Fountainhead, March 17, 1971


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





WWwi
i
students offend
s i
MRC rallysupports visitation action
BvPHIIIPuuiiiiaimc 7 "? ? " ?
BV PHIL IP WILLIAMS
(Slat I w - ii ??. )
l Men - Residence Council's Visitation
V1'1 'llu'11 ?' Us he mall lasl
r.ueid?y- March 1 in suppori ol ???,
vigorous .mkhi mi the visitation issue
Hie iiighi hefore, the committee circulated a
newslettei calling foi ihe men on the Hill to
makc "visitation a rcalih " Hie rail) was
scheduled foi I p m artei which the
participants were to proceed up the Hill
llk' administration and man) studenl as
well interpreted the call to make "visitation a
fMht) to mean thai Ihe isitationommittee
was advocating premeditated cntr) b) women
students into the men's dormitories rhe
visitation committee declined to comment on
the intei pretation
?" 'he morning on March9.the members ol
the committee received letters ol warning
signed b) lames fuckei dean ol studenl
t
appropi late Bgal action it an)
university policy was violated Ih.
weie ;ils.) verbally warned by Dean ol Men
James Mallory and Tucket in 11 nference before
the rally
Students began peaceful!) issembling for the Fountainhead office i
rally around 2 JO p m on ruesday Shortly
?llu'r 3 p in . sovci.ii MR( representatives
addressed the crowdl aboul 500 Questions
from the group wereAlelded by Ml( President
Inn Bixon Rob LSisiana, governoi ol ylei
Dormitory, and otbei MR( members
fhe crowd grumbled immediately aftej the
two hours I" Hnd oui the decision ol the
Board
Nl abriel but bittei question and antwei
bei ent the
iwaii telephone call
iccrning the Board' dec ision
?? ? ihi r. wd reclined on the
?'? ' imised decision
pitethi
hums
draws 500 students to support more vigorus act
ion on the
nun Dccduse in tlie leilei
received (oafTucker, they could not verbally
advocaupmy action that could be construed to
he ni,Eolation 0( existing University polu y
y rumble ol dissent went up from the
Indents win n l uisiana informed them that the
ECU Board mI Trustees was meeting in Raleigh
' . .in. ii. e the
? ? an building
Is and list ii . i . radios playing
and usi talking
! " il MR( represenutives
Lelurned " thai the Hoaid ol
trustees had turned tl
wh ii di
?m the Board
ei to Jenkins
to the MR(
A delegation
I til n .pon
eting
ountainhead OJ"op 'ansi, sys,e,n
and the truth shall make you free

rreenville, North t
7
tz
proposed by city
Police lift four student ID'
I ui Ml students mi
M R deli ii i ton ? ere deprived
identification cards last I ucsda) following the
Vlsi,a?5 hey we're leaving the
lhc) re,urred, the) were met the dooi by
Jenkins, vho informed them thai he would m I
speak with them at thai lime, and they should
come to his office during the regulai hout
. Jenkins then told the students thai il t v
I uisiana, Maik i, i
u not ten iiii- premises with
wuh'j JZT,K?5T oft
visitation mattei Ihe group had gone to the
homi .ii 6 p in and were told that lenkms was
in and the) should return at 7 p m When
Inn one minute
ins sl.ii
dooi abruptly, according tu the studet
i ne students tinned lo go but had onh gone
aboui Mi feel when the) wi re accosted In
campus policeman who aid he was under
By HOLLY FINMAN
( N ?? s fl. I
ruesda) March 1$, 1971 Greenville City Managei Harry Hag
proposed a resolution to theity Coum i1
March 4 which would provide an innei. us bus
system in co-operation with ECU's transit
program
Hagerty said thai he had conducted a studs
ol .its bus systems in Huilineton Rocks
rtlers lo tk their ID's Hie foui reluctantly Mount. FayettevilJe, Wilson and Chapel lid!
implied and no explanation of charges was rhese cities were chosen for then similarities to
ven Greenville in population
Deprivation ol ID is the campus equivalent Most of the city bus systems were owned and
rhe students' ID's were returned lo ?Prated bs private companies Ihe cits itsell
Pavs no part I the system, according to
Hagerty
? li a si .inline that should ans ol
'ncse 'udentsl found on the premises of the ? . PCl Studenl rnmenl
'enkins home again, they would be arrested " " "nances the bus system foi
the cits as well as the students HagertN
I i
hen a ?
( it)
In Ihe
I he studs ul a
I,
ll'le
I ' I which already
ihe system in
il ? ? 000 each
'is systen
New Union to open in 1973
BV DONNA WEBB
will be enjoying
and Mils
H spnne 197.1
recreational failines, lout en e
rooms in the new studenl urn. m
Ihe ness union will cosl approximate!)
? lo i hfton Moore, H I
busine i anaj
Ihe piposed building to be built al the
intersection of I ighth and harles Streets will
?looi ul ssin, h w in be
'?wei the I luntainhead
Bucca '?' ' - s well as the
Pr?po?d , facilities including eighl
l lanes I billiard tables and six tennis
labl? l?un I irca W1 also be
downsl in ;
: an auditorium
" I apatit) ol il it so robe used
1 "nl inovn ind il . . , ties
n i'l ? be a Mi.uk bar, two lounges
the studenl bank a lobb)
?' UPI ' - ll new student ui
H house th SGA m ? .ding and meeting
looms and ihe balcon) area ol Ihe auditorium
i onstruction, originjlly to have begun in
July, 1970, was delayed because several
homeowners along I Ighth 1harles Streets
did ii1 wish to sell then land the State of
North arolina who is purchasing land foi the
and display area, ind
NEW STUDENT UNION, to be completed by
1973, will house recreational facilities, SGA
offices, publications, and an auditorium.
(Stan nnntoby Ross Mann)
? SB I dumiorium.
What's it like to b
By BECKY NOBLE
G I ?? ?? ? Ihday "
s ' iled jail I vcr) da)
n i wa) rail could celebrate
In bn ihda) in the I'm. iunt) Jail was In
scnbhlii the wall
' vail ii j foi a
??? i '?? ing held in jail
? ' ii abli i" post bond logei
jail I a detention ccntei according to
Waym Nobli ' puty Sherifl It is the place a
I" (son lays from ihe nine he has been charged
with .mil lus case ha been tried in
l.Milt
30 DAY SENTENCE
we b) ihe theor) thai a man is innocent
until i" .ven guilty hui th. en are locked
up in i e jail bei au Ihi s have been charged
ami Ihey can'l po i bond i uplained Nobles
rhe Slate Department olorrection handles
only those who are sentenced Howevei
30-day sentence is the .niall.sl I prison
department w ill tak it I u they i hangi n the
in i in.mih ui idd Nobles
11" sentences o) K)da) t and undei the
pnsonsert are kepi in the county jail alone with
those awaiting trial Sheriff Ralph Isson is
responsible foi keeping all these people
The short term nature ol jail tends to keep ?" supposed to aii out the mattresses so thev
problems to a minimum Howevei there is ? won't have to be cleaned so often Bui ii
problem ol in-jail time versui couri mne and doesn't work; they stink anyway
vV'iien asked about reading materials
(Henna s.ud Ihes had books that people had
brought in "mostly cowbo) books and sex
wlv" J,ul thai the reading mattei was
censored little Howevei he did notice in
absence ol law books
When asked about music, he s.u.l none ws
"??wed "Thev would e( me lake m.
meets onl) once month he mighi sta) in tail
amosl anothei month ii hecan'l psi bond
Mans times says Nobles, the superioi couri
judge releases the mai on time i n :
subtrai ts this time From hi: i, ? ? h
ihe disc nil.m ui the judge
Whai is it like to be m jail?
icrriblc, says tonne, inmate D
Overman "In the five days thai I wasm ll
gained a lot ol insight I jusi don'l sec how ihi
ep, i men to change aftei being lot ked up in a
clamped nast) jail cell
"The) throw murderers and rapi
robbers II in the same sell and give ,h
communit) orientation, none whatsoevei
Overman, who was awaiting trial foi hue,
oi illegal p.issessii marijuana,described thi
cells as "nasty and added thai he caught one
ol the diseases going around
He is distressed with the la, k ol privacy and
the unsanitary toilel lacihties "The) Jean the
cells ah.ml once a month he comments
"Ihe walls are bare and the) has, metal
bunks hanging ofl ol them, i,ui pei cell he
Says 'The mattresses are about two in. lies
thick and they're on top ol these metal
frames "
THEY STINK ANYWAY"
"The frames have all these holes in them thai
A suit filed bs Sam l nderwood i
nomeownei on Eighth Street and a Greenville
?itorney, was taken to the North arolu .
Supreme Court las, week I he I niversit)
should he notified of the mime within on,las
said Moore
If the ruling ,i favorable ii the University
stated Moore, construction of the studei ,
union should begin bs June 97) ?.
construction is supposed to lake about 22
months
The new studenl union will he comparable to
the State University's at Raleigh, he said
The location i ,he ?ew student union being
solar awa) from the main classroom buildings
has bee a problem. Moore said. "I don't think
" wll he utilized as much had it bee,
physically possible to put il where theCroatan
However, he pointed OUI thai with the
adequate day student lounge area and the close
proximity of both the library and aboul 80 pe.
senioi the women's dorms, the new union will
still be amply used
Ihe old studenl union now located in Wrighl
Building will be taken ovei bs the Student
Supply Store, said Moore rhe snack bar now in
use will remain pen bui the lounge and
recreational areas will eventually be remodeled
tobe used as the Studenl Store
e in jail?
'P?rtaii.)i I- be made available to them
l"he City Cou s , ,
an FCI
' . Ii nl
1(1
? ' b eak .md students were
Council finds
editor guilty
By PHILIP WILLIAMS
Rofeerl I hone edilo, I ouritainhead, was
found emirs misappropriation of funds bs
the Men's Hoi oi I ouncil las, month
" i length) trial, which lasted from 5 0
P until 10 ' and aft ?; intensive
examinat . : . M ,mM
witness, ITtonen was found guilt) and
sentenced to "an offi lal reprimand "
Ihe charge ol misappropriation stemmed
Iron, a dispute ovei the salaries ol seveial
Fountainhead stafl members rreasurei Steve
Sharpe ol the S(, had withheld his signature
fron the . hecks in question repeatedly, so
IIInen had paid Stafl members out ol the
pelts sash fund
In the dispositioi the ouncil
said, Due i ? . ? , 0j
and the la ? I irification
SG x I Sulai ? cerntng the
financial structun md lal I the
I ountamhead. and will ilicious liileni lo
piottt personally, we hereb) issue to Mi
Robert I; rficial reprimand apprising
financial ad
eidtoi and ihe pui
' ' ? ? inl ised
i: i isu
I ounlainhead
sentencing
I hi instance, a man charged with public
drunkenness who cannot post bond willhave to
sta) ii. jail from one to two weeks until his trial
. i Hues up
linn, in district int he may receive a
sentenceol 10 days to six months If he decides
to appeal Ins case to superior souit. which
Harmonica in oi ms guitai oi m transistoi
radio
Ihe atlitude ol the jailors was mostly
indifference However, adds Overman, "One old
?hide was really ,u, ? He did favors foi you, like
mailing lett, I -
l.iil.i, I ugene Whitle) says the prisoners'day
with breakfast from 8 10 a m to 9 a m
t'ei breadkfast the inmates shave and "pist
siLaround and read until kinch Sometimes
the) put) u.ls o, talk No recreational
facilities television radio are provided oi
allowed
"Store call' is al 10 a in and I p.m I his is
"K lll whei in- trustees bus nabs .md candy
ihe prisoners I rustet sare prisoners who are
adefed class "A" in conducl and are
allowed duties in the jail
' on?-erning the three hot meals served a day,
M' ' IVs "I lus 're balancedsome "l
wouldn i sas they're completely balanced "
1 ,ncn " ?" l; 10 p m Afterwards the
1 " ndand read oi play cardsuntil
PPei ?" 5 in rhe) can go to bed whenevei
Hies e.i read)
Jnere is m "lights-out" foi bedtime Ihe
lights are lefl on during the nighi in order to "check
a, kness oi fights
Wien an inmate becomes sick, either D,
1 ? cockoi I), Will (lawssdied in
'he patient is sent to the emeieen, s room al
the hospital
rhe jail iscomposed mainly ol five different
kinds ol ,eK
"NONCONFORMERS"
1 hen ire two maximum securit) tanks One
contains one bed, the othei has two rhese are
'?" felonies and "non conformen "
rwo individual cells have 2 bunks and house
mostly the public drunkenness prisoners
There are three bull pens Each hull pen
contains three cells and a central hallway I ach
"I these cells has tour beds Felonies are kepi jn
one oi these bull pens .md misdeneanors are
kept in the othei two
there is a special juvenile section also
Juveniles are nevei kept with the oldei
offenders
I he fifth kind i i cell is the women's cell
which is separate from the men's section Ihe
is also a juvenile women's cell
In addition to the five main categories of
sells, there is also si,k cell and and isolation
lank
According to Nobles, the majority ol the
offenders are those charged with public
drunkenness and,driving undei the influence ol
alcohol
When asked about the attitude ol ihe
inmates, he s.u.1. 'They're deprived ol all theii
freedom greal deal form a bad outlook aftei
Ihey stas lise to sis dass "
He said a lew men create trouble because
"they think the world owes them a living and
they think ihes should be Heated like kings and
queens You can'l I.KO, one You have lo I,cat
Ihem all as von Heal one "
Inmates are allowed i
someone brings them
receive clean clothes and food
eis ? new spapci, il
lhi' can also
A slate law allows them to furnish theil own
pillows, sheets and linens
Regulai visitation hours are Wednesday from
2 to -4 p.m Howevei the immediate family can
visit more often
A prison tee o 3id,j ls lWi ,h
wno do no, receive sentences
"I JUST DOIMT SEE how they expect men
?JZ' Sf bem9 ,0cked ? a "?tv
m cell, said former inmate David Overman
?9
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Page 2. Fountainhead Tuesday. March 17 1971
Fund initiated
in honor of
local doctor
A scholarship fund named in memory of Dr.
Charles P. Adams had been established at ECU.
Adams, a Greenville physician well known in
eastern North Carolina, recently died at the age
of 46.
According to Dr. Edwin Monroe, dean of the
School of Allied Health and Social Professions,
"The Scholarship was formed in memory of Dr.
Adams' long service to the community, the
University and lo the medical profession
Funds from the scholarship will be used to
aid deserving students in any course of study in
health related fields at ECU.
Members of the scholarship committee are
Dr. Fred Irons, ECL1 physician; Monroe: ECU
Provost Robert Williams: and Greenville
physician Dr. liar Trevathan.
Contributions to the scholarship fund should
be sent to: Dr. Charles P. Adams Memorial.
They may be mailed to Dr. Leo Jenkins. ECU
president.
Campus briefs
MRS. SALL CURRIN's home of 50
years is at 504 E. Eighth Street. The
expansion of ECU necessitates
removal of the 11-room gray house.
the
50-year old home soon leveled by state
By HOLLY FINMAN
? ! I
Blue eyes look out from behind wire-rimmed
spectacles rhose eyes match the coloi of the
blui-knoi shawl draped ovei ihm shoulders.
Though she stands with the aid of .i cane.
there's -i strong, sturdy look in tl se
87-year-old eyes
The tall, gray-haired lad) said liei heart is
failing it u.is "skipping" so badly that hei
doctoi put hei m the hospital foi 17 days last
month.
Bui Mrs. Sallie Currin is nol as worried about
hei heart condition as she is about her future.
She wonders where she will go and In u . .ill
live when hei home since 192 I is leveled to the
ground b the State of North Carolina.
"It makes me sick to ihink of a bulldo.ei
just pushing it over said Mrs. Currin. her blue
eyes filling with tears.
The Luge. 11-room graj house ai 504 I.
Eighth St. is one ol a few houses remaining on
the block, h has a wide proch with rocking
chairs thai have seen SO years of use Inside are
high ceilings and a wide staircase leading to the
second floor and the rooms which she iciits.
This house and others on Eighth Street will
be removed as part o die expansion program of
ECU. A library extension and a student union
will replace the present structures Construction
is scheduled to begin b January, 1972, it the
block is clcai ol
houses, said Clifton Moore.
ECU business manager.
Foui houses already belonged to ECU. The
university built them for faculty housing about
1923. Later, they were made into
administrative offices. These four frame
buildings were the first to be demolished.
ECU authorized the State of North Carolina
to purchase othei houses on Eighth Street.
Moore said.
Moore explained that ECU has nothing to do
with the purchasing .( property. The University
authorizes the State to purchase it.
"The Stale men aren't humanless robots.
They've got a job to do and they are trying to-
do it as humanly as possible he said.
The law ol eminent domain pi -tects the
State's rights to take private property for public
use Eminent domain is the prerogative of a
sovereign state. It is limited by payment of
"just compensation foi the condemned
propel t according to North Carolina law.
Mrs. Currin said, however, that die Slate is
nol offering her "just compensation" for her
house. It is in good condition ai.d sits on a 90
foot lot, she said.
"After all. it's the land they want, not the
house she pointed out. Mrs. Currin said the
State lias paid more for houses on smaller lots.
"They offered me $17,500 she said, "and
anybody can tell its worth more than thai
Her attorney is attempting to get more from
the State to help support her in the coming
years, she said.
"My boarders arc my only income except for
$58 a month from Social Security she said.
ECU students rent three upstairs rooms in her
home.
When her home and income are gone, what
will she do? "They don't have 'poor houses'
any more for filks- U.Ur nie she said. "The
only thing I can do is move in with my
daughter in Goldsboro. but they have a very
small house. They'll have lo build on an extra
ropm if I move there
She concluded. "If the politicians' would
take the time to find out whai my situation is,
maybe they would be more concerned. I've
tried to tell them, but they don't hear me. They
aren't interested in tolks ike me. They're just
interested in politics
Moore stated however, that be Eighth Street
project has not caused community resentment
toward the University.
"Some individuals are upset and one has
carried the case to the State Supreme Court
Moore said, "but as a whole, the community
relationship with the University has not been
upset
Chemistry prof
receives praise
Dr. Joseph Nisbet LeConte. Professor of
chemistry, has been commended by the
American Chemical Society (ACS) for his
activities and efforts as a member of one of its
examination committees.
Dr. Theo A. Ashford, chairman of the ACS
Examination Committee, lauded the efforts of
LeConte in the past several years in the
development of a standardized chemistry test
for paramedical programs.
The test, now completed, is designed to be
used for nursing and medical technology
programs and in preparatory programs for other
paramedical fields.
A member of the ECU chemistry faculty
since 1957, LeConte specializes in organic-
chemistry and biochemistry courses for nursing
majors.
He holds degrees from Emory University and
UNCCH and has done postdoctoral work at
the University of Florida.
LeConte is the author of a number of
research publications included in the Journal of
the American Chemical Society, the Journal of
Organic Chemistry and other scientific
periodicals.
He is grand-nephew to the renowned
LeConte brothers, scientists in the latter
nineteenth century, for whom buildings on the
campused of the Universities of California at
Derkeley and South Carolina are named.
Library forum organized
DR. GARRET HUME tests infants-
hearing with new equipment. Brenda
Morgan, president of Delta Zeta
A forum to discuss library
services and policies, open to
both Students and faculty, will
be held weekly beginning
Tuesday. March 16.
The discussion will be in
room 2 14 Joyncr Library,
from I I a.m. until noon. The
door lo the meeting will be
open for one hour and visitors
may come and go at their
pleasure.
The library will be
represent. I by its personnel
who are qualified to respond to
questions from the floor.
All persons attending will be
considered as forum members.
The forum will continue as
long as there is sufficient
interest and representation to
justify it. The time and place
will be the same except under
unusual circumstance, in which
case due notice will be
circulated.
Key editor
Positions are now open for
editor and business manager of
the 1971-72 Key, the
University handbook.
Applicants should contact the
dean of student affairs by
March 24. To qualify for the
positions applicant) must be
student in good standing with a
2.0 average.
A written statement listing
qualifications and reasons for
wanting position should be
turned in to Steve Neal,
chairman of the Publications
Board or left at the student
affairs office. The election will
be March 31.
Visiting speaker
Dr. Charles M. Weiss of the
School of Public Health of the
University of North CArolina
at Chapel Hill, will speak here
Wednesday, March 17.
Water Quality
Management: Its Implications
for Our Contemporary
Society" is the topic Weiss will
explore in the Biology
Building, N102 at 1 p.m.
The Association of Eastern
North Carolina Colleges
sponsoring Weiss and other
visiting lecturers during the
year.
Girl's slimnastics
Women's slimnastic classes
for all ECU students, faculty
and staff began last
Wednesday. New members are
welcome each Wednesday at 7
p.m. in the dance studio of
Memorial Gym.
Jenkins appointed
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU
president, has been appointed
to the committee on Allied
Health Professions of the
American Association of State
Colleges and Universities.
The committee on which
Jenkins will serve is composed
of presidents of state colleges
and universities. It will plan
and supervise programs of teh
Association, composed of 276
state-supported colleges and
regional universities.
The Association is a vehicle
for coordinated aciton and
research programs and a
clearinghouse for information.
It is a cooperative mechanism
by which member institutions
can work together to improve
and advance higher education.
Through its Washington
headquarters, it also serves as a
voice speaking for low-cost
higher education available to
all students who can benefit
from il.
Jenkins also serves as a state
representative of the
Association.
Biology seminar
Graduate students in the
Department of Biology have
announced the schedule for a
seminar scries during the spring
quarter.
Noted scientists from
laboratories and universities in
several states will address the
weekly seminar scries on topics
relating to biology and
ecology.
The speakers will come from
Rutgers University, the College
of William and Mary,
UNC-Chapel Hill and
Wilmington, N.C. Stale
University and Wake Forest
University.
Also represented on the
schedule are the Chesapeake
Biological Laboratory and the
Woods Hole (Mass.) Marine
Biological Laboratory.
Funded by the National
Science Foundation's Visiting
Scientists Program and (he
Biology Department, the
seminars arc tentatively
scheduled for I p.m. on
Thursdays and Fridays.
Interested persons from the
campus and local communities
arc invited to attend any of the
seminars.
Union bowling
The Union Bowling League
is now calling for new members
for spring quarter. Anyone
desiring to participate should
meet at 4 p.m. each Tuesday at
Hillcrest Lanes. Rides, leaving
Glanagan Building at 4 p.m.
each Tuesday, have been made
available to the league.
Buc queen
Entries for 1971-72
Buccaneer Queen must be
registered by March 19 at 5
p.m.
is open to all
ECU campus
grade average
The contest
girls on the
There is no
requirement.
A $2.50 entry fee must be
paid in the Buccaneer office,
second floor. Wright
Auditorium.
All organizations on campus
are invited to sponsor a girl for
the contest.
Induced anxiety
Dr. Charles Moore, associate
professor in the Department of
Psychology, is to present a
paper before the symposium at
the Southeastern Psychological
Association Convocation in
Miami. April 21-May 1.
Moore's paper is entitled
"Induced Anxiety as a Therapy
Technique The symposium
theme is induced anxiety as a
method for research and
behavior change.
In 1969, Moore addressed
the Association on a new
technique for treating male
homosexual patients. His
method was aversive
conditioning to homosexual
urges by electrical shocks.
The process of treatment
continued wilh positive
conditioning, to lessen the
patient's fear of females.
He reported a high degree of
success with this treatment m
contrast to the failure of
conventional methods of
treating sexual deviates in the
United Stales.
Moore has studied at ECU,
UNC-CH and the Univeisity of
Georgia. He has done work in
clinical psychology al ihc
M illedgcville (Gal Slate
Hospital.
The author of several articles
in leading psychology journals.
Moo.e was assistant professoi
of psychology at the UNC
School of Medicine before
joining the ECU faculty in
1968.
Beginning bridge
Union beginning bridge
classes began last Wednesday in
room 212 of I lie union. New
students will be welcome to
the second meeting on
Wednesday. March 17. at 3
p.m.
ROTC awards
An Force ROTC cadcis
Alvin E. Benion. Jr Ronnie
W Smith and Michael J. Ulmei
have been awarded two-year
ROTC college scholarships.
This scholarship covers full
tiiiiom. laboratory expenses,
incidental tees, and an
allowance foi books. Also
included is $50 per month in
nontaxable pay.
They weie first nominated
to receive ilns honor by
institutional officials and by
Air Force ROTC officers. Final
select ion was made on a
nationally competitive basis by
a ccntial selection board al Air
Force ROTC Headquarters in
Alabama.
Selection was based on the
score received on I he Air Force
Office Qualifying Tesl,
scholast ic achievement.
involvement in extracurricular
university activities, and the
rating received from an
interview hoard of Air Force
officers.
Intervarsity groups
Intervarsit) Christian
Fellowship meets
Tuesday and Thuisday.
On Tuesdays, meetings
originate al 7:15 p.m in
Umstead's lobby and then
move to a house in the
community which is provided
by a church member. The
house varies each week
On Thursdays, meetings are
in room 20.1 of the Union al 7
p.m. Bold sessions aie for
sharing problems and "getting
to know each Other
The group is inter-
dominational and a part of an
international organization. This
is its firsl year at ECU.
For furl hei information
contact Mary Nell Cavin,
7sx.rvfc
Artist show
Two intaglio prints by
Donald Sexauer were shown
with the works of artists from
13 other southeastern stales in
the I2ih annual exhibition of
prints and drawings at the
Montgomery Museum of Fine
Arts.
Sexauci is professor and
chairman ol the prmlmaking
department in the School of
Art ai ECU.
The prints, entitled "Family
Tree" and "Lost Frontier" will
be included in the exhibilion as
H travels to the Pensacola An
Centei. Pensacola, Flu during
the month of May and in July
when the exhibition will be
displayed al the Mobile Art
Gallery. Mobile. Ala.
presented the testing device to the
Speach and Hearing Clinic.
Equipment donated
to Speech Clinic
Scientists ogled at ECU's moon
An infant hearing screenei has been
presented to the Speech and Hearing Clinic at
ECU by members ol Zeta Lambda chaptei ol
Delta Zeta sorority.
Delta Ze.a has as its nalional philanthropy
the treatment and education of deal children.
Zeta Lambda chapter has decided lo make the
expansion of the facilities ol ECU'S Speech
and Hearing Clinic a permanent project.
In special activities recently. Delta Zeta
presented the screenei to l)r Garret Hume,
director of the Speech and Hearing Clinic which
serves all of eastern North Carolina and is the
only such clinic in this area.
Members of the sorority financed the infant
scrccncr ihiough various fund laismg projects
and presented il to the Speech and Hearing
Clinic as the initiation of an annual campaign to
expand the clinic's facilities and services.
Speaking before the sorority, Hume stated
thai ihe infant screenei was one of many pieces
of equipment needed for the expansion of the
clime's services.
According to Hume, anothe significant
benefit of heaving the infant screcner is that
Students in the speech and hearing program will
learn to use it, Many graduating speech and
healing majors will be working ineastern North
Carolina, and knowledge of how lo use the
infant screener will enable them to better serve
the area in which they work
The addition of an infant screcner is only a
beginning to the expansion of clinical services
for residents ol eastern North Carolina. Delta
Zeta emphasizes that more money and
equipment must he made available to ihe ECU
Speech and Hearing Clinic if its services arc to
be Improved and expanded. Il is hoped that the
presentation of the infant screener will be the
lust jteop in Increased interest and support of
the Clinic by the residents of this area which it
so valuably serves.
Guests foi the presentation included faculty
members ol the Speech and Hearing Clinic,
ECU President Leo Jenkins, and Delta Zeta
Stale officers and alumnae.
f
From the superstitious in the Veracruz
jungles to the coldly analytical scientists
huddled over their instruments along the
Atlantic seaboard of the United States they
ogled.
A year ago, on March 7, the millions turned
their eyes upward to watch one of Mother
Nature's magnificent spectacles a total solar
eclipse.
And ihe most important gathering of all may
have been a scientific conference at ECU called
for the avowed purpose of learning nothing
new
"We believe it is the only conference of its
type ever held at any time said Dr. Marshall
Helms, professor of physics, and director of the
gathering at the Greenville campus. "It was
designed for those who are teaching astronomy,
and not for astronomers
As a result, said Helms, over 100 instructors
from 35 states between Maine and Colorado
have returned to their classrooms with
first-hand experience in observing a solar
eclipse. "Many took back color slides they had
taken themselves, and could tell their classes 'I
took this Many report making talks before
civic clubs, and have exnressed satisfaction at
being here
It was, said Helms, "something which seemed
ECU WAS CHOSEN for
vieving last year's eclipse
because of its close
proximity to the center of
the eclipse.
ThPr, hC eXperience ?? ?" 'each "
'he ecu cany wus becgu
only three mile, from the dead denter of eclipse
totality, For those who watched through 177
seconds 0 carkness while the birds hushed and
lowers closed and ,? (empera.ure fell 14
degrees t was a remarkable experience for such
bor.inne less than three rnlnutes.
wna they saw at Greenville was augmented
b leturesfr,m seven experts ?, e field And
when the hvoOay conference was over, .he 100
went back to ,hei, home campuses With more
??'Photographs and slides. They had
Inc eased .heir knowledge by personal
and taten back new enthusiasm for the subject.
,Alhe?!il'ln idea was born
shitT '? C ll,cse mtunl happenings
u2L? cTnl,ml on b ??? " 5
teaching, said Helms, "Our conference could
cornARir.yea'S " Wlcan? e,ul"d ?' ?
"run II d?wn ?, Mexico. I. was well studied
J ?2P??JV volcanolorwiu
a
eacheis
wonderful .hing 3!TTr
i,i i, . d inference or
could have been held there, too
Jlmsll' upheavals and unusual
&S f .a7"?J?t? t? be studied ,? Musi
by experts .n.helield.bu, by .eachcis. also
BELENDA
the 18th E
Wright was
Whi
Belinda Wiig
Ball Oucen in
fund-raising co
Phi Omega scrvi
Twenty-six I
campus oigani,
Queen was d
select ion. Prt
Weal
W e a . h e r m
meteorological t
A large weatl
physical feature
the Department
of the "C" w:
Building.
Current read
forecasts, are pi,
wilh the aid of s
Michael Dink
charge of the wc
Dinkcl joinec
1970 and le
geography. Dur
teach a course
using the weath
classes.
Beginning sh
"If





I uesuay, Mjh.Ii I , i ? ? i i ountainnead I agi
BELENDA WRIGHT (wearing crown) is
the 18th ECU White Ball Queen. Miss
Wright was chosen on the basis of a
penny vote held by the student body.
With her is Becky Lacky, 1970 Queen.
White Ball queen chosen
Belinda Wright was chosen the 18th White
Ball Queen jn a recent campus wide charity
fund-raising competition sponsored by Alpha
Phi Omega service fraternity.
Twenty-six ECU coeds were sponsored by
campus organization and selection of the
Queen was determined in a penny-a-vote
selection. Proceeds from the competition
permitted Alpha Phi Omega to present $1,000
to the Pitt County Crippled Children's
Association.
Sponsored by Kappa Sigma fraternity, the
1971 Queen was crowned by her predecessor,
Becky Lackey.
Kay Flyc of Greenville, sponsored by Theta
Chi fraternity, was first runner-up.
Weather,climate map installed
Weathermen are on campus. The
meteorological type that is!
A large weather map with states outlined and
physical features indicated has been installed by
the Department of Geography in the south side
of the "C" wing of the new Social Science
Building.
Current readings, in addition to weather
forecasts, are placed on the board each morning
with the aid of symbols.
Michael Dinkcl. instructor of geography, is in
charge of the weather map project.
Dinkel joined the geography staff in Sept.
1970 and leaches courses in physical
geography. During the spring quarter he will
teach a course in weather and climate. He is
using the weather map in conjunction with his
classes.
Beginning shortly after the weather and
climate class starts, each student in the class
will be given a period of time to be in charge of
reporting present weather conditions and
forecasting the weather for the next 48 hours.
Anyone interested in the latest weather data is
urged to study this weather map daily.
Also, a new weather station instrument
shelter has been installed between the Social
Science building and the Memorial Gym.
Instruments in the shelter are used to record
such things as temperature, barometric pressure
and precipitation. Installation of the weather
shelter will make it possible to prepare minute
reports on weather conditions and to record all
observations for use on the weather map.
With the practical use of this equipment, the
student should better understand the problems
involved in weather forecasting.
Course created for kids media
Childrens media workshops lor primary and
elementary teachers, supervisors and librarians
are planned for hCU this summer. The
Department of Library Science has two
workshops planned lor July 19 through August
6.
"Workshop on Media for Children" is a three
week combined course program planned to
investigate current trends and materials for
primary and elementary children.
During this same period, another workship,
"Workshop on Government Publications' will
involve a study of the forms, distribution, care
and utilization of all types of federal
government publications. Attention will be
given to publications of value in school, public,
college and university media programs.
Brief problems in legislative tracing as well as
a review of state government publications will
be explored. Credits may be used for graduate
certification renewal or toward graduate
degrees. This workship will be appropriate for
librarians in all types of libraries as well as
social science teachers and supervisors.
Non-violent
protest persists
Non-violent protest of American policies in
Southeast Asia is now a weekly happening in
Greenville. Mrs. Jerry Paul, wife of an ACLLJ
lawyer, has organized a silent, non-violent
group of protesters to meet at the Greenville
Post Office every Wednesday from noon until 1
p.m.
Mrs. Paul and a handful of "faithfuls" have
vowed to continue protesting until all U.S.
troops are out of Southeast Asia, particularly
Laos and Vietnam, the said.
Mrs. Paul has noi just recently begun her
vigil. It has been a weekly part of her life since
last spring when U.S. troops moved into
Cambodia to destroy North Vietnamese supply
dumps and infiltration routes.
She and a group of approximately 25
interested neighbors and friends stood vigil on
the post office property one hour a week to
protest their opposition to the government's '
policies, in an orderly and deeply serious
manner. Over the mouths the group shriveled to
a mere six or eight but with the current Laotian
drive, flagging interest has been partially
restored by a fewcampus extras, according to
MrsPaul.
The public reaction to the peace vigil has
largely been one of general apathy but there has
been some response, both positive and negative.
Even the negative response is welcomed. "I'd
rather people got mad than nothing said Mrs
Paul.
Her motives and the motives of her
followers, have been to get U.S. troops jut of
Vietnam, and now Laos as well. Mrs. Paul said
her biggest concern is poverty here at home.
Mrs. Paul and her followers intend to
continue with their protest until our troops are
out of Southeast Asia. She invites all the
support she can get.
California quake
brings speculation
By BETSY HEADY
(Staff Writer)
The earthquake that recently ripped through
Southern California has evoked comments from
hundreds of geologists and seismologists.
Fountainhead recently spoke with Michael
O'Connor, professor of geology at LCU, to
learn more about the quake.
According to O'Connor, the quake resulted
from the rifts or faults that are found in
California. The San Andreas Fault, a 600 mile
rift which was responsible for the San Francisco
earthquake of 1906, is the largest and mosi
active fault in the area. However, it was a
secondary fault, the San Gabriel Fault, which
lead to the Los Angeles quake. This fault is
located about 40 miles northeast of Los
Angeles.
Pressure builds up inside these faults causing
the land to move. In the case of the San
Andreas and San Gabriel Faults, one side of the
fault moves northward while the other moves
to the south.
A particularly vulnerable area to danger is
the spot where the San Andreas Fault with its
north-south movement crosses the Garlock
Fault where there is an east-west movement. In
this area the land is being pushed and pulled by
the earthly pressures and is moving apart in
four directions, according to O'Connor.
For years, scientists have predicted an
earthquake of gigantic proportions foi the
California area. Although the Los Angela
quake has occurred and was not as great a:
expected, the threat of future disturbances is
still present. O'Connor stated that while the
quake diJ occur as predicted, the area is
nevertheless subject to new dangers and is by
no means safe
Many geologists aie concerned with why this
area oi the country is so unsteady and
susceptible to earthquake action. A new theory,
outlined by J luo Wilson University of
Toronto, neatly explains the reason behind this
geological mystery.
Millions of years ago, the continents broke
off from one of two immense laud masses along
volcanically active cracks in the earth's crust
known as mid-ocean ridges. As North America
slowly crept westward away from the
mid-Atlantic Ridge, the west coast of tin
continent met with anothei segment of the
ridge system called the I .is' Pacific Rise.
Instead of stopping at tins natural harrier.
the land bulldozed right ovei it Consequent!)
the west now si r s on top of this hot scam in tin
earth's crust
The San Andreas I ault was probably created
by this underlying rise and may sull be affected
by it, said 0'( onnoi
Scfs
IN
i m.
if
SKETCH SHOWS MANY FAULTS
which make California vulnerable to
parthnualro
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1





Pane 2. Fountainheatl luesdav. March 17. 1971
Fund initiated
in honor of
local doctor
A scholarship fund named in memory of Dr.
Charles P. Adams had been established at ECU.
Adams, a Greenville physician well known in
eastern North Carolina, recently died at the age
of 46.
According to Dr. Edwin Monroe, dean of the
School of Allied Health and Social Professions,
"The Scholarship was formed in memory of Dr.
Adams' long service to the community, the
University and to the medical profession
Funds from the scholarship will be used to
aid deserving students in any course of study in
health related fields at ECU.
Members of (he scholarship committee arc
Dr. Fred Irons, ECU physician: Monroe; ECU
Provost Robert Williams; and Greenville
physician Dr. Earl Trevathan.
Contributions to the scholarship fund should
be sent to: Dr. Charles P. Adams Memorial.
They may be mailed to Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU
president.
MRS. SALL CURRIIM's home of 50
years is at 504 E. Eighth Street. The
expansion of ECU necessitates
removal of the 11-room gray house.
the
50-year old home soon leveled by state
By HOLLY FINMAN
(Newt EdII ;
Blue eyes look out from behind wirc-rimmed
spectacles ritose eyes match the culm ol the
blur-knoi shawl draped over thin shoulders
Though she stands with the aid ol a cane,
there's a strong, sturdy look in those
87-yeai-old eyes
The tall, gray-haired lady said lici heart is
failing It was "skipping" so badly iliat liei
doctoi put hei in the hospital foi I7 days last
month
Bui Mrs. SallieCurrin is not as worried about
her heart condition as she is about her future.
She wonders where she will go and hovi she will
live when hei home since 1921 is leveled to the
ground by the Slate of North Carolina.
"I i makes me sick to think of a bulldozel
just pushing n over said Mrs. Currin. hei blue
eyes filling with tears.
The large. I I-room gray house at 504 I
Eighth St. is one of a few houses remaining on
the block. It has a wide proch with rocking
chairs that have seen 50 years of use. Inside are
high ceilings and a wide staircase leading to the
second flooi and the looms which she rents.
This house and others on Eighth Street will
be removed as part o' the expansion program of
ECU. A library extension and a student union
will replace the present structures. Construction
is scheduled to begin by Januais. 1 -72. if the
block is cleat of houses, said Clifton Moore.
I (I business manager.
Foul houses already belonged to ECU. The
university built them for faculty housing about
19 23. Later, they were made into
administrative offices. These four frame
buildings were the first to be demolished.
ECU authorized the State of North Carolina
to purchase other houses on Eighth Street.
Moore said.
Moore explained that ECU has nothing to do
with the purchasing of property. The University
authorizes the State to purchase it.
The Slate men aren't humanless robots.
They've got a job to do and they are trying to-
do it as humanly as possible he said.
The law of eminent domain protects the
Stale's rights to take private property for public
use Eminent domain is the prerogative of a
sovereign state. It is limited by payment of
"liisi compensation foi the condemned
property according to North Carolina law.
Mis. Currin said, however, that (he Slate is
not offering her "ju.t compensation" for her
lumse li is in good condition ai;d sits on a 90
foot lot. she said.
"After all. it's the land they want, not the
house she pointed out. Mrs. Currin said the
Stale has paid more for houses on smaller lots.
"They offered me $17,500 she said, "and
anybody can tell its worth more than that
Her attorney is attempting to get more from
the State to help support her in the coming
years, she said.
"My boarders are my only income except for
S58 a month from Social Security she said.
ECU students rent three upstairs rooms in her
home.
When her home and income arc gone, what
will she do? "They don't have 'poor houses'
any more for h Iks like me she said. "The
only thing I can do is move in with my
daughter in Goldsboro. but they have a very
small house. They'll have to build on an extra
ruiom if I move there
She concluded. "If the politicians' would
take the time to find out what my situation is,
maybe they would be more concerned. I've
tried to tell them, but they don't hear me. They
aren't interested in folksike me. They're just
interested in politics
Moore stated however, that :he Eighth Street
project has not caused community resentment
toward the University.
"Some individuals are upset and one has
carried the case to the State Supreme Court
Moore said, "but as a whole, the community
relationship with the University has not been
upset
Chemistry prof
receives praise
Dr. Joseph Nisbet LeConte, Professor of
chemistry, has been commended by the
American Chemical Society (ACS) for his
activities and efforts as a member of one of its
examination committees.
Dr. Theo A. Ashford, chairman of the ACS
Examination Committee, lauded the efforts of
LeConte in the past several years in the
development of a standardized chemistry test
for paramedical programs.
The test, now completed, is designed to be
used for nursing and medical technology
programs and in preparatory programs for other
paramedical fields.
A member of the ECU chemistry faculty
since 1957, LeConte specializes in organic
chemistry and biochemistry courses for nursing
majors.
He holds degrees from Emory University and
UNCCH and has done postdoctoral work at
the University of Florida.
LeConte is the author of a number of
research publications included in the Journal of
the American Chemical Society, the Journal of
Organic Chemistry and other scientific-
periodicals.
He is grand-nephew to the renowned
LeConte brothers, scientists in the latter
nineteenth century, for whom buildings on the
campused of the Universities of California at
Derkeley and South Carolina are named.
Campus briefs
Library forum organized
DR. GARRET HUME tests infants-
hearing with new equipment. Brenda
Morgan, president of Delta Zeta
A forum to discuss libnry
services and policies, open to
both students and faculty, will
be held weekly beginning
Tuesday, March 16.
The discussion will be in
room 2 14 Joyner Library,
from I I a.m. until noon. The
door to the meeting will be
open for one hour and visitors
may come and go at their
pleasure.
The library will be
represented by its personnel
who are qualified to respond to
questions from the floor.
All persons attending will be
considered as forum members.
The forum will continue as
long as there is sufficient
interest and representation to
justify it. The time and place
will be the same except under
unusual circumstance, in whicl
case due notice will be
circulated.
Key editor
Positions are now open for
editor and business manager of
the 1971-72 Key, the
University handbook.
Applicants should contact the
dean of student affairs by
March 24. To qualify for the
positions applicants must be
student in good standing with a
2.0 average.
A written statement listing
qualifications and reasons for
wanting position should be
turned in to Steve Ncal.
chairman of the Publications
Board or left at the student
affairs office. The election will
be March 31.
Visiting speaker
Dr. Charles M. Weiss of the
School of Public Health of the
University of North CArolina
at Chapel Hill, will speak here
Wednesday, March 17.
Water Quality
Management: Its Implications
for Our Contemporary
Society" is the topic Weiss will
explore in the Biology
Building, N102 at 1 p.m.
The Association of Eastern
North Carolina Colleges
sponsoring Weiss and other
visiting lecturers during the
year.
Girl's slimnastics
Women's slimnastic classes
for all ECU students, faculty
and staff began last
Wednesday. New members are
welcome each Wednesday at 7
p.m. in the dance studio of
Memorial Gym.
Jenkins appointed
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU
president, has been appointed
to the committee on Allied
Health Professions of the
American Association of State
Colleges and Universities.
The committee on which
Jenkins will serve is composed
of presidents of state colleges
and universities. It will plan
and supervise programs of teh
Association, composed of 276
state-supported colleges and
regional universities.
The Association is a vehicle
for coordinated aciton and
research programs and a
clearinghouse for information.
It is a cooperative mechanism
by which member institutions
can work together to improve
and advance higher education.
Through its Washington
headquarters, it also serves as a
voice speaking for low-cost
higher education available to
all students who can benefit
from it.
Jenkins also serves as a state
representative of the
Association.
Biology seminar
Graduate students in the
Department of Biology have
announced the schedule for a
seminar scries during the spring
quarter.
Noted scientists from
laboratories and universities in
several states will address the
weekly seminar series on topics
relating to biology and
ecology.
The speakers will come from
Rutgers University, the College
of William and Mary,
UNC-Chapel Hill and
Wilmington, N.C. Stale
University and Wake Forest
University.
Also icpresented on the
schedule are the Chesapeake
Biological Laboratory and the
Woods Hole (Mass.) Marine
Biological Laboratory.
Funded by the National
Science Foundation's Visiting
Scientists Program and the
Biology Department, the
seminars arc tentatively
scheduled for I p.m. on
Thursdays and Fridays.
Interested persons from the
campus and local communities
are invited to attend any of the
seminars.
Union bowling
The Union Bowling League
is now calling for new members
for spring quarter. Anyone
desiring to participate should
meet at 4 p.m. each Tuesday at
Hillcrest Lanes. Rides, leaving
Glanagan Building at 4 p.m.
each Tuesday, have been made
available to the league.
Buc queen
Entries for 197 1-72
Buccaneer Queen must be
registered by March 19 at 5
p.m.
The contest is open to all
girls on the ECU campus.
There is no grade average
requirement.
A $2.50 entry fee must be
paid in the Buccaneer office,
second floor. Wright
Auditorium.
All organizations on campus
are invited to sponsor a girl for
the contest.
Induced anxiety
dominational and a part of an
Dr. Charles Moore, associate international organization. This
professor in the Department of is 'ls r'rsl ve:lr aI ECU
Psychology, is to present a F()l furthei
paper before the symposium at contact Mary Nell Cavin,
the Southeastern Psychologica
treating sexual deviates in the
United States.
Moore has studied at ITU,
UNC-CH and llie Univcisity of
Georgia. He has done work in
clinical psychology at the
M illedgeville (Ga.) Stale
Hospital.
The author of several articles
in leading psychology journals.
Moore was assistant professoi
of psychology at the UNC
School of Medicine before
joining the ECU faculty in
1968.
Beginning bridge
Union beginning bridge
classes began last Wednesday in
room 212 of the union. New
students will be welcome to
the second meeting on
Wednesday. March 17. at 3
p.m.
ROTC awards
Aii Force ROTC cadets
Alvin E. Benton. Jr Ronnie
W. Smith and Michael J. Ulmei
have been awarded two-year
ROTC college scholarships.
This scholarship covers full
tuiioin. laboratory expenses.
incidental fees, and an
allowance loi books. Also
included is S50 per month in
nontaxable pay.
They were first nominated
to receive this honor by
institutional officials and by
Air Force ROTC officers. Final
selection was made on a
nationally competitive basis by
a central selection board at Air
Force ROTC Headquarters in
Alabama.
Selection was based on the
score received on the Air Force
Officei Qualifying Test,
scholastic achievement.
involvement in extracurricular
university activities, and the
rating received from an
interview board of Air Force
officers.
Inrervarsity groups
Intervarsity Christian
Fellowship meets
Tuesday and Thursday.
On Tuesdays, meetings
originate at 7:15 pin in
Umstead's lobby and then
move to a house in the
community which is provided
by a church member. The
house varies each week.
On Thursdays, meetings are
in room 203 of the Union at 7
p.m. Both sessions arc for
sharing problems and "getting
to know each other
The group is inter-
Association Convocation .
Miami. April 21-May 1.
Moore's paper is entitled
"Induced Anxiety as a Therapy
Technique The symposium
theme is induced anxiety as a
method for research and
behavior change.
In 1969, Moore addressed
the Association on a new
technique for treating male
homosexual patients. His
method was aversive
conditioning to homosexual
urges by electrical shocks.
The process of treatment
continued with positive
conditioning, to lessen the
patient's fear of females.
He reported a high degree of
success with this treatment, in
contrast to the failure
conventional methods
of
of
information
Ni
7SK.066"
Artist show
Two intaglio prints by
Donald Sexauer were shown
with the works of artists from
13 other southeastern states in
the 12th annual exhibition of
prints and drawings at the
Montgomery Museum of Fine-
Arts.
Sexauei is professor and
chairman ol the printmaking
department in the School of
Art at l(U
The prims, entitled "Family
Tree" and "Lost Frontier" will
be included in the exhibition as
ii travels to the Pensacola Art
Center. Pensacola. Fla during
the month of May and in July
when the exhibition will be
displayed al the Mobile Art
Gallery, Mobile, Ala.
presented the testing device to the
Speach and Hearing Clinic.
Equipment donated
to Speech Clinic
Scientists ogled at ECU's moon
An Infant hearing scieener has been
presented to the Speech and Hearing Clinic at
ECU by members of Zeta Lambda chapter of
Delta Zeta sorority.
Delta Zeta has as its national philanthropy
the treatment and education of deaf children
Zeta Lambda chapter has decided to make the
expansion of the facilities of ECU's Speech
and Hearing Clinic a permanent project.
In special activities recently. Delta Zeta
presented the screener to Dr. Garret Hume,
director of the Speech and Hearing Clinic which
serves all of eastern North Carolina and is the
only such clinic in this area.
Members of the sorority financed the infant
screener through various fund raising projects
and presented it to the Speech and Hearing
Clinic as the initiation of an annual campaign in
expand the clinic's facilities and services.
Speaking before the sorority. Hume stated
that the infant screener was one of many pieces
of equipment needed for the expansion of the
s
clinic's services
According to Hume, ariothe significant
benefit of heaving the infant screener is that
students in the speech and hearing program will
learn to use it. Many graduating speech and
hearing majors will be working ineastern North
Carolina, and knowledge of how to use the
infant screener will enable them to better serve
the area in which they work.
The addition of an infant screener is only a
beginning to the expansion of clinical services
for residents of eastern North Carolina. Delta
Zeta emphasizes that more -money and
equipment must be made available to the ECU
Speech and Hearing Clinic if its services are to
be improved and expanded. It is hoped that the
presentation of the infant screener will be the
first steop in increased interest and support of
the Clinic by the residents of this area which it
so valuably serves.
Guests for the presentation included faculty
members of the Speech and Hearing Clinic,
ECU President Leo Jenkins, and Delta Zeta
Stale officers and alumnae.
From the superstitious in the Veracruz
jungles to the coldly analytical scientists
huddled over their instruments along the
Atlantic seaboard of the United States they
ogled.
A year ago, on March 7, the millions turned
their eyes upward to watch one of Mother
Nature's magnificent spectacles a total solar
eclipse.
And the most important gathering of all may
have been a scientific conference at ECU called
for the avowed purpose of learning nothing
new.
"We believe it is the only conference of its
type ever held at any time said Dr. Marshall
Helms, professor of physics, and director of the
gathering at the Greenville campus. "It was
designed for those who are teaching astronomy,
and not for astronomers
As a result, said Helms, over 100 instructors
from 35 states between Maine and Colorado
have returned to their classrooms with
first-hand experience in observing a solar
eclipse. "Many took back color slides they had
taken themselves, and could tell their classes '1
took this Many report making talks before
civic clubs, and have expressed satisfaction at
being here
It was, said Helms, "something which seemed
ECU WAS CHOSEN for
vieving last year's eclipse
because of its close
proximity to the center of
the eclipse.
to enhance the experience o, those who teach
oniu ,i ,?T" was chosen because it lay
only hree miles froill ,hc dcud dmn o( ?
Utah y, F(,r those who watched through 177
a" Car,knCSS Whilc ,he bilJs Shed and
flowen closed and the temperature fell 14
a shoriV WaSM experience for such
??MUma less than three minutes.
What thcy saw ? Greenvfl,e was (ed
whn.rC,rTSeVCncx'ler,si"? ield. And
Th , I ,heil home campuses with more
ne LP Tapl,S and slid?- They had
xo ,e ,hCir k?dge by personal
and taken back new enthuUaim for the subject
A'tMwne time, an Idea was borm
should Tm '? C ,hcsc nu,l,r;l1 M'Penings
eac 1 ? 'T'm1"011 by 'he who are
tewhJng, said ?clms ?0ur a)(ecMco wuU
o,hTrnedsPryC ers of its kind, in
cornr,erdownSinaM " C,UCd J
and ,1 Mexico " wys well studied
' Helms.n.ture1,upheaval, and
bv experts ,n the Iield. but by teachers, also
What a
teachers
unusual
not just
BELENDA 1
the 18th E(
Wright was
Whh
Belinda Wrigl
Ball Queen in ;
fund-raising cor
Phi Omega servii
Twenty-six E
campus organiz
Queen was di
selection. Pro.
Weal
W c a t h e r m e
meteorological t;
A large weath
physical features
the Department
of the "C" wii
Building.
Current readi
forecasts, are pla
with the aid of sj
Michael Dinke
charge of the wei
Dinke! joined
I970 and tet
geography. Durii
teach a course i
using the weathe
classes.
Beginning shi
WA
1
I
"If





? ? ????
i uesday, March 17, i"i rountainnead, fage
the
BELENDA WRIGHT (wearing crown) is
the 18th ECU White Ball Queen. Miss
Wright was chosen on the basis of a
penny vote held by the student body.
With her is Becky Lacky, 1970 Queen.
White Ball queen chosen
Belinda Wright was chosen the 18th White
Ball Queen jn a recent campus wide charity
fund-raising competition sponsored by Alpha
Phi Omega service fraternity.
Twenty-six ECU coeds were sponsored by
campus organizations and selection of the
Queen was determined in a penny-a-vote
selection. Proceeds from the competition
permitted Alpha Phi Omega, to present $1,000
to the Pitt County Crippled Children's
Association.
Sponsored by Kappa Sigma fraternity, the
1971 Queen was crowned by her predecessor,
Becky Lackey.
Kay Flye of Greenville, sponsored by Theta
Chi fraternity, was first runner-up.
Weather,climate map installed
Weathermen are on campus. The
meteorological type that is!
A large weather map with states outlined and
physical features indicated has been installed by
the Department of Geography in the south side
of the "C" wing of the new Social Science
Building.
Current readings, in addition to weather
forecasts, are placed on the board each morning
with the aid of symbols.
Michael Dinkel, instructor of geography, is in
charge of the weather map project.
Dinkel joined the geography staff in Sept.
I?70 and teaches courses in physical
geography. During the spring quarter he will
teach a course in weather and climate. He is
using the weather map in conjunction with his
classes.
Beginning shortly after the weather and
climate class starts, each student in the class
will be given a period of time to be in charge of
reporting present weather conditions and
forecasting the weather for the next 48 hours.
Anyone interested in the latest weather data is
urged to study this weather map daily.
Also, a new weather station instrument
shelter has been installed between the Social
Science building and the Memorial Gym.
Instruments in the shelter are used to record
such things as temperature, barometric pressure
and precipitation. Installation of the weather
shelter will make it possible to prepare minute
reports on weather conditions and to record all
observations for use on the weather map.
With the practical use of this equipment, the
student should better understand the problems
involved in weather forecasting.
Course created for kids media
Childrens media workshops for primary and
elementary teachers, supervisors and librarians
are planned for LCU this summer. The
Department of Library Science has two
workshops planned lor July 19 through August
6.
"Workshop on Media for Children" is a three
week combined course program planned to
investigate current trends and materials for
primary and elementary children.
During this same period, another workship,
"Workshop on Government Publications" will
involve a study of the forms, distribution, care
and utilization of all types of federal
government publications. Attention will be
given to publications of value in school, public,
college and university media programs.
Brief problems in legislative tracing as well as
a review of state government publications will
be explored. Credits may be used for graduate
certification renewal or toward graduate
degrees. This workship will be appropriate for
librarians in all types of libraries as well as
social science teachers and supervisors.
Non-violent
protest persists
Non-violent protest of American policies in
Southeast Asia is now a weekly happening in
Greenville. Mrs. Jerry Paul, wife of an ACLU
lawyer, has organized a silent, nonviolent
group of protesters to meet at the Greenville
Post Office every Wednesday from noon until 1
p.m.
Mrs. Paul and a handful of "faithfuls" have
vowed to coniinue protesting until all U.S.
troops are out of Southeast Asia, particularly
Laos and Vietnam, she said.
Mrs. Paul has not just recently begun her
vigil. It has been a weekly part of her life since
last spring when U.S. troops moved into
Cambodia to destroy North Vietnamese supply
dumps and infiltration routes.
She and a group of approximately 25
interested neighbors and friends stood vigil on
the post office property one hour a week to
protest their opposition to the government's '
policies, in an orderly and deeply serious
manner. Over the months the group shriveled to
a mere six or eight but with the current Laotian
drive, flagging interest has been partially
restored by a few campus extras, according to
MrsPaul.
The public reaction to the peace vigil has
largely been one of general apathy but there has
been some response, both positive and negative.
Even the negative response is welcomed. "I'd
rather people got mad than nothing said Mrs.
Paul.
Her motives and the motives of her
followers, have been to get U.S. troops out of
Vietnam, and now Laos as well. Mrs. Paul said
her biggest concern is poverty here at home.
Mrs. Paul and her followers intend to
continue with their protest until our troops arc
out of Southeast Asia. She invites all the
support she can get.
California quake
brings speculation
By BETSY HEADY
(Staff Writer)
The earthquake that recently ripped through
Southern California has evoked comments from
hundreds of geologists and seismologists.
Fountainhead recently spoke with Michael
O'Connor, professor of geology at ECU, to
learn more about the quake.
According to O'Connor, the quake resulted
from the rifts or faults that are found in
California. The San Andreas Fault, a 600 milt-
rift which was responsible for the San Francisco
earthquake of 1906, is the largest and most
active fault in the area. However, it was a
secondary fault, the San Gabriel Fault, which
lead to the Los Angeles quake. This fault is
located about 40 miles northeast of Los
Angeles.
Pressure builds up inside these faults causing
the land to move. In the case of the San
Andreas and San Gabriel Faults, one side of the
fault moves northward while the other moves
to the south.
A particularly vulnerable area to danger is
the spot where the San Andreas Fault with its
north-south movement crosses the Garlock
Fault where there is an east-west movement. In
this area the land is being pushed and pulled by
the earthly pressures and is moving apart in
four directions, according to O'Connor.
For years, scientists have predicted an
earthquake of gigantic proportions fot the
California area. Although the Los Angeles
quake has occurred and was not as great as
expected, the threat of future disturbances is
still present. O'Connor stated that while the
quake did occur as predicted, the area is
nevertheless subject to new dangers and is by
no means safe.
Man geologists are concerned with why this
area of the country is so unsteady and
susceptible to earthquake action, A new theory.
outlined by J. Tuzo Wilson. University oi
Toronto, neatly explains the reason behind this
geological mystery.
Millions of years ago. the continents broke
off from one of two immense land masses along
volcanically active cracks in the earth's crust
known as mid-ocean ridges. As North America
slowly crept westward away from the
mid-Atlantic Kidge. the west coast of the
continent met with anolhei segment of the
ridge system called the Last Pacific Rise.
Instead of stopping at this natural barrier,
the land bulldozed right over it Consequently!
the west now sits on top of this hot wain in tlie
earth's crust
The San Andreas Fault was probably created
by this underlying rise and ma still be affected
by it, said O'Connor.
? ?
I l i i i-
3
SKETCH SHOWS MANY FAULTS
which make California vulnerable to
parthniialfp
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?ooular Entertainment Committee
o
'Genesis III' film festival
offers animation,drama Money is pr m fu
Bv CONiutF RnrPR ' Bv JIM EICHLING the) making II poss.bie fo, the PI C iake
DV LWIJlV t Hi) iFR ? . . Ino , 11t I II Mil 111 '(? .ill! I iiim .
Bv CONNIE BOGER
"Genesis III iw i houi program ol shorl
n,s to EC'I Wednesday March I 7
i S p in
rhe uval the work ol student
?"ul indepei dent Him nakers from across the
Hie latest collecth
s I ilnis I i,l and will he shown in Wrighl
Vudiloi in
rhe llh s ne to 60 minutes in
ll'11' 'IIJ fonsisi ol dramatic screenplays.
moii. soual documentaries, and comedk
l11 txP' enialand innovative methods
"I expression make "Genesis III" an especially
exciting collection ol cinema an I he program
"hole is ,i representative ?? 0f
ls liappcnn dependent film
Mils;
MARIJUANA EDUCATION
I he Genesis jgn,
sk ' 1 m Rettig s amusing
? lieh comedian
laranoid
vils of
isell hi
? become
dering around.
1 '?'? s i. in the role
essiv
s hat the ' actually
ind crew "
' s nologica
Ro Barge pui
1 '? ion" which he . as "the
li
techi
'ature through tl
- stasis.
igery
ovacative ol thi ,
McD' llJ's documenta . Mattel ol
which he interviews two draft
Widespread wfohcrpfr
-tors who ahvc taken quite different courses
? 'l action
loin Dreshler. a young teacher, explains thai
he chose llighi to Canada not so much because
oi Vietnam bul what he calls "the American
"It we gel out ol Vietnam we'll be
someplace else he explains pessimesticall) He
decided againsl going to jail foi his beliefs
because "I would be detained as a political
prisonei foi the resi ol mj life "
In contrast to Dreschler, Christian Hayden
those risking jail where he is now appealing
42-month sentence He is the outward more
latniltai stereotyped, long-haired, bearded
radical south who is interviewed al a rock
"?nccrt Protest rail) The appearances are
ading since the youth is actuall a Quakei
whose commitment to nonviolence dates to his
shooting
LESS IS MORE
I quails disturbing "Induction" is described
bj us make, Larry I Larstead, as being "an
analogy. Plugging the system into the pleasure
ventei rhe march ol progress L sun the
setting ol a biologj lab, a class demonstration
'?ikes place implanting a electrode in the
'pleasure centers" of a rat's brain so thai he
?? become self-stimulating Its function
performed, the ral is decapitated in a miniature
guillotine and its head preserved in
formaldehyde The implications can be taken
'hus rat ? man. experimenter societ)
electrode perverted values, decapitation
spiritual death
One ol the rats escapes, finds its wa) oui of
the lab, and goes to live in Ihe deserl leaving the
audience with a hopeful message ll ordinar)
existance holds nothing more in store than an
electrode and a blade, drop out
"I ess is More" is a one-minute frame cutting
b Don Paonessa, who says ll is ? fin
evolution What we've had and what we've
gol "
"Airplane Glue, I I ove You written and
directed In Howard I Lester, is verj funny
.mil lotall) original shorl comedy, rhrough an
administrative error, a professional hobby shop
modcl-ntakei who is a 10-yeai old ease of
arrested development to begin with and whose
brain has mined i "jcllo" from sniffing model
airplane glue, is declared a truant and returned
to the siih grade
PARALLEL TO'200V
"An unconscious imagery, with no point
othet than torrefied a numbei ol states ol
being confirming one anothei . a film about
"O'SC Ihe statemenl describes Patrick
O'Neill's "Runs Good" a title which carries the
reassurance ol a used cai salesman Ihe film is
15 minutes of foops, high contrast solariatfons,
step?printing, matting and othei special effects
"ii stock film librarj footage and sound tracks
put togethei whimsical!) al breakneck speed
with no particulai meaning bul often with a
sharp usual humoi
Ron Policy, Rod Whitaker, and Richard
( ooris are responsible foi "Cinemania" which
won a Silvei Phoenix m the Atlanta Film
Festival li has fun with the cliches of the I960
movies and those who Stud) them. Ihe
production work was done in Austin and
several rural lexas locations.
"Genesis III" ends appropriate!) with
"Omega Scored with passages from classical
music, ii has a profoundl) spiritual effect. With
vibranl coloi techniques, including infrared
photography, the film illustrates its theme ol
"the transformation of man from his physical
shell to an immortan being ol energy
"Omega" is directly parallel to the end oi
M Space Odyssey evoking the
ms Stic ism of miter space.
By JIM EICHLING
(Siaii Wrltei I
Ihe Populai Entertainment Committee
(PEC) has iust one maoi problem according to
chairman Russell Uzzle.
"It's a problem of getting who vein want,
when sou want them, at a puce sou can pas
he said.
The PEC has often been critized hs those
students who are not fully awaie of the
problems involved in booking qualit)
entertainment at ECU. "One big misconception
"ii this campus Uzzle said, "is thai activit)
lees go exclusively for entertainment. At the
most, only Si.75 pet student goes towards
entertainment
Ihe 14 members of the PEC are ahead)
making plans foi next seal's entertainment.
According to Uzzle, hopes of booking two oi
three "supet groups" will depend upon mans
factors.
"I lungs like Homecoming require much
cooperation with the athletic department he
said "You just can't tell anothei football team
to show up 'next week' because the
entertainment can't make it until then "
INEVITABLE INCREASE
Uzzle went on to sa) thai puce increase is
inevitable Present!) programs al ECU costing
ovei x 10.000 have a $2 maximum ticket price
lie said that at Duke Universit). $4 was charged
foi the group Mountain and thai I NCsetstheii
pikes "accordingly" m hopes ol breaking even
Uzzle explained the problem involved in the
limited size oi Minges which can hold onl)
ooo persons
"We tried to get rhree Dog Night and the)
wanted J15,000plus 100 pet cent of the gate.
al the present ticket puce " He said thai il the
ticket pi ice were increased, the "supei groups"
mas not ask such a high percentage of the gate,
therb) making il possible foi the PI to make
inlies from a singh' performance and re-invt
in more programs
All big name groups arc nol equal, accordii
I Uzzle s? have had reputations i
breaking contracts and pooi cooperation with
universities.
"I oi example SI) and ihe I .mills Stone li
a terrible reputation .md ihe word has ;
out he said "Few schools sign contracts w
them now
ENTERTAINMENT CONFERENCE
I'M cams knowledge ol lessei known gru
through membership in the National
Entertainmentonference I his conference
comprised ol mans school and universil)
e n l e i la inmen I . o ill mil lees w ho w ui k
collectivel) to book entertainment Hush,
meets with national booking agencies win,
turn, nol onl) schedule ihe lug name gi
tours, bul introduce,the "up and comers" i,
the entertainment world
It schools oi ,i certain region such as North
t arolina and Virginia, can collective!) bai
the cost oi the contract ssill he reduced be,
ihe travel expenses will be greatl) led
according to I .zle
In reference to ihe lessei known grout
I le s.nd "I ssish ihe students would .
and give them a iis Onl) l.ooo stud
i up ai Minges t" heai 'lie I rinidad i
Band bul those who did just loved it
l'f. ' ??. , I
ihe largei groups to present more ft
?I is with lessei know n, hm "good" gi
I Ins would make il possible to appeal to the
special interest groups on campus Hi
groups like "Heav) Organ" (Virgil Fox ssiih
Joe . I ight Show i and "Hills l.i loi I rio " rhe
formet plass electrunk Bach and ihe latter jazz
'Mind over 'matter' is cure
CH RLESTO.S. i P)
W11 c I
w'del) in S irolina and
lopted the
? ' to
"hex" victims back to health
"It's .i
' ' . R
Meilett
hums and pediatrics at the
Medical I f Sou
Carolina, said Monday He
spoki
Club on "Witchcraft in ihe
Low Country "
"Root doctors are ni -
prevalent a the) were in the
past, but lies a . jve
he said
Per- plain the)
have been "hexed" often
iio response I 'ntioriJ
therapy, the psychiatrist said.
He cited the , uuJ
been the victim ol a "hex" and
' out to die
"u .ui all kinds
the girl and found nothing
hei v
kchoanalysis and
no avail The
girl iust died Meliette said.
ventional methods
Simply don't work in mam
cases rhe hex oi the
ition in the mind, i
- it becomes an obsession.
You can't talk them out ol it
Meliette said while modern
I hera ften Tailed .
countering a bad "hex" w jth a
State Bank
and Trust Co.
go "hex" proved si ci
in about three out ol ever)
fout ca
"We have to use the same
ach as rool doctors to
effect cures. And the potions
we i and out work he
"In this role I'm sou 0f white
w itch doctor
Meliette has a score of
potions used regularly bs root
doctors. They include "success
incense "fast luck "keys to
power "confusion powder
and "virgin parchment
He said il you wished
someone dead, the trick is to
take a sheet of the parchment,
write 'he name of the person
"ti it seven times in "dragon's
blood stick it into the mouth
?t a rattlesnake and hang up
the snake
"As ihe snake decomposes,
so will the person. That's the
theory, at least he said.
"Graveyard dut is
considered powerful, and the
most powerful dust is from the
grave of an electrocuted
criminal
Careers
discussed
at meeting
Librar) careers was the topic
"I Alpha Beta Alpha's recent
meeting I , Gene I aniei led
the discussion concerning the
roles of the librarian ami his
image, .r seen in the librarian
himself, as weTI b) patrons.
1 he conflicts between the
various roles were also brought
out. Mans ideas svere presented
on boss the librarina might
better serve the public.
The job market was also
discussed, and. many new tacts
were exposed. There is
currently, acdording to Lanier,
a need for 125.000 trained
librarians in all fields. Salaries
sais with the kind of job and
the education and experience
ol ihe librarian Most salaries
range Iron, $7,500 to SI 5.000
annuall).
Alpha Beta Alpha is open to
all persons interested in
libraries, library professions,
and people.
Applications may be
"blamed from president Jim
(.oisl or from the department
office.
Irish patron saint
inspired by vision
By SANDY OVERCARSH
(Start Wi
Saint Patrick, an apostle and patron saint t
I,eland. sas born near Dumburton, Scotland.
"i Christian parents. At the age of 16 he was
captured by Irish raideis and sold as a slave in
Ireland. During six years of working as a
herdsman he sought consolation in religion;
thus his faith and his love of God were greatly
strengthened He escaped from bondage into
Gaul and made his wa) home, whereupon he
was called bs a vision to return to Ireland as a
missionary
Patrick sas consecrated bishop m 432 A I)
when he left for Ireland. He is generally
credited with transforming the primarilj pagan
country into one of predominant!) Christian
people, founding mans churches and
monasteries, and organizing clergies to look
aftei them Patrick was an extremel) populai
misstonar) and mans legends grew up around
his name He is s;lK ,? have rjd ,R,aml Qf
snakes and to have used a shamrock to explain
ihe Trinity, int Patrick died at the Monastery
"I Saul in Downpatrick,County Down.
His death on March 17, in about 461, has
been observed in America since Match 17
when a group of lush protestant
gentlemen and merchants met in Boston Mass
honor him. They founded a benevolent
group called the Charitable Irish Society The
Fnendly Sons.of St. Patrick was organized
I hjladelphia. To commemorate the meeting the
officials bed silver keys made fo. the members
Observance ol the day since 1845 has
hecme nation-wide in the United States
Merchants sell special wearing apparel, (lowers
Shamrocks, and greeting cards. Each year
arrangements for New York's St. Patrick's Day
parade begin shortly after New Year's The
organization committee enlists the help 0f
businessmen, chinches, government officials
and employees throughout the city to make the
parade an important event.
The shamrock is worn to commemorate
Saint Patricks use ol it to illustrate the
doctrine ol the Trinity, and green, which is the
national color of Ireland, is the favorite foi the
occasion.
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lb. i (i
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oidini
Meu.n I. I lie
I edctalion ,
I 'di ration
Btolog) Itil
ol the Y
Sin U'U and
"Wc leel
.loss sci lion
saiicd outdo
said
lie added
upon the a
I cii t p in en i
available to e
oil a lilsl .fin
I ise IS I,
mountain lei
miscellaneous
stoves da)
items bt ui- re
Ihe Out.
icalion ini.
ti'(uest '
Art
beg
Art iiisiiu, t,
he makes good
Hartley, ori
teat lies design
n His collej
I et h. w heie
I ngineeiing I ,
ol Georgia as .
iu- al North fe
11 ss.is as .i sen
tinned to ait
"I met people
said "I had to s
ail depai inieiii
majors I lies had
TAU(
'I si.n ted like
icgulai artwork.
sins ise " I le tool
seal ol high sclli
graduate student
"I gol an as
le.dls didn't km
iliai n was relati
degree from I (
Mis graduate
appreciation lam
leaching I ndei
Army-Nay
SIS Dickini
I .il i"iu- Iin
I I i
Wool Pants
VOl
KEI
HAMrV
Vice Pre
SGi
11mi vote .hi
ss ill be gn
to appi i.
? HIllP
I





?Mi
1
f?ndc9f0C'Ub "eeds Jose Greco and frupe
funds for expans.oncreate fery excjtemeHnt
Hy JIM EICHLING
r!l ll 0? ' l?h imiuitfd action 1.1
J?oi rccicalhinal
1 l?Mt i?an ?, ihenaij
t.viirding in Ouiinj, I luh Presidcnl Lirrv
Sk'wuii. ilic imipuM-d tfsiablishmi in ol an K I
1 ?l l?'11 lubs is i? ?
1 ?'ll1 ? al Ihc Outin luh with ihc
'?'ll,b '? "l?W I lub iln K i i
National Student, Kcctculitin and Parks
il ili
"cl0l lhl l( liapici of Laniba fan
"w ?'?'?'I ibal this would represent a greatei
?? section ol students and i.? till) who have
saiied outdooi reereational interest
said
IK "M'u ll 'I" I'e.l lation will depend
"I11 'In' allocation ol Minds h 1C S(,
1 tntpmon 1 will be purchased and made
available to each organiin ol the I edcration
on a in si come In i serve basis
CAMOES AND TENTS
1 ,vc IK-loot fiberglass canoes live nylon
? ' ?" ? nylon ropes and ladders, and
llaneous group equipment such as cook
vloves da pai ks and carbide lamps are all
items bt mil' requested
livitics are severely Ied due to la I
lum,s ol ' "illy revenue comes Irom yearl)
u led 'ii.ii without sufficient I
11 rve as a truly fum lioning organial
ni the I niversit)
Past activities have included back packing in
?i1 Smoky Mountains National Park
skiing ai Seven Devils neai Boone spelunking
' avi exploration) in the Blue Ridge Mountains
Virginia: and canoeing local rivers, creeks
and swamp an as
Sl' arl aid that the club is open foi all
"l1 including sky and scuba diving il propei
install tori m be ei ured
PROPER STATE OF MIND'
aving ha been the primary activitj. with more
iIk l litions undertaken According to
Slewari i xperience is not a pre-requisite foi
eaving only a propei "state ol mind I oui
inexperienced girls went on a recent trip and
reported that they "had a ball" despite the
Hums involved
w u gung ho when wc sense a chall
By DONNA WEBB
(Stall ? li ? ,
Jose Greco a world- re-knowned Spanish
Dancer, will be bun his troupe to W'nglit
Auditorium on I Inn day I he program b
at 8:15 p m
With a company that is now rate I a "the
in1 exi iting tp ol its kind in the world
today, Jnsi Greco nami has long been
synonymous with the Spanish Dance in this
country
His troupe, with Nana I on a. foi many
seasons his leading lady consists ol "a superbly
versatile" group ol young dancers, singers and
mn lit ian
"Ji ise Greco and liis spirited company staged
?i show that would be haul to match anywhi re
foi fiery excitement Hie Grei u troupe lite rally
filled thi i igi with lire, flash and colot a it
gave ili audit nee a rousing demonstration ol
Spanish dance in all ol its fa inating aspects
said ime critii aftet a performance in Austin
i
H program begins with the Mi zarab and
Medieval Spam at thi end ol the Dark Ages,
1 le Outing lub. the oldest outdooi
e icalion oriented o ganialion on campus, is
said. "Present
?in 10 Stewart
r- iivii mix , UKIIIIIIJIL. i iy,n r. . ies.
Stewart s,n, Plans foi a uiuuniaiii climbing trip trea,in8 the conflict and eventual reconciliation
to the Rocky Mountains are in store lot this ' astilians and the Moarabshristians
summei who voluntarily lived among the Mums aftei
He summed up the club's philosophy when llil Moorish conquest, with the eventual
he limited "Those who stop when expulsion of th Moors from Spain
lictates nevet see the highest and most he second work of the program deals with
beautiful places of all ?' adventures ol Don Quixote, covering the
attempts ol Quiote to liberate a group ol
galley slaves from the service ol the king ftei
freeing the laves, Quixote retreats to the Siena
Morcna to do penance
He isicns Dulcinea coming lo him from iIk
foui corners ol thi ? arth I . h Dulcinea,
Dult inea of thi Dawt Dulcinea of tl
Dulcinea ol the Northern Stai and Dull ii
the Southern Skies is a differen dancer
I second part of the progra like
earlier Greco programs, opens with "Viva
dallieia an episodic work dealing with five
distinct regional types found in the p province
"l t.ahua Jibe Harvest thi trecrows. the
fisherman, the mothers, and the Stonemasons
and the Maidens are dance vignettes, music.
costumes and personality character! ti ol the
dalle tans
"Gypsy Sabbath i the fina I the
program full of humor, passion, i
conflict and a delightful ending dealing wit!
fertility ritual ol the Andalucian Gypsie:
All "i the horeography, costume di
and musical arrangements foi this progt
been personally executed and supervised hv
( ' Nana I ca and Machado, the musica
directoi
In addition to Ins personal choreography and
design ol performances as well as his dancing
ability Jose Greco is also a teachei and a
scholai ol Iberian culture Ironically hi was
born in the mountains ol Italy, but ol Spanish
a pai ntag He showed early inti
Spanish musk and dancing, Greco latei si
several years under some ol y .
outstanding teachers He has be?
foremosl Spanish dancei ol the world with a
company which exhibits the best in the held
Hckets aie on sale in the (entral I icket
Office, 50 cents for students and S2 50 tor
faculty and stall
Art instructor Hartley
?" i iulumv jiiu sum
began teaching to survive Generation gap bridged
By PAT CRAWFORD
lafl . it ei i
v' instim toi Paul Hartley may be quiet, but
In' makes gi iod sense
Hartley, originally from Vtlania, Georgia,
ica. lies design and drawing in the S hool ol
n His college education began ai Georgia
' e li. w here he majored in erospacc
I ngineering I alei he attended (he I Diversity
ol Georgia as math major, eventually ended
IP- al North lexas Slate
wacky, ban brained view ol t he
. "(.euein gap" is the subject ol "Tango
and student Rock Kershaw graded papers and the next productt the Bast Carolina
were latei called upon to answet class Playhouse
lT rhe comedy by Slawomit Mro.ek, Poland's
' be main difficulty with beginning an finest modern playwright, opens March 24 for a
students, said Hartley, "is that they have no four-night run in McGinnis Auditorium
background at all I think the students come Actually, ??lane is picture of the
"M b maturity just In exposure to generation gap in reverse reminiscent of the
everything and by being around the people madcap Sycamore family in "You Can't Take ll
hcre , With You" In Moss" Han in.1 George SI
STATICSTYLE Kaufman In both plays it's the oldsters who
Hie style ol Hartley's own work is mosiiv are doing theii thing
sta,k and m frontal position "It's something Mrozek's family includes Siomil, the father,
like Greek and Egyptian sculpture where things ? relic ol Bohcmianism who lounges about in
lust lace in one direction lie said "There's swealshnt and unbuttoned pajama bottoms
no)a niovement " creating silliness and playing inane card games
H I had lo have a painting In anyone, it vvnb his elegantly decayed wile, bleanorc
would hc b dc KSi bin that has nothing cackling baseball-capped Grandma; and insanely
lo do vvnb m own stvle "
ll tley 's main interest is iculpture relief,
inflated, and upholstered oi stretched ovet
stuffing
I he instructoi lias learned to appreciate a
numbei ol things Greenville offers that cannot
be found in large cities the abundance of old
buildings His teaching plan ben- is scheduled
for i me eai
"I'll have lo teach somewhere later. I've no
idea where What I do now is an It's a good
thing io do. li s a good way to spend youi life "
decorous I nde Eugene.
There is also Eddie, the caveman stud n
sleeping with Ideanora. succulent bird-brained
Cousin Ala. and the plas s protagonist, rthur,
the lieu lo this tattered dynast)
Arthur is a rebel, but be has nothing to rebel
against. To survive, he takes up the standaid of
"form and order" and ai gunppoint. force bis
lamily to conform. Both hilarity and disastei
follow.
Director Albert Pertalion has assembled a
cast which includes Jim Fleming as Sloiinl.
Linda Taylor as Eleanora. Mitzi Hyman as
I ugenia. the Grandma. George Merrell as I nde
Eugene, Robin McDanial as the nubile. Cousin
Ala, Richard Brown as the anthropoid Iddte.
and Jim Lcedom as Arthur.
Tickets toi "Tango" become available March
I7 at McGinnis Auditorium
Ferrell is elected
JOSE GRECO AND his troupe, including Nana Lorca,
will perform here Thursday evening at 8 15.
(Photi-s t)v Ross Mann
PAUL HARTLEY
li was as a senioi there that Hartley's interest
iiii ned In ait
"I met people mid started trying things be
said "I bad to sllhillll a portfolio I" eel in the
an department Drawing and painting were the
majoi s they bad
TAUGHT TO SURVIVE
'I started like most people intending to do
icgulai aitwoik and decided on teaching lo
survive " lie look up education and taught one
eat "i high si hoi l hi li i i oming lo ECU as a
graduate student
"I got an assisiaiilslup here be said "I
really didn'i know much aboul the school bin
that il was relatively inexpensive" n l I
degiee from I I qualified Ilartley to teach
here
His graduali experience assisting in an
appreciation lamilianed Hartley with college
leaching I ndet an instructor. Mike llviin. he
Di Henry Clifton I errell,
Jr assoi iate professoi in the
Departmenl ol History, was
elected presideni ol the North
Cai olina (onference ol the
Ainei n a n .s ta 11. in ol
University Professors fAAl P)
ai a statewide meeting held in
I ousiburg lasi week,
lie will serve foi a term of
one veal
Approximately 60 l P
members attended the meeting
Keynote speak ei was lb
Cameron West, chairman ol the
stale Board of Higher
Education.
Ferrell has been president
and secretary of the LCI
ehaptei ol the VU P. He is
also a membei ol the American
Historical Association.
He holds degrees from Duke
University and the University
oi Virginia.
specialist in American
political history, Ferrell has
been mi the ECU faculty since
1961
Call The
Wings of M
Man.
PITT PLAZA DAIRY BAR
2s) FLAVORS
BANANA BOATS
HALLMARK CARDS
OPEN 10-10 MONFRI. 1-10 SUN.
PAUL HARTLEY CITES the main
problem of beginners ;is lack of
background.
Army-Nay Surplus
515 Dickinson Ave
I .illi'ne Imts V' Ml
I mn'Hen n.ilsVj no
Wool Pauls s I
LUNCHEON SPECIAL
Ships Ahoy Salad (you have to try
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Y4 LB. HAMBURGER STEAK
garnished with lettuce & tomato
DE VAHNI
originators & creators of
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present their
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Shoemasters
"Shoes You Can Live In"
THE SHOE INN OF GREENVILLE, INC.
421 EVANS ST Greenville, N. C.
Easterns Campus Representative can put it .ill to-
gether for you. When you want to follow the team Sun,
ski. surf, or celebrate ()r go home for ,i change.
Our Representative can handle your flight reserva-
tions. Or get you an I astern Youth II)ard good I
25rr olf regular coach tare to any city I astern sen
the U.S.A. andanada Xnd that gives you reserved
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Special note to Facultj & Administration Officers
Our Campus Representative can also handle all ol your
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758-0063
Just rinu up and win: out.
Ihc inssol Man
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A





Tuesday, March 17. 1471 Fountainhead Page 6
So?,
O W'TH
BURNED-OUT
ty K.ITncH
ntrothttmjj Rmpp jgndttate
KABIBBLERFUNNIES
u i -
by Bruce Walthers
FEATURING;
OSCAR. 0X" KAolRiLtrV.
STUDLEY
The 'Wanderer' wanders on
By BILLSCHELL
(Reviews Editor)
Does anybody remembei
Dion "Oh win must I he a
teenager in love" DiMucci?
?boiii three cars ago he did
"Abraham. Martin and John"
and got lo sit on a girder and
sing tor about lour minutes tin
the Smother's Brothers Show.
Jthat was the high point of
Dion's big come back from the
oblivion of the 50's. The hop
and saddle shoes.
Dion isn't going to make any
more progress with this album.
It isn't really a bad album if
1 was into a down beat thing. I
would give it two stars, but it is
not a good abum. Dion has
washed the grease out of his
hair, bought a Marten, taken
guitar lessons and learned some
new tricks with his voice. What
Dion has not done is learned
music. In addition the album is
all ballads which gets very dull
indeed.
Dion has written sever of 10
songs on the album. Of these
seven only one. "Josie is any
good. The others are cliche
ridden and written in the
amaturish wandering style that
is typical of most people's
attempts to write songs. There
is no real melodie line and no
unity in his writing. Nothing
adventurous is tryed and
nothing interesting results. One
exception to this is
"Blackbird" which Dion gives a
face lifting. Unfortunately it is
the same decending chromatic
face lifting he gave "Purple
Haze" and "Abraham, Martin
and John
On the plus side Dion has a
very good voice and he uses it
well, for what he does. On the
negative side what he does is
insipid music. If Dion and
some one to write for him and
regular band to feed him ideas
and get a few sparks flying,
everything would be cool.
If all your young life you
have been a Dion freak you'll
really like this album. If you
are a Joni Mitchell fan you will
also like this album for Dion
reproduces all of her sins -
(i.e. too many ballads,
wandering songs lacking unity,
etc.). Also if you just use
records for background music,
this is very pleasant
background noise which will
not distract anyone from the
conversation in progress.
Well so much for Dion. It's
time to meet Marylou at the
Sweet Shop and then we're
going to the hop; that is if I
come back from dead man's
curve.
SEEMS WE MAlE A
MiscoMcepnoM.
by Don Glassford
m?mm
FOURTH ESTATE FUNNIES
ymfr
by Denis Kitchen
Have
confidence
t'll help you through exams,
speeches, class recitations
and even just being with you
friends It's something every
girl needs One way to be
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tampons
Internally worn Tampax
tampons can keep you
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when you re the center
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And one more important
fact. Tampax tampons were
developed by a doctor so you
know you can trust them.
Even if you've just begun to
menstruate
Confidence has made
Tampax tampons the best-
selling tampons in the world
And that confidence can
make things easier for you
Ji'fjhf from thr ilart . .

?
?? TAMPON AM? MADE ONLY ?V
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Feast, leftover food for thought
CLASSIFIED
FOR SELL
Cougar 1968 XR7GT. Air
r ondit toning, 4 speed power
steering, power brakes, excellent
condition. $1500. or make otter.
Call 750-5431.
FOUND
One pair of girls glasses In a red
case. Found near Jones Dorm.
Contact the resident at Jones
Dorm.
GUITAR FOR SELL
Kaye Guitar and case. Roundtop,
steel strings, extra strings plus
Instruction book. $30.00. Call
752-4687.
WATFR BEDS ARE MERE!
Sales and Service
Starr
Beaton
Chevrolet
highway
70West
Kinston
Dhone
523-4123
King size (84x75) - $69.69. Double
(53x75) - $59.69. Econo double
(53x75) - $49.69. Aqua Dream Bed ;
Co P.O. Box 2543, Chapel Hill, I
N.C. 27514. Check or COD. 1
Distributors needed.
LOST i
By JOHN WALLACE
(Staff Writer)
Lew Black's new play "Feast" contains all'
the ingredients needed for a successful Last
Supper. This review is written in remembrance
of last Tuesday's performance of the play at
ECU by the Feast Family. Inc.
The appetizer for the meal was the opening
scene between THE American Father and THE
American Mother a la "Father Km ws Best
Whit Andrews (Dad) created about as much
enthusiasm over his last newspaper as a gourmet
would creat over a Burger King Delux. Sharon
Mills was the sumpathctich, dull, but basically
good willed Mom whose dowdiness reminded
one of a day-old glaed doughnut.
The soup for the meal to come was provided
by two leftovers from "Family Affair
"Mitchell Albright was The brother Dclaney
and Gayle Bchrman was THE sister Willa. The
peanut butter jar sequence was handled by the
director with a more than compctant
understanding of obnoxious children.
The salad was of course mixed. In showing
how children grow up in establishment oriented
public schools, such intriguing innovations were
employed as the unfeeling school teacher who
promote repetition for repetition's sake. The
salad course was the longest for the same things
kept occuring, only in different settings.
What humor there was in the dialogue
depended on situation parody. When Dclaney
tries to justify his not wanting to go swimming
in THE forbidden creek, he launches into a
series of descriptive fears of polio that depend
on a condensation of every cruelly joke of the
1950's. At this point, the lettuce wilts and the
dressing begins to leave a bad taste in one's
mouth.
After the brother-sister
you-can-ask-me-about-sex scene the only thing
that can hope to sustain interest is the
inevitable entree. And is it ever served up with
gusto.
Dclaney goes to college where he succumbs
to the grossities of dorm life and its
consequential male conquest of the female. We
8et THE long awaited four letter word (shades
of "Hair") and THE sex scene done with the
imagination it takes to make macaroni and
cheese.
After orgasm, it's all down hill. Delaney
rejects his environment and returns home for
the dessert. With the pcrsistant piano playing
dissonant chords evoking subllcly a mood of
distress. Delaney tells his parents they just
don't understand. At this point, the audience
docsn I either.
there were a lew professionallyhandlcd
aspects ol the production though. Kick Young's
set was lunclional and appealing. The technical
?,rb'0 ? 1is'?s and the movies were
solved and tan smoothly. The movie
adveusements, prcbably the most genuinely
funny elements of the show, could not help but
renmid on of "Laugh-ln's" quickies.
Feast was written by a galloping gourmet
I'111 cMche? together with the ease Julia
who
Smlthfleld Sutle with the auburn ;$
hair. Write and tell me your name. ?
I'd like to see you again! B.L. 119 'x
Pine Street. Carrboro (Chapel Hill), 9
N.C. 8
JOB OPPORTUNITY ji
Unique opportunity for l-t;
onterprlslng student. Become agent ?:?:
for growing company. Make a great 9
deal of money In spare time. Write: I
Grimm, 1 Clark Rd Chapel Hill, $?
N.C. 27514. Or call collect :X
919-968-1476 after 6 p.m. ?$
iwWSWx.w
TAFF OFFICE
EQUIPMENT INC.
569 S. Evans St. 752-2175
We've moved fo a bigger
location fo sorvo you better.
HtUff one iloc& weU of (fie
For a better buy in: Attache' Cases,
Desk Lamps, Bulletin Boards,
College Supplies, etc.
Child prepares cordon bleu. Con.cmpoiary
uhsoralo)ka.c.ntemporarylife.as!nVan
ahes American Hurrah certainly is valid
?hca.rc. But one must seriously u?cSo? a ,Z
thoughts P "lc scrpcs ?"?' P-n's
:
Real handpainted
MW?
eggshells
The Mushroom
Georgetown Shoppes - 11 A.M. - 7 P.M
:
?
:
:
i
i
Se
Now that a m
the wmlei of I
previous winter.
As was the cas
the Pirates was
swimming team
Two of the Pi
lilies they swept
John Welboin
each finished se
Wrestlers after an
And most iron
the showing in;
Conference tourn
For the secom
two points in tl
75-7.1. This year i
So you might i
is, except for the
team.
FR
Coached by A
Quinn, the Baby
"best ever" recor
1964-65 team fini
Nicky White
All-State Freshnu
its record.
The six-foot-ct
both scoring and
recoveries, lie als
when he hit 31 po
Six-foot-seven
much support as I
points and 12.1 re
For his efforts
performer.
These tw play
comes time again
considerably miss
help the rising sop
Gregory was am
season and establi
finished the seasoi
scoring and was na
LEADS
Al Faber. who
game, was named
with teammate C
Needless to say, thi
As to the so-cal
which are nearly a
can boast much glo
In the conferen
Mary, the Indians i
Pirates by 1 1 poiri
individual ehampio
Dan Monroe at
at 177 were all vici
at 190, Mark Pol
defending ehampio
The following
Lexington, Va C;
finish a strong seconc
track and field chat
PIF
The Pirates finis
Indians in the sevt
points fewer than d
Jim Kidil. a jun
performer for the
record of 1:53.8 in
In addition to K
championships in I
(Lawrence Wilkerso
How will future
Well, you can al
with his recently
competitors that r
track tournaments
Perhaps in 1972
Southern Confercm.
New sport
For a long time
sport among large
in the South,
become a part
athletic program
with the institution
Club.
All students,
graduates, will be
play.
Keith Rusmisell,
four years playing t
such teams as Aspe
Tahoe, has gathcre
players which wil!
nucleus of the lean
to generat enough
form two squads, at
'B" squad.
Rugby is an unu;
that it consists of
just the game
tradition, a rugby
includes a p
fraterniing t
opposition after the
No formal scried
been set up since
still in its Infl
However, Rusmisel
???????????????????????
???????????????


i
?
? By George H;


$5.00




Eight Tt
Cartridge '
ALL TH
MUST I
(Ones not Inc
Jam
Prom p t D
Call 758 3
H?l





:?:
MX
The Pirate's
Cove
Season ends
Now thai
the winiei
By DON TRAUSNECK
(Sporti I ditor)
As was lhe
score was
but "ho-hum" winter that
rded by our freshman basketball
FROSH TIE BEST EVER' MARK
Coached by Al Ferncr. in his first year as assistant to Tom
Qulnn, the Baby Pirates claimed a 12-4 final mark which ties the
"best ever" recorded by a freshman basketball team at r-CU The
196445 team finished 15-5.
Nicky White was named to the Greensboro Daily News'
All-State Freshman Team for his fine play In leading the team to
its record.
The six-foot-eight pivot man from Kinston led the team in
both scoring and rebounding with marks of 18.1 points and 15.3
recoveries, lie also had the highest scoring game of the season
when he hit 31 points agains! Wayne Community College.
Six-foot-seven Ray Pcsko of Greenville provided White with
much support as he finished second in both categories with 15.1
points and 12.1 rebounds per game.
For his efforts. Pesko was an All-State Honorable Mention
performer.
These tw i players should receive much consideration when it
comes time again to choose next year's team. The Pirates will
considerably miss Jim Gregory, however, no matter how much
help the rising sophomores will bring.
Gregory was among the conference scoring leaders much of the
season and established a new career scoring record at ECU. He
finished the season with 18.3 points a game to lead the Pirates in
scoring and was named to the All-Southern Conference first team.
LEADS CONFERENCE IN REBOUNDING
Al Faber. who led the conference in rebounding with 12.2 a
game, was named to the All-Conference second team and. along
with teammate Dave Franklin, to the All-Sophomore Team.
Needless to say. Ihey will both be back.
As to the so-called minor sports of the winter season, all of
which are nearly always successful at ECU, the Pirates once again
can boast much glory.
In the conference wrestling tournament held at William and
Mary, the Indians once again captured the team title, edging the
Pirates by 1 I points. But three ECU grapplers came home with
individual championship trophies.
Dan Monroe at 126 pounds. Steve Morgan at 134. and Bill Hill
at 177 were all victorious while Ronnie Williams at 118. Tim Gay
at 190. Mark Pohren at heavyweight, and Mike Spohn, the
defending champion at 158, all finished second.
The following weekend (March 6), across the state at
Lexington. Va Carson's men were expected to and did
finish a strong second behind William and Mary in the conference
track and l.id championships.
PIRATES COLLECT 55 POINTS
The Pirates finished 40 points off the pace of 95 set by the
Indians in the seven-team meet. Furman. at third, captured 12
points fewer than did the Pirates.
Jim Kidd. a junior from Manassas. Va was the outstanding
performer for the Pirates in the meet as he set a conference
record of 1:53.8 in the half-mile. He won the event by 50 yards.
In addition to Kidd's triumph, the Pirates captured individual
championships in the long jump (Larry Malone) and triple jump
(Lawrence Wilkerson).
How will future winters go0
Well, you can almost count on continued successes by Scharf
with his recently recruited talents. Also, the majority of the
competitors that placed high in the conference wrestling and
track tournaments will be returning next year.
Perhaps in 1972 we will even get past the first round in the
Southern Conference basketball tournament.
New sport
Rugby started
For a long time a popular
sport among large universities
in the South, rugby will
become a part of ECU's
athletic program this season
with the institution of a Rugby
Club.
All students, including
graduates, will be eligible to
play.
Keith Rusmisell, a veteran of
four years playing the sport for
such teams as Aspen and Lake
Tahoe, has gathered some 15
players which will form the
nucleus of the team. He hopes
to general enough interest to
form two squads, an "A" and a
'B" squad.
Rugby is an unusual sport in
that it consists of more than
just the game itself. By
tradition, a rugby match also
includes a period of
fraternizing with the
opposition after the game.
No formal schedule has yet
been set up since the club is
still in its infant stages.
However, Rusmisell hopes to
??A
? Li. TI,
play such local powers as
strong Duke, N.C. State,
Carolina, Davidson and
possibly George Washington.
Netters second
BU1ES CREEK ECU's
tennis team finished second to
Atlantic Christian College in
the Campbell Invitational
completed Saturday at the
Campbell College courts here.
The Pirates return home
Thursday afternoon when they
take on Campbell College at
2 p.m. It will be the first of
eight consecutive matches on
the new ECU courts.
Pirates begin 1971 grid drills
By DON TRAUSNECK
(Sports Editor)
a new season is upon us. we can close the books on
"I K U athletics nearly a carbon copy
previous winter.
of the
New Pirate head football
coach Sonny Randle had his
first full look at the team he
inherited from Mike McGee
when the Pirates began spring
football drills Monday.
Meeting Randle were
approximately 80 candidates.
including 25
1970's 11 that
One
battles
ettcrmen from
finished 3-8.
)f the most interesting
in the spring drills is
once again expected to be the
fight for the starting
quarterback job, John Casa.a,
the number one man last year.
? case last year, the first conference championship for
the I,rales was taken by coach Ray Scharf's always-powerful
swimming leant with a record total of 658 points
Two ol the Pirate mermen won again the same three individual
titles they swept in 1970 Wayne Norris and Jim Griffin
John Welbom's wrestlers and Bill Carson's indoor track team
each finished second in their respective conference meets, the
wrestlers alter an excellent 9-2 season.
And most ironic of all, and definitely most disappointing, was
I he showing made by the basketball
Conference tournament in Charlotte.
For the second year in a row. the Pirates lost to Richmond by
two points in their first round game. Last year the
75-73. This year it was 69-67.
So you might call it a successful
is. except for the fine finish rcct
team.
team in the Southern
is expecting trouble from
sophomore Carl Summerell and
transfer Gary Wann.
BABY PIRATES
Playing for the Baby Pirates
last year, Summerell completed
54 of I 15 passes for 689 yards
in five games.
Wann's credentials are a
little more impressive as the
six-foot-three. 195-pound
threw for 15 touchdowns and
more than 2,000 yards.
The running-back positions
are pretty well set with last
year's starters, Billy Wallace
and Les Strayhorn, back for
more action.a r I ester
Clumpier, a rising sophomore
from Wilson, will join the team
in the fall.
Five of the players will be
tried at new positions.
LXONDARY
Jack Patterson, who played
behind Casazza last fall, and
reserve flanker Pele Woolley
will be moved to the defensive
secondary.
Linebacker Grovel I ruslow
moves io offensive tackle and
center Mark Pohren lcs to
defensive tackle. David
Glosson, .i reserve linebacker
last year, will be tried as
kicker.
The Pirates will conclude
their 20-day dull period with
the annual Purple-Gold game
on April 25.
Sports
Fountainhead, Page 7
Tuesday, March 16, 1971
Mermen cop sixth title
PIRATE HURLER Sonny Robinson sets to deliver pitch
in recent action at University Field. Robinson will once
again be on the mound against Ithaca College this week.
Bucs host Ithaca;
seek second win
Having split their first two
games of the season with North
Carolina State, the Pirates
return to the baseball wars
Wednesday hosting the
Bombers from Ithaca College.
Game time at University
Field is 3 p.m. The same teams
will also meet Thursday at 3
p.m.
In the season opener, March
6, Ron Hastings started for the
Pirates and pitched the first
five innings. Although he was
not as sharp as he is known to
be, he limited the Wolfpack to
two runs and left with the
game tied.
7-2 TRIUMPH
State scored four big runs in
the top of the sixth and wound
up with a 7-2 triumph.
The following day was a
different story, however, as Hal
Baird pitched a strong game for
a 6-5 win. He worked the first
seven innings and gave up only
three hits.
ECU scored five unearned
runs in the fifth inning and
another in the sixth to take a
big lead before State came
roaring back.
THREE IN NINTH
The Wolfpack scored a run
in the seventh and then belted
reliever Don Oxidine for three
in the ninth.
Bill Godwin, a freshman
from Wilmington, came in to
put out the fire.
Following this week's games,
the Pirates continue their home
stand against Dartmouth and
Virginia, March 25-28.
By DON TRAUSNECK
(Sports Editor)
WILLIAMSBURG, Va
For the sixth straight year.
ECU's Pirates are kings of the
Southern Conference waters as
coach Ray Scharfs mermen
captured the conference meet
fere during the spring break.
The Pirates won 12 of the
17 events contested and won
the meet with a record 658
points. Host William and Mary
was second with 481 points.
VMI. with 317!4 points, and
Davidson, with 143, rounded
out the three-day event.
TWO DEFEND
Two ECU swimmers
successfully defended their
1970 individual championships
in three events: Wayne Norris
and Jim Griffin.
Norris set records in each
event, winning the 200-yard
individual medley in 2:04; the
200-yard butterfly in 2:02.5;
and the 400-yard individual
medley in 4:28.6.
OTHER RECORDS
Griffin won the 100 200
and 500-yard freestyle events.
Two other conference
records were set by the Pirates.
Team captain Gary Frederick
won the 1,650-yard freestyle in
17:48 and the 400-yard
freestyle relay team of Tom
Rehm, Norris, Griffin and Paul
Trevisan finished ahead of the
field in 3:16.4.
Linksters vie
Coach John Welborn will
send his ECU golfers into their
first competition of the spring
Thursday wh' they host
UNC-Wilm iton at the
Greenville Coi .try Club.
The next match after
Thursday's will be another
home contest the following
Monday against William and
Mary.
Other winners for ECU were
Henry Morrow, a freshman, in
the 100-yard butterfly: Jack
Morrow, another freshman, in
the one-meter dive: the
400-yard medley relay team of
Greg Hinchman, Larry Allman.
Henry Morrow and Trevisan;
and the 800-yard freestyle
relay team of John Manning.
Norris. Griffin and Frederick
ECU, which had finished the
dual meet season at 6-6. sent
seven swimmers to the Eastern
Seaboard Championships in
Philadelphia last weekend.
The Pirate representatives
there were Griffin, Norris,
Frederick. Trevisan. Allman.
and divers Doug Emerson and
Neil Wmslow .
&
A FAMILIAR SCENE in Minges
Natatorium this past season - ECU
swimming captain Gary Frederick
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)
finishes ahead of the field. Pirates won
their sixth straight swim title recently in
meet at Williamsburg, Va.
Players to represent ECU
SHv8:$S
Spring Schedules
CREW
BASEBALLMARCH
20 - VCU Regatta, at Richmond
MARCH27 - The Citadel, home
17 - Ithaca, homeAPRIL
18 ? Ithaca, home
25 ? Dartmouth, home11 - Grimaldi Cup Race,
26 - Dartmouth, homeat New York
27 ? Virginia, home17 - VCU. home
28 ? Virginia, home24, 26, 26 - Southern Regatta,
at Savannah, Ga.
APRIL
MAY
4 - at VMI (2)
8 - The Citadel, Home7, 8 - Dad Vail Regatta,
9 - at N. C. Stateat Philadelphia, Pa.
10 - at N. C. State
11 - at High Point
12 - at Va. TechLACROSSE
13 - at Va. Tech
22 - at Duke
24 - at FurmanMARCH
25 -at The Citadel! 2)25 ? Ohio Wesley an, home
28 - at Wm. 8, Mary27 - at Washington & Lee
MAY30 - Wm. & Mary, home
1 - at Richmond (21APRIL
2 - UNC, home2 ? Duke, away
t - Wm. & Mary, home (213 - Virginia Tech, away
8 ? Furman, home (2)13-at VMI
9 ? Duke, home14 - Roanoke, away
10-at UNC17 ? Maryland, home
11 - Richmond, home21 - UNC, home
15 - at Davidson (2)24 ? Randolph Macon, home
28 - at N. C. State
GOLF
MARCH
18 ? Wilmington, home
22 - Wm. 8c Mary, home
26 ? Duke, home
APRIL
1, 2, 3 ? Furman Tourney
7 - Southern Conn home
8 - Trenton State, home
9 ? Old Dominion, home
11, 12, 13 - Maryland Tourney
16 - VMI, home
19 - Campbell and
Appalachian, home
20 - Richmond and ACC, home
22 - The Citadel, home
23 - at Wilmington
27, 28, 29 - SC Tourney,
at Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Two amateur athletes from
ECU will represent Region Five
of the Association of College
Unions in international
intercollegiate competition this
month.
Wayne Nixon of Newport
News, Va will travel to
Detroit. Mich March 28-30.
for the men's bowling
tournament. Nixon placed
second in the regional
tournament held last month in
Charlotte.
Debbie Eagan of
Fifteen sign
?ven with spring drills for
the 1971 football season
having already started. Pirate
head coach Sonny Randle
continues to look to the
future, recruiting many fine
grid prospects.
Fifteen more players have
signed grants-in-aid recently,
bringing to 28 the number of
prospects who will be playing
football for the Pirates.
The latest to sign include
seven from North Carolina and
eight from out-of-state.
Jacksonville, who finished
third in women's bowling al
Charlotte, will go to Atlanta.
Ga April 16-18 for the finals
in her event.
Several other students
placed high for ECU at
Charlotte.
Anthony Reger erf
Richmond. Va finished first
in men's pocket billiards.
Catherine Elliott finished
second in women's singles table
tennis and also in women's
doubles table tennis. She is
from Falls Church. Va.
William CoJebrook of
Sanford finished second in
bowling, men's singles.
Karen Sue Burns of Newark,
N.J placed second in women's
doubles table tennis.
In all. 24 students travelled
to Charlotte to represent ECU.
What you should know about diamonds
when you know it's for keeps
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ountainhead
and the truth shall maKe you free'
Ignoring the regulations
appears safest action
Perhaps the saddest aspect of the MRC
visitation situation is that the IKC is
conducting itself properly.
One oi the campus security officers
recently stated that it the men on the mil
had just brought the girls to then rooms at
the beginning of the year and not made any
tnss about it the regulations would not
hav e been in forced
It was widely known by the men on the
Mill th.it regulations ol tins sort were
seldom, il ever, enforced
i 01 i number ol years the situation with
alcohol in the men's dormitories has held .1
position similai to the owe nisi described It
has been against school policy for the men
to have alcohol in their rooms and yet even
the University Dorm Residents and hall
proctors laugh at the idea of writing
someone up lor beer, wine or even
hard-core whiskey
I his wnlei shared .1 drink mA a
philosophical discussion on sex with a hall
proctor as tar hack as three years ago. ,ik
this same year shared some time with a
young lady in a room on third floor Belk.
Similar occuranees must have been going
ow even before that time, both the drinking
and the sex.
Instead ot ignoring the regulations,
however, the members of the MRC tried to
lollovv the course of action long advocated
by the administration and other so-called
proponents of "law and order They tried
to work through the system at logical,
orderly and democratic change.
For their actions, however, the MRC
instead of getting visitation officially
extended, wound up with what seems to be
developing into a full scale revolution. The
ad hoe committee is up tight because of it.
the Board of Trustees is "very
concerned and the school president and
dean of student affairs are both running so
scared that they ordered the Daily
Reflector, where Fountainhead is normally
printed, not to print last week's special
issue devoted to the visitation situation. In
spite of thes orders, the issue was printed
elsewhere, although it was distributed a
little late.
It would seem that the way to do things
would be to just ignore the regulations and
by so doing avoid the hassles. Being
democratic seems to lead to having charges
filed against you in the University Board or
the Men's Honor Council as many students
are finding out these days.
President describes proposal
By TIM BIXON ? ?
By TIM BIXON
(MRC Pres.dent)
I Jin writing in an effort to explain m the
students jusi what is huppeningwith visitation.
First, the rally last Tuesday. March 9, was a
mistake. The letter that called foi the rally was
pin out by .me 01 two individuals that thought
II appropriate at the time It was no) put out by
the entne MRC or the entire MRC visitation
committee
t nfortunately, 11 may have done mure harm
than good. The lettei was taken bv President
Jenkins j a lineal, when 111 fact, il was not
meant to he. From now on, the newsletters will
be put out only aftei being approved bv the
president of the IR(
On llie same day ol the rally. Jenkins. Bob
Wlullc. and I were supposed to go to the
Board of Trustees in Raleigh in an effort to get
llie mallei of visitation turned over to Jenkins
Because of the proposed rally and the problems
that may have resulted, I fell it necessary to
slay on campus ralhei llian go to Raleigh.
The Board of Trustees seemed largely against
visitation in any state-run institution but they
turned the matter over lo Jenkins more or less
as a personal favor
The Board said that before anything could be
done, a proper means of supervision had to be
sei up and approved by Jenkins and then by the
I xecutivesof the Board of Trustees.
On March 10. Jenkins appointed me. as the
president of the MRC. along with the president
oi the WR( to a committee to set up an
adequate means of supervision. Each of us is to
appoint two other students to the committee.
The Dean of Women, Dean of Men. and Dean
of Student Affairs are also on the committee.
Now. n is important to note that this is not
another ad hoe committee like the last. It is
student dominated by a six to three ratio and
the students are not selected by some
adminisiartivc official thai does not know what
is going on. Also important is that fact that Dr
Jenkins has given an order thai there is to be no
administrative stall this time. We will meet
March 12 at I p.m. If the problem is not solved
then, we will meet Monday. March 15. We will
keep meeting until the problem is solved. There
is no chairman of this committee. We are all
equal in vote and we are not overpowered by
the administration.
After an adequate means of supervision is set
up. the plan is to be taken to Jenkins for
acceptance and then to the Executive Board. I
have been asked to go with Jenkins to present
the plan for supervision to the Board. This
cleariy shows that the MRC as well as the
students will be represented in Raleigh.
The matter of the number of days of
visitation is not at stake here. I am confident
and 11 is the opinion of some administrators I
have talked with thai we will get the severday.
noon until curfew proposal that was originally
outlined by the MRC. The only thing that has
to be solved is the problem of supervision. I
guarantee that I will work for a plan that does
not humiliate the student or treat him like a
child, bui it will be an effective plan.
A lew other things came out of my meeting
with Jenkins on March 10. He apologized for
taking of student ID's the other night. It was
explained as a mistake due to a
misunderstanding on the part of the police and
Jenkins. Also, Jenkins admitted thai the ad hoc
committee had not been composed of the best
people and he agreed that the MRC should have
been better represented. He seemed to show
this by the new committee.
On Friday. March 12. we did meet with the
new commit lee. We arrived at a reasonable
solution for supervision. The proposal will be
written out over the weekend and most likely
will be submitted to Jenkins on Monday, the
15lh. After the proposal is given to Jenkins and
accepted, it has to go to the executive Board of
Trustees which should be rather quick after
Jenkins receives the proposal. I cannot say
exactly how long it will take, but we are
moving as fast as possible.
It is my opinion that we are making progress.
Though il may not look like it, I say this as one
who has been closely connected with the
visitation problem since it has started and as
one who knows a lot of the background to the
situation. We apparently cannot do anything
else now but work with the administration It is
the only way we can accomplish anything and
still stay in school.
Wc will also gel a reasonable plan this way
without any threats afterward. I ask you now
to support us. I ask yoi: not to run to Jenkins,
Mallory, or any other administrative official
and hassle them about visitation. It could
possibly make things worse. The administration
is more apt to discuss it with our committee
than with every individual that goes into their
office.
I will keep you aware, with the help of the
Fountainhead. of what is happening as it
happens.
I IS deferments subject to reform
Appreciation
To Fountainhead:
I would like to publically express my
personal and professional appreciation to Steve
Apple, the President of the Student Union, for
his loyalty, leadership and service to the Union.
As students hopefully know, the Student
Union is an organization of students who serve
as "the voice of the student" in Union policy,
program planning ari staging of special
program events. Many members of the Student
Union give hours of volunteer time and service
to their fellow students in trying to provide
social and recreational programming through
the Union and are surely worthy of personal
commendation.
However I am particularly moved to write
this letter to cite service that Steve Apple has
given, using just one sample as was shown this
past weekend in staging the "Showmen" dance
in Memorial Gym:
On Friday. Steve spent almost an hour at the
Memorial Gym looking over the situation as to
the necessary arrangements specifically for
lighting and staging: on Saturday afternoon,
Steve spent approximately three hours
mounting, and arranging the lighting: Saturday
night. Steve spent approximately five hours in
receiving the band, "hosting" the dance, and
then dismantling the ligting and returning the
equipment to the Union following the dance.
Several other committee members helped
during these times. But, Steve personally gave
approximately 10 hours for this one event.
Sincerely,
Cynthia Anne Mendenhall
Director, East Carolina Union
To Fountainhead:
When a group of guys wants to pass the time
during weekends playing a friendly game of
basketball, and finds that Memorial Gym is
locked tight for no apparent reason, then it
seems that there is a very definite inadequacv
that East Carolina condones.
Indeed, there are multiple excuses why the
gym must be locked up during a free weekend:
A ten hour reservation for a night game? No
chaperon? Janitor not show up to unlock if Or
maybe students might tear up the court, and its
valuables inside the gym? Of course the light
bill would be outrgeous. And it is such a
bother to mess with the gym when only twenty
or thirty want to use it. Perhaps there is a
wrestling match being held there tonoght for all
of Greenville to come and see. But no, there
can never be an opportunity to put the
University students before Greenville, the Boy
Scouts of America, rumble-tumble wrestlers, or
Snidely Whiplash. Keep the students off that
newly-sewpt floor - it's so hard to keep it
clean.
Cops with nothing better to do than run a
group of kids out of the gym. (I suppose they
all get their kicks that way.) Suggesting that
breaking and entering might have been
involved, a full-scale investigation follows. After
explaining that the door was found unlocked,
he quickly returns to the game. But not for
long. The cop orders everyone out. "Why?" "I
dunno. ask Jorgeson I did.
"Why was Memorial Gym closed today Dr
Jorgeson?" "Well there are so many
considerations which must be considered
And some wonder why there is so much
apathy on campus!
Bill Edwards
!
I
By JOHN STRIKER and ANDREW SHAPIRO
Since President Nixon seeks extension of the
drati now. it is more usefuho consider his
reforms pioposed tor the near future, rather
than) the volunteer army he dreams about for
the distant future The President's reforms are
contained in his icquesi lor draft extension.
Senate Bill No 427.
Chief among die reforms is abolition of the
IIS deferment. The ll-S would not be phased
out for the men win. were enrolled in college as
ol April 1170 They would remain eligible
toi deferment under current ll-S rules
As loi siudcnls who enrolled after April 22.
1970. their luluie wjs predicted by Dr. Curtis
W. Tan. Direetoi of Selective Service. 111 recent
testimony before the Senate Armed Services
Committee: "A young man enrolling . . alter
April 22 would be eligible for call when his
local boaid reached his random selection
number, wuh the understanding lhal he be
permitted lo complete die semester, term or
quarter in which he then was enrolled Ihs
induction might thus be postponed but nol
cancelled and then reordered subsequently.
The end of the present cancellation
procedure is foreseeable, because Senate Bill
427 would also abolish the l-SK'i deferment.
Thai deferment is currently available and acts
lo cancel an induction order received by a
fulltime student who is making satisfactory
progress.
"There is no question in my mind Dr. Tarr
testified, "that the spirit of inquiry and the
enthusiasm for scholarship on college campuses
would be enhanced greatly if the compulsion
imposed by undergraduate student deferments
were eliminated "
Dr Tarr based his opinion on six years'
experience as President of Lawrence College
(1963-69): "I have talked with countless
numbers ol young people during my years as a
college president who would have gained a great
deal personally by interrupting their college
work to lake lime to understand their purpose
in study and how belter they might orient their
lives. But whenever I asked why they did not
choose 10 take time for this reappraisal,
consistently young men reported that they felt
hound to continue college work so that they
might avoid induction
Sen ale Bill 427 would also phase out
exemptions for divinity school students (Class
IV-D). Should Congress grant President Nixon
the authority he desires, "It is his intention
according to Dr. Tarr, "to continue all
exemptions to divinity students enrolled prior
to January 2X. 1971. but not to authorize new
ones
So. if you are planning on a IV-D exemption,
but you were not enrolled in a divinity school
Jim Eichling
Managing Editor
Robert R. Thonen
Editor in-Chief
Bev Denny
Associate Editor
Kevin Tracey
Business Manager
Holly FiniwnNewi EdJtof
Karen Blanjf ,e)dFeature! Editor
Don Trau.necks tJ Edjt0r
Baler Adviser
Published by the students of East Carolina University,
P.O. Box 2516, Greenville. North Carolina 27834
Advertising open rate is $1.80 per column inch
Classified $1.00 for the first 25 wo-ds. Telephone
708 6166 Subscription rate is SI 0.00 per year.
me opinions expressed by this newspaper
am not necessarily those of East Carolina University.
i
prior to last January 28. your plans may fall
through with the passage of Senate Bill 427.
The Bill is also designed to plug up a
loophole opened by the Supreme Court's
decision in United Slates v. Toussie (March 2,
1970). Under Toussie the statute of limitations
bars prosecution of a young man for failing to
register for the draft within 5 days after his
18th birthday, if no prosecution has been
initiated with 5 years after the alleged crime,
i.e before the yound man reaches the age of
23 years and 5 days.
The Toussie rule would be repealed by
Senate Bill 427. The government could
prosecute for refusal to register up unti the
refuser's 31st birthday.
Senate Bill 427 also proposes that the
President be given authority to substitute a
"uniform national call" for the present
haphazard quota system under which draft
boards call different lottery numbers at
different times. "Under the present law the
President complained last April, "a man with
sequence number 185 may be called up by one
draft board while a man with a lower number in
a different draft board is not called
Dr. Tarr echoed the President's earlier
sentiments and testified in favor of the
institution of a uniform national lottery call:
"Each local community would be protected
against having a disproportionate number of its
young men called because we would hold to
the same random selection number evciywherc
in the nation and only those men in the
community with numbers below that national
number could ever be called by the
community's local board
Other than these few reforms. Senate Bill
427 is conspicuously lacking in any proposals
relating to conscientious objection, alternative
forms of civilian work, right to counsel,
restructuring of the draft board system, change
in qualifications for membership on draft
boards, annual ceilings on draft calls, or any of
the other major issues disturbing draft
reformers. We would appreciate your reactions
to Senate Bill 427, since we are lobbying for
much wider reform. Send your comments to
"Mastering the Draft Suite 1202, 60 Hast 42d
Street, New York, NY. 10017.
i
Might still cost the farm
By SONNY McLAWHORN
(Special to Fountainhead)
"Say it ain't so. Pa
The young farm boy couldn't read very well.
But he saw the headline of the news story. And
that was enough to roll a tear down his
sunburned cheek.
"Farm Income Down proclaimed the
headline in the Calvin County Dispatch.
"You told me wc was goin' to do better
The youngster glinted from beneath the
wide-brimmed straw hat he wore in the field.
"You mean we ain't goin' to be able to get that
pony from Farmer Nixon
"Let's go see him anyway. Joe his father
said, "lie ain't done so well either. Maybe we
can trade in that DeSoto from the garage
So they got in the truck and bounced down
the din path to the Nixon farm.
"Come in said the Nixon girl. She had
always been Joe's favorite, even though her
head had been turned by going away to school.
"When arc you goin' to get married?" Joe
asked earnestly.
"Hush said his father. Then the farmer
turned to the young maiden in the calico print
dress. "Howdy. Wc come to see your dad
Dad was seated at the kitchen table, pouring
over his ledger.
"Dick, you better get out to the farm
Barker said lo his neighbor. "You can't raise
chickens at the kitchen table
Farmer Nixon was dressed in tattered green
overalls. He wore a purple engineer's hat that
shadowed his fate from the bare ceiling light.
For the first time since the feud of '62,
Nixon was silent. He just stared at his books in
disbelief.
"Are you goin' to the Grange dance?" old
Barker asked. Farmer Nixon didn't even look
up.
"Are the chickens doin' better?" Nixon
scratched his head and scribbled something on
the big black ledger.
"I said, I come to pay you lhal five dollars I
borrowed last week Barker said in a low
voice.
"Cash or check?" Nixon asked.
"Never you mind answered Barker. "I
wanted to ask if you'd lake my DeSoto for that
pony in Ihc chicken yard
"No he answered quickly. "I'm not taking
any more used cars from you. The last time I
tried to get rid of one it nearly cost me the
farm
"If you'd shaved when you went to town to
sell it, they might have taken your price
"Are you trying lo start something?" Nixon
demanded.
"You sure ain't. You're jusi like your old
self Then old Barker leaned back on his heels
and collected his senses. "How about that new
harvester you look from me in '68 You got a
good price for thai
"Times were right. Farmer Johnson had been
dealing with that guy for five yeais. And when
he reined, il was natural lhal I should take-
over.
"It's not my fault times are bad Nixon
continued.
"It sure ain't Joe's fault. He jusi wauls a
pony.
And with that Farmer Nixon retreated lo his
books, not looking up al his neighbors
So.he Barkers left. As they crossed through
?he hying room to ,hc door. ,hey noticed a
crewe sampler that said. "Dick made a deal
wi h, he bank. Dak doesn't give credit, and, he
bank doesn I raise chickens "
When they go, back to the farm. l)k Billk?
-k Ins son ouo,he pasture. He led Joe ove,
nadb,eb?aX ?-
being so bold, the Hatf?
bowed its head. ' 'xd back and
"He's nol much, but he can take you wheie
you want logo U,e funne. said l. his SOM
"Pa the boy cried out. "That'sgreat1"
He climbed on the donkey's back and rode
across the pasture, saying over and ove, again
Charley. I promise neve, lo joke about you
again I promise lo feed you and lake care of
you. Just h. e you're wonh a inilhon dollars
Ami when they i ,o ,U. gate. ,he donkev
spoke. A promise made is a debi unpaid


Title
Fountainhead, March 17, 1971
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
March 16, 1971
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.97
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39543
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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