<?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="00039672_0001"/>
X<lb/>
??:?:?:?:<lb/>
:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:?:<lb/>
Eppinete.<lb/>
nade at this<lb/>
d in attending<lb/>
Donna Hinton<lb/>
ark<lb/>
insidering the<lb/>
I would like<lb/>
23 year old<lb/>
fith a degree<lb/>
ar's work in<lb/>
immer job at<lb/>
irk for the<lb/>
ich had the<lb/>
npletion of 3<lb/>
lalization in<lb/>
s (two years<lb/>
e in field of<lb/>
nds like I'm<lb/>
t received a<lb/>
State Park<lb/>
le applicants<lb/>
It of living<lb/>
females.<lb/>
I is isolated<lb/>
luarters for<lb/>
act that Mt.<lb/>
lormitory, I<lb/>
'lieve that<lb/>
rkers can't<lb/>
they never<lb/>
this is only<lb/>
1 5 years of<lb/>
?t the job I<lb/>
?rim mated<lb/>
hM. Heath<lb/>
ants<lb/>
ik<lb/>
's letter lr<lb/>
e bus trif<lb/>
? W'RC, w?<lb/>
regard m<lb/>
or womer<lb/>
ig charge(<lb/>
$2.00) i<lb/>
being user.<lb/>
in of th<lb/>
n residan<lb/>
Quarter i<lb/>
sor sucl<lb/>
efore, it i<lb/>
sidents b<lb/>
?f the txi<lb/>
r the bus.<lb/>
outh an<lb/>
s of wha<lb/>
?ome.<lb/>
ecca Eur<lb/>
'an, WR<lb/>
cy<lb/>
?"?, and<lb/>
? their<lb/>
forum<lb/>
Wished<lb/>
ct the<lb/>
nd not<lb/>
taff or<lb/>
I, the<lb/>
i<lb/>
to the<lb/>
ped,<lb/>
'XCM'd<lb/>
i th?<lb/>
'filers<lb/>
their<lb/>
t the<lb/>
not<lb/>
1 or<lb/>
Country Club<lb/>
charges made<lb/>
By SKIPSAUNDERS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The non-admittance of three ECU<lb/>
student to thl. Aydn (Vnmtry Cub'ha8<lb/>
brought charges and refutations of racial<lb/>
discrimination on the part of the club<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
The three students AJ Day, Larry<lb/>
Hurst and James Carter - attempted to<lb/>
enter the country club on Wed Feb 7<lb/>
t? play golf. Of the three, both Hurst<lb/>
andarter are black.<lb/>
Their entrance was stopped by club<lb/>
manager Clarence Alexander, who<lb/>
stated that. U non-members, the<lb/>
students were ineligible to play.<lb/>
Day and Carter, said, however that<lb/>
they had played golf at Ayden Country<lb/>
Uub before with other students who are<lb/>
also non-members. They said they also<lb/>
knew that the ecu intramural golf<lb/>
teams and many other students played<lb/>
as non-members.<lb/>
"The Ayden golf course is the only<lb/>
course students can use within<lb/>
reasonable distance from ECU " said<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
"Any member can invite a guest if he<lb/>
wants said Alexander. Me revealed<lb/>
further that "a few years ago 1 talked<lb/>
the club's board of directors into<lb/>
allowing me to let students play as my<lb/>
ffuests. If 1 don't know the student or<lb/>
think they might be trouble-makers<lb/>
then obviously I won't admit them to'<lb/>
play<lb/>
denies racial<lb/>
hy students<lb/>
Alexander said he suggested that the<lb/>
dub admit student non-members during<lb/>
the week days because busmess was<lb/>
slow and the students had no where else<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
The country club's board of directors<lb/>
had allowed him to use his own<lb/>
discretion as to who he would admit to<lb/>
play, Alexander explained He said he<lb/>
didn't remember having seen Day or<lb/>
Carter play there before.<lb/>
To gain admission to the country club<lb/>
one must submit an application, which<lb/>
is then reviewed by the club's board of<lb/>
directors. If accepted, the applicant is<lb/>
required to pay a $200 membership fee<lb/>
and $17 a month in dues thereafter.<lb/>
Alexander was then asked whether he<lb/>
thought student membership to the golf<lb/>
course could be obtained through ECU<lb/>
funds. He said he couldn't comment on<lb/>
that because it would be a matter for<lb/>
the country club's board of directors to<lb/>
decide.<lb/>
The country club's board of directors<lb/>
met Tuesday night Feb. 13. There was<lb/>
no change announced concerning<lb/>
Alexander's right to admit non-members<lb/>
as his guest.<lb/>
Country club president, M. C. Baldree<lb/>
said this matter will possibly be referred<lb/>
to a general membership meeting.<lb/>
In 8-10 years<lb/>
Black schooling debated<lb/>
(If) -The "white face" of higher<lb/>
educat.on is a continuing problem that<lb/>
needs to be attacked constantly charges<lb/>
a black psychologist at the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Madison.<lb/>
Although some of his colleagues on<lb/>
the campus call his criticism "old hat "<lb/>
Prof Ross A. Evans claims many<lb/>
academic disciplines are "culture<lb/>
bound" and continue to teach American<lb/>
icis assumptions. He states- "I'm<lb/>
baffled that some say this criticism is<lb/>
old hat. I his is something that needs to<lb/>
be articulated in as many ways as<lb/>
possible. It's depressing that this 'old<lb/>
hat' criticism is so accurate<lb/>
PROF. EVANS<lb/>
Evans is particularly critical of<lb/>
educators who make what he calls "the<lb/>
inferiority assumptions" about blacks.<lb/>
These educators spend too much time<lb/>
trying to offer "scientific explanations"<lb/>
of assumed inferiority within blacks, he<lb/>
contends.<lb/>
"The myth of blind objectivity has<lb/>
the disadvantage of working to the<lb/>
disadvantage of the oppressed adds<lb/>
Evans, who has a joint appointment<lb/>
with thi' Afro-American studies<lb/>
department on this campus. "Asa black<lb/>
psychologist I, like many others, have<lb/>
always tried very hard to treat the<lb/>
development of my professional<lb/>
proficiency apart from my personal<lb/>
experience as a black American.<lb/>
"In so doing, I find now that I have<lb/>
allowed myself to be diverted from the<lb/>
essentially racist elements buried in<lb/>
many of the fundamental assumptions<lb/>
of American psychology assumptions<lb/>
which have served to punish black<lb/>
Americans hrutually with the sanction<lb/>
and participation of too many black as<lb/>
well as white psychologists<lb/>
PROF. BOWMAN<lb/>
The chairman of his department, Prof.<lb/>
Robert E. Bowman, considers Evan's<lb/>
criticism valid: "We're bound to teach<lb/>
cultural biaseswe do it without<lb/>
thinking about it. As educators and<lb/>
scientists, we need to make a conscious<lb/>
effort to be aware of these biases.<lb/>
"One of the reasons we hired<lb/>
Evans-in addition to his competency as<lb/>
a psychologist-was because his<lb/>
perspective will be a valuable input for<lb/>
our department Bowman added that<lb/>
Evan's criticism was not new, but that it<lb/>
was the type criticism that needs to be<lb/>
made constantly.<lb/>
PROF. LAMBERT<lb/>
Prof. Philip Lambert of the<lb/>
educational psychology department<lb/>
agreed that Evan's criticism was not new<lb/>
and called it "old hat He said: "I<lb/>
applaud blacks studying blacks, and I<lb/>
Alumna honored<lb/>
by Jaycees<lb/>
Cameron Payne Bain, a 1971 ECU<lb/>
graduate, has been selected Outstanding<lb/>
Educator of the Year by the Lenior<lb/>
County Jaycees.<lb/>
Mrs. Bain, a teacher at Harvey<lb/>
Elementary School in Kinston, was<lb/>
selected for the honor from a<lb/>
representative group consisting of one<lb/>
nominee from each Lenoir County<lb/>
school.<lb/>
While attending ECU, Mrs. Bain had<lb/>
majored in Special Education.<lb/>
agree with Evans that educators need to<lb/>
be aware of their cultural biases, but we<lb/>
have recognized the errors of racist<lb/>
assumptions for a long time<lb/>
PROF. CAMPBELL<lb/>
faculty members continue to make<lb/>
racist assumptions "because it's become<lb/>
a habit of thought. But the younger<lb/>
faculty members are not in that bag.<lb/>
These younger people have a different<lb/>
conception of what culture means-they<lb/>
are more aware of cultural biases.<lb/>
"To change the white face of this<lb/>
institution will mean exposing students<lb/>
and professors to facts about other<lb/>
cultures Campbell said one way he is<lb/>
trying to do this is by having his<lb/>
department establish mutual courses<lb/>
with other departments<lb/>
Contrary to statements made in a<lb/>
front-page story included in our Feb. 13<lb/>
issue the Russian program at ECU is not<lb/>
being dropped.<lb/>
According to Dr. Maria Malby of the<lb/>
German and Russian Department, the<lb/>
Russian program is "still very much<lb/>
alive A Russian I course will be taught<lb/>
in the spring at noon each day; in<lb/>
addition, interest in Russian language<lb/>
and literature has grown considerably.<lb/>
"Russian has grown more popular<lb/>
said Dr. Malby. 'Thirty five students<lb/>
signed up for our Ri"??' literature<lb/>
course.<lb/>
"This is almost double the enrollment<lb/>
when the course was first offered last<lb/>
year<lb/>
While Russian and German are being<lb/>
merged into the Romance Language<lb/>
Department, neither is being dropped.<lb/>
Fountainhead regrets our error to the<lb/>
contrary, and assures that such<lb/>
oversights will be checked in the future.<lb/>
Medical school<lb/>
receives grants<lb/>
A total of $17,716 was granted to<lb/>
ECU during January from federal and<lb/>
state government agencies and the Du<lb/>
Pont Foundation.<lb/>
The funds were awarded to the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine, the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Professions, the<lb/>
Departments of Chemistry and<lb/>
Psychology and the Graduate School.<lb/>
The largest grant was an award of<lb/>
$6,251 to the ECU School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Professions from the<lb/>
Albemarle Human Resources<lb/>
Development System.<lb/>
An award of $5,475 was given to the<lb/>
Graduate School by the National<lb/>
Science Foundation as an institutional<lb/>
grant for the sciences at ECU.<lb/>
Awards of $2,500 were given to the<lb/>
School of Medicine by the N. C. Heart<lb/>
Association and the Department of<lb/>
Chemistry by the Du Pont Foundation.<lb/>
North Carolina United Community<lb/>
Services awarded $990 to the<lb/>
Department of Psychology for a<lb/>
research project on the effects of<lb/>
amphetamine drugs on the brains<lb/>
amnestic syndrome.<lb/>
Parking decks 'answer'<lb/>
Parking deck are the on!) answer for<lb/>
East Carolina unsurmoui irkmg<lb/>
problem, said Joe CsJder, head of<lb/>
campus mjIh .<lb/>
BCU's problem is like that oi any<lb/>
other major university  North<lb/>
Carolina, according to Calder Thereare<lb/>
just too many cars and nol enough<lb/>
parking spaces<lb/>
Calder .said ECU's parking problem<lb/>
really itarted approximately lo yean<lb/>
ago, when the campus was planned At<lb/>
that time, the campus was foreseen as a<lb/>
walking campus. Out of approximately<lb/>
3,000 students, only 10 per cent owned<lb/>
vehicles.<lb/>
Therefore as the years passed, many<lb/>
buildings were constructed but there<lb/>
were no parking plans.<lb/>
Now, Calder said, of our present<lb/>
enrollment of 10-11 thousand students,<lb/>
50 per cent of the students own and<lb/>
drive vehicles on the college campus.<lb/>
The campus has had to result to 'patch<lb/>
?P parking plans to make the best of a<lb/>
bad situation<lb/>
Presently, said Calder of the major<lb/>
universities in North Carolina, our<lb/>
situation is the best. ECU has been ablr<lb/>
to buy marginal and submarginaj tenet<lb/>
property to expand parking facilities<lb/>
For example, on Ninth street several<lb/>
Houses have been bought by the school<lb/>
Vfter the houses have been torn down s<lb/>
parking lot w,li be constructed. Calder<lb/>
said the only problem with our presei I<lb/>
expansion is that the parking areas are<lb/>
getting farther and farther away from<lb/>
the classroom buildings. There is no<lb/>
?pace available near the .enter of<lb/>
campus<lb/>
However, even at ECU there is a limit<lb/>
to available space for parking<lb/>
construction, "in 8-10 years the only<lb/>
answer will be parking decks said<lb/>
Calder "Parking decks will use a<lb/>
minimum amount of space and at the<lb/>
same time they can house an adequate<lb/>
 ??WXM?w?WW?;vv<lb/>
THIS IS FOUNTAINHEAD'S LAST ISSUE<lb/>
OF THIS QUARTER<lb/>
NEXT ISSUE IS MARCH5 GOOD LUCK<lb/>
?xWft<lb/>
?x-x?<lb/>
number of automobiles<lb/>
I he problem with parking decks will<lb/>
be the expense I aider said a minimal<lb/>
estimate is $1,700 1,800 par parking<lb/>
?pace; this is only an estimate tor<lb/>
construction costs it will take at least s<lb/>
quarter of a million dollars to get into<lb/>
the parking deck program This amount<lb/>
oi money must be raised by the school<lb/>
before any construction is itarted<lb/>
Calder added the ECU must be ses<lb/>
responsible because there an- no state<lb/>
appropriations for parking facilities<lb/>
Therefore the school must raise the<lb/>
money collecting fines for parking<lb/>
violations, and registration fees for<lb/>
operating a vehicle on campus<lb/>
 alder said the registration fee will<lb/>
have to be increased to $25 or 30 per<lb/>
vear for the spaces available now At<lb/>
this rate in five or six years, the school<lb/>
will have enough money to get into<lb/>
plans for the parking decks<lb/>
"After the quarter of a million dollars<lb/>
is raised, then we might be able to get<lb/>
help from the general assembly he<lb/>
said<lb/>
So far Calder said. "I have been<lb/>
able to enlighten the administration and<lb/>
their cooperation is good " His one<lb/>
hope is that, when it comes time for the<lb/>
students to help, they will be equally<lb/>
co-operative<lb/>
ountamhead<lb/>
and the truth shall make you free'<lb/>
Housing list to emerge in spring<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
THURSDAY. FEB. 15, 1973<lb/>
VOLUME IV, NUMBER 35<lb/>
By PORTIA REESE<lb/>
Special to Founlainhearl<lb/>
A detailed list of all off-campus<lb/>
housing in the Greenville area is in the<lb/>
process of being made by the Office of<lb/>
Consumer Affairs<lb/>
According to Consumer Afairs<lb/>
secretary Bob M. .eel, wilt enable<lb/>
students to secure a residence which will<lb/>
best suit his needs. It will also enable<lb/>
the landlord to make known a clear-cut<lb/>
view of any rules and regualtions that he<lb/>
feels are necessary.<lb/>
McKeel says that the information for<lb/>
the proposed list is being gathered by<lb/>
the use of questionnaires. He obtained<lb/>
the names of landlords from the campus<lb/>
housing authorities and from an open<lb/>
canvass of students.<lb/>
According to McKeel, the list should<lb/>
be out by Spring Quarter, it will<lb/>
probably be published in Fountainhead.<lb/>
If the budget allows the SGA Office<lb/>
of Consumer Affairs will update the list<lb/>
each quarter and publish it also.<lb/>
The list included such information as:<lb/>
type of rental property, distance from<lb/>
campus and furnishings provided.<lb/>
McKeel said if any student would like to<lb/>
suggest other questions for future lists<lb/>
he would welcome them If any student<lb/>
is aware of any landlord not included on<lb/>
the list, McKeel claims he would be glad<lb/>
to include this new information Any<lb/>
names submitted immediately, will be<lb/>
included in the Spring quarter printing.<lb/>
If not submitted in time they will be<lb/>
included in any future lute. McKeel can<lb/>
be contacted through the SAG office on<lb/>
the third floor of the Student Union.<lb/>
McKeel expects some problems in<lb/>
getting a return on all the questionnaires<lb/>
he has sent out. If a landlord with<lb/>
rooms for rent has a yearly boarder, he<lb/>
might ignore the questionnaire because<lb/>
he doesn't need publicity for new<lb/>
tenants. According to McKeel, there are<lb/>
some owners who feel that they dont<lb/>
need the widespread publicity.<lb/>
According to Consumer Affairs<lb/>
Secretary Bob McKeel, the list will<lb/>
enable students to secure a residence<lb/>
which will best suit his needs. It will<lb/>
also enable the landlord to make known<lb/>
a clear-cut view of any rules and<lb/>
regulations that he feels are<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
Kenton to appear<lb/>
in March concert<lb/>
Stan Kenton and his 19 piece orchestra<lb/>
will be appearing at Wright Auditorium<lb/>
on the East Carolina University campus<lb/>
Wednesday, March 7. The concert, given<lb/>
in conjunction with an afternoon clinic,<lb/>
is part of a program to develop Jazz<lb/>
studies in Eastern Carolina schools which<lb/>
is being financed by a grant from the<lb/>
National Endowment for the Arts<lb/>
Kenton - through his work with the<lb/>
National Stage Band Camps and his own<lb/>
organization. The Creative World of Stan<lb/>
Kenton and his Orchestra - has been one<lb/>
of the major motivators of the school<lb/>
stage band movement, as well as an<lb/>
internationally known Jazz Artist His<lb/>
concerts of the Jazz Band in Residence<lb/>
and the use of the entire orchestra in<lb/>
clinics have proven to be useful tools in<lb/>
the building of Jazz Programs<lb/>
throughout the nation.<lb/>
A limited number of tickets for the<lb/>
concert, which will also feature the East<lb/>
Carolina Jazz Ensemble under the<lb/>
direction of Tom Smith and George<lb/>
Broussard. will be offered to the general<lb/>
public at a later date.<lb/>
Churches challenge six corporations<lb/>
i<lb/>
(CPS)-Six of the largest church<lb/>
organizations in this country have joined<lb/>
in an effort to challenge American<lb/>
corporate investment in South Africa.<lb/>
Participants in the effort, call the<lb/>
Church Project on LS. Investments in<lb/>
Southern Africa-1973, include the<lb/>
American Baptist Churches, the National<lb/>
Council of Churches, the United<lb/>
Presbyterian Church U.8.A the United<lb/>
Methodist Church, the Episcopal<lb/>
Church, and the Unitarian-L'mversalist<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Church Project73 has filed<lb/>
resolutions with 11 companies asking for<lb/>
a full disclosure of the facts on<lb/>
involvement of these companies in the<lb/>
Republic of South Africa.<lb/>
CORPORATIONS<lb/>
The companies are Burroughs<lb/>
Corporation, Caterpillar Tractor,<lb/>
Chrysler, Eastman Kodak. First National<lb/>
City Bank, General Electric, IBM, ITT.<lb/>
Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing,<lb/>
Texaco and Xerox.<lb/>
The six church groups, all of whom<lb/>
have substantial investments themselves,<lb/>
will formally seek proxy votes for these<lb/>
resolutions from stockholders, both large<lb/>
and small<lb/>
Florence Little, speaking for<lb/>
Project73 explained, "We will actively<lb/>
solicit votes from unversities,<lb/>
foundations, and mutual funds, churches<lb/>
and unions, and of course from the<lb/>
concerned individual investors<lb/>
Little said that this program by the<lb/>
churches in the area of corporate<lb/>
responsibility in Southern Africa was a<lb/>
f<lb/>
translation into action of continuing<lb/>
concern expressed about colonialism and<lb/>
racism-<lb/>
Rev Sterling Cary, president of the<lb/>
National Council of Churches, gave a<lb/>
fuller explanation for seeking public<lb/>
disclosure of corporate interests in South<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
"For decades LS. companies have<lb/>
invested in South Africa where apartheid<lb/>
is the law of the lands. These operations<lb/>
have been virtually unscrutinized.<lb/>
"They have made huge profits there<lb/>
while paying their black workers<lb/>
pitifully inadequate wages. They have<lb/>
run their plants like plantations because<lb/>
they felt no one cared.<lb/>
"They have provided products for the<lb/>
white government and military, thereby<lb/>
strengthening white control. They have<lb/>
helped create a flourishing economy-for<lb/>
whites<lb/>
In addition to the resolutions filed<lb/>
with the 11 companines operating in the<lb/>
Republic of South Africa, separate<lb/>
resolutions have been filed with Exxon<lb/>
Corporation and Phillips Petroleum<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
INVESTIGATION<lb/>
The Exxon proposal urges the<lb/>
corporation to set up a special<lb/>
committee to investigate implications of<lb/>
a proposed investment in the Portugese<lb/>
colony of Angola. The Church Project<lb/>
feels that an investment in Angola at this<lb/>
time can only support Portugal, which<lb/>
has 150,000 troops in Africa fighting<lb/>
natice independence.<lb/>
The Phillips resolution would prevent<lb/>
it from going into Namibia (South West<lb/>
Africa). Phillips has joined a consortium<lb/>
which will explore for oil offshore<lb/>
Namibia despite the fact that this<lb/>
territory is occupied by South Africa in<lb/>
defiance of numerous United Nations<lb/>
roolutions.<lb/>
SUCCESS AND FAILURE<lb/>
The Church Project on U.S.<lb/>
Investments in Southern Africa, which<lb/>
was first formed in 1971, has already<lb/>
met with some successes and failures.<lb/>
In 1972, it submitted similar<lb/>
stockholder resolutions requesting the<lb/>
details of the involvement of Mobil,<lb/>
Goodyear, IBM, and General Motors in<lb/>
South Africa and Gulf Oil in Angola.<lb/>
Mobil agreed to voluntarily disclose<lb/>
this information and sent it to all<lb/>
stockholders IBM made a similar<lb/>
agreement, but wound up only revealing<lb/>
a portion of the information requested.<lb/>
After a proxy contest. Gulf finally<lb/>
disclosed the data, and General Motors<lb/>
has agreed to mail all stockholders a<lb/>
booklet on corporate responsibility,<lb/>
including full details of the company's<lb/>
involvement in South Africa. Goodyear<lb/>
refused to provide any information and a<lb/>
resolution seeking the information was<lb/>
defeated at the company's 1972<lb/>
stockholders' meeting.<lb/>
Church Project7 3 has already<lb/>
announced that it is withdrawing its<lb/>
resolution filed with Burroughs<lb/>
Corporation because the corporation has<lb/>
agreed to publish a report for<lb/>
shareholders and others which will<lb/>
outline their program in social issues<lb/>
areas, including South Africa.<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00039672_0002"/><lb/>
The bqno picker of our time<lb/>
Scruggs overlooks bluegrass<lb/>
.<lb/>
 and<lb/>
tl ? Nashville<lb/>
of us<lb/>
who tended to neali i ,ntry<lb/>
musi and hall u up in ,i jingle<lb/>
silver bu kled,<lb/>
?eq . ? t pai kagi<lb/>
MOST OFT REQUESTED TUNE<lb/>
During r?. ytmn his gBamrmUy<lb/>
unhapn coUaboration with Lester Flatt<lb/>
phi tea to . ountry muaii heard<lb/>
onl tome ol Earl's leaser effi<lb/>
The Be<lb/>
?teams ol which<lb/>
? <lb/>
j<lb/>
I INNIE i Di<lb/>
esu i somewhat mon<lb/>
i<lb/>
nands-ituwn the m ? quested tun<lb/>
: 'ulai bluegrass gathering<lb/>
"Fogg) Mountait Breakdown l- rfc<lb/>
night we will undoubtabl) heai this<lb/>
lur' ? ? ? y<lb/>
wilhou'<lb/>
Know<lb/>
Mil; 111 VKIi Hol I those legends in theii own time? Heai one when he greets<lb/>
? ampus audiences I i tday<lb/>
when w hear them played "Cripple<lb/>
Creek "Salty Dog Blues and others<lb/>
POLITICAL PLAYING<lb/>
Sun. Eai separation from Lester<lb/>
Flat! h has been quite active in<lb/>
gatherings besides those expressly<lb/>
formed for bluegrass He and his son<lb/>
Randy (incidentally, one of 'he finest<lb/>
guitarists m the business.) have been<lb/>
conspicuous at anti-war concerts, .1 id<lb/>
BarJ'i outspoken attitudes against the<lb/>
A lofty pinnacle<lb/>
i! . ? : fom<lb/>
Vietnam tragedy and other crimes<lb/>
against nature have endured him I<lb/>
many people for his politics as well ai<lb/>
his superior banjo playing Even a<lb/>
grievous heart attack a few years back<lb/>
has not dampened his spirit<lb/>
l get in the mood for Friday's<lb/>
concert, i suggest buying, stealing or<lb/>
borrowing one particular record, at<lb/>
least. "Karl Scruggs' Family and<lb/>
Friends on the Columbia label. Hen<lb/>
we have some excellent efforts by Baal<lb/>
and his son as well ;i collaborations<lb/>
with ()i and Merle Watson, the Byrds,<lb/>
Bob Dylan, and .oan Baa (on two of<lb/>
the finest live cuts she has everdonel.<lb/>
Then by Friday night this writer is sure<lb/>
you will be prime: put on your sleaziest<lb/>
flannel shirt, your baggiest, patchiest<lb/>
trousers, your most comfortable<lb/>
toe tapping shoes, grab your favorite<lb/>
hog-caller's daughter and be in Wright at<lb/>
8 00 Some ol you will be surprised;all<lb/>
will be delighted It not, I'm sure this<lb/>
wnter will hear about it in the editorial<lb/>
tai2c next quartei<lb/>
give to the<lb/>
march of Dimes<lb/>
the dope you'll<lb/>
a Europe hip.<lb/>
?IH?I<lb/>
6 Il M I<lb/>
"llH -IJipllt-<lb/>
I Hktn?oi<lb/>
am Cafeteria<lb/>
. s.<lb/>
CAU T0O?' 0 I 'OKfttf<lb/>
tut ntr assit owe its<lb/>
it'WIN  II MO<lb/>
VIMD ?o? rows (ll COM<lb/>
FORT INC (ONVINIINCI If<lb/>
M0NI ir 0V? UNWt5rtNf)<lb/>
NC fOONUIOIS -ivi<lb/>
IMPORTANT SO CAL1<lb/>
I O D A V<lb/>
SOI 523 bl18<lb/>
??<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L.i<lb/>
fa N<lb/>
i<lb/>
;?<lb/>
i<lb/>
.? . ?? mm mm ? to a i<lb/>
-<lb/>
SI SMMI ?<lb/>
? ? - ??- i .<lb/>
? Jut  m MH i f <lb/>
? ? uwoa io tu'ocM<lb/>
VJf jot Isila ? bnd I ?. A<lb/>
<lb/>
IMI<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
u ti t rt i i, jj i arj<lb/>
V<lb/>
ill<lb/>
Ij(' il st?l! I<lb/>
tn<lb/>
POD <lb/>
I (i<lb/>
11<lb/>
1,1, !<lb/>
w<lb/>
lit,<lb/>
11 u I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I!<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sports editor retires<lb/>
? ?dil<lb/>
I<lb/>
mn ittMi MAMM<lb/>
I<lb/>
An art i" hlstoi ? ?<lb/>
when the scnt.M in.ml<lb/>
Fountain head stafl ?<lb/>
Donald liaiisin . I, ?.???it<lb/>
thni' vears is the onl i.<lb/>
CO rememhei the t'oimlniuhci i ? -<lb/>
column tabloid .culm.<lb/>
aspiration, with lamnnli'i" '? h?M<lb/>
work with pilhlli Ida; ?<lb/>
Naval Ai adenn<lb/>
Joining tin Fountat<lb/>
Novemhei 1969 as I ipofl 1 '?' <lb/>
covered minoi spot I  huttnii<lb/>
swimming and wrestlmf When Honn)<lb/>
a retired IS spoil ediloi I ' ueaiecl,<lb/>
was chosen to replace him Sm, r then<lb/>
I have reigned supreme 'said rrausnrok<lb/>
laugh mgl<lb/>
In additon t' his experience al the<lb/>
Fountainhead, Yausneck has worked<lb/>
during the past fea summers ?( thi<lb/>
WILSON DAIl N riMES In June 1972<lb/>
Tvmisneck abo served as editor-in-chiei<lb/>
fi the HAVELOCK PROGRESS a<lb/>
regional weekl papei He acted as head<lb/>
photographer, copy readei and writer ol<lb/>
local news During that period hi ww<lb/>
virtually ? one man show<lb/>
TIMFS OFFFRS MUCH<lb/>
He considers th summers with th<lb/>
TIMES to ii beneficial foi his chi<lb/>
field He has acted SDOlta latin and<lb/>
society editor and has covered jjjpih r<lb/>
police and the courts lr,nwH?'l?.<lb/>
attributes much ol his oumaltsti<lb/>
education to John Scott, an ihtoi he<lb/>
iv.rktxl under at the TIMES<lb/>
I rausnei k recalls thi Koiintiiinhead ol<lb/>
(our vears ago "The papsi stsatedjout<lb/>
as a five-page tabloid I still reraembei<lb/>
all of the loiijj hours we spent, slaving to<lb/>
ieet the paper into print fTianksto Bob<lb/>
Thotien we converted to the broadsheet<lb/>
(a wider page) now m use Huh claimed<lb/>
the Fountainhead to be the fust<lb/>
regional paper to use the broadsheet<lb/>
p-sxvxsss<lb/>
! TEST<lb/>
lie I i paper the c.Unpus<lb/>
a ugh I on and noticed us "<lb/>
I, ,?i.on.ills It-It Thotien was<lb/>
niiioi under which he had<lb/>
W.in HI<lb/>
hualh<lb/>
11 iiiiiu'i<lb/>
worked<lb/>
ii hiiunlainhaad us a good eoiiege<lb/>
iupci Like an) college nawapapat<lb/>
 M difficulties bill in the wst our<lb/>
I   ihown an ability to put it all<lb/>
 that<lb/>
MOM HOW REPLACES<lb/>
When In -el lie liauMieck will ?,<lb/>
replaced b) J k Morrow, former sports<lb/>
nditoi foi a charlotte high school<lb/>
rtpwspapei Says I rausneck, "When .lark<lb/>
lust wrote foi me a few weeks ago, hs<lb/>
Showed good ability When he takes<lb/>
ovei Friday, I i iure he will exhibit<lb/>
Ibis He know ,i good deal about the<lb/>
layout and other techniques, and t?n<lb/>
easily learn what ha doesn't already<lb/>
know ' Traueneck will stay on u an<lb/>
adviaoi to Morrow during spring<lb/>
quartei<lb/>
In commenting on ECU sports.<lb/>
Iransiie, I, attributed most limitatinib<lb/>
to ,i lad ol adequate funds "The cost<lb/>
oi recruiting, coupled with the cost ol<lb/>
education, touts our reeruitmenl<lb/>
abilities This is especially true of the<lb/>
major sports, football and baaketbal r<lb/>
will be a while before football and<lb/>
basketball will be able to compete<lb/>
effectively<lb/>
SPORTS RECEIVE PRESTIGE<lb/>
. have ahead) accomplished great<lb/>
deal in joining ? recognised major<lb/>
conference For the tumor sports.<lb/>
1 rausneck acknowledges effectm<lb/>
programs "I he coaches are excellent<lb/>
and we have strong teams competing Q<lb/>
tougli schedules<lb/>
rrausneck's joumaliatii career hsj<lb/>
been well roundtsl In the navy hi<lb/>
formed a newspaper on his ship v<lb/>
Cherry Point Marine Air Base. ru-<lb/>
supervised publication of the bast<lb/>
newspaper, the WINDSOCK.<lb/>
inniinnw?iinniuiiiMniianniiiii?iiaajMWWiwiiii<lb/>
YOUR!<lb/>
.wLAI do ALl<lb/>
- -H IK Tl<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
lPHYSTl  ' - <lb/>
. - <lb/>
BREAKFASTPR01 ESSORS? -<lb/>
,1!J APITALIS1 ' ?CHATKAI BRIA<lb/>
'ARIS<lb/>
ERTYS1<lb/>
OSTEI  .<lb/>
- - II<lb/>
 OLD tfEA<lb/>
?MOS<lb/>
SN0WM<lb/>
- - : .<lb/>
S0RM<lb/>
?W<lb/>
 ? . '? <lb/>
?- ?<lb/>
BURI <lb/>
?-<lb/>
 - - ' SH Rl<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
n M 1<lb/>
i ;<lb/>
-<lb/>
? 'iouiiiip:i 11  . , u<lb/>
35,ULJ 'J'di a ? ii mot dn a ltd put<lb/>
,s ' ??? ? ?:? " i ???  ? .i ? <lb/>
? oux o3 aj<lb/>
M '  " <lb/>
lA.noA?<lb/>
,n di<lb/>
 ic Sc )L<lb/>
 <lb/>
?mi 1<lb/>
ii1,iW-?J-il-5)iVi-1-i-jitjj t<lb/>
? idoji<lb/>
u  i<lb/>
???W.<lb/>
o 1 <lb/>
inbi un<lb/>
ANTIQUE AUCTION SALE EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT AT730<lb/>
JELLY CUBBARDS SPOOl REDS Two Lrg Truck Losdt ,0 H. Sold I hli W?. . , " - " ? " ?WW<lb/>
JELLY CUBBAROS<lb/>
ROCKING CHAIRS<lb/>
PIE SAFES<lb/>
WASH STANDS<lb/>
DRY SINKS<lb/>
SETS OF CHAIRS<lb/>
STONE JUGS<lb/>
OIL LAMPS<lb/>
CARNIVAL GLASS<lb/>
TILT TOP TABLES<lb/>
GAME TABLES<lb/>
CANDLE STANDS<lb/>
COPPER KETTLES<lb/>
CORNER CABINETS<lb/>
?wvjv3tas<lb/>
SPOOL BEDS<lb/>
FARM BELLS<lb/>
BOOKCASES<lb/>
GUN CABINETS<lb/>
OLiv WATCHES<lb/>
HALL TREES<lb/>
SECRETARIES<lb/>
ROLL TOP DESKS<lb/>
BRASS BEDS<lb/>
PICTURE FRAMES<lb/>
SPINNET DESK<lb/>
TOWEL RACKS<lb/>
CUT GLASS<lb/>
CHINA CABin. is,<lb/>
' -tz.io; rrrr; A"i?n????<lb/>
Two Ldrqe Truck Load To B? Sold Thi. Wo?k<lb/>
<lb/>
COL. GCOROt iAr g(J?, J , J "Urn "<lb/>
 b, Asa, u r M Aod N u Viry W($-?<lb/>
v?. ,n??,iwi<lb/>
Stokes Auction House<lb/>
Own?d and Omii i t ? ffOMH iiawi iy<lb/>
HOME PHONF 7585979 ?? u ,<lb/>
(Locstl lOMUtt North of G).  "TaflUl ,? v0(<lb/>
- - ?, k. UiUil?U-l 1?ll?.??. fc<lb/>
iaii'ainitV-4)???<lb/>
PINE BLANKET CHESTS<lb/>
CHINESE TEMPLE JARS<lb/>
BRASS JELLY PANS<lb/>
EIGHT DAY CLOCK<lb/>
DEPRESSION GLASS<lb/>
CHEST OF DRAWERS<lb/>
PEWTER AND SILVER<lb/>
OLD TOYS AND BANKS<lb/>
BOWl AND PITCHER SETS<lb/>
OUBBN ANNE FURNITURE<lb/>
MARRi f TOP FURNITURE<lb/>
DROP LEAF TABLES<lb/>
eoiIND OAK TABLES<lb/>
women tee boxes<lb/>
WUKSR FURNITURE<lb/>
?PINNING WHEELS<lb/>
-SJWU<lb/>
II II ii II T<lb/>
<pb facs="00039672_0003"/><lb/>
ires<lb/>
.ip.t tin campus<lb/>
11(1 noticed Uh "<lb/>
ii'it Thonsn was<lb/>
??r which In- had<lb/>
is ? good ooUege<lb/>
college newsppr<lb/>
il in the wst our<lb/>
lulily to put it all<lb/>
EPLACES<lb/>
rausu'c'k will (<lb/>
row. tanner iporu<lb/>
itte high Khoo<lb/>
meek, "When Jack<lb/>
lew weeks ago, tie<lb/>
When he taka<lb/>
re he will exhibit<lb/>
)d (leal about the<lb/>
nniquee, ind can<lb/>
? doesn't already<lb/>
ill stav on as an<lb/>
during spring<lb/>
n ECU sports,<lb/>
most limitations<lb/>
fuiul.s "The cost<lb/>
with the cos! of<lb/>
our recruitment<lb/>
 wily true of the<lb/>
and basketball <lb/>
ore football and<lb/>
ible to compete<lb/>
E PRESTIGE<lb/>
omplished great<lb/>
recognised major<lb/>
ie minor sports.<lb/>
ledge effectm<lb/>
ics ire excellent<lb/>
am.s competing in<lb/>
hstu career ha-<lb/>
In the navy hi<lb/>
on his ship V<lb/>
Air Hasi ht-<lb/>
m of the lase<lb/>
?JOCK.<lb/>
JR<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
;s<lb/>
AUBRIA!<lb/>
'ARIS<lb/>
 :<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
URI <lb/>
KIRC <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? 1 ' l"i<lb/>
d pm<lb/>
oa?<lb/>
' tto<lb/>
mzm$<lb/>
-ii<lb/>
E3tai <lb/>
Thursday, February 15<lb/>
David Bowie<lb/>
Pountainhead, rhurtday, February 15, 1973 1<lb/>
.live 3<lb/>
Ziggy maintains superstar inventiveness<lb/>
Alpha X, Delta "All Sing" In Wright Auditorium at 8 00<lb/>
p in<lb/>
Friday, February 16<lb/>
Special Concert Earl Scruggi in Wright at 8.00 p.m.<lb/>
Wrestling: ECU vs. UNC W ,n Mmges at 800 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday, February 17<lb/>
March of D,mes DanceA Thon ,n Wngh. Auditorium from<lb/>
Noon to Midnight<lb/>
National Opera Company performs in McGlnnii at 8 15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Sunday, February 18<lb/>
Free Flick "Death in Venice" in Wright at 7:00 and 900<lb/>
p m.<lb/>
c<lb/>
o<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
w<lb/>
Wednesday, February 21<lb/>
International Film: "Marriage Italian Style" at 8 00 p m in<lb/>
Wright<lb/>
 <lb/>
By ROBERT McDOWELL<lb/>
I to f-ounlaiipfiMo<lb/>
"Space Oddity David Bowie il <lb/>
LSP4813).<lb/>
"The Man Who Bold The World David<lb/>
Bowie (RCA LSP-4816).<lb/>
Alice Cooper, turn in your snake.<lb/>
David Bowie has arrived!<lb/>
Bizarre. Bisexual frightening In.<lb/>
are just some of the adjectives thai<lb/>
reviewers have applied to Bowie.<lb/>
Another one is: Beautiful<lb/>
Whereas he might seem, in<lb/>
performance, like the galaxy's number<lb/>
one sada-maso freak, on record, Bowie u<lb/>
amazingly inventive and innovative. It is<lb/>
not too much to say that he will he one<lb/>
of the superstars of the 70's.<lb/>
To capitalize on Bowie's recent<lb/>
American tour, RCA released Spa. ,<lb/>
Oddity" and "The Man Who Sold The<lb/>
World two early Bowie efforts.<lb/>
completed in 1969 and 1970,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
"Space Odditywhich in 1968<lb/>
brought David Bowie into music's world<lb/>
arena as one to be reckoned with,<lb/>
inhabits and charges the whole being. As<lb/>
with all of Bowie's music, it is both<lb/>
e c' s t a t i c and<lb/>
uncomfortable discomforting. It dates<lb/>
early in the mutable yet paradoxically<lb/>
consistent Bowie odyssey and remains<lb/>
archetypal. Its achievement, and this is<lb/>
-UNIVERSITY BOARD<lb/>
OPENINGS-There are three openings<lb/>
on the I'diversify Board for Spring<lb/>
Quarter. Anyone interested may apply in<lb/>
the SOA office. 303 Wright Annex.<lb/>
-DON'T FORGET TO APPLY FOR<lb/>
GRADUATIOIM-AII students, graduate<lb/>
and undergraduate, who plan to<lb/>
graduate Spring Quarter. 1973 and who<lb/>
have neglected to make application for<lb/>
graduation, will be given a final<lb/>
opportunity to make application for<lb/>
graduation for the Spring Quarter. This<lb/>
application must be in the Registrar's<lb/>
Office no later than Friday, March 16.<lb/>
-PHI SIGMA TAU INITIATION-Thc<lb/>
Winter Quarter Phi Sigma Tau initiation<lb/>
will be held Friday, Feb. 16 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
in the Tar River Party Room. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend.<lb/>
-INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE-The<lb/>
Accounting Society will offer assistance<lb/>
m filling out Income Tax forms<lb/>
beginning Feb. a (Monday) m the lobhy<lb/>
of Wright Auditorium. This free service<lb/>
will be offered Monday thru Friday from<lb/>
4 to 7 and Saturday morning from 9 to<lb/>
12 All salaried personnel and students<lb/>
are welcome.<lb/>
-HISTORY AND SOCIAL STUDIES<lb/>
SYMPOSIUM-A symposium on history<lb/>
and social studies will be held on Friday.<lb/>
Feb. 16 at Tryon Palace in New Bern,<lb/>
N.C. The theme for the conference is<lb/>
"The American Revolution: In Thought<lb/>
and Action For additional information<lb/>
contact Hugh Wease. Chairman of the<lb/>
Symposium Committee, in the<lb/>
Department of History at ECU.<lb/>
- DEATH IN VENICE-is a film by the<lb/>
eminent Italian director Luchino<lb/>
Visconti (director of THE DAMNED) It<lb/>
is visually beautiful. thematically<lb/>
disturbing. Visconti has taken drastic-<lb/>
liberties with his original material,<lb/>
Thomas Mann's classic novella of the<lb/>
same name. In the film, the central<lb/>
character is an aging musician (played<lb/>
extremely well by Dirk Bogarde) who<lb/>
comes to Turn-of-the-century Venice<lb/>
?evening for pure beauty. He becomes<lb/>
infatuated with a young boy who<lb/>
symbolizes this ideal of beauty. The<lb/>
infatuation rohs him of his dignity and<lb/>
ultimately his life. This is the sort of film<lb/>
many local exibitors consider too<lb/>
"special" for their customers and refuse<lb/>
to book, so the present university<lb/>
showing may be your only chance to see<lb/>
DEATH IN VENICE. Widely acclaimed<lb/>
in more sophisticated areas, it won the<lb/>
Grand Prize at the 1971 Cannes Film<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
Sunday. Feb. 18. 7:00 p.m. and 9:00<lb/>
p.m. Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
RlGGAN SHOt<lb/>
REPAIR SHPP<lb/>
Pn S8 070<lb/>
REGAL NOTES<lb/>
UNLERSTUND PLAYS NOVELS AND POfMS<lb/>
FASTER ?ITM OUR NOTES<lb/>
Ph.lo.h P.I, I. C.I Sent '??????<lb/>
R.I S?nc. S1 U'k- P?k-<lb/>
m. Li W ? iw ???'?? ,Y"1"<lb/>
?fGAL KOTIS<lb/>
1140 "0" in ?"?<lb/>
? .1 0. C 2000'<lb/>
T.ltf ?H331-OX"<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
-PHI KAPPA PHI MEETING-1 here<lb/>
will be a meeting of Phi Kappa Phi on<lb/>
Ihursday. February 15 at 4:00 p.m. in<lb/>
SB 201.<lb/>
-BINGO NIGHT-Thursday, Feb. 15<lb/>
at 710 in Room 201 of the Union there<lb/>
will be a bingo night for all interested<lb/>
students. Students will be admitted by<lb/>
ID and activity card and allowed to<lb/>
bring a guest. Refreshments will be<lb/>
served and prizes awarded to the<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
-CAP AND CCWN APPLICATION-<lb/>
MI winter quarter graduates must have<lb/>
applied for cap and gown no later than<lb/>
February 28. Applications may be filed<lb/>
in Student Supply Stops<lb/>
-OPEN HOUSE-Linda Whitney and<lb/>
Donna landoli, senior Interior Design<lb/>
students, would like to invite you to<lb/>
view a renovation of a room of an old<lb/>
house on 504 E. Ninth St on Tues<lb/>
Feb. 20 and Wed Feb. 21, from 12-4<lb/>
p.m. Ijghting supplied courtesy of The<lb/>
Fixture House; furniture loaned by Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. James E. Cobband Mr. William<lb/>
F. Carrig.<lb/>
-PAYMENT OF FEES-The Cashier's<lb/>
Office will accept student fees for<lb/>
Spring Quarter beginning Monday, Feb.<lb/>
19. Payment in advance will help avoid<lb/>
some inconveniences and delays on<lb/>
Registration Day.<lb/>
-BIRTHDAY PARTY-The Coastal<lb/>
Plains Folklore Society will present a<lb/>
program commemorating the birthday<lb/>
of Muhammed, prophet of Islam, on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 21, at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 201 of the Student Union. The<lb/>
birthday celebration is an ancient poem,<lb/>
called "Maulidi written by Sheikh<lb/>
Al-Bazanyi, and was recorded in<lb/>
Mombasa, Kenya, by Dr. Robert Bunger<lb/>
in the Dept. of Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropology. His presentation will<lb/>
include a number of other interesting<lb/>
items. All members and any other<lb/>
interested persons are urged to attend.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
so of Bowie's music in general, is thai<lb/>
was .SOU then, and it still is now NOW<lb/>
personal and universal, perhaps galactic .<lb/>
microcosm ie and macrocosm i<lb/>
The preceding album note, wr;<lb/>
anonymously, sums up the unlqueneu<lb/>
?"?'I describes the impact that David<lb/>
Bowies music has. It il inviting and<lb/>
seductive and. at the same time<lb/>
bone-rattling<lb/>
Bowie'l tunes are minstrel tunes in<lb/>
that they, almost without exception, tell<lb/>
ry. built around the voice<lb/>
persona who finds his lot to be among<lb/>
the degraded, deviant, or dispossessed<lb/>
Bowie uses many voicei to ad OUl tl i i<lb/>
tragedies, when music follows lyric in<lb/>
form .nd emotion<lb/>
Space Oddity" is a haunting ballad<lb/>
about an astronaut lost in gpace "God<lb/>
Knows I'm Good describes the ordeal<lb/>
of a drab and starving old woman who<lb/>
shoplifts a "tin of stewing steak ' She is<lb/>
then overcome by guilt feelings and<lb/>
faints, only to be rescued by a<lb/>
sympathetic crowd unaware of her<lb/>
thievery "Letter to Hermione<lb/>
"Janine and "An Occasional Dream"<lb/>
chronicle unhappy love affaire<lb/>
'The Wild Eyed Boj From<lb/>
r'rloud" telli the story of "a solitary<lb/>
son from the mountain called the<lb/>
Freecloud" who it executed by feudal<lb/>
villagers who fear his ecc entricit)<lb/>
"Cygnet Committee" is a complex<lb/>
piec that lashes out a cultural and<lb/>
political "leaders" who abuse their<lb/>
power and ignore their responsibilitiei to<lb/>
the masses, copping out for personal<lb/>
financial gain<lb/>
Infiltrated buaineu cesspools.<lb/>
Hating through Our sleeves<lb/>
'??' and We sla the Catholic throat<lb/>
Stoned the poor on slogans such as:<lb/>
Wish You I ould Hear'<lb/>
Love Is ah We Need<lb/>
Kick out the Jams<lb/>
'Kick Out VoUr Mother<lb/>
1 p Your friend<lb/>
Screw i p your Brother or<lb/>
He'll Gel You in the End<lb/>
"Cygnel Committee' is overlong and<lb/>
sometimes inscrutable, but its lyrics<lb/>
come strangely close to poetry in plai ei<lb/>
'Memory of ? Free Festival" is<lb/>
another lengthy piece which could be<lb/>
cut down<lb/>
uhed and Bomewhal Slightly<lb/>
Dazed" is a shocker. It is another<lb/>
itory-aong whooe brutal and pungent<lb/>
lyrici come from the mouth of one of<lb/>
England l paupers who strikes out in his<lb/>
anger against the poverty and oppression<lb/>
that oociet) has inflicted upon him. His<lb/>
sexual target tl one of the privileged<lb/>
daughters of the upper lass <lb/>
I'm a phallus in pigtails<lb/>
And there - blood on my nose.<lb/>
And my tissue is rotting<lb/>
Where the rats .hew my bones.<lb/>
And my eye locket'l empty<lb/>
Se nothing but pain.<lb/>
I keep having this brainstorm<lb/>
About twelve times daj<lb/>
So now you could spend the morning<lb/>
walking with me quite amazed,<lb/>
As I'm Unwashed and Somewhat<lb/>
Slightly Dazed<lb/>
Sm Insists page 4 I<lb/>
-TALENT AND FASHION-Talent<lb/>
Show and Fashion Review will be<lb/>
presented by East Carolina's future<lb/>
chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity<lb/>
Tuesday, Feb. 20, 1973 at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Admission is fifty<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
AEROSPACE DANCE-A-THON-<lb/>
Grab a gal and dig out your dancing<lb/>
shoes for a good old-fashioned, rip-it-out<lb/>
DANCEATHON! The Areospace<lb/>
Studies will sponsor a dance-a-thon on<lb/>
Feb. 17, in Wright Auditorium from 12<lb/>
noon to 12 midnighttif you last). All<lb/>
proceeds will go to the March of Dimes.<lb/>
Anyone or organization or company can<lb/>
sponsor couples or singles.<lb/>
Pre-registration is on Feb. 12-14, 9 a.m.<lb/>
to 1 1 p.m.<lb/>
-ENVIRONMENTAL FILM<lb/>
SERIES-The department 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/>
Jones Cafeteria Main Cafeteria <lb/>
11.25 DINNER SPECIAL <lb/>
DAJL1 I<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
 VERDE<lb/>
i<lb/>
SHOES &amp; BOOTS<lb/>
13 to 12 and more<lb/>
1 off original cost<lb/>
Wed. Eve 8-12<lb/>
THE RECORD BAR<lb/>
WELCOMES<lb/>
The Earl Scruggs Revue<lb/>
AND OFFERS THESE SPECIALS ON THEIR LP's @ TAPES<lb/>
??<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
2to<lb/>
M<lb/>
?<lb/>
X<lb/>
"LIVE AT KANSAS STATE<lb/>
ft ft.<lb/>
?)<lb/>
,A s<lb/>
-Mf<lb/>
Ly<lb/>
40<lb/>
4.98 LIST LP'S ONLY 3.33<lb/>
5 98 LIST LP'S ONLY 3.68<lb/>
6.98 LIST TAPES " 4.99<lb/>
<lb/>
'?<lb/>
S-<lb/>
SHIVER SLRPIAS SALES<lb/>
822 DICKINSON AVE.<lb/>
OPPOSITE PARTY PAC<lb/>
<pb facs="00039672_0004"/><lb/>
JV<lb/>
r<lb/>
 DISCOUNT STEREO COMPONENT<lb/>
WE BOUGHT OUT ANOTHER DEALER<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
xo<lb/>
CONTINUES<lb/>
??????????????<lb/>
e -oV-<lb/>
W<lb/>
. ?'C<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
W<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
9r<lb/>
USED<lb/>
DEMONSTRATOR<lb/>
AND<lb/>
DISCONTINUED EQUIPMENT<lb/>
?<lb/>
J.<lb/>
Continued from page 3)<lb/>
"The Man Who Sold the World<lb/>
which is also produced hy Tony<lb/>
Viacounti, features "The Width of a<lb/>
Circle" and "Running Gun Blues The<lb/>
former explores Bowie's hisexuality with<lb/>
descriptive and powerful lyrics that will<lb/>
be sensual to some and disgusting to<lb/>
others:<lb/>
His nebulous body swayed above<lb/>
His tongue swollen with devil's<lb/>
love<lb/>
The snake and I, a venom hig I said,<lb/>
"Do it again,<lb/>
do it again<lb/>
Breathe, breathe, breathe<lb/>
deeply<lb/>
And I was seething, breathing<lb/>
deeply<lb/>
A spitting sentry, horned<lb/>
and tailed<lb/>
Waiting for you. The latter could be<lb/>
called "The My Lai Anthem It strikes<lb/>
out at profiteering merchants who make<lb/>
their fortunes from human misery:<lb/>
It seems the peacefuls stopped<lb/>
the war<lb/>
Left generals squashed and stifled<lb/>
But I'll slip out again tonight<lb/>
'Cause they havent taken back<lb/>
my rifle<lb/>
For I promote oblivion<lb/>
And I'll plug a few civilians<lb/>
"All the Madmen" explores the<lb/>
terrifying desert that addition to<lb/>
 FAMOUS NAMES <lb/>
Like<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
SCOTT<lb/>
SANSUI<lb/>
KENWOOD<lb/>
GARRARD<lb/>
PIONEER<lb/>
FISHER<lb/>
SONY<lb/>
and<lb/>
MANY MORE<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
????????.<lb/>
SOME ITEMS HAVE<lb/>
BEEN FURTHER REDUCED<lb/>
DON'T BUY ANYWHERF UNTIL YOU GFTQupjYSTFMmmTF<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
- OF 4th 1 EVANS - DOWNTOWN QpEN 10 6 MON SAT<lb/>
barbituates makes of the mind, where<lb/>
sicknesses of the spirit are tranquilized<lb/>
rather than cured. "The Sperman"<lb/>
describes the torment f the god who<lb/>
can suffer even to eternity but cannot<lb/>
die.<lb/>
"The Man Who Sold the World" and<lb/>
"Savior Machine" are enigmatic songs<lb/>
which probe varying facets messianic-<lb/>
neuroses in modern society.<lb/>
"After All" deals with the individual's<lb/>
loss of identity in a cybernetic society,<lb/>
and the ways some strike back, often in<lb/>
bizarre fashion, to combat their<lb/>
anonymnity.<lb/>
"She Shook Me Cold" il another love<lb/>
song about an overpowering and<lb/>
mesmerizing lover who reduces, then<lb/>
brutally abandons the ginger who feels<lb/>
he can never love again with such<lb/>
intensity.<lb/>
"Black Country Rock" completes the<lb/>
LP with the sentiment:<lb/>
Some say the view is crazy<lb/>
But you may adopt another<lb/>
point of view<lb/>
So if its much too hazy<lb/>
You can leave my friend and<lb/>
me with fond adieu.<lb/>
A comment from the album cover of<lb/>
"The Man Who Sold the World" is<lb/>
appropriate to conclude this review<lb/>
"Neither metaphor or analogue,<lb/>
Bowie's music insists on its own reality'<lb/>
Phantasmagoria is its own reality; the<lb/>
preternatural its unsettling truth<lb/>
WINTER QUARTER EXAMINATION SCHEDULE<lb/>
TIME CLASSES<lb/>
REGULARLY MEET<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
12:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
2:00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:00<lb/>
DAY AND TIME OF<lb/>
EXAMINATION<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
11:00- 1:00 Tuesday,<lb/>
8:00- 1000 Friday,<lb/>
11:00-1:00 Monday,<lb/>
3:00-5:00 Tuesday,<lb/>
8:00 - 10:00 Wednesday,<lb/>
1100-1:00 Friday,<lb/>
3:00 - 5:00 Monday,<lb/>
8:00- 10:00 Tuesday,<lb/>
11:00- 1:00 Wednesday,<lb/>
February 27<lb/>
February 23<lb/>
February 2tj<lb/>
February 27<lb/>
February 28<lb/>
February 23<lb/>
February 2ti<lb/>
February 27<lb/>
February 28<lb/>
Exception<lb/>
according<lb/>
To avoid conflicts, certain English classes must hold their final exam.nations<lb/>
to the following schedule: examinations<lb/>
Classes meeting M-T-Th examination held in the Monday classroom, M-W-Th held in the<lb/>
Monday Wednesday classroom. a ln ,n<lb/>
TIME EXPECTED<lb/>
ENGLISH CLASSES<lb/>
REGULARLY MEET<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
11:00<lb/>
12:00<lb/>
1:00<lb/>
2.00<lb/>
3:00<lb/>
4:005.00<lb/>
DAY AND TIME OF<lb/>
EXAMINATION<lb/>
7:00 Friday, February 23<lb/>
1:00 -3:00 Tuesday,<lb/>
1:00-3.00 Friday,<lb/>
8:00 10:00 Monday,<lb/>
5:00-7:00 Tuesday,<lb/>
00 -3:00 Wednesday,<lb/>
3.00-5:00 Friday,<lb/>
1:00-3:00 Monday<lb/>
5:00-7:00 Monday,<lb/>
February 27<lb/>
February 23<lb/>
February 2(i<lb/>
February 27<lb/>
February 28<lb/>
February 23<lb/>
February 2ti<lb/>
February 26<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
SHOE REPAIRING<lb/>
Carolina Shoe Rebuilders<lb/>
822 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
next to Cozarts<lb/>
Auto Supply<lb/>
By I<lb/>
Th.<lb/>
outm<lb/>
there<lb/>
Tuc<lb/>
Kale<lb/>
( olitc<lb/>
took<lb/>
team i<lb/>
K)wer<lb/>
when<lb/>
?houti<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
and a<lb/>
Abo<lb/>
the U<lb/>
there<lb/>
were t<lb/>
AI F<lb/>
junior<lb/>
prelimi<lb/>
As tl<lb/>
get uni<lb/>
were si<lb/>
reputat<lb/>
they v<lb/>
the sp<lb/>
crowd i<lb/>
make t<lb/>
either<lb/>
So b<lb/>
Carol in;<lb/>
was a <lb/>
<lb/>
hire<lb/>
iU<lb/>
j? tdu-<lb/>
ft<lb/>
fk,r<lb/>
A<lb/>
IU<lb/>
<pb facs="00039672_0005"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
?j<lb/>
e mind, where<lb/>
ire tranquilized<lb/>
I'he Spemian"<lb/>
f the god who<lb/>
ity but cannot<lb/>
he World" and<lb/>
mgmatic songs<lb/>
cets messianic<lb/>
y-<lb/>
:he individual's<lb/>
srnetic society,<lb/>
hack, often in<lb/>
combat their<lb/>
is another love<lb/>
lowering and<lb/>
seduces, then<lb/>
nger who feels<lb/>
in with such<lb/>
complete! the<lb/>
y<lb/>
icr<lb/>
ind<lb/>
Ihum cover of<lb/>
he World" is<lb/>
is review<lb/>
W analogue,<lb/>
- own reality.<lb/>
n reality; the<lb/>
truth<lb/>
!???????<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
??????<lb/>
JV's save the day<lb/>
Bucs blitzed by State<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The Plmtei were simply<lb/>
out maimed. That is all<lb/>
there was to it<lb/>
Tuesday night m<lb/>
Raleigh'i Reynolds<lb/>
Coliseum, East Carolina<lb/>
look on the number two<lb/>
team in the nation. State's<lb/>
powerful Wolfpack, and<lb/>
when the shooting and<lb/>
shouting was all over the<lb/>
Pack had a 105-70 win<lb/>
and a 20-0 record.<lb/>
About the only thing<lb/>
the few ECU supporters<lb/>
there had to cheer about<lb/>
were the hot shooting of<lb/>
AI Faber and KCl "s<lb/>
junior varsity win in the<lb/>
preliminary contest.<lb/>
As the game was set to<lb/>
get underway, the Pirates<lb/>
were simply awed by the<lb/>
reputation of the team<lb/>
they were playing. And<lb/>
the spirit of the State<lb/>
crowd did not do much to<lb/>
make them feel at home<lb/>
either.<lb/>
So by the time Kast<lb/>
Carolina realized there<lb/>
was a game going on, it<lb/>
was already 12-2.<lb/>
State, doing just about<lb/>
everything it wanted to<lb/>
do against the underdog<lb/>
but scrappy Hues, never<lb/>
trailed in the contest<lb/>
Despite Faber'i fin.<lb/>
play, which enabled him<lb/>
to scon- 16 points in the<lb/>
first half and 27 for the<lb/>
game. State continued to<lb/>
build onto its early<lb/>
10-pomt spread.<lb/>
By halftime it was<lb/>
5 4-36 and State<lb/>
supporters among the<lb/>
crowd of 11,800 could<lb/>
sense that their heroes<lb/>
would hit the 100-point<lb/>
mark for the eighth time<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
When the teams went<lb/>
into the dressing room at<lb/>
the break, super-soph<lb/>
David Thompson had hit<lb/>
on nine of 10 shots from<lb/>
the floor and he already<lb/>
had 18 points.<lb/>
Add to this Tommy<lb/>
Burleson's 13 points and<lb/>
it was no wonder EC<lb/>
coach Tom Quinn and his<lb/>
forces had no idea what<lb/>
to do.<lb/>
????:??????:<lb/>
From here on, it was<lb/>
just a matter of playing<lb/>
out the last 20 minutes.<lb/>
State continued to pour<lb/>
on the coals, led by as<lb/>
much as 37 points late in<lb/>
the game, and walked<lb/>
home to the final spread<lb/>
With the intimidation<lb/>
by 7-4 Burleson and the<lb/>
rest of the State<lb/>
Supermen, the Pirates<lb/>
were only able to connect<lb/>
on 39.2 par cent of their<lb/>
field goals, a poor<lb/>
showing.<lb/>
However, Faber's points<lb/>
came mostly on 11 of 17<lb/>
field goal attempts. This<lb/>
was one of the better<lb/>
games of his career.<lb/>
For State, which hit a<lb/>
spectacular 56.3 per cent<lb/>
from the floor, Thompson<lb/>
was high man with 33<lb/>
points. Me missed only<lb/>
two of 1 5 shots from the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
points, Ken Edmonds had<lb/>
15 and Randy McCullen<lb/>
?cored 13 in the win.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs started<lb/>
slowly, trailing by as<lb/>
many as seven point in<lb/>
the first half, but they<lb/>
outseored State 16-6<lb/>
during a key itretcb to<lb/>
take the lead for good.<lb/>
"When we were ahead<lb/>
at the half after playing<lb/>
about as poorly as we<lb/>
have all year, then we<lb/>
knew we could win<lb/>
Patton remarked later.<lb/>
The Bucs led 34-31 at<lb/>
intermission but increased<lb/>
that to 40-31 and then to<lb/>
as much as a 26-point<lb/>
spread in the second half.<lb/>
Patton also noted that<lb/>
switching to a<lb/>
man-to-man defense had a<lb/>
lot to do with EC's<lb/>
complete about-face in<lb/>
 the game.<lb/>
THE BADTHE GOOD: The had Toted, nigh,<lb/>
"as the intimidation ottered In State'i Tommj<lb/>
Burleson and bis mates (photo left) after the ECl<lb/>
Burleson's 1 7 rebounds - The Baby Bucs have one<lb/>
and six blocked shots did ? more contest this year<lb/>
not hurt the home team They will try to make the<lb/>
2 final record 11-3 when<lb/>
javvees turned in the good b) besting the Wolf lets. At<lb/>
right. Bab) Pirate William Hill dumps in an easv lavnp.<lb/>
(Stall photos b Don rauaneck)<lb/>
<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
1<lb/>
388<lb/>
1$ UJifh a htqvY htirT'<lb/>
7J10T T T4M o?T ??? ZTr?<lb/>
fl$ ftJ? for H?cqi<lb/>
For Ar-ee ye.s no<lb/>
hire Ad The, fodfo<lb/>
?Po<lb/>
much either<lb/>
The preliminary contest<lb/>
between the two schools'<lb/>
junior varsity quintets was<lb/>
a different matter<lb/>
altogether.<lb/>
Coach Dave Patton's<lb/>
Army won its 10th game<lb/>
in 13 outings by bombing<lb/>
the Wolflets 94-69 with a<lb/>
great team effort.<lb/>
Five players scored in<lb/>
double figures for the<lb/>
Baby Bucs with Al<lb/>
Edwards and Chuck Mohn<lb/>
pacing the attack. Each<lb/>
hit the nets for 18 points.<lb/>
William Hill added 16<lb/>
they take on the Old<lb/>
Dominion jayveei<lb/>
Tuesday at Norfolk, Va<lb/>
Still ahead for Quinn<lb/>
varsity are games at<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
Saturday, at Old<lb/>
Dominion Tuesday, at<lb/>
home against The Citadel<lb/>
on Feb. 24, the Southern<lb/>
Conference Tournament<lb/>
in March at Richmond,<lb/>
and possibly the<lb/>
Regionals.<lb/>
EC's record now stands<lb/>
at 11-10 while the<lb/>
conference ledger is 6-6.<lb/>
Mallory returns to coaching Pirates,<lb/>
another banner season appears near<lb/>
A?4<lb/>
Several carry colors<lb/>
of ECU in Regionals<lb/>
<lb/>
r7i<lb/>
trC<lb/>
of folUidiKj our 1y fte<lb/>
Urt)ferS ty<lb/>
2<lb/>
bvt iytA h rarest<lb/>
JLp. 6esf of mr a<lb/>
fLUh<lb/>
o<lb/>
CdtAdu do<lb/>
f fooheS Cr<lb/>
4J iU'r<lb/>
fo<lb/>
Oili teS<lb/>
closets<lb/>
ic ctn<lb/>
Ofe(y<lb/>
DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
? ad ack.<lb/>
W<lb/>
4cTrt c s-<lb/>
X AV?. ?ff?rtk<lb/>
JuJo eiloy<lb/>
Cttrl mi<lb/>
Use Three,<lb/>
a.<lb/>
East Carolina was<lb/>
represented by many<lb/>
talented students at the<lb/>
College Unions Regional<lb/>
Tournament in Knoxville,<lb/>
Tenn last weekend.<lb/>
In bowling competition.<lb/>
Lea Kemezis placed<lb/>
fourth in the women's<lb/>
singles. Kemezis and<lb/>
Debbie Eagan finished<lb/>
fourth in women's<lb/>
doubles. Other ECU<lb/>
women bowlers were<lb/>
Kathy Brock, Linda<lb/>
Beasley and Sylvia Zelkin.<lb/>
The men bowlers from<lb/>
ECU were Coye<lb/>
Pendergrass, Hubert<lb/>
Gibson, Ron Huffman,<lb/>
Dave Woody and Tracy<lb/>
Conners. They finished<lb/>
ninth overall while Gibson<lb/>
and Pendergrass finished<lb/>
seventh in men's doubles.<lb/>
Many of the teams the<lb/>
men competed against<lb/>
were from the organized<lb/>
Southern Intercollegiate<lb/>
Bowling League which<lb/>
enabled them to have<lb/>
better teamwork.<lb/>
As a result, the EC<lb/>
bowlers did fairly well<lb/>
considering this handicap.<lb/>
Wade Dudley and Sam<lb/>
Smith represented the<lb/>
school in chess and they<lb/>
bettered the school's<lb/>
performance of last year.<lb/>
Kathy Straw finished<lb/>
third in the double<lb/>
elimination table tennis<lb/>
match. Other EC<lb/>
delegates were Laura<lb/>
White, Ed McFall and<lb/>
James Blanchard.<lb/>
McFall finished in the<lb/>
top 20 out of 44 entries<lb/>
in men's table tennis<lb/>
while McFall Blanchard<lb/>
placed in the top 10 in<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Bill Harper finished<lb/>
fifth in the billiards<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Bob Bland, Bill Fryar,<lb/>
Frank Crow and Bruce<lb/>
Mai-Donald represented<lb/>
the school in bridge and<lb/>
Bland-Fryar finished<lb/>
ninth of 28 pairs.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
representatives earned<lb/>
their way to Knoxville in<lb/>
the school's local<lb/>
competition last month.<lb/>
GO GET 'EM!<lb/>
Pirate trackmen<lb/>
Saturday's S.C. Meet<lb/>
By ROGER EDWARDS<lb/>
(Last of a Series I<lb/>
Experience is an<lb/>
oft-heard word in sports<lb/>
talk. In s)orts, many<lb/>
times one's fortune is at<lb/>
the mercy of his<lb/>
experience. How true this<lb/>
is could be a test for the<lb/>
1973 edition of ECU<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
The Pirates appear to be<lb/>
deep, but nowhere more<lb/>
so than at the helm with<lb/>
"new" coach Jim Mallory.<lb/>
Mallory once guided Buc<lb/>
fortunes quite<lb/>
successfully and he is<lb/>
again in the dugout.<lb/>
He will command a<lb/>
veteran team, composed<lb/>
of 13 letterman back<lb/>
from last year's crew plus<lb/>
several promising recruits.<lb/>
Practice opened January<lb/>
15 with a conditioning<lb/>
program consisting of<lb/>
running. Claimed the<lb/>
coach, "Attitude has been<lb/>
good and cooperation<lb/>
splendid. If hard work<lb/>
does it, the team will be<lb/>
ready<lb/>
Last season the Pirates<lb/>
finished in second place in<lb/>
the Southern Conference<lb/>
and with a 19-10 overall<lb/>
record. To improve on<lb/>
that record B big question<lb/>
mark concerning<lb/>
Mallory's outfit must be<lb/>
answered.<lb/>
"If we can score any<lb/>
runs we will definitely be<lb/>
a competitive club<lb/>
mused the Pirate skipper.<lb/>
Throughout the lineup<lb/>
the hitting appears<lb/>
improved from last<lb/>
season. To avoid the short<lb/>
end of the stick, the<lb/>
Pirates must have scoring<lb/>
to take the one-two run<lb/>
games they dropped last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
While the Bucs may<lb/>
have doubts at the plate.<lb/>
60' away stand three men<lb/>
who may hold the key to<lb/>
the Pirates' hopes.<lb/>
Dave LaRussa, Bill<lb/>
Godwin and Tom Toms<lb/>
are all rumors. They do a<lb/>
little pitching.<lb/>
"We have last yrar's top<lb/>
three pitchers back the<lb/>
coach noted, "plus<lb/>
Godwin and Toms have<lb/>
been the club's aces the<lb/>
past two years<lb/>
On opening day against<lb/>
Duke University. Mallory<lb/>
will field a team featuring<lb/>
onlv two seniors but a<lb/>
supporting cast of<lb/>
talented people whi have<lb/>
seen considerable action<lb/>
At first base is Ron<lb/>
Staggs. last year's RK1<lb/>
leader. "We expect big<lb/>
things from Ron<lb/>
Mallory says. "He has had<lb/>
a year's experience and<lb/>
looks relaxed<lb/>
Freshman Jeff Beston<lb/>
will tend the keystone<lb/>
sack<lb/>
"Jeff is a good fielder<lb/>
with an excellent arm and<lb/>
good speed who could<lb/>
develop into a real good<lb/>
one comments the<lb/>
coach<lb/>
I.ast year's second<lb/>
baseman, Ron Leggett.<lb/>
moves over to third where<lb/>
his tine fielding will come<lb/>
in handy around the hot<lb/>
corner.<lb/>
Pirates win;<lb/>
home Friday<lb/>
Women tankers beat St. Mary's;<lb/>
Linda Smiley leads the triumph<lb/>
reocie$ of<lb/>
ffa cOO?U iikk io<lb/>
 I , Gail Phillips ca<lb/>
jo ?fe iJry f<lb/>
Lind Smiley won three<lb/>
individual events Tuesday<lb/>
and swam on a winning<lb/>
relay team as the women's<lb/>
swimming and diving<lb/>
team scored a 65-41 win<lb/>
over St. Mary's in Raleigh.<lb/>
In all,the EC girls won<lb/>
nine of 13 events in<lb/>
splashing to their fifth<lb/>
win in seven meets.<lb/>
Smiley won the 50-yard<lb/>
butterfly in 30.8 seconds;<lb/>
the 50-yard backstroke in<lb/>
34.7; and the 100-yard<lb/>
freestyle in 1:02.8.<lb/>
In addition, she swam<lb/>
the third leg of the<lb/>
victorioui 200-yard<lb/>
medley relay race as EC<lb/>
finished in 2:13.9. Other<lb/>
girls on that relay squad<lb/>
were Peggy Toth, Barbara<lb/>
Strange and Doris Conlyn.<lb/>
Toth was a double<lb/>
winner as she captured<lb/>
the 100-yard individual<lb/>
medley in 1 14.4 and the<lb/>
100-yard backstroke in<lb/>
1:15.6.<lb/>
Cindy Wheeler and<lb/>
Laura Harris finished<lb/>
one-two in the diving<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Other i n dividual<lb/>
winners for East Carolina<lb/>
were Kathy Nuklaw in<lb/>
the 50-yard breaststroke<lb/>
(42.0) and Diane Schlaich<lb/>
in the 100-yard<lb/>
breaststroke (1:88 B)<lb/>
Fast Carolina coach Eric<lb/>
Orders noted that many<lb/>
of the girls were<lb/>
swimming in events they<lb/>
usually were not tested in<lb/>
because he wanted to<lb/>
experiment for the next<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
The girls meet<lb/>
Appalachian State and<lb/>
Tennessee Saturday in<lb/>
Boone.<lb/>
Orders cited Mam<lb/>
Reiehstein for<lb/>
outstanding effort in the<lb/>
meet and remarked that<lb/>
Smiley turned in the<lb/>
outstanding performance.<lb/>
Reiehstein finished<lb/>
second in the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Other girls who added<lb/>
points to EC's total were<lb/>
Kay White and Judi<lb/>
Peacock as the girls<lb/>
showed some fine depth<lb/>
Order of the day. Feb 24<lb/>
GO NAVY BEAT ARMY'<lb/>
r<lb/>
4<lb/>
jh.<lb/>
o?<lb/>
e 4<lb/>
NtroS<lb/>
r<lb/>
(&amp;<lb/>
Phillips captured<lb/>
first place in the uneven<lb/>
bars and Sandy Hart did<lb/>
likewise in the balance<lb/>
beam as the women's<lb/>
gymnastics team won a<lb/>
tn-meet Tuesday.<lb/>
The girls scored 60<lb/>
points to 58 for host<lb/>
Duke and 57 for<lb/>
Iiongwood. East Carolina<lb/>
is now 7-0.<lb/>
Jane Smith turned in<lb/>
EC's best effort in the<lb/>
vaulting as she finished<lb/>
third. Joan Fulp, third in<lb/>
the unevens, also added to<lb/>
the triumph.<lb/>
QUICK STXKT: ECU nwimiwr Linda<lb/>
Sniile getn a good utart as she begins<lb/>
the third leg in ECl relay victory<lb/>
Ttirfldav. The Omiond Beach, Ha<lb/>
tniliin.ni had a hand in four triumph<lb/>
as Hie EC girln beat St. Mary's, 65-41.<lb/>
(Staff photo In Don TraiiHncck)<lb/>
I<lb/>
Coach John Welborn<lb/>
turned his men loose on<lb/>
Old Dominion and the<lb/>
Pirate matmen responded<lb/>
by taking every single<lb/>
match en route to a 46-0<lb/>
thrashing of the visitors<lb/>
from Virginia Tuesday.<lb/>
The first match of the<lb/>
evening was also the<lb/>
closest as Glenn Baker.<lb/>
118 pounds, won on<lb/>
riding time. 2-1.<lb/>
With ten seconds<lb/>
remaining in the third<lb/>
period of the 126-pound<lb/>
match. Dan Monroe<lb/>
pinned the Old Dominion<lb/>
wrestler The match was<lb/>
not close at all as Monroe<lb/>
controlled with superior<lb/>
strength.<lb/>
Jim McCloe. 134<lb/>
pounds, also proved too<lb/>
strong for his opponent in<lb/>
running up a 12-2 score.<lb/>
The second pin of the<lb/>
night came at 1:41 of the<lb/>
second period in the<lb/>
142-pound match,<lb/>
compliments of Milt<lb/>
Sherman.<lb/>
Tom Marriott. 150<lb/>
pounds, was a 7-1 winner<lb/>
in a very even match.<lb/>
In an o t h e r<lb/>
evenly-wrestled match.<lb/>
Bruce Hall claimed the<lb/>
decision 6-3 in the<lb/>
1 58-pound class<lb/>
The Pirates continued<lb/>
to rack up the points as<lb/>
167-pounder Ron<lb/>
Whitcomb decteioned the<lb/>
Old Dominion man, 8-1.<lb/>
 pin was recorded in<lb/>
each of the three<lb/>
remaining matches. Bill<lb/>
Hill did it at 1 22 of the<lb/>
second period in the<lb/>
177-pound class<lb/>
Mike Radford got has<lb/>
pin in the 190-pound class<lb/>
at 2:30 of the second<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Mark Poteen came close<lb/>
several times but didn't<lb/>
complete the heavyweight<lb/>
pin until 213 of the<lb/>
second period<lb/>
Welborn's crew hosts<lb/>
I'NCW Friday night.<lb/>
Then it's off to<lb/>
Williamsburg, Va for the<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Senior Mike Bradshaw<lb/>
return) to play short-stop.<lb/>
A good fielder with a<lb/>
strong arm. Bradshaw is<lb/>
also co-captain of the<lb/>
team<lb/>
Several people who<lb/>
played last season and a<lb/>
transfer student are<lb/>
battling for the "up for<lb/>
grabs" outfield spots.<lb/>
Returnees include Jim<lb/>
Paige. Troy Eason and<lb/>
John Natron Adding<lb/>
strength to this group is<lb/>
Mike Hogan, a transfer<lb/>
from The College of the<lb/>
Aibermarle<lb/>
Co i aptain Larry<lb/>
Walters is another man<lb/>
with outfield experience<lb/>
but be can also handle the<lb/>
? atching chOtas. Walters,<lb/>
the other senior on the<lb/>
club, is a consistent hitter,<lb/>
and i dexcritd by his<lb/>
foai:h as a "tough clutch<lb/>
pfajRer "<lb/>
Adding depth to the<lb/>
dutie. behind the plate<lb/>
are Kick McMahon and<lb/>
Creg Fulghum. both<lb/>
"good receivers with<lb/>
strong arms" who have<lb/>
seen action.<lb/>
"We have a good<lb/>
program here said<lb/>
Mallory, "and with losing<lb/>
only two seniors this year<lb/>
we should have top-notch<lb/>
baseball in the years to<lb/>
come<lb/>
The Pirate schedule is<lb/>
tough and features<lb/>
top-flight competition for<lb/>
Mai lory's bunch.<lb/>
"In seven days we play-<lb/>
six games against ACC<lb/>
teams, meeting last year's<lb/>
champ, Virginia, twice<lb/>
and runner up, I'NC. once<lb/>
in those first games<lb/>
commented the skipper.<lb/>
Yet the schedule gels no<lb/>
easier after those first six,<lb/>
with high caliber teams<lb/>
such as Pembroke State<lb/>
and l'N ("Wilmington<lb/>
scattered on the card<lb/>
The road is rocky and<lb/>
the competition steep for<lb/>
Jim Mai lory'i comeback.<lb/>
But if the coach can<lb/>
convey his excitement ti-<lb/>
the players themselves,<lb/>
the Bucs could well have a<lb/>
banner year<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
March 3, at Duke; March<lb/>
6, Carolina; March 7, at<lb/>
State; March 8, at State;<lb/>
March 10, Virginia; March<lb/>
11, Virginia; March 17,<lb/>
Furman (2); March 19,<lb/>
Duke, March 22,<lb/>
Dartmouth. March 23,<lb/>
Dartmouth; March 31,<lb/>
VMI (2); April 2,<lb/>
Richmond; April 6, at<lb/>
William and Mary; April<lb/>
8, at Appalachian State<lb/>
(2); April 11, State; April<lb/>
14, at Davidson (2); April<lb/>
16, William and Mary;<lb/>
April 21, at The Citadel;<lb/>
April 22, at UNC-W; April<lb/>
23, at UNC W; April 24,<lb/>
at Pembroke; April 28,<lb/>
The Citadel; April 30, at<lb/>
Richmond; May 4,<lb/>
UNC W; May 5,<lb/>
Pembroke. All home<lb/>
single games, 3 p.m<lb/>
various times with<lb/>
double headers.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039672_0006"/><lb/>
fountAinheAd<lb/>
Editorial Commentary<lb/>
Sludant Newuai<lb/>
nun t tot Carolina University<lb/>
litlen<lb/>
QrMnvllM, North I irollna 27834<lb/>
Tmcpnonr "Bhl6i or 'SSb.lh<lb/>
N.C. General Assembly has<lb/>
monster on it's hands<lb/>
CHAMPiOwSHP<lb/>
THE<lb/>
HIGHER EDUCATION<lb/>
BUDGET BOOT<lb/>
 A ? A<lb/>
vs.<lb/>
FOR. A POfcSfc q<lb/>
Ber AMoTheR<lb/>
DOMT HAVE A<lb/>
CHANCE1<lb/>
Without realizing it. the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly has given<lb/>
birth tn a monster Several yean ago,<lb/>
when the idea of having a Hoard of<lb/>
Governor! to supervise Moth Carolina's<lb/>
'i higher education system was<lb/>
proposed, almost everyone thought it<lb/>
would be .1 great idea Hie Board would<lb/>
assuredly reduce the amount of<lb/>
in-fighting among our 16 state wide<lb/>
campuses, and provide .1 "superior"<lb/>
judge for preparing the higher education<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Ibis is the second year of operation<lb/>
for the notorious "Super Board and it<lb/>
appears that the General Assemblj is in<lb/>
for another financial surprise. surprise<lb/>
in theamounl of $86,000,000 00<lb/>
Ih Super Hoard was originally<lb/>
designed to create more efficiency in<lb/>
the higher education structure by<lb/>
trimming down some of the overlapping<lb/>
of departmental priorities in the<lb/>
state wide system Insteadspending<lb/>
millions to begin programs at certain<lb/>
schools, the monej was to be budgeted<lb/>
to the schools that alreadj had larger,<lb/>
more-advanced programs rhe smaller<lb/>
schools would not suffer, however,<lb/>
because they could concentrate their<lb/>
effort aim1, finances on their own<lb/>
particular progarms Instead of two<lb/>
schools having both a moderate med<lb/>
and a moderate law program, one school<lb/>
would concentrate on medicine, and the<lb/>
other ,in law<lb/>
Politicians would not have to be lured<lb/>
to "legislative nights, 'at which they are<lb/>
wined and dined into providing enough<lb/>
money to . xtracurricular<lb/>
activities The Super Hoard would<lb/>
simply decide if a program was<lb/>
necessary, and acting upon the advise of<lb/>
the wiser body, the General Assembly<lb/>
would naturally "rubber stamp" the<lb/>
proposal<lb/>
"Regionalism" would be eliminated,<lb/>
because there would no longer be any<lb/>
"academic Lobbies" with which to<lb/>
contend<lb/>
Former powerful university presidents<lb/>
would be shackled with a system of<lb/>
checks and balances, and the less<lb/>
powerful ones would have an "equal"<lb/>
vote- in the decisions concerning<lb/>
academic and financial programming.<lb/>
Harmony and concord would<lb/>
characterize the relationships among the<lb/>
universities No more backbiting, no<lb/>
more lying, no more nepotism. We<lb/>
would finally get the politicing out of<lb/>
higher education. Even the titles of the<lb/>
individual presidents were changed to<lb/>
"chancellor "<lb/>
U hat l Itopia<lb/>
Things just didnt turn out the way<lb/>
the General Assembly planned. Just<lb/>
recently, the Super Board suggested that<lb/>
the Genera Assembly increase the<lb/>
present 1973 74 budget for higher<lb/>
education by $86,000,000.00. A large<lb/>
part of this is planned for the renewal<lb/>
and expansion of one of the 16 schools'<lb/>
medical programs Which one?<lb/>
Carolina, of course, And the president<lb/>
of the Super HoardWilliam Friday, of<lb/>
course<lb/>
At least m the past when a college<lb/>
president made a suggestion for huge<lb/>
sums of money for his school, the<lb/>
legislators were able to turn to one of<lb/>
the other university presidents for<lb/>
advice. Not any more. Once the Super<lb/>
Hoard has okay'd something, there is no<lb/>
other place to turn. And why not?<lb/>
Aren't the decisions of the Super Board<lb/>
made alter careful consideration of the<lb/>
entire Iti school system budget? These<lb/>
men. all who have many years of<lb/>
experience in college administration,<lb/>
were brought together to take some of<lb/>
the worry off the shoulders of North<lb/>
Carolina's legislators.<lb/>
Well, the ('ieneral Assembly no longer<lb/>
has to worry over the budget for higher<lb/>
education Now they have to explain to<lb/>
all the other interest groups in the state<lb/>
why the budget for the 16 University ol<lb/>
North Carolina schools is being<lb/>
stretched by $86,000,000.00.<lb/>
N<lb/>
Ml?<lb/>
TiVr.T ?<lb/>
NRA wants .22 caliber restrictions dropped<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD would like to extend our deepest<lb/>
appreciation to retiring sports editor<lb/>
DONALD TRAUSNECK,<lb/>
for three years' work well done.<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
Senator John Stennis was cut down,<lb/>
apparently, by a blast of .22 caliber<lb/>
bullets from one of those pistols known<lb/>
to police as "Saturday night specials<lb/>
Yet, even while the old Mississippian lay<lb/>
seriously wounded in a hospital bed, his<lb/>
colleagues on Capitol Hill have quietly<lb/>
agreed to cosponsor a bill that would<lb/>
boost the sale of .22 ammunition.<lb/>
The National Rifle Association, for its<lb/>
part, offered a $10,000 reward for<lb/>
information leading to the arrest and<lb/>
conviction of the senators' assailants. But<lb/>
at the same time, the association has<lb/>
been working not to eliminate the<lb/>
handguns but to eliminate all restrictions<lb/>
on the sale of .22 caliber ammunition.<lb/>
At present, anyone who buys<lb/>
ammunition for handguns must register<lb/>
their names with gun dealers at the time<lb/>
of sale This gives police the opportunity<lb/>
to check whether convicted felons are<lb/>
buying ammunition illegally.<lb/>
The gun lobby argues that .22 caliber<lb/>
ammunition is used in rifles. Since no<lb/>
record-keeping is required for the sale of<lb/>
rifle ammunition, the lobbyists say<lb/>
restrictions on the sale of 22caliber<lb/>
bullets should be dropped.<lb/>
The lobbyists neatly overlook the fact<lb/>
that .22 caliber is by far the most<lb/>
commonly used ammunition for<lb/>
handguns.<lb/>
Despite the Stennis shooting, the bill is<lb/>
picking up supporters in the House. No<lb/>
fewer than 60 congressmen have quietly<lb/>
agreed to cosponsor the bill. The gun<lb/>
lobby is now biding its time. The bill's<lb/>
wXvMSwxWJ5?:ft?<lb/>
THE FORUM<lb/>
chief sponsor. Bob Sikes, D-Fla tells us<lb/>
he won't introduce the bill for another<lb/>
two or three weeks. Apparently, he is<lb/>
waiting for public concern over the<lb/>
Stennis shooting to die down.<lb/>
SSTGAME PLAN<lb/>
One of the most memorable battles in<lb/>
recant years was the fight over SST ?<lb/>
the plane that could whisk people across<lb/>
continents faster than the speed of<lb/>
sound. The opponents finally blocked<lb/>
federal funds for the proposed superjet<lb/>
in 1971. But administration spokesmen<lb/>
have hinted that they hope to resurrect<lb/>
the SST.<lb/>
Behind the scenes, the White House<lb/>
has been plotting a sophisticated stategy<lb/>
to change public opinion about the<lb/>
airplane and win federal funding for its<lb/>
construction. The first step in the plan is<lb/>
to guarantee the British-French version<lb/>
of the SST, the Concorde, landing rights<lb/>
in the United States. Now, many local<lb/>
noise control laws would prevent the big<lb/>
plane from setting down.<lb/>
A flock of administration officials,<lb/>
including White House fix-it man Peter<lb/>
Flanigan, met secretly with British<lb/>
aerospace minister Michael Heseltime to<lb/>
discuss the problem. The officials reason<lb/>
that if the Concorde begins to service the<lb/>
United States the environmental<lb/>
objections to the jumbo aircraft will be<lb/>
undercut and the economic values of the<lb/>
plane will be emphasized.<lb/>
On the congressional front, the<lb/>
administration plans legislation that<lb/>
would authorize millions for loans to<lb/>
private aerospace developers. The loans<lb/>
Does Neo fiddle<lb/>
while Rome burns?<lb/>
Kaleidoscopism is. as experience<lb/>
teaches, dispersion and time lost<lb/>
Chancellors who lake trips overseas to<lb/>
inspect conglomerate institutions to<lb/>
study, it is said, ways for improvements<lb/>
at home, are false. I he improvements are<lb/>
made by attentive, vigilant academic<lb/>
interest. Educators who cannot bear<lb/>
their educational loneliness become the<lb/>
new peripatetics, administrators, or<lb/>
public persons Ambitious but<lb/>
disappointed educators run willy-nilly<lb/>
into university administration where,<lb/>
possessed bv chronic frustrations, often<lb/>
beco me super-men est pocket<lb/>
Mai hiavellis who try to manipulate their<lb/>
subjects in a long winded political game<lb/>
in which very little of any scholarly<lb/>
importance is at staki<lb/>
Super duper educator even go BO tar<lb/>
as to try to enter real politics, but this<lb/>
x-xx-x-x-xXvra<lb/>
step might become even more disruptive<lb/>
than it is now. These prophets of<lb/>
neglected consciousness, abandon in the<lb/>
drawers of oblivion the very root of<lb/>
humanistic idealism which is founded on<lb/>
the genuine effort of knowledge to<lb/>
enrich the students entrusted to them,<lb/>
and not on a pseudo-culture imparted by<lb/>
pseudo-professors, whose credentials<lb/>
have neither academic nor legal value, or<lb/>
by pseudo-professors graduate of<lb/>
??Degree Mill" universities. To all these<lb/>
irresponsible bureaucratic "geniuses<lb/>
loci" 1 say: be responsible to those<lb/>
entrusted to you by eradicating and not<lb/>
by perpetuating the calamities of<lb/>
pseudo-education. Do not fiddle while<lb/>
Home is burning. It would be a<lb/>
redemptional step, and not an<lb/>
eschatologicaJ one. if the responsible<lb/>
bureaucrats of such an educational<lb/>
apparatus be purged and replaced by<lb/>
people dedicated to education and not<lb/>
to politics When will they stop<lb/>
adolescing students and " begin<lb/>
educating?Cicero pro domo sua.<lb/>
Dr. John Costa<lb/>
xx.xxxxx:x.x.x-xxxw.x-x-w<lb/>
B Perkins<lb/>
Editor in Chief<lb/>
Stephen RauchJe Business Manager<lb/>
Ron Wertheim, Advertising Manager<lb/>
Pal Crawford, Nens Editor<lb/>
Bruce I'arrish, Features Editc<lb/>
Don Yausneck, Sports Editt<lb/>
Phyllia Dougherty, snt. Features Editor<lb/>
Mike Edwards, Circulation Managei<lb/>
Boss Mann, Chief Photographer<lb/>
lia I . Baker, clw-o,<lb/>
Iran certainly not<lb/>
'underdeveloped'<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am a foreign student from Iran<lb/>
attending school m the U.S. at ECU.<lb/>
This quarter it happens that I am taking<lb/>
Econ. 112. The last part of this course is<lb/>
about international economics. The<lb/>
professor. Dr. Joseph Romita, is always<lb/>
talking about "underdeveloped"<lb/>
countries. However, during the Stone<lb/>
Age, which is apparently when he got<lb/>
his information, all countries were<lb/>
underdeveloped. I dont understand<lb/>
how you can expect students to learn<lb/>
something when they are given old and<lb/>
now wrong information. I do not know<lb/>
if his information about the other<lb/>
underdeveloped countries he talks about<lb/>
is just as wrong or not, but as far as I<lb/>
know, every bit of information he gave<lb/>
students about Iran is nothing but<lb/>
fallacy, by the way Iran is no longer<lb/>
classified as underdeveloped.<lb/>
Dr. Romita mentioned that Iran has<lb/>
only 40 miles of roads and also people<lb/>
live in tents and ride camel I dont<lb/>
know how a country that is second in<lb/>
oil producing in the world could have<lb/>
only 40 miles of road.<lb/>
For your information, Dr. Romita. I<lb/>
have never seen a camel in Iran in the<lb/>
past 24 years of my life. Besides Dr.<lb/>
Romita mentions that the Iranian<lb/>
government which celebrated the 25th<lb/>
anniversary of the Persian Empire,<lb/>
entertained all the celebrities of the<lb/>
world in TENTS. But if you had looked<lb/>
at the pictures of these tents in the<lb/>
world's leading magazines and<lb/>
newspapers at that tune, you would<lb/>
have seen that there so-called tents look<lb/>
a whole lot better that the White House.<lb/>
I believe a lot of Dr. Romita's<lb/>
information is all the same, and I wish a<lb/>
person who has a so-Ph. D. would read a<lb/>
bit more and get up-to-date information<lb/>
before he comes to his class, but I<lb/>
believe giving wrong information to<lb/>
students is against student policy<lb/>
because students come to school to<lb/>
learn up-to-date facts, not to get a<lb/>
bunch of Stone Age information. Dear<lb/>
Dr. Romita, I finally suggest that you<lb/>
accept my invitation to come to Iran<lb/>
and at least get your information about<lb/>
Iran corrected, because 1 believe that is<lb/>
the least I could do for you. I believe<lb/>
this will be the only way to get you to<lb/>
stop giving people wrong information,<lb/>
because if this wrong information is<lb/>
allowed to be given out in class, pretty<lb/>
soon you would probably say that since<lb/>
it snows in Iran and people ride camels,<lb/>
that U.S. exports a lot of chains and<lb/>
antifreeze to Iran for the camels to start<lb/>
with the first try in the morning, and be<lb/>
able to go all over those 40 miles of<lb/>
roads without getting stuck. And finally<lb/>
I suggest you get in your car every now<lb/>
and then, and drive around the U.S. and<lb/>
see what's going on in your own<lb/>
country. This is a shame, shame, shame.<lb/>
Jamshid Jafari<lb/>
Sports editor<lb/>
should be praised<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I understand that you are losing your<lb/>
Sports Editor after this issue. Let me<lb/>
say that the job he has done over the<lb/>
past three years is one to be applauded.<lb/>
He has consistently produced a page<lb/>
that has made this paper. His<lb/>
conscientious efforts to offer co -iplete<lb/>
coverage of the sports on this campus<lb/>
have resulted in nothing less than that<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD'S loss is truly a loss<lb/>
to the students of East Carolina, and I<lb/>
offer Don Trausneck congratulations on<lb/>
a job quite well done.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
A serious reader<lb/>
Criticism of SGA<lb/>
legislators justified<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
This letter comeb in reply to that of<lb/>
Michael Edwards, Day Student<lb/>
Representative, in the Feb. 13<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
Mr. Edwards refers<lb/>
would be awarded much like defens.<lb/>
contracts and would go to companie<lb/>
doing aviation research "in the publi.<lb/>
interest<lb/>
If the proposal passed, one of the firs<lb/>
companies found to be doing work "ii<lb/>
the public interest" would no doubt bi<lb/>
Boeing, builder of the SST prototype.<lb/>
The opponents of the SST may hav<lb/>
won the battle in 1971. Whether they<lb/>
will win the war remains to be seen.<lb/>
HEADLINES AND FOOTNOTES<lb/>
KISSINGER'S 8ECRBT- 9 America<lb/>
secret negotiator Henry Kissinger ma<lb/>
have a secret of his own. A federa<lb/>
education official, David McGinms, ha<lb/>
been telling colleagues that his sister<lb/>
Nancy has agreed to marry the White<lb/>
House trouble-shooter. Miss McGinnis<lb/>
was Kissinger's date at the inaugural<lb/>
balls. When we checked with Mr<lb/>
McGinnis at the Office of Education, he<lb/>
said he had "no comment<lb/>
ITT WATERGATE LINK PROBED -<lb/>
Two separate Senate investigations are<lb/>
trying to link Howard Hunt, the<lb/>
mastermind of the Watergate bugging,<lb/>
with International Telephone and<lb/>
Telegraph, enate investigators suspect -<lb/>
but haven't yet nailed down that the<lb/>
giant conglomerate hired Hunt to spy on<lb/>
Chile. They believe he enlisted his<lb/>
"Mission: Impossible" team to break<lb/>
into the Chilean embassy and the homes<lb/>
of three Chilean diplomats in New York<lb/>
City in search of secret documents<lb/>
Investigators have questioned ITT<lb/>
officials behind closed doors. But the<lb/>
got no answers.<lb/>
;x?ft:S?:v:?WS??w<lb/>
-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-xx?x-x-x-x-x-x-x-xx-x-x-x-x-xx-<lb/>
commendable the efforts of those<lb/>
legislatures who debated and voted<lb/>
against a bill calling for revision of ECU<lb/>
judicial processes. This commendation<lb/>
cannot be denied, for any effort made<lb/>
in opposition to such a bill are indeed<lb/>
commendable. However, does this makt<lb/>
the fact that over fifty per cent of tht<lb/>
legislators voted for the bill any less<lb/>
tragic? This bill would negate hundreds<lb/>
of years of common law justice, as well<lb/>
as a basic tenet of American justice<lb/>
innocent until proven guilty.<lb/>
Mr. Edwards can be commended for<lb/>
his masterful efforts in opposition to<lb/>
the bill. He has shown himself to be a<lb/>
rationally thinking individual, the kind<lb/>
our SGA needs. However, those<lb/>
legislators who supported and voted for<lb/>
the bill in question deserve no such<lb/>
courtesy, and likewise deserve no seat<lb/>
on any SGA we hope to be effective ,<lb/>
student government which can boast<lb/>
only of a majority favoring the rejection<lb/>
of basic American judicial principles u<lb/>
a little more than ludicrous<lb/>
to<lb/>
as<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Bob Marske<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
All students, fsculty 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 opmions may be puhh.hed<lb/>
Unsigned editorial, reflect (?<lb/>
opinion, of the editor-in- chief, and <lb/>
necessarily those of the entire staff<lb/>
even a majority. r<lb/>
When writing to the Forum th?<lb/>
following procedure should be uasd'<lb/>
Letter, should be coae.se lnd U) (h(.<lb/>
-Letters should he t j<lb/>
double-paced, snd should not '<lb/>
300 words. 0t ????<lb/>
-Letters should be ?an,?t ? ,<lb/>
name of the author and X h th"<lb/>
Upon the request of the 81 <lb/>
names may be withheld thlr<lb/>
Signed articles on this ?? .<lb/>
opinion, of the auC' T1<lb/>
necessarily thow of k0u ' n,i ?'<lb/>
Ewt Carolina Univer,ltyUntalnh"?d W I<lb/>
By:<lb/>
North<lb/>
shortagt<lb/>
accord ir<lb/>
Dean of<lb/>
"Thes.<lb/>
the Boi<lb/>
other j<lb/>
national<lb/>
doctor<lb/>
In No<lb/>
people t<lb/>
it is 1<lb/>
western<lb/>
to one i<lb/>
one in th<lb/>
"Those<lb/>
here tha<lb/>
shortage<lb/>
Kar<lb/>
be$<lb/>
In Septi<lb/>
have the<lb/>
overseas <lb/>
Ogura Cit<lb/>
This I<lb/>
establishei<lb/>
year after<lb/>
experimer<lb/>
The Jap.<lb/>
in conjunt<lb/>
Foreign SI<lb/>
had cordu<lb/>
number o<lb/>
Director c<lb/>
"We had b<lb/>
for a study<lb/>
PR<lb/>
ECU sti<lb/>
accom panic<lb/>
of the Ar<lb/>
part of tl<lb/>
Kansai sch<lb/>
their facult;<lb/>
"We have<lb/>
King, "thoi<lb/>
be a good fi<lb/>
ECU stui<lb/>
Kansai unc<lb/>
addition to<lb/>
and a sen<lb/>
Watrous. St<lb/>
opportunity<lb/>
language, u;<lb/>
fulfill some<lb/>
Studies mint<lb/>
One of thi<lb/>
Kansai prog)<lb/>
"Students<lb/>
with a Jar<lb/>
"They'll tx<lb/>
families and<lb/>
absorb the h<lb/>
"Of coursi<lb/>
doesn't cho<lb/>
live wherevei<lb/>
or in a hotel<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
invited to jo:<lb/>
"Under i<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Schools sa<lb/>
can obtain u<lb/>
approved ins<lb/>
ACLU<lb/>
resid<lb/>
(CPS)-Th<lb/>
Union (AC<lb/>
filed a cc<lb/>
constitution<lb/>
requirement<lb/>
Virginia's co<lb/>
Attorneys<lb/>
be half of a<lb/>
Community<lb/>
Virginia. T<lb/>
Virginia fro<lb/>
the state for<lb/>
to attorney<lb/>
Virginia in<lb/>
register as ai<lb/>
was informs:<lb/>
residency<lb/>
residence pri<lb/>
Attorneys<lb/>
such a n<lb/>
Amendment<lb/>
access to ed<lb/>
by imposini<lb/>
upon non-rei<lb/>
Dave Thai<lb/>
explained<lb/>
requirement<lb/>
Supreme Cc<lb/>
Thompson,<lb/>
any state to<lb/>
to travel. Th<lb/>
requirement<lb/>
equal proteel<lb/>
Thalen em<lb/>
case is not d<lb/>
issue of out-<lb/>
explained Ti-<lb/>
to in' "tackle<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>