Fountainhead, January 31, 1974


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EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,
NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
I Han kins clarifies
traffic study story
William W Hankins, Chairman of the
Ad Hoc Campus Transportation Study
Committee, submitted the following to
correct a previous story regarding the
traffic study situation.
DATE: January 30, 1974
FROM: William W. Hankins, Chairman
Ad Hoc Campus Transportation Study
Committee
TO: Pat Crawford, Editor-in-Chief
Fountainhead
RE: Clarification regarding the status
and responsibilities of the Ad Hoc
Campus Transportation Study Committee
In its meeting on December 11, 1973,
the ECU Faculty Senate approved a
recommendation of the Faculty Welfare
Committee to establish "an ad hoc
committee to study the entire parking and
traffic situation on campus This
committee is to report its findings to the
Faculty Senate at the end of the Spring
Quarter.
The committee consists of 4 faculty
members and 2 students representing
several disciplines. Three committee
members have previously been employed
as city planners-one of the three has a
strong background in transportation
planning.
Although the committee held its first
meeting on January 30th, the transport-
ation study will not begin in earnest until
the first week in March. In the interim the
committee will devote a considerable
degree of its time to preliminary
organizational details and establishing
contact with various individuals and
agencies involved in one way or another in
the development of campus transportation
policies. Recommendations or plans for
any component of the campus
transportation system will not be
forthcoming until mid-Ap ,l at the earliest.
The study will be undertaken with the
assistance of students pursuing a minor
in Urban and Regional Planning. For the
past two years students enrolled in the
course "Urban Site Design" have studied
transportation problems on the East
Carolina University campus. This year's
class will be involved to a considerable
degree in the collection and analysis of
campus transportation data. The data
base obtained through the efforts of the
"Urban Site Design" students will greatly
facilitate the work of the ad hoc
committee.
At the present time students enrolled
in the class "Planning Techniques II" are
assisting the city planner, John Schofield,
in the preparation of a proposal for a
municipal bicycle pathway system. In
order to avoid confusion it should be
noted that this study is independent of
the campus transportation study being
conducted by the ad hoc committee.
However, the ad hoc committee will
certainly give serious consideration to
coordinating its proposals with those
developed by the city.
In May, 1965, a preliminary
development plan was prepared for the
campus by a campus planning
firm. Although the plan contained
campus transportation recommendations,
these proposals are now obsolete due to
developments during the past nine
yearsThe "Physical Plant' section of
the 1972 Faculty Self-Evaluation Report
for East Carolina University recommended
the establishment of a campus planning
board composed of both students and
faculty. Perhaps the Faculty Senate ad
hoc committee will prove to be a
prototype of the permanent campus
planning board envisioned in the
self-study. At a minimum, the committee
will provide the University with the
up-to-date planning data no longer
provided by the preliminary development
plan.
CLAUDE F. SITTON editor and vice president of the Raleigh News and
an infrequent visit to the ECU campus Wednesday despite gaoline
Raleigh. He spoke to journalism students about new problems facing
how they might be handled.
Observer, paid
shortages in
the press and'
SGA treasurer
Bodenhamer calls for impeachment action
By DARRELL WILLIAMS
News Editor
SGA President Bill Bodenhamer
announced yesterday that he "is taking
impeachment proceedings against SGA
Treasurer Mike Ertis because of his
refusal to sign several requisitions for
money from the SGA Cabinet and the
SGA Executive Council
The dispute involves two requisitions
for SGA money. One is a requisition
asking for enough money from the SGA
Cabinet's budget to mail out newsletters
to all ECU students. Bodenhamer
described the tenative newsletter as "a
speech to the students on what the SGA
has done under my administration since
last May He stated further: "My
administration has initiated 35 to 40
programs so far this year, using funds
from the approximate quarter of a million
dollar SGA budget and I wanted to tell
each student directly, in the form of a
letter, what has been done with his or her
annual $25.50 student fees. The cost of
doing this would be about $617.00 and
there are cheaper ways of doing it; in
fact, I have had some disapprovals of
doing it from other SGA officials, but I
don't want to inform the students of such
a matter by just sliding a note under their
doors
The other requisition is from the SGA
Executive Council asking for approximate-
ly $11.00 for the purchase of a plaque
which bears the words of appreciation to
the ECU Traffic Office from the SGA for
their good service.
In both organizations, only one
member was required to sign the
requisitions (the Executive Council used
"Miscellaneous Funds" and the Cabinet
doesn't have a line-item budget), therefore
money taken from the respective budgets
did not have to be and was not voted
upon.
SGA Treasurer Mike Ertis who,
according to the SGA Constitution, has
the duty "of signing all valid requisitions
for organizations sponsored by the SGA"
declared the requisitions invalid and
refused to sign them. "I am doing this
mainly because I feel that the
organizations as a whole, not individuals
within the organizations, should decide
how the money in their budget should be
spent, especially in such cases as these
SGA Attorney General Tom Clare
issued an advisory opinion on the validity
of these requisitions on Jan. 24. It
states:
In reference to spending requisitions
from the Student Government Executive
Council and Student Government Cabinet,
it is the opinion of this office that monies
appropriated to either the SGA Cabinet or
the Executive Council should be
requisitioned and spent accordingly to the
line items of the appropriation. However,
in cases where the Legislature has
designated a certain amount to be
appropraited to either of the aforemen-
tioned bodies as "Miscellaneous Funds
these funds may be requisitioned by any
member of the respective body to be used
for any costs incurred in the duties of
their office. If a controversy among the
members of the Executive Council arises
as to a certain expenditure, logic and
reason dictate that a general consensus of
that body would be necessary in order to
spend the monies which had been
appropriated to that body as a
whole. However, since money is appro-
priated to the Cabinet with no line items,
any member of the Cabinet may
requisition that money as he and the
President of the SGA see fit.
Ertis is appealing Clares' decision,
which upholds the validity of the
requisitions, to the Review Board which
will meet in the near future. He declined
to comment further on the matter but said
that his main reasons for not signing the
requisitions would come out in the
Review Board decision.
In other action, SGA President Bill
Bodenhamer sent the Publications Board
and the Real House, organizations which
have just recently been appropriated SGA
funds, the following letterultimatum:
"As of today, your constitution has
not been approved by the Student
Government Association Legislature.
Because it states in our Constitution that
CONTINUED ON PAGE THIRTEEN.
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2
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
mm
news FLASH FLASH FLASH FLASHIFLASH
Geology grant
Scott Hartness, senior geology
student at ECU, has received a research
grant form the N.C. Academy of Science
in support of his research on "Infrared and
X-ray Diffraction Studies, on Xonotlite
from Durham, North Carolina Trie study
is sponsored and supervised by Dr. Pei-lm
Tien, Assistant Professor of Geology at
ECU.
European studies
Dr. Goetz Fehr of Inter Nationes in the
government of West Germany, will be the
featured resource person in a series of
events sponsored by ECU'S European
Studies Committee here Feb. 3-8.
This committee, which is chaired by
Dr Ralph Birchard of the Geography
Department, is an interdisciplinary
committee, one of four foreign studies
committees which operate under the
direction of Dean Richard L. Capwell.
Inter Nationes, the semi-governmental
agency in West Germany which Dr. Fehr
directs, is responsible for such cultural
exchanges as intercultural exhibitions and
Goethe institutes.
The theme of the 1974 European
Studies Program is to be European
Culture Today: Evolution or Revolution?
Whereas in the past the annual programs
have centered around formal speeches by
numerous invited specialists, this year the
approach will be innovative in that direct (
personal contact with Dr. Fehr will be
provided in regular classroom situations,
where the informal group discussion
system will prevail.
In addition to meeting with classes in
the German, Political Science, History,
Anthropology, Art History, Geography,
and Music Departments, Dr. Fehr will
present film-lectures to four Greenville
comrrunity groups: the Optimist Club,
Clio Book Club, Woman's Club and
American Association of University
Women.
The public is invited to attend the
class sessions at the university in which
Dr. Fehr is scheduled to appear, the
Tuesday evening meeting with the
Woman's Club of Greenville, and the
Wednesday evening meeting with the
American Association of University
Women.
Chancellor Jenkins Junior panhellenics Piano recital
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, Chancellor of
ECU, has been re-elected to a new
two-year term on the executive committee
of the National Commission on
Accrediting.
The ECU Chancellor is serving his
fourth year on the National Commission
as representative of the American
Association of State-supported Colleges
and Universities. The National Commis-
sion on Accrediting is the largest and
most prestigious education accrediting
body in the United States. It held its
annual business meeting in Washington
over the past weekend.
Dr. William L. Boyd, president of the
University of Iowa, ws elected president
of the National Commission on
Accrediting succeeding Dr. Lloyd H.
Elliott, president of George Washington
University.
Promotion
James A. McGee, a staff member of
the East Carolina University Division of
Continuing Education since 1964, has
been promoted to Assistant Dean for
Undergraduate Continuing Education.
Announcing McGee's promotion, Dean
David J. Middleton said McGee will
continue to direct ECU'S Sea Grant Marine
Advisory Service for commercial fisher-
men in addition to his duties as assistant
dean.
McGee's new duties will involve
various off-campus programs which
enable adults to enroll in evening courses
for college credit as well as the campus
evening program now offered through
ECU'S University College, Dr. Middleton
said.
During his tenure with the ECU
Division, McGee has been director of
ECU'S Cherry Point Center and director of
the ECU Coastal Resources Center at
Roanoke Island.
He holds degrees in biology from
Appalachian State University and has
done additional study at Wake Forest,
N.C. State and Cornell Universities.
A native of Wilkes County, McGee is
the author of a study of the plant and
animal life of Bear Island published by the
N.C. Department of Conservation and
Development.
Contents
SGA IMPEACHMENT PROCEEDINGS page one
BUCCANEER AND SORENSONpage three
URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING page four
PARKS, RECREATION AND CONSERVATION page five
REVIEWS page six
GERTRUDE STEIN page seven
EDITORIALFORUMCOMMENTARY pages eight and nine
MATH 65 WITH VAN LATHAM page ten
EUROPEAN STUDIES PROGRAM page twelve
WOMEN AND FLASHES page thirteen
SPORTSpages fourteen, fifteen, and sixteen
Officers of the 1974 Junior Panhellenic
Board were elected recently. They are
president, Lise Turner; rush chairman,
Sherran Brewer; vice-president, Dale
Wilson; corresponding secretary, Dana
Bishop; recording secretary, Susan Fish;
treasurer, Judy Bunch; parliamentarian
and chaplain, Lynne Massengin; and
editor, Kathy Koonce.
Dr. Mayo
Dr. Fitzhugh Mayo, chairman of the
Department of Family Practice at the
Medical College of Virginia, will speak at
ECU tonight.
Dr. Mayo is an expert on family
medicine and is expected to discuss the
role of the family doctor in society. His
speech is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
Allied Health Auditorium on the corner of
Charles Street and U.S. 264 by-pass.
Dr. Abdullah Fatteh, professor of
Pathology at ECU said that Dr. Mayo is an
outstanding speaker and a man with great
expertise in the field of family medicine.
"He is especially aware of the
problems concerning general practice in
rural areas and he will talk on the
contributions that general practitioners
can make Fatteh said.
"His speech should render advice to
the general public on how best to take
advantage of the existing medical
services, even though they're in short
supply he said.
Prior to assuming duties at the
Medical College of Virginia in Richmond
in 1970, Dr. Mayo was in private practice
at Virginia Beach, Va. He is a graduate of
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and the
Medial College of Virginia.
Dr. Mayo is active in several
professional socieities and is currently
serving on a committee studying the
shortage of family physicians in Virgina.
Computing center
The ECU Computing Center has
undergone a partial reorganization
resulting in changes of responsibility for
key management individuals.
Robert D. Bolonde, formerly Director
of Operations, has assumed duties as
Acting Assistant Director of the
Computing Center. In addition, Bolonde
has been designated Center Security
Officer.
William E. Little has been appointed
Acting Operations Manger, with respon-
sibility for overall management of the
entire Operations Department. Little's
duties represent an expansion of his
previous responsibilities to include
management of the Keypunch function as
well as Computer operations and
dispatching.
In announcing these appointments,
Richard S. Lennon, Jr Acting Director of
the ECU Computing Center, stated, "We
are very fortunate to have the benefit of
the extensive experience that Mr. Little
and Mr. Bolonde bring to the Computing
Center. I am grateful for their support,
and for the major contributions that these
individuals are making toward accom-
plishing the objectives of this organi-
zation
Paul Tardif, faculty pianist in the ECU
School of Music, will perform works by
Debussy and Prokofieff in a recital
program Wednesday, Feb. 6, at 8:15 p.m.
in the A. J. Fletcher Music Center Recital
Hall.
The first half of the program will be
devoted to Debussy's Second Book of
Preludes, a series of impressionistic
pieces generally considered to be the
composer's best works for solo
piano. Tardifs performance of the
Preludes is the first presentation of the
entire series on the ECU campus.
During the second half of the recital,
Tardif will perform the Sonata No. 6 in A
Major of Prokofieff. Written in Moscow
during World War II, the sonata is often
called the "War Sonata" and is noted for
its extremely violent and angry nature.
Tardif will briefly discuss some of the
salient features of the sonata before his
performance.
A former student of Cecile Genhart at
the Eastman School of Music and of Leon
Fleisher at the Peabody Conservatory,
Tardif received the Artist's Diploma from
the Salzburg Mozarteum while studying in
Europe under a Fulbright Grant.
His extensive touring experience
included a concert tour of Poland in 1963
which was sponsored by the U.S. Senate
Department.
The recital is free and open to the
public.
SAM
The Society for Advancement of
Management will hold a dinner meeting
on February 7 at Fiddlers III Restaurant.
The guest speaker will be Jack
Laughtery, president of Hardee's Food
System. His topic will be "Staffing and
Financing a Rapidly Expanding Organi-
sation The meeting begins at 7:00 and
the cost is $3.00 For further information
call Ken Dollar at 752-7746, or Ken Smith
at 756-7477.
Dr. Debnath
Dr. Debnath of the ECU Mathematics
faculty is the author of an article which
appeared in the first issue of a new
international journal in the fields of
applies sciences and engineering.
The journal, LETTERS IN APPLIED
AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, is
published by the Pergamon Press, New
York, and is edited by Professor A. C.
Eringen of Princeton University.
Dr. Debnath who has been on the
faculty at ECU since 1968, is a prolific
writer and this current article, "On the
Hydromagnetic Spin-up Flows in a
Rotating Fluid" is a continuation of his
studies on electrically conducting rotating
liquids and gases under the action of an
external magnetic field. This work has
applications in solar physics, especially
in the propagation of solar energy in the
Earth's atmosphere. In addition to
research and his teaching in the
mathematics and physics departments of
ECU, Dr. Debn h serves as the
Editor-in-Chief for t I Overseas Office of
the Bulletin of the Calcutta Mathematical
Society.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
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Buccaneer advisor
Sorenson's role not one of censor
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By BARBARA TURNER
Staff Writer
The 73 edition of the Buccaneer has
received much attention and various
reactions according to its literary advisor,
Mrs. Mary Sorensen. Mrs. Sorensen has
been literary advisor to the Buccaneer for
eleven years. According to Mrs. Soren-
sen, "The 70, 71, 72 editions were rated
All-American by the Associated Collegiate
Pr ss. Very few of these ratings are given
in the nation
Mrs. Sorensen stated that her role is
one of literary advisor, not a censor. "I
assist the staff in meeting deadlines, by
proof-reading, assisting in the writing of
headlines and captions, in tracking down
bits of information and identifying
pictures. I do not rule on what goes into
the yearbook and what does not. If I find
an article in bad taste, I so advise the
editor. However, I was consulted very
little by the 1973 editor. I did read the
acceptable articles and assisted the staff
member who wrote the interview with Dr.
Kilpatrick
Mrs. Sorensen, in her remarks about
the 73 Buccaneer, commented, "I was not
advised of the format or the attempted art
work. If I had read the copy, I would have
been horrified by the treatment of
religion, but my primary role is only to
assist the editor and staff in expressing
their own ideas
According to SGA by-laws, students
have complete control of student
publications at ECU with financial support
from the Publications Board which is
composed of seven voting members "who
shall be students Non-voting members
are the Dean of Student Affairs, the
Financial Advisor of the SGA, the
editors-in-chief of all publications.
Mrs. Sorensen also gave her views
concerning the quality of the yearbook.
"All students collectively are responsible
ultimately for the quality of the yearbook,
by their choice of student representatives
at all levels. Every editor has his own
unique personality to express; therefore,
each edition has its own character. It also
shows the creativity of the staff
Mrs. Sorensen offered suggestions for
improvement of the Buccaneer saying, "I
feel that every edition should have
sophisticated humor, which is a part of
the college scene every year. Foremost,
the yearbook must give complete
coverage of the events of the year in copy
and photography. Any edition of the
Buccaneer is the composite effort of
SORENSEN
Steia promises 'true experience
with summer trip to Costa Rica
By SUSAN SHERMAN
Staff Writer
How does the idea of spending this
summer in Costa Rica grab you? A month
there may sound better than that dull
summer job you may now see yourself
toiling in. Imagine yourself on one of the
many beaches or snorkelling the live coral
reefs off the Central American
coast. How about a thrilling train ride
over those deep gorges that you imagined
were only in the movies. If none of these
thoughts tickle your fancy, how about
climbing an active volcano, eating a
complete sirloin dinner for about $1.50, or
getting in on a little "night life" in San
Jose. Sounds better all the time doesn't it
- if so, then this is your summer to
journey to Costa Rica.
The East Carolina Department of
Geography and Division of Continuing
Education are offering the summer
session in Costa Rica. Dr. Donald Steila,
in charge of the trip, promises it to be a
true experience. His enthusiasm can
convince any student into going,
im m??i?i HH ??oil
especially when he begins speaking of the
many attractions the group will enjoy.
Dr. Steila emphasized that the course
is designed to stress both the physical
and cultural environment of the
country. In this course, the student can
personally experience each attraction
instead of having to picture it from a
classroom lecture. One example Dr.
Steila utilized to express his point, is the
proposed visit to a large banana
plantation. Reading about the manage-
ment of a banana plantation is nothing
compared to watching the men run around
hauling all those bananas.
"Costa Rica, albeit a small country,
encompasses some twelve distinctive
tropical region life zones, each of which
in turn includes a marked range and
localized diversity of plant associations
and their successional seres This
description of the country comes from the
phamplet prepared by Dr. Steila.
Any student participating in this
venture will not have spent his time in
vain. Nine quarter hours will be awarded
mmmwmm
in both the Undergraduate and Graduate
levels. Another positive fart about the
trip includes NO out-of-state tuition.
Since money is always a factor in a
long jaunt, the truth shall now come to
light. The price of that exciting summer
is $678.00, which includes tuition, round
trip air-fare from Miami to San Jose, and
much more.
Individual course requirements are
small. "Each student will be expected
to: (1) maintain a notebook of field
observations and lecture materials
presented in seminar sessions, and (2)
develop a short term-paper relating to
some aspect of the Costa Rican or
Tropical Environment These require-
ments were also taken from the phamplet.
Application deadline is May 15, but Dr.
Steila urges any interested students to
see him in his office (Social Science A224)
to discuss further details. Only 15
students will be taken on the Costa Rica
summer session and any interested
persons should secure their application
immediately.
mmnm 11
only hope that
will lend him
support in this
many people. The school photographer,
for example, can make or break the
pictorial quality of any edition
When asked her reaction to the
four-letter word in the Buccaneer, Mrs.
Sorensen replied, "It seems to me that
rather than using obscenity in a $50,000
publication that will come down to
posterity, it would be wiser to let those
interested in obscenity buy pornographic
literature on an individual basis
Mrs. Sorensen discussed the effect
she believes the '73 edition of the
Buccaneer will have on future editions
saying, "it made the student body aware
of their yearbook. Perhaps the good
editions were taken for granted. Long
hours went into those editions. Several
years the staff worked during Christmas
vacation in an unheated building. One
year, two boys got permission to live in
an unheated dormitory during one week of
their Christmas vacation to meet a
deadling for the Buccaneer. Sports
Editor, John Lowe, in 1970, for example,
worked all night long on a Saturday night
to meet his deadline
"I have great confidence in the ability
and good taste of Gary McCullough, the
1974 editor of the Buccaneer Mrs.
Sorensen commented,
the student body
encouragement and
difficult task
According to the June 5,1972 issue of
Newsweek about a dozen yearbooks have
gone out of business altogether, and at
many institutions student editors are
frantically looking for new approaches
that will interest their apathetic
classmates. Some colleges have even had
trouble in assembling a yearbook staff.
School yearbooks are crammed with
portraits of fellow students one scarcely
knows and stories on fraternities,
sororities, athletic teams, and campus
clubs that many do not belong to.
Some universities, particularly those
whose campuses are large ariV diverse,
are trying to buck the trend with annuals
tailored for specific audiences. Black
students at Stanford have just completed
a volume that is notably mainly for
devoting more space to attacking the
university than to worshipping it.
Even the more traditional yearbooks
are radically modifying their formats. The
'73 edition of the Buccaneer is similar to
Princeton's 96 year old "Bric-a-Brac The
Bric-a-Brac consists of two soft-cover
volumes in a slipcase; the first is a
compendium of sports, student and
faculty pictures, and the second is a
75-page exploration of campus life. The
75-page exploration of campus life has
several pages on campus sex, drugs and
alcohol.
As yearbook editors attempt to reflect
the current campus scene, they risk
offending some people. According to the
Newsweek articles, when the LSU
"Gumbo" used nude photos to illustrate
the work of the art department, the book
was condemned to the Louisiana State
Legislature. But the Gumbo sold a record
13,500 copies and went into a second
printing for the first time in its history.
It seems that the current generation of
students at most universities have little
inclination to be nostalgic over college
careers that have contained no more
turmoil and political anguish than
goldfish-swallowing.







4
FOUNTAINHEADVOL
5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
M
Demand for more planners
Urban, regional planning expands
MR. WILLIAM HANKINS
Special to the Fountainhead
Rapid urbanization coupled with the
increasing severity and complexity of the
social, political, economic, and physical
problems confronting contemporary
America has resulted in an increasing
demand for urban and regional planning
personnel.
In response to the increasing demand
for trained planning specialists, the
Department of Geography at ECU
established an undergraduate minor in
Urban and Regional Planning in
1964. During the last nine years 115
students have graduated with a minor in
Planning. Many of these graduates are
currently employed in planning agencies
throughout the Southeast. Other
graduates are currently employed in
graduate schools either in Planning or
related fields and have successfully
completed graduate degrees.
Under the direction of Professor
William W. Hankins, ECU'S program in
urban and regional planning has expanded
to include all aspects of planning
problems. The curriculum currently con-
sists of 41 quarter hours of courses in
urban planning, regional planning, urban
form, planning techniques, planning
legislation, planning theory, and urban
site design.
MAJOR PROPOSED
A proposal for a B.S. Degree in Urban
and Regional Planning was submitted in
November. 1972, by Dr. Robert E. Cramer,
Chairman of the Department of
Geography, and Professor Hankins. A
major step toward implementation of
the Planning Major was realized recently
when the proposal was passed by the
ECU Board of Trustees. Approval must
still be obtained from the North Carolina
Board of Governors. If implemented, ECU
would be one of only three colleges in the
Southeast offering a Bachelor's Degree in
Urban and Regional Planning.
Since the services of urban and
regional planning specialists are so
desperately needed at the present time,
employment opportunities are excellent
for planning graduates. The average
starting salary for graduates of the ECU
planning program is approximately
$8,700. However, several students have
obtained starting salaries in excess of
$10,000.
According to Professor Hankins "Eight
planning positions remain unfilled at the
3D

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8
PROFESSOR WILLIAM W HANKINS directs the expansion of the urban and
regional curriculum at ECU.
present time due to an insufficient
number of planning graduates. At one
point during the summer four graduates
of the Urban and Regional Planning
Program were able to choose from
fourteen available planning positions
Those students who pursue graduate work
in Urban and Regional Planning or a
related field subsequent to graduation can
anticipate employment at top-level
salaries.
During the past several years urban
and regional planning students have been
involved in numerous curriculum-related
activities. They have attended con-
ferences at other universities and hosted
two conferences at ECU. They have
toured one of the best examples of
colonial tour planning in America-
Will iamsburg, Virginia, and they visited
the "new town" communities of Reston,
Virginia, and Columbia, Maryland. In
addition, the Student Planning Associ-
ation (SPAN) has sponsored visits to
Strike against tuition hike works
(CPS)-When administrators at the
University of Michigan (Ann Arbor)
announced a tuition hike of 24 percent for
the 1973-74 school year, student leaders
were quick to charge the University with
taking excessive income and organized a
tuition strike.
AM the administration denied
i'aes and the strike drew little
support, the Board of Regents last month
ordered a five percent reduction in tuition
costs for the winter and spring
terms. The university had raised its
tuition because it feared it would lose
money from new requirements governing
the residency status of students.
The financial crunch never came,
however, and the school discovered in
November it would raise $3.7 million more
than it expected due "largely" to fewer
students applying for residency status to
pay the lower-in-state tuition, than had
been feared. With the extra funds the
Board decided to spend an additional $2
million on student aid stipends for
graduate teaching assistants as well as
granting the tuition rebate.
ECU by state and nationally recognized
urban and regional planning experts.
Numerous planning students have also
interned in planning agencies through the
Southeast.
Last year the urban form class
analyzed the processes, determinants,
and features of urban spatial structure in
selected cities. The students prepared
term papers on various aspects of the
urban development of cities such as
Paris London, Amsterdam, Savannah,
and Washington, D.C. They constructed
models depicting the transition in urban
form over long periods as graphic aids to
accompany the papers.
CLASSES INVOLVED
The planning techniques classes are
currently involved with projects from the
City of Greenville and Pitt County. One
class is working with the city planner,
John Schofield, on a bicycle system
proposal for the city while the other class
is involved in a county zoning and land
use study for the Greenville-Ayden-Grifton
area. The latter project is being
undertaken with the assistance of Howard
Hurlocker, the Pitt County planner.
Professor Hankins and two planning
students, Susan Sedgwick and Stanley
Watkins, have contracted with the North
Carolina Internship Office to deter nine
the availability of off-campus learning
opportunities for college students in the
five county Mideast Region. This study of
student internship needs within Region Q
is being conducted with the cooperation
of Mr. Ed Jones, Executive Director of the
Mideast Commission in Washington,
North Carolina. The results of this
research effort will be made available to
the North Carolina Internship Office in the
latter part of February.
A campus transportation study will be
undertaken at ECU during the Spring
Quarter by a committee chaired by
Professor Hankins. The committee will be
composed of both faculty and students
representing several academic depart-
ments on campus. Three of the
committee members have held city or
regional planning positions: one has a
professional background in transportation
planning. The study was authorized by
the ECU Faculty Senate. The committee
will present its findings to this body at
the end of the Spring Quarter.
Additional information regarding the
Urban and Regional Planning Program
may be secured by writing Professor
Hankins at the following address:
William W. Hankins, Director, Urban and
Regional Planning Program, Department
of Geography, P.O. Box 2723, ECU,
Greenville, North Carolina 27834.
RESEARCH
Thousands of Topics
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
5
Dr. Ralph Steele
Originator of PRC major ends study, leaves
By JIM DODSON
Staff Writer
Dr. Ralph Steele, the director of the
Parks, Recreation and Conservation (PRC)
department is leaving East Carolina. His
departure will represent the culmination
of over ten years of work and research in
an effort that helped to establish the
program that now exists at ECU. With his
absence the program faces definite
changes in administration and even
possibly in the curriculum itself.
Recenly Dr. Steele talked about his
involvement in the program and offered
some interesting insight into the
formation of the PRC major that is
presently awarded through the program.
He defined its objectives as being, "To
qualify the students for professional
employment, by industry and agencies,
concerned with the development and
management of people-oriented, outdoor-
related programs and resources for
leisure
Included in PRC study are four main
areas of concentration. The first area is
known as the rehabilitative therapeutic
option. It concerns working with people
who through some mental or physical
disadvantagement or other social
condition find themselves confronted with
free time on their hands.
In helping these people, the objective
is to achieve the same psychological
satisfaction that they might otherwise
gain in other activities that they are
unable to participate in.
The second area of concentration is
concerned with community and commer-
cial recreation. This area is aimed mainly
at the "white collar" worker who spends
his time in more commercially-oriented
recreation. Dr. Steele cited two examples
of students working in this area, "We have
a married couple who recently graduated
from ECU and went out to Steamboat
Springs, Colorado. They are presently
working in a low-level managerial position
with a commercial resort outfit. Another
student recently became director of a
county park system in one of the western
counties of the state. He is utilizing his
PRC training by planning and implement-
ing the plans for a comprehensive park
system for that county
The third area of concentration in PRC
is the study of social and youth-serving
agencies such as Boy's Clubs and
community coordinated activities. Gen-
erally PRC does not get too involved with
the social welfare aspects of a community
but does encourage its students to take
courses that would enable them to better
understand welfare programs.
The last area that the program is
specifically concerned with deals
primarily with parks, conservation and
outdoor recreation, and is probably the
single most important area in PRC.
Steele attributes most of the success of
this area, and indeed the whole program,
to the influence of the Outward Bound
program.
"I cannot stress enough the
importance of Outward Bound on our
program here. I believe so strongly in its
influence on us that I can't emphasize it
enough he commented.
This influence began in 1970 when the
program was awarded an initial grant of
$5,000.00 which enabled thirteen stu-
dents, who had been involved in a PRC
minor, that had been established since
1960, to attend and observe Outward
Bound in action. Its influence was
instrumental in the organization and
implementation of the present curriculum
offered and the B.S. professional
non-teaching degree that is now available.
A student contemplating PRC as a
major will find that the program is flexible
in scope and offers a variety of
concentrations while includina thr?p
DR. RALPH STEELE
basic major aspects of study. First the
student must satisfy the basic general
college requirements. Secondly he must
study an established core curriculum of
PRC-related courses. Thirdly he partici-
pates in the four already mentioned
cognate areas which include field trips
and independent travel and study.
Dr. Steele talked about the broad
scope of the program, "We are highly
interdisciplinary in our approach and
encourage our students to take as many
courses as they can in other disciplines
because they will not be just working with
professional recreation people, but with a
broad spectrum of personalities and
ideas
Today there are approximately 120
students working towards a PRC
degree. The program has grown con-
siderably in the past few years, and
seems to be offering rewarding career
opportunities for graduates.
With Dr. Steele's departure from the
program to work on a federally-funded
grant (that involves research on
recreationaly waterway development in
eastern North Carolina), there has been
much discussion as to the fate of the PRC
program. Many feel that it may return to
its previous status under the department
of Physical Education, thus destroying
much of the flexibility and broadening
experiences that the program now offers.
Dr. Steele discussed the current
actions being taken to insure its
continued success, "The whole idea is
looking for someone to replace me as
coordinator in the department is to find a
person who will eventually become the
administrator of the curriculum as
well. We must fine someone capable of
dealing with such an expanded
program. Whoever is chosen, he or she
must have the freedom to develop the
program as they see fit. Dr. Edgar Hooks,
chairman of the Health and Physical
Education Department, has been very
helpful and understanding about the
whole matter. I also think that the
program is almost entirely contingent on
the continued support of the students
As to whether or not he would be
returning to the program Steele replied, "V
can't really say at this time, but I think
that the program will continue to grow as
long as quality and strict control are
maintained. If not, I think it will grow like
mad and then die. If we start going for
quantity as opposed to quality, we're
sealing our own doom
Dr. Steele was asked to reflect on his
past years in the program. "Well he said
with a smile, "it certainly has been as
interesting as it has rewarding. Why did
you know that we've had three pairs of our
students to get married. I wonder if that
says something. We don't charge
anything for counseling though
In a more serious vein he added, "I
suppose frustration motivated me to get
this thing off the ground. Frustration at
seeing the academic conditions present
when we started. School was not doing
what it was supposed to be doing. They
were not reaching the kid's minds, bodies
and spirits. Our sterile classrooms were
producing sterile minds-minds that
needed to be stimulated. That's where
recreation comes in. It certainly isn't all
physical, it deals with the spirit and
attitude of man as well
In conclusion he added, "You know, I
can't tell you the rewards this experience
has offered, but the thing that makes it so
meaningful and worthwhile jan best be
summed up in one word-people. People
make it all worth the time
If people make things all worthwhile
then certainly people who teach and guide
other people must be really something
special. To the students of PRC, Dr.
Ralph Steele has been, and is someone
very special. Whoever replaces him will
To prevent escape,
narc kills, goes free
(CPS)-The federal government has
challenged California's right to prosecute
a US narcotics agent for his homicide.
The government, arguing in California
Appellate Court, stated that the state has
no right "to try a federal agent in the
proper discharge of his federal duty
The agent, Lloyd N. Clifton, was
indicted for second degree murder last
January after he shot an unarmed 24-year
old suspect in the back during a San
Francisco drug raid.
A companion of the victim said that
they had become "petrified" when they
saw 19 long-haired men running toward
their cabin with drawn guns.
Clifton, one of the plain clothes
agents, said that he shot the youth in the
back "to prevent him from escaping
Charges against the victim's companion
were dropped.
have a great example to follow, in what
Steele has achieved in such a relatively
short period of time.
Where the PRC program goes after Dr.
Steele may very well depend on those
people whom he believes so strongly in -
the students themselves.
EiriMei
lay offer RX via
oversea: training
For the session starting Fall, 1974,
Euromed will assist qualified Amer-
ican students in gaining admission
to recognized overseas medical
schools.
And that's just the beginning.
Since the language barrier constitutes
the preponderate difficulty in succeed-
ing at a foreign school, the Euromed
program also includes an intensive
12 week medical and conversational
language course, mandatory for all
students. Five hours daily. 5 days per
week (1216 weeks) the course is
given in the country where the student
will attend medical school.
In addition. Euromed provides stu-
dents with a 12 week intensive cul
tural orientation program, with
American students now studying medi-
cine in that particular country serving
as counselors
Senior or graduate students currently
enrolled in an American university are
eligible to participate in the Euromed
program.
For application and further
information, phone toll tree,
(800)645 1234
or write,
Euromed, Ltd.
170 Old Country Road
Mineola. NY 11501
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6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
m
Reviews
hi
AREOSMITH
Columbia KC32006
By J. K. LOFT1N
Staff Writer
As the liner notes on the back of this
album say, "What can a poor boy do,
except play for a rock and roll
band?" After listening to this album one
realized that that's exactly what these five
refugees from the wrong side of the tracks
have taken as their motto. This new
group presents a fairly decent package for
the R&R affecianado, especially consider-
ing their obscure origin. None of the
members has ever been heard of before,
as in the case of Montrose or Doug Sahm,
and this helps to keep the material a bit
unrefined and raw. But there is
something which smacks of things yet to
come. Produced by Adrian Barber, the
album retains much of the energy one
would expect from a live rock and roll
band and the sound is well balanced with
a minimum of electronic gimrock buffs as
the producer of the Allman Brothers' first
album, and while this album isn't quite
the musical statement that that one was,
it nonetheless has some good points.
The opening song, "Make It has
some of the most interesting chord
changes to be found in straight rock and
roll. This is one of Aerosmith's strongest
points. The fact that they do not restrict
themselves to three chords as so many
other "so-so" bands do, doesn't mean
that this album is of consistently high
quality either, for some songs are just
space fillers. "Somebody" and "Write
Me" can be easily forgotten. However,
songs like the aforementioned "Make It"
and their single release "Dream On" give
us a hint that this is a band that will
continue to develop and with a little
refinement and professional direction we
may see the beginnings of something
really promising. Their brand new
single, "Dream On which is perhaps the
best song on the album, or at least the
most unique. A soft ballad with
harpsichord and guitar blending well, it
starts off gently, building a momentum
which does not push, but rather carries
the song along. Lead singer, Steven
Tyler, really shows what he can do on this
number, with his voice sounding
alternately like Dion and Elton John on
their softer works. Tying all of this
together with a memorable melody, it
builds until Tyler's voice goes into a
couple of Robert Plantish flights, finally
returning to its original level. The only
fault in this song is the quality of the
recording on the instruments: it is rather
thin and tinny. A mellow number such as
this should have a corresponding
background rather than a metallic
mellotron and guitar. But the song itself
and Tyler's excellent vocals come through
all of this. The last song on side one,
"One Way Street while in and of itself is
not that good, contains some elements,
particularly the way the two rhythm
guitars are structured with harmonic and
dissonant changes, which proved to be
quite interesting.
The group itself presents a strange
picture on the front cover, particularly
Tyler and lead guitarist Joe Perry, who
have got to be two of the rauchiest
looking rockers around, with the rest of
the band not looking much better. Sup-
posedly from rough backgrounds, they
have channeled their working class energy
into rock and roll (sounds like an old
story, doesn't it, but then that's how the
Beatles started) and have come out with
something that promises to continue to
improve. If this album doesn't seem to be
quite right, just wait for the next one, it
should be.
Editor's Note: This record supplied to the
Fountainhead courtest of Rock n' Soul,
'Lady Sings the Blues'
depicts sensitive artist
FOUNTAINHEAD needs music, arts, and
theatre reviewers immediately. If interest-
ed call 758-6366 (ask for reviews editor) or
leave note in reviews editor's box.
By HELENA WOODARD
Staff Writer
The movie, "Lady Sings the Blues
drew an impressionable flock of viewers
on campus recently. Perhaps the crowds
turned out for a view of the superb acting
ability exemplified by singer Diana Ross,
an academy award nominee, and for the
suave, strikingly handsome Billy Dee
Williams who played the parts of Billy
Holliday's husband, Louis McKay,
I could not help but wonder how many
people walked away from the movie
unbiased by its lowly depiction of Billy
Holiday overwhelmingly as a dope
addict. Since many students probably
had never heard of or read about the life
of Blues Artist Billy Holiday, I felt like
sharing some interesting findings about
the tragic life of a great lady.
Whites did not get her on dope, and
the fact that Billy was married three times
shatters the lengthly, heavenly romance
which the movie implied that she
had. Most important of all, Billie's
problems as a heroin addict did not
dominate her more sensitive qualities as
an entertainer.
Billy Holiday, bom Eleanora Fagan,
was one of the greatest sensations the
jazz world had ever known. She reigned
and excelled in the company of such
blues and jazz artists as Count Basie,
Dizzy Gillespie, Bill Eckstine and Hazel
Scott during the fabulous jazz age of the
thirties and forties.
Her billing title as "Lady Day" was
indicative of the respect and courtesy
which she deserved and earned in an era
when the Stepinf etch its were rolling
eyeballs and the heavy mamas were
butt-shaking belters.
In a January, 1973, article in Ebony
magazine, friends close to Billy Holiday
described her music as being delicate and
romantic - the type that would fill a
barroom of drunks with the intoxication of
her music. Among her hits were "Stange
Fruit "I'll Get By "Fine and Mellow"
and "On the Sunny Side of the
Street Ms. Holiday once said that she
could never sing anything without "feeling
her music" and without getting into her
song lyrics.
Apparently a highly sensitive artist,
Ms. Holiday would probably be enraged to
view the movie about her life if she could
relive. The drug problems appeared late
in Billie's career when she was arrested
several times by narcotics agents. The
arrests were highly publicized and Billy
attacked the tactics of the government
more than twenty years ago in her
autobiography, "Lady Sings the Blues
"People on drugs, she noted, were treated
as criminals instead of being treated as
sick Finally, she was arrested as she
lay dying in a New York hospital. On the
afternoon of July 17, 1959, at the age of
44, Billy Holiday died.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
ftftPftftftftftftftftftMflftftft
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'Staying On Alone' -
a Stein commemorative
Sunday, Feb. 3 will be the 100th
anniversary of the birth of Gertrude Stein,
American expatriate writer. Fountainhead
presents the following book review in
commenoration.
STAYING ON ALONE: The letters of
Alice B. Toklas. Edited by Edward Bums,
with an introduction by Gilbert
Harrison. Liveright, $11.95. 426 pp.
When Gertrude Stein died in Paris in
1946 at age 72, she left behind her an
apartment in the Hue Christine, a white
poodle named Basket II, an important
collection of modern art. masses of
manuscripts, and Alice B. Toklas. Of all
of these, Alice has been most maligned;
in accounts coming down to us from
Stein acquaintances, Alice was "nicely
ugly sinister, iron-willed, an obstinate
lady with a scynthe-like voice. After 66
years of such description - ever since
Gertrude and Alice began living together
in 1908 - the real Alice Toklas emerges
through her letters.
The first response of the uninitiated to
a photograph of Gertrude Stein and Alice
Toklas is one of shock. Stocky Gertrude,
dressed in outlandish outfits, half
peasant costume, half farm wife's SKirts;
the scythe-thin Alice, an unassuming
bird-like person evenloped in acres of
black, topped with a huge plumed
hat. The costumes rarely varied - and if
people often say Gertrude had a kind of
Semitic mqg Vnentality, a solid Art of
beauty - they never said so for
Alice. Alice was the supporting cast for
Stein; Alice did, in fact, not want to be
noticed. But her hawk-face and drooping
grey eyes made a lasting impression.
MOTHER OF US ALL
Gertrude Stein was a moderately
well off American expatriate, a Baltimore
citizen who spend the last 40 years of her
life in Paris. Most important, Stein was a
writer, "the mother of us all a magnetic
personality who drew andor influenced
Picasso, Hemmingwav. Braque, Sir
Francis Rose, Maris Laurencin, Thornton
Wilder, Carl Van Vechten, some perfect
strangers, and several hundred Gl's who
visited her and Toklas during World War
II. Stein's magnificent self-assurance,
naturalism, original thinking and warmth
made her a personality whose influence
few friends escaped.
SAN FRANCISCAN
And perennially in the shadows
behind Stein was Alice B. Toklas. Toklas,
a San Franciscan, had come to Paris on a
chance visit - and shortly thereafter
moved in with Stein and formed the
Stein-Toklas household. Says Joseph
Barry, "They were a conglomerate, if the
metaphor can retain any sense of privacy,
of interlocking relationships - intellectual
and emotional, physical and sentimental,
and aesthetic. They were the complete
couple Stein and Toklas, Toklas and
Stein - always with Alice Toklas in the
shadows and Gertrude Stein stage front
and loving it. Stein was the genius,
Toklas the protector of genius - and the
darner of socks, cook, typist, proofreader
and gardener.
Stein was expansive, warm, spoiled, a
late riser who wrote into the dawn, talked
endlessly and loved explorations. Toklas
was small and dark, efficient, close-
matched and critical, an early-riser who
weeded the garden, cooked, picked
vegetables and cleaned the house all
?P
before 8 a.m. But the marriage worked,
lasting 38 years until Stein's death on 27
July 1946.
FIERCELY OBSTINATE
It is with Stein's death that
STAYING ON ALIVE begins, recording
Alice Toklas' letters to friends - at first
bewildered and alone, later fiercely
obstinate in her efforts to have all the
Stein works published. "And now she is
in the vault at the American Cathedral on
the Quai d'Orsay writes Toklas, "and I'm
here alone. And nothing more - only what
was. You will know that nothing is very
clear to me - everything is empty and
blurred
VENGEANCE
Alice Toklas' was not a blurred
personality, however, and she set into
perpetuating Stein with a vengence, not
resting until all of Gertrude's books were
in print. Old friends visited, Yale
accepted the Stein manuscripts, 'more
Stein works were printed. Gertrude's
relatives bartered for the collection of
paintings by Picasso, Matisse and others
- and eventually the paintings were
"removed" from Alice's possession. Alice
Toklas was evicted from the apartment
she had shared with Stein; she grew old
and ill writing two cookbooks to support
herself. Young writers and Stein friends
wrote to Alice, asking advice, sharing old
memories, and Alice wrote back with such
charm, intelligence and love that the
"nicely ugly" image loses its meaning.
I don't much like those colds you
are indulging in she wrote Carl Van
Vachten. "Can't you avoid them by strict
application of precautionary measures
Do something, anything
VOLUMINOUS READING
The letters are full of local gossip
(Alice loved it), references to voluminous
reading and to the people who came to
her seeking information on Stein. Since
Toklas was a renowned cook, occasional
recipes were tucked in - omelets, jellied
eggs, poulet celestine, potato quenelles.
Alice Toklas never stopped. "I am just a
memory of Gertrude she said - but those
ALICE B.
who knew felt that, without Toklas' iron
discipline, Stein the writer would never
have surfaced so completely.
Even in her 80's, Alice Toklas was
never really old, never a bore. Her letters
remained dry and alert:
"This nursing home is a fit subject for
a novelette she wrote at age 81. "There
are ten people on the staff and they all
hate each other. In any case they never
agree, and they come bouncing into my
room as it it were a way station and
say: 'Is she here?' and they take
messages for the telephone which never
get delivered
Toklas lived on for nearly twenty
years after Stein's death, twenty years she
simply accepted as her duty to fill. She
filled them with Stein, her memories of
Stein and her writings, the nourishing of
Stein's friends and the young people
newly-interested in her pioneering literary
work.
"Do come back soon writes Alice in
her last letter, dated 9 January 1966. "I
shan't last forever
In March of 1967, Alice loklas died
just one month short of her 90th birthday
and was buried beside Gertrude Stein in
the Pere Lachaise cemetery. "Pensive,
TOKLAS
pale?'tender- eyed like Leah" one friend
had called her, an opposite to the sturdy,
tramping Stein. The union had lasted 38
years - and more, since Alice Toklas has
never truly separated from Stein. In some
way she had managed to be her own iron-
clad person, and Stein's as well.
FAMOUS MARRIAGES
In the past several months "famous
marriages" have been a rage of sorts,
what with exposes on the Duke and
Duchess of Windsor, the Burtons and
most flamboyantly - Harold Nicolson and
Vita Sackvi He-West (PORTRAIT OF A
MARRIAGE). If ever a marriage existed, it
did with Stein and Toklas, a perteu
balance between two persons so different
as to be natural enemies. Stein and
Toklas, Toklas and Stein.
Or as Stein wrote of Alice, "And
certainly (she) all her living then was
happier in living than any one else who
ever could, who was, who is, who ever
will be livina Alice Toklas was quite
happy and had ample love for everyone for
nearly 90 years.
For further reading on Gertrude Stein,
recommended books are Briimin's THE
THIRD ROSE and W. G. Rogers' WHEN
THIS YOU SEE REMEMBER ME.
'And certainly (she)
all her living then
was happier in living
than any one else
Gertrude Stein
GERTRUDE STEIN
mmmm
m
mm





O FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
Editorials
The SGA and other things
3Son? ; one of the requisitions, by the way was to cover the costs for ma,lmg
a brochure to all ECU students, telling them tte nreat th.ngs the SGA has
sol acSeTdetelhe tact that the SGA, has received more coverage this year ttan
Sf?S tour Thl latest escapade gives us the distinct impression that the SGA
iexiTnorTstTbul for public relations Jhere are oHw waysto
S)!SJLW be As ffii students, there are additional ways to
inform which cost considerably less than $617. is resDect for
Reaardinq Mr. Bodenhamer's attempt to impeach the SGA Treasurer. ? ?2T5iM7
?Srta an imoeachable act? Can Mr. Ertis be blamed for holding back on a $617
2SKSSd? We fear that Mr. Bodenharner has b swa?od
f,n aarandiose vision which seems to have turned the onetime "student s fr.eno
t& SGA to aaS bureaucracy. Shouldn't more than one person judge where
Lfao a rret of Ss have seen Mr. Bodenhamer freeze publications
? ?n " 2ach us a lesion" and have his criticism of too-little or unfavorable
cove has systenSly corned that Real House "doesn't exist" because he
ESf?JI its cnsTitut?" that Pub Board Chairman Bob McKeel, in office since last
fn?TnrPbS? that publications funds were illegal because
SdSSnS? sS htoSTuN; and - the latest one - that the Publications
SSaSS"alganLtion because its constitution was g??
We notice two things in each of these actions The first 's.rsB
tpnds to claim that anything he doesn't approve of doesnt exist me seconoisan
1I ZllwnTn raise chaos Any mature person, on discovering that a
c?nstitoneded appovSorTSl r??ded signing'wou.d meet with the concerrd
Sf? dSuaS on out difficulties - Mr. Bodenhamer prefers to toss threatsi about
?mlv d sSk letters stating that "action will be taken and bark out plat.tudes
ShZ trurSTunderstandini of a brick. This calculated chaos and making of
motehla intomaintalns serves to totally disrupt the SGA when . could be
c?noen rat inTonZters other than war. In addition, each conflict oenera Iv ends w th
Mr Bodenhamer slapping the concerned parties' wrists or sending a letter as in the
fund freeze, stating that he hopes we all learned a lesson. The tactics are insulting to
human intelligence. . .
Remaps the most galling part of the matter is that after each ws item inrMr
on-g
6XitlSSTTist ?j I Plan to support a collective conscience. Wo have been
oatienTTn' enirtaoly philosophical, and have made statements concerningiMr
Sdenharner taorty two iditorials we can recall since September 5. However, when
asTn a position of authority proves his imrmturity??????
extent Mr. Bodenhamer has, someone has to speak out. We fee th? Mr Bnhamer
nas been wrong. It is our responsibility to present th.s "other side of the SGA story.
See related story, page one.
staff
u0o you know
you know
because I toll you so, or do
-G. Stein
EWTOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford
MANAGING EDITORSklp Sounders
BUSINESS MANAGERRIck Gllllam
AD MANAGERJackle Shallcross
NEWS EDITORSDerrell Williams
Diane Taylor
REVIEWS EDITORSteve BohmuKer
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow
ADVISORDr Frank J. Murphy
FOUNTAINHEAD Is the student news-
paper of East Carolina University and ap-
pears 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.
Oil squeeze and tax returns
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - The oil squeeze
has caused world oil prices to
skyrocket. The increase will add an
estimated $75 billion to the price that
oil-consuming countries must pay
their economic lifeblood.
This is simply more than most nations
can afford without inviting economic
disaster.
World leaders have been communicat-
int secretly over how to cope with the oil
crisis. The United States has taken the
lead in urging the oil consumers to join
together in planning a common strategy.
Most nations have been reluctant to
challenge the Arabs openly for fear of
losing their oil supply.A few nations,
such as Britain and France, have sought
to make their own private deals with the
Arab oil producers.
But secretly, many world leaders are
saying that prices must be rolled
back. Some are ready to use force, if
necessary, to prevent an oil depression.
Apparently, the message is getting
through to the Arab leaders. Intelligence
reports claim the Arab leaders are
prepared to ease prices.
Even the Russians, who originally
encouraged the Arab price squeeze, are
growing wary. Intelligence reports say
Kremlin leaders now fear that prices could
cause such severe economic dislocations
that it could lead to a rise in fascism
rather than Communism.
It is beginning to look as if world
pressure may force the Arabs to reduce oil
prices.
Behind Mills' Offer: House Ways and
Means Chairman Wilbur Mills, probably
the most powerful member of Congress,
has offered to introduce legislation
granting President Nixon immunity from
prosecution if he will resign. Here's the
story behing this extraordinary offer:
Mills is conducting the investigation
into President Nixon's tax returns. This
was requested by the President himself to
determine whether he owes more
taxes. The central controversy is over the
$576,000 tax deduction he claimed for
giving his vice presidential papers to the
government.
Mills' investigators have now esta-
blished that the deed, turning over the
papers, was backdated to make it appear
that they were donated before July 25,
1969. Thereafter, tax deductions were no
longer allowed for historical papers.
The investigators have also uncovered
that Ralph Newman, the appraiser, didn't
even select which papers should be
donated until November 1969 - four
months after the deadline.
The use of a backdated deed to gain
more than a half-million dollar tax
deduction could indicate possible fraud
and tax evasion. The Nixon tax returns, of
course, were signed by the President and
the First Lady who are legally responsible
for the statements therein.
It's the possibility of tax fraud that
prompted Wilbur Mills to seek immunity
from prosecution for the President in
return for his resignation.
Foreign Fears: Almost desperately,
President Nixon is stressing his foreign
policy skills as the trump card in his
struggle to stay in office. He has told
friends fiercely that no one else is as
qualified as he is to play the delicate
balance-of-power game with the two
Communist superpowers. He has remind-
ed them of his diplomatic achievements in
Peking, Moscow and the Middle East.
The White House took pains to inform
newsmen that the President sent
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger daily
guidance instructions during the sensitive
negotiations in the Middle East.
But the secret diplomatic messages
from around the world indicate that Nixon
is hurting, not helping, American foreign
policy. The dispatches from Europe, in
particular, suggest that our European
allies have lost confidence in Nixon and
are worried about his ability to cwnrnit
the United States. It is clear from the
secret messages that theWestem alliance
is deteriorating. .
In the Middle East, Kissinger
encountered guarded but anxious
inquiries about Nixon. The Israelis, who
had counted heavily upon Nixon's
support, expressed special concern that
he is losing his power.
Even in the Kremlin, according to the
secret intelligence reports, there is an
understanding that Nixon has been
mortally weakened. The messages from
Peking, typically, are more enigmatic.
But increasingly, Kissinger appears as the
man who is holding Ampican foreign
policy together.
Privately, State Department strategists
are saying Kissinger could do this even
better under a President Ford than
President Nixon.
An Antltax Year: The Internal Revenue
Service is afraid 1974 might be a bad
year. Voluntary compliance is the
bedrock of the tax system. Audits are run
only on a random basis. Therefore, the
government must depent upon the
honesty of its citizens to collect taxes
The IRS is afraid that the voluntary
system has been eroded by the events of
the past year. First, ex-Vice President
Spiro Agnew was caught cheating on his
taxes. Now President Nixon, himself, is
in tax trouble.
But more than anything else, the high
profits and low taxes of the oil companies
are stirring up antitax feelings. Many
Americans no longer feel they are taxed
fairly. For every dollar that the oil
companies escape paying in taxes must
be made up by the rest of the taxpayers.
The energy crisis has also presuaded
some people that they can ger away from
cheating on their taxes. For weeks now,
the IRS has been receiving complaints
about price gouging at the gas
pumps. Yet only a few stations have been
taken to court. The IRS simply doesn't
have the manpower to run down all the
complaints.
So Americans have seen many station
get away with charging outrageous
prices. The aura of enforcement once
surrounding the IRS has been damaged
and our IRS sources say some people may
be encouraged to fudge on their tax
returns.
The revelations of 1973, in other
words, might have serious consequences
for the IRS in 1974.
i
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oppose
some





FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
9
i
v
r
-V
i ?
V- .
I
V- ?
?
NIMWPWM
TheForum
Music funds
To Fountainhead:
To Fountainhead, S.G.A. and students as
well as entire university faculty including
Chancellor Leo Jenkins:
5 reasons why we needed originally
$10,000.
1. Scholarships
2. Tours and concerts
3. Sheet music
4. Repair and replacing instruments
5. Buses and instrument trucks
In case you don't know it, there is
inflation (value cost of money on products
and goods). You may ask why we neither
contacted A. J. Fletcher andor
community of Greenville. These people
already give in many ways more than one.
As for Dr. Jenkins, all he wants is 2 yr.
medical school and enlarge Flcklen
Stadium which is full only on
homecoming and yet does not talk about
supporting schools already established.
Maybe it is too late to change
anything. Personally, School of Music
needs $500,000 for improvements, etc.
Anyway, I just wanted to get this off
my chest.
Respectfully,
Thomas Bumgamer
171 Jones
Bicycle paths
Editor's note: The following letter
forwarded to us by City Planner John
Schofieid. The information given Foun-
tainhead in the article mentioned was
supplied by SGA President Bill
Bodenhamar.
Mr. Bill Bodenhamer
Student Government Association
East Carolina University
Greenville, North Carolina 27834
Dear Mr. Bodenhamer:
In reading the recent article on bicycle
paths in the Fountainhead, I noticed
several errors that perhaps should be
corrected before a misunderstanding
develops.
The article implies that the bicycle
route plan is ready for implementation.
However, neither the City nor the campus
transportation study committee has
reached the point of even determining
where the bicycle routes should be
located. In fact, the data for the study
being undertaken by the City has not even
been totally collected, much less
analyzed. It was also stated that the cost
of the system would exceed $75,000.
Since the route has not been developed as
yet, the cost estimates cannot be
determined. However, I do not think that
the final costs will even begin to approach
those mentioned in the article. No appro-
priation or even committment of funds
has been made on the part of the City. In
fact, we will not be in a position to
present the City Council with a final plan
until early spring.
I am aware of the committee that has
been formed by the University to study
the intra-campus transportation network.
However, the study being conducted by
the City, although utilizing the assistance
of an urban planning class at the
University, has no relationship to the work
being done by that committee. Mr.
Hankins and I are both interested in
developing an overall coordinated
transportation network, but our work is
being done independently of each other.
In closing, I would like to say that the
bicycle plan being developed by theCity of
Greenville will very definitely take into
account the travel patterns of the
University students, once these patterns
are determined. However, it may perhaps
be premature to suggest definite routes
when the supporting data is not yet
available. I would appreciate any
assistance that the Student Government
Association could offer in the develop-
ment of the bicycle route study, but I
would suggest that future public
statements be held until the plan is
finalized.
Sincerely,
John Schofield
City Planner
SGA report
To Fountainhead:
On Monday, February 4, 1974, at 6:00,
in the auditorium of the Nursing Building,
I will be giving a detailed report of the
East Carolina University Student Govern-
ment Association since May 1, 1973. I
will also include programs in which I
intend to introduce to the legislature
between now and the time our term in
office is over.
I feel this will be the most important
meeting of the Legislature because this is
where you as administrators and faculty
members can evaluate how effective my
administration has been in the last year.
I am req jesting that you attend with
other students, administration officials,
and faculty because you are a part of the
reason our year in Student Government
has been successful. My entire cabinet
and staff will also be attending this
meeting because they have been the
backbone of the programs which are now
being formulated or already in operation.
I hope you will be able to attend, if I
can assist you please feel free to call on
me.
Bill Bodenhamer
President
Frieda Clark?
Vice-Preskjent
' Nixon presided over a conspiracy - Coffin
By TRISTRAM COFFIN
THE WATERGATE CRIMES - "Test-
imony before the Senate Watergate
hearings and the guilty pleas of Jeb Stuart
Magruder and Frederick La Rue have
established that the White House in
1972-73 was the center of multiple
conspiracies climaxing in the break-in of
the Democratic National Committee and
the subsequent illegal efforts to obstruct
justice and conceal the involvement of
higher-ups Former White House coun-
sel John W. Dean III has testified that Mr.
Nixon has put forward several rebuttals
that have been evasive, contradictory and
incomplete (Times, September 30)
Lawyers for the Senate Watergate
Committee, both majority and minority
counsel, told a Federal Court: "As
demonstrated in our Statement of Material
Facts, there is sufficient evidence to
establish a prima facie that the President
was engaged in criminal conductWe
trust the court will recognize that the
reference to the President's own possible
criminality is not recklessly made
Nixon's guilt or innocence has to be
weighed against his record. As "The
Strange Cast of Richard Milhous Nixon"
by former Congressman Jerry Voorhis
shows, he has used a viciousness rare
even in American politics against those he
calls "enemies political rivals or
critics. Even today the stories of his first
campaign against Voorhis and for the
Senate against Helen Gahagan Douglas
are shocking-falsified information and
almost obseven vulgarity. The basic
Nixon assumption is "that anyone
opposed to Richard Nixon, must be in
some manner or another subversive
Thus, any tactic is fair game.
Nixon has never shown any
extraordinary respect for the letter of the
law and ethnics. Irving Wallace reports:
"In handling his first lawsuit, a case that
was heard in 1937 and went on until 1940,
President Nixon was accused by a Los
Angeles judge of unethical' behaviour,
threatened with 'disbarment and himself
sued by his client for mishandling her
case
In the case, Los Angeles Municipal
Court Action No. 457600, December 10,
1937, "Nixon committed a grave blunder
that damaged his own client. When Nixon
tried to make up for it by submission of a
questionable affidavit, he was charged by
the bench with conduct unbefitting an
attorney, and threatened with expulsion
from the Bar
Judge Alfred Paonessa stated, "Mr.
Nixon, I have serious doubts whether you
have the ethical qualifications to practice
law in the State of California. I am
seriously thinking of turning this matter
over to the Association
VIOLATION OF BILL OF RIGHTS - The
1st and 4th Amendments to the
Constitution guarantee, among other
things: "freedom of speechthe right
of the people peaceably to assemble, and
to petition the Government for a redress
of grievances .The right of the people to
be secure in their persons, houses,
papers and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures
President Nixon presided over a
conspiracy to deprive his "enemies" of
these Constitutional rights. The White
House seems to argue that "the inherent
power of the President to protect national
security permits burglary, wiretapping,
surveillance, and other violations of the
law (Times, September 27)
Daniel Ellsberg and the "Gainesville
Eight" were particular "enemies" because
they were effective in turning opinion
against Nixon's war in Southeast Asia -
Ellsberg by revealing the "pentagon
Papers the Vietnam Veterans Against
the War, by the poignant and shocking
testimony of soldiers, many of whom bore
the horrible scars of war.
John D. Ehrlichman testified before a
Los Angeles County grand jury in June
that "President Nixon 'specifically
approved' a venture to the West Coast by
E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy to
develop information on Daniel Ellsberg
and the Pentagon Papers leak
(Washington Post, October 2)
Ehrlichman was asked, "What was
your understanding of the investigative
methods used by Mr. Hunt and Mr. Liddy
in the course of their investigations?" He
replied, "Only that they wre to conduct
themselves in such a fashion that it did
not appear that the White House was
directly involved
Ellsberg was put on trial and the office
of his psychiatrist burglarized by White
House agents.
Three alleged Watergate conspirators,
James McCord, Alfred Baldwin and Jeb
Stuart Magruder, have said part of their
"mission" was to investigate the
WAW. The veterans were bugged and
infiltrated by paid piovocateurs, and
seven put on trial in Gainesville for
plotting the violent disruption of the GOP
National Convention.
They were found innocent, and crime
reporter Fred J. Cook writes in The Nation
(October 1): "A jury composed of middle
class Florida citizens said, at least by
implication .it is time to stop framing
dissidents for politcal purposes throught
the use of unreliable and sometimes
psychotic informers turned agents
provocateurs; it si time to stop using
authoritarian methods A defendant, a
former first lieutenant, said, "For the last
fourteen months the Government
completely controlled my life. It was
fourteen months of hell
By contrast, Attorney General Mitchell
-of used to call a grand jury to investigate
;he fatal shooting of four Kent State
students in 1970. They were protesting
the Cambodian invasion, and that made
the difference. Information gathered by
Congressional investigations indicates
thai a key figure at Kent State was
employed by the FBI and now works as an
under-cover agent for Nixon's pet police
force, that of the District of Columbia.
THE RATIONALE - Congress should
act, because, as Hugh Sidney, Time
Washington bureau chief, said on radio
(September 28): "Perhaps we are at a
time in our national life when the men and
women of power and intelligence and
good will should openly consider, if the
White House will not, how to remove an
Administration blinded now to national
interest and seemingly bent on
self-destruction
Business Week (September 29)
reports, "President Nixon has been able
to give only perfunctory attention to the
growing issues of inflation, the energy
crisis, and world economic problems. A-
gain and again, he has been caught
unprepared by an economic crisis that
was not only predictable but inevitable if
the Administration took no action to head
it off





io
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
WP
MMMM
WP
AP
Math laboratory offers individual assistance
By BARBARA TURNER
Staff Writer
Since the summer of 1970 students
have been going to the Math Lab for
assistance as well as preparation for Math
65.
"I couldn't have made it without it
said one Math 65 student.
Although some students dislike the
amount of time required for lab work,
most feel that the lab is worth their time.
There are two types of instructional
programs in the lab. One involves
independent study, held every hour, (8-4),
in Austin 110 and lecture held at 9, 11,
and 1. Students have a choice of either
instructional programs. In independent
study, the student has his or her own
workbook and works at his or her own
pace with individual help from the lab
staff which includes lab director, Vann
Latham, Dr. Robert Joyner, eight
work-study students, and Mardy Brown,
research assistant, who are on hand to
offer assistance Monday through Friday.
The lecture is based on the traditional
math class approach.
Aside from offering assistance to
students placed in the lab, the lab also
offers assistance to puzzled Math 65
students. The Math 65 students receive
help on an individual problem basis, not a
tutorial basis.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
"We have more lab staff, therefore we
can give more individual attention to
people in independent study. We have
been through a three year period of trying
different methods of both lecture and
independent study. As a result of this, we
have adopted our current methods which
we believe will be effective in the
preparation of students for Math 65 said
Latham. Changes are still taking place in
the lab.
Dr. Pignani, chairman of the Math
department, says, "in our testing
programs we are finding a group of
students that can take two new
courses: Math 63 or 64, in place of Math
65. These new courses have the same
Syllabus and text as Math 65. They will
meet five times a week, but will receive
two hours credit for Math 63 and three
hours for Math 64. We feel that some
students could do better at a slower pace,
therefore they will be able to take 63 and
64 rather than the one quarter of lab and
one quarter of Math 65. Math lab will still
be open for the weakest students. Often
we need a trained psychologist to
determine how the student acquired his
deficiencies. We have a big job he
added.
A big job indeed! Vann Latham said
that although the number of students
varies from quarter to quarter, 120
students are enrolled in the lab this
quarter.
When asked about the difficulties in
?'?' m iin;r,mt)l;
VAN LATHAM
'Land of the free' opens personal letter,
terminates foreign students's scholarship
(CPS)-A foreign student at Montana State
University has had his scholarship
terminated because a letter containing his
political views reached the Agency for
International Development (AID) which
sponsored his scholarship.
Abubakar S. Ibrahim, a 25-year old
Nigerian student, has written a letter to
his father in early December expressing
disenchantment with certain US policies
and discussing South African politics.
The letter reached the university's
Foreign Student Advisor, Helen Simpson,
who said it had already been opened by
the post office. She then telephoned AID
in Washington, and discussed the letter
with Robert Doan, Program Specialist for
m
?
m
International Training, because, she said,
it was "something I had to do She said
she felt AID should be informed of
Ibrahim's attitudes because the federal
government was picking up the tab for his
education.
Ibrahim received a call from Doan who
told him, "If I hear any more about you I
am going to create enough problems for
you in Nigeria so that even your country
won't accept you
Dr. Richard B. Landis, director of the
university's Center for Intercultural
Programs said Simpson had "acted highly
irregularly" in reporting the contents of
the letter to Doan. Landis later contacted
Doan, who informed Landis that Ibrahim
should not stay on at MSU and that his
AID funding would expire January 23
anyway.
However, AID terminated Ibrahim's
funding in late December, thus preventing
him from registering for the winter term at
MSU. He is now in Washington meeting
with the Nigerian ambassador to see if his
country will pay for his education.
University authorities are still investi-
gating to determine who opened the
letter.
In a letter to his fellow students at
MSU Ibrahim wrote: "It is better for
foreign students to realize they don i have
the right to their own views in the land of
the free
the lab's organization, thoughtfully Mr.
Latham said, "Placement is our big
problem. We need an effective in-
structional program that will reform the
student's skills and attitudes toward
math; so he will be ready for an effective
learning experience in Math 65. Most of
the students we have, have had bad
experiences with math in high school and
before. Such an experience often
produces a bad attitude towards math and
this has an adverse effect on their
learning math in college. However, many
students in the lab take the course very
seriously and do an outstanding job in
spite of past experiences and preent
frustrations. The students are resp r Jing
very favorably to the efforts of the nath
lab staff to provide a good proqram '
But, the math lab has alwey; done
considerable research related to student
achievement, high school math grades,
and other factors relevant to the lab's
operation. Mardy Brown, lab research
assistant, gathers data concerning
student performance in one math lab and
in Math 65.
Summer jobs
The Mayor's New York City Urban
Fellowship is now accepting applications
for the 1974-75 , ademic year.
The program spans the entire
academic year, from September through
June. During this time, students work
with a City agency four days a week and
participate in a seminar on the fifth
day. Speakers from all areas of the City
government and also interesting persons
that live in New York City area are invited
to direct these seminars.
A stipend of $4,000 and transportation
to and from New York City are provided by
the city of New York. In addition,
participating universities contribute in
addition $500 to the stipend and grant
academic credit.
All students who are seniors or
graduate students may apply. Appli-
cations can be obtained from the
Financial Aid or Fellowship office at your
respective universities or write to:
Dr. Leonore Loft, Director, New York City
Urban Fellowship, 250 Broadway, New
York, New York 10007.
The past five years have shown that
the Urban Fellows learned much from
their experiences and have also
contributed to the improvement of City
government.
The deadline for applying is February
15.
Insect perfume
Although it seems that we're running
out of everything these days, America
does have one renewable resource.
Timber. Even holding onto this can be a
full-time job as forestry and lumber
industry officials do battle with over-ready
supply of lumber at hand. In a special
two-part report, the February Science
Digest describes how scientists are
helping the cause with everything from
exotic insect "perfumes" to a unique
model forest that only exists in the
"mind" of a computer.
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4
? I
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
m
mm
v
mm
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Energy crisis seriously effects students
(CPS)Most of the effects of the energy
crisis on college students are, so far,
trivial, limited mainly to colder, darker
campuses, though education officials
across the country are just beginning to
verbalize some of the potentially
disastrous effects, including revised
calendars, extended vacations and high
costs of living and education.
In testimony before the Senate
Education subcommittee last week, a
HEW official said the energy crisis will
hurt low-income students attending
community college, vocational and
technical schools much more severely
than others. Among problems low-
income students in particular will have to
face are rising f ' bills resulting in higher
tuition and h? er gasoline costs for
commuters. Part-time and evening stu-
dents wi.l suffe. if schools close or curtail
schedules in order to conserve fuel or
reduce operating costs.
According to the President's National
Comission on Financing Postsecondary
Education every $100 increase in tuition
forces at least 2 12 percent or 175,000
public college students out of
school. The National Student Lobby
(NSL) said the increase in cost for the
average commuter who travels ten miles
to school and pays a 20 cent increase in
the price of gasoline equals a $100
increase in tuition.
NSL president Arthur Rodbell, in a
letter to chief energy Willie Simon,
listed nine effects of the eneigy crisis on
students: winter term closings; summer
employment losses due to forced makeup
sessions; breakup of school year
employment with no compensation,
increased costs of commuting to and
from campuses; threats of parking taxes
levied by the Environmental Protection
v Agency; increased costs of interstate
travel with the phasing out of youth
standby fare discounts on airlines rising
costs of materials to produce student
educational tools; Committee for
Economic Development and Carnegie
Commission recommendations to double
tuitions and too little financial aid to
compensate for increased costs of
education.
Over an extended period of time the
problems of the energy crisis are
"frightening" Stephen K. Bailey, vice
president of the American Council on
Education said. Bailey cited two pro-
blems due to the energy crisis: schools
that opt for schedule adjustments
concentrate classes during daylight
hours causing difficulties for part-time
and night students. "The elimination of
night and weekend classes would almost
destroy opportunities for part-time
students, who number in the millions
women, particularly could be hurt by any
substantial reduction in part-time
educational opportunity he said.
The second problem Bailey mentioned
is gasoline rationing and the problems it
would pose for commuting students.
A prolonged energy crisis could
convert the traditional summer vacation
for Northern students to winter vacation
in order to save fuel, the Association of
American Colleges said. On the other
hand Southern colleges may have to give
up summer terms because of high air
conditioning costs.
Harold Webb, a representative from
the National School Board Association
told a Senate committee vocational
training and adult education programs
utilizing high powered machinery and
electronic equipment could be endanger-
ed. "Indeed Webb said, "many workers
may first find themselves without a job
because of the energy crisis and then
without a public institution to help them
qualify for other employment
College and university administrators
also worry that major sources of revenue,
namely private philanthropy and income
from endowments will be threatened by
an unstable stock market.
Many schools are holding indoor and
outdoor athletic events during the day to
save lighting costs and activities such as
travel for athletics and debate teams have
been cancelled or cut back. Cancellation
of athletics may cause athletes who are
on athletic scholarships or other aid to
drop out of school or find other sources
of aid.
Fuel shortage caused a number of
colleges and universities in the northeast
to end their first term before Christmas
and delay the opening of their second
terms until late January or early February.
All over the country colleges and
universities are continuing crash pro-
grams of lowering thermostats, reducing
indoor and outdoor campus lighting,
forming student and faculty car pools and
closing little-used buildings in attempts
to cut energy use by 10 to 25 percent.
The Federal Energy Office's (FEO)
mandatory fuel allocation programs
require colleges and universities to reduce
indoor heat ten degrees or otherwise save
the equivalent amount of fuel.
Although elementary and secondary
schools were listed as Category I or
highest priority fuel users by the FEO,
colleges and universities are not, because
the FEO says the former have to be
warmer because they are so young while
college students should be treated like
other adults.
Under the FEO guidelines non-
residential college and university build-
ings are Category II consumers and forced
to fight for heating oil left over after the
needs of Category I users have been
fulfilled. Dormitories, however, qualify as
residences and only have to lower
temperatures 6 degrees.
There are some bright spots in the
picture. The need for energy has resulted
in better employment prospects for
engineering graduates. Many campuses
may save money by fuel cutbacks.
FREE
IncomeTax
Assistance
Sponsor: ECU Accounting
Society
Place: Wright Annex 305
When: Feb. 1-15; March 5-
ApriH5
ATTENTION
COUPON
INTRODUCTORY OFFER!
The Acapulco Dinner
Tippy's Taco House
(Best Selling Dinner)
$ 1 55
m
TO ALL FREE-LANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS:
Fountainhead welcomes any work you care to submit
in return for publication of your photos and by-lines.
Enchilada, Tamale, Beans,
Rice, Chili Con Came,
Tostados, Meat Taco
Per Person
Not Including
Beverage or Tax
You must present this coupon to be entitled to this special introauctory
price. This coupon may be used for 2 people.
TIPPY'S
284 BY-PASS (Utt HWl Wlk m
c
We are especially interested in creative shots and-or
jcandid shots particularly on campus or the GreenvilleJ
rea. Please contact Skip Saunders MonFri. from
3-5:00 p.m. at 758-6366 or 758-6367 or come to the
Fountainhead offices over Wright Auditorium to talk





12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
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'Evolution or Revolution'
European studies program begins Monday
SCHEDULE
The purpose of the University European Studies Program is to meet informally in
relatively small groups. The formal address is intentionally avoided to find an intimate
level of communication where the exchanged ideas predominates. The following topics
listed should be taken as a general framework. Community and University visitors are
very welcome at all sessions held on campus. The following is a calendar of events for
the "Evolution or Revolution" European Studies Program:
February
Monday
9:00 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
February 510:00 a.m.
Tuesday3:00 p.m.
4:30-6.00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
February 6
Wednesday
10:00 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
2:00 p
3:00 p.
7:30 p.m.
February 7
Thursday
9:00 a.m.
4:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
German Seminar, Dr. Bramy Resnik,
Room SO302, Topic: Youth in Germany
Today (in German)
Kaffee-Klatsch with Language Clubs,
Room SC-305
Official Opening of the Program,
Audi.rium SB-102, Mr. John Lang, Jr
Vice-Cnancellor for External Affairs.
Topic: Languages for Careers and
Cross-Cultural Understanding. (Meeting
primarily for foreign language students,
arranged by Dr. Joseph Fernandez)
Political Science, Dr. Hans Indorf, Room
SC-101. Topic: German Democratic
Practices Today
Dinner meeting with the Optimist Club of
Greenville, Mr. L. E. Ward, President.
Topic: Film and general discussion
Informal meeting with student leaders,
arranged by Robert Lucas, Student Union,
Room 201
Modern German History, Dr. Loren
Campion, Room SD-101. Topic: German
Libertarian Movements (Dr. Fehr's book)
Meeting with Clio Book Club, Mrs. Mary
Mann, President. Topic: Dr. Fehr's book,
film, general
Chancellor's Reception, home of Dr. and
Mrs. Leo Jenkins, (by invitation only)
Meeting with Woman's Club of Greenville,
Mrs. Mary Faye Shires, Chairman,
International Affairs Committee (Open to
the Public). Topic: Film, general
discussion
Introduction to Cultural Anthropology, Dr.
Robert Bunger, Room SD-304
Topic: Film strips, discussion on cultural
manifestations
Art History, Dr. Priscilla Roetzel, Rawl
Late 19th Century German
232. Topic:
Architecture
Art History,
232. Topic:
Dr. Emily Farnham, Rawl
Early 20th Century Archi-
tecture: Gropius and the Bauhaus
Art History Seminar, Dr. Lloyd Benjamin,
Rawl 232. Topic: Fifteenth Century
Northern Painting: Medieval or Renais-
sance?
Meeting with the American Association of
University Women, Miss Carolyn Ful-
ghum, President (Open to the Public).
Topic: German Immigrants to the United
States and Their Integration into American
Society, at the Developmental Evaluation
Clinic
Geography of Western Europe Class, Dr.
Ralph Birchard, Room SC-206. Topic:
German City Life and Urbanization
Opera Class, Dr. Clyde Hiss, A. J.
Fletcher Music Center. Topic: Status of
German Opera Today
Pi Sigma Alpha (Political Science Honor
Society) Dinner Meeting. Topic: German
Democratic Practices Today
German History Seminar: The Third
Reich, Dr. Loren Campion. Topic:
Questions and answers; personal
riences
An outstanding four-day program on
European Studies will be presented by
ECU in cooperation with the Greenville
community Feb. 4-7 featuring a
distinguished West German cultural
official, members of the ECU faculty and
Greenville civic leaders.
Entitled "European Culture Today:
Evolution or Revolution the program
embraces a wide range of topics including
language, history, art, music, politics,
literature, architecture, youth and
urbanization.
Dr. Goetz Fehr, director, Inter
Nationes, Bonn, will attend and
participate in most of the events of the
program schedule. The purpose is to
meet informally in relatively small groups
to find an intimate level of communication
where the exchange of ideas predomi-
nates. Community and university visitors
Loren K. Campion, will be on Dr. Fehr's
own book, German Libertarian Move-
ments. At 3 p.m Dr. Fehr will meet with
the Clio Book Club, Mrs. Mary Mann,
president, for a film and discussion of his
book.
CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Dr. Fehr will lead a discussion on
cultural manifestations in a class on
Cultural Anthropology, Dr. Robert
Bunger, at 10 a.m. Wednesday Feb. 6,
followed at 1 p.m. by a discussion of late
Nineteenth Century German Architecture
in an Art History class, Dr. Priscilla
Roetzel, followed by Early Twentieth
Century Architecture, Gropius and the
Bauhaus, in a class on Art History, Dr.
Emily Farnham, at 2 p.m and participate
in an Art History Seminar, Dr. Lloyd
Benjamin, on Fifteenth Centum Northern
Painting: Medieval or Renaissance? at 3
DR. GOETZ FEHR
are welcome at all sessions held on
campus.
GERMAN SEMINAR
The program opens at 9 a.m. Monday
with a German seminar, Youth in
Germany Today (in German) by Dr. Bramy
Resnik of the ECU Department of Foreign
Languages, followed by a Kaffee-Klatsch
with ECU Language Clubs.
Gen. John A. Lang, Jr ECU Vice
Chancellor for External Affairs, will
conduct official opening of the program at
11 a.m. Feb. 4 in the Auditorium of the
newly-dedicated Brewster Building, the
ECU Social Sciences complex, followed
by the topic "Languages for Careers and
Cross-Cultural Understanding primarily
for foreign langusge students, arranged
by Dr. Joseph Fernandez.
German Democratic Practices Today
will be the topic of a session conducted
by Dr. Hans Indorf of the ECU Political
Science rDartment at 2 p.m.
Dr. Fehr will be guest speaker for the
Optimist Club of Greenville, L.E. Ward,
president, featuring a film and general
discussion, at 6 p.m. Monday.
At 10 a.m. Feb. 5, Dr. Fehr's topic in
Modern German History taught by Dr.
p.m.
He will discuss German Immigrants to
the U.S. and their Integration Into
American Society, in a 7:30 p.m. meeting
with the American Association of
University Women, Miss Carolyn Ful-
ghum, president, at the Developmental
Evaluation Clinic, also open to the public,
Wednesday evening.
German City Life and Urbanization will
be Dr. Fehr's topic in a Geography of
Western Europe Class, Dr. Ralph
Birchard, at 9 a.m. Thursday, Feb. 7. He
will discuss the Status of German Opera
Today at an Opera Class, Dr. Clyde Hiss,
Fletcher Music Center, at 4 p.m.
Thursday, followed by a dinner meeting of
the Political Science Honor Society
featuring the topic, German Democratic
Practices Today.
On Thursday evening at 8 pim Dr.
Fehr will attend a German History
Seminar on the Third Reich, conducted by
Dr. Loren Campion of the ECU
Department of History, and participate in
discussion.
A private reception in Dr. Fehr's honor
will be given by ECU Chancellor and Mrs.
Leo W. Jenkins at 4:30 - 6 p.m. Tuesday
at the Chancellor's home.
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1
Women's group
gets national
affiliation here
The largest organization in the United
States for undergraduate college women,
the Intercollegiate Association of Women
Students (IAWS), is now on the ECU
campus.
Last year, under the sponsorship of
the Women's Residence Council, the
IAWS on campus received its national
affiliation.
However, this organization is for all
female undergraduate students - any
classification, any major, any political
thought, in-state, out-of-state, sorority,
residence hall, or day students. IAWS
believes that women must identify,
explore, develop, and utilize their
individual potentials now and throughout
their lives. The organization believes that
a vital part of every college woman's
education is her opportunity for active
participation in various experiences wtiich
prepare here for a more meaningful life.
IAWS is not a women's liberation
movement, but rather an expression of
women's movement for equality. It is
concerned with continuing education,
career and recreational opportunities,
racial issues, political and civic
responsibilities, and international con-
cerns.
At East Carolina IAWS will represent
all the women. It will survey their needs
and concentrate on these. Such activities
may include campus health services,
career counseling, child care services, the
two-profession family, human sexuality,
preventing assaults, and supporting
legislative action favorable to women,
including the Equal Rights Amendment.
If you are concerned about women
students and are interested in IAWS
please contact Betty Nixon Byrum, 404
Old London Inn, or call her at 756-4380.
Liz Carpenter, former Press Secretary
to Lady Bird Johnson, made these
pertinent remarks. "There is a little bit of
the liberationist in every woman. Most of
us are somewhere between the soft,
gentle perception of Anne Morrow
Lindbergh and the biting brilliance of
Germaine Greer. We need the poets as
well as the zealots. We need all women,
young and old, married and single,
welfare women trying to cope, and the
frustrated housewives determined not to
surrender their boredom to the bottle and
become suburban alcholics - one of the
real problems of our times, our suburbs
and our sex
SGA
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
13
Wm
news FLASH FLASH
Funds awarded
A total of $160,022 was awarded ECU
research project and service programs
during December, according to ECU
Office of Sponsored Programs.
Most of the funds originate from the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration through UNC-Chapel Hill,
which is supporting ECU projects in
geology, health and physical education,
biology and continuing education.
A grant of $50,000 was awarded Dr.
Charles O'Rear, ECU biologist, by the
N.C. Department of Natural and Economic
Resources for a water quality survey.
The chemistry department received
funds from the N.C. Board of Science and
Technology and the Triangle Universities
Consortium on Air Pollution.
Continued from page one.
for an organization to receive money from
the SGA, they must have their
constitution approved by the SGA
Legislature.
If this matter is not taken care of
within the next 21 days, I will be forced to
take action
"These organizations will not be
legally recognized by the SGA unless their
constitutions are approved within 21
days" Bodenhamer stated. "After this
period, I will be forced to take action in
the form of cutting off their funds. The
Pub Board and the Real House as of now,
are only temporarily approved by the
SGA The reason for this 21 day
ultimatum is to make our appropriations
to these organizations legal as specified
in our constitution
Planetarium
CHAPEL HILL - Following the current
program "The Hunter's Affair, Sunrise at
Stonehenge an hour-long star drama
delving into the Stonehenge mystery, will
open at 8:00 p.m. in the Morehead
Planetarium on February 5th.
The show explores such questions
as: Was it a temple or an observatory for
precise study of the movement of the
heavens?
Unfolding through the Planetarium s
reproduction of the sky is astonishing
new evidence and the latest theories and
discoveries about Stonehenge.
The show car, be seen thereafter at the
following times: Monday through Fridays
at 8 p.m on Saturdays at 11 a.m 1, 3,
and 8 p.m and on Sundays at 2, 3, and 8
p.m.
Admission is 75 cents for children
through age 11 or grade 6; $1 for students
and $1.25 for adults.
One adult is admitted free with each
ten members of organized school and
youth groups. Clergymen are admitted
free at all times.
Free scientific and art exhibits are
open to the public before and after each
show.
History lecture
Phi Sigma lota, the Romance
Language Honor Society at ECU,
announces a public lecture by Dr. William
H Cobb, of the ECU History Department,
on "Historical Controversies of the
Seventeenth Century
Dr. Cobb's paper will be a brief
critique of several of the major issues
among historians of the seventeenth
century. Emphasis will be placed on the
general political crisis, as well as several
attendant problems particular to France
and Spain.
The meeting will be held on
Wednesday, February 6, at 8:00 p.m. in
room 201 of the University Union. The
public is cordially invited.
:
Ki;jim Slux.
Rop.nr Slior

Shoe Stoiv
i r w lot in
Med school lecture
The ECU med school will present
another lecture in its public lecture series
tonight. The topic of the lecture is
"Family Medicine: The Role of the
Patient and the Physician Fitzhugh
Mayo, chairman of the department of
family practice at Medical College of
Virginia will give the lecture. The lecture
will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Allied Health
Building auJitorium. The admission is
free and students and the public are
invited.
Pi Sigma Alpha
On February 7,1974, Epsilon Lambda,
local chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha the
National Political Science Honor Society,
will hold its monthly dinner meeting at
Fiddlers Three at 6:00 p.m.
The guest speaker for this month will
be Dr. Goetz Fehr, Director, Inter
Nationes, Bonn, Germany, speaking on
the topic of German Democratic practices
today. A question and answer session
will follow.
The dinner is open to students,
faculty, and the public. Cost of the dinner
will be $2.80. Anyone interested should
come by the Political Science office,
Brewster Building A-124, by Tuesday, 6
February.
Designs and crafts
Designs and crafts by Martha Parker
McDavid, senior student in the ECU
School of Art, will be on display in the
gallery of the Baptist Student Union on
Tenth St. Feb. 3-9.
A candidate for the Bachelor of Fine
Arts degree in interior design, Miss
McDavid is showing interior design
renderings and several craft items,
including handcrafted jewelry, pottery and
weavings.
She is a student member of the
National Society of Interior Designers and
plans to pursue a career in interior design
upon graduation
CLASSIFIEDS
FOUND: 1971 Havelock High bchool
girl's ring. Can be claimed in 172 Minges
Coliseum upon identification.
FOR RENT: Furnished house on 14th
Street, between Charles & Co 7
bedrooms, kitchen, 2 baths, dining area,
living room. Ideal for 9 students. $40
monthly rent per person and utilities. Call
756 4384 after 6:30 p.m.
FOUND: ID belonging to PARKER,
Annie Deane, 119 East 14th St
Washington, N.C. See Laura Grimes,
Room 408 Cotten.
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL info &
referral no fee. Up to 24 weeks. General
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation
also available. Free pregnancy test. Call
PCS, non-profit, 202 298-7995.
WANTED TO BUY: Will pay good prices
for old 45 RPM records (1958-69). Come
by 177 Aycock Dorm.
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack
Brendle 752-2619.
TYPING SERVICE: Call 758-5948.
JOBS ON SHIPS: No experience .?-
quired. Excellent pay. Worldwide travel.
Perfect summer job or career. Send $3.00
for information. SEAFAX, Dept. 15-J,
P.O. Box 2049, Port Angeles, Washington
98362.
FOR RENT: Private
campus. Call 752 4006.
room close to
r'OR SALE: Ludwig Drums - 4 piece set
with Zildjian cymbals. Brand new, but
will sacrifice. Call 756-4515 after 6:00 p.m.
ROOMS FOR RENT: Completely fur-
nished, includes color T.V wall to wall
carpet, no utilities bill, free private phone
except long distance calls, once a week
maid service, privat bath and pool. But
no kitchen and no pets. Two people $120
per mo one person $100 per month. Cal!
756-1115.
R?
EHBgp nv'UL.muLunniLLTiinmrrrn
Be
Grand Opening Sale at the OCEAN in
Pitt Plaza (across from Singers )
THIS WEEK ONLY
Stereo Tapes$1.99 3 Tapes$5.00
5 Tapes $10.00 Some Albums 77 cents
4,000 tapes to choose from Soul, Rock, Country
Western and many more
?1I.II1L. ' I ? ? I II I I ' I L L I " t t I L L LTnI





14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
mmm
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Sports
Sports World
By STEVE TOMPKINS
Staff Writer
BOXING
z
As I was listening Monday night to the Ali-Frazier fight a dear friend made the
comment. "Boxing is a stupid game
I take issue with that statement. I'm not defending a position on whether Louis,
Johnson, Marciano or Ali is the greatest of all time. I'm defending what some people
call a sport, but what in reality is a glimpse of human struggle. How else can you
explain the almost total male admiration for fighters. The Harris poll in 1971 rated
heavyweight champions the most admired athletes in the world next to the Olympic
decathlon gold medalist.
A man loved or hated by all, Howard Cosell, gave this view of boxing, "There is a
quality about boxing that attaches to no other sport. Well, maybe not boxing, maybe
the men who fight, rather than the science itself. They are the most interesting of
athletes, for they seem to have the deepest feelings of life. Theirs is a lonely sport, at
times ugly, brutal, naked. You have to get inside a ring to appreciate how small it
is. You wonder how men can ever escape
The TV. camera records the fun and games of a training camp, yet the exhibition is
only a rest period to the boxer.
Take a man like Marciano. Each morning at 5 a.m. he ran six miles, had breakfast
and then to the gym for two or three hour workouts. Rounds of boxing, weight-lifting
for the arms, countless sit-ups for the stomach, endless jumping robe for agility and
speed and arm numbing crashes into a speechless monster called the heavy bag.
And then the ring. What goes through a boxer's mind when he looks across the ring
at an opponent. Fear. Hate. The months of preparation. In no other sport is one
confronted with so simple a task. And in no other sport, not track, bowling, tennis or
any of the team sports, does a man hold total responsibility for the outcome within
himself. All the days of struggle are concentrated in a dozen three minute clashes,
with no timeouts, no time to think of the next play, and no substitutions.
In the beginning freshness overturns all thoughts, but as the rounds recede what
goes through to that sweat surrounded nerve center?
Sonny Liston was quoted as saying he hoped to kill a man in the ring. Frazier stalks
his prey relentlessly. Marciano could not hide the thought of being the strongest man
in ring history, andhis ego often overshadowed his skill in combat. Louis fought with
pride. Dempsey was a puncher.Tunney a thinker and Patterson a "lover Critics say if
Patterson could have hated like Liston he would have never lost. Ali has been
condemned and Foreman cuts wood.
Outside the ring they surround themselves with softness and luxury, but most of all
freedom. For their thoughts are always brought back to that ringed prison, yet their
flesh must escape and breathe.
Though through the years scorned because of gangsterism and corruption, boxing
has survived. Thirty million dollars was grossed on the rematch of Ali-Frazier, and
double that is seen for a title match between Foreman and Ali.
Next time you pass a ring stop a minute and step inside. If you have any
imagination at all, you'll breathe easier when you escape.
As a matter of debate, my all time list of heavyweights:
1. Muhammad Ali
2. Joe Louis
3. Rocky Marciano
Joe Frazier
Archie Moore
Gene Tunney
Floyd Patterson
Jack Dempsey
Sonny Liston
4
5
6
7.
8.
9
10. George Chuvalo
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JOHN WELBORN, coach of the East Carolina wrestling team, will lead his
squad into action again next Tuesday when the Pirates take on the undefeated
Wolfpack of N.C. State at Raleigh.
Dynasty continues
SUMME
League
Crumpli
Summe
season,
every n
Crumpli
upend?
Judging by the past few seasons, it
would not be far-fetched to say that
wrestling has reached the "big time" at
East Carolina University.
When John Welbom took over the
reigns as coach in 1967, Pirate wrestling
fortunes began a steep rise to
success. Finally, in the 1971-72 season,
his grapplers steamrolled to East
Carolina's first Southern Conference
wrestling championship, bringing to an
abrupt end William & Mary's four-year
domination of the conference.
Some were saying it marked the end of
one dynasty and the beginning of another,
an assertion which became even more
credible in 1972-73, an East Carolina
swept seven of the ten individual titles in
the conference tourney to claim its
second straight championship.
In fact, the Pirates may have two
wrestling dynasties going at the same
time. For, East Carolina has been the
kingpin of collegiate wrestling in the state
NCAA committee safeguards athletes
of North Carolina for quite a while,
dominating the N.C. Collegiate Wrestling
Championships every year since the
annual event was conceived five years
ago.
The 1973-74 season indicates the
possibility of even bigger successes in
East Carolina's wrestling future. As a
warmup for the 1974 dual meet season,
the Pirates ravaged the eastern seaboard
tournament circuit, capturing team titles
in the Colgate Open, Thanksgiving Open,
Maryland Federation, Georgia Tech
Invitational and N.C. Collegiate tourna-
ments to firmly establish themselves as
the Number One wrestling power in the
South.
The Pirates climaxed their 1973-74
tournament travels by pulling off an
unprecedented feat in the N.C. Collegiate
tournament: they swept all ten of the
individual titles to further bolster their
dominance of college wrestling in the
state. And so far this year in dual match
competition, the grapplers are 2-0 with
big wins over West Chester State and
Appalachian State.
The wrestlers will next take on N.C.
State on Tuesday in Raleigh.
V
t
The National Collegiate Athletic
Association's Committee on Competitive
Safeguards and Medical Aspects of
Sports has adopted an official policy
statement regarding the use of athletic
trainers and physicians by member
institutions.
The Committee is strongly in favor of
the use of qualified trainers and athletic
Tfsicians, as evident in the following
statement:
"The task of determining an athlete's
medical eligibility for participation, when
given to team physicians andor qualified

athletic trainers (those meeting certifi-
cation requirements of the National
Athletic Trainers Association) provides
the coach and the athlete an informed
estimate of the significance of an injury or
other atypical condition. Further, it
provides responsible medical supervision
for visiting teams and tourney contests
hosted by an institution.
"The NCAA Committee on Competitive
Safeguards and Medical Aspects of
Sports urges all collegiate institutions to
strive for quality medical supervision of
their athletic programs and to support the
decision-making prerogatives delegated to
these personnel. The team physician and
certified athletic trainer are bringing
professional assistance to athletic
programs at a time when accountability
within these programs is beginning to
require such assistance
There's a line in a front page story,
Thirteen horses that also ran.
1973-74 SWIMMING
Feb. 1 Richmond
Feb. 2 Univ. of Virgino
Feb. 16 Catholic Unvi.
Feb. 21 Appalachian 7:00
Feb. 23 VMI 2:00
Feb. 28, Southern Conference
Mar. 1,2 meet
Mur 7,8,9 Eastern Championship
Mar. 28-30 NCAA
Long Beach, Co.
mmmmm
mmm
BUZZY
thrilling
Bi
The
announ
footbal
signee?
runninc
The





N
?
?

I his
ated
a while,
i Wrestling
since the
five years
cates the
joesses in
ure. As a
3t season,
i seaboard
earn titles
'ing Open,
gia Tech
te touma-
lselves as
ver in the
r 1973-74
g off an
Collegiate
n of the
ster their
ig in the
ual match
2-0 with
State and
i on N.C.
7:00
2:00
iship
-I
i
I
? 1
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3131 JAN. 1974
15

mm
m
wmmm
OTlLi
SflLEJAn.28-FEB.3
SUMMERELL AND CRUMPLER DRAFTED - In Tuesday's National Football
League draft, ECU quarterback Carl Summerell and tailback Carlester
Crumpler were both selected in the fourth round. The New York Giants picked
Summerell, who broke many East Carolina passing records this past
season. Crumpler was grabbed by the Buffalo Bills, after shattering virtually
every rushing mark in the Pirate record book. Here, Summerell hands off to
Crumpler who skirts around left in action early in the season when the Bucs
upended Southern Mississippi down in Hattiesburg, 13-0.
This sale includes all STEVE MILLER!
PITT PLAZA
10-9:30 monsat
BUZZY BRAMAN AWAITS PASS from Pirate teammate In last Saturday nights
thrilling 57-55 victory over the Keydets of VMI.
Buc gridders sign four
FREEifgaL
COUNSEL
The East Carolina Pirate gridders have
announced the signing of four more
football players for next fall. The new
signees include three linemen and one
running back.
The linemen are Kevin Hill a 6'4 310
pound lineman from Macon, Ga Lewis
Morris a 6'0 290 lineman from Macon,
Ga Mark Huston a 6T 190 pound
lineman from College Park, Ga and
Vince Kolanki a 5'10 185 pound running
back fromWeirton, West Virginia.
Available for all full time students
Inquire in SGA main office
Wright 303 or Call 758 6262
m
m
mmmm
mm





16
HJNTAINHf-AD VOI '? Nt) J1 31 JAN 1974
WINHJHHIIM

Paladins remain in first with win
By STEVE TOMPKINS
ivi
:
iates
thi veel oacl ?
?
ffi
have help? ' ? i id to tx
and we
? ? N - . ?? in foul
because hi
A; , ??? , Ma
ect e
berl It ' -
id
Bi
Mayes underneatl
I
?
. ket:
M 11 I '
. I
? . ? ? re for the I
I
Whiti ' led ? hara
kets. on
: . ? ?' ? I i ????
Mayi imed b
Marvi
Furma ect?
JRMAN DEFENDER BLOCKS SHOT of ECU'S Greg Ashom in the Bucs 89-80 loss Mondav niqht
ll omen gain victory
lefe
ve
y CONNIE HUGHES
? : j it all we ;
erytl took it
?
word f a I appy
herini I ifti n her I
I,
isiui ' ? night
jhl we ' inded ut. Our
ffei se work? I
;U shot 49 pei ent from the fd
which show me n ; : ivement
? jam) had i 0J night
. ? . ? ? ? ? ?? ? ?
t lea
' Altl
t hurl
. . & ially
re i h ?
'
it to a 1
e Pirates wil
AI te
I ir of the lasl
i esl ' ' ?
?? ?
iid
rn . prettv ????
"
e '
;
'
?
? ly banned 1
??. . had ?
A : ?
the
?
ii - Ahei thing;
e led 1 coring
wed I ? Ahite's 14, Owens 12.
ind Marsh's 10 apiece.
Pirates take on Furman ag
Saturday in Greenville. S.C the game
will be televised regionally by WNCT
on.
I - ' ? ?
The Lady Pirates t
hp
$9
? n idated High P
? juartei md didn't let up the
teen ECU players saw
i Imtesl whii 1 eff? lively
e 'i ? I reaJ rhe ECU
Point ? ' '
. ? ?? ?. , oured i n 1
th ?
. lartei High Point fared
Ahe otl teams left for the
v I 17 and High
In 1 ?-11
I
whicl botl
beei Aail i g
' I ?
? ? md it toe
.
I playei
; layers and a
said I -i I
iet1 . ised
Ri ? ? regulai ? - play ifter
th National play-offs la
si ime pressure i m the girls "We
?. the targel ri n IJNC! H
N G Whei . ? ?' n the
. trie; hardei for you said
i
an
ii f
EAST CAROLINA
IS
"FISH HOUSE COUNTRY
GO PIRATES
IN WASHINGTON
Drive a Little and Eat a Lot '
ALL YOU CAN FAT
HI H OF , rtNDKR SWEE1 FRIED
Flounder$2i(Clams $235
??
419 We
Mam St
Telephone
946 1301
0mm mm HMD
mmm9m0mmfmmMmmm





Title
Fountainhead, January 31, 1974
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
January 31, 1974
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.260
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.
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39903
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