<?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="00039651_0001"/>
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where the<lb/>
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and the truth shall make you free<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N CAROLINA<lb/>
VOLUME IV. NUMBER 14<lb/>
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1972<lb/>
Colder. 'We need it<lb/>
MRC appropriates fund for campus police liahts<lb/>
HENDAE.PUGH were the only members of the MRC who ?? (,n the srivW t? u ??. W <lb/>
By BRENDA E PUGH<lb/>
Stiff Wm.h.<lb/>
On Oct. 10, the Men's Residence<lb/>
Council appropriated funds for two blue<lb/>
lights for campus police cars.<lb/>
According to Allen Groom, Governor<lb/>
of Slay Dormitory. William (Bill)<lb/>
Bodenheimer, President of MRC made<lb/>
the original request on Oct. 3, "He asked<lb/>
that MRC pass a resolution allocating<lb/>
$200 for one blue light and one siren for<lb/>
one carsaid Groom.<lb/>
NO FUNDS<lb/>
"Bodenheimer said that no state funds<lb/>
are available for the equipment Groom<lb/>
Continued. "Bodenheimer also talked<lb/>
about how many people could be helped<lb/>
?Bore easily if the cars could be<lb/>
recognized as emergency vehicles and<lb/>
about how the purchases would improve<lb/>
MRC-Campus Police relations. Me also<lb/>
?aid that the Women's Residence Council<lb/>
Would he asked to do the same thing for<lb/>
another car<lb/>
Opposition to the resolution came<lb/>
from Bill Hogarth, Lieutenant Governor<lb/>
Of Slay Dormitory and from Groom.<lb/>
Hogarth asserted that state funding was<lb/>
appropriate and that it should be<lb/>
investigated further.<lb/>
Bodenheimer was unavailable for<lb/>
comment at the time of this writing.<lb/>
"My major contention explained<lb/>
Groom, "is that Bill (Hogarth) and I did<lb/>
not get notices of the Oct. 10 meeting<lb/>
when the proposal was voted on. We<lb/>
were the only members of the MRC who<lb/>
didn't. I am sure this was not<lb/>
deliberate just an oversight<lb/>
On Oct. 6, Chief of Campus Police,<lb/>
J.L. Harrell purchased two blue lights<lb/>
costing $184.50 out of his personal<lb/>
funds. According to Campus Security<lb/>
Officer Joseph H. Calder, Harrell was<lb/>
?aBfc&amp; VL<lb/>
acting on the advice ol Jamei B. Mallory,<lb/>
Associate Dean of Student Affairs.<lb/>
Mallory had indicated thai MRC would<lb/>
reimburse Harrell.<lb/>
QUESTIONED<lb/>
C.C. Rowe. advisor to MRC, was<lb/>
questioned about the purchase. He<lb/>
responded, Chief Harrell must<lb/>
been reasonably sure that he would be<lb/>
reimbursed l don't know who would<lb/>
have given him thisaasuram i<lb/>
The following Tuesday, in the a ?? i<lb/>
of Hogarth and Groom, MR<lb/>
appropriate the monies to Harrell.<lb/>
PARTLY FROM FEES<lb/>
MRC funds, according to Groom,<lb/>
come partly from the $3.00 MRl<lb/>
required of male dormitory students<lb/>
each year. The n si i<lb/>
machines thai MRC leasea from a<lb/>
commercial dealer Fifty p i the<lb/>
profits from these machirn<lb/>
the MRc treasury<lb/>
SOURCE OF SOME CONFUSION: lwo police lights for which MRC funds we?,?<lb/>
I in. i r-nuio uy now Minn)<lb/>
If MRC could<lb/>
come up with some<lb/>
money would<lb/>
like some sirens'<lb/>
Rowe stated that other purchases<lb/>
from this treasury haw- included<lb/>
coin-operated washers, color televisions,<lb/>
and ice machines for the men's<lb/>
dormitories<lb/>
Dr. Harry McLean of the ECU<lb/>
Infirmary confirmed that th Can <lb/>
Police often help out m emergencies. "In<lb/>
tli- short timi i ve been hen- (since July<lb/>
I, 19721. the Campus Police have<lb/>
brought students to the Informary fairly<lb/>
frequently said McLean "We call them<lb/>
to transport students to Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in emergency situations much<lb/>
more frequently several times a week.<lb/>
I'd say. We consider the Campus Pole ? a<lb/>
very valuable right arm<lb/>
It is not clear who originally raised the<lb/>
question of lights and sirens According<lb/>
to Groom. Bodenheimer suggested that<lb/>
he had been approached bj the campus<lb/>
police department ('aider said, "D<lb/>
Mallory had been approai hed in late<lb/>
September by students complaining<lb/>
because then- wai no waj of<lb/>
distinguishing the police can from other<lb/>
cars in an emergency Mallorj thi ? came<lb/>
to me with the idea that MR might use<lb/>
some of its funds to get us some lights<lb/>
Calder explained that tin- request was<lb/>
? ? ?? essary because there it no money in<lb/>
the campus ponce budget for the<lb/>
equipment and because requests for<lb/>
federal funds have not been approved<lb/>
He stated, "I appreciate it because we<lb/>
need it<lb/>
The existing sirens. Calder and Harrell<lb/>
agreed, would have been adequate in<lb/>
1920. "If MRC would come up with<lb/>
some money Calder said. "I would like<lb/>
some sirens. One of the one- we have<lb/>
belongs to Officer Kenneth Paige and the<lb/>
other belongs to me<lb/>
Loop hole allows unregistered to vote Pr'2e winning editor visits ECU<lb/>
October 9 was the last day to register<lb/>
to vote for the November 7 general<lb/>
election but you can still vote for the<lb/>
president of the Cnited States because of<lb/>
? loophole in federal laws.<lb/>
The federal law is the 1970 Voting<lb/>
Rights Act which enables unregistered<lb/>
t citizens who have been absent from their<lb/>
county, state, or nation to vote in the<lb/>
Esidential contest. Also, the Supreme<lb/>
art ruled last year that if persons<lb/>
oad would be able to vote without<lb/>
registering, persons who have not been<lb/>
absent from their county, state, or<lb/>
nation can vote for president without<lb/>
registering. State Elections Director for<lb/>
North Carolina Board of Elections Alen<lb/>
Brock stated that persons who failed to<lb/>
register because of apathy or were absent<lb/>
from the county can still vote in the<lb/>
presidential election.<lb/>
CHANCE OF FRAUD<lb/>
Brock feels that the loophole in the<lb/>
federal law allowing unregistered citizens<lb/>
to vote in a presidential election leaves<lb/>
much chance for fraud because it is hard<lb/>
to tell if the person passes qualifications<lb/>
to register to vote. The Board of<lb/>
Elections of North Carolina will try to<lb/>
alleviate this problem by requiring<lb/>
persons who file for a presidential ballot<lb/>
to sign an affidavit.<lb/>
SPECIAL INTEREST<lb/>
At East Carolina University the Public<lb/>
Relations Office of the Student<lb/>
Government Association which handles<lb/>
Voter Registration is taking special<lb/>
interest in this ruling. "It will renew our<lb/>
voter registration movement and give<lb/>
students a second chance to vote in the<lb/>
November election stated Robert<lb/>
Twilley, Secretary of Public Relations.<lb/>
"Even though you will only be able to<lb/>
vote in the presidential election, it is still<lb/>
an opportunity for students' voice to be<lb/>
heard The Public Relations Office is<lb/>
offering request for presidential ballots<lb/>
in room 303 Wright Annex (SGA<lb/>
Office). The SGA will stamp and mail<lb/>
these requests.<lb/>
REQUIREMENTS<lb/>
The requirements for the presidential<lb/>
ballot an- that the citizen be a legal<lb/>
resident of the county (30 days.) The<lb/>
requests have to be made by November 1<lb/>
and the ballots be in the elections board<lb/>
by November 4. Students are to request<lb/>
presidential ballots for the county where<lb/>
their parents live. Presidential ballots can<lb/>
be obtained and voted in the elections<lb/>
board office, so students are advised to<lb/>
go home to do so between now and<lb/>
November 1.<lb/>
EMPHASIS<lb/>
"There needs to be emphasis placed<lb/>
on a few things about this presidential<lb/>
ballot explained Twilley. "This ballot<lb/>
is only for unregistered citizens and it is<lb/>
only for the presidential contest. Also, it<lb/>
is best to send your request to the<lb/>
elections board of your parents' home<lb/>
because the N.C. State Board of<lb/>
Elections has failed to recognize Pitt<lb/>
County as the home for East Carolina<lb/>
students, even though they may have<lb/>
passed the 30 day requirement as stated<lb/>
in the 1970 Voting Rights Act<lb/>
One of the state's most outstanding<lb/>
newspaper editors who led his editorial<lb/>
staff U) a Pulitzer Prize two years ago<lb/>
will speak at an open meeting of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Gamma journalism fraternity<lb/>
?XvXW-WrKW-SvWftWrWft<lb/>
News in Brief<lb/>
Don't blow it<lb/>
vote Absentee<lb/>
or<lb/>
November 7<lb/>
J. PATRICK KELLY of the Winston<lb/>
Salem Journal and I win Cit Sentinel<lb/>
v i 11 lecture Wednesday at 7:30.<lb/>
Wednesday. Oct. 25, m 182 New Austin<lb/>
at 7.30 p.m.<lb/>
J. Patrick Kelly, executive news editor<lb/>
of the Winston-Salem Journal, will spend<lb/>
Wednesday night and Thursday on<lb/>
campus counseling and sp aking to<lb/>
journalism classes by special arrangement<lb/>
with the American Society of Newspaper<lb/>
Editors and the Newspaper Fund of the<lb/>
Wall Street Journal as a part of their<lb/>
"Editor-inResidenee" program on<lb/>
college campuses across the country.<lb/>
After serving as managing editor of<lb/>
the Raleigh Times and Sunday editor of<lb/>
the Atlanta Journal and Constitution, he<lb/>
returned to the Winston-Salem Journal<lb/>
and Twin City Sentinel in 1964. where<lb/>
his career had begun in 1947 following<lb/>
graduation from the L'NC School of<lb/>
Journalism.<lb/>
In 1958 Kelly was one of 11<lb/>
newspapermen in this country awarded a<lb/>
Nieman Fellowship for a year's study at<lb/>
Harvard, where he concentrated on<lb/>
courses in the Middle East. Far East and<lb/>
American foreign policy<lb/>
Wednesday night's Alpha Phi Gamma<lb/>
lecture, open to the student body, will<lb/>
be followed by a press conference<lb/>
question period<lb/>
Newspaper staffs from neighboring<lb/>
high schools have been invited.<lb/>
Kelly will visit journalism classes<lb/>
Thursday at 10 and 1:30-2. and 2. He<lb/>
will be available for conference from 11<lb/>
until 11:50 in Office 334. New Austin<lb/>
eugene robert platt, poet, will read<lb/>
some of his poems in the auditorium of<lb/>
the Nursing School on the East Carolina<lb/>
University campus at 8 p.m Tuesday,<lb/>
Oct. 24. Admission is free and the public<lb/>
is invited.<lb/>
While on campus, platt will also<lb/>
Conduct a workshop in poetry for<lb/>
students and area poets. The workshop<lb/>
Schedule is 4 p.m Tuesday, in 319<lb/>
Austin building and 10 a.m Wednesday<lb/>
Ui 302 Austin. Local poets are invited to<lb/>
faring manuscripts for platt's criticism to<lb/>
the workshop Visitors an welcome.<lb/>
 platt. 33 years old, and one of th<lb/>
bearded poets, is author of three<lb/>
?oiled ions of poetry, "Coffee and<lb/>
Solace "Six of OneHalf Dozen of the<lb/>
)ther and "Allegheny Reveries He<lb/>
las also published poetry in many<lb/>
INTERESTED IN PEACE<lb/>
(OR PS?-Liz and Tom Drahman,<lb/>
Hurried Peace Corps volunteers from<lb/>
lailand, will be in the Union lobby<lb/>
londay, 30 through Thursday,<lb/>
fov. 2 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to assist<lb/>
lose interested in the Peace Corps and<lb/>
literary magazines, among them "The<lb/>
American "Voices International and<lb/>
"Poet Lore and has read on many<lb/>
college campuses -College of Charleston,<lb/>
Davidson, Marshall University, Penn<lb/>
State, and Pittsburgh, among others.<lb/>
At present, he is editing three<lb/>
anthologies, one of them a collection of<lb/>
poems about the Outer Banks of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Besides writing, reading, and editing<lb/>
poetry, platt serves as Assistant to the<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs at Clarion State<lb/>
College in Pennsylvania. He lives with his<lb/>
wife, Kathleen, and three-year-old<lb/>
daughter, Troye-Suzanne.<lb/>
platt holds a diploma in Anglo-lnsh<lb/>
literature from Trinity College, Dublin,<lb/>
and has been a featured poet at the<lb/>
Dublin Arts Festival.<lb/>
Vista. Particularly sought are those<lb/>
students majoring in Education, Math,<lb/>
Science, the Health Professions and<lb/>
Nursing, Business, Home Ec and<lb/>
Nutrition.<lb/>
Applications for June and other<lb/>
programs will be available.<lb/>
Republican campaign thriving in Greenville<lb/>
UflON ANNOUCES<lb/>
IOMECOMING SHOWS The East<lb/>
Carolina University Student Union<lb/>
inounces the 1972 Homecoming<lb/>
bows. Entertainment will include Stevie<lb/>
fonder plus Tiny Alice on Friday. Nov.<lb/>
at 8 p m. m Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
ECU student tickets an' $2.00 and<lb/>
public tickets are $3.00 for this<lb/>
attraction.<lb/>
On Sunday, Nov. 5, at 2 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, the Beach Boys will<lb/>
appear in concert. Tickets for this<lb/>
attraction are $3.00 for ECU students<lb/>
and $4.00 for the public<lb/>
All Uckets are available at the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
By ROBERT LINK<lb/>
Sta" Writer<lb/>
The Republican campaign is alive and<lb/>
well in Greenville and on the ECU<lb/>
campus, according to Eloise Howard,<lb/>
chairman of the Re-elect the President<lb/>
regional headquarters in downtown<lb/>
 Ireenville.<lb/>
Jesse Helms. Republican candidate for<lb/>
United States Senate, briefly visited the<lb/>
ECU campus last Tuesday morning from<lb/>
10:30 until 11:30 a.m Most of his visit<lb/>
was spent in front of the Rawl building<lb/>
on campus shaking hands and talking<lb/>
with students and faculty, after which he<lb/>
went to Wilson. Helms is expected to<lb/>
return to Greenville Friday, Oct. 27.<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 27, a Young Voters<lb/>
Rally will be held at the Music Factory<lb/>
in Greenville. Beginning at 7:30 and<lb/>
ending at midnight, the event features a<lb/>
musical group called Nantucket<lb/>
Sleighnde, Jim Gardner, and several<lb/>
Republican political candidates.<lb/>
Evenone is invited to attend the rally at<lb/>
a cost of $1.00 per person, which<lb/>
includes "all the beer you can drink<lb/>
According to polls conducted on<lb/>
ECU, Atlantic-Christian, and<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, Nixon has gained a<lb/>
definite stronghold on these campuses.<lb/>
The ECU poll indicated 60 per cent of<lb/>
1,205 voters cast went for Nixon and 37<lb/>
per cent for McGovern.<lb/>
Another function of the Re-elect the<lb/>
President headquarters has been the<lb/>
mailing of 11.000 letters to North<lb/>
Carolina farmers soliciting their support<lb/>
and donations for the Republican<lb/>
campaign. Various posters, stickers, and<lb/>
lite.ature endorsing Republican<lb/>
candidates is available through this office<lb/>
as are Prisoner of War bracelets and<lb/>
Nixon tee-shirts. An ECU student drew<lb/>
the elephant on the Nixon tee-shirt and<lb/>
two of these have been sent to the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
An unnamed White House advisor to<lb/>
the National Committee for the<lb/>
Agricultural Commission to Re-elect the<lb/>
President visited the Greenville<lb/>
headquarters Oct. 19 and remarked that<lb/>
it is "the best organized and enthusiast<lb/>
campaign center that I have seen in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
NIXON HEADQ1 RTi R4" IS alive and wcl<lb/>
(SUM Photo by Ho Mann)<lb/>
on the corner of Fifth and tan. In-<lb/>
<pb facs="00039651_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 KounUunhetd i??t. .1 ?-i :t .<lb/>
'Grasshopper' begins tour<lb/>
By NANCY HALL<lb/>
MrlMi<lb/>
 in id 1 h rongi ui w et, cheering<lb/>
McGovem wpportert, the 'Granrooti<lb/>
? ruhoppiT campaign airived here on<lb/>
'hursday morning, the first itop 111 a<lb/>
SIX-State sVMIIg<lb/>
1 he caravan, hotted i Dr Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, opened with ipeeches and<lb/>
testimonials from prominent members of<lb/>
thi McOovern Campaign before a<lb/>
cheering crowd of about 300 students<lb/>
Among tin ipeaken were rerry<lb/>
McGovem, the 28-year-old daughter 01<lb/>
the Democratic Presidential Candidate.<lb/>
George McGovem; Sissy Parenthold, a<lb/>
Democratic Representative from rexes<lb/>
and the largest vote-getter for McGovem<lb/>
at the Democratic Convention; also<lb/>
present were l.iz Carpenter, former press<lb/>
secretary to I-ady<lb/>
Mrs Hub Scott<lb/>
Bird Johnson, and<lb/>
But, aside from being excellent<lb/>
political ipeaken and well-known<lb/>
personalities, who and what are the<lb/>
McGovem people When the election is<lb/>
OV? and the political fervor dies down,<lb/>
if McGovem U elected, what type of<lb/>
man will the American people have<lb/>
choaen to serve them m the nations<lb/>
highest office'1 f one can make any type<lb/>
of sound judgment from thi three main<lb/>
speakers of the C.rassroots Caravan, then<lb/>
a sincere, entertaining, and intellectual<lb/>
group could possibly move into the<lb/>
White House in January<lb/>
Perry McGovem, who spoke first for<lb/>
the group, presented sincerity to the<lb/>
audience, Ms McGovem'1 talk was brief,<lb/>
but in her few moments, she made the<lb/>
audience understand how involved she is<lb/>
in her father's campaign. "Many have<lb/>
asked me if I believe my father has a<lb/>
chance of beating Nixon and I tell them<lb/>
that I would not see any reason to<lb/>
campaign if 1 did not believe that my<lb/>
father was going to win in November<lb/>
The witty and entertaining Liz<lb/>
Carpenter was the "Grasshopper's" next<lb/>
speaker. She told the audience that it<lb/>
was "great to be in the Southland where<lb/>
they spray bugs instead of planting<lb/>
them "I'm a FDK. H8T, JFK girl<lb/>
myself What have Richard Nixon or<lb/>
John formally ever done for the<lb/>
South ?Nothing came a cry from the<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
Carpenter's duty with the group<lb/>
seemed to be that of a crowd loosener.<lb/>
She accomplished her goal with such<lb/>
remarks as, "Show me a Republican that<lb/>
naturally reaches out for his fellow man<lb/>
and I'll show you a pick-pocket<lb/>
Sissy Farenthold rounded out the<lb/>
M c G o v e r n people with her<lb/>
mtelleetualism. "We are here because we<lb/>
face the 'New South'and because we are<lb/>
tired of the phony patriotism of Richard<lb/>
Nixon spoke Farenthold emphatically<lb/>
"We can no longer tolerate what has<lb/>
been happening in our government such<lb/>
as the Watergate bugging and the ITT<lb/>
scandal It shows no respectability "<lb/>
Farenthold was adamant about what she<lb/>
wants for herself and her people as she<lb/>
closed saying. "In November. Candidate<lb/>
Nixon, we want our country back: we<lb/>
want our constitution hack<lb/>
IT<lb/>
??:??<lb/>
1<lb/>
BAR<lb/>
 SAYS-<lb/>
.JAVI<lb/>
WE GOT A SALE<lb/>
FOR YOU!<lb/>
(CLASSICAL THAT IS!)<lb/>
BISTTIRE STOCK: of<lb/>
COlUjAjlASSI(S<lb/>
ST. tQ99 Mhriflastrni<lb/>
lf? 3? ar an<lb/>
99 (Columbia<lb/>
IfflaBtmuorkB.<lb/>
Leonard Bernstein ? Rudolph Serkin ?<lb/>
Bruno Walter ? Eugene Ormandy ?<lb/>
Phillippe Entremont ? E. Power Biggs ?<lb/>
? Issac Stern ? Glenn Gould ?<lb/>
QUALITY RECORDINGS,<lb/>
BUDGET PRK<lb/>
ODYSSEY STEREO CLASSICS-<lb/>
(thf ViMBt Btorka: S-8B<lb/>
The Symphonies of Haydn ? Mahler ?<lb/>
Sym. No. 4 ? Prokofiev - Romeo &amp; Juliet ?<lb/>
Vivaldi - Concertos ? Vivaldi - Four Seasons<lb/>
Mozart - Piano Quartets ? Dvorak ? Sym. 9<lb/>
Tchaikovsky - "Pathetique"  and more!<lb/>
Sty? $WBt ArttfitH :<lb/>
Bruno Walter ? Pablo Casals ? Dinu Lipatti<lb/>
Walter Gieseking ? George SzelI ? Robert<lb/>
Casadesus ? Budapest String Quartet ?<lb/>
Sir Adrian Boult . . . and more!<lb/>
GREENVILLE fedS open nites till 9:30<lb/>
Quality matches Broadwa<lb/>
B<lb/>
By KATHY JACQUELINE HARDISON<lb/>
Staff Writ<lb/>
Tradition! What is tradition? To the<lb/>
villagers of Anatevka, it is a way of life.<lb/>
Because of our traditions, everyone<lb/>
knows who he is and what God expels<lb/>
him to do "Without our traditions, our<lb/>
lives would be so shaky as a fiddler on<lb/>
the roof<lb/>
The fiddler, portrayed by Chris Jones,<lb/>
was seen only in the mind of Tevya.<lb/>
Chris's execution of the fiddler was<lb/>
dynamic. His ability to move gracefully<lb/>
was to the precision of a fiddler plucking<lb/>
out his tune. The reflection of tradition<lb/>
within Tevya's mind is interwoven<lb/>
throughout the play by the fiddler<lb/>
Tevya, portrayed by James Brochu,<lb/>
had the magnificent quality of<lb/>
connecting any void between the<lb/>
audience and himself. He constantly<lb/>
played into the special interests of each<lb/>
theater-goer. The professional from<lb/>
Brooklyn came alive with each new<lb/>
show Mis ability to improvise brought<lb/>
the show to life.<lb/>
In the lines, "You take care of her.<lb/>
Sec that she dresses warm Tevya<lb/>
reveals his true relationship with God.<lb/>
He relates to God on the basis of an<lb/>
ordinary friend with a little more power.<lb/>
He feels he can speak to Him in any tone<lb/>
of voice, even a demanding plea. ECU<lb/>
was privileged to have such a<lb/>
professional performance in its theatre.<lb/>
Betty Schmidt was a perfect Golda<lb/>
until she opened her mouth to sing. She<lb/>
destroyed what could have been a<lb/>
beautiful "Do You Love Me?" Her<lb/>
interpretation of its touching lines was as<lb/>
poor as her ability t stay on pitch.<lb/>
?SWri"ft"is1taV'sfJ<lb/>
u<lb/>
a<lb/>
v&amp;rnAeib aenfUH<lb/>
Martin Thompson, playing the part of<lb/>
Perchik, was the catalyst in bringing<lb/>
about a change in tradition. His<lb/>
performance showed the quality of<lb/>
professionalism. Martin's "Now I Have<lb/>
Everything" added depth and dimension<lb/>
to the bearing of love. His performance<lb/>
was astounding.<lb/>
As for the part of Hodel, Perchik s<lb/>
wife. Rosalyn Barlowe's peak came in<lb/>
the scene at the train station when she<lb/>
displayed her extraordinary voice in<lb/>
"Far From the Home I Love<lb/>
Yente, the matchmaker, played by<lb/>
Anita Brehm lacked feeling and<lb/>
emotion. She has given better<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
Robert Beard and Judy Townsend<lb/>
playing Model and Tzeitel stole the show.<lb/>
Their performances were so natural that<lb/>
?one couldn't help but fall in love with<lb/>
both of them. Their voices added beauty<lb/>
and meaning, especially when Model sang<lb/>
"Miracle of Miracles<lb/>
The bottle dancers captivated the<lb/>
audience to the point of sitting on the<lb/>
seat's edge Mavis Ray outdid herself<lb/>
We have seen Ricky Price dance, sing.<lb/>
and act before, but never have we seen<lb/>
him do all three as superbly as in<lb/>
"Fiddler<lb/>
Of course the show would have been<lb/>
nothing without Barry M. Shank and the<lb/>
ECU orchestra. They are to be<lb/>
commended for a job well done.<lb/>
Congratulations to F.dgar Ixiessin his<lb/>
entire cast, and crews for a splendid job<lb/>
in the production of "Fiddler on the<lb/>
Roof The show demonstrated such a<lb/>
professional quality that it could only be<lb/>
matched on Broadway.<lb/>
Tuesday, October 24<lb/>
eocMOOoooooooaooooooeooeoeeooooeooooeoeoooooc<lb/>
Lecture Sene Frederic Stontki iCtUftl on 'To Be or Not To Be<lb/>
Raped " at 8 p.m m Wright Aud'tonum<lb/>
Poet euqene robert platt at 8 p m in Nursing 101<lb/>
Wednesday, October 25<lb/>
International Film The Wa' ol the Buttons" in Wright at 8 p m<lb/>
Thursday, October 26<lb/>
Special Concert .Charlie Byrd will appear n Wrrght at B 16 pm<lb/>
Friday, October 27<lb/>
Free Flick 'Tom Jones" al 7pm in Wnqht<lb/>
Sunday, October 29<lb/>
ECU Orchestra Concert in Wright at 3 1 5 p m<lb/>
Wednesday, November 1<lb/>
Artist Series Gary Graffmen and Leonard Rose in Wright at 8 15<lb/>
WORLD CAMPUS<lb/>
. AFLOAT<lb/>
Discover the World on Your<lb/>
SEMESTER AT SEA<lb/>
Sails each September &amp; February<lb/>
Combine accredited study with<lb/>
educational stops in Africa. Aus-<lb/>
tralasia and the Orient. Over 5000<lb/>
students from 450 campuses have<lb/>
already experienced this interna-<lb/>
tional program A wide range of<lb/>
financial aid is available Write<lb/>
now for free catalog<lb/>
WCA, Chapman College, Box CC40, Orange, Cal. 92666<lb/>
?Y<lb/>
11,? pi p p pi<lb/>
Citizens for McGovern<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Wed Oct.25-8:15 pm<lb/>
Rawl-130<lb/>
The Selling of the Pentagon<lb/>
Vietnam slide show by<lb/>
a Vietnam Veteran<lb/>
and<lb/>
Thurs Oct.26-3-6 pm<lb/>
Mall stage<lb/>
3-Hour Concert-Rally<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
SWEET THURSDAY<lb/>
FLATIAND<lb/>
FAMILY BAND<lb/>
with THE CLOGGERS<lb/>
HEARTWOOD<lb/>
(formall) CLAYROOT BAND)<lb/>
and<lb/>
special guest speaker<lb/>
WILBUR HOBBY<lb/>
(CHAIRMAN, STATE AFL-CIO)<lb/>
ALL EVENTS ARK FREE.<lb/>
EVERYONE IS INVITED<lb/>
See Sen. McGovern on T.VWed. night-730<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
-PHI MU ALPHA CONCERT-The<lb/>
ECU School of Music presents in concert<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha honor music fraternity.<lb/>
This event will be held at 8 15 p.m . Oct.<lb/>
2ri, in Fletcher Music building.<lb/>
Admission is free<lb/>
-INTERNATIONAL FILM- Thus<lb/>
week's International Film is a charming,<lb/>
offbeat, humorous, satiric little comedy<lb/>
as only the French can make them. It's<lb/>
"The War of the Buttons winner of le<lb/>
Prix Jean Vigo, a marvelous look at the<lb/>
rural French and their countryside.<lb/>
'The War of the Buttons" is in black<lb/>
and white, in French with subtitles. It<lb/>
will screen Wednesday. Oct. 25, at 8<lb/>
p.m in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
-SERVICE SORORITY RUSH-The<lb/>
colony of Gamma Sigma Sigma National<lb/>
Service Sorority (formerly Delta Theta<lb/>
Chi) invites all women interested in<lb/>
service to our rush activities. Rush will<lb/>
begin on Oct. 26. at 7:30 p.m in<lb/>
Fletcher Hall social room with an<lb/>
informal tea.<lb/>
-FRESHMEN TO M E E T - Freshman<lb/>
Class Representatives will meet<lb/>
Wednesday at 5 p.m. in 201 on the<lb/>
second floor of the Student Union. All<lb/>
representatives are urged to come. Issues<lb/>
on the class projects of 1972-73 will be<lb/>
discussed in further detail.<lb/>
CHARLIE BYRD TO<lb/>
APPE A R - Versatile guitarist Charlie<lb/>
Byrd will appear in concert at Kas:<lb/>
Carolina I'niversity Thursday. Oct. 26<lb/>
The performance is free and open tr<lb/>
everyone and is scheduled for 8:15 p.rr.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
During the past decade, Byrd has beer,<lb/>
internationally recognized as a skilled<lb/>
performer Of both classical and jazz<lb/>
guitar music.<lb/>
"Charlie Byrd's versatility in the<lb/>
literature of the guitar surpasses that ai<lb/>
anyone else said Willis Conova of the<lb/>
Voice of America. "He is a masterfu,<lb/>
jack of all guitar trades<lb/>
-STUDENTS TO DISPLAY<lb/>
ART-Two senior students in the Eas:<lb/>
Carolina University School of Art wil<lb/>
show their paintings in week-lonf<lb/>
exhibitions scheduled to begin Oct. 22<lb/>
Sheila Ann Bumgardner and Timothj<lb/>
Paul Sechler, both candidate for the<lb/>
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with major<lb/>
in painting will display their work <lb/>
campus galleries.<lb/>
Miss Bumgardner. who is minoring ill<lb/>
commercial art. has previously showrfl<lb/>
her paintings at the Bank of Nortr<lb/>
Carolina. N A She is the daughter of Mr<lb/>
and Mrs. Jm- Tyson Bumgardner o'<lb/>
Gastonia.<lb/>
Sechler. the son of Mr. and Mrsj<lb/>
Raymond R Sechler of Concord, u<lb/>
minonng in pnntmaking.<lb/>
COLOR IN THIS "MINI-<lb/>
PRESIQENTIAL<lb/>
1. Buy a bunch of Flair pens You need il<lb/>
b ack red, blue, brown, orange, and pur.<lb/>
pie (You need them anyway for school )<lb/>
2 Now-color in the picture according to<lb/>
these color guide numbers m RLrl<lb/>
(2). Red (3). Blue (5) Brown (6) brannp<lb/>
(9) Purple. Please do no. color unnu?m<lb/>
bered areas<lb/>
1 POSTER-OF ONE OF THE<lb/>
, CANDIDATES!<lb/>
JssttsrjaaaRR:<lb/>
wafrh ? .k60'8' Sh0" S,av ,uned and<lb/>
 (olds Ann S?Ul sea'ching drama u"<lb/>
, act tooth '8 or oldPr. 9 <lb/>
1  ,??e,her an vote November 7<lb/>
(Don t foraet to<lb/>
mate, the<lb/>
K<lb/>
ask about Fl<lb/>
Liner)<lb/>
air s running<lb/>
Aft,<lb/>
<pb facs="00039651_0003"/><lb/>
fall in love with<lb/>
iOM added beauty<lb/>
when Model sang<lb/>
captivated the<lb/>
of sitting on the<lb/>
utdid herself<lb/>
Price dance, sing,<lb/>
ver have we se.n<lb/>
superbly as m<lb/>
would have been<lb/>
Vl. Shank and the<lb/>
ey are to be<lb/>
?II done.<lb/>
dgar IxM'ssm his<lb/>
r a splendid job<lb/>
"Fiddler on the<lb/>
 nstrated such a<lb/>
it could only be<lb/>
QOOQOQCKyx<lb/>
B Y R D TO<lb/>
guitarist Charlie<lb/>
concert at Hast<lb/>
lursday, Oct. 26<lb/>
ree and open b<lb/>
led for 8:15 p.m<lb/>
de, Byrd has beer.<lb/>
zed as a skilled<lb/>
lassical and jazz<lb/>
?rsatility in the<lb/>
surpasses that of<lb/>
is Conova of the<lb/>
le is a masterfu,<lb/>
O DISPLAY<lb/>
ents in the Eas;<lb/>
lool of Art wil<lb/>
;s in week Ion;<lb/>
0 begin Oct. 22<lb/>
ler and Timothj<lb/>
ululates for the<lb/>
?gree with majun<lb/>
y their work hi<lb/>
10 is minonng l'H<lb/>
reviously showrH<lb/>
Bank of Norttfl<lb/>
? daughter of M<lb/>
Bumgardner<lb/>
Mr and Mrs I<lb/>
of Concord, ul<lb/>
2<lb/>
)FTHE<lb/>
ES!<lb/>
created a<lb/>
3n of the<lb/>
jned and<lb/>
rama un<lb/>
get your<lb/>
r 7<lb/>
i running<lb/>
ftate hands Pirates first loss<lb/>
Freshman quarterback Buckey<lb/>
paces second half explosion<lb/>
By EPHRAIM POWER. WKi"OiUfl<lb/>
By EPHRAIM POWER.<lb/>
A? "IM I .1,1,?<lb/>
A -in ?nd?d for the<lb/>
a.es 8?tuRlay night a.<lb/>
they wen' dealt a 38 1;<lb/>
lOM at the hands of th<lb/>
N.C State UV.Ifpa.k ?,<lb/>
Haleighs Carter Stadium<lb/>
ItwMBCU'fflrn loss.<lb/>
Th? X a m e , a<lb/>
nonconferen test bfon.<lb/>
the Burs travel to Funnan<lb/>
'turclay, was witness<lb/>
by 39.300 fans. This was<lb/>
the third largest crowd in<lb/>
Carter SU.dit.rn history<lb/>
and with the State Fair<lb/>
"Par by, one rad()<lb/>
announcer claimed there<lb/>
wwean estimated 200,000<lb/>
people in the area.<lb/>
ECU took the early lead<lb/>
when Cartetter Crumpler<lb/>
bulled over from the one<lb/>
midway through the first<lb/>
period.<lb/>
?tate quickly evened<lb/>
W? wore as Stan Fritts<lb/>
?ent in from two yardi<lb/>
 fn the next series as<lb/>
the quarter came to an<lb/>
7 h e W o 1 f p . c k<lb/>
continued to throttle the<lb/>
Wild Dogs" and th(, Hu(.<lb/>
defense as freshman<lb/>
quarterback Dave Buckey<lb/>
scampered two yards for<lb/>
another tally to gwe them<lb/>
a "ad they never<lb/>
surrendered.<lb/>
Sure-toed Ricky<lb/>
McLeeter, who earlier<lb/>
missed a 43-yard field goal<lb/>
attempt by shaking the<lb/>
upright, got the Bucs on<lb/>
the board again with a<lb/>
33-yard boot to end the<lb/>
first half scoring.<lb/>
After intermission<lb/>
State continued to show<lb/>
 "HVnsivc ta(.nt that<lb/>
"as led them to a 4-2-1<lb/>
reor,j<lb/>
The Wolf pack took<lb/>
their first possession of the<lb/>
naif 66 yards in four plays<lb/>
With Fritts again scoring to<lb/>
rnaki the count 21-10<lb/>
After holding the Bucs<lb/>
aKain. State took its<lb/>
snd posse.sKion all the<lb/>
way to wrap up the game<lb/>
with a 28-10 edge.<lb/>
ECU continued to fight<lb/>
however, and the Bucs<lb/>
moved the length of the<lb/>
Deld with quarterback Carl<lb/>
Summerell hitting Vic<lb/>
U,If?re and Stan Eure<lb/>
with key pa.SM,s<lb/>
Two paa interference<lb/>
'alls against State, one of<lb/>
tm in the end zone<lb/>
j"ded the Bucs and<lb/>
Crumpler scored his<lb/>
WCOnd touchdown of the<lb/>
evening from one yard<lb/>
out.<lb/>
T h ?' t w o - p o , n t<lb/>
c?nveraion try was<lb/>
unsuccessful.<lb/>
Sam Harrell<lb/>
37-yard field<lb/>
State scored<lb/>
touchdown in<lb/>
minute to close<lb/>
on only seven of 23 passes<lb/>
for 86 yards. W.lfore made<lb/>
four of the grabs.<lb/>
The IVdtes suffered two<lb/>
casualties in the game<lb/>
Billy Hibbs suffered a knee<lb/>
injury early in the game<lb/>
and never rejoined the<lb/>
lineup.<lb/>
Safety Mike Myrick<lb/>
sprained his ankle early, as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
'lowing the game,<lb/>
fc-CU coach Sonny Handle<lb/>
said, "A lot of our people<lb/>
were not ready to play<lb/>
tonight, but I'll take the<lb/>
blame for that. We just<lb/>
couldn't stop them.<lb/>
"We are just not in N.C<lb/>
Site's league. We have<lb/>
been a real fine team until<lb/>
tonight he added.<lb/>
First-year State mentor<lb/>
Lou Holtz was impressed<lb/>
hy the Pirate performance.<lb/>
"We beat a real fine<lb/>
football team. I have the<lb/>
utmost respect for Fast<lb/>
Carolina. They really came<lb/>
after us the State coach<lb/>
said.<lb/>
LOOKS TO PASS, Carf Summerell trie,<lb/>
to ipot a receiver downfieW  earii<lb/>
?etion a. the State game Saturdaj nigh'i<lb/>
a Jimmj Howe (33) and unidentified<lb/>
Stj?f photo by Poii Mann)<lb/>
'??? Imeman block. Summerell had to<lb/>
kT"? thi.pl.) and on othe, occasion.<lb/>
" We run. kept ,(?. Buc in the action<lb/>
"ni.l theaecond halt<lb/>
kicked a<lb/>
goal and<lb/>
another<lb/>
the final<lb/>
out the<lb/>
I    '  b? How Mann)<lb/>
X   ? Intended receiver I<lb/>
D?-?? (?kt uniform, i, hit ?rd from WdJ<lb/>
one as he complete, a pa(?.rtl. ?. '<lb/>
?erterence  se, ?. ?-?? ' las,  'I<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
??" mi nan.<lb/>
Rain dampens grid contests;<lb/>
but cross country meet held<lb/>
?v LARRY Mllinai i<lb/>
Deadline<lb/>
extended<lb/>
The deadline has been<lb/>
extended for students<lb/>
interested in applying for<lb/>
homecoming bicycle<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Applications may be<lb/>
I obtained in the Union or<lb/>
at the dorms.<lb/>
A minimum of 12<lb/>
entries are required before<lb/>
any event will be held.<lb/>
Judges and race officials<lb/>
are also needed for the<lb/>
events. Interested students<lb/>
may sign up for such<lb/>
positions also at the<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
?coring. Fireworks<lb/>
exploded at the nearby<lb/>
Mate Fair just as State<lb/>
picked off the third ECU<lb/>
pass iate in the game.<lb/>
Respite the apparently<lb/>
one-sided defeat, the<lb/>
Pirates did play a fine<lb/>
Kame. But poor field<lb/>
Position to start the<lb/>
second half kept ECU<lb/>
from making a comeback<lb/>
bid.<lb/>
Booters bounced in pair<lb/>
State had been a<lb/>
two-touchdown favorite.<lb/>
Statistically, the Bucs<lb/>
had a rough time even<lb/>
rougher than they had in<lb/>
the Citadel game. State<lb/>
rolled up 224 yards on the<lb/>
pound and 169 in the air<lb/>
for a total offense figure<lb/>
of 393 yards.<lb/>
The Pirates had entered<lb/>
the game with their<lb/>
nation-leading status<lb/>
unchanged in total<lb/>
defense. But this game<lb/>
should change that.<lb/>
ECU, led by Les<lb/>
Strayhom's 77 yards and<lb/>
Summerell 73 yards, had<lb/>
a 236 to 224 yards edge in<lb/>
rushing but Summerell hit<lb/>
WATER BEDS 100 water beds, starting at $1595<lb/>
guarantee United Freight Co . 2904 E Tenth St 652 4053<lb/>
5 year<lb/>
ECU soccer team lost<lb/>
its fourth and fifth games<lb/>
of the season this past<lb/>
week in two rather<lb/>
disappointing encounters.<lb/>
On Wednesday, the<lb/>
Bucs were handcuffed by<lb/>
the Appalachian State<lb/>
University kickers by a 3-0<lb/>
score. They then dropped<lb/>
a 4-0 decision to Duke on<lb/>
Friday afternoon in a<lb/>
game much closer than the<lb/>
score indicated.<lb/>
The booters just<lb/>
couldn't get their game to<lb/>
mesh on Wednesday<lb/>
against a fast, aggressive<lb/>
ASU team<lb/>
The Apps managed to<lb/>
push through three goals,<lb/>
all on fast breaks and<lb/>
about evenly spaced in the<lb/>
first 45 minutes of play, to<lb/>
take a 3-0 halftime lead.<lb/>
The Bucs stormed back<lb/>
in the second half b<lb/>
were unable to capital<lb/>
on numerous scoring<lb/>
attacks.<lb/>
Standout right forward.<lb/>
Jeff Kunkler, tied for<lb/>
team scoring honors, was<lb/>
injured near the end of the<lb/>
first half and immediately-<lb/>
rushed off for medical<lb/>
care. With half the potent<lb/>
Pirate attack disabled,<lb/>
their scoring ability was<lb/>
decisively hampered.<lb/>
The defense, led by<lb/>
Brad Smith, Bob Poser.<lb/>
and Bob Gebhardt were<lb/>
commendable for their<lb/>
performance as were<lb/>
forward Tom O'Shea and<lb/>
halfback Tom Tozer.<lb/>
It was a costly day for<lb/>
the Pirates, however, as<lb/>
they lost the services of<lb/>
not only Kunkler. but<lb/>
co-captain Poser and<lb/>
halfback Charlie Costello,<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
Despite their first<lb/>
conference loss, the Bucs<lb/>
traveled to Durham sky<lb/>
high for their encounter<lb/>
with the undefeated Blue<lb/>
Devils and nearly emerged<lb/>
victorious.<lb/>
At the half. Duke held a<lb/>
shaky 1-0 lead, the<lb/>
unimpressive result of a<lb/>
successful penalty kick.<lb/>
The Pirates, however.<lb/>
were playing a remarkable<lb/>
game and were<lb/>
successfully containing the<lb/>
Blue Devil offense<lb/>
W'th fullback Poser<lb/>
along with Kunkler and<lb/>
halfbacks Costello and Bill<lb/>
Belts all injured, the Bucs<lb/>
lacked some of their<lb/>
depth.<lb/>
Freshman David McGee<lb/>
filled in well at left<lb/>
fullback, and center<lb/>
halfback Tom Tozer had<lb/>
to be moved up on the line<lb/>
to fill the void left by the<lb/>
loss of Kunkler.<lb/>
The booters.<lb/>
overall, host<lb/>
mid western tear<lb/>
McMurray College<lb/>
Wednesday, then take<lb/>
their 2-1 conference<lb/>
record to William and<lb/>
Mary Saturday for their<lb/>
most important contest of<lb/>
the season<lb/>
now 3-5<lb/>
a tough<lb/>
By LARRY CRANDALL<lb/>
Intramural football<lb/>
?tivit.es were curtailed by<lb/>
mid-week rains which<lb/>
' celled games on<lb/>
Wednesday and Thursday<lb/>
A. a result, few changes<lb/>
occurred in league<lb/>
standings.<lb/>
In games that wen<lb/>
Played, Kappa Alpha<lb/>
handed Kappa Sigma its<lb/>
first loss of the season by a<lb/>
27-26 score. The loss gave<lb/>
Kappa Sigma a 7-11<lb/>
record and a one-game<lb/>
lead over Sigma Chi Delta.<lb/>
5-1-1, in Fraternity League<lb/>
Two.<lb/>
In dorm action, the<lb/>
Hogbears upset Fourth<lb/>
Floor Aycock 18-13 to<lb/>
further tighten the League<lb/>
One race. The Football<lb/>
Players assumed the top<lb/>
spot by virtue of their<lb/>
35-6 rout of the Red<lb/>
Devils.<lb/>
Team X bested Jones<lb/>
Jocks 20-12 to break a<lb/>
three-way tie for the lead<lb/>
in Dorm League Three<lb/>
Other league standings<lb/>
remained virtually<lb/>
unchanged.<lb/>
With less than a week<lb/>
remaining in the volleyball<lb/>
season, the following<lb/>
teams currently hold<lb/>
league leads. Fraternities.<lb/>
Lgue A, Kappa Sigma,<lb/>
and League B, Kappa<lb/>
Alpha; Dorrns. League A<lb/>
ferrible Twinldet, and<lb/>
League B, Cheap ThriJls.<lb/>
Independent League A,<lb/>
Rolling Stones, and<lb/>
League B. Pickle Packers.<lb/>
Barring further<lb/>
postponements, volleyball<lb/>
playoffs are scheduled to<lb/>
begin on Thursday. The<lb/>
top two entries from each<lb/>
league automatically<lb/>
qualify for the playoffs<lb/>
In the intramural cross<lb/>
country meet held<lb/>
Wednesday. R,ch Edwards,<lb/>
representing the<lb/>
Plundering Peaheads,<lb/>
broke the existing ECU<lb/>
intramural record by<lb/>
running the course in<lb/>
11:44. Paul Minafaew of<lb/>
the Marauders placed<lb/>
second with a time of<lb/>
1 1 54. while Frank<lb/>
Puente. another<lb/>
Plundering Peahead, was<lb/>
third.<lb/>
EFFICIENCY APT One completely furmshed apartment mcluding<lb/>
utilities lor 1 2. or 3 people Across from campus 920 E 14th St<lb/>
758 2685<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
campus<lb/>
White<lb/>
A pair ol green tinted contacts in brown case in vacinity of<lb/>
Reward off,red Contact Donna Graham. 752 9853 207<lb/>
MAKE YOUR OWN LAMP with lamp kits available at Womack<lb/>
Electric 506 Pennsylvania Avenue<lb/>
PIEAL CRISIS INTERVENTION Phone 758 HELP, corner of<lb/>
Abortion referrels, suicide<lb/>
nformation, overnight<lb/>
5 midnight All services free<lb/>
rtt-K ? " ?" - a n u were tne season 3 "u,u<lb/>
but league leads. Fraternities.<lb/>
1Z(1 jc.<lb/>
 Antique Auction SALE <lb/>
Every Fri. Nite 7:30 P.M.<lb/>
Free arver dolors gprven at every sale<lb/>
SJWENIS receive 10 dkeount<lb/>
let us set items you don't want<lb/>
Guaranteed customer satisfaction<lb/>
BANK CARDS honored<lb/>
Owner &amp; audoneer?George T. Hawley<lb/>
Shop open Mon.?Fri. 10-4 7co ?<lb/>
in ?.F??rt It STOKES ANTIQUES &amp; AUCTION HOUSE $<lb/>
??? $<lb/>
)own<lb/>
?reem<lb/>
s<lb/>
Eighth ?nd Cotanche Streets<lb/>
intervention, drug problems, birth control<lb/>
housing Draft counsel Thursday<lb/>
? In the November 7 election, as always, there are differences of<lb/>
I opinion as ft, qualification and acceptance of the candidates,<lb/>
J But there is one all of us can support and vote for,<lb/>
? and that<lb/>
is<lb/>
H. L HODGES CO.<lb/>
210 E. 5th St.<lb/>
sporting goods<lb/>
hunting-fishing<lb/>
hardware<lb/>
Telephone 752-4156<lb/>
? CONGRESSMAN<lb/>
B WALTER B. JONES<lb/>
? Consider his record of personal service to the first district<lb/>
0 His voting record is always consistent with the wishes<lb/>
S the majority of those he represents<lb/>
g Walter Jones is not involved in any other political<lb/>
LI HE IS DOING A GOOD JOB<lb/>
of<lb/>
race<lb/>
Let's send<lb/>
WALTER JONES<lb/>
back to Congress<lb/>
SPARK is the<lb/>
fashion gleam<lb/>
in Autumn's Eye<lb/>
Circuits the season<lb/>
m a wide range Of<lb/>
s zes. widths, and eclectic<lb/>
color combinations to connect<lb/>
with current classroom styles<lb/>
liss<lb/>
Underfill<lb/>
I Available at:<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Miss Wond' iuI Shoes<lb/>
Larry s shoe Store.<lb/>
431 Evans Street, Greenville.<lb/>
Larry's Shoe Store,<lb/>
153 West Main Street. Washington. North Carolina<lb/>
Larry's Shoe Store.<lb/>
254 Middle Street. New Bern, North Carolina<lb/>
Larry's Shoe Store,<lb/>
117 West Walnut Street. Goldsboro. North Carolina<lb/>
Love's Shoe Store.<lb/>
205 North Queen Street. Kinston, North Carolina<lb/>
Roberson &amp; Dupree Shoe Store. Tarboro. North Carolina<lb/>
<pb facs="00039651_0004"/><lb/>
ountAinheAd<lb/>
EDITORIALS,<lb/>
Philip r Williams, Editoi in chiel<lb/>
COMMENTARY<lb/>
ueadav, October 24, l(72<lb/>
MRC misappropriates funds<lb/>
The Men i Residence Council!<lb/>
purchase of revolving blue lights tm<lb/>
rampus poluc cruiten appears to be one<lb/>
of the most inappropriate expenditure!<lb/>
ever devised by a student government<lb/>
?fencj<lb/>
Were it not for the redeeming Factors<lb/>
of good inUmtions and plain old naivete,<lb/>
the MRC'i purchase of the police hhus<lb/>
would stand as a landmark in fu - :y<lb/>
thinking.<lb/>
While the MRC suppposedlj exists "to<lb/>
make the residence hall life more<lb/>
liveable the members of that body<lb/>
have been somehow convinced that blue<lb/>
lights for police ears will improve the<lb/>
living conditions of the men dormitorj<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
Undoubtedly, members of the MRC<lb/>
must feel proud of their philanthropic<lb/>
act, since most of their time is<lb/>
squandered squabbling over ice<lb/>
machines and tmshcan colors In a<lb/>
single magnificent appropriation, this<lb/>
year's MRC has immortalized everything<lb/>
the MRC stands for by commissioning<lb/>
works of .irt sculptured in chrome and<lb/>
blue glass to forever adom campus prowl<lb/>
cars Unfortunately, more than just the<lb/>
propriet) of the appropriation is being<lb/>
called into question Die entire method<lb/>
of expenditure seems .1 bit ihadj<lb/>
consider that Campus Polic Chief<lb/>
Johnnj Harrel had alread) purchased the<lb/>
lights by the time the MRC got around to<lb/>
actually voting on the funds. Consider<lb/>
also that two opponents of the<lb/>
appropriation were not notified of the<lb/>
meeting during which the money was<lb/>
approved, and were therefore absent<lb/>
(and silent.)<lb/>
MRC should not be in the business of<lb/>
providing campus police with<lb/>
equipment. If the lights were needed, as<lb/>
campus police officials claim, the MRC<lb/>
should have merely confined itself to<lb/>
protesting the lack of lights to the ECU<lb/>
Business Office Instead, the MRC plays<lb/>
philanthropist, and before the dust has<lb/>
even settled, the campus police are<lb/>
taJking wistfully of sirens that they need<lb/>
oh so had.<lb/>
Certain!) inadequate police protection<lb/>
is an emotional issue. No one has taken a<lb/>
stronger stand for quality law<lb/>
enforcement than this editor However,<lb/>
the whole matter of insufficient funds<lb/>
and equipment, if these claims are real,<lb/>
sh ?uld be laid squarely at the feel of<lb/>
those responsible for providing this<lb/>
quality law enforcement, the<lb/>
ECU administration.<lb/>
Campus police, as a necessary and<lb/>
n spected service, should not be reduced<lb/>
to taking hand-outs from student<lb/>
treasuries, nor should student<lb/>
representatives try to buy police<lb/>
goodwill with student funds.<lb/>
History can be changed at polls<lb/>
By Ml ril .<lb/>
front the<lb/>
mn. n ly enfranchised voters<lb/>
approaching the ballot box Has the man<lb/>
elected m .1 pr m n l end the war<lb/>
broker faith with the America)<lb/>
the American people stomach the<lb/>
war n w that 'he color of the bodies has<lb/>
changed? Has the sense of moral outrage<lb/>
- napalming and bomb.<lb/>
'listed" Do the nominations of<lb/>
well and Haynesworth to the highest<lb/>
court mark a planned retreat from the<lb/>
commitment to racial justice? Is the<lb/>
hugging of Democratic National<lb/>
Committee Headquarters symptomatic<lb/>
of an emerging Orwellian nightmare"<lb/>
Has the Nixon Administration sold out<lb/>
to big business"<lb/>
And what of the Senator from South<lb/>
Dakota Will his economic proposals<lb/>
bankrupt the economy Do the Eagleton<lb/>
fiasco and the refining" of the<lb/>
proposals of the primaries portend a<lb/>
presidency based on vacillation Will<lb/>
McGovern, i reducing the military<lb/>
budget, dimmish the diplomatic<lb/>
flexibility of the l" 8.? Invite agression?<lb/>
Pave the road to war?<lb/>
The questions are of course, loaded.<lb/>
There are few simple answers. But<lb/>
remove the vituperation and the inflated<lb/>
promises and four facts are clear<lb/>
First The candidates vying for the<lb/>
presidency differ widely in "ideology and<lb/>
outlook The potential voter cannot sit<lb/>
this one out on the grounds that the<lb/>
choice is betweei tweedle dum and<lb/>
tweedle dee<lb/>
Second: The new ho refuses to<lb/>
cast a ballot is shirking the responsiblity<lb/>
which he claimed ? ? f0 refuse<lb/>
to vote or to vote casually is to solicit<lb/>
the disgust of those who demanded the<lb/>
Is year old vote. It is also to invite the<lb/>
smuggest "I told you so" m history from<lb/>
the cynics and the sceptics.<lb/>
I bird I he college student cannot<lb/>
choose to remain unaffected by the<lb/>
direction of national leadership. If the<lb/>
President of the United States chooses to<lb/>
tolerate unemployment and<lb/>
underemployment, for example, the<lb/>
PhD of today will continue to be the<lb/>
cab driver of tomorrow, and students<lb/>
with B.S.s and B As will continue to<lb/>
pour into secretarial pools and factories.<lb/>
Fourth: The establishment listens to<lb/>
numbers. History will record that the<lb/>
young rose up from the college campuses<lb/>
in search of a leader to end a war they<lb/>
judged immoral. History should record<lb/>
that the young also managed to sensitize<lb/>
the nation to the need for ecological<lb/>
balance, population control, equal rights<lb/>
for minorities. By refusing to vote, the<lb/>
student invites inattention and<lb/>
guarantees that the interests of the<lb/>
young will not be served.<lb/>
The message is clear. An important<lb/>
choice must be made. Those who use the<lb/>
ballot November 7 will participate in<lb/>
making it. Those who boycott the ballot<lb/>
box will succeed only in ripping<lb/>
themselves off.<lb/>
The message is simple. Vote.<lb/>
Don't disenfranchise yourself in the<lb/>
critical presidential election. Vote at the<lb/>
polls November 7. If you are registered<lb/>
away from campus, write for an absentee<lb/>
ballot. The federal deadline is October<lb/>
31. ' you don't know how to reach<lb/>
your Board of Elections, call your local<lb/>
McGovern. Nixon, or other campaign<lb/>
headquarters.<lb/>
Don't Throw Away<lb/>
Your Chance<lb/>
To Vote<lb/>
Vlick (iodwin. Business Manage) t? ui u , ,<lb/>
1 mi wehner, Managing Editor<lb/>
Ron Vteiilieim Advertising Manager<lb/>
Bo Perkins<lb/>
New? I tllloi<lb/>
Bruce Parrtsh<lb/>
Features I ditoi<lb/>
Don Traiisricck<lb/>
Spoi N Editor<lb/>
Rota Mann<lb/>
Chiel Photographer<lb/>
Ira I. Baker. Advisor<lb/>
iFountainhead is published by the students of East Carolina Un.vers.ty under the<lb/>
tousp.ee, of the Student Publication Board Telephone 758 6366<lb/>
MtM , UT THE. ONE ON THt fR<lb/>
Right go! he's one of Os <lb/>
McGovern once dealt in used cars, too<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
Democrats once again are dredging up<lb/>
the old familiar question about Richard<lb/>
Nixon Political posters are asking<lb/>
voters Would you buj a used car from<lb/>
this man<lb/>
The question is especially unfair in<lb/>
this political campaign, since George<lb/>
McGovern actually has had more<lb/>
experience dealing in used cars<lb/>
A few years ago. in fact. McGovern<lb/>
swung a sweet car deal back home in the<lb/>
Dakotas. He exchanged his used<lb/>
Chevrolet for a neu I'ontiacand then let<lb/>
a friend pick up $700 of the bill<lb/>
The friend is Paul McCann, a<lb/>
Minneapolis businessman, whose family<lb/>
owns an interest in James River Motors<lb/>
in Jamestown. North Dakota. McGovern<lb/>
sold his Chevy for $2,800. then picked<lb/>
up a $3,500 Pontiac at the factory.<lb/>
McCann made up the $700 difference<lb/>
At one point, the Internal Revenue<lb/>
Service investigated the deal. Agent<lb/>
William Heath questioned McCann about<lb/>
it and travelled to Jamestown to inspect<lb/>
the auto firm's records. The IRS.<lb/>
however, found nothing incriminating.<lb/>
Sen. tor McGovern himself has<lb/>
discussed the transaction frankly with<lb/>
us. He called the money he saved on the<lb/>
deal a gift fr m a friend.<lb/>
The deal was all perfectly legal, but it<lb/>
does provide a new twist on an old<lb/>
question. A Republican might well ask:<lb/>
"Would you buy a used car from George<lb/>
McGovern?"<lb/>
CHINESE CONTROL DRUGS-<lb/>
New evidence has come to light that<lb/>
Mainland China is virtually free of drug<lb/>
problems<lb/>
Last summer, we quoted an internal<lb/>
White lloust memo which strongly<lb/>
refuted mmors that China was heavily<lb/>
involved in the international flow of<lb/>
illicit drugs Recently, we obtained a<lb/>
secret intelligence report which backs up<lb/>
the White House memo.<lb/>
The document's authors state: "We<lb/>
believe that opium production and<lb/>
consumption is under effective control<lb/>
inside the People's Republic of China<lb/>
and that any possible illicit export is in<lb/>
miniacule amounts<lb/>
The intelligence report concludes:<lb/>
rhere is no reliable evidence that<lb/>
Communist China has either engaged in<lb/>
or sanctioned the illicit export of opium<lb/>
or its derivatives to the Free World<lb/>
Our sources tell us that the Chinese<lb/>
have a three pronged antidrug program.<lb/>
First, they exercise strict control over<lb/>
the cultivation of opium. Second, they<lb/>
have instituted a vast program to educate<lb/>
the public on the evils of drugs. Finally,<lb/>
they have rehabilitated old opium<lb/>
addicts and put them to work.<lb/>
AROUND THE U.S.<lb/>
NIXON PUZZLED President Nixon<lb/>
has told Republican leaders privately<lb/>
that he does not understand why the<lb/>
North Vietnamese are cooperating in his<lb/>
election eve peace negotiations. They<lb/>
must know, said the President, that they<lb/>
are helping his campaign by holding<lb/>
secret peace talks befon the election.<lb/>
The President hinted to his friends,<lb/>
however, that Moscow and Peking have<lb/>
quietly brought pressure upon the North<lb/>
Vietnamese to settle the war. The<lb/>
President has suggested that perhaps the<lb/>
two Communist titans have told Hanoi<lb/>
that Nixon would be tougher to deal<lb/>
with if he is re elected<lb/>
OILY BIRDS 1 he American<lb/>
Petroleum Institute has come up with<lb/>
another face-saving way to treat oil<lb/>
spills. It has published an expansive,<lb/>
full-color booklet on how to scrub down<lb/>
birds once they have been drenched with<lb/>
oil. The booklet is called "Operation<lb/>
Rescue" and took three years to prepare<lb/>
A better title for it would be Operation<lb/>
Double-Talk The oil industry offers<lb/>
the public helpful hints on the dos and<lb/>
don'ts of cleaning oil-soaked birds at the<lb/>
same time that it continues to lobby<lb/>
against legislation that would prevent oil<lb/>
spills in the first place<lb/>
COLLEGE QUOTAS Representative<lb/>
Bert Podeil. D-N Y , is investigating<lb/>
charges that the Health. Education and<lb/>
Welfare Department is quietly pressuring<lb/>
universities to set racial quotas for<lb/>
professors. According to Podeil,<lb/>
unqualified minority professors in many<lb/>
colleges are getting jobs that should be<lb/>
going to more able men. HEW denies the<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
SMOKESCREEN The Air Transport<lb/>
Association is proclaiming in newspaper<lb/>
ads around the country that airlines have<lb/>
put an end to smoke emissions from jet<lb/>
aircraft, but environmentalists tell us<lb/>
that by getting rid of the smoke, the<lb/>
airlines have actually caused the amount<lb/>
of invisible and highly toxic pollutants<lb/>
from jet engines to increase. Despite<lb/>
ATA s latest ad campaign, the Northern<lb/>
Research Corporation predicts a 200 per<lb/>
cent increase in invisible nitrogen oxide<lb/>
emissions from jet engines by the vear<lb/>
1980. ' T<lb/>
Author addresses problems of 'finding oneself'<lb/>
Bv JAMES MICHENER<lb/>
'? KM editor World War II serviceman<lb/>
? '? cl PuMtlti Prize winner, James<lb/>
? grit a whole new dimension to<lb/>
? One ol the most prolific and<lb/>
Of tne last three decades, Michener has<lb/>
M selling novels as Hawa'i<lb/>
and The Drifters "I<lb/>
0 calculating. Don't be too<lb/>
?cientifii Dont let the shrinks terrify<lb/>
v"u ? the movements of your<lb/>
life<lb/>
?"ere divine irrelevance in the<lb/>
universe and many men and women win<lb/>
through to .1 sense of greatness in their<lb/>
liU- ? it in .tiling and fumbling their<lb/>
waj into patterns that gratify them and<lb/>
allow then, to mil their endowments<lb/>
to the maximum.<lb/>
If Swarthmore College in 1925 had<lb/>
employed even a half-way decent<lb/>
guidance ekr, 1 would have spent<lb/>
my llf ?? an assistant professor of<lb/>
education in some midwestern<lb/>
university Became when I reported to<lb/>
college it must have been apparent to<lb/>
everyone th.it I was destined for some<lb/>
kmd of academic career. Nevertheless, I<lb/>
was allow to take Spanish, which leads<lb/>
to nothing, instead of French or<lb/>
German, which as everyone knows, are<lb/>
important languages studied by serious<lb/>
?tudents who vush to gain a Ph.D.<lb/>
I cannot tell you how often I was<lb/>
penalized for having taken a frivolous<lb/>
language like Spanish instead of a<lb/>
decent, sel f respecting tongue like<lb/>
French h, the end, I sacrificed my<lb/>
aeademii 1 areer<lb/>
Instead, I continued to putter around<lb/>
Wlth Spanish and found a deep affinity<lb/>
f?r it. In the end, I was able to write a<lb/>
b"ok about Spain which will probably<lb/>
I've longer than anything else I've done.<lb/>
In other words, I blindly backed into a<lb/>
minor masterpiece. There are thousands<lb/>
f?f people competent to write about<lb/>
F-ani e, and if had taken that language<lb/>
in college, 1 would have been prepared to<lb/>
add no new ?jas general knowledge.<lb/>
11 was Spanish that opened up for me a<lb/>
i<lb/>
whole new universe of concepts and<lb/>
ideas.<lb/>
I wrote nothing until 1 was 40. This<lb/>
tardy beginning, one might say this<lb/>
delinquency, stemmed from the fact that<lb/>
I had spent a good deal of my early time<lb/>
knocking around this country and<lb/>
Europe, trying to find out what I<lb/>
believed in, what values were large<lb/>
enough to enlist my sympathies during<lb/>
what I sensed would be a long and<lb/>
confused life. Had I committed myself at<lb/>
age 18, as I was encouraged to do, I<lb/>
would not even have known the<lb/>
parameters of the problem, and any<lb/>
choice I might have made then would<lb/>
have had to be wrong.<lb/>
It took me 40 years to find out the<lb/>
facts.<lb/>
As a consequence, I have never been<lb/>
able to feel anxiety about young people<lb/>
who are fumbling their way toward the<lb/>
enlightenment that will keep them going.<lb/>
I doubt that a young man unless he<lb/>
wants to be a doctor or a research<lb/>
chemist, where a substantial body of<lb/>
specific knowledge must be mastered<lb/>
within a prescribed time can waste<lb/>
time, regardless of what he does. I<lb/>
believe you have till age 35 to decide<lb/>
finally on what you are going to do, and<lb/>
that any exploration you pursue in the<lb/>
process will in the end turn out to have<lb/>
been creative.<lb/>
Indeed, it may well be the year that<lb/>
observers describe as "wasted" that will<lb/>
prove to have been the most productive<lb/>
of those insights which will keep you<lb/>
going. The trip to Egypt. The two years<lb/>
spent working as a runner for a bank.<lb/>
The spell you spent on the newspaper in<lb/>
Idaho. Your apprenticeship at a trade.<lb/>
These are the ways in which a young<lb/>
man ought to spend h? lifethe ways of<lb/>
waste that lead to true intelligence.<lb/>
Two more comments. Throughout my<lb/>
life, I have been something of an<lb/>
idealist-optimist, so it is startling for me<lb/>
to discover that recently I have become <lb/>
downright Nietzschean! I find that the<lb/>
constructive work of the world is done<lb/>
by an appallingly small percentage of the<lb/>
general population. The rest simply<lb/>
don't give a damnor they grow<lb/>
tiredor they failed to acquire when<lb/>
young the ideas that would vitalize them<lb/>
for the long decades.<lb/>
I am not saying that they don't<lb/>
matter. They count as among the most<lb/>
precious items on earth. But thev cannot<lb/>
be depended upon either to generate<lb/>
necessary new ideas or put them into<lb/>
operation if someone else generates<lb/>
them. Therefore those men and women<lb/>
who do have the energy to form new<lb/>
constructs and new ways to implement<lb/>
them must do the work of many<lb/>
believe it to be m nonorable asp.ratio<lb/>
to want to be among hose creators<lb/>
Final comment. I was about 40 when<lb/>
I retired from the rat race, having<lb/>
satisfied myself that I could handle it if <lb/>
had to. I saw then a man could count h.s<lb/>
life a success if he surv.ved mereh<lb/>
survived- to age 65 without haw<lb/>
ended up in jail (because he co idnt<lb/>
adjust to the minimum laws that so ?ietv<lb/>
requires) or having landed in the boobv<lb/>
hatch (because he could not bring his<lb/>
personality into harmony with 1<lb/>
personalities of others.)<lb/>
I believe this now without question<lb/>
Income, position, the opmion f<lb/>
friends, the judgment of Z;r?m<lb/>
all the other traditional criteria ???<lb/>
human beings are generally iJL ,<lb/>
for the birds. The only quet.rrVC<lb/>
you hang on through the era, .u<lb/>
throw at you and not lose vour' 2<lb/>
or your good sense?" ir??edom<lb/>
I am now sixty f<lb/>
three-quarters, and it's begmnZl " d<lb/>
as if I may make it if , ri ng'0,?ok<lb/>
happens beyond that j, Whatv"r<lb/>
houseand of no concern to th"<lb/>
???  rrie.<lb/>
FORUM REQUIRE(v7r<lb/>
All letters for public<lb/>
FORUM should be ZJr" m ,h"<lb/>
signature of the author "h tn?'<lb/>
withheldfromprmUfr5<lb/>
must have your name ' but ?'<lb/>
Y<lb/>
can<lb/>
visit<lb/>
part<lb/>
cam 1<lb/>
W<lb/>
the<lb/>
ass in<lb/>
As<lb/>
Hunt<lb/>
refei<lb/>
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about<lb/>
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and 11<lb/>
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and Pol<lb/>
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by the st<lb/>
compose<lb/>
Special<lb/>
a month 1<lb/>
selection<lb/>
A c c o r d 1<lb/>
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made a<lb/>
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groups.<lb/>
In re<lb/>
Student<lb/>
talize rest<lb/>
"llomt<lb/>
different<lb/>
allow for<lb/>
well as (<lb/>
allowing<lb/>
fullest e:<lb/>
sched ul(<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
This<lb/>
Cor<lb/>
Veterai<lb/>
benefits w<lb/>
as a result<lb/>
by Preside<lb/>
The an<lb/>
at a U'hi<lb/>
Vietnam V<lb/>
Let,<lb/>
cha<lb/>
The Bai<lb/>
convened ?1<lb/>
with Speak<lb/>
The bus<lb/>
began w<lb/>
legislation<lb/>
member of<lb/>
posit ion<lb/>
Fleming II;<lb/>
All legisl<lb/>
sworn in :<lb/>
oath of off<lb/>
N'eese.<lb/>
Selection<lb/>
hiUicaUons<lb/>
1.111sn;i pi<lb/>
the 12 nan<lb/>
Cynthia A<lb/>
Marvin Hm<lb/>
Kovacevic<lb/>
an alternate<lb/>
Brought<lb/>
bill concern<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>