Fountainhead, October 23, 1973


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Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
ECU mfcj expansion
Land purchase needs $1.25 million
By DIANE TAYLOR
Staff Writer
ECU has requested $1 1 4 million from
the state for the acquisition of new land.
The proposed areas include the
tobacco warehouse on Charles St near
Minges Colliseum and all the land not
already owned by ECU, from 7th St. to
both sides of 9th St. (east-west) and
Cotanche St. through 608 9th St.
(north-south).
"If we can ever get the money for the
Planetarium, we're going to put it on
some of that land explained C.G.
Moore, vice-chancellor for Business
Affairs.
The area behind Joyner Library, on 9th
St. "would be the most logical place for it
since those teaching (in the Planetarium)
will have their offices in the Science
Education Department, based in Flana-
gan Moore said.
He also said, "I'd like to use some of
that land to build more parking
lots However, he went on to say, "there
is a committee which chooses the land to
be purchased and how it will be used
?

00
CORRECTION
In the October 16 issue of
Fountainhead on page 3, the business
manager of the Buccaneer is mistakenly
named as the source of a statement which
says the Buccaneer has no money to
begin operations. The reply is instead "no
comment
Moore said the warehouse would be
used to store campus vehicles,
maintenance equipment, etc. "But our
chances for getting this are, I would say, x
pretty slim he added. "Probably the g
only way we'll ever get it is to condemn
It
"The problem is, we don t know how
much monty the (state) legislature has
appropriated for the acquisition of land,
Moore explained. "We already know that
the legislature has appropriated money to
the Board of Governors for the acquisition
of land, but we don't know how much
ECU will qet
He said that ECU sends in a request
for state funds necessary to buy land, to
General Admissions in Chapel Hill. The
request specifies the parcels of land ECU
wishes to obtain. A division of the
Department of General Admissions then
contacts the owners of the land and if he
is willing to sell, they send a local
appraiser to evaluate the possible
cost. They then negotiate the sale, if the
price is acceptable to the appointed
budget. The office then notifies ECU
that the land has been acquired, or that it
has not.
Moore said the Board of jovernors
does not publicly announce (he amounts
of state funds appropriated to the
universities for purchase of land, because
the price of the land would increase
before negotiations could even begin. For
that reason, the Department of General
Admissions handles the transactions.
If the money is appropriated for the
Planetarium, Moore said that actual
construction on it could not begin until
after July 1 of 1975. He estimated it's
completion to be "around the end of 76
Current construction of new buildings
at ECU includes the new student center,
an addition to Joyner Library, half of the
School of Art and the Regional
Development Institute at 1st and Reade
Streets.
ATTENTION
ANY CAMPUS ORGANIZATION
INTERESTED IN BUILDING A
HOMECOMING FLOAT PLEASE
CONTACT: CHRIS RIPPER
CHAIRMAN HOMECOMING PARADE
752-9132
DEADLINE 6:00
Wed. 24th
??
nn C G MOORE vice chancellor w business affairs discusses possible
future' construction on the ECU campusECU
of $1 14 million for new land acquisitions and $880 thousand for a
new planetarium.
Plans are in progress
for new planetarium
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN
Staff Writer
Plans are being made for a
planetarium at ECU according to Clifton
Moore, Vice-Chancel lor of business
affairs.
Moore said that in the budget
submitted to the Board of Governors, part
of the money requested was for advanced
planning money for high priority
projects. The planning money requested
was for improvement and renovation of
the Wahl-Coates school building, the
Summer Theatre and the planetarium.
"This indicates to me that if they are
requesting planning money for the
planetarium, there is a strong indication
that the next time they will request the
money for the building itself Moore
said. .
He said the total cost of the
planetarium has been estimated at $880
thousand, $315 thousand of which has to
be in gifts and grants to the university for
the planetarium. The remaining $565
thousand will be state appropriated.
Forty-four thousand dollars is being
requested from the Board of Governors for
planning such as architectural planning of
the planetarium.
Moore said there was no way of being
sure when the money would be approved
until after the legislature meets sometime
in January. He said the legislature would
probably decide sometime next May or
June.
Moore speculated that the earliest the
university could hope to have the
planetarium for use would be in the latter
part of 1975.
"If the legislature appropriates the
money in 1974 the earliest we could start
with the building would be in July of
1974. It would take about a year to build,
making it ready for use in about July
1975 he explained.
The planetarium will probably be built
on the property the university has
acquired on Ninth Street which is now
being used for parking lots.
"I can't say unequivocally where it will
be placed but that seems the only logical
place to put it Moore added.
The planetarium will be used for
instruction and therefore will be put as
close to Flanagan as possible, allowing
instructors to have close access to the
building.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
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Announcemenfs Drama
Anyone wishing to submit articles or
announcements to FOUNTAINHEAD
should turn in. their copy for Tuesday's
paper by 12 noon Monday and copy for
Thursday's paper by 12 noon Wednesday.
All copy must be typed. Material that is
not typed and does not meet the deadline
will not be published. No announcements
will be taken by phone.
Hebrew Youth
To all Hebrew Youth Fellowship
Members and prospective members: A
general meeting is scheduled for Oct. 25
at 7:30 p.m. in Wright Annex (Student
Union) room 204. Please attend.
Sigma Alpha
Pi Sigma Alpha, a political science
honor society, will meet Thursday, Oct.
25. 1973 at 7:00 p.m. in Social Studies
building C-105.
Drama Workshop
The Theatre Workshop presents Kurt
Vonnegut Jrs 'Happy Birthday Wanda
Jane" on Tuesday and Wednesday nights,
Oct. 30 & 31 in McGinnis Auditorium. Ad-
mission FREE.
Teacher Exams
Students planning to take the National
Teacher Examinations on November 10,
1973 should send their applications
immediately as they have to arrive in
Princeton, N.J. by October 18,
1973. From this date until October 25,
closing registration date, a late fee of
$3.50 is necessary. The next NTE date is
during Winter Quarter, on January 26,
1974. For information, come to the
Testing Department, Education-Psycho-
logy Building, Room 204, or call 758-6811.
"The Merry Wives of Windsor a
dramatic production presented by the
East Carolina Playhouse, will conclude its
performances on Tuesday, Oct. 23, and
Wednesday, Oct. 24. The production has
been running since Oct. 17 in the "new
and agreeable studio theatre located in
the old Wahl-Coates school.
"The Merry Wives of Windsor" begins,
at 8:15 p.m. in the evenings. Admission
costs for the public is $2.00. ECU student
will be admitted by presenting their ID's.
Tickets are still available for the UNC
game at Kenan Stadium on Saturday.
Students are urged to come by the Minges
ticket office to purchase their tickets as
soon as possible due to the fact that a
small number are available.
Prices will be $3.50 for students and
$7 for everyone else who is not fortunate
enough to be a student.
Seminar
Dr. Myron L. Caspar, associate
professor of Chemistry at ECU, will
conduct a seminar at Clemson University
Oct. 23 on the topic, "The Cyclic
Reduction of Ketones
The seminar subject will deal with
research by Dr. Caspar at ECU which was
presented to the American Chemical
Society in Chicago in August.
Caspar's seminar is under auspices of
the Clemson University Department of
Chemistry.
Work
A job is being offered by the ECU
Sports Information Office to any student
available for work 2 or 3 hours on Monday
or Wednesday afternoons or both. The
job will involve letter writing, filing and
other general office work. The salary will
be $1.80 an hour. Anyone interested
should contact the ECU Sports
Information Office in Minges 168.
Contents
PROPOSED CONSTRUCTION ON ECU page one
POLITICAL SCIENCE PROFESSORS COMMENT ON NIXON page three
FILM COURSES page three
CHARLOTTE ASSOCIATED PRESS CHIEF VISITS ECU page four
EDITORIALCOMMENTARY FORUM pages eight and nine
COLORADO PSY. INSTRUCTOR FILES SUIT page eleven
SPORTS pages fifteen and sixteen
Depression
Dr. Hans Lowenback, professor of
psychiatry at Duke University will discuss
how to cope with mental depression when
he speaks at ECU Tuesday, Oct. 23.
His speech, entitled "Depression and
Loss" is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
Allied Health Auditorium on the
ECUcampus.
Dr. Lowenbach is the second in a
series of lecturers sponsored by the ECU
School of Medicine in an effort to give the
general public a better understanding of
medicine as it relates to physical and
mental health. The project is co-spon-
sored by the Department of Pathology at
ECU.
Dr. Abdullah Fatteh, professor of
pathology at ECU, described Dr.
Lowenbach as an "outstanding authority
on the subject of mental depression
"He will explain the important
differences between true and lasting
mental depression and temporary changes
in mood due to unwelcomed circum-
stances Dr. Fatteh said.
"He will also discuss the ways to
handle mental depression and will provide
us with some expert advice on mental
health in general
A native of Duisburg, Germany, Dr.
Lowenbach came to America in 1938 and
has been on the staff of Duke University
since 1940.
He presently serves as consultant in
forensic psychiatry to Dorothea Dix State
Hospital in Raleigh and is also consultant
to Mental Health Centers in Washington,
N.C. and Elizabeth City, N.C.
Juniors
Juniors-This is your chance to know
what your SGA is doing or to get involved
in student government! A Junior Class
Interest Committee is forming and there
will be a meeting this Thursday, Oct. 25 at
7:00 in room 204 of the Union. All juniors
are invited to get involved and to become
aware of what is happening on campus.
Colorado
Take a trip through Colorado and the
Grand Canyon tonight at 7:30 without
leaving your seat in the lobby of
Garrett. Jackie Armyette, graduate stu-
dent in Geography, will be sharing her
slides of her recent travels with us. Come
and get some inspiration for a summer
trip.
Meditate
All stCTdents and faculty are invited to
attend an introductory lecture on the
principles and practice of Transcendental
Meditation on Tuesday October 30 at 7:30
in Social Sciences B-102. Transcendental
Meditation is a natural technique which
allows the individual to gain deep rest and
relaxation while at the same time
experience more happiness and clarity of
thought.
ATTENTION TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDIATAORS: Weekly meetings for
meditators are held every Sunday night at
7:30 in room 204 of the student union.
Scientist award
Dr. Hal J. Daniel, III of ECU was
presented the Junior Scientist award for
1973 by the 15,000 member American
Speech and Hearing Association at the
annual convention of the association
in Detroit October 14.
The recipient of this award if chosen
for outstanding research done within five
years of completion of his advanced
degree studies. Dr. Daniel was recog-
nized for extensive pioneering research
done since 1968 both here and in
Switzerland on otosclerosis. This is a
disease of the inner ear that affects 10-20
percent of all people and is one of the
leading causes of deafness.
Dr. Daniel joined the ECU faculty in
1968 and is Associate Professor in the
Department of Speech, Language and
Auditory Pathology in the School of Allied
Halth and Social Professions. He
received his BS and MA from the
University of Tennessee and his PhD from
the University of Southern Mississippi.
Total health
William Byrd, Associate Dean of the
School of Allied Health and Social
Professions at ECU, will participate in a
panel discussion of rural health in
Winston-Salem on Oct. 27. Total health is
the subject of concern at this year's
semi-annual meeting of the North
Carolina Sociological Association, meet-
ing at Wake Forest University.
Scholarships
Eight National Merit Scholarships and
17 Academic Scholarships have been
awarded to gifted and promising entering
freshmen students at ECU for 1973-74.
The recipients of this year's awards
will be honored at the annual ECU
Scholarship weekend banquet Sunday,
Nov. 11. Guests at the banquet will
include a large number of outstanding
high school seniors from North Carolina
and Virginia who have been invited for
special Scholarship Weekend activities at
East Carolina.
Certificates of honor will be presented
to those entering freshmen who have
received either National Merit Scholarsips
or ECU academic scholarships. The
awards will be presented by Dr. Leo
Jenkins, ECU Chancellor, assisted by
Robert Boudreaux, director of Scholar-
ships and Financial Aid, ECU.
According to Mrs. Mildred H. Derrick,
chairman of the Scholarship, Fellowship
and Financial Aid Committee, the
following scholarship winners will be
honored:
Henry Eugene Latham, Julius D.
Register, Patrick R. Pearce, Jane L.
Peterson, Arthur J. Mayfield, Patricia C.
Coyle, Otho Allen Daniel III, Priscilla A.
Hudgins, Karen A. Campbell, Phyllis
Robin McKee, Pamela A. Radford,
Deborah A. Holloman, Barbara Ann
Mathews, Michael Wayne Kegerreis,
Jeffrey H. Krantz, Steven S. Boyd, Pamela
Jean Fisher, Cathy L. Cowart, Jennifer E.
Lambeth, William L. Barlow, Julia Ann
Cleveland, Cynthia L. Freeman, Wardlow
C. Hawes, Alan Stewart McQuiston, AND
Andrea L. Harman.
Continued page 13
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
3
Resignations and dismissals
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Campus figures view politics
Saturday saw the resignation of
Attorney General Elliot Richardson and
dismissal of Deputy Attorney General
Ruckelshaus and Special Prosecutor
Archibald Cox.
This is the first of a series of
interviews designed to express opinion
around the campus concerning these
occurences and the action that the public
and the Congress could take. Persons
interviewed in this article are Dr. William
F. Troutman, chairman of the political
science department, Dr. H.A.I. Sugg,
assoc. professor of political science, and
Mr. Lawrence E. Hough, asst. professor
of political science. The questions were:
1. What was your first reaction to Nixon's
action Saturday?
2. What purpose could the President
serve by taking such action?
3. What action should the legislative
branch take now?
4. What action should the citizenry take?
"You couldn't publish my initial
reaction stated Hough. "He (the
President) removes a thorn, and one can
only conjecture as to what could be on
the tapes Hough added that his view
was toward the negative in that there was
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something to hide.
An expanded judicial investigation on
the part of Congress should be conducted
theorized Hough. This is the feeling
expressed by several Congressmen such
as Senator Stevenson of Illinois and
Representative Davis of Minnesota.
Hough added that Nixon apparently was
upset by the refusal of Cox to accept the
proposal that was offered the Ervin
committee, and decided to have him fired.
Hough feels the citizenry should be
aroused and express their feelings to their
congressmen. He concluded by alluding
to Machiavelli's two concepts of virtue
with Cox, Richardson, and Ruckelshaus
representing the citizen and Nixon
representing the state. In this, "Nixon
has not only put his private interests
above those of the citizenry and the state
(contrary to Machiavelli's directions), but
has placed himself above the legal basis
for our society explained Hough.
"Shock, surprise and then shock" were
Troutman's reactions. "Nixon had offered
compromise with the Ervin committee,
and felt that if Mr. Cox had to go, then
everyone would excuse him for his
action
Apparently Nixon didn't want the
Supreme Court to rule on this
constitutional crisis conjectured Trout-
man. He also felt that a politically
acceptable settlement would avoid a legal
showdown.
"Congress would be remiss in their
obligations and failing in duty if they did
not look into the matter of grounds for
impeachment Troutman stated. If the
individual citizen is concerned that the
President is acting beyond his powers,
then he should write his congressman.
"If one admires integrity and courage,
he should write Richardson, Ruckelshaus
and Cox showing support for those who
seem to exercise these qualities he
added. "Men of integrity have not found a
home under Mr. Nixon's administration,
and this frightens me more than legal
problems
"I was not greatly surprised at Cox's
firing stated Sugg. "I was interested
concerning Mr. Richardson's resignation,
since in HEW and DOD, he did certain
things that placed loyalty above other
feelings
The purpose was to remove what
Nixon felt was an insubordinate in the
administration who had been told to stop,
but failed to do so observed Suggs.
Suggs doesn't feel that there is a
precipitate action that Congress should
take. "The issue of the Watergate tapes
mat seem to be central to the committee
and to Judge Sirica's interests still has
not been resolved, so I feel further
investigation is warranted Suggs feels
that although there has been some talk of
impeachment to resolve the constitutional
crisis, there are two things to be
considered. First, the problem is that
impeachment procedures would seem to
be incapable of resolving the crisis except
where the effort succeeds. He noted that
if it fails, even by a narrow margin as was
the case with Andrew Johnson, the crisis
seems to remain. The second point is
that it is not clear at this point how strong
the movement for impeachment is among
the Congress and in the public at large. It
will be some time before the
congressional leadership can assess the
situation in Congress and the public in
general.
"Overall, a great many of the actions
that Nixon seems to have taken tend to
aggrevate the situation Dr. Sugg
observed in closing.
Stephenson offers film study
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS
Assistant News Editor
What do you see when you go to the
movies? What gives movies their great
appeal that attracts millions of viewers
yearly? How are movies made? What
value do movies have as an art?
Answers to these and other questions
relating to motion pictures can be
provided in a unique film study program
offered by Dr. William Stephenson,
professor of English at East Carolina
University.
He explained that the four course
program is an introduction to what to look
for in films. "Most people don't know
why they like to dislike a film he says in
his relaxed but acutely fascinating
manner, "these courses give students the
tools to better evaluate the films they
see. They are taught from the viewpoint
of the audience
Stephenson, working quietly at his
shaded, lamp lit desk, seems at home in
his well organized office, being
surrounded by colorful literary work
ranging from the 18th century to the most
contemporary cultures.
"This film study program has been my
'baby my personal development for over
three years Stephenson observes,
smiling with his pride for it from behind
his gold-rimmed spectacles. "It has taken
long range planning to achieve a program
of this sort which emphasizes film as a
humanities and as literature
Stephenson has long been interested
in films, dating back to 1934, when he
was three years old and living in Bourbon,
Indiana.
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"Bourbon was an ironical name for
such a puritanical town mused
Stephenson, his features highlighted by
his moustache and wavy brown hair, "It
didn't have a movie theatre because films
were regarded as 'the devil's playground'
and were practically forbidden. But my
mother and I didn't think like many of the
others and on Wednesday afternoons we
would go to Plymouth, the county seat,
and pay ten cent 3 each to see the current
films. My love of drama and motion
pictures began here with a film starring
Gloris Swanson called "Music in the
Air It was marvelous
Stephenson pursued his interest in
drama and film, receiving a degree in
drama from Indiana University.
"There were, of course, no film
courses offered in universities at that
time reminisces Stephenson, casually
glancing to the antiquated map of London
above him, "and I had to settle for 18th
century English literature as my area of x
study, but I constantly attended movies O
and watched them with growing interest ?
The University of California at Berkley
kept Stephenson busy for six years as he
worked on his English Doctorate.
"It was here that I really got involved
with looking at films. I used to go down
to an old theatre in Berkley several times
a week where current art films would be
shown. It was called The Cinema Guiild
and was run by a woman named Pauline
Kael who used to write the programs out
for the films shown there. She is now a
renowned film critic, studied in serveral of
my classes
See "Stephenson" on page five.
m
DR. WILLIAM STEPHENSON professor
of English at ECU discusses the "unique
film study program" which he has
developed. He hopes to eventually
expand the film studies program
presently offered.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
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AP Chief sees
image change
Ross: 'death and dying'
By MIKE PARSONS
Staff Writer
William J. Dill, bureau chief of the
Charlotte Office of Associated Press (AP),
spoke to two journalism classes at ECU
Thursday.
The image of the AP has changed
somewhat from the cinema image of the
40's and 50's Dill explained. With
computer technology freeing the staff
members to go to the field, AP has
become an originator of news stories
rather than a collection and distribution
agency for its members.
"There are really people involved and
not just machines states Dill. The staff
at AP is young and progressive. There is
no position for the old "retreads" which
people tend to think make up the
staff. The oldest member is 62 years old,
and the youngest is in his twenties and
just out of college. The staff members are
on the road much more producing their
own stories rather than just editing and
transmitting.
"The staff is more specialized" stated
Dill. Departments of organization involve
the normal news departments that cover
politics and sports to be specialized areas
dealing with aerospace, youth, and
religion. There are also departments of
writers who specialize in the areas of
investigative reporting that produce
insight valuable to the public for
evaluation of world events.
Listening to Dill and his description of
computer banks storing and delivering
stories to cathode ray tube readers cause
memories of Buck Rogers to come to
reality. Capabilities of 24 hour photo-
graph transmission to any subscribing
news office are now matter of
fact. Realization that, in a few years, an
editor will be able to call for edited
versions complete with photos cropped
and shaded to specification are
unbelievable. Then, when one learns that
the items will be processed for production
instantaneously, the feelings are of
incredibility.
Associated Press is a cooperative
news service. The newspapers that
subscribe to it are the actual
owners. Through its services, it enables
member newspapers to carry comprehen-
sive coverage of events in a world that is
otherwise too large and complicated for a
single paper to cover. The service is
headquarted in New York under the
operational direction of a 33 year-old
executive editor.
Mr. Dill, a graduate of Southern
Illinois University, is bureau chief of just
one of the 37 territories that help to
coordinate the coverage of events
throughout the United States.
Dr. Elizabeth Kubler Ross, inter-
national consultant, lecturer and author
on the subject of Death and Dying will
present a two-day conference in
Greenville, Oct. 30 and 31. The Schools
of Allied Health and Social Professions,
Medicine and Nursing of ECU, and the
Pitt County Mental Health Associations
are co-sponsoring the conference.
On Oct. 30, 8 p.m at the First
Presbyterian Church, Dr. Ross will speak
on "Understanding Death and Dying On
Oct. 31, at 10 a.m Allied Health
?Building, her presentation will be
"Exploring Children's Conception of
Death Time will be included for
questions. Discussion of these questions
and audience participation is encouraged.
There is no admission fee.
On Tuesday at 4 p.m. and Wednesday
at 12:30 p.m. Dr. Ross will meet with
health professionals and students of
co-sponsoring Schools in closed sessions
which will be held at the Allied Health
Building.
A native of Switzerland, Dr. Ross
received her medical degree from the
University of Zurich in 1957. She came to
the United States in 1958 and did her
internship at Community Hospital, Glen
Cove, Long Island, N.Y. and her residency
at Manhattan State Hospital, Research
Job outlook is favorable for
future ECU graduates
The future employment outlook for
ECU graduates is favorable, according to
ECU Placement Service Director Furney
James.
While the national economic situation
in recent years has meant a high
unemployment rate among the college-
trained, all but a few ECU Placement
Service registrants have been able to find
jobs.
"We registered 1,128 seniors in the
class of 1973 and 412 former graduates
during th" past year said James. "Most
of these found employment; as of
September, only 100 were still
job-hunting
The ECU Placement Service acts as a
liaison between large employers and
graduating seniors who seek employment.
The Service refers the names and
credentials of students to companies who
request such information, and schedules
periodic interviews on campus between
company recruiters and job-seeking
students.
Since its establishment, the Place-
ment Service has arranged for thousands
of ECU graduates to have jobs waiting fo
them immediately upon graduation.
Most of the employers who seek the
help of the campus placement office a.
private businesses and industries
government agencier and school
systems for several states.
tmm
m
Some ECU alumni return to campus to
avail themselves of the Placement Service
when they wish to change jobs or
relocate.
ECU students who are preparing to
teach are finding that teachers are no
longer in the great demand of former
years, but that teaching jobs are still
available in certain fields.
"The South does not seem to be
oversupplied with teachers, not yet
anyway said James. "We are still
receiving a number of requests for
graduates who can teach mathematics,
science, special education, and the
elementary grades
"And with the advent of public
kindergarten in North Carolina, there will
continue to be increasing demands for
teachers in the area of early childhood
Other employment opportunities in-
clude sales, accounting and industrial
technology, he said.
"A high percentage of the companies
deal with are interested in employing
personnel in various aspects of
manufacturing.
"The production of consumer goods is
an operation which always needs
well-trained technology graduates
James noted that the older g aduate
has a considerable edge with the average
mmwmnm
employer.
"Generally speaking, the students who
are in most demand are older students, in
the middle twenties, who have had
previous employment experience or who
are veterans. Employers seem to prefer
the more mature graduate
Now that the national economy has
stabilized somewhat after the President's
phase program, more employers are
interested in interviewing potential
personnel among ECU'S seniors.
Last year 101 business firms and
government agencies visited the campus
for interviews; this year at least 124 are
already expected, an increase of about 25
percent.
Scheduled to recruit on campus during
October are representatives from W.T.
Grant Co Sears and Roebuck, Corning
Glass Works, the North Carolina
Extension Services, Ortho Pharmaceu-
ticals, Proctor and Gamble, and several
large accounting firms.
While there are still good employment
opportunities for many ECU students, few
graduates can pick and choose their
locations from several choices.
Often acceptance of employment
means locating wherever the job happens
to be, even if the location ;s not the
preferred one, James explainer.
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?
Division, New York.
Until recently Dr. Ross, psychiatrist,
was Medical Director of the Mental Health
and Family Services Health Center of
South Cook County in Chicago Heights,
Illinois. She was also teaching and a
consultant at the Lutheran Shcool of
Theology in Chicago. At the University of
Chicago she hs served as professor of
Psychiatry, Chief of Consultation and
Liaison Section-La Rabida Children's
Hospital and Research Center, Assistant
Director of Psychiatric Consultation and
Liaison Service, Associate and Acting
Chief, Psychiatric In-patient Service.
She is a member of the Advisory and
Editorial Board, Thantology Foundation,
Columbia University, the Academy of
Religion and Mental Health, Chicago
Chapter, American Psychistric Assoc-
iation; American Psychosomatic Society,
and the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
According to Mrs. Joseph N. LeConte,
Executive Director, Pitt County Mental
Health Association, Dr. Ross said "I am
now limiting my professional involvement
to being a psychiatrist, lecturer and
author Her book On Death and Dying,
was developed as a result of a university
inter-disciplinary seminar on death?the
first of its kind-planned and conducted by
Dr. Ross.
Faith healers
practice
'no medicine'
(CPS)Faith healers are attempting to
clarify their practice following the death
of an 11 year old diabetic who died when
his parents allegedly withheld his insulin
because they believed he had been cured
during a church healing service.
Dr. R. Wilkerson, pastor of the 8000
member Melodyland Christian Center in
Anaheim, California, said "The thing we
don't believe in is abuses, error and
fanaticism in the area of Christian
healing
"The first error which the boy's parents
made was attributing their son's condition
to demon possession and withholding
insulin because of it said Wilkerson.
"According to the Bible, Christians
cannot be demon possessed but can
come under demonic attack
Wilkerson pointed out it was wrong to
tell the child to discontinue taking his
medicine. "Discontinuance of the boy's
medicine is a decision that only a medical
doctor should make and evangelists who
conduct healing ministries have an
obligation to give their congregation this
instruction he said.
At Melodyland, people who believe
they have been healed by God are told to
see their doctor for a medical verification
and to have a complete physical
examination twice a year.
Another mistake was the idea that no
matter what happened, God would
resurrect their son if they persisted in
prayer, Dr. Wilkerson said, "There is no
scripture in the Bible which promises or
commands us to raise the dead
Ste
Continue
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psychiatrist,
Cental Health
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ago Heights,
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mm
wmmm
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
mmmmmmmm
5
Stephenson starts film courses
Continued from page three.
Soon after completing his education,
Stephenson started teaching at UCLA
where he remained until arriving at ECU in
the fall of 1970.
I had a good reason for coming to
ECU, Stephenson recalls. "Here was my
chance to develop a film studies program
on the university level which would teach
film as a humanities as well as a
profession. I learned at UCLA through
special classes and guest directors and
actors that there was a place and a need
for such a program in the university
Stephenson has traveled widely and
has met many people involved with the
film profession. He is a member of the
American and British Film Institutes and
the University Film Association. He has
just completed an article on the British
director Thorold Dickinson and the
American director George Cukor called
"The Two Versions of Gaslight
"Once I was on a tour in London
says Stephenson, relating an experience
which glowed with warmth of fond
memories, "which took us to the studios
where Alfred Hitchcock was in the
process of making a film at that time. The
tour had been terribly boring that day and
I had been eagerly awaiting the visit to the
studios in hope that I might see the real
'master of suspense Disappointment
wasn't an adequate work for my feelings
when I found out after arriving at the
studios that Hitchcock would be away for
the day. This news totally dampened my
enthusiasm for the trip through the
studios so after a hurried view of them I
headed back to the bus. Well, as I was
walking through the parking lot, I noticed
a special place marked off just outside the
studios. I walked over to it, and to my
pleasant surprise it was where 'he' was
designated to park: in bold yellow letters
in front of the space were the words
'Alfred Hitchcock I just stood there in
his parking place, being thankful, at least,
for this association with the director
whose work I respect and admire so. I
then walked happily on to the bus, my day
having been brightened by this occasion
The present film study program at ECU
initiated by Stephenson consists of four
separate courses offered at different times
in the year. English 211 is the
introductory course and is prerequisite for
all the other courses. It is titled 'The
Literature of Films The next course if
English 316 which is the first part of a two
part series covering the history of
films. It deals with the first films made
through films made in 1940. The
follow-up sequence is English 317 which
takes up films made in 1940 and traces
their history up to the present.
The last course is English 322G which
deals with special aspects of film. It will
change every year, presenting each time a
new topic of study relating to films. Its
present topic is 'Alfred Hitchcock' whose
works and ideas as a director will be
discussed throughout the quarter. Step-
henson hopes to deal with such topics as
gangster movies, screen comedies, and
documentaries in future 322G series.
All of these courses involve in-depth
contact with films, spending at least two
hours weekly viewing different films and
at least two hours weekly discussing and
analyzing them.
Stephenson feels that the student of
the cinema should look closely at films
for their art value and for their insight into
modern culture.
"The film is unique as an art says
Stephenson, reflecting on what is so
much a part of his professional life. "It
was born almost entirely in the 20th
Century, in an age of technology. It
depends entirely upon the camera and
pieces of celluloid-both manufactured by
man. We should ask ourselves what the
implications of this exclusively 20th
Century art are. What does the history of
film tell us about ourselves? What effects
do films have on us as part of the popular
culture? -A study of films and their
history might provide the answer.
American idea of
success changes
The American idea of success is
changing, according to a 52-page report
recently published by American Manage-
ment Associations, the world's largest
not-for-profit management education
institution. The report, by 29 year old
business writer, Dale Tarnowieski,
concludes that "the success idea that is
emerging as values shift may exalt above
material well-being the richness of human
experience and the rewards inherent in a
social reality in which genuine
opportunities for self-expression are
nearly limitless
According to the report, The Changing
Success Ethic, people have worked
for organizations for too long; it's time
for organizations to go to work for the
people
The report is based on a survey of
2,821 American businessmen-the largest
number of responses to a major survey in
the 50 year history of American Manage-
ment Associations. The report notes that
traditional notions of success are waning
and "For more and more people, success
if a way of life and not just a goal
Highlights of the report which may
prove of particular interest to educators
include:
-Nearly three out of every four
businessmen surveyed agreed that
youth's disenchantment is greatly
overblown by educators and others.
-Respondents with no more than a
high school education consistently
reported the highest levels of personal
and professional satisfaction.
-The higher the respondents level of
education, the more likely he was to point
to educational background and training as
an important factor in the determination
of personal goals and aspirations .and
to attribute the disenchantment of youth
to "an informed intellectual rejection of
traditional values by a better educated
generation of young people
-Respondents holding advanced de-
grees were more inclined than those
holding undergraduate degrees to believe
that they were "frequently or occasional-
ly" expected to compromise personal
principles to conform to organizational
standards or to those standards
ummmmnm
m
m
See "American
fourteen.

success" on page
OW
Mi
m
mm
mpi mm





6
m
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
Student parents
evicted from
NY dorm
(CPS)Citing "safety reasons the State
University of New York (SUNY) at Stony
Brook has ordered the eviction of married
students with children from campus
housing.
The new rule affected six families
living in married student dormitories as
part of an experimental system which
offered campus living at rentals $30 to $50
lower per month than those in the
surrounding area. The ban on children for
safety reasons discriminates against
families by forcing them to live in higher
rent districts, according to student
charges.
Stony Brook dormitories were not built
with the "special safety needs of children"
in mind, said the University's acting
vice-president of student affairs. In early
August the University notified the student
parents of the regulation and told them to
move.
A series of unsuccessful appeals and
negotiations with the University officials
followed the original eviction notices.
Last week the couples were forced to
comply with safety policy. Some
students sent their children to live with
relatives and others moved off campus
into more expensive apartment housing.
Stony Brook began a crackdown on
safety regulations enforcement when a.
man was killed after wandering into a
campus construction site several months
ago. A ban on children in one married
student complex had been included in
1972 housing contracts but it had not
been enforced until last August.
OP
m
Self-determination? bas sponsors
The North Carolina Bicentennial and
the North Carolina Internship Office have
announced an innovative program
involving post-secondary senior college
students in self-initiated service-learning
projects to re-examine America's origins
and values. Through their work the
students will be initiating practices that
foster self-determination among citizens
and communities in North Carolina.
Any student enrolled in a senior public
or private institution of higher education
in North Carolina may apply. A total of 14
students will be chosen and they may
work as individuals or as a team. Novem-
ber 23, 1973 is the deadline for all
applications and the earliest possible
project initiation date is December 17,
1973. All projects must be completed by
May 31, 1974.
Funds for the program are being
supplied by the North Carolina
Bicentennial, the Southern Regional
Education Board, the Department of
Administration and the North Carolina
Internship Office. An individual student
will receive no more than $1,000 for a total
project grant and no team of students will
receive more than $2,500.
A Selection Panel will review the
applications and determine the projects to
be funded. The members are: Mrs.
Elizabeth Koontz, Coordinator, Depart-
ment of Human Resources; Mrs. Janis
Somerville, Academic Dean, Salem
College; Dr. Bonnie Gillespie, Professor,
Shaw University, Mr. Hector MacLean,
Chairman, North Carolina Bicentennial,
and Mrs. Dabney M. Enderle, Director,
North Carolina Bicentennial.
Applications are available from the
North Carolina Internship Office, 116
West Jones Street, Room 408K, Raleigh,
N.C. 27603.
For additional information contact Liz
Fentress, 109 East Jones Street, Raleigh,
N.C. 27611, (919) 829-24530, Media
Director, North Carolina Bicentennial.
Kodak announces new
photographers contest
A new competition for amateur
photographers with a "People Helping
People" theme has been announced by
Eastman Kodak Company. The 1974
Kodak Community Service Photography
Awards will provide cash prizes for the
best photographs that show how people
devote their skills, time and money to
helping others improve the quality of their
lives.
The contest is divided into two
categories-black and white and color-
with equal prizes being offered in
each. There will be eight Awards of
Excellence at $100 each; eight Awards of
Distinction at $75 each; eight Awards of
Metir at $50 each; and Special Awards of
$25 each, to be determined by the judges.
Entries for the 1974 awards must not
be postmarked later than February
1. Original slides or prints of any size are
acceptable and all prints must be
accompanied by the original negative.
This Awards program has been
initiated to call attention to the value of
photography in dramatically recording the
human aspect of a wide variety of
community service projects in which
people help people-such as programs for
the deaf, mute, blind, retarded,
handicapped; rehabilitation; day care;
cultural enrichment; disaster service;
youth development; family service, job
training; health service. These are the
types of activities that will offer subject
matter for the competition.
An informal brochure, including rules
and official entry form, can be obtained
by requesting Kodak Community Service
Photography Awards (A3-77) from
Eastman Kodak Company, Department
841, 343 State Street, Rochester, New
York, 14650. For prompt reply, a
self-addressed business size envelope (no
postage necessary) should be included.
yearbook burn
(CPS)-Members of the Black Action
Society (BAS) at Slippery Rock State
College sponsored a yearbook burning
September 26 to protest the "lack of
recognition in the yearbook given to black
events and organizations
The BAS was angry with the 1973
Saxigena's non-inclusion of a BAS group
photo and photos of a Black Arts
Weekend.
The yearbook distributed two days
before the BAS rally. A preliminary
meeting of BAS with yearbook and
college officials failed to prevent the
indicent.
According to Lynn Moosman, Editor of
the 1973 Saxigena, a BAS organization
photo was scheduled with a professional
photographer, but the group failed to
show up. The appointment was resche-
duled with a student photographer, who
subsequently lost the negatives. The
negatives were discovered to be missing
so close to the printing deadline that no
new photos could be taken.
As for the Black Arts Week pictures,
Moosman maintains they never reached
the Saxigena office.
Kevin Taylor, BAS chairman, called it
"a deliberate oversight" on the part of the
Saxigena staff.
When contacted by CPS, Don
DiSpirito, advisor to the yearbook and
public relations director for Slippery
Rock, said it was, "just a mechanical
problem.
The day after the Saxigena burning,
BAS presented a list of demands
including an increase in black related
courses, and hiring of blacks to certain
college offices to the Slippery Rock
administration. The organization gave the
college until November 12, 1973 to reply
to its demands
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n
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
7
FOR SALE WEBCOR solid state stereo cassette deck for $125.00. Call
758 5150 after 3 p.m.
HUNT SEAT RIDER: Accomplished hunt seat rider needed to exercise
hunter. Must have transportation to Grimesland. Cost $20 per
month. 752 0270 after 6 p.m.
LOST SOLID GREY kitten with small white spot on chest in vicinity of
E. 3rd St. Reward offered for any information. Please call 756 1098 or
come by 805 E. 3rd St.
HELP WANTED: 2 attractive Black female vocalists to perform with 8
piece white top 40 dance band. Must be able to perform any weekend
and occasional weeknights. For appointment Four Par Productions
752 2024.
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758 HELP. Corner Evans and
14th Streets. Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug problems,
birth control information, overnight housing. All free services and
confidential.
HELP WANTED $100.00 weekly possible addressing mail for firms Full and
part time at home Send stamped self addressed envelope to COMMACO, BOX
157, ROUND ROCK, TEXAS, 78664.
NICE PERSON TO live in trailer. $40.00 per month. Should have car. Contact
William Cleveland at Lot 30, Pineview Trailer Court on Rt. 3.
LOST: WOMEN'S DIAMOND RING. Either in or in vicinity of ECU Studio
Theatre. Lost Wednesday Oct. 17. Call 752 5578. Reward.
PRIVATE ROOM & BATH in backyard with refrigerator for male student Call
758 2585.
FREE FOOTSBALL for ladies and couples Thurs. nite 5:00 9:00 P.M. Basement
of Aycock.
FOR SALE EXCELLENT condition, 26" girl's Schwin bike, less than 1
yr. old, complete with lights. Call Carolyn, 752-5699 or 756-3905.
WANTED PART TIME male sr. livina in dorm. Phone 758-2469.
JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide
travel. Perfect summer job or career. Send $3.00 for information,
seafax, Dept. Q 9, Box 2049, Post Angeles, Washington 98362.
WANTED. STUDENT WIFE or student for baby sitting and light
housework. Daily 12 5. Call 756 3369 after 5 p.m.
ANY MALE OR FEMALE who has had modeling experience and would
like to pose for fashion pictures for the Fountainhead, please contact the
Fountainhead office or Carol Wood, 216 Fletcher Dorm. Sorry, but the
only pay is the gratification of seeing your picture in the paper.
HAVING PROBLEMS WITH your relationship? Confidential free
therapy. Call 756 4859 for information.
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free inro & referral, up to 24
weeks. General anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also available.
Free pregnancy tests. Call PCS non-profit 202 298 7995.
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle, 752 2619.
LOST: BROWN 3 FOLD Buxton wallet at Crows Nest. If found call
752 3471. Reward if offered.
FOR SALE 1972 HONDA 450. Excellent condition. Call 752-4916.
NOW ACCEPTING PART TIME help. Noon hours, evenings, weekends,
apply in person at McDonalds.
Demonstrators protest
latin recruitment
(CPS)Some 38 demonstrators protesting the University of Illinois'
policies concerning recruitment of Latin students were arrested at the
Chicago Circle Campus early in October and charged with
trespassing on state property and interverence with public institution
of higher education. Bond was set at $1,000 for each.
Those arrested were among one hundred demonstrators who
occupied ihe ground floor and the elevators of the campus' tallest
building. They were arrested after refusing a police order to vacate
the building.
A spokesman for the demonstrators said they were trying to
establish a separate recruiting program for the Puerto Rican and
other Latin students. He said the school's Educational Assistance
Program, which recruits from all minority groups, was not sufficient.
:CftWS:W:ff?:W:w:ws
Pfm6faf
NfW LOCATION COtNM Of
V AND COTANCHE STREETS
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5
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POTTERY: SHOW & SALE
Mushroom Gallery
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as
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TUESDAY
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DELIVERY SERVICE
5P.M11P.M 7Days
?verseas iraiiin
For the session starting Fall, 1974,
the European Medical Students
Placement Service, Inc. will assist
qualified American students in
gaining admission to recognized
overseas medical schools.
And that's just the beginning.
Since the language barrier constitutes
the preponderate difficulty in succeed-
ing at a foreign school, the Euromed
program also includes an intensive
12 week medical and conversational
language course, mandatory for all
students. Five hours daily, the course
is given in the country where the stu-
dent will attend medical school.
In addition, the European Medical
Students Placement Service provides
students with a 12 week intensive
cultural orientation course, with Amer-
ican students now studying medicine
in that particular country serving as
counselors.
Senior or graduate students currently
enrolled in an American university are
eligible to participate in the Euromed
program.
For application and further
information, phone toll free,
(800) 6451234
or write,
EUROPEAN MEDICAL
Students Placement Service, Inc.
170 Old Country Read
Mmeola. N.V. 11501





8
m
m
mm
mmm
EdilatalsCcxTimenlarv
A little of everything:
Gold water views Agnew
the SGA and languages
We had originally planned an
action-packed editorial full of violent,
caustic protest regarding SGA President
Bill Bodenhamer's proposed publications
budget cut. We are against the cut, which
entrance requirement. Exposure to the
"foreign" is one of the simple necessities
of a decent education.
POOR ARGUMENT
The fact that a high school student
By SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER
Today's Washington, with its
actual and suspected political intrigues,
might easily put history's Machiavelli to
shame.
The process of achieving and
manipulating political power in the
strongest capital in the world is rough at
the best of times. But in the atmosphere
would shear off slightly under one-quarter may not be particularly fond of German, create(j by the Watergate scandal and
e-i.i.k?.i. ?; kjnn? UauUa ? Cranh rr Qrvani;h is a DOOr u?,?? ? nrimimi mionnHurt anainst
of Fountainhead's entire budget, leaving
us with three alternatives: reduced
quality in a twice-weekly paper,
production of a weekly paper rather than
twice-weekly. . .or simply running this
newspaper at its present level and
frequency until we went broke, perhaps
sometime in March. However, rather than
bursting on the scene with a wild
editorial, Fountainhead demands time to
think, to formulate decisions and to
consult both Mr. Bodenhamer and the
remnants of our Publications Board.
Readers are perhaps not accustomed to
hearing this sort of thing from a
newspaper which once had a reputation
for violent accusation and immediate
retraction.
But tnis is a new Fountainhead, as
many of our readers have informed us via
much-appreciated commendations. Let
us think on the matter .and if our
results fit, that caustic editorial may be
on the way.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
As for non-SGA business: we
were disturbed to receive notice of the
proposal to eliminate foreign language
requirements for incoming freshmen. The
Forum letter supporting the pro-language
stand states this case quite eloquently.
We can recall a former editor's statement
that foreign languages were inessential,
but must disagree.
The belief is widespread that an
or French, or Spanish, is a poor cnarges of criminal misconduct against
argument; few people are fond of former vice President Agnew, it is
geography, history, or math, but their downright unbelievable,
value to a human being in the For example, the city boasts a large
contemporary world can hardly be gr0up of citizens who believe absolutely
disputed. Others may state that students tnat tne entjre Watergate affair was
should be given a choice as to what is p)anned and executed by Democrats
beneficial to them - whether a foreign seekjng to discredit the Nixon
language will have any bearing on their Administration. The whole subject of
careers. To this, we answer that a possible "double agentry" has been
three-year old child is also capable of exp0red in the best James Bond
making a choice- but that whether such a fasnion. And what appears to be a state
choice is a good one without guidance is 0f 0pen COmbat between some of the
disputable. principals and agencies involved in the
SURVEY SCENE Watergate and Agnew charges has
Perhaps the promoters of a confUSed and further complicated an
permissive, less taxing educational format aready complicated situation,
and those who wish to herd students in Qn every hand there are political
droves to ECU should step back and paradoxes which have had no precedents
survey the scene more objectively. In
time, the lack of a language requirement
for those entering could lead to other
convenient requirement omissions, lead-
ing East Carolina back to the days of its
ECTC image. And, most pertinently, the
lack of a language requirement and the
inevitable list of succeeding requirement
lapses will enforce the belief of many that
college is simply a glorified high school,
that any true education can be found only
by way of travel or non-academic
work .and that attending ECU is really
not worth the cost.
GREATLY SADDENED
in our 200 years as a nation.
And when you have a condition where
the Vice President has resigned and
accepted a sentence for income tax
evasion, and demands are heard for the
impeachment of the President himself,
you have a situation that would delight, if
not completely overcome, the heart of
that devious old rascal and expert in the
art of unscrupulous political conduct,
Niccolo Machiavelli.
But even in this wildly unusual
situation, the most ridiculous argument I
can find is the one that holds that the
charges against former Vice President
We will be greatly saddened should Agnew were actually "leaked" to the news
MIC UCMOI IJ ??IVJO(-I&OVJ uiai ??? ??v rim k? yiv??nj wwrwvi .w? ? Myi ICW WCIC OMUBIIJ IOOHVU
undergraduate college degree today is the the foreign language entrance requirement media by his own attorneys.
'? ml?iil nt t kink K-vl .nWnitlnn Ksi HrnnewH It Mill renrocont nnt nfllw a TU? IJi r, rrrrf?rrrt a
equivalent of a high school graduation
certificate years ago. Rather than
enhancing the image of a university
education, ECU is proposing a massive
downgrade in eliminating the language
success in removing things academic
from the world of academia.
staff
NO, MY FRIENDS,
THE TRUTH WILL NOT BE
KNOWN BY EXAMINING THE
FACTS. THE TRUTH WILL 11
. KNOWN ONLY BY INNUENDO
AND DENIAL.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan
NEWS EDITORSSkip Saunders
Betsy Fernandez
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow
COMPOSER TYPISTAlice Leary
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-
paper of East Carolina University and
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of
the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,
Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial offices: 758-6366, 758-6367
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-
students.
be dropped. It will represent, not only a The idea is preposterous on its face,
lowering of standards, but a gap in the but it did at one stage receive currency in
dignity of an education and one more Washington, largely because it seemed to
be the only answer Justice Department
officials were able to muster in reply to
charges that the government itself leaked
the case.
When you try to give this argument
political credence, it boggles the
mind. To begin with, you would have to
accept as fact the idea that the Vice
President, or men representing him,
( speeded up the process of destroying Mr.
Agnew's political future by drawing on
immediate and serious questions of his
-Ohonesty and integrity. And, eventually,
J you would have to accept the fact that the
.Vice President's own nten were
responsible for publicly degrading the
second highest office in the land, and
subjecting Mr. Agnew, his family and
friends to an almost unbearable type of
personal agony and distress.
- "? The idea that the Vice President's
attorneys did the "leaking" was offered by
at least one high official in the Justice
y Department as a clever, roundabout move
j i by Agnew people to lay groundwork for an
Lt N appeal, should the Vice President be
ji indicted and convicted. As one Adminis-
y tration official posed the idea, "Who
Vjstands to gain the most from
unauthorized leaks of criminal charges
being considered against an official?"
Then he went on to suggest that the
prosecution stands to lose in the event
the legal process is poisoned by
prejudical publicity.
4
i
IT'S THE AMERICAN WAY

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One of the stranger facets of this
Machiavellian suggestion is that it
persisted even after denials by Mr.
Agnew's lawyers were followed by direct
action to prove their point.
Thus, in the midst of all the
conjecturing about a possible "in family"
leak by the Agnew camp, the people
handling the legal work for the Vice
President sought and obtained from a
federal court the right to subpoena and
question members of the news media who
had published charges against the Vice
President on the basis of information
from unnamed sources. It strikes me that
if the Agnew attorneys were responsible,
either directly or indirectly, for any of the
news leaks about their client, they would
have been rather foolish to haul the
newsmen they tipped off into court and
demand that they reveal the sources of
their information.
The wheels of justice grind
slowly. And while they grind in the
Watergate and the Agnew cases, the
perpetrators of bizarre and weird theories
of political maneuvering are having a field
day.
In some respects, it is unfortunate that
the case of Spiro Agnew was not given a
full congressional airing so that all angles
of this unprecedented situation could be
seen by the public.
With every passing day, I feel more
strongly that the American people should
be given a good hard look into the legal
machinery that was used against the
second highest elected official in the
country.
It is time the public was told in detail
about the workings of special legal
techniques, such as the kind the Justice
Department used to bring a grand jury
case built on promises of immunity for
the former Vice President's accusers. The
people have a right to know how
dangerous and lethal the immunity laws
could be in the hands of arrogant,
ambitious and unprincipled government
prosecutors.
Although I am not accusing anyone in
the government of taking unfair advantage
of the special legal devices, I am saying
that the whole question of granting
immunity to one person for the purpose of
nailing someone else should be better
understood.
In some respects, this whole
picture-when applied to prominent
citizens-is downright frightening. Indeed
a scenario could be written to show
precisely how government prosecutors
can make use of the immunity laws to
bring about the indictment of what former
Vice President Agnew has described as a
"big trophy
On Thursday, investigative columnist
Jack Anderson writes of Nixon's therapist
and continued fighting in the Vietnam
countryside.
m
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?eForum
Braillard again
To Fountainhead:
With the trumpeting of dingy bugles
and the beating of drums that have a
tendency to fall to the ground at the
wrong moment, I slither through the grass
to rejoin the glorius reunion of insanity
that has once again entered its varied
comments into the forum of the campus.
I wish to thank the Fountainhead for
setting my mind straight with what is
really going on on campus. SGA has
been received well and gives me
clarification on questions which were
pretty much unanswered except for the
rumors, half-truths, and total ignorance
which Mr. Bodenhamer and I despise
so much.
In view of this, I offer congratulations
to the cabinet for their excellent start,
although more questionnaires like those
of Bob Lucas would be appreciated and
could bring more involvement of the
student body into university affairs.
I offer a suggestion to Brooks Bear,
since she has Internal Affairs, to publish a
questionnaire concerning the student
body's feeling toward publications to find
the students idea of what should be
expected of each particular one.
Also, since we are doomed to have a
second bus, the secretary of transport-
ation, Walter Mann, should do the same
and use his questionnaire to determine
feelings towards bus outes. I mean
really, Walter, a bureaucracy is fine as
long as it is first efficient and second it
attempts to learn the constituents' desires
at the least possible expense to them.
So as not to lose the old touch,
Debbie Wright in her letter to the
Fountainhead of Oct. 12 should consider
carefully her statement of what has been
earned.
A person elected in a minority vote has
not particularly earned anything at
all. Furthermore, if that election result
produces a petition for a recall carrying
more valid signatures than the so-called
mandate which the "victor" received, the
right is less earned.
And then if the petition is ruled illegal
or void because of one word not being
appropriately descriptive of the position
then held, there is NO right
whatsoever. Instead, the results of that
fiasco becomes the albatross which
hangs about that person's neck.
If one can be jealous of that situation,
he is surely in worse shape than the fool
who rushes to his idols support without
the paddle to return down the creek with.
However, the identical situation exists
for the apathetic critic who takes no
action until the event which he feared
most has really occurred at the authorship
of persons who rely on apathy to block
the opposition through its non-partici-
pation. Confusing as that may seem, it
can be rephrased in the words of Nixon
when he stated he felt thankful to the
silent majority for their silent support.
If all people who try to emulate Nixon
would remember that the "silent majority"
was first referenced in the Greek Classics
as a euphemism for the dead, perhaps we
could attempt to produce a viable,
representative government wherever we
are.
Thank you.
Michael le Brail lard
Baseball et al
To Fountainhead:
Recently perhaps due to some change
in the moon's phase, a large percentage
of the baseball team, kenneled in Belk
Hall, has undergone a radical change.
Not content with wearing jocks over their
heads, these poor souls have turned to
howling at the moon. Now I am all for
them relieving their premeval urges on
trees and automobile tires, but to disturb
the blissful sleep of scholars with
mournful howls is simply asking too
much.
Perhaps, the baseball coach could
change the team's feeding and watering
time so that all physiological functions
can be handled during the day, and then
too, a simple obedience lesson might
produce more control over the team's urge
to howl. Of course, the whole problem
could probably be solved by simply
procuring one bitch in heat to serve as
team mascot. The Athletic Department,
so quick to send out memos on the
academic standing of its scholars, surely
can find a dollar or two in its silk purse. I,
a poor and obscure jester, will even
contribute two cents to this worthy cause
(if King Billie doesn't withhold my salary).
Yours humbly,
M.D. Hickson, Jr.
Language issue
To Fountainhead:
In an attempt to increase the student
enrollment at East Carolina University, the
Admissions Committee has proposed the
dropping of the foreign language as an
entrance requirement.
What this means, in effect, is a
lowering of the very standards that our
university officials are so adamant in
achieving.
But more importantly, this proposal if
passed by the Faculty Senate, would
mean a reduction in the whole purpose
and challenge of the educational
system. It is this increasingly softened
attitude toward education that I am most
concerned with.
It seems that East Carolina is
concerned more with the quantity rather
than the quality of the student body. With
the dropping of this important and
necessary requirement, any high school
graduate will be able to enter East
Carolina, stay here for 4 years, graduate,
but he will have accomplished nothing.
This applies not only to the foreign
language but to the other humanities as
well. If the foreign language or any other
requirement is dropped, what incentive
does the college-bound student have to
learn all he can about life and
himself? Take away these requirements
and you take away the challenge of
education.
We are concerned so much about
student population at East Carolina. Let's
stop worrying about the number of
students and start worrying about the
quality of students. Does East Carolina
want to produce computerized men and
women with just a mediocre education or
would it rather educate its students to
become the finest human beings
possible?
Let us now consider the advantages in
learning a foreign language. First of all,
the world is obviously becoming smaller
everyday. We in America need to know all
we can about the other nations of the
world in order to appreciate the world
community. What better way to begin
this understanding than through a foreign
language. The barriers of language exist
not only between America and other
countries, but even among our own
people. How do you communicate with
the 16 million Spanish-speaking persons
living in the United States, if you have no
knowledge of their Spanish language?
Secondly, the knowledge of a foreign
language greatly enhances the under-
standing of the English language. The
study of a foreign language, I think,
increases one's ability to think more
clearly and precisely. Through the study ?
of a foreign language, we can learn so "
much not only about the other cultures
and societies of the world, but we come
to a greater understanding of our own
culture as well.
This brings us back to the purpose of
education. If our goal is to educate
students to be well-rounded thinking
individuals, then we at East Carolina must
strive for the highest standards
possible. We would like to see an
increased enrollment, but is it not true
that the best universities in the country
have the longest waiting lists? If, in the
future, East Carolina is to be a truly fine
institution, then now is the time to
establish ourselves. East Carolina can
begin now to meet the challenge of higher
education.
The first step would be a retention of
the foreign language as a requirement for
admission. If the proposal to drop the
requirement is passed, then the university
may as well present overy incoming
freshman with his degree as soon as he
arrives, because the next four years he
spends here will mean absolutely nothing.
I urge all members of the Faculty
Senate to consider the damage this
proposal will do not only to future
students but to the entire system of
education.
Sincerely,
Cheryl Perry
Football team
To Fountainhead:
The East Carolina University football
team has suffered the agony of defeat
and, fortunately, more often, the ectasy of
triumph and victory this current football
season. The entire team - including the
coaches have put forth a most extensive,
and admirable effort on behalf of the
University and I certainly hope their
chances at a bowl game aren't bungled
because of "lack of support" as they were
last year. It appears to me that the team
has more support behind them than they
ever had before as evidenced at the last
home game against VMI. We're all hoping
for big things from this great team effort
and, I for one, am grateful to the ECU
Football Team!
A supporter for the
ECU FootbaP Team
More evidence
Editor's Note: Following is the conclu-
sion of an article by Tristram Coffin,
beginning in the Oct. 18 FOUNTAINHEAD
which purported to show evidence that
President John F. Kennedy had been the
victim of an assassination conspiracy.
NEW EVIDENCE-) New Orleans
district attorney Jim Garrison is said to
have a copy of an FBI report, quoting
Oswald, and warning of the assassination
of President Kennedy. This did not
appear in the Warren Commission
reports. Professor Peter Dale Scott of the
University of California claims to have
evidence of a massive official "cover-up"
of evidence of the slaying.
(3) A Secret Service man present at
the scene of the assassination says
privately he is sure shots were fired from
the knoll. He was not questioned by the
Warren Commission, and has not
volunteered his information publicly for
fear of retaliation.
(4) The French paper, L'Aurore
(October 2, 1972) claims a French soldier
of fortune was hired to kill President
Kennedy May 31, 1961 during his visit to
Paris. The contact with the hired gunman
was made through a CIA man in Algiers.
(5) The Washington Star-News reports
(November 6, 1972) that four detectives
hired by Aristotle Onassis conducted a
private investigation and presumably
found "the names of the 'real' murderers
?of President Kennedy The report is
locked away in Onassis' private safe at
Glyfada
mm0mmmmmmmm
(6) Donald Freed, co-author of
Executive Action, a novel of the
assassination, told the Los Angeles Star,
"The professionals in the Watergate .are
tied to the CIA, Cuban politics, the Miami
area, and assassination He states there
was a plot "to assassinate Castro before
or coincident with the invasion and this
was called off bv President Kennedv.
Freed claims Hunt and Frank Sturgis,
another Watergate defendant, were
involved in this action, and two other
assassination plots, in Haiti and
Guatemala. Also he states in a new book,
Give Us This Day, that Hunt, Sturgis and
Liddy "were in Mexico City in 1971 as part
of an executive action to assassinate the
president of Panama" but this was "called
off and aborted
Freed suggests the answer to a
mystery of the Watergate hearings. Why
.did the White House order CIA officials to
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters
should be signed by the authorfs; names
will be withheld on request. Unsigned
editorials on this page and on the editorial
page reflect the opinions of the editor,
and are not necessarily those of the staff.
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to
refuse printing in instances of libel or
obscenity, and to comment as an
independent body on any and all
issues. A newspaper is objective only in
proportion to its autonomy.
stop the FBI from investigating the
laundering of funds through Mexico?
"The probabilities were that they (FBI)
might come up with someone from the
Kennedy assassination and the whole
thing would be blown open
Some investigators believe the
assassination was organized in Mexico
the pay-off money passed through there
and the "team" came to Dallas two days
Defore the murder from Mexico.
mm





io
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
m
New goals are cited
for future universities
(CPS)lndividual colleges and universities
in the United States have larger
responsibilities than solving their
particular "crises in higher education"
according to the concluding report of the
Carnegie Commission on Higher Edu-
cation released October 9.
Summarizing nearly six years of study
and deliberations the Commission
sketched broad guidelines for a socially
just and financially stable post-secondary
educational network of the future. The
Commission included hundreds of
specific recommendations aimed at
implementing these goals.
"Survival, with memories of past
glories, is not enough of a program for
higher education as it approaches the year
2000 reported the Commission. "Nor is
it enough for society as it relies more and
more in creating its future on the high
skills and careful thought that higher
education can so effectively help supply
The Commission's agenda for higher
education, organized under six "Priorities
for Action" include:
-Advancement of social justice
-Enhancement of constructive change
- Achievement of more effective
governance
-Assurance of resources and their
more effective use
-Clarification of purposes
-Preservation and enhancement of
quality and diversity
The distinguished panel of American
educators and laymen who make up the
Commission began their work in July,
1967 with a charge from the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching to make a systematic appraisal
of higher education and to suggest
guidelines for its development in the
1970's and beyond to the year 2000. Dr.
Clark Kerr, former president of the
University of California, served as its
chairman.
The Commission stated "all remnants
of inequality of educational opportunity
due to race, sex, family level of income,
and geographic location should be
overcome substantially by 1980 and as
completely as possible by the year 2000
In its analysis the Commission
recognizes "there is very little time to
make the necessary adjustments and
that realizing its egalaterian goal "may be
the work for a generation requiring
efforts until the year 2000 and perhaps be-
yond According to the Commission
"Ten years too late could easily become
thirty years too late
The report supported "affirmative
action" programs of consciously hiring
women and members of minority groups
to offset past employment practices.
Such programs, according to the
Commission, will require constant
reevaluation and "force many to confront
rather uncomfortable realitied
In dealing with such problems, the
Commission observed, "The most
important single issueis whether it
(change) will come primarily from internal
leadership or whether it will be imposed
more totally from external sources
The report identified four potential
new shocks' to higher education-collect-
ive bargaining, the polidealization of
institutions, the possible resurgence of
student activism, and the "glacial" spread
of public control.
The Commission favored "internal
initiative as the basic pattern of change
and has argued for the selection of
'activist' presidents" with increased input
from students trustees, and faculty
members.
In calling for new goals for higher
education the Commission said, "There
has been no basic discussion of
purposes, engaged in widely within higher
education for a century. There should be
some new aspirations, some new
versions
Among the specific recommendations
of the Commission were:
-Equal reqard for teaching as for
research, except for research at the
"highest levels of competence"
-The creation of "open-access"
educational centers available at low or no
net tuition and within commuting
distance to all high school graduates who
want to attend.
-The improvement of old and the
creation of new alternatives to college
attendance including on-the-job training,
proprietary schools, apprenticeship pro-
grams, education in the military,
education by off-campus extension work,
and national service opportunities.
-The absorbtion of about one-half of
the public share of total monetary outlays
for higher education by the federal
government.
WORK OVERSEAS
Male
All trades, skills and professions
Students and Graduates
Female
?v
Higher pay, no taxes, travel to Australia, Europe, So. and 55
Central America, Africa and So. East Asia 3
Write for our brochure: ?$
Worldwide Student Opportunities $
'$ P.O. Box 1255 :?:?
? 1075 Camino F lores S
: Thousand Oaks, Calif, 91360 :j:j
'Humanity' is topic
(CPS)-Man must accept the principle that "all of humanity is
integrated R. Buckminister Fuller said at a symposium to mark the
opening of the papers on urban affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson
Library at the University of Texas.
Man can no longer think the whole world is made up of "just
parts Fuller declared. Thinking in terms of "parts he said, has led
to such problems as pollution. The behavior of whole systems
operate on interrelated principles that are "inherently eternal
Throughout the ages, Fuller said, man has thought there has not
been enough to go around, and that once resources had been mined,
man thought they were lost. But nothing is ever lost, he said.
"Iron doesn't get lost; copper doesn't get lose he emphasized,
noting that when you melt down a Cadillac "you can get two
Chevrolet s
"Even though he does not yet fully understand how to get on in
the worldFuller said, "the universe is trying very hard to rake
humanity a success he concluded.
Tele-lecture' offers
modern education
(CPS)-West Virginia has developed a lecture system called
"tele-lecture" that involves telephone circuits linking WVU's
Morgantown campuses with 72 West Virginia hospitals and health
facilities, and six WVU extension centers.
Health service workers, pharmacists, educators, administrators,
social workers, and other professionals throughout the state listen to
lectures from WVU and then respond with questions or
comments-all via telephone.
The American habit of talking on the telephone has been adapted
to educational purposes by WVU's School of Nursing through a grant
of $86,531 from the U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare.
r

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Hardee's has got
your number.
If your student ID. number
is listed here, you're the winner
of a free meal at Hardee's:
721111 738053 734765 725076
735999 718421 738043 725431
721617 735904 705993 716215
736472 718562 718888 722658
729942 714226 732759 734590
For the payoff just present
your ID. at Hardee's. You'll get
a Deluxe Huskee or Huskee
Junior, a regular order of
French Fries, and a regular
size Soft Drink, all absolutely
free.
Offer good only at
300 E. Greenville Boulevard,
and 10th Street, in Greenville, N.C.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT.
rr. 1973
Instructor sues Colo, college for
infringing on fmoral character9
WASHINGTON, D.CA Colorado college psychology
instructor, refused a second-year contract allegedly in retaliation for
presenting a panel on lesbianism to one of her classes of
Psychology of Women is filing suit in Denver today (Oct 12) for
reinstatement, back salary and $100,000 in damages.
Susan Brown is suing Ames College in Greeley, contending that
she was denied her "procedural due process rights in that she was
never provided written reasons for her nonretention nor a fair hearinq
concerning nonrenewal of her contract The National Education
Association and its affiliate, the Colorado Education Association are
supporting federal litigation on Ms. Brown's behalf.
The NEA and CEA are also supporting two other Colorado
teachers filing nonrenewal suits today in the U.S. District Court in
Denver. They are Florence Coen, a teacher at Lincoln Elementary
School, Boulder Valley School District; and Donald Weathers a
teacher and basketball coach at West Grade School, West Yuma
HiS0 District- Both are seekinQ reinstatement, back salary
and $200,000 in damages.
In the Brown suit against members of the College Council of
Ames College and Ed Beaty, college president, Ms. Brown's brief
states that the panel discussion of three members of the Denver
Lesbian Center was relevant to the subject matter of her course and
she had advance approval by her administrative supervisors to have
the discussion. The panelists answered students' questions about
sex roles, employment difficulties, married homosexuals, and
childbearing.
Additionally, the Brown brief contends that the nonrenewal of her
contract "was accompanied with accusations concerning (her) moral
character so that the nonrenewal imposes upon her a stigma
foreclosing other employment opportunities in her chosen profession
as a teacher, depriving plaintiff thereby of her liberty without due
process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment In
addition to legal assistance, Ms. Brown is receiving a loan from the
NEA DuShane Emergency Fund.
In the other contract nonrenewal suits the NEA and CEA are
supporting two elementary school teachers who are alleging that they
have been treated unfairly in evaluation procedures and also have
been deprived of their property and liberty rights without due process
of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
In the Florence Coen suit against the Boulder Valley School
District directors, the district school superintendent, the principal of
Lincoln Elementary School, and the director of the Follow Through
Program, Ms. Coen is charging defendants with reneging on the
evaluation procedures set forth in the collective bargaining
f?M"MM????
i
agreement between the Board ana the Boulder Valley Education
Association.
Ms. Coen's brief states that she received satisfactory evaluations
for her first two years at Lincoln, but that in 1971-72 she was not
given constructive leadership and guidance by administrative and
supervisory staff as provided by the district's policies. Neither was
she gien oral or written warnings by the principal of his intention
not to recommend that her contract be renewed, also required by the
district's policies.
When the principal's unfavorable evaluation was submitted to the
school board and Ms. Coen's contract was not renewed, she filed a
grievance stating that the evaluation was not made in accordance
with the bargaining agreement and that no guidance had been
provided. The board claimed the matter was not subject to grievance
procedure.
Additionally Ms. Coen is claiming she was deprived of her
academic freedom rights under the First Amendment. The actions of
her supervisor and principal in interfering with her performance of her
teaching duties, interrupting and criticizing her performance in aid of
dissident factions in the community were, her complaint alleges,
"arbitrary and unreasonable, (and) attended with malice
Ms. Coen further contends that a parent of one of the students in
the Follow Through Program stated at a public meeting "that there
was a teacher at Lincoln Elementary they wanted to get rid of The
Coen complaint alleges that the parent "enjoyed the favor of the
supervisor and principal and that the two undertook not to give
plaintiff constructive leadership and guidance.
Donald Weathers, a nonrenewed teacher and basketball coach, is
claiming in his suit that in light of Colorado statutory requirements
and the written employment contracts of the West Yuma County
School District No. R-J-1, he had a legitimate expectancy of
continued employment in that district and therefore he could not be
deprived of his job without a written notice of the reasons for
nonrenewal and a hearing.
Weathers has taught two years in West Grade School but was not
rehired for the 1972-73 school year despite evaluations by the
superintendent and principal that he was a satisfactory and efficient
employee. His suit alleges his contract was not renewed because of
complaints from individuals or groups made to school directors and
either never referred to the superintendent, or if referred, were
satisfactorily adjusted by him.
Weathers further asserts that his termination was "accompanied
with accusations and innuendos concerning his professional
competence" which affect his future job opportunities.
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12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
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Assembly discusses
unity among blacks
By MIKE PARSONS
Staff Writer
Projects designed to increase black
students' awareness of themselves and
other students at ECU were the topics
discussed with Secretary of Minority
Affairs Maurice Huntley recently.
"Unity more in 74" was the theme of
an assembly held for black ECU students
a few weeks ago. Between 100-150
students attended. Discussions were held
concerning how the black community at
ECU could increase their rapport with
black citizens of Greenville and
surrounding areas as well as with other
students who attend ECU.
A community action program is in
progress designed to unite the Greenville
black community and students at
ECU. The stress is on service. The action
is in tutorial aid, music, and cultural
awareness. The black community in
Greenville has had little to do with the
black students at ECU stated Huntley.
With this program, he and the other
minority students hope to show Greenville
blacks that there really are benefits in
their fellowship.
Minority recruitment is another area of
concern. The office of minority affairs
hopes to publish two brochures designed
to publicize black-oriented programs
available at ECU for both pi spective
Committee requires child's
Social Security number
(CPSLNS)-The Senate Finance Committee approved a plan this
month that would require every child in the country to be assigned a
Social Security number upon entering first grade, beginning in 1974.
The committee is studying a plan that would make fingerprinting
mandatory for "older" persons who apply for cards but "voluntary"
for children receiving cards for the first time.
According to aides of committee chairman, Russel B. Long
(DLa.), the plans are aimed at precenting misuse of cards for fraud.
"I personally think that everyone ought to have fingerprints on
file, but I don't think we should require it at six Long said.
The Social Security and Welfare bill, to which the fingerprinting
plan would be attached if approved, will be ready for Senate action
soon ??????HritaHHBH
students and those presently enrolled.
The administration has not done a whole
lot, stated Huntley concerning the efforts
at minority recruitment. There is a
curriculum with many good programs
which should be brought to the attention
of blacks who desire to go to college, but
have not made their choice yet. Most of
those who come are attracted mainly for
sports, while there should be emphasis
on the academic as well.
Saturday, a bus for minority students
will travel to the ECU-UNC game to
empha .ize their support as a group for tht
school. "This is not a program to stress
separatism he stated. "We feel before
we t jrn our attentions to something else,
we have to get out heads together first
Black enrollment has been steadily
increasing at ECU. Huntley feels that a
lot of the credit for the increased interest
should go to the black Greek
organizations. There are now four
organizations on campus that are
nationally affiliated. The office for
minority affairs also works closely with
Souls, a campus organization for blacks.
Through the coordination of these
groups, Huntley plans to produce an
awareness of the administration to the
particular problems of minorities and their
recruitment for college, as well as the
necessity of more black faculty members.
Factory termpapers cause
two students' probation
(CPS)-Two students who bought and submitted "factory" termpapers
have been placed on disciplinary probation for the remainder of their
academic careers at Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts.
The violators' names became known after Boston University filed
suit against the term-paper firms. The suit, which Tufts helped
finance, closed down the termpaper industry in Massachusetts and
required the companies to turn over their records to Boston
University.
Because this was the first offense for each student, punishment
was limited to disciplinary probation. Students who repeat the
violation will be suspended or expelled, a Tufts' official said.
Scuba diving grows
If you are a good swimmer, then you
probably enjoy all types of water sports.
One of the newest and fastest growing
water sports is SCUBA DIVING. Getting a
first hand look at what lies under the
surface of the water, or exploring old ship
wrecks and collecting souvenirs can be
fascinating. SCUBA DIVING is perfectly
safe as long as certain safety precautions
are observed nd the equipment is used
properly. Tr,d oport is growing so fast
that many states have passed laws
requiring that divers be certified before
than can use SCUBA equipment.
Learn how to become an efficient,
competent diver. Enroll in the BASIC
SCUBA CERTIFICATION COURSE spon-
sored by the Division of Continuing
Education of ECU. This 27-hour course is
designed to train the student in the sport
of SKIN and SCUBA DIVING and to react
favorably under both normal and adverse
conditions on the surface and under
water.
The course will consist of eight
three-hour sessions. The first session
will be an introductory session. At that
time students will be given details on
equipment arrangements for the course, a
swimming test will be administered,
medical examination forms distributed,
and the objectives of the course will be
outlined. The ninth and final session will
consist of a deep dive test to be arranged
by the student and the instructor. Most
deep dives will take place off Radio
Island, Morehead City, N.C.
Each student will have to supply his
own flippers, mask and snorkel. The
remainder of the equipment, including the
air, may be obtained from the instructor
for $33.50 for the duration of the course.
Mr. Robert Eastep will teach the
course. He has taught the Los Angeles
County Program for several years, is
recognized as one of the outstanding
SCUBA instructors in the Southeast, and
is certified in Red Cross First Aid and Life
Saving.
Classes will meet on Tuesday and
Thursday nights, November 15-December
13,1973, 7:00-10:00 in Minges Coliseum,
Room 145. Class will not meet on
November 22, Thanksgiving. Students
must attend all classes and observe all
regulations for pool sessions each night.
Tuition is $40.00 per student (plus
equipment, if needed), and class size is
limited to 20 students. For further
information contact the Division of
Continuing Education, East Carolina
University, P.O. Box 2727, Greenville,
N.C. 27834.
Talking off?
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
13
Frat Speech
Conference
Sigma Sigma Sigma social sorority at
ECU hosted representatives from other
North Carolina campuses and several
alumnie officers at a regional leadership
workshop at ECU Oct. 19-21.
ECU'S Gamma Beta chapter provided
the location for one of eleven such
workshops held throughout the U.S.
Workshop participants included Sigma
Sigma Sigma members from UNC-Chapel
Hill, Elon College and Atlantic Christian
College. National representatives in-
cluded alumnae members from Texas,
Illinois and Ohio.
The workshop consisted of sessions
on rush, Panhellenic procedures, chapter
management and other organization
interests.
Home Ec
Dr. Patricia G. Hurley and Thelma
Snuggs of the ECU School of Home
Economics have returned from the annual
conference of the American Association
of Housing Educators in Madison, Wis.
Both are members of the ECU housing
and management faculty.
The conference featured addresses by
architects, designers and other pro-
fessionals on the theme of multi-family
dwellings in the total environment.
Dr. Hurley was selected as chairman
of the Association's Educational Com-
mittee for the coming academic
year. Among the committee projects she
will direct are preparing and distributing
educational materials on methods of
teaching housing to the membership and
awarding scholarships to housing
graduate students.
Dr. Miriam B. Moore, dean of the East
Carolina University School of Home
Economics, was a discussion leader at
the Lake Placid. N.Y conference of the
American Home Economics Association
Oct. 14-17.
She and several other leaders were
selected among home economics
professionals to explore in-depth
direction for the Association.
Leaders were selected by state
presidents and members of the AHEA
governing board to lead discussions on
Leaders were selected by state
presidents and members of the AHEA
govemin board to lead discussions on the
future of the home economics
profession. Their ideas will be followed
up at individual state meetings and at the
65th annual meeting of the AHEA in Los
Angeles.
Sophmores
Attention: All Sophomores - There
will be a meeting Wednesday Night at
7:30 in room 308 of the student
union. The major purpose is to discuss a
homecoming project. Your help is needed
in order for the project to be carried
through. If you are interested but can't
attend please contact Jimmy Honeycutt,
758-4994.
NCAEDS
Boating
The Greenville Flotilla of the U.S.
Coast Guard Auxiliary will give a special
one-lesson course on boating safety on
Monday (Oct. 29) night in Room 103 of the
Biology building on the East Carolina
University campus. The course, entitled
the Skippers Outboard Special (SOS), will
begin at 7:00 p.m. and last for 2 12 to 3
hours. This program is designed espec-
ially for operators of small boat who are
not able to enroll in the Auxiliary's more
comprehensive course on boating safety
and seamanship which will be taught
beginning around the first of the year.
The U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary is a
volunteer, non-military organization which
cooperates with the U.S. Coast Guard in
promoting boating safety. The entire
family is welcome at all public education
classes conducted by the Auxiliary.
High School
On Friday November 2, 1973, the A.L.
Brown High School is having its
homecoming festivities. Some of our
1973 graduates are attending ECU.
Friday Nov. 2,1973 - date of homecoming
Special tea-11:30-3:00
Recognition at the ceremony
Tennala A. Gross of the ECU
mathematics faculty was elected to a
second term as treasurer of the North
Carolina Association for Educational Data
Systems at the Association's annual
meeting in Raleigh last week.
Other offers included faculty members
from state and private colleges and
universities, technical institutes and
public schools, and officials from the
state education agencies.
The meeting featured addresses by Dr.
James D. Powell of the NCSU computer
science faculty; Steve Painter of the
North Carolina Educational Computer
Service; Bob Johns, director of the N.C.
Dept. of Administration's Office of
Management Systems; and Alan Hill,
Director of the Dept. of Public
Instruction's Management Information
System.
Legal Counseling
The SGA attorney-general, Tom Clare,
reminds the student body that there is
free legal counseling available. This
counseling service makes available
lawyers to the students who provide
advice on such matters as criminal cases,
civil suits, residency problems, and just
about anything else that requires these
services.
Interested students should call
758-6262 and ask for Tom Clare, or visit
his office on the third floor of Wright
between the hours of 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.
Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 11
a.m. Tuesday and Thursday.
Joint meeting
William Byrd and Don Dancy, faculty
members of the School of Allied Health
and Social Professions, ECU, recently
attended the annual joint meeting of the
North Carolina Association of Health
Educators and the Society of Public
Health Educators. The keynote address
was given by Dr. Lee Holder, Dean,
College of Community and Allied Health
Professions, University of Tennessee.
Both Byrd and Dancy are members of
the combined organizations' Action
Committee which has led the professional
health educators toward a mere active
political role in state and federal affairs.
The theme of the two-day conference
was "The Challenge of the Legislative and
Planning Process Major presentations
were made by John Morrisey, Executive
Director of the NorthCarolina Association
of County Commissioners; Ernest Ratliff,
Director of the Center for Health Law;
Mary Lou Skinner, HEW; Elmer Johnson,
North Carolina Director of Comprehensive
Health Planning; Frank Kivett, Director of
Metroline Council of Governments and
Goerge Stockbridge, Executive Director of
the Health Planning Council for Central
North Carolina.
Phi Sigma Pi
Dr. Alvin A. Fahrner, professor of
History at ECU, addressed Phi Sigma Pi
National Honor Fraternity at their dinner
meeting of October 17.
Delivering his famed speech concern-
ing his experiences in the Navy on the day
Pearl Harbor was attacked, Fahrner said
that he learned one thing from that
event-never to be caught "unawares in
my underwears" again.
Math meets
Meeting offers
emergency
information
TRAUMA. Care of Patients with
Multiple Injuries a two-day conference
for emergency medical personnel, will be
hosted by East Carolina University Oct.
29-30.
The purpose of the conference is to
provide each participant with information
on the correct procedure of emergency
treatment and transportation of a patient
suffering from multiple injuries.
The conference course is designed for
registered nurses, licensed practical
nurses and rescue squad members who
must deal with accident victims in
emergency medical situations.
Conference speakers will include five
Greenville physicians: Dr. Ira Hardy and
Dr. Robert Timmons, neurosurgeons;Dr.
Jack Welch, anesthesiologist; Dr. John
Wooten, orthopedic surgeon; and Dr.
Frank Longino, thoracic surgeon.
Also speaking at a conference will be
Pitt Memorial Hospital Administer Jack
Richardson; Sylvia Waters, head nurse
with Pitt Memorial Hospital's Special
Surgical Unit; and Evelyn Perry, dean of
the ECU School of Nursing.
All sessions are scheduled for the
auditorium of the ECU Allied Health
Building.
Conference co-sponsors with ECU are
Pitt Memorial Hospital and the N.C. State
Association of Rescue Squads.
Among the topics to be covered at the
conference are types and diagnoses of
injuries commonly seen in the
multi-trauma patient, commonly used
life-saving techniques, and proper
transportation of victims of head and
spinal cord injuries.
The Mathematics Department at ECU
will be represented by a group of ten
students and five faculty members when
the third annual state Mathematics
Conference Convenes in Raleigh this
wseekend.
Dr. Katharine W. Hodgin will preside
at the general interest section for college
personnel. Other faculty members attend-
ing include Mrs. Millie Derrick, Dr. Robert
Joyner, Mr. Vann Latham, and Dr. Katye
Sowell. The student group includes John
Barrow, Vickie Boyd, Dorothy Doyle, Sue
Hagan, Dianne Boseman, Elizabeth Hurst,
Flonie Jones, Mary Catherine Lloyd,
Linda Vann and Laura White.
The conference is co-sponsored by the
N.C. Council of Teachers of Mathematics
and the Mathematics Division of the State
Department of Public Instruction. It
attracts students and teachers from
schools and colleges through the state
and much of the time is devoted to
workships and sectional meetings in
which the delegates are active
participants
Meredith College is the site for this
year's meeting. Out-of-state speakers
include Staley Bezueka, Boston College,
Ruth Hoffman, University of Denver,
Raymond Wilder, University ofialifomia
at Santa Barbara, and Lauren Woodby
from the National Science Foundation,
Washington, D.C.
Further information and registration
forms are available from the ECU Division
of Continuing Education, Box 2727,
Greenville. Pre-regi strati on deadline is
Oct. 24.
MM
English students
Omicron Theta Chapter of Sigma Tau
Delta National English Honor Society
invites all English Majors and Minors,
Faculty membrs and Graduate students to
its Invitational Program on Thursday,
October 25, 1973, in Coffeehouse (R 201
Student Union) at 7:00.
Dr. William Stephenson will show the
highly acclaimed award-winning docu-
mentary on THE MAKING OF "BUTCH
CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID an
on-the-set documentary narrated by the
director, George Roy Hill; the
scriptwriter, William Goldman; and the
actors, Paul Newman and Robert Bedford.
Those eligible for membership in the
society will be invited to join Sigma Tau
Delta THursday evening.
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14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
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Student Union shows British film
The Student Union Lecture Series
Committee will present Robert Davis who
will present his travel film "Britain's
Holiday Islands" on November 1, at 8:00
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.
Robert Davis, noted lecturer, cinema-
tographer, and film producer is one of
those rare individuals who changed an
avocation to a vocation and has been in
constant demand ever since. Though he
calls the woods of Trout Valley in
Northern Illinois his home, he is a world
traveller who has won renown for his color
documentary films featuring many areas
of the globe. Mr. Davis was bom in
Kansas City, Missouri and while in
elei oentary school he acquired an 8mm
camera and immediately began filming
everything in sight. Later he switched to
16mm while working at Calvin film
production studio in Kansas City.
"Britain's Holiday Islands a varied
playground of historical and scenic
delights, will be expertly narrated for the
viewers by Robert Davis. The film will
take the viewers on visits to the homes of
John Keats and Queen Victoria, as well as
through the streets of Sark Island, where
bicycles and carriages replace automo-
biles.
The Isle of Man, home of the Tailess
Manx Cat, and Dunvegan Castle on the
Isle of Skye will captivate viewers with
their simplistic beauty.
Admission for ECU students and
Faclty will be by I.D. card, ECU staff, fifty
cents, and Public admission is
$1.00. Tickets may be purchased
beginning October 25 at the ECU Central
Ticket Office.
On the Isle of Man, thousands of foreign visitors come to take Dart in the world famous Tourist Trophy Motorcycle
Races. You will have a areater understanding and appreciation of the contestants and their cycles when
you observe the loving care, preparation and details displayed in the two weeks of racing. Speeds up to 130 mph,
(including sounds) will fascinate you! From the travel-documentary film, Britain's Holiday Islands personally
presented by Robert Davis, of Cary, Illinois.
American success
ideal transformed
crossword puzzle
Continued from page five.
established by corporate superiors. The
survey sub-group most inclined to believe
that "pressures to conform" were
decreasing was composed of respondents
holding at least one advanced degree.
-Respondents who did not complete
high school were consistently the most
dissatisfied with respect to career
advancement and the sense of personal
fulfillment. The next most dissatisfied
group was composed of businessmen (of
all ages) currently pursuing post-graduate
studies.
Few businessmen surveyed equate
success with greater material reward
andor job or career advancement. In
fact, more than a third of the 2,821
executives say that "success increasingly
represents the realization of goals and
aspirations which have little or nothing to
do with career advancement. Nearly half
of the respondents define success in
terms of greater job satisfaction and more
meaningful work Here they would seem
to be in substantial agreement with U.S.
college students who, according to
pollster Daniel Yankelovich, are "turning
away from the extrinsic rewards of a
career, such as money and status,
and turning toward its inherent
satisfactions A 1972 report by the
mm
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College Placement Council, moreover,
reveals that young people today are
increasingly interested "in activities that
satisfy oneself rather than in activities
that promise recognition from the larger
society
In responses to rapidly changing
values, the AMA report concludes,
organizations are going to have to move
away from elitism and "rigidity of
methods and structure and toward the
establishment of an organizational
climate that is more natural, spontaneous
and organic-and not just on paper, but in
practice. Those that do will be those that
sense the direction in which human
progress is moving
Dale Tarnowieski is a former Senior
Research Associate for American
Management Associations and co-author
of four AMA research reports, including
The Four-Day Week and Trade With
China. He has written a number of
articles for newspapers and periodicals,
including Personnel Magazine.
The Changing Success Ethic is an
AMA membership publication. It is
available through AMACOM, publishing
division of AMA. The cost of the report if
$5.00 to AMA members; $7.50 to
non-members.
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1 At the pinnacle
5 Duct
8 For each
11 The of
Orleans
12 Struck with
a light,
splashing
sound (var.)
13 Old French
coin
14 Birthstone
16 Canadian
province (ab.l
17 No part
18 Dreary
19 Birthstone
23 Blockhead
24 Caribbean
island
25 Skidded
27 ? and tucker
28 Dance
30 Dennis the
Menace, for one
33 Alaskan island
34 Jim Ryun,
for example
36 Engrave
38 Short, open
vest
39 Plant of the
lily family
40 Blessing
42 Drink little
by little
43 Abandoned
child
48 Actress Lupino
49 Otherwise
50 Carry out
51 Turkish cap
52 Know (arch.)
53 Boorish person
DOWN
1 Amount lab.)
2 Greek letter
3 Hear (Sp.)
4 On the double
(ab.)
5 Song: "You're
so
6 Part of a church
7 ? Mhre Eglise
8 Birthstone
9 Brilliant success
10 Birthstone
12 Money (coll.)
15 Discover
18 Supreme being
19 Chatter (coll.)
20 Jackie's husband
21 Massage
22 Note well (ab.)
23 Birthstone
25 Southern
Methodist
University (ab.)
26 Pound (ab.)
29 University of
Texas lab.)
30 - de la Citd
31 Sea in Cherbourg
32 Joe Namath.
for instance
Answer to Puzzle No. 111
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33 Playing card
35 Duce
36 Suppress
37 Birthstone
38 Tibia or
femur
39 As though
(two words)
40 Kind of knife
41 Eiect
43 Of small
number
44 Daily record
45 Nigerian tribe
46 Combining
form: recent
47 Swindle
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OP
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
15
Sports
Strawderman returns
To-Morrow's Sports
By JACK MORROW
Sports Editor
UGH
I was somewhat awed as I stared at my television screen last Tuesday evening
to view the third game of the 73 World Series. Was the mechanism that works my
eyesburned out or did I see Met outfielder Cleon Jones blow his dinner right in front
of 56,000 fans at Shea Stadium?
Well NBC's Curt Gowdy and Tony Kubek (alias Laurel and Hardy) were very
diplomatic about it as they remarked, "Jones appears to be having some difficulty in
leftfield However, Met announcer Lindsey Nelson blurted forth, "I wonder if we
could get an instant replay of Jones throwing up in the outfield
A further investigation showed that Jones was suffereing from a case of the flu.
I am reminded of the White Sox pitcher, Bob Locker, who was facing the New
York Yankees in New York on a Sunday afternoon before a large crowd.
As the game moved into the fifth inning, Locker was working on a fresh plug of
"Beech Nut" when he was hit in the abdomen with a wicked line drive. He
swallowed the tobacco and promptly turned around and gave it up on the back of the
mound along with his cookies.
MORE ON "ANNOUNCERS"
I should think that the President of NBC would think twice before sending guys
like Curt Gowdy, Jim Simpson and Tony Kubek to "announce" baseball
games. These "3Musketeers" not only give NBC a bad name, but they hurt the game
of baseball as well.
Gowdy is consistently giving wrong names, faces, positions and scores. When
Simpson is behind the microphone, I am lucky if I know who is playing. In short,
Gowdy and Simpson give me the illusion that I am watching an old Dean Martin and
Jerry Lewis movie.
When Kubek flashes that "cheese" smile and then spits out his juvenile remarks,
I feel compelled to grab a 34 ounce "Louisville Slugger" and beat my television set
to a pulp.
The most important aspect of an announcer's job is to be prepared. If the
announcer does his homework he can keep the fans abreast of what is happing on
the field of play.
Bob Lamey, voice of the Carolina Cougars, is a prime example of a dedicated
reporter. He has all of his information stored in the memory bank in his head and he
does not need it all typed out in front of him as do out NBC boys.
NBC statistician Alan Roth keeps Gowdy and company "alive" with some very
interesting facts. I would think that if they were without the services of Mr. Roth,
Gowdy would come on the air thusly, "Good evening ladies and gentlemen this
is
LACROSSE
The Pirate Athletic Council's decision to drop lacrosse as a varsity sport has
been challenged and questioned by many.
Clark Franke, a member of the 1972 East Carolina lacrosse team, presented
Athletic Director, Clarence Stasavich, with a list of 13 points outlining the reasons
why he and his supporters feel lacrosse should be reinstated as a varsity sport.
The following are Franke's 13 points:
1. ECU will be in a new lacrosse league, the South Atlantic Lacrosse League of the
NCAA, if the Pirates are a varsity sport.
2. The U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) has grown from 50
members in 1962 to well over 100 in 1972.
3. Lacrosse is now played in Chapel Hill high school and Durtiam Academy with
equipement and coaching supplied by UNC-CH and Duke University.
4. The Lacrosse Hall of Fame in Baltimore has offered many services to help us
regain our varsity status.
5. Lacrosse has gained national exposure through "Sport Magazine a great deal of
coverage in "Sports Illustrated" and lacrosse is featured in Chevrolet's recent
brochure for new cars.
6. For the past four years, there has been a national championship series which has
had great attendance records.
7. There are some 30 experienced lacrosse players here at ECU, practically all being
either freshmen or sophomores, recruited exclusively to play lacrosse.
8. The National Hall of Fame is investigating potential volunteer lacrosse coaches
living in the Greenville area. Here at ECU we have a faculty member (David
MacNaught, Dept. of Sociology) who would be willing to coach the team as a varsity
sport.
9. The Hall of Fame has offered us a kit to completely outfit (sticks, balls, gloves,
armpads, helmets, shoulderpads, goals and nets) the team with all new equipement
for up to 30 players for only $600. We feel that this fact shows clearly the low cost
of a full varsity lacrosse program.
10. We feel that this kit, along with a volunteer coach and total varsity status will
allow us to operate on a budget even smaller than the very small budget we had last
year. If a team is interested enough in the sport that they play, then there appears to
be no valid reason to cut out such a progressive sport.
Less than a week before East
Carolina's opener against North Carolina
State, strong (Sarah) linebacker Butch
Strawderman crumpled to the group
during a freak practice mishap.
The diagnosis: sprained knee, out for
four to six weeks. The problem: how to
replace one of the wildett of the "Wild
Dogs
Four weeks turned into five and five
into six. Finally, after seven and one half
weeks by Strawderman's careful count, he
played as a starter against VMI.
"I never thought I'd see the day. When
I hurt my knee, the doctors told me I'd be
back for Furman (Sept. 29) if I took care of
it and worked hard at rehabilitating
it. Things didn't go to well at first, but
now the knee has come around.
Against VMI, I felt pretty good. I think
my knee is back almost 100 percent. But I
played like a dummy. I made a lot of
mistakes and I'll tell you, the first series I
was about to die. It was a long series and
VMI did try to throw a lot, but I didn't
realize how much conditioning I missed.
"The worst thing that happened was
that I couldn't catch the football. I had a
chance to intercept two passes and one of
them was a sure touchdown.
"I'd better change that. The worst
thing was the assignments I missed. The
tight end for VMI got me a couple of times
when I was playing where I shouldn't have
been. Then the guy knocked me down. I
don't like that
"The best part of the game was being
back with the 'Wild Dogs I say that
because they are playing super
defense. Coach Randle likes to say they
were 'flyin around' on defense. If you
look at the points on the visitors side of
the scoreboard you can tell how much
flyin' around there was.
"Against VMI the "Wild Dogs' were
flyin I think they came up with pass
interceptions and at least three
fumbles. The scoreboard took care of
itself-seven points. The 'Dogs' shutout
Davidson, allowed Furman only three
points, scored two touchdowns against
Southern Illinois and shutout Southern
Mississippi. I'm proud to be a part of that
outfit, even though I wasn't playing when
they were doing all the flyin' around
Strawderman will have his chance to
fly around over the next five weeks. He is
back and the defense needs him. Cary
Godette, defensive end, is playing hurt as
is Buddy Lowery. Strawderman's return
adds striking power to the "Wild Dogs
Lady swimmers drop ASU
Before a sparse crowd at Minges
Natatorium Saturday afternoon, the East
Carolina women swimmers won 14 out of
15 events on their way to a 105-19
thrashing of the women from Appalachian
State University.
Sophomore Co-Captain Linda Smiley
and sophomore Beverly Osborn accounted
for three individual first place finishes.
Miss Smiley won the 50 and 100-yard
butterfly events and the 100-yard
individual medley while Miss Osborn
captured the 50, 200 an' 400-yard
freestyle events. Both girls Sw?am on the
victorious 200-yard freestyle relay.
Double winners were senior Cindy
Wheeler, who won both the one and
three-meter diving events, and freshman
Linda Shull who swam to victories in the
50 and 100-yard backstroke events. Miss
Shull also swam on the winning 200-yard
medley relay.
Other Pirate winners were junior
Barbara Strange in the 50-yard breastroke
and junior Donna Webb in the 100-yard
breastroke.
Head coach Eric Orders was quite
pleased with his team's efforts. He
awarded the team's Gold Award
(outstanding performance) to Miss Smiley
and he presented the entire team with the
Purple Award (outstanding effort). Even
chough the girls from Appalachian didn't
pose much of a problem, the lady Pirates
still turned in good times, which is the
mark of a fine team.
The competition will get a bit stiffer as
the girls travel to Chapel Hill on Friday for
the UNC Relays. Stiff competition should
be provided by UNC-G, UNC-CH and Duke
University.
Ladies shutout
Tar Heels, 8-0
ECU'S women's field hockey team
used a blanket defense and the scoring of
Terry Jones to bomb UNC 8-0.
Gail Betton and Marion Hart combined
to stop all the Tar Heel attempts at
scoring while goalie Nancy Richards
registered her first shutout of the season.
Miss Richards has allowed only one
goal in two games this year.
At halftime the Pirates led 4-0, yet the
game was never in serious doubt as Terry
Jones scored four goals set up by the
accurate passing of her teammates.
Also scoring for ECU were Jane Gallop
with two goals and Carlene Boyd and
Frances Swenholt with one each.
11. We need to gain varsity status because, in order to make up a schedule of our
own, other coaches have told us that they cannot definitely schedule us if we are not
a team. Schedules which were set up before we were cut out have since been
terminated.
12. Being college students on budgets of our own, we can hardly afford to pay the
costs of new equipment, transportation and, most importantly, medical
costs. Should any of our players incur any injury, we would have to be able to use
the services of East Carolina's Sports Medicine Center.
We would have to purchase the items discussed above because, as of now, we
have enough equipment to outfit less than half of our team. Obviously we could not
purchase these things on our own.
13. Lacrosse is an original American sport. It was established by the Indians who
lived in the Southern, Western and Northeastern areas of our country. The sport has
generated a great deal of national interest in ECU. Also, we have a team composed
of active, interested and talented players. For these reasons, we feel that there is a
basic and strong need to reinstate lacrosse as a varsity sport immediately here at
East Carolina.

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16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973
? !???'?
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Pirates subdue Bulldogs, 34-0
By DAVE ENGLERT
Assistant Sports Editor
CHARLESTON, S.CEast Carolina
won it's 12th straight conference game
since a mid-1971 loss to Richmond and
moved into first place with a 34-0
whitewashing of The Citadel.
Carlester Crumpler ran for three
touchdowns and a total of 98 yards in a
sloppy game marred by 12 fumbles and
some unruly behavior on the part of the
cadets.
"We played as well as we could in the
first half said coach Sonny Randle.
"And although we let down in the second
half, that was only natural. I was
extremely pleased with the game
The "Wild Dogs" turned in another
"routine" performance, limiting The
Citadel to 92 yards rushing and only 54
yards through the air.
"I didn't think we would dominate
them as we did said coach
Randle. "We're got a mighty fine defense,
and the credit goes to Carl Reese, our
defensive coordinator. In fact, all the
coaches have been doing a great job
The Citadel head coach Bobby Ross
made this comment after the game:
"East Carolina was a faster team, I am
sure, but we just didn't play good football
offensively or defensively. We never
blocked that number 42 (ECU'S Danny
Kepley-honorable mention All-American
last season). He is a fine football player
Quarterback Carl Summerell had a
superlative day at the reigns of the Pirate
offense, which piled up 416 yards. Sum-
merell completed 12 of 14 passes (yes,
that is 86 percent) for 175 yards.
"Summerell makes their offense what
it is said opposing coach Ross. "He's
just a fine athlete and hurts you in many
ways
Coach Randle posed this question to
the press after the game. "You (the press)
keep saying that he (Summerell) has his
best game each week. I challenge you to
name a better quarterback in the eastern
part of the country
Kenny Strayhom, Southern Con-
ference leading rusher going into the
game, scored ECU'S first touchdown after
Cary Godette recovered a Citadel fumble
on the game's second play. Five
consecutive rushes by the "Horn" gave
the Pirates a 7-0 lead.
Later in the quarter Jim Bolding went
back to field a punt, and was called for
signaling for a fair catch when all he had
in mind was to shield the sun from his
eyes. The Citadel also suffered the same
misfortune later in the second quarter. It
was a good thing that the punt returners
never had an itchy nose, for the referees
would probably have mistaken that for a
fair catch signal, too.
As the first quarter came to a close,
Mike Shea fumbled a pass from
Summerell at The Citadel eight. Godette
promptly recovered his second fumble on
the next play, and three plays later
Summerell ran it in from the four for a
14-0 Pirate lead.
Crumpler scored his first touchdown
in the second quarter on an unmolested
eight yard run through a gaping hole in
The Citadel line which was big enough to
drive the team bus through. The offensive
line was "blowing them out according to
coach Randle.
The next 1:25 was typical of the
"giveaway" style that seemed to be the
order of the day. First Reggie Pinkney
recovered a fumble on the first play after
the kickoff. Two plays later Jimmy Howe
fumbled to give the ball back to The
Citadel. Jim Bolding then intercepted a
pass on the very next play to give the ball
back to the Pirates. Enough is enough,
but Crumpler missed a handoff on the
second subsequent play, and once more it
was the Bulldog's ball.
Crumpler scored again before halftime
climaxing a 10 play, 80 yard drive with a
-two yard plunge. Jim Woodymissed for a
change on the conversion, but the Bucs
were still on top 27-0.
A key play in the drive was a third
down Summerell pass to split end Vic
Wilfore, good for 22 yards and a first
down. Summerell threw to Wilfore five
PIRATE LINEBACKER DANNY KEPLEY sacks Citadel's quarterback during Saturday
afternoon's game in Charleston. Kepley and the "Wild Dogs" were plenty wild as
they shutout theBulldogs.
RUNNING BACK KEN STRAYHORN prepares to turn the corner as he leaves Citadel
defenders in his wake.
times for a total of 73 yards.
In discussing Wilfore's improvement
of the past few weeks, coach Randle said
that "Vic was our best receiver last
season, but was in the National Guard
andmissed spring practice. This caused
him to get off to a slow start but now he's
playing like we all know he can
In the third quarter tempers started to
wear a little thin. On a third down play
The Citadel quarterback, Harry Lynch,
completed a pass only to have Pirate
. linebacker Kepley pop the receiver so hard
that he coughed up the ball. Pinkney
recovered his second fumble of the game.
Citadel partisans questioned the
referees interpretation, to put it
mildly. They felt that maybe it should
have been just an incomplete pass. The
fans took their chagrin out on the Pirates,
and unfortunately they got a little out of
hand.
With 2000 cadets screaming and
jumping up and down on the aluminum
stands of Johnson Hagood Stadium, the
Pirates twice had to go back to the huddle
without being able to call a play due to
the noise.
"It's a shame they let the cadets
behave like that said coach Randle.
"Enthusiasm is great but there is a time
and place for everything
On the first play the Pirates were able
to finally run, a lineman jumped offside,
unable to hear Summerell call the
signals. "It was a fiasco the last 30
minutes according to coach Randle. "I
just told the team to maintain their
composure
"It is common courtesy to allow the
visiting team a chance to run their plays
without having the band blowing full
blast continued the coach. "It was just
disgraceful
The Pirates ate up the last 4:38 of the
game before Crumpler scored his third TD
with three seconds left on the clock. His
one yard run, followed by Woody's
conversion made the final score 34-0.
The fact still remains that the Bucs did
fumble the ball away six times, and one
shudders to think what would happen
against the Tar Heels if that should
continue.
"The turnovers, those fumbles?they
will be corrected in time for our trip to
Chapel Hill. I guarantee it said Randle.
Citadel coach Ross had this to say
about the Pirates after the game. "I'd say
they were comparable to William & Mary,
just that they get after it better on
defense
So the Bucs head to Chapel Hill next
week to tackle a Tar Heel squad which is
having an unusual season-a losing one.
After a 16-0 loss to Tulane they will be
breathing fire in anticipation of a much
needed victory.
Women blank UNC-W
Winning is becoming a habit with the
women's tennis team as ECU blanked
UNC-Wilmington 9-0 last week to run their
record to 6-0.
The pattern for the match was set early
by Ellen Warren in a swift victory which
saw her lose only one game in winning
6-0, 6-1.
The Pirates in fact swept all the
singles matches in straight sets. Ann
Archer won 6-0, 6-2, Gwen Waller 6-1,6-1,
Susan Bussey 6-3, 6-4, Ann Chavasse 7-5,
6-2 and Ginny Deese 7-5, 6-4.
The dominance in the singles matches
was evident in the doubles where all three
of the Pirate's pairs won.
Misses Archer and Waller won 8-1.
Misses Bussey and Warren won 8-5 and
Cynthia Averett and Miss Deese won 8-4.
The last home match of the season
will take place at the Mmges Courts Oct.
25 against Peace College at 3 p.m.
The match against Peace College has
an added flair in that both teams are
presently undefeated.
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Title
Fountainhead, October 23, 1973
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
October 23, 1973
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.579
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39885
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