<?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="00039661_0001"/>
-M-<lb/>
ountainhead<lb/>
a7c r?e rrtyf7 shall make you free'<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N CAROLINA<lb/>
TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1972<lb/>
VOLUME IV NUMBER 24<lb/>
Use of activity fees to finance Fine Arts<lb/>
scholarships deemed illegal by Att. Gen.<lb/>
Music receives $5000 grant<lb/>
By BRENDA PUGH<lb/>
Stall Writer<lb/>
Acting "ii recommendations of former<lb/>
Attorney-Advisor David B. SN?g, N.C.<lb/>
Attorney General Rohert Morgan has<lb/>
ruled that the use of $30,000 in student<lb/>
activity fees, designated to finance last<lb/>
spring's SGA Fine Arts Bill, "would be<lb/>
an iller use of such funds<lb/>
TV bill, passed in its final form in<lb/>
Sf .ember of last year, was to provide<lb/>
.iolarship funds for "any (art, music or<lb/>
drama) student who has need and<lb/>
talent according to Rob Luisana, SGA<lb/>
President.<lb/>
"It was intended to bring outstanding<lb/>
students in (to ECU) and to help those<lb/>
here in a drastic financial state<lb/>
explained Rick Atkinson, SGA Vice<lb/>
President<lb/>
SGA funds actually available<lb/>
amounted to $7,100 in September. The<lb/>
sum considered in May in Becky<lb/>
Engelman's original proposal was<lb/>
$30,000. Each department was to raise<lb/>
funds from outside sources, which would<lb/>
matched dollar for dollar by the SGA<lb/>
The legality of using student activity<lb/>
fees for scholarships was questioned in<lb/>
October, 1972, by Philip Williams,<lb/>
Fountainhead editor, and Tim Wehner,<lb/>
legislator.<lb/>
In response to their inquiry, David B.<lb/>
Stevens, at that time Attorney Advisor<lb/>
to the University, stated that the legality<lb/>
of the bill was doubtful for two reasons.<lb/>
First, the SGA is not authorized by<lb/>
North Carolina statutes to provide<lb/>
scholarships from state funds (student<lb/>
activity fees.) Secondly, the SGA<lb/>
Constitution provides that funds<lb/>
collected from the whole student body<lb/>
may not be allotted for the use of a few.<lb/>
Stevens used the "equal protection"<lb/>
clause Art. 3, Sec. 10.<lb/>
Andrew Vanone, then Deput<lb/>
Attorney, concurred with Stevens.<lb/>
Rick Atkinson stated, "We appreciate<lb/>
having Williams point out the<lb/>
unconstitutionality of using activity<lb/>
funds, after which we decided to use<lb/>
refrigerator funds<lb/>
In November, however, the State<lb/>
Auditor, requested that all SGA funds,<lb/>
including refrigerator receipts, be put<lb/>
into the same account. Therefore,<lb/>
according to Clifton Moore, refrigerator<lb/>
funds are also to be treated as state<lb/>
funds and are subject to the same<lb/>
regulations as student activity fees. They<lb/>
are not to be used by the SGA for<lb/>
scholarships.<lb/>
"We have a commitment to the three<lb/>
departments said Luisana, referring to<lb/>
art, music and drama. "We are going to<lb/>
honor that commitment to the amount<lb/>
agreed upon with SGA funds, not state<lb/>
funds<lb/>
The School of Music has received a<lb/>
$5,000 grant from the Z. Smith<lb/>
Reynolds Foundation of Winston-Salem<lb/>
The SGA is expected to match this sum<lb/>
by spring quarter, according to Dean<lb/>
Everett Pittman, chairman of the<lb/>
department. Eight to ten students are<lb/>
here on the grant expecting to use the<lb/>
SGA funds in the spring.<lb/>
SGA officials plan to meet this week<lb/>
with Clifton Moore, vice chancellor of<lb/>
business affaiK, to discuss the use of<lb/>
?frigertor funds to finance the<lb/>
commitment to the Music Department.<lb/>
Smith Bagley, president of the Z.<lb/>
Smith Reynolds Foundation, has given a<lb/>
grant of $5,000 to East Carolina<lb/>
University to support scholarships in the<lb/>
School of Mush<lb/>
The grant was made in response to a<lb/>
proposal presented to the Foundation by<lb/>
Dr. Everett Pittman, dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Music, and the Fine Arts<lb/>
Committee of the ECU Student<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
A unique feature of the proposal was<lb/>
that the SGA agreed to match<lb/>
dollar-for-dollar foundation funds to be<lb/>
used for scholarships in the fine arts.<lb/>
Commenting on the Reynolds grant.<lb/>
Dean Pittman said, "We are very grateful<lb/>
to the Foundation for these funds,<lb/>
which support us toward a solution to<lb/>
one of the most pressing problems in the<lb/>
School of .Music that of scholarships for<lb/>
gifted students<lb/>
The ECU School ot Musk is one of<lb/>
the largest in the Southeast, with a<lb/>
faculty of 43 and more than 350 majors,<lb/>
many of whom have come from other<lb/>
states.<lb/>
In addition to several choirs and<lb/>
bands, the school support the only<lb/>
symphony orchestra in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina and also presents operas and<lb/>
oratorios during the year<lb/>
The school is accredited by the<lb/>
National Association of Schools of Music<lb/>
and all regional accrediting groups.<lb/>
Degrees offered include the Bachelor of<lb/>
Music and Master of Musk- in<lb/>
Performance. Music Education,<lb/>
Theory-Composition. Church Music<lb/>
Music Therapy and Piano Pedagogy.<lb/>
Brody professorship created<lb/>
A $100,000 gift to the East Carolina<lb/>
University School of Medicine from the<lb/>
Brody brothers of Greenville and<lb/>
Kinston, N.C. and Columbia. S.C. has<lb/>
been announced by ECU Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band headlines Carousel Week<lb/>
Carousel Week officially began<lb/>
yesterday with Buddy Rich scheduled to<lb/>
perform in Wright Auditorium. Formerly<lb/>
Carousel Weekend, this year's activities<lb/>
encompassed so much that the Student<lb/>
Union decided to make it Carousel<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
Student Union president, Gary Massie.<lb/>
estimated that 64 man-hours have gone<lb/>
into the planning of Carousel Week and<lb/>
that approximately 127 man-hours will<lb/>
go into the production. After estimating.<lb/>
Massie said. "That shocks me to death. I<lb/>
didn't know we had put that much time<lb/>
into it. No one that is working gets<lb/>
compensation<lb/>
According to Massie. this week is<lb/>
customarily in February, close to or<lb/>
around Valentine's Day. "But we just<lb/>
couldn't get things lined up at that time.<lb/>
We thought we would go ahead and back<lb/>
up to this time when we could get what<lb/>
we wanted Massie continued. "When<lb/>
we had had Nitty Gritty Dirt Band last<lb/>
year, we had a big turnout, and they<lb/>
happened to fall in this time. We had a<lb/>
hard time lining up Buddy Rich, but we<lb/>
finally got him<lb/>
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band will appear<lb/>
Saturday. Jan. 13, at 8 p.m in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. This is their second<lb/>
appearance on campus in two years.<lb/>
Publicity chairman for the union popular<lb/>
entertainment committee, Diana<lb/>
Goettman commented on the return of<lb/>
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band. "We had much<lb/>
voiced opinion from people that wanted<lb/>
to see them again and from those that<lb/>
wanted to see them for the first time. A<lb/>
lot of people missed the first concert.<lb/>
When we put up the posters, we heard<lb/>
lots of people say that they wanted to<lb/>
see them<lb/>
HITCHCOCK<lb/>
On Sunday, Jan. 14, there will be a<lb/>
Hitchcock Film Festival. Three<lb/>
Hitchcock films: "Dial M for Murder<lb/>
"Notorious and "The Paradine Case"<lb/>
will be shown. Chairman of the union<lb/>
films committee, Kathy Myers,<lb/>
explained. "I think we could tell by<lb/>
other films we had shown that students<lb/>
were more interested in suspense;<lb/>
therefore, we decided to show Hitchcock<lb/>
films<lb/>
Mom's Apple Pie, a brass-rock group<lb/>
of 10 members, will be in special concert<lb/>
on Monday. Jan. 15, in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium. According to Massie, it was<lb/>
difficult to get Mom's Apple Pie. "We<lb/>
had them booked three times, and we<lb/>
had to change dates around to suit us<lb/>
and them he said.<lb/>
Carousel Week will cost the union<lb/>
between 10 and 15 thousand dollars,<lb/>
according to Paul Breitman, assistant<lb/>
director of the union. "It's hard to give<lb/>
an exact figure he cautioned. "The<lb/>
contract fee for a concert is not the total<lb/>
cost. There are also production costs,<lb/>
publicity costs, and additional costs<lb/>
All programs sponsored by the union are<lb/>
funded by student fees and funds<lb/>
generated by the program. All costs for<lb/>
the popular entertainment committee do<lb/>
not come from student fees. The popular<lb/>
entertainment committee is<lb/>
self-sustaining.<lb/>
TRADITION<lb/>
The Carousel celebration has been a<lb/>
tradition at ECU for five years. Associate<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs, Rudolph S.<lb/>
Alexander, explained how Carousel<lb/>
Week was started. Students on the<lb/>
popular entertainment committee knew<lb/>
many colleges had a big weekend in the<lb/>
spring, so they started Pirates Jamboree<lb/>
Economics<lb/>
in spring quarter about eight or nine<lb/>
years ago. "It was such a big success that<lb/>
they decided to have a big weekend<lb/>
during winter quarter also. That was the<lb/>
start of Carousel Week Alexander<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
The union is expecting good student<lb/>
participation. Massie speculated, "We<lb/>
think there will be a large amount of<lb/>
attention. We hope people will stay on<lb/>
campus and enjoy themselves<lb/>
Carousel Week activities will include:<lb/>
Jan. 10, 8 p.m Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
international film: "Grand Illusion"<lb/>
(admission by ID and activity card): 8<lb/>
and 9 p.m Coffeehouse, featuring Jeff<lb/>
Espana, 201 Union ($.25 and ID and<lb/>
activity card); Jan 12, 7 and 9 p.m<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, movie: "Minnie and<lb/>
Moskowitz" (admission by ID and<lb/>
activity card); 8 and 9 p.m<lb/>
Coffeehouse: Jan. 13, 8 p.m Minges,<lb/>
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (student tickets,<lb/>
$2, public tickets, $3): Jan. 14, 6 p.m<lb/>
Wright, Alfred Hitchcock Film Festival<lb/>
(admission by ID and activity card): Jan<lb/>
15, 8 p.m Wright, Mom's Apple Pie<lb/>
(admission for students and faculty by<lb/>
ID, public tickets. $1.00).<lb/>
Course provokes insight<lb/>
Although Chancellor<lb/>
Jenkins denies contacts with<lb/>
the Winter 01 mpics<lb/>
Committee, there were those<lb/>
persons who began their<lb/>
training ttl preparation for<lb/>
final competition in the<lb/>
Tnwski and Four Man Boh<lb/>
Sledding event.<lb/>
Losing in the final heat,<lb/>
which prove to be quite<lb/>
disasterou. is the as yet<lb/>
unidentified One Man<lb/>
Bobledder at top.<lb/>
Finishing in second place is<lb/>
the Polish T?f? team, who<lb/>
after learning of the beautiful<lb/>
powder) condition in<lb/>
Greenville drove here from<lb/>
"Why certain countries are poor is<lb/>
the theme of Economics of<lb/>
Underdeveloped Areas (Economics 335)<lb/>
offered spring by the Economics<lb/>
Warsaw.<lb/>
Informed soiives tate that<lb/>
the committee i allegedly<lb/>
quite favorable toward<lb/>
Greenville a a possible<lb/>
projection of the future<lb/>
Winter Olympic. All qualifier<lb/>
are requested to report their<lb/>
qualification to the nearest<lb/>
training center, located on the<lb/>
freeway of their choice.<lb/>
Department. Dr. Umesh C. Gulati is the<lb/>
instructor.<lb/>
Poor countries, or the underdeveloped<lb/>
countries as they are usually known, are<lb/>
not culturally backward. Most of these<lb/>
countries have indeed been the center of<lb/>
civilization, according to Gulati. All<lb/>
major religions of the world onginated in<lb/>
Asia and Africa. It is true to say.<lb/>
however, that the poor countries exhibit<lb/>
certain cultural traits which hamper<lb/>
economic development there.<lb/>
The underdeveloped countries-<lb/>
constitute a very heterogeneous group of<lb/>
countries. They vary with a per capita<lb/>
incomes ranging from less than 500.000<lb/>
to over compositions, religions,<lb/>
ideologies, and histoncal associations<lb/>
with industrialized countries.<lb/>
This course, according to Gulati. is<lb/>
very relevant in the modem-day world.<lb/>
Of the 131 members of the United<lb/>
Nations, all but 30 belong to the<lb/>
category of the underdeveloped<lb/>
countries of Asia. Africa, and Latin<lb/>
America. Thus, any international<lb/>
political structure, which works on a one<lb/>
country, one vote principle, will be<lb/>
dominated by the underdeveloped<lb/>
countnes-which , of course, also<lb/>
represent over three-quarters of the<lb/>
world's population. This offers somethe<lb/>
world's population. This offers some<lb/>
explanation why the United States has<lb/>
considered foreign aid as an important<lb/>
tool of its international economic policy.<lb/>
It is not suggested here that the<lb/>
underdeveloped countries are either<lb/>
stagnant or have done nothing to help<lb/>
themselves. In fact, on an aggregate<lb/>
basis, the growth in their gross national<lb/>
product was as large as in that of<lb/>
economically advanced countries during<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
The money was presented to the ECU<lb/>
Foundation for Health Affairs by the<lb/>
Brody brothers who operate department<lb/>
stores in both North and South Carolina.<lb/>
It is the largest contribution received<lb/>
to date by the School of Medicine.<lb/>
In announcing the Brody gift Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins sais. "This is an historic event in<lb/>
the brief history of our School of<lb/>
Medicine said, is additional evidence of<lb/>
the friendship and support that East<lb/>
Carolina University has enjoyed from the<lb/>
Brody family who have been so<lb/>
important to the business and<lb/>
community affairs of the East<lb/>
He said, "J. S. Brody of Columbia.<lb/>
S.C. and Leo Brody of Kinston in<lb/>
particular deserve our deep gratitude for<lb/>
their instrumental role in making this<lb/>
gift possible<lb/>
Dr. Wallace Wooles, Dean of the one<lb/>
year Medical School said that the funds<lb/>
provided through the Brody<lb/>
contributions will be used to establish<lb/>
the Brody Brothers Professorship and he<lb/>
indicated that a faculty position in the<lb/>
School of Medicine will be entitled<lb/>
accordingly<lb/>
"The Brody gift will assist us greatly<lb/>
in attracting and retaining the highly<lb/>
qualified faculty so necessary for our<lb/>
sound future development Dr. Wooles<lb/>
Two injured in<lb/>
auto accident<lb/>
behind Jar vis<lb/>
Two students sustained minor injuries<lb/>
in an automobile mishap at about 9:30<lb/>
a.rn. Jan. 5.<lb/>
Derorah Waters and Gerald Cyrus<lb/>
v.ere hit behind Jarvis Dormitory by a<lb/>
c; r driven by Laura Yates. another ECU<lb/>
student. Campus Police Chief Joe<lb/>
Caulder says that no charges will be filed<lb/>
against the driver of the vehicle.<lb/>
According to Officer J.L Stokes of<lb/>
the campus police, both were treated at<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital for minor<lb/>
abrasions. Waters complained of back<lb/>
pains, but her x-rays were<lb/>
negative.<lb/>
the last decade, though it varied from<lb/>
about 10 percent in Taiwan and South<lb/>
Korea to 0.5 percent in Uruguay<lb/>
However, on a per capita basis, the<lb/>
underdeveloped countries had a much<lb/>
siower growth rate than the developed<lb/>
countries owing countries has a much<lb/>
slower growth rate than the developed<lb/>
countries owing to a much faster growth<lb/>
of population in the former. Thus, while<lb/>
the per capita GNP grew at a rate of five<lb/>
percent annually in the developed<lb/>
countries, it grew at the rate of only 2.3<lb/>
percent in the underdeveloped countries.<lb/>
Africa, in fact, experienced only a 1.5<lb/>
percent growth in per capita GNP.<lb/>
The tremendous importance of the<lb/>
underdeveloped coutries in the<lb/>
international political structure makes<lb/>
the importance of the cours. Economics<lb/>
of Underdeveloped Areas, self evident.<lb/>
But even if one is not internationally<lb/>
inclined still this course has a great<lb/>
appeal especially to a student whto<lb/>
wants to unerstand why certain regions<lb/>
in the United States are relatively poor<lb/>
while others are rich. Why, for example,<lb/>
North l arolina's per capita GNP is only<lb/>
about $800 less than the United States'<lb/>
The students will be able to find that<lb/>
some of the problems of underdeveloped<lb/>
countries have a great deal of relevance<lb/>
to the underdeveloped areas of this<lb/>
country. 1<lb/>
This course is open to any student<lb/>
who has had Economics 111 and 112.<lb/>
treatea as an individual no matter how<lb/>
Speaker of the Houte<lb/>
<pb facs="00039661_0002"/><lb/>
Iif' Fountainhead fuesdaj January ?. n?7i<lb/>
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Classified<lb/>
?'j'<lb/>
IN - CC iAi<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
LOST Dec 14.197? Bstwatn EF and Music Bldgs. Chlld'i<lb/>
bracelet, wooden figurei on red leather band Sentimental<lb/>
value CdiU.ii.t Siis.in 58 4VM<lb/>
" MISC FOR SALE<lb/>
Oin' Ri'iniiiiit'in I'li'itm typewriter. Excellent shape.<lb/>
Standard 758-237401 7526463<lb/>
Charcoal Portrait! by J? h Brendle, 7b? 2619<lb/>
Small battery powered Electronic Calculators for rent on d<lb/>
monthly and quarterly batii Portion o( rent maV !??<lb/>
 to purchase price Creech and Jones Business<lb/>
Machines. 103 Trade St Call 756 31 75<lb/>
HELP WANTED<lb/>
"? ? i bv Rom Mimii<lb/>
T<lb/>
A<lb/>
L<lb/>
A<lb/>
L<lb/>
I<lb/>
G<lb/>
H<lb/>
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(Phot i by Hoss iviai<lb/>
U<lb/>
P<lb/>
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c<lb/>
A<lb/>
u<lb/>
Student i distribute very unusual computer dating forms,<lb/>
S400 000 mo Write Box 508. Boulder. Colo<lb/>
WAITERS and WAITRESSES WANTED Apply in person<lb/>
rues Fri after 5 30 Candlewick Inn, Stantonsburg Rd<lb/>
Work on a ship next summer! No experience required<lb/>
Excelleni pay Worldwide travel Perfect summer ob or<lb/>
careei Send $2 for information SEAFAX Box 20499 NN<lb/>
Porl Angeles, Wash 9836?<lb/>
HELP WANTED Student agents Sell our 8 track jtereo<lb/>
tapes to youi friends and acquaintances from out catalog<lb/>
for almost half what the tapei i cst in mush stores No risk<lb/>
No investment Write SRP Music Company. P.O Box 1 ?89,<lb/>
N Springfield, Va 22161<lb/>
Summei Camp Counseloi Openings Camp Sea Gull and<lb/>
Camp Seefarei Camps feature sailing motoruoatirg, and<lb/>
seamanship plus SCUBA at Camp Sea Gull and horseback<lb/>
riding at Camp Seafarer Openings for Nurses IRNl June 6<lb/>
Aug. 17, Good salaries board and lodging Apply to Wyatt<lb/>
Taylor, Director, Camp Sea Gull &amp;'af.i P 0 Box 10976<lb/>
Raleigh. N C. 27605<lb/>
HELP WANTED Male 01 female Campus sales rep. for<lb/>
High Quality European 10-speed bicycles Exclusive factory<lb/>
direct program. Final interviews will be held on campus m<lb/>
Jan Write for information and application to<lb/>
GRASSHOPPER SPORTS. RD ?. Box 747, Pittsburgh. N<lb/>
Y 12901<lb/>
STARTING SALARIES<lb/>
FROM S628 to S672 PER<lb/>
MONTH<lb/>
WE ARE A RAPIDLV<lb/>
EXPENDING BILLION<lb/>
DOLLAR RETAIL<lb/>
CHAIN OF OVER 1100<lb/>
STORES WITH A<lb/>
REPUTATION FOR<lb/>
PA YING TOP INCOMES<lb/>
ASK YOUR PLACEMENT<lb/>
DIRECTOR FOR A COPY<lb/>
OF OUR<lb/>
B R 0CHURES AND<lb/>
SIGN UP FOR AN<lb/>
INTERVIEW<lb/>
George Dixon<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Jan.30,1973<lb/>
T. GRANTCOMPANY<lb/>
214 N Try on St.<lb/>
Charlotte, flfrfl<lb/>
-SPANISH 220 (SPANISH<lb/>
LITERATURE IN<lb/>
translation Although Spanish<lb/>
literature is relatively unknown outside<lb/>
ill Spam. Don Quijote and Don Juan<lb/>
represent two of the five greatest<lb/>
fictional characters created by man<lb/>
(Oedipus, Faust, and Hamlet belong to<lb/>
Greece, Germany, and England.) This<lb/>
course will concentrate on Don Quijote<lb/>
and Don Juan, who have caught the<lb/>
imagination of poets, dramatists, and<lb/>
novelists in every at since their<lb/>
creation. Vou will have the opportunity<lb/>
to examine their roles as archetypes and<lb/>
the role of myth in Spanish literature in<lb/>
general.<lb/>
-ENVIRONMENTAL FILM<lb/>
SERIES-The d e par t m e n t of<lb/>
Environmental Health is sponsoring an<lb/>
environmental film series on Thursday<lb/>
evenings at 7 p.m. in room 206, Allied<lb/>
Health Building, All interested persons<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
-GRADUATION APPLICATION<lb/>
DEADLINE The last day to apply for<lb/>
graduation for winter quarter<lb/>
1972-1973, both for graduates and<lb/>
undergraduates, will he Friday. Jan. 12.<lb/>
Applications are availahle in the<lb/>
Registrar's office in room 102 Whichard.<lb/>
-RUSSIAN COURSE<lb/>
OFFERED-The department of German<lb/>
and Russian announces that Russian I<lb/>
will be offered spring quarter every day<lb/>
at 12 o'clock. All interested students art-<lb/>
urged to pre register, Be different' Study<lb/>
Russian! Plan ahead and be ready for the<lb/>
forthcoming Russian American cultural<lb/>
and economic exchange,<lb/>
-LATIN 220 ILATIN LITERATURE<lb/>
IN TRANSLATION)-Want to read<lb/>
some really great literature All you<lb/>
need is interest and the course is open to<lb/>
you. You'll have the chance to read<lb/>
Classic Roman literature, especially that<lb/>
of the Golden Age. including prose,<lb/>
oratory. poetry, and theater, with<lb/>
emphasis on Plautus. The translations are<lb/>
by Eric Segal. Classics professor and<lb/>
author of "Love Story Here's one man<lb/>
who will show you Latin literature isn't<lb/>
out of date.<lb/>
REGAL NOTES<lb/>
UNLFrVTANLJ PlAYS N0?TLS AND POEMS<lb/>
FASTER ITH OUR NOTES<lb/>
e re niw ond w i? the b.yest1 Thousands o<lb/>
tOP'CI '?villd tor CJU'Ctor understanding Our<lb/>
Subjects nclud not only English, but Anthro-<lb/>
pology. Art, Black Studies, Ecology, Eco-<lb/>
noTi -? Education, H,to'y, La, Muiic,<lb/>
Ph. Iosophy Politico! Sc ence, Psychology.<lb/>
Religion, Scitnct, Sociolr jy ond U'bon Prob-<lb/>
lems Svnd J2 'o' you' cat. og of topics avail<lb/>
abl<lb/>
REGAL NOTES<lb/>
3160 "0" Street, N W.<lb/>
Washington, D C 20007<lb/>
Telephone 202 333 0201<lb/>
Around<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
FRENCH 100 (CONTEMPORARY<lb/>
FRANCE )-Comment v i v e n t I e s<lb/>
Francais? Aimeriez-vous le savoir? If yon<lb/>
would, there is a new course just for you<lb/>
which will deal with all aspects of<lb/>
contemporary French life and will<lb/>
enable vmi to learn more about what the<lb/>
French are really like The prerequisite is<lb/>
the completion of French IV. and the<lb/>
course is open to French majors, minors<lb/>
and anyone else who is interested.<lb/>
SPANISH 116<lb/>
iSPANISH - AMERICAN<lb/>
CIV I LIZ AT ION I-What makes Spanish<lb/>
America so unique? How is it like or<lb/>
unlike our own culture? Why not find<lb/>
out for yourself in the comprehensive<lb/>
survey of Spanish-American civilization<lb/>
and culture. Open to Spanish majors and<lb/>
minors and to students interested in<lb/>
Latin America who understand Spanish,<lb/>
and to students seeking teacher<lb/>
certification<lb/>
-FRENCH 50 (INTRODUCTION TO<lb/>
FRENCH LYRIC LITERATURE! -<lb/>
ITALIAN 50 (INTRODUCTION TO<lb/>
ITALIAN LYRIC<lb/>
LITER ATUR B)-These courses are<lb/>
streamlined for music lovers who want<lb/>
to learn to pronounce accurately and<lb/>
understand major works of lyric<lb/>
literature Roth courses will concentrate<lb/>
on phonetics and the fundamentals of<lb/>
translation and will meet in the<lb/>
classroom and the language laboratory.<lb/>
(pen to all interested students.<lb/>
-INTERNATIONAL FILMS-The<lb/>
film "Grand Illusion" is one of the<lb/>
all-time greats, among the few that I like<lb/>
"Citizen Kane") never seem to age or<lb/>
fade. The 'grand illusion of the title it<lb/>
the human illusion that war changes<lb/>
anything or accomplishes anything. Jean<lb/>
Renoir's 1937 film shows that it does<lb/>
not. as it tells the story of an escape<lb/>
attempted by French aviators from a<lb/>
German prison camp in World War I<lb/>
Erich von Stroheim gives an<lb/>
unforgettable performance as Col. von<lb/>
Rauf f enstein, the aristocratic-<lb/>
commandant of the camp. A few critical<lb/>
rives cite it as interesting,<lb/>
distinguished and Important for a whole<lb/>
suite of reasonsthe tenderest and most<lb/>
towering elegy of its kind in film<lb/>
history says Parker Tyler of "Classics<lb/>
of the Foreign Film<lb/>
Boslej Crowther, "The Great Films"<lb/>
remarks it is the most telling<lb/>
examination of why men submit to war<lb/>
ever iut on the screena film which for<lb/>
e eryt hing t heme, philosophy,<lb/>
construction, staging, performance and<lb/>
m 0 o d merits the highest<lb/>
commendations and the monumental<lb/>
fame it has achieved. "<lb/>
U ednesday, January 10, 8 p m ,<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Subtitled<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
By EPHHAIIV<lb/>
? Si<lb/>
Coach Ii<lb/>
Pirates retu<lb/>
after a no<lb/>
Christmas hoi<lb/>
down VMI BJ<lb/>
nighl<lb/>
During the i<lb/>
tne Mies man<lb/>
only one of<lb/>
I hey lost by <lb/>
an improvi d I<lb/>
at Charlesto<lb/>
start the holid<lb/>
T h ? y d<lb/>
One- of th.<lb/>
Carolina's athl<lb/>
baseball tradit<lb/>
after an absem<lb/>
In a not -t<lb/>
holiday break,<lb/>
Smith as FCC<lb/>
Mallory. alsi<lb/>
assistant coacl<lb/>
School basebal<lb/>
graduate stude<lb/>
Jim Mallor<lb/>
baseball fans n<lb/>
One of t<lb/>
exponents of<lb/>
Mallory COS<lb/>
Carolina to t<lb/>
championshi<lb/>
just eight<lb/>
assuming his fi<lb/>
position here.<lb/>
In those da<lb/>
competed in<lb/>
and they won<lb/>
every kind<lb/>
championship<lb/>
19 6 1, t hi<lb/>
appearance in<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Mallory has<lb/>
and he has ri<lb/>
stars who ever<lb/>
The new F<lb/>
Ya and he be<lb/>
Union Militar<lb/>
student in FU1<lb/>
one year: track<lb/>
In fact, urn<lb/>
1936. he pitc-<lb/>
long jump bel<lb/>
doubles tennis<lb/>
STA<lb/>
Virginia's lo<lb/>
Mallory' decid<lb/>
Carolina after I<lb/>
At Carolina<lb/>
becoming a C(<lb/>
semi-pro baseb<lb/>
After servin<lb/>
played prof<lb/>
Senators, St. I<lb/>
New York Giai<lb/>
He began h<lb/>
High School<lb/>
Mallory was ni<lb/>
in 1953, it me<lb/>
Rues had alreai<lb/>
Through th<lb/>
tradition that<lb/>
losing season ii<lb/>
His fine rt<lb/>
championship<lb/>
named winner<lb/>
to the North<lb/>
to baseball dui<lb/>
Other winnt<lb/>
and Jim "Catfi<lb/>
When, in 1!<lb/>
to devote all r<lb/>
it was felt Kas<lb/>
world of sport<lb/>
But he nevt<lb/>
his long-time<lb/>
Karl Smith. 1<lb/>
Midwest. Mall,<lb/>
books on base<lb/>
Now Mallo<lb/>
involved in h<lb/>
little doubt th<lb/>
Pirate camp fo<lb/>
Fountainhe.<lb/>
the best of lu<lb/>
the squad for I<lb/>
FIN<lb/>
Final footfc<lb/>
released by tl<lb/>
Carlester Cruri<lb/>
(everyone Iocs<lb/>
elite.<lb/>
Crump was<lb/>
as he gained<lb/>
Hues' 11 coi<lb/>
seventh in sco<lb/>
per game<lb/>
In a 11 - p ui<lb/>
returns, pass r<lb/>
a 136.2 yards<lb/>
The "Wild<lb/>
teams also c<lb/>
Conference eh<lb/>
In total del<lb/>
yards per gam<lb/>
was seventh I<lb/>
per contest.<lb/>
ECU also I<lb/>
returns, a 3.<lb/>
country<lb/>
<pb facs="00039661_0003"/><lb/>
Fountainhead ruetdaj Jtnuarj 9 1073 Pafa 9<lb/>
shape<lb/>
Buc cagers whip VMI, 81-63; tankers take pair<lb/>
By EPHRAIM POWERS<lb/>
Ats't Sports l.dltor<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn's<lb/>
Pirates returned home<lb/>
after a not-so-happy<lb/>
Christmas holiday to put<lb/>
down VMI HI-63 Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
During the recent break,<lb/>
the Bucs managed to win<lb/>
only one of four games.<lb/>
They lost by one point to<lb/>
an improved Citadel squad<lb/>
at Charleston, B.C to<lb/>
start the holiday schedule.<lb/>
They defeated<lb/>
Northeast Louisiana 83-75<lb/>
in the first game of<lb/>
Northeasts's own<lb/>
tournament but then the<lb/>
Bucs fell to Mississippi<lb/>
State in the title game,<lb/>
69-64.<lb/>
In a disaster last week,<lb/>
the Bucs visited<lb/>
Richmond, Va to take on<lb/>
the Spiders and ran into a<lb/>
31-point performance by<lb/>
Aaron Stewart. The<lb/>
Spiders topped the rallying<lb/>
Bucs 84-75 despite the<lb/>
heroics of Nicky White<lb/>
Pirate's<lb/>
Cove!<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
One of the first truly successful coaches in East<lb/>
Carolina's athletic history, a figurehead in the Pirates'<lb/>
baseball traditions, has returned to the coaching ranks<lb/>
after an absence of nearly 11 years.<lb/>
In a not-too surprising move during the recent<lb/>
holiday break, Jim Mallory was named to succeed Earl<lb/>
Smith as ECU's head baseball coach.<lb/>
Mallory, also the Dean of Men here, will be joined by<lb/>
assistant coach Monte Little, a former Ayden High<lb/>
School baseball, football and basketball performer and a<lb/>
graduate student at ECU.<lb/>
Jim Mallory's name is a household word among<lb/>
baseball fans in this state.<lb/>
One of the premier<lb/>
exponents of the sport,<lb/>
Mallory coached East<lb/>
Carolina to the national<lb/>
championship in 1961,<lb/>
just eight years after<lb/>
assuming his first coaching<lb/>
position here.<lb/>
In those days, the Bucs<lb/>
competed in the NAIA,<lb/>
and they won just about<lb/>
every kind of baseball<lb/>
championship available in<lb/>
1961, their first<lb/>
appearance in the national<lb/>
event.<lb/>
DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Mallory has a long-time acquaintance with baseball,<lb/>
and he has rubbed elbows with some of the greatest<lb/>
stars who ever played the game.<lb/>
The new ECU mentor was reared in Lawrenceville,<lb/>
Va and he began his illustrious athletic career at Fork<lb/>
Union Military Academy. It is said he is the only<lb/>
student in FUMA's history to win five athletic letters in<lb/>
one year: track, baseball, football, basketball and tennis.<lb/>
In fact, one story claims that on one afternoon in<lb/>
1936, he pitched a no-hit ballgame, competed in the<lb/>
long jump between innings and then won singles and<lb/>
doubles tennis matches after the baseball game.<lb/>
STATE GAINS GREAT ATHLETE<lb/>
Virginia's loss was North Carolina's gain, however, as<lb/>
Mallory decided to enter the University of North<lb/>
Carolina after his graduation from FUMA.<lb/>
At Carolina, Mallory played football and baseball,<lb/>
becoming a co-captain of the UNC nine and playing<lb/>
semi-pro baseball during the summers.<lb/>
After serving in the United State Air Force, Mallory<lb/>
played professional baseball for the Washington<lb/>
Senators, St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Athletics and<lb/>
New York Giants.<lb/>
He began his coaching chores in 1945 at Burlington<lb/>
High School and later went to Elon College. When<lb/>
Mallory was named head baseball coach at East Carolina<lb/>
in 1953, it meant the start of a new era, even though the<lb/>
Bucs had already established a winning tradition.<lb/>
Through the next nine years, he maintained the<lb/>
tradition that has now seen the Bucs suffer but one<lb/>
losing season in the last 38 years.<lb/>
His fine record was climaxed with that national<lb/>
championship in 1961. For his efforts, Mallory was<lb/>
named winner of the Will Wynne Award, given annually<lb/>
to the North Carolinian who has contributed the most<lb/>
to baseball during the year.<lb/>
Other winners since then have included Gaylord Perry<lb/>
and Jim "Catfish" Hunter.<lb/>
When, in 1962, Mallory gave up his coaching chores<lb/>
to devote all his time to the duties of the Dean of Men,<lb/>
it was felt East Carolina was losing a great figure in the<lb/>
world of sports.<lb/>
But he never lost contact with the program and with<lb/>
his long-time friend, successor and now predecessor,<lb/>
Earl Smith, he established a baseball camp in the<lb/>
Midwest. Mallory is also the author of two widely-used<lb/>
books on baseball fundamentals.<lb/>
Now Mallory is back where he belongs, actively<lb/>
involved in his first love: baseball. And there can be<lb/>
little doubt that the winning tradition will remain in the<lb/>
Pirate camp for at least another year.<lb/>
Fou n tain head wishes the new coach and his assistant<lb/>
the best of luck as they take on the task of preparing<lb/>
the squad for the 1973 season.<lb/>
FINAL GRID STATS ANNOUNCED<lb/>
Final football statistics for the recent season were<lb/>
released by the NCAA during the holiday break and<lb/>
Carle8ter Crumpler, everybody's All-American candidate<lb/>
(everyone locally, that is), was listed among the nation's<lb/>
elite.<lb/>
Crump was seventh in the nation in rushing per game<lb/>
as he gained an average of 119 yards for each of the<lb/>
Bucs' 11 contests. The Wilson native was tied for<lb/>
seventh in scoring average, coming up with 9.3 markers<lb/>
per game.<lb/>
In all-purpose running, including rushing, kick<lb/>
returns, pass receptions and interceptions, Crumpler had<lb/>
a 136.2 yards per game average, 14th best in the nation.<lb/>
The "Wild Dogs" defensive unit and the specialty<lb/>
teams also claimed some glory for the Southern<lb/>
Conference champions.<lb/>
In total defense, the Bucs finished 11th with a 246.1<lb/>
yards yer game figure. In defense against the rush, ECU<lb/>
was seventh best nationally, allowing but 109.1 yards<lb/>
per contest.<lb/>
ECU also held the 11 foes to 53 yards in 16 punt<lb/>
returns, a 3.3 average which was third best in the<lb/>
country<lb/>
and Earl Quash, who<lb/>
combined for 33 points.<lb/>
After returning home,<lb/>
the Bucs met the VMI<lb/>
Keydets and put down a<lb/>
vastly-improved squad by<lb/>
the 18-point spread.<lb/>
The Pirates found the<lb/>
early going quite rough as<lb/>
they could never really<lb/>
stretch their lead to a big<lb/>
margin. However, they<lb/>
managed to build an<lb/>
eight-point, 34-26 lead at<lb/>
the half, largely behind the<lb/>
hot hands of Quash, White<lb/>
and Jerome Owens.<lb/>
The second half began<lb/>
much like the first had,<lb/>
with both teams having<lb/>
trouble finding the range.<lb/>
But the Pirates finally<lb/>
warmed up and hit more<lb/>
than 55 per cent of their<lb/>
shots from the floor in the<lb/>
second half.<lb/>
Leading the scoring for<lb/>
the Bucs were Quash, who<lb/>
hit several key layups near<lb/>
the game's end. He tallied<lb/>
50 points while Dave<lb/>
Franklin racked up 16 and<lb/>
White popped in 11.<lb/>
Big Al Faber was<lb/>
saddled with four personal<lb/>
fouls, and he scored only<lb/>
eight points, but he dished<lb/>
out just as many assists to<lb/>
his mates. Franklin and<lb/>
Faber were also big men<lb/>
on the boards, grabbing 12<lb/>
and 9 missed shots,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
For the game, the Bucs<lb/>
hit better than 52 per cent<lb/>
of their field goal attempts<lb/>
and about 71 per cent<lb/>
from the line<lb/>
The win makes the<lb/>
Pirates' conference mark<lb/>
2-3 and brings the overall<lb/>
ledger to 5-5.<lb/>
Coming into the<lb/>
contest, three Bucs were<lb/>
scoring in double figures<lb/>
per game, led by Quash,<lb/>
with more than 14 points<lb/>
per contest. Faber had<lb/>
averaged 11.8 tallies while<lb/>
Franklin averaged 11 per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
White is the team's<lb/>
leading rebounder while<lb/>
Ernie Pope has dished out<lb/>
the most assists to date.<lb/>
The Bucs' next game<lb/>
will be a tough one. Quinn<lb/>
will take the Pirates to<lb/>
Greenville, S.C to<lb/>
challenge the rugged<lb/>
Furman Paladins.<lb/>
Furman sports one of<lb/>
the tallest front lines in<lb/>
college basketball. The<lb/>
Paladins feature 7-1<lb/>
"Moose" Leonard, 6-9<lb/>
Clyde Mayes, 6-9 Roy<lb/>
Simpson and 6-3 Russ<lb/>
Hunt.<lb/>
Coach Joe Williams'<lb/>
teams are always tough<lb/>
and Saturday's game<lb/>
should prove tough for the<lb/>
Pirates. But Quinn noted<lb/>
after the VMI game, "We'll<lb/>
be ready for Furman by<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
(Stiff photos by Rots Umn<lb/>
DIVER AND BACKERS: ECU's best diver. Charlotte<lb/>
junior Jack Morrow (top; displays his fine form while<lb/>
ECU's swimmers awaiting their turn at poolside<lb/>
(bottom) cheer on their mates. Action is from<lb/>
Saturday's varsity meet, swept by the Bucs over<lb/>
Marshall and Connecticut.<lb/>
Jayvees hit<lb/>
as Frederick<lb/>
century mark<lb/>
Military falls<lb/>
ECU's jayvee<lb/>
basketballers returned in<lb/>
grand fashion Saturday<lb/>
night after a long break<lb/>
and squashed Frederick<lb/>
Military Academy, 100-60.<lb/>
The win marked the<lb/>
first time in quite a while a<lb/>
(Staff photo by Ross Mann)<lb/>
JAYVEES WIN AGAIN: The jayvee basketball team<lb/>
under First year coach Dave Patton has won five games<lb/>
in its first seven starts after hitting the century mark<lb/>
Saturday night. Here, a jayvee performer tries to beat<lb/>
his foe on another offensive surge.<lb/>
Union plans events<lb/>
for regional tourney<lb/>
ECU's Student Union<lb/>
has several events lined up<lb/>
this month as preliminary<lb/>
competition for the Union<lb/>
Regional Games<lb/>
Tournament scheduled for<lb/>
Feb. 8-10 at Knoxville,<lb/>
Tenn.<lb/>
The Recreation<lb/>
Committee has scheduled<lb/>
competition in billiards,<lb/>
bowling and table tennis.<lb/>
Billiards has been a bad<lb/>
event for competition in<lb/>
past years, according to a<lb/>
spokesman for the<lb/>
committee, but he hopes<lb/>
participation will pick up<lb/>
in 1973. The tournament<lb/>
is scheduled for 6 o'clock<lb/>
tonight at the 420 Club.<lb/>
Any full-time student<lb/>
here may enter the<lb/>
competition and one<lb/>
winner will qualify for the<lb/>
Regionals The entry fee is<lb/>
$1 per person and no early<lb/>
sign-up is required.<lb/>
EXPERT<lb/>
SHOE REPAIRING<lb/>
CAROLINA SHOE<lb/>
REBUILDERS<lb/>
? 22 Oicklnson Avenu?<lb/>
Oppotlt Party Pac<lb/>
Men's and women's<lb/>
bowling teams will be<lb/>
selected with nine<lb/>
qualifying games to be<lb/>
bowled between now and<lb/>
Jan. 19. All Union or<lb/>
i n tramural league games<lb/>
must be counted among<lb/>
the nine games.<lb/>
Games must be bowled<lb/>
at Hillcrest Lanes, and the<lb/>
cost of a three-game series<lb/>
is $1.50. A roll-off will be<lb/>
held the week of Jan.<lb/>
22-26. The top eight<lb/>
qualifiers or the top 20 per<lb/>
cent of competitors will be<lb/>
in the roll-off.<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
call riAT NaCtMM<lb/>
TUttmTMMfOMITnSK 1<lb/>
nmniMw car n no.<lb/>
VtK?fO?YeUM.?t<lb/>
fOtT ??? C0IVJMI Kl IT<lb/>
Buc jayvee or freshman<lb/>
team hit the century mark.<lb/>
Al Edwards put on a<lb/>
sterling offensive<lb/>
performance as he tallied<lb/>
32 points for the young<lb/>
Bucs. The New York<lb/>
native was almost<lb/>
unstoppable as he<lb/>
appeared to score at will<lb/>
from everywhere on the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Eugene Walcott was far<lb/>
behind but second in<lb/>
scoring with 13 points and<lb/>
a game-high 14 rebounds.<lb/>
William Hill and Chuck<lb/>
Mohi; each collected 12<lb/>
points and just as many<lb/>
missed shots.<lb/>
Randy McCullen and<lb/>
Ken Edmonds proved<lb/>
capable floor leaders as<lb/>
they dished out 16 assists<lb/>
between them and scored<lb/>
nine points each.<lb/>
The Bucs as a team<lb/>
proved deadly from the<lb/>
free throw line as they hit<lb/>
16 of 20 charity tosses for<lb/>
the evening.<lb/>
Each of the nine who<lb/>
played scored for the Buc<lb/>
jayvees. It was a complete<lb/>
team victory and the Baby<lb/>
Bucs showed all signs of<lb/>
having put everything<lb/>
together after a<lb/>
heart-breaking loss to the<lb/>
Duke jayvees last month.<lb/>
Course offered<lb/>
The B.S. Degree in<lb/>
school and community<lb/>
health education is a new.<lb/>
interdisciplinary program<lb/>
in the Department of<lb/>
Health, Physical Education<lb/>
and Recreation.<lb/>
A member of the health<lb/>
education faculty will be<lb/>
present during General<lb/>
College pre-registration to<lb/>
answer any questions<lb/>
students may have about<lb/>
the degree.<lb/>
Names due<lb/>
Prospective entrants for<lb/>
intramural swimming and<lb/>
wrestling are reminded<lb/>
that Friday is the deadline<lb/>
date for entering both<lb/>
sports. Entry blanks are<lb/>
available at the intramural<lb/>
office at Minges.<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
rti i aim<lb/>
It was an all-around fine<lb/>
weekend for the ECU<lb/>
swimmers of coach Ray<lb/>
S harf as they swept a<lb/>
triple dual varsity m.i t<lb/>
Saturday and captured <lb/>
junior varsity encounter<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
The varsity swimmers,<lb/>
idle sinn- a 100 1) win<lb/>
over Richmond one month<lb/>
ago today, played host to<lb/>
Marshall and Connecticut.<lb/>
stroking away to Ki 2h<lb/>
and 82-31 triumphs,<lb/>
respectively, and winning<lb/>
11 of the 1 l events<lb/>
overall.<lb/>
Connecticut might just<lb/>
as well have stayed north.<lb/>
In addition to losing to the<lb/>
Bucs in the swim meet and<lb/>
a wrestling match earlier in<lb/>
the afternoon, the Huskies<lb/>
bowed to Marshall 70-42<lb/>
in the third dual meet<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
In the junior varsity<lb/>
meet held Sunday, the<lb/>
Bucs won seven of 11<lb/>
events to nudge the<lb/>
Briarwood Swim Club,<lb/>
57-38.<lb/>
Freshman Larry Green,<lb/>
who appears to be perhaps<lb/>
one of the best young<lb/>
prospects to swim for the<lb/>
Bucs, set one school<lb/>
varsity record and another<lb/>
freshman mark as he won<lb/>
two events Saturday.<lb/>
RECORDS SET<lb/>
The Penns Grove, N.J<lb/>
swimmer won the<lb/>
1,000-yard freestyle in<lb/>
10:16.85 for the school<lb/>
record. His winning time<lb/>
of 4:57.41 in the<lb/>
500-freestyle set a<lb/>
freshman mark and was a<lb/>
mere .31 seconds off the<lb/>
school record.<lb/>
Other double winners in<lb/>
Saturday'smeet were Paul<lb/>
1 revisan in the 50 and<lb/>
100 yard freest vie event;<lb/>
Paul Schiffel in the<lb/>
2 00-yard individual<lb/>
medley and 2 00 yard<lb/>
backstroke, and .lack<lb/>
Morrow in both diving<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Winners of one evenl<lb/>
each were I on Falk in the<lb/>
200-yard freestyle and<lb/>
Wayne Norris in the<lb/>
200-yard butterfly.<lb/>
The I'irjies. who travel<lb/>
to Chapel Hill for their<lb/>
traditional struggle with<lb/>
Carolina Saturday, began<lb/>
this meet with a win in the<lb/>
100-yard medley relay<lb/>
A relay squad composed<lb/>
of Jim Hadley, Charles<lb/>
Kemp, Norris and Bobby<lb/>
Vail turned in the first of<lb/>
10 straight BCU victories<lb/>
The only event in which<lb/>
the Pirates did not win in<lb/>
either meet was the<lb/>
200-yard breast stroke.<lb/>
ECU won 11 of 13 events<lb/>
against Connecticut and all<lb/>
but one again: t, Marshall.<lb/>
WINS RELAY<lb/>
In the final event, the<lb/>
400-yard freestyle relay,<lb/>
the Buc contingent of Ron<lb/>
Hughes, John Woods, Tom<lb/>
Falk and Kevin O'Shea<lb/>
beat the Marshall team but<lb/>
lost to Connecticut.<lb/>
The Jayvee meet<lb/>
showed the kind of depth<lb/>
available to Scharf as he<lb/>
will try to send his squad<lb/>
after another conference<lb/>
championship next month.<lb/>
Green had a second<lb/>
straight sensational<lb/>
afternoon as he again won<lb/>
the 1.000-yard freestyle<lb/>
and 200-yard breaststroke,<lb/>
giving him one and<lb/>
one-half miles of first<lb/>
place swimming last<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Here's to you f'orr Burger King Big 1 2 or Beverage glasses with sinking<lb/>
pedestal design, full color dishwasher safe picture of The Burge'<lb/>
King himself, and best of all ?an irresistibly low pnee<lb/>
Stop in soon and .tart your collection The kids will<lb/>
love em And after all. how jtten are you offered glasses<lb/>
formerly owned by a king ?<lb/>
BuftGE KlMC<lb/>
WHOpPlK<lb/>
321 EAST GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
(EAST 264 BY PASS<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
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Golden Check Gift Certificate<lb/>
Program sponsored by a group of Greenville merchants.<lb/>
Your number may<lb/>
called to receive<lb/>
be<lb/>
FOR ONLY<lb/>
125<lb/>
In gifts, restaurant meals, entertainment ard services. This is a real<lb/>
budget stretcher. Stay close to your phones. Sponsored by the following<lb/>
Greenville merchants and the Greenville Lions Club.<lb/>
Glidden Paint Center<lb/>
Goodyear Service Store Meadow brook Theatre<lb/>
HW COfftftttHrV time<lb/>
IMPORTANT SO CALL<lb/>
TOLL FREE TODAY<lb/>
?00 523 6308<lb/>
AJ-ri- SERVICES.<lb/>
21 SS5 164-j<lb/>
Hardee's Hamburgers Shoney's<lb/>
Friendly Beauty Shop A Cleaner World<lb/>
Hillcrest Lanes Radio Shack<lb/>
Shirlee's Wigs &amp; Gifts Carr<lb/>
Burger Chef<lb/>
Tice Theatre<lb/>
U Ren Co.<lb/>
age House Cleaners<lb/>
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL 752-0277<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
MAUTIPUL<lb/>
PMTRAITS<lb/>
1?1U14<lb/>
JA<lb/>
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d in<lb/>
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lelp<lb/>
'he<lb/>
is a<lb/>
her<lb/>
in<lb/>
ces<lb/>
ow<lb/>
the<lb/>
we<lb/>
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ll.s<lb/>
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in<lb/>
d<lb/>
h<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00039661_0004"/><lb/>
fountamhead<lb/>
? ? ? ? O ,<lb/>
Editorials <lb/>
c<lb/>
commentary<lb/>
Sludant riniiuuK<lb/>
?ufclKH .1 cm CkMm Onlv.rwty<lb/>
? O ao? 191f ICU Station<lb/>
OrwnvliM. Norm Carolina I7SM<lb/>
l.l?pr?. r)a?jM ?r 73S4S47<lb/>
Fine Arts finances flounder<lb/>
If S- President Rob Luisana and his<lb/>
cohorts hau their way. money rnav he<lb/>
diverted from the Refrigerator Fund<lb/>
towardi heiping make good a political<lb/>
promiM made in last year's anipaigii<lb/>
I hat poUtical promise was to help fine<lb/>
arts Students stay in ichool despite the<lb/>
rising COstl Of uit of state tuition.<lb/>
Luisana and supporters drove a bill<lb/>
through the Legislature which gave up to<lb/>
$30,000 of student activitj fees to fine<lb/>
Iftl to be used as scholarships<lb/>
Unfortunately, the State Attorney<lb/>
General concurred with this writer in<lb/>
feeling that this wat an improper use of<lb/>
student funds Luisana has decided that<lb/>
the refrigerator funds ought to be used<lb/>
'Social experiment' lacks definition<lb/>
fm ?' of I In' m o t . i n an I :i r I U ??; :i, ?<lb/>
One of the most singularly<lb/>
unelucidating definitions to be found in<lb/>
a dictionary is that ot 'catkin<lb/>
Webster's Ilnrd New International<lb/>
Dictionary informs us that a catkin is<lb/>
"an ament, especially long and densely<lb/>
crowded n ith bract<lb/>
Another term that is commonly<lb/>
employed Without the restraint of<lb/>
troublesome definition is "social<lb/>
? Mvnmcnt " We have all heard about<lb/>
that great social experiment, bussing.<lb/>
And certainly, we all can immediately<lb/>
pick out the guaranteed annual income<lb/>
as a social experiment<lb/>
It can be generally agreed that social<lb/>
experiment" applies to any departure<lb/>
from past methods. Yet. strangely<lb/>
enough, the term social experiment has<lb/>
become the nearly exclusive property of<lb/>
onservative right wing spokesmen, who<lb/>
have found it to be a conveniently vague,<lb/>
yet somehow demeaning, bombast.<lb/>
While the abolition of capital<lb/>
punishment is a "social experiment<lb/>
intimidation of the press by the White<lb/>
House is not. While kindergarten was<lb/>
Libeled a "social experiment the<lb/>
Vietnam war escaped such a label. And<lb/>
while bussing was denounced as a social<lb/>
experiment, commercial television was<lb/>
not.<lb/>
Which has more profoundly<lb/>
influenced the course of America,<lb/>
bussing or television?<lb/>
Perhaps right-wing America should be<lb/>
deprived of its copyright to the terms<lb/>
"social experiment" so that it can be<lb/>
fairly employed.<lb/>
; ? ' - ioiih empiovea.<lb/>
The<lb/>
(nvitrt apologies tu<lb/>
Forth upon the Coastal Plain.<lb/>
By the slimy River Tar,<lb/>
With his strange New Jersey accent.<lb/>
Uttered from his puppet-mouth.<lb/>
Forth to win the Raleigh Mansion.<lb/>
Gov er nor, King of Fishes.<lb/>
From his cloister on the campus.<lb/>
All alone went Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Builded he (all by his lonesome!<lb/>
Builded he the University.<lb/>
From a small and rinky college.<lb/>
To a large and nnky college.<lb/>
With the dream of someday catching,<lb/>
With the ri-eam of someday crushing,<lb/>
The Devils Castle-Chapel Hill!<lb/>
Pleaded he (Ambitious Leo),<lb/>
For the funds to build his college,<lb/>
(For the funds to build his name up),<lb/>
To the stan wide Jaycee voters.<lb/>
To the Women's League of Voters,<lb/>
To the Moose and P T A ers,<lb/>
Thus caioled Hand Shaking Leo,<lb/>
As Gov er nor, the sweet, sweet title.<lb/>
Sang its Siren's Song to him<lb/>
And there rose from dust and ashes.<lb/>
From the earth a mighty campus.<lb/>
Peopled with the eager scholars,<lb/>
Bright of eye, with Southern drawls.<lb/>
Pushing to the new-raised classrooms,<lb/>
Pushing from the new razed dorms,<lb/>
Carrying their college spirits.<lb/>
Proudly in their pocket flasks.<lb/>
But the smiling Leo Face,<lb/>
With its tempered Jersey banter.<lb/>
Irked the troubled Piedmont voters,<lb/>
Irked the troubled Mountain voters.<lb/>
With his talk of EC Med Schools,<lb/>
With his talk of Raleigh Mansions.<lb/>
And they scorned Ambitious Leo,<lb/>
Telling him without a ballot.<lb/>
Telling him beneath the dias.<lb/>
Not to buy his Raleigh plates.<lb/>
But the Unrelenting Leo.<lb/>
With Ambition burning m him,<lb/>
Sought to capture Carolina,<lb/>
Sought to woo their hardened hearts,<lb/>
And the Wily Foxy Leo,<lb/>
Sought to make a last ditch effort.<lb/>
Breeding pure and honest fear,<lb/>
In the average N C voter.<lb/>
Who would see the Righteous Leo,<lb/>
Asa modern Beowulf,<lb/>
Sweeping him, their Saviour Hero,<lb/>
Lament of Leo<lb/>
-CW LonqfsnoA and Hiawatt-a)<lb/>
To the green green Raleigh Mansion.<lb/>
So there came the Ghastly Otl.ers,<lb/>
From the feared and hateu North land,<lb/>
Marching with the ghost of Sherman,<lb/>
To the docile, cloistered campus,<lb/>
To the hallowed Grounds of Leo,<lb/>
With their hair grown long and straggly.<lb/>
With their strange North land tobacco,<lb/>
Softly chanting Thoughts of Mao.<lb/>
Following the North land Leaders,<lb/>
And the foul and smelly hippies.<lb/>
Came the restless horny students.<lb/>
In the dormitories beating.<lb/>
Marching now to Leo's doorsteps.<lb/>
Calling him the Farce of Fifth Street,<lb/>
While the Righteous Riot Squadsmen.<lb/>
Build a wall of clubs and teargas.<lb/>
Saving Leo from the mob.<lb/>
Then the evil student paper,<lb/>
With its nasty words and pictures,<lb/>
Roused the ire of the Leo,<lb/>
By advising copulation.<lb/>
So the Leo with his yes-men.<lb/>
With the sweet, sweet cry of outrage.<lb/>
From a shocked and shaken public.<lb/>
Struck the obscene campus paper<lb/>
Across its foul and filthy mouth<lb/>
And in the aged Board of Mustees,<lb/>
Common decency prevailed,<lb/>
Which was proven very common,<lb/>
As the Campus turned to Prison,<lb/>
As all vestiges of Freedom,<lb/>
Fell beneath the Mustee's canes.<lb/>
All to save the Tar State's Children,<lb/>
From burdening Life with Undue Living.<lb/>
Thus the Proud and Noble Leo,<lb/>
Saved the State and all its Voters,<lb/>
Saved them from the Creeping Menace,<lb/>
Saved them from decay of morals.<lb/>
Saved them from the pinko faggots.<lb/>
And the slant-eyed miscreants.<lb/>
Saved them by Election Time.<lb/>
But Election Year saw Leo,<lb/>
Sitting with the walking wounded.<lb/>
Sitting without crown of laurel,<lb/>
In his old, old Fifth Street hang out,<lb/>
Far away from Raleigh's action,<lb/>
Far away from his heart's dream<lb/>
But be still, weeping idealists,<lb/>
Blubber not, romanticists.<lb/>
For as sure as four years endeth.<lb/>
Plots Sly Leo His return.<lb/>
Finis<lb/>
;v<lb/>
to pay up on his promises.<lb/>
The Refrigerator Fund is a mysterious<lb/>
slush account enriched by excess profits<lb/>
made on refrigerator rentals. If bailing<lb/>
the BOA out of $12,000 of trouble<lb/>
won't break this fund, then obviously<lb/>
there is something wrong with the SGA's<lb/>
profit margin on the rentals-it's too<lb/>
high.<lb/>
This suggested misuse of the<lb/>
Refrigerator Fund would also endanger a<lb/>
bill soon to be introduced into the SGA<lb/>
Legislature that would make refrigerator<lb/>
rental a non-profit operation.<lb/>
That sort of legislation will be put on<lb/>
ice as long as Luisana attempts to honor<lb/>
his political debts with your<lb/>
money.<lb/>
 V<lb/>
V I P ,fi<lb/>
Philip E. Williams<lb/>
Editor io-chief<lb/>
Mick Godwu, Bu?e. Manager Tim Wehner <lb/>
Ron Wertheim, Advertising Manager<lb/>
0 i<lb/>
Bo Perkins<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Don Trausneck<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
0- A , V<lb/>
Bruce Parriari<lb/>
Features Editor<lb/>
Roas Mann<lb/>
Chief Photographer<lb/>
.0 A. , ,V . ,i<lb/>
4<lb/>
W x ItVfH I<lb/>
o km<lb/>
CAlO HP COULOfVJ f<lb/>
 rr c<lb/>
pj C H d<lb/>
Washington Mwry-go-Round<lb/>
ArTT<lb/>
?<lb/>
Congress's free pill supply dries up<lb/>
K ANDERSON ? ?<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
Dozens of congressmen may be feeling<lb/>
a little queasy when they return to the<lb/>
Capitol this month. The reason: Miles<lb/>
Laboratories, the huge drug firm, has<lb/>
stopped providing bushels of<lb/>
Alka-Seltzer to 2-1 senators and 44<lb/>
congressmen who are on the firm's<lb/>
official gratuity list.<lb/>
Confidential interoffice memos in our<lb/>
possession reveal that, for years. Miles<lb/>
Laboratories took care of the sneezes,<lb/>
wheezes and vitamin deficiencies of<lb/>
important congressmen and other<lb/>
Washington VIPs.<lb/>
The Capitol Hill care packages which<lb/>
contained Alka-Seltzer, vitamins and<lb/>
bactine were all personally wrapped for<lb/>
the congressmen and their staffs.<lb/>
According to the memos. Senate<lb/>
Republican Leader Hugh Scott got a<lb/>
double allotment, which he requested as<lb/>
his rightful due after he was elevated<lb/>
above the rank of an ordinary senator.<lb/>
Last March, however, Miles<lb/>
Laboratories abruptly cut off the flow of<lb/>
free pills and powders. The gifts were<lb/>
stopped, according to Miles spokesman<lb/>
C.N. Jolly, for a combination of reasons.<lb/>
The most compelling was the new<lb/>
campaign financial disclosure act which<lb/>
requires disclosure of any gift or<lb/>
combination of gifts which total $10 in<lb/>
value.<lb/>
The company was afraid all the free<lb/>
medicine, if disclosed, might appear<lb/>
improper.<lb/>
SETTING AN EXAMPLE<lb/>
The admirals are stirring up a quiet<lb/>
rebellion against their civilian bosses over<lb/>
their favorite fighter plane the F-14<lb/>
Tomcat.<lb/>
Some time ago. Secretary of Defense<lb/>
Melvin Laird, tired of cost overruns,<lb/>
decided to make an example of the next<lb/>
defense contractor that tried to saddle<lb/>
NDERSOIS<lb/>
the taxpayers with a big cost overrun.<lb/>
This turned out to be Grumman<lb/>
Aerospace Corporation, which claims<lb/>
mournfully that it has already lost $85<lb/>
million on the 86 Tomcats it is now<lb/>
building for the Navy and that it would<lb/>
lose an additional $105 million if it goes<lb/>
ahead with the contract to build another<lb/>
48 Tomcats. Grumman wants more<lb/>
money, but Laird is demanding the 48<lb/>
planes at the contract price.<lb/>
We spoke to Laird, who told us he is<lb/>
determined not to allow another huge<lb/>
cost overrun. But he still has to reckon<lb/>
with the admirals who are leaking stories<lb/>
around town about how great a plane<lb/>
the Tomcat is and how unfair Laird is to<lb/>
Grumman.<lb/>
For the Navy, the stakes are high.<lb/>
Many military strategists are questioning<lb/>
the value of aircraft carriers, which are<lb/>
highly vulnerable to air and missile<lb/>
attack. Without carriers, there would be<lb/>
little need for the Navy's air arm. The<lb/>
development of the Tomcat, therefore, is<lb/>
part of the Navy's campaign to save the<lb/>
aircraft carriers.<lb/>
BEHIND THE SCENES<lb/>
NUDE KISSINGER-Washington is all<lb/>
aflutter over "Harvard Lampoon's"<lb/>
full-length, fold-out picture of what<lb/>
looks like Henry Kissinger in the nude.<lb/>
The picture is not of Kissinger, of<lb/>
course, but the resemblance is so close it<lb/>
has turned an otherwise ho-hum parody<lb/>
into a spectacular best seller.<lb/>
Harvard s undergraduate editors<lb/>
expect to rake in hundreds of thousands<lb/>
of dollars on the issue. The trouble is:<lb/>
The Harvard Lampoon is non-profit. The<lb/>
students can't pocket the money they<lb/>
make. It's Harvard University that's<lb/>
cashing in on "Kissingers" naked body<lb/>
EYES RIGHT- The Marine's top brass<lb/>
have spread the word that they want<lb/>
more pictures of women in the ranks. A<lb/>
recent directive makes it mandatory for<lb/>
women NCOs to submit pictures with<lb/>
each promotion from lat oa corporal to<lb/>
master sergeant. The pictures will be<lb/>
used to help determine which young<lb/>
lady gets a top secretarial job. The<lb/>
Marines explain hastily that their top<lb/>
brass are not looking for knockouts as<lb/>
secretaries. The brass, we're told, just<lb/>
want to give the more hefty women<lb/>
NCOs an incent e to trim their<lb/>
waistlines.<lb/>
WESTWOOD WELCHED-Former<lb/>
Democratic National Chairman Jean<lb/>
Westwood welched on a deal that would<lb/>
have left her in a top party post. She had<lb/>
agreed to resign as national chairman and<lb/>
to accept another position. Her<lb/>
successor. Robert Strauss, had agreed in<lb/>
turn, to give her a face-saving job. But at<lb/>
the last minute, Mrs. Westwood not only-<lb/>
reneged but made an attack on Strauss.<lb/>
Now she is out in the cold.<lb/>
Doc dispenses straight talk on personal problems<lb/>
Ira L. Baker. Advisor<lb/>
THE DOCTORS BAG<lb/>
By ARNOLD WERNER, M.D<lb/>
QUESTION: My problem is a<lb/>
psychosomatic one, dealing with<lb/>
urinating in the presence of others. When<lb/>
I go into a restroom and there are other<lb/>
men around, I can't seem to go to the<lb/>
bathroom. This can be a very painful<lb/>
situation. No matter how hard I try. my<lb/>
muscles just contract and my bladder<lb/>
will not release. I am not necessarily<lb/>
interested in the reason for this but<lb/>
rather in a cure for the problem<lb/>
ANSWER: While I can appreciate the<lb/>
urgency of your situation, you'll have to<lb/>
suffer a brief explanation as well as a<lb/>
suggested cure. One becomes aware of<lb/>
the need to urinate because of the<lb/>
buildup of pressure in the bladder from<lb/>
the accumulation of urine, but the act of<lb/>
urination requires a simultaneous tensing<lb/>
of certain muscles in the abdomen and<lb/>
releasing of other muscles surrounding<lb/>
the neck of the bladder. Anxiety<lb/>
interferes with the ability to perform<lb/>
this tricky, coordinated maneuver.<lb/>
A number of emotional issues can be<lb/>
contributory to difficult urination. Past<lb/>
unpleasant experiences as well, can make<lb/>
urination in public unpleasant. Some<lb/>
people are sufficiently shy and inhibited<lb/>
about any bodily exposure in public,<lb/>
that urination becomes impossible in<lb/>
such circumstances. Men seem to be<lb/>
much more affected by the situation you<lb/>
describe than are women. Often, there is<lb/>
no particular explanation for the<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Starting with simple suggestions first,<lb/>
you might try using the enclosed booth<lb/>
and regular toilet rather than the open<lb/>
urinal. It is often easier to relax<lb/>
necessary muscles if you sit down when<lb/>
you urinate, so you might try that also.<lb/>
An anxiety diminishing technique you<lb/>
can do in a public bathroom us to close<lb/>
your eyes and imagine yourself in the<lb/>
privac ,f your own toilet, following<lb/>
several hours of beer drinking, or<lb/>
whatever else creates a mood of<lb/>
eagerness to urinate.<lb/>
If these suggestions fail, you might<lb/>
need so Tie help in desensitizing yourself<lb/>
to the tenseness you feel when you are<lb/>
in a public bathroom. A psychiatrist or<lb/>
psychologist working with behavior<lb/>
therapy techniques should be able to<lb/>
help you. Basically, the technique would<lb/>
involve linking pleasant stimuli with<lb/>
varying imagined experiences of<lb/>
urination. Situations might range from<lb/>
one where you can currently urinate in<lb/>
an unimpeded fashion and gradually<lb/>
build up to situations that would be<lb/>
anxiety provoking, such as urinating in<lb/>
front of your school's library or writing<lb/>
your name in urine on a snow covered<lb/>
walk in front of your dorm. When you<lb/>
are able to imagine yourself doing the<lb/>
latter without feeling any anxiety, the<lb/>
odds are that urinating in a men's room<lb/>
will be easy.<lb/>
QUESTION: Is it true that getting drunk<lb/>
dries up acne? Recently I became<lb/>
intoxicated and the next morning, to my<lb/>
surprise, I noticed my acne had withered<lb/>
away. Could there be a cause and effect<lb/>
relationship?<lb/>
ANSWER: Acne does respond to agents<lb/>
applied to the skin which tend to dry the<lb/>
skin out. Alcohol intoxication can result<lb/>
in transient dehydration, but I find it<lb/>
hard to believe that it would be<lb/>
sufficient to wither away much of<lb/>
anything. Nice try. See below.<lb/>
QUESTION. I have been troubled with<lb/>
pimples and acne and a friend told me of<lb/>
a possible solution. If he wanted his face<lb/>
to clear up for certain dates, he would<lb/>
masturbate every day for about a week<lb/>
before that date and his face would clear<lb/>
up. This seems to work for me. Does this<lb/>
have something to do with hormone<lb/>
imbalance?<lb/>
ANSWER: Probably not. Acne tends to<lb/>
wax and wane with a variety of factors,<lb/>
one of which is anxiety. Symptoms<lb/>
made worse by anxiety are often relieved<lb/>
by any treatment which the "patient"<lb/>
thinks will work, making objective<lb/>
studies difficult. Acne is more frequent<lb/>
during the years when masturbation is<lb/>
also more frequent, which should also<lb/>
tend to weaken your argument. This last<lb/>
mentioned fact has led some people to<lb/>
think acne is produced by masturbation,<lb/>
which is equally ridiculous. The best<lb/>
solution for mild acne remains keeping<lb/>
the skin cean, using a drying type soap<lb/>
and the application of certain drying<lb/>
creams containing resorcinol and other<lb/>
agents, available over the counter or<lb/>
through your physician. Extensive acne<lb/>
often requires the help of a<lb/>
dermatologist or of a physician<lb/>
experienced in dealing with such<lb/>
problems.<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 such opinions may be published.<lb/>
Unsigned editorials reflect the<lb/>
opinions of the editor-in-chief, and not<lb/>
necessarily those of the entire staff or<lb/>
even a majority.<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/>
opinions of the authors, and not<lb/>
necessarily those of Fountainhead or<lb/>
East Carolina University.<lb/>

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