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<pb facs="00039876_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C. 20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 4<lb/>
Living no different<lb/>
Co-ed dorm has a 'good start'<lb/>
By DIANNE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Garrett Hall, ECU'S first co-ed<lb/>
dorm, is reported off to a good start<lb/>
and doing well by the administrators,<lb/>
despite its questionable status last<lb/>
year and claims of apathy and<lb/>
disinterest of several residents.<lb/>
Of the male residents interviewed,<lb/>
five out of six said they were living in<lb/>
Garrett only because of its centralized<lb/>
location. Women residents cited<lb/>
several different reasons for being<lb/>
here, among them were location and a<lb/>
desire for minimized rules. Invariably,<lb/>
nine out of ten residents said they<lb/>
found no different living in Garrett than<lb/>
any other dorm.<lb/>
The administration is enthusiastic<lb/>
and certain of Garrett's success.<lb/>
Kathy Keppinger, Garrett adminis-<lb/>
trator, said it must be taken into<lb/>
consideration that this experiment has<lb/>
just begun and asked that time be<lb/>
allowed for everyone involved to get<lb/>
settled in. But she said "so far its<lb/>
going great The first social event of<lb/>
Garrett, a courtyard cookout, was<lb/>
described by Ms. Kleppinger as "Real<lb/>
good (turnout), lots of fun She<lb/>
explained that the students had gotten<lb/>
along well together, things went<lb/>
smoothly and many residents stayed<lb/>
late playing volleyball.<lb/>
According to Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students, James A. Mallory, "Things<lb/>
seem to be going fine and I think it is<lb/>
going to be a success. We are pleased<lb/>
that we are getting more and more<lb/>
students there He went on to say<lb/>
that no problems had been reported<lb/>
other than the disappearance of the<lb/>
dorm's intercom speakers which were<lb/>
later found in Jones dormitory.<lb/>
Dean of Women, Carolyn A.<lb/>
Fulghum backs up this feeling by<lb/>
saying, "From all reports I've gotten,<lb/>
students seems to be getting along<lb/>
well and assuming responsibility<lb/>
inside the building<lb/>
This question of responsible<lb/>
residents appears to be what will make<lb/>
or break the success of Garrett<lb/>
dorm. "I think most residents moved<lb/>
into Garrett, because its new (the<lb/>
co-ed situation). Since they want it to<lb/>
work, this entails a greater degree of<lb/>
responsibility, more than in any other<lb/>
dorm said Ms. Kleppinger, who was<lb/>
administrator of White Hall last year.<lb/>
A few male residents interviewed,<lb/>
complained of the security, which they<lb/>
described as, "Locking up the girls and<lb/>
officers patroling the halls Ms.<lb/>
Kleppinger responded by explaining<lb/>
that after the hours of visitation, which<lb/>
were voted on by all residents,<lb/>
partitions are closed between the men<lb/>
and women's sides on the second and<lb/>
third Noor. "These partitions are not<lb/>
for visual convenience, they are not<lb/>
locked. It is part of the responsibility<lb/>
the residents assume when they move<lb/>
in She went on to explain that<lb/>
although the partitions are put up,<lb/>
there are social rooms between the<lb/>
men's and women's sides "where<lb/>
students are encouraged to meet and<lb/>
interact at all times. These rooms are<lb/>
open 24 hours a day<lb/>
A new type of government has been<lb/>
created to fit the co-ed situation of<lb/>
Garrett. There will be co-ed coordi-<lb/>
nators, which Ms. Kleppinger de-<lb/>
scribes as the primary programmers.<lb/>
These two students "will strive for<lb/>
balance of activities (within the dorm)<lb/>
that will appeal to both men and<lb/>
women she said. There will be co-ed<lb/>
social activity directors and co-ed food<lb/>
directors, to be employed for social<lb/>
affairs where food is served. The other<lb/>
offices such as MRC WRC and wing<lb/>
representatives as well as the<lb/>
combined office of secretary-treasurer,<lb/>
will be held by one student<lb/>
only. Kleppinger said that as time<lb/>
goes on "We may add or change<lb/>
things but this is how Garrett dorm's<lb/>
government stands now for the first<lb/>
election<lb/>
e Garrett dorm on page inree.<lb/>
Uk<lb/>
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ARTISTS' CONCEPTION OF THE ECU Regional Development Institute<lb/>
building on First and Reade Streets. The building's planned completion date<lb/>
is August 1974. The cost of the project is $556,000 and is funded in part by the<lb/>
State.<lb/>
ECU Regional Development Institute is begun<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, Chancellor, East<lb/>
Carolina University announced today<lb/>
that construction has begun on the<lb/>
new East Carolina University Regional<lb/>
Development Institute building in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The 16,000 sq. ft. facility is being<lb/>
constructed near the downtown<lb/>
business district at the corner of First<lb/>
and Reade Streets overlooking the Tar<lb/>
River. The site was purchased by the<lb/>
University from the Greenville Re-<lb/>
development Commission.<lb/>
Plans for the modern, one-story<lb/>
structure shows the building con-<lb/>
m<lb/>
taining staff offices, conference<lb/>
rooms, a drafting room, an exhibit<lb/>
room for East North Carolina products,<lb/>
a library and a 300 seat auditorium. It<lb/>
is to be completed by August 1974.<lb/>
The cost of the project is $556,000<lb/>
and is funded in part by the State; the<lb/>
U.S. Economic Development Adminis-<lb/>
tration; and the Coastal Plain Regional<lb/>
Commission.<lb/>
Tom Willis, director of the ECU<lb/>
Regional Development Institute says<lb/>
that construction on the facility<lb/>
"culminates a nine year effort to secure<lb/>
funds for the project<lb/>
MMI<lb/>
"We've become very crowded at our<lb/>
present location (on 5th Street across<lb/>
from the ECU campus) and this new<lb/>
building will give us the added<lb/>
efficiency needed to handle the ever<lb/>
increasing number of projects he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Last year the Institute completed in<lb/>
excess of 120 projects. The projects<lb/>
are designed to aid the proper<lb/>
economic development of 32 Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina counties and includes<lb/>
seminars on timely subjects, job fairs,<lb/>
land development, environmental<lb/>
advice and consultation, management<lb/>
and loan assistance and community<lb/>
development.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins says he is delighted<lb/>
that construction on the new facility<lb/>
has begun.<lb/>
"The East Carolina Regional<lb/>
Development Institute is playing an<lb/>
important role in the growth and<lb/>
development of Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and this new facility will help us to<lb/>
better serve our people and the state<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
J.H. Hudson Inc. of Greenville is<lb/>
the contractor for the project.<lb/>
See related feature on page three.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039876_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 4<lb/>
MM0MMMMMMMMM<lb/>
MMM<lb/>
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news<lb/>
(�MEfUl�fL<lb/>
Teachers<lb/>
Q National Teacher Examinations will<lb/>
be administered Nov. 10 at ECU for<lb/>
teacher candidates in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
ECU Testing Director John B<lb/>
Childers said college seniors preparing<lb/>
to teach and teachers applying for<lb/>
certification or licensure or seeking<lb/>
positions in school systems which<lb/>
encourage or require the NTE will be<lb/>
taking the tests.<lb/>
Last year about 110,000 candidates<lb/>
throughout the nation took the<lb/>
examinations, which are designed to<lb/>
assess knowledge and understanding<lb/>
in professional education and in<lb/>
subject-field specialization. The NTE<lb/>
is prepared by Educational Testing<lb/>
Service of Princeton, N.J.<lb/>
Bulletins of information describing<lb/>
registration procedures and regis-<lb/>
tration forms are available from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Service in the campus<lb/>
Education-Psychology Building or<lb/>
from the Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Box 911, Princeton, N.J. 08540.<lb/>
Who's Who<lb/>
? The Student Affairs Office is now in<lb/>
the process of selecting students from<lb/>
ECU to appear in the 1973-74 edition of<lb/>
Who's Who Among Students in<lb/>
American Colleges and Universities.<lb/>
The office is sending out forms to<lb/>
all departments and organizations that<lb/>
we can possibly locate. If you wish to<lb/>
make a nomination and do not receive<lb/>
the necessary forms, please contact<lb/>
the Student Affairs office immediately.<lb/>
All nominations are due by OCTOBER<lb/>
2, 1973.<lb/>
City<lb/>
QThere will be a municipal election<lb/>
candidates forum Tuesday Oct. 2. The<lb/>
public forum is sponsored by the<lb/>
Greenville - Pitt County League of<lb/>
Women Voters-District Court Room-<lb/>
Pitt County Court House-Tuesday<lb/>
October 2-8:00 P.M. Each candidate<lb/>
will briefly state his views and,<lb/>
immediately following, answer any<lb/>
questions from the audience.<lb/>
Following the program, refreshments<lb/>
will be served.<lb/>
Marriage<lb/>
? "Marriage - So You've Decided a<lb/>
series of classes designed for couples<lb/>
who plan to marry within the next few<lb/>
months, will be offered by Pitt County<lb/>
Home Economics Extension Agents.<lb/>
The classes will be held each Tuesday<lb/>
night for four weeks beginning<lb/>
September 25 at 8 p.m. Topics covered<lb/>
in the various sessions are printed<lb/>
below.<lb/>
These subjects deal chiefly with the<lb/>
Tianagement aspect of marriage. They<lb/>
are in no way designed to overlap or<lb/>
infringe on counseling by ministers or<lb/>
other professionals but are designed to<lb/>
compliment the professional counselor<lb/>
role.<lb/>
MARRIAGE - So You've uecideu<lb/>
Agricultural Extension Office<lb/>
Corner of Third &amp; Greene Streets<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina 27834<lb/>
8:00 p.m. Tuesday<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
September 25<lb/>
DISCUSSION<lb/>
Marriage Role<lb/>
Expectations<lb/>
October 2 Planning &amp; Paying for the<lb/>
Wedding Bridal Showers &amp; Wedding<lb/>
Reception<lb/>
October 9 Your Wedding Attire<lb/>
Your Wedding Trousseau<lb/>
October 16 Choose Tableware for New<lb/>
Lifestyle Selecting &amp; Furnishing<lb/>
Your First Home<lb/>
Home Econ.<lb/>
U Members of the North Carolina<lb/>
Home Economics Association, Region<lb/>
F, will gather at ECU Sept. 25.<lb/>
Meeting in the ECU Home<lb/>
Economics Building, the group will<lb/>
participate in programs designed to<lb/>
increase their knowledge of and<lb/>
commitment to the home economics<lb/>
professions.<lb/>
Associate Professor Elisabeth<lb/>
Schmidt of the ECU Food, Nutrition<lb/>
and Institution Management faculty<lb/>
and several of her students will serve<lb/>
dinner at the meeting.<lb/>
Dr. Vila Rosenfeld, chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Home Economics<lb/>
Education, will preside at the<lb/>
meeting. Chairman-elect is Rebecca<lb/>
King of Raleigh.<lb/>
PRE-REGISTER by calling the Home<lb/>
Economics Extension Office (758-1196)<lb/>
or by writing P.O. Box 1427.<lb/>
No Admission Fee<lb/>
Angel Flight<lb/>
? Angel Flight Rush<lb/>
Sept. 24,25,27<lb/>
7:30 - Monday night<lb/>
Union 201<lb/>
Tues Thurs. : Whichard 113<lb/>
Must have 2.0 average<lb/>
No military obligations<lb/>
Legislature ECU<lb/>
CJThere will be a meeting of all<lb/>
students interested in joining the N.C.<lb/>
Student Legislature Monday, Sept. 24<lb/>
at 8:00 in room 206 of the Student<lb/>
Union. All students are welcome!<lb/>
Alumni<lb/>
D Don Leggett Director of Alumni<lb/>
Affairs at ECU since January 1970, has<lb/>
been promoted to Director of Alumni<lb/>
Affairs and Foundations.<lb/>
J. Michael Howell, a 1972 graduate<lb/>
of ECU and former employer of Home<lb/>
Savings and Loan Association of<lb/>
Greenville, has been named Assistant<lb/>
Director of Alumni Affairs.<lb/>
Leggett's new duties will include<lb/>
serving as Executive Director of the<lb/>
East Carolina University Foundation<lb/>
while continuing to serve as Director of<lb/>
Alumni Affairs. He will also monitor<lb/>
and coordinate the total fund-raising<lb/>
activity for the university. Howell will<lb/>
assist Leggett with those duties as<lb/>
they pertain to the alumni program.<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, Chancellor of<lb/>
East Carolina University, commented:<lb/>
"This move was made to bring about a<lb/>
greater degree of coordination in our<lb/>
total fund-raising program, while at the<lb/>
same time broadening the structure<lb/>
within which we might expand on the<lb/>
success already experienced by our<lb/>
alumni program.<lb/>
"This should cause our alumni and<lb/>
fund-raising programs to reach new<lb/>
heights as we attempt to supplement<lb/>
state allocated funds for further<lb/>
development of University programs.<lb/>
We urge all of our alumni and friends<lb/>
to support these efforts<lb/>
Leggett is originally from Buies<lb/>
Creek in Harriett County and came to<lb/>
Greenville in 1970 from a position as<lb/>
Assistant Principal at Needham B.<lb/>
Contents:<lb/>
Broughton High School in Raleigh. He<lb/>
received his BS degree from ECU in<lb/>
1958 and his Masters degree in<lb/>
1962. He is married to the former<lb/>
LaBette Dorman of Buies Creek, N.C.<lb/>
Howell is a Seaboard, N.C. native<lb/>
and is married to the former Rose Jean<lb/>
Drake of Como. N.C.<lb/>
CD East Carolina University has the<lb/>
largest number of students applying<lb/>
for studies in the 1973-74 international<lb/>
program of the American Association<lb/>
of State Colleges and Universities of<lb/>
any of the more than 20 participating<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
An AASCU report showed that as of<lb/>
early September, 39 applications had<lb/>
been submitted by East Carolina<lb/>
University students for studies in Italy<lb/>
and Mexico.<lb/>
Substantial numbers of students<lb/>
have enrolled from Adams State<lb/>
College, Col Wright State University,<lb/>
Ohio; St. Mary's College, Md<lb/>
Glassboro State College, N.J Rhode<lb/>
Island College; Grand Valley State<lb/>
College, Mich Metropolital State<lb/>
College, Colo the University of<lb/>
Northern Colorado; Plymouth State<lb/>
College, N.H. Also enrolled are<lb/>
students from Louisiana Tech Univer-<lb/>
sity, Madison College, Va Morgan<lb/>
State College, Md Neward State<lb/>
College, N.J Southern Connecticut<lb/>
State College; Western State College<lb/>
of Colorado.<lb/>
Reviewers<lb/>
DFOUNTAINHEAD is engaging in a<lb/>
campaign to recruit reviewers.<lb/>
We need persons interested in all<lb/>
phases of entertainment and the<lb/>
arts: books, films, music (rock,<lb/>
classical, records and performances),<lb/>
drama, concerts, television, and the<lb/>
visualgraphic arts: painting,<lb/>
sculpture, ceramics, drawing, etc.<lb/>
If you can help us out in any way,<lb/>
call Fountainhead at 758-6366 between<lb/>
11 am- 4:30 pm. Ask for editor, leave<lb/>
a message, or put a note in the editor's<lb/>
box, mentioning name, where we can<lb/>
reach you, and what you'd like to<lb/>
review. We'll pass the information on<lb/>
to our reviews editor.<lb/>
GARRETT GOES CO-EDPAGE ONE<lb/>
RDI CONSTRUCTION BEGINSPAGE ONE<lb/>
NEWS FLASHTHIS PAGE<lb/>
MORE RDI GRE AND MEANS GRANTPAGE THREE<lb/>
GRIZZLY.BEARS IN DANGERPAGE FOUR<lb/>
MAVIS RAY AND THE DANCEPAGE FIVE<lb/>
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARY: ABSURDPAGE EIGHT<lb/>
THE FORUMPAGE NINE<lb/>
SPORTSPAGES ELEVEN AND TWELVE<lb/>
Gn<lb/>
GRE PR<lb/>
ongoing<lb/>
Graduate<lb/>
all who<lb/>
educatior<lb/>
undertake<lb/>
special ir<lb/>
for the rr<lb/>
Aptitude<lb/>
In ore<lb/>
ness of<lb/>
several <lb/>
consideri<lb/>
are beim<lb/>
attend a<lb/>
totaling <lb/>
an add it<lb/>
out-of-cl�<lb/>
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have bee<lb/>
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free to ea<lb/>
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classes<lb/>
instructoi<lb/>
It is<lb/>
participal<lb/>
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confident<lb/>
standardi<lb/>
to deal<lb/>
n<lb/>
ECU i<lb/>
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has an<lb/>
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Grad test offers help<lb/>
GRE PROGRAM As part of an<lb/>
ongoing effort to insure that the<lb/>
Graduate Record Examination is fair to<lb/>
all who seek admission to graduate<lb/>
education, the GRE Board has<lb/>
undertaken the development of a<lb/>
special intensive instructional program<lb/>
for the mathematical part of the GRE<lb/>
Aptitude Test (GRE-Q).<lb/>
In order to evaluate the effective-<lb/>
ness of such a program, seniors on<lb/>
several college campuses who are<lb/>
considering taking the GRE this year<lb/>
are being given the opportunity to<lb/>
attend a special series of classes<lb/>
totaling about 16 hours in class plus<lb/>
an additional amount of structured<lb/>
out-of-class work.<lb/>
Intensive instructional materials<lb/>
have been developed by Educational<lb/>
Testing Service and will be provided<lb/>
free to each student who participates.<lb/>
Instruction will be provided in small<lb/>
classes by specially trained<lb/>
instructors.<lb/>
It is hoped that stuents who<lb/>
participate fully in this instructional<lb/>
program will benefit by increased<lb/>
confidence in responding to<lb/>
standardized tests and greater ability<lb/>
to deal with material requiring a<lb/>
thorough knowledge of basic mathe-<lb/>
matics.<lb/>
At ECU this instruction will be<lb/>
offered twice over an eight-week period<lb/>
prior to the December 1973 GRE test<lb/>
date (12-8-73). The instruction pro-<lb/>
vided to the December 1973 GRE test<lb/>
date for taking standardized tests<lb/>
(such as when to guess and how to<lb/>
pace yourself), items similar to those<lb/>
used in the GRE-Q, and a thorough<lb/>
and systematic review of the basic<lb/>
mathematics contents required for<lb/>
adequate performance on the GRE-Q.<lb/>
No fees or charges of any kind are<lb/>
required for those who volunteer to<lb/>
participate. The only committment<lb/>
students are asked to make is to<lb/>
devote the required amount of time to<lb/>
the instruction so that its effectiveness<lb/>
may be adequately assessed.<lb/>
Since tne numoer of students who<lb/>
will be able to participate is limited,<lb/>
the course will be offered on a<lb/>
first-come, first-serve basis. Selection<lb/>
of participates will be carried out until<lb/>
October 5 in Room 204 of the<lb/>
Education-Psychology Building on the<lb/>
ECU campus. Please note this will be<lb/>
the only sign-up period.<lb/>
Brain research<lb/>
grant is awarded<lb/>
By NANCY AUSTIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Larry Means. ECU psychology<lb/>
professor, has been awarded a grant<lb/>
for research on the Korsakoff<lb/>
Syndrome brain disease.<lb/>
The $2060 grant was awarded by<lb/>
the North Carolina United Communioty<lb/>
Grant to Dr. Means for a continuation<lb/>
of his research on the defects of<lb/>
memory and learning capabilities<lb/>
associated with the Korsakoff<lb/>
Syndrome.<lb/>
Means' research is focused<lb/>
primarily on the dorsal medial thalmus<lb/>
portion of the brain which is<lb/>
responsible for the memory and<lb/>
�earning deficiencies.<lb/>
The dorsal medial thalmus, located<lb/>
just under the cerebrum, is the portion<lb/>
of the brain which seems to cause<lb/>
most memory and learning difficulties<lb/>
when damaged. "For example said<lb/>
Means, "when directing a question to a<lb/>
person with this disease, their answer<lb/>
might be totally unrelated<lb/>
With the help of assistants, Means<lb/>
has been experimenting with trained<lb/>
rats. "The dorsal medial thalmus is<lb/>
electronically destroyed explained<lb/>
Means "Then the animal is allowed to<lb/>
recover. After recovery, the rats are<lb/>
tested and it is then found that they<lb/>
cannot perform what they had been<lb/>
trained to do. They cannot be retrained<lb/>
either<lb/>
Means hopes this grant will help to<lb/>
answer a lot of questions still<lb/>
unanswered about the Korsakoff<lb/>
Syndrome.<lb/>
This syndrome is very common<lb/>
among alcoholics said Means.<lb/>
Although Means' goal is not to study<lb/>
people directly, he hopes his findings<lb/>
will bring a better understanding of the<lb/>
brain structure important for learning<lb/>
and memory processes.<lb/>
Institute aids local economic development<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU in conjunction with the U.S.<lb/>
Economic Development Administration<lb/>
has an active and beneficial<lb/>
organization in the ECU Regional<lb/>
Development Insitutue.<lb/>
The institute was authorized in<lb/>
April, 1964 for the purpose of aiding<lb/>
the economic development of 32<lb/>
eastern North Carolina counties. It<lb/>
fills this task by utilizing the resources<lb/>
of the university in the form of the<lb/>
faculty and students of various<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
The institute approaches its tasks<lb/>
with a project-oriented view. In this<lb/>
manner it has completed 142 projects<lb/>
during the twelve month period from<lb/>
July, 1972 to July, 1973. Each project<lb/>
is generally from three to six months in<lb/>
duration. The topics have ranged from<lb/>
developing a state part in the Great<lb/>
Dismal Swamp, to encouraging<lb/>
entrepreneurship in the black com-<lb/>
munity with small business loans.<lb/>
The organization of the institute<lb/>
consists of five major divisions, the<lb/>
first of which is informational<lb/>
services. This division provides<lb/>
interested enterprises with statistics<lb/>
involving four hundred factors for each<lb/>
enumeration district in its area of<lb/>
service. The second division is<lb/>
community development, whose con-<lb/>
cern is for the infrastructure of the<lb/>
community. Such problems as water<lb/>
systems, sewage, fire protection, and<lb/>
related problems are dealt with by this<lb/>
division.<lb/>
The third division is that of<lb/>
managerial consultation. This office<lb/>
offers advice and counseling to small<lb/>
businesses in the areas of manaqe-<lb/>
m<lb/>
ment and financing. Conferences and<lb/>
seminars are handled by the fourth<lb/>
division. This office takes the attitude<lb/>
of telling industry "how to do it instead<lb/>
of not to do it<lb/>
The fifth and final division is that of<lb/>
special projects. This office deals with<lb/>
particular studies that will aid in<lb/>
attracting industry to the area. Two<lb/>
projects of note have dealt with New<lb/>
East, a magazine designed to attract<lb/>
industry and development to the area,<lb/>
and the feasibility of barge sights<lb/>
along the naviqable rivers of the state<lb/>
which will benefit about 50 new<lb/>
Garrett dorm<lb/>
Continued from page one.<lb/>
Garrett dorm is less than a month<lb/>
along in its experiment. Although<lb/>
most residents feel there is little or no<lb/>
difference living in their co-ed<lb/>
situation, there have been no reported<lb/>
disadvantages. Many students did say<lb/>
they felt that relationships between<lb/>
men and women were more<lb/>
relaxed. Several male residents said<lb/>
they enjoyed being able to meet and<lb/>
get to know girls on a friend-to-friend<lb/>
basis rather than as dates. No<lb/>
residents expressed any incon-<lb/>
veniences.<lb/>
That is how the co-ed experiment<lb/>
stands now. The majority feels there<lb/>
are no disadvantages, nor advantages,<lb/>
the administrators are hopeful and<lb/>
confident. However, as the year goes<lb/>
on, what the residents do and feel will<lb/>
determine the success and contin-<lb/>
uance of co-ed living on the ECU<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
industries that the area hopes to draw<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
According to Mr. Tom Willis, the<lb/>
head of the institute, there are two<lb/>
particularly important studies that the<lb/>
institute has made that have had an<lb/>
effect on areas other than those in the<lb/>
institute's concern The first is a<lb/>
computerized industrial location<lb/>
system, which provides a file<lb/>
pertaining to the advantages of<lb/>
communities for industrial growth.<lb/>
This system has been implemented in<lb/>
several other states with great<lb/>
success. The second study was the<lb/>
construction of the first environmental<lb/>
wet site. The significance of this is<lb/>
that it was the first time that<lb/>
government agencies were called upon<lb/>
to place all restrictions necessary for<lb/>
environmental control before the site<lb/>
was offered for consideration by<lb/>
industry.<lb/>
At present the institute is<lb/>
constructing a conference office center<lb/>
(Story and photo found elsewhere) here<lb/>
in Greenville to allow much needed<lb/>
expansion of the institute and facilities<lb/>
for multiday conferences.<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/>
<pb facs="00039876_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEAD 20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 4<lb/>
mm<lb/>
$mm<lb/>
Park destroys few<lb/>
remaining grizzlies<lb/>
PARK SERVICE DESTROYING FEW<lb/>
REGAINING GRIZZLIES NOTED WILD-<lb/>
LIFE ECOLOGIST CHARGES<lb/>
A short-sighted National Park<lb/>
Service policy may have needlessly<lb/>
destroyed over half of the few<lb/>
remaining grizzly bears in Yellowstone<lb/>
National Park and is also insuring the<lb/>
virtual extermination of the rest,<lb/>
according to a renowned U.S.<lb/>
ecologist.<lb/>
In an interview in the October-<lb/>
November issue of National Wildlife<lb/>
Magazine, published by the National<lb/>
Wildlife Federation, Dr. Frank C.<lb/>
Craighead, Jr. discusses the grizzlies<lb/>
and their future in the Yellowstone<lb/>
ecosystem, an area embracing four<lb/>
national forests and three Western<lb/>
states, Wyoming, Idaho, and Montana.<lb/>
Dr. Craighead, who, along with his<lb/>
scientist brother. Dr. John J.<lb/>
Craighead. intensively researched the<lb/>
bears' lives and habits from 1959<lb/>
through 1968, believes that the current<lb/>
inflexible policy of the agency is<lb/>
forcing the bears to make their last<lb/>
stand in the area.<lb/>
Though the Craigheads' research<lb/>
findings could reportedly reverse the<lb/>
growing pattern of bear-man con-<lb/>
frontations in the area, the Park<lb/>
Service vehemently disagrees. In<lb/>
addition, it has effectively barred them<lb/>
from further research in Yellowstone, �<lb/>
through restrictions on their work and<lb/>
publications of their research findings.<lb/>
The controversy centers on the<lb/>
earth fill garbage dumps located<lb/>
throughout Yellowstone. Over the<lb/>
years, explains Dr. Craighead, the<lb/>
grizzly population gradually changed<lb/>
its movement and behavior patterns to<lb/>
depend on the available food in the<lb/>
dumps.<lb/>
The dumps became a part of the<lb/>
bears' way of life explained Dr.<lb/>
Craighead. They are a part of the total<lb/>
ecology and the situation could not be<lb/>
suddenly altered without affecting the<lb/>
behavior, the movements, the repro-<lb/>
ductive success and the mortality rate<lb/>
of the grizzly bear population<lb/>
In 1967, the Park Service came out<lb/>
with a plan to close down the dumps in<lb/>
order to keep the bears away from<lb/>
people. The Craigheads agreed with<lb/>
the principle and, in a 113-page report,<lb/>
recommended that the dumps, a<lb/>
primary source of food for the bears,<lb/>
be slowly phased out while<lb/>
supplementary rations were provided<lb/>
during the period. They argued that<lb/>
this slow, scientific method would<lb/>
keep grizzlies away from campgrounds<lb/>
and decrease the danger to campers as<lb/>
well as to the bears.<lb/>
Instead, the Park Service shut the<lb/>
dumps down quickly and, true to the<lb/>
Craighead's predictions, the bears<lb/>
moved into the campgrounds, pushing<lb/>
camper injuries up over 40 per cent<lb/>
during the 1968-1972 period of revised<lb/>
management.<lb/>
"Along with the program of rapidly<lb/>
removing the earth fill dumps, there<lb/>
was a policy to trap the bears in the<lb/>
campgrounds and transport them some<lb/>
distance away reports Dr. Craighead<lb/>
in the NATIONAL WILDLIFE interview.<lb/>
"If an individual bear returned a second<lb/>
time, it was often killed<lb/>
During 1968-1970, the average<lb/>
number of grizzlies killed was<lb/>
reportedly three times the average of<lb/>
the preceding nine years. And,<lb/>
although only a "minimum of 175, a<lb/>
maximum of about 250, lives in the<lb/>
Yellowstone ecosystem In 1987 a<lb/>
total of 118 known grizzly bear deaths<lb/>
occured in the area during 1970-1972.<lb/>
When asked why the Park Service<lb/>
didn't supply supplemental food,<lb/>
Craighead answers that the agency<lb/>
assumes, "without proof that there<lb/>
are two populations of grizzlies-one<lb/>
that feeds at garbage dumps, the other<lb/>
a wild, free-roaming population.<lb/>
"On the contrary Craighead notes,<lb/>
"our information, gathered through<lb/>
thousands of observations of both<lb/>
marked and unmarked animals and<lb/>
ones fitted with radios, indicated that<lb/>
almost all of the grizzlies in the<lb/>
Yellowstone ecosystem sooner or later<lb/>
visited these dumps.<lb/>
"So, if the Yellowstone adminis-<lb/>
tration continues its policy of<lb/>
eliminating bears that visit the dumps,<lb/>
or that are forced into nearby<lb/>
campgrounds Craighead adds, "they<lb/>
will eventually eliminate nearly all the<lb/>
grizzlies<lb/>
See Grizzlies on page 5<lb/>
WE PLEAD GUILTY<lb/>
TO CROSS TOWN BUSING<lb/>
Sunday Bus To 1st Presbyterian Church<lb/>
Rev. R. R. Gammon, Pastor<lb/>
Church SchoolMo mi rip- Worship<lb/>
' �: 30 A. M.10:30 A. K.<lb/>
9:3510: 35<lb/>
9010:I0<lb/>
'M51.0:15<lb/>
rom<lb/>
Gotten Ilall<lb/>
White-Greene Area<lb/>
7ms tea d :Iall<lb/>
College Hill-Tyler<lb/>
n0et on board .There 'a room for many a morel"<lb/>
Vets and servicemen use<lb/>
Gl Bill to progress<lb/>
Educationally disadvantaged<lb/>
veterans and servicemen using the Gl<lb/>
Bill made substantial educational<lb/>
progress in fiscal year 1973, according<lb/>
to H. W. Johnson, Director of the<lb/>
Winston-Salem Veterans Adminis-<lb/>
tration Regional Office.<lb/>
Johnson reported that 130,000<lb/>
trained and used free entitlement<lb/>
during the year, or before. A total of<lb/>
196,000 veterans and servicemen, have<lb/>
received free entitlement since it<lb/>
became available to veterans in 1967,<lb/>
and servicemen in 1970.<lb/>
Johnson also noted that 428,000<lb/>
educationally disadvantaged trainees<lb/>
have taken some form of Gl Bill<lb/>
"catch-up" training since 1966.<lb/>
"We make a special effort to<lb/>
encourage these veterans to take<lb/>
advantage of the Gl Bill because of the<lb/>
profound effect it can have on their<lb/>
lives he pointed out.<lb/>
crossword puzzle<lb/>
A veteran or serviceman is<lb/>
considered educationally disad-<lb/>
vantaged if he was a high school<lb/>
dropout, or completed high school but<lb/>
needs refresher, deficiency or other<lb/>
courses to qualify for advanced<lb/>
training.<lb/>
Johnson explained that under the<lb/>
free entitlement program, VA pays<lb/>
monthly training allowances but time<lb/>
spent training is not charged against<lb/>
the total Gl Bill time to which the<lb/>
trainee is entitled.<lb/>
The pay of $220 a month for single<lb/>
veterans training full time  more for<lb/>
trainees with dependents.<lb/>
Details on Gl Bi<lb/>
available at any VA<lb/>
representatives of<lb/>
service organizations.<lb/>
II eligibility are<lb/>
office, or from<lb/>
local veterans<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Swig<lb/>
4 Capital of<lb/>
Latvia<lb/>
8 Cancer<lb/>
12 Tonal language<lb/>
13 Rickenbacker<lb/>
and the Red<lb/>
Baron<lb/>
14 Occurs by<lb/>
chance (arch.)<lb/>
15 Drama Joe<lb/>
16 Dog<lb/>
18 Flanders<lb/>
(lower<lb/>
20 Used with<lb/>
shift and box<lb/>
21 Comparative<lb/>
suffix<lb/>
22 Bog<lb/>
23 Shade of<lb/>
green<lb/>
27 Finished first<lb/>
29 Jolt<lb/>
30 Character<lb/>
from Peanuts<lb/>
31 Article<lb/>
32 Range of<lb/>
knowledge<lb/>
33 Catcher in<lb/>
the -��<lb/>
34 Steamship lab )<lb/>
35 Fragrance<lb/>
37 View<lb/>
38 River in<lb/>
Scotland<lb/>
39 Soccer hero<lb/>
40 Insect<lb/>
41 Symbol helium<lb/>
42 Used with<lb/>
drome and<lb/>
nautical<lb/>
44 Kind of hemp<lb/>
47 Character from<lb/>
Peanuts<lb/>
51 Australian bird<lb/>
52 Sea eagle<lb/>
53 Saber's cousin<lb/>
54 Fabulous bird<lb/>
of prey<lb/>
55 Exploit<lb/>
56 Auld lang<lb/>
57 Attempt<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Footfall<lb/>
2 Othello's<lb/>
nemesis<lb/>
3 Character<lb/>
from Peanuts<lb/>
4 Risque<lb/>
5 liebe dich<lb/>
6 Kind of<lb/>
counter<lb/>
7 Pallid<lb/>
8 Character<lb/>
from Peanuts<lb/>
9 Gridiron<lb/>
cheer<lb/>
10 Movie The<lb/>
World of<lb/>
11 Youth<lb/>
organization<lb/>
lab.)<lb/>
17 University<lb/>
of Arizona (ab.)<lb/>
19 Abbreviation<lb/>
used in adver<lb/>
tiling<lb/>
22 Aficcionado<lb/>
24 The doctor is<lb/>
25 Terpsichore,<lb/>
for example<lb/>
26 Being (Lai.)<lb/>
27 Sociologist's<lb/>
term<lb/>
28 One time<lb/>
29 A certain<lb/>
set<lb/>
30 Soap ingredient<lb/>
32 Squeezed<lb/>
33 Soak<lb/>
36 Dorado<lb/>
37 Character from<lb/>
Peanuts<lb/>
38 Gobi, for one<lb/>
40 Palacio de<lb/>
Bellas<lb/>
41 Greeting<lb/>
43 Plural suffix<lb/>
44 Travel on thin<lb/>
runners (var)<lb/>
45 Love Spanish<lb/>
style<lb/>
46 World's<lb/>
greatest<lb/>
fussbudget<lb/>
47 Spliced<lb/>
48 Bauxite<lb/>
49 Any number<lb/>
divided by itself<lb/>
50 Period of time<lb/>
(ab.)<lb/>
7' 119135t' 1!11 91011<lb/>
I?14<lb/>
15 II16 i�?47571<lb/>
20� 30"<lb/>
B"r<lb/>
V71<lb/>
31 351"<lb/>
m 43<lb/>
11�i47� 50<lb/>
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Distr. by Puzzles. Inc No 109<lb/>
MARRIED STUDENTS SIGN UP NOW!<lb/>
Join our Couples Club. Enjoy an inexpensive supper out every other week.<lb/>
Meet new friends. Talk about topics of personl interest to you. Sponsored<lb/>
by the Presbyterian Student Center - 401 East Ninth St. Next meeting<lb/>
Wednesday Sept. 26 at 6:30 p.m. Call John N. Miller, campus minister, at<lb/>
752-7240 to get your name in!<lb/>
I<lb/>
F<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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is<lb/>
<pb facs="00039876_0005"/><lb/>
nan is<lb/>
disad-<lb/>
school<lb/>
hool but<lb/>
Dr other<lb/>
idvanced<lb/>
ider the<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAD20 SiPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO.4<lb/>
5<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
w i mm ii mm<lb/>
MWM<lb/>
�wxii mm<lb/>
Grizzlies<lb/>
For the future, Craighead recom-<lb/>
mends that the Park Service put into<lb/>
effect the recommendations based on<lb/>
computer analysis of the grizzly<lb/>
population developed by his brother.<lb/>
The recommendations were previously<lb/>
rejected by the Interior agency. He<lb/>
also urges that supplemental natural<lb/>
food be put out to "attract grizzlies and<lb/>
zone them from people<lb/>
"Because our findings were<lb/>
contrary to existing policy further<lb/>
research on the bears by the<lb/>
Craigheads has been essentially barred<lb/>
by the Park Service.<lb/>
To date said Craighead, "I have<lb/>
not had an opportunity to discuss this<lb/>
subject or the present grizzly bear<lb/>
situation with a Park Service director or<lb/>
higher officials of the Department of<lb/>
the Interior. They have formed their<lb/>
attitudes and positions with benefit of<lb/>
information from both sides of this<lb/>
controversy. Both my brother and I<lb/>
have been excluded from recent<lb/>
meetings on the subject. If we were<lb/>
invited to discuss the subject freely<lb/>
and objectively with the Park Service<lb/>
director (Ronald Walker), I am<lb/>
confident that an understanding and a<lb/>
solution could be readily reached<lb/>
During the nine years of study in<lb/>
the Yellowstone area, the Craigheads<lb/>
found that the population increased by<lb/>
about six grizzlies per year. "In the five<lb/>
years of new management policies<lb/>
reports Dr. Frank Craiahead, "the<lb/>
conditions completely changed and<lb/>
modalities have greatly exceeded<lb/>
births. If this policy continues, it will<lb/>
eliminate the grizzly in this area<lb/>
The grizzly bears' original territory<lb/>
extended over much of an almost<lb/>
continuous range from the eastern<lb/>
edge of the Great Plains westward to<lb/>
the Pacific, and from the Artie coast of<lb/>
Alaska in the north to Mexico in the<lb/>
south.<lb/>
"Today, the grizzly has vanished<lb/>
from most of its former haunts and<lb/>
.only survives in large wilderness 3reas<lb/>
in Alaska and Canada as well as in<lb/>
Glacier and Yellowstone National<lb/>
Parks in the U.S. There are also a<lb/>
handful, probably less than 10, located<lb/>
in Washington. All of these<lb/>
populations are isolated, and, with a<lb/>
few exceptions, are in danger of<lb/>
extinction.<lb/>
Mavis Ray is living<lb/>
in a'world of dance'<lb/>
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS<lb/>
Mozart's music blared from the<lb/>
corner of the bare, dusty-floored studio<lb/>
as a short, red-haired, bright-featured<lb/>
woman appeared in her pink skirt.<lb/>
black tiqhts and well worn dance<lb/>
shoes.<lb/>
She walked casually among<lb/>
students lined up along a bar that<lb/>
encircled the mirror-walled room, then<lb/>
threw her foot gracefully above her<lb/>
head, demonstrating the exact form<lb/>
and position that she wanted. Shout-<lb/>
ing in a stern, but reassuring,<lb/>
English-accented voice she said. "I get<lb/>
the feeling that you think dancing to<lb/>
Mozart is easy .Well, it's not<lb/>
her mother enrolled her in her first<lb/>
dance class. Now, after a long and<lb/>
successful career, she continues to<lb/>
dance, but in a teaching rather than<lb/>
performing capacity.<lb/>
She is presently the head of the<lb/>
dance department at East Carolina<lb/>
University, where she has taught<lb/>
classical ballet and jazz dance since<lb/>
1964 She also ooes the choreography<lb/>
for "The Lost Colony" at the Waterside<lb/>
Thestre in Manteo. N.C and for the<lb/>
ECU Summer Theatre<lb/>
OKLAHOMA<lb/>
"I can't remember a time when I<lb/>
wasn't dancing sayd Miss Ray. Born<lb/>
in England. Miss Ray started her career<lb/>
as a dancer on the West End Stage of<lb/>
London, dancing at the London<lb/>
Palladium and appearing in revues with<lb/>
Noel Coward and the Sadler's Wells<lb/>
Ballet.<lb/>
See First pro' appearance on page 10.<lb/>
o<lb/>
-<lb/>
f1<lb/>
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KMUSARIE6A10MDAV<lb/>
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CONVMIItfCI IT NOW IT<lb/>
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10IS. TIMI IS IMPOITANT -<lb/>
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1V � �-�-���-�  v<lb/>
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8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5 N0.4<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
iirn.irrTT<lb/>
EditorralsCommenlary<lb/>
Editor's note: Those readers seeking deep motivation, great causes and the<lb/>
meaning of life are advised to avoid the following editorial, which was written<lb/>
primarily as an exorcism of sober spirits<lb/>
Where is everyone?<lb/>
Doesn't anyone write letters to the editor these days? Whatever happened<lb/>
to the nutty classified ad9 We bemoan the passing of both<lb/>
WELLSPRINGS<lb/>
Somewhere on this campus, someone is longing to scream out in loud<lb/>
print about some injustice, real or imagined. Someone has written a letter to<lb/>
the Forum and thrown it away, afraid to put it in the paper. At any rate,<lb/>
someone has been withholding all these wellspnngs of emotion from<lb/>
Fountainhead, since the Forum showing has been remarkably low.<lb/>
Are we printing a newspaper in a void? Is anyone listening? Have we no<lb/>
enemies Remember us? We're roughly $30,000 of your funds: speak to us.<lb/>
PROSAIC b IM11<lb/>
Which brings us to topic two. The Ad. Having a penchant for the absurd,<lb/>
this editor has been waxing sorrowful over the prosaic state of the ECU<lb/>
imagination. "For Rent: Etc seems to be the standard classified<lb/>
formula Tucked away somewhere is a student attemDting to rent a kayak made<lb/>
ennreiy or old nose warmers, or a pair of sweat socks for a large whale, or a<lb/>
large, autographed picture of Harold Stassen's mother-in-law. Where are you<lb/>
We envy those publications who seem to be bombarded with clever and<lb/>
half-cracked classified hounds. Of these. The Richmond Mercury and<lb/>
Saturday ReviewWorld seem to be the best<lb/>
"We are pleasea to announce tne union of one mustache and two<lb/>
sideburns on the face of Abel Mclver says the Mercury. "Good going Mac<lb/>
Or: "GOING WILD in the City Jail, So all of my people on the outside,<lb/>
write or come to see me. Franklin Driaqs<lb/>
CRYPTIC AND STRANGE<lb/>
Thus fares the Mercury, its classifieds becoming more cryptic and strange<lb/>
each week SR, however, rates no. 1 on the absurdity chart, provina that even<lb/>
Norman Cousins. Esteemed Publisners and people in High Places go insane<lb/>
on occasion - or at least let insanity slip into print. I he thought is refreshing.<lb/>
HAVE YOU EVER DREAMED of spending a vacation in an<lb/>
oversized bird-bath9 Our pool-cum-cage is made with<lb/>
surplus metal parts of Sherman tanks. Write Big Wet Bird,<lb/>
SRW Box U.T.<lb/>
FEELING DEPRESSED FOR NO REASON? We supply up to<lb/>
a dozen reasons for feeling depressed. Dark Horizons, Inc.<lb/>
SRW Box L.Z.<lb/>
COMMON SENSE<lb/>
Absurdity is an art, and an art to be respected in a world where most of us<lb/>
are required to be adult, and practical and swimming in common sense. We<lb/>
recall some of our favorites: the SR cartoon of a few years back, showina a<lb/>
doleful man in a clown suit, surrounded by magician's rabbits and broken<lb/>
toys. In the background is his wife, saying, None of us can be happy all of<lb/>
the time. Farley<lb/>
Or the latest National Lampoon, with the final panel of one cartoon<lb/>
showing an aging actress' husband storming out of the house.<lb/>
"Madame is not troubled he says, "Madame is a damned nut<lb/>
Where there is no humor, or wit, or opinion, or at minimum, some totally<lb/>
irrevelant, absurd commentary there must be little mind. Or, worse, there<lb/>
must be an overabundance of pomposity, the dread sin of believing oneself to<lb/>
be Important and Indispensable, the feeling that one is above making a total<lb/>
idiot of oneself by writing a letter to a newspaper or taking out a classified ad<lb/>
reading,<lb/>
Don't worry Elmo, very soon the world will be free for all the<lb/>
bunnies to roam in. Best to you, Figbert.<lb/>
Or, in a more classical vein,<lb/>
IN MEMORIAM - Richard Plantagenet, "Piteously slain and<lb/>
murdered August 22, 1485.<lb/>
We worry about the state of ECU if it lacks even the time in which to be<lb/>
irrevelant. PerhaDS the form-filling bureaucracy of registration week hasn't<lb/>
worn off yet. We hope this is the case; 10,000 minds are at stake<lb/>
To close, we quote the moving words of a SR classified:<lb/>
A SCIENTIFIC BREAKTHROUGH perfected by our<lb/>
round-the-clock biochemists permits a tough vinyl sole to<lb/>
be glued on your feet - giving you instant protection. Amaze<lb/>
your friends by stamping "barefoot" on l;qhted cigars,<lb/>
cigarettes, and broken glass without ill effects<lb/>
Prove you're alive. Write us, or send notes tied to rocks, but don't let this<lb/>
great opportunity to be in print pass you by. It's enough to make a person<lb/>
weep<lb/>
Comments on Nixon<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
By T. COFFIN<lb/>
PRESIDENTIAL WITHDRAWAL-Presi-<lb/>
dent Nixon may retire from office<lb/>
before the end of the year, because of<lb/>
a physical breakdown. He has virtually<lb/>
no other "honorable" exit from the<lb/>
shadows that grow around him. The<lb/>
next phase of the Watergate<lb/>
investigation may be more shocking<lb/>
than the first, and show "laundering"<lb/>
of campaign funds through Mafia<lb/>
channels. The economy is in trouble.<lb/>
Public opinion has soured.<lb/>
The Cox grand juries are certain to<lb/>
indict key members of the Adminis-<lb/>
tration and White House staff. A<lb/>
supreme Court decision on White<lb/>
House tapes will not be a clear victory<lb/>
for the President. Discussion of the<lb/>
President's health is now in the open.<lb/>
Columnist Nicholas Von Hoffman<lb/>
writes. "The impression is gaining that<lb/>
Nixon is dysfunctional (August 23)<lb/>
The 25th Amendment provides the<lb/>
President may send Congress "his<lb/>
written declaration that he is unable to<lb/>
discharge the powers and duties of his<lb/>
office Before he was President, in<lb/>
conditions of stress, Nixon suffered<lb/>
severe psychosomatic illness, and was<lb/>
treated by a New York psychiatrist.<lb/>
The pneumonia that sent him to the<lb/>
hospital this summer is a typical<lb/>
response-among some people-to high<lb/>
stress. This may be coupled with a<lb/>
suicidal "death wish<lb/>
Nixon is being urged to nominate<lb/>
as Vice President, if Agnew has to step<lb/>
down, either Governor Nelson Rocke-<lb/>
feller of New York or Secretary of State<lb/>
William Rogers, an old friend.<lb/>
THE ECONOMY NIXON'S FOUR<lb/>
BONERS -Four decisions by the<lb/>
President set file to what the New York<lb/>
Times calls "precarious times for the<lb/>
American economy The symptoms<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Time forecasts, "Food prices at the<lb/>
end of December could easily be 25<lb/>
percent above those January 1 The<lb/>
Times says hopefully the "absurd price<lb/>
levels" of food may be slipping due to<lb/>
"buyer resistance The rise in food<lb/>
costs "is devastating for perhaps a<lb/>
majority of American families says<lb/>
the Christian Science Monitor. "Take<lb/>
someone with an income of $10,000.<lb/>
Assume he is married and has two<lb/>
children. After Federal income and<lb/>
social security taxes-but before state<lb/>
income or property taxes-he has about<lb/>
$700 a month to live on. To add $10 a<lb/>
week to the food budget is going to<lb/>
put a severe strain on the family. It<lb/>
also seems most likely to cut into<lb/>
spending on consumer durables<lb/>
(August 11) Business Work reports,<lb/>
"The poor are fighting had to subsist<lb/>
Costs are up along the line. The<lb/>
Dow Jones Commodity Index-food,<lb/>
fibers and rubber-has jumped 60<lb/>
percent since January, and is still<lb/>
moving up. The tax Foundation finds<lb/>
an American family with a 35 percent<lb/>
increase in pay has less purchasing<lb/>
power than in 1966. A married man<lb/>
who made $1o, in 1966 and has<lb/>
m<lb/>
received $3,500 in raises actually gets<lb/>
about $466 less than his net seven<lb/>
years ago.<lb/>
"Almost all economists agree that<lb/>
an economic slowdown is in the cards<lb/>
for next year. They are split on<lb/>
whether the slowdown will degenerate<lb/>
into something worse (Business<lb/>
Week) AFL-CIO president George<lb/>
Meany sees a recession "before the<lb/>
end of the year<lb/>
A fuel oil shortage is coming this<lb/>
winter, and the Monitor says,<lb/>
"Shortage of key raw materials are<lb/>
hampering production of auto,<lb/>
chemical, fiber and nonferrous metals<lb/>
industries. . Among the most fre-<lb/>
quently cited items in tight supply are<lb/>
copper, z c, electric motors, forgings<lb/>
and paper products A spokesman for<lb/>
the National Association of Purchasing<lb/>
Managements says, "The list of<lb/>
industrial commodities in short supply<lb/>
has gotten so lengthy we no longer<lb/>
bother to publish it<lb/>
NIXON ON ECONOMICS-The President<lb/>
is bored with economics and does not<lb/>
like bad news. So his advisors<lb/>
gingerly avoid bothering him, and last<lb/>
November White House assistant<lb/>
Robert H. Finch announced "that Mr.<lb/>
Nixon had successfully eliminated the<lb/>
two chief obstacles to social prograss -<lb/>
the Vietnam War and inflation<lb/>
reported the Times (November 22).<lb/>
Early in his Administration, Nixon<lb/>
had a chance to shore up the economy,<lb/>
but let the chance go by.<lb/>
The engine of inflation, balance of<lb/>
payments deficits and unbalanced<lb/>
budgets is war and overseas military<lb/>
spending. As far back as 1954, one of<lb/>
America's greatest economic prophets<lb/>
warned this burden could not be borne<lb/>
indefinitely. MarrinerS. Eccles, former<lb/>
chairman of the Federal Reserve<lb/>
Board, said on May 3, 1954: "We<lb/>
should know by now that Communism<lb/>
cannot be contained by isolated<lb/>
military efforts around the world and<lb/>
the cost in blood and treasure in<lb/>
attempting to do is formidable,<lb/>
endless and futile. It would be far less<lb/>
costly and more successful to use our<lb/>
staff<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSSkip 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, 758-6367<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-<lb/>
students.<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
<pb facs="00039876_0008"/><lb/>
ECU<lb/>
wrnwrnm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD20 SEPT.<lb/>
1973VOL. 5, N0.4<lb/>
wmmamm<lb/>
9<lb/>
�mm<lb/>
The military, profits and wheat<lb/>
continued from page 8<lb/>
knowledge and substance to create<lb/>
economic and political conditions in<lb/>
the backward countries of the world<lb/>
which the Communists cannot<lb/>
exploit<lb/>
The Times puts the problem<lb/>
succinctly. The U.S. has been<lb/>
spending more than it earned for<lb/>
twenty years. Billions of dollars not<lb/>
backed by productive resources were<lb/>
printed fo finance spending for "the<lb/>
Vietnam war, troops in Europe, the<lb/>
'bomb the whole defense effort,<lb/>
foreign aid, foreign investments,<lb/>
imports on foreign goods, spending by<lb/>
American tourists (abroad)<lb/>
The failure o' our foreign military<lb/>
program is evident in Indo-China. A<lb/>
newspaper usually favorable to Nixon<lb/>
and his foreign policy, the Financial<lb/>
Times of London, writes: "None of<lb/>
the problems of Southeast Asia has<lb/>
been solved or even eased by American<lb/>
involvement; in many respects the<lb/>
situation is recognizably the same as it<lb/>
was ten years ago: and even the<lb/>
Vietnam cease-fire has proved to be a<lb/>
complete illusion (August 16)<lb/>
Nixon, elected on a pledge to end<lb/>
the war, could have taken effective<lb/>
action-stop the fighting and begin<lb/>
closing down our overseas military<lb/>
bases. They cost an estimated $30<lb/>
billion a year. Instead, he prolonged<lb/>
the war and increased military<lb/>
spending, the first boner.<lb/>
This put a heavy drag on the<lb/>
Treasury and the balance of payments,<lb/>
and made a new drain on such<lb/>
resources as metals and petroleum.<lb/>
Rep. Henry Reuss, a member of the<lb/>
Joint Economic Committee, also<lb/>
proposes-tighter investment tax<lb/>
credits, close tax loopholes for the<lb/>
wealthy, tighten controls on install-<lb/>
ment credit, and restore Phase II for<lb/>
steel, autos, aluminum and chemicals.<lb/>
THE PROFITS DECISION-A second<lb/>
error was to focus the Nixon economic<lb/>
program on profits, or the "trickle<lb/>
down" theory. The last President to try<lb/>
this was Herbert Hoover, and it created<lb/>
a flashy boom and then a bust. For the<lb/>
second quarter of this year, corporate<lb/>
profits before taxes were 37 percent<lb/>
above a year earlier, at "the record<lb/>
annual rate of $130.1 billion This,<lb/>
says the Times, is sure to bring tough<lb/>
new labor demands this fall.<lb/>
The profit climb is, in many cases,<lb/>
at the expense of consumers, and so<lb/>
shrinks the market. For example, the<lb/>
Civil Aeronautics Board chairman,<lb/>
Robert B. Timm, says his "major goal<lb/>
is to improve airline prcts reports<lb/>
the New York Times Magazine (August<lb/>
12). So air fares have gone up 22<lb/>
percent in the last five years, and are<lb/>
still climbing. "Economic estimates<lb/>
suggest that, without CAB, you could<lb/>
fly from New York to Los Angeles for<lb/>
$95 (the present fare if $169), from<lb/>
Washington to Chicago for $33 (as<lb/>
compared to $52)<lb/>
THE EXPORT OF U.S. FOOD<lb/>
PRODUCTS-A third mistake was the<lb/>
Nixon decision to ship our American<lb/>
farm products to ease the balance of<lb/>
payments deficit, rather than cutback<lb/>
on overseas military spending. "In the<lb/>
last six months agricultural exports<lb/>
have nett<lb/>
"writes Roscoe Drummond in the<lb/>
Monitor (August 18). This has been at<lb/>
the cost of skyrocketing food prices at<lb/>
home. Jack Anderson points out an<lb/>
irony: "At the same time that our<lb/>
Federal managers are struggling to<lb/>
hold down food prices, they are<lb/>
spending $12 million a year to promote<lb/>
agricultural sales overseas. These<lb/>
sales reduce the food stocks at home<lb/>
and drive up prices .The sales efforts<lb/>
produced $13 billion worth of export<lb/>
business, which has left the<lb/>
supermarkets at home short of some<lb/>
foodsMost of the benefits go to the<lb/>
agri-corporations, not to the economy<lb/>
at large<lb/>
The most disastrous deal was what<lb/>
the Times calls "the colossal American<lb/>
grain giveaway to the Soviet Union, the<lb/>
inflationary effects of which have<lb/>
already cost this country hundreds of<lb/>
millions and perhaps even billions of<lb/>
dollars (July 25)<lb/>
According to this account:<lb/>
"Soviet buyers slipped into the U.S.<lb/>
and made secret purchase deals with a<lb/>
series of American grain exporters at<lb/>
low prices that didn't reflect the real<lb/>
supply-demand situation The U.S.<lb/>
Government further paid the exporters<lb/>
a subsidy of $300 million. "A direct<lb/>
connection can be seen between the<lb/>
huge Soviet grain purchases-at what�<lb/>
now looks like giveaway prices-and<lb/>
that crisis. . .as livestock and chicken<lb/>
raisers found it unprofitable to<lb/>
continue their output because of the<lb/>
rocketing cost of feed The higher<lb/>
costs have spread to meat and bread.<lb/>
Russia, apparently, has used the<lb/>
grain for political and economic<lb/>
advantage. The Times reports from<lb/>
Moscow (August 16): "While American<lb/>
housewives are paying higher prices<lb/>
for baked goods. Russian bread<lb/>
remains one of the biggest consumer<lb/>
bargains in the Soviet Union. Moscow<lb/>
shoppers. . are unlikely to suspect<lb/>
that it may have been enriched with<lb/>
flour made from American grain<lb/>
News of the purchases have been<lb/>
carefully shielded The Government<lb/>
keeps the "fresh, fragant bread" at low<lb/>
fixed prj'x-c.<lb/>
According to press reports. Russia<lb/>
has shipped grain to South Asia to<lb/>
bolster its political position there in its<lb/>
contest with China. The Monitor adds<lb/>
(August 15): "Grain traders at the<lb/>
Chicago Board of Trade have heard<lb/>
reports that the Soviet Union has<lb/>
resold wheat purchases from the U.S.<lb/>
last yearto improve its foreign-<lb/>
exchange reserves Russia bought<lb/>
the wheat at $1.80 a bushel, and can<lb/>
sell it for close to $5.<lb/>
orum<lb/>
Guest editorial: On Allende<lb/>
By MITCHELL REEP<lb/>
The recent economic upheaval in Chile, the tragedy of Salvador Allende, and the<lb/>
establishment of yet another military junta in Latin America has been met with<lb/>
marked indifference throughout the United States. The expressed willingness of<lb/>
American businessmen to re-invest in Chile's copper mines and Ford Motor<lb/>
Company's prospective plans for industry there indeed confirms that the coup was<lb/>
welcomed in America.<lb/>
NO SYMPATHY<lb/>
� Why has no official regret been expressed by the State Department? Why has<lb/>
there been no sympathy evinced by our great supporter of democracy abroad,<lb/>
Richard M. Nixon? Perhaps for the same reason that he befriends and supports a<lb/>
group of Greek colonels, military regimes in Brazil and Peru, and a strong-armed<lb/>
dictator in Indochina. Richard Nixon seems to have a new definition of democrary<lb/>
for Thomas Jefferson and John Locke to consider. It reads: Democracy-American<lb/>
economic and military interests.<lb/>
OPEN DEFIANCE<lb/>
It has been clear from the beginning, and is becoming clearer, that Richard<lb/>
Nixon either does not know what democracy is, or is in open defiance of it. He has<lb/>
exhibited such an attitude both within and without the United States. His<lb/>
administration has shown where its priorities lie by the cutting off of substantial<lb/>
economic aid (International Bank Loans) when Allende came to power. At the same<lb/>
time, while aware of plans for the recent coup, the United States maintained close<lb/>
military relations and supplied aid to Chile's armed forces.<lb/>
INCREDIBLY NAIVE<lb/>
The only comment we could get from official sources was "the CIA is<lb/>
clean One would have to be incredibly naive to believe such a statement. The ITT<lb/>
scandal has already surfaced CIA plans of outright sabotage of the Chilean<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to<lb/>
express their opinions in the<lb/>
Forum. Letters should be signed by<lb/>
the authors); 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 automy.<lb/>
economy. A recent film by Costa-Gravas, "State of Siege exposes what one could<lb/>
call "facist" techniques of law enforcement constantly imparted by CIA agents to<lb/>
Latin American armed forces. In our country, where not even the president is above<lb/>
suspicion of criminal activities, why should we believe merely by official statement,<lb/>
that our Central Intelligence Agency is "clean"?<lb/>
DENATIONALIZE<lb/>
But then why should any of us in the United States care about democracy in<lb/>
Chile anyway? After all, if we play our cards right, we can proceed to denationalize<lb/>
all the industries. Eric Severeid has assured us in his two-minute judgement of the<lb/>
world, that this is a trend in the third world that we can do nothing about. Why ask<lb/>
if the CIA is involved? Such a question could become as "tiresome" as<lb/>
Watergate. And finally, since Allende was a Marxist, against American principles,<lb/>
why shouldn't we back his overthrow?<lb/>
HAD PRINCIPLES<lb/>
But there, perhaps, lies the most tragic aspect of the entire affair. Allende was<lb/>
a man who "had" principles. Not just a set of rhetorical expressions-underneath<lb/>
which lay corruption and opportunism-but a set of definite ethical beliefs on<lb/>
parlimentanan and electoral matters. He was a man who preferred to die rather than<lb/>
be coerced to renounce those beliefs. In welcoming the deposition of such a man,<lb/>
Americans have once again displayed that they are primarily capitalists, and only<lb/>
secondarily committed to the idea of democracy.<lb/>
WITHOUT REVOLUTION<lb/>
Allende's example will probably prove an important lesson for those Marxists<lb/>
who were beginning to believe that it was possible to bring about a classless society<lb/>
without violent revolution. He was an example that failed, however, and if the<lb/>
capitalist world accomplished anything by the recent coup, it was placing just one<lb/>
more signature on its death warrant<lb/>
<pb facs="00039876_0009"/><lb/>
1Q<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, N0.4<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmmmmimm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
First pro<lb/>
appearance<lb/>
Continued from page five.<lb/>
Her first professional appearance<lb/>
was in London in His Maiesty's Theatre<lb/>
as a dancer in "Ballalaika She then<lb/>
auditioned and was hired as the only<lb/>
English dancer to open at Drury Lane<lb/>
Theatre in England with the<lb/>
all-American cast of "Oklahoma<lb/>
OUTSTANDING FIGURE<lb/>
In 1947, Miss Ray came to the<lb/>
United States, rapidly establishing<lb/>
herself as an outstanding figure in the<lb/>
world of dance. She began by dancing<lb/>
at Radio City Music Hall in New York<lb/>
for a season, and after a tour of the<lb/>
states, appeared in many Broadway<lb/>
shows such as "Carousel "Gentle-<lb/>
men Prefer Blondes "Paint Your<lb/>
Wagon "The King and I" and<lb/>
"Kismet<lb/>
Miss Ray also danced for the New<lb/>
York Ballet Company and the Agnes de<lb/>
Mi He Dance Theatre plus many<lb/>
television "Spectaculars "I then<lb/>
managed to get back to England to<lb/>
open the London production of<lb/>
Carousel Miss Ray says. "And again<lb/>
to reproduce Paint Your Wagon' for<lb/>
Agnes de Mille in 1953<lb/>
RIGHT ARM<lb/>
Miss Ray's first choreography was<lb/>
done for the Pittsburgh Light Opera<lb/>
and the Paper Mill Playhouse where<lb/>
she received much recognition. Later<lb/>
she became Agnes de Mille's assistant<lb/>
for several Broadway productions<lb/>
(Miss de Mille once called her "my<lb/>
staunch right arm") AND SPENT<lb/>
SEVERAL SUMMERS WITH THF St.<lb/>
Louis Municipal Opera Company.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU. Miss Ray was<lb/>
the director of the New Jersey School<lb/>
of Ballet for six vears.<lb/>
LOST COLONY<lb/>
"Recently, I've gone to London to<lb/>
assist Joe Layton. director of The Lost<lb/>
Colony with the choreographing of a<lb/>
dance for the Royal Ballet Company<lb/>
says Miss Ray, "I've also been<lb/>
assisting Agnes de Mille again in the<lb/>
formation of a new dance company for<lb/>
the N.C. School of the Arts in<lb/>
Winston-Salem which will begin in the<lb/>
spring<lb/>
Miss Ray seems very content in her<lb/>
present role as a dance instructor.<lb/>
"I'm greatly satisfied to be more on the<lb/>
teaching end of dance than on the<lb/>
performing end. I get great satis-<lb/>
faction in nurturing someone else's<lb/>
talent. Before. I didn't particularly like<lb/>
FLOYD G. ROBINSON'S<lb/>
DISCOUNT JfcWHERS<lb/>
PRESENT YQUR I.D. AND RECEIVE<lb/>
AN ADDED 251 DISCOUNT ON ALL DIAMONDS AND<lb/>
EARRINGS<lb/>
GOOD THRU SEPT. ONLY<lb/>
watching a dance, I only wanted to<lb/>
participate. Now watching dance is my<lb/>
favorite past-time<lb/>
Since she has become a teacher of<lb/>
dance, Miss Ray has developed a<lb/>
"philosophy" of teaching such a<lb/>
precise and demanding art. "I settle<lb/>
only for the right way of dancing; I<lb/>
would rather do one thing, and do it<lb/>
well, than do six things, and do them<lb/>
wrong. My philosophy sayd, 'Best is<lb/>
only good enough<lb/>
"It takes a special kind of person to<lb/>
become a professional dancer Miss<lb/>
Ray vows, "You have to love it or you<lb/>
wouldn't do it This can be seen by<lb/>
attending one of Miss Ray's<lb/>
breath-taking and face-reddening<lb/>
dance classes.<lb/>
GENERALLY PLEASANT<lb/>
As she stomps her foot, and yells<lb/>
assucingly at the students. "It's<lb/>
disgusting! Uhg one can see how<lb/>
physically and mentally demanding the<lb/>
dance profession is. "Dancers are well<lb/>
disciplined, hard-working people and<lb/>
are generally pleasant-of course, they<lb/>
work too hard and long to be<lb/>
unpleasant. . .they don't have time to<lb/>
be catty and spiteful. Most of them are<lb/>
happy, because that's what dancing is,<lb/>
a happy expression<lb/>
Miss Ray's students find her<lb/>
challenging and interesting and have a<lb/>
deep respect and admiration for the<lb/>
talent and background that she has.<lb/>
"She's the type of teacher as one<lb/>
student relates, "that you look forward<lb/>
to being criticized by. Even though it<lb/>
seems harsh and a bit painful at the<lb/>
time, it pays off when you can see<lb/>
improvement in your dancing because<lb/>
of her discipline<lb/>
"Let's turn around and do it<lb/>
o-o-o-one m-m-more time<lb/>
exaggerates Miss Ray to the class, her<lb/>
scuffed shoes a bit more dusty than<lb/>
they were a few hours earlier, but her<lb/>
eyes still sparkling.<lb/>
"Think, think, think, it's not that<lb/>
difficult. . O.K see you tomorrow<lb/>
The students applauded together,<lb/>
class being over, and walked,<lb/>
exhausted, out of the room, leaving the<lb/>
slightly blushed, yet unfaultermg<lb/>
figure of Miss Ray behind in her studio<lb/>
as she prepared for her bike ride home.<lb/>
COMPLETE LINE 6f ONYX, JADE, OPAL, AND<lb/>
CAMEO RINGS ALSO WATCHES, FLASKS AND MUGS<lb/>
j<lb/>
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SLANDERS GRAPHICS, WHERE are you? Whoever you are: Fountainhead<lb/>
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REVIEWS, WE NEED you Art, music drama, books, records we need<lb/>
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DESPERATELY NEEDED: P.E. 12 (not Healthl2( text the softbound one<lb/>
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Located at corner of J. lm &amp; E. lth !3tree t3-near College Hill<lb/>
Sunday Morning Worship: 9:00 &amp; 11:00 A.M.<lb/>
Young Adult Career &amp; University Class: 10:00 A.M.<lb/>
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FOUNTAIN HEAD20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 4<lb/>
mmmmtmtmmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
n<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Ed Rigsby loves to run<lb/>
John Evenson named new Buc<lb/>
Sports Information Director<lb/>
By STEPHEN G. TOMPKINS<lb/>
The cross-country runner. Some<lb/>
call his sport long and exhausting<lb/>
drudgery. Some say it's an ecological<lb/>
experience. Few understand him yet<lb/>
few can help but admire his quest of<lb/>
excellence.<lb/>
Ed. Rigsby, the premier runner on<lb/>
East Carolina University's cross-<lb/>
country team, knows well the life of a<lb/>
distance runner.<lb/>
Rigsby, a two time All-Conference<lb/>
and All-State selection at ECU, enters<lb/>
his junior year thirsty for Ail-American<lb/>
honors and a conference champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
A two time Eastern Regional gold<lb/>
medalist in high school in the mile,<lb/>
Rigsby believes distance running is a<lb/>
love affair.<lb/>
"You have to love to run, that's the<lb/>
key to success. To be dedicated to the<lb/>
sport and to set specific goals to<lb/>
accomplishment is the secret to<lb/>
distance running.<lb/>
"Cross-country is much more<lb/>
enjoyable than track. Six miles around<lb/>
a track is dull. But in cross-country<lb/>
you have this beautiful landscape to<lb/>
run over. Twenty-four laps around a<lb/>
track blows your mind but running in<lb/>
the woods and fields is actually fun<lb/>
Confronting Rigsby and his<lb/>
teammates this year will be a William<lb/>
and Mary team picked among the top<lb/>
ten cross-country teams in the nation.<lb/>
"If (Gerald) Klas and (Jerry) Hillard<lb/>
and myself can place high in the<lb/>
conference meet and a couple of our<lb/>
freshmen can finish in the top thirty, I<lb/>
think we can finish a strong<lb/>
second. And with a little luck we can<lb/>
challenge William and Mary<lb/>
Like many athletes Rigsby began in<lb/>
baseball.<lb/>
"I st" led out in baseball in New<lb/>
Mexico. We used to run laps after<lb/>
practice and I always finished first. I<lb/>
went out for track but the coach was<lb/>
more interested in the sprinters than<lb/>
anyone else<lb/>
The turning point in Rigsby's career<lb/>
came when his family moved to New<lb/>
York. There he came under the<lb/>
coaching of Richard Douglas, a former<lb/>
gold medalist at the British<lb/>
Commonwealth games.<lb/>
"Mr. Douglas was and still is the<lb/>
chief inspiration in my distance<lb/>
running. I left New York my junior year<lb/>
and came to North Carolina, but we<lb/>
still communicate. Being a former<lb/>
champion he knew his sport and all the<lb/>
runners respected his judgement. Its<lb/>
important to a runner to trust his<lb/>
coach, especially to know the coach<lb/>
understands his particular event<lb/>
Asked about what he thought his<lb/>
biggest race was, Rigsby recalled two.<lb/>
"The conference cross-country<lb/>
meet my freshman year was a great<lb/>
thrill. It was my first experience with<lb/>
big time college running and finishing<lb/>
seventh was quite an "experience<lb/>
The race everyone identifies Rigsby<lb/>
with is the six mile run in last years<lb/>
outdoor conference track and field<lb/>
meet. It was generally conceded that<lb/>
William and Mary would sweep all five<lb/>
places as they did in the three mile.<lb/>
As Rigsby recalls, "Last year the<lb/>
coach predicted I coulnd't finish fourth<lb/>
in the six mile and I wound up<lb/>
third. The week before at the<lb/>
Pembroke meet I ran terribly and<lb/>
Coach (Bill) Carson was down on me<lb/>
about my performance. So I told him<lb/>
we'd decide about my performance at<lb/>
the upcoming conference meet<lb/>
What Rigsby did was stun the<lb/>
crowd and the competition by taking<lb/>
the bronze medal in a time of 30:39.4.<lb/>
One of Rigsby's goals for the<lb/>
coming season is a double medal<lb/>
performance in the three and six mile,<lb/>
a task requiring considerable pre;<lb/>
paration.<lb/>
To prepare for this plus the,<lb/>
cross-country season Rigsby goes<lb/>
through a rigorous training schedule.<lb/>
Each morning at six he runs five miles,<lb/>
then returns for seven more miles in<lb/>
the afternoon plus a variety of interval<lb/>
running. A total of eighty-four miles a<lb/>
week often in blistering heat is needed<lb/>
to approach his goals.<lb/>
"Last year I came in out of shape<lb/>
and gradually worked up to the<lb/>
conference meet. This year I'm in<lb/>
excellent shape, so my chances of<lb/>
cracking the top five are greatly<lb/>
improved<lb/>
Pedestals fit few athletes. But<lb/>
possibly the distance runner belongs<lb/>
on such a plateau. For his is not a<lb/>
sport of sunshine or indoor comfort or<lb/>
post season rest. He runs in driving<lb/>
rain or sweltering heat.<lb/>
Possibly as one writer pointed out<lb/>
only Thoreau can understand the<lb/>
distance runner, for like Thoreau they<lb/>
quest for the simplicity and rusticity of<lb/>
life. Though it may be appropriate to<lb/>
simply describe him oy saying, "He's<lb/>
alone<lb/>
This summer a large gap wasfilled<lb/>
in the Pirate's athletic department as<lb/>
John Evenson, a former sportswriter<lb/>
for the Asheville "Citizen-Times was<lb/>
named sports information director.<lb/>
Evenson succeeded Sonny Lea,<lb/>
who resigned the position in May to<lb/>
continue his education.<lb/>
A native of Lafayette, Indiana,<lb/>
Evenson graduated from the University<lb/>
of Tennessee in 1972, with a degree in<lb/>
communications. During his senior<lb/>
year he was the recipient of the<lb/>
Grand land Rice Memorial scholarship<lb/>
and served as the sports editor of the<lb/>
UT-Daily Beacon.<lb/>
Evenson attended Edison Junior<lb/>
College in Fort Myers, Florida, his<lb/>
freshman and sophomore years,<lb/>
serving as the school's sports<lb/>
information director both years. He<lb/>
then enrolled at Western Carolina<lb/>
University, where he worked as a<lb/>
student assistant in the sports<lb/>
information office and edited the<lb/>
school newspaper prior to transferring<lb/>
to Tennessee in 1971.<lb/>
"I feel that Evenson has the<lb/>
credentials we were looking for in our<lb/>
new sports information director said<lb/>
Athletic Director Clarence Stasavich in<lb/>
making the announcement. "His close<lb/>
working experience with college<lb/>
athletics, in both the newspaper and<lb/>
sports information fields, will be a<lb/>
trememdous asset to him in his new<lb/>
position<lb/>
As a member of the sports staff of<lb/>
the "Citizen-Times Evenson covered<lb/>
Fred Horeis: 'Unsung hero'<lb/>
Offensive linemen wear the<lb/>
perennial tag "unsung heroes<lb/>
It bothers some football beasts to<lb/>
go unnoticed. But it doesn't bother<lb/>
East Carolina offensive guard Fred<lb/>
Horeis. "And one more thing, I'm not a<lb/>
beast. The guys say I'm a comic<lb/>
"Don't ask me why I am the comic<lb/>
among the linemen, because I don't<lb/>
know. I guess it's just me or maybe<lb/>
it's them<lb/>
Horeis, though "unsung has<lb/>
become an ECU football VIP. Maybe<lb/>
not as important as All-Southern<lb/>
Conference and All-South guard Greg<lb/>
Troupe, but don't tell Fred that.<lb/>
"We're all important, especially<lb/>
when our running gme went like it did<lb/>
at Southern Mississipi<lb/>
"Hey, I'm here to play and enjoy<lb/>
it. I don't know if the coaches will<lb/>
enjoy the comment, but I think playing<lb/>
this game should be fun. I think it's<lb/>
fun to block, maybe that's why people<lb/>
think I'm a comic<lb/>
"This year and last year have really<lb/>
been exciting for me. My sophomore<lb/>
year was the lowest,part of my sports<lb/>
life. I wanted to quit and just forget<lb/>
about it. Now, I'm glad I didn't. I<lb/>
stuck it out and things worked out<lb/>
Horeis is one of "Randle's<lb/>
Runts At 6'2 216, he could pass for<lb/>
a linebacker or defensive end.<lb/>
"The size bit doesn't really bother<lb/>
me. I try to think of my size as an<lb/>
advantage. I am smaller than most<lb/>
people I block, but I'm also quicker. I<lb/>
can get off the ball faster, make my<lb/>
block and keep moving. When the ball<lb/>
is snapped, the first thing a defensive<lb/>
man does is stand up. If I can get to<lb/>
him then, I can do my job.<lb/>
"It all goes back to speed and<lb/>
quickness, the two most important<lb/>
things in sports as far as I'm<lb/>
concerned<lb/>
"I worked very hard this summer to<lb/>
get ready for the season. You won't<lb/>
believe it, but I did a lot of distance<lb/>
running and played basketball. When I<lb/>
came out of high school in Roanoke, I<lb/>
had a half basketball and half football<lb/>
offer at Catawba. Can you imagine me<lb/>
playing basketball?<lb/>
"That's why I picked East<lb/>
Carolina. I couldn't see playing<lb/>
basketball, Mike McGee's building<lb/>
ideas sounded good and it wasn't<lb/>
military. I had offers from Virginia<lb/>
Tech, Virginia Military and The<lb/>
Citadel. Somehow, I just couldn't see<lb/>
myself at a military school.<lb/>
"Now, after a discouraging year and<lb/>
then a good year, I feel pretty<lb/>
confident. I want to coach high school<lb/>
and maybe college ball after I finish<lb/>
here. Everything seems to be working<lb/>
out pretty good<lb/>
Tennis meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the ECU<lb/>
tennis team on Monday Sept. 24 at 4<lb/>
p.m. The meeting will take place in<lb/>
room D-209 of the Social Sciences<lb/>
building. Anyone interested in joining<lb/>
the team or wishing information is<lb/>
asked to come by.<lb/>
JOHN EVENSON<lb/>
college athletics and auto racing in<lb/>
addition to performing layout work<lb/>
"I am proud to become affiliated<lb/>
with East Carolina's outstanding<lb/>
athletic program" said Evenson. "I<lb/>
look forward to associating with the<lb/>
fine people in the athletic department,<lb/>
and cooperating with the members of<lb/>
the local news media in any way<lb/>
possible<lb/>
The 24-year old bachelor assumed<lb/>
his duties in early August.<lb/>
TO OUR ATHl.FTES<lb/>
"Notning in the world can take tne<lb/>
place of persistence<lb/>
Talent will not; nothing is more<lb/>
common than unsuccessful men with<lb/>
talent<lb/>
Genius will not; unrewarded genius<lb/>
is almost a proverb.<lb/>
Education will not; the world is full of<lb/>
educated derelicts.<lb/>
Pe-sistence and determination alone<lb/>
are omnipotent. The slogan 'press on'<lb/>
has solved, and always will solve, the<lb/>
problems of the human race<lb/>
Anonymous<lb/>
1971 VARSITY FOOTBALL<lb/>
Sept 0 N. C. SVote 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sept 15 S. Mississippi 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sept 22 S. Illinois 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sept. 29 Furmon 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 6 Dovidxtfi 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 13 VMI 8 00pm<lb/>
Oct. 20 The Ciiodel 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Oct 27 Unvi. N. C. :30 p.m.<lb/>
Nov. 3 William &amp; Mary 8 00 p.m.<lb/>
Nov. 10 Richmond<lb/>
(Homecoming) I :J0 p.m.<lb/>
Nov. 17 Apptachieii 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
�Bold Typo donotot Nemo Gome<lb/>
Coach: SONNY RANDLI<lb/>
Help needed<lb/>
All male students who would be<lb/>
interested in assisting the sports<lb/>
information department with pre-game<lb/>
and post-game arrangements for<lb/>
members of the press should contact<lb/>
Sports Information Director John<lb/>
Evenson at 758-6491 immediately.<lb/>
mmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mmmmt<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmnmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmt<lb/>
<pb facs="00039876_0011"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD20 SEPT. 1973VOL. 5, NO. 4<lb/>
mmnm<lb/>
wmmtmimmmm<lb/>
wmmi<lb/>
m<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S MICHAEL FETCHKO blasts ball<lb/>
goaltender. Madison went on to win the contest, 2-1.<lb/>
past helpless Madison<lb/>
Moore receives honor<lb/>
East Carolina defensive tackle<lb/>
Kenny Moore was named Southern<lb/>
Conference Defensive Player of the<lb/>
Week for his outstanding performance<lb/>
against the Golden Eagles of Southern<lb/>
Mississippi last Sunday.<lb/>
Moore accounted for eight solo<lb/>
Bucs meet SIU<lb/>
in Carbondale<lb/>
The Salukis of Southern Illinois will<lb/>
be playing host to East Carolina in this<lb/>
Saturday night's gridiron encounter in<lb/>
Carbondale.<lb/>
Southern Illinois lost 28 lettermen<lb/>
from last year's 1-8-1 team. With only<lb/>
eight starters returning, it once again<lb/>
will be a building year for SIU.<lb/>
Last week against tough Northern<lb/>
Illinois the Salukis lost a close 34-27<lb/>
decision, so things may be looking up<lb/>
for the men of head coach Dick<lb/>
Towers.<lb/>
SIU does have an experienced<lb/>
defensive unit, led by the likes of<lb/>
defensive back Ed Bell and linebacker<lb/>
Gordon Rickey. Running back Larry<lb/>
Perkins, center Bill JacKson, and end<lb/>
Bob Habbe head up the offense.<lb/>
The Buc series with Southern<lb/>
Illinois began in 1966, with ECU having<lb/>
taken three out of the five contests<lb/>
played.<lb/>
Last year the Pirates shut the<lb/>
Salukis out 16-0. Saturday they have<lb/>
a chance to do it again at McAndrew<lb/>
Stadium. Game time is 7:30 CST.<lb/>
tackles and assisted on six others in<lb/>
sparking the "Wild Dogs Four times<lb/>
he was responsible for sacking the<lb/>
Southern Mississippi quarterback and<lb/>
he recovered a fumble.<lb/>
In the game USM was held to a<lb/>
mere 39 yards rushing, with most of<lb/>
that coming in the first quarter. The<lb/>
Pirates, led by Moore, held the Golden<lb/>
Eagles to minus 26 yards rushing in<lb/>
the secong half.<lb/>
Moore, the first Pirate to receive<lb/>
conference honors this season, is<lb/>
playing in a starting role for the first<lb/>
time. The senior from Harrels was out<lb/>
with an injury his sophomore year but<lb/>
came back last year to have a fine<lb/>
season as a part-time starter at tackle.<lb/>
Pirates lose heartbreaker<lb/>
Kick this comparison around for a<lb/>
while. Imagine if after only 10 days of<lb/>
practice, Sonny Randle's football team<lb/>
was scheduled to play the University of<lb/>
Tennessee or Stanford. That would be<lb/>
quite a shock. Well, East Carolina's<lb/>
soccer team was faced with that same<lb/>
type of situation when they took on<lb/>
nationally ninth ranked Madison<lb/>
College Monday afternoon.<lb/>
In probably one of the finest soccer<lb/>
games ever played at Minges field,<lb/>
Madison edged the Pirates 2-1. The<lb/>
winning goal came on a penalty shot<lb/>
due to a "hand ball" infraction<lb/>
occuring in the penalty area.<lb/>
Acting head coach Ed Wolcott was<lb/>
brimming with pride as his men played<lb/>
their hearts out, for a victory would<lb/>
have been a monumental upset.<lb/>
"It was one of the most superb<lb/>
team efforts I have ever seen Wolcott<lb/>
said. 'I am quite proud of every single<lb/>
purple-shirted player that was on that<lb/>
field<lb/>
A fine crowd that lined both sides<lb/>
of the field saw Madison grab an early<lb/>
lead on a chip shot into the net that<lb/>
leaped over goalie John Henderson.<lb/>
Both teams settled down to battle on<lb/>
even terms up to the horn ending the<lb/>
first half.<lb/>
Wolcott singled out the fine play of<lb/>
former All-America goalie Henderson.<lb/>
His many fine stops kept the game<lb/>
close.<lb/>
Halfback Dave Myles and Dave<lb/>
Schaler ran and ran and ran to keep<lb/>
constant pressure on Madison. Lee<lb/>
Ellis, who was playing with a pulled<lb/>
muscle, had an excellent game as well.<lb/>
The three fullbacks, Brad Smith,<lb/>
Bob Poser and Allen Lewitz put up a<lb/>
formidable defensive line in front of<lb/>
the Buc goal.<lb/>
In the second half, freshman<lb/>
Michael Fetchko took a great pass<lb/>
from Tom O'Shea and evened the score<lb/>
at 1-1. The goal was Fetchko's first<lb/>
and also O'Shea's first assist of the<lb/>
young season.<lb/>
The stage was then set for the last<lb/>
minute dramatics which were soon to<lb/>
be unveiled.<lb/>
Bunky Moser, a sophomore, was<lb/>
sent into the game to mind the<lb/>
nets. Madison peppered the ball his<lb/>
way, but he was more than equal to the<lb/>
occasion, stopping shots left and<lb/>
right.<lb/>
With time running out, the costly<lb/>
penalty inside the penalty area gave<lb/>
Madison a free penalty shot.<lb/>
The ball got through Moser to put<lb/>
Madison on top for cixxJ, 2-1.<lb/>
The Bucs, now 0-2-1, travel to<lb/>
Chapel Hill to take on another<lb/>
opponent in the Tar Heels of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The disappointment was quite<lb/>
evident in the faces of the dejected<lb/>
Pirates, who had wanted to win so<lb/>
badly. However deep inside of every<lb/>
player was the satisfaction of knowing<lb/>
that they had given a 100 percent<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
Pirate athletics<lb/>
on the move<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Faculty Committee on Athletics voted<lb/>
Monday to continue East Carolina's<lb/>
sweeping program of athletic improve-<lb/>
ment and urged increased scheduling<lb/>
from Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
Schools in all sports.<lb/>
The Committee expressed pleasure<lb/>
with the addition of Virginia, Maryland<lb/>
and former ACC member South<lb/>
Carolina to Pirate schedules in future<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The Committee cited the large<lb/>
Baptist following in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina and urged establishment of<lb/>
athletic relations with Wake Forest.<lb/>
East Carolina teams currently play<lb/>
the University of North Carolina and<lb/>
North Carolina State in football, and<lb/>
Duke and N.C. State in basketball.<lb/>
Baseball as well as minor sports<lb/>
schedules are dotted with Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference opponents.<lb/>
Stadium expansion and improve-<lb/>
ment were discussed by the<lb/>
Committee which advises Chancellor<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins on athletic affairs.<lb/>
Estimates for an additional 10,000<lb/>
stadium seats were studied as were<lb/>
possible completion dates for the<lb/>
$350,000 lighting system which has<lb/>
already been approved. Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, East Carolina's football<lb/>
complex, currently seats 20,000.<lb/>
m?qmji$<lb/>
Manager needed<lb/>
f<lb/>
a<lb/>
on<lb/>
The Pirate basketball team needs a<lb/>
manager for the 1973-74 season. Any<lb/>
student interested in this position is<lb/>
urged to contact Assistant Coach Dave<lb/>
Patton in room 162, Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
1973-74 EAST CAROLINA CHEERLEADERS front row (L-R) Denise Bobbit,<lb/>
Rambo, Debbie Davis, Kim Aussant, Sherry Cobb. Back row: John<lb/>
Mike Radford, Bryan Sibley and Rodney McDonald.<lb/>
Judv Barnes, Becky Keeter, Kathy<lb/>
Rambo, Rick Hipper, Jerry Jones,<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039876_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>