane of Jewells" a<lb/>
collection of poetry Ward noted that the book<lb/>
has been published by the Golden Quill Press<lb/>
Mrs Reeves is also a frequent contributor to<lb/>
the book review section of "The News and<lb/>
Observer<lb/>
There wall be a coffee hour at 4 p.m in<lb/>
University Union 201 with the poets All<lb/>
students and faculty are invited to attend, said<lb/>
ward Following the evening presentation by<lb/>
the guest poets. Poetry Forum members are<lb/>
invited to meet with the poets at 1101 W<lb/>
Wright Rd. for an informal reception.<lb/>
Rebel budget proposed<lb/>
Newly-elected Rebel editoi Woody Thurman<lb/>
presented Ins proposed budget foi spring<lb/>
publication to the Publications Board last<lb/>
I uesday night<lb/>
Thurman's proposal represents an increase ol<lb/>
about S500 ovei last year's literary magaine<lb/>
budget<lb/>
? special art-oriented edition ol the Rebel<lb/>
and a laisc in his stall's salaries prompted the<lb/>
growth in figures, according to rhurman<lb/>
Ihe largest money item on the proposal was<lb/>
lor office supplies Thurman stated that<lb/>
typewriters, tape recorders and other items had<lb/>
either been mislaid, stolen or otherwise<lb/>
removed from the office<lb/>
Approximately $4,200 was left in the budge.<lb/>
by the previous editor, Rod Ketner. This sum<lb/>
will be used to pay the debts made while<lb/>
Ketnei was in office.<lb/>
Ihe total of S7.287 was approved by the<lb/>
Board to be submitted to the SGA for approval<lb/>
The Pilot String Project, a cultural<lb/>
opportunity for children in the Greenville area<lb/>
has entered its fourth year<lb/>
Approximately 120 local school children and<lb/>
their parents receive tuition-free instruction in<lb/>
violin, viola and cello every week from FCC<lb/>
musicians, at special classes held in six<lb/>
elementary schools.<lb/>
Based on the Japanese Suzuki method the<lb/>
children are first taught to "play bv ear " an<lb/>
accomplishment usually discouraged by music<lb/>
teachers<lb/>
Beginning students in the first and second<lb/>
grades, or even earlier, learn to play simple<lb/>
tunes such as "Twinkle. Twinkle. Little Star"<lb/>
and "Blue Bells ol Scotland" entirely by rote<lb/>
Music reading is not taught until the second<lb/>
year, alter they have acquired a basic skill in<lb/>
the use ol the bow.<lb/>
The Project is partially funded by an<lb/>
tnstititional assistance grand from HEW under<lb/>
Title IV of the Higher Education Act It lj<lb/>
directed by Rodney Schmidt of the School of<lb/>
Music, with assistance of a staff of six<lb/>
composed of ECU musicians, local school<lb/>
music teachers and volunteer parents.<lb/>
Schmidt explains the advantages of the<lb/>
Project teaching method this way:<lb/>
"Croup teaching is good, because it inspires<lb/>
he children to be learning with peers; it takes a<lb/>
long time to learn to play a stringed instrument<lb/>
well, because the two hands do quite different<lb/>
tilings.<lb/>
"Mastering the skill is a matter of developing<lb/>
coordination ? h<lb/>
He noted that children who might ordinarily<lb/>
become discouraged by private lessons try<lb/>
harder when they learn with others<lb/>
A second difficulty to learning, he added is<lb/>
that ol achieving a good sound. Unlike<lb/>
keyboard instruments, stringed instruments<lb/>
have to create their own pitch.<lb/>
Schmidt cites as a major advantage of the<lb/>
Project the fact that ,t begins when children are<lb/>
very young and most adaptable so that by the<lb/>
time a young violinist is twelve years old he is<lb/>
quite proficient.<lb/>
Project also involves parents in the learning<lb/>
nrocess. Each beginning student attends classes<lb/>
THE YOUTH ORCHESTRA of the<lb/>
Pilot String Project performed<lb/>
publicly for the first time here last<lb/>
with a parent, who learns along with him<lb/>
Future possibilities of expansion appear<lb/>
quite good, according to Schmidt. He hopes lo<lb/>
cover a wider area soon, by enlarging the<lb/>
number of schools to include communities in<lb/>
the environs ol Greenville.<lb/>
So far. the Project has formed a 36-membei<lb/>
Youth Orchestra, made up of advanced Pilot<lb/>
String students and a number ol wind brass<lb/>
and percussion performers fromAycock luniot<lb/>
High School ii has also rormed the Pilot String<lb/>
Quartet, three sixth-graders and an<lb/>
e.gllth.gradet The Quartet has appealed on<lb/>
' ical television.<lb/>
(Sufi Dholo by Ken Finch)<lb/>
week. There are 36 members in the<lb/>
orchestra.<lb/>
Pilot String Project enthusiasts envision an<lb/>
influx ol these fledgling performers into future<lb/>
prominent musical circles<lb/>
 program comparable to the Pilot String<lb/>
Project is located in Richmond, according to<lb/>
director Schmidt.<lb/>
The Youth Orchestra performed pubhcallv<lb/>
"tthelirst ,in,e las. week aheannual.Spring<lb/>
Children s Concert, presented bv the ECU<lb/>
Symphony Orchestra in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Large numbers of P,? County school<lb/>
Children were present. ,0 hear both orchestras<lb/>
Perform They performed selections by I ully<lb/>
Ischaikoweky and Offenbach.<lb/>
d iocai icievisiou i i , .  "iwni'iis ry 1 UIIV<lb/>
m richaikowsky and Offenbach<lb/>
yourself in books' professor savs<lb/>
By SHERRY BUCHANAN the "greats" in Russian and German literature WB?1 W <lb/>
F?0nn?,n,aa) Sie . .  ???issssssMMMaMaaasaaii i is i aaaaassii na? 11 ?iiiaiisassssMssaaaaiaai n n m<lb/>
(Spec.ai lo F nunla ,n nad <lb/>
When you were small and your mother told<lb/>
you to sit down and lead because you can find<lb/>
yoursell in a book, she literally meant what she<lb/>
said, according to Dr Marat Malby. assistant<lb/>
professot in the Russian and German<lb/>
Depai ti'ieni<lb/>
Books oi more precisely, literature was ihe<lb/>
topic Malby centered her lecture around last<lb/>
Wednesday night She explained how to pick up<lb/>
a hook one day and find yourself staring back<lb/>
from literary mirrors<lb/>
Malby, now a U.S. citizen, is originally from<lb/>
i ugoslavia She came to America I I years ago<lb/>
and received her education degree from Florida<lb/>
Stale University and hei PhD from Harvard<lb/>
Hei specialuv is Russian literature and she<lb/>
found a "twin" toi everyone present in the<lb/>
pages ol the Russian winks<lb/>
Man finds himself, understands his life,<lb/>
answers his questions and stumbles upon the<lb/>
truth through the ideas and writings of the<lb/>
'meals" of the generations before him. Such<lb/>
wis the idea Malbv expiessed as she reviewed<lb/>
! f<lb/>
the "greats" in Russian and German literature<lb/>
She cited several books and themes written<lb/>
hundreds of years ago, which when examined<lb/>
were relevant if not almost identical to today's<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
Early concepts like the " . . superfluous,<lb/>
possessed, and ill-fated man" were easily<lb/>
aligned with men of today. As the heroes of<lb/>
those earlier novels, who could not feel or<lb/>
know love, who dream of only money and<lb/>
power, who played God. so are the men of<lb/>
today she said<lb/>
"Hatred, greed and omnipotenceare merely<lb/>
flourishing in our society today, as they<lb/>
nourished in the hearts of the heroes of the<lb/>
famed "War and Peace and "Crime and<lb/>
Punish me n I "<lb/>
One outstanding correlation was made in<lb/>
terms of today's generation gap. As in the old<lb/>
"Fathers and Sons written 100 years ago, the<lb/>
older generation based all things on "reason"<lb/>
while the younger did the same with<lb/>
feeling " But as Malby stated, she feels this is<lb/>
precisely what is going on today At any rate,<lb/>
she feels this gap is simply a process of<lb/>
DR. MARIA MALBY, assistant professor in the<lb/>
Russian and German Department explained<lb/>
(Stiff photo by Roh Mann)<lb/>
books as mirrors. She said man can find himself<lb/>
through great writers of previous generations.<lb/>
evolution it is inevitable<lb/>
According to Malby. fat. must be b.ough.<lb/>
 themes r.te or the unavoidable I,<lb/>
out rate o, unavoidable occuranw any different<lb/>
from that suffered by the most brlHianl I),<lb/>
ZWvago ,? 11S Ml)Vt.d L-BM, ()i <lb/>
problems any different? People don't listen to<lb/>
them because they have their own problems to<lb/>
contend with, as was the case with Ihe poo,<lb/>
ordinary people ol some of the gieal Chekov<lb/>
novels.<lb/>
The important relevance ol literature to out<lb/>
?fe today is that we do see il and leant fiom ,i<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
Di Henry Wanderman. head oi the<lb/>
department concluded. "The problems you<lb/>
have now aie not ?ew the gnerations before<lb/>
you made it "<lb/>
1,0 sllllll'l ?i he reinforced Malbv s<lb/>
statements. "You niUSl educate you.sell l,v lo<lb/>
ll?"?! and be pa.ienl " Learning<lb/>
omies horn h??ks Some ol,he wnu-isaniong<lb/>
SKbe the "greats" from which<lb/>
"uicluld.cn will haw ?, kllM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039547_0003"/><lb/>
rfatt<lb/>
CmAm<lb/>
honor<lb/>
eriod, Successful<lb/>
ion o i i hi<lb/>
it a pieiaiimilc<lb/>
r degree ui 11 i<lb/>
org is a graduate<lb/>
political telenet<lb/>
.issigiied In an<lb/>
?i .is teaching ind<lb/>
.1111<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Men siiidcnis in<lb/>
winter quarto<lb/>
I class, your<lb/>
leceSttT) lo help<lb/>
? itudeni oi ,in<lb/>
I offense. Please<lb/>
I sou (Mk the<lb/>
Mm Contact<lb/>
at 7585447<lb/>
c officers<lb/>
I N'Mih Carolina<lb/>
tics Association<lb/>
their slate of<lb/>
" 1-72 a: the<lb/>
held last week<lb/>
lows president.<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
tecretw). Gail<lb/>
easurei, Ptni<lb/>
reporter, Susan<lb/>
meeting Robert<lb/>
niture designer<lb/>
ill Furniture<lb/>
'nted a program<lb/>
ook into the<lb/>
lire "<lb/>
also included<lb/>
pes ol matenals<lb/>
;ture furniture,<lb/>
e r e n t s t I e s<lb/>
snts<lb/>
l K?n Finch)<lb/>
ers in the<lb/>
envision an<lb/>
Into future<lb/>
1'ilot String<lb/>
ccording lo<lb/>
pubhcally<lb/>
nual Spring<lb/>
the l( ('<lb/>
torium,<lb/>
it school<lb/>
orchestras<lb/>
by Lully.<lb/>
fS<lb/>
w brought<lb/>
oidable. Is<lb/>
y different<lb/>
illiant Dl<lb/>
i aie on i<lb/>
i listen lo<lb/>
obleins lo<lb/>
the pooi<lb/>
it Chekov<lb/>
ire lo out<lb/>
II flOltl II<lb/>
ol i K.<lb/>
ems ,M<lb/>
ns before<lb/>
Mallu <lb/>
?If. iry to<lb/>
I earning<lb/>
is among<lb/>
m which<lb/>
New Rebel editor plans<lb/>
'Super Rebel 'for spring<lb/>
Maicii iO. 1471. Fountmnhead. Paae .t<lb/>
By PAT CRAWFORD<lb/>
(Stall Writer I<lb/>
II you've had it with people who are down<lb/>
on everything, run up to the Kehel office and<lb/>
fan with Woody Thurman, the newly-elected<lb/>
editoi Thurman's down-to-earth manner, his<lb/>
enthusiasm and his wide range ol abilities make<lb/>
him a tiuly exceptional and entertaining<lb/>
person.<lb/>
I hough reluctant to talk about himself,<lb/>
I liiuin.m was moie than willing to explain his<lb/>
interest in the Rebel.<lb/>
"On March 10 he said, "the Pub Board had<lb/>
a meeting to elect a new editor. I made a<lb/>
statement of qualifications and went through a<lb/>
question and answer period, left the room and<lb/>
vs.i told I was elected.<lb/>
"When I ran I assumed it was ust for spring<lb/>
quarter, but tI?Pub Board asked me lo stay this<lb/>
spung. and winlei and fall quarters of next<lb/>
year I accepted under the condition that if<lb/>
anyone chose to iuii againsi me later, they<lb/>
would be able to<lb/>
A gieal deal ol material remained from<lb/>
formei editoi Rod Ketner's unpublished Rebel.<lb/>
Thurman, however, finds it impossible to<lb/>
continue Ketner's lormat in the new Rebel.<lb/>
"Originally he said, "whal Ketnei had done<lb/>
was a layout in which 2? color plates of ancient<lb/>
dieek art filled most of the magazine. These<lb/>
were in conjunction with a Doc Watson<lb/>
interview Watson is a North Carolina folk<lb/>
musician.<lb/>
"My most able art expert Thurman<lb/>
continued, "could find no correlation between<lb/>
Doc Watson and ancient Greek art<lb/>
Thurman plans to publish a Supei Rebel<lb/>
issue, using the best material from Ketner's<lb/>
magazine in addition to new material the staff<lb/>
will solicit. The issue should be out by the<lb/>
second week in May<lb/>
The absence ol the Rebel earlier this year<lb/>
was a souice of puzzlement to some students.<lb/>
Thurman, in explaining the situation, claimed<lb/>
that all the fault did not lie with Ketner.<lb/>
"Part of the blame had lo be with Ketner tor<lb/>
the fact that the magaine was not out before<lb/>
the end of the fall quarter he said.<lb/>
"The S(iA has tried to make a scapegoat of<lb/>
Ketner. claiming he was responsible for all ills<lb/>
with the Rebel. Bui the SGA abolished the Pub<lb/>
Boaid before the end of the fall quarter, and it<lb/>
was approximately one quarter later before<lb/>
they elected a new one. If the SCA had elected<lb/>
a new Pub Board before abolishing the old one.<lb/>
there would have been a Rebel stall.<lb/>
"I'm not blaming the Pub Board for the<lb/>
delay, since they weren't even in existence<lb/>
then<lb/>
NEW STAFF<lb/>
Thurman said that the new Pub Board has<lb/>
been "very understanding and reasonable<lb/>
"I have had no double he said. "For my<lb/>
money, they're doing a good job<lb/>
The new Rebel demanded a new staff as well.<lb/>
"I e lose a prospective staff said Thurman,<lb/>
"of, in my opinion, the three best-qualified<lb/>
people on campus for this kind of work. I<lb/>
talked to them and asked them even before I<lb/>
filed for election if they'd do it, and they said<lb/>
they would<lb/>
Business Manager for the new Rebel is Kelly<lb/>
Almond, a carry-over from last year's staff.<lb/>
Judy McCorisin will assist in art direction.<lb/>
"Not only is she an excellent artist and<lb/>
knowiedgable in art history said Thurman,<lb/>
"but she has worked on numerous publications<lb/>
before "<lb/>
Managing editor is Nicky Glover, who has<lb/>
worked with the Rebel in the past.<lb/>
"She's an English major said Thurman.<lb/>
"and I value her judgment and literary criticism<lb/>
very highly t,<lb/>
The final staff member is Walt Whittemore.<lb/>
who as associate editor is in charge of reviews,<lb/>
essays and interviews.<lb/>
Thurman intends to reserve 250 copies of the<lb/>
magazine to send to national reviewing<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
"These complimentary copies he said, "will<lb/>
go to such places as 'Harper's 'The Atlantic-<lb/>
Monthly 'Evergreen Review and the<lb/>
&amp; '<lb/>
"Swannee Review usually the editoi reads<lb/>
them. My reason for sending them is that a lot<lb/>
of times they'll see something they like, and<lb/>
will contact the student, asking him to submit<lb/>
his work to a national magazine<lb/>
OFFERS FROM MAGAZINE<lb/>
Thurman knows the possibility of this<lb/>
chance from personal experience. He has been<lb/>
writing for six years, has been a member of the<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum for three years, and has<lb/>
worked one year for Laverne Manners, a former<lb/>
ECU instructor.<lb/>
"She probably knew more about<lb/>
comtemporary literature and how to judge<lb/>
literature better than just about anyone in this<lb/>
school said Thurman.<lb/>
"She taught me that the idea of writing as a<lb/>
skill had to develop through lots of hard work<lb/>
The idea of spontaneous creation is a bunch of<lb/>
malarky<lb/>
In 1968. Thurman's work appeared in the<lb/>
first Poetry Forum publication, "Trio in Blue "<lb/>
As a result of this, he was invited to have his<lb/>
work published in "Harper's "The Atlantic-<lb/>
Monthly "American Notes and Queries and<lb/>
"The Evergreen Review Thurman declined<lb/>
the offers, preferring to save his work for<lb/>
publication in a book of his own verse.<lb/>
"I decided I wanted to be one of die 'young<lb/>
bards he said. "I set about the next year to<lb/>
read everything that was being written in<lb/>
contemporary poetry. That's how I spent most<lb/>
of my time and most of my money when I was<lb/>
out of school "<lb/>
During that time. Thurman made a discovery<lb/>
about popular poets those who are receiving<lb/>
all the exposure in contemporary literature.<lb/>
"I found out that of all the ones who were<lb/>
popular, none were any good He cited<lb/>
McKuen and Ginsberg as examples.<lb/>
"The poets who in the last 10 years were the<lb/>
best in the United States, no one has ever heard<lb/>
about he continued. "The most influential<lb/>
poet in the '60's was James Wright. I'm sure<lb/>
that name rings a bell for everyone<lb/>
nstitute of Religion<lb/>
WOODY THURMAN, NEWLY elected<lb/>
editor of the Rebel, hopes to have a<lb/>
"Super Rebel" published by the second<lb/>
week in May. His experience in literature<lb/>
(SUM photo by Ken Finch)<lb/>
includes six years of writing, publication<lb/>
of his poetry in the ECU Poetry Forum<lb/>
book, and offers from several national<lb/>
magazines to print his work.<lb/>
Chapel adds dimension<lb/>
.?v<lb/>
   sM,StW<lb/>
THE ROTHKO CHAPEL in Houston, Texas, is<lb/>
the world's first permanent center for<lb/>
ecumenical celebration of all religions. The<lb/>
chapel is an addition to the Institute of Religion<lb/>
Fine Arts Committee<lb/>
and Human Development which serves to<lb/>
provide a needed connection between religion<lb/>
and medicine.<lb/>
Film festival set for M ay<lb/>
The ECU Second Annual Film Festival,<lb/>
sponsored bv the fine Arts Committee, will be<lb/>
Saturday. May  at X p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Films lot the leslival will be judged<lb/>
according to idea and presentation, the quality<lb/>
ol filming and the use of sound effects, if any.<lb/>
Four cash prizes of $125. $100. $75. and $50<lb/>
will be awarded<lb/>
Judging will be Thursday. May 20 at 7:30<lb/>
p m in Raw I 130.<lb/>
All films submitted must be no longer than<lb/>
30 minutes and no less than one minutes, and<lb/>
they must be 8mm. Super X or 16mm<lb/>
No "with sound" films may be entered<lb/>
unless the individual entering such film can<lb/>
personalls provide the necessary projection<lb/>
equipment foi showing such film. This must be<lb/>
done not only on the night of the judging but<lb/>
tlto on the night or nights of the festival Other<lb/>
acceptable sound systems will be records, tapes,<lb/>
or no sound at all<lb/>
There will be no restriction of subject matter<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
All enines must be submitted lor judging by<lb/>
? later than 7 p.m. May 20. An entry blank<lb/>
can be submitted on each film no later than<lb/>
two days prior lo the judging There will be no<lb/>
entry fee. and only ECU students are eligible to<lb/>
enter. . , c.<lb/>
After completion of the judging, the Fine<lb/>
Arts Committee will compile the film festival<lb/>
from the films entered. All films entered for<lb/>
? udgmg must be available for the film festival.<lb/>
Students who miss the judging date may also<lb/>
still enter their film in the festival<lb/>
Winners will be announced at the completion<lb/>
of the film festival<lb/>
Cliff Lane a member of the Fine Arts<lb/>
Committee, expressed the hope that there will<lb/>
be a large number of entries. He said that many<lb/>
schools do not realize how easy it is to make a<lb/>
?All that it takes is a valid idea and the<lb/>
willingness to try to capture that idea on film<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"Filmmaking is becoming the art media of<lb/>
our time he continued. "Films such as "Easy<lb/>
Rider and Sterile Cuckoo' which are<lb/>
contemporary to us, are being made by young<lb/>
filmmakers across the country<lb/>
"Most of the films in the festivals brought<lb/>
here are made by student filmmakers on college<lb/>
campuses. The Fine Arts Committee here felt if<lb/>
there was an art media, that any student could<lb/>
get involved in it, not just art majors<lb/>
99c<lb/>
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Entree<lb/>
2 Vegetables (your choice)<lb/>
Salad or Dessert (your choice)<lb/>
Tea or Fruitade<lb/>
Roll - Oleo<lb/>
Main and Jones Cafeterias<lb/>
By PAT CRAWFORD<lb/>
(Staff Writer)<lb/>
The city of Houston, Texas recently acquired<lb/>
a religious center that may set the pace for<lb/>
space-age theology<lb/>
The center, the Rothko Chapel, is the<lb/>
world's first permanent center for ecumenical<lb/>
celebration giving equal consideration to all<lb/>
religions. In addition, the chapel represents an<lb/>
unusual mingling of twentieth century art and<lb/>
religion on a grand scale.<lb/>
Dedicated on Feb. 27, the Rothko Chapel<lb/>
was designed by Houston architects Howard<lb/>
Barnstone and Eugene Aubry, and is named for<lb/>
the American abstract expressionist Mark<lb/>
Rothko. Rothko devoted three of the last years<lb/>
of his life to a series of 14 paintings contained<lb/>
in the chapel.<lb/>
PROVIDES PRACTICAL EDUCATION<lb/>
"Though Mark Rothko had no concern with<lb/>
dogma or doctrine, he was an intensely religious<lb/>
man recalled Rothko's friend Dr. Robert<lb/>
Goldwater. The Houston paintings were<lb/>
intended to provide an atmosphere for<lb/>
contemplation of "the grandeur and the<lb/>
tragedy of the human condition To give the<lb/>
visitor's mind complete freedom. Rothko<lb/>
eliminated all recognizable symbols from his<lb/>
work, using instead vast areas of magenta and<lb/>
purpbsh reds.<lb/>
"The Broken Obelisk a sculpture by the<lb/>
late Barnett Newman, stands in a reflecting<lb/>
pool near the Chapel. The sculpture. 26 feet<lb/>
high and made of cor-ten steel, is dedicated to<lb/>
the memory of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr. Both building and sculpture are in a<lb/>
small park not far from the Institute of<lb/>
Religion for which the chapel will serve as a<lb/>
house of worship for all faiths.<lb/>
The Institute of Religion and Human<lb/>
Development was formed in 1954 by a group ot<lb/>
doctors and clergymen associated with the<lb/>
Texas Medical Center in Houston who foresaw<lb/>
the need for a connection between religion and<lb/>
medicine Today, the Institute provides<lb/>
graduate theology students with experience in<lb/>
three principal areas religious education in the<lb/>
hospital, marriage and family counseling, and<lb/>
ethical studies In this last field, students<lb/>
examine moral questions raised by such medical<lb/>
issues as organ transplants, artificial control of<lb/>
behavior, and drug dependence<lb/>
Working in the Medical Center provides<lb/>
Institute members with a combination of moral<lb/>
thought and practical application, removing<lb/>
some of the academic isolation from<lb/>
conventional learning. The students' close<lb/>
observation of man's physical problems gives<lb/>
them a scientific knowledge that complements<lb/>
their theological training It is a completely<lb/>
practical and constructive education, with little<lb/>
of the airy oiher-worldhness so often attributed<lb/>
to conventional lehgious study.<lb/>
"BLOOD AND WINE"<lb/>
The Rothko Chapel adds a new dimension to<lb/>
the Institute. Foi growing numbers of people,<lb/>
tiulitional religious practices are unable to<lb/>
express man's personal needs through worship<lb/>
By remaining open to all creeds, the chapel<lb/>
encourages participation in divine services.<lb/>
private meditation, and investigation of new<lb/>
forms of worship. Above all. the Rothko<lb/>
Chapel is at once a symbol and a workship tor<lb/>
the religious harmony of modern man<lb/>
Still, it is the art. not the philosophy . that is<lb/>
most obviously expressive of the Institute's<lb/>
work According, to an emu Thomas B Hess,<lb/>
the sculptuie Newman built an artistic<lb/>
conviction "so deeply elaborated and dedicated<lb/>
that in any other time or place it would have<lb/>
been called a religion And it is in the<lb/>
octagonal chapel and the work of Mark Rothko<lb/>
that the unity of religion and art is most keenly<lb/>
realized.<lb/>
Mrs John de Menil of Houston, one of the<lb/>
Chapel's onginators. recently remarked thai<lb/>
"the colors in the Rothko paintings are those ot<lb/>
blood and wine As you stand in the chapel<lb/>
she continued, "the paintings aie close very<lb/>
close even warm and comforting: yet. they<lb/>
do not oppress. Instead you feel ou could take<lb/>
(light "<lb/>
"Onl a mighty artist can capture in his work<lb/>
the infinity of God and his closeness to man<lb/>
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the 84th dav oi 1971 There<lb/>
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On this date in I So I S<lb/>
Secretary ol State William H.<lb/>
Sewaid and the Russian<lb/>
minister to the United Stales<lb/>
agreed on the US. purchase ol<lb/>
Alaska foi S7 million<lb/>
On this date:<lb/>
In 1746, the Spanish artist.<lb/>
Francisco Goya, was born<lb/>
In 1842. ether reputedly was<lb/>
used as an anesthetic for the<lb/>
first time by Dr Crawford<lb/>
Long of Jefferson. Ga<lb/>
In 18 5 6. the 15th<lb/>
Amendment to the U.S.<lb/>
Constitution was ratified,<lb/>
declaring that citizens could<lb/>
not be denied the right to vote<lb/>
because of race, color oi<lb/>
previous condition o I<lb/>
servitude.<lb/>
In l?40. Japan established a<lb/>
puppet government in<lb/>
occupied China<lb/>
Ten sears ago it was<lb/>
announced bv the Pentagon<lb/>
that 5 miluars installations in<lb/>
the U.S. and 2 1 US<lb/>
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Box 2516 ECU Station<lb/>
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RATES 11 for thefirat 26v?ord?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039547_0004"/><lb/>
M<lb/>
Page 4 Founuintwad March 10 ll?7l<lb/>
YOU'RE LUCKY 1 3U5T CAN'T"<lb/>
STK? A MAPPY MEDIUM"<lb/>
CO PZTOPFERZ<lb/>
TEST&amp;OOK<lb/>
iULS<lb/>
PHI6 ABUtatS)<lb/>
TAKt Noff' i<lb/>
ClAI THEV<lb/>
TO SMOKE 1ST 'HTH YOU<lb/>
ti<lb/>
jfc<lb/>
THE WIZARD OF ID<lb/>
by Br.n. p.rk.r ?-? J?hnn'<lb/>
hart<lb/>
tMt wiul-<lb/>
 fiiiiMiiu"i!iilL.VI?itii-iTiIBi<lb/>
( I HAVZH'T I<lb/>
HE tVN'r<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
by s.ClR6po'M'W)iD'r'<lb/>
Tango: no resolution, no conclusion<lb/>
By JOHN WALLACE<lb/>
(S t? 'I W r Iter)<lb/>
I .isi week the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse it aged Slawonii<lb/>
Mroek's farce. "Tango " The<lb/>
pl.i Iijv genuinely funny<lb/>
moments, but foi the most<lb/>
pan is .i series ol discussions<lb/>
thai have no resolution and no<lb/>
. oni lusion<lb/>
I he tango is a formal dance<lb/>
with established patterns that<lb/>
d e pe n d on j certai n<lb/>
accentuation ol the music In<lb/>
"1 ango" the formal steps of<lb/>
glide along with the music<lb/>
i reason I he only problem is<lb/>
thai the dance lasts too long<lb/>
" he presentation ol the<lb/>
conflict between the young<lb/>
son's seeming desire foi the<lb/>
? i' establishment ol the old<lb/>
conventions and the father's<lb/>
I freedom, the paradoxes<lb/>
11 mimic and continue<lb/>
Miock uses the changing<lb/>
structure of the family to<lb/>
reflect the changing values of<lb/>
society al large Once the<lb/>
conflicts are established, the<lb/>
pla) turns into a lalk-a-thon<lb/>
that deals with oi touches the<lb/>
theories ol even majoi critic<lb/>
since Aristotle<lb/>
Mioek justifies, oi perhaps<lb/>
tries to justify Ins use of farce<lb/>
in Stomil's speech in act two<lb/>
"Don'i you realize thai tragedy<lb/>
isn't possible anymore In our<lb/>
time only farce is possible "<lb/>
I he fault ol the play 'j<lb/>
nubility to sustain itself is that<lb/>
good logic doesn't always make<lb/>
good theatre To illustrate<lb/>
boredom, one doesn't have to<lb/>
be bonng. not to illustrate<lb/>
confusion must one be<lb/>
confusing<lb/>
Mthough the play has its<lb/>
less than hely moments, the<lb/>
cast can't be blamed Jim<lb/>
I eedom's Arthui was both<lb/>
delightful!) serious and<lb/>
convincing!) real<lb/>
Ideas motivated Arthur, and<lb/>
1 eeJom kept these ideas<lb/>
bubbling below the surface,<lb/>
jlwavs seeking the moment oi<lb/>
expression The one time his<lb/>
emotion instead of his ideas<lb/>
erupted in the second act with<lb/>
his attack on the young Ala. he<lb/>
seemed awkward in a wa) that<lb/>
was unbecoming and out of<lb/>
character.<lb/>
I he third act moved to the<lb/>
strains of a funeral dirge rather<lb/>
than a tango, until Leedom<lb/>
popped up completely drunk<lb/>
to speed-up what was left of<lb/>
Mroek's confusions and<lb/>
non-sequiturs.<lb/>
John Fleming's Stomil was<lb/>
grand, larger than life, and as<lb/>
all encompassing as the<lb/>
Revolution His speeches were<lb/>
naturally grandiose and his<lb/>
hesitation to take action in any<lb/>
situation was thoroughly<lb/>
amusing<lb/>
As the grandma lugenia.<lb/>
Miti Hy man was a jewel. She<lb/>
was superb, crotchety direct,<lb/>
and unfailingly honest<lb/>
George Merrell's Lugenewas<lb/>
enjoyable. His best moments<lb/>
were his one line commentaries<lb/>
that seemed to come at all the<lb/>
wrong times<lb/>
Linda Taylor's Eleanor, the<lb/>
mother, always seemed too<lb/>
young, too passive, and too<lb/>
restricted.<lb/>
Robin McDaniel's young and<lb/>
lovely Ala was never really coy<lb/>
enough to present a convincing<lb/>
obstacle or object for Arthur<lb/>
Richard Brown played the<lb/>
heavy with an expertise that<lb/>
matches t h e acting<lb/>
accomplishments of a James<lb/>
Brown or a Joe Namath.<lb/>
Albert Pcrtalion's direction<lb/>
brought the contusion Into<lb/>
focus, defined it as best one<lb/>
could, and maintained the<lb/>
distinctions oi the various<lb/>
characters<lb/>
The long static conversation<lb/>
between Eleanoi and Ala in act<lb/>
three was unforgiveable.<lb/>
The blocking amidst all the<lb/>
rubbish of the first two acls<lb/>
was smooth and easy Pertalion<lb/>
presented the characters as the<lb/>
anachronisms they were, rather<lb/>
than making them into mock<lb/>
heroic parodies<lb/>
Robert William's set<lb/>
displayed a sense of otder in<lb/>
spite of the disorder of the<lb/>
characters. On opening night,<lb/>
the moveablc wall, like<lb/>
Lohengrin's swan boat, tailed to<lb/>
move with its expected ease,<lb/>
but that is minor.<lb/>
The acting for the most part<lb/>
was good, and in several<lb/>
instances excellent. The play<lb/>
for the most part was good.<lb/>
but in more instances slow,<lb/>
tiresome, and wearying<lb/>
r<lb/>
you it "M c??v-<lb/>
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Good Seats still available at: -I <lb/>
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hit duties at<lb/>
June I,<lb/>
Rose, who<lb/>
Auburn L'niv<lb/>
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arolina co<lb/>
AGONY O<lb/>
faces of the<lb/>
to The Citai<lb/>
Saturday al<lb/>
Victorious<lb/>
Piral<lb/>
Tying two<lb/>
and coming i<lb/>
pole vault i<lb/>
season, the<lb/>
walloped Ru<lb/>
in a dual met<lb/>
The m e e<lb/>
scheduled foi<lb/>
track in Rale<lb/>
of inclement<lb/>
shifted to the<lb/>
track State,<lb/>
entered in the<lb/>
ol competitio<lb/>
Ronnie Sin<lb/>
from Hamlet<lb/>
mark in the<lb/>
hurdles with ;<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
100<lb/>
The other<lb/>
. CLI<lb/>
mi<lb/>
IB NO I<lb/>
Caii the people I<lb/>
? out<lb/>
:(212)4<lb/>
? OPEN 1<lb/>
? PnonssioNti s<lb/>
? MS fifth ?'<lb/>
? ? ? There it a<lb/>
<pb facs="00039547_0005"/><lb/>
?4<lb/>
ML?<lb/>
Five evenfs canceled<lb/>
March 30, 1971, Fountainhead, P?p 5<lb/>
Snowfall dampens sports weekend<lb/>
DAN MONROE<lb/>
wo ECU athletes<lb/>
ceive high honors<lb/>
IWayne Norris was named<lb/>
u t her tio n I e ren ce<lb/>
jwimmei -ol the-Year" lor<lb/>
?71 and Dan Monroe of<lb/>
ECU wrestling sijuad was<lb/>
runner-up for conference<lb/>
fceitier-of-the-Year" honori<lb/>
i e ce n t balloting by<lb/>
llciencc coaches.<lb/>
Morris, who captured three<lb/>
the four votes cast, set<lb/>
lool records in the 200-yard<lb/>
Individual medley (204).<lb/>
200-yard buttetfly (2 02 5).<lb/>
and 400-yard individual<lb/>
medley (4:28.6).<lb/>
He is a sophomore from<lb/>
Fayetteville.<lb/>
Monroe, a freshman from<lb/>
Warners. N.Y captured the<lb/>
nod from two conference<lb/>
coaches. He lost by two vottl<lb/>
to Lonnie Parker, a William<lb/>
and Mary wrestler who has<lb/>
won the conference title at<lb/>
IIX pounds the last four years.<lb/>
The conference champion at<lb/>
126, Monroe was in Auburn.<lb/>
Ala this past weekend for the<lb/>
NCAA Nationals.<lb/>
The unexpected inowfalli last Thursday .md Friday brought<lb/>
some unusual cancellation! foi March on the ECU sports scene,<lb/>
and those teami thai did manage to compete are probably<lb/>
regretting (hat the Itorm hadn't been worse.<lb/>
A snowoul in Match' That's what Pirate baseball coach Earl<lb/>
Smith faced Friday when Ins forces were to play Dartmouth in<lb/>
the second game ol their two-game series.<lb/>
ECU was ready to atone for an 11-0 defeat suffered at the<lb/>
hands of the Indians the previous day. llo ever the weatherman<lb/>
said "No" and the game nevei came off,<lb/>
Saturday afternoon brought Virginia to University Field and<lb/>
the playing conditions had not improved enough so the teams had<lb/>
to settle foi a doubleheadei Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
SKIES CLEAf, BY SUNDAY<lb/>
The skies were clear and it was a great day for the long-awaited<lb/>
games. However, when the twin-bill was over, the Pirates had seen<lb/>
their losing streak extend to lour games by losing both ends, 4-5<lb/>
and 1-0<lb/>
Both games could have gone either way. In fact, the Pirates<lb/>
were leading the opener 5-4 until a seventh-inning homcrun by<lb/>
the Virginia catcher evened things up.<lb/>
The Cavaliers won with lour runs in the ninth.<lb/>
MASTERFUL TWO-HITTER<lb/>
Hal Band was working on a masterful two-hitter lor tCL' in<lb/>
the nightcap but he weakened in the eighth, allowing the only run<lb/>
By DON TRAUSIMECK<lb/>
(Sp')Ms f ditor)<lb/>
to cioss the plate<lb/>
The Pirates, now 2-5. ttavel to VMI foi a Sunday<lb/>
doubleheader.<lb/>
Coach John Lovitedt'i lacrosse team faced a better late than<lb/>
that of the Pirate nine Scheduled to play at Washington and Lee.<lb/>
the stickmen were unable to travel, due to the adverse conditions<lb/>
THINCLADS RUN AWAY<lb/>
l( I "s track team was scheduled for a meet in Raleigh with<lb/>
Richmond and State but because the Raleigh track was not in<lb/>
shape for the meet, as a result oi the Itorm, the meet was shifted<lb/>
to Greenville. Coach Bill (arson's thinclads won over Richmond<lb/>
here, 110-35.<lb/>
Bill Dickens was set to send his tennis team into two matches<lb/>
against Old Dominion Saturday and Last Stroudsburg Sunday<lb/>
However, the first one had to be canceled<lb/>
In Sunday's match, the Pirate netters made their record 2-3<lb/>
with a 5-2 victory Bill Van Mtddlesworth. drier Ferguson, Allan<lb/>
Hinds, and Bruce Linton were victorious in singles competition.<lb/>
DOUBLES TEAMS VICTORIOUS<lb/>
The doubles teams ol Graham Felton and Linton. and Hinds<lb/>
and Chris Staunton, were also victorious. The Pirates will host<lb/>
Appalachian Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
Golf was another sport that tell victim to the weather<lb/>
conditions. A match between John Welborn's hnksters and Duke,<lb/>
scheduled for Friday, was canceled<lb/>
And the ECU crew would probabl) have liked loi the<lb/>
conditions to be too bad to hold their scheduled lace with The<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
Perhaps overconfident altei then tremendous viUot ovei<lb/>
Virginia the previous weekend, ihe Buc lowers lost by one boat<lb/>
length in varsity competition and by several lengths in the juihoi<lb/>
varsity race<lb/>
The football drills also were hampered somewhat when the<lb/>
conditions forced cancellation ol Saturday 'i practice<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
I ountamhead. Page S<lb/>
Tuesday, March 30, 1971<lb/>
?ST?xiji . yj ?? ?<lb/>
ECU signs Rose Stickmen drop season opener, 10-6;<lb/>
. George Rose, who played six<lb/>
seasons in the National<lb/>
Football League with the<lb/>
Vikings, Saints and 40'ers. was<lb/>
named last week as freshman<lb/>
football coach at ECU.<lb/>
EC I' head coach Sonny<lb/>
Randle, a teammate of Rose<lb/>
with the San Francisco 40crs in<lb/>
196H. announced the hiring of<lb/>
8se and said he would assume<lb/>
duties at the University<lb/>
June 1<lb/>
Rose, who giaduated from<lb/>
Auburn University in 0(S4.<lb/>
was forced to retire from the<lb/>
NFI aftei the 1969 season due<lb/>
to a knee iiijuiy He spent the<lb/>
past year as head football<lb/>
Bch at Glen Ai idemy. a prep<lb/>
Uool in his In netown of<lb/>
Brunswick. Ga.<lb/>
VERY FOND'<lb/>
"I became very fond of<lb/>
George in the two years I was<lb/>
at San Francisco saiu Randle.<lb/>
"George impressed me as more<lb/>
than just a football player He<lb/>
was a devoted student of the<lb/>
game had a great way with<lb/>
ftids and was just a fine<lb/>
?around individual<lb/>
"We are extremely fortunate<lb/>
have a man of George Rose's<lb/>
lher to be our freshman<lb/>
oach this year at Hast<lb/>
arolina continued Randle<lb/>
"I know he will do an excellent<lb/>
job working with our incoming<lb/>
freshmen<lb/>
The 29-year-old mentor.<lb/>
Rose starred as a runningback<lb/>
foi Auburn in the early 960's<lb/>
and the Minnesota Vikings<lb/>
selected him third in the 1964<lb/>
pro player draft He played in<lb/>
the 1964 College All-Star<lb/>
Game<lb/>
DRAFT SELECTEE<lb/>
Rose, who is married and<lb/>
the father oi a young girl,<lb/>
was selected by the New<lb/>
Orleans Saints in the 1967<lb/>
NFL expansion draft and<lb/>
started for them that season.<lb/>
The hiring of Rose<lb/>
completes the Pirates' 1971<lb/>
football staff. Randle now has<lb/>
eight coaches offensive<lb/>
coordinator Vito Ragazzo,<lb/>
offensive backfieid coach<lb/>
Henry Trevathan. offensive line<lb/>
coach Dick Rupee, defensive<lb/>
COOrdinatOI Carl Reese.<lb/>
defensive line coach AI<lb/>
Ferguson, linebackers coach<lb/>
and chiel scout Paul<lb/>
Weathersbee. defensive<lb/>
secondary coach George<lb/>
Whitley. and Rose.<lb/>
Weathersbee and Whitley<lb/>
technically are graduate<lb/>
assistants, but both will work<lb/>
strictly with the varsity.<lb/>
face William &amp; Mary Indians today<lb/>
Suffering a barrage of lix<lb/>
goals in the final period. E( U's<lb/>
lacrosse team opened its season<lb/>
Thursday afternoon losing to a<lb/>
fired-up Ohio Wesleyan ten.<lb/>
10-6.<lb/>
The Pirates, who will host<lb/>
conference foe William and<lb/>
Mary this afternoon, were to<lb/>
have played a game at<lb/>
Washington and Lee Saturday<lb/>
but the unexpected snowfall<lb/>
(Staff photo by Rom Mann)<lb/>
PIRATE STICKMAN ERIC<lb/>
SCHANDELMEIER tallies early goal for Wesleyan.<lb/>
the Bucs in season opener against Ohio but Bucs<lb/>
canceled their travel plans<lb/>
Last season, the Pirates and<lb/>
William and Mary split a pair of<lb/>
games, each team winning on<lb/>
the other's field<lb/>
The first game between the<lb/>
teams found ECU on top by a<lb/>
7-5 count at the final horn.<lb/>
The Pirates actually outshot<lb/>
and outplayed the Indians by a<lb/>
wide margin but mistakes cost<lb/>
them a bigger win.<lb/>
In the rematch, two weeks<lb/>
later in Ficklen Stadium. ECU<lb/>
grabbed command early only<lb/>
to see several leads vanish with<lb/>
a Hurry of Indian goals in the<lb/>
second hall<lb/>
With neither team able to<lb/>
grab command late in the game<lb/>
or in the two overtime periods.<lb/>
the Indians eventually came<lb/>
out better, winning 7-6 in<lb/>
sudden-death.<lb/>
In last week's opener, the<lb/>
Pirates were flat on offense<lb/>
with mistakes and bad passes<lb/>
proving to be their downfall.<lb/>
Also, they had a tough time<lb/>
clearing the ball on defense and<lb/>
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)<lb/>
ACTION WAS FAST and furious in Thursday's lacrosse<lb/>
opener with Ohio Wesleyan Here, ECU attackman<lb/>
attempts to evade Ohio Wesleyan defender in late<lb/>
action.<lb/>
tound most of the game being<lb/>
played near the LCU goal.<lb/>
The score was tied 4-4 at the<lb/>
end ot the third period but<lb/>
Ohio Lesley an oulscored the<lb/>
hosts 6-2 in the final 15<lb/>
minutes for the win<lb/>
Eric Schandelmeier and<lb/>
Mike Denniston got two goals<lb/>
each for the Bucs while Don<lb/>
McCorkel and Dave Holdeter<lb/>
added one each<lb/>
Following today's game, the<lb/>
Pirates travel to Duke Friday<lb/>
for the first of four straight<lb/>
road games<lb/>
Schandelmeier<lb/>
lost, 10-6.<lb/>
scored twice<lb/>
Key players injured<lb/>
Pirates suffer Last Stand<lb/>
(Staff photo oy Ross Mann)<lb/>
Richmond the previous weekend, the<lb/>
Bucs led The Citadel early in the race<lb/>
only to lose by five seconds at the final<lb/>
mark. The ECU junior varsity crew also<lb/>
lost by 30 seconds.<lb/>
Pirates speed past Richmond<lb/>
Tying two school records<lb/>
and coming up with the best<lb/>
pole vault in the state this<lb/>
season, the BCU trackmen<lb/>
walloped Richmond, 110-35.<lb/>
in a dual meet here Saturday.<lb/>
The meet was originally<lb/>
scheduled for the N.C. State<lb/>
track in Raleigh but. because<lb/>
of inclement weather, it was<lb/>
shifted to the ECU all-weather<lb/>
track State, the third i-am<lb/>
entered in the meet, bowed out<lb/>
of competition<lb/>
Ronnie Smith, a sophomore<lb/>
from Hamlet, tied the ECU<lb/>
mark in the 120-yard high<lb/>
hurdles with a clocking of 14.1<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
100 DASH<lb/>
The other mark was lied by<lb/>
? ?????? cup ?no ?iil?llA!<lb/>
;MAB0ru<lb/>
IIS NO LO"<lb/>
Goldsboro freshman Phil<lb/>
Phillips, who won the 100-yard<lb/>
dash in 9.7 seconds.<lb/>
Bill Bean, the Camp l.ejeune<lb/>
juniot. set the pole vault mark,<lb/>
winning the event at 15 feet.<lb/>
Although not a school record.<lb/>
it is the best recorded in North<lb/>
Carolina ta 1971.<lb/>
WIN 14 EVENTS<lb/>
In all. the Pirates won 14 of<lb/>
17 events.<lb/>
Larry Malone won the long<lb/>
jump at 23'3 Ray Quick won<lb/>
the high jump at 6'2 Barry<lb/>
Johnson won the quarter mile<lb/>
in 51.4 seconds. Jim Kidd won<lb/>
the half mile in 1:54.6, Ivey<lb/>
Peacock won the shot put at<lb/>
45'4" and the<lb/>
132'ir-plus.<lb/>
OTHER WINNERS<lb/>
Also, Lawrence Wilkerson<lb/>
won the triple jump at 45'2<lb/>
Ronnie Smith won the<lb/>
Intermediate hurdles in 57.7<lb/>
seconds: Ron Hunt won the<lb/>
220-yard dash m 21 H seconds<lb/>
and John Hoffman won the<lb/>
javelin at 171 feet.<lb/>
The ECU mile-relay team ol<lb/>
Tom Inserr. Ted Bales. Rusty<lb/>
Carraway, and Gerald Klas was<lb/>
victorious in .3:26 7.<lb/>
The Pirates will now travel<lb/>
to Columbia. S.C for the<lb/>
State Record Relays Saturday.<lb/>
It's been a rough spring so<lb/>
far for pass receivers at ECU.<lb/>
As coach Sonny Randle's<lb/>
Pirates entered the second full<lb/>
week of spring football drills.<lb/>
no fewer than four members of<lb/>
the receiving corps were<lb/>
sidelined by injuries.<lb/>
"Gary Wann. our junior<lb/>
college transfer quarterback<lb/>
from California, is responsible<lb/>
for three of the injuries said<lb/>
Randle. who obviously wasn't<lb/>
blaming Wann. only kidding<lb/>
him.<lb/>
?THROWS HARD'<lb/>
"Gary throws the ball so<lb/>
hard and some of our young<lb/>
receivers just weren't used to<lb/>
? catching him Three men<lb/>
suffered hand injuries torn<lb/>
ligaments, broken fingers, that<lb/>
sort of thing when they were<lb/>
catching Gary Wann's passes<lb/>
The three, all sophomores,<lb/>
are Clark Davis of Wilson. Mike<lb/>
Mynck of Goldsboro and Stan<lb/>
Eure of Chesapeake, Va.<lb/>
The fourth hobbled receiver<lb/>
is returning split end starter<lb/>
Carl Gordon, a senior from<lb/>
Jacksonville. Fla. The 6-5<lb/>
Gordon, who was the No. 2<lb/>
receiver for the Pirates last fall,<lb/>
has been slow coming around<lb/>
after an off-season knee<lb/>
operation Gordon injured the<lb/>
knee in the N.C. State game<lb/>
last October.<lb/>
CONCERNED'<lb/>
"We're very concerned<lb/>
about Carl said Randle<lb/>
"Somedays he runs and other<lb/>
days he can't run. And he's had<lb/>
no contact work. We need him<lb/>
very badly, but right now we're<lb/>
making plans to go without<lb/>
him. He's that big of a question<lb/>
mark II ! can't play, it will<lb/>
really hurt us because Carl can<lb/>
be a great r ceivtr<lb/>
So far, the brightest part of<lb/>
the pass catching picture has<lb/>
been the work of junior college<lb/>
transfer Tom Counter from<lb/>
Virginia Beach. Va.<lb/>
By SAMMY HYDE<lb/>
(Staff witer)<lb/>
The Dartmouth Indians<lb/>
went on the warpath and<lb/>
brought home 11 runs, rather<lb/>
than customary scalps in their<lb/>
raid over the ECU Pirates<lb/>
Thursday afternoon.<lb/>
It was "Custer's Last Stand"<lb/>
all over again The Indians<lb/>
attacked the Pirates with a<lb/>
barrage oi 10 hits, while their<lb/>
chief on the mound allowed<lb/>
but five scattered hits and four<lb/>
walks in the massacre<lb/>
The Pirates were scheduled<lb/>
to play the Indians again<lb/>
Friday but an unexpected<lb/>
snow storm and rain<lb/>
probably brought on by the<lb/>
Indians' medicine man<lb/>
forced cancellation ot the<lb/>
game<lb/>
In the second inning the<lb/>
Pirates faced their first casualty<lb/>
followed by another in the<lb/>
thud, two in the seventh, four<lb/>
in the eighth, and three in the<lb/>
ninth totalling to an 11-0<lb/>
shutout for the Indians<lb/>
The second-inning run by<lb/>
the Indians came on a double<lb/>
and a two-base error<lb/>
The Pirates mustered a<lb/>
threat in the first With one<lb/>
out. Dick Corrada singled to<lb/>
short and Lairy Walters singled<lb/>
to right An error on a fielder's<lb/>
choice loaded the bases The<lb/>
rally, however, ended when<lb/>
Roy Coble grounded into a<lb/>
fielder's choice<lb/>
The hitting for the Pirates<lb/>
was scattered with five<lb/>
different men getting a hit<lb/>
each Matt Walker. Corrada.<lb/>
Walters. Mike Aldndge and<lb/>
Stan Sneeden Defensively . the<lb/>
Pirates committed six errors<lb/>
The losing pitcher was Ron<lb/>
Hastings, now 1-1 Hastings<lb/>
went seven innings striking out<lb/>
five, walking five, and giving up<lb/>
seven hits and eight runs, only<lb/>
two ol which were earned Bill<lb/>
Godwin came on in the eighth<lb/>
with two out to relieve<lb/>
Hastings Mike<lb/>
Va n L andingham relieved<lb/>
Godwin in the ninth.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
Lexington. Va Sunday to meet<lb/>
the Keydets of VMI in a<lb/>
scheduled doubleheader They<lb/>
return to University Field April<lb/>
8 to meet the Citadel before<lb/>
they start their Easter trip<lb/>
April o<lb/>
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Join National Union of Students. Inc now for full<lb/>
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Campus representative requited Applicants for this<lb/>
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"Programme Coordinator. All interested write to:<lb/>
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Suite'M I. 159 W. 33rd Street<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039547_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
R<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
8dUoUa(b and ($ommenaty<lb/>
and the truth shall make you tree<lb/>
SGA legislature adopts<lb/>
MRC 'open dorm' policy<lb/>
I n .1 uii' show ol si tul<lb/>
unanimity the s(, Legi lature voted<lb/>
M idu) to declare I lie men <lb/>
doi mitoi ies open from I noon until<lb/>
t in lew seen da s i week<lb/>
S Presid ; Bo V utlc) <lb/>
the hod) to oft'ii mil) repi imand I I I<lb/>
Presidenl 1 eo Icnkins foi "putiii ? ?<lb/>
Hie decisioi ?? I'<lb/>
Intion itsell was submitted h)<lb/>
MRC President I nil Ki alsi<lb/>
SGA I egislatoi<lb/>
rhis action unites the IKi and<lb/>
the S( t i'ii .1 majoi iss w li.ii<lb/>
he the liisi nine W i ih.il<lb/>
it should be obvious by now dial<lb/>
men tiuk"is no longei w ill .i.<lb/>
Mii dated and pointless iesti k :<lb/>
then personal and private lives<lb/>
In addition t'ii. action hi<lb/>
the su ; idem ttov ernment .it<lb/>
i ? ! and plants it firmly "ii the<lb/>
I .k h v e.n we go  the<lb/>
? - I<lb/>
i ? pre se n i us in .i governmental<lb/>
? lipa it Now wt heai i uniors i hal<lb/>
jdmmisti I ? ppi irl ol otu student<lb/>
government will be removed il the<lb/>
S (IA ilivv nol d o w hal i he<lb/>
administration wishes<lb/>
llu MR has taken .i stand on<lb/>
iIns iss i d ' he st i has now<lb/>
taken tin stand I ithei Icnkins<lb/>
w ill oi w ill ' i aa pi i hen milled<lb/>
dct ision<lb/>
w applaude the SGA I legislature<lb/>
demonstrating thai they have the<lb/>
intestinal fortitude to join with the<lb/>
MKt in standing up foi what then<lb/>
.tituents desire in the face ol<lb/>
administrative pit ssure<lb/>
Mow thai thi S( i has stood up ii<lb/>
lins to be seen whethei the) w ill<lb/>
illowed to remain standing oi<lb/>
fiei they will be 'pul in theii<lb/>
place" In whal may be ,i vet large<lb/>
 admimsti .ii ion fo i<lb/>
It's otit move Jenkins.<lb/>
Women students deserve<lb/>
voice in dorm policy<lb/>
The Forum<lb/>
Hi several d<lb/>
positioi - ? -<lb/>
ii .line tl ts ol women<lb/>
j i ng tlu k i si I<lb/>
a til IIS .r s ' <lb/>
mttory si<lb/>
I' in<lb/>
?  Id i p<lb/>
? '<lb/>
H<lb/>
s.lV s<lb/>
i' <lb/>
that tlies do<lb/>
K<lb/>
? - MRi<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
ol both<lb/>
limitation upon<lb/>
the requirement that<lb/>
ajai<lb/>
ng !<lb/>
S en hundred and eight) seven<lb/>
. - ha .? been received .is ilus<lb/>
to press<lb/>
I i .i p p e .i i s i h ,i i ,i serions<lb/>
blem esisis w iih<lb/>
ther ol the two fat tions<lb/>
d I he onl) wa) thai we<lb/>
' which position the<lb/>
 students support<lb/>
is to .isk them in out wa) oi<lb/>
 the actions ol Shea<lb/>
Bixon not because we feel that<lb/>
women's visitation regulations should<lb/>
ixed but because we feel tli.it<lb/>
a .tudents deserve to have<lb/>
 n one w.i or<lb/>
? I in has indicated that she<lb/>
will take the sentiments expressed b)<lb/>
i ii sideral i( ?n upon<lb/>
 ip thai ach and ever) co-ed<lb/>
take thi tim to examine the<lb/>
refull) and make up then<lb/>
mind .is to whether the) do oi<lb/>
do not support what the petition<lb/>
sts<lb/>
Appreciate efforts Rubber stamp<lb/>
Grand flag<lb/>
The Doctor's Bag<lb/>
By ARNOLD WERNER MD<lb/>
QUESTION What a<lb/>
wluJi gross oi<lb/>
siz.es and qu ?'<lb/>
i ating the<lb/>
etables. telling i . tained<lb/>
while the<lb/>
cat I" this Is there any km<lb/>
ire itmenl available t<lb/>
marks'1<lb/>
SW R ! h<lb/>
grow ;<lb/>
grow ili rate is a<lb/>
i I milliinetei i It takes approxim u<lb/>
months foi<lb/>
1 lie nail pu<lb/>
hjse approximately I 10 ol<lb/>
n hi' he white<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
variety ol illnesses<lb/>
re si less can al these<lb/>
Many people have the<lb/>
pai ik tilai cause I hey are hai n<lb/>
Fungu ml tions ol the nail hoi jie more<lb/>
i little while marks and result in<lb/>
iderable distortion ol the nail; this should<lb/>
be treated b) a physician reiling lies addles<lb/>
? ? e in fingei intact<lb/>
?I sure why sun would warn to treat these<lb/>
umerous and you are<lb/>
i ned. I suggest thai you check with a<lb/>
pllvs! you d0 no h .<lb/>
othei inedk.il<lb/>
il lsi(i Whal qualifications would you<lb/>
a Ii mg and how<lb/>
.iihe through the mouth<lb/>
e w Inle steaming and w hal<lb/>
S I R I  Sa<lb/>
they feel<lb/>
1 table,<lb/>
I I I kll"W<lb/>
n mal tl eathe<lb/>
- and ii :<lb/>
fouritainhead<lb/>
Jim Eichhng<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Robert R. Thonen<lb/>
?dit ' ? ? ? '<lb/>
Ass" <lb/>
Kevin Tray<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Holly Fmman<lb/>
K.iriMi Hlansf iftlri<lb/>
Oon Trausneck<lb/>
Ira Baker<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Features Fditor<lb/>
Sports F ttitor<lb/>
Adviser<lb/>
Published By the students ol . ? . . ,<lb/>
North Cat i I<lb/>
Advertising open rate I<lb/>
C HiSlNed 11.00 lor the 'Irsl<lb/>
? ' ? ' r yeai<lb/>
I<lb/>
?Mat lly thosi<lb/>
I Fountainhead<lb/>
I would like n in be known thai there are<lb/>
smiie oi is who appreciate the efforts<lb/>
Fountainhead h.is made ovei the yeai in an<lb/>
al tempi to give 1(1 an itmosphere ol<lb/>
academic freedom I and m friends relish<lb/>
everything from the very expressive "trash ol<lb/>
cartoonist k Finch to the caustic letters in the<lb/>
I orum Hie olume II issue Nt 41 ol<lb/>
Fountainhead exemplified what I feel is the<lb/>
purpose ol a student newspapei to serve the<lb/>
interests ol tin. students "he entirety ol page<lb/>
linn on the problems ol the d I - was a<lb/>
masterpiece<lb/>
On a campus where the SGA seems i b<lb/>
functioning somewhere on Mais, ji is a relief to<lb/>
have good representation in a student<lb/>
newspapei Powei to the people!<lb/>
Frank N Bennett. Jr<lb/>
Most competent<lb/>
11 I "in tatnhead<lb/>
s a membei ol the MM Visitation<lb/>
Committee 1 have been actively involved since<lb/>
lasi fall in working h ting an extended<lb/>
seven-day visitation policy foi this campus<lb/>
I nfortunately it took a confrontation ol sorts<lb/>
with the administration to achieve the policy<lb/>
we should soon have Ihe struggle foi ilus<lb/>
advancement was unnecessarily long and drawn<lb/>
.an simply because SGA and MKt executive<lb/>
officers weir unwilling to whole-heartedly<lb/>
support and push for extended visistation<lb/>
Students should not be misled noi impressed<lb/>
by thai candidate foi the SGA Presidency who<lb/>
has actually prolonged the final enactment ol<lb/>
visitation by keeping il in his special committee<lb/>
foi an expedient political football I tut trick<lb/>
smells already ol an administration lackey<lb/>
I am very concerned thai progress al 1(1<lb/>
nol end with the final validity ol wsiiaii.ni<lb/>
I Ins university has much to catch up with il it<lb/>
is i" be true to the definition ol a university<lb/>
Now is nol the lime to eleel a student "Uncle<lb/>
l"in' We need a student government chiel<lb/>
executive who will stand firm against<lb/>
administration oiity Hall pressure, who is<lb/>
creative and progressive in action as well as in<lb/>
concepts Oui SGA needs committed<lb/>
leadership<lb/>
1M the hi ii ol three, Glenn Croshaw is<lb/>
undoubtedly (he mosl competent His<lb/>
ilifications are Ins fortitude, dynamism,<lb/>
jressivistn and determination to do the job<lb/>
thai will be expected ol him lie will represent<lb/>
student inti<lb/>
Ilus is an important election What makes it<lb/>
su important is whal isal stake When you vote<lb/>
March 10 vote foi commitment one foi<lb/>
Glenn roshaw foi SGA presidenl<lb/>
Cecil Myers<lb/>
Wrong direction<lb/>
I" Fi luntainhead<lb/>
Ii seems in me ihai the "men "I the Hill"<lb/>
ought I" know the real rim Bixon Mi Bixon<lb/>
the "acting" presidenl ol the MKt is<lb/>
exploiting the Hill<lb/>
He seems i" think th.it he has taken<lb/>
visitation to the position when' n stands now<lb/>
Nowhere He thinks thai he is the one that has<lb/>
done everything on the "Hill "<lb/>
Well Mi Bixon "u haven') done a damn<lb/>
thing except to use yum position as "acting"<lb/>
MM president to net when you are now a<lb/>
Insei<lb/>
Il you, thi reader vote foi Bixon, your vote<lb/>
will semi you in the wrong direction Ii is not<lb/>
my position I tell you who to vote for, but<lb/>
please realize thai Mi Bixon will exploit you as<lb/>
he has exploited the MR and the "Hill '<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Michael Jacohson<lb/>
11 ? Fountainhead<lb/>
Ii is time i"i people, no mattei whal age, to<lb/>
stop rubber-stamping approval foi everything<lb/>
"in "meal government" has done foi us Have<lb/>
you people completely stopped thinking foi<lb/>
yourselves? People have to learn to examine<lb/>
things, make decisions and stand b) them up to<lb/>
a point l"i example, anytime you tell othei<lb/>
people who don'i agree with you on some<lb/>
issue, like iei Yin, to leave the country . you<lb/>
are becoming as closeminded and repressive as<lb/>
the extremes ol both the left and right,<lb/>
communism andfascism<lb/>
Statements like "I s love it oi leave it"<lb/>
have as much relevancy as statements fri<lb/>
othei side like "Vietnam love it oi leave it<lb/>
Oui governmenl is fai from perfect, hut we, the<lb/>
people, must siay here and n to make<lb/>
improvements instead ol "going back to youi<lb/>
home o'ei the sea (Lettei to Fountainhead,<lb/>
March 25)<lb/>
s I s citizens, il we are dissatisfied with<lb/>
something then il is oui job i work hard here<lb/>
m the ISA and try i change il Ii is through<lb/>
these efforts thai the greatness ol oui country<lb/>
will show<lb/>
I hi righl "i dissent in ilus country is as old<lb/>
as thi righl ol religious preference Anyone<lb/>
who advocates the repression ol "protest and<lb/>
dissention" (same letter) as a way ol keeping<lb/>
America great is nisi stagnant in the mind<lb/>
Believe me, it I didn'i ilimk il was worth the<lb/>
effort and hard work to change things in this<lb/>
countr), I wniildn'i sia<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Jeff Schtmberg<lb/>
Another committee<lb/>
i o Mr I mi Bixon<lb/>
Su ihe MKt visitation committee is a farce<lb/>
Didn'i the MKt institute D HOC, which was<lb/>
supposed i" reach an important decision before<lb/>
quartet break Yes, AD IKK reached a<lb/>
decision, visitation 7 days a week, noon until<lb/>
curfew But, Mi Bixon, the administration did<lb/>
nut ukav the proposal Now anothei committee<lb/>
has been established This sounds even mure<lb/>
erroneous Mi Bixon, does this committee vest<lb/>
more authority that DIK) or let's not forget<lb/>
the administration, the highest Echelon<lb/>
Moreover, the students ol 1(1 are not<lb/>
informed ol when the problem will be solved.<lb/>
relating to the following statements Vou said<lb/>
in the March 16, lv7 issue ol Fountainhead<lb/>
that the issue has to he approved b) I): lenkins<lb/>
and then the Board ol trustees<lb/>
l IKx was also a committee, but also a<lb/>
mistake<lb/>
Do you think youi new committee will<lb/>
dissipate enough heai. in ordei 1" reach a<lb/>
decision in 72 anothei Hellacious committee<lb/>
DW Smith<lb/>
Personal support<lb/>
I" I ountainhead:<lb/>
t tor thoughtful!) considering all the<lb/>
candidates foi SGA vice-picsident, we the<lb/>
undersigned support Have Edwards foi that<lb/>
office His voting record and Ins real concern<lb/>
ini student interest qualifies him above the rest<lb/>
Most importantly, Dave Edwards has<lb/>
introduced into the legislature many hills thai<lb/>
have indicated Ins willingness lii lake the<lb/>
initiative in working foi itudenti We urge vnu<lb/>
In v111? March .tilth and I" vote lui Dave<lb/>
Edwards<lb/>
Cecil Myers<lb/>
Dwight Watson<lb/>
Robert Luisana<lb/>
David Lacel<lb/>
Chris Williams<lb/>
Steve Klein<lb/>
David McGee<lb/>
Cindy Maultsbuy<lb/>
I.i I ountainhead<lb/>
Mi Jorgenson, "She's a grand old flag, she s<lb/>
a high flying flag, and forevci in peace ma) she<lb/>
wave<lb/>
Patriotically yours,<lb/>
Whitney Hadden<lb/>
Inside joke<lb/>
I" I ountainhead<lb/>
It's getting rathei pathetic when the<lb/>
Fountainhead must use a bob) to get a laugh<lb/>
ilues March 23) Youi "inside Joke" was far<lb/>
from being a joke 1" a male screw ofl who<lb/>
doesn'l frankly give a damn about the mother<lb/>
involved, il may certainly he an "inside oke "<lb/>
But listen well I" a pregnant girl the pain,<lb/>
heartbreak and confusion she feels when caught<lb/>
in a situation in which she feels she has no one<lb/>
iii turn to, ii is lai from being a joke Don't<lb/>
alienate the pregnant gnls ol the world, foi<lb/>
aftei all. it it weren't foi them who would you<lb/>
seiew ' Were you an "inside joke <lb/>
Name Withheld<lb/>
Apparent pervert<lb/>
I o Fountainhead<lb/>
Although I am sure that ken Finch does not<lb/>
need me to defend him, noi does he want me<lb/>
to. I am equatl) sine that I will scream il I see<lb/>
one mine derogatory letter about him<lb/>
Ihe Marine Corps will make vou a man The<lb/>
Marine Corps build halls What's the difference '<lb/>
Thev say the same thing, but one is put more<lb/>
"delicately" than the othei<lb/>
Besides, that was nol the point Supposedly,<lb/>
there is a revolution going on In ordei to carry<lb/>
on a revolution, you need military training So<lb/>
where is a bettei place to get this training than<lb/>
the Marine Corps? You even get paid foi n<lb/>
Apparently I am a pervert because<lb/>
"obscenity and filth" do nol bothei me It just<lb/>
doesn'l mean anything to me I heartily enjoy<lb/>
Ken Finch's cartoons and I feel for you pom<lb/>
sheltered children who eithei hate se so had<lb/>
you can't stand to heai about it, or are so afraid<lb/>
ol tailing into temptation that othei people<lb/>
have to protect vou from it<lb/>
By this tune, everybody can recognize a Ken<lb/>
Finch cartoon iusi by looking at it. It vou feel<lb/>
that it will damage youi purity oi offend youi<lb/>
sense ol morals (m tmtellatc vou so much you<lb/>
lust hive to go out and lape someone 1. then hv<lb/>
all means, don't read It Bui il Vou .tie the . auv<lb/>
"i depriving me ol the enjoyment ol his<lb/>
cartoons hv having them removed, then vou<lb/>
have done me and every othei Finch tan a great<lb/>
disservice Kindly refrain from protecting mv<lb/>
morals. I don't need any help<lb/>
Again, my apologies to Ken Finch More<lb/>
than defending you I am blasting the lunkheads<lb/>
in tins world who think everybody's values are<lb/>
the same as theirs,a ii they Bren'l they should<lb/>
he, jnil v do everything in theii powei to<lb/>
make II so<lb/>
Sincerely.<lb/>
Sue Bowermaster<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
.Students and employees ol the I'mveisiiv are<lb/>
urged to express their opinions in ihe Student<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Letters should he concise and to the point<lb/>
Letters must not exceed .100 words<lb/>
The editors reserve the right to edit all<lb/>
letters for style errors and length<lb/>
? All letters must be signed wud i,c name ol<lb/>
the writer Upon the writer's personal request<lb/>
his name will be withheld<lb/>
Signed articles on this page reflect the<lb/>
opinions of the writer, and rim necessanlv<lb/>
those of Fountainhead or last Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Said ECI<lb/>
D<lb/>
was attended<lb/>
students, man<lb/>
wearing<lb/>
armbands.<lb/>
' We're t<lb/>
downtown I<lb/>
like Death V;<lb/>
Rob Luisai<lb/>
suspended<lb/>
violating I'niv<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
The only<lb/>
will not be b<lb/>
Kaleidoscope.<lb/>
Leather Sho<lb/>
I able, the II<lb/>
the bars.<lb/>
A I atei a<lb/>

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