<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039640_0001"/>
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GREENVILLE. IM. CAROLINA<lb/>
VOLUME IV NUMBER 3<lb/>
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14 1972<lb/>
ALKansai University<lb/>
Extension program planned for Japan<lb/>
sVrltsu B<lb/>
BY LOWFLL KNOUFF<lb/>
IUf .VntiM<lb/>
Students from hast Carolina<lb/>
I niversity may be going to school on<lb/>
three continents nexl ? ? ai<lb/>
If plans worked out by representatives<lb/>
of ECU and Kansai University of Japan<lb/>
are approved by the board of trustees<lb/>
and by the Stair Universitj Hoard of<lb/>
Governors about 15 ECU students will<lb/>
be traveling to Japan in September,<lb/>
1 7 to itudy for a year.<lb/>
Dr Robert William provost of ECU<lb/>
and Clifton Moore, the university's<lb/>
business manager, were in Japan from<lb/>
August 24 until September 1. to work<lb/>
out details of the program<lb/>
According to Williams, the trip was<lb/>
made "in connection with a long range<lb/>
plan which has been under study for<lb/>
some time to find a way to offer our<lb/>
area study minor programs m the area<lb/>
which is being studit d "<lb/>
The Bonn Campus in Germany is the<lb/>
arm of this program in Europe. Students<lb/>
whose minor is European area studies are<lb/>
offered an opportunity to take the 36<lb/>
hours required by their minor in Europe.<lb/>
1 his gives the student a chance to see the<lb/>
country in person rather than just in<lb/>
Iks.<lb/>
"We also offer programs in Asian area<lb/>
Studies, Latin American area studies, and<lb/>
African area studies says Williams. So a<lb/>
long time ago when we first started the<lb/>
area study idea we thought about what<lb/>
sort or priorities to give in the<lb/>
development of the curriculum, and one<lb/>
of the priorities was to have as much of<lb/>
the course work as possible m the<lb/>
area including if possible the language<lb/>
that is appropriate to the area. This<lb/>
present plan has developed from that.<lb/>
According to Williams, the biggest<lb/>
problem m establishing an Asian study<lb/>
bra n rh was the h igh cost of<lb/>
transportation. Air transportation to<lb/>
anywhere in .Japan exceeds SI .000.<lb/>
Recently Williams submitted a request<lb/>
to the Japan Society and to the Asian<lb/>
Society asking for help with the<lb/>
transportation coats. Aftei some<lb/>
discussion, the societies aureed to give<lb/>
what amounted to a $960 grant in aid to<lb/>
each student traveling to Japan from the<lb/>
United States for a year abroad.<lb/>
'This would bring the cost to $480<lb/>
per Btudt for transportation he said.<lb/>
"This combined with some of the other<lb/>
costs which are less for Japan than<lb/>
elsewhere would make the total costs<lb/>
about the same as the cost for a year at<lb/>
the Bonn Campus<lb/>
However, Williams pointed out the<lb/>
financial details have not been firmly<lb/>
worked out as of now.<lb/>
Kansai University is located in Ogura<lb/>
City, Japan. Ogura City is between<lb/>
Kyoto, the Ancient capital of Japan and<lb/>
Osaka, a modern city of about two and a<lb/>
half million people<lb/>
Kansai University is a private<lb/>
univensty which has a very good<lb/>
reputation is Asian studies, according to<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
With the aid of the Council on<lb/>
International Educational Exchange,<lb/>
Williams and Moore traveled to Tokyo<lb/>
and Ogura City. There they worked out<lb/>
a contract for sending students to Japan<lb/>
for a year of study. Williams said he<lb/>
expet U ' that the number of students<lb/>
from ECU would be about 15.<lb/>
"While in .Japan, those students will<lb/>
have the opportunity for meeting all the<lb/>
requirements for the area studies minor<lb/>
program plus the general education<lb/>
requirements for a BA degree and the<lb/>
requirements for the appropriate<lb/>
language by taking .Japanese through the<lb/>
equivalent of our fourth level of a<lb/>
language Williams said.<lb/>
Also, while in Japan, an agreement for<lb/>
the exchange of one professor from ECU<lb/>
and a Japanese professor was worked out<lb/>
by Williams and Moore. Dr. Robert<lb/>
Gowen of the ECU history department<lb/>
has been tentatively selected to go to<lb/>
Japan. Katusuka Yamashita is the<lb/>
Japanese professor selected to come to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Gowen specializes in Asian history. He<lb/>
will teach many of the courses our<lb/>
students will take in Japan, according to<lb/>
Williams, while Yamashita is a professor<lb/>
of comparative government and<lb/>
comparative law.<lb/>
Williams said if this contract is<lb/>
approved by our board of trustees and<lb/>
the State University Board of Governors,<lb/>
the university will begin recruiting<lb/>
students to spend a year studying in<lb/>
Japan.<lb/>
"If all this is approved Williams said,<lb/>
"the students will have their choice of<lb/>
living with a Japanese family and taking<lb/>
Jenkins investigates UNC-Europe<lb/>
As a result of his previous experience<lb/>
in international education, hast Carolina<lb/>
Chancellor Leo w Jenkins will be<lb/>
visiting West Germany during the week<lb/>
of September 16-24 to investigate the<lb/>
economic feasibility of a North Carolina<lb/>
Center for European Studies. As<lb/>
chairman of a six-man research<lb/>
committee appointed by University of<lb/>
North Carolina President. William<lb/>
Friday. Jenkins will be involved in what<lb/>
h ? calls "fact-finding and preliminary<lb/>
negotiations" concerning land and<lb/>
housing facilities for the new center.<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
regular curriculum being considered for<lb/>
third- or possibly fourth-year students,<lb/>
summer activities such as seminars in<lb/>
European marketing and research by<lb/>
students, faculty, and North Carolina<lb/>
businessmen are being discussed. It is<lb/>
hoped that bit summer seminars would<lb/>
begin as early as 1173 and the regular<lb/>
terms in September. !)7 I<lb/>
Admission to th center would be<lb/>
open to all qualified North Carolina<lb/>
resident students The fees for the<lb/>
anticipated 350 to TOO students would<lb/>
approximate $2500 per year. Jenkins<lb/>
hopes that if the center becomes a<lb/>
reality, foundations will provide<lb/>
scholarships lor students who would not<lb/>
be able to take advantage of the program<lb/>
otherwise.<lb/>
As it is planned, the fees of those<lb/>
actually using the center would make it a<lb/>
self-supporting enterprise, and there,<lb/>
more acceptable to the Legislature who<lb/>
would purchase the needed properties.<lb/>
This is one of the reasons for Jenkins'<lb/>
optimism. Other reasons include the<lb/>
advantages to North Carolina business if<lb/>
good rapport is established in Germany,<lb/>
the success of ECU's Bonn center, the<lb/>
cultural advantages, and the enthusiasm<lb/>
the German people have shown for the<lb/>
new center.<lb/>
Hoping to unite business, government,<lb/>
and education in North Carolina, Jenkins<lb/>
will try to gain support from the North<lb/>
Carolina Commission on International<lb/>
Cooperation for the European study<lb/>
center This eleven-man panel of<lb/>
business, legal, and education whose<lb/>
members are appointees of the President<lb/>
of the Senate, the Speaker of the House,<lb/>
and of the Governor could conceivably<lb/>
support the center with favorable<lb/>
recommendations to the Legislature, the<lb/>
business world, and the media. In<lb/>
addition, the commission could help<lb/>
sponsor one or more of the proposed<lb/>
seminars.<lb/>
Jenkins will be bringing his findings<lb/>
back to the investigative committee<lb/>
appointed by William Friday. This<lb/>
committee will in turn make suggestions<lb/>
to the Administrative Council of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina, a body<lb/>
composed of the chancellors of the<lb/>
sixteen state-supported schools in this<lb/>
state. As chairman of both committees,<lb/>
Jenkins hopes that the Board of<lb/>
Governors, after conferring with the<lb/>
Administrative Councile. will take action<lb/>
establishing the Center for European<lb/>
Studies.<lb/>
If the prospective site is approved, the<lb/>
new center will stand almost directly<lb/>
across the<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
Rhine from ECU's Bonn<lb/>
two meals each day with the family or<lb/>
living in the dorm and eating in the<lb/>
cafeteria<lb/>
In Japan, students will have three<lb/>
terms of classroom study, plus during<lb/>
the month of March, they will be free to<lb/>
do ndependent study of just to travel<lb/>
around the country, according to<lb/>
Williams. In effect, if a student takes the<lb/>
maximum number of credit hours the<lb/>
whole time he is in Japan, be will be able<lb/>
to get the equivalent -A three regular<lb/>
quarters and a summer session here,<lb/>
Williams said there an no special<lb/>
ai ademii req .in mentt for students who<lb/>
want to participate m thu, program,<lb/>
"however it will I moil useful to<lb/>
students with an area studies minor " He<lb/>
said that students sbouki consult with<lb/>
their advisor to insure that they will not<lb/>
be losing any credits if they take part.<lb/>
"The program will not be limited to<lb/>
studenUs with an area studies minor; the<lb/>
student will just have to work the<lb/>
courses into his schedule just ai he works<lb/>
a year of studies here into Ins schedule<lb/>
Williams said "We expect that most<lb/>
students going will be juniors, but<lb/>
anyone who wants to take the courses<lb/>
may go<lb/>
I<lb/>
Wooles sees fruits in seven years<lb/>
CHANCELLOR LEO JENKINS<lb/>
JAPANESE ART and drama are only some of the more obvious cultural differences to confront prospective exchange student.<lb/>
NCNB sponsors<lb/>
sculpture contest<lb/>
NCNB Plaza Associates will conduct a<lb/>
$30,000 sculpture competition among<lb/>
southeastern artists for a work to be<lb/>
installed in Winston-Salem.<lb/>
The sculpture-fountain will become<lb/>
the focal point of an outdoor plaza area<lb/>
in front of the new downt own<lb/>
Winston-Salem headquarters of North<lb/>
Carolina National Bank.<lb/>
The sponsors are seeking "a major<lb/>
work of open-air sculpture that will add<lb/>
greatly to the visual climate of the<lb/>
downtown area and call attention to the<lb/>
accomplishments and talent of our<lb/>
regional artisits<lb/>
The commission will be awarded by a<lb/>
special jury on the following timetable:<lb/>
Artists are invited to submit slides of<lb/>
their previous work no later than<lb/>
October 13, 1972. The jury will screen<lb/>
the entrants down to five finalists in<lb/>
early November, and the finalists will be<lb/>
asked to prepare models and specific<lb/>
proposals for the Winston-Salem site.<lb/>
Final judging of the five finalists and<lb/>
the awarding of the commission will<lb/>
occur in early January, 1973.<lb/>
The competition is being managed by<lb/>
Ted Potter, Director of the Gallery of<lb/>
Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem.<lb/>
Potter will supply a detailed prospectus<lb/>
to interested artists.<lb/>
Medical School<lb/>
receives grant<lb/>
The East Carolina University School<lb/>
of Medicine has received its first research<lb/>
grant from the American Cancer Society.<lb/>
The money, a $500 grant, was<lb/>
presented by Dr. P. B. Young, president<lb/>
of the Pitt County chapter of the<lb/>
American Cancer Society at the opening<lb/>
of the new medical school Wednesday.<lb/>
"We hope that this will be the start of<lb/>
a continuing research interest between<lb/>
the cancer society and the School of<lb/>
Medicine said Ir. Wallace Wooles, dean<lb/>
of the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
Dr. Wooles said the money will be<lb/>
used to study a type of cancer medically<lb/>
known as Walker 57. The research in<lb/>
biochemistry is being conducted by Dr<lb/>
S. N Pennington of the ECU Medical<lb/>
School faculty.<lb/>
BY PHYLLIS DOUGHERTY<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
"It takes 30 thousand to 35 thousand<lb/>
dollars to educate one of ECU's twenty-<lb/>
medical students estimated Dr Wallace<lb/>
Wooles. director of ECU's School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
"At best estimate, it costs 20<lb/>
thousand to 25 thousand dollars" at an<lb/>
established four-year institution Dr.<lb/>
Wooles compared. "The cost is faculty<lb/>
and instruction with a teaching<lb/>
hospital<lb/>
Tn our circumstances Dr. Wooles<lb/>
said. "We could have more students than<lb/>
now 90 per class. With a two-year<lb/>
program. v e could educate 80<lb/>
students -a 900 percent increase. There<lb/>
would only be a 30-40 percent increase<lb/>
in cost<lb/>
The 18-man staff of professors in<lb/>
mil robiology, physiology and preventive<lb/>
medicine will not need to be expanded<lb/>
for the two-year program, assures Dr.<lb/>
Wooles The staff adequately fills posts<lb/>
for both years in a curriculum "geared to<lb/>
the needs of most students and which<lb/>
are most efficient said Dr. Wooles.<lb/>
Dr. Wooles anticipated the arguments<lb/>
against a two-year program saying.<lb/>
"Number one: it is expensive. But who<lb/>
else is there to meet eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's needs And number two:<lb/>
what is the alternative? Nothing<lb/>
"A two-year medical school is a step<lb/>
to meet the medical manpower needs of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina Dr. Wooles<lb/>
commented. "I don't want to speed up<lb/>
education to endanger quality "<lb/>
However, he sees "no fruits of the<lb/>
school, no doctors, for seven years<lb/>
While graduates of the one-year<lb/>
program are "automatically admitted to<lb/>
the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill M. iical School said Dr<lb/>
Wooles. there is concern to have them<lb/>
return to eastern North Carolina to<lb/>
practice<lb/>
Therefore, Dr Wooles says that "the<lb/>
student will be exposed to physicians in<lb/>
the community. When they see the<lb/>
caliber of men serving here, i hope it will<lb/>
encourage them to return "<lb/>
'Also, today's student is more<lb/>
concerned to provide service where it is<lb/>
needed he said assunngly.<lb/>
PR<lb/>
WALLACE WOOLES hope ECl will help to eliminate the doctor shortage.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039640_0002"/><lb/>
She<lb/>
sou<lb/>
ght<lb/>
a dream<lb/>
and soon found<lb/>
it<lb/>
CONSTANCE DOHN<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
1 r ? -HER<lb/>
DREAM<lb/>
?-<lb/>
FULFILLED<lb/>
<lb/>
ON A<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
THAT<lb/>
COULD<lb/>
HA I<lb/>
BEEN<lb/>
DISASTROUS<lb/>
clan at the age of 12. Four years ago,<lb/>
she opened her own ballet studio in<lb/>
Kiniton. Lul year, she traveled twice<lb/>
each week to Kmston to teach classes<lb/>
Her goal is to teach normal, as well as<lb/>
retarded children, ballet and movement!<lb/>
ol the body,<lb/>
She has done some modeling in her<lb/>
home town of Kinston, where she mi<lb/>
also choreographer for her high school<lb/>
drama production<lb/>
Mis.s Horn has special interests in<lb/>
iwimming, dancing, cooking, and<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
Because of the numerous appearances<lb/>
she must make as Miss North Carolina,<lb/>
Connie has not enrolled in school this<lb/>
year She will return here as a<lb/>
sophomore on the $6000 scholarship she<lb/>
received as fust runner-up, after her<lb/>
reign as Miss North Carolina is up<lb/>
She plant to major in Special<lb/>
Education and minor in Dance,<lb/>
World tour awaits<lb/>
contestant chosen<lb/>
'Maid of Cotton'<lb/>
Cotton Council<lb/>
opening of the<lb/>
today<lb/>
1973<lb/>
rAYLOR<lb/>
 'T-Up<lb/>
? to<lb/>
"full im<lb/>
Dur impetition of the<lb/>
?u in which she performed .1 ballet<lb/>
toe routine, her slipper became untied<lb/>
However, she continued us planned and<lb/>
rated high in that segment of<lb/>
competition<lb/>
Miss Dorn has taken ballet for several<lb/>
? ? . ??? teaching a neighborhood<lb/>
f 12 Four year ago,<lb/>
the opened her own bullrt studio in<lb/>
Kinston Last year, she traveled twice<lb/>
week to Kinston to teach (lasses<lb/>
Her goal s to teach normal, as well as<lb/>
retarded children, ballet and movements<lb/>
dy<lb/>
Shx has some modeling in her<lb/>
horn. : iwti of Kinston, where she was<lb/>
choreographer for her high school<lb/>
drama productions.<lb/>
Miss Porn has special interests in<lb/>
swimming, dancing, cooking, and<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
Because of the numerous appearances,<lb/>
she must make as Miss North Carolina,<lb/>
Connie has not enrolled in school this<lb/>
year. She will return here as a<lb/>
sophomore on the $6000 scholarship she<lb/>
received as first runner-up, after her<lb/>
reign as Miss North Carolina is up.<lb/>
She plans to major in Special<lb/>
Education and minor in Dance.<lb/>
Miss Dorn has taken ballet for several<lb/>
years and began teaching a neighborhood<lb/>
DEPRESSED? GET FAST RELIEF<lb/>
WITH NATIONAL LAMPOON!<lb/>
1 ' 1 you siilh 1 hiini still 1 mic: "I the extremities? embarrassing odoi'<lb/>
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ing?lick with youi cloetoi You ma) lie a victim til the heartbreak<lb/>
 ?sis known to medical science as clinical death If so read no<lb/>
further! Ii - too late foi you Bui it you're suffering from am ol a<lb/>
long list ol lessei disorders, including Spirorrhea, inflation, Indochina,<lb/>
kosis painful swelling ol the lefl wing nutation of the lower tax<lb/>
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1h nia be what you're looking foi Of course there is no cure for<lb/>
these puzzling maladies, hut doctors know thai the capital ol Dela-<lb/>
ware is Dover and in a recenl survej nine mil ol the tedividuais<lb/>
polled recommended Sational Lampoon for peopli who read humor<lb/>
magazines li J Because Sational Lampoon lias been show n to be<lb/>
an effei live laiighter-prodm ing humorfrice providing transiton re-<lb/>
liel in some mild cases o simple depression Yon see because its<lb/>
B iffered Sational Lampoon goes to work instant!) earning pain-<lb/>
relieving I ah in" throughout sour entile bod) lii most cases readers<lb/>
report a prompl reduction ol their symptoms within minutes! So wli<lb/>
suffer needlessly? Stay out of the draft, watch between-meal "downs<lb/>
and lead nt ii null Lampoon regularly, vailableb) mail in one two<lb/>
and three-yeai supplies and on most newsstands without subscription.<lb/>
1<lb/>
yeut ccMind uppl of al<lb/>
mi<lb/>
11 .OKI m III ihi I nth<lb/>
.ihv.<lb/>
I he National I ampeiin. Dipt. Nl 771<lb/>
6338Lindmar Dr Coleu.A 9301 7<lb/>
Rush me your remarkable product in the quantities I have indicated below,<lb/>
I enclose ched mono order<lb/>
l-ear suppl (12 monthls dnsesi?$5.95 (sou sase $3.(15)<lb/>
2-)t-ar supply (24monthl doses)?$10.5(1 (you tiv $7.50)<lb/>
3year suppl (36 monthly doses)?$14.50 (yen sae $12.50)<lb/>
The Nations<lb/>
announced the<lb/>
Maid o( Cotton selection.<lb/>
Twenty girls will be chosen from<lb/>
applications and state contests to<lb/>
participate in finals here Dec. 28-2<lb/>
Winners of state of district events in<lb/>
Alabama, Arizona, New Mexico, and the<lb/>
South Plains of Texas are automatic<lb/>
finalists<lb/>
The 197.1 Maid, who will succeed<lb/>
Debbie H right of Tahoka, Texas, will<lb/>
represent the U.S. cotton industry as its<lb/>
official good will ambassadress in this<lb/>
country and overseas. Her domestic tour<lb/>
will include a visit to Washington and<lb/>
other cities where she will participate 111<lb/>
activities designed to increase public<lb/>
understanding of the cotton industry's<lb/>
contributions to the nation as a whole.<lb/>
Tentative plans call for fashion shows<lb/>
and public appearances m Thailand.<lb/>
1 icmg Kong. .Japan. Korea, and Taiwan<lb/>
during her travels overseas. These<lb/>
countries are major customers for U S<lb/>
1 1 itton exports.<lb/>
immediately following her selection as<lb/>
the industry's 35th ambassadress, the<lb/>
1973 Maid will make her first official<lb/>
appearance at the Cotton Bowl Festival<lb/>
in Dallas on New Year's Day. After<lb/>
completing her tour, she will return here<lb/>
to receive a new automobile as a gift<lb/>
from dealers in the five-state Memphis<lb/>
Ford District.<lb/>
The Maid of Cotton selection is open<lb/>
to girls between 19 and 23 years of age.<lb/>
who are at least five feet five inches tall<lb/>
and have never been married Applicants<lb/>
also must have been born in a<lb/>
cotton-producing state or resided<lb/>
continuously in the Cotton Belt since<lb/>
the age of seven or earlier.<lb/>
Application forms may be obtained<lb/>
by writing the Council at 1918 N.<lb/>
Parkway, Memphis, Tenn 38112.<lb/>
Completed applications and required<lb/>
photographs must be submitted to the<lb/>
Council by midnight Dec. 1.<lb/>
????IITTT<lb/>
(PflOtO by Moti Mann)<lb/>
DR WELLINGTON B GRAY<lb/>
Dr. Gray finds<lb/>
'beauty plus'<lb/>
By DIANf TAYLOR<lb/>
Sljfl WHtri<lb/>
Dr Wellington B. (nay. Dean of the<lb/>
School of Art. recently took a front row<lb/>
scat as a judge for the 1973 Miss<lb/>
America Pageant<lb/>
Dr. Cray found himself among a very<lb/>
distinguished panel. Included amont the<lb/>
nine-judge panel were two well known<lb/>
opera singers, 1 member of the News<lb/>
Media, an actor an actress, the President<lb/>
of the Motio Picture Academy, a<lb/>
prominent new . 1 ister, Ule Director of<lb/>
Admissions t the I'niversity of<lb/>
Cmcmatti. and h Cray<lb/>
The judges e chosen from a list of<lb/>
thousands of pe pie who have requested<lb/>
the position 0 have been suggested<lb/>
They are pi k d to try and represent<lb/>
several different areas of profession and<lb/>
interests<lb/>
"I could have stayed there all night<lb/>
just listening to them (judges) talking<lb/>
Dr. Gray exclaimed.<lb/>
ARTIST AND TEACHER<lb/>
Dr Cray said he was chosen mainly<lb/>
because of his position as "artist and<lb/>
college teacher He is also a long-time<lb/>
close friend of Mr. Samuel Butcher,<lb/>
President of the Miss America Contest<lb/>
organization. Mr. Butcher was a<lb/>
Lieutenant under Dr Gray in his World<lb/>
W.ir II battalion.<lb/>
Dr Cray explained that "This hasn't<lb/>
been for a long, long time just a 'beauty<lb/>
contest There are over 70,000 girls<lb/>
involved from the local level up. He went<lb/>
on to say that dioutone million dollars<lb/>
are given in scholai ihips He said North<lb/>
Carolina has the largest state pageant in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
?This year the girls not only had<lb/>
beauty but brains as well he told.<lb/>
Of the North Carolina contestant,<lb/>
Connie Dorn, he said, "Connie doesn't<lb/>
tiave to take a backseat to anybody. She<lb/>
looked more like an apparition floating<lb/>
across the stage, than anything else. Very<lb/>
classical He was also impressed by the<lb/>
quick, intelligent answers she gave during<lb/>
the interviews.<lb/>
He recalled that when Miss Dorn<lb/>
finished her ballet routine 'no one<lb/>
clapped, they were all astounded Then<lb/>
when they did clap, the next contestant<lb/>
had to wait until they were finished.<lb/>
JUDGING DIFFICULT<lb/>
The toughest thing to do was judge<lb/>
between such excellent talent Dr. Gray<lb/>
explained. "How do you judge between<lb/>
an excellent pianist and an excellent<lb/>
opera singer? It's like apples and<lb/>
oranges<lb/>
Still showing traits of the judge, Dean<lb/>
Gray said, "These girls must represent<lb/>
the ideal girl of the United States. They<lb/>
must be poised, mannered, self-confident<lb/>
and have a presence' about them<lb/>
Every aspect must be perfect, he went<lb/>
on, such as her voice, taste in clothes and<lb/>
her ability to wear them well.<lb/>
Each afternoon, a third of the girls<lb/>
were interviewed by the judges and all<lb/>
attended an informal gathering with<lb/>
refreshments. The two most interesting<lb/>
factors, Dr. Gray found, were that at<lb/>
least seventy-five per cent had some kind<lb/>
of religioi ommitment "and weren't<lb/>
afraid to Ik about it Also, over<lb/>
seventy-five ,jer cent were interested in<lb/>
some kind of teaching.<lb/>
"These mrls were not interested in<lb/>
money, be. in serving humanity he<lb/>
sa.d.<lb/>
 Looking back on his week in Atlantic<lb/>
City, he told of the most memorable<lb/>
event of his stay. The day before the<lb/>
pageant began, he said, there was a<lb/>
parade. There were over thirty floats,<lb/>
dozens of bands from all across the<lb/>
country and all the girls riding in open<lb/>
cars and "looking very beautiful in their<lb/>
evening gowns One of the bands was<lb/>
the Salvation Army Band. They didn't<lb/>
have the twirlers or the most attractive<lb/>
uniforms, he told, but when they came<lb/>
by, everyone stood up. "Literally,<lb/>
thousands stood and no one made a<lb/>
sound. The people had such respect for<lb/>
this band He said that years from now<lb/>
this incident would stand out in hts<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
It's the Jesus Way<lb/>
By JAMES POE<lb/>
SUM VVr.ter<lb/>
Many people seem to feel today that<lb/>
they are good or righteous or are of the<lb/>
mind that the deeds they commit will<lb/>
never come to light revealed. Well, in the<lb/>
"Epktle of Paul, the Apostle to the<lb/>
Remans Paul writes: "As it is written.<lb/>
There is none righteous, no. not one"<lb/>
(Rom. 3:10) and Jesus says in the<lb/>
Gospel of St. Luke that "For there is<lb/>
nothing covered, that shall not be<lb/>
revealed: neither hid. that shall not be<lb/>
known Therefore, whatsoever ye have<lb/>
spoken in darkness shall be heard in the<lb/>
light, and that which ye have spoken in<lb/>
the ear in closets shall be proclaimed<lb/>
upon the housetops (Luke 12:23.)<lb/>
Some think that they are saved by<lb/>
good works or by their own design. In<lb/>
the "Epktle of Paul to the Ephesians<lb/>
Paul states: "For by grace are ye saved<lb/>
through faith; and that not of<lb/>
yourselves: it a the gift of God: nor of<lb/>
?MOB?<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
CHOLARSHIPf<lb/>
OFFER.<lb/>
CLASS OF 75 ONLY<lb/>
Name<lb/>
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Scholarship Includes: 2 year tuition free! $100<lb/>
monthly. Book allowance, lab fees?etc<lb/>
How to qualify:<lb/>
Just send in the coupon, or talk to the Professor of<lb/>
Aerospace Studies on your campus. (If you're class<lb/>
of '76, next year is your year.)<lb/>
U S Air Force Recruiting Service<lb/>
Directorate of Advertising (RSAV)<lb/>
Randolph Air force Base<lb/>
Texas 78U8<lb/>
Please send me more information on your 2-year scholarship<lb/>
program<lb/>
Name Birth Date<lb/>
AddressSex<lb/>
City CountyStateZip<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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I FIND YOURSELF A SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
L IN AIR FORCE ROTC. J<lb/>
Present College<lb/>
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works, lest any man should boast (Eph.<lb/>
2:8,9). But at the same time, we find in<lb/>
the "General Epistle of James it is<lb/>
written: "Even so faith, if it hath not<lb/>
works, is dead, being alone. Yea, a man<lb/>
may say. thou hast faith, and I have<lb/>
works: show me thy faith without thy<lb/>
works, and 1 will show thee my faith by<lb/>
my works. Thou believest there is one<lb/>
god; thou doest well: the devils also<lb/>
believe and tremble (James 2:17, 18.<lb/>
19.)<lb/>
TRUST GIVES LIFE<lb/>
It is by faith in God and his son Jesjs<lb/>
Christ that we are saved a faith which<lb/>
produces works. "For God so loved the<lb/>
world, that he gave his only begotten<lb/>
Son, that whosoever believeth in him<lb/>
should not perish but have everlasting<lb/>
life (John 3:16.)<lb/>
Jesus, when he perceived that there<lb/>
were some in one crowd that he was<lb/>
addressing "who trusted m themselves<lb/>
that they were nghteous and despised<lb/>
others" told them this parable: "Two<lb/>
men went up into the temple to pray.<lb/>
one a Pharisee and the other a tax<lb/>
collector. The Pharisee stood and prayed<lb/>
thus with himself, "God, I thank thee<lb/>
that I am not like other men,<lb/>
extortioners, unjust, adulteres, or even<lb/>
like this tax collector. I fast twice a<lb/>
week, 1 give tithes of all that I get But<lb/>
the tax collector, standing far off, would<lb/>
not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but<lb/>
beat his breast, saying, 'God, be merciful<lb/>
to me a sinner I tell you, this man went<lb/>
down to his house justified rather than<lb/>
the other; for everyone who exalts<lb/>
himself will be humbled, but he who<lb/>
humbles himself will be exalted(iwke<lb/>
18:9-14 RSV).<lb/>
So, in truth, we should all realize that<lb/>
"since all have sinned and fall short of<lb/>
the glory of Gold, they are justified by<lb/>
his grace as a gift, through the<lb/>
redemption, which is in Jesus Chirst<lb/>
(Rom 3:23-24 RSV).<lb/>
WE DON'T OFFER A<lb/>
CLOCKWORK<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
But you can get good food,<lb/>
fellowship and discussion at<lb/>
THE DEN<lb/>
Presbyterian Campus (enter<lb/>
401 East Ninth Street<lb/>
SUPPER FORUM<lb/>
Tuesdays 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
John N Miller, Campus Minister<lb/>
DR.<lb/>
P<lb/>
<pb facs="00039640_0003"/><lb/>
.one million dollars<lb/>
lips. He said North<lb/>
:st state pageant in<lb/>
iris not only had<lb/>
well he told,<lb/>
irolina contestant,<lb/>
i, "Connie doesn't<lb/>
at to anybody. She<lb/>
apparition floating<lb/>
anything else. Very<lb/>
j impressed by the<lb/>
'era she gave during<lb/>
when Miss Dorn<lb/>
routine 'no one<lb/>
I astounded Then<lb/>
he next contestant<lb/>
were finished.<lb/>
:FICULT<lb/>
to do was judgr-<lb/>
t talent Dr. Gray<lb/>
'ou judge between<lb/>
and an excellent<lb/>
like apples and<lb/>
af the judge, Dean<lb/>
Is must represent<lb/>
lited States. They<lb/>
red, self-confident<lb/>
?' about them<lb/>
perfect, he went<lb/>
iste in clothes and<lb/>
n well.<lb/>
third of the girls<lb/>
he judges and all<lb/>
I gathering with<lb/>
i most interesting<lb/>
nd. were that at<lb/>
?nt had some kind<lb/>
;nt "and weren't<lb/>
it Also, over<lb/>
vere interested in<lb/>
lot interested in<lb/>
I humanity he<lb/>
week in Atlantic<lb/>
most memorable<lb/>
' day before the<lb/>
id, there was a<lb/>
ver thirty floats,<lb/>
n all across the<lb/>
Is riding in open<lb/>
beautiful in their<lb/>
:f the bands was<lb/>
ind. They didn't<lb/>
e most attractive<lb/>
when they came<lb/>
up. "Literally,<lb/>
no one made a<lb/>
such respect for<lb/>
t years from now<lb/>
land out in his<lb/>
uld boast (Eph.<lb/>
time, we find in<lb/>
if James it is<lb/>
1, if it hath not<lb/>
one. Yea, a man<lb/>
lith, and I have<lb/>
nth without thy<lb/>
thee my faith by<lb/>
'est there is one<lb/>
the devils also<lb/>
James 2:17, 18.<lb/>
IFE<lb/>
and his son Jcsjs<lb/>
d a faith which<lb/>
iod so loved the<lb/>
s only begotten<lb/>
lelieveth in him<lb/>
have everlasting<lb/>
?ived that there<lb/>
wd that he was<lb/>
d m themselves<lb/>
us and despised<lb/>
parable: "Two<lb/>
temple to pray.<lb/>
le other a tax<lb/>
tood and prayed<lb/>
j, 1 thank thee<lb/>
? other men,<lb/>
ulteres, or even<lb/>
I fast twice a<lb/>
that I get But<lb/>
lg far off, would<lb/>
 to heaven, but<lb/>
3od, be merciful<lb/>
i, this man went<lb/>
fied rather than<lb/>
ne who exalts<lb/>
?d, but he who<lb/>
exalted. "(Luke<lb/>
d all realize that<lb/>
id fall short of<lb/>
are justified by<lb/>
, through the<lb/>
Jesus Chirst<lb/>
1<lb/>
IK<lb/>
Saxophonists get recognition<lb/>
1<lb/>
Fountainhead, Thursday. September 14. H72. Paga 3<lb/>
DR. JAMKS HOI I.IK<lb/>
By GINGER DAVIS<lb/>
Still Writer<lb/>
Noted saxaphonist Dr. James Houlik,<lb/>
of the EClT School of Music, is seeking<lb/>
to upgrade the image of his instrument.<lb/>
For the past eighteen months, he has<lb/>
served as president of the World<lb/>
Saxaphone Congress, an international<lb/>
organization which he has been involved<lb/>
with for the past three years.<lb/>
Approximately five hundred<lb/>
saxaphonists from all over the world<lb/>
attended the most recent meeting of the<lb/>
organization, which was held at the<lb/>
University of Toronto.<lb/>
The organization has been striving for<lb/>
world-wide recognition of the saxaphone<lb/>
as a serious instrument. Most music<lb/>
written for the orchestra does not<lb/>
include the saxaphone; however, many<lb/>
orchestras are now beginning to use the<lb/>
saxaphone because the music of<lb/>
contemporary musicians often calls for<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Over two hundred composers have<lb/>
been influenced by the World Saxaphone<lb/>
Congress to write music for the<lb/>
saxaphone. "Although the lobby action<lb/>
of the organization has been somewhat<lb/>
effective, the saxaphone will attain the<lb/>
recognition it deserves only through the<lb/>
actions and accomplishments of<lb/>
individual musicians according to Dr.<lb/>
Houlik.<lb/>
Dr. Houlik feels that his affiliation<lb/>
with the organization eventually comes<lb/>
to benefit his students because he has<lb/>
communication with saxaphonists on a<lb/>
world-wide basis.<lb/>
Friday, September 15<lb/>
Free Flick "Shootout" in Wright Auditorium Shows at<lb/>
7 OOp.fT and 9 00 pm<lb/>
Saturday, September 16<lb/>
PARENTS DAY<lb/>
Mini Concert Roy Acuff on the Mall at 2 00 p m<lb/>
Football ECU Pirates host Southern Illinois in the opening<lb/>
home game of the season Kick oft time is 7 30 p.m<lb/>
in Ficklen<lb/>
Wednesday, September 20<lb/>
ID cards made in Wright Auditorium from 2 to 3 p m.<lb/>
International Film ?Hiroshima Mon Amour" Show time<lb/>
8 00 p.m.<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Fiddler on the Roof" auditions<lb/>
set for this weekend<lb/>
-ECU Playhouse<lb/>
auditions for the hit musical, "Fiddler<lb/>
on the Roof will be held this week on<lb/>
Friday and Sunday evenings (September<lb/>
15 and 17) at 7:30 p.m. in the Studio<lb/>
Theatre, located next to McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium on the ECU campus.<lb/>
"Fiddler on the Roof" recently made<lb/>
history as the longest running play or<lb/>
musical in Broadway's history and was<lb/>
also the most popular musical presented<lb/>
by the East Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
The show offers a large variety of<lb/>
roles for men and women, including<lb/>
singers and dancers. Anyone is welcome<lb/>
to try out for the production which<lb/>
opens on October 18. for five<lb/>
performances. Those interested in the<lb/>
auditions should be prepared to sing a<lb/>
song of their own choice and bring their<lb/>
own sheet music. An accompanist will be<lb/>
provided.<lb/>
"Fiddler on the Roof" will be<lb/>
directed by Edgar R. Loessin, chairman<lb/>
of the Drama Department at ECU.<lb/>
ROY ACUFF headline Parent's Dav weekend.<lb/>
Remember, the automobile is not the only thing that can be recalled by the maker<lb/>
(NEA)<lb/>
oooooooooooooooooooocoooooooocaoo<lb/>
Around<lb/>
DIRECTOR EDGAR LOESSIN<lb/>
oooBBoeaaoooo<lb/>
Camp<lb/>
us<lb/>
POLITICAL SCIENCE<lb/>
MEETING-The faculty and students of<lb/>
the Department of Political Science will<lb/>
assemble in Room C-103 of the Social<lb/>
Studies Building on Monday, September<lb/>
18, 1972, at 7:00 p.m. This is the only<lb/>
general assembly planned for 1972-73,<lb/>
and it is important that everyone be<lb/>
present.<lb/>
All students in General College and<lb/>
others who have an interest in Political<lb/>
Science are invited to attend the<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
-STUDY SKILLS CLASS-Dr.<lb/>
George Weigand will teach the Study<lb/>
Skills Class fall quarter in Room 209<lb/>
Wright Building. The Class will begin<lb/>
Monday. September 18, at 1:00 p.m.<lb/>
Attendance is voluntary, and it is not<lb/>
necessary to register for this class.<lb/>
If you are unable to attend class the<lb/>
first day. you may come in a few days<lb/>
late, or if your schedule is such that you<lb/>
cannot attend the class every day. you<lb/>
may attend part-time.<lb/>
-ATTENTION ALL GIRLS<lb/>
INTERESTED IN<lb/>
INTRAMURALS-Co-eds interested in<lb/>
participating in ECU's intramural<lb/>
program this fall can obtain information<lb/>
in Memorial Gym, Room 105. Sports<lb/>
this quarter will include Tennis Singles,<lb/>
Flag Football, and Volleyball.<lb/>
Participants in flag football are<lb/>
required to attend clinics, September 14<lb/>
and 18. Compulsory clinic for tennis<lb/>
singles will be September 19. YOU<lb/>
MUST ATTEND CLINIC TO PLAY!<lb/>
Hope to see you there!<lb/>
Roy Acuff is. among other things, a<lb/>
member of the Country Music Hall of<lb/>
Fame, the "King of Country Music a<lb/>
highly successful business man. a<lb/>
home-spun philosopher, a singer, a<lb/>
fiddler, and master of the yo-yo and<lb/>
fiddle-bow balancing act.<lb/>
Mr. Acuff is the first artist in history<lb/>
to celebrate 34 years as member of the<lb/>
"Grand Old Opry<lb/>
The man who is perhaps most famous<lb/>
for such monumentally important<lb/>
country song standards as "YVabash<lb/>
Cannonball" and "The Great Spectled<lb/>
Bird never sang professionally until he<lb/>
was almost 30 years old.<lb/>
Born in Maynardsville, Union County,<lb/>
East Tennessee. Acuff grew up with<lb/>
sports potential and ambitii . A<lb/>
three-letter man in high school in<lb/>
Knoxville, he took a fling at professional<lb/>
baseball, only to suffer repeated bouts<lb/>
with sunstroke.<lb/>
The last such incident left him with<lb/>
hospital time on his hands, and an<lb/>
opportunity to learn to play the fiddle.<lb/>
"I had to pick me out a new career<lb/>
he said. The career was inspired by his<lb/>
father, a missionary Baptist minister and<lb/>
MlVlV AND<lb/>
CLrStOF 'H.<lb/>
 <lb/>
WIN<lb/>
local lawyer, who also played fiddle and<lb/>
collected recordl of mountain fiddle<lb/>
songs.<lb/>
Acuff joined a medicine show that<lb/>
was traveling through Virginia and East<lb/>
Tenneatee, when he did his first<lb/>
professional entertaining Thia was in<lb/>
1932. The medicine ahow experience lad<lb/>
to his first recording in 1934. about the<lb/>
same time he began UIUjin on WNOX<lb/>
and WROL in Knoxvill.<lb/>
Four years later, he moved to<lb/>
Nashville to join the 'Opry where he's<lb/>
been a regular ever since. He brought<lb/>
along his Smokey Mountain Boys (then<lb/>
called the Crazy Tennesseansi, and has<lb/>
had most of them with him since that<lb/>
date.<lb/>
Acuff is. perhaps, best known for his<lb/>
consistent entertaining of troops abroad.<lb/>
During the Berlin airlift of 1949, he was<lb/>
there with his troupe. He has entertained<lb/>
under hot war conditions in Korea, in<lb/>
Santo Domingo, in Vietnam and<lb/>
elsewhere.<lb/>
Acuff headlines Parents' Day<lb/>
activities. Saturday, September 16,<lb/>
1972. Whooping and stomping begin at<lb/>
2.00 on the ECU Mall. Admission is free.<lb/>
756 0088 ? PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
STARTS SUNDAY!<lb/>
<lb/>
THE MOST PROVOCATIVE LOVE STORY<lb/>
OF OUR TIME. THE LOVE STORY OF A PRIEST.<lb/>
A love storyJH. that, will shock you.<lb/>
Robert j Xauren<lb/>
rorster Hutton<lb/>
"Pieces<lb/>
of Dreams"<lb/>
SHOWS DAILY AT 2 4 6 8<lb/>
S.75 MON THRU FRI. 1 30 TIL 2 P.M<lb/>
ACRES OF FREE PARKING<lb/>
NEED A LIFT ?<lb/>
Try Firtt Presbylerun Church on Sundays<lb/>
(or the Church of your choice)<lb/>
Corner S. Elm and E Fourteenth Streets<lb/>
Morning Worship - 9 00 A 11 00 ? jn.<lb/>
Church School 945 a.m<lb/>
Plftor - Rev R R Gammon<lb/>
Campus Minister - Rev Jon Miller<lb/>
Presbyterian Church Bui operates<lb/>
through campus 9 30 A 10:30 a i<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
NOW THRU<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
LEE VAN CLEEF IN<lb/>
"RETURN OF SABATA'<lb/>
DELIVERY 7 DAYS A<lb/>
WEEK FROM 5-11 PM<lb/>
TRY OUR<lb/>
LASAGNE DINNER!<lb/>
SALAD A ROLLS INCLUDED.<lb/>
529 Cotanche Phone 752-7483.<lb/>
<lb/>
This Continental<lb/>
? Dual position caliper ? Chrome moly alloy<lb/>
brake levers ,reei frame<lb/>
? 10-tpeed. 33 to 100<lb/>
gear<lb/>
ARMY SURPLUS<lb/>
Complete line of Fatigues.<lb/>
Navy Peacoats and Pants, and<lb/>
Knapsacks 515 Oickmton Avr<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
If you need work while in school mm. long hair no pro bem<lb/>
Please call 752-4479 Mon<lb/>
between 9e.rn1 p.m.<lb/>
k<lb/>
r ? l! <lb/>
At WACHOVIA'S 10th Street Branch<lb/>
Come into our University Office and let us help you with<lb/>
your banking needs We are located (for your convenience)<lb/>
next to the 10th Street Post Office.<lb/>
To acquaint you with our branch office, we invite you to<lb/>
come in &amp; register for the Schwinn Super Sport we will be<lb/>
giving away on Sept. 22.<lb/>
We look forward to meeting and helping you.<lb/>
WACHOVIA<lb/>
BANK &amp; TRUST COMPANY, N.A<lb/>
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation<lb/>
Member Federal Reserve System<lb/>
 W <lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039640_0004"/><lb/>
.1,1<lb/>
(6 Corner<lb/>
-applications Applications are<lb/>
now being accepted for Publications<lb/>
Board, Review Board. Honor Council,<lb/>
and University Board in the SGA office,<lb/>
room 303 of Wright Annex Deadline is<lb/>
Tuesday, September 19.<lb/>
Applications are also being accepted<lb/>
for class officers and SGA Lesiglature in<lb/>
the sc office, room 303 of Wright<lb/>
Annex. Headline is Friday, September<lb/>
22.<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
schedule for screening applicants is as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
Publications BoardSept. 19<lb/>
Review Bu.rdSept. 20<lb/>
Honor CouncilSept. 21<lb/>
University Board Sept. 25<lb/>
ADVERTISING CORNER<lb/>
BUS SCHEDULE<lb/>
SOCIAL SCIENCE<lb/>
MINGES<lb/>
LI.IKI) HEALTH<lb/>
SOCIAL SCIENCE<lb/>
MINGES<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH<lb/>
SOCIAL SCIENCE<lb/>
MINGES<lb/>
M.l.lF.n HF.ALTH<lb/>
SOCIAL SCIENCE<lb/>
Greek Gossip<lb/>
I'he East Carolina Panhelleme<lb/>
cordially invites all student women to<lb/>
participate in the 1972 Formal Fall<lb/>
Rush. The members of the eight national<lb/>
sororities will be present at Convocation<lb/>
on I'uesday, September 19th at 7:00 in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium with displays,<lb/>
speakers, and refreshments to introduce<lb/>
the Greek way of life and explain the<lb/>
procedures for participating in formal<lb/>
rush. It is essential that all women<lb/>
interested in attending the rush parties<lb/>
and activities be present to receive the<lb/>
application forms and rush rules which<lb/>
will only be given out at this time.<lb/>
Convocation is the first step toward<lb/>
the rush week in October full of new<lb/>
faces, new places and parties , and a<lb/>
whole lot of fun. Rush week ends and<lb/>
then begins sorority life which provides a<lb/>
basis for women with common goals to<lb/>
combine their education and campus<lb/>
activites in an atmosphere of lasting<lb/>
friendship. The experience of going<lb/>
through rush is worthwhile and all Greek<lb/>
women hope that it will begin for all<lb/>
interested women this coming Tuesday<lb/>
at Convocation.<lb/>
r:?:&amp;<lb/>
ROOM TELEPHONES<lb/>
are available in five dorms-<lb/>
Scott Belk<lb/>
Tyler Clement<lb/>
Umstead<lb/>
fand courtsidc rooms of four others<lb/>
10 minutes till the hour<lb/>
5 minutes till the hour<lb/>
On the hour<lb/>
10 minutes after the hour<lb/>
IS minutes after the hour<lb/>
20 minutes after the hour<lb/>
Every half hour<lb/>
25 minutes till the hour<lb/>
20 minutes till the hour<lb/>
10 minutes till the hour<lb/>
REBEL seeks<lb/>
nude, writers<lb/>
-ATTENTION NEED EXTRA<lb/>
CASH?The Rebel ECU's fine arts<lb/>
magazine needs a nude model (female)<lb/>
for one of its projects in photography.<lb/>
The photo will be done in high contrast<lb/>
color so the face and form will not be<lb/>
recognizable to any puritan friends or<lb/>
relatives you might fear to arouse.<lb/>
If you think your body can enhance<lb/>
the artist's eye, flesh your way over to<lb/>
215 Wright Annex, between 4 and 5<lb/>
p.m. Monday through Thursday, to leave<lb/>
you name and address andor telephone<lb/>
number.<lb/>
There is a way for creative people to<lb/>
make a little extra money without really<lb/>
trying. All you have to do is present the<lb/>
staff of "The Rebel" your works of great<lb/>
talent. We are looking for anything in<lb/>
the way of short stories, essays, poetry,<lb/>
and art work. If your work is used, we<lb/>
are prepared to pay eight to ten dollars<lb/>
for a short story or essay, and fifty cents<lb/>
a line for poetry (subject to the length of<lb/>
the line, of course). Additional<lb/>
arrangements will be worked out for art<lb/>
work. If you feel you have the slightest<lb/>
bit of talent, don't be shy. Bring your<lb/>
work up to the Rebel office.<lb/>
JOB OFFERS<lb/>
Needed Student with cat to deliver Fountainheed on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday afternoon.<lb/>
Student to manage small business. Nc selling Short hours<lb/>
$300-600month Write INF. Box 508, Boulder, Colo 80302<lb/>
Include a few personal details.<lb/>
MISC FOR SALE<lb/>
Sales Equatorial telescope with full equipment and magnification<lb/>
ranging from 45x 554x 80mm objective 910mm focal distance<lb/>
Contact Myron Jarman in 408 B Bolk<lb/>
Spinet Piano Bargain Wanted responsible person to take over spinet<lb/>
piano. Can be seen locally Write Credit Manager. PO Box 241.<lb/>
McClellanville, South Carolina 29458<lb/>
Fender Mustang Guitar and Fonder amp with 2 speakers. $175 00<lb/>
A .eal bargain Cal 752 7483 Ask for Bob<lb/>
AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE<lb/>
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752 7859<lb/>
Movie Review<lb/>
n<lb/>
Fritz" exploits violence<lb/>
By tOWEL KNOUFF<lb/>
Sts'r Wnti'i<lb/>
See violence! See perversions! See lots<lb/>
of bleep-bleeping! See the Air Force<lb/>
bomb the ghetto and more.<lb/>
That's what the film previews claim<lb/>
for "Fritz the Cat And if that's what<lb/>
you want to see, then that is what you<lb/>
see when you go to this movie.<lb/>
Fritz begins as any clean cut girl crazy<lb/>
guy, uh, cat might begin in a small city<lb/>
park with two other girl-seeking cats.<lb/>
Girls they find, but at first they are<lb/>
put down by the girls for a crow. But<lb/>
when the crow puts down the girls, Fritz<lb/>
makes out. He takes not just one, but all<lb/>
three girls to a buddy's pad where he<lb/>
balls them in the bathtub. This soon<lb/>
develops into a full-fledged orgy.<lb/>
Then enter the pigs no disrespect<lb/>
intended these law officers are really<lb/>
pigs. They come to Fritz's friend's house<lb/>
on a tip there are a bunch of kids taking<lb/>
dope there. But when they bust into the<lb/>
place, they don t have time to look for<lb/>
dope because of the orgiastic activities.<lb/>
In the confusion, Fritz manages to<lb/>
escape and thus becomes a fugitive from<lb/>
the law. He returns briefly to his room at<lb/>
the big city university and spends time<lb/>
debating the pros and cons of study.<lb/>
After reaching no conclusions<lb/>
whatsoever, he sets fire to his notes,<lb/>
which seems to spread everywhere.<lb/>
Fritz next appears in the big city<lb/>
ghetto where he visits a bar normally<lb/>
patronized only by crows. After making<lb/>
friends with one pool-playing crow, Fritz<lb/>
nearly blows the whole thing by calling<lb/>
the bartender "boy Saved from<lb/>
destruction by his new friend, the two?a<lb/>
cat and a crow together, would you<lb/>
believe it head across town to the pad<lb/>
 of one of the crow's "sisters<lb/>
On the way, Fritz again becomes<lb/>
entangled with the law by stealing a car.<lb/>
After a thrilling cross town race, Fritz<lb/>
runs the car off a bridge and the crow<lb/>
saves his life. They make it to their<lb/>
destination.<lb/>
Here Fritz gets high on reefers and<lb/>
talks the entire population of the ghetto<lb/>
into revolution. While the pigs and the<lb/>
air force are putting down the<lb/>
revolution, Fritz hides in an alley,<lb/>
narrowly escaping capture and even<lb/>
death.<lb/>
'I he next morning, Fritz's old<lb/>
girlfriend from the bathtub scene finds<lb/>
him hiding in a trash can. She talks him<lb/>
into leaving the city and going west.<lb/>
After a couple of days driving, Fritz<lb/>
has had it with this chick. Their car runs<lb/>
out of gas; Fritz goes for help, but<lb/>
doesn't return. Instead he gets involved<lb/>
with a group of bomb nuts who are out<lb/>
to destroy the establishment. Fritz helps<lb/>
them with one joh. While he sits<lb/>
watching the fuse burn down, his only<lb/>
words are "Far out<lb/>
So ends Fritz's career as a bomber,<lb/>
but not his career as a cat.<lb/>
The ads call 'Fritz the Cat" the<lb/>
world's first X rated cartoon. There is no<lb/>
doubt it qualifies for an X rating, but<lb/>
one may wonder about the billing as a<lb/>
cartoon.<lb/>
Fritz is funny; life is funny, especially<lb/>
life in the big city. But Fritz is also just<lb/>
as serious as life is.<lb/>
If you go see this movie, you can go<lb/>
for one or two reasons-sex or laughs. If<lb/>
sex is your reason for going, you may as<lb/>
well go to the nearest public bathroom<lb/>
and look at the dirty pictures on the<lb/>
wall. Or you can go see a somewhat<lb/>
funny movie and take a look at life<lb/>
today from a cat's eye view. Don't let<lb/>
the X rating scare you away. Fritz has<lb/>
more to say than "Bleep-bleep<lb/>
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Still viewing a big year<lb/>
Coaches install new soccer drills<lb/>
?<lb/>
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)<lb/>
GETTING HIS KICKS: ECU hooter Harry HartofHis<lb/>
gets in a lew kicks in Wednesday's practice session as the<lb/>
Hues prepare to host Carolina September 25. Defending<lb/>
in the goal is Kick Lindsay.<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Soccer practice at ECU<lb/>
has taken on a new look<lb/>
this year as the Bucs busily<lb/>
prepare for the season<lb/>
opener September 25<lb/>
against Carolina.<lb/>
Each day between 4 and<lb/>
6 p.m head coach John<lb/>
Lovstedt and his assistant,<lb/>
Ed Wolcott, may be seen<lb/>
on the practice field<lb/>
putting their players<lb/>
through the mill. But<lb/>
instead of the usual wind<lb/>
sprints, push-ups and other<lb/>
calesthenics, a new twist<lb/>
has been added to the<lb/>
drills.<lb/>
Not a single exercise<lb/>
performed by the squad is<lb/>
done without a soccer ball.<lb/>
Each player has been<lb/>
issued his own ball and is<lb/>
responsible for its care.<lb/>
MORE FAMILIAR<lb/>
"This way, the player<lb/>
learns to associate with the<lb/>
ball more, and it helps him<lb/>
become more familiar with<lb/>
the proper fundamentals<lb/>
said Wolcott. "He learns to<lb/>
eat, sleep, drink and love<lb/>
with the ball, and it<lb/>
becomes a part of him "<lb/>
Wolcott, who joins<lb/>
Lovstedt's staff for the<lb/>
first time this fall, should<lb/>
be pretty familiar with the<lb/>
system used by many<lb/>
professional teams here<lb/>
and abroad but not so<lb/>
much in colleges.<lb/>
It was at a "football"<lb/>
camp last summer that the<lb/>
ECU assistant learned<lb/>
these drills. The camps was<lb/>
coached by one of the<lb/>
modern era soccer greats.<lb/>
Dittmar f ramer of<lb/>
Germany, who has<lb/>
coached World Cup<lb/>
champions and several<lb/>
Olympic teams.<lb/>
Since practice began at<lb/>
ECU two weeks ago, the<lb/>
drills have caught on so<lb/>
Against Salukis<lb/>
Bucs seek number two Saturday<lb/>
Now that the Pirates<lb/>
have disposed of<lb/>
conference foe VMI in the<lb/>
opener Saturday, there is a<lb/>
more difficult task ahead,<lb/>
that of stopping Southern<lb/>
Illinois Saturday night in<lb/>
the Ficklen Stadium debut<lb/>
for 1972.<lb/>
The Salukis are tough,<lb/>
as they have 34 lettermen<lb/>
back from the 1971 team<lb/>
that finished 6-4. Included<lb/>
among these veterans are<lb/>
15 starters who<lb/>
spearheaded wins over<lb/>
Arkansas State, Central<lb/>
Michigan and four other<lb/>
squads.<lb/>
ECU head coach Sonny<lb/>
Randle sums up the<lb/>
opposition by saying SIU<lb/>
is "big, strong and a very<lb/>
physical club one that<lb/>
Runner sees Olympics<lb/>
With the 1972 Olympics<lb/>
just completed, few people<lb/>
are looking ahead to the<lb/>
1976 games in Montreal.<lb/>
Among those that are,<lb/>
however, is Ed Hereford, a<lb/>
former ECU runner who<lb/>
has finally found his event<lb/>
and has been working on<lb/>
the marathon run for<lb/>
several months.<lb/>
A St. Albens, W Va.<lb/>
junior majoring in science<lb/>
education, Hereford<lb/>
entered the Olympic trials<lb/>
in Oregon last July and<lb/>
finished 17th of 105<lb/>
starters with a fine time of<lb/>
2:27:28. Only 66 runners<lb/>
could complete the<lb/>
grueling 26 mile, 385 yard<lb/>
course in 75 degree<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
The top four in the race<lb/>
were able to enter the<lb/>
Munich games, and all had<lb/>
to be in under two hours,<lb/>
30 minutes.<lb/>
Hereford had earlier<lb/>
qualified for the trials at<lb/>
Verther, Germany, where<lb/>
he finished in 2:29:18. He<lb/>
has also competed at<lb/>
Japan, Okinawa, Belgium,<lb/>
France, and about 10 of<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
LOVE TO RUN'<lb/>
"I love to run in these<lb/>
races because it involves<lb/>
travel said the<lb/>
25-year-old athlete who<lb/>
began running in high<lb/>
school some eight years<lb/>
ago and carried the habit<lb/>
through his years in the<lb/>
United States Air Force.<lb/>
Hereford, who ran cross<lb/>
country for coach Bill<lb/>
Carson at ECU his<lb/>
freshman year, decided to<lb/>
leave the sport last year<lb/>
because the distance<lb/>
involved wasn't suited to<lb/>
his talents.<lb/>
It was not a<lb/>
personality problem<lb/>
between player and<lb/>
coach Carson said. "He<lb/>
just has trouble<lb/>
maintaining a fast pace<lb/>
over a six-mile cross<lb/>
country course. I think he<lb/>
has found his own level<lb/>
Hereford has much<lb/>
respect from his former<lb/>
coach, who also feels he<lb/>
"has the mental makeup<lb/>
of a fine distance runner.<lb/>
His outlook is tremendous.<lb/>
He will run and pay the<lb/>
price<lb/>
As fine an athlete as<lb/>
Hereford is, he has<lb/>
impressed Carson and his<lb/>
peers with his academic<lb/>
ability, as well.<lb/>
FINE STUDENT'<lb/>
"Ed is a fine young man<lb/>
and an exceptionally fine<lb/>
student the coach<lb/>
claims. "He is very<lb/>
intelligent and interested<lb/>
in his education<lb/>
In the immediate future<lb/>
for Hereford is the 30<lb/>
Kilometer Championship<lb/>
in New York, October 15,<lb/>
where he will run for the<lb/>
North Carolina Track<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
There, as he puts it, he<lb/>
can compete against<lb/>
"people with the same<lb/>
training schedules, the<lb/>
same problems and,<lb/>
mostly, the same desire to<lb/>
win<lb/>
But it is all a part of his<lb/>
preparation for the<lb/>
Montreal games.<lb/>
Hereford feels if he can<lb/>
continue his practice and<lb/>
run about 100 miles a<lb/>
week, he should be able to<lb/>
get his time below 2:25<lb/>
and number among the<lb/>
top five runners<lb/>
competing.<lb/>
And Carson agrees that<lb/>
it is entirely possible. If so,<lb/>
Hereford may become the<lb/>
first ECU alumnus with a<lb/>
chance to pick up Olympic<lb/>
Gold.<lb/>
on paper appears stronger<lb/>
than the Pirates.<lb/>
SIU employs a multiple<lb/>
offense with a split end,<lb/>
guided by quarterback<lb/>
Larry Perkins, a capable<lb/>
but inexperienced field<lb/>
general who saw little<lb/>
action in 1971.<lb/>
There is an abundance<lb/>
of receivers on hand.<lb/>
However, the Salukis are<lb/>
hard pressed to replace the<lb/>
graduated Lionel Antoine<lb/>
who was named to several<lb/>
All-America teams. He<lb/>
began his career as a tight<lb/>
end and finished as an<lb/>
offensive tackle.<lb/>
RUNNING WILD<lb/>
In the running<lb/>
department, the Salukis<lb/>
are led by George Loukas,<lb/>
who ran for 1,052 yards<lb/>
and caught 16 passes for<lb/>
another 241 yards last fall.<lb/>
He scored 13 times and<lb/>
figures to add many more<lb/>
scores this year.<lb/>
Backing up Loukas will<lb/>
be Thomas Thompson and<lb/>
Sam Reed, last year's<lb/>
number two and three<lb/>
rushers.<lb/>
Defensively, the Salukis<lb/>
have much experience as<lb/>
10 starters return.<lb/>
"This is an exceptional<lb/>
team we will be facing<lb/>
Saturday night Randle<lb/>
asserts. "They have a real<lb/>
fine bunch of great<lb/>
athletes<lb/>
But there is one<lb/>
problem that might plague<lb/>
the Bucs in preparation for<lb/>
the game, that of<lb/>
overconfidence after such<lb/>
a fine performance in the<lb/>
30-3 win Saturday.<lb/>
Randle, however, disclaims<lb/>
the possibility.<lb/>
NO OVERCONFIDENCE<lb/>
We can't be<lb/>
overconfident for such a<lb/>
good team as Southern<lb/>
Illinois he says.<lb/>
One thing the Bucs<lb/>
definitely have going for<lb/>
them as the home opener<lb/>
approaches is the memory<lb/>
of the 1970 homecoming<lb/>
game won by SIU, 14-12.<lb/>
In that one, the Bucs<lb/>
trailed 14-0 in the first<lb/>
half, but nearly tied the<lb/>
game in the final minutes.<lb/>
Two-point conversion<lb/>
attempts failed after each<lb/>
ECU score.<lb/>
This year. Southern<lb/>
Illinois will try to take a<lb/>
3-2 lead in the series<lb/>
between the teams. The<lb/>
Salukis opened with a<lb/>
31-13 win in 1966, but the<lb/>
Bucs have since won, 21-8<lb/>
in 1967 and 17-3 in 1969.<lb/>
The Bucs will be<lb/>
without the services of<lb/>
Terry Cumberworth and<lb/>
John Williams, two tackles<lb/>
who have been injured.<lb/>
Defensive standout<lb/>
Danny Kepley has also<lb/>
been injured but has<lb/>
responded well to<lb/>
treatment.<lb/>
Perhaps the only change<lb/>
for this game not brought<lb/>
about by injuries has been<lb/>
the switch of Carlester<lb/>
Crumpler and Les<lb/>
Strayhorn to the starting<lb/>
backfield.<lb/>
However, Randle notes<lb/>
that he is still impressed<lb/>
with Don Schink and<lb/>
Jimmy Howe, the other<lb/>
main running backs.<lb/>
This week's sessions<lb/>
have been used mainly to<lb/>
iron out last week's<lb/>
mistakes in preparation for<lb/>
the Parents' Night battle,<lb/>
which is scheduled to<lb/>
begin Saturday at 7:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Net title<lb/>
set here<lb/>
The Minges Coliseum<lb/>
tennis courts will be the<lb/>
scene Sunday for the<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Tennis<lb/>
Association championship<lb/>
between Greenville, the<lb/>
eastern titlist, and<lb/>
Durham, the western<lb/>
champ.<lb/>
Greenville, which had a<lb/>
4-2 regular season, will be<lb/>
the underdog for the 2<lb/>
p.m. match. Durham<lb/>
finished 7-0 and the<lb/>
Western Division has<lb/>
dominated the event the<lb/>
past few years.<lb/>
Helpers<lb/>
wanted<lb/>
Pirate soccer coach<lb/>
John Lovstedt has<lb/>
announced that he needs<lb/>
help in the form of team<lb/>
managers, scorekeepers,<lb/>
timers and ball chasers for<lb/>
the coming season.<lb/>
Any interested student<lb/>
may apply at Lovstedt's<lb/>
office in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Coeds are not only<lb/>
permitted but urged to<lb/>
seek such a position.<lb/>
Varsity tennis tryouts<lb/>
will begin Monday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Interested students<lb/>
should apply at a meeting<lb/>
at 4 p.m. in room 144<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. This will<lb/>
be a rebuilding year for<lb/>
the Bues.<lb/>
?<lb/>
I WOULDN'T LET A MAN<lb/>
in my room . . . unless ?<lb/>
he bad a refrigerator<lb/>
Ym cm rMt mm frta<lb/>
UNITED RENT-ALL<lb/>
Fr? Delivery<lb/>
f Mjm I<lb/>
well that Lovstedt is still<lb/>
tinging optimism for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"These drills have had<lb/>
much carry-over value for<lb/>
the players he said. "We<lb/>
.ire now a much better<lb/>
team at fundamentals than<lb/>
we were before, because<lb/>
the players can apply the<lb/>
exercises to game<lb/>
situations<lb/>
MENTAL PRESSURE<lb/>
Lovstedt noted that<lb/>
there is some kind of<lb/>
mental pressure at all<lb/>
times in a game, and such<lb/>
instances are stressed in<lb/>
the drills.<lb/>
"It depends on what the<lb/>
coach happens to be<lb/>
emphasizing at the time,<lb/>
but we have all our drills<lb/>
in which there is pressure<lb/>
on the player to perform,<lb/>
whether it is pressure from<lb/>
the clock, pressure from<lb/>
another player or pressure<lb/>
of a restricted area<lb/>
Lovstedt said.<lb/>
The coach emphasized<lb/>
that the Pirates will follow<lb/>
international trends and<lb/>
stick to a more controlled<lb/>
offense this year. This will<lb/>
involve more passing than<lb/>
in the past, and there is no<lb/>
doubt that these drills will<lb/>
improve the passing game.<lb/>
However, at the start of<lb/>
the sessions, there was<lb/>
little passing and more<lb/>
individual work. In fact,<lb/>
SC FOOTBALL<lb/>
PIRATES 1 0<lb/>
Wm &amp; Mary 1 0<lb/>
Davidson 0 0<lb/>
Richmond 0 0<lb/>
Appalachian St. 0 0<lb/>
The Citadel 0 0<lb/>
Va Military 0 1<lb/>
Furman 0 1<lb/>
THIS WEEK s GAMES<lb/>
Citadel at Appalachian<lb/>
Davidson at Va Military<lb/>
the team did not holri its<lb/>
first scrimmage until last<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"The advantage in this<lb/>
Lovstedt asserts, "is that<lb/>
the players get so lick of<lb/>
i he drills and exercises<lb/>
that they are looking<lb/>
forward to the scrimmage<lb/>
That way. vm- can get the<lb/>
best out of them. They are<lb/>
chomping at the bit to<lb/>
scrimmage<lb/>
Another advantage in<lb/>
holding fewer scrimmages<lb/>
is that the players have<lb/>
more time to work on the<lb/>
basics and build up to a<lb/>
stronger team game<lb/>
As the season<lb/>
approaches. Wolcott ? ?.<lb/>
that another new phase of<lb/>
these drills must be<lb/>
introduced to the players<lb/>
Bach drill leading up to ;i<lb/>
game, he says, will be<lb/>
harder than the previous<lb/>
drill, and the day before a<lb/>
game, the team will go all<lb/>
out<lb/>
"All this has been tried<lb/>
and proven before, so we<lb/>
know it can work, "<lb/>
Wolcott asserts. "But we<lb/>
have to get the players<lb/>
used to the idea that the<lb/>
old days of a light<lb/>
workout just before ?<lb/>
game are past<lb/>
ANALYSIS CHART<lb/>
Another item employed<lb/>
by the coaching staff is an<lb/>
analysis chart of each<lb/>
player, based upon the<lb/>
drills.<lb/>
"We know pretty much<lb/>
where we are with each<lb/>
man. We can put the<lb/>
players into proper<lb/>
positions, and we can<lb/>
work on the strengths and<lb/>
weaknesses of each man<lb/>
Wolcott said.<lb/>
Dave Schaler, a veteran<lb/>
on the squad, noted that<lb/>
although the drills are<lb/>
much different from those<lb/>
employed by many teams,<lb/>
"they are easy to catch<lb/>
onto, and they should<lb/>
really help build us up<lb/>
"We can apply them to<lb/>
game situations, and it will<lb/>
help because last year we<lb/>
really missed the basics<lb/>
Schaler added.<lb/>
With the drills helping<lb/>
the squad as much as they<lb/>
seem to be, and with a<lb/>
slightly better team that<lb/>
Lovstedt had anticipated<lb/>
just a few weeks ago, it<lb/>
appears certain that ECU<lb/>
will have its first winning<lb/>
soccer team in years.<lb/>
But the test will come<lb/>
in that opener against<lb/>
Carolina, a game in which<lb/>
the Bucs go after their first<lb/>
win of the series with the<lb/>
Tar Heels.<lb/>
ON THE BALL: Tom O'Shea does his '??" oho,? 0y RoM Mlnn?<lb/>
dail round of pushup on the soccer done vtith a hall. Wist an I coach Ed<lb/>
ball. ECU'S practice is unique on the Woleotl installed (he new drills three<lb/>
soccer field this ear as eer exercise is weeks ago.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039640_0006"/><lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free<lb/>
University seeks to broaden<lb/>
educational horizons<lb/>
Vftei reading toda s lead stor on .1<lb/>
proposal to pul .1 bil ol E U in Japan,<lb/>
we can only wonder where il will .ill end<lb/>
I rom its humble beginnings .is .1 little<lb/>
redbrick training school to Ms present<lb/>
Universit) status, E( I has leai eda little<lb/>
ahead oi itself into ideas and dreams that<lb/>
have kept the school constantly seeking<lb/>
new goals and new needs to meet<lb/>
Undeniably, much of the credit foi<lb/>
the present status ol Ici must be<lb/>
granted to its long-time President and<lb/>
current Chancelloi Di I eo u Jenkins<lb/>
Despite the reams of trite commentary<lb/>
0 n his achiev ements and t heir<lb/>
significance to the school, Dr Jenkins<lb/>
has demonstrable moved the University<lb/>
forward in stature and sn le.<lb/>
While tins University also undeniably<lb/>
lags behind others in promoting new<lb/>
solutions to very ordinary problems,<lb/>
1(1 has rarely tacked the kind of vision<lb/>
that provides new educational<lb/>
opportunities 1 'he name and energy of ECU<lb/>
has spread to .ill parts of the state uiul<lb/>
nation, even to other lands.<lb/>
Football loses,not makes,money<lb/>
Everybody knows that football is the<lb/>
big money maker, right?<lb/>
Wrong Simple addition and<lb/>
subtraction oi figures supplied by the<lb/>
Athletic Department shows that football<lb/>
i not "the big money-maker<lb/>
Unfortunately, football loses more<lb/>
money than is even spent on all other<lb/>
ath activities combined.<lb/>
Let's take the basic football budget<lb/>
for 1971 of $305,000 This was 51 of<lb/>
the overall athletic budget, and<lb/>
probably somewhat more than, say, the<lb/>
School of Business budget. Add to this<lb/>
direct cost, the expense of yearly bond<lb/>
Another view<lb/>
payment for Fickien Stadium, around<lb/>
$99,000 yearly, footed by the students,<lb/>
We must also consider the hidden cost of<lb/>
granting reduced tuition to out-of-state<lb/>
players, another $15-20.000. These add<lb/>
up to the tidy sum of $419,000, or<lb/>
about $11 per game for every ECU<lb/>
student in attendance.<lb/>
But let's not ignore ticket sales, which<lb/>
amounted to $104,000 in 1970. This<lb/>
puts the program only $315,000 in the<lb/>
red. We invite rebuttal to these figures,<lb/>
because we'd rather not admit that ECU<lb/>
football is such a costly venture. (Next<lb/>
week. Athletes Don't Get Special<lb/>
T reatmen t "I<lb/>
Politics spoil spirit of Olympics<lb/>
By DANIEL WHITFORD that  iaa JL  .T  ,<lb/>
By DANIEL WHITFORD<lb/>
The "Olympic Spirit if ever it<lb/>
existed, was smothered in Munich,<lb/>
Germany, by a series of destructively<lb/>
narrowrmnded acts ranging from naked<lb/>
racism to murderous insanity. Born of<lb/>
feeble minds, such purposeless acts have<lb/>
dragged the microcosmic world of the<lb/>
Olympics into the same pitifully filthy-<lb/>
pit of cold politics and unmerciful<lb/>
inhumanity occupied by the<lb/>
non-Olympic world.<lb/>
The games of the Olympiad began<lb/>
only after a racially mixed Rhodesian<lb/>
team had been barred from participation<lb/>
by an International Olympic Committee<lb/>
which meekly bowed to the "reverse<lb/>
racist" threats of an Olympic boycott by<lb/>
black African nations. The athletes of<lb/>
Rhodesia, black and white, thus were<lb/>
denied the right to compete in Munich<lb/>
simply because of naked political<lb/>
blackmail aimed at a white supremacist<lb/>
government completely beyond the<lb/>
athletes' control.<lb/>
Soon after the games began, it became<lb/>
sorrowfully apparent that politics would<lb/>
also play a disgraceful role in<lb/>
determining the games' medal winners.<lb/>
Judges and officials from Cuba and the<lb/>
Iron Curtain countries arrived at<lb/>
decisions so outrageously biased in favor<lb/>
of communist athletes that a dozen of<lb/>
them were either officially reprimanded<lb/>
or banned from the Olympics. The fact<lb/>
that many clearly superior athletes from<lb/>
the L" S.A and Western Europe were<lb/>
forced to sacrifice hard-earned medals<lb/>
because of such dubious officiating isn't<lb/>
likely to be forgotten for years. Nor is it<lb/>
likely that such disgraceful slaps in the<lb/>
face of honest competition by the<lb/>
communist judges will promote the sense<lb/>
of trust and cooperation among nations<lb/>
that was intended when the Modern<lb/>
Olympics were begun.<lb/>
Two Americans who did win medals.<lb/>
however, behaved so distastefully at the<lb/>
medals presentation ceremony that they<lb/>
were properly banned forever from<lb/>
future Olympic competition by the<lb/>
I.O.C. As the "star Spangled Banner"<lb/>
was played and the "Stars and Stripes"<lb/>
were hoisted in their honor, Wayne<lb/>
Collett and Vince Matthews found ti<lb/>
desirable to inject the "politics of<lb/>
disrespect" into the ceremony,<lb/>
arrogantly chatting with one another.<lb/>
hands on hips, backs to the flag, as the<lb/>
stadium's 80.000 people from 134<lb/>
nations looked on in utter disgust.<lb/>
The worst came on Tuesday.<lb/>
September 5. The spirit of the Olympic-<lb/>
games was tragically shattered by the<lb/>
politics of ruthlessly insane murderers.<lb/>
The people of the world can now but<lb/>
grievously pay their respects to the<lb/>
eleven Israeli athletes and the German<lb/>
policeman whose lives were snuffed out<lb/>
by the stark hatred possessed by eight<lb/>
Arab madmen<lb/>
Will the spirit of the Olympic Games<lb/>
also be permanently snuffed out9 The<lb/>
Olympiads were meant to foster a great<lb/>
dream: a dream of benevolence,<lb/>
objectivity, and cooperation; of justice!<lb/>
respect, and friendship among nations.<lb/>
The participants' pursuit of human<lb/>
excellence was to be but a byproduct of<lb/>
their pursuit of this "Olympic Dream "<lb/>
Perhaps, however, the Olympics also<lb/>
foster a great sorrow. The terrible flaws<lb/>
which have marred the spirit of this<lb/>
year's microcosmic Olympic World may-<lb/>
be but the reflection of the tragic human<lb/>
weakensses which have marred the spirit<lb/>
of the non-olympian world since man's<lb/>
very beginning.<lb/>
fountAinhead<lb/>
Philip E. Wilhams<lb/>
Editor-in-chief<lb/>
Mick Godwin<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Tim Wehner<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
News<lb/>
Bo Perkins<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Bruce Parrish<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Sports n T<lb/>
1 Don Trausneck<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Fountainhead is published by the students of East Carolina University under the<lb/>
auspices of the Student Publications Board.<lb/>
rt<lb/>
OOMlNfr SOON!<lb/>
ANOTHER<lb/>
EAST ca?oimA OMNERSirv j<lb/>
campus ; V'aS<lb/>
On this spot X&amp; V<lb/>
B? DEDiCAT,ED<lb/>
IN JT ?<lb/>
197<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
Columnist claims bombs not effective<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
Warming Chinese-American relations,<lb/>
which weathered the bombing and<lb/>
mining of North Vietnam's supply lines,<lb/>
are chilling again.<lb/>
The interception of Chinese<lb/>
shipments, according to a CIA report,<lb/>
has soured U.S. relations with mainland<lb/>
China.<lb/>
The report reveals that Chinese<lb/>
freighters are successfully unloading an<lb/>
astonishing amount of supplies at hidden<lb/>
anchorages up and down the North<lb/>
Vietnam coast.<lb/>
The supplies pre unloaded on small<lb/>
barges and boats, which smuggle the war<lb/>
booty to shore. The ingenious Chinese,<lb/>
we have learned, even use huge<lb/>
waterproof plastic bigs to float supplies<lb/>
ashore.<lb/>
To disrupt Hanoi's supply line, the<lb/>
U.S. Seventh Fleet has interested some<lb/>
Chinese shipping. But such action,<lb/>
according to the CIA. has only prompted<lb/>
the Chinese to renew their pledges of<lb/>
support of North Vietnam.<lb/>
One strongly worded message of<lb/>
support reportedly was signed by<lb/>
Chairman Mao Tse-tung himself. Such a<lb/>
rare message from Mao has the force of<lb/>
being engraved on the great wall of<lb/>
China.<lb/>
The CIA report, furthermore, affirms<lb/>
our earlier report that heavy U S.<lb/>
bombing has failed to halt the flow of<lb/>
supplies across the network of rail lines,<lb/>
roads and trails that lead into North<lb/>
Vietnam.<lb/>
The CIA report claims more than half<lb/>
of the war material, which used to be<lb/>
shipped to North Vietnam before the<lb/>
bombing, is getting through. Even the<lb/>
Air Force, which has a vested interest in<lb/>
demonstrating its bombing raids are<lb/>
effective, acknowledges that more than a<lb/>
quarter of the former shipments are<lb/>
reaching North Vietnam.<lb/>
NIXON'S '76 STRATEGY<lb/>
White House aides tell us that<lb/>
President Nixon will not annoint Spiro<lb/>
Agnew as his successor in 1976 if the<lb/>
President is re-elected this fall. The<lb/>
President, say our sources, wants a wide<lb/>
open Republican convention in 1976.<lb/>
With this in mind, the President<lb/>
intends to give national exposure to<lb/>
several presidential prospects, including<lb/>
New York's Gov. Nelson Rockefeller,<lb/>
ex-Treasury Secretary John Connelly,<lb/>
cost-of-living czar Donald Rumsfeld and<lb/>
United Nations ambassador George<lb/>
Bush.<lb/>
The President is not likely to embrace<lb/>
liberal Illinois Senator Chuck Percy. But<lb/>
even if a Percy bandwagon begins to pick<lb/>
up steam, the President is expected to<lb/>
remain above an election fight.<lb/>
POW PREPARATIONS<lb/>
The date remains uncertain when the<lb/>
528 American prisoners of war in North<lb/>
Vietnam will return home. But the<lb/>
Nixon Administration has made sure it<lb/>
won't be caught unprepared when the<lb/>
prisoners are finally released.<lb/>
A special government task<lb/>
force using the code name "Operation<lb/>
Egress Recap has already set up<lb/>
medical centers around the country to<lb/>
receive the POWs. Once they arrive, each<lb/>
will be assigned a special counselor who<lb/>
has been thoroughly briefed on the<lb/>
prisoner's background from his eating<lb/>
habits to his sex life.<lb/>
The difficulty of readjustment is<lb/>
expected to vary widely. A team of<lb/>
doctors, who have made exhaustive<lb/>
JACK NDERSOlN<lb/>
studies of POW problems, have told the<lb/>
Pentagon that some POWs may be<lb/>
surprisingly healthy despite their ordeal.<lb/>
Others, say the doctors, will suffer from<lb/>
what is called the "concentration camp<lb/>
syndrome The symptoms include<lb/>
fatigue, fits of depression, memory loss<lb/>
and temporary impotence.<lb/>
The Defense Department has begun to<lb/>
brief families on what to expert when<lb/>
their imprisoned loved ones conic home.<lb/>
Wives are warned to expect a<lb/>
tremendous emotional letdown a few-<lb/>
weeks following the return. This will<lb/>
come once the wife realizes that her<lb/>
husband's presence does not solve all her<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
At the medical centers, care will be<lb/>
taken not to force the prisoners to<lb/>
readjust to American life too quickly.<lb/>
Bach prisoner will be allowed only a few<lb/>
phone calls, and his immediate family<lb/>
will be kepi at a distance until the<lb/>
prisoner has been thoroughly examined.<lb/>
Even after the prisoner is pronounced<lb/>
fit, the doctors will try to discourage a<lb/>
big homecoming. Studies show these<lb/>
affairs can be traumatic and impair the<lb/>
readjustment of an ex-prisoner<lb/>
POLITICAL POTPOURRI<lb/>
George McGovern has received more<lb/>
lip service than campaign funds from the<lb/>
unions that have endorsed him. The<lb/>
labor committee, which is trying to raise<lb/>
money for McGovern, has collected only<lb/>
$125,000 so far. Security around the<lb/>
President us so tight that the Secret<lb/>
Service now routinely excludes all<lb/>
casually dressed, long-haired young<lb/>
people whenever the President makes an<lb/>
appearance in public. The Secret Service<lb/>
says it is purging the long-hairs to<lb/>
protect the President, but the action also<lb/>
insures that the President is free of the<lb/>
young protestors who dogged his<lb/>
campaign in 1968.<lb/>
Because of the enthusiastic<lb/>
response to Fountainhead<lb/>
advertisements for staff members,<lb/>
the staff of Fountainhead will<lb/>
sponsor and lead a seminar for<lb/>
aspiring journalists.<lb/>
The seminar, composed of three<lb/>
90-minute sessions, will deal with<lb/>
the elements of newspaper<lb/>
operaUon, basic writing skills, and<lb/>
journalistic style. The sessions will<lb/>
be offered over a three week<lb/>
period, with the same lecture given<lb/>
on both Sunday and Thursday<lb/>
wm<lb/>
nights from 6:30 to 8:00, beginning<lb/>
September 17. All sessions will be<lb/>
held in the Fountainhead office,<lb/>
second floor Wright Building.<lb/>
Regular readers may notice<lb/>
something a bit different about<lb/>
today's edition. Anew typeface<lb/>
has been adopted for the body of<lb/>
the newsprint, and a corresponding<lb/>
photo CUtline typeface has been<lb/>
employed. For example, old style:<lb/>
l ountsinhesd e w style,<lb/>
Fountainhead. We would be glad to<lb/>
hear your opinions on the<lb/>
change.<lb/>
FORUM<lb/>
?tim<lb/>
o:?vvv.vv<lb/>
Questions schedule<lb/>
To Fountainhead<lb/>
Upon returning to ECU for a fourth<lb/>
consecutive fall. am reminded once<lb/>
again of a seemingly flagrant injustii ,? to<lb/>
the students. Why is that ECU Students<lb/>
go back to BhcOOl the earliest, get out<lb/>
the latest in the spring, and get the<lb/>
shortest vacation of many, if not all. of<lb/>
the major universities The only schools<lb/>
that return earlier are on the new<lb/>
semester system, and even they get out<lb/>
nearly a full month earlier in the spring.<lb/>
The fact that we get a total of 1 2 days<lb/>
(including weekends) for Thanksgiving<lb/>
and Easter breaks conbined seems<lb/>
merely token appeasement. Surely the<lb/>
students work hard enough during these<lb/>
6 months to warrant more than this<lb/>
piecemeal serving of a vacation.<lb/>
So be it that the Administration and<lb/>
the Board determine how many days<lb/>
during the year students will attend<lb/>
classes. Where is the SGA's voice in such<lb/>
matters? Can Rob Lusiana and the Si; <lb/>
look into this matter Surely the<lb/>
students will back any efforts you make<lb/>
to get us out of this "shortchanging the<lb/>
student symdrome Motivate students'<lb/>
We're getting ripped off!<lb/>
Sincerely, with desire to act,<lb/>
Tonv Gray<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
All students, faculty members, and<lb/>
administrators are urged to express their<lb/>
opinions in writing to the Forum<lb/>
The editorial page is an open forum<lb/>
where uch opinions may be published.<lb/>
Unsigned editorials reflect the<lb/>
"pinions of the editor-in-chief, and not<lb/>
necessarily those of the entire staff or<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
When writing to the Forum, the<lb/>
following procedure should be used:<lb/>
Letters should be concise and to the<lb/>
point.<lb/>
?Letters should be typed<lb/>
double-spaced, and should not exceed<lb/>
300 words.<lb/>
-Letters should be signed with the<lb/>
name of the author and other endorsers.<lb/>
Upon the request of the signees, their<lb/>
names may be withheld.<lb/>
Signed articles on this page reflect the<lb/>
"Pinions of the authors, and not<lb/>
necessarily those of Fountainhead or<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>
I<lb/>

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