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        <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
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          <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
          <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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        <date>2012</date>
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          <lb />EE ee a ESR ee oe REN! gar PO ae te<lb /><lb />7 recast " "_<lb /><lb />fall 1969<lb /><lb />ener RT TD EOE ES OM AE SM SGN NLT OLN MRR<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Editor Rod Ketner<lb />Art and Design Editor Bob S. Morris, Jr.<lb /><lb />Associate Editor John Fulton<lb /><lb />Business Manager Kelly Almond<lb /><lb />Copy Editor Glenn Tetterton<lb />Poetry Editor Charles Griffin<lb />Reviews Editor Rita Korn<lb /><lb />Photography Editor Kelly Adams<lb /><lb />Advertising Director John Sherman<lb /><lb />Typist and Correspondence<lb />Director Yona Creech<lb /><lb />Exchange and Subscriptions<lb />Director Patience Collie<lb />Publicity Director Pamela Van Slyke<lb />Advisor Ovid Williams Pierce<lb /><lb />Staff: Lynn Ayers, Deborah Byrd, Joyce<lb />Daughtry, Al Fuller, Laurel Greene, Jennifer<lb /><lb />Salinger, Barbara Taychert. The Rebel is a<lb />student publication of East Carolina University.<lb />Offices are located on the campus at 215<lb />Wright Annex. Inquiries and contributions<lb />should be directed to P. O. Box 2486, Green-<lb />ville, North Carolina 27834. Copyright 1969,<lb />East Carolina University Student Government<lb />Association. None of the materials herein may<lb />be used or reproduced in any manner whatso-<lb />ever without written permission. Subscription<lb /><lb />per year, $6.00.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />a<lb />pt il<lb /><lb />young blood<lb />letters to the editor<lb />editorial<lb /><lb />untitled<lb /><lb />interview<lb /><lb />bleeker street<lb /><lb />untitled<lb /><lb />carrousel<lb /><lb />big bow, little boy<lb /><lb />photo essay<lb /><lb />the other i<lb /><lb />off central park west<lb /><lb />the knickerbocker<lb />unemployment<lb /><lb />untitled<lb /><lb />untitled<lb /><lb />the selling of a president<lb />dutchman and the slave<lb />the college drug scene<lb /><lb />a walk with love and death<lb />in face of death<lb /><lb />don juan<lb /><lb />since frost itself doth burn<lb />in steel and stone<lb /><lb />funeral mantra<lb /><lb />art and design<lb /><lb />cover<lb /><lb />frederick sorenson<lb /><lb />charles griffin<lb />senator fred r. harris<lb />david mclemore<lb />richard w. orr<lb />nancy compton warmbrod<lb />jena gurganus<lb /><lb />kelly adams<lb />richard e. campbell<lb />david mclemore<lb />david mclemore<lb />william mills<lb /><lb />jean brown<lb /><lb />richard w. orr<lb /><lb />john reynolds<lb />william mills<lb />william r. day<lb />jennifer salinger<lb />frederick sorenson<lb />frederick sorenson<lb />frederick sorenson<lb />daesen para<lb />charles griffin<lb /><lb />bob s. morris, jr.<lb />kelly adams<lb /></p>
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          <lb />Young Blood<lb /><lb />Young blood will not obey<lb />An old decree<lb /><lb />Young blood will not wait<lb />Young blood now will not believe<lb />Much less obey<lb /><lb />And should it believe<lb />In the old worldTs woe<lb /><lb />And should it obey the command<lb />Of nations to slaughter<lb /><lb />And should it trust<lb />The skeleton hand of the past<lb /><lb />Laid on its shoulder<lb />frederick sorensen<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Dear Sir:<lb />The memory of a fresh Spring day can be as elusive as the dandelion puffs which float through the air<lb />Spring. My thanks to you for a Spring day which I can touch again and again.<lb /><lb />Irwin Chatterton<lb />Bimini, Bahama Islands<lb /><lb />Dear Sir:<lb />While travelling through North Carolina recently, I read a copy of your Spring, 1969 REBEL. You havée<lb />your foot well inside the door of a revolutionary new idea in communications"the total visual effect. Per<lb />haps your most effective achievement is that of a complementary cohesiveness of ideas, events, and illusions<lb />Each step that you make toward communicative literacy will help to bring us all nearer to the point of<lb />really understanding each other.<lb />My deepest wishes for your success.<lb /><lb />a Nn a ma a<lb /><lb />A. John Bertram<lb />Comparative Communications<lb /><lb />Dear Sir:<lb />As a professor at East Carolina I am in daily contact with mediocrity.<lb />I know students who make the word onigger� an integral part of their vocabulary. I know black racists<lb />I know dope pushers and test stealers. Where are the students?<lb />I offer you a challenge"make these people aware of the holes they are digging for themselves"makéh<lb />them aware that there is a better world. :<lb />(name withheld by request)<lb /><lb />Letters<lb />to the<lb />Editor<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />rial<lb /><lb />Our culture has become a high-<lb />energy complex of conflicting<lb />values. We are living in a jungle<lb />of contrived procedures, our lives<lb />being encased by multiple shells<lb />of structure and ceremony.<lb /><lb />Our preoccupation with super-<lb />ficiality causes us to lose contact<lb />with our environment and our<lb />friends. We have forgotten that<lb />human communication is the<lb />sole means with which to dispel<lb />false assumptions of stereotyped<lb />ideals and behavior. The part of<lb />1ach man which is common to<lb />us"the ohuman denominator� "<lb />is rebelling at this acceptance of<lb />prefabricated existence.<lb /><lb />This rebellion brings a general,<lb />intangible tension to be seen<lb />wherever we turn. Each black is<lb />a potential militant. Each police-<lb />man tomorrowTs clubbing<lb />maniac. The kid up the street is<lb />a dope fiend. Each individual re-<lb />acts to relieve this pressure in his<lb />own way. Some burn buildings.<lb />Some curse the cops. Some join<lb />the City Council. Others do no-<lb />thing, pretending that it will go<lb /><lb />is<lb /><lb />away.<lb />It is our belief<lb />that if we can uncover<lb />and expose some of the causes<lb />and effects of our situation, if we<lb /><lb />move<lb /><lb />can<lb /><lb />circumstances<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />people to consider the<lb /><lb />experience and knowledge, if we<lb />allow the wind of communication to<lb />the dirt of misunder-<lb />standing, then perhaps we can<lb />positive contribution<lb /><lb />blow away<lb /><lb />make a<lb /><lb />to<lb /><lb />the<lb /><lb />recovery<lb /><lb />of<lb />friend " our society.<lb /><lb />a sick<lb /><lb />in the light of their<lb /><lb />can<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />We eee TT ee ee oye oT ee weave ee<lb />SaaS CER iy Fe ety Be Ee Fy te MOPAS RL TE ta Ga oe te oy sha +<lb />2 eth tad 2 A RR A BR eRe S OT Rt 2<lb /><lb />a SSS SS a a a a ar<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Senator from Oklahoma, is Chairman<lb />A member of Phi Beta Kappa,<lb />University of Oklahoma.<lb />hirty-nine year old Harris<lb /><lb />Fred R. Harris, the junior<lb />of the National Democratic Party.<lb />he holds B.A. and LL.B. degrees from the<lb /><lb />During his five years as a Senator, the t<lb />. liberal attitude towards many affairs of govern-<lb />rested in conservation, ending the Viet Nam<lb />the SenatorTs thoughts are<lb /><lb />has displayed :<lb />ment. Currently inte<lb />war, and defeating ABM deployment,<lb />powerful forces ~n creating tomorrow's America.<lb /><lb />7<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />~ «7? ape 2 } = ~averted eg i sre edna tc &gt; ~<lb /><lb />A REE URBANITE<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb />ME<lb /><lb />WHY DO MOST AMERICANS THINK OF THE<lb />FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AS oTHEM�<lb />INSTEAD OF oUSTT?<lb /><lb />| think it is a part of a feeling of powerlessness<lb />which pervades our society. | think some groups in<lb />our society, the blacks, the poor, and the young"<lb />feel less powerful than do others. They feel terribly<lb />frustrated about that. It is a result of urbanization,<lb />population explosion, and so forth. | think we can<lb />and must conscientiously change that.<lb /><lb />IS THERE ANY SUBSTANCE IN THE IDEA THAT<lb />THE GUARANTEED ANNUAL INCOME IS ANOTHER<lb />STEP IN A SLOWLY IMPENDING AMERICAN<lb />SOCIALISM?<lb /><lb />No. Even President Nixon, who would not be thought<lb />of as a radical liberal, has suggested"and most<lb />taxpayers and welfare recipients agree"that the<lb />present welfare system is a failure. It was designed<lb />for a different set of facts back in the 1930's and it<lb />won't fit today. The welfare system as presently con-<lb />stituted is not only inhumane and degrading but also<lb />it helps to trap people in poverty. It doesnTt really<lb />help them to break out of the cycle of poverty.<lb />Therefore, everybody is looking for different answers.<lb />| think you have to have a federalized welfare system<lb />which treats people with a differential based upon<lb />the cost of living in different places. This system<lb />should give people sufficient opportunities to have<lb />good health and education. It should give them the<lb />opportunity to break out of poverty and out of wel-<lb />fare. The present system does not do this.<lb /><lb />IN THE THIRTIES A PHILOSOPHY DEVELOPED<lb />WHICH STATED, oTHE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT<lb />CAN DO EVERYTHING FOR LESS MONEY AND<lb />WITH LESS DIFFICULTY.T� THEODORE DRUCKER<lb />HAS NOTED THAT THIS PHILOSOPHY HAS<lb />GAINED MOMENTUM. HE SUGGESTS THAT THIS<lb />IS AMERICATS FAILURE...<lb /><lb />| think Theodore Drucker is right in his book, The<lb />Age of Discontinuity, that there is a great deal of<lb />disillusionment with the ability of government at any<lb />level to solve all problems. The idea of decentraliza-<lb />tion of decision-making is an idea whose time has<lb />come, to use a trite expression. WeTve seen in the<lb />Ocean Hills school dispute that decentralization of<lb />decision-making to give the individual person more<lb />control over its schools is far easier said than done.<lb />Decentralization will not be accomplished without a<lb />great deal of grief, heartache, and difficulty. It never-<lb />theless is the direction in which we have to move.<lb />| think thatTs true of all programs.<lb /><lb />HOW CAN YOU DECENTRALIZE THE FEDERAL<lb />GOVERNMENT?<lb /><lb />The one thing which ITve advocated for a time is the<lb /><lb />regional development commission idea. | sponsored<lb />an amendment to the Public Works Act of three or<lb />four years ago which set up several regional com-<lb />missions. They could well develop into a halfway |<lb />house between the federal government and the |<lb />states. Such an office would concentrate all of these<lb />myriad, often confusing, frequently overlapping,<lb />federal programs into one office per region. These<lb />are some of the kinds of ideas which we have to<lb />entertain.<lb /><lb />THE VOCABULARY OF THE AMERICAN LEGAL<lb />SYSTEM, A VOCABULARY WHICH IS BEYOND<lb />THE COMPREHENSION OF THE AVERAGE<lb />AMERICAN?<lb /><lb />| think to some degree lawyers, including myself,<lb />have been derelict in their responsibility to help<lb />other people understand our system of law and<lb />how it works. | saw a poll some time ago where<lb />people were asked in non-legal language what they<lb />thought about various items in the Bill of Rights.<lb />Their answers were confused. This is a result of the<lb />fact that those of us who are skilled in the law<lb />haven't done very well in helping others to under-<lb />stand that the law is for their benefit and the way<lb />it actually works. We have not done a very good job<lb />either in extending the benefits of the law to those<lb />who are poor or powerless in our society. For ex-<lb />ample, lawyers have not been in the forefront of<lb />movements to insure every person, whatever his<lb />stature in life, of the right to trial by jury, of right to<lb />bail, of right against self-discrimination, of the right<lb />to be represented by an attorney. Others have come<lb />along to improve the reality of those rights. | am<lb />hopeful now that the legal profession itself will join<lb />the movement.<lb /><lb />DO YOU THINK THAT IN THE FUTURE THERE<lb />WILL BE A MOVEMENT TO DO THAT?<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Ee a great deal of progress in the legal profession<lb />ea particularly among young lawyers. | see much<lb /># rest on the part of law schools and law students<lb />Seas that law is a social science and that<lb />oA Study of law should not be just the study of what<lb /><lb />w is, but also a study of what the law should be.<lb /><lb />eevee A BLACK MAN WHO IS A GHETTO<lb /><lb />te LER, WHO HAS TROUBLE SPEAKING<lb /><lb />de DARD ENGLISH, BE MORE CONFUSED<lb /><lb />ee HOSTILE IN A COURT WHICH IS SPEAKING<lb />IC ENGLISH?<lb /><lb />" =k think more difficult than that is the prob:<lb />Sos finding someone to do the translation. Every<lb />th a needs a translator in the courts"not just a<lb />+e pul of layman English"but a translator who<lb />i cater ai his own desires into the framework<lb />the ie they can be considered. The black man in<lb />the ghetto sees no representative of the law except<lb />= een who isnTt trained to give him advice<lb />one He comes in contact with law prob-<lb />bis " when the law seems to be an adversary<lb />i: se legal system is seen as his enemy. That is<lb />the E erent from the way the rest of us think of<lb />That aw because we have privileged circumstances.<lb />Rcpont why such programs as the Office of Economic<lb />. unities legal aid program are very basic in<lb />= eee If weTre going to make the law a friend<lb />si eryone, then we must take affirmative steps to<lb />ange this misdirected system.<lb /><lb />wat THINK THAT BLACKS ARE POORLY<lb />RESENTED IN NATIONAL POLITICS?<lb /><lb />oe they have been poorly represented in national<lb />es = es several reasons. Before the Voting Rights<lb />Stir 965, many of them were prevented from<lb />ae Blacks have not had the influence they<lb />Nes particularly because of the way political<lb />=a an are organized. In the Democratic Party we<lb />ts ing steps to make our party, North and South,<lb />~a Eh mbepecr eit and more legitimate. We are<lb />Ss ay steps to assist black people who run<lb />ie on office. We want to help increase the num-<lb />ak ack politicians so that their desires and their<lb />i. S can be properly represented in the political<lb />oaid as have the desires and interests of other<lb />ities in the past.<lb /><lb />PAR OMEONE WHO KNOWS THE DEMOCRATIC<lb /><lb />TeERTY VERY THOROUGHLY, DO YOU THINK<lb /><lb />CHAT SKIN COLOR HAS EVER AFFECTED THE<lb /><lb />SEANCES OF A BLACK TO BECOME A<lb />OCRATIC NOMINEE?<lb /><lb />l think it has often.<lb /><lb />Is<lb />ees JUST IN THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY<lb />RES O YOU THINK MAYBE ITTS IN THE<lb />UBLICAN PARTY ALSO?<lb /><lb />It's in all the parties.<lb /><lb />WOULD YOU THINK THAT THIS IS BECAUSE<lb />OF A FEELING OF BIGOTRY ON THE PART OF<lb />SOME OF THE PEOPLE IN THE PARTY?<lb /><lb />Racism is a fact about our country, as the Kerner<lb />Commission so clearly documented. We make quite<lb />clear that there are a lot of white poor people, for<lb />example, but there are not any white people in<lb />America who are poor because they are white. They<lb />are a part of all the people in America who have<lb />not been properly represented in the governmental<lb />and political process because they are black or be-<lb />cause they are Mexican-Americans or because they<lb />are American Indians. | think we're on the way to<lb />changing that, but it took such acts as the Voting<lb />Rights Act of 1965, and it will require the con-<lb />tinuation of such programs to assure that progress.<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT NIXON WAS ACCUSED OF RUNNING<lb />A RACIST CAMPAIGN IN 1968. HOW DO YOU<lb /><lb />FEEL ABOUT THAT?<lb /><lb />Kevin Phillips wrote a book called The Emerging Re-<lb />publican Majority. He was an assistant to John<lb />Mitchell during the campaign and is presently a<lb />special assistant to the Attorney General of the Jus-<lb />tice Department. His thesis advocated among other<lb />things that itTs a good thing that most Negroes are<lb />Democrats because that keeps the Republican Party<lb />from having to lose any white votes by having to<lb />worry about black interests. In the first place, thatTs<lb />an immoral thesis. Political parties exist, among<lb />other things, to further principles of right as opposed<lb />to wrong. It seems to me that human rights are<lb />rather basic in a society which prides itself on the<lb />consent of the majority but more than that, it is an<lb />erroneous political theory and wonTt work for the<lb />Republican Party any more than that it will work for<lb /><lb />any party.<lb /><lb />VICE PRESIDENT HUMPHREY CLAIMED THAT IN<lb />HIS CAMPAIGN HE WANTED TO TALK ABOUT<lb />THE ISSUES BUT THE PEOPLE WERE TIRED<lb />AND DID NOT WANT TO HEAR THE ISSUES.<lb />MR. NIXON AVOIDED THE ISSUES AND RAN A<lb />PRIMARILY UNINTELLECTUAL CAMPAIGN.<lb />NIXON WON. DO YOU THINK THIS WILL BE<lb />THE TREND IN CAMPAIGNS IN THE FUTURE?<lb /><lb />would like to rest and not be bothered<lb /><lb />about the problems but problems clamor for solu-<lb />tion. Problems do not belong to the federal govern-<lb />ment or to somebody off in Washington. There are<lb />problems in every neighborhood in America and<lb />they have to be solved. Political parties and candi-<lb />dates will be successful to the degree of which they<lb />offer some hope of solution for the terrible frustra-<lb />tions, dissatisfactions and feelings of discontent<lb /><lb />which exist in this country.<lb /><lb />No. People<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />in ee<lb /><lb />Fe<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />i SR A I<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb />Se ee aoe a<lb /><lb />IS PRESIDENT NIXON STILL TRYING TO RUN<lb />THE COUNTRY THE WAY HE RAN HIS POLITICAL<lb />CAMPAIGN"WITH LOTS OF PROMISES AND<lb /><lb />NO ACTION?<lb /><lb />The President in his own words during his campaign<lb />declared that the presidency these days has to have<lb />an activist president, yet it seems to me that he has<lb />failed to carry out his own advice up to now. He has<lb />to ~~bite the bulletTT on issues such as inflation and<lb />the war, and on moral issues such as racism. He has<lb />to take a position. Up to now, it seems to me that he<lb />hasnTt taken a strong enough or clear enough posi-<lb />tion on most issues.<lb /><lb />PRESIDENT NIXON HAS RECENTLY STATED THAT<lb />BY 1976, HUGE STEPS IN HIS ADMINISTRATION<lb />WILL BE ABLE TO END HUNGER IN THE UNITED<lb />STATES. WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE DATE<lb />HE CHOSE?<lb /><lb />It seems to me that the right to enough to eat, the<lb />right against hunger is exactly that"a right, not a<lb />matter of charity. If it is a right, then it should not<lb />be postponed when the amount of money involved<lb />to make it real for every American is pitifully small.<lb />| just hope that the Congress will finally pass the<lb />McGovern Amendment.<lb /><lb />ACCORDING TO THE WAY THE AMERICAN<lb />GOVERNMENT SPENDS ALL THE MONEY THAT<lb />IT HAS NOW, OUR NATIONAL PRIORITIES<lb />ARE: DEFENSE, OVERSEAS COMMITMENTS<lb />AND NATIONAL SECURITY FROM EXTERNAL<lb />THREATS RATHER THAN FROM INTERNAL<lb />THREATS SUCH AS AIR POLLUTION AND SO<lb />FORTH. DO YOU THINK THERE IS A NEED<lb />FOR THESE PRIORITIES TO CHANGE?<lb /><lb />The priorities will change sooner or later because<lb />they must. | hope that it will be sooner rather than<lb />later. | was one of those in the Senate who cried for<lb />a military procurement bill this year to be examined<lb />in the Senate in great detail. | was one of those who<lb />supported several amendments which were offered<lb />for cuts in the recommended budget.<lb /><lb />DOES THE SO-CALLED MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL<lb />COMPLEX HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE<lb />CONTINUATION OF THE WAR?<lb /><lb />It seems to me that if you are going to identify some<lb />complex that has caused or continues the war in<lb />Vietnam, you would have to expand the conflicts to<lb />involve a great many more of us than just those who<lb />identify with the military and industrial establish-<lb />ments. We've all been involved in that to a more<lb />or less degree, either actively or passively.<lb /><lb />DO YOU THINK THAT THE CONFUSION AND<lb />THE MISUNDERSTANDING CAUSED BY THE<lb />VIETNAM WAR WILL HAVE A DETERRING<lb /><lb />EFFECT ON A DECISION THAT COULD GET<lb />US INTO ANOTHER VIETNAM?<lb /><lb />Yes. | donTt think that any administration can again<lb />get us into such a big war by small degrees without<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />&gt;<lb /><lb />-<lb /><lb />public discussion of the goals and their relative im- 7}<lb />portance to the country. We've learned some rather |<lb />tragic and costly lessons in Vietnam and | think they 4 3<lb /><lb />will be important to us in the future.<lb />WILL VIETNAM SOON BE oNIXONTS WARTT?<lb /><lb />| think that President Nixon had a chance to take 4<lb />advantage of his ability to say, ~I didnTt get us into |<lb />this war; therefore, | will lose no face in getting us J<lb />out.� | am afraid that he has begun to lose that 4}<lb />kind of advantage and more and more is falling into 7<lb /><lb />the quagmire that the war has been in in the past. 4<lb /><lb />He should take greater steps to ge us out of there J}<lb /><lb />at a much faster rate.<lb /><lb />IF LARGE-SCALE STANDING ARMIES COULD BE<lb />ELIMINATED IN FAVOR OF TOTAL RELIANCE<lb />UPON NUCLEAR POWER, DO YOU THINK THAT<lb />THE FEAR OF NUCLEAR DESTRUCTION WOULD<lb />DETER WAR?<lb /><lb />No. It would have a chance of working if everyone §<lb />agreed to it, but . . . George Washington at the Con- "<lb />stitutional Convention, in opposing a provision in<lb />the Constitution which would limit the size of our<lb />own standing armies, pointed out that that would 7)<lb /><lb />have no binding effect on anybody elseTs standing<lb />army, and of course, thatTs the problem. We went<lb /><lb />through a terribly dangerous period, | think, under 7<lb /><lb />President Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles, when our<lb /><lb />whole national strategy was primarily dependent up- |<lb />on what was called ~~massive retaliation.TT You've<lb /><lb />got to have, at least for ~~trip-fireTT purposes, con-"<lb /><lb />ventional forces which serve at several levels at<lb />which war might be joined and stopped before it ¥<lb /><lb />gets to the nuclear stage.<lb /><lb />WILL THERE BE MORE CONGRESSIONAL<lb />ARGUMENTS ON THE ABM SYSTEM?<lb /><lb />Yes, there will be more fights on ABM. We had a §<lb /><lb />fight at the time of the authorization for deployment §<lb /><lb />which came out fifty votes for, and fifty votes against. §<lb />Therefore, the amendment to strike it under the §<lb />parliamentary situation failed for the lack of a ma- #<lb />jority. The Vice President voted but his vote was #<lb />superfluous and didnTt count. The fight will again be<lb /><lb />joined at the time of the appropriation to carry out<lb /><lb />the authorization bill. We will always hope that at | ;<lb />that stage we will have picked up an additional vote "<lb />or two, so we could at that point be successful. But © ]<lb /><lb />in any event the debate will continue, as it should.<lb /><lb />We must have, as soon as possible, talks with the<lb />Soviet Union to see if we can arrive at some mutually #<lb />enforceable agreement by which both countries, be- "<lb /><lb />cause of our own self-interest, will agree to limit our #<lb /><lb />offensive as well as defensive arms expenditures.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />HOW IS STUDENT UNREST AFFECTING<lb />CURRENT POLITICAL THINKING AND WHAT<lb />LONG RANGE EFFECTS DO YOU FORESEE?<lb /><lb />Student disorders frighten people perhaps even more<lb />than did the black disorders of 1967. They do not<lb />help the causes for which they were allegedly<lb />brought about. They have caused a considerable re-<lb />action rather than action in the Congress, which in<lb />my judgment is always true of unlawful, violent<lb />Means of protest. At the same time | think all of us<lb />Nave to understand that students as a group which<lb />CanTt vote in our society are under-represented and<lb />are among the less powerful groups in our society.<lb />Ways have to be provided by which they may legiti-<lb />Mately have their views heard and acted upon and<lb />by which they may be involved in decision-making<lb />Processes which have to do with their own lives.<lb />hatTs why, for example, | am a co-sponsor of a pro-<lb />Posal for the 18-year-old vote. ThatTs why the Mc-<lb />Govern Committee, which | appointed in the Demo-<lb /><lb />Cratic Party, has recommended that the Democratic<lb />arty open all its functions to those 18 years old<lb />Or more.<lb /><lb />WILL THIS BRING ABOUT A RADICAL CHANGE<lb />AMERICAN POLITICS BECAUSE THE MAJORITY<lb />AMERICANS IN 1978 WILL BE UNDER 35?<lb /><lb />sont know. Populist that | am, | believe that the<lb /><lb />Se have a right to rule. All barriers to people's<lb /><lb />. to vote and particularly in government should<lb /><lb />Sy noved, There are barriers because of outdated<lb /><lb />. archaic registration rules. There are barriers<lb /><lb />: a of age and these have to be removed down<lb />�,� age of 18.<lb /><lb />spar FORCES ARE BEHIND THE STUDENT<lb />Erect SET FOR OCTOBER 15 AND WHAT<lb />ECT DO YOU THINK THE STRIKE ITSELF<lb /><lb />WILL HAVE ON THE ADMINISTRATION'S<lb />CURRENT VIETNAM POLICY?<lb /><lb />| donTt know what forces are behind it. It is a matter<lb />of nonpartisanship. The truth is a great many people<lb />in both parties are opposed to what is going on in<lb />Vietnam, now 60% according to the latest Gallup<lb />Poll. We should not allow anyone to believe that<lb />students are the only ones opposed to this war.<lb />That isnTt true, and thatTs why many of us felt that<lb />it was a mistake for President Nixon to say he would<lb />not be affected by what the young people had to say<lb />about this war. | believe that public officials ought<lb />to make clear that they believe unlawful or violent<lb />protest will hurt in fact any cause.<lb /><lb />REPORTS CONFLICT ON WHETHER MARIJUANA<lb />IS HARMFUL OR NOT. POSSESSION OF IT IS A<lb />FELONY, YET MILLIONS OF GALLONS OF<lb />ALCOHOL ARE SOLD EACH DAY"EVEN BY<lb />SOME OF THE STATES"WHILE IT IS KNOWN<lb />THAT ALCOHOL IS HARMFUL. DOES THE<lb />GOVERNMENT ADVOCATE A HARSH DOUBLE<lb /><lb />STANDARD?<lb /><lb />| think that there is a growing feeling that those who<lb />say that marijuana necessarily has horrible results<lb />for its users are probably wrong. There is a growing<lb />feeling in the country that we ought to know more<lb />about the effects of marijuana than we presently do<lb />and that we should separate the truth from the<lb />myths which are advocated by both sides of the<lb />controversy. In the meantime | think that thereTs a<lb />growing feeling in the country, rightly so, that the<lb />present laws are unfair and too harsh.<lb /><lb />ISNTT IT RIDICULOUS TO SEND SOMEONE TO<lb />JAIL FOR FIVE YEARS FOR THE POSSESSION<lb />OF A DRUG THAT WE DO NOT KNOW IS<lb /><lb />HARMFUL?<lb /><lb />A representative from the Food and Drug Administra-<lb />tion came to Congress recently and recommended<lb />that the drug laws have to be examined and | think,<lb />in effect, that he said, changed. | agree with that.<lb /><lb />WHAT IS THE POLITICAL REACTION TO THE<lb />GROWING USE OF DRUGS AMONG THE NATIONTS<lb />YOUTH"NOT JUST MARIJUANA BUT ALSO THE<lb />oHARD DRUGST SUCH AS LSD?<lb /><lb />The growing use of drugs in our society is sympto-<lb />matic of the growing stresses and tensions and<lb />frustrations in our society. We have to do something<lb />about those stresses. At the same time we have to<lb />do more than we are now doing in the whole nar-<lb />cotics field in the way of detection and particularly<lb />in the way of treatment and cutting off the organized<lb />drug traffic. The use of drugs is a terrible problem<lb />which cuts across all lines in our society and eco-<lb /><lb />nomic strata.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />nee<lb /><lb />oe ences<lb /><lb />a maine<lb /><lb />ARE PEOPLE REALLY CONCERNED WITH THE<lb />EFFECTS OF THESE DRUGS ON YOUTHTS<lb />MENTALITY AND EMOTIONS?<lb /><lb />Yes, | think they feel frustrated. Members of Con-<lb />gress do"that weTre not doing more.<lb /><lb />WILL DRUGS BE A CAMPAIGN ISSUE IN<lb />THE 1972 ELECTION?<lb /><lb />| hope so. | hope it will be an issue to the degree<lb />not that the candidates will disagree but that it<lb />will cause public discussion. The use of drugs is a<lb />serious matter on the minds of everybody in this<lb />country and it needs a concerted and broad attack.<lb /><lb />WHY ARE SUPPOSEDLY REHABILITATED FELONS<lb />NOT ALLOWED TO VOTE? WHEN WILL PENAL<lb /><lb />INSTITUTIONS BE DESIGNED FOR THE PURPOSE<lb />OF REHABILITATION INSTEAD OF PUNISHMENT?<lb /><lb />| think that the answer to the second question is<lb />involved in the first. We will do something about<lb />rehabilitation and reform of our penal systems when<lb />we decide we want to rehabilitate rather than to<lb />exact vengeance. WeTve been very mixed up about<lb />the intentions of penal systems and our criminal<lb />code. A Senate committee is in the process of show-<lb />ing the terrible inadequacies of our penal system.<lb />Rather than rehabilitate, they more often train crim-<lb />inals. ThatTs not a very romantic issue. ItTs not one<lb />about which you can get very many people excited.<lb />| hope that more hearings like those being held in<lb />the Senate now will get people excited. Then we can<lb />move toward better protection of society through<lb />better rehabilitation of criminals. Meanwhile, we're<lb />going to continue to pay a terrible social cost and a<lb />terrible human cost of inadequate and unjust penal<lb />systems and criminal codes.<lb /><lb />THE RIGHT TO VOTE IS A BASIC RIGHT OF OUR<lb />SOCIETY. HOW CAN A RIGHT BE TAKEN AWAY<lb /><lb />BECAUSE OF WHAT SOMEONE HAS DONE AND<lb /><lb />PAID FOR?<lb /><lb />Constitutionally, itTs based upon not what the gov-<lb />ernment does, but upon what the criminal does. He<lb />himself forfeits his right of citizenship, only to regain<lb />it upon the granting to him of a full pardon. The<lb />right to vote is something which the Constitution<lb />and the laws following the Constitution tend to<lb />govern. This is a more minor aspect of the whole<lb />penal system, which, as | said, mixes up in some<lb />kind of vague confusion several ends " vengeance,<lb />punishment, rehabilitation, removal from society,<lb />and many others. We need to consider a little more<lb />clearly what we are trying to accomplish.<lb /><lb />WHY DO INDIAN RESERVATIONS STILL EXIST?<lb />WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN?<lb /><lb />Indian reservations still exist to some degree be-<lb />cause there are Indians who want them to exist. |<lb />donTt think that the federal government can make<lb />the decision to force them to live on their land.<lb />There has never been any federal policy in regard<lb />to Indians. We've vacillated between trying to keep<lb />Indians as quaint and curious tourist attractions<lb />and make them all into middle-class white men. We<lb />have been wrong in both respects. Our policy should<lb />provide compensatory programs in the fields of edu-<lb />cation, employment, training, housing, and capital-<lb />ism. We should also provide for individual self-de-<lb />termination so that each American Indian has a real<lb />choice to leave the reservation without artificial eco-<lb />nomic, racial, or educational barriers. We have to<lb />have a concerted effort on the part of the entire<lb />federal government, not just the Bureau of Indian<lb />Affairs. President Johnson initiated that effort<lb />through the creation of the National Indian Oppor-<lb />tunity Council. | hope that policy will be taken up<lb />and supported by the new administration.<lb /><lb />WHAT WILL BE THE LONG TERM EFFECT ON<lb />THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF SMALL RADICAL<lb />POLITICAL GROUPS SUCH AS THE JOHN<lb />BIRCH SOCIETY, SDS, OR THE KKK?<lb /><lb />They will be and always should be out on the fringes<lb />of respectable political self-action. A central feature<lb />of our society, the glue that holds it together, is that<lb />violence will not be rewarded and is not a proper<lb />means of change. If a substantial percentage of our<lb />people come to believe otherwise, then we will be in<lb />deep and serious trouble. This requires all of us to<lb />make it clear that violence is not a proper method<lb />to achieve change and that it sullies any goal no<lb />matter how noble. We must help our system to re-<lb />spond in order to legitimatize means of petition<lb />and recourse.<lb /><lb />ARE WE ENTERING AN ERA THAT! WILL PROMPT<lb />PEACE OR WAR?<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />| think we have a great chance for peace. Mass<lb />communication helps people to know better the de-<lb />sires and true nature of other people around the<lb />world than ever before. It also helps to increase our<lb />own belief in the opportunity for the good things of<lb />life for each of us as individuals. | think there is a<lb />great chance for an offensive for peace. This world<lb />is still a dangerous world and will continue to be a<lb />dangerous world for a long time. But | think there<lb />are mutual self interests involved here on the part<lb />Of our own country and the part of other countries<lb />who have been our adversaries in the past which<lb />might now be exploited, prodded, and probed to our<lb />Mutual advantage.<lb /><lb />WILL THE NEXT FOUR TO EIGHT YEARS BRING<lb />LESS TROUBLED TIMES THAN THE PAST?<lb /><lb />| think weTre really in a troubled time. All of the<lb />radically different facts of life are pressing in upon<lb />us. Our lives have been radically changed in recent<lb />years by unbelievably rapid urbanization, by con-<lb />tinued explosion of our population, by the high mo-<lb />bility which now characterizes our rather rootless<lb />People, by the changes in the makeup of our people<lb />IN various age groups, and by unprecedented afflu-<lb />�,�nce. All those things have made our lives different.<lb />They have changed our society while institutions and<lb />Political thinking and programs lag behind. Institu-<lb />tions, public and private, all have to change, all have<lb />to become more idealistic, all have to take the in-<lb />dividual more into account, all have to confront the<lb />New facts. Most institutions are slow to change, so<lb />We have a period when things are out of balance.<lb />How rapidly we can change will determine how soon<lb />we may have domestic tranquility. | think we will<lb />Succeed because our people are basically decent<lb />People, they know the right thing to do, and they'll<lb />do it. | think we will succeed because itTs in our own<lb />individual self-interest to do so. Sooner or later, we<lb />Will all know that we will have to make some changes.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />My armour is incense and sitar<lb />My arms are bead, book, and bell<lb />Yet | am open and vulnerable.<lb />My soft belly lies naked<lb /><lb />Before the fangs of frustration<lb />Pray, my darling, do not strafe me<lb />With claws that rend and tear<lb />Tender flesh<lb /><lb />As | will die.<lb /><lb />In the minutes before dawn<lb /><lb />We pass on the street<lb />| turn my face to the barren concrete<lb /><lb />And a lump comes to my throat<lb />As | blurt out a brief<lb /><lb />But smiling greeting<lb /><lb />And keep on walking... .<lb /><lb />david mclemore<lb /><lb />Requiem for a peace lost<lb />In the pieces<lb /><lb />Of people hithering to<lb /><lb />And shrinking under<lb /><lb />Not yielding, only dying<lb /><lb />Not winning, only trying<lb /><lb />The noise oils the wheels<lb />(Causing)<lb /><lb />Ball-bearing people<lb />Smoothly roll<lb /><lb />Along threaded streets.<lb /><lb />richard w. orr<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Ol Dan smiled contentedly as he concentrated<lb />lowing his shadow up the river bank. It had<lb />nice afternoon on the river. He<lb />chuckled to himself as he put the bamboo pole on<lb />its rack in the barn. Dan had gotten the pole two<lb />years ago. Now the part of the pole he had held<lb />was worn smooth from so much use and his rough<lb />hands. OlT Dan purchased the pole because he had<lb />a big rainbow trout. The same<lb />trout that first spurred his interest was still out<lb />there around his pier. Dan alled the trout Big<lb />Bow. Yes, OlT Dan had spent many long, peaceful<lb />hours fishing for Big Bow. He just never could<lb />seem to hook him, though.<lb />Jim Roberts, who helps Dan with his crops<lb />sometimes, told him that it just couldnTt be the<lb />same fish, but OlT Dan knew he didnTt know what<lb />he was talking about. Why, just this morning,<lb />like many other mornings for a long time, OlT Dan<lb />had paused in front of the big, decrepit barn and<lb />looked down the river bank just in time to see Big<lb />Bow jump two feet out of the water. It was as if<lb />he was trying to say, oGood-day, Dan!� Why,<lb />next year this time, Big Bow would probably still<lb />ig all those juminous colors which gave<lb />heTs the same fish.<lb />pushed against<lb /><lb />shuffled into<lb /><lb />on fol<lb />been another<lb /><lb />an urge to catch<lb /><lb />be sporti<lb />him his name. Of course,<lb /><lb />OP Dan was still smiling when he<lb />the back door of the farmhouse and<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />OT<lb /><lb />i}<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />alls<lb /><lb />se LEE eS Lie<lb /><lb />the tiny, smutted kitchen. He sat the bucket down<lb />on the porcelain drainboard and began to search<lb />for a knife to clean his fish with.<lb /><lb />With a small, limp fish in one hand and a sharp<lb />knife in the other, OlT Dan began to scrape the<lb />filmy seales into the sink. What a terrible thing to<lb />do to such a harmless, helpless fish, he began to<lb />think to himself. He wondered if heTd ever be able<lb />to scale, fry, and eat Big Bow"even if he caught<lb />him. But then he chuckled again. No one could<lb />catch that tricky fish. HeTs too smart. And heTs<lb />gonna get even smarter as he gets older.<lb /><lb />After Dan ate his supper, he read his paper for<lb />about an hour. His four-room farmhouse was<lb />quieter this time of year"late August.<lb /><lb />When Dan felt the urge to sleep, he went to<lb />bed. But he didnTt go to sleep immediately. He<lb />thought about what he would do tomorrow"start<lb />taking in tobacco. Then he closed his eyes and<lb />recalled the sight of Big Bow shining in the sun-<lb />light as he jumped out to greet the new day. Just<lb />before he fell asleep, OlT Dan said aloud, oI'd be<lb />some kinda lonely without Big Bow.�<lb /><lb />The next day Dan worked harder and longer<lb />than usual. His tobacco was in the middle of har-<lb />vest. He had to work extra hours now. This was<lb />the reason Dan did not know that Joey Hart had<lb />visited his shabby pier to fish. Joey had seen the<lb />big fish jumping just past the pier. The farm-<lb />house looked sort of deserted, so he made himself<lb />at home. He set his heart on reeling in the big<lb />fish, but he knew his mother would not let him<lb />come back tomorrow if he stayed past supper-<lb />time. Joey was gone before OlT Dan returned from<lb />the field. So Dan didnTt meet Joey until the next<lb />day.<lb /><lb />Their first meeting was rather startling for both.<lb />Dan was already comfortably settled with his back<lb />nestled against the weather-beaten pile. He gazed<lb />through the cracks in the pier and listened to the<lb />lullaby of the waves lapping lazily at the piles.<lb /><lb />Joey had come out of the woods into the clear-<lb />ing before he saw the old man sitting in his new<lb />fishing spot. He stopped completely and blinked<lb />at him. Just as he decided to turn and run, OlT<lb />Dan jerked his head up and saw him. They looked<lb />at each other, each knowing or seeming to want to<lb />know the other. But Joey carried his rod and reel<lb />and his tackle box, so the old man knew why he<lb />had come.<lb /><lb />Dan smiled as he saw the skinny little boy sway<lb />and almost lose his balance. Then he motioned for<lb />the boy to come down and join him. Joey walked<lb />clumsily down the slope and then out to the end<lb />of the pier. He looked down all the way so his<lb /><lb />feet would not go through the pier where boards<lb />were missing or rotted away. He stopped a few<lb />feet from Dan and looked at him uncomfortably.<lb /><lb />oHi,� Joey muttered, oWhatcha doinT?�<lb /><lb />oFishinT, son.�<lb /><lb />"Oh"<lb /><lb />oHave a seat.�<lb /><lb />oThanks,� Joey whispered as he scrambled<lb />awkwardly into a sitting position, his legs dang-<lb />ling over the water.<lb /><lb />Ol Dan studied the boy. He liked his gray-<lb />brown hair and his tan which looked almost like<lb />ground-in dirt. He was terribly thin. The boy just<lb />stared at the water as if he could see clear to the<lb />bottom.<lb /><lb />oWhatTs your name, son?� Dan asked.<lb /><lb />oJoey.�<lb /><lb />oMineTs Dan. OlT Dan they call me.�<lb /><lb />oOh,� Joey ventured a question. oDo you own<lb />this farm?�<lb /><lb />ea<lb /><lb />oDo you fish much?�<lb /><lb />oWell, yes.�� Dan decided heTd tell the bright-<lb />eyed boy about Big Bow.<lb /><lb />The two were a contented-looking pair. From<lb />fifty feet away their voices were not audible, but<lb />they were without doubt enjoying each otherTs<lb />company. The little boy swung his legs and nod-<lb />ded his head to show his enthusiasm. He pointed<lb />his toes and skimmed the glassy green water with<lb />his sneakers. OlT Dan was so enchanted with the<lb />boy that his old, tired eyes gleamed wet and glassy<lb />like the water. His face actually ached from the<lb />broad grin heTd had ever since he first met Joey.<lb />Now OlT Dan had two friends, Big Bow and little<lb />Joey.<lb /><lb />Joey came almost every day. Sometimes he<lb />didnTt fish; he just sat and listened to OlT Dan.<lb />He loved to hear the old man tell him stories and<lb />all the strange things he knew about fish, birds,<lb />and other animals. Sometimes he showed OlT Dan<lb />his fishing gear. OlT Dan was quite fond of JoeyTs<lb />rod and reel.<lb /><lb />Big Bow was more valuable than ever to Dan<lb />now. He was no longer just an understanding<lb />friend. He was the reason Joey first came to the<lb />farm to fish. Dan wondered if he and Joey would<lb /><lb />continue to be friends if it werenTt for Big Bow. "<lb /><lb />Would Joey still come every chance he got? Ol<lb />Dan soon found out.<lb /><lb />He worked ~a while longer than usual that day. 4<lb />Joey was already perched in his favorite osmooth |<lb /><lb />spot� when Dan came down to join him. Joey once<lb />told Dan he sat there because there were not so<lb /><lb />fe<lb />~4<lb /><lb />many splinters in that spot. Dan had laughted out 4<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />loud and told Joey that his own hide was so tough<lb />that even splinters didnTt bother it anymore.<lb />When it happened, Joey was holding his rod<lb />and reel in one hand and showing Dan his new<lb />Silver spoon lure. Suddenly he dropped the lure<lb />and grasped the rod with both hands. oDan!� he<lb />gasped, oI think itTs Big Bow!� The boy was try-<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Ing to reel in the big fish. Dan could see the beau-<lb />tiful trout fighting just below the water's surface.<lb />He stood up, watching first the overjoyed boy,<lb />then the fish. Joey pulled and reeled. Pulled and<lb />reeled. He pulled with all the strength those frail<lb />arms could muster, but Big Bow, was a real fighter.<lb /><lb />oBoy is he a fighter!� Joey screeched. oI canTt<lb /><lb />elieve ITve hooked him. Can you, Dan?�<lb /><lb />Then Joey glanced at OlT Dan, and his hand<lb />Slipped from the reel and it started to spin. Joey<lb /><lb />ad seen tears in OlT DanTs eyes.<lb /><lb />Dan grabbed the rod and reel from JoeyTs hands<lb />and began to reel the fish back in. Then, with com-<lb />Plete assurance, OlT Dan carefully gave the rod<lb /><lb />ack to Joey. oYou bring him in, son. HeTs all<lb />yours,� Dan tried to grin.<lb /><lb />The boy brought the fish in. He gently removed<lb />the hook from its jaw and laid him in the old<lb /><lb />ucket.<lb /><lb />Big Bow didnTt give up easily. He struggled for<lb />&amp; long time in the bucket. Several times Dan<lb />thought he must be dead. Big Bow would flip<lb />again.<lb /><lb />: The sun had begun to fall and the water stilled<lb /><lb />© a golden glow. With a deep sigh Joey finally<lb />Said, oI have to go home now. My mother said<lb />Not to stay long.�<lb /><lb />an said nothing.<lb /><lb />Joey got up and closed his tackle box. He took<lb />1S rod and reel apart and then waited. Dan did<lb /><lb />not move. He just stared through the cracks of<lb />the pier into the darkness.<lb /><lb />The boy walked carefully off of the pier and<lb />started up the steep river bank.<lb /><lb />oJoey!� OlT Dan called"almost frantically.<lb /><lb />Joey quickly turned around.<lb /><lb />oJoey, donTt you want to take it home?�<lb /><lb />oDonTt you want it?� the boy said, trembling.<lb /><lb />=NGr-<lb /><lb />Joey put down his gear and went back out on<lb />the pier. He had a question, but he didnTt dare ask<lb />it. He picked up the bucket. It was much heavier<lb />than usual.<lb /><lb />OP Dan took a deep breath and struggled to<lb />his feet. His head was heavy, but now he held it<lb />up and looked at Joey. The little boy looked like<lb />a painting. He stood motionless and stared blank-<lb />ly across the river.<lb /><lb />oJoey, will you come back again?�<lb /><lb />The boy still stared at the other side of the<lb />river. He looked much younger than eleven, but<lb />he wisely said, oYou donTt mind? I like to talk<lb />and fish with you.�<lb /><lb />Dan stepped over to the boy and ruffled his<lb />hair. Then he put his big rough hand on the back<lb />of the boyTs neck, and together they walked to-<lb />ward shore as the sun sunk into the river.<lb /><lb />jena gurganus<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />"""""<lb /><lb />ax<lb /><lb />i<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb />As the<lb />LASCené<lb /><lb />Mabaci<lb /><lb />Niel at �,�<lb />VVitinetine Writ eae SKI<lb />Smilese wee bY<lb /><lb />So Atatinemyouitina| vets<lb /><lb />SSS SN<lb />as 5<lb /><lb />bate eh whet<lb /><lb />ax hee<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />The Knickerbocker<lb /><lb />Leather<lb />Wainscoting<lb />Silent Lamplight<lb />And the constant hiss of a gas log.<lb />Distant eyes<lb /><lb />Mounted above the pierced olive<lb />Gaze through a toothpick<lb /><lb />Into human patterns below on the avenue.<lb /><lb />Contentment, my friend<lb />Is but an insect<lb /><lb />On a blade of grass<lb />High above the ants.<lb /><lb />david mclemore<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />chair.<lb />pats<lb />d.<lb /><lb />2<lb />=<lb />12)<lb /><lb />A<lb /><lb />oD<lb />c<lb />3<lb /><lb />UNEMPLOYMENT<lb /><lb />A young ho<lb /><lb />| am almost slumbering<lb /><lb />In a rocking<lb /><lb />The soft rain<lb /><lb />A Mississippi roa<lb /><lb />| feel like the road.<lb />william mills<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb />ties iietedndieteneiiedieen ge<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />The Selling of the President, 1968<lb />by Joe McGinniss<lb />(New York: Trident Press, 253 pp. $5.95) -<lb /><lb />It is a debatable question whether Americans<lb />should really know their president. Whether they<lb />Americans eventually know just<lb /><lb />should or not,<lb />subject, due<lb /><lb />about everything on just about any<lb />to this decadeTs explosion in communications.<lb />A very good example of this trend is Joe Mc-<lb />GinnissT book about how Richard Nixon used tele-<lb />vision to win the 1968 election. The book should<lb />be subtitled, oRead This Book To Get To Know<lb />Better The Man You Thought You Voted For.�<lb />Joe McGinniss worked in the Nixon campaign<lb />a collection of satires about<lb />advertising men who<lb />image� to the<lb /><lb />and his book is largely<lb />that campaign, especially the<lb />worked to sell the onew Nixon<lb />American people. The underlying theme of the<lb />book is somewhat understated, but nevertheless<lb />it is there: using television to sell presidents, to<lb />make them something they are not, is something<lb />less than scrupulous.<lb />. McGinniss states in the opening of the book,<lb /><lb />Advertising, in many ways, is a con game ..-<lb />Human beings do not need new automobiles every<lb />third year; a color television set brings little en-<lb />tichment of the human experience; @ higher or<lb />lower hemline, no expansion of consciousness, no<lb />Mcrease in the capacity.<lb /><lb />oTt is not surprising then, that politicians and<lb />discovered one an-<lb />ize that the citizen<lb />as make a<lb /><lb />advertising men should have<lb />Other. And, once they recogn<lb />did not so much vote for a candidate<lb />Psychological purchase of him, not surprising that<lb />they began to work together.�<lb /><lb />The book is one more thing. It is<lb />Well-written piece that entertains the reader as<lb />Well as informs him. McGinnissT style is clear, and<lb />he does not get involved in over-philosophizing<lb />about the questions and strategies he is dealing<lb />With. It should have been easy to slip into that<lb />: ause of the very nature of the<lb />Subject. McGinniss makes his points, but he does<lb />It vis-a-vis very perceptive reporting. For example,<lb />At the conclusion of chapter four he quotes Frank<lb />peekespeareTs comment about how the Nixon<lb /><lb />ategy will counter the Humphrey campaign.<lb /><lb />a deliciously<lb /><lb />kind of writing, bec<lb /><lb />ee ~ - - = =.<lb />... by ignoring it. By continuing to pre-<lb /><lb />sent Nixon as he is today. Calmer, more<lb /><lb />thoughtful, more compassionate than he<lb />was eight years ago. You see, I feel that<lb />if he is presented in the proper situations<lb />"on television"these qualities will come<lb />across. As I said, without television he<lb /><lb />wouldnTt have a chance. With it, he can-<lb />not lose.�<lb />At the beginning of the next chapter, McGinniss<lb /><lb />writes,<lb />oT am not going to barricade myself into<lb />a television studio and make this an anti-<lb />septic campaign, Richard Nixon said at<lb />a press conference a few days after his<lb /><lb />nomination.<lb /><lb />oThen he went to Chicago to open<lb />his campaign. The whole day was built<lb />around a television show. Even when ten<lb />thousand people stood in front of his<lb />hotel and screamed for him to greet them,<lb />he stayed locked up in his room, resting<lb /><lb />for the show.�<lb /><lb />These are good examples of the way McGinniss<lb />of how he makes his points, and of the<lb />ok. All the people that voted in<lb />and the people that will be voting<lb />lections should read this book. It<lb />levision can do, whether<lb /><lb />writes,<lb />subject of his be<lb />the last election,<lb />in the coming e<lb />is a case study of what te<lb />it is ethical or not.<lb /><lb />john reynolds<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Dutchman and The Slave by LeRoi Jones<lb />(Apollo Editions, William Morrow and Co.,<lb />159 pp., $1.50)<lb /><lb />This Apollo edition of LeRoi JonesTs two plays<lb />Dutchman and The Slave follows the 1964 pro-<lb />duction of his work off-Broadway. Perhaps be-<lb />cause of the necessities of the sixties, both are<lb />about race. This is not the time, maybe, to expect<lb />anything else from most Negro writers.<lb /><lb />Probably the title Dutchman refers to the legen-<lb />dary Flying Dutchman (via The Wandering Jew) .<lb />There the Dutchman is punished for having stray-<lb />ed too far from his native land; his adventurous<lb />spirit is his misfortune. The Dutchman in the<lb />play is, of course, the black. He is flying through<lb />the undergrounds of New York in a _ subway.<lb />Seeking his redemption? Maybe. At least the<lb />White Woman in the play is interested in his<lb />redemption. But this beautiful, thirty-year-old,<lb />red-haired White Woman is certainly not the run-<lb />of-the-mill savior or white woman. While she<lb />munches an apple, she tries to pick up Clay, the<lb />twenty-year-old black man. Alternately caressing<lb />and attacking the innocent young man, she talks<lb />of his manhood, insisting that this is what the<lb />rendezvous is all about.<lb /><lb />The action is a thriller right up to the end.<lb />Black slaps White Woman because she wonTt<lb />leave him alone, but White Woman puts a knife<lb />into Black man. Just as the stage is. cleaned up,<lb />however, and the black body thrown out of the<lb />subway, another twenty-year-old black walks in<lb />and sits down. The curtain closes just as the<lb />cycle begins again.<lb /><lb />Maybe we've got developing here a Wandering<lb />White Woman doomed to wander the labyrinth<lb />of the transit authority seeking the salvation of<lb />dusky men and her own satisfaction. (Maybe<lb />this archetype has already appeared in another<lb />guise with Charley of Boston (MTA) subway<lb />fame. WonTt anybody lend a buddy a dime?)<lb /><lb />Part of the moral of Dutchman is this: Leave<lb />black people alone.<lb /><lb />oLet them sing curses at you in code and<lb />see your filth as simple lack of style.<lb />DonTt make the mistake, through some<lb />irresponsible surge of Christian charity,<lb />of talking too much about the advan-<lb />tages of Western rationalism, or the great<lb />intellectual legacy of the white man, or<lb />maybe they'll begin to listen.�<lb />The white woman wanders over to the second<lb />play of the volume, a slightly softer woman this<lb />time because she is the former mistress of a<lb /><lb />forty-year-old black man and the mother of his<lb />two illegitimate daughters. (ITm serious.) So far,<lb /><lb />just Ladies Home Journal. But in the meantime,<lb />she has married a gelded, liberal-fink college pro-<lb />fessor who, knowing her history but being liberal<lb />and stupid, has married her anyway.<lb /><lb />In the background, the city is being destroyed<lb />by black revolutionaries. On stage the white man<lb />and white woman are destroyed by the revolu-<lb />tion. For the audience, the play is destroyed by<lb />too much politics and too many ideas.<lb /><lb />Dutchman is probably better theater than<lb />The Slave because long speeches weigh the latter<lb />down. Neither would do for the commercial thea-<lb />ter, although that need not necessarily stop us,<lb />but both are excessively cerebral. Experimental<lb />theater is very often cerebral, but the risk of new<lb />technical innovations often justifies the crowd of<lb />ideas"if the final effort is worth it. These two<lb />short plays tend to this extreme because of politics<lb />"rocks that have destroyed many pretty boats.<lb />With LeRoi Jones, the audience expects it and<lb />gets it . . . every time. There are those who like<lb />their politics dressed up like three-penny actors,<lb />because it gives them class. In the relatively rare<lb />atmosphere of the experimental theater, there isnTt<lb />the danger of a Chicago convention.<lb /><lb />william mills<lb /><lb />EXPE-<lb />A IME:<lb />NTAL.<lb /><lb />Sh ealra<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />7) x<lb />The College Drug Scene by James T. Carey<lb />(Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc.,<lb />151 pp., $1.50)<lb /><lb />Most books about drug use are absurdly exag-<lb />gerated profiles of typical� dope-fiends, strung out<lb /><lb />and scrounging for a fix. Today such fairy tales are<lb />not even remotely credible, and public attention<lb />has shifted to drug usage among college students.<lb />The College Drug Scene by James T. Carey is a<lb />detailed sociological study of the situation in<lb />Berkeley, California.<lb /><lb />Using a highly sophisticated technique of inter-<lb />Views and field observation, the authorTs study<lb />group has succeeded in accurately recording pat-<lb />terns of drug usage and related social interaction<lb />mm an academic community. Carey is not biased<lb />in favor of the ohead�: oThe side bet placed in<lb />terms of dropping out of college has effectively<lb />Closed off any feasible alternative to the way of<lb />life the hard core user is now engaged in.�<lb /><lb />All sorts of drug involvement are investigated<lb />here, from the recreational user who smokes some<lb />grass on the weekends to the acid head, tripping<lb />as often as twice a week. In some places the<lb />author, an assistant professor of criminology at<lb /><lb />erkeley, actually becomes rather literary in<lb />describing the drug experience. He also subjects<lb />the values of heavy dopers to an intense scru-<lb />tiny, but pointedly refrains from interjecting a<lb /><lb />Straight� value judgment. Even the economics<lb />of drug dealing do not escape his notice.<lb /><lb />The College Drug Scene should be placed be-<lb />Ore every university administrator and_ police<lb />Official in America, many of whom suffer from<lb />Superbly anachronistic misconceptions about the<lb /><lb />tug phenomenon. No longer are drug users a de-<lb />Viant criminal subculture"they are college stu-<lb />ents. SocietyTs darlings are turning on and will<lb />�,� running the world tomorrow. Read it if you<lb />Care,<lb /><lb />william r. day<lb /><lb />Though the world often seems to be odying<lb />around us,� one never quite gives up hope for its<lb />rebirth. Hans Koningsberger has beautifully told<lb />the story of manTs struggle to flee from the brutal-<lb />ity of war in A Walk With Love and Death.<lb /><lb />The tale begins in the spring of 1358, when othe<lb />peasants of northern France did not sow their<lb />fields any more.� The hero, a young student nam-<lb />ed Heron, is oon a quest for freedom.� Fleeing<lb />from war, and perhaps himself too, he is constant-<lb />ly moving toward the sea . toward England.<lb />In fact, the sea becomes an obsession with Heron.<lb /><lb />Amid the crisis of war, Heron has reached his<lb />own crisis. He finds himself drowning in the sea<lb />of life. and so he looks for his own blue sea.<lb /><lb />The parallels between KoningsbergerTs sensual<lb />novel and the current conflicts of the young stu-<lb />dent today can be easily drawn. The draft ques-<lb />tion and the Vietnam war, as well as the present<lb />crisis on our campuses today are directly com-<lb />parable. Heron has left the University because:<lb /><lb />oT wonTt die with the world, I though: as<lb /><lb />a matter of fact, neither the world nor I<lb /><lb />will die: there is something else to be<lb /><lb />found but not at this dead university and<lb /><lb />not by hunting wolves in a cemetery. I'll<lb /><lb />have my hour yet, ITm not going to have<lb /><lb />it stolen from me: I'll go find it, in<lb /><lb />spring. I will escape.�<lb />Escape solving the conflicts within oneself<lb />hefore the conflicts outside oneself are solved .. .<lb />living . . . all these have become the young manTs<lb />elements of personal crisis. They are ours.<lb /><lb />Searching for othe hourT becomes the aim of<lb />the young lovers, Claudia and Heron. Are we not<lb />searching for our hour? Or are we fleeing from our<lb />hour? We must decide. We, like Heron, see too<lb />that the world is dying around us. Is hopelessness<lb />so hopeless? Does one run backward or forward?<lb />Does one move at all?<lb /><lb />Finally, one realizes, as Hans Koningsberger<lb />wrote, that love and death continually are walk-<lb /><lb />ing hand-in-hand.<lb />jennifer salinger<lb /><lb />A Walk With Love and Death<lb /><lb />by Hans Koningsberger.<lb />(New York: Popular Library, 128 pp. $.60)<lb /><lb />a walk with<lb /><lb />E_O/e<lb />&amp; DEATH<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />In Face of Death<lb /><lb />Thus home | draw<lb />As deathTs long night<lb />Draws on<lb /><lb />The shadow of death<lb />Has fallen upon me<lb />My hopes are vanished<lb />As running water<lb />What is there now<lb />Left for me<lb /><lb />But to wait<lb /><lb />The falling<lb /><lb />Of the fatal blow<lb /><lb />With arms outstretched<lb />PAVale mm at-y-lomt-liom cel) 7-10<lb />The orient sun<lb /><lb />frederick sorensen<lb /><lb />Don Juan<lb /><lb />The grass upon my grave<lb />Will grow as long ~<lb />And sigh to midnight winds<lb /><lb />The grass upon my grave<lb />Will grow as long<lb /><lb />As streaming hair " ,<lb />And send its tendrils down<lb />To sup with me<lb /><lb />The grass upon my grave<lb />Will hear the. sigh of re<lb />When my ears. :<lb /><lb />Are clogged with clay ~<lb />And the root "_*<lb /><lb />Of a growing vine<lb /><lb />The grass upon my grave *<lb />Will grow waist high<lb /><lb />While my loved one pan<lb />Stretches down her arms to tie: ai<lb />And cries<lb /><lb />frederick sorensen<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>a<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />ame sn Soon<lb /><lb />Gentle Things for<lb />Gentle People at<lb /><lb />: The Mushroom<lb /><lb />Fine Art By Faculty and Students of<lb />EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY.<lb /><lb />LIC<lb /><lb />Georgetown Shoppees, 521 Cotanche<lb />BROWSERS WELCOME 11 a.m.-7 p.m.<lb /><lb />Donna Tabar<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />JERRYTS<lb />CAFETERIA<lb /><lb />702 EVANS<lb /><lb />STUDENTS:<lb /><lb />For The Finest In<lb /><lb />Home-cooked Meals,<lb /><lb />Lowest Prices, and<lb />Top Service,<lb /><lb />EAT AT JERRYTS CAFETERIA<lb /><lb />EPelk Tyler<lb /><lb />We Have the oLook�<lb />You Want!<lb /><lb />Distinctive Fashion for<lb />Young Men and Women.<lb /><lb />If itTs oNEW�... If itTs the<lb />oIN-LOOK� ... YouTll find it first at<lb />Belk Tyler.<lb /><lb />In Downt nville. O<lb /><lb />ep egifalepedepip pe) y<lb />MOUARUOUATeE<lb /><lb />(SBeo Cs bea, ra<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb /><lb />gw TEXTBOOKS New and Used<lb />mw STUDENT SUPPLIES and GIFTS<lb /><lb />m STUDY GUIDES<lb />528 S. COTANCHE STREET<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />In Sizes 3-13 and 4-14<lb /><lb />ProctorTs PirateTs Den<lb />Scrappy Proctor Invites All ECU Men<lb />To Enjoy the Coffee Bar<lb />and<lb /><lb />203 E. 5th Street Browse<lb />Through These Familiar<lb /><lb />V illager Brand Names<lb />Emil y M.<lb /><lb />Alvin Duskin Cricketeer Suits &amp; Sport Coats<lb /><lb />Funky Allen Paine &amp; Glasco Sweaters<lb /><lb />Fashions Footjoy Shoes<lb /><lb />Pempelton &amp; Hathaway Shirts<lb /><lb />3 THANK YOU FOR SHOPPING<lb />? AT<lb />| Downtown<lb />i and 9<lb />Pitt<lb />| Plaza<lb /><lb /></p>
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