Fountainhead, October 2, 1973


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Fountainhead
VOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
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Board of Governors
down ECU med school
SGA officer resigns
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS
Assistant News Editor
The UNC Board of Governors ruled
Thursday against a four year medical
school at ECU recommending instead a
medical education plan suggested by a
board of out-of-state mt?dical consultants.
Dr. Wallace R. Wooles, dean of the
present one-year med school at ECU, and
Dr. Edwin W. Monroe, vice chancellor of
the ECU medical .program made
comments relating to new developments
of the med school issue.
"There was a wide diversity of opinion
expressed by all members of the Board of
Governors in its decision to vote against
the establishment of a four-year medical
school at ECU said Dr. Wooles. "The
main thrust of their argument was for the
establishment of a residency training
program, yet there are now 150 vacancies
and the only sure way to get them is
through a medical school proaram
Dr. Wooles feels that the people of the
state should decide the med school
question because it is an issue that
effects the people of North Carolina
directly. "Medical care is a legitimate
icem of the people of North Carolina
and transcends the educational politics of
the ECU Med School issue. Doctors are
needed in the state and the surest way of
getting them is through a med school
program. It was found our recently that
about 51 percent of all medical students
in North Carolina remain to practice their
profession in the state
The Board of Governors decided
Thursday that the implementation of an
area health education center concept
would be more viable than a four-year
medical school. "I have seen no plans, no
locations or cost estimates of the
proposed health education centers
commented Wooles. What will they be
like? Are they hospitals? I think the
Board of Governors must have bought a
concept. I feel that these health
education centers could be effective if
they were effectively coupled with
opportunities for medical students.
It would be effective but there would
still be no doctors
Also, the out-of-state medical
consultants concluded that the "new med
school would be ineffective in meeting the
health problems of the state and would
not mean more doctors for eastern N.C
"I totally disagree with this Wooles
states, "look at the other medical schools
in the state and you will see that they do
help with health problems and do result in
more doctors in the state. I feel that with
a medical school at ECU plus the medical
residency programs advocated by the
Board of Governors, the people of the
state will have much better medical care
The cost of a four-year medical school
at ECU "has been estimated at $85
million, fhe estimated cost for the 158
DR. WALLACE R. WOOLES
medical degrees that would be given in
1982 by the ECU Med School is $4X,000
per graduate. "I think these prices are
terribly misleading and they have probably
discouraged likely supporters of a
four-year med school. I don't think that it
would be that expensive
See Med School on page five.
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN
Staff Writer
Kathy Holloman, treasurer of the.
Student Government Association resigned
her position Monday, Oct. 1.
Holloman is also withdrawing from
school.
Holloman said, "I am resigning from
the SGA for the reason I'm leaving
school. If I had stayed in school I would
have stayed in the SGA. I have had no
pressure from anyone to resign
She said her reasons for leaving
school were medical and financial
problems that she could not deal with
while in school.
Holloman said she hoped to be back in
school in three months. It will depend on
her health whether she gets involved in
student government again.
"It was a purely personal decision on
my part to leave school. We have gotten
along very well and have accomplished a
lot. I'm sure they can find someone
competent to replace me
Holloman said she planned to stay in
Greenville for the next three months and if
there was any way she could help out with
KATHY HOLLOMAN
the student government she would.
In accordance with elections rules a
treasurer must be elected within three
weeks. Filing for the office of Treasurer
will begin October 2nd - October
8th. Mandatory meetings for candidates
will be on October 9th at 7:00. Election
day will be Tuesday, October 16th.
BRUSE CONNELLY AND THE COMPANY sing "We
Thee" in a scene from the National Touring Company of
GODSPELL, the hit musical based on the Gospel According to
St. Matthew, directed by Larry Whiteley, originally conceived
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and directed by John-Michael lebeiak with music and new lyrics
by Stephen Schwartz. Produced by Edgar Lanabury, Stuart
Duncan nnd Joseph Beruh, the play is recipient of Drama Desk
and the National Theatre Arts Conference Awards, and winner of
the 1971 Grammy Award.
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2
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
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Tickets
The SGA secietary of transportation
announces that tickets are available for
bus trips to all away football
games. Interested persons should con-
tact the SGA office in Wright Building.
Accompanist
Calendars
To those students who failed to
receive their free 1973-74 Campus Activity
Calendar during registration, there is a
limited supply still available. To pick up
your calendar, come by the office of the
Student Supply Stores in Wright
Building. Only one per student please.
NAT
VHS
The National Association of Industrial
Technology held its annual fall picnic on
September 27th at Elm Street Park.
N.A.I.T. would like to thank everyone
who helped to make this social event such
a success, and extends its congrat-
ulations to Gary Krause, for winning the
door prize. Make your plans now to
attend N.A.l.Ts annual spring picnic.
An accompanist for dance classes in
the Drama Department is needed for this
quarter. It is a student self-help
position. If interested, please contact the
Drama Dept. Office, Ext. 6390.
Religious survey Needs help
Read fast
Speed reading course will be offered
on Monday and Wednesday at 7:00 p.m.
in the basement of Scott Hall for any
interested students.
? ??
Competition
The Newspaper Fund, Inc. is
sponsoring a competition for summer
newspaper internships. Applications
must be in by Dec. 1, 1973. For further
information, write P.O. Box 300,
Princeton, N.J. 08540.
Announcement
Fountainhead proudly announces the
Sept. 29 signing of a contract with the
CompuGraphic Corp. of Wilmington,
Mass. for a CG7200L Headliner. The new
arrival is expected in January, 1974.
At the same time, Fountainhead
joyously announces the sale of one of two
annoying old Varityper 820 headliners to
Bethel of Jacksonville, N.C.
Upon arrival the CG7200L Headliner
will reside in the same domain with the
CompuGraphic Compurwriter II presently
owned by Runtainhead. Mazeltov!
Students who signed up to take the
National Collegiate Religious Survey are
asked to be patient until someone
contacts you regarding it. Due to the
heavy response, it is taking several weeks
to contact those who signed up.
Also those students interested in
attending the Campus Crusade for Christ
study sessions should meet Tuesday
night at 7:00 in Austin 220.
New maor?
A new international affairs major?
This was only one of the projects
discussed Thursday night by a group of
students who met with Bob Lucas,
Secretary of International Affairs. The
group discussed and has begun work on
such projects as participating in the
Model United Nations, setting up an
information center of possible summer
work and travel opportunities in foreign
countries, publicizing existing inter-
national study centers and other
necessary international projects.
All those interested in becoming a part
of the international scene are invited to
come by Room 301 above the Student
Union and talk with the people of the
International Affairs Office.
The Vietnamese-American Children's
Fund, Inc. is asking for student help. The
Fund is a publically-supported, non-profit
organization contracted with the Viet-
namese Ministry of Social Welfare to
gather and care for ill and abandoned
children.
The Funds asks for public support of
the U.S. House Bills 3159, 6793, 6794,
7566, 8810 and other legislation for the
relief of war orphans. In addition, the
funds asks for financial aid. Donations
may be sent to The Vietnamese-American
Children's Fund, 3801 Cullen Blvd Rm.
274, UC, Houston, Texas 77004.
Volunteer Health Services, a nonprofit
family planning organization is currently
making available to women informative
bookelts on the subjects of personal
hygiene, birth-control, sex education and
"VD By also making available such
necessary items as the personal feminine
calendar and the personal hygiene kit
every woman can learn to care for her own
personal health.
VHS hopes to better serve all
communities by not only providing
information regarding terminations of
unwanted pregnancies by means of a safe
therapeutic abortion or alternatives but
feels basic hygiene and sex education
would afford all a basic understanding of
their body functions and thus eliminate
unwanted pregnancies.
Persons interested in receiving these
booklets may call (202) 628-5098 or
write: Volunteer Health Services, 1010
Vermont Avenue, N.W. Wash D.C.
20005.
Rauchle!
Crafts
ART STUDENTS - Hightide Crafters of
Rocky Mt. wants ceramics, jewelry,
crafts, etc. on consignment or wholesale
purchase. Contact P. Beall-Greenville
after 5:30. 756-0060.
STEVE RAUCHLE where are you?
Fountainhead needs you for just about
everything we can think of at the
moment. Please stop by after 2 or leave a
note.
Democrats
The ECU College Democrats Club will
meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in CU
206. Prospective members welcome.
Nominations for new officers will be held.
Schedule
Poetry Forum Schedule for 1973-74.
Place:319Austin Time: 8:00 p.m.
October 2
October 16
November 6
December 4
January 15
February 5
February 19
March 5
March 19
April 2
April 16
May 7
Art show
James A. Davies II, candidate for the
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in the ECU
School of Art, will show examplesof his
work in a week-long display beginning
Oct. 7.
Davies will exhibit acrylic paintings
and several sculptures in mixed woods
and forged steel in the Greenville Art
Center on Evans St.
Davies plans to continue art studies at
ECU in the Master of Fine Arts degree
program. He previously was graduated
from Duke University with the AB degree
in anthropology.
Contents
MED SCHOOLpage one
GODSPELL AT ECUpage three
DOOBIE BROTHERSpage three
REVIEWSpage six
EDITORIALSFORUMpages eight and nine
NATIONAL TRAILS SYSTEMpage eleven
MISS AMERICApage fourteen
SPORTSpagas fifteen and sixteen
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Godspe
Gospel of
performed c
Auditorium.
Conceive
Michael Teb
Stephen Sc
presented I
Duncan and
Only dur
production
Crucifixion
production,
from the spi
rather than
sense. Jude
profoundly
which is at i
new mass f
"Godspe
of the word
its audienc
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is in essenc
How an
gather their
Stewart's La
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the last fev
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going throu
changes, I
incarnation:
spirituality,
in a great
survival in
world requi:
human n
James Tayl
Phi
win
aws
East Car
of Phi Sigm
won it's eig
Chapter in
national coi
D.C. on Sat
The Tau
led by offici
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national via
The othe
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chairman Bi
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presence of
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Grand Chap
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Braxton
tarian for
invitation of
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and Missou
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
3
'Godspell'sings of St. Matthew
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"Godspell a musical based on the
Gospel of Saint Matthew, will be
performed on October 4, 1973 in Wright
Auditorium.
Conceived and directed by John-
Michael Tebelak with an original score by
Stephen Schwartz, "Godspell" is being
presented by Edgar Lansbury, Stuart
Duncan'and Joseph Beruh.
Only during the last sequences of the
production does the Passion and
Crucifixion enter into this spirited
production, for Mr. Tebelak has drawn
from the spirit of Christ and his teachings
rather than from the Bible in its literal
sense. Judaism, Zen, Baba - all religions
profoundly influence the presentation
which is at its heart an atterrpt to create a
new mass for today.
"Godspell which is the archaic form
of the word gospel, attempts to envelope
its audience with its message of joy,
communication and renewal; "Godspell"
is In essence Eucharistic Theatre.
How and why did tan young people
gather their talents to appear first at Ellen
Stewart's LaMama Theatre, then at Cherry
Lane, and finally at the Promenade: In
the last few years, the peace and love
ethos of the hippie experience - after
going through violent, sad and profound
changes, has evolved with a new
incarnation: the age of reawakened
spirituality. Humanism, for the first time
in a great while, seems inadequate;
survival in an unreal and unresponsive
world requires more than naked faith in
human nature. As singercomposer
James Taylor expressed It recently, "In a
Phi Sigma Pi
wins eighth
award
East Carolina University's Tau Chapter
of Phi Sigma Pi National Honor Fraternity
won it's eighth consecutive Outsta ling
Chapter in the Nation Award" ?t t.isir
national convention held in Washington,
D.C. on Saturday, September 29.
The Tau Chapter representation was
led by official delegate Bill Phipps, who is
the chapter's president, and faculty
advisor Dr. Richard C. Todd, who is the
national vice-president.
The other members of the delegation
included vice-president Fred West,
historian Braxton Hall, reporter Dave
Englert, and Todd Scholarship Fund
chairman Bill Beckner.
Tau Chapter was also honored with the
presence of alumni member Paul Allen,
III. Formerly of Farmville, Allen is
presently residing in Scarsdale, N Y
where is is associate minister of the
Scarsdale Community Baptist Church. At
this convention Allen was selected by the
Grand Chapter to be the national alumni
representative.
Braxton Hall servced as Parliamen-
tarian for the convention upon the
invitation of national president Vaughn E.
Rhodes.
The convention, attracting universities
from as far away as Maine, North Dakota,
and Missouri, and with the theme of
euphoric society, existentialism would be
fine. The way things are now, though, it
certainly is necessary to have buffers like
Christianity. To me, Jesus is a metaphor,
but also a manifestation of needs and
feelings people have deep within
themselves
In the last year or so the "Jesus
Freaks" have begun to out-number
panhandlers on Telegraph Avenue in
Berkeley and the Sunset Strip in Los
Angeles; reformed addicts have started
holding non-donominational church
services in living rooms; a mystical
religion based on the teachings of Meher
Baba bloomed in The Who's rock opera
"Tommy "Jesus Christ Superstar" and
"Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat composed and written by
two young Englishmen, Andrew Lloyd
Webber and Rim Rice, have made an
Indelible impression on young America -
and now on the crest of this new wave of
spirituality in the young comes
"Godspell an answer to the age of
despair.
The time of the performance will be
8:15 p.m. Student tickets are $2.00 and
faculty and staff tickets are $3.00. Tickets
may be purchased at the ECU Central
Tickets will go on sale September 27.
FOOTNOTE: The inspiration for
"Godspell" occurred on a snowy spring
Easter Sunday during sunrise services 2
years ago, when long-haired John-Michael
Tebelak was stopped and frisked for drugs
by a Pittsburgh policeman in the nave of
St. Paul's Cathedral.
COMPANY in a scene from the National Touring
Company of GODSPELL the hit musical based on the Gospel
according to St. Matthew, directed by Larry Whiteley,
originally conceived and directed by John-Michael Tebelak
music and new lyrics by Stephen Schwartz. Produced by
Edgar Lansbury, Stuart Duncan and Joseph Beruh, the play is
recipient of Drama Desk and the National Theatre Arts
Conference Awards, and winner of the 1971 Grammy Award.
"Social Profit-Economic
Friday morning with
Washington.
Risk opened
a tour of
Following noon luncheon the after-
noon General Session was called to order
and business began.
Phi Sigma Pi was proud to have as it's
after dinner speaker John D. Muir from
the U.S. Department of State. His subject
dealt with "International Economic
Competition
The convention concluded Saturday
with the morning committee reports and
the afternoon awards luncheon.
Phi Sigma Pi is the oldest and most
active fraternal organization on the East
Carolina campus. To become a brother
one must have a 3.1 grade point average
and exhibit the qualities of scholarship,
leadership, and fellowship.
Tau Chapter annually is one of the big
participants in the Red Cross blood drive
on campus, and also holds a Christmas
party for local underprivileged children.
Funds are raised to award the annual.
Todd Scholarship, and Tau Chapter
presents the university's "Outstanding
Male and Female Senior of the Year"
awards. Last year nine brothers were
selected to "Who's Who in American
Colleges and Universities
Doobie
cancel
By DIANE TAYLOR
Staff Writer
Brothers
concert
The Doobie Brothers' October 14
performance at ECU has been postponed.
Tona Pnce, chairman of the Popular
Entertainment Committee said she
received a phone call September 24 from
Chuck Ramsey of IFA (the Doobie
Brothers' agency) notifying her of the
postponement.
Ramsey said all southern dates had
been cancelled to allow the Doobie
Brothers to record another album. The
group will be in recording throughout the
month of October.
Although contracts had been signed
The committee is still trying to
negotiate a later date for the Doobie
Brothers to appear. "Chances are pretty
good that we'll still have the Doobie
Brothers here Price said.
Ms. Price said the committee has a
policy of allowing at lease one month for
negotiating with possible performers.
Therefore, she said, no replacement will
be obtained for the October concert date.
The first concert will be the
Temptations, who will open the
Homecoming events, November 9.
Negotiations for the Sunday Homecoming
attractions are still in process.
Ms. Price said the committee usually
for the October stand, no money has been plans three conoMs for fall quarter Only
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lose. Ms. Price explained that when a
group cancels a contract, they must pay
all the expenses that have incumd, such
as tickets, posters, other advertising
costs, etc. However, if a group postpones
it's engagement before such preparatory
measures have been taken, no money is
lost.
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one concert is planned for most winter
quarters. "The reason for this said
Price, "is that our statistics show a low
attendance in the wintertime. Fall quarter
usually has the best student turnout
But she added, "Maybe we'll have two
concerts this winter quarter sines we'll
only have two this fall
-





When this 25-year-old researcher
wanted to investigate a possible cancer treatment,
we gave him the go-ahead.
We also gave him the right to fail.
At Kodak, it's not unusual for a 25-year-old like Jim
Carroll to win the title of senior research physicist. Like any
company involved in a lot of basic research, Kodak has felt
the pressure of modern technology and the need for young,
fresh thinking. So we hire the best talent we possibly can,
and then give them as much responsibility as they can han-
dle. Whatever their age.
We have departments and divisions, like any company.
What we don't have are preconceived ideas about how an
expert scientist's time should be spent. So when we received
a request from the medical community for assistance in ex-
perimenting with lasers as a possible cancer treatment, we
turned to 25-year-old Jim Carroll, who is deep in laser tech-
nology, and gave him the go-ahead. He built two half-billion
watt laser systems, one of which Kodak has donated to the
National Institute of Health.
The lasers proved unsuccessful in treating cancer, but
we'd make the same decision all over again. We entered laser
technology because we have a stake in business. We let a
young researcher help the medical community look for a
means of cancer treatment because we have a stake in the
future of mankind.
To put it another way, we're in business to make a
profit. But in furthering our own needs, we have often fur-
thered society's. After all, our business depends on our soci-
ety. So we care what happens to it.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL
5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
5
Med school
Continued from page one.
Fountainhead went to Chancellor
Leo Jenkins for comments. He had no
comments and referred this reporter to Dr.
Edwin Monroe, vice-chancellor of the ECU
medical program.
The proposed four-year medical school
at ECU was called 'an institutional trophy
for one region of the state" in the Sunday
News and Observer. "This is a typical
distortion of the issue and not an accurate
phrase for the situation Dr. Monrce
comments, "I think that a four-year med
school at ECU would be a trophy-for the
state and for the nation. It seems that th
med school at Chapel Hill isn't viewed as
an 'institutional trophy of a region
"I feel very positive about the
proposed medical training program and
feel it could be very effectiveif used in
addition to a four year med
school. Monroe continued, "A medical
residency program by itself, however, is
not enough
Now that the Board of Governors has
made a decision against the four year
ECU medical school, it is possible for the
issue to go before the General Assembly
and the decision be amended. "The
General Assembly will receive the
recommendations from the Board of
Governors then will consider expanding
medical opportunities in North Carolina
says Monroe, "hopefully expanding what
has been started at ECU
Monroe continues, "If the General
Assembly decides in facor of a four year
med school at ECU, they will necessarily
be over-ruling the Board of Governors,
only implementing more rapidly what they
have suggested. The Board of Governors
is only operating in a rery conservative,
cautious way. The Board of Governors
crlled the four year med school at ECU
'premature The General Assembly might
not feel that it would be 'premature
Grad students
Biologist receives
water research grant talk eco,?9v
By NANCY LONGWORTH
Staff Writer
Dr. Charles O'Rear, ECU biologist, has
received a grant of $12,246 from the Water
Resources Research Institute at North
Carolina State University.
O'Rear and three graduate students:
Jay Chapin, Darrell Vodopich and Ed
Grune, are studying the effects of human
engineered stream channelization on the
quality of water in two eastern North
Carolina streams.
The project evaluates the influence of
channelization of streams on the nutrient
input to estuaries.
O'Rear said that two segments of
Swift Creek in Pitt County will be used in
MM
the first phase of the project. One
segment is natural and the other, in close
proximity, is channelized. The second
phase will be concerned with another
eastern North Carolina creek and
comparison of data for the two.
The entire project will take about four
years, says O'Read. One of the long
range objectives of the study will be to
predict the consequences of channel-
ization and nutrient modification on
wildlife and plants.
O'Rear said that he has received
another grant from Water and Air
Resources Raleigh Watersheds. The grant
has not formally been awarded as of yet.
DR. CHARLES O'REAR
n
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Joseph Harwood and Steven Reed,
graduate students in the ECU Department
of Biology, discussed estaurine ecology
with a group of students at Bath High
School.
Focussing on a current ECU study of
the Pamlico River estuary, Harwood and
Reed showed aerial photographs of the
estuary, pointing out how plant
communities can be identified.
Following their presentation, they
conducted the students on a short field
trip to one of the plant communities.
The discussion was based on research
in progress under a grant from the Water
Resources Institute. Dr. Graham J. Davis,
chairman of biology at ECU, is the
principal investigator for the research
project.
m





6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
Reviews
lull's 'A Passion Play'
In mid July, after a delay of a few
months. Jethro lull's "A Passion Play"
was released or shall I say unleashed.
This is Tull's seventh album and the
second prodigous and controversial
sibling conceived in Ian Anderson's
whimsical mind, the other being "Thick as
a Brick Both albums were over a year in
the making interrupted only by the
interjection of a collection of previous and
non-released material, namely "Living in
the Past
Anderson has now augmented to his
menagerie of instruments the soprano
saxophone. Something like a modified
clarinet, the sax has a mellow sound
when played quietly, but Mr. Anderson
blasts more air through the reeds a unique
jazzy sound prevails making the music
fuller and giving the tempo more
versatility. As for his voice, Ian Anderson
is limited, however, only in range. His
resonance is as healthy as ever. His
peculiar prowess to stretch his voice
smoothly, which easily allows him to
fit in the complicated phrases that
accomodate most of his songs. Let's not
forget his melodic acoustic guitar picking
that wanders in and out of his music
and enchants the audience in concert
His flute playing, to say the least, is
still as dazzling as ever and anyone can
easily see why this was the instrument
that brought him to fame.
The other most signigicant players in
"A Passion Play" are Barriemore Barlow
and John Evan.
Barlow's drumming techniques are
truly some of the most innovative to come
along in quite a while. His drumming is
subtle but lightning quick. It often takes
a very trained ear to discern the brilliance
of his style. It is perfectly appropriate for
"A Passion Play" and his expanded use of
the cymbal adds just the right touch to
difficult sections. He is, without doubt,
one of today's most formidable
percussionists. Just give a listen to his
solo session on side two of "Thick as a
Brick" for a short-cut to discovering his
severe talent.
John Evan, polished performer on the
Steinway grand piano and the Hammond
organ really has his work cut out for him
in "A Passion Play With the exception
of Anderson he has more parts to perform
than the rest of the boys. Throughout the
entire album he plays the rhythmic chords
on the organ that are substituted for
Martin Barre's guitar and collaborates
with Jeffrey Hammond Hammond's bass
to form nearly the entire bedrock of the
music. His relatively simple but very
pleasing piano pieces are arranged, by
Anderson of course, quite intrrcately .
They stand out considerably, second only
to Anderson's flute and sax.
When the first note of "A Passion
Play" was struck, before the audience of
my ears, all the memories of "Thick as a
Brick" evaporated from my mind. And as
the last note faded into silence the
irresistable urge to play "Thick as a Brick"
came over me. I knew from then on it
would be a constant comparison and
contrast between "Brick" and "Play
At first the discrepancies came slow, I
knew they were different but I was not
sure how. After a few more sides of both,
gaping differences began to open
up. "Thick as a Brick I had perceived,
4MMMMMMMMM
was a romantic album. In other words,
the music was spurred from the thoughts
behind the poetry. One can listen to
?Brick and with the aid of the words and
music working together, see illustrious
visions and become so deeply involved
and enraptured in the entire scheme that
he nearly forgets that a record is actually
playing.
Conversely "A Passion Play' is
abstract. THIS IS THE ONLY DRAW-
BACK OF THE ALBUM. If you are a
romanticist, of course. "Play" speeds
along with its sporadic rhythms
hypnotizing the listener in a way that
leads him away from the meaning of the
words, whatever it may be, whereas he
can only associate his own thoughts with
the music. Likewise if a person were to
sit down and read the words he would
associate all of his thoughts with them
and be totally oblivious to the reasoning
behind the music.
Another contrast is the nature of the
quite confusing lyrics. "Thick as a Brick"
is, or seems to be, composed of small
groups of esoteric poems, coherent and
interrelated. On the contrary "A Passion
Play" is a composite non-stop epic
poem. Nevertheless, relevancy between
many of its parts is doubtful. Both
abound in enigmatic mini-morals
Ask people, who have scrutinized "A
Passion Play what it's all about and
chances are you'll get quite a few varying
answers. Almost everyone who hears it
formulates a different theory about its
meaning in entirety. Basically, however,
many persons believe that certain lyrics
are based on quotes from ecclesiastical
scriptures. I personally hold the firm
belief that it's a musical, based on
Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol
updated. But I won't get into that.
Anderson's main objective in preparing
a piece of music appears to be to
endeavor to maintain a fixed immutable
position in sound. One that is difficult for
anyone else to replicate and one, of
course, that will appeal to the listener. "A
Passion Play" seems to be divided into
about nine or ten separate songs fused
together subtley by improvised interludes
played concurrently by each member of
the band.
After side one descends to a
shuddering silence the narrative story of
"The Hare Who Lost His Spectacles"
begins. This allegory was written by Ian
Anderson, John Evan and the narrator
Jeffrey Hammond-Hammond. The mean-
ing behind it is as abscure as the one
behind "A Passion Play" and I believe it
completely disjoint from it. This story
terminates the first side and introduces
the first three minutes of the second
side. Then "A Passion Play" springs forth
once again and all reality is lost. Some
people may think the story to be very
obnoxious but I think it makes a
marvelous intermission.
The second side is difficult to follow
and it is often hard to tell if the music is
culminating to an ecstatic climax or
fulminating to a breathless pause. Or as
the senior citizens might say, "Are they
waxing or are they waning?" Anyway it
does make for a very satisfying effect.
Ian Anderson is not at a loss of wit, as
usual, and slips in a bit of humor. The
"Play" is supposedly taking place "along
E
JETHRO TULL'S IAN ANDERSON dazzles his audiences with
numerous onstage antics. His show is unparallelled in musical
performances.
the Fulham Road Where else would you
expect to find a group of asinine actors
but along a "Full-ham road
"A Passion Play" has received much
disparaging criticism and the critics have
bombarded the stage act with numerous
abrasive reviews. This has enraged Ian
Anderson and word has it that he is
touring only once more. So by all means
don't miss their act the next time
around. It would also do your ears justice
to pick up a copy of "A Passion Play the
cover has a ballerina on it who,
incidentally, is Ian Anderson's latest
mate.
The only shortcoming of the album is
that it's habit forming and can deter you
from your rightful duties. "But a little of
what you fancy does you good .or so it
should
Continuing Everts
MOVIES
PARK THEATER
Sept. 30-Oct. 2 When The Legends DIE
PGOct. 3-9 Sounder
Late show Oct. 5,6 Legend of Nigger
Charlie
PITT THEATER
Sept. 30-Oct. 4 Lady Kung FU (R)
Oct. 5-9 They Call Me Trinity (G)
Late Show Oct. 5,6 Wattstax (R)
PLAZA CINEMA
Until Oct. 20 Walking Tall (R)
LATE SHOWS (11:30 P.M.)
Oct. 5,6 Pacific Vibrations (G)
Oct. 12,13 A Fistful of Dollars (R)
mmmmm
Oct. 19,20 For A Few Dollars More (R)
THE MUSHROOM ON COTANCHE ST.
Starting early this week there will be an
exhibit of glass blown work by John
Nygren. The exhibit will last two weeks.
The oi
work wit
children i
for Excep
Accor
of the Ck
university
for Exce
have exi;
children
All the (
element:
children.
Except ior
wanted tc
children,
the futu
Council v
Two
1 :
6
ii i
I
13
14 I
15 !
17 I
18
i
20 l
t
21 !
22 i
24 i
25 i
26 !
28 !
I
29 I
30 i
31 t
32 !
34 I
36 I
I
36 '
38 I
39 I
41 I
I
I
42 I
43 I
45 I
46 I
48 .
i
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51 I
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mmn?
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
mmmmmmmm
7
Exceptional children get help
i Play the
it who,
n's latest
te album is
i deter you
t a little of
I .or so it
rfore (R)
JCHE ST.
will be an
! by John
vo weeks.
By Kathy Koonce
Staff Writer
The opportunity to provide service, to
work with and learn about exceptional
children is offered by the Student Council
for Exceptional Children.
According to Skeet Creekmore, advisor
of the Council, the Student Council is a
university version of the American Council
for Exceptional Children. Organizations
have existed for gifted children, artistic
children and mentally retarded children.
All the organizations had one common
element: the desire to help special
children. The American Council for
Exceptional Children took all people who
wanted to provide services for exceptional
children. Since university students are
the future professionals the Student
Council was organized.
Two primary objectives are rendered
by the Student Council. First is the
opportunity to provide service for
exceptional children. Secondly, the
Student Council allows students to gain
beneficial experience while working with
excpetional children. This is not the first
year the Student Council has functioned
on the campus, however, much more is
being done by the Council this year. "On
this campus, the Council is service
oriented Creekmore said.
During the coming year various
services are planned. A pilot program at
Stokes Elementary School is being
initiated. Assistance will be given in
preceptive motor skills. Students
affiliated with the Council will work in the
afternoons. Presently, negotiations are
underway regarding the adoption of a
cottage at Caswell Center in Kinston and
the School for the Deaf in Wilson.
The Council also provides babysitting
for parents of exceptional children.
Meetings are held twice a month in
conjunction with the Pitt County
Association for Exceptional Children.
Mothers of retarded children have asked
for swimming lessons to be offered.
Creekmore added that there are plans
to attend the convention of the National
Conference for Exceptional Children in
April. The convention is to be held in
New York. Efforts will be made to raise
money for the people wishing to attend.
Membership in the Student Council for
Exceptional Children is open to
anyone. The only two prerequisites are
the desire to help exceptional children
and an honest interest in learning about
exceptional children. At this point
students involved are from various
departments. Most, however, are in
speech, audio pathology, music therapy,
recreation therapy, social work and early
childhood education. Still there are no
limitations upon an individual's major if
they have a desire to help exceptional
children. "They can be in history
Creekmore said.
The Student Council is sponsoring a
film festival this quarter. Films covering
such topics as the intellectually gifted,
epilectical, retarded, blind and deaf are
shown every Monday. They are shown in
EP-129 from 6:30 p.m. - 8:30
p.m. Training films are also shown.
The Student Council for Exceptional
Children meets every other Tuesday at 7
p.m. in EP-129. The next meeting will be
held Oct. 9.
Nothing about the meetings are
formal. "We are on a first name basis
Creekmore noted. The organization is
service oriented to give kids love and
attentionthings that they need
Creekmore concluded.
crossword puzzle
Answer to Puzzle No. 109
ACROSS
1 Sign of the
Zodiac
6 Icy coating
11 Colors reddish-
brown
13 Treeless plain
14 Continent (ab.)
15 Sign of the
Zodiac
17 Bovine
18 "La la" s
companion
20 Certain
tactics
21 Saratoga
Springs
22 Cheer
24 Oriental game
25 Candid
26 Sign of the
Zodiac
28 South African
lily
29 Dutch river
30 Combining
form:
pertaining to
Mars
31 Word
32 Sign of the
Zodiac
34 Helps
36 Contemptible
person
36 Verne's Captain ???
38 Befuddled (Scot.)
39 Elementary
41 Rensselaer
Polytechnic
Institute (ab.)
42 Prefix: not
43 Rigorous
45 Man's nickname
46 Pass
48 Anemia of a
certain cell
50 Pampered one
51 Purchaser
DOWN
1 Robust
2 Turkish inn
3 Pellet
4 Research (ab.)
5 Curves
6 Jail (coll.)
7 Sign of the
Zodiac
8 Epistle (ab.)
9 Epic poem
10 Native of
Houston
12 God of sleep
13 Mess hall regular
16 Old Portuguese
coins
19 With ice cream
21 Oxford minister
famous for
unintentional
interchange of
sounds: ' .(is
kistumary to
cuss the bride
23 Waikiki bashes
25 Liquid part
of any fat
27 Sprinted
28 Long ? of the
I"l'GAU
AOFSl
S I PB?
7 A tMA C
fc '0'ftc
PQP.P?
WON
AN
see
re'L'E
WOpDST
ERNtTgF
DEfc-JDMS
CH AB
esMh'aps
ihuah'ja
L I ME
m
r t iWkoc
YnTBtrV
law
30 High perched
strongholds
31 Deep black
alloy
32 Outburst
33 Transfix
34 Sign of the
Zodiac
35 Examine
carefully (coll.)
37 Lubricator
39 A certain body
40 Baby bed
43 Quick to learn
44 Old French coin
47 Air Force (ab.)
49 State (ab.)
1734S1?1613t71S10
111P
14PP"
II? 27P
:?"P1 37
?Pf1
1?P
IPP
34Pl
3147? 4)1
42 4fT"45
41
SO51
Distr. by Puzzles, Inc. No. 110 c
Part-Time Help Wanted
Contact Mr. Davenport
at Hardees No. 2
300 E. Greenville Blvd.
Hardees
where the Burgers
are charcoal broiled.
The average Navy Pilot isn't.
No man who has mastered the flying skills
it takes to fly and land on a ship at sea can be
called an average pilot. And the sense of
accomplishment and satisfaction that he enjoys
are also above average. Which is only right. For
the man who would go places as a Naval Aviator
must pass through the most challenging and
demanding training program to be found
anywhere.
From Aviation Officer Candidate School
through Flight Training to the day his golden
Navy Wings are awarded, he is tested; driven;
pushed and tested again. And for good reason.
The Navy has learned that without the will to
succeed, no man can be successful.
The benefits aren't average either. A Naval
Aviator can earn up to $10,000 upon comple-
tion of flight school. The pay after three years
is up to $14,500. There is also a program for
obtaining a masters degree at no cost. The
Navy gives its Aviators the best.
Which brings us to you. Do you Have what
it takes to fly Navy? Send in this coupon and
find out. Or talk with your local Navy recruiter.
Gentlemen:
I like it. Please send more information on what it
takes to be a Naval Aviator.
Name
Age
Address
City-
Current College Year
State.
Zip.
I
TALK WITH THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM, STUDENT UNION, l-50ct
9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. or send coupon to Navy Officer Programs, P.O. Box 2506, Raleigh,
N.C. 27602.
HELICOPTER AND T 34 ORIENTATION FLIGHTS AVAILABLE.
mm
m
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?p
tmmmm
m





1
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
m
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EditortalsCommenlcirv
A med school is a med school is a med school
An appreciable increase in today's Fo urn mail has obliged us to curtail our editorial
comments, limiting them from the usual rambling half-page to this shriveled little
corner
This doesn't mean we begrudge you the space; we're the next best thing to a
billboard, and tend to become desolate when there are no little envelopes for our elt.n
hands to rip open
Getting now to the subject of this editorial: the ever-present med school. As a
non-resident of North Carolina, this editor is blessed with the ability to see the
situation as objectively as possible, hopefully without the "educational politics" cited
by med school dean Dr. Wallace Wooles.
And "educational politics" appears to be the crux of the situation. We have
witnessed the med school issue being thrown back and forth in the past few years, with
excuses and estimates and critical judgements cast down from outside organizations
and, now, the Board of Governors.
Ai id we are unable to see why. Eastern North Carolina is, admittedly, in great need
of doctors; the ECU Med School stands ready for implementation and expansion to
meet that need. As for the "medical education plan" suggested by the Board as a
substitute for ECU expansion - by the time committees have met and the health care
issue has been haggled over again and again, North Carolina can hardly be in better
shape as regards the doctor situation.
Perhaps we are viewing the issue with too much of the alien's overly-objective eye;
however, we'd like to think not. When one is little touched by the alleged prestige of
Duke and Chapel Hill, the basic issue becomes clearer. The ECU med school is - or
was - the most practical solution, but practical solutions often don't equal practical
politics.
Pakistanis receive U.S. aid
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - Pakistan's Prime
Minister Bhutto called upon President
Nixon and recalled the President's famous
"tilt" toward Pakistan. This was his
secret policy of aiding Pakistan in its
December 1971 war with India. It was a
policy of deception. Both the American
people and their Congress were deceived
by Nixon, who stated publicly that the
U.S. was neutral in the conflict.
The smiling Bhutto said, however, that
the President had "tilted for freedom
But this time, the President didn't tilt as
?fas as Pakistan would have liked. Bhutto
came to the U.S. to obtain arms to build
what he called a "credible deterrent"
against India. His appeal for arms was
quietly turned down.
Only parts needed to maintain the
weapons already in the Pakistani arsenal
will be sent. Otherwise, U.S. aid will be
limited to food and medical supplies.
Meanwhile, our Ambassador to India,
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, has assured the
Indian Government privately that the U.S.
will not become a major arms supplier for
Pakistan. He has also calmed Indian fears
that U.S. arms might be shipped secretly
to Pakistan through Iran.
The Nixon Administration, belatedly,
is sflfikina to improve relations with India.
staff
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan
NEWS EDtTORSSkip Saunders
Betsy Fernandez
REVIEWS EDITORJeff Robinson
SPORTS EDITORJacfc Morrow
COMPOSER TYPISTAlice Levy
ADVISORIra Baker
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-
paper of East Carolina University and
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of
the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,
Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial offices: 758-6366, 758-6367
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-
students.
1934 Wiretap Scandal: Senate Water-
gate counsel Sam Dash has uncovered
what he called one of the "most serious
invasions of privacy in the country This
was a tap on the telephone terminals,
believe it or not, of Supreme Court
justices.
But the case goes back to 1934 - a
Watergate-size scandal that has been
hidden from the public for 40 years.
Dash has belatedly learned this much
about the 1934 scandal: The Supreme
Court was meeting on a giant commerical
case involving millions. Apparently, one
of the litigants hoped to learn how the
justices would vote, so he could settle out
of court if it looked as if he might lose.
With millions at stake, he apparently
hired some expert tapper who holed up in
a building near the Capitol and tapped in
on the justices' phones. A squad of
raiders from the Federal Communications
Commission rushed into the building.
But the tappers had fled moments earlier,
leaving behind a freshly-lit cigarette and
warm cups of coffe.
The FCC raiders were sworn to
secrecy, and the tappers were never
caught.
Costly Mistake: Both the consumers
and the farmers are paying rw f?r
mistakes made by the large food retailing
chains during the price freeze on
beef. The supermarket chains feared a
shortage, so they bought up cattle in high
prices in order to keep meat in their
stores.
Now with beef prices going down, the
stors are stuck with cattle worth much
less. Predictably, they decided to pass
their business mistakes along to the
consumers. The supermarkets have
announced a rise in beef prices even while
the market price is going down.
Safeway led the pack by decreeing a
10-cent, across-the-board rise in beef.
Other chains have followed. The result:
higher prices for the consumer and lower
prices for the farmers.
The soaring meat prices have already
resulted in a lot of meatless school
lunches. Federal subsidies for school
lunches are fixed and, therefore, can't
keep up with the price increases. So
across the country, school children are
getting spaghetti, beans, pizzas and other
low-cost meat substitutes.
Spiro Agnew: a history
THE NEW REPUBLIC
There he stood, tall, fastidious,
handsome, the benign-looking man
conservatives jubilantly recognized as one
who might cut liberals down to size: "A
spirit of national masochism prevails
declared impeccably groomed Vice
President Spiro Agnew in New Orleans,
October, 1969, "encouraged by an effete
corps of impudent snobs who characterize
themselves as intellectuals
ROTTEN APPLES
Mr. Agnew in 1969 didn't appeal for
decency, or mercy, in characterizing his
youthful opponents in Harrisburg, Pa.
that same month. He declared "We can
afford to separate them (student radicals)
from our society - with no more regret
than we should feel over discarding rotten
apples from a barrel
Agnew speaks with few gestures and
oratorical tricks. He just stands there,
sleek and superior, manicured an
magisterial, registering well-bred scorn.
He sends editors and supporters running
to their dictionaries to find what the
words mean ("nattering nabobs of
negativism" was a honey) and comes up
with fine resounding phrases that cause
apreciative chuckles even from his
opponents:
"They (the young protestor) are
vultures who sit in trees and watch lions
battle, knowing that win, lose or draw,
they will be fed
ESTATIC PRAISE
His attack on the press and TV
brought ecstatic priase from Tricia
Nixon. "The Vice President is incredible.
I feel I should write him a letter. He's
amazing, what he has done to the media -
helping it (sic) to reform itselfI think
they've taken a second look. You can't
underestimate the power of fear
And now, how things are changed.
The Vice President is practically appealing
to the House of Representatives to
impeach him. The public is suddenly
discovering that impeachment is about
the only way under the Constitution, to
heave out a President or Vice President. It
is so cumbersom most congressmen
shudder at the very thought. But it is the
so called "grand inquest of the
nation And now here we are, looking
over the brink into something frightening
and unknown.
Last February as the new Congress
got to work, this reporter began a column,
"The question is now, can he govern? Mr.
Nixon stands at his peak: an unpre-
cedented election landslide, a Gallup Poll
rating of 68 percent. He is stem, taut,
confident, eager to show who's boss. He
looks at Congress, waiting for something
to be outraged about Yet even so, as we
saw it last February there were strange
portents: the evident Nixon feeling that
he was being "persecuted by 'the better
people He has an immense majority
we added, "can he govern?"
MORE DUBIOUS
The asnwer is still uncertain. But it
becomes more dubious at all time. There
is some evidence that Mr. Nixon knew
about the Agnew Maryland troubles way
back before the 1972 Republican
convention. But he looked at the crisis
touches the Nixon Administration is
soiled. The New York Times' Tom Wicker
has added it up - six Congressional
investigations, five grand juries, five civil
suitsand on and on. The former
Cabinet is almost swept clean now and
two of its former members are under
indictment; and his closest former White
House aides are out, and in trouble.
BARS PROCEEDING
Now the Vice President. The man
twice picked by Mr. Nixon to fill his place
in office. The Vice President sounds quite
noble as he tells the House, that he wants
it, not a grand jury to investigate his
troubles. The Consitution, he asserts,
"bars a criminal proceeding of any kind -
federal or state, county or town - against
a President or Vice President while he
holds office
Just like Mr. Nixon who won't give up
the Wategate tapes for the loftiest of
reasons. And so Mr. Agnew says,
"accordingly, I cannot acquiese in any
criminal proceeding being lodged against
me It is his "right and duty he says,
"to turn to the House
This sounds fine. But what it means
is that Messrs. Nixon and Agnew have an
exclusive monarchical privilege under
certain circumstances; they are not like
other men. They transcend the law. They
cannot be indicted or subpoenaed. They
need not even obey the Supreme Court
unless, in Mr. Nixon's airy phrase, its
judgment is "definite They can appeal
to the labyrinthine process of impeach-
ment which means, in Mr. Agnew's case,
that instead of being tried by a
hard-nosed federal grand jury of common
citizens in Baltimore he may utlimately (if
the house acts) go before a body of fellow
politicians in the Senate, familiar with the
problems of campaign donations and
kickbacks, and hope that one-third of
them plus one will vote "not guilty
BYZANTINE
The atmosphere here last week was as
strange as we have ever seen it. The
White House carried on a Byzantine
campaign to get Mr. Agnew to resign. As
the rift with him widened and deepened,
rumors were set afloat, and thenear-
desperate Vice President tried to swat
them down like hornets. Obviously the
White House doesn't want a discredited
Agnew on its hands.
Ultimately, when the Vice President
made his decision, Mr. Nixon came up
with a tardy appeal not to prejudge the
case. This is all very well but, under the
circumstances, Mr. Nixon's own earlier
failure to rush eloquently to his
subordinate's defense was in itself a form
of prejudgment. We believe that Mr.
Agnew has already been politically
destroyed.
VACANCY LOOMING
We suspect there's something to
Stewart Alsop's ingenious speculation
that John Connaly sees a vice presidential
vacancy looming and angling for it. How
else but to curry Nixon's favor can you
explain Connally's rash and extraordinary
statement that the President need not
obey the Supreme Court? Through it all
the public remains amazing quiet. It is
stunned and incredulous and its belief in
mm
mm
McGovern was having in the Eagleton the democratic political process may well
affair and decided to let the thing ride. be dangerously low. Our guess is that
Sometimes it seems that anyone who there are more shocks to come.
mmmmmmmwmmmmmmwmmmmmmwm





FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 7 2 OCT. 1973
9
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iry
ration is
jm Wicker
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: he wants
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1ieForum
Talking squirrels and other things
Dear Ms. Editor:
I was walkin' around campus the other night looking up at the trees, for I am
diving to doin' things like that at times, when I saw two squirrels poppm nuts and
ffwhJTsquirrels'are given to do. Now, of course, I didrVt Py nofrtnd totIwn
first cause I'm used to such things being a country boy and all. Well, I won t none
oTntefeedn vS they were talkin' bout; and cides, a squirrell can be right hard
o udetstSd especially with a mouth full of nuts. So I kept on walk.n' till one of
SSffi3 and said, "Damn, Herb Well .? been knowing h
squirrels talk right much, and a lot of times they talk just to be talkm, but very
seldom will you hear one just come riqht out and sav, damn.
Well the other squirrel backed off a few steps and flatly said that he didn't hold
to such'talk even hough the cussin' squirrel was what you call an academically
liberated animal. Anyway, the squirrel that said damn said damn again and this time
elaborated on the subject so much that the other squirrel just shut right up and sat
there with his ears pointed up and he started to suck on his front paws cause he
never in his bom davs had heard a squirrel talk thusly.
However, after about five or ten minutes of discoursing, the squirrel that started
all the cussing shut down and started to pout and beat her tail around and
bout Well, doin' all this time I managed to piece together what she was talking
bout It seems that she was dogged near tired of college life, and she was becoming
humanized by the whole atmosphere. She said that the other day some fellow
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters
should be signed by the author! s; names
will be withheld on request. Unsigned ed-
itorials on this page and on the editorial
page reflect the opinions of the editor,
and are not necessarily those of the staff.
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-
fuse printing in instances of libel or
obscenity, and to omment as an indepen-
dent body on any and all issues. A
newspaper is objective only in proportion
to its autonomy.
To Fountainhead:
Once again, I feel that I must act on
the basis of rumors which I have heard. I
read in your issue of September 27th the
comments of Mr. Bodenhamer concerning
his attempts to justify his actions.
I must beg your indulgence in asking
whether or not Mr. Bodenhamer has
anything to say which he has not said
before. Unfortunately, it seems that he
forgot a few items.
First, the fact that the Xerox machine
in the student union must be used to copy
7000 items to break even under the terms
of the installation contract. Admittedly,
the library machines are used an average
of 9,000 times each month, but there are
such things as reference materials which
cannot be removed from the library. Who
would have the urgency to copy a page of
a newspaper in the union, when the entire
paper can be purchased for less trouble
than copying a page of it.
Secondly, the question of the jumper
cables. Does our noble chief expect to be
able to justify $41.50 for two jumper
cables? Admittedly inflation has taken its
toll (thanks to his counterpart in
Washington) but the trick is to find
something economical to begin with, then
soak the peasantry with unforeseen
expenses.
Third, the question of a second
bus. Its existence might be better
justification for a cabinet office called The
Secretary of Transportation, but not when
the first bus barely justifies its need by
the paltry number of students who utilize
My recommendation to Mr. Boden-
hamer would be to quit trying to justify a
budget by ensuring that it is totally used
for its express purpose. If he desires to
create a massive and apparently useless
bureaucracy, he should be reminded that
one exists in Washington that has greater
resources to be exploited than the one
i
mm
formed from the $46.00 which is
confiscated from students with the intent
of making available activities designed to
enhance their background.
His complaint has been that students
have relied on "half-truths" in forming
their criticisms of his office. One would
think that such statements would reflect
bases for their utterance, and in fact it
would serve Mr. Bodenhamer well to
check the public record (including
efficiency reports by his own cabinet)
before crying, "you haven't looked at the
facts
Sincerely,
Michel le Braillard
(Pseudonym)
Nouveau riche
To Fountainhead:
Upon reviewing your amateur, school
boy publication, we have determined that
certain revisions in your format are in
order. We have conscientously re-
searched various and sundry books of
etiquette in order to arrive at the following
suggestions:
A)Any mention of such controversial
topics as sex, religion, politics, sports,
the arts, the weather, and the like should
and must be avoided at all costs. Only
those topics acceptable at a nouveau
riche drawing room tea should be printed.
B) Any item which you desire to print
must primarily be reviewed by us. Only
those articles about the creme de la creme
need be printed, in order to avoid petty
gossip.
In conclusion, we submit that
Fountainhead has reached a new
low. Only by following the above
recommendations, can Fountainhead
return to its former patrician uniqueness.
Coridally yours,
Mamie Anderbilt
Emily Toast
Post Script: This letter is respectfully
dedicated to Dr. Ralph Hardee flives,
Associate Professor of English, B.S
M.A Ed.D.
Non-smoking
To the Anonymous Outspoken Norv
Smoker:
I am in a practical sense a non-smoker
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
chased her up a tree, climbed up after her, stole her nuts, and then tried to paint her
tail with green, purple, orange, red, blue, and yellow crayons. She said the fellow
claimed that he was checking on funds around the campus and makin' a few cuts on
the excess and that it was his opinion that his organization could use a few more
nuts.
Then the squirrel went on to say that the whole blessed area taint save for a
civilized squirrel. The young'uns, as she called us aint interested in nothin cept
tornificatin smilin nicelv when 'tis profitable, and not really givin' a general damn
about nothin' lessen it cerns themselves. (Never seen a squirrel so partial to sayin
damnSaid she couldn't understand it, but it seemed to her that the young uns
thought that all that t'was necessary to be thought upon as a carin , involved
individual now times is to either have a beard andor blue jeans with a general back
to nature appearance. To top it off, she said that she used to be kind of fond of
them professors talkin but the last she heard a professor that made half a grain of
sense that little bit was drown out by the sound of some damn lawn mover that
would be cutting grass the young'uns had already trotted down anyway.
' It was about this time when the squirrel who had been listenin, got a chance to
say a few words in order to calm his partner down a little. He came out and said
that the other squirrel ought not worry cause sooner or later there is goin' be a
medical place on campus to straighten things out as best he could understand
it Then he said that the other squirrel's whole damnable mood was coming bout on
account of the squirrel was mad cause out of all the nuts on campus, she had just
Well, personally I was gettin' worn out by all this squirell talk, and I came to
- decide that the squirrel called Herb was right and the she squirrel just got a bad
nut. So I walked on down the sidewalk a piece cause it was gettin' later than I
expected. w
K Yours,
J. Norfleet
also. I too an annoyed "by someone's
cigarette smoke "clouding my air as you
say.
But if you iael so outspoken, why
don't you use common sense and locate
that annoying smoker and ask him
politely to move his cigarette to another
side of his desk, or exhale his smoke in
another direction? If the smoker proves
further to be ignorant of your "personal
rights" get up and move to another area
that pleases your whims. I'm sure a
professor won't disagree with your
decision. No, you wait until you get
aggravated enough to write an
anonymous editorial. Don't sit back and
wait for someone else to convey your
ideas, (i.e. school newspapers) act for
yourself.
By the way do you know that it is
possible for a non-smoker to get lung
cancer without coming in contact with
cigarette smoke?
Fred Austin
Bicycle paths
To Fountainhead:
This idea is not a new one to police,
bicyclists, or motorists, but it bears
repeating. With the unbelievable quantity
of bicycles on campus and in the city of
Greenville, why is the move toward
bicycle paths not recognized as
necessary?
Concerning bicyclist-motorist pro-
blems, the condition of most of the
streets on campus (particularly thc"?
leading to the girls' dorms) is so atrocious
that it is a wonder that there isn't an
accident every day. The roads dip, fall, or
bank in odd places and give most cars
about three inches lee way on either side
before knocking over a handful of
cvclists.
And if the pedestrians and bicyclists
are having traffic problems it is only
because most of the side walks are in just
slightly better condition. When your only
shock absorber is the one you sit on
(no-not the one approved by Schwinn) you
tend to take the less tortuous route which
may be a side walk ot the wrong way up a
street. I'm not excusing breaking traffic
laws but until something more
constructive than giving out traffic tickets
is done, I predict continued bicycle-
motorist-pedistrian problems.
Susan Hoinville
Beer for peace
To Fountainhead:
I'm new nere, but still I'd like to
publically comment ECU for such an
outstanding student body. Just last week
some fine ingenius students on the
southeast campus recycled a few beer
cans. What better way to aid the
ecological movement! Then.too, feeling a
bit sorry for the underworked maintenance
crew, these fine environmental engineers
used their beer-can cannon to blast out a
few windows in the men's dormitories.
Just like good ole Viet Nam, remember
that one? We should have had ole
Tricky-Dick leading a charge up the hill!
With these practical-minded men
adding their intellectual prowess to
eastern North Carolina, why does Dr.
Jenkins want a medical school here? It is
simply absurd to think of such a
castrophe. After all, ECU has a certain
tradition to maintain. Those medical
students would spend too much time in
the library or laboratories, and how in the
world could they keep their necks red like
that? No way! So, Dr. Jenkins can keep
working on his medical school, but with
what we have now, he's just bound to ruin
a good thing. Sincerely yours,
M.D. Hickson, Jr.
Self-defense
To the Men of Scott Dorm:
This letter is in response to many
rumors circulating our campus as to my
"policing the halls, having a girl arrested
for trespassing and room checks after
visitation All of these rumors are
false. They have no firm backing and are
to be disregarded as lies.
This ruling as to females being
escorted in men's dorms is N.C. General
Statute-GS 14-134. This was passed by
the North Carolina State Legislature
General Assembly. It is not my ruling.
My position as Hall Advisor, is of
advisory nature only, and occasional
discipline due to noise or the such. I
refuse to "police" the halls and have not
been doing this, despite the rumors of my
standing out late at night at the railing on
the floor. These rumors are simple a
"smear campaign They are beginning to
get obnoxious and therefore, please
disregard all rumors as lies.
Sincerely
Durwood Broughton
Hall Advi or
m
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io
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
m
mmwm
mm
Rhine researches 'nature of man'
By PAM SCRUGGS
Staff Writer
World renown parapsychologist, Dr. J.
B. Rhine, opened the Public Lecture
Series sponsored by the ECU School of
Medicine Thursday night.
Dr. Rhine, now in his second
retirement at age 77. is founder of the
Parapsychology Laboratory at Duke Uni-
versity and executive director of the
Foundation for the Research on the
Nature of Man.
He addressed the group of medical
and interested public in a talk entitled
"Parapsychology: A New Frontier of
Medicine
Dr. Rhine began his lecture by
defining parapsychology as, "a section of
behavior-a communication with those
around you without use of the senses
and muscles
Parapsychology. Dr. Rhine explained,
had its beginnings with reports such as
one made some years ago when two
North Carolina doctors reported a strange
case at Broughton Hospital in Morganton,
N.C. The case involved two women,
twins, who died at age 32 within minutes
of each other. The women, both
schizophrenic, had been in the same ward
since their admittance and had been
separated against their wills, dying
shortly thereafter. The doctors published
the account because they felt the twins
had strange communication.
Another case - what Dr. Rhine termed
"a horrible example" - involved a pregnant
miner's wife. Despite the doctor's
assurance, the woman believed her baby
would be born without one hand as had
her husband who had lost his hand in a
mining accident. The child was born with
one hand missing.
Dr. Rhine stated if these two cases of
complete mystery has not been reported,
parapsychology would not be where it is
today. He advised that those who have
chosen any field of medicine realize the
importance of reporting the unexplainable
- advancement cannot be made with the
reporting of only the understandable.
A great deal of parapsychology is
unexplainable Dr. Rhine further noted.
However, he stated, "You do not have to
believe or disbelieve - that's not in
science
He advised that in any field one should
"Entertain an idea for ideas By doing
so, Dr. Rhine stated, progress in that area
can be made.
Dr. Rhine foresees parapsychology as
a definite part of the medical future. He
noted in the future more and more
emphasis will be placed on the mind of
the patient in health, disease and
therapy. "It will seem strange that the
connection could be overlooked he
stated.
Dr. Rhine said some signs as basis for
his belief in the future of parapsychology
in medicine are the Ellis twins in
Morganton of whom their mother once
said, "They were two bodies with one
mind
Another basis for this belief is the
amusing case of two fraternal twins - a
male and female. Dr. Rhine explained the
female twin became pregnant unknowing
to the male twin. While the girl
experienced morning sickness, her twin
suffered similar symptoms. Finally the
male twin underwent tests to find out the
cause of his illness. After a series of
tests showing no apparent reason, the
discovery was made his sister was
pregnant.
Dr. Rhine has conducted experiments
in his lab at Duke using people and
animals to help come to a conclusion
aty't the ability to foresee the future or
feel what one close to you feels. He
strongly believes there exists a whole new
dimension in man in his research.
Dr. Rhine feels there is not a great
difference in physiology and psychology -
"The barrier between the two are breaking
down
Dr. Rhine further concluded that, "In
your (ECU's) new med school .you will
do more because you are new .as we
have done in our work with
parapsychology. My wife and I entered
Duke before the windows and doors were
hung
At the conclusion of the lecture, Dr.
Rhine was asked his opinion of the
prophetess Jeanne Dixon. He stated,
"Mrs. Dixon is an intelligent woman My
question is why not register predictions
properly rather than under various kinds
of pretenses? This is no way to treat the
public
Dr. Rhine was also asked about "faith
healers He stated, "They're hard to
handle from the laboratory .They aren't
sure of themselves, so they won't take
chances
In conclusion Dr. Rhine stated, "I'm
glad to be in the same state with
you. Most of the work that has been done
in parapsychology has been done in the
Duke research lab. I will be looking to see
the growth in medicine at ECU
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phjl frank
'IT MK9HT HAVE BEEN A LONG
LOMELY WIMTER FDR NbU-BUT
MOT R3R ALICE AMP MB)'
DANCERS OF THE BAYANIHAN PHILIPPINE DANCE COMPANY entertain a
captivated audience in Wright Auditorium last Thursday night.
metumtmmeuMmmmm
Kttttttt
OL'MINER
SPECIAL!
Special
try our Luncheon
96
WITH THIS
COUPON
Any $1.95 medium pizza
offer good Monday,OCT. I thru
R?g.$1.45 Wednesday, OCT. 3
ftl'
small pizza plus salad Miminn
$1.25 112 Mon Frl. MINER
NEXT TO PITT PLAZA RtttdUTailt & TaV6ffl
690 E. GREENVILLE BLVD.
Hmn
Montfay-Tnvra. 11 A.M. to 11 MMnlfM
Frltfay ft Saturday 11 A.M. ta 1 A.M.
Sunday 4 WM. to 1) MiatolffM
Phone 756-4727 - Carry Out
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National trails expand
The National Trails System,
established in 1968 by an Act of
Congress, continues to expand. At
last count, the system included 40
National Recreational Trails ranging in
length from less than a quarter mile to
30 miles. Located in 22 states and the
District of Columbia, most are near
urban centers.
All but five of the recreational trails
are administered by government
agencies. The trails provide outdoor
recreation opportunities for hikers,
bikers, horse riders, nature lovers
snowmobilers, and the handicapped in
wheelchairs.
The newest National Recreation
Trail is the Honeysuckle Trail, a
one-half mile braille path in T.O. Fuller
State Park, Memphis, Tenn. The circle
trail is designed for day use by the
blind. An eight-inch wide gravel strip
parallels one side of the trail to serve
as a guide for blind hikers' canes,
eliminating the need for guide ropes or
rails.
The National Trails System also
includes the Appalachian and Pacific
Crest National Scenic Trails, estab-
lished in 1968 by Congress as the
initial component in the System,
'these are long distance trails which
generally traverse mountain or rural
country.
In addition to the already-estab-
lished Appalachian and Pacific Crest
National Scenic Trails, the Act directed
that 14 other long-distance routes,
such as the Oregon Trail, North
Country Trail, and Continental Divide
Trail, be studied for possible future
inclusion, by Congress, in the national
system. Likely, the first of these to be
Added will be the 825-mile Potomac
Heritage Trail extending from the
mouth of the Potomac River to its
sources in Pennsylvania and West
Virginia, including the 175-mile
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal towpath. -
Further information on the National
Trails System can be obtained from the
Federal agency responsible for
administering the program-Depart-
ment of the Interior's Bureau of
Outdoor Recreation, Washington, D.C.
20240.
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THE BELLE ISLAND bicycle trail in Detroit is one of the 40 National Recreatio.
Trails located throughout the U.S.
China 'awakes' to world
CHINA THE AWAKENING GIANT
No place in the world is more in the
public eye today than China. Jens Bjerre
will personally present his second
documentary film on this area on October
2 at 8:00 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.
In his film, Bjerre explores and
explains what happened in the
tumultuous years of the cultural
revolution when the nation was
completely sealed off from the outside
world. The main feature in the new China
is the military style of life in all segments
of society. Factories, farms, and schools
(from kindergarden to university) - all
institutions are organized into squads,
companies and brigades. China is one
great school for inculcating Mao
Tse-tung's thoughts - thus molding
human nature to an amazing degree of
uniformity and loyalty to the state and the
revolution.
All aspects of Chinese life today are
pictured: education at all levels, sports,
arts, and medicine (including the practice
of acupuncture, little known to the
Western world).
China is now a member of the United
Nations, re-entering the mainstream of
world affairs. It is vital - today more than
ever - that the public knows what goes on
in the highest populated nation on earth
in order to form intelligent opinions and
avoid fateful misjudgments in this rapidly
changing world.
The film is a must for everyone who is
concerned with the world in which we
live. Far more than a travelogue, it is "a
milestone in the film lecture field
Tickets for the presentation may be
purchased from the Central T cket Office
and are priced at $1.00 for the public and
$.50 for ECU Staff members. Students
and faculty members will be admitted by
their ID card.
wwmmmmk
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
11
Japanese theatre
is drama topic
The Department of Drama and Speech
at ECU is sponsoring a very unique
lecture-recital on Japanese Noh Theatre
by Dr. Howard B. Hamilton. Dr. Hamilton
will appear at 8:15 on October 3 in
McGinnis Auditorium. There is no
charge.
Dr. Hamilton has studied the Noh
drama in Japan intensively for more than
fifteen years, attaining fully professional
rank, and performing regularly in recitals
in Tokyo and at the annual festivals at
Miyajama.
In "real" life Dr. Hamilton is a
physician, a graduate of the University of
Rochester and Yale University, who has
lived for nearly twenty years in Japan as
Director of the Laboratories of the Atomic
Bomb Casualty Commission in Hiro-
shima. In this latter capacity Dr.
Hamilton also frequently lectures and
gives advanced seminars in atmoic
medicine.
The oldest extant theatre in the world
today, Noh, a highly symbolic, aesthetic,
nonrealistic and poetic monodrama with
origins in dance and religious ceremony
of Japan and China, perfected to its
present form in the 14th century, is
performed by elegantly costumed and
often masked actor-dancers on an
uncluttered stage devoid of realistic
scenery and properties. The highlight of
Noh drama is the dance section,
consisting og abstract movement and
gesture in symbolic pantomime of verses
chanted by the chorus. The poetic
imagery of Noh ranks with the best of
Japanese literature.
Dr. Hamilton has received a number of
citations from the Kita School attesting to
his ability as a Noh performer. He has
been awarded seven advanced certificates
for performances above the first grade,
including the Instructor's Certificate,
licensing him to teach Noh dancing.
Robbery,
fireworks
in Belk dorm
By TOM BROWNLEE
Staff Writer
Belk Dormitory was the scene of
robbery and fireworks during the past
week.
One resident of Belk was arrested on
Saturday, Sept. 21, for throwing
firecrackers from the balcony. David
Hope of the campus police arrested the
suspect at 2:45 a.m. He was charged
with possession of pyrotechnics. The
offense carries a maximum fine of $500
andor two years in jail. The accused will
stand trial in District Court on Oct. 10,
1973.
The following night two rooms on
second floor Belk were broken into and an
estimated $235 in goods were stolen. The
rooms were entered using a key which
"apparently was not returned for the
deposit by previous tenants" and Chief
Harrell of the campus police. He further
commented, "We tried to raise the
amount of deposit so the keys would be
returned and this sort of thing wouldn't
happen
Among the articles missing af?r the
break-in were a study pillow, a watch, an
electric razor, an estimated $150 to $200
in clothing, and a jar of pennies.
m
m
m0tmmm
Changing
legal age
makes a
difference
(CPS)-Lowering the legal age of
majority from 21 to 18 years may have
serious implications for colleges and
universities in tnose states where the
change has been effected.
In a study prepared for the Council
of Student Personnel Associations in
Higher Education, D. Parker Young of
the University of Georgia discussed the
legal and financial problems being
created for college administrators by
the newly gained adult status of many
students. Copies of the report have
been forwarded to 480 college
presidents across the nation.
Young questioned the legal status
of campus rules requiring under-
graduates to live in dorms and obey
curfew hours, and suggested schools
may be forced to stop acting in loco
parentis. Similarly, university
regulation of campus organizations,
clubs, publications, fraternities and
sororities are subject to change.
According to the study, developing
trouble spots include: students
establishing residency to obtain lower
tuition at state schools, the validity of
awarding scholarships based on
parental income, and the question of
legal justification for mailing grades or
disciplinary action notices to parents.
In addition to raising these
questions, students who have attained
the age of majority will have the right
to bring suit against universities in an
attempt to cope with other traditional
student problems, such as landlord-
tenant disputes with colleges and
challenges to being charged a uniform
activity fee.
Prompted largely by the 26th
amendment which granted 18 year olds
the right to vote in federal elections,
about two dozen states have lowered
the age of majority.
If this trend continues, the
opportunities for presenting new legal
hassles to the nation's institutions of
higher learning will be greatly
expanded.
Daniel studies
effects of
ear disease
Dr. Hal J. Daniel, associate professor
of speech, language and auditory path-
ology at East Carolina University, has
received a grant of $2,500 to research
otosclerosis a disease of the inner ear
which causes hearing disorder.
Daniel will isolate otosclerotic en-
zymes in the inner ear which are
poisonous to its function and attempt to
neutralize the poisonous effect of these
enzymes by treating them with sodium
flouride.
The project is a pilot grant to test the
feasibility of enzyme isolation as a
research approach which could lead to a
cure of this disease.
Previous research undertaken by
Daniel indicates a low incidence of
otosclerosis among the population of
areas where water systems are treated
with flourides.
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f-OUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
13
I
BABYSITTING AVAILABLE MonFri. during morning hours until
3:00). Contact 756-0711 before 9 a.m.
FOR SALE 1972 HONDA 450. Excellent Condition. Call 752 4916.
LOST: BROWN 3 FOLD Buxton wallet, late Thursday night at the Crows Nest. If
found call 752-3471. Reward is offered.
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758-HELP. Corner Evans and 14th
Streets Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug problems, birth control
information, overnight housing. All free services and confidential.
NOW ACCEPTING PART TIME help. Noon hours, evenings, weekends, apply in
person at McDonalds.
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle, 752-2619.
GIRAFFE LOVER AND COMPANY: What the world needs is a few
more cold, wet-nosed dog kisses (and giraffes, too, of course) to spread
a little love, dog germs and fleas. Thanks for everything (even the
dog germs and fleas). Love, the little red-haired girl.
WANTED: PERSON WHO has lived in commune to come and speak to
a Sociology CLass. Call Jeannie at 752-1095.
WANTED PART TIME male sr. living in dorm. Phone 758-2469.
FOR SALE EXCELLENT condition, 26" girl's Schwin bike, less than 1
yr. old, complete with lights. Call Carolyn, 752-5699 or 756-3905.
SLANDERS GRAPHICS, WHERE are you? Whoever you are: Fountainhead is
interested in printing you. Call 758-6366 or leave message for editor.
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free info & referral, up to 24 weeks. General
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also available. Free pregnancy tests. Call
PCS non-profit 202 298-7995.
FOR SALE Webcor solid state stereo cassette deck $125.00. Call
758 5150 after 3 p.m.
WANTED: 2 qualified nurses specializing in foot care. Contact Dr.
Scholls anytime after 7 p.m.
FOR SALE- 10 used toothpicks (in good condition), 3 loaves of fresh
bread ends, assortment preserved apple cores, banana peels and grape
hulls.
JONES CAFETERIA HAS several positions open: we need skilled
cooks, also dish, glass, and silverware washers. Qualifications: cook;
must be able to cook raw hamburgers, burnt beans, and rock hard
rolls;Dishwashers, must be able to leave at least two visible pieces of
debris on knives and one or more lemon seeds in bottoms of
glasses. Pay rate: 10 cent an hour plus all you can eat and as many
roaches as you can catch.
LOST: LADIES GOLD Bulova watch, on campus around Austin and
Rawl, Sept. 26. Great sentimental gift value, please call 758 5962 it
found.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY and a case of beer to G.M. from T.F.
WANTED: 2 rainbow
compatible.
trout, 1 bass (live) for fish bowl. Must be
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that do not show their love
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12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
x
O
a
-
(3
AN ECU
afternoon
American students
take summer jobs
while in Europe
More than two thousand American students took
summer jobs in Europe because they chose to pack up
and see the continent on an earn-as-you-go basis.
In this day of high prices the attraction of a paying
temporary job in Europe with free room and board is
obvious A few weeks work, which in itself is a unique
experience, earns the lion's share of the trip cost, and a
few more weeks earns money for traveling around
Europe. . . .
Now fall and winter jobs are available in European ski
and winter resorts. Standard wages are paid, plus free
room and board.
Jobs, working papers, permits and living
accomodations are arranged in advance, on a non-profit
basis by the Student Overseas Services (SOS), a student
run organization which has been helping American
students in Europe for the past 14 years To make
certain each student gets off on the right foot in
Europe-and to the job at the right time-SOS also provides
a job orientation in Europe.
Jobs work permits and other necessary papers are
issued to students on a first come, first served
basis. Any full or part time student between the ages erf
17 and 27 may apply. Applications should be submitted
early enough to allow SOS ample time to obtain the
necessary papers and permits.
Students interested in applying for a winter or
summber job in Europe may obtain the SOS Handbook
on eamng your way in Europe, which contains a job
application form, job listings and descriptions, by
sending their name, address, name of educational
institution, and $1 (for postage, printing, addressing and
handling) to either SOS - Student Overseas Services, 22
Ave. r ' la Liberte Luxembourg, Europe.
Candidates ready
for SGA elections
By MIKE PARSONS
Staff Writer
The meeting in Wright 308 of all announced candidates signalled
the beginning of the 1973 campaigns for the student legislature and
C,aSCdiSSs will campaign for one week with the elfjUons being
held Monday, October 8. Overseeing the activities will be the SGA
Elections Committee, headed by Dons McRae, and the MRC, w.th
Joe Johnson as its president.
In regards to campaign rules, there is no need ?Jrry ftou
another Watergate occurring at ECU. ??M
the SGA office. Their expenditures are limited to $35.00, and their
activities are clearly defined by existing SGA legislation.
There is an effort this year, however, on the part of the elct.ons
committee, to eliminate criticisms that have been evident in he
nast The committee has asked for assistance from the
Sministrat on in the form of a listing of all students thait classifies
them by the number of hours which they have on reco d On the
bast of this listing, each student will receive separate ballots which
lists only the candidates for whom he is eligible to vote.
The polls will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Day students w.1
vote in the student union, and dorm students must voto in the r
respective dorms. To be eligible to vote, each student must have h.s
,D AfteTSf Pilose at 5 p.m. the responsible people will count
the taltol! by hand and tabulate the rsults. These will be posted at
thP ?GA receotionist's office when copleted.
MrRae)inted out a big problem in prior elections when she
statnrSS years approximately one third of the student body
halfurneS otfto vote. We encourage you, the student, to please
vote October 8
LADY takes a moment to relax on a lazy
At times like this, what difference does it
make what class you just cut?
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tears,
so this
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some very
the point,
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the point)
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Sports
WMM?l
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
mmt0mm0tm
15
mmmm
Pirate thindads finish second
By STEPHEN TOMPKINS
Led by the steady running of Gerald
Klas and Ed Rigsby, and aided by the
superb performance of freshman Scott
Miller, ECU'S cross-country team finished
a surprising second in the Pembroke
Invitational Cross-Country meet held at
Pembroke this weekend.
Pembroke State University won the
meet with 27 points, followed by ECU'S 49
and Wake Forest's 60 points.
East Carolina won three of the seven
trophies given to the first seven
finishers. Klas took second place with a
time of 26:27, Rigsby finished third in
26:45 and Scott Miller took the fifth place
trophy at 27:14.
Victor Elk of Pembroke took first place
in a time of 26:09.
Tar Heels
victorious
over Bugs
The University of North Carolina
defeated the East Carolina Pirate soccer
team 5-2 in a well played contest last
Wednesday. The game was played before
a fine crowd at Chapel Hill.
The Tar Heels peppered the Pirate goal
with a massive total of 66 shots and East
Carolina goalies John Henderson and
Bunky Moser were equal to the occasion
as only five shots eluded them.
Moser started the game in goal and
gave up two scores before being removed
in favor of Henderson. Big John gave up
a single tally and his gimpy knee became
worse and he left the game before the half
concluded with Moser returning.
While UNC was busy firing 30 shots at
the Buc goal, Tom O'Shea put the Pirates
on'the scoreboard with an assist going to
Tom Tozer. The score stood 3-1 at
halftime.
The second half began with Moser in
the nets and credit must be heaped upon
him as the Tar Heels continued their
bombardment of the enemy goal. Out of
36 second half shots, Moser stopped 34.
Danny and Tom O'Shea teamed up for
the Bucs second goal of the game with
Danny hitting the net, but it was too late
as the horse had already been stolen and
the Tar Heels had the 5-2 win.
Assistant coach Ed Wolcott cited the
fine play of fullback Floyd McClelland.
"Floyd's playing time is increasing and he
is doing a fine job for us Wolcott said.
Wolcott was also pleased with the play
of the O'Sheas. "Those two guys always
give their all and this game was no
exception Wolcott added.
A few changes have been made in the
soccer schedule. The N.C. State game
has been re-scheduled for Thursday,
October 11 at 4 p.m. at Minges Field. The
game against Elon has been cancelled.
The Pirates, now 0-3-1, face their first
conference foe, the V.M.I. Keydets, on
October 3 at Minges Field.
Seven schools participated in Ihw
meet: ECU, Wake Forest, Pembroke,
High Point Coliege, Guilford College, St.
Andrews and Campbell College.
Gerald Klas, captain of ECU'S team,
described the five mile course the meet
was run on.
"The course was relatively flat. It is
basically a speed course yet it has some-
rough terrain where early positioning was
important. The woods had areas of
footing which were bad but the hard dirt
roads made up for it
Other fine performances turned in by
ECU runners were Steve Michael's 15th
place finish, Marty Martin in 27th and
Larry Clarke who finished in 38th place.
Al Kalamega, a transfer student from
Buffalo State College who is ineligible
until the outdoor track season, showed
his great future potential with a fine 13th
place finish running unattached.
Ed Rigsby commented on his third
place finish.
"I was really tight at the two mile
mark, not loose like I was last week. Parts
of the course were flat but the terrain in
the woods was so bad you couldn't keep
your footing.
Coach Bill Carson, who is peaking his
team for the conference and state meets,
had his team in great shape for their first
meet.
Gerald Klas who finished second
praised Carson's preparation and the
teams' performance.
"I think we ran a good race. This was
our first race and most of these teams
have raced before. Also we had a lot of
inexperienced freshmen. We got good
performances out of our freshmen
though, especially Miller and Michaels.
And then Jerry Hillard got hurt at the two
mile mark. Later in the season he'll be up
there in the top twenty
Klas says he changed his style of
running from last year.
"I used to be the type of runner to go
out fast and stay with the initial leaders,
but not I'm trying to stay relaxed and
come on at the end. I just gave (Victor)
Elk to much room between the third and
fourth mile so when i started closing in he
was simply too far away
East Carolina travels to Raleigh this
weekend for another invitational meet and
returns home Oct. 6 for a meet against
William and Mary, VPI and N.C. State.
Harbaugh: a study in individualism
Greg Harbaugh is not impressive by
mere physical presence. He is not
mamouth, does not have bulging neck,
arm and leg muscles. He is quiet, often
pensive and he talks very little.
But then Harbaugh (pronounced
Har-Bow) isn't supposed to impress
anyone. He is an offensive center and his
job is to "put somebody on their back
then trot back to the huddle quietly.
Harbaugh is a case study in
individualism on the East Carolina
football team. On the road trips, he isn't
overly talkative, he doesn't venture too far
from his assigned motel room, and he is
always in the lobby early for planned
meetings.
Off the field, he is Greg Harbaugh,
student, and he wants to make that
clear. "I was recruited by North Carolina
State, Maryland, South Carolina and a
couple of other schools, but I came to
East Carolina because it's not as big
Harbaugh reasons. "I'm a history major
and I'd probably like to go in to
teaching. I came here on a football
scholarship and I think it's my job to do
what my scholarship says, but I think
that's as far as it goes. All these guys are
my friends, but I like to be an individual,
sort of. Being a history major is part of
it. I guess I could have majored in
physical education or something, but I
don't want the label of "jock There's
nothing wrong with that, but I just like
being an individual. I don't evenwearmy
football jacket around, because when
practice or the game is over, I like to be
Greg Harbaugh, student, not Greg
Harbaugh, offensive center for the Pirates
or Greg Harbaugh, jock. I'm not big and
dumb, which surprises alot of
people. But, I'll tell you, neither are the
other guys. This jock thing is just an
image we've earned without really trying
and I don't want to be a part of
it. Football? Fine, I love it.
"I think the simplist way to explain
myself is this: I really like being a
student and playing football, too, but I
want to be liked just because I'm Greg
Harbaugh, not because I'm a football
player
"And the bit with the girls, there are
always some that like you because you're
a football player. That's great for a while,
but it wears off real quick
Harbaugh's career at East Carolina has
been one of transition. He was recruited
as a linebacker, then moved to offensive
guard because speed curtailed his
linebackingplay. In the spring, he was
moved to center to fill the void left by the
graduation of All Conference Jimmy
Creech.
"Converting to center was okay with
me Harbaugh says, "because it gave me
an immediate chance to start. I just sort
of moved into the first team job
"Now, I think I'm doing pretty
good. The coaches have been real patient
with me. I really played bad against State
in the opener, but I'm beginning to
understand my job much better. It takes
time Everyone needs a dry run when he
starts something new. I'd been playing
against my own team mates, then all of a
sudden, I was up against opposing
players who I had to figure out in a short
time for just one game
"My size might be a handicap. I m
only 6'1 210. When I faced that guy at
State, I couldn't believe it. He seemed so
much quicker and still heavier
"The same thing happened at Southern
Mississippi, but I figured out how to
handle that guy
I'm getting better, and I think the
coaches know it. For a while, there was a
real struggle for my job. Now, I think I've
won it because of the last ouple of
games
Club gridders shutout 'Cats
The East Carolina club football team
jumped out to 20-0 halftime lead and
coasted to their second win of the
season, 28-0 over Davidson.
Mike Weirick and Mike Richardson
picked up over 100 yards apiece as five
Pirate runners combined for a club record
of 323 yards rushing.
The line blocking of Neal Peterson,
Chip German and John Evans did an
excellent job of opening holes for the
backs and also keeping the pressure off
quarterbacks, Denny Lynch and Sam
Derenie.
The Pirate's first score came early as
Chuck Maxwell picked off a Wildcat pass
and trooped 75 yards to pay dirt.
The marginwasupped to 12-0 following
"Yank" Pugh's interception and on the
following play Lynch hit Jim Newton in
the end zone.
ECU moved the margin to 20-0 on the
half's last play when Lynch hit Weirick on
a 65 yard scoring strike. Ricky McKay
then ran for the conversion.
After a t, oreless third period, Stacey
Evans put East Carolina on the board
again when he dropped the Davidson
quarterback for a safety.
The final Pirate tally came following
Billy Tart's block of a Wildcat
punt. Derenie then passed to Glen Bataan
for 30 yards to the 20. Three plays later,
Derenie scored from the one.
Top defensive performances were
turned in by Dan Merrill, who had two
interceptions for his day's work. Ralph
Dietz and John Chadwick also had an
excellent afternoon on the defensive side
of the ledger.
ECU plays at home Saturday against
the N.C. State club at 2 p.m. on the
varsity practice field.
"Do you still see me even here
The silver chord lies on the ground.





14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 712 OCT. 193
'brooflhMoyoybyJonT
Gray reflects on 'Miss America
9
By WANE TAYLOR
Staff Writer
Earlier this month, for no reason that I
could possibly explain, I once aga.n ound
myself sitting down with my family for
another dull evening of watching the
parade of goodies smiling out at me from
the 1974 Miss America Pagaent.
Yes, there they all were, shining and
anxiously illuminating our TV screen
and graciously "brought to you by Tom,
that great home permanent, or some
shampoo or other "live and direct from
Atlantic City, N.J
Stretching back in the easy chair I
remembered hearing several somewhat
blatantly derisive remarks about the
pagaent from those "menaces to
femininity, women s liberation.sts I had
to chuckle as I thought of those remarks
while listening to my two little sisters and
seeing how eagerly they watched those
beauties. Oh. why not? So what I little
girls want to grow up beaut if u and
talented? So what's the big deal if they
want to be a Miss America?
Seems to me that I too have some
faint memories of those programs I had
- watched so eagerly as child.
As the show wore on (or should I say
Bored on?) I inevitably found myself
watching a bit closer. Now, the girls were
the same, a dreamgirl is a dreamgirl
riqht? but I seemed to detect a bit of
change in that oh-so-regular format. Wart
a minute, wasn't that number aimed at
those glowering, smouldering, bra-
burning unisexists? -Don't Call Me Ms-
Well ok ladies, if you want to keep the
faith as well as your bras and pantyhose,
I'm not going to argue. But, where-o-
where is little Bert Parks? That chauv.nist
of all male Pigs? Could it be that he s
been slowed in order to let those lovelies
show how well they can manage without
him? Hmmm!
Thank heavens the talent show is over,
but I must admit my regret at having
missed the graceful young lady and her
ballet on roller skates. But I guess she
,ust wasn't in the same class with al lour
' musical dreamgirls (and I do mean All!)
Well, that's it, now for the five
finalists. Let's see, oh yeah, I think I want
Miss Texas to win. She's the tallest one
of all, and wasn't she cute in that fiddle
number? My, my, what a smile.
Hey there's Bert now, opening the
envelope. Do your stuff baby, !?want to
hear you sing your legendary, There She
Is" What do you mean Miss Colorado
won I mean changing the show was one
thing, but choosing a girl who wants to be
a civil judge? Why she's even one of the
ten most outstanding young women in
Colorado! Some dreamgirl! She isnt
even crying, and the way she
cold-shouldered all those grasping losers,
she'd never have won Miss Congeniality.
And just look how cool and smug she is -
her crown isn't even slipping!
That's it folks, all over, time to go to
bed Sorry kids, maybe your girl will win
next year. As for me, old Bert even let me
down, he changed hissong.
Now I suppose I could have let it go at
that but I got a hunch to go see someone
who just might be able to tell me how far
the changes went in that pagaent.
Dean Wellington B. Gray, head of the
Art Department at ECU, was a judge again
this year so I thought maybe he could fill
me in on a little behind the scene activity.
Q. Dean Gray, are you a chauvinist?
(nothing like jumping right in)
A "No I really don't know what that
word means, it's used so many different
ways
Q. Do you think the pagaent is on it's way
out9 (musn't sound too hopeful)
A "No One of the things that have hurt
it is a proliferation of other pagaents that
haven't done as well (like Miss Teen-age
America, Miss World, Miss Nude - you
know) "But it is not on the way out
because of over one-million dollars n
scholarships and the over 700,000 girls
across the U.S.who participate each g
year
(In case you're interested, the lucky
winner got $15,000 and every girl who oo
made it to the Atlantic City pagaent got at
least $500 for just being there. Not to
mention, all expenses paid, plus the local
and state scholarships, plus entertain-
ment, plus a chance to be seen on
TV The scholarships have to be used tor
education only, but if the girl already has
her college degree and can get the
consent of the board, she can use it to
travel.)
Q Have you heard, or did you see any
angry "Women's Libbers" causing trouble
this year?
A "You hear things like this (those
derisive comments I was talking about
from Betty Freidham and gals like this all
the time, not just before pagaents
Q How much do looks actually count?
A Looks count about 25 percent. That
is part of the aura of the things. When
vou say Miss America, you want
something good to look at, nol: some old
haq. Ability to look well in clothes, a well
tailored suit, or an evening gcwjrvOOUrtS
25 percent. Talent, I mean by that their
stage presence, their poise during the act
and ability, about 50 percent. So looks
aren't the most important thing.
-
Q About this year's Miss America, she
wantfio be a judge, right? She's going
places. Was she in any way meant to
say appease some "women's libbers by
showinglhat a woman heading into a
more or less "man's profession could
w?n? Asides, she didn't look the Miss
America type, why would she want to
enter a beauty contest?
A "Every judge gets a book with a
rundown on all the girls. One question in
u ,8 . why did you enter the
pagaent? Almost all the girls answered -
because of the scholarship possibilities.
She (the winner) was chosen, of course
for overall appearance, talent, etc. But
mostly from the impression she left at tne
interview. She had a positive attitude In
everything she did - no tears - that s
DR WELLINGTON GRAY head of the
ECU Art Department was a judoe at the
probably why she won. Sunday morning,
after the pagaent there,m ?
brunch. She got up and said - This s not
a time for tears, it is a time to be
happy ' A very positive attitude
Well I could see I was getting
nowhere with my ideas about the pageant
beino hassled into changing. So l
thought I'd at least find out why Bert had
changed his traditional trophy song.
q. Why was Bert Parks' song different?
(to get right to the point)
A "A year ago Bert Parks was
injured. No one knew of this. Someone
left a stage brace in an exit and he went
out real fast to change between
numbers (yep, you guessed it folks) He
fell and busted his head open. Later it
took seven stitches. But he did the whole
show anyway, no one knew. He said that
was it, no rrore, the show was too much
Tor him. But he was talked into coming
back this year under the condition that he
have help. This is why there ve more
numbers with the girls, and 1973 Miss
America, Terri Neussome, helped him
out
Brother! Even that hunch was
shot Bert didn't get bumped out, he just
got bumped! Well anyhow, I decided to
give it the old college try and act like a
dedicated reporter really digging for the
facts.
recent Miss America Pageant.
But almost to the point of tears,
beqged him to let me print it so this
whole, long mess wouldn't be entirely a
loss. He gave in with a few chuckles.
Dean Grey knew what I was trying
to do and he must have taken pity Bering
the disappointment in my face. To make
? feeTberter (whether really cared
how I felt or not, I did feel a spark of
enthusiasm returning) he told me about a
few questions during the mterv.ews - off
the record.
Q. Are you sure I can't print that?
A. "Oh, go ahead
Thank you Dean Gray.
"Some of the judges asked some very
Dointed questions, so much to the point,
irT fact, that some of the other judges
were even embarassed.
This one girl that won came in , .her
fanny hadn't so much as touched the
chair when one judge asked Are you
wearing a bra?' (now, that is to the pomt)
Xnot one fired at her, 'Can you pass
the pencil test?
Now I'll admit that the judges want
their dreamgirl to be an all-around average
flW andmlght need to get a bit personal
with some questions like - How many
cavities do you have, or, ever been
arrested, jailed, deported, busted or
booked? Maybe even if she had any
tendencies to over-drink, smoke pot go
skinny-dipping in the ?f? j' "
burn an American flag. But, Can you
pass the pencil test?' Ha, I knew the
pagaent was different this year.
At any rate - that $15,000 prize might
even be morsel enough to tempt a few
aspiring "women's libbers" into borrowing
their mother's bras for a couple of turns
around the stage.
Pi
Take it or leave it!





16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 72 OCT. 1973
Bucs win again
By DAVE ENGLERT
Saturday evening the Furman Paladins
became the East Carolina Pirate's third
consecutive victim on the gridiron by the
score of 14-3.
Carl Summered, although not having
his best game of the year, provided the
leadership while Kenny Strayhorn churned
out 146 yards rushing.
The "Wild Dogs" were led by Cary
Godette who was busy stopping runs,
sacking quarterbacks and recovering
fumbles.
The first quarter had the "blahs" and
probaly would have made a fine Alka
Seltzer commercial. Any attempt at
football was marred by frequent penalties
agairst both squads.
The Pirates did put together one good
drive with about four minutes remaining
in the quarter. Carlester Crumpler, who
played sparingly, ripped off runs of six
and sevvn yards, Don Sen ink had a 13
yard burst up the middle and Strayhorn
galloped 20 yards on a draw play.
Jim Woody attempted a 38 yard field
goal when the drive stalled, but
unfortunately he was wide to the left.
In the second quarter the Pirates were
stopped by an illegal procedure penalty
and once on a Summered fumble.
Summered also had two passes
intercepted before the night was
over. "He was playing hurt said coach
Sonny Randle, "Anybody can play when
he's well, but it takes an excellent
performer to play as well as Carl did
On the Pirate's third possesion they
drove down to the Paladin eight only to
have an offensive pass interference call
charged against them. This infraction
pushed the Bucs back to the 23.
On third down, a swing pass to
Strayhorn advanced the ball to the ten,
and with Furman being called for a
personal foul, it was fourth and five at the
Paladin five.
The Bucs gambled for the touchdown,
but Summered missed Benny Gibson in
the end zone and that touched off a
chorus of boos from the gras Istand
quarterbacks.
The "Wild Dogs" must have been
stunned by this failure to score because
Furman moved from their five to mid-field
in two pass plays. A few plays later they
were forced to punt.
After the scoreless first half, the Bucs
got on the scoreboard the second time
they got their hands on the ball. The
"Triple-S" offense (Summered, Schink and
Strayhorn) had moved the ball down to the
Furman 27 when the Pirates got the break
of the game.
Summered, on a third and nine lay,
scrambled for five yards. After he was
down a Furman player hit him, the
Paladins were penalized half the distance
to the goal line giving East Carolina a first
down at the 11.
Two plays later Strayhorn scored on a
five yard run, and the score stood at 7-0
following Woody's conversion.
Furman came right back, completing
passes right and left. Aided by a pass
interference call against Rusty Markland,
itwassoon to be first and goal at the ECU
seven yard line.
Here the Pirates received another
break when Furman fumbled two plays
later with Gary Niklason recovering the
loose ball.
Summerell's second interception
followed, giving the ball back to the
Paladins at the Buc's 21. Two com-
pletions and an 11 yard run made it first'
and goal at the Pirate three.
The "Wild Dogs" stiffened here,
holding two rushing attempts to no
gain. Godette dumped the quarterback for
a loss of eight on a third down play.
Furman's placekicker then booted a 28
yard field goal, cutting the Pirate margin
to 7-3.
Reggie Pinkney took the kickoff and
EAST CAROLINA CO-CAPTAIN Carl Summered watches as the referee
marches off a 15 yard penalty against the Pirates. ECU amassed 115 yards of
penalties in Saturday night's 14-3 triumph over the Furman Paladins.
raced all the way to the 49 yard line of the
Pirates. The ball was then advanced to
the Furman 18 where the Pirates were
faced with a fourth and one situation.
Hoping for the element of surprise to
fool Furman, the Pirates passed. It fell
incomplete and Furman took over with
5:35 left in the contest and with 16,270
fans screaming their disapprovals.
Four plays later the Pirates belted the
Furman quarterback, forcing a fumble
which was recovered by Godette.
An 11 yard burst up the middle by
Schink gave East Carolina first and goal at
the five. On third and two, Schink scored
and Woody's kick upped the Buc lead to
14-3. With only 1:24 left to play, it was
"Curtains McGoo" for the Paladins.
The Pirate defense did an incredible
EAST CAROLINA'S KENNY STRAYHORN puts his head down and churns out part of his 146 yards rushing in
Saturday's victory over the Furman Paladins.
job against the run, limiting the Paladins
to a mere 12 yards net rushing. Against
the pass they were not as successful.
Three Furman quarterbacks completed 18
of 27 passes for 183 yards.
The Bucs amassed 304 yards rushing,
with Strayhorn (146 yards) getting almost
half. Kenny gave all the credit to the
offensive line for his effort. "The linemen
were doing the big job said Ken. Schink
had 59 yards, Summered 47, Crumpler 34
and Howe 18.
One area which has plagued the
Pirates all year is kickoff returns, but that
appears to be solved at the
moment. Furman amassed only 50 yards
on three returns.
Next week the Bucs return to the road
to play one of the Southern Conference
doormats, the Davidson Wildcats. The
Pirates look to come home with a 4-1
record following Saturday's game.
Grid tickefs available
Tickets for the Davidson-East Carolina
game are available in the ticket office in
Minges Coliseum.
Students are urged to buy tickets as
soon as possible so it will be available for
them to sit with other East Carolina
students at the game.
Student tickets are $2.50 and general
admission tickets are $5.
JV Basketball
All men interested in playing junior
ivarsity basketball are urged to come by
room 162 in Minges Coliseum and see
coach Dave Patton.
Practice will begin the night of
October 15.
There will be a meeting for all
interested players at 4 p.m. on October 11
in room 145 Minges.
We blew it
Last Thursday's sports page gave the
incorrect date for the purple-gold
swimming meet. It is officially scheduled
for Tuesday evening November 13 at
Minges Pool.
mm
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Title
Fountainhead, October 2, 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
October 02, 1973
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.665
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39879
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