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The the best u're looking at it takes to ®& Coupon Ensemble performs on television A seven-member ensemble from the ECU School of Music will perform Stravinsky's “L’Histoire du Soldat” on the UNC educational television network Sunday, April 29 The group, all members of the ECU Symphony Orchestra, will appear on the program “North Carolina: The Arts,” which is scheduled for 3:30 p.m, ECU Symphony conductor Pobert Hause will conduet the performance The performers — include Marilyn Gibson Secor, violin; Sherry Jones Sievers, bass violin; Ronald Rudkin, clarinet; Craig Mills, bassoon; Jess Nelson, trumpet; — Douglas Adams, trombone; and Marion Sievers, percussion The Stavinsky work, considered technically difficult to perform, includes a variety of tunes of international origin, such as two marches, a fiddling dance, a tango, a waltz and a ragtime SBI operation busts students By BOB MARSKE Staff Writer Forty-six warrants for arrest for the sale of illegal drugs were issued to ECU students by the State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) last week. These warrants, and the subsequent arrests, came as the culmination of an extensive undercover operation which _ started December 1, 1972. The warrants, reported local SBI agent M. G. McCload, were issued to ECU students on campus and in Greenville by an undercover SBI agent. ‘‘All but one or two of these warrants have been served,” said McCloud. Those who were not served with a warrant, he added, were not available when the arrests were attempted, but will be apprehended eventually. All of those students who received warrants were charged with distribution of marijuana or other drugs. This involved the sale of said drugs to the BSU sponsors charity hike By KATHY KOONCE Stalt Writer The Baptist Student Union — will sponsor a Walk for Development May 5 Preparation for the Walk is now in process. The walk is designed to educate the individual and community with problems of development Anyone physically able can participate in the Walk. To take part, a person should secure a Walk card. These cards can be obtained in the Student Union Lobby Monday-Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Every hiker must have at least one sponsor. Sponsors can be any individual, business or group who pledges to pay a certain amount for each mile completed. More than one sponsor can be obtained Safeway meat (CPS)—-A $33. million class action lawsuit was filed April 6 against Safeway Stores, the nation’s largest supermarket chain, charging them with knowingly and willfully mislabeling cuts of meat. he suit was filed in Colorado by the Task Force for Consumer Protection of the Interfaith Committee to Aid Farm Workers. The Interfaith Committee has been active recently in seeking to obtain Safeway’s cooperation in the lettuce boycott of the United Farm Workers. In investigating different cuts of meats being sold in Safeway stores, the Committee found that the chain had been ‘‘systematically deceiving their customers and reaping high profits through meat fraud.” DOSE OF MISERY A spokesperson for the Committee said that, ‘‘At a time when meat prices are at an all time high, Safeway customers get a double dose of misery: they pay premium prices tor their meat and all too often end up with meat cuts that are tougher and fattier than Safeway labels led them to believe they were purchasing.” Cited as examples were blade chuck steaks labeled as T-bone steaks and boneless rib steaks as rib eye steaks. The latter labeling would defraud customers by 80 to 90 cents per pound. This $33 million suit comes less than a week after an Interfaith Committee charge that the Safeway ground beef contained more fat than advertised. This was indicated by an investigation by the Denver District Attorney's office. The DA’s office found that labelings of regular, lean and extra lean bore little relationship to the amount of fat in the ground beef. ADVERTISING ATTACKED Advertising of meats has also come under attack. Additional thousands of dollars has been spent on meat advertising in the past few weeks as prices have climbed. In some instances, a check of the stores indicated more per pound was being charged than was advertised and meat cuts pictured clearly in the ads were mislabeled. The Task Force commented on this advertising, “It would be better for the consumer if Safeway advertised less and cut their prices more.” The controversy over false labeling of meats is clouded by the fact that laws protecting consumers and personnel to enforce existing laws seem inadequate A similar class action suit against Safeway has been filed in Los Angeles California State Senator David A Roberti said in response to the California suit, “Quick action is needed to protect the consumer and that is why I applaud and more than one sponsored. hiker can be Different areas of Greenville will be covered and various living conditions will be exposed. Greenville police and city manager will approve the route. The route will cover 25 miles; however, hikers do not have to complete the entire 25 miles. Checkpoints will be established to Provide rest areas for the hikers. Cards will also be validated at the checkpoints. Of the money collected from the Walk, VISTA will receive 42.5 percent for distributions in for different areas Another 42.5 percent will be received by Cameroon, Africa and Bangladesh. The remaining 15 percent will go to the American Freedom from Hunger Foundation. causes lawsuit the lawsuit initiated by the Interfaith Committee to Aid Farm Workers against Safeway to recover money damages for the millions of purchasers of these mislabeled meats and to seek an injunction to stop the mislabeling in the future so that the maximum number of consumers can be protected.” “TI find it reprehensible at this time of rising prices for a large concern such as Safeway to take advantage of the public in this way,’’ Roberti continued. SGA electi By KATHY KOONCE Staff Writer Former SGA Presidential candidate Robert Twilley has dropped all charges and election protests previously brought before the elections board. At a special hearing of the elections board April 11 Twilley presented the following statement: My intentions in bringing this protest of the SGA _ presidential election was to make some constructive changes to the election board concerning election procedure. After Mon ay night’s meeting and talking to bob McKeel, past chairman of the election committee, I am dropping the charges brought before this board. My reasons are that I am going to exert different actions to obtain the recommendations that I previously submitted: 1) That persons actively campaigning for candidates should not participate in the electoral undercover agent. “Only one undercover agent was involved, Warren Campbell, Supervisor of the Greenville SBI office. ‘According to a recent state court ruling, no one charged with a drug violation can be arrested for both possession and sale of drug said McCloud For that reasor he commented, all of those warrant issued were for distribution only JOINT EFFORT City, county and tate law enforcement agents, anc the campus police were involved in the arrests according to Campbell t was a joint venture of all of these agencies,’ commented Campbell, lowever, the Greenville Police did not participate in the on-campus arrests.”’ Greenville City Police Chief Frank G. Car explained this, saying All of our officers were busy elsewhere A letter was circulated from the office of the Dean of Men to many of those men dormitory tudents who were arrested rt etter, one recipient reports, demanded the addressee tc appear in the office of the Dean of Mer regardless of class conflicts, at 10:30 Thursday moring. Both Campbell and McCloud denied he knowledge of the letter According to McCloud, ‘all but one of them were arrested in the dear office.” This was probably done. he speculates, to eliminate the unnecessary difficulties of locating each address and making the arrest there for sure. | was only called another agent after the arr made ,”’ he added ROOM SEARCH One room was searched by SBI agent according = t McCloud The sear uncovered one 1 ina pla (one-half ir \ r eized brought are being held for Se evidence n ourt Afterwa according to ( ampbe he wil Jestroyed by court order Trial date those { arrested as 4 result of th perat 1 been set for sometime in May, Camy reports Counselors encounter student By JOE MOOSHA Staff Writer Most of the student problems encountered at ECU’s counseling center are either academic or emotional, according to Dr. Weigand, a member of the staff “We're involved with helping students get what they want to graduate. But not that many are interested in that,” said Weigand. *‘This is due mainly to parental pressure. But in many cases, it involves a study problem or motivation.” In the areas of academic problems, Weigand states that the problem is one of the student’s not working, or not working efficiently. Students with this difficulty expect the ‘‘magic dust treatment,’ says Weigand. ‘“‘They want to know how to do so-and-so without working. In other words, they want a degree, not an education.” But Weigand believes .notivation is also a factor in academic problems. He said that all a counselor can do in this area is try to give the student incentive. “We cannot instill motivation in a person.” ountainhead ... and the truth shall make you free’ VOLUME IV, NUMBER 47/GREENVILLE, N.C.WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18, 1973 Weigand also acknowledges that the best predictor for success in the academic area is a person’s record: such as grades in high school almost ‘This will always hold — true something has happened t« person, such as enlightenment.” Weigand emotions, problems are more difficult to determine. He attributes this mostly to the stigma that has been attached to mental disorders by society. Students are therefore reluctant to talk about these problems In dealing with an emotional problem, the counselor specifies two important steps. The first is to check for physical disorders. “The student may have an organic difficulty such as headaches or eye trouble. We therefore check to see that they have had a recent physical exam before treating them for an emotional problem. The second step is to note whether the student is a danger to himself or others. ‘‘In this case we have to have medical help from the _ infirmary unless change the military service or notes that in the area of on protest dropped system, and 2) that there be provisions for run-off for presidential elections. Those recommendations will be included, in some manner, to those that are being devised by Bob McKeel and that a hearing tonight would not fulfill my aim and my purpose but only cause uneeded quarre].” Twilley had previously protested the SGA presidential election at a special elections board meeting Monday April 9. At the first meeting Twilley protested the organization and operation of the polls and the election committee. He claimed that poll tenders were chosen by the first vice president of the dorms under the WRC and that the WRC were Bodenhamer supporters. He assumed that the poll tenders sympathized with Bodenhamer and that this did not comply with the regulations forbidding campaign material within 100 ft. of the polls. Twilley had also charged that the selection of vote counters Bodenhamer supporters were In response to the charges concerning campaign material near the polls and the vote counters being his supporters Bill Bodenhamer replied, “I don’t believe in that.”” Bodenhamer recommended that the elections be declared valid. “If anybody got treated wrong | think you know who it was.”’ He stated also that his campaign was “perfectly organized.” Twilley emphasized that the board pass the two recommendations he proposed. The elections board decided another hearing was determine whether or not the elections were valid needed to During the second hearing Twilley dropped his charges to exert other actions in obtaining the recommendations which he proposed Honor society inducts 82 undergrads Eighty-two junior and _— senior undergraduates at ECU were inducted into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi during ceremonies April 18. Seniors chosen for the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi must have a 3.5 grade average and the juniors a 3.8 grade average. The primary objective of the Honor Society is the recognition and encouragement of superior scholarship in all academic disciplines. In addition to the undergraduate initiates, the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi also inducted Dr. Robert L. Holt, Vice Chancellor and Dean of the University, from the ECU administration, and Dr. Richard Cecil Todd, ECU Professor of History, during the April 18 ceremonies. Those inducted were: Mary Timmerman Magy, Kathleen Glass Weeks, Claude BeBernian Hughes, Chery] Vallery Bryanm Jo Ann T. Harlee, Mary Laurinda Hooks Livesay, Kathy Marie Dudley Laspina, Linda L. Crandall, Nell Lois Boone, Susan Denise Campbell, Kenneth Bruce Hawkins, Edith F. Harrison, Ellen Jane Craft, Donald Wayne Bullock, Sylvia Jean Johnson, Judy Ann Burnett, Linda Dianne Vann, Margaret Beth Latschar, Betty Bruce Kennedy Lawson, Diane Fincher Horne, Kenneth Bruce Hawkins, Deborah Ann Pollack Nowell Janet J. Harrington, Rebecca M Gentry, Robert Nelson Bogard, Dorothy Ann Doyle, Thomas Wesley Durham, Bertha E. Elks, Carol Smith Gardner, Marie-Claire Hatcher, Jeanette Shoults Joslyn, Joseph Allen Keyes, Doris Helsing Kincade, Linda Bryan McGowan, Janet Graham McLendon, Max G. Miller, dr., Gloria Jean Peaden, Judith B Randle, Debra L. Stocks, Kathleen Marie Taylor, Janet Dolores Ward, Patricia Pezdek Wike James million increase in medical and health-related time.”’ ie ? a Well. I ous are asked frequently to update When this figure, $24.5 million, is services and facilities, due not only to Dr. Kilpatrick was director of the : Sh does see a differenc Jay's N eriber comparative: statistics on the growth rate compared with the school’s operating the medical and allied health effort of program for five years. She explained, : Fh wae see = erence, Wy toc aye eb pen and nee of East Carolina l vuyerslty as an budget for 1960-61 which was $4.2 the university but also to such things as “The program tested all first quarter ra ssl ase nae i mony ie lube ie hae = indicator of the university’s outreach million, a tremendous growth — is the alcoholic rehabilitation center in juniors to see if they needed help. Papers ogg ag lag pole he : They ee ee 2 and influence Spe nate educ Aone and indicated. And there are projections of a Greenville, a soon-to-be constructed $12 were read by two instructors. One was i nue ae 2 Way Meare a aie which is tt Bees growth = an en es 25 per cent increase in university million hospital and 50 bed vocational not of the English faculty.”’ ee each: 1 i F a oi cae seer: like- : \ S are happy to furnish these enrollment and employment during the rehabilitation center, They were grading passing, peas 7. ee i: Aon eect trill is kin neuro We are proud of them--but next 10 years Te ie oppose in eee satisfactory, or unsatisfactory. gt es been — oy ees ie. t always we emphasize that the bare, cold These are enrollment,employment and . ayaa y Questionable papers were read by a third year’s editor for the Wake Forest Law y “ statistics do not tell the full story. The ‘ category, in almost every county, city 3 Revue. “A student like that makes up Sorte) Poi : : span dollars and cents figures. They speak for and town in this region that Eastern instructor, Dr. Kilpatrick. Students felt f ae eee eee started deti story briefly, in my opinion, is one of themselves, but again this is not all of Noeintestoiin ae : aca ae Dr. Kilpatrick alone read the papers. A or years of students that don’t want to good, sound and substantial growth in the ECU story. What is the real impact avai: a ’ 8 ping giant, is student who felt help was unnecessary learn, : i ig sia Carolina as a whole e upon the community and the region Be had to see Dr. Kilpatrick. ‘Because of is — ho eae ins red peta ; pin - igh served by ECU? Education, educational opportunity that program my name became known,” i = -. ' piers BE : Lash 4 Ke = peo : is glad to be part of this For one thing Greenville is rapidly for all our people, stimulates this she remarked. The program et eee! - ite ae Nie auiah ne of do you overall picture becoming a regional medical center awakening and is an essential part of was discontinued in the spring of 1965. Bemeetiar Feauye aes oo a Ided aft \t the present time, according to our encouraged by the emerging ECU School enlightened progress, It is the goal of wouldn’t do anything else. They could ae office of institutional research and of Medicine and our well established East Carolina Universit Wy pecan this She ‘may impress the student that she however.” that maybe Statistics, we have an enrollment of School of Allied Health parvice: eae PA no) outage ap ereee| uowever; Dr. Dr. Rachel Kilpatr’ <’s new home will 10,286 and employment of 1,847 Kilpatrick is an active woman with be Ft. Myers, Florida. B.B. KING faculty and staff at ECU I'm kind « And by the way, the campus security TRY H U EY’ mixture of chief reports a registration of 70 y 7 7 put him tc approximately 7,000 automobiles on GROFF S W ALLPAPER OUTLET Lemon Jef: campus in Greenville jazz, so Ch The impact of this concentration of = On Charles Street Rhinehart, student body, faculty and staff upon the a 5 4 them, I’m | immediate are is obvious ma adjacent to Minges Over 20,000 rolls in stock think, it w It is estimated for example the ECU became so will spend more than 224 million dollars ‘ 7 use the wo in the Greenville community during the All Food Prices Reduced Psychedelic modern B.B. King. next decade for faculty and staff salaries 5 play somet and for other operating expenses. An 756—4808 most any kind of wal/papecr. to play it 1 additional 145 million dollars will be not try tor spent by students which means that ECU Re / ) will be pumping more than 370 million gu il Prices (S6. OO & $7. OO) FOUNTAI! dollars into the local ec onomy For the coming fiscal year, 1973-74, now only $7. 50 to $2. 50. bsg et end of som Vinyl, pre-pasted, wet / THE FINEST MEDICAL CARE yl, pre-p , Wet /OOKS, flocks. B.B. KING AT THE LOWEST PRICES It came fre FOR A SAFE LEGAL OWE DAY the only plays—his ° ‘ 2 ; ~ ukka user ABORTION YOU THINK. Everything for the Do-it-Yourselfer pepe EVERYTHING CAN BE PROVIDED e ene He plays 78 YOUR CARE, COMFORT AND On June 1 , time runs out for you to all in stock - no wailing fingers. At OUR UNDERSTANDING psi enroll in the 2-year Air Force ROTC Program on stupid fing LORS. TIME 1S IMPORTANT - = this campus. And here's what you'll be missing: that, whate CALL TOLL FREE TODAY. os 38 ® $100 a month, tax-free, during your junior ant coun A.1.C. Services 800-5235308 HA TED >= and senior years #0 my ears Cc E Ga @ the chance to win a full Air Force scholarship hand like (including tuition, lab fees, the works). feat OLD BOOKS OL S$ My erie 2 ' similar sou a a a challenging job as an Air Force officer upon WUilss: tate ved Ar PLUS: CANDLE SUPPLIES 58 graduation POEMS iT in eth 8 HANDMADE EARRINGS ne pits FOUNTAL 9 ELETS WIDE a)! @ a future where the sky is no limit History, Religion, Civil War, AND BRAC 2 Wi 3 oun 2 miles south of Kinston Well, do y« Religion, Natural History, VARIETY OF SCENE + dh ontact Major Berrier _ route 258 dobro, or ai Medicine, etc COLORES ATTHE BEST g at E.C.U. 919-758-6598 B.B. KING: ——___. % Jacksonville highway N Curiosity Shop PRICES Ps (Available only to college juniors or students 0, no no: - — ~ : having at least 2 academic years left before stupid fing 710 Dickinson Ave. By Rraduation.) FOUNTAI Open 10-4 ‘i ‘ Closed Wednesday Find Yourself A Future In Air Force ROTC. Yeah, #0 yo ! r] \ 6 e ime’ ing and boating arg 5, She is a Power Squadron Coast’ Guard She 2-foot cruiser and a L. “one reason I ‘lorida is that I can rors her interests y to animals, “| » read detective cularly teenagers » ith people through such as the DAR 17th Century, the 1 Society and the n of University League of Women the Equal Rights we need it. There e professional and Paul’s Episcopal sest to her own Jentalist, which is transcendental thts of this group in America from (Photo by Ross Mann, ustrative tone. ne brother and ttained — college is an authority vers and_ birds. said for my th all this,” she rence in today’s st cases we have ntial. They tend hey are so hard ioned recently former student. elected as next ake Forest Law that makes up t don’t want to years in the Dr. Kilpatrick Ss a rewarding ppose teachers se. They could new home will A Conversation with the King B.B. King, known to millions as the King of the Blues performed last Saturday in Minges Coliseum to a small but thrilled crowd, After hig performance, King was interviewed by representatives from Fountainhead and Buccaneer staff. King’s answers to these questions provide a great insight to this talented bluesman, : : B.B. KING: First I'd like to apoplogize for tonight. It's been a long time since I’ve had my throat in as much trouble as it seemed tonight.” There’s one little thing though, they say God gives every man two of most everything, except a mouth, because most people talk too much anyway So, we only have One...sometimes it..you have that problem. And funny... usually sing from my stomach so, there are certain notes like between A and A that are above say C in one register--I can hitthe notes very clear below it and another I can hit ‘em very clear, but if you had to come all the way down, it’s like crossing a ditch, So I apologize for that Brother, I just hope that it went along well. FOUNTAINHEAD: I heard a rumor that you were having trouble with arthritus, or something like that with playing. Is there any validity to that rumor? B.B. KING: Well, I don’t know, ah my hand always cramp me ever since I had it. It it’s arthritus, maybe that’s true. I don't know what it is, just a cramp every once inawhile-and that happened before I started playing. “the way | play with the tri of a strain on my hand anyway.” is kind FOUNTAINHEAD: After that, they kind of get loosened up a little bit. B.B.KING: Well, I don't know. Well, here in November, I was in Israel and I fell down about nine feet of stairs, of course it busted my teeth, went through my lip, busted a blood vessel in my left hand, which is the one, it’s kind of-it may not seen. like-but the way I play with the trill is kind of a strain on your hand anyway. I don’t know. I just figure that at forty-seven maybe it’s time something started deteriorating. FOUNTAINHEAD: Did you develop a lot of your styles yourself when you began playing guitar, or do you look at yourself as being molded after any type of blues guitarists that maybe you looked toward? B.B. KING: I'm kind of like ‘Frankenstein’. I’m a mixture of many. You know, when they put him together. So I’m a mixture of Lemon Jefferson, Lonnie Johnson, I like jazz, so Charlie Christain some of Django Rhinehart, T. Bone Walker You name them, I’m probably a part of them. But I think, it was done in such a way, till it became so much of each one that--I’ll use the word ‘intermixed’--so then it was B.B. King. Meaning that if I hear you play something and I like it, I won’t try to play it like you. I’ll use the idea, but not try to make the sound. FOUNTAINHEAD: What about the trill that you put on the end of some of your notes? B.B. KING: It came from--I’ve got a cousin, which is the only person in my family that plays-his name is Bukke White, and Bukka used to play with a bottleneck. In fact I saw him yesterday in New Orleans. He plays with a bottleneck on his fingers. And he can do that, I’ve got stupid fingers, and my fingers won't do that, whatever they do. I like that sound, and I could never get my hand to do it, so my ears would tell me when I trill my hand like this (demonstrating) I get @ similar sound to what they were doing. And I started doing that, and I still try. FOUNT AINHEAD: Well, do you play any slide yourself, or dobro, or anything else? B.B. KING: No, no no--you didn’t understand. I got stupid fingers. FOUNTAINHEAD: Yeah, so you just do that. B.B. KING: They (fingers) won’t make it. Trying to hold a bottleneck like that, they just won't make it. Maybe it would, if I practiced hard, but I don’t know, it just seemed like a...it wasn’t the thing that I wanted. But I hear other people play, like Earl Hooker, I hear many guys, like Mick Jagger, a lot of them play the slide. I like to hear ‘em, but I just can’t get it to do it. BUCCANEER: B.B., before I begin, I'd like to say that I've seen you many times at the Fillmore East, and I just want to thank you for all those good times. A lot of people refer to you as the “Greatest something or other around.’”’ In your introduction tonight, they referred to you as the “King of the Blues.” I also personally think you are the greatest something or other. What do you think as B.B. King? What do you think of the billing? B.B. KING: I think I’m something or other. No, I think it was like when I was a very you man, as a teenager, guys would say ““B.B.” or “King” or what have you, but as I became older, people would say Mr. King, which to me is just a bit of respect that they have for me. A lot of the people I think still have that respect for me as a blues musician, a blues singer. They give me many titles, which I appreciate very much. But if you would ask me, if I thought I was the ‘‘King of the Blues” or the ‘‘Boss of the Blues,”’ or the ‘Chairman of the Board’ or the many, many things they call me, I would say “no.”’ But I do think that I’m a pretty good musician. I think that I’m a pretty good blues singer. That I think I am. But as far as being the top, I don’t know. There are many who think I am as good or as better. BUCCANEER: What importance do you think blues has made to the shape of contemporary music? B.B. KING: Blues to me is like a mother tree, many branches have came from it, like the jazz, and a lot of the so-called contemporary music came from blues. You hear jazz men. The average guy that you find now that is a great jazz musician can play good blues, but the average guy that didn’t start out from the roots, as we say, if he try blues, regardless how much he could play, or how well he knows his instrument, it still sounds a little bit mechanical.. Anybody that knows anything about music can design or play a piano, or they can have a sitar or many other things that you can play electronically. Anybody can do it. It’s just like turning on your radio, or getting your dog to tum it on. But, to actually put you feeling to it, to actually feel it, than, that takes a little bit more. So, I think again that the guys that came up in church, that had a chance to be associated with the many, many things that make a guy be introduced to blues is the ones that have more feeling to it. And I think that had _ influenced contemporary music. Quite a bit. BUCCANEER: In playing the blues, do you enjoy the spiritual or emotional experience, or just getting up there...? B.B. KING: Yeah, you know, it’s not just doing something. When I get up there, I’m really interested in what I’m doing. | become the character that I’m singing about. In other words, I’m not B.B. King anymore then. I assume the role of an, I think of an actor, as an actress or actor would try and portray a certain character--well that’s what happens to me when I'm on stage. Otherwords, my emotional, or otherthings, otherwords my personal problems don’t usually enter, now once in a while it does if something is or like I got stood up by some beautiful lady or somethin’. But Once in a while it will happen, but most time it’s always the other guy that I’m sing’in about. FOUNTAINHEAD: So emotionally you don’t change, or you do change? When you go on stage-like when it’s just B.B. King sitting down just playing some blues, say acoustic blues. If you play that much, you know your emotional state doesn’t change when you go on Stage. B.B. KING: Let me put it this way, I’ve seen many horror movies, I’ve seen on television or on the theatre, when all of a sudden the guy in the soul leaves and gets into somebody else, well this is what happens to me, when I start playing, whether I’m playing acoustic guitar or what have you, all of a sudden I’m not B.B. King anymore. O.K., I’m gonna try and define it, what I’m trying to say is I’m not thinkin about me then, I’m thinkin about whatever I’m playin, it it’s a melody, I’minthat. If I’m singin, I’m in that. I’m that guy that this is happened ‘'to, or the guy that wants this to happen tryin to make this happen. Other words, it’s not B.B. King any more. I mean my whole feelins is in to what I’m doin. Other words some guy can take an instrument, this way like when I’m rehearsin with my band I tell them anybody can play a note, you see a C on the board you know it’s a C. Anybody can make a C, but there are certain ways of makin that C. It’s just like we talk like now, I’m tryin to get my point over so certain parts of it I really push or punch, cause I wants you to get, ya dig, so that’s the way it is with playing music, You may not play but two notes in a bar once, but you can bend it around, this can mean so much, when some guy might play 64 notes in one bar, ana it still might not say nothing to me. Like he plays them so we know he has technique, and he knows how to get on his instrument, but other than that he still hasn’t said nothing to me in here. FOUNTAINHEAD: : Like what about when you've been playing guitar have you ever resorted to any other equipment on stage with your guitar, like a wah-wah? B.B. KING: I’ve never played one. FOUNTAINHEAD: Do vou like to keep it straight guitar and you? B.B. KING: I don’t know. One day I may try, but I think that myself and a few other guys are the cause of the wah-wah, so why should we use it? I like to hear other guys use it, but I think myself and a few other guys were the cause of the wah wah peddle, so why should we use them? I like to hear other guys use them though. I think that I believe that holding the notes and making the fuzz and all those other sounds, well we've been doing it for many, many years without anything but an ampliflier. In fact like sustaining sounds or notes I’ve Photos by Ross Mann been doing it for years before | heard what a wah-wah was. I like to hear it and I feel that there is a place for it, and the more people we can get to do these many different things, the better it is for music, I like to hear it. In fact my guitarist, he uses one. I’ve never used one. In fact, I don’t even know how. Maybe one day I may even try FOUNTAINHEAD: Mr. King, we notice that a great deal of emphasis is shown in the talent of your band, especially your tenor sax, would you comment on your band and how you work with them when producing a live performance? B.B. KING: Well, I think that they are all superb musicians or a better musician than I am. You can figure that when we are giving a concert somewhere in there, there should be a certain spot that kicks off everything and I know that’s a weird way of putting this, but I mean the show may be going well but one guy may have that certain something--like a ball game. A certain twist or whatever it is that makes this concert the better. Like tonight I felt that when my tenor sax, when Bobby came in, and I went to the piano for a little bit--at that moment that’s when it gave him a lift which lifted the whole band and everybody and this I thought was the highlight of the concert. But each one of the guys in the band, I'm happy to say, I’m lucky to have each one a great soloist from time to time I will use them. I feel that’s what you have the man for, to use him to your advantage. I came up in church and I like the sound of a big band. I’m a little different from Ray Charles and other guys who carry voices. | usually think of my horns as voices, so if you have a good tight rhythm section and a shouting horn section that’s your voices for me ONLOOKER: Mr. King, in Memphis who do you think of WDIA’s disc jockeys did the most to promote your career? B.B. KING Nat Williams, yep Nat D. Williams. He was the first one to help me, aid he wrote many stories about me in the Pittsurg Courier; in fact he was the first guy chat I called New Year’s Day this year cause he’s been very sick ONLOOKER Mr. King, you've been sitting here talking about blues. When B.B. King talkes about the blues what does he mean? B.B. KING A feeling, a feeling that has been living in me and twenty-seven other people, my family, my father and his family and many other people for 26 years. | talk about my life and the life of many other people they came up the same as I. | talk about the world and its problems--that’s the blues ONLOOKER: What about now? I’m sure it’s been a long road and a lot of years, but how do you receive an audience of say 3, 4, 6 or even 10 thousand, what kind of feeling is that to you? Fountainhead, Wednesday, April 18, 1973 Page 3 of Blue B.B.KING I can’t really define it to you. It's like asking someone how does an orange taste I can’t really tell you. The least I can say is that it is a good feeling, a very good feeling to know that people think enough of you to come out in numbers of that size, It’s also a great feeling to know that just one person really digs you, You can tell, see I’m a Virgo and | observe people very closely, | can tell when a person is not joshing you, when he says ‘I really dug your performance but they don’t want anything except to let you know that they really dig you and sometimes, well like I look at them and [ can understand. | know what they're seying, and then I start to search myself ai that very moment as | say thank you and | want to say ‘hey that’s enough, ! believe you’. This is what | want to say, you know? (laughs) And then I go to my room and practice that night so J can really deserve the appreciation he gave me. That's the best I can say man. It really feels good, very good BUCCANEER Music critics have made a distinction by saying that there are white blues anc black blues where people like yourself and John Lee Hooker and Howlin’ wolf representing black blues, where people like Eric Clapton and John Hammond represent white blues. Do you think this isa fair distinction between the two? B.B. KING Let’s put it this way. Your father is your father. You may do greater things than he did but you'll never be your father Now I do think that we have a lot ir common. Speaking about Eric Clapto: I've read, and I’ve heard him mention that he listens to my playing. But I think that when you play and play well, you play well. I don’t really go for the white blues or the black blues. Like you put it, most of the white blues singers really don’t sound like real true blues to a lot of us because of diction. Most of the white blues singers use correct diction where most of us Blues singers don’t And when we hear something like somebody saying something like ‘my girl’ it sound like as we call it in Mississippi, ‘kinda proper like’. It’s phony to us, you dig? And when I use the term ‘everyday’ you know what I mean? And when I use the word ‘everyday’ I’m gettin’ right down to it or there abouts. And we're not ashamed of “| talk about the world and its problems--that‘s the blues.” it. But now, let somebody try and mimick us sayin’ it, it’s just like some of the movies I see. A lot of black and white movies where somebody tries to mimick us, for instance sayin’ ‘dem bones’, that sounds phony too, whether it’s said by a black or a white. Well that sounds as funny as some of the white guys singing the blues and try to sound like a black and that too is phony, but there are exceptions. There are two guys I know that can really sing and if I was on the outside of the room it wouldn't matter whether they were black or white it would just be good blues to hear and of course I've got used to hearin’ blues now that if I walked into a room and opened the door and see the guy black, white, red or yellow it wouldn’t matter I've seen so many types of people doin’ it already. | was in Austria and we went down to the wine cellar and | heard this dude playin’ the blues like mad and singin’ ‘em like mad. So I had some wine you know, I hardly drink but that night it happened to be very cold and I was half froze and we had a good concert and I walked down to the cellar and there was an oriental guy Chinese or Korean or something, and he was singin’ the hell out of the blues, and playin’ ‘em so I learned right then that the blues belong to everyone and no particular person. It’s just like a car might have been created by Ford, and later other people expanded on the idea so we may have created the blues but everybody's singin’ ‘em. {See KING CONTINUES on page 4) April dnesday Page 4, Fountainhead, We " t Not Lucille. This guitar I’ve had five years. FOUNTAINHEAD Well I know, | guess I’m very limited in what I have fut you meant the real Frank Sinatra type things (laughter), we hardly do him anymore. I'l] do one or two from time to time, but a lot of times the reason why [ won't do tunes like ‘“Mother’s Love” is because the college crowd is expecting blues which is more moving than they would be than like things like Johnny Mathis, Stevie Wonder, the Allman Brothers or whoever it may be that sing ballads, but not BB. King everyone wants B.B. King to sing the blues, so that’s why most times I do it But in a club | may use a ballad or two possibly Vegas FOUNTAINHEAD Mr. King, could I ask more question before we close this interview? Is the guitar that you have with you the original guitar you refer to as ‘‘Lucille’’? B.B. KING because you one No. The first guitar | had was a Stella, and it was red and | don’t know what happened to it, to be honest. Then | bought another guitar which was a 18 King continues 3 Gibson, and we put a “Dion” pick-up on it, and that was the first electric guitar | ever had. Then | kept it until it got destroyed in an automobile accident, and I've had several others get torn up like that. Then | had guys that would steal them, but then later on I got one that | kept for about 12 years, and one night I had closed at the Apollo Theater and I went to 138 St. and went upstairs to see a friend, and when I came back some dude had opened my car with the key, went in the trunk and took the guitar. Then after that I’ve had several guitars which I’ve kept for about five or six years. This one here I’ve had for five years FOUNTAINHEAD Mr. King, you mentioned on the Cook County Jail album that you had produced 308 singles and that many of those were blues ballads or love songs, we noticed that tonight in the concert you didn’t do any balads, do you still use them in your repertoire or do you change for college audiences? B.B “Guess Who” is considered a ballad. FOUNT AINHEAD: I hope you get a chance to come back, because we really enjoyed it. B.B Well I'd like to, (to agent) please? Alright FOUNTAINHEAD Well Mr. King, we certainly appreciate you taking the time to come and talk to & us like this B.B. KING Thank you very much Around Campus - id Ss I Cc H I SCHOLARSHIPS—Applications are now being taken for two $100 scholarships to be awarded by Psi Chi, the national honor fraternity in Psychology. This scholarship is open to any graduate or undergraduate Psychology major who will be pursuing his education in the next academic year, either at ECU or another institution. The scholarships will be awarded on the basis of academic achievement and need. Application blanks are available in the Psychology departmental office, EP109, and the Psi Chi Library, EP202. Deadline date for the applications to be turned in is Friday, May 4. Turn in applications to the Psi Chi mailbox in the Psychology departmental office —GHE ER LEA DIN G MEETING-—There will be a meeting of the 1973-74 Varsity Cheerleading Squad on Thursday April 26 at 4:00 p.m. in Union 201. Everyone is urged to attend EE FOR RENT Small battery powered Electronic Calculators and Typewriter for rent on a monthly basis. Portion of rent may be applied to purchase price. CREECH AND JONES BUSINESS MACHINES, 103 Trade St? Call 756-3175. FOR RENT: Stadium Apartments, 14th St. ajoins campus of East Carolina University. $115 per month, call 752-5700 or 756-4671. Two and three bedroom apartments available. $72.50 and $80.50. GLENDALE COURT APARTMENTS — Phone 756-5731 FURNISHED UTILITY APARTMENT for two or three people. Utilities included with air conditioning. Also room with private bath. Separate entrance in backyardm refrigerator and A.C. Call 758-2585. i oh, Full or part time work. Work at your own convinience. Come by 417 W. 3rd St., or call 758-0641. NEED WORK: Sign up now for job opportunity. Work for summer only or throughout year. Hours can be tailored to meet your needs. Call: 756-0038. NEEDED: Someone to do an oil painting of Tolkien's trilogy - very important for a special gift. Will pay - please contact Margaret 752-9943. Licensed insurance agents wanted. Part-time, or full-time Life and Accient Health. 75% first year commission on ordinary life. Write UAIC, Box 1682, Kinston, N.C Information mailed. Local jobs, part-time, full-ti for high earnings 756-0038. or summer. Opportunity Plus educitional fund awards. Call FOR SALE I Typing Service (Termpapers, etc.) Call: 758-5948 FOR SALE: 1970 Fiat Sport 850. Convertible, 4-wheel disc brakes, 4-speed. Great shape. Call 758-1652, ask for Mark FOR SALE. 8-Track Tape Player & tapes also Cassette Player. Contact Walt, 106-A Scott. Phone: 752-1343 ‘Puppies of Samoyed origin. Long, black and white hair and beautifully marked. Call 758-0484. FOR SALE: Handwoven belts. Betsy Purvis 141 Ragsdale 752-9334 UNITED FREIGHT Water Beds - All Sizes - Starting at $15.95 - 5 Year Guar. - Limited Amount of Stock - United Freight Company, 2904 E. 10th St., 752-4053. See eee en ET ype Emr aed BUMPERSTICKER: “Don’t Blame Me | Voted For McGovern” 3 for $1.00. Proceeds to Senate re-election campaign. Carolina Conscience, P.O. Box 2873, Greenville, N.C, 27834 1971 Yamaha 200, only 205 miles! Near perfect condition-was in storage. Real bargain at $475.00. Call 752-2818 to leave name and number-will call you back. NT FOR SALE: Combo Organ. $150.00 and Leslie $175.00 Call 758-9381 ask for Cecil, room 222. Charcoal portraits by Jack Brendle. 752-2619 Green Honda CB-350 with luggage rack. Must Sell. Best offer, Call Richard 752-7000 or 758-6235. Yard Sale at Pitt County Wildlife Club. See our box ad on Page 5. UNICORN PHOTOGRAPHY Portraits in natural color and in natural surroundings to suit your personality. A Perfect gift or a beautiful memory. For more information contact Griffin at the Fountainhead after 2 p.m. weekdays RUMMAGE SALE: Clothes, odds & ends and useful junk Tony Jordan, 1107 Forbes St. April 14 ail day Excellent One Remington electric typewriter shape, Standard. 756-2374 or 752.5453 FOR SALE: AKC Registered Irish Setters: 1 Female $75. 1 Male $100. or best offer. See Nancy at Fountainhead or call 758-0716 FOR SALE: Platform rocker (needs recovering) $5. Dresser $12. Two Army cots with mattresses $12 each. Box springs vp are is a ron She ida can asts Ive igh ‘R, he the ity en its re nd EC We vict Piri Sou Dav wee M the See) in o was hurl on anot TI Afte the f bunt the t on th Mi single fill t Narro single run, Lar run. § Elkins Ronni shalloy third ; at the from catche 123 fer eee WANicD and mattresses $25. Table with chairs (poor condition) $7 FOUNTAINHEAD Fey LS Call 758-0584 The: ROOM WANTED for female student in Sept. Hopefully ae We really enjoyed your concert. near campus / reasonable rates. Call Pat, 752-0506, after 5 Eee that p.m. MISC. recognit running B.B.KING: HELP WANTED: Part-time typist. Please send resume, Legal, medical abortions from 1 day to 24 weeks, as low as time, ar Well I'm so happy that you did. Wow, qualifications, and hours available. P.O. Box 727 Greenville $125. Free pregnancy tests and birth control information Is, why now that makes me feel really good. NS Ms. Rogers, Washington, O.C. 202-628-7656 or if he iso LOST AND FOUND 301-484-7424 anvtime. Tea FOUND: Brown dog with black & beige markings. Has a Heref i i REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758-HELP, corner erro rawhide strip around neck. Contact K it 752-1535. : st-clas Rp cumnaren a 5 of Eighth and Cotanche Sts. Abortion referrals, suicide if first-clas LOST: Red Wallet. If found, please contact Sue Starling, intervention, drug problems, birth control information, | a piste. 514 Clement. REWARD overnight housing. All services free and confidential ° ate: Mal n, Yester = ‘ to comp Ey marathor 2 race co t stretchiny 66 Massachu Natu:e,to be commanded, bee ust be ob r chs thn m e ° e ) three tim Francis Bacon 156) | 1970. Th the top | ale ROM INENT POETS TO EDUCATION FOR AN INTERNATIONAL WORLD hours and READ-—North Carolina poets James Deorea: prograrne jnelntesnetionl Business Administration probably Applewhite and Maria Ingram will read Studies (BA) fath/Science (BS) Computer Science i American: from their own poetry at a special public So far | reading at ECU Tuesday, April 17. AMERICAN COLLEGE best time The program, scheduled for the OF SWITZERLAND when he Nursing Auditorium at 8 p.m., will 1084 LEYSIN ©.-SWITZERLAND Marathon include readings by Greenville poets US REP.H. . SPENGLER, 2906 49, NEW YORK seconds 01 Anita Brehm and Douglas McReynolds. The mi The public is invited to attend free of ehling at elec covers in charge unbelievat -~STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN-The SCEC is having a meeting April 18 at 6:30 p.m. in EP102. There will be a speaker on recreational therapy. —COLLEGE REPUBLICATION CLUB-The College Republican Club of East Carolina University will be holding its last business meeting of the year on Wednesday April 18, 1973 at 7:30 p.m. in Austin 108. Everybody is invited and if you have any questions please call tapered of miles the vy I'hen enjoyed TY Tithe) natural beer A b ) be runnin additives or cher =rvatives {North Car For a natural Rheingold taste you | to help tl just can't find in other beers title. The long distan Hereforc MEDAL PLAY Olympics 8:00 PM. Natural Rheingold Montreal EVERY WEDNESDAY in Oregon | We know how you feel about beer. EAST 10th ST. JUST PAST HASTINGS FORD this meeting Rick Gilliam at 756-7966. OA OLEE We House Calls NOW SERVING DELIVERY SERVICE Spaghetti with Meat Balls Sunday - Thursday 5:00 P.M. til 9:00 P.M Friday - Saturday 5:00 P.M. til 10:00 P.M.m Minimum Order $2.50 Knock, knock Who's there? Butcher Butcher who? Butcher hands out and 1'tl Cive you a Pizza Hut Pizza 2601 E. Tenth Street 752-4445 But we won't force you to move some Attention Mr. Zachary R. Fields. Let's get together and put each other on the map! |icfo nyo! BEMOsimebaies ver! o ciemapre rar Wr Moma Address ____ CHECK OUT A BANKING CAREER ANYWHERE IN VIRGINIA You ca: ul career w gest and most wantto live. formation, write a National Bank nercial Place rginia 23510. ‘ity & State PevIRGINIA NATIONAL BANKSHARES, INC Major _ ENTE WA Piano June w HOLI BC KILL DEV; AUC a YARL PITT WILDL 11AM State R North near | Old Fa: Rock Fi available $1.25 — All COME AND B 1 48 | 1-wheel disc k for Mark 50, Cassette 343 | rite hair and | 1 Ragsdale | Starting at ck - United Voted For re-election Greenville, ar perfect 75.00. Call 1 back. ie $175.00. i, Best ——e box ad on ural color anality. A formation weekdays. seful junk nt shape, ———— ale $75. 1 ead or call 5. Dresser Ox springs fition) $7 , as low as ormation 656 or .P, corner s, suicide 2rmation, | ed, are isa ron She ida can asts Ive igh the the ity en its Te nd val vn Is al Ip m N.C. State University touched the ECU Pirate pitch ing staff for 14 hits Wednesday afternoon enroute to an 11-3 victory. Then on Friday afternoon, the Pirates came back Strong to sweep a Southern Conference doubleheader from Davidson, 12-0 and 3-1. That was the week for the Diamondmen of ECU. Wednesday was a chilly afternoon and the Pirate pitchers were just in over three weeks, Coach hurlers some work. Whe: on opening a new another matter The game started out great for ECU. After Dave LaRussa set State down in the first, Mike Bradshaw led off with a very well by and Bradshaw reached bunt which was not handled the third baseman on the boot. Mike Hogan fill the sacks for clean-up run. Larry Walters also singled to drive in a run, State finally retired a batter as Jack Elkins was a_ strikeout victim. Then Ronnie Legget lofted a fly ball to shallow centerfield. Staggs tagged at third and on the ensuing confrontation at the plate, Staggs knocked the ball from the grasp of the Wolfpack’s catcher, and scored the third run of the 123 miles weekly as cold. Seeing how this was only the third game Jim Mallory was planning on siving a few of his ther he intended can of pitchers is followed with a sharp single to right and Ron Staggs walked to man John Narron. Narron came through with a single to right, driving in the first Pirate Inning. Little did anyone know that would be the extent of the Pirate scoring for the afternoon State came right back in the second with a three run outburst of their own. LaRussa’s radar went haywire, walking three and allowing one of the runs to score on a wild pitch. Bill Godwin entered the game in the third to face the ‘Pack and he was just as effective. After three hits, two walks and another wild pitch State had two more runs, In the fourth inning, Russ Smith came on with one out to bail out Godwin. But State plated two more runs to up their lead to 7-3 The Wolfpack got another run in the sixth off Smith to make the score 8-3. Three more in the seventh off Glenn Forbes brought the margin to 11-3. At this point the ‘Pack must have decided that this was enough #s Tommy Toms and Joe Heavner escaped the last two Innings without being scored upon There was nothing wrong with the Pirate’s bats as they banged out ten hits, with Hogan, Walters and Jeff Beaston getting two each However, all ten were Singles and the Pirates ended up leaving 12 men on base, so these hits could have been more timely. The loss dropped the Pirates to 7-3, At Davidson on Friday, ECU opened up the twinbill by skinning the Wildcats, 120. Toms hurled a superb game for the Ed loves to run There is a man at this school who feels that he suffers from a lack of recognition. You have probably seen him running around Greenville from time to time, and you may be wondering who he is, why he runs, how much he runs, and if he ison the ECU track squad To begin with, his name is Ed Hereford. He is 26 years old and a first-class marathon runner, widely respected in national as well as international circles. Yesterday, April 16, Hereford was due to compete in the most famous of all marathons~the Boston Marathon. This race covers 26 miles 385 yards in Stretching from Hopkinton to Boston, Massachusetts. There will be 1,566 runners from the U.S. and all over the world participating. Hereford has Tun it three times previously—1967, 1968 and 1970. This time he expects to finish in the top twenty with a time near two hours and 20 minutes. If he does he will probably be among the ten best Americans, So far this year he has run the seventh best time in the country (for 1973) when he ran the Durham to Raleigh Marathon in two hours 22 minutes 32 seconds on January 20 The mileage that a marathon runner covers in a week's time is almost unbelievable. This past week Hereford tapered off his training after doing 123 miles the week before In the Boston Marathon Hereford will be running under the auspices of the North Carolina Track Club and he hopes to help them win the American team title. The NCTC is now the second best long distance club in the U.S. Hereford’s goal is to make the U.S. Olympics team for the 1976 games in Montreal. At the Olympic Trials last year in Oregon he came in 17th place. While Serving time with the United States Air Force at Okinawa in 1969, Hereford competed in the International Marathon Championships. This race, which takes place at Fukuoka, Japan, is the most Prestigious race except for the Olympic Marathon Only five other Americans beside him have been invited to run in it Last year, while attending the ECU Bonn program, Hereford competed in the German Marathon Championships as a member of the Bonn Track Club. It was his time there that qualified him for the Olympic Trials last summer. Hereford is not on the ECU track team. In fact he quit the team when he was receiving aid from the athletic department. He does not run for the benefit of the public or for the glory of it. Every day he receives threatening stares and is the victim of Occasionally he even has objects thrown in his direction! verbal harassment. Hereford loves to run and sees no end to his improvement. He runs for himself and his club. The satisfaction he receives from being in condition as well as the aesthetic pleasures he derives from the freedom of movement and the closeness with nature makes running worthwhile for him CREW Apr. 7 UNC - Chapel Hill Home 14 Citadel Home 27° UNC - Chapel Hill Away 27-2 Southern Intercollegiate Rowing Assoc. Regatta Away COACH: Al Hearn Se The Atlanta Braves’ Hank Aaron needs only 38 more homeruns to tie the immortal Babe Ruth’s record of 714 3 homers. doubleheader Irackm Buc’s. In the seven shut-out and struck out nine. On top of that Toms had a very productive day at the plate, going two for four and driy ing ina run. The win upped his record to 4 1 The offensive star of the g ame was Hogan. He was three for thre« including a triple and a homerun. Hogan also scored four runs and drove jr three himself. Bradshaw and Beaston each had two hits, and Wlaters drove in two runs in a very well-balanced offensive display In the nightcap the Buc’s « xploded f three runs in the top of the sixth Davidson again, 3-1 The Wildcats scratched out their run in the third off Pirate pitcher Russ Smith. Smith only gave up three hits in the contest and raised his re ord to 2-0 Walters went three for three for the Pirates and Legget was two for two driving in a run and doubling. Beaston also knocked in a run to help the Pirate cause. or to stop Coach Mallory’s men accounted for nineteen hits in the doubleheader and this is the kind of hit production the team will nedd if they are to « Ontinue on the winning ways. The two wins over Davidson put ECU’s record at 4-1 in the Southern Conference and next on the schedule was William and Mary. The Bucs and Indians squared off Monday afternoon at Harrington Field Tom Quinn signs prep star Lee ECU head basketball coach Tom Quinn announced last Wednesday that Maryland prep star, Reginald Lee has been awarded a ! sketball grant-in-aid. Lee, a 6-3, 180 pound guard, averaged 21 points and 9 rebounds per game last season for coach All Ferraro’s Einstein High School team in Kensington, Md. He was selected to various all-star teams including Maryland’s All-State Class A team and the Washington Evening Star’s All-Metropolitan team. “Reggie’s excellent offensive tools are his top attribute,” said Quinn in making the announcement. “He shouldered much of the scoring responsibility for his high school team while seeing nothing but special combination defenses the entire season. “He is a natural second guard but can handle the ball well enough to play point,” EEE Thought for the day: Successes come in cans, failures come in can’ts, TICKETS ECU Athletic Office .O. Box 2576 Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 758-6470 ENTERTAINER WANTED: Piano or Guitar JuneltoSept. 1 WRITE HOLIDAY INN BOX 308 KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C. 27948 RIGGAN SHOE REPAIR SHOP Ko AUCTION and YARD SALE PITT COUNTY WILDLIFE CLUB 11 A.M. April 21+ State Road 1400 North of NC 43 near Falkland Old Fashioned Rock Fish Stew available at 12 noon $1.25 — All you can eat!! COME EARLY AND BROUSE “Im seeking truth Im an idealist, idyllic environmen ideal,” The ideal place for good reason why, Cut out this per customer. FEF 4-24.73 507 E 2907 E T hunger fora al Recently I went to Hardees hamburgers Now that was truly burgers 18 Hardees And heres another ‘Buy one Deluxe Huskee ay a andgetoneFRee, F and bring it | with you toHardees.One Coupon @ 14th Street 300 E. Greenville Bivd a 10th Street | eee oe eam cemeememnead © Hordes’, Food Systems, Inc 1972 Last of the Brooklyn Cowboys BREAD ‘Best All Columbia ngs he gave up only two hits, wlaked no one DEEP PURPLE ‘Made In Japan’ DOOBIE BROS. Captain and Me’ Fountainhead, Wed esday, April 18, 1973, Page en outrun Furman and State By DON TRAUSNECK East Carolina’s and State at Raleigh Pirates won a tri-meet course The Pirates captured first pl of the 17 events while Furm way with eight individual However, ECU took gh seconds thirds and fourths to take tean edging Furman for second place 53 52 ECU coach Bill Carson noted that the win was “a real team effort with severa fine performances.” \ st notable among the ECU efforts w new schoo! record In the javelin by John Hoffman (215-0). Hoffriin had to settle for second plac. in the event, though, as State’s Curt Renz bettered him by two feet Among the first place finishes for East Carolina were Charlie Lovelace in the quarter mile (48.9), Maurice Huntley ; the 100-yard dash (9.9) Roy Quick in the high jump (66), Walter Davenport in the triple Jump (48-3 (at 23-8) and the 440 d relay team of Les Strayhorn, Carlester ( rumpler Huntley and Lovelace (42.0) ) and long jump In the running events, Gerald Klas was wack and field squad proved too strong and jeep for Furmar Saturday as the n the Wolfpack lace in six an led the winners honors with 76 points. State won the real battle, 3 to fourt in the mile high hurdles: Barry Johnson added third in the quarter and a fourth in the 200; Gary Tiffany was fourth in the 100 3ill McRee and Smith were three four ir the intermediate hurdles: and the mile relay team finished second (Lovelace Palmer Lisane Davenport and Johnson) Sam Phillips was second and Ron Smith, fourth in the However, it was in the field event ompeti that the their rea ength Pirates showed ECU took all but one place in the triple jump (Lawrence Wilkerson third), shot LeBaron Wulzyn ump (Malone, third, and fourth) and high jum; third, and John Pitts second, and Larry Malone (Ivey Peacock, second Caruthers, third, and Bill fourth), long Willie Harvey (Glenn Russell fourth) Other second places were turned in | y Caruthers in the discus and McDuffie in the pole vault Art Miller shed third in the pole vault and Gary Diedloff, likewise. ir the javelin. Peacock added Richard nother big point with a fourth n the discus The Pirates return to Greenville for ther last home meet of the year Saturday. 1 tle with Pembroke 9 State is set tc 2 p.m Citadel sweeps three from Pirates The Citadel crew team Swept three races from the ECU Pirates on Saturday afternoon at the Tar River and in doing so handed the Buc varsity lightweight eight their first defeat of the year The Pirate ship in the first race failed to finish when an oar lock broke. The Citadel JV. eight shell finished the 2000-meter course with a time of 9:09.3. The Bulldog’s heavyweight eight took the second race in 8°< nudging ECU whose time was 8:5: The varsity lightweight eight was the varsity BASEBALL Mar, 3° Duke University Away 6 University of N.C Home 7 NC te University Away & NC University Away 10 Vi Home 11 Vv. Home 4 Oe 2) Home 19° Duke University Home 22 Dartmouth Home 23° Dartmouth Home 31 V.M.1. (2) Home Apr. 2° Richmond Home 6 William & Mary Away 8 Appalachian (2) Away 1 Ne State University Home 14 Davidson (2) Away 16 William & Mary Home 21° Citadel Away 22 UNC - Wilmington Away 23° UNC - Wilmington Away 24 Pembroke Away 28 Citadel Home 30 Richmond Away May 4 UNC- Wilmington Home 5 Pembroke Home COACH: Jim Mallory SS Joke of the day: Russia’s economy is so much better than ours because they do not have to spend all of their mor Py fighting communism at the record bar this weck! JUDY COLLINS ‘True Storics and Other Dreams’ TODD RUNDGREN ‘Wizard’ SEALS & CROFT ‘Diamond Girl’ ot Bread’ Classics and 5 surprise items ALL at record bar sale prices in addition-ALL Odyesscy Budgetcl Pitt Plaza ASSICS, S186 final race of the day and that too was captured by the Citadel with a winning time of 8:49.0 with ECL finishing second in 9:09.1 Pirate coach Al Hearn felt that the Citadel’s experience was the key factor in the victory. Hearn said, “we gave it our maximum effort, but the Citadel Just had a bigger team and a lot more experience racing The Pirates travel to Chapel Hill week to row against leave for the next UNC before the y South 1 Association Rowing Regatta on April 27-28 Stickmen demolished ore, Md. would probably be a e to live but the ECL team did not like their visit. On Saturday afternoon Morgan State gave the Pirates a lesson in how to play, by soundly thrashing the Bucs, 21-3 nice lacrosse Jeff Hansen and Larry Hayes accounted for the three Pirate goals. Hansen scored twice while Hayes added a single tally. Danny Mannix added two assists to the Buc’s cause The Pirates are now 2-6 on the year as they look forward to playing N.C. State on Wednesday Minges field April 25 at 3 p.m. on Po0ol Horum ‘ frail Hole Ichudes: A Sousent of London Grand cts! TV Ceaser Roberts RECORD BAR SALE PRICES tapes i cach Cee sl We WVARCo aim ‘Vo SERVE & ee ee \ eS, dant Newspaper ee ountainhead | og blah Na University WHETHER YOULIKE — ir OR NoT !} ACAINS T) tac WALL YOU 7 b COMME , FAG, aa ville, North Carolina 27834 Editorial / Commentary HlepNOne 758-6366 oF 758-6367 DOPE FIEND... J Wares ae Sa and they got to study.” a he SBI “Great,” exclaims Ned. ‘Most of ‘em is the Il be there when we bust tonight. You é nightstar kot Lo go with us todudge Dealer’s to get ucKly the warrants.”’ : 8:15 “Why me?” asks the pigeon, f waist and gently tugs the grey trousers “Cause we don’t know any of these po \paeee i (part of his Stentatious garb) over his Junkies,” screams Ned : ‘ knees “That’s all right,’ muses Harry. “We ~ 8:43 Ned gets into his sleek 1972 Just won't: put any names on the 5 dull-white Ford lack tires warrants, and fill them in at the station. tad spins wards his rendezvous Dealer don’t care. We'll tell him they're ; with danger {rugs all John Does.” Ait’ 9:15 Ned picks uy ry 10 p.m. Ned and Harry, along with = Harrassen fr t the rest of the SBI, county police, city q ood Mornin,” says Ned police, campus police and assorted Like sa Ig 1 huge officials begin busting. The bust is a hangover, I was over at that chick’s complete — succ except for a few trailor last night hardened — drug pushers who are ¥ lake a couple a drinks,” advises Ned downtown. Harry and Ned, mission Y J You'll feel like a new nar¢ accomplished, talk about the upcoming An derson g ives overview of Wate rg ate ready have,” replies Harry. “Say trials vh ire we supposed to meet our “What do you think Dealer will give By JACK ANDERSON ‘em?” asks Harry. , fee eye Ned “He gives ‘em all five years suspended Reporters are still trying to put RO ing ie ah hg di 2 7 Bag ha implacable Chiang U 4s Bo get some breakfast sentence if it’s their first bust,” Ned together the jigsaw pieces of the baffling in frontier days, the daring riders of Raicaka aii ee i eae * “ eee 5 te! J the pony express raced across the ai-shek has salted away millions of : answers. “Don’t worry though. We'll get Watergate puzzle. The picture has Healt dollars to finance _ his dream of x iN ae nN sail foe Se oe re tne oi ia did become confused by a whirlwind of bebo) ae ce aes ea di tte reconquering the Chinese mainland This lowa I ed asks you see that plant they found in one rumors, leaks, charges ; nie ‘ unheard-of speeds a ieee ane Seri ‘ bade Seay guy's room?” bate set han te oes ee \Ithough the method of ie 2 tye tee ie a theo ong “ N 1 Harry { their pigeon “Yeah,” replies Harry. “It must have from the soft facts, Here is the picture transportation has bec ome much more a ti ree haces aang zh eee s was ASK behind Belch been at least an inch tall, We'll burn him that emerges sophisticated today, with the Jet plane a ee eh pene ae! i the {ope asks Ned. for manufacture The l97 (prendeny Ni es replacing the horse, the postal system fave s : i . Nae Meanie Ma ne some Joints,’ “Listen, my head’s startin’ to hurt : iH ae if peaches en pesamne has not cut down the cross-country : sale erence ey auee ate eae ‘ embling with fear again. You got any Darvon?” alarmed as Sen. Ed Muskie overtook him delivery time appreciably ‘ hata ot money inspecial funds, mostly s 5 five hima buck for ‘Naw, but I got some Librium,” Ned in the Presidential polls lhe President, me marked for contingency use in mainland y e u ne, W | | replies who has a Zest for political intrigue, It has now been two years since the recovery ght Sure. I aXpayers’ money,” laughs “Fine, let’s go get some beer so | (aa called for an undercover post office was put on a business basis. But the old warrior had counted upon fie here plenty more wash ‘em down,” states Harry, intelligence-gathering Operation His The whole idea’ was to Increase American support to help him retake the i ro get any hard Harry and Ned crawl aro into the Instructions were implemented by his efficiency and improve service mainland. Now he has seen his dream ae dispatcher and drive away, proud of chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, who Congressional invest igators have been shattered. His old friend and ally, ae pigeor answers once more bringing law and order to this issued the orders through White House checking into citizens complaints about Richard Nixon, has suddenly started to f terms tomorrow, small university town. aides and the President's personal the service Their preliminary, court the Chinese Communis They, in 2 lawyer. unpublished findings are that turn, have lost no opportunity to remind Th q ‘ long-distance mail delivery is slower Taiwan that the United States is now I And whatsoever ye sow _ ,=.« inden sree)‘ than as wo ens eo, ther tnd, Thea pane tL that their subordinates get involves Cross-town delivery within lost cities is Taiwan to reunite with the motherland Uni Sometimes a politician can talk Force Base on Cape Cod, and worst of anything : illegal Three popereis slower than two years ago, and overall voluntarily. The appeal has been made And himself into a lot of trouble all, the famous old Boston Navy Yard. operations esa 16 fete torn pre service is increasingly erratic. from Peking by formerNationalist bacl Senator Edward M. Kennedy D-Mass Last week Kennedy, sensing the spying upon the Democrats: tio’ Our congressional sources lay much of leaders now in the Communist camp. A has long been a proponent of cutbacks in envitable, issued a pre-decision “foul” sabotage against the Denceais ana the blame on former Postmaster General But those who know old Chiang say Cat the federal mi ry budget. Kennedy charge citing**...the long established three, internal aecurity tomas Aivaitise Winton Blount. Blount started the he still hasn’t given up dreaming the was reasoned that the Nixon Administration Importance of these bases not only to Dainoant didn't do ne Baie thing £5 reorganization of the Post Office and Impossible dream. It is the “cement,” ‘is has long been spending too much on the region’s economy but to the defense them then left in the middle of it. The new says the secret report, that holds his sett ulitary matters, and too little on social posture of the nation.” : had man, E Pr. Klassen, was left to tie up fovernment “intact in the absence of apps programs Kennedy’s pleas fell on deaf ears, asa The three activites ultimately became the loose ends, of which there were any real or emotional rallying point.” i iv) got his wish yesterday, but matter of fact the same ears that listened conbined under the control of two White many And he may have another ace up his dats manner that he had when he and Senator George McGovern House aides, G. Gordon Liddy and FE Besides the reorganization shuffle, sleeve ine gon has requested a were both seeking huge cuts in the Howard Hunt Liddy maintained the Klassen also has to fight the bugaboo of There is no more intransigent ites uts for Congress defense budget during last year’s contacts with the higher-ups. He told his many new administrators the anti-Communist that Chiang Kai-shek coul save the nation’s campaign coconspirators that he got his orders entrenched bureaucracy, Yet, in order to achieve the impossible We economy up to $1 billion a year Hopefully, Massachusetts voters will from Attorney General John Mitchell, For example, Klassen recently went dream, he has now started to think the wap Kennedy's home state, Massachusetts not put the entire blame on Senator both before and after Mitchell left the on an inspection tour. Everything unthinkable thoughts. He has hinted that : a will be hardest hit by the military cuts Kennedy for the loss of jobs caused by Justice Department. seemed to be running smoothly. What he he might switch allegiance from the pp Schedu fazed out in the closing of the bases. He is not the Liddy even described, in detail, the didn’t know was that local postmasters United States to the Soviet Union, Stat Massact ane Westover Air first politician to be reminded that the meetings he held with Mitchell to discuss had brought in extra help to make The Russians, whose hostility toward Grin Force Base near Springfield, the Otis Air federal government can be Indian givers. the Watergate —_ bugging. Mitchell themselves look good. In at least one their comrades seems to be heightening vigorously denies that any such meetings case, they actually hid mail outside the daily, have — given Chiang quiet Termpapers borin --naturall ever took place. Liddy has refused to post office to conceal the evidence of encouragement. A Soviet United Nations ‘i g y talk about it under oath, preferring to theor snail-like working pace. delegate showed up the other day, for \ \ recent article in the Christian from a research firm. Instead the student accept a stiff prison sentence instead. All of the problems have citizens example, at a conference on Taiwan. He We Science Monitor entitled “P an end should accept the project for what it isa What he told his colleagues, meanwhile, howling and congressional investigators argued that Taiwan is not part of China Ben to term-paper buying’ suggested ar research paper--designed to increase is strickly hearsay. scurrying. But whether the flurry of and need not be returned to Peking’s ie unusual answer to the problen of illegal Knowledge of the subject matter--but activity speeds the mail eventually control. de termpaper sales also an exercise that sharpens one’s Liddy and Hunt, together with their remains to be seen The old diehard anti-Communists ten The writer, a teacher named Prisc ilk ability to find out information on any break-in crew, have now been convicted. One Washington wit has suggested must be blinkig their eyes in disbelief sda Fortescue, feels m sy athy for subject when it is needed. But those who took the rap by pleading that the answer may be to bring back the what with Richard Nixon courting zn those — stude vho turn to the College professors do not expect guilty have continued to furnish money pony express, perhaps replacing the Peking and Chiang Kai-shek flirting with ue “packaged” ter pers becaused they students to walk out of their subjects as to the Watergate conspirators. ponies with motorcycles Moscow, budg are too “bored” by the subjects to get authorities. However, if a student needs ~ er into writing a paper selves. She to find the answer to certain : the suggests that professor ould attempt questions--say about the structure of his next oO personalize termpaper state’s government-- he should be able to TH E F 0 R U M ! assignments This, she argues, will name several sources where the Ge increase s ts’ interests in the information can be found. . topics to make the writing of termpapers This is not asking a lot on the CAE POET RRREIN ae aa almost f individual's part Termpaper writing is rH H Lewis Gidley Kathy Mye. Well, they may be fun for Ms just an ee that is designed to Jesus Freaks Infirmary issue George econ Janis ee st jut for the r rity of sharpen one’s ability to do just that. performance a real lemon Jackie Boyce Dianna Morris termpapers are hard work. This Sorry, Ms. Fortescue, the “personal” va And to the committee members who TI mean that all students who hate touch is not the only way to get students ‘disturbence’ To Fountainhead showed they cared enough to help Bi ECL Npapers should ‘‘buy one to “get into” research papers. People like Margaret Blanchard cour: To Fountainhead: (forum, April 12) ought to be glad that Sincerely, 15 Yesterday (12 April), we were treated the public DOESN’T always know all the William H. Edwards a direc Bo Perkins to a performance on the Mall which facts. For the public’s information, ee desig kd transcended good taste, consideration, Professor Blanchard was the guiding light bar rditor ine Chiet and reason, who directed the _ news-gathering F P li 2 If “Jesus Freaks” want to spread the Operation for Fountainhead’s ill-famed orum Oo Icy be acco! “word” that is fine with me But, I do “Infirmary scandal investigation” issue, . spect not believe that they have the right to Her profound grasp of journalism All students, faculty members, and es) Bruce Parrish, Managing Editor Charles Griffin, Business Manager hens Fi A il aig ties with Penapes ae Pounppetbead publish a adminstrators are urged to express their a daring loudspeakers naucous music, and Investigation issue: one week and a opinions in writing to the Forum “saved’’ speakers dusturbing the dorms “retraction issue”’ the next. The editorial page is an open f poite and library. Maybe that’s why she’s so sour on where such Opinions may he subatabe Cost: If I had been a dorm. student Fountainhead Unsigned editorials ranioat the aoe, attempting to study, I would have been of the editor-in-chief. an BRE ee ay Perri Morgan, Advertising Manager Jack Morrow, Sports Editor quite outraged over the invasion of my Philip E. Williams those of the mga - —s bese Tight to peace and quiet. As it was the Pe majority, ae ven a beac Pat Crawford, News Editor Dav e Englert, Asst. Sports Editor Invasion of the quietude of the library Praise offered When writing to the F; sible Mikes eh TL To Fountainhead following prox edure should by sau wpe pyar Skip Saunders Asst. News Editor Phyllis Dougherty, Asst. Features Editor These saved souls on an ego trip To a group of individuals who - Letters must i. ee _ , other ae poh a fee ian peste pigeon their _ hours Pte pl aaa ‘nd should not aud yi : bs ; ‘irculat) ” the maintenance of a more Prtec i tj incl Mike Edwards, Circulation Manager posciaad (at 8 p.m.) of less than 150 Student Union, I offer my praise and Pipi hould be signed with the name ai thank LS “ Ned Time, let them hire a hall and thanks to : : ee sh aig re Other endorsers Upon A cot keep their noise to themselv Dean Alexander Paul Brietman eee +h the signees their tanias infon Mrs. Thompson Mrs. Paul ay be withheld conta fra L. Baker, Adv isor Sincerely, Gary Massiie Doris Stephens 5 a oy a on this page reflect the of Ge Art Weatherwax Wayne Powell ' me OD the. aithaw ae Unive John C. Atkenson, Jr. necessarily ind not Veronica Ward Norris Holloway dim Hicks Wayne Sullivan those of thy F Asst. Prof. of History East Caroling | untainhead or Niversity anh EE Ne pe