<?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="00039647_0001"/>
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GREENVILLE. N CAROLINA<lb/>
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 10<lb/>
TUESDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1972<lb/>
Problems delay computers' operation<lb/>
H?illay  ?peratl0n of lhe new four hour continuous runnrn. of the hauled i? ?n ? !  . .  "<lb/>
A delay in operation of the new<lb/>
Burroughs 5500 computer has caused<lb/>
some curiosity and comment across<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The computer, delivered to ECU's<lb/>
Computing Center in late August, was<lb/>
intended as a replacement for the<lb/>
overworked IBM 360-30 unit then in<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
Difficulties with the Computing<lb/>
 enter's air conditioning system caused a<lb/>
postponement of the new Burroughs<lb/>
operation. Dr. Charles Q. Brown,<lb/>
director of Institutional Development,<lb/>
commented on the problem.<lb/>
"The Burroughs is fantastically bigger<lb/>
than the IBM " said Brown. "It's a high<lb/>
I peed computer and generates more<lb/>
heat, its memory is four times that of<lb/>
the other, and its discs are four to five<lb/>
times faster.<lb/>
"If the computer overheats, it will go<lb/>
out and create damage<lb/>
Al a result of the heat produced by<lb/>
the Burroughs 5500 unit, a special air<lb/>
conditioning system is required. Cold air<lb/>
is circulated under the equipment by<lb/>
means of a down draft to keep<lb/>
temperatures low.<lb/>
"It's an underthedeck system said<lb/>
James L. Lowry, director of the Physical<lb/>
Plant. "Grilles are put under each piece<lb/>
of equipment; it's different from<lb/>
anything we've ever had<lb/>
Unfortunately, the unique air<lb/>
conditioning system had not been<lb/>
delivered by the time the Burroughs<lb/>
computer was installed. The only<lb/>
? available air conditioning, that used with<lb/>
( the old IBM. was inadequate. As a result,<lb/>
the Burroughs unit could run at only a<lb/>
fraction of its capacity or risk<lb/>
I overheating.<lb/>
"We couldn't bring up ail the discs<lb/>
said Dr. Brown. "Forty percent of them<lb/>
would have balanced out with the<lb/>
cooling system.<lb/>
"The Burroughs needed to be cooled<lb/>
so the whole unit could be run<lb/>
simultaneously he added "We need a<lb/>
four hour continuous running of the<lb/>
system to check it out -we never had the<lb/>
opportunity to do that<lb/>
James L. Lowry commented on the<lb/>
late delivery of the air conditioning unit.<lb/>
"I don't think there was ever a time<lb/>
set for it he said. "It's just that people<lb/>
were reaching for the moon.<lb/>
"Ft was installed and operating in a<lb/>
reasonable amount of time he added.<lb/>
"The Purchase Department did a fine<lb/>
job<lb/>
The special air conditioning was<lb/>
installed last week, but the Burroughs<lb/>
unit is still not in operation<lb/>
Why?<lb/>
 Dr. F. Milam Johnson, Director of the<lb/>
Computing Center, Lowr and Brown<lb/>
all agreed that the systen n teded to be<lb/>
checked out before full operation.<lb/>
Johnson stated that "small<lb/>
difficulties" and probler s with the air<lb/>
conditioning had come ,p, but was<lb/>
reluctant to give details.<lb/>
Word had already bee nt out earlier<lb/>
cancelling the computer trading system,<lb/>
perhaps until April, 173. The IBM<lb/>
Optical Scanner, used to read computer<lb/>
tests, would not operate with the<lb/>
Burroughs 5500.<lb/>
Until a scanner is fcund for use with<lb/>
the new unit, no computer grading will<lb/>
be done. This may prove somehting of a<lb/>
headache for the Psychology and<lb/>
Sociology departments, which have long<lb/>
made use of computer testing and<lb/>
research.<lb/>
"We're looking at two kinds of optical<lb/>
scanners now said Brown. "One is a<lb/>
new IBM. and Dr. Johnson is looking at<lb/>
other manufacturers' products to see if<lb/>
exceeding the capacity of the IBM might<lb/>
not be possible<lb/>
The prospective IBM scanner can be<lb/>
used to read black numbers as well as the<lb/>
familiar fiJled-in dots.<lb/>
An unidentified source had informed<lb/>
the Fountainhead of additional<lb/>
difficulties behind the computer story.<lb/>
The source charged that the computer.<lb/>
hauled in an open truck from Raleigh<lb/>
had sustained wiring damages.<lb/>
Johnson stated that he would rather<lb/>
not comment on the actual installation<lb/>
of the computer, and referred the<lb/>
Fountainhcid to Brown for further<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Brown conceded that the unit had<lb/>
been brought in an open truck, but<lb/>
stated that the shipping was appropriate<lb/>
Both he and Johnson agreed that the<lb/>
computer arrived satisfactorily, though<lb/>
Johnson intimated some minor "dents"<lb/>
in transit.<lb/>
The same unidentified source stated<lb/>
that upcoming preregistration would be<lb/>
confused as a result of the computer<lb/>
trouble. Preregfetration is dependent<lb/>
upon a computerized system<lb/>
ECU Registrar Worth E. Baker<lb/>
discredited this rum<lb/>
(Suit Photo by Rdh Mannt<lb/>
DR F. MILAM JOHNSON<lb/>
Preregistration will not be affected<lb/>
he said, "because we have the same<lb/>
facilities here as we had before The<lb/>
Registrar's office uses a small IBM<lb/>
360-20 for its transactions, and makes<lb/>
use of the Computing Center facilities<lb/>
for major work.<lb/>
The procedure surrounding future use<lb/>
Of the registrar's computer is quite<lb/>
involved. In the past, work requiring a<lb/>
small memory unit was done with the<lb/>
registrar's IBM Now. information stored<lb/>
in the small IBM must be transferred to<lb/>
the Burroughs unit The registrar,<lb/>
computer will be eliminated<lb/>
"They'll take the one we have said<lb/>
Baker, "and we'll be working from the<lb/>
Computing (enter.<lb/>
"Until the actual transition takes<lb/>
place he said. "I foresee no problems "<lb/>
If any problems occur and the<lb/>
Burroughs unit is not operating, the<lb/>
Computing Center will try to arrange for<lb/>
a backup machine to do the work.<lb/>
Not all departments are unaffected by<lb/>
the computer delay, however. In<lb/>
addition to those departments affected<lb/>
by lack of computer grading, Joyner<lb/>
Library has problems of its own<lb/>
Unknown to many, the library orders<lb/>
books by means of computer. During the<lb/>
computer delay, a sizeable backlog of<lb/>
orders has formed.<lb/>
Mrs. Salhe E. Mann. Head of<lb/>
Acquisitions discussed the situation:<lb/>
"We krew for sure that we could get<lb/>
the Burroughs she said. "We were also<lb/>
told that we would have a delay between<lb/>
the time they uncabled the IBM and the<lb/>
time the Burroughs was running.<lb/>
"We started to make preparations here<lb/>
before time she said. "We were given<lb/>
special permission by the Business Office<lb/>
to issue purchase orders before July<lb/>
before the beginning of the new fiscal<lb/>
year<lb/>
In doing this, the library hoped to<lb/>
order enough books in advance to offset<lb/>
some of the delay involved in the<lb/>
?"?-  cuKt-u tiiai tne computer, l)R F Mil 1 InHNWN ? <lb/>
g a ? ? WIUW JUUnoU" computer transition.<lb/>
McGovern is human and humanefaccordmq to Mayor lee<lb/>
ByBRENDAPUGH people put it (the Democratic Party, Party WW" ?f ? ??" J tI LCC<lb/>
By BRENOA PUGH<lb/>
?t?f4 Writ<lb/>
Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee, one<lb/>
of the few black mayors in the U.S<lb/>
?poke in Greenville on Oct. 5 at a<lb/>
banquet for George McGovern at the<lb/>
Candlewick Inn in an effort to increase<lb/>
?upport for Democratic Presidential<lb/>
nominee George McGovern and the<lb/>
Democratic Party.<lb/>
McGovern s aim, according to Lee, "is<lb/>
to put people back in politics<lb/>
Appealing to all segments of the voting<lb/>
population, Lee stated. "What is going to<lb/>
make this nation tick is a coalition that<lb/>
knows no sex, knows no age, knows no<lb/>
race but the human race Describing<lb/>
?upporters of George Wallace as people<lb/>
who "have fear because the system has<lb/>
not been kind to them either Lee<lb/>
vowed that McGovern would try to<lb/>
improve their lot. "The tenor of the<lb/>
times he said, "is not just the problem<lb/>
of one race, age, or sex, but the problem<lb/>
of us all<lb/>
Noting that McGovern's candidacy is<lb/>
"an underdog situation Lee reminded<lb/>
his audience that "nothing is impossible<lb/>
and that to be pessimistic in this day and<lb/>
time is to be a cop out "The polls he<lb/>
went on, "are influenced by people, but<lb/>
polls don't rule people. We should learn<lb/>
from rather than be enslaved by them;<lb/>
be motivated rather than held back by<lb/>
them<lb/>
Concentrating on North Carolina<lb/>
where he feels "obligated to help the<lb/>
people put it (the Democratic Party)<lb/>
back together Lee is "pushing the total<lb/>
Democratic ticket from the State House<lb/>
to the White House and from the State<lb/>
House to the Poor House He gives the<lb/>
state a 50-50 chance of going<lb/>
Democratic.<lb/>
Those who have left the Democratic<lb/>
Party during a time of adversity Lee<lb/>
terms "pseudo-Democrats who are<lb/>
turning their tails to the wind and<lb/>
running for cover Such people, he<lb/>
feels, do not "belong in' the Democratic<lb/>
(Staff Photo by Ron Mann)<lb/>
MAYOR HOWARD LEE<lb/>
Party.<lb/>
Answering criticism that McGovern<lb/>
changes his position on the election<lb/>
issues, Lee explained that McGovern is<lb/>
"humane and human and, therefore,<lb/>
does make mistakes. McGovern's<lb/>
willingness to change is praiseworthy,<lb/>
according to Lee. "In the White House,<lb/>
if McGovern saw that one of his policies<lb/>
was harmful, he would be willing to<lb/>
rectify the situation before it changed<lb/>
the lives of millions of American<lb/>
citizens In contrast, Lee said, "Nixon<lb/>
made few mistakes, for little was done"<lb/>
(to make mistakes on.) Moreover, he<lb/>
charged that Nixon follows a rigid time<lb/>
schedule for everything from "lifting his<lb/>
wine glass and painting his White<lb/>
Houseto bugging Democratic<lb/>
headquarters<lb/>
Attacking the priorities of the Nixon<lb/>
Administration, Lee criticized support of<lb/>
the military-industrial complex such as<lb/>
federal assistance in the Lockheed affair.<lb/>
He also stated his opinion that the space<lb/>
program has "blown 40-50 million<lb/>
dollars Supporting the defense<lb/>
cutbacks McGovern proposes, Lee feels<lb/>
that the money saved should be<lb/>
redistributed to improve the domestic-<lb/>
situation. Summarizing the Nixon<lb/>
Administration. Lee spoke of Nixon as<lb/>
"a machine that has been operated by<lb/>
high-powered officials, the main one<lb/>
being Henry Kissinger "Kissinger he<lb/>
said, "is 90 percent in control of the<lb/>
Administration<lb/>
Med School gets new pathology building<lb/>
By LOWELL KNOUFF<lb/>
Stiff Writer<lb/>
Medical students at East Carolina<lb/>
University are only weeks away from<lb/>
having a new pathology "building<lb/>
Today the "building" is only a bunch<lb/>
of cement blocks laid out neatly behind<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium. Hopefully,<lb/>
according to John Bell, purchasing<lb/>
director of ECU, a building will be<lb/>
placed on those blocks somewhere<lb/>
between October 12 and October 15<lb/>
The building will be a 24-foot by<lb/>
60-foot mobile classroom. Custom built<lb/>
for ECU by American Structures<lb/>
Company of Ashburn, Georgia, at a cost<lb/>
of approximately $24,500, the building<lb/>
will be used for classrooms and lab by<lb/>
students studying pathology.<lb/>
According to Dr. Wallace Wooles,<lb/>
dean of the med school, the students are<lb/>
now studying pathology when ver they<lb/>
can find room in the biology building.<lb/>
He says that due to the nature of<lb/>
studying pathology quite a lot of room is<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
Pathology is the study of diseases.<lb/>
are the doctors which do autopsies to<lb/>
discover the cause of death. To learn to<lb/>
do this, students must be able to study<lb/>
different diseased tissues, and he must<lb/>
learn to recognize the reactions of those<lb/>
tissues to various dyes and chemicals<lb/>
used when working with microscopic-<lb/>
slides.<lb/>
"We need room to store tissue samples<lb/>
their essential nature and development<lb/>
and the structural and functional<lb/>
changes produced by them Pathologists<lb/>
and room to prepare and study<lb/>
microscopic slides of the tissues<lb/>
Woole. said. Each student has 150 slides<lb/>
to work with and learn the<lb/>
characteristics of diseases in those<lb/>
tissues. "This calls for room to spread<lb/>
out equipment and work he said<lb/>
Wooles said the mobile classroom was<lb/>
chosen because "a trailer provides the<lb/>
needed space at the lowest cost, doesn't<lb/>
permanently tie up an area and it can be<lb/>
used for other purposes<lb/>
He said, "We are looking toward<lb/>
expansion of the medical school, and we<lb/>
are working toward and planning for<lb/>
separate facilities. The school of<lb/>
medicine will need space, and we cannot<lb/>
compromise existing facilities to get it "<lb/>
Some students may wonder why this<lb/>
is being put behind the gym instead of<lb/>
near the Allied Health Building. Wooles<lb/>
said this is because the med school is<lb/>
located in the biology building rather<lb/>
than in the Allied Health Building as<lb/>
some students may think. He also<lb/>
pointed out that this type of structure<lb/>
can be rather easily moved if the need<lb/>
should arise. "This is to be a temporary<lb/>
facility, and it will go when the medical<lb/>
school expands and develops its own<lb/>
facilities<lb/>
The building will contain two general<lb/>
classrooms, two labs and an office area.<lb/>
The cost of the structure does not<lb/>
include furnishings but Bell said that<lb/>
they hope to furnish it with equipment<lb/>
already owned by the school.<lb/>
The guaranteed minimum income that<lb/>
McGovern proposes, "is just as American<lb/>
as apple pie according to Lee.<lb/>
"However, it is only a means to the end<lb/>
of erasing poverty He went on to say.<lb/>
"We ask people to pull themselves up by<lb/>
their bootstraps when their boots don't<lb/>
even have soles<lb/>
The states and nation could also help<lb/>
break the poverty cycle. Lee feels, by<lb/>
c intributing more to education in the<lb/>
form of scholarships, grants, and loans.<lb/>
Education in North Carolina will<lb/>
benefit from the consolidation of the 16<lb/>
universities into INC. Lee feels. Black<lb/>
schools, he predicts, will (begin tol<lb/>
"receive their fair share of<lb/>
appropriations (from the Board of<lb/>
Governors) The phasing out of black<lb/>
schools, he acknowledges, is a legitimate<lb/>
concern. Lee warns those concerned<lb/>
with this issue to "participate in the<lb/>
political process to make sure" there is<lb/>
no phasing out. The decisions affecting<lb/>
this are made by elected officials<lb/>
"The problem with drugs is not drugs,<lb/>
but the hypocrisy inherent in the drug<lb/>
scene he said. "It's bad if you take<lb/>
drugs to get high, but its not bad if you<lb/>
take aspirin for pain As for punishing<lb/>
those involved with drugs. Lee feels that<lb/>
users of hard drugs are in need of<lb/>
medical care and pushers of hard drugs<lb/>
should be given maximum penalities.<lb/>
Marijuana users mould be punished, but<lb/>
not charged with a felony This drug, he<lb/>
See "MjyO page 2)<lb/>
Department<lb/>
announces<lb/>
speakers<lb/>
The Department of Chemistry at East<lb/>
Carolina University has announced the<lb/>
speakers for its Friday afternoon seminar<lb/>
series who will lead seminars scheduled<lb/>
for October.<lb/>
Dr. Harry B Herman, associate<lb/>
professor of chemistry at<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, will speak at the Oct.<lb/>
6 seminar; Dr. Robert C. Lamb, ECU<lb/>
chemistry chairman. Oct. 13; Dr. Louis<lb/>
D. Quin. chairman of chemistry at Duke<lb/>
University. Oct. 20; and Dr. Jon P.<lb/>
Engstrom of the Emory University<lb/>
chemistry department. Oct. 27.<lb/>
September seminar speakers included<lb/>
ECU chemist Dr. Fred Parham and<lb/>
Brooks Whitehurst of Texas Gulf<lb/>
Sulfur's Technical Services department.<lb/>
All seminars are open to the interested<lb/>
public, and are scheduled for 3 p.m. in<lb/>
206 Flanagan Building on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
"We had known and were prepared<lb/>
for the shutdown since the last run on<lb/>
August 11 she said.<lb/>
"Then the IBM went and the<lb/>
Burroughs came in "<lb/>
This Monday Od 9, marked the<lb/>
ninth week since any book purchase<lb/>
orders went out At (east 3,000 books<lb/>
are waiting to be ordered a large<lb/>
backlog caused by the computer delay<lb/>
One of the major companies dealth<lb/>
with by tin- library, Baker and Taylor.<lb/>
does business exclusively by computer.<lb/>
"All of our orders with the company<lb/>
on tape said Mrs Mann. "We send<lb/>
the tape to them, and they process our<lb/>
order<lb/>
"Then the) send back a tape with the<lb/>
invoice she said. With University I'rss<lb/>
books, the shipment is sent along with<lb/>
? omputer tapes.<lb/>
rhe tapes contain all sorts of<lb/>
information concerning each book, "said<lb/>
Mrs Mann, such as cost and whether it<lb/>
is a first edition.<lb/>
"We use the tape to punch out<lb/>
net essarj lorms<lb/>
In addition to the book order backlog,<lb/>
the library has a second problem:<lb/>
inversion Before the Burroughs system<lb/>
can be used by the library, both the<lb/>
library's own computer and the tapes<lb/>
? nl by the Baker and Taylor<lb/>
organization must be translated to the<lb/>
Burroughs system.<lb/>
Don Bogart. a Baker and Taylor<lb/>
computer specialist, is undertaking the<lb/>
changeover in the library computer.<lb/>
Converting Baker and Taylor's invoice<lb/>
and information tapes to a<lb/>
Burroughs-acceptable system is a more<lb/>
intricate procedure.<lb/>
' Before we can use their tapes, they'll<lb/>
have to be converted said Mrs. Mann.<lb/>
"W, can't put the tape in until it is<lb/>
converted in Raleigh.<lb/>
"We were told she said, "that the<lb/>
Computing Center will take care of<lb/>
this they'll tell Baker and Taylor to<lb/>
S?e "Cnolnq" oaq? ?<lb/>
Enrollment increase<lb/>
seen for UNC<lb/>
Enrollment on the 16 campuses of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina for the fall<lb/>
term this year totals 87.627, according<lb/>
to a preliminary head-count.<lb/>
The total represents an increase of<lb/>
2,637 over the enrollment for the same<lb/>
term last year.<lb/>
The campus-by-campus enrollment<lb/>
figures are Appalachian. 7.320; East<lb/>
Carolina. 10.250: Elizabeth City, 1,108;<lb/>
Fayetteville. 1.627; A and f. 4.515<lb/>
North Carolina Central. 4.021: School of<lb/>
the Arts. 356; N.C. State. 13.809;<lb/>
Pembroke. 1.978: UNC-Asheville. 1.174:<lb/>
L'NC-Chapel Hill, 19.175;<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte, 5.119. UNC-Greensboro.<lb/>
7,411; UNC-Wilmington. 2.300: Western<lb/>
Carolina. 5.656 and Winston-Salem<lb/>
State. 1.708.<lb/>
Post assists<lb/>
recruitment<lb/>
By TIM JONES<lb/>
Sta" h t ,ter<lb/>
A new cabinet office for International<lb/>
Affairs was created last Friday with<lb/>
Michael Allen as its secretary.<lb/>
This new office was formed with the<lb/>
purpose of assisting students on the<lb/>
overseas campus at Bonn. Germany, and<lb/>
to assist the Internationa Studies<lb/>
Program here. Students who have<lb/>
participated in the Bonn program will<lb/>
work in the capacity of recruiting,<lb/>
publicity and curriculum<lb/>
According to Allen, there was a<lb/>
i "mmunieation problem between the<lb/>
Bonn campus and the Greenville campus<lb/>
last year. "We had news v.e wanted to<lb/>
gie to the Fountainhead and the<lb/>
Buccaneer, but we could not get an<lb/>
effective channel. We wrote letters, but<lb/>
did not get a single reply. It was<lb/>
Christmas before I ever knew that<lb/>
Crowshaw wasn't SGA president<lb/>
anymore. We went to Moscow over the<lb/>
Christmas holidays and the story was put<lb/>
in the Fountainhead in April<lb/>
"The first problem that I have to deal<lb/>
with this year involves recruitment said<lb/>
Allen. "There are still five vacancies for<lb/>
winter quarter Fall and spring are filled<lb/>
up. "To help find more recruits for this<lb/>
program, students who have participated<lb/>
in this program are acting as salesmen<lb/>
The ex-participants of this program<lb/>
are holding a meeting Tuesday night to<lb/>
help find those that are interested in the<lb/>
program The meeting will be held in the<lb/>
Social Studies building, room 102, at 8<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039647_0002"/><lb/>
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playing in fronl of in audience Hint's<lb/>
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uiuhi .iiiii night, rehearsing, plmuiH<lb/>
i tub m, colleges an,I listening hi the<lb/>
huiHlreds oi rei ordi i he) i'i i nlk ? I<lb/>
m i'ii' i he ?' t Sell Hand the heal<lb/>
musician in the Nee Knginnd area V<lb/>
i epi esenl ai ?? i i Ian Mi Kei oi da<lb/>
iHtted id en i on a ImI I with In  ln and<lb/>
hegii i reconling imtngemenl the hand<lb/>
find especial!) fortuiloxin Vtbtntii was<lb/>
the record eonipani ere had alwayp<lb/>
dreamed ol (veins, ttgnnl ?uh <lb/>
Wi'ii l he were the record we bough I<lb/>
the moal rhej had people like Vretha,<lb/>
l ax ih.ii lea, u 11 son Pickett, t Itti<lb/>
Redding, Sam ,v have, th?? Rascals and<lb/>
I a in Iin.i New 11 :i 1111. has the J<lb/>
Ceils Rand<lb/>
I i VMM ?? ' MI- I i? ? In looee! Formerly ol Humble<lb/>
i11 add sown i1 and iiuiel rock In Saturday's concert.<lb/>
Pie. Peter Frampton<lb/>
Frampton brings new 'Wind'<lb/>
II V<lb/>
II I Mil II I<lb/>
,? r s. <lb/>
I INK<lb/>
Cooling problem plagues computer center operation<lb/>
?end - iers<lb/>
-<lb/>
- a m<lb/>
the<lb/>
tend - a  ? ? ?<lb/>
ma: from.<lb/>
Eu . of<lb/>
rtical pro esses explained a third<lb/>
problem confronting the library.<lb/>
"We have another system he said,<lb/>
which serves to catalog all our serials<lb/>
holdings<lb/>
ipdated monthly, and it is used<lb/>
lo determine what we have in the<lb/>
? ibra - run and updated<lb/>
-<lb/>
I a catalog m that is n<lb/>
' updated the<lb/>
.<lb/>
v -ri-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
' it;<lb/>
ordering ir.d semis systems air<lb/>
conditioning.<lb/>
'The air conditioning is the only<lb/>
? kn taid H guelet He<lb/>
added tl tad always ex<lb/>
from the<lb/>
t<lb/>
CONSOLING BENEFITS<lb/>
Library has, however, bee"<lb/>
informed oi the benefits the<lb/>
computer will bring once it b<lb/>
operation<lb/>
"On the IBM. odd Mr- v inn, "we<lb/>
had one run each week As I r .Johnson<lb/>
explained to us. the Burroughs can run<lb/>
seven programs at nvV<lb/>
"That means they won't have to close<lb/>
out all other work as they did on the<lb/>
IBM just to do the library's run she<lb/>
said "We may be able to have a run<lb/>
twice a week we won't hold up student<lb/>
programming while doing library<lb/>
programs. "<lb/>
ln$titutionMl Development's Dr<lb/>
Brown was also enthusiastic about the<lb/>
C??!iS?OC?i-yJ6y<lb/>
'?yyyszssyzscsyz.<lb/>
i??iC?OCO&amp;<lb/>
i500<lb/>
Ii does much more than the IBM<lb/>
 laid "It ismorep.iwerfid.it is fasteI<lb/>
its memotv ? larger ami it can support<lb/>
terminals Yrminala would be remote<lb/>
hookups to various departments, such as<lb/>
Business Administration, enabling them<lb/>
ape into the computer<lb/>
It be better for registration, Inr the<lb/>
Business office, payrolls and academic<lb/>
research<lb/>
The Burroughs 5500 has the<lb/>
distinction of being purchased for<lb/>
S550.T62. unlike the IBM 360-30, which<lb/>
was rented 1 he cash price for the<lb/>
Burroughs unil was $1,234,425, but a<lb/>
substantial amount was subtracted as an<lb/>
educational discount.<lb/>
Why was the new computer purchased<lb/>
to begin with?<lb/>
"The IBM was completer) saturated<lb/>
said Brown V hMi two complete<lb/>
shifts working, with tome people going<lb/>
elsewhere to do their work.<lb/>
"It had limitations for example, it<lb/>
couldnl support terminals he said<lb/>
"There just wasn't enough horsepower<lb/>
or enough capability to accomodate<lb/>
Pete) I' i ainpion is on the loose!<lb/>
win, ii udging from his firtl oloalbum,<lb/>
ma) prove to i" his natural habitat<lb/>
V eai a( frampton quit Humble<lb/>
Pie simpis because he in ame musical!)<lb/>
Incongruous with the group lb bk? Pie<lb/>
had established themselves is.  hard<lb/>
drivin' to, k'n'ioii band, and quite<lb/>
lucceasfull) Frampton was into jaxz and<lb/>
quiet rock but comprised by playing Pie<lb/>
material to keep the peace among group<lb/>
and fang Us not that the inusi. al<lb/>
conipronn.se would not sell "Rocking<lb/>
the Killiiuire" has turned gold but that<lb/>
Frampton could not buy it go Peter<lb/>
FramptonS departure from Humble IV<lb/>
was really no shocking event.<lb/>
"Wind of Changa" is no contrivance<lb/>
that Frampton mustered up in g matter<lb/>
of weeks It is the result of in<lb/>
months of writing and planning, though<lb/>
in a sense, bits been in the makinc f<lb/>
' " Frampton'l anxieties and des,rs<lb/>
are reflet tad In many of hta songs.<lb/>
Brmgi thr wikJ f ihsng?<lb/>
I ? I , ?,? ,t,r<lb/>
tvtttffllm '? Itrtnge<lb/>
I hltt thtl you knot, Ihtl I llvr t III-<lb/>
Tsir  .(rt<lb/>
Wind ol Chtngt<lb/>
Frampton plays tight, dean electric<lb/>
?nd st" lurtari on all cuta, uaingno<lb/>
distortive devksja or gadgetry His voice,<lb/>
though strained on some of the hot and<lb/>
h?vy songs, is clear and honest. With<lb/>
's.iors l,ke Rmgo Starr. Klaus Voorman<lb/>
and Billy Preaton sitting in on the<lb/>
recording sessions<lb/>
tor<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
VOI Kl LNVITEO ro HI 01 R (.1 EST l <lb/>
MSI STf KIKIIM. ft) HI CONDUCTED<lb/>
1 N il R s. TciRl ftfUM<lb/>
" M)<lb/>
THl RS? ?<lb/>
OCTOBER l i o i-R(XJ<lb/>
I<lb/>
12<lb/>
NOOTH To u<lb/>
uu P M MR PM .<lb/>
QUILLAN. BOSE FACTORY<lb/>
research<lb/>
Specifications for a new computer had<lb/>
been drawn up a year ago; the Burroughs<lb/>
organization was chosen tin<lb/>
provided thi lowest bid for the desired<lb/>
computer<lb/>
Dr Johnson of the Computing Center<lb/>
stated that there was no telling when the<lb/>
Burroughs 5500 would be operating in<lb/>
full<lb/>
"We hope it won't be too long he<lb/>
said, "but then- are no definite dates<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVE I<lb/>
"II PRESENT <lb/>
(OMPl TFRIH) DEMONSTRATKW<lb/>
BOSE 901 Till worlds MOST<lb/>
OK THE<lb/>
UK.HI1<lb/>
UIIOMAIK<lb/>
OVFJUJNERS &amp;<lb/>
UNDERLINE RS<lb/>
ACCLAIMED SPEAKER SYSTEM. WOTHLR<lb/>
M DIOPHILE SERVICE FOR 01 R<lb/>
KIND FRIENDS<lb/>
Dcthe<lb/>
whule<lb/>
Crb bit<lb/>
in color.<lb/>
Cl STUMERS 5<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH I<lb/>
DOWVLOWN (,REJ Will I<lb/>
10:00 6 00 DAILY<lb/>
Here s the fastest, eas.est. most colortui wav<lb/>
to draw the prettiest eyes Do ,t w,th tZX,<lb/>
Maybelime that you wear two at a me<lb/>
Use subtly shaded Overi,ne7rFCh5n5?ai<lb/>
Brown. Nayy Ash Brown. Olive or Black<lb/>
Then contrast with pastel Underhners In<lb/>
Soft Blue or Mint Green Gverl.ners ana<lb/>
Underlmers-with a pure sable brush<lb/>
and creamy formula la very pretty<lb/>
cases (Refills available j<lb/>
The finest in eve make up yet sf isibiy priced<lb/>
sitting in<lb/>
Frampton s songs<lb/>
come across In beautiful stvle "The<lb/>
Lodger" and "Alright the two fmest<lb/>
roi kers on the alburn, display the<lb/>
ever-preaent guitar rifls and dnve that<lb/>
led the Tie" to fame.<lb/>
Of the softer tunes. Ml Vant to<lb/>
Be and "Lady Uerighl " aie some of the<lb/>
finest quiet rook sm.e Ten Years Afters<lb/>
I 8ns?a m Time Though it has<lb/>
orr the song to do. ?Jumping Jack<lb/>
Mash is a totally unexpected cut in that<lb/>
it disrupts the entire theme of the<lb/>
album,<lb/>
"Wind of Change" is a success<lb/>
whether the record sales are great or not<lb/>
hecauaa It is a personal success for Peter<lb/>
Frampton He took an enormous risk<lb/>
leaving the i'ie in its time of<lb/>
luperetardom and going on his own.<lb/>
Frampton does himself a favor by<lb/>
ignoring compromiae and playing im<lb/>
music. There is wind of change, indeed<lb/>
Chapel Hill mayor<lb/>
speaks here<lb/>
feels, should not be legalized until more<lb/>
is known about it.<lb/>
Having praised the Democrats of this<lb/>
area for their past accomplishments and<lb/>
urgi'd them to continue to "push the<lb/>
total Democratic ticket Lee predicted<lb/>
success for the party Quoting Frederick<lb/>
Douglas. Lee stated. "Power concedi-s<lb/>
nothing without a struggle " "I believe<lb/>
Lei' said, "that we will elect McOovem<lb/>
in 1972; that we will establish a closer<lb/>
relationship among the people, and that<lb/>
the good and decent will triumph over<lb/>
the bad and indecent And I believe that<lb/>
the outcome will be brotherhood<lb/>
Before being elected mayor of Chapel<lb/>
Hill. Lee'l work included field efforts<lb/>
with the Southern Christian Leadership<lb/>
Conference (SCLC) in Mississippi and<lb/>
Alabama m the early 1960s. In 1965. he<lb/>
led the Poor People's March through the<lb/>
st;ite of North Carolina.<lb/>
Greenville City Councilman John<lb/>
aylor Introduced Lee as "a giant of a<lb/>
man who believes the system IS not<lb/>
perfect but can be made to work for<lb/>
those whose only hope is the document<lb/>
under whic h this nation was founded<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
DELIVERY 7 DAYS A<lb/>
WEEK FROM 5-11 PM<lb/>
TRY OUR<lb/>
LASAGNE DINNER!<lb/>
SALAD &amp; ROLLS INCLUDED.<lb/>
J29 Cotonch Pk -so ,1f<lb/>
<lb/>
ti<lb/>
n<lb/>
v<lb/>
in<lb/>
to<lb/>
REWARD<lb/>
?nam?l inlav<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Lounge 752<lb/>
TWO ATLA<lb/>
13 Bneh-15<lb/>
EFFICIENC<lb/>
utilities lor<lb/>
758 7585<lb/>
MAKE YOU<lb/>
ElKlnc 505<lb/>
REAL CRIS<lb/>
Eighth and C<lb/>
problems, bi<lb/>
Drsli counse<lb/>
wasMgwajaa<lb/>
r<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Pre Reg.st<lb/>
Wednesi<lb/>
Pre Regutr<lb/>
Inter nanoi<lb/>
Thursda)<lb/>
PreReg'jtr<lb/>
Friday, <lb/>
Pre Regisn<lb/>
Free Flick<lb/>
in Wright<lb/>
Saturda)<lb/>
ECU Pintl<lb/>
Concert J<lb/>
Wednesc<lb/>
Internatior<lb/>
'Fiddler oi<lb/>
TFTi<lb/>
M eter ia<lb/>
F<lb/>
<pb facs="00039647_0003"/><lb/>
'iipton<lb/>
I<lb/>
??s and dcsiri's<lb/>
- Sllllpi<lb/>
Wind o Chtngt<lb/>
I lan .?(tri(<lb/>
cute, using no<lb/>
ry His von <lb/>
f the hot and<lb/>
honest. With<lb/>
ms Voorman,<lb/>
te on the<lb/>
pton's songs<lb/>
style. "The<lb/>
? two finest<lb/>
display the<lb/>
d drive that<lb/>
II 1 Want to<lb/>
some of the<lb/>
Vears After's<lb/>
High it has<lb/>
imping Jack<lb/>
d cut in that<lb/>
'me of the<lb/>
a success<lb/>
peat or not<lb/>
?8s for Peter<lb/>
?imous risk<lb/>
i time of<lb/>
n his own<lb/>
i favor by<lb/>
playing his<lb/>
flge, indeed<lb/>
ayor<lb/>
until more<lb/>
?rats of this<lb/>
hments and<lb/>
"push the<lb/>
e predicted<lb/>
g Frederick<lb/>
r eoiicedei<lb/>
i believe<lb/>
Mc Govern<lb/>
sh a closer<lb/>
e. and that<lb/>
umph over<lb/>
x'lieve that<lb/>
od<lb/>
? of Chapel<lb/>
eld efforts<lb/>
Leadership<lb/>
ssippi and<lb/>
n 1965. he<lb/>
!irough the<lb/>
nan John<lb/>
giant of a<lb/>
irn is not<lb/>
work for<lb/>
document<lb/>
founded "<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
HI M'lMlf COMMfTTII The<lb/>
Spirit Commute It having ? Banner<lb/>
Contatl this Thuraday hi the October 12<lb/>
ii- reljy All students indudJng<lb/>
fraternitM.K. .n ?,?, ???? m<lb/>
?nviU-d o Join The per?onK, that have<lb/>
the most original banner will receive a<lb/>
prize (,t the kci; citadel game<lb/>
HerearelhertilesoftheconU.st:<lb/>
I Hi Manners must not Contain any<lb/>
't)sne or vulgar words or pi.tun.s<lb/>
2. The BaniMn must he presented at<lb/>
the October 12 pep rally It is at this pep<lb/>
rally that the winner will he decided<lb/>
Various Banners will he chosen to appear<lb/>
m the stadium at the BCU Citadel game.<lb/>
3- I he Manners should be no longer<lb/>
than 1 5 feet.<lb/>
GREEK MYTH SUBJECT OF FILM<lb/>
"Black Orpheus" is considered by<lb/>
many film critics and audiences alike the<lb/>
most beautiful film ever made. It is a<lb/>
modem retelling or the Orpheus and<lb/>
Eurydice myth, peopled by a handsome<lb/>
all-black cast, set in Rio during the Mard.<lb/>
Gras carnival, and captured in dazzling<lb/>
color.<lb/>
Marpessa Dawn, as Eurydice, is one of<lb/>
the most hauntingly beautiful women<lb/>
ever on screen and Breno Mello is one of<lb/>
the handsomest men. Soon after they<lb/>
fall in love, their lives are threatened by<lb/>
Orpheus' jealous ex-lover and by a<lb/>
mysterious allegorical figure who chases<lb/>
Eurydice. Both figures lead to the final<lb/>
tragedy Orpheus' attempt to retrieve her<lb/>
from the bowels of Hades leads to his<lb/>
ruin.<lb/>
But a plot sumrrvy can't do the film<lb/>
justice; only its own beauty can: frenetic<lb/>
music and carnival street dancing snaking<lb/>
relentlessly through the movie; children<lb/>
playing atop the beautiful mountains of<lb/>
Brazil, and the revival of the powerful<lb/>
Greek myth. The film earned for its<lb/>
director Marcel Camus both the 1959<lb/>
Cannes Film Festival Grand Prix and the<lb/>
Academy Award Best Foreign Film. Its<lb/>
music (by Antonio Carlos Jobim) started<lb/>
the Bassa Nova movement. It is subtitled<lb/>
and free on Wednesday, October 11, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Wnght Auditorium .<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
ALJVfPTISINC, COP Ml W<lb/>
REWARD Ring left in ladiei room at North Cafattria Staal with<lb/>
anamal .nlay 377 Cotton Danita Oixon<lb/>
TWO ATLANTA GAS HEATERS 1 5 Brick 20,000 BTu $18 00<lb/>
13 Bnch 15.000 BTU. $12 00 Phona 752 3956 altar 5 pm<lb/>
EFFICIENCY APT One completely furniihad apartmant including<lb/>
utilities for 1 2 and 3 people Aciou liom cimpui 920 E 14th St<lb/>
758 2585<lb/>
MAKE YOUR OWN LAMPS with lamp knj available at Womack<lb/>
Electric 505 Pennsylvania Avenue<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION Phone 758HELP. corner of<lb/>
Eighth and Cotanche Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug<lb/>
problems, btrth control information, overnight housing<lb/>
Draft counsel Thursday 5 midnight An services free<lb/>
:c$$4444$c:<lb/>
H<lb/>
?WmrAnSS i numiteiunc.<lb/>
295 HUNT IN GTON AVENUE<lb/>
BOSTON,MASS.02115<lb/>
(6171267 3000<lb/>
MatenalsinourextensiveResearch Libraty<lb/>
$2 4 5 per page<lb/>
R search and Referenreonly'<lb/>
?????.????????<lb/>
gfl&amp;H<lb/>
, meet<lb/>
coo'd <lb/>
?eoW<lb/>
t ??'<lb/>
,i<lb/>
ealveS Z w tvi' ?even 1'? ieCe.?<lb/>
 I '<lb/>
M:t<lb/>
Ejtope<lb/>
 ?584108<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
rueedaj Gn tob l ntainhead, Pa)<lb/>
??o?QQOQOooooeQoooooeooQoooooaoooooc<lb/>
WANTED Girls to work part time in th? evening Can Louie's<lb/>
Lounge 752 2075<lb/>
Tuesday, October 10<lb/>
Pre Registration from 800am to600pm m Wnght<lb/>
Wednesday, October 11<lb/>
Pre-Registration from 800am to 5 00 p m in Wright<lb/>
International Film Lavender Hill Mob at 8 00 p m in Wright<lb/>
Thursday, October 72<lb/>
PreRagistration from 800am to500pm in Wright<lb/>
Friday, October 13<lb/>
Pre Registration from 8 00 a m to 5 00 p m in Wnght<lb/>
Free Flick Liberation of L B Jones at 7 00 p m and 9 00 p m<lb/>
m Wnght<lb/>
Saturday, October 14<lb/>
ECU Pirates lake on The Citadel at 1 50 p m at Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Concert J Geils Band at Minges Coliseum at 8.00 p m<lb/>
Wednesday, October 18<lb/>
International Film "Joe Hill in Wright Auditorium at 8 00 p m<lb/>
Fiddler on the Roof begins at 8 15 pm in McGmms Auditorium<lb/>
GERMAN CURRICULUM<lb/>
expansion Concerned about war,<lb/>
poverty, world anihilation, civil<lb/>
disobedience, rebellion, or violence? The<lb/>
Department of German and Russian will<lb/>
Introduce a new course winter quarter<lb/>
entitled "Modern German Drama in<lb/>
Translation: The Theater of Protest"<lb/>
(German 220.) The course will offer<lb/>
insights into German youth who have<lb/>
already gone through the peace, protest,<lb/>
and reform movements.<lb/>
The course will be taught in English<lb/>
and is open to all students. It carries<lb/>
three hours of credit which may be<lb/>
counted as partial fulfillment of the<lb/>
General College requirement in<lb/>
humanities and fine arts. The course will<lb/>
be taught winter quarter at 12 noon in<lb/>
SC-301. All interested students are<lb/>
encouraged to preregister for this course.<lb/>
SURREALISM COURSE OFFERED<lb/>
Got to get off the Humanities<lb/>
literature requirement for General<lb/>
College? Looking for something<lb/>
different and interesting? Read Camus,<lb/>
Sartre, Surrealism and other great<lb/>
French classics. In translation, of course.<lb/>
No knowledge of a foreign language is<lb/>
required. What will the course (French<lb/>
220, French Literature in Translation)<lb/>
be like? 'We'll read good books, think<lb/>
about them and talk about them " says<lb/>
Dr. T A. Williams, who will be teaching<lb/>
the course this winter. He invites<lb/>
interested students to come by to chat<lb/>
with him in Graham 101A.<lb/>
-PRE MEDPRE DENTAL CLUB<lb/>
M EE T ING-There will be an<lb/>
organizational meeting and orientation<lb/>
session for new members of the<lb/>
Pre-MedPre-Dental Club Tuesday, Oct.<lb/>
17, in room 103 of the biology building,<lb/>
at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Old members are urged to attend to<lb/>
help answer questions.<lb/>
This club plays an important role in<lb/>
directing and preparing a student for a<lb/>
career in medicine and dentistry. All<lb/>
interested persons are invited to attend.<lb/>
-CEREBRAL PALSY DRIVE-On<lb/>
Saturday. September 9, 1972, the<lb/>
Veterans Club of East Carolina<lb/>
University conducted an on-street<lb/>
solicitation on behalf of United Cerebral<lb/>
Palsy. The drive was held between 10:00<lb/>
a.m. and 2:00 p.m. at five intersections<lb/>
in Greenville. Nineteen Vets participated<lb/>
and raised $1,208.93. The national<lb/>
organization and the county<lb/>
organization presented certificates of<lb/>
appreciation this week to the Vets Club.<lb/>
-ABSENTEE BALLOT<lb/>
APPL ICA TIONS-Request for<lb/>
application for absentee ballots can be<lb/>
picked up at the Union desk, SGA office<lb/>
room 303 Wright Annex, and the offices<lb/>
of the girls' dorms. Fill these post cards<lb/>
out, return and the SGA will stamp and<lb/>
mail them for you. Requests should be<lb/>
made before October 20.<lb/>
-J. GEILS BAND-The East Carolina<lb/>
University Student Union presents the J.<lb/>
Geils Band along with Peter Frompton<lb/>
on Saturday, October 14, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Tickets are available<lb/>
now in the ECU Central Ticket Office<lb/>
priced at $2.00 for ECU students and<lb/>
$3.00 for the public. Public tickets are<lb/>
also available at the Record Bar.<lb/>
-WAIT MEETS The East Carolina<lb/>
Umversity Student Chapter of the<lb/>
National Association of Industrial<lb/>
technology ,NAIT) met on Tuesday<lb/>
mght, October 3.<lb/>
Then- were a number of new and<lb/>
prospective members present at the<lb/>
meeting. The new members were<lb/>
welcomed, and all prospective members<lb/>
were welcomed and encouraged to join<lb/>
the local chapter<lb/>
At the end of the busines meeting,<lb/>
refreshments were srved frVhile enjoying<lb/>
refreshments, a Him. "First Aid Now<lb/>
was shown. It was an excellent film<lb/>
presenting the latest in first aid<lb/>
techniques.<lb/>
The next meeting of the local chapter<lb/>
will be held on October 24 (Tuesday) at<lb/>
6:30 p.m. in room 104, Flanagan.<lb/>
Members and interested persons are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
-SUBMISSIONS FOR THE<lb/>
RE BEL-Again it is time for all talented<lb/>
artists to break forth with their<lb/>
masterpieces.<lb/>
'The Rebel is now taking<lb/>
submissions for the winter quarter issue.<lb/>
The staff is looking for poetry, prose,<lb/>
art, photography, and any other form of<lb/>
printable material.<lb/>
The Rebel office is located in Wright<lb/>
Annex in room 215. Regular office<lb/>
hours are from 4 to 5 in the afternoons,<lb/>
but submissions may be left in the folder<lb/>
on the outside of the office at any time.<lb/>
-BUCCANEER<lb/>
POR TRAITS-Buccaneer portraits will<lb/>
be taken Monday through Friday, 9-4 m<lb/>
room 308 Wright Annex from October 2<lb/>
to October 27. There is no sitting fee or<lb/>
dress requirements.<lb/>
McGOVERN MEETING<lb/>
There will be a meeting Thursday<lb/>
night, October 12, at the Methodist<lb/>
Student Center at 8:00.<lb/>
The purpose of this meeting is to<lb/>
finalize plans in Pitt County for<lb/>
McGovern's drive to the White House.<lb/>
All interested people are invited to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
-PHI BETA LAMBDA-Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda Business Fraternity met<lb/>
Tuesday night for induction of new<lb/>
members East Carolina's chapter is just<lb/>
one of several hundred chapters located<lb/>
throughout the United States with<lb/>
national headquarters in Washington<lb/>
DC.<lb/>
About 35 new members were<lb/>
inducted, and several vacancies in the<lb/>
Executive Council were filled as follows.<lb/>
Dan Hardee, Vice-President; Debbie<lb/>
Morgan. Treasurer; Walter House,<lb/>
Historian; and Tim Wehner, Reporter.<lb/>
Various committee chairmen were<lb/>
appointed, and faculty advisor. Dr.<lb/>
David Stevens, gave the new members an<lb/>
idea of what they could offer the<lb/>
fraternity and what the fraternity could<lb/>
offer them.<lb/>
Among subjects discussed were state<lb/>
and national conferences, interaction<lb/>
with local Jaycees, and activities at the<lb/>
bi-weekly meetings.<lb/>
All students interested in becoming a<lb/>
member of Phi Beta Lambda are invited<lb/>
to attend the next meeting. Notice of<lb/>
meetings will be posted throughout<lb/>
Rawl.<lb/>
COLOR IN THIS "MINI-<lb/>
PRESIDENTIAL<lb/>
1, Buy a bunch ot Flair jens. You need<lb/>
black, red. blue, brown, orange 3nd pur-<lb/>
ple. (You need them anyway tor school )<lb/>
2. Now -color m the picture according to<lb/>
these color guide numbers. (1). Black (2)<lb/>
Red (3). Blue (5). Brown (6) Orange (9)<lb/>
Purple Please do not color unnumbered<lb/>
areas<lb/>
POSTER" OF ONE OF THE<lb/>
CANDIDATES!<lb/>
3. Congratulations! You have created a<lb/>
genuine full color portrait of someone<lb/>
you know and love Maybe. If he is not<lb/>
yourfavorite presidential candidate, have<lb/>
patience You'll see your favorite next in<lb/>
the Flair Election CoMectionl<lb/>
(Don't forget to ask about Flair's running<lb/>
mate, the Flair Hot Liner.)<lb/>
<lb/>
-THE WAY MEETING-Dr Victor<lb/>
Paul Weirwille, founder and president ol<lb/>
The Way, Inc will be teaching on "The<lb/>
Bible" at the Ameriu ' ?gion Hut on<lb/>
Oct. 11, at 7.30 p.m WeirwiU'i<lb/>
organization is a practical,<lb/>
non-denominational, teaching ministry.<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK AND<lb/>
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
meeting The Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services Department will<lb/>
hold ;i departmental meeting Wednesday.<lb/>
October 11. at 8 p.m in the Allied<lb/>
Health School Auditorium room KM<lb/>
Cotton Brushed Denim<lb/>
for the Him But also fit<lb/>
the Her.<lb/>
We'll tell it like it is let's lay it all out flat. Our New<lb/>
York Office gave us a phone call They had made a<lb/>
great proposition. One of our manufacturers had made<lb/>
a big mistake and produced too many jeans over the<lb/>
contract. They wanted to make a deal and unload. We<lb/>
said, "Let's talk All this time we were thinking of<lb/>
ECU you were up the sleeve At the price offer they<lb/>
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different Frankly, we've never had a better deal in<lb/>
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Available in men's sizes 29 to 36<lb/>
JCPenney<lb/>
We know what you're looking for.<lb/>
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WE ARE A RAPIDLY<lb/>
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Elton Shoemakei<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
October 17<lb/>
W. T. GRANT COMPANY<lb/>
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Bits 1 hoot!<lb/>
Don't pollute<lb/>
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IMPORTANT SO CALL?<lb/>
TOL.LonfREE TODAY<lb/>
800 523 5308<lb/>
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12J?5 1646<lb/>
Our Cities<lb/>
Our Oceans.<lb/>
Our Trees.<lb/>
Our Rivers.<lb/>
Our Air.<lb/>
Our Mountains<lb/>
Our Fishes.<lb/>
QurTomorrovv s.<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
Jobs Are Available<lb/>
For FREE information<lb/>
on student assistance and<lb/>
Sr"g? Program send<lb/>
self-addressed STAMPFD<lb/>
envelope to the National<lb/>
Placement Registry, 1001<lb/>
tast Idaho St Kalkiwli<lb/>
MT 59901 KaUiP?"<lb/>
NO GIMMICKS<lb/>
$hn Jarferf<lb/>
Tice Drive-in<lb/>
Sunday. October 15 12 noon ? 5 p m<lb/>
APPLE-PEELERS to ZITHERS,<lb/>
?-?h JNEART,oFANCYjUNQUE<lb/>
(and .nythm, in-between) '<lb/>
The B.g, Big, Big Greenville Collector. Club<lb/>
By TO<lb/>
KM<lb/>
giant ? 11<lb/>
Souther<lb/>
champions<lb/>
defeating 1<lb/>
Our<lb/>
say:<lb/>
By EPHR<lb/>
S h 0 r 11<lb/>
jubilant<lb/>
1 o u n d I<lb/>
Rii'hmoi<lb/>
Pirate coac<lb/>
retoundei<lb/>
about the f<lb/>
"I made<lb/>
earlier this<lb/>
season star<lb/>
team stayei<lb/>
youngtten<lb/>
he said. <lb/>
so p homo<lb/>
freshman, .<lb/>
RKTl RNS<lb/>
return- the ?<lb/>
intramural<lb/>
profesMM in<lb/>
the title o<lb/>
another kap<lb/>
Defe<lb/>
as fi<lb/>
By DON T<lb/>
Sp.irt'<lb/>
A 2 5 - y<lb/>
Lynch toucl<lb/>
Lin Spear<lb/>
minutes left<lb/>
sealed N.C.<lb/>
Sunday a<lb/>
Football Clu<lb/>
a 9-0 triumpl<lb/>
The garni<lb/>
the varsity<lb/>
here, market<lb/>
this y ear<lb/>
ECU, despil<lb/>
Club's see<lb/>
?loppy perfoi<lb/>
Last wei<lb/>
topped Duk<lb/>
circus of errc<lb/>
only a fine<lb/>
ECU a v o 1<lb/>
embarrassme<lb/>
The ECU (<lb/>
highly prau<lb/>
coach T C<lb/>
following th<lb/>
State to a<lb/>
minus seven<lb/>
ground Stati<lb/>
Lynn Daniel.<lb/>
for Will)<lb/>
intimidated 1<lb/>
passes but<lb/>
complete 13<lb/>
152 yards.<lb/>
Daniel w<lb/>
completely r<lb/>
line w her<lb/>
counted.<lb/>
S1o ppy b<lb/>
missed assi<lb/>
poor timing<lb/>
from scoring<lb/>
or 30 poi<lb/>
fumbles, one<lb/>
to enemy<lb/>
factors in the<lb/>
sub-average ;<lb/>
the ground.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039647_0005"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
In 21-0 whitewashinQ<lb/>
i ?? tobei 10 Page '??<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
sT<lb/>
0<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
c<lb/>
0<lb/>
(0<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
U<lb/>
E<lb/>
D<lb/>
?0<lb/>
1<lb/>
ct i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Bucs get by big spider web<lb/>
By TOMMY CLAY<lb/>
ECU'l Pirates took a<lb/>
giant step toward the<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
championship Saturday be<lb/>
defeating the University of<lb/>
m<lb/>
Richmond Spiders<lb/>
enemy territory.<lb/>
Led by high stepping<lb/>
halfback Car lest er<lb/>
Crumple and the famed<lb/>
"Wild Dogs" defense, the<lb/>
Pirates rolled to a 21-0<lb/>
victory over the preseason<lb/>
conference favorites<lb/>
The Pirates, now 4-0,<lb/>
return home to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Saturday to face<lb/>
Our 'youngsters have grown'<lb/>
says happy coach after win<lb/>
By EPHRAIM POWERS<lb/>
Shortly after his<lb/>
jubilant Pirates had<lb/>
soundly whipped<lb/>
Richmond Saturday,<lb/>
Pirate coach Sonny Handle<lb/>
resounded his feelings<lb/>
about the great victory.<lb/>
"I made the statement<lb/>
earlier this year before the<lb/>
season started that if this<lb/>
team stayed healthy, these<lb/>
youngsters would grow<lb/>
he said "We start seven<lb/>
sophomores and one<lb/>
freshman, and believe me.<lb/>
these<lb/>
grown.<lb/>
youngsters have<lb/>
The coach claimed he<lb/>
had never seen a more<lb/>
dedicated group of young<lb/>
men. "The jury is not out<lb/>
on us anymore. These kids<lb/>
can do anything they want<lb/>
to<lb/>
Handle said that, even<lb/>
though perhaps the biggest<lb/>
game of the conference<lb/>
schedule is now behind<lb/>
them, he does not expect<lb/>
his players to have a<lb/>
letdown.<lb/>
(Staff pnoto by Roil Minn)<lb/>
RETURNS SERVE) Dr. I.arrv Means (face in wv,)<lb/>
returns the sene of Steve Moore during the finals of the<lb/>
intramural badminton tournament last week. <lb/>
professoi in the pscholog department. Dr. Means won<lb/>
the title over Moore, a Kappa Sigma, alter defeating<lb/>
another Kappa Sigma in the semis.<lb/>
"We will take them one<lb/>
at a time he said.<lb/>
Regarding his defensive<lb/>
unit, the "Wild Dogs" who<lb/>
number among national<lb/>
leaders, Randle said, "We<lb/>
have a fine defense. We did<lb/>
not let them control the<lb/>
football. We knew we had<lb/>
to do what we did to win.<lb/>
Our youngsters reacted<lb/>
like seasoned veterans<lb/>
against a very fine football<lb/>
team<lb/>
Randle continued praise<lb/>
of his staff of five<lb/>
assistants, saying that he<lb/>
"will not trade them for<lb/>
any 15 coaches in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
The ECU head coach<lb/>
added that he was<lb/>
"pleased to finally be with<lb/>
a winner after 11 season<lb/>
with a losing team in the<lb/>
pros<lb/>
Richmond coach Frank<lb/>
Jones said that "East<lb/>
Carolina just beat us in<lb/>
every phase of the game.<lb/>
They have a fine football<lb/>
team, and we had bad field<lb/>
position all day long. Now<lb/>
we'll just have to wait for<lb/>
someone else in the league<lb/>
to beat this bunch, and I'll<lb/>
tell you, there are not<lb/>
many teams that can do<lb/>
it<lb/>
A scout from the<lb/>
Citadel was overheard to<lb/>
say he had never seen a<lb/>
better ECU team.<lb/>
"It will take our best<lb/>
effort to stay on the field<lb/>
with this bunch next<lb/>
weekend he said.<lb/>
"They're really an<lb/>
improved squad<lb/>
Randle was highly<lb/>
pleased with the<lb/>
enthusiasm displayed by<lb/>
ECU supporters at<lb/>
Richmond and hopes for<lb/>
more of the same at<lb/>
Saturday's game, which<lb/>
The Citadel in another<lb/>
c r u 11 l S o u t h e r n<lb/>
Conference COnteSl The<lb/>
game, which will be<lb/>
regionally televised on<lb/>
ABC-TV, begins at 1 :50<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
C r u m pIe r, running<lb/>
behind the outstanding<lb/>
blocking of his teammates.<lb/>
carried the ball 15 times<lb/>
for 13 2 yards He<lb/>
combined with<lb/>
quarterback Carl<lb/>
Summerell, 9 for 15 in the<lb/>
passing department for<lb/>
111 yards, and kicker<lb/>
Ricky McLester to lead<lb/>
the offense to their 19<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Meanwhile, the Wild<lb/>
Dogs turned in another<lb/>
fine defensive performance<lb/>
and added a safety to the<lb/>
Pirate score.<lb/>
Lad by lineman Joe<lb/>
Tkach, linebackers Jim<lb/>
Post, Danny Kepley,<lb/>
Mutch Strawderman, and<lb/>
Hilly llibbs, and safety<lb/>
Mike Myrick, the Pirate<lb/>
defense held the Spiders to<lb/>
only 26 yards rushing and<lb/>
132 yards total offense,<lb/>
while picking up one<lb/>
fumble and two<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
It took the Pirates only<lb/>
12 plays to drive in after<lb/>
a Richmond punt for their<lb/>
only score of the half.<lb/>
Crumpler and fullback Les<lb/>
Strayhorn alternated for<lb/>
six plays to move the Bucs<lb/>
to the Richmond 13-yard<lb/>
line. Then Crumpler<lb/>
carried six consecutive<lb/>
times, finally scoring on<lb/>
fourth and goal from the<lb/>
one-yard line.<lb/>
With 3:40 left in the<lb/>
first quarter, McLester'i<lb/>
conversion attempt was<lb/>
blown wide by the swirling<lb/>
winds in City Stadium and<lb/>
the Pirates led 6-0<lb/>
Neither iearn ouid<lb/>
manage s score for the<lb/>
remainder of the half<lb/>
t h o ugh t h e H u ? s<lb/>
penetrated deep into<lb/>
Richmond territory tw ice,<lb/>
nee to the four yard line.<lb/>
On o n e o ccasion. a<lb/>
?11 -yard field goal attempt<lb/>
against the wind by<lb/>
Mc Lester fell inches short.<lb/>
Early in the second half.<lb/>
the Spiders promptly lost<lb/>
12 yards in three plays and<lb/>
the Richmond punter ran<lb/>
Out of the end one after S<lb/>
bad snap from center to<lb/>
give the Bucs an H-0 leaf!<lb/>
with 5:50 left in the<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Sumnirdl hit Wilfore for<lb/>
nine yards and the second<lb/>
TD. McLester'i PAT now<lb/>
was good, and the Pirai.<lb/>
led 15-0.<lb/>
Not relaxing even late m<lb/>
the game, the Wild Dop,<lb/>
aided by a Richmond<lb/>
penalty, kept the Spiders<lb/>
bottled up on their 12 A<lb/>
punt was out of bounds on<lb/>
the Spider 30-yard line.<lb/>
However, the Hues<lb/>
could manage only five<lb/>
yards in three plays, and<lb/>
Mc Lester came in again to<lb/>
attempt another field goal<lb/>
from the 32. This time, he<lb/>
was successful as his<lb/>
record 42-yard kick<lb/>
increased the Pirate lead to<lb/>
18-0 with 11:47 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
"WILD DOGS" HOLD; Digging in on<lb/>
crucial plays, ECI 's Wild Dogs"<lb/>
defensive unit held Richmond's<lb/>
highh touted Bart) Smith (33) to jui<lb/>
OVei 60 varda, below his usual figure.<lb/>
(SHf photo by Don Trlutnl<lb/>
Hen. defensive end Buddj Lower) m<lb/>
an unidentified "Dog" stop Smith v?h<lb/>
R o In n Hogue (44) and But<lb/>
Strawderman (35) hurrv in.<lb/>
Three teams are tied<lb/>
in independent loop<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
planned<lb/>
A poster competition<lb/>
will be sponsored by the<lb/>
Unh ersity ' Won spirit<lb/>
C m rn i t t e e during<lb/>
Saturday i game<lb/>
Posters must be<lb/>
a p p r o ved by the<lb/>
committee during the pep<lb/>
rally Thursday at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. on the Mall. The<lb/>
winner will be selected<lb/>
then but announced at<lb/>
halftime of the Citadel<lb/>
game.<lb/>
First prize will lie a keg<lb/>
of beer donated by the<lb/>
Hallow Distributing Co. of<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Banners and posters are<lb/>
to be no longer than 15'<lb/>
and they must contain no<lb/>
obscene words or pictures.<lb/>
Refreshments donated<lb/>
by the Union social<lb/>
committee will be served<lb/>
Thursday pnor to the pep<lb/>
rallv.<lb/>
will also<lb/>
television.<lb/>
be on regional<lb/>
Defense sparks 9-0 triumph<lb/>
as football club wins third<lb/>
tion<lb/>
and<lb/>
end<lb/>
ED<lb/>
rial<lb/>
K)I<lb/>
?<lb/>
UE,<lb/>
BV DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Spurn I ati"<lb/>
A 2 5-yard Dennis<lb/>
Lynch touchdown pass to<lb/>
Lin Spears with five<lb/>
minutes left in the game<lb/>
sealed N .( State's doom<lb/>
Sunday as the ECU<lb/>
Football Club hung on for<lb/>
a 9-0 triumph<lb/>
The game, played on<lb/>
the varsity practice field<lb/>
here, marked the third win<lb/>
this year for unbeaten<lb/>
ECU, despite the Pirate<lb/>
Club's second straight<lb/>
sloppy performance.<lb/>
Last week, the club<lb/>
topped Duke 26-10 in a<lb/>
circus of errors. This week,<lb/>
only a fine defense by<lb/>
ECU avoided total<lb/>
embarrassment.<lb/>
The ECU defensive unit,<lb/>
highly praised by head<lb/>
coach Tom Michel<lb/>
following the game, held<lb/>
State to a net total of<lb/>
minus seven yards on the<lb/>
ground State quarterback<lb/>
Lynn Daniel, a former star<lb/>
for Wilson Fike,<lb/>
intimidated ECU with 36<lb/>
passes but could only<lb/>
complete 13 of them for<lb/>
152 yards.<lb/>
Daniel was shut off<lb/>
completely near the goal<lb/>
line where it really<lb/>
counted.<lb/>
Sloppy ball handling,<lb/>
missed assignments and<lb/>
poor timing kept ECU<lb/>
from scoring its usual 20<lb/>
or 30 points. Three<lb/>
fumbles, one of them lost<lb/>
to enemy hands, were<lb/>
factors in the Pirate Club's<lb/>
sub-average 39 yards on<lb/>
the ground.<lb/>
Lynch, a u sually<lb/>
capable performer, also<lb/>
had a rough afternoon. He<lb/>
could only complete seven<lb/>
of 20 passes in the first<lb/>
half and finish 11 of 29<lb/>
passes for 160 yards.<lb/>
After a scoreless first<lb/>
quarter, Mike Richardson<lb/>
put the first points on the<lb/>
board with a 29-yard field<lb/>
goal in the second period.<lb/>
That was it for the<lb/>
scoring until Spears scored<lb/>
the touchdown in the<lb/>
dying moments when he<lb/>
took a pass on the State<lb/>
15 and eluded one final<lb/>
desperation tackle.<lb/>
The play capped a<lb/>
two play drive after a<lb/>
State punt was dead on<lb/>
the State 49. Both plays in<lb/>
the drive were passes from<lb/>
Lynch to Spears, one for<lb/>
24 and one for 25 yards.<lb/>
Spears, who was shut<lb/>
out going into the fourth<lb/>
quarter, also added a<lb/>
21-yard reception earlier<lb/>
in the period and his three<lb/>
catches led the team.<lb/>
For awhile, though, it<lb/>
seemed as though the 3-0<lb/>
lead might be in jeopardy<lb/>
for ECU.<lb/>
In key drives. Daniel<lb/>
brought State as close as<lb/>
the ECU 20, 33 and 12<lb/>
yard lines. However,<lb/>
interceptions by Mike<lb/>
Weirich stopped the first<lb/>
two threats and the clock<lb/>
ended the final bid.<lb/>
Michel, obviously<lb/>
displeased as his team<lb/>
prepares to play at Duke<lb/>
next weekend, said, "It's a<lb/>
shame we have such fine<lb/>
talent and we have to<lb/>
waste it.<lb/>
"Our practices were not<lb/>
so good, and our timing<lb/>
was way off he said.<lb/>
"But I thought the defense<lb/>
played a good game<lb/>
Cited by the coach for<lb/>
their efforts were Dave<lb/>
Szymanski, John Masotti,<lb/>
Bob Comerford, Bruce<lb/>
Garmon, John McMillan,<lb/>
York Rudisill and<lb/>
Richardson on defense as<lb/>
well as Tommy McDonald,<lb/>
Chip Isaacs and Phil<lb/>
Platania on offense.<lb/>
It has not been<lb/>
determined whether the<lb/>
game at Duke will be<lb/>
Saturday or Sunday.<lb/>
By LARRY CRANDALL<lb/>
Three teams remain<lb/>
virtually deadlocked for<lb/>
the lead in Independent<lb/>
League Two after the<lb/>
second week of intramural<lb/>
action.<lb/>
Jim Parsons and Tom<lb/>
Speros paced the<lb/>
depth-shy Medical<lb/>
Students, now 3-1, to an<lb/>
impressive 20-6 victory<lb/>
over the hapless UFO's,<lb/>
while the Wild Bunch and<lb/>
Filthy Ten, both 2-0-1.<lb/>
battled to a 6-6 tie in their<lb/>
showdown meeting last<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
The Chokers clearly<lb/>
established themselves as<lb/>
the top contingent in<lb/>
Independent League One<lb/>
by blasting both AFROTC<lb/>
and leading challenger<lb/>
Fraziers Follies. In four<lb/>
games, the<lb/>
offensively-oriented<lb/>
Chokers have outscored<lb/>
their opponents 122-6.<lb/>
In League One dorm<lb/>
action, the Football<lb/>
Players garnered a pair of<lb/>
triumphs during the week<lb/>
to move one-half game in<lb/>
front of Fourth Floor<lb/>
Aycock.<lb/>
The Sweat Hogs and<lb/>
Second Floor Ayclock<lb/>
dominated League Two<lb/>
play, while Jones Jocks<lb/>
emerged as the favorite in<lb/>
League Three.<lb/>
In Fraternity league<lb/>
play. Pi K appa Phi<lb/>
defeated Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
27-0, and Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon 12-6. to assume<lb/>
the league One lead.<lb/>
Three League Two<lb/>
members remain<lb/>
undefeated. Kappa Sigma<lb/>
and Sigma Chi Delta, both<lb/>
3-0-1. struggled to a 7-7<lb/>
standoff in the week's top<lb/>
encounter, while Kappa<lb/>
Alpha recorded two<lb/>
shutout victories to remain<lb/>
a prime contender for<lb/>
league honors.<lb/>
Game today<lb/>
Fl<lb/>
Dorms<lb/>
p.m. for the flag football<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
tcher and Jarvis<lb/>
collide today at 5<lb/>
(SU1 pnoto by Don Trautneckl<lb/>
NE1 RECORD: Ml plm shirks i Ricky McLeater (M)<lb/>
lxot! a sdkOOl record 42 ard field goal lale in<lb/>
Saturday's game despits a fine effort l one Snider to<lb/>
nets up a blocking<lb/>
block the kick. Tim<lb/>
vtall and holder Carl i<lb/>
DSSMTOSI (8(i<lb/>
iiiiiiueiell also looks on.<lb/>
Booters wallop Keydets;<lb/>
face 'Pack Wednesday<lb/>
Bad luck and an<lb/>
inability to stick to their<lb/>
own style of play resulted<lb/>
in the Bucs' second defeat<lb/>
of the season Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon at the hands of<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
The booters bounded<lb/>
right back Saturday,<lb/>
however, and it was a<lb/>
different story as they<lb/>
kept their record ever, by<lb/>
thrashing the Keydets of<lb/>
VMI 3-1<lb/>
It as disappointing<lb/>
show for the B ucs<lb/>
TURNS IT ON: High stepping Carlenter<lb/>
Crumpler moves out on one of his mam<lb/>
runs as the Wilson superstar gained over<lb/>
130 vards tor the Bucs against<lb/>
(St?" pnolo by Don TnutnecM<lb/>
Richmond. Spiders<lb/>
and Lee Pearson were<lb/>
Boh Saunderi (41)<lb/>
helpless in this<lb/>
Wednesday They felt they<lb/>
could soundly trounce the<lb/>
Wilmington ven.<lb/>
Everything kept going<lb/>
wrong, however.<lb/>
Two minutes shy of the<lb/>
final gun. Wilmington<lb/>
came up with a lucky goal<lb/>
despite fine defensive<lb/>
efforts by fullbacks Brad<lb/>
Smith and Bob Gebhardi.<lb/>
"They didn't beat us.<lb/>
we beat ourselves<lb/>
Gebhardt said later.<lb/>
The Pirate booters<lb/>
reignited and played up to<lb/>
their potential Saturday.<lb/>
They passed and<lb/>
controlled the ball well<lb/>
and were able to<lb/>
manipulate the Keydet<lb/>
booters.<lb/>
A11 the scoring took<lb/>
place in the first half. Tom<lb/>
O'Shea jumped into the<lb/>
highly competitive team<lb/>
scoring lead by drilling in a<lb/>
pass from Jeff Kunkler to<lb/>
put the Bucs up 1-0. VMI<lb/>
then tied the score with<lb/>
one of its few goals so far<lb/>
this season on a fluke<lb/>
score which spun off one<lb/>
of the goal uprights.<lb/>
Left wing Rick Johnson<lb/>
followed 10 minutes later<lb/>
with his first goal of the<lb/>
season by heading in a pass<lb/>
from forward Tom<lb/>
O'Shea<lb/>
Then to wind up the<lb/>
scoring and ice the Pirates'<lb/>
victory, junior Steve<lb/>
Tompkins scored his first<lb/>
career goal for the Bucs to<lb/>
insure a 3-1 win.<lb/>
The Pirate defense of<lb/>
Poser. Smith and Gebhardt<lb/>
teamed with goalie Rick<lb/>
Lindsay to limit the<lb/>
conference foe to just one<lb/>
score. The Pirates<lb/>
substituted extensively<lb/>
and every member of the<lb/>
team saw action.<lb/>
In beating VMI, the<lb/>
Pirates extended their<lb/>
conference record to 2-0.<lb/>
After four games, Tom<lb/>
O'Shea leads all Pirate<lb/>
scorers with three goals,<lb/>
but he is followed closely<lb/>
by Jeff Kunkler and Bob<lb/>
Gebhardt. each with two.<lb/>
The Bucs face awesome<lb/>
N.C. State Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon in Raleigh in<lb/>
what could prove their<lb/>
toughest test of the year<lb/>
Last year, the Bucs<lb/>
managed a tie with the<lb/>
Wolf pack<lb/>
ARMY SURPLUS<lb/>
Complete line of Fatigues,<lb/>
Navy Peacoats and Pant and<lb/>
Knapsacks. 515 Dickunon Avi<lb/>
xaooooooooooooooooo<lb/>
WHAT? FRESH OYSTERS, SHRIMP. FISH DAILY<lb/>
WHERE? HUEY'S, CHARLES ST ADJ. MINGES COL.<lb/>
HUEY'S SUPER $1.20 SPECIAL? CHICKEN PASTRY.<lb/>
STEW BEEF, SALISBURY STEAK. MEAT LOAF, VEAL<lb/>
CUTLET, V.BBQ CHICKEN. INCLUDES 2 VEGETABLES<lb/>
&amp; BEVERAGE.<lb/>
HUEY'S Rest. Charles<lb/>
756-4808<lb/>
PS. SUPPORT HUEY'S &amp; THE<lb/>
St.<lb/>
in Ji Moahr?orr Qaif?T4Tiru Gd a<lb/>
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lo btlieoa. 5 clear ?i o com 'm ond<lb/>
oor S?rSMuj G?? - .3o 4,1 cisanno.<lb/>
Ut'li b loAirvj-fdr u?o<lb/>
" Mr?.TrM auth<lb/>
VJtU t<lb/>
H. L HODGES CO.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
HUNTING-FISHING<lb/>
HARDWARE<lb/>
Telephone 752-4156<lb/>
)A<lb/>
<pb facs="00039647_0006"/><lb/>
i- v nil i tamneaO<lb/>
Philip E UilliMnix. Miloi in .hi.i<lb/>
LUI IORIALS<lb/>
COMMENTARY<lb/>
Tuesday. Octobet 10,1972<lb/>
Democracy thwarted again<lb/>
Hi- lid vis once more pried from the<lb/>
I "i student government politics<lb/>
Monday afternoon .is the I egislature<lb/>
PrePared to ratif) appointments to<lb/>
various judicial and regulatory boards li<lb/>
seems that .1 list of nominees w.is to be<lb/>
presented to the I egislature with the<lb/>
v ? onstitution providing that this list<lb/>
should come from the deliberations of<lb/>
the I xecutive ouncil, composed of<lb/>
(' President Vice pi esidenl.<lb/>
I reasurer, Secretary and .ill four lass<lb/>
Presidents<lb/>
However, the slate ol appointees w.is<lb/>
not the product ol normal consideration<lb/>
by the I xecutive Council js might be<lb/>
assum d si, President 1 uisana,<lb/>
 it e president Vtkinson, and 1 reasi<lb/>
Browne engaged in their own private<lb/>
consultation to arrive at their own slate<lb/>
ol nominees I Ik- class presidents wen<lb/>
not consulted, and did not interview any<lb/>
ol the candidates<lb/>
But, five minutes before I egislature<lb/>
was to convene, the 1 lass presidents ? ere<lb/>
I xecutive Suite and<lb/>
.1 complete list ol<lb/>
ushered into the<lb/>
presented with<lb/>
appointees "hey were asked ii endorse<lb/>
the slate completely, and immediately,<lb/>
.is .hi act of political good faith in<lb/>
I uis.in.is administration aiu-i only ten<lb/>
minutes ol wimikKt.iik the foui class<lb/>
presidents numbly complied and voted<lb/>
to accept the entire list of appointees,<lb/>
without exception<lb/>
The I egislature then proceeded to<lb/>
ratify the nominees with only minoi<lb/>
debate<lb/>
Had any oi the class officers insisted<lb/>
upon full exercise ol then Constitutional<lb/>
duties, the appointments and interviews<lb/>
would have been invalid and conducted<lb/>
over, tins time in the mannei proscribed<lb/>
in the Constitution. r.itlu-r than in the<lb/>
manner most convenient to I uisana,<lb/>
Atkinson, and Brow<lb/>
Rathei than rock the boat, youi 1 lass<lb/>
presidents agreed to relinquish both youi<lb/>
and their Constitutional rights, to serve<lb/>
convenience<lb/>
Vietnam war stands as monument<lb/>
to American political folly<lb/>
By TIM WEHNER<lb/>
Mana-f t Edit<lb/>
Go-I " I wi to ight II the<lb/>
: do it, we Vmerii 1<lb/>
N it not .1 game ol football but a<lb/>
te oi politics where the score is<lb/>
measured in Im lost and targets<lb/>
demolished You know, it's .1 shame the<lb/>
people ol South Vietnam only want<lb/>
their rice paddies and peace; think of all<lb/>
the problems they could face during<lb/>
election times in their country hese<lb/>
people could have a democratic<lb/>
trnmenl of their own but then they<lb/>
a who to vote for because<lb/>
immunieation a we nehteous<lb/>
worlders<lb/>
know it is still<lb/>
decades away from<lb/>
most 01 this<lb/>
pop<lb/>
It iv hard tor the<lb/>
peopl ' Vmerica<lb/>
to realize that th e<lb/>
Sout h Vietnamese<lb/>
don't care who their<lb/>
leaders are .is long as<lb/>
their bellies a a- full and they ean walk to<lb/>
their rice paddies or markets without the<lb/>
ol being murdered<lb/>
When the war first involved<lb/>
x fricans we were considered the<lb/>
v ipreme warrior, but the GI's morals ai d<lb/>
the indignities inflicted upu a proud<lb/>
people soon lowered the American to<lb/>
the leel ol .1 sex-starved, filthy rich,<lb/>
animal<lb/>
But you can't blame the GI; he didn't<lb/>
want the war either He didn't lose<lb/>
anything in Indochina. From the day <lb/>
t.l vets fool on the South Vietnamese<lb/>
soil he counts the days until he is the<lb/>
ultimate 'short-timer the man with<lb/>
just hours left in that country When the<lb/>
"Freedom Bird" leaves the ground and<lb/>
below, the snake like canals yet smaller,<lb/>
you ean actually hear a sigh oi reliet-a<lb/>
rebel that you don't have to fight the<lb/>
war on the enemy's terms anymore, a<lb/>
relict that you don't have to fight the<lb/>
germs, dysentary, rats or the apathy ol<lb/>
the South Vietnamese Apathy? maybe a<lb/>
better word would be bewilderment,<lb/>
alter decades of fighting and nothing to<lb/>
show for it The South Vietnamese don't<lb/>
want the war-the men fighting don't<lb/>
want the war-who in the hell started this<lb/>
mess-politicians!<lb/>
Give a hoot!<lb/>
Don't pollute, j<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
G.S. Troop 470 is collecting I<lb/>
magazines and newspapers <lb/>
each Saturday in October '<lb/>
from 10-4 pm. ,<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
n ?<lb/>
Urop your<lb/>
paper at Rose High School 1<lb/>
or call: 756 2568 or I<lb/>
7564730. I<lb/>
SUPPORT THE GIRL SCOUT PAPER DRIVE'<lb/>
Mick Godwin, Business Manager Tim M?1(.r. Managing Kdilc<lb/>
Ron wertheim, Advertising Manager<lb/>
lie, Perkins<lb/>
New Editor<lb/>
Bruce Parrish<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Don Trausneck<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
(r M ACTION <lb/>
AlTMOvJ&amp;M I poVoT AtwWM S.<lb/>
v Follow fH6 COfslSriTUTicwJ<lb/>
l Ask fop A voTfc of<lb/>
IWPOVAI SHOUJNG<lb/>
y HOUR OOrslFiPfcNCt IN<lb/>
f1rob' Bw<lb/>
Ko.ss Mann<lb/>
Chief Photographer<lb/>
"? L Biker, Faculty Advisor<lb/>
Fountainhead is published by the students of East Carolina University under the<lb/>
auspices of the Student Publications Board Telephone 758 6366<lb/>
BAA A A<lb/>
t<lb/>
L I 1-I 1 .y. ;<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I .1<lb/>
?-W V-<lb/>
Congressmen misusing franking privilege<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
Congressmen are playing to fast and<lb/>
loose with their free postal privileges this<lb/>
j ear that misuse of the mails is becoming<lb/>
a major campaign issue in political races<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
I h e Fair Campaign Practices<lb/>
Committee reports it has already<lb/>
received twice as many complaints about<lb/>
congressional abuse of the mails in this<lb/>
campaign as u received during the entire<lb/>
1970 campaign<lb/>
Formal complaints have been filed<lb/>
againsl James Howard, D NJ? Hamilton<lb/>
Fish. H New York. John Moss. D-Calif<lb/>
Bob Mathias, K Calif George Shipley.<lb/>
D III John Asbrook. R Ohio and Albert<lb/>
Johnson. R-Calif. In addition, the<lb/>
committee says there are dozens of other<lb/>
cases in which congressmen have<lb/>
allegedly abused the mails but have not<lb/>
been challenged formally by their<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
Under the law. congressmen can use<lb/>
the mails free of charge for official<lb/>
business, but incumbents have become<lb/>
so ingenious at disguising political<lb/>
puffery as official business that the<lb/>
Postal Service has given up trying to<lb/>
enforce the law.<lb/>
Congressmen have perfected all sorts<lb/>
of ways to circumvent mailing<lb/>
restrictions. Frequently, they insert<lb/>
self-serving material into the<lb/>
Congressional Record, which makes it<lb/>
official business. Then congressmen<lb/>
order reprints and mail them to<lb/>
constituents at public expense.<lb/>
Questionnaires, which are drafted,<lb/>
ostensibly, to solicit the views of<lb/>
constituents, are another ruse used by<lb/>
congressmen to solicit votes. The<lb/>
questions are carefully loaded to<lb/>
produce the desired political results.<lb/>
Once tabulated, the results are released<lb/>
to voters in massive mailings once again<lb/>
at public expense.<lb/>
These practices, among others, have so<lb/>
e.xficerbated postal authorities that they<lb/>
now refuse even to send advisors to<lb/>
Capitol Hill to caution congressmen not<lb/>
to abuse the mails. "It simply would do<lb/>
no good one insider said.<lb/>
Why have congressmen shifted so<lb/>
dramatically to massive direct mailings<lb/>
this year to get themselves re-elected<lb/>
Besides the Postal Service's reluctance to<lb/>
enforce the law, political watchdogs cite<lb/>
new restrictions on political ads in the<lb/>
media and the reapportionment of<lb/>
numerous congressional districts as the<lb/>
major factors contributing to Congress's<lb/>
latest assault on the V S. mails.<lb/>
PENSION REFORMS REBUFFED<lb/>
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has<lb/>
reached into the Senate and effectively<lb/>
squashed legislation that would protect<lb/>
older citizens from being cheated out of<lb/>
their pensions.<lb/>
The Senate Labor Committee, which<lb/>
has spent years investigating pension<lb/>
abuses, has established that citizens who<lb/>
lose their jobs before retirement often<lb/>
receive no pensions at all even though<lb/>
collectively they contribute millions of<lb/>
dollars to pension funds.<lb/>
To correct such abuses, the committee<lb/>
drafted careful reforms. But the guilty<lb/>
companies, working through the U.S.<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce, have managed to<lb/>
cheat their employees again.<lb/>
The Chamber of Commerce got the<lb/>
bill referred to the Senate Finance<lb/>
Committee headed by Big Businesss<lb/>
buddy. Senator Russell Long. When the<lb/>
legislation came back, it was stripped of<lb/>
its meaning. The key provisions had been<lb/>
gutted. Labor Committee members are<lb/>
funous and have promised a big battle<lb/>
on the Senate floor.<lb/>
1<lb/>
Meanwhile, a TV network has<lb/>
dramatized the great pension scandal in a<lb/>
nationwide television documentary. But<lb/>
we have learned that corporate powers<lb/>
are putting quiet pressure on the TV<lb/>
network not to make the documentary<lb/>
available for private showing.<lb/>
Spate Age Convenience he<lb/>
National Aeronautics and Space<lb/>
Administration has proudly announced<lb/>
in a press release that it has awarded a<lb/>
contract to a private firm to develop the<lb/>
world's most expensive toilet. The<lb/>
commode under contract will be<lb/>
launched into space for use by<lb/>
astronauts m the space shuttle program.<lb/>
The pricetag for I prototype toilet is<lb/>
staggering $238,000 .Meanwhile, back<lb/>
on earth, the government is spending<lb/>
hundreds of thousands more dollars for<lb/>
the convenience of its employees. This<lb/>
year, for example, the government<lb/>
estimates it will spend $350,000 for<lb/>
smoking Stands. If public money isn't<lb/>
going down the drain, it's going up in<lb/>
smoke.<lb/>
Union Strikes in '73 'resident<lb/>
Nixon's Wage Board has held salary<lb/>
increases to about five-and-a-half percent<lb/>
a year. But after the election, the board<lb/>
is expected to tighten controls on wages<lb/>
in an attempt to reduce the annual wage<lb/>
increase below five percent. The move,<lb/>
no doubt, would infuriate unions Their<lb/>
main complaint: The President's controls<lb/>
would be tough on workers' wages but<lb/>
not tough enough on prices and profits.<lb/>
If the wage lid is tightened, a showdown<lb/>
may come next year in the form of<lb/>
strikes by auto, construction, airline, and<lb/>
railroad employees.<lb/>
A Visa for a Star Recent press<lb/>
reports claimed that movie star Vanessa<lb/>
Redgrave had loen denied a temporary<lb/>
visa to shoot a new film in the United<lb/>
States. The reports, carried widely in the<lb/>
press, speculated that the decision was<lb/>
motivated by Miss Redgrave's outspoken<lb/>
views against the Vietnam War. We have<lb/>
done our own checking. At the time of<lb/>
the reports. Miss Redgrave had not yet<lb/>
formally applied for a visa. Even a<lb/>
famous movie star like MiSS<lb/>
Redgrave has to apply for a visa in<lb/>
order to get one.<lb/>
FORUM<lb/>
mS&amp;9SM9MnmsmMmmimiimmaaimssmSieei6tSSS&amp;<lb/>
Boosts Nixon<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
For those people that are undecided<lb/>
on who to vote for for President, let me<lb/>
offer this bit of advice. If for no other<lb/>
reason, vote for President Nixon simply<lb/>
because the Fountainhead is against him.<lb/>
For the past four years, this newspaper<lb/>
has consistently supported militant<lb/>
radicals, communist aggressors, and<lb/>
immoral causes. When this same<lb/>
newspaper endorses George McGovern,<lb/>
then I know positively that something<lb/>
has got to be wrong with the man.<lb/>
McGovern is more attuned to the<lb/>
demands of violent protestors and more<lb/>
concerned with the rights of criminals<lb/>
than he is concerned with the wishes of<lb/>
the majority of Americans. If McGovern<lb/>
is such a compassionate man, then why<lb/>
is it that he seems so unconcerned with<lb/>
the people of South Vietnam? A<lb/>
communist takeover of the country<lb/>
would means the slaughter of tens of<lb/>
thousands of South Vietnamese who<lb/>
have fought so long and hard to preserve<lb/>
their freedom. American liberals have<lb/>
always prided themselves in the<lb/>
promotion of individual rights and<lb/>
dignity. Yet, today, they are the ones<lb/>
that give moral support to a Hanoi<lb/>
regime that is completely insensitive to<lb/>
humanitarian principles. Hanoi has no<lb/>
concept whatsoever of personal rights or<lb/>
liberties. The Hanoi government stands<lb/>
for everything that a liberal should be<lb/>
against.<lb/>
McGovern is an extremist of the left<lb/>
and is outside the mainstream of<lb/>
American thought. President Nixon, on<lb/>
the other hand, has won the approval of<lb/>
most Americans for his sound judgment<lb/>
and leadership over the past four years<lb/>
May the best man win re-election.<lb/>
David Harrington<lb/>
Mr Harrington<lb/>
Your opinion notwithstanding. Fountainhead t<lb/>
editorial columns have been proud to support, in the<lb/>
past, such militant radicals" as Wilbur Hobby,<lb/>
communist aggressors "such as Dr Leo Jenkins, and<lb/>
such "immoral causes as food tor the starving m Bufra<lb/>
As a point of information, editorials represent the<lb/>
opinion of the editor ,n-ch,ef, and not necessarily<lb/>
those of Fountainhead or of East Carolina University<lb/>
Editor in-chuf<lb/>
Thanks paper staff<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
On behalf of all the students at Haus<lb/>
Steineck, ECU Bonn, I would like to<lb/>
thank the staff for mailing the first few-<lb/>
editions of the Fountainhead to us air<lb/>
mail. All of the students here were eager<lb/>
to hear some news from our home<lb/>
University I know most of the students<lb/>
at ECU would like to hear from us also.<lb/>
We are going to try to send as many<lb/>
articles as possible to the Fountainhead<lb/>
to keep everyone informed about our<lb/>
experiences in Germany as well as other<lb/>
parts of Europe we venture to.<lb/>
Thank you once again for sending the<lb/>
news from home so quickly. We do<lb/>
appreciate your thoughtfulness and will<lb/>
be looking forward to receiving future<lb/>
editions. You will be hearing from us<lb/>
again very soon.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Lynne Barrett-Publicity<lb/>
Pluj Sti entt from ECU Bonn<lb/>
Bonn reports<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to share some of my first<lb/>
experiences at ECU-Haus Steineck with<lb/>
the rest of my fellow students In the<lb/>
two weeks I've been overwhelmed by the<lb/>
kindness and patience of the German<lb/>
people and their lively, refreshing<lb/>
outlook on life It is a beautiful country<lb/>
with rolling hills and castle rums on<lb/>
almost every hilltop Our first trip was a<lb/>
bus ride M0 miles to Rudesheim, a tounst<lb/>
town full of souvenirs and Sunday<lb/>
sightseers. Throughout the town were<lb/>
wine vending machines and people in<lb/>
groups stopping to roar out a song and a<lb/>
toast to their friends Some of us ate hot<lb/>
sausages with mustard, fthe equivalent of<lb/>
an American hotdog) and mingled with<lb/>
the natives Utei we took a chairlift<lb/>
over the vineyards to a huge monument<lb/>
dedicated to the formation of the second<lb/>
Reich This was the only formal trip we<lb/>
have taken so far, but Students on their<lb/>
own have gone to Amsterdam, Cologne,<lb/>
and on shopping excursions into Bonn<lb/>
Last weekend, I went to the motoi races<lb/>
at Nurburg Ring and camped bes.de the<lb/>
racetrack At night there, people<lb/>
gathered around a big fire and consumed<lb/>
unbelievable quant.t.es of beer and Sana<lb/>
folk songs. My roommate and another<lb/>
Student last weekend packed a lunch and<lb/>
'limbed a mountain to see some ruins of<lb/>
a castle, eating blackberries all the wav<lb/>
All told, the scene here ,s ?.?'<lb/>
exotic. We have ma? serv.ee. our own<lb/>
bar downstairs, and a warm family<lb/>
atmosphere Since our teachers live here<lb/>
?can discuss our problems or"<lb/>
homework over a beer. ?. 1(j<lb/>
'??"t.ona. atmosphere on an indiv,dull<lb/>
basis ? a reality here. Anyway. we <lb/>
diggui .t AufWaderaahen,<lb/>
K?ve Johnston<lb/>
ECU Bonn<lb/>
C<lb/>
H<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>