Fountainhead, March 14, 1974


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Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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Review Board
Jenkins reverses decision
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS
News Editor
A Feb. 25 advisory opinion of the
Review Board was reversed by Chancellor
Leo Jenkins Friday on the advice of David
S. Stevens, ECU legal advisor. Bill
Phipps, chairman of the Review Board,
stated today that the board "was in the
process of trying to get the decision
reinstated
The Feb. 25 Review Board decision
"concerned the legal authority of the SGA
President (presently Bill Bodenhamer) to
allocate funds which have been
appropriated as a 'miscellaneous funds'
line item to the Student Government
Cabinet and the Executive Council
according to Stevens.
The Review Board decision stated
basically that "money appropriated to the
Cabinet as a line item under the Executive
Budget shall be voted on by all members of
the Cabinet in the case of a controversy
between the members of the Cabinet. Any
expenditure of monies from the Cabinet
requires a majority vote of the members of
the Cabinet. This decision is based on the
fact that the money was appropriated
specifically to the Cabinet and not to the
SGA President
Stevens, in reversing this decision,
stated that "the only legal limitation on the
allocation of duly appropriated miscellan-
eous funds by the SGA President and his
cabinet is that the funds be used for an
official or public purpose
"(The Review Board decision) does not
address the legal issue at hand Stevens
said in his opinion. "To deal with
possible future conflicts of this nature, I
strongly recommend adoption of the
procedures set forth by the Board in its
opinion Thus, as in this statement, the
Review Board decision was overturned. A
follow-up of the Review Board decision
will appear in the next issue of
Fountainhead.
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International major possible
By BARBARA TURNER
Staff Writer
An International Studies Program,
involving an inter-disciplinary major and
emphasizing various aspects of the
international scene, may soon be a part of
the ECU academic curriculum. According
to a recent poll taken by the SGA Internal
Affairs Committee, there is a strong
interest among ECU students for an
international studies major.
Grier Ferguson, spokesman for the
Internal Affairs Committee, proposed an
Best delegation and best bill
ECU dele
By SUSAN QUINN
Staff Writer
Not only did the ECU delegation of the
North Carolina Student Legislature (NCSL)
set a record as being the fi'st college in
international studies major to the
SGA. He interpreted and commented on
figures from the poll taken in three
Political Science classes and at random in
the dorms.
Ferguson said, "The results were quite
positive. My general conclusion is that 95
percent of the students who responded
thought the major would be worthwhile.
534 students responded of the 1000 ballots
sent out. Fifty-three percent of the ballots
were returned
Continued on page thirteen.
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"WIND SONG one of the recent sculptural works of ECU art professor Robert
Edmiston is seen In its new location in front of Fletcher Music Building.
many NCSL
JOHN PREVETTE
North Carolina to receive awards for both
the best delegation and best bill, but it
also carried home many other honors and
awards from the 37th annual NCSL.
The ECU delegation is one of the 40
schools represetned in the model
legislature. Some other schools partici-
pating in NCSL are as follows: Wake
Forest, Duke University, North Carolina
State University, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of North
Carolina at Greensboro, Methodist
College, Peace College and Queens
College.
The awards of best bill and best
delegation represented the hard work of all
of the ECU delegation members. The best
bill was awarded to the ECU delegation for
their bill entitled "The Juvenile Justice
Act The bill provides for raising the age
of a juvenile offender to 18. It will also
create a division of youth development
under the department of Social
Rehabilitation and Control and deal with
other problems which have been
encountered in past years when dealing
with juveniles.
Jim Davis, Sally Freeman, and Vallerie
Szabo wrote and revised the bill and the
other delegation members lobbyed the bill.
ECU delegates receiving awards were
as follows: Freida Clark was elected to
the conference committee, a committee
which approves the final form of
legislation which is to be sent to the N.C.
General Assembly; Lee McLaughlin was
elected to the Carlisle Committee, which
was responsible for selecting the best
legislator of the year. Jane Noffsinger was
appointed recording secretary of the house
of representatives. Sally Freeman was
elected secretary of state. Harry Stubbs
was elected Speaker Pro Tern and received
an award for best delegation chairman.
Jim Davis received an award for best
speaker of the house. John Prevette,
Harry Stubbs and Maurice Huntley
received certificates of appreciation from
the governor of NCSL.
Other members of the ECU delegation
include D.D. Dixon. House Delegate;
Steve Nobles, House Delegate; Dianne
Bower, House Alternate; John Davis,
House Alternate; Rick Gilliam, House
Delegate; Maurice Huntley, House
Delegate; Lee McLaughlin, Advisor;
Michael Edwards, House Delegate; Jimmy
Honeycutt, Senate Alternate; Debbie
Ruthledge, House Delegate; Mike West,
House Delegate; Sandy West, House
Delegate; Greg McLeod, House Delegate;
Angela Pennine House Alternate; Susan
Jewell, House Delegate; Vemon Bean,
House Alternate; and Susan Quinn,
Observer.
These legislators worked together
lobbying their ideas concerning bills and
resolutions, particularly the juvenile
justice bill and the Medical School
resolution. They also worked in commit-
tee revising and amending other school's
bills In fact Vallerie Szabo rewrote the
Methodist College bill concerning the
abolishment of corporal punishment and
this bill was awarded the best bill from a
small school.
Besides the many hard, long hours of
work and the sessions and committee
meetings, the delegation did attend
several social activities. Wednesday
NCSL was invited to a tea at Chancellor
Caldwell's of North Carolina State
University and Wednesday night NCSL
HARRY STUBBS at NCSU.
attended a banquet with many General
Assembly members.
The ECU delegation was also invited to
parties given by the larger schools
including NCSU, UNC-Cbapel Hill and
Continued on page five.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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news
Women's Week Clogging lesson
Attention
International festival
Fr
Attention musical groups or indivi-
duals! General entertainment too! If you
are interested in being a part of the
entertainment program that is being
sponsored for Women's Awareness Week
in April, contact either of the following
people: Kathy Kleppinger at 758-6074 or
Pam Holt at 758-6101. The program will be
in the amphitheater behind Fletcher Dorm.
Canticle
This spring the members of the ECU
coffeehouse committee, The Canticle, are
bursting forth with energy to bring you the
most pleasant entertainment available.
Starting this Saturday night, March 16,
at 8:00 will be Rick Goodling & Keith
Winkler who received unusual attention
from the audience at the Old Time
Bluegrass Convention outside of Charlotte
this past fall. Rick and Keith play a variety
of styles of music. Charlie Rodgers will
also be performing. Since this is a local
show, auditions are encouraged after the
scheduled show.
This committee is planning on having a
coffeehouse almost every week this
quarter which will include outstanding
professional entertainers as well as several
local shows. We encourage all types of
entertainment to audition because it is not
just the singer and guitar player that gains
attention but also the dancer, dramatist,
hypnotist, and classical bassoon player
than an audience is sentitive to.
The committee is presently working on
entertainment for spring, planning a new
coffeehouse for next year, and trying to
establish a system where students can
bring beer or wine with them while they
listen to music. Hopefully the spring will
bring warm weather so that entertainment
can be enjoyed outside on the patio behind
the student union.
Admission to all shows is 25 cents plus
I.D. This week's show will be held in
Room 201 of the Student Union.
The E.C.U. Volleyball Club will resume
practice sessions on Tuesday, March 19th
at 7:00 p.m. in Minges. Practices will be
held thereafter each Tues. and Thurs.
evenings from 7 until 9 p.m. Additional
players are needed. Students, staff and
faculty, both men and women are invited
to join.
Basic clogging will be demonstrated
and taught in Garrett Dorm Monday at
7:30. Come prepare yourself for the
Fiddler's Convention.
Concert Band
The Concert Band of ECU, under the
direction of George Noff, will present a
concert on Monday, March 18, at 8:30
p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Music Center Recital
Hall.
Program to include overture; Fanfare
Capriccio, by Schaefer; Incidental Suite,
by Smith; The Silver Quill, by Nestico;
Incantation and Dance, by Chance; The
Klaxon, by Fillmore; and Divergents, by
McBeth.
The students, faculty and. staff of ECU
are cordially invited. Admission free to
public.
Travelogue
From Mexico north through the
American and Canadian Rockies to the
foot of Alaska's Mt. McKinley, film maker
Don Cooper traces the routes of the early
westerners in his travelogue, "Trails of the
Mountain West The program, part of the
ECU Student Union Lecture Series, will be
presented on March 25, at 8 p.m. in Wright
Auditorium.
Traveling in a rustic mobile home
which they constructed on the bed of a
resurrected Model-T Ford truck, Don and
his brother Dennis set out on the route
traveled by the Spanish explorer Coronado
in his search for the seven cities of gold.
They go along the Sante Fe Trail in New
Mexico, over the pass into Colorado and
along its historic mountain railroads,
through Wyoming and its spectacular
mountain scenery, through Yellowstone
Park and into Montana along the cattle
trails. Cooper's striking photography
provides close-ups of wildlife as well as
dramatic scenery and historic sites of the
early west.
Cooper deftly mixes with his humor
and beautiful photography a plug for the
beauty of the mountains and their wildlife,
and makes a point for conservation
without belaboring the issue.
Tickets for this program may be
purchased from the ECU Central Ticket
Office, Box 2731, ECU, Greenville, N.C. or
telephone 758-6278.
NSCL AND REVIEW BOARDpage one.
THE FRANKFORD'Spage three
THE ATTICpage four
REVIEWSpages six and seven
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARYpages eight and nine
STREAKING pages ten and eleven
THE CIRCUS IS COMING page twelve
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL page thirteen
SPORTS pages fourteen, fifteen and sixteen
Attention Spring Quarter graduates.
Graduation announcements are now on
sale and can be picked up in the Student's
Supply Stores. Caps and Gowns for
Spring Quarter graduates will be delivered
March 26-28, from 9-4 p.m. in the
Students's Supply Stores. These caps and
gowns will be yours to keep.
Fountainhead
Fountainhead needs a reviews editor
and a layout assistant. Call 758-6366 or
758-6367, or come up to the Fountainhead
office over Wright Auditorium lobby
between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Mond. - Fri.
Just ask for Pat Crawford of Skip
Saunders.
Gamma Beta Phi
Gamma Beta Phi will hold Spring Rush
on Tuesday, March 19 at 7:00 p.m. at the
Baptist Student Center.
Gamma Bata Phi is a co-ed national
honor-service society based on scholar-
ship and character. Prospective members
are required to have an overall grade point
average of a 3.0 or more.
All interested students are urged to
attend this meeting on March 19. For
more information call Bill Murphy at
752-3776.
MRC free flicks
This Monday, March 18, the M.R.C.
will again be sponsoring a free flick for all
students. This week we will be showing
three short Comedy Classics: Mae West's
"I'm No Angel W.C. Fields' "California
Bound and Laural and Hardy's "Sugar
Daddies We will begin at 7:30 p.m. in
Belk Hall's basement T.V. room. Everyone
is invited.
'Career Job Guide'
A new "Career Job Guide" paperback
has just been published to help students
with after-college employment.
It lists the names and addresses of over
500 companies and school districts plus
short descriptions of types of industries
and talents needed, written by leaders of
specific fields such as R. H. Macy on
"retailing General Foods Corp. on the
"food industry etc.
The book also supplies information on
available government careers and gives
tips for a successful interview as well as a
sample resume.
Some of the vocational fields covered
in the book are engineering, urban
planning, aerospace, book publishing,
communications, advertising, public
relations and others.
"Career Job Guide" is available at
college book stores or send $1.50 plus 25
cents handling charge to N.E.A.S 360
Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017.
Foreign Languages and Literatures will
be sponsoring an International Festival
March 20-22. It will open Wednesday
Night with speakers and films concluding
with an International Fair on Friday with
students of Foreign Languages coming
from eastern N.C. counties.
Service auction
There will be a service auction in
Garrett Dorm lobby this Saturday (March
16th) at 11:00 a.m. Auctioneers are our
own Vicki Pridgen & John Evans. Come
and help make this auction a success. All
money will be used for future dorm
projects.
Classical guitarist
Classical guitarist Mario Abril will
perform a concert at ECU Thursday, March
21. The concert, scheduled for 8:30 p.m.
in the campus Recital Hall, is free and
open to the public.
Now a member of the music faculty at
the University of Tennessee, Dr. Abril was
formerly a member of the Florida State
University faculty.
Dr. Abril studied guitar with the
renowned English virtuoso Julian
Bream. He pursued his musical studies at
the University of Albuquerque, N.M. and at
Florida State Univeristy where he received
his PhD degree in music theory.
During his ECU visit, Dr. Abril will
conduct a workshop in Latin American
music as part of the fourth annual ECU
Latin American Symposium.
The workshop wil be in Room B-102
Brewster Building at 10 a.m. Friday, March
22, and is also open to all interested
oersons.
Business
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The School of Business, ECU is now
offering a course of study at Fort Bragg
leading to a Master of Business
Administration degree. Civilians as well
as military personnel may enroll. The
courses are scheduled during evening
hours and the program is designed for a
part-time students who are employed
full-time.
Undergraduate preparation in business
or economics is not required for admission
to the MBA Program. Undergraduates
from such diverse majors as political
science, psychology, engineering, bio-
logy, mathematics, physics, computer
science as well as many others are actively
seeking the MBA Degree. Courses in
economics, managerial accounting, stat-
istical analysis, organizational behavior,
and computer operations are included in
the program.
The admission test for graduate study
in Business is required. The test will be
administered at Fort Braff on March
30. Applications for the test should be
sent to Educational Testing Service prior
to March 8. The Fort Bragg test center
number is 5318. Applications and test
booklets may be obtained from the
Registrar, Fayetteville State University,
Fort Bragg Branch, by calling 396-6737.
The next test date will be July 13, 1974.
Continued on page seven.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.
5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
3
Frankfords offer counceling service
By CAROLYN DAVIS
Staff Writer
Helping people realize their own
individuality and strength is a major
concern of two ECU social work teachers,
Joseph and Gladys Frankford.
In January the Frankfords announced
the opening of their private practice in
counseling, thus bringing a professional
counseling service to Greenville. Their
services are offered not only to the
Greenville community, but to surrounding
areas as well.
The Frankfords' services are compre-
hensive, offering pre-marital and marriage,
family and child counseling, individual and
group therapy, and social work
consultation.
Basically, in all these areas, the
Frankfords strive to help people "realize
that they are the ones that make their own
lives work according to Mr. Frankford.
"We try to help them see that they're
not that helpless, that they have a lot of
strength. We help then find in themselves
what they want out of life, and that it's
their decision, not someone else's, what
Communications
major
considered
ByGLENHARGETT
Staff Writer
Student's interest in a communication
degree at ECU was the subject of a recent
survey.
The survey was given the last week of
classes winter quarter by professors in the
English Department and some Speech
classes, especially those dealing with
Broadcasting.
The communications major would span
both the Drama and Speech Department
and the English Department. If the
program is approved then a student will be
able to concentrate in broadcasting (which
is in the speech department) or
concentrate in Journal ism (currently under
a BS English . The Communications
majors would receive a BS degree and have
no language requirement.
A minor would be required to bring the
number of hours up to graduation
level. There has been interest in
establishing a communications degree at
ECU for the past two years. Karl E. Faser,
Assistant to the Provost and Margaret
Blanchard, Assistant Professor of English
have been working on the latest proposal
for presentation.
The survey is the first step in determing
student interest in the major. Blanchard is
now writing the report for presentation to
the various committees which the proposal
must go through. Final approval will be by
the UNC Board of Governors.
Sophomores who would wish to
graduate with this degree may be able to
do so. The plan is able to be put through
many of the committees during the next
year, allowing for current sophomores or
freshmen to declare a communications
major.
Those who are interested in the
program but who were not contacted by
the survey or those who wish further
information should contact Karl Faser at
75&6241 or Margaret Blanchard in 318
Austin.
they do
"We help them see that they are as
independent as they really are, that they
are as responsible as they really are he
continued.
PRACTICE BEGINS
The Frankfords' private practice is
separate from their teaching professions at
ECU, where they teach classes in social
work and corrections. Counseling is
conducted on an appointment basis in
their home located on the 264 by-pass in
the Red Oak subdivision.
Formal announcements were sent in
January to local ministers, doctors,
lawyers, professors, and various people in
the community, to inform these contacts
of their new practice.
"We sent the announcements to people
that we thought could give us referrals
from their own practices Mrs. Frankford
said.
"We tried to aim at a group that could
use what we were offering said
Frankford.
Frankford pointed out that in Pitt
County there are few services or agencies
that are dedicated to helping people with
problems in their lives that aren't actually
physical or mental.
"There was little service for people who
needed help, and weren't mentally sick,
and could pay for it (the help) he
commented.
The Frankfords also considered the
feelings of people who are "embarrassed,
and humiliated to go to an agency to ask
for help
By aiming at professionals in the
community who have contact with people
who have problems in their lives, these
professionals can now spot problems and
refer their patients to the Frankfords for
counseling.
Local residents may independently
arrange an appointment with the
Frankfords for any type of counseling by
calling their home at 756-4994.
TYPICAL PROBLEMS
The problems brought to the
Frankfords by troubled people are not
"catastrophic" according to Frankford, but
are things in life that have mounted up to
make their lives uncomfortable, and even
miserable for them.
"The people that come to us are
miserable and have been for a long time,
and don't want to be. They've had too
much total misery .It's usually problems
with a relationship with a person in their
lives, or a combination of relationships
with several people. They don't like the
way they get along with their husband or
wife, children, or parents, other people, or
just don't like the way they feel about
themselves said Frankford.
"A lot of people come before that
teachers, ministers, friends said Mr.
Frankford.
"So many times in these situations a
big hardship is created for the parents
because they feel they have failed as
parents when their children are
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JOSEPH AND GLADYS FRANKFORT strive
through a private counseling service.
stage, though said Mrs. Frankford.
"They realize something is wrong and they
want to do something to help the
situation. Usually at this stage they want
the other person to change and want to
know how they can live with the way things
are
This is a common finding in premarital
counseling, according to Mrs. Frankford.
Often the couple will realize there is a
problem but they lose track of what started
it because everything blurs together.
The Frankfords work with the couple,
individually or together, to help them sort
out feelings and occurences that
contribute to the overall discontent.
By talking with the couple, the problem
is usually discovered and brought out by
the Frankfords. The couple can be made
aware of the problem causing conflicts,
and advised of action that can patch up the
relationship.
In their present practice the most
frequent problem brought to the
Frankfords is of the parent-child
relationship. These problems usually
stem from "children who are troubled and
juDlesome in all their relations-parents,
to help people realize their individuality
troublesome. The mother feels she has
failed as a mother and the father feels he
has failed as a father he said.
In such parent-child conflicts the
Frankfords most often begin their
counseling sessions by talking to the
troubled child. Then, as things progress
and problems and feelings become
evident, group counseling is begun
including the parents or the whole family.
"I enjoy working with small children
said Mrs. Frankford. "They are usually
more hopeful and have more hope that
things will get better
"By the time they get to be 18, the
children and the parents are often all fed
up with the situation said Frankford.
"Sometimes it is a more difficult situation
in these cases because the 18 year olds are
set in their ways and it's often difficult for
the parents to see this.
"However, change is more frequent
with 18-year-olds than with smaller
children because they want to work for a
change, too, and are willing to make
changes more than small children he
said.
Continued on page thirteen.
Forum allows students personal contact with
paid and elected University officials
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A student forum uniting ECU students
with campus leaders will be held Tuesday
night March 19 in room 201 of the
University Union.
The objective of the forum is to allow
students to have a personal, face-to-face
contact with the elected, appointed and
paid officials of the university. Both ad-
ministration and faculty will be
represented.
Amond those expected to be present a
the forum will be Bob Woodside, presiden
of the faculty-senate, editors of the-
Bucaneer and Fountainhead and speaker
of the student legislature Braxton Hall.
Tentatively expected to attend are Wade
Hobgood, in-coming president of the
Student Union and Dr. John Home,
representing the administration and
admissions. Also the out-going and
in-coming SGA administrations will be in
attendance. Moderator for the student
forum will be Jim Davis, secretary of
Internal Affairs.
Students are asked to direct any
questions they might have concerning any
area of campus life or the university to the
representatives at the forum. There are
four ways students can relate questions to
the forum. Questions can be mailed in to
the SGA office through campus
mail. These letters can be taken to the
departmental offices and forwarded to the
SGA through the campus mail
system. Students can also call the Hotline
number, 758-0231, and leave their
questions with the answering service.
These questions will be answered at the
forum meeting.
There will also be telephones at the
forum for students to call in their
questions. The numbers for calling will be
758-6262 and 768-6263. Students may
attend the forum and personally ask the
representatives their questions.
WECU will broadcast the forum to the
dorms.
Jim Davis, spokesman for the forum
emphasized that if the forum is
successful, more student forums will be
held in the future.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
Safety standards to improve
Attic changes with styles, students
By CAROLYN DAVIS
Staff Writer
The Attic was inspected Thursday,
March 7, by an inspection crew from the
fire department to determine its
compliance with state and national safety
standards for a public establishment,
according to Fire Marshall McLawhorn.
In January, 1974, Attic manager Tom
Haines felt that the legal capacity for
maximum number of occupants in the
Attic at a single time might be raised from
the existing 396 to over 400. However,
when inspected last Thursday, the legal
number of occupants within the legal
capacity. Thus, the admission was raised
to 75 cents.
"I couldn't stand at the door after a
certain number of people had come in and
begin to turn people away, so we raised
the price to 75 cents and it's knocked out
about 200 people said Haines.
The admission hike to 75 cents was the
third price increase instituted by The
Attic. There was originally no admission
charge at The Attic.
When the cost of entertainment and
transportaion began rising, bands began
makinr demands fo?- higher orices. In
FOOTSBALL
capacity was not raised but remained at
396.
The inspection crew consisted of
Inspector Jane Murray, Lieutenant James
E. Smith, Chief Building Inspector A.E
Warren and Fire Marshall McLawhorn.
The Attic was found to be generally in
compliance with fire regulations, although
the inspection crew found two deviations
from the rules. One of the back exit doors
was padlocked instead of equipped with a
panic bar, and combustible material was
found under the front stairway leading
from the street to the Attic entrance.
The inspection crew requested that
panic bar be installed on the padlocked
door and the lock removed so that the exit
door could not be locked from the
inside. A panic bar is a horizontal bar that
extends across the door and must be
pushed to open the door. When it is
pushed and the door opens, an alarm
sounds in the building to notify others of
danger.
If a panic bar is installed and the
combusitble material is removed from
under the stairway, the Attic will be in
compliance with fire regulations, accord-
ing to McLawhorn.
"But we couldn't raise the legal
capacity because of the building itself and
because of the back exit door and
combustible material under the stairway
he said.
PRICE CONTROLS
On the average night 600 to 1,000
people enter The Attic, according to
Haines. This is not representative of the
number of people in The Attic at any one
time, however, he said.
Because of the large numbers
frequenting The Attic, some type of
control had to be instituted to keep the
ROOM at The Attic.
order to book good bands, these demands
had to be met, and an admission charge
had to be incurred.
Initially admission was 25 cents, but
when even that extra amount put a strain
on Attic funds, the charge was raised to 50
cents. The bands are paid from a portion
of money received from admissions
Haines said.
ATTIC OFFERINGS
This past fall The Attic had the
distinction of being rated the most popular
college night club in the state, based on
the number of customers.
Despite a slow and unsuccessful start
as a changeover from the Id, The Attic has
steadily gained popularity with the
students of ECU, and is now enjoying its
peak, according to Haines.
"More people have gone through the
doors of The Attic this past fall than of any
other college club in the state of North
Carolina said Haines.
The Attic is correctly called a night club
because of its offerings. An establish-
ment is termed a night club if it sells
alcoholic beverages and offers live
entertainment. Without live entertain-
ment, a night spot selling alcoholic
beverages is a tavern.
The popularity of The Attic may be
attributed to the variety that may be found
in both atmosphere and entertainment in
the room above The Fiddler's Three,
Haines proposes.
"Our main objective as far as
entertainment is concerned in variety " he
said.
Haines tries to engage in variety of
bands because he feels that most people
especially highly intelligent people such
as college students, get bored easily
seeing the same bands doing the same
routines.
ECU students seem to frequent The
Attic because of this variety found in the
bands, according to Haines.
"They seem to come for the
music. This can be seen in their
response. If we have a bad band the place
will be empty in a minute. And if the
band's good the place'll get packed "
VARIETY ERA
The Attic is now in a variety era, the
third phase of changes began several years
ago to keep up with the desires and
demands of the customers.
Some students can remember when the
upstairs spot now occupied by The Attic
was The Place To Be Above The Fiddler's
Three and featured soul music with the
beach and soul bands.
Next came the Id which is probably
remembered more by current ECU
students. The Id offered a psychadelic
atmosphere with black lights, strobe
lights, mirror balls and ihe sounds of hard
rock, rock and roll, and acid rock.
In September 1971 when Haines
became manager of the night spot, the
setting changed once again, replacing the
features of the psychedelic age with a
natural ecology decor which remains
today.
Tables and wall fixtures were made
form the outside bark portions of logs that
were gathered from the Greenville saw
mill. "It doesn't have that store-bought
look Haines said of the setting.
With the change in atmosphere came a
change in the band image from the rock
sounds to a use of variety featuring blue
grass, blues rock and some show bands.
"The only thing we don't use right now
are the beach music and soul bands
because that is the Bucanneer's
attraction said Haines.
Now at the height of its variety era, The
Attic offers more than a place to go get
something to drink, Haines feels. "There
are areas for people to dance, play
footsball, pinball machines or air hockey,
plus tables and corners where you can just
sit and talk
The Attic is responsible for bringing
footsball to Greenville, according to
Haines.
"We were the first people in Greenville
to put in footsball tables on a large
scaln As a matter of fact, I think the first
footsball tables in Greenville period "
COLLEGE ORIENTED
Although The Attic's main concern
in entertainment in variety, it not so with
the customers it attempts to attract.
"Our main interest is with school said
Haines.
The Attic is the only club in town that
regulates its schedule by ECU's schedule
according to Haines.
"When the school's open, we're open
when the school's closed, we're closed
The Attic also works with the school in
providing attractions for students. For the
past three years The Attic has presented an
annual faculty talent show. The MRC and
Real House often work in conjunction with
The Attic for various benefits, also.
ECU students serve as both customers
and employees of The Attic. All of the
employees with the exception of Haines,
an ECU graduate, are full-time students at
ECU. "We make it a policy to hire students
to help themselves finance their way
through school Haines said.
Besides aiding in financial assistance
Haines feels that The Attic and the entire
downtown area serves another useful
purpose for ECU students.
"The school supplies the students with
a good cultural, social and athletic
calendar with the free flicks on Friday
nights, the concerts, lectures and
basketball and football games Haines
"The void that's left is filled with the clubs
downtown Continued on page five
BIGGS DRUG STORE
yGrdley
Opposite Court House
phone 752-2135
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
wmmjmmmm
5
Faulkner styled
Pierce novel well received
A fourth major novel by author Ovid
Williams Pierce, scheduled for publication
April 12, is already receiving favorable
reviews. It is expected to be received with
wide interest.
Pierce's latest work, four years in
preparation, is entitled "The Wedding
Guest a title drawn from Samuel Taylor
Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient
Mariner Pre-publication reviewers such
as Publisher's Weekly have compared the
style of the novel to those of Faulkner.
Sam Ragan, Southern Pines, N.C
poet, editor and literary critic, has written
for the publisher, Doubleday and Co New
York, that "Ovid Pierce's 'The Wedding
Guest' equals the best of Faulkner in an
eloquent interpretation and understanding
of the South.
"His characters are masterfully drawn,
and he deals with an aspect of Southern
life largely unexplored in fiction. In fact, I
know of no other work of fiction which
explores in depth the transition taking
place in the South
Pierce, writer-in-residence and profes-
sor of English at ECU, both reconstructs
the past and treats critical contemporary
situations in the book, examining the
OVID WILLIAMS PIERCE
effects of rootlessness in today's
society. In the novel, Pierce's wedding
guest is an elderly college professor who,
in the Spring of his retirement year, returns
Complaints prompt Attic inspection
Continued from page four.
Haines feels that this is important for
the students as it allows them to be with
their friends in a different atmosphere,
unwind after a term paper, take a break
from studying or just get out of a rut.
"It makes it a lot easier getting through
school he added.
COMPLAINTS
Someone must be concerned about
the number of people in The Attic at one
time, and the condition of the building, as
the Fire Department has recently received
complaints of these things.

ATTIC
TOM HAINES
"We've had complaints from someone,
but I don't know who. Also City Manager
William Carstarphen has called with some
complaints Fire Marshall McLawhorn
said. "The Attic was due for an inspection
anyway, but when we had these
complaints, we decided to go now
This week the fire inspection crew is
beginning inspections for a number of
night spots and restaurants in Greenville.
These inspections will not be announced,
and will last indefinitely, according to
McLawhorn.
"We're not announcing the times when
we'll be coming because then, naturally,
everything would be in compliance. We
want to see them as they really are and
how they operate on any night he said.
The regulations followed by the fire
department are those found in the State of
North Carolina Building Code and in the
NCSL
Continued from page one.
UNC-G. Saturday night the ECU delegation
upheld its party spirit by having every
member present at a dance and beer-blast
sponsored by NCSL and North Carolina
Budweiser Distributors.
Partying was only a small portion of the
five day session, however, as the ECU
delegation worked long hours and
attended all sessions and meetings having
at least 13 delegates or alternates present
in the house and two senators or alternates
in the senate.
The 37th annual NCSL at Raleigh was
indeed a profitable one for the ECU
delegation.
Silmarillion
The late J.R.R. Tolkien's final work,
"The Silmarillion a lengthy prologue to
the events that made up "The Lord of the
Rings" trilogy, won't be published for
another year, at least. Tolkien's British
publishers, Allen and Unwin, say that the
unfinished manuscript consists of a
series of as-yet unconnected legends.
They expect Tolkien's son, Christopher, to
put them together.
? ? II ? i ?
SGA says
no monies
to WECU
By SUSAN OUINN
Staff Writer
The SGA Legislature voted for the
second time not to appropriate money to
WECU for research for the possibilities of
an FM station at ECU. Allen Dehmer of
WECU asked the legislature to reconsider
and to appropriate $495 to be spent for a
study of FM frequencies for WECU. Deh-
mer said that the proposed FM station
would be an educational station and would
be funded by grants instead of
advertisements.
A controversy centers around the
management of a financial account that
WECU owns. The account contains $6,500
which a WECU representative said would
be used for capital improvements of the
AM station, but some of the legislators felt
that this fund could be used to pay for the
survey. The bill was brought to the floor
and was tabled because the Speaker,
Braxton Hall, ruled it out of order because
the bill with the same subject matter can
not be considered after defeat.
In other SGA action, Jim Davis,
Secretary of Academic Affairs, announced
to the legislature that the teacher
evaluation system will not be effective at
the present. "We will not be in a position
to have a teacher evaluation at ECU he
said. Davis said because of the time
element involved in the defeat of the bill
for student evaluation at the end of the
quarter that "this session of the SGA will
not be able to provide this needed
evaluation to the students.
In other business the legislature did
not override the SGA president Bill
Bodenhamer's veto of the repeal of a bill
which appropriated $1,200 to the SGA
cabinet. The bill was repealed February 19
but Bodenhamer vetoed the bill and the
legislature's attempt to override his
decision failed.
Michael Brown was accepted as a new
day student representative.
EAST CAROLINA
IS f,
"FISH HOUSE COUNTRY
GO PIRATES
IN WASHINGTON
to his ancestral home and finds the rural
South of the 1970s deep in crisis and
confrontation. A modern superhighway,
with non-ending streams- of traffic,
exposing the people to unheard of vistas
and destroying regional identity is the
symbol of rootlessness and departure from
the old ways. The wedding guest is the
man to whom they all come, to whom the
characters relate their stories as the
Ancient Mariner told his fearful and
symbolic story to Coleridge's Wedding-
Guest.
Pierce's previous major novels are "The
Plantation" (1953), "On A Lonesome
Porch" (1960), and "The Devil's Half"
(1968).
He is twice winner of the Sir Walter
Raleigh award for fiction published by a
North Carolina writer and won the 1969
North Carolina Gold Medal for Literature.
He received the 1973 O. Max Gardner
award of the University of North Carolina
for contributions to culture which
described him as a "masterful writer,
teacher of the craft of writing, sympathetic
and profound interpreter of life (who has)
produced an authoritative portrait of the
South helped to right the distorted view
that fiction too often gives to our region
National Fire Prevention Code, fondly
called "the bible" by McLawhorn.
"We're not trying to be sneaky by not
announcing the times we'll inspect. We're
not out to catch them-we're just seeing
how these places normally operate and
that everyone can be safe while they're
there and not get hurt if anything should
happen
Drivt
ALL
and Eat a Lot f
CAN EAT
a Litfl a
LL YOU
Flounderf&Clams $935
419 West
Main St.
Telephone
9461311

nm
hmh





6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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Reviews
The Beatle era
Holding hands to turning on but always cashing in
By BRANDON TISE
Staff Writer
THE BEATLES- 1964-1974
Was it ten years ago that the Beatles
first hit the USA9 It doesn't seem that long
ago since they rocked the States with "I
Want To Hold Your Hand" and
Beatlemania had begun. At one time in
April 1964 they held thirteen of the top
song posit'ons in the US introducing the
mania of longhair (go back and look at
their 1964 pictures), they became the
lovable moptops elevating rock musicians
to acceptable levels from their lowly 1950's
status.
Celebrities posed with Beatle wigs
(usually succeeding in making themselves
look like assholes), words such as "Luv
"Poppycock and "Bird found their way
into the vocabularies of American
teenyboppers. Elvis Presley, The King,
had his title ungloriously taken for the rest
of the decade. Ten thousand fans greeted
them at Kennedy Airport upon their arrival,
but that was only a small number
compared to the 300,000 fans who stormed
the streets of Adelaide, Australia when
they went on a Far east tour. Everyone
desperately wanted to see the Beatles;
remember the girl who mailed herself in a
box to the BeaWes in New York? Yes,
those were fun days. In those days the
FAB FOUR broke all entertainment records
and made more money doing it than any
one had ever done before. Surely you girls
remember belonging to a neighborhood
Beatles fan club and being chastised by
your friends for not being able to
remember Paul's birthday.
In 1965 the Beatles performed before
the second largest enclosed crowd in
history, that was in Shea Stadium. They
made over half a million dollars for that
concert playing the longest time they ever
played: twenty five minutes. Throughout
1964, 1965, 1966 they toured the world
making movies, putting out 10 albums and
in general making money, money,
money. They made millions of dollars and
thumbed their noses to the world by
buying all the comforts of life such as
psychedelically (remember that word?)
painted houses and Rolls Royces. In
these years they dropped their yeah, yeah
yeah, for love, love, love.
In 1966, they were offered one million
dollars to play Shea Stadium again but
turned it down because they were tired of
touring. The new refined sound they had
displayed on 'Rubber Soul' and
'Yesterday And Today' came out even
stronger on their next album 'Revolver1.
'Revolver1 (which Lennon called "acid") had
two main influences, the drugs, and
Harrison's interest in Indian music and
religion.
The first "superalbum 'Sergeant
Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band utilized
new song structures and instruments
which had been hinted at on previous
albums were now firmly implanted in
Beatle style. The Beatles announced that
they had taken drugs, in particular LSD,
and the lovable moptops became the
leaders and heroes of a new
ind John almost went
H
to live in the rising Haight-Ashbury section
of San Francisco. The Beatles instead
found a new place to go - to India with the
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. They renounced
materialism, went to India with their wives
Mick Jagger, and Mia Farrow. When the
Beatles found out the Maharishi was
thinking of exploring Mia Farrow's body
and in fact had already tried, they saw his
hypocrisy and left him forever. 'Magical
Mystery Tour their next album, was well
received by critics but the movie was
panned almost worldwide. That coupled
with a previous Lennon wisecrack that the
pop world press misconstrued to say the
Beatles thought that they were greater
than God brought out the first anti-Beatles
publicity. We all remember - when radio
stations refused to play Beatles records
and come cited burned Beatle records in
the streets (How foolish we can be
sometimes, right?) After the untimely
death of their manager, Brian Epstein, the
Beatles seemed to drift apart when the
next album, 'White Album came out it
revealed each Beatles individual talents
more than ever. Their single "Hey
JudeRevolution which came out in
October, 1988, showed the difference
between Paul's music and John's
music. "Hey Jude" became their second
most popular selling song in history.
It is often overlooked by many that the
Beaties fortune was ripped-off by British
taxes, phoney inventors and artists, and
anyone else who could pursuade them to
be their patrons. The Beatles established
a chain of boutiques in London as a tax
write off, but closed them down with a
grand finale by giving away $35,000.00
worth of clothes. Their newly established
corporation, Apple, would gradually
become a monster in the hands of
unscrupulous businessmen.
John divorced his first wife, Cynthia,
and married Yoko Ono, an avant-garde
artist. She immediately received the wrath
of the other Beatles and the Apple staff
who used to give her the finger behind her
back. John and Yoko traveled around the
world holding "peace-ins" and "love-ins
and Viet Nam rallies and giving thousands
of pounds to the "Liberate Marijuana"
campaign. (John and Yoko had been
busted in 1968 for hashish which many
(jvew Improved full oiminsional srtmd)
BEATLES
THE WORLD'S MOST POPULAR FOURSOME! JOHN -PAUL GEORGE RINGO
YOU UK! MI TOO MUCH ? Till MI WNAT rOU SII ? SAD BOY ? DIZZY MISS LIZZIE ? IIGHT DAYS ? WiiK ? VIS IT IS
WORDS Of 10VI ? KANSAS CITY ? I DON'T WANT TO SPOIL TNI PARTY ? IVIRT LITTLE TNIN6 ? WNAT YOU Rl DOINC
people think was a set up.)
Paul in the meantime had married
Linda Eastman who some called the
world's greatest groupie. They went to
Paul's farm in Scotland where they became
recluses for a time. John Eastman and Lee
Eastman, Linda's brother and father
respectively, wanted to become the new
managers of Apple and with Paul's backing
almost had the job when Lennon backed
Allen Klein, the Rolling Stones
Manager. Lennon thought Eastman was
an "animal" and refused to have him head
Apple. Klein eventually got the job but
then turned into the "animal" that Lennon
had feared in Eastman. This manager
controversy was a major cause in the 1970
Beatle breakup.
During the filming and recording of
"Let It Be" in early 1969, the last to be
released, it became quite evident that there
was a rift in the group. Each Beatle was
into his own personal taste in music too
much to bother with the others.
Later in 1969, after the release of
'Abbey Road' (the last Beatle album), John
told Paul that he was leaving the group. It
was decided to keep the whole thing
hush-hush. Paul went into seclusion in
Scotland working on his solo album.
In 1970 a student at the University of
Michigan and a Detroit disc jockey
dreamed up the "Paul is dead"
campaign. For a week the girls cried
(including many of you), while reporters
seached high and low to find the
"deceased" Paul. Fans looked back at
their old Beatle albums for the "clues"
depicting Paul's "auto death" in
1966. Luckily for the world, and all of the
teary eyed teenyboppers, he was found
safe on his farm in Scotland. In 1970, Paul
released "McCartney" while simultaneous-
Continued on page 7.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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Continued from page 6.
ly announcing to the world that he was
leaving the Beatles when in fact John had
left eight months previously. He later
formed "Wings" with his wife, Linda,
which broke up in the fall of 1973.
Since the breakup, Paul has put out five
albums, John has put out five, George
four, and Ringo three. George has had the
most success rutting on benefit concerts
for BhanglaDeshand with his three record
smash All Things Must Pass John and
his own Plastic Ono Band which later
broke up, jammed with Frank Zappa, the
Rolling Stones, and performed at clubs
with Elephants Memory. In the fall of
1972, he put on his own benefit concert the
"One To One Concert" in Madison Square
Garden. John gave the money to a
children's hospital in New York. John
tried to become a US citizen but was
refused for his old hashish bust and fears
to leave the country because he can't get
back in. Also, John and Yoko are trying to
get Kyoko Cox, her daughter by another
marriage, whom they have been unable to
find since they were granted custody of the
child in 1973. At the present time, John is
appealing to Queen Elizabeth through
'Radio Luxembourg for a pardon of his drug
bust.
Paul has been kept out of the country
for two years for minor drug busts, but in
December, 1973, was allowed to enter the
US again. One condition of the entry visa
is a concert benefiting the Phoenix House,
a drug rehabilitation center in New
York. In his latest Rolling Stone interview,
McCartney stated plans for a major United
States tour this spriny while also saying
that studio work with the other Beatles
would be more than welcomed by him.
The latest Beatles reunion rumor was
sparked by every Beatle contributing
songs and performances on 'Ringo
Starr's latest album. John, George, and
Ringo were in a Los Angeles studio at one
time last fall but McCartney was unable to
get in the US because of his busts. Now
that all of them are in the United States, an
album by the four is now very
possible. However, as McCartney stated
in his last Rolling Stone interview, this
would not be a Beatle album, but rather an
album where the four contributed so as to
not start the myth again. The return of
Bob Dylan has also interested the
ex-Beatles in performing together live
again since the Dylan tour was an
unprecendented success.
Right now all the ex-Beatles are
involved in lawsuits with each other, and
with Allen Klein, who they have rejected as
their manager. Millions of dollars in
royr.lties are at stake and Klein wants to
get his hands on as much as
possible. This may prevent any reunion on
stage and on record during 1974. Whether
it is an unscheduled one-night stand or a
full blown tour no one knows but John,
Paul, George, and Ringo themselves. In
1964 the Beatles were introduced to the
United States, in 1974, they may
reintroduce themselves.

NEEDED: Fountainhead needs a reviews
editor and a layout assistant Call 758 6366
or 758 6367, or come up to the
Fountainhead offices over Wright Aud
itorium lobby between 10 am and 4 p m.
Mon Fri Just ask tor Pat Crawford or
Skip Saunders.
news
DONALD TAYLOR: No. 135972, Viet
Nam, artist serving prison sentence for
possession of marijuana. Has received no
visits and few letters during the past
year. Would gladly welcome receiving
letters from any concerned sincere
person. Donald Taylor, No. 135972, P.O.
Box 787, Lucasville, Ohio, 45648.
JUST RECEIVED: Large shipment
waterbeds. Five year warranty. Now
only $16.95. Freight Liquidators, West
End Shopping Center, Greenville.
ECU SENIORS AND GRADUATE
STUDENTS: If you can work 10 20 hrs.
per week, you can earn $50 75. NATION
AL CONCERN NEEDS MEN AND
WOMEN FOR SURVEY WORK. No
selling. Can fit hours into your schedule.
May lead to full time after graduation.
Call Al Elmore MON THURS. 756 2797
Ext. 123.
CONSIDER MAKING YOURSELF
AVAILABLE. For information write:
ECU Student Services, Box 2001, ECU
Station, Greenville.
NEEDED: Adult male studderers to be
used in a speech and hearing research
study. All information confidential. Con-
tact Barbara Wells at 758 6961 Ext. 227 or
7520574.
FOR SALE: 1970 Kawasaki "350" Big
Horn, Completely over-hauled. Call Gene
Cole 756 6558, after 5.
LOST: Leather key chain made by Dave
from Mushroom, VW key, madterlock key
and brown and white onxydon key -Very
Important- Call Rodney at 758-2206.
FOR SALE: 1971 Kawasaki 500-going
overseas and need cash. Excellent
condition 525.00 or best offer. Call Tom
weeknights 756-5094.
"WANT A DATE?" Computer dating is
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Let our computer match you with your
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from the names of thousands of students
from over 50 colleges in North
Carolina. For complete detail send name
and address to:Student Dating Service,
Box 533, Carrboro, N.C. 27510.
GENERAL TYPING: Papers, thesis,
manuscripts. Fast professional work at
reasonable rates. Call Julia Bloodworth,
7567874.
FOR RENT: Private room close to
campus. Call 752-4006.
EUROPE ISRAEL AFRICA: Travel dis-
count year round. Student Air Travel
Agency, Inc 201 Allen Rd Suite 410,
Atlanta, Ga. 30328, (404) 256-4258.
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack
Brendle 752 2619.
STUDY IN OXFORD this summer. Two
sessions: June 30-July 25; July 25-August
21. Courses offered include literature,
drama, philosophy, history, art, and
biology. Six hours semester credit
possible. Cost of room, board and all fees
$485.00. Write UNC-A Oxford, UNC Ashe
ville, Asheville, N.C. 28801.
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL info and
referral no fee. Up to 24 weeks. General
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligationalso
available. Free pregnancy tests. Call
PCS, non profit, 202 298 7995.
TYPING SERVICE: 758 2814.
MARRIED COUPLE, BA degree, work
with troubled youth in group home, room
board and competitive salary. Contact
Bill Harrington at 929 4337, Box 2287,
Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514
Continued from page two.
Medical admissions
The Medical College Admission Test
will be offered at ECU on May 4,
1974. Application blanks are to be
completed and mailed to The ACT
Program, Iowa City, Iowa, to arrive by April
12, 1974. These applications are available
at the Testing Department. Rooms
204-205, Speight Building, ECU.
D.A.T. offered
The Dental Aptitude Test will be offered
at ECU on April 20, 1974. Application
blanks are to be completed and mailed to
the Division of Educational Measure-
ments, American Dental Association, 211
East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois
60611 to arrive by March 25, 1974. These
applications are available at the Testing
Department, Rooms 204-205 Speight
Building, ECU.
Grad record exam
The Graduate Record Examination will
be offered at ECU on April 27,1974. Appli-
cation blanks are to be completed and
mailed to Educational Testing Service,
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 to arrive by
April 2, 1974. These applications are
available at the Testing Department,
Rooms 204-205, Speight Building, ECU.
Reaearch results
Two learning specialists at ECU have
discovered the importance of an indivi-
dual s preference of auditory or visual
stimuli upon his learning ability.
Dr Patricia N. Daniel of the ECU
elementary education faculty and Dr.
Robert S. Tacker of the psychology faculty
reported results of their research in the
February Journal of Educational Research.
They selected three groups of 15
children about eight years old for their
research, using one group of children who
respond well to the visual sensory
modality, one who responds well to the
auditory modality and one composed of
children who respond equally well to
either.
Each group was given material to be
memorized both by sight and by sound,
and was then tested for recall of the
material.
The findings showed that children learn
best when material is presented through
the preferred modality and worst through
the nonpreferred modality.
Drs. Daniel and Tacker concluded that
modality preference can be an important
variable in learning and that educators
should provide congruity between a
learner's preference and the mode of
instruction.
TYPING SERVICE
Call 758 5948
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8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
wmm
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EcfflorialSCommenlcry
SGA decision made
By the time this editorial appears, the fate of next year's SGA will have been decided.
This editor can't speculate at great length upon the matter of elections; I'm writing
this pretty much on the run, on the way to a Columbia Press convention in New
York. We'll be anxious to hear the results of the 74-75 elections, and hope a major
portion of the student body undertook some refelctive thinking re: our last editorial,
which supported Mitchell Riley for SGA president, Tom Clare for Vice-President and Bill
Beckner for Treasurer. Our support still stands; it remains to be seen if the student
body will agree with us. Good luck.
Anderson says bankers cause gas lines also
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - Those gas lines
that you have to wait in have been caused
by a deadly combination of industry greed
and government bumbling. But they were
also caused by bankers.
The world is awash in oil, but there are
not enough refineries to make it into
gasoline. The major oil companies have
built few refineries in the last 10 years.
Here's where the bankers come in.
Independent refiners have had trouble
getting financing to build new plants,
because of the close ties between the eight
major oil companies and the nation's
largest banks. Many of the same men,
who sit on the boards of the banks, also sit
on the boards of the oil companies.
Therefore, they did not want to see the
independents build more refineries and cut
into the profits of the major oil companies.
In addition to freezing the indepen-
dents out, the bankers have helped make
the oil industry interdependent, rather than
competitive. For example, the Chase
Manhattan Bank is both the largest
shareholder in Atlantic Richfield and the
second largest shareholder of Mobil. Ob-
viously, it is not in the bank's interest to
promote competition between the two.
The Federal Trade Commission,
meanwhile, has charged that the oil
business is not free enterprise at all, but a
monopoly which operates to the detriment
of the public. It has filed suit to break up
the oil trust.
Battles for Oman: The headlines hold
out hope of peace in the Middle East and
detente with Russia. But the opposite is
developing in an obscure but strategic
comer of the world.
The place is the oil-rich Shiekhdom of
Oman, which controls the entrance to the
Persian Gulf. All tankers, carrying oil from
the world's greatest oil reserves, must
pass from the Persian Gulf into the Gulf of
Oman.
Under hostile control Oman could
bottle up the flow of oil out of the Persian
Gulf. This is the jugular which carries the
West's economic lifeblood.
Now the Shiekh of Oman, backed by
the United States is challenged by
Communist insurgents, who are backed by
the Soviet Union. Our staunch ally, Iran,
has dispatched troops to Oman to battle
the rebels.
Meanwhile, fishing fleets from both the
United States and the Soviet Union have
suddenly taken an interest in fishing the
crucial Gulf of Oman.
The American fishing vessels are
owned by Charles Black, the husband of
former child star Shirley Temple. She has
close connections with the Nixon
Administration. This had led to rumors
that her husband's boats are really fishing
for information.
The Soviet trawlers are also bristling
with electronic gear, more suitable for
spying than fishing.
Fountainhead
"Do you know because I tell you so, or do
you know Gertrude Stein
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford
MANAGING EDITORSkip Saunders
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gillian)
AD MANAGERJackie Shallcross
NEWS EDITORSDarrell Williams
Diane Taylor
REVIEWS EDITORSteve Bohmuller
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow
ADVISORFrank J. Murphy
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-
paper of East Carolina University and
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of
the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,
Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367
Subscriptions. $10 annually for non-
students.
The battle for Oman is beginning to
look a little like a rerun of Vietnam. The
stakes: access to the world's largest oil
supply.
Too Eager: The case against the
Watergate defendants may be jeopardized
by overeager prosecutors. This is causing
concern among Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski's lawyers. They are particularly
upset over the trial of former Attorney
General John Mitchell and Commerce
Secretary Maurice Stans.
The Watergate prosecutors secretly
believe Mitchell and Stans stand a good
chance of acquittal. They fear this will
influence the juries that hear the Watergate
cases and may adversely affect the
chances of obtaining convictions.
The Jaworski team blames the New
York prosecutors who were so eager to get
into the Watergate spotlight that they went
ahead with a weak case. The trouble with
the case, my sources say, is that a
principal player, Robert Vesco, won't be
there. He is still in the Caribbean, ducking
subpoenas. Without Vesco, the New York
prosecutors may have trouble convicting
Mitchell and Stans.
The Watergate prosecutors, them-
selves, were also too eager to nail a
prominent Democrat and, thereby, prove
they were nonpartisan. They asked the
grand jury to indict a former Lyndon
Johnson aide, Jake Jacobson, for
allegedly lying about his role in the milk
scandal.
But the indictment, the prosecutors
secretly fear, was faulty and eventually will
be thrown out. This may cause future
juries to question the Watergate
indictments.
Budget Bombs: Once again, the
Pentagon is asking for billions of dollars to
develop new weapons. Last year, they re-
quested $8.5 billions for research and
development. This year, they want $9.3
billion.
Once work starts on a weapon, it is
almost impossible to stop. Commanders
use them as excuses to demand more
men, more money, more gold braid. Bu-
reaucracies build up around them.
In 1964, for example, the Army began
developing the "main battle tank Seven
years and $235 million later, Congress
ordered it junked. But last year, it showed
up in the budget again - as the XM-1.
Then there's the Cheyenne helicopter.
After six years and $40 million, it too was
shelved. But last year it was back as the
"advanced attack helicopter
And remember the B-1 manned
bomber, which keeps disappearing and
reappearing on the Pentagon drawing
boards? Last year, the brass hats
appeared before a closed session of a
m
Senate subcommittee and pleaded for
more money for the B-1 bomber. They got
it.
All to often, the weapons that the Army
develops don't work right. For example,
the Army has started to mass-produce a
truck, which is supposed to be able to float
across calm water. Army drivers drove it
into Maryland's Chesapeake Bay recently
for a test run. It sank.
Elsewhere
RIYADH - I have followed the
Watergate trails all the way to the Middle
East. Witnesses have told the Senate
Watergate investigators that millions were
tunneled into President Nixon's campaign
from such Middle Eastern potentates as
the Shah of Iran and the Saudi Arabian
royal family.
The name of Adnam Khashoggi has
been mentioned in the secret testimony.
He is a mysterious man about-the-world,
who has excellent contacts in the ruling
Saudi circles.
I tracked him down to his home in
Riyadh, the remote capital of Saudi
Arabia. He also has an office in Riyadh
under the name of the Triat International
Marketing Co.
But Adnam Khashoggi is never in one
place for long. I reached his brother, who
said Adnam was in Khartoum. No one
seemed to know where he would be
heading from there.
According to the secret testimony,
Adnam Khashoggi delivered the Saudi
money to the Nixon campaign. So far,
however, I have been unable to catch up
with Khashoggi. And the Senate investi-
gators haven't gotten as close as I have.
It is not Khashoggi, but Saudi Arabia's
King Faisal who can do the most to help
Nixon now. Faisal, the absolute ruler of
the world's largest oil reserves, will make
the final decision whether to relieve
America's oil shortage.
He is intensely anti-Communist.
Therefore, he lines up solidy behind the
United States and against the Soviet Union
during the cold war.
But he is also intensely anti-Zionist.
He finally shut off oil exports to the United
States in retaliation for U.S. arms
shipment to Israel during the October war.
No one can be certain what goes on in
the mind of the brooding, hawk-like
Faisal. Those who are close to him say he
has a strong sense of honor and of loyalty
to his friends.
They say he still regards the United
States as a friend, despite its aid to
Israel. He cut off the oil, partly to
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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strengthen his voice in the Arab world,
partly to remind the Americans not to take
him for granted.
But quietly, he is using his new
prestige in the Arab world to argue for
moderation. He is also trying to persuade
other Arab oil producers to hold down
prices.
In the end, say those who know Faisal,
he will still be in America's comer.
Other powers are also lusting for
Faisal's oil.
The outer office of Sheik Ahmed Zaki
Yamani reveals, in a glimpse, the world's
changing power patterns. Yamani is Saudi
Arabia's oil minister. Saudi Arabia's sea of
petroleum under its hot sands makes
Yamani one of the world's most powerful
men.
In his outer office, a gruff American oil
baron almost groveled before Yamani's
appointments secretary. A rich Lebanese
businessman, whose aides scurried to
'make him confratable, did the scurrying
when Yamani's deputy enetered the
room. Three Japanese, who had just
arrived from Tokyo, bowed lower than
usual when they approached the
appointments secretary.
They all knew that Yamani has them
over the oil barrel. He spoke to me softly
and thoughtfully about the world oil
shortage. It was better for Saudi Arabia,
he said, to hold down production.
But to ease the crisis, he said, Saudi
wells will soon be producing nine million
barrels a day. It will take a few years and
millions of dollars in development . he
said, to reach the 20-million barrel output
he has promised. Meanwhile, he believes
continued exploration, will double Saudi
Arabia's already vast oil reserves.
The money pouring into Riyadh could
create other problems.
There is ominous talk in Saudi Arabia
of using some of the nation's oil billions to
purchase nuclear weapons. Responsible
Saudi leaders told me they may have to
acquire a nuclear arsenal for the Arab
world to counter the Israeli nuclear threat.
They are convinced that the Israelis are
building nuclear warheads. As the Saudis
see it, if peace should fail, another
Arab-Israeli war is inevitable. Next time,
the Saudis believe, the Arab armies will do
better. The Israelis, as a last resort, might
use their nuclear weapons.
It is this possibility which has the
Arabs worried. Today, the Saudis have
the money and their oil gives them the
clout to arm the Arab side with nuclear
weapons.
No overtures have yet been made,
according to my Saudi sources, to obtain
nuclear arms. But the idea has been
seriously discussed in the Arab capitals.
The approach is more likely to be made
to the French, or perhaps the British, than
to the Russians. The Saudis believe the
French would sell nuclear weaponry, if
necessary, to keep their oil pipelines filled.
Clearly, another blow-up in the Middle
East could be catastrophic.
WHAT BUSt?IM?j
WOO?
'Perhaps it's time for another Presidential trip, Bebe . . . .
99
Nixon's emotional heath questioned
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By TRISTIN COFFIN
THE HIDDEN ALARM - "As the media
linger over his 'ravaged' face, his public
quirkiness, his increasing isolation, the
question of Mr. Nixon's emotional health
has become a kind of muttered
counterpoint to the more public issues of
guilt or innocence, impeachment or let-it
be
Washington's hidden alarm is
President Nixon is not capable of pulling
America through a tough economic crisis,
and Congress hasn't the guts to get rid of
him. The hope-Nixon will suffer a
breakdown and withdraw under terms of
the 25th Amendment. The most influential
member of Congress, Chairman Wilbur
Mills of the Ways and Means Committee,
has publicly pleaded with Nixon to
resign. He told newsmen that if Nixon
"were looking to me for advice I would say
resign in the near future
This is the talk in the Congressional
cloakrooms, and is reflected in a jittery
Wall Street. More revelations lie ahead.
The New York Times hints at what the
underground press has been saying for
months, Nixon's links with organized
crime, through gambling interests in the
Banamas.
The Miami Herald says agents of the
Irving Committee are in Florida
investigating the passing of gambling
money to Nixon, and adds: "Seymour
Alter, a Miamian with Bahama gambling
connections, said he has visited the Key
Biscayne Presidential Compound four or
five times to make social calls on C.G.
(Bebe) Rebozo .An investigation by state
attorney Gerstein's office is currently
tracing out Alter" s movement of money
from the Bahamas into the US through the
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Key Biscayne Bank headed by Rebozo.
Author Gore Vidal in The New York
Review suggests that some White House
"plumbers" and Watergate burglars may
have been involved in the assassination of
John Kennedy and the shooting of George
Wallace.
When Nixon came back from
California, the cautious TBR called him
"Bleak and ravaged Time said he
"looked haggard and phrased his thoughts
uncertainly in a quavering voice" in his talk
on the Mideast. A Congressman who was
brought to the White House is startled by
the man behind the desk; he is obsessed
with his ability to destroy seventy-five
million Russians in twenty minutes, and
vice versa.
Columnists Evans and Novak tell of a
Nixon talk to top Government officials:
"He then advised his audience to read
Albert Speeds 'Inside the Third Reich
particularly the description of how Speer,
as (Hitler's) arms production boss, had
kept German war production at peak
levels, even during the worst of the Allied
bombing .The reaction of some of those
listening bordered on shock. Worse than
that, some of the President's official
family felt that the easy praise for
convicted war criminal Spoor's industrial
mobilization was slightly ominous
NIXON'S NEUROTIC HISTORY - The
record seems to be that under both
pressure and adverse criticism, Nixon falls
apart. After a considerable investigation,
Irving Wallave wrote that Nixon "suffered
physical problems that came from
emotional problems and from 'great
pressure
Columnist Drew Pearson revealed to
the National Press Club in November 1968
that Nixon had been a patient of New York
psychiatrist Arnold A. Hutschnecker who,
currently, is recommending "that all
Presidential candidates ought to be
screened by a panel of psychiatrists and
then monitored for 'mental health' as
closely as they are for physical
health Nixon was treated with severe
depression and psychosomatic illness
while Vice-President and after his defeat
for Governor of California in 1962.
After the bombing of Cambodia and the
protests, Nixon one May night went to the
Lincoln Memorial and talked to visiting
students. Some of them told CBS
newsman Bob Schieffer: "He was just
rambling about things that didn't make any
sense, that didn't relate He seemed very
tired and nervous, and you know, he was
all leaning over, and he was looking at the
floor, he couldn't look at anybody His
sentences wre incoherent He looked
like he had a mask on
WHO WILL LEAD? - In the absence of
leadership in the White House or Congress
"the desire for leadership has grown so
strong .that it has opened the door to
dictatorship This is the view of Father
Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of Notre
Dame. "The mood is dangerous because I
think it's the kind of mood you could see in
other countries before dictatorship moved
in; people so desperately looking for
leadership that they'll almost go with any
strong man
More specifically, Max Lerner in the
New York Post, fears a military take-over
"if and when they are convinced that the
civilian leaders have turned America into a
second-rate (military) power
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12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
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Thirty acts
Hanne ford Circus comes to Minges
Trained wild animals and beautiful girl
performers will be important elements in
the varied performance of Hanneford
Circus when it appears in Greenville on
Thursday, March 21. 1974 at Minges
Coliseum. With an impressive array of
new features, the 1974 program of this
popular circus promises to be the
strongest in its history.
High on the list of animal features will
be the lion and tiger act presented in the
incorporated into the circus. In "Nep-
tune's Holiday" shapely sea nymphs and
mermaids sail through the air in a colorful
aerial ballet. "Circus Parade" is a second
spectacle that utilizes the entire company
in a dazzling circus-style salute to the
"Nashville sound" of country music.
Among other features of the show,
many of them being seen in this country
for the first time, are the Hungarian
Troupe, in an exhibition of acrobatic
MINQES WILL BE insured for $1,000,000 for the upcoming circus.
steel arena by the lovely, graceful and
fearless lady trainer, Tajana. She performs
with a mixed group of jungle-bred cats
which include both Bengal and Siberian
tigers plus a black-maned African lion. As
the climax of her act she presents a savage
black panther that mounts and rides the
back of one of its natural enemies, an
Indian elephant.
At another point in the program, blond
and beautiful Gina Dubsky presents a
group of performing African leopards. In-
sofar as women are seldom seen in the
highly dangerous role of wild animal
trainers, the appearance of two such girl
performers within one circus program may
well constitute a circus "first
Additional animal stars include Janos's
Chimpanzees in a fantastic demonstration
of animal intelligence and Lacey's
Performing Seals, who do a hilarious
routine. Joanne's Pets are another popular
item in this year's show - an adorable
congress of very appealing and very well
trained dogs and ponies. Finally there are
the ever-popular performing elephants and
horses.
Beautiful girls and gorgeous costum-
ing are emphasized in the three all-new
production spectaculars which are
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmn
SHONEY S BIG BOY
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
This Coupon Good
for one slice freshly
made Strawberry
pie with any
combination or dinner
order
Expires April 30.
strength and coordination; the Pinsons,
courageous high-trapeze daredevils;
Marina Radulescu, shapely young
Rumanian aerialists; the Barrys and the
Roberts, whirlwind tumblers and trampo-
linists; Don and Lana, unbelievably clever
jugglers; the Four Dubskys and the
Argentinos, high perch-pole balancing
artists; and an entire troupe of clowns,
headed by the side-splitting comic, Doug
Ashton, Australia's contribution to the art
of funny slapstick comic. As always, the
prestigious Hannefora Family Bareback
Riding Act will give added luster to the
show with its big cast of horses and riders,
again featuring Tommy Hanneford, the
riding comedian, and dashing Peter
Haubner, young guest riding star from the
Hungarian State Circus in Budapest.
The Hanneford name is one of the
oldest and most respected in the circus
world, dating back to an original in
England in 1621. Still produced and
directed by the present generation of the
Hanneford family, the show exhibits
exclusively in sports arenas and
auditoriums in line with present-day
emphasis on greater audience comfort.
This year's performance runs a very
fast-paced two hours, and includes 30 acts
in 20 displays. It embraces many startling
and unusual features against a colorful
and elaborate production background that
one would normally expect in a Broadway
show or a major ice show.
There will be two performances of the
Hanneford Circus on March 21, 1974. The
matinee will be presented at 4:30 p.m. and
the evening performance will be at 8:00
p.m. Student tickets for the matinee are
$.50 and for the evening show $1.00. Any
child 12 years or younger will be admitted
free when accompanied by a regular ticket
holder. Tickets will be on sale at the ECU
Central Ticket Office.
THE CIRCUS WILL feature many trained
animal acts.
maaaaDiBaifleicJbiaoiBoiasiciaicdibbio
TO ALL FREE-LANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS:
Fountainhead welcomes any work you care to
submit in return for publication of your photos and
by-lines. i
x
We are especially interested in creative shots
and-or candid shots particularly on campus or the
Greenville area. Please contact Skip Saunders
MonFri. from 3-5:00 p.m. at 758-6366 or 758-I
3367 or come to theFountainhead offices over
Wright Auditorium to talk

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:h21, 1974. The
at 4:30 p.m. and
will be at 8:00
the matinee are
how $1.00. Any
will be admitted
i a regular ticket
sale at the ECU
? many trained
BEESESEDiqa
HERS:
are to
:os and
shots
Dr the
irs
758-I
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
mmm0m
13
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International studies Counceling services
Continued from page one.
Following are the results of the poll:
1. I think the major in International
Studies would be useful.
Of 185 freshman, 175 answered yes.
Of 169 sophomores, 156 answered yes.
Of 111 juniors, 106 answered yes.
Of 69 seniors, 68 answered yes.
2. I agree that ECU should consider
establishing a new major in International
Studies.
Of 185 freshmen, 173 answered yes.
Of 169 sophomores, 155 answered yes.
Of 111 juniors, 106 answered yes.
Of 69 seniors, 68 answered yes.
3. If a major in International Studies would
have been available, I might have chosen
ft.
Of 185 freshmen, 48 answered yes.
Of 169 sophomores, 52 answered yes.
Of 111 juniors, 42 answered yes.
Of 69 seniors, 34 answered yes.
The figures of the above poll are from
special classes and are not necessarily a
Commemorates anniversary
sample of the total student population.
According to Ferguson "exact details
have not been worked out for the proposed
major Dean Capwell of Arts and
Sciences, Chairman of the International
Affairs committee now has the proposal
pretty much in his hands. Dean Capwell
and his committee will make recommend-
ations to the administration about the
major.
"There is a positive out-look now,
especially as far as the student body. It is
not definite, but there may be a possible
deceleration of ECU programs in Japan
and Rome due to financial reasons. Be-
cause of this there may be a acceleration
of campus studies said Ferguson.
When asked why he thought an
International Studies major is necessary at
ECU, Ferguson said, "ECU has the
strongest international studies program in
N.C. with campuses in Rome, Japan, and
Mexico. Mexico is the most stable
campus. It could prepare you for job
opportunities in big trade cities and would
have practical applications - the market is
there. We also feel that any school with as
much emphasis on International Studies
as ECU should have a major in
International Studies rather than only a
minor as we now have
Continued from page three.
The Frankfords are well qualified to
deal with children's problems because of
the extensive amount of experience they
have both had in this and other areas.
For the past 30 years both Gladys and
Joseph have been in social work and
correctional fields. Most of this time has
been spent in North Carolina.
Both received their master's degrees in
social work, Mrs. Frankford from
Columbia University in New York, and Mr.
Frankford from the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. They are
also both members of the Academy of
Certified Social Workers (ACSW).
Membership in the ACSW
is equivalent to possessing a license for a
particular practice. Social workers do not
earn licenses for their work. Instead, they
gain credit from the ACSW for actual
practical experience gained under
supervision of an accredited social worker.
Frankford had been doing social work
in Baltimore, Md. for nine or 10 years when
he was contacted by the dean of social
work at Chapel Hill about a social work
position in Charlotte, N.C.
"I had never heard of Charlotte Mr.
Frankford said with a laugh as he recalled
the offer. "But I felt like I was in a rut in
Baltimore, so I decided to come down and
look at the offer
He accepted the position as director of
a comprehensive program of social work in
the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system.
Mrs. Frankford also began working in
Charlotte supervising student units in
social work f'om UNC at Chapel Hill. She
worked with students sent from Chapel
Hill to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg area to
do their field work for a six-month period.
In 1970, the Frankfords came to
Greenville "to get involved in what was
happening at East Carolina The
department of social work and corrections
was expanding and beginning new
programs in allied and mental health. "We
like to keep our hands in things that are
happening t?day said Frankford. "There
is a danger in teaching in that if teachers
don't keep going and continue research or
work in their field, they become
stale .they are actually teaching about
the past. That's one of the reasons we
started this counseling service
The Frankford's schedule appoint-
ments for counseling for week-day
evenings after 5:30 p.m. and all day
Saturday.
"Right now we're both doing about 10
hours a week each, maximum in
counseling. We try to leave at least one
night a week open for ourselves, and of
course, Sunday. We don't do any
counseling on Sunday's" said Mrs.
Frankford.
International Festival Plans varied program
By BARBARA TURNER
Staff Writer
An International Festival and Sym-
posium, commemorating the 50th
anniversary of the ECU Department of
Foreign Languages and Literatures will be
held on the ECU campus March 20-22.
MICHAEL BASSMAN
The three day program is being planned
by the departmental Special Projects
Committee and Dr. Michael Bassman,
chairman of the committee.
The festival date coincides with a
second symposium sponsored by the Latin
American Area Studies Committee which
will present speakers from the U.S.
Department of State; a classical guitarist,
Dr. Mario Abril of the University of
Tennessee; and Dr. Emir Rodrigue-Mone-
gal of Yale University, who will speak on
"Contemporary Latin American Litera-
ture
Marguerite Perry, Chariman of the
Department of Foreign Languages and
John Lang, ECU Vice-Chancel lor of
External Affairs will open the festival and
welcome guests. Principal speakers for
the program will be Dr. Edward Stack,
professor of Modem Languages at NCSU
and David Cat heart, personnel officer and
management recruiter from NCNB-
Charlotte. Dr. Stack will speak on
"Languages and the Machine" and David
Cathead will be speaking on "Foreign
Languages and Business Opportunities
During the Wednesday afternoon
program, former chairmen of the ECU
Department of Foreign Languages will be
recognized: Mr. James Fleming, Dr.
Henry Wanderman, and Dr. Joseph A.
Fernandez. Mr. Fleming served as
chairman for twentv-five vears, (1945-
1970). Following the afternoon activities
there will be a reception to honor ECU'S
international students.
On Wednesday evening in Nursing 101
several films will be shown. They include
"Yevtushenko" about a Russian poet; "The
Paris of Trancois a French film about the
typical life of a French child; German film,
"Bar bar tanz" - (Dance Bear Dance); and
"Mexico: A Photo Adventure" will be
shown through the courtesy of Eastman
Kodak Company.
Thursday is primarily for the Latin
American Symposium. Friday will be for
ECU students and "invited high school
students in N.C, principally in eastern
N.C added Dr. Bassman. Memorial Gym
will have many booths featuring items
ranging from Russian Easter eggs, tacos,
crepes - to a booth with a ham radio totune
in foreign countries.
Memorial Gym will also be the scene of
talent from high schools, local Greenville
people and ECU students. A poetry
contest for high school students, who
have memorized poems or written an
original poem in French, Spanish, German
or Russian is also scheduled. A skit
competition for high school students is .
planned. Prizes will be awarded.
Jones Cafeteria will have Foreign
Language tables and foreign conversation.
The festival will conclude with a scene
from the French play "La Valse des
Toreadors" (Nursing 101) and a Spanish
play reading, "Corona de Amor
Muerte The presentation from "La Valse
des Toreadors" will be part of the southern
competition at Clemson University later
this spring.
All ECU students are welcome to the
International Festival activities.
r
Consider makina yourself avail- v
able. For information write:
1
ECU STUDENT SERVICES
BOX 2001, ECU STATION 0
GREENVILLE S
PEYOTE
FINE INDIAN
JEWELRY
Turquoise, coral, silver'
CALL KELLY CWIN
752-0111
This week at the
ATTIC
Wed. March 13 Blackfrost
Thur. March 14 Singletree
Fri. March 15 Flatland
Sat. March 16 Steve Ball
Notice: The front door is now an emergency
exit and the back door is the main entrance.
m
MPW
?mN?M?MW
m
m
m
m
m

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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
? ?????
OMJ
m
Sports
To-Morrow's Sports
By JACK MORROW
Sports Editor
The departed coach Tom Quinn was supposed to be replaced Wednesday by Dave
Patton, but controversy still reigns as Quinn has not signed his release. Another
position on the East Carolina basketball staff appears to have been mislaid and it is a
very sad affair. So those of you faithful readers who cried at "Brian's Song" and "The
Roy Campanella Story" had better not read any further.
Along with Quinn, freshman basketball mentor and assistant coach Tom Twitty was
told that his time to exit the scene had also come. Now, the Pirate basketball situation
appears to be in a bit of a sticky situation. They have a head coach, and a very good one,
and an able assistant as George Estes was retained from the Quinn staff, but that is all.
The burden of running a major college basketball team is amightyone and with only
two people to bear the load - well it's going to be rough.
My question is why not keep Twitty on as a recruiter and coach of the junior
varsity? The man was a one-man coaching legend at Louisburg High School as he
coached football and basketball. His cage teams recorded a five year record of 62-18. It
is a crying shame that this coaching talent is going to be wasted.
There are many questions that need to be answered and I hope that the athletic
council will see the light and keep Tom Twitty on the staff. Two men are certainly not
enough.
I am still not over the decision that rid the University of one of the finest coaches that
they have ever employed. John Lovstedt wascoachingsoccer, lacrosse and diving when he
was given the axe last year.
He was the winningest coach ever in the history of East Carolina lacrosse and
soccer. His diving coaching was where his true ability was and I feel confident to say
that there are few diving coaches in America better than John Lovstedt.
John Lovstedt was a tribute to East Carolina and he put them on the map as far as
collegiate diving was concerned. He set his goals high and he achieved them, but E.C.U.
did not want his successful and positive attitude. Instead of rising to the heights of
greatness. East Carolina appeared to be content, wallowing in the depths of mediocrity.
When coach Lovstedt was relieved of his duties, the best excuse that the University
could give him was that he was being fired for the purpose of hiring a more experienced
soccer coach. Well before I make any more enemies, let me bow out of this commentary
gracefully.
This year's football team has eight assistant coaches and I hope and pray that those
eight coaches were not the reason behind the firing of these top-notch coaches. Maybe
the athletic council deciued to get rid of these coaches to make room for a larger grid
staff and then maybe there was another reason. I wish that someone would tell me the
answerplease!
HOT WATER NEEDED
The following letter was submitted to Fountainhead's sports' desk:
To the Sports Editor of Fountainhead
To the administration of Minges Coliseum:
Winners of five tournaments before Christmas, second in another and fourth in the
"Rose Bowl of Wrestling" - Wilkes Open - undefeated for three consecutive years, and
now recognized as one of the top 20 teams of the nation; the East Carolina wrestling
team has a " chillling" complaint.
For approximately three weeks, the week before and two weeks since the S.C.
tournament we've been working as hard as humanly possible. Now, after qualifying
seven for the NCAA finals to be held in Ames, Iowa on March 14-16, we have to put up
with something very few high schools have problems with.
Imagine working your body to near exhaustion and going into a shower that, at best
is 55 degrees.
First, it's painful, second it is bad for team moral, and third it has caused an outbreak
of colds, strep throat, the flu or whatever the M.Ds at the infirmary call it.
It seems as though someone in Minges Coliseum could have the courtesy to see to it
that there is hot water spraying from the faucets.
Although it won't do the wrestling team any good this year (they're in Ames for the
NCAA finals) it might make a few ECU students happy who need showers after P.E.
cJasses and intramural events to be held in Minges for the rest of the year.
We, the wrestling team, cannot find out who is responsible because whoever we ask
always seems to "pass the buck" to someone else. Maybe, just maybe, the person
responsible will read this letter and get from behind his desk and stop pushing his pencil
long enough to see that there is hot water in Minges Coliseum "for the duration
Thanks very much,
The ECU. wrestlers
it74 GOLF SCHEDULE
?rch 14. IS, 16
tv,
March 19
March 71, 73,
March IS.
April 3
April IS
April 30
May I
June l? 21
Palmetto Intercollegiate
Golf Tournament
UNC WILMINGTON
Camp Lejeune Tourney
Fur man Tourney
RICHMOND Southern Conn
Campbell
Southern Conference
Southern Conference
NCAA
10 00a.m.
2 OOp m
10 00 a m
10 00a m
I OOp m
1:00pm
10 00am
10 00a m
COACH Bill Cain
ALL CAPS DENOTE HOME GAMES
Tell me is it you who are here
For our good cheer.
Or are we here for the story, for the glory,
For the gory satisfaction of telling you
how absolutely awful you really are.
mmtmmtmmm
m
m
EAST CAROLINA ASSISTANT BASKETBALL coach Dave Patton is expected to be
named new Pirate head coach. Patton served for two years as an assistant to Tom
Quinn, former Buc mentor. No reason for the delay in naming a new coach has
been given by the athletic council.
Pirate spring sports fill the air
Three East Carolina spring sports,
facing unexpected pressure from a tight
Southern Conference Commissioner's Cup
race, open their respective seasons this
week.
The golf team, under new head coach
Bill Cain, opens play in the Palmetto
Intercollegiate Tournament in Orangeburg,
S.C, while Wes Hankins' tennis team
takes on UNC-Wilmington Saturday at 2
p.m. at the Minges Coliseum courts. Bill
Carson's outdoor track team opens a
12-meet schedule Friday in Chapel Hill
against North Carolina and Wake Forest.
The extra pressure placed on all Pirate
spring sports teams is due to the slim lead
held over William & Mary in the annual
chase for the Commissioner's Cup which
is awarded to the institution with the best
overall athletic program. East Carolina
has never won the Cup.
The golf team is expecting a banner
year because of the return of Ail-American
player Eddie Pinnix and five other
experienced and consistent players. Bebo
Batts, a senior, also returns along with Jim
Ward, a stellar player, Carl Bell, another
senior, Doug Owens, a sophomore with
great promise and Steve Ridge, a freshman
who cracked a tough team with good
practice sessions.
The golfers participate in eight
tournaments including the Southern
Conference and NCAA Championships.
Following the opener Thursday, the golf
team will host UNC-Wilmington on March
19 at Greenville Golf and Country Club
then travel to Camp Lejeunne Tournament
and the Furman Tournament on March
22-24 and March 28-30. East Carolina
hosts Richmond on April 3 and visits
Campbell on April 15 before conference
tournament action begins on April 30.
The tennis team returns five
experiences players who are all battling for
the No.1 singles position. Coach Wes
Hankins, who finished with a 7-11 record a
year ago after losing the first seven
matches, will be counting heavily on Chris
Davis, the No. 1 player a year ago, along
with Wray Gilette, Howard Rambeau, Ed
Spiegel and Thomas Marion. Doug
Getsinger, a freshman, is coming off a
torrid spring performance and is expected
to surprise several opponents in the
middle of the singles groupings.
Outdoor track has the distinct problem
of running every meet on the road because
of problems with the surface of the home
track which also hinders practice
sessions. The Pirates boast a host of
standouts including Les and Kenny
Strayborn, both speedsters, Maurice
Huntley, Carlester Crumpler, Ivy Peacock
in the weights, Roy Quick in the high jump
and Charley Lovelace.
Pirate road meets include visits to
Baptist College and Princeton (dual meet
in Charleston, S.C), The Atlantic Coast
Relays, the Carolina Relays, the
Mountaineer Relays in Morganton, W. Va
the Maryland and Tennessee Invitationals
as well as the Southern Conference and
NCAA meets.
174 BASEBALL SCHEDULE
March 2 (Sat)Campbell3 OOp m
March S (Tuas)DUKE UNIVERSITY3 OOp m
March 6 (Wad)N C State3 00pm
March 7 (Thur)NC. State3 OOp m
March 13 (Wad)Duke University3 00pm
March 16 (Sat)Furman (2games)130pm
March K (Mori)VIRGINIA3:00p.m
March 11 (Thur)U.N.C. CHAPEL HILL1 00pm
March 23 (Sat)SHIPPENSBURG! 00pm
March 24 (Sun)SHIPPENSBURG3 OOp m
March 30 (Sat)DAVIDSON (2)1:30pm
March 31 (Sun)PEMBROKE1 00pm
April 1 (Mon)RICHMOND1 00pm
April 2 (Tue)NC. STATE3:00p.m.
April 4 (Thur)William & Mary3:00p.m.
April 6 (Sat)APPALACHIAN (2gamas)130pm
April 12 (Ff-I)Pembroke3:00p.m.
April 13 (Sat)Citadel3:00p.m.
April IS (Mon)U.N.C. Wilmington (2games1:30pm
April 20 (Sat)WILLIAM & MARY3:00p.m.
April 24 (Wed)Richmond3:00p.m.
April 27 (Sat)V.M.I. (2games)130pm
April 29 (Mon)CITADEL3:00p.m.
May 3 (Frl)UN C.WILMINGTON3:00p.m.
May 7 (Tue)CAMPBELL300pm
COACH: George Williams
ALL CAPS DENOTE HOME GAMES
For we do love you like a son,
Of that there's no doubt.
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cted to be
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3.00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
1:30p.m.
1:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
1:30pm.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
130pm
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
1.30 p.m.
3:00p.m.
3:00p.m.
130pm
3:00p.m.
3:00pm
3:00pm
a son,
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974
15
Lady gymnasts finish second
The East Carolina Women's Gymnastic
team surprised everyone but themselves
Saturday, with an excellent second place
finish in the State Meet in Boone. Placing
second to Western Carolina, whose Susan
Bullock won every event, the girls put on a
fine team performance. Five women
placed for the ECU team, which was more
than any other team.
The girls' strongest showing came in
the uneven parallel bars. Joan Fulp placed
second and Gail Phillips finished third, as
the team placed first in this category of the
competition. Miss Phillips also placed
fifth in the floor exercises.
The girls also made a good showing in
the balance beam ccompetition where
Myrna Ocasio placed fourth and Charlene
Daniels fifth. Freshman Linda Lane placed
third in the vaulting exercises for the team
this year.
The team's other competitors; Jenny
Griffin, Beth Wheeler, and Debbie Laurer
made contributions to the team by scoring
high enough to figure in the team's final
point total.
The girls, although they had a losing
record this year, proved they were winners,
after all, by defeating both Appalachian
State and UNC-Chapel Hill, two teams that
had previsouly beaten the girls earlier in
the season.
The girls will continue to practice for
the Regionals on March 23 and then
prepare for their spring show. Any woman
interested in competing in the show or on
next year's team is welcome to come and
practice with the team following the
Regionals.
Sports medicine conference set
EAST CAROLINA'S BASEBALL TEAM took on the Duke UniversityBlue Devils yesterday
and this weekend they travel to Greenville, S.C. to battle the Furman Purple Paladins in a
doubleheader on Saturday. The bucs return to Harrington Field on Monday to face the
University of Virginia. Gametime is 3 p.m.
A Sports Medicine Conference for
athletic trainers and coaches will be
offered by ECU May 10-11.
The conference is sponsored by the
Sports Medicine Division of the ECU
Athletic Department, the ECU School of
Allied Health and Social Professions and
the ECU Division of Continuing Education.
The program is designed to provide
coaches and student trainers with
necessary skills and techniques for
developing a systematic and successful
program of treatment and rehabilitation of
athletic injuries.
Further information and registration
materials are available from the ECU
Division of Continuing Education, Box
2727, Greenville, or telephone 75&-6148.
JF"5'50"5'505'5'5
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16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974

mmmwm
Sports World
By STEVE TOMPKINS
Staff Writer
PART II THE NECESSITY OF CHANGE
East Carolina is building itself gradually to athletic supremacy in the
East Surprised? Well, here's how our athletic director intends to get there.
To build an athletic program you start with football, since gate receipts and alumn
support for this sport are greater in this area. A winning football team brings fans but
more importantly it brings television.
N C State got $110,00 for a regular season appearance, $250,000 for its victory in tne
Liberty Bowl. Even lowly Louisiana Tech made $100,00 for the second regional game
te'i?yoAuBprojct your budget for just gate receipts like Clarence Stasavich does and
then you pick up an extra 100 grand you're on your way. Southern
Sounds simple doesn't it? Ah, I can see your puzzlement If ECU won theSojJtrwn
Conference championship this year, had a man named Crumpler goodUjnoutfo run with
Orange Juice and a quarterback named Summerell who is a Giant, plus a colorful and
Dhotoqraphic coach in Sonny Randle, where was the television?
Answer, Clarence Stasavich failed to come through. Oh, he applied for a contract,
bUtShtavdich isTnThe6 NoXcaro.ina HaH Fan an honor he richly deserved after f,
f ine S aL an athlete and coach. But his greatness was in the 50's, and unlike other
men he's failed to change with the decades.
"You have to spend money to make money" is an old cliche, but aptly applied
here. And the key to making it in college athletics is publicity.
If our athletic director would only open his door and walk across the hall to the Sports
information Department he might wake up from a ten year sleep.
Thn Evenly our SID, is an accomplished journalist who knows the ropes of he
press His bCdgei you would guess would be substantial. Get ahold of yourselves, it s
"YouasMor comparison. N.C. State spent our budget plus in promoting Bill Yoest for
the AHJSrfcan te? in football. Funny that the entire National RxMeagueMWW
to see the value of this consensus All-American. Yoest may not block too well but he
had his name in every newspaper in the country.
Did you see Crumpler or Summerell on those squads. And yet bo h were draftedhn
the fourth round of the NFL draft. In essence didn't our athletic director rob them from
And aTyourself why with all this talent we didn't go to a bowl game. Again the
primary factor was our AD failed to heed the value of publicity. Notre Dime&?
froe Sugar Bowl, Penn State $500,000 from the Orange Bowl and Miami of Ohio
$197,000 from the Tangerine Bowl.
Notre Dame puts aside $25,000 if they even remotely think a senior has a shot at the
He NTonTer0?hyool in the ACC, Southeastern, Big Ten, Pac Eight, Southwest or Big
Eiaht Conferences spend less than $80,000 for sports publicity.
Even six of the seven other schools in the Southern Conference spend more than we
retStoSeUney folks. First let's get our Pirate Glut, moving. Instead of
spending a few bucks on coffee and donuts to get the membership up, build a solid
foundation of supporters that will grow instead of remaining stale. Pursue our graduates
as well as wealthy businessmen. .
Fix up that "barn" we call a press room at Ficklen Stad.um. Impress the press;and
they become talkative and friendly. Get some respect in this state instead of being
laughed at. There's not even a heater in that press room!
If you're going to build a football power then build one. Get those lights behind the
stand's, get the training facilities Coach Dye requests. We've learned that Dye asked fora
fence around the field for privacy during practices yet this requea was
ignored. Stasavich's teams might have practiced in cow fields but todays athletes
defGeU lobby started in the state legislature. Do something about this obstacle course
we call a road from here to Raleigh. A four lane highway would make n'OMoameajn
Greenville easily accessable from anywhere In the Piedmont. At least start some noise,
don't just sit behind a desk reading Football Weekly.
Do something about the student body's support. Don't ignore 10,000 peopL JUSt
because they don't pay. This conglomerate mass can communicate a program s worm in
far more ways than any newspaper.
The saying "don't make waves" is dead and long since buried. To gam supremacy
even in the conference is an uphill fight. It will take a strong and hungry leader to get us
t hfrp
Unfortunately, our master has his hands in his pockets, his mouth tightly clasp, and
hjs publicity department chained into uselessness.
Jim Fuller named to grid staff
Jim Fuller, who boasts a solid
championship background as both a coach
and player, was added to the staff of new
head fooiball coach Pat Dye Monday. Ful-
ler will serve as offensive line coach, a
position he held at Jacksonville State
University (Ala.) before coming to East
Carolina.
The announcement of Fuller's
appointment brings the total staff to seven
including Henry Trevathan, who was
retained as assistant head coach. The Dye
staff is expected to number eight when
completed, however, no deadline has been
set for completing the staff.
Fuller played college football at the
University of Alambama as an offensive
guard and defensive tackle. During his
playing years, The Crimson Tide visited
the Orange Bowl twice and the Sugar Bowl
once. During two of Fuller's three
seasons, Alabama won back to back
national collegiate championships.
Fuller's coaching experience began at
Fairfield High School in Fairfield, Ala.
where he played high school athletics,
reaping many honors including Athlete of
the Year Awards and letters in four
sports. Before moving to Jacksonville
Sate in February of 1970, Fuller served as
an assistant coach and eventually head
football coach and athletic director. His
high school record was 23 wins to seven
losses.
"East Carolina University and North
Carolina are new to me. I was bom and
raised in Alabama and all my playing and
coaching experience was in Alabama
Fuller says. "That is one of the reasons I
came here. I wanted to step up in major
college circles and at the same time, I
wanted to coach and work with people who
I didn't know. That is the biggest
challenge I know of
"The second reason I came here was
because of Pat (Dye). I played on both
offense and defense when he was
coaching at Alabama. He knew his
football and he had what I think was a near
perfect relationship with his players.
He is a great person and will be an
excellent coach to work for and learn from.
m
iw
S

Specialize in all type
Volkswagon Repair
All work guaranteed
COLLEGE EXXON
1101 E. Fifth
752-5646
GfiB
1
Fuller is married to the former Peggy
Allridge of Fairfield, Ala. They have two
daughters: Kimberly seven and Katherine,
five.
Commissioner's Cup
Scoring for the Commissioner's Cup
shows East Carolina University leading
William & Mary by 4 112 points. This cal-
culation includes all sports through winter
quarter.
ECU has 47 points to the Indians 42112
Appalachian is in third with 32 12,
Furman and Richmond are tied with 33,
V.M.I, has 22112, Davidson has 20 points
and The Citadel has 17 12.
Grapplers to Ames
Seven East Carolina University
Wrestlers will travel to Ames, Iowa to
compete in the National Collegiate
Athletic Association's Wrestling Champ-
ionship March 14-16.
The Pirates have a two-year dual match
record of 18-0 and they are the current
Southern Conference Champions.
Representing East Carolina in the
Championships will be Jim Blair in the 118
pound weight class, Glen Baker at 126,
Tom Marriott at 142, Bruce Hall at 158, Bill
Hill at 177, Mike Radford will compete in
the 190-pound division and Willie Bryant
will wrestle in the heavyweight class.
Chancellor entertains
Chancellor and Mrs. Leo Jenkins
entertained the members of the 1973-74
East Carolina swimming team and friends
on Tuesday evening at their home.
The Pirates swimmers and divers won
18 of 18 events in this year's Southern
Conference Swimming and Diving
Championships which were held in Minges
Natatorium.
There was a rush along the Fulham Road.
There was a hush in the Passion Play.
S5M
RigganShoe
Repair Shop
111 W. Fourth
Downtown Greenville
???????
?
March 15 (Fri)
March 23 (Sal)
March 30 (Sat)
April 5 & 6 (Sat)
Hi I DOOR TRACK SCHEDULE
N C. StateWake Forest 1 00 pm
Baptist CollegefPrincetonUniv 2 00 pm
Atlantic Coast Relays
Colonial Relays
AprM 13 (Sat)
April 70 (Sat)
April 27 (Sat)
May 3 & 4 (Sat
May 11 (Sat)
May 19 (Sun)
May 25 (Sat)
June 67.8
COACH Bill Carson
ALL CAPS DENOTE
Carolina Relays
Mountaineer Relays
U of South Carolina
Southern Conterence
Pitt invitational
Maryland Invitational
Tennessee invitational
NCAA National Championship
1:00p.m.
3 00p.m.
10:00pm
10 Mam
10 00a m
1 30p m
FREE
IncomeTax
Assistance
Sponsor: ECU Accounting
Societv
Race: Wright Annex 305
When: Feb. 1-15; March 5-
April 15
Time: MonFri 3-6;
Sat 1012
We sleep by the ever bright hole in the
door,
Eat in the corner, talk to the floor.





Title
Fountainhead, March 14, 1974
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
March 14, 1974
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.268
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/39911
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