<?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="00039671_0001"/>
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Progressive music'<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. CAROLINA<lb/>
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 13 1973<lb/>
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 34<lb/>
WECU acquires new format<lb/>
By GEORGETTE FOSTER<lb/>
Special to Fountamhead<lb/>
On Thursday, Feb. 15, radio station<lb/>
WECU's new progressive format will<lb/>
have been in effect for one month.<lb/>
Under this new format, Top 40-hard<lb/>
rock is played from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m<lb/>
progressive music is played from 6 p.m.<lb/>
to 1 a.m. and throughout the night with<lb/>
the use of tape recorders.<lb/>
This makes the second time the format<lb/>
has changed since the school year began,<lb/>
according to WECU program director<lb/>
Jeff Cheek.<lb/>
At the beginning of the school year<lb/>
WECU played only Top 40 and hard<lb/>
rock music. Staff members who lived in<lb/>
the dorm talked with students and found<lb/>
that a change was needed.<lb/>
A student poll was taken in<lb/>
September, and the results showed that<lb/>
half the students favored the existing<lb/>
format and the other half wanted a<lb/>
change to progressive music.<lb/>
Midway through fall quarter WECU<lb/>
began experimenting with the different<lb/>
forms of progressive music. By the end<lb/>
of November the format had changed to<lb/>
all progressive sounds.<lb/>
Students did not raise any objections<lb/>
in effect, Cheek said.<lb/>
Then the station began getting<lb/>
complaints from Top 40 fans, and the<lb/>
staff realized that another change was<lb/>
needed.<lb/>
The staff has not yet received any<lb/>
student response to the new mixture of<lb/>
Top 40-hard rock and progressive music.<lb/>
Cheek said he expects the response to be<lb/>
favorable.<lb/>
The progressive format deals with new<lb/>
original music and creative trends that<lb/>
cover a broad range of sounds. It<lb/>
includes anything from bluegrass to jazz<lb/>
to hard rock and even some soul.<lb/>
Concentration is placed on the artists<lb/>
Russian dropped, German merged<lb/>
in language department change<lb/>
By KATHY KOONCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A decrease in enrollment has resulted<lb/>
in the elimination of the Russian<lb/>
program and merger of the German<lb/>
program with the Department of<lb/>
Romance languages.<lb/>
According to Dr. Joseph Fernandez,<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Romance Languages, the merging of the<lb/>
departments has not been officially<lb/>
announced.<lb/>
Interest in foreign languages has<lb/>
dropped and general college<lb/>
requirements of foreign languages have<lb/>
been lowered, according to Fernandez.<lb/>
These two factors have resulted in a<lb/>
student enrollment decrease in German<lb/>
and Russian courses.<lb/>
Dr. Richard L. Capwell, Dean of the<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences said, "When<lb/>
departments get too small, it's more<lb/>
sensible to combine them Both<lb/>
economic and administrative advantages<lb/>
will be offered by the new department.<lb/>
Such merges are traditional. "I want to<lb/>
emphasize that this is a simple change<lb/>
Capwell said "It w111 just help things run<lb/>
Higher education<lb/>
a ' public utility'<lb/>
(IP)?Higher education has become<lb/>
more central to society, and society has<lb/>
become more concerned with higher<lb/>
education, according to Clark Kerr,<lb/>
chairman of the Carnegie Commission on<lb/>
Higher Education. "The 'ivory tower'of<lb/>
yore is now becoming a regulated public<lb/>
utility he said.<lb/>
In a David D. Henry Lecture at the<lb/>
University of Illinois on "The<lb/>
Administration of Higher Education in<lb/>
an Era of Change and Conflict he said,<lb/>
"The greatest change in governance now<lb/>
going on is not the rise of student power<lb/>
or faculty power but the rise of public<lb/>
power. The governance of higher<lb/>
education is less and less by higher<lb/>
education and also less and less for<lb/>
higher education.<lb/>
"just as state budget experts, legislative<lb/>
committees, governors, even the courts,<lb/>
become more involved with the campus,<lb/>
so also will the campus, not just as a<lb/>
whole through its president but often in<lb/>
some of Us parts-student lobbies and<lb/>
faculty unions, for example-become<lb/>
more involved with public authority<lb/>
Kerr singled out these basic forces<lb/>
which will change higher education:<lb/>
"The students are changing in several<lb/>
ways. The major over-all change is the<lb/>
new interest of many students in the<lb/>
academic envoronment. No longer is it<lb/>
taken for granted as the sole preserve of<lb/>
the faculty and administration.<lb/>
"The new eletronic technology is the<lb/>
first major technological revolution<lb/>
affecting higher education in the 500<lb/>
years since the Gutenberg Bible. The two<lb/>
major impla.rtl 111 higher education still<lb/>
to come art, one, the tranformation of<lb/>
the library for books, periodicals and<lb/>
documents into a more centrally<lb/>
important 'learning resourse center, and,<lb/>
two, extension of access to the subject<lb/>
matter of higher education into the work<lb/>
place and into the home.<lb/>
"Attention will now turn to equality<lb/>
of opportunity to enter M! t0 n<lb/>
exploration of ways of improving the<lb/>
many avenues to work and life, and not<lb/>
just higher education alone. This means<lb/>
that higher education will become more<lb/>
a part of a larger universe, rather than<lb/>
being a universe' unti twif.<lb/>
more smoothly in the foreign language<lb/>
curriculum<lb/>
Foreign language courses here are<lb/>
taught on student demand, said Capwell.<lb/>
"Sometimes the demand for Russian is<lb/>
so low that only one course is taught<lb/>
each quarter<lb/>
When enrollment is so low funds are<lb/>
cut. "However said Capwell, "the<lb/>
foreign language program is not run on a<lb/>
'shoestring budget " as stated by Dr.<lb/>
John Costa in his letter recently<lb/>
published in Fountamhead.<lb/>
Dr. Fernandez said financial cuts in the<lb/>
foreign language program will not affect<lb/>
students or classes. Cuts in other<lb/>
departments will not have a significant<lb/>
effect upon classes.<lb/>
A chairman for the new department<lb/>
will be chosen by a committee<lb/>
composed of present faculty members.<lb/>
Courses in the foreign language<lb/>
department will not be changed in any<lb/>
manner, nor will requirements for<lb/>
general college students of foreign<lb/>
language majors be altered.<lb/>
who are making the trend famous with<lb/>
their unique styles<lb/>
The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, who<lb/>
appeared on campus recently, is an<lb/>
example of a group who plays<lb/>
progressive music.<lb/>
WECU now plays a lot of albums and<lb/>
cuts off albums. Previously, the format<lb/>
was based on singles.<lb/>
Cheek said there was no problem with<lb/>
the change, and the staff like and enjoys<lb/>
the new music.<lb/>
WECU now has the most complete<lb/>
progressive format in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina due to this change.<lb/>
"We think the new format has made<lb/>
WECU more responsive to students<lb/>
Cheek said.<lb/>
'Great Decisions'<lb/>
program begins<lb/>
The 1973 "Great Decisions" program,<lb/>
sponsored in eastern North Carolina by<lb/>
the East Carolina Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, will be highlighted this year<lb/>
by an eight-week educational television<lb/>
series.<lb/>
TV appearances by leading experts on<lb/>
world affairs will be scheduled weekly<lb/>
by the Public Broadcasting System, to<lb/>
coincide with the discussion topics of<lb/>
the "Great Decisions" program.<lb/>
Approximately 30 groups of eastern<lb/>
North Carolina participants will be active<lb/>
in the 1973 program which begins the<lb/>
week of Feb. 11.<lb/>
Among the TV programs in the series<lb/>
are:<lb/>
"The Mass Media and Foreign Policy<lb/>
a panel discussion by Martin Agronski,<lb/>
Howard K. Smith, Herbert Klein, James<lb/>
Reston, Dean Rusk and Arthur<lb/>
Schlesinger; and The<lb/>
Sino-Soviet-American Triangle<lb/>
discussed by George F. Kennan, former<lb/>
U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union<lb/>
and U. Alexis Johnson, former U.S.<lb/>
Ambassador to ? apan and current Under<lb/>
Secretary of State lor Foreign Affairs.<lb/>
Edtors support action<lb/>
against criminal contempt<lb/>
(CPS)-Editors of four major<lb/>
newspapers recently signed affidavits<lb/>
supporting a brief submitted by the<lb/>
Reporters Committee for Freedom in a<lb/>
Louisiana case in which newspaper<lb/>
reporters have been convicted of<lb/>
criminal contempt.<lb/>
The affidavits, which were filed in the<lb/>
United States Court of Appeals for the<lb/>
Fifth Circuit, asserted that the four<lb/>
newspapers did not intend to observe in<lb/>
the future any injunctions served against<lb/>
them, as in the Pentagon papers case.<lb/>
The newpapers had temporarily<lb/>
suspended publication of the Pentagon<lb/>
papers under court order.<lb/>
The Justice Department has cited the<lb/>
Pentagon papers case as evidence that<lb/>
newspapers regard themselves bound by<lb/>
prior restraining orders, even though the<lb/>
orders are later overturned.<lb/>
The papers involved are the New York<lb/>
Times, the Washington Psot, the Boston<lb/>
Globe, and the St Louis Post-Dispatch.<lb/>
The Louisiana case invloves two<lb/>
reporters from the Baton Rouge Morning<lb/>
Advocate and' State Times who wrote<lb/>
articles about an open Federal court<lb/>
hearing, despite an order by the District<lb/>
Court Judge prohibiting any coverage of<lb/>
the proceedings by newspapers, radio, or<lb/>
television.<lb/>
The hearing was held to attempt<lb/>
enjoining criminal proceedings against<lb/>
Frank Stewart, a civil rights worker<lb/>
accused of conspiracy to murder<lb/>
Woodrow W. Dumas, Mayor President of<lb/>
Baton Rouge. The judge claimed that<lb/>
reporting the hearing would make it<lb/>
more difficult to get an impartial jury if<lb/>
the conspiracy charge ever came to trial.<lb/>
The Court of Appeals later ruled that<lb/>
the District Court judge's order was<lb/>
unconstitutional violation of freedom of<lb/>
the press. However, the Court said that<lb/>
the reporters should have obeyed the<lb/>
order until it was invalidated by a higher<lb/>
court. As a result, both the comtempt<lb/>
conviction and the $300 fine leveled<lb/>
against the reporters, were upheld, and<lb/>
are to be reviewed in the case now<lb/>
before the appellate court.<lb/>
The Reporters Committee has been<lb/>
accepted as a friend of the court in the<lb/>
Louisiana case and is submitting<lb/>
arguments on the behalf of the two<lb/>
defendants. The committee is a three-<lb/>
year old group dedicated to legal<lb/>
research and defense of news reporters in<lb/>
press freedom cases.<lb/>
Greelcs'will survive'<lb/>
in university life<lb/>
By VICKIE MORGAN<lb/>
S da to Fountainhead<lb/>
The Greek system ii still strong at<lb/>
ECU, according to Inter-fraternity<lb/>
Council resident Bruce Braddy<lb/>
"I believe that the system will last.<lb/>
Ust year was one of the worst for<lb/>
Greeks at EC1 but this year the<lb/>
fraternities had a 140 Increase in the<lb/>
number of members jaid Braddy.<lb/>
"Last year we only had 85 men to go<lb/>
through fall rush, but this year we had<lb/>
close to 200<lb/>
Panhellenu president Kay Flye agrees<lb/>
with Bradd . "There has been a big<lb/>
downfall of the Greek system ail over<lb/>
the country, especially in the north, but<lb/>
now we are in the middle of an upswing.<lb/>
The system is adjusting to hange in<lb/>
college students now. Greeks are no<lb/>
longer stereotyped, and the system will<lb/>
probably be stronger in the next few<lb/>
years. The numbers in the sororities at<lb/>
ECU haven't changed "<lb/>
BLACK FRATERNITY<lb/>
Now there are 12 social fraternities on<lb/>
campus and eight social sororities.<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi. a black fraternity,<lb/>
recently became the thirteenth social<lb/>
fraternity at Ed Right now. 10 of<lb/>
ECU's student body is Greek.<lb/>
Braddy believes that reasons for<lb/>
joining a fraternal organization are<lb/>
changing. People no longer join for the<lb/>
parties and social life, but join for<lb/>
brotherhood or sisterhood. "Downtown<lb/>
Greenville is in competition with the<lb/>
fraternities, so selling brotherhood is the<lb/>
onlt way to keep a fraternity going.<lb/>
That's why fraternities are moving up<lb/>
now. They are no longer built on<lb/>
parties<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP SUFFERS<lb/>
"Every year a different kind of student<lb/>
comes to college Braddy continued,<lb/>
"so the fraternity has to change each<lb/>
year. There has to be a proper turnover<lb/>
Flye agrees that the sororities art-<lb/>
changing also to meet the changing needs<lb/>
of students. Both agree that some of the<lb/>
positive aspects of Greek life are learning<lb/>
to get along with all kinds of people,<lb/>
making lifelong friends, and learning to<lb/>
keep a corporate business going. Now,<lb/>
each person in a fraternity or soroity is<lb/>
an individual. People can be themselves,<lb/>
there is no set pattern.<lb/>
Braddy added that some of the<lb/>
negative aspects of fraternal life are the<lb/>
expense and the fact that scholarship<lb/>
suffers. "About 95 of fraternity life is<lb/>
social. A person has to be mature enough<lb/>
to know when to study. Only 65 of<lb/>
Greeks graduate on time, because many<lb/>
aren't that mature<lb/>
One fraternity on campus lost their<lb/>
house this year, and another folded<lb/>
completely. Braddy said that the house<lb/>
was lost because of lack of financial<lb/>
management: money was embezzled. He<lb/>
Drug charges end in jail<lb/>
(CPS)?The case of Tom Whitacre,<lb/>
imprisoned in Mexico for violating drug<lb/>
laws, typifies the problems many young<lb/>
Americans face in this country. In<lb/>
December, someone here reported they<lb/>
had seen Tom Whitacre smoke grass. He<lb/>
was arrested by the local police and<lb/>
thrown in jail without defense. He was<lb/>
not carrying marijuana at the time.<lb/>
Tom Whitacre was lucky. JAIL<lb/>
(Justice for Americans In prison and<lb/>
Lost) was informed that someone had<lb/>
been imprisoned in Mazatlan and needed<lb/>
fund money. Mia Richardson and her<lb/>
husband, Neil, who founded the group,<lb/>
contacted the American consulate here,<lb/>
confirmed the jailing and sent the $40<lb/>
for Whitacre's release.<lb/>
He was released on his 14th day in<lb/>
prison-one day later and he would have<lb/>
been served with a federal process. His<lb/>
stay would have been extended for eight<lb/>
to 12 months even before his trial.<lb/>
"On August 31, according to the state<lb/>
department, there were 211 cannabis ?<lb/>
prisoners in Mexica, but we know the<lb/>
figure is incorrect says Mia, "1 would<lb/>
say there are close to 300 Other<lb/>
countries holding large numbers of<lb/>
American cannabis prisoners include<lb/>
Spain, Turkey, Britain, Greece and<lb/>
Canada.<lb/>
"They're thrown in jail for 15 days<lb/>
and the fine is anywhere form 40 to 80<lb/>
dolloars, but most of them don't know<lb/>
that. Many of them dont know why<lb/>
they have been jailed unless they were<lb/>
actually smoking at the time of arrest.<lb/>
"When they are brought to trial, if the<lb/>
sentence is shorter than five years, then<lb/>
after three years they can get a fiance<lb/>
Ifeeonz) which is anything from three to<lb/>
five thousand dollars. They are deported<lb/>
immediately after they leave the jail, so<lb/>
that's a straight payment to the Mexican<lb/>
government.<lb/>
"In another case, we helped the release<lb/>
of another prisoner from the same jail.<lb/>
His fiance had been paid, hut he couldn't<lb/>
be found. Tom had heard him answer<lb/>
roll call so we knew he was there and we<lb/>
contacted the American ccisulate to<lb/>
speed his release'<lb/>
When you escape from a Mexican jail.<lb/>
the warden and al! the guards get thrown<lb/>
in jail in your place They had two<lb/>
escapes in Mazatlan in the past two<lb/>
weeks, so there was threee changes of<lb/>
warden and guards, and no one could<lb/>
find him.<lb/>
"There's one guy in Mazatlan who was<lb/>
ousted for three nedi found on his<lb/>
airplane. The plane crashed, he had<lb/>
second and third degree burns over part<lb/>
of his body, and they made him sign a<lb/>
confession before they would give him<lb/>
medical treatment. He has been in prison<lb/>
over 15 months now, and because he's<lb/>
been sentenced to five years and a<lb/>
month, there's no financial recourse. He<lb/>
would have to serve the full sentence.<lb/>
"But we feel that we can get the case<lb/>
appealed and we have a Mexican<lb/>
American lawyer to work with on the<lb/>
case<lb/>
JAIL is concentrating its present<lb/>
campaign on the IB cases in Mazatlan<lb/>
where the most information is available.<lb/>
They have little finances and are forced<lb/>
to work close to their base in Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
Mia Richardson is waiting on JAIL's<lb/>
.lonprofit, tax deductable status which<lb/>
promises to arrive soon, and is soliciting<lb/>
funds to continue its Mexican release<lb/>
work<lb/>
said that the other folded because then<lb/>
was not a proper turnover of men Most<lb/>
of them just lost interest<lb/>
However. Braddy still believes that<lb/>
Greeks at ECU are stronger than it has<lb/>
ever been During the last three years,<lb/>
four new houses have been bought,<lb/>
which proves that the national<lb/>
organizations believe the system will last<lb/>
on this campus. Dean James Mallory has<lb/>
been a big help to fraternities, as has Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, according to Graddy.<lb/>
Both Braddy and Flye mentioned that<lb/>
last year's "individual movement" is now<lb/>
swinging back to group participation.<lb/>
which helps the Greek movement.<lb/>
Greeks ar ry much involved in<lb/>
campus affairs in the SGA. the judiciary<lb/>
groups, the student union, lntramurals,<lb/>
etc. Greeks are also active in service<lb/>
projects. In February every Greek group<lb/>
will help in a drive for the Heart Fund.<lb/>
Panhellenu is involved with group<lb/>
projects involving all the sororities.<lb/>
according to Flye. There are also<lb/>
projects with non-Greeks, such as bridge<lb/>
lessons in the dorms Therefore. Flye<lb/>
believes that the Greek system is still<lb/>
relevant to campus life.<lb/>
SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
If the Greek system is so progressive,<lb/>
then why aren't the other 90 of the<lb/>
students on campus involved?Del Burns<lb/>
who was a member of the fraternity that<lb/>
folded this year, agrees with Braddy that<lb/>
the fraternities are competing with<lb/>
downtown Greenville. Burns feels that<lb/>
now boys don't need a fraternity for<lb/>
social life<lb/>
Terry Cumberworth, a football player<lb/>
at ECU. said that fraternities take up too<lb/>
much time. "Fraternities are just social<lb/>
organizations. I can do all right on my<lb/>
own to create a substantial social lite. I<lb/>
don't need to pay heavy dues to meet a<lb/>
girl or get a drink 1 like fraternities, but<lb/>
don't see them as a necessity for myself<lb/>
Fraternities would restrict my<lb/>
independence<lb/>
Bobby Jones, an ECU coed, said that if<lb/>
she .ad come to ECU as a freshman she<lb/>
would have been apt to pledge a<lb/>
soronty. But because she was two years<lb/>
older when she transferred here, she<lb/>
decided she didn 't need it.<lb/>
"I realize that one of the reasons a lot<lb/>
of girls join is to meet guys in<lb/>
fraternities she said. "But I didn t<lb/>
pledge and I still dated Greeks. I don't<lb/>
like people telling me where to go or<lb/>
what to do. It restricts my freedom. I<lb/>
want to organize my life myself, and<lb/>
don't want to be told where to live or<lb/>
anything else.<lb/>
A sorority enables you to meet a lot of<lb/>
people and make a lot of friends, but<lb/>
you can do that outside of a sorority.<lb/>
The cost is another negative aspect<lb/>
Novel discussed<lb/>
"The Devil's Half a novel by Ovid<lb/>
Pierce, ECU! wnter-in-residence, will be<lb/>
discussed by Dr. David Sanders of the<lb/>
ECU English lieterature faculty m a<lb/>
campus lecture Tuesday, Feb. 13.<lb/>
The lecture, scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the Biology Auditorium, is the third in a<lb/>
series of programs on Southern novelists<lb/>
Pierce and Inglis Fletcher and their<lb/>
perception of cultural change in the<lb/>
South<lb/>
l)R TINSLEY FYRI!ROrCII of the<lb/>
Political Scienee lacult pannes lo make<lb/>
a point during his lecture, given Ian!<lb/>
Thursday The lecture, which compared<lb/>
the stance ol Justice Black and Houglax<lb/>
on constitutional liberties, drew a full<lb/>
audience al least one member ol which<lb/>
lraeled I Ml mile- o hear the talk.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039671_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2 Fountainhead, ruesday, February l.( 1973<lb/>
ChariMiitk iliiifiMJiailftf<lb/>
Mi, I<lb/>
Do<lb/>
Apathy carries Luisana to fringes of success<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
support to those lulls h? found<lb/>
favorable, and encouraged the rejection<lb/>
of those with whom ho did not agree<lb/>
tcconbng to Michael Km St <lb/>
repreai ntative, nw h of Luisana'1 tut 1 m<lb/>
in thii area can be attributed to an<lb/>
penuaded lefiskture and an apetheUt<lb/>
student body Felloe legittator I m<lb/>
Wehnei agreed, adding, "Whatever Rob<lb/>
CITES CONTROL<lb/>
Ertii . u u 1<lb/>
trol, bill paated m a rw<lb/>
legisJatun g student<lb/>
btl i railroaded<lb/>
!hn of : Hob and<lb/>
The bill, later vetoed by<lb/>
- id the Judicial<lb/>
proof on<lb/>
Peel guilt until<lb/>
v ? ? i uiaana,<lb/>
th? ? a 1 .Tisi to warn the<lb/>
sequi 1 1 -litid<lb/>
an; T<lb/>
shows that : a at<lb/>
-ana receives e -<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
' " - ?? ?<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
LLCM MA LS LI SANA<lb/>
?<lb/>
constitution. Ha is aware of the feeling<lb/>
of the students, and supports them<lb/>
well " Qary Masses, president of the<lb/>
Student Union, agreed bu1 added.<lb/>
however, "m his capacity as SQA<lb/>
Preiidenl he ha ihown far less effort<lb/>
than either the saiaiv provide! for ,i the<lb/>
10b require<lb/>
Luiaaim refuted tlu? charge, Mtymg, "A<lb/>
greni d?v?i Km- bean aeoonpliahed In th?<lb/>
a i m 111 1? ti Ml (OH . ? fur'her<lb/>
improvements are it ill up In the mr " Ha<lb/>
referred to the Hbanl etattntion rutea, the<lb/>
ii'Uxati'Mi of women's ourfew, the<lb/>
student advocate and 1 homing !???<lb/>
published by the K3A whioh will<lb/>
,1<lb/>
gSflP<lb/>
'j<lb/>
0,<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
Jkgzy 0(<lb/>
Identify and evaluate all local landloards<lb/>
It ahould be pointed out that the<lb/>
housing hit hai yet to appear He also<lb/>
h.mted to the $5,000 Fine Arts<lb/>
neholarihipi to be provided by the SO A.<lb/>
"The detractor! do not reali e that<lb/>
the benefit derived from these<lb/>
Hcholarahipa are not restricted to the<lb/>
Nchools of the Fine Arts. All students<lb/>
tienefit from them, through concerts and<lb/>
recitals, art exhibits, and theatrical<lb/>
productions<lb/>
REFUTES POLITICAL CLAIMS<lb/>
He refuted claims that these<lb/>
scholarships were given to serve his own<lb/>
political interests. "After all, I will be<lb/>
graduating. I am not running for an<lb/>
office. What good could they do me?<lb/>
Luisana also cited efforts to increase the<lb/>
amount of money spent on the minor<lb/>
sports, and to hire a legal advisor.<lb/>
Neither of these have been successful as<lb/>
yet.<lb/>
Generally, most individuals questioned<lb/>
blame inactivity of Luisana or the<lb/>
legislature on apathy and lack of interest<lb/>
in the student body and BOA. Luisana<lb/>
commented, "If the legislators can learn<lb/>
not to take themselves so seriously and<lb/>
to stay involved, the SGA can be an<lb/>
effective institution<lb/>
Will they relive 'They kill horses'?<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Generation looks around,<lb/>
sees environmental health<lb/>
to"0 ? Ur Societj of the ROTC<lb/>
iponaor .1 D wvk mo<lb/>
Eb  ? Wright Auditorium to raise<lb/>
? : the. Mar, h of Dime<lb/>
? Dance rhon, which will<lb/>
?? and lasts until midnight, si<lb/>
 the pubttC, and anyone or any<lb/>
? 13 .1 as a iponaor.<lb/>
net have at least one<lb/>
? n must pledge a<lb/>
?ey for each hour<lb/>
-<lb/>
BREAKS ON HOUR<lb/>
a five minute break after<lb/>
fifteen minute intermission<lb/>
LBS<lb/>
- under age 14 must be<lb/>
b) an adult. Participants<lb/>
age 14 and IS must have a<lb/>
permission form signed by a parent or<lb/>
guardian The Dance A-Thon will be<lb/>
chaperoned.<lb/>
Interested persons should pick up their<lb/>
registration form anytime in room 109<lb/>
Whiohard nnex. Complete instructions<lb/>
are on the ornis.<lb/>
T'VO BANDS PLAY<lb/>
Two bands are booked for Saurday's<lb/>
entertainment. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served and trophies be given for the<lb/>
longest dancer and the kookiest dresser.<lb/>
Local disc jockeys will act as<lb/>
mast ers-of ceremony at the<lb/>
Dance-A-Thon. The event may be<lb/>
partially televised. Final arrangements<lb/>
have not been confirmed, however<lb/>
Capt. Gerald A. Fabisch of Aerospace<lb/>
Studios is acting as this year's director<lb/>
for the Pitt County March of Dimes. He<lb/>
said Pitt County has not done anything<lb/>
like this in about 12 years, and that this<lb/>
year's goal is $10,000. Capt Fabiseh<lb/>
hopes the Dance-A Thon will bring at<lb/>
least $500.<lb/>
EFFORTS CONTINUE<lb/>
Past March of Dimes' efforts have<lb/>
included a mother's march, a march by<lb/>
the ROTC and money has been raised by<lb/>
mailers.<lb/>
Much of the money raised will remain<lb/>
m Pitt County. The county will receive a<lb/>
sizable portion for its battle against<lb/>
sick-cell anemia.<lb/>
Capt. Fabisch has described this year's<lb/>
results as "beautiful "Everyone has<lb/>
been co-operative he says, "but wed<lb/>
like to see more youth<lb/>
participation<lb/>
By BETSY HEADY<lb/>
problem fa ing the field<lb/>
eath in ihi area is<lb/>
imong 1 itizens but<lb/>
? 1 ment "<lb/>
? ? Dt I rent, n Davis, chairman of<lb/>
formed Environmental Health<lb/>
Department at E( 1<lb/>
las headed thi department<lb/>
1 reation in the summer of 1972,<lb/>
poke ol the problems with county<lb/>
officials<lb/>
'The Count) Commissioners see no<lb/>
threats in the environment "hey think<lb/>
'I l! is Only the mil,y students and<lb/>
the effete mobs ?i,(1  interested in<lb/>
1 he environment<lb/>
IGNORES PROBLEMS<lb/>
people either won't recognize<lb/>
" ,r1 convinced that there are any<lb/>
 problems in this section<lb/>
11Ir, one example of<lb/>
'? " on the pan ()f local<lb/>
Rovernment  thai the Health<lb/>
11 in Pitt County does not<lb/>
0 work with and<lb/>
1 to itruggle to get the money<lb/>
'?'? ? ?'?' from thecounty finances<lb/>
1 onmental Health<lb/>
which is the only<lb/>
"???? program of it, type m<lb/>
' u-olina lo. uses on the control<lb/>
 ? : ? ??'?? mi m lor better health<lb/>
rijmr-s vary<lb/>
? ?iran partu ipants study both<lb/>
?' profi tonal 1 ourses Ml<lb/>
' 'r.rv toward ' ontrolling<lb/>
in or food and water<lb/>
plaining ? need for qualified<lb/>
Davi itated, "Studies<lb/>
? "? runriirji short f<lb/>
it 1 arts ?<lb/>
l ? ic good<lb/>
?<lb/>
rtoi nei '?.ac;<lb/>
foi ?' ;?? ? ? allege degree to<lb/>
wort in environmental hearth In North<lb/>
' ttrolins But In 1 ? . a degree<lb/>
means 1 '?? tU r istvu ? ih? lagkiature<lb/>
' " ihe thl Heed for I degree i<lb/>
" 1 ?' ronmet tal I ealth He<lb/>
"?  all. profi ional group thai<lb/>
hould be approached from .1<lb/>
profMional angle "<lb/>
Nff US INVIMONMf NTALISTS<lb/>
Although Davis iees no majoi<lb/>
pollution problems in Eastern North<lb/>
' iioiina he doe recognize a need foi<lb/>
envtronmentallsl In this area<lb/>
 m ' tton oi the itata Is ahead oi<lb/>
,l"  1 fi ?? pollution goes bet ause<lb/>
wr donl have an) lare crUea<lb/>
commented Davii "Thara are siin<lb/>
olated problems how. uer ve ni p,<lb/>
mOnltOI pollution and keep il   ?,p.<lb/>
vi Bui more Important we need<lb/>
money ami manpower In the areas of<lb/>
health and imitation<lb/>
Pans admits that he used to thins, thai<lb/>
the only answer to awaking peop, :?<lb/>
the pollution situation was through an<lb/>
environmental calamity But ?<lb/>
have changed now<lb/>
I go into grammar school classroom-<lb/>
and the children are much more aware of<lb/>
pollution problems They <lb/>
stow where they didn't even know the<lb/>
:ngs of the word I veers ago<lb/>
"When the younger generation gi<lb/>
into college and later government we wiil<lb/>
begin to see some action in the fight<lb/>
against pollution. If we just wait a bit.<lb/>
time wall solve the major problem that<lb/>
environmental health faces<lb/>
NCNB(24)<lb/>
ffti f 'torn Wm, dtwwvttm<lb/>
Cherish<lb/>
By Orange Blossom<lb/>
A simple solitaire,<lb/>
caught in the<lb/>
delicate interplay<lb/>
ol brushed<lb/>
and polished<lb/>
18 carat gold.<lb/>
CSt'S 02 EVANS<lb/>
JEWELERS 752-3175<lb/>
it toeiNie, 4-o<lb/>
L0 Unyl wj;6 4l00.b0 ies CCtak -Cr, c-e KiCm6<lb/>
C.katW atxeu-KT 0.S au. udelg. wol 4k X wchUf tk?tfc.<lb/>
O Vv? ? Qe-AQfeivicawci x aweuU. CAikaJsa?e? .<lb/>
1M 4o oUck ou. tkgjhi (Xkrvt ?g? aiK. uouh<lb/>
(WtCUewicwcL ?? COik rvVsCS?a3, 10c<lb/>
a?i vou Ow pH?0r?c t?c?U.Nfcfciiew.<lb/>
15 cxU.e iagg, a kOCk)G tk.elce.ceout<lb/>
KJrVe. ofea.da, op.n-Jl.r UU<lb/>
?P.eUl.Wolirlgi , No.Vn?U .UeltKV bfhf? WCWi <lb/>
NCNB<lb/>
North Carolina National Bank<lb/>
rnerryIC<lb/>
gMotaaw<lb/>
I Jot)? Cafetaiia Main Cafeteria I<lb/>
I 1JS 81 PfEl SPKCIAL I<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
!<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039671_0003"/><lb/>
te all local landloards<lb/>
inted out that the<lb/>
't to appear He also<lb/>
$5,000 Fine Arts<lb/>
provided by the SO A.<lb/>
o not reali ? that<lb/>
rived from these<lb/>
ot restricted to the<lb/>
e Arts. All students<lb/>
through concerts and<lb/>
lits. and theatrical<lb/>
ITICAL CLAIMS<lb/>
laims that these<lb/>
ven to serve his own<lb/>
"After all, 1 will be<lb/>
not running for an<lb/>
could they do me?<lb/>
fforts to increase the<lb/>
spent on the minor<lb/>
re a legal advisor.<lb/>
te been successful as<lb/>
idividuals questioned<lb/>
if Luisana or the<lb/>
 and lack of interest<lb/>
t and SGA Luisana<lb/>
legislators can learn<lb/>
ves so seriously and<lb/>
he SGA can be an<lb/>
iS<lb/>
'?<lb/>
i not done anything<lb/>
years, and that this<lb/>
)00. Capt. FabiMh<lb/>
Thon will bring at<lb/>
X)NTINUE<lb/>
imes' efforts have<lb/>
march, a march by<lb/>
y has been raised by<lb/>
f raised will remain<lb/>
ounty will receive a<lb/>
its battle against<lb/>
lescribed this year's<lb/>
I "Everyone has<lb/>
le says, "but we'd<lb/>
more youth<lb/>
i<lb/>
i.<lb/>
a4<lb/>
lc<lb/>
m<lb/>
Chi O.<lb/>
Jarvis<lb/>
champs<lb/>
(hi Omega continued its<lb/>
ama.ing domination in the<lb/>
Sorority Division of the<lb/>
WRA last week by blasting<lb/>
past M 23-6 in t ,e<lb/>
basketball championship.<lb/>
The Jarvis Jocks won the<lb/>
dorm championship by<lb/>
easily handling Greene<lb/>
Dorm 34-20 in Thursday's<lb/>
other final.<lb/>
XS2, which had won the<lb/>
flag football and volleybal<lb/>
championships almost<lb/>
uncontested, completed a<lb/>
perfect (8-0i basketball<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
Cathy Noyes, a big part<lb/>
of X 12's success all season,<lb/>
tallied more than half of<lb/>
her team's points in the<lb/>
finale as she dumped in<lb/>
five field goals and three<lb/>
of six free throws for 13<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Kim Kuzmuk with seven<lb/>
points and Linda Griffin<lb/>
with three contributed to<lb/>
the scoring column for XS2.<lb/>
The champions led at the<lb/>
half. 13-2.<lb/>
In the dorm finale,<lb/>
Sylvia Daniel scored 11<lb/>
points but nine of them<lb/>
came in the first half as<lb/>
the eventual champions<lb/>
raced away for a 27-11<lb/>
edge at the intermission.<lb/>
The inability to hit on<lb/>
several free throw<lb/>
attempts thwarted a<lb/>
comeback by Greene,<lb/>
which came into the game<lb/>
with an unblemished<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Jarvis completed the<lb/>
season 7-0.<lb/>
Girls triumph<lb/>
ECU's women's<lb/>
basketball team grabbed a<lb/>
perfect 8-0 record with a<lb/>
69-54 win over UNC.<lb/>
Fee State tonite<lb/>
Pountainhaad, ruatday, Februarj 13, 1973 Pagt 3<lb/>
Bucs<lb/>
CHAMPS: The basketball<lb/>
champion! of the Women's Recreation<lb/>
Wociation were decided last week with<lb/>
Chi Omega (top) and Jarvis winning the<lb/>
sririt and dorm titles, respectively The<lb/>
girls are: (top photo, top row. left to<lb/>
right) Tam Flaherty, Debra Dodd, Kim<lb/>
kii.mnk. Kattn Noyes. Cathy Robinson<lb/>
Young squad<lb/>
New coach is optimistic<lb/>
llnlrjmunl OXicl pnotot)<lb/>
and Nancy Morgan; (bottom row) Sandv<lb/>
Fields, Linda Nielsen. Linda Griffin and<lb/>
Rebecca Ashby; (bottom photo) Merrv<lb/>
Aycock, Vickie Pridgen, Jo<lb/>
Haubenreiser, Sylvia Daniel and Kmv<lb/>
Fishel. Missing from the Jarvis picture is<lb/>
Cookie Lagan.<lb/>
By EPHRAIM POWERS<lb/>
'Ml ' 'jpMi t ditor<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn's<lb/>
Pirates took undisputed<lb/>
possession of third place in<lb/>
the Southern Conferem e<lb/>
last Wednesday night with<lb/>
a 69-64 win over the<lb/>
Richmond Spiders<lb/>
The Bucs led nearly all<lb/>
the way and seldom found<lb/>
themselves behind.<lb/>
Nicky White opened the<lb/>
scoring after just 12<lb/>
seconds on a short jumper<lb/>
but then neither team<lb/>
scored for a few minutes<lb/>
until the Spiders' Aron<lb/>
Stewart hit an easy lay up<lb/>
That shot was the only<lb/>
one allowed him by Dave<lb/>
Franklin, who played great<lb/>
defense all night.<lb/>
Signees<lb/>
named<lb/>
Following is a partial list<lb/>
of the athletes FCC has<lb/>
signed to a football<lb/>
grant:<lb/>
The linemen are Ralph<lb/>
Lewis, 6-3, 190,<lb/>
Goldsboro; Mike Delk,<lb/>
6-3, 220, Lake Waccamaw;<lb/>
Jacob Dove, 6-4, 210,<lb/>
Havelock; Joseph Reutter,<lb/>
6-1, 185, Downingtown,<lb/>
Pa Harold Nicely, 6-2,<lb/>
265, Madison Heights, Va<lb/>
Nicholas Bullock. 5-11,<lb/>
215, Durham; Richard<lb/>
Bennett, 6-4, 225,<lb/>
Gaithersburg, Md Michael<lb/>
Johnston, 6-3, 195,<lb/>
Burlington; Steven<lb/>
Maulden, 6-3, 210, Bowie,<lb/>
Md Chuck Eller, 6-4,<lb/>
220, Bowie, Md Tom<lb/>
Miller, 6-1, 215,<lb/>
Annandale, Va and<lb/>
Derwood Harrison, 6-4,<lb/>
195, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
win one, lose one<lb/>
Earl Ouash hit<lb/>
jumper to put the<lb/>
a long<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
back on top. Then Jerome<lb/>
Owens and Franklin each<lb/>
hit field goals to put EC<lb/>
up by six<lb/>
The teams twice<lb/>
exchanged baskets before<lb/>
White hit a jump shot at<lb/>
14:24 to give the Bucs an<lb/>
eight-point spread.<lb/>
r-CJ held this margin<lb/>
briefly but then began to<lb/>
lose it. Steve Catlett and<lb/>
Ray Amann each hit shots<lb/>
to trim the lead to 18-14.<lb/>
The Pirates held on to this<lb/>
lead until a technical foul<lb/>
was called on the Pirate<lb/>
bench. Stewart hit the<lb/>
shot.<lb/>
TAKE LEAD<lb/>
The Spiders then pulled<lb/>
to within one point before<lb/>
halftime but that was as<lb/>
close as they got before<lb/>
the Bucs took a 39-35 lead<lb/>
at the break<lb/>
As the second half got<lb/>
underway, Owens grabbed<lb/>
a steal and connected to<lb/>
give the Bucs a six-point<lb/>
spread. The rest of the<lb/>
game was a matter of the<lb/>
Bucs pulling away and<lb/>
then Richmond cutting<lb/>
the gap to one point again<lb/>
The Spiders stayed close<lb/>
on free throws until<lb/>
Franklin got two charity<lb/>
tosses and White and<lb/>
Owens hit key taps to<lb/>
spread the margin to 10 in<lb/>
the fading moments.<lb/>
Fast Carolina had tivt<lb/>
men in double figures with<lb/>
Al Faber's 17 points<lb/>
leading the way He had<lb/>
13 in the first half.<lb/>
Owens and Quash<lb/>
'hipped in 13 points while<lb/>
White and Franklin tallied<lb/>
10 each.<lb/>
Following the Richmond<lb/>
game, the Pirates<lb/>
journeyed to Boone to<lb/>
meet Appalachian State<lb/>
and ran into a disaster.<lb/>
The lowly Apps pulled a<lb/>
big upset by setting down<lb/>
the Pirates 88-79.<lb/>
The game saw each team<lb/>
take big leads ECU led by<lb/>
11 at the half but saw that<lb/>
vanish in a big hurry in<lb/>
the second half. ASl<lb/>
outscored the Bucs 20-4 at<lb/>
one stretch to take a<lb/>
15-point lead late in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Quash was high man for<lb/>
the Hues as he ran his<lb/>
team-leading average to 14<lb/>
points per game with an<lb/>
18-point evening.<lb/>
FACE STATE<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
Raleigh tonight for a<lb/>
scheduled game with N C<lb/>
State, unbeaten and<lb/>
ranked<lb/>
net on<lb/>
second in the<lb/>
There ii little doubl that<lb/>
this is the toughest game<lb/>
of the year for the Km I<lb/>
The T.i. k has put<lb/>
everything together this<lb/>
season behind three of the<lb/>
finest players in the<lb/>
nation<lb/>
Tommy Burieeon at 7 l<lb/>
is one of the nation's truly<lb/>
great big men<lb/>
Monte To we at 5-7 a<lb/>
real spark plug and has<lb/>
been the key for State at<lb/>
guard this year<lb/>
But "super' is the only<lb/>
word that can be used to<lb/>
describe David Thompson<lb/>
The 6 J Shelby native is<lb/>
currently leading the<lb/>
tough Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conferem e in io Ting and<lb/>
he has been called the<lb/>
AC( I next sure<lb/>
All-Americtn<lb/>
As though this were not<lb/>
enough, the Pack features<lb/>
plenty of depth<lb/>
Mark Moeller,<lb/>
Hawkins in<lb/>
Stoddard a.Id to the<lb/>
to make it a truly<lb/>
team.<lb/>
If the Bucs are to have<lb/>
any chance at all against<lb/>
State, they will have to<lb/>
play perfect basketball and<lb/>
pray a lot.<lb/>
Greg<lb/>
Tim<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
great<lb/>
(Fifth o ? ienesl<lb/>
If the youth movement<lb/>
has anything to do with it.<lb/>
East Carolina's tennis team<lb/>
could be heard from this<lb/>
spring and it's about time.<lb/>
The Pirates for years<lb/>
now have been wallowing<lb/>
in the depths of the<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
basement and few people<lb/>
here now can remember<lb/>
the last winning season for<lb/>
EC netters.<lb/>
But a new coach and a<lb/>
young but potentially<lb/>
strong squad come 'o the<lb/>
surface when the season<lb/>
opensatl'NC-W, March 17.<lb/>
Wes Hankins, a member<lb/>
of the geography faculty<lb/>
in his fifth year here,<lb/>
begins his first year as<lb/>
head man for the Bucs. A<lb/>
captain of the Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Tennis<lb/>
Association the past two<lb/>
summers and an eight-year<lb/>
veteran of Florida Juniors<lb/>
competition, Hankins<lb/>
should put his knowledge<lb/>
of the game to good use.<lb/>
And what better way<lb/>
could there be for a new<lb/>
man to start than with a<lb/>
new team he can develop<lb/>
in his own style. Of 11<lb/>
players on the Buc roster,<lb/>
eight are freshmen.<lb/>
"We will be competitive<lb/>
this year, even though we<lb/>
have a lot of young<lb/>
players the coach<lb/>
remarked recently. "We<lb/>
have so much depth that I<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
March 17, at UNC W;<lb/>
March 19, Ohio U March<lb/>
21, at Old Dominion;<lb/>
March 22, at William and<lb/>
Mary; March 23, N.C.<lb/>
State; March 27, at<lb/>
Appalachian State; March<lb/>
30, The Citadel, March 31,<lb/>
Pembroke; April 1, VMI at<lb/>
Davidson; April 2, at<lb/>
Davidson; April 3, at N.C.<lb/>
State (tentative); April 5,<lb/>
Wesleyan; April 6, Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College; April 9,<lb/>
Richmond; April 11,<lb/>
UNC -W; April 16, at ACC;<lb/>
April 17, at Pembroke;<lb/>
April 26-28, Conference<lb/>
Tournament at Furman;<lb/>
May 1, Campbell All<lb/>
home matches scheduled<lb/>
for 2 p.m. except<lb/>
Wesleyan match, 1<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
think we can do well in<lb/>
the 'conference<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Hankins said that with<lb/>
his coaching philosophy<lb/>
and the players available,<lb/>
the doubles teams as well<lb/>
as the "lower" singles<lb/>
events will be critical in<lb/>
how well the Pirates can<lb/>
compete.<lb/>
Among the players<lb/>
Hankins is counting<lb/>
heavily on are team<lb/>
captain Howard Rambeau<lb/>
and returning veterans<lb/>
Fraisure Fulton and Chris<lb/>
Davis.<lb/>
Others on the squad<lb/>
include Keith Marion, Ed<lb/>
Spiegel, Mel Vest, Ray<lb/>
Gillette, Rick Graham and<lb/>
Keith Winkler, the team<lb/>
manager whom the coach<lb/>
cites as a tireless worker.<lb/>
Hankins notes that<lb/>
perhaps his bes doubles<lb/>
team will be that<lb/>
composed of Marion and<lb/>
Vest, which was brought<lb/>
to East Carolina intact<lb/>
from high school.<lb/>
"We are looking forward<lb/>
to the season Hankins<lb/>
said. "I am sure we can<lb/>
improve over last year and<lb/>
we should be<lb/>
representative within the<lb/>
schedule<lb/>
But the rough schedule<lb/>
includes such fine squads<lb/>
as N.C. State, the<lb/>
ever-potent Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College,<lb/>
Davidson and rugged<lb/>
Appalachian State, among<lb/>
others in the 18-match<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
Truly a rugged hurdle.<lb/>
But take a coach with a<lb/>
winning attitude?and<lb/>
players who have not been<lb/>
indoctrinated into losing<lb/>
ways?and 1973 could see<lb/>
a Buc net team with a<lb/>
winning record.<lb/>
(Si?" pnoto by Ron Minn)<lb/>
RETURNS SERVE) ECU sophmore Chris Davis, then a<lb/>
freshman, powers into the ball in last year's match with<lb/>
vm.<lb/>
JonesCafeteriaMainCafeteria<lb/>
$.99 LUNCHEON DAILYSPECIAL<lb/>
Win number 10 for the<lb/>
East Carolina swim team<lb/>
was one of the most<lb/>
satisfying of the season.<lb/>
Last Wednesday<lb/>
afternoon at Minges<lb/>
Natatorium, the Pirates<lb/>
soundly trampled the<lb/>
Catholic University<lb/>
swimmers of Washington,<lb/>
D.C 72-41, thereby<lb/>
gaining revenge for last<lb/>
year's five-point loss at the<lb/>
hands of the Cardinals.<lb/>
The Pirates' record of<lb/>
10-2 is the best record in<lb/>
the history of East<lb/>
Carolina swimming.<lb/>
The men who have been<lb/>
leading the Bucs all year<lb/>
did it again.<lb/>
Freshman Larry Green's<lb/>
winning time of 10:15.75<lb/>
in the 1000-yard freestyle<lb/>
set a new freshman and<lb/>
varsity record in that<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Senior co-captain Paul<lb/>
Trevisan set a pool and<lb/>
varsity record as he won<lb/>
the 50-yard freestyle with<lb/>
a time of 21:55, and then<lb/>
he followed that<lb/>
accomplishment with a<lb/>
new pool and varsity<lb/>
record of 47.67 in the<lb/>
100-yard freestyle.<lb/>
Jack Morrow rounded<lb/>
out the record breakers by<lb/>
setting a meet, pool, and<lb/>
varsity record in each of<lb/>
the one-meter diving<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Other Pirate winners<lb/>
included Tom Falk in the<lb/>
200ard freestyle, Wayne<lb/>
Norris in the 200-yard<lb/>
individual medley, and<lb/>
Green, who captured the<lb/>
500-yard freestyle.<lb/>
The Pirates face one of<lb/>
their toughest tests of the<lb/>
year as they travel to<lb/>
College Park, to take on<lb/>
the ACC powerhouse<lb/>
Maryland Terrapins<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Mermaids vie<lb/>
The women's swimming<lb/>
and diving team journeyed<lb/>
to Raleigh this afternoon<lb/>
to do battle with the girls<lb/>
from St. Mary's.<lb/>
RiCGAN cHOt<lb/>
REPAIR SHPP<lb/>
Pirates win tenth,<lb/>
best record<lb/>
The Pirate junior varsity<lb/>
swimmen, behind Green's<lb/>
two first places, defeated<lb/>
the swimmers from Caivert<lb/>
Hall 49-47 Friday<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
The victory marked the<lb/>
first time the Baby Bucs<lb/>
had ever beaten the<lb/>
Maryland high school.<lb/>
AWARDED: Walter Davenport receives<lb/>
the trophy as Fountainhead's 1972<lb/>
"Athlete-of the Year" from Jack<lb/>
(Photo by Jot<lb/>
Davenport<lb/>
weekend'<lb/>
Morrow (left) during<lb/>
ceremonies at last<lb/>
EC I -Richmond basketball<lb/>
halftime<lb/>
week 's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
will lead the l!n into tha<lb/>
9C Meet al Ml while<lb/>
Morrow replaces Don 1 rausneck as the<lb/>
Fountainhead sport editor IihI.h<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
Horrors, Kappa Sig<lb/>
Souls in semifinals<lb/>
By LARRYCRANDALL<lb/>
The Horrors and Kappa<lb/>
Sigma advanced to the<lb/>
campus semifinals<lb/>
Thursday, but the biggest<lb/>
intramural basketball<lb/>
victory may have gone to<lb/>
the Souls.<lb/>
Parleying balanced<lb/>
scoring and agressive floor<lb/>
play, the Souls overcame<lb/>
the Graduate Students<lb/>
55-45 in an independent<lb/>
semifinal affair. Al<lb/>
McCrimmon paced the<lb/>
victors with 14 points<lb/>
while Fred Harris, who<lb/>
garnered 20, was<lb/>
superlative in a losing<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
The Horrors struggled to<lb/>
a 52-44 win over the<lb/>
GAFS. Ricky Tharrington<lb/>
of the GAFS stole the<lb/>
individual spotlight by<lb/>
burning the nets for 26<lb/>
points, while Mike Lepors<lb/>
Matmenwin<lb/>
Following a big, 28-9,<lb/>
win over conference foe<lb/>
William and Mary last<lb/>
Wednesday, the Pirates<lb/>
returned home for a 37-5<lb/>
triumph over Appalachian<lb/>
State in SC wTestling<lb/>
Friday night.<lb/>
The Bucs, 11-0, will<lb/>
battle Old Dominion<lb/>
tonight in a key match at<lb/>
8 p.m.<lb/>
performed well under the<lb/>
boards.<lb/>
The Horrors did not play<lb/>
particularly well, but their<lb/>
superior rebounding<lb/>
strength c mpensated for<lb/>
their errors. Carl<lb/>
Summerell led the<lb/>
rebounding effort. Gibby<lb/>
Gibson also came off the<lb/>
bench to spark a first-half<lb/>
rally.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma edged<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha 44-40<lb/>
for the fraternity title.<lb/>
Billie Parsley and Sam<lb/>
Bryer swished the nets for<lb/>
16 points apiece to lead<lb/>
the winners.<lb/>
In earlier playoff action,<lb/>
the GAFS won a<lb/>
double-overtime thriller<lb/>
over the Zig Zags in one<lb/>
dorm semifinal contest,<lb/>
while the Horrors bested<lb/>
Clive, Vadram. and the<lb/>
GB's in the other game.<lb/>
The Souls also romped to<lb/>
a 63-38 triumph over the<lb/>
Wizards.<lb/>
Sam Bryer of Kappa<lb/>
Sigma won the free throw<lb/>
shooting contest held on<lb/>
Tuesday. Bryer, displaying<lb/>
a feather-like touch,<lb/>
connected on 42 of 45<lb/>
attempts in besting 92<lb/>
other participants.<lb/>
Softball rosters are due<lb/>
Friday. Team entry blanks<lb/>
are available at the<lb/>
intramural office.<lb/>
They do not lore<lb/>
that do not show their lore<lb/>
Wil<lb/>
Chooc Keepsake<lb/>
with complete confidence<lb/>
because the famous<lb/>
Keepsake Guarantee<lb/>
assures a perfect<lb/>
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NO MATTER WHAT YOU CALL IT<lb/>
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OR CHICKEN &amp; DUMPLINGS<lb/>
YOU'LL FIND IT'S BEST AT HUEY'S<lb/>
DELICIOUS HUSH-PUPPIES<lb/>
CANDID YAMS<lb/>
ST CHARLES ST. 756 4808<lb/>
MON -FRI $130<lb/>
HOW TO PLAN WHR ENGAGEMEN1<lb/>
Send rw? -? pn booklet. Planning Vow 1 nsjjcmcnl and Wedding<lb/>
lull color folder and 44 pg Bride ? Book gill ofltr all lor unl lit<lb/>
Add'etr-<lb/>
ON.<lb/>
-Co<lb/>
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St?t. <lb/>
KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS. BOX ?U. SYRACUSE. N V 1)201<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00039671_0004"/><lb/>
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? .??' tiSlM<lb/>
 ? ??'?'<lb/>
??v . ?<lb/>
?. ? ?? ?.<lb/>
A i, ,?<lb/>
w. !<lb/>
? m<lb/>
M?<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
UUUI<lb/>
. , I<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
AIMING CUT FOR<lb/>
DIABf TICS<lb/>
I i<lb/>
WHA1 S HAPPEN IMT, IN<lb/>
lVH I Tl i<lb/>
ORCHI<lb/>
PERFORMS<lb/>
t,plN INCOMt TAX ASSISTANCE I he<lb/>
? ty w ill offei assist<lb/>
Income l;i forms<lb/>
; ij i 1:1 the lobby<lb/>
' W litorii m. I his frei -<lb/>
ij thru Pridaj from<lb/>
il urdaj morning from 9 to<lb/>
lalai ied personnel and studi<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOARD<lb/>
OP! IMINGS I hi re ire three openings<lb/>
versitj Board foi Spring<lb/>
? Li " ited maj apply in<lb/>
103 Wright nnex<lb/>
PHI KAPPA PHI MEETING I here<lb/>
i meeting of Phi Kappa Phi on<lb/>
bruarj 1 5 .it I 00 p m in<lb/>
SB<lb/>
BINGO NIGHT rhursday, Keb 15<lb/>
icim 201 of ihr I iihin there<lb/>
ighl for .ill interested<lb/>
.1 be admitted bj<lb/>
ill. i ard and allowed to<lb/>
? shments will be<lb/>
and prizes awarded to the<lb/>
? -<lb/>
. ? ? Solisl<lb/>
.if thr Salzburg and Bubrovnik Festivals<lb/>
two years later<lb/>
 ? ? ' is ARfETY has -<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
SIGMA TAU INITIATION<lb/>
Quarter Phi Sigma I au initiation<lb/>
? Id Friday, Feh 16 ai 7 00 p m<lb/>
I u Rivet Part Room All<lb/>
edl ??<lb/>
SPACE DANCE A THON<lb/>
ga ind dig oul j our dam i<lb/>
 od i ild fashioned, rip il<lb/>
D VM I 1'HON! rhe reospaci<lb/>
? II spoi si i a dam e ,i thoi<lb/>
H righl Auditorium from 1 2<lb/>
ti 12 midt ighti I you last i All<lb/>
?? I go ti the March of Dimes<lb/>
ne or organization or compai ?<lb/>
couples or singles<lb/>
Feb 12-14, 9 a<lb/>
?<lb/>
-CAP AND GOWN APPL ICATION-<lb/>
?rad lates musl hav<lb/>
no later than<lb/>
Februai 28 p may be filed<lb/>
BUS SCHEDULE<lb/>
Bl'ILDIN TIM<lb/>
Si ii ial Science<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
Soi IaJ Science<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Allied Health<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ii<lb/>
10 bel re the hour<lb/>
5 before the hour<lb/>
On the hour<lb/>
10 after the hour<lb/>
15 aft or the hour<lb/>
20 after the hour<lb/>
H.iIf past the hour<lb/>
20 before the hour<lb/>
10 before the hour<lb/>
I Health 3 15<lb/>
g ?amfau&amp; faencai 8<lb/>
s I<lb/>
Tuesday, February 13<lb/>
nil in in Mmges at 8 00 p m.<lb/>
Wednesday, February 14<lb/>
' KJI . -norm in Wright dt<lb/>
8 1b;<lb/>
Thursday, February 15<lb/>
?<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
litonum at 8 00<lb/>
Friday, February 16<lb/>
Saturday, February 17<lb/>
at 8 00 pm<lb/>
3 00 p.m.<lb/>
?gnt Auditorium from<lb/>
urns at 8 1b<lb/>
Sunday, February 18<lb/>
Wednesday, February 21<lb/>
 g I<lb/>
Aright dt 7 00 and 9 00<lb/>
Il , ? it 8 00 i m in<lb/>
J<lb/>
h vi in<lb/>
SHOI KKIWIRIM,<lb/>
? arolina Shoe Rebuilders<lb/>
822 Dickinson Vvenue<lb/>
arts<lb/>
VutO Slip:<lb/>
REGAL NOTES<lb/>
N ' - '?" PLATJ NOVELS AND POEMS<lb/>
i ? , ? f u with OUR NOTES<lb/>
? ? n?w od -? ra 'So b 9?tr rKoutof.dt o'<lb/>
? -? ?.?d lor ou.cko. ?nd????, Ou'<lb/>
?ub.ri? nc!?d? oo' only En,lh 0u, ??<lb/>
pology Art Block Slod Ecolojy E to<lb/>
? nw. ? Educator, H0rr ,4 Mw.c<lb/>
PS o.ops. heal ? M?t Pl.cholog,<lb/>
Ral.J.or. Sr Hid 'ur.Olo or.r U'bOn Prob<lb/>
ItOlOf 0 lop.ci .g.l<lb/>
r. ?<lb/>
SEGAL NOTES<lb/>
3160 0 ,? n <lb/>
 e -oiov 0 C 20007<lb/>
T. .Or-On. ;02 33JO?l<lb/>
Controversial drop-add system<lb/>
causes administrative concern<lb/>
By WORTH WORTHINGTON<lb/>
i <lb/>
ilina u tuallj encourages the<lb/>
drop add system Pre registration is so<lb/>
in the quarter thai many students<lb/>
have no idea it they are failing a course<lb/>
I hej in.i sign up foi the next course in<lb/>
?i seque and then discover one week<lb/>
latei thej will have to repeat the firsl<lb/>
i le<lb/>
rhesi are I he thi tughta i il Ji ?hn Kozj .<lb/>
Ji chairman ol the Philosophy<lb/>
II partmenl Nol 011I5 does he dislike<lb/>
r.iily pre-registration, he thinks the drop<lb/>
period is much too Ii ing<lb/>
"Most universities with which I hav<lb/>
been associated have had a very short<lb/>
drop add period and then no dropping<lb/>
exi epl foi medii al reasons It is unfair to<lb/>
lei students drop courses so late in the<lb/>
quarter One student maj do poorly on a<lb/>
test and dei id. to drop .1 course Is it fair<lb/>
I 11I .1 student Who Bticks It out 1 veil<lb/>
though he may nol have done well on<lb/>
that test<lb/>
 ! mfait<lb/>
in tht u ?<lb/>
Ko;  s departmenl publishes .1 1 ourse<lb/>
information list which may decrease<lb/>
some o( the drop idd choas Bi<lb/>
pre registration the department pi<lb/>
list that names the ci iurses being offered,<lb/>
the times, tin names , i instructors, and<lb/>
test i:i term paper requirements I his<lb/>
? the student avoid personality<lb/>
IK know whal course and<lb/>
1 he would lik. ' ave ?ithout<lb/>
waiting until the beginning of the nexl<lb/>
quarti 1<lb/>
Of course tins maj lead to few<lb/>
students initially siliiiiil! up for certain<lb/>
professors, but Kozy views tins as a<lb/>
blessing. He cites one case where<lb/>
students were abandoning one teacher<lb/>
lor another in the same course.<lb/>
Investigation proved thai thi populai<lb/>
teai hei s textlks and examinations<lb/>
did nol meel departmenl tandards I In<lb/>
teacher was asked to improve his work<lb/>
More positively, Kozy recalls "In<lb/>
another instance, the mure requested<lb/>
instructor did meet our standards We<lb/>
realized thai we simply had a superlative<lb/>
teacher<lb/>
The chairman feels thai the course<lb/>
information his department publishes is<lb/>
a responsibility to the students He sees<lb/>
11 as vital in promoting .1 closer<lb/>
student-teacher'relationship With favor<lb/>
he notes thai several department<lb/>
members want studenl evaluation results<lb/>
? added to the information list Instructor<lb/>
biographies have also been suggested ll<lb/>
these things Kozy wants to give students<lb/>
.1 1 h.m. . to learn about instructors<lb/>
befiii taking coursi inm them<lb/>
REGISTRAR DIFFERS<lb/>
I he Registrai 1 nine has quik<lb/>
different s for ar.<lb/>
pre registration, -lames , Moon<lb/>
int r. gistrar, notes thai it is<lb/>
me, hanically in , essary His staff is busy<lb/>
until the firsl oi each quarter 1<lb/>
1 1 mii's scheduli He also saj 9 I hal :<lb/>
Carolina has the most advanced<lb/>
registration system in North Carolina<lb/>
1 thi r si hools havi contai ted his ofl<lb/>
for aid in setting i their compute!<lb/>
ims<lb/>
Moore likes the extended tim a<lb/>
studenl may drop a .ourse He says thai<lb/>
?'Student- have the righl to us their<lb/>
money as they lit " A shorti 1 drop<lb/>
period, in Moore, would be infringing on<lb/>
tins righl<lb/>
s assistant registrar, he sees little that<lb/>
can be dune to eliminate the lines in<lb/>
Drof' add remains<lb/>
,1 het f'i " 1<lb/>
of an ? i tuden ' i .<lb/>
drop add "Al least " he say "We have<lb/>
gotten the lines inside instead of leaving<lb/>
them OUtsidi There are so many<lb/>
legitimate excuses for dropping and<lb/>
adding Many students have failed a<lb/>
course, sum. registered without having<lb/>
prerequisites, and many want more or<lb/>
 w ei hi tun<lb/>
FIRST COME. FIRST SERVE<lb/>
Moore thinks thai course lists such as<lb/>
Kozy's have hltli value He says the<lb/>
computer works on a first-come,<lb/>
first serve hasis Manv students would<lb/>
still nol le satisfied Also,<lb/>
pre registratii in analyses are senl to<lb/>
:? partmental offices to tell the chairman<lb/>
what prop-s 111 j .in in.ml ii, .ti mand<lb/>
Drop-add remain ,1 hectii line oi<lb/>
students waiting for 1 certain professor<lb/>
in English 2 or Math 65 Ideas such as<lb/>
Kozy' are till lubjecl to the awesome<lb/>
registration of thousands ol students<lb/>
Then are few answers The assistant<lb/>
registnu admits this when he says "If<lb/>
you can find a workable solution to the<lb/>
hi ip add problem, I w ill be mi r<lb/>
glad to listen to it "<lb/>
m Pictures talk.<lb/>
Some little boys "<lb/>
n't<lb/>
??<lb/>
1 ' ' ? I pecii ools<lb/>
vhodon't 1<lb/>
mute Httii i.Bul en so withdrawn, so afraid<lb/>
f failure, thi .<lb/>
- fail,<lb/>
nedon't tall  ? behave And<lb/>
learn<lb/>
? help<lb/>
? ? Ko 1.1k. 1 ameras and film were disti ib ited I<lb/>
I told<lb/>
'<lb/>
? Little b ij - who had ? 1<lb/>
ind begai I 1<lb/>
' This is my log " "Th - ?<lb/>
'  Thej began to explain to Hen, ii .<lb/>
1: " Ti.<lb/>
?? ? ? ? I jobs '<lb/>
' Kk  to, m ,u . W11 .<lb/>
   "?? So we . are<lb/>
kM<lb/>
 , Kodak<lb/>
More than a business.<lb/>
)<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
<pb facs="00039671_0005"/><lb/>
71<lb/>
rv. He says thai<lb/>
hi to use their<lb/>
 .m ii I. i drop<lb/>
be infringu<lb/>
i . little thai<lb/>
ate the lines in<lb/>
mains<lb/>
me<lb/>
udents,<lb/>
saj . "we have<lb/>
I U ,h! of IrIVIIlK<lb/>
are so many<lb/>
dropping and<lb/>
have failed ;i<lb/>
.1 having<lb/>
, wanl more or<lb/>
(ST SERVE<lb/>
rse lists su h as<lb/>
Hi- says the<lb/>
,i firsl i i 'inc.<lb/>
students would<lb/>
isficd Vlso,<lb/>
an ?enl to<lb/>
?II the chairman<lb/>
and<lb/>
he i n lin? i <lb/>
rtain professor<lb/>
lilr.is such as<lb/>
ii the awesiime<lb/>
? "t Students<lb/>
The i-<lb/>
?n he says "If<lb/>
solution to the<lb/>
be mi ?<lb/>
)<lb/>
<lb/>
HUMOR<lb/>
Wi$$<lb/>
(tyTred of cUrhj,UJ7&amp;djJCa?ncT?il GCrrac Sftxp: ?.<lb/>
film US OMi4UmfmMrf<lb/>
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t HP<lb/>
CAMPUS COMIX by Sarrrj Satlco<lb/>
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S??Mt? MIL<lb/>
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r1<lb/>
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Degj i, n i n g bpring quartei Fountainhead will i<lb/>
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m writing layout, sales, and managerial positions ,ppJy M<lb/>
I ?'? mediately in oui office tnird floor, V right Auditorium. ?<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
T vping Servu e ' 1 emCall 758 5948<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
Black &amp; ?'58 2250 ? ? Bai .<lb/>
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HtLH WANTED<lb/>
VALENTINE PORTRAITS by graduate student in<lb/>
photography Size &amp; price negotiable 752 7248<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Fleet w ime <lb/>
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dryei Call after 5 30 p m 752-5214<lb/>
AUTO FOR SA1 F . ?,  h! ?  ? ?? . ' . '?<lb/>
automatic, power steering, AM Fm stereo 752 5682<lb/>
CAR FOR SALE 66 1GB<lb/>
overdrive and wire wheels S600 Convertible with hard top.<lb/>
$150 extra Call 7564529<lb/>
Studei t to disi t ? ?  '<lb/>
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EARN $500 SI500 this SPRING The national<lb/>
Students Co-Oi oordinatoi Complete<lb/>
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mi ted'iatelv I Id is I eb<lb/>
28 Write ti P 15151<lb/>
FOR R6NT<lb/>
Small battery powered tie Calcu'atois 'or rent<lb/>
monthly ami quarterly basis Portion of rent may t)e<lb/>
applied to purchase price Creed ind Jones Business<lb/>
Machines I03 Trade St Call 756 3175<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT 2 moms double<lb/>
- rtgls bad with bath - ' age. i<lb/>
758 258b<lb/>
STEREO COMPONEVTSYSTfOFSALE Ft<lb/>
information and oi demonstration cm tai ' Mm ? ey Rm<lb/>
206 Slay Phone 752 9939 will sell 'or $299 01<lb/>
offer<lb/>
Charcoal Portraits by Jack Brendle 752 26'?<lb/>
One Remington electric typewriter Excelle ' si<lb/>
Standard 756 2374 or 752 5453<lb/>
'00 WATERBl DS It 15 15 F ?? Vhj q? ? " led<lb/>
Freight Company, 2904 Last 10f Street G<lb/>
752 4053 <lb/>
MOBILE HOME 12 X From kitchen,<lb/>
dishwasher, carpet drapes, furnish'<lb/>
house, air conditioning, excellent condition Shady Knoll<lb/>
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" MISC<lb/>
real cRlsI?rTT?TTTo7rsn5TproTnTr<lb/>
of Eighth and Cotanche Sts Abortion referrals, suicide<lb/>
intervention, drug problems, birth control information,<lb/>
overnight housing Draft counsel Thursday 5 midnight All<lb/>
services free<lb/>
STUDY AT CXFCnD Earn up to b nouis credit while m<lb/>
residence in literature, philosophy, history, or drama<lb/>
Room, board d all fees tor four week term $400 This<lb/>
includes trips to Stonefienge, Stiatfonl upon ftvi n and<lb/>
Churchill's birth place Air iravel pro ' ' required at<lb/>
lowest rates Write Di James Stpwart UNC A shville,<lb/>
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For RENT Stadium Apartments, 14th St ajoins<lb/>
campus ii ECU $115 pei nth Call 752 5 700 or<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
350 Honda I ' ' " lon<lb/>
Call 756 5926 atti" PM?.??<lb/>
"All the<lb/>
David Bowie<lb/>
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Used<lb/>
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H2'2 I In kniMiii Xm'ium<lb/>
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ROCK N SOUL Rip off of the week<lb/>
SOME DOWN TO EARTH PRICES ON THESE<lb/>
WARNER BROTHRS L P S AND TAPES'<lb/>
THE MOTHERS<lb/>
VAZOO<lb/>
$3.59<lb/>
The Mothers<lb/>
The Grand Wazoo<lb/>
"eons alburr MS 2093<lb/>
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Wimf B'ot a rj?n- BS 26"<lb/>
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THE BEACH BOYS<lb/>
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in 72<lb/>
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Back in 72<lb/>
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The Beach Boys<lb/>
Holland<lb/>
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 s.? I KWO urtmNc irl?<lb/>
?m M? iJa o Mo V- Long al Ih. h?<lb/>
n i ' h K 'N SOU1 .<lb/>
mds<lb/>
I I - suggest!<lb/>
Rock n Soul price 3.59<lb/>
I apes suggested list<lb/>
Rok n Soul price 4 99<lb/>
America<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
l'on Bro? album BS 2655<lb/>
$3.59<lb/>
Paul Stookey<lb/>
One Night Stand<lb/>
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?f pp?j.f?y.$q.3fqtq,qrCf,f.f,ijtCf,j,qq,qq?t?j?f'<lb/>
<pb facs="00039671_0006"/><lb/>
pourrtainhed<lb/>
Editorial Commentary<lb/>
f<lb/>
student NewuJdum<lb/>
'?nuiniiB i 4i i jit Carolini unlwtlty<lb/>
Be 16 t cu Station<lb/>
Wnvuie Ninth Carolina ?7?34<lb/>
Taiapnon ?, 16 oi b?(,36!<lb/>
H<lb/>
A<lb/>
votf<lb/>
<lb/>
Campaign '73 marks<lb/>
death of party system<lb/>
SG elections an just around the<lb/>
corner In the pas) the elections have<lb/>
been marked by parties, coalitions and<lb/>
the occasional discussion of campus<lb/>
issues. I In- year in - imewhal of .1<lb/>
surprise mainly due to the anticlimatic<lb/>
atmosphere pervading the upcoming<lb/>
festivities I lwvr. n  be fun<lb/>
speculating aboul Campaign<lb/>
Parties, political of course, have just<lb/>
aboul seen their last sunset on the ECU<lb/>
ampus I here are several reasons for<lb/>
their ijck of popularity. On- is him<lb/>
thai their lack of popularity No party<lb/>
has ever existed in the past long enough<lb/>
t build an image on this campus rhere<lb/>
is a two fold reason for this<lb/>
r irst, thej all promise to be attentive<lb/>
and responsive to the needs of the<lb/>
student bod "hej promise that student<lb/>
grievances will be aired with the proper<lb/>
administrative forces on campus and in<lb/>
Raleigh Student ? iize this for<lb/>
being whal I is -general political<lb/>
rhetorii<lb/>
Secondly, parties have no financial<lb/>
 ans isor the type of polling and<lb/>
research necessary to detect what are the<lb/>
real issues to the average ECU student. It<lb/>
is easy to pinpoint what concerns every<lb/>
student in a very broad sense Tuition,<lb/>
' tdemic injustices and the weather to<lb/>
name but three But what can a student<lb/>
government administration do about<lb/>
these? Not much Students are<lb/>
concerned about transportation,<lb/>
entertainment and fair treatment in<lb/>
student nuns. Something can be done<lb/>
ahuii! these<lb/>
Parties are also plagued by their lack of<lb/>
cohesiveness. One major spokesman<lb/>
inevitably steps to the forefront,<lb/>
expounding his party's manifesto, Where<lb/>
are the others? "heir names are on the<lb/>
tickets, but their voices are nowhere to<lb/>
be lound Usually, the only binding<lb/>
force of a party 1- an anti-administration<lb/>
attitude Whoever can complain the<lb/>
loudest is usually chosen to head the<lb/>
ticket.<lb/>
Parties are very easlily stereotyped.<lb/>
Main of them cling pitifully to the<lb/>
notion that the mass of students are<lb/>
seeking the most radical, obscene group<lb/>
to carry on the cries of "Viva la<lb/>
revolution Nothing could be farther<lb/>
from the truth. Students can recognize a<lb/>
paranoic zealot at first glance. Besides,<lb/>
this isn't Berkeley fours years ago. This<lb/>
is Greenville, North Carolina-where the<lb/>
Administration Building represents a<lb/>
place to pay tuition at the first of each<lb/>
quarter, not an enemy outpost to be<lb/>
attacked, overwhelmed and held at all<lb/>
cost .<lb/>
Parties are generally born or altered<lb/>
following an extreme economic or<lb/>
emotional crisis. Since the awe-inspiring<lb/>
concern over the overplayed issue of<lb/>
VISITATION is over-thank God-ECU's<lb/>
radical body has been groping in the<lb/>
dark for another means to renew the fire<lb/>
of student dissent. Despite the fact the<lb/>
Chancellor Jenkins can veto any act of<lb/>
the SGA, there are legitimate differences<lb/>
between the students and the<lb/>
administration that need to be ironed<lb/>
out. Let's hope the ext crop of ECU<lb/>
politicos sit down and do a little<lb/>
analysing before the rhetoric mills are<lb/>
cranked up.<lb/>
AS JOURNALISTS WB SAW<lb/>
THE WATERGATE. CASE AS<lb/>
A UNlQJJfc CHALLENGE.<lb/>
r4N,wliiLI?r TRAPITIOM<lb/>
OP INVESTIGATEVE RBPOKTIMG<lb/>
OUR. JOB WA5 -TD DIG INTO<lb/>
Tr-Pf?NJl?J?Ws AFFAIR<lb/>
and pimp oar WHO WAS<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE<lb/>
SO WE DOGGEPLV PURSUED<lb/>
TUAT INFORMATION SUSTAINED<lb/>
BY THE HOPE. THAT OUR<lb/>
EFFORTS MIGHT EVENTUALLY<lb/>
LEAD -no ARRESTS AND<lb/>
CONVICTIONS<lb/>
Mephen Raurlih . , ? ?,<lb/>
i on wertheim, tdvertisuta W<lb/>
Pal Crawford, ews Editor<lb/>
g Manager<lb/>
Brine Parrish, Features Edit<lb/>
Mike Edwards, Circulation Manage<lb/>
Id Herring. sst. News Editor<lb/>
PinIhs Dougherty, s?t. Features Editi<lb/>
3W<lb/>
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- PRESIDENT -<lb/>
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Don Trauaneck, Sports Editor<lb/>
Boss Maim. Chief Photographer<lb/>
,f ' ?aker. dtiwir<lb/>
R<lb/>
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THE FORUM<lb/>
?w:x.x-?xsvXsra<lb/>
:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?<lb/>
'Disgusting'<lb/>
editorial disgusting<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
This letter is being written in reference<lb/>
to the "Disgusting" editorial in last<lb/>
Thursday's Fountainhead. The editorial<lb/>
was concerning a bill which was passed<lb/>
in the SGA Legislature on Monday, Feb.<lb/>
5. Among other gross<lb/>
misrepresentations, the editorial<lb/>
suggested that there was a "complete<lb/>
ineptness" on the part of the SGA. It<lb/>
stated that "Once more the SGA<lb/>
Legislature has proven their (sic)<lb/>
parliamentary attentiveness and concern<lb/>
for the student body<lb/>
It seems that some people do not<lb/>
realize that the SGA Legislature<lb/>
functions as a group which is composed<lb/>
of individuals. Some people also do not<lb/>
realize that it only takes a majority vote<lb/>
(6091 plus 1) to pass a bill in the<lb/>
legislature. One would onlt have to<lb/>
attend one legislative meeting to see that<lb/>
it is very seldom that the legislature<lb/>
agrees 100 on any one subject. This<lb/>
difference of opinion is absolutely<lb/>
necessary as it is the primary factor<lb/>
which tends to make any elected body<lb/>
function with any simularity of fairness.<lb/>
It is this difference of opinion which<lb/>
keeps the actions of that body on the<lb/>
level. And it is this difference of opinion<lb/>
which was expressed so vehemently<lb/>
Monday night, Feb. 5.<lb/>
The bill in question was most<lb/>
definitely not passed unanimously, as it<lb/>
was debated for quite some period of<lb/>
time. Many members of the legislature<lb/>
were opposed to the bill and many spoke<lb/>
against it. In spite of this, the bill was<lb/>
passed. However, it was a very close<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
The important thing to remember is<lb/>
that almost half of the legislature voted<lb/>
against the bill. Those that did so shoula<lb/>
be commended instead of being<lb/>
chastized by an editorial that could<lb/>
possibly give the impression that no one<lb/>
in the legislature is capable of a single<lb/>
intelligent action or of making a decision<lb/>
by himself.<lb/>
There are many intelligent and capable<lb/>
individuals in the legislature. I only hope<lb/>
that the flagrant slams which are<lb/>
continually being made against their<lb/>
integrity do not discourage them to the<lb/>
point of causing them to give-up<lb/>
entirely.<lb/>
One who debated against<lb/>
and voted against<lb/>
the bill in question,<lb/>
Michael Edwards<lb/>
Day Student Rep.<lb/>
W?60?Moaaaa8aaa?oaaflyflfiflffi;yftfflftftfrftftfrfrf<lb/>
:?:?:?:?:?<lb/>
Hour to learn,<lb/>
or hour to teach?<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I have a diificult time trying to<lb/>
understand this or any educational<lb/>
system.<lb/>
People are out to try to out-trick the<lb/>
other. Students search around often to<lb/>
find the easiest teachers, and then adjust<lb/>
their schedules accordingly; teachers<lb/>
invent multiple guess tests to make the<lb/>
ones who have studied well barely pass,<lb/>
and enable those who have hardly<lb/>
opened a book to fall adequately in their<lb/>
normal curve.<lb/>
Why are grades not given for what you<lb/>
LEARN in a particular classTI'his would<lb/>
seem to evaluate the teacher as well as<lb/>
the student. The grades seem instead to<lb/>
be issued on how well you get along with<lb/>
a teacher or on how much you have<lb/>
learned in the past outside the course.<lb/>
I never expect things in life f.o be<lb/>
perfect, but we all must strive and<lb/>
attempt to gain what we can in the right<lb/>
way. We must voice our objections and<lb/>
recommendations in a fair and<lb/>
respectable manner.<lb/>
Since many students here are<lb/>
"learning" how to be teachers, and we<lb/>
all come in contact with one at some<lb/>
ime. I propose the simple question to<lb/>
those who are concerned with teaching;<lb/>
do you feel each day you have only an<lb/>
hour to teach, or do you have to teach<lb/>
for an hour?<lb/>
Thoughtfully,<lb/>
A Concerned Student<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
scores two<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
If the February 6 issue of the<lb/>
Fountainhead is an indication of future<lb/>
Fountainheads, then I am confident that<lb/>
you will enjoy credibility with the<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Your emphasis on the role of a free<lb/>
press in a free society and the necessity<lb/>
of improving this nation's Criminal<lb/>
Justice System reflects an awareness at<lb/>
Fountainhead of two extremely<lb/>
important contemporary issues.<lb/>
As Balcum and Campbell have aptly<lb/>
written much more than technical<lb/>
knowledge of firing weapons and police<lb/>
organization is required in successfully<lb/>
dealing with human beings on the crisis<lb/>
level. I have this year begun employment<lb/>
with North Carolina's Department of<lb/>
Corrections in a program development<lb/>
capacity. I can attest from personal<lb/>
experience that education in the social<lb/>
sciences is fundamental in coping with<lb/>
people's problems. Incarcerated<lb/>
individuals, for example, suffer from the<lb/>
treat-them-all- alike approach of the<lb/>
uneducated and the cold<lb/>
do-it-like-the-Manual-says techniques of<lb/>
the inadequately trained personnel that<lb/>
1 dominate Corrections today.<lb/>
The success of the Criminal Justice<lb/>
System as a whole in preventing crime,<lb/>
prosecuting criminals, and modifying<lb/>
criminal behavior is directly related to<lb/>
the foresight and insight of the personnel<lb/>
involved. The Department of Social<lb/>
Work and Corrections at ECU should be<lb/>
acknowledged for its thorough approach<lb/>
in preparing college graduates for this<lb/>
field. Their professional contribution<lb/>
within the next five years should have a<lb/>
profoundly positive impact in coDine<lb/>
with the abnormal and anti-social<lb/>
behavior this society defines as criminal.<lb/>
Cecil Myers<lb/>
Urges support of<lb/>
Eppinete's defense<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I call attention to an important court<lb/>
case which will be tried in New Bern this<lb/>
week the Chuck Eppinete case. Chuck<lb/>
Eppinete, an active field worker of N.C.<lb/>
Resistance is charged with (1)<lb/>
non-possession of selective service<lb/>
identification card and (2)<lb/>
non -possession of selective service<lb/>
classification card. He faces a possible 10<lb/>
year prison sentence (5 years on each<lb/>
count). Chuck Eppinete was one of 89<lb/>
men who turned their draft cards in<lb/>
during an anti-war demonstration. Chuck<lb/>
was the only man of the 89 arrested for<lb/>
non possession of his selective service<lb/>
cards. The nature of this case is<lb/>
obviously political. Eppinete was<lb/>
actually arrested because of his work in<lb/>
N.C. Resistance. Eppinete is a victim of<lb/>
government's attempt to intimidate<lb/>
persons committed to the organizing of<lb/>
resistance to U.S. Militarism. I urge all to<lb/>
SUPPORT THE EPPINETE DEFENSE.<lb/>
There will be a meeting held tonight,<lb/>
Feb. 13 at 730 p.m. in room 204 of the<lb/>
Student Union for all interested in<lb/>
supporting Chuck Eppinete.<lb/>
Arrangements II be made at this<lb/>
meeting for those interested in attending<lb/>
the trial.<lb/>
Donna Hinton<lb/>
Chauvinist park<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
To all students who are considering the<lb/>
Equal Rights Amendments I would like<lb/>
to state my case. I am a 23 year old<lb/>
graduating senior, female with a degree<lb/>
in Biology and over a year's work in<lb/>
Geology. I applied for a summer job at<lb/>
Mount Mitchell State Park for the<lb/>
position of Naturalist, which had the<lb/>
following requirements: completion of 3<lb/>
years of college with specialization in<lb/>
one of the natural sciences (two years<lb/>
with 1 year of major course in field of<lb/>
specialization). O.K it sounds like I'm<lb/>
qualified. Well, I have just received a<lb/>
letter from Mount Mitchell State Park<lb/>
which says: "Acceptable male applicants<lb/>
are preferred due to lack of living<lb/>
accomodations for females<lb/>
Unfortunately, Mt. Mitchell is isolated<lb/>
and we have no living quarters for<lb/>
females Knowing for a fact that Mt<lb/>
Mitchell has cabins and a dormitory. I<lb/>
find it difficult to believe that<lb/>
arrangements for female workers can't<lb/>
be made. Sounds to me like they never<lb/>
plan to hire any women, and this is only<lb/>
an excuse. What good has my 5 years of<lb/>
college done me if I can't get the job I<lb/>
want? I have been discriminated<lb/>
against<lb/>
Sarah M. Heath<lb/>
Women residents<lb/>
deserved break<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In response to Mr. Edward's letter ir<lb/>
Tuesday's issue concerning the bus trir<lb/>
to Raleigh being sponsored by WRC, w<lb/>
should like to enlighten him regardint<lb/>
the facts. The simple reason for wo met<lb/>
students living in the dorm being chargec<lb/>
a lesser fee ($1.00 instead of $2.001 1<lb/>
that it is their money which is being usec<lb/>
to acquire the bus. A portion of th.<lb/>
Social Fees paid by each woman residan<lb/>
at the beginning of Fall Quarter 1<lb/>
allocated to WRC to sponsor sue!<lb/>
activities as this bus trip. Therefore, it 1<lb/>
only logical that the women residents b<lb/>
given a discount on the cost of the tri<lb/>
as it is they who are paying for the buv<lb/>
Mr. Edwards, your Open mouth an<lb/>
closed mind are good examples of wha<lb/>
we women are working to overcome.<lb/>
Rebecca Eur<lb/>
1st Vice Chairman, WR<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
All student faculty members, and<lb/>
administrator, are urged to express the<lb/>
opinions in writing to the Forum<lb/>
The editors page i. an open forum<lb/>
where such opin.on. may be pubJhe,?<lb/>
Ungned editorial, reHe' ,n<lb/>
opm.on. of the ed.tor-in-chief, and no<lb/>
nece-ardy o? of the ente ,uff 0<lb/>
evens majority. or<lb/>
When writing to the Forum th,<lb/>
following procedure should be ujd'<lb/>
-Letter, should" be co,ce and ,? tn?<lb/>
-Letter, .hould be t?.<lb/>
doublepaced, and .hould not ' '<lb/>
300 word ' PX ??(<lb/>
-Letter, .hould be signed<lb/>
nwie of the author and other JS tht<lb/>
Upon the request of the 'f<lb/>
name, may be withheld hr<lb/>
Signed article, on thw paK(. refu.<lb/>
opinion, of the auth?)rt ,7 <lb/>
neceMMily those of K0un ' ?nd not<lb/>
Ewt Carolina Univer,lty Ulnh?' Or<lb/>

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