<?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="00039875_0001"/>
y<lb/>
Fountainheod<lb/>
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GREENVILLE N.C. 18 SEPT. 1973VOL 5, NO. 3<lb/>
IMMMWMV<lb/>
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Editors resign; time, SGA<lb/>
red tape cited as reasons<lb/>
By JOE MOOSHA<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Thp editors of the "Buccaneer" and the "Rebel" have resigned, leaving ECU<lb/>
with only one operating publication - Fountainhead.<lb/>
Charles Griffin, former editor of ECU'S yearbook, said his work with the<lb/>
publication was beginning to take up too much of his study time - "what with<lb/>
S.G.A. controls, the Publication Board and red tape in general<lb/>
Sandy Penfield, editor of the "Rebel ECU'S literary magazine, cited<lb/>
essentially the same reason.<lb/>
NO BOARD<lb/>
New editors for the publications will be chosen around the last of October,<lb/>
according to Kathy Holloman, S.G.A. treasurer.<lb/>
Holloman noted that at present, there is no Publication Board. It expired<lb/>
during the second week of school. A new one will be selected after the<lb/>
S.G.A. legislature meets during the second week in October.<lb/>
At that time, according to Holloman, acting representative of the<lb/>
Publication Board, the new board will appoint new editors. These<lb/>
appointments will come from applications that have been received up to that<lb/>
date.<lb/>
CREATIVE EFFORT<lb/>
Griffin, in noting reasons for his resignation, stated that work on the<lb/>
"Buccaneer became more than just an extracurricular activity.<lb/>
"I didn't feel like fighting for a creative effort. That is, if you have to spend<lb/>
so much time fighting, it takes away from creativity.<lb/>
"For example, every cent I spent would be grudgingly given by the S.G.A<lb/>
Griffin turned in his resignation on Sept. 6.<lb/>
VIRTUALLY IMPOSSIBLE<lb/>
Penfield said that she found it "virtually impossible to work with such a<lb/>
limited budget as is being proposed by the student government president.<lb/>
There is really no way a good magazine - or the kind I would like to<lb/>
publish  can be printed for the amount of money we would be allotted<lb/>
She added, however, that her basic reason for quitting was due to health<lb/>
She will officially resign at the next meeting of the Publication Board<lb/>
Students interested in the positions of Buccaneer or Rebel editor, or in a<lb/>
Publications Board membership, should apply in the SGA office, 3rd floo.<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
PIRATE QUARTERBACK CARL SUMMERELL barks his signals to his<lb/>
offensive charges as he leads the Pirates tc a 13-0 victory over the University<lb/>
of Southern Mississippi. See story on page twelve.<lb/>
Garrett vehicles towed , charged<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Construction of the new art<lb/>
building and the addition of male<lb/>
residents to Garrett Dorm has created<lb/>
parking problems that rcently became<lb/>
a controversial issue when approxi-<lb/>
mately 23 campus registered vehicles<lb/>
were towed away.<lb/>
The cars belonged to male<lb/>
residents of Garrett Dorm and a Garrett<lb/>
senior, Don Squires, estimated the<lb/>
cost to be $345 combined, to retrieve<lb/>
the towed cars.<lb/>
Squired claimed the vehicles were<lb/>
towed illegally, and went to several<lb/>
campus officials to "see what they are<lb/>
going to do about this<lb/>
The towed vehicles were parked<lb/>
along the uncurbed sidewalk next to<lb/>
the fence of the construction site.<lb/>
POLICE OK PARKING<lb/>
Squires claimed that there were no<lb/>
signs along this area indicating no<lb/>
parking. He also said he and three<lb/>
friends had asked two campus police<lb/>
officers the previous week if they could<lb/>
park there. Squires said the officers<lb/>
told them it was all right as long as the<lb/>
cars were off the road.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
By 11 o'clock Monday morning,<lb/>
Sept. 10, the cars had been towed,<lb/>
several "No Parking" signs erected and<lb/>
many of the residents found tickets on<lb/>
their cars when they went to get them.<lb/>
"I was up at 8 o'clock studying and<lb/>
left the dorm for a 10 o'clock class,<lb/>
going out the front of Garrett, along<lb/>
the other side of the construction<lb/>
(opposite the side of the parked<lb/>
cars). No announcements were made<lb/>
that the cars would be towed. When I<lb/>
got back at 11 o'clock, my car was<lb/>
gone along with 22 others. When I got<lb/>
my car there were two parking tickets<lb/>
on it, one for 5:06 a.m. and one for<lb/>
10:16 a.m.<lb/>
MOORE EXPLAINS<lb/>
C.G.Moore, Vice-Chancel lor for<lb/>
Business Affairs explained, "The cars<lb/>
were originally towed away because<lb/>
they were blocking the entrance to the<lb/>
construction site. They couldn't even<lb/>
get their trucks in. So where do you<lb/>
stop? Just tow away the two infront of<lb/>
the entrance or all cars parked along<lb/>
the fence? One boy (parked further<lb/>
down along the curb) with a No<lb/>
Parking sign staring him in the face<lb/>
even told me he didn't think he should<lb/>
have to pay his ticket because the curb<lb/>
wasn't painted yellow. Where do you<lb/>
draw the line?"<lb/>
When Chief of Campus Police, Joe<lb/>
Calder, was asked about the situation<lb/>
he said, "Those No Parking signs have<lb/>
been there for over a year and those<lb/>
cars were illegally parked. We've been<lb/>
taking some signs down and moving<lb/>
others around, but no signs were put<lb/>
up this week However, after being<lb/>
told that several construction workers<lb/>
backed up Squires' claim that there<lb/>
were no signs there until Monday<lb/>
morning, Calder checked and found<lb/>
that the maintenance men had put up<lb/>
the signs Monday morning.<lb/>
Calder apologized and said he did<lb/>
not realize it had taken the<lb/>
maintenance men so long to put up the<lb/>
signs.<lb/>
COMPENSATION AWAITED<lb/>
However, the students who feel<lb/>
they were unjustly fined the $15 towing<lb/>
expense, continue to try and find<lb/>
compensation pending a decision by<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
Moore said that he asked Squires<lb/>
to get all the men together and talk<lb/>
over the situation. "The students and<lb/>
administration are working together to<lb/>
try and see if they can find a palatable<lb/>
solution for everyone told Moore.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Moore also explained that the<lb/>
university has provided new parking<lb/>
areas this year which he said the<lb/>
students are not using.<lb/>
He pointed out that houses had<lb/>
been torn down and lots provided,<lb/>
complete with signs denoting Univer-<lb/>
sity Parking, along James St. between<lb/>
8th and 9th Sts. There are also lots<lb/>
down 9th St. Moore said he counted<lb/>
spaces himself he estimated to contain<lb/>
approximately 24 spaces in each of the<lb/>
six lots. He said the university had<lb/>
also contracted to build a 308 space,<lb/>
paved, lighted student parking area<lb/>
near the Allied Health building. He<lb/>
said day students could park there and<lb/>
be shuttled back and forth to the<lb/>
campus by the ECU shuttle bus. This,<lb/>
he said, would help alleviate some of<lb/>
the parking problems on campus.<lb/>
There was also a suggestion that<lb/>
there may be a need for a Student<lb/>
Parking Committee to be appointed to<lb/>
study the traffic situation. "It's good<lb/>
on both sides of the coin Moore<lb/>
commented. "The students can see<lb/>
problems the administration faces and<lb/>
the administration can get fresh<lb/>
ideas. It's a possibility<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHFAD 18 SEPT 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmf<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
news<lb/>
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fU<lb/>
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3i<lb/>
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If<lb/>
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am<lb/>
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In)<lb/>
Games NigM<lb/>
The Recreation Committee is<lb/>
sponsoring Games Night on Monday,<lb/>
September 24 at 7:30 p.m. A variety of<lb/>
games will be played and prizes will be<lb/>
awarded. Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Accountants<lb/>
Members of the North Carolina<lb/>
Society of Accountants (NCSA) are<lb/>
expected to attend ECU'S annual<lb/>
Professional Development Conference<lb/>
in Raleigh later this month.<lb/>
The conference, jointly sponsored<lb/>
by the NCSA with the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education and the ECU<lb/>
School of Business, is scheduled for<lb/>
Sept. 23-25 at the Sheraton-Crabtree<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
Featured speakers include:<lb/>
Ernest Taylor of the regional U.S.<lb/>
General Accounting Office in Norfolk;<lb/>
Norman Blcok, Greensboro arrotnry;<lb/>
and Dr. Robert L. Dickens of the Duke<lb/>
University Department of Management<lb/>
Science.<lb/>
Other speakers include Gwen<lb/>
Potter, chairman of accounting at<lb/>
ECU; Gorman W. Ledbetter, associate<lb/>
professor of acconting at ECU; and<lb/>
officers of the NCSA.<lb/>
Topics of lectures and discussions<lb/>
will be various aspects of the<lb/>
Professional Corporation Act and the<lb/>
accountant's responsibility regarding<lb/>
audited and unaudited financial<lb/>
statements.<lb/>
Enrollment is limited to members<lb/>
of the NCSA and their employees.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
materials are available from ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education, Box<lb/>
2727, Greenville.<lb/>
Pianist wins<lb/>
Peter Takacs, member of the artist<lb/>
faculty of ECU School of Music, is the<lb/>
first prize winner of this year's<lb/>
University of Maryland International<lb/>
Piano Competition.<lb/>
A cash prize of $2,500 was awarded<lb/>
Takacs. a native of Rumania, for his<lb/>
performance of Liszt's B minor Sonata<lb/>
and Schoenberg's Piano Pieces. Opus<lb/>
11.<lb/>
The five judges, including pianist<lb/>
Jorge Bolet and noted teacher Cecile<lb/>
Gerhart. selected Takacs among 30<lb/>
entrants<lb/>
Diabetes talk Meditation<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Diabetes<lb/>
Association will hold a meeting<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. at 7:30 p.m. at the<lb/>
Moyewood Social Service Center (1710<lb/>
W. 3rd, opposite Pitt Hospital).<lb/>
A talk will be given by Dr. Jerome<lb/>
Feldman on recent diabetes research.<lb/>
For further information call<lb/>
758-5010.<lb/>
RDI ideas<lb/>
"How To Do It" will be the theme of<lb/>
an environmental conference to be<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Regional<lb/>
Development Institute at Morehead<lb/>
City on Sept. 26.<lb/>
This unique conference will present<lb/>
ideas on how to develop from an<lb/>
economic standpoint while observing<lb/>
the laws of nature and man.<lb/>
SOLID WASTE<lb/>
Among the subjects to be<lb/>
presented are ideas on alleviating<lb/>
siltation from dredging and filling,<lb/>
stopping backwash from behind<lb/>
bulkheads, disposal of solid waste by<lb/>
means of intense, self-generating heat<lb/>
with the residue being used for road<lb/>
building materials.<lb/>
Other ideas to be presented are<lb/>
reduction of erosion from wave wash,<lb/>
boring a hole through a mountain, and<lb/>
nylon, sand-filled groin (eg) bags.<lb/>
NO FEE<lb/>
Wxperts from several states will<lb/>
present their ideas and demonstrate<lb/>
products.<lb/>
Tom Willis, director of the ECU<lb/>
Regional Development Institute, said,<lb/>
"While no registration fee is involved,<lb/>
rgistration will be required to assure<lb/>
ample seating room<lb/>
Willis also said he has hopes that<lb/>
interest in this conference will result in<lb/>
a quarterly continuation of the basic<lb/>
"How To Do It" idea.<lb/>
The conference will begin at 9 a.m.<lb/>
in the main auditorium of Carteret<lb/>
Technical Institute, Morehead City.<lb/>
Cheerlead'tng<lb/>
Practice for Junior Varsity Cheer-<lb/>
leading tryouts will ebgin on Tuesday<lb/>
Sept. 18 at 4 p.m. on the mall. Anyone<lb/>
interested please come!<lb/>
All students and faculty are invited<lb/>
to an introductory lecture on the<lb/>
principles and practive of Transcen-<lb/>
dental Meditation on Tuesday, Sept.<lb/>
25, at 6:30 and 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
SB102. Transcendental Meditation is a<lb/>
natural technique which allows the<lb/>
person to enjoy the more subtle and<lb/>
enjoyable aspects of life while at the<lb/>
same time experiencing deep rest and<lb/>
clarity of thought.<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
Phi Alpha Theta will meet Thursday<lb/>
afternoon, Sept. 20 at 4:00 in Room<lb/>
SB 104. Attendance for all members<lb/>
ismandatory. Those who do not attend<lb/>
will be asked to turn in a written<lb/>
excuse explaining their abscence.<lb/>
Members are asked to please bring<lb/>
dues of $3.00 for Fall Quarter.<lb/>
Foreign Students<lb/>
Efforts are being made to compile a<lb/>
list of all foreign students at ECU. If<lb/>
you have not turned in your name and<lb/>
address to Ron Scronce, please do so<lb/>
this week. You may come by the<lb/>
counseling office, front lobby of Scott<lb/>
Hall from 8-5, or call 758-6144.<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
A volleyball club is being formed<lb/>
for both Men's and Women's teams. If<lb/>
interested, please attend meeting and<lb/>
practice, Tuesday, Sept. 18, at 7 p.m.<lb/>
in Minges.<lb/>
MRC<lb/>
On Tuesday, Sept. 25 the Men's<lb/>
Residence Council will be holding<lb/>
elections for all open residence hall<lb/>
house council Officers. There are<lb/>
impcrtant positions open in each<lb/>
resident hall. All interested men may<lb/>
pick up applications for office in Jon<lb/>
Roger's office at Jones Hall, front<lb/>
lobby, or Ron Scronce's office, front<lb/>
lobby, Scott Hall. Deadline for filing is<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Contents:<lb/>
Editors edited out page one<lb/>
Towing the line page one<lb/>
Newspapers and ECU page three<lb/>
Real estate program page five<lb/>
Editorial: Tea and sympathy page six<lb/>
The Forum page seven<lb/>
Continuing Events page nine<lb/>
Flashing Newdles this page<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Nasal<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEAD ad venture-safari dis-<lb/>
cussion ijor staffers only) regarding<lb/>
exploration of the Nasal Passage as<lb/>
described by Afred Wimbish in his<lb/>
book, "Three Against the Dread<lb/>
Norelco Other things will be<lb/>
discussed at no particular time.<lb/>
Lectures<lb/>
Communications among family<lb/>
members will be explored in lectures<lb/>
and discussions at the 26th annual<lb/>
meeting of the North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Marriage and Family<lb/>
Counselors at Jarvis Memorial United<lb/>
Methodist Church in Greenville oct.<lb/>
4-6.<lb/>
The meeting, which is co-<lb/>
sponsored by East Carolina University,<lb/>
includes a number of open sessions.<lb/>
All persons who are interested in better<lb/>
marriage and family communications<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
HUMAN RELATIONS<lb/>
Featured speakers include Dr.<lb/>
David R. Mace, family sociologist of<lb/>
the Bowman Gray School of Medicine;<lb/>
Dudley Flood, former Greenville<lb/>
educator who is now Assistant State<lb/>
Superintendent for Human Relations<lb/>
and Student Affairs in the Department<lb/>
of Public Instruction; and Dr. Carlyle<lb/>
Marney, clergyman, editor and<lb/>
lecturer.<lb/>
The three key speakers will speak<lb/>
on topics in the area of family<lb/>
communications. Other speakers<lb/>
include members of the ECU faculty,<lb/>
ministers, educators and officers of<lb/>
family relations organizations.<lb/>
The program also includes small<lb/>
group discussions on difficult aspects<lb/>
of family life, including parent-child,<lb/>
student-teacher, counselor-client and<lb/>
minister-laiety relationships; marital<lb/>
relationships, black-white barriers;<lb/>
and the grief experience.<lb/>
All conference sessions, except<lb/>
meetings of the N.C. Association of<lb/>
Marriage and Family Counselors, are<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Prior registration is necessary to<lb/>
attend. Further information and regis-<lb/>
tration forms are available from the<lb/>
ECU Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
Box 2727. Greenville. Registration<lb/>
deadline is Sept 29.<lb/>
mmjm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
fit<lb/>
COI<lb/>
B<lb/>
College<lb/>
through ne<lb/>
Division<lb/>
announcec<lb/>
with UNC-<lb/>
credit obt<lb/>
course.<lb/>
UNC-C<lb/>
universitie:<lb/>
with the U<lb/>
Diego. If<lb/>
course pro<lb/>
UNC-CH a<lb/>
In orde<lb/>
individuals<lb/>
of Continu<lb/>
applicatior<lb/>
Division of<lb/>
Carolina I<lb/>
27834 or p<lb/>
Financ<lb/>
ment for<lb/>
America<lb/>
Lectures v<lb/>
newspapei<lb/>
series wi<lb/>
Septembe<lb/>
February<lb/>
held Dec<lb/>
1974. The<lb/>
allow tirr<lb/>
given co<lb/>
published<lb/>
students i<lb/>
includes<lb/>
may be ot<lb/>
the stude<lb/>
may be <lb/>
Division o<lb/>
Americ<lb/>
an "awar<lb/>
passes th<lb/>
present d<lb/>
newspape<lb/>
authorities<lb/>
Topics r.<lb/>
Change"<lb/>
Future<lb/>
where Am<lb/>
stand in t<lb/>
"Anyoi<lb/>
the cours<lb/>
readers a<lb/>
obtaining<lb/>
L<lb/>
F<lb/>
The r<lb/>
accredite<lb/>
anxious<lb/>
committe<lb/>
Record,<lb/>
resolutioi<lb/>
additiona<lb/>
generally<lb/>
of a new<lb/>
The C<lb/>
urging irr<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5. NO 3<lb/>
3<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Newspapers to offer<lb/>
course for credits<lb/>
By KATHY KOONCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
College credit may now be obtained<lb/>
through newspapers. Dr. Wells of the<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education<lb/>
announced that ECU is cooperating<lb/>
with UNC-CH to make possible college<lb/>
credit obtained through a newspaper<lb/>
course.<lb/>
UNC-CH is among twelve other<lb/>
universities working in conjunction<lb/>
with the University of California at San<lb/>
Diego. If completed for credit, the<lb/>
course provides two semester hours by<lb/>
UNC-CH which is an extension credit.<lb/>
In order to register for the course<lb/>
individuals should contact the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education or write for an<lb/>
application to: Course by Newspaper,<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education, East<lb/>
Carolina University. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
27834 or phone 758-6324.<lb/>
Financed by the National Endow-<lb/>
ment for Humanities, the course is<lb/>
America and the Future of Man.<lb/>
Lectures will be printed in various state<lb/>
newspapers for twenty weeks. The<lb/>
series will begin the last week in<lb/>
September and continue through<lb/>
February 1974. Two meetings will be<lb/>
held Dec. 8, 1973 and Feb. 23,<lb/>
1974. The three hour sessions will<lb/>
allow time for an examination to be<lb/>
given covering material previously<lb/>
published. Also, to obtain credit,<lb/>
students must purchase a "kit" which<lb/>
includes additional articles. The kit<lb/>
may be obtained from the publisher by<lb/>
the student. The address for the kit<lb/>
may be obtained by contacting the<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
America and the Future of Man is<lb/>
an "awareness course It encom-<lb/>
passes the history of America to the<lb/>
present day. Lectures printed in the<lb/>
newspapers are composed by noted<lb/>
authorities in their respective fields.<lb/>
Topics range from "Challenge of<lb/>
Change" to "Technology and the<lb/>
Future The course will evaluate<lb/>
where America stands presently and its<lb/>
stand in the future.<lb/>
"Anyone who may profit" may take<lb/>
the course. It is designed for casual<lb/>
readers and for those interested in<lb/>
obtaining college credit.<lb/>
North Carolina newspapers pub-<lb/>
lishing the lectures are Greesnboro<lb/>
Daily News and Record, Winston-<lb/>
Salem Journal-Sentinel, Wilmington<lb/>
Star News, Asheville Citizen-Times,<lb/>
CHapel Hill, Chapel Hill Newspaper,<lb/>
Elizabeth City Daily Advance, Fayette-<lb/>
ville Observer, Raleigh News and<lb/>
Observer.<lb/>
Dr. Wells said that this course is a<lb/>
"very stimulating" idea. It is hoped to<lb/>
reach a large segment of the American<lb/>
population. He also commented that<lb/>
such an idea has never been tried<lb/>
before and a significant sum of money<lb/>
has been appropriated for the course.<lb/>
For course registration and further<lb/>
information the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education is in charge. Dr. Douglas<lb/>
Strickland is the program coordinator.<lb/>
City passes<lb/>
pet ordinance<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
According to the Greenville City<lb/>
Manager's office, a new ordinance on<lb/>
pets has been passed by the City<lb/>
Council. It is Ordinance No. 441, and<lb/>
went into effect July 1, 1973. This law<lb/>
defines who the pet owner is, what the<lb/>
regulations concerning pets are, and<lb/>
the penal it ies for noncompliance.<lb/>
In the case of dogs (cats are not<lb/>
included in the ordinance), a stray is<lb/>
any animal which has not been<lb/>
vaccinated, which does not have tags,<lb/>
or is notmaintained according to the<lb/>
provisions of law. A dog cannot be<lb/>
vaccinated without purchasing city<lb/>
tags for a fee of $3.00.<lb/>
, If the animal brings a complaint<lb/>
(public nuisance), or is allowed to run<lb/>
at large between 9 p.m. and 7 a.m it<lb/>
is dealt with as a stray regardless of<lb/>
whether it has tags.<lb/>
The owner is defined as the person<lb/>
or persons who posses, shelter, feed,<lb/>
or harbors an animal as defined by<lb/>
law. Pet owners are subject to this law<lb/>
if they reside, or plan to reside, within<lb/>
the city of Greenville for a period in<lb/>
excess of 30 days. If they care for a<lb/>
stray longer than 24 hours, they must<lb/>
See "City" on page five.<lb/>
Local support<lb/>
For Med School<lb/>
The resolution said ECU "is fully prepared to become a fully<lb/>
accredited school. Even more important East Carolina is willing and<lb/>
anxious The Chamber's state and local governmental affairs<lb/>
committee, chaired by Hoover Adams, editor of the Dunn Daily<lb/>
Record, attached a thick file of documentaion in support of the<lb/>
resolution. C of C president K. Edward Greene said "the need for<lb/>
additional physicians in NOrth Carolina is a documented and<lb/>
generally accepted fact the only remaining question is the location<lb/>
of a new medical school.<lb/>
The Dunn area Chamber of Commerce has adopted a resolution<lb/>
urging immediate establishing of a degree granting medical school at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
t<lb/>
4<lb/>
J<lb/>
Greenville restores<lb/>
its town common<lb/>
down by the river<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Current restoration of the Greenville<lb/>
town common will soon provide<lb/>
Greenville residents with a new park<lb/>
and recreational area.<lb/>
The town common is located on the<lb/>
tract of land from First Street to the<lb/>
Tar River. According to City Engineer<lb/>
Charles Holliday this land was set<lb/>
aside as a town common when the city<lb/>
of Greenville was laid out in 1776 or<lb/>
1774. The people at that time used the<lb/>
town common for celebrations, picnics<lb/>
and other types of recreation.<lb/>
"Some of the land has been sold<lb/>
but the major portion still remains<lb/>
Holliday explained. In 1958 the houses<lb/>
in the area were torn down in<lb/>
conjunction with urban renewal<lb/>
plans. The area was filled in and<lb/>
smoothed off and remained that way<lb/>
until the recent restoration was begun.<lb/>
Plans for the common include<lb/>
shubbery, gaslights and paved<lb/>
walkways. There will also be an<lb/>
amphitheater located at one end next<lb/>
to the river. The area will be flood<lb/>
lighted from First Street. "We hope to<lb/>
have a Christmas tree each year and<lb/>
possibly some sort of Fourth of July<lb/>
celebration Holliday said.<lb/>
He said the gas lights will be a<lb/>
unique kind used to establish the<lb/>
mood of the area. They will be globe<lb/>
type constructed out of extremely<lb/>
durable plastic.<lb/>
According to Holliday the con-<lb/>
struction has now reached the stage<lb/>
for the process of grading. The land<lb/>
will be countoured with rolling mounds<lb/>
and walkways leading down to the<lb/>
river. It will not be possible to put the<lb/>
shubbery out until after the excavation<lb/>
for the gas lines and the water lines.<lb/>
There is no target date for the<lb/>
completion of the common he<lb/>
explained because so much depends<lb/>
on weather conditions and other<lb/>
factors. The crews doing the won are<lb/>
involved in other Greenville work. "We<lb/>
hope to get back on this and finish the<lb/>
grading sometime' in the near future<lb/>
Holliday said. The common should be<lb/>
completed some time next year.<lb/>
SGA ELECTIONS<lb/>
Elections for:<lb/>
LEGISLATURE<lb/>
CLASS OFFICERS<lb/>
PUBLICATIONS BOARD<lb/>
REVIEW BOARD<lb/>
HONOR COUNCIL<lb/>
DRUG BOARD<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOARD<lb/>
Students may file for these positions<lb/>
Sept. 13 through Sept. 27, 9-5 Union<lb/>
303.<lb/>
I WOULDN'T Ltl A MAN<lb/>
in my room . ? ? unless<lb/>
he had a refrigerator <lb/>
Y?? toi r?t om fron<lb/>
UNITED RENT-ALL<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAD18 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
PART TIME HELP wanted Can work around school schedule morning and<lb/>
afternoong 417 W. 3rd. 758 0641<lb/>
LOST: GOLD KEY chain with initials AC. Approx. 5 keys. Please contact 752 4989,<lb/>
Anne Caddell<lb/>
LARGE REWARD $$$ offered for return or information leading to return of missing<lb/>
bicycle Raleigh Super Course W s25' 2" green frame equipped with Suntour<lb/>
deraileurs. Contact Ross 758 4039.<lb/>
FOR RENT: PRIVATE room close to campus. Oct. 1. 758 6091 (Day) 752 4006<lb/>
(Night)<lb/>
WANTED: "SMILEY SMILE" Beach Boys LP, will pay $10 $15 for good copy.<lb/>
Call 752 4716.<lb/>
7PC LIVING ROOM group 86 sofa, chair, 3 tables and 2 lamps. Super savings at<lb/>
$158. Can be seen at Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center. 756 4851.<lb/>
MAKE PAYMENTS ON 1973 Console Stereo walnut finish, Like new, AM FM Radio,<lb/>
Phono 12 payments of $11.32 per mo. Can be see at Freight Liquidators, West End<lb/>
Shopping Center 756 4851.<lb/>
FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON 4 pc. bedroom suits. Choice of finishes. Starting at<lb/>
$125.00 mattress &amp; box spring sets $88.00. Can be seen at Freight Liquidators, West<lb/>
End Shopping Center 756 4851.<lb/>
WHY RENT WHEN you can buy. Refrigerators ideal for dorm rooms 3 4'2 craft.<lb/>
Starting at $75 00. Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center 756 4851.<lb/>
SLANDER GRAPHICS, where are you? Whoever you are: Fountainhead is<lb/>
interested in printing you Call 758 6366 or leave message for editor.<lb/>
REVIEWS, WE NEED you. Art, music, drama, books, records we need reviewers<lb/>
and a reviews editor to put it all together and bring culture (that's cultchah) to<lb/>
Fountainhead Call 758 6366 or leave name and place where you can be reached.<lb/>
ONE REMINGTON ELECTRIC typewriter. Excellent shape, standard. 756 2374 or<lb/>
752 5453.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free info 8. referral, up to 24 weeks. General<lb/>
anesthesia. Vesectomy, tubal ligation also available. Free pregnancy tests. Call PCS<lb/>
non profit 202 298 7995.<lb/>
FOR RENT: STADIUM apartments, 14th St. adjoins campus of ECU. $115 per<lb/>
month. 752 5700.<lb/>
A SET OF keys was found in an Ed. Psych, building restroom. The owner may<lb/>
re claim them by going to the Psych. Dept. office or calling 758 6800.<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758 HELP. Crner Evans and Nth<lb/>
St. Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug problems, birth control<lb/>
information, overnight housing. All free services and confidential.<lb/>
LOST: 1 WHITE gold engagement ring and 1 white gold class ring, onyx,<lb/>
1974. Reward offered. PLEASE contact lost and found in the Union.<lb/>
ONE AND TWO BEDROOM apt. now leasing. River Bluff Apts. East 10th St.<lb/>
extension directly behind Putt Putt Golf (Highway 264) Call 758 4015.<lb/>
TWO AND THREE bedroom apts. available. $72.50 and $80.50. Glendale Court Apts.<lb/>
Phone 756 5731.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: BABY sitter for fall quarter; Mon. &amp; Wed. mornings from 8:45<lb/>
until 10:45. Phone 752 4885.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT near ECU: Call 752 6528 after 5. Valerio, 306 Prince Road,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
NEEDED: AM LIVING in Van (Self equipped) except for shower. Would like to<lb/>
rent space in driveway with a spare shower in garage or such. Contact Jim B. in<lb/>
Fountainhead Office or Jim Boyle, P.O. Box 2183.<lb/>
ECU debate<lb/>
team travels<lb/>
to tourneys<lb/>
The ECU Debate Team has traveled<lb/>
to Chicago, New Orleans. Rhode<lb/>
Island and Maine, ana from<lb/>
Pennsylvania to Florida, following the<lb/>
tournament trail. At tournaments in<lb/>
these places the Debate Team has had<lb/>
the opportunity to become acquainted<lb/>
with new areas and represent ECU in<lb/>
intercollegiate debate.<lb/>
STRONG CONTENDER<lb/>
The ECU team has proven itself a<lb/>
strong contender in competition<lb/>
against Southern Conference schools.<lb/>
Because of past successes, the team<lb/>
has been granted a larger budget this<lb/>
year, enabling more teams to debate in<lb/>
more areas.<lb/>
At present, the Debate Team has<lb/>
recognized a need for more<lb/>
participation. No experience in debate<lb/>
is necessary to join; work with a<lb/>
debate partner, however, is a part of<lb/>
the job.<lb/>
Handbooks and research materials<lb/>
are ordered to aid in learning more<lb/>
about debate topics. This preliminary<lb/>
work is used in tournaments; the<lb/>
Debate Team budget takes care of all<lb/>
transportation, food and room<lb/>
expenses.<lb/>
FIRST MEETING<lb/>
The Debate Team will welcome any<lb/>
prospective mambers at its first<lb/>
meeting on Thursday September<lb/>
20. Anyone interested will be able to<lb/>
work with the team this year as no<lb/>
experience is necessary. Anyone<lb/>
interested or slightly curious is invited<lb/>
to stop by room 204, Speech and<lb/>
Drama Building, at 6 p.m.<lb/>
FLOYD G. ROBINSON'S<lb/>
DISCOUNT JEWFLERS<lb/>
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PRESENT YOUR I.D. AND RECEIVE J<lb/>
AN ADDED 25 DISCOUNT ON ALL DIAMONDS AND I<lb/>
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NEW!I Chef Salad $1.25<lb/>
Pizza, lasagna. spaghetti sandwiches l f-$ now taking I<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
5<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Real estate program strengthened<lb/>
City<lb/>
The School of Business at ECU<lb/>
announces that the real estate program<lb/>
has been strengthened through the aid<lb/>
of a continuing grant from the North<lb/>
Carolina Real Estate Educational<lb/>
Foundation, Inc. of Greensboro.<lb/>
FULL-TIME<lb/>
Each year the Foundation con-<lb/>
tributes $5,000 to the ECU School of<lb/>
Business for support of real estate<lb/>
education. Through this continuing<lb/>
support, the School of Business is<lb/>
now able to add a full-time faculty<lb/>
member in the real estate area.<lb/>
Bruce N. Ward rep has been<lb/>
employed as an Assistant Professor of<lb/>
Real Estate in the Department of<lb/>
Business Administration.<lb/>
College grads,<lb/>
jobs matched<lb/>
Computers-those 20th century<lb/>
miracle machines- are playing many<lb/>
roles in today's world.<lb/>
Now there is a computer to match<lb/>
the college graduate with the job best<lb/>
suited to his talents and training, and<lb/>
to do it speedily and at minimal cost to<lb/>
both parties concerned.<lb/>
Graduate Services, INC. (GS), was<lb/>
formed less than a year ago by Thomas<lb/>
Noble of Des Moines, Iowa. The<lb/>
Graduate Services program is a<lb/>
nation-wide computer service designed<lb/>
to get college job applicant and the<lb/>
corporate employer together without<lb/>
the customary annual hit-and-miss<lb/>
scramble.<lb/>
The graduating college student<lb/>
seeking a job need only go to his<lb/>
campus placement office or bookstore<lb/>
and pick up a GS resume. Or, he can<lb/>
write to GS in Des Moines and ask for<lb/>
a resume form and fill out the resume,<lb/>
listing his qualifications and return it<lb/>
to GS along with $15 service fee.<lb/>
The company looking for a student<lb/>
to fill a job, in turn, files with GS a<lb/>
vocational profile outlining the<lb/>
qualifications required.<lb/>
That's where the computer comes<lb/>
in. Student resumes and company job<lb/>
profiles are fed into the computer and<lb/>
out comes the right person for the<lb/>
right job. The pre-screening has been<lb/>
done. The company recruiter can get<lb/>
down to in-depth interviewing<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
GS, through seven regional offices,<lb/>
solicits resumes in all fields of study<lb/>
from graduates of four-year colleges<lb/>
and universities thrughout the United<lb/>
States. GS has the ability to provide a<lb/>
company wit one, or many, qualified<lb/>
resumes from across the nation, or<lb/>
from any one campus within 48 hours<lb/>
of the company's request.<lb/>
A small per resume charge is made<lb/>
when a company asks to have its job<lb/>
profiles matched with student<lb/>
resumes. There is no charge for<lb/>
simply placing and holding a<lb/>
company's job profile information in<lb/>
the GS computer system.<lb/>
GS has seen a need and is filling<lb/>
it. Its 1973-74 resume search will start<lb/>
October. GS is located at 8170<lb/>
Road, Des Moines, Iowa,<lb/>
in<lb/>
Prof. Wardrep is completing his<lb/>
doctoral dissertation at Goergia State<lb/>
University in Atlanta, majoring in real<lb/>
estate and urban affairs. He has<lb/>
experience as a land development<lb/>
analyst in the Atlanta area and is an<lb/>
associate member of the American<lb/>
Institute of Planners.<lb/>
The real estate program at East<lb/>
Carolina University, the state's only<lb/>
such program in a four-year institution,<lb/>
in addition to the business core<lb/>
courses, currently consists of courses<lb/>
in three general areas of real estate.<lb/>
The undergraduate courses inciuae<lb/>
the business law of real estate; the<lb/>
area of real property appraisal and<lb/>
valuation; and finally the area of real<lb/>
estate brokerage, concentrating in real<lb/>
property transfer, management and<lb/>
financing.<lb/>
These three areas are supplemented<lb/>
by courses in market research<lb/>
techniques and practices and regional<lb/>
economics analysis.<lb/>
According to the School of<lb/>
Business, the addition of a faculty<lb/>
member with expertise and education<lb/>
in real estate will serve to strengthen<lb/>
and expand the program at ECU in the<lb/>
future as well as increase the dialogue<lb/>
between the business and academic<lb/>
community in the area of real estate.<lb/>
Continued from page three<lb/>
either register it, or surrender it to<lb/>
authorities for impoundment in order<lb/>
to escape the penalities prescribed.<lb/>
The penalities for ncncompliance<lb/>
begin with a civil penalty of $6.00 for<lb/>
not complying with the ordinance. If a<lb/>
dog is picked up for any reason under<lb/>
this ordinance, there is a $5.00 fee for<lb/>
obtaining its release from impound-<lb/>
ment. In addition $1.00 per day will be<lb/>
charged for care while it is in the<lb/>
animal shelter.<lb/>
If the same animal Is picked up<lb/>
more than once in a twelve month<lb/>
period, an increase of $2.50 will be<lb/>
added each time to the Impoundment<lb/>
fee. The law provides that, In the case<lb/>
of dogs, the animal will be kept for<lb/>
three days and then offered for sate or<lb/>
destroyed at the discretion of the<lb/>
animal control officer.<lb/>
ack to school<lb/>
specials!<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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SUPPLY STORE FOR THESE<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039875_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT 1973VOL. 5. NO. 3<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mum<lb/>
EditorialsCommentary<lb/>
Tea and sympathy<lb/>
It's a field day for publications as our page one story<lb/>
indicates We've the only publication, it seems, with the other two<lb/>
laying dormant until new editors are located.<lb/>
NOT EASY<lb/>
We sympathize with both the former Buccaneer and the former Rebel<lb/>
editors' reasons for resignation. The publications situation now is not<lb/>
an easy one; Fountainhead is operating on a makeshift budget at<lb/>
present, waiting for the SGA to appropriate a real' budget later on. At<lb/>
that, we,too are slated to feel a budget cut - and are reluctant to move<lb/>
too quickly in our plans for change until we know what that budget is.<lb/>
RADICAL CUTBACKS<lb/>
On one hand, the publications naturally resent radical cutbacks in<lb/>
their respective budges; on the other hand, the student body is getting<lb/>
a transit system, zerox machine, projected legal counsel, et al out of the<lb/>
deal. We rebel against our limitations, but we recognize that - at least<lb/>
for this publication - our means of operation makes the crunch<lb/>
inevitable. We are not an independent body,we rely on student funds,<lb/>
and. to quote Duscha and Fischer's study of the campus press,<lb/>
"With subsidies to the press come strings and controls, whether the<lb/>
subsidies come directly from government or indirectly from student<lb/>
governing bodies dispensing student activity fees<lb/>
To be hyperbolic about the situation, it's a case of Buc,<lb/>
Fountainhead and Rebel vs. the zerox machine.<lb/>
OFF-CAMPUS<lb/>
Our own solution would be to go off-campus and act as a<lb/>
self-supporting newspaper. We can't afford this at present, but wish it<lb/>
for future generations. As for the other publications: their situation is<lb/>
most urgent at this time<lb/>
Although yearbooks have been decried as passe' and bourgeois and<lb/>
unnecessary, the SGA has seemingly left a large hole in the cosmos<lb/>
labeled Buccaneer Regardless of the format - hardbound, softbound,<lb/>
freshman register, picture book or National Lampoon - the Buc requires<lb/>
some time in preparation. By this time, its huge mass is generally being<lb/>
formed - last years budget estimate was $57,215. This is quite a bundle<lb/>
to drop on a publication which is, as yet, totally unplanned. Should an<lb/>
editor not be found soon, the Buc runs the risk of being produced like<lb/>
an eleventh-hour term paper.<lb/>
REQUIRES TIME<lb/>
While the Rebel isn't as mammotn an undertaking, it requires<lb/>
selection, editing and layout time. In addition, the Rebel serves as a<lb/>
clearing house for discussion of work submitted, talk between writer<lb/>
and editor, etc. There are undoubtedly numerous students whose<lb/>
writing education via the Rebel had made this publication<lb/>
invaluable. While we admit some budget cuts are due, we find it<lb/>
unfortunate that the Rebel's budget be cut so drastically that only one<lb/>
publication could be squeezed from it for the year.<lb/>
Although the Rebel's preparation time isn't as crucial as that of the<lb/>
Buc, the budget cut introduces an added problem: what editor is<lb/>
willing to deal with so meager a budget? Or, more challengingly - what<lb/>
editor is ingenious enough to draw blood from a stone, and make a<lb/>
de-funded Rebel both literate and creative?<lb/>
IN LIMBO<lb/>
Lack of a Publications Board leaves us all in limbo. Salary<lb/>
increases, if any, can't be approved without a Board; editor's guidelines<lb/>
and staff choices aren't quite official without approval of the<lb/>
Publications Board - the entire Board. No publication is particularly<lb/>
wild about a Pub Board; but, then, we'd rather be independent as<lb/>
well. Since we aren't the latter, we've been given the former. And -<lb/>
until the Board assembles itself - we're living by a series of verbal<lb/>
agreements, future plans and makeshift approvals that serve more as<lb/>
hobbles than as plans of action.<lb/>
FACTS OF LIFE<lb/>
There are fringe problems as well Aside from the economic facts of<lb/>
life, we miss having other publications to fight with. We have no Buc to<lb/>
mutter wasteful' over, no Rebel to argue esthetics with. Worse of all,<lb/>
we have no brother and sister publications on whose shoulders to cry<lb/>
when funding cuts and staff mutinies threaten us with a wrist-slashing<lb/>
epidemic.<lb/>
We request that someone take pity on us all and look into an<lb/>
editorship or a Pub Board position. There are a lot worse things you can<lb/>
do, and, at this point, not many better.<lb/>
An avant-garde education<lb/>
Bv T. COFFIN<lb/>
EDUCATION THE "FOXFIRE"<lb/>
REVOLT - In 1966 young Eliot<lb/>
Wigginton, with five years at Cornell<lb/>
and an MA in teaching, came to the<lb/>
Appalachian mountain town of Rabun<lb/>
Gap to teach English and geography to<lb/>
the 9th grade and 10th grade in a<lb/>
240-pupil school.<lb/>
After six weeks, "I surveyed the<lb/>
wreckage. My lectern was scorched<lb/>
from the time Tommy Green tried to<lb/>
set it on fire with his ligher-during<lb/>
class. Charles Henslee had already<lb/>
broken off the blade of his Barlow<lb/>
knife in the floor-boards. Every desk<lb/>
was decorated with graffiti .The nine<lb/>
water pistols I had confiscated that<lb/>
afternoon had been reconflscated from<lb/>
under my nose ("The Foxfire Book")<lb/>
Taking stock, he decided he had<lb/>
"bored them unmercifully and<lb/>
recalled his own high school -<lb/>
"monumentally boring texts and<lb/>
lectures, all forgotten; punishments<lb/>
and regulations and slights that only<lb/>
filled a reservoir of bitterness; and<lb/>
three blessed teachers who let me<lb/>
make things, helped me make them,<lb/>
and praised the results<lb/>
The next day, Wigginton told the<lb/>
class, "How would you like to throw<lb/>
away the text and start a magazine?"<lb/>
Thus began an experiment, a key<lb/>
element in the growing revolt against<lb/>
the rigid curriculum. The idea was to<lb/>
involve everyone. The students<lb/>
scattered out into the community and<lb/>
interviewed 'he elders on mountain<lb/>
customs "Superstitions, old home<lb/>
remedies, weather signs, a story about<lb/>
the hog hunt, a taped interview with a<lb/>
retired sheriff about the time the local<lb/>
bank was robbed-and directions for<lb/>
planting by the signs<lb/>
The magazine was sole to get mney<lb/>
to carry on the experiment. The name<lb/>
"Foxfire came from a tiny organism<lb/>
that glows in the dark and is seen in<lb/>
mountain coves. "The Foxfire Book" -<lb/>
"hog dressing, log cabin building,<lb/>
mountain crafts and food, planting by<lb/>
the signs, snake lore, hunting tales,<lb/>
faith healing, moonshining and other<lb/>
affairs of plain living has sold<lb/>
300,000 copies, and "Foxfire 2" is<lb/>
going great guns in book stores. It<lb/>
wasn't always easy sailing and "there<lb/>
were times we almost chucked the<lb/>
whle thing and went back to 'silas<lb/>
Marner<lb/>
The opposition came from the strict<lb/>
constructionists. The state's<lb/>
education organization has been trying<lb/>
to stop the teaching of journalism by<lb/>
Wigginton, because he never had a<lb/>
course in journalism. Some discipli-<lb/>
narians harassed his children, because<lb/>
they did not learn the rote lessons,<lb/>
although they were writing and<lb/>
photographing articles with high<lb/>
professional skill.<lb/>
THE NEW TRAILS - All over<lb/>
America-from upstate New York to San<lb/>
Francisco-teachers and schools are<lb/>
cutting new trails. Educators are<lb/>
asking serious and probing questions:<lb/>
What is the goal of education<lb/>
today? Is the old, rigid curriculum<lb/>
relevant? To what degree should the<lb/>
young participate as so-equals in the<lb/>
learning process? Is experience or<lb/>
?<lb/>
rote the best teacher?<lb/>
The conventional system is based<lb/>
on a 19th century concept - that<lb/>
education, beyond mere reading,<lb/>
writing, arithmetic, and patriotic lore,<lb/>
was limited to the upper and middle<lb/>
classes. These privileged students<lb/>
needed certain disciplines and studies<lb/>
to fit into a white collar society. The<lb/>
studies were based, in large part, on<lb/>
the British Victorian society, hence the<lb/>
ubiquitous "Silas Marner Some<lb/>
studies, as algebra and geometry, were<lb/>
pushed into the curriculum because<lb/>
they had powerful and eloquent<lb/>
advocates.<lb/>
Today, education - kindergarten<lb/>
through high school - covers almost all<lb/>
the population, and the young are<lb/>
much more independent than their<lb/>
grandparents. Teachers are finding<lb/>
they cannot keep order in their classes.<lb/>
So, out of desperation, schools are<lb/>
seeking ways to interest and hold the<lb/>
attention of their students. A real<lb/>
revolution is in the making. Some<lb/>
examples:<lb/>
GEOGRAPHY IN CAMBRIDGE - The<lb/>
New York Times reports (June 17) that<lb/>
"until fairly recently the school<lb/>
children (in this Massachusetts town)<lb/>
never learned anything in geography<lb/>
about their own polyglot city. They<lb/>
yawned through classes on the state<lb/>
capitals, the tribes of Africa and the<lb/>
export of copper from Chile. All that<lb/>
has changed. Beginning in the fourth<lb/>
grade, the youngsters are now plunged<lb/>
into what Elizabeth Boyce, the city's<lb/>
social studies curriculum director,<lb/>
calls urban awareness Using aerial<lb/>
maps of Cambridge, they can locate<lb/>
their own homes and schools, compare<lb/>
the density of neighborhoods on one<lb/>
side of town with the more affluent<lb/>
areas on the other, or see where their<lb/>
fathers work in Boston<lb/>
And when they get around to<lb/>
studying the geography of foreign<lb/>
lands in later grades, they learn not<lb/>
only that oil is produced in the Middle<lb/>
East, but that this fact has direct<lb/>
bearing on the economic well being of<lb/>
New England. When they study<lb/>
Europe's history, it is in the contect of<lb/>
the Common Market and how it affects<lb/>
this country .The new approach<lb/>
attempts to instill in children a more<lb/>
realistic view of the complex processes<lb/>
that buffet their lives than is suggested<lb/>
in the abiliity to cough up statistics<lb/>
about rice production or the name of<lb/>
Seepage 7.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039875_0007"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT<lb/>
tmmmmmm<lb/>
1973VOL. 5. NO. 3<lb/>
7<lb/>
U.S. being held 'over the oil barrel'<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
WASHINGTON - For the sake of<lb/>
Middle East oil, President Nixon is<lb/>
prepared to show more sympathy for<lb/>
the Arab cause.<lb/>
In the past, he has ignored<lb/>
warnings from the State Department<lb/>
that Saudi Arabia literally had the<lb/>
United States over a barrel - the oil<lb/>
barrel. Saudi Arabia alone has enough<lb/>
oil reserves to save the United States<lb/>
from a critical shortage of gasoline and<lb/>
fuel oil.<lb/>
The State Department has pleaded<lb/>
that Saudi Arabia would like to be<lb/>
aligned with America, that Egypt has<lb/>
thrown out its Soviet military advLers<lb/>
and that the Saudi-Egyptian axis could<lb/>
keep the Arab world from turning<lb/>
against the West.<lb/>
But the least the Saudis and<lb/>
Egyptians would expect, the State<lb/>
Department has warned, would be<lb/>
support in gaining concessions from<lb/>
Israel.<lb/>
Last year was an election year, and<lb/>
President Nixon didn't want to<lb/>
antagonize Jewish voters. Therefore,<lb/>
he ignored the State Department's<lb/>
appeals. In return, the Israeli<lb/>
ambassador made a public statement<lb/>
about Nixon's friendship toward<lb/>
Israel. This helped to win Nixon more<lb/>
Jewish votes than any Republican has<lb/>
received in the past quarter-century.<lb/>
But now, the President is more<lb/>
concerned with solving the oil<lb/>
crisis. He has told friends that his<lb/>
appointment of Henry Kissinger, a<lb/>
Jew, to be secretary of state should<lb/>
make it possible politically for him to<lb/>
shift closer to the Arab side.<lb/>
One move he is considering is a tax<lb/>
on contributions, which go to support<lb/>
foreign countries. This would be<lb/>
aimed at the United Jewish Appeal,<lb/>
which raises tax-free donations to aid<lb/>
Israel.<lb/>
Crisis in Education: The nation's<lb/>
schools are facing a financial crisis. In<lb/>
many communities, racial integration<lb/>
and liberal teaching have raised<lb/>
parents' hackles. The public, therefore<lb/>
has turned down property taxes which<lb/>
are urgently needed to pay school<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
As a result, many schools across<lb/>
the nation are opening without<lb/>
sufficient funds to keep them going<lb/>
through te school year. Other<lb/>
schools have been forced to make<lb/>
drastic cutbacks. Special teachers and<lb/>
guidance counselors have been<lb/>
dropped. This has left an oversupply<lb/>
of teachers.<lb/>
Black teachers, who used to teach<lb/>
in all-black schools, are finding it<lb/>
difficult to get jobs in the newly<lb/>
integrated schools.<lb/>
The average teacher's salary is still<lb/>
less than $10,000 a year, far less than<lb/>
the average carpenter, plumber, brick<lb/>
layer or truck driver is paid.<lb/>
Student services have also been cut<lb/>
back. Classes have been enlarged.<lb/>
Less private counseling is available.<lb/>
Some schools have been forced to<lb/>
close their cafeterias.<lb/>
Congress is expected to come to<lb/>
the rescue with $900 million to aid<lb/>
elementary and secondary education.<lb/>
But President Nixon has already vetoed<lb/>
four previous education bills. He is<lb/>
not expected to accept this one.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Americans continue to<lb/>
spend more on frivolity than education.<lb/>
Feeding Inflation ; Commodity<lb/>
prices have just taken the biggest jump<lb/>
since price controls were removed after<lb/>
World War II. This has the public far<lb/>
more upset than the Watergate scandal<lb/>
ever did. An alarmed Presiden Nixon,<lb/>
therefore, has tried to blame the price<lb/>
rise on Congress.<lb/>
To give weight to his words, he<lb/>
vetoes a biil that would have increased<lb/>
the minimum wage. He argued that a<lb/>
higher minimum wage would feed the<lb/>
fires of inflation. He has shown more<lb/>
interest, however, in holding down the<lb/>
wages of the poor than the profits of<lb/>
the rich.<lb/>
Soaring oil income, interest rates<lb/>
and other profits - which benefit the<lb/>
'rich - also feed the fires of inflation.<lb/>
The truth is that the President's<lb/>
economic advisers have been giving<lb/>
him poor advice. His top exDert on<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following letter is<lb/>
of the same sort and theme withheld<lb/>
from publication by last year's editor -<lb/>
an act which resulted in accusation of<lb/>
"heavy-handed editing" on that editor's<lb/>
part. In the belief that all opinion is to<lb/>
be heard, and that any public figure is<lb/>
subject to criticism, we print the<lb/>
following.<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In devoting half a front page of your<lb/>
last issue to Billy Bodenhamer you<lb/>
have done little more than feed the<lb/>
delusions of grandeur and monumental<lb/>
conceit of this little Napoleon who is<lb/>
obviously trying to take over where<lb/>
P.T. Barnum left off. Perhaps, to<lb/>
balance that article, you might<lb/>
acquaint your readers, particularly the<lb/>
new students, with the other side of<lb/>
Bodenhamer's personal ity-a side<lb/>
partially brought to light in a series of<lb/>
well-documented exposes in the<lb/>
Fountainhead this summer.<lb/>
You might tell your readers that<lb/>
after Bodenhamer won the S.G.A.<lb/>
Presidency last year (with a minority of<lb/>
first choice popular votes) over 1500<lb/>
full-time students-hundreds more than<lb/>
voted for Bodenhamer in the first<lb/>
place-petitioned for a recall of that<lb/>
vote. You might also report that the<lb/>
wishes of those students were<lb/>
overturned on the very flimsiest of<lb/>
technicalities?that the petition char-<lb/>
acterized Bodenhamer as "President-<lb/>
elect" rather than "President<lb/>
Readers of the Fountainhead might<lb/>
be interested in discovering that<lb/>
Bodenhamer was caught publicly in<lb/>
making at least two lies in a statement<lb/>
to the Fountainhead this summer. One<lb/>
was a claim that last year's S.G.A. had<lb/>
already appropriated all but $6,000 of<lb/>
the approximated 1973-74 S.G.A.<lb/>
budget. Bodenhamer's own financial<lb/>
report to the Legislature of May 9<lb/>
shows that $171,000 had already been<lb/>
appropriated, rather than the $214,000<lb/>
figure he stated in his June 28, 1973<lb/>
Fountainhead article.<lb/>
In that same article Bodenhamer<lb/>
also stated that he did not veto any<lb/>
appropriations because all of them<lb/>
inflation, Secretary or the Treasury<lb/>
George Shultz, told him that an open<lb/>
marketplace would keep inflation in<lb/>
check. The President's chief economic<lb/>
adviser, Herbert Stein, also argued<lb/>
against government controls.<lb/>
Both advisers forecast that the<lb/>
inflation rate could be curbed. This led<lb/>
the President to pledge to reduce the<lb/>
1973 inflation rate below three per<lb/>
cent. During the first six months, the<lb/>
inflation rate shot above an annual<lb/>
eight per cent almost three times what<lb/>
his advisers anticipated.<lb/>
In desperation, the President<lb/>
slapped on an emergency price freeze<lb/>
during the summer. But the price<lb/>
pressures are now blowing the lid off<lb/>
the economy. The President is trying<lb/>
to lay the blame on Congress. But it's<lb/>
his own economic advisers who have<lb/>
been wrong.<lb/>
Lip Service. The illegal use of<lb/>
campaign contributions foi spying and<lb/>
burglary has politicians of every shade<lb/>
again paying lip service to reforms.<lb/>
Neither the Democratic nor<lb/>
Republican leaders in Congress are<lb/>
enthusiastic enough about campaign<lb/>
spending reforms to lead the fight. For<lb/>
their campaigns are bank-rolled by<lb/>
fat-cat businessmen or powerful<lb/>
unions.<lb/>
So far, reformers in the House<lb/>
haven't even been able to get a hearing<lb/>
this year, because House adminis-<lb/>
tration chairman Wayne Hays is<lb/>
dragging his feet. Just last week, he<lb/>
called off hearings again.<lb/>
In the Senate, hearings are<lb/>
scheduled later this month. But the<lb/>
showdown will be in the House.<lb/>
Representatives John Anderson, an<lb/>
Illinois Republican, and Morris Udall,<lb/>
an Arizona Democrat, are leading the<lb/>
fight for financial reform. Their bill<lb/>
would provide for an independent<lb/>
elections commission, a limit on<lb/>
individual contributions and strick<lb/>
over-sight of all the complicated<lb/>
financial dealings of campaign<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
mm wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
ttmm<lb/>
were tabled until Fall Quarter, in tact,<lb/>
the record shows that there were two<lb/>
appropriations which were passed by<lb/>
the Legislature and were not later<lb/>
tabled. One of these concerned a<lb/>
salary increase for the Executive<lb/>
Secretary. Bodenhamer's sordid role in<lb/>
that affair was reported in some detail<lb/>
in the June 28 issue of the<lb/>
Fountainhead. Bodenhamer was<lb/>
apparently in a pique because she<lb/>
refused to type his term papers and<lb/>
other school work free of charge.<lb/>
Bodenhamer is currently attempting<lb/>
to line up favorites to run for Fall<lb/>
S.G.A. election positions so that he<lb/>
can turn the S.G.A. Legislature into a<lb/>
rubber stamp as he did the M.R.C.<lb/>
Student Council last year. It would<lb/>
consequently be well for students to<lb/>
study the list of candidates thoroughly<lb/>
before they make their choices to<lb/>
represent them for the rest of the<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Edward S. Slagle<lb/>
wmmmmmmnmmwmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
Despite the horrors of Watergate, a<lb/>
few lonely congressmen face an uphill<lb/>
battle to bring reform to our political<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Education<lb/>
in revolt<lb/>
Continued from page 6.<lb/>
the capital of North DakotaThe<lb/>
problem is more important than the<lb/>
answer<lb/>
One of the new geographers, Prof.<lb/>
Gilbert F. White of the University of<lb/>
Colorado, explains: "There is little in<lb/>
the course materials that smacks of<lb/>
rote learning or of the description of<lb/>
the earth's features for its own<lb/>
sake. There is concern for the attitude<lb/>
which students develop toward their<lb/>
fellow members of the human race and<lb/>
their common habitat<lb/>
staff<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner<lb/>
AD MANAGERPern Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS Skip Saunders,<lb/>
Betsy Fernandez<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
CIRCULATION MANAGERMike Edwards<lb/>
COMPOSER TYPISTAlice Leary<lb/>
ADVISORIra L. Baker<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student<lb/>
newspaper of East Carolina University<lb/>
and appears each Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday of the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU<lb/>
Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Editorial offices: 758-6366, 758367<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-<lb/>
students.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to<lb/>
express their opinions in the<lb/>
Forum. Letters should be signed by<lb/>
the authorfs); names will be withheld<lb/>
on request. Unsigned editorials on<lb/>
this page and on the editorial page<lb/>
reflect the opinions of the editor, and<lb/>
do not necessarily represent the views<lb/>
of the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to<lb/>
refuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment as an<lb/>
independent body on any and all<lb/>
issues. A newspaper is objective only<lb/>
in proportion to its autonomy.<lb/>
Kit<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0008"/><lb/>
FOUNTAJNHEAD 18 SEPT 1973VOL 5, NO. 3<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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TUB OTtmryDA<lb/>
ngQPJ. ? ? sny-? AHH3j ?T73H<lb/>
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WEAK H A<lb/>
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Student self help<lb/>
faces dilemma<lb/>
By THOMAS L. BROWNLEE<lb/>
The Student Self Help Program on the ECU Campus has been<lb/>
faced with a dilemma as the Federal Minimum Wage was raised from<lb/>
$1.60 to $1.80 per hour.<lb/>
In lieu of this wage hike the funds appropriated for the program<lb/>
have remained the same, necessitating a cut back in the student help<lb/>
of approximately thirteen percent.<lb/>
"Things like this happen historically" said Mr. C.G. Moore, Vice<lb/>
Chancellor of Business Affairs on campus. He went further to point<lb/>
out that since no additional allotments of funds had been made for<lb/>
the program, either the number of students on it had to be cut back,<lb/>
or the existing number of hours for students on the program must be<lb/>
cut. Each Department on campus must reduce its quota of man<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
Dr. E.C. Simpson of the East Carolina Biology Department<lb/>
provided a deeper insight into the problem this wage hike caused to<lb/>
arise in the department. "It in particular may hurt us, as we have<lb/>
recently lost three faculty members, and have an increased<lb/>
enrollment Student help is more greatly needed than before but<lb/>
said Dr. Simpson, "We have had to turn down between seventy five<lb/>
and one hundred applications for fall quarter alone Coupled with<lb/>
this is increased awareness of the existence of Self Help Program<lb/>
and or the fact tht more students need financial aid of this sort.<lb/>
See "New Problems" on page ten.<lb/>
Beginning<lb/>
September 23<lb/>
through 30<lb/>
Central Carolina<lb/>
Crusade<lb/>
CARTER STADIUM-RALEIGH<lb/>
ALL SEATS FREE A<lb/>
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Nightly 7:30 PM thru Sunday<lb/>
METRO PANTS<lb/>
help you make a beeline<lb/>
tothe country with<lb/>
"Hipshake"shaped pants-<lb/>
that have an extension<lb/>
. aistband, scalloped<lb/>
pockets and cuffed bot-<lb/>
toms. In Cone Jonah's<lb/>
Wale Corduroy. Navy,<lb/>
red, grey, green, brown,<lb/>
camel. 27-38, S,M,Land<lb/>
XL lengths. About $15.<lb/>
Visit your campus shop<lb/>
today.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Gone<lb/>
corduroy<lb/>
Cone makes fabrics people live in.<lb/>
I INI MILI 11440 8" ??' NEW "jI'k NY 10018<lb/>
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9(4<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAD13 SEPT. 1973VOL 5, NO. 3<lb/>
9<lb/>
Williams opens<lb/>
at Coffeehouse<lb/>
Looks like a hairy Howdy Doody, sounds like a cross between a<lb/>
freight train and a butterfly, feels life so strongly that it just has to come<lb/>
busting out in a song .12-string guitar, big like a sledge hammer,<lb/>
gentle like a harpsichord .six foot two, country, totally out front. This<lb/>
is Mike Williams-a purveyor of ideas.<lb/>
His medium is music, and the people who come to listen, to be<lb/>
entertained, invariably find that they are doing more than listening, more<lb/>
than being entertained-they find they are responding to the words and<lb/>
music both emotionally and intellectually.<lb/>
Most of Mike's repertoire is original material. He is now making his<lb/>
fame as a solo performer with such songs as "Will I Ever Catch Another<lb/>
Butterfly which captures all the remembered joys of boyhood, and has<lb/>
just been recorded by John Denver. Other favorites of his are "Ballad of<lb/>
El Dorado" and "The Balloon Song<lb/>
Mike moves from folk singer to blues belter to country western star<lb/>
to crooner, matching his voice and style to the mood and message of<lb/>
the song. Mike Williams is the kind of person Kris Kristodderson had in<lb/>
mind when he wrote "The Pilgrim-Chapter 33 "He's a poet (he's a<lb/>
picker, He's a prophet (He's a pusher) He's a pilgrim, and a preacher<lb/>
and a problem when he's stones, He's a walking contradiction, Partly<lb/>
truth and partly fiction, Taking every wrong direction on his lonely way<lb/>
back home<lb/>
Mike Williams will be appearing at The Canticle (room 201 in the<lb/>
Student Union for those of you who don't know yet) on September 21,<lb/>
22, 23. Shows start at 8 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
Continuing Events<lb/>
GREENVILLE ART CENTER (Evans St.) - Betty Ashford - watercolors;<lb/>
through early October.<lb/>
THE MUSHROOM (GEORGETOWN SHOPPES) - Watercolors by Ed.<lb/>
Voorhees. Hours 11 am7p.m.<lb/>
PARK THEATER - Romeo and Juliet, 6:30 &amp; 9 p.m.<lb/>
PITT THEATER - That Same Summer (last day), 3,5,7, and 9 p.m.<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA - Paper Moon (last day), 1:30, 3:25, 5:20, 7:15, 9:10.<lb/>
MISCELLANY<lb/>
Wed. Sept. 19, 8 p.m. - Matthew and Peter concern on the Mall<lb/>
Thurs. Sept.20, 8 p.m. - Christine Jorgeneen lecture<lb/>
Fri. Sept. 21, 7 and 9 p.m. - Straight-Jacket movie,Wright<lb/>
8 p.m. and 9 p.m. - Mike Williams coffeehouse, 201 Union<lb/>
Sat. Sept. 23, 7:30 p.m. - Southern Illinois football, away<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039875_0010"/><lb/>
1 FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
Innocent drugs' kill too<lb/>
New problems<lb/>
Tfiefe is a cloud no bigger than a<lb/>
tranquilizer pill appearing on the<lb/>
horizon of traffic safety researchers<lb/>
these davs.<lb/>
As thougta they didn't have enough<lb/>
troubles with the ominous statistics<lb/>
uncovered in connection with the<lb/>
alcohol-impaired driver, there is<lb/>
growing evidence that another type of<lb/>
drug-impaired driver also presents a<lb/>
problem of tremendous potential.<lb/>
INNOCENT DRUGS<lb/>
In the 1973 edition of The Travelers<lb/>
Insurance Companies annual booklet,<lb/>
on highway safety called "Speed"<lb/>
Kills the subjects are not the<lb/>
hard-core heroin addicts-the familiarj<lb/>
"dope fiends" of popular literature-butk<lb/>
millions of people taking frequent<lb/>
doses of so-called "innocent" drugs forj<lb/>
a variety of reasons, usually valid and<lb/>
under the care of a doctor. &amp;<lb/>
A person can be taking such drugs I<lb/>
for several ailments and acquired froma<lb/>
a number of sources. The cumulative"<lb/>
effect of the medication is thus greater<lb/>
than would be anticipated from any of<lb/>
the drugs taken singly.<lb/>
TRAGIC RESULTS<lb/>
Such mind-altering drugs as diet<lb/>
pills, tranquilizers, antihistamines,<lb/>
barbiturates and bromides can impair a<lb/>
driver's ability to function effectively<lb/>
on the highway. When used in<lb/>
conjunction with even moderate<lb/>
amounts of alcohol, the results can be<lb/>
tragic<lb/>
The magnitude ut me legal drug<lb/>
industry can be measured by the fact<lb/>
that just the promotion and advertising<lb/>
of beverage alcohol and tobacco,<lb/>
patent medicines and over-the-counter<lb/>
drugs costs $2 million every day in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
The real Sunday punch of the drug<lb/>
situation lies in the so-called<lb/>
"synergistic" effect of drugs combined<lb/>
with alcohol. This refers to the<lb/>
interaction of drugs which, when taken<lb/>
together, increases each otter's<lb/>
effectiveness.<lb/>
TOWN DRUNK<lb/>
This means that a driver taking<lb/>
cold pills, for example, might after a<lb/>
couple of cocktails, exhibit all the<lb/>
characteristics of the town drunk. His<lb/>
reflexes could be slowed, his speech<lb/>
slurred, his vision impaired and his<lb/>
gait affected.<lb/>
This man becomes a dangerous<lb/>
driver, by any definition and only<lb/>
S anrusl<lb/>
auma<lb/>
because he woke up with the sniffles<lb/>
and lacked the knowledge of the<lb/>
possible side-effects of his pills and<lb/>
cocktails.<lb/>
One researcher has observed that<lb/>
numerous individuals arrested for<lb/>
drunken driving are also drug<lb/>
involved. In certain instances, the<lb/>
individual has a very low blood alcohol<lb/>
level but has also, in fact, taken some<lb/>
other substances which are synergistic<lb/>
with alcohol and which produce all the<lb/>
appearances of gross drunkenness.<lb/>
ry. Today Is Part of<lb/>
S5TN Our SPECIAL<lb/>
l ' OPENING<lb/>
Free plants o first<lb/>
100 customers<lb/>
Register for $5.00 Gift Certificate<lb/>
assorted fofaoe plants<lb/>
Terr an urns 0 , 7QS<lb/>
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$1.99 to $29.95<lb/>
see our indoor greenhouse with<lb/>
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open 9 30 - 9:00. Mon Sat.<lb/>
107 Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
across from Pitt Plaza<lb/>
mz3m.mtmK3mamemK-ymK. mm mm ynszum :mk ??<lb/>
I-Jtm. ? mm mm. ?" mszmm ? mm mm-mm mmmm<lb/>
PRINTED '<lb/>
COPIES<lb/>
I while you wait g<lb/>
Continued from page eight.<lb/>
Combined with new problems presented by the raise in wages the<lb/>
Biology Department has experienced an approximate twenty percent<lb/>
cut in funds allotted for the program in the past four years, totalling<lb/>
an overall reduction of the program by one third since 1969 in the<lb/>
department.<lb/>
Both Dr. Simpson and Mr. Moore pointed out the preference by<lb/>
instructors for students that have participated in the program in the<lb/>
past Again necessitating the refusal of new applicants.<lb/>
The cut in man hours and the stagnancy of allotted funds for the<lb/>
Student Help Program will hurt both students and staff at East<lb/>
Carolina New applications are being turned down by the score to<lb/>
maintain the hour quota, and as Dr. Simpson pointed out, "We need<lb/>
the help, the faculty just cannot do it all by themselves<lb/>
The most complete<lb/>
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featuring:<lb/>
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Guess the number off staples<lb/>
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Nos 5610 4 6610<lb/>
The jar is approximately 8V4"<lb/>
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It's filled with Swingline Tot<lb/>
staples. (Look for the clue<lb/>
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The Tot 50 stapler is un-<lb/>
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Fill in coupon or send post<lb/>
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Entries must be postmarked by<lb/>
Nov. 30, 1973 and received by<lb/>
Dec. 8, 1973. Final decision by<lb/>
an independent judging organ-<lb/>
ization. Prizes awarded to en-<lb/>
tries nearest actual count. In<lb/>
case of tie, a drawing deter-<lb/>
mines winners. Offer subject<lb/>
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There arestaples in<lb/>
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guei outside the envelope,<lb/>
lower let! hand corner.<lb/>
Les St 1<lb/>
squad of t<lb/>
Walt Garri<lb/>
Strayhc<lb/>
being a 17<lb/>
Staubach f<lb/>
ECU st<lb/>
office in fV<lb/>
Price o<lb/>
married sti<lb/>
Sept. 29 tc<lb/>
gate are $6<lb/>
The EC<lb/>
Coach(<lb/>
schedule <lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Swenholt.<lb/>
Captair<lb/>
O'Shea. Si<lb/>
year's leac<lb/>
against Vfv<lb/>
Next s<lb/>
Southwest<lb/>
stars as R<lb/>
Pancho Gc<lb/>
U.S. Ji<lb/>
consecutivi<lb/>
the star of<lb/>
tour.<lb/>
OddsrrK<lb/>
Player Awa<lb/>
Jacksor<lb/>
MVP in the<lb/>
of .291.<lb/>
Thursdc<lb/>
year old Be<lb/>
Astrodome<lb/>
Cosell, Jac<lb/>
Coach f<lb/>
ECU please<lb/>
Hamme<lb/>
Atlanta stai<lb/>
Inti<lb/>
Intramui<lb/>
reminds <lb/>
Friday is<lb/>
volleyball a<lb/>
Six players<lb/>
team, while<lb/>
to participa<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Football<lb/>
Monday. M<lb/>
expected 1<lb/>
championsl<lb/>
As in th<lb/>
to join in i<lb/>
being of ft<lb/>
level. For r<lb/>
program, di<lb/>
at 164 Mine<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0011"/><lb/>
a.<lb/>
m<lb/>
es<lb/>
67.<lb/>
id post<lb/>
mired,<lb/>
ked by<lb/>
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lion by<lb/>
organ-<lb/>
to en-<lb/>
unt. In<lb/>
deter-<lb/>
ubject<lb/>
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Wash,<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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ope.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
IflMMUMP<lb/>
n<lb/>
mn<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SPORTS WORLD<lb/>
By TOMPKINS<lb/>
NFL<lb/>
Les Strayhorn, former ECU running back, has made the 40 man traveling<lb/>
squad of the Dallas Cowboys. Strayhorn is the second string fullback behind<lb/>
Walt Garrison.<lb/>
Strayhorn scored three touchdowns in the pre-season, his longest run<lb/>
being a 17 yard jaunt. Strayhorn also caught a 46 yd. screen pass from Roger<lb/>
Staubach for a touchdown.<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
ECU student-spouse season football tickets are now on sale at the ticket<lb/>
office in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Price of the ticket is $15, one half the regular season ticket price. ECU<lb/>
married students should purchase tickets before the Pirate's first home game<lb/>
Sept. 29 to take advantage of the full five-game home schedule. Tickets at the<lb/>
gate are $6.<lb/>
FIELD HOCKEY<lb/>
The ECU girl's field hockey team begins their season Oct. 11 at UNC-G.<lb/>
Coach Catherine Bolton has 15 players returning and will play a three game<lb/>
schedule plus two tournaments. The only home game is Oct. 18 against<lb/>
Carolina. The Pirates are led by second team deep south fullback Francis<lb/>
Swenholt.<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
Captains of ECU's 1973 soccer team are Brad Smith and Tom<lb/>
O'Shea. Smith is a two year starter at center fullback, and O'Shea is last<lb/>
year's leading scorer. The Pirates next home game will be Wed Oct. 3<lb/>
against VMI.<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
Next stop for most of the world's leading pros will be the Pacific<lb/>
Southwest Championships at Los Angeles Tennis Club Sept. 17-23. Such<lb/>
stars as Rod Laver, Jimmy Connors and two time champion, 43 year old<lb/>
Pancho Gonzales, will be on hand.<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
U.S. Junior track and field team returned from Europe with three<lb/>
consecutives wins over Poland, West Germany and the USSR. Carter Suggs,<lb/>
the star of the team from nearby Tarboro, N.C won eight gold medals on the<lb/>
tour.<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Oddsmakers favor Reggie Jackson and Bobby Bonds for the Most Valuable<lb/>
Player Awards in the American and National Leagues respectively<lb/>
Jackson leads the AL in homers with 31 and RBI's with 112. Bonds, the<lb/>
MVP in the 1973 All Star game, has 38 homers, 94 RBI's and a batting average<lb/>
of .291.<lb/>
MORE TENNIS<lb/>
Thursday evening, tennis' $100,000 battle of the sexes will take place as 55<lb/>
year old Bobby Riggs and Ms. Billie Jean King will meet head on in Houston's<lb/>
Astrodome. The best five sets match will be televised by ABC with Howard<lb/>
Cosell, Jack Cramer and Margaret Casals courtside.<lb/>
MORE TRACK<lb/>
Coach Bill Carson requests that any men interested in running track for<lb/>
ECU please report to his office in Scales Fieldhouse.<lb/>
THE "HAMMER"<lb/>
Hammerin' Hank Aaron is still st uck on homerun number 710. When the<lb/>
Atlanta star blasts one more will the crowd sing "Oh Thank Heaven for 711<lb/>
inoij<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Intramural director John Bobo<lb/>
reminds prospective players that<lb/>
Friday is the deadline for entering<lb/>
volleyball and badminton competition.<lb/>
Six players are needed for a volleyball<lb/>
team, while individuals are encouraged<lb/>
to participate in the annual badminton<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Football action is slated to begin<lb/>
Monday. More than 30 teams are<lb/>
expected to vie for the campus<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
As in the past, students are invited<lb/>
to join in any or all of the 15 sports<lb/>
being offered at the intramural<lb/>
level. For more information about the<lb/>
program, drop by the intramural office<lb/>
at 164 Minges.<lb/>
1973 SOCCER<lb/>
Sept. 17 Madison College 2.00 p.m.<lb/>
Sept 26 U N.C?C 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 3 V.M.I.<lb/>
Oct. 6 N.C. State<lb/>
Oct. 10 Elon College<lb/>
Oct 14 Appalachian<lb/>
Oct. 23 Duke<lb/>
Oct. 27 William &amp; Mory 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 31 N.C. Wesleyan 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Nov. 5 Methodist Col. 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Bold denotes Home Games<lb/>
2:00 p.m.<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
3:00 pm.<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD 18 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
Wtmmmm0mtt0mmmtmmmmmmmmtmmm<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA LINEBACKER Danny Kepley makes life difficult for the<lb/>
Golden Eagle's quarterback as he explodes thru the offensive line to make the<lb/>
stop.<lb/>
Buc hooters impressive<lb/>
Last Saturday afternoon the East<lb/>
Carolina soccer team found themselves<lb/>
in a very sticky situation. During the<lb/>
course of their match against Campbell<lb/>
College, goalie Scott Balas (who is<lb/>
normally a halfback) was knocked<lb/>
unconscious and suddenly the Pirates<lb/>
were left without a goalterder. Need-<lb/>
less to say Campbell kicked and<lb/>
gouged their way to a 7-0 victory in the<lb/>
second day of the two day Wilmington<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
On Friday afternoon freshman Pete<lb/>
Angus scored the only East Carolina<lb/>
tally and Balas, playing his first game<lb/>
in goal was superb as the Bucs held<lb/>
host UNC-Wilmington to only one goal<lb/>
and the two clubs settled for a 1-1 tie.<lb/>
Saturday was a bit dimmer for the<lb/>
purple and goid as Campbell played a<lb/>
rather rough brand of soccer and<lb/>
whipped the Pirates physically as well<lb/>
as on the scoreboard.<lb/>
Acting coach Ed Wolcott had<lb/>
nothing but praise for the Pirate's<lb/>
efforts as they played extremely well<lb/>
considering that they have only had<lb/>
about eight days of practice.<lb/>
In an interesting analogy, Wolcott<lb/>
noted that Campbell had defeated<lb/>
Madison College earlier in the<lb/>
tournament and Madison was the ninth<lb/>
rated team in the nation. Therefore<lb/>
East Carolina's play against Campbell<lb/>
was quite encouraging.<lb/>
The new head coach of the Bucs,<lb/>
Monte Little, who has yet to sign his<lb/>
contract, rates his Pirates a much<lb/>
improved ball club. A tough schedule<lb/>
lies ahead for the team and Little feels<lb/>
that the squad should top the .500<lb/>
mark, a goal which has eluded the<lb/>
grasp of previous teams.<lb/>
The new mentor is very pleased<lb/>
with the play of his eight irv xning<lb/>
freshmen. He feels that three of four<lb/>
of these men will greatly aid the<lb/>
team. Offsetting the eight freshmen<lb/>
will be eight returning lettermen, so<lb/>
the club should be well balanced in<lb/>
that respect.<lb/>
Little is most pleased with his<lb/>
newest aquisition in goalie, John<lb/>
Henderson. Henderson who was<lb/>
unable to play in the tournament at<lb/>
Wilmington, comes to East Carolina<lb/>
from Campbell where he earned<lb/>
All-America honors in the N.A.I.A.<lb/>
district.<lb/>
Little had an abundance of praise<lb/>
for Wolcott's efforts during pre-season<lb/>
workouts and the begining of the<lb/>
season. After Little signs his contract<lb/>
Wolcott will resume his duties as the<lb/>
assistant coach.<lb/>
Yesterday the Bucb faced that same<lb/>
tough Madison team and the next<lb/>
action for the booters will be on<lb/>
September 26 when they travel to<lb/>
Chapel Hill to take on UNC.<lb/>
1973 CROSS-COUNTRY<lb/>
Sept 29 Pembroke<lb/>
Invitational 10:00 o.m.<lb/>
Oct. 6 William &amp; Mary, V.P.I.<lb/>
N. C. State 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
Oct 13 Appalachian 1030 o.m.<lb/>
Oct 20 Mt. St Mary's 10 00am.<lb/>
Oct. 27 N C Championships<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD18 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 3<lb/>
m<lb/>
mut i<lb/>
mmmmm iu?i<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Pirates blank Southern Mississippi<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
"This was the greatest team effort<lb/>
by an East Carolina squad in my three<lb/>
years here So stated coach Sonny<lb/>
Randle after the Pirates whipped the<lb/>
Golden Eagles of Southern Mississippi<lb/>
Saturday night by the score of 13-0.<lb/>
WILD DOGS<lb/>
According to Randle, it was "a<lb/>
super effort by the 11 men on offense<lb/>
and by the 11 men on defense The<lb/>
defense, which allowed a mere 39<lb/>
yards rushing, "looked like the 'Wild<lb/>
Dogs' of last season said the coach.<lb/>
The opening quarter was fairly<lb/>
evenly matched. The Golden Eagles<lb/>
penetrated to the ECU 17, but a 35 yard<lb/>
field goal attempt was wide to the left.<lb/>
INTERCEPTION<lb/>
Southern Mississippi was driving<lb/>
again, only to have a pass intercepted<lb/>
by Pirate freshman Jim Bolding at the<lb/>
ECU 26. A fine 27 yard return brought<lb/>
the ball to the USM 47. Bolding, a<lb/>
native of High Point, is described by<lb/>
coach Randle as "having the poise of a<lb/>
junior or senior<lb/>
As the first quarter drew to a close,<lb/>
Buc quarterback Carl Summerell<lb/>
completed a 17 yard pass to tight end<lb/>
Benny Gibson, bringing the ball down<lb/>
to the USM 28. The horn sounded as<lb/>
Don Shink slashed through the line for<lb/>
13 yards and a first down at the 15 yard<lb/>
line.<lb/>
GIBSON FOR SIX<lb/>
Three plays into the second<lb/>
quarter. Summerell, on a delayed<lb/>
screen, passed 12 yards to Gibson for<lb/>
a touchdown. Jim Woody booted the<lb/>
extra point, making it 7-0.<lb/>
Woody had a bit of trouble on the<lb/>
insuing kickoff, finally keeping the<lb/>
third one in bounds. USM halfback<lb/>
Doyle Orange grabbed the pigskin on<lb/>
the 24 and scampered 29 yards to the<lb/>
ECU 47.<lb/>
BUCS BACKED UP<lb/>
The Pirate defense tightened up<lb/>
and on fourth and seven USM was<lb/>
forced to punt. The ball landed at the<lb/>
two and bounced back to the four,<lb/>
leaving the Pirates in poor field<lb/>
position.<lb/>
ECU was soon forced to punt, but<lb/>
three plays later Robin Hogue hit the<lb/>
Golden Eagles quarterback and forced<lb/>
a fumble. The recovery was made by<lb/>
Ken Moore at the USM 49.<lb/>
The Bucs drove down to the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi 19, where on a<lb/>
third down play, Summerell was<lb/>
intercept- near the goal line.<lb/>
DEFENSE HOLDS AGAIN<lb/>
Possession was quickly regained as<lb/>
USM was forced to punt on fourth<lb/>
down from their own 14. It was a<lb/>
booming punt that Rusty Markland<lb/>
fumbled, but fortunately he icovered<lb/>
back at the ECU 32.<lb/>
The Pirates put together a fine drive<lb/>
before half time but could not score. A<lb/>
holding penalty was the crippling<lb/>
factor<lb/>
SUMMERELL TO STRAYHORN<lb/>
Summerell and sophomore Ken<lb/>
St ray horn, who started in place of<lb/>
injured Carlester Crumpler, teamed up<lb/>
for a beautiful delay pass against the<lb/>
flow for a 20 yard gain in the big play<lb/>
of that drive.<lb/>
Strayhorn said that coach Randle<lb/>
had informed him just prior to the<lb/>
contest that he would start with<lb/>
Crumpler still suffering from a hip<lb/>
pointer and a shoulder injury. After the<lb/>
game he wanted it made clear that he<lb/>
was "just filling in for the Crump. I'm<lb/>
only a sophomore said the humble<lb/>
Strayhorn. "There's no way I could<lb/>
take the place of the great C.C<lb/>
FINE EFFORT<lb/>
This attitude is typical of the Pirate<lb/>
squad. Coach Randle had words of<lb/>
praise for Strayhorn and indicated he<lb/>
would start next week against<lb/>
Southern Illinois. Said Randle, "Kenny<lb/>
played a great game. There's no way<lb/>
he won't start next week. You have to<lb/>
reward an effort like he gave tonight<lb/>
With the score only 7-0 going into<lb/>
the second half, the Pirates went right<lb/>
to work. Three plays after kicking off<lb/>
to the Golden Eagles, linebacker<lb/>
Danny Kepley picked off a pass. This<lb/>
was his third interception of the year<lb/>
and gave ECU the ball at the USM 35.<lb/>
WOODY UPS MARGIN<lb/>
Power running by Don Shink and<lb/>
Strayhorn advanced the ball to the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi 6 before<lb/>
Summerell threw an incompletion on<lb/>
third down. Jim Woody, who has<lb/>
helped everyone forget the departed<lb/>
Rick McLester, booted a 22 yard field<lb/>
goal. This upped the Pirate margin<lb/>
to 10-0<lb/>
After an exchange of punts, USM<lb/>
took over at their own 38. Two plays<lb/>
later the Pirate's Mike Myrick<lb/>
intercepted a pass, putting the ball at<lb/>
the ECU 42 and setting the stage for<lb/>
another scoring opportunity for the<lb/>
Bucs.<lb/>
BUCS MOVE<lb/>
On first down, Summerell hit<lb/>
Gibson on a pass play. He broke the<lb/>
tackle and raced downfield for 34 yards<lb/>
down to the USM 24. Strong running<lb/>
by Shink moved the ball to the<lb/>
13. There the drive stalled and<lb/>
Woody's services were once again<lb/>
called upon for a 32 yarder making it<lb/>
13-0<lb/>
At the start of the fourth quarter<lb/>
ECU held onto the ball for 17 plays,<lb/>
eating up valuable time on the clock<lb/>
before Jon Deming punted into the end<lb/>
zone.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles took over at<lb/>
their own 20 and marched upfield to<lb/>
the Pirate 10. The USM quarterback<lb/>
was then sacked twice for losses.<lb/>
Gary Godette and Kepley did most of<lb/>
the damage. Then, on fourth and 24<lb/>
from the ECU 24 yard line, Southern<lb/>
Mississippi attempted a field goal with<lb/>
3:42 left in the game. This "unusual"<lb/>
strategy did not meet with the home<lb/>
crowd's approval, and they showered<lb/>
USM head coach P.W. Underwood with<lb/>
a chorus of boos which resembled the<lb/>
anvil chorus. It was later learned that<lb/>
Underwood had never been shut out<lb/>
before in his career.<lb/>
The field goal attempt missed and<lb/>
the Pirates took over at their 20. Three<lb/>
plays later, in one of his few<lb/>
appearances of the evening. Crumpler<lb/>
fumbled after being smashed by four<lb/>
USM defensemen at the 26.<lb/>
With a great opportunity to score,<lb/>
Southern Mississippi was pushed back<lb/>
to their 37 and then relinquished the<lb/>
ball after four plays.<lb/>
ECU took over and three plays later<lb/>
the ball game was history with the<lb/>
Pirates decisive victors, 13-0.<lb/>
STATS<lb/>
Shink led the Pirate rushes with 89<lb/>
yards on 18 carries. Workhorse<lb/>
Strayhorn churned out 77 yards on his<lb/>
26 carries.<lb/>
Summerell had a fine night,<lb/>
passing 13 times with six completions.<lb/>
His favorite target was Gibson, who<lb/>
amassed 64 yards on four receptions.<lb/>
Deming handled the punting in<lb/>
excellent fashion, averaging 38.9 yards<lb/>
on seven punts. This included a clutch<lb/>
54 yarder while standing deep in Pirate<lb/>
territory<lb/>
The only fault that could be found<lb/>
was the fact that USM piled up 126<lb/>
yards on kickoff returns. Coach<lb/>
Randle promised much work on this<lb/>
during the week.<lb/>
LOOKING AHEAD<lb/>
The Pirates stay on the road this<lb/>
Saturday as they travel to Carbondale,<lb/>
III. to do battle with the Salukis of<lb/>
Southern Illinois. They have their<lb/>
home opener the following week at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium against the Furman<lb/>
Paladins.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA QUARTERBACK Carl Summerell fakes a handoff to Don Shink then gives the ball to Kenny Strayhorn who<lb/>
picks up valuable yardage in Saturday evening's 13-0 victory over Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
010<lb/>
?P<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039875_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>