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<pb facs="00039877_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE N.C.VOL. 5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
jmmmtmmm wi<lb/>
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Expansion called premature<lb/>
Med officials say 'no expansion'<lb/>
By SKIP SAUNDERS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A panel of medical experts have,<lb/>
recommended in a report that there be<lb/>
no immediate exoansion of the ECU<lb/>
prog<lb/>
The report however does indicate<lb/>
possible expansion of the one year<lb/>
program in the future. The panel called<lb/>
the proposed expansion at ECU<lb/>
' premature<lb/>
There is general agreement among<lb/>
state legislators that the issue will<lb/>
come before the 1974 General<lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
The study by out of state medical<lb/>
experts was commissioned by the<lb/>
University of North Carolina Board of<lb/>
Governors. The medical consultants<lb/>
.vere inquiring into the possibilities of<lb/>
another degree granting medical<lb/>
school by the expansion of ECU'S<lb/>
program. Dr. Edwin W. Monroe,<lb/>
vice-chancellor of the medical program<lb/>
at ECU. prepared this statement<lb/>
concerning the consultants' report:<lb/>
"After all of the dust predictably<lb/>
created by this report has settled, two<lb/>
facts should be crystal clear.<lb/>
The first is that the consultants do<lb/>
not call for any urgent or compelling<lb/>
action to produce more doctors in<lb/>
North Carolina. They recommend no<lb/>
immediate steps to increase the<lb/>
enrollment of North Carolinians in<lb/>
medical schools.<lb/>
The second fact is that the people<lb/>
of North Carolina recognize clearly our<lb/>
severe shortage of doctors and warn<lb/>
something done about it now. We<lb/>
believe that the people will insure that<lb/>
much more immediate and positive<lb/>
Thefts, vandalism<lb/>
hit ECU campus<lb/>
SGA robbed<lb/>
By TOM BROWNLEE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An estimated one thousand dollars<lb/>
worth of office equipment was stolen<lb/>
from the SGA offices last Wednesday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Included among the articles<lb/>
missing were two electric typewriters,<lb/>
one IBM "Selectric" typewriter, and an<lb/>
adding machine.<lb/>
"We know very little about it as of<lb/>
yet said J.H. Calder of the E.C.U.<lb/>
Campus Police. However, he went on<lb/>
to add, "The offices were broken into<lb/>
using a key Jeannie Summerlin, the<lb/>
Executive Secretary of the SGA<lb/>
confirmed this savinq, "Yes, we found<lb/>
two keys missing<lb/>
"We'll De changing all the<lb/>
locks She added, when questioned<lb/>
on preventative measures against<lb/>
further break-ins.<lb/>
The stolen equipment was insured<lb/>
and Miss Summerlin went on to say<lb/>
"As far as I know, the insurance will<lb/>
cover the loss However, the serial<lb/>
numbers of the stolen equipment are<lb/>
on file and the SGA has a faint hope to<lb/>
recover the machines if and when an<lb/>
attempt is made to sell them.<lb/>
Other items of comparative value<lb/>
such as a stereo set, various other<lb/>
electrical fixtures, and SGA records<lb/>
were left untouched during the<lb/>
burglary. <lb/>
Vandals strike<lb/>
By TOM BROWNLEE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two cases of larceny and at least<lb/>
two of vandalism against campus<lb/>
property occurred on the ECU campus<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
An automobile was broken into and<lb/>
an eight track tape player stolen on<lb/>
Sept. 17. The car had been parked near<lb/>
the new art building and left<lb/>
unattended for slightly over four<lb/>
hours. On the same day the Campus<lb/>
Police answered another report of<lb/>
larceny. Two large sections of<lb/>
stainless steel duct were stolen from<lb/>
the second floor of the new Student<lb/>
Union. Their estimated value was<lb/>
between seventy-five and one hundred<lb/>
dollars, constituting grand larceny.<lb/>
Windows were reported broken by<lb/>
vandals in the men's dormitories on<lb/>
the hill. According to Patrolman D.<lb/>
Tripp of the Campus Police, "Someone<lb/>
had apparently made a cannon from<lb/>
beer cans, and fired wet balls of toilet<lb/>
paper containing pennies to break the<lb/>
windows<lb/>
Other instances of dormitory<lb/>
vandalism included missing Public<lb/>
Address speakers. The speakers and<lb/>
housing had been torn from the walls,<lb/>
the speakers themselves removed and<lb/>
the housing discarded.<lb/>
Two students from Greensboro,<lb/>
N.C. were arrested on drunk and<lb/>
disorderly charges. They were<lb/>
detained by the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department until each had posted a<lb/>
one hundred dollar bond, and were<lb/>
released.<lb/>
steps to solve their problems will be<lb/>
taken over<lb/>
ECU CHancellor Leo Jenkins and<lb/>
Dean Wallace R. Wooles, of the school<lb/>
of medicine were unavailable for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
The following is an excerpt from<lb/>
the report made by the medical<lb/>
consultants, consisting of 11 recom-<lb/>
mendations. :<lb/>
RECOMMENDATION 3<lb/>
Specifically, we recommend that<lb/>
the Board of Governors assign to the<lb/>
School of Medicine at UNCCH the<lb/>
direct administrative and operating<lb/>
responsibility for upgrading and<lb/>
maintaining the existing one year<lb/>
medical program at ECU with firm<lb/>
authority over admission and pro-<lb/>
motion of students, selection anG<lb/>
appointment of faculty, redesign ol<lb/>
curriculum, and budaeting for<lb/>
operations as wen as upuui<lb/>
expenditures.<lb/>
We recommend that the size of the<lb/>
class admitted to the ECU program in<lb/>
1974 be held at 20 students and that<lb/>
the quality and the accreditation status<lb/>
of the program be reviewed again in<lb/>
the latter part of 1974 or early 1975. If<lb/>
progress has been satisfactory,<lb/>
consideration should be given to<lb/>
expanding the entering class in 1975 to<lb/>
25 or 30 students. If improvement in<lb/>
the program occurs and is sustained<lb/>
and if the development of additional<lb/>
capacity within the state to give<lb/>
clinical education to medical students<lb/>
warrants, it may become feasible and<lb/>
desirable to further expand class size<lb/>
and to aid a second year of medical<lb/>
education to the program.<lb/>
CHRISTINE JORGENSEN, the first human to undergoa sex transformation<lb/>
opens the ECU lecture series. See story on page eight.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
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NOW begins Research<lb/>
A local chapter of the National<lb/>
Organization for Women (NOW) has<lb/>
been formed in the Greenville<lb/>
area. The group, to be known as the<lb/>
"Eastern Carolina Chapter includes<lb/>
members of both sexes and all ages.<lb/>
ECU faculty and students are<lb/>
invited to attend the meetings and<lb/>
become members.<lb/>
The chapter meets on the last<lb/>
Thursday evening of each month at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the meeting room of the First<lb/>
Federal Building on the 264 By-pass.<lb/>
Temporary chapter officers are:<lb/>
Barbara Ellis, president; Stephanie<lb/>
Carstaphen, vice president; Edith<lb/>
Webber, secretary; Mary Lou Byrne,<lb/>
membership director; Inez Fridley,<lb/>
treasurer; and Franceine Rees,<lb/>
publicity director.<lb/>
The chapter will consist of<lb/>
committees concerned with issues of<lb/>
interest to women, such as<lb/>
employment, child care, the Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment, education,<lb/>
minority women's rights, and women's<lb/>
image and the media.<lb/>
NCW, a civil rights for women<lb/>
organization, is the oldest and largest<lb/>
of the new feminist groups, with more<lb/>
than 200 chapters across the nation.<lb/>
Founded by author-lecturer Betty<lb/>
Friedan in 1966, NOW is involved in<lb/>
security equality of opportunity for<lb/>
women economically, politically,<lb/>
legally and socially.<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
A Rock Festival, billed as the<lb/>
"happening of the year will be held<lb/>
near Ebro Thanksyiving weekend,<lb/>
according to organizers of the event.<lb/>
Top name stars in the rock field are<lb/>
expected to perform for 30 hours<lb/>
beginning the day after Thanksgiving.<lb/>
Organizers say they expect rock<lb/>
music fans from throughout the South<lb/>
to come to the event during the school<lb/>
holiday.<lb/>
The Florida Panhandle has never<lb/>
"hosted" a big rock festival, but no<lb/>
particular problems are expected.<lb/>
Organizers said full health facilities<lb/>
will be installed for the event and<lb/>
crowd control measures will be taken.<lb/>
More than 10,000 tickets are being<lb/>
printed for the event with several<lb/>
hundred to be donated to charity<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
Those organizations interested in<lb/>
getting the free tickets may write to<lb/>
Rock Marathon, P.O. Box 3567,<lb/>
Panama City.<lb/>
Dr. Brad Bond, Research Associate<lb/>
E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and Co Inc.<lb/>
Parkersburg, W. Va will present a<lb/>
seminar on "The Toxicology of<lb/>
Brommated Biphenyls" Friday,<lb/>
September 28. 1973 at 3:00 p.m. in<lb/>
room 201 Flanagan Buildings. Coffee<lb/>
will be served in the conference<lb/>
room. All interested persons are<lb/>
cordially invited to attend.<lb/>
RAIT picnic<lb/>
The National Association of<lb/>
Industrial Technology (N.A.I.T.) is<lb/>
hosting a fall picnic and membership<lb/>
drive at Elm Street Park picnic area, on<lb/>
Thursday 27 September, at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Everyone is invited regardless of<lb/>
major. Tickets are on sale downstairs<lb/>
in Flanagan or at the park. Children<lb/>
.50 and Adults $1.00. There will be a<lb/>
drawing for a door prize.<lb/>
Accompanist<lb/>
An accompanist for dance classes<lb/>
in the Drama Department is needed for<lb/>
this quarter. It is a student self-help<lb/>
position. If interested, please contact<lb/>
the Drama Dept. Office, Ext. 6390.<lb/>
Debate team<lb/>
The Debate Team will meet Wed<lb/>
Sept. 26 at 4:00 p.m. Those presently<lb/>
involved and any prospective members<lb/>
should come to Room 203, Speech and<lb/>
Drama Building for this important<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Prat meets<lb/>
Alpha Phi Gamma, honorary<lb/>
journalism fraternity, will hold an<lb/>
organizational meeting Tues Sept. 25<lb/>
at 7 p.m. in room 301 Austin. All<lb/>
members are asked to attend.<lb/>
Tic kefs<lb/>
The SGA secretary of trans-<lb/>
portation announces that tickets are<lb/>
available for bus trips to all away<lb/>
football games. Interested persons<lb/>
should contact the SGA office in<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Contents:<lb/>
MED. SCHOOL V. EXPANSION page one<lb/>
CAMPUS CRIME page one<lb/>
NEWSFLASH page two<lb/>
KELLER PLANpage three<lb/>
EDITORIAL: BEING CONSIDERATEpage six<lb/>
JACK ANDERSON &amp; THE FORUM page seven<lb/>
CHRISTINE JORGENSEN page eight<lb/>
DROP ADD AGAIN) page ten<lb/>
SPORTS pages eleven and twelve<lb/>
Meditation<lb/>
Transcendental Meditation teachers<lb/>
Allen and Chris Ross will present a<lb/>
lecture Tuesday, Sept. 25 at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center, 501 East<lb/>
Fifth Street. Sessions will be held at<lb/>
6:00 and 8:30 p.m. explaining more<lb/>
about transcendental meditation. All<lb/>
students, faculty and friends are<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
Stay dry<lb/>
Liquor by the drink, by the bottle,<lb/>
in a basket or in a box is prohibited at<lb/>
athletic contests by State law and will<lb/>
not be permitted at Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
ECU officials stated last week.<lb/>
With the Pirates opening at home<lb/>
this Saturday night, ECU officials<lb/>
issued a list of items that will not be<lb/>
admitted to the Stadium:<lb/>
1. Ice chests, coolers or<lb/>
thermoses.<lb/>
2. Baskets, hampers or boxes.<lb/>
3. Bottles of any kind or cans.<lb/>
4. Paper or plastic bags.<lb/>
J.H. Calder, the University's<lb/>
director of security, said that the<lb/>
prohibition resulted from complaints of<lb/>
fans. The policy was initiated in 1972.<lb/>
North Carolina law (G.S. 18-A-30)<lb/>
prohibits any public display, con-<lb/>
sumption or possession of any<lb/>
alcoholic beverages at athletic<lb/>
contests.<lb/>
In upholding the law, Calder said<lb/>
the ECU policy also "is designed<lb/>
tomake football games more enjoyable<lb/>
and safer for all persons attending<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
The College Democrat's Club will<lb/>
hold an organizational meeting<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 204 of the Student Union<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
New members are welcome to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
An Application for Graduation is<lb/>
not a requirement for graduation but it<lb/>
does determine the date a student will<lb/>
graduate.<lb/>
Applications for undergraduate<lb/>
graduation must be made not later<lb/>
than two and one-half quarters before<lb/>
the completion of the requirements for<lb/>
the degree.<lb/>
Applications for graduate grad-<lb/>
uation must be made not later than one<lb/>
quarter before the completion of the<lb/>
requirements for the degree.<lb/>
All students, graduate and under-<lb/>
graduate, who plan to graduate Fall<lb/>
Quarter, 1973 and who have neglected<lb/>
to make application for graduation, will<lb/>
be given a final opportunity to make<lb/>
application for graduation for the Fall<lb/>
Quarter. This application must be in<lb/>
the Registrar's Office no later than<lb/>
Friday, September 28.<lb/>
REAP social<lb/>
Council for<lb/>
sponsoring a<lb/>
Sept. 25 at<lb/>
The ECU Student<lb/>
Exceptional Children is<lb/>
picnic-social, Tuesday,<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
The social will be held at the<lb/>
Remedial Education Activity Program<lb/>
at the Developmental Evaluation<lb/>
Clinic. A generous supply of ham-<lb/>
burgers from MacDonalds of Greenville<lb/>
will be provided and drinks will be<lb/>
supplied by the Coca-Cola Company.<lb/>
Rhine speaks<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine begins<lb/>
its Public Lecture Series Thursday<lb/>
night, Sept. 27, with the noted<lb/>
parapsychologist Dr. J. B. Rhine of<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Dr. Rhine is the founder of the<lb/>
Parapsychology Laboratory at Duke<lb/>
University and is currently executive<lb/>
director of the Foundation for<lb/>
Research on the Nature of Man.<lb/>
His lecture, entitled "Para-<lb/>
psychology: A New Frontier of<lb/>
Medicine is scheduled for 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the Allied Health Auditorium.<lb/>
Dr. Rhine is the first speaker in the<lb/>
ECU Med School Lecture Series which<lb/>
begins this year as an effort to give the<lb/>
general public a better understanding<lb/>
of medicine as it relates to physical<lb/>
and mental health. The project is<lb/>
co-sponsored by the Department of<lb/>
Pathology at ECU. Additional speakers<lb/>
scheduled for later in the year are to<lb/>
discuss a wide range of common<lb/>
medical problems including; mental<lb/>
depression, headaches, high blood<lb/>
pressure and heart disease.<lb/>
Dr. Abdullah Fatteh, professor of<lb/>
pathology at ECU, explained that the<lb/>
lectures are designed to bring<lb/>
information on medical topics to the<lb/>
general public.<lb/>
"We believe that one of the<lb/>
important contributions a medical<lb/>
school can make is in the direction of<lb/>
public education he said. "That's<lb/>
why we are bringing in experts like Dr.<lb/>
Rhine who can speak on subjects of<lb/>
interest to the public<lb/>
Crew tryouts<lb/>
Tryouts for ECU Crew will be held<lb/>
Friday, 28 September by the Town<lb/>
Commons on First Street. The time for<lb/>
tryouts will be 3 p.m.<lb/>
Read fast<lb/>
Speed reading course will be<lb/>
offered on Monday and Wednesday at<lb/>
7:00 p.m. in the basement of Scott<lb/>
Hall for any interested students.<lb/>
Pofi Sci meet<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha, political science<lb/>
honor fraternity, will hold its first<lb/>
meeting on Tues Sept. 25 at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Social Sciences Building room C-105.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5 25 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
3<lb/>
m<lb/>
Work at your own rote<lb/>
ECU Professors try Keller Plan<lb/>
By PAM SCRUGGS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two ECU professors, Dr. Caroline<lb/>
Ayers and Dr. Floyd E. Mattheis, are<lb/>
participating in a teaching program<lb/>
that should provide an answer to the<lb/>
problem of achievement at the<lb/>
university level.<lb/>
The program, the Keller Plan or<lb/>
Personalized System of Instruction,<lb/>
provides the student with the challenge<lb/>
of individual studv and achievement at<lb/>
one's own rate. This relatively new<lb/>
method of teaching 'minus formal<lb/>
lectures' gives the student the<lb/>
opportunity to learn on his own from a<lb/>
prepared text. Help is always available<lb/>
from tutors and professors if the<lb/>
student seeks it.<lb/>
Chemistry 64 taught by Dr. Ayers<lb/>
and Descriptive Astronomy 235 taught<lb/>
by Dr. Matteis are the courses<lb/>
presently operating under this system.<lb/>
Dr. Matteis, department chairman<lb/>
of Science Education, said the<lb/>
program was brought to the ECU<lb/>
courses because "we're always looking<lb/>
for ways to improve our teaching and<lb/>
classes<lb/>
As with any program of this nature,<lb/>
advantages and difficulties can be<lb/>
easily cited. On the positive side, Dr.<lb/>
Matteis pointed out that a student will<lb/>
learn more on his own than in a<lb/>
classroom lecture situation.<lb/>
The only difficulty has been the<lb/>
obtaining of text material to fit the<lb/>
plan. Since Dr. Keller, the originator of<lb/>
this svstem, emphasized physics,<lb/>
mathematics and psychology, the ECU<lb/>
professors have had to prepare the text<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Fortunately for Dr. Mattheis. a<lb/>
summer graduate student, Lee Roger<lb/>
Taylor, Jr took an interest in the<lb/>
program, and wrote the curriculum for<lb/>
the astronomy course.<lb/>
"Student reaction to the plan is<lb/>
hard to tell at this point since we're<lb/>
just getting started Dr. Mattheis<lb/>
concluded. But he feels the program<lb/>
"shows much promise<lb/>
Chemistry professor Dr. Ayers,<lb/>
stated the program is essentially for<lb/>
two types of students - the unusually<lb/>
well-prepared student and the slow<lb/>
student, the advantage for the talented<lb/>
student is the challenge; the slow<lb/>
student, the change to go at his own<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
The greatest disadvantage for the<lb/>
student, Dr. Ayers noted, is<lb/>
procrastination. In a course that<lb/>
requires a certain number of units<lb/>
completed within a long time span<lb/>
putting off is usually easy, she noted.<lb/>
Dr. Ayers feels a student benefits<lb/>
most from the course by "learning to<lb/>
work on his own. This ability is<lb/>
needed far beyond the university<lb/>
The success or tne plan at ECU<lb/>
remains to be seen. The results will be<lb/>
covered in a later issue of the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD.<lb/>
For background information con-<lb/>
cerning the Keller Plan, refer to the<lb/>
Sept. 13, 1973 issue of FOUNTAIN-<lb/>
HEAD page 10.<lb/>
DR. CAROLINE AYERS<lb/>
DR. FLOYD E. MATTHEIS<lb/>
Council considers non-thesis option<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Political Science Department has announced that a<lb/>
proposal is now before the graduate council to offer a<lb/>
non-thesis option for those pursuing a master's deqree in<lb/>
political science.<lb/>
According to Dr. H.A.I. Sugg of the department, the<lb/>
proposal allows the student to substitute additional course<lb/>
work for the thesis. He added that such programs have<lb/>
been meeting with some degree of success at several<lb/>
DR. HOWARD A. I. SUGG examines the no-thesis MA degree<lb/>
proposal presented before the ECU graduate council.<lb/>
UMffMMMMl<lb/>
universities around th country.<lb/>
One of the major reasons for such programs is that some<lb/>
students experience great difficulty in producing a paper of<lb/>
the magnitude of a thesis. The additional course work will<lb/>
still require research papers, but their nature will be such<lb/>
that a better estimation of the time required for completion<lb/>
will be possible.<lb/>
Dr. Sugg stated that the lack of a non-thesis option<lb/>
may have been a factor in students' decisions to attend<lb/>
another university for pursuance of their masters degree.<lb/>
The program that exists at present requires the<lb/>
completion of 39 hours of coursework. The student is then<lb/>
given 6 hours credit for the satisfactorv completion of the<lb/>
thesis making a total of 45 hours.<lb/>
As proposed, the non thesis option will require 48 hours<lb/>
of coursework with the same time limit of five years placed<lb/>
on completion. The same basic requirements such as<lb/>
examinations, etc. will also remain the same.<lb/>
For those students who plan to pursue a doctorate, the<lb/>
thesis option will still be recommended. The reason,<lb/>
according to Dr. Sugg , is "to prepare the student for<lb/>
writing the dissertation required of the PhD<lb/>
The department hopes tor immediate approval. The<lb/>
proposal must first te approved by the Graduate Council<lb/>
(This may have been done by the time this paper is at<lb/>
press.) It is then presented to the provost, men we<lb/>
chancellor, and ultimately to the President of the N.C.<lb/>
University system, Dr. William C. Friday.<lb/>
Academic<lb/>
Affairs office<lb/>
for students<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Secretary for Academic Affairs<lb/>
is the channel of the SGA which<lb/>
students may use to register their<lb/>
views and feelings concerning the<lb/>
academic situation at ECU.<lb/>
Jim Davis, the Secretary for<lb/>
Academic Affairs is a senior with a<lb/>
double major in political science and<lb/>
sociology. Davis is attending ECU on<lb/>
the Army's two year degree completion<lb/>
program. Originally from High Point,<lb/>
N.C. his family resides in Fayetteville<lb/>
where he is a captain at Fort Bragg.<lb/>
This office has met with success in<lb/>
attaining reforms in procedures and<lb/>
curriculum requirements this year.<lb/>
Students returning to ECU this fall<lb/>
saw the implementation of a new drop<lb/>
policy whereby the student is allowed<lb/>
twenty class days to drop a course!<lb/>
without penalty. It has also been<lb/>
instrumental in obtaining the deletion<lb/>
of the swimming proficiency test from<lb/>
graduation requirements.<lb/>
Another responsibility of the<lb/>
academic affairs office is to nominate<lb/>
candidates for student membership on<lb/>
various committees The student<lb/>
nominees, after SGA approval, sit with<lb/>
faculty members and participate in<lb/>
making recommendations concerning<lb/>
university policy. Problems have<lb/>
occurred, however, since few students<lb/>
have applied for the positions<lb/>
available. He added that the only<lb/>
requirements were that the student<lb/>
sincerely wanted to participate rather<lb/>
than occupy the seat and do<lb/>
nothing. Some of the committees still<lb/>
open for student membership are the<lb/>
Curriculum Committee, Institutional<lb/>
Survey Committee, and the Calendar<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
In passing, Davis stated, "this<lb/>
office is the student's medium for<lb/>
input into the academic affairs of the<lb/>
university He added that anyone<lb/>
desiring to offer suggestions should<lb/>
direct their comments to his office<lb/>
which is in room 310 of the Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
uTJ<lb/>
AN EXPRESSION OF stress is shown<lb/>
by this cheerleading hopeful, as JV<lb/>
cheerleader tryouts are held this week.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039877_0004"/><lb/>
,VVWSAAVWAVVSAfWYSAVWVV<lb/>
vvvwvvvvvwvwvvyvAAAAAf<lb/>
The First<lb/>
Great Gulf Thanksgiving Weekend<lb/>
ROCK<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
The Happening of 1973 With<lb/>
30 HOURS<lb/>
of Solid Continous Entertainment<lb/>
Great Performers - Live - In Person<lb/>
40 ACRES<lb/>
of Arena Grounds and Camping Area<lb/>
Food, Sanitary Facilities Available<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
8 P.M. Friday, November 23<lb/>
to<lb/>
2 A.M. Sunday, November 25<lb/>
Festival Location: Hwy 20 WEST of Ebro Dog Track<lb/>
Approx. 10 Miles from Gulf of Mexico Beaches<lb/>
Total Price $10.00 Tickets Limited<lb/>
Send Check or Money Order to: P.O. Box 3567 Panama City, Florida<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0005"/><lb/>
MM<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Now playing:<lb/>
Cinema arts<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
MM<lb/>
5<lb/>
degree<lb/>
(CPS)-A liberal arts major in<lb/>
cinema studies that leads to a<lb/>
Bachelor of Fine Arts degree is now<lb/>
being offered by the School of the<lb/>
Arts of New York University.<lb/>
This is the first degree program<lb/>
in the country that will use film as<lb/>
its basis for study. "That is not a<lb/>
degree in filmmaking emphasized<lb/>
Ted Perry, chairman of the<lb/>
department of cinema studies. "It<lb/>
is meant we will use the motion<lb/>
pictures-its history, criticism,<lb/>
esthetics-as a means of focusing<lb/>
the realities of life today and to help<lb/>
us learn how to live<lb/>
The program "has been designed<lb/>
to permit students to study their<lb/>
world in terms of a major art form<lb/>
according to David Oppenheim,<lb/>
dean of the school.<lb/>
The basic idea behind this new<lb/>
form of study is that the cinema is a<lb/>
cross section of all the arts and<lb/>
humanities. A study of film<lb/>
requires an integrative under-<lb/>
standing of psychology, philosophy<lb/>
history, literature, music, etc. The<lb/>
use of documentary film as a<lb/>
resource to deal with social studies<lb/>
in another aspect of the new<lb/>
curriculum.<lb/>
It is hoped that students wi<lb/>
find the prospect of studying Sartre,<lb/>
Marx and Marcuse through the films<lb/>
of Jean-Luc Goddard an intriguing<lb/>
method. Proponents of the program<lb/>
feel that while our culture has been<lb/>
explored through novels, drama and<lb/>
poetry, we have long neglected<lb/>
cinema, television and song which<lb/>
are becoming more dominant media<lb/>
everyday.<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/>
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<pb facs="00039877_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
EditortalsCoTYTienlarv<lb/>
Thundering hooves<lb/>
plays etc - at wh.ch a remarkable lack of courtesy is often shown.<lb/>
P dy ' SHARING SPIRIT<lb/>
The Christine Jorgensen lecture wen, J"8SVSZ<lb/>
fascination and intelligence of the speaker herself. At any rate, severa<lb/>
h!?ndr students displayed the interest, cons.derat.on and sharing spin<lb/>
SxSSSj of adeufts in thil case, at least, the ECU student body had come of<lb/>
age. and we were proud of ourjgjjj late<lb/>
elTher sS or dmnk. babbling loudly and obviously no. interested In the<lb/>
160 Timber of persons left early - far before the "question and answer-<lb/>
nnwhKh is generally the acceptable early-departure time. Many of<lb/>
mos; leavmTnae'conlde'rable noise doing so. calling to each other down<lb/>
,heS,a'rS NOISE EVIDENT<lb/>
Since the top stair doors in Wi.ght were left open -whether for yenIllation,<lb/>
safety o. ease in admitting late arrivals - most of this noise was evident to<lb/>
mnse sirtino near the back of the auditorium andor the balcony area<lb/>
Wnoh AuXr urn hasn't ye. been declared obsolete in favor of he new<lb/>
un�n a9udi,Aonum. ma, is still a few months away Until them , odents �gb,<lb/>
observe more concern for lecturers, performers and guest artists by keeping<lb/>
� noise down in a� parts ���� <lb/>
" tfonhetnity rihindiy of .his. , either �M��lo�M<lb/>
H HELD CAPTIVE<lb/>
Perhaps a section should be roped off for those who don't intend to remain<lb/>
throughout a lecture or concert; maybe the entire aud.ence should be held<lb/>
2bv a time-tock system on all the doors. We don't know and can only<lb/>
otfer wildI suiSettiSns -and hope the new Union facilities will prov.de for all<lb/>
elotZZs to think twice before running out of a Injure<lb/>
midway The wright pod'um provides a fine view of the entire auditorium. A<lb/>
Ser finds it ralherTsconcerting to speak, and simultaneously watch the<lb/>
entire balcony file out the door.<lb/>
Population and subsistence<lb/>
THE NEW REPUBLIC<lb/>
Any reasonable person knows that<lb/>
the world population increase can't<lb/>
continue. Seventy million more people<lb/>
each year. Why, that's the size of East<lb/>
and West Germany! We shrug and<lb/>
say, "They'll starve in a few years -<lb/>
glad I won't be around But suppose<lb/>
you are around. Suppose time has run<lb/>
out Suppose we are about to see the<lb/>
greatest calamity in the history of<lb/>
mankind.<lb/>
FOOD RIOTS<lb/>
It probably depends on the<lb/>
weather The world's food stock is so<lb/>
low, the margin is so thin, that with<lb/>
bad weather 10 to 30 million people<lb/>
may starve in 1974 It has already<lb/>
started in Africa. There are food riots<lb/>
in India. The UN Food and Agriculture<lb/>
Organization called an emergency<lb/>
meeting on grain at Rome last<lb/>
week Robert McNamara, head of the<lb/>
World Bank pleaded for a moral<lb/>
response from the affluent nations at<lb/>
the annual meeting of the bank at<lb/>
Nairobi Kenya, this week. You can<lb/>
see one effect at the corner<lb/>
supermarket at home in the price of<lb/>
foods. Prices will fall, in time, but<lb/>
they are never coming back again to<lb/>
"normal<lb/>
HAVE NATIONS<lb/>
The grab for food in the world<lb/>
protein war comes from two sources,<lb/>
the rise in affluence of the "have"<lb/>
nations, and the rise in population of<lb/>
the "have not" nations. Here's how it<lb/>
works. West Germany, of course, is a<lb/>
"have" nation. Its population has<lb/>
stopped growing at ZPG (Zero<lb/>
Population Growth). But its food<lb/>
consumption is expanding because its<lb/>
affluence permits it to buy more meat -<lb/>
and meat requires more grain, and<lb/>
grain occupies over 70 percent of the<lb/>
world's crop area. The same thing is<lb/>
true of Japan. Also of Russia; it has<lb/>
land but not enough fresh water.<lb/>
That's why it quietly grabbed a quarter<lb/>
of our grain crop this year.<lb/>
HAVE-NOTS'<lb/>
For the "have not" countries the<lb/>
choice is to get more food or<lb/>
starve Their population doubles every<lb/>
25 years. There are 3.5 billion people<lb/>
on earth, 2 billion people ih the<lb/>
"undeveloped" (have-not)countries.<lb/>
Enforce laws: Nader<lb/>
By RALPH NADER<lb/>
WASHINGTONThere's gold in<lb/>
them thar hills" used to be the<lb/>
expectant cry of the 19th century<lb/>
prospector. Today the inquiring citi-<lb/>
zen-taxpayer could direct the same<lb/>
words towards state and local<lb/>
government which are losing billions<lb/>
of dollars every year in uncollected<lb/>
corporate tax revenues, lost procure-<lb/>
ment savings, and non-interest bearing<lb/>
qovernment accounts.<lb/>
EXISTING LAWS<lb/>
Here is a list of hidden lodes where<lb/>
badly needed revenues could be<lb/>
obtained simply by enforcing existing<lb/>
laws and pursuing prudent government<lb/>
management practices.<lb/>
(1) There is a national scandal in<lb/>
corporate evasion or underpayment of<lb/>
property taxes. Public Citizen's tax<lb/>
reform group estimates that local<lb/>
government lose a minimum of $7<lb/>
billion a year through underassess-<lb/>
ment and evasion, most of which is<lb/>
corporate.<lb/>
Whether it is coal companies in<lb/>
Appalachia, oil and gas firms in Texas,<lb/>
timber and paper companies in Maine,<lb/>
mining companies in the west, and<lb/>
industrial plants and commerical office<lb/>
buildings throughout the country, the<lb/>
message is the same. The big<lb/>
companies pay less while the small<lb/>
homeowners and small businessmen<lb/>
pay more property taxes as a result.<lb/>
LOCAL ASSESSOR<lb/>
Senator Muskie's subcommittee<lb/>
estimated, for example, that U.S.<lb/>
Steel's Gary, Indiana plant is<lb/>
underassessed by $119 million. The<lb/>
local assessor has been denied<lb/>
information by U.S. Steel about plan<lb/>
value and equipment. More details on<lb/>
property taxes chicanery by companies<lb/>
and mass appraisal firms can be<lb/>
obtained by writing to the Tax Reform<lb/>
Research Group, P.O. Box 14198,<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20044.<lb/>
(2) Companies who fudge on<lb/>
turning over sales taxes to the state or<lb/>
who evade personal property taxes by<lb/>
moving inventory or equipment out of<lb/>
the state just before tax time are fertile<lb/>
areas for investigation. Presently in<lb/>
Missouri, state authorities are<lb/>
investigating an annual loss of some<lb/>
$100 million in state retail sales taxes<lb/>
which are collected by businesses but<lb/>
not remitted to state revenue offices.<lb/>
Companies operating interstate<lb/>
frequently play off one state against<lb/>
another to escape taxes. The Illinois<lb/>
Insurance Department has ordered<lb/>
eleven insurance companies either to<lb/>
move their real headquarters to Illinois<lb/>
or drop their false "store-front" home<lb/>
offices which are designed to escape<lb/>
premium taxation by other states as<lb/>
well as by Illinois. Commissioner Fred<lb/>
Mauck estimates a $5 million a year tax<lb/>
loss to Illinois unless this practice is<lb/>
stopped.<lb/>
TAX LIABILITY<lb/>
On July 31, 1973 the Illinois<lb/>
Department of Revenue issued a notice<lb/>
of tax liability in the amount of $45.9<lb/>
million against the Illinois Bell<lb/>
Telephone Company for the period July<lb/>
1967 to November 1970. The phone<lb/>
company claims that there should be<lb/>
no tax on receipts from alleged<lb/>
interstate commerce-that is, long<lb/>
distance calls out of state. This is a<lb/>
frequent accountant's defense which<lb/>
has been inadequately challenged by<lb/>
understaffed state agencies.<lb/>
(3) Poor management of state and<lb/>
local pension-retirement, operating,<lb/>
and capital funds lose citizens and<lb/>
local government operating funds in<lb/>
non-interest bearing bank accounts.<lb/>
This shocking official irresponsibility<lb/>
means less state revenues which could<lb/>
lead to higher taxes for the people.<lb/>
CAPITAL FUNDS<lb/>
For the huge pension and capital<lb/>
funds the problem is one of under<lb/>
investment. There is utterly too much<lb/>
secrecy surroundging facts which<lb/>
citizens have a right to know. Con-<lb/>
flicts of interest is one reason for<lb/>
secrecy. Until this spring, for in-<lb/>
stance, the Maryland State Treasurer<lb/>
was also the head of a Baltimore bank<lb/>
and a banking industry leader.<lb/>
(4) State and local procurement of<lb/>
services and supplies total nearly $40<lb/>
billion a year. Mismanagement, cor-<lb/>
ruption, and the frequent absense of<lb/>
competitive bidding cost taxpayers at<lb/>
least a quarter of that sum. For<lb/>
example, more centralized purchasing<lb/>
direct from manufacturers to avoid<lb/>
unnecessary or wholesale markups<lb/>
would promote great savings. The<lb/>
Federal General Services Adminis-<lb/>
tration urged this course of action on<lb/>
the states over three years ago but<lb/>
stopped when the wholesalers' trade<lb/>
association protested to powerful<lb/>
members of Congress and the White<lb/>
House.<lb/>
(5) State pension and retirement<lb/>
funds invested in common stocks pay<lb/>
a sizable commission to brokers.<lb/>
Connecticut State Treasurer Robert<lb/>
Berdon revolted against this practice<lb/>
last year and obtained, over great<lb/>
opposition by the securities industry, a<lb/>
seat on the PBW exchange to save the<lb/>
state $1 million a year in brokerage<lb/>
fees. Other states (Washington, Cal-<lb/>
ifornia, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania)<lb/>
are watching the Connecticut move<lb/>
because they are considering doing the<lb/>
same thing.<lb/>
So before state and local taxes go<lb/>
up on the little taxpayer, citizens<lb/>
should inquire of their state and local<lb/>
officials what they are doing to recover<lb/>
all of these lost revenues.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0007"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
7<lb/>
Intelligence reports White House criticism<lb/>
by Jack Anderson<lb/>
WASHINGTON- The Senate Watergate<lb/>
Committee has obtained a White<lb/>
House document which complains of<lb/>
my access to secret intelligence<lb/>
digests. It's true I see secret<lb/>
intelligence reports, which often<lb/>
contain some fascinating items. Here<lb/>
are a few examples:<lb/>
- The latest intelligence reports<lb/>
warn that trouble may flare up along<lb/>
the Chinese-Mongolian border. There<lb/>
is evidence, according to the reports,<lb/>
that the Soviets may be instigating an<lb/>
incident.<lb/>
- Intelligence reports from the<lb/>
Middle East claim that Soviet missile<lb/>
technicians have refused to operate the<lb/>
new antiaircraft missiles that they have<lb/>
installed in Syria. The Soviets<lb/>
reportedly have been ordered to keep<lb/>
out of direct combat. The Syrians,<lb/>
therefore, have gone to Hanoi to recruit<lb/>
North Vietnamese veterans who have<lb/>
had experience operating the Soviet<lb/>
missiles.<lb/>
- Colonel Quaddafi, the Libyan<lb/>
strongman, is preparing a little green<lb/>
book of his sayings, patterned after the<lb/>
little red book of Mao Tsetung's<lb/>
thoughts. Arrangements have been<lb/>
made to distribute tne green book<lb/>
throughout the world. It will teach<lb/>
Islamic socialism, which Qaddafi<lb/>
claims is the middle course between<lb/>
Communism and Capitalism.<lb/>
- Perhaps the most surprising<lb/>
intelligence reports tells of fighting<lb/>
between North Vietnamese troops and<lb/>
Cambodian insurgents in Cambodia.<lb/>
TieForum<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/>
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/>
Bicycle gripe<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
As a law abiding motor vehicle-<lb/>
operator, I feel that I have the right to<lb/>
criticize those people who mount their<lb/>
unmotorized vehicles and play<lb/>
"car And then without warning<lb/>
change into a "pedestrian" - without<lb/>
dismounting. To all of you who ride in<lb/>
the middle of the road but can't seem<lb/>
to top 15 MPH, I would appreciate it if<lb/>
vou could move to the right side of the<lb/>
lane when you see me coming - I'm the<lb/>
one in the black two-door.<lb/>
And to people who like to<lb/>
weave in and out of traffic, especially<lb/>
They had been fighting together to<lb/>
overthrow the government of Lon<lb/>
Nol. But just as they appeared to be<lb/>
winning, some units turned their guns<lb/>
on one another in outbreaks over the<lb/>
control of supplies.<lb/>
Oil Planr A severe winter could<lb/>
leave the nation critically short of<lb/>
heating oils. Shortages could also<lb/>
develop in propant gas and electrical<lb/>
power. The Northwest is particularly<lb/>
vulnerable to a power shortage.<lb/>
The new energy czar, John love, is<lb/>
already drafting emergen plans<lb/>
which would go into effect in uase of a<lb/>
bad winter. He is getting help from<lb/>
both the Interior Department and the<lb/>
Office of Emergency Planning. Their<lb/>
proposals should be ready for final<lb/>
White House approval by mid-October.<lb/>
They will recommend curtailing<lb/>
nonessential activities, such as theatre<lb/>
performances, concerts and sporting<lb/>
events, if the fuel oil shortage gets<lb/>
serious enough. They will also<lb/>
consider closing down schools during<lb/>
extremely cold weather. The lost<lb/>
school days would be added at the end<lb/>
of the academic year when the weather<lb/>
is warmer and the school buildings<lb/>
require less heating.<lb/>
As another fuel saving measure, the<lb/>
temperatures will probably be lowered<lb/>
in federal buildings. A campaign can<lb/>
also be expected to urge all Americans<lb/>
to turn down their thermometers at<lb/>
home and cut down on the use of their<lb/>
automobiles.<lb/>
The emergency measures, or<lb/>
course, will depend upon the weather.<lb/>
CIA Yes Men: The late President<lb/>
Kennedy blamed the Bav of Pigs<lb/>
the blonde long-haired dude on the<lb/>
green ten-speed who almost caused<lb/>
me two wrecks in less than a minute,<lb/>
may the fleas of a thousand camels<lb/>
infest your arm-pits! And while I'm<lb/>
taking your time, it'd be nice if all the<lb/>
bicycles could be seen in the dark - get<lb/>
a light before you get hit.<lb/>
John Palmer<lb/>
People gripe<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I just got back from the mall where<lb/>
Matthew and Peter played to night, and<lb/>
I am very disappointed - not in the<lb/>
artists themselves, but in the people<lb/>
who attended. I sat with some friends,<lb/>
and we were constantly being trampled<lb/>
by people going in and out near the<lb/>
side of the lawn.<lb/>
Also, there was more sound from<lb/>
people carrying on casual conver-<lb/>
sations than there was from the bass<lb/>
player. Maybe you don't care for the<lb/>
particular type of music that was<lb/>
played. Fine! That still doesn't give<lb/>
you any excuse for ruining it for the<lb/>
ones of us who really wanted to<lb/>
hear. You should have picked up your<lb/>
blanket and left -once! Some dude<lb/>
walked around us 4 different<lb/>
times. That gets to be aggravating<lb/>
after a while.<lb/>
Maybe next time they can rope off a<lb/>
special area for the people who like to<lb/>
run their mouths, and also for those<lb/>
blunder on the Central Intelligence<lb/>
Agency. He declared afterward that he<lb/>
"wanted to splinter the CIA in a<lb/>
thousand pieces and scatter it to the<lb/>
winds<lb/>
When he cooled down, he called in<lb/>
White House advisor Clark Clifford<lb/>
who had drafted the legislation<lb/>
establishing the CIA. As Clifford<lb/>
remembers it, Kennedy said: "I made<lb/>
some bad decisions on the Bay of<lb/>
Pigs. I made these bad decisions<lb/>
because I had bad information<lb/>
Kennedy appointed Clifford to head<lb/>
a civilian advisory board, which<lb/>
recommended a great many reforms.<lb/>
To make sure the President got good<lb/>
information, a board of estimates was<lb/>
established.<lb/>
However, its estimates angered<lb/>
President Nixon and his foreign<lb/>
policy-czar, Henry Kissinger. They<lb/>
complained that the board was<lb/>
dominated by doves. My White House<lb/>
sources say Kissinger got so upset<lb/>
that he refused to read the estimates<lb/>
from the CIA.<lb/>
The. new CIA chief, William Colby,<lb/>
is now preparing to abolish the board<lb/>
of estimates. In its place, he intends<lb/>
to choose a dozen experts from the<lb/>
different divisions of the CIA. They<lb/>
. I be known as national intelligence<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
Kissinger, meanwhile, has told the<lb/>
CIA that he wants his intelligence<lb/>
straight without any ideological<lb/>
slant. He also wants to see the<lb/>
minority views.<lb/>
My CIA sources claim this is<lb/>
exactly what, the board of estimates<lb/>
was sending the White House. The<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
who can't park themselves in one place<lb/>
for an hour. Sincerely,<lb/>
Susan Mayer<lb/>
Official item?<lb/>
TO: ALL RESIDENCE HALL STUDENTS<lb/>
Because of the fuel shortage and all<lb/>
that crap, we are requiring that all<lb/>
students restrict the use of lighting to<lb/>
the hours between 8:30 p.m. and 8:35<lb/>
p.m. The use of hot pads is hereby<lb/>
prohibited and any violation will result<lb/>
in automatic castration. Also we figure<lb/>
that you students should be able to get<lb/>
by the duration of the winter using<lb/>
body heat. Any banging on the<lb/>
radiators for the purpose of obtaining<lb/>
more heat will result in automatic<lb/>
decapitation and possible fornication.<lb/>
With your cooperation we feel certain<lb/>
that although you may feel uncom-<lb/>
fortable at times. . you'll make it!<lb/>
Thank you for your understanding,<lb/>
Dan K. Tooten<lb/>
Herd speaks<lb/>
Editor's note: The tollowing letter was<lb/>
written on drawing paper in green,<lb/>
purple, orange, red, blue and yellow<lb/>
crayon. We wish we could have<lb/>
reproduced it in the original hues, but<lb/>
we have enough trouble being coherent<lb/>
as it is now.<lb/>
Dear Whoever writes the Editorials,<lb/>
We (the two of us) feel that the<lb/>
editorial in the Sept. 20th paper,<lb/>
elimination of the board, they say, is a<lb/>
signal that the White House really<lb/>
wants estimates which always support<lb/>
the President's policies.<lb/>
Condemnation Rip-Offs: One of<lb/>
the most controversial practices of<lb/>
government is condemnation. The<lb/>
government has the power to condemn<lb/>
property supposedly for the public<lb/>
good. But the way it works, owners<lb/>
are often forced to see their property to<lb/>
government agencies or corporations<lb/>
at rockbottom prices.<lb/>
Here are some recent examples: In<lb/>
New York City, an old neighborhood<lb/>
was torn down to make way for a<lb/>
factory expansion. The residents,<lb/>
mostly edlerly people who had lived<lb/>
there all their lives, were given token<lb/>
sums for their property. Now they<lb/>
have no homes and no place to go.<lb/>
staff<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSSkip Saunders<lb/>
Betsy Fernandez<lb/>
SPORTS EDI TORJack 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/>
"Where is Everyone?" was directed<lb/>
towards us (Maybe a few others), and<lb/>
because of this we felt obligated to<lb/>
write.<lb/>
We just wanted to re-assure you<lb/>
that there are still some strange people<lb/>
roaming the vast and beautiful ECU<lb/>
Campus, (the two of us for example).<lb/>
In the course of events that we have<lb/>
been involved in, we have left quite a<lb/>
few people standing around wondering<lb/>
about us, the rest knowing we were<lb/>
crazy. Imagine your surprise at seeing<lb/>
two human airplanes flying around a<lb/>
small tree. Or seeing one girl<lb/>
impersonating a herd of buffalo (not<lb/>
ONE buffalo, but a whole HERD). In<lb/>
fact, you might be careful when<lb/>
walking past the back porch or Jarvis<lb/>
Hall or you might get trampled<lb/>
on. One may never know when the<lb/>
herd might be stampeding.<lb/>
While we're at it, we'd like to say<lb/>
"Hello" to a few friends and strangers,<lb/>
namely the Bearded Bicycle, the<lb/>
Serious Bicycle, the Paper Airplane<lb/>
Man, Bicycle Bill, Bicycle Bob, the<lb/>
Cowboy, the Cement Cinder Block<lb/>
Borrower, all the frisbee players on<lb/>
ECU Campus, and Danny. To all of<lb/>
you "Hello<lb/>
Continually Insane,<lb/>
Jake Raybin &amp; Betty Packer<lb/>
of Jarvis Hall<lb/>
(red light and all)<lb/>
P.S. We can produce eye witnesses to<lb/>
prove our insanity. Most live on 1st<lb/>
East Jarvis Hall.<lb/>
Love to all of you.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
iMVWMM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
�mm<lb/>
Sex change satisfies Jorgensen<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Christine Jorgensen. the first human to undergo a sex transformation, opened<lb/>
the ECU lecture series Thursuay night<lb/>
She traced her life from childhood to the present.<lb/>
Jorgensen recalled her childhood as one of confusion and fear. She called her<lb/>
home a "pretty average" place where sex was never discussed.<lb/>
However she feels that her family was unaverage when it came to<lb/>
intelligence. "My father was brilliant, almost a genius She said her father was<lb/>
scientifically inclined.<lb/>
Her mother was a warm emotional person who understood a persons<lb/>
emotional needs.<lb/>
"From these two elements, sensitivity and intelligence came to my sister and<lb/>
I. Many times the intelligence had to surpass the emotional, " Miss Jrgensen<lb/>
said .<lb/>
She grew up knowing she had a problem but not whit it was. She knew she<lb/>
was different from the other boys and girls. Books and motion pictures became<lb/>
her "friends"<lb/>
In World War II she was called to the draft and rejected twice for being<lb/>
under-weight "In a way I was disappointed she turned her interests to studying<lb/>
photography.<lb/>
She continued to be bothered by a strong identity crisis and continued her<lb/>
study of photography.<lb/>
When World Warr II ended she was again called to the draft and became Ptc.<lb/>
George W. Jorgensen She was stationed at Ft Dix almost all of her military<lb/>
career. .<lb/>
"Contrary to popular belief the military was good for me. For the first time i<lb/>
was forced to live close to people. I discovered I wasn't the only one with<lb/>
problems and discovered more about me and not George Jorgensen but some<lb/>
one else that was to be Christine Jorgensen she said.<lb/>
After the service. Miss Jorgensen went to Beaumont College in New York for<lb/>
six months After she left Beaumont College she went back to studying<lb/>
photography She then went to Yale to study.<lb/>
In the library at Yale was a book called THE MALE HORMONE. It was the first<lb/>
one like that she had ever seen. She discovered that no one is 100 percent male<lb/>
or female. 80 percent is the highest anyone can be of one sex.<lb/>
"I began to think that perhaps I had been dealing with the wrong thoughts. So<lb/>
I started thinking in terms of bio-chemistry Jorgensen explained.<lb/>
She then went to a laboratory technician school on the Gl bill because she<lb/>
wanted to study more about what she had found.<lb/>
It was during this time that she first mentioned to a doctor that she had come<lb/>
close to how she felt. He was not shocked and said he had been reading some<lb/>
newspaper articles about doctors doing research in masculinity and feminity in<lb/>
Sweden.<lb/>
"On May 1, 1950, I sailed for Sweden with a one way ticket. I didn't know<lb/>
anyone and I didn't know what was waiting for me she said.<lb/>
When she qot off in Denmark she SDoketo her cousin who told her she did not<lb/>
have tc go to Sweden. While she had been on the hiah seas a Danish doctor<lb/>
had been doing research in that area.<lb/>
That began almost three years of experimenting. At fisrst all the study was<lb/>
done on urine samples. The doctor then asked Jorgensen if he could do further<lb/>
research The first operation was performed December of 1951 and the second in<lb/>
December 1952. "I was at no time in any more danger than anyone else<lb/>
undergoing normai urgery she said.<lb/>
The story broke in December of 1952. Miss Jorgensen was furious that the<lb/>
story had been leaked to the press. It was only 15 years later that she found out<lb/>
who the person was that leaked the story.<lb/>
hfte nad tne choice of staying in Europe after the story had broken. She<lb/>
decided to come home. It had become a very big story in America.<lb/>
Back in America Miss Jorgensen decided to enter show business. "I did it for<lb/>
the money. Little did I know that I started a love affair for life she said.<lb/>
In 1967 her biography was released and the movie was released in 1970. "I got<lb/>
tired of Christine and now I'm on this lecture circuit she explained.<lb/>
Jorgensen said she only took a few hormone injections although she now<lb/>
takes hormone pills. "My body is in pretty much the function of a woman who<lb/>
has had a hysterectomy. It can function but can't have children. The hormones<lb/>
do change the body configuration she explained. She has never had a<lb/>
menstiual cycle. "In a way I've been lucky she laughed. She can experience an<lb/>
orgasm.<lb/>
"My family was surprised when they found out she said. "I didn't tell them<lb/>
why I went to Denmark. It was much more difficult for my father to accept. A<lb/>
father will accept a daughter going male more readily rather than a son going<lb/>
female. My communication with my parents was better after the operations<lb/>
She said she had considered marriage twice, but both times for the wrong<lb/>
reasons. "I have been engaged twice and in love twice but not with the same<lb/>
people she said. "I don't know if I will marry in the future, I would rather live<lb/>
with him than marry him. I don't think a piece of paper means that much except<lb/>
when having children<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
STOP-N-GO<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
,�<lb/>
, �$<lb/>
V.<lb/>
' w<lb/>
"1<lb/>
L �Asm �<lb/>
i HOURS!<lb/>
FOR YOUR CONVENI<lb/>
f "����<lb/>
810 E 10th St.<lb/>
NEXT TO POST OFFICE<lb/>
2905 E 10th St.<lb/>
NEXT TO HARDEE'S<lb/>
CHRISTINE JORGENSEN tells her story to a<lb/>
curious ECU audience. "She discovered that<lb/>
no one is 100 percent male or female<lb/>
STOP-N-GO FOODS<lb/>
WE SAVE YOU TIME<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5. NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
9<lb/>
SLANDERS GRAPHICS, WHERE are you? Whoever you are: Fountainhead is<lb/>
interested in printing you. Call 758 6366 or leave message for editor.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free info &amp; referral, up to 24 weeks. General<lb/>
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also available. Free pregnancy tests. Call<lb/>
PCS non profit 202 298 7995.<lb/>
 EASTERN AREA j<lb/>
! UNIFICATION RALLY j<lb/>
 National Guard Armory �<lb/>
i Sept. 27, 1973 i<lb/>
� Barbecue &amp; Program <lb/>
6:30-9:00 $5.00 per ticket .<lb/>
 FEATURING 1<lb/>
! SENATOR SAM ERVIN J<lb/>
i Lt. Gov. James Hunt i<lb/>
S Congressman Walter Jones 1<lb/>
1 Tickets available at door or call I Perry Walton at 758-001. <lb/>
1 Sponsored by Pitt Co YDC J<lb/>
Taking off?<lb/>
Take us up.<lb/>
There's a place tor you on<lb/>
Piedmont. For a weekend ot<lb/>
fun, a game out ot town, a<lb/>
quick trip home, whatever-<lb/>
there's a Piedmont jci or<lb/>
propjet flight to tit your<lb/>
plans. With personal,<lb/>
thoughtlul service always.<lb/>
Piedmont - serving over 75<lb/>
cities including Chicago,<lb/>
New York, Washington,<lb/>
Norfolk, Atlanta, Memphis.<lb/>
Call us, or your travel agent.<lb/>
Piedmont<lb/>
Airlines <lb/>
Our twenty-fifth year<lb/>
ot service.<lb/>
LOST: BROWN 3 FOLD Buxton wallet, late Thursday night at the Crows Nest. It<lb/>
tound call 752 3471 Reward is ottered.<lb/>
BABYSITTING AVAILABLE Mon Fri. during morning hours (until<lb/>
3:00) Contact 756 0711 betore 9 am<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING PART TIME help Noon hours, evenings, weekends, apply in<lb/>
person at McDonalds.<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION. Phone 758 HELP Corner Evans and 14th<lb/>
Streets. Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug problems, birth control<lb/>
information, overnight housing. All free services and confidential.<lb/>
WANTED- FEMALE FOR use as a sex object. No experience needed Will<lb/>
train. Send photograph and resume to DESIRE c o Fountainhead.<lb/>
WANTED: HOME FOR a lonely flip flop (the other one broke). Will sell real<lb/>
cheap Write P.O Box 932, Greene Hall.<lb/>
FOR SALE 1972 HONDA 450. Excellent Condition. Call 752 4916.<lb/>
HAVE THOSE EZU weekends got you down? Don't be apathetic Do something<lb/>
about it-come to a riot workshop Friday at 12:43 1103 Greene. This will be in<lb/>
preparation for the Oct. 13, 5 points riot.<lb/>
WANTED- WILL PAY good money for copies of Curd a Wack a Sacka Want<lb/>
Some Seafood, Mama and Your Feet Too Big. Will not accept ones that have<lb/>
been used as t v. trays, windchimes, or ones Mom &amp; Bozo jitter-bugged on at the<lb/>
class of '48 reunion. Come by the Fats Waller Hall of Fame located at the<lb/>
intersection of .Harles and Jarvis. We've open 23 hours a day.<lb/>
FLOYD G. ROBINSON'S<lb/>
READY NOW!<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
"A New Direction For<lb/>
Finer Living"<lb/>
IMMEIIATE ICCMPAKY<lb/>
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ta�'Itfwli and fcMttA cwwrat AND<lb/>
Moee<lb/>
RECREATION? YES!<lb/>
Pool Tennis<lb/>
Clubhouse<lb/>
MODELOPEN<lb/>
DAILY 10-12, l-e:30<lb/>
Sat. r Sun. 1:30-6:30<lb/>
Pot Leasts Available<lb/>
LIVE ON THE<lb/>
Fashionable Easttida<lb/>
j�i aattfcraak Drlva� OH Oraanvllla<lb/>
��utovar (US M4 irMn) l��� M�ifc a�<lb/>
TMith Straat, cattvanlaNt to OCU �n<lb/>
�varytMnf.<lb/>
Easbpook<lb/>
Rent Includes Utilities<lb/>
ONE CHECK PAYS ALL<lb/>
DRUCKER &amp;<lb/>
ft' FAlK<lb/>
" 758-4012<lb/>
Am Accra fcU�-mat Or�aa�tal�a�<lb/>
Discount Jewelers<lb/>
YOUR TIMEX REPAIR CENTER<lb/>
Present your ID and receive an added 25<lb/>
percent discount on all diamonds and earrings.<lb/>
GOOD THRU SEPT ONLY<lb/>
Complete line of onyx, jade, opal and cameo<lb/>
rings; also watches, flasks, and mugs.<lb/>
TWO WATCHMAKERS<lb/>
407 Evans St<lb/>
wwvwwwvwww<lb/>
Mike and Floyd Robinson<lb/>
758 2452<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
THIS NUMBER j<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
You may not need it today, tomorrow,<lb/>
or next week, but someday you will<lb/>
need it. everyone eventually does.<lb/>
ELIVERT SERVIC<lb/>
5-11 7 DAYS<lb/>
NEW 11 Chef Salad1.25<lb/>
Pizza, lasagna. spaghetti sandwiches<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
Corner 5th &amp; Cotanche St<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEADVOL. 5, NO. 5 25 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
III � � '<lb/>
Drpp-Acid,<lb/>
changing with<lb/>
the tinnes<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following article is reprinted at the request of the<lb/>
Provost and SGA office for student information.<lb/>
By JIM DAVIS<lb/>
SGA Secretary ol Academic Affairs<lb/>
Beginning with this Fall quarter (1973-74 school year), there will<lb/>
be a new system for dropping and adding courses at ECU. The rules<lb/>
qoveming the new procedures are published in the new<lb/>
Undergraduate Catalogue (1973-74). Since only new students will<lb/>
receive the new 73-74 catalogue, following are the new regulations<lb/>
plus some comments as to what they mean to ECU students.<lb/>
DROPPING COURSES<lb/>
Durinq the first 20 days of the quarter or first ten days of a<lb/>
summer session term, excluding Saturdays and Sundays a student<lb/>
may at his option, drop a course or courses without penalty. A<lb/>
student who wishes to drop a course or courses must observe the<lb/>
following procedure:<lb/>
1 He must inform the appropriate dean, departmental chairman, or<lb/>
person whom they designate and discuss the course or courses<lb/>
which he wishes to drop.<lb/>
2 He must obtain a drop-add form, complete it, and obtain the<lb/>
siqnature of the University official with whom he has conferred.<lb/>
3. He must next secure from the instructor or instructors the class<lb/>
enrollment card or cards<lb/>
4 Both the drop-add form and required class enrollment card or<lb/>
cards must be taken by the student to the Registrars Office within<lb/>
three class days.<lb/>
COMPELLING NECESSITY<lb/>
After the first 20 class days of a quarter or the first ten class days<lb/>
of a summer session term, excluding Saturdays and Sundays, a<lb/>
student may drop a course or courses without penalty only with the<lb/>
permission of the Provost, the Vice Chancellor of Health Affairs or<lb/>
the persons he may designate, or the Dean of the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, as is appropriate.<lb/>
Permission to drop a course or courses will be given only for<lb/>
reasons of clear and compelling necessity. If denied permission to<lb/>
drop the student may appeal the decision to a faculty appeals<lb/>
committee. If permitted to drop, the student must deliver the<lb/>
required forms to the office of the Registrar within three class days.<lb/>
REQUIRE CLARIFICATION<lb/>
There are three specific points of the new system which require<lb/>
some clarification The first is that up to the twentieth or tenth day<lb/>
deadline, whichever is applicable, a student cannot Prevented<lb/>
from dropping a course The requirement for d.scuss.on with an<lb/>
individual department ana the obtaining of a signature are not at<lb/>
odds with this statement.<lb/>
The student's department must sign the form if the student still<lb/>
wishes to drop a course after consultation The signature is only a<lb/>
means of insuring that the student has in fact been afforded the<lb/>
opportunity of being counseled as to what effect, if any, dropping a<lb/>
certain course will have on his academic plans.<lb/>
For example, during the consultation the student may be<lb/>
mformed that if he were to drop a particular course it would prevent<lb/>
him from graduating unfl the following year due to the course being<lb/>
a required course and that it would not be offered for another<lb/>
year The signature is also a protection for the different departments<lb/>
in that it provides evidence that a student was counseled.<lb/>
The second point is that no matter when a student drops course,<lb/>
there will be no penalty under the new system. This means that<lb/>
when you drop you do not obtain a grade; there is no longer, at<lb/>
anytime, a drop with failing or passing.<lb/>
Regarding the third point, the new system insures that there will<lb/>
be a uniform application of dropping which will be applied by the<lb/>
offices of the Provost, Vice Chancellor of Health Affairs, or Dean of<lb/>
the Division of Cntinuing Education to all ECU students.<lb/>
Though there will be a uniform application, requests tor dropping<lb/>
will be reviewed on an individual case by case basis. However, it<lb/>
must be stressed that after the initial probation period has elapsed<lb/>
the "permission to drop will be given only for reasons of clear and<lb/>
compelling necessity "<lb/>
!<lb/>
OL'MINER<lb/>
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Reg. $1.45<lb/>
small pizza plus salad<lb/>
$1.25 112 Mon Fri.<lb/>
96<lb/>
C WITHTHIS<lb/>
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NEXT TO PITT PIJZA<lb/>
Hour<lb/>
Monday Thurt. II A.M. toU MWnlfht<lb/>
Friday Saturday 11 A.M. to 1 A.M.<lb/>
Sunday 4 P.M. to 1) Midnight<lb/>
Any $1.95 medium pizza<lb/>
offer good Monday, Sept M thru<lb/>
Wednesday, Sept Z6<lb/>
0L'<lb/>
MINER<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Tavern<lb/>
i<lb/>
PJPJMaoWBWWi<lb/>
- � "<lb/>
690 E. GREENVILLE BLVD.<lb/>
Phone 756-4727 - Carry Out<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
tfRumammmmmmssamiissmaxstmaB9KaKmmKKm<lb/>
OVERTOILS SUPERMARKET,<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
2 blocks from ECU<lb/>
Corner of Jarvis and 3rd Street<lb/>
Ovcrtons<lb/>
Home of Greenville's Best<lb/>
Western Meats<lb/>
A rem;<lb/>
mid-Janu<lb/>
With<lb/>
defeated I<lb/>
time Wim<lb/>
year old<lb/>
comment:<lb/>
enemy of<lb/>
The E<lb/>
tourname<lb/>
The P<lb/>
four-hand<lb/>
Johnston<lb/>
Montr<lb/>
year due<lb/>
Dryde<lb/>
was askir<lb/>
will spent<lb/>
Harcourt.<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
TheN<lb/>
to win th<lb/>
Evonr<lb/>
win the $<lb/>
The E<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Susar<lb/>
respect iv<lb/>
and one<lb/>
Thefi<lb/>
will take<lb/>
Dave<lb/>
Hornsby'<lb/>
43 Sept.<lb/>
Far t(<lb/>
left in th<lb/>
hits and<lb/>
Now<lb/>
batted .2<lb/>
Of c�<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
Al Ur<lb/>
the Hoo!<lb/>
Jean-<lb/>
finish in<lb/>
a speed<lb/>
Rod<lb/>
Thet<lb/>
1973 For<lb/>
Aust<lb/>
On S<lb/>
Pembrol<lb/>
Wednes<lb/>
Furman<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
The<lb/>
has be<lb/>
scouts<lb/>
20. Mo<lb/>
visited<lb/>
Preside<lb/>
main<lb/>
Crumpl<lb/>
Summe<lb/>
quarterl<lb/>
200- poi<lb/>
speed,<lb/>
linebac<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
rn<lb/>
LVD.<lb/>
Out 5<lb/>
INMNNMM<lb/>
r.<lb/>
ts<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
��MMMi<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Sports World<lb/>
by TOMPKINS<lb/>
RIGGS AND KING<lb/>
A rematch between Billy Jean King and Bobby Riggs is being planned for<lb/>
mid-January at Madison Square Garden in New York.<lb/>
With over 50 million Americans watching Thursday night, Ms King<lb/>
defeated Riggs 6-4, 6-3, 6-3. The match again showed the great talent of five<lb/>
time Wimbeldon champion Ms. King, the amazing physical condition of a 55<lb/>
vear old Riggs, and the inept commentary of Rosie Casals. Ms. Casals<lb/>
comments almost made women's tennis look bad and rivaled static as an<lb/>
enemy of t.v. <lb/>
LADIES GOLF<lb/>
The ECU women's golf team opens their season Sept. 25 with a<lb/>
tournament against Wake Forest and Furman at Greenville S�.<lb/>
The Pirate's are led by last year's premier golfer, Barbara Haverty, a<lb/>
four-handicapper. Other members of the team are Lollie Edwards, Cheryl<lb/>
Johnston and Lee Kemezis.<lb/>
HOCKEY<lb/>
Montreal Canadian hockey goalie Ken Dryden has decided to sit out this<lb/>
vear due to a contract dispute.<lb/>
Drvden winner of the Vezina, Calder and Conn Smythe trophies, reportedly<lb/>
was askinq for $50,000 more than the Canadians were willing to pay Dryden<lb/>
will spendI the season working for the Toronto law firm of Osier, Haskins and<lb/>
Harcourt. Next year he will be a free agent and able to negotiate with other<lb/>
t6amS PRO TENNIS<lb/>
The Netherlands Tom Okker defeated Australia's John Alexander 7-5, 6-4,<lb/>
to win the $37,000 Seattle International Tennis Classic<lb/>
Evonne Goolagong defeated Yeugeniya Biryukova of the USSR 6-2 fro to<lb/>
win the $10,00 prize at the Four Roses Tennis Classic at Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
ECU TENNIS<lb/>
The ECU girls tennis team opens their season Sept. 27 at St. Mary's<lb/>
Susan Bussey and Ellen Warren, last years number one and two players<lb/>
respectively, return this year to try and better last years record of four wins<lb/>
andTheefirstShome match is Oct. 2 against Atlantic Christian. All home games<lb/>
will take place at Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
Dave Johnson, second baseman for the Atlanta Braves, broke Roger<lb/>
Hornsby's record of most homeruns by a second baseman by hitting number<lb/>
43 SeDt 17 against the Los Angeles Dodgers in LA.<lb/>
Far too many statistics are misleading though. Johnson, with one week<lb/>
left in the regular season, has 43 homers, 98 RBI's. is batting .273 w.th 147<lb/>
hits and 11 stolen bases. , 1CDni'c<lb/>
Now compare Hornsby. The year Hornsby hit 42 homers, he had 116 RBI s,<lb/>
batted .376 with 259 hits and 41 stolen bases.<lb/>
Of course Hornsby is in the Hall of Fame and except for this year<lb/>
Johnson's career hardly warrants the honor.<lb/>
MOTOR SPORTS<lb/>
Al Unser won his fourth straight USAC dirt-track championship by winning<lb/>
the Hoosier 100 at Indianapolis.<lb/>
Jean-Pierre Jarier won the European Formula II title with a seooncI place<lb/>
finish in the Grand Prix at Albi, France. Jarrier drove his March BMW 732s at<lb/>
a speed of 116 mph to win the title.<lb/>
 DAVIS CUP<lb/>
Rod Laver has agreed to play for Australia's Davis Cup team this year.<lb/>
The team that will probably face the U.S. in December will include Laver,<lb/>
1973 Forest Hill champion John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall and Mai Anderson.<lb/>
Australia has not won the Daivs Cup since 1967.<lb/>
PIRATES THIS WEEK<lb/>
On Saturday the cross-country team takes part in an invitational meet at<lb/>
Ppmbroke N C. The soccer team encounters UNC at Chapel him<lb/>
Wednesday. And the Pirates football team meets their first conference foe in<lb/>
Furman Univ. in Ficklen Stadium Saturday night at 7:30.<lb/>
Pros eye Bucs<lb/>
The East Carolina football camp<lb/>
has been populated with professional<lb/>
scouts since drills opened Aug.<lb/>
20. More than 15 representatives have<lb/>
visited including Gil Brandt, Vice-<lb/>
President of the Dallas Cowboys. The<lb/>
main topics of conversation are<lb/>
Crumpler, a 6-5, 220 pounder; Carl<lb/>
Summered, a 6-3, 210 pound<lb/>
quarterback and Rusty Markland, a<lb/>
200-pound defensive back with good<lb/>
speed. Danny Kepley, a junior<lb/>
linebacker, is also being watched.<lb/>
1973 YARSITY FOOTBALL<lb/>
8:00 p<lb/>
2:00 p.<lb/>
8:00 p<lb/>
�P<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 525 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
n<lb/>
Sept. 29 Furman<lb/>
Oct. 6 Davidson<lb/>
Oct. 13 VMI<lb/>
Oct.<lb/>
Oct.<lb/>
Nov.<lb/>
20 The Citadel 1:30 p.<lb/>
27 Unvi. N. C. 1:30 p<lb/>
m.<lb/>
m.<lb/>
m.<lb/>
m.<lb/>
3 William &amp; Mary 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Nov. 10 Richmond<lb/>
(Homecoming) 1:30 p.<lb/>
Nov. 17 Applachian 8:00 p.<lb/>
'Bold Type denotes Home Games<lb/>
Pirates face Paladins<lb/>
Head coach Sonny Randle said<lb/>
repeatedly following the North Carolina<lb/>
State game. "don't write us<lb/>
off "Some did Randle thinks, "but<lb/>
now look at us. No one ever thought<lb/>
we'd go on the road to places like<lb/>
Mississippi Southern and Southern<lb/>
lllinios and come back a winner. It<lb/>
shows how far we've come and what<lb/>
kind of class team we have<lb/>
"It's good to be home and it's great<lb/>
to come home with a 2-1 record<lb/>
Opponents previewing the Pirates<lb/>
through the Spring and Summer<lb/>
expected a running game built around<lb/>
Carlester Crumpler and quarterback<lb/>
Carl Summerell. Well, those who<lb/>
previewed are coming back for another<lb/>
look because the Pirates boast four<lb/>
effective runners-tailback Ken Stray-<lb/>
horn, fullback Don Schink, Crumpler<lb/>
and Summerell.<lb/>
The rushing statistics are virtually,<lb/>
even. Crumpler has gained 213 yards<lb/>
on 39 carries while St ray horn, who won<lb/>
the starting job following the season's<lb/>
opener, has picked up 217 yards on 54<lb/>
totes. Summerell, who rushed only<lb/>
eight times in the first two games<lb/>
combined, carried the football 11 times<lb/>
at .Southern Illinois, scored three<lb/>
touchdowns and gained 69 yards.<lb/>
And don't forget Schink, the quiet<lb/>
durable fullback who has 179 yards on<lb/>
37 carries including 61 at SIU and a<lb/>
game leading 89 at Southern<lb/>
Mississippi.<lb/>
Another outfit wearing purple and<lb/>
gold is doing some rushing of its<lb/>
own. it's the "Wild Dogs" defense,<lb/>
lead by the tough front four of Cary<lb/>
Goddette, Ken Moore, Joe Tkach and<lb/>
Buddy Lowery and by the linebackers,<lb/>
Danny Kepley, Billy Hibbs, Gary<lb/>
Niklason and Skip Russell.<lb/>
The "Wild Dogs" shut out Southern<lb/>
Mississippi two weeks ago-the first<lb/>
time P.W. Underwood had been<lb/>
shutout in his college career. At SIU,<lb/>
the "Wild Dogs" scored two<lb/>
touchdowns on fumble recoveries in<lb/>
the end zone.<lb/>
That unit also produced a Southern<lb/>
Conference Defensive Player of the<lb/>
Week last week in Ken Moore.<lb/>
The "Wild Dogs" may welcome<lb/>
back a crucial missing link this<lb/>
weekend if linebacker Butch Strawder-<lb/>
man is available to play. Strawderman<lb/>
sprained his knee during two-a-days<lb/>
and has missed the first three<lb/>
games. He has been working out in<lb/>
full gear for two weeks, but is taking<lb/>
his time to make sure the knee heals<lb/>
correctly.<lb/>
Newspaper headlines early in the<lb/>
season bemoaned the loss of<lb/>
placekicker Ricky McLester. Since<lb/>
McLester left practice, no one has<lb/>
lauded the efforts of placekicker Jim<lb/>
Woody and frosh punter Jonathan<lb/>
Deming. Woody booted two important<lb/>
field goals at Southern Mississippi,<lb/>
missed by inches from 37 yards away<lb/>
at Southern Illinois and continues to<lb/>
drill extra point boots.<lb/>
Deming, who was thrown into<lb/>
battle at N.C. State with no college<lb/>
experience, has averaged 38 - plus<lb/>
yards per punt including a 65 yard<lb/>
boomer from his own end zone against<lb/>
Southern Mississippi. At SIU last<lb/>
weekend, he punted sja times for an<lb/>
average of 37 yards.<lb/>
The Pirate injury lists nothing more<lb/>
than aches and pains following a hard<lb/>
hitting game last week. No one is<lb/>
expected to miss the Furman game,<lb/>
although several players may be<lb/>
slowed.<lb/>
Last week was East Carolina's only<lb/>
exposure to polyturf in 1973. The<lb/>
players had mixed emotions. Most<lb/>
thought the surface was very fast,<lb/>
allowed harder hitting, but was very<lb/>
irritating to arms and hands. Other<lb/>
players complained of leg cramps from<lb/>
playing on the surface as opposed to i<lb/>
grass. The majority of complaints con-<lb/>
cerned the hardness of the field.<lb/>
Players said they bounced instead of<lb/>
sliding.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S POWERHOUSE FULLBACK Don Shink blasts his way through a<lb/>
large hole made in the Southern Mississippi line. Shink's running and attitude has<lb/>
led the Pirates to a 2-1 record during 1973.<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039877_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 5 25 SEPT. 1973<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
Salukis fall in bruising battle<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
The East Carolina gridders battered<lb/>
and gouged their way past the Salukis<lb/>
of Southern Illinois Saturday night by<lb/>
the score of 42-25.<lb/>
Quarterback Carl Summered was<lb/>
the scoring hero of the game. He ran<lb/>
for three touchdowns, but unfortu-<lb/>
nately was hit hard on the third one<lb/>
and suffered possible rib damage.<lb/>
Senior linebacker Gary Niklason<lb/>
was voted the "Outstanding Player of<lb/>
the Game" by the SIU Sports Network.<lb/>
The Pirates took the opening<lb/>
kickoff on the Astroturf of McAndrew<lb/>
Stadium and marched down the field<lb/>
for a touchdown. Powerful running up<lb/>
the middle by Kenny Strayhorn and<lb/>
Don Shink through gaping holes<lb/>
opened by the offensive line paved the<lb/>
way. On third and goal to go at the<lb/>
SIU two, Summerell faked a dive and<lb/>
scored on a keeper around left<lb/>
end. Jim Woody's extra point made<lb/>
the score 7-0 with 10:46 left in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Southern Illinois took the kickoff<lb/>
but couldn't advance the ball. On<lb/>
fourth and one they lined up in punt<lb/>
formation at their own 30, only to have<lb/>
the center snap the ball over the<lb/>
punter's head. After a few crazy<lb/>
bounces, Danny Kepley pounced on<lb/>
the ball in the end zone for a<lb/>
touchdown. Woody's kick was good,<lb/>
upping the score to 14-0 with 9:10 left.<lb/>
After the insuing kickoff, the<lb/>
Salukis stalled again and were faced<lb/>
with another punting situation at their<lb/>
26 yard line. Unbelievably the SIU<lb/>
center pulled an instant replay for<lb/>
those who missed it the first<lb/>
time. After another wild scramble, the<lb/>
ball popped into Cary Codette's grasp<lb/>
for still another touchdown. Woody<lb/>
missed the kick, but with 7:19 still<lb/>
remaining in the first quarter the<lb/>
Pirates were on top 20-0.<lb/>
SIU back Larry Perkins took the<lb/>
kickoff and galloped 46 yards to the<lb/>
ECU 41. A personal foul penalty<lb/>
against the Bucs brought the ball down<lb/>
to the 24. The Pirates held, but were<lb/>
offside on the fieldgoal attempt. Fresh<lb/>
man running back Melvin Moncrief<lb/>
took advantage of the opportunity,<lb/>
scoring on a 16 yard blast on the very<lb/>
next play. This cut the Pirate margin<lb/>
to 20-6.<lb/>
ECU lost the ball on the following<lb/>
possession due to a fumble by<lb/>
Strayhorn. But two plays later the<lb/>
Bucs had the ball back as defensive<lb/>
tackle Ken Moore recovered a fumble<lb/>
by SlU's Moncrief.<lb/>
1973 CROSS-COUNTRY<lb/>
Sept. 29 Pembroke<lb/>
Invitotionol 10:00 o.m<lb/>
Oct. 6 W'lliom &amp; Mary, V.P.I.<lb/>
N. C. State 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
Oct 13 Appalachian 10:30 o.m.<lb/>
Oct. 20 Mt. St. Mary's 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
Oct. 27 N. C.<lb/>
Championships 10:00 am<lb/>
Nov. 3 Sou. Conf.<lb/>
Championships 10:00 a.m.<lb/>
8old Typa denotes Horn Garnet<lb/>
Coach: BILL CARtnM<lb/>
The quarter ended with Summerell<lb/>
leading a drive down to the Southern<lb/>
Illinois three yard line. On the first<lb/>
play of the second quarter Summerell<lb/>
scored again on the keeper play, and<lb/>
with Woody's conversion the score was<lb/>
27-6.<lb/>
The two teams traded punts, with<lb/>
the ECU drive highlighted by the<lb/>
re-appearance of Carlester Crumpler.<lb/>
Crumpler was in for Strayhorn, who<lb/>
had been shaken up momentarily.<lb/>
In speaking about these two after<lb/>
the game, coach Randle had this to<lb/>
say: "Kenny had another fine game,<lb/>
and Crumpler is back in form. He<lb/>
played a good game also<lb/>
The Salukis then put together a fine<lb/>
drive, highlighted by a 36 yard run by<lb/>
Perkins, and scored with 7:13 left in<lb/>
the half. This cut the Pirate margin to<lb/>
27-12.<lb/>
After an exchange of punts,<lb/>
Southern Illinois had the ball at their<lb/>
own 23 with 27 seconds left in the<lb/>
half. A 23 yard pass play brought the<lb/>
ball to the SIU 48 with three seconds<lb/>
left. On the final play of the half the<lb/>
Saluki fans celebrated an incredible 52<lb/>
yard touchdown pass. The Pirates<lb/>
went off the field knowing that it was a<lb/>
whole new ball game, leading by only<lb/>
nine, 27-18.<lb/>
On Southern Illinois' second<lb/>
possession of the half, they were faced<lb/>
with a fourth and one at the ECU<lb/>
38. With the Bucs expecting a run they<lb/>
placed ten men on the line. And run<lb/>
the Saluki runner did, finding no one in<lb/>
his path after a burst through the<lb/>
line. The score was now a barnburning<lb/>
27-25.<lb/>
The character of the Pirate club<lb/>
shonw brightly when they were faced<lb/>
with this crisis, as they moved 65<lb/>
yards in seven plays on a scoring drive.<lb/>
A Summerell to Benny Gibson pass<lb/>
for 16, a Strayhorn run for 12, and<lb/>
Summerell runs of 18 and 10 for the<lb/>
touchdown highlighted the drive. It<lb/>
was on the touchdown run that<lb/>
Summerell was injured. Reserve Bob<lb/>
Bailey came in and hit Gibson on a<lb/>
pass as the Pirates went for the<lb/>
two-point conversion, upping their lead<lb/>
35-25 with 6:33 left in the third quarter.<lb/>
On SlU's second play after the<lb/>
kickoff, ECU defensive back Rusty<lb/>
Markland intercepted a pass and<lb/>
returned it 16 yards to the Saluki<lb/>
15. On third and two Bailey fired a<lb/>
bullet to Gibson for an eight yard<lb/>
touchdown pass. Woody's conversion<lb/>
with 4:39 left made the margin a more<lb/>
comfortable one 42-25.<lb/>
Bailey, a junior from Bloomingdale,<lb/>
N.J filled in for Summerell the rest of<lb/>
the way. "He did a fine job for us<lb/>
coming off the bench said coach<lb/>
Randle.<lb/>
The fourth quarter was scoreless<lb/>
but exciting nonetheless. Crumpler<lb/>
almost broke away for a long<lb/>
touchdown run, finally being caught<lb/>
after weaving and sprinting for 64<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Jim Bolding picked off his second<lb/>
pass in as many games, adding a fine<lb/>
23 yard runback to it.<lb/>
The Pirates picked up 309 yards<lb/>
rushing. Strayhorn has 95, Crumpler<lb/>
85, Summerell 68, and Shink has<lb/>
61. Moncrief of Southern lllionis led<lb/>
all carriers with 127 yards.<lb/>
Once again the Bucs had trouble<lb/>
containing the opposition on kickoffs.<lb/>
Southern Illinois picked up 194 yards<lb/>
in this fashion.<lb/>
The players would like nothing<lb/>
better than to return home to a packed<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium crowd in their home<lb/>
opener Saturday night against the<lb/>
undefeated Furman Paladins, who<lb/>
surprised everyone by shutting out<lb/>
Appalachian State 17-0 earlier this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
And, as coach Randle said after the<lb/>
game: "Nobody in America thought<lb/>
we'd be 2-1 now. It'll be a shame if we<lb/>
don't have a big turnout after the way<lb/>
the players have performed in the first<lb/>
three games<lb/>
HRATE QUARTERBACK CARL SUMMbhbLL leaps through Saluki defenders<lb/>
in Saturday night's triumph. Summerell picked up 68 yards rushing in the<lb/>
42-25 contest.<lb/>
S<lb/>
o<lb/>
-<lb/>
O<lb/>
<lb/>
CO<lb/>
<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S SOCCER TEAM will face another tough opponent<lb/>
tomorrow afternoon as they travel to Chapel Hill to battle the University of<lb/>
North Carolina. The Pirate record now stands at 0-2-1 and their next home<lb/>
game will be October 3 when VMI comes to Minges field.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm � m<lb/>
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MOT<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039877_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>