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Fountainhead
Assembly appropriates
med school budget
By CINDY KENT
Co-News Editor
North Carolina General Assernbly
vated last week a total of $28 245
for construction of the ECU
medical school. The original recomrmend-
allied for $35.4 million for 1975-77,
according to Edwin W. Monroe
Jice- Chancellor for Health Affairs
ie made an agreement with Pitt
Merona! Hospital to use the facility as a
reaching hospital, rather than constructing
, separate building,” said Monroe. “This
accounts for the 7 million dollar
reduction
$15 million wes already appropriated
» 1973-75 as a reserve for the med
school.” said Monroe.
“The $2B million breaks down to $6
million for 1975-76, and $22 245 million for
1976-77. There is a total of over $43
million available in funds. This money
goes toward hospital and teaching
facilities to be added on to the county
hospital, the med school building, the
Health Affairs library, Allied Health, and
the nursing school. Also, Ragsdale dorm
will be renovated as part of the program
According to ‘The News and
Observer’, the total sum appropriated was
$32 million
That figure includes all operating
costs, some not combined to the med
schoo! itself,” said Monroe. “Options and
Opportunities for Health Careers, which
recruits and educates disadvantaged and
minority students, has an operating
MUSICAL GATHERING breaks monotony of hot summer day.
Family Practice Department
budget of $250 thousand a year.”
Contributions and donations become
part of the Account for the Foundation of
Health Affairs, a tax exempt account,
according to Monroe
“These funds supplement the state
funds available, and heip with student
financial aid,” said Monroe. “The Amos
Johnson memorial fund for Health Affairs
has also been started.”
“These new funds for the med school
will go toward enlarging the emergency,
operating, clinical lab and x-ray areas. Pitt
Memorial is 40 per cent complete. Right
now it is terribly overcrowded and is an
outdated facility,” said Monroe
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
VOL. 6, NO. 56
1 JULY 1975
Out-of-state students
suffer tuition hike
The N.C. General Assembly has
approved legisiation to increase tuition for
out-of-state students $100 per year in
North Carolina state-supported colleges
This tuition increase will apply across
the board to ail out-of-state students in
tax-supported institutions, said Julian R
Vainright, Assistant to the Business
Manager at ECU
“We don't know at this point how
graduate students will be affected, or
whether community colleges will be
affected,” Vainright said
“This increase will be applied to a
three-quarter academic year, and will not
affect this summer's tuition,” he said,
“though the possibility exists there may be
some effect on next years summer
sessions.”
Fees for summer sessions are
determined by the institution and not by
the Raleigh legislature
‘We hope to receive additional
information from Chapel Hill on the
subject this week,” Vainright said
No uniformity of tuition charges
existed in the university system until
1971. in that year the N.C Generai
Assembly established a base of $1300 for
out-of-state students attending five year
and doctorate granting institutions. In
1972 the tuition was increased to $1800 for
out-of-state students
“We don't think the increase will cause
much loss in student enroliment, but this
iS @ Supposition on our part,” Vainright
said.
Medical School receives memorial fund
ECU and the family of the late Dr
Arn ‘“. Johnson of Garland have
an C80 establishment of a memorial
Strengthen family practice in the
NOO0! of Medicine
“ Johnson, a rural family practitioner
‘More than 40 years, died earlier this
yGar
Announcement of the Amos Neill
YONNson Memorial Fund in his honor was
ae jointly by his widow, Mrs. Mary
oer Johnson, on behalf of the family,
ae Sy ECU Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins
a Or Edwin Monroe, Vice Chancellor for
" Mealth Affairs, on benait of ECU
‘e fund will be established within the
"oundation for Health Affairs, and
oe used to enhance development of a
Department of Family Practice in
) Medical school
Wy
he FY
Proceeds from the func May oe used to
establish a memorial chairmanship or
professorship, for recruitment of top
quality faculty in the Department, for
enhancing state operating funds for the
Department, for family practice student or
resident financial aid, and for other similar
needs
Dr. Johnson was an alumnus of Duke
University and received the MD degree
from the University of Pennsylvania in
1933
Dr. Johnson was active in medical
organizations and held several elective and
appointive offices, including president of
the N.C. Medical Examiners and medical
fr
Inside Today
Editorials page 2
Simulated wreck page 4
Beach Boys and Chicago page 6
Movies page 7
Sports page 6
advisor to the US Dept. of Health,
Education and Welfare and the N.C. Board
of Mental Health. He was aiso a member
of three N.C. Governor's Commissions
In addition, he served as president and
board member for the American Board of
Family Practice, state and national
president of the American Academy of
Genera! Practice, and member of the
American Medical Association's Hospital
Accreditation Commission.
“Amos Johnson was among our
Strongest supporters and a constant
source of encouragement and inspiration
in the long struggie to establish a school
of medicine at ECU,” Jerikins said. “It is
especially appropriate that such a fund be
established to further his aspirations that
emphasis be placed on primary health care
delivery for rural North Carolina—the need
for family doctors.”
eee ine i
‘tat
sos
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975
PNA OA STN ILE AINSI III LILES ST TALS ss,
Ediforials‘SCommentary
Hike unfair to out-of-staters
The General Assembly's move to hike out-of-state tuition by $100 a year may generate
me additional revenue in the short run. in the long run, such a move could have
fetrimental effects on North Carolina's higher education system
-state tuition at the Consolidated University of North Carolina's 16 campuses is
excessively high when compared with other states. The 1,373 students classified
is n-resident Fall Quarter, 1974 were already paying “through the nose” to attend ECU
Adding $100 to that educational bill moves the total price from the “through the nose’
ategory into a new range called “getting biood out of a turnip
The question now arises just how many out-of-state students the consolidated
ystem will lose by upping the ante to attend a North Carolina college in September
When the original tuition hike proposal was cranked out, the call was for marking up
the price for non-residents $300 a year. Such a large increase would have cost ECU as
many as 190 out-of-state students, ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins claimed then
Just how the new increase really will affect non-resident enroliment is anybody's
juess. Even though two-thirds has been trimmed from the original proposal, upping the
price taq surely will not heip attract more out-of-state tuition
n fact, raising the tuition rate could lead to some decline in total out-of-state
enroliment, and then any gain made through the increased tuition would be wiped out
Rather than gain ground, the system should actually suffer a setback. We will have
fewer non-resident students contributing to the system, and those we do Nave will be
suffering under increased financial burden
The only smart thing the General Assembly did when dealing with this issue was to
it Out a portion of the bill raising in-state tuition by $25
4 Shame those same legislators did not show the same “Southern Hospitality” to
ion-resident students. We thought out-of-staters added diversity, variety, new insights,
talent, and gave us “a good cultural meiting pot.” At the rate the system is upping the
inte for these “foreigners”, we could soon be a 99.44 percent pure Consolidated
Iniversity of North Carolina
“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers, of newspapers without a a a
preter the latter.”
Thomas Jefferson
Editor-in-ChiefMike Taylor
Managing EditorSydney Green
Business Manager Teresa Whisnant
News EditorsSam Newell, Cindy Kent
Advertising ManagerJackie Shalicross
Sports EntertainmentJohn Evans
Copy EditorGretchen R. Bowermaster
Fountainnead will be published weekly during Summer Schoo! but will resume cet
twice-weekly publication beginning in September
Fountainhead is the student newspaper sponsored by the Student Governmen
Association of East Carolina University and appears each Tuesday and Thursday dering
the schoo! year
Mailing address. Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville. N.C. 27834
Editorial Offices 758-6366, 758-6367
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-students
TO
OUT OF STATE
TUITION.
Snore p
Twn tree (
BUT;
T HOID'OF SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY
DHIS’ WASNT
EXACTLY
: HOW IX HAD IT PICTURED.
By JACK ANDERSON
with Joe Spear
WASHINGTON Vice President
Neison Rockefeller recently suggested
that the late President Kennedy was aware
of at least one CIA assassination
plot. This has touched off a big
Washington controversy, involving Presi-
dents Eisenhower and Johnson as well
Did they have advance knowledge of
assassination attempts against foreign
leaders?
Our sources say that none of the CIA
investigations has uncovered direct
evidence that past presidents were
informed about the assassination
plots. But the President always headed
the chain of command and had the
responsibility to approve or disapprove the
plots
As far back as January, 1971, we
reported that the CIA had undertaken six
assassination attempts against Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro. At that time. we
attempted to determine whether President
Jonn Kennedy had personally sanctioned
the plot
A close friend of the President. former
sen. George Smathers, toid us he once
hac spoken to Kennedy about schemes to
assassinate Castro. The late President,
Assination plotting
regular CIA business
Jack Anderson
said Smathers, merely rolied back IS
eyes, indicating he was familiar with he
idea but considered it too wild to discuss
A blue-ribbon commission, of which
Vice President Rockefeller is a member
has submitted to President Ford a study 0!
the CIA in which they recommend thal
future presidents be dissociated fromm
covert activities. We obtained a draft copy
of the report several weeks ago
‘We. believe that the current require
ment of law that the President personay
certify to the Congress the necessity for al
covert actions,” states the repon
harmful in associating the head of State Ss:
formally with such activities.”
The clear implication, therefore, S
that the CIA did not operate on its Own but
sought approval for the assassination
attempts. The secret communications
channel led directly to the President's Ova
Office
it is highly unlikely, therefore, iden
Eisenhower, Kennedy or Johnson were
kept in the dark about the assassination
plots
Use it Or Lose It: The federa
government is on a buying spree ine
makes Jackie Onassis look like a tigntwac
See CIA, page 3
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975 3
Military budget
rapped
intainnead
ary citizens are turning thermo-
stats Gown in winter and up in summer,
“ ng, cutting off lights, washing in
water. etc etc. Inflation continues,
but there are no raises for county or state
employees. (Just be glad youve got a
b) People are laid off or not
drop. Farms and busi-
nesses go under If we suffer, we can
apply for food stamps and go on welfare
Bul the military? They demand $15.7
billion more in 1975-76 than the $89 billion
of ther last fiscal year. And it looks as if
ney get most of it.
me Presidential candidate, Jimmy
varer of Georgia, says if he were
President, he “would insist upon a budget
n'y Dig enough to guarantee Our nation’s
Security and honor its global commit-
ments. That kind of military budget,” he
States, ‘could save us billions of dollars a
¥Yea!
But the military? Trident at $1.5 billion
ver submarine. B-1 program at $50
AWACS at $100 million per
pane. New “concepts” and USA
CxCiusives!
Mire Profits
henry Kissinger in Chicago said that
we Must cut oil imports by 6 million
carrelSs a day. Uniess we cut oil
oNsumMption, he said, “we face further
and Mounting worldwide shortages,
MEMDIOYMeNt, Poverty, and hunger.”
But the military? Supersonic fighters,
DOMDerS transports, fuelishly burn our
‘fal Strength. Keeping troops in Europe
ans dollars, while economic eminence
passe )INexorably to Japan, Germany, and
Arab states
“opetully Jimmy Carter is right that if
Ne Of US Ordinary citizens were President,
2 would not “tolerate military
“vagets whose main purpose seems to be
Gar overkill and the stationing of
i 40 troops all over the globe.” For
we are hostage to stronger
OM6S, as Kissinger wamed, “it is our
verly that in the end is at stake.”
Ne cP
Carroll and Edith Webber
Work ethic:crucial issue in
By DAN W. LUFKIN
A founder of the investment banking
concern of Donakison, Lufkin & Jenrette,
Inc and a former governor of the New
York Stock Exchange, Dan W. Lufkin was
recently appointed Connecticut's first
Commissioner of its new Department of
Environmental Protection. He also serves
88 a trustee of the National Conference of
Christians and Jews, and the National
Council on Crime and Delinquency
We have heard a lot recently about the
“work ethic”. Smacking as it does of
Puritanism, Calvinism, Sunday School
maxims and a host of self-righteous
aphorisms popular in a bygone era, it is
not one of the most exciting phrases to
describe a major motivating force of our
society. In fact, it is downright out of
style! But, whether we accept it or not,
the “work ethic” will be as lively an issue in
shaping our future as it has been in
determining our past
It bacame popular about twenty years
ago tO speak of America in the closing
decades of the twentieth century as a
society of abundance. We envisioned our
continent as a great wealth-producing
machine into which we poured an
inexhaustible supply of raw materials and
from which we received an equally
inexhaustible supply of the good things of
life. The work week shortened. Techno-
logy lessened the individual's load
Government took an ever-more patema-
listic cast. Because it all seemed so
CIA business
The end of the government's budgeting
year is approaching. And the bureaucratic
rule is: “Use it or lose it.”
if an agency fails to spend ail its
allotted money, it is criticized for
requesting too much and its budget for
next year is reduced. So the bureaucrats
are off taking trips and conducting hasty
studies. They are aiso buying fumiture,
pocket calculators, paper clips—anything
. spend the taxpayers’ green
They have until June 30th to empty
t. ir coffers, or face the awful prospect of
re. uming the money to the Treasury
The annual spending spree, of course,
jeads to some ludicrous acquisitions. The
General Services Administration once
bought expensive oak doors for its
executives just to get rid of a budget
surplus
The annual buying binge has always
been bad. But it seems worse this year,
when the rest of the nation is suffering
through a recession
Supply Problems: Military strategists
are worried about the tightening shortage
of raw materials, which are essential to
defense. Already, there is a shortage of
asbestos, chromite and rayon fibers,
which are used in military production
The Pentagon strategists also are
concemed about soaring prices. Cartels
suddenly have been formed to control
bauxite, chrome, copper, phosphate, tin
and other essential raw materials. They
are following the example, of course, of
the oil cartel, which has successfully
squeezed billions out of the oil-consuming
nations
For example, the price of aluminum,
which is made from bauxite, has shot up
700 per cent during the past
automatic, so effortiess, both the meaning
of work and its intrinsic value and
contributions became biurred and
confused - for a time
Young people, especially, encouraged
to believe that the gentie ruminations of
Consciousness ili would produce a
fresher, greener nation, consigned the
work ethic to the junk heap of
Consciousness , preferring instead to
substitute other ethics less harsh, less
competitive, and less demanding.
Now, today, our embattled society
stands in the ruins of its cities, amidst the
debasement of its natural heritage, and
listens to the great weailth-producing
machine siowly clank to a hait. Looking
for an easy solution, we seek some magic
mechanic to get it operating in high gear
again, to solve problems only vaguely
understood. Surely there's a button to
press or something or someone to
kick. Sadly, the remedy seems to have
escaped us, curiously, it is that musty
old-fashioned phrase “work ethic” that
may prove our salvation yet
The work ethic implies, first of all, that
there is meaningful work to be
done. Surely all of us, whether on the
conservative right or radical left, stuffed
shirts or shirtless, can agree on this
fact. In America today, there is more work
to be done than people or wealth to do
it. We have a continent to clean up and
rebuild. There are cities to restore,
resources to reciaim, raw materiais to
harvest more wisely and products to
manufacture more safely and with greater
ee Continued from CIA, page 2.
year. Chromium, copper and titanium
prices also are soaring.
The Pentagon has established a
watchdog unit to keep close track of
defense supplies. Meanwhile, the United
States maintains a strategic stockpile of
vital raw materials, and the Commerce
Department also sets aside some materials
for military use
inside Job: Vandalism is on the rise at
the famous FBI academy in Quantico,
Va. Bureau sources say that libraries have
been torn apart, police car windows have
been broken, and school property has been
destroyed. The crimes remain unsolved,
but insiders suspect civilian employes and
local police trainees are responsible.
Fear of Spending: Rep. Robert
Bauman, the conservative Maryland
Republican, is trying to replace lowa’s
retired H.R. Gross as the House's chief
penny pincher. He already has pushed
through legisiation which provides for
congressional review of National Science
Foundation grants. He also raised a how!
recently when he learned that the National
Arts Endowment had awarded feminist
author Erica John $5,000 to work on her
best-selling novel, “Fear of Flying”
Filthy Food: A House Appropriations
Committee probe of the food warehousing
industry has revealed that Americans may
be eating food that’s contaminated with
insects, rodent hair and general filth
The investigators also found that food
import controls were sorely lacking. In
other words, bad food can make its way to
American tables from foreign countries.
Yet the profits for selling imported food
are often higher than the fines imposed
when a dealer is caught selling bad
merchandise
the future
care for the consequences of their
distribution. A decade ago, we looked to
the primitive emerging nations as the last
great arena of the work ethic. Now we see
that sophisticated, developed nations
stand in even greater need and that without
much hard, constructive effort, they will
rapidly become the declining nations
buried under their own excesses.
Having agreed on the need for work,
the nature of the ethic must be
considered. is it ethical to work in the
profit system? is work under such a
system as ennobling as work in a
“commune” or a “people's republic”? Here
again think that the answer is
self-evident. We are, ail of us, oriented to
the profit motive. in ail its forms, it is truly
the goose that has laid the goiden
egg. For some the profit is money, for
others, perquisites, for stil! others, it is an
intangible set of values — society, not
self-directed. But the glory of our
pluralistic, multi-valued system is that
there is ethic enough for everybody — just
as there is work enough to go around
Money profit will motivate many, thank
heavens, enabling our enterprises to
supply our needs, modemize, Giversify,
protect against pollution and play a more
significant role in activities such as
minority groups job training and urban
rebuilding.
Social profit will motivate many others
— enabling them to work constructively,
lead creative, productive lives and still
dedicate a portion of their efforts to the
improvement of life in ail its forms
And spiritual profit will motivate still
others as they work in fields where
monetary compensation is not paramount
but where the satisfaction of service to
mankind is its own reward
Whatever the medium, and don’t think
the medium is overly important, hard,
honest, creative work of ail kinds will be
needed if we as a society or as individuals
are to have a future. And because there is
so much to be done, there can be no free
ride for the able, the strong, and the wise —
not if we, our system and our way of life
are to survive
‘
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4 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975
OSI SIO ST TNs
Staged wreck tests medical emergency treatment S
if an accident had actually occurred, a
ews story of the day might have read
Approximately 70 school children
itferead injury Thursday afternoon when
i activity Dus Overturned on a highway
about ten miles from Greenville
Within minutes after the accident
ccurred, state highway patrol men,
Rescue Squad vans and ambulances
wrived on the scene, with stretchers and
emergency equipment, and the victims,
whose injures ranged from minor cuts to
ompound fractures, were rushed to
spitais
Thursday a bus accident was “staged,
instruction at ECU in the simulation of
emergency injures for diagnosis and
treatment
Workshoo instructor was Sinclair
Cutcliffe of Prince Edward Island, Canada,
one of the originators of the Realistic
Casualty Simulation method, which has
been taught and used widely in medical
training programs in Canada and in
Europe, but taught only twice in the U.S
Participating in the ECU workshop
were nurses, rescue squad personnel,
emergency medical technicians and others
interested in the mass casualty aspects of
community health
Disaster simulations are now fairly
common among health care agencies,
Emergency Medical Education since hospitals are required to stage two
rogram, part of ECU's Division of Health drills each year for accreditation,” said Ms
Affairs Campbell
The “injunes’” were actually make-up, But in most cases, the ‘simulation’ is
Ng theatrical paint, plasticine, formula rather sketchily carried out, with little or
Od, petroleum jelly and animal entrails no attempt at realism. In this way, the
The purpose of the mock “accident” Cutcliffe program is unique. We are proud
was to dr area medical personnel in that the only two disaster simulation
quick and efficient handling of mass workshops of this type ever done in the
nation were held here in North Carolina.”
The ECU workshop stressed realism
throughout the various sessions on
simulation of such injunes as shock,
as part of a Casualty Simulation Course for
nedical personnel being offered by the
asualties, said Barbara Campbell
Training oordinator for the ECU
ergency Medical Education Program. It
workshop
- —
axed ur Jays of
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swelling, bruises, lacerations, fractures,
all types of burns and Diisters, open
wounds, heavy bleeding, amputation and
eye injuries. Each participant practiced
with the materials needed to simulate
these injuries when they conducted
emergency treatment workshops in their
own work locations
“Disaster drill is not just a required
process for health care personnel; it is a
real need in our area,” stressed Ms
Campbell. “Highway accidents are just
one possible cause of mass casualties
Violent storms, especially tomadoes,
often injure many persons in eastern North
Carolina
“These drills serve to help improve the
quality of emergency care given both in the
field and in the hospitals and test the skills
FLASH
The Forever Generation is a campus
group which meets weekly to provide warm
fellowship and Christ-centered activity for
all students. We invite YOU to join us -
Tuesday nights at 7:00 PM in the Social
Room of Fletcher Dorm
CLASSIFIE
LOOKING FOR A PET? have a Diack
poodie terrier to give away to a good home,
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Greenville, N.C. 752-4854
Wilson, N.C. 243-4730
Complete line of Accesories
Complete Repair Service
Skateboard Headquarters
7
required for better patient care and
community preparedness.’ ‘ ;
Volunteering to be subjects for the — hy
workshop were local 4H Club mernber: oe
and other children from places as ar away ts
as Wilmington and Bradford. Va
After the four days of classroor ny
practice, workshop participants applied
their newly acquired skills in the setting ur
of the bus accident, using an actua ‘
wrecked school bus. The “scene of the n
accident” was further developed by the use
of smoke bombs and scattered debris orogr
The “injured children” were taken Port
Pitt and Martin County Hospitals and
Robersonville Hospital, where emergency
room personnel were standing by to carry ppo'
on when they arrived the
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At home on the campus tow
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shift controls, dual position caliper
brake levers DThamond stye « yrtx
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F Reco ee ee
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975 5
ALLELE LA OLE OTL LAP LINE LOE EMELINE LEED DEELEY AE LEA LEDER: 58 ERO A EA ALLO SALLE DALAL ALE LLL COLLET
come
Speech students get practical experience
Mrs Sheila Porter, depart mental SUDEGTVISION of Qualified Clinically oert ified problem Foundation's sponsorship as Apnasia
Care and eocretary, Department of Speech faculty At present, the Aphasia and Dyslexia Specialist, Miss Laura Becker, has been
Language and Auditory Pathology (SLAP) (2) It provides the community with program which was initiated at ECU in employed at ECU, serving under the
s for the said Friday that a “very active” speech and needed services for the speech and hearing —-1972, is a pilot program for these specific supervision of Dr. W. Garrett
mernbers hearing clinics have been in progress handicapped population disabilities in the state. Through the Director of the Department of SLAP
far away ‘uring the Summer session The East Carolina Speech and Hearing
voter ‘said at present there are 78 clinic Nas a special Aphasia and Dysiexia
eerie ents coming for speech therapy and 59 Program designed to provide diagnostic 7
3 applied speech evaluations have beer! asgigned to evaluations for those with language and K
SetTING up oicians at the various clinics hetd at the speech disorders. (Dyslexia is difficulty in a rate Nn st f U ct iO Nn
actua Allied Health Building reading. Aphasia is impairment of faculty
re of the The East Carolina University Speech to use Of understand spoken language.) TT i
y (he use and Hearing Clinic is a part of the training The program operates through the Goju Shorin Karate School
debris orogram for SLAP students. According to North Carolina Scottish Rite Masonic 801 Dickinson Avenue
taken Porter. the clinic accomplishes a two-fold Foundation Sponsorship Greenville N i Phone 752-0545
iS and t purpose Until a few years ago, children with : nga
Ter gency ‘) It provides the students with an these learning disabilities were frequently b d d RR f
y tO Carry opportunity to apply academic theory to sent to institutions for the feeble-minded e uce ates OF
the practical experience under the direct
because of lack of knowledge of the real
ECU Students
Black Belt instructors
Complete Dance Supply
Ballet Modern Tennis & Golf
Tap Square Dancers Cloggers
Learn Self-Defense
Member A.A U
Competition (Sport) Karate
S.E.K.A. Sanctioned School
Physical Fitness
S.E.K.A. Sanctioned Ranking
Improved Concentration
Complete Capezio & Danskin Lines
7
A BOF OOXINSON ANE
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BARIRE Sa
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6 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975
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Beach Boys and Chicago
BEACH BOYS
CHICAGO
WASHINGTON, D.C.
June 28, 1975
By JOHN EVANS
Entertainment Editor
Before the show, they were selling
t-shirts, posters and books, and like
tickets to the concert, they sold out fast
Finally when all got down to business the
Beach Boys and Chicago themselves
performed individually and collectively
during a four-hour show tagged as the last
of five “Summer of '75" concerts the group
played at the Capital Centre in
Washington, D.C
With voices a little strained, music
sometimes a little loud, and an organist
with a broken leg, the two groups
nevertheless put on a pleasing show for
the 20,000 fans in attendance
The crowd for the last night was like
that of previous nights, mixed equally
between young teenagers and the older,
now grown-up teenagers of the
sixties. Those who knew the Beach Boys
when their material was new and their hair
short. And those who were musical
connoiseurs even before Chicago ever
existed as even a beginning rock force
The Beach Boys opened the concert
with “Sloop John B” and followed with
“Help Me Rhonda” and “In My Room”
The crowd remained basically calm during
the opening songs, rising to applaud at the
completion of each song and then sitting
down again for the next song
But once the group and crowd got into
each other, the remainder of the Beach
Boys set was superb
The Beach Boys modern day magic is
an ability to change old standards from
their numerous repertoire and, while
keeping the basic mythm, making them
sound new. The group ran through “ Get
Around”, “Litthe Oeuce Coupe”, “Surtin’
U.S.A and “Good Vibrations”, bringing
the crowd to its feet with the latter two
The group also progressed through “Sail
On Sailor’, “Heroes and Villians” and
other less aged numbers, al! with equal
response
Highlights of the 70-minute set though
were the two solos performed by Dennis
Wilson. Wilson, the one Beach Boy who
has kept his original appearance
throughout the years, performed the
classic “Surfer Girl” and, then when the
group came on for an encore “You Are So
Beautiful”
Another aspect of the group's
performance was the increased contri-
butions of the group's road musicians over
earlier concert tours, particularly Billy
Hinsche on the keyboards and Chicago-
producer Jim Guercio on bass
Mike Love said in an interview at one of
the earlier tour stops, “Up to 1967 Brian
Wilson was overwhelmingly the musical
leader of the group, but now each guy in
the group writes and performs individually
to complete the group.”
But Brian Wilson, Love's cousin and
brother of Beach Boys’ Car! and Dennis
Wilson, never toured with the group and
that brings the spotlight to Love, who now
handies most of the group's lead vocals
Now numbering eight, the group has
spanned out musically from their
surf-music days without having recorded
settee
aed
any Ne@w songs in the last two years. With
neither the old or new dominating, their
creativity continues without them actually
Creating new songs.
And unlike Chicago, the group's
primary source of revenue is touring, a
pastime they have come to love
“The last few years have really been
good ones,” said Love. “We hit a low
point in our popularity in the 6arly
seventies, but things have worked their
way back now. The attitude at concerts is
SO positive and the crowds are stil! reaily
great. look forward to performing and we
always have a good time.”
From the rock of the 60's the concert
after a short intermission, spanned intc
the rock of the 70's when Chicago took the
stage
After Robert Lamm struggled with his
broken leg to the keyboards, Chica:
broke into “Anyway You Want It” fron
their latest album
Despite his injury, which he incurred
while playing basketball two nights ear ier
Lamm still was a standout, as was Pete
Cetera on bass and Terry Kath on the lead
From the opening number, Chicag
progressed into “Beginnings”, ‘Does
Anybody Really Know What Time it is” and
then their 15-minute, seven movement
suite entitied “The Girl From Buchanor
which included the classic “Colour My
Word.”
As the show progressed and Lam
Kath and Cetera traded off lead vocals. the
group began to sound more and more ike
the Beach Boys vocally.
But if the groups sounded similar
vocally, the Chicago hom section of James
Pankow, Lee Loughnane and Waiter
Parazaider set them apart from the Beach
Boys
At times the homs became 50
dominant that they drowned out the valiant
attempts by Cetera to be heard on Nis
vocals. And as Cetera’s strained voice
struggled on songs like “Oid Days’ and
“Call On Me" the major weakness of
Chicago's performance showed ou!
sometimes all too much
The group did well on several purely
instrumental numbers, which showed that
their horns and percussion was an asset
not a hinderance.
As the group left the stage, the ai! toc
often tribute of lighted matches ! ne
darkened arena. When stage hands bega!”
to rearrange instruments and bring on new
instruments the crowd relaxed and waited
for what most of them had been there fo
all along - to see Chicago and the Beach
Boys on stage at the same time
Chicago retumed first, minus Lamr
and performed an encore with the song
“Dialogue” and were then joined by the
Beach Boys
Now with a dozen or more musicials
on the giant stage at the same time, the
groups went into the song which, as Love
explained, started the whole Beach
Boys-Chicago tour idea into motion
“Wishing You Were Here”
For the first time in the evening, the
entire crowd responded as a Mass. The
groups followed with “Saturday In The
Park,” with Carl Wilson as lead vocal
“Califomia Girls”, with Chicago's Cetera
helping with the lead, and at least half 4
dozen more tunes together
Continued on page 7.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975 7
ptt A RL ION ELLE SG DOLL! AOA LOLLY LT LOGIT LEER sk NaI i lt ae NT NE BOE PEER L OLNLE LILA AE NILE ELLE,
SASL OE TEAS
atime
Entertainment
Cl
‘Four Musketeers’ is better than most sequels
By CHIP GWYNN
Staff Writer
The Four Musketeers (5 Richard
Lester s rousing conclusion to his
four-hour, $3 million dollar comic spoof of
the swashbuckling days of old, that he
started several months ago in The Three
Musketeers .
The film serves its purpose well, and
though it achieves more of its comedy
through slapstick than did The Three
Musketeers, Lester has created a unique
-atharsis to his unique interpretation of
Alexander Dumas’ literary classic
The current outbreak of films these
jays seems to follow the old belief that
once you have found a winning
combination you should not change it. So
too. it seems, almost every successful film
spawns a similar film, in an attempt by
oroducers to capitalize economically on
the popularity of the original by offering a
hastily put together “Part Ii.”
With the possible exception of
Godtather ll and in this case, The Four
Musketeers, the spin-off versions never
seem to produce quite the same effect as
the onginal.
Richard Lester (Hard Day's Night and
more recently Juggemautseems to have
taken into serious Consideration the comic
oloys successful in The Three
Musketteers, and has applied them a little
more generously in The Four Musketeers.
The sequel becomes funnier because of
the great extent of slapstick Numor and
situations, bawdy side glances and
gestures. The subtle comedy of the
viginal, such as the King of France
playing chess using different size dogs as
the chessmen, gives way to the Diunter,
more obvious Comedy of the sequel. This
S probably the only area where Lester let
r ynmerciainess” gain control of the
fim. Though this does not detract from
the flim to any great extent, it still reminds
JS of Lester's above-and-beyond attempt
'O insure Commercial approval
Lester proves himself, however, a5 4
rector with a unique gift of cinematic
“sion. His use of numerous discordent
Settings adds an undertying current of
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artistry to the murthful dialogue and
Situations of the musketeers. For
example, toward the end of the film,
Dartagnan (Michale York) is engaged in
one of the climaxing sword fights. The
fight takes place in a church, with stained
glass windows illuminating the area of
battle
Examples of Lester's carefully
controlied artistic vision can be seen
throughout the film, and it is this added
insight which elevates Lester's comedy
above the commercial nonsense of other,
often highly-rated, comedic directors
Lester directly carries over several
areas of comic interpretation from part one
to part two. He uses the well-rounded
anatomy of both Faye Dunaway (Milady)
and Raquel Weich (Constance) to optimum
advantage
Though Weich plays a much smailer
part in The Four Musketeers (she is either
chained up or heid in a convent the whole
time), her brief appearances are hard to
overlook. Dunaway plays a more import-
ant role in the sequel as the evil
power-hungry temptress, who uses brains
and bodkin to whatever scheme serves her
best advantage
While not devising her own schemes of
revenge, Dunaway operates under the
powertul and also evil demands of Cardinal
Richieau (Charles Heston). It is Richleau's
red-coated swordsmen who harass the
musketeers through all of part one and
most of part two. They act as oils to the
fierce though highly comic engagements
with the four musketeers
in one of the funniest scenes in the
film, D’artagnan is ambushed by
Richleau's men, and the resulting
swordfight takes place on a frozen
pond. The results are notous
The characters of the musketeers
themselves add yet another dimension to
the comic unity of the film. Michael York
again dominates the action, and once
again proves himself apt enough to play
next to the likes of Richard Chamberlain
and Oliver Reed
York supplies his share of sidelong
glances and enough boyish charm to Carry
his part of the comic whole Oliver Reed
an equally as entertaining sequel to nis
same effect or reached the same level
artistically as the first part, but the effect
he has created is worth seeing
The relative simplicity of the pilot,
which borders on a non-plot construction,
iS easily picked up even if one missed the
first part. Most of the comedy is through
situations, so the pilot is not an immediate
problem. recommend the Four
Musketeers . even if you missed part one.
does an excellent job as a kind of
in-resident guidance counselor to York
Richard Chamberlain and Frank Finlay
also do good jobs as the other two
musketeers, though they have relatively
small parts
What Lester has done is to put together
Three Musketeers . which received more
than one favorable nod from the
critics. Lester may not have achieved the
Concert Continued trom page 6.
Those who left early from the concert
gave evidence that the two groups may
have almost overdone it, but not quite.
As one of the younger fans put it before
the show, “The Beach Boys or Chicago by
themselves would be a great concert, Dut
together don’t know if I'll be able to take
And although she might have meant
the words in another way, they certainly
and
together were something elise and not
Quite too much for any one concert-goer to
handle
Continuing Events
way. THROUGH THURSDAY
ES
Cineme—French Connection ti
Gene Hackman recreates his role as narcotics officer Popeye Doyle in this
disappointing and fictitious sequel to the 1971 Oscar-winning film. The movie is
four-fifths over before anything relevant occurs and by then it's too late. Another
example of this rule that states repeats of a success generally is a flop. THROUGH
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
Walking Tall, Part Il
STARTS FRIDAY—not much material available except to say this is another sequel to
a big success film. For this reason one best approach this film with hesitation. Sup-
posediy continues the telling of the Buford Pusser legend
Pitt-Seven Alone
An orphaned family is led by the oldest boy in its attempts to get to Oregon. int
process, the boy turns into a man, Or SO the plot of the movie is supposed to move thi
The Exorcist
STARTS FRIDAY—What can you say about this devilish (7) film about the
of an adolescent girl except don't eat dinner before you go
ParkThe Four Musketeers
See Review this page)-Greenville is full of follow-ups these days, but then that is
what movies in general are today. Picking up where Part left off, this film conti
with the adventures of the “Four Musketeers.” THROUGH THURSDAY
Cooley High
STARTS FRIDAYAn American International film which is pretty fair, considering t
lack of publicity it has been getting
TELEVISION
“Hooray for Hollywood”
Those of you with UHF on your television will be in luck if you are an oid
buff. Beginning July 4, UNC-TV, Channei 25 begins its second series of HOORAY
HOLL YWOOD
To last for 13 weeks, beginning at 9 p.m. the series will bring thirties’ films to t
home. This Friday, the film “His Girl Friday” starring Cary Grant and Rosiiand Russel
will be featured
8 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 561 JULY 1975
Colleges, large and small, feel athletic cuts
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Third in a series.
There may soon come a day when there
college football on Saturday
y Saturday evening, if you go
ECU). The thought may seem
robable to most, Dut with most
eges pleading poverty, more and more
; OlS are dropping football from their
ithietic programs, or de-emphasizing it
vternoon
yreatly
Among schools which are already
asualjties are Bndgepor, Tampa and
Holy Cross. Schools like Davidson
ege have greatly de-emphasized
football, choosing to build programs
wound other sports like basketball!
St others are battling student
position to keep a football program
ve. Such is the case at William and
Mary, Kent State and Furman
Most of the school's named above are
-name schools but the fact remains
t the nation's colleges and universities,
na and large, are hurting from a
" ar i a r im™ r
aid John Fuzak of Michigan State
versity and president of the NCAA, “We
believe intercoliegiate atnietics are at a
ng point. Our collegiate programs are
the envy of the world and it is incumbent of
ss ft ome up with a positive and
ippropnate way of cutting costs while stil!
1g a high level of quality in our
programs
Actually the problem has been around
21 long time. but with recent Title IX
egisiation and economic burdens many of
the major universities are beginning to feel
the burden the smaller schools have felt
for years
One of the major reasons seem to be
the increased financing needed to support
a football team, the bread-and-butter of
basically every major institution in the
nation. One of the principal costs is the
cost of transportation
Three years ago, our football team
took a plane trip to play a game at Illinois,’
said Fuzak. “That trip cost $7.600. Two
years later, that same trip costs
$13,000. That is an example of what we
are up against
Most school officials are reluctant to
tamper with the funding of their revenue
sports, but at the same time they realize
these are the sports which also cost them
the most to support
Robert Kamm, president of Oklahoma
State University said it was a question of
finding priorities and sticking to them
The boom of the sixties is over,” said
Kamm. “Not only in the fieid of athletics
Dbut for the entire university Community
We must establish priorities in ail areas.”
On a college level only three sports
earn money. They are football, basketbal
and hockey. The rest of the sports operate
at a deficit and hockey is basically a
northern sport, leaving football and
basketball the only sports which make
money on a national scale These
revenue sports help pay for the
non-revenue sports
KAPeT
Said one NCAA official, “There are two
other major funding practices. The first is
the alumni contributions and the other is
money wich is received by state-support-
ed schools. Naturally a large, state
supported school or a school like Notre
Dame is better funded than a private-smal!
college school with very little alumni
contributions.”
Texas coach Darrell Royal gave some
ideas aS to how schools can curb their
nsing costs for football
‘We are headed for one platoon
football at the rate that we are going now
and that's fine with me. There is also no
question that we are traveling too many
players. It's just a matter of keeping up
with the other guy. don't think you need
more than 44 to 46 players a game.”
Yet Texas year after year fields one of
the larger, and strongest, squads in the
nation
But football is not the only problem
area. The problem extends into all sports
And the NCAA's proposal to curb financial
rises is to cut scholarship quotas
Football scholarships are to be cut
from 105 to 90, basketbal! from 18 to 16,
and for the remaining sports scholarships
allowed will be reduced from 209 to 80
Some major schoois, like Tulane, have
already started the practice of reducing the
ECU, VMI
favored picks
Southern Conference Sports inform
ation Directors have picked East Carolina
a slight pre-season pick to win this year's
football crown
The Pirates, who were the Conference
champions in 1972 and 1973, nosed
defending champion VMI by one point in
the voting
When looking at the SID’s picks, the
conference seems to wind-up as a race for
the tithe between ECU and VMI. with
Richmond and Appalachian State distant
picks to win the title
The Pirates in their second year under
Pat Dye are expected to be similar to the
1972 tearm which featured a potent offense
and an untried defense. And Dye more
than likely hopes that the results of this
combination are the same as two years
ago
VMI is coming off of its best season in
two decades with most of its starters
returning. These starters include All-
Conference picks Phil Upton, Ronnie
Norman and Doug Hines. The Keydets fin
themselves without an experienced
Quarterback, however
1. East Carolina 57
2. VMI 56
3. Appalachian St 45
4 Richmond 39
5. Furman 31
6. Citadel 2B
7. Wm. and Mary 24
8. Davidson 8°
“Not eligible for title
number of scholarships offered. There are
no scholarships at all for golf, tennis and
track. Still, for the 142 total scholarships
which Tulane offers the school pays
$710,000
At schools like Holy Cross, Tampa and
Davidson have found out the costs of
athletics can be quite deadly. Now the
major colleges, Oklahoma, Northwestern
and Texas included, are falling into debt’
also, which sudden makes the problem 4
major one
When the “biggies” begin to be
effected things start getting done. Resi:
May never become as drastic as
football, but in the next few years college
athletics as a whole, and not JUSt College
football, should see some drast
Changes. It should be interesting to see
what they are and how they are handled
Patrick brochure is cited
East Carolina Assistant Sports
Information Direction Willie Patrick has
been cited by the College Sports
Information Directors of America (COSIDA)
for the 1975 East Carolina swim brochure
which he edited and prepared
For the brochure, Patrick received a
second place award in the nation for
Division One schools. Division One
schools are most of the nation’s major
colleges and universities
The only major university cited by
COSIDA as having a better brochure than
the one prepared by Patrick was Indiana,
which consistently has one of the major
swimming teams in the nation
The award, which was accepted for
Patrick by ECU Sports Information Director
Ken Smith, was the only award presented
to a Southern Conterence school. In North
Carolina only Duke University received an
award other than ECU
Smith attended the COSIDA conference
in Houston last week and accepted
Patrick's award for him there
Patrick was unable to attend the
conterence because of studies and
obligations to the North Carolina
Collegiate Summer Baseball league, for
which he is the official league statistician
It's steak, your way. With ail the trimmings
Smith said he was very pleased abou!
Patrick's award.
“Lam highly pleased for Willie that he
won this award,” said Smith “Tm.
represents once again the Outstanding
work that Willie is continually performinc
in the Sports Information Office
Smith pointed out that Patrick is one
the few student assistant Spor:
Information Directors in the nation ¢
reveice such an honor this year
Patrick came to East Carolina
spring of 1974 while John Evenson w
Sports Information Director. He continued
In Nis Capacity as a student assistant in the
Sports Information office when Smit!
replaced Evenson in August of the sar
year
Before coming to East Carolina, Pat
had been a student at Surrey Commun'ty
College and later the University of Nor:
Carolina at Asheville
While in school at Asheville, Pat
worked on the sports staff of the Ashe
Citizen-Times. Since coming to £a
Carolina, Patrick has contributed article
to the Greenville Daily Reflect
Greensboro Daily News, Goldst
News-Argus and Winston-Salem Jouma
Other brochures which Patrick hei ped
prepare were last years football press
guide and baseball press guide
PDP DPOOD )
welcome
students
a a
Where sornething good S
always Cooking - 24 hours 4
includes a juicy Sambo's steak, cooked tO day
order. Our famous french fries. Steaming soup of
crisp green salad, with your choice of dressing
Dinner bread. Any beverage. And ur dessert, fruit
gelatin, sherbet or pudding
Bon appetit!
2518 East 10th
Greenville
North Carolina
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ee
sei 1See SIAR RE OR.