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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039883_0001"/>
Fountainhegd<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE,NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
SGA legislature<lb/>
begins new term<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The 1973-74 student legislature was called to order at<lb/>
5 d m Oct 15 by Freida Clark, SGA vice-president.<lb/>
After an introduction and welcome for the new<lb/>
members the motion was entertained for nominations<lb/>
K of the house. Braxton Hall was the only<lb/>
nominee and was voted in with no objection. Upon<lb/>
assuming office, Hall thanked the legislators for the.<lb/>
confidence and introduced Richardson's New Rules of<lb/>
Order for consideration as the governing procedure.<lb/>
LB 1-1, Emergency Appropriation for the 973<lb/>
Homecoming Parade, was '50?<lb/>
Domme. The bill asked for an appropriation of $75C00.to<lb/>
be given to the Inter-Fraternity Council and Student<lb/>
steering committee to be allocated among<lb/>
interested organizations on campus to defray<lb/>
homecoming float-building expenses. The bill passed by<lb/>
voicTvote after Domme argued first that it was necessary<lb/>
to Purchase prefabricated floats at ?25 and second that<lb/>
f the appropriation was not approved, there would be no<lb/>
parade Mite Edwards, a day student representative<lb/>
asked the source of the ultimatum of no parade, and<lb/>
Dommis reply was, "It's just fact Edwards pointed ?<lb/>
that homecoming shou.d be an organizational effort<lb/>
ratrlrSubsidized economic contest made possible<lb/>
by LB 1-2, also entered with suspension of the rulee,<lb/>
called for an appropriation to the senior class of $54J5<lb/>
to coWExpenses of sending questionnaries to members<lb/>
or the class The bill was passed by voice vote with no<lb/>
TbTI was introduced by D.D. Dixon under normal<lb/>
procedures. The bill is a proposal to increasetnertudert<lb/>
foan fund to $5000 from the Pjj8,<lb/>
temrxrary select committee was formed by Hal to stuc-y<lb/>
hTSsal for consideration at the next session.<lb/>
An rtempt to suspend the rules again was introduced<lb/>
bv Dixon in an effort to force consideration of Lbi-4,<lb/>
ludent Covenant Transit Appropriation The, motton<lb/>
failed and a request for recess was called by Dixon. TTys<lb/>
was withdrawn after Hall explained that the<lb/>
sporlatron bill could not be considered again until<lb/>
theLReX1t-raSirenso.ution supporting the ECU crew team<lb/>
and lacrosse team, was introduced by ??????<lb/>
Dorm. The resolution was referred to committee tor<lb/>
"reduced her Student Government Transit<lb/>
Appropriation bill through normal channels The bih<lb/>
caffs for an appropriation of $10 thousand dollars be<lb/>
amoved for purchase of a second bus, and that a<lb/>
budget of $17,56 be appropriated Ilor operating expenses<lb/>
of both buses. The breakdown of the budget for each<lb/>
bus a locates $1250 for gas, $6838 for salaries $325 for<lb/>
fnsuranc? and $360 for maintenance. It also calls for the<lb/>
salaries to be emered as fl-time salaries.<lb/>
ThP meetina adjourned at 6:15 p.m aner dim<lb/>
BodS-JSTsGA ' president caMed (or emergency<lb/>
session, Wednesday, Oct. 17 at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
u i  ;?. ? ? ?Slt<lb/>
?$&amp; <lb/>
mtfP?<lb/>
m&amp;vWa' ' ?'?SVS<lb/>
myr?m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
.m<lb/>
 <lb/>
? '<lb/>
O<lb/>
<lb/>
0B<lb/>
Proposition 19 backers try<lb/>
downing 'pot' penalties again<lb/>
 . iJSL. if a rfrndum on common is agreement with the new wording and<lb/>
(CPSKThe backers of Proposition 19, a referendum on<lb/>
the 1972 California ballot which would have done away<lb/>
with criminal penalties for the use of marijuana, are<lb/>
going to try it again in 1974.<lb/>
The California Marijuana Initiative Coalition (CMIQ,<lb/>
ispresentlyattempting to get the signatures of 325 504<lb/>
registered'voters across California to put a revised<lb/>
proposition on the November, 1974 ballot The<lb/>
revisions include a more specific wording than that of<lb/>
Proposition 19. iL m . iQ lh<lb/>
Passage would give persons over the age of 18 the<lb/>
right to use marijuana in private, to posses or transport<lb/>
it and to grow it for personal use "provided hat<lb/>
reasonable steps are taken to shield such cultivation<lb/>
from public access" with no criminal Penalties.<lb/>
The updated proposition further stales that the<lb/>
governing body of any city or unincorporated area shall<lb/>
have exclusive"jurisdiction to prohibit use of marijuana<lb/>
in public "with a maximum penalty of a $100 ?"??<lb/>
CMIC is made up of a variety of groups and smaller<lb/>
coalitions from across the state. What they have in<lb/>
State board strips MD of privileges<lb/>
(CPSZNS)-Dr. Frederick Blanton, who successfully<lb/>
used marihuana to treat glaucoma has been stripped d<lb/>
hifmSl privileges and faces the possible loss of his<lb/>
license to practice.<lb/>
Blanton a Fort Lauderdale eye specialist, created<lb/>
a furofeariier this year when he reported the success of<lb/>
h s uana treatment for glaucoma. The common<lb/>
Pve disease causes a buildup of fluid pressure In the<lb/>
eyyebaretuTtin1 in pain, discomfort and loss of vision.<lb/>
Blanton had learned cannabis sativa reduces the<lb/>
eye's fluid pressure when smoked or ingested and<lb/>
conducted experiments with the illegal drug on 50<lb/>
volunteer glaucoma suffers. He fed the patients<lb/>
home-rnade brownies laced with potent Jamac.an<lb/>
SriuSS Tests showed dramatic reduction in eye<lb/>
pressure for seven hours after eating the brown.es.<lb/>
The eye doctor said that the government had turned<lb/>
down hJrequest for marijuana on a ?Ny ????<lb/>
so he was forced to obtain the drug illegally Tor<lb/>
experimentation.<lb/>
Blanton has been denied the right to practice at two<lb/>
Florida hospitals and the State Board of Medical<lb/>
Examiners informed him that he may be permanently<lb/>
stripped of his practioneCs license as a result of his<lb/>
experiments.<lb/>
common is agreement with the new wording and a<lb/>
desire to see it become law.<lb/>
The state has been divided into five regions, and<lb/>
fund raising, petitioning, and planning will take place<lb/>
on a regional rather than state basis.<lb/>
Supporters of the new initiative are confident that<lb/>
with the right educational campaign, the measure will<lb/>
pass in 1974.<lb/>
Proposition 19, which was attacked for being too<lb/>
qeneral and thus allowing unrestricted growth and<lb/>
public use of marijuana nevertheless received over<lb/>
one-third of the vote. The new initiative accomodates<lb/>
these objectives. .<lb/>
The strategy has also changed. In 1972 he<lb/>
emDhasis was placed on marijuana itself being the<lb/>
fssue In 1974 the emphasis will be based more on the<lb/>
ssue of privacy, the right of an adult to do as he sees<lb/>
fit in his own home. There was agreement on this<lb/>
aspect of the issue in 1972, but the sweeping wording<lb/>
wasthe primary cause of Proposition 19 s defeat,<lb/>
arrordina to CMIC workers.<lb/>
Coamion planners intend to employ several other<lb/>
arguments including, showing the California taxpayers<lb/>
the wastefulness of spending large amounts of ax<lb/>
mneTTan estimated $100 million in 1972) to punish<lb/>
Sana users, emphasizing the ineffectiveness erf<lb/>
present criminal laws in deterring rnatfutna uand<lb/>
publicizing the large amount of legal and medical<lb/>
informtion favoring decriminalization. hanrilina<lb/>
With the experience gained from handling<lb/>
Proposition 19, the new initiative's backers eel they<lb/>
will be able to put the new measure,cn ?the baltot more<lb/>
cheaply and easily than they were able to in 1972. Ths<lb/>
will leave more money and time available for the<lb/>
SucSoXy campaign which the Coalition views as<lb/>
beina the most important phase.<lb/>
The new initiative provides the sale of marijuana still<lb/>
be subject to criminal penalties, and makes no effort to<lb/>
cangeTresent criminal laws against activitieswhile<lb/>
under the influence of marijuana that would endanger<lb/>
others, such as driving while stoned.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
news msmmm<lb/>
ajm?&amp;&amp;mmpu<lb/>
o<lb/>
U"U<lb/>
Pub Board<lb/>
Diabetes<lb/>
Christmas<lb/>
Money?<lb/>
The deadline for applications for the<lb/>
Publications Board has been extended.<lb/>
Applications will be accepted in the SGA<lb/>
office, 303 Wright Annex, from<lb/>
Wednesday, October 17, until Wednes-<lb/>
day, October 25. The only requirement for<lb/>
applicants is a 2.0 average. There are<lb/>
presently 5 open positions on the<lb/>
Publications Board. The Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association and the Publications<lb/>
Board members urge all interested and<lb/>
qualified people to apply for the Board, as<lb/>
no official business concerning any<lb/>
campus publication can be conducted<lb/>
until the vacant board positions are filled.<lb/>
N.C. Wesley an<lb/>
"Stories" (Brother Louie) and "Nan-<lb/>
tucket Sleighride" will appear in concert<lb/>
in Everette Gym at North Carolina<lb/>
Wesleyan College on Saturday, October<lb/>
20 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are $3.50 each.<lb/>
English students<lb/>
Omicron Theta Chapter of Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta National English Honor Society<lb/>
invites all English Majors and Minors,<lb/>
Faculty membrs and Graduate students to<lb/>
its Invitational Program on Thursday,<lb/>
October 25, 1973, in Coffeehouse (R 201<lb/>
Student Union) at 7:00.<lb/>
Dr. William Stephenson will show the<lb/>
highly acclaimed award-winning docu-<lb/>
mentary on THE MAKING OF "BUTCH<lb/>
CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID an<lb/>
on-the-set documentary narrated by the<lb/>
director, George Roy Hill; the<lb/>
scriptwriter, William Goldman; and the<lb/>
actors, Paul Newman and Robert Redford.<lb/>
Those eligible for membership in the<lb/>
society will be invited to join Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta THursday evening.<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Diabetes Association<lb/>
Meeting Oct. 18 at 7:30 Moyewood<lb/>
Center. SDpeaker John Laurents, Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Director of N.S. Diabetes<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Away games<lb/>
Bus transportation to<lb/>
'away" football games is available at<lb/>
the following rates:<lb/>
Oct. 20 THE CITADEL $4.00<lb/>
Oct. 27 u.N.C. $3.00<lb/>
Arts Ensemble<lb/>
The five-member News Arts Ensemble,<lb/>
a group of chamber musicians, will<lb/>
perform at ECU Wednesday, Oct. 17 as<lb/>
part of the ECU'S Music Festival 74.<lb/>
The Ensemble will perform the Mozart<lb/>
Adagio and Rondo, K. 617 for Glass<lb/>
Harmonica, Flute, Oboe, Viola and Cello;<lb/>
Poulenc's "Sonata for Oboe and Piano<lb/>
Berio's "Sequence for Solo Flute and<lb/>
selections by Chi Ids and Ives.<lb/>
All Emsemble members have studied<lb/>
at the Eastman School of Music,<lb/>
Rochester, N.Y. and have performed<lb/>
concerts throughout the U.S. and<lb/>
Canada. The group is now resident at<lb/>
Belknap College, Center Harbor, N.H.<lb/>
The Wednesday performance, open to<lb/>
the public without charge, is scheduled<lb/>
for 8:15 p.m. in the Recital Hall of<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center.<lb/>
The upcoming Christmas season will<lb/>
be a lonely one for many young<lb/>
Americans who are serving our country,<lb/>
both here in the U.S. and in countries<lb/>
around the world.<lb/>
It was announced this week that<lb/>
Military Overseas Mail will assist our<lb/>
servicemen during the holiday season by<lb/>
collecting Christmas cards for distribution<lb/>
to them. MOM has received requests for<lb/>
thousands of cards for our men stationed<lb/>
overseas. After these requests have been<lb/>
filled, cards will also be sent to<lb/>
servicemen stationed in the U.S.<lb/>
This is an ideal Christmas project for<lb/>
clubs, schools, scout troops, churches<lb/>
and other organizations as well as<lb/>
families and individuals. Those who are<lb/>
interested in assisting our men in this<lb/>
way may obtain further information by<lb/>
sending a stamped, self-addressed<lb/>
envelope to Lee Spencer, Coordinator,<lb/>
Military Overseas Mail, Box 127, Daly<lb/>
City, Ca. 94016.<lb/>
Hair<lb/>
Peace<lb/>
Garrett<lb/>
Garrett Coffee House Number Two<lb/>
features Lisa Heller of Garrett playing the<lb/>
guitar. Come to the lobby at 9:30 on<lb/>
Wednesday for some entertaining form<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
The Greenville Peace Committee<lb/>
protests the military overthrow of the<lb/>
elected government of Chile. A public<lb/>
demonstration of this protest will be<lb/>
made at the Main Post Office (Green and<lb/>
Second Streets) on Wednesday, October<lb/>
17th, from 12:00 noon until 1:00<lb/>
p.m. Anyone who feels that the denial of<lb/>
life and liberty in Chile demands more<lb/>
notice than it has so far received in the<lb/>
land of Jefferson is invited to use this<lb/>
means.<lb/>
Auditions for the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse production of the smash-hit<lb/>
musical Hair, will be held in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium on October 18th from 4:00 to<lb/>
7:00 and October 19th from 7:30 to<lb/>
10:00. Anyone interested in trying out is<lb/>
welcome and should be prepared to sing a<lb/>
song from Hair (or any of your choice) and<lb/>
do some "soul-train" type dancing.<lb/>
Inter. Affairs<lb/>
Bob Lucas welcomes anyone who has<lb/>
an interest in international affairs to drop<lb/>
by his office in room 310 of Wright<lb/>
Building. He would be happy to accept<lb/>
the services of anyone desiring to work<lb/>
with any of the committees, and asks that<lb/>
they stop by and leave their name and<lb/>
address<lb/>
Need money? Wonder how you might<lb/>
get some money to help pay your ECU<lb/>
dues? Talk with Robert Boudreaux of<lb/>
Financial Aides about monies available.<lb/>
Meet in the Garrett lobby at 7:30 tonight,<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The next meeting of the ECU College<lb/>
Republicans will be on Wednesday<lb/>
October 24, at 7:30 p.m. in Austin 132<lb/>
(please note that the meeting was<lb/>
originally scheduled for Tuesday Oct. 23<lb/>
but the date had to be changed). Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins will be our guest speaker so<lb/>
please try to attend.<lb/>
For all of the Clubs executive<lb/>
committee members; there will be an<lb/>
executive committee meeting Monday<lb/>
Oct. 22 at 4:00 p.m. in Mr. Hemdons<lb/>
office (Social Science Building room 323).<lb/>
Chief of A.P.<lb/>
The Chief of the Bureau of the<lb/>
Associated Press for the Carolinas will<lb/>
speak to two ECU journalism classes<lb/>
Thursday at 2 and 3 p.m.<lb/>
W.J. (Joe) Dill of Charlotte will also be<lb/>
available for conference from 1-2 p.m. ikn<lb/>
Room 334, New Austin.<lb/>
This visit marks the first time that a<lb/>
wire service bureau chief has ever spoken<lb/>
to ECU journalism students.<lb/>
Dill, a native of Illinois, began his<lb/>
career with the AP on Christmas eve of<lb/>
1961 in Chicago. He moved from night<lb/>
city editor to assistant chief of the bureau<lb/>
in the large Chicago office and later to<lb/>
bureau chief assignments in Baltimore,<lb/>
Nashville and, more recently, Charlotte.<lb/>
As an undergraduate, Dill was<lb/>
editor-in-chief of the campus newspaper<lb/>
for two years.<lb/>
Dill says that he is "looking forward to<lb/>
my first visit to East Carolina<lb/>
Journalism students are invtied to<lb/>
j attend the lectures scheduled for Rooms<lb/>
207 and 301 of New Austin.<lb/>
Contents<lb/>
SGA LEGISLATUREpage one<lb/>
STUDENT TUITION STRIKEpage three<lb/>
VISTA IN GREENVILLEpage three<lb/>
GERMAN FRIEND FROM ECU-BONN VISITS. . paqe four<lb/>
GREEK RUSHpage seven<lb/>
EDITORIALSFORUMCOMMENTARYpages eight and nine<lb/>
SEX DISCRIMINATION IN EDUCATION page twelve<lb/>
SPORTS pages fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
5000<lb/>
(CPS)-A s<lb/>
been callec<lb/>
Ann Arboi<lb/>
tuition hik<lb/>
weeks bef<lb/>
Lee Gil<lb/>
the first b<lb/>
called for<lb/>
orientatior<lb/>
"You rr<lb/>
money in<lb/>
it. Just k<lb/>
while .U<lb/>
us, inste<lb/>
them Gil<lb/>
Allen<lb/>
president<lb/>
being "sh<lb/>
but added<lb/>
will amour<lb/>
(o dat<lb/>
students r<lb/>
for the 1<lb/>
Committei<lb/>
the striki<lb/>
demonstrs<lb/>
students<lb/>
install men<lb/>
Tuitior<lb/>
according<lb/>
effect iverx<lb/>
VI<lb/>
There<lb/>
this fall.<lb/>
They<lb/>
(Voluntee<lb/>
they belo<lb/>
Linda S<lb/>
Hainely,<lb/>
Mike Car<lb/>
Earnhard<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
They<lb/>
devoted i<lb/>
their ski I<lb/>
over Amc<lb/>
poverty <lb/>
people o<lb/>
County ?<lb/>
Altho<lb/>
begun '<lb/>
concept i<lb/>
year anc<lb/>
which w<lb/>
Developr<lb/>
project,<lb/>
present<lb/>
County,<lb/>
federal <lb/>
contribu<lb/>
commun<lb/>
VIST<lb/>
purpose<lb/>
they cor<lb/>
centratic<lb/>
areas is<lb/>
the prob<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
through<lb/>
is desig<lb/>
poor ar<lb/>
populati<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0003"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
3<lb/>
you might<lb/>
your ECU<lb/>
Jreaux of<lb/>
available.<lb/>
0 tonight,<lb/>
J College<lb/>
ednesday<lb/>
ustin 132<lb/>
ing was<lb/>
i Oct. 23<lb/>
. Dr. Leo<lb/>
eaker so<lb/>
executive<lb/>
II be an<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
-lemdons<lb/>
torn 323).<lb/>
of the<lb/>
nas will<lb/>
classes<lb/>
I also be<lb/>
p.m. ikn<lb/>
e that a<lb/>
' spoken<lb/>
gan his<lb/>
5 eve of<lb/>
n night<lb/>
I bureau<lb/>
later to<lb/>
It i more,<lb/>
rlotte.<lb/>
II was<lb/>
vspaper<lb/>
ward to<lb/>
tied to<lb/>
Rooms<lb/>
5000 sign pledges<lb/>
Students hold tuition strike<lb/>
(CPS)-A schuoi wide tuition strike has<lb/>
been called at the University of Michigan,<lb/>
Ann Arbor, in protest of a 24 percent<lb/>
tuition hike ordered by the Regents two<lb/>
weeks before classes started this fall.<lb/>
Lee Gill, a 25 year old ex-convict and<lb/>
the first black student council president<lb/>
called for the strike at a freshman<lb/>
orientation meeting.<lb/>
"You must seize power now! Put that<lb/>
money in your pockets: don't spend<lb/>
it. Just keep it in your pockets for a<lb/>
while .Let's make these folks bend to<lb/>
us, instead of us always bending to<lb/>
them Gill said.<lb/>
Allen Smith, the University's vice-<lb/>
president for academic affairs, admitted<lb/>
being "shocked" by Gill's announcement<lb/>
but added, "I really don't think the strike<lb/>
will amount to anything<lb/>
lo date, 5000 of the school's 33,000<lb/>
students have signed pledges of support<lb/>
for the tuition strike. Student Action<lb/>
Committee, the organizing force behind<lb/>
the strike, has called a series of<lb/>
demonstrations and estimates about 1500<lb/>
students have not paid their first<lb/>
installment.<lb/>
Tuition was due on Oct. 1, but<lb/>
according to Smith the strike's<lb/>
effectiveness will not be known "for well<lb/>
"over a month .and even then there are<lb/>
many who normally don't pay on the first<lb/>
date<lb/>
The Regent's telephone vote decision<lb/>
to raise tuition was multi-fold, Smith<lb/>
said, "First, we simply need more<lb/>
money. We had to have an increase in<lb/>
revenue from last year But the second,<lb/>
more complex reason involved the US<lb/>
Supreme Court decision which granted<lb/>
out-of-state students resident status and<lb/>
lower tuitions.<lb/>
University officials predicted a loss of<lb/>
approximately $2.5 million in tuition<lb/>
revenue as thousands of nonresidents<lb/>
qualified for lower rates. Nearly 25<lb/>
percent of the University's 33,000<lb/>
students are from outside of Michigan.<lb/>
The tuition increase raises freshman-<lb/>
sophomore yearly charges from $696 to<lb/>
$800; and out-of-state rate was advanced<lb/>
to $2,600 from $2,260 last year. Juniors,<lb/>
seniors and graduate students faced<lb/>
increases of 28 to 30 percent.<lb/>
The Student Action Committee<lb/>
claimed the $2.5 million loss figure was<lb/>
inflated by a redefinition of residency<lb/>
rules made by the University after the<lb/>
Supreme Court ruling. Even if that figure<lb/>
is accurate, the committee said, the<lb/>
University stands to make $7.1 million<lb/>
additional from the tuition hike.<lb/>
The administration has been chargea<lb/>
with being "vague about the need for<lb/>
money" and intending to use the raise to<lb/>
make Michigan more of an "elitist"<lb/>
school. "The result of higher tuition and<lb/>
increased aid a student spokesman<lb/>
said, "is that the students from middle<lb/>
and upper-middle class families become<lb/>
antagonistic toward the lower class<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Smith admitted being unsure as to<lb/>
exactly how much tuition hikes would<lb/>
increase revenue but expressed concern<lb/>
that it would not be enough to meet<lb/>
needs. "If there is a surplus, it won't be<lb/>
refunded he said. Smith dismissed the<lb/>
other student charge as "a rhetorical<lb/>
assertion" and "nonsense<lb/>
The tuition strike has received strong<lb/>
support from the graduate student<lb/>
teaching assistants at the University of<lb/>
Michigan who ironically face higher<lb/>
tuition because of the same US Supreme<lb/>
Court decision on residency. Next year,<lb/>
for the first time in the University's<lb/>
history, graduate teaching fellows will<lb/>
have to pay the higher non-resident<lb/>
tuition if they come from out of<lb/>
state. Previously, all teaching fellows,<lb/>
whether they came from outside the state<lb/>
or not, paid a lower tuition than an out of<lb/>
state student. This will affect about<lb/>
two-thirds of roughly 800 of the teaching<lb/>
fellows in all departments of the<lb/>
University.<lb/>
In response to this tuition rise<lb/>
graduate assistants in about 14<lb/>
departments have decided to form some<lb/>
sort of teaching fellows union or<lb/>
association. A similar attempt at<lb/>
unionization was blocked by the<lb/>
University in a court suit three years ago.<lb/>
Mooney denies<lb/>
sex revolution<lb/>
(CPSHndiana psychologist Elizabeth<lb/>
Mooney says reports of a sexual<lb/>
revolution on college campuses are<lb/>
probably exaggerated.<lb/>
Mooney believes students entering<lb/>
college now may just as likely be virgins<lb/>
as students of a generation ago.<lb/>
Dismissing the idea that there is a<lb/>
sexual revolution on campus, Mooney<lb/>
said reports of sexual permissiveness are<lb/>
getting a lot of attention while the "good<lb/>
news" of chastity has gone unnoticed.<lb/>
VISTA begins Greenville project<lb/>
By JIM DODSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There are eight new faces in Greenville<lb/>
th'S falL X.OTA<lb/>
They are the faces of VISTA,<lb/>
(Volunteers In Service To America), and<lb/>
they belong to Rick Cagen, Bob Edwards,<lb/>
Linda Schrakenberg, Jim Speer, Pat<lb/>
Hainely, Charles Lance, Chris Power, and<lb/>
Mike Carson. The group's sponser is Rev.<lb/>
Earnhardt of the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
They are young people who have<lb/>
devoted a year out of their lives as well as<lb/>
their skills and talents to come from all<lb/>
over America to work with the problems of<lb/>
poverty and ignorance that confront the<lb/>
people of Greenville and surrounding Pitt<lb/>
County area.<lb/>
Although the project was formally<lb/>
begun this past August, its initial<lb/>
conception goes back to the spring of this<lb/>
year and the "Walk For Development"<lb/>
which was sponsored by "Young World<lb/>
Development Of the money raised in the<lb/>
project, 42 percent went to initiate the<lb/>
present VISTA project here in Pitt<lb/>
County. Other funding comes from the<lb/>
federal ACTION agency and from various<lb/>
contributions of private citizens in the<lb/>
community.<lb/>
VISTA projects vary in scope and<lb/>
purpose with the needs and problems<lb/>
they confront and seek to aleviate. Con-<lb/>
centration upon certain poverty-related<lb/>
areas is determined by an evaluation of<lb/>
the problems by business and community<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
The VISTA program, once established<lb/>
through the efforts of community leaders,<lb/>
is designed to provide guidance for the<lb/>
poor and low-income segment of the<lb/>
population in coping with their problems.<lb/>
VISTA members Dring their skills,<lb/>
education, training-and perhaps most<lb/>
important of all, their compassion for<lb/>
humanity, into the arena when they join<lb/>
the fight on poverty and ignorance.<lb/>
The Greenville project, though<lb/>
relatively new, has begun to deal with a<lb/>
number of problems that currently<lb/>
confront many people in Greenville and<lb/>
Pitt County.<lb/>
Charles Lance, VISTA group super-<lb/>
visor in Greenville, points out that the<lb/>
group is presently involved in making a<lb/>
detailed survey in two areas. Specific<lb/>
objectives are consumer education and<lb/>
job development.<lb/>
In the area of consumer education the<lb/>
group is currently involved in a<lb/>
city-county survey project from which<lb/>
they hope to develop a better<lb/>
understanding of the problems faced by<lb/>
consumers in this area who fall into the<lb/>
low-income category.<lb/>
The consumer education study is<lb/>
scheduled to get into full swing late in<lb/>
October and VISTA leaders hasten to<lb/>
point out that they would welcome<lb/>
voluntary help from interested ECU<lb/>
students and local citizens and service<lb/>
clubs.<lb/>
There are no limitations upon time<lb/>
invested in this project by volunteers,<lb/>
VISTA leaders point out, and persons<lb/>
interested in lending a hand in the survey<lb/>
will be welcomed. Volunteers should<lb/>
contact Mike Carson at telephone<lb/>
758-1528 for details.<lb/>
A second area of concentration for the<lb/>
local VISTA group involves "job<lb/>
development" in behalf of the lower<lb/>
income seament of this area's population.<lb/>
In reference to this project, Rick<lb/>
Cagen points out, "We are interested in<lb/>
identifying people in this area who don't<lb/>
have jobs and hope to match their skills<lb/>
and work-interest with available jobs or<lb/>
places of employment which may<lb/>
develop<lb/>
Along these same lines, VISTA worker<lb/>
Charles Lance added, "Unfortunately,<lb/>
being here for such a short time we are<lb/>
just now getting into the guts of the<lb/>
"problem. We are concerned with the real<lb/>
needs of people who can't seem to find<lb/>
the handle for helping themselves Lance<lb/>
.continued, and at the same time<lb/>
running a continuing evaluation of our<lb/>
own efforts to insure that we are reaching<lb/>
these sensitive areas of need<lb/>
Among projects the VISTA group is<lb/>
involved in, directly or indirectly, includes<lb/>
support and development of the Boy's<lb/>
Club, Real House and Juvenile Court<lb/>
Counciling.<lb/>
Currently the local VISTA group has<lb/>
openings for four additional members and<lb/>
they are interested in talking to<lb/>
prospective recruits who may find full<lb/>
time service with VISTA rewarding.<lb/>
"We are looking for people from the<lb/>
Greenville area said Charles Lance, "and<lb/>
are particularly interested in recruiting<lb/>
blacks into the VISTA program. We<lb/>
believe the addition of qualified blacks to<lb/>
the VISTA program will greatly improve<lb/>
our services and communications to and<lb/>
with the black community<lb/>
Recruits joining the VISTA program<lb/>
from this area are sent to a regional<lb/>
training center at Atlanta for a four to six<lb/>
weeks training and orientation session.<lb/>
It is recommended that college<lb/>
students, other than those from the<lb/>
Greenville area, wishing to become a part<lb/>
of the VISTA program make application to<lb/>
the national organization.<lb/>
In addition to providing rewarding<lb/>
experiences in working with people,<lb/>
VISTA appears to offer it's members many<lb/>
opportunities to understand and become<lb/>
involved in the warp and filler of the fabric<lb/>
of American life.<lb/>
In this context Bob Edwards, a VISTA<lb/>
worker, reflected, "The degree of<lb/>
involvement has been rewarding because<lb/>
it allows us to come into contact with<lb/>
people we normally wouldn't, and that<lb/>
includes some incredibly diverse person-<lb/>
alities.  .<lb/>
Pat Hainley, another VISTA worker<lb/>
from Portland, Oregon, assessed his<lb/>
involvement in the Greenville area in the<lb/>
following manner. "To someone in-<lb/>
terested in it, it's amazing to see an urban<lb/>
area become industralized. The change is'<lb/>
striking. Sociologists should be just as<lb/>
concerned as business men. These<lb/>
changes affect people's lives<lb/>
Another volunteer, Mike Carson,<lb/>
concluded, "The thing that surprised me<lb/>
most after joining VISTA was the cultural<lb/>
shock, food and the weather. Where I<lb/>
came from we only wore hush puppies,<lb/>
we didn't eat them<lb/>
Although the VISTA program in the<lb/>
Greenville and Pitt County area is<lb/>
relatively new and no assessment of it's<lb/>
value can be made at this time, it is<lb/>
almost certain to be an asset if the<lb/>
enthusiasm and dedication of the<lb/>
Greenville VISTA eight to the principle of<lb/>
lending a helping hand to needy<lb/>
Americans is any criteria for measuring<lb/>
success.<lb/>
Anyone interested in learning more<lb/>
about the VISTA program is urged to call<lb/>
area headquarters or come by 503 East<lb/>
Fifth Street and talk with any one of the<lb/>
VISTA volunteers.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
in search of friendship<lb/>
German youth visits ECU friends<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Reiner Clasen is a twenty-year old,<lb/>
blond, bearded, blue-eyed German who is<lb/>
174 centimeters tall and wears a size<lb/>
40-42 shoe (in German numerals).<lb/>
He came to the United States on<lb/>
August 1 to travel around the country and<lb/>
visit friends he met at ECU-Bonn. He<lb/>
explained that he met the students (most<lb/>
of whom have returned to ECU-Greenville<lb/>
this year) at a "Winefest" in a village at<lb/>
the foot of the Seven Mountains, outside<lb/>
of Bonn. A Winefest, he explained, takes<lb/>
place after a "wine fall" when the wine<lb/>
merchant has harvested his grapes and<lb/>
made the wine. The village is decorated<lb/>
and there is "cheap wine, many people,<lb/>
dancing, kissing and singing in the<lb/>
streets - you do everything in the streets<lb/>
he added.<lb/>
HITCHIKING<lb/>
Now, I could go on to tell you that he<lb/>
traveled about the Outer Banks along the<lb/>
eastern coast visiting friends before<lb/>
hitchiking to San Francisco and going<lb/>
from there to Mexico City, Kabhal, Uxmal<lb/>
and Chicheu Itza to visit the scenes of<lb/>
Mayan culture in which he is very<lb/>
interested. I could also explain how he<lb/>
returned to Greenville on October 5th after<lb/>
a visit to a Carribbean Island and<lb/>
spending some more time in California.<lb/>
You might even be interested in<lb/>
hearing that he felt people in California to<lb/>
be more European and the girls there<lb/>
more liberated. You might like to know<lb/>
that he felt the people in N.C. were more<lb/>
sincerely cordial, that he didn't like<lb/>
American beer, that the Elbow Room<lb/>
reminded him of a bar outside of Bonn<lb/>
near a lake where the people all go<lb/>
skinny-dipping on hot summer nights<lb/>
when the moon is shining and they've all<lb/>
been drinking German beer.<lb/>
It would probably have been good to<lb/>
tell you that he plans to start at the<lb/>
University of Bonn on October 15th where<lb/>
he will study physics ana math in<lb/>
preparation for medical studies in<lb/>
computer diagnosis. And everyone al-<lb/>
ways wants to hear about what others do,<lb/>
like play the organ, being an active<lb/>
gymnast, having a glider pilot license and<lb/>
generally enjoying life and good times, all<lb/>
of which applies to Reiner.<lb/>
GERMAN SCHOOLS<lb/>
I could have bored you with facts of<lb/>
the German school system and how the<lb/>
students must study ten years of English<lb/>
even before they go to college, how he<lb/>
was correcting me on my grammar, and<lb/>
how it's difficult for many young people<lb/>
to go to college because the state can<lb/>
support only so many that it has to set<lb/>
grade quotas. You probably would have<lb/>
been interested to know that Reiner<lb/>
thought American students lived lux-<lb/>
uriously and that in Germany, students<lb/>
who live away from home usually have<lb/>
only one room with a bed, a desk, a chair<lb/>
and little else, that there is no other<lb/>
activity on campus but classes and no<lb/>
student housing.<lb/>
I suppose I should tell you that Reiner<lb/>
Clasen tried to enroll at ECU, but that<lb/>
according to the information they sent<lb/>
him, it would have cost him nearly $1,300<lb/>
a quarter and he could not afford it.<lb/>
If you had met Reiner you would agree<lb/>
that he has a great sense of humor and is<lb/>
a lot of fun to be with, even though<lb/>
Germans are supposed to have very little<lb/>
humor and be more philosophical. But<lb/>
Reiner is philosophical, very, and he has a<lb/>
.great sense of humor too.<lb/>
So, since there is really no need for<lb/>
me to tell you these everyday,<lb/>
run-of-the-mill questions and answers<lb/>
that one reads in an interview, and since I<lb/>
could never do justice to his lighthearted,<lb/>
happy humor, perhaps I could introduce<lb/>
you to a bit of his philosophy of<lb/>
life. Perhaps it might interest you more to<lb/>
read of the problems and unhappiness of<lb/>
Reiner Clasen.<lb/>
Like many European countries,<lb/>
Germany has an automatic draft<lb/>
system. When a young man reaches 18<lb/>
he receives his notice to appear for the<lb/>
physical. As in most draft systems the<lb/>
only way you can be deferred from the<lb/>
draft, aside from mental or physical<lb/>
handicaps or certain set exceptions, is to<lb/>
prove that you are a Conscientious<lb/>
Objector. But proving one's beliefs is<lb/>
sometimes more difficult than it may<lb/>
seem, as Reiner found out.<lb/>
CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR<lb/>
At his first trial for a CO. pass, Reiner<lb/>
was turned down. "I know what I am he<lb/>
said with an easy smile, "I know, maybe<lb/>
they don't, but they are wrong His<lb/>
second trial will be in two months. This<lb/>
time, if they refuse to accept his<lb/>
statements as a Conscientious Objector,<lb/>
he said he would leave Germany. "I'm<lb/>
going to tell them the words, they have to<lb/>
write them down, I'm going to tell them<lb/>
they are wrong how inhumane they are<lb/>
will say that I leave Germany before I do<lb/>
this(enter the military service)<lb/>
What then? It is not so unusual to<lb/>
young Americans who know of people or<lb/>
maybe even friends, who have I ,t the<lb/>
country to avoid being drafted. It is no<lb/>
new thing.<lb/>
If Reiner is turned down and he must<lb/>
leave Germany, he can never go back. So<lb/>
where does he go then?<lb/>
Reiner said he would "come back" to<lb/>
America. He would come back and try to<lb/>
find some way to live and work here.<lb/>
He originally came to the U.S. on a<lb/>
five month visa with permission to stay<lb/>
for three months after receiving a letter<lb/>
from home, notifying him of his new trial<lb/>
date. With time running out and three<lb/>
days before he was scheudled to leave, he<lb/>
began trying to find a way to stay, or at,<lb/>
least a way to come back. He was still<lb/>
the happy, joking Reiner of a few days<lb/>
before, but now one tended to see a frown<lb/>
often upon his face. The smiles came a<lb/>
little slower and the joking comments<lb/>
were fewer.<lb/>
DR. HANS INDORF<lb/>
First he went to Dr. Hans H. Indorr,<lb/>
associate professor of Political Science,<lb/>
who is originally from Germany. Dr.<lb/>
Indorf told him two things; "become a<lb/>
student and obtain a student visa or marry<lb/>
an American girl These things Reiner<lb/>
had been told before. He was to leave on<lb/>
Saturday, October 13, to fly to New York<lb/>
where he would take off for Germany. On<lb/>
Friday he went to visit Mr. Peter<lb/>
Mueller-Roemer, an instructor in the math<lb/>
department, also of German origin. He<lb/>
told Reiner of an assistanceship at ECU<lb/>
which would allow him to become a<lb/>
student at ECU while assisting in<lb/>
teaching. In this way he could stay in the<lb/>
U.S.and also receive some financial aid as<lb/>
long as he was in school. But to enroll in<lb/>
this program, Reiner would have had to<lb/>
have his pre-diploma, a degree that is,<lb/>
received upon completion of the first two<lb/>
years of university in Germany.<lb/>
He still had two choices. But<lb/>
financially he could not afford to go to<lb/>
school here. However, he still had a day<lb/>
and half to look for an American wife.<lb/>
MARRIAGE<lb/>
"I'm against marriage he explained.<lb/>
"What does marriage change? What you<lb/>
have afterward is a piece of paper, but it<lb/>
doesn't change a thing in the<lb/>
relationship. Also, in this society I would<lb/>
never have children. Society is changing,<lb/>
I don't know about the States, but it is<lb/>
changing in Germany<lb/>
"I am a person who lives tor the<lb/>
moment, for today. I want to live each<lb/>
moment to be happy. Everybody should<lb/>
be happy if only for an hour, a<lb/>
second-why not?" he told.<lb/>
"I can't understand why Americans get<lb/>
married so early, it's stupid. You have so<lb/>
many divorces and it is because you are<lb/>
not mature enough. You focus your<lb/>
attention on one person too much and<lb/>
you don't get to know other people. In my<lb/>
opinion, the big error of people in love,<lb/>
thev do it unconsciously, but they want to<lb/>
possess a partner. Jealousy goes along<lb/>
with it. They want no one with the partner<lb/>
but themselves. In that respect I think<lb/>
jealousy is immaturity. Because that's<lb/>
not love<lb/>
"Love is respecting and trusting,<lb/>
accepting someone for what they<lb/>
are. Two people meet and they want to<lb/>
compromise, that means they are looking<lb/>
for a way to adjust to each other. I think<lb/>
it is wrong because if you adjust to each<lb/>
other, you have to lose a part of<lb/>
yourself. Then comes out a person who is<lb/>
missing something. The other way is for<lb/>
a person to keep all of his own<lb/>
personality-that is acceptance of a<lb/>
-partner he ended. "I don't like role<lb/>
playing, I don't like doing what I feel is<lb/>
expected of me. I like to do what I feel<lb/>
like doing<lb/>
This is the way he feels, yet it seems<lb/>
his feelings may bring him unhappiness.<lb/>
If he is true to himself then he will lose<lb/>
his country and even his freedom of<lb/>
choice. If he supports his country then he<lb/>
must lose a part of himself. These<lb/>
problems are not new and many young<lb/>
American men are even today trying to<lb/>
work out the results of their past<lb/>
decisions, stands of this type.<lb/>
See. 'Friendship' on pege five.<lb/>
REiNEfi CLASEN reveals his impressions of life in the United States compared to<lb/>
his home in Germany. He came to the U.S. to travel around the country and visit<lb/>
friends he met at ECU-Bonn.<lb/>
Vi<lb/>
(CPS)-J<lb/>
staff se<lb/>
stay in<lb/>
issue of<lb/>
America<lb/>
the arm'<lb/>
War.<lb/>
"The<lb/>
person?<lb/>
military,<lb/>
military<lb/>
same jol<lb/>
interview<lb/>
ground f<lb/>
flight rrv<lb/>
get a d<lb/>
Force m<lb/>
I would<lb/>
FB<lb/>
(CPSUPJ<lb/>
the New<lb/>
sponsore<lb/>
San Diegi<lb/>
A me<lb/>
Godfrey,<lb/>
the office<lb/>
thousanc<lb/>
Heal:<lb/>
cars. In ,<lb/>
another !<lb/>
of Street<lb/>
ceased p<lb/>
Da<lb/>
pro<lb/>
(CPS)TI-<lb/>
designed<lb/>
campus c<lb/>
Apprc<lb/>
women f<lb/>
classes,<lb/>
Student I<lb/>
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program'<lb/>
Union of<lb/>
In cc<lb/>
Program<lb/>
students<lb/>
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distribut<lb/>
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to a por<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039883_0005"/><lb/>
MOT<lb/>
m<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmmmmmmfmrnm<lb/>
5<lb/>
Is<lb/>
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i part of<lb/>
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way is for<lb/>
his own<lb/>
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lappiness.<lb/>
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sedom of<lb/>
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3lf. These<lb/>
ny young<lb/>
trying to<lb/>
leir past<lb/>
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Ex-Marine cites<lb/>
Viet work camps<lb/>
(CPS)John Navaeu, 38, an ex-Marine<lb/>
staff sergeant recently returned from a<lb/>
stay in Vietnam charged in the October<lb/>
issue of the WAWs Winter Soldier that<lb/>
American companies have taken up where<lb/>
the army left off in fighting the Vietnam<lb/>
War.<lb/>
"The large companies, using American<lb/>
personnel, have replaced the American<lb/>
military. But all they are doing is hiring<lb/>
military men as civilians to do exactly the<lb/>
same job aj before Naveau says in the<lb/>
interview. "The only thing they don't do is<lb/>
ground fighting. For example, if I was a<lb/>
flight mechanic in the Air Force, I would<lb/>
get a discharge upon showing the Air<lb/>
Force my contract with a company. Then<lb/>
I would put on civilian clothes and an<lb/>
back to my job. Same job, different<lb/>
clothing<lb/>
Vietnamese refugee centers are no<lb/>
better thatn "camps for committing<lb/>
genocide He said, "I visited a camp<lb/>
near Bear Cat, just outside Saigon, where<lb/>
28,000 people were crammed into this<lb/>
barbed wire trap, which had no shade or<lb/>
trees or any kind of vegetation. The Army<lb/>
of the Republic of Vietnam would truck<lb/>
water in a rusty 50 gallon drum which<lb/>
would be half empty. Plus, the people<lb/>
only get 5 piastres a day for food, not<lb/>
enough to even buy rice for two meals<lb/>
Naveau spent the first six months of<lb/>
1973 in Vietnam working for the<lb/>
Lear-Seigler corporation, one of the big<lb/>
war contractors.<lb/>
friendship<lb/>
Continued from page four.<lb/>
Reiner's friends had a big going-away<lb/>
party for him Friday night. Bob Lucas,<lb/>
one of those friends, remarked, "If you've<lb/>
ever seen a guy who could be close with<lb/>
everyone, it's him. He's a hell of a good<lb/>
guy Even so, Reiner could not stay in<lb/>
the United States. Saturday he returned<lb/>
to Germany and the decisions that await<lb/>
him there. He said he learned a lot in the<lb/>
U.S. and met a lot of good people. But he<lb/>
?returned to Germany feeling the same<lb/>
about what he must do, as when he faced<lb/>
his first trial.<lb/>
"I will be back, for sure, maybe in<lb/>
two months, but I know I will be<lb/>
back The only thing his friends wish is<lb/>
that he can come back freely, still doing<lb/>
only as he feels like doing.<lb/>
FBI sponsors vandals<lb/>
(CPSUPS)A year after its first appearance in the San Diego Door,<lb/>
the New York Times had picked up the story that the FBI has<lb/>
sponsored right-wing terrorist actions against leftist organizations in<lb/>
San Diego.<lb/>
A member of the Secret Army Organization (SAO), Howard<lb/>
Godfrey, admitted he was being paid by the FBI when he broke into<lb/>
the offices of the Street Journal, a local paper, and smashed several<lb/>
thousand dollars worth of printing equipment.<lb/>
He also confessed to other burglaries and the firebombing of two<lb/>
cars. In addition, Godfrey was also a passenger in a car from which<lb/>
another SAO member fired shots into a house, shattering the elbow<lb/>
of Street Journal staffer Paula Tharp. The Street Journal has since<lb/>
ceased publishing.<lb/>
Dangers of darkness<lb/>
prompt student action<lb/>
(CPS)-The University of Denver has organized an escort service<lb/>
designed to protect university women from rape attacks in the<lb/>
campus community.<lb/>
Approximately 40 "husky DU athletes" have volunteered to escort<lb/>
women from 5:30 p.m. to midnight, seven days a week, to night<lb/>
classes, dorms and other destinations, according to Rob Platt,<lb/>
Student Government Chief Justice.<lb/>
The service has been nicknamed the "Bod Squad" to reflect the<lb/>
program's "informal" atmosphere. Students will telephone a Student<lb/>
Union office to request an escort.<lb/>
In conjunction with this program a Neighborhood Assistance<lb/>
Program (NAP) hopes to involve area residents in helping DU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Several hundred yellow and orange emblems have been<lb/>
distributed to homes of people willing to help a student who feels her<lb/>
safety is temporarily threatened while walking on the streets.<lb/>
If a woman notices a man following her, Platt said, she should go<lb/>
to a porch displaying the NAP emblem. If danger is imminent, the<lb/>
student has access to people ready to help, he said.<lb/>
Another organizer said the programs were "more of a fun thing<lb/>
than a scare thing" and that the services were designed to make<lb/>
students aware of the danger on campus "not to the point of putting<lb/>
fear in them, but to the point of helping them<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
IS<lb/>
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IN WASHINGTON<lb/>
Drive a Little and Eat a Lot !<lb/>
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Telephone<lb/>
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(MltHWimWHIMIBUMIWIMHMtWMMtlHMIIimHIMMIHIIMIimiMimKI<lb/>
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$1.85<lb/>
Including French Fries, Cole Slaw, and hushpuppies<lb/>
RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT<lb/>
710 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Across the River<lb/>
Also featuring<lb/>
PITT COOKED BBQ CHICKEN AND STEAKS<lb/>
Phone 752 2624<lb/>
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without<lb/>
Hormones<lb/>
EMKO is a highly effective<lb/>
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that is deposited at the open-<lb/>
ing of the uterus with an ap-<lb/>
plicator. The foam blocks the<lb/>
spetm while the sperrnicide<lb/>
kills them on contact.<lb/>
EMKO contains no hormones<lb/>
and does not enter the cir-<lb/>
culation system or affect your<lb/>
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You use it only when pro-<lb/>
tection is needed. Apply it in<lb/>
seconds  up to an hour in<lb/>
advance. Won't leak, run, or<lb/>
interfere with sensations.<lb/>
Recommended by physicians.<lb/>
It is highly effective, but so<lb/>
safe and simple to use you can<lb/>
buy it at drug departments<lb/>
without a prescription.<lb/>
TMt laKO COMPANY ? ?T LOUIS MO,<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
w<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAJMHEA.DVX<lb/>
1116 OCT 1V7'j<lb/>
Students compare grade systems<lb/>
5UNY SURVEY SHOWS<lb/>
PASS-FAJL PREFERENCE<lb/>
(CPS) rVkJsepread ues of Hm A6C0F<lb/>
nterest r<lb/>
tflS most<lb/>
pop . -3' (rends d seemed r ; recent State<lb/>
Jr rersrly of Mae ovfc Student<lb/>
Aavx, -v v  jre or grad  pract cee<lb/>
 ng systsrr and ncrsas ng<lb/>
ItMl : '? : SyflfSfT aera<lb/>
Letters aers sent by EM Nations<lb/>
Affairs Coordinator Pat Kadi to mow<lb/>
II-v 50 CO sges rid jr srs ties A<lb/>
? ' ?? received rwsponasa f,o"<lb/>
rougf one-fiftf of thaas nstrtutiona<lb/>
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reeponeee that rnoet of the schools aere<lb/>
or the A6C0I: ?? and afso have lhs<lb/>
?r '??) option<lb/>
rhe State lit erstty College at<lb/>
Fredor a MY) replied thai ? operates on<lb/>
the ABCOEf grading systen ftt the<lb/>
opt of pass fail grading in upper level<lb/>
course outside a v idem  Vvr<lb/>
However students SUC-Fredonia<lb/>
rtave recently suggested alternative<lb/>
grading proposals (incl id r?g h simpie P-f<lb/>
system), sJI of ehfcti haws mat wttti<lb/>
disapproval of the admlnlstratioc<lb/>
Many students feel thai it is rather<lb/>
ridiculous to svsn attempt to rjitinguioh<lb/>
between an a and a b according to<lb/>
f redonia Student Qovernment vice<lb/>
President Jeffrey a. Caeeie The<lb/>
students also feat thai such a grading<lb/>
?terr, erxjrag more of a 'grade-<lb/>
Ohensed1 StniUSphtfS rather than a<lb/>
learning atftlOSphSfe.<lb/>
Fha nsaponse from the student<lb/>
government at ths University of Florida at<lb/>
Gainesville found both praise and<lb/>
criticism for ths pfua-mlnus system<lb/>
Many students condemn the system<lb/>
upon receiving a grade of B-minus in a<lb/>
course Staled the letter "The name<lb/>
Students will praise the system upon<lb/>
receiving a C-pfus "<lb/>
HWh I arriowedging "a "e<lb/>
puSrminus system allows more I es<lb/>
ib?iit and eyactneas m grading, the<lb/>
Gainesville student government aes sfeo<lb/>
ssmbu of the fact thai e him of the<lb/>
profeeeor to give pluses or minuses<lb/>
SMC m m car rxarisaJi oance out thai<lb/>
bsnef I<lb/>
t C Carro Pass dent of the student<lb/>
body at Nortf Caro - r'de University in<lb/>
Ra e  r si d hi i u nlverslty e as<lb/>
p rese ntiy e ghtog sitematl res to its<lb/>
AfiCOf syeterr of oradlna<lb/>
Carroll said traditional gac.g<lb/>
systems protect and encouraga bed<lb/>
teaching and lend themrjeives readily to<lb/>
cheating in addition. conventional<lb/>
systems force a student returning to<lb/>
school after 20 years to go to bat with<lb/>
str kes against him from bis previous<lb/>
failures be said<lb/>
Carroll pointed out that many<lb/>
graduate schools have procedure to<lb/>
regulate admissions of graduates from<lb/>
ungraded colleges<lb/>
The Faculty Senate Academics<lb/>
Committee at North Carolina State has<lb/>
presented the following alternatives to its<lb/>
abode system:<lb/>
Placing all university courses on an<lb/>
Optional peasfail basis with the student<lb/>
Choosing a graded or ungraded program.<lb/>
A passno pass system which would<lb/>
not record courses completed unsatis-<lb/>
factorily Should such a system be<lb/>
implemented, the problem of students<lb/>
remaining indefinitely at a university<lb/>
without accomplishing anything could be<lb/>
eliminated by requiring the students to<lb/>
pass a specified number of hours each<lb/>
year<lb/>
-A comprehensive and all-encom-<lb/>
passing examination at the end of each<lb/>
year or at graduation. "This approach<lb/>
stated the proposal, "has the advantage of<lb/>
making the student and his professor<lb/>
antes' against the impending super-eam<lb/>
The student feels that the professor is<lb/>
helping him prepare for a standardized<lb/>
final 'at her than standing over him.<lb/>
threatening him with pop-quizzes and<lb/>
eekly exams<lb/>
The ABC no pass system-this<lb/>
would eliminate the 'penal aspect" of an<lb/>
f while still offering study incentives for<lb/>
students rs are so irrevocably<lb/>
conditioned to grade-point chasing that<lb/>
the pursuit o( oviedge for only a PASS<lb/>
.v d rv sf'er enougf impetus<lb/>
Man students have expressed the<lb/>
feeling that they are compelled to work<lb/>
more for the external reward (A.Bi or to<lb/>
avoid the external punishment 'CDF; than<lb/>
to jnderstand the material for its intrinsic<lb/>
value, rote Steve A. Cunningham of the<lb/>
University of Alabama<lb/>
According to Cunningham, many<lb/>
students are pressured into attempting to<lb/>
succeed at the expense of others, thereby<lb/>
teatertng an atmosphere where comoeti-<lb/>
tion rather than cooperation becomes the<lb/>
rule<lb/>
He said the optional pass-fa! system<lb/>
tended to relieve the pressure of<lb/>
competition and led to increased course<lb/>
enjoyment, greater retention of inform-<lb/>
ation gamed, and a general reduction of<lb/>
grade-re atec anxiety<lb/>
However. Cunningham also noted that<lb/>
many students have defended the<lb/>
traditional system. These students feel<lb/>
unable to study in pass-fail courses and<lb/>
enjoy the atmosphere of competition.<lb/>
since they feel higher grades represent<lb/>
concrete goals and consider achievement<lb/>
of such goals personally satisfying<lb/>
Eddie Smith<lb/>
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rvHJNl?4JNNCAi.? W?4. 3<lb/>
(Vv<lb/>
besf rush ?n two ytors<lb/>
Greek rush brings renewed optimism<lb/>
By KATHY KOONCE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"Rush. Go Gup<lb/>
The beginning- of evwy school yea'<lb/>
opens with signs and the distribution of<lb/>
posters encouraging ECU'S men and<lb/>
women to participate in rush and join the<lb/>
Greek system<lb/>
This year was no different The signs<lb/>
were displayed around the campus and<lb/>
circulars were slipped under the doors in<lb/>
the dorms. Sorority rush lasted two<lb/>
weeks rather than one and the fraternities<lb/>
used a "completely open" rush for a<lb/>
-rv-ond year.<lb/>
The number ol women participatinc, r<lb/>
rush was comparable to last year. How-<lb/>
ever, the fraternities, according to Chris<lb/>
Ripper. IFC president, had the "best rush<lb/>
in two years<lb/>
Because of the open system of<lb/>
fraternity rush men did not have to<lb/>
register and consequently there h n-<lb/>
? nite way to be certain of the number<lb/>
of men who rushed Ripper said be would<lb/>
guess that there were 500 visiting the nirx<lb/>
houses on campus. This does not include<lb/>
the recently formed black fraternity which<lb/>
did not actively participate in rush. Rippe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha received the teres<lb/>
number of pledges which was about<lb/>
24. Ripper noted the average number of<lb/>
pledges per house was about 15.<lb/>
Ripper attributed the success of the<lb/>
rush partially to the "Intensive summr-<lb/>
rush program carried on by IFC rn<lb/>
the orientation sessions WsrterriK<lb/>
booklets were prepared and Inserted lht<lb/>
the orientation folders. A movie abou<lb/>
Greek life was shown and followed by a<lb/>
question and answer pelod. Beer partie:<lb/>
were also sponsored by the fraternities<lb/>
The program was repeated six time<lb/>
during the summer. Although this<lb/>
program was directed towards freshmen<lb/>
Ripper noted that there were a substantif.<lb/>
number of sophomores and junior<lb/>
rushing.<lb/>
The desire to be Greek is much<lb/>
stronger "If anything the Greek system is<lb/>
much better commented Ripper "Peo-<lb/>
ple realize fraternities are changing on<lb/>
campus They have changed tor the<lb/>
better. Tiere is an increased emphasis on<lb/>
academics, service and brotherhood ' He<lb/>
also feels there is a "close relationship<lb/>
between the Greek system and the<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
There has beer a basic anemp1 ic<lb/>
abolish the old stereotypes by all the<lb/>
fraternities Witt the oper system ol<lb/>
rush, visiting eacr housf wat no<lb/>
mandatory All pledget were encourages<lb/>
to visit every house H wai tht only<lb/>
wa k makf ar obiectivt decision. Rippe<lb/>
addeo "the? was a fin amoun o<lb/>
cooperation arnonc fraternities witi<lb/>
mutual, sincere feelinn 0' th whoit<lb/>
fraternity svsten U dr wel at e whoin<lb/>
The sororities die no se ? prea i<lb/>
rush as die the fraternities tni:<lb/>
year Howevei ?an Hoi; adviso- ti<lb/>
Panbelienk Council firmiy believe; tna<lb/>
sororities are on an upward trend<lb/>
According to the nations statistic<lb/>
from a study conducted b fn? Nation-<lb/>
Dpr.iu.nk; Conference t Memoersriii<lb/>
Statistics there has been a 48.5 percent<lb/>
? ?mac jn n?. -nemoer dtirirv<lb/>
1961.1971 There has dee - a nr increas<lb/>
of 20.3 percent in nev chapter. :oaa<lb/>
there is a total of one and a hai milno<lb/>
-vnnrvv! sororities an 1 i tott I r f two an<lb/>
one half million men in fratemme. 11 tn<lb/>
past two years 25 campuses havs 0000?<lb/>
to PanhelleniQ oroup<lb/>
This year 92 worm? active!<lb/>
participated in formal rus s beqinrmi wit<lb/>
the mandator partie. Dunn, the two<lb/>
week rush tbr yea partie were not<lb/>
marxfato!) the first wee New ideas such<lb/>
as fersey day and phiianthrooi: df ? wei<lb/>
included Holt said these were to sho<lb/>
people a "different swe of ourselves<lb/>
She also believes that the stereotype of<lb/>
Suzie Sorontv is dying out.<lb/>
 PAPER CU easi' sufuoes s replacing a mug at a L h? -<lb/>
rush<lb/>
inng fraternity<lb/>
TWO SORORITY LADIES discuss issue<lb/>
pertinent to the cominq year's activities -<lb/>
a causal drink alws makus discussions<lb/>
run more smoothly.<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
berviced to common and to the<lb/>
university is becoming more tmud<lb/>
win the sorontie W leaiiy are<lb/>
interested n Helping the university Holt<lb/>
commented. Sorontiv members worked<lb/>
witn tresnmen in the dorms dun<lb/>
orientation this aummer and they a-<lb/>
worxed with the aumini&amp;uation bu?<lb/>
spring oreak<lb/>
the grown i sororouts is indicated<lb/>
py tn cooper am among a. -<lb/>
campus. Hi I Mid that 6CU had the<lb/>
large representation at the regional<lb/>
MMkthip rield recently. The workshop<lb/>
:rcuo? noi 1 Utrou virgin . <lb/>
West viigtr<lb/>
mm ? " <lb/>
cooperau. within the sororities or<lb/>
5 camo. ? Christmas caroling has beer<lb/>
i O do together. Lest year the iirs<lb/>
 schoiansr ip nanqtei was field. A gpai has<lb/>
0 bewri oatHDhsnu 0 oi a .Wiuiaibmps t<lb/>
hi'jn scn 01 qi ?? pittiiui ? .0 Uend Eask<lb/>
Qaroyna ta year 1 rhi.itene.<lb/>
Ooun ti has Soronty bwap wi? t i ;<lb/>
trc ni 0 ik iiou will live in anoth no<lb/>
tor a Wt-<lb/>
Jnii pr R wiiriMU r h?)i.ue?y? ihe<lb/>
sorooti hi 1 to U<lb/>
Cnuc ? Each sorority has open<lb/>
house for the faculty. It i&amp; hoped that the<lb/>
downto business people ikiiI<lb/>
i?uded this year.<lb/>
Two new black sororities, making a<lb/>
total number of sororities 10, were also<lb/>
parted last year, however, they are not<lb/>
yet in chapter status Holt said<lb/>
Colorado man<lb/>
can't take it<lb/>
lCPSi-K-r A dorado man is recovering<lb/>
a Denver hospital after shooting<lb/>
hini8eK during a Denver Broncos football<lb/>
game<lb/>
The Arapahoe County shanff:<lb/>
?otwnment said the man, who they would<lb/>
not identify, shot himself with a pistol<lb/>
.? iy after the Broncos fumbled for the<lb/>
.tj. ? u, k.  their loss to the Chicago<lb/>
Beioru tinnfl the shot, the man wrote a<lb/>
note plained, "i have been a<lb/>
 )c , 1 since the Bionc ere first<lb/>
uiv id and I cant s - blng<lb/>
anyrm 1 '<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
mmmmemmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
EditorialsCorTYTieritarv<lb/>
A (perhaps) minority plea<lb/>
The closer winter approaches, and the more uninspiring Greenville weekends<lb/>
become, the more limited Greenville's social alternatives are shown to be.<lb/>
For an alleged "university town Greenville displays a remarkable dearth of appeal<lb/>
to ALL strata of student academia. Unless one intends to sit around the house or dorm<lb/>
all weekend, the alternatives are the Rat (a loud place serving beer), Fiddler's taproom<lb/>
or the Attic (loud places serving beer), Darryl's (a fairly loud restaurant serving beer), or<lb/>
food-in-general-zones such as Krispy Kreme, Bentley's, the Pirate's Table or the<lb/>
venerable Olde Towne Inn.<lb/>
In short. Greenville diversions seem to be geared to a hiah school mentalitv that<lb/>
accepts beer and loudness as the only outside alternative to studying. Perhaps this is a<lb/>
tradition, a trademark of Eastern North Carolina or the state university system; being a<lb/>
New Yorker residing in Virginia Beach, I admit my inability to judge this matter<lb/>
adequately.<lb/>
But somewhere in Greenville there exists a group of diehards looking for a revival of<lb/>
the old coffeehouse movement or simply for a fairly quiet place in which to meet<lb/>
friends and acquaintances over coffee and varieties of tea or cheese. The Student<lb/>
Union coffeehouse people give some actualization fo this wish via their campus<lb/>
productions, but Greenville needs some sort of quiet, permanent gathering place for<lb/>
those of us who are rather more reserved and conversation-prone than the other local<lb/>
diversions would normally allow. On those cold January evenings when no Union<lb/>
coffeehouse is on, the average student's outside alternatives are a blinding neon<lb/>
evening at Krispy Kreme or the Rat-Fiddler's syndrome.<lb/>
This is not a temperance essay or a diatribe against noise pollution. This is simply<lb/>
a plea for and a recognition of the more gracious things in human life; conversation,<lb/>
quiet friendships and hot coffee. It's a request for places to hang out besides the<lb/>
comer of Fifth and Cotanche in front of the Happy Store, and a belief that there are<lb/>
things to do besides whiz through intersections in a car with ten buddies and the<lb/>
remnants of three sixpacks.<lb/>
There has to be, or should be, a form of diversion outside of the high school<lb/>
lifestyle that unfortunately often lasts through four years at ECU. We welcome any<lb/>
entrepreneurs wishing to take advantage of Greenville's need for an adult<lb/>
alternative. And we also anticipate much disagreement with this editorial, because the<lb/>
aforementioned lifestyle has become so ingrained in the student consciousness that to<lb/>
attack it is to attack the college-status image itself. We aren't attempting to incite<lb/>
warfare; we are only asking for a solution. Somewhere, one exists, and it exists<lb/>
outside of the theory that we can approach maturity only with a can of Schlitz clasped<lb/>
in one hand.<lb/>
Transit, again<lb/>
If the opening session of the SGA<lb/>
Legislature is any indication, we're all in<lb/>
for a rather bizarre year.<lb/>
Rather than debating the reasons for<lb/>
even having a second student transit bus,<lb/>
the transit appropriation bill was hastily<lb/>
slipped to the legislature by Bodenhamer<lb/>
ally D.D. Dixon. All the neatly-estimated<lb/>
data, numerical facts and detail<lb/>
concerning the proposed bus are available<lb/>
- in short, all auctions are answered save,<lb/>
one: Why does ECU need a second bus?<lb/>
The minimal use of the first SGA bus<lb/>
bears witness to the risk being<lb/>
taken. From informal sightings between<lb/>
Allied Health and College Hill, the average<lb/>
busload seems to be closer to half a<lb/>
dozen persons than to the thronging<lb/>
multitude the "second-bus" bill implies.<lb/>
Whether out of habit, or due to the<lb/>
acquisition of bicycles and cars,<lb/>
ECU students are simply not making use<lb/>
of the bus. The fact that the SGA thinks<lb/>
buses are good for the student body is<lb/>
a strange argument.<lb/>
The second pro-bus argument is that, at<lb/>
last, stuoenx money win oe spent on<lb/>
something large and visible, rather than<lb/>
being spirited away bv SGA employees.<lb/>
This argument, too, is weak. The SGA<lb/>
could finance a sixty-foot soap sculpture<lb/>
of Nancy Drew and still maintain the<lb/>
"large and visible" argument. The point is<lb/>
not to be large and visible, but to be used<lb/>
and practical. $10,000-plus-expenses is.a<lb/>
large gamble to take on an item before<lb/>
determining its potential use by students.<lb/>
Somewhere in the arsenal of student<lb/>
needs-and there are many-there exists<lb/>
something, or some individual things,<lb/>
deserving of as much consideration as the<lb/>
SGA bus is receiving. Students reading<lb/>
this can assuredly think of many things<lb/>
equally lasting and perhaps more critical.<lb/>
But the SGA has decided that students<lb/>
want a bus, perhaps just as the SGA has<lb/>
decided that the original bus is full to<lb/>
bursting and must be supplemented.<lb/>
We ask you as students, to<lb/>
contemplate where your $10,000, plus<lb/>
gas, salaries, insurance and maintenance,<lb/>
should ao. and to make your wishes<lb/>
known to your SGA legislature.If you want<lb/>
a bus, so be it; if not, so be that, too. We<lb/>
are asking only that you as student get<lb/>
what you want, not what you are<lb/>
given. That is, after all, the entire point of<lb/>
having a student government, isn't it?<lb/>
Kissinge.r and power<lb/>
By TRISTRAM COFFIN<lb/>
HENRY'S BAG OF TRICKS - The<lb/>
need for international cooperation to keep<lb/>
peace and stabilize a turbulent world "has<lb/>
never been so great or so urgent This is<lb/>
the verdict of UN Secretary General Kurt<lb/>
Waldheim in his annual message.<lb/>
The White House hopes Henry<lb/>
Kissinger can pull from his bag of tricks<lb/>
an international miracle, as Mideast<lb/>
peace, to save President Nixon. Joseph<lb/>
C. Harsch reports in the Christian Science<lb/>
Monitor, "At the White House the detente<lb/>
(with Russia) was treasured as the best<lb/>
antidote to Watergate<lb/>
But Dr. Kissinger's tricks, upon close<lb/>
inspection, are nothing more than power<lb/>
politics. His scheme for world order is a<lb/>
big power triangle with the US playing off<lb/>
China against Russia, and by turns<lb/>
cajoling (with cut rate grain deals) and<lb/>
threatening (with MIRV warheads). Three<lb/>
weaknesses show up:<lb/>
-The great powers can't control their<lb/>
client states. The Saigon gang, a whole<lb/>
regime owned and created by the U.S<lb/>
doubled cross'xj Lyndon in 1968, and<lb/>
refused to talk peace in Paris. Hanoi<lb/>
thumbed its nose at both Russia and<lb/>
China, and kept on fighting.<lb/>
Moscow discovered the only way it<lb/>
could insure loyalty in East Europe was-<lb/>
by tanks and Red Army troops. The<lb/>
"safe" Latin American satellites have been<lb/>
seizing Yankee companies. The latest is a<lb/>
threat by Peru to take over the giant Cerro<lb/>
de Pasco copper, gold and silver mining<lb/>
company, without paying a cent.<lb/>
-Russia's demands upon Washington<lb/>
seem to grow daily. First, it was a quarter<lb/>
of the US grain harvest to give-away<lb/>
prices, and, more lately, according to the<lb/>
New York Times, "massive transfers of<lb/>
American capital and technological<lb/>
know-how to speed up Soviet develop-<lb/>
ment - inevitably - the growth of Soviet<lb/>
power<lb/>
This has been challenged from within<lb/>
Russia. Andrei D. Sakharov, inventor of<lb/>
the Soviet hydrogen bomb, says that<lb/>
"failure to insist that the Soviet<lb/>
dictatorship move toward greater demo-<lb/>
cracy  could be suicidal to world<lb/>
freedom<lb/>
-The US is almost broke from paying<lb/>
for three wars and playing world cop. US<lb/>
public and private debt now totals nearly<lb/>
$2.25 trillion, according to the Bureau of<lb/>
Economic Analysis. The 1972 increase<lb/>
was $209 billion deeper in hock. The only<lb/>
way to keep on the big power game is by<lb/>
selling off products of farm and forest in<lb/>
the world market. This, in turn, brings on<lb/>
the wild US inflation of the present.<lb/>
AP says farmers are getting sixty-two<lb/>
percent more for their produce than a year<lb/>
ago; there was a twenty percent jump in<lb/>
August alone. Food prices have gone so<lb/>
high the Federal Government "will no<lb/>
longer subsidize special milk programs<lb/>
for forty million of the nation's school<lb/>
children says the Denver Post.<lb/>
An AP survey shows "school districts<lb/>
are boosting the price of cafeteria lunches<lb/>
and cutting back on high-priced items like<lb/>
beef to make ends meet Another direct<lb/>
result of the Nixon-Kissinger program is a<lb/>
new Forest Service policy of cutting 10.6<lb/>
million board feet of timber in national<lb/>
forests, much of it for export. This<lb/>
means, said the Post " substantially<lb/>
reduced camping picnicking, boating,<lb/>
swimming, skiing and hiking oppor-<lb/>
tunities while more national forest land is<lb/>
opened for harvesting by timber<lb/>
interests<lb/>
THE MIDDLE EAST GAME- The State<lb/>
Department assures the Arab oil shieks<lb/>
Washington is their bosom friend. Under<lb/>
Secretary of State Joseph J. Sisco<lb/>
announced in late summer (August 5),<lb/>
"We have important political, economic<lb/>
and strategic interests in the entire<lb/>
area .There is increasing concern in out<lb/>
country over the energy question, and I<lb/>
think it is foolhardy to believe that this is<lb/>
not a factor (in our policy)<lb/>
The White House gives Israeli leaders<lb/>
private assurances of our committment to<lb/>
Israel's security, and ships US arms to<lb/>
that country. At the same time,<lb/>
prominent American Jews are asked to<lb/>
"persuade" Israel to be less belligerent.<lb/>
Then the Defense Department builds<lb/>
up Iran as an American armed pro-consul<lb/>
in the oil-rich Middle East.<lb/>
The Arab states are not playing. The<lb/>
London Financial Times reports, "The<lb/>
threat of a politically provoked oil supply<lb/>
"crisis existsIt is certain that all the<lb/>
Arab oil-producing states, with the<lb/>
exception of Algeria, could hold back<lb/>
production without causing themselves<lb/>
discomfiture .No new American initia-<lb/>
tive is in sight.<lb/>
The Christian Science Monitor<lb/>
adds: "When someone as pro-Western as<lb/>
King Faisal of Saudi Arabia adds his voice<lb/>
to the warnings, and says that he may<lb/>
have to freeze the level of Saudi oil<lb/>
production unless the US persuades Israel<lb/>
to accept a Mideast settlement,<lb/>
Washington is compelled to listen. For<lb/>
Saudi Arabia has the biggest known oil<lb/>
reserves of any country<lb/>
A Monitor correspondent reports from<lb/>
Beirut on "a series of behind-the-scenes<lb/>
Arab movesto prepare a policy of<lb/>
coordinated oil restrictions against the<lb/>
US In late August, prices for Persian<lb/>
Gulf oil jumped twenty percent since<lb/>
Janaury, and will keep moving up. Libya,<lb/>
the radical bell wether of the Arab states,<lb/>
has nationalized the oil industry, and will<lb/>
not accept US dollars, says Al Anwar of<lb/>
Beirut. This means a loss to the US of<lb/>
"about one million barrels of low-sulfur<lb/>
oil a day" the Monitor suggests.<lb/>
slaff<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERJJnda Gardner<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSSklo Saunders<lb/>
Betsy Fernandez<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORJeff Robinson<lb/>
SPORTS EWTORJack Morrow<lb/>
COMPOSER TYPISTAlice Leary<lb/>
ADVISORIra Baker<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-<lb/>
paper of East Carolina University and<lb/>
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial offices: 758-6366, 758-6367<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Gold<lb/>
In the b<lb/>
can be vnt<lb/>
political pe<lb/>
introduces<lb/>
conservativ<lb/>
community<lb/>
Sen. G<lb/>
spokeman<lb/>
writes frorr<lb/>
senator w<lb/>
informatioi<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
During<lb/>
nationally<lb/>
Goldwater<lb/>
of a ser<lb/>
popularity<lb/>
Democrats<lb/>
he served<lb/>
defeated c<lb/>
Now Si<lb/>
make gei<lb/>
column, f-<lb/>
the natio<lb/>
President<lb/>
but one w<lb/>
support f<lb/>
candidacy<lb/>
The <lb/>
published<lb/>
newspape<lb/>
began to<lb/>
campaign<lb/>
Senate. H<lb/>
1953 to 1<lb/>
senator f r<lb/>
He is<lb/>
among t<lb/>
Conserval<lb/>
Victory?<lb/>
volume h<lb/>
River of C<lb/>
BySEI<lb/>
Ar<lb/>
most oi<lb/>
appeaser<lb/>
learning<lb/>
counterp<lb/>
Over<lb/>
the mos<lb/>
Russia h<lb/>
great im<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
Rhode?<lb/>
message<lb/>
reports<lb/>
subcomr<lb/>
Un-Amei<lb/>
warn of<lb/>
pursuit <lb/>
theKren<lb/>
at appe?<lb/>
other aj<lb/>
heart of<lb/>
lvhai<lb/>
are far fi<lb/>
consequ<lb/>
govern rr<lb/>
warning:<lb/>
been w<lb/>
that this<lb/>
are lost<lb/>
Union<lb/>
warning<lb/>
must n<lb/>
engagin<lb/>
defense<lb/>
military<lb/>
The<lb/>
at an<lb/>
antidefe<lb/>
ever fo<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039883_0009"/><lb/>
non-<lb/>
Goldwater appraises Soviet<lb/>
In the belief that Intelligent decisions<lb/>
can be made only by a hearing of all<lb/>
political persuasions, Fountainhead today<lb/>
introduces Sen. Baity M. CJoldwater's<lb/>
conservative column to the ecu<lb/>
community.<lb/>
Sen. Goldwater, America's foremost<lb/>
spokeman for the conservative cause,<lb/>
writes from the viewpoint of an influential<lb/>
senator who has access to accurate<lb/>
information from all government depart-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
During his two previous stints as a<lb/>
nationally syndicated columnist, Sen.<lb/>
Goldwater either wrote from the position<lb/>
of a senator with growing personal<lb/>
popularity but with little influence on the<lb/>
Democratic administrations under which<lb/>
he served or from the viewpoint of a<lb/>
defeated candidate for the Presidency.<lb/>
Now Sen. Goldwater is in a position to<lb/>
make genuine, hard news with his<lb/>
column. His Republican Party controls<lb/>
the national administration, and the<lb/>
President is not only a personal friend,<lb/>
but one who received vigorous Goktwater<lb/>
support from the earliest days of his<lb/>
candidacy.<lb/>
The Goldwater column tost was<lb/>
published in more than 175U.S.<lb/>
newspapers and was suspended when he<lb/>
began to devote his full time to plan his<lb/>
campaign for re-election to the U.S.<lb/>
Senate. He served in the Senate from<lb/>
1953 to 1964 and won re-election as a<lb/>
senator from Arizona in 1968.<lb/>
He is the author of several boosk,<lb/>
among them "The Conscience of a<lb/>
Conservative "Where I Stand "Why Not<lb/>
Victory? "Arizona Portraits a two-<lb/>
volume history, and "Journey Down the<lb/>
River of Canyons<lb/>
By SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER<lb/>
American intellectuals who spent<lb/>
most of the cold war urging U.S.<lb/>
appeasement of the Soviet Union are now<lb/>
learning the facts of life from their<lb/>
counterparts in Russia.<lb/>
Over the past several weeks some of<lb/>
the most celebrated men of letters in<lb/>
Russia have been sending us messages of<lb/>
great importance.<lb/>
DANGER TO U.S.<lb/>
And much to the dismay of some<lb/>
Rhoder, scholar types in America, those<lb/>
messages read like somthing out of the<lb/>
reports of the Senate internal security<lb/>
subcommittee and the old House<lb/>
Un-American Activities Committee. They<lb/>
warn of danger to the United States in<lb/>
pursuit of policies aimed at detente with<lb/>
the Kremlin, at disarmament agreements,<lb/>
at appeasement of Soviet leaders and at<lb/>
other approaches near and dear to the<lb/>
heart of the intellectual left in America.<lb/>
"Whai's more, the Soviet intellectuals<lb/>
are far from mild in their estimates of the<lb/>
consequences if the United States<lb/>
government fails to heed their<lb/>
warnings. The Nixon Administration has<lb/>
been warned bluntly from inside Russia<lb/>
that this nation and the cause of freedom<lb/>
are lost, if appeasement of the Soviet<lb/>
Union continues. Included in the<lb/>
warnings is a message which says we<lb/>
must not be fooled by the Kremlin into<lb/>
engaging in a hasty pullback of our<lb/>
defense system or a reduction of our<lb/>
military strength.<lb/>
LARGE REDUCTIONS<lb/>
The warnings from inside Russia come<lb/>
at an important time-when America's<lb/>
antidefense lobby is pressing harder than<lb/>
ever for large reductions in American<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phil frank<lb/>
military expenditures. The climate of<lb/>
detente, honestly promoted by the Nixon<lb/>
Administration in an effort to reduce<lb/>
tensions between the East and West, is<lb/>
being seized upon by advocates of<lb/>
unilateral disarmament as an added<lb/>
reason for cutting down on our weapons<lb/>
systems, our troop commitments and our<lb/>
military research and development.<lb/>
There can be little doubt that recent<lb/>
years have seen a lull in the<lb/>
Soviet-American military confrontation.<lb/>
But the Russian intellectuals confirmed<lb/>
what many advocates of an adequate<lb/>
defense system have been suggesting for<lb/>
several years-that we are being fooled<lb/>
about true Soviet intentions, and the great<lb/>
arms buildup now going on in Russia<lb/>
proves that point.<lb/>
Where the Communists are concerned,<lb/>
we cannot afford to base our decisions on<lb/>
anything but their actions. Conciliatory<lb/>
words, such as talk of detente and<lb/>
"peaceful coexistence are merely a<lb/>
strategic tactic to the hard-bitten bosses<lb/>
of the Kremlin. And when the Russians<lb/>
talk of better understanding and the<lb/>
possibility of limiting the arms race and<lb/>
of a new era of Soviet-American relations,<lb/>
their words must be weighed carefully<lb/>
against Soviet actions in their military<lb/>
sphere.<lb/>
INCREASING EXPENDITURES<lb/>
During the whole period of the<lb/>
so-called detente, including that covered<lb/>
by the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks<lb/>
(SALT) with this country, the Soviets have<lb/>
been increasing their expenditures 'or<lb/>
military weapons, enlarging their stock-<lb/>
pile of nuclear bombs, increasing their<lb/>
number of nuclear delivery systems and<lb/>
building perhaps the largest navy the<lb/>
world has seen since the Spanish<lb/>
Armada.<lb/>
The evidence is hard and indisputable<lb/>
of an all-out reach by the Soviet Union for<lb/>
nuclear superiority and for extending their<lb/>
military might into all the major<lb/>
waterways in the world. Yet the New Left<lb/>
in America discounts all of this and keeps<lb/>
arguing that improved relations between<lb/>
the two countries justifies hugh<lb/>
reductions in our defense spending.<lb/>
ARGUMENTS AND WARNINGS<lb/>
It is doubtful if even the arguments<lb/>
and warnings of intellectuals within the<lb/>
Soviet Union will have much effect on the<lb/>
disarmament group in America.<lb/>
But it is ironical that the true<lb/>
libertarians in the Soviet Union are the<lb/>
ones who finally are debunking the<lb/>
contention of the Fulbrights and the<lb/>
McGoverns who for years have blamed the<lb/>
world arms race on the American military<lb/>
strength. They have always insisted that<lb/>
the Russians really want to reduce their<lb/>
armaments as well as tensions, but that<lb/>
they hae had to keep building their<lb/>
military strength because of their fear of<lb/>
the United States. As matters now stand,<lb/>
the Soviet Union has equaled and<lb/>
surpassed this country in many areas of<lb/>
military strength but they are pushing<lb/>
ahead nevertheless.<lb/>
The Soviet objective is now and always<lb/>
had been not military parity but comolete<lb/>
superiority over the United States and<lb/>
every other country in the worid.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I ASK TtXL IS RADICAL ACTNKM<lb/>
PEAP? WEU IS IT?'<lb/>
Thforum<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all reader to<lb/>
express their opinions In the Forum.<lb/>
Letters should be signed by the autnoifs);<lb/>
names will be withheld on request. Un-<lb/>
signed editorials on this page and on the<lb/>
editorial page reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
editor, and ant not nee?eerily those of<lb/>
the staff. . . m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserve the rigt to<lb/>
refuse printing In instances of Itoei or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment ?? m<lb/>
Independent body on ???"<lb/>
Issues. A newspaper ln<lb/>
proportion to Hs autonomy.<lb/>
Raybin and Packar return<lb/>
Dear Editorial Writer:<lb/>
It's us again, (the two of us). Many of<lb/>
our friends, after reading our first letter,<lb/>
were disappointed because we did not<lb/>
mention them PERSONALLY in our<lb/>
hello's. Since such a ruckus has been<lb/>
raised, we felt we had to write a second<lb/>
letter to rectify the matter. High on our<lb/>
list of upset friends is German Jon who<lb/>
was disappointed that he was just<lb/>
included in the ECU frisbee players and<lb/>
felt that he should have been mentioned<lb/>
individually. Next we have two people<lb/>
(???) that we don't know how we could<lb/>
have forgotten in our first letter - the<lb/>
exciting, the enchanting, the beautiful,<lb/>
the fabulous crime fighters of Greenville<lb/>
known as THE BIRD BROTHERS<lb/>
There were also several dogs who were<lb/>
disappointed at not being mentioned.<lb/>
Namely, Ralph, the Frisbee Dog, Voodoo<lb/>
(the one Jake calls Baxter), and Horse<lb/>
(sometimes called Barney). Horse is a<lb/>
very large, mostly St. Bernard (minus the<lb/>
wiskey around his neck) almost grown<lb/>
dog. He limps, and we think that he is<lb/>
not well fed after watching him gobble up<lb/>
3 packets of Prime Choice, a package of<lb/>
bologna (minus 3 slices) and two 15 oz.<lb/>
cans of dog food and he was still<lb/>
hungry. We would appreciate anyone<lb/>
seeing him to offer him some food.<lb/>
Continuing with the list of people, we<lb/>
have the Doughnut Man, the Greenville<lb/>
Grabber, the Three Musketeers of the<lb/>
Cafeteria: Sam, Mike and Stuart,<lb/>
Sneakers (alias tennis shoes), Mr. Keebler<lb/>
ana nis Elves, Mike Williams and his<lb/>
flfmMMMMMmi<lb/>
beautiful music, Mighty Mouse, and Clark<lb/>
Kent, because they are also crime fighters<lb/>
(though no where's as good as the Bird<lb/>
Brothers), Merd our friend from N.J Syd<lb/>
Barrett (David wants to know if anyone<lb/>
knows who this guy is), Gordon Lightfoot<lb/>
who really should have been at the top of<lb/>
our list, Jackie (on our hall) and her root b<lb/>
beer, Moishe Kapoyer and the Toads of<lb/>
the Short Forest -<lb/>
Now for our "Thank You's First of all<lb/>
we would like to thank the Editor for<lb/>
inspiring us to write our first letter, next<lb/>
we'd like to thank whoever it is that is<lb/>
supposed to fix the ice machines for<lb/>
taking such a long time to do it. We'd like<lb/>
to thank the ECU maintenance crew for<lb/>
finally cleaning the fountain. We have<lb/>
never seen a more beautiful environment<lb/>
for germs and disease.<lb/>
" We do regret that we could not also<lb/>
submit this letter in crayon, but there is a<lb/>
lack of paper suitable for using crayon.<lb/>
Until the next time just keep<lb/>
smiling. You might be lucky enough not<lb/>
to run into us later some night in a dark<lb/>
alley. Thank you ladies and gentlemen.<lb/>
Jake Raybin and Betty Packer<lb/>
of the infamous Jarvis Hall<lb/>
PS. I would like to thank the Cafeteria<lb/>
Musketeers: Sam, Mike and Stuart (in<lb/>
case you forgot who they were) for giving<lb/>
me two Cafeteria Flowers on my 19th<lb/>
birthday. Thank you! (J.R.)<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm inm<lb/>
Jenkins emphasizes<lb/>
language skills at<lb/>
educators' luncheon<lb/>
Secondary school educators were urged Friday to emphasize<lb/>
language skills - reading and writing - as the basis of any<lb/>
well-rounded education or career.<lb/>
"Failure to be well-rounded in reading and writing handicaps the<lb/>
student in all disciplines Dr. Leo Jenkins, Chancellor of ECU, told a<lb/>
joint luncheon meeting of principals, supervisors, and<lb/>
superintendents of District 10, N.C. Association of Educators,<lb/>
(NCAE).<lb/>
The most important subject in the public school curriculum,<lb/>
Jenkins said, is English. Failures in other disciplines, obviously,<lb/>
grow from a weakness in English, he said.<lb/>
"We can be of great service to the youth of America by insisting<lb/>
that our schools recognize that the use of our mother tongue is not<lb/>
something for the English period alone, but for the entire school<lb/>
day Jenkins said.<lb/>
"Too few students realize that no matter what their careers may<lb/>
be, English is one subject that will either help or hurt them he said.<lb/>
He said the child who cannot read well, who does not enjoy<lb/>
reading "is cut off from much of the world's beauty and most of its<lb/>
knowledge Referring to the importance of classroom teaching, he<lb/>
said the teacher must direct students to read and vrivt their appetite<lb/>
for it.<lb/>
"If the library is the heart of the school, then the classroom is<lb/>
most certainly the main artery to it he said. He noted that forty-five<lb/>
percent of the people of the world today cannot read.<lb/>
The ECU chancellor also stressed to his audience that "you must<lb/>
see that teachers are fully protected so that they may do an effective<lb/>
job<lb/>
"We must free our teachers completely from non-teaching tasks<lb/>
Jenkins said. "Teaching is a full-time task. Our schools should be<lb/>
free from boring meetings and fund drives and the like<lb/>
As for teachers themselves, he said, they "must appreciate the<lb/>
inevitability of change He said society has always been in a period<lb/>
of transition but that change today is more rapid than ever before.<lb/>
"This will be a rapidly changing world-an angry worlda complex<lb/>
world, and today's pupil will live with an intellectual explosion. The<lb/>
new world will mean new duties, new nonmenclature and new<lb/>
responsibility<lb/>
Jenkins also urged teachers to be an inspiration to their students,<lb/>
to be familiar with "most of the known tricks of<lb/>
motivation-understanding, sympathy and love and to exert<lb/>
salesmanship in selling his subject-education.<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
Mflf off luncheon meats <lb/>
offer expires Sat. Oct. 20<lb/>
limit 2 per customer<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
SUPERMARKET, INC.<lb/>
1 coupon I package<lb/>
Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
? ?????HHBH aM BBB) aaBl BBS BBB1 ??? aia<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
off luncheon meats<lb/>
100 100<lb/>
offer expires Sat. Oct. 20<lb/>
limit 2 per customer<lb/>
'I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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Rtffti Skt<lb/>
Repair Shop<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
111 W. 4th St DowntowiT<lb/>
Gaanvilla 758-0204<lb/>
READY NOW!<lb/>
Apartments<lb/>
"A Now Direction For<lb/>
Flntr Living"<lb/>
WMEIUTE OCCUPANCY<lb/>
Twa Hnim twi?ry iHrmwh wit<lb/>
?pttoMl mm M all ffta mm ?mwHttw<lb/>
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camUttanlNf and haattna canfral, and<lb/>
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RECREATION? YES!<lb/>
Pool Tennis<lb/>
Clubhouse<lb/>
MODELOPEN<lb/>
DAILY 10-12, 1-6:30<lb/>
Sot. aTSon. 1:30-6:30<lb/>
Pot Looms Available<lb/>
LIVE ON THE<lb/>
Fathionabk Eastsioa<lb/>
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?avlavara- (US M4 lyaat) l??t tawf a<lb/>
Ta??li Sfraat, caavaniaat la 8CU and<lb/>
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Rent Includes Utilities<lb/>
ONE CHECK PAYS ALL<lb/>
XK BJ Bm BJ KH-HXHKJIJ M??v?MJtHKimM;<lb/>
a<lb/>
DRUCKER ft<lb/>
FALK<lb/>
758-4012<lb/>
An Accrtdit?4 Manaaamant Oraanltation<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
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i .<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0011"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
MM<lb/>
11<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
IFDEDS<lb/>
COUPLE NEEDED FOR graduate marriage counseling class. Free.<lb/>
Call 756 4859.<lb/>
FOR SALE EXCELLENT condition, 26" girl's Schwin bike, less than 1<lb/>
yr. old, complete with lights. Call Carolyn, 752-5699 or 756-3905.<lb/>
W<lb/>
ANTED PART TIME male sr. living in dorm. Phone 758 2469.<lb/>
DESK CLERK WANTED to work weekends Best Value Motor Lodge,<lb/>
2725 Memorial Drive. Apply anytime before 6 p.m. in person.<lb/>
FOR RENT: PRIVATE room close to campus; boy or mature lady;<lb/>
econo rate. Phone 758 6091 day 752 4006 night.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience required. Excellent pay. Worldwide<lb/>
travel. Perfect summer job or career. Send S3.00 ?r "formation,<lb/>
seafax, Dept. Q-9, Box 2049, Port Angeles, Wash.ngton 98362.<lb/>
WANTED: PERSON WHO has lived in commune to come and speak to<lb/>
a Sociology Class. Call Jeannie at 752 1095.<lb/>
FOR SALE WEBCOR solid state stereo cassette deck for $125.00 Call<lb/>
758 5150 after 3 p.m.<lb/>
HUNT SEAT RIDER: Accomplished hunt seat rider needed to exercise<lb/>
hunter. Must have transportation to Gr.mesland. Cost $20 per<lb/>
month. 752 0270 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle, 752-2619.<lb/>
LOST SOLID GREY kitten with small white spot on chest -in vicinity of E. 3rd<lb/>
St Reward offered for any information. Please call 756-1098 or come by 805 E.<lb/>
3rd St.<lb/>
HELP WANTED- 2 attractive Black female vocalists to perform with 8 piece<lb/>
white top 40 dance band. Must be able to perform any weekend and occasional<lb/>
weeknights. For appointment Four Par Productions 752 2024.<lb/>
REAL CRISIS INTERVENTION: Phone 758-HELP. Corner Evans and<lb/>
14th Streets. Abortion referrals, suicide intervention, drug problems,<lb/>
birth control, information, overnight housing. All free services and<lb/>
confidential.<lb/>
PART TIME WAITRESSES wanted apply in person Ol' Miner<lb/>
Restaurant.<lb/>
LOST: BROWN 3 FOLD Buxton wallet at the Crows Nest. If found call<lb/>
752-3471. Reward Is offered.<lb/>
FOR SALE 1972 HONDA 450. Excellent Condition. Call 752-4916.<lb/>
NOW ACCEPTING PART TIME help. Noon hours, evenings, weekends,<lb/>
apply in person at McDonalds.<lb/>
LOST: LADIES GOLD Bulova watch, on campus around Austin and<lb/>
rawl, Sept. 26. Great semtimental value, please call 758-5962 if found.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free info &amp; referral, up to i<lb/>
weeks. General anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also available.<lb/>
Free pregnancy tests. Call PCS non profit 202 298-7995.<lb/>
SHONEY'S: NOW ACCEPTING cooks, waitresses, dishwashers day &amp; nite, full<lb/>
and part-time. Apply in person.<lb/>
Hardee's has got<lb/>
your number.<lb/>
If your student ID. number<lb/>
is listed here, you're the winner<lb/>
of a free meal at Hardee's:<lb/>
690015 721862 716925 721572<lb/>
731570<lb/>
732691<lb/>
706420<lb/>
715795<lb/>
705140 715555 736541<lb/>
738000 715444 735777<lb/>
729999 706542 726655<lb/>
721411 731859 736511<lb/>
For the payoff just present<lb/>
your ID. at Hardee s. You'll get<lb/>
a Deluxe Huskee or Huskee<lb/>
Junior, a regular order of<lb/>
French Fries, and a regular<lb/>
size Soft Drink, all absolutely<lb/>
free.<lb/>
Offer good only at<lb/>
300 E. Greenville Boulevard,<lb/>
and 10th Street, in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
WWW<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmmt0m<lb/>
w0mmi0mmmm<lb/>
Institutions continue with<lb/>
sex discrimination<lb/>
(CPS)Sex discrimination in education<lb/>
with a few minor exceptions is now<lb/>
but institutional<lb/>
reported rampant<lb/>
explicitly illegal,<lb/>
non-compliance is<lb/>
across the country.<lb/>
Non-compliance to Title IX of the<lb/>
Educational Amendments of 1972 has<lb/>
been partially attributed to the absence of<lb/>
official guidelines, but many clear<lb/>
violations continue to occur. Some<lb/>
common examples are:<lb/>
-A woman student's residency<lb/>
determined by her husband's domicile<lb/>
(while his legal home is never determined<lb/>
by his wife's) in order to charge married<lb/>
women residents out-of-state tuition.<lb/>
-Different housing rules and hours for<lb/>
men and women.<lb/>
-Classes limited to one sex or the<lb/>
other, or required only for one sex.<lb/>
-Quota systems and different<lb/>
standards for admissions and financial<lb/>
aid for men and women.<lb/>
-Different dress code standards<lb/>
including hair length and pants<lb/>
restrictions.<lb/>
Title IX states,<lb/>
United States shall,<lb/>
be excluded from<lb/>
"No person in the<lb/>
on the basis of sex,<lb/>
participation in, be<lb/>
denied the benefits of, or be subjected to<lb/>
discrimination under any educational<lb/>
program or activity receiving Federal<lb/>
financial assistance<lb/>
Since fewer than a dozen educational<lb/>
institutions fail to receive federal funds,<lb/>
Title IX covers virtually every one of the<lb/>
2500 institutions of higher learning, and<lb/>
the 18,000 elementary and secondary<lb/>
school districts, as well as the thousands<lb/>
of professional, vocational and proprietary<lb/>
schools in the U.S.<lb/>
Technically Title IX outlaws sex<lb/>
discrimination in education with some<lb/>
specific exceptions, but in actuality it<lb/>
only covers that discrimination which can<lb/>
be documented.<lb/>
Exceptions to Title IX include:<lb/>
-Religious institutions may apply for<lb/>
exemptions in areas where the law would<lb/>
conflict with religious tenets.<lb/>
-Military service and Merchant<lb/>
Marine training schools are exempt from<lb/>
the law.<lb/>
-Private undergraduate institutions of<lb/>
higher education, non-vocational non-<lb/>
professional elementary and secondary<lb/>
schools, and public institutions of<lb/>
undergraduate higher education which<lb/>
have traditionally been single-sexed are<lb/>
exempt in admissions only.<lb/>
In addition to Title IX several other<lb/>
federal laws and regulations concern sex<lb/>
discrimination in educational institutions.<lb/>
Executive Order 11246, as amended by<lb/>
Executive Order 11375 and Revised Order<lb/>
4, prohibits sex discrimination in<lb/>
employment at educational institutions<lb/>
receiving federal contracts. Such con-<lb/>
tracts must practice non-discrimination<lb/>
and those under private control must<lb/>
maintain written affirmative action<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
Non-discrimination in admissions to<lb/>
all health services training programs is<lb/>
required by Titles VII and VIII of the Public<lb/>
Services Act as amended in 1971. This<lb/>
applies to admissions policies at<lb/>
institutions otherwise exempt from Title<lb/>
IX admissions coverage.<lb/>
The Office of Civil Rights (OCR) of the<lb/>
Department of Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare is the enforcing agency for Title<lb/>
IX. At present OCR is writing the<lb/>
guidelines for such enforcement.<lb/>
The original deadline for release of<lb/>
Title IX regulations is already past,<lb/>
making it difficult to predict when the<lb/>
guidelines will go into effect. However,<lb/>
OCR is accepting complaints filed under<lb/>
Title IX and about one third have been<lb/>
settled.<lb/>
Any discriminatory practice which can<lb/>
be at all substantiated should be<lb/>
considered grounds for a complaint.<lb/>
There are three basic types of<lb/>
complaints available under Title IX: the<lb/>
individual complaint; a class action<lb/>
complaint, where a group claims to have<lb/>
been victim of a particular act of discrimi-<lb/>
nation; and a request for investigation,<lb/>
which may be filed by anyone who has<lb/>
reason to believe discrimination exists in<lb/>
an institution.<lb/>
CAROL BEULE FITS STEPHEN HENDERSON with a costume for his lead role or<lb/>
Falstaff in Merry Wives of Windsor, to open on October 17th.<lb/>
Evidence continues against<lb/>
smoking while pregnant<lb/>
(CPSZNS)- There is increasing evidence<lb/>
to indicate that women who are pregnant<lb/>
simply should not smoke.<lb/>
Scientific studies have determined that<lb/>
the babies of mothers who smoked<lb/>
cigarettes during pregnancy were more<lb/>
likely to be bom premature, or to weigh<lb/>
less than the babies of non-smoking<lb/>
mothers.<lb/>
m<lb/>
now, the National Children's Bureau<lb/>
in Britain has uncovered some more<lb/>
disturbing evidence about the ill-effects of<lb/>
smoking.<lb/>
The Bureau says it has found that the<lb/>
babies of women who smoke cigarettes<lb/>
during pregnancy have a 30 percent higher<lb/>
incidence of death just after birth than<lb/>
those babies bom to non-smoking<lb/>
mothers.<lb/>
Liberal churches are<lb/>
losing congregations<lb/>
(CPS)-Many liberal churches are losing their congregations<lb/>
according to prominent theologian and sociologist at Rutgers<lb/>
University Peter L. Berger.<lb/>
This phenomenon is caused by liberal churches offering social<lb/>
action, psychotherapy, and encounter groups, that are available in<lb/>
places other than the church, Berger said, so people are staying away<lb/>
from liberal congregations.<lb/>
"Most people who go to church today want a clear religious<lb/>
message Berger asserted. "If you are interested in a program of<lb/>
social action or something like racial justice, why do it through the<lb/>
church? There are such organizations everywhere and they are<lb/>
probably doing a better job of it<lb/>
Berger maintained that the "new liberalism" is offensive to many<lb/>
churchgoers and only makes them uncomfortable. He feels many<lb/>
churches are undergoing "a frantic quest for modernity which is<lb/>
degrading and self-defeating<lb/>
As a result conservatice churches which offer substantive<lb/>
religious messages, or "God talk" as Berger pus it, are gaining<lb/>
members at the expense of the liberal churches which are not<lb/>
"preaching traditional truths<lb/>
OL'MINER<lb/>
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PE<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039883_0013"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
13<lb/>
Die or<lb/>
t<lb/>
s Bureau<lb/>
fie more<lb/>
effects of<lb/>
i that the<lb/>
cigarettes<lb/>
nt higher<lb/>
irth than<lb/>
-smoking<lb/>
U<lb/>
8<lb/>
i<lb/>
YD.<lb/>
it<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
PE department Recommendations stir hot debate<lb/>
clarifies<lb/>
swim test<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Due to some curriculum changes in<lb/>
the physical education department in<lb/>
recent years some students are confused<lb/>
about whether they need to take the<lb/>
swimming test to graduate.<lb/>
"For a long time East Carolina had a<lb/>
swimming requirement in terms of a<lb/>
swimming proficiency test or taking<lb/>
elementary swimming if the student<lb/>
couldn't pass the swimming test. In 1971<lb/>
the university changed the general<lb/>
education requirements and the Health<lb/>
and Physical Education department also<lb/>
changed their requirements explained<lb/>
Dr. Edgar W. Hooks, chairman of the<lb/>
Health and Physical Education depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
In considering the curriculum change<lb/>
Hooks explained, "The faculty and<lb/>
department proposed recognizing the<lb/>
concept that what is needed for general<lb/>
education is a sound background in<lb/>
health and physical education for the<lb/>
same purpose as other general education<lb/>
requirements - to enhance education<lb/>
A new requirement was structured<lb/>
with four hours of health and physical<lb/>
education. The required four hours was in<lb/>
two courses: P.E. 12 (one hour) and<lb/>
Health 12 (three hours).<lb/>
In P.E. 12 the swimming test is given<lb/>
to the students. "It is not the same test<lb/>
we had under the old concept. It consists<lb/>
of swimming two lengths of the pool and<lb/>
also a test for floating and we brought in<lb/>
drownproofing. We take all the students<lb/>
in P.E. 12 and give them the opportunity<lb/>
to view a film on drownproofing<lb/>
technique. Then for a period of about two<lb/>
weeks we give the student a chance to<lb/>
come to the pool and practice under<lb/>
supervision before we give them the<lb/>
swimming test Hooks said.<lb/>
If a student fails to pass the swimming<lb/>
test he must take elementary swimming<lb/>
as his activity in P.E. 12. If the student<lb/>
passes the test he can take some other<lb/>
activity such as tennis, volley ball,<lb/>
dancing or several others.<lb/>
The students that started school<lb/>
during the summer of 1971 and afterward<lb/>
are under the P.E. 12 program. Students<lb/>
that are under a previous catalogue had to<lb/>
pass the old swimming test to graduate.<lb/>
Hooks said that the department<lb/>
continued to administer the old swimming<lb/>
test up until this summer when the point<lb/>
was reached that most of the students<lb/>
that needed the test had taken it.<lb/>
Hooks gave two reasons for<lb/>
administering the swimming test. The<lb/>
first is for the physiological aspect. He<lb/>
explained that swimming is one of the<lb/>
best physical activities a person can<lb/>
engage in. The second factor is for the<lb/>
safety aspect. "We want people to be able<lb/>
to save themselves if they are<lb/>
unintentionally exposed to water. That's<lb/>
where the drownproofing comes in<lb/>
He added that if a person cannot<lb/>
reasonably satisfy the swimming require-<lb/>
ment and has a good reason that they<lb/>
would not be kept from graduating.<lb/>
(CPS)-A series of recommendations<lb/>
aimed at alleviating the "decisive"<lb/>
financial crises in higher education has<lb/>
stirred heated debate among educators<lb/>
and students.<lb/>
The report, issued by the Committee<lb/>
for Economic Development (CED), called<lb/>
for raising tuition to cover 50 percent of<lb/>
instructional costs and the use of<lb/>
improved management techniques in<lb/>
educational administration.<lb/>
Tuition at most private schools<lb/>
presently approximates over half of<lb/>
instructional costs and the recommended<lb/>
increase would mainly affect public<lb/>
colleges and universities. Critics of the<lb/>
plan have charged CED with representing<lb/>
the interests of the private schools who<lb/>
would gain enrollment from an increase in<lb/>
costs ir. the public sector.<lb/>
Calling the tuition recommendation "a<lb/>
direct attack on millions of middle and<lb/>
lower income American families<lb/>
American Association of State Colleges<lb/>
and Universities Executive Director Allan<lb/>
Ostar said the report, "appears to express<lb/>
the views of a few multi-billion dollar<lb/>
corporations and affluent private univer-<lb/>
sities<lb/>
The CED, whose 200 members are<lb/>
mainly executives of major corporations<lb/>
with a few educational leaders, joins the<lb/>
Carnegie Commission on Higher Ed-<lb/>
ucation and the College Entrance<lb/>
Examination Board in recommending<lb/>
increased tuition for public schools. The<lb/>
CED plan calls for raising tuition at an<lb/>
average four year public institution by<lb/>
$540 per year.<lb/>
At a CED policy forum in Denver Dr.<lb/>
Ben Lawrence, Director of the National<lb/>
Commission on the Financing of<lb/>
Post-Secondary Education asked, "How<lb/>
much can you increase tuition and expect<lb/>
them (students) to remain in colleoe?"<lb/>
The report emphasized tuition<lb/>
increases should only be instituted after<lb/>
there is a corresponding increase in<lb/>
financial aid to students. The Committee<lb/>
recommended a program of direct grants<lb/>
for students from lower income families<lb/>
coupled with an extensive loan program<lb/>
for students from middle and upper<lb/>
income backgrounds.<lb/>
"It is not surprising to find that a<lb/>
college-age person from a family with an<lb/>
annual income of $15,000 or more was<lb/>
almost five times more likely to be in<lb/>
college than one from a family with an<lb/>
income of $3000 or less observed the<lb/>
committee. "Equalization of educational<lb/>
opportunity should be a major social goal<lb/>
and, therfore, a basic responsibility of<lb/>
government they said.<lb/>
"Promises of coupling tuition in-<lb/>
creases with increases in grants for low<lb/>
income students have been around for<lb/>
years charged Olson. "The problem is<lb/>
that it never quite works out that<lb/>
way. Grants never keep up with the rise in<lb/>
tuition he said.<lb/>
In a memorandum published with the<lb/>
report University of California at Berkeley<lb/>
Vice President John A. Perkins argued<lb/>
against expanded reliance on loans. With<lb/>
such an emphasis, argued Perkins, "many<lb/>
young people will be discouraged from<lb/>
seeking a broad liberal education .Many<lb/>
others will be diverted to training<lb/>
programs that will guarantee a quick<lb/>
return on their educational investment in<lb/>
spite of the likelihood that such<lb/>
vocational training will become obsoles-<lb/>
cent long before they retire he said.<lb/>
In Washington, National Student<lb/>
Lobby Executive Director Layton K. Olson<lb/>
called the plan "a severe blow" to the<lb/>
aspirations of middle American families.<lb/>
In addition, Olson doubted an effective<lb/>
federal aid program to meet massive<lb/>
tuition increases would be forth coming.<lb/>
One freauentlv mentioned aualm at<lb/>
the Denver forum was that even if the<lb/>
government supported increased tuition<lb/>
through increased aid, any financial<lb/>
benefits could be wiped out by resulting<lb/>
cutbacks in state aid.<lb/>
Associate Dean Ronald Calgaard of<lb/>
the University of Kansas said specific<lb/>
grant programs would probably suffer<lb/>
through an increased federal reliance on<lb/>
individual grants. "It's very tough to sell<lb/>
the Kanses legislature on a program for<lb/>
excellance in Slavic languages Calgaard<lb/>
said. "Universities support national and<lb/>
international interests, too<lb/>
Concerning management, the CED<lb/>
report claims the extent of the rise in the<lb/>
annual rate of increase in per student<lb/>
costs is "largely attributable to the lack of<lb/>
major productivity improvements<lb/>
Management techniques recommended<lb/>
include:<lb/>
-granting all executive powers not<lb/>
reserved to the trustees or delegated<lb/>
elsewhere to the president.<lb/>
-utilizing instructional technology.<lb/>
-experimenting with admission and<lb/>
degree requirements on the basis of<lb/>
knowledge acquired outside of class-<lb/>
rooms.<lb/>
-defining specific institutional goals<lb/>
and objectives in order to establish<lb/>
funding priorities.<lb/>
These suggestions drew mixed<lb/>
reactions. Many at the Denver meeting<lb/>
agreed higher education needs to clarity<lb/>
its goais to direct limited resources, "You<lb/>
can't be all things to all people Calgaard<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Others said the report had a<lb/>
"preoccupation with the idea of<lb/>
-productivity Professor Robert Lewis of<lb/>
the University of North Dakota argued that<lb/>
higher education is a "peculiar social or<lb/>
human activity, different from business<lb/>
and not subject to quantifiable<lb/>
measiirempnt "<lb/>
GREECE-INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS WELCOMED supper Friday night at the WomansClu P?"?'a<lb/>
Carolina University at a reception and covered dishBaines.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmwmm<lb/>
wmam<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
University saves energy<lb/>
and turns off lights<lb/>
(CPS)-The lights are going out all over the Austin campus of the<lb/>
University of Texas this fall.<lb/>
The electrical cutback is part of a conservation plan proposed by<lb/>
the school to reduce energy loads. Similar efforts during the summer<lb/>
resulted in decreases of approximately 30 percent from historical<lb/>
growth loads for the same period.<lb/>
Actions taken by the university include:<lb/>
-Fountain and other lights will be turned off.<lb/>
-Lighting on campus, including street and parking lighting will be<lb/>
reduced through selective deactivation of some lights. Special<lb/>
attention will be given to heavily used areas and to areas of women's<lb/>
dormitories in a schedule to be developed with University Police.<lb/>
-Light levels in classrooms and officer will be reduced to between<lb/>
60 and 80 footcandles by deactivating selected lights or tubes in<lb/>
fixtures in those areas.<lb/>
-Cooling and heating units in selected buildings will be turned off<lb/>
during holidays and weekends.<lb/>
-Students and faculty have been asked to turn off energy<lb/>
consuming devices and lights at every opportunity.<lb/>
Dog fights back<lb/>
(CPS)-Entertainment is a nice thing; it lends a certain perspective to<lb/>
life. With what should have been that throught in mind a singer<lb/>
named Waldick Sariano was singing at an outdoor concert in Juazeiro<lb/>
Do Norte Brazil.<lb/>
His repertoire included a little tune called "I Am Not A Dog As<lb/>
this song neared its close, a very-far seeing dog strolled on stage<lb/>
wearing a sign that read, "I'm not Waldick Soriano Alas, Mr.<lb/>
Soriano lost his head and was not amused.<lb/>
Crossword Puzzle<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Succor<lb/>
5 Currency<lb/>
9 Posed<lb/>
12 To use (Lat.)<lb/>
13 Primitive rjce of<lb/>
Hokkaido<lb/>
14 Con s counterpart<lb/>
1 5 A White House<lb/>
plumber<lb/>
17 Article<lb/>
18 "Flymg down to ???"<lb/>
19 Humble<lb/>
21 Type of weave<lb/>
23 Strangle<lb/>
27 - garde!<lb/>
28 Caribbean republic<lb/>
29 Time zone (ab.)<lb/>
31 You've  to be<lb/>
kiddmgl<lb/>
34 Peisonal pronoun<lb/>
35 In a group (two<lb/>
words)<lb/>
38 Oriental game<lb/>
39 Saratoga Springs<lb/>
41 School subiect (ab.)<lb/>
42 Zola<lb/>
44 Principal Egyptian<lb/>
god<lb/>
46 Inappropriate<lb/>
48 A third White<lb/>
House plumber<lb/>
51 A bridge player<lb/>
52 Six to the zero<lb/>
power<lb/>
53 Latin conjunction<lb/>
55 Decide<lb/>
59 Man's nickname<lb/>
60 Play The Winter's<lb/>
62 Ireland<lb/>
6 3 Permit<lb/>
64 Stravinsky<lb/>
65 Colored<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Sing with closed<lb/>
lips<lb/>
2 And so forth<lb/>
3 City in Viet Nam:<lb/>
An -<lb/>
4 Advance<lb/>
5 West Pointer<lb/>
?"11 I10t1IN?<lb/>
Itll 111I1<lb/>
0'?!1NII II1?I 0 l 0<lb/>
1uIII sT11'?I 0<lb/>
0iT??tFES 1t<lb/>
sn11I II I1IV1 <lb/>
??"I1I 11?I1 1<lb/>
1IIr11CMLI1I1<lb/>
I'lliIC1I II I01I<lb/>
T0 M II IIGtI II"11<lb/>
u1Iil 11M1T ? II<lb/>
rtIMI111t?TI1<lb/>
?T0IIST1VI <lb/>
6 Ouch in Acapulco<lb/>
7 Nahoor sheep<lb/>
8 Another White<lb/>
House plumber<lb/>
9 Stream source<lb/>
10 A certain seed<lb/>
covering<lb/>
11 Drive fast (coll.)<lb/>
16 Part of eyeball<lb/>
20 Official in the<lb/>
KKK<lb/>
22 Pronoun<lb/>
23 In this manner<lb/>
24 Hinged fastening<lb/>
25 A state (ab.)<lb/>
26 Type of curve<lb/>
30 African fly<lb/>
32 Look with desire<lb/>
33 Word used with<lb/>
pigeon<lb/>
36 1,051 (Roman)<lb/>
37 Uttered<lb/>
40 Burning<lb/>
43 Contraction<lb/>
45 Paid announcement<lb/>
47 Kind of beam<lb/>
48 Lounge about<lb/>
49 Arrow poison<lb/>
50 Abominable snowman<lb/>
54 A certain game<lb/>
56 Attempt<lb/>
57 Golf term<lb/>
58 A football player<lb/>
61 Behold<lb/>
n i W<lb/>
m 1<lb/>
Hm" H -<lb/>
? pL-JP<lb/>
j. H ?? IT"<lb/>
HflBi" ri"<lb/>
 itV U t<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
: ? ? I L<lb/>
Oist by Pule Inc 102<lb/>
r SS<lb/>
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Be sure to fill in name, address, and size. Send with check or money order to:<lb/>
Promotion Centers of America<lb/>
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1. Miss Wonderful Hat-Crushable, pellon lined. Specify size:Small,Medium,Large<lb/>
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2. n Miss Wonderful Bike Shirt. 100 fine quality cotton. White body with 1 red sleeve and 1 blue<lb/>
sleeve. Miss Wonderful emblem. Sizes: Small, Medium,Large, andXL. $4.25 each.<lb/>
3. G Miss Wonderful Bike Bag. Canvas with straps. For school supplies or bike outings. 15" x 14<lb/>
with Miss Wonderful emblem. $1.75 each.<lb/>
4. Miss Wonderful Tank Shirt. Cotton tank top with Miss Wonderful imprint.Small,<lb/>
? Medium, Large, and Q XL. $3.00 each.<lb/>
5. G Miss Wonderful Bike radio-light-horn. Snaps on and off in seconds. G Black &amp; White;<lb/>
? Red &amp; White; G Blue &amp; White, complete with batteries and accessories. Specify color<lb/>
choice. $15.15 each.<lb/>
All prices are delivered costs. Send check or money order (NO CASH) with your order. Missouri<lb/>
residents must add 4 Sales Tax.<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
STREET ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
ZIP CODE<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Buc<lb/>
Sparke<lb/>
State's c<lb/>
cross-cou<lb/>
taineers 2<lb/>
The fi<lb/>
chickened<lb/>
scheduled<lb/>
Pirates h<lb/>
available.<lb/>
To ad<lb/>
Mountain<lb/>
shirt with<lb/>
That's<lb/>
needed a<lb/>
within 50<lb/>
EdRi(<lb/>
25:58 mi<lb/>
Fra<lb/>
The fi<lb/>
season t<lb/>
powers F<lb/>
collide.<lb/>
The ;<lb/>
confront<lb/>
offense a<lb/>
Pi Kaps<lb/>
breezing<lb/>
Kappa v<lb/>
three tc<lb/>
figures 1<lb/>
with Pi H<lb/>
Two <lb/>
records<lb/>
action. I<lb/>
to 7-0 wi<lb/>
Shafts,<lb/>
the Fear<lb/>
to 7-0-1.<lb/>
In ot<lb/>
into con<lb/>
lead by <lb/>
Devils. I<lb/>
Inj<lb/>
For<lb/>
injuries<lb/>
hand. <lb/>
Bucs <lb/>
column<lb/>
North<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Full<lb/>
per ce.<lb/>
Chip E<lb/>
broken<lb/>
have tc<lb/>
Johnsc<lb/>
leg, Da<lb/>
BobGk<lb/>
State c<lb/>
Ag<lb/>
to sa<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
penal t'<lb/>
for a t<lb/>
Bucdt<lb/>
Ea;<lb/>
one 1<lb/>
forget.<lb/>
Pirate;<lb/>
9-0 w<lb/>
fnmmmiwmmmm-? iwwmimw?ia.m i minimum<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0015"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
;n<lb/>
T.M.<lb/>
?<lb/>
i and<lb/>
tform<lb/>
heel.<lb/>
:ores<lb/>
Skirt.<lb/>
-$20<lb/>
wful-<lb/>
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0<lb/>
use?<lb/>
ir to:<lb/>
-arge<lb/>
blue<lb/>
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14<lb/>
imall,<lb/>
hite;<lb/>
color<lb/>
isouri<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1116 CT1973<lb/>
15<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Jim Woody improves<lb/>
Buc Harriers upset Moun<lb/>
IX-<lb/>
Sparked by an article in Appalachian<lb/>
State's campus newspaper the ECU<lb/>
cross-country team defeated the Moun-<lb/>
taineers 25-31 in a dual meet Saturday.<lb/>
The Apps campus paper said ECU<lb/>
chickened out last year in canceling their<lb/>
scheduled meet. The real reason was the<lb/>
Pirates had only four healthy runners<lb/>
available.<lb/>
To add insult to injury one of the<lb/>
Mountaineer runners showed up in a tee<lb/>
shirt with "ECTC" on it.<lb/>
That's all the incentive the Pirates<lb/>
needed as four of ECU'S runners finished<lb/>
within 50 seconds of each other.<lb/>
Ed Rigsby won the race with a time of<lb/>
25:58 minutes. Gerald Klas was third in<lb/>
26:22, Scott Miller fourth in 26:29, Jerry<lb/>
Hillard sixth in 26:49 and Steve Michaels<lb/>
eleventh in 28:22.<lb/>
Coach Carson was greatly pleased<lb/>
with the team performance.<lb/>
"The meet presented a real good<lb/>
rivalry, though Appalachian's team<lb/>
behavior was extremely pcxr. This really<lb/>
fired up the team. Ed (Rigsby) ran his<lb/>
finest race ever and Gerlad Klas ran<lb/>
extremely well with an injured foot. Jerry<lb/>
Hillard had his best meet of the<lb/>
year. This was our finest team effort in<lb/>
five years and that could turn our whole<lb/>
season around<lb/>
ECU next faces Mount St. Mary's on<lb/>
Oct. 20 on their home course in Virginia.<lb/>
Frat showdown to take place<lb/>
The first showdown of the intramural<lb/>
season takes place Thursday as fraternity<lb/>
powers Pi Kappa Phi and Kappa Sigma<lb/>
collide.<lb/>
The affair shapes up as a classic<lb/>
confrontation between an explosive<lb/>
offense against an agressive defense. The<lb/>
Pi Kaps have amassed 126 points in<lb/>
breezing past five opponents, while the<lb/>
Kappa Sigs have begrudgingly yeilded<lb/>
three touchdowns in six outings. It<lb/>
figures to be a highly-spirited contest,<lb/>
with Pi Kappa Phi expected to prevail.<lb/>
Two other teams cling to unblemished<lb/>
records after the third week of<lb/>
action. Herb's Superbs advanced its slate<lb/>
to 7-0 with an 8-6 triumph over the Royal<lb/>
Shafts, while the Sweat Hogs upended<lb/>
the Fearless Fuggers 13-6 to run its mark<lb/>
to 7-0-1.<lb/>
In other action, the Banshees moved<lb/>
into contention for the Dorm League One<lb/>
lead by virtue of a 26-7 romp over the Red<lb/>
Devils. League Four standings remained<lb/>
clouded with the Eye Dotters, Crabs, and<lb/>
Dark Horses in contention for league<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha vaulted atop Fraternity<lb/>
League One by pasting Phi Kappa Tau,<lb/>
25-6.<lb/>
The Flying Kaboobies, class of the<lb/>
Independents, whitewashed the Vet's<lb/>
Club 32-0 and manhandled the Rolling<lb/>
Stones 25-12. The triumphs boosted their<lb/>
record to 5-1, with the loss coming via the<lb/>
forfeit route. The Sea Monkeys fell from<lb/>
the ranks of the unbeaten by falling to the<lb/>
Rip-Offs 13-12. A 6-yard pass from Steve<lb/>
Cooper to Si Seymour provided the victory<lb/>
margin.<lb/>
Volleyball action progressed through<lb/>
week two with no major surprises. The<lb/>
leading teams at this juncture are Kappa<lb/>
Sigma, 5-1, and Pi Kappa Phi, 3-1.<lb/>
The intramural office reminds pro-<lb/>
spective players that basketball rosters<lb/>
are due November 9.<lb/>
James Clayborne Woody has earned a<lb/>
new East Carolina University football<lb/>
nameplate.<lb/>
For three years he has been an<lb/>
unheralded, never publicized reserve<lb/>
kicking specialist. He came to camp this<lb/>
fall as a junior reserve. Now he is "King<lb/>
Woody first team place kicker and leader<lb/>
of East Carolina's speciality kickoff team<lb/>
which adopted an unprintable variation of<lb/>
Woody's name.<lb/>
"King Woody" is turning into a<lb/>
spaceman kicker-distance, that is, with<lb/>
accuracy. His rise to East Carolina fame<lb/>
was fast and a little surprising, even to<lb/>
"King Woody" himself.<lb/>
"I was still a second teamer when I<lb/>
came here this fall Woody said<lb/>
recently. "McLester (Ricky, who quit<lb/>
before the season started) had the job and<lb/>
CoachRandle (East Carolina head coach)<lb/>
said that as long as he did an adequate<lb/>
job he would keep the No. 1<lb/>
spot. Besides, he was kicking better than<lb/>
me and he was on a full<lb/>
scholarship. Those are some pretty good<lb/>
reasons for him keeping the job<lb/>
"Really, I don't think there was that<lb/>
much difference between us ability<lb/>
wise. It was just a matter of kicking<lb/>
experience. He has me beat there<lb/>
"King Woody" used to be "Brain<lb/>
Lock" Woody, and only three games<lb/>
ago. "Against Southern Mississippi, I<lb/>
kept kicking the ball out of bounds on one<lb/>
of the kickoffs he remembers. "Then<lb/>
the next day on his television show,<lb/>
Coach Randle mentioned "Brain Lock" on<lb/>
the kickoff. That just made me work<lb/>
harder and now I think I'm kicking much<lb/>
better.<lb/>
" "Against Furman, I was kicking the<lb/>
ball really well. I think there are two<lb/>
reasons for that. First, I now look forward<lb/>
to kicking in the game and in front of a lot<lb/>
of people. I'm more confident and I think<lb/>
I can help the team win another Southern<lb/>
Conference championship.<lb/>
"Secondly, I've gained confidence and<lb/>
my kicking is really improving. I think<lb/>
Injured Booters drop pair<lb/>
For the East Carolina soccer team the<lb/>
injuries are beginning to get a little out of<lb/>
hand. As a result of the casualties the<lb/>
Bucs put two games under the loss<lb/>
column last week as they were dropped by<lb/>
North Carolina State and Appalachian<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Fullback Brad Smith is playing at 50<lb/>
per cent strength due to a knee injury,<lb/>
Chip Bair is out for the season with a<lb/>
broken foot, Goalie John Henderson may<lb/>
have to undergo surgery on his knee, Rick<lb/>
Johnson has a pulled muscle in his upper<lb/>
leg, Dave Schaler has very bad ankles and<lb/>
Bob Gebhardt had to be removed from the<lb/>
State game with lung congestion.<lb/>
Against the Wolfpack, the only thing<lb/>
to say is that it could have been<lb/>
worse. State scored their first tally on a<lb/>
penalty kick, then they added four more<lb/>
for a 5-0 victory. Only a very determined<lb/>
Buc defense kept the score respectable.<lb/>
East Carolina's debut on astroturf was<lb/>
one that they would soon like to<lb/>
forget. Appalachian State kicked the<lb/>
Pirates from pillar to post and recorded a<lb/>
9-0 win. The Bucs undermanned squad<lb/>
shone through more than ever in this<lb/>
contest as only 14 men made the trip to<lb/>
RoonG<lb/>
Coach Monte Little's team, now 0-5-2,<lb/>
will get out their band-aids, linament, ace<lb/>
bandages and novacaine and face the<lb/>
tough Duke Blue vils at 4 p.m. on Oct.<lb/>
23 at Minges Field.<lb/>
Women fie UNC-G<lb/>
Last Thursday the Women's field<lb/>
hockey team battled to a 1-1 tie in a clash<lb/>
with UNC-Greensboro.<lb/>
Gail Betton tallied the lone goal for the<lb/>
lady Bucs.<lb/>
Goalie Nancy Richards, playing her<lb/>
first game, turned in an outstanding<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
The team plays at home Thursday in a<lb/>
contest with UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
maybe Coach Randle is even a little<lb/>
surprised<lb/>
"At one time, he said that we wouldn t<lb/>
try any field goals and that we would run<lb/>
for the extra points after touchdowns.<lb/>
You don't know how hard that made me<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"I have a check list sort of thing I go<lb/>
through before each kick Woody<lb/>
continued. I've been going through it on<lb/>
every kick, even in practice. That, plus<lb/>
confidence, plus the opportunity to kick<lb/>
more in games is making me a lot<lb/>
better. The check list goes: alignment<lb/>
first, then step quick, swing straight and<lb/>
follow through. I was having a lot of<lb/>
trouble, then Coach Novak (offensive<lb/>
coordinator) told me to think about each<lb/>
little thing and keep cool. Believe me,<lb/>
that advice is really working<lb/>
"King Woody" is now on scholarship,<lb/>
quite an accomplishment for a walk-on<lb/>
kicking specialist from Clinton, N.C. He<lb/>
came to East Carolina because "a couple<lb/>
of East Carolina coaches mentioned the<lb/>
school to me while they were recruiting a<lb/>
big lineman who played high school ball<lb/>
with me. Also, Coach Bill Carson, the<lb/>
track coach, talked to me a little bit. I<lb/>
wasn't offered a scholarship, but I<lb/>
decided I'd give it a try.<lb/>
"I guess I'm not like a lot of other<lb/>
kickers. I'm not real superstitious, I don't<lb/>
'think any kicker around is that much<lb/>
better than me and I sitli think my best<lb/>
kicking is ahead of me.<lb/>
"I do have an idol. That's George<lb/>
Blanda. You have to think a lot about that<lb/>
guy because he is still kicking very well<lb/>
and he's old. He's really consistent which<lb/>
is my real goal. Now, I have to work on<lb/>
distance<lb/>
"I'm getting better and that's because<lb/>
I'm getting more chances to kick. This<lb/>
college kicking is a dream for me. I've<lb/>
always wanted to do it and when I got the<lb/>
chance this fall, I wanted the job more<lb/>
than anything. The bad things is that it's<lb/>
only a one shot deal. But that one shot is<lb/>
all I every wanted<lb/>
Pirate Clubbers drop UNC, 20-0<lb/>
The East Carolina club football team<lb/>
brought it all together Saturday afternoon<lb/>
as they romped to a 2(K victory over the<lb/>
North Carolina Tar Heels.<lb/>
The game saw the rebirth of a<lb/>
defensive unit which stifled the Tar Heels<lb/>
except for two drives, which both ended<lb/>
in top defensive performances.<lb/>
A two platoon defensive line put such<lb/>
pressure on the UNC quarterback that he<lb/>
was virtually unable to take advantage of<lb/>
the club's injury riddled secondary.<lb/>
Fine defensive performances were<lb/>
turned in by the entire defensive unit, but<lb/>
particularly "Yank" Pew, who constantly<lb/>
seemed to be where the action was.<lb/>
The club took the opening kickoff and<lb/>
drove 70 yards to a score. Denny Lynch<lb/>
hit his brother Mike for a 17-yard<lb/>
touchdown. Sam Derence added the<lb/>
conversion points for an 8-0 lead.<lb/>
After an exchange of punts, Derence<lb/>
led the Pirates 65 yards along the ground,<lb/>
scoring himself from the 20 for a 14-0<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
Derence, subbing for a shaken up<lb/>
Lynch, gained close to 100 yards and<lb/>
expertly led the team for the quarter and a<lb/>
half he played.<lb/>
ECU scored again when Mike<lb/>
Richardson rambled up the middle for an<lb/>
11-yard score and a 200 margin over the<lb/>
boys in baby blue. The score was set up<lb/>
by a 50 yard Lynch brothers pass play.<lb/>
Derence led the Bucs on one final<lb/>
drive to the Carolina five. At the five, the<lb/>
pirates fumbled for the first time on<lb/>
offense this season and UNC recovered.<lb/>
The Heels came roaring back late in<lb/>
the game, driving 60 yards, with the help<lb/>
of a facemask penalty, to the ECU<lb/>
two. Here, the Buc line threw up a goal<lb/>
line stand, preventing a Tar Heels score.<lb/>
Now 3-1, the clubbers travel to<lb/>
Winthrop College on Saturday in an<lb/>
attempt to make it two in a row.<lb/>
Tickets stiff available<lb/>
Beginning this week tickets will go on<lb/>
sale for the football games against The<lb/>
Citadel and the University of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Tickets for students and faculty<lb/>
. members for The Citadel contest will be<lb/>
$2.<lb/>
Against UNC, tickets will be $3.50.<lb/>
Such a sense of glowing in the<lb/>
aftermath,<lb/>
Ripe with rich attainments, all imagined.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO 1116 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?mn m smm<lb/>
Pirate gridders stomp Keydets<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assn't Sports Editor<lb/>
VMI, still riding the crest of a rare<lb/>
"victory" wave from last week, took an<lb/>
early 7-0 lead before "wiping out" in the<lb/>
second half as the Pirates overwhelmed<lb/>
the Keydets 42-7.<lb/>
Workhorse Ken Strayhorn carried the<lb/>
ball 31 times for 93 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns. Carlester Crumpler excited<lb/>
the crowd and sparked the Pirates in the<lb/>
fourth quarter when he gained 49 yards on<lb/>
11 carries.<lb/>
Carl Summered had his best passing<lb/>
performance of the year, completing nine<lb/>
of 13 for 125 yards. His main target was<lb/>
split end Vic Wilfore, who had a fine<lb/>
game. He handled five receptions for 61<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
A sad note for the Pirates was the loss<lb/>
of tight end Benny Gibson. "He has a<lb/>
complete separation of the shoulder and<lb/>
will be lost for the season said caoch<lb/>
Sonny Randle. Gibson was scheduled for<lb/>
surgery on Monday.<lb/>
ECU took the kickoff but looked<lb/>
flat. VMI took the ball and was<lb/>
penetrating only to have Mike My rick<lb/>
intercept quarterback Tom Schultze. But<lb/>
again the Bucs failed to move the ball,<lb/>
and Jonathan Deming had to punt.<lb/>
VMI then launched their lone scoring<lb/>
drive A big play was a questionable pass<lb/>
interference call against the Pirates which<lb/>
qave VMI a first down at the ECU 37. On<lb/>
fourth and one from the ECU 28, tailback<lb/>
Bruce Torbett picked up a clutch first<lb/>
down.<lb/>
Two plays later Schultze hit split end<lb/>
Ron Moore on a 27 yard touchdown pass,<lb/>
giving VMI their 7-0 lead.<lb/>
The Pirates came right back on a 10<lb/>
play, 67 yard scoring drive, climaxed by a<lb/>
23 yard touchdown run by Strayhorn. Jim<lb/>
Woody's conversion was good and the<lb/>
score was tied 7-7.<lb/>
The teams traded a few punts before<lb/>
the Bucs embarked on the go-ahead<lb/>
march. Summered completed a 13 yard<lb/>
pass to Wilfore, who made a fantastic<lb/>
diving catch at the sideline. After<lb/>
Strayhorn recovered his own fumble,<lb/>
Summerell missed a wide open Mike<lb/>
Shea, but came right back to complete a<lb/>
pass to Gibson at the VMI 31.<lb/>
A personal foul penalty after a draw<lb/>
play by Strayhorn gave ECU the ball at the<lb/>
13. A pass to Wilfore advanced the<lb/>
Pirates to the four, where Summerell went<lb/>
in for the score on the second of two<lb/>
quarterback sneaks. Woody's PAT put<lb/>
ECU on top 14-7. The score remained<lb/>
14-7 as the first half came to a close.<lb/>
The Pirate defense gave the offense<lb/>
IT WAS YOUTH NIGHT Saturday at Ficklen Stadium as the Pirates hosted the<lb/>
Keydets of VMI One of the celebrities on hand was Grand National NASCAR<lb/>
driver Benny Parsons Pictured with Parsons is Miss North Carolina Motor<lb/>
Speedway.<lb/>
BUG LINEBACKER NELSON STROTHER intercepts a pass in the fourth<lb/>
quarter and races downfield to set up the Pirates final touchdown. ECU<lb/>
prevailed, 42-7.<lb/>
two opportunities early in the second half<lb/>
when Myrick recovered a fumble on the<lb/>
first play from scrimmage and when<lb/>
Reggie Pinkney intercepted a pass on<lb/>
VMI's next possession. Unfortunately<lb/>
they couldn't capitalize.<lb/>
The offense finally moved into high<lb/>
gear with 6:05 remaining in the third<lb/>
quarter. Led by Don Shink and Strayhorn,<lb/>
together with another Summerell pass to<lb/>
Wilfore, the Bucs upped their lead to<lb/>
21-7. Strayhorn got the touchdown on a<lb/>
one yard plunge over left tackle.<lb/>
On the initial play of the fourth<lb/>
quarter, Summerell hit the "Crabman<lb/>
Stan Eure. on a 33 yard touchdown bomb,<lb/>
making the Buc lead 28-7.<lb/>
Jim Bolding, who continued to<lb/>
impress everyone at defensive back and<lb/>
as a punt returner, intercepted a Schultze<lb/>
pass to give ECU the ball at their 34.<lb/>
Crumpler entered the game and made<lb/>
what was probably the most exciting run<lb/>
of the game on a play which was nulified<lb/>
due to a holding penalty. He weaved and<lb/>
bucked and powered his way for 21 yards<lb/>
on that play, seemingly fighting off every<lb/>
VMI defender along the way.<lb/>
ECU failed to score, but the next time<lb/>
they got the ball back Crumpler ripped off<lb/>
gams of eight, six, nine, four, three and<lb/>
ten, before going over from the two for<lb/>
the score. This put the Pirates out in<lb/>
front 35-7 with 1 :57 left.<lb/>
Freshman Jesse Ingram was just a<lb/>
blur as he flew around left end for the<lb/>
final tally of the game after Nelson<lb/>
Strother intercepted a pass at the VMI 40<lb/>
and returned it to the 28. This made the<lb/>
final score 42-7 following Woody's<lb/>
conversion.<lb/>
The Pirates completely dominated the<lb/>
Keydets statistically. ECUpicked up 24<lb/>
first downs, while the Keydets managed<lb/>
only nine. The Pirates outgained VMI<lb/>
237-78 in the rushing department and also<lb/>
in the passing phase 140-71<lb/>
The schedule starts to get tough now<lb/>
for the Bucs. They travel Saturday to The<lb/>
Citadel to clash with a team that has been<lb/>
one of the most controversial foes<lb/>
through the years. The week after, ECU<lb/>
meets the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill, then<lb/>
returns home for the two most important<lb/>
conference clashes of the season against<lb/>
William &amp; Mary and Richmond.<lb/>
1973 SOCCER<lb/>
Oct. 23 Duke 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 27 William &amp; Mory 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Oct 31 N.C. Wesleyan 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
Nor. 5 Methodist Col. 2:00 p.m.<lb/>
'Bold denotes Home Games<lb/>
Cooch: MONTE LITTLE<lb/>
<lb/>
m0m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
.0m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039883_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>