Fountainhead, April 18, 1973


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Ensemble performs
on television
A sevenmember ensemble from the
ECU School of Music will perform
Stravinsky's "L'Histoire du Soldat" on
the UNC educational television network
Sunday, April 29.
The group, all members of the ECU
Symphony Orchestra, will appear on the
pro-am "North Carolina: The Arts
which is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ECU
Symphony conductor I'obcrt Ha use will
conduct Performance.
The performers include Marilyn
Gibion Secor, violin; Sherry Jones
Sievers, bass violin; Ronald Rudkin,
clarinet: Craig Mills, bassoon; Jess
Nelson, trumpet; Douglas Adams,
trombone; and Marion Sievers,
percussion.
The Stavinsky work, considered
technically difficult to perform, includes
a variety of tunes of international origin,
such as two marches, a fiddling dance, a
tango, a waltz and a ragtime.
b
By BOB MARSKE
lUff writer
Forty-six warrants for arrest for the
sale of illegal drugs were issued to ECU
students by the State Bureau of
Investigation (SBI) last week. These
warrants, arid the subsequent arrests,
came as the culmination of an extensive
undercover operation which started
December 1, 1972.
The warrants, reported local SBI agent
M. G. McCload, were issued to ECU
students on campus and in Greenville by
an undercover SBI agent. "All but one or
two of these warrants have been served
said McCloud. Those who were not
served with a warrant, he added, were
not available when the arrpsts were
attempted, but will be apprehended
eventually.
All of those students who received
warrants were charged with distribution
of marijuana or other drugs. This
involved the sale of said drugs to the
undercover agent "Only one undercover
agent was involved laid Warren
Campbell, Supervisor of tin Greenville
SKI office "According to a n, enl state
court ruling, no one charged with a drug
violation can be arrested for both
possession and sale of drugs said
McCloud. For that reason, he
commented, all of those warrants issued
were for distribution only.
JOINT EFFORT
City, county and state law
enforcement agents, and the campus
police were involved in the arrests,
according to Campbell. "H was a joint
venture of all of these agencies
commented Campbell, however, the
Greenville Police did not participate in
the on-campus arrests Greenville City
Police Chief Frank G Cannon explained
this, saying, "All of our officers were
busy elsewhen
A letter was circulated from the office
of the Dean of Men to many of thi.se
men dormitorv students who wer.
arrested. This letter, one recipient
reports, demanded the addressee
appear in the office of the Dean of Men.
regardless of cla.ss conflicts, at 10:30
Thursday morning Both Campbell and
McCloud denied having any knowledge
of the letter.
According to McCloud, "all but one
of them wen arrested in the dean's
office This was probably done, he
speculates, to eliminate the unnecessary
difficulties of locating each address and
making the arrest there I ,1 nol know
for sure I was only called in to assist h
�let agent alter the arrests M,I l�vn
made he added
ROOM SEARCH
One room was lean hed bj SBI agents,
according to McCloud hi. search
uncovered one potted marijuana plant
(one-half inch high) All drugs seized oi
broughl ate being held foi us.
evidence in coun "Afterwards
according to Campbell, "they will be
destroyed by court order "
'Inal dates for those individi
arrested as a result of this operation hav.
�� i set fur sometime in Mas Campbell
reports.
BSU sponsors charity hike
BvKATHYKOONCE
Stifl Writer
The Baptist Student Union will
sponsor a Walk for Development May 5.
Preparation for the Walk is now in
process.
The walk is designed to educate the
individual and community with
problems of development.
Anyone physically able can
participate in the Walk. To take part, a
person should secure a Walk card. These
cards can be obtained in the Student
Union Lobby Monday-Thursday from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Every hiker must have at least one
sponsor. Sponsors can beany individual,
business or group who pledges to pay a
certain amount for each mile completed.
More than one sponsor can be obtained
and more than one hiker can be
sponsored.
Different areas of Greenville will be
covered and various living conditions will
be exposed. Greenville police and city
manager will approve the route. The
route will cover 25 miles; however,
hikers do not have to complete the
entire 25 miles.
Checkpoints will be established to
provide rest areas for the hikers. Cards
will also be validated at the checkpoints.
Of the money collected from the
Walk, VISTA will receive 42.5 percent
for distributions in for different areas.
Another 42.5 percent will be received by
Cameroon, Africa and Bangladesh. The
remaining 15 percent will go to the
American Freedom from Hunger
Foundation.
Count ainhead
iP and the truth shall make you free'
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 47GREENVILLE, N.C.WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18. 1973
Counselors encounter student problems
Safeway meat causes lawsuit
(CPS�A $33 million class action
lawsuit was filed April 6 against Safeway
Stores, the nation's largest supermarket
chain, charging them with knowingly
and willfully mislabeling cuts of meat.
The suit was filed in Colorado by the
Task Force for Consumer Protection of
the Interfaith Committee to Aid Farm
Workers. The Interfaith Committee has
been active recently in seeking to obtain
Safeway's cooperation in the lettuce
boycott of the United Farm Workers.
In investigating different cuts of meats
being sold in Safeway stores, the
Committee found that the chain had
been "systematically deceiving their
customers and reaping high profits
through meat fraud
DOSE OF MISERY
A spokesperson for the Committee
said that. "At a time when meat prices
are at an all time high, Safeway
customers get a double dose of misery:
they pay premium prices tor their meat
and all too often end up with meat cuts
that are tougher and fattier than
Safeway labels led them to believe they
were purchasing
Cited as examples were blade chuck
steaks labeled as T-bone steaks and
boneless rib steaks as rib eye steaks. The
latter labeling would defraud customers
by 80 to 90 cents per pound.
This $33 million suit comes less than a
week after an Interfaith Committee
charge that the Safeway ground beef
contained more fat than advertised. This
was indicated by an investigation by the
Denver District Attorney's office. The
DA's office found that landings of
regular, lean and extra lean bore little
relationship to the amount of fat in the
gTound beef.
ADVERTISING ATTACKED
Advertising of meats has also come
under attack. Additional thousands of
dollars has been spent on meat
advertising in the past few weeks as
prices have climbed. In some instances, a
check of the stores indicated more per
pound was being charged than was
advertised and meat cuts pictured clearly
in the ads were mislabeled.
The Task Force commented on this
advertising, "It would be better for the
consumer if Safeway advertised less and
cut their prices more
The controversy over false labeling of
meats is clouded by the fact that laws
protecting consumers and personnel to
enforce existing laws seem inadequate.
A similar class action suit against
Safeway has been filed in Los Angeles.
California State Senator David A.
Hoberti said in response to the California
suit, "Quick action is needed to protect
the consumer and that is why 1 applaud
the lawsuit initiated by the Interfaith
Committee to Aid Farm Workers against
Safeway to recover money damages for
the millions of purchasers of these
mislabeled meats and to seek an
injunction to stop the mislabeling in the
future so that the maximum number of
consumers can be protected
"I find it reprehensible at this time of
rising prices for a large concern such as
Safeway to take advantage of the public
in this way Roberti continued.
By JOE MOOSHA
Stan Wnter
Most of the student problems
encountered at ECU's counseling center
are either academic or emotional,
according to Dr. Weigand. a member of
the staff.
"We're involved with helping students
get what they want to graduate. But not
that many are interested in that said
Weigand. "This is due mainly to parental
pressure. But in many cases, it involves a
study problem or motivation
In the areas of academic problems.
Weigand states that the problem is one
of the student's not working, or not
working efficiently.
Students with this difficulty expect
the "magic dust treatment says
Weigand. "They want to know how to
do so-and-so without working. In other
words, they want a degree, not an
education
But Weigand believes .notivation is
also a factor in academic problems. He
said that all a counselor can do in this
area is try to give the student incentive.
"We cannot instill motivation in a
person
Weigand also acknowledges that the
best predictor for success in the
academic area is a person's record: such
as grades in high school "This will
almost always hold true unless
something has happened to change the
person, such as military service or
enlightenment
Weigand notes that in the area of
emotions, problems are more difficult to
determine. He attributes this mostly to
the stigma that has been attached to
mental disorders by society. Students are
therefore reluctant to talk about these
problems.
In dealing with an emotional problem,
the counselor specifies two important
steps.
The first is to check for physical
disorders. "The student may have an
organic difficulty such as headaches or
eye trouble. We therefore check to see
that they have had a recent physical
exam before treating them for an
emotional problem.
The second step is to note whether
the student is a danger to himself or
others. "In this case we have to have
medical help from the infirmary
SGA election protest dropped
By KATHY KOONCE
StJft Writer
Former SGA Presidential candidate
Robert Twilley has dropped all charges
and election protests previously brought
before the elections board.
At a special hearing of the elections
board April 11 TwiUey presented the
following statement:
My intentions in bringing this
protest of the SGA presidential
election was to make some
constructive changes to the election
board concerning election procedure.
After Mon 'ay night's meeting and
talkii. to tub McKeel. past chairman
of the election committee, I am
dropping the charges brought before
this board. My reasons are that I am
going to exert different actions to
obtain the recommendations that I
previously submitted: 1) That persons
actively campaigning for candidates
should not participate in the electoral
system, and 2) that there be
provLsions for run-off for presidential
elections. Those recommendations
will be included, in some manner, to
those that are being devised by Bob
McKeel and that a hearing tonight
would not fulfill my aim and my
purpose but only cause uneeded
quarrel
Twilley had previously protested the
SGA presidential election at a special
elections board meeting Monday April 9.
At the first meeting Twilley protested
the organization and operation of the
polls and the election committee. He
claimed that poll tenders were chosen by
the first vice president of the dorms
under the WRC and that the WRC were
Bodenhamer supporters. He assumed
that the poll tenders sympathized with
Bodenhamer and that this did not
comply with the regulations forbidding
campaign material within 100 ft. of the
polls.
Twilley had also charged that the
selection of vote counters were
Bodenhamer supporters.
In response to the charges concerning
campaign material near the polls and the
vote counters being his supporters Bill
Bodenhamer replied. "I don't believe in
that
Bodenhamer recommended that the
elections be declared valid. "If anybody
got treated vrong I think you know who
it was He stated also that his campaign
was "perfectly organized
Twilley emphasized that the board
pass the two recommendations he
proposed.
The elections board decided another
hearing was needed to determine
whether or not the elections were valid
During the second hearing Twilley
dropped his charges to exert other
actions in obtaining the
recommendations which he proposed.
Honor society inducts 82 undergrads
Eighty-two junior and senior
undergraduates at ECU were inducted
into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi
during ceremonies April 18.
Seniors chosen fo the Honor Society
of Phi Kappa Phi must have a 3.5 grade
average and the juniors a 3.8 grade
average. The primary objective of the
Honor Society is the recognition and
encouragement of superior scholarship in
all academic disciplines.
In addition to the undergraduate
initiates, the Honor Society of Phi
Kappa Phi also inducted Dr. Robert L.
Holt, Vice Chancellor and Dean of the
University, from the ECU
administration, and Dr. Richard Cecil
Todd, ECU Professor of History, during
the April 18 ceremonies.
Those inducted were: Mary
Timmerman Magy, Kathleen Glass
Weeks, Claude BeBernian Hughes, Cheryl
Vallery Bryanm Jo Ann T. Harlee, Mary
Laurinda Hooks Livesay, Kathy Mane
Dudley Iaspina, Linda L. Crandall, Nell
Lois Boone, Susan Denise Campbell,
Kenneth Bruce Hawkins, Edith F.
Harrison, Ellen Jane Craft, Donald
Wayne Bullock, Sylvia Jean Johnson,
Judy Ann Burnett, Linda Dianne Vann,
Margaret Beth Latschar, Betty Bruce
Kennedy Lawson. Diane Fincher Home,
Kenneth Bruce Hawkins. Deborah Ann
Pollack No well.
Janet J. Harrington, Rebecca M.
Gentry, Robert Nelson Bogard, Dorothy
Ann Doyle, Thomas Wesley Durham.
Bertha E. Elks, Carol Smith Gardner.
Marie-Claire Hatcher, Jeanette Shoults
Joslyn, Joseph Allen Keyes, Doris
Helsing Kincade, Linda Bryan McGowan,
Janet Graham Mclendon, Max G. Miller,
Jr Gloria Jean Peaden, Judith B.
Randle, Debra L. Stocks, Kathleen Marie
Taylor, Janet Dolores Ward, Patricia
Pezdek Wike.
James A. Davies. James Bernice
Tyndall, Mary Anne Kerr, Alice
Catherine Kelley, Vorginia Peace
Pierpoint, Janice Eileen Northcutt, Dael
Mattie McFee, William Clifton Stuckey
III, Rita Reavis Reaves, Connie Leigh
King, Dixie McPherson Fuerst, A.
Clinton Dickens, Jr.
Patricia Jane Clarke. Mary Ellen
McLean, Joan Russell Pilcher, Lynn
Pate, Gail Summers Rys, Evelyn Joan
Sackett, James Patrick Faulkner,
Kathleen Elizabeth Eaholtz, Joan Russell
Pilcher. Mary Jane Hunley, Michael
Allen Raab, Nancy Lois Jones, Robert
Andrew German, Janice Raphael
Callihan. Mary Jo Steig, Rebecca Jeanne
Poling. Deborah Lee Ney, Larry Donald
Woody, Ava Maureen Sawyer Melissa
Morgan Thrasher.
Lucia Lindsey Lee. Betsy Jennette
Mounteastle, Marilyn Gibson Secor,
Laurie Kay Anderson, Beverley Ann
Ervine, Mary Ellen Wood, Lucia Villa
CaldweU.
Faculty member
co-authors article
An article co-authored by Dr. Charles
Coble of the ECU science education
faculty appears in the April issue of The
Science Teacher, the professional journal
of the National Science Teachers
Association.
The article. "Environmental Decision
Making in the Classroom was written
in collaboration with Dr. Paul B.
Hounshell at UNC Chapel Hill. It deals
with the problems and controversy often
involved in classroom instruction on
environmental concepts
(psychiatry) Weigand remarked "We
have to report such a person, but we
usually talk it over with him first "
Transition to college life can also tit-
an emotional problem for a student
Weigand noted.
Weigand acknowledges that most
the difficulty here involves study kills
"People don't know how to study This
problem is practically universal "
One other factor involved m tin
problem of transition is the self fulfilling
prophesy. That is. "most people tend to
live up to what is expected of them by
people who matter, such as parents. If
they aren't expected to amount to
much, they won't.Of course, this is not
always true, but it is a factor
The counseling center has a staff of
five full-time counselors to handle these
two major problems: all Ph.D.s. They
also have a secretary and two student
helpen.
"We also have a black student who
acts as a hason between blacks and the
counseling center-an accomplishment of
which I am extremely proud Weigand
concludes.
DOoeeooeoooooeeeoeeocK
FOUNTAINHEAD APOLOGIZES FOR
THE EXTRA DAY REQUIRED TO
PUT OUT THE PAPER OUR IBM
COMPOSER WAS ON THE BLINK
AGAIN
BoooeoeooooeoooexMOOoc
Summer Theatre
marks 10th year
Summer 1973 will mark the tenth
anniversary of the East Carolina Summer
Theatre, the musical comedy showcas.
that has become one of North Carolina's
most popular summer attractions.
Since its beginning in 1963 under the
guidance of producer -director Edgar R.
Loessin, this theatre has presented over
40 top Broadway musicals and featured
some of the finest professional talents on
the East Coast.
Last summer all but five of the
performances in McGinnis Auditorium
were sold out: a sure indication of the
success of this operation.
Now the plans for the tenth season are
well underway, and general manager
Michael Hardy has announced the
schedule of musicals which will be
presented.
"This year we altered our usual
procedure of choosing the shows he
explained, "by asking our theatre
patrons to suggest their favorites. From
their response, we found that the five
most popular musicals were:
APPLAUSE, MY FAIR LADY. H.MS,
PINAFORE, COMPANY, and YOU'RE
A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN
"One of the best things about this
season Hardy said, "is that it offers a
tremendous range of entertainment:
from the most modern hits available to
the old favorites, with a special
attraction thrown in for children.
"We're also very happy that, in a year
where all sorts of prices seem to be going
up, we are able to hold our ticket pri. as
down. Our season tickets still sell for
$18, and the Monday Night Special price
of $12 will be continued for at least one
more year
Orders are now being taken for season
tickets to the East Carolina Summer
Theatre at Box 2712 in Greenville, or by
phone (758-6390). All tickets are
reserved, and the best seats can be
obtained by ordering early.

I





Kilpatrick retires
Drive and expertise mold 'legend in own time'
By KATHY KOONCE
�VrK.i
"Kilpatrick! I'm going through
drop-add m r�- than one itudenl
during the pad fen yean .it ECU ttaa
uttered this statement After i�; yean
with the i mviTsiu Dr Rachel
Kilpatrick retiree at the end of thai
quarter
She is a woman with extensive
knowledge of the English language ties
field work with American dialects haa
been Dr Kilpatrick'� ipectalt) � id
variety of hobbies ami interest
characterise her Ufe. ih destn to
instil knowledge into hei -
implanted � toughness in thai profeesoi
whuh few othen can equal
Ir Kikpatrick was born m
County. Man where hei aen'
descendants of the first New England
�ettlen Her relatives tnce their anceatrj
to William Sargeanl She attended
Haverhill High School and was p
editor of the ichool nen tpap i
ATTENDS COLLEGE
vt'ter graduation, she attended
Bradford Junior College rransfen wen
not usually accepted in northeaatei
ages then However. Brow-
University did Dr .Kilpatrick enrolled al
Pembroke College, Bro
undergraduate division for women, for
her junior year There the was i member
of the Archery Club and again poetry
editor t the w ho .i t
Dr Kilpatrick vi- the "writes
rhymei Her poetry is not for
publication "Whenever I'm uptight I let
off steam bj poetrj " she added,
"Whenever I reallv want to lose myself I
use poetrj for escapism "
Dr. Kilpatrick'i desire to teach
stemmed from both her parenta being
teachers She received her B.A. in Old
and Middle English She decided this
particular field was her major after
studying an Anglo-Saxon literature
course In two weeks she knew this
would be her major Still she cannot
answer why.
GRADUATES WITH HONORS
She graduated from Brown with
highest honors in English. She was an
Ehsha Benjamin Andwers Scholar which
is an honorary award goven for
outstanding work. Also she received the
magna cum laude.
The next year she received her masters
DEI IBrK IIr UViWHUU often
with i v i d and valued maiat resulting.
in English � Philology from
Raddiff While pursuing her masten, Pr
Kilpatrick studied Old English, Old
French and Gothic In addition, the had
to acquire a reading knowledge of
German and French
During this time, she was the only-
woman taking Welsh She was required
to complete the Name work, hut her
classes were separated from the Harvard
men.
In the Wydener Library at Harvard,
Dr. Kilpatrick shared a "carrel" with
three men. She was allowed to work in
the library from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily.
She comments ahoul the regulations
regarding women using the library. "We
didn't rebel we thought we were lucky
She remembers that most women were
(Mnoto DV Holt Mann)
rer� ide- Dr Rachel Kilpatrick'i classroom
"usually escorted home Then, the
women "dressed" to use the library and
"things were more of a challenge
"Travel is oni' of my hobbies
Kilpatrick stated. She took her first trip
to England the summer after she
received her masters. During her trip two
weeks each were spent in England,
Scotland and Wales. In the latter country
she visited the National Assembly where
Ixrd George and his daughter spoke.
She returned during the depression
and secured a job teaching English, Math
and Latin at Amesbury High School. She
was not able to teach in her home town
because it required education courses
which she had not taken.
Dr. Kilpatrick commented, "I think
practice teaching is marvelous. Certain
Jenkins depicts university's influence
By LEO W JENKINS
Chancatlor, East Carolina university
We are asked frequently to update
comparative statistics on the growth rate
and size of East Carolina University as an
indicator of the university's outreach
and influence upon the educational and
economic growth of the region it serves.
We are happy to furnish these
figures-we are proud of thembut
always we emphasize that the bare, cold
statistics do not tell the full story. The
story briefly, in my opinion, is one of
good, sound and substantial growth in
Eastern North Carolina as a whole.
The word is growth, progressive
growth. ECU is glad to be part of this
overall picture.
At the present time, according to our
office of institutional research and
statistics, we have an enrollment of
10,286 and employment of 1.847
faculty and staff at ECV
And by the way, the campus security-
chief reports a registration of
approximately 7,000 automobiles on
campus in Greenville.
The impact of this concentration of
student body, faculty and staff upon the
immediate are is obvious.
It is estimated for example the ECU
will spend more than 224 million dollars
in the Greenville community dunng the
next decade for faculty and staff salaries
and for other operating expenses. An
additional 145 million dollars will be
spent by students which means that ECU
will be pumping more than 370 million
dollars into the local economy.
For the coming fiscal year, 1973-74,
alone the university's requested
operating budget of $24.5 million.
When this figure. $24.5 million, is
compared with the school's operating
budget for 1960-61 which was $4.2
million, a tremendous growth is
indicated. And there are projections of a
25 per cent increase in university-
enrollment and employment during the
next 10 years.
These are enrollment,employment and
dollars and cents figures. They speak for
themselves, but again this is not all of
the ECU story. What is the real impact
upon the community and the region
served by ECU?
For one thing Greenville is rapidly
becoming a regional medical center
encouraged by the emerging ECU School
of Medicine and our well established
School of Allied Health.
Greenville has witnessed a rather large
increase in medical and health-related
services and facilities, due not only to
the medical and allied health effort of
the university but also to such things as
the alcoholic rehabilitation center in
Greenville, a soon-to-be constructed $12
million hospital and 50 bed vocational
rehabilitation center.
It is apparent in almost every
category, in almost every county, city
and town in this region that Eastern
North Carolina, long a sleeping giant, is
stirring.
Education, educational opportunity
for all our people, stimulates this
awakening and is an essential part of
enlightened progress, It is the goal of
East Carolina University to perform this
service.


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710 Dickinson Ave.
Open 10-4
Closed Wednesday
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LATER THAN
YOU THINK.
June 1
time runs out for you to
On.
enroll in the 2 year Air Force ROTC Program on
this campus And here's what you'll be missing:
� $100 a month, tax-free, during your junior
and senior years.
� the chance to win a full Air Force scholarship
(including tuition, lab fees, the works).
� a challenging job as an Air Force officer upon
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plus
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Contact Major Berrier
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(Available only to college juniors or students
having at least 2 academic years left before
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Find Yourself A Future In Air Force ROTC.
type of methods COUOM are valuable
but education course rlo not substitute
for knowledge of a subjwt
The turning point in Dr. Kilpatrick's
life came when the Linguistics Atlas was
being started in New England. Friday
morning she received a long distance
phone call from Professor George
Anderson of Brown University asking if
she would consider working for her
doctorate.
For three years she was e Fellow at
Brown University. She was the only
woman working on the Atlas staff and is
one of five women to obtain a
Fellowship from Brown University. Her
dissertation, "The Speech of Rhode
Island: The Stressed Vowels and
Diphthongs)'is of original material based
on the atlas materials and 52,000
instances. She received her doctorate in
English and Germatic Linguistics.
WORK PROHIBITS MARRIAGE
While working on her doctorate she
was made to sign a statement that she
would not marry until the work was
completed. After a two and one-half
years engagement she was married two
weeks after completing the final
examinations. She met her husband in
the reference room and they were
"properly introduced She has two
sons.
After World War II, Dr. Kilpatrick
taught at the University of Iowa to
accomodate the G.l.s. A study of
American dialects in the upper midwest
was begun. The University of Iowa was
asked to send graduate students for field
work. Kilpatrick gave a course in the
methods of field work, The next summer
she was the fieh! work supervisor. She
was the work director in Iowa for the
Linguistic Atlas.
From Iowa she and her husband
moved to Florida. He designed the
library at Florida State University.
Faculty wives could not teach so Dr.
Kilpatrick entered business school. The
she took a position as a steno-booker for
the Livestock Board.
ARRIVES AT ECC
Dr. Kilpatrick said she had to begin
work to put her sons through college.
ECC made her an offer. During the past
16 years, she has seen much change in
the school. Student enrollment has
gTown from 2,500 to 10,000. The
English Department has increased its
faculty to 65 from 12.
After teaching almost every course on
every level, she recalls the "friendliness
of the faculty and students" and the
"famous junior English program The
latter has made her a "legend in her own
time
Dr. Kilpatrick was director of the
program for five years. She explained,
"The program tested all first quarter
juniors to see if they needed help. Papers
were read by two instructors. One was
not of the English faculty
They were grading passing,
satisfactory, or unsatisfactory.
Questionable papers were read by a third
instructor. Dr. Kilpatrick. Students felt
Dr. Kilpatrick alone read the papers. A
student who felt help was unnecessary
had to see Dr. Kilpatrick. "Because of
that program my name became known
she remarked. The program
was discontinued in the spring of 1965.
She may impress the student that she
has no outside interests. However, Dr.
Kilpatrick is an active woman with
varied interests Fishing and boating ar�
two fuvored activities She la a
member of the Power Squadron
sponsored by the Coast Guard sh�
owned two boats, a 22 foot cruiser and a
12-foot fishing boat, "one reason
decided to retire to Florida is that ,an
fish 12 months a year
Besides the outdoors her inten.hUi
range from genealogy to animals "
particularly like to read detective-
stories she added
"People I like, particularly teenager "
She stays involved with people through
various organizations such as the l),
Colonial Dames of the 17th Century, the'
Pitt County Historical Society and the
American Association of University
Women.
A member of the League of Women
Voters she supports the Equal Rights
Amendment. "I think we need it. Then-
is discrimination in the professional and
leaching positions
She attends St. Paul's BpilcoprJ
Church which is closest to her own
church, tiie Transcendentalist, which is
not alligned with transcendental
meditation. The thoughts of this group
received their impetus in America from
(Photo bv Mom Mam,
CLASS TAKES on an illustrative lone.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Dr. Kilpatrick has one brother and
one sister. Both attained college
educations. Her brother is an authority
on New England flowers and birds.
"Something should be said for my
parents who put up with all this she
stated.
She does see a difference in today's
college student. "In most cases we have
students with more potential. They tend
to be lazy. That's why they are so hard
to teach She mentioned recently
receiving a letter from a former student.
The student has been selected as next
year's editor for the Wake Forest Law
Revue. "A student like that makes up
for years of students that don't want to
learn
Looking over many years in the �
teaching profession, Dr. Kilpatrick
concluded, "Teaching is a rewarding
profession really. 1 suppose teachers
wouldn't do anything else. They could
however
Dr. Rachel Kilpatr 's new home will
be Ft. Myers, Florida.
GROFF'S WALLPAPER OUTLET
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route 258
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ime'
mg and hoatinK ar�
�� She ib a
Power Squa.lror,
Coast Guard ,sh�
2 foot cruiwr imda
L. "one reason
lorida m that ,�n
ors her interest
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) read dttectn
icularlv teenagers
ith people throuiih
such as the ),h
17th Century, tne'
il Society and tne
B of University
I-eague of Women
the Equal Kihts
we need it. Tn(,r(1
e professional and
Paul's Kpisc()pa
sest to her own
ientalist, which is
transcen dental
(hts of this group
in America from
Am$ m Fountainhead. Wednesday. April 1 M, 197.1 Page ;j
Conversation with the King of Blues
(Photo by Mom Mni
uxtrative tone.
me brother and
t tamed college
ls an authority
vers and birds.
i' said for my
th all this she
'ence in today's
st cases we have
ntial. They tend
.hey are so hard
ioned recently
former student,
elected as next
ike Forest I.aw
that makes up
t don't want to
years in the �
Dr. Kilpatrick
s a rewarding
ppose teachers
se. They could �
new home will
I
V
cks.
B.B King, known to millions at the
King of the Blues performed last
Saturday in Mmges Coliseum to a small
but thrilled crowd. After his
performance. King was interviewed by
representatives from Fountainhead and
Buccaneer staff. King's answers to these
questions provide a great insight to this
talented bluesman.
B.B.KING:
First I'd like to apoplogize for tonight.
It's been a long time since I've had my
throat in as much trouble as it seemed
tonight. There's one little thing though,
they say God gives every man two of
most everything, except a mouth,
because most people talk too much
anyway. So, we only have
onesometimes ityou have that
problem. And funny1 usually sing from
my stomach so, there are certain notes
like between A and A that are above say
C in one register-I can hit the notes very
clear below it and another I can hit 'em
very clear, but if you had to come all the
way down, it's like crossing a ditch. So I
apologize for that Brother, I just hope
that it went along well.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
I heard a rumor that you were having
trouble with arthritus, or something like
that with playing. Is there any validity to
that rumor?
B.B.KING:
Well, I don't know, ah my hand always
cramp me ever since I had it. It it's
arthritus. maybe that's true. I dont
know what it is, just a cramp every once
in a while and that happened before I
started playing.
the way I play with the trill is kind
of a strain on my hand anyway
FOUNTAINHEAD:
After that, they kind of get loosened up
a little bit.
B.B.KING:
Well, I dont know. Well, here in
November, I was in Israel and I fell down
about nine feet of stairs, of course it
busted my teeth, went through my lip,
busted a blood vessel in my left hand,
which is the one, it's kind of-it may not
seen, like-but the way I play with the
trill is kind of a strain on your hand
anyway. I don't know. I just figure that
at forty-seven maybe it's time something
started deteriorating.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Did you develop a lot of your styles
yourself when you began playing guitar,
or do you look at yourself as being
molded after any type of blues guitarists
that maybe you looked toward?
B.B. KING:
I'm kind of like 'Frankenstein I'm a
mixture of many. You know, when they
put him together. So I'm a mixture of
Lemon Jefferson, Lonnie Johnson, I like
jazz, so Charlie Christain some of Django
Rhinehart, T. Bone Walker You name
them, I'm probably a part of them. But I
think, it was done in such a way, till it
became so much of each one thatI'll
use the word 'intermixedso then it was
B.B. King. Meaning that if I hear you
play something and I like it, I won't try
to play it like you. I'll use the idea, but
not try to make the sound.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
What about the trill that you put on the
end of some of your notes?
B.B. KING:
It csme fromI've got a cousin, which is
the only person in my family that
playi-his name is Bukka White, and
Bukka used to play with a bottleneck. In
fact I saw him yesterday in New Orleans.
He plays with a bottleneck on his
fingers. And he can do that, I've got
stupid fingers, and my fingers wont do
that, whatever they do. I like that sound,
and I could never get my hand to do it,
to my ears would tell me when I trill my
hand like this (demonstrating) I get a
similar sound to what they were doing.
And I started doing that, and I still try.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Well, do you play any slide yourself, or
dobro, or anything else?
B.B. KING:
No, no no-you didn't understand. I got
stupid fingers.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Yeah, so you just do that.
B. B. King toying out ton hot blues lick, on his guitar, Lucille' at Saturday night concert at Minge, Coliseum
B.B. KING:
They (fingers) won't make it. Trying to
hold a bottleneck like that, they just
wont make it. Maybe it would, if I
practiced hard, but I don't know, it just
seemed like ait wasn't the thing that I
wanted. But I hear other people play,
like Earl Hooker, I hear many guys, like
Mick Jagger, a lot of them play the slide.
I like to hear 'em, but I just can't get it
to do it.
BUCCANEER:
B.B before I begin, I'd like to say that
I've seen you many times at the Fillmore
East, and I just want to thank you for all
those good times. A lot of people refer
to you as the "Greatest something or
other around In your introduction
tonight, they referred to you as the
"King of the Blues I also personally
think you are the greatest something or
other. What do you think as B.B. King?
What do you think of the billing?
B.B. KING:
I think I'm something or other. No, I
think it was like when I was a very you
man, as a teenager, guys would say
"B.B or "King" or what have you, but
as I became older, people would say Mr.
King, which to me is just a bit of respect
that they have for me. A lot of the
people I think still have that respect for
me as a blues musician, a blues singer.
They give me many titles, which I
appreciate very much. But if you would
ask me, if I thought I was the "King of
the Blues" or the "Boss of the Blues or
the "Chairman of the Board" or the
many, many things they call me, I would
say "no But I do think that I'm a
pretty good musician. 1 think that I'm a
pretty good blues singer. That I think I
am. But as far as being the top, I don't
know. There are many who think I am as
good or as better.
BUCCANEER:
What importance do you think blues has
made to the shape of contemporary
music?
B.B. KING:
Blues to me is like a mother tree, many
branches have came from it, like the
jazz, and a lot of the so-called
contemporary music came from blues.
You hear jazz men. The average guy that
you find now that is a great jazz
musician can play good blues, but the
average guy that didn't start out from
the roots, as we say, if he try blues,
regardless how much he could play, or
how well he knows his instrument, it still
sounds a little bit mechanical Anybody
that knows anything about music can
design or play a piano, or they can have
a sitar or many other things that you can
play electronically. Anybody can do it.
It's just like turning on your radio, or
getting your dog to tum it on. But, to
actually put you feeling to it, to actually
feel it, than, that takes a little bit more.
So, I think again that the guys that came
up in church, that had a chance to be
associated with the many, many things
that make a guy be introduced to blues
is the ones that have more feeling to it.
And I think that had influenced
contemporary music. Quite a bit.
BUCCANEER:
In playing the blues, do you enjoy the
spiritual or emotional experience, or just
getting up there?
B.B. KING:
Yeah, you know, it's not just doing
something. When I get up there, I'm
really interested in what I'm doing. I
become the character that I'm singing
about. In other words, I'm not B.B. King
anymore then. I assume the role of an, I
think of an actor, as an actress or actor
would try and portray a certain
character-well that's what happens to
me when I'm on stage. Otherwords, my
emotional, or otherthings, otherwords
my personal problems don't usually
enter, now once in a while it does if
something is or like I got stood up by
some beautiful lady or somethin But
once in a while it will happen, but most
time it's always the other guy that I'm
sing'in about.
i
FOUNTAINHEAD:
So emotionally you don't change, or you
do change? When you go on stage-like
when it's just B.B. King sitting down just
playing some blues, say acoustic blues. If
you play that much, you know your
emotional state doesn't change when
you go on stage.
B.B. KING:
Let me put it this way, I've seen many
horror movies, I've seen on television or
on the theatre, when all of a sudden the
guy in the soul leaves and gets into
somebody else, well this is what happens
to me, when I start playing, whether I'm
playing acoustic guitar or what have you,
all of a sudden I'm not B.B. King
anymore. O.K I'm gonna try and define
it, what I'm trying to say is I'm not
thinkin about me then. I'm thinkin
about whatever I'm playin, it it's a
melody, I'minthat. If I'm singin, I'm in
that. I'm that guy that this is happened
"to, or the guy that wants this to happen
tryin to make this happen. Other words,
it's not B.B. King any more. I mean my
whole feelins is in to what I'm doin.
Other words some guy can take an
instrument, this way like when I'm
rehearsin with my band I tell them
anybody can play a note, you see a C on
the board you know it's a C. Anybody
can make a C, but there are certain ways
of makin that C. It's just like we talk like
now, I'm tryin to get my point over so
certain parts of it I really push or punch,
cause I wants you to get, ya dig, so that's
the way it is with playing music. You
may not play but two notes in a bar
once, but you can bend it around, this
can mean so much, when si ne guy
might play 64 notes in one bar, and it
still might not say nothing to me. Like
he plays them so we know he has
technique, and he knows how to get on
his instrument, but other than that he
still hasn't said nothing to me in here.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Like what about when you've been
playing guitar have you ever resorted to
any other equipment on stage with your
guitar, like a wah wah?
B.B. KING:
I've never played one.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Do J ou like to keep it straight guitar and
you?
B.B. KING:
I don't know. One day I may try, but 1
think that myself and a few other guys
are the cause of the wah-wah, so why
should we use it? I like to hear other
guys use it, but 1 think myself and a few
other guys were the cause of the wah
wah peddle, so why should we use them?
I like to hear other guys use them
though. I think that I believe that
holding the notes and making the fuzz
and all those other sounds, well we've
been doing it for many, many years
without anything but an amplifher. In
fact like sustaining sounds or notes I've
been doing it for years before 1 heard
what a wah-wah was. I like to hear it and
I feel that there is a place for it, and the
more people we can get to do these
many different things, the better it is for
music, I like to hear it. In fact my
guitarist, he uses one. I've never used
one. In fact, I don't even know how.
Maybe one day 1 may even try.
FOUNTAINHEAD.
Mr. King, we notice that a great deal of
emphasis is shown in the talent of your
band, especially your tenor sax, would
you comment on your band and how
you work with them when producing a
live performance?
B.B. KING:
Well, I think that they are all superb
musicians or a better musician than I am.
You can figure that when we are giving a
concert somewhere in there, there
should be a certain spot that kicks off
everything and I know that's a weird
way of putting this, but I mean the show
may be going well but one guy may have
that certain something-like a ball game.
A certain twist or whatever it is that
makes this concert the better. Like
tonight I felt that when my tenor sax,
when Bobby came in, and I went to the
piano for a little bit-at that moment
that's when it gave him a lift which lifted
the whole band and everybody and this I
thought was the highlight of the concert.
But each one of the guys in the band.
I'm happy to say, I'm lucky to have each
one a great soloist from time to time I
will use them. 1 feel that's what you have
the man for, to use him to your
advantage. I came up in church and I like
the sound of a big band. I'm a little
different from Ray Charles and other
guys who carry voices. I usually think of
my horns as voices, so if you have a good
tight rhythm section and a shouting horn
section that's your voices for me.
ONLOOKER:
Mr. King, in Memphis who do you think
of WDIA's disc jockeys did the most to
promote your career9
B.B. KING:
Nat Williams, yep Nat D. Williams. He
was the first one to help me, a.id he
wrote many stories about me in the
Pittsburg Courier: in fact he was the first
guy hat I called New Year's Day this
year c luse he's been very sick.
ONLOOKER:
Mr. King, you've been sitting here
talking about blues. When B.B. King
talkes about the blues what does he
mean?
B.B KING:
A feeling, a feeling that has been living in
me and twenty-seven other people, my
family, my father and his family and
many other people for 26 years. I talk
about my life and the life of many other
people they came up the same as 1 I talk
about the world and its problems-that's
the blues
ONLOOKER:
What about now? I'm sure it's been a
long road and a lot of years, but how do
you receive an audience of say 3, 4, 6 or
even 10 thousand, wha' kind of feeling is
that to you?
B.BKING:
I can't really define n to you It's like
asking someone how does anornnfalaita
I can't really tell you The leasl 1 can say
is that it is a good feeling, a very good
feeling to know that people think
enough of you to come out in numbers
of that size. It's also a great feeling to
know that just one person really digs
you You can tell, see I'm a Virgo and I
observe people very closely. I can tell
when a person is not joshing you, when
he says 'I really dug your performance'
but they don't want anything except to
let you know that the really dig you,
and sometimes, well like I look at them,
and I can understand I know what
they're stying, and then I start to search
myself at that very moment as I say
thank you and I want to say hey that's
enough, I believe you' This is what 1
want to say, you know? (laughs) And
then I go to my room and practice that
night so I can really deserve the
appreciation he gave me That's the best
I can say man. It really feels good, very
good.
BUCCANEER:
Music critic! have made a distinction by
saying that there are white blues anJ
black blues where people like yourself
and John Lee Hooker and Howlin' wolf
representing black blues, where people
like Eric Clapton and John Hammond
represent white blues. Do you think this
is a fair distinction between the two?
B.B KING:
Let's put it this way. Your father is your
father. You may do greater things than
he did but you'll never be your father
Now I do think that we have a lot in
common. Speaking about Eric Clapton
I've read, and I've heard him mention
that he listens to my playing. But 1 think
that when you play and play well, you
play well. 1 don't really go for the whit
blues or the black blues. Lake you put it,
most of the white blues singers really
don't sound like real true blues to a lot
of us because of diction. Most of the
white blues singers use correct dictior
where most of us Blues singers don't
And when we hear something like
somebody saying something like 'my
girl' it sound like as we call it in
Mississippi, 'kinda proper like' It's
phony to us, you dig? And when 1 use
the term 'everyday' you know what I
mean? And when I use the word
'everyday' I'm gettin' right down to it or
there abouts. And we're not ashamed of
"I talk about the world and its
problems-that's the blues
it. But now. let somebody try and
mimick us sayin' it, it's just like some of
the movies I see. A lot of black and
white movies where somebody tries to
mimick us, for instance sayin' 'dem
bones that sounds phony too, whether
it's said by a black or a white. Well that
sounds as funny as some of the white
guys singing the blues and try to sound
like a black and that too is phony, but
there are exceptions. There are two guys
I know that can reall sing and if 1 was
on the outside of the room it wouldn't
matter whether they were black or white
it would just be good blues to hear and
of course I've got used to hearin' blues
now that if I walked into a room and
opened the door and see the guy black,
white, red or yellow it wouldn't matter
I've seen so many types of people doin'
it already. 1 was in Austria and we went
down to the wine cellar and I heard this
dude playin' the blues like mad and
singin' 'em like mad. So I had some wine
you know, I hardly drink but that night
it happened to be very cold and I was
half froze and we had a good concert
and 1 walked down to the cellar and
there was an oriental guy Chinese or
Korean or something, and he was singin'
the hell out of the blues, and playin' 'em
so I learned right then that the blues
belong to everyone and no particular
person. It's just like a car might have
been created by Ford, and later other
people expanded on the idea so we may
have created the blues but everybody's
singin' 'era
(Si� KING CONTINUES on page 4)

I





P�t 4, Fountainhead WadlMKaBy, April 18
' 97:
fViflr continues
Not Lucille. This guitar I've had five years
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Well I know, I guess I'm very limited in
what I have
iut you meant the real Frank Sinatra
type things (laughter), we hardly do him
anymore I'll do one or two from time to
time, but a lot of times the reason why I
won't do tunes like "Mother's Love" is
because the college crowd is expecting
blues which is more moving than they
would be than like things like Johnny
Mathis, Stevie Wonder, the Allman
Brothers or whoever it may be that sing
ballads, but not B.B King because
everyone wants B.B King to sing the
blues, so that's why most times 1 do it
But in a club I may use a ballad or two
possibly Vegas.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Mr. King, could I ask you one more
question before we close this interview
Is the guitar that you have with you the
original guitar you refer to as "Lucille"?
B.B KING:
No. The first guitar I had was a Stella,
and it was red and I dont know what
happened to it. to be honest. Then I
bought another guitar which was a
Gibson, and we put a "Dion" pick-up on
it, and that was the first electric guitar 1
ever had Then I kept it until it got
destroyed in an automobile accident,
and I've had several others get torn up
like that. Then I had guys that would
steal them, but then later on I got one
that I kept for about 12 years, and one
night I had closed at the Apollo Theater
and I went to 138 St. and went upstairs
to see a friend, and when I came back
some dude had opened my car with the
key, went in the trunk and took the
guitar Then after that I've had several
guitars which I've kept for about five or
six years. This one here I've had for five
years.
FOUNTAINHEAD
Mr. King, you mentioned on the Cook
County Jail album that you had
produced 308 singles and that many of
those were blues ballads or love songs,
we noticed that tonight in the concert
you didn't do any balads, do you still
use them in your repertoire or do you
change for college audiences?
B.B
"Guess Who" is considered a ballad.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
I hope you get a chance to come back,
because we really enjoyed it.
B.B
Well I'd like to, (to agent) please?
Alright
FOUNTAINHEAD:
Well Mr. King, we certainly appreciate
you taking the time to come and talk to
us like this.
B.B KING:
Thank you very much.
FOUNTAINHEAD:
We really enjoyed your concert.
B.B.KING:
Well I'm so happy that you did. Wow,
now that makes me feel really good.
,
FOR SALE
FOR RENT
Small battery powered Electronic Calculators and
Typewriter for rent on a monthly basis. Portion of rent
may be applied to purchase price. CREECH AND JONES
BUSINESS MACHINES, 103 Trade St Call 756-3175.
FOR RENT: Stadium Apartments, 14th St. ajoins campus
of East Carolina University. $115 per month, call 752-5700
or 756-4671.
Two and three bedroom apartments available. $72.50 and
$80.50. GLENDALE COURT APARTMENTS - Phone
756-5731.
FURNISHED UTILITY APARTMENT for two or three
people. Utilities included with air conditioning. Also room
with private bath. Separate entrance in backyardm
refrigerator and AC. Call 758-2585.
JOBS
Typing Service (Termpapers. etc.) Call: 758-5948
FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat Sport 850. Convertible, 4 wheel disc
brakes, 4 speed. Great shape. Call 758 1662, ask for Mark
FOR SALE: 8 Track Tape Player & tapes also. Cassette
Player. Contact Walt, 106 A Scott. Phone: 752 1343
Puppies of Samoyed origin Long, black and white hair and
beautifully marked. Call 758-0484.
FOR SALE Handwoven belts. Betsy Purvis 141 Ragsdale.
752-9334 �
UNITED FREIGHT Water Beds All Sizes Starting at
$15.95 5 Year Guar. Limited Amount of Stock United
Freight Company, 2904 E. 10th St 752 4053.
BUMPERSTICKER: "Don't Blame Me I Voted For
McGovern" 3 for $1.00. Proceeds to Senate reelection
campaign. Carolina Conscience, P.O Box 2873. Greenville,
N.C. 27834.
1971 Yamaha 200, only 205 milesl Near perfect
condition-was in storage. Real bargain at $475.00. Call
752-2818 to leave name and number-will call you back.
FOR SALE: Combo Organ. $150.00 and Leslie $175.00.
Call 75&9381 ask for Cecil, room 222.
Charcoal portraits by Jack Brendle 752 2619
Ureen Honda CB 350 with luggage rack. Must Sell Best
offer. Call Richard 752-7000 or 758-6235.
I
�M
Full or part time work. Work at your own convimence.
Come by 417 W. 3rd St or call 758-0641.
NEED WORK: Sign up now for job opportunity. Work for
summer only or throughout year. Hours can be tailored to
meet your needs. Call: 756-0038.
NEEDED: Someone to do an oil painting of Tolkien's
trilogy - very important for a special gift. Will pay - please
contact Margaret 752 9943.
Licensed insurance agents wanted. Part-time, or full-time.
Life and Accient Health. 75 first year commission on
ordinary life. Write UAIC, Box 1682, Kinston, N.C.
Information mailed.
Local jobs, part-time, full-ti or summer. Opportunity
for high earnings. Plus edui .tional fund awards. Call
756-0038.
WAN i c'D
ROOM WANTED for female student in Sept. Hopefully
near campus reasonable rates. Call Pat, 752-0506, after 5
p.m.
HELP WANTED: Part time typist. Please .end resume,
qualifications, and hours available. P.O. Box 727 Greenville.
,�aoebrvjh
LOST AND FOUND
IR.M-0W'
2� J$fc4Mc4"f
t mm
In
FOUND: Brown dog with black & beige markings. Has a
rawhide strip around neck. Contact Karen at 752-1535.
LOST: Red Wallet. I found, please contact Sue Starling.
514 Clement. REWARD
Yard Sale at Pitt County Wildlife Club. See our box ad on
page 5.
UNICORN PHOTOGRAPHY Portraits in natural color
and in natural surroundings to suit your personality. A
perfect gift or a beautiful memory. For more information
contact Griffin at the Fountainhead after 2 p.m weekdays.
RUMMAGE SALE: Clothes, odds & ends and useful junk.
Tony Jordan 1107 Forbes St. April 14 ail day
One Remington electric typewriter Excellent shape.
Standard. 756 2374 or 752 5453
FOR SALE: AKC Registered Irish Setters 1 Female $75. 1
Male $100. oi best offer. See Nancy at Fountainhead or call
7580716a
FOR SALE: Platform rocker (needs recovering) $5 Dresser
SI2. Two Army cots with mattresses $12 each. Box springs
and mattresses $25. Table with chairs (poor condition) $7.
Call 758-0584
MISC.
Legal, medical abortions from 1 day to 24 weeks, as low as
$125. Free pregnancy tests and birth control information.
Ms. Rogers, Washington DjC 202-628-7656 or
301 -484-7424 anytime.
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758-HELP, corner
of Eighth and Cotanche Sts. Abortion referrals, suicide
intervention, drug problems, birth control information,
overnight housing. All services free and confidential.
EC
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Around Campus
- P S I CHI
SCHOLARSHIPS-Applications are now
being taken for two $100 scholarships to
be awarded by Psi Chi, the national
honor fraternity in Psychology. This
scholarship is open to any graduate or
undergraduate Psychology major who
will be pursuing his education in the
next academic year, either at ECU or
another institution The scholarships will
be awarded on the basis of academic
achievement and need. Application
blanks are available in the Psychology
departmental office, EP109, and the Psi
Chi Library, EP202. Deadline date for
the applications to be turned in is
Friday, May 4. Turn in applications to
the Psi Chi mailbox in the Psychology
departmental office.
-CHEERLEADING
MEETING�There will be a meeting of
the 1973-74 Varsity Cheerleading Squad
on Thursday April 26 at 4:00 p.m. in
Union 201. Everyone is urged to attend
this meeting.
-PROMINENT POETS TO
READ�North Carolina poets James
Applewhite and Maria Ingram will read
from their own poetry at a special public
reading at ECU Tuesday, April 17.
The program, scheduled for the
Nursing Auditorium at 8 p.m will
include readings by Greenville poets
Anita Brehm and Douglas McReynolds.
The public is invited to attend free of
charge.
-STUDENT COUNCIL FOR
EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN-The
SCEC is having a meeting April 18 at
6:30 p.m. in EP102. There will be a
speaker on recreational therapy.
-COLLEGE REPUBLICATION
CLUB-The College Republican Club of
East Carolina University will be holding
its last business meeting of the year on
Wednesday April 18, 1973 at 7:30 p.m.
in Austin 108. Everybody is invited and
if you have any questions please call
Rick Gilliam at 756-7966.
��
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3est
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Bucswindoublehead
N-C State " � � � V 7 V4
Fountainhead. Wednesday, April 18, 1973, Pa 6
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N.C State University touched the
ECU Pirate pitching staff for 14 h�
Wednesday afternoon enroute to an 113
victory. Then on Friday afternoon, the
Piraes came back strong to sweep a
Southern Conference doubleheader from
Davidson 12-0 and 3-1. That was the
week for the Diamondmen of FCU
Wednesday was a chilly afternoon and
the Pirate pitchers were just as .old
Seeing how this was only the third game
in over three weeks, Coach Jim Mallory
was planning on giving a few of h�
hurlers some work. Whether he intended
on opening a new can of pitchers is
another matter.
The game started out great for ECU
After Dave LaRussa set State down ,n
the first, Mike Bradshaw led off with a
bunt which was not handled very well by
the third baseman and Bradshaw reached
on the boot.
Mike Hogan followed with a sharp
single to right and Ron Staggs walked to
fill the sacks for clean-up man John
Narron. Narron came through with a
single to right, driving ,n the first Plrate
run.
Larry Walters also singled to drive in a
run. State f.nally retired a batter as Jack
Llkms was a strikeout victim Then
Ronnie Legget lofted a fly ball to
shallow centerfield. Staggs tagged at
third and on the ensuing confrontation
at the plate, Staggs knocked the ball
from the grasp of the Wolfpack's
catcher, and scored the third run of the
123 miles weekly
inning. Little did anyone know that
would be the extent of the Pirate scoring
for the afternoon.
State came right back in the second
with a three run outburst of their own
LaRussa's radar went haywire, walking
three and allowing one of the runs to
score on a wild pitch.
Bill Godwin entered the game in the
third to free the 'Pack and he was just as
effective. After three hits, two walks and
another wild pitch State had two more
runs.
In the fourth inning, Russ Smith came
on with one out to bail out Godwin. But
State plated two more runs to up their
lead to 7-3.
The Wolfpack got another run in the
sixth off Smith to make the score 8-3.
Three more in the seventh off Glenn
Forbes brought the margin to 11-3 At
this point the 'Pack must have decided
that this was enough ps Tommy Toms
and Joe Heavner escaped the last two
innings without being scored upon.
There was nothing wrong with the
Crate's bats as they banged out ten hits
with Hogan, Walters and Jeff Beaston
getting two each. However, all ten were
singles and the P,rates ended up leaving
12 men on base, so these hits could have
been more timely.
The loss dropped the Pirates to 7-3.
At Davidson on Friday, ECU opened
up the twinbill by skinning the Wildcats,
Toms hurled a superb game for the
er
Ed loves to run
There is a man at this school who feels
that he suffers from a lack of
recognition. You have probably seen him
running around Greenville from time to
time, and you may be wondering who he
is, why he runs, how much he runs and
rf he is on the ECU track squad.
To begin with, his name is Ed
Hereford. He is 26 years old and a
first-class marathon runner, widely
respected in national as well as
international circles.
Yesterday, April 16, Hereford was due
to compete in the most famous of all
marathons -the Boston Marathon. This
race covers 26 miles 385 yards in
stretching from Hopkinton to Boston
Massachusetts. There will be 1,566
runners from the U.S. and all over' the
world participating. Hereford has run it
three times previously-1967, 1968 and
1970. This time he expect to finish in
the top twenty with a time near two
hours and 20 minutes. If he does he will
probably be among the ten best
Americans.
So far this year he has run the seventh
best time m the country (for 1973)
when he ran the Durham to RaJeigh
Marathon in two hours 22 minutes 32
seconds on January 20.
The mileage that a marathon runner
covers in a week's time is almost
unbelievable. This past week Hereford
tapered off his training after doing 123
miles the week before.
In the Boston Marathon Hereford will
be running under the auspices of the
North Carolina Track Club and he hopes
to help them win the American team
title. The NCTC is now the second best
long distance club in the U.S.
Hereford's goal is to make the U.S.
Olympics team for the 1976 games in
Montreal. At the Olympic Trials last year
in Oregon he came in 17th place.
While serving time with the United
States Air Force at Okinawa in 1969
Hereford competed ,n the International
Marathon Championships. This race
which takes place at Fukuoka, Japan is
the most prestigious race except for the
Olympic Marathon Only five other
Americans beside him have been invited
to run in it.
Last year, while attending the ECU
Bonn program, Hereford competed in
the German Marathon Championships as
a member of the Bonn Track Club It
was his time there that qualified him for
the Olympic Trials last summer.
Hereford is not on the ECU track
team. In fact he quit the team when he
was receiving aid from the athletic
department.
He does not run for the benefit of the
public or for the glory of it. Every day
he receives threatening stares and is the
victim of verbal harassment.
Occasionally he even has objects thrown
in his direction!
Hereford loves to run and sees no end
to his improvement. He runs for himself
and his club. The satisfaction he receives
from being in condition as well as the
aesthetic pleasures he derives from the
freedom of movement and the closeness
with nature makes running worthwhile
for him.
CREW
Buc's. In the seven shut-out innings he
gave up only two hits, wlaked no one
and struck out nine. On top 0f that
Toms had a very productive day at the
plate, going two for four and driving in a
run. The win upped his record to 41
The offensive star of the game was
Hogan. He was three for thre inrluding
a triple and a homerun. Hogan also
scored four runs and drove ,n three
himself.
Bradshaw and Beaston each had two
hits, and Wlaters drove in two runs in a
very well-balanced offensive display.
In the nightcap the Buc's exploded for
three runs in the top of the sixth to stop
Davidson again, 3-1.
The Wildcats scratched out their run
in the third off Pirate pitcher Russ
Smith. Smith only gave up three hits in
the contest and raised his re ord to 2-0
Walters went three for three for the
Pirates and Legget was two for two
driving in a run and doubling. Beaston
also knocked in a run to help the Pirate
cause.
Coach Mallory's men accounted for
nineteen hits in the doubleheader and
this is the kind of hit production the
team will nedd if they are to continue on
the winning ways.
The two wins over Davidson put
ECU's record at 4-1 in the Southern
Conference and next on the schedule
was William and Mary. The Bucs and
Indians squared off Monday afternoon at
Harrington Field.
Tom Quinn
signs prep
star Lee
, rountainneao. v,l)(.Miay, April 18, 1973,
Trackmen outrun
Fur man and State
By DON TRAIJSNECK
East Carolina's track and field squad
proved too strong and deep for Furman
and State at Raleigh Saturday as the
Pirates won a tri-meel on the Wolfpack
course.
The Pirates captured first place in six
of the 17 events while Furman led the
way with eight individual winners
However, ECU took enough seconds
thirds and fourths to take team honors
with 76 points. State won the real battle,
edging Furman for second place 53 to
52.
ECU coach Bill Carson noted that the
win was "a real team effort with several
fine performances M ,rt notable among
the ECU efforts w , new school record
in the javelin t by John Hoffman
(215-0). Hof- n had to settle for
lecond plac in the event, though, as
�State's Curt RenZ bettered him by two
feet.
Among the first place finishes for East
Carolina were Charlie Lovelace in the
quarter mile (48.9), Maurice Huntley in
'he 100-yard dash (9.91. Roy Quick in
th high jump (6-61, Walter Davenport in
the triple jump (48-314) and long jump
(at 23-8) and the 440-yard relay team
of Les Strayhorn. (arlester Crumpler,
Huntley and Lovelace 142.0)
In the running events, Gerald Klas was
fourth in the mile; Sam Phillips was
second and Ron Smith, fourth in the
high hurdles: Barry Johnson added a
third in the quarter and a fourth in the
200; Gary Tiffany was fourth in the LOO;
Bill McRee and Smith were three-four in
the intermediate hurdles; and the mile
relay team finished second (Lovelace.
Palmer Liaane, Davenport and Johnson .
However, it was in the field event
competition that the Pirates showed
their real strength.
ECU took all but one place in the
triple jump (Lav.ence Wilkewon,
second, and Larry Malone. third), shot
(Ivey Peacock, second, LeBaron
Caruthers. third, and Bill Uulyn
fourth), long jump (Malone. third, and
Willie Harvey, fourth) and high jump
(Glenn Russell, third, and John Puts
fourth).
Other second places were turned in bj
Caruthers in the discus and Richard
McDuffie in the pole vault.
Art Miller finished third in the pole
vault and Gary Diedloff. likewise, in the
javelin Peacoi k added another big point
with a fourth in the discus
The Pirates return to Greenville for
their last norntJ meet of tne vtar
Saturday The battle with Pembroke
State is set to begm at 2 p.m.
Citadel sweeps three from Pirates
ECU head basketball coach Tom
Quinn announced last Wednesday that
Maryland prep star, Reginald Lee has
been awarded a ' sketball grant-in-aid.
Lee, a 6-3, 180 p jund guard, averaged
21 points and 9 rebounds per game last
season for coach All Ferraro's Einstein
High School team in Kensington, Md He
was selected to various all-star teams
including Maryland's All-State Class A
team and the Washington Evening Star's
All-Metropolitan team.
"Reggie's excellent offensive tools are
his top attribute said Quinn in making
the announcement. "He shouldered
much of the scoring responsibility for his
high school team while seeing nothing
but special combination defenses the
entire season.
"He is a natural second guard but can
handle the ball well enough to play
point
Thought for the day: Successes come
in cans, failures come in can'ts.
The Citadel crew team swept three
races from the ECU Pirates on Saturday
afternoon at the Tar River and in doing
so handed the Buc varsity lightweight
eight their first defeat of the year.
The Pirate ship in the first race failed
to finish when an oar lock broke The
Citadel J.V. eight shell flushed- the-
2000-meter course with a time of
The Bulldog's heavyweight varsity
eight took the second race in 8:32.5 just
nudging ECU whose time was 8:53.0.
The varsity lightweight eight was the
Mar
Apr
May
3
6
7
8
10
11
17
19
22
23
31
2
6
8
11
14
IS
21
22
23
24
28
30
i
I
BASEBALL
Duke U nlversity
University of N.C.
N.C. Stale University
Ni.C. State University
Virginia
Virgin ta
Furman (2)
Duke University
Dartmouth
Dartmouth
V.M.I. (21
Richmond
William 4 Mary
Appalachian (2)
NC Stat Lniverotv
Davidson (2)
William 4 Mary
Citadel
JHf� � Wilmington
UNC - Wilmington
rVmbrok
Citadel
Richmond
VNC - WUmuision
Pembroke
Away
Horn
Away
Away
Home
Home
Home
Home
Home
Home
Home
Home
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Awa
Home
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Home
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Away
Away
Home
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Horn
Horn
COACH Jim Mallory
Joke of the day: Russia's economy is
so much better than ours because they
do not have to spend alJ of their money
fighting communism.
final race of the day and that too was
captured by the Qudel with a w.nnmg
time of 8:49.0 with ECU finishing
second in 9:09.1.
Pirate coach Al Hearn felt that the
Citadel's experience was the key factor
in the victory Hearn said "are gave it
our maximum effort, but the Citadel just
had a bigger team and a lot more racing
experience
The Pirates travel to Chapel Hill next
week to row against UNC before they
leave for the Southern Association
Rowing Regatta on April 27-28.
Stickmen
demolished
Baltimore. Md would probably be a
nice place to live but the ECU lacrosse
team did not like their visit. On Saturday
afternoon Morgan State gave the Pirates
a lesson in how to play, by soundly
thrashing the Bucs, 21-3.
Jeff Hansen and Larry Hayes
accounted for the three Pirate goals.
Hansen scored twice while Hayes added
a single tally. Danny Mannix added two
assists to the Buc's cause.
The Pirates are now 2-6 on the year as
they look forward to playing N.C. State
on Wednesday April 25 at 3 p.m. on
Minges field.
Apr. 7UNC - Chapel HUI Home
14C Home
27UNC-Chapel Hill Away
27-2Southern Intercollegiate
Rowing Assoc Regatta AwayTICKETS
COACH:Al HearnECU Athletic Office O. Box 2576 Greenville, N.C. 27834
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fountainhead
Editorial Commentary
A Day in the Life
itwtenl NiKimpn
Pubin.d M EM CwelMi Uni,�My
. i' Bo� ?bi6 tCU Slltlon
'ireeiivhto. North c�rolln� 2734
'�lopho.K 5�J6� or 756367
B .1 m Ned Noble notorious narc for
the SHi. awoke early with the sound of
the alarm Scurring around the
nightatand, Ned finds his glasses, and
quickly begins donning his uniform
8 IS Ned slaps his .38 around his
waist and gently tugs the grey trousers
(part of his unostentatious garb) over his
knees
8: 13 Ned gets into his siok 1972
dull white Ford with the big black tires
i id spins off towards his rendezvous
with danger and drugs
9 15 Ned picks up his sidekick, Harry
Harraasem in front of Harry's apartment,
"Good Mornin gay8 Ned.
�'lake - says Marry 'I got a huge
hangover, I was over at that chii k's
trailor last night
"Take a couple a drinks ad isea Ned,
"You'll feel like a new narc
"I uYeady have replies Harry "Say,
when are we supposed to meet our
pigeon?"
"He gets out of claw at two Ned
ll's "Let's go gel some breakfast
first
"Where at?" Harry asks
"How about RAY'S?" Ned asks
"Whj not?" gleams Hairy
2 ID Ned and Harry meet their pigeon
on the basketball court behind Belch
lormitory. "Score any dope?" asks Ned.
"I his dude sold me some joints
replies the pigeon, trembling with fear
"I was supposed to give hima buck for
each on wudden ?"
"Sure. It's taxpayers' money laughs
Harry, "Besides, there's plenty more
where that came from. Va get anv hard
stuff-like speed?"
the pigeon answers
r.u'rybody's. ot midterms- tomorrow.
And whatsoever ye sow
Sometimes a politician can talk
himself into a lot of trouble.
Senator Edward M Kennedy It-Mass,
has long been a proponent of cutbacks in
the federal military budget. Kennedy
reasoned that the Nixon Administration
has long been spending too much on
military matters, and too little on social
programs.
Kennedy got his wish yesterday, but
not in the exact manner that he had
intended. The Pentagon has requested a
long hst of military cuts for Congress
designed to eventually save the nation's
economy up to $1 billion a vear
Kennedys home state. Massachusetts,
will he hardest hit by the- military cuts.
Scheduled to be fazed out in
Massachusetts are the Westover Air
Force Base near Springfield, the ()tis ir
Force Base on Cape Cod, and worst of
all, the famous old Boston Navy Yard.
Last week Kennedy, sensing the
envitable, issued a pre-decision "foul"
charge citingthe long established
importance of these bases not only to
the region's economy but to the defense
posture of the nation
Kennedy's pleas fell on deaf ears, as a
matter of fact the same ears that listened
when he and Senator George McGovern
were both seeking huge cuts in the
defense budget during last year's
campaign.
Hopefully, Massachusetts voters will
not put the entire blame on Senator
Kennedy for the loss of jobs caused by
the closing of the bases. He is not the
first politician to be reminded that the
federal government can be Indian givers.
Termpapers boringnaturally
A recent article in the Christian
Science Monitor entitled "Putting an end
to term-paper buying" suggested an
unusual answer to the problem of illegal
term paper sales.
The writer, a teacher named PnscilL
Fortescue, feels much sympathy for
those students who turn to the
"packaged" termpapers beeaused they
are too "bored" by the subjects to get
into writing a paper themselves She
suggests that professors should attempt
to "personalie" the termpaper
assignments. This, she argues, will
increase the students interests m the
topics to make the writing of termpapers
almost fun.
Well, they may be fun for Ms
Fortescue. but for the majority of
students termpapers are hard work. This
does not mean that all students who hate
doing termpapers should "buy" one
from a research firm. Instead the student
should accept the project for what it is-a
research paper-designed to increase
knowledge of the subject matter-but
also an exercise that sharpens one's
ability to find out information on any
subject when it is needed.
College professors do not expect
students to walk out of their subjects as
authorities. However, if a student needs
to find the answer to certain
questions-say about the structure of his
state's government- he should be able to
name several sources where the
information can be found.
This is not asking a lot on the
individual's part. Termpaper writing is
just an exercise that is designed to
sharpen one's ability to do just that.
Sorry, Ms. Fortescue, the "personal"
touch is not the only way to get students
to "get into" research papers.
jJi HARc Aim
TO -SERVE i PROTECT.
iJH�THr:R OULIKl
NOT AGUNS
PE FfcNDJ
and they got to study
"Great exclaims Ned. "Most of 'em
II be there when we bust tonight. You
got to go with us to Judge Dealer's to get
the warrants
"Why me?" asks the pigeon.
"Cause we dont know any of these
junkiesscreams Ned.
"That's all right muses Harry. "We
just wont put any names on the
warrants, and fill them in at the station
Dealer don't care. We'll tell him they're
all John Does
10 p.m. Ned and Harry, along with
the rest of the SBI, county police, city
police, campus police and assorted
officials begin busting. The bust is a
complete success, except for a few
hardened drug pushers who are
downtown. Harry and Ned, mission
accomplished, talk about the upcoming
trials.
"What do you think Dealer will give
"em?" asks Harry.
"He gives 'em all five years suspended
sentence if its their first bust Ned
answers. "Don't worry though. We'll get
some of 'em again next fall. Hey, did
you see that plant they found in one
guy's room?"
"Yeah replies Harry. "It must have
been at least an inch tall. We'll burn him
for manufacture.
"Listen, my head's startin' to hurt
again. You got any Darvon?"
Naw. but I got some Librium Ned
replies.
"Fine, let's go get some beer so I can
wash 'em down states Harry.
Harry and Ned crawl back into the
dispatcher and drive away, proud of
once more bringing law and order to this
small university town.
Washington Mmny-go-Round
Anderson
By JACK ANDERSON
Reporters are still trying to put
together the jigsaw pieces of the baffling
Watergate puzzle. The picture has
become confused by a whirlwind of
rumors, leaks, charges and denials We
have done our best to separate the hard
from the soft facts. Here is the picture
that emerges.
In 1971. President Nixon became
alarmed as Sen. Ed Muskie overtook him
in the presidential polls. The President
who has a zest for political intrigue'
called for an undercover
intelligence-gathering operation. His
instructions were implemented by his
chief of staff, U.K. Haldeman who
issued the orders through White House
aides and the President's personal
lawyer.
There is no evidence that the
President or Haldeman ever intended
that their subordinates get involved in
anything illegal. Three separate
operations began to take form: One
spying upon the Democrats- two'
sabotage against the Democrats; and
three, internal security to make sure the
Democrats didn't do the same thing to
them.
The three activites ultimately became
conbined under the control of two White
House aides, G. Gordon Liddy and E
Howard Hunt. Uddy maintained the
contacts with the higher-ups. He told his
coconspu-ators that he got his orders
from Attorney General John Mitchell
both before and after Mitchell left the'
Justice Department.
Liddy even described, in detail, the
meetings he held with Mitchell to discuss
the Watergate bugging. Mitchell
vigorously denies that any such meetings
ever took place. Liddy has refused to
talk about it under oath, preferring to
accept a stiff prison sentence instead.
What he told his colleagues, meanwhile,
is strickly hearsay.
Liddy and Hunt, together with their
break-in crew, have now been convicted.
But those who took the rap by pleading
guilty have continued to furnish money
to the Watergate conspirators.
gives overview of Watergate
Jesus Freaks
performance
'disturbence'
To Fountainhead:
Yesterday (12 April), we were treated
to a performance on the Mall which
transcended good taste, consideration,
and reason.
If "Jesus Freaks" want to spread the
"word" that is fine wit! me. But, I do
not believe that they have the right to
spend an afternoon and evening with
blaring loudspeakers naucous music, and
"saved" speakers dusturbing the dorms
and library.
If I had been a dorm student
attempting to study, I would have been
quite outraged over the invasion of my
right to peace and quiet. As it was the
invasion of the quietude of the library
was inexcusable.
These saved souls on an ego trip
disrupted the rights of KvmJ
hundred students for an observed
audience (at 8 p.m.) of less than 150
people.
Next Time, let them hire a hall and
keep their noise to themselves.
Sincerely,
John C. Atkenion, Jr.
Am. Prof, of History
THE CYCLE EXPRESS
In frontier days, the daring riders of
the pony express raced across the
country on horseback, delivering mail at
unheard-of speeds.
Although the method of
transportation has become much more
sophisticated today, with the jet plane
�'ng the horse, the postal system
has no, cut down the cross-countrv
delivery time appreciably.
It has now been two years since the
post office was put on a business basis.
The whole idea was to increase
efficiency and improve service.
Congressional investigators have been
checking into citizens- complaints alxmt
the service. Their preliminary,
unpublished findings are that
long-distance mail delivery is slower
today than it was two years ago.
Cross-town delivery within lost cities is
slower than two years ago, and overall
service is increasingly erratic.
Our congressional sources lay much of
the blame on former Postmaster General
Winton Blount. Blount started the
reorganization of the Post Office and
then left in the middle of it. The new
had man, E.T. Klassen, was left to tie up
the loose ends, of which there were
many.
Besides the reorganization shuffle,
Klassen also has to fight the bugaboo of
many new administrators the
entrenched bureaucracy.
For example, Klassen recently went
on an inspection tour. Fwerything
seemed to be running smoothly. What he
didn't know was that local postmasters
had brought in extra help to make
themselves look good. In at least one
case, they actually hid mail outside the
post office to conceal the evidence of
theor snail-like working pace.
All of the problems have citizens
howling and congressional investigators
scurrying. But whether the flurry of
activity speeds the mail eventually
remains to be seen.
One Washington wit has suggested
that the answer may be to bring back the
pony express, perhaps replacing the
ponies with motorcycles.
THE FORUM
IMPOSSIBLE DREAM
The venerable but implacable Chiang
Kai-shek has salted away millions of
dollars to finance his dream of
reconquering the Chinese mainland. This
has been reported to the Pentagon by
our military advisory group in Taipei.
In their secret report, the advisors
note: "We do know privately that
(Chiang's government) has considerable
sums of money inspecial funds, mostly
marked for contingency use in mainland
recovery
But the old warrior had counted upon
, American support to help him retake the
mainland. Now he has seen his dream
shattered. His old friend and ally,
Richard Nixon, has suddenly started to
court the Chinese Communists. They, in
turn, have lost no opportunity to remind
Taiwan that the Cnited States is now
their friend. They have appealed to
Taiwan to reunite with the motherland
voluntarily. The appeal has been made
from Peking by formerNationalist
leaders now in the Communist camp.
But those who know old Chiang say
he still hasn't given up dreaming the
impossible dream. It is the "cement "
says the secret report, that holds his
government "intact in the absence of
any real or emotional rallying point "
And he may have another ace up his
sleeve.
There is no more intransigent
anti-Communist that Chiang Kai-shek
Vet, in order to achieve the impossible
dream, he has now started to think the
unthinkable thoughts. He has hinted that
he might switch allegiance from the
United States to the Soviet Union.
The Russians, whose hostility toward
their comrades seems to be heightening
daily, have g.ven Chiang quiet
encouragement. A Soviet United Nations
delegate showed up the other day for
example, at a conference on Taiwan He
argued that Taiwan is not part of China
and need not be returned to Peking's
control.
The �id diehard anti-Communists
must be blinkig their eyes in disbelief
what with Richard Nixon courting
Peking and Chiang Kai-shek flirting with
Moscow.
Infirmary issue
a real lemon
To Fountainhead:
People like Margaret Blanchard
(forum, April 12) ought to be glad that
the public DOESN'T always know all the
facts. For the public's information,
Professor Blanchard was the guiding light
who directed the news-gathering
operation for Funtainhead's ill-famed
"Infirmary scandal investigation" issue.
Her profound grasp of journalism
principles had Fountainhead publish an
"investigation issue: one week and a
"retraction issue" the next.
Maybe that's why she's so sour on
Fountainhead.
Philip E. Williams
Praise offered
To Fountainhead:
To a group of individuals who
volunteered their valuable hours toward
the maintenance of a more perfect
I offer
wx-xc��x.5K.s�two�
Lewis Gidley Kathy Myers
George Glosson Janis Andi.
Jackie Boyce Dianna M�rrLS
And to the committee members who
showed they cared enough to help.
Sincerely,
Will.am H Edwards
Forum Policy
All students, facultv �
admmstrators are urg J"2 �
oPm.ons,nwntgtotheK,rir;eSStheir
The editorial page is a�
where such opines 1 VP"n
Unseed ed"or,atr(f,b;hrbllShed
of the editor-in-chief �� "Pinions
�- - �� dnd n�t necessarily
e
ait
the entire jtaff
or even
those of
majority
When writing to M v
the
Student Union,
thanks to:
Dean Alexander
Mrs. Thompson
Gary Massue
Art Weather wax
Veronica Ward
Norris Holloway
my praise and
Paul Brietman
Mrs. Paul
I "ons Stephens
Wayne Powell
Jim Hicks
Wayne Sullivan
300 words
-Letters hould be Km
of the author and the name
the request 0fV POn
may be withheld
�Signed arti,
opinions �f
�ther endonen
srs. their names
7 � MP reflect the
has ('r�linarn,verlUntalnh�Jor


Title
Fountainhead, April 18, 1973
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
April 18, 1973
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.237
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39684
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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