<?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="00039673_0001"/>
' N99d it preofer hmr '<lb/>
Wooles cites statewide doctor shortaae<lb/>
IN GREENE ? Wfcl- .  . . 5 W<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREENE<lb/>
STAFF WRITER<lb/>
North Carolina Ll experiencing a<lb/>
shortage of about 1,800 doctors<lb/>
according to Dr. Wallace R. Wooles'<lb/>
Dean of the School of Medicine<lb/>
"These figures come from a report of<lb/>
the Hoard of Governor! and various<lb/>
other studies said Wooles "The<lb/>
national average if 700 people per 1<lb/>
doctor<lb/>
In North Carolina the ratio is 1 000<lb/>
people to one doctor. More specifically<lb/>
it is 1,200 people to one doctor in<lb/>
western North Carolina and 800 people<lb/>
to one in the Piedmont, and 1,800 to<lb/>
one in the east.<lb/>
"Those figures show the need is greater<lb/>
here than any other place but the<lb/>
shortage of doctors is state wide " said<lb/>
Wooles. "It's just as hard if not harder to<lb/>
get a doctor in the larger cities than in<lb/>
the smaller cities<lb/>
According to Wooles the 1,800-doctor<lb/>
shortage is probably a low figure because<lb/>
it doesnt take into account all the<lb/>
doctors who retire and die.<lb/>
Wooles said that if a new medical<lb/>
school started graduating 100 students a<lb/>
year it would be 18 years before North<lb/>
Carolina caught up with the national<lb/>
average.<lb/>
MEDICAL STUDENTS<lb/>
However, considering that North<lb/>
Carolina retains only about 55 percent<lb/>
of the medical studente that graduate<lb/>
from the 3 medical schools it would be<lb/>
36 years before we would catch up with<lb/>
the national average<lb/>
"The Board of Governors calls for a<lb/>
grand total of 40 students each war and<lb/>
that wont occur until 1980 If these<lb/>
recommendations were earned out by<lb/>
1980 that would put us 2 - percent<lb/>
behind the national average  saKj<lb/>
"These predictions are based on the fad<lb/>
of graduating new studente Immediately<lb/>
but from the time a stud-m enters<lb/>
medical school until he starts to practice<lb/>
it's a minimum of 7 years Woolei said<lb/>
$12,320,000 is being requested from<lb/>
the state legislature for a ne? faculty<lb/>
office and laboratory at the I'NC-Chapel<lb/>
Kansai extension program to<lb/>
begin in September, 1973<lb/>
In September of 1973, 20 student will<lb/>
have the opportunity to attend ECU's<lb/>
overseas campus at Kansai University in<lb/>
Ogura City, Japan.<lb/>
This Ogura City campus was<lb/>
established m July 1972, roughly one<lb/>
year after ECU began its first overseas<lb/>
experiment in Bonn, Germany.<lb/>
The Japanese program will be operated<lb/>
 conjunction with Kansai University of<lb/>
foreign Studies in Ogura City. "We've<lb/>
had cordial relations with Kansai for a<lb/>
number of years said Kermit King<lb/>
Director of the offered InternStudies!<lb/>
We had been trying to establish details<lb/>
for a study program with them<lb/>
PROFESSOR EXCHANGE<lb/>
ECU students at Kansai will be<lb/>
accompanied by Dr. Blanche G. Watrous<lb/>
of the Anthropology Department. As<lb/>
part of this professor exchange, the<lb/>
Kansai school will send a member of<lb/>
their faculty to ECU.<lb/>
"We have no idea who it will be said<lb/>
King, "though I imagine language would<lb/>
be a good field for him to be in<lb/>
ECU students will take courses at<lb/>
Kansai under Japanese professors, in<lb/>
addition to two courses - field studies<lb/>
and a seminar - conducted by Dr.<lb/>
Watrous. Students will also have the<lb/>
opportunity to study the Japanese<lb/>
language, using the language course to<lb/>
fulfill some requirements for an Asian<lb/>
Studies minor.<lb/>
HOMESTAY<lb/>
One of the more unusual facets of the<lb/>
Kansai program will be the "homestay<lb/>
"Students will be able to actually live<lb/>
with a Japanese family said King.<lb/>
"They'll be living with well-chosen<lb/>
families and will have the opportunity to<lb/>
absorb the best of Japanese culture.<lb/>
"Of course he added, "if the student<lb/>
doesn't choose the homestay, he may<lb/>
live wherever he wants - in the dormitory<lb/>
or in a hotel<lb/>
Graduate students have also been<lb/>
invited to join the Kansai program.<lb/>
"Under rules established by the<lb/>
Southern Association of Graduate<lb/>
Schools said King, "graduate students<lb/>
can obtain up to 9 hours of credit in an<lb/>
approved institution abroad.<lb/>
ACLU questions<lb/>
resident status<lb/>
(CPS)-The American Civil Liberites<lb/>
Union (ACLU) of Virginia last week<lb/>
filed a court case questioning the<lb/>
constitutionality of a one-year residency<lb/>
requirement 'or in-state tuition at<lb/>
Virginia's colleges and universities.<lb/>
Attorneys for the VaCLU filed suit on<lb/>
be half of a student at Northern Virginia<lb/>
Community College in Annandale,<lb/>
Virginia. The student, a resident of<lb/>
Virginia from her birth until 1969, left<lb/>
the state for a year and a half. According<lb/>
to attorneys, when she returned to<lb/>
Virginia in 1970 and attempted to<lb/>
register as an in-state college student, sue<lb/>
was informed that she did not meet the<lb/>
residency requirement of one-year<lb/>
residence prior to registration.<lb/>
Attorneys for the student claimed that<lb/>
such a requirement violates 14th<lb/>
Amendment rights by restricting easy<lb/>
access to educational opportunities and<lb/>
by imposing "an unnecessary hardship<lb/>
upon non-residents<lb/>
Dave Thalen, staff counsel for VaCLU,<lb/>
explained that such a residency<lb/>
requirement violates the United States<lb/>
Supreme Court decision in Shapiro v.<lb/>
Thompson, in which the court forbade<lb/>
any state to restrict the right of a citizen<lb/>
to travel. Thalen commented that such a<lb/>
requirement was an "irrational "denial of<lb/>
equal protection.<lb/>
Thalen emphasized however, that this<lb/>
MM is not designed to tackle the whole<lb/>
issue of out-of state tuitions. That issue,<lb/>
explained Thalen, is one whn h will have<lb/>
to be "tackled little by little<lb/>
"Where Kansai University can provide<lb/>
graduate studies, the students will be<lb/>
able to take advantage of them.<lb/>
"However he said, "it should be noted<lb/>
that Kansai is a school of foreign studies<lb/>
- language and political science for<lb/>
example - and wouldn't be able to<lb/>
handle all graduate fields<lb/>
How much will the Kansai year cost?<lb/>
"It will be $2,700 plus tuition and<lb/>
fees said King, "the same rate as we<lb/>
offer in the Bonn program. Of course<lb/>
he added, "this may be too high for out<lb/>
of state studente.<lb/>
"The student also pays for his<lb/>
passport, application fee and<lb/>
transportation to New York, his starting<lb/>
point on the flight to Japan.<lb/>
"But by special arrangement with the<lb/>
Japan Society and the Association for<lb/>
Asian Studies, each student taking part<lb/>
in the program will receive free<lb/>
round-trip air fare from New York to<lb/>
Kansai<lb/>
DEVALUATION<lb/>
King expressed some concern over the<lb/>
recent devaluation of the dollar and its<lb/>
possible effect on program costs.<lb/>
"The Japanese yen used to stand at<lb/>
301 to the dollar he said. "We dont<lb/>
know where it stands now, and havent<lb/>
heard anything from Japan about it.<lb/>
"We're hoping the devaluation doesn't<lb/>
affect pro-p-amoste in any way he said.<lb/>
"We're hoping the devaluation doesn't<lb/>
affect progra, costs in any way he said.<lb/>
"If costs were to go up, it might make<lb/>
operation of the program too expensive,<lb/>
and would make costs hard on the ECU<lb/>
student in Japan<lb/>
Have any students yet signed up for<lb/>
the program?<lb/>
"There are quite a few who have<lb/>
expressed interest in it said King. "I<lb/>
think they're all in the stages of thinking<lb/>
about it now. We'd like to have a group<lb/>
of about 20 going over there in<lb/>
September of this year.<lb/>
"We're really encouraging students to<lb/>
take advantage of the Kansai program<lb/>
now he said. "I think we're the only<lb/>
school in North Carolina offering a<lb/>
program in Japan - and we also offer a<lb/>
program in Mexico, which no other<lb/>
school in the state has.<lb/>
Hill Medical School $4,005,000 is also<lb/>
being requested to renovate a major<lb/>
building, MacNider Hall, at the UNC<lb/>
school. $9,140,000 has also been<lb/>
requested for expansion and renovation<lb/>
of the teaching hospital there.<lb/>
An additional $1,280,000 will go to<lb/>
increase supplies for North Carolina<lb/>
studente at Duke and Bowman Gray<lb/>
from $3,000 to $5,000 per student.<lb/>
According to Wooles those funds<lb/>
should provide 30 more students at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, 3 more North Carolina<lb/>
studente per year at Duke and 7 more<lb/>
studente at Bowman Gray by 1980. That<lb/>
would mean 40 more students<lb/>
graduating in medicine by 1980<lb/>
COST<lb/>
"That is a total close to 25<lb/>
millionsaid Wooles, "and all that it<lb/>
gives us is 40 more students<lb/>
The cost of a medical school without a<lb/>
teaching hospital is. $15 milhon<lb/>
according to a Board of Governors<lb/>
report using data from the Association<lb/>
of American Medical Colleges. The<lb/>
operating cost would be 5-6 million<lb/>
Without a teaching hospital the school<lb/>
would use a community hospital There<lb/>
would be an annual cost of $2 million<lb/>
for the community hospital affiliation.<lb/>
Therefore, it would cost about $15-20<lb/>
million to start a new medical school.<lb/>
"We are talking about how much<lb/>
money we have to put out for 10<lb/>
studente as opposed to what the Board<lb/>
of Governors say would be the com of a<lb/>
new medical school Wooles said.<lb/>
WooIm estimated that if ECU got a<lb/>
4-year medical school now with ideal<lb/>
conditions, "we could start the first<lb/>
clinical training in 1977 and graduate the<lb/>
first class by 1978 "<lb/>
WoolM laid the classes would be<lb/>
between 80 100 students. "If there wen<lb/>
a study group as the Board of Governors<lb/>
recommended1 said Wooles, "1 could<lb/>
not see how they could say a medical<lb/>
school was not needed He added that<lb/>
there was a great need for a school here.<lb/>
"EC1 already has a School of Nursing<lb/>
and Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions said Wooles, "which could<lb/>
work closely with the medical school "<lb/>
fountainhead<lb/>
P  and the truth shall make unu fro  greenville. n c<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH<lb/>
Music graduates<lb/>
outstanding<lb/>
Two recent graduates of the East<lb/>
Carolina University School of Music have<lb/>
recently won recognition for outstanding<lb/>
performance in voice competitions.<lb/>
Donna Stephenson, mezzo soprano<lb/>
from Benson, was chosen first place<lb/>
winner in a competition sponsored by<lb/>
the Southern Division of the Music<lb/>
Teachers National Association. A winner<lb/>
of the previously held state competition,<lb/>
she was judged best among first place<lb/>
winners from eight southern states.<lb/>
Miss Stephenson will represent the<lb/>
Southern region at the national<lb/>
convention of the Music Teachers<lb/>
National Association in Philadelphia<lb/>
April 1. ?<lb/>
This is the second year she has been<lb/>
first place winner for the South in the<lb/>
MTNA event.<lb/>
Soprano Jacqueline Willis Rausch of<lb/>
Greenville, first place winner of the<lb/>
scholarship competition sponsored by<lb/>
the N.C. Federation of Music Clubs, was<lb/>
also first place winner in the<lb/>
Federation's District Audition at<lb/>
Spartanburg, S.C.<lb/>
As district winner, she will compete<lb/>
for the national Irene S. Muir Biennial<lb/>
Scholarship to be awarded later this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Mrs. Rausch was also a winner in the<lb/>
District Metropolitan Opera Auditions<lb/>
held on the ECU campus.<lb/>
Both Miss Stephenson and Mrs. Rausch<lb/>
were studente at Gladys White of the<lb/>
ECU voice faculty.<lb/>
Pass-fail system not cure-a<lb/>
says Michigan psychologist<lb/>
(IP)?Pass-fail grading does not appear<lb/>
to be this decade's cure-all for the<lb/>
problems of higher education. University<lb/>
of Michigan psychologist Frank M Koen<lb/>
conducted a broad study comparing the<lb/>
effects of pass-fail and traditional<lb/>
grading on 950 undergraduates. It<lb/>
produced. Prof. Koen reported "little<lb/>
conclusive evidence that either system is<lb/>
intrinsically superior in all respects<lb/>
It may profit the student in some<lb/>
ways: toward a greater sense of<lb/>
autonomy, self motivated learning, or a<lb/>
more collesriaj reimtionmhip with him<lb/>
professor On the other hand, if the<lb/>
student's pass-fail transcript does not<lb/>
come from an academically prestigious<lb/>
institution and he lacks other<lb/>
credentials, he may reduce his chances of<lb/>
being accepted by a graduate school.<lb/>
"The choice of grading system is a far<lb/>
more complex matter than supporters of<lb/>
either approach have perceived he<lb/>
concluded. "An individual institution or<lb/>
department must decide which goals are<lb/>
most important for the students and<lb/>
choose the grading policy that is more<lb/>
likely to bring them about<lb/>
Prof. Koen tested 16 commonly made<lb/>
claims regarding the differences in<lb/>
student performances, attitudes and<lb/>
experience that may result from the<lb/>
traditional system or P-F grading. The<lb/>
students were tested on academic<lb/>
achievement early and late in the term.<lb/>
They also completed opinion<lb/>
questionnaires at the beginning and end<lb/>
of their courses.<lb/>
Use of morning-after pill encounters investigation<lb/>
(CPS)-The use of Diethyl-Stilbestrol<lb/>
(DES) as a post-coital contraceptive or<lb/>
morning after pill will be approved by<lb/>
the Food and Drug Admininstration<lb/>
(FDA), according to FDA Commissioner<lb/>
Dr. Charles C. Edwards.<lb/>
Edwards, in a statement prepared for<lb/>
the Senate health subcommittee, said "A<lb/>
revision of the labeling of DES for use as<lb/>
a post-coital contraceptive is currently<lb/>
under way<lb/>
The decision, yet to be officially<lb/>
announced, is apparently the result of a<lb/>
unanimous recommendation from the<lb/>
FDA's Obstetrics and Gynecology.<lb/>
Committee which met Uanuary 26 to<lb/>
discuss the situation.<lb/>
SHARP CRITICISM<lb/>
Sharp criticism had been leveled at the<lb/>
FDA for "recalcitrance (cancer-causing)<lb/>
effect of DES. The synthetic drug, an<lb/>
estrogen-based hormone, has been linked<lb/>
to cervical cancer in the offspring of<lb/>
women who ingest it. It is also<lb/>
considered a possible danger to women<lb/>
with a high cancer risk such as those<lb/>
with a family history of cancer, or those<lb/>
who already have cancerous conditions.<lb/>
Ed Nida of the FDA information<lb/>
office says the FDA has been advised by<lb/>
its committee to approve the new use for<lb/>
the drug, but to require labels warning<lb/>
doctors of the risk to certain patients.<lb/>
There is no chance 11 win be taken off<lb/>
the market because it has uses other than<lb/>
as a morning after pill-like treatment of<lb/>
painful swelling of the breast Nida<lb/>
said. The committee will officially<lb/>
present its report to the FDA February<lb/>
27.<lb/>
The harshest attack on the use of DES<lb/>
post-coitally came from the Ralph<lb/>
Nader-associated Health Research Group<lb/>
which blasted unrestricted use of the<lb/>
drug, emphasized the cancer risk, and<lb/>
claimed women w ?re being used as<lb/>
"guinea pigs" at college health centers.<lb/>
Many medical experts agreed the drug<lb/>
should be further controlled and the<lb/>
carcinogenic effect cited, but they felt<lb/>
the Nader report was "hysterical and<lb/>
counter-productive A concensus<lb/>
indicates the drug needs further study,<lb/>
but that its benefits far outweigh its risks<lb/>
to the average woman.<lb/>
Dr. John McLean Morris, professor of<lb/>
gynocology at the Yale University<lb/>
School of Medicine, who for the past 10<lb/>
years had studied DES, agrees with the<lb/>
use of the drug as a morning after pill.<lb/>
"RISKS"<lb/>
'You have to balance the risks he<lb/>
said "You begin taking a chance when<lb/>
you have sex There's a two percent<lb/>
chance you'll get cancer of the cervix<lb/>
from that. Then if you get pregnant, and<lb/>
have the baby, you are taking a<lb/>
life-or death chance If you have an<lb/>
abort ion you take a chance. 1 simply<lb/>
think your chances are belter if you take<lb/>
the morning after pill to prevent an<lb/>
unwanted bith or traumatic abortion<lb/>
Dr. Arnold Werner of the College of<lb/>
Human Medicine at Michigan State<lb/>
University agrees, but adds, "It is still<lb/>
somewhat experimental and certain<lb/>
procedures for its (DES) use should be<lb/>
followed He stressed DES should not<lb/>
be used routinely as a true contreceptive<lb/>
but only in the case of an emergency<lb/>
such as rape, or condom or diaphram<lb/>
failure. Dr Werner feels charges linking<lb/>
DES to cancer in the user "lack<lb/>
evidence<lb/>
There may be some evidence that<lb/>
regular ingestion of DES leads to<lb/>
"greater than expected frequency of<lb/>
malignancy in the female genital tract<lb/>
says Dr Roy Hertz, a hormonal cancer<lb/>
expert at New York Medical College.<lb/>
Since DES as a morning after pill is<lb/>
administered for five days starting within<lb/>
72 hours of sexual contact the duration<lb/>
might limit the cancer risk Critics feel<lb/>
this is untrue.<lb/>
NADER STUDY<lb/>
The Nader study quotes Dr. Arthur<lb/>
Herbst, who discovered the first cancer<lb/>
link in the offspring of users, as saying,<lb/>
"we do not have enough data or<lb/>
knowledge at the present time to say<lb/>
what the smallest dose or the shortest<lb/>
duration of exposure to this drug is that<lb/>
causes trouble " But Dr. Herbst was<lb/>
quoted out of context in the Nader<lb/>
study, and he has said his studies on DES<lb/>
'should not be applied to the morning<lb/>
after pill since his work dealt with<lb/>
offspring and not users.<lb/>
Perhaps a more dangerous use of DES<lb/>
was the one recently banned by the FDA<lb/>
after interne pressure was brought to<lb/>
bear against the agency by consumer<lb/>
groups. Last summer the use of DES &amp;v a<lb/>
growth stimulant in cattle food was<lb/>
outlawed by the FDA after trace<lb/>
amounts began appearing in meat<lb/>
butchered from DES-fed cattle.<lb/>
The FDA still is permitting the<lb/>
implanting of DES pellets into the ears<lb/>
of cattle, a practice banned by both the<lb/>
French and Canadian governments<lb/>
French studies have found that female<lb/>
rats who ate meat from DES-implanted<lb/>
cattle became sterile.<lb/>
CONTROVERSY<lb/>
The controversy over the use of DES<lb/>
in any form will undoubtably continue<lb/>
For the present time however the use of<lb/>
DES as a morning after pill will have the<lb/>
sanction of the FDA. The Nader Health<lb/>
Research Group still doesnt think the<lb/>
drug should be marketed until further<lb/>
tests are conducted. They point out the<lb/>
FDA has a record of approving drugs<lb/>
which later prove harmful.<lb/>
Dr Werner counters with "Everything<lb/>
you do in medicine is playing with the<lb/>
odds This view is grimly summed up<lb/>
by the FDA's Ed Nida who observes,<lb/>
"The risk depends on how bad the girl<lb/>
doesnt want to have a baby She's given<lb/>
a choice of which she would rather<lb/>
have-an abortion or a little dose of<lb/>
cancer<lb/>
I<lb/>
ti-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
ne<lb/>
?te<lb/>
k<lb/>
on<lb/>
"Students in the traditional sections<lb/>
did report spending significantly more<lb/>
time and effort on the course than P-F<lb/>
students, although their estimated<lb/>
retention of the subject matter was no<lb/>
greater Prof Koen reported<lb/>
OPT ION<lb/>
The pass-fail option can be viewed<lb/>
somewhat as an "unfamiliar intellectual<lb/>
territory" for the student to explore,<lb/>
Koen noted Although there have beer<lb/>
??TtJons that thome with higher uradr<lb/>
point mvermgem would prefer traditional<lb/>
grading, he maid, their past academic<lb/>
records proved to be of no relevance.<lb/>
Nor was grading policy found to<lb/>
influence a student's choice of major.<lb/>
Students under the traditional system<lb/>
were more likely to regard their teachers<lb/>
as organizers, task setters and content<lb/>
experts, while P-F students tended to see<lb/>
teachers as helpers and colleagues. These<lb/>
differences, however, were not striking,<lb/>
Koen reported.<lb/>
"The P-F students tended to place<lb/>
somewhat more value on 'internal'<lb/>
rewards for learning, such as an increased<lb/>
sense of personal competence, as<lb/>
opposed to the 'external' rewards of<lb/>
grades and competition with their<lb/>
classmates. They also tended to profess a<lb/>
greater sense of autonomy and personal<lb/>
responsibility for success in the course,<lb/>
although these effects did not reach a<lb/>
statistically significant level<lb/>
on<lb/>
As<lb/>
?ct<lb/>
ted<lb/>
is<lb/>
lv<lb/>
d<lb/>
nd<lb/>
to<lb/>
n).<lb/>
n),<lb/>
3ul<lb/>
es,<lb/>
of<lb/>
C.<lb/>
ree<lb/>
on.<lb/>
led<lb/>
ors<lb/>
of<lb/>
:<lb/>
the<lb/>
on.<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
mi<lb/>
en,<lb/>
die<lb/>
it-<lb/>
on;<lb/>
tate<lb/>
tate<lb/>
iser,<lb/>
ing<lb/>
?son<lb/>
?ny,<lb/>
: of<lb/>
irig;<lb/>
and<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039673_0002"/><lb/>
n tain head rhursdaj Much 8 197S, Page 2<lb/>
Sleuth mystery<lb/>
grips audiences,<lb/>
opens ECU theater<lb/>
"Sleuth Broadwaj mystery hit<lb/>
employing the su? essive wiles ol ita two<lb/>
opposing character vnii be presented at<lb/>
Bast Carolina University Mondaj March<lb/>
12<lb/>
riii- ECt presentation is a special<lb/>
added attraction to the campus rtists<lb/>
Series IVo performances are scheduled<lb/>
m ECU's McGinnis Auditorium, ?<lb/>
mat me.? at 2 1 5 p m. and an evening<lb/>
performance at 8 p.m<lb/>
Written bj playwright Anthony<lb/>
Shaffer, "Sleuth" won the rony Award<lb/>
for Broadway's best play in 1971 and<lb/>
also the 197 Edgar Award of the<lb/>
Mysterj Writers of America for best<lb/>
mystery story of the year in any form<lb/>
TEASES FICTION DEVOTEES<lb/>
A teaser for thi' most experienced<lb/>
tees of Vgatha Christu Ellery<lb/>
Queen, George Simenon and other<lb/>
authors ,)f detective fiction, the play's<lb/>
-lv ? nseful action takes place<lb/>
in the usual British country mansion, hut<lb/>
m no other nay is it usual in its tale o<lb/>
plot ami counterpl<lb/>
"Sleuth" is both a mystery and a<lb/>
parodj of mysteries; it mocks the cliches<lb/>
dn,i mechanisms detective stones.<lb/>
while -nil using their devices to hold<lb/>
audiem ? - ess w ith suspense its<lb/>
baffling twists of plot keep guessers in<lb/>
tht lark until the final curtain<lb/>
CONTEND FOR LIFE<lb/>
Actors i ?? irgi Host and I'a id<lb/>
Haviland are feat in ? i- thi : wo<lb/>
antag both i riding tor<lb/>
self-respect, revengi ?? ? self.<lb/>
K se portrays a successful mid<lb/>
writer of clever mysterj novels who has<lb/>
a penchant for games ii wil He<lb/>
challenges the young Haviland-who ha<lb/>
cuckolded himto a truss c.av.<lb/>
survh ? - ktail, and<lb/>
the tens, action begins.<lb/>
Besides the suspense of th story, the<lb/>
dialogue has had - ippeaJ with<lb/>
audiences. It is witty, polished and<lb/>
always amusing<lb/>
Tickets for ?'Sleuth" are available at<lb/>
the ECU Central Ticket Offii e<lb/>
Ma ton Prof fit<lb/>
Freedom sound rides land<lb/>
lake early pioneers looking for land<lb/>
MASON PROFFIT rule west looltinf<lb/>
for freedom Armed with their drums,<lb/>
guitars and musie, they've settled at<lb/>
K.h kfish Crossing to l ultiviitc their<lb/>
musical soil and grow new loots<lb/>
I'hey ride from Indianapolis tin<lb/>
Chicago leaving their lirand in the ftins<lb/>
of albums "Wanted" ami "Moving<lb/>
I, ward Happiness" "Last Night I Had<lb/>
the Strangest Dream" The decision to<lb/>
migrate cams after their first single.<lb/>
?Two Hangmen was released ami then<lb/>
banned from AM airplay in some of the<lb/>
finest Midwest i ities because they and<lb/>
their material were considered politically<lb/>
outlawed Which Old) served to bring<lb/>
them together with the thousands of<lb/>
other political outlaws in the area, and<lb/>
they hit the road with their goods to<lb/>
play for the people who felt the same<lb/>
way they did. and that meant a lot of<lb/>
saloons and little red college<lb/>
schoolhouses 1'hat's when they hide<lb/>
out the most.<lb/>
If you haven't seen the wanted posters,<lb/>
?nd you're interacted m collectbu th<lb/>
bounty, MASON PROFPIT are;<lb/>
John lalhot who wields a miijht ?<lb/>
guitar, banjo, steal guitar, dobrs an()<lb/>
does a lot of singing; Terry Talbot (th<lb/>
other half of the notorious Talbot<lb/>
Brothers) who also is a quick draw<lb/>
the lead guitar and sings like a mel)vs<lb/>
coyote; BniCe "Creeper" Kurnow Wri()<lb/>
travelled a lot with the Muddy Vaur4<lb/>
gang of bluesers and learned a lot j ,<lb/>
the harmonica from Mojo Buford, Tt,<lb/>
tyres who plays the has and listens to<lb/>
contraband rock music a lot, and .n<lb/>
Nash who shoots from the hip on th<lb/>
double barreled drums<lb/>
If you Ye interested in a night ol<lb/>
foot stompm' bluegrass music or mellou<lb/>
country rock turn out Thursday<lb/>
March M at H p m. in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Each student and guest will hi<lb/>
admitted by ID and activity ,ard<lb/>
Faculty must present ID cards. Ticket<lb/>
are available for the public in the Centra<lb/>
Ticket Office at $2.00.<lb/>
SMSO PKOKUT Mil WANTED LIVE and an- rumored to hidI at "R?H-kfi?h<lb/>
CrossingThe bount) is music from (I. to r.Tern Talbot, Bruce "Creeper" Kumoi<lb/>
rt Nash. Tim vres, and John lalhot.<lb/>
'Hey, let's check out the media center<lb/>
i<lb/>
By LINDA GARDNER<lb/>
' ? ' ihssd<lb/>
Five years ago Karen Sanders was<lb/>
graduated from Fa Carolina University<lb/>
with a degree m library science she now<lb/>
wor-s-  a Tana Next year her sister.<lb/>
Brenda, will also graduate from ECU<lb/>
with a degree in library science, but she<lb/>
i media specialist.<lb/>
The hang in title from librarian to<lb/>
media specialist : representative oi the<lb/>
g " thi philosophy of the<lb/>
Department of Library Science at ECU.<lb/>
I he ;ihrar ha- stood as an important<lb/>
part f the academic community at ECU<lb/>
for many years I 1936, the library<lb/>
ind curriculum were<lb/>
with the campus library<lb/>
Students could take brary<lb/>
11 but no degri  were offered.<lb/>
In 1964, library science became a<lb/>
separate department, and for the first<lb/>
time, graduated students into the ranks<lb/>
Popular diets and foods<lb/>
prove unpopular with body<lb/>
of Ubrartanship<lb/>
Now m 197;). the library that has<lb/>
stood for so King as an institution is<lb/>
changing There is a new concept, that<lb/>
of. Media Center and the media<lb/>
specialist<lb/>
AIM AT SERVICE<lb/>
"The basic philosophy of the library<lb/>
has always been service We have now-<lb/>
changed the concept of the library and<lb/>
revamped our program to provide better<lb/>
service explains Lois T. Berry,<lb/>
instructor in library science.<lb/>
Brenda Sanders explains the difference<lb/>
in her degree training and her sister's by<lb/>
saving. "We realize today that the library-<lb/>
must handle more books to provide the<lb/>
-ervice needed. I'm trained to operate all<lb/>
types of educational equipment. My<lb/>
sister learned only aiiout books<lb/>
Since the emphasis in education today<lb/>
i no longer solely on the textbook.<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
classroom lectures are giving way to<lb/>
individualized instruction This increases<lb/>
the responsibility of the library.<lb/>
"If we offer only books to students to<lb/>
aid in the education process, we are<lb/>
ignoring a vast amount of knowledge<lb/>
said Mrs Berry-<lb/>
Media specialists now urge students to<lb/>
explore other forms of educational<lb/>
materials including films, films trips,<lb/>
microfilm, pictures, records and tape<lb/>
recordings.<lb/>
This use of different types of materials<lb/>
in the library typifies the change in<lb/>
philosophy of the library science<lb/>
department. "We must provide<lb/>
experience in all types of media<lb/>
explained Mrs. Berry. The media<lb/>
specialist, therefor, must be well trained<lb/>
in the field of audio-visual aids.<lb/>
The impo'tance of media in education<lb/>
is further explained by Dr William F.<lb/>
Pritchard, audiovisual instructor.<lb/>
"Because of different cultural<lb/>
backgrounds, a child is often unable to<lb/>
understand a certain verbal<lb/>
communication, whereas, a picture<lb/>
universal<lb/>
Libraries, or Media Centers, as they ar<lb/>
now being called, allow for extend)<lb/>
of audio-visual equipment in the icho<lb/>
as well as at home<lb/>
STIMULATE A V USE<lb/>
"We trv to -tress that it is no longer<lb/>
important to be able to put our hands or<lb/>
our A V equipment at any giver<lb/>
moment What good are these material<lb/>
if they sit on the shelves? The benefit<lb/>
comes from use alone, whether is thi<lb/>
school or in the home according tc<lb/>
Berry<lb/>
This reasoning, along with the hasi.<lb/>
changes in the philosophy of education<lb/>
have made it necessary to change tht<lb/>
library to the Media Center. In keepmk<lb/>
with the changes. FCC now trains medk<lb/>
specialists instead of the traditions<lb/>
librarian.<lb/>
In the years to come, dont b?<lb/>
surprised to hear someone say. "In-<lb/>
going to the Media Center to study<lb/>
By FRANCENE PERRY<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Invest m yourself Buy nutrition<lb/>
The above suggestion is this years<lb/>
watchword from the American Dietetic<lb/>
Association, which is sponsoring<lb/>
nal Nutrition Week March MO.<lb/>
One of the Association's L'l.000<lb/>
members Dr ic Scott of the :<lb/>
'  Econon s, explains<lb/>
whv the  ? finam ial terms in a<lb/>
out nutrition is appropriate.<lb/>
In many ways pr pel illy a<lb/>
matt - wisely spent dollars and cents.<lb/>
The current increa ? . rj  ?<lb/>
has caused numerostudent shopper<lb/>
purchase "cheaper" items, such a- ?<lb/>
l sandwich meats B <lb/>
I<lb/>
the long ru<lb/>
? - . n proteii<lb/>
mini - <lb/>
high ring cos)<lb/>
?? Dr Scott md tc<lb/>
-<lb/>
to keep healthy<lb/>
? i ir ? ? i <lb/>
?<lb/>
Buying the more nutritious I<lb/>
prod but a first<lb/>
Pood preparation is also an essential<lb/>
factor m good nutrition.<lb/>
"Meat is an important source of the<lb/>
B-vitamins and minerals she noted.<lb/>
'When meat Is toasted, it should be<lb/>
cooked at not more than 325degrees, or<lb/>
il it is a cheaper cut, braised at about the<lb/>
same temperature<lb/>
u<lb/>
T<lb/>
R<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
O<lb/>
"organic" food sold than grown.<lb/>
"Health foods may be well used to<lb/>
supplement regular foods, but they<lb/>
should not be used as substitute's for<lb/>
necessary foods They are usually more<lb/>
expensive than ordinary mass-produced<lb/>
food products and are not essential in<lb/>
good menu planning<lb/>
Fad diets, such as the much-touted<lb/>
"Grapefruit Diet" and the "Rue Diet"<lb/>
can be actually harmful, says Dr Scott.<lb/>
Such diets are usually promoted for<lb/>
money-making purposes and extravagant<lb/>
claims are made about the benefits they<lb/>
bring.<lb/>
SCHOOL AND OUR<lb/>
FANTASTIC STEREO COMPONENT<lb/>
W<lb/>
20 PAIR FAMOUS<lb/>
NAME BRAND<lb/>
SPEAKERS<lb/>
VI<lb/>
BIG DISCOl NTS<lb/>
I<lb/>
iIlllllllimitniii<lb/>
? Scott ls chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Pood, Nutrition and<lb/>
tution Management of the ECU<lb/>
l of Home F onomics.<lb/>
department offers a Bs degree<lb/>
program which prepares students for<lb/>
?"? ? administration or dietetics.<lb/>
nay enter food retesn h or<lb/>
nutritionist with allied health<lb/>
agen<lb/>
Moat graduates of th- FCC program<lb/>
r 'he food service administration<lb/>
field, where they direct industrial,<lb/>
commercial or institutional food<lb/>
lervk es, including hospitals, schools and<lb/>
airlines<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
CONTINUES<lb/>
????????????i ??????<lb/>
DISCOl NT<lb/>
SYSTEM PRICES<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT<lb/>
FOUR CHANNEL<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
AT<lb/>
B I G<lb/>
DISCOUNTS<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT<lb/>
HEADPHONES<lb/>
AT<lb/>
WHOLESALE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
Hi meat shrinks less when cooked<lb/>
slowly, giving more servings per pound,<lb/>
losing fewer vitamins and minerals and<lb/>
even tasting better when done. Cooked<lb/>
'his way. B cut of meat provides more<lb/>
nutrients for the money "<lb/>
Despite mass circulation of good<lb/>
nutrition information, a great deal of<lb/>
misinformation about nutrition is being<lb/>
followed by otherwise careful student<lb/>
consumers.<lb/>
People have come to rely upon the diet<lb/>
M a shortcut to total well-being, and<lb/>
therefore su, h innovations as "organic"<lb/>
produce, health food and fad diets have<lb/>
been taken up by thousands of<lb/>
Americans<lb/>
. "Organic produce (fruits and<lb/>
vegetables grown with pesticides and<lb/>
with only natural fertilisers) costs about<lb/>
10 percent more to grow and deliver<lb/>
than other farm products. And most<lb/>
experts a Tee (hat there<lb/>
is more<lb/>
Upon graduation, they enter an<lb/>
internship program with a food service<lb/>
op-ration After the internship, they are<lb/>
eligible to take the national qualifying<lb/>
examination to become registered<lb/>
dieticians.<lb/>
I he curriculum now includes a<lb/>
practicum course, involving actual work<lb/>
in food service During the spring, several<lb/>
students will be at work with the<lb/>
Kinston City Schools Food Service<lb/>
System and at hospital food services in<lb/>
Greenville, Kinston and Washington.<lb/>
For the student who plans a career in<lb/>
the restaurant business, practicums can<lb/>
be arranged in commercial operations.<lb/>
Former student Jim McMahon did his<lb/>
practicum with the food service of a<lb/>
local .ountry club. At present, he is<lb/>
operating his own sandwich shop in1<lb/>
Creenville.<lb/>
The ECU program in food, nutrition<lb/>
and institution management offers itsi<lb/>
graduates a variety of career choices.<lb/>
And unlike many professional fields<lb/>
today, there are ample job opportunities<lb/>
for trained personnel.<lb/>
ONE GROUP<lb/>
FAMOUS NAME<lb/>
STEREO SYSTEMS<lb/>
REDUCED TO<lb/>
WHOLESALE'<lb/>
CARTRIDGES<lb/>
12 PRICE<lb/>
FAMOUS CHANGERS<lb/>
FREE BASE. COVER.<lb/>
AND CARTRIDGE<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
30<lb/>
O<lb/>
<pb facs="00039673_0003"/><lb/>
'?<lb/>
s land<lb/>
 ?K th,<lb/>
!? II art'<lb/>
Wl"l(l a mkhtv<lb/>
I?-rry Tall.ot ,lh(,<lb/>
lotorioui Talbot<lb/>
? quick dn? ,M1<lb/>
'?s MM a ?1(.?w<lb/>
?r" Kurnow Wrl0<lb/>
? Muddy U'aten<lb/>
?rn.Ml a lot about<lb/>
ojo Buford. Tm,<lb/>
as and listen, to<lb/>
' a lot, and An<lb/>
1 tn' hip on th,<lb/>
"i ? night o!<lb/>
music or mellow<lb/>
out Thursday<lb/>
i?ht Auditorium<lb/>
Kust will (<lb/>
activity ,ard<lb/>
U cards. Ticket<lb/>
lie in the (Vntra<lb/>
at "Rockfkfc<lb/>
-?'n-r" Kumo<lb/>
er<lb/>
IS, ? picture .<lb/>
itcrs, as they at'<lb/>
rnr extended <lb/>
nt in the m hi<lb/>
V USE<lb/>
it is no longet<lb/>
ut our hands or<lb/>
at any giver<lb/>
these material'<lb/>
s? The benefit<lb/>
whether is th.<lb/>
according tt<lb/>
with the hasii<lb/>
y of education<lb/>
to change th.<lb/>
iter. In keepmf<lb/>
w trains media<lb/>
the traditiona<lb/>
me. don't r<lb/>
one say, 'Trr<lb/>
to study "<lb/>
NT<lb/>
l NT<lb/>
PRICE:<lb/>
MENT<lb/>
ONES<lb/>
A L E<lb/>
E S<lb/>
Thursday, March 8<lb/>
Drop Add d?d Late R<lb/>
??soooow<lb/>
MwcMaw<lb/>
FoiJntainhe?d, Thursday. Mar. h h 19731<lb/>
age<lb/>
???c?e???scov:<lb/>
Sunday, March 11<lb/>
9 00 a.m. to 4 00 p.i<lb/>
egistration in Memorial Gym from<lb/>
Baseball ECU vs V.rg.nia at 3 00 p.r<lb/>
?o0p'mConte Mason Prom Wr,uh? Auditorium a, Monday, March 12<lb/>
Friday, March 9<lb/>
Tree Flick: "W.U S A " ? 700 and 900 p.m. in Wright.<lb/>
Saturday, March 10<lb/>
Baseball: ECU vs. Virgmia at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Last Day to Register<lb/>
Artists Series Special "Sleuth" in McGinnis Auditorium at<lb/>
2 00 p.m. and 8'15 p.m.<lb/>
Tuesday, March 13<lb/>
Lecture Series Gordon Gray at 800 p m. in Wright.<lb/>
Wednesday, March 14<lb/>
Schlitr Film Festival "Son of Movie Orgy" m Wright at<lb/>
800 p.m.<lb/>
Don and Phil shun mediocrity<lb/>
C<lb/>
o<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
E<lb/>
w<lb/>
By G.E. CARTER<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
"Pass the Chicken and Listen" (RCA<lb/>
ISP-4781) ' A<lb/>
"Bustin'Out" (RCA LSP-4769)<lb/>
"To Whom It May Concern"<lb/>
(ATCOSD-7012)<lb/>
but Thomas Wolfe said, "You can't<lb/>
go home again and it seems the man<lb/>
was right. Yet there are always things<lb/>
that make you remember home and<lb/>
younger days, whether you want to or<lb/>
not. There will always be that loning for<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
(Musical interlude)<lb/>
Remember the two twangy-voiced<lb/>
guys on "Shindig with their hair fully<lb/>
oiled, banging on battered black<lb/>
guitars? Remember songs like "Bye Bye<lb/>
Love? " Yes sir, two stabs from the<lb/>
dark past, Don and Phil Everly, are alive<lb/>
and well in Nashville, Tennessee.<lb/>
Yes, the boys are back, stronger than<lb/>
ever, and their new album, "Pass the<lb/>
Chicken and Listen" is pretty nice.<lb/>
Gone are the tinny voices of puberty,<lb/>
replaced by soft voices of maturity. The<lb/>
brother's harmonies are close and<lb/>
soaring, with a hint of country that calls<lb/>
you back to some home, even if you're<lb/>
from the bowels of the deity.<lb/>
The Everly Brothers' latest attempt,<lb/>
recorded in Nashville, features back-up<lb/>
from some of the finest studio<lb/>
musicians in the business. Not to<lb/>
mention that the whole thing was<lb/>
produced with loving care by Chet<lb/>
Atkins. Contained on the disc are twelve<lb/>
songs and there's not even a mediocre<lb/>
one in the whole stack. And, if you're<lb/>
tired of the raucous, scraping of<lb/>
electrified instruments, the volume<lb/>
often making up for lack of talent, this<lb/>
album will be like throwing a party for<lb/>
your ears. Nearly all the instumentation<lb/>
is acoustical guitar, something fine is<lb/>
sure to follow.<lb/>
"Woman, Don't You Try to Tie Me<lb/>
Down" is a fine example. This is one of<lb/>
those gocd-t me tunes that happens<lb/>
when able musicians sit around pickin'<lb/>
and grinnin fiddlin' and hummin The<lb/>
Everly's sing, "I can run as fast as Chet<lb/>
Atkins picks a guitar and then stand<lb/>
back and let the man take up the<lb/>
challenge.<lb/>
Highlighting this album are two slow,<lb/>
tear-packed country ballads that should<lb/>
have them crying in their beer down at<lb/>
Joe's on a cold, lonely Saturday night.<lb/>
"Sweet Memories" (Hell, the title tells it<lb/>
all) is one of those mournful tales of<lb/>
fading love "with the past slippin' in<lb/>
Don and Phil's vocals are sensitive and<lb/>
melodic, backed by a crying pedal steel<lb/>
and mournful dobro.<lb/>
"Somebody Nobody Knows" is a song<lb/>
of the loneliness in the unfeeling cities,<lb/>
of forgotten old men and saddened<lb/>
women. These two numbers rank right<lb/>
up there with such country-rock classics<lb/>
as Commander Cody's "Down to Seeds<lb/>
and Stems Again and Fleetwood Mac's<lb/>
"Blood on the Floor<lb/>
Closing the album is a pleasant<lb/>
rendition of the country classic "Rocky<lb/>
Top done with amazing subtlety. This<lb/>
is an album that will conjure images of<lb/>
home, wherever it might be, and bring<lb/>
back rweet memories.<lb/>
(Musical Interlude)<lb/>
Then, for a little pick-me-up, try Pure<lb/>
Prairie League's "BusthV Out This is<lb/>
not an album to beat a little old lady to<lb/>
death over, but it offers some nice<lb/>
moments. The three members of this<lb/>
group provide some clear, tenor vocals,<lb/>
which are the real highlights of the disc.<lb/>
The accompaniment, primarily by two<lb/>
(See "Pure" Page 4)<lb/>
? "Everyone has<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I choice, when to<lb/>
?<lb/>
? when not to raise<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I their voices, it's<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 you that decides<lb/>
Around Campus<lb/>
WINTER AND SUMMER STUDENT<lb/>
JOBS IN EUROPE-Thousands of<lb/>
paying student jobs are again available in<lb/>
Europe for this winter and next summer<lb/>
Winter jobs are available now in Swiss,<lb/>
'irman, Austrian, and French ski<lb/>
resorts, restaurants and hotels. Jobs for<lb/>
next summer are available throughout<lb/>
Europe in resorts, restaurants, hotels,<lb/>
hospitals, factories, offices, shops and on<lb/>
farms for those who like outdoor work<lb/>
Most of the y os are located in<lb/>
Switzerland, France, Germany and<lb/>
Spain, but selected positions are<lb/>
available in other countries Standard<lb/>
wages are always paid, and free room<lb/>
and board are provided with most of the<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
Any student may obtain application<lb/>
forms, job listings and descriptions, and<lb/>
the SOS Handbook on earning a trip to<lb/>
Europe by sending their name, address,<lb/>
educational institution, and $1 (for<lb/>
addressing, handling and postage) to<lb/>
either Placement Office, Student<lb/>
Overseas Services, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,<lb/>
Luxembourg ? Europe, or to SOS, Box<lb/>
5173, Santa Barbara, California 93108.<lb/>
Applications for winter jobs in Europe<lb/>
should be sent immediately, and all job<lb/>
applications should be sent early enough<lb/>
to allow the SOS Placement Office<lb/>
ample time to process job arrangements<lb/>
and working papers.<lb/>
-TICKETS FOR "SLEUTHTickets<lb/>
are now available at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office for "Sleuth a special added<lb/>
attraction to thi Artists Series. For the<lb/>
Matinee performance at 2:00 p.m<lb/>
Students - $1.00, Faculty and Staff -<lb/>
$2.00. Public $300. Evening<lb/>
performance at 8:15 p.m. Students -<lb/>
$1.00, Faculty and Staff - $2.50, Public -<lb/>
$4.00.<lb/>
-CARTOONISTS MEETING-There<lb/>
will be a meeting of Fountainhead<lb/>
cartoonists Friday, March 9 in the main<lb/>
offices at 3:00. All staff members and<lb/>
prospective cartoonists are urged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
-APPLICATION FOR COMMITTEE<lb/>
CHAIRMANSHIP 1973 1974-<lb/>
Apphcations for Student Union<lb/>
Committee Chairmanships will be taken<lb/>
from March 5 through Monday. March<lb/>
12 until 5;00 pjn. All applications<lb/>
should be turned in to the g1'?<lb/>
enclosure in the Student Union.<lb/>
-HEBREW YOUTH FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
MEETING?There will be a meeting of<lb/>
the Hebrew Youth Fellowship in the<lb/>
Student Union Tuesday, March 13 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in room 212. Refreshments<lb/>
will be served.<lb/>
-STUDY SKILLS CLASS-Dr George<lb/>
Weigand will teach the Study Skills<lb/>
Spring Quarter in Room 209 Wright<lb/>
Bldg. The class will begin Monday,<lb/>
March 12 at 1:00 p.m. Attendance is<lb/>
voluntary and it is not necessary to<lb/>
register for this class.<lb/>
If you are unable to attend class the<lb/>
first day you may come in a few days<lb/>
late, or if your schedule is such that you<lb/>
cannot attend the class every day you<lb/>
may attend part-time.<lb/>
-ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH<lb/>
MEETING?There will be a meeting of<lb/>
all Environmental Health students<lb/>
Tuesday night, March 13, at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 101, Allied Health Building,<lb/>
interested persons are invited.<lb/>
All<lb/>
-LOOK AT FUTURE IN<lb/>
SPACETh Billy Graham of the<lb/>
American aerospace industry. Cordon<lb/>
Gray, will be presented by the Student<lb/>
Union Lecture Committee on March 13<lb/>
Gray, top-level veteran of 2(1 wars in the<lb/>
aerospace industry, is qualified to discusj<lb/>
practically any facet of the nal<lb/>
?pat e program and the benefit- thai have<lb/>
spun out of the nation'i space program<lb/>
lince its inception,<lb/>
"Look (hit' Look Way Out will be<lb/>
the Uvymanoriented speech and slide<lb/>
presentation by this special assistant for<lb/>
Space Programs and advocate of the $2 6<lb/>
billion space shuttle "Look Out is a<lb/>
noncommercial presentation<lb/>
implemented by North American<lb/>
Rockwell because surveys have shown<lb/>
that th American publu is not apathetic<lb/>
toward space, they just haven't been told<lb/>
the facts<lb/>
Gordon Cray will appear ir v right<lb/>
Auditorium at 8:00 p.m. on March 13<lb/>
Each Student and guest will be admitted<lb/>
by presentation of valid ID and activity<lb/>
cards. Faculty must present ID cards<lb/>
Public tickets, available m the II<lb/>
(Vntral Ticket Office, are 12 00 Tickets<lb/>
for staff or groups  20 or more arc<lb/>
$1.50.<lb/>
MOVIE SETS VARIED<lb/>
TEMPO-wrs.x is one of those pictures<lb/>
about which opinion varies drastically<lb/>
Some people have liked it very much!<lb/>
Others have come out the door saying<lb/>
"Oh no. no. NO Briefly, the plot<lb/>
concerns a right-wing radio station in<lb/>
New Orleans (the WUSA of the title), a<lb/>
big welfare swindle, an assassination at a<lb/>
patriotic rally, a mass riot, and a hanging<lb/>
in a jail cell About the only thing<lb/>
everyone agrees on is that the picture has<lb/>
a strong cast: Paul Newman. Joanne<lb/>
Woodward. Tony Perkins. Laurence<lb/>
Harvey, and Claris Leachman, among<lb/>
others. The director is Stuart Rosenburg.<lb/>
whose other work includes COOL<lb/>
HAND LUKE and THE APRIL POOLS<lb/>
The movie will be shown on Friday,<lb/>
March 9, at 7:00 and 9.00 p.m in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Rood on<lb/>
easy book<lb/>
before you<lb/>
read a<lb/>
tough one.<lb/>
Eas? into tough reading<lb/>
assignments Cliff s Notes<lb/>
give you a head<lb/>
start toward<lb/>
understanding<lb/>
novels plays anc<lb/>
poems More than<lb/>
200 titles always<lb/>
available at your<lb/>
booksellers Send<lb/>
for FREE title list<lb/>
add if and<lb/>
we I! include a<lb/>
handy reusable<lb/>
waterproof drawstring book bag<lb/>
Cliff's Notes Inc Lincoln Neb'<lb/>
68501<lb/>
Ecology wa re ??f?ir? on rt<lb/>
During th pan 14 vaars Lie ?<lb/>
Nota ias umo ova' 2 00 000 ton<lb/>
o' paoa' uamg 'tevcac pu'p<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<lb/>
UNDERSTANDING COUPON ? UNDERSTANDING COUPON<lb/>
Your roommate threw your last<lb/>
brown apple out. And you can't find<lb/>
those animal crackers you stuffed<lb/>
under your bed last month. And the<lb/>
glutton across the hall decided to<lb/>
finish off your entire pack of<lb/>
Halloween candy.<lb/>
That's why I'm here. Me, a very<lb/>
understanding coupon.<lb/>
O<lb/>
r<lb/>
O<lb/>
O<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIAL<lb/>
MON -FRI<lb/>
11:30 - 230<lb/>
$1.29<lb/>
ANY SMALL PIZZA<lb/>
The fresh-crusted,<lb/>
thick-cheesed,<lb/>
?xtra-saucy kind<lb/>
from<lb/>
PIZZA<lb/>
HUT<lb/>
I'M $1.00<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
REGULAR PRICE<lb/>
A LARGE PIZZA<lb/>
11:<lb/>
??<lb/>
ROCK 'N SOUL INC.<lb/>
NEW DEEP PURPLEWho Do We Thmk We Are'<lb/>
DELIVERANCE SOUND TRACK-featuring the hit<lb/>
'Dueling Baric<lb/>
NEW JO JO GUNNEBite Down Hard"<lb/>
SEALS AND CROFTSummBr Breeze'<lb/>
lWODOTA-2001 Space OrJessy'<lb/>
NEW LITTLE FEAT-Taxie Chicken'<lb/>
ALL $3 69<lb/>
NEW DAVID BOWIE 'linages 191967<lb/>
LSJ PRICE 7 98 ROCK 7V SOUL<lb/>
DEREK AND THE DOM1NOS IN CONCERT<lb/>
MORE HOT ROCKSRolling Stones'<lb/>
LIST PRICE 9 98<lb/>
ROCK N SOUL 5 99<lb/>
? UNDERSTANDING CPUSSSL(JSS!S jj<lb/>
Your personal record shopl<lb/>
in ii liii 11 mi inn timmm?m?wmhm<lb/>
Across from the<lb/>
Heading in the<lb/>
right direction<lb/>
Moving straight ahead<lb/>
following the times, ke?<lb/>
up-to-date, seeking the<lb/>
that s happening now That s<lb/>
you and your friends a.<lb/>
?? go.<lb/>
??ep you going<lb/>
confidently every day you<lb/>
need Tampax tampons<lb/>
re the internal sar n .<lb/>
protection that s part of t i t)<lb/>
that frees you to lead<lb/>
an active life No<lb/>
reason to sit idle and<lb/>
iet the fun pass ycu<lb/>
'h Tampax ta:<lb/>
re no! encumbered by<lb/>
pins and pads, net held back<lb/>
by fear of 'son ?<lb/>
come in ;<lb/>
il ? ? ? e Regular<lb/>
Super and lunior -r;oyouget<lb/>
the one that's best for you<lb/>
With Tampax tampons to rely<lb/>
on, you're always head<lb/>
rht direction for fun<lb/>
s.<lb/>
d<lb/>
e<lb/>
<lb/>
n<lb/>
?n<lb/>
U<lb/>
ct<lb/>
sd<lb/>
I<lb/>
ll<lb/>
id<lb/>
to<lb/>
I),<lb/>
I),<lb/>
ul<lb/>
?s.<lb/>
of<lb/>
C<lb/>
ee<lb/>
n<lb/>
ed<lb/>
rs<lb/>
of<lb/>
or<lb/>
he<lb/>
?n.<lb/>
;d.<lb/>
c<lb/>
Th Inlarnal protection mor woman trust<lb/>
Ik M<lb/>
<lb/>
IA0C ONC ? TAM?AJI INC0CO?TlCt, ?LMI. NAM.<lb/>
nl<lb/>
?n,<lb/>
Im<lb/>
n;<lb/>
at<lb/>
ate<lb/>
wr,<lb/>
ng<lb/>
ion<lb/>
ny.<lb/>
of<lb/>
nK.<lb/>
ind<lb/>
n?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039673_0004"/><lb/>
! ROUEN I<lb/>
 <lb/>
Pure Prairie not for beating old ladies;<lb/>
Bee Gees sparkle, maintain sound<lb/>
guitars, i subdued and tasteful, never<lb/>
becoming overdone or tedious, "here i<lb/>
some nice interplaj between the two<lb/>
double-picking guitars, as on I eave My<lb/>
Hear! Al<lb/>
I h i tune begins nice an i easy, laps<lb/>
into .i toe-tapping, rolling and rocking<lb/>
style thai has : ill over it<lb/>
Dianne B ippearing on this si<lb/>
only unfortunately ol e rough<lb/>
s i i th - el t(<lb/>
Bleed<lb/>
"Falling In : ove" and<lb/>
"Boulder Skies an simple tunes<lb/>
iod oul on I latter, dedica<lb/>
"with great love to . Colorado lady is<lb/>
- ntle ballad with jubUe strings ad<lb/>
- ind depth. It feati<lb/>
interwoven double-picking, reminisi<lb/>
the old Byrds in the early daj -<lb/>
folk-roi <lb/>
"Bustin' Out" is perhaps a lit!<lb/>
imitative mk repetitive for m<lb/>
there always seems to be something<lb/>
missing Hut there ari<lb/>
cuts and one can drift off, vt<lb/>
whether the missing element <lb/>
music or himsi<lb/>
(Chimes)<lb/>
I Whom It May I oncem the title<lb/>
i the BeeGei s latest offering, probably<lb/>
sums up the limits of the album.<lb/>
Probably only an of the L<lb/>
will appreciate this<lb/>
But, speaking of the past, listening to<lb/>
the Brothers Gibba may make you<lb/>
remember lonelj days and lonely nights.<lb/>
when you were hopelessly infatuated<lb/>
with that pimple-faced person in your<lb/>
civics class. There are still those same<lb/>
unique vocals, though perhaps mellowed<lb/>
a hit u ah age<lb/>
This album also is repetitive, lacking<lb/>
the variety of style displayed on the<lb/>
BeeGee's minor masterpiece of several<lb/>
 ears .i:o. )dessa " "Never Been<lb/>
Vlone" is a traditional sounding<lb/>
Beet tmber with Robin's vibrato<lb/>
vocal rolling strings in the background.<lb/>
But ouv (eels like it has all been played<lb/>
before<lb/>
Until the ok arm progresses to the last<lb/>
three cuts of the alhuni Hr, are some<lb/>
tunes unhke anything the BeeGees have<lb/>
? . showing real promise. "Alive"<lb/>
gained some popularity as a single and,<lb/>
all m all, is a very nice song. The vocals<lb/>
are quiet and sensitive, creating a<lb/>
strange mood,<lb/>
"Road to Alaska' is. surprisingly, a<lb/>
bouncing roek and roll number that<lb/>
? alis for more. Finalizing the di.se is<lb/>
"Sweet Song of Summer a tune of<lb/>
haunting proportion. It features an eerie<lb/>
synthesiser lead performed by Maurice<lb/>
Gibb, .shoes of EL &amp; P, In the<lb/>
background is distant chanting,<lb/>
somewhat unsettling. But enough.<lb/>
So. the past is here and the past is<lb/>
there, and will always be for those who<lb/>
seek it. But as the BeeGee's say.<lb/>
"Jimmy hail .1 bomb and the bomb<lb/>
went bang. Jimmy was everywhere<lb/>
eMssmeoi<lb/>
for e'<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
Small batte.v pov<lb/>
Typewriter for rent on  Portion ol<lb/>
mav  HEECH AND JONES<lb/>
BUSINESS MACHINES, in ? Cdl' 756 3175.<lb/>
LOST Large sum of money lost in and around campus I!<lb/>
n than I do keep it if not, please return it<lb/>
II 101 D Scott Dorm ask for Gary.<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
FOR RENT -Stadium A:<lb/>
of East Carolina Un .<lb/>
or 7564671<lb/>
14th St aioins campus<lb/>
 I 111 752 5700<lb/>
HELP WAM ED Student or student wife fond of children<lb/>
2 days pei week 758-4677 Mrs Byron Coulter<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Typing Service I I Call 758 5948.<lb/>
APPLICATIONS for Day Student Representatives to the<lb/>
election committee will be accepted in the SGA office until<lb/>
March 20<lb/>
Charcoal Portraits by Jack Brendle, 752 2619<lb/>
SPINET PIANO BARGAIN -Wanted responsible party to<lb/>
take over spinet piano Can be seen locally Write Credit<lb/>
Manager PO Box 241. McClellanb.lle. South Carolina<lb/>
29458<lb/>
One Remington electric typewrite- Excellent shape<lb/>
Standard 756 2374 or 752 5453<lb/>
HELP WANTED S100 00 weekly possible addressing mail<lb/>
for firms-Full and pan time at home-Send stamped<lb/>
self addressed envelop to HOME WORK OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
Box 566 Ruidoso Downs, New Mexico 88346<lb/>
Student to distribute very unusual computer dating forms<lb/>
$400 600 month Write Box 508, Boulder Colo<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
Honda CB 350 with luggage rack Must Sell Best<lb/>
Call Richard 752 7CXX or 758 6235<lb/>
Legal, medical abortions from 1 day to 24 weeks, as low as<lb/>
SI 25 Free pregnancy tests and birth control information<lb/>
Ms Rogers Wash DC 202 628-7656 or 301-484-7424<lb/>
anytime.<lb/>
100 WATERBEDS -$15 9 . Jnitefl<lb/>
'? Company. 2904 East 10th St Greenville NC<lb/>
752 4053<lb/>
Suppers on Moi  4 3Q (Q<lb/>
p.m Price $1 15 (spec - S! ?5 (seconds on<lb/>
vegetables) Luncheons on Wednesdays from 12 00 noon to<lb/>
1:30 p.m Prices SI 00 Menu suggestions are well<lb/>
Meth ?1 501 East Fifth St. Also.<lb/>
?nVOm d m chess call MSC at 758 1528 difl<lb/>
levels<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758 HELP, corner<lb/>
of Eighth and Cotanche Sts. Abortion referrals, suicide<lb/>
intervention, drug problems, birth control information,<lb/>
overnight housing All services free and confidents<lb/>
FOR SALE One Fender Bandmaster (19691 4'<lb/>
4  ction cabinet-Vibrato $260.00. One I<lb/>
T-49 Electric Guitar (6-Sti<lb/>
Steve Bailey 308 Library Si<lb/>
STUDY AT OXFORD-Earn up to 6 hours cred while in<lb/>
tesidence in literature, philosophy, h,story, or drama<lb/>
Room, board and all fees for four weeks term, S400 This<lb/>
includes trips to Stonehenge, Stafford upon Avon and<lb/>
Churchill's birthplace A? travel provided if required at<lb/>
lowest rates. Write Dr James Stewart UNC A<lb/>
N.C. 28804<lb/>
Ahville,<lb/>
v?v<lb/>
(I<lb/>
FOR SALE AKC registered Irish Sett pups $100.00<lb/>
call 758 0716 or see Nancy in Fountainhead " i ??<lb/>
UNICORN PHOTOGRAPHY A TZi "<lb/>
photography for special people For more information leave<lb/>
a note for Griffin at Fo ,i office.<lb/>
1970 MG Midget<lb/>
758 1419<lb/>
Yellow and black oonvertable top<lb/>
THf FINEST ME0IC4<lb/>
AT THf lOWfST I<lb/>
FOR A SAFE IEGAII<lb/>
ABORTION<lb/>
EVERYTHING CAN IE PROVIDED<lb/>
FOR TOUR CARE, COMFORT AND<lb/>
C0NVENEINCE IT RHONE IT<lb/>
OUR UNDERSTANDING COUNSE<lb/>
tORS. TIME IS IMPORTANT<lb/>
UUTOUFREETOOAr<lb/>
A I C Ww? IC4 573 SJflff,<lb/>
SPARE TIME CASH!<lb/>
RlGGAN SHOfc<lb/>
REPAIR SHpP<lb/>
' ? i W 1th M<lb/>
i Ph 58 070.<lb/>
?Tr' 11 TT,TTf77T?l<lb/>
Stu n?w lifetime, CoU?n m?.0i<lb/>
Sociol Security Pfotn m ipora time for<lb/>
BIG ftOflTS. Million! woiling to buy<lb/>
No investment or obligation wUotio?vr<lb/>
SENO FO FREE SAMPLE AND<lb/>
COMPLETE SALES KIT WOW<lb/>
Good for Fund Raiting Projects<lb/>
ROANOKE STAMPING SERVICE<lb/>
WASHINGTON ST P O BOX 444<lb/>
WILLIAMSTON.N C<lb/>
SELLS<lb/>
ON<lb/>
SIGHT!<lb/>
i<lb/>
ALL STUDENT CRUISE<lb/>
All cabins same price<lb/>
SS Bahama Star<lb/>
to NASSAU<lb/>
April 20-23, 1973<lb/>
$107.75<lb/>
Optional air from Raleigh<lb/>
$92.00<lb/>
MACOOPN TRAVEL AOENCV<lb/>
JM COTANCHE ST<lb/>
GREENVILLE NX<lb/>
Phone WHM<lb/>
The Graduation Present<lb/>
Why settle fo. a solid chrome ballpoint <lb/>
a zodiac calendar watch, or even a supercharged<lb/>
imported car that goes only 120 miles an hour?<lb/>
There's a slim, sleek, mult, m.llion dollar ,e, ,ha, utuM<lb/>
have your name on It. And with ft comes an mvaluable<lb/>
nostqrad education, and the coveted wing of oold<lb/>
worn only by a few Naval Officers '<lb/>
H vou're go.ng to be something, why not be<lb/>
something special?<lb/>
SEE THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION<lb/>
TEAM ON CAMPUS' STUDENT UNION<lb/>
12 14 MARCH' OR CALL<lb/>
COLLECT I9T9) 832 6629.<lb/>
FREE AIRPLANE RIDES<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
 ?eV tit m.ich ;sm<lb/>
?mtnu likt tbtu and<lb/>
? ?' '?? " m ? U?<lb/>
emko<lb/>
??koFoemoftrtroo .he cown<lb/>
?P?ive pr??? Jnd rclir M<lb/>
ml"??4n?(n?j,?I<lb/>
?djp and BUBotrowi<lb/>
Dmloprt with ?,ur nrcdl ta<lb/>
;mJkN" h?"? Om m,rhl<lb/>
Jb "u M?tm ,?,??,<lb/>
r?? scb.mi hM,lb tn4 wfI<lb/>
'n"  n Gen<lb/>
N"u 'N ot  ??, bl<lb/>
?fir.?tnlt,<lb/>
"?? -mmrJ BJllCl(b<lb/>
 ??? ?' ?l.n.?l ,???, Jn'<lb/>
"?tn,ll?,?,ofwomrn<lb/>
the NAVY<lb/>
The EC!<lb/>
proved to<lb/>
Conference tin<lb/>
they really an<lb/>
Rebound ii it;<lb/>
complin: it<lb/>
Uie Bui tntvi<lb/>
where they .apt<lb/>
Southern Conf.<lb/>
old scoring m<lb/>
?coring 725 pou<lb/>
pool records. 1<lb/>
eight varsity nv<lb/>
Leading th-<lb/>
CO-captain Waj<lb/>
Ml named the<lb/>
swimmer<lb/>
200-yard<lb/>
IjO-yard :<lb/>
ft 100 van<lb/>
flctonuu<lb/>
f Paul<lb/>
pt sped<lb/>
d freest<lb/>
gold n<lb/>
e. <lb/>
in the 6<lb/>
i tt)p let<lb/>
endousi<lb/>
?ophom<lb/>
d indiv<lb/>
d hacks<lb/>
man la<lb/>
500 I<lb/>
ne who<lb/>
nal Kifl<lb/>
letted in st<lb/>
please CO<lb/>
t? Cohsel<lb/>
BASEB<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
IN Sl?l? t'niv<lb/>
I V iiBiiila<lb/>
I "tinii<lb/>
r mmin (2.<lb/>
Pub Univarstt<lb/>
! Dartmouth<lb/>
Dartmttulh<lb/>
B M I. (2<lb/>
Apt<lb/>
Kn -hmond<lb/>
Vtllliam A Mary<lb/>
Appalachian i'<lb/>
N C Stata Unl?<lb/>
Oavidaon (2)<lb/>
William A M.rv<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
CMC - WUminft<lb/>
L'NC - Wilmlng!<lb/>
Pfmbrok<lb/>
 itadrl<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
May<lb/>
UNC ? W liming'<lb/>
Pembtolia<lb/>
TRAC<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
1 V irglnia<lb/>
W Comall<lb/>
"? Atlantic Coaat I<lb/>
RESEARCH A<lb/>
AIITC<lb/>
5enj lot youi (j?icr<lb/>
121 page, mail ordt<lb/>
ouaiity ies?atch<lb/>
' 00 t? cmr ??<lb/>
RESEARCH I<lb/>
HUNRCKI<lb/>
LOSANGElEf<lb/>
(213'477M74<lb/>
? nttd ,i lor<lb/>
<pb facs="00039673_0005"/><lb/>
c rs<lb/>
4-<lb/>
TOP SCOKKR: SiVilah Cotten, hero<lb/>
putting up i k? l;lsket in the final<lb/>
moment of the stale championship<lb/>
game, has been the top scorer for the<lb/>
women basketball learn. NevertheleM<lb/>
Eighth straight!<lb/>
she is oni one member of a<lb/>
well -balanced learn which lakes a 15-0<lb/>
record to the Regionab at Kentuck) this<lb/>
weekend. (Photo b) Don Trauaneck)<lb/>
Tankers again take title<lb/>
The ECI Pirate swimmers certainly<lb/>
proved to the entire Southern<lb/>
Conference the caliber of swimmers that<lb/>
tbey really are.<lb/>
Rebounding from a hitter defeat.<lb/>
compliments of the Maryland Terrapins,<lb/>
tile Bucs traveled to Lexington, Va.<lb/>
Whefethey captured their eighth straight<lb/>
Southern Conference title, broke their<lb/>
Old scoring mark of 650 points by<lb/>
?coring 725 points, and the Pirates set 14<lb/>
pool records. 1 1 conference marks, and<lb/>
eight varsity records.<lb/>
Leading the way for K(T was senior<lb/>
CO-captain Wayne Norris. Morris, who<lb/>
Ml named the meet's most outstanding<lb/>
SWimmer. .tones in the<lb/>
2f0?yard individual medley and the<lb/>
2f0-yard butterfly. He finished second<lb/>
lithe 100 yard butterfly and swam on<lb/>
tftie victorious relay teams.<lb/>
hit two<lb/>
yar<lb/>
Paul Trcvisan easily captured<lb/>
specialties, the 50 and the<lb/>
freestyle events. He anchored<lb/>
d medal relays and his<lb/>
e. pool, and meet record of<lb/>
the 50 placed him among the<lb/>
i top ten.<lb/>
endous performances were turned<lb/>
sophomore Paul Sehiffel in the<lb/>
d individual medley and in the<lb/>
d backstroke<lb/>
man Larry Green was victorious<lb/>
500 and 1660-yard freestyle<lb/>
erest desired<lb/>
me who is a member of the<lb/>
Dual Rifle Association and is<lb/>
festeil in starting a rifle team here at<lb/>
please contact Mr. Hill Cam at the<lb/>
Zes Coliseum Athletic Uepartment.<lb/>
Tom Falk, also a freshman, set a pool<lb/>
and freshman record as he was an upset<lb/>
winner in the 200-yard freestyle.<lb/>
The Bucs absolutely ran off with all<lb/>
the bacon in both diving events. Junior<lb/>
Jack Morrow was a gold medalist on<lb/>
both boards, setting two pool records<lb/>
and his score of 500.35 on the<lb/>
three-meter set a new conference and<lb/>
varsity record. Tim Winslow's consistent<lb/>
performances placed him second in both<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Fifteen f the 19-man ECU roster were<lb/>
named to the All-Southern 'onference<lb/>
swimming team.<lb/>
Coaches Ray Scharf and John Lovstedt<lb/>
were quite pleased with their team s<lb/>
performance. Scharf felt that the team<lb/>
accomplished about 80 of their<lb/>
objectives.<lb/>
That lost 20 is going to have to be<lb/>
found in a hurry as nine of the Big<lb/>
Bucs" travel to West Point, NY, for the<lb/>
Eastern Championships this weekend.<lb/>
Xhute club<lb/>
meeting set<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
ECU Sport Parachute Club<lb/>
Tuesday, March 12. at the TKE<lb/>
House. Time is 8 p.m.<lb/>
All members hoping to go to the<lb/>
North Carolina Collegiate Meet in<lb/>
April must attend. Any person<lb/>
interested in jumping is also invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
BACK THE<lb/>
BUCS!<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
N I SUM I'nlvereilvAwiy<lb/>
V HKiiilaHorn'<lb/>
VirginiaHorn-<lb/>
r urmen (21Hum-<lb/>
lluae L'nivarattrHorn'<lb/>
DartmouthHome<lb/>
DartmouthHome<lb/>
V M 1 (21Horn)<lb/>
Apr<lb/>
1 Stale i Ralayi Away<lb/>
14 Furman ? N.CSlale Away<lb/>
21 Pembroke Horn<lb/>
gt Southern Conference Away<lb/>
May<lb/>
.1 (Juantiro Belaya Away<lb/>
12 NC State Invitational Away ft Geo. Waahlngton Univ. Away<lb/>
iy NavyAway<lb/>
7-9 N.C.A.A.Away<lb/>
CREW<lb/>
Mar.<lb/>
If, Morni Harvey CollageHorn<lb/>
24 University of VirginiaAway<lb/>
Apr<lb/>
Kirhmond<lb/>
William Mary<lb/>
Appalachian (21<lb/>
N C State Untveratty<lb/>
Davidann (2)<lb/>
William 4 Mary<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
f NC - Wilmington<lb/>
CMC - Wilmington<lb/>
Pembroke<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
May<lb/>
UNC - Wilmington<lb/>
Pembroke<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
'? irglnla<lb/>
9 I omell<lb/>
Atlantic Coaat Relaya<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Horn<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
RESEARCH MATERIALS<lb/>
All Topics<lb/>
?"d loi your descriptive up to dt'<lb/>
R page, mail order catalog e) 2 3"?<lb/>
ouahty lesearch papers trtclait<lb/>
I' 00 to crrer patUf ? n? "andlirtf<lb/>
RESEARCH UNLIMITED<lb/>
&amp;I9 GLENftOrK AVE . SUITE 203<lb/>
LOS ANGELES CALIF 90024<lb/>
(213477 8474 ? 477 5493<lb/>
? need local salesman<lb/>
Mark soars to 15-0<lb/>
I- Kin tain head. Thursday. March 8, 1973, Page <lb/>
Girls win state tournament<lb/>
By DON TRAUSNECK<lb/>
Special to Fountainhead<lb/>
A spirited performance by the h( <lb/>
women's basketball team enabled the<lb/>
girls to overcome adversity and capture<lb/>
the State Championship in the<lb/>
tournament last weekend at Elon<lb/>
College.<lb/>
ECU, 12-0 and favored on the eve ol<lb/>
the tournament, had to fight back from<lb/>
halftime deficits in all three games<lb/>
before defeating host Elon, Western<lb/>
Carolina and scrappy High Point.<lb/>
Sheilah Gotten scored 47 points m the<lb/>
three games to lead EC in scoring but<lb/>
help from Susan James and Jean Mobley,<lb/>
and a great team effort from the rest of<lb/>
the cast, enabled the girls to enter this<lb/>
weekend's Regionals with a 15-0 record.<lb/>
In Friday's first-round battle with<lb/>
Elon, EC had a rough time getting<lb/>
untracked as the hosts took a 30-20<lb/>
half time lead.<lb/>
CLUTCH BUCKETS<lb/>
In fact. East Carolina did not really<lb/>
start hitting until midway through the<lb/>
third quarter. Two straight clutch<lb/>
baskets by Terry Ward and a scoring<lb/>
flurry by Cotten and James eventually<lb/>
put EC in front 50-49 with two minutes<lb/>
left.<lb/>
Linksters win<lb/>
The ECU Pirates opened the 1973<lb/>
golf season with a bang last Saturday as<lb/>
they walked away with a resounding<lb/>
13-5 win over the NC State Wolfpack.<lb/>
The match was played at the Raleigh<lb/>
Golf Association golf course.<lb/>
The match was medal play with points<lb/>
being awarded to the winner of the front<lb/>
nine, back nine, and total eighteen holes<lb/>
of the course.<lb/>
The medalist of the match was ECU'S<lb/>
Jim Pinnix who shot a six under par 66.<lb/>
The Pirates' next match will be a<lb/>
return bout with NC State Thursday.<lb/>
The match is scheduled to start at 2:00<lb/>
at the Greenville Country Club.<lb/>
The summary of Saturday's match:<lb/>
1. Jim Pinnix (EC) defeated Dye (S)<lb/>
3-0<lb/>
2. Harry Helmer (EC) drew Brewer (S)<lb/>
1V4j.1V,<lb/>
3. Vance Heafner (S) defeated Jim<lb/>
Brown (EC) 2-1<lb/>
4. Jim Ward (EC) defeated Overnly (S)<lb/>
2-1<lb/>
5. Carl Bell (EC) defeated Stewart (S)<lb/>
2Mi<lb/>
6. Bebo Batts (EC) defeated Stalling<lb/>
(S) 3-0<lb/>
TnTiiriivin"ninTrnniTnnnr?innnniinnnnnnnnnnniin(i)iiiiriiB<lb/>
Swim meet set I<lb/>
?<lb/>
v<lb/>
Minges Natatorium is the scene J?<lb/>
Saturday morning for the ECU ?<lb/>
Women's Invitational Swim Meet. 1<lb/>
The meet is set to get underway jj<lb/>
at 10 with 15 events scheduled, ?:?<lb/>
including a one-meter dive. ?<lb/>
Four teams will participate, $<lb/>
including Florida State, Columbia :?:<lb/>
College, Appalachian State and, of ?:?<lb/>
course, ECU. The EC girls are 6-3 ?:?<lb/>
for the season but they figure to :?:<lb/>
have a tough time with FSU. jij<lb/>
Candidates for SGA offices<lb/>
must file for office<lb/>
in the SGA office<lb/>
between<lb/>
March 12 and 23.<lb/>
After swapping buckets, EC ml the<lb/>
game on ice and came away with a 54-51<lb/>
win. James was high scorer with 16<lb/>
points while Cotten added 10.<lb/>
In the semifinal boui with WCU, the<lb/>
favorites again had a had start, turning<lb/>
the ball over 11 times in the first quarter<lb/>
while falling behind 13-5. Western<lb/>
increased its lead to 27-14 at<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
But once again East Carolina was not<lb/>
to be denied as the girls dosed to within<lb/>
five points entering the final period.<lb/>
Fast Carolina finally caught up with<lb/>
six minutes left and eventually put away<lb/>
a 47-40 triumph behind Cotten's 21<lb/>
points. James added 12 points while<lb/>
?Mobley had six, mostly in clutch<lb/>
situations<lb/>
In the finale, EC ran into a High Point<lb/>
team which had already upset UNC-G<lb/>
and Meredith. The Lady Panthers gave<lb/>
EC's girls a tough test for most of three<lb/>
quarters before the favorites breezed to a<lb/>
60-44 title win.<lb/>
High Point actually led at halftime by<lb/>
one point but poor shooting by the<lb/>
Panthers and a great team effort by EC<lb/>
led to the underdog's doom.<lb/>
Mobley, win, paced the second half<lb/>
romp, was EC's leading score ?nh 17<lb/>
points Gotten added it; and James hit<lb/>
eight while turning in her third straight<lb/>
fine rebounding game<lb/>
FINE PERFORMANCES<lb/>
Fine performances were also turned in<lb/>
during all three games by Lollie<lb/>
Edwards, Lorraine Rollins, Peggy Taylor,<lb/>
Laura Kilpatrick, Terrj Jones and Becky<lb/>
At wood<lb/>
Coach Catherine Bolton will now take<lb/>
her squad I Kentucky where EC will be<lb/>
one of two teams representing the state<lb/>
in the Regionals The other<lb/>
representative is state runner-up High<lb/>
Point.<lb/>
Some girls on the team who did not<lb/>
see much action last weekend but who<lb/>
have been a strong part of the team's<lb/>
n ' i ss are Ginny D em . Nancy<lb/>
Ellington. Carlene Boyd, Frances<lb/>
Swenholt. Ginny Merrifield, Myra<lb/>
Modlin. Gale Chamblee, Ellen Garrison<lb/>
and Mane Chamblee<lb/>
In addition. Lea Kemezis,<lb/>
Caherley, Sue Co well and<lb/>
Bennett. the team trainer,<lb/>
contributed their shan<lb/>
Sue<lb/>
Peggy<lb/>
have<lb/>
TEAM CHAMPS. The unbeaten<lb/>
women's basketball team receiver) the<lb/>
state championship plaque after last<lb/>
weekend's tournament. Making the<lb/>
presentation m K.i Yow, an ECI<lb/>
Meeting scheduled<lb/>
There will be a very important aquatics<lb/>
specialists meeting Tuesday, March 13,<lb/>
1973 at 5:00 p.m. in Minges pool.<lb/>
All those attending this meeting must<lb/>
have had senior life-saving and their<lb/>
water safety instruction.<lb/>
An instructor will be needed to teach<lb/>
junior and senior life-saving starting the<lb/>
week of March 26.<lb/>
graduate now the I Ion wOCBMe't coach<lb/>
and thu. ear'? tournament director.<lb/>
Lorraine Kollnit- accept)- the plaque tor<lb/>
Ft.I  t'liolo h I ton I i.i kl<lb/>
REGAL MOTES<lb/>
I UNDERSTAND fLYS, NOVCLS AMD fOtmS<lb/>
FASTFaT WITH OU NOTES<lb/>
mm rm tfm mnm we're rh a'?af' TKwa?nrs)a of <lb/>
'tOfxce '??? 5 tor a-choi wndenrencfinf Ow<lb/>
1 st.fc ?' '? mcltd not only fnfl.eh, bvf An thro<lb/>
I poiojv Art Block Stwdioa, f o ug, Eco-<lb/>
I noKi Educor.on H.a?orp Low, MUfi<lb/>
' Philoeophy, Poi.rirel Scene, Psychology<lb/>
Relrgion Science, Sociology end U'bav Pros-<lb/>
lOr-nt Send $7 far IOur catalog o' 'OpCI OVQil<lb/>
able<lb/>
REGAL NOTES<lb/>
3'60 "0" Sfeet. N.W.<lb/>
Woah.nfton, D. C 70007<lb/>
 Telephone 20? 333-0201<lb/>
W<lb/>
?I lYVORI.I) CAMPUSn<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF I afloat<lb/>
Now Open in Our New<lb/>
Location! 123 E. 5th.St.<lb/>
featuring PIZZA.SPAGHETTI.<lb/>
LASAGNA. SANDWICHES<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE 5-11 P.M.<lb/>
7 DAYS A WEEK. 752-7483.<lb/>
It Takes Time To Deliver, So Please<lb/>
Allow 30 45 Minutes For<lb/>
Your Order<lb/>
iscover the World on Your<lb/>
SEMESTER AT SEA<lb/>
Sails each September a February<lb/>
Combine accredited study with<lb/>
educational stops in Africa, Aus-<lb/>
tralasia and the Orient. Over 7500<lb/>
students from 450 campuses have<lb/>
already experienced this interna-<lb/>
tional program A wide range ot<lb/>
financial aid is available Write<lb/>
now for free catalog<lb/>
WCA, Chapman College, Bo? CC40, Orange, Cel. 92666<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ???? ??????<lb/>
8Track Tapes For Sale <lb/>
Over 100 Assorted Top Name <lb/>
ArtlStS Some New. Some Used. <lb/>
and Some Are Reprints .but a<lb/>
m<lb/>
good buy for sure $2 00-S3 00<lb/>
See Vic 246 SLAY <lb/>
? ?? ?????????-aY-aY<lb/>
An important announcement to every<lb/>
student in the health professions:<lb/>
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.<lb/>
THEY COVER TUITION AND<lb/>
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN<lb/>
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.<lb/>
If a Stead) salary of $4C'J a<lb/>
month and paid-up tuition<lb/>
will help you continue your<lb/>
professional training, the<lb/>
scholarships just made pos-<lb/>
sible by the Ui!iI'm nicil<lb/>
Sen ices Health Professions<lb/>
Revitalization Act of 1972<lb/>
desei ve youi close attention<lb/>
Becausi if you are no? in a<lb/>
medical, osteopathii. dental,<lb/>
vetei inai y, podiatrj. 01 op-<lb/>
tomet i j -i hool, 01 are work<lb/>
me toward s I'hl' in Clii<lb/>
Psj i ? . , you may qualif)<lb/>
H' M<lb/>
i ompL '? m.You'i e<lb/>
commissioned at ai officei a<lb/>
soon a yi I hi I <lb/>
gram, but remain in student<lb/>
iduation. And,<lb/>
dui ii .it you U ill he<lb/>
mi active duty l with exti S<lb/>
pa) I foi 45 lays NatUl ally.<lb/>
if youi academic schedule<lb/>
requires that you remaii<lb/>
campus, you stay on campus<lb/>
and ? ? ive youi ai I<lb/>
dut) pay.<lb/>
. I, ? e dui ? ? ?: ? ement<lb/>
fot' Basically, you Bervi<lb/>
one yeai as a commissioned<lb/>
h yeai you've<lb/>
participated in the program,<lb/>
with a two year minimum.<lb/>
You may apply foi a icholai<lb/>
ship ? ith either the Army.<lb/>
Nav) "i Air Force, and kim?<lb/>
that upon entering active<lb/>
dutyou'll have rank ami<lb/>
dUtiei 111 keeping with youi<lb/>
professional ti<lb/>
The life's work you've cho<lb/>
ten foi j oum it requires leng,<lb/>
hai ii ex pensive training,<lb/>
Now we are in a position to<lb/>
jive ? OU -nine help Mail in<lb/>
il youi eai liest<lb/>
convi efoi moredetailed<lb/>
information<lb/>
i<lb/>
C CN 33 !<lb/>
Am<lb/>
aa <lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
S.<lb/>
id<lb/>
te<lb/>
u<lb/>
k.<lb/>
n<lb/>
n<lb/>
U<lb/>
ct<lb/>
art<lb/>
il<lb/>
Cat.<lb/>
sd<lb/>
id<lb/>
to<lb/>
I),<lb/>
)Ul<lb/>
es,<lb/>
of<lb/>
C.<lb/>
?ee<lb/>
n.<lb/>
ed<lb/>
rs<lb/>
of<lb/>
for<lb/>
he<lb/>
n.<lb/>
?d.<lb/>
f<lb/>
nl<lb/>
en,<lb/>
die<lb/>
JS?"<lb/>
on;<lb/>
??Ite<lb/>
ser,<lb/>
ng<lb/>
son<lb/>
ny,<lb/>
of<lb/>
tng;<lb/>
and<lb/>
tng.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039673_0006"/><lb/>
CountAinhe?6<lb/>
Editorial Commentary<lb/>
Student N?wtpap?r<lb/>
Pufiiitnwi it im Ctrollnt univ?ntv<lb/>
V 0 ?.)? ?l? LCU Station<lb/>
GMMVHM, North Carotin 27134<lb/>
?-ii-i" r? ??iti? or 758-6367<lb/>
U)WAT ia4RonG W?rM winnmnCt ?? THE KNER<lb/>
THAT&amp; vwHte. T WANS AS A c?D !<lb/>
Ji 1<lb/>
<lb/>
?? 4iia<lb/>
<lb/>
Swimming pool only issue<lb/>
during hot summer months<lb/>
'Seasonal politics" is drowning the<lb/>
youth of Greenville Last summer saw ,i<lb/>
m irisingiy itrong amount f discussion<lb/>
aboul the prospecl of building a<lb/>
swimming pool r swimming pools in<lb/>
Greenville Greenville had a swimming<lb/>
pool located across the street from the<lb/>
Downtown Sunoco station many years<lb/>
ago Now the last remanmts of that pool<lb/>
are being scraped away to provide for<lb/>
the new loop road It seems that the idea<lb/>
for the construction of a new pool has<lb/>
also been "scraped away" from the<lb/>
minds of the Greenville City Council.<lb/>
This coming summer will probably see<lb/>
the ressurection of the swimming pool<lb/>
idea 'iuf again No doubt one or more<lb/>
of Greenville's youth will be dredged up<lb/>
by the local rescue squad for taking a<lb/>
hazardous swim in either the muddy I ar<lb/>
or the now infamous Sand Pits. People<lb/>
will gel upset, and another council<lb/>
member will bring up a proposal to<lb/>
provide funds for a new pool Arguments<lb/>
will fall into the same pattern as in the<lb/>
past Some will argue that it is a pure sin<lb/>
to add another burden on to the<lb/>
propertj tax Others will say that<lb/>
Greenville needs a more comprehensive<lb/>
recreation program and that a swimming<lb/>
pool is only one expensive aspect of a<lb/>
good long range p 'gram. ECl' will issue<lb/>
another strong warning to the Greenville<lb/>
citizenry that the Minges pool is<lb/>
overtaxed ami can no longer provide<lb/>
swimming facilities for the entire city<lb/>
1 'nspoken, but in the minds of all, will<lb/>
be the problem of integration. In order<lb/>
to receive any federal funds from the<lb/>
General Neighborhood Renewal<lb/>
Program, which could cover about<lb/>
ninety per cent of the costs, a new pool<lb/>
must be integrated.<lb/>
Councilman William Dansey almost<lb/>
solved the problem in his proposal last<lb/>
year. Instead of one pool being built.<lb/>
Greenville would build three. Each pool<lb/>
would be stragetically located in a<lb/>
particular "section" of town so that it<lb/>
would be frequented by the<lb/>
"neighborhood kids" His plan was<lb/>
endorsed by the Human Relations<lb/>
Council. Dansey's proposal would have<lb/>
provided funds by levying an increase of<lb/>
4 cents of every $'00 property tax for<lb/>
maintenance and construction of<lb/>
recreation facilities. However, since it is<lb/>
impossible to set aside city tax revenue<lb/>
for recreational purposes, a referendum<lb/>
was needed. A furor arose, and before<lb/>
anyone could clear the air summer was<lb/>
slipping away The coming of autumn<lb/>
brought relief to the city council<lb/>
members. Just like storing summer<lb/>
clothes, the idea was shelved once again.<lb/>
We fear the same may happen this year<lb/>
unless action is taken soon. As members<lb/>
of the Greenville community, students<lb/>
should also help push the idea of a<lb/>
swimming pool on local officials. ' fter<lb/>
all, Greenville is able to qualify for a<lb/>
much larger share of federal funds<lb/>
because it counts about 8,000 of us in its<lb/>
census.<lb/>
For those of us who suffered through<lb/>
the long hot summer of 1972 in<lb/>
Greenville it was very depressing to hear<lb/>
of the youths who drowned in nearby<lb/>
swimming "holes Students should not<lb/>
be apathetic because they may go<lb/>
swimming in the Minges pool. There are<lb/>
thousands of others in Greenville who<lb/>
cannot.<lb/>
?.w.sw.yy.Sx.i.K.x?<lb/>
?xx-xXvX:xx-X-XvXxx-xx-x<lb/>
Domestic budget<lb/>
axed for defense<lb/>
1 Fountainhead:<lb/>
Of course politics isn't rational. We<lb/>
just assume that our government is<lb/>
reasonable and experience shock when it<lb/>
turns out to be otherwise Consider the<lb/>
battle of the budget:<lb/>
The President goes after the domestic<lb/>
budget with a meat axe, laying down a<lb/>
protective barrage of threats about who<lb/>
will be re ponsible for higher taxes if<lb/>
Congress doesn't go along with his<lb/>
chosen cuts Congress squirms as<lb/>
programs important to individual<lb/>
districts are attacked. And members of<lb/>
the press lecture them for not<lb/>
recognizing the obvious-if you want<lb/>
those programs you have to be willing to<lb/>
levy more taxes<lb/>
In freshman comp we call this a false<lb/>
dilema Even after social security and<lb/>
highway trust expenditures are added to<lb/>
the regular budget to make the human<lb/>
resources percentage look better (until a<lb/>
couple of years ago these huge<lb/>
expenditures were kept in separate<lb/>
accounts I the military takes 36 of the<lb/>
President's budget. Why not cut some fat<lb/>
there0<lb/>
For instance, would we raise taxes to<lb/>
pay $299 million for developing the<lb/>
engine for a new nuclear aircraft carrier?<lb/>
It's in the budget for fiscal 1973. Would<lb/>
we raise taxes to pay the large salaries<lb/>
and huge fringe benefits of more generals<lb/>
than we needed to fight WWII? It's in<lb/>
the budget. Would we raise taxes to pay<lb/>
over $1 billion for six more submarines?<lb/>
It's in the budget.<lb/>
Surely good sense as well as logic-<lb/>
dictates that we should at least consider<lb/>
these alternatives.<lb/>
Edith Webber<lb/>
t<lb/>
MOTSU should<lb/>
be converted<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Although we like to believe that our<lb/>
nation has achieved peace, War<lb/>
continues. Its supplies roll across the<lb/>
state of North Carolina by rail and<lb/>
highway. Thousands of North Carolina<lb/>
Ho Perkins<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Stephen Rauchle, itiminesK Manager<lb/>
Perri Morgan. Advertising Manager<lb/>
Pal Crawford, News Edit<lb/>
Bruce Parrish, Features Edit<lb/>
or<lb/>
Jack Morrow. Sports Editor<lb/>
Ed Herring, Asst. News Editor<lb/>
Phyllis Dougherty, Asst. Features Editor<lb/>
Mike Edwards. Circulation Manager Row Mann, Chief Photographer<lb/>
Ira L Baker, Advisor<lb/>
Washington AUrry-go-ound<lb/>
Oil companies progulmate 'energy crisis'<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
The term "energy crisis" has pushed its<lb/>
way uninvited into our everyday<lb/>
vocabulary with the help of a massive<lb/>
media campaign financed by the oil<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
Certainly the oil companies would like<lb/>
the government and the public to think<lb/>
there's an energy shortage. Then they<lb/>
can use the emergency as an excuse to<lb/>
end government regulation and to raise<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
But whether the energy shortage is a<lb/>
genuine problem or a scare campaign<lb/>
remains undetermined.<lb/>
David S. Freeman, chairman of the<lb/>
Energy Policy Project, recently called<lb/>
the energy crisis "a smokescreen for a<lb/>
massive exercise in picking the pocket of<lb/>
the American consumer to the tune of<lb/>
billions of dollars a year The speech<lb/>
predictably made Mobil Oil President<lb/>
William Tavoulareas to erupt like a<lb/>
newfound oil well. As a member of the<lb/>
project's advisory board, he successfully<lb/>
forced the Ford Foundation, which<lb/>
finances the project, to call Freeman on<lb/>
the carpet and tongue-lash the oil<lb/>
industry critic.<lb/>
Freeman particularly enraged the oil<lb/>
industry when he criticized oil quotas.<lb/>
These quotas keep large amounts of<lb/>
foreign oil off the American market,<lb/>
thus making the oil supply low and the<lb/>
price artificially high.<lb/>
This "drain American first" policy<lb/>
X-XvXrX-X-X<lb/>
THE FORUM<lb/>
citizens continue to work in the state's<lb/>
war industries. And thousands of tons of<lb/>
heavy munitions are shipped each week<lb/>
from our shores-from the Military<lb/>
Ocean Terminal at Sunny Point<lb/>
(MOTSU I.<lb/>
The base in Sunny Point was built<lb/>
especially for the purpose of shipping<lb/>
ammunition and other explosive cargo<lb/>
between land and sea. It processes<lb/>
approximately 20,000 tons of this cargo<lb/>
weekly, and we can be sure that some of<lb/>
the bombs dropped on civilians in North<lb/>
Vietnam came from our own North<lb/>
Carolina coast.<lb/>
Like many other citizens of this state,<lb/>
we are tired of watching our tax dollars<lb/>
roll across that state on railroads, to be<lb/>
shipped overseas, ultimately for the<lb/>
purpose of destroying someone or<lb/>
something in a distant land which we<lb/>
know very little about. We would rather<lb/>
that those tax dollars remain hereto<lb/>
bring better medical care to our elderly,<lb/>
better teachers to our young.<lb/>
In accord with these convictions about<lb/>
the continuing War, we have decided to<lb/>
join a coalition of North Carolina<lb/>
citizens who seek important changes.<lb/>
Our group would like to see plans for the<lb/>
conversion of the base at Sunny Point<lb/>
(MOTSU) from war to peace-time use.<lb/>
We would like to see North Carolina<lb/>
supplying life-giving aid to other<lb/>
countries, rather that instruments of<lb/>
destruction. We desire that workers at<lb/>
MOTSU be guaranteed continuing<lb/>
employment at a job which depends not<lb/>
on War, but on the earnest attempt to<lb/>
enhance human life.<lb/>
A resolution proposing such a<lb/>
conversion is presently before the North<lb/>
Carolina Legislature. We urge every<lb/>
citizen to write your legislator in support<lb/>
of the proposal.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
THE GREENVILLE RESISTANCE<lb/>
Fish bait Smokey<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
(Feb. 14)?I went to the biology<lb/>
building to check on an aquarium that I<lb/>
maintain in the lobby. I noticed that a<lb/>
student had pushed the light fixture way<lb/>
back and put a cigarette butt in the<lb/>
aquarium. Then I noticed that within<lb/>
two feet of the aquarium were two butt<lb/>
1<lb/>
helped create heating oil shortages in<lb/>
some parts of the nation this winter and<lb/>
has slowly drained our energy resources,<lb/>
says Freeman.<lb/>
Instead of repealing the quotas,<lb/>
Freeman notes, the oil companies are<lb/>
demanding that the government keep<lb/>
them. The oilmen want th government<lb/>
to lift the price restrictions on natural<lb/>
gas and to allow them more<lb/>
environmental liberties in drilling,<lb/>
mining and exploration.<lb/>
Freeman has excellent credentials. He<lb/>
was an advisor to both Presidents<lb/>
Kennedy and Johnson. But his latest<lb/>
advice has not impressed the rich oil<lb/>
barons.<lb/>
Drugs That Kill<lb/>
The crackdown on the distribution of<lb/>
the drug speed has apparently been<lb/>
successful enough to trigger a<lb/>
counterphenomenon. An unpublished<lb/>
federal report claims drug users are<lb/>
switching from speed and psychedelics<lb/>
to sedatives.<lb/>
In this report, the Bureau of Narcotics<lb/>
and Dangerous Drugs warns that many<lb/>
of the sedatives now in vogue among<lb/>
thrill seekers may lead a trip to the<lb/>
morgue. Unknown to many users, the<lb/>
sedatives can be addictive and can cause<lb/>
convulsions leading to death. Such drugs<lb/>
as Qualudes or Sorpors can be deadly<lb/>
when combined with alcohol. Ironically,<lb/>
these drugs are often pushed as an<lb/>
aphrodisiac to the naive, even though<lb/>
ococ WKoe rtj?wwwwew?w?8W8 wrocm on scowww<lb/>
X-X<lb/>
X-X-X-X-XX-X?X-X<lb/>
cans and one trashcan. That action was a<lb/>
good measurement of someone's cultural<lb/>
level. I wondered earlier this year if good<lb/>
sense was a prerequisite for admission to<lb/>
ECU. This action answered that<lb/>
question.<lb/>
Bill Laughinghouse<lb/>
Profs should drop<lb/>
TRUE-FALSE test<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
As a former high school teacher, 1<lb/>
made the fatal mistake of giving<lb/>
TRUE-FALSE tests to my students. As<lb/>
my first year of teaching progressed, it<lb/>
became increasingly aware that I was<lb/>
doing no teaching just making students<lb/>
learn many useless facts which I used as<lb/>
a basis for grading.<lb/>
TRUE-FALSE tests in my opinion and<lb/>
in the opinion of educational testing<lb/>
organizations are completely useless.<lb/>
Facts are helpful to know, but if that is<lb/>
all you learn, then, no learning has taken<lb/>
place. A TRUE-FALSE test if<lb/>
constructed well, which very few<lb/>
professors use, can call for logic and<lb/>
situations which you apply the material<lb/>
that you have learned is a fair and<lb/>
adequate test.<lb/>
Many professors at ECU rely mainly<lb/>
on TRUE-FALSE test in which no<lb/>
meaningful learning has taken place. Are<lb/>
the professors afraid to teach and give a<lb/>
test the adequately measure a student's<lb/>
knowledge in the subject matter? Are<lb/>
the professors afraid to work longer in<lb/>
grading tests which could more truly<lb/>
recognize and measure a student's<lb/>
knowledge? Many professors at this<lb/>
university do not, or care not, or know<lb/>
not how to teach?<lb/>
It is almost remarkable how almost all<lb/>
of our professors read mainly from the<lb/>
textbook. Do the professors think that<lb/>
students cannot read? If they do, they<lb/>
need another occupation. Only by<lb/>
learning the total view of the subject is<lb/>
any true learning taking place. Do our<lb/>
professors wish to teach in a total<lb/>
learning situation?<lb/>
Any professor, who does NOT use the<lb/>
TRUE-FALSE method of tests and does<lb/>
teach in a manner that does give an<lb/>
overall view of the subject; I must<lb/>
commend you. Those professors who do<lb/>
give the TRUE-FALSE tests are relying<lb/>
they are renowned for producing i<lb/>
sedentary, trance-like state in the user<lb/>
Qualudes and Sorpors have beer<lb/>
labelled as dangerous drugs in Englam<lb/>
since 1966. Yet they are still classifiet<lb/>
with aspirin on the Food and Drui<lb/>
Administration's danger scale here in th<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
The sedatives are easily obtainable<lb/>
either with or without a prescription<lb/>
There is no underground manufacturing<lb/>
as with LSD or mescaline. The pill<lb/>
found on the street come straight fron<lb/>
the nation's booming pharmaceutica<lb/>
companies. Usually, they are obtained ii<lb/>
large numbers by sellers who forgi<lb/>
prescriptions. But there are also a fe<lb/>
greedy druggists who are willing t<lb/>
compromise their integrity for a fes<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
The unpublished study comes on th<lb/>
heels of our own report the the Foo<lb/>
and Drug Administration is topheav;<lb/>
with officials who have worked in tlv<lb/>
past for pharmaceutical, companies. Th<lb/>
FDA, true to form, has been reluctant t(<lb/>
crack down on the black market u<lb/>
sedatives.<lb/>
Congress, however, might force th'<lb/>
FDA to take action. Some congressmei<lb/>
concerned with the new drug craze ar<lb/>
preparing legislation that would fore<lb/>
the FDA to tighten its control<lb/>
Meanwhile, the FAD still operates on tlv<lb/>
risky premise that a once-approved dru<lb/>
is innocent until proven guilty.<lb/>
fmmmimMmmiiiimiMmmimmtmmmmit<lb/>
?x-x-x-Xv-xx??-x-x-ox??ws?flwx-x-x-x-x<lb/>
on a quick-test and easy grading with n(<lb/>
thought for the student. This lattei<lb/>
group should perhaps try to teach in ;<lb/>
different way which emphasizes learning<lb/>
and not just the memorization of facts<lb/>
The time for you to change is NOW, not<lb/>
later.<lb/>
George D. Evan<lb/>
Living in commune<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am asking your cooperation in<lb/>
printing this letter so that I may reach<lb/>
the general student population.<lb/>
I am attempting to accumulate some<lb/>
meaningful data for a serious study on<lb/>
American communes. To that end, I<lb/>
wish to reach as many communes as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
I will be grateful if students, graduau<lb/>
and undergraduate, who are living ir.<lb/>
communal situations, will write me<lb/>
indicating willingness to receive a<lb/>
questionnaire andor to be interviewed<lb/>
Size of commune is unimportant; 3 oi I<lb/>
people, up to any number.<lb/>
Sincerely<lb/>
Mae T. Sperber<lb/>
26 West 9th Street, 9E<lb/>
New York, New York 10011<lb/>
Forum Policy<lb/>
All students, faculty members and<lb/>
administrator! are urged to express their<lb/>
opinions in writing to the Forum<lb/>
The editorial p?ge ? an open forum<lb/>
where such opinions may be publ?hed<lb/>
Unsigned editor reflec,<lb/>
opinion, of the editor-in- chief, and no!<lb/>
neceruy ? ?' the entire staff<lb/>
even a majority. r<lb/>
When writing to thp vn<lb/>
following procedure i ftj <lb/>
-Utters should be coX ,?,<lb/>
-Letter, .hould h. .<lb/>
JStST' "  ?'?1<lb/>
name, may be withheld ' their<lb/>
necemrily those of f ' 'nd ?<lb/>
East Carolina Univ?r?ty Umhe,d '<lb/>
:<lb/>
F<lb/>
of<lb/>
St<lb/>
7:<lb/>
ce<lb/>
E(<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
1<lb/>
?ti<lb/>
mi<lb/>
in<lb/>
Ed<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>