Fountainhead, November 8, 1973


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Fountainhead
HOMECOMING
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA no. 188 NOV 1973
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Outstanding poet
appears Monday
James Dickey, outstanding American poet, but perhaps
best known for his novel and movie, Deliverance, will appear
in Wright Auditorium on the ECU campus at 8:00 p.m
Monday, November 12.
Dickey will also conduct a workshop for student and area
poets. The workshop will meet at 10:00 a.m Monday
November 12, and at 9:00 a.m Tuesday November
13. Both sessions will take place in 132 Austin Building on
the ECU campus.
Dickey's public appearance is sponsored by the ECU
Student Lecture Committee and the workshop is sponsored
by the ECU Poetry Forum. Local poets are invited to join in
the workshop and to bring manuscripts for Mr. Dickey's
criticism on Monday, returning on Tuesday to pick up their
mr .luscripts and hear Mr. Dickey's criticism and comments.
James Dickey was bom in Atlanta in 1923. In high
school, already six feet three, he was a football star. From
high school, he went to Clemson College in 1942, but soon
enlisted in the Air Force. During World War II he flew a
hundred combat mission in the Pacific.
Returning from the war, Dickey entered Vanderbilt,
where he began seriously to write poetry. As a college
senior he had a poem accepted by the Sewannee Review.
By now Dickey has written many boosk, in both poetry
and prose. He has held a Guggenheim Fellowship, enabling
him to spend a year in Italy with his family. He has also
served two terms as Consultant in Poetry for the Library of
Congress. His present publisher is Doubleday. Playboy has
recently published a Dickey interview.
There is no question that Dickey is now among
America's top few living poets.
A RECORD BREAKING crowd is expected to turnout to see the fighting Pirates See related story
Homecoming is revived
Weekend highlights
One of the highlights of this year's
Homecoming win be the return of the
Homecoming parade- "Hie parade will
begin at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday and the
route will proceed from Elm Street to Fifth
Street to Five Points, north on Evans
Street to Second Street, and will disband
on Reade Street. At present the parade
will include eleven floats, five bands,
Angel Flight, the R.O.T.C. Color Guard,
and University Community Digni.taries.
The parade is being made possible by the
Interfratemity Council, the Student
Government Association, and the
Greenville Chamber of Commerce, and the
best way to show your appreciation to
these organizations for their efforts is to
turn out for the parade and enjoy
yourselves.
Rode and blues
In your ear for the Sunday portion of
Homecoming 73 at East Carolina
University will be the Wet Willie Band,
Lynyrd Skynyrd and John Hammond.
This southern style rock and roll show
will be presented by the Popuiar
Entertainment Committee of the Student
Union at 2:00 p.m November 11, in
Minges Coliseum. John Hammond will
open the show with his version of
Mississippi bayou blues, to be followed
by Lynyrd Skynyrd, and then the Wet
Willie Band. Both bands, Wet Willie and
Lynyrd Skynyrd, are based in the
steel-touch town of Macon, Georgia; and
all three acts record on the Capricorn
label.
Tickets are priced at $2.00 for ECU
students and $3.00 for the public. Tickets
may be purchased at the ECU Central
Ticket Office beginning November
5. Public tickets will also be on sale at
the Record Bar in Pitt Plaza.
Art shows
The ECU Art Department is
contributing to the 1973 Homecoming
festivities by sponsoring two art shows on
Saturday and Sunday.
One of the shows will be held in the
Kate Lewis Gallery on first floor Whichard
Building and will feature the work of the
professional sculptor, Ray Musselwhite
from the N.C. State School of
Design. This show will be open from 9:00
a.m. to 12:00 noon on Saturday,
November 10 and from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00
p.m. on Sunday, November 11.
In addition the Art Department will
sponsor an Open House on the third floor
of Rawl Building from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00
p.m. on Saturday and from 2:00 p.m. to
11:00 p.m. on Sunday. Student art will be
featured in this show, and there will be
artists at work who will be more than
happy to take time to explain what they
are attempting to accomplish and how
they create their final product.
In sponsoring these shows, the School
of Art is making an important contribution
to this year's homecoming, so do make a
point to stop by during the weekend and
see what is hapening artwise at ECU.
In regards to several rumors traveling
around campus pertaining to the closing
of ECU for the three week period between
Thanksgiving and Christmas breaks
because of the energy shortage,
Vice-Chancel lor for Business Affairs, C.G
Moore, said, "It's nothing but pure anc
simple rumor. There's not a thread o
truth to it.
It is also a lie about Appalachian anc
State closing. At least, we haven't hec.rc
anything about it he said.
For a number of years prior to 1972 the
Student Government Association was in
charge of Homecoming activities. Many
different organizations and groups
participated i Homecoming, but the SGA
had the overall responsibility. Some of
the activities held over the past few years
have included football games, popular
entertainments, parades, house and
dormitory decorations, Union receptions,
alumni receptions, film festivals, Play-
house productions, and many, many
others.
In the spring of 1972 the SGA turned
over to the Student Union all its
programming responsibilities-including
Homecoming. The Student Union dele-
gated the responsibilities for planning and
overseeing Homecoming activities to the
Special Events Committee. Homecoming
1972 featured some new activities and
some formerly-held activities were not
presented. A lack of real interest and
support for Homecoming played a major
role in the events that took place and
those that did not take place in 1972.
Last year's Homecoming was conced-
ed by nearly everyone to have left quite a
bit desired; and, in an effort to
re-evaluate and improve our Homecoming,
a Homecoming Brainstorm Session was
held last January 18. Invitations to this
meeting were extended to all campus
organizations, numerous administration
and faculty bodies, and to representatives
of the Greenville community. It was
decided that Homecoming should
definitely be continued as a University
tradition and that a Steering Committee
be established to be in charge of
Homecoming 1973.
The Steering Committee was formed
and held its first meeting last March, and
for the past eight months has served as a
clearinghouse and a coordinating body for
this weekend's festivities. If all goes as
planned, this will be the best
Homecoming in recent years, and
Homecoming will have been spared the
slow death of so many other campus
traditions.
The Steering Committee has worked
many hours to coordinate a Homecoming
that will appear to the entire University
Community, and It would be appropriate
to give credit to the following individuals
who have served on the committee.
Chairman: Dr. Charles Q. Brown,
Director of Institutional Development. Co-
Chairman: Gibert Kennedy, Student
Union President. Members: Joe John-
son, MRC President; Donna Peterson,
WRC President; Chris Ripper, Interfrater-
nity Council President; Sandy Penfleld,
Panhellenic Council President; Don
Leggett, Director of Alumni Affairs;
Clarence Stasavich, Director of Athletics;
Herbert Carter, Director of Bands; Dean
Rudolph Alexander, Associate Dean of
Student Affairs; Harold Creech, Green-
ville Chamber of Commerce; and Frieda
Clark, SGA Vice-President.
CARTOON RUM FESTIVAL
WALT DISNEYS MILESTONES
IN ANIMATION
"Steamboat Willie"
"Skeleton Dance"
"Flowers and Trees"
"The Three Little Pigs"
"The Old Mill"
ROAD RUNNER
"ZOOM At the Top"
"Hot Rod and Reel"
BUGS BUNNY
"Falling Hare"
DAFFY DUCK
"My Little Duckeroo"
THREE STOOGES COMEDIES
"Calling All Cars"
"Hot Ice"
LITTLE RASCALS
"Roam' Holiday"
"Rushin Ballet"
"Night n' Gales"
i UilDWUP
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2
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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Book exchange Bikes
The Vet's Club Book Exchange will be
in operation in 308 Wright on November
13-December 5 from 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. This exchange offers the students a
chance to sell books for more and buy for
less.
Jazz concert
Dick Gable, North Carolina's Coordi-
nator for Development of Drug and
Alcohol Programs and noted performer on
the jazz trumpet, will be featured at the
Thursday evening, Nov. 8, concert of the
ECU Jazz Ensemble.
The program will include Gershwin's "I
Love You, Porgy Thad Jones' "A Child Is
Bom "Sunny and "Recuerdos" from
Johnnie Richard's "Cuban Fire Suite
Gable is a graduate of Duke University
and has performed with the bands of
Glenn Miller led by Ray McKinley and
Buddy DeFranco, Woody Herman, Warren
Covington and Vaughan Monroe.
The Concert is scheduled for 8:15
p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Fletcher
Music Center.
Computer director
Richard S. Lennon Jr. who worked
with NASA computer operations in
support of the first man-on-the-moon
mission, has been appointed acting
director of the ECU Computing Center.
Lennon, 32, a native of Kings
Mountain, N.C joined the ECU
Computing Center staff in November,
1972, as Manager of Programming and
Systems.
Dr. C.Q. Brown, ECU Director of
Institutional Development, said, "Mr.
Lennon by his outstanding performance
during the past year as the programming
and systems manager for the computing
center, has earned the confidence which
this appointment reflects. I feel we are
extremely fortunate to be able to draw on
talent within our organization for such a
vital role
Lennon pledged that "it is our
intention to work toward greatly
expanding support that is provided to the
academic community" through the
computing center.
While with NASA, Lennon participated
in tracking and data processing
operations in support of Gemini and
Apollo missions, including the first
orbital rendevous by Gemini 76, the first
manned lunar voyage by Appolo 8 and the
first named lunar landing by Apollo 11.
The University Police Department nas
approximately 50 unregistered bicycles on
hand. All efforts to locate the owners of
these bicycles have failed. Anyone who
has lost a bicycle is urged to contact Mr.
Calder. If they can prove ownership the
bicycle will be returned to them.
A.C.A.appointee
Herman G. Moeller, Associate
Professor, Department of Social Work and
Correctional Services, School of Allied
Health and Social Professions, ECU has
been appointed Co-Chairman of the
Committee on Policy Positions of the
American Correctinal Association.
The committee has the responsibility
for the preparation of statements of policy
which will reflect the position of the
Association on major issues in the area of
prevention and control of crime. State-
ments prepared by the committee will be
submitted to the Board of Directors for
review and approval prior to their
presentation to the 10,000 members of the
Association. Upon adoption they will be
given both nation-wide and international
distribution.
Moeller, retired Deputy Director of the
U.S. Bureau of Prisons, is the coordinator
of Correctional Services in the Department
of Social Work and Correctional
Services. The program is designed to
prepare students for professional work in
the criminal justice field.
O.T. meeting
There will be a meeting of the
Occupational Therapy Student Associ-
ation at 7:00 Thursday, November 8, at
A.H. 203. This meeting is one of special
importance to all freshman and
sophomore students interested in
O.T. We strongly urge anyone consider-
ing entering the O.T. cirriculum to attend.
Reception
Following the Richmond-ECU game,
the Student Union Recreation Committee
will sponsor a Student Union Victory
Reception in the Union lobby. The
reception will last form 5:00 p.m. to 6:30
p.m. Refreshments and entertainment
will be provided, and the reception will
end in time for you to catch the Cartoon
film festival in Wright Auditorium at 7:00
p.m.
Contents
FLASHESpages two and ten
ECU FOUNDATION RECEIVES GIFTpage five
FASHIONSpage five
REVIEWSpage seven
EDITORIALCOMMENTARYFORUM pages eight and nine
SPORTSpages fourteen and fifteen
Jumper cables Borrow $25.00
Have your car jumped 24 hours a day
by the Student Government Association
jumper cables. These jumper cables are
in each of the East Carolina police
cars. This is another service sponsored
by your Student Government Association.
Print show
McDonald Art Gallery's second fall
show will include an exhibit of more than
40 prints by East Carolina print maker
Donald Sexauer.
in this his third McDonald show,
Sexauer will show among other prints, a
portfolio, "Companions on the Road
based on Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales
The exhibit will open with a reception
for Sexauer on Sunday, November 11,
from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
The Sexuer show will continue at the
gallery through Friday, November 30.
Gallery hours are Mondays through
Fridays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and on
Sundays from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
For additional information contact:
Marj McDonald, McDonald Art Gallery,
(704-332-6767).
Seminar
Dr. Santi Ranjan Palit, Distinguished
Research Professor of Chemistry, Indian
Association for the Cultivation of Science,
University of Calcutta, India, will present
a seminar on "Non-Faradaic Electrolysis"
Friday, November 9, 1973, at 3 p.m. in
rool 201 Flanagan Building.
Coffee will be served in the conference
room. All interested persons are cordially
invited to attend.
Sigma Sigma
Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority wishes to
announce their newly elected officers for
the 1973-74 school year.
They are: President, Jennifer Carr,
Richmond, Va Vice-President, Cindy
Ange, Jamesville, N.C Corresponding
Secretary, Carol Cox, Burlington, N.C;
Recording Secretary, Lynn Rodd,
Havelock N.C; Membership Chairman,
Robyn James, McLean, Va Panhellenic
Executive Board, Harriet Brinn, Rocky
Mount, N.C; Scholarship Secretary,
Susie Johnson, Henderson, N.S and
Treasurer, Tana Nobles, Plymouth, N.C.
Nursing
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The ECU School of Nursing has been
granted a charter of Sigma Theta Tau,
national honor society in nursing.
Announcement of the charter came
after the 22nd biannual meeting of the
national Sigma Theta Tau House of
Delegates in Indianapolis last week.
Sigma Theta Tau, the only nationally
recognized honor society for nursing,
recognizes baccalaureate nursing stu-
dents who demonstrate superior qualities
in both scholarship and leadership.
There are 55 chapters of Sigma Theta
Tau in university schools in nursing in the
U.S. ECU'S chapter will be the third
chapter in North Carolina.
m
Borrow $25.00 per month, with no
interest. Pick up the applications in the
Dean of Men's or Dean of Women's
office. The Student Loan Fund was just
increased to $5,000.00 by the Student
Government Legislature.
Panhellenic
The East Carolina University Panhel-
lenic Association, consisting of the
following members: Alpha Delta Pi,
Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha Xi
Delta, Chi Omega, Delta Zeta, Kappa
Delta, and Sigma Sigma Sigma sororities,
wishes to welcome its two newest
members, Alpha Kappa Alpha and Delta
Sigma Theta sororities.
Cartoons
Come to Wright Auditorium on
Saturday night, November 10 and enjoy
an evening of good old-fashion cartoon
and comedy entertainment. The Student
Union Films Committee will present some
fascinating vintage Walt Disney cartoons.
Included will be "Steamboat Willie"
(1928), starring Mickey Mouse, "Skeleton
Dance" (1929) and "The Three Little Pigs"
(1933), which was an Academy Award
winner for Disney. Along with these Bugs
Bunny, Daffy Duck, and Road Runner
cartoons will be shown. Also on the
program will be a number of Three
Stooges and Little Rascal comedies.
Violinist
Violinist Sidney Harth will perform at
ECU Wednesday, Nov. 14 as part of the
ECU Music Festival 74 Series.
Accompanied by pianist Paul Tardif of
the ECU keyboard faculty, Harth will
perform Handel's Sonata No. 3 in F.
Major, Ysaye's Sonata No. 3 for violin
alone, Grieg's Sonata No. 2, Debussy's
violin sonata and Ravel's "Tzigane
Harth is concertmaster and associate
conductor this season for the Los Angeles
Philharmonic orchestra, and has previous-
ly served as concertmaster for the
Chicago Symphony, the Louisville
Orchestra and the Casals Festival
Orchestra in Puerto Rico.
During his orchestral career, he has
performed as soloist under such
conductors as Fritz Reiner, Eugene
Ormandy, Erich Leinsdorf, William
Steinberg and Thomas Schippers.
He is also a member of the faculty of
the Aspen, Colorado, Festival of Music
and holds the Andrew Mellon professor-
ship at Carnegie-Mel Ion University in
Pittsburgh, Pa.
His performance at ECU is scheduled
for 8:15 p.m. in the Fletcher Music Center
Recital Hall, and is free and open to the
public.
Continued on page ten.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
Alumni
One of Motown's top recording and
performing acts, The Temptations, will be
a featured attraction at the East Carolina
University Homecoming.
The concert will be presented
November 9,1973, at 8:00 p.m. in Minges
Coliseum. The Temptations are celebrat-
ing their tenth year as a show business
institution. The Temptations evolved from
five unknown and inexperienced young
Detroiters who wanted only to sing.
Working with every top producer at
Motown, including Smoky Robinson and
Marvin Gaye, The Temptations have
generated a non-stop succession of hit
songs. As a result they have amassed a
collection of platinum and gold records
that reflects millions in sales during the
ten years The Temptations have recorded
at the studios of Motown.
The Temptations explode on stage
with enormous energy, displaying the
sight and sound that have rocketed them
to the top and made them a perennial
favorite. Off stage The Temptations have
taken keen interest in educational and
recreational programs for young people in
the Detroit area throughout their career.
Ticket information for the November
9th concert may be obtained by writing
the East Carolina Central Ticket Office,
Box 2731, ECU Station, Greenville, N.C
27834, or by calling 758-6278. Public
tickets are available for $4.00 each.
Ticket sales information
In order that there won't be too much
confusion regarding ticket sales 'or the
Homecoming concerts, the Central Ticket
Office is passing on the following
information to the public.
Tickets for the Temptations concert
and the Wet Willie concert will be on sale
in the Central Ticket Office from 9-4 until
Friday afternoon. Tickets for the Friday
night Temptations concert are $3.00 for
students and $4.00 for the public. Tickets
for the Sunday afternoon Wet Willie
concert are $2.00 for students and $3.00
for the public.
For those people who don't get tickets
at the Central Ticket Office, the box office
at Minges Coliseum will be open
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beginning at 7:00 Friday nignt and 1:00
Sunday afternoon. Only public tickets
will be sold at the box office. No student
tickets will be sold.
Students are also reminded of rules for
Minges Coliseum. Due to severe damage
which has been sustained at Minges
Coliseum during pop concerts, the
following rules will be enforced. No
smoking will be permitted inside the
coliseum. No drinking will be allowed
inside the coliseum. No one will be
allowed to sit or stand in the aisles during
the concerts. When you purchase a ticket
you agree to obey these rules. Any
violators of the above rules will be ejected
from the coliseum without ticket refunds.
Homecoming 1973
Homecoming 73 promises to be one
of the best in recent years-thanks to the
prevailing school spirit which seems to
rank at an all time high.
The ECU Alumni Association takes
pride in working with the Homecoming
Steering Committee to help organize
activities that could establish a precedent
for many years to come.
Several events are sponsored this year
by the Alumni Association. Because of
the success we experienced last year at
Homecoming, the Alumni Association is
again sponsoring a buffet breakfast.
Many of the Alumni found this event an
excellent time to renew friendships with
old acquaintances. The breakfast pro-
mises to be an enjoyable occasion and a
good meal, too, and scrambles to a start
Saturday morning, November 10, from
8:00 a.m. until 10:00 a.m. No advance
reservations are necessary. The breakfast
is $1.75 per person. Students are also,
invited to this activity.
The Alumni Association will also
sponsor an Alumni Registration from 9:00
MOTOWN'S TEMPTATIONS will appear at Minges Coliseum tomorrow night at
8:00 p.m.
Homecoming stars Temptations
to 12:00 noon at a booth on the mall. A
free print of Wright Fountain suitable for
framing will be given to each alumnus
who registers.
Immediately following the football
game Alumni are invited to a victory "key"
social as guests of the Alumni
Association. This event is scheduled
from 4:30 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. at the
Greenville Moose Lodge.
To complete a day of fun-filled
activities the Alumni Association will also
sponsor a special Alumni 4 Parents'
Dance which we hope will become an
aniual event and will attract
mmbers of ECU patrons. Music wf be
f jmished by the Betty Weldon Combo of
lew Bern. The group will be xepar 1 to
play jrrangements appropriate tor 8'l who
attend. Tickets for the Alumni Dance,
which begins at 8:X p.m. in the
Greenville Moose Lodge, may be
purchased at the door - $2.50 individuals
and $4.00 per couple.
Examination schedule
There will be no departure from the printed schedule, except as noted below. All
examinations for one and two-hour courses and for evening and Saturday classes will
be held during the last regular meeting of the class. Final examinations for three hour
courses whish meet less than three times per week will be held during the last regular
meeting of the class.
Exception: Examinations in graduate courses (300G and 400 courses) meeting at
night on Monday through Friday and on Saturday morning will be held on the night or
the morning of their usual meeting during the reading and examination period
(November 15 through November 21) rather than on the last regular meeting of the
class.
Common examinations will be held according to the following schedule:
Two-hour examinations in Accounting 122, 140, 141, 252 and 253 will be given on
Saturday, November 17, from 8:00-10:00 a.m 10:00-12:00 a.m and 2:(XM:00
p.m. Students will be notified at which time the examination in each course is
scheduled.
French, Spanish, German a,& French 3Friday, Nov. 16, 7:00-9:0Q p.ra
French, Spanish, German 2, & Spanish 3Monday, Nov. 19, 7:00-9:00 p.m.
GeoaraDhv 15 Saturday, Nov. 17,12:00-2:00 D.m.
Sryy34,35;36;64,65,66Iffi'KelSi
Swimming proficiency testMctiS No'1$ ElK-KiMa
Other examinations, except for certain English classes, will be held on Friday,
November 16; Monday, November 19; Tuesday, November 20; and Wednesday,
November 21 as follows:
Xim� 0ldss6S
Regularly Meet Day and Time of Examination
800 11:00-1:00 Tuesday, Nov. 20
gioo 8:00-10:00 Friday, Nov. 16
�lO-oo 11:0�-1:0� Monday, Nov. 19
�jvoo 3:00-5:00 Tuesday, Nov. 20
12-00 8:00-10:00 Wednesday, Nov. 21
1 ioo 11:0n-1:0� Friday, Nov. 1�
2-00 3:00-5:00 Monday, Nov. 19
3:90 8:00-10:00 Tuesday, Nov. 20
4:0o! 11:0�-1:0� Wednesday. Nov. 21
Exception: To avoid conflicts, certain English classes must hold their final
examinations according to the following schedule:
Classes meeting M-T-Th - examination held in the Monday classroom; M-W-Th -
held in the Monday-Wednesday classroom.
Time Excepted English
Classes Regularly Meet �3(& TW of Examination
800 1:00-3:00 Tuesday, Nov. 20
oifjO 1:00-3:00 Friday, Nov. 16
10:rjo' 8:00-10:00 Monday, Nov. 19
11-00 5:00-7:00 Tuesday, Nov. 20
100 1:00-3:00 Wednesday, Nov. 21
voo 3:00-5:00 Friday, Nov. 16
2-00 1:00-3:00 Monday, Nov. 19
300 5:00-7:00 Monday, Nov. 19
400 5:00-7:00, Friday, Nov. 16
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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Republicans Organizations protect environment
hear Jenkins
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, a staunch
Democrat, analyzed what went wrong foi
the Democrats in 1972 in a talk last night
to an appreciative audience, the Young
Republicans Club at ECU.
In 1972, Jenkins said, the two party
system came of age in N.C. with the
election of a Republican governor and
U.S. Senator. In these two elections, he
said, the Republican party scored "great
victories
Making it clear that he is a Democrat,
he blamed the defeat of Democratic
candidates on a lack of part participation,
a diffusion of strength in the running of
separate, disjointed campaigns and a
shift in voting trends. One out of every
three voters split their tickets-in favor of
the Republican candidates for governor
and senator on the state ballot, Jenkins
said.
"This speaks well for a good job done
by you in convincing people to do this
Jenkins told the YRC members. And he
asked, "What can you young people do
now to profit by this for your party?"
"I tell the Young Democrats the same
thing. You young people can make your
party strong by: insisting on courage,
facing issues and taking a vigorous stand,
seeking strong leadership, constructing
good programs and taking pride in the
party
The ECU Chancellor urged young
voters and party workers to "disassociate
yourselves from the idea that elections
can be purchased. Insist on honesty and
integrity at all levels cf government, and
always place your country above your
party.
"Be a good American first and then a
good Republican he said.
Jenkins warned that "MadisonAvenue
techniques fail more often than they
succeed in N.C and described some of
the bigger state newspapers as
"insufferable bullies" whose "blessing is
a kiss of death
Senator Sam
(CPS)-Senator Sam Ervin will release a
phonograph record in time for
Christmas. The Senate Watergate Com-
mittee chairman has recorded a
non-Watergate collection of stories,
family recollections, court cases, poetry,
and talks on the Bible. Ervin also recites
the words from Paul Simon's "Bridge Over
Troubled Water" and Pete Seeger's "If I
Had A Hammer
The record, cut in the library of Ervin's
North Carolina home includes the
interruptions of doorbells-ringing, friends
and neighbors and passing cars.
In recent years, many citizen's
organizations have formed for the specific
purpose of protecting our environment
and providing "expert" guidance to the
state and federal governments.
The activity of these organizations
have resulted in stopping the construction
of the Alaskan Pipeline for four years,
new nuclear plant construction has been
virtually eliminated, offshore drilling has
been stopped and a moratorium has been
placed on the construction of hydro-elec-
tric power dams.
The life support system of modern
civilization is based on availability of
useable energy. The people of the State
of California require 95 percent of their
energy resources to be applied by natural
gas and petroleum. At the present time,
we have proven reserves of less than 4
and 8 years respectively of petroleum and
natural gas within the land mass of the
continental 48 states. A little over a
decade ago, the proven reserves of both
of these resources were nearly 30 years of
consumptive use at that time. By 1975 we
will be importing 50 percent of our
petroleum from the international markets.
P.G.&E. has already indicted that it will
cut back 50 percent of its commercial
natural gas service this year if it is unable
to buy crude oil on the international
markets to fire its boilers in the
company's thermo-electric plants. The
crude oil price is increased from $1.86 to
over $7.00 a barrell by 1975 during a ten
year interval with the main increase
occuring between 1972 and 1975. Import-
ed natural gas, if it becomes available,
will experience a much greater increase in
cost.
Coal, which cannot be fired in many of
the existing thermo-eiectric plants, will
experience a three fold increase in cost at
the minemouth. Practical processes for
the gasification and polymerization of
coal to produce a liquid energy product
will result in energy losses of well over 70
percent of the input resource. The plants
to do this do not exist and it will take
years to construct the number that are
needed.
The people of this country are being
struck by an energy crisis for which they
are unprepared as proven by the fact that
we are still constructing a massive super
highway system. This situation has
resulted from massive blunders within
government, gross incompetence of
governmental agencies, and helped by the
well intentioned but misguided citizen's
groups.
The offshore drilling was stopped
because of an accidental oil spill that did
no lasting ecological harm nor property
damage that was not compensated. The
Alaskan Pipeline was stopped by a
concept that 150 foot of right-of-way
through the arctic waste land would do
irreparable harm to an entire region. New
nuclear plant construction has been
stopped by Proposition 20 on the
November 1972 ballot and the develop-
ment of hydro-electric power dams has
been affected by the "white water"
legislation.
It is time that the general population
considers what the citizen's groups are
and what they have done. One of the
larger organizations has indicated a desire
to destroy the water supply system of the
City of San Francisco and publicly
proclaims that its membership contains
kooks. Many of the organizations have
no regard for ecology but practice a
modern-day form of Druidism where rocks
are worshipped and the human masses
and their country are expendable. Many
egomaniacs have found it fashionable and
profitable to attack the business
developmental areas and the govemmet.
They preach the gospel of death and they
are hypocrites of the worst kind.
Here are some real ecological items
that may create and few questions.
When there was another approach, we are
being forced to use lead free gasoline
which will release massive amounts of
carcinogenic materials into the atmo-
sphere. A new sewage treatment plant
has been constructed in the capitol of the
state where many of the organizational
headquarters are located. This plant
heavily pollutes the waters of one of hte
major rivers. Nothing has been said about
this plant by the ecologists, even though
the technology has existed for thirty years
to render a properly designed and
operational unit. The ecologists created a
Continued on page 5.
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THE TRADING POST
Sale On All Summer Items
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REFRIGERATOR RENTALS
Refrigerators must either be
turned in or renewed for winter
quarter.
Refrigerators may still be
rented for winter and spring
quarters. Rent $12.00 deposit
$10.00.
For information call SGA
Office 7586262.
COLLECTION SCHEDULE
Location Time
Hill Nov. 15,16,17 12-5 p.m.
Women's High
Rise Dorms Nov. 15,16,17 12-5 p.rn
RENEWAL OR RENTAL
jLocation Tim
Office 311
Wright Annex Nov. 12,13,14 9-3 pm
Shoney's invites
Students to Dinner
the Homecoming
Good Luck to the
from Shoney's.
ECU
After
Game.
Pirates
SHONEY'S WILL
FOR THE GAME.
SUN. THURS. 7-10
FRI.andSAT. 7-11
BE OPEN TILL 12:00 ON SATURDAY
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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5
Continued from page four.
massive reaction about the Santa Barbara
Channel, which did no lasting harm, but
nothing was said about naturally occuring
oil seeps that can be seen to coat the
surface of the ocean. These steps could
be stopped by sate regulated offshore
drilling.
Much of the developing energy
shortage is due to public apathy and
unawareness of the problem that has
resulted from over publicizing the great
expectations of the future which will never
reach massive technical benefits. Such
things are the space effort and the
modern electronic wizardy have little
signficance when they are compared with
the energy to heat our homes and cook
our food, as well as provide for our modes
of transportation. Even the structural
materials of i modern civilization; steel,
concrete, glass, plaster board, and
plastics; are energy based. Few people
rei;ze that the chemical fertilizer industry
that is responsible for producing a third of
our food supplies is based directly on
natural gas as a major chemical
ingredient.
The energy crisis that we face today,
for the most past, has resulted from the
clamor of a very small minority of
activists located here in California. In all
probability less than 50,000 people
actively have been writing to their electd
representatives. In other words, this
msall group oif people is controlling the
life destiny of 200,000,000 people in this
country. I have a letter from the
Honorable Paul Fannin, United States
Senator for the State of Arizona which
states in part, "As critical as the nation's
need for these resources, it will first
necessitate a much broader public
support before it would be appropriate for
the responsible agencies to proceed to
make them available Senator Fannin is
a member of the Interior and Insular
Affairs Committee which controls the
federal resources.
Foundation receives $10,000
Lawrence Behr Associates, Stuart
Shinn, Inc and Telecommunications,
Inc. of which Stuart M. Shinn and
Lawrence Behr of Greenville are the
principal officers, have contributed a gift
of $10,000 to the ECU Foundation.
Don Leggett, Executive Director of the
ECU Foundation, made this announce-
ment Saturday.
A portion of the grant is to be used for
support of special projects in the area of
community social work in the School of
Allied Health and Social Professions. The
remainder is given unrestricted for Univer-
sity development.
Stuart Shinn, during the check
presentation ceremonies in the office of
Chancellor Leo Jenkins, said "I am vitally
interested in the development of our
University and the influence that it has on
the economic and social structure of our
area of the state. As a Greenville
businessman I am constantly aware of the
services available through the University
and the impact it has on the Greenville
community and the state as a whole. This
is my way of expressing my interest in the
development of ECU and the Greenville
community
Lawrence Behr made the following
statement: "Through my association with
the Pitt County Vista program I have
developed a special interest in the area of
community social work and the intent of
this gift is to perpetuate and further
special projects that the School of Allied
Health and Social Professions might be
considering at this time. As a graduate of
ECU, I have a special interest in the
progress of the University and by giving
this gift I can enhance the progress of the
University and at the same time assist a
in
which I have particular
Bicentennial involves students
In 1967, the North Carolina
Bicentennial Commission (NCBC) was
created by the State Legislature to plan
and develop programs for the celebration
of the American Revolution in the
state. Within the themes of Heritage and
Horizons, the NCBC encourages the
active envoivement of your people in
carrying out of Bicentennial goals. The
Bicentennial Celebration involves not only
a re-examination of America's origins and
values, but also a challenge to its citizens
to undertake at least one principal project
which manifests the pride, the priorities
and the hopes of America's citizens.
This program offers post-secondary
education students an opportunity to
create their own projects within the
framework of Bicentennial goals. It is
jointly sponsored by the Southern
Regional Education Board (SREB), the
North Carolina Bicentennial Commission,
and the North Carolina Internship Office
(NCIO).
Student initiated projects can:
-Call attention to North Carolina's
cultural traditions and initiate practices
that foster self-determination among
peoples and communities;
-Encourage secondary student popu-
lations to contribute to public needs and
their own learning within the "Spirit of
76 and
-Assist counties and local Bicenten-
nial groups in developing and implement-
ing Bicentennial activities.
Student initiated projects should:
ffMMMMM
-Answer the question, "How can
America's Bicentennial be given signifi-
cance and lasting value?
-Be sanctioned as learning;
-Meet a public need; and
-Be imaginative and feasible.
Post-secondary students at senior
colleges and universities in the state are
eligible to apply.
You are encouraged to seek assistance
from local Bicentennial groups, interested
community residents and college faculty
members in developing your proposal.
The NCIO staff is available to provide
technical assistance. They can be
reached at 919-829-4375 or NCIO, 116 W.
Jones St Raleigh, N.C. 27603.
November 23,1973, is the deadline for
all applications and notice of acceptance
will be made December 14,1973.
At least 14 students will be
supported. Applicants will contract with
the NCIO, mutally agreeing on project
objectives, beginning and ending dates,
reimbursement schedule and time period.
An individual student will receive no
more than $1000 for a total project grant,
and no team of students will receive more
than $2500. When the agreement is
signed, 50 per cent of the funds will be
released. Payment for the balance will be
negotiated with at least 10 per cent of the
total project grant held back upon the
successful completion of the project.
The earliest possible project initiation
date is December 17, 1973. All projects
must be completed by May 31, 1974.
program
interest
Dr. Jenkins, receiving the gift, said
"Both of these men have attended ECU
and are natives of this area. They are
keenly aware of the needs of the
University and its community. We deeply
appreciate their assistance in the
development of ECU and their interest in
the role of the University in the total
development of our region of the state
Leggett, Executive Director of the
Foundation, expressed his appreciation
for the efforts of Shinn and Behr to
perpetuate the development work of the
Foundation to the end that funds might
be made available to support outstanding
projects within the University which need
additional funding in supplement to
state-allocated monies.
Telecommunications, Inc is a
communications systems construction
firm; Stuart Shinn, Inc is an electrical
contracting firm; and Lawrence Behr
Associates is a broadcasting and
communications systems consulting
firm. All of these have their headquarters
in Greenville.
sponsor
Dr. Umesh Gulati, a professor in the
Department of Economics at ECU, will
participate in a panel discussion, "Talk
About Trade a program given by the
Greenville-Pitt County League of Women
Voters.
Held for the general public, this
discussion will focus on international
trade as it relates to North Carolina.
A native of India, Dr. Gulati has spem
the past 9 years in the United States. He
earned his doctorate at the University of
Virginia where he specialized in
macro-economic theory. His current
research centers on the economics of
developing countries.
ig costs
increase
By CAROL WOOD
Staff Writer
Consumers have been so involved in
the "battle of the budget" at the grocery
check out lines, that many haven't noticed
the recent increase in retail clothing.
The increase is not because of
exorbitant profits being made by retailers,
rather the industry is experiencing the
same economic squeeze imposed by the
"Phase I, II, III, IVTheraphy
Women's Wear Daily stated that one
firms' prices are up 12 percent over last
year's because of higher labor and fabric
costs.
As consumers you should learn to
recognize the difference between a fad
and a fashion.
Fads are temporary, often extreme
designs. Fashions are better quality, and
more permanent designs.
For the budget conscious person,
fashions are your safest and best solution
to the clothing dilemma.
It is wise to choose multipurpose and
interchangeable items of apparel vests,
tops and jackets that can be mixed and
matched with several different outfits.
Another helpful hint is to develop a
basic color scheme for your wardrobe.
That makes it much easier to combine and
extend your wardrobe.
There are certain basic styles or
classics that are always a safe purchase,
for example, the front button blazer and
the A-line skirt. Classics can remain in a
wardrobe for years and look totally
different each season with current
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
The program will be held November 13
at 8:00 p.m. in the First Federal Savings
and Loan Building on 264 By-pass.
All ECU students, faculty and staff are
urged to attend.
Language arts
to hold annual
talk-workshop
The English Department of ECU will
present a four day conference-workshop
in language arts in the secondary schools
on the ECU campus Nov. 13-16.
Janice Hardison, conference director,
said the annual language arts conference
is open to any and all school personnel
interested in any subject covered during
the four days of programs and seminars
conducted by recognized experts.
"The conference-workshop is a
product of efforts made by the English
Department to stay attuned to the
changing scene in our secondary
schoolsto provide a channel through
which the best experience among us, at
whatever level, can be made available to
all of us she said.
Subjects for the seminars include:
Wednesday-Science Fiction, Black Liter-
ature, Folklore, Individual Instruction.
Thursday-Films, Art, Special Learning
Problems, Visual Literary. Friday-News-
paper, Yearbook, Literary Magazine,
lournalism.
The seminars will include 'questions
and answer periods and open forum
discussions.
Reservations for the sessions are $5
per day for registration, and further
registration and program information may
be obtained from Janice G. Hardison,
Conference Director, Department of
English, ECU Greenville.
accessories.
Develop a mental checklist for
reference when purchasing a new apparel
item .(1) Is the price proportional to the
service you expect to receive; (2) Do you
have accessories that will match the new
item; (3) Does the garment fit into your
wardrobe scheme - can it be interchanged
with other apparel, etc.
In today's economy most of the
consumer's money is spent for food, so
stretch your clothing dollar by evaluating
clothes before you purchase them.
m
mm





6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
wmmmmmmmwmwmi
m
m
mm
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IN SEARCI
HISTORICA
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Reviews
IN SEARCH OF NIXON, A PSYCHO-
HISTORICAL INQUIRY, by Bruce Mazlish
A Pelican Book.
Who, after all is Richard Nixon? In an
attempt to discover the answer, author
Bruce Mazlish has accumulated data and
information from eminent biographers,
journalists and historians, friends and
Nixon family members and i analyzed the
total through the fine eye of the
psychologically-oriented historian.
Nixon's need for "lonely decisions
"his need to be hard on himself and on
others his "highly competitive nature"
are all traced from childhood to the
present.
Richard Nixon is presented as a man
continually apart, one for whom
spontaneity, warmth, and the impromptu
are an impossibility. The death of Nixon's
two brothers early in life, contends
Mazlish, made young Richard aware of
the uncomfortable proximity of death -
and added to his youthful insecurity.
Nixon was turn between the placid,
peaceloving Quaker nature of his mother,
Hannah, a "neighborhood saint and the
blistering and authorative, often cruel
nature of the Irish Frank Nixon, his
father. Ultimately, Mazlish contends,
Richard learned to escape his father's
temper by outtalking him - by debate and
circumlocution.
But these anecdotes, often haphazard-
ly presented by Mazlish, are not enough
in themselves as sufficient description of
Richard Nixon. The picture presented of
Nixon-the-man is a confusing and
complex one - a picture of a man with
two distinct personalities, a man so
conditioned to hiding his true feelings
(both due to the demands of politics and
remnants of Quaker privacy) that, for
everyone save Richard Nixon, only the
public Nixon exists; rigid, cold, unable to
break free.
We are left, subsequently, with a
frightening question: will this artificial
Nixon, the public man indeed by failure
after failure, the only typed politician
capable of existence in coming
years? Nixon's life is a science. By
self-admission, he has systematically
learned from past election failures and
deep-seated childhood failures, and has
modified his life accordingly. Each
experiment-each election, action or
proposal-is measured for effectiveness
and used for a future plan of action. This
is, quite naturally, the normal means of
character growth in human life�but
Mazlish presents a man who has
systematically excluded humanness from
his life pattern, as being less conducive to
success.
Mazlish's book is neither pro or
anti-Nixon in atmosphere. Rather, it
presents a remarkably interesting portrait
of a man whom, in some vague way, we
can understand-a man with so much
failure behind him that fighting was the
only out; a clumsy, uncoordinated boy
who tried too hard at everything and never
quite fit in; a man who saw his father fail
in business due to haphazardness-and
resolved that success required a system.
There are two sides to every story,
every person, every president. Regardless
of one's feelings toward Nixon the
politician, Bruce Mazlish's book brings us
closer to seeing Nixon as a man
continually on the defense, continually
trying to win and, like most achievers,
haunted by failure.
Who, after all, is Richard Nixon? Only
Richard Nixon knows, but Mazlish makes
a noble and valuable attempt in helping
the reader to understand. And under-
standing is often more valuable than a
definite answer.
HIGH ON THE HOGBLACK OAK
ARKANSAS ATCO DS 7035
Black Oak Arkansas have won a huge
young following through their enthusi-
astic and energetic approach to original
rock material, sparked by the down-home
vocal style of Jim Dandy. Now BOA,
wihtout letting go of their unique and
distinctive form of funk, display some
other sides to their music, with ballads,
country rock, and straight-ahead rock n'
roll.
"Swimmin' In Quicksand" is in the
brash Black Oak tradition; "Jim Dandy"
shows the way they can transform an R&B
classic into the Black Oak mold, and
"Back to the Land" is their way of
combining their country roots with pure
funk. "High On The Hog" is Black Oak
Arkansas now.
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
7
�P
SPECTRUMBILLY COBHAM
ATLANTIC SD 7268
In recent years, Billy Cobham has
acquired the exceedingly well-deserved
reputation as one of the finest drummers
in all of contemporary music. Countless
jazz and rock sessions, plus a highly
successful stint with John McLaughlin
and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, have
drawn his amazing percussive talents
more and more out into the
open. Working with exciting and dynamic
"new music" players like Jan Hammer
(kayboards), Tommy Bolin (guitar), Lee
Sklar (bass), Joe Farrell (sax-flute), and
Ron Carter (acoustic bass), Billy creates a
startling and powerfully inventive blend of
astral melodies and funk oriented rhythms
that create their own categories. This is
an outstanding album, with legitimately
new and original music experimentation.
(CPSZNS)-The four members of the
Beatles are getting together in a secret
meeting soon to finalize the break-up of
their business, the New York Times
reports.
John, Paul, Ringo and George are said
to be preparing to end all business
relations within the next few months.
The Times adds, however, that if the
meeting ends on a friendly basis, then the
ex-Beatles might work together indivi-
dually be contributing material to each
other's albums.
JOIN THE "BOGART" CULT!
This Coupon Will Admit You For 1.00
Admission to any Picture Listed Below
'Treasure of the Sierre
Madre" Nov. 9 13
"Key Largo"
Nov. 14-17
'Casa Blanca"
Nov. 18-20
PARK THEATRE
Downtown Greenville
Here's
Looking
At
You
Kid!
Madman
again
By JOHN EVANS
Staff Writer
With his new release, the double
album "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Elton John once again establishes his
superior rating in the rock field. John has
not missed yet and this superb set will
surely add to this string.
John's keyboards are exceptional,
equalled only by the range of his
voice. Featured in this package is music
which varies from his familiar rock beat to
some extremely pretty ballad material.
This LP seems to be fuller than any of his
previous efforts. The strong guitar work
of Davey Johnstone and the background
vocal work by the entire group
accomplishes great things.
John has yet to fail in his presentation
of song. In this set, the material spans
many fields to include country and
Jamaican flavors. His presentation of
these songs are superb. On one cut,
"Funeral For A Friend a large orchestral
session, accompanied by an A.R.P.
synthesizer, leads into the cut and results
in one of the finest cuts on the two
platters.
as usual, Bernie Taupin provides the
lyrics. Taupin has a mastery for such
chores. This particular set seems to have
several socially oriented cuts, the best of
which are, "Social Disease "Candle in th
Wind and "All the Girls Have Alice
Perhaps the best cuts in this
collection of super arrangements are the
title cuts, and the closing cut
"Harmony Both are superb efforts with
Del Newman handling the orchestral
arrangements. The orchestral accompani-
ment is a fairly new device for John and it
worked very well.
An avid Elton John fan will consume
every bit of the package, while a more
critical listener will be treated to an
excellent sample of the artist's work. For
those not used to John's style, this album
may have to grow on them. There are so
many outstanding cuts that it will take the
listener a while to take it all in. There are
no "bad" cuts on the albums-this is good
stuff and most likely John's best to
date. If you are not yet a fan of Elton
John this offering will make you one.
FOUNTAINHEAD
needs Reviews Writers
call 758-6366
or leave note in editor's box,
Fountainhead office.
We pay cash.
MM





8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
mm
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EdiiorialsCainmenlarv
A quarter's-end word
Fountainhead regrets the failure of the liquor-by tne-drink referendum. We can
attribute the failure only to the well-organized fanaticism of the "dry" vote and poor
turnout of the 'wets not to a triumph of virtue. Perhaps this should be expected from
a state in which good old boys may gather to discuss the joys of last night's
drunkenness while piously condemning liquor-by-the-drink as a corrupting
influence. The pros and cons of each side are so well-known by now that they don't
bear repeating - but let us remember that the referendum which was defeated was not
for the immediate construction of bars, but for free choice in the counties. Free choice
defeated; ironically appropriate. We hope the issue is raised again, next time
successfully.
As for other matters, this is Fountainhead's last issue for Fall Quarter. We hope
we've served you well, and plan to be back after Thanksgiving with our staff
considerably rested and ready to put out a better newspaper-with, of course, some of
the occasional screw-ups which make life eternally interesting.
We encourage more people to come talk to us rather than criticizing from
afar. When we have received specific criticisms, we have attempted to rectify problems
in person or by telephone rather than sensationalizing our quarrels in bold print. The
point is in understanding and in making things just, not in filling space with massive
vilification
"But I say that wisdom is better than might, though the
poor man's wisdom is despised, and his words are not
heeded
Eccleslastes9:16
Or, to quote Lao Tzu
"To know, yet to think that one does not know is best
So Fountainhead ends the first quarter of its fifth year. We wish you a happy
Homecoming, good luck on exams, and - most of all - a little time in which to be
contemplative, to see student governments, student newspapers, varsity sports and
clubs in proper perspective, and to find something quiet and deeper in all your
respective selves.
A hopelessly philosophical editor-in-chief wishes you well until Winter Quarter.
Vets, take note
A recent study by the Educational
Testing Service (ETS) has confirmed that
Vietnam veterans get considerably less
benefits than the benefits provided for
World War II veterans.
The study says, "When educational
allowances for the Vietnam veteran are
adjusted for the average tuition, fees,
books and supplies at a four-year public
institution, the benefits remaining are
insufficient to meet the veteran's
estimated living expenses
The World War II G.I. Bill offered
single vets up to $500 per year for books,
tuition, and fees, plus $75 a month for
subsistence. Today's benefits give
veterans $220 a month to cover
everything.
"It is apparent that inflation and a
rising standard of living have taken their
ton oti the Vietnam veteran's benefits
the study continues, "and that his 'real'
JLl At
staff
ability to purchase post-secondary
education has dimisned with respect to
his World War II counterpart
In a letter to the New York Times in
March, VA administrator Donald Johnson
said the "present single veteran allowance
of $1980 for a school year is nearly three
times the World War II allowance and
gives most veterans more monetary
assistance than after World War II, even
allowing for inflation and increased
school costs
But the ETS report disagrees: "The
five-fold increase in the average tuition of
four-year private institutions by 1973,
coupled with the cost of books and
supplies, requires the Vietnam veteran
with current benefits of $1980 to raise and
additional $136 just to meet educational
costs, leaving literally nothing for
subsistence.
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat CrawJord
MANAGING EDITORSklp Saunders
NEWS EDITORS Wane Taylor
Darretl Williams
AD MANAGERParrl Morgan
BUSINESS MANAGER Linda Gardner
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow
COMPOSER TYPISTAllot Laary
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, 7564367
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-
students
mmmmm
'1UE CARD SECTION IS SPELLING
OUT A MESSAGE TO THE OTHER
TEAM THE POUCE 19 NOVl
AAOWG fNi
Arabs, 'the Milktapes
and a tattered Alliance
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - The desert sands
of the Arab countries hold the life blood
of the great western industrial nations. A
complete cutoff of oil this winter would
force Western Europe and Japan virtually
to shut down their industries. The United
States would be critically short of oil to
heat homes and operate automobiles.
Yet Arab leaders are threatening to
continue the oil embargo against the West
until Israel evacuates all the Arab territory
it seized in 1967. Secret Intelligence
reports tell of pledges of "solidarity"
between the Arab nations to use their
precious oil as a political weapon
The National Security Council is
urgently studying how to deal with the
crisis. We can report that one decision
has been made. The United States has no
intention of letting the Arab nations shut
down factories around the world and
create mass unemployment.
Contingency plans are being prepared
to use military force, if necessary, to take
over the Arab oil fields. This, of course,
would be the last resort. First, the United
States would seek the oil by every
possible peaceful, commercial method. If
these should fail, the United States
probably would use financial pressure and
freeze the billions f dollars in Arab bank
accounts in the West.
But military action is a definite
possibility if 'the Arab leaders remain
intransigent.
The Milktapes: A new battle is
brewing over some other White House
tapes. Two meetings were held on the
White House on March 23, 1971, one in
the President's oval office, the other in
the cabinet room. Attending the meetings
were dairymen, who were seeking an
increase in dairy subsidies
Secretary of Agriculture Clifford
Hard in had refused to increase milk price
supports. He was supported by budget
boss George Shultz. But Nixon's friend,
ex-Rep. Pat Hillings, wrote a letter to the
White House in behalf of the dairy
industry, promising to raise $2 million for
the 1972 Nixon campaign. In the same
letter, he pleaded the case for higher dairy
subsidies.
Two days after the dairymen talked to
the President the White House ordered the
Agriculture Department to increase milk
price supports 27 cents for 100
pounds. This White House order was
worth an estimated $500 million a year to
the dairy industry.
Senate investigators are now trying to
find out whether the dairy lobby
contributed to the Nixon campaign in
return for a pledge to increase dairy
subsidies. This could be construed as a
bribe.
Hardin has refused to discuss the
matter with the investigators. As the
former secretary of agriculture, he is
claiming executive privilege. But the real
showdown is expected to come over the
White House tapes. The dairymen's
discussions inside the White House,
presumably, were recorded. The investi-
gators now want the tapes.
Allies at Odds: This was supposed to
be the Year of Europe, the year we would
bolster our relations with our European
allies. Today, the Atlantic Alliance lies in
tatters.
The Atlantic partners are bickering
bitterly over the Middle East war. Presi-
dent Nixon complained in a press
conference that our European friends
weren't cooperating in seeking a
settlement. This brought a sour crack
from British Prime Minister Edward
Heath, picked up by the Central
Intelligence Agency, that Britain refused
to rush arms to the front and lengthen the
war.
Our European allies were particularly
upset over the worldwide military alert
that Nixon ordered without consulting
them. The North Atlantic Council, which
is supposed to coordinate military
strategy, complained that its generals
learned about the alert from the
Associated Press.
The President petulantly told reporters
that Western Europe would have frozen to
death this wir.er if the alert hadn't been
ordered and Russia hadn't held back its
troops from the Middle East. France's
President Georges Pompidou was quoted
by the CIA as saying privately that
Western Europeans would have frozen to
death faster if they had followed the U.S.
policy which made the alert necessary.
Germany's Chancellor Willy Brandt,
meanwhile, objected vigorously over the
transfer of U.S. military equipment from
Germany to Israel at a time when West
Germany was trying to maintain neutrality
in the Arab-Israeli conflict.
1973, apparently, isn't going to be the
Year of Europe after all.
Of Booze and Pigs: The men who run
the Pentagon like to pose as tireless
public servants who devote their time to
safeguarding the nation's security. But
the brass hats also spend long hours in
the solemn study of more pedestrian
problems.
The Navy thought it would be
interesting to find out, for example, about
the drinking habits of its men. So a few
weeks ago, a study was ordered. The
sailors were asked why they drink, when
they drink and how often they get "high or
tight
On the West Coast, however, the Navy
is more concerned about the goats and
pigs on San Clemente Island. Contractors
have been asked to submit bids "for the
round-up and removal of approximately
5,000 feral goats and approximately 800
feral pigs" from San Clementa Island.
San Clements Island should not be
confused with President Nixon's San
Clemente estate. The island is located
about 50 miles off the Southern California
coast. There are no goats and pigs
roaming over the President's property.
The animals on the island, the Navy
informed the contractors, "roam free in
the unoccupied and canyon areas The
man who gets the job will be required to
"remove (the) goats and pigs alive in
accordance with huamne methods and
procedures
So while most brass hats are occupied
with the Middle East crisis, some are
worried how to catch wild goats and pigs
on San Clemente Island.





FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
9
I T
heForum
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to
express their opinions in the Forum.
Letters should be signed by the authors;
names will be withheld on request. Un-
signed 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.
Band issue
To Fountainhead:
On the subject of second rate bands,
East Carolina is the third largest
University in North Carolina and as a
couple of interested students we would
like to know why ECU does not have any
top name bands appear?
Elon College is about a third the size
of ECU and can afford first rate bands
like: The Guess Who, The Doobie
Brothers, Rod Stewart and Faces, and
others. Why then does it seem like East
Carolina ends up with a lot of second rate
bands?
We think the students of East Carolina
are waiting to see a good concert come
out of Greenville and as of yet East
Carolina has failed to produce one. What
is the holdup?
Disgusted students,
Larry Alan Pace
George F. Smith
Ernest G. Marshburn
Greg Henden
Doug Happer
Anti-revolution
To Fountainhead:
Yesterday I overheard someone say, "I
wish we would have a revolution and a
depression, just to relieve the boredom of
things Yes maybe many people have
had this same thought or feelings esp. the
way things have been lately. But have you
ever stopped to think what these two
words really men? I'll bet these people
have never been really grateful of what
they have or the opportunity to
achieve. This statement came from the
mind of a very irrational and immature
person from my point of view. I suppose
they never say the beauty around them or
the wonderful feeling of just being alive.
Or wondering where your next meal
comes from, always running just to live,
that's just part of what it would be like if
these things were for real.
For all of you who want a revolution
and a depression, someday and maybe
soon you'll get your wish. Then maybe
you'll praise God for what you had and
curse the devil or ignorance that
persuaded you to think such thoughts.
God has been so good to us I just don't
see how one could possibly ignore this.
Thank God,
Phyllis Vail
Garrett beds
To Fountainhead:
The bed situation in Garrett Hail is
pretty bad. Beds are six feet long with
rests at the end. If you're taller than six
feet it's a bit of a problem. Second,
only has just a few springs for support
the middle. Seems like you're sleeping
a hammock.
The atrocity is, you can't place it in
any of the six empty storage rooms. You
must pay a fee t� remove it from your
room. It's crowded enough in a room
without parts of a bed hanging
around. I've taken mine apart.
It seems to me, that if the University
can't supply a satisfactory bed they could
at least let students put them in one of
the empty storage rooms free of the five
dollar fee. I mean what's the purpose of a
storage room? Also students are required
to live in dorms for six quarters, and pay
the cost the University desires, can't they
in turn supply a half decent bed. I guess
that's too much to ask for since you only
spend one third of your day in it.
I've talked to Dan K. Wooten, Director
of Housing and Mr. Vainwright, Associate
to the Business Office. They might as
well be deaf. Because they just don't
listen. I think instead of them hearing
anything, they're trying to think of
something to say next.
Sincerely,
John Freeman
Fraternity thanks
To Fountainhead:
On behalf of the business fraternity,
Phi Beta Lambda, I would like to thank
the fraternity brothers of Alpha Phi
Omega and all the sorority pledge classes
for their help in the United Fund
Rock-A-Thon.
To my knowledge, this marks the first
time at East Carolina University that
professional, service and social organi-
zations have worked together on a civic
oriented project This year Rock-A-Thon
was one of the most successful ever,
thanks to the loyal support, hard work and
late hours of everyone involved.
Thanks again for a job well done!
Sincerely,
T.R. Pierce
Vice President
Phi Beta Lambda
Heat complaint
To Fountainhead:
Due to the lack of heat in my dorm and
others, it has become increasingly
difficult to concentrate upon my
studies. I am sure this is also causing
increasing problems in other areas as
well. I am not alone in stating that we as
paying dormitory residents deserve
adequate amounts of heat to eliminate
constant agitation and shivers as a result
of this heat shortage. Perhaps if the
University would rescend its archaeic
rules concerning residence requirements I
would be able to have my own cosy, warm
apartment without causing severe damage
to the environment. Please do not
misinterpret me. I do realize the energy
shortage we are facing, but I do feel that
the University should at least bear with
those of us who need to spend some time
studying, instead of seeking refuge
between a blanket and mattress and not
getting a single constructive thing done.
Sincerely,
An Aycock third floor resident
A KA story
To Fountainhead:
On Saturday Nov. 3 following the ECU
William and Mary game, the "Bad Ass"
KA's had a party at their Party
House. Buzzy Braman, a 6 foot 3 inch 175
pound freshman basketball player, was
invited to attend this party by two young
ladies. As Buzzy arrived at the Party
House "alone" he was greeted by a couple
of Bad Ass KA's who stopped him. They
told him he could not enter the house. He
explained that he had been invited and
after some hassel one of the "Rats"
allowed him to enter. After he entered the
house he stood alone, minding his own
business at the back of the
house. Shortly he was approached by a
group (10-15 pussys) who began to show
their superiority by hassling him. They
told Buzzy to "get the hell out" and he
replied "I will leave when I am
ready Moments after this, a big tuff
(squatty body) KA hit him in the face
several times and before Buzzy could
recover he was swarmed by 10-15
vultures. They beat the living hell out of
him as well as ripping his clothes to
shreds. He finally managed to escape
through a door or he would have been
mutilated. I can see two guys on one but
10-15 on one guy.
Well, mat incident is over with and
forgotten by the KA's but you had better
believe that I, the writer, and numerous
other people haven't forgotten. So you
won round one, now we are going to see
just how damn bad you guys are. Don't
be surprised if one of your parties in the
near future is "briefly" interrupted. I
advise you to party without dates for a
while as it might be embarassing for the
young ladies one night.
I am not writing this letter knocking
fraternities, as I have lots of friends in
Fraternal Organizations. I just want the
KA's to know that they just added fuel to
the fire regarding their reputation as the
"Ass Holes" of the fraternities (right,
sororities?).
Also, I heard this information from 10U
percent accurate sources and Buzzy did
not say a word regarding me writing this
letter. I know the guy (Buzzy) when I see
him, but that is the extent of our
relationship. I guess a lot of people will
get to know him a lot better after the
"frolic" the third fo November.
"Be aware KA's (Bad Asses)
Muhammid and Clan will be making a
visit.
A Concerned Student at ECU
P S We have already made arrangements
with the City Jail of Greenville to
accomodate 50 of you or 50 of us. May
the BEST group win.
LIGHT AT THE END OF THE TUNNEL
�P





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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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Continued from page two.
PE workshop
The Emergency School Aid Act
program sponsored by the Department of
Health and Physical Education at East
Carolina University is conducting a
parentchild physical education work-
shop. Parents of 5th and 6th grade
children are invited to attend as are all
interested members of the community.
The consultant for the workshop will
be Mr. Ambrose Brazelton, an elementary
school physical education specialist from
Columbus, Ohio. The date for the
workshop is Thursday, November 8, 1973
at 7:00 p.m. in Minges Coliseum.
Winter fees
The Cashier's Office will accept
student fees for the Winter Quarter 1973
beginning Monday, November 12. Pay-
ment in advance will help avoid some
inconveniences and delays on Regis-
tration Day.
Preschool unit
A third unit of preschool will be
opened at ECU for the winter and spring
quarters. The announcement was made
today by Dr. Nash W. Love, Jr Chairman
of the Department of Child Development
and Family Relations, School of Home
Economics.
Interested parents of children who
have had their third, fourth or fifth by
October 15, 1973, are invited to make
application by calling 758-6908 or
758-6926 between the hours of 9:00 a.m.
and 12:30 p.m. through November 16.
The preschool program, meeting daily
weekdays from 9:00 until 12:00, have
three purposes: (1) to offer good
living-learning experiences to individual
children within a group setting; (2) to be a
resource to parents; (3) to provide
observation-participation to students who
wish to increase their skills in relating to
young children
Additional information will be given
upon request.
Midnight hour
November 16 (Friday and 17
(Saturday), 1973, Joyner Library will
remain open until midnight. It will be
opened primarily as a quiet place to study
since limited libra- service will be offered
and some areas will be closed. If these
expanded hours are used by the students,
such expansion of hours will be seriously
considered in future scheduling.
WSSftWftSSftS
I
i
Vets dub
NEED
The Veteran's Club book exchange is
provided to afford the student an
opportunity to sell and buy his books for
a decent price. It will be held 13 Nov. thru
5 Dec from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p.m in
room 308 Wright Annex. The Veterans
Club does not buy the books, but merely
acts as an agent thru which transactions
may occur. Since the Vet's book
exchange is not on a book quota system
(many times the book buyer will only take
just so many of each book to reduce their
risk of loss), you may bring any and all
books you have to the exchange. The
main drawback to this exchange is that
you have to wait until the book is sold
before you can claim your money. But,
even with the delay, the amount you
receive will be more than the book buyer
will give.
?
RING
SS
V
Bring this add for 15 percent off on any
Jade, Onyx, Opal, Smoky Topaz, or Linde'
Star Ring purchased from Floyd
G.Robinson's.
DISCOUNT JEWELERS
407 Evans Street
Downtown Greenville
7582452
We Buy and Sell Diamonds
Offer expires November 30, 1973
I
100 I.U.100 CAPSULES $2.50
200 I.U100 CAPSULES $4.10
400 I.U100 CAPSULES $7.27
600 I.U100 CAPSULES $8 27
NEW FROM
ROeRIG
1
I
STORE
1
&
Opposite Courf ftovs
Phone 75224
We Deliver
�:WSS-SffiWX-XX�-iBftK&;
INSTANT) REPAY FOR ALUMINUM
BUDWEISER CANS
Budweiser will buy ALL aluminum
beer cans. Beginning January 12
Budweiser will pay 10 cents per pound
for all the aluminum beer cans you can
find. This will be a six weeks event with
all organizations, fraternities and
sororities invited to compete. A free
color T.V. will be given to the
organization bringing in the most
cans. Help Ecology and Promote
Competition in this Project.
SAVE THOSE ALUMINUM
BEER CANS
Pick up location will be announced.
Hardee's has got
your number.
. If ycurstudent ID. number
is listed here, you're the winner
of a free meal at Hardee's:
696942 69991. 733591 705909
694441 695076
725662 718994
724617
725416
718904
727941
705711
733215
736517
718842
696541 718907
726411 734421
i
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.
:fc
J.
M
1
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1
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
11
Everything You Need
for
HOMECOMING 73
Y
Six Packs. Cases Kegs Cups Mixers. Ice
Wine. . Champagne. Snacks
(All Below Supermarket Prices)
8 Track TapesOnly $2.99
(Ask About Coupons for Free Tapes)
PARTY SAK
� Chin up Lambchop �
� and straight ahead I
TttnilBT�IMCMU
ATTMUWmiflKB
AIAKIMMOMT
BORTION
COMVtlHINCf it rao� iv
m mmniumm am
lOtS. TIM IS l�fOtTA�T �
UUTOUFMITOtAV.
Night courses
announced for
winter quarter
University College, the undergraduate
evening program of ECU has announced
its schedule of evening courses for the
winter term, offered primarily for
individuals who are unable to enroll as
full-time students in the day program.
Persons interested in working toward a
degree may complete approximately two
years of resident credit toward the
Baccalaureate Degree. Others seek main-
ly personal achievement and self-enrich-
Educational offerings for the winter
term include courses in anthropology, art,
business, English, math, music, psycho-
logy, and speech. In addition, special
courses are being offered at night during
the winter term for in-service people.
These include "Methods of Teaching
Industrial Subjects "Water Supplies and
Waste Water Treatment" in addition to
courses in Business Education and
several offerings in Correctional Services
and Law Enforcement.
Courses for the winter term begin
November 26. Participants may register
that day between 8:00 am. and 6:00
p.m. Classes begin 6:� each evening
and meet either one or two evenings per
week for two to three hours.
Individuals interested in participating
in these courses or finding out more
about the evening college concept should
write or call the Division of Continuing
Education, ECU, P.O. Box 2727,
Greenville, N.C. 27834; telephone
758-634.
QMROT
�00-523 930
208 E. 10th Street
Open 24 Hours Daily
REFRIGERATOR FOR RENT
No Deposit
We Will Deliver
$1.50 PER WEEK
If shared with a friend
your cost only 87V2 cents a week
Call between 1-5
(752-0929)
Monday-Friday
STUDENT RENTALS, LTD.
P.O. Box 3106
Greenville
Dinners
Sandwiches
Draft Beer
Breakfast 4 am. -II am.
SUPPORTS THE PIRATES FOR A
HOMECOMING VICTORY!
Jt





12
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
fmtmmmmm
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FOR SALE WEBCOR scl'd state
stereo cassette deck for $125.00. Call
758 5150 after 3 p.m.
WANTED: STUDENT WIFE or
student for baby sitting and light
housework. Daily 12 5 Call 756 3369
after 5 p.m.
DEAR MOM & DAD, I won't come
home unless you buy me a footsball
table like the ones they have at
Friar Tuck's. Love, Gloria. PS. I
think I may be pregnant!
SHONEY'S IS NOW accepting
part-time help for cooks. Apply in
person.
HAVING PROBLEMS WITH your
relationship? Confidentialfree ther-
apy. Call 756-4859 for information.
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free
info & referral, up to 24 weeks. Gen-
eral anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal
ligation also available. Free preg-
nancy tests. Call PCS non-profit
202 298 7995.
1972 CB 350 HONDA excellent
condition. 752 0807 after 6 p.m.
NOW ACCEPTING PART TIME
help. Noon hours, evenings, week-
ends, apply in person at McDonalds.
JOBS ON SHIPS No experience re
quired. Excellent pay. Worldwide
travel. Perfect summer job or
career. Send $3.00 for information,
seafax, Dept. Q-9, Box 2049, Post
Angeles, Washington 98362.
LOST: PAIR OF small black wire
rim girl's glasses. Needed badly.
Call 758 0822 or bring them by 703
White Dormitory.
NEED A JOB? Make in the home
presentations for a nationally
recognized company. Marketing
beautiful products. Sales experience
helpful but not necessary. Call
752 4479 9 1:00 p.m.
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack
Brendle, 752 2619.
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 appoint
ment Four Par Productions 752-2024.
HUNT SEAT RIDER: Accomplished
hunt seat rider needed to exercise
hunter. Must have transportaion to
Grimesland. Cost $20 per month.
752 0270 after 6 p.m.
WANTED:FEMALE BABYSITTER
keep children in home, boy 2 12,
interested? Call 752-1688.
URGENT: RIDE NEEDED to Rich-
mond, Va. Friday, Nov. 9. Call Pat
at 758 6366 Thursday, leave phone
message or put note in editor's box,
Fountainhead Office. This editor
needs a vacation desperately. Please
help.
LOST: DARK SEALPOINT Siamese
cat. Male, blue and flea colors. Re
ward. 756-6321.
LOST IN THE VICINITY of the
Croatan one history health education
book needed for remainder of
quarter. Reward offered. Call
758-1737.
FOR SALE: Fred Bear HC 300
Tournament Archery Bow '71 Model,
can be used for hunting. Originally
$235.00. Will sacrifice. Contact 752
5325, Tom Matthews.
IF ANYONE FINDS a red key case
with 3 keys in it lost at the field by
the boys' dorm Sat. please call
Elizabeth at 758 3386. Reward
offered.
WANTED: WAITRESSES and bar-
tenders 18 and over. Apply in person.
Louis's Lounge, 200 W. 10th St.
FOR SALE: '70 Midget 35,000
miles. Best offer over $1000. Contact
D.R. at 752 6314.
NICE PERSON TO live In
trailer. $40.00 per month. Should
have car. Contact William Cleveland
at Lot 30, Plneview Trailer Court on
Rt. 3.
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.
MEDICAL CAREERS? Are you
considering a medical career, M.D
D.D.S P.A etc.? Would you like to
talk with a Junior or Senior Pre Med
Student about courses, requirements,
advice, etc.? ECU Pre Med Society
advising Council hours, Mon 2-3
p.m Tues 3-4 p.m Wed 2-3 p.m.
Flannagan Building, Room 228.
I
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bunr
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learn
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ALL KINDS OF SUBS
Weekend Hours
Friday 11 a.m11 p.m.
Saturday 10a.rnl p.m.
Sunday 11 a.m9 p.m.
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Navy boots bunny
(CPSHED)Shortly after a brigade of enterprising midshipmen got
an affirmative answer to their letter inviting a Playboy magazine
bunny to compete in the Naval Academy's homecoming pageant,
they were told by the school that their entry would be
ineligible. Stating that the girl's occupation had nothing to do with
the decision, an academy spokesman said the pageant is open only
to friends of the midshipmen. He also said that if any of the middies
had actually known the bunny she would have been eligible, that they
"didn't even know her name Playboy magazine was irate when it
learned the invitation had been withdrawn and wrote a letter to
academy officials accusing them of "intellectual cowardice
R athletes compete
(CPS)Students at American River College in California are gearing
up for the annual Rat Decathalon held there each December.
This year, psychology departments from over 20 colleges and
universities are expected to enter rathletes in the competition wh.ch
raises money for a school scholarship fund. "Every rat that runs
from out school carries a sponsorship of $100 or more from
businesses in thecommunity explained psychology instructor Jack
Badaracco, who originated the idea.
Governor Ronald Regan once sponsored "The Gipper' and the Air
Force named its entry "Air Force One
EAST CAROLINA
IS
"FISH HOUSE COUNTRY
GO PIRATES
IN WASHINGTON
Drive a Little and Eat a Lot !
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if
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Children under 12 $1.00
RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT
710 N. Greene St.
Across the River
Also featuring Pitt Cooked BBQ, Chicken, and Steaks
Phone 752-2624 J
)
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO.J88 NOV. 1973
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13
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HARMONY
HOUSE
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14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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Homecoming battle will decide
Southern Conference Champion
East Carolina has extended its
Southern Conference and home winning
streaks to thirteen games and ten games,
respectively. The last conference and
home defeat for the Pirates came in the
fifth game of the 1971 season when
Saturday's opponent, Richmond, edged
the Pirates, 14-7.
For the first time this season, both the
Southern Conference offensive and
defensive players of the week were
chosen from the same team. East
Carolina tailback Cartester Crumpler and
middle linebacker Gary Niklason won the
offensive and defensive honors, respect-
ively, for their preformances in ECU'S 34-3
pasting of William & Ma Crumpler
broke the Southern Confe �ce career
rushing yardage record with h.s 160 yard
performance while Niklay i had an
incredible 20 primary tackles, 12 assisted
tackles, one blocked punt and one fumble
caused.
The 18,100 fans who watched East
Carolina defeat William & Mary, 34-3, last
Saturday night, set a new Ficklen Stadium
attendance record. But based on advance
ticket sales for this week's Richmond
game, the record is guaranteed to be
short lived.
Here are how some of the coaches and
players feel about Saturday's Home-
coming clash with the Richmond Spiders.
DANNY KEPLEY, Meg (Middle) Line-
backerRichmond's attack is well
balanced mainly because their passing
game is a little better than last year. 'I
think they lost some of their outside
running ability when Bob Allen got hurt
and that could make it harder for them to
run because we can concentrate on Barty
Smith a little more. Right now, Barty is
their offense
"I'm worried about giving away
anything early. We have to stop them and
make sure they don't get anything
cheap. If the offense scores early it will
help us break them down a little. No
matter what, it will be a great game
MIKE MYRICK, Defensive Back,
Co-CaptainRichmond isn't quite as
explosive as William & Mary, but they are
much more physical and more
disciplined. I guess they are kind of like
Southern Illinois, very tough, very
physical. They come out and try to out
tough you or intimidate you. I think
Richmond's offense is better mainly
because they have two class wide
receivers and a quarterback that can get
the ball to them. That's my worry
DAN KILLEBREW, Offensive Tackle,
Punt Team SpecialistAfter watching the
films of Richmond, I feel that the
speciality teams will play an important
part in the game Saturday. Our speciality
team did a great job last Saturday and we
will have out hands full this week trying to
contain Richmond. If we do contain their
return game, we can help the team a great
deal and the defense especially
Swimming team
holds Purple-Gold
The East Carolina swimming team will
get under way next Tuesday when the
annual Purple-Gold swimming meet will
beheld.
The meet will begin at 7:30 p.m. in
Natatorium.
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BUTCH STRAWDERMAN, Sarah
Strong) Linebackerlf we can do the job
we did on Barty Smith last year in
Saturday's game, then our defense should
control their offense. I think we need to
gain a little momentum early in the game
it could decide the outcome. Our pursuit
will be one of the most important
factors. Against William & Mary, we were
�flyin around If we pursue against
Richmond and tak away the quick pitch
play, we will be in good shape. I think it
might come down to a big play or two in
the first quarter, either on offense or
defense. What we do may dictate the
game
LARRY VAN DER HEYDEN, Offensive
Line CoachPlaying Richmond is just
like when you were a little kid and the
bullies were coming down the
block. They are very big, very strong and
very physical. I want to emphasize all
three things because they have the best
defense we've seen all year. They like to
intimidate you and believe me, they have
the personnel to do it
HENRY TREVETHAN, Defensive Back-
field Coachl don't think anybody is
going to shake the earth with quotes this
week. This entire year of football has
tunneled down to one focal point and I
think everybody is seeing about the same
thing
"From our standpoint, we see a good
Richmond football team that will be very
hard to beat. And from my standpoint as
a coach, I see a team that passes in a way
that is most effective and best designed
to beat you. They have what I consider
the three fundamentals of a good passing
game: 1) excellent line protection; 2) a
smart quarterback with a good arm and 3)
receivers with a lot of ability who run
excellent routes. Some of the routes
appear dangerous, but really, they are
routes that beat you. They run a lot of
things deeper than some teams, but they
know how to use the patterns and how to
hurt a defense
CARL REESE, Defensive Coordinator-
"I always consider it a challenge to play
one of Frank Jones' teams because he
keeps the defense off balance with a
different wrinkle each year. First, we
must stop Richmond's bread and butter
formation and plays and then we must be
ready to adjust to something new. Rich-
mond is by far the strongest team in the
Southern Conference from the purely
physical aspect. One of our main tasks is
to get mentally ready to play a physical
football game
TEDD SCHOCH, Head ScoutTve
seen Richmond enough times to know
that they are by far the best balanced
team we'll face. When you build an
offensive attack around a line like theirs,
put Barty Smith in the backf ield and add a
good passing quarterback and excellent
receivers, you have balance
"And they match that offense with a
great defense led by three outstanding
individual players-defensive iackles Vic
Moye, Ace Owen and linebacker Pat
Kelly
"Overall, Richmond has the ability to
keep the ball away form our offense and
they have the ability to stop our offense
when we do have the ball. Both the
defense and offense are big teams -
physical - and very determined. It won't
take much to get them fired up for East
Carolina
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Grap piers open season
By DAVE ENGLERT
Assistant Sports Editor
The East Carolina wrestling team
opens their season tomorrow when they
journey to Hamilton, N.Y. to compete in
the Colgate University Open Tourney.
Coach John Welbom's grapplers are
the defending Southern Conference
champions and also are the team that
finished nineteenth in last year's NCAA
national tournament.
"We feel we are as good as ever, if not
a little better commented coach
Welborn. "We should be rated in the
preseason Top 20. If we get the
performances we expect, barring injury,
we should improve on that
ECU is unquestionably the best team
in the state, having captured the N.C.
Collegiate Championship for the past few
seasons.
"We also feel like we are the best in
the South continued the coach. "Event-
ually we hope to be the best in the East
by the end of the season
Teams lurking in the path of this Pirate
goal include Penn State, Clarion State,
Lehigh and Navy.
The Bucs have only three matches
scheduled for the friendly confines of
Minges Coliseum, although efforts are
being made to add at least one more
home dual meet.
"We have a very difficult time
scheduling anybody explained Welborn.
"Now even Carolina and Duke won't
schedule us. Last year we beat Carolina
something like 46-0 and we didn't use all
of our first-stringers
When asked about what schools ECU
has attempted to get matches with, coach
Welborn presented an impressive list.
"We've tried to schedule Marland, but
they won't come. Navy won't, Virginia
won't, and Va. Tech. won't
Turning to the Southern Conference,
the Pirates should retain this title with a
minimum of difficulty.
"William and Mary will offer the
stiffest competition within the conference
along with Appalachian State said the
coach. Appalachian was one of the few
teams to defeat the Pirate rnatmen last
season.
ECU will be fielding a veteran team, in
eluding a possible total of six starting
seniors. However, there are a few
important changes from last year.
"We lost Mark Pohren, last year's
Southern Conference Champion and
Thanksgiving Open Champion in the
heavyweight division noted coach
Welborn. "We also lost Jim McCloe at
134, so this year we've shifted our 142
man down to 134, and out 150 man down
to 142
The following is coach Welborn's
analysis of the Pirate wrestling squad,
composed in order of weight class.
118
"At 118 we have returning a two-time
conference champion in Glenn Baker, a
senior from Massena, N.Y. He will
receive stiff competition from Jim Blair, a
transfer student from Western Carolina
126
"Dan Monroe, a senior from Warners,
NY is three time Southern Conference
Champ. He has been to the Nationals his
three years here and has been a N.C.
Collegiate Champ, a Thanksgiving Open
Champ, a Maryland Wrestling Federation
Champ two times a Wilkes Open
Champ-that tournament is 'the Rose
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Bowl of wrestling and a First Colonies
Champ. At the NCAA tournament last
year Danny defeated the college division
champ in the first round and lost in the
second round, even though he was
injured, by only one point to the guy who
finished third. Others competing at 126
include Mike Stagliano, Paul Ketchum,
Paul Johnson and Linwood Brown
134
"At 134 we have Milt Sherman, a
senior from Arlington, Va. Milt is a
Southern Conference Champ, a N.C.
Collegiate Champ, a Thanksgiving Open
Champ, a Maryland Wrestling Federation
Champ, and many others. Phil Hagan,
Tim Gaghan, Whitey Martin, and Bill
Dando are others wrestling at 134
142
"We have Tom Marriott, a sophomore
from Herkimer, N.Y at 142. He is the
N.C. collegiate Champ and a Southern
Conference Champ. The others we have
at this weight are Bucky Baker, Dana
Twigg and Sean McLaurin
150
"This weight class is up for grabs. We
have three very good wrestlers here, but
Jack Stortz appears to have a slight
edge. He is a junior from Hampton,
Va. Stiff competition will come from Tim
McAteer, an Arlington, Va. sophomore,
and Steve Satterthwaithe, a freshman
from Portsmouth, Va
158
"At 158 we have Bruce Hall, a senior
from Arlington, Va. Bruce is a Southern
Conference Champion, a N.C. Collegiate
Champ, and a Thanksgiving Open
Champ. Paul Prewitt, a sophomore from
Norwich, N.Y will push Hall for his
position
167
"Ron Whitcomb, a sophomore from
East Rochester, N.Y will wrestle at
167. Others wrestling at this weight
include Ron Pearce, Ernest Wruch, and
Jud Larrimore
177
"At 177 we have Bill Hill, a senior from
Norfolk, Va. Bill is a three time
conference champion and a three time
N.C. Collegiate Champ. Last year he was
voted the 'Best Wrestler in NorthCarolina'
at the latter tournament. He is also a
Thanksgiving Open Champ, a Maryland
Wrestling Federation Champ, and a First
Colonies Champ. Bill and Danny Monroe
will be serving as co-captains, each for
their third year. Others competing at 177
are Jim Cox and Ray Hodges
190
"John Huber, a senior from
Greenbrook, N.J looks to be our man at
190, although he will have tough
competition from Mike Radford. Mike is a
sophomore from Morehead City and was a
Plebe Champion at the Naval Academy
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"To replace Mark we have Willie
Bryant, a junior from Glassboro, N.J. He
transferred here from Gloucester County
College and was second last year in the
National Junior College Tournament
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 188 NOV. 1973
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Sports
To-Morrow's Sports
By JACK MORROW
Sports Editor
The following letter was submitted to Fountainheatfs sports desk by
Hereford. So we print the letter below for all to read.
Ed
SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT
For the past few weeks I have been reading Fountainhead's coverage of East
Carolina's cross country team. It seems they have done better than expected this
season and I wish them luck in the future. However, I was surprised to read Coach
Carson's remarks comparing the accomplishments of this team with those of past East
Carolina teams. Then I was left in a near breathless state of laughter when I read his
criteria for sectioning out certain individuals for certain honors.
First it would seem that a coach would remember when his team won the State
Championship title, it was in 1967, not 1968, when East Carolina won the team title. In
1968, Donald Jayroe of East Carolina won the individual first place title and East
Carolina placed second as a team behind Duke.
Second, Coach Carson rightfully picked Toni Waldrop of Carolina to win the state
meet. Then Coach Carson went on to declare Toni Waldrop as "the best distance
runner ever in North Carolina Sorry again Coach. Bob Wheeler of Duke made the
1972 Olympic Team - Waldrop did not. Besides back in 1962 there was a Mr. Jim Beatty
who was the first American to break the four minute mile. He also set the world record
for two miles that year in eight minutes 29 seconds. His arch rival from Duke, Cary
Weisk r, ak?s another sub four minute miler who later lowered Jim's American
1500-meter record to three minutes 39 seconds. Both men were founders of the North
Carolina Track Club, the club I presently run for.
Finally, I have to correct Coach Carson's claim to "the fastest five mile cross
country performance in East Carolina's history In due respect to Eddie Rigsby with
whom I share friendship and close sportsmanship as a fellow runner I have to set the
record straight and defend my title as the fastest cross country runner over five miles
wearing the purple and gold.
October 27, 1970, I ran five miles through the old East Carolina course following
Waldrop and Widgeon of Carolina who tied for first place. I finished third but passed
the five mile mark in 25:23. Then in the Southern Conference Championship race
November 9 at VMI I ran the 5.15 mile course in 25:44 for a fourth place finish. This
time gives an equivalent of 24:58 for five miles and definitely faster than the 25:28
performance of my friend Eddie Rigsby in his race in the State Meet this year.
Although most people could not care less who is or who was the fastest cross
country runner at ECU, I felt it was my duty to defend my title as the fastest Pirate to
run through the woods. I will defend my contribution to East Carolina's running
program when I see such statements in the paper resulting from Coach Carson's
forgetfuiness or ignorance. In order for him to give credit where credit is due, he
should maintain a list of all school track and field records for display in Scales Field
House for all to see each day.
As for myself, I am currently rated sixteenth in the marathon nationally so far this
year That is from running 26 miles, 385 yards in 2 hours 22 minutes 32 seconds .or
each mile in about 5 minutes 26 seconds. I was seventeenth in the U.S. Olympic Trials
last yearthe top four finishers made the Olympic team. I have been on three
National Championship teams with the North Carolina Track Club in the past three
years. Currently I am training from 130 to 140 miles weekly in preparation for a
marathon in Baltimore, Maryland, November 24. I am favored to win and the winner
may receive a trip to Europe to run in a marathon there at the expense of the American
Amateur and Athletic Union.
HUMPING FOR BIGGER AND BETTER THINGS
The original "Fast Eddie" Hereford
New NCAA guides available
The NCAA's Official Collegiate
Basketball Guide for 1974 is now available
from the NCAA Publishing Service.
The 248-page Guide contains national
and regional preview-review articles by
noted basketball writers across the
nation, as well as the 1973-74 NCAA
member schedules and the 1972-73
season scores. Also included are reviews
of last year's statistical leaders and the
Official Read-Easy Basketball Rules.
Orders and prepayment of $2 per copy
should be mailed to NCAA Publishing
Service, P.O. Box 1906, Shawnee
Mission, Kansas 66222.
Other recent NCAA publications
available from the same address are the
Official 1974 Swimming Guide, Official
1974 Wrestling Guide, Official 1974 Ice
Hockey Guide and the 1974 National
Collegiate Championships record book.
Each sells for $2 to member institutions,
with payment to accompany orders.
She laid her head upon my disbelief,
And bathed me with her ever smile.
Booters dump Methodist;
look to championship
Monday afternoon may have been a
cold and dreary day in Greenville, but on
the soccer field the sun was shining as
the East Carolina soccer contigent
defeated the booters from Methodist,
4-1. The victory gave the Pirates their
third in a row and brought their season
record up to 4-6-2.
The first half was loosely played by
the Bucs. Tom Tozer scored the first goal
of the game with an assist from Rick
Johnson. The lead, however, was
short-lived as Methodist came back
quickly to even the score at 1-1.
East Carolina did not seem to have the
old spark and it appeared that the visitors
from Fayetteville had been taken too
lightly.
The second half was different as niht
and day as the Pirates really put it
together. They completely dominated
play as they controlled the ball
approx mately 75 per cent of the second
half. The passes were crisp and accurate
and as a result the Bucs were able to put
three more goals up on the scoreboard.
Mike Fetchko scored the second tally
on an unassisted shot. Tom O'Shea
accounted for the third score with an
assist from Bob Gebhard and Pete Angus
got into the scoring parade with an assist
from O'Shea.
The defense was once again as strong
as ever as they continued to foil
Methodists' scoring opportunities.
Saturday morning at 10 a.m. East
Carolina and Appalachian State University
will tangle to decide the conference
soccer championship on Minges Field.
Earlier this season the two teams met
with the Mountaineers coming out on top
9-0. But the Pirates are a different club
now.
"When we played them before, it was
on their home field with artificial turf,
something unfamiliar to us, and we were
not working well together said Pirate
goal keeper Bucky Moser.
A strong effort against Duke and wins
over William and Mary, North Carolina
Wesleyan and now Methodist have turned
the season around for the Bucs. The
William and Mary victory gave East
Carolina the right to play for the
conference title.
"We really came together and worked
as a team in those last three games said
Moser, "with another effort like those we
will beat Appalachian
As David Schaler walked into the
dressing room the other day, assistant
coach Ed. Wolcott kidded him about not
scoring a goal against Methodist like he
promised he would. Schaler told Wolcott
that he would pick up two goals against
Appalachian. That is an example of how
the booters have done an about face in
attitude.
When the Pirates take the field
Saturday morning they must indeed come
up with a great effort in order to take the
title. But team play makes that effort
much easier and they have proven
themselves to be a team late in the
season.
Bucky Moser sums it up in one simple
sentence, "We hang together
Buc harriers finish fourth
Led by All-American Ron Martin,
William and Mary swept the first seven
places and easily won the Southern
Conference Cross-country Championship
at Greenville, S.C. on Saturday.
Martin, on a hot windy day, won by
almost 400 yards in 29:38 minutes. He
was never pressed over the hilly six mile
course at Furman University on which the
NCAA District III Championships will be
run on this weekend.
Rob Clark, who finished seventh in the
1972 NCAA half mile, finished fifth and
gave William and Mary a team score of 10
points.
East Carolina was led by Ed Rigsby,
who by finishing eigth in 31:20 made the
eight man All-Southern Conference team.
Gerald Klas finished 12th in 31:32 for
the Pirates, Scott Miller 16th in 32:10,
Steve Michaels 32nd, Jerry Hillard 35th
and Marty Martin 48th.
In team scoring Appalachian finished
second with 78 points, Furman third with
82, East Carolina fourth with 90, followed
by Richmond's 135, Citadel's 162, VMI's
189 and Davidson's 196.
ECU went into the meet generally
considered a strong third place and
possibly a contender for second.
Coach Bill Carson commented, "We
did very well up front with our first three
men. In fact our first three men all
finished ahead of Furman's first man. We
did a good job against Appalachian up
front. Our downfall was our fourth man
falling back to become our fifth
man. 'erry Hillard was running a great
race at the three mile mark, but when
Appalachian confronted him he pressed
and got tight
Carson has always contended that to
win big cross-country meets you need
eight runners. This allows for one of your
top five runners to have a bad day and not
adversely affect the team. A prime
example is William and Mary.
Gerald Klas, the captain of the team,
commented on the meet.
"William and Mary was really
awesome. After the N.C. Championships
we may have had a mental lapse. We took
Appalachian too lightly because we were
just worrying about Furman. When we
saw we had Furman we just let up and
then Appalachian went by and we lost our
whole plan in the race
"We had some good performances.
Rigsby finished 8th and made All-Con-
ference. Scott Miller finished 16th which
is great for a freshman. Steve Michaels
had his best race of the year
Ed Rigsby, who in 1973 won All-State
and All-Conference honors, believes the
course was extremely difficult.
"I felt ragged the whole way. I wasn't
loose and I hurt so bad at the two mile
mark I wanted to quit. The hills were
terrible, and not being loose and springy
didn't help
Scott Miller, possibly the best
freshman recruit in recent ECU history,
gave his view of the meet.
"With a six mile course the hills made
that extra mile more difficult. You go five
miles and hear your time and think you're
done yet you haven't even begun to
sprint. I'm satisfied with my time but my
left leg hurt the last two miles and I
wanted to make the top fifteen
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Title
Fountainhead, November 8, 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
November 08, 1973
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.584
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39890
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Cite this item
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