<?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="00039682_0001"/>
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ECU hosts state debate<lb/>
championship tournament<lb/>
The annual State Debate<lb/>
Championship Tournament was held at<lb/>
ECU Saturday, April 7 for the first time.<lb/>
The tournament featured teams from<lb/>
UNC Chapel Hill, Duke, Wake Forest,<lb/>
Davidson, Lenoir-Ryne, Pfeiffer'<lb/>
UNC Ashville, NCSU, UNCGreensboro<lb/>
Appalachian, CaUwaba, and ECU.<lb/>
ECU Debate coach Nathan Weavil<lb/>
said, "This was a very successful debate<lb/>
as far as school participation. But it was<lb/>
the year of the small colleges<lb/>
The schools which placed in<lb/>
competition were: I,enoir-Rhyne first,<lb/>
UNCGreensboro second, Davidson<lb/>
third, Appalachian fourth, and ECU<lb/>
fifth. At last year's tournament at Wake<lb/>
Forest University, the Wake Forest team<lb/>
won the championship with ECU cominu<lb/>
in fifth.<lb/>
The tournament featured rounds in<lb/>
the varsity division, for experienced<lb/>
debaters, and in the novice division, for<lb/>
first year debaters. "Actually there were<lb/>
two debates going on at the same time<lb/>
said coach Weavil.<lb/>
"This year we have probably the best<lb/>
pair of varsity debaters we've ever had at<lb/>
ECU Weavil remarked. "Verne Jewett<lb/>
and Pat Ellis are the varsity team and<lb/>
have debated together for two years<lb/>
now<lb/>
The highlight of the ECU debating<lb/>
year came last October when Jewett and<lb/>
Ellis won the prestigious debate at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill. "This debate said<lb/>
Weavil, "attracts all the big national<lb/>
debate teams. Verne and Pat had a five<lb/>
and three record at this debate and beat<lb/>
North western's renowned debating<lb/>
team<lb/>
The official query for this year's<lb/>
championship was:<lb/>
"Resolved: That the federal<lb/>
government should provide a program of<lb/>
comprehensive medical care for all U.S.<lb/>
citizens<lb/>
SGA elections protested<lb/>
The recent SGA presidential elections<lb/>
have been protested by Robert Twilley,<lb/>
a candidate in that election.<lb/>
"1 am protesting the operation and<lb/>
organization of poll tenders and the<lb/>
elections committee said Twilley.<lb/>
"What I'm trying to show is how easy it<lb/>
is for someone to gain control of the<lb/>
elections<lb/>
Twilley feels that all persons who<lb/>
actively campaign for a candidate should<lb/>
not be allowed to attend the voting<lb/>
booths or count ballots. In the recent<lb/>
SGA elections this situation did occur<lb/>
Geologist speaks<lb/>
at local banquet<lb/>
A noted marine geologist and<lb/>
oceanographer. Dr. Robert S. Dietz, will<lb/>
be the speaker at the annual spring<lb/>
banquet of the East Carolina University<lb/>
Sigma Xi Club. The topic of Dr. Dietz's<lb/>
lecture will be "Continents Adrift: New<lb/>
Orthodoxy or Persuasive Joker?"<lb/>
The banquet will be held at 7 p.m. on<lb/>
Friday evening, April 13, in the South<lb/>
Cafeteria on the ECU Campus. Sigma Xi<lb/>
is a national honorary society embracing<lb/>
all scientific disciplines and is dedicated<lb/>
to the encouragement of research.<lb/>
The featured speaker. Dr. Dietz, has<lb/>
done much research on meteor craters in<lb/>
the earth's surface, and on the<lb/>
development of the relationship between<lb/>
continental drifting and sea-floor<lb/>
spreading are considered to be<lb/>
outstanding. His work has demanded<lb/>
that he visit every ocean and every<lb/>
continent, including Antartica where he<lb/>
went with Admiral Byrd's last<lb/>
expedition He is the author of about<lb/>
175 articles and reports and is the<lb/>
co-author with Jacques Piccard of the<lb/>
book "Seven Miles Down<lb/>
Dr. Dietz is credited with two major<lb/>
discoveries which have significantly<lb/>
altered the development of the earth<lb/>
sciences. He was one of the first to point<lb/>
out the importance of research on<lb/>
terrestrial meteor craters and led the way<lb/>
in their identification and in establishing<lb/>
their meteoric origin.<lb/>
Secondly, his studies explaining how<lb/>
i the idea of continental drift could be<lb/>
. integrated with the history of the ocean<lb/>
I floor have led to the development of one<lb/>
?Df the most important concepts in<lb/>
Ipeophysics today-that of sea-floor<lb/>
upreading.<lb/>
Students get<lb/>
scholarships<lb/>
?Three ECU students jn Biology have<lb/>
Ijaen chosen til reeer.e scholarships<lb/>
ptovided jointly by the faculty of the<lb/>
department and the ECU Office of<lb/>
?ttloloarships and Financial Aid<lb/>
?wd undergraduate students selected<lb/>
?It David Michael Rein of Washington,<lb/>
B and Russell Norman Holmes of<lb/>
Mtdford I-akes, N.J the graduate<lb/>
rtttdcni is Thomas Allen Dean of<lb/>
IMSberton, N.J.<lb/>
l?e two undergraduates and one<lb/>
IWdtiate student wire selected for the<lb/>
?gpJ awards as a result of their<lb/>
h and academic accomplishments.<lb/>
In is a senior biochemistry major<lb/>
has been involved in study of<lb/>
jn consumption by parasitic worms<lb/>
conditions of stress and will report<lb/>
h? lk to the North Carolina Academy<lb/>
e thus May in Charlotte. Holmes<lb/>
ior biology major who has been<lb/>
in research study of fresh-water<lb/>
in? algae Dean has recently<lb/>
il masters thesis research on the<lb/>
of the Pamlico Estuary<lb/>
Twilley stated. "There was campaign<lb/>
material exhibited at polling places in<lb/>
dorms that was not corrected by poll<lb/>
tenders , "he went on.<lb/>
'There are provisions for run-off<lb/>
elections for marshall legislature, and<lb/>
class presidents but not SGA President.<lb/>
This is inconsistent and not logical<lb/>
Twilley said.<lb/>
"I plan to present these facts to either<lb/>
the Elections Committee, Executive<lb/>
Council or the Review Board for possible<lb/>
reforms to be made<lb/>
"My intention with this protest said<lb/>
Twilley, "is not exactly to ask for a<lb/>
run-off election for SGA President. If<lb/>
the students feel the way I do about this,<lb/>
and they want a run-off, then I will run.<lb/>
"The only way for a run-off to be<lb/>
held is for the students to start a petition<lb/>
and submit it to the SGA Attorney<lb/>
General to be validated within 10 days<lb/>
after the initial election<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
week held<lb/>
The first two weeks in March were<lb/>
designated National Phi Sigma Pi Week.<lb/>
As part of their observance. Fast<lb/>
Carolina's Tau Chapter placed special<lb/>
displays in the main lobby of the<lb/>
University Union and Joyner Library,<lb/>
depicting some of the activities and goals<lb/>
of the fraternity.<lb/>
Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity was founded at East<lb/>
Carolina in 1936, and is the oldest<lb/>
fraternity organization on campus. Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi is based on a tripod of<lb/>
scholarship, leadership and fellowship.<lb/>
To become a brother of East<lb/>
Carolina's chapter, a student must have<lb/>
at least a 3.100 overall academic<lb/>
standing and a sophomore classification.<lb/>
In addition, the candidate must have<lb/>
shown an active interest in the<lb/>
University and an apparant potential for<lb/>
leadership.<lb/>
Nationally, Tau Chapter has been<lb/>
recognized as "Best Chapter in the<lb/>
Nation" for the past seven consecutive<lb/>
years. Some of the Chapter's activities<lb/>
are: an annual Christmas party for<lb/>
underprivileged children, donating and<lb/>
assisting the American Red Cross<lb/>
Bloodmobil a full program of<lb/>
intramural sports, and presenting a<lb/>
special award for an outstanding male<lb/>
and female senior.<lb/>
Within the fraternity, Tau chapter<lb/>
annually awards the Richard Cecil Todd<lb/>
and Clauda Pennock Todd Scholarship<lb/>
to an outstanding junior brother. The<lb/>
scholarship was established by Dr.<lb/>
Richard C. Todd, the chapter's faculty<lb/>
advisor and professor of history and Mrs.<lb/>
Todd.<lb/>
Bodenhamer wins election<lb/>
Bill Bodenhamer was elected SGA<lb/>
President Thursday, April 5 for the term<lb/>
beginning April 27, 1973<lb/>
Other SGA officers elected were<lb/>
Frieda Clarke, vice-president, Kathy<lb/>
HolJoman, treasurer. and Sandra<lb/>
Langley, secretary<lb/>
Only one of three referendum! put<lb/>
before the student body was passed. An<lb/>
amendment to the Student Government<lb/>
Constitution to do away with the<lb/>
popular election of marshals and to be<lb/>
replaced with the applicants who have<lb/>
the highest grade point above the<lb/>
required 3.00 was the referendum<lb/>
passed.<lb/>
The proposed name change of<lb/>
Morpheus for the school literary<lb/>
magazine was not passed and the name<lb/>
Rebel was maintained. Likewise the<lb/>
referendum proposing the elimination of<lb/>
the 2.0 grade average as a requirement to<lb/>
be a candidate for public office was not<lb/>
passed.<lb/>
SGA ELECTION RESULTS<lb/>
PRESIDENT<lb/>
Bill Bodenhamer 1,282 votes first count<lb/>
59 votes preferential<lb/>
second count<lb/>
1,341 total votes<lb/>
Robert Twilley<lb/>
1,089 votes first count<lb/>
66 votes preferential<lb/>
second count<lb/>
1,155 total votes<lb/>
Frank Saunders: 164 total votes<lb/>
Walter Estes: 59 total votes<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT<lb/>
Freida Clarke. 1,566 total votes<lb/>
Bob McKeel: 946 total votes<lb/>
TREASURER<lb/>
Kathy Holloman. 1,465 total votes<lb/>
Mike Edwards: 1,068 total votes<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
Sandra Langley elected:ran unopposed<lb/>
fountamhead<lb/>
?  and the truth xhftJ malra i .?<lb/>
VOLUME IV. NUMBER 45GREENVILLE, N.C.TUESDAY. APRIL 10 1973<lb/>
A ttica lawyers begin defense efforts<lb/>
(CPS)?A defense effort is being<lb/>
planned for this summer to prepare for<lb/>
the upcoming trials resulting from the<lb/>
Attica prison uprising of September<lb/>
1971.<lb/>
The project, called "Attica Summer<lb/>
is intended to bring about 100 people to<lb/>
upstate New York in order to undertake<lb/>
the necessary groundwork. The Attica<lb/>
Defense Committee has asked Don<lb/>
Jelinek. a defense attorney from<lb/>
Berkeley, to coordinate the project.<lb/>
Since the uprising a New York grand<lb/>
jury has handed down 37 indictments<lb/>
which name 60 of the Attica inmates.<lb/>
Then are more than 3,000 charges<lb/>
against Attica defendants, ranging from<lb/>
murder to "promoting prison<lb/>
contraband<lb/>
The trials for the inmates, according<lb/>
to Jelmek. will begin next winter and<lb/>
perhaps as early as the fall.<lb/>
Jelinek has issued a nationwide call<lb/>
for people to come to New York this<lb/>
summer and work on the Attica case.<lb/>
This work will consist of reading,<lb/>
analyzing, cross-indexing, and<lb/>
computerizing the extensive written<lb/>
evidence on the uprising; mapmaking.<lb/>
investigating, interviewing, court work,<lb/>
jury research and more.<lb/>
The defense committee needs people<lb/>
with specific skills related to these areas<lb/>
such as lawyers, law students and legal<lb/>
workers. They also need many people<lb/>
with general skills, such as typists,<lb/>
interviewers and general researchers. The<lb/>
committee. however, advises that<lb/>
volunteers cannot be paid due to lack of<lb/>
funds. They will be provided with a<lb/>
place to live, gas money, and perhaps<lb/>
with food.<lb/>
The reason given why such a large<lb/>
pretrial effort is required is that the case<lb/>
is extremely complex. The state has<lb/>
impost ' some peculiar burdens on the<lb/>
defense earn. A change-if-venue motion<lb/>
has been granted and will move the trials<lb/>
from Attica to various upstate New York<lb/>
cities, probabiy Rochester, Buffalo and<lb/>
Syracuse.<lb/>
Jelinek doesn't know how may trials<lb/>
there will be, or who will actually stand<lb/>
trial. He claims that the state "is<lb/>
indicting a large number of people in the<lb/>
hope of breaking a few to testify against<lb/>
the others "<lb/>
Another problem cited was that there<lb/>
are so many indictments, defendants will<lb/>
be named on a particular indictment<lb/>
with several other people Then he will<lb/>
be named on another indictment with<lb/>
different people and more charges.<lb/>
This means that each defendant may-<lb/>
have to stand trial more than once, each<lb/>
time on different charges with different<lb/>
co-defendantt and perhaps at different<lb/>
locations.<lb/>
Jelinek asks that people who are<lb/>
interested in working on the "Attica<lb/>
Summer write him at 2437 Durant<lb/>
Avenue. Berkeley, Californian 94704.<lb/>
The defense team would like at least a<lb/>
three-week commitment from<lb/>
volunteers, but preferably a six-week<lb/>
commitment.<lb/>
$50 million bond issue<lb/>
Bill could expand Med School<lb/>
t<lb/>
By SIDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
' 1 Writer<lb/>
A bill calling for a statewide<lb/>
referendum on the ECU med school was<lb/>
introduced Thursday.<lb/>
The bill was introduced by Rep. Larry<lb/>
Eagle D-Edgecombe and has 17 signers.<lb/>
Seveidl of these signers were not from<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
If passed the bill would set up a<lb/>
statewide referendum on a $50 million<lb/>
bond issue to finance expansion of the<lb/>
one-year medical school at East Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Erwin W. Monroe, vice-chancellor<lb/>
of Health Affairs said, 'This isn't<lb/>
something ECU is pushing or the eastern<lb/>
legislature as a whole. We didn't have<lb/>
anything to do with that bill or Larry<lb/>
Eagles'dec is ion to introduce the bill<lb/>
Monroe said he felt Eagles had several<lb/>
reasons for introducing the bill. An<lb/>
important reason would be because the<lb/>
Board of Governors has called for<lb/>
another study to evaluate the need for<lb/>
another medical school rather than<lb/>
advising the Board of Governors to<lb/>
proceed with the medical school.<lb/>
Ensemble programs presented<lb/>
Two ensemble programs will be<lb/>
presented by ECU musicians this week.<lb/>
The Chamber Singers will present its<lb/>
spring concert Wednesday, April 11, at<lb/>
8:15 p.m and four faculty members<lb/>
will perform a recital of chamber music<lb/>
Sunday, April 15, at 4:15 p.m. Both<lb/>
programs will be held in the Recital Hall<lb/>
of the A. J. Fletcher Music Center.<lb/>
The Chamber Singers, a small choral<lb/>
group of select voices from the School of<lb/>
Music will perform Monteverdi's<lb/>
"Magnificat Five English Folk Songs,<lb/>
arranged by Ralph Vaughn Williams, and<lb/>
a choral setting of Brahms' "New Love<lb/>
Songs<lb/>
The Monteverdi selection will be<lb/>
conducted by graduate student James<lb/>
Powers and will be accompanied by an<lb/>
ensemble of Baroque instruments.<lb/>
including two sack butts, a tenor<lb/>
trombone and organ.<lb/>
Soloists in the Brahms selection will<lb/>
be Melissa Thrasher, Ken Davis, Mary<lb/>
Lee Wilgers, Garner Keel and Debra<lb/>
Johnson.<lb/>
The faculty chamber music program<lb/>
will include Four Hymns arranged by<lb/>
Ralph Vaughn Williams from originals by<lb/>
Jeremy Taylor, Isaac Watts, Richard<lb/>
Crashaw and Robert Bridges.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Moore, tenor soloist, will<lb/>
sing the hymns, accompanied by pianist<lb/>
Jo Ann Moore and violist Dr. Rodney<lb/>
Schmidt.<lb/>
The program will also feature<lb/>
Hindemith's Sonata for Horn and Piano,<lb/>
performed by Jam?s Parnell, horn, and<lb/>
Ellen Reithmaier, piano.<lb/>
Both programs are free and open to<lb/>
the public-<lb/>
Monroe also said he felt a factor in the<lb/>
decision was that the study was to be<lb/>
made by out of state medical people that<lb/>
were more qualified to advise now to<lb/>
start a medical school than to say<lb/>
whether the state needs another medical<lb/>
school.<lb/>
TWO SEPERATE STUDIES<lb/>
Two separate studies have been made<lb/>
on the ECU Medical School One was<lb/>
made by Dr. John Glasson, president of<lb/>
the state medical society, and the heads<lb/>
of the three medical schools in the state.<lb/>
The other study was made by the<lb/>
committee of the Board of Governors.<lb/>
The study by the committee of the<lb/>
Board of Governors recommended that<lb/>
the school of medicine not be expanded<lb/>
but that it continue as a one year<lb/>
program and that another study be made<lb/>
to find the necessity of another medical<lb/>
school in North Carolina.<lb/>
ABOLISHMENT RECOMMENDED<lb/>
The study made by the state medical<lb/>
society recommends the abolishment of<lb/>
the one-year medical school at East<lb/>
Carolina to be replaced with an Area<lb/>
Health Education Center. It also<lb/>
recommends that an increase in financial<lb/>
support for North Carolina students at<lb/>
Duke and Boman Gray medical schools<lb/>
and an increase from 125 to 140-150<lb/>
students at the UNC School of Medicine.<lb/>
This study was made November, 1971<lb/>
and Monroe feels the reason the study-<lb/>
has suddenly become published is<lb/>
because the report was published in the<lb/>
March issue of the N.C. Medical Society<lb/>
Journal and "the president of this<lb/>
society is against the development of a<lb/>
medical school at ECU and not just at<lb/>
ECU. I would expect him to be against<lb/>
the development of a medical school<lb/>
anywhere in the state<lb/>
Dr Wallace Wooles, dean of the ECU<lb/>
Medical School said the report by the<lb/>
state medical society was biased and<lb/>
prejudiced because it was prepared by<lb/>
the heads of the three medical schools in<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Wooles also said he was upset by the<lb/>
report because it admits that North<lb/>
Carolins is 26 percent behind the<lb/>
national average of doctors and the<lb/>
proposals it makes only would have 20<lb/>
more doctors a year graduating from<lb/>
UNC. Wooles said that North Carolina<lb/>
would still be 20-25 percent behind the<lb/>
national average by 1980 if it follows<lb/>
what the state medical society report<lb/>
recommends.<lb/>
Wooles said the timing of the release<lb/>
of the report upset him because it<lb/>
appeared two weeks before the<lb/>
committee appointed by th? board of<lb/>
governors was to meet.<lb/>
REPORT PRESENTED<lb/>
The report will be presented to the<lb/>
society's House of Delegates at its annual<lb/>
meeting next May for adoption as<lb/>
medical society policy. "I don't believe<lb/>
the average practicing doctor in the state<lb/>
will agree with it Dr Wooles<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
Monroe said, "I don't have any idea<lb/>
whether the report by the medical<lb/>
society will have an effect on the<lb/>
Governors Board committee I tnink the<lb/>
republishing of the report at this time is<lb/>
inappropriate They will not have a<lb/>
chance to agree or disagree with it until<lb/>
mid-May<lb/>
Monroe feels that the state has made<lb/>
a commitment toward the development<lb/>
of a medical school in North Carolina<lb/>
and the state needs a new medical school<lb/>
whether it's now or in '74 Everyone<lb/>
across the state is aware of the need for<lb/>
doctors and something mjst be done no<lb/>
matter what study group says what<lb/>
A mistake a lot of people make<lb/>
according to Monroe is that a medical<lb/>
school at East Carolina is for eastern<lb/>
North Carolina. "Any medical school is<lb/>
statewide and not just regional because it<lb/>
accepts students from across the state It<lb/>
is through outreaching programs and<lb/>
resources that you get doctors in the<lb/>
area. Doctors are attracted to practice in<lb/>
regions where ther ? is a medical school<lb/>
he said<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039682_0002"/><lb/>
d (rii Mt 19 13<lb/>
fount Ainhead<lb/>
Editorial Commentary<lb/>
Printed rumors dangerous<lb/>
Student NewMUiK-i<lb/>
t'UblllhM ?t t Jll (fOllnj Olllvatflty<lb/>
 I' h tilt i I U Station<lb/>
Qraanvitlc, North Carolina .?78I4<lb/>
t alepho<lb/>
tit h M '<lb/>
Bi't ,ium' of (iTiain legal technicalities<lb/>
involved, we were no! able to write the<lb/>
editorial thai we desired It would have<lb/>
been on the unscrupulous behavior of<lb/>
certain students during the past election<lb/>
for s; President<lb/>
One such act was the circulation of a<lb/>
poster entitled "The rtue Facts about<lb/>
'Blue Light' Hill Bodenhamer " The<lb/>
first paragraph stated that these "facts"<lb/>
had been iititittt?Mt to my attention, and<lb/>
that I had refused to investigate them l<lb/>
would like to state now thai I have never<lb/>
seen the author of tins poster We then<lb/>
investigated the charges through Dean of<lb/>
Men James Mallory rhe results appear<lb/>
on the opposite page<lb/>
rhe Fountainhead will NOT print ru-<lb/>
mors from ANY source until they can be<lb/>
?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:<lb/>
Black week<lb/>
underplayed<lb/>
ro Fountainhead<lb/>
On rhursday of lad week, I came up<lb/>
to the Fountainhead office and asked for<lb/>
.t reporter to do a coverage story on<lb/>
Black Week (April 2-8) th.it was being<lb/>
sponsored by Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students (S.O.U.L.S i Brenda Pugh was<lb/>
assigned to cover the story, which<lb/>
consisted of an outline of speakers and<lb/>
events to encompass the entire week<lb/>
From Miss Pugh, I got the impression<lb/>
that the article was turned in by deadline<lb/>
time for Tuesday's paper, yet the article<lb/>
on Black Week wasn't there and on<lb/>
rhursday I find a mentioning of Black<lb/>
Week in a wee corner (if the paper with<lb/>
all oi the important events cut out I'd<lb/>
like to ay that l didn't appreciate it<lb/>
1 don't appreciate the idea of your<lb/>
revising the article to fit the smaller<lb/>
spaces of your newpaper and<lb/>
simultaneously distorting the purpose<lb/>
and minimizing the importance of our<lb/>
Hlaek Week You must realize by now<lb/>
that the Blacks are a minority here on<lb/>
campus, but we are of a large enough<lb/>
number to receive recognition by<lb/>
Fountainhead. S.G.A, administration.<lb/>
etc We can't be as easily overlooked as<lb/>
that article (that YOU revised! implies<lb/>
According to the original article we<lb/>
three speakers, rap sessions, dress<lb/>
mod .md choirs scheduled for that<lb/>
week. yet. you only felt it necessary to<lb/>
the parts Either YOUR<lb/>
priorities .ire all misconstrued or you feel<lb/>
that the most important thing to Blacks<lb/>
IS announcing a party Whichever reason.<lb/>
1 feel that they make you most<lb/>
incompetent for revising a letter dealing<lb/>
with Black people and Black events<lb/>
Until you become knowledgeable of our<lb/>
people and things of importance in our<lb/>
culture. I ask you to refrain from<lb/>
revising our articles. Print them as they<lb/>
ar. or DON'T print them at all.<lb/>
A member<lb/>
Other concerned member<lb/>
Cassandra Bradshaw<lb/>
Everette Lee O'Neal<lb/>
Dennis Dawson<lb/>
Nevonia Bruton<lb/>
Kathy McLeod<lb/>
Jerome Owens<lb/>
Willie Harvey, Jr<lb/>
Matthew Hibbs<lb/>
James Adams, Jr<lb/>
Aaron Croon<lb/>
Palmer Lisane<lb/>
Michael Jones<lb/>
Deborah McCrae<lb/>
Alfred McCrimmon<lb/>
Jacqueline Hawkins,<lb/>
of the Black minority<lb/>
i:<lb/>
Dianne Cameron<lb/>
Thomas Patterson<lb/>
Veronica Ward<lb/>
Walter Davenport<lb/>
Brenda Daniel<lb/>
James Mitchell<lb/>
Jim Jones<lb/>
Jackson Farrar<lb/>
Gary W (illegible)<lb/>
Marshall McCaden<lb/>
Stan Watkins<lb/>
George Leurs<lb/>
Norns Holloway<lb/>
substantiated Apparently the author of<lb/>
this poster is too much of a coward to<lb/>
present himself in person in the Foun-<lb/>
tainhead office<lb/>
It is part of my job to protect the Fast<lb/>
Carolina University Publications Hoard<lb/>
from damages resulting from a libel suit,<lb/>
which this poster may create Until such<lb/>
statements can be cleared through the<lb/>
ptoper channels, we will refuse to print<lb/>
any other such electoral propoganda<lb/>
Instead of asking Fountainhead to<lb/>
investigate any more charges, I would<lb/>
suggest that anyone having such<lb/>
grievances present them to the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council, the Elections Com<lb/>
mittee or the Honor Council. These<lb/>
are the proper channels for filing such<lb/>
complaints<lb/>
xwwvvxwx<lb/>
,EditO' S ??piv I<lb/>
Our editing of the Black Week story<lb/>
down to bulletin size was not warranted<lb/>
by prejudice or a desire to ignore Blacks<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Miss Pugh-a highly able staff writer. I<lb/>
might add was requested to write the<lb/>
Black Week story for Thursday's paper;<lb/>
she replied that the information was not<lb/>
ready, and turned the story in instead<lb/>
for the following Tuesday's paper<lb/>
On Tuesday the second day of Black<lb/>
Week our IBM composer broke down,<lb/>
and two pages of t hi' paper were<lb/>
eliminated No other space was available<lb/>
due to our extensive SGA coverage<lb/>
By Thursday, looking at the Black<lb/>
Week story, we realized that all but a<lb/>
few events were over: since news is in the<lb/>
present and future, this meant that no<lb/>
lengthy Black Week story could be run<lb/>
on page one. Instead of eliminating it<lb/>
entirely, we placed it in 'Around<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
At the same time, we suggested to the<lb/>
features department that they cover the<lb/>
remaining Black Week events on their<lb/>
page (page 2), since a feature story or<lb/>
photo essay would be more absorbing<lb/>
than a small bulletin. Unfortunately, it<lb/>
seems that the suggestion was not made<lb/>
use of.<lb/>
As a result. Black Week received only<lb/>
a bulletin in Thursday's paper. This was<lb/>
not intentional, and I assure you that I<lb/>
was quite disappointed as well, since<lb/>
Fountainhead has tried to give extensive<lb/>
coverage to all campus groups, minority<lb/>
groups, and anyone else involved in local<lb/>
news It was a result of both mechanical<lb/>
failure and the pressures of laying out a<lb/>
paper in minimum time<lb/>
I can understand any bitterness you<lb/>
might feel, and 1 apologize. Blacks do<lb/>
receive an unfortunate minimum of news<lb/>
coverage, we try up here, though perhaps<lb/>
not hard enough in this particular<lb/>
instance.<lb/>
t any rate, try to understand our<lb/>
predicament as well-and we'll attempt to<lb/>
act with greater sensitivity in the future<lb/>
Pat Crawford<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Amnesty never dies<lb/>
Fountainhead:<lb/>
Sirs. (Mr. Simpson and Mr.<lb/>
Stephenson) you speak that which you<lb/>
know not. H. D. Thoreau has wntten:<lb/>
"Only the defeated and deserters go to<lb/>
the wars, cowards that run away and<lb/>
enlist "Woe unto them! For they have<lb/>
gone in the way of Cain - Jude: 11.<lb/>
"For this is the message that ye heard<lb/>
from the beginning, that we should love<lb/>
one another " - .John 3:11<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
A Hippy Jesus Freak<lb/>
Bo Perkins<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Stephen Rauchle, Managing Editor<lb/>
Charles Griffin, Business Manager<lb/>
Perri Morgan, Advertising Manager jack Morrow, Sp?r,? Kditor<lb/>
I'd Crawford. News Editor lln? e Parri? ????.? g<lb/>
Skip Sander, Wl. New Edito, PfcylH. Motherly, kmt. Features EdHor<lb/>
Mike Edwards, Circulation Manager<lb/>
 I . t v<lb/>
v i or<lb/>
HrttM<lb/>
r OK SOME KEASOM I<lb/>
-THOOOHT IT WOULD corvt OUT A<lb/>
CIVILE DlFF?t?Nn.y<lb/>
<lb/>
rvVv?U<lb/>
v)3<lb/>
NAa7V<lb/>
fr<lb/>
Lgtai<lb/>
ft-  <lb/>
wsxw<lb/>
ttCMOWHWjWOftBft<lb/>
THE FORUM<lb/>
Ex beneficiary<lb/>
sorry over Bonn<lb/>
1 o Fountainhead<lb/>
I imagine that the Greenville campus<lb/>
Of FCC has heard that FCC Bonn will<lb/>
cease to exist after this year 1 am sorry<lb/>
that no one after this year will know the<lb/>
kind of happy and educational<lb/>
experiences we at FCC Bonn have gone<lb/>
through together<lb/>
We have traveled, eaten, learned, and<lb/>
gotten into mischief together We have<lb/>
all seen at least eleven countries<lb/>
together of which three an- communist.<lb/>
On a fascist regime, and the remainder<lb/>
either federal or monarchial . We have<lb/>
seen the best and the worst of Europe.<lb/>
No matter how bad a situation seemed.<lb/>
it was quickly overcome. I feel that this<lb/>
year will prove more and more to have<lb/>
been the best year of my life.<lb/>
Before I left for this year abroad. 1<lb/>
felt that life was becoming a drag<lb/>
I pardon the cliche i and that my<lb/>
academic carver was not proving to be<lb/>
worthwhile Over here 1 began to<lb/>
examine myself and to learn from the<lb/>
other student, of Haus Steineck, They<lb/>
became a combination of parental and<lb/>
friendly advisors. If I was coming on<lb/>
strong they would let me know that I<lb/>
was being too much to bear This helpful<lb/>
criticism was given without any<lb/>
animosity being created. Of course<lb/>
conflicts would flare up from time to<lb/>
time but this seems only natural when<lb/>
thirty-six individuals are put together in<lb/>
a strange environment. This communal<lb/>
style of living also helped my study<lb/>
habits as shown m a rise in my quality<lb/>
point average We had to study harder<lb/>
but found it be more rewarding<lb/>
gradewise and personally The<lb/>
curriculum set-up of ECU Bonn I feel<lb/>
has prepared me for life and interrelating<lb/>
with other people. I attribute this<lb/>
opinion i the fact that the ECU Bonn<lb/>
program was Reared to give a student a<lb/>
variety of subjects to choose from and<lb/>
these subjects dealt with all facets of life<lb/>
in general.<lb/>
In closing I again wish to convey to<lb/>
the people of FCC Oreenville what a<lb/>
rewarding and worthwhile program FCC<lb/>
Bonn iaandwhataahameitiitocloaeil<lb/>
down. 1 also w,sh to thank the other<lb/>
thirty-five students who shared the.r<lb/>
ives with ma. 1 apologize for<lb/>
rouble I ever caused them and hope that<lb/>
will see them next yar back in<lb/>
Creenville. Thanks also to the faculties<lb/>
of the past three quarters of FCC Bonn<lb/>
Special thanks to Dr. HansH. Indorf and<lb/>
Dr. Henry Wandermann for their<lb/>
understanding and leadership as director!<lb/>
of ECU BONN<lb/>
Regretfully yourj,<lb/>
Charles W Hulka<lb/>
Must meet one<lb/>
dorm stipulation<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
We the residents of Creene Hall would<lb/>
like to strongly protest the actions taken<lb/>
against our dorm, namely the turning of<lb/>
it into a freshman dorm. We are not<lb/>
entirely opposed to it if one stipulation<lb/>
is met -??WE WANT SELF-LIMITING<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
Presently there are freshmen in this<lb/>
dorm and we stlij' have self-limiting<lb/>
hours and it would not be different fall<lb/>
quarter with them there. If funds are the<lb/>
question then the self-limiting entrance<lb/>
to Garrett for girls could be made the<lb/>
back door and one policeman could<lb/>
serve all dorms.<lb/>
The administrations' actions may<lb/>
result in more empty rooms in the other<lb/>
dorms due to more upperclassmen<lb/>
moving off-campus. Greene ls the only<lb/>
dorm many of them would even consider<lb/>
living m due to the attitude of the<lb/>
residents, location, hours and the<lb/>
facilities available. With the increase in<lb/>
xxx-Xsxss<lb/>
dorm rent, students will be more than<lb/>
willing to pay I In- same rent for an<lb/>
off campus apartment<lb/>
According to a memorandum dated<lb/>
March 21. 1973 from Fleanor .1<lb/>
Hunting, Greene was designated to be a<lb/>
self-limiting dorm for the 73-74 school<lb/>
year. It is now one week prior to room<lb/>
assignments and the administration has<lb/>
changed this policy.<lb/>
We readily accept anything the<lb/>
administration will do to remedy the<lb/>
situation<lb/>
Residents of Mary Greene Dorm<lb/>
Thanks students<lb/>
for concern, talent<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to take this opportunity<lb/>
to thank all of the students that<lb/>
displayed their concern and talent by<lb/>
trying out for the Varsity Cheerleading<lb/>
Squad Because of the fine talent<lb/>
exhibited, the judges were forced with a<lb/>
tough job.<lb/>
A thank you is necessary for the Spirit<lb/>
Committee. No one really knows what a<lb/>
fine job all of you carried out this year.<lb/>
Thank you: Lou Ann Taylor, Sidney<lb/>
Querry. Vickie Vaughn, Kathy Owens,<lb/>
Beverly Hester, Beth Tuttle, Brenda<lb/>
Branch, Mrs Erwin, Mr. McLendon, Dr.<lb/>
Gnmsely and all others involved in the<lb/>
project conducted by the committee.<lb/>
And of course, congratulations to the<lb/>
new 1973-74 Varsity Cheerleading<lb/>
Squad:<lb/>
Denise Bobbitt<lb/>
Kathy Rambo<lb/>
Sherry Cobbs<lb/>
Debbie Davis<lb/>
Kim Aussant<lb/>
Judy Barnes<lb/>
Becky Keeter<lb/>
Roger Dennehy<lb/>
Bill Heard<lb/>
Jerome Jones<lb/>
John Rambo<lb/>
Bryan Sibley<lb/>
Rick Nipper<lb/>
Noms Holloway<lb/>
Sincerely yours.<lb/>
Norm S Holloway, Chairman<lb/>
Spirit Commirteee<lb/>
Venders- 3<lb/>
Students- 0<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Last Tuesday (April 31 I went to see<lb/>
the Moog Concert in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
which I enjoyed very much. However, I<lb/>
arrived a little late and missed the first<lb/>
two numbers The doors were closed<lb/>
during this time so as not to disturb the<lb/>
concert.<lb/>
I already had my ticket but many<lb/>
ieople had not yet purchased one and<lb/>
were standing in line waiting to buy<lb/>
tickets. The ticket venders ran out of the<lb/>
blue ticket for students which cost 50<lb/>
'nu. They then refused to sell the<lb/>
students the public tickets for anything<lb/>
Jess than the full price of 3 dollars!<lb/>
rhese students had their I.D.s and<lb/>
Activity Cards and had every right to<lb/>
entr the concert at the student price of<lb/>
50 cents.<lb/>
Futhermore, when I entered the<lb/>
Auditorium I found that several rows of<lb/>
seats were almost completely empty<lb/>
I hese seats remained empty throughout<lb/>
the concert. The students were turned<lb/>
away for the sole reason of running out<lb/>
of tickets marked "student "<lb/>
Congratulations to the ticket sellers who<lb/>
kept the letter of the rules but ignored<lb/>
the spirit of them. It was another victory<lb/>
for bureaucracy and another loss for<lb/>
fairness.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Stephen B Nash<lb/>
Disgusted and<lb/>
angered in Slay<lb/>
To Fountainhead<lb/>
rhe closing of Slay Dormitory ha.v<lb/>
brought about much controversy and has<lb/>
evoked the wrath of its residents on the<lb/>
administration. After much protest and<lb/>
petitioning, it has become evident that<lb/>
there is nothing that can be done about<lb/>
the closing of Slay Dorm.<lb/>
In looking at the housing situation as<lb/>
it has been in the past. I can't help<lb/>
finding myself disgusted and angered at<lb/>
the parties responsible for the planning,<lb/>
location, and construction of the<lb/>
dormitories built in the past fifteen<lb/>
years. Beet Carolina was originally a<lb/>
teacher's college and the overwhelming<lb/>
majority of its students were women.<lb/>
However, in the past fifteen years, there<lb/>
has been a steady expansion of a variety<lb/>
of other cuunculum and the male<lb/>
population has thus increased.<lb/>
To put ,t bluntly, the dormitory<lb/>
situation is a mess and those parties that<lb/>
were responsible are a bunch of idiots. In<lb/>
regard to the planning and construction<lb/>
of the newer dormitories (both men's<lb/>
and women's), they are excessively large<lb/>
and impersonal. The construction is such<lb/>
that a person can put his fist through the<lb/>
walls and one can hear an alarm clock<lb/>
two rooms down There is speculation<lb/>
that several of the newer dorms will be<lb/>
unsafe long before one expects an<lb/>
expensive building to wear out. It is a<lb/>
pity the ECU will only have a gaudily<lb/>
painted smoke-stack for a landmark fifty<lb/>
years from now.<lb/>
In regard to location, it is inexcusable<lb/>
that ALL of the men's dorms are on the<lb/>
hill, and that most all of the women<lb/>
dorms are on the main campus Were the<lb/>
fathers of our housing program not<lb/>
aware that the balance of men to women<lb/>
students was apt to change drastically<lb/>
over a short period of time? For all of<lb/>
you great moral fathers; how much extra<lb/>
money would have it cost just to wire<lb/>
the men's dorms for an intercom system<lb/>
that could be implemented at a later<lb/>
time if nece?ary'<lb/>
It is simply unjust that there will no<lb/>
longer be any men's dorms on the main<lb/>
campus. The students of ECU will be<lb/>
infinitely inconvenienced simply because<lb/>
my twelve-year old brother could do a<lb/>
much better job of planning the<lb/>
dormitories than our great moral fathers<lb/>
did.<lb/>
VIC JEFFREYS<lb/>
SLAY DORM<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
All students, faculty members, and<lb/>
adminstrators are urged to express their<lb/>
opinions in writing to the Forum.<lb/>
The editorial page is an open forum<lb/>
where such opinions may be published<lb/>
Unsigned editorials reflect the opinions<lb/>
of the editor-in-chief, and not necessarily<lb/>
those of the entire staff or wen a<lb/>
majority.<lb/>
When writing to the Forum, the<lb/>
follow ng procedure should be used:<lb/>
-Letters must be typed,<lb/>
double-spaced, and should not exceed<lb/>
300 words.<lb/>
Letters hould be signed with the name<lb/>
Of the author and Other endorsers Upon<lb/>
the request of the s.gnees. their names<lb/>
may be withheld.<lb/>
Signed articles on th? page reflect the<lb/>
"Pinions of the authors, and not<lb/>
u-eessarily those of the Fo?n?.?nhcHd or<lb/>
sen (arolma University.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039682_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
T A<lb/>
Fountainhead. Tuesday April 10, 1973 Pane 8<lb/>
g<lb/>
WffawwwwgBj<lb/>
I and<lb/>
in Slay<lb/>
Jlay Dormitory has<lb/>
controversy and has<lb/>
its residents on the<lb/>
r much protest and<lb/>
ecome evident that<lb/>
I can be done about<lb/>
orm.<lb/>
housing situation as<lb/>
past. I can't help<lb/>
sted and angered at<lb/>
ile for the planning,<lb/>
istruction of the<lb/>
l the past fifteen<lb/>
i was originally a<lb/>
I the overwhelming<lb/>
lents were women<lb/>
fifteen years, there<lb/>
pansion of a variety<lb/>
n and the male<lb/>
I creased.<lb/>
y, the dormitory<lb/>
d those parties that<lb/>
bunch of idiots. In<lb/>
g and construction<lb/>
tories (both men's<lb/>
re excessively large<lb/>
'obstruction is such<lb/>
his fist through the<lb/>
aar an alarm clock<lb/>
lere is speculation<lb/>
?wer dorms will be<lb/>
one expects an<lb/>
wear out. It is a<lb/>
ily have a gaudily<lb/>
nr a landmark fifty<lb/>
n, it is inexcusable<lb/>
s dorms are on the<lb/>
II of the women'5<lb/>
campus Were the<lb/>
;ing program not<lb/>
of men to women<lb/>
change drastically<lb/>
f time For all of<lb/>
s. how much extra<lb/>
cost just to wire<lb/>
n intercom system<lb/>
nented at a later<lb/>
that there will no<lb/>
orms on the main<lb/>
of ECU will be<lb/>
ed simply because<lb/>
other could do a<lb/>
if planning the<lb/>
reat moral fathers<lb/>
VIC JEFFREYS<lb/>
SLAY DORM<lb/>
olicy<lb/>
y members, and<lb/>
i to express their<lb/>
le Forum.<lb/>
 an open forum<lb/>
lay be published<lb/>
fleet the opinions<lb/>
id not necessarily<lb/>
staff or even a<lb/>
he Forum, the<lb/>
iiId be used:<lb/>
he typed,<lb/>
mid not exceed<lb/>
"d with the name<lb/>
endorsers. Upon<lb/>
?'es. their names<lb/>
!agc reflect the<lb/>
hors. and not<lb/>
Fountainhead or<lb/>
SOrACTAjQUTBILL ("BLUE LIGHT? BODENHAMFr"<lb/>
Ein7ZJS bm,tt? l? the att8nt,0n ?f Perkin'? Editor-in-Chief of TJ<lb/>
?nvest.gate or pub.ish eTaCts ? " Thj?FoiJmainh,ad refused to eitlver<lb/>
Genera. Td.TeL nVwlTT? "  "P d rammmfl thr?Uflh the MRC<lb/>
nuymg blue lights for the campus police cars.<lb/>
2. Last year the MR C created a ?-n no<lb/>
mach.nes in the men, mMmaZhZTfljEfSET! ' su'ng the pool tables and pinball<lb/>
h.mself has already collected a,v,nl 1 ?2 "T ! 8ntai'S ?n'V diVidmfl the m?ney wh,ch the ?do'<lb/>
Treasurer once a vvee A,ls " ? u ? '  ? ?ther ha,f 0ver to the R.C.<lb/>
months last summer ,?. nThmes ln ! 1'V T JlT B?denhamer took . I hirmrtf. Some<lb/>
mach.nes d.dn t even br.ng in a total of twenty dollars per week.<lb/>
dollar3, wchTeTakt'l monthTp ZS "TV" " i$ ?V9r and abov8 <lb/>
the M.R.C. President andTthrreluLeoT ?L? KS B?denha? ?? " ??ary increase of<lb/>
But .(no. no public mformat on 2 I 7" " M? Genera' Council "v"al "?? ago.<lb/>
unknown. f?'?t.on has been disseminated concerning the fact the amount of increase is<lb/>
finanC4ia,Tofit!0the:MmRec ES?? ? ? kernes as potent.a. sources of huge<lb/>
for the dorms. Only a few dollars 1 , ??? ?f d?"ar$ f?r tabl? and j? ?chines<lb/>
Almost no one uses theTce machines "I IE "   f?r the  of tha ??. ??"??<lb/>
M.R.C. money this year   C?nSt'tUte ?n8 ?f the  ??? Phases made with<lb/>
2.0 gfadeZnt ZSXiSmtTZ ?S t0  6,eCt'0n'   " ?<lb/>
As it stands now a nd date Jo n S A o? "? "SL the ?utco? ? ? referendum was.<lb/>
srStxH ?H Srssarss<lb/>
and has b?ri t,ck.t.d Pi0  s"b?qU.ntly parkad his m in ,h. ,p?,<lb/>
the lody U, .hid, auch comphinuthouJ to.ZTZZTl? f l   n"<lb/>
W, ,?,fcW ?? ?, M,? j.?,? Mll lh(. ? d?" ,TI"?? 'I" ?nvejtwi.on our?i,a,<lb/>
1. Dean of Men James MalJory originally conceived of the idea of purchasing blue lumts for ?????<lb/>
Ktco5L??Bodenhamer ?nt th" -in thfcJ -f a wr, m0r m<lb/>
pofit.oVrMrenXrdTn'ator ' ive Advisor to screen applicant, for the<lb/>
mesa week ?, fte mSn,T the ma h,n " ' P?1"1 m?ney U?m mat'h,npS thr? to f?<lb/>
duties of thi. ? dtinTrsumLJno ;ay  ReS'dent AdmStral- ?- .l handled the<lb/>
thU saly was puWS"iS'th?" 65Id?llaTS qUmer untl) ,l was ?? 0 $90 a quarter New. of<lb/>
y was published in the I Want to Know" column of Fountainhead on March 29<lb/>
one-half the tStSSJ ?L??B f?f P?0) tab,es' beL'aU8t the tables "? lea '?<lb/>
that the older machme' ?uld not h , J? " R'e maCh'neS WWe aT0 on thp -umption<lb/>
by Bodenhamer when u was found tha,fS? u' 5 l? CanCel the "6W machlne P was U"<lb/>
was round that the older machines could be repaired by Fall quarter.<lb/>
5. Irrelevant.<lb/>
cJrifT rS "eVer a" ?Jf,W,al m?t,0n Placed by Bodenhamer before the MRC for his endorsement<lb/>
Certified by the minutes and John Rogers, the new Res.dent Adnnmstrator of the WLC.<lb/>
ejS? ZToTR?that ?"offlcl"MRC press rp,ea- -<lb/>
MRC President on them None of ftelSSSh.wk I 1? R annncemenu have the name of the<lb/>
the candidacy of Bodenhame!?for president  ?f the e'Wtl?n made reference to<lb/>
i1Wiassa?a<lb/>
bv u?drhaTef dld, nt Wm the b? P'Une vote nocessarV to win the election and only was elected<lb/>
by use of preferennal voting. Gross polling irregularities were reported however n .t leas, t of nt<lb/>
Pcincts and concerned a number of the election officials. 9' per prJSE<lb/>
PonntVT h!V! tHe faCt$ that V?U Sh?U,d have had before th8 ????on. Contact the S G A and The<lb/>
Fountamhead and demand new. honest, and impartial elections.<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR IMPARTIAL ELECTIONS<lb/>
?WWWWJWHWPRRWWSW<lb/>
Constructive<lb/>
measures offered<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The bells of Spring toll a renewal and<lb/>
rebirth of Nature. This Spring let the<lb/>
life-giving Sun smile down upon the<lb/>
innocent collegians of ECU as we aspire<lb/>
to broaden our intellectual horizons, and<lb/>
to fortify and sanctify the dynamic spirit<lb/>
of our student body. And this Spring let<lb/>
the bubbling effervescence of our<lb/>
individual and communal renaissance<lb/>
overflow onto, inundate, and refurbish<lb/>
the serene visage of our beloved campus.<lb/>
We the undersigned have earnestly<lb/>
compiled a brief but potent list of<lb/>
constructive measures which we believe<lb/>
will honorably serve this student<lb/>
symphony and campus face-lifting.<lb/>
Firstly, with Athletes Foot treading<lb/>
toward epidemic proportions we<lb/>
altruistically admonish and boldly<lb/>
beseech each student (faculty are also<lb/>
susceptible to this predatory, pedal<lb/>
plague) to dutifully donate the old<lb/>
toothbrush along with his next 4 or 5<lb/>
sunny Saturdays so that we may unite<lb/>
on our hands and knees, bathing our<lb/>
being m that healthy, sweet aroma of<lb/>
common sweat, and scour the cracks and<lb/>
crevaces of all Greenville sidewalks<lb/>
whenn the malicious, malignant, menace<lb/>
may locally lurk.<lb/>
Secondly and socially, we suggest the<lb/>
confluence of all students and faculty at<lb/>
the Wright Circle fountain to occasion<lb/>
yfflywwmwtmmnnfuiiiB?????? mmn (<lb/>
FORUM cont'd.<lb/>
the First Annual ECU Fenny Pitch where<lb/>
each individual will be required to<lb/>
joyously toss ALL his surplus pennies<lb/>
into our sparkling fountain (there need<lb/>
not be any water in it) (currency and<lb/>
coin exchange will be provided) (nickels<lb/>
and dimes are even more fun). Those<lb/>
who wish to linger behind as the<lb/>
emotionally drained multitude disperses<lb/>
may observe soon thereafter three<lb/>
rapturous comrades harvesting and<lb/>
crating the copper crop in the sincere<lb/>
hope that the dual purpose of this festive<lb/>
event will be fruitfully fulfilled; that is,<lb/>
to first grant each contestant regardless<lb/>
of age, sex, race, or disability an equal<lb/>
opportunity in the competition to<lb/>
determine who can land the most coins<lb/>
inside the fountain within the illotted<lb/>
six hours, and secondly to provide ample<lb/>
funds to pay our rent for the remainder<lb/>
of the school year.<lb/>
With the brevity and impact of a<lb/>
snake-tongue, knockout punch we<lb/>
conclude our rich respendent repertoire<lb/>
in the blessed name of school spirit by<lb/>
propounding that little purple pirates be<lb/>
emblazoned on all campus toillette<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
In this noble attempt to harness the<lb/>
boundless, perennial energies of our<lb/>
student body, it is our sincere hope and<lb/>
trust that these straightforward<lb/>
suggestions will lend impetus and<lb/>
direction to new and, it possible, more<lb/>
explosively constructive ideas which<lb/>
might Spring into action.<lb/>
Have a nice Spring<lb/>
Gordo, Dono. Ben<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
"P<lb/>
rr<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
Now Open in our New Location<lb/>
Corner of 5th St. &amp; Cofanche St.<lb/>
We Have DELICIOUS<lb/>
PIZZA LASAGNA<lb/>
SPAGHETTI SANDWICHES<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
510p.m. 7 DAYS A<lb/>
WEEK. 752-7483<lb/>
Allow 30-45 Minutes for Your<lb/>
Order to Arrive.<lb/>
Will the circle be unbroken-<lb/>
music all afternoon<lb/>
DUKE JOE COLLEGE<lb/>
CONCERT<lb/>
Saturday, April I4-J2 P.M.<lb/>
Wallace Wade Stadium<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band<lb/>
Miles Davis<lb/>
Grin with Nils Lofgren<lb/>
special guest star<lb/>
Boz Scaggs<lb/>
tickets: $5.00 for the whole show available<lb/>
at all area Record Bars, Page Box Office, and on<lb/>
the quad at Duke, and the day of the (how.<lb/>
MAIL ORDERS. TICKETS JOE COLLEGE<lb/>
BOX KM DUKE STATION<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. 27706<lb/>
Sponsored by Duke University Joe College Committee<lb/>
flew iDoybelline<lb/>
POWD6R-<lb/>
A whole new twist<lb/>
in outomotic<lb/>
eye shadow.<lb/>
Powdef Twist is here1 it s the first truly auto<lb/>
matic powder eye shadow Just twist twice<lb/>
and exactly enough soft color is pre<lb/>
measured onto the little Pillow Wana Then<lb/>
apply It goes on smoothly, evenly And<lb/>
each Powder Twist case holds hundreds of<lb/>
applications Try gentle Green, Brown. Blue<lb/>
Then highlight with Frosty Pink. Frosty Lilac, or<lb/>
Frosty White Powder Twist is the eye shadow<lb/>
of tht future Make it yours today<lb/>
The tin. ? ? .? f ?. 11 fit Mnt&amp;y pnaed<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039682_0004"/><lb/>
Pafi I PounUinhead fuesday tpril in<lb/>
Depth of life<lb/>
Studies open Russian past Cr<lb/>
P .? Dy Rim Mann)<lb/>
SPRINCi DAYS ol'l contemplation for thinp i? com? courses, each other, wimmer.<lb/>
Whims call, coed councils call<lb/>
but the search never ceases<lb/>
By SYDNEY GREEN<lb/>
Whims "i boredom often drives coeds<lb/>
from their room in search of an alluring<lb/>
oasis Often the problem is finding that<lb/>
i tasis<lb/>
Paths toward some son of relief are<lb/>
revealed by Sara Lee, residence<lb/>
administrator ol Greene Hall<lb/>
Each girl pays a social fee of $4 when<lb/>
she moves in fall quarter. (If a girl moves<lb/>
in winter quarter the fee is S3 and $2<lb/>
during spring quarter i change of<lb/>
dorm during the year requires no<lb/>
additional payment<lb/>
"Actually there's no structure to the<lb/>
programs in the dorm Lee said. "It's<lb/>
run by the House Council and those girls<lb/>
strive for what the girls in the dorm<lb/>
ACTIVITIESVARY<lb/>
Some o( the activities in Greene this<lb/>
year have included: a fall cookout, a<lb/>
Christmas tree decorating and a party<lb/>
afterward, the movie "Spencer's<lb/>
Mountain and a spring fashion show.<lb/>
There have been several guest speakers<lb/>
including Robert M Boudreaux of<lb/>
financial aid who spoke on financing<lb/>
your education and Dr. lone I Ryan of<lb/>
the Counseling Center who spoke on<lb/>
combining a career and marriage.<lb/>
Campus minister Boh Clyde has been<lb/>
conducting a hrman sexuality series<lb/>
which will be continued during this<lb/>
quarter<lb/>
The fashion show was planned by<lb/>
students in cooperation with Greenville<lb/>
merchants. The girls were fitted with<lb/>
outfits at the different stores and<lb/>
modeled them for the show<lb/>
EXAM BREAK APPEALS<lb/>
tine of the most popular events is the<lb/>
refreshment break during exins. Hot<lb/>
chocolate and doughnuts are served<lb/>
during one night of exams<lb/>
Green dorm has also had three socials<lb/>
this year one was with Belk dorm. The<lb/>
expense for that social was S51.50. "We<lb/>
don't usually spend that much money<lb/>
for a social Miss Lee said. The other<lb/>
two socials were with Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Lee commented regretfully that some<lb/>
activities fizzled out. "We tried classes in<lb/>
crocheting and macraming but they<lb/>
didn't go. I also tried learning to play<lb/>
bridge twice but that didn't work. We<lb/>
also had a swimming party planned, but<lb/>
no one showed up<lb/>
On the other hand, an indoor sport has<lb/>
captured dorm interest. "Our ping pong<lb/>
table has been used constantly. The girls<lb/>
sign up for it in the office. It usually<lb/>
goes in tin afternoon and night Since<lb/>
the ping pong table has seemed so<lb/>
successful the dorm has considered<lb/>
getting a pool table The main problem<lb/>
here Miss Lee explained is the money.<lb/>
Some things catch on well and some<lb/>
things don't Lee commented. "It's<lb/>
hard, but we're guided by the House<lb/>
i louncil<lb/>
Most of the activites have gone<lb/>
smoothly. "We were afraid the lamp<lb/>
would blow during the movie and that<lb/>
would have been the end of the movie,<lb/>
but it didn't<lb/>
PROBLEM ARISE<lb/>
"Lots of times we wonder how many<lb/>
to plan for she said. At the Christmas<lb/>
party they didn't know whether to plan<lb/>
for 100 or 50. A decision for 50 proved<lb/>
prophetic.<lb/>
A picnic planned for last week had to<lb/>
be canceled due to weather. "We<lb/>
thought spring was here to stay when we<lb/>
planned it. It turned cold, and we<lb/>
decided to postpone it until the weather<lb/>
got better<lb/>
Let? feels the programs would be better<lb/>
if the girls would express some of the<lb/>
things they would like to do. "It would<lb/>
help a whole lot. Lot's of times they<lb/>
wont express themselves at all she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
By BETTY HATCH<lb/>
Stl'f Wllttt<lb/>
To the students who seeks a new<lb/>
knowledge of the world, intriguing, but<lb/>
hardly "crip" courses are offered in the<lb/>
Russian department These translated<lb/>
courses usually are not well-known<lb/>
among the majority of students. Two<lb/>
such courses are Russian 220 and<lb/>
Hussian 221 which deal with the<lb/>
literature of Russia in the nineteenth and<lb/>
twentieth centuries, respectively.<lb/>
Listed under the department of<lb/>
German and Russian, the first course of<lb/>
Russian literature in translation (220)<lb/>
was taught m the Winter quarter of the<lb/>
1971-1972 academic year. "The interest<lb/>
and enthusiasm of the students was so<lb/>
great that a course on twentieth century<lb/>
literature (Soviet literature) followed<lb/>
according to Dr. Maria Malby, Russian<lb/>
professor.<lb/>
Both courses were taught again in the<lb/>
Fall and Winter quarters of the<lb/>
1972-1973 academic year and will be<lb/>
offered next year, 220 in the Winter<lb/>
quarter and 221 in the Spring quarter.<lb/>
These two courses may be used to satisfy<lb/>
the humanities requirement in<lb/>
literature.<lb/>
"Students either don't know yet about<lb/>
these courses or are reluctant" because<lb/>
they have no background in the<lb/>
literature of Russia, speculated Malby.<lb/>
She continued, "this is regrettable<lb/>
because they are missing a golden<lb/>
opportunity to discover a new, exciting<lb/>
world of great writers and thinkers<lb/>
Most of the Russian authors of the<lb/>
nineteenth century were both writers<lb/>
and philosophers or at least "had<lb/>
interesting views on life and human<lb/>
existence in general Malby stated<lb/>
Almost all of these writers were<lb/>
noblemen with much leisure time to<lb/>
write and think. The great writers such<lb/>
as Pushkin, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky,<lb/>
Turgenev, Gogol, and Iermontow "dealt<lb/>
with such problems as the 'generation<lb/>
gap love, death (promanly man's fear<lb/>
of death and his struggle to overcome it),<lb/>
sin and redemption (two interrelated<lb/>
subjects), man's relationship to God and<lb/>
his relationship to the universe<lb/>
EXPLORES SEVERAL THEMES<lb/>
Several interesting themes were<lb/>
developed and explored, five basic ones<lb/>
being the most important.<lb/>
'The first theme dealt with "the<lb/>
superfluous man a young, intelligent,<lb/>
and wealthy man who a apathetic and<lb/>
incapable of emotion; he could be saved<lb/>
by love, but he is an "emotional<lb/>
vacuum The second theme is "the<lb/>
possessed man a monomaniac obsessed<lb/>
with obtaining one goal (often power) at<lb/>
all costs, trampling on others: he tries<lb/>
"to assert himself or even prove his<lb/>
God-likeness, but he is doomed from the<lb/>
very start Another character, "the<lb/>
little man is "equally interesting and<lb/>
pathetic" because he is "all wrapped up<lb/>
in the material aspects of life and<lb/>
therefore always ends as a loser Two<lb/>
interwoven themes are "the tragic end ol<lb/>
all beauty" (the belief that "everything<lb/>
that is good, kind, noble, and beautiful is<lb/>
bound to perish in this world") and "evil<lb/>
in the universe" (for some writers, a<lb/>
very real concept represented by the<lb/>
devil, but for others a "more abstract<lb/>
and metaphysical" idea).<lb/>
LIFE REVOLUNTIONIfS<lb/>
At the turn of the century, with<lb/>
approach of the Revolution.<lb/>
rhythm of life became frantic<lb/>
Malby "(Ireat historica<lb/>
the<lb/>
'the<lb/>
said<lb/>
events, the<lb/>
Psych takes profitable approach<lb/>
By DAVID HAINS<lb/>
Stan Writer<lb/>
Meeting what has been termed a<lb/>
"critical shortage" in the field of mental<lb/>
health the ECU department of<lb/>
psychology has developed an approach<lb/>
profitable to the training of masters level<lb/>
degree candidates.<lb/>
The program is different in many ways<lb/>
according to Dr. Thomas Long,<lb/>
psychology professor, "The masters<lb/>
degree is terminal, the recipient upon<lb/>
graduating has enough experience to<lb/>
become a licensed psychologist by the<lb/>
state of North Carolina It is the only<lb/>
program of its kind in the southeast.<lb/>
Some of the innovative aspects of the<lb/>
program are that proficiency in a foreign<lb/>
language is not required. Instead courses<lb/>
closely related to the area of<lb/>
concentration can be substitued.<lb/>
Students who are centering their studies<lb/>
in statistics are able to take courses in<lb/>
math or computer science.<lb/>
Likewise, a student can substitue an<lb/>
English course in scientific writing for<lb/>
the requirement.<lb/>
Sensitivity training, a form of therapy<lb/>
in which the individual becomes more<lb/>
aware of himself and other around him is<lb/>
also taught. Long mentioned that this is<lb/>
one area of psychology that has not been<lb/>
given fair treatment, especially in movies<lb/>
which depict psychologists as money<lb/>
hungry eccentrics. The course, however,<lb/>
takes a scientific approach to the<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
The most original aspect ol" the<lb/>
program is a six month -internship that<lb/>
each candidate must undergo. During the<lb/>
intern period the student is placed in one<lb/>
of several mental health clinics around<lb/>
the state. Once in the clinical situation<lb/>
the student becomes a contributing<lb/>
member of the staff.<lb/>
The work an intern does may range<lb/>
from diagnosing the origin of an<lb/>
adolescents' problems in school to<lb/>
working out marital difficulties with a<lb/>
young couple. All of the situations are<lb/>
real and for this reason the intern is<lb/>
supervised to help him with any<lb/>
questions that may arise.<lb/>
Long commented the ECU program<lb/>
has helped many students to be placed in<lb/>
clinics upon graduation. He concluded in<lb/>
noting, "10 years ago. before the<lb/>
program existed, it was unheard of for a<lb/>
masters degree holder in psychology to<lb/>
do anything other than pursuing his<lb/>
studies for a doctorate<lb/>
'Revolution and the difficult<lb/>
post-Revoluntlonary period, inspired<lb/>
some writers while they destroyed many<lb/>
Others There was no time for<lb/>
philosophizing or writing long novels, for<lb/>
the many new authors had to write<lb/>
quickly and often under adverse<lb/>
conditions. The most practical form of<lb/>
liU'rature was the short story, hut poetry<lb/>
and plays were also popular.<lb/>
"The 'sex maniacs' and the<lb/>
worshippers of Sophia, 'the eternal<lb/>
feminine of the pre RevoUmtionary<lb/>
period were quickly replaced Malby<lb/>
explained, "by the Proletarian writers<lb/>
who left an almost photographic copy of<lb/>
their times<lb/>
SOVIETS SEIZE CONTROL<lb/>
Eventually the Soviet government<lb/>
seised absolute control of Russia's<lb/>
literature and labelled il "Soviet<lb/>
literature 'This gave rise to "Socialist<lb/>
realsim which was supposedly<lb/>
"realistic in content and S(x ialistic in<lb/>
form but actually very unrealistic The<lb/>
mam character was "the positive hero<lb/>
a new version of the neoNeit.i hian<lb/>
superman theory, who had no doubts or<lb/>
fears and devoted his life to working for<lb/>
the government.<lb/>
However. a group of more<lb/>
sophisticated writers who followed the<lb/>
traditions of the nineteenth century had<lb/>
survived. Marry of them could not adapt<lb/>
to the new way of life and the new<lb/>
literary style, so they either emigrated<lb/>
and wrote abroad or "persisted to write<lb/>
in the nineteenth century vein, finding<lb/>
an escape in the past or a very distant<lb/>
future.<lb/>
TRADITION REMAINS<lb/>
Malby concluded by saying that if a<lb/>
student today "takes a good look at<lb/>
Russian twentieth century literature, he<lb/>
can see that the nineteenth century<lb/>
tradition has remained very '<lb/>
wellpreserved in spite of the '<lb/>
government's attempts to do away with<lb/>
it. The greatest living Soviet pros writer. ?<lb/>
Alexander Solzhenitsyn. is unmistakably<lb/>
walking in the footsteps of such great<lb/>
nineteenth century writers as Tolstoy.<lb/>
Dostoevsky, and many others<lb/>
Those interested in obtaining further<lb/>
information about the Russian literature<lb/>
courses may contact Malby in her office<lb/>
' -1: ? - -r- ?? ?"? . - - ?? ?-? v "  v - ? ?<lb/>
DORM LIFE on "The Hill" evokes into a Tvler social affair a welcome relief from a trek<lb/>
across campus lor an afternoon date<lb/>
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
UPSTAIRS AT<lb/>
FRIAR TUCK'S<lb/>
Tues April 10 8 00 10 00 P M<lb/>
Thurs April 12 9 00-1100 P M<lb/>
NO COVEP CHAPGE DRAFT C20<lb/>
Irs<lb/>
LATER THAN<lb/>
YOU THINK.<lb/>
On<lb/>
June 1<lb/>
time runs out for you to<lb/>
enroll in the 2-year Air Force ROTC Program on<lb/>
this campus And here's what you'll be missing:<lb/>
? $100 a month tax free, during your junior<lb/>
and senior years<lb/>
? the chance to win a full Air Force scholarship<lb/>
(including tuition lab fees, the works).<lb/>
? a challenging job as an Air Force officer upon<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
plus<lb/>
? a future where the sky is no limit<lb/>
Contact Major Berrier<lb/>
at ECU. 919-758-6598<lb/>
(Available only to college luniors or students<lb/>
having at least 2 academic years left before<lb/>
graduation.)<lb/>
Find Yourself A Future In Air Force ROTC.<lb/>
7<lb/>
This u, ear I was going to be<lb/>
the bigge&amp;fc thing to hit<lb/>
-football smce pigskin<lb/>
"But" I dec ided toqiue it up.<lb/>
Ididn't make the ream.<lb/>
So instead I'm spending<lb/>
a lot of mil time at<lb/>
Wardee's hamburgers.<lb/>
I figure if tou cant go out<lb/>
for football, ot east<lb/>
ifOU can gooutfor a burger<lb/>
Here's another good rvason<lb/>
whu uou shouldqo out-for a<lb/>
burger stHardee's<lb/>
fBuiy oneDelutfeHuskee<lb/>
and cjetoneFREB.<lb/>
t out this Coupon and bn'rtq it<lb/>
th ljou to'Hdrdees.One coupon<lb/>
r customer.<lb/>
SfFCR EXPIRES 4-17-73. c ?<lb/>
OOOD ONY h "Vi'S<lb/>
ECU'S<lb/>
UNC on S<lb/>
a three ra<lb/>
The Pirate<lb/>
Despite<lb/>
good to<lb/>
Hiver for t<lb/>
The no<lb/>
ihe first r<lb/>
ECU tear<lb/>
winning ti<lb/>
place tim<lb/>
finished t<lb/>
10:01.3.<lb/>
Coa<lb/>
By!<lb/>
The new<lb/>
put a glear<lb/>
track coach<lb/>
athletes, mt<lb/>
I (jreater nati<lb/>
Coach B<lb/>
ECU, sees t<lb/>
Association<lb/>
 purpose as<lb/>
League Base<lb/>
basketball, f<lb/>
Carson sa<lb/>
Iwhen you're<lb/>
?young man<lb/>
football and<lb/>
"Consider<lb/>
One of the<lb/>
3een if you<lb/>
nay ma ke i<lb/>
!ow we can<lb/>
Situation. Th<lb/>
living puttin,<lb/>
koing to be t<lb/>
bther type of<lb/>
The ITA<lb/>
lompany of <lb/>
Ithletes. An<lb/>
)lympians an<lb/>
lyun, Kip K<lb/>
Ivans and Bo<lb/>
bere is $500<lb/>
lace, $100 tc<lb/>
tie meets art<lb/>
Los Ange<lb/>
bishing at V<lb/>
June<lb/>
JVVhen Carso<lb/>
tBSck will u<lb/>
collegiate track<lb/>
"On the cot<lb/>
Rain w<lb/>
Record<lb/>
For the first<lb/>
event, the Care<lb/>
were cancelled i<lb/>
scheduled for<lb/>
Pirates of Ei<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
507 E 14th Street<lb/>
300 E. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
2907 E 10th Street<lb/>
? Hft ; . Su?tM,1flC iQ7l<lb/>
<pb facs="00039682_0005"/><lb/>
?w<lb/>
ppp<lb/>
Crew takes events from UNC<lb/>
ECU'S young crew teHm ?mk?,<lb/>
Fountainheed, Tuesday, April 10, 197i Page 5<lb/>
ECUi young crew team embarrassed<lb/>
UN( on Saturday afternoon by sweep<lb/>
?' '?"?'?" rare ?rt from the Tar Heels<lb/>
I he Plnties are now 7-4 overall<lb/>
I)cs,?te the constant precipitation a<lb/>
good crowd was on hand at the Tar<lb/>
River for the event.<lb/>
The novice and freshman e,ght took<lb/>
the first race on the day and a second<lb/>
ECU team was close behind The<lb/>
Winning time was 9:20.6. The second<lb/>
place time was 9:30.0 while UNC<lb/>
finished third with a clocking of<lb/>
he novice eight boat uj made up of<lb/>
Bill Holland, Walter Mann, Al Strickland<lb/>
R'cky Spence, Jim Day, Mike Host, Jim<lb/>
Ellis and "Beeve" Beaver. Their<lb/>
coxswain is Mary Winters.<lb/>
The freshman eight have Kelly Myatt<lb/>
a their coxswain and their shell ii<lb/>
powered by Jim Breeze, Robert<lb/>
Chandler, David dine, Bob Grant Burt<lb/>
Stewan, g Hjnds<lb/>
Deffenbaugh and Gray Kimbrell<lb/>
The lightweight varsity eight remained<lb/>
undefeated as they beat the Tar Heel<lb/>
shell by 25 seconds. Their winning time<lb/>
was 8:58.3.<lb/>
Making up the lightweight shell are<lb/>
Bob Sauls, Tin Foard, Dan (raver,<lb/>
David Lane, Clark Bridgman, I'hil<lb/>
Windham, Richard Cook and Uavid<lb/>
Dombroski. The lightweight coxswain is<lb/>
Karen Krieger.<lb/>
The heavyweight varsity eight<lb/>
rounded the day out with a third win<lb/>
They beat the UNC boat by almost a<lb/>
minute.<lb/>
The Pirates will be at home next<lb/>
Saturday when they take on Theitadel<lb/>
on the Tar River at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Atlantic Christian beats<lb/>
Pirate tennis squad, 8-1<lb/>
0o?lLP?on Wounds on track's new ITA<lb/>
By STEPHEN G.TOMPKINS<lb/>
Special to Fountalnh??a<lb/>
The new professional track circuit has<lb/>
put a gleam in the eye of the college<lb/>
;rack coach, with the prospect of better<lb/>
athletes, more successful recruiting and<lb/>
I greater nationwide publicity.<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson, track coach at<lb/>
KCU, sees the new International Track<lb/>
Association (ITA) serving the same<lb/>
purpose as the NBA, NFL and Major<lb/>
League Baseball serves to the coaches of<lb/>
basketball, football and baseball.<lb/>
Carson says, "It goes way back to<lb/>
I when vou're recruiting in high school A<lb/>
Ivoung man may be debating between<lb/>
footbaJI and track.<lb/>
"Consider a shotputter for instance.<lb/>
Pne of the big arguments has always<lb/>
pen if you continue with football you<lb/>
'nay make it big in college and pros<lb/>
vfow we can come back with the same<lb/>
kituation. The athlete can now earn a<lb/>
pving putting the shot. And he's not<lb/>
koing to be torn to pieces with a knee or<lb/>
tther type of injury as in football<lb/>
The ITA is America's first touring<lb/>
lompany of professional track and field<lb/>
Ithletes. Among its members are<lb/>
)lympians and world record holders Jim<lb/>
tyun, Kip Keino, Randy Matson, Lee<lb/>
Ivans and Bob Seagren. For each event<lb/>
Here is $500 for finishing first, $250 to<lb/>
Sace, $100 to show and $50 for fourth,<lb/>
le meets are all held indoors, starting<lb/>
Los Angeles in early March and<lb/>
Mushing at Madison Square Garden in<lb/>
Jane.<lb/>
IWhen Carson was asked if professional<lb/>
tmck will take the spotlight from<lb/>
collegiate track, Carson said no.<lb/>
"On the contrary, anything that gets<lb/>
Rain washes out<lb/>
Record Relays<lb/>
For the first time in the history of the<lb/>
event, the Carolina State-Record Relays<lb/>
were cancelled due to rain. The meet was<lb/>
scheduled for Columbia, S.C. and the<lb/>
Pirates of East Carolina were to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
nationwide publicity, that will point a<lb/>
finger toward track nationally is going to<lb/>
spur interest in the sport Carson<lb/>
remarked that college crowds now may<lb/>
witness individuals who in later years<lb/>
may be leading money winners on the<lb/>
pro circuit.<lb/>
Carson, considered a very successful<lb/>
relay and hurdle coach, doesn't believe<lb/>
pro track will hurt the Olympics, until<lb/>
now the only goal a track athlete had to<lb/>
pursue.<lb/>
"I can't see where it will hurt the<lb/>
Olympics at all, just like he does in<lb/>
basketball an athlete will have to choose.<lb/>
There are plenty enough track athletes<lb/>
to go around to field a strong Olympic<lb/>
team<lb/>
Another advantage Carson sees in pro<lb/>
track is that the interest it builds will<lb/>
force a settlement between the Amateur<lb/>
Athletic Union and the NCAA. The two<lb/>
bodies have battled for years for control<lb/>
of amateur athletics in America. Carson<lb/>
feels a more fairly picked Olympic team<lb/>
and coaching staff will come from this<lb/>
settlement.<lb/>
In the ITA meets spectators don't miss<lb/>
a spectacular effort because they we.c<lb/>
watching something else going on<lb/>
simultaneously. A shotputter, for<lb/>
All stars compete<lb/>
The Ayden Grifton High School<lb/>
Gymnasium will be the scene of some<lb/>
good basketball Thursday as the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference All Stars will play the<lb/>
Greenville All Stars.<lb/>
The ACC will feature such names as<lb/>
Rick Holt and Joe Cafferky of N.C.<lb/>
State, George Kar! and Don Johnson of<lb/>
UNC, and Gary Melchioni of Duke.<lb/>
The Greenville All Stars are led by Al<lb/>
Faber, Earl Quash, and Dave Franklin all<lb/>
of ECU.<lb/>
Game time is 8 p.m. and tickets are<lb/>
1.50 for adults and 1.00 for children.<lb/>
Thought for the day: Believing equals<lb/>
receiving.<lb/>
Man is not content to take<lb/>
natwvashefindshen<lb/>
lie insists on making her over.<lb/>
??<lb/>
J E Woodbndgc<lb/>
?<lb/>
Not us We make a natural beer<lb/>
A beer without any additives or<lb/>
chemical preservatives For a<lb/>
natural Rheingold taste you just<lb/>
can't find in other beers.<lb/>
Natural RheintfokT<lb/>
c kin av Ik m i hi fccl ?ib nit beer.<lb/>
0he. , W ?<lb/>
IT ?i ,<lb/>
instance, is required to wait before<lb/>
making a throw if a vaulter is about to<lb/>
jump. Also the fan no longer has to wait<lb/>
for long periods of time for action<lb/>
shotputters have thirty seconds to throw<lb/>
and vaulters forty-five seconds to jump.<lb/>
Carson doesn't believe this<lb/>
spotlighting will become part of college<lb/>
track. "In college track, especially dual<lb/>
meets, you have team competition. The<lb/>
track fan is interested in how his school<lb/>
does. In pro track it is the individual that<lb/>
counts. Of course with $500 riding on<lb/>
iach event the suspense is tremendous<lb/>
Carson believes the college track<lb/>
coach must now change his style<lb/>
allowing superior athletes to concentrate<lb/>
on their specialties, giving them the<lb/>
training needed to compete<lb/>
professionally. The change seems to<lb/>
Carson insignificant in light of the<lb/>
superior athletes he now has a better<lb/>
chance of recruiting.<lb/>
So though Jim Ryun is making $500<lb/>
in four minutes it takes him to run a<lb/>
mile. Bill Carson is back home smiling to<lb/>
himself over how much more Ryun is<lb/>
actually accomplishing.<lb/>
On Friday, the hast Carolina tennis<lb/>
team had another long afternoon as they<lb/>
were soundly defeated by the Bulldogs<lb/>
of Atlantic Christian College 8 1.<lb/>
The Pirates got their only point in the<lb/>
number four singles match a- Howard<lb/>
Rambeau, a freshman from SmithfieW<lb/>
defeated Rocky Peed of AC Peed won<lb/>
the first six games to three, but<lb/>
Rambeau came back strong to win the<lb/>
?econd set 6-2. He won the match in<lb/>
decisive fashion by taking the third set<lb/>
6-1.<lb/>
Other than that the day belonged to<lb/>
the Bulldogs. They took the other five<lb/>
singles matches and swept all three<lb/>
doubles matches without allowing the<lb/>
Bucs to win a single set.<lb/>
This loss was Baal Carolina's eighth in<lb/>
'?'? outings Coach Wei tonkins' team<lb/>
w expected to have a rough season this<lb/>
vear due to the inexperience of the<lb/>
players Coach Hankini .tarts one<lb/>
sophomore and five freshmen The<lb/>
sophomore is Fraysure Fulton, from<lb/>
Wilson The freshmen are Wray Gillette<lb/>
who is also from Wilson: Ed Speigel!<lb/>
from West Nyack, Men York; Rambeau;<lb/>
John Nance, from Washington, and<lb/>
Keith Marion, from Carthage. Tennis at<lb/>
Last Carolina has ? brighter future, as<lb/>
'ties, six will benefit greatly from the<lb/>
experience they are jetting now<lb/>
The Bucs. who arc 1  m the Southern<lb/>
Conference, were scheduled to host the<lb/>
University of Richmond Monday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Stickmen whip Guilford<lb/>
Last Wednesday's 17-3 loss to the<lb/>
Duke Blue Devils was not much of a<lb/>
motivator to the ECU Lacrosse squad<lb/>
before their Saturday afternoon's<lb/>
non-conference battle with Guilford.<lb/>
However the Pirates slipped and sloshed<lb/>
through the mud and rainy conditions to<lb/>
thrash the visitors, 12-1.<lb/>
The victory for the Bucs was their<lb/>
second in five outings.<lb/>
Danny Mannix led the Pirate attack as<lb/>
he pumped in four goals. Bill Harrington<lb/>
scored twice and had two assists while<lb/>
Andy Stanick accounted for three goals<lb/>
and an assist. Larry Hayes scored twice<lb/>
and Chuck Maxwell tallied a single goal.<lb/>
ECU jumped into the lead with three<lb/>
goals in the first quarter then added five<lb/>
more in the second for an 8-0 lead at<lb/>
half time. The Pirates picked up two<lb/>
Rallies in each of the final periods, while<lb/>
Guilford spoiled ECU'S bid for a<lb/>
shut-out with a goal in the final quartet<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to Roanoke for<lb/>
thir next battle on Tuesday afternoon.<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
Ma.IKHaieigh LaenMM ClubAway<lb/>
20DartmouthHome<lb/>
Apr1U. N (Home<lb/>
4DukrA way<lb/>
7GilfordHome<lb/>
IdRoanokeAway<lb/>
14Morgan StateAway<lb/>
25M. c. sumHorn.<lb/>
28V M 1Home<lb/>
29V P 1Home<lb/>
?5William &amp; MaxyHome<lb/>
Joke of the day: A man had his cellar<lb/>
remodeled and now it is currently on the<lb/>
best cellar list.<lb/>
If you think Kodak is just<lb/>
pretty pictures, you ought to have<lb/>
your chest examined.<lb/>
When a chest x-ray shows that you have a potential<lb/>
killer like TB or cancer, it's not a pretty picture But it's an<lb/>
important picture because it can help the doc-tor detect and<lb/>
catch the killer in time.<lb/>
When doctors are out to catch these potential killers,<lb/>
they want the sharpest, clearest x-ray films they can get And<lb/>
that's why people at Kodak spend so many hours creating<lb/>
new and better x-ray film equipment Already, the results in-<lb/>
clude convenience for the patient, economy for the hospital,<lb/>
an even more useful txl for the radiologist and, most impor-<lb/>
tant, reduced radiation exposure<lb/>
Researching and creating better x-ray films is good<lb/>
for our business, which is why we went into them in the first<lb/>
place But it does our society good, too which isn't a ,?ad<lb/>
feeling After all, our business depends on our society so we<lb/>
care what happens to it<lb/>
anni<lb/>
Kodak<lb/>
More than a business.<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00039682_0006"/><lb/>
BIKE AUCTION I he University<lb/>
i iikhi will hold .i bike auction on April<lb/>
11 it 9 o p m H will he on the<lb/>
I niveraity Patio betide the Union For<lb/>
suit' will he three tandems, three<lb/>
women s bikea and five men's bikei Also<lb/>
for sale will he manv hike parts such .is<lb/>
lire pumps, pedals, basket! tires, tubes,<lb/>
lights, fenders, reflectors, runs, etc<lb/>
etc<lb/>
The Union is going oul of the hike<lb/>
business and all dikes MUST I'e sold"<lb/>
Need a hike Come to the University<lb/>
i nion Patio April 11 All hikes will be<lb/>
sold io the highest bidder<lb/>
MICROFORMS<lb/>
DEPARTMENT-The Microforms<lb/>
Department in J.Y. Joyner Library is<lb/>
conducting a survey to gather<lb/>
information relative to the use of<lb/>
muroforms and microform services. The<lb/>
questionnaire will be used as a basis for<lb/>
future planning and improvement of the<lb/>
department All students who use<lb/>
microforms during the month of April<lb/>
will be asked to complete the<lb/>
questionnaire.<lb/>
INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE-Free<lb/>
for all Faculty, Staff and Students, by<lb/>
ECl Accounting Dep't. and the IKS<lb/>
V.I.T.A, program. Unght Aud. Lobby.<lb/>
I 7 Mond. thru Thurs . 1-6 Friday, and 9<lb/>
to Noon Saturday morning.<lb/>
POWERFUL ANTI WAR FILM-Ifs<lb/>
no exaggeration to say that ALL QUIET<lb/>
( I UK WESTERN FRONT, thus<lb/>
week's offering in the International Film<lb/>
Series, is one of the greatest movies ever<lb/>
made hirst seen in 1930, it remains<lb/>
today the most famous and most<lb/>
powerful "f all anti war films. The story<lb/>
follows a group of young German<lb/>
recruits m World War I fr 'in idealism to<lb/>
horror to disillusionment and to death<lb/>
The ending, with its combination of<lb/>
blood anil iron) must be one of the<lb/>
most heart breaking momenta ever put on<lb/>
film. Directed by U-wis Milestone, based<lb/>
on the novel by Krich Maria Remarque.<lb/>
Showing in Wright Auditorium on<lb/>
Wednesday, April 11, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
PIG PICKING-Pig-picking for the<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Corrections will be Sunday, April 15 at 4<lb/>
p.m. Tickets will be $2.00 per person.<lb/>
Meet at the lhed Health Building at 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
TRANCENDENTAL<lb/>
MEDITATION-An invitation is<lb/>
extended to all faculty and all students<lb/>
to a lecture by Ken Uavitt of<lb/>
Dartmouth on TM. This is a natural<lb/>
technique of gaining energy and creative<lb/>
intelligence through deep rest. Mr.<lb/>
Ieavitt will lecture at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
SB102 Wednesday April 11, and<lb/>
Thursday April 12. He will be available<lb/>
for any classroom lectures during the<lb/>
rest of the week. Please attend.<lb/>
xx-xs:W:?.?xsX-x-x-x<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
-BUCCANEER AVAILABLE TO<lb/>
NON RETURNING STUDENTS-Any<lb/>
student, who will not be returning to<lb/>
Fast Carolina and who want a 72-73<lb/>
yearbook mailed to them please come by<lb/>
the office between 11-12 a.m. There will<lb/>
be a $1.00 mailing charge. This excludes<lb/>
the May graduates because their<lb/>
yearbooks will be mailed to them free of<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
SENIOR REFERENDUM-There<lb/>
will be a Senior Class Referendum on<lb/>
April 4 and 5 in the Lobby of the<lb/>
Student Union. The purpose is to<lb/>
determine if caps and gowns will be used<lb/>
this year for graduation. The referendum<lb/>
will be conducted from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.<lb/>
daily.<lb/>
-CORRECTIONAL SERVICES<lb/>
WORKSHOP-A Correctional Services<lb/>
workshop will be held Friday, April 13<lb/>
arid Saturday, April 14 at the Allied<lb/>
Health Auditorium All interested<lb/>
students are invited. Keynote speaker<lb/>
will be Dr. Ted Sharp, Executive<lb/>
Secretary of the American Corrections<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
-PRE-MEDPR E-DENTAL<lb/>
CLUB-Dr. Harry McLean of the ECU<lb/>
Infirmary will speak on "The Spectrum<lb/>
of Family Practice" on Thursday, April<lb/>
10 at 7:30 p.m. in Biology 103.<lb/>
x-x-xxx-x-x-x-xx-x-x-xx-x-xx-xx<lb/>
DEBATE ON FEMALE<lb/>
IDENTITY-On April 10 Wright<lb/>
Auditorium will he the sight of a debate<lb/>
between two of America's most<lb/>
outspoken women, Betty Friedan and<lb/>
Lucianne Goldberg. This debate will be<lb/>
the final attraction in the 72-73 I-ecture<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
Betty Friedan, who has been referred<lb/>
to as "High Priestess" and "Mother<lb/>
Superior" Io the Women's Liberation<lb/>
Movement, v?.il argue the position of<lb/>
Women's Liberation, and will lecture on<lb/>
"Human Liberation: A Two-Sex<lb/>
Revolution Friedan's opponent in the<lb/>
debate, Lucianne Goldgerg, one of the<lb/>
co-founders of the Pussycat League,<lb/>
argues the point of satisfied married<lb/>
women and single women who enjoy<lb/>
taking care of themselves.<lb/>
The debate on the topic "The Female<lb/>
Identity Crisis" will be presented at 8<lb/>
p.m. Student will be admitted on I.D.<lb/>
and activity card, faculty on I.D. cards.<lb/>
Public tickets, available at Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, are $2.00.<lb/>
-STUDENT NEWSLETTER-Any<lb/>
student in the Dept. of Social Work and<lb/>
Corrections who is interest 1 in working<lb/>
on a student Newsletter undei the<lb/>
auspices of the Student Advisory<lb/>
Committee, please contact either Greg<lb/>
Mcleod at 758-5625 or Tom Harrigan at<lb/>
756-1115.<lb/>
-SPECIAL NOTE TO FILM<lb/>
FANS-What amounts to a festival of<lb/>
films for Alfred Hitchcock is upcoming<lb/>
for the Fall Quarter. It's a new course<lb/>
offered for the first time, English 322C.<lb/>
Special Studies in Film, and the topic for<lb/>
fall is Hitchcock. Scheduled for showing<lb/>
are BLACKMAIL (1929), THE 39<lb/>
STEPS (1935), REBECCA (1940),<lb/>
SPELLBOUND (1945), STRANGERS<lb/>
ON A TRAIN (1951), NORTH BY<lb/>
NORTHWEST (1959), MARNIE (1964),<lb/>
and TOPAZ (1969). Pre-registration now<lb/>
going on. Further inquiries to Prof<lb/>
William Stephenson, Austin 330.<lb/>
-FRENCH 60: FRENCH FOR<lb/>
READING KNOWLEDGE-This cours<lb/>
is aimed at helping students to<lb/>
understand written French, keepini;<lb/>
particularly in mind the fulfillment ol<lb/>
Graduate School requirements. Th<lb/>
accent is on developing the skills needec<lb/>
to recognize meaningful language signal:<lb/>
without becoming lost in a dictionary<lb/>
Modern texts from a variety of fields wil<lb/>
be used.<lb/>
-PHI SIGMA TAL<lb/>
INITIATION-The Spring Quarter Ph<lb/>
Sigma Tau initiation will be held Friday<lb/>
April 13 at 7:30 p.m. in the Tar Rivei<lb/>
Party Room. All members are urged tc<lb/>
attend. Officers for 1973-74 will b(<lb/>
Mected.<lb/>
H<lb/>
U<lb/>
O<lb/>
R<lb/>
A<lb/>
P<lb/>
H<lb/>
I<lb/>
C<lb/>
??:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:<lb/>
x-xxxxx-x-xxx-x-xc-x'XxS:WXx-X'X?x-w<lb/>
?)?) CDfOS<lb/>
X<lb/>
X<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
rrTil<lb/>
8<lb/>
i<lb/>
8<lb/>
x:vxx-x-x-xx-xx:x-xx???: x-xx-x-xxx-x<lb/>
?"rT'r'frrrrTi'TrrrTrrrTrTrriTiTr 11 uri'i i n n onnn nnnnnfiin ifT<lb/>
a uimnm<lb/>
Tuesday, April 10<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Saturday, April 14<lb/>
Pre Registration in Wright from 8 am to 5 p.m.<lb/>
" Series Betty Friedan and Lucianne Goldberg m<lb/>
Wright at 8 p m.<lb/>
Wednesday, April 11<lb/>
Crew ECU vs The Citadel at 11:30 a m<lb/>
Spring Football Varsity vs Alumni in Ficklen Stadium at 2<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Pre Registration in Wright from 8 am to 5 p m.<lb/>
Tennis ECU vs. UNC Wilmington at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Baseball CU vs. N C State at 3 p.m on Harrington Field<lb/>
International Film "All Quiet on the Western Front" in<lb/>
Wright at 8 p.m<lb/>
Chamber Singers Concert in Fletcher Recital Hall at 815<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
Sunday, April 15<lb/>
Concert Michael Nesmith and Band with Robey, Falk, and<lb/>
Bod on the Mall at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Faculty Chamber Music Series in Fletcher Recital Hall at<lb/>
4 15p.m.<lb/>
Thursday, April 12<lb/>
Monday, April 16<lb/>
Pre Registration in Wright from 8 am to 5 p.m.<lb/>
Baseball: ECU vs Wm. and Maiy at 3 p.m. on Harrington<lb/>
Field<lb/>
Friday, Aoril 13<lb/>
Wednesday, April 18<lb/>
PreRegistration in Wright from 8 am to 5 p.m<lb/>
Free Flick Cat Ballou in Wright at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Festival Concert: Gerald Schwar in Fletcher Recital Hall at<lb/>
8:15p.m.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATES WANTED: Need 2 persons (male or female)<lb/>
to share large house in town. $40month . utilities included.<lb/>
Contact Cecil Frost: 758-6217 or 758-5645.<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Ty.c.v, Service (Termpapers, etc.) Call 750-5948<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat Sport 850. Convertible, 4 wheel disc<lb/>
brakes, 4 speed. Great shape. Call 758-1652, ask for Mark<lb/>
FOR SALE: 8 Track Tape Player &amp; tapes also Cassette<lb/>
Player. Contact Walt, 106-A Scott. Phone: 752 1343<lb/>
Puppies of Samoyed origin Long, black and white hair and<lb/>
beautifully marked Call 758-0484<lb/>
TOR SALE: Handwoven belts. Betsy Purvis 141 Ragsdale<lb/>
7529334.<lb/>
UNITED FREIGHT Water Beds All Sizes - Starting at<lb/>
$15.95 ? 5 Year Guar ? Limited Amount of Stock United<lb/>
Freight Company. 2904 E 10th St 752-4053.<lb/>
ROOM WANTED for female student in Sept. Hopefully<lb/>
near campus reasonable rates. Call Pat, 752-0506, after 5<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
LOST: Dearly loved, big, yellow, labrador retriever lost in<lb/>
the area of Stokes - Answers to "Yellow Dog" - Does not<lb/>
necessarily have to be returned as long as he has a good<lb/>
home - Call Lisa Pescia - 758 9791<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Small battery powered Electronic Calculators and<lb/>
Typewriter for rent on a monthly basis Portion of rent<lb/>
may be applied to purchase price. CREECH AND JONES<lb/>
BUSINESS MACHINES, 103 Trade St. Call 756 3175.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Stadium Apartments, 14th St. ajoins campus<lb/>
of East Carolina University. $115 per month, call 752-5700<lb/>
or 756-4671.<lb/>
BUMPERSTICKER "Don't Blame Me I Voted For<lb/>
McGovern" 3 for $1.00 Proceeds to Senate reelection<lb/>
campaign. Carolina Conscience, P.O. Box 2873, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834<lb/>
Two and three bedroom apartments available $72.50 and<lb/>
$80.50. GLENDALE COURT APARTMENTS - Phone<lb/>
756-5731<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
75&amp;1889<lb/>
Riding Instructor. Contact: BT Eastwood<lb/>
FOR SALE Chest $10 00, Wardrobe $10.00, Complete<lb/>
Double Bed $30, Living Room Chairs-5 &amp; $10, Tables-$3 &amp;<lb/>
$4. Call 758-0584.<lb/>
FOR SALE Combo Organ $150.00 and Leslie $175.00.<lb/>
Call 75&amp;9381 ask foi Cecil, room 222.<lb/>
FOR SALE: AKC registered Irish setters. Call 758-0716 or<lb/>
see Nancy in Fountainhead office<lb/>
Charcoal portraits by Jack Brendle 752 2619<lb/>
Full or part time work Work at your own convimence<lb/>
Come by 417 W. 3rd St or call 758 0641<lb/>
NEED WORK: Sign up now for job opportunity Work for<lb/>
summer only or throughout year. Hours can be tailored to<lb/>
meet your needs. Call: 756 0038.<lb/>
summer jobs Times Mirror Corp , high<lb/>
Help wanted<lb/>
school seniors and college<lb/>
month. Call 752-2378<lb/>
students. Average pay $800<lb/>
Green Honda CB 350 with luggage rack Must Sell Best<lb/>
offer. Call Richard 752 7000 or 758-6235<lb/>
UNICORN PHOTOGRAPHY Portraits in natural color<lb/>
and in natural surroundings to suit your personality. A<lb/>
perfect gift or a beautiful memory. For more information<lb/>
contact Griffin at the Fountainhead after 2 p.m. weekdays.<lb/>
RUMMAGE SALE Clothes, odds &amp; ends and useful junk.<lb/>
Tony Jordan, 1107 Forbes St. April 14 all day.<lb/>
One Remington electric typewriter. Excellent shape.<lb/>
Standard 756 2374 or 752 5453.<lb/>
I-OR SALE Classical 6 string guitar, blond top,<lb/>
tortoise shell pick plate, steel reinforced neck. New. $25.<lb/>
Call 758 50o7<lb/>
FOR SALE Roberts 450A Triple head tapedeck $80. Pro<lb/>
4A stereo headphones: $20. Sony 7 inch reel tape: $1 per<lb/>
box. 1 pair 8" Utah speakers: $15. All in excellent<lb/>
condition. See Larry 810 Cotanche St No 4-7 to 10<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Licensed insurance agents wanted. Part time, or full-time<lb/>
Life and Accient Health. 75 first year commiss.on on<lb/>
ordinary life. Write UAIC, Box 1682, Kinston, N.C<lb/>
Information mailed.<lb/>
NEEDED: Someone to do an oil painting of Tolkien's"<lb/>
trilogy very important for a special gift. Will pay Pease<lb/>
contact Margaret 752 9943.<lb/>
NEED SUMMER EMPLOYMENT? Earn $400 600 pe<lb/>
month. Long hair no problem. Call 752 4479 from 9 5<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
Legal, medical abortions from 1 day to 24 weeks a<lb/>
$125. Free pregnancy tests and birth control information<lb/>
Ms. Rogers. Washington, DC. 202 628 7656<lb/>
301 484 7424 anytime ?'<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758 HELP<lb/>
of Eighth and Cotanche Sts. Abortion reftrr.l. TL<lb/>
intervention, drug problems, birth control inf<lb/>
overnight housing. All services free and ennf<lb/>
The<lb/>
belongin<lb/>
in Slay I<lb/>
receive<lb/>
articles d<lb/>
Bill R<lb/>
the Logf<lb/>
their SO<lb/>
in their <lb/>
Said Mo<lb/>
room at<lb/>
have beer<lb/>
The S(<lb/>
will be<lb/>
everythin<lb/>
SGA Prei<lb/>
this, sayi<lb/>
everythmi<lb/>
"The si<lb/>
nearly ev?<lb/>
few thn<lb/>
salvagahle<lb/>
the dam,<lb/>
Mobley i<lb/>
compensa<lb/>
insurance<lb/>
these co<lb/>
Carolina,<lb/>
"the scho<lb/>
the refrig<lb/>
nothing dt<lb/>
The car<lb/>
explosion<lb/>
Put<lb/>
The Pi<lb/>
searching f(<lb/>
At Tuesi<lb/>
that the r<lb/>
considering<lb/>
would be e:<lb/>
"All but<lb/>
leaving thil<lb/>
Holloman. '<lb/>
Ha.skett. He<lb/>
be retumi<lb/>
Holloman v<lb/>
SGA Treasu<lb/>
Accordin<lb/>
Publication:<lb/>
of seven v<lb/>
Para<lb/>
FXU SKY!)<lb/>
Skydiving<lb/>
Sport Parat<lb/>
Joan Murp<lb/>
Soci<lb/>
The Honi<lb/>
will induct<lb/>
Wednesday,<lb/>
begin at 7:<lb/>
Nursing Auc<lb/>
The prim<lb/>
Honor Soci<lb/>
encouragerm<lb/>
all academic<lb/>
First ,<lb/>
held<lb/>
Probably<lb/>
campus hist<lb/>
at 7:30 p.<lb/>
pastor in W;<lb/>
a worker<lb/>
Challenge, <lb/>
"New Li<lb/>
King Youtl<lb/>
out a day<lb/>
activities<lb/>
Christian gi<lb/>
believe aboi<lb/>
jointly sp<lb/>
Ministers an<lb/>
Paul and<lb/>
Internationa<lb/>
program, a<lb/>
singer-guitar<lb/>
f<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>