Fountainhead, June 21, 1972


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GREENVILLE. N CAROLINA
VOLUME III. NUMBER b8
WEDNESDAY JUNE 21, 1972
and the truth shall make you free'
Summer students pay extra fees but receive less
By BO PERKINS
itjfi ?. ??
Students attending both terms "t tins year's
sununei session me paving SI 00 more foi fees
than iin legulai quartei full-time student
Howeset ihe services thej are receiving in
retm: ate considerably loss than those offered
to the tegtilai quartet student
Anmng those .n iivmes not being offered this
Mmmei aie the Aiiisi Series Lecture Series,
Travel Vlventure films campus bus services
and .in s(, I egisljtuie
Othei activities is huh have been
BJOnsidetahlv loduced are the Pop
Eutcttammeii! Series-two mini-concerts have
been scheduled this summer, the campus
ftgwspapct "I nuniainhead" one issuepei week
Mftc.nl "i iho nnini.il two, and the athletu
prog i am
Alsn. siudeni .uiisus cards have not been
issued lhis siimmei I Ins has boon done
tecoiding in Cliiion Moore li I Business
Manage! because those activities foi which the
cards aie iintnulK needed are noi being
often Individual schedules foi prooi "I
full-nine status are being substituted .is a means
for cashing i hecks in the Studeni Hank
Gai Massie President ol the li t Studeni
Union . mmented on those functions that the
SU is peiI n t I ? ihe 11 I summei -111110111
Massie who is the formei chairman ol the Pops
Enteiiaininoni Committee spoke first "I ihe
populai enteildiiiinenl thai has been lined
for this suminei
"Two mini-concerts have been planned foi
HininieisJi.il,1 stated Massie 'We are giving
the students these concerts, one each quartei
The will he held on the Mall with n cl
foi a iimssion
- 150 (mi has beet ip 11 I to covei
the costs ol presenting both concerts I1.1I
expenditures foi populai entertainment during
Fall quartei ol 1971, the highest foi this
academic yeai were ovei $42,000 Enrollment
foi the Summei session (both terms combined)
is projected to be around 6.000 student!
GARY MASSIE. President of the
newly reorganized Student Union,
tw " Is ol a normal sessii n such as
Fall quartei
According to Massie, the smallet enrollment
i- to blame foi the lack ol summei
entertainment "In summei school we don'i
base the large student body to rely on to bus
tickets i" concerts explains Massie "It's also
much hardet to generate a crowd there's no
wa) sse could even break -even by preset
big name group
Massie gave as an example the problem ol
preseni m such as Jethro Tull.
(Staff pnoto Dy Bin NitMi)
explains the reasons for reduced summer
activities.
who played a concert during Fall quarter at
II "It sse presented Jethro Tull during the
summei says Massie "we would lose probably
' l(XD s it tinned out, we made over
t 00001 that concert
I mmenting n othet SI activities. Massie
stated that there would be no Lecture or Artist
Series foi the Summei session "The mam
v ; we don't have these is that we feel there
is 11 it enough interest in this type ot
entertainment during the summer Massie says
Neither 1 these acti. ? ?ve been presented
during past summers
Expenditures foi this summei 1 movies aie
expected to be SI 500 01 one fo irtti t this
year's Sf000 budgf Expenditures foi si
games will also be approximately the art
those ol the previous quarters I hese include
chess monopoly . ping-pong and the like
Another added activity to this .
summer budget is the watermelon festiva
thousand dollars was appropriated to covei the
cost ol this event
Massie feels that the summer school studeni
should "get his monev s worth, even tl
the figures show that there is a drastic cul in
the number of activities offered to the student
during the summer "When sou look at n
Massie. "you have to ask 'How much does ti
cost each student that attends the ever
"Then take that cost and weigh it against the
cost for each student if the event was held
during a regular session Then v ou should try to
present that event when it will be most
economical "
ECL's Student Government Association
stall has also been drastically cut back in the
summer session According to SGA Treasurer
Mark Browne the staff numbers about one-third
of what it does during the normal quartei Most
of this cut is due to the fact that there is no
SGA Legislature durine the summer
In past years ECL students have elected a
legislature to represent them during the summer
months According to Browne the summei
legislature was a "farce " "Most summei
legislatures didn't know what they wete doing
says Browne Browne stated thai the SGA
Executive Council will remain tot both terms
this summer, but he acknowledged that there
are still problems in trying to provide
representation for the students "I sernmsls
think thai lhey (the summei students! aie
belter represented by the legislative members
Browne said Lou ot them just won! lake ihe
initiative to come to us when lhey have
something on their minds
AjXeii about how the siudeni wiJJ benetii
the summi SGA It 1 wni r? plii I 11
? thing Hi. , ,K.
"Also wo still
S .
I inergi rtcy I md
Browni stres d tl amount
mei itudi 1 1 . fi ? in .
"?? ? SI IA 1 . intil the I all quartei
but he feels that it would be a mistake to shut
all activities foi the summei "I mil ting
all the variables Browi I run the
summe ludents . ney s
Vspari 'Mi studeni
what is tei
"Othei University I ei H
. v. 1 B tsiness
' thai the r ason foi
primarily 1 ?
number ol dollai 1 iscs
This dollai which will bring approximately
Sri.000 into the business 1
not us nvity
v- rding to M ?? eated
by a SI 00 fee every quartei which has nevei
been touched lor any purpi -
rhirteen dollars ol the ti lal twenty lollars
ol the othei university tees is used to pas foi
bonds on sui.1i items as ihe new studeni union
and I icklen Stadium S4 50 goes from each
teim s toes into ECU'S athletu program
Before last summei thei wi I letn
programs .tiered during the summei and those
gram were used dut ing
the regulai .u. Starting last summei. the
Huate ? las ing in a spec ia
summer league with othei Nottl ina
schools 1 ho schedule is set foi thi
games, and 1 Cl students will be admitted fr
M re feels that instead ol being
discriminatory, the present !i fe systei
in fact more beneficial than many othei
universities' "At Chapel Hill, si State and
UNC-4 a Itudeni is ,1 studeni and must pas all
siudeni tees ' Moots Meted "Here at I ,ist
aroltna a pan time student is noi required to
pay tor non-academic activities "
RDI receives federal grants for buildings
PiliPH?
By MICHAEL JACOBSON
Staff ?
Ihe Regional IX-velopment Institute (RDI)
al II has received federal grants totaling
S 192.400.
Additional funds will be provided from the
Coastal Plains Regional Commission and the
S. ite ol North Carolina totaling SlK,200 each.
bringing the total funds to S4?0.c00
The hinds will be used by the RDI to build
office buildings and an auditorium to be used in
conjunction with programs and seminars
sponsored by the institute.
16,000 square-fool office building will be
built on Reed First and Second Streets, with
the Mont facing toward the fai River.
According to romas Willis, director, diversity is
the key woid to the RDI "To work in the
Regional Development Institute, one must he
diversied in almost every field
Basically, the purpose ol the institute is to
aid. economically. socially. and
environmentally, the thirty-two eastern North
Carolina counties The institute helps towns
within this area to find doctors and to start lire
departments Their projects. 110 in number.
range from helping a black cobbler in Grifton.
to building a $2-milhon rain facility
Willis pointed out that there aie three bask
functions of the RDI First, the institute offers
to the student and faculty a laison to the
communal affairs of Fastern N C Second, n
hopes to aid the counties economically And
third, th' institute hopes to bring recognition
to ECU and the RDI
The institute is the first in the nation to have
interns working in the field ol economic
development Joe' Patrick, graduate student in
Business and Michael Yount. commercial art
graduate are the two interns which work with
the institute
Since there is no degree offered in the field
ol economic development, the students must
work in the field in order to understand the
institute
The students work lull time lot the inslilute
and are paid $500 from federal funds
Wilhs hopes that this program ol interns will
reach other universities, for he feels that it is
necessary for students to understand the
economics ol the region in which they reside
Ihe institute houses a 4.000 volume library
which in itselt is the largest ot its type The
RDI is producing a magazine, the "Now I asi
whose purpose is to show the "new ol Eastern
n tl 1 arolina
Willis likes to refei to his workers noi as
planners 01 engineers bui as "imagineers
because it takes the imagination and the
engineering skills to be successful in the field ol
k j rial Development
HALF MILLION DOLLAR grant will
construct a facility for the Regional
Development Institute at the corner of
First and Reade Streets.
Executives reap the profits of government
Marijuana usage surges in schools
reveals survey of Charlotte students
CHARLOT II N( P survey ol M.OOO
students in grades 7 12 ol the Charlotte schools
indicates that alcohol and marijuana usage is
increasing and that students are experimenting
with di ties earliei
The surves which asked students it they had
used .hut's ranging from alcohol, opiates and
marijuana to 'inhalants" showed that children
may be getting started on dines before they
reach the seventh grade
Ot the 1.250 seventh graders who said they
had used inhalants glue, gasoline, and
hairspiass almost all said they had started
moo than aeai 1
The results ol the survey indicated thai as
the students gel oldei .so ol inhalants .hops
and alcohol and marijuana become the drugs ol
choice di the high school seniors, 19.6 pe
cent said they used marijuana and 62 9 pet cenl
said ihov had used all ohol
Ihr survey was taken in March and released
Hondas bvharlotte s Drug I ducat ion Centet
Ol all the students surveyed 45 9 pei cent
said ihev had used alcohol 24 - pet cenl has
used marijuana and I ' 5 pe. cent had tlted
Inhalant I 01 oil the figures were
impliot.iininos I4percenl haliucinogens.il 2
pc, cent barbiturates. 10.6 pei cent, and
-j ilos. 6 0 pel cent
Amphetamines and barbiturates, which are
habit-forming stimulants and depressants;
hallucinogens, such as I S and pcvote.are the
sources ol consciousness-altering "tups and
opiates include many addictive drugs, such as
heroin
School and ding education officials said the
sursov had shown that drug usage increases
tastost during the junioi Inch school soais
"The leveling ofl during the senioi Inch
seats suggests ihat patterns in decision making
about drugs are sol ails " said Di J 'hmo
Mel eod ol the Drug 1 du? ationentei
Die figures also reflet 1 a rapid use in the use
ot marijuana survey three years ago by the
Mecklenburgounty Medical Society said thai
12.8 pei cent, compared to this year's 19.6 pei
cent, ol high school seniors had used marijuana
Dr NKI cod saul that approximately
three fourths ol the students in grades ' 12 had
been reached h the survey 01 the remaining
I 1,000, she said, slightlv more than hall were
eithei absent, declined to till oul the
questionnaire, "i were noi asked
she saul the ost won' probably sclI
dropouts, and that the report might be
underestimating several types ol drug usage
(Ipiate users in partu ulat she said t nd to drop
OUl Ol s. hoI
Bv GARY CARTER
Sldlt Wnier
Unknown to many students, the president.
vice-president and treasure! ol the Student
Government Association arc now required, bv
the SGA constitution, to attend summei
sessions and assume all duties foi the operation
of the student government Also unknown to
most students, is the tact that the officers
receive monetary compensation foi then
seis k 1 s
According to the newly lesised SGA
constitution, the three officers "shall receive
normal orderly salaries during the summer, and,
as an addition, their tuition shall be paid bv the
Student Government Association " The salaries
ol Rob I uisana. Rick Atkinson, am! Maik
Browne will total $795 foi the three summei
months I his amounts to Si45 lor I uisana.
S270 foi Browne and180 for Atkinson
Tuition expenses lot the thtee lotah $938,
with 1 uisana and Atkinson receiving
out-ol state tuition of $100 pet session
Browne, as an in state student receives S"U pei
session
Though the S(iA constitution does not
specif) it, the three officers may also
reside in the dormitories free of charge during
the summei Only 1 .uisana has profited from
this feature as both Atkinson and Browne
leside oil campus
Besides receiving the above benefits, luisana
and the other two 1 Slicials were "selected" by
Dean ol Men lames Matter) to be employed bv'
the University during the freahrnen orientation
sessions Ihe three aot as guides and will receive
SI00 each for services rendered during Ihe six
planned sessions
The total of the above figures comes to
S2.I33 lor the three students, with the S(.A
paying the majority of the sum Both Browne
and Luisana believe that it is necessary foi the
three top officers ol the St. 1. he present
during the summer terms Both al agreed that
the work involved justified the payment
received Bmwne slated. "I think thai we do
enough to justify the monev we receive wedo
as much during the summer months as during
the regular school year ' He also staled his
belief that it was important lor the officers to
.111 their offices and staffs during tin
summer months 111 oidct to prepare foi the
upcoming school term
Luisana pointed oul thai had he not been
requned to come to summei school, he could
have been working ai some Othei job making
much more monev The two officers ais.
commented thai the monev involved in the
offices was no incentive foi someone to run
Browne stated further, "I believe ihat the
I xecutive officers ol the S(,s, and then staffs
are the mosi underpaid public servants
anywhere
Nixon applauds Ky government
President Nixon savs th.
N th Vietnamese offensive in
S.uth Vietnam not only has
tailed but also has
demonstrated thai Saigon is
the legitimate government ol
somh ietnam
Writing in the latest issue ol
1 S News and World Repot'
Nixon said "the wav in which
the people ol South Vietnam
have tallied to thou nation's
detense should persuade even
the most committed apologists
lot ihe enemy that Saigon, not
Hanoi, speaks for the South
Vietnamese people" The
President said that ending I S
involvement in the wai "in a
way that loaves "tun purposes
intact, and that will contribute
to a lasting peace in his goal ol
building a 'structure ol peace'
in the world "
Nixon's ten page
1 ops lighted article was said bv
the magazine to be the first he-
has prepared exclusively and
specifically lor any publication
since becoming President
The President said both
Russia and China have gone
through a policy change ol
"piofuuiid importance' aitei
recognizing the 'old taoiks
would noi woik
"Neithei the Soviet 1 n
01 (Tuna abandoned ns
pailkulat view ol the w.uld
he said "But both accepted
the idea that then own best
interests would be seised
bettei h negotiation than by
confrontation ' He said also
that Ihe United Stales has
learned thai it is not wnhm is
"unilateral powi to
determine the future ol
developing nations
2
72
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Proof at Wahl Coates
Children find nature rarely fail
I
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i i
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Fascinating Proi ess
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itet
wild creature almost is skittish as s game bird,
inn while ihc was "brooding she ?? Vti
in.I gentle recalls Mri Brehm
si wasver) protective during the hatching
period Whenevei the children csme
to hei nest, she made pecku
cooing noises to warn them awa) si
Bui aftei the eggs were hitched shi l i 'he
ihildren hol ? lie hei
Ottficult AdUJtment
Ided Di Sand son Setting u the
dassroom as i majoi adjustment i"i hei ti
make li the children had disturbed hei ?
she wo hill Iiiiil! iha
"l ould probabl) have
abandoned the eggs
? I he children wen re ,n,
" ,IK ver) good about
n Vis Hiiim emphasized ? i c
inctdeni when a duld ?ot hi. ,
a"i ins imgei nipped
!1,1 ? with hei at all
Since the children werei , .
"iii considerate ol Mis
10 tru" them after awhile but
she remained quite i1M1,k ?? (
'(i 'u ???. She relished startei
mash chicken Feed and wheat grains bul she
lossedawa) all offerings of corn kernels
he incubation period drew toaclose .he-
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taratv
:wx-KnS-??-x'??w?: o i n u u o ?mimmmMmiMmimmmmmm?M)s&&i5&M
university calendar
Wednesday, June 21
Wednesday June 21
Another letSIOri if Freshman oriental,on open, at the young are
physically perverted and mentally molested
Movie A doubts Vafur featuring The Thomas Crown Affa.r
and Lets Scare Jessica to Death will be shown ,n Wngrlt
Aud.tor.um The features will begin at 8 00 P M The double
showing is bemq run n order to allow presentation of The
rhorrtas Crown AHair which was cancelled earlier
Friday, June 23
Thursday, June 22
Thursday June 21
The Union will sponsor a Bingo extravangania in room 201 of the
Un.on at 7 30 P M Free ice cream will be served to the bingoers
1 ? It
!????????????w?1r
ftwi Merchandise
C That Moves
into SUMMER 72
HEADSTRONG brings in
the LOOK with PANTS
in fantastic plaids, checks,
seersuckers and solids
KNITS, SHIRTS, BELTS,
SHOES
Friday June 23
Baseball ECU vs UNC Chapel Hill t Hafrirtgloi I ? t Game
time ii 7 30 P M
Movie The movie scheduled to be shown tonight Pacific
Vibrations will not be shown It has been moved to Wednesday.
July b Showing tonight will be Murder at Hue Morgue at 8 00
PM in Wright Auditorium
Saturday, June 24
Saturday June 24
Classes will be held for all three hour coui
Monday, June 25
Monday. June 26
The Union will sponsor a Table Tennis Tournament at 6 00 P M
in the Union Information concerning the contest ,s ava.lable at
the Union desk
Tuesday, June 26
Tuesday. June 27
I3 n" CamPbC" L " H? F' G"?
time is 7 30 P M
Another freshmen onentation begins third in a series
Wednesday, June 27
Wednesday, June 29
The Union will sponsor a watery ?, ? 2 ,0 P M ?n the
Sawbuck. a rock and roll band ?,ll urform a ,
Mall beginning at 7 00 P M ?" ,he
Movie -Star Spangled G.r, w,? lhown ttt:00 p.M jf,
Auditorium "rignr
II ?????? Mlt
children became anxious to see results
"The knew in advance whai to expect
noted Mrs Brehm "We had been observing and
ilisi ussing the growth cyclei ol othei animals.
including a fox, an Iguana .1 gerbil, an
oppoasum ami frogs
Rarely Seen
?s tuji hatching as observed by the children,
is a phenomenon most adults, even mans
chicken farmers, have nevei seen
I hi' chick inside peckl two small holes and
then a citdc in the largei end ol the eggshell
With its "egg tooth J sharp, shelllike
projection which is lost soon iftei haidung
When the eude is complete, the babv chick
emerges through the hole, head insi Initially,
the) aie curious-looking creatures, "very wet,
wobbly, and tcrswn) looking said Mrs.
Brehm
"Hut thev begin to 'peep' right awav. and
alter about five hours, thev are fluff) and
beautiful "
Hens experience the "broody" condition
most an time ol sear, hul 11 seems to occur
most!) dining the spring and summer,
act ording to li Sanderson
He has promised to supply the summei
kindergarten group with snothei hen and
several eggs 10 Mis Brehm can repeat this
lesson in nature Stud)
Future kindergarten classes at WahM oates
will no doubt b) pass the artificial Incubatoi
altogethei whenevei the more efficient "real
thing" is available
Dieters! Beware
of diet schemes
trMor s note The following Consumer Pioiecnon
News ii a service of the rvj C Depei tmeni o' Juit.ee
I he Stttorne) General wai is lai Heel dieters
10 beware oi schemes ihat promi inches ofl In
days bin reduce youi pocketbook raihei
than s out waistline
rhe supposed wonder" diets are being
widel) advertised in newspapers, magazines
: through the mails Some offei foi a less
liars a cop) ol a "miracle' die I which vsdi
enable a person to lose "ten pounds in ten davs
: Still eal all you Wan I " Some oi Hie ads
appeal in tht form oi a nevss article Ihe word
mei ; appears in wis small print and
mighi eastl) go unnoticed One ad in particular
aptioned, "Special Report " It sass. From
fal ilous Giildmsi n comes word ol
the lalesl high speed giapelmi reducing
I . .in is new and different from
othei grapefruit die's v long ssaiimg This
IS SO lasl i! adiiallv begins to work vsnhui
iwentyfoui hours, even while you sleep
I mo ten ol these diets claim ihat
ICtuall) melt awav tal b some
special process Physicians who testified befi
.1 Postal Service hearing said ihat grapefruit has
special properties wind, cause it to melt
awav tal rhe) also said llial fa I diets, like the
grapefruit diet, could be miunous to the health
ui) people
Ihe I nitcd Slates Psul Service has issued
lers 10 slop several grapefruit diet promoters
ising the mails to receive orders tor then
die) plans federal law gives the Postal
Service the authorit) to den) the right to
receive mone) 01 proper!) through the mails.
to anyone who misrepresents a product ot
service rhe I'ostal Service has issued formal
rden igainsl "Grapefruit Diet Division" j.id
I .m Slim ol Encinoahi rhese 1 mpanlei
were found to be conducting schemes to obtain
mone) through the mails bv means ol laise
sentattons
I onsumei Protection Division uiges
N fth Carolina residents not to do business
with these companies thai advertise and sell
die! plans through the mail Ihe safest and
II effective was to lose weight is to consult a
physician and follow hts instuctions
Write to the onsumei Protection Division if
you tee advertisements in North Carolina
ines 01 newspapers foi
diets which nuke
extraordinar) claims We can
ijke action ti stop iji. Jnj
' ling advertising
Pil
Wl
Earth Day
shows action,
not reaction
Earth Week 72 ended on April 2 I, showing
signs thai concern foi the environment has lost
much ol the emotional laddism that gripped it
in pasi years and instead has become seriously,
construe live
Hanging from bursts ol unexpected adiviic
to overwhelming apaihv national participation
in I ailli Week '72 was low keyed subdued, and
without "a lol "I unnecessar) flufl "According
to news writei Gladwin Hill, "the week's doings
weie heartening evidence that ecological
concern had evolved from spasmodic
"chest-thumping" to an accepted veai
fixture
rhe observsnee 'his wai was sponsored b)
Senatoi Gay lord Nelson iwis i one ol ihe
original forces behind 1970 lailli Da) snd
tweniv national conservation and education
organizations including the NWJ it was
co-sponsored bv sixty-nine Senators In
Congress and proclaimed bv the President ji
least fort) 'ive governors, and hundreds il
mayors rhere was not i national!) -coordinated
headquarters, bul instead emphasis was placed
on loal glass loots efforts
Solid Attention
In seveial large ,nies throughout the
countr) special environmental events die
little attention Bui where there was attention,
it was solid Participation on a communit) level
varied from cleanup campaigns to tree-planting,
interspersed with everything from film festivals
to bicycle tours A recent Sew York Times
article pointed out several large examples
Each ol I :00 delegates to a national YM(
convention in Pittsburgh chose an
environmental project foi Ins area-an effort
u!timatel) expected to involve h50.000
throughout the countr)
In Kansas City, Mo Mayot Richard Walsh
arranged tor the service ol ten National Guard
trucks in a weekend drive to colled junk too
large lor the city's legulai trash service
The Governors Council foi Keep Nebraska
Beautiful mailed 38.000 letters to mayors,
school principals, and other community leaders
urging diicd environmental action and received
affirmative icsponses from main of them
As SenatOI Nelson lias said, the original
intention ol lartli Week was to make the
environment a major pan ol the dialogue ol the
countr) The environmental concern issue thai
was new in the late l?fS0's is unquestionably
here to sijs and is a major L S concern Rallu"
than interest having dropped since the first
lailh Dav in 1970, we can now see with the
results ol I arth Week "72 and various studies
that the "cheat-hammering" and "fluff" aie
being Iranslated into verv real action
Recent studies show that the limited lailh
Week '72 campus activities thai stimulated the
previous two scars' observances mav have
simplv been ihe result ot an entrenchment of
directed activities Manv environ
interests have been tullv incorporated into
regular year-round college activities
For instance Michigan Stale I niversitv
recentlv opened a S2 million pesticide researcll
center, and I niveisitv ol Illinois students are
conducting experiments in solid waste disj -j
Penn Stales forest hydrotog) department has
been working on revegetatmg strip-mined sr"nl
banks foi fertilizing them with sewage-plant
effluent, and Carnegie-Mellon Universit)
students in Ptttsbuigh aie studying impioved
water supplies for surrounding rural
communities
Get Acquainted
PUTT PUTT TO THE PIZZA HUT on E?t
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?601 E 10th Street
M AnoeloDamone
I 5 l 6"d' - nc P Just recerved 500 water bads with
752T053Tn,v ? i499S "? ??'y nui cm
' 5ormTUWV Un" ? st?, a, $16 00
, J !T!mlU?- Trerah, Co 2,04 E 10th S.
'?1
Superb
pitching
week enabl
l rague Pira
djines. and
slieals 10 sis
I asl
Vppalachian
fifteen hits 1
lountei the
ihev pulled
Seven ol id
inearned, di
slipper) glov
Kuss Sin
stanei Gleni
not in ifou
collected thi
ins first funs
Smith .ill.
struck out
sliUc'k out 1
seven lilts
Bui do
I eggetl in ih
Mounts ineer'i
before II
hall ol the li,
'ii live hits
Ihe BUCS
aflei Mike Bl
Jiinmv I'aiei
Ralph I jinn!
lauv VN.ilu-is
force in Biads
run
I iov I ason
jwa) to Score
and Kids M
scored Wallers
Rnlph Lamm
with 7 hits 8
game winnmc
UNC
could gel the P11
Down now
Mountaineers 1
runs with tw.
second on thn
error
The Bucs dit
Thn
Quit
Several ici
ihe Athletic D
lell 1(1 wii
coaching positii
George K
I reshman fool
eai resigned
?ubuin I nive
will take ove
Coach 'here jl
Auburn. al
othei Southeas
Schools, has
I reshman team
compliance v
decision w h
schools to de
!3te wheie th
I l chose
freshman teams
ECU head
Kaildle. in exp
that Kose will
announced tha
:piz;
:nev
DEL
S





lion,
in
Aptil : t showing
vironment has lost
sin thai gripped
? bCCOmc seriously
nexpecied ictivity
lonal participation
ed, subdued, and
Unit According
the week's duingj
that ecological
torn spasmodic
epted eai round
was tponaored hs
is I. one ol the
I arth D.i and
n and education
' NM It waj
Senator! in
the President it
itid hundreds ol
nally .coordinated
phasis was placed
throughout the
tal event! die
re was attention.
community level
. to tree-planting,
om tilm lestivals
ew York I lines
examples
i national YM(
1 chose an
i arca-an efTort
ivoKe H50.000
r Rkhard Walsh
National (.uaid
CoBecl junk too
service
Keep Nehiaska
;is lo mayors.
nmunity leaders
ion and received
. ot them
d. the original
, to make the
dialogue ol the
ucrn issue that
unquestionably
oncern Rather
since the lust
see with the
various studiev
id "fluff" jie
tion
e limited iarth
stimulated the
ces ma hasc
ltienchment of
environmental
irporated into
les
ate I liisersiti
rticide research
is students are
waste disposal
lepattinent has
up mined spoil
Kwage-piant
A I Diversity
sine improved
Hiding rural
Pirate battery unloads for four
wins; streak reaches six straight
"v iHf EPPs ? . . W
and Fall
:an make
between
lent pay
or tmall
ed? with
)5 Call
raat
$16 00
Dth St
By IKE EPPS
it i an
Superb hitting and clutch
pitching performances last
week enabled His Summei
I eague Pirate! to win .ill i,?
games, and to extend then
slicak to si Straight wins
last ruesdaj igainsi
Appalachian State, the Bucs'
fifteen hits were just enough to
i-ountei theii seven error! as
they pulled out a 10-9 vsm
Seven ol the tppi rum were
inearned, due largely toECI
slippery glove!
Kuss Smith, who relieved
staitei Glenn I orbei aitei he
got in trouble In the sixth.
ollected the win foi I CU in
ins tits! luusji ol the summer
Smith allowed loin hits and
itruck out m. and Forbei
struck OUI one and gave up
seven hits
Buc double play by Ron
I eggeti in the first stifled the
Mountaineer's first threat.
before II unloaded in then
hall ol the frame foi fout runs
M five tins
I he Bucs loaded the lues
alter Mike Bradshaw doubled.
Jimmy Paige singled, and
Ralph I imm bunted satcls
I ans Walters then walked t
force in Biadshaw foi the first
run
I roy I ason singled with one
away to score Paige and Lamm.
and Rkk McMahon's bum
scored Walters before the App!
I fourth but from here
out they tallied in i i
Irani,?
rne" m ill. fourth
came as result ol a loul
Paige that scored Leggett i,
ll1 reached base ,lhl
1,1 "i? null, id: Piratei
?gain loaded the hags a
Walter! bunted, Ron Staggi
walked, and I ason rea hi
' Welder choicr McMahon i
?acrifice bum y? Walters
Mike Bradshaw
7 hits
Rilph Lamm led the Bucs
With 7 hits 8 RBI's, and a
game winning homerun at
UNC
could get the Pirates out
Down now by 4-0. the
Mountaineers tallied lor two
runs with two ,nit in the
second on three hits and an
error
1 he Hues didn't score again
and the Hues went up by 6-2
Appalachian tied il at 6 6
with a fout run explosion in
the top ot the sixth Hiey
sorred on a homerun, two hits
and two errors
I he Pirates went back up
S ' aftei then two-run sixth
Smith opened the frame with a
single and Bradshaw hit safely
ai the pps' throw to force
Smith at second was late
Lamm then scored both
runners with a hard double to
left c
II added anothei in the
seventh as a Smith hit to right
scored I ason. who had hit
safely to get on
I he Mountaineer! made n
9-7 With a run in the top ol the
eighth;and the Buc! came back
with the winning run m ineir
halt ol the frame
1 amm singled to get on and
then moved on to third as he
attempted a steal .u.d the
throw was wild hobbled hit
by Si.iegs sci He,I I amm tor the
Pirates' final run bui the Bucs
weren't out lear y el
Atipalavlii.nl same hack in
the lop ot the ninth and loaded
the bases A ll to cental was
dropped, and two runs rowed
With two out, the next batter
Hied out, and the game ended
10-9, 1(1
tter the close call with
Appalachian the Piratei
traveled to Chapel Hill tor a
(? match with arolina fhia
game proved to be even
?IS the two teams went foi
twelve inning! before a Ralph
I amm homerun pulled out a
'I win 'or the Buci and
avenged an earliet loss to the
Heeli
Tommy Tomi went ail the
av I pick up iiis second win
againil one loss foi the
?ummei He scattered nine
arolina hits and struck in
tw
The Bucs managed only
,( hits oil strong Jim
' hamberlain, who m turn set
down nine Bucs b was ot
itrike-outs rhese tour hits
prosed lo he enough, though,
tor the Piratei to win their
fourth straight
ECU wenl ahead m the
second inning 1-0, and from
then on they had lew threats
until the 12th
I he Bucs stored .is I airs
Wallers opened the frame With
a triple Ron Suggs then lined
to second, and Walters scored
when the throw to home was
oil
? V lied it in the tilth with
theil only tails ol the game,
when a l'eit I ranklin single
scored Ramh McNeil from
thud
( ai olina posed numerous
threats lot the remaindei ol
ihe game, hut clutch plass hs
I he tw. leams countered
. Il h tin r until the I 2th ss to I
II exploded lor two runs
and the win
Ralph I amm decided tl
with a one oul sole homer, but
the BUCS added an ins
run also Walters walked
stole second, and then s.
on a Troy I ason single to mak
the Imal $?)
Riding a lour game Streal
the Biks next traveled l"
. I
n tl
but
hem short and
Jimmy Paige
6 hits, 3 doubles
the Bucs cut them short each
time
I he close! the Heels came
was in the eighth when rhes
attempted a squeeze play at
home I he hatter, however,
missed the hall, and Rick
McMahon easily tagged out
Mickey Hickerson coming in
tiom thud
Ron Staggs
3 hits, 3 RBI's, I HR
Wilmington to lace the only
other team to heat them, and
came home with a f-4 win ovet
I 'NC Wilmington
Bill Godwin, hacked up by a
steads hitting performance got
the win foi 1(1 his hrst
againsl one loss He allowed
eight hits m going all the way
Aftei a scoreless lust, the
Pirates got things going m the
second will, one (alley
lairs Walters, who had
reached h.ise , ,i j ssjlk. stolen
second, and moved to thud on
a passed hall, scored when Rick
McMahon squeezed him across
Wilmington took the lead in
the second with two runs on
thiee hits
Ml Iok the lead hack tor
good with three runs in their
hall the tilth mning
Jimms Paige led .1! the
Irame with a double, and
moved to thud on a Mike
Biadshaw hit Ron Staggs then
unloaded foi a three run smash
ovei right-centei to put the
Bucs up 4 2
I he Pirates came hack again
with Iwo runs in the si.xrh
Biadshaw opened wnha
simile and Paige followed with
his second double Lamm then
grounded out to short, hut
Biadshaw came home on the
plas Paige scored next when
Walters smashed a tuple, to put
Three assistant coaches leave;
Quinn considered for pro 76'ers
Seseral recenl aclivites in base alieach been contacted
the Athletic Department base about the position
lett 1(1 with opening' at
i ?.adiing positions
George Rose Who was
r reshman loothall coach last
e.n resigned to return to
Auburn I mseisits where he
will take ovet as I reshman
l lach then- .H his alma matei
ubum. along with seseral
othei Southeasternonference
Schools, has chosen lo field
Ireshman teams next seal in
compliance with an
decision which all"Ws the
schools to decide then own
late svheie this is concerned
ECU chose not to Meld
Ireshman leams
I I head COadl Sonus
Randle. m expressing Ins regret
thai Rose will be leasing has
announced that several people
Rose led last s ??? a
I reshman gnddeis to a 2 ;
mark
Assistant basketball coach
Hairs Blown announced his
resignation last week alter he
had held that ob lor the past
IV .C.I is
Blown ssili lake ovet as an
assistant coach at Bridgeport
University in Connecticut,
around the area which In is
from
He seised as a scout and
head ic'ciuitei foi the Pirates
since his coining here, and he
also svas the head I enms coal h
foi ECI
Biown joins lomrum is
the second Pirate cage coach to
resign Crump, who was head
freshman coach last season left
earliet to return to Inch school
coaching in South Carolina
?lso. head basketball coach
I o m 0 ii i n n ?.is b eing
onsidered last week foi the
head coaching position ol the
Pro basketball Philadelphia
'6et s
76ei spokesmen stated that
the field had been narrowed to
two oi three, and that Quinn
was .ne ot them
Qtiiiin. howevei. was quoted
as sas ing that he "was flattered
to be considered foi the
position bin that he "liked
his position here (at I I I"
He also stated that he had a
new verbal t hree-yeat
agreement with the University,
effective J nix I
Coach Tom Quinn
:
PIZZA CHEF
ANNOUCES
NEW HAPPY HRS
TVES. & THURS
o?o
DRAFT-25
DELIVERY SERVICE
SUNTHURS. 5-T1
752-7483
JEAN SALE
25 I )(?uij
WranglerJeans
Blue Doom fl? Lm
Patcii Podurfi
Ri, Rint and f lip t luggen
Slight imperfects
reg. $5 50 if first quality
SPECIAL $3.97 pair
Dickinson Ave
Ii : r,4 Ml
the P
'
? i theii sixth n
? Herring
i win foi the B
inehn tnd trikinj
( amels on tl
Bu two
Campl el pitchers foi
.?- i . :
tied them tor lust m the
Les vith UN
I ' BuCS got things started
eath ivjth two runs in the
ing frame, as Ralph Lamm
I safely on a field
Larry Walters then
lashed a 190 foot homerun
ghl center to put ECU

(ampbell tied it in the
before the Pirates
? ? ins in then
hall ol the same inning
Mike Bradshaw and Jimmy
1 both reached base1, and
both scored when Lamm
singled I amm then scored on
.i Walters hit to right
Troy Eason was then hit I
a pitched ball, the inst oi three
foi him this game and K -
McMahon followed with a walk
to load the bag! Walters and
Eason both scored next as a
Ron I eggett single pushed
them across, and the Bucs went
up 7-2
The fury continued tor I I I
in the fourth as the Pirates
tallied lour more inns to lead
I 1-2
Almost the same situations
accounted foi the scores as
Biadshaw and Paige got
and I amm scored them both
with a double Walters then
ss aiked. I as was hit b a
pitch, and the bases were
loaded again
M Mali n's walk forced in
1 amm. and K in I eggett's
sacrifice fly x ired Walters foi
the imal Buc run ol the ii
Alter (ampbell Scored is"
runs in the seventh, the Pnaies
got theil final score of the
came when Leggett advanced
Larry Walters5 hits
5 RBI's. 2 triples, I HR
lo thud on a wall
B
rht Pirati
10 plas
I OU1S' . .
I
'?'
June ?
I ield
I he Bu .sill
be this evening at R
whet the Pirates v
v alachian Stati On Fi
the Pii ites I I I
?I. Saturday. thi
W ilnin

Intramurals
lil summei im
iva ?
last week with fo
On Wednesday thi I I
I. bda I
16-12 and then the 5th Stteet
lowned the same Dirty
1' by 11 -3
Oi rhursday thi NADS
edged Pi Kappa Phi 16 1 I
Lambda i ?
I he I Ibo R
I Ins Monday tw
were scheduled hut neither
were played (The D
Dozei I Ibi R game ?j
poned, and Lambda
Mpha forfeited to Pi Kappa
Phi
Yesterday lh? tl Si
schedule I
n i ? r
(In Alpha w.i
l S pending w
?
1 da r it 4 p.n the Diri
Dozen will play P Kap a Ph
immediately foUowii
N ls will i i ?
Room
Tomorrow ai 4 p m . the
5th Street Gang plass the
NADS and at 5 p m . I lie I Ibo
Room will plas Pi Kappa Phi
Today in
History
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
i
f
Sugar gets
what she wants
H
In 1834
? ?
'?
In 1912 n W u
?
u
'
'
In 1J4! lapai
island il 01
?
!?
hop f Miiat
! I ?.
? "
I
?
. ? first
I mist B
predicted n wi iuld I ?
down eventually
I is, . eai - af Pi
and Mi 1 . ? 01 B I
?
I
1 ?
I i
v
(Vest
I ?.
Judith R.r ? ? ?
I
everythinf, ami su mil iimi
I fur a pieaaaniei creature does
nor exist hi ?mas arlve.
Scottish historian, I 786 1881
NA
12
172
NOW
R
NOW the screen brings
you i new tind of
enchartmerTt f
EASTMANCOUM
t a
be
tinu
on.
oly
)
on
of
to
as
as
ax
in
he I
le
id
at
Ii
All Seats 75c
&t&.
M.MJLM - P tn
Together
" Sow
The Umidk Greatest Artists
Performing the Unids Greatest
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RCA Vktrok
Just imagine! Toscanini, Caruso,
Fiedler, Horowitz, Kreisler, Reiner
and many other reat artists in never-
to-be-forotten performances If
INCREDIBLY LOU PRICES
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Ii, . ii mill ss ilh I con Is in. I 'i ice
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Frit. Krciolt i Souxcnii - v
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ountamhead
and the truth shall make you free
$?6Ua&
Summer fees get students
less for their dollars
(fiommenJaty
page one story brings to our
attention the great disparity between the
amount and number of services offered
lo the Summer School student bodv .is
compared to the services ottered during
the regular term
Although the basic activitv fee is the
s.iiiie .is the quarter!) fee lor the
regular term, seveul important and
expensive activities .ire conspicuously
absent, including the lecture series.
foreign Mlms. and full-funded varsity
athletics
We must commend the Union for
making the best of its limited resources
in the summer Bv any estimate, the
watermelon leasts are percentage-wise
one ol the most popular programs
sponsored by the Union Hut what about
the athletic department?
Ovei 51 of the total yearly athletic
budget is spent on one sport, football
This means that students who attend
ECU during quarters other than Kail are
pay ing money to support a sport Hut
they may nave nevet seen We feel that
one solution lo the problem of limited
summer activities may lie in the polk
ot "i .is you go" with one quarter's
sports nol consuming any more money
than one quarter's activity fee allotment
We feel it would be fairer to the
students to reduce the amount of fees In
the corresponding amount saved bv the
curtailment ol these activities
Freshman flick shows real talent
We extend our congratulations to the
ECl Vws Bureau for its magnificent
filmed vitire on campus life, which is
being screened before the freshmen
orientation groups
We were fortunate enough to catch
the tail end of (his clever bit of acerbic
insight rhis oxymoronical nexus of
appealing shots ol dorms, classrooms and
athletic events with a disembodied voice
extolling the virtues ot ECU wjs
certamlv one ol the greatest bits ol
intellectual buffoonery the
administration has vet produced
The him had a certain frenetic energy
that left us breathlessly choked, crying
"Say it isn't so to everyone near us.
before we realized it was a put-on
I he final scene was the one to
convince us ot (he inescapable genius of
the film a shot of the Pitt County
Courthouse, with the memorial to the
"White dead ot World War II in the
foreground, and the American flag
flapping m a south-bound breeze.
This movie should be required
viewing for anyone who wonders where
the administrations head is really at. or
maybe, anyone who wonders what their
head is up
Scandals chip at public confidence
in the light of how well the public trust has been fulfilled bv the nation's executive
branch. ,t fa, , hard fo sympathy with ,h e ever swelling ranks of those- who want a
change m rhe country 's leadership
We thought we had seen ? .fl. tft? the Justice Department-ITT Republican
Convention (lap Vet even before the dust had settled, another scandal had developed
this time with employees of the Committee to Re-Fleet the President who were trying to
bug the Democratic National headquarters
Obvious!) a
candidate .ant be
responsible for
the actions of all
his supporters
More than likely.
President Nixon
had nothing to do
with the bugging
attempt, but all
the same. t he-
damage has been
done
The damage was
not inflicted upon
simply one party
or one man-the
damage was done
to a common asset
and precious
n a t i o n a I
treasure ??the
confidence of the
American people
in its government
and way of life
founumheao
Philip E Williams
Editor m chief
Mick Godwin
Business Manager
Frank Tursj
Bruce Parrish
Gary Carter
Ik I pps
Bill RiedeU
David Willson
Managing Editor
News Editor
Features Editor
Bulletin Editor
Sports Editor
Photo Editor
for pub(??100 A? nmwZ't?nl'l!hfwrtmm'ltu?
wrthm 60 day, of 1Mu.n? ,?? - T?' r,nd?? will be void if not pie up
?ny material. The option. ?? J J " ,mpo?? ?o guaranty publication of
Fountainhead or East Cerol.na Univenity ? ?? "ot necaeearily thota of
Publ.shed by the ttudants of East Carol? u
Student Publ.cat.on, Board Advert Unv?r?"V under the auspice of the
?re $100 for JTJSZ " V ? " ' "??-
?mm. North Caronn. SS IZ?" "? ' " ???
HP4
ff
' 1 ?-S
?Wff
yf
Wash ing ton Merry-go-Round
Party reform rules boost Peabody chances
By JACK ANDERSON
Senator George McGovern has made skillful
use of his own party reforms to bring the
Democratic presidential nomination almost
within his grasp Hi- now faces the task of
gaining support from all factions of his party
for the lace against President Nixon But.
ironically. McGovern image as a party
reformer may come back to haunt hun at the
convention
Since last December, former Massachusetts
Governor Endicott Peabody has been a declared
candidate for vice president In March, he
became the first candidate ever to capture a
pnmary election for vice president with a
victory in New Hampshire
Subsequently, he nude the rounds of state
caucuses trying to win over more delegates He
tells me he now has more than 200
But Peabody isn't waiting around for the
presidential candidate io choose htm as a
running mate. Instead, the whole purpose of
Peabody"s campaign is to force the party to
throw open the convention SO the vice
presidential candidate can be nominated in a
truly democratic :unner Peabody is busy
raising money these days and he has already
reserved 70 hotei rooms in Miami for hu
organization
If anyone besides George McGovern were
the hkely Democratic nominee. Peabody s
crusade would probably be hopeless. But
McGovern is the man who led the fight to make
the nomination , hJ p presidentla
candidate mo.e democratic. He might find it
hard to say no to an effort to do the same for
the candidate for vi,c president
PERILS OF HENRY
White House adviser Henry Kissinger has
described in a top-secret report the perils of
negotiating w ,h, ,?,h Vietnamese.
As far ba,k ? .?,7 hf arranged for ,wo
French intermediaries to carry a peace offering
?o Hanoi rim led l0 ret talks which
continued ,? Pa?s from July through October.
The negotiations finally bogged down over
what Kissinger called "elliptical references full
ol double meanings "
The intermediaries last attempt to break the
deadlock illustrates how frustrating it is to deal
with the North Vietnamese Theintermediar.es
phoned North v,ein,m , Ma. Van Bo at his
Pans home nne in.e.mediary did the talking.
I he other l,5,ened 0? ap exten?on Here ? an
excerpt from ,he secret transcr.pt:
The intermedia aid "We would like to
see you urgently "
Bo replied There ,s nothing new lo ay.
The situation ? , There ? no reason
to talk again
The intermediary lnllJted -fSjaes ?
something new mn
s 'ew and very important.
Bo repeated i-i.
T. Inf,t is nothing new to say
The situation is won TL
to talk again g T??e is no reason
?Jiff 'hc ln,e"neduiry ,n,U,ed "There is
something verv ,?
?mn,?.ani ant-perhaps the most
Bu B,Untre"f "change,
BUI do ,iy in r.
original phras " word for word the
No wonder the Bible says "Blessed are the
peacemakers "
THE GRAY GHOSTS
The Gray Ghosts are raising havoc inside
North Vietnam They are blowing up military
installations, disrupting communications lines
and spotting targets for American bombers
They are called Gray Ghosts because they
usually wear gray fatigues and disappear iike
ghosts But they are reallv South Vietnamese
commandos and Men tribesmen, who have been
recruited and trained bv the CIA to operate
behind the lines
In the past, they have harassed the Ho Chi
Minh trail complex They planted electronic
devices to measure the traffic, laid booby traps
on the trails and staged hit-and-run attacks
against truck parks and supply depots
Sometimes, the raids were conducted by
joint teams of U S special forces and South
Vietnamese rangers These were called
MACSOG teams Unhappily, the raiders often
found the enemy waiting for them and suffered
severe casualties
Other intelligence teams slipped inside North
Vietnam to gather intelligence and to guide
U.S planes by clandestine radio to bombing
targets.
The MACSOG teams and the C y Ghosts
have now combined to harass the North
Vietnamese on their home grounds The
Americans no longer accompany the raiders
into North Vietnam But crack raiders, skilled
at hit-and-run warfare, are slipping inio North
Vietnam from Laos and landing by boats on the
North Vietnamese coast They are striking at
the nerve centers of the North
The secret intelligence reports indicate these
Gray Ghosts are giving the North Vietnamese a
lesson in guerilla warfare
INTELLIGENCE NOTES
The Arab extremists who recruited four
Japanese terrorists to shoot up Lod airport in
Tel Aviv are loosely affiliated with extremist
groups around the world. Intelligence tepoits
claim that the Arab group has ties stretching
from Japan's United Red Army to South
Americas Tupamaros The Arab extremists
have even had contact with a Jewish Maoist
group, called Matpen. inside Israel
The Air Force has been showering North
Vietnam not only with bombs but wnh
propaganda leaflets. There has been criticism
inside the Pentagon, however, that the leaflets
are amateurish and aren't likely to influence the
North Vietnamese. The Voice of America has
also stepped up us broadcasts to North
Vietnam from six to thirteen hours a das
The Forum
Comments on Way
To Fountainhead:
After reading the article in the June 14th
edition of the Fountainhead. I must admit
"The Way" belief is quite extraordinary. Surely
everyone knows the Word of God is accurate
and that it fits together. Dr WeirwiUe and his
associates can vouch for its accuracy. It only
took them twenty nine years of research to find
it.
So what if "Jesus Freaks" are "into" God;
they'll never make it without paying the S65
for the foundation course I would like to
propose that we include this course in the
curriculum at ECU and entitle it "Bullshit 72
The only requirement for passing being that
everyone successfully complete a 1800 foot
free tall while giving the nine manifestations of
the Holy Spirit on "The Way" down.
Ed Stephens
program is to display students' work to the
campus and community: to sponsor art h0?i
judge contestants. and deliver ptoptj
recognition to art contest winners
The program, being new. requires a area,
deal of help in organizing and ,mpe,T,e,?;?on
Any ?lude?, m.erested ,n a? and ?s d,sP
should come to the Student Union Off.c '
Room 214. Iron, I to 4 for ,nlor,?alKm
Gary Manie
Student Union Pre?de
Union
art
To Fountainhead
The School of Art at Fast Carolina has come
into its age With the many colorful exhibits
throughout campus, students are beginning to
realize the great development which has taken
place by the talented students on third floor
Rawl
In response to the great amount of talent in
the Art Department and throughout the
campus, the Student Union has inaugurated an
Art Fxhibit Program fhe purpose of the
Forum policy
All students faculty
administrators are VhS
op.nK.ns in writing to the Fo,u?-
The editorial page ,s an ,
?uchopmionsma
Unsigned editorial, nfieel
theediion.chiel.ai.d?o,
?hr,es,a?o,s,uder '
When writing to ihe I , '
procedure should be used i
Letters should be cob i.
"Leoers should b, " r-tn,
?hould no, exceed oJ: H' '
"Letter, should be '
ho, ando,J
retue" ? HgnJ "
withheld ' mm,
Sinned articles
r ?
1


Title
Fountainhead, June 21, 1972
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
June 21, 1972
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.183
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39630
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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