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Western Carolinian Volume 36 Number 09

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  • October L 1970 Six dates for THE WESTERN CAROLINIAN graduateexams set Fi9ures saV volunteer PRINCETON, N.J. - Educational Testing Service announ ced today that undergraduates and others preparing to go to graduate school may take the Graduate Record Examinations on any of six different test dates during the current academic year. The first testing date for the GRE is October 24, 1970. Scores from this administration will be reported to the grad uate schools about December 1. Students planning to register for the October test date are ad vised that applications received by ETS after October 6 will incur a $3.00 late registration fee. After October 9, there is no guarantee that applications for the October test date can be processed. The other five test dates are December 12, 1970, January 16, February 27, April 24 and WCUreceives fund of $400 Western Carolina University has received $400 in scholarship funds from the Jackson County Cancer Society, according to Clair Martin, head of the WCU Department of Nursing. The money will be used to provide one or two scholarships to needy nursing students, preferably from Jackson County, Martin said. the Rev. Riley Coving of Sylva, president of the society, presented the money to the university. He said the scholarship money was intended to foster improved nursing services in Jackson County by encouraging county residents to enter the nursing profession. The scholarships will be administered through the WCU office of Student Aids. June 19, 1971. Equivalent late fee and registration deadlines apply to these dates. Choice of test dates should be determined by the requirements of graduate schools or fellowships to which one is applying. Scores are usually reported to graduate schools five weeks after a test date. The Graduate Record Examinations include an Aptitude Test of general scholastic ability and Advanced Tests measuring achievement in 20 major fields of study, Full details and registration forms for the GRE are contained in the 1970- 71 GRE Information Bulletin. The Bulletin also contains forms and instructions for re= questing transcript service on GRE scores already on file with ETS. This booklet may be available on your campus or may be ordered from: Educational Testing Service, Box 955, Princeton, New Jersey 08540; Educational Testing Service, 1947 Center Street, Berkeley, California 94704; Ed • ucational Testing Service, 960 Grove Street, Evanston, Ulinios 60201. Pollutants FROM PAGE 3 Dreft 41.9; Rinso with chlorine bleach 41.0; Galn39.5; Duz 38.3; Bestline B-7 38.0; Bonus 37.5; Breeze 37.2; Cheer 36.3: Fab 34.8; White King with borax 34.7; Royalite 21.7; Instant Fel Soap 16.6; Wisk liquid 14.2; Par Plus 4.3; Addit liquid 2.2; Ivory Liquid 1.9; Lux Liquid 1.9; While King Soap and Coldwater ALL liquid, less than 1 percent Automatic dishwasher detergents; Amway 60; Cascade 54.5; ALL 54.0; Calgonite49.4; Electrosol 34.8. Household cleaners: Ajax All Purlose 28,5; Mr. Clean 27.0; Whistle 3.1; Pinesol less than 1 percent THE JIFFY SHOPS Walnut Street & Balsam Road Discount Package Store — Best Prices in Town — Free Ice to WCU Students — Interesting Contests — Everything for Your Parties Welcome All WCU Students! WASHINGTON — (CPS) — Army draftees have almost twice as high a chance of being killed in Vietnam as non draftee enlisted men, according to a U.S. Army study. During 1969, draftees were killed at the rate of 31 per 1,000, and injured at the rate of 203 per 1,000, while first term enlistees were killed at the rate of 17 per 1,000 and injured at the rate of 120 per 1.000, The reason draftees tend to be killed at a much higher rate is that the Army, in a procedure different from pre • vious wars, allows men who enlist for three years to choose what job they want Because of this, draftees who make up 56 per cent of the men enter Ing the Army, tend to make up a much higher percentage of combat units William K Brehm, assistant secretary of the Army for manpower and reserve affairs, explains that ' the popular jobs are the ones for which people enlist They don't enlist for they hard-core combat skills. That is why draftees tend to populate the hard-core combat skills: 70 percent of the Infan- draftees." A Defense Department man • power expert, who refused to be quoted by name, told a reporter for National Journal, a newsletter which requested the Army study, that "we've studied this problem very carefully. People don't enlist in the Army to fight We recognize the inequity this causes in a shooting war, but we don't New book about Kent State NEW YORK, September 21 — The "real tragedy" of the four students killed at Kent State is "that some people think they deserved to die," today asserted Erich Segal, author of LOVE STORY. "And when I say some people, I mean many people,..Americans all over the land," stated Segal in an article in the current (October) issue of LADIES' HOME JOURNAL, "These sentiments were, by and large, expressed by men of good will" who "obviously felt that the crimes committed by the students deserved the death penalty." Segal noted that though "very few offenses nowadays warrant capital punishment., people aU across America considered the deaths at Kent State not only justified but desirable," According to Segal, "if the good folk In nearby Ohio towns do not understand Kent State, how will they understand Jackson State, or Augusta, much less what happened in the far- off little village of My Lai?.,. "If we are so confused that we cannot distinguish a campus from a battlefield, if Kent State and Khe Sanh look the same, then we had better stop and look around and see what is happenning," Segal asserted in his JOURNAL article. The author said that a moment before Allison Krause was shot and killed by National Guard bullets she " * just stopped to look around to see what was happening.' Maybe if WE had, she wouldn't have had to," know what to do about it" College graduates are slightly less likely to be assigned to combat duty but there are no figures separating draftees from enlistees among college graduates. 36.2 percent of the graduates who ent ered the Army in 1969 were assigned to combat jobs, com ■ pared with the overall rate of 43,3 percent 61 percent of the graduates were draftees, The higher death rate of draftees in Vietnam would have been ended by an amendment to the military procurement bill, which would have barred the sending of draftees to Vietnam unless they volunteered to go. The amendment, authored by Sen, William Proxmire, (D=Wisc.), was rejected by a vote of 22-71. The Army says It has no figures on the chances of a draftee serving in Vietnam each month. The monthlydraft call has been running about 10,000. 30 percent of all draftees then in the Army were serving In Vietnam on July 1, compared with 25 percent of first term enlistees. Many persons, including Sen. Proxmire, feel that the three- year enlistees should not be able to opt out of combat while draftees must fight; the Army is apparently unwilling to remove the provision because enlistments might drop, forcing a drastic rise in draft calls. "As strange as it sounds,", Brahm said, "only 800 young men a month out of 200 million Americans are enlisting for combat If we went to an all-volunteer force In Vieuiam, it's quite conceivable that that's all we might get" WELCOME WCU We invite you to shop with us while you are here— We guarantee the finest in fashion at moderate prices. Famous name brands include; FOR MEN FOR WOMEN McGregor WHITE STAG VAN HEUSEN LADY MANHATTAN LEE PANTS K0RET OF CALIFORNIA FREEMAN SHOES STAGE "7" HEATHROW SWEATERS RAIN SHEDDER COAT DENNIS MENS & LADIES' SHOP 7 East Main St Sylva, N.C. BANK CARDS PERSONAL CHECKS
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