<?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">
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<pb facs="00039571_0001"/>
?flIMI<lb/>
?<lb/>
v<lb/>
Med School gets $30,000 J<lb/>
from Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
Reprinted from the Daily<lb/>
Reflector<lb/>
A grant of S30.000 was<lb/>
announced last Monday by G.<lb/>
Henry Leslie, plant manager of<lb/>
fk Burroughs Wellcome and<lb/>
Company in Greenville, from<lb/>
 his company to the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
 Ihis money is to be used for<lb/>
the new Medical School<lb/>
recently approved for East<lb/>
Carolina by the State<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
In making this<lb/>
announcement. Leslie said,<lb/>
"Our company is very pleased<lb/>
to make this gift to the new<lb/>
Medical School at East<lb/>
Carolina University. We always<lb/>
In tn k.ln ? ' I<lb/>
J iilj.  AWIUM13.<lb/>
especially new ones, and we<lb/>
think this one at East Carolina<lb/>
University will be a big success<lb/>
and a tremendous asset to all<lb/>
of Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, presideni<lb/>
of the University, in accepting<lb/>
the gift, told Leslie, "All of the<lb/>
people at the University wanl<lb/>
to express their appreciation to<lb/>
your fine company for this<lb/>
generous gift. It is greatly<lb/>
needed and will be put to good<lb/>
use. All of us at East Carolina<lb/>
uic very enthusiastic about the<lb/>
Med School and are sure that it<lb/>
has a wonderful future<lb/>
Dr. Wallace Wooles. Dean of<lb/>
the new Medical School, said,<lb/>
'It is very gratifying for a fine<lb/>
company like Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome to honor us with this<lb/>
gift All of us at the Med<lb/>
School appreciate it very much<lb/>
and want to assure Burroughs<lb/>
Wellcome that we will do all in<lb/>
our power to make the school<lb/>
an outstanding success<lb/>
The one vp?r medics! school<lb/>
was authorized by the l?7l<lb/>
General Assembly with<lb/>
students completing the<lb/>
program transferring to Chapel<lb/>
Hill Medical School. The first<lb/>
medical students at ECU are<lb/>
expected to be admitted in the<lb/>
fall of 1972.<lb/>
MEDICAL SCHOOL GIFT . . . G.Henry Leslie (second from left) manaoar nf'T uZ<lb/>
Company Greenville plant presents a $30 000 check to Dr lZ JZ'EZFZL I ' Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
medical school ' eck t0 Dr Leo Jenkins, ECU president for use for the new<lb/>
Volume II, Number 70<lb/>
f Summer School<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
?? and the truth shall make vou free'<lb/>
? Greenville. North Carolina ' <lb/>
Wednesday. August 11.1<lb/>
N.C. students mobilize to r l. ,<lb/>
vote college in towns Qroshaw seeks restructure<lb/>
By ROBERTS. CULLEN<lb/>
Associated Press Writer<lb/>
Now that a constitutional<lb/>
amendment has given persons<lb/>
18 to 21 the right to vote,<lb/>
some students in North<lb/>
Carolina are mobilizing for a<lb/>
struggle over a new question:<lb/>
Where can they exercise that<lb/>
right<lb/>
, ENORMOUS IMPACT<lb/>
Many college students want<lb/>
to vote in the towns where<lb/>
they go to school If current<lb/>
rules are changed to allow this,<lb/>
then vote might have an<lb/>
enormous impact in towns<lb/>
where college students<lb/>
outnumber other voters.<lb/>
Greenville, for instance, has<lb/>
9,086 registered voters and<lb/>
ECU has about 10.000<lb/>
students Chapel Hill has nearly<lb/>
20.000 registered voters, and<lb/>
UNC at Chapel Hill has almost<lb/>
that many students.<lb/>
When the courts declared<lb/>
North Carolina's one-year<lb/>
residency requirement<lb/>
unconstitutional and lowered it<lb/>
to 30 days, they removed one<lb/>
01 the major barriers to massive<lb/>
tt?oi. I participation in local<lb/>
politics by students.<lb/>
Alex Brock, executive<lb/>
secretary of the state Board of<lb/>
Elections, said the major<lb/>
obstacle left is the present<lb/>
interpretation of the domicile<lb/>
rule.<lb/>
"We consider a person's<lb/>
intent in taking up residence in<lb/>
a particular area Brock said.<lb/>
"II a student comes to a<lb/>
community simply to attend<lb/>
school, he is still a resident, for<lb/>
voting purposes, of the town<lb/>
from which he came<lb/>
BOARD'S REASONING<lb/>
The board's reasoning,<lb/>
Brock added, is that temporary<lb/>
residents should not help<lb/>
decide issues that ultimately<lb/>
will not affect them.<lb/>
"A group of students could<lb/>
vote to approve school bonds,<lb/>
leave the area after their<lb/>
studies, then never pay a nickel<lb/>
in taxes on those bonds<lb/>
Brock said.<lb/>
He said his board is not<lb/>
concerned with the political<lb/>
repercussions of its decisions.<lb/>
But he admits there are "a lot<lb/>
of local government people<lb/>
who want to make sure our<lb/>
interpretation stands<lb/>
Many student leaders across<lb/>
the state want to change the<lb/>
board's mind. The Student<lb/>
Government Association at<lb/>
UNC-CH is sponsoring a voter<lb/>
reg tration project to<lb/>
encourage students to register.<lb/>
At the same time, students are<lb/>
preparing strategy aimed at<lb/>
winning them the right to<lb/>
register where they attend<lb/>
school.<lb/>
MEETING PLANNED<lb/>
Student presidents,<lb/>
newspaper editors, and others<lb/>
from many state colleges plan<lb/>
to meet in Chapel Hill Aug<lb/>
13-1 s. Rod Fonda, a UNC<lb/>
student who has been working<lb/>
on the registration project, said<lb/>
they will probably decide to<lb/>
challenge the state residency<lb/>
ruling with a test case<lb/>
"For many of us Fonda<lb/>
said, "the main interest is in<lb/>
national and state affairs. We<lb/>
just think more students will<lb/>
participate in the political<lb/>
process if voting is made as<lb/>
easy as possible. But there are<lb/>
others whose main interest lies<lb/>
in the possibility of wielding<lb/>
local power<lb/>
The students base their<lb/>
demand for college residency<lb/>
voting partly on the mobility<lb/>
of today's society. Said Fonda<lb/>
"Very few people anymore can<lb/>
claim they intend to stay in<lb/>
one place very long. A student<lb/>
knows he'll be around for four<lb/>
years, and I think that's about<lb/>
as much as the society can<lb/>
expect<lb/>
Students who register in<lb/>
their hometowns can vote<lb/>
through absentee ballots only<lb/>
in general elections. 'The<lb/>
primary is often more<lb/>
important Fonda said, "and<lb/>
only military personnel are<lb/>
given absentee ballots for if<lb/>
Students would have to drive<lb/>
home in May, just when the<lb/>
academic load is heaviest<lb/>
Fonda admits that should<lb/>
his plan succeed, the possibility<lb/>
of students influencing local<lb/>
affairs in their home towns<lb/>
would be lost. ?"But<lb/>
considering the difficulties in<lb/>
transportation or absentee<lb/>
voting, combined with the<lb/>
average student's lack of touch<lb/>
with hometown politics, I<lb/>
don't think many of us would<lb/>
vote anyway. Not nearly as<lb/>
many as would vote in their<lb/>
college towns he said.<lb/>
At present, local election<lb/>
boards contacted in an<lb/>
Associated Press survey are<lb/>
following the state directive<lb/>
and making it difficult for<lb/>
students to register in their<lb/>
temporary districts.<lb/>
'MUST PROVE INTENT'<lb/>
Most of the local boards ask<lb/>
a prospective voter his<lb/>
occupation. If the answer is<lb/>
student or soldier, the person<lb/>
must prove his intent to remain<lb/>
a resident after his studies or<lb/>
his time in service are over.<lb/>
For a student, this entails a<lb/>
sworn statement in some cases.<lb/>
In others, he must appear ?<lb/>
before the local board and<lb/>
satisfy its members of his<lb/>
intent.<lb/>
SGA President Glenn<lb/>
Crowshaw is one of the four<lb/>
presidents of N.C. regional<lb/>
universities who formed a<lb/>
statewide organization to push<lb/>
for restructuring of higher<lb/>
eudcation in North Carolina.<lb/>
The others are Gary<lb/>
Strickland of Pembroke State<lb/>
University. Greg Lockamy of<lb/>
Western Carolina University<lb/>
and Fred Barden of<lb/>
Appalachian State University.<lb/>
The organization, called the<lb/>
Student Progressive<lb/>
Education Committee plans<lb/>
to meet in Chapel Hill August<lb/>
13-15 in conjunction with a<lb/>
seminar for student<lb/>
government officers of N.C.<lb/>
universities and colleges.<lb/>
The organization solidly<lb/>
backs Gov. Bob Scott's<lb/>
proposal for restructuring of<lb/>
higher education which<lb/>
includes setting up one Board<lb/>
of Regents.<lb/>
Such a board would cut<lb/>
down on duplications,<lb/>
according to Crowshaw. so that<lb/>
universities would offer<lb/>
different courses rather than<lb/>
each offer the same programs.<lb/>
'II would also change the<lb/>
competition said Crowshaw.<lb/>
"Now the universities compete<lb/>
with each other for programs<lb/>
when we should be working<lb/>
together to offer more<lb/>
different programs across the<lb/>
state<lb/>
The organization was<lb/>
formed several weeks after the<lb/>
state legislature postponed<lb/>
action on restructuring until<lb/>
October, according to<lb/>
Crowshaw. Western Carolina<lb/>
University had sent students to<lb/>
lobby during the regular<lb/>
legislative session, but it was<lb/>
decided that there needed to<lb/>
be a more organized effort<lb/>
ECU will head the lobbying.<lb/>
said Crowshaw. and other<lb/>
presidents will have charge of<lb/>
rallying public opinion.<lb/>
"The restructuring of highei<lb/>
education m N.C. is without<lb/>
doubt the most important issue<lb/>
to be faced in this state in<lb/>
many years stated Crowshaw<lb/>
"For the benefit of those<lb/>
who will attend N.C. campuses<lb/>
in the future. Gov Scon's<lb/>
renovation proposal otters the<lb/>
only hope for a system of<lb/>
super on statewide higher<lb/>
education he continued<lb/>
"Pressure politics and false<lb/>
personal pride cannot be<lb/>
allowed to continue to<lb/>
interfere with higher education<lb/>
in a state with as much<lb/>
potential as North Carolina<lb/>
he concluded.<lb/>
The organization meeting<lb/>
will be held during the<lb/>
weekend with the state-wide<lb/>
conference foi student<lb/>
government officers. Some 400<lb/>
high school and college<lb/>
students are expected to attend<lb/>
the conference, according to<lb/>
Joe Stalling, student bodv<lb/>
president at UNC-CH The<lb/>
officers will consider votei<lb/>
registration and "mutual<lb/>
political and educational<lb/>
problems "<lb/>
Guest speakers will include<lb/>
former IS Rep. A Hard<lb/>
Lowenstein of New Vork and<lb/>
I S Rep Donald Riegle. Ji<lb/>
of Michigan. They will speak<lb/>
on "The Politics of 72<lb/>
vIM AKERS of Tarmac, Inc. shows<lb/>
some of the new reading instruction<lb/>
machines to participants in a special<lb/>
reading workshop at East Carolina<lb/>
University last week.<lb/>
Teachers attend workshop<lb/>
machines for reading<lb/>
About 40 language arts<lb/>
(teachers, reading laboratory<lb/>
technicians and ESEA Title I<lb/>
(directors were at ECU last<lb/>
'eek for a special workshop on<lb/>
lew machines used in reading<lb/>
istruction.<lb/>
Dr Keith D Holmes of the<lb/>
U School of Education was<lb/>
Sogram director for the<lb/>
Jforkshop The instructional<lb/>
ft included various experts<lb/>
reading instruction and<lb/>
prcsentatives from<lb/>
hotechnics, Inc. and<lb/>
mac, Inc manufacturers of<lb/>
cial reading instruction<lb/>
?MB,<lb/>
mong the audio-visual<lb/>
Jlines demonstrated during<lb/>
the workshop were T-Matic<lb/>
150. Hoffman Reader,<lb/>
Tachomatic 500, Craig Reader,<lb/>
System 80. RX Reading<lb/>
Program and Visual-Phonic <lb/>
Reading Program.<lb/>
According to Holmes, the<lb/>
ECU workshop was an attempt<lb/>
to acquaint instructional<lb/>
personnel with the use of the<lb/>
machines, which were<lb/>
developed to improve the<lb/>
teaching of reading in the<lb/>
lower grades<lb/>
"Many schools can afford to<lb/>
buy the machinery he said<lb/>
'but in a number of cases the <lb/>
teachers cannot use it<lb/>
He added that many of the .<lb/>
new machines for reading '<lb/>
instruction were developed<lb/>
with the support of federal<lb/>
grants, on the premise that<lb/>
"every child has the right to<lb/>
read<lb/>
He noted that last week's<lb/>
workshop was a pilot program,<lb/>
and that ECU will sponsor<lb/>
similar workshops in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Holmes, a consultant in<lb/>
language arts for the Virginia<lb/>
public schools, is professor of<lb/>
elementary education at ECU.<lb/>
The author of a number of<lb/>
publications about reading<lb/>
instruction. Holmes earned<lb/>
advanced degrees from<lb/>
Columbia and Cornell<lb/>
Universities.<lb/>
A careet soldier. Brock says,<lb/>
generally has a slightly easier<lb/>
time proving his intent He said<lb/>
the judgment generally applies<lb/>
only to the particular<lb/>
individual.<lb/>
Mrs. Caroline Cody, the<lb/>
elections registrar in Chapel<lb/>
Hill, said she considers the type<lb/>
of housing a student occupies.<lb/>
"If he lives in a donniiory, he<lb/>
is not eligible Mrs. Cody said.<lb/>
"But if they live off-campus,<lb/>
we generally accept them "<lb/>
Although the young people<lb/>
won the right to vote through a<lb/>
constitutional amendment,<lb/>
there are no federal guidelines<lb/>
on the domicile question. Each<lb/>
state must confront the<lb/>
problem individually<lb/>
In Massachusetts, Atty. Gen<lb/>
Robert Quinn rued July 21<lb/>
that students could choose<lb/>
heir own domicile iftei<lb/>
passing a six month residency<lb/>
requirement.<lb/>
Glenn Croshaw. student<lb/>
presideni at ECU. said he<lb/>
doesn't think the voting trends<lb/>
would change appreciably if<lb/>
the Massachusetts ruling were<lb/>
applied in North Carolina<lb/>
"Students here he s.ud.<lb/>
'would vote in much the same<lb/>
way the general population<lb/>
does, if they voted at all "<lb/>
Pot' program threatens ecology upset<lb/>
Reprinted from Conservation News into the US. drug market<lb/>
During World War II libers<lb/>
from marijuana producing wild<lb/>
help plants in the Midwest<lb/>
were prized for use in rope<lb/>
manufacturing. Today the libei<lb/>
quality is forgotten Mary jane<lb/>
is the name of the game, and as<lb/>
the federal narcotics squeeze<lb/>
reduces the drug Mow from<lb/>
Mexico, marijuana seekers arc<lb/>
relying more each year on<lb/>
second rate pot obtained from<lb/>
Midwest weed patches.<lb/>
Intent on appearing to do<lb/>
something about the drug<lb/>
problem, the U.S. Justice<lb/>
Department (its Bureau of<lb/>
J Narcotics and Dangerous<lb/>
Drugs) has pumped an $85,000<lb/>
grant Into the Agriculture<lb/>
Department for a subsidy<lb/>
program designed to eradicate<lb/>
marijuana plants in ten<lb/>
Midwestern States. Hopes are<lb/>
i that I he funds handed to<lb/>
farmers in parts of Illinois<lb/>
Towi, Indiana, Kansas.<lb/>
Kentucky, Michigan.<lb/>
Minnesota. Missouri, South<lb/>
Dakota and Wisconsin will<lb/>
idem, in some small way. the<lb/>
amount of manjuana (lowing<lb/>
Since the five to ten million<lb/>
Midwestern acres which hosts<lb/>
iii.ii fane includes some of the<lb/>
best game and song bird<lb/>
habitat in (he country,<lb/>
conservationists are concerned<lb/>
with the eradication program's<lb/>
outcome. The planta-thej<lb/>
average seven to ten feet in<lb/>
height, some rocket to<lb/>
six t e e n- aie scattered<lb/>
throughout other weeds and<lb/>
grasses which provide essential<lb/>
bud food and covci<lb/>
At present the Agriculture<lb/>
Extension Service recommends<lb/>
that farmers selectively destroy<lb/>
marijuana thiough hoeing,<lb/>
pullmg. ciiiimg. burning, oi<lb/>
spot spraying with the<lb/>
herbicide 2.4-D. Bui because<lb/>
hemp gums along held edges,<lb/>
it does not hampei cultivation,<lb/>
and fanners to date have been<lb/>
content to leave it alone How<lb/>
much energ the) can afford<lb/>
to expend on good will weed<lb/>
Control is questionable<lb/>
Conservationists an not<lb/>
opposed to kWcI control of<lb/>
marijuana I beta apprehensions<lb/>
stem from the realization that<lb/>
select control mav prove<lb/>
impractical Considering the<lb/>
Justice Department's zeal to<lb/>
ciack the poi racket, and<lb/>
Agriculture's delight in<lb/>
subsidized chemical control, an<lb/>
alternative to select<lb/>
control-massive spraying ol<lb/>
herbicides-become all too<lb/>
cleat<lb/>
The broad application of<lb/>
chemicals, according to (<lb/>
Philip Agee ol the Nebraska<lb/>
Game and Parksornmission.<lb/>
"would result in the control ol<lb/>
a broad arrav ol plants Among<lb/>
these would be ragwec. nettle<lb/>
and fruit-bearing shrubs on<lb/>
streambottom sues, fireweed.<lb/>
pigweed, lanih's-quarier.<lb/>
partridge pea and sunflower<lb/>
on upland sites The net result<lb/>
would be to shift the<lb/>
composition o( the plant<lb/>
community from its present<lb/>
grass-weedy complex toward<lb/>
a grass-only complex " In other<lb/>
words. "The destruction of a<lb/>
species such as wild hemp with<lb/>
herbicides is to the ecologist<lb/>
the removal of from one to<lb/>
several component! of a<lb/>
dynamic wild community<lb/>
According to a Missoun<lb/>
Conservation Agent quoted in<lb/>
a recent "Outdooi I lie" article<lb/>
hv Joel Vance. "The stirll is all<lb/>
over the place rhere'i no way<lb/>
you could gei rid oi n without<lb/>
domg-in a heck ol a lot of<lb/>
wildlife cover<lb/>
Do away with hemp and its<lb/>
adjacent covei during Mav and<lb/>
June-lhe peak period for<lb/>
marijuana control-and Vance<lb/>
feels game and song birds will<lb/>
suitei serious repercussions.<lb/>
For it a widespread spring<lb/>
ei ad ua 11on program is<lb/>
followed by a dry hot summer,<lb/>
a hard Winter, and a rainy<lb/>
nesting season lire lollowmg<lb/>
spiing. Midwest bud<lb/>
populations could be sent<lb/>
reeling lot yean to come<lb/>
Though agents are standing<lb/>
by in pilot contiol areas with<lb/>
eradication guidelines, final say<lb/>
on how the mary jane is to be<lb/>
removed lies with individual<lb/>
counties Should the program<lb/>
flop, conservalioiiLSIs will call<lb/>
lor careful consideration ol the<lb/>
next step. Scattered marijuana<lb/>
plants mav he a pioblem. but<lb/>
ten million acres ol valuable<lb/>
wildlife habitat deserve<lb/>
something othei than a hard<lb/>
lading ol 2,443<lb/>
i<lb/>
rw<lb/>
f<lb/>
:u<lb/>
to a<lb/>
aire,<lb/>
jvere<lb/>
?ven<lb/>
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ified<lb/>
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Carol Fulghum picked<lb/>
as outstanding woman<lb/>
'Draftables'held in suspense<lb/>
CARIKYN A FULGHUM Dean for<lb/>
Women has been selected to appear<lb/>
in the !1971 Outstanding Women of<lb/>
American publication.<lb/>
Library Science Dept. gets $15,000<lb/>
for program in Educational media<lb/>
Carolyn A. Fulghum, Dean<lb/>
? lor Women, has been selected<lb/>
to appear in the 1071<lb/>
Outstanding Young Women of<lb/>
America publication<lb/>
The Outstanding Young<lb/>
Women of America program,<lb/>
conceived bv the leaders of the<lb/>
nation's major women's<lb/>
organizations, recognizes<lb/>
young women for their<lb/>
contributions to their<lb/>
communities, professions and<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Miss Fulghum was<lb/>
nominated by the Greenville<lb/>
Business and Professional<lb/>
Women's Club (BPW) and will<lb/>
compete with other young<lb/>
women from across the si.nc<lb/>
i o i North Carolina's<lb/>
Outstanding Young Woman of<lb/>
the Year Award<lb/>
A native ol Wilson County,<lb/>
Miss Fulghum was a 1959 ECU<lb/>
graduate, receiving the BS<lb/>
degree in physical education<lb/>
She taught three years at<lb/>
Rosewood High School in<lb/>
W ?) n I Co lint) be foi e<lb/>
returning to ECU m l2.<lb/>
She was employed as a<lb/>
c a m pus i e s i d e n c e hall<lb/>
counselor and while serving in<lb/>
this position, received the<lb/>
matter's degree in education<lb/>
In 1966, she was appointed<lb/>
Assistant Dean of Women and<lb/>
in July. I960, was appointed<lb/>
Dean ol Women upon the<lb/>
retirement of I-an Ruth A<lb/>
White<lb/>
Miss F u I n h u m holds<lb/>
membership In the National<lb/>
Association of Women Deans<lb/>
and Counselors, the Southern<lb/>
College Personnel and<lb/>
Guidance Association, the N.C.<lb/>
College Personnel and<lb/>
Guidance Association and the<lb/>
N.C. Association ol Women<lb/>
Deans and Counselors, in<lb/>
which she has been active in<lb/>
committee work and presently<lb/>
serves as secretary.<lb/>
Recently she served on a<lb/>
committee foi the N.C Board<lb/>
of Highei Education to draw<lb/>
up guidelines for residence hall<lb/>
staffing in North Carolina's<lb/>
institutions of higher learning<lb/>
Miss Fulghum has been<lb/>
active in the (iieenville BPW<lb/>
lor several years She has<lb/>
served as committee chairman,<lb/>
first vice president and<lb/>
president<lb/>
A member ot the Fastcrn<lb/>
Tuberculosis and Respiratory<lb/>
Disease Association, she was<lb/>
secretary In 1970-71 and is<lb/>
currently president elect In<lb/>
1969, the was awarded a<lb/>
Certificate oi Merit from this<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Miss Fulghum has been also<lb/>
awarded a Citation foi<lb/>
Outstanding Service and<lb/>
Cooperation from the United<lb/>
( erebral Palsy oi North<lb/>
Carolina. Inc.<lb/>
She is a member of Delta<lb/>
Kappa Gamma Society, an<lb/>
honorary society lor women in<lb/>
education, and is cited in the<lb/>
lc)7 edition of Leaders in<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
By JERRY T BAULCH<lb/>
'Associated Pioss Writer<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP) Ihe<lb/>
nearly two million men turning<lb/>
I1) this yeai have then draft<lb/>
lottery numbers today, bm the<lb/>
suspense isn't over for all ol<lb/>
them<lb/>
Assuming Congress<lb/>
reestablishes the<lb/>
governments authority to<lb/>
piess young men into military<lb/>
service, catnips will proceed<lb/>
next year according to a table<lb/>
established Thursday when all<lb/>
1952 birthdays were assigned<lb/>
priority numbers by lot.<lb/>
But nob viy at this point<lb/>
knows what number will be the<lb/>
CUtofT date and draft officials<lb/>
won't make a publ c guess.<lb/>
Dial! Director Curtis W<lb/>
Tair did say that diaft calls this<lb/>
year are significantly below last<lb/>
year, when 195 was the cutoll<lb/>
and next year, he said. "We<lb/>
expect that draft calls will be<lb/>
even lown<lb/>
Men with number! up to<lb/>
100 probably will be called<lb/>
unless exempted oi deferred.<lb/>
But bailing an emergency, men<lb/>
in the 200s and 300s can<lb/>
assume they won't be called<lb/>
Ilia! leaves men in the 100s<lb/>
still in uncertainly<lb/>
The lottery, slieamluied this<lb/>
year, took two hours, beating<lb/>
the 1 12 hours it look last<lb/>
yea i<lb/>
Capsules con l a i n i n g<lb/>
birthdays were diawn from a<lb/>
plastic drum, and were<lb/>
matched up with priority<lb/>
numbers in capsules drawn<lb/>
from another drum<lb/>
NumOCI one was matched<lb/>
on the 360th draw with Dec. 4,<lb/>
Ihe highest, therefore safest,<lb/>
number, 366, was matched<lb/>
with Nov I on the 339th<lb/>
draw<lb/>
Five i' the six "youth<lb/>
advisors" who took turns<lb/>
picking capsules are<lb/>
working m Selects<lb/>
headquarters l asi<lb/>
were more<lb/>
several states.<lb/>
'00 ft<lb/>
This ,s the third rW<lb/>
does not affect men old?<lb/>
those who turn 19 t( <lb/>
The men who rfi<lb/>
numban last year and H?"<lb/>
before keep them as ?n '<lb/>
Ihey're subject to ,le 7"<lb/>
normally until age 26<lb/>
Similarly, those i? ,nis<lb/>
lottery will ke<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
But barring an e<lb/>
?whoarenotdelerreS<lb/>
?ra not drafted ?,x, "<lb/>
during the.r exposure ?J<lb/>
callup process ,uto<lb/>
drop Bt0 , ,e ?<lb/>
vulnerable category n<lb/>
deferred get the JJ<lb/>
?he year they use<lb/>
determent, ustng the nun!<lb/>
they drew Thursday<lb/>
syeaf<lb/>
" he I<lb/>
ictihl<lb/>
Irai<lb/>
<lb/>
F<lb/>
Th<lb/>
coach<lb/>
forme<lb/>
folio,<lb/>
and <lb/>
this <lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
sea so i<lb/>
Th<lb/>
ruggt<lb/>
tough<lb/>
Pi,ate<lb/>
home<lb/>
South crushes North, 21 - )<lb/>
<lb/>
Di Gene l I aniet.<lb/>
chairman ol the Department of<lb/>
I i biai Science. 1(1<lb/>
announced today .1 grant of<lb/>
about SI 5.000 has been<lb/>
awarded to the departmet 1 ? n<lb/>
.1 short-term intensive naming<lb/>
program foi training school<lb/>
librarians as media specialists<lb/>
The program will be conducted<lb/>
under .1 contractual agreemet 1<lb/>
with the Division 0 f<lb/>
Educational Media. Stati<lb/>
Depart me n t ol Public<lb/>
Instruction<lb/>
1 he I nivi rsity will work m<lb/>
0operation with school<lb/>
administrative units in the<lb/>
c 0 m muiing at ea I hese<lb/>
administrative units will be<lb/>
invited to participate in the<lb/>
program by (1) appointing a<lb/>
representative to serve 1 an<lb/>
advisory committee. This<lb/>
' ftee will advise and<lb/>
participate in recruitment of<lb/>
trainees, program planning.<lb/>
directing practicum of trainees,<lb/>
and continuing evaluation ot<lb/>
the program; (2) identifying<lb/>
specific positions that mighl be<lb/>
tilled by trainees recruited by<lb/>
the particulai unit<lb/>
 m a x i m u m 0 f 1 0<lb/>
applicants will be selected for<lb/>
participation in the program,<lb/>
which will piowde intensive<lb/>
full-time training on the<lb/>
University campus from<lb/>
Novembei 29- May 28, and<lb/>
continuing in-service education<lb/>
during the 1972-1973 school<lb/>
year while trainees art-<lb/>
employed as school media<lb/>
specialists<lb/>
Miss Emily S. Boyce.<lb/>
associal - professor in the<lb/>
Department of Library<lb/>
Science, will direct the<lb/>
program with the cooperation<lb/>
of Judith Gantano, Chief<lb/>
Consultant, Division of<lb/>
Educational Media in the State<lb/>
Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction<lb/>
ECU faculty members<lb/>
honored nationally<lb/>
GREENVILLE (AP)- William<lb/>
Guiiford of Washington High<lb/>
raced 38 yaids for one<lb/>
touchdown and set up another<lb/>
with a 68-yard tunback as the<lb/>
South defeated the Ninth.<lb/>
21-7, in the ninth annual Boys<lb/>
Home All-Slai football game<lb/>
Satu,day night<lb/>
Guiiford was named the<lb/>
game's outstanding back,<lb/>
winning the Ttey Barrett<lb/>
Memorial Award, and<lb/>
teammate Frnest Clark of<lb/>
Pmecrest was selected as the<lb/>
outstanding lineman<lb/>
South struck twice in the<lb/>
first period and again in the<lb/>
final quartet North's only<lb/>
touchdown came in the third,<lb/>
set up by a 76-yard march in<lb/>
10 plays Eugene "Cool"<lb/>
Simmons i Manteo earned<lb/>
ovei Irom the nine and Ralph<lb/>
Gtlliam ol western Mainance<lb/>
kicked the extra point<lb/>
South scored on its lust<lb/>
posession, getting the ball on<lb/>
the North 38 on a offside<lb/>
rulling tftei a punt Cutlfoid<lb/>
went ovei foi the score on the<lb/>
(irst play and quarterback<lb/>
Tommy Luck of Masses Hill<lb/>
High added the extra point<lb/>
Several plays later, Guillo,d<lb/>
took a North punt on his own<lb/>
30 and ran it back to the North<lb/>
two. where Joey Keane of<lb/>
Rohanen High tan it over on<lb/>
the first play.<lb/>
South drove 80 yards for its<lb/>
final tally with led I Iktns<lb/>
going over from the one-yard<lb/>
line on the lust play oi the<lb/>
final period Luck passed to<lb/>
Randy M u 111 s 0 f E atl<lb/>
Mecklenburg lor the two-point<lb/>
conversion<lb/>
Mulhs was halted at the or<lb/>
but interference was ruled <lb/>
the extra points were awarded<lb/>
to the South.<lb/>
Mike Holder of Tuscob Hi<lb/>
received the Bryant fatf<lb/>
Memorial Awaid as n,(<lb/>
islanding player durm<lb/>
practice leading to the aj<lb/>
played at ECU.<lb/>
Ihe Barrett award is narwrj<lb/>
lot a Wilmington high school<lb/>
player who died ol injuries<lb/>
suffered in a game last fall.<lb/>
The Powell award is named<lb/>
In honor of the first gradujn<lb/>
Irom Ihe Boys Home to pUyie<lb/>
the game, who was later killw<lb/>
in action in Vietnam<lb/>
Pioceeds from the game.<lb/>
sponsored by the N0t<lb/>
Carolina Jaycees. go to the<lb/>
Boys Home in Like<lb/>
Waccamaw<lb/>
Albert threatened with eviction<lb/>
MAR OISI WD I la I VP) <lb/>
circuit judge, the Florida<lb/>
attorney general's office and<lb/>
state game commission officials<lb/>
have agreed thai Albert ihe<lb/>
poddle-eaimg alligatoi must<lb/>
leave Ins goll course lake Now<lb/>
all thes have to do is convince<lb/>
lhert<lb/>
Albert, a 10-footer, is one ol<lb/>
the attractions on a goit course<lb/>
in ihis southwest Florida island<lb/>
community, living happily on<lb/>
fish and maybe an occasional<lb/>
airless duck<lb/>
Lile was pleasant and<lb/>
peaceful until one day in June<lb/>
when Albert slipped oul ol the<lb/>
lake and gobbled up Se Si a<lb/>
pedigreed French pHe<lb/>
owned hs golfei I I "Bogue"<lb/>
Bailey<lb/>
Bailey asked j court to gel<lb/>
nd of Albert as a menace<lb/>
Collier County Circuit Judge<lb/>
11 irold Smith agreed with<lb/>
Bailey and on Julv 12 ordered<lb/>
the (lame and Fresh Water Fish<lb/>
Commission to evict the beast.<lb/>
But the ink had hardly dried<lb/>
on Smith's order before Bailey<lb/>
was accused ol gator-baiting,<lb/>
Smith was accused of being<lb/>
prejudiced against Albert and<lb/>
200 residents formed a "Save<lb/>
0111 Alligatoi Society Then<lb/>
the state attorney general's<lb/>
Office filed an appeal on<lb/>
Albert's behall in the 2nd<lb/>
Districtoun of Appeal.<lb/>
s ith sard in Ins order that<lb/>
any saurian fond ol dogs rnighl<lb/>
also develop a fondness foi<lb/>
little children who wandered<lb/>
by<lb/>
rhe game commission said<lb/>
Smith should have disqualified<lb/>
himsell from the case because<lb/>
he had written them a lettei<lb/>
before A I belt's hearing<lb/>
ordering them to remove<lb/>
Albert "or I'll have the sheriff's (<lb/>
department go out there and<lb/>
shoot him<lb/>
The game commission also<lb/>
said Bailey had indicated a<lb/>
dislike foi Albert by lunnghim<lb/>
out the lake with food<lb/>
offering! and then proceeding<lb/>
to belabor the gator "with golf<lb/>
clubs and other instruments<lb/>
Mike McDonnell. Bailey's<lb/>
attorney, said his client wanted<lb/>
to make 11 clear that he wasn't<lb/>
a gator-hater Bailey was just<lb/>
afraid that Albert had become<lb/>
too lame lor his own good.<lb/>
Game commission officers<lb/>
reluctantly agreed, saying<lb/>
alligators that had been fed by<lb/>
man-and Albert received many<lb/>
handouts Irom golfers-might<lb/>
ace identity swallow an arm<lb/>
along with an offering.<lb/>
So. game commission<lb/>
officials said they would find<lb/>
Albert a new home.<lb/>
But first, they have to catch<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Twenty-five faculty<lb/>
members and administrative<lb/>
officials of ECU have been<lb/>
selected to appear in the 1971<lb/>
edition of 'Outstanding<lb/>
Educators of America<lb/>
The Outstanding Educators<lb/>
of America awaids are given<lb/>
annually to distinguished<lb/>
leaders in education for<lb/>
exceptional service,<lb/>
achievements and civic and<lb/>
professional leadership.<lb/>
ECU educators selected for<lb/>
1971 are: Dr. Carl G Adler.<lb/>
associate professor.<lb/>
Department of Physics; Dr<lb/>
Paul A Aliapoulios, assistant<lb/>
dean. School of Music. Dr<lb/>
John R. Ball, chairman.<lb/>
Department of Social Work<lb/>
and Correctional Services.<lb/>
School of Allied Health and<lb/>
Social Professions:<lb/>
Dr Ruby G. Barnes,<lb/>
director. Continuing Education<lb/>
in Nursing; Dr. James Bearden.<lb/>
dean. School of Business; Ruth<lb/>
J. Broadhurst. assistant dean.<lb/>
School of Nursing; Dr. James<lb/>
William Byrd. chairman.<lb/>
Department of Physics;<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Howard<lb/>
Carpenter, chairman.<lb/>
Department of Music<lb/>
Education. School of Music.<lb/>
Dr. V Glenn Chapped Jr<lb/>
assistant professor. Department<lb/>
of Business Administration,<lb/>
School of Business; Dr. John<lb/>
Porter East, associate<lb/>
professor, Department of<lb/>
Political Science;<lb/>
Met Tranbarger Gordley,<lb/>
assistant dean. School of Art;<lb/>
Dr William Foster Crossnickle.<lb/>
professoi. Department of<lb/>
Psychology: Dr Virginia<lb/>
Townsend Hcrrin. professor.<lb/>
Department of English;<lb/>
Dr W. Erwin Hester,<lb/>
chairman. Department of<lb/>
English; Dr. Keith Holmes,<lb/>
professor. Department of<lb/>
Elementary Education, School<lb/>
of Education; Dr. John M<lb/>
Howell. dean. Graduate<lb/>
School; Dr. Robert C. Lamb,<lb/>
chairman. Department of<lb/>
Chemistry;<lb/>
Dr. Douglas J. McMillan,<lb/>
professor. Department <lb/>
English; Charlotte M Martin,<lb/>
associate professor. School of<lb/>
Nursing; Dr Charles C.<lb/>
Mitchell, associate professor.<lb/>
Department of Psychology; Dr.<lb/>
Sam Pennington. acting<lb/>
chairman. Department of<lb/>
Biochemistry. School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
Dr. Tullio Joseph Pignani.<lb/>
chairman. Department of<lb/>
1 Mathematics; Donald Sexauer,<lb/>
chairman. Department of<lb/>
Printmakmg. School of Art<lb/>
Dr. William N. Still Jr<lb/>
associate professor.<lb/>
Department of History; and<lb/>
Dr. Robert Webb Dilliams,<lb/>
university provost.<lb/>
Nominations for the<lb/>
program are made by the<lb/>
officials of colleges and<lb/>
universities, including<lb/>
presidents, deans and<lb/>
department heads.<lb/>
Guidelines for selection<lb/>
include an educator's talents in<lb/>
the classroom, contributions to<lb/>
research, administrative<lb/>
abilities, civic service and<lb/>
professional recognition.<lb/>
Unknown factors in moon rocks<lb/>
are subject of examination<lb/>
Southern courts lily-white9<lb/>
Delaware prohibits polluters char?es Black 'eader<lb/>
R-iprmied from Conservation News<lb/>
rhe people thi legislature<lb/>
and the Governor ol Delaware<lb/>
have told industrial polluters<lb/>
that they are not welcome u<lb/>
their slate In feet the It 11<lb/>
has mede n illegal foi heavy<lb/>
industry lo locate along the<lb/>
stale's 100 miles oi coastline in<lb/>
Delaware Bay and 25 miles<lb/>
along ihe Vtlantii Ocean<lb/>
Ihe laridni.uk legislation was<lb/>
passed by the Delaware<lb/>
legislature m the face ol<lb/>
massive pressure horn industry,<lb/>
Ihe Chambet ol Commerce and<lb/>
the (' s Departments ol<lb/>
( ommert e and 1 reasury<lb/>
( harged with discriminating<lb/>
against industry, Delaware<lb/>
Governor Russell W Peterson<lb/>
maintained that not to be<lb/>
selective ,n attracting Jean<lb/>
rathet than polluting Industries<lb/>
would be "discriminating<lb/>
against (he people ol<lb/>
Delaware<lb/>
Specifically prohibited from<lb/>
building along the Delaware<lb/>
I are refincriet, steel nulls.<lb/>
Ii" ' 'mils petrochemical<lb/>
complexes and off-shore bulk<lb/>
transfer terminals<lb/>
Other industrial applicants<lb/>
will have to win approval ol<lb/>
the siatc plannei .i,d  10-man<lb/>
ontrol board established by<lb/>
the new law<lb/>
Peterson, who personally<lb/>
initiated and sponsored the<lb/>
legislation, led a coalition oi<lb/>
citizens, environmentalists and<lb/>
legislators, in passing the<lb/>
industry-control law n so<lb/>
doing, he was called on the<lb/>
carpel several times in<lb/>
Washington. DC where federal<lb/>
 ommerce and Treasure<lb/>
Department officials tried to<lb/>
force Peterson to back down<lb/>
on the issue According to<lb/>
press reprots, the Comm -<lb/>
D e part ?i e ,1 1 ma d e a<lb/>
P?fti ularly heavy handed<lb/>
attempt to pressure Peterson<lb/>
into ignoring Delaware citizens'<lb/>
welfare oinuals told the<lb/>
Governor he was "interfering<lb/>
with the prosperity .nul<lb/>
security oi America The<lb/>
same officials puffed with<lb/>
self-righteous indignation when<lb/>
conservationists cried foul at<lb/>
putting the National<lb/>
Oceanographic and<lb/>
Atmospheric Administration<lb/>
into the industry-oriented!<lb/>
bureaucracy,<lb/>
rhe hill arose in the face of<lb/>
" iI'kmi by Shell GUI Company<lb/>
to build a SI00 million oil<lb/>
rehnery on land it owns near<lb/>
Smyrna ll also blocks plans by<lb/>
Zapta orness Inc. to build a<lb/>
300-acre island In Delaware<lb/>
Bay three miles off the mouth<lb/>
ol the Misptlhon R,ver to store<lb/>
up to three million Ions of coal<lb/>
lor shipment abroad in giant<lb/>
cargo ships, too large lo use<lb/>
other East Coast ports<lb/>
The bill also reflects the<lb/>
d?i" "1 Ihe people ol<lb/>
Delaware to save Its beautiful<lb/>
Kacoaat beaches foi recreation<lb/>
?nid tourism 1 majot Income<lb/>
producet in the state<lb/>
ATLANTA. Ga. (AP)- Talk ol<lb/>
the New South "is just talk as<lb/>
long as we have lily-while<lb/>
courts in the South says the<lb/>
executive director of the<lb/>
National Urban League.<lb/>
Vernon Jordan, speaking to<lb/>
a convention of the largely<lb/>
black National Bar Association,<lb/>
said Friday, "It is a national<lb/>
shame that the three circuits<lb/>
which handle the bulk of civil<lb/>
rights cases in this country are<lb/>
lily-white "<lb/>
The civil rights movement is<lb/>
now being led by black lawyers<lb/>
and judges, Jordan said, and<lb/>
black lawyers are necessary "to<lb/>
interpret for black people the<lb/>
subtleties and grey issues of<lb/>
racism<lb/>
He also told the association<lb/>
'hat President Nixon should<lb/>
appoint black federal judges in<lb/>
the South if he wants lo be<lb/>
reelectedin 1972.<lb/>
By BILL STOCKTON<lb/>
AP Science Writer<lb/>
SPACE CENTER, Houston<lb/>
(AP)- Because no moon bugs<lb/>
have ever been found, the<lb/>
Apollo I 5 astronauts aie<lb/>
being spared the three-weak<lb/>
quarantine thai faced the past<lb/>
moon explorers.<lb/>
But the 175 pounds of<lb/>
rocks David R Scott. James<lb/>
B. Irwin and Allied M<lb/>
Worden brought back from<lb/>
the moon face a thorough<lb/>
analysis to make certain there<lb/>
is no health hazard And they<lb/>
will be probed to learn more<lb/>
about the unknown (actors in<lb/>
moon rocks that seem to kill<lb/>
earthly microorganisms and<lb/>
spur or retard some plant<lb/>
growth.<lb/>
The factors, which still<lb/>
aren't understood, were<lb/>
discovered in moon rocks<lb/>
returned by Apollo 11 m<lb/>
1969. Samples returned by<lb/>
Apollo 12 and 14 also have<lb/>
shown biological aciicity.<lb/>
A variety of plant species<lb/>
that have shown a reaction to<lb/>
previous lunar material will<lb/>
be studied.<lb/>
These include celery,<lb/>
cabbage, brussels sprouts,<lb/>
pepper, carrot, lettuce,<lb/>
radish, spinach, club moss,<lb/>
fern, liverwort and algae-<lb/>
Tissue cultures of other<lb/>
plants and seedlings of lime,<lb/>
cotton and com also will be<lb/>
studied. When the space<lb/>
agency decided to eliminate<lb/>
the elaborate astronaut<lb/>
quarantine with Apollo 15<lb/>
because scientists decided it<lb/>
was unnecessary, a<lb/>
"preliminary biomedlcal<lb/>
evaluation" program was<lb/>
outlined for Apollo 5<lb/>
samples.<lb/>
"Botanical investigations<lb/>
have definitely shown that<lb/>
lunar materials are capable ol<lb/>
enhancing plant growth<lb/>
responses the document<lb/>
outlining the biomsdJotl<lb/>
evaluation program stales.<lb/>
"In addition, the exposure<lb/>
of terrestrial microorganisms<lb/>
to lunar materials in the<lb/>
presence of normal growth<lb/>
media has resulted in the<lb/>
death 0 I these<lb/>
microorganisms "<lb/>
The unknown factor that<lb/>
Can kill earthly<lb/>
microorganisms, such as<lb/>
bactena and virus was<lb/>
discovered in Apollo 11 rocks<lb/>
from beneath the moon's<lb/>
surface, sail. Dr. Gerald<lb/>
Taylor, a Manned Spacecraft<lb/>
Center scientist I<lb/>
Could the toxic agent be<lb/>
some miracle substance that<lb/>
would become a powerful<lb/>
new medicine<lb/>
"no Not at all Tayk?r<lb/>
s-iid "It will end up to be<lb/>
some common thing we know<lb/>
'hat is toxic to<lb/>
microorganisms Some meul<lb/>
or something It's just a<lb/>
matter of tracking it down<lb/>
Ervin protests<lb/>
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sen. San<lb/>
J. Ervin Jr D-N.C. introduced<lb/>
a resolution Friday which urges<lb/>
President Nixon to revoke his<lb/>
grant of new authority to the<lb/>
Subversive Activities Control<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
"It is alien to the American<lb/>
system of govei.iment. it is<lb/>
based on unjustified fears, and<lb/>
it reflect! the spirit of<lb/>
McCarthyism said Ervin of<lb/>
Nixon's action last month<lb/>
By executive order, the.<lb/>
President empowered the<lb/>
board to update the attorney<lb/>
general's list of subversive<lb/>
organizations which lists sijte<lb/>
300 groups last identified in<lb/>
1955.<lb/>
Ervin's resolution was thrf<lb/>
second attempt to scuttle<lb/>
Nixon's order. The Senate<lb/>
recently voted 51-37 for an<lb/>
amendment to forbid the<lb/>
board from drawing up a new<lb/>
.list, but the House declined to<lb/>
go along.<lb/>
'<lb/>
Some out-of-staters<lb/>
not affected by bill<lb/>
In 1836 mad carriers wcie<lb/>
allowed two cents for each<lb/>
letter and one cent for each<lb/>
newspaper they delivered.<lb/>
Out-ol state graduate<lb/>
students employed as teaching<lb/>
assistants whose contracts were<lb/>
made prior to July 3i Q7j<lb/>
?"ll not have theit tuition<lb/>
increased as a result of the<lb/>
recent increase m out-of-atats<lb/>
'tuition, according to a<lb/>
memorandum inssucd by State<lb/>
Budget Officei (, a. Jones. J,<lb/>
Graduate student teaching<lb/>
assistants whose contracts were<lb/>
made after July i.t may ,at.t <lb/>
tuition Increase<lb/>
rhs Jones memoiandum<lb/>
furtnei clarified certain issues<lb/>
related to the increase in<lb/>
out-ol slate tuition.<lb/>
Under the old law. a "legal<lb/>
rasidenf could qualify by<lb/>
maintaining ?s domicile in<lb/>
North Carol for at least six<lb/>
l<lb/>
Sentence will be reduced<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP)-<lb/>
Newsweek magazine says that<lb/>
Lt William L. Calley's life<lb/>
sentence for the murder of 22<lb/>
civilians at My Lai in 1968 will<lb/>
be reduced to 20 to 30 years in<lb/>
prison<lb/>
The magazine's current issue<lb/>
quotes "word from Fort<lb/>
McPherson. Ga as saying that<lb/>
Lt Gen Albert Connor. Third<lb/>
Army commander and the<lb/>
officer reviewing the sentence<lb/>
imposed last March l. would<lb/>
to<lb/>
act within a lew weeks<lb/>
reduce the sentence<lb/>
At the Pentagon, an Army<lb/>
spokesman said the review has<lb/>
not been completed and no<lb/>
final decision has been made.<lb/>
A spokesman for Connor<lb/>
said Sunday the general was<lb/>
considering ihe case but had<lb/>
made no decision AI<lb/>
subsequen levels of appeal<lb/>
the sentence approved by<lb/>
Connor can be sustained<lb/>
further reduced.<lb/>
fountainhea6<lb/>
months prior to enrollment or<lb/>
re-enrollment in an institution<lb/>
of higher learning.<lb/>
Under the new law. a persito<lb/>
must maintain residence for a g<lb/>
twelve month period in order<lb/>
to qualify as a legal resident.<lb/>
However, this twelve-nwntn<lb/>
requirement "does not ?ppk'<lb/>
to any individual who applied<lb/>
for admission a tfcV<lb/>
stale-supported institution<lb/>
higher learning and<lb/>
accepted prior to July<lb/>
1971<lb/>
The student already enrolled<lb/>
as an instate student,<lb/>
qualifying as such by<lb/>
compliance with the six-month<lb/>
requirement prior to July ?<lb/>
may retain his instate status<lb/>
Trim iJlfiiMo"l)!MiW)lffl I flM1<lb/>
was<lb/>
13,<lb/>
Whitney Hadden<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
David LaFone<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Published bv studenri ol<lb/>
Robert W. McDowell<lb/>
h.ditor-in-Chwt<lb/>
Bill Owens<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Joe Appleoate<lb/>
Advertising Manager<lb/>
?5 word, Trt.phon. 7586366 tncnnwZr v1 $' ?? '?' <lb/>
 .frrrr<lb/>
.?v.y.vyvvy UniveM.ty<lb/>
By<lb/>
A SSOC H<lb/>
NEW Y<lb/>
the N<lb/>
quarter!<lb/>
remove i<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
went I<lb/>
everyb<lb/>
uaiter<lb/>
least foi<lb/>
"This<lb/>
Vnjury,<lb/>
Nichola<lb/>
physic iat<lb/>
operated<lb/>
the delic.<lb/>
The<lb/>
handcu<lb/>
q ua rt e<lb/>
demons!<lb/>
says he<lb/>
himself<lb/>
reported<lb/>
camp on<lb/>
f three<lb/>
play foi<lb/>
summer<lb/>
Alabam<lb/>
strengtl<lb/>
broke a;<lb/>
Oct. 18.<lb/>
Hell<lb/>
umlorm<lb/>
of Noven<lb/>
the quei<lb/>
He'll let<lb/>
up and<lb/>
Nicholas<lb/>
i"e 5 I -<lb/>
Lennox I<lb/>
Nama<lb/>
games<lb/>
broken <lb/>
hgamen<lb/>
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year 'hey lose 2<lb/>
"?;Ljjftai the numj<lb/>
drew Thursday<lb/>
.21-7<lb/>
His was halted a, the Wie<lb/>
iterference was ruled ?<lb/>
(tra points were awarded<lb/>
South<lb/>
c Holder of TuscolaHijfc<lb/>
'ed the Bryant fa<lb/>
Ofiil Award as th(<lb/>
?ndini pliye, du<lb/>
:e leading  ,le UM<lb/>
atlGU.<lb/>
Barrett award is named<lb/>
Wilmington high school<lb/>
who died ol injuries<lb/>
d in a game last fall.<lb/>
Powell award is named<lb/>
? of the first graduaie<lb/>
tie Boys Home to play it<lb/>
ne. who was later killto<lb/>
m in Vietnam<lb/>
eeds from the game<lb/>
red by the North<lb/>
a Jaycees. go to the<lb/>
Home m Lake<lb/>
law<lb/>
i rocks<lb/>
n<lb/>
. a Manned Spacecraft<lb/>
scientist. I<lb/>
Id the toxic agent be<lb/>
miracle substance that<lb/>
become a powerful<lb/>
edicine'1<lb/>
Not at all Taylor<lb/>
'It will end up to be<lb/>
ommon thing we know<lb/>
is toxic to<lb/>
rganisms Some metal<lb/>
me thing. It's just a<lb/>
of tracking H down<lb/>
Pirates seek wins<lb/>
(<lb/>
The Pirates have their thud<lb/>
coach in as many seasons with<lb/>
formei All-Pro Sonny Handle<lb/>
lollowmg Glarence Stasavich<lb/>
and Mike McGee. Randle'sgoal<lb/>
(his year will be to bring the<lb/>
Piiates their first winning<lb/>
season since l?-67.<lb/>
The Pirates will face a<lb/>
rugged sehedule-perhaps the<lb/>
toughest in HZU history. The<lb/>
Pirates begin their season at<lb/>
home with Toledo, who brings<lb/>
to Greenville the longest<lb/>
winning streak in the nation at<lb/>
23 games. The Mid-American<lb/>
Gonference Champions for the<lb/>
past two seasons also have two<lb/>
straight Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
victories. Many of the<lb/>
outstanding players in the<lb/>
Rocket power house are back<lb/>
including Chuck Kaley, one of<lb/>
the best quarterbacks in the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
Other outside foes include<lb/>
Tampa, one of the nation's<lb/>
most powerful small college<lb/>
teams. West Virginia. Bowling<lb/>
Green, and N.C. State<lb/>
The Pirates will play five<lb/>
conference games instead of<lb/>
only four as in 1970. All live<lb/>
games will be played at home<lb/>
in Ficklen Stadium Last<lb/>
season the Pirates were 2-2 in<lb/>
the Southern Conference,<lb/>
losing by lopsided margins to<lb/>
The Citadel and Richmond.<lb/>
<lb/>
CARLESTER CRUMPLER COULD<lb/>
e the spark to ignite the Pirate<lb/>
? offense. The former High School<lb/>
All-American from Wilson has the<lb/>
potential to be one of ECU's greatest<lb/>
backs.<lb/>
StS<lb/>
I empowered the<lb/>
update the attorney<lb/>
list of subversive<lb/>
ms which lists saye<lb/>
s last identified in<lb/>
resolution was thai<lb/>
I tempt to scuttle<lb/>
order. The Senate<lb/>
afed 51-37 lor an<lb/>
nt to forbid the<lb/>
i drawing up a new<lb/>
; House declined to<lb/>
staters<lb/>
jy bill<lb/>
ior to enrollment or<lb/>
:nt in an institution<lb/>
?armng.<lb/>
le new law a pern<lb/>
tain residence for 1<lb/>
nth period in order<lb/>
is a legal resident<lb/>
. this twelve-tiwntn<lb/>
t "does not uppl)'<lb/>
ividual who applied<lb/>
mission ?<lb/>
rted institution of<lb/>
arning and was<lb/>
irior to July Hi<lb/>
ent already enrolled<lb/>
i-state student,<lb/>
ig as such by<lb/>
with the six-month<lb/>
prior to July 13.<lb/>
his in-state status<lb/>
Namath badly hurt<lb/>
but will play again<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
Bill Owens<lb/>
'less Manager<lb/>
oe Applegate<lb/>
ting Manager<lb/>
North<lb/>
? tint<lb/>
By EARL GERHEIM<lb/>
Associated Press Sports write,<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP Joe Namath<lb/>
the New York Jets' star<lb/>
quarterback, had the cartilage<lb/>
removed from his left kness<lb/>
Sunday morning and with it<lb/>
went his chance "to show"<lb/>
everybody I'm the No.<lb/>
qtterback in footballat<lb/>
least for awhile<lb/>
"This isn't a career ending<lb/>
Wljury said Dr. James<lb/>
Nicholas, the Jets' team<lb/>
physician and the man who has<lb/>
operated three other times on<lb/>
the delicate Namath knees.<lb/>
The injury temporarily<lb/>
handcuffed the flamboyant<lb/>
quarterback's desire to<lb/>
demonstrate a new outlook he<lb/>
says he has developed about<lb/>
himself and the game. He<lb/>
reported to the Jets' training<lb/>
camp on time for the first time<lb/>
ai three years and was eager to<lb/>
play football He spent the<lb/>
summer at the L'niversity of<lb/>
Alabama, his alma mater,<lb/>
strengthening the wrist he<lb/>
broke against Baltimore last<lb/>
Oct. 18.<lb/>
He'll probably be back in<lb/>
uniform to play by the middle<lb/>
of November, but then there is<lb/>
the question of his timing.<lb/>
He'll let us know if he can set<lb/>
up and drop back said<lb/>
Nicholas after he peiformed<lb/>
iWe 51-minute operation at<lb/>
Lennox Hill Hospital.<lb/>
Namath, who missed 10<lb/>
games last season with a<lb/>
broken wrist, sustained severe<lb/>
ligament damage Saturday<lb/>
night when he attempted to<lb/>
make a tackle during the Jets'<lb/>
exhibition opener against the<lb/>
Detroit Lions In Tampa. Fla.<lb/>
He made a handoff to Lee<lb/>
White, who bobbled the ball.<lb/>
Lion linebacker Mike Lucci<lb/>
picked it up and scampered 2?<lb/>
yards for a touchdown that<lb/>
started Detroit on the road to a<lb/>
28-24 victory after Namath<lb/>
had guided New York to a 140<lb/>
Pregnant?<lb/>
Need Help?<lb/>
for as?l?tance in obtaining<lb/>
a lefl?l Abortion immediately<lb/>
Call:<lb/>
(404) 524-4781<lb/>
Beortia Family Planning<lb/>
(J non prodt orB?nlnllo")<lb/>
8 AM-10 PM?7 DAYS<lb/>
lea" go Namath said later in the<lb/>
Namath tried to bring Lucci Jet dressing room, referring to<lb/>
down, but missed and Detroit his futile effort to stop Lucci.<lb/>
linebacker Paul Naumoff fell<lb/>
on top of him.<lb/>
"No way I could let him<lb/>
'I guess crazier things have<lb/>
happened. I guess it shows I'm<lb/>
not a defensive back "<lb/>
both on the road Conference<lb/>
wins came over F-urman and<lb/>
Davidson, both were away<lb/>
games also. But. with all the<lb/>
conference games at home, the<lb/>
Pirates should be tough to<lb/>
beat<lb/>
ECU's offense in 197I<lb/>
should be stronger, for several<lb/>
reasons. First, the Pirates are<lb/>
more familiar with their pro-set<lb/>
offensive system which was<lb/>
initiated just last season.<lb/>
Secondly, there is more and<lb/>
better talent at both<lb/>
quarterback and running back<lb/>
John Casaza. the returning OB<lb/>
starter, is in a fight for his job<lb/>
against star sophomore Carl<lb/>
Summerell. who was starting at<lb/>
the close of spring drills and<lb/>
junior college transfer Gary<lb/>
Wann, who was no. 2. At<lb/>
running back, both starters are<lb/>
back in the persons of Billy<lb/>
Wallace and Les Strayhorn<lb/>
This fall they will be joined by<lb/>
a potential superstar. Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler Grumpier, only a<lb/>
sophomore, was a high school<lb/>
Ail-American at Wilson Fike<lb/>
High School. Thirdly, the<lb/>
offensive line is loaded with<lb/>
experience, especially seniors<lb/>
Mike Kopp. Grover Truslow.<lb/>
and Paul Haug<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates were<lb/>
the best in the Southern<lb/>
Conference last season, despite<lb/>
a pass, defense that was rather<lb/>
porous at times This year the<lb/>
defense is a question mark<lb/>
Only five starters are back and<lb/>
Will Mitchell is the only<lb/>
returning back in the defensive<lb/>
secondary. The key to the<lb/>
secondary probably will be<lb/>
converted quarterback Jack<lb/>
Patterson, who will start at<lb/>
satety Up front there are two<lb/>
starters back in All-Southern<lb/>
Conference tackle and team<lb/>
captain Rich Peeler and end<lb/>
Ted Salmon, but inexperienced<lb/>
men must take up the slack.<lb/>
Possibly the strength of the<lb/>
ECU defense will be the<lb/>
linebacking corps. Two<lb/>
standout starters return in<lb/>
Monty Kiernan and Ralph<lb/>
Betesh and Don Mollenhauer<lb/>
also has experience.<lb/>
Cougars play<lb/>
Colonels here<lb/>
Reprinted from the Daily<lb/>
Reflector. The Carolina<lb/>
Cougars will play an exhibition<lb/>
game with the Kentucky<lb/>
Colonels Friday. October I.<lb/>
The game will be in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum with game time set<lb/>
for 8 p.m.<lb/>
"We are delighted to have a<lb/>
team of the caliber of the<lb/>
Colonels as the Cougars<lb/>
opponent Jack Wall,<lb/>
chairman for the game which is<lb/>
sponsored by the Greenville<lb/>
Jaycees. said. "Artis Gilmore<lb/>
and Dan Issel are very familiar<lb/>
to every basketball fan in the<lb/>
area. We hope to have a sellout<lb/>
crowd with the matchup of<lb/>
Jim McDaniel against Gilmore<lb/>
and Joe Caldwell against Issel.<lb/>
This is a fantastic attraction in<lb/>
itself<lb/>
McDaniels is featured as the<lb/>
highest paid basketball player<lb/>
in the ABA and "Jumping" Joe<lb/>
Caldwell was on of the top<lb/>
players in the National<lb/>
Basketball Association prior to<lb/>
switching to the American<lb/>
Basketball Association. Joining<lb/>
them are a pair of talented<lb/>
rookies. Tom McClain and<lb/>
Randy Demon, a former Duke<lb/>
University star.<lb/>
JOE NAMATH, ACCIDENT prone,<lb/>
frustrated, determined.<lb/>
Pizza Chef<lb/>
"NEW<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
NOW OPEN UNTIL<lb/>
3jP0aj3i.<lb/>
a ajT?? ?"? ay?Ea?ii5ai<lb/>
FRI. &amp; SAT.<lb/>
529 Cotanche Phone 752-7483<lb/>
(????????????????????????MB<lb/>
Special Half Price<lb/>
Rate for Faculty<lb/>
and Students<lb/>
Please send me the Monitor for<lb/>
D 1 year $15 Q 9 mo?. $11.25<lb/>
? 6 moj. $7.50<lb/>
I am j faculty D student<lb/>
? Checkmoney order enclosed<lb/>
D Bill me later<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State . Zip<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Christian Science<lb/>
Monitor,<lb/>
Box US, A?tor Station<lb/>
Boston, MaitachuMttt 02123<lb/>
Fountainhead, Wednesday. August II. 197J, Pap <lb/>
scholarships challenged<lb/>
Athletic scholarships have<lb/>
always been a source ol<lb/>
controversy. They pit the<lb/>
academically inclined factions<lb/>
ol higher learning against the<lb/>
athletically inclined<lb/>
It can safely be staled ihai<lb/>
any large, well-rounded<lb/>
institute of higher learning<lb/>
needs a competitive athletic<lb/>
program as a source ol spun<lb/>
stimulus and diversion from<lb/>
the academe life<lb/>
However, it seems that in<lb/>
some schools athletics have<lb/>
become iiie major source ol<lb/>
pride-or the identifying quality<lb/>
of a certain campus.<lb/>
This athletic emphasis has<lb/>
come about through several<lb/>
factors; chief among these is<lb/>
the scholaiship program<lb/>
Schools simply don't get the<lb/>
name athletes without giving<lb/>
them a free ride While this was<lb/>
something ol an honor a lew.<lb/>
years back, it has become a<lb/>
laughing comedy in recent<lb/>
times.<lb/>
In the past, colleges and<lb/>
universities ottered full rides to<lb/>
those budding atheletes who<lb/>
could not afford tuition but<lb/>
appeared to be good financial<lb/>
risks because fo their gridiron<lb/>
or hardwood abilities.<lb/>
Today, however, with the<lb/>
tremendous struggle between<lb/>
colleges for "supenjocks<lb/>
scholarships are flung about in<lb/>
hopes of landing some young<lb/>
high school standout who<lb/>
might develop into a college<lb/>
star.<lb/>
Thus, the athletic rat race is<lb/>
initiated. Coaches pamper high<lb/>
schoolers with praise and<lb/>
promises while the high<lb/>
schoolers simply look around<lb/>
for the best deal. The tragic-<lb/>
flaw is the waste College<lb/>
scouting has become a racket.<lb/>
Boys are invited down in<lb/>
their senior year of high school<lb/>
to "look the campus over If<lb/>
the boy weighs 220 or is 6'7"<lb/>
in his junior year he may get an<lb/>
early invitation. When they<lb/>
arrive they are assigned rooms<lb/>
at the local Holiday Inn.<lb/>
treated to an evening meal at<lb/>
the restaurant (usually steak or<lb/>
lobster-often both), given a<lb/>
"little spending cash and<lb/>
then out on the town with one<lb/>
of the present team members,<lb/>
who has instructions to go to<lb/>
the "best spots<lb/>
All of this sounds rather<lb/>
entertaining and appetimg.<lb/>
especially for the<lb/>
all-conference tackles or<lb/>
all-state forwards After all.<lb/>
four or five colleges could fill a<lb/>
hoy s spring weekends up. And<lb/>
the price, well hell, the athletic<lb/>
department has funds for all<lb/>
thai<lb/>
But what about those high<lb/>
II hool athletes who simply<lb/>
don't pan out in college'What<lb/>
it those young youths who<lb/>
just developed early but see<lb/>
then athletic piowress passed<lb/>
by in the college age group<lb/>
On the other hand, il v ou<lb/>
don't get the boys to come.<lb/>
then Ohio State will II you<lb/>
don't give thei thai extra little<lb/>
bonus (under the tible ol<lb/>
course), then they'll go to<lb/>
Texas or play tor Johnny<lb/>
Wooien Out of this glows the<lb/>
factoi oi playing cacilities,<lb/>
added benefits, locale, etc<lb/>
Schools must build<lb/>
ultra-modern, super equipped<lb/>
stadiums and coliseums to lure<lb/>
the really big athletes fhen.<lb/>
you must also have a name<lb/>
coach who is famous for<lb/>
success (and of course he costs<lb/>
the school a little extra), you<lb/>
must h ive an athletically<lb/>
inclined alumni (w ho come out<lb/>
of the stands and pat hjks<lb/>
after the game and then i ffi<lb/>
jobs foi the summei I, and ol<lb/>
course you have to have the<lb/>
hot night ipoti where the<lb/>
athletes can slay in training.<lb/>
Once these pre-requisites are<lb/>
met. the extensive college<lb/>
scouting system can do battle<lb/>
in landing the high school<lb/>
standouts-those herds ul<lb/>
hopefuls who could or could<lb/>
not bring fame, money, and<lb/>
future athletes to the school<lb/>
The philosophy behind this<lb/>
ostentation seems to be the<lb/>
first law of pragmatic sports<lb/>
programs. Get those impressive<lb/>
athletes, bowl over rival<lb/>
colleges, and then Harvey<lb/>
Snockei (1st row. seats B,9,<lb/>
and 10 in the Century Club<lb/>
section-also president of the<lb/>
state bank and former third<lb/>
string punt returner) just might<lb/>
donate the needed funds to<lb/>
add a new wing on the music<lb/>
building, in his former wife's<lb/>
name ol course.<lb/>
The pathetic thmg that this<lb/>
system perpetuates is bigget<lb/>
price tags on exceptional<lb/>
athletes The players in college<lb/>
become models of professional<lb/>
athletes in their bid for better<lb/>
and better contracts. As the<lb/>
price goes up. the smaller<lb/>
schools can not afford to<lb/>
seduce athletes Thus, the same<lb/>
big names seem to go to the<lb/>
bowl games each year, the<lb/>
same basketball giants continue<lb/>
to win, the same track schools<lb/>
go on dominating the imining<lb/>
and jumping world<lb/>
ECU fits into this<lb/>
' ilaiship dilemma ECU can<lb/>
not afford to woo the<lb/>
super stars. First, we don't<lb/>
have the money to throw<lb/>
around in those fringe benefit!<lb/>
thai leven-footen demand<lb/>
Second, the tobacco center of<lb/>
the smith is not exactly where<lb/>
Jimmy Browns like to call<lb/>
home And third, the facilities<lb/>
can only meet the budget oi a<lb/>
school I'm si, with our<lb/>
allotted tate funds, alumni<lb/>
giants, and the limited gate<lb/>
local fan suppoit<lb/>
Yet ECU strives to lure the<lb/>
bell available athletes, but even<lb/>
then ECU must accept the<lb/>
leftovers, those boys passed<lb/>
over by the biggei schools<lb/>
The other upsetting factoi<lb/>
that this st ho I ai ship race<lb/>
engenders is a fostering of the<lb/>
"jock- an brains The<lb/>
emphasis tc ns to statistical<lb/>
production and the iesult is a<lb/>
deflated, almost non-existent<lb/>
academic out-put<lb/>
Of course the old addit ve<lb/>
about dumb athletes with an<lb/>
10 of a boxei has helped<lb/>
sustain this kind of attitude<lb/>
The real athletes competing<lb/>
today have to harbor some<lb/>
smarts just to win a game The<lb/>
muscles and brawn factoi goes<lb/>
just so far-every coach is<lb/>
looking for the all-round<lb/>
athlete.<lb/>
Another fallacy to this type<lb/>
of thought is that sports heroes<lb/>
in training haven't got time for<lb/>
academic matters-they are too<lb/>
busy preparing for their<lb/>
respective upcoming seasons.<lb/>
This simple-minded outlook<lb/>
could be dashed with one visit<lb/>
to the local pub.<lb/>
With all of this criticism one<lb/>
would think that the<lb/>
inter-collegiate athletit system<lb/>
is operating on principle!<lb/>
which strictly adhere to III<lb/>
own interests Peihap . this is<lb/>
only too true<lb/>
While the NCAA and NAIA<lb/>
set down mles and regulations<lb/>
governing recruiting and<lb/>
academic standaids. there aie<lb/>
many loopholes through which<lb/>
coaches and schools ,jh create<lb/>
a sepaiate society aiound then<lb/>
athletic programs and the boy s<lb/>
who compete m them<lb/>
Anothei depressing thought<lb/>
that comes from the system is<lb/>
the monetary waste Schools<lb/>
like Alabama have constructed<lb/>
sepaiate dorms foi the football<lb/>
p I a y e i s complete with<lb/>
wall-to-wall carpeting and coloi<lb/>
TV's foi each room I ven the<lb/>
telephone bill that Ohio State's<lb/>
football program tuns up is<lb/>
enough money to run the<lb/>
entne athletic department of<lb/>
many unallei colleges<lb/>
The methods ol t his<lb/>
self-perpetuating system an<lb/>
become means without<lb/>
v nipples Some coaches have<lb/>
,een to it that recruit! aie "set<lb/>
up" with, rathei "questionable"<lb/>
iijies-a big new thrill foi the<lb/>
high school senior who may be<lb/>
the next starting quatterback.<lb/>
The. question doesn't boil<lb/>
down to "should there be<lb/>
athletic scholarships or not<lb/>
but it does point to the need<lb/>
for a re-evaluation of the<lb/>
present athletic system<lb/>
Mote emphasis needs to be<lb/>
placed on the young man as<lb/>
student-player-human rather<lb/>
than "manufactured jock"<lb/>
with the all American<lb/>
super-star image Money needs<lb/>
to be channeled where it will<lb/>
do the most good, serve the<lb/>
student best in view of the<lb/>
educational ideals of the<lb/>
individual, the institution, and<lb/>
even the country as a whole<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
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ountainhead<lb/>
'<lb/>
SoMcUaA and iommenaAf<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Chapel Hill student conference lays<lb/>
groundwork for statewide group<lb/>
"Student Vet ton 71-72: A<lb/>
Beginning .1 conference of North<lb/>
l irolina student leaders, will be held this<lb/>
weekend in Chapel Hill This gathering<lb/>
ol the student tribes, sponsored by the<lb/>
student government associations ot<lb/>
eleven North Carolina schools, will be<lb/>
closely watched by the state's veteran<lb/>
politicians.<lb/>
Ilk- conference's announced purpose<lb/>
i- "to discuss common political and<lb/>
educational objectives for the coming<lb/>
year Workshop topics will include<lb/>
sessions on how the I 8-year-old vote and<lb/>
the North Carolina Presidential primary<lb/>
best be used by students to see that<lb/>
thcil interests .ire protected in state and<lb/>
national politics, how the reorganization<lb/>
of the si.ite's higher education system<lb/>
can be effected so that students have a<lb/>
greater voice in determining the<lb/>
conditions and priorities of their own<lb/>
educational process, and how .1 statewide<lb/>
student political organization can affect<lb/>
state politics<lb/>
Workshops will also be held on a<lb/>
variety of problems which affect area<lb/>
campuses including voter registration,<lb/>
campus newspapers .mo" radio, student<lb/>
fees women's rights, environmental<lb/>
quality, interdormitory visitation, and<lb/>
campus rules<lb/>
Ulard Lo we nstein. form er<lb/>
Congressman from New York and<lb/>
founder ol both the "Dump Johnson"<lb/>
and "Dump Nixon campaigns, will be<lb/>
featured speaker at the conference A<lb/>
Chapel Mill graduate returning to his<lb/>
alma mater. Lowenstein has great<lb/>
rapport with student croups and is<lb/>
widely recognized among the young<lb/>
both .is an organizer for hugene<lb/>
McCarthy and as a champion of student<lb/>
causes<lb/>
Ihe possibility of a statewide<lb/>
coalition of students, blacks, women and<lb/>
other groups which are the object of<lb/>
imic and legal discrimination is sure<lb/>
to be discussed Conservative politicians<lb/>
have feared the possibility of such a<lb/>
union for a long time now. If the<lb/>
students can 'get it together" this<lb/>
weekend, the politicians will be forced<lb/>
to make concessions to the student vot<lb/>
But. ideally, students will reject<lb/>
attempts by the establishment to coopt<lb/>
student sentiment for change b<lb/>
superficial changes in policy Students<lb/>
should press for major change both in<lb/>
the state's political system and in its<lb/>
economic status quo<lb/>
On an institutional basis, a statewide<lb/>
student organization could provide<lb/>
collective bargaining power for students<lb/>
at smaller institutions. Such a group<lb/>
could also champion student interests in<lb/>
jn reorganization of the state's higher<lb/>
education system<lb/>
This weekend's Chapel Mill conference<lb/>
could have the greatest effect on North<lb/>
Carolina's higher education system since<lb/>
the desegregation of the state's colleges<lb/>
and universities. What effects the<lb/>
conference will have, of course, depend<lb/>
upon how well the student delegates<lb/>
from the different colleges and<lb/>
universities work together in planning<lb/>
activities and structuring a statewide<lb/>
organization to promote the students'<lb/>
common political, educational and<lb/>
economic interests.<lb/>
ECU's Student Government<lb/>
Association, one of the 1 1 sponsors of<lb/>
the gathering, is sending seven delegates<lb/>
to the conference; Fountainhead hopes<lb/>
to send three delegates to cover the<lb/>
weekend's workshops and report the<lb/>
events in next week's edition.<lb/>
Hopefully, the groundwork will be-<lb/>
laid this weekend for a statewide student<lb/>
organization that will influence both<lb/>
North Carolina electoral politics and the<lb/>
policies of the state's institutions of<lb/>
higher learning. Such a force could make<lb/>
"student power" a reality on the<lb/>
campus, in the community and<lb/>
throughout the state.<lb/>
anti<lb/>
the<lb/>
4<lb/>
Buckley replies to Kerry speech i<lb/>
Summer Theater needs your help<lb/>
The ECU Summer Theatre is in<lb/>
trouble The inflation-conscious 1971<lb/>
dener.il Assembly cut funds for the<lb/>
long-promised remodeling of McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium from ECU's budget. In<lb/>
addition, the Summer Theater also lost<lb/>
the small annual subsidy that the state<lb/>
has provided to help support its<lb/>
productions 111 past years.<lb/>
This loss forces the Summer Theater<lb/>
program to become completely<lb/>
sell-supporting from box office sales or<lb/>
perish Because the summer season was<lb/>
planned with the expectation of a<lb/>
subsidy, the reduction of funds is<lb/>
particularly hurtful.<lb/>
Because of the professional scale of<lb/>
tins summer's presentations, much<lb/>
money has been spent that can only be<lb/>
replaced through box offc sales. Even<lb/>
with capacity audiences every night for<lb/>
the one remaining Summer Theater<lb/>
production, the Theater will be hard<lb/>
pressed to break even because of a<lb/>
midsummer slump in ticket sales that<lb/>
affected other offerings. -<lb/>
Gypsy, a stunning production based<lb/>
on the life of Gypsy Rose Lee which<lb/>
concludes the summer season, has five<lb/>
more performances this week. The<lb/>
musical features outstanding<lb/>
performances by SUmrner Theater<lb/>
mainstay Sally-Jand Heit and ECU's own<lb/>
Jane Barrett, a native of nearby<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty and staff<lb/>
members are urged to buy tickets to this<lb/>
last production so that ECU's summer<lb/>
theater program, unique in this part of<lb/>
the state, will not founder due to lack of<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
Only with the continued support of<lb/>
the University community and area<lb/>
residents can the ECU Summer Theater<lb/>
operate on its current professional level,<lb/>
providing a topflight cultural and<lb/>
entertainment attraction for Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Bv WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR.<lb/>
Reprinted from National Review<lb/>
Editor's note The following article combine!<lb/>
two of William F Buckley J '? syndicated<lb/>
columns as they were printed in the June 29,<lb/>
1971 edition of National Review The columns<lb/>
are reprinted by permission.<lb/>
An editoi of the Boston Globe was so<lb/>
thoughtful as to send me the lull text ol the<lb/>
speeeh given last month b John kerr to the<lb/>
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Mr Kerry<lb/>
is the young veteran, pedigreed Bostonian, and<lb/>
Vale graduate, who led the veterans' protest in<lb/>
Washington The headline. In the Boston<lb/>
Globe's magazine, reveals that the Globe is the<lb/>
only newspapei which has twice published in<lb/>
lu.i Mr Kerry's remarkable addiess I tear that<lb/>
the publication of it was intended to suggest<lb/>
that Mr Kerry s statement was important other<lb/>
than in the sense in which I nidge it to be<lb/>
important. It is very important<lb/>
Consider the words that made John Kerry<lb/>
famous Consider, first, the haunting resonance<lb/>
of its peroration.<lb/>
"We are determined to undertake one last<lb/>
mission, to search out and destroy the last<lb/>
vestige of this barbaric war, to pacify our own<lb/>
hearts, to conquer the hate and the feai that<lb/>
have driven this country these last ten years and<lb/>
more, and so when in thirty years from now<lb/>
our brothers go down the street without a leg.<lb/>
without an arm. or a face, and small boys ask<lb/>
why. we will be able to say 'Vietnam' and not<lb/>
mean a desert, not a filthy obscene memory but<lb/>
the place where America finally turned and<lb/>
where soldiers like us helped it in the turning<lb/>
"Where America finally turned One needs<lb/>
to ask Where America finally turned from<lb/>
what0<lb/>
Mr. Kerry, in introducing himself to the<lb/>
Senaie Foreign Relations Committee, made it<lb/>
plain that he was there not to speak for himsell.<lb/>
but to speak for what he called "a very much<lb/>
larger group of veterans in this country He<lb/>
then proceeded to describe the America he<lb/>
knows, the America fi m which he enjoined us<lb/>
all to turn.<lb/>
In Southeast Asia, he said, he saw "not<lb/>
isolated incidents but crimes committed on a<lb/>
day-to-day basis with the full awareness of<lb/>
officers at all levels ol command "<lb/>
A grave charge, but the sensitive listener will<lb/>
instantly assume that Mr Kerry is using the<lb/>
word "crime" loosely, metaphorically . as in "he<lb/>
was criminally thoughtless in not writing home<lb/>
more often to Ins mother But Mi. Kerry<lb/>
quickly interdicted that line of retreat. He went<lb/>
on to enumerate precisely such crimes as are<lb/>
being committed on a day-to-day basis, "with<lb/>
the lull awareness of officers at all levels of<lb/>
command He gave tales of torture, rape, of<lb/>
Amencans who "randomly shot at civilians,<lb/>
raed villages in fashion reminiscent of Genghis<lb/>
Khan, shot cattle and dogs for fun. poisoned<lb/>
food stocks, and generally ravaged the<lb/>
countryside of South Vietnam in addition to<lb/>
the normal ravage of war<lb/>
Mr. Kerry informed Congress that what<lb/>
threatens the United States isn't "Reds but<lb/>
"the crimes" we are committing He told us<lb/>
that we have "created a monster, a monster in<lb/>
the form of millions of men who have been<lb/>
taught to deal and to trade in violence, and who<lb/>
have returned with a sense of danger<lb/>
And indeed, if American soldiers have been<lb/>
called upon to rape and torture and to<lb/>
exterminate noncombatants, it is obvious that<lb/>
they should be ashamed, less obvious why they<lb/>
have not expressed that shame more widely on<lb/>
returning to the United States, particularly<lb/>
inasmuch as we have been assured by Mr Kerry<lb/>
that they have been taught to deal and to li.ide<lb/>
in violence<lb/>
Are there extenuating circumstances'<lb/>
Is there a reason for being in Vietnam '<lb/>
"To attempt to justify the loss ol one<lb/>
American life in Vietnam. Cambodia, or Laos<lb/>
by linking such loss to the preservation of<lb/>
freedomis. the height of criminal hypocrisy,<lb/>
and it is that kind of hypocrisy which we feel<lb/>
has torn this country apart"<lb/>
It is then, we reason retrospectively, not<lb/>
alone an act of hypocrisy that caused the Joint<lb/>
Chiefs of Staff, and the heads of the civilian<lb/>
departments in strategic calculations, to make<lb/>
the recommendations they made over the past<lb/>
ten years to three Presidents of the United<lb/>
States it was not merely hypocrisy but<lb/>
criminal hypocrisy Underlying that hypocrisy'1<lb/>
Mr. Kerry had the answer to that too, "All thai<lb/>
we were told about the mystical wai agJrr.st<lb/>
Communism <lb/>
The indictment by John Kerry. as given in<lb/>
behalf of his veterans' organization to Senator<lb/>
Fulbnghi's committee, is complete: a total<lb/>
indictment of the practices, and motives of<lb/>
America and its leaders.<lb/>
It is the indictment of an ignorant young<lb/>
man. who is willing to condemn in words that<lb/>
would have been appropriately used in<lb/>
Nuremberg the governing class of America: the<lb/>
statesmen, the legislators, the generals And,<lb/>
reaching beyond them, the people who named<lb/>
the governors to their positions ol<lb/>
responsibility, and ratified their decisions in<lb/>
several elections.<lb/>
Now if America is what John Kerry says it is.<lb/>
what is it that is appropriate for ui to do'The<lb/>
(Continued on page 41<lb/>
ECU has developed rapidly over the years<lb/>
Fountainhead needs students' help,<lb/>
newspaper is badly understaffed<lb/>
There are alot of Associated Press<lb/>
dispatches and reprinted stories in this<lb/>
week's Fountainhead We would rather<lb/>
have printed campus and local news and<lb/>
features But we couldn't. And it's your<lb/>
fault!<lb/>
vh is it your fault Because you<lb/>
didn't help, that's win You haven't<lb/>
responded to Fountainhead staff<lb/>
recruitment ads You haven't offered to<lb/>
help, either by writing stories or<lb/>
notify nig us of upcoming events.<lb/>
Fountainhead's editorial<lb/>
departments- news, features and sports-<lb/>
are .ill serious!) understaffed. As a result,<lb/>
a few people are expected to cover the<lb/>
entire campus f'hey can't be<lb/>
everywhere, and they can't work all the<lb/>
tune Because thes're students, just like<lb/>
you, 1 he aie carrying about the same<lb/>
course loads you are<lb/>
What m you do with only one<lb/>
summer school and a back-to-school<lb/>
issue remainingYou can join in; you can<lb/>
help our. You can make sure that your<lb/>
views are expressed in your student<lb/>
newspaper. You can begin participating<lb/>
in your education.<lb/>
Even if you don't want to joi the<lb/>
staff, you can keep us informed about<lb/>
the news that affects you. You can put<lb/>
your complaints in writing, as letters to<lb/>
the editor or as editorial columns.<lb/>
You can begin now with the last<lb/>
summer issues, and continue to work<lb/>
throughout the regular school year If<lb/>
the newspaper isn't your "bag their are<lb/>
three other campus publications and a<lb/>
student government association that<lb/>
could use your help<lb/>
Begin now! And. perhaps, by this time<lb/>
next year, those problems you have been<lb/>
complaining about will be solved With<lb/>
your help ?<lb/>
By FRANCEINE PERRY<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
From its modest beginnings 64 years ago, as<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers Training School. ECU<lb/>
has rapidly developed into a dynamic and<lb/>
constantly growing multi-disciplinary<lb/>
university<lb/>
A prime factor in this swift upward rise has<lb/>
been the desire of ECU's leaders to enlarge iis<lb/>
scope and improve its programs.<lb/>
The metamorphosis of a little two-year<lb/>
teachers' training school into a four-year<lb/>
teachers' college into a liberal arts college into,<lb/>
finally, a university has been by no means a<lb/>
smooth and easy one.<lb/>
But Dr Leo Jenkins. ECU president since<lb/>
I960 and Ins predecessors have readily accepted<lb/>
the challenge to work for the growth of their<lb/>
institution, and when necessary, struggle agauist<lb/>
lormidable obstacles to its progress.<lb/>
This fall, with an expected enrollment of<lb/>
more than 10,000 students from all parts of<lb/>
North Carolina, nearly all the other states and a<lb/>
good number ol foreign countries, ECU will<lb/>
begin the 1971-72 academic year. Many<lb/>
evidences of ECU's recent growth will be<lb/>
apparent<lb/>
About two-thirds of the faculty will hold<lb/>
doctoral degrees, a percentage which has<lb/>
climbed steadily dunng the past decade.<lb/>
Classroom instruction on the Greenville<lb/>
campus will benefit from greater use of<lb/>
effective teaching methods. New techniques<lb/>
involving the use of multi-media instruction,<lb/>
student responder systems, closed circuit TV<lb/>
and computer resourses will be incorporated<lb/>
into the traditional lecture presentation.<lb/>
Besides classroom work with students. ECU's<lb/>
faculty will be more than ever before engaged<lb/>
in scholarship and independent research. During<lb/>
the aeamemic year 1971-72 more than<lb/>
53.000,000 in funds from state and national<lb/>
agencies and private foundations will finance a<lb/>
variety of active grants undertaken by ECU<lb/>
professors<lb/>
ECU's curriculum offerings have increased<lb/>
and become more flexible General education<lb/>
requirements have been revised for freshmen<lb/>
and sophomores in order to meet the needs of<lb/>
the individual student.<lb/>
The School of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions will add degree programs in<lb/>
occupational therapy and school and<lb/>
community health, and a new School of<lb/>
Technology will begin its operations this fall.<lb/>
Another new program, in effect foi the first<lb/>
time, will be ECU's unique European Area<lb/>
Studies Thirty-five students will fly to the<lb/>
overseas campus at Bonn, West Germany, to<lb/>
spend the year in study and observation of<lb/>
European society and culture.<lb/>
Continuing the trend of the past several<lb/>
years. ECU's Graduate School enrollment will<lb/>
increase, with the addition of federally funded<lb/>
fellowships in physics and biology.<lb/>
And ECU's long-awaited medical studies<lb/>
program will enroll its first students this Fall, a<lb/>
preliminary step leading to the eventual<lb/>
establishment of a four-year School of Medicine<lb/>
at Greenville.<lb/>
Joyner Library at ECU will show<lb/>
considerable progress It alieads :anks second<lb/>
among libraries in North Carolina's institutions<lb/>
of higher learning in microfilm holdings, third<lb/>
in microtext holdings, fifth in periodicals and<lb/>
(Continued on page 4i<lb/>
The Forum<lb/>
Brain Witheld?<lb/>
To Fou. linhead:<lb/>
1 was quite amused by the letter in your last<lb/>
issue concerning "Integrity and guts by Name<lb/>
Witheld by Request. Not knowing Name<lb/>
Witheld personally. I can only assume that<lb/>
either (a) he doesn't know the difference<lb/>
between the terms 'Liberal" and<lb/>
"Conservative (b) he wears blinders to class,<lb/>
(c) he is long overdue for a checkup or (d) all of<lb/>
the above.<lb/>
Name Witheld would have us believe that<lb/>
ECU is nothing more than a hot bed of<lb/>
conservatism and that the only thing<lb/>
approaching a liberaj point of view would be.<lb/>
perhaps, a left-handed Lab instructor. Come<lb/>
now. Name Witheld! Trying to find a<lb/>
conservative professor in most departments is<lb/>
like trying to find an advertisement for the<lb/>
John Birch Society in the "Fountainhead<lb/>
Name Witheld seems to dislike the fact that<lb/>
there is one conservative in the Political Science<lb/>
Department who is rather outspoken. Whe he<lb/>
fails to mention, however, is that he is, for all<lb/>
practical purposes, the only conservative in the<lb/>
F J Science Department, or in any other<lb/>
department, for that matter.<lb/>
Are you sure that wasn't a misprint and was<lb/>
supposed to be Brain Witheld by Request0<lb/>
William F. Harrell<lb/>
Thanks<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
As chairman of the 1971 summer Popular<lb/>
Entertainment Committee, I would like to<lb/>
thank Jim Godfrey and the Alpha Phi Omega's<lb/>
for their help with the Cowboy-Hampton<lb/>
Grease Band concert July 7, and Tommy Clay<lb/>
and the Sigma Tau Signu's foi their help with<lb/>
the Ides of Match concert. July 28<lb/>
Little recognition is given to the work ?<lb/>
these service fraternities, but without ilieu<lb/>
help, many problems prevalent at these<lb/>
concerts could not hau' been handled as<lb/>
efficiently as they were.<lb/>
I would also like to thank the oilier members<lb/>
of the committee who worked so diligent, on<lb/>
the problems encountered during the first<lb/>
performance, and a special wort! of thanks to<lb/>
the members who. although not enrolled in<lb/>
summer school, made a special trip down to<lb/>
help with the production.<lb/>
Most of all. I would like to thank the student<lb/>
body a't large for making the conceits the<lb/>
success that they were.<lb/>
Talley<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
Students and employes of the University' are<lb/>
urged to express their opinions in The Forum M<lb/>
Letters should be concise and to the point<lb/>
Letters should not exceed .100 words.<lb/>
The editors reserve the right to edit all letters<lb/>
for style, grammatical errors and length<lb/>
All letters must be signed with the name ol<lb/>
the writer. Upon the writer's request, his name<lb/>
will be withheld<lb/>
Space permitting. every letter to<lb/>
Fountainhead will be printed subject to the<lb/>
above procedures.<lb/>
Signed articles on this page refUcI the<lb/>
opinions of the writer and no, neccessarib<lb/>
<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>