Fountainhead, April 27, 1971


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The merchants
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deserted when
mers.
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a state school,
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's It is all in
. Bui this has
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Garrett Dorm
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Joel Woll
ountainhead
Bill Schell's trial ends. Full coverage in Thursdays paper.
and the truth shall make you free'
Volume II. Number 4
Greenville, North Carolina
Tuesday. April 27, 1971
WECU now has 'hot line' service
By JENNY JONES
(Staff Writer)
A "hot line" from ECU to commercial radio
stations throughout the stale provides instant
reports of campus events.
According to James L. Rees, director of
campus radio services, this "hot line" type of
reporting is one of the campus radio services'
newest functions.
"Voices of campus news makers are sent by
telephone to news departments of radio
stations minutes after the news is made said
Rees.
Events such as the Marshall University plane
crash, the medical school controversy, and
recent student protests are reported quickly
through the "hot line
Campus radio services perform several other
functions as a part of ECU's public relations
program, said Rees. The service regularly tapes
talk programs for commercial use in addition to
producing full length concerts for stereo FM
stations in North Carolina and Virginia.
Each week, a five-minute summary of
campus news is recorded, copied, and sent to
twelve commercial stations in the state.
These twelve stations also receive a
five-minute sports interview each week hosted
by Sports Information Director John
Montague.
"ECU Concepts a 25-minute round table
discussion program, is produced regularly for
10 stations. According to Rees, the topics of
this program may include current student
projects, reports on faculty research, new areas
of study and current issues related to the world
of education.
A local commercial station which carries
"ECU Concepts" is WNCT in Greenville.
WPTF-Raleigh, WSOC-Charlot te,
WBT-Charlotte and the TN (Tobacco Network)
radio network are among others which carry
radio service programs.
In a special series called 'The President's
Report ECU President Leo Jenkins comments
on programs of ECU and other important
issues. This program is broadcast over the TN
network, according to Rees.
Campus radio services also prepare a weekly
special interview for WPTF The program
includes interviews with individuals such as
Rudolph Alexander, dean of student affairs and
Wallace R. Wooles, head of the medical school.
The production of full length concerts given
by the ECU Symphony Orchestra and the
Symphonic Wind Ensemble is another function
of radio services. One of the recent symphonic
programs produced by radio services featured
the performance of the internationally known
pianist Ivan Davis. The tape which was sent to
the stereo FM stations also included an
interview with Davis, said Rees.
CARL DAVIS WECU disc jockey takes a quick
break while a record plays. The radio station
has recently incorporated a telephone hotline
into their news department.
(Photo creoit oy Hotl Minn
ECU represented at GP War mOralltV dlSCUSSed
Two ECU to II-week session, which will III I rfi III W ? ? i 0 ? W ? e?
jarticipate in the 1971 North Carolina State include both actual employment and several g
Two ECU students were chosen recently to
participate in the 1971 North Carolina State
Government Internship Program in Raleigh.
Phil Dixon of Chapel Hill and Henry Gorham
of Rocky Mount were chosen from among
more than 200 students who applied for the 25
state internship openings
Dixon is a former vice president of the SGA
hile Gorham is the current SGA attorney
general. Both are seniors.
Instituted in 1962. the internship program
offers those who qualify a chance to work with
high government officials in important state
posts. Positions are offered in administration,
archives and history, conservation and
development, highway safety, higher education,
employment, correction, social services and
public instruction, as well as several other
important fields.
The program offers the participants a chance
to get practical experience in the fields that
they might be entering on a permanent basis
after college graduation.
Another program, similar to the state
internship program, is offered on a local basis
Eligible to apply for both programs are
residents from N.C. currently enrolled in a
college or university, either in or out of the
state. They must have completed at least three
years in school prior to June 1971.
Participants in both programs will be
involved in an 11-week session, which will
include both actual employment and several
seminar sessions. Here, they will meet with
state officials, agency heads and college
protessors to discuss theories, practices and
progress of state government.
The first week of state program will be
devoted to a special orientation session where
Dixon and Gorham, as well as the other 23
participants in the state will familiarize
themselves with North Carolina history,
economy, geography, politics and problems.
The local programs will be run in much the
same manner, with both interships extending
from June 7 to Aug. 20.
During this penod.the state lnternswuT make
approximately $100 a week and live in
air-conditioned houses at nearby N.C. State
University.
"It gives you a good chance to work with the
state agencies said Dixon. although he
pointed out that the selection committees were
disappointed in the number of applicants from
ECU this year.
Dixon said that he and Gorham hoped to
work in several of the different available fields
this summer, particularly in the consumer
protection division. Other areas in which they
are interested are higher ed ication.
administrative office of the courts, and the
State Bureau of Investigation.
By BRENDA BATTS
(Special to Fountainneaa)
"There is no condition under which war can
be justified stated EG. Willis, a formei ECU
student, in a discussion of the morality of war.
Faculty members, campus chaplains and
students participated in the discussion
moderated by Dt Dan Earhardt. The panel
members were asked how they felt about the
m ralit of war.
Willis took the point of view of a complete
pacifist "War is immoral because it takes the
lives of human beings he said in the discussion
Thursday.
According to Dr. Frank Murphy of the
Philosophy Department. 'The relative values of
man arc based on freedom, welfare, and justice
The chief value is welfare he said "Abscence
of freedom and justice become important when
it causes human suffering "
Murphy went on to say that war is justified
when it represents some jximization of
freedom, welfare, and just'
Father Charles Mulhc nd said that people
have come to see war as a necessary evil. This is
in contrast to the pacifist viewpoint held by the
early Christians.
"Before, if your country said a war was right
you went to war. We must get away from this
It is not wrong for a man to defend himself
But it is no longer one man against another "
Father Mulholland went on to say that every
man must decide for himself whether or not a
war is right He feels that nuclear warfare is
wrong because it kills large populations, he
added
In agreement with Father Mulholland was
Dr. John East, a political science professor
"Self-defense is inherent in the nature of being
human It is wholly natural and not against
religion he said.
East said that it is the first principle of the
government to protect citizens against senseless
attack. There is no contradiction between faith
and human leason He added that :t is perverse
to believe that man should suffer without
defending himself under a Hitler or a Stalin
Earnhardt asked the panel if they felt the
war in Southeast Asia was justified
Willis lead the discussion with. "I do not see
Southeast Asia as a threat to the United States
A country should be able to decide what kind
of government it wants without pull from
outside countries "
Said Wilhs. "It is a war like any war in the
past, and therefore it is immoral
Murphy stated that there is no hope of
justification of the war in Southeast Asia in
terms of freedom, justice, and human welfare
Father Mulholland leels that the North
Vietnamese are bullies and should be stopped
with whatever force is needed, he said
"I wish all the world was as liberal and sweet
as my brethern. but it isn't said East "There
are Hitlers and Stalins and people should not
suffer for them
He added that he needed better answers than
those he gets from pacifists who say the United
States should disarm first If we immediately
and unilaterally withdrew we should be
prepared tot a hideous blood bath in South
Vietnam
East said it is because men have been willing
to fight in the past that we have our freedom
today "If it were not for the power of the
United States we would not be free to sit here
and discuss the morality of war "
There followed questions directed to
members of the panel from people in the
audience A lively debate ensued between
James Boswell and East on the corruption of
leftist governments as opposed to rightists.
Father Mulholland called attention to the
fact that the discussion was supposed to
concern only the justification of the means of
warfare
Overcrowding leaves patients in hall
By BRENDA FORBIS
(Special to Fountalnhead)
EDITOR'S NOTE: This if the find article in ? earm
on medical thortaow in Greenville This part rJeala
with hospital and public health problem.
An elderly man is lying in bed in the hall. As
people pass, his visitor greedily draws the
curtain around his bed to protect him from
curious stares.
The lady in the bed behind his has no one to
pull the curtain She lies inanimately as visitors
pass and gape.
Overcrowding at Pitt Memorial Hospital
sometimes results in such a situation. This is
only one of the conditions Pitt Memorial
suffers as a result of medical shortages that
harrass all of eastern North Carolina and the
entire country.
Hospital space seems to shrink as the
population grows and demands more and more
bed space. The 204 bed service cannot always
cope with the number of admissions necessary.
Therefore, patients who must receive care are
placed in the halls until rooms are available.
NO RESERVATIONS
Because necessary surgical or emergency
cases take space priority, a patient who needs
elective surgery must often wait several weeks.
Then, if no beds are empty, he must continue
the vigil, according to Jean Owens, director of
nursing "We never know what the rooming
situation is going lobe
"Requesting a certain type room is a thing of
the past here says Owens. People must be
concerned with getting a bed that's not in the
hall.
Patients placed in halls have a minimum ol
privacy. "It is an inconvenience for both
patient and nurse according to Evelyn Perry,
dean of the ECU School of Nursing. "The staff
tries to keep the sickest people out of the hall,
but when they have to be admitted and there is
no bed, there is no other choice They are
moved as soon as possihle
Miss Perry recalled a day when six patients
were in the hall in the surgical ward. This is a
particular strain on the patient, because
stretchers are constantly moved up and down
the hall
MEDICARE
Besides the expanding population, there is
another cause of the flooding of Pitt Memorial.
Since Medicare has been expanded, more
elderly people can afford hospital care,
according to i?ck Rhardson, assistant
director. "People realize that with Medicare
health services will not wipe out their savings
Before this program 80 per cent of the
patients in the hospital were acutely ill, Owens
said. but. now that percentage has dropped.
Many of the elderly patients could be cared for
at nursing homes; however, there is a shortage
of such institutions as well as welfare money to
finance the personnel or the patient, she added.
The emergency room sometimes has to
stretch services to meet growing demands.
Emergency room visits average about 30 a day,
rising to as many as 48 on busier days.
Occasionally, if an emergency patient must stay
in the hospital and there is no bed, he is housed
in the emergency room until space is available
People who don't really need to see a doctor
burden the emergency room staff, especially at
night. Moreover, "Patients come to the
emergency room to avoid sitting in the doctor's
office Richardson said.
INSUFFICIENT FUNDS
While Pitt Memorial has answers to its
problems, another health service is not so
fortunate. The Pitt County Health Department
is suffering personnel shortages and
overcrowding of facilities because of a lack of
operating funds, according to Barbara Oyler.
associate professor at the ECU School ot
Nursing. Since the summer retirement of the
directing doctor, the department has found no
replacement. Funds are insufficient to hire a
well-qualified director. Oyler said.
Oyler. who supervises student clinical
experience at the department said that more
funds would hire a director and expand
facilities. More rooms for consultation and
examination are greatly needed, she said
The Home Care Program, which provided
public health nurse service for patients at home,
was halted last year when government funds
were cut off. she said This service answered a
real need for persons otherwise unable to
obtain health care, especiallv the elderly
NON PITT RESIDENTS
Several clinics at the department are Hooded
with patients from outside Put County The
neurology, orthopedic, rheumatic fever and
speech and hearing clinics aid counties which
have no such services Problems may result if
these clinics ate full, and patients who come a
long way have to be turned away, said Nursing
Supervisor Violet Jones.
The clinics are used only lor referral The
only treatment given is tor venereal disease or
prenatal examination. If patients from other
counties are referred to doctors, the welfare
department in then own county helps them
find one if there is a problem
The prenatal clinic is always Hooded. Oyler
said Although the clinic is strictly lor Pitt
County residents, some paticnt ttill must be
turned away
H l
L
PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, with 204 beds, tuffen problem, tuch as overcrowding and leek
of privacy The new hospital will be planned to rity, thi problem end many others.
DOCTORAL STAFF
Pitt Memorial has an adequate doctoral statl.
Richardson said. Services in such areas as
pathology, anesthesia. X-ray are all excellent
However, several doctors work heavy schedules
because they are in demand by numerous
counties Dr Ira Hardy, foi instance, is the only
neurosurgeon is eastern N.C. this side ot
Wilmington. Richardson said He operates on
many automobile accident victims. 73 percent
of which come from outside Pitt County
"Before Hardy was here, wreck victims had to
go all the way to Chapel Hill for ireatment
Richardson noted. Thus. Hardy is constantly on
call If he wants relief, he tries i gci someone
from Chapel Hill here to covei for him
Otherwise, when he leaves there is no one to do
the job
Patients from othei counties come 10 Pitt
Memorial tor orthopedic care. Keeping tins area
busy also The psychiatnsl also st.ivs quite
busy, because he is the n 1 . hospital
psychiatnsl in eastern S( except possibly in
Wilson. Richaidson explained
The public's conception ol hospital service
creates another kind of strain. Owens said
"People expect the hospital to be a motel, but
this is impossible " They expect to be served
three meals per day and have their room tidied
by a staft member. If such services continue to
those who arc able to do them for themselves,
hospital prices will skyrocket as they have in
the North, she added
NEW HOSPITAL PLANS
The new hospital will he planned to relieve
this problem and many of the others. Owens
said Arrangements are being contemplated to
have those who are able to obtain then own
meals
Three hundred thirty-five beds will be
available, all in private rooms. The patient will
be insured of more privacy Fewer translers will
be necessary, allowing nurses time to serve
patients more adequately.
An intermediate care unit will be included
"This will wean patients from intensive care
before placing them back into general care
units Owens projected Otherwise, the change
from intensive care to a general ward is a jolt to
the patient
Richardson hopes that the new hospital will
be a drawing card for more doctors
"Up-to-date facilities and more doctors will
help us prepare for the future and provide a
wider variety of services
10
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KiKe z. hounidiiiiittfU, iiaj.n , , it
;?.
Future shopping by computers
Campus br'fh
Research awards open
By MARTHA GREENE
(Sl?M Wntar)
Punch j credit card t"i a bagoi applet
Pick up a computer card instead of .1 call "I
KXip
Ten 01 fifteen ve.ns from now a supermarket
will look like a compute! center, comments
William Kehoe, assistant professor of business
at ECU
Instead ol strolling down endless .nsles.
customers will enter a small building, eye one
item ol each pioducl undei glass, and pick up a
computer card foi the items the) want In some
stores they might punch then credit card into a
slot for the items they want
A computer will record the selected items
and the groceries vs.ill be packaged and lent to
the check out desk on a conveyoi beli from the
store's warehouse
This computeried method ol shopping is
already being tested in France, according to
kehoe
the young consumer advocate (eels this type
of shopping will lower prices foi the shopper as
well as reduce the amount of breakage, package
abuse and thert Since the consumer must pa)
lor the damage, the less the amount ol damage
or theft, the less he will have to pa) foi
groceries
Though he visualizes a better consume!
environment lor the future. Kehoe's main
concern is consumer protection at the retail
level toda)
"I worry about why retaders charge 29 cents
tor a tube of tooth paste reflects the
concerned disciple of Ralph Nadei
Kehoe. who has two consumer articles in the
planning stage, sees unit and psychological
pricing as having a major effect on the
consuinei
Unit pricing occurs when a retailer will
charge 60 cents for a 12ounee box of cereal
and 49 cents for three-fourths of a pound of
cereal.
"Shopping loi the consumer now requires a
job of mental arithmetic says Kehoe.
The consumer will naturally buy the box ot
cereal which seems to have the most content
They won't stop to convert pounds to ounces
Kehoe suggests that the retailer be required
to put the cost per ounce on each package in
order lo clarify the price of the product
Psychological pricing comes with the package
sie and color
"Consumers don't usually look at ounces.
They will buy the package that looks larger
The difference in package size often results
in what Kehoe refers to as slack-fill.
"Often you open a package of cereal and
find the box is one-fourth empty. A certain
S6A creates board
for consumers
CONSUMER ADVOCATE KEHOE
amount is due to the settling of the product
matter but there is only so much a product can
settle
Instead of the customer getting more for his
money, he is deceived into buying a fourth of
an empty box.
Another gripe against the retailer is that
there is no regulation to the quantity of
ingredients in a product.
There is no way to measure quality,
according to Kehoe.
"When you buy a loaf of bread, the
ingredients are required to be listed. However,
the producer does not have to list the amount
of ingredients
"The consumer just can't win in a retail
environment says Kehoe who was formally
employed as a product manager and learned
how to take advantage of the consumer.
"You have people with experience of
handling merchandise working to make a profit
If the manager has a chance to sell a product
for more profit, he will usually do it. It's only
human nature comments Kehoe.
This callous disregard of consumers is ironic,
says Kehoe. The retailers are also consumers
themselves.
He believes, however, prices are best held in
check by competition.
"If a neighbor sells a box of soup for 29
cents, he cannot afford to sell it for more.
Often if he can afford it he will sell it for 27
cents
Kehoe feels the key to consumer protection
lies in consumer education. The consumer mils'
be aware of the psychological processes the
retailer uses in price setting.
The Committee on
International Exchange of
Persons announces that
applications for senior
Fulbright Hays awards foi
university lecturing and
advanced research during
1972-73 in over 75 countries
ar?now being accepted.
The booklet on the program
for this period lists
approximately 25 per cent
more awards than the booklet
for 1971-72. It is available on
request to the committee,
(2101 Constitution Ave
Washington. DC 20418), Ol
may be consulted at the office
of the Faculty Fulbright
Advisor. Dean Richard
Capwell.
Application requirements
include: US citizenship, for
lectureships, college or
university teaching experience,
for research awards, a
doctorate or in some fields.
recognized professional
standing as demonstrated by
faculty rank, publications,
compositions, and exhibition
record
July I is the deadline for
applying for research awards,
and it is the suggested date for
filing for lectureships.
Senior Fulbright Hays
awards generally consist of a
maintenance allowance in local
currency to cover normal living
costs of he grantee and family
while in residence abroad, and
round-trip travel for the
grantee Transportation is not
provided for dependents. For
lecturers going to most
non-European countries, the
award includes a dollar
supplement, subject to the
availability of funds, or carries
a stipend in dollars and foreign
currency, the amount
depending on the assignment,
the lecturer's qualifications,
salary, and other factors.
Panel discussion planned
Italian 3,4 rejected
The Student Consumer Protection Board and
the legal Information Board standing
committees have been created, according to
SGA President Glenn Croshaw
The Consumer Protection Board, headed by
Joe Leconte, will work with downtown
merchants m providing protection foi student
consumers It will also work on getting student
discount programs with downtown merchant
according to Croshaw
The Legal Information Board, headed h
Rick Atkinson, will compile recent court
decisions that affect students These decisions
will be kept on hand so students mav refer to
them This board will give legal information,
not legal aid, said Croshaw
Croshaw also announced his appointments
for the members of his cabinet They are Rob
Luisana, secretary of internal affairs; Ken
Hammond, secretary of external affairs; Bill
Owens, secretary of minority affairs; Nick
Forte, secretary of transportation; Gary
Massey. secretary of entertainment, and Philip
Williams, press secretary.
"Appointments to standing committees are
incomplete said Croshaw. Those that have
been appointed are Jane Seism. Elections
Committee; Pat DeV'anne. Lecture Series; Carol
Steele. Movies Committee. Gary Massey.
Popular Entertainment Committee; and Martha
OeWitt. Special Events
All the appointments made by the SGA
President are subject to approval by the SGA
Legislature These appointments will be
submitted to the SGA Monday April 26.
according to Croshaw
BySUEBOWERMASTER
(Staff Writer)
Beginning Spring quarter of 1972, Italian 3
and 4 will no longer be offered at ECU.
"Not enough people have been signing up for
Italian Dr. Joseph A. Fernandez, chairman of
the department of Romance Languages said.
"Perhaps people just don't know that it is on
the curriculum
The first session of Italian 1 was offered Fall
quarter of 1970. taught by Luanda W. Wright.
During winter quarter Italian I and 2 were
offered. Italian 2 being taught by Monika W
Gauglholer. This quarter there is one section of
Italian 2 only, since there were not enough
students registered for Italian 3.
Fall and winter quarters of 1971 will offer
Italian 3 and 4 respectively. in order to allow
those who are taking Italian to fulfill their
language requirement to complete their credit
hours.
From then on. only Italian 1 and 2 will be
Fraternity now national
offered to aid music majors in their studies
Math majors can also benefit from taking
Italian, since more and more math is being
written in this language, said Fernandez.
Latin, which has been recently added to the
department of romance languages, is doing well,
reports Fernandez. In order for a class to be
offered, at least 16 people must sign up for it,
and Latin classes are meeting this requirement.
When asked whether any other languages
might be added in the future, Fernandez said he-
would like to sec sections in Greek and possibly-
even Hebrew. A classics department would then
be sot up, but he said it does not look as though
this will happen anytime soon.
In the meantune, music and math majors are
encouraged to consider taking Italian. Students
in other departments can take it as an elective.
If more people begin asking for Italian, perhaps
the department will be reopened, said
Fernandez.
What do companies look for
in college graduates?
What are the social
responsibilities ol businesses'
These questions will be
answered in a panel discussion
by the Young Piesidents Club
Tuesday. May 4. from 10 a m
until 12 noon in Rawl 130.
The Society tor the
Advancement of Management
will sponsor the discussion
which is open to all
Leading the discussion will
be Leonard Rawls. chairman of
Hardee's Food System, Inc
Also on the panel will be
Paul Barrmger from the Coastal
Lumber Company. James
Kelley. Aeroglide Corporation
and SM Peden from Peden
Steel Company Gregory Poole
of the Gregory Poole
Equipment Co will also
participate ,
Geologist speaks
The Kappa Kappa colony of Delta Sigma Phi
was initiated into the national brotherhood
Friday. April 23. in a banquet held at the
Candlewick Inn The new chapter, which is
presently housed at 562 Cotanche Street, was
given the designation. Epsilon Phi.
FOUNDED LOCALLY
The newly chartered chapter of Delta Sigma
Phi had its foundation in a local fraternity. Phi
Alpha Sigma, which was founded February 6.
1967 From the original nine brothers, the local
organization grew, and on October 15. 1968
was given colony status by the national chapter
Delta Sigma Phi currently ranks sixth in size
among the members of the Inter-Fraternity
Council. They have also maintained the highest
scholastic average on campus for the last ten
quarters.
Edward Allen James, chapter supervisor, was
master of ceremonies at the installation
banquet which followed a short service held at
the Methodist Student Center. James
introduced the various national officials
attending and the other quests
NATIONAL PRESIDENT SPEAKS
At the initiation banquet, the charter
brothers heard remarks from Edward G
Timmerman. district governor, and Russell T
Roebuck, past national president. James B.
Mallory. dean of men. then delivered an address
to the group, followed by National President
Albert C Tillman who welcomed the chapter
into the national organization. Francis P
Wacker. executive director, also spoke.
CHARTER RECEIVED
The charter, bearing the names of the charter
members, was then received by William W
Fagundus. Jr current president of the local
chapter. The ceremony was interspersed by
songs performed by the entire brotherhood.
Following the installation service, a dance was
held at the fraternity house to celebrate a
long-anticipated event.
Fagundus stated that the chapter is
extremely happy to receive its charter. "We've
learned what it is to live and work together
This is the end result he added. According to
Fagundus. the goal ot the chapter now is to
find a new house.
Off-campus credit offered
ECU offers an opportunity lor those who
have not been able to complete their education
to do so through the Division of Continuing
Education
The Division of Continuing Education is
divided into two sections, the undergraduate
Evening College (UECl and off-campus
Graduate Programs
The UEC operates off the Greenville campus
as well as on Off-campus centers are located at
Goldsboro. Camp Lejeune. and Cherry Point.
The UEC offers mainly freshman college
level courses althoug 1 some sophomore level
'liftie Murderers'
courses are given.
In the UEC program, the nine-month
academic year is divided into four eight week
terms. Each class meets twice weekly Students
may enroll in one or two courses.
Tuition for the UEC program is $10 a
quarter hour for in-state students and $24 a
quarter for out-of-state students. Students are
expected to buy their own text books
The graduate level courses are mainly for
those in education These courses are held at
various centers across the state. These locations
are announced several weeks prior to the
beginning of the course.
To receive credit in a graduate level program
the student must hold a baccalaureate degree.
These graduate level classes usually meet
once weekly and the sessions last about three
hours.
Students under either of the programs have
access to the campus library, the cafeterias, the
campus book store, and campus parking
stickers. They are not able to take advantage of
other extra-curricular or entertainment
programs.
These students may not live in the
dormitories.
Pilot honored
after dismissal
An Eastern Airlines pilot who was fired for
refusing to dump raw jet fuel into the
atmosphere and later reinstated with full
seniority has been cited for "outstanding
courage and personal integrity" by the regional
director of the U.S. Department of Health
Education and Welfare.
William L Guthne was presented the
Regional Director's Citation by Frank J
Groschelle
Groschelle said the 58-year-old Guthne
showed "outstanding courage and personal
integrity in the waging of a personal battle
against continued pollution of the air at the risk
of great personal loss
Guthrie was fired for insubordination from
his $57,000 a year job as a jet captain after he
refused to follow a procedure used by Eastern
and other air lines of dumping raw fuel
overboard shortly after takeoff.
The fuel dumped is that which accumulates
in the manifold of each engine after the engines
are shut down.
John T. Middleton, commissioner of the
National Air Pollution Control Administration,
has estimated that more than 6.7000 tons or
two million gallons of fuel is dumped into the
atmosphere over the United States each year.
Guthrie subsequently was reinstated with full
back pay and seniority by Eastern. He also was
given a new job as Consultant on ecology to the
airlines' new vice-president for operations,
former astronaut Frank Borman
Dr Sherwood M Gaghano
of the Coastal Studies Institute
In Baton Rouge. Louisiana, will
present two lectures on campus
Wednesday, April 28.
The afternoon lecture,
"Process and Form in Deltaic
Areas will be presented at
I 30 p.m in Graham, room
301. and will be related to the
natural processes involved in
the development and
destruction of deltas
The evening lecture on
"Man's Interaction in the
Mississippi Delta Through
Time" will be in room 103,
Biology Building al 8 p.m. The
evening lecture is of a less
technical nature and will be of
interest to the public-
Beginning with early American
Indian cultures. Gagliano will
GAGLIANO
treat man's relationship with
the natural environment of the
Mississippi Delta.
Gagliano's visit to the
Department of Geology at
ECU is sponsored by the
American Geological Institute's
Visiting Scientist Program
Cosmetics discussed
The May meeting of the
Student North Carolina Home
Economics Association will be
Monday, May 10, at 7 p.m. in
the social room of the Home
Economics Building
The guest speaker will be
Windy Augustus. Augustus is
from Duke University and is a
College Board Member of
Bonne Bell Cosmetics Her
ptogram wdl concern different
aspects of cosmetics.
All Home Economics majors
are urged and invited to attend
New uniforms planned
The 1971 Marching Pirates
will don new uniforms in the
Fall.
Members of the group must
come by the Music Building,
room 369, for measurements
Wednesday, May 5, from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m.
ABA plans banquet
The Alpha Beta Alpha
library science fraternity will
have its annual Spring Banquet
Saturday, May I. at the
Candlewick Inn
Dr. James W Batten,
chairman of secondary
education, will be the guest
speaker.
Feiffer play slated
"Little Murders the corned) by famous
cartoonist Jules Feiffer about the perils and
absurdities of life in New York, will be
presented by the ECU Playhouse Wednesday,
May 12 through Saturday. May IS m McGinnis
Auditorium.
The little murders Feiffer spotlights in his
play are the t housand-and one minor
annoyances and disasters that, according to his
theme, all city-dwellers contend with the
major mayhem, homicides and general violence
that beset the mugged, raddled, besotted.
baffled dwellers of a modern metropolis
The scene of his play is an average upper
middle class apartment, with double locks on
its doors to close out the violence that exists
outside. These dangers have come to be so
much a part of the Newquist family's life that
they light candles at meal-times as power
black-outs occur, without even a break in their
conversation.
SOUNDS OF SIRENS
The sounds of sirens come up from the street
so incessantly that the Newquists never check
to see what awful errands to which all those
ambulances, fire-trucks and police squad cars
are running in the armed camp they inhabit.
(The frequent! sounds of shooting in the streets
aremerely routine
Anita Brehm and James Slaughter will
portray the mother and father of the genteel
Newquist family who, as the comedy begins.
are about to meet a new suiter brought to
dinner by their successful career-girl daughter,
played by Amanda Muir.
MARK RAMSEY AS SUITOR
In the person ol Mark Ramsey, this suitor
turns out to be an oddball, a total
non-combatant amid the aggressions of the city.
When he is set upon by toughs, he passively lets
them beat him up because, he says, when he
doesn't fight back they tire of the game and
quit, leaving him only moderately bruised.
Daughter, determined to mold this lump of
apathy into her own image of a sunny,
energetic personality, decides to marry him
despite his flaw Their ensuing adventures
involve some zany characters entirely worthy of
the observantly satirical Feiffer.
One of them is a judge devoted to
old-fashioned virtues, played by Gregory Smith
and brought in by Papa Newquist to persuade
the groom-to-be to give up his opposition to
having God mentioned in the ceremony
Another is the minister who performs the
ceremony in accprdance with the groom's
wishes Kirl Thayer is this willing to condone
everything preacher from the underground,
whose free-and-easy ceremony forms one of the
most uproariously funny highlights of the
comedy. "Of the 200 marriages I have
performed, all but seven have failed he says
for openers. "If your marriage works, fine If it
fails, fine. At least it's a forward step
When a sniper's random shot brings tragedy
to this family, they are confronted with a
detective played by Franc Wieerzak, gibbering
on the edge of a breakdown. He prattles about
a pattern beginning to emerge from the 345
unsolved, pointless murders he has been
working on, namely that there is not pattern.
BURLESQUE
Joseph G. Stockdale, guest professor in
drama at ECU, is directing this burlesque of a
world raging with disorder outside a middle
class apartment, that has made its dwellers
prisoners in their home, and he is keeping it at a
hair trigger pace, as is appropriate for a farce
about the big and little murders of modern
urban life.
Tickets for "Little Murders" become
available Wednesday. May 5 at the McGinnis
Auditorium box office.
Mack will lectureon
Othello Thursday
Maynard Mack, Yale scholar, teacher, and
administrator, will lecture on "Othello: The
Candle in the Dark Thursday, April 29 at 8
p.m. in the Nursing School Auditorium.
Mack is a Sterling Professor of English. His
undergraduate course on Shakespeare at Yale is
outstanding among academicians. Mack is also
an authority on Alexander Pope.
Mack's written works include an edition of
the "Essay on Man" volume of the
"Twickenham Edition" of Pope's poetry He
also helped edit the "Twickenham Edition "
Recent books are "King Lear in Our Time" and
"The Garden and the City "
Mack is currently the editor of 'Twentieth
Century Views" and "Twentieth Century
Interpretations" which are published bv
Prentice-Hall.
SERVED AS DIRECTOR
Mack served as director of Yale University's
Division of the Humanities from 1962 to 1964
In 1965 he was named chairman of the
Department of English.
He was appointed to the Sterling chair ?,
1965. That same year he received a
Guggenheim Fellowship for research ,n
England.
Mack has been on the Yale staff since 1936
when he received his Ph D He also received his
undergraduate degree from Yale
SEVERAL AWARDS
While a student at Yale. Mack received
several awaids, including the Winston
Trowbridge Townsend Prize. C. Wyllys Belts
Pfize, Masefield Poetry Prize. Andrew D White
Prize, Albert Stanborough Cook Prize and
Alpheus Henry Snow Prize
Mack was also president of the Yale Phi Beta
Kappa Chapter, editor of the "Yale Literary
Magazine" and "darkness Hoot " He was also
(lass Poet.
Mack has been a meinbei of the Yale
University Course of Studv Committee and a
member ol President Sevmour's Comimt.ee on
Kehgion He has also been supervisor of Yale's
Directed Studies Program, supeivisoi of Ford
Scholars, and chairman ol the Depirtmental
(ourseol Study Committee
In 1959 Mack made lour half-hour coloi
mini on Hamlet for the Ford Foundation
These films a.e s11 ,h?wn ln Stuus m
colleges
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open
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demonstrated by
nk. publications,
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the deadline for
research awards,
suggested date for
ureships.
Fulbnght-Hays
rally consist of ?
allowance in local
over normal living
grantee and family
dcnce abroad, and
travel for the
isportation is not
dependents. For
going to most
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ludes a dollar
subject to the
I funds, or carries
lollars and foreign
the amount
i the assignment,
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her factors
armed
to all.
le discussion will
awls, chairman of
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Irom the Coastal
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egory Poole
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lationship with
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visit to the
af Geology at
nsored by the
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'osmetics Her
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measurements
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Foundation
ichools and
fuetcUy, April 27 1971 Fountatnhead Page I
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"BEANS" BRINGS TO the Student Union Coffeehouse
this week a new sound which is not a particular form of
music, but more of a combination of several different
styles. The group consists of Paul Levine, Courtney
Colleth. Skip Roberts and Luis Molina. Thev will
$

?
JOB HUNTING
TROUBLE?





? Recent statistics in the Wildcat reveal that non-technical 0b
?openings tot college graduates are becoming scarce.and the
? trend is continuing Firns are looking lot graduates wiUi
BxpenenCfl and many related qualifications Many firms won't
? consider graduates who are qualified but have uncertain draft ?
perform tonight and Thursday from 8 10 p m. in the
Union Coffeehouse, room 201, and on Wednesday from
4-6 p.m. on the mall. They will play Friday and
Saturday from 8-11 p.m. on the Union Patio.
Part-time students needed foi promotionaJ work
$7S pCr week. Male or female Call Mr Blalock .it
758-5919 between lu a.m. and 1 p.m. Monday
through Fridaj
STUDLEY
by Don Glassford
?
wmat'Re you Vv
POIM ?J
STUDLEY
3RAVy. IS THAT "1
vou? J
l
talus, so the chances tor a ob are reduced even further
llficers. after completing their obligated service, are in high
commercial concerns
J An I orce HOTC may offer you a solution. The An Force
offers one nf the most highly specialised managerial and
technical education programs available to college graduates. J
i
fr
demand in almost al


X It you are interested m your tuture and have at least two years J
;t university study remaining (undergraduate or graduate)
J then considet the US Air Force (Incidentally, AFROTC
The
iduate school do receive deferments
Professoi ul Aerospace Studies is now interviewing applicants
5 interested in areers in the following arm
?

?

?
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?
?


Aircraft Pilot
Aircraft Navigation
Aeronautical Engineering
Oil Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
Business Administration
Criminology
Foreign Technology
APPLY FOR AN INTERVIEW
Optcal Science
Medicine
Missile & Aircraft Maintenance
Scientific Research
Space Operations
Peraonnel
Finance
Other related fields
Austin Room 128
Phone 758 6597
LEW ME TO THE INFLICTION CENTER.
' MAN. I Vl UP FOR My PHYSICAL
TOGIAY.
FENSTER SITZEN
Fen5-ERH0WpIDYj2LI )(W7MV
(STOUT Of (Cro
by Wendel Pugh
SUMMER JOBS!
We) or recruiting a limit! number of students for interfiling, well paying
postions in their home areos when classes arc completed You will be deoling
with the owner, of business firms ond doctors, offering o service which costs
them nothing unless our home office produces money for them We prefer
full time employees, but some part time petitions arc open Wntt immediately
giving age and home town We'll send details and application by return mail
Penonnel Director
INTERSTATE CORP.
93 Massachusetts Av Boston Mats 02 1 5
Join the JjQIJ Crowd
Pizza inn
421 Greenville Blvd
i 264 By Pass)
DIM INN oi I KI OU1
( .ill hcjd Foi Paster Service
felephone 756 9991
i





Ike and Tina Turner
provide wild show
Iueidaj Vprij 17 I1' 'i I ?Muii.iinluid.
By ROBERT MARINER
I as( I riday ni I students ol 11 l an
excellent program ol contemporary musk
Although the concert given by "Dreams" and
the Ike and "ina rurnei Revue suffered from
irksome problems such as an inadequate sound
system, it overcame the problems and won the
strong approval ol the audience
Despite i tiresome intermission, which lasted
beyond hall an hou the audience greeted the
Ike i . I in.i rurnei Revue more with friendly
enthusiasm than with mere impatience Indeed,
whi I ina I urnei said 'W e hope you II like
us several members ol the audience shouted
"We will " I ho performance proved them ngln
Demonstrating the good rock artist's power
ovet his Instrument, each musician in the band
plaved with both Intensity and precision.
Discerning conscious wildness from chaos he
achieved the former while avoiding the latter.
Even dining the most nearly frenzied rhythms
of "Proud Mary" and "Respect each player
forced his own sound into the savage loudness
around him withoul destroying the musical
unilv demanded by the effective presentation
of a song, no playei sloppily or selfishly
perverted the complexity of the music into
cacophony
PENETRATING GUITAR
The Ikettes, .1 female trio, danced, sang, and
even bantered with the same combination of
energy and precision as the other performers
Then voices mastered not only the gritty,
occasionally gutteral sounds traditionally
associated with soul singing, but also the
smooth, keen notes traditionally sought be
choruses.
Ike Turnci asserted his presence with his
penetrating but nevet piercing guitar work His
music, played coolj. was most effective when it
emphasized the feelings expressed by his wife.
lli, guitai could be raucous on "Honky Tonk
Woman wailing on "Piece of My Heart and
insistently suggestive ol male desire half-rumble
in the throat in "I've Been Loving You Too
Long
RICH IN FEELINGS
Tina Turnei proved herself the most amazing
performei Ol the evening Muscular but
curvaceous she deserves respect as rock's
greatest female athlete I Taunting her body in a
tight mini-dress whose tinsel swung wildly with
her various gyrations, she shook, strutted,
jerked, whirled stomped, and twisted her way
through the most torturous choreography
imaginable However, hei performance was not
simply a display ol physical proweta similar to
that of a Roller IXrby skater
She proved m "I've Been Loving You Too
Long" that she can make the audience feel
emotions as different as resentment and lust
Spotlighted in red. she sang in such a way that
her stroking ol the microphone made her seem,
not a treak or bawd, but a woman incredibly
ich in feelings and in the ability to share them
She starred perfectly in the performance, and
she, more than anyone else, deserves credit lor
he encore which the audience demanded
To think and respond
TINA TURNER HELD the audience captive
with little trouble at the concert Friday night in
Minges Coliseum. Together with her husband Ike
Turner, the Ikettes and Dreams, she provided an
enthusiastic kickoff for Jamboree Weekend
1971.
Havens stirs audience
DOC WATSON AND his son Merle,
together with the Southern Folk
Festival, provided what was perhaps the
most enjoyable part of the weekend.
From 1:30 Sunday afternoon until 9
o'clock that night, the Mall was filled
with the sounds of folk music, bluegrass,
gospel hymns, blues and old time
(Photo credit by Ross Mann) fjy JOHN WALLACE
mountain music. Doc Watson, one of the iRe,?? Editor)
world's finest folk musicians, and his Saturday night at Minges Coliseum, Richie
equally proficient son Merle, gave one Havens spoke, sang, restrung his guitar, retaped
concert in the afternoon and another in '11S microphone, but most of all, he did what he
tis songs
the evening. During breaks in the
afternoon concerts, several local
bluegrass and folk groups entertained the
crowd.
BESSIE JONES, MEMBER of the
Southern Folk Festival Tour and leader
of the famed Georgia Sea Island Singers,
held the crowd's rapt attention as she
spoke of her slave grandfather and her
life in the rural South. Other members of
the Festival w re Anne Romaine, Earl
Gtlmore, Jackie Wright, Brenda Jones
and Hazel Dickens, all of whom provided
Art presented
I wo senior in the School of
i' ire presenting an shim on
the hrsi ilooi ol R.iwl Building
this week
kaian Lynne Hall from
Canton will show examples of
wo,id .Hid leather crafts,
ewelr. enameling, sculpture,
prints, batik, macrame and
weaving!
Shu ley Penley Mclver. a
major in interior design, will
show her textiles, sculpture
and examples of interior
designs tn the exhibition
(Pnoto credit by Ross Mann)
entertainment which the crowd
thoroughly enjoyed. On the whole, the
atmosphere of the day was free and
relaxed By nightfall, when the concerts
ended and the crowd dispersed, a feeling
of contentment reigned, providing the
best ending possible for Jamboree
Weekend, 1971.
does best he moved people He stirred them
to think and to respond
After the intermission, when he came on
stage, the audience was ready for him. He
warmed them up by simply walking onto the
platform After everyone quieted, he spoke. He
spoke softly, like a prophet, saying what so
many people wanted to hear. When he
mentioned the veterans in Washington, DC,
the audience applauded, and "far out" and
"right on" echoed through the coliseum. He
won the audience with his words, before he
won it with his singing.
He spoke of :he first creation of Adam and
the second creation after Noah. He said that
one was of the earth and the other of the mind,
yet he felt that only now the creation is just
beginning.
When his mike setup broke, he turned the
repair into a musical numbei He filled the
coliseum with his personality, with his music,
and with his soul
At the end of the concert he sang what he
had talked about all evening. "Freedom" The
audience, clapping their hands, rose from their
seats and moved forward to the front of the
stage defying the baincades They yelled for
"more" after he left the stage, and he came
back to say and sing again, "We can do it "
Richie Havens is an artist His music does not
depend upon light displays or electronic
gimmickry His music comes from within, and
touches hii listeners in the same was
arc simple and then messages are i leai
The audience will remember the concert foi
other reasons, too "here wore the soap
bubbles, the balloons, and the frisbees. But
even more memorable was a certain character, a
cross between Hugh Griffith and Jackie Gleason
who provided In- own skin -how each time he
beni down to fix a mike wire All the element
no nutici how disparate, seemed to blend to
create an evening that, il you were there, you'll
be a long lime 11: forgetting
HOUSE FOR RENT
RICHIE HAVENS MOVED his audience with his own sincere style.
'
Furnished nouse to
boys Call 75? 286?
rent 4 to 6
LOST
Brown wallet with $30 lost In
locker room ol Minges rollseum If
found pieate turn in at the Union
desK. Finder can keep the money,
just return the wallet
J
PREGNANT ??
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pmomi: 792-aats orccnville.n.c. 2734
HELP WANTED
Sparetnn or futl time opportunity
addressing mam Huffing
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thousand and up, nand written or
typed. t.uaranteed money miking
deal send $2.00 lor . omplete
instructions and list ol firms using
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HELP WANTED
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WANrEO
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CLASSIFIED AD
Ten ijd.es for phone receptionists
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Ten men for light delivery wort
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BICVCLE SALESMAN WANTED
Student, knowledgable about
bicycles, with small amount ol
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aVQ? commission on sales.
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wm
iltliead.
provided an
! Weekend,
ackie Gleason
each time he
the elements,
to blend lo
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Purple squashes Gold in spring game
By DON TRAUSNECK
S ports LdH.ir)
I hose who came la ECU'i
annual Purple-Gold football
game Saturday desiring lo see
,in offensive show p tlieir
wish .is the favored Purple
team won the Intrasquad
clash. 40 14
In all. seven different pjis
scored touchdowns and three
accounted for the extra points
in a game that saw the winners
OUtgain their opponents. 503
sards to 2 12
I'u r pie gave an early
indication ol how the game
would t'o as it went all the
waj for a score on its first
possession.
DRIVE 94 YARDS
Alter holding the (.old to 18
sards following the opening
kickoff, the Purple drove ?4
sauls in 18 plays for the score,
l.es Strayhorn, who ran for 37
yards in the scries, tallied on a
run from one yard out Vaughn
Boman added the extra point.
Before the half was over,
Purple had scored more
touchdowns on a seven-yard
pass from Carl Summerell to
Bob Millie, an I 1 yard pass
from John Casaza to Bill
Troisetiere, and another run by
Strayhorn, this one for two
rards.
Bozman added another extra
ypoinl after Purple's second
?core Here, however, is when
?Jhe Gold team made its bid
prising 47 yards in nine plays.
Jhe Gold scored its first and
?nly touchdown of the half.
Cars Warm ran ovei from the
one to make the score 14-6.
Bo'man's kick after this score
yas wide
THREE OF FOUR
During the drive. Wann hii
on three of four passes for 33
yards
Neither team was able to
score in the third period, which
was speeded up by allowing the
clock to run even when the ball
was dead
On the first play of the
Coach pleased
with efforts
ISta" pnoto by Ross Minn
RUSTY SCALES (24) DRIVES for Gold yardage in Purple Gold game
Mermen set marks
(Sta" photo by Ross Minn)
WILSON'S CLARK DAVIS, playing for the Purple
squad, goes high for a Carl Summerell pass in Saturday's
Purple-Gold football game.
fourth quarter, a third-down,
six sard pass from Casaza to
Rusty Scales was good for a
Gold touchdown and the score
was then 26-14. Casaza ran in
for the extra points
36-YARD BOMB
Purple took the ball 56
yards after the next kickoff to
score the final offensive
touchdown The key play was
a 36-yard scoring bomb from
Summerell to Billy Wallace
The pass for the extra points
was incomplete
The final score of the game
came as Mike Stephens of the
Purple team intercepted a pass
on the Gold 40 and took it all
the way in. The intended
receiver on the play fell down
while running his pattern.
BIG QUESTION
One of the biggest questions
the coaches had asked prior to
the game who will be the
starting quarterback in the fall
Summerell was the number
one man entering the game and
he completed seven of I I
passes for 133 yards and the
two touchdowns. Wann
connected on eight of 17 for 71
yards while Casazza, playing
for both teams, had a total of
seven completions in 20
attempts He also threw for
two scores
Strayhorn led all rushers
with 69 yards in 16 carries
while Wallace had 56 yards in
I 3 rushes.
(Stiff pnoto by Ross Mann)
FIRST-QUARTER PASS from John Casazza barely eludes grasp of Clark Davis.
ECU hosts SC meet
Jhe 1071 Southern
Conference Outdoor Track and
Field Championships will be
held at ECU April 30-May I
This marks the first time the
title meet has ever been held in
Greenville Site of the meet
will be ECU's nine-lane
all-weather Gras-Tex track and
runways, considered to be one
of the finest facilities of its
kind in the South
SCRAMBLE'
"We expect to have from
130 to 140 competing in the
championships says ECU
head track coach Bill Carson.
who will be doing double duty
as meet director "There
should be some great individual
battles in addition to the
scramble for team points
The meet will open at 1:15
p.m. Friday with 'rials and
finals in three events the
long jump, lavehn and shot
put. One other final cent will
be run Friday, the steeplechase
at 4 p.m.
In addition, all the time
?????????????????????
M
Jwill the two co-eds
wno borrowed tne pmnw
(from tne Sigma rau Sigma nousej
please return it
trials in the track events will be
run on the first day of the
meet
SATURDAY SCHEDULE
Saturday's schedule includes
the finals in the other 15
events, starting with the
six-mile run at 10 am and
winding up with the mile relay
at 4 p.m. In between wdl come
the finals of the pole vault,
high jump, triple jump, discus.
440, mile run. 120 high
hurdles. 440 relay, 100-yard
dash. 880. 440 intermediate
hurdles. 220 and three-mile
run.
William and Mary has
captured the title the last five
years and coach John
Randolph's Indians will again
be favored this year.
Stiffed competition should
come from ECU and Furman.
which finished two, three
behind William and Mary in the
indoor championships two
months ago
mm
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ECU swimming oach Ray
Scharf has recently completed
compiling the statistics from
the past season, in which his
team won an unprecedented
sixth sir aight Southern
Conference swimming
championship.
In swimming to a 6-6 varsity
record, the Pirates broke seven
individual and relay varsity-
records, two ECU pool records,
and seven treshman records.
The Pirates also set new
conference marks in five events
and scored a tecord number of
team points (658) in the
championship meet.
Wayne No mis, a sophomore,
and Jim Griffin, a junior, set
the pace in leading the Pirates
to another fine season. Norris
led the team in scoring as he
swam for a total of 83
points-plus in dual meet
competition and 168-plus
overall
SECOND IN SCORING
Griffin was second in
dual-meet scoring with 84-plus
His live rail point score of
155-plus was also second on
the team
Gary Frederick, a junior,
and Paul Trevisan. a
sophomore, also broke the
100-mark in total points
sco.ed. indicating that the
Pirates will have their top four
scorers back next year. The
highest scoring senior was 1 Ith
in team scoring
Another indication of the
team's future strength would
come from a breakdown of the
scoring by classes
FRESHMEN TOP
Freshmen topped the team
total with better than 478
points Sophomores scored
45 8-plus while juniors and
seniors followed with 344 and
198, respectively
Fifteen Pirates were named
All-Conference performers
after the championship meet
held at William and Mary In
addition to Frederick. Griffin.
Norris and Trevisan. they are
Larry Allman. Greg Hanes.
Doug Emerson. Steve Howard.
Don Sicbert. Maik Wilson
Greg II i ii i li in a n . John
Manning. Henry Morrow I
Rehm and JaA Morrow
Only toui scoring members
of the squad will be missed
through graduation nexl year
They are Allman. Hanes
Howard and Neil Winslow
The new conference records
set in the 1971 meet were in
the 400-yard freestyle relay
(Rehm, Norris, Trevisan. and
Griffin), 3:16.4; 1,650-yard
freestyle (FreJenck). 1 7 4s
200-yard butterfly (Norris),
2:02.5; 200-yard individual
medley (Norris). 2 04. and
400-yard individual medics
fNorris),4 28.6.
ECU added to its laurels in
1970-71 by finishing second in
the Penn State Relays at the
beginning of the season and
then 15th in the Eastern
College Championships.
Stickmen lose
"We got exactly what we
wanted The fans wanted to see
an offensive show and that's
what we gave them We really
put on a sh ??
That was the way ECU head
football coach Sonny Randle
described his feelings after the
annual Purple-Gold intrasquad
football game Saturday
The Purple team,
representing the first unit on
both offense and defense
won 40-14 as arl Summerell
passed for 1 33 yards and two
touchdowns
"If I had to start all over
again with spring drills
rrow I wouldn't do it any
differently continued the
new mentor, obviously pleased
foi the most part with his
team's performance.
When asked how far his
team is. compared to the pace
the team had set at this time
tat, Randle was hesitant
ti give an exact answer
UNFAIR TOMcGEE'
"I his would be unfair to
Mike McGee he said, citing
that the tormer coach had to
start from almost nowhere in
installing the new pro-set
offense "This year. I've got
that offense already established
and 1 just have to pick up
where he left off "
Randle emphasized that the
team's main concern has been
lack of depth and he claimed
that there are only about 15
players well established on
both offense and defense
Referring to the quarterback
situation. Randle said (hat
none of the tlnee hopefuls
((ail Summerell. Gary Wann
and John f asaal realK hasai
inner track for the numbei one
spot
"Whoevei gets that spoi will
be a better man because of the
other two he said "In iIns
respect I'm probably ihe
luckiest coach in the country
Quaiterback is not the only
? g point on the iI
squad, however and Randle
cited the running backs. Les
Strayhorn and Billy Wallace, as
another key I I U'l hopes
this yea'
ALL-AMERICAN
Also. Rusty fcales has
promise to become a line
runnei and former High School
Ail-Americanai lestei
Ciumpler will be ready to play
with the at sit in the tall
"With these men. I have foul
running backs with equal
ability That way. I can be suie
to have two fresh ball carriers
at all times said Randle
The coach pointed out that
the situation is somewhat the
same toi the receivers and he
expects the pass-catching corps
to be in good shape come fall
However Randle indicated
that the big "plus" on his team
all spring has been the
enthusiasm, spirit, and
togetherness in building for the
season "
ECU's lacrosse team
dropped its tourth straight
contest of the season Saturday.
bowing to Randolph-Maeon
9-6
Mike Denniston had a goal
and two assists while Bob
Geonic. Mike I ynch, Eric
Schandelmeier. Tom
Christensen and Don McCorkel
added a goal each lor the
Pirates
However, it was not enough
as the visitors raced to a 3-2
halftime lead and extended it
to 7-3 alter three periods.
Sports
Fountainhead. Page 5
Tuesday, April 27, 1971
Pinball record set
A most unusual record in
sports that of the most time
spent behind a pin-ball
machine was set recently by
a former ECU student.
Alton Bowling, a 1970
graduate tt ECU and a former
member of the cheerleading
squad here, set the record of
25M continuous hours "with
just a few three or torn minute
breaks to eat and
Using the pin-ball machine
at Lum's on Tenth Street.
Bowling started at I 2 30 a m .
Apnl 18. and continued playing
until l 45 p m that das
A current resident of
Greenville who works for
Jefferson Standard Life
Insurance Co Bowling claims
he won 702 games during the
stretch, all on just one quarter
Why did he stop' The
machine broke
iSiiSS&S
This week's schedule;
Tuesday Golf SC Tournament at Myrtle Beach. S C. (to 29tln
Tennis at VMI
Wednesday Baseball at Wilnam and Mary
Tennis at Davidson
Thursday Tennis SC Tournament at Davidson (to May l)
Friday Track SC Championships, home (to May ll
Saturday Baseball at Richmond (doubleheader)
Sunday Baseball vs The University of North Carolina, home
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fountainhead
I
SdUobiaA and MnmerUaiy
We are speechless at the
conviction of Mr. Schell.
Mastering the Draft
By JOHN STRIKER AND ANDREW SHAPIRO
Are you afraid of youi draft board clerk Do
you give her your real njme when you
telephone the board? Is the information she
heg udges you believable or limply
intimidating?
Such doubts have long weakened the
relationship "conteit" ma he j beuei word
thdt pits j registrant against his draft hoard
clerk Lately, registrants are beginning to gain
ground
Theoretically, clerics are pett) functionaries.
They are low paygrade civil servants hired to
perform purely clerical chores A clerk is not a
federal official, not a membei of the draft
hoard, not a trier of fact 01 law empowered to
decide you draft status.
In practice, however, the clerk may be the
most powerful person in you draft board
Generally, she is the only one in the office who
has even the vaguest comprehension o( the
draft law not that you blindly trust her
advice Draft board members understandably
look to the clerk as their Moses
A clerk is also most familiar with registrants'
files One of her chief tasks is to keep these files
up to date with all information submitted so
that the board can act upon each case:
"Although the board itself does the
classifying reported a 1967 Presidential
commission on the draft, "a good clerk can
make the board's job considerably easier
Perhaps the most important of her tasks -
certainly from the registrant's point of view the
most critical is the routine preparation of
cases for board review and decision, which in
practical effect amounts to an initial
classification " (emphasis added)
Sometimes, unwarranted decisions made by a
clerk can amount to the denial of any
classification action whatsoever by the draft
board The dangers oi such an illegal usurpation
by a civil servant reached disgraceful
proportions in the recent case of Warwick v.
Volatile. During the week preceding young
Warwick's scheduled induction, he. and his
attorney, and his mother's osteopath
bombarded the draft board office with letters
attesting to the ill health of Warwick's mother
The osteopath's letter, for example, reported
that the mother "recently presented herself at
my office in a state of utter panic at the
impending induction order of her son This
is not just an ordinary type of nervousness
associated with a son entering service Her
husband died of a malignancy about 18 years
ago, an event preceded by the death ef her
mother and father She is dwelling on this phase
and sees only a pending doom with losing her
son
"I have placed her on tranquilizers in an
attempt to calm her but I ani convinced that if
(her son) is inducted she will require
hospitalization for mental illness. She is
definitely on the verge of a complete mental
breakdown .
The draft board never decided whether the
letters called for a reopening and a
reclassification into ll-A (hardship deferment).
This dereliction was not entirely the board's
fault, because the clerk failed to notify the
board members of the newly submitted
evidence. Consequently, that evidence was
never even considered, let alone evaluated, by
the boatd members; they, like most board
members, were not in the practice of boring
themselves with registrants' flies 'intil forced to
do so at an occasional meeting.
At Warwick's trial, the judge based his
decision upon the clerk's egregious assumption
of authority: "The Selective Service System has
placed important responsibilities on the
members of Local Boards for evaluating the
status of registrants in light of the particular
characteristics of each registrant and the needs
of the registrant's family and the local
community. The sensitive and difficult
responsibilities involved in classification cannot
be delegated to, or assumed by, the clerks of
the local boards . Because the members of
the local board did not consider the registrant's
request for reopening and the evidence
submitted to support the request, the order to
report for induction was invalid A writ of
habeas corpus was issued freeing Warwick from
the army.
The clerk's gross distortion of elemental
procedural fairness was alone sufficient to void
the outstanding induction order, it you believe
that your own clerk has in any way
misinformed you to your detriment, or refused
to supply you with necessary forms to fill out,
or declined to file any new evidence you have
submitted, or denied you access to your
Government Appeal Agent, or failed to notify
you of damaging evidence slipped into your
file, or in any other way, prejudiced your case,
seek counsel immediately to determine the legal
gravity of the clerk's misconduct. The
consequences of her action may be as critical as
they were for young Warwick.
Ironic contradiction
To Fountainhead:
It is ironic that the administration has
adopted a riot policy suited for a large
university, while it still maintains an official
policy on intervisitation suited more for a
second-rate, privately supported college rather
than for ECU.
Yours truly,
Ricky Guptill
ions
To Fountainhead:
Applications for Homecoming Committee
Membership may be picked up in the Student
Union or the SGA office Tuesday through
Friday of this week. Selection will depend
completely upon these applications.
David Edwards
Homecoming Chairman
Nonchalant firemen
To Fountainhead:
Last Saturday night at about 2 a.m. I was
sitting up at Bentley's with a friend of mine,
and we saw a fire at a house across the field
behind the restaurant. We could not tell
whether someone was burning something or if
the house was on fire, so we went over to
check. When we got closer, we could see that
the entire inside of the house was in flames.
The Doctor's Bag
By ARNOLD WERNER, MD
(Copyright 1971, College Press Service)
QUESTION: I have heard that aspirin is
harmful to the stomach Is it true that the acid
in it eats away at the stomach wall'
ANSWER: Believe it or not. yes. In the acid
environment of the stomach, aspirin is a potent
irritant to the lining of the stomach Granules
that remain in contact with the stomach wall
can cause bleeding Obviously, the harsh effects
of aspirin are minimal for most people as
aspirin is consumed often. However, some
people are more vulnerable to the irritant
effects than others People unable to take
aspirin due to its inflammatory properties, or
because of allergies, should receive alternative
pain killing medicine from a physician.
The best way of reducing the distressful
effects of aspirin is to take it with food or
plenty ot fluids so that it dissolves quickly and
does not lodge in the stomach Buffered aspirin
is probably ust as irritating as the nonbuffered
kind and much more expensive The enteric
coated varieties (they have a hard coating so
they dissolve in the intestine rather than in the
stomach) are to be avoided. Often they are
excreted in the same shape that they were
ingested There have also been reported cases of
coated aspirin causing perforation of the small
intestine. Incidentally, the nausea and vomiting
caused by aspirin is usually due to the direct
effect of the aspirin on the brain. It is often a
sign of using too much.
QUESTION: I am very worried about my
boyfriend. He has been taking diet pills in order
to lose weight He also takes them quite
frequently to stay awake. Can you tell me if
these diet pills are as dangerous as regular
speed9 Will they cause death within five years
as they warn on the radio? How many times
does one have to take speed before there is a
danger of death
ANSWER: I don't blame you for being very
worried about your boyfriend. The usual type
of diet pill does contain amphetamines which
are popularly known as speed, although
originally speed referred to a particular
amphetamine, methedrine The continued use
of amphetamines is extraordinarily hazardous.
The person soon finds that he needs to take
more and more amphetamines in order to stay
awake Eventually, he can take an amount
sufficient to cause major mental symptoms
including shortened temper, impaired
judgement and a paranoid psychosis.
fountainhead
Robert R. Thonen
Editor-in-Chief
Jirr Eichling Ktivin Tracy
Managing Editor Business Mana?er
Bev Denny
Associate Editor
Molly Finmin N?w? Editor
Karen BlantfnldFaetura Editor
Don Trausneck. Sports Editor
l-a Baker Advlaar
Published by students o' E??( Carolina University, P.O Boa 2516, Greenville,
North Carolina 27834 Advertising open rate: tl.SO per column Inch.
Classified tl 00 'or the first 25 words Subscription rate tlO.OO per year
Telephone 758 6366
The opinions expressed by this 'ewspeper
are not necessarily those of Eest Carolina University.
Stopping the drugs results in the clearing of
the symptoms after a week or ao. Some
vulnerable people are tripped into major mental
illnesses that take a long time to straighten out.
Amphetamine abusers often have underlying
depressions and other emotional difficulties and
require professional help.
Death from amphetamines can occur when
large amounts are used continually, especially
by injection. The decreased food intake and
general debilitation that results opens the
person to cardiovascular collapse.
Amphetamines are of value almost solely in
treating two rare conditions. One is narcolepsy,
a syndrome of uncontrollable sleepiness and the
second is the hyperkinetic child. It is probably
of no permanent value in a weight reduction
program and may be dangerous as mentioned.
Many people abuse amphetamines because of
the lift it gives them. The fall is greater than the
,ise.
QUESTION: Are there any dangers involved
in using a vibrator for sexual stimulation? What
is the best time of day to do exercises for
physical fitness?
ANSWER: All electrical devices should be
correctly grounded. Otherwise, I can think of
no dangers.
The best time of day to do exercises for
physical fitness is right before using the vibrator
for sexual stimulation.
QUESTION: I write this letter out of
frustration from masturbation. I am 24 years
old and have been masturbating for two years.
Ever since I started masturbating, my hair
began to fall out, at first gradually and now
profusely. I'm at my hair's end trying to find a
way to stabilize this condition. I've ruled out
heredity as a possible cause of the fallout
because my father and both grandfathers still
have a full head of hair. Can masturbation cause
hair loss? I've also considered the psychological
effect that masturbating might have on my hair
loss.
ANSWER: I receive a large number of
questions concerning harmful effects resulting
from masturbation, but I'm still waiting for a
testimonial to the beneficial effects.
The Forum
Two police cars were already there, but no
firemen. As I stood and watched, the flames
crept out the window, and half the outside of
the house went up in fire. Still no firemen
arrived. The house continued to bum; finally, I
saw the fire truck coming down the street.
Their red lights were flashing, but I could hear
no sirens. They drove slowly down the street,
stopping at corners - this in the middle of the
night - and when they finally got to the house
they extinguished the fire within a matter of
minutes.
It was really sad to have to stand there,
wishing there was something I could do, but
knowing that there was nothing. If the firemen
had gotten there a little sooner, they could have
saved a greater part of the house than they did.
If the Greenville firemen could be as efficient in
answering alarms as the police seem to be in
arresting people, then perhaps the residents of
Greenville could be safer from such unfortunate
occurrences as that of Saturday night.
Karen Blantf wld
New Revolution
To Fountainhead:
"Let it be known that your supreme effort
of policing the fun out of last weekend's
concerts was and will remain an imposter of
justice and a symbol of foolish authority. In
infinite wisdom and stallion bravery you
stationed your legions of flash-lit robots
amongst the soul of the sizable crowds in order
to procure hypothetical order and reason. Even
at a concert where the feelings of relaxation,
easiness, and closeness to fellow man are
supposedly heightened, "You" saw fit to blaze
the corneas of untold innocent students in an
effort to prevent a Minges holocaust.
Could you feel the resentment that brewed
from your police intoxication? What is the
difference between a shirt saying "Usher" and a
police badge? Do your so loyal ushers know
how to attend a gathering with the idea of
enjoyment opposed to enforcement? When are
you to realize the futility of your intolerant
ways?
Peaceful and loving vibrations flowed this
weekend and "we alchemic wizards of
positiveness, deem it time for you to also
partake of the Spirit of Oneness. (Please).
Beware you may soon wear a loving smile
and not know from where it came Beware a
new revolution from within of beauty and love
are fast approaching this planet earth and if
your type ignore it, you and your flashlights
will be cast upon the sea of darkness, where
there exist no docile students to whom you can
dictate norms and sanctions.
Smile, oh friendly administrators, your face
will not crack.
Mania (the Heathen)
and Etjor (the Sensitive One)
Clarification
To Fountainhead:
I feel a necessity for replying to Dr. Clyde
Hiss' recent letter concerning my review of
"Don Giovanni Let me first state I have not
made music my life's work. I simply try to
enjoy it.
Dr. Hiss was correct in pointing out my
mistranslation of "sua It was a detail that I
should have noticed. Details are important. I
believe that it was Mies Van der Rohe who said
in effect that if I take care of the details, God
will take care of the overall work.
I did not seek a gala performance of "Don
Giovanni I only asked that the details be
properly handled. If the props, acting, and
harpsichord had been attended to, I, for one,
would not have minded two well constructed
columns with an occasional railing or chair to
compose the entire mise en scene. I feel it is
better to try to suggest the elegance and the
complicated instead of trying to depict them.
May I point out that the group listed
themselves on the program as the Goldovsky
Grand Opera Theater. I did not give them the
name "grand nor did I ever Imply that "Don
Giovanni" was not a "dramma giocosa The
two terms are not enemies to one another as
Dr. Hiss implied.
"Aida the grandest of the grand, is called
simply an opera in four acts. Bellini called the,
beautiful "Norma" a lyric tragedy in two acts.
Rosini called "Semiramide" an "opera seria
Perhaps one should not use the term grand for
opera at all. I don't know of too many
composers who did.
But there is an element that unites these
operas, excluding the ambiguous
"Semiramide and that is a certain magnitude
these works possess. They have a certain
enousness that affects ones humanity with a
depth of understanding that might be called
grand.
Although some call Mozart frivolous and
accuse him of a certain superficiality when they
compare him to Beethoven or other later
romantic composers, I do not find this to be
true. Mozart is a tragic comic. His music is a
divine comedy. Does it matter he call "Don
Giovanni" a "dramma giocosa Does it matter
that Chekhov called "The Sea Gull" a comedy?
What's in a name afterall?
The production's deletion of the "Dalla sua
pace" was minor: the detection of the final
number was not. Dr. Hiss was right. The
"Dalla" was written for a later performance;
correct me again if I am wrong but the final
number was written for the original
performance.
As to my hearing "it performed better I
admit to having seen it only two other times:
once at the Grand Opera in Paris and a second
time at the Mozart Festival in Salzburg, Austria
under the direction of Herbert Van Kara Jan.
The night I went to see it at ECU, I did not
expect lavish staging or expensive costuming. I
only expected to hear a sincere performance,
one that would rise above the level of "la
routine which is so common in the operatic
world.
Sincerely,
John Wallace
Reviewt Editor
In doubt
To Fountainhead:
In reply to your letter in the April 22 issue
of the Fountainhead, I am in doubt as to the
meaning of your letter entitled "Emcee I
cannot understand why you would want your
name withheld, as I would graciously accept
your criticism of the way I handled the Phi Mu
Alpha talent show I would appreciate an
explanation of your letter to clarify your last
sentence. Again, may I say that I would
appreciate your criticism in plain and simple
language.
Respectfully yours,
Terry W. Blalock (Emcee)
Typical justice
To Fountainhead:
In the issue of volume II, April 20 of the
Fountainhead appeared a letter from me
concerning an example of typical justice at
ECU, especially in the dormitories Well, the
response I received from the dear hall proctor
left a lot to be desired I was informed by her.
accompanied by the dorm president (for
defense or otherwise), that I should have
consulted her, the House Council, or the dorm
counselor before expressing my opinion and
case publicly. To this I answer that I had
previously talked to the dorm counselor about
this but in a defensive manner because the hall
proctor above me have been bothered by my
asking her to hold her excessive noise So, she
had complained first
In regard to the House Council, I think it ,s a
farce. A girl can receive the same number of
demerits for failing to sign in on an "official
ZPUff b'?M S ? b"ng k,c at "??"? She
this official blank is for convenience sake only
there should be no penalty concerning J
whatsoever However. I can understand ,hc
reasons behind the after-hours penalty
It is bad enough to be reprimanded for
expressmg ,ny optnion, which Is the ?uh, o
t? SCVen ?? beTdW
bitch by the hall proctor while ih, l
president stands there in lUfi Y
this should be enough HRdeffnif"h,nk
Pissed off
the Ogre of Garrett Dorm
Jacqueline M Cogo,r??
Jo
Cathy Jean
editor-in-chief of
ll7l-72.
At the same
I ucsday aftermx
elected summei
newspaper
Johnson, a jun
as a news writer f
spring. She was
newspaper as w
attended three prt
Presently work
ECU, she has take
Johnson has al
for her hoinetowr
as for a Greensbo
for a summer intt
foi tins summer.
She plans sevet
next year. "I th:
material covering
has been taken
would like to brin
Johnson also s
change the lay-ou
of the Fountainl
department lay 0
Make-up is not a:
Volume II. Numb
Th
Robert Thone
announced Thurs
President Leo Jer
and punitive damn
Thonen said th
brought against h
Henry Gorham
violation of the ca
Thonen was i
complimentary cli
appearing in the
The closing con
directed toward J
disturbance on cai
Dean of Studer
of Men James
co-defendants wn
connection with tl
Thonen said t
were a violation C
guaranteed by the
The complain
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By Bf
"Mayor is a p
very little author
Wooten Jr in a c
Monday night.
Other candidat
who spoke at tl
Sigma Alpha w
mayor. Kennetl
Phillips. Greenvil
mayor.
Voting day is
a.m. until 6:30 p.
Defining the
Wooten explainei
government "It'
form of governin
duties than servir
"He votes in s
on 'ficial func
appoints the
advisory commi
Commission He
The city is aci
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Wooten al
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citizens vote on
Redevelopment P
will be spent on tl
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a 1.6 per cent
approved
Still stressii
Greenville's n
expanding he
getting money fn
no bettei place I
on the parks an
such as the arts
In addition to
spent for a p
tinued Woot
The mayor ah
should be half a
and half elected,
by the City Coun
Greenville i
inspectors, accon
be required to in!
that is done
Redevelopment C
Concerning en
action "has to be
In conclusion,
the most import;
was having an
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Lm


Title
Fountainhead, April 27, 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
April 27, 1971
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.109
Location of Original
University Archives
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39555
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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