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Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,
NO. 5414 MAY 1974
Tuition law
changes
requirements
By MIKE PARSONS
Staff Writer
In-state residency for tuition is no
longer lost automatically by virtue of
mamiage, according to Julian R.
Vainwright, assistant to the business
manage
An amendment to the statute on
residency enables a woman “to continue
paying tuition as a resident for a 12-month
grace period, explained Vainwright. If her
Nusband has not established residency in
North Carolina during that time. she
becomes a non-resident
North Carolina law determines
residency of a family from the actions of
the head of household. If a person is
lependent on his parents, then it is the
father's residence which determines the
tuition rate. If the person is married, it is
the husband's status which influences the
ruling.
The 18 year-old vote has caused
problems for Vainwright's office. With the
passage of this law, persons between the
age of 18 and 21 could establish their own
household, whether they are married or
not
NO FORMULA
“There is no formula for the thing,”
Said Vainwright. A Supreme Court
decision on a Connecticut case
established that each individual case must
be decided on its own merits. It went on to
Say that possible tests of residency
included maintaining a year-round
residence, voter registration, filing for
taxes and property ownership.
“SO many students walk in and ask
what they have to do to become a legal
resident,” Vainwright said. Their status as
a student does not prevent them from
becoming aresident. They have establish-
ed their domicile in the state, however,
over a continuous 12-month period
The biggest problem Vainwright faces,
comes from military dependents. Their
father has generally not taken action
establishing a domicile in N.C. early
enough. He does not become a state
resident automatically from being
Stationed in the state. The determination
of his residence is made by records the
military maintains.
There can only be one domicile
according to N.C. State law, explained
Vainwright. Merely owning property in
itself does not constitute proof. The
determination is made by other acts which
show the person's intent to be considered a
State resident.
RULING
Vainwright makes the initial ruling on
residency for tuition. His ruling can be
appealed to the Local Residence
Committee of ECU consisting of faculty,
Staff and a student representative. Their
ruling must be appealed to the State
Residence Committee before it can enter
ow
TWO GREENVILLE CHILDREN
sculpture during an exhibition by the Community Arts Management
WECU
4
4
»
cool their tongues on an ice Seminar Class last Thursday. A piece of art was donated by the
class to the Agnes Fullilove School Kindergarten.
Benz favors AM and FM
By ANTHONY RAY EVERETTE
Staff Writer
“lam not only in favor of a FM station
at ECU but am in favor of an AM station
too. would like to see WECU AM
continue and grow just as much as would
like to see the founding of an FM station.”
Those are the words of Dr. Carlton
Benz speaking on behalf of his feelings
about the campus radio station and its
efforts to establish an FM Station here and
close down the AM station. Dr. Benz is
the Director of Closed Circuit Television
and Associate Professor of Drama and
Speech.
He came to East Carolina in 1966 from
Wayne State College in Wayne, Nebraska
where he was Asst. Professor of
Speech. Dr. Benz received his BFA degree
from Ohio University, in Athens, Ohio. He
earned his Masters Degree from the
University of Wisconsin in Madison,
Wisconsin.
Dr. Benz feels that an FMstation would
not take the place of an AM
station. “WECU AM provides an excellent
training ground for students to train and
learn to gain experience in broadcasting.”
Dr. Benz also mentioned that Mr.
Jacobson, owner of WOOW, recently told
him that there are a great number of D.Js
that have first gained experience at WECU
added that many former WECU-AM-ers are
working for stations throughout the state
and beyond the state.
Dr. Benz feels that sales is another
extremely important area in broadcasting.
He said “experience in this area at
WECU-AM is presently possible for
interested students. would like to see the
largest number of students gain practical
experience in WECU AM,” he continued.
Dr. Benz concluded, “Let's keep WECU
AM and continue to aid in its improvement
and expansion, and go on and work for an
FM station to serve the community as
well.”
SGA votes against the
override of fine arts veto
By SUSAN QUINN
Assistant News Editor
The SGA Legislature voted not to
override SGA president, Bob Lucas’ veto of
the fine arts bill. The bill which would
transfer students funds to the fine arts
departments, was finally killed with a vote
of 21 against, 17 for and 3 absentions for
overriding Lucas’ veto.
Concerning the overriding of his veto
Lucas said, “My major concern is setting a
dangerous precedent. In allowing this bill
we lose input, the legislature as a whole
will not have input on the expenditures.”
Also concerning ‘the overriding of the
veto, Bobby Sullivan of the School of
Music said, “These funds for students,
better. This bill has been supported by
Students other than fine arts majors.”
After the final decision to not override
the bill was voted on, the bill automatically
became dead.
In other business of the legislature a
bill stating the requirements of SGA
recognized organizations was passed and
will become effective Fall quarter 1974.
Also an appropriation of $1,000 to the
publications board was passed to cover
the increased printing costs of the student
handbooks.
Monday was the last of the legislature
meetirigs this school year and the last of
fifty straight meetings presided by speaker
Braxton Hall. Hall brought to the attention
of the legislature that 50 measures directly
affecting students have been passed this
the court system. and then gone on to work for WOOW. He funded by students, couldn’t be handied year as well as 15 resolutions.
2 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
wires
news FLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH
Attention PRC String Quartet Pi Sigma Alpha E
By
Attention spring quarter graduates, There will be a final meeting for the The ECU String Quartet will perform in The Hon. H.R. Pyong-Choon Hahm,
this is your last chance to pick up your cap year for the Parks, Recreation and concert Wednesday, May 15, at 8:15 p.m. Korea’s ambassador to the U.S was
and gown. This cap and gown is yours to Conservation Society at 8:00 p.m. on May in the A.J. Fletcher Music Center Recital featured speaker Wednesday at the annual In the c
keep. Graduation announcements are now 15, 1974 at Union Jack's. Officers for next Hall. initiation banquet of ECU's chapter of Pi problems
on sale jn the Student Supply Stores. yer will be elected at this time. The program includes three works: Sigma Alpha honor society in political through hor
Mozart’s Quartet in B flat Major, K. 589; science. valuable exc
Walter Piston’s String Quarter No. 1; and Ambassador Hahm was in Greenville One cou
s Brahm’s Quartet in B flat Major, Opus 67. for the ECU Asian Studies Symposium. successful i
Concert band Pierce discussion The concert is open to the public Twenty-five political science students by which the
without charge. were initiated into ECU's Epsilon Lambda be exposed
writer-in- chapter. course, “Bla
There. will be a concert band on the Music
School lawn at 4:00 p.m May 16,
conducted by George Naff. The program
will include: El Capitan by Sousa; The
Girl Left Behind Me by Anderson;
Emperta by Smith; Concerto for Horn by
Haddad; Hail to the Fleet by Maltby;
Concertante for Percussion by Missal; and
Imperatrix by Reed.
Summer school
Bulletins containing information per-
taining to Summer School Sessions of
North Carolina institutions of higher
learning are available in 303 Wright Annex
(SGA office).
Interest increased
The federal interest rate on
government-backed home loans was
increased from 8.25 to 8.50 percent effective
April 15.
H.W. Johnson, Director of the
Winston-Salem Veterans Admini@tration
Regional Office, said today that the new
rate, established for FHA loans by the
Secretary for Housing and Urban
Development, would apply to VA loans as
well.
The new loan rate does not apply to VA
mobile home loans, which differ from
regular mortgage loans in that they are for
shorter terms and lesser loan amounts.
Cyclists
The Pitt Peloton Cyclists and the
Riders of Rohan will meet in room 203 of
the Student Union on Tuesday night (May
14) at 7:00. They will discuss merging the
two clubs, time and place of ride
assembly, and summer rides. All
interested bicycle riders are invited.
Ovid Williams Pierce,
residence at ECU, will discuss his new
book “The Wedding Guest” at the New
Orleans Public Library May 29 for the
library's “Meet the Authors Series.”
The program, sponsored by the Friends
of the New Orleans Public Library, will be
held in Gallier Hall onthe Second Floor.
Publisher's Weekly hailed the book 2
“the equal of Faulkner's best.”
Beta Gamma Sigma
ECU's chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma
honor society in business has recognized
senior accounting major Linda Ann
Blackwelder as the 1974 outstanding
senior member.
In campus ceremonies Miss Black-
welder was presented the award, annually
given by ECU’s Gamma chapter.
She is also a member of Phi Kappa Phi
and Omicron Delta Epsilon honor societies
and is a member of the ECU Accounting
Society. During the past academic year,
she represented ECU at the annual General
Accounting Office-Beta Gamma Sigma
seminar in Washington, D.C.
Psi Chi
Psi Chi, the national honor society in
Psychology, awarded three scholarships at
its last meeting of the school year on May
9, to two undergraduates, Karen Haskett
and Ronald Franklin. Sam Williams was
awarded the graduate scholarship named
in memory of Carol Faulkner Wray, former
graduate student in the Psychology
Department.
Newly elected officers for the 1974-75
school year who were formally installed
were: Tom Phillips, president; Tom
Clare, vice-president; Kathy Auman,
secretary; Vivian Kirkpatrick, treasurer:
and Suzy Sadler, publicity chairman.
CONTENTS
LEGISLATURE VOTES NOT TO OVERRIDE VETO .page one
STUDY HABITS ARE REEVALUATED .page three
ART CLASS HOLDS COMMUNITY PROJECT. .page four
REVIEWS .page five
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARYFORUNM .pages six, seven and
ten
MINI-SHUTTLE BUS POSSIBLE .page eight
RENT-A-GARDEN .page nine
SPORTS. .pages eleven and twelve
VA reminder
The Veterans Administration reminds
married home-minded veterans that it is
now easier to qualify for Gl home loans.
H.W. Johnson, VA Regional Office
Director Winston-Salem, N.C noted that
VA now accords full recognition to
incomes and expenses of both veteran and
spouse in determining ability to repay loan
obligations.
Johnson said VA is required by law to
determine if contemplated terms of
repayment bear a proper relation to the
veteran’s anticipated income and expenses
before approving the loan.
“But while the spouse’s income has
always been considered,” Johnson
explained, “loan rules sometimes had the
effect of discounting the spouse’s
income. Now, however, no such local
rules are imposed, and the spouse’s
income is given full consideration.”
VA guarantees 60 percent (maximum
$12,500) of GI home loans private lenders
make to servicemen, veterans and eligible
spouses of World War II, Korean and
post-Korean Conflicts and the Vietnam
era.
Math fellowship
Debra Lynn Stocks, an ECU graduating
senior with a 3.983 average in
mathematics, has been named'recipient of
a national fellowship awarded. by Phi
Kappa Phi honor society.
Miss Stocks was one of 20 applicants
selected for honorable mention through
the society's fellowship program. The
award is $200.
Each of the more than 150 Phi Kappa
Phi chapters across the country were
allowed to submit only one name for
consideration. Local applicants were
screened by faculty members of the ECU
chapter.
AATSEEL
Dr. Maria Malby of the Department of
Foreign Languages and Literatures, ECU,
has been elected secretary-treasurer of the
Carolinas chapter of teh American Assn. of
Teachers of Slavic and East European
Languages (AATSEEL).
Dr. Malby presented a paper entitled,
“Categorization of Female Protagonists in
Serbo-Croatian Literature” at the AATSEEL
meeting held last week in Greensboro.
offered by tl
structured sc
Membership in Pi Sigma Alpha is open
to student with high academic averages
who are majoring or minoring in political both as the 1
science. “ hope t
o means of ex
s between the
Dr. Grossnickle Rosenfeld, it
“We learn
: the ideas exp
Dr. William F. Grossnickle, professor As the q
of psychology at ECU, has appeared on the
program at the Southeastern Psychologi-
cal Association meeting in Hollywood, Overle
Fla. last weekend.
He chaired a meeting and directed a
workshop for students and faculty
advisors of Psi Chi national honor society
in psychology. Dr. Grossnickle is south-
eastern vice president of the society.
He also chaired a session of the
convention which featured an address by
Dr. Sidney Journard of the University of
Florida on the topic “Within Freedom and
Dignity: The Task of Humanistic
Psychology.”
Elmore exhibit
Ray E. Elmore, Associate Professor of
Art at ECU, is currently exhibiting five
drawings at the Fendrick Gallery in
Washington, D.C. The exhibition entitled,
“The Soft Pencil Line,” also includes work
by Alex Katz, Phillip Peairstein, John
Grazier, William Baily, and Joan Danziger.
The exhibit will remain open until May
18, 1974. The Fendrick Gallery has
purchased one of Mr. Elmore’s drawings
entitled, “Pepsi No. 2” for their collection.
Senior art work
A variety of art work by ECU School of
Art seniors Libby Johnson Phillips of
Scotland Neck and Sheila Jane Kelly of
Dubuque, lowa will be on display May
12-18 in the gallery of the Baptist Student
Center on Tenth St.
Dr. Bearden elected
Dr. James H. Bearden, dean of the ECU By KA’
School of Business, has been elected to Si
membership in the Newcomen Society in
North America, a select non-profit
membership corporation for the study of
business, industrial and institutional
history.
Dr. Bearden was nominated by ECU
Chancellor Leo Jenkins, a member of the
Newcomen Society's North Carolina
Committee.
Tay all
How to stud)
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974 3
Black Lit opens communication
By BROWNIE WILSON
Staff Writer
In the complex world of today, many
problems could be better understood
through honest communication and a
valuable exchange of ideas.
One course at East Carolina has been
successful in providing students an outlet
by which they may express themselves and
be exposed to other's point of view. The
course, “Black Literature in America,” is
offered by the English department and is
structured so that the class member is cast
both as the teacher and the student.
“ hope that the class will provide a
means of exchanging attitudes and ideas
between the students,” said Dr. Norman
Rosenfeld, instructor of the class.
“We learn from everyone’s reaction to
the ideas expressed in class.”
As the quarter progresses, students
prepare committee reports on subjects of
interest to the class. These run from a
discussion of Elridge Cleaver’s Soul on Ice
to a program of Black music prepared by
the class members.
“The two objectives of the course are a
better understanding of the Black race and
more knowledge of the literature and
culture it has to offer,” felt Rosenfeld.
“Black Literature” has been successful
in both of these goals.
INFORMATIVE
“The class informed me of things
happening in the black world that didn’t
know about, books, newspapers, different
thoughts all opened up to me,” said Tal
Fauntleroy, a member of the class.
Dalton Nicholson felt the true value of
the course was his awareness of the black
involvement and the exposure he received
from other Blacks.
Overlearning stressed
“The course has Changed over the past
couple of years,” said Rosenfeld, “the
mood of the class seems to be the mood of
the country at the time, it is always
changing.”
In many ways the member is for the
most part a student, but when an opinion
is expressed the student becomes a
teacher.
“ enjoyed the class because it was
discovery learning, learning about a
subject directly from the source,” said
Chris Mills, “not second-hand knowledge
like most of my classes.”
The atmosphere of the class was very
relaxed and led to interesting discussions
concerning the situation of the black man
in America. Issues such as discrimination
in the public schools, blacks in the
criminal system and ways to improve
relations between blacks and the city of
Greenville were all discussed.
Study habits are reevalua ted
DR. GEORGE WEIGAND
By KATHY KOONCE
Staff Writer
How to study is one of the hardest
problems a student needs to overcome.
Realizing that many students had study
problems, Dr. George Weigand originally
published HOW TO SUCCEED IN HIGH
SCHOOL in 1965. Now the book has
recently been revised.
Weigand said the original idea for the
book came several years ago when he was
teaching a study skills course. “Most
students had basically the same
problems,” he observed. The book is an
accumulation of the kinds of questions
that most students ask.
Although the book is aimed for high
school students some of the same
problems carry over into college, he
noted. Weigand had co-authored COL-
LEGE ORIENTATION which was written to
and for students. Weigand observed that
the largest problem for the college
freshman is the atmosphere of the
class. “In high school there is a certain
amount of participation, in college
students sit in large lecture classes and
listen. There are fewer tests and students
allow work to pile up.”
Weigand mentioned three areas which
his book covers in regard to better grades
with less time “not less effort.” First, is
the budgeting of time. Second is the
method of getting more material from the
text. Third centers on how to take tests
and examinations. Weigand emphasizes
SQ3R, which means Survey, Question,
Read, Write and Review.
The book, written for high school
students, is written in “plain ordinary
everyday, conversational English.” Wei-
gand believes that the instructor's job “is
to communicate.”
In COLLEGE ORIENTATION he states
that it helps to “talk over information.” He
has observed that this has been very
helpful to nursing students at ECU. Sartor
is the tailor made method of studying
which he advises. S stands for scanning
the material, A means ask questions, R.
stands for reading. Talking over inform
ation is represented by t. O means
overlearn and finally R for review.
To answer all the questions a student
might have about studying Weigand
suggests reading the book. He still thinks
students should study for application and
not for grades. “A degree is an indication
of an education. Why go to class and end
up with grades when you can end up with
an education?”
eee © © OOOO 43444444 St
MAY IS THE LAST MONTH
FOR
Carolinas largest selection
of rare old maps and engravings.
THE ANTIQUARIAN PRINT
- @e (GALLERY
9-5Sat.
503Dickinson
SS SS BBO TTT eee
SS eee ees sss seer
As Jim Ingram pointed out, “While
much of the tension of few years has eased
in the black community, the problems
discussed in class were very important and
cannot be overlooked. There might not
have been as much attention attached to
them as in the past but they were still very
valid and deserved much interest.”
Because of the structure of the class,
Rosenfeld has taken the role of a student
in the course, “I learn along with everyone
else in the class, I'm educated by the
students.”
Food class
offered by
Home Ec
An institute for personnel of school
food services will be offered by ECU dine
7- 21. ci se sf Pa
The institute is sponsored by the ECU
School of Home Economics and the ECU
Division of Continuing Education in
cooperation with the N.C. School Food
Service Division.
Purpose of the institute is to increase
the knowledge and skills of food service
personnel in areas of menu planning,
quantity food preparation, record keeping,
job design and supervision and training.
Among the topics to be covered are
sanitation principles in food preparation
and serving, cookery techniques,
nutrition, costs control, and employee
training and evaluation.
Participants will receive about 18 hours
of classroom lecture and discussion and
12 hours of foods lab experience.
Further information and registration
materials are availabel from the ECU
Division of Continuing Education, Box
2727, Greenville. Enroliment will be
limited to 30 persons, early registration is
advised.
ATTENTION!
JUNIORS SENIORS
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE IN
NUCLEAR PROPULSION FIELN
A MONTH
DURING YOUR SENIOR YEAR.
(maximum of ten months)
Applicants must be
male, U.S. citizens,
19-26 2 years old,
and have completed
a minimum of one
year of college
ph ysics and math
through integral
calculus.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CALL OR WRITE:
LT. G.A. LEWIS, USN
NAVY RECRUITING DISTRICT
P.O. BOX 2506
RALEIGH, N.C. 27602
PH. 919-832-6629
4 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
Community Arts class
spring pilot project dig rt
offers true experience 4)
THE SKILLED HANDS of Cliff Stuckey, senior art major, guide the small willing hands of
Randy Tripp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tripp.
On Thursday, May 9, from 9 a.m. to
noon, the Community Arts Management
Seminar Class held its spring pilot project
at the Agnes Fullilove School Kinder-
garten. Class members Sars Sager, Glenn
Yokley, Thomas Perryman and Paul Barbar
organized the entire program under the
supervision of Ral Elmore, director of the
program, which consisted of de
monstrations by art students in the areas
of ceramics and sculpture (in ice and
metal). Classes moved from one area to
the next over a period of 45 minutes with
20 minutes devoted to handling and
working with clay. A metal and wood
functional piece was donated to the
children for use as a piece of playground
equipment.
Student volunteers who helped with the
demonstrations were Charlie Davis, Larry
Benfield, Mike Scharf, Mary Cromartie,
Debbie Bryant, Katherine Myers, Ed
Weintraub, Glenn Eure, Mary Langston,
Jim Davies, Ellen Mayer, Cliff Stuckey,
Judy March and Nancy Brame. Faculty
members who assisted were Charles
Chamberlain, Chairman of Ceramics Dept.
and Robert Edmiston, Chairman of
Sculpture Dept.
This pilot pra is
just a small
Specialize in all type
Volkswagon Repair
All work guaranteed satate
COLLEGE EXXON &
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752-5646
ti
THE POT BEGINS to take shape and with success comes steady confidence for Randy
Tripp. Instructor Stuckey watches the creation of a new creator.
segment of the overall proposed program
initiated by the Community § Arts
Management Class. Included in the
proposal but not represented On Thursday
are the areas of dance, drama, music and
Monday Night Special
parmasan cheese
Tuesday’ Night Special
painting. The proposal would also reach a
broader spectrum of children and would
involve the community of Greenville as
well as ECU personnel.
spaghetti 99¢
grecian bread
99¢
Beef Stew coleslaw grecian bread
Hot fudge cake 49¢
5pm to closing
Health G
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974 5
I
REVIEWS
DRACULA proves ‘chilling’ finale
Se CARIBE CC:
snouid not be long before they join the
Allman Brothers, Lynard Skynard, and
Marshall Tucker at the top of the
country-rock totem pole.
By PATSY HINTON
StaffWriter
Setting: Dr. Seward’s Sanitorium in a
L. Balderston. At any rate, the latest
question around campus seems to be,
“Did you see DRACULA?” Melodrama,
laced with horror and bathos, never had it
so good.
astounding , as he bounded, baboon-style,
across stage, scampered up walls chasing
his favorite snack, succulent flies, and
finally, squatting on his heels on the post
at the foot of the stairs.
RECORDS
Looking Thru: Passport
rather God-forsaken part of England. True, there were some parts in the long Judy Townsend as Lucy Seward, the Atlantic Records
Time: Almost always the night. Char- (around two and a half hours) supernatural beautiful, unfortunate victim of the
acters: A beautiful but pale and classic that seemed a bit tedious, and at dreadful DRACULA, staged a stunning By JED
distressed young woman; her concerned
father and handsome lover; a knowledge-
able, foreign professor; a well-meaning
maid; aman-servant who acts as keeper of
a lunatic; and finally, a sinister-looking,
darkly-dressed neighbor by the name of
Count Dracula.
Combine all these elements and you
have, quite obviously, DRACULA, the
latest and last presentation of the East
Carolina Playhouse for the current season,
and also one of the most popular plays to
hit Greenville in many a moon (no pun
times, think the audience was ahead of
the show, especially when explanations of
well-known vampire facts were unduly
detailed. However, the play, with its
stilted, measured, heavily accented
speech, organ grinding, and high-pitched,
nasal. oohing and aahing at climatic
moments, showed that horror can very well
be transformed into soap opera, netting a
touch of comedy with the transformation.
There is much praise to be given to
many people. Director Don Biehn, set
designer Robert T. Wi'tiams, and lighting
transformation from a pale, pure maiden to
a passionate, provocative “servant of the
Master.”
Robert Beard, as Abraham Ven
Helsing, the cranky old Dutch professor,
and Martin Thompson posing as the
troubled Dr. Seward, rendered better-than-
average performances, even though they
were at times forced to speak lines that
seemed a bit trite. For example, near the
bloody climax, Professor Van Helsing said
the the Count: “Thirty seconds until
sunrise.” The Count calmly replied,
Passport is a new group to the
American popular music scene, Led by
blue-eyed, fair-haired Kiaus Dolinger, the
group has attained an enormous following
in their native Germany.
The group specializes in the newest fad
on the pop circuit today, instrumentalized
rock-folk. This sound that Passport
displays is performed with such excellence
that their sound places them on a level
with such similarly-styled, big name
artists as Focus, Mike Oldfield, Bo
intended). manager William Devins, together “Thank you for reminding me of the time.” Hanson, and Yes.
Not that DRACULA has no produced a mood. of alternating Russell Chesson really bit into his role Now a collection of titles has been
faults. Basically, the vampire theme is so satirical-suspenseful-soap-operaness. as the infamous Count (pardon the ¢orn) released in the United States. The
worn-out there is little innovation that has Organ music by Lee Hendricks and the and Rodney Freeze was properly pathetic package, entitled “Looking Thru”,
not already been thought of at one time or
the other. must admit, though, thatthe
use of the airplane by the Count in
transporting his “life-giving” boxes of
earth from Transylvania to England is a
novel twist, and definitely brings the old
horror story into the twentieth century.
amplified background music of McCall
Thompson and Janice Vertucci, though
not exactly “Tubular Bells’, effectively
combined with such sounds effects as
howling dogs (the wolves were about),
bats batting through the air, a pistol shot,
and a thunderstorm, to enhance a mystic
as the lover of the tortured Lucy. Barbara
Richardson was good; for.a:couple of
laughs as the saucy little maid, and John
Newsome, the badgered Butterworth, with
an Irish brogue futilely attempted to keep
the possessed Renfield confined, much to
the audience’s amusement
For those who missed this “Dark
contains eight of the group’s electronically
instrumentalized pieces. As the listener
becomes engrossed in these pieces it
becomes more apparent the role which
Doldinger plays in the group.
Not only is Doldinger the acknowledg-
ed leader of the,group, but ‘his musical
talents are the fer the; quartet's
we And Friday night, as sat for my mood.
: second night in a row and viewed the gory All of the characters rendered good Shadows” type rendition of the familiar, high-keyed, electric approagh. », -
wa death of the infamous Count, felt a Gothic performances, but think Terry famous old horror story, can only offer In addition to his playing contributions
2 definite affection for him as the familiar Pickard’s portrayal of R.M. Renfield, the heart-felt sympathy. And oh, be sure to (tenor and soprano sax, moog, electric
aa delicious chill crept over the audience. wild-eyed, wild-haired, crouching, cring- wear your wolf’s fang or The Cross, for The piano, and meliotron) Doldinger composes
Perhaps the current interest in mystical ing madman in DRACULA deserves special Count will undoubtedly rise again. all of the group's music. From these
occults or supernatural forces (witness the recognition. Pickard’s performance, as compositions the group’s other three
Randy sensational success of “The Exorcist”) noted by The Daily Reflector, was “a fine members: Wolfgang Schmid, bass and
accounts, at least partly, for the mixture of babbling nonsense and sudden HYDRA HITS GREENVILLE lead guitar; Curt Crees, percussion; and
enthusiastic reception of this updated outbursts of sanity.” His agility was Kristian Schutz, piano and organ; exercise
stage version by Hamilton Deane and John The country-flavored rock group their talents by improvising from
Hydra which performed at the Attic last Doldinger’s main themes. The resulting
Thursday night has just released their first sound is as pleasing and enthralling as any
album on the CAPRICORN RECORDS Piece performed by the more established
3 8 label. The group, which hails from cts. :
Atlanta, has built up quite a reputation for Through listening several times to this
themselves in the Southeast and their album, it is easy to see how this group has
performance Thursday night certainly did become so popular in Europe. The
nothing but increase this following. One electronic sound that this group displays
CINEMA: of the finest groups ever to appear at the has not yet reached its zenith in the United
ae Attic, Greenville was certainly fortunate in wei iy ll bt gag gy gy
) reac “ tan’? catching the band before they hit it bi promotio
d would PARK: si aa i a Vannestion kt By If the -group’s em pts. skyrocket the sound. To borrow one of the
Wille as wy possesses the same professionalism as themes from the album, the group is Ready
Professional football stars try their talents at acting in this “Super Fly” take off.
LATE SHOW:
May 22-28 “Spike’s Gang”
PLAZA:
17-18 “Black Six”
Lee Marvin stars in this western comedy.
May 15-21 “Thieves Like Us” Thin plot around a bank robbery in the 1930's.
LATE SHOW: May 17-18 “Bang the Drum Slowly”. Superbly done film dealing
with a dying athlete’s struggle to compete.
May 22-28 “Welcome to Arrow Beach’. Stars Laurence Harvey and Stuart
Whitman. THis is the last film that Harvey ever directed or appeared in.
PITT: May 16-23 “Jeremiah Johnson”. Robert Redford continues his string of film
appearances in Greenville with this film about a loner who becomes a legendary hero.
BEST BETS TO SEE:
ECU SCHOOL OF MUSIC:
JEREMIAH JOHNSON and BANG THE DRUM SLOWLY.
May 15 ECU String Quarter, 8:15, Fletcher Recital Hall.
May 17 Concert Band Lawn Concert, 4:00, School of Music Lawn.
May 19 Spring Project Concert, 3:15, Wright Auditorium.
May 24 Donna Grose, piano, 8:15, Fletcher Recital Hall.
their performance at the Attic displayed, it
electric.
Located off E. 10th St.
One block from 5th10th
intersection
King’s Row
Apartments
One and two bedroom garden type apartments with wail-to-wall shag
carpet, drapes, color-coordinated appliances, dishwasher, garbage
disposal, decorator selected wall coverings, walk in closets, totally
‘Fit for a king’
for Take Off.”
752-3519
6 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
epg iengs
Editorials‘Commentary
2 INTAINHE
Last time around An SGA story oc
uld be si
This is my last editorial as editor-in-chief of Fountainhead. i ’ ' ’ a
won't hide it — I've been extraordinarily proud of this year’s staff and this year’s Student Government Association, —stixients just. don't Know whe! § good "or ; rye
paper. believe we've improvea the old rag considerably, and I'd like to think of the new SGA: whether we like it or not, it's with us themselves anymore. However, the SGA 96 Ley
image, organization and groundwork as my legacy to Fountainhead future. And I'd like because to make - of — a oe oft .
to thank an excellent staff for putting up with the anguish of those first months of change individual is self-sufficing’. The first Perhaps many fellow wretches in the a
and the eccentricities of a strongwilled editor-in-chief who always looked upon this university SGA-type organizations came ce Se ee inti
reveananet tie fitibe. into being as more or less play-politics not realized, however, is that this spirit of a Printing
This year has been an odd one, indicating that the day of Administration oppression societies, but by the 60's their avowed detachment often extends say ut the —- Ay
is over, and that the greatest threats now come from other student organizations. I'd like CRUSe iS to protest the students from the SGA. After those Fall elections, ii ; A
to envision a day when all publications, like the Union, are funded independently of the Administration and to make students’ elect Mary Smith as your day student or ven orden
views known out loud. Student govern- whatever representative, old Mary is going portion to
SGA, and are no longer subject to arbitrary budgeting. The groundwork is down,
people; you have a new Fountainhead and a new SGA, and it’s up to publications and the
SGA Legislature to act. I’ve done all could possibly do in one year.
ments became informal things whose
purpose dignified the protocol, rather than
the other way around.
to be thinking about representing you
rather strongly. However, around midyear
- and particularly if Mary has been with
raise
THANKS Repevidie ,
— Well, it ain't that way no more, , the SGA for a few years — Mary's on her
To extend the traditional thanks: thank you to the Pub Board, who learned to live and it’s best for all es ea to Foglia own, in it for the experience, to stick on Eountainhe
with all my detailed xerox copies of everything but my birth certificate; to Skip, the that fact. We on this newspaper staff have her job resume or because she enjoys
awd i. editor, for being optimistic; to Rick, who gave us a business department for watched a few SGA administrations fadein groups. The representative aspect wanes 1 would tike
e first time in years ; to our new typesetting equipment, for working; and to Alice, our and out, and have been remarkably abit. And there are some people to whom hmend the
typist, who will someday understand why student publications just don’t act like any — impressed with the undying priggishness the SGA is such a way of life that, if they on thei
other employer. of each executive. He who was old Joeon declared that body extinct as of today, r. Inmy fo
I’ve been with Fountainhead for four death-defying years, and it'll be difficult to Monday is, the day after the election, someone would still show up for the lina Unive
attend a lecture without taking notes, or to read without thinking of a story, or to wake up making “the rights of the students” sound meetings. been a
ese Peg in mind. I probably even miss being called “Putt”, which is the name like the tablets from Sinai, and “the rights Therefore, it is necessary in many troversial,
-but it’s ee jag HA in gice 6 God only knows why Stayed fouryears; of the students” generally don’t mean cases to separate the concepts of “SGA” lication. 1
svt Ae pm fos a . ideas about “duties-of-the-news- rights in the good ethical sense of the and “student interest”. And, to further one ranged
heer vet ing fa vot wit pote my good ideas hace come from three years of word. The phrase means “transit system”, of our favorite points — let's discuss the ationalism
: g my poraries do everything wrong. There’s something to longevity after or some similar tangible. We have yet to “SGA power” line. There are those who i that
ea find an SGA president who defined those argue against the SGA’s giving up its NTAINHE
A SWITCH “rights”, but all have invoked them. money permanently in the areas of arts or ed in r
Before forget — thanks to all the people who wrote or made appreciative And each and every SGA President publications — just as they balked at its NTAINHE
comments about us or about my editorials. The latter haven't been written like we've seen has begun his year by looking split with the Union — because to slice off lication re
commands from On High or political tracts—basically, they've been loose-jointed letters sincere and saying, “Now, people may say funds Pe to slice cil a tg —— , by ade
to friends. I’ve customarily used quotes to illustrate points, so I'll pul! a switch this time I'm power-hungry, but I’m not. just want — that, if money is the SGA’s only means o ts writte
and quote myself from that first issue of September 5: to do what the students want.” Yes, even attracting attention, it's in sick shape able sty!
2 —o pens i a born explainer and communicator; your uniqueness lies nie spent sag a 9 Ho soley — pe pores 0 on og the
in your ideas and speech. appens midyear — i u 2SS SGA: er.
can't say much more than that. Perhaps one of the most appealing aspects of a Golda Meir became SGA President, the organization was fairly worthless anyway, AD has co
newspaper is that it’s impermanent, perishable, changing and impossible to mummify in same thing would happen: somehow that and should be either pared back or given ons of
a glass case. It has all the abstract and fluctuating qualities of thought; more than any little side job of helping the poor students UP as hopeless. The career SGA people ntinuing tc
other publication, a newspaper has the potential to be “alive”. That's what attracted me seems a little more absorbing. The would raise hell at these ‘suggestions, pus issu
to the form to begin with. And! will always maintain that, first, we reveal ourselves best executive begins to relate to the student however, and when they say, But we need Asamem
through words, and second, that the newspaper is the best way to say it aloud. body about as much as J. Paul Getty apowerful SGA”, the unspoken part of the r the past
So my final statement as editor is simply, say what you have to say and listen very relation to the SPhoMnce. lid Continued on page nine. NTAINH
ate ee eee you. Acquiring wisdom can be that simple. wish next year’s a fone this
ountain staff best wishes in the new office, and hope they’ intai
scciane danas eae. i pe they’! maintain or better the been the
Thank you, and take care. rvive in
. This
orthy of
edication p
oubtless be
ye FOUNTA
s redible stuc
Fountainhead aoe
ne directior
uccess or f
“Do you know because tell you so, or do in additic
you know” Gertrude Stein “OUNTAINE
iso beenor
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Pat Crawford mypovicn re
MANAGING EDITORSkip Saunders ind policy-r
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gilliam Since ite on
AD MANAGER Jackie Shallcross “as seen ©
NEWS EDITORS Darrell Williams he handics
Diane Taylor archaic, i
REVIEWS EDITOR John Evans sonflicting
SPORTS EDITOR Jack Morrow membershit
ADVISORDr. Frank Murphy and lack
regarding
students
addition to
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news- and Legisl
paper of East Carolina University and students t
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of for politica
the school year. Board, h
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Board-publ
Greenville, N.C. 27834 past.
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367 Ms. Cré
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non ’ — panes ro
students. ' ’ the Public
A CRAWFORD dartboard for all those SGA people who may have wanted one all year. i citioalh
i a
SE IS ——
0d for
2 SGA
in the
fnatis
dirit of
jut the
an you
ent or
going
J you
idyear
1 with
on her
ck on
Nnjoys
r the
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974 7
“Forum
INTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-
's their Opinions in the Forum. Letters
Id be signed by their authors;
will be withheld on request. Un-
editorials on this page and on the
ial page reflect the opinions of the
or, and are not necessarily those of
staff.
JNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-
printing in instances of libel or
ity, and to comment as an
ant body on any and all
ses. A newspaper is objective only in
portion to its autonomy.
raise
Fountainhead :
1 would like to take this opportunity to
hmend the entire FOUNTAINHEAD
‘f on their efforts during the past
r. In my four years as a student at East
lina University, the FOUNTAINHEAD
been a much maligned, often
itroversial, and not frequently praised
blication. The tone of FOUNTAINHEAD
$ ranged all the way from radical
ationalism to reactional conservatism.
that the efforts of this year's
NTAINHEADstaff have finally suc-
ed in raising the status of the
NTAINHEAD to a responsible student
lication representative of student life at
, by adequate coverage of campus
nts written in an interesting and
able style,
mething more than a
ader. At the same time, the FOUNTAIN-
AD has constantly strived to uphold the
ons of journalistic ethics while
ntinuing to cover possible controversial
pus issues in a responsible manner.
As amember of the Publications Board
r the past two years, have seen four
NTAINHEAD editors come and go,
me going more quickly than
hers. This years editor, Pat Crawford,
been the only editor in several years to
rvive in this position for an entire
. This in itself is possibly a fact
rthy of praise. The leadership and
adication provided by Ms. Crawford has
oubtless been a factor in the elevation of
ye FOUNTAINHEAD to a responsible and
redible student publication, for the leader
f any organization not only determines
ne direction it will take, but often its very
uccess or failure.
In addition to a capable performance as
“OUNTAINHEAD editor, Ms. Crawford has
iso beenone of the few editors who has
ittempted to work in cooperation with the
2ublications Board in its role as publisher
ind policy-maker for student publications.
3ince its creation, the Publications Board
yas been beset with problems including
‘he handicaps of working under a set of
archaic, inefficient, ambiguous and
conflicting by-laws, a constantly changing
membership, lack of internal structure,
and lack of respect and confusion
regarding authority from editors and
students
alike. These problems, in
addition to the yearly whims of the SGA
and Legislature and a desire by some
students to manipulate the publications
for political purposes via the Publications
Board, have led to several Pub
Board-publications editors conflicts in the
past.
Ms. Crawford has earned my personal
respect and feel sure that of the rest of
the Publications Board by her concern for
the future of the FOUNTAINHEADMore
specifically, by her concern that the
moving of all publications to the Pamlico
Room during the summer is properly
supervised, and by the development of a
set of comprehensive working guidelines
concerning procedures and policies of the
FOUNTAINHEAD—san effort to provide
some badly needed structure and
continuity in the life of FOUNTAINHEAD.
In conclusion—a well deserved “pat”
on the back to Pat and her entire staff—and
a wish for success and continued
improvement for next year’s staff.
Sincerely yours,
Karen Jo Haskett
602 Tyler
Morgan
To Fountainhead :
in the April 24th issue of the
FOUNTAINHEAD there was a short article
about Robert Morgan’s visit to the ECU
campus. Included in the news story was
one sentence at which we must take
issue: “A few of the changes that Morgan
supports included the co-ed dorms and
free legal advice.”
Mr. Morgan stated during his
appearance that while he was Chairman of
the Board of Trustees, the first co-ed
residence hall for East Carolina was
approved. This is true. However, what Mr.
Morgan very tactfully failed to mention
was that he strongly opposed the co-ed
dorm concept and spoke out against it at
the Board meeting. His thwarting action
not withstanding, the Board voted in favor
of co-ed residence living for ECU.
Secondly, the article presented the
reader with the idea that Mr. Morgan
supported “free legal advice” for the ECU
student. What the story failed to mention
was that what Mr. Morgan and the
students considered to be “free legal
advice” were two entirely different
interpretations. During the debate about a
free lawyer for students, Mr. Morgan said
that the attorney for East Carolina was the
state attorney general, and therefore,
student funds should not be spent for
another attorney for students. Mr.
Morgan’s position again was in the
minority, allowing ECU students to obtain
free legal advice through the legal office of
the SGA.
The Residents of
Garrett Residence Hall
Stasavich
To Fountainhead:
have just finished reading the second
of the two-part transcript of the recorded
conversation with Athletic Director
Clarence Stasavich. It is my opinion that
the very literal manner in which the tape
was transcribed was in poor taste and an
excellent example of the shabby
journalism that has dotted the final few
pages of the FOUNTAINHEAD in recent
weeks.
First, who conducted the interview
anyway? The name(s) of the reporter(s) did
not appear at the beginning of either
article. Because of this fact can’t be
sure, but have a sneaky feeling Jack
Morrow as involved in either asked the
questions or transcribing the recording or
both.
Secondly, as have stated, the way the
tape was transcribed was in poor taste.
believe that the “ers” and ‘“um’s” which
appeared in the article were printed to
make it sound like Mr. Stasavich didn’t
know what he was talking about or was
very unsure of what he was saying. I’m
sure most people will agree that when
someone asks you a question and you are
thinking about it at the same time you are
answering it, you will utter several “ah’s”
and ‘“‘um’s”. However, they should not be
included in the text of a newspaper.
Thirdly, don’t believe the purpose of
the article was to inform the students of
the workings of the athletic department,
but to discredit the athletic administration,
mainly Clarence Stasavich.
Finally, it is common knowledge that
Jack Morrow doesn’t give a damn for
Stasavich, but should he be continually
permitted to use the FOUNTAINHEAD to
tell everyone? Another good example is
the recent ridiculous article in which
Stasavich was dubbed “King Minges”.
By the way Jack, I’m glad to hear you
like Milo Hamilton. It’s good to see you
write something good about someone.
Why don't you do it more often?
A reply
Dear Mr. Merritt
would like to take this opportunity to
answer your letter because consider it
important and because this is the last
issue of the year.
To answer your first question, Jack
Morrow and myself conducted the
interview. From your “sneaky feeling”
infer that you did not like the questions nor
the transcribing. Since the second point
of your letter is directed at the latter, let's
consider the questions first.
Jack and composed the questions,
with input from other sports writers,
students, athletes and coaches. What did
you not like about the questions, Mr.
Merritt-were they too hard? Were we
touching on “taboo” subjects? It is not
shabby journalism to ask questions
pertaining to subjects where you believe
injustice is being done or where you
disagree with policy. Please remember
that we are not in the business of sports
promotions—John Evenson does an
excellent job at that. accept full and
equal responsibility for each question that
was asked.
Next you expressed your displeasure
with the way the tape was transcribed.
agree with you. It does sound bad and
have expressed my apologies to Coach
Stas. Jack Morrow did transcribe the
entire tape since had some tests to study
for, but did type roughly half of the
interview and accept again equal
responsibility for the text. However, the
literal manner of transcribing was not to
make Coach Stas sound unsure or as if he
didn’t know what he was talking
about. The “ers” and “um’s” were
included because it is not uncharacteristic
of Coach Stas to talk in that manner—sort
of like the “Stengelese” of great old
Casey. Good grief! Our purpose for being
there certainly wasn’t to record and
transcribe and print all of the “ers” and
“um’s” we could find.
Frankly, am insulted that you would
insinuate a deliberate attempt to smear
Coach Stas. have mountains of respect
for him, consider him a friend and
interesting conversationalist. Next time
you see him, Mr. Merrittassume you
have met him), ask him what he thinks of
me and how do my job. He has his job to
do and have mine—a difference of opinion
does not automataically imply dislike.
Thirdly, you take issue with our
purpose for the interview. You state that
we were out to discredit the athletic
administration, mainly Clarence Stasa-
vich. don’t see how you can discredit
someone by asking them a question,
unless perhaps the person does not have a
creditable answer to offer. If there is a
discreditable answer to be found, it is my
journalistic responsibility to uncover it.
You lastly make reference to the
conflict between Morrow and Stasavich.
will not discuss personalities, but only
lament the fact that you waited so long to
write. We've been looking for people ail
year to make their feelings known. Thank
you for writing.
Dave Englert
Assistant Sports Editor
Return
To Fountainhead:
Will the low, degenerate form of life
that stole my intermediate accounting
(Acct. 256) text Friday afternoon between
noon and 12:30 from the accounting lab
please return it. PLEASE Drop it off in
the accounting office or room 307-A Scott
Dorm. PLEASE
Nave Englert
Lucas-arts
To Fountainhead:
From the moment that our new SGA
President Bob Lucas vetoed the Fine Arts
Bill, an irrational and totally absurd effort
has been initiated to either get a reversal of
his decision or to remove the new SGA
President by a recall election.
The individuals behind this movement
are acting in a hasty and foolish
manner. They are so close-minded and
ignorant of the legislative process that
they fail to see the logic behind the Lucas
veto. The passage of the fine arts bill
would have established an unusual and
dangerous precedent: firstly, the fine arts
committee would have taken away entirely
student control over a large amount of
student funds; and secondly, the
establishment of such a committee would
have opened the door for every department
on campus to make a valid and justified
demand to also be provided for within this
committee. If the drama, art and music
departments are given a fixed amount of
money each year, obviously every other
department should be given the same
treatment. The repercussions of such a
move would be unfortunate.
Petitions are now being circulated to
gather signatures for some very suspicious
purposes. At first the petitions said that
the signatures would be used to override
the Lucas veto. Unfortunately, only a
specified majority of the SGA Legislature
can override the President's veto. When
the uninformed leaders of this shadowy
Continued on page ten.
ti
8 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
ECU STUDENT RUSSELL CHESSON plays the role of Dracula in the tinal ECU Playhouse
production of the year which ran last week.
Study shows marijuana
reduces sperm count
Marijuana can temporarily reduce the
sperm count and male sex hormone levels
in heavy smokers, according to new
findings by a team of researchers headed
by Dr. Robert Kolodny and including sex
behaviorist Dr. William Masters.
STUDY RESULTS
The study results indicated that
reduced sperm and testosterone pro-
duction was proportional to the number of
joints the subjects said they consumed in
an average week.
The study also pointed out that when
three of the marijuana users gave up
marijuana, their sperm and hormone levels
jumped to normal within two weeks.
The researchers, working at the
Reproductive Biology Research Found-
ation in St. Louis, tested 20 men who had
smoked five to 18 joints per week over at
least the previous six months, without
using any other drugs. As acontrol group,
20 men who said they had never smoked
marijuana were also tested. The research-
ers stressed in their report that they had
only the verbal assurances of the subject
that they had either never smoked smoked
marijuana or had never used any drugs
other than marijuana.
The Kolodny team further qualified
their results by saying that because of the
small size of the sample groups, lack of
data on the potency of marijuana smoked
by the subjects, and the sperm counts and
hormone levels of smokers before they
began using the drug made the study only
indicative of a possible relationship
between marijuana and hormone and
sperm levels.
DANGER
However, the team said their findings
indicated a danger to two groups of
marijuana smokers—boys entering puberty
and women pregnant with male fetuses.
The danger to adolescents, the doctors
said, was that proper puberty development
requires a delicate balance of hormones
which might be upset by marijuana. In
pregnant women, the potential danger was
not to the mothers, but to their male
fetuses, whose normal development of sex
characteristics might be inhibited by
marijuana, and could possible cause a
permanent hormone imbalance.
Mini-shuttle bus planned
to run from hill to union
By BOB MARSKE
Staff Writer
SGA President Bob Lucas recently
expressed tentative plans for a
mini-shuttle bus to run between the men’s
dorms and the new Student Union.
In response to complaints which
students have made concerning the
near-prohibitive distance between “the
Hill” and Mendenhall Student Center,
Lucas began to look into the possibilities
of the shuttle bus. “However,” he said,
“we have nothing definite. hope to be
able to present something conclusive to
the legislature and the students in the
fall.”
The shuttle bus, which Lucas de
being any “pet project”, will fotlow ar
which will come from “the Hill’,
through campus, and end at the
Union. Although,” Lucas added, “we
nothing definite as yet.”
The proposed new bus system
implemented, will supplement the exis
buses. “In addition, it will cost much
than the $10,000 which these buses c
although can’t say yet exactly
much,” he commented.
“What we're trying to do now,”
Lucas, “is to get as many inputs as
can. can’t see spending students’ mc
without knowing if they want it spent.
To all concerned students:
Do you know the SGA legislature voted
21-17 not to override the veto of the Fine
Arts Billi. Although was glad to see this
action taken, especially since it was a
majority vote, feel it is more important
that we all look toward the future.
feel many fine art students
misunderstood the issue at hand. The
discussion was centered around how the
money should be appropriated and how
the money would be spent by each group,
not if the fine arts should be funded. feel
there is a realization among nearly all
Students that the fine arts should be
funded. The only reason vetoed the bill
as because numerous questions that
ere raised about the bill were not
nswery or explained. Therefore,
one § felt the legislators should be
iv gs ample opportunity to reconsider
hes” decision.
would like to assure all students,
Lucas speaks on fine arts
especially those of the fine
departments, that will work
diligently with the Drama, Music and
Departments this summer in writing af
bill which will be introduced this fall.
A very positive attempt will be made
reach a compromise that will
satisfactory to all groups involvec
sincerely hope that the fine arts stude
will not look at yesterday’s action v
bitterness, but will look toward the fut
with a positive attitude so that efforts t
coming summer and fall will
productive.
am looking forward to next year w
a great amount of enthusiasm. wo
like to say that am very willing to talk
any student on any issue. n fact, stror
encourage students to come to the S
office and nonviolently express ys
opinion.
Sincere
Bob Luc
SGA Presid
Train for the
Navy’ s sky now.
If you qualify, you can sign up for Navy
flight training while youre still in college
and be assured of the program you want
Our AOC Program (if you want to be a Pilot)
or our NFOC Program (if you want to be a
Flight Officer) can get you into the Navy
sky for an exciting, challenging career.
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Call or Write:
Lt. Wallace Mangum
Navy Recruiting District
P.O. Box 2506
Raleigh, N.C. 27602
Ph 919-832-6629 callcollect
irov
egt
By CA
s
rowing yO
ner is one
2ry prices.
you don't
able for pl
from Hele
-A-Garden
xt Extensior
he 20 feet b
ar, and may
ting at any
Some peof
‘ gardens
fall crops,”
s well as
2 a wide
asented at
mer.
We have dt
ers, house
s of pe
ession not
re attorney:
All the pe
t-A-Garden
beable with
problem w
»s, as fara
‘It's the
ple I’ve ever
»GA
itence is, “
agine an St
islature, a
heral, mee
juations,
it lobbying
ants. (Yes,
siness, bu
rquet, it c
e-for-al! ev
rk or elsev
r out-of-tc
iversity i
iA. Yes, b
sumes of
1.) Imagine
ggled abo
fairs of sta
‘ting wisel
rn to those
ilue to the
udent has
lode-a-Phor
hine the
udent has
nsumer ai
udent just
machine
teresting -
udent, Ww
ntimidated
Ind furnish
Our argt
pst its purt
between tl
tudent. It
bf a busin
ttudents w
but of the
rom their .
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974 :
SONATE EC
irow your own garden
egtables this summer
sh Lucas de
j 4
7 get By CAROLYN DAVIS
a, Staff Writer
nd at the
added, “we rowing your own vegetables this
hy ; :
US system a om, eC
te a you don’t have a plot of land readily
nets able for planting vegetables, rent a
‘ vi C from Helen Chapin, creator of the
exactly — -A-Garden in Greenville on Evans
2t Extension.
rm » , he20 feet by 50 feet plots rent for $20
4 ichig ‘ar, and may be used by the tenant for
fee S$ aS ting at any time during the year.
on “ SMC Some people take full advantage of
spent. - gardens and plant spring, summer
pammeeeiteee
fall crops,” Mrs. Chapin said
S well as a variety of crops, there is
arts 2 a wide spectrum of people
2sented at the Rent-A-Garden each
mer.
We have doctors, professors, nurses,
ers, housewives, teachers, almost ail
‘S Of people. think the only
ession not represented at the gardens
1e attorneys,” Mrs. Chapin said.
ll the people participating in the
t-A-Garden program are most
seable with each other. There has been
problem with stealing other people’s
Ss, as far as Mrs. Chapin has seen.
‘It’s the most congenial group of
ple I’ve ever seen. think digging in the
1GA
Continued from page six.
re tine
work
Music and
writing ar
1 this fall.
ill be made
vat will
S involvec
arts stude
5 action v
ard the fut
at efforts t
all swill
ext year w
ism. wo
ing to talk
act, stror
1 to the S
mPress ¥Titence is, “. . .sol can have a job.” Just
aigine an SGA that consisted only of a
islature, a few officers and an attorney
eral, meeting to talk about course
luations, consumer information, stu-
It lobbying, or occasional all-student
nts. (Yes, know that’s the Union’s
lsiness, but if the SGA can fund a
yquet, it can surely fund some kind of
e-for-all event rather than a trip to New
rk or elsewhere for a select few. “But
r out-of-town participation does the
f iversity image good!”, says the
iA. Yes, but it also looks good on the
sumes of the lucky few who get to
.) Imagine an SGA in which no one
ggled about how much the damned
iccaneer gets this year, or why does the
’ ayhouse need the money. With the SGA
i duced to Rousseau’s people “regulating
fairs of state under the oak, and always
‘ting wisely”, perhaps the SGA would
Sincere
Bob Luc
3A Presid
@ rn to those things which are, in fact, of .
ilue to the average student. The average
‘udent has not been interested in a
lode-a-Phone. Model UN or a xerox
it achine that rarely worked. The average
Ot) udent has been interested in housing,
: bnsumer aid and bike trails. The average
d udent just wants a little help, no gadgets
machinery, please. And yet it is
teresting to note that it is the average
udent, who funds the SGA, who is
(ow. timidated by the SGA offices, carpeted
nd furnished as they are.
vy. Our argument is that the SGA long ago
pst its purpose of acting as a buifer zone
'petween the forces of evil and the
tudent. It now has ail the appurtenances
f a business, and we know of several
tudents who claim they get more action
but of the Administration than they do
rom their peer group.
earth is a common denominator for most
people. They enjoy raising their own food,
and there’s a great sense of satisfaction,”
Mrs.Chapin said.
Last year, the first year of operation for
Rent-A-Garden was such a success that
most of the people who had plots last year
have renewed their leases to hold a plot
again this year.
“ think the only ones who didn’t renew
their leases this year were people -mostly
young couplesthat had to move away,”
Mrs. Chapin said. “This makes me feel
it’s very worthwhile.”
Information about the lots can be
obtained by calling Mrs. Chapin at
756-7633 or 758-1159.
There’s still plenty of time for a
summer and fall crop.
Hi Neighbor!
There are, occasionally, saving graces
in the SGA. We point especially to Cecil
Myers, from Rob Luisana’s SGA, and to
Tom Clare, Bill Beckner and Braxton Hall
from this year. These people have
understood that the SGA should be a little
more than a horde with a president who
acts excruciatingly sincere. They have
attempted to get the SGA moving and:
have, in many cases succeeded. We
admire them.
Despite our above ramble through the
SGA, we know little will change. Each
year the SGA will be given a dole to play
with, to spend a year apportioning rather
than investigating uncomfortable things.
A miniscule number of people will be sent
to various things — conventions et al — on
the premise that in order to be a Big
University, you have to send people
places, failing to understand that if ECU
sent all its students to Algiers, it would
still not be Chapel Hill or NYU. There is
more to prestige than that; it requires
more than a bus or an international
program to build a university. You have to
have something to start with. And until
the SGA realizes this, it will be no
organization of the students. It will be an
organization of and for the SGA, an
insiders’ club with voluminous funds and a
lot of Monday afternoons to kill.
: Riggan Snoe 4
: Repair Shop :
: 111 W. Fourth :
: Downtown Greenville -
CLASSIFIED
NUCLEAR REACTORS: Young men, you
can secure your future and play a part in
the solution to the energy crisis through
the Navy Nuclear Training Program.
Over 1 year of nuclear propulsion
education, salaries up to $10,300 in 3 years,
travel and adventure too. Ages 17-24, U.S.
citizen. To see if you qualify, call collect
523-4971 US Navy or call toll free
800-841-8000.
ROOM FOR RENT in furnished 3-bedroom
house for second session of summer
school. House includes an air-conditioned
living room, large’ kitchen, indoor
bathroom facilities, a large front porch,
and a partridge ina pear tree. All this for
$25 a mo. Call Skip at 752-4750 or come by
at 114 West 9th St.
ROOMMATE WANTED. Tar River Es-
tates. Ask for Tony 752-7278.
WANTED: Responsible couple or indivi-
dual to sublet completely furnished
apartment for summer - 1 block from Ed.
Psyc. Building. Call 752-5282.
LOST TIMEX electronic watch Silver with
silver band. Left on hill tennis courts Fri.
7-8. Call 758-5574 or to 622 Tyler.
DUE TO A PROMOTION within our
accounting organization we are in
immediate need of an accountant. Must
have accounting major from a 4 year
school; business administration graduate
must have 1-3 years experience. Send
resume to: Personnel Department, W.R.
Grace Company, Nitrex Plant, P.O. Box
630, Wilmington, N.C an equal opportu-
nity employer.
IT HAS HARDLY seemed like 4
yearsmore like 4 minutes or 40
years. But at least now with a peaceful
mind for in the final evaluation the good
had more than made up for the bad. With
thanks to my friends and other strangers
for making it just hunky-dory: C. Sleazy,
the DDSS: Carol C. and Fanny and the
rest of the SFWC; Reggis and rock and
roll, Charlie and his comet, James the
framer (here still in spirit) and Doug; J.
Taylor and the Country Club crew; T.D.
and Anne, gone but not forgotten and all
the other friendly faces with their own
special nicknames. Also to those in the
PSYCHO Dept Linda, Larry, Jim and
Tacket, and Mose especially Cheerful
Charlie. And then there is always Peggy,
the one and only Grew.With love, Ronnie
Jo.
) a@ (ele! ele «e ele @e) ele ee ale
Dorms
Belk, Aycock, Jones
Scott and Tyler
Greene, White, Clement,
Garrett and Fletcher
Cotten, Jarvis, Umstead
and Fleming
@ ele (ele ele « «@ ele ee ale oe ale «
will be charged $3.00
Other Charges
ele (ele) ale (ele) ele ele sje (
‘es (ele) ee) ee) ele (ele) sje (ele ale (ele) ele (e@ ale (22 «e se «2) ele «« « e) ale (ele)
Refrigerator Rentals
Refrigerators will be picked-up on Thursday,
May 16 and Friday, May 17 from 12:00 noon to
5:00p.m. at the following locations,
Deposits may be picked-up in room 308 Wright
Annex at the times above. Any deposit not claimed
by tne specified time will be forfieted to the S.G.A.k
Refrigerator Service. Refrigerators turned in late 7
ele ale! os ele) efe (ele) ale (os! ele (ele) ele (els! ele «e ee ale ele aie «ale ae
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent: carpeted, paneled, big back yard,
$80 per month thru Sept. Ist. New lease
after that. Call Mike Marsh, 752-0359.
LOST: Brown and white beagie, wearing
collar with name Perry Rogers on it. Call
758-1369 after 5 p.m. Dog’s name is
Spooky.
OLD-TIME RADIO SEAMAS, mysteries,
1930's and 40’s. Cassette, 13 hours, $26 incl.
tape. 758-2125.
PORTABLE RADIO - Panasonic R-3000
AM, FN, Marine,SW bands 1.6-22MC.
Batteries or plug-in to all international
voltages. Anti-drift FM (AFC). Superb
speaker. Versatile. Can serve as FM-
stereo imput. Exc. cond. Value new
$325. Asking $225. 758-2125.
JOB SECURITY- Wanted men and women
with a future. Recent high school and
college grads looking for a job with no
lay-offs, no strikes, technical and
advanced training, medical and dental
benefits, 30 days paid vacation per year
provided. For more information call
523-4971 U.S. Navy or call toll free
800-841-8000.
WANTED - Someone with knowledge and
love for horses to manage horse
stable. Male or female. Call 758-2179 d2
or 752-2498 night.
WANTED TO BUY - Used girl’s regular
type one speed bike, with large balloon
type old-fashioned tires, in good
condition. Would like to buy in time for
. Mother’s Day. Cali 756-0344 after 6:00 and
ask for Karen.
NEEDED: need someone to hetp me
clean house one afternoon every other
week. Transportation can be provided.
Two dollars an hour. Cath 756-6443 days or
758-5524 nights. Ask for Rita Minton.
LOST: Silver Band, Stat Sapphire (Biuve)
ring - reward. Lost in class. Call 752-6612.
WANTED: College girls to work in
taproom. Guaranteed two dollars an
hour. Apply in person at Louie’s Lounge,
200 10th St.
APT. TOSUBLEASE for Summer - 1 block
from campus. Corner of 4th: Library.
$60-month. Call 752-1376.
ele ele sje
Location
Truck will be parked on the Hill.
Truck will be located in area
of Girls High Rise Dorms.
Truck will be parked on the Mail.
Missing shelf $1.00
Missing ice trays .50 ea.
Uncieaned $1.00
Undefrosted $1.00
10 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
"FOrUM
Continued from page seven.
movement learned that their documents
were useless, they reworded the petitions
to ask for a recall election of President
Lucas. This is valid and can be done with
15 percent of the sfudent body having
signed a petition which asks for a recall
election, but the leaders had collected
signatures on a petition which at first had
said something entirely different than its
present wording. These petitioning
methods are flagrant and capricious!
protest the actions of these petitioners and
insist that the petitions be destroyed
because the little trick of rewording has
caused the documents to become the
same as forgeries.
President Lucas’s veto was without
malice towards the three departments
mentioned above. Instead, it was a
carefully thought out and courageous
decision made to protect the rights and
powers of the entire student body. After
having objectively considered our
President’s decision, strongly urge the
student body to support the Lucas veto.
Phillip D. Bailey
Dorm dirt
To Fountainhead:
The letter you ran a while back, griping
about filth in a dofm, gave me courage to
write-on' the same subject. Granted, it’s
the end of the year, but feel the subject
warrants noise.
I’m in adorm - no name needed - which
has, in the part two months, hit the pits of
grubbiness. The maids do their work, but
the residents are a disaster. On the first
floor, garbage spills out of wastebaskets
throughout the hall. On weekends the
Stairs are littered with beer cans, spilled
beer, paper cups, wrappers, cans and
cigarette butts. Halls often have dried
puddies of mysterious liquids (is it
water? is it beer?) and, with summer close
by, the doors are often wide open, letting
in various stray animals at odd hours. Two
weeks ago a large dog whined and pawed
at my door at 3 a.m and I’ve located or
heard at least three cats crying and unable
to find a way out of the dorm. The
absolute limit and motivation for this letter
was reached on Saturday morning, when
opened my door to find that a dog had
relieved himself in both solid and liquid
forms in the hall.
pity the summer residents. I’m no
neatness freak, but food-type trash and old
beer in the hall can, after a weekend of
ripening, verge on the revolting. The
traveling animal problem may be
insoluble, but what about tne rest? lived
in a tenth-rate apartment with nine cats
next door, a non-housebroken dog, and a
next-door neighbor who threw parties
every other night, and had less trouble
with garbage and miscellaneous than I’ve
had on campus.
So, someone: please take note. Two
letter-writers from two different dorms
can’t be all that crazy.
WRC
To Fountainhead :
Perturbed
This letter is in response to the letter
written by “A Women Resident” in last
Tuesday's edition of the Fountainhead.
It is obviously quite true that all of the
candidates for both major and minor
offices ran unopposed in the recent WRC
elections. Conceivably, as you stated,
this event can be attributed to general
apathy; however, extend your viewpoint
and consider all the facets of becoming an
officer.
When one assumes an authoritative
position in an organization, in conjunction
one also assumes responsibilities and
time obligations. Being an officer of an
organization, expecially one which
represents the women resident students,
requires the officer to subject herself to
their criticisms, complaints, and de-
mands. These points must be considered,
weighed, and finally balanced to the best
of her capabilities. To do this she must
know what the students want. Once again
this entails an expenditure of time and
effort. How many people are willing to do
this? Perhaps these are contributing
factors to the lack of candidates, not only
in WRC elections, but in others as well.
This lack of candidacy is, as you
emphasized, in conflict with the purpose
of elections and representation. However,
by the very definition of a democracy, one
must have an election ‘whether an
opposition exists or not. If one does not
exist, as in this case, you, the voter, have
at your disposal the power to “write-in” the
candidate you desire for office. To the
best of my knowledgedid not count the
votes) this power was not extensively
utilized.
also hope “that in the future, more
students will take part in the organizations
that were created to serve their interest.”
However, feel this coming years WRC
executive board has the interests of the
women resident students in mind, not
their own. But once again, stress, let us
know what you want, so that we can more
effectively perform our duties.
Karen Harloe
WRC 1st Vice-chairwoman
for 1974-75
Appalled
To Fountainhead:
was appalled at the content of the
recent series of articles on Athletic
Director C. Stasavich in the school
newspaper, “Fountainhead.” If Jack
Morrow, the writer, has facts and he
claims they are documented by tapes,
local newspaper stories, relesases and
conversations with key administrative
personnel, then the women of this
university are to be chastised severely.
Do you women realize that you are
paying an athletic fee of $9.00 a
quarter? Most of the women are here for
three quarters a year. Women comprised
57 percent of the school’s enrollment this
year. Now for the mathematics. Nine
dollars a quarter times three equals twenty
seven dollars and that times 57 percent of
the 10,000 students or 5700 women, totals
$153,900.00. Men’s total done the same
way but using 43 percent of enroliment,
totals $116,100.00.
Now who should be getting
what? Your building is Minges, not old
delapidated Memorial Gym. Why do you
have to use the old antiquated Memorial
Pool when your money is the majority,
your enrollment the majority and yet you
use inferior equipment and buildings?
Stasavich’s office should be in the
basement of Memorial Gym and Ms.
Stallings in that big lovely, interior
decorated, air conditioned double office in
Minges Coliseum. Why are you accepting
scraps from the table like dogs? You
provide the main meal, steak, with your
money, yet you accept handouts,
Stasavich throws a bone - like a traveling
van for women’s athletics which was due
ten years ago. Do you get air conditioned
Greyhound buses for team trips? The men
do! Do you get steak dinners when on the
road? The men do! Do you sleep at the
Lemon Tree Inn before home games? The
men do! Do you fly on long trips? The
men do!
Now the Athletic Director says you
have no gate receipt teams - in otherwords
teams that take in money profitably.
Neither does he. The athletic department
has not made any money in the past five
years if all expenses are totaled. If football
was paying its own way why isn’t the debt
owed on Ficklen Stadium paid off. The
interest alone on the debt would put many
students through college here. Baseball
receipts can’t afford the new uniforms,
charge for lights, bats, balls, coaches,
grounds keepers, watering system,
mowing equipment, two diamonds,
upkeep, travel expenses, meals, etc.
Basketball even lost money on some home
games this year. Gate receipts didn’t even
pay for the referees, let along lights,
maintenance, cleaning Minges after the
game, etc. The AD is seriously
considering no freshman or JV basketball
games next year. (They cost too much
money.)
What am trying to point out is that the
women of this university have been
overrun, maligned, beaten and subjected
to falsehoods and male power plays to
keep them in line plus allowing the men in
control to use their money, their funds to
further their own needs. How do back up
a statement like this?
Do you (Women of ECU) have a
representative on the Athletic Council?
NO! (No women according to Stasavich
and yet you provide more money than the
men!) Pirates Club has at least two, Math
dept. one, Administration one, Student
Government, one - a man, yet women -
NONE- Second: how many women get
grants: None - according to Stasavich, a
local newspaper says 198 men get grants
here in athletics yet women contribute
more money to the overall program than
the men in fees! UNC-Chapel Hill issued
their first women’s athletic scholarship so
it is being done in North Carolina but not
at East Carolina.
So women - with NO representation -
NO grants - No nothing, what should you
do? You are in the majority and normally
the majority rules but not here! As Tom
Daly so eloquantly put it last week in his
letter to the editor, make the SGA cut off
all student funds to the Athletic
Department. Women’s $154,000.00. -
Men’s $116.000.00 - total of $270,000.00.
This will make you (the majority) the
largest contributor to the athletic
department and in complete fontrol. They
can’t exist without you! You would then
shut down the whole athletic program here
at the university. Then new prio:‘ties
could be established with some goals
representing all student with equal
participation - as the law states - Title IX of
the Education Amendments of 1972 reads
“No person in the United States shall, on
the basis of sex, be excluded from
participation in, be dénied the benefits of,
or be subjected to discrimination under
any educational program or activity
receiving Federal financial assistance.”
And East Carolina does receive Federal
financial assistance.
Women of the campus arise
Wipe the sand from your eyes
Now is the time, to get things done
ARISE! ARISE! ARISE
An equal opportunity
Athletic Supporter
Editors Note: This was forwarck
Fountainhead.
Mr. Braxton Hall, Speaker
Student Government Association
East Carolina University
Greenville, North Carolina 27834
Dear Mr. Hall:
wish to officially comment on th
of L.B. 20-3, the arts funding bill by
President, Mr. Bob Lucas. Especial
wish to say a few words about the :
specifics charged to the art “departn
The School of Art on several occ
mentioned proposed expenditure
general terms just like the Departme
Drama and Speech and the Scho
Music. It is impossible to make sp
statements concerning the distributi
an allotment until one has the mon
work with. Figures and percentages
mentioned by the School of Art as
experience is concerned before
appropriations committee and befor
Judiciary Committee. We have
present at each committee meeting
submitted to questions by members.
There is going to be exhibitions at
Carolina whether funded by the SG
not. These exhibitions have been a pi
our overall educational program for ai
students attending the University, not
art majors as is the situation with con
and stage presentations. The qualit
the exhibitions can be- enha
tremendously by SGA funding
present, and for the past 18 years, t
exhibitions have cost the stud
nothing.
If the arts were to be funded anc
School of Art receive $5,000 per ye
reasonable breakdown on expenses c
be listed as follows:
$500 for exhibition fees
$500 for exhibition
(mounting, framing, ca
drapery, plinths, etc.)
$500 for exhibition guards, ho
iums, etc.
$1500 for exhibition catalogs, post
etc.
$2000 for exhibition freight, handl
extra insurance
Like many things today, there is
such thing as an instant exhibiti
Sometimes these are “in the works”
several years. Currently we are plann
the 1976 centennial year exhibitions. If
are funded we will have one kind
exhibition; if we are not, we shall hav
totally different kind of exhibition.
te athlete
Yow, as i
ling to cc
It has
2 ever.
The foott
nmers W
Stlers rer
thern Cc
ference é
7,
My cc
yed FOU!
Carl v
acond str
ds and pa
ticipated
3 a fourth:
As a base
presenta ff) a .337 ¢
In rer
itude and
S perfect.
t that a fe
being “the
a “troubl
ing invitec
East Carc
Contrary
rson invo
ree with ¢
would
ge. Both
Ip us bett
We urge the legislature to override jr the stud
veto of President Lucas and take the
step that insures early and contenia
pianning for the art on this campus.
Sincere
Wellington B. G
De
To Fountainhead:
In the interest of fair play, would
to address this thought to the perso
responsible for the “Impeach Bob L
sign that saw out in front of the Unio
Lucas has been in office less thar
month, and think calling for
impeachment because of one unpopu
veto is ridiculous. mean give him
chance! Dave Matthew
(Supporter of the Fine Arts
and believer in fair play
Iping the
A big tha
em.
So long,
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974 1 T
Ping
sueiitideieemeiemeeatemmetrtern oe)
ker 7
tion 1 O-Morrow’s Sports
na 27834 By JACK MORROW
Sports Editor
mment on th
nding bill by CONFERENCE A SUCCESS
is. Especial
; about the ; Heartiest congratulations to Mr. Rod Compton and his sports medicine staff for
art “departn ucing a first-rate conference for trainers and potential trainers this past weekend.
several occe Was fortunate to be able to attend the conference and the clockwork efficiency with
expenditure h it was conducted was impressive. Dr. James Bowman, Dr. Richard Evans, Dr.
he Departrn et Walsh, Dr. William Bost, and Mrs. Janet Schweisthal all took time out from their
d the Scho schedules to make valuable contributions to the conference.
to make sp he sports medicine staff at East Carolina is one of the finest around and Compton
he distributi his staff prove the point that money is not the only incentive for doing a good x
as the mon The trainers take great pride in their competency and you can rest assured that the 8
percentages e athletes are in good hands.
of Art as ‘Ow, asin years to come, look for leaders in the field of sports medicine and athletic Fc
ied before ‘ing to come from East Carolina.
e and befor
Ne have GOOD YEAR
tee meetin
y te ting It has been a good year. The Pirates won the Commissioner's Cup for the first aun, Gaon aaa tis a aa lnadne leche etme ' Cart
xhibitions at 7 ever. :
by the SG The football squad led off the year by sweeping a Southern Conference field. The hay ge —— and he was a fourth-round draft choice of
ve been ap; TMers won all eighteen events in their conference championship. John Welborn’s ‘
ogram for a Stlers repeated as Southern Conference champions, and the baseball squad won the
iversity, not thern Conference pennant and they have now earned the right to represent the S
on with'con ference at the District Playoffs which will be played in Starkville, Miss on May occer - ou er n name
The qualit 77:
be enha Three members of the 1973 ECU Carolina University 1973.
A funding ATHLETE OF THE YEAR soccer team made the All-Star Southern The University is indeed proud of these
18 years, t Conference Team. Receiving this honor men and their second place finish in
the stud My congratulations also go out to East Carolina’s Carl Summerell for being were Tom Tozer - Sophomore; Brad Smith soccer last fall. In the short time that
ved FOUNTAINHEAD’s ATHLETE OF THE YEAR. - Junior; and Tom O’Shea - Junior. soccer has been a certified Southem
funded anc Carl was named Football Player of the Year this season as he led the Pirates to Their citation on the individual trophies Conference sport on the ECU campus, this
000 per yez , econd straight Southern Conference title and a 9-2 season. He rushed for 285 which they recently received from their —is their highest finish. In turn this also
expenses c Js and passed for 1,222 good for an aerial percentage of 53.2 percent. Summerell coaches reads “Southern Conference meant seven points for the recently won
ticipated in the Blue-Grey football classic, he received the McArthur Award, and All-Star Soccer Team - their name - East Commissioner's Cup.
3 afourth-round draft choice of the New York Giants of the NFL.
BeS bs a baseball player, he was a starter at shortstop and he led the Pirates in hitting
presenta ff a .337 average.
ming, ca
etc.) FINAL THOUGHTS
juards, ho
In reporting sports this season, guess that could have taken a “laissez-faire”
alogs, post fitude and gone along with the crowd and make believe that our athletic department
Ss perfect. But was interested in East Carolina’s building a top-notch program and
ight, hand t that a few policies that were employed by the athletic staff were not quite indicative
being “the best”. Sol pointed out a few “sore spots” and have now assumed the role
a “troublemaker” or “bad guy”. Well, don’t mind taking my punishment and not
y, there is jing invited to athletic banquets ; in fact, don’t even mind not being on the mailing list
nt exhibiti East Carolina’s Sports Information Department.
he works” Contrary to what a few uninformed individuals believe, have nothing against any
2 are plannrson involved with the East Carolina athletic department. Just because you do not
ibitions. If jree with a man’s policies does not make him an enemy.Does it?
one kind would like to thank everyone who has taken time to comment on our sports
e shall havge. Both positive and negative remarks were greatly appreciated. This criticism will
bition. Ip us better OURSELVES and THE QUALITY OF OUR PAGES. We were writing strictly
10 override jr the students of this university and we hope that we have turned the wheels toward
1 take the cPlping the student body gain a better understanding of athletics in general.
id contenic A big thank you to my staff for doing their jobs the way that they were supposed to do
campus. &M.
So long, gang, and hope you didn’t take it personally.
Sincere
ington B. G « «
De Trojans dominate,
The University of Southern California 8
has won the NCAA's College World Series 2
five of the last six years. The Trojans have ©
won a record nine College World Series '
y, would titles.
the perso SEE
‘ pea What a mistake didn't take a feather from SOCCER PLAYERS RECEIVE HONOR - Tom Tozer, Brad Smith, and Tom O’Shea of
, ian thed his pillow the 1973 East Carolina Pirate soccer team were recently named to the All-Star
; ' Here’s the everlasting rub, neither am Souther Conference Soccer Team. The Pirates finished second in the conference
Ing tor good nor bad, behind Appaichian State university.
Ne unpopu I'd give up my halo for ahorn and a horn for
give him the hat once had.
fe Matthew :
ine Arts
‘in fair play ae reeaaalanialscaetian matic tecbieiemasiiabinmen iene mente
2 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5414 MAY 1974
‘Stas’ releases bud
By DAVE ENGLERT
Assistant Sports Editor
Monday afternoon, May 13, East
Carolina Athletic Director Clarence
Stasavich released to this reporter the
particulars of the Athletic Budget and
grants-in-aid. He did this despite concern
that it was not in the best interests of the
university.
The source of funds for the 1973-74
Athletic Budget are as follows:
é
Football $226,000
Basketball receipts 27,000
Student Fees 285,500
Pirate Club 140,000
Concessions 22,500
Programs 13,500
Miscellaneous:
Baseball, wrestling
& swimming receipts 1,000
This can be compared with the source
of funds for the 1963-64 budget to show
how the student fee percentage has
dropped from well over 50 percent to
approximately 35 percent. The 1963-64
sources were:
Football receipts .$57,850
Basketball receipts .5,000
Student fees 99,000
Student Union 5,000
Century Club 5,700
The Century Club was the predecessor
of today’s Pirate Club.
The above-mentioned source of funds
for 1973-74 comprise the basis for this, the
1973-74 Athletic Department Budget :
ADMINISTRATION $84,222
FOOTBALL 396,572
BASKETBALL 89,460
BASEBALL 18,788
SWIMMING 12,100
GOLF 3,100
TENNIS 3,120
BAND 5,110
TRACK 14,040
WRESTLING 11,540
SOCCER 3,510
MEDICAL 33,489
PUBLICITY 25,290
12,476
CONCESSIONS
Pounder 99) 5
419 West
Main St.
EAST CAROLINA
‘FISH HOUSE COUNTRY‘
GO PIRATES
IN WASHINGTON
Drive a Little and Eat a Lot!
ALL YOU CAN EAT
« FISH HOUSE 7
WOMEN’S ATHLETICS 13,160
CHEERLEADERS 600
TOTAL $699,577
Under the category “Administration”,
the following areas are funded: athletic
vehicles, Ficklen Stadium operation,
Minges Coliseum operation, other
expenses, and a contingency fund. Money
from this fund is used to sent our athletes
to national championship events,
according to Stasavich.
To provide a further explanation of
funds each athletic team receives,
Stasavich released the following inform-
ation concerning grants-in-aid:
TEAM NUMBER AMOUNT
Football 83 $185,000
Basketball 16 34,000
Baseball 7 9,000
Swimming 17 6,350
Golf 7 900
Tennis 7 700
Track 26 5,500
Wrestling 24 6000
The remainder of the budget (budget
minus grants) is disbursed for tiie
following typical expenses which are
generally applicable to each sport: equip-
ment, supplies, guarantees (only in
football and basketball), officials, team
travel, recruiting and scouting, salaries
and wages, Office operation, dues
(entrance fees), and other expenses
(WATTS line, film, printing recruiting
material, etc.).
Stasavich lastly pointed out that the
reason why football and basketball got
most of the money was because “those are
the main areas of student interest.”
ree
“on ArM e °
Telephone
946-1301
ig
S.
at
EQUALITY FOR WOMEN-Recent legislation has called for equality for both men’s aiG
women’s athletics. This equality is to be in effect for all areas of athletics. If the Mp:
receive $89,000 for basketball, then the women are to receive the same amount.
bert
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eremiah .
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