<?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="00039557_0001"/>
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ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Voluint II, Number i 1<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Tuesday. May 4 1971<lb/>
MRCresignsen masse<lb/>
The Men's Residence Council resigned en<lb/>
masse Thursday night, following the lead of its<lb/>
president, Mark Wilson.<lb/>
The resignations are the latest in a series of<lb/>
confrontations with the administration over the<lb/>
legislative capacity of the MRC.<lb/>
Wilson said that he could no longer continue<lb/>
in good faith as a member of the council<lb/>
because it was supposed to be a student<lb/>
government.yet was not allowed to govern.<lb/>
He said (hat although he was resigning, he<lb/>
did not want the MRC itself to be dissolved,<lb/>
since perhaps there were some students who<lb/>
liked pretending to be a government, and<lb/>
enjoyed the meetings.<lb/>
The only member present who declined to<lb/>
resign was Braxton Hall.<lb/>
The individual resignations which were<lb/>
accepted by Wilson went into effect<lb/>
immediately, but the council officers will<lb/>
remain in office until the end of this quarter to<lb/>
finish business.<lb/>
There appeared to be strong sentiment<lb/>
among the members to redistribute the funds<lb/>
remaining in the council treasury to its<lb/>
constituents.<lb/>
Of the MRC'S actions, representative Rob<lb/>
Luisana said, "I think that most of the<lb/>
members thought it would be better to resign<lb/>
than to project the false image that students<lb/>
really have a voice in student affairs<lb/>
Cecil Myers, representative from Tyler,<lb/>
resigned separately in a letter to the council. He<lb/>
said that student government was a cover for<lb/>
the administration, and added that if he had<lb/>
wanted to 'play government' he would have<lb/>
taken a political science course.<lb/>
One representative posted the following<lb/>
notice on his floor<lb/>
"To anyone who gives a damn:<lb/>
At the last Men'i Residence Council meeting,<lb/>
the entire council resigned. Thusly, there is no<lb/>
longer such a thing as the MRC. There will<lb/>
never be another MRC-next year or any year<lb/>
There wasreally neeran MRC in the first place,<lb/>
but that is another matter. In short, you have<lb/>
no form of representation.butthen again, you<lb/>
probably never did. The meetings were fun.<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
The reaction from the MRC constituency<lb/>
was varied, ranging Irom disgust to elation But<lb/>
the action came as no surprise to most.<lb/>
Several students cited the "run-around"<lb/>
given them by ECU President l.eo Jenkins at<lb/>
the 'rap session' as the reason for the<lb/>
apathy.<lb/>
Jenkins raps with students<lb/>
By PHYLLIS DOUGHERTY<lb/>
(SUM Wrltsr)<lb/>
Dt. Leo Jenkins spoke about visitation, the<lb/>
Board of Trustees, dormitory facilities and<lb/>
campus improvements in the first of a series of<lb/>
"raps" with students Wednesday night.<lb/>
"We ought to push ahead and see what we're<lb/>
going to do, where we're going to move said<lb/>
Jenkins, informally addressing about 200 men<lb/>
in the basement of Jones Dormitory.<lb/>
Accompanied by deans James H. Tucker and<lb/>
James B. Mallory, Clifton Moore, business<lb/>
manager of ECU, Jenkins answered questions<lb/>
put to him by students.<lb/>
Jenkins said, "We play two roles now. We got<lb/>
out of one role; we are no longer in the 'in loco<lb/>
parent is' business; we're no longer parents, away<lb/>
from home<lb/>
"We do have a new role he said "We are<lb/>
also a landlord, so to speak. The Board of<lb/>
Trustees is responsible for the operation of this<lb/>
state property as a landlord and also as the<lb/>
programmer in education. So they may come in<lb/>
on any decision which concerns ECU.<lb/>
"So it's all tied in, the machinery of higher<lb/>
education, it's not a question of morals we're<lb/>
talking about solely The Board has this<lb/>
privilege and are exercising it<lb/>
Jenkins was asked to explain why he did not<lb/>
inform the students that he personally had not<lb/>
been delegated the authority to decide<lb/>
visitation.<lb/>
David Whichard, editor of the Daily<lb/>
Reflector, said, "The president of the student<lb/>
body and a number of members of the Board<lb/>
sat in on that meeting. The managing editor of<lb/>
the Fountainhead was present and they were<lb/>
fully aware that the discussion was taking place.<lb/>
It was not reported to the students. I don't<lb/>
think it was Dr. Jenkins' fault<lb/>
One student said of the Fountainhead<lb/>
coverage, "I think we've been given one side<lb/>
plus misinformation and it sounds like that<lb/>
might have caused a lot of trouble "<lb/>
Poor and inadequate dormitory facilities<lb/>
were discussed. "This dump called Jones Dorm<lb/>
has hammocks to sleep in said one student,<lb/>
"and there are no lobbies in any of the (men's)<lb/>
dorms, not too much to do on campus; all<lb/>
we're doing is supporting thy town. Why don't<lb/>
we put more money into student activities<lb/>
instead of buildings<lb/>
Jenkins agreed that the dormitories were<lb/>
"poor economically over the years. We've been<lb/>
fighting for better facilities we knew were only<lb/>
going to get second best. We were building<lb/>
dorms that were going to fall apart almost while<lb/>
we were in them.<lb/>
"We are not asking for dorms anymore. 1 feel<lb/>
that we can get a better deal from the private<lb/>
entrepreneurs . . cheaper than the state he<lb/>
said. "And intramural facilities ought to be<lb/>
expanded. I think we need a 30,000 seat<lb/>
stadium<lb/>
The question of a new art building was<lb/>
raised. Jenkins said. "We've got the land for it;<lb/>
it's going to be put on the site of the old Austin<lb/>
building. Plans are being completed and the art<lb/>
majors should write letters and lobby their<lb/>
heads off.<lb/>
"We were able to get a new music building<lb/>
and a $3.5 million addition to the library he<lb/>
said<lb/>
"My real objective is a 4-year medical<lb/>
school if politically possible<lb/>
Glen Croshaw, SGA president, spoke to the<lb/>
students later. "All of us involved in this have<lb/>
been really irritated and impatient. I've made<lb/>
some mistakes and I'm willing to admit this.<lb/>
"I'm not interested in the past right now. I<lb/>
want to get visitation and some other changes<lb/>
I'm going to present it to the Board in this way:<lb/>
that mistaes have beer made, secondly, that<lb/>
the visitatio i issue was iot overnight<lb/>
"Let inc add that the F antainhead may not<lb/>
tell but o.ie story, but I swear the press of<lb/>
North Carolria has told only one story.<lb/>
"Thirdly the students are basically the<lb/>
people who decide where th:y go to s hool so<lb/>
they look for education jnd they also look at<lb/>
the social :nironmont at the institjtion they<lb/>
are going to a.tend<lb/>
"I don't think that wr can compete with<lb/>
Carolina or State or Duke which is what we are<lb/>
trying to do academically wher we have a socia!<lb/>
environinert hat speaks of 1930. We are losii.g<lb/>
a lot of good students with high scores who like<lb/>
progressive dorms.<lb/>
"And 1 think that the tiouble is that the<lb/>
Board thinks we're interested in short term,<lb/>
overnight clia iges. But. I thi.ik they realize we<lb/>
did everything we could through diplomatic<lb/>
channels and it wasn't an overnight de .ision.<lb/>
"After understanding that and seeing ihat we<lb/>
ire intr rested that ECU does progress<lb/>
academic illy and withui our own socid<lb/>
environment, then they will approve<lb/>
visitation<lb/>
Je.kins concluded saying, "These rap<lb/>
sessions are iiot new; we use! to have them<lb/>
periodically several years ago, but we gew and<lb/>
they became passe. If you trunk they're okay,<lb/>
we could hav: them periodically<lb/>
The next rpp session is May 4 in Whit<lb/>
Dormitory -uid is open to all interested<lb/>
studmf.<lb/>
JOE LECONTE, WHO heads the newly<lb/>
formed Consumer Protection Division<lb/>
plans to publish a pamphlet to compare<lb/>
(pnoTC bv Ross Mann)<lb/>
prices of Greenville with prices in nearby<lb/>
non-college towns<lb/>
Leconte plans for<lb/>
consumer protection<lb/>
ECU students shopping in the Greenville area<lb/>
in the future will have some help, according to<lb/>
ECU student Joe Leconte.<lb/>
In charge of the newly-formed Consumer<lb/>
Protection Division at ECU. Leconte has several<lb/>
ideas which might aid the students in finding<lb/>
better buys on the products they regularly use<lb/>
"We plan to publish a pamphlet by the fall<lb/>
which will give comparative prices ot Greenville<lb/>
with prices in nearby non-college towns said<lb/>
Leconte.<lb/>
The committee is so new that most of<lb/>
Leconte's ideas are still in the planning stage<lb/>
Leconte is not sure yet who will be working<lb/>
with him .in the pamphlet but he is accepting<lb/>
applications from any member of the<lb/>
University community who is mterested in the<lb/>
program<lb/>
Screening of the applicants will take place<lb/>
Monday. May 10. The location will be<lb/>
announced to the applicants at a later date<lb/>
In the pamphlet which Leconte has planned,<lb/>
he will give advice and list prices of clothing<lb/>
stores, restaurants, apartments and housing<lb/>
facilities, and any other places frequented by<lb/>
ECU students It couW pu.sibly include<lb/>
furniture stores<lb/>
"We want to give an indication for the<lb/>
students and staff of boss the prices are in<lb/>
Greenville relative to towns with smaller<lb/>
universities or none at all said Leconte.<lb/>
He also menf:on?ed the possibility ol<lb/>
establishing a committee to advise students and<lb/>
any staff members who teel hey are being<lb/>
abused as consumers.<lb/>
The details ol this commute which will<lb/>
probably be ready to assist students m the iall.<lb/>
have not yet been finalized.<lb/>
Although similar in nature to the Consume!<lb/>
Protection Act ol 1971, passed recently b the<lb/>
ECU delegation to the North ('arolina State<lb/>
Student Legislature, the Consumer Protection<lb/>
Division had a different origin and does not<lb/>
spring from thai act. according to Leconfe,<lb/>
In fact, the chairman admitted not having<lb/>
any knowledge of the act, which calls foi more<lb/>
careful consideration of sale contracts by<lb/>
consumers<lb/>
The bill was presented in the annual sessi. ;<lb/>
of the SSL last month and nearly unanimously<lb/>
adopted<lb/>
Board formed Doctoral program is still moving slowly<lb/>
for legal info<lb/>
The Legal Information Board is one of two<lb/>
new committes formed by newly elected SGA<lb/>
President Glenn Croshaw. Rick Atkinson was<lb/>
chosen by Croshaw to be chairman of the<lb/>
board.<lb/>
The ommittee was formed "because of<lb/>
certain inconsistencies in the University<lb/>
concerning complaints about student rights<lb/>
according to Atkinson. He added, "It will serve<lb/>
mainly to let students know of their<lb/>
constitutional rights under the jurisdiction of<lb/>
the SGA and to investigate student complaints<lb/>
such as those concerning discriminatory hiring<lb/>
practices "<lb/>
"Many girls are unaware of their rights, for<lb/>
instance, when they are before the Women's<lb/>
Judiciary Atkinson stated. "Most student<lb/>
aren't aware of the twelve student rights listed<lb/>
in The Key or that the Bill of Rights affects<lb/>
them<lb/>
Efforts are being made for the committee to<lb/>
be put on the mailing lists of the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Supreme<lb/>
Court In this way, the committee would be<lb/>
immediately informed of recent rulings and<lb/>
court actions thus enabling them to give up to<lb/>
dare information.<lb/>
Considering the future, Atkinson said, "I<lb/>
hope eventually to turn this thing into a general<lb/>
investigative process in all SGA tribunals. The<lb/>
committee would look into all campus services<lb/>
and organizations to assure that student rights<lb/>
were not being ignored or taken advantage of.<lb/>
The Legal Information Board will be located<lb/>
in the Office of Internal Affairs on third floor<lb/>
of Wright Building Anyone who feels that his<lb/>
individual student rights or the rights of his<lb/>
fellow students have been violated can seek aid<lb/>
from the committee.<lb/>
The committee is presently composed of<lb/>
Rick Atkinson and Rob Luisana.<lb/>
Applications for the Board are now being<lb/>
accepted in the SGA office. Any interested<lb/>
student can apply in the form of a resume He<lb/>
will be interviewed by the SGA President and<lb/>
the two board members.<lb/>
Applicants do not necessarily have to have a<lb/>
legal background but must have an interest in<lb/>
judicial practices The board will consist of<lb/>
about five student members but may have a<lb/>
professional legal advisor<lb/>
By LOWELL KNOUFF<lb/>
(Stiff Writer)<lb/>
The wheels of progress grind slowly forward.<lb/>
Including efforts to develop doctoral programs<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Because of the current publicity being given<lb/>
to the proposed medical school at ECU, the<lb/>
doctoral programs have been all but forgotten.<lb/>
However, things are going smoothly according<lb/>
to Dr. John M Howell, dean of ECU graduate<lb/>
school and chairman of the Ad Hoc Doctoral<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
The 1969 North Carolina Legislature passed<lb/>
House Bill 318. which authorized regional-<lb/>
universities such as ECU to begin their move<lb/>
toward iffering doctoral degrees. The bill<lb/>
provided that any regional university could<lb/>
offer doctoral programs if approved by the<lb/>
boards of trustees and the State Board of<lb/>
Higher Education. However, no university<lb/>
could begin a new doctoral program until the<lb/>
Board of Higher Education completed a<lb/>
two-year study of higher education in North<lb/>
Carolina. This study is to be completed by<lb/>
1972.<lb/>
As soon as that bill was approved. ECU set to<lb/>
work developing doctoral programs An ad hoc-<lb/>
committee on doctoral programs was formed<lb/>
and each department was invited to appoint a<lb/>
representative to it.<lb/>
Trie cOiMnitUfl was to make an internal<lb/>
study of ECU to determine which departments<lb/>
will make the first proposals to the Board of<lb/>
Higher Education. It was decided that this<lb/>
could be done best by inviting competition<lb/>
between the departments. Each discipline that<lb/>
felt it was capable of supporting a doctoral<lb/>
program was asked to submit a written proposal<lb/>
for their program.<lb/>
The ad hoc committee would select the best<lb/>
proposals and then the university would center<lb/>
their total efforts on developing those programs<lb/>
to the fullest.<lb/>
Twelve disciplines submitted proposals to the<lb/>
committee similar to the proposals that will be<lb/>
submitted to the Board of Higher Education<lb/>
The committee ' ad to decide how many ot the<lb/>
proposals could be adequately supported<lb/>
without a great increase in the budget Then<lb/>
they selected I he strongest proposals based on<lb/>
the guidelines set down by The Council of<lb/>
Graduate Schools and the Southern Association<lb/>
of Colleges and Schools.<lb/>
After a year of study the Ad Hoc Doctoral<lb/>
Committee ranked the proposals The programs<lb/>
selected in order were history . biology. musK.<lb/>
math, psychology. English, chemistry, business<lb/>
administration, art, administration and<lb/>
supervision (education; political science and<lb/>
elementary education<lb/>
11 was decided by the committee that<lb/>
program development efforts would be<lb/>
concentrated on the top foul oi these<lb/>
disciplines Howell said that it was concluded<lb/>
that about $100,000 would be required beyond<lb/>
the regular budget to till the gap between what<lb/>
the university has and what it was felt would be<lb/>
minimum facilities for doctoral programs in<lb/>
these four disciplines Most ot thai would he<lb/>
for library materials.<lb/>
Today work is progressing within ihe fan<lb/>
departments in preparation for the day they<lb/>
will officially begin accepting doctoral<lb/>
candidates, according to Howell He went on to<lb/>
say that the earliest possible date the program<lb/>
could begin is 1973.<lb/>
"We have been operating n sn<lb/>
of making our proposdi to the Ba rd i<lb/>
I .luxation in 1972. and it I ti<lb/>
months to get ;? program Bppi<lb/>
them he said<lb/>
The proposals of the committee have been<lb/>
approved by Dr. Leo Jenkins and the I I<lb/>
Hoard of Trustees. However, in 1972 the<lb/>
proposals will be rewritten to bring them up to<lb/>
date betore submitting them to the state hoaid<lb/>
?'1 think this institution could support<lb/>
doctoral programs in all 12 disciplines Howell<lb/>
added, "bo'  would not be reasoiuble to<lb/>
propose that many all at once "<lb/>
Presetly il looks as. it ECU will he offering<lb/>
doctoral degrees within a lew yeais. but.<lb/>
Howell pointed out. "There is a possibility tlv<lb/>
state board will not approve our proposals, 0<lb/>
ihey may ice! there is BO need foi additional<lb/>
doctoral pr ;iam in the slate as a result o! the<lb/>
studv they are now making I sen it they<lb/>
apptove our programs something may develop<lb/>
in the future so that we would not even ollei<lb/>
the programs "<lb/>
Coeds to live on Hill<lb/>
Next fall quarter, ECU students will see a<lb/>
major change in dormitory lif<lb/>
So far, 300 women have signed up to live in<lb/>
Tyler and 82 men for Sly. Also, the<lb/>
upperclassmen women's dorms, which will have<lb/>
self-limiting hours in the fall, have been filled<lb/>
up.<lb/>
"These new developments have been<lb/>
approved since last spring with the close if<lb/>
SGA president John Schofield's administration,<lb/>
but until now not enough students wanted it<lb/>
said Carolyn Fulghum, dean of women.<lb/>
"For the past two falls, 250 to 300 beds<lb/>
were empty in the men's dorms, whereas the<lb/>
women's dorms were more than full said Dan<lb/>
K. Wooten, director of housing. "The new<lb/>
set-up will decrease the men's space and<lb/>
increase the women's space, which should solve<lb/>
the problem<lb/>
Wooten also said (hat Tyler dorm is not<lb/>
really sturdy enough to house men students<lb/>
Two elevators were burned out this year<lb/>
The Women s Residence Council (WRC) was<lb/>
responsible for the self-limiting huurs in the<lb/>
upperclassmen women's dons said<lb/>
Fulghur.i. "Also, the money is now available to<lb/>
make it pra deal<lb/>
Some of the upperclassmen signed up for<lb/>
limited hours dorms and will have to observe a<lb/>
curfew, said Fulghum.<lb/>
The reasons that the men who will be living<lb/>
in Slay gave foi t'leii choice were varied, but<lb/>
the main reason was that they wantec to be<lb/>
closer to the classroom buildings.<lb/>
One rising senior said that he would not wa'it<lb/>
to live in Slay because it is too cramped and<lb/>
because it is too close to the women dormitory<lb/>
counselors who might call the police if there<lb/>
was a shouting session between Slay and<lb/>
Umstcad.<lb/>
Dan Wooten said that the remaining rooms n<lb/>
Slay wilf probably be filled by incoming<lb/>
freshmen men.<lb/>
The reasons the womc pave for moving Into<lb/>
Tyler varied widely<lb/>
Rose Daugheity and rtcgina Schall said that<lb/>
they were moving o Tyler because Edna<lb/>
Cascioli and Ida Edwards, now counselors for<lb/>
Umr.iead. would b going to Tvlet<lb/>
"It's a well-kr.own fact 'hat they are the two<lb/>
best co'inselcis on the campus Dauihcrty<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Two othei coeds, who wished to remain<lb/>
naineles said that they were moving to Tyler<lb/>
beca'i't: the track team lives m hclk. which is<lb/>
situated across fi m Tyler.<lb/>
'We're both dating fellows on the track<lb/>
team they said<lb/>
Many jf the women signed up for rooms in<lb/>
the self-h niting hou.s dorms did ?i because<lb/>
they wanted to stay in the same rooms as they<lb/>
did this year, otneYs because they liked the idea<lb/>
of self-limiting hours.<lb/>
"It will come in handv metimes said one<lb/>
co-ed win will be a ranior next fall, "But 1<lb/>
won't be able to use If otter, After all. it's hard<lb/>
to stay out until 4 am md then go to an 8<lb/>
a.m. class<lb/>
f<lb/>
no<lb/>
rial,<lb/>
hau<lb/>
n in<lb/>
and<lb/>
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nee<lb/>
be<lb/>
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isic<lb/>
We<lb/>
ed"<lb/>
b<lb/>
P R OF ESSOR<lb/>
MAYNARD MACK<lb/>
(PtiOtO by Ho? Minn)<lb/>
visited ECU Thursday.<lb/>
See related tfory, page 2.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039557_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2, Fountainhead May 4.1971<lb/>
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Mack tours campus, speaks<lb/>
briefs<lb/>
By JOHN WALLACE<lb/>
I R v '?? s Editor)<lb/>
Profeitoi Mayn.ird Mack spoke on<lb/>
Sli.ikcspc.iic i "Othello last Thursday night to<lb/>
an overflowing crowd in the Nursing<lb/>
Auditorium<lb/>
Aftei Dr. 1 ivin Hester, chairman of the<lb/>
Department o( English, told of Mack's many<lb/>
achievements, including Ins election as<lb/>
President ol the Modem Languages Association<lb/>
in ll70. Mack began to speak, amusing the<lb/>
audience with his dry New I ngland wil<lb/>
He was fat from being the type ol "dodo" he<lb/>
warned the audience most visiting professors<lb/>
can be. "Othello" is noi a plaj Ihat can be dealt<lb/>
with simply; however, Mack showed how the<lb/>
play could be dealt with clearly<lb/>
LIGHT AND DARK<lb/>
He fell the play contained two basic<lb/>
concepts: one. an imagedarkness<lb/>
surrounding whai little light there exists in the<lb/>
world; the oilier the importance of seeing a<lb/>
reveisal in out opinion toward Othello from<lb/>
when he is first introduced by lago until he<lb/>
commits suicide ai the end ot the play<lb/>
In the beginning oi the pla. the torches of<lb/>
Desdemona's father's household push back the<lb/>
darkness ol night momentarily, as does<lb/>
Othello's candle latei when he approaches her<lb/>
bed chambet to take her life. The play becomes<lb/>
a tragedy of the power o darkness over the<lb/>
weak and less substantial forces of light, light<lb/>
requires energy and thought: darkness is the<lb/>
absence ol motion, the chaotic void.<lb/>
Mack pointed oul that lago's first lines<lb/>
Carnival slated<lb/>
MAYNARD MACK DISCUSSES<lb/>
Shakespeare's "Othello says the play<lb/>
contains two basic concepts. One<lb/>
concerns an image of darkness<lb/>
surrounding what little light there exists<lb/>
(Photo by Rom Mann)<lb/>
in the world. The other is the<lb/>
importance of seeing a reversal in<lb/>
opinion toward Othello from his<lb/>
introduction until he commits suicide at<lb/>
the end of the play.<lb/>
present Othello as a horrible monster and a<lb/>
sexual maniac. But the more we see Othello and<lb/>
judge him for ourselves, this image changes and<lb/>
we find that lago has deceived us with the same<lb/>
cunning that he will later use to deceive<lb/>
Othello.<lb/>
The white lago has an inner darkness. The<lb/>
black Othello has an inner purity, a whiteness,<lb/>
of heart in his striving for the simple truth<lb/>
INTERPRETS IAGOS CHARACTER<lb/>
One of the most important points Mack<lb/>
made pertained to the interpretation of the<lb/>
character of lago. He explained that most<lb/>
critics have either seen him as a "grimacing<lb/>
devil" or a bluff, hearty man of the world. Both<lb/>
views he feels are extremes.<lb/>
lago is a soured and frustrated man. Because<lb/>
he cannot achieve what other men have<lb/>
accomplished, he has a "driving urge to destroy<lb/>
what he cannot attain Because he no longer<lb/>
believes in loyalty, he finds it contemptible.<lb/>
Because he no longer believes in love, he<lb/>
laughs at it and turns it to lust.<lb/>
lago unites himself with that greater darkness<lb/>
of the greater night ? the night outside<lb/>
ourselves and the night within us.<lb/>
Mack made these perceptions immediate and<lb/>
real. During the questioning period he<lb/>
continued to clarify and expand upon points he<lb/>
had already made during his talk.<lb/>
Mack impressed the audience both with his<lb/>
clarity and with his thought. He showed them<lb/>
that scholarship and literature can still be<lb/>
tremendously fascinating.<lb/>
The IFC will present its<lb/>
second annual Carnival on the<lb/>
mall this Wednesday from -4<lb/>
p.m. until 10 p.m<lb/>
The Carnival will consist ol<lb/>
various booths such as the Ring<lb/>
Toss, Penny Pitch, and Knock<lb/>
over the cans<lb/>
Several sororities will be<lb/>
represented in the Kissing<lb/>
Booth, and Dean of Men James<lb/>
B. Mallory has agreed again this<lb/>
year to be dunked in the<lb/>
bunking Booth by the highesi<lb/>
bidder<lb/>
Nighttime activities will<lb/>
include a light show and a<lb/>
drawing for prizes donated by<lb/>
Greenville merchants. The<lb/>
whole campus is invited to<lb/>
bung their dimes and quarters<lb/>
and test their skill.<lb/>
The IFC will hold a drawing<lb/>
for approximately 100 prizes<lb/>
worth $300 during the<lb/>
Carnival Tickets may be<lb/>
picked up from any IFC<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Library hours posted<lb/>
Library hours are as follows; am until S p.m. Sunday, i<lb/>
Monday through Thursday. 8 pin until 12 p.m The<lb/>
a.m. until 12 pin Friday, X circulation desk open until fj<lb/>
a.m. until 5 p.m Saturday, 9 p.m.<lb/>
Reserve rooms<lb/>
Volunteer army discussed<lb/>
by Air Force ROTC at ECU<lb/>
a -i . . . mi imi ? i, ??<lb/>
All students wishing to<lb/>
reserve a dormitory room foi<lb/>
the first session of siiiiiniei<lb/>
school may do so on May 11.<lb/>
1971 or anytime thereafter,<lb/>
Aycock Hall will be used to<lb/>
house the men student! Ii<lb/>
there is an overflow "I Aycock<lb/>
Hall. Jones Hall will be used<lb/>
To sign up foi a room)<lb/>
dormitory room application<lb/>
cards should he picked up from<lb/>
the Housing Office anytime<lb/>
after May 3.<lb/>
On Tuesday. May 1 I, the<lb/>
application is to be taken with<lb/>
a $45 deposit ($55 for a<lb/>
private room) to the Cashier's<lb/>
Office to be stamped "Paid "<lb/>
Applications should then be<lb/>
taken to the Housing Office tor<lb/>
room assignment.<lb/>
White and New "C"<lb/>
dormitories will be used to<lb/>
house women students. The<lb/>
same procedure will be<lb/>
followed foi women student'<lb/>
in signing up for rooms.<lb/>
Byars elected<lb/>
By S'IGRRY BUCHANAN<lb/>
i S t a t' Wf it er)<lb/>
One ot the most debatable issues in this<lb/>
country today is thai concerning the possibility<lb/>
of j volunteer army<lb/>
Whether it will be or not, whether it will be a<lb/>
result ol some political ot economical move, is<lb/>
yet to be seen But. for some rather<lb/>
knowledgeable opinions on the subject one<lb/>
place to go is to the military man himself.<lb/>
And the military man on the LCI' campus is<lb/>
the Air Force ROTC man<lb/>
The ROTC program at I:CL is divided into<lb/>
two sections: the four-year program and the<lb/>
two-year program L'pon graduation, a cadet<lb/>
leaves with the rank of a second lieutenant.<lb/>
Not only does he leave with this officer's<lb/>
rank but also with a knowledge of the military<lb/>
and what it is all about He understands its<lb/>
procedures, actions, and makeup well enough<lb/>
to lead other men. which he will be doing in<lb/>
later years.<lb/>
What would a volunteer army do to such<lb/>
program1'<lb/>
According to almost all of the military men<lb/>
questioned not much<lb/>
Capt. Gary Schaal expressed his feelings on<lb/>
the volunteer army's effect by stating that of<lb/>
course he knew it would cut enrollment in an<lb/>
ROTC program, however, he said he earnestly<lb/>
felt there would still be the men who wanted to<lb/>
enter. "A volunteei army would still have the<lb/>
stiff requirements he said. "There would just<lb/>
be that cutback in the draft<lb/>
Sgt. Tommy L. Brown said he felt a<lb/>
volunteer army would possibly lead to a "poor<lb/>
man's army He thinks that if the military<lb/>
became volunteer it would naturally have to<lb/>
pay more and make more attractive offers and<lb/>
benefits which would pull in the lower classes<lb/>
who cannot do anything else.<lb/>
But one cadet. Gary Armstrong, doesn't<lb/>
think so.<lb/>
"You're still going to have the Officer's<lb/>
Qualifying Test he said, "and you're still<lb/>
going to have the guys that want to serve<lb/>
Armstrong, a junior in the program, has a draft<lb/>
number of 251.<lb/>
"I think that if Nixon is re-elected, by the<lb/>
end of his second term we'll have a volunteer<lb/>
army Armstrong said.<lb/>
Hugh Cameron, a junior ROTC cadet, said he<lb/>
felt that the volunteer army depended on what<lb/>
happened in Southeast Asia. "We're all in favor<lb/>
of peace, naturally he stated, "but the Asian<lb/>
thing will have a great bearing on this volunteer<lb/>
idea<lb/>
Cameron and two of his classmates, Jim<lb/>
Adam and Mike Karr. agreed that the issue had<lb/>
two sides.<lb/>
"You have to take into consideration the<lb/>
governmental side and the war side they<lb/>
agreed. "These are two similar yet different<lb/>
views<lb/>
Freshman cadet John Fowler argued with<lb/>
Karr that this type of voluntary military would<lb/>
have more freedom and higher caliber men,<lb/>
while Karr contends that this type military<lb/>
would create a "poor man's army<lb/>
Clyde Crusenberry, a junior cadet, feels<lb/>
Nixon is slowly moving toward this voluntary<lb/>
idea but he says the ROTC program won't be<lb/>
affected that much. "We haven't had any<lb/>
dropouts due to their draft numbers<lb/>
Adam supported Crusenberry by adding.<lb/>
"Why. the first two years of this program some<lb/>
of thesy guys don't even have a draft number<lb/>
Capt. Melvin Edwards said that the voluntary-<lb/>
situation would certainly be attractive to a<lb/>
young man with the security and money that<lb/>
would be involved. "With the way the job<lb/>
market is today and trie difficulty in finding<lb/>
jobs, this security might be what everyone will<lb/>
be looking for But with or without this<lb/>
voluntary army, I still feel there will have to be<lb/>
some type of draft<lb/>
Col. John D. Duffus. chairman of the ROTC<lb/>
Department said that his opinions could not be<lb/>
separated from those of the military since he<lb/>
had served in it for the last 30 years. His<lb/>
response was that in any form of military laws<lb/>
and rules, any voluntary situation, or otherwise,<lb/>
he would simply back the President, his<lb/>
commander-in-chief.<lb/>
So the opinions varied even among the<lb/>
military men themselves. Who knows how<lb/>
attractive the volunteer army might become if<lb/>
it should come into being9<lb/>
The majority of the ROTC cadets and<lb/>
officers feel that their program wiJl remain in<lb/>
good condition because of the men who want<lb/>
to join. But how many of these "want-to-join"<lb/>
guys will remain if there's no draft or military<lb/>
obligations"<lb/>
Cvnthia Byars has been<lb/>
elected chairman of the WRC<lb/>
for the 1971-72 school term in<lb/>
an election held April 27.<lb/>
In a run-off election.<lb/>
Cynthia Maultiby was elected<lb/>
first vice chairman; Jacqueline<lb/>
Holland, second vice-president;<lb/>
Shirley Blandino, secretary;<lb/>
and Kay Johnson, ttcasurer<lb/>
Seniors honored<lb/>
Ten ECU seniors have been<lb/>
recognized by the ECU Alumni<lb/>
Association of Phi Beta Kappa<lb/>
The students, all of whom<lb/>
have superior academic<lb/>
records, with grade poini<lb/>
averages above 3.6 and whose<lb/>
major fields are among those<lb/>
recognized by Phi Beta Kappa.<lb/>
will be graduated from the<lb/>
ECU College of Aits and<lb/>
Sciences this spring<lb/>
Represented among the<lb/>
honored students were the<lb/>
ECU Departments ot English,<lb/>
History. Mathematics.<lb/>
Chemistry. and Psychology<lb/>
1 hose ho no i ed were<lb/>
Kenneth RffHrtJ Wright.<lb/>
psychology; Larry Calvin<lb/>
Parks, history. Floyd Eugene<lb/>
Woodard, chemistry, Jeanette<lb/>
Cartel Johnson, mathematics;<lb/>
Edward Johnston Harper.<lb/>
English; Frances Margaret<lb/>
Gihbs. English. Kristen Eileen<lb/>
Zimmer, chemistry, Barbara<lb/>
Helen Covington, mathematics.<lb/>
Lynn Monica Harris.<lb/>
psychology; and Mary Carolyn<lb/>
I aulkner, psychology<lb/>
Officers elected<lb/>
Thirty-eight will go to Bonn<lb/>
Dr. Hans Indorf. coordinator of European<lb/>
Area Studies, has announced the names of 38<lb/>
college sophomores and juniors from ECU and<lb/>
other institutions win will study at the ECU<lb/>
Bonn Study Center next year<lb/>
The students will begin their academic year<lb/>
at the overseas campus this fall and return after<lb/>
nine months of study in a special curriculum of<lb/>
European studies<lb/>
Included m the curriculum are courses in<lb/>
history, business, geography, an. music and<lb/>
political science Opportunities v. ill be provided<lb/>
for the students to strengthen their knowledge<lb/>
of the German and French languages<lb/>
Haus Stemeck. a chateau overlooking the<lb/>
Rhine River a few miles from the West German<lb/>
capital, will house living quarters, library<lb/>
facilities and classrooms for the students.<lb/>
According to Indorf. all classes will be taught<lb/>
in English, and a number of field trips into<lb/>
European cities will be a major part of the<lb/>
academic program.<lb/>
The students will depart for Germany by<lb/>
airline from New York on September I 5.<lb/>
Faculty for the Bonn campus, selected from<lb/>
the ECU faculty, will be:<lb/>
Dr. Ralph E. Btrchard. geography; Dr. Loren<lb/>
K. Campion, history; Dr William F. Troutman,<lb/>
Jr . political science; Dr Joseph A Hill,<lb/>
business; Tran Gordley. art; and Dr. Clyde Hiss,<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Names and major fields of study of the<lb/>
students who will study at ECU's Bonn campus<lb/>
this fall follow:<lb/>
Earl Stanton Harris, political science; Donald<lb/>
B. Gerock, physics; C. Gail Benge, English;<lb/>
Cynthia Marie Maultsby. psychology; Carol<lb/>
Elizabeth Hawkins, music; Gene Perry Ayscue,<lb/>
art; and Susan McDonald, general studies.<lb/>
Pamela Anne Murphy, music; Sheila A.<lb/>
Nicholson, general studies; Debby K. Mitchell,<lb/>
political science; Paul Archer Dulin Jr<lb/>
geography; Vivian E. Swepston, English;<lb/>
Harriett L Brinn, general studies: and Michael<lb/>
Deavouts Jefcoat. political science.<lb/>
Alan Carl Kearney, history; Christine Anne<lb/>
Prange. general studies: Belinda Broome,<lb/>
general studies: David Loren Gradis. music;<lb/>
The ECU chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Beta Alpha national library<lb/>
science fraternity has elected<lb/>
officers tc serve during the<lb/>
1971-72 academic year.<lb/>
They are Frankie Campbell<lb/>
president; Richard T Martin<lb/>
vice president; Joan B Pfiefer<lb/>
Robert L. Hadden. history ;Cabell Jones Regan,<lb/>
general studies; Mulba L. Handsel Jr political<lb/>
science; Michael Coghland Allen, political<lb/>
science; and Thomas M. Brooke, political<lb/>
science.<lb/>
Paul Donald Lewis Jr business; Mark N.<lb/>
Griffiths. English; Joseph Kieffer Norris.<lb/>
economics; Gordon Edward Quill, general<lb/>
studies; Donald Lee Davenport, psychology;<lb/>
Susan Fiances Cande, general studies; Suzanne<lb/>
Louise Berry, history; Juanelle Ann Wehmer.<lb/>
music; Diana Estill Winfree, psychology Martin<lb/>
L. Paulsen, general studies; Elizabeth Fay Gygi,<lb/>
music; Marian Leigh Blount. business; Beverly<lb/>
Louise Eubank, art; Steven Paul Polifko,<lb/>
political science: and Cheryl Lynn Pope, music.<lb/>
SAM meets<lb/>
secretary-treasurer, and Gerald<lb/>
W Garrett. Imtori.ni-reportet<lb/>
Dr James W Batten.<lb/>
ch rman of secondary<lb/>
ed ation in the FCU School<lb/>
of Education, will address the<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha at its annual<lb/>
spring banquet at the<lb/>
Candlewick Inn.<lb/>
The Society foi the<lb/>
Advancement of Management<lb/>
in cooperation with the North<lb/>
Carolina chapter of the Young<lb/>
Presidents Organization will<lb/>
sponsor its second annual<lb/>
seminar and panel discussion<lb/>
today at io am ,? Raw<lb/>
Building, room 130.<lb/>
The YPO consists of North<lb/>
Carolina business executives<lb/>
who have attained the<lb/>
presidencies of their respective<lb/>
companies before the age of<lb/>
 syecuve attend tb u<lb/>
G companies before the age of charge<lb/>
 ? rad Student Union officers<lb/>
 1 V4 ? g? VJ 1 I J 13 Union officers for the school<lb/>
 ? M are: r?ll Plttm.n<lb/>
condemn bill relects letter<lb/>
 " " " ? tJ m By CLAUDIA OLDER thine at hand an,I hpr??. i r?i.<lb/>
40<lb/>
SAM, composed o f<lb/>
undergraduate students from<lb/>
the LCI School of Business,<lb/>
has as it purpose the bridging<lb/>
"I University business training<lb/>
?nd the practical world of<lb/>
business and management.<lb/>
This is achieved through<lb/>
meetings, seminars, plant tours<lb/>
and speakers from the business<lb/>
community.<lb/>
The public is invited to<lb/>
attend the seminar free of<lb/>
barge<lb/>
Union officers for the school<lb/>
year 1971-72 are: Conwel,<lb/>
Vorthington, president; Rita<lb/>
Lortie, vice-president; Diane<lb/>
Woods, recording secretary;<lb/>
Lane Pittman, corresponding<lb/>
?ecretary; Roy Winstead,<lb/>
treasurer; and Jonathan Barnes,<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
(AP) Newspaper editors throughout North<lb/>
Carolina condemned today a proposed law<lb/>
requiring that newspaper editorials be signed bs<lb/>
then authors.<lb/>
The legislation wai introduced by Sen.<lb/>
Ruiim Bailey ot Raleigh ai an amendment to<lb/>
the "Open Meetings Bill" which prohibits secret<lb/>
meetings by moil agencies of government.<lb/>
Alter proposing the amendment Bailey<lb/>
moved that the Senate Judiciary Committee<lb/>
sent lhe House-passed bill to a study<lb/>
committee. The committee accepted the<lb/>
motion.<lb/>
DENOUNCES AMENDMENT<lb/>
A Howard White, editor ol the Burlington<lb/>
Times News and chairman of the North<lb/>
Carolina Press Association's legislative<lb/>
commit tee. denounced Ruffin's proposed<lb/>
amendment as did several other editors.<lb/>
White, who has testified before the<lb/>
committee in favot of the bill said. "We cannot<lb/>
accept the proposal for editorials in our<lb/>
newspaper to be signed for they, unsigned,<lb/>
represent the expression of our newspaper, not<lb/>
a single individual Such proposed action is<lb/>
unrealistic for the newspaper stands behind its<lb/>
editorial expression regardless of the author<lb/>
This is a mallei of individual choice of a<lb/>
newspaper not by legislative requirement<lb/>
Several editors attacked Bailey's motive for<lb/>
offering themendment.<lb/>
Bill Williams, editor of the Gastonia (.aette<lb/>
who also has testified in support of the bill, said<lb/>
Bailey "apparently is ignoring the fact that<lb/>
public business is the public's business<lb/>
"He says that open meetings would tend to<lb/>
hamstring public officials. Since when has it<lb/>
developed in this country, where so much<lb/>
emphasis is placed on a free press, that the best<lb/>
interests of the people lie in the darkness of the<lb/>
closed meeting?"<lb/>
'EFFORT TOWARD REPRISAL<lb/>
The Rocky Mount Telegram issued a<lb/>
statement saying the amendment "is an obvious<lb/>
effort toward reprisal because of the<lb/>
newspaper's demand for the public's right to<lb/>
know. In writing an editorial the editorial<lb/>
writer is following the policies of the newspapei<lb/>
which he represents If he dissents Irom the<lb/>
newspaper's policy, then and only then should<lb/>
he sign the editorial<lb/>
Jerry Ausband. editor of the Shelby Daily<lb/>
Star, noted his name appears in his newspaper's<lb/>
masthead each day. "This means that I stand<lb/>
behind and am responsible for the editorials<lb/>
and editorial opinion which appears he said.<lb/>
"It should be pointed out that every newspaper<lb/>
stands responsible every day for everything it<lb/>
does in the public view in contrast to public<lb/>
bodies which sometimes hide behind closed<lb/>
doors<lb/>
By CLAUDIA OLDER<lb/>
(Staff Write,)<lb/>
A giaduate student In the political science<lb/>
department chose an unusual method to<lb/>
express her view, on visitation.<lb/>
Miss Linda Ahlborg, who recently passed her<lb/>
comprehensive examinations with distinctior,<lb/>
received a letter from l)r. Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
president of the University, asking her to accept<lb/>
his congialulations on being the first student in<lb/>
the political science department to achieve this<lb/>
honor.<lb/>
Ahlborg received this letter during the week<lb/>
ol demonstrations against the present visitation<lb/>
policy She decided that the best way for her to<lb/>
show her disapproval of the handling of the<lb/>
situation would he to return the letter to Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins, according to Ahlborg.<lb/>
On the bottom of Jenkins' letter. Miss<lb/>
Ahlborg wrote "Because of your recent actions<lb/>
concerning visitation I am returning this letter<lb/>
She mailed the letter the day faster vacation<lb/>
began<lb/>
When Ahlborg returned from vacation she a,<lb/>
notice Ihat Dr. William Troutman, chairman of<lb/>
the department, wanted to see her. Troutman<lb/>
told her than Jenkins was concerned that a<lb/>
graduate student in political scien.r was<lb/>
unaware of the chain of command at ECU. "It<lb/>
was not up to Dr. Jenkins but to the Board of<lb/>
Trustees and the people of North Caroliir. to<lb/>
decide about visitation according to<lb/>
Troutman.<lb/>
Ahlborg said ihat visitation was not the main<lb/>
issue. "I mentioned visitation because i was the<lb/>
thing at hand and because I felt that he was<lb/>
paying more attention to his constituents than<lb/>
to the students of ECU. Ae'ually it goes much<lb/>
further than that said Ahlborg.<lb/>
Ahlborg made reference to the inadequate<lb/>
library at the university, the great emphasis<lb/>
placed on athletics, and the general lack of<lb/>
academic freedom at ECU.<lb/>
"I am beginning work on my thesis and I will<lb/>
have to do most of my research work at other<lb/>
libraries because the one here does not have<lb/>
adequate mateiials said Ahlborg.<lb/>
Ahlborg also stated that she felt that it was<lb/>
"unmst to involve Dr. Troutman The action<lb/>
she took was done without the knowledge of<lb/>
anyone in the department. She felt that Jenkins<lb/>
should have called her if he had something to<lb/>
tell her about the matter.<lb/>
She felt that Jenkins' reason for handling the<lb/>
matter through Troutman was that he<lb/>
"couldn't pass it off as the action of some<lb/>
immature flunky<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins said that he was "amazed that<lb/>
Ahlborg accused me of establishing the<lb/>
visitation policy<lb/>
His reason for operating through Troutman<lb/>
to handle this situation was that he was<lb/>
concerned that a graduate student, especially<lb/>
one of her standing, was not "knowledgeable<lb/>
and I wanted to find out why she was not<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins aho said that Ahlborg was<lb/>
blaming the wrong person. " am a state<lb/>
employee The Board of Trustees hnds me the<lb/>
policy to carry out. They do not ask me if I like<lb/>
it said Jenkins.<lb/>
Recital planned<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha, a professional<lb/>
traternity for men in music<lb/>
and Sigma Alpha Iota, a<lb/>
professional fraternity tot<lb/>
womeninm. sic. will presCnt a<lb/>
recital of American music on<lb/>
Wednesday, May 5 at 8 15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The program will include<lb/>
ks by such well known<lb/>
contemporary composers as<lb/>
Ned Rorem. Carlisle Floyd.<lb/>
 Carter, and Samuel<lb/>
Barber.<lb/>
The recital will be held in<lb/>
the School of Music<lb/>
auditorium.<lb/>
Grant awarded<lb/>
Kenneth McJ?n. Mnioi<lb/>
geology s'udert bus been<lb/>
granted a teaching assistantship<lb/>
rom the Department of<lb/>
Geology at the Univeristy ot<lb/>
Texas at Austin<lb/>
McLean will enter graduate<lb/>
school at the University of<lb/>
Texas in the fall of 197 to<lb/>
begin work toward a master ol<lb/>
jence degree in geology.<lb/>
Brown honored<lb/>
Al ECU McLean has<lb/>
distinguished himself as a<lb/>
research assistant; Dean's List.<lb/>
?Chi Beta Phi. honorary science<lb/>
fraternity and outstanding<lb/>
lenioi geology Sudent.<lb/>
McLean is also a membei of<lb/>
tlic ECU Geology Club, and he<lb/>
has done illustrations for a<lb/>
paleontology laboratory<lb/>
manna I<lb/>
Susann Sonja Brown has<lb/>
been given the Outstanding<lb/>
Senior Award by the<lb/>
Department of Russian and<lb/>
Gorman.<lb/>
MiSs Brown, a German<lb/>
major, has been a participant in<lb/>
the Intensive Overseas Study<lb/>
lor Prospective Elementary and<lb/>
Secondary School Teachers in<lb/>
G e r m a n y . under the<lb/>
'sponsorship of Carl Scbu.<lb/>
Association in Philadelphia<lb/>
<pb facs="00039557_0003"/><lb/>
Journalism professor<lb/>
shows student interest<lb/>
I ountainhead Ma) A 19 'I Pag<lb/>
By DONNfi 'VEBB<lb/>
(Stiff Writer)<lb/>
At any given time one can walk by Ira L<lb/>
Baker s office on the third floor of Austin<lb/>
Building, find the door open, and almost<lb/>
invariably sec at least one or more students<lb/>
inside<lb/>
A professor of journalism, Baker has a<lb/>
reputation lor always having his door open to<lb/>
students, and students take advantage of his<lb/>
interested friendliness.<lb/>
Baker is not only interested in journalism<lb/>
and his students, but he is also a very<lb/>
interesting man.<lb/>
He can discuss layout, writing style,<lb/>
journalism history, or the effects of the mass<lb/>
media on the contemporary scene with equal<lb/>
cognizance,<lb/>
ENLIVENS CLASSES<lb/>
Mis classes are by no means boring. Baker can<lb/>
enliven any subject with anecdotes or<lb/>
interesting bits of information on people,<lb/>
places, and situations in the journalism field.<lb/>
He reimburses his already wide span of<lb/>
knowledge by going to the campus library at<lb/>
least once daily and sometimes twice. There he<lb/>
reads every newspaper taken by Joyner Library<lb/>
and a good cross-section of the magazines. He<lb/>
also visits the Greenville library two nights a<lb/>
week<lb/>
Deeply entrenched in the journalistic field,<lb/>
Baker says, "Journalism is my life. I can think<lb/>
of nothing I am more interested in<lb/>
Consequently, he spends six and often seven<lb/>
days a week in his office in Austin.<lb/>
Since Baker came here three years ago, ECU<lb/>
has added a journalism minor for students<lb/>
gettin? 3n A R degree.<lb/>
During his first year here, Baker chartered<lb/>
the largest chapter ever organized of the<lb/>
national honorary journalism fraternity Alpha<lb/>
Phi Gamma. He has served as president of the<lb/>
national fraternity for two years and is<lb/>
presently editor of the fraternity's national<lb/>
magazine, "Collegiate Journalist<lb/>
Hailing from southwest Virginia. Baker calls<lb/>
himself a "hillbilly He moved with his family<lb/>
to North Carolina when he was nine years old<lb/>
and says. "I consider myself a North Carolinian<lb/>
until asked<lb/>
He became interested in journalism while in<lb/>
high school where, he says, most journalists<lb/>
usually begin.<lb/>
Baker graduated front Wake Forest<lb/>
University where he worked v.ith the campus<lb/>
newspaper and yearbook as .ell as the news<lb/>
bureau.<lb/>
He broke into the journalise field by editing<lb/>
a publication at North Carolina State University<lb/>
and from there went to Furman University in<lb/>
Greenville, S.C. where he was a professor and<lb/>
advisor of the campus newspaper for 14 years.<lb/>
He then migrated back to North Carolina and<lb/>
High Point Collage where he taught three yc-irs<lb/>
before coming to F.CU.<lb/>
Baker has served as advisor for the<lb/>
Fountainhead for two years and often becomes<lb/>
a buffer between the public and the campus<lb/>
newspaper. He receives innumerable calls at<lb/>
times concerning the Fountainhead.<lb/>
'NOT A CENSOR<lb/>
"People call me and ask me "Why can't you<lb/>
get those dirty words out of the<lb/>
Fountainhead1?. said Biker. "My reply is. of<lb/>
course, that I am not a censor.<lb/>
"I say train them, then truit them said<lb/>
Baker. "I am not a censor I have no authority<lb/>
over the content of the Fountainhead and I<lb/>
want none. The editor of any newspaper should<lb/>
have sole responsibility over the content. That<lb/>
is the only way to have free press<lb/>
Baker said that he never sees copy before it is<lb/>
printed in the Fountainhead His primary<lb/>
interest is not the content but the journalistic<lb/>
PROFESSOR IRA BAKER has earned a<lb/>
reputation for leaving his door open to students.<lb/>
Among other achievements, Baker chartered the<lb/>
make-up ol the newspaper. He reviewj each<lb/>
cip of the Fountainhead and makes<lb/>
suggestions to the staff. "Usually the<lb/>
technicalities are cleared up in the next issue<lb/>
he said<lb/>
"Occasionally the editor will see me about<lb/>
material before it is printed he said,<lb/>
"although the editor is by no means obligated<lb/>
to go b) my advice<lb/>
"It he takes my advice and it is wrong<lb/>
(Pnoto by Ga.<lb/>
largest organized chapter of Alpha Phi Gamma<lb/>
here at GCU.<lb/>
continued bakci thei we botl<lb/>
Baker feels that the campus news<lb/>
well as othei publications and the ele<lb/>
media on campus, serve a -<lb/>
for journalism stud<lb/>
"Some schools I<lb/>
where they may evei . out a<lb/>
dummy and then throw n awaj Here, students<lb/>
are faced with the actual publish .<lb/>
newspaper with deadlines<lb/>
Sidewalk show thrives with art<lb/>
FOLKSINGER BRIAN FLYNN will<lb/>
perform at the Union Coffeehouse<lb/>
(Photo by Ken Finch)<lb/>
tonight and Thursday at 8 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
FAC sponsors Coffeehouse<lb/>
On Tuesday and Thursday of this week, the<lb/>
Fine Arts Committee will sponsor Coffeehouse<lb/>
performances by folk musician Brian Flynn. at<lb/>
8 and 9 p.m. Flynn. who will be<lb/>
accompanied by lead guitarist Tom Garlow, is<lb/>
finishing up his master's degree in psychology<lb/>
here, and teaches introductory psychology.<lb/>
Flynn has been playing the guitat for about<lb/>
eight years, and has written music during most<lb/>
of that time. The music he performs is partly<lb/>
onginal and paitly borrowed.<lb/>
"Most of my music I wrote when I was really<lb/>
depressed he said, "when I'm happy, there's<lb/>
other ways of expressing it. but when I'm<lb/>
depressed, music is about the only way. But<lb/>
recently I've begun writing some happy music<lb/>
Flynn is working on arrangements now to<lb/>
release an album later this year. He has made a<lb/>
Songwriters contract with Blue Surf Music Co<lb/>
and will probably begin recording in the late<lb/>
summer or fall, after the material and<lb/>
arrangements have been completed. He said lie<lb/>
will probably play some time this summer at<lb/>
the Cellar Door in Washington. DC, with one<lb/>
of his favorite artists, Gordon Liglitfoot.<lb/>
He plans to work in Philadelphia during the<lb/>
summer with a regional office of the National<lb/>
Institute of Health.<lb/>
Flynn will give two performances each night<lb/>
one at X p.m. and the other at 9 in the<lb/>
Union Coffeehouse room 201.<lb/>
"If they don't like it. they can at least come<lb/>
and admire our guitars Flynn laughed. "I have<lb/>
faith in only one thing, and that's Martin<lb/>
gui'irs<lb/>
By PAT CRAWFORD<lb/>
(Staff Writer i<lb/>
A sidewalk art show, open to anyone for a<lb/>
fee, usually risks a lot in terms of good art<lb/>
Luckily, the Greenville An (enter's Sidewalk<lb/>
Show had enough good points to make up for<lb/>
the rest.<lb/>
It was a strange combination of good art.<lb/>
high school, amateur and professional work<lb/>
Much of the better work had already been seen<lb/>
earlier in senior shows. Raleigh's recent<lb/>
Designers' Show, the Delta Phi Delta sales and<lb/>
faculty exhibits.<lb/>
Among these were Jack Guard's fine<lb/>
charcoal drawings. Mike Nelson's photography<lb/>
and ECU instruct r Chuck Chamberlain's<lb/>
intricate ceramic castles. Instructor Paul<lb/>
Hartley, abandoning for a while his frontal<lb/>
figure studies, contributed "Graph a large<lb/>
grey painting subdivided into softer, lettered<lb/>
squares.<lb/>
A third instructor, Peter Jones, was<lb/>
represented by numerous drawings and a large,<lb/>
bright painting, "300 Interior" one of the<lb/>
few non-drawing works he has exhibited this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The huge, high-contrast photograph) of Rich<lb/>
Griendling and L. Kislowski. remembered from<lb/>
the Delta Phi Delta show, added some drama to<lb/>
the sidewalk display In quieter media were J.<lb/>
McConson's sensitive charcoal, "Onion<lb/>
portraying the cloud-like metamorphosis of a<lb/>
seated infant, and John Michael Brake's<lb/>
whimsical watercolor. "Angeligus There was<lb/>
Annette Marsland's striking etching "Dragonfly<lb/>
Attacking a Golfball" an explosion of line<lb/>
and Mike Coin's sturdy, reassuring woodcuts.<lb/>
Joseph Dudasik's frothing watercolor! and<lb/>
Susan Harris's sensitive pen and ink drawings.<lb/>
The list might go on forever I red Brooks'<lb/>
familiar montage-paintings, huge canvases<lb/>
supporting halves of artificial fruit' and cutouts<lb/>
of Gainsborough's "Blue Boyarol Wood's<lb/>
acrylic-collage. "Sans Karas" barrel staves,<lb/>
bands and old family photographs incorporated<lb/>
into a circular frame: macrame and woven wall<lb/>
hangings by Gwen Jones and Myra Sexauer.<lb/>
both wives of ECU art faculty members. Mike<lb/>
Flinn. once an instructor here, contributed his<lb/>
color photographs of classical and medieval art.<lb/>
titled (in Grck) "Time "Peace "Truth<lb/>
and "Freedom<lb/>
Particularly striking was the work of<lb/>
Goldsboro's Patricia Turlington I lei acrylic<lb/>
"Becoming is Meaning" described soft mauve,<lb/>
aqua and earth-colored bands in a waterfall "I<lb/>
diapery.<lb/>
By 2 p.m. the show was packed IcaJierv<lb/>
art students, local matrons and small children<lb/>
nulled around outside 01 made then waj "Ho<lb/>
the Art Center, where the graduate student<lb/>
show will be held through May I 1<lb/>
A wind instrument group played on the front<lb/>
porch; the Women's Club sold bakedgoodsand<lb/>
children's books in a small tent on the lawn<lb/>
The crowd was as varied as the work presented.<lb/>
reaffirming a major truth; everyone likes to<lb/>
look at pictures.<lb/>
There was the usual number of mediocre<lb/>
watercolors (and a mediocre watercolor is a bad<lb/>
one), pottery that failed, meaningful titles foi<lb/>
meaningless works and mutant Still-life!<lb/>
executed on canvas board However, what was<lb/>
good was good, and if seen in earlier shows<lb/>
was worth seeing aiiain.<lb/>
Student winners from ECU were:<lb/>
Oil and acrylics: 1st. Madeleine Shinn Brake:<lb/>
2nd. James Jordan. Watercolor: John Brake<lb/>
Graphics: 3rd Chris Ward. Sculpture: all<lb/>
awards. Dean Lichtmann Photograph) 2nd.<lb/>
Rich Griendling<lb/>
St at on. The Best in Show award weni t i<lb/>
Wood<lb/>
In the professional were<lb/>
Oil and aery Iks 1st and 2nd. Peter J<lb/>
3rd. Jim Norman. Watercokat 1st, Esthet<lb/>
Hutcherson. Graphics 1st, Gwen Jones: 2nd<lb/>
and 3rd. Mike Owens Sculpture Isi Y<lb/>
Keller; 2nd and 3rd. Chuck Chamberlain<lb/>
('holography 1st. Ray llaidee. 2nd and 3rd.<lb/>
Steven March. Mixed Media ates Millet<lb/>
The children, the musk the sprawling out<lb/>
and the talking prosed the abihn ol art oi<lb/>
ion-art to bring people togethei make them<lb/>
laugh, give them somethin) jo) and. in<lb/>
some cases, give then<lb/>
t was a B??d day. and what was won was<lb/>
well-deserved<lb/>
(p" ' jnn<lb/>
PHI MU ALPHA, a professional music afternoon. The concert featured the<lb/>
fraternity for men, gave its first in a University Men's Glee Club under the<lb/>
series of amphitheater concerts Sunday direction o Brett Watson.<lb/>
THE RECORD BAR<lb/>
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the sea'<lb/>
winning<lb/>
here i nui<lb/>
The P<lb/>
F u r in a i<lb/>
one -st n<lb/>
entering t<lb/>
I stroke<lb/>
Final<lb/>
niaich sh<lb/>
a total of<lb/>
with 755,<lb/>
place wit I<lb/>
784, Will<lb/>
800, and<lb/>
tied with i<lb/>
L0<lb/>
FCU. wl<lb/>
12 regufau<lb/>
led to its<lb/>
low scorer<lb/>
Bell. Phil <lb/>
and Marry<lb/>
Pinnlx v<lb/>
the Bucs i<lb/>
This total<lb/>
individual i<lb/>
Citadel's<lb/>
earned Ilia<lb/>
alter finish<lb/>
with l ? 1<lb/>
Gaul finish.<lb/>
Pinnix's<lb/>
72-77.<lb/>
Bell, wh.<lb/>
! the first i<lb/>
finished ft<lb/>
strokes off<lb/>
TIE<lb/>
Wallace I<lb/>
fifth as he i<lb/>
Pinnei, win<lb/>
the first roi<lb/>
among the i<lb/>
the team i<lb/>
with 75. H<lb/>
151.<lb/>
Helmer v.<lb/>
scorer as fa<lb/>
153. This p<lb/>
I Ith place<lb/>
The oil<lb/>
entered ir i<lb/>
totals did<lb/>
team Stan<lb/>
Brown (75<lb/>
Sharped<lb/>
13-ST<lb/>
ECU had<lb/>
day of coi<lb/>
13-stroke le<lb/>
champion<lb/>
Paladins put<lb/>
nearly pullei<lb/>
It was tf<lb/>
title in four<lb/>
who calle.<lb/>
"nerverackn<lb/>
"It doesn<lb/>
take it. Th;<lb/>
much I<lb/>
afterthought<lb/>
Wifdca<lb/>
N<lb/>
D A V I D<lb/>
climaxed aim<lb/>
tennis seaso<lb/>
finishing<lb/>
seven-ic<lb/>
C o n I e i e<lb/>
champion thi<lb/>
Host Da<lb/>
individual cl<lb/>
23 points foi<lb/>
with 18.<lb/>
Ihe Pirate<lb/>
tluee playi<lb/>
scmilinals<lb/>
Bruce Lin<lb/>
St a union<lb/>
three-day m.<lb/>
Tick<lb/>
Tickets fo<lb/>
game oi I<lb/>
ECU'l new-<lb/>
are now on sa<lb/>
Ihe gam<lb/>
University wi<lb/>
l. at 3 p<lb/>
ceremonies w<lb/>
in Wright Ai<lb/>
m<lb/>
bv Li!<lb/>
SWAN<lb/>
8TUD1<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
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oposn<lb/>
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OOEO<lb/>
OTSH<lb/>
COROC<lb/>
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WORK<lb/>
AVAIL<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039557_0005"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
w<lb/>
Golf<lb/>
Win by<lb/>
a shot<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
(Spoils Editor)<lb/>
SANFORD Coach John<lb/>
Welborn'i ECU golferi brought<lb/>
home the iecond Southern<lb/>
Conference championship of<lb/>
the season foi the school.<lb/>
winning the conference meet<lb/>
here Tiiuisuay.<lb/>
The I'nates held of) the<lb/>
furman Paladins lor a<lb/>
one stroke victory after<lb/>
entering the final round with a<lb/>
13-stroke lead<lb/>
Final team scores in the<lb/>
match showed the Pirates with<lb/>
a lotal of 754 strokes. Furman<lb/>
with 755, The Citadel in third<lb/>
place with 783. Davidson with<lb/>
784. William and Mary with<lb/>
SOO, and VMI and Richmond<lb/>
tied with 828.<lb/>
LOSE BUT TWO<lb/>
ECU. which lost only two of<lb/>
12 tegular season matches, was<lb/>
led to its triumph hy its five<lb/>
low scorers Fd Pimm. Carl<lb/>
Bell. Phil Wallace. Ron Pinner<lb/>
and Marry Helmet.<lb/>
Pinnix was the low man for<lb/>
the Bucs as he caided a I4(<lb/>
This total put him third foi<lb/>
individual medalist honors. The<lb/>
Citadel's Lynwood Edwards<lb/>
earned that title in a plavotl<lb/>
after finishing regulation play<lb/>
with l,t Eurman's Tommy<lb/>
Gaul finished second.<lb/>
Pinnix's score bv rounds was<lb/>
72-77.<lb/>
Bell, who led the Bucs after<lb/>
the first round with a 71.<lb/>
finished fourth at 150. six<lb/>
strokes off the pace.<lb/>
TIE FOR FIFTH<lb/>
Wallace finished in a tie for<lb/>
fifth as he carded 74-77 151.<lb/>
Pinner, who had a bad day in<lb/>
the first round and failed to be<lb/>
among the top five Pirates, led<lb/>
the team in the final round<lb/>
with 75 He also finished with<lb/>
151.<lb/>
Helmer was the other ECU<lb/>
scorer as he carded 72-81<lb/>
153. This put him in a tie for<lb/>
I Ith place<lb/>
The other two Pirates<lb/>
entered in competition, whose<lb/>
totals did not count in the<lb/>
team standings, were Jim<lb/>
Brown (75-7') 154) and Raj<lb/>
Sharpe (79-78 157).<lb/>
13-STROKE LEAD<lb/>
ECU had entered the final<lb/>
day of competition with a<lb/>
13-stroke lead over defending<lb/>
champion Furman but the<lb/>
Paladins put on a surge that<lb/>
nearly pulled it out of the fire.<lb/>
It was the second SC golf<lb/>
title in four years for Welborn,<lb/>
who called the finish a<lb/>
"nerve-racking" one.<lb/>
"It doesn't care how you<lb/>
take it. This counts just as<lb/>
much he said as an<lb/>
afterthought.<lb/>
Wildcats champs<lb/>
Netmen<lb/>
ers take title; thinclads second<lb/>
William and Mary again<lb/>
captures team laurels<lb/>
I<lb/>
THERE WERE MANY heroes for ECU Saturday in the<lb/>
47th annual Southern Conference Track and Field<lb/>
Championships held in Greenville for the first time.<lb/>
Shown here are just some of them. (Top) Phil Phillips,<lb/>
ECU's top sprinter, stretches out just inches before he<lb/>
(Staff photos by Ross Mann)<lb/>
touches the wire to win the 100 yard dash. Ron Hunt,<lb/>
left foreground, finished second. (Bottom left)<lb/>
Lawrence Wilkerson in one of his efforts in the triple<lb/>
jump. He finished third. (Bottom right) Bill Beam clears<lb/>
15 feet in the pole vault. He also finished third.<lb/>
Pirate nine hosts William and Mary<lb/>
By SAMMY HYDE<lb/>
(Stall Writer)<lb/>
Mike Aldndge blasted his<lb/>
fiftl home run of the season<lb/>
Sunday to boost the Pirates to<lb/>
a 10-6 baseball victory over<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
The Pirates were scheduled<lb/>
to meet William and Mary this<lb/>
afternoon at University<lb/>
fifth<lb/>
DAVIDSON ECU<lb/>
climaxed another disappointing<lb/>
tennis season here Saturday,<lb/>
finishing fifth in the<lb/>
seven-team Southern<lb/>
Conference tennis<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Host Davidson won the<lb/>
individual championship with<lb/>
23 points followed hy Furman<lb/>
with 18<lb/>
The Pirates, who sent only<lb/>
thiee players into Friday's<lb/>
semifinals Graham Felton.<lb/>
Bruce Einton and Chris<lb/>
Staunton finished the<lb/>
three-day meet with only 3<lb/>
points The Citadel had 10,<lb/>
William and Mary had 7, and<lb/>
VMI and Richmond had 1<lb/>
each.<lb/>
ECU had earlier completed<lb/>
another sub500 season,<lb/>
pending the result of one<lb/>
remaining dual match.<lb/>
Fhe season finale will be<lb/>
held m Wilson this afternoon<lb/>
when the Pirates face Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College. The Bulldogs<lb/>
have had a banner year this<lb/>
season, winning the Carolinas<lb/>
C o n f e r e n c e championship<lb/>
Saturday for the second year in<lb/>
a row<lb/>
Tickets now on sale<lb/>
Tickets for the dedication<lb/>
game oi Harrington Field,<lb/>
I l Is now baseball Itadium,<lb/>
are now on sale<lb/>
I he game against Duke<lb/>
Universin will be Sundas Ma)<lb/>
9, at 3 p in Dedication<lb/>
ceremonies will begin at 2 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium on the<lb/>
1(1 campus<lb/>
Tickets aic being handled by<lb/>
the Greenville Jaycees. They<lb/>
are on ale from any Jaycee<lb/>
membei and from several<lb/>
Greenville merchants Hodges<lb/>
Hardware, Colfman's Men's<lb/>
Shop, Proctor's Men's Shop,<lb/>
the Carolina Grill and the<lb/>
I luee Steers Restaurant.<lb/>
W?TORBEe)&amp; 1 b- LilQUA-liin -ONLY n jwantedn; fiPPPK STUDENT RCPsMbJljJ J T FOR OUR (i?vv?ii?El ?.? n?rA-TTHHEDS CAWV SI2SEJ<lb/>
OPOBTERS OPATOKEB OSEOALS OTSHIRTS UOROOVIES STJM1VXEM WORK AVAILABLE ? fQUPAY SH'PI.N; "?!JL U S ln?MS KJhh?? tTtra rMAl crs'Trn, m. A 092 on, tffCUKD (1 "i 'tr" on mam rur-rt rot mr IJt.fS.FLEAII RISK A WATEMrrt AT OHfl TOl<lb/>
 . ?nnirs?<lb/>
Iff<lb/>
. i in ? vr ?t?a.F "1TM1T1 T1IAT IF I AH ? IA.H HFTVH rH? WTHIiri, VITHI1 TF MA- , !? Hill It r vin iv Rft l . 1 rROCIUrt.<lb/>
Stadium in a Southern<lb/>
Conference doubleheader.<lb/>
ECU currently holds a 9-14<lb/>
record, including 4-5 in<lb/>
conference action after a<lb/>
twinbill split with Richmond<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
STRIKE EARLY<lb/>
Against the Tar Heels<lb/>
Sunday, the Pirates struck<lb/>
early, scoring four runs in the<lb/>
second inning. Singles by Larry<lb/>
Walters and Hal Baird started<lb/>
things off and Matt Walker<lb/>
added a double to score three<lb/>
of the runs.<lb/>
UNC battled back to score<lb/>
three times in the fifth and<lb/>
then take a 6-4 lead with three<lb/>
more runs in the seventh. That<lb/>
set the stage for Aldridge's<lb/>
blast in the bottom of the<lb/>
seventh.<lb/>
The homer lollowed a triple<lb/>
by Skip Horton and a<lb/>
hit-batsman (Dick Corrada)<lb/>
Cut out and save this ad I<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Call Your<lb/>
Travel<lb/>
Agent!<lb/>
When you want the most<lb/>
charters available for<lb/>
Summer 1971. Call<lb/>
212-697-3054<lb/>
As a student at this<lb/>
college, YOU may be<lb/>
eligible for our low. low<lb/>
cost fares Flights from<lb/>
New York !o all major<lb/>
European Cities<lb/>
Weekly departures<lb/>
Flights under the auspices<lb/>
of World Student<lb/>
Government Organization<lb/>
Send coupon call, write<lb/>
or visit<lb/>
and sailed 340 feettowill bus! Duke Universitv<lb/>
rightfield.p.m.<lb/>
POST WINSwmmmmwm<lb/>
at 3<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
(Spurts Editor)<lb/>
The winner was the same<lb/>
but the story was a lot<lb/>
different in the 47th annual<lb/>
Southern Conference track and<lb/>
field championships held here<lb/>
this past weekend<lb/>
EC! hosted the<lb/>
championship meet foi the<lb/>
first time ever and the home<lb/>
track must have definitely<lb/>
proven some kind of<lb/>
advantage Although William<lb/>
and Mary won its sixth straight<lb/>
title, the final margin was one<lb/>
oi the closest in recent years<lb/>
The Pirates were able to<lb/>
move from a torrid race to<lb/>
edge I he Furman Paladins for<lb/>
second place honors.<lb/>
FEWER POINTS<lb/>
William and Mary finished<lb/>
the two-day meet with 101<lb/>
points, far fewer than its usual.<lb/>
ECU had 78 while Furman<lb/>
scored 68. Fat behind the<lb/>
pace-setters were The Citadel<lb/>
with 19 points. Richmond with<lb/>
17. VMI with 11. and Davidson<lb/>
Six stars<lb/>
awarded<lb/>
George Whitley. co-captain<lb/>
of the 1970 ECU football<lb/>
team, is the recipient of four of<lb/>
the top awards presented<lb/>
annually to outstanding Pirate<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
The senior defensive back<lb/>
from Huntersville. was named<lb/>
the winner ot the Outstanding<lb/>
Football Player Award<lb/>
(presented by Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega), the Swindell Memorial<lb/>
Award (for dedication and<lb/>
leadership in football,<lb/>
presented by WNCT-TV), the<lb/>
Lansche Award (to the<lb/>
outstanding football senior,<lb/>
presented by the Naval<lb/>
Reserve) and the Most<lb/>
Valuable Football Player<lb/>
Award (presented by Hodges<lb/>
Hardware).<lb/>
Other football awards went<lb/>
to the following players:<lb/>
Dwight Flanagan, senior<lb/>
Hanker from Edenton: the E.E.<lb/>
Rawl Memorial Award for<lb/>
character, scholastic and<lb/>
athletic ability.<lb/>
Paul Haug. junior offensive<lb/>
tackle from Fenton. Mo the<lb/>
Blocking Trophy, presented by<lb/>
the Pitt Theater.<lb/>
Carl Summerell, freshman<lb/>
with 10.<lb/>
Although ECU and Funnan<lb/>
won only four events each,<lb/>
compared to eight won by the<lb/>
champion Indians, the Pirates<lb/>
captured :?cv.unu place by<lb/>
virtue of their greater depth<lb/>
The Pirates won both relay<lb/>
events (440 and mile) while<lb/>
Barry Johnson won the quarter<lb/>
mile in 48.2 seconds, just<lb/>
three-tenths of a second ofl<lb/>
the conference record.<lb/>
TIES BEST<lb/>
In addition Phil Phillips<lb/>
won the 100-yard dash with a<lb/>
l'second sprint This ties the<lb/>
best previous in the state this<lb/>
year<lb/>
The quarter-mile relay team<lb/>
of Ron Hunt. Lany Nuckols,<lb/>
Les Strayhorn and Phillips<lb/>
took command after the first<lb/>
turn and strode home to<lb/>
victory in 42 seconds-flat half<lb/>
a second slower than the<lb/>
conference mark<lb/>
In the last track event of the<lb/>
meet, the ECU mile-relay team<lb/>
of Johnson, Rusty Carraway.<lb/>
Jim Kidd and Hunt sped past<lb/>
William and Mary to win b 12<lb/>
yards in 3:18.3.<lb/>
OTHER SCORES<lb/>
Othei fine Pirate finishes<lb/>
were recorded by Hunt, second<lb/>
in the 100 and 220: Ray<lb/>
Ouick. second in the high jump<lb/>
((()"), Gerald Klas. second in<lb/>
the mile. Ron Smith, second in<lb/>
the high hurdles and third in<lb/>
the intermediate hurdles. Kidd<lb/>
second in the half-mile;<lb/>
Also: David Frye, third in<lb/>
the long jump, Bill Beam, third<lb/>
m the pole vault, Lawrence<lb/>
Wilkerson third in the triple<lb/>
jump; Larry Malone. fourth in<lb/>
the long jump and fifth in the<lb/>
triple jump; John Hoffman,<lb/>
fourth in the javelin, Ed<lb/>
Hereford, fourth in the stx-mile<lb/>
run:<lb/>
Bill McRee. fourth in the<lb/>
high hurdles. Carraway. fourth<lb/>
in the half-mile; Ivey Peacock,<lb/>
fifth in the discus; Tom Inseii<lb/>
fifth in the quarter-mile, and<lb/>
Nuckols. fifth in the 220. were<lb/>
the other ECU scorers.<lb/>
In all. the Pirates scored in<lb/>
16 of the 19 events. ECU will<lb/>
next compete in the WTVD<lb/>
State Meet this weekend<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Fountainhead. Page 5<lb/>
Tuesday, May 4, 1971<lb/>
quarterback from Virginia<lb/>
Beacll, Va the Outstanding<lb/>
Freshman Player Award.<lb/>
presented by WNCT Radio<lb/>
Two basketball players also<lb/>
were honored. Jim Gregory,<lb/>
the senior co-captam from<lb/>
Wayne Post, who ironically<lb/>
faced only two batters, was the<lb/>
winner.<lb/>
In Richmond Saturday, the<lb/>
Pirates easily won the opener.<lb/>
4-2, as Baird struck out 12<lb/>
batters to gain the win<lb/>
The second game was an<lb/>
altogether different story,<lb/>
however, as the Pirates fell to<lb/>
the hometown Spiders. I 1-2.<lb/>
ECU will continue its home<lb/>
stand Saturday with a<lb/>
conference twinbill against<lb/>
Furman. Sunday will feature<lb/>
the dedication game of<lb/>
Harrington Field. The Pirates<lb/>
This week's schedule:<lb/>
Tuesday Baseball vs William and Mary (2). home<lb/>
I ennil at Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
Friday Crew: Dad Vail Regatta at Philadelphia. Pa<lb/>
Track: WTVD State Meet at Durham<lb/>
Saturday Baseball vs. Furman (2). home<lb/>
Crew and track: continuation of meets<lb/>
Sunday Baseball vs Duke University, home<lb/>
DEDICATION OF HARRINGTON FIELD<lb/>
Monday Baseball at the I niveisits ol North Carolina<lb/>
GEORGE WHITLEY<lb/>
Elbert. WVa was named the<lb/>
Most Valuable Player in<lb/>
basketball. He was presented<lb/>
an award given by the<lb/>
Greenvdle Daily Reflector.<lb/>
The Outstanding Freshman<lb/>
Award in basketball went to<lb/>
Nicky White from Kinston.<lb/>
This trophy is presented by<lb/>
Hodges Hardware<lb/>
LOSE 20 POUNDS<lb/>
IN TWO WEEKS!<lb/>
Famous US. Women Ski Team Dir<lb/>
During the non-snow off season<lb/>
he IS. Women's Alpine Ski Team<lb/>
members go on the "Ski Team" diet<lb/>
lose 20 pounds in two weeks.<lb/>
That's right 20 pounds in 14 day<lb/>
The basis ol the diet is chemical food<lb/>
etion and was devised by a famous<lb/>
ToloracU) physician especially for the<lb/>
LS. Ski Team Normal energy is<lb/>
maintained (very important') while<lb/>
reducing You keep "full" no<lb/>
sUrvatum because the diet is de<lb/>
signed that way! It's a diet that i<lb/>
easy to follow whether you work<lb/>
travel or stay at home.<lb/>
This is. honestly, a fantastically!<lb/>
successful diel. If it weren't, the V.S<lb/>
Women's Ski Team wouldn't be per<lb/>
mined to use it' RighC So, givel<lb/>
yourself the same break the U.S. Ski)<lb/>
earn gets lose weight the scientific<lb/>
proven way. Even if you've tried allj<lb/>
the other diets, you owe it to you<lb/>
self to try the LS. Women's Ski<lb/>
Team Diet. That is, if you re illy dol<lb/>
want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks.)<lb/>
Order today Tear this out as<lb/>
reminder<lb/>
Send only $1.00 ($1.25 for Ru<lb/>
Service) - cash is O.K. to: Sk<lb/>
Team Diet. P.O.Box 15493, Dept<lb/>
ST. Saa Diego, Calif. 92115<lb/>
Don't order unless you expect to lo:<lb/>
20 pounds in two weeks! Becau<lb/>
that's what the Ski Team Diet will do<lb/>
Part-time students needed for promotional work.<lb/>
$75 per week. Male or female. Call Mr. Blalock at<lb/>
758-5919 between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Monday<lb/>
through Friday.<lb/>
CLUB FOOTBALL<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
MANDATORY for fall players<lb/>
Wednesday, 7:30 C.U. Lobby<lb/>
PREGNANT?<lb/>
NEED HELP?<lb/>
For assistance in obtaining a<lb/>
legal abortion immediately in<lb/>
New York City at minimal<lb/>
cost call:<lb/>
Chicago (312) 922-0777<lb/>
Phila. (215) 878-5800<lb/>
Miami (305) 754-5471<lb/>
Atlanta (404) 524-4781<lb/>
New York (212) 582-4740<lb/>
8 a.m. until 10 pm<lb/>
7 davs a week<lb/>
ABORTION REFERRAL<lb/>
SERVICE (ARS), WVvC.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Join the Qf) Crowd<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
(264 By Pass)<lb/>
DINK INN or TAKE OUT<lb/>
Call Ahead For Faster Service<lb/>
Telephone 576 9991<lb/>
PITT PLAZA DAIRY BAR<lb/>
25 FLAVORS<lb/>
BANANA BOATS<lb/>
HALLMARK CARDS<lb/>
tOPEN 10-10 MON<lb/>
????????????????.<lb/>
-FR1. 1-10 SUNi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD CLASSIFIED<lb/>
S Experienced<lb/>
9 employment<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
JOBS AVAIL ABLE<lb/>
PREGNANCY TESTING BV MAIL<lb/>
roofers lor summer<lb/>
Phone 752-2 1?2<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
196! Plymouth Valiant, runs good.<lb/>
$100.00. Call 756 5170.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT<lb/>
Four rooms available for summer.<lb/>
Air conditioning. Houie run by<lb/>
student, no calls. 119 West 7th<lb/>
Street anytime.<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
Ten ladies for phone receptionists.<lb/>
Full or part time. Good hourly<lb/>
wage, Apply 301A Cotancne Street<lb/>
upstairs.<lb/>
MALE HELP WANTED<lb/>
Men nf all trades, to North Slope,<lb/>
Alaska and the Yukon, around<lb/>
$2800.00 per month. For complete<lb/>
Information write to Job Research,<lb/>
P.O. Box 161. Stn-A, Toronto, Ont<lb/>
Enclose $3 to cover costs<lb/>
Government certified, licensed<lb/>
laboratory. Prompt results. Free<lb/>
instructions. Write or call Poplan,<lb/>
Box 1556P12. Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb/>
27514, Phone (919) 929-7194.<lb/>
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
' Interested In starting your own<lb/>
, business this summer with a new<lb/>
1 nationally-known product' Write<lb/>
I R.A.H. Distributing Company,<lb/>
I Suite 14, 4821 Sahier Street,<lb/>
Omaha. Nebraska 68104 or call<lb/>
402-455-3395 (no collect calls).<lb/>
1<lb/>
:<lb/>
CLASSIFIED AD FORM<lb/>
Ten men lor light delivery work.<lb/>
Full or part time. Good dally pay.<lb/>
Must have own transportation.<lb/>
App'v 301-A Cotanche Street<lb/>
upstairs.<lb/>
CERAMICS<lb/>
W S Q 0 please send<lb/>
n Travel bulletins<lb/>
D Application lor international<lb/>
Studeni I D<lb/>
Name. <lb/>
Address<lb/>
Cily<lb/>
Slate<lb/>
Scl.m.l<lb/>
Ca<lb/>
Elvira's Caramlc Shop, 2801<lb/>
Crockett Drive. Phone 758 3212.<lb/>
Open for classes Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday evenings 6-10. Saturday<lb/>
afternoon 1-5.<lb/>
Zip<lb/>
SKYDIVING<lb/>
Charter &amp; Group<lb/>
Travel Specialists<lb/>
60 East 42 nd Street<lb/>
New York 10017<lb/>
Call (212)697-3084<lb/>
First lump course $?00P<lb/>
Complete course $35 00 (6 lumpsl.<lb/>
Training, equipment and tumps<lb/>
Included in above.<lb/>
Carolina Para-Centei<lb/>
noanoke Rapids, N.C.<lb/>
Call 758-3355<lb/>
BICVCLE SALESMAN WANTED<lb/>
Student, knowledgeable about<lb/>
bicycles, with small amount of<lb/>
capital, to sell Peugeot, Anquetll,<lb/>
Sand Atala bicycles for me In<lb/>
I GreenviH area. Especial need: ECU<lb/>
I campus Call or write Watson<lb/>
? Morris, 425 W. Cameron Ave<lb/>
S Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. 967-4738<lb/>
 Large commission on sales.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
MAIL TO:<lb/>
Fount. inheaJ Advertising<lb/>
Box 2516 ECU Station<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
CALL:<lb/>
758-6366<lb/>
Same<lb/>
RATLS. $1 for the first 25 words.<lb/>
15 cents for each additional word<lb/>
Ads must be submitted at least<lb/>
two days in advance.<lb/>
iddnu<lb/>
rh me<lb/>
L" Black Labrador Retrieve, puppies, - I I J<lb/>
AK( registered Priced tor 2 "libiiivtum Duii's) mmmKmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmm f <lb/>
Mia $50.00. can 7954561 or ?oeoo,ooaooooooo????eoeooooooeoeooooooooo?eoeooeoei. I<lb/>
7Q (Q1 J Hobersonvllle. N.C. ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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no<lb/>
i rial,<lb/>
hau<lb/>
n in<lb/>
and<lb/>
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inch<lb/>
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inli<lb/>
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ountamhead<lb/>
Visitation still a problem<lb/>
Gxui&amp;UeUb md ommenlaAy<lb/>
rhe i'ii masse resignation of the<lb/>
Men's Residence Council members last<lb/>
rhursday nighl brings the visitation<lb/>
problem back into focus as the major<lb/>
problem now facing students and<lb/>
administration<lb/>
(. iting the continuous "run-around"<lb/>
given them by ECU President Leo<lb/>
Jenkins at the "rap session" .is one<lb/>
reason for the decision to discontinue<lb/>
furthei MRC membership, some MRC<lb/>
members seem to hold little hope for<lb/>
.i ti v future student control ol<lb/>
controversial student affairs<lb/>
We offer our condolences and moral<lb/>
support to the now former members<lb/>
ol the MRC for finding their action<lb/>
necessary We sincerely hope that their<lb/>
resignations will help to open some of<lb/>
the still closed eyes as to what is<lb/>
taking place on this campus<lb/>
Then are still those who maintain<lb/>
that we have a governing student bod)<lb/>
and a judicial body of justice. There<lb/>
are still those who feel that the<lb/>
students are being treated as mature<lb/>
and responsible human beings. And<lb/>
there are still those who are surprised<lb/>
that some students feel sufficiently<lb/>
frustrated by the continuous lack of<lb/>
action to have gone into the streets.<lb/>
Perhaps the MRC resignations will<lb/>
help to show that the individuals<lb/>
involved in this entire situation are<lb/>
not simply out to have a good time<lb/>
stirring up demonstrations and that<lb/>
they are deadlv serious.<lb/>
Emotional maturity reflected by letters<lb/>
3y MW ALDRIDGE, DOS<lb/>
May ! offei my congratulations to the many<lb/>
Students whose letters appeared in The Forum<lb/>
Tuesday April (i. and particularly to the<lb/>
sditorial entitled. "Jenkins Declares War<lb/>
Those letters, and ilie editorial, reflect in a most<lb/>
revealing w ij 'he emotional maturKy ol the<lb/>
y nleis<lb/>
The letter by Mr Fermams was particularly<lb/>
noteworthy He savs. " realize that we<lb/>
students can only he put down tor so long<lb/>
before we strike back don't be put down.<lb/>
The I niversity is run foi the students, not for<lb/>
the trustees He is so right That is why the<lb/>
state ol North Carolina awards a scholarship of<lb/>
Sl.liX) to each student and why parents gladly<lb/>
finance the remaining tuition What right does<lb/>
the administration have? After all. it isn't their<lb/>
school, they only work there' They are only<lb/>
employed by and responsible to the taxpayer to<lb/>
provide the best possible educational program<lb/>
foi the youth of this state Surely, a group of<lb/>
intelligent students, notwithstanding the lack of<lb/>
experience, is certainly more capable and<lb/>
knowledgeable regarding what is best for them,<lb/>
and exactly how the school should be operated<lb/>
Mr knowk-s states. "My congratulations to<lb/>
the students ol ECl foi not stooping so low as<lb/>
to use violent tactics as those that were<lb/>
employed by the police I agree with him. I<lb/>
think it is absuid that the police should be<lb/>
.ipset because someone is throwing rocks at<lb/>
them, that they are being called vulgar rimes,<lb/>
that they are regarded as enemies rather than<lb/>
keepers of the peace After all. isn't it part of<lb/>
their iob to accept nay. encourage public<lb/>
abuse stoically, unemotionally" Why should<lb/>
police get up tight when, in the normal line of<lb/>
duty, their own safety is threatened I think it<lb/>
would be well for all of us to remember that<lb/>
the next time we are in trouble and need help.<lb/>
"don't call a con call a student "<lb/>
Mr Jones urged that students continue the<lb/>
Mastering the Draft<lb/>
boycott and teach the merchants "what they<lb/>
must do to regain our business " The editorial<lb/>
stated. "Doctor Jenkins' actions, however, have<lb/>
educated us to the fact that when you are<lb/>
dealing with irrational and self-seeking<lb/>
individuals, it matters not how intelligent and<lb/>
rational your actions may be Right on.<lb/>
brother How much more intelligent and<lb/>
rational could the students' action regarding the<lb/>
boycott be" After all. it is the merchants' fault<lb/>
that students' visiting hours are not as they<lb/>
would like them to be<lb/>
It is the co-operation and dollars from the<lb/>
Greenville businessmen that has aided in<lb/>
making ECL' the tremendous institution it now<lb/>
is. Better they had not co-operated and kept<lb/>
their money in their pockets. Possibly, without<lb/>
their help, we would still be ECTC or at the<lb/>
most, ECC Had we remained a "two-bit"<lb/>
school, these student problems possibly never<lb/>
would have arisen, for we never would have had<lb/>
the "elite intelligentsia" in attendance as<lb/>
students. Only the local country hicks would<lb/>
have comprised the student body, and<lb/>
everybody knows they are so dumb that they<lb/>
think it is proper for the school authorities to<lb/>
insist that education come before pleasure, that<lb/>
rules be made and that they be enforced, that<lb/>
order be maintained on the campus and that<lb/>
the administration direct the affairs of the<lb/>
institution rather that the students in residence.<lb/>
If the boycott were still in existence, there is<lb/>
a strong possibility that when the various<lb/>
members of the Pirate Club go out this week to<lb/>
solicit the local businessmen for their support<lb/>
in budding the athletic program, none would<lb/>
help. Wouldn't this be wonderful? We could go<lb/>
back to playing football with Rose High School<lb/>
and Podunk College We could use Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium for demonstrations and sell tickets to<lb/>
the student wars<lb/>
Man. how stupid can you get'1<lb/>
Good work?<lb/>
To Fountainhead<lb/>
Keep up the good work. Your paper makes<lb/>
excellent tissue The texture is like that of<lb/>
Charmin. but the contents are as chafing as<lb/>
splintered plywood,<lb/>
Write on?<lb/>
Carl W. Joyner<lb/>
Serious debate<lb/>
To Fountainhead<lb/>
I was one of the members of the MRC who<lb/>
resigned last Thursday night. I would like to say<lb/>
that there was serious debate both pro and con<lb/>
on the resignation It was not a sudden move,<lb/>
and we tried to leave everything in good<lb/>
condition.<lb/>
I telt the MRC should continue to function<lb/>
normally. For no matter how small our powers<lb/>
are we still have a commitment to the men on<lb/>
the hill Also, I felt there was a need for unity<lb/>
in the student movement during this time of<lb/>
crisis. Therefore, with all due respect for the<lb/>
organization of the MRC, I have resigned from<lb/>
Supreme Court upholds alternate<lb/>
method for pre-induction review<lb/>
By JOHN STRIKER AND ANDREW SHAPIRO<lb/>
"You arc about to be inducted into the<lb/>
Armed Forces ol the United States. . . You will<lb/>
take one step forward as your name and service<lb/>
are called and such step will constitute your<lb/>
induction into the Armed Forces indicated<lb/>
With the step forward, a young man becomes a<lb/>
young soldier<lb/>
An increasing nurnbei of men are refusing to<lb/>
take the symbolic step forward Apparently<lb/>
they agree with the poster depicting Father<lb/>
Daniel Berngan with the words "Don't just do<lb/>
something, stand there<lb/>
These men will have a chance to contest the<lb/>
validity of their induction orders in court They<lb/>
will be prosecuted for refusing induction. As a<lb/>
defense, they can claim that their induction<lb/>
order was illegal They cannot be convicted of<lb/>
refusing to obey an illegal order.<lb/>
Aside from refusing induction, getting into<lb/>
court to contest the validity of a registrant's<lb/>
draft status has not, and still is not. easy. The<lb/>
courts are not immediately available to remedy<lb/>
any injustice The basis for this limitation is<lb/>
found in the diatt law itselfongress legislated<lb/>
that "no (udieial review shall be made of the<lb/>
lassitication or processing ,il any registrant by<lb/>
i"sal hoards, appeal hoards, or the President<lb/>
except as a defense to a criminal<lb/>
prosecution after the registrant has<lb/>
responded eithei affirmatively or negatively to<lb/>
an order to icport tor induction<lb/>
In other words, if the words ol I ongress are<lb/>
induction It you are right, you will be found<lb/>
innocent. If you have judged wrong, you will be<lb/>
found guilty and may spend up to five years in<lb/>
prison. Needless to say, Congress tried to<lb/>
discourage use of the courts by making use a<lb/>
big gamble<lb/>
The courts, however, have not read<lb/>
Congress's language literals A number of vears<lb/>
ago they decided that a young man who had<lb/>
been inducted into the Armed Forces could<lb/>
contest his induction through the use of what is<lb/>
called the writ of habeas corpus. Through the<lb/>
use ot this procedure, a young man in the<lb/>
Armed Forces can challenge his commanding<lb/>
officer s right to hold him in military service If<lb/>
the young man's induction was illegal his<lb/>
commanding officer has no right to hold him in<lb/>
military service.<lb/>
Though the writ of habeas corpus allowed<lb/>
men to get into court without refusing<lb/>
induction, the risks were still high Instead of<lb/>
putting five years in prison on the line the<lb/>
young man who uses the writ runs the risk of<lb/>
losing his case and spending two years in (he<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
For a number of years, refusing induction<lb/>
and the writ ot habeas corpus remained as the<lb/>
only two avenues for getting into court<lb/>
Recently, however, a new avenue has opened<lb/>
Though only available under exceptional<lb/>
circumstances, this new avenue allows a young<lb/>
man to have a court review his case even before<lb/>
he has received an induction order. This form<lb/>
of court review is called pre-induction judicial<lb/>
review Its advantage is that a young man can<lb/>
fountainhead<lb/>
Danny Norris<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Cathy Johnson<lb/>
Karen Blanif iald<lb/>
Don Trausnacfc<lb/>
Ira Bakar .<lb/>
Robert R Thonen<lb/>
Editor in-Chief<lb/>
Bev Denny<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Kevin Tracy<lb/>
Business Mana?er<lb/>
Nawi Editor<lb/>
Faaturaa Editor<lb/>
Sporti Editor<lb/>
Advinr<lb/>
Pubiiihad ti? ttudanti o' Eait Carolina UnlvaMltv Po nv? aaia r-<lb/>
Norlh ciroimi 27,34 AdvartUIng opan ,Ju?' ?l nS ?i5'iG"?n,lll,<lb/>
CUnltlad: $1.00 or tha ?lr? 25 ?m s,h.V,i.?' "ft ?'J "?u?n Inch<lb/>
Talapnona 7J?-?366 Subscription rat(l $10.00 par yaar<lb/>
Tha opinionj axpranad by tun nawtoaow<lb/>
?ra not nacaaiarlly thota ot E.lt Carolina" n"Ii<lb/>
Ivarilty<lb/>
get into court without risking five years in<lb/>
prison or two years in the Army.<lb/>
Pre-induction judicial review is not available<lb/>
in every case. As a general rule, it is available<lb/>
only if a local or appeal board has acted in a<lb/>
blatantly lawless manner. The case of<lb/>
Oestereich v. Selective Service System brought<lb/>
pre induction judicial review to full bloom and<lb/>
provides the best explanation of when it is<lb/>
available to a registrant<lb/>
Oestereich returned his draft card to his local<lb/>
board His IV-D ministerial student exemption<lb/>
was revoked. Before his induction, he sought<lb/>
help in the courts I he case finally reached the<lb/>
United States Supreme Court.<lb/>
The United States Attorney argued that<lb/>
Oestereich must enhei refuse induction or seek<lb/>
the writ of habeas corpus in order to get into<lb/>
court The Supreme Court disagreed.<lb/>
"We deal here with conduct of a local board<lb/>
that is basically lawless It is no different in<lb/>
constitutional Implications from a case where<lb/>
induction of an ordained minister or other<lb/>
clearly exempt person is ordered (a) to retaliate<lb/>
against the person because of his political views<lb/>
or (b) to bear down on him for his religious<lb/>
views or his racial attitudes or (C) to get him<lb/>
out of town so thai the ,imorous interests of a<lb/>
Board member might be better served In<lb/>
such instances, as in the present one, there is no<lb/>
evidence of discretion by a Board in evaluating<lb/>
evidence and in determining whether a claimed<lb/>
exemption is deseived. The case we decide<lb/>
today involves a clear departure by the Board<lb/>
from its statutory mandate. To hold that a<lb/>
person deprived of hJi statutory exemption in<lb/>
such a blatantly lawless manner must either be<lb/>
inducted and raise his piotest through a habeas<lb/>
corpus proceeding or defy induction and<lb/>
defend his refusal in a criminal prosecution is to<lb/>
construe the draft aw Wlth unnecessary<lb/>
harshness<lb/>
This language is vague What is the difference<lb/>
between lawless conduct and blatantly lawless<lb/>
conduct The only reasonable answer can be<lb/>
provided by an attorney who is familiar with all<lb/>
the cases which have followed in the footsteps<lb/>
of Oestereich.<lb/>
Though pre-induuion judicial review is only<lb/>
available under exceptional circumstances,<lb/>
don't hesitate to seek aid if you think your case<lb/>
may qualify. The alternatives forms of getting<lb/>
into court are gambles with extremely high<lb/>
stakes<lb/>
We welcome your questions and comments.<lb/>
Please address them to "Mastering the Draft<lb/>
Suite 1202, 60 Hast 4?nd Street, New York,<lb/>
NY 10017. Otn.Je<lb/>
The Forum<lb/>
my appointed post for the ideal of impact upon<lb/>
our governing administration.<lb/>
In the interest of<lb/>
representative government,<lb/>
Jay Evans.<lb/>
Greenville firemen do then job eiy well. ,u at<lb/>
well as they can with an expert like uni in their<lb/>
way<lb/>
Wayne Lehman<lb/>
MRC resignations 'Come here, baby'<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We, the Jones delegation to the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council, feel that we can no longer<lb/>
participate in a powerless government. The<lb/>
administration of this university has<lb/>
demonstrated, by its dictatorial repression of all<lb/>
MRC proposals that deal with any greater<lb/>
magnitude than magazine subscriptions for the<lb/>
laundry room, that it refuses to allow student<lb/>
government to be anything more than a name<lb/>
Apparently, the administration feels that the<lb/>
students are not capable of governing their own<lb/>
hves. We feel that, since the MRC has no voice<lb/>
m student affairs, it can no longer effectively<lb/>
represent the men in the dorms. Therefore we<lb/>
the undersigned, do hereby submit 'our'<lb/>
resignations as members of the MRC effective<lb/>
April 29, 1971.<lb/>
Dan Cox<lb/>
Alan Peevy<lb/>
Peter Cajigal<lb/>
Tom Delmore<lb/>
Ronald Voncannon<lb/>
'University Oath'<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Kenneth Hammond and Rick Atkinson, I<lb/>
read your letters in the April 29 issue of<lb/>
Fountainhead in disbelief and utter amazement.<lb/>
Frankly, after knowing both of you for a total<lb/>
of 3 years, I was bewildered, realizing that you<lb/>
would stoop so low to attack a personal friend<lb/>
and colleague of yours and mine so ruthlessly<lb/>
through our campus newspaper, simply because<lb/>
you are either infuriated because of the<lb/>
University Board's verdict of Bill Schell's<lb/>
"abusive language" trial, or that you are so<lb/>
precocious to the point that you cannot accept<lb/>
diverse opinions without fabricating an attack<lb/>
upon the personal character and integrity of the<lb/>
SGA attorney general, Henry Gorham.<lb/>
Both of you should realize, as representatives<lb/>
in the judicial system, that many of our<lb/>
University rules, regulations, and policies are in<lb/>
conflict with national law for the maintenance<lb/>
and fostering of a better academic community<lb/>
and climate. If University regulations are in<lb/>
conflict with national law, then you should<lb/>
challenge the North Carolina General Assembly<lb/>
for allowing universities to make rules and<lb/>
regulations subordinate and in conflict with<lb/>
national law.<lb/>
Furthermore, ECU's judicial system is not a<lb/>
court of law, governed by federal, state, and<lb/>
municipal law, but rather, is a body organized<lb/>
to judge cases upon their meiits or demerits<lb/>
according to university rules and regulations.<lb/>
As a representative of the student body, a<lb/>
member of our judicial system, and one who<lb/>
has taken the "university oath" which you may<lb/>
have not, I shall forever uphold university rules<lb/>
and regulations until they are altered, changed<lb/>
or deleted.<lb/>
Moffette Antwan Tony Harris<lb/>
Fire fighters upheld<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Please address this to Karen Blansfield<lb/>
Concerning your l-tter in The Forum in<lb/>
April 27 about the "Nonchalant Firemen do<lb/>
you know all the details of a fireman getting to<lb/>
a fire7 First they must be notified. The<lb/>
policemen 'you saw probably got there only<lb/>
seconds before you did. When they turned in<lb/>
the alarm the fiiemen were not sitting in the<lb/>
firetrucks waiting to go. At 2 a.m. they were<lb/>
probably in bed, when they got the alarm they<lb/>
had to get out of bed and get dressed. Then<lb/>
they had to drive the firetrucks to the fire. All<lb/>
this takes time. Also you said they were nrt<lb/>
blowing their sirens Why should they when<lb/>
there is not much, if any, traffic in their way at<lb/>
2 a.m.? Another thing is you said that they<lb/>
drove up slowly, well the firetrucks won't run<lb/>
as fast as a sports car, personally. I think the<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I wish to relate a charming incident which<lb/>
inspired my friends and my intense udmi<lb/>
for the typical HCV fraternity member 01<lb/>
course it i; common knowledge thai being<lb/>
worthy to join a fiat represents the zenith ot<lb/>
accomplishment and status in college life, but I<lb/>
wish to heap still more paeans ot praise upon<lb/>
those who exemplify the very epitome ol the<lb/>
"southern gentleman "<lb/>
Two of my friends and I were strolling back<lb/>
to the dorm today after a pleasant walk As we<lb/>
approached a frat house (I will decline to name<lb/>
we became aware of the piercing states ot some<lb/>
ot the brothers, congregated upon the porch<lb/>
gripping beer cans in then habitual slothful<lb/>
pose<lb/>
"Come here, baby they entreated us loudly<lb/>
amid much raucous laughter and wolf yyhistles<lb/>
Needless to say we were thrilled by then<lb/>
attentions, but we somehow managed i. retain<lb/>
our self-possession and proceeded on our v.j<lb/>
We were abruptly halted when sudde; I) ,<lb/>
water-filled balloon hit the pavement befon us<lb/>
and splattered, showering out leans and bare<lb/>
feet with sparkling cascades ol Creek water We<lb/>
were so amused. We were also impressed hy<lb/>
their maturity, reflected in the clevei execution<lb/>
of their mischevious little prank Such<lb/>
consideration for one's fellow students deserves<lb/>
recognition. Now we have joined the rank<lb/>
those who advocate "Go Greek, not tieak<lb/>
Susan Prevarte<lb/>
Jean Faddis<lb/>
Karen Dawes<lb/>
Need our help?<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to take this opportunity to<lb/>
thank you most sincerely for your support'and<lb/>
cooperation in the past few months in giving<lb/>
the Student Union such great coverage and<lb/>
publicity.<lb/>
T?ube,?T SpeCC' ' ?PPr??ted 'Levyas<lb/>
you handled our publicity for the Ma?i and<lb/>
Terr. Coffeehouse Not many papers wouki I<lb/>
to the trouble of printing Jn article , WCt.k<lb/>
ahead of time and with the wrong information<lb/>
This could have been remedied by the<lb/>
correction I asked you ,o p but I gu?. ,<lb/>
can t expect too much.<lb/>
Secondly. I would like to say thai the success<lb/>
"four Mystery Personality" contest can be<lb/>
wholly ?ttrtbuted to the articles and clue, you<lb/>
faithfully printed to, us When an organ<lb/>
J trying ,o reach all the student the campus<lb/>
newspaper can be invaluable<lb/>
Presently (? I write thi, letter), the Un<lb/>
sponsonng another Coffeehouse featurin<lb/>
Bea' Once again you haye sornelho<lb/>
tor us with l wo pictures n i<lb/>
EvM-nttythe packet fuKpubS 2JX<lb/>
I carried up to you and let. ?n k'<lb/>
B.ansf,eld;s desk was ,nsu.f,c,enMoc<lb/>
firs -rate journahsts to work ??o an a ?<lb/>
And m sorry ,f the interview wBca<lb/>
Monday n,gh, (,ldn, sllppK ? on<lb/>
Trsday'shed1?oneen ?"? " "?<lb/>
II has been a pleasure foime ,0,0 up,on<lb/>
Fountamhead office several times and T<lb/>
all of you. but if you re II ?i ' <lb/>
Print publicity for ,11, 5MW!d t0<lb/>
-el'nieandwebo,hcornar:f;V<lb/>
time and trouble d ' <lb/>
successful functioning of n e i? "le<lb/>
?o the campus co,nn,undVSfrVr<lb/>
our most powerful coimnunca, ,Md ls<lb/>
hope that we may have , I" ' '<lb/>
facilities, you w,? ? OS<lb/>
Vouri truly.<lb/>
Lane Pittman<lb/>
Publicity Chairm<lb/>
ECU Student Un.on<lb/>
IV<lb/>
a<lb/>
h<lb/>
L<lb/>
Yi<lb/>
i<lb/>
rhe l(i<lb/>
cancelled yisit.i<lb/>
to the decitk<lb/>
General Robt<lb/>
Boaid, replied<lb/>
made "The b(<lb/>
the nghts ol i<lb/>
the problem al<lb/>
As tO wliet<lb/>
chances ol<lb/>
disturbances di<lb/>
but they sure<lb/>
comment as<lb/>
opinions weie<lb/>
the boaid<lb/>
WW laylo,<lb/>
stand In the<lb/>
division to cat<lb/>
"I verybody's i<lb/>
and ihat's mine<lb/>
The only<lb/>
dissenting vote<lb/>
Whichard, own<lb/>
Rel lector" V<lb/>
board's decisio<lb/>
reasons thai 1<lb/>
Rob Luisana<lb/>
Howevei he yy<lb/>
reasoning behin<lb/>
these remark, i<lb/>
"The Boaid wi<lb/>
uiatter as H doc<lb/>
to the l tmeisits<lb/>
In answer to<lb/>
student, could<lb/>
change the dec!<lb/>
said, "The best t<lb/>
abide In the di<lb/>
stated thai lettei<lb/>
as "public opink<lb/>
Di Leo Jenk<lb/>
Pro<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
nti war pro<lb/>
guerrilla sty le<lb/>
government c<lb/>
Pentagon began<lb/>
the sieets and b<lb/>
Wholesale arrt<lb/>
Monday appcaiC<lb/>
the planned thiei<lb/>
As the Mat<lb/>
tedeial troops<lb/>
capital police rej<lb/>
been made tod<lb/>
young people w,<lb/>
leader less and s i<lb/>
The federal tr<lb/>
city al the heigl<lb/>
back to staging<lb/>
there was no mo<lb/>
'10.000 troops w<lb/>
SGA spor<lb/>
A<lb/>
A Student Co'<lb/>
would establish a<lb/>
an abortion i<lb/>
Appropriation, (<lb/>
i lie legislature In<lb/>
This bill, sur<lb/>
Representative Ji<lb/>
to a fund from w<lb/>
(400 foi an abot<lb/>
coed must subirri<lb/>
doctOI contin<lb/>
statement ol hei<lb/>
abortion<lb/>
l he student I,<lb/>
back the mone<lb/>
students under<lb/>
someone co-sign t<lb/>
When question<lb/>
keep the loan pi<lb/>
see any problem I<lb/>
only be in the S<lb/>
the SGA record,<lb/>
than tWO years<lb/>
A piohlem coi<lb/>
on her record if t<lb/>
the money witliu<lb/>
Admittedly, he<lb/>
time to pay back<lb/>
promise musl<lb/>
funds at all<lb/>
Fulton predict<lb/>
passage ol the hi<lb/>
since SI.i)00<lb/>
Appropriation, C<lb/>
?' repayment He<lb/>

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