<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039884_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE,NORTH CAROLINA VOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
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Ertis elected to SGA treasurer's post<lb/>
By SKIP SAUNDERS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Mike Ertis was elected SGA treasurer<lb/>
Tuesday in a special election in which 937<lb/>
students voted.<lb/>
Ertis won with a total of 302<lb/>
votes. The special election was held in<lb/>
order to fill a vacancy left by former SGA<lb/>
treasurer Kathy Holloman. Holloman<lb/>
resigned Oct. 1 from the SGA post and'<lb/>
withdrew from school for personal<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
"It'll take me about a week to get<lb/>
oriented to what I'm really supposed to<lb/>
do said Ertis in a recent interview. "Of<lb/>
course there's the usual stretching of the<lb/>
dollar which every SGA treasurer is faced<lb/>
with. My main concern is to try to see<lb/>
that the money appropriated is being<lb/>
spent on something that a large majority<lb/>
of students will be able to benefit from<lb/>
"Starting next week the SGA executive<lb/>
council begins appointments to the<lb/>
judicial board said Ertis. One of my first<lb/>
objectives will be to get good unbiased<lb/>
people on the board to listen to both<lb/>
sides of a story and judge fairly on a<lb/>
matter<lb/>
Ertis explained that at the beginning of<lb/>
this year the SGA had a total of $72,000 in<lb/>
the general fund; now there is $27,000<lb/>
remaining. He said his primary job as<lb/>
treasurer is a managerial one. "You can<lb/>
see by these figures said Ertis, "that<lb/>
with transactions like this occurring I've<lb/>
got to watch the funds closely to make<lb/>
sure the SGA doesn't approach<lb/>
bankruptcy<lb/>
"I'm finding most students don't<lb/>
understand the present transportation<lb/>
issue which is presently under<lb/>
consideration by the SGA legislature<lb/>
Ertis continued. "The transportaion sys-<lb/>
tem as it stands right now sucks. We<lb/>
only have one bus operating so,<lb/>
consequently, only the few people who<lb/>
have to go to Allied Health and Minges<lb/>
get its service. Because of this the bus is<lb/>
never filled<lb/>
"The SGA can't operate only one bus<lb/>
like this said Ertisbecause we'll be<lb/>
losing money on it. If we can purchase<lb/>
another bus, we'll be able to provide<lb/>
service to students who live on the 'hill'<lb/>
and around campus. Then, we could<lb/>
re-route the bus going to Allied Health<lb/>
and Minges to possibly run by apartment<lb/>
complexes where students live and<lb/>
provide day students with the bus<lb/>
service. I'm definitely in favor of this bus<lb/>
system because when the weather starts<lb/>
getting bad more and more students are<lb/>
going to be able to benefit from it<lb/>
"One pet goal of my own that I'd like<lb/>
to see come about is to let WECU go on<lb/>
the air as an FM station Ertis<lb/>
said. "This could be a potential money<lb/>
maker for WECU also because this would<lb/>
bring in advertising revenue. This will<lb/>
take a lot of work and money, but with a<lb/>
loan from a band and funds appropriated<lb/>
by the SGA we could do it. Day students<lb/>
could then enjoy ECU's radio station<lb/>
which in the past had been exclusive to<lb/>
dorm students<lb/>
"Oh yeah one more thing Ertis said,<lb/>
"could you tell students to come on up<lb/>
and see me if they need my help on<lb/>
anything. My office is open to anyone for<lb/>
suggestions or whatever<lb/>
The SGA treasurer's office is on the<lb/>
third floor of Wright annex.<lb/>
MIKE ERTIS begins his duties as SGA<lb/>
treasurer after his election Tuesday.<lb/>
He hopes to get WECU on the air asar<lb/>
FM station. Ertis was elected to fill a<lb/>
vacancy left by former SGA treasurer<lb/>
Kathy Holloman.<lb/>
THE NEW STUDENT UNION BUILDING nearing completion as leaves begin falling before winter. The building is located on 9th and James Streets and is expected to<lb/>
be completed by Spring of 1974.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
news IF<lb/>
LnJ<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
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In<lb/>
ITusi<lb/>
Iruu list<lb/>
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Psychology<lb/>
Pick major<lb/>
Myree D. Hayes of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Psychology has been<lb/>
awarded $2,000 by the North Carolina<lb/>
Department of Mental Health to evaluate<lb/>
the degree of role consensus among<lb/>
mental health clinic directors in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
She will visit and interview the area's<lb/>
mental health directors regarding the role<lb/>
and responsibility of each principal party<lb/>
to the operation of mental health clinics.<lb/>
Upon completion of direct interviews,<lb/>
she will analyze the data to determine the<lb/>
degree of consensus between area board<lb/>
members and clinic directors. Dr. Clinton<lb/>
Prewett of the ECU Psychology faculty<lb/>
will collaborate with her.<lb/>
The final report will be submitted to<lb/>
Dr. Robert Radcliffe, eastern regional<lb/>
mental health commissioner, and to Dr.<lb/>
M.P. Zarzar, state mental health<lb/>
commissioner.<lb/>
Mrs. Hayes is chairman of the Pitt<lb/>
County Area Mental Health Board.<lb/>
Environment<lb/>
Dr. Trenton G. Davis, chairman of<lb/>
environmental health at ECU,addressed<lb/>
the environmental health section at the<lb/>
recent 62nd annual meeting at the NC<lb/>
Public Health Association in Raleigh.<lb/>
Speaking on "Reenergizing Environ-<lb/>
mental Health through Education" Dr.<lb/>
Trenton was one of the several<lb/>
presentations on the theme of energy and<lb/>
the problem of dwindling health<lb/>
resources.<lb/>
Among the more than 1000 public<lb/>
health professionals from across NC was<lb/>
Dr. Y. L. Lao of the ECU Department of<lb/>
Environmental Health and Don Dancy,<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Community Health Education.<lb/>
Undecided about a major? Umstead<lb/>
Dorm is sponsoring a "Pick a Major"<lb/>
day. Each department will have a<lb/>
representative to tell about the<lb/>
department and its career opportunities.<lb/>
Everyone is invited. Please come<lb/>
Monday, October 22, from 9 to 10<lb/>
p.m. The representative will be in the<lb/>
lobby.<lb/>
Foriegn tit.<lb/>
A book by Dr. Nicole Aronson,<lb/>
associate professor in the ECU<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages and<lb/>
Literatures, has been published by a Paris<lb/>
firm.<lb/>
Her book, "The Political Ideas of<lb/>
Rabelais has been issued by Nizet. An<lb/>
article by Dr. Aronson on the queens in<lb/>
Rabelais' fifth book was included in a<lb/>
recent issue of "Studi Francesi a journal<lb/>
published by the University of Turin, Italy.<lb/>
Dr. Aronson spoke on the women in<lb/>
Moliere's plays at the interstate<lb/>
conference of Romancce language<lb/>
scholars last week at Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
University. Her address will be included<lb/>
in a forthcoming collection to be<lb/>
published for the university's centennial<lb/>
celebration.<lb/>
A native of Bordeaux, France, Dr.<lb/>
Aronson has degrees from the University<lb/>
of Bordeaux and the City University of<lb/>
New York. Before joining the ECU faculty<lb/>
in 1970, she taught at Marymount<lb/>
College. Tarrytown, N.Y.<lb/>
History<lb/>
Va voting<lb/>
VIRGINIANS: Interested in voting<lb/>
absentee for the Virginia State<lb/>
Gubernatorial election; call (Kelly)<lb/>
752-1312 or come by White 702.<lb/>
Dr. Mary Jo Bratton, assistant<lb/>
professor of history at ECU, has been<lb/>
invited to address the 58th annual<lb/>
convention of the Association for the<lb/>
Study of Afro-American Life and History,<lb/>
in New York Oct. 18-21.<lb/>
Her topic will be "The Development of<lb/>
Creole Cultures: Comparative Perspect-<lb/>
ives on Colonial Brazil and the Old<lb/>
South<lb/>
Contents!<lb/>
ERTIS ELECTED SGA TREASURERpage one<lb/>
UNIVERSITY CUTS HEAT IN DORMSpage three<lb/>
BODENHAMER COMMENTS ON PUBLICATIONS<lb/>
AND TRANSPORTATIONpage three<lb/>
TRUSTEES ELECT FACULTY EMERITISpage four<lb/>
BOOX EXCHANGE 73page four<lb/>
OREGON PASSES LIGHT PENALTY FOR POTpage six<lb/>
EDITORIALFORUMCOMMENTARYpages eight and nine<lb/>
FASHION MAKERpage twelve<lb/>
SPORTSpages fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
Art show<lb/>
Art of the Carolinas, in the form of the<lb/>
annual Springs Mills Traveling Art Show,<lb/>
is on exhibit in ECU'S Whichard Hall<lb/>
through Oct. 28.<lb/>
The 33-piece show represents the best<lb/>
of the 757 works of art entered in last<lb/>
year's 14th Annual Springs Art Show in<lb/>
Lancaster, S.C.<lb/>
James K. Monte, associate curator of<lb/>
the Whitney Museum of American Art in<lb/>
New York, made the traveling show<lb/>
selections.<lb/>
Included are paintings, sculpture,<lb/>
graphics, collage and drawings, all in a<lb/>
variey of media.<lb/>
The top cash award winners from the<lb/>
Lancaster show are also included. For the<lb/>
$1,000 purchase (first place) award, Monte<lb/>
chose a delicate tissue collage landscape<lb/>
by Dr. Joan Gregoey, head of the art<lb/>
department at UNC-Greensboro.<lb/>
South Carolina artists have 23 of the<lb/>
33 selections in the show. The annual<lb/>
Springs show is open to all artists in the<lb/>
two Carolinas.<lb/>
This is the second year the Springs<lb/>
Traveling Art Show has appeared at<lb/>
ECU. The show is in great demand and<lb/>
follows a year long itinerary of galleries,<lb/>
museums, colleges, and public buildings<lb/>
on the Eastern Seaboard.<lb/>
The show is sponsored by the Spring<lb/>
Mills textile organization, which is based<lb/>
in Fort Mill, S.C.<lb/>
N.CSJL<lb/>
Screening for the ECU delegation to<lb/>
the N.C Student Legislature will be<lb/>
October 15-29. If you are interested<lb/>
please contact Harry Stubbs at 756-0865<lb/>
or D.D. Dixonat 752-2647.<lb/>
Pub Board<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/>
Hair<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<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/>
Physics<lb/>
Dr. Karl E. Lonngren, professor of<lb/>
electrical engineering at the University of<lb/>
Iowa, will direct a seminar program at<lb/>
ECU Friday, Oct. 19.<lb/>
Dr. Lonngren will speak on "Properties<lb/>
of Plasma Waves Defined by the<lb/>
Dispersion Relation" at a physics<lb/>
departmental seminar at 3 p.m. in room<lb/>
213 of the physics building.<lb/>
Rush tea<lb/>
The colony of Gamma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
service sorority will have a rush tea on<lb/>
Monday, October 22 in the social room of<lb/>
Fletcher Dorm. There will also be a<lb/>
slumber party on October 26 at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center. Come meet<lb/>
the sisters and learn what a service<lb/>
sorority is. If anyone has questions call<lb/>
752-1966.<lb/>
Kindergarten<lb/>
Alice Arledge of the ECU School of<lb/>
Education faculty is the new president of<lb/>
the North Carolina Kindergarten<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
She was installed in office at the<lb/>
Association's meeting in Greensboro last<lb/>
week. The new corresponding secretary is<lb/>
another ECU faculty member, Peggy<lb/>
Boyd.<lb/>
More than 1400 members attended the<lb/>
meeting, representing university depart-<lb/>
ments of early childhood education and<lb/>
kindergartens from public schools, federal<lb/>
programs, and private and church related<lb/>
preschool programs.<lb/>
The gathering voted to affiliate with<lb/>
the National Association for the<lb/>
Education of Young Children, and become<lb/>
the largest affiliate group of the national<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
Filing for all boards-Honor Council,<lb/>
Publication Board, Review Board,<lb/>
University Board and Drug Board will end<lb/>
on Wednesday, October 24, 1973 at<lb/>
5:00. Applications are being accepted in<lb/>
the Student Government Office, 303<lb/>
Wright Annex.<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/>
i<lb/>
Tra<lb/>
con<lb/>
B<lb/>
Transpc<lb/>
publication<lb/>
with SGA <lb/>
an interviev<lb/>
Accordi<lb/>
SGA bus<lb/>
complete ti<lb/>
has in m<lb/>
restrictive,<lb/>
with the Be<lb/>
the SGA<lb/>
transportat<lb/>
per paying<lb/>
service bei<lb/>
Minges anc<lb/>
A secoi<lb/>
which circl<lb/>
reasonable<lb/>
attend. Ah<lb/>
possibility<lb/>
apartment<lb/>
portation f<lb/>
from camp<lb/>
Bodenh<lb/>
bus urgent<lb/>
session of<lb/>
fact that<lb/>
specific pu<lb/>
the past<lb/>
Bodenham<lb/>
legislature:<lb/>
in allocati<lb/>
zations. <lb/>
year, doesi<lb/>
this year<lb/>
requests f<lb/>
zations. H<lb/>
priorities a<lb/>
and that<lb/>
allowing rr<lb/>
"I'm i<lb/>
applicatior<lb/>
H�afi<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU f<lb/>
William L<lb/>
N.C. Depe<lb/>
the univer<lb/>
at least 1C<lb/>
Mr. C.<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Director c<lb/>
Larry Sny<lb/>
decisions<lb/>
fuel cons<lb/>
Moore sai<lb/>
account o<lb/>
do it<lb/>
"Heat<lb/>
campus) (<lb/>
like in the<lb/>
back there<lb/>
The ret<lb/>
things as<lb/>
water fro<lb/>
buildings<lb/>
and maint<lb/>
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Lowry<lb/>
would me<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0003"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
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mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
3<lb/>
Transportation,publications major<lb/>
concerns in Bodenhamer interview<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Transportation appropriations ana<lb/>
publications were the topics of discussion<lb/>
with SGA president, Bill Bodenhamer in<lb/>
an interview recently.<lb/>
According to Bodenhamer, a second<lb/>
SGA bus is needed to provide the<lb/>
complete transportation system which he<lb/>
has in mind. The present system is<lb/>
restrictive. Under the terms of agreement<lb/>
with the Board of Trustees two years ago,<lb/>
the SGA must use the two dollar<lb/>
transportation fee received each quarter<lb/>
per paying student to at least provide<lb/>
service between the main campus and<lb/>
Minges and Allied Health.<lb/>
A second bus would enable a system<lb/>
which circled all ECU class areas under a<lb/>
reasonable schedule enabling students to<lb/>
attend. Also under consideration is the<lb/>
possibility of sending a bus to the nearby<lb/>
apartment complexes to provide trans-<lb/>
portation for off-campus students to and<lb/>
from campus.<lb/>
Bodenhamer felt the need for a second<lb/>
bus urgent enough to call an emergency<lb/>
session of the legislature last night. The<lb/>
fact that the money is received for a<lb/>
specific purpose and has not been used in<lb/>
the past is of great concern to<lb/>
Bodenhamer. He charged that past<lb/>
legislatures have misappropriated funds<lb/>
in allocating them to different organi-<lb/>
zations. "Just because they got it last<lb/>
year, doesn't mean they are going to get it<lb/>
this year was his comment in regards to<lb/>
requests for funds by various organi-<lb/>
zations. He added that he had set<lb/>
priorities as to importance and necessity,<lb/>
and that they would be the basis for<lb/>
allowing monies to be appropriated.<lb/>
"I'm not going to accept any<lb/>
applications which I don't feel are<lb/>
qualified he stated regarding the<lb/>
problems of no applications for the<lb/>
Publications Board. At present there has<lb/>
been one application received by SGA and<lb/>
none received by the Dean of Student<lb/>
Affairs. The Pub Board is responsible for<lb/>
insuring the proper publication of campus<lb/>
publications.<lb/>
The SGA Executive Council has been<lb/>
acting in lieu of the board during its lack<lb/>
of members. During this time, it has<lb/>
placed Gary McCullough as acting editor<lb/>
of the Buccaneer and appropriated two<lb/>
thousand dollars to the Fountainhead for<lb/>
contingency expenses.<lb/>
Bodenhamer stated that by his<lb/>
interpretation, the executive council is<lb/>
subject to the by-laws of the Publication<lb/>
Board while it acts in its capacity. He<lb/>
was asked to comment in regards to the<lb/>
resignations of the past editors of the<lb/>
Rebel and Buccaneer. Charles Griffin,<lb/>
Buccaneer editor stated that excessive red<lb/>
tape and the statement "every red cent I<lb/>
spent would be grudgingly given by the<lb/>
SGA" as his major reasons. Sandy<lb/>
Penfield, Rebel editor cited ill health and<lb/>
the statement "virtually impossible to<lb/>
work with such a limited budget as is<lb/>
being proposed by the student<lb/>
government president.<lb/>
The Publications Board By-laws calls<lb/>
for a guaranteed budget of $120 thousand<lb/>
which was appropraited by last year's<lb/>
legislature, ruled illegal by Bodenhamer,<lb/>
and tabled as a result. This leaves<lb/>
publications without a budget as well as a<lb/>
supervisory body other than the executive<lb/>
council.<lb/>
Bodenhamefs recommendations for<lb/>
the budget are reputed to be $9 thousand<lb/>
for the Rebel, $48 thousand for the<lb/>
Buccaneer, and $25 thousand for the<lb/>
Fountainhead. His reasons for budget<lb/>
cuts are excessive waste, salaries, and<lb/>
the general lack of necessity for such a<lb/>
large budget. He exemplifies the surplus<lb/>
issues of the Rebel as excessive waste,<lb/>
$16 thousand in salaries over last year as<lb/>
excessive salaries and the ability to<lb/>
contract advertising as lack of necessity<lb/>
for a large budget.<lb/>
The publications staffs, however, offer<lb/>
different statements. The Rebel does not<lb/>
exist because there is no budget or staff<lb/>
to contradict his statements. The<lb/>
Buccaneer business manager states that<lb/>
they don't have any money to buy<lb/>
supplies to they can begin operations.<lb/>
The Fountainhed has been operating in<lb/>
the red for several weeks since the excess<lb/>
advertising revenues which Bodenhamer<lb/>
alludes to have not materialized.<lb/>
The two existing members of the<lb/>
Publications Board, Bob McKeel and<lb/>
Karen Haskett, do not feel that the<lb/>
budgets should be cut. McKeel states<lb/>
that in addition to the $120 thousand<lb/>
asked for, a heavy campaign for<lb/>
advertising and patrons will have to be<lb/>
implemented by the Buccaneer and Rebel<lb/>
to meet expenses. Without a full board,<lb/>
however, nothing can be accomplished by<lb/>
the publications to defend their<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
There are three ways that Bodenhamer<lb/>
can implement his proposals after the $51<lb/>
thousand transportation fee is removed<lb/>
from available revenues. One is to cut<lb/>
other organization budgets. The second<lb/>
is to raise activity fees above the $46<lb/>
collected per student per quarter, and the<lb/>
last is to cut the expense of filling his<lb/>
priorities by waiting to see where the<lb/>
excesses lie, if any.<lb/>
Healing cut on ECU campus<lb/>
State orders fuel cuts<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU has received a directive from Mr.<lb/>
William L. Bondurant, secretary of the<lb/>
N.C. Department of Admissions ordering<lb/>
the university to cut fuel consumption by<lb/>
at least 10 percent.<lb/>
Mr. C. G. Moore, vice-chancellor for<lb/>
Business Affairs, Mr. James Lowry,<lb/>
Director of the Physical Plant and Mr.<lb/>
Larry Snyder, Plant engineer, made the<lb/>
decisions of exactly where and how much<lb/>
fuel consumption would be lowered.<lb/>
Moore said the directive also called for an<lb/>
account of "exactly how we are going do<lb/>
do it<lb/>
"Heat will be cut back everywhere (on<lb/>
campus) except in some critical places<lb/>
like in the animal labs. You just can't cut<lb/>
back there Moore continued.<lb/>
The reduction in heat will include such<lb/>
things as lowering the temperature of the<lb/>
water from 140 F. to 120 F. in all<lb/>
buildings on campus except the cafeteria<lb/>
and maintaining mininal heating temper-<lb/>
atures in all buildings on campus.<lb/>
Lowry explained that all buildings<lb/>
would maintain a 68-70 F. heat range<lb/>
during normal usage. When not oc-<lb/>
cupied, heat in the buildings will be<lb/>
lowered to approximately 60 F. He also<lb/>
said that all dorms would experience a<lb/>
night cutback of about 10 F. This would<lb/>
mean that between the hours of 11 p.m.<lb/>
and 5:30 a.m heat in the forms will beat<lb/>
60 F.<lb/>
Lowry said Dr. Edwin W. Monroe,<lb/>
vice-chancellor-M.D Division of Health<lb/>
Affairs had advised him that 68 F. was a<lb/>
normal and healthy heating level.<lb/>
Lowry went on to explain that all<lb/>
buildings operate in accordance to<lb/>
outdoor censors which record outdoor<lb/>
temperature changes and adjust the heat<lb/>
output inside the buildings accordingly.<lb/>
Therefore, he said, "the heat will always<lb/>
be in relation with what it is outside<lb/>
Notices were issued to all dormitory<lb/>
residents explaining the areas and need<lb/>
for a fuel cutback. Residents were also<lb/>
requested to keep usage of electrical<lb/>
appliances, lights, etc to a minimum in<lb/>
order tor eserve energy.<lb/>
Moore explained that the cost of fuel<lb/>
and utilities between July 1, 1972 and<lb/>
June 30, 1973 was $617,925.23. This<lb/>
figure did not include gasoline<lb/>
mm<lb/>
n<lb/>
bills. However, due to the recent<lb/>
increases in gas and electricity costs, the<lb/>
cutback will allow little savings over last<lb/>
year, he explained.<lb/>
One area of the campus which<lb/>
consumes a great deal of fuel is the<lb/>
campus laundry. "We are in the process<lb/>
of phasing out the laundry anyway said<lb/>
Moore. "A sizeable body of students in<lb/>
the dorms never use the $5.00 worth of<lb/>
laundry they pay for (included in fees). It<lb/>
just didn't seem right to me to make them<lb/>
pay for something they are not using he<lb/>
added. The mandatory laundry fee is<lb/>
being slowly reduced and will eventually<lb/>
be eliminated. All dorms will at that time,<lb/>
according to Moore, have been equipped<lb/>
with individual machines.<lb/>
When asked if a continuing energy<lb/>
shortage could eventually mean limit-<lb/>
ations on the number of electrical<lb/>
appliances allowed in dormitory rooms<lb/>
and actual fuel consumption restrictions<lb/>
on residents, Moore answered, "I think it<lb/>
will be absolutely necessary. It's going to<lb/>
be nationwide. If you believe what you<lb/>
read in the newspapers, this is a serious<lb/>
problem<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Emergency<lb/>
SGA meet<lb/>
passes<lb/>
The first emergency session of the<lb/>
SGA legislature was called at 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 17.<lb/>
The purpose of the sesson was to<lb/>
consider the question of the 3GA transit<lb/>
appropriation which had beor unsuccess-<lb/>
fully introduced the first session. The<lb/>
reason for the new bus v�a presented to<lb/>
the legislature by SGA President Bill<lb/>
Bodenhamer during "Questions and<lb/>
Privileges" portion of the order of<lb/>
business. Bodenhamer urged the legis-<lb/>
lators to discuss the bill today as time<lb/>
was of the utmost importance.<lb/>
Legislator Cindy Domme asked for<lb/>
suspension of rules with the opening of<lb/>
new business. The rules were suspended,<lb/>
and the SGA Transit Appropriation Bill<lb/>
was introduced to the floor. The bill was<lb/>
discussed and subsequently passed.<lb/>
Standing committees and their<lb/>
chairmen were introduced by Braxton<lb/>
Hall, speaker of the house. They<lb/>
are: Rules committee-Mike Edwards;<lb/>
Appropnaong Committee-Jane Noff-<lb/>
singer; arid Student Affairs Committee-<lb/>
D.D. Dixon. Officers of the legislature<lb/>
were also introduced as: Parliamentarian-<lb/>
Bill Beckner; Sergeant at Arms-David<lb/>
Boone; Secretary-Sandy Langley.<lb/>
Announcements were the final<lb/>
business of the emergency session.<lb/>
Walter Mann, secretary of transportaion,<lb/>
announced that bus tickets to the<lb/>
ECU-Citadel game were available for $4.00<lb/>
a seat. Legislator Noffsinger announced<lb/>
that the screening and appointments<lb/>
committee would meet at 4 p.m. Monday<lb/>
to screen persons interested in<lb/>
representing Jones Dorm in the SGA<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Pregnancy<lb/>
is proved<lb/>
more lethal<lb/>
(CPS)-Pregnancy is four to eight times<lb/>
more lethal than either lUDs or birth<lb/>
control pills, according to figures<lb/>
available to the ZPG National Reporter.<lb/>
The maternal death rate is 25 per<lb/>
100,000 births.<lb/>
Complications resulting from preg-<lb/>
nancy are both more frequent and<lb/>
generally more severe than those related<lb/>
to the two most effective methods of birth<lb/>
.control. The Zero Population Growth<lb/>
publication also reported abortions are<lb/>
safer than pregnancy, about ten times<lb/>
safer in the first three months.<lb/>
The dangers of lUDs and birth control<lb/>
pills have recently been the subject of<lb/>
hearings in Washington. ZPG fears<lb/>
women reading adverse testimony will<lb/>
give up these methods of birth control<lb/>
without realizing the risks of becoming<lb/>
pregnant.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEDVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
Trustee board names<lb/>
five to Faculty Emeriti<lb/>
Refrigerators pushed<lb/>
By WANDA EDWARDS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Board of Trustees elected five<lb/>
retired ECU faculty members to the<lb/>
Faculty Emeriti at their May and October<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
Dr. Rachel Kilpatrick and Dr. Frederick<lb/>
Sorensen of the English department<lb/>
received the honorary status at the<lb/>
meeting last May, along with Dr. Marshall<lb/>
Helms from Physics and the late Dr.<lb/>
Kathleen Stokes of the Political Science<lb/>
Department. Dr. Henry Wanderman,<lb/>
former professor of German and Russian,<lb/>
was designated as Emeritus at the<lb/>
Steptember Board meeting.<lb/>
Emeritus status is an honor and<lb/>
carries no special privileges. It has no<lb/>
special eligibility requirements at ECU,<lb/>
although some other universities demand<lb/>
that the professor teach at the school a<lb/>
certain number of years.<lb/>
Department heads are responsible for<lb/>
nominations. The chairman may make the<lb/>
nominations by having a departmental<lb/>
meeting and vote, appointing a committee<lb/>
to make selections, talking informally<lb/>
with other department members, or<lb/>
nominating a retired person himself. No<lb/>
standard procedure exists for all<lb/>
departments.<lb/>
After the department head makes the<lb/>
initial nomination, the motion must go to<lb/>
the provost, from there the vice-chan-<lb/>
cellor, and then to the chancellor. Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins submits the nominations to the<lb/>
Board of Trustees for their vote.<lb/>
Some nominations are not voted on as<lb/>
quickly as others because the Coard<lb/>
meets only two or three times a year. Dr.<lb/>
Kathleen Stokes was nominated last<lb/>
October, but her nomination was not<lb/>
voted on until May, when the Board held<lb/>
its next meeting. The Trustees voted on<lb/>
the nomination of Dr. Henry Wanderman<lb/>
almost immediately; he was nominated in<lb/>
September and the Board of Trustees met<lb/>
that same month.<lb/>
When asked why no public<lb/>
announcement had been made of the new<lb/>
Faculty Emeritus, nor the Emeriti<lb/>
themselves notified, Provost John Howell<lb/>
said that the relative newness of the<lb/>
nominating and electing procedure was<lb/>
probably responsible.<lb/>
In the past, all retiring faculty were<lb/>
nominated, and often names were simply<lb/>
moved from the active list to the Emeritus<lb/>
list. The new system is not as<lb/>
casual. Whatever the reason for the<lb/>
failure, no announcement was made and<lb/>
the new Emeriti were not notified. One,<lb/>
Dr. Kathleen Stokes, died without<lb/>
knowing she had been given the honor.<lb/>
Vets open<lb/>
book co-op<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Book Exchange 73, operated by the<lb/>
ECU Veteran's Club, will open Nov. 13 in<lb/>
Wright 310.<lb/>
The exchange is a students'<lb/>
cooperative book store which will return<lb/>
this year due to success last<lb/>
spring. Operated by the Vet's Club under<lb/>
SGA sponsorship, it allows students to<lb/>
place their value on the books handled<lb/>
through the service.<lb/>
Its purpose is to assist the student in<lb/>
paying what he feels is a fair price for his<lb/>
used text books and in receiving a fair<lb/>
price for the ones he sells. The books are<lb/>
handled on a consignment basis, with a<lb/>
ten percent charge received for handling<lb/>
the books from the seller.<lb/>
Hints are offered students who plan to<lb/>
use the exchange. Since there is no set<lb/>
price for a particular book, all prices<lb/>
should be checked. Any textbooks the<lb/>
student desires to sell should be brought<lb/>
by since majors in the area may purchase<lb/>
these books for reference. If the book<lb/>
desired is not there at that time, check<lb/>
back. Chances are that it will be sooner<lb/>
or later.<lb/>
The service will be available Nov. 13<lb/>
through Dec. 5 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily<lb/>
except for weekends and the quarter<lb/>
break. It will officially close Wednesday,<lb/>
Dec. 5 at 5 p.m. Since any books or<lb/>
money not claimed by then will become<lb/>
property of the Vet's Club, all claims after<lb/>
that date will be handled by their<lb/>
executive council.<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An effort is being made by manager<lb/>
Ivey Peacock to rent more refrigerators<lb/>
through a drive that involves reduced rates<lb/>
for the rest of this quarter and a door to<lb/>
door campaign.<lb/>
The goal is a total of one thousands<lb/>
rentals for the year. This would produce a<lb/>
projected net income of $4,000 for the<lb/>
year through Sept. 1974. Peacock<lb/>
emphasized that this was a conservative<lb/>
goal and that he hopes for better results.<lb/>
The reduced rate is six dollars for the<lb/>
remainder of the fall quarter with the<lb/>
regular twelve dollar rate being charged<lb/>
for winter and spring. The resulting cost<lb/>
for the rest of the school year to the<lb/>
student will be $30.00 rental and a $10.00<lb/>
refundable deposit.<lb/>
The door to door campaign results<lb/>
from a number of callers who expressed<lb/>
interest in renting, but for one reason or<lb/>
another, failed to stop by the<lb/>
office. Peacock feels that by going to the<lb/>
customer the goal he set lies within easy<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
The refrigerator concession began the<lb/>
year with many unanswered questions.<lb/>
Last year's financial rep, rt shows losses<lb/>
equal to the projected profit this year. At<lb/>
least 150 refrigerators appeared unac-<lb/>
counted for in the records. By cutting<lb/>
expenses through improved procedures of<lb/>
distribution and recounting receipts and<lb/>
refrigerators, Peacock feels he can turn<lb/>
the concession into a profit for the<lb/>
SGA. The corrected total of refrigerators<lb/>
now on hand stands at 1213 including 43<lb/>
considered unrepairable.<lb/>
A full financial report including<lb/>
comparisons with last year's performance<lb/>
will be given at the next SGA Legislature<lb/>
session, Monday, Oct. 22, to which the<lb/>
student body is welcome.<lb/>
Entremont to<lb/>
perform here<lb/>
The East Carolina University Artist<lb/>
Series will present Philippe Entremont in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium on October 24,<lb/>
1973. The performance will be at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Entremont has been performing with<lb/>
the world's leading orchestras and<lb/>
conductors for the past two decades. He<lb/>
has been called by critics "le pianiste<lb/>
atomique" and "a young French pianist<lb/>
who is nothing less ihan a genius<lb/>
As an international recording artist,<lb/>
Entremont's many Columbia releases have<lb/>
sold well over a million copies. In 1969,<lb/>
he was the recipient of the Netherlands<lb/>
highly coveted Edison Award, and for four<lb/>
consecutive years, he has won France's<lb/>
highest record honor, the Grand Prix du<lb/>
Disaue<lb/>
Entremont also has the dexterity and<lb/>
emotional empathy to project the music<lb/>
of his time. Contemporary composers,<lb/>
including Stravinsky, Bernstein, Miland,<lb/>
and Folivet, have paid him the ultimate<lb/>
compliment of choosing him to perform<lb/>
the definitive performances of their works.<lb/>
Student tickets for this Artist Series<lb/>
event are $.50. Faculty and Staff tickets<lb/>
are $2.50. Tickets may be purchased at<lb/>
the ECU Central Ticket Office beginning<lb/>
on October 17.<lb/>
World Campus Afloat: Join Us!<lb/>
Sails each September &amp; February.<lb/>
This is the way you've always wanted<lb/>
to learn . . and should Combine<lb/>
accredited study with a tascinating<lb/>
semester of travel to Africa, Austral-<lb/>
asia, the Orient, and the Americas.<lb/>
Over 8500 students from 450 colleges<lb/>
have already participated. Financial<lb/>
aid is available Write no,v for free<lb/>
catalog:<lb/>
WCA, Chapman College<lb/>
Box 1000, Orange, CA 92666<lb/>
TNFFllKST MEDICAL CAK<lb/>
JLT THE LOWEST fttCES<lb/>
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Kfc TOM CAtE, COMfOtT AND<lb/>
CONVENEINCE IY PHONE IY<lb/>
OUT UNOftSTANMNC COUNSI<lb/>
lOiS. TIME IS IMFOITANT �<lb/>
UU TOll FtEE TODAY.<lb/>
A.I.C Services 800-523F<lb/>
V' 3<lb/>
Rbjgo Shot<lb/>
Rtprir Shop<lb/>
REPAIR ALL<lb/>
LEATHER GOODS<lb/>
111 W. 4th St Downtown<lb/>
Greenville 758-02C4<lb/>
Don Kirshner's Rock Concert<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
The Allman Brothers<lb/>
The Marshall Tucker Band<lb/>
Wet Willie<lb/>
Martin Mull<lb/>
Friday Night Channel 12<lb/>
 <lb/>
WET WILLIE will be appearing in Minges Coliseum on<lb/>
Sunday, November 11 with Lynard Skynard and John<lb/>
Ham mond<lb/>
miMHIIHHIMI<lb/>
HNNNHIHHIHIIUIM<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS AND<lb/>
CARD SHOP<lb/>
321 Evans St.<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
We have a complete line of paperbacks, popular<lb/>
novels and books for your educational needs, hardback<lb/>
books, sporting books, Bibles and children's series<lb/>
books. We also have a complete selection of<lb/>
magazines. Come to us for your local and out of town<lb/>
daily and Sunday newspapers.<lb/>
Open daily and Sunday<lb/>
8:30 a.m. until 10:00 p.m.<lb/>
IHHIHiMINHimi<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0005"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Activist pleads guilty<lb/>
to arson, murder<lb/>
(CPS)Anti-war activist Karl Armstrong pleaded guilty September 28<lb/>
to four counts of arson and one count of second degree murder in<lb/>
connection with the 1970 bombing of a University of Wisconsin<lb/>
Madison building.<lb/>
Armstrong faces a possible 25 years prison sentence.<lb/>
The bombing took place at 3 am August 24, 1970, during a<lb/>
semester break. Police had received a telephoned warning to clear<lb/>
the building but took no immediate action. The bomb, equivalent to<lb/>
3400 sticks of dynamite, exploded prematurely ripping apart the<lb/>
university's Army Mathematics Research Center (AMRC) and<lb/>
shattering windows for miles around. The explosion also killed a<lb/>
physics graduate student, Robert Fassnacht, who was in the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Shortly after the indicent, Armstrong, then 24, his brother Dwight,<lb/>
19, David Fine, 18, and Leo Burt, 22, were indicted by a federal grand<lb/>
jury. Armstrong was arrested in Canada last year and after a drawn<lb/>
out legal battle, was extradited to the United States. The other three<lb/>
suspects are sill at large.<lb/>
Armstrong's plea of guilty will allow his mitigation haring, which<lb/>
began October 15, to become a forum in which the defense will try to<lb/>
put the Vietnam war on trial. (Unlike a trial.the mitigation hearing<lb/>
entitles Armstrong to call witnesses to explain his<lb/>
motvies.) Witnesses for the defense in the four to six week hearing<lb/>
will include scientists, former prisoners of war, historians, Vietnam<lb/>
veterans, and international law experts. They will be testifying about<lb/>
the illegality of the war itself, war crimes, eyewitness reports of<lb/>
ecological destruction, nd the total destruction of all forms of life<lb/>
inVietnam.<lb/>
A major portion of the defense presentation will be directed to the<lb/>
importance of the Army Math Research Center to the military and<lb/>
foreign policy of the US involvement in Vietnam.<lb/>
Armstrong, who was born on the night of the Nurenburg<lb/>
executions, claims his action was motivated by a desire to slow the<lb/>
development of military weapons planned for use in<lb/>
Vietnam. ARMCs research at the time of the bombing included the<lb/>
transfer of animal diseases to humans, the development of weapons<lb/>
to destroy underground bomb shelters, development of nuclear<lb/>
weapons to create tidal waves, and the development heat-sensitive<lb/>
radar which tracks the movement of anything generating heat.<lb/>
The bombing took place at a time of widespread campus dissent<lb/>
against the continued Vietnam war and the Cambodian invasion. The<lb/>
Army Research Center had been operating on million dollar annual<lb/>
grants from the Pentagon when the attack occured.<lb/>
Following his extradition Armstrong was kept in solitary<lb/>
confinement, and, according to his defense committee, "given a<lb/>
minimal diet, and severely restricted in his access to visitors, reading<lb/>
material and legal research Armstrong's bail was set at $45,000<lb/>
cash or $900,000 property, the highest in Wisconsin history.<lb/>
Several socail action groups including WAW, Winter Soldier<lb/>
Organization, Science for the People, and the Attica Brigade are<lb/>
organizing support for Armstrong in Madison and around the country<lb/>
and hope to use his trial as a focal point to encourage the end of<lb/>
University complicity with military research and amnesty for ail<lb/>
politcal prisoners.<lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
<lb/>
5<lb/>
m<lb/>
Poet presents his work here<lb/>
Robert Creeley will read some of his<lb/>
poetry in Biology Auditorium (103<lb/>
Biology) at 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 23.<lb/>
Creeley is a leading American<lb/>
poet. He has been called "one of the<lb/>
outstanding voices in contemporary<lb/>
American poetry The most recent of his<lb/>
sixteen published volumes, A DAY BOOK,<lb/>
was published by Charles Scribner's Sons<lb/>
in December 1972.<lb/>
Terry Southern in The New York Times<lb/>
Book Review has commented, "His<lb/>
influence on contemporary American<lb/>
poetry has probably been more deeply felt<lb/>
than that of any writer of his generation<lb/>
Of himself Cree'ey says, in an<lb/>
interview in The Paris Review, "I am given<lb/>
as a man to work with what is most<lb/>
intimate to me-these senses of<lb/>
relationship among people .Therefore,<lb/>
they are the materials of which my word is<lb/>
made<lb/>
A short story writer, essayist, and<lb/>
novelist as well as a poet, Creeley was<lb/>
born in Arlington, Massachusetts, in<lb/>
1926. He attended Harvard University and<lb/>
later received his M.A. from the University<lb/>
of New Mexico. During World War II he<lb/>
served with the American Field Service in<lb/>
India and Burma. He later taught at Black<lb/>
Mountain College, where he founded and<lb/>
edited The Black Mountain Review. He<lb/>
has since taught at the University of New<lb/>
Mexico and at the State University of New<lb/>
York at Buffalo.<lb/>
Some of his book titles are FOR<lb/>
LOVE: Poems 1950-1960; WORDS;<lb/>
PIECES; THE GOLD DIGGERS, a<lb/>
collection of short stories; and THE<lb/>
ISLAND, a novel. These are all available<lb/>
in both hard-cover and in paper from The<lb/>
Agnew<lb/>
forfeits<lb/>
pension<lb/>
(CPS)-Vice President Spiro T. Agnew lost<lb/>
his eligibility for federal retirement<lb/>
pension by resigning last week.<lb/>
Federal law requires government<lb/>
employees to complete five years of<lb/>
"creditable civil service" in order to<lb/>
qualify for a retirement pension.<lb/>
Agnew took office in his first Federal<lb/>
job on January 20, 1969 and held it for<lb/>
four and three quarter years, falling 102<lb/>
days short of the pension requirement.<lb/>
PINICCHABUS<lb/>
OF CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Mm than a Rose, our Pink Chablis is a captivate<lb/>
van combining the delicate fragrance of a superior U<lb/>
tni fc crisp character of a fine Chablis. This wint i �<lb/>
njour most delightful creations. Made and bottled tl fc<lb/>
GdUo Vineyards in Modesto, Calif. Alcohol 12 by d<lb/>
TIME<lb/>
Magazine<lb/>
reports:<lb/>
Gallo's Pink Chablis<lb/>
recently triumphed<lb/>
over ten costlier<lb/>
competitors in a blind<lb/>
tasting among a<lb/>
panel of wine-industry<lb/>
executives<lb/>
in Los Angeles<lb/>
Time Magazine November 27. 1972 page 81<lb/>
More than a Rose.<lb/>
PINK CHABLIS ol CALIFORNIA Gallo Vineyards. Modesto. California<lb/>
MWWMWW<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0006"/><lb/>
� ��<lb/>
6<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5. NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
Oregon passes light Soaring food budgets<lb/>
possession penalities prompt ECU course<lb/>
By JOHN LANIER<lb/>
The state of Oregon now has the<lb/>
lightest penalty for marijuana possession<lb/>
in the US.<lb/>
Possession of less than one ounce of<lb/>
marijuana is no longer a "crime" but a<lb/>
"violation according to a law passed<lb/>
earlier this year by the state<lb/>
legislature. The penalty for being caught<lb/>
with less than an ounce has been reduced<lb/>
to a $100 fine.<lb/>
In taking this action, the Oregon<lb/>
legislature made a distinction between the<lb/>
casual user and persons who grow,<lb/>
process or sell marijuana. The latter still<lb/>
face a possible 10-year, $2500 penalty,<lb/>
and adults who furnish marijuana to<lb/>
minors under 18 years of age can be given<lb/>
a 20-year sentence.<lb/>
Several flaws in the new marijuana law<lb/>
almost caused Governor Rom McCall to<lb/>
veto it. The first was that the way the law<lb/>
was written, the greatly reduced penalty<lb/>
also applies to hashish, a highly<lb/>
concentrated form of marijuana. The<lb/>
legislature will be asked to eliminate<lb/>
hashish from the new law in a special<lb/>
session next year.<lb/>
The second flaw comes because the<lb/>
legislators neglected to change another<lb/>
law making it a misdemeanor punishable<lb/>
by a year in jail to frequent a place where<lb/>
marijuana is used. Technically, a person<lb/>
smoking marijuana could be fined $100 if<lb/>
caught, while a non-smoker busted in a<lb/>
place where others are smoking could be<lb/>
jailed for a year.<lb/>
The new law. said the Augur, an<lb/>
Oregon underground pacer, "is a<lb/>
considerable improvement over the law it<lb/>
replaced The old law provided for up to<lb/>
a year in prison plus $1000 fine for<lb/>
possession of less than an ounce of<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
Law enforcement personnel around the<lb/>
state have varied feeling about the new<lb/>
law. Some welcome it; others say they<lb/>
believe it will increase the state's drug<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The Lane County District Attorney has<lb/>
already instituted a system allowing<lb/>
police to issue citations rather than<lb/>
making arrests in certain drug cases. He<lb/>
said the old law "was unfair and made<lb/>
criminals out of people who were not<lb/>
otherwise engaged in criminal activity<lb/>
The DA claimed marijuana prose-<lb/>
cutions had started to effect the entire<lb/>
criminal justice systems to the point of<lb/>
clogging the courts. "It's time we got<lb/>
away from this obsession of prosecuting<lb/>
kids who smoke marijuana he added.<lb/>
The Marion County DA considers the<lb/>
new law unenforceable and said his office<lb/>
will consider using other laws to arrest<lb/>
persons who are in a place where<lb/>
marijuana is being used but are not<lb/>
themselves smoking it.<lb/>
The Eugene Register-Guard reported<lb/>
that another DA said, "We should devote<lb/>
our time and resources to apprehending<lb/>
and convicting burglars, rapists, mur-<lb/>
derers, hard drug pushers and the like,<lb/>
not incidental and casual users of<lb/>
marijuana. The people using marijuana<lb/>
are not the black leather jacket<lb/>
crowd. They are your neighbors and mine<lb/>
and our neighbors' kids<lb/>
JiU L� Lil�<lb/>
LOST: BROWN 3 FOLD Buxton wallet at Crows Nest. If found call<lb/>
752-3471. Reward if 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/>
JRawl, Sept. 26. Great sentimental value, please call 758-5962 if found.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL, free inro &amp; referral, up to 24<lb/>
weeks. General anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation also available.<lb/>
Free pregnancy tests. Call PCS non-profit 202 298 7995.<lb/>
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle, 752-2619.<lb/>
TO THE LEADER OF THE PACK: Is ther something anything? More<lb/>
I can wish you than the very best of tomorrows? Yu betcha not Happy<lb/>
Birth to Grew, a Wizard, A True Star, from Ronnie Jo.<lb/>
FOR SALE PIONEER Stereo amp. SA 900 200 watts total pwr. used<lb/>
only 3 months $175.00. Dust cover for Teac Tape recorder A 6010, 7010,<lb/>
7030. $10.00. Steve Geiger 758 0938.<lb/>
ANY MALE OR FEMALE who has had modeling experience and would<lb/>
like to pose for fashion pictures for the Fountainhead, please contact the<lb/>
Fountainhead office or Carol Wood, 216 Fletcher Dorm. Sorry, but the<lb/>
only pay is the gratification of seeing your picture in the paper.<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEMS WITH your relationship? Confidential free<lb/>
therapy. Call 756 4859 for information.<lb/>
1972 YAMAHA 350 cc R 5 3000 miles, $650.00. See Jim Apt A 15,<lb/>
Glendale Courts, Hooker Road after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED: STUDENT WIFE or student for baby sitting and light<lb/>
housework. Daily 12 5 Call 756 3369 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
Soaring food prices are affecting<lb/>
budgets across the nation. Prices have<lb/>
risen on some products as much as 30<lb/>
percent, crippling household budgets and<lb/>
forcing families at all incomes to search<lb/>
for new ways to cope. Consumers are<lb/>
overstocking, buying food substitutes,<lb/>
and using various other means of curbing<lb/>
food costs. An official of the Cost of<lb/>
Living Council was recently quoted as<lb/>
saying, "All we need to do is to educate<lb/>
the people-educate them that the days of<lb/>
cheap food are over<lb/>
The possession and use of marijuana<lb/>
is still a federal offense in Oregon,<lb/>
punishable by up to a year in prison. But<lb/>
the United States Attorney for the state<lb/>
has said that his office "feels that where a<lb/>
state has made a statement of policy<lb/>
through legislation which calls for a more<lb/>
lenient penalty, we attempt to give validity<lb/>
to that action by not acting in<lb/>
contravention to that law<lb/>
The new Oregon marijuana law stands<lb/>
in contrast to failures to reduce penalties<lb/>
in several other states in recent years, and<lb/>
to the tough new law in New York state<lb/>
which sets a maximum penalty of seven<lb/>
years for marijuana possession.<lb/>
Oregon's university students appear<lb/>
virtually unanimously delighted with the<lb/>
new law, even if it does not legalize<lb/>
marijuana as many hoped the legislature<lb/>
would do. A recent survey revealed that<lb/>
45 percent of the 18-24 age group in<lb/>
Oregon smoked marijuana in 1971 - up 5<lb/>
percent from 1966.<lb/>
"Managing the Family Food Budget<lb/>
a non-credit evening course, will be<lb/>
offered by the East Carolina University<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education<lb/>
beginning in November.<lb/>
Instructor Marilyn Steele of the ECU<lb/>
School of Home Economics will provide<lb/>
lecture and laboratory instruction about<lb/>
food budgeting, money-saving shopping<lb/>
techniques and meal planning for<lb/>
nutrition and low cost.<lb/>
In addition, foods will be introduced<lb/>
not commonly used which are high in<lb/>
nutrition and low in cost. The student will<lb/>
also be taught to judge food quality and<lb/>
to choose the quality appropriate to the<lb/>
intended use. Teaching techniques to be<lb/>
used will include lectures, demonstra-<lb/>
tions and two sessions where participants<lb/>
will actually take Dart in food preparation.<lb/>
The course will meet for six sessions<lb/>
on Tuesday nights, Nov. 6-Dec. 11, at<lb/>
7:30 in the ECU Home Economics<lb/>
Buildina.<lb/>
Steve Alexander of the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education Office of Con-<lb/>
ferences and Institutes said the course is<lb/>
designed for "the person who prepares<lb/>
the family's meals and does the grocery<lb/>
shopping and who wishes to cope with<lb/>
"soaring food Drices "<lb/>
Interested persons should visit or write<lb/>
Alexander for further information and<lb/>
registration forms, at the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, Box 2727,<lb/>
Greenville. Course enrollment will be<lb/>
limited to 20 persons.<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/>
WANTED 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 $3.00 for information,<lb/>
seafax, Dept. Q 9, Box 2049, Post Angeles, Washington 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 Grimesland. Cost $20 per<lb/>
month. 752 0270 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
LOST SOLID GREY kitten with small white spot on chest in vicinity of<lb/>
E. 3rd St. Reward offered for any information. Please call 756 1098 or<lb/>
come by 805 E. 3rd St.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: 2 attractive Black female vocalists to perform with 8<lb/>
piece white top 40 dance band. Must be able to perform any weekend<lb/>
and occasional weeknights. For appointment Four Par Productions<lb/>
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 01' Miner<lb/>
Restaurant.<lb/>
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7<lb/>
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Creeley<lb/>
Continued from page 5.<lb/>
A Rockefeller Foundation grant, a<lb/>
Guggenheim Fellowship, and a D. H.<lb/>
Lawrence Fellowship are among the<lb/>
awards Creeley has received.<lb/>
Creeley now teaches at San Francisco<lb/>
State College and lives in Bolinas,<lb/>
California, with his wife Bobbie.<lb/>
On leave for an extensive reading and<lb/>
lecture tour, Creeley flies to Greenville<lb/>
from Emory University, where he reads<lb/>
Monday, and from Greenville to Austin<lb/>
Peay, where he reads Wednesday.<lb/>
There is no admission charge for<lb/>
Creeley's ECU reading. The public is<lb/>
cordially invited to hear Creeley and to<lb/>
meet him after the reading.<lb/>
AWO L soldier surrenders after<lb/>
returning from years in Sweden<lb/>
ARMY REGISTER SURRENDERS<lb/>
TO AUTHORITIES<lb/>
(CPS)Vietnam era soldier Richard<lb/>
Bucklin left the army four and a half years<lb/>
ago to seek "humanitarian asylum" in<lb/>
Sweden. Last week he ended his exile as<lb/>
he surrendered to Federal authorities in<lb/>
Denver.<lb/>
"At first I figured spending two or<lb/>
three years in Germany with the Army was<lb/>
all right, instead of going to Vietnam<lb/>
Bucklin said in a press conference prior to<lb/>
his surrender. "But then I realized it was<lb/>
a cop-out. To keep my own opinion of<lb/>
myself I had to leave<lb/>
Bucklin is being held in solitary<lb/>
confinement at Fort Carson, Colorado.<lb/>
According to military authorities there,<lb/>
"We put him in solitary because we felt<lb/>
that the Vietnam veterans in out stockade<lb/>
might physically harm or kill him<lb/>
Though he is the third returning AWOL<lb/>
(absent without leave) case to be<lb/>
processed by the military, Bucklin is the<lb/>
first to invoke opposition to the Vietnam<lb/>
War as a defense<lb/>
When Bucklin first returned to the US<lb/>
to surrender, army officials informed him<lb/>
he would receive no more than an<lb/>
undesirable discharge. He was<lb/>
granted leave and told his discharge<lb/>
would be mailed to him. Shortly<lb/>
thereafter military authorities rescinded<lb/>
that decision and informed Bucklin of his<lb/>
impending court martial.<lb/>
Bucklin said he returned to the United<lb/>
States expecting jail, and hoping to focus<lb/>
attention on others like himself. "I'm<lb/>
calling for amnesty for soldiers like me<lb/>
ne said. "I don't expect to get<lb/>
amnesty. If I spend two years in jail it's a<lb/>
good enough reason to come back. My<lb/>
interests have always been in the United<lb/>
States<lb/>
"If the Vietnam War was a mistake and<lb/>
soldiers like me were trying to right our<lb/>
country to make them see the mistake it's<lb/>
not fair that we are tried and convicted<lb/>
Bucklin said.<lb/>
Supporters of the former soldier see<lb/>
Bucklin's case as a test of military<lb/>
disposition toward draft resistors and<lb/>
amnesty for fugitives like Bucklin. About<lb/>
200,000 draft resistors are in the United<lb/>
States as fugitives, awaiting trial, or<lb/>
servings terms in prison. Another 60,000<lb/>
are Canadian exiles, while 6000 men are<lb/>
living in Sweden as Bucklin did.<lb/>
mn ��'�� ��"�"�<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039884_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
EditortalsAOTTTnenlary<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmimm<lb/>
Miscellany et al<lb/>
This issue is full of SGA news. First, and whether or not you wanted it, a second<lb/>
SGA transit bus in on the way for your use - or non-use. We can only hope for the<lb/>
benefit of SGA prestige that the bus culls more than the present bus's informal<lb/>
estimate of 6-nders-per trip.Should the second operation prove to be as dismal as the<lb/>
first the sanity of such a purchase will be twice as questionable. And we will then<lb/>
puckishly question a $1250 gas expenditure for two unused buses, while at the same<lb/>
time the university is directing fuel cutbacks due to the energy shortage.<lb/>
We are crossing our fingers and waiting for an anticipated massive use of both<lb/>
buses In fact now that students have been obliged to pay for the transit system, we<lb/>
actually hope (for the sake of their student fees) that bus-riding becomes some local<lb/>
fad only because $27,546 (including purchase of one bus and operation of both) of<lb/>
student funds will be invested in the matter.<lb/>
As for other business, an SGA Treasurer is finally in existence, although neither a<lb/>
Publications Board nor a Rebel editor have yet wafted in the window. Fountainhead is<lb/>
still harping on its eternal plea for Pub Board applicants: with only three applicants<lb/>
and two living members, the Board is still a few applications away from reality. Pub<lb/>
Board Chairman Bob McKeel will undoubtedly agree with us that membership is not<lb/>
only fun and fascinating, but provides remarkable insight into The American Dream,<lb/>
and is more educational than a chinchilla farm.<lb/>
Actually, we'd like to have a Pub Board to complain to and about, and would<lb/>
appreciate any steps the student public might take to indulge us.<lb/>
"Publication wrote Emily Dickinson, "is the auctionOf the mind of man This<lb/>
auction ended, we rest until Tuesdav.<lb/>
Warning from Cairo<lb/>
RM.FHIE<lb/>
OWRAtfH!<lb/>
HERE BOY<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
WASHINGTON-The outbreak of<lb/>
fighting in the Middle East caught<lb/>
Washington by surprise. The intelligence<lb/>
reports from Syria and Egypt told of the<lb/>
military preparations and warned of the<lb/>
building tensions. But the White House<lb/>
policymakers didn't take the reports<lb/>
seriously.<lb/>
We have seen some of the secret<lb/>
intelligence reports and can now relate<lb/>
the behind-the-scenes developments that<lb/>
led to this dangerous new outbreak.<lb/>
In Cairo, President Sadat had been<lb/>
threatening Israel with an all-out war. But<lb/>
a secret intelligence dispatch said he gave<lb/>
contrary orders to the Egyptian Army to<lb/>
avoid provoking a war. Sadat explained to<lb/>
his generals that he had to talk tough to<lb/>
maintain international interest in the<lb/>
Middle East.<lb/>
Sadat was goaded, however, by the<lb/>
Syrians. Syria's President Asad, in private<lb/>
conversations, belittled the Egyptians.<lb/>
One secret report quoted him as saying<lb/>
bluntly that he didn't expect much from<lb/>
Egyptians.<lb/>
Other intelligence reports described a<lb/>
growing tendency among Arabs to treat<lb/>
Sadat's threats toward Israel with<lb/>
derision. The reports warned<lb/>
pressure from his fellow Arabs<lb/>
force Sadat, even against his<lb/>
judgment, to resume shooting.<lb/>
Apparently, this is exactly<lb/>
happened.<lb/>
this<lb/>
might<lb/>
better<lb/>
this past year, for example, were<lb/>
instrumental in driving up the prices of<lb/>
beef, bread and milk in the supermarkets.<lb/>
Now, a House subcommittee is<lb/>
investigating the commodities market,<lb/>
and has already come up with some<lb/>
disturbing, unpublished evidence. The<lb/>
Commidities Exchange Authority, which<lb/>
is supposed to police the commidities<lb/>
market, allegedly filed false reports.<lb/>
There is evidence that CEA officials also<lb/>
have been cooperating with the big<lb/>
traders the agency is supposed to govern.<lb/>
The House subcommittee is also<lb/>
considering a probe of the Russian wheat<lb/>
deal. We have already written, for<lb/>
example, that the Russians may have<lb/>
speculated on the U.S. futures market in<lb/>
violation of law.<lb/>
Some may call it dull, but the<lb/>
commodities investigation may pay off in<lb/>
lower supermarket prices.<lb/>
Labor Angered: President Nixon's<lb/>
romance with labor is on the rocks. From<lb/>
the beginning it was a love affair of<lb/>
political expediency. The President and<lb/>
AFL-CIO boss George Meany shared a<lb/>
distaste for Senator Goerge McGovern<lb/>
and the antiwar movement.<lb/>
The courtship lasted through the 1972<lb/>
campaign. Nixon was presented with an<lb/>
honorary hard hat and blue-collar workers<lb/>
trooped to the polls to help re-elect<lb/>
him. As their reward, the President<lb/>
appointed Peter Brennan, a tough New<lb/>
York labor leader, to be Secretary of<lb/>
Labor.<lb/>
But now, the working men's ardor for<lb/>
Nixon has plummeted as living costs have<lb/>
skyrocketed. The purchasing power of the<lb/>
average worker has dropped two per cent<lb/>
while corporate profits have shot up 23<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
At the supermarket, the worker finds<lb/>
food costs have gone up six per cent in<lb/>
the last six months. At the hospital,<lb/>
staff<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERLinda Gardner<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSSkip Saunders<lb/>
Betsy Fernandez<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
COMPOSER TYPISTAlice Leary<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/>
Cont nued on page 9.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0009"/><lb/>
;<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmmmtm<lb/>
9<lb/>
Israel Watetgate and Kennedy TheFOTUITt<lb/>
By TRISTRAM COFFIN<lb/>
ISRAEL LOSES FAITH IN WASHING-<lb/>
TON-lsrael has decided it can no longer<lb/>
rely on US support, and must play a lone<lb/>
hand. This means shoring up its strength<lb/>
while it has the upper nana. inus, in<lb/>
August, Israeli leaders O.Kd "a 4 year<lb/>
plan providing for public and private<lb/>
purchase of land by Israelis on the<lb/>
occupied Arab territories, and the<lb/>
establishment of additional Israeli<lb/>
settlements in the territories noted the<lb/>
New York Times. This "represents a<lb/>
victory for the hard-liners in the Cabinet<lb/>
led by Defense Minister Moshe Dayan"<lb/>
and seems certain to generate new<lb/>
controversy abroad<lb/>
The White House, with pressure from<lb/>
oil companies, is increasingly nervous.<lb/>
This is reflected in an Evans-Novak<lb/>
column which quotes "one prominent<lb/>
Jewish leader with close ties to the Nixon<lb/>
Administration" as sharply criticizing<lb/>
Israel. The columnists say, "Mr. Nixon is<lb/>
far more concerned than generally<lb/>
realized<lb/>
The arms build-up of Iran is causing<lb/>
trouble too. The New York Times reports<lb/>
from New Delhi: "India, worried about<lb/>
American arms sales to Iran, has begun a<lb/>
major reassessment of her powerful<lb/>
armed forces .Intertwined with deep<lb/>
uncertainty about American arms sales to<lb/>
Iran-sales that will turn Iran into a major<lb/>
power in the Persian Gulf-India remains<lb/>
deeply suspicious of American motives<lb/>
and views the arms shipment as a<lb/>
threat .What plainly worries Indian<lb/>
officials is mat Iranian military<lb/>
equipment-either the new American<lb/>
weapons or arms that have been<lb/>
replaced-will slip into Pakistan, a close<lb/>
ally of Iran and a hostile neighbor of<lb/>
India<lb/>
THE JFK ASSASSINATION AND<lb/>
WATERGATELee Harvey Oswald, the<lb/>
man who shot President Kennedy. Did he<lb/>
know or have contact with E. Howard<lb/>
Hunt or Gordon Liddy, or any of the<lb/>
others in that mysterious and dangerous<lb/>
crew convicted in the Watergate crime<lb/>
and, under investigation still in<lb/>
connection with a series of other criminal<lb/>
acts including burglarizing homes, offices<lb/>
and embassies?<lb/>
"What about Sirhan Sirhan, the<lb/>
assassin of Robert Kennedy and James<lb/>
Earl Ray, the killer of Martin Luther King,<lb/>
and Arthur Bremer, the man who shot<lb/>
George Wallace? Did Hunt or Liddy or his<lb/>
strange Cuban contacts, did any or all of<lb/>
them know any of these people?"<lb/>
These questions are being asked by a<lb/>
respected Washington correspondent.<lb/>
Dan Rather was with the Presidential<lb/>
party when John Kennedy was<lb/>
murdered. He covered the Warren<lb/>
Commission hearings. He conducted an<lb/>
independent investigation for CBS News.<lb/>
He now reports, "The old sores, the<lb/>
old doubts, the old questions and some<lb/>
new ones are being reopened. Oswald's<lb/>
involvement with anti-Castro Cubans<lb/>
his mystery appearance in Mexico<lb/>
City. The possibility of contact with<lb/>
people who had CIA connections. Hunt<lb/>
and Liddy's involvement with anti-Castro<lb/>
Cubans<lb/>
Since the Warren Commission closed<lb/>
its books, new evidence has been dug up.<lb/>
(1) Lyndon Johnson in an interview<lb/>
published after his death in Atlantic (July<lb/>
1973) said he believed Kennedy was the<lb/>
victim of an organized conspiracy. "I<lb/>
never believed that Oswald acted alone,<lb/>
although I can accept that he pulled the<lb/>
trigger The interviewer, Leo Janos,<lb/>
continues, "Johnson said when he had<lb/>
taken office he found that 'we had been<lb/>
operating a damned Murder Inc. in the<lb/>
Caribbean j , J<lb/>
"A year or so before Kennedy s death.a<lb/>
CIA-backed assassination team had been<lb/>
picked up in Havana. Johnson speculated<lb/>
that Dallas had been a retaliation for this<lb/>
thwarted attempt, although he couldn't<lb/>
prove it LBJ told Walter Cronkite a<lb/>
similar story, but, after the taping, asked<lb/>
this be deleted for "national security<lb/>
reasons<lb/>
A member of the Warren Commission,<lb/>
Senator Richard Russell (D-Ga.), was<lb/>
convinced of a conspiracy, too.<lb/>
"Kennedy evidence" to be continued in<lb/>
Oct. 23 Fountainhead.<lb/>
Anderson column<lb/>
operating 'room charges have soared 48<lb/>
per cent. If he should try to buy a new<lb/>
home, interest rates have reached records<lb/>
at nine and 10 per cent.<lb/>
Down at the Labor Department,<lb/>
meanwhile, Brennan has been stewing.<lb/>
He openly clashed with the President over<lb/>
the veto of the minimum wage bill. This<lb/>
is the sort of disloyalty that the President<lb/>
won't countenance from his Cabinet. So<lb/>
as soon s the President catches his breath<lb/>
from Watergate, Brennan will be<lb/>
dumped. The Irishman from the streets of<lb/>
Manhattan, who rose from hard hat to<lb/>
Secretary of Labor, will go back to the<lb/>
union halls.<lb/>
Incriminating Letter: The Senate<lb/>
Watergate Committee is quietly investi-<lb/>
gating the extent of former Democratic<lb/>
Chairman Larry O'Brien's relationship with<lb/>
eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes.<lb/>
We have uncovered an important pice<lb/>
of evidence in the investigation. It ii the<lb/>
original of a letter from O'Brien to Robert<lb/>
Maheu, who used to be the major domo of<lb/>
Hughes' Las Vegas empire.<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
The letter, written on August 21,1968,<lb/>
offers to handle government relations for<lb/>
Hughes. O'Brien wrote: "My services<lb/>
would be available as required, with a<lb/>
staff including a highly competent<lb/>
governmental relations man, a top-notch<lb/>
public affairs expert and two secretaries.<lb/>
The staff would perform necessary<lb/>
services on a priority basis<lb/>
In return O'Brien wanted $180,000 a<lb/>
year, plus expenses.<lb/>
To emphasize his importance, O'Brien<lb/>
gave his hotel and convention hall phone<lb/>
numbers, since the 1968 Democratic<lb/>
convention was then about to begin.<lb/>
But for a former Postmaster General,<lb/>
O'Brien made two unforgivable errors in<lb/>
his letter.<lb/>
He spelled Maheu's name "Mayhew<lb/>
And the special delivery letter arrived with<lb/>
four cents postage due.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to<lb/>
express their opinions in the Forum. Let-<lb/>
ters should be signed by the authorfsj;<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 are not necessarily those of<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to<lb/>
refuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment as an<lb/>
independent body on any and all<lb/>
issues. A newspaper is objective only in<lb/>
proportion to its autonomy.<lb/>
Public thanks<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to thank publically Ms.<lb/>
Bishop, Ms. Winstead, Ms. Clark, and<lb/>
Ms. Williams for their kind praise of my<lb/>
previous letters. It is not often that a<lb/>
mere jester receives such accolades from<lb/>
scholars, but I, a humble, pious man,<lb/>
appreciate their recognition. In fact, I'm<lb/>
donating their gift, white socks, Blue<lb/>
Ribbon beer and a complete run of Mad<lb/>
Magazine to Dr. Jenkins.<lb/>
If not for those girls' letter, I would<lb/>
never have known that slander and<lb/>
injustice were part of my character. I now<lb/>
graciously accept those kind words, for<lb/>
how could I, in my ignorance, know as<lb/>
much as the yellow-marker crowd. I<lb/>
suspect the squeaks of their magic-<lb/>
markers echo throughout their dorm or<lb/>
apartment long after my feeble brain<lb/>
slumbers blissfully.<lb/>
Alas, the weight of worldly praise<lb/>
swells my head with pride, but I will try to<lb/>
the utmost of my meager abilities to live<lb/>
up to my constituency's expectations.<lb/>
Afterall, I did receive the largest mandate<lb/>
in ECU history with my colossal victory<lb/>
over "Sambo the Irish setter.<lb/>
Your humble jester,<lb/>
M.D. Hickson, J<lb/>
Hickson letter 2<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
This lowly court jester has aroused<lb/>
King Billie (From the House of Bluelight)<lb/>
Bodenhamer's wrath by misplacing his<lb/>
crown. When last I saw it, the slightly<lb/>
tarnished crown was lying in the stream<lb/>
near the bridge of College Hill Drive. I<lb/>
hope King Billie will not lash this humble<lb/>
servant too much, for I am, indeed, a loyal<lb/>
subject and would never stoop to<lb/>
treachery against God or King Billie.<lb/>
Since coming to court here, many<lb/>
times I've seen King Billie stand in awe<lb/>
before the royal mirror admirring his<lb/>
crown. What power and pride in his<lb/>
eyes! Alas, I am pained greatly by his<lb/>
loss and would crawl on hands and knees<lb/>
to Bethel and back to right this most<lb/>
grievous wrong.<lb/>
I appeal to the student body to<lb/>
intercede on my behalf. At this my lowest<lb/>
hour, give me your blood, sweat and tears<lb/>
that we may be a happy band of brothers<lb/>
in search of King Billie's crown.<lb/>
Yours humbly,<lb/>
M.D. Hickson, Jr.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Middfe East crisis<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In learning tonight of the sending of<lb/>
U.S. Marines and Air Force personnel to<lb/>
the Middle East I feel that I can stay silent<lb/>
no more.<lb/>
America, I fear, is on the verge of<lb/>
annihilating itself with the general<lb/>
consensus of the people being "So I'm<lb/>
not sure whether it is a state of apathy<lb/>
that we are in or just that we are lazy to<lb/>
the extent where we cower away from<lb/>
facing situations that involve any<lb/>
challenge to our brain.<lb/>
In regard to college campuses, I'm<lb/>
amazed at what little opposition it takes<lb/>
to stifle the student of today. The young<lb/>
American in the late 60's and early 70's<lb/>
showed a trend toward constructive<lb/>
change; a questioning of values. With<lb/>
the exception to today's Female<lb/>
Liberation Movement this trend seems to<lb/>
have died a rapid death.<lb/>
In view of the Middle East conflict and<lb/>
our involvement I would like to ask a<lb/>
question:<lb/>
"If religion is so great, why do people<lb/>
fight over it?<lb/>
Is it a question of who's right or<lb/>
wrong, or is it to justify man's desire to<lb/>
achieve greatness?<lb/>
In all of the wars ever fought have the<lb/>
real goals ever been achieved: My answer<lb/>
is NO. A glance back into history will<lb/>
show that each conflicting party had a<lb/>
motive which was, in their view,<lb/>
completely justified. But the ending is<lb/>
always the same, both sides loose one<lb/>
way or another. Was the lose really<lb/>
justified?<lb/>
The Middle East conflict has been<lb/>
classified as a religious war. This is a war<lb/>
fought between the worshipers of<lb/>
God; He being slightly different in each<lb/>
case but essentially the same. What a<lb/>
better way to show our expressions of<lb/>
spirit to our God than beating the brains<lb/>
out of our brothers. Humiliating,<lb/>
desroying, and killing; that's showing<lb/>
God you believe in Him.<lb/>
Perhaps what I was taught in Sunday<lb/>
School and Church was all wrong, I don't<lb/>
know any more, but if this is the way it's<lb/>
going to be then I'm sorry but I don't want<lb/>
any of it.<lb/>
I can only say in closing that I agree<lb/>
with the following statement by Thoreau:<lb/>
"When the heavens are obscured to<lb/>
us, and nothing heroic appears, but we<lb/>
are oppressed by imperfection and<lb/>
shortcoming on all hands, we are apt to<lb/>
suck our thumbs and decry our fates. As<lb/>
if nothing was to be done in cloudy<lb/>
weather, or, if heaven were not accessible<lb/>
by the upper road, men would not find a<lb/>
lower. There are two ways to victory - to<lb/>
strive bravely, or to yield. How much pain<lb/>
the last will save us we have not vet<lb/>
,earned " Sincerely,<lb/>
James B. Perry<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmmmm " "i<lb/>
0m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Europe offers job opportunities to U.S. students<lb/>
More and more American college<lb/>
students are taking temporary, student<lb/>
jobs in Europe. The trend is apparently<lb/>
because students realize that earning a<lb/>
trip to Europe can be profitable in more<lb/>
ways than one. Any student taking a<lb/>
temporary job in Europe is able to get out<lb/>
and see some of the world on a<lb/>
pay-as-you-go basis, and earn some<lb/>
money besides.<lb/>
A wide range of temporary student<lb/>
jobs are now available in Switzerland.<lb/>
Austria, France and Germany. Any<lb/>
student may apply through a mail<lb/>
ap� cation system. All jobs include free<lb/>
room and board plus a standard wage<lb/>
which ranges between $140 and $350 -<lb/>
depending upon the actual job, tips,<lb/>
etc. However, the free room and board<lb/>
are perhaps the best benefit for a student<lb/>
in Europe.<lb/>
Jobs, permits and other necessary<lb/>
details are arranged on a non-profit basis<lb/>
by the Student Overseas Services - a<lb/>
student run organization which has been<lb/>
assisting students for 15 years. SOS also<lb/>
conducts a 5-day orientation period in<lb/>
VA benefits<lb/>
available<lb/>
overseas<lb/>
Veterans planning to travel abroad or<lb/>
establish residence in a foreign country<lb/>
should check on the availability of<lb/>
Veterans Administration benefits.<lb/>
H.W. Johnson, Diector of the<lb/>
Winston-Salem VA Regional Office,<lb/>
suggested that Americans with service-<lb/>
connected disabilities, should carry with<lb/>
them a statement of service-connected<lb/>
conditions issued by the VA office<lb/>
maintaining their medical records.<lb/>
If a need for medical care should arise<lb/>
in a foreign country, the statement,<lb/>
together with an application for medical<lb/>
benefits, should be presented to the<lb/>
American embassy or consular office.<lb/>
In an emergency, an eligible veteran is<lb/>
entitled to VA-paid hospitalization if he<lb/>
notifies the embassy or consular office<lb/>
within 72 hours after hospitalization. Not-<lb/>
ification of outpatient treatment must be<lb/>
made within 15 days.<lb/>
Only in the Philippines is care<lb/>
available for both veterans with service-<lb/>
connected disabilities and nonservice-<lb/>
connected disabilities. Treatment is<lb/>
provided at the Veterans Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in Manila. There, as in the<lb/>
United States, veterans with nonservice-<lb/>
connected disabilities are eligble only on<lb/>
a space-available basis and only if they<lb/>
are unable to defray expenses.<lb/>
Retired servicemen are eligible for<lb/>
medical benefits from military hospitals<lb/>
and clinics, Johnson said.<lb/>
Gl home loans are not available to<lb/>
veterans living in foreign countries - but<lb/>
compensation and pension checks may be<lb/>
mailed to all overseas addresses except<lb/>
for certain "blocked" countries.<lb/>
Johnson also advised veterans<lb/>
traveling in foreign countries to maintain<lb/>
stateside mailing addresses, where<lb/>
possible, to insure prompt receipt of<lb/>
checks.<lb/>
Eligible veterans, we well as eligible<lb/>
wives, widows and children, are permitted<lb/>
to pursue degrees in many VA-approved<lb/>
foreign schools.<lb/>
AUSTRIA: Hotel, resort and restau-<lb/>
rant work Standard wages plus free room<lb/>
and board. Also excellent location in<lb/>
Europe and work is often at beautiful<lb/>
mountain and lakeside locations.<lb/>
SWITZERLAND: Resort hotel,<lb/>
restaurant work available, throughout the<lb/>
Europe to make certain everything goes<lb/>
smoothly in Europe and that students get<lb/>
off to their jobs at the right time.<lb/>
Latest available openings include the<lb/>
following. No foreign language require-<lb/>
ments are necessary in many cases.<lb/>
country. Standard Swiss wages plus tips<lb/>
paid, plus free room and board. Good<lb/>
central location in Europe.<lb/>
FRANCE: Good factory jobs.<lb/>
Rooms provided, good wages. Relatively<lb/>
short hours and shift work allow time to<lb/>
travel to Amsterdam, Paris, etc. Farm and<lb/>
fruit picking work in spring and summer,<lb/>
wine harvest in fall.<lb/>
GERMANY: Resort, hotel, factory,<lb/>
farm, hospital and other work available in<lb/>
all parts of the country. Standard German<lb/>
wages plus tips where applicable. Free<lb/>
room and board always provided with<lb/>
resort hotel and restaurant jobs. Allow 8<lb/>
weeks for permits and papers.<lb/>
Any student may obtain an application<lb/>
form, job listings and descriptions, and<lb/>
the SOS Handbook on earning a trip to<lb/>
Europe by sending their name, address,<lb/>
educational institution and $1 (for<lb/>
printing, postage, addressing and<lb/>
handling) to SOS - Student Ocerseas<lb/>
Services, 22 Ave. de la Liberte,<lb/>
Luxembourg, Europe. Students interested<lb/>
in winter jobs in ski resorts should apply<lb/>
immediately. <lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
11<lb/>
Abortion rights threatened across country<lb/>
By GRACI MAST ALU<lb/>
(CPS)Last January's Supreme Court<lb/>
decision legalizing abortion is being<lb/>
severely threatened by anti-abortion<lb/>
legislative actions across the country.<lb/>
Far from settling the issue, the<lb/>
Supreme Court's sweeping affirmation of<lb/>
a woman's right to privacy and<lb/>
consequently the right to abortion under<lb/>
the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments<lb/>
set off a wave of anti-abortion reaction.<lb/>
Although the Supreme Court decision<lb/>
can only be overthrown by constitutional<lb/>
amendment the availability of abortion<lb/>
has already been greatly reduced via bills<lb/>
and amendments passed by Congress.<lb/>
In addition, approximately ten percent<lb/>
of the US Congresspeople (some 43 of 435<lb/>
members) are sponsoring some form of<lb/>
anti-abortion legislation.<lb/>
Three distinct types of constitutional<lb/>
amendments have been proposed to<lb/>
Congress in at least 21 separate bills,<lb/>
including sponsored by seven senators.<lb/>
To date at least 188 anti-abortion bills<lb/>
have been introduced in 41 states.<lb/>
Several states have enacted or retained<lb/>
clearly unconstitutional abortion laws.<lb/>
Establishing the fetus as a person with<lb/>
full legal rights has become the rallying<lb/>
point of the "right to life" groups<lb/>
spearheading the drive for anti-abortion<lb/>
constitutional amendment.<lb/>
It has been charged that the<lb/>
anti-abortion campaign is relly an<lb/>
attempt to impose one religion's beliefs<lb/>
on all. The Catholic Church has<lb/>
substantially Rinded the National Right to<lb/>
Life Committee (NRLC), which has an<lb/>
overwhelmingly Catholic membership.<lb/>
NRLC however denies any religious<lb/>
motivation, and states its only concern is<lb/>
"the sanctity of all life<lb/>
According to Supreme Court rulings<lb/>
the word "person" as used in the<lb/>
Fourteenth Amendment's stricture against<lb/>
depriving any person of life without due<lb/>
process of law  .does not include the<lb/>
unborn and "the Court does not<lb/>
postulate the existence of a new being<lb/>
with federal constitutional rights at any<lb/>
time during gestation<lb/>
Yet the issue of a women's right to<lb/>
abortion remains tied to that of fetal<lb/>
rights.<lb/>
Despite contentions that the federal<lb/>
government has no right to legislate<lb/>
control over women's bodies, several<lb/>
major attempts are underway.<lb/>
"Right-to-life" constitutional amend-<lb/>
ment (H.J. Res. 261) sponsored by Rep.<lb/>
Larry Hogan (D-Md.), seeks to insure that<lb/>
due process and equal protection are<lb/>
offered to an individual "from the moment<lb/>
of conception<lb/>
Hogan has introduced a "discharge<lb/>
petition" which would place his proposed<lb/>
amendment without committee review<lb/>
directly on the House floor, where it<lb/>
would take priority over all other<lb/>
business. The petition requires the<lb/>
signatures of more than half the House.<lb/>
Senator james Buckley (ConN.Y.)<lb/>
has proposed a constitutional amendment<lb/>
(S.J.Res. 119) that says the word "person"<lb/>
as used in the Fifth and Fourteenth<lb/>
Amendments shall apply to all human<lb/>
beings "including their unborn offspring<lb/>
at every stage of their biological<lb/>
development<lb/>
The NRLC is displeased with the<lb/>
Buckley amendment because it makes<lb/>
provision for abortion when "continuation<lb/>
of the pregnancy will cause the death of<lb/>
thp other<lb/>
The third type of proposed amendment<lb/>
is exemplified by HJ Res. 468, sponsored<lb/>
by Virginian Rep. G. William Whitehurst,<lb/>
which states that nothing in the<lb/>
Constitution shall bar any state "from<lb/>
allowing, regulating, or prohibiting the<lb/>
practice of abortion<lb/>
More than 19 bills in the House call for<lb/>
either the "states rights" or the "right to<lb/>
life" type of amendment, with a total of 36<lb/>
sponsors.<lb/>
Whether advocates of Hogan's right to<lb/>
life amendment would compromise by<lb/>
supporting the "states rights" amendment<lb/>
is unknown. If a compromise were<lb/>
reached the decision would soon sit in the<lb/>
laps of 50 state legislatures.<lb/>
In the meantime other legislative<lb/>
moves to limit abortion continue.<lb/>
The Health Programs Extension Act,<lb/>
which contains the church amendment is<lb/>
now law. It provides that any hospital or<lb/>
health care facility can refuse to perform<lb/>
abortions or sterilizations if these<lb/>
procedures are against the religious<lb/>
beliefs of medical or administrative<lb/>
personnel.<lb/>
An amendment to the Legal Services<lb/>
Corporation bill essentially prohibits legal<lb/>
aid lawyers from representing a woman<lb/>
sueing a hospital for refusing a<lb/>
nontherapudic abortion and denies the<lb/>
poor the right to even hear their case for<lb/>
obtaining an abortion in court. It was<lb/>
overwhelmingly passed by the House and<lb/>
awaits action by the Senate.<lb/>
Many other bills to limit abortion have<lb/>
been proposed including one to amend<lb/>
the Social Security Act to prohibit<lb/>
Medicare payments for abortions except<lb/>
in case of medical necessity.<lb/>
Despite findings of a Harris poll in<lb/>
April 1973 that showed more than 52<lb/>
percent of all US citizens favor the<lb/>
Supreme Court decision on making<lb/>
abortions legal in the first three months of<lb/>
pregnancy anti-abortion bills continue to<lb/>
proliferate.<lb/>
"Right-to-life" lobbyists are applying<lb/>
enormous pressure on state and federal<lb/>
legislators. The strength of the anti-<lb/>
abortion movement has been partly<lb/>
attributed to the failure of pro-abortion<lb/>
forces to continue lobbying after last<lb/>
January's Supreme Court ruling in the<lb/>
false belief that the battle was won.<lb/>
ECU librarian named<lb/>
to head organization<lb/>
Pslice report bicycles,<lb/>
cars stolen at ECU<lb/>
By TOM BROWNLEE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
During the past week the larcenies of<lb/>
at least three vehicles have been reported<lb/>
to the East Carolina Police Department.<lb/>
A resident of Aycock men's dorm<lb/>
reported seeing a while male loading a<lb/>
bicycle into the back of his car. The<lb/>
bicycle still retained the chain around the<lb/>
rear tire that was placed there by it's<lb/>
owner.<lb/>
A non-student marine was seen by<lb/>
campus police shortly afterwards riding<lb/>
the bicycle on Cotanche Street in an<lb/>
intoxicated state. Force was needed to<lb/>
subdue and apprehend the suspect. The<lb/>
suspect was admitted and released to Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital for treatment of minor<lb/>
head injuries, and charged with larceny<lb/>
and resisting arrest.<lb/>
Later, a ten speed boy's bicycle was<lb/>
reported stolen from Jones Dormitory.<lb/>
The bicycle (a Schwinn) has not yet been<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
On Oct. 9 Hasting's Ford on Tenth<lb/>
Street notified the campus police that<lb/>
their wrecker had towed a late model<lb/>
Toyota from the parking lot of Tyler<lb/>
women's dorm. The owner could not be<lb/>
located and it was discovered that the<lb/>
car was stolen. The vehicle was<lb/>
registered to a Kinston, N.C. resident.<lb/>
During the Biennial Conference of the<lb/>
North Carolina Library Association to be<lb/>
held in Winston-Salem at the Benton<lb/>
Convention Center, November 1-3, Dr.<lb/>
Gene D. Lanier, Chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Library Science at East<lb/>
Carolina University, will accept the gavel<lb/>
as presen: of the state organization.<lb/>
Membership in the Association is<lb/>
made up of librarians from public<lb/>
libraries, senior colleges and universities,<lb/>
school media centers, community<lb/>
colleges and technical institutes and<lb/>
special libraries. Lanier has served this<lb/>
year as president-elect and is responsible<lb/>
for the program at the November<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Lanier has been professor and<lb/>
chairman of the Department of Library<lb/>
Science at East Carolina since 1966. He<lb/>
holds the master's degree and the<lb/>
doctorate of philosophy from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Active in professional circles, he has<lb/>
served on the Committee of Librarianship<lb/>
As A Career of the Southeastern Library<lb/>
Association, chairman of the Education<lb/>
for Librarianship Committee of the North<lb/>
Carolina Library Association, and as<lb/>
director of the North Carolina Association<lb/>
of School Librarians for a four year<lb/>
term. He has served as consultant and<lb/>
speaker to many organizations and<lb/>
institutions around the state connected<lb/>
with libraries and media.<lb/>
His writings are included in a number<lb/>
of professional journals and he has had<lb/>
works published by Macmillan, the<lb/>
University of Rochester, and University<lb/>
Microfilms. He is listed in a number of<lb/>
biographical dictionaries including<lb/>
"Who's Who in the South and Southwest,<lb/>
Biographical Directory of Librarians in the<lb/>
U.S. and Canada, Personalities of the<lb/>
South, International Scholars Directory,<lb/>
and Men of Achievement - 1973<lb/>
Food co-op uses skills,not money<lb/>
(CPS)Members of the "Food Con-<lb/>
spiracy a food co-cp in Tucson, Ariz<lb/>
have begun a skill exchange program<lb/>
called the "Work Conspiracy on the<lb/>
principle that people should be exchaning<lb/>
skills and not money.<lb/>
People who join the "conspiracy"<lb/>
receive four work coupons, good for four<lb/>
hours labor rendered by other members.<lb/>
Each person lists their skills which are<lb/>
then on file for members who desire that<lb/>
particular service. For every hour one<lb/>
works he or she earns one coupon,<lb/>
although the number is negotiable<lb/>
depending upon the desirability of the<lb/>
m<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Twenty-five people have signed-up<lb/>
with the two-week old program, each<lb/>
listing five to six skills ranging from<lb/>
candle-making and foot massaging to<lb/>
computor programming and dentistry.<lb/>
The idea for the exchange evolved<lb/>
from similar programs in Washington<lb/>
D.C. and Florida, where membership cost<lb/>
$15 and tools were provided by the<lb/>
worker. The "work conspiracy" asks only<lb/>
for a 25 cent donation and "employers"<lb/>
are required to provide tools and material.<lb/>
The work-exchange concept is<lb/>
precendented in American history by 19th<lb/>
century anarchist Josiah Warren who<lb/>
operated a successful "time store" for<lb/>
several years in New Harmony, Indiana.<lb/>
Warren felt the only true basis of<lb/>
wealth or currency was labor. Ac-<lb/>
cordingly customers paid for articles in<lb/>
his store with "labor notes by which<lb/>
they promised to render a certain number<lb/>
of working hours.<lb/>
Five percent of the coupons at the<lb/>
"conspiracy" are given out "free" to<lb/>
people who cannot donate skills at the<lb/>
moment because of sickness or disability.<lb/>
Besides exchanging skills the "work<lb/>
conspiracy" hopes to encourage com-<lb/>
munity action and would like to see 300 to<lb/>
400 members per organization and several<lb/>
organizations in various parts of the city.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Stanford Daily<lb/>
sues against<lb/>
office searches<lb/>
(CPS)-Prompted by a police search of<lb/>
psychiatric records at a local hospital, the<lb/>
staff of the University of Stanford Daily<lb/>
recently filed suit, for the second time in<lb/>
two years, seeking a preliminary<lb/>
injunction against future searches of its<lb/>
campus office.<lb/>
The Daily staff sought similar relief<lb/>
following a police search of their office in<lb/>
April, 1971.<lb/>
At that time, Palo Alto police and<lb/>
Santa Clara sheriff's deputies, armed with<lb/>
search warrants, searched the Daily staff's<lb/>
filed, desks and personal belongings for<lb/>
photographs of a recent campus<lb/>
sit-in. They left empty-handed.<lb/>
DISTRICT COURT<lb/>
Later that year, a U.S. District Court<lb/>
judge ruled the search illegal and<lb/>
unconstitutional under the first, fourth,<lb/>
fifth and fourteenth amendments of the<lb/>
U.S. Constitution. The judge criticized<lb/>
issuance of search warrants to police for<lb/>
the purpose of inflicting a search on a<lb/>
party not suspected of a crime.<lb/>
He termed the use of search warrants<lb/>
an "excessive measure" which left the<lb/>
Daily staff with no legal recourse.<lb/>
The judge refused, however, to issue<lb/>
an injunction preventing further searches,<lb/>
explaining that it was unnecessary since<lb/>
police would obey the ruling of the court.<lb/>
That decision is currently under appeal<lb/>
by the Palo Alto police department.<lb/>
INVESTIGATORS<lb/>
Over the summer, investigators from<lb/>
the local district attorney's office, again<lb/>
used search warrants this time to seek<lb/>
psychiatric records at Stanford Hospital.<lb/>
Similarity of the two cases led the Daily<lb/>
staff to file suit a second time, requesting<lb/>
that the court issue a permanent<lb/>
injunction against further searches.<lb/>
A spokesperson for the Daily staff<lb/>
expressed doubt that a court would issue<lb/>
such an injunction, despite the Palo Alto<lb/>
police department's disregard for the<lb/>
earlier court ruling.<lb/>
Fashionmaker talks<lb/>
about male designs<lb/>
By CAROL WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Men have been discriminated against!<lb/>
Men have almost been totally left out of<lb/>
the fashion - sewing realm.<lb/>
Though many might still lead you to<lb/>
believe it, fashion is not just for the fairer<lb/>
sex. Fashion, just as almost everything<lb/>
else, has been liberated. And in that<lb/>
liberation a victory has been scored.<lb/>
Men who were once sentenced to wear<lb/>
the classic "Gray flannel suit have been<lb/>
reprieved. Now the menswear department<lb/>
is just as colorful and up-to-date as the<lb/>
ladieswear department.<lb/>
Men have always made an important<lb/>
contribution to the high fashion or "haute<lb/>
couture" world; and it has been almost<lb/>
common knowledge that the best tailors<lb/>
are men.<lb/>
But, why the gap? Why have men<lb/>
either been high fashion designers or<lb/>
tailors, or expressed no interest in fashion<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING .by phil frank<lb/>
'OKilV 3U59 MORE SWOPPING DAYS<lb/>
'TIL IW<lb/>
l COllEGE MEDIA SERVlCESBOx 9, ' BERKELEY CA 94709<lb/>
- sewing whatsoever?<lb/>
Fortunately this gap has been<lb/>
bridged. Designers have seen the light<lb/>
and responded by designing menswear for<lb/>
the man of the 70's.<lb/>
The burial of the gray flannel suit has<lb/>
been superceeded by the birth of suede<lb/>
safari jackets, body shirts, high-rise<lb/>
corduroy pants, Eisenhower jackets,<lb/>
softly gathered shirts, plaid sport coats;<lb/>
the list is a varied as is the man of the<lb/>
70's.<lb/>
Menswear now comes in such a wide<lb/>
range of colors, that it would make even<lb/>
"Madame Butterfly" look drab.<lb/>
Contemporary menswear designers<lb/>
include Scot Barrie, Willie Smith, Kenzo,<lb/>
Pierre Cardin, Bill Blass, and John<lb/>
Kloss. Not only are they designing<lb/>
menswear, but also patterns for<lb/>
menswear.<lb/>
Don't panic guys - it's not as bad as<lb/>
you think!<lb/>
Pattern companies are producing easy<lb/>
versions for making unlined vests and<lb/>
jackets, as well as other garments.<lb/>
To help those who feel a little nervous<lb/>
about their first project, Simplicity makes<lb/>
an illustrated text entitled. "Sewing for<lb/>
Men and Boys Other pattern companies<lb/>
produce similar texts.<lb/>
Don't just say sewing is for girls and<lb/>
I'll have no part of it. Sewing is an art - a<lb/>
creative outlet for anyone who wishes to<lb/>
pursue it.<lb/>
In February, 1972, Mademoiselle<lb/>
published the results of a menswear<lb/>
survey. They found that man, from New<lb/>
York to California, are interested in<lb/>
sewing. The reason most frequently<lb/>
stated was creativity.<lb/>
I'm not guaranteeing that with a<lb/>
pattern and a "How to book , you will<lb/>
become a high fashion designer or a tailor<lb/>
in one easy lesson, but you might enjoy<lb/>
the experiment.<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
THIS NUMBER<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
You may not need it today, tomorrow,<lb/>
or next week, but someday you will<lb/>
need it. everyone eventually does.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
IMMMMMlMMiV<lb/>
13<lb/>
Education use<lb/>
finds answer<lb/>
To many college students in our<lb/>
nation the biggest question is how they<lb/>
can use their college education to benefit<lb/>
others without having a Master's or Ph.D.<lb/>
degree. For those freshmen and sopho-<lb/>
mores interested in math and science, the<lb/>
State University of New York may have the<lb/>
answer.<lb/>
On the campus of the State University<lb/>
at Brockport there exists a unique<lb/>
program known as the Peace CorpsCol-<lb/>
lege Degree Program. The program, the<lb/>
only one in the U.S.A was started at<lb/>
Brockport in 1967, for the purpose of<lb/>
training teachers in the math and science<lb/>
areas to be stationed overseas as Peace<lb/>
Corps volunteers for two years. The first<lb/>
five years of the program were aimed at<lb/>
sending teachers to Latin America but the<lb/>
new emphasis is on Franchphone Africa,<lb/>
especially Zaire, the former Belgian<lb/>
Congo. In fact the project director has<lb/>
just returned from a two year teaching<lb/>
tour there.<lb/>
The program, which lasts for 15<lb/>
months, is geared towards training<lb/>
volunteers who have finished the<lb/>
equivalent of a two year program, 60<lb/>
credits, with enough hours in their math<lb/>
or science major to finish in four<lb/>
semesters. The graduates, who minor in<lb/>
French, Zaire's official language; receive<lb/>
a Bachelor's Degree and provisional New<lb/>
York State Teacher Certification.<lb/>
The program begins in June,<lb/>
continues through the fall, the spring, and<lb/>
a second summer. During the two<lb/>
summer sessions the students receive<lb/>
intensive training with special attention<lb/>
given to French, taught by an<lb/>
international staff. During the academic<lb/>
year the trainees take a full load which<lb/>
includes the French courses taught by<lb/>
Professor Georges Hingot, who lived in<lb/>
Zaire before and after its independence.<lb/>
The French courses involve total<lb/>
immersion and are designed to give the<lb/>
students a working vocabulary so that<lb/>
they can teach in French by the second<lb/>
summer of training.<lb/>
During the spring semester the<lb/>
co-directors; Norrell Noble and academic<lb/>
director, Dr. Elaine K. Miller, hope to take<lb/>
Student newspaper closes<lb/>
due to SGA impounding<lb/>
(CPS)-The Edinboro State College<lb/>
Spectator was shut down when the<lb/>
Student Government Association (SGA)<lb/>
voted to impound all the newspaper's<lb/>
funds on the basis of charges that the<lb/>
Spectator had violated the school's<lb/>
Student Bill of Rights.<lb/>
SGA President Larry Hill and Spectator<lb/>
Editor David Rutherford met October 2<lb/>
and came to an agreement to release<lb/>
funds for an October 5 issue of Spectator,<lb/>
but the Student Congress has not yet<lb/>
voted on releasing any further funds<lb/>
despite the fact that the Hill-Rutherford<lb/>
meeting involved "many of the differences<lb/>
between the two organizations accord-<lb/>
ing to Hill.<lb/>
The Student Congress took the<lb/>
September 28 action against the Spectator<lb/>
following a report by Hill, in which he<lb/>
said he had written a letter to the<lb/>
college's recently reactivated Student<lb/>
Publications Board. Hill's letter charged<lb/>
Spectator with a violation of the Edinboro<lb/>
State College Student Bill of Rights.<lb/>
The letter claimed articles appearing in<lb/>
the first three issues of the Spectator this<lb/>
fall were examples of poor journalism, in<lb/>
that they contained "undocumented<lb/>
allegations, attacks on personal integrity<lb/>
and techniques of innuendo levied against<lb/>
certain members of SGA and against the<lb/>
congress itself Hill did not specifically<lb/>
name the allegations he was referring to,<lb/>
but he recommended that the Public-<lb/>
the students to schools in French<lb/>
speaking Canada to give them the<lb/>
experience of teaching in a francophone<lb/>
classroom.<lb/>
Noble reports that last year's groups<lb/>
has finished its training and is now at<lb/>
schools throughout the Zaire. The<lb/>
present group of 26 will take up their<lb/>
assignments next August. Both Miller<lb/>
and Noble stress that there is a serious<lb/>
need for trained teachers, one that Peace<lb/>
Corps is helping to fill, so if you qualify<lb/>
for this program and are interested in<lb/>
teaching in Africa, write to: Peace<lb/>
Corps College Degree Program, 112<lb/>
Hartwell Hall, SUC Brockport, Brockport,<lb/>
New York 14420.<lb/>
at ions Board investigate the charges and<lb/>
issue an offical reprimand to the<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
The Student Congress, many members<lb/>
of which were newly elected and<lb/>
attending their first session, approved<lb/>
Hill's letter without further investigation<lb/>
of the charges and ordered Spectator's<lb/>
funds impounded.<lb/>
The Spectator recently received First<lb/>
Class honors from the National Critical<lb/>
Survey of the Associated Collegiate<lb/>
Press, the second highest possible rating<lb/>
given, in competition with 3200 other<lb/>
schools. A special mark of distinction<lb/>
was awarded to the Spectator in the areas<lb/>
of writing and editing. The evaluator<lb/>
indicated the Spectator was "an excellent<lb/>
publication, indicative of sound journa-<lb/>
lism and high standards<lb/>
A joint statement issued by Hill and<lb/>
Rutherford following their two hour<lb/>
October 2 meeting said agreement had<lb/>
been reached to reduce the number of<lb/>
cotes held by the Editor and Advisor on<lb/>
the Spectator Editorial Board from three<lb/>
votes each, to one vote apieve; that the<lb/>
Editor should be elected by a majority<lb/>
vote of the Board; and that the editorial<lb/>
policy should be controlled by the<lb/>
Editorial Board.<lb/>
The only mention of Hil's original<lb/>
charges was that "a more conscientious<lb/>
effort be made in researching background<lb/>
material for editorial comment<lb/>
In a separate statement, the<lb/>
Publications Board recommended Hill "be<lb/>
allowed to withdraw the formal<lb/>
complaints against the Spectator's<lb/>
editorial staff" and that the impounded<lb/>
funds should be released.<lb/>
In an editorial in the special October 5<lb/>
issue, Spectator asserted that "the basic<lb/>
concepts at stake are the role of<lb/>
newspaper in relation to government and<lb/>
government's consequential powers of<lb/>
control<lb/>
N.C. students<lb/>
establish exec.<lb/>
group<lb/>
Spock states change fm<lb/>
in 'sexist' policy<lb/>
Dr Benjamin Spock yesterday joined the ranks of the women's<lb/>
liberationists by declaring in the November issue of Redbook<lb/>
maqazine, just released, that he will use "she" and "her" to cover boy<lb/>
and girl in his future writings, just as "he" and "him" have been used<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
The noted pediatrician, who has been strongly criticized as a<lb/>
"sexist" by members of the Women's Liberation Movement,<lb/>
explained that the Movement has made him aware of the many<lb/>
injustices against women.<lb/>
"The (generic) use of the male pronoun is one of the many<lb/>
examples of discrimination, each of which may seem of small<lb/>
consequence in itself but which, when added up, help to keep<lb/>
women at an enormous disadvantagein employment, in the courts,<lb/>
in the universities and in conventional social life Dr. Spock said.<lb/>
Admitting that his solution to the problem may confuse some<lb/>
people Dr. Spock argued, "It has the special virtue of reminding<lb/>
people'how much girls and women have been cheated in the past and<lb/>
how much needs to be done in order to repair the damage<lb/>
Dr Spock, who writes a monthly column for Redbook, said that in<lb/>
his search for a more equitable reference to members of both sexes,<lb/>
he considered using "an illegitimate hybrid, 'she Though it would<lb/>
irritate many people, it has a neatness to it. But there is no similar<lb/>
way to condense 'herhim' or 'herhis<lb/>
A new power structure has been<lb/>
formed within the North Carolina<lb/>
university system. It is the Union of<lb/>
North Carolina Student Body Presidents.<lb/>
On October 20, 1973, Mr. Terry Carroll,<lb/>
President of the student body at NCSU,<lb/>
will gavel into session the first meeting of<lb/>
university student presidents, since he<lb/>
was elected last September 21 in CHapel<lb/>
Hill, to head up this organization.<lb/>
The Union's initial goal will be to<lb/>
organize into an effective information<lb/>
distribution center for all cmpuses. If a<lb/>
campus needs information concerning a<lb/>
matter which another campus has had<lb/>
experience with, then the president can<lb/>
contact the Union, and through a<lb/>
clearinghouse arrangement will feed the<lb/>
requested information back to the campus<lb/>
concerned.<lb/>
The Union is also considering using<lb/>
its organization for voicing concerns<lb/>
about policies and politics which directly<lb/>
relate to the students, but which over the<lb/>
years has not been coordinated to get<lb/>
joing concerns approved.<lb/>
Carroll sees the role of the Union<lb/>
expanding greatly in the near future to<lb/>
include even activities with lobby groups<lb/>
in the state legislature.<lb/>
This power structure will now be able<lb/>
to help smaller colleges, who in the past<lb/>
have been unable to effect change<lb/>
because their student body was not large<lb/>
enough and strong enough to bring about<lb/>
needed changes. With the combined<lb/>
power of over 12 schools, it is felt that the<lb/>
students will be experiencing power in<lb/>
dealing with their particular problems,<lb/>
which they have not had ever before, in<lb/>
the past.<lb/>
This first meeting to be held at N.C.<lb/>
State University, will deal with the goal<lb/>
setting and organizational making roles<lb/>
this Union feels needs to be done. The<lb/>
meeting will begin on Saturday, October<lb/>
20 at 1:00 p.m. and continue on Sunday,<lb/>
October 21 at 10:00 a.m. at the University<lb/>
Student Center, NCSU campus.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039884_0014"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Underground group hits Farnham appointed to<lb/>
in offices in protest N.C.Art Commission<lb/>
(CPS)-Four days after a bomb exploded<lb/>
in the New York offices of the<lb/>
International Telephone and Telegraph<lb/>
(ITT) Corporation's Latin American<lb/>
Division, College Press Service (CPS) in<lb/>
Denver received a letter from the "Weather<lb/>
Underground" claiming responsibility for<lb/>
the action.<lb/>
The early morning Sept. 28th<lb/>
explosion left none injured but destroyed<lb/>
700 square feet of office space, blasted<lb/>
out windows, splintered furniture and<lb/>
crumpled metal air ducts.<lb/>
The five page mimeographed letter,<lb/>
bearing a Sept. 29th "pray for peace"<lb/>
postmark accuses ITT and the U.S.<lb/>
government of financing and training the<lb/>
military leaders who three weeks ago<lb/>
overthrew Marxist President Salvador<lb/>
Allende's democratically elected govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
It further states that U.S. government<lb/>
corporations made economic stability in<lb/>
Chile an impossibility by withdrawing all<lb/>
non-military aid, vetoing Chile's requests<lb/>
for long-term economic assistance from<lb/>
the World Bank and by pressuring private<lb/>
banks to withdraw 85 percent of Chile's<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
The Weather Underground's con-<lb/>
tention that "thousands of sisters and<lb/>
brothers" were being "indiscriminately<lb/>
executed" was substanitated this week by<lb/>
Newsweek's first hand report of a "reign<lb/>
of terror" in Chile that has claimed as<lb/>
manv as "2.796 cornses<lb/>
Last February ITT Chairman Harold S.<lb/>
Geneen conceded to a Senate committee<lb/>
that his conglomerate had offered the<lb/>
U.S. government $1 million to help block<lb/>
Allende's election. Allende's government<lb/>
had taken over operation of ITTs<lb/>
telephone system in Chile.<lb/>
The Weather Underground letter reads<lb/>
in part:<lb/>
"Tonight we attacked the ITT<lb/>
headquarters for Latin America in New<lb/>
York City, in support of the people of<lb/>
Chile, and to add our voice to the<lb/>
international expression of outrage and<lb/>
anger at the involvement of ITT and the<lb/>
U.S. government in the overthrow of<lb/>
Socialist Chile.<lb/>
"Without the machinations of ITT and<lb/>
U.S. government these events would not<lb/>
have happened. In spite of their insolent<lb/>
denials they stand indicted by their own<lb/>
words and deeds. The blood of<lb/>
thousands of people is on their hands<lb/>
"ITT is a symbol to the whole world of<lb/>
U.S. greed and ruthlessness. ITT can be<lb/>
understood by millions of people as an<lb/>
international enemy. They have offices in<lb/>
every major U.S. city and seventy<lb/>
countries. They created the electronic<lb/>
battlefield in Vietnam. They made the<lb/>
avionics system that guided Nixon's<lb/>
bombs to the hospitals of Hanoi. They<lb/>
should be attacked throughout this<lb/>
country<lb/>
The return address on the letter was<lb/>
stamped 437 Madison Ave NY, NY, the<lb/>
site of the explosion<lb/>
CED recommendation<lb/>
for doubling of tuition<lb/>
meets sharpe criticism<lb/>
The recent recommendation made by<lb/>
the Committee for Economic Development<lb/>
(CED) to double tuition has drawn sharp<lb/>
criticism from Student National Education<lb/>
Association President Thomas A.<lb/>
Santesteban.<lb/>
Speaking for 80,000 students on over<lb/>
1,100 college and university campuses<lb/>
across the nation, Santesteban said, "If<lb/>
this report is accepted, it could become<lb/>
another example of the Nixon Adminis-<lb/>
tration's providing treatment without<lb/>
diagnosing the illness<lb/>
"Where were the students on the<lb/>
Commission?" asked Santesteban. "It is<lb/>
extremely difficult for me to understand<lb/>
how a committee can presume to make<lb/>
recommendations affecting the lives and<lb/>
pocketbooks of millions of students, and<lb/>
never seek their opinions. The ineptness<lb/>
of this committee is evidenced by its<lb/>
shortsightedness in its failure, to<lb/>
recognize today's educational needs.<lb/>
"This plan would double or triple<lb/>
tuitions, force students out of their<lb/>
planned courses of study with no<lb/>
consideration of such things as loans<lb/>
already taken out for their future. What<lb/>
are the possibilities of today's students<lb/>
being able to finish their education?"<lb/>
"How can students not be considered<lb/>
a vital part of such a commission?" asked<lb/>
Santesteban, a senior at Northern Arizona<lb/>
University, Flagstaff. "They are the real<lb/>
consumers of our national product labeled<lb/>
wmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
'education How can a trade commission<lb/>
presume to know the needs of students or<lb/>
of education? Students, parents, and<lb/>
educators are the only people qualified to<lb/>
speak to these needs. Once again the<lb/>
protected interests groups are about to<lb/>
squeeze the middle American into paying<lb/>
for an entire national program<lb/>
"This commission spent $400,000 on<lb/>
the study he continued. "I shudder to<lb/>
think how many students could have been<lb/>
educated for this amount of money. To<lb/>
-really get at the problem, the money<lb/>
should have gone into legislative efforts<lb/>
to restructure the educational financing<lb/>
system<lb/>
"It would be easy to compare this to<lb/>
the recent Russian Wheat Deal the 23<lb/>
year old student leader commented. "I<lb/>
seriously question whether the com-<lb/>
mission has considered the far-reaching<lb/>
ramifications of its recommendation.<lb/>
Again, it appears that the American public<lb/>
will be asked to pay for an inequitable<lb/>
.decision made by a few<lb/>
"Where are our vested rights as<lb/>
students?" Santesteban asked. "If we<lb/>
really are concerned on a national level<lb/>
about the education of students today,<lb/>
let's put the entire program into<lb/>
perspective. This report should be<lb/>
rejected. Any future atten pts to analyze<lb/>
and develop the financial structuring of<lb/>
education must include the real consumer<lb/>
of educationthe student<lb/>
By H. GLENN HARGETT, JR.<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Dr. Emily Famham of the ECU School<lb/>
of Art, was recently appointed to the NC<lb/>
Art Commission by Gov. Holshouser. By<lb/>
appointing Dr. Famham, the commission<lb/>
fulfills a requirement that at least two<lb/>
members of the commission be from<lb/>
university art of design faculties.<lb/>
Dr. Joseph Sloane from UNC-CH is the<lb/>
other faculty member and chairman of the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
The Art Commission acts as a board of<lb/>
trustees for the NC Art Museum, but<lb/>
under state reorganization plan the<lb/>
group's name was changed to NC Art<lb/>
Commission with their duties remaining<lb/>
the same.<lb/>
Dr. Farnham hopes to represent the<lb/>
East on the Commission. She has already<lb/>
spoken out for eastern artists' rights at<lb/>
the first meeting. Also at the first<lb/>
meeting, Dr. Farnham was appointed to<lb/>
the Loan and Acquisition Committee.<lb/>
In the last round of appointments the<lb/>
Governor and the NC Art Society, each<lb/>
appointed two appointees to the<lb/>
Commission. Dr. Farnham and Mrs.<lb/>
Jeanne Rauch of Gastonia were the two<lb/>
gubernatorial appointees this time. The<lb/>
Art Society elected Finley T. White of<lb/>
Durham, president of the NC Art Society<lb/>
and Gorden Hanes of Winston Salem.<lb/>
Dr. Emily Famham<lb/>
Eddie Smith<lb/>
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All-Confer<lb/>
All-Americ<lb/>
Lombardi<lb/>
Kepley<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
in high sc<lb/>
linebacker<lb/>
A mid<lb/>
several pic<lb/>
waist up r<lb/>
order to (<lb/>
lineman cl<lb/>
down he I<lb/>
cover runn<lb/>
pass patt<lb/>
quarterbac<lb/>
like a rece<lb/>
Kepley<lb/>
in the mi<lb/>
foot and v<lb/>
"When<lb/>
linebacker<lb/>
pure anirn;<lb/>
have to be<lb/>
he hits ar<lb/>
should kn<lb/>
who hit hii<lb/>
to do tw<lb/>
think<lb/>
The r<lb/>
defensive<lb/>
keys or cli<lb/>
Kepley<lb/>
has three I<lb/>
guards an<lb/>
you read y<lb/>
But thi<lb/>
middle lin<lb/>
to read I<lb/>
accomplisl<lb/>
films.<lb/>
"The te<lb/>
to study<lb/>
another c<lb/>
team's of<lb/>
varsity run<lb/>
practice f<lb/>
thoroughly<lb/>
Kepley<lb/>
defensive<lb/>
nator Carl<lb/>
"I look<lb/>
play. Coac<lb/>
Lad<lb/>
East C<lb/>
team will<lb/>
Saturday i.<lb/>
swimmers<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Minges Nc<lb/>
The<lb/>
abundance<lb/>
chian, but<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
ECU s<lb/>
Smiley, B<lb/>
Donna W<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0015"/><lb/>
0<lb/>
to the<lb/>
d Mrs.<lb/>
the two<lb/>
me. The<lb/>
Vhite of<lb/>
Society<lb/>
Jem.<lb/>
IT<lb/>
ek<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm0mmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1218 OCT. 1973<lb/>
15<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Kepley calls the shots<lb/>
By STEPHEN G. THOMPKINS<lb/>
Vince Lombardi, the great molder of<lb/>
the Green Bay Packer championship team<lb/>
of the 1960's, said a middle linebacker<lb/>
had to be like a maddock, part tool and<lb/>
part weapon.<lb/>
Danny Kepley, East Carolina's<lb/>
All-Conference and Honorable Mention<lb/>
Ail-American linebacker, certainly fits<lb/>
Lombardi's designs.<lb/>
Kepley, All-Conference in football and<lb/>
basketball and MVP of his baseball team<lb/>
in high school has all the equipment of a<lb/>
linebacker.<lb/>
A middle linebacker really has to be<lb/>
several players rolled into one. From the<lb/>
waist up he has to be a defensive end in<lb/>
order to confront a 240 pound offensive<lb/>
lineman charging at him. From the waist<lb/>
down he has to be a cornerback able to<lb/>
cover running backs with greater speed on<lb/>
pass patterns. He has to think like a<lb/>
quarterback, run like a fullback and catch<lb/>
like a receiver.<lb/>
Kepley relishes the the roll of the man<lb/>
in the middle, though standing only six<lb/>
foot and weighing 200 pounds.<lb/>
"When most people think of the Meg<lb/>
linebacker they think of Dick Butkus, the<lb/>
pure animal. And to play the position you<lb/>
have to be part animal. Butkus says when<lb/>
he hits an opposing player that the man<lb/>
should know by the force of the impact<lb/>
who hit him. To play the middle you have<lb/>
to do two things, be aggressive and<lb/>
think<lb/>
The middle linebacker calls the<lb/>
defensive signals and adjusts to certain<lb/>
keys or clues the offense gives him.<lb/>
Kepley says, "the middle linebacker<lb/>
has three basic keys; the center, the two<lb/>
guards and the running backs. From them<lb/>
you read your opponents moves<lb/>
But there's a fine line here, for the<lb/>
middle linebacker has only a split second<lb/>
to read his opponent's intentions. To<lb/>
accomplish this Kepley studies hours of<lb/>
films.<lb/>
"The team meets three nights a week<lb/>
to study films and usually I stay for<lb/>
another couple of hours to study the<lb/>
team's offense. Of course our junior<lb/>
varsity runs the opponents offense on the<lb/>
practice field, so by Saturday we're<lb/>
thoroughly familiar with it<lb/>
Kepley gets help in calling the<lb/>
defensive signals from defensive coordi-<lb/>
nator Carl Reese.<lb/>
"I look over to the sidelines after each<lb/>
play. Coach Reese and I have worked out<lb/>
the defensive signals during the week and<lb/>
he signals what kind of formation he<lb/>
wants. I call the signal and any specific<lb/>
assignment in our huddle<lb/>
Trouble arises sometime when<lb/>
opponents run a wide variety of offensive<lb/>
formations, as Southern Mississippi did<lb/>
when ECU beat them 13-0 earlier this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"Against Southern Miss. I probably<lb/>
had my hardest game in college. They ran<lb/>
out of ten or more offensive sets. We had<lb/>
a different defensive formation for each<lb/>
set. Because of this I had to call the<lb/>
defense at the line of scrimmage. I had to<lb/>
recognize the offense they were running<lb/>
and call the defense at the line before the<lb/>
snap. Failing to do this would result in<lb/>
something resembling a Chinese fire<lb/>
drill<lb/>
Kepley began playing football in<lb/>
Hawaii while his father was stationed<lb/>
there. At Goldsboro High School he was<lb/>
an All-Conference performer two years,<lb/>
his junior year at safety and his senior<lb/>
year at fullback.<lb/>
Several schools showed interest in<lb/>
Kepley including N.C. State, Wake Forest<lb/>
and Duke, but ECU finally won out.<lb/>
Selected the outstanding freshman<lb/>
player his first year at ECU, Kepley has<lb/>
become what some consider the finest<lb/>
linebacker in the school's history.<lb/>
Anchoring the "Wild Dogs the name<lb/>
of the defensive unit, Kepley so far this<lb/>
year has intercepted three passes and<lb/>
against Southern Illinois was credited<lb/>
with 14 unassisted tackles.<lb/>
A physical education major in college<lb/>
who would like to coach young kids,<lb/>
Kepley dreams of a chance to play pro<lb/>
football.<lb/>
"To play in the NFL is the zenith of<lb/>
anyone's career in football. To play<lb/>
against the best you have to play like<lb/>
them. They are doing you a favor and<lb/>
you've got to earn it<lb/>
To prepare for this dream Kepley goes<lb/>
through a vigorous program of<lb/>
weightlifting and running during the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The middle linebacker no longer<lb/>
exhibits the sole trait of strength like the<lb/>
Spartans of Greece but rather resembles<lb/>
the Athenean warrior of brawn and<lb/>
scholar.<lb/>
Mind you the oblique, sinister bearing<lb/>
of a Butkus is still there, but the cunning<lb/>
of a S. Holmes can also be glimpsed at a<lb/>
distance.<lb/>
Lady swimmers face ASU<lb/>
East Carolina's women's swimming<lb/>
team will open their 1973-74 season on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon as they host the lady<lb/>
swimmers from Appalachian State<lb/>
University. The meet will be held in<lb/>
Minges Natatorium at 1 p.m.<lb/>
The lady Pirates have had an<lb/>
abundance of success against Appala-<lb/>
chian, but they expect a tough meet this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
ECU swimmers to watch are Linda<lb/>
Smiley, Bev Osborn, Linda Shut I and<lb/>
Donna Webb. Saturday's diving event<lb/>
should shape up to be quite a battle<lb/>
between Bucs Cindy Wheeler and Sue<lb/>
Bingham.<lb/>
The lady swimmer's next action will be<lb/>
at the UNC Relays in Chapel Hill on<lb/>
Friday, Oct. 26.<lb/>
CAPTAIN MARION HART (foreground) leads the women's field hockey team into<lb/>
action this afternoon against UNC-CH. The girls are currently 0-0-1 following last<lb/>
week's tie with UNC-G.<lb/>
Carson praises team<lb/>
It's seldom that a coach sporting a 1-4<lb/>
record is overly enthusiastic or optimistic<lb/>
about his team. But, this is exactly the<lb/>
case with coach Bill Carson, East<lb/>
Carolina cross-country coach.<lb/>
Coming off a decisive win over<lb/>
Appalachian State in a race Carson<lb/>
described as "one of the best his East<lb/>
Carolina team has ever won the harriers<lb/>
are looking forward to the next meet at<lb/>
Mount St. Mary's College in Emments-<lb/>
burg, Md Oct. 20.<lb/>
"Mount St. Mary's whipped us last<lb/>
year and will definitely be favored again<lb/>
this weekend. However, I think that we<lb/>
will be able to run on even terms with<lb/>
them<lb/>
Coach Carson's optimism is reflected<lb/>
by the performances of four of his runners<lb/>
against Appalachian State. Ed Rigsby,<lb/>
Jerry Klas, Scott Miller and Jerry Hilliard<lb/>
all finished the five-mile race in less than<lb/>
26 minutes. Rigsby captured first place<lb/>
with a time of 25:48 minutes.<lb/>
"We're getting better each week<lb/>
Carson thinks. "Anytime a team has four<lb/>
runners under 26 minutes for five miles,<lb/>
they're going to be hard to beat<lb/>
Carson doesn't think the record is<lb/>
indicative of the team's ability. All four<lb/>
losses came in a five-way meet against<lb/>
William &amp; Mary, North Carolina State,<lb/>
V.P.I, and Pembroke.<lb/>
"We're a young team and as such, we<lb/>
have a depth problem in big meets like<lb/>
that. But, our long training period and the<lb/>
experience from the first races is<lb/>
beginning to pay off. The meet at<lb/>
Apalachian was really competetive and<lb/>
well run. I was extremely pleased with the<lb/>
overall performance of the entire<lb/>
team. We now feel that we're ready to<lb/>
compete with anybody on equal terms<lb/>
Following the trip to Mount St. Mary's, <lb/>
East Carolina travels to Raleigh, Oct. 27<lb/>
for the North Carolina Championships and<lb/>
then to Greenville S.C. for the Southern<lb/>
Conference Championships Nov. 3.<lb/>
Women netters drop ACC<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Riding the winning ways of Ginny<lb/>
Deese, ECU'S women's tennis team<lb/>
remained undefeated by defeating Atlantic<lb/>
Christian 8-1 Monday.<lb/>
Miss Deese defeated Joan Adams,<lb/>
ranked in the top ten in women's tennis<lb/>
in North Carolina, 3-6,6-3,6-1. Miss<lb/>
Deese used her quickness to continuely<lb/>
return the sure winners of Miss<lb/>
Adams. Miss Adams became more and<lb/>
more frustrated by Miss Deese's returns<lb/>
and fell completely apart in the last set.<lb/>
Miss Deese then teamed with Miss<lb/>
Averett to win their doubles match 8-2.<lb/>
The Pirates number one doubles team<lb/>
of Susan Bussey and Ellen Warren won a<lb/>
tight match 10-8, and Misses Gaster and<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
Howard won 8-3.<lb/>
Other Pirates who won singles<lb/>
matches were Susan Bussey, Ellen<lb/>
Warren, Ann Archer and Ann Chavasse.<lb/>
Miss Chavasse won a grueling three hour<lb/>
match 5-7, 6-2, 6-4.<lb/>
ECU now stands 5-0 for the year, with<lb/>
the season half over.<lb/>
Gibson resfs quietly<lb/>
Pirate tight end, Benny Gibson, the<lb/>
team's leading receiver is resting<lb/>
comfortably following shoulder surgery<lb/>
Monday. Gibson will be lost for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
0Mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5: NO. 1218 OCT.1973<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
vm<lb/>
Sports World<lb/>
By STEPHEN G. TOMPKINS<lb/>
OLYMPICS<lb/>
The International Olympic Committee last Tuesday voted to eliminate 10 events<lb/>
from the 1976 games in Montreal.<lb/>
Meeting in Varna, Bulgaria, the committee said it decided to eliminate the events<lb/>
to prevent the Olympics from becoming too gigantic and taking interest away from<lb/>
other events.  <lb/>
The events eliminated were the 50-kilometer walk, and in swimming the mens<lb/>
and women's 200-meter individual medley and the men's 400-meter freestyle<lb/>
relay. All four canoe slalom races were scratched and one event each from cycling<lb/>
and shooting.<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
Jimmy Connors beat Marty Riessen 6-1, 6-4, 6-7, 6-0 in the finals of the-<lb/>
$50,000 Quebec City Open.<lb/>
Billy Jean King won the $40,000 Phoenix-Feberge Tournament for the fourth<lb/>
consecutive year by defeating Nancy Gunter 6-3, 6-1. <lb/>
Ken Rosewall defeated Japan's Toshiro Sakai to win the $25,000 Osaka Open,<lb/>
first stop on the Asian pro tennis tour. Tom Gorman and Jeff Borowiak beat<lb/>
Rosewall and Jun Kamiwazumi 6-4, 7-6 to win the doubles.<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
ECU women's volleyball team defeated Duke Univ. in Memorial Gym Monday<lb/>
n'9The Pirates won 15-5, 15-12 and showed great consistency throughout the<lb/>
match. The entire team saw action in the contest.<lb/>
ECU next faces Chowan College Oct. 22 at Chowan gym. The women will be<lb/>
taking a 5-1 record with them.<lb/>
MOTOR SPORTS TRAGEDY<lb/>
French Formula I driver Francois Cevert, 29, died as his Tyrell-Ford crashed into<lb/>
a barrier at Watkins Glen during a qualifying run at the U.S. Grand Prix.<lb/>
On Wednesday of this week the three time world champion driver Jackie Stewart<lb/>
announced his retirement. Stewart saw three of his dear friends die in auto racing,<lb/>
Piers Courage, Jochen Rindt and Jimmy Clark. One can not blame Stewart for trying<lb/>
to avoid his companions' fate.<lb/>
"OLD' SWIMMING<lb/>
73 year old Clarence Boss set four Masters swim records for men over 70 at the<lb/>
AAU Lonq Course Championships in Chicago last week. He swan the 1500 meters<lb/>
in four and one half minutes and bettered the 50, 100 and 200 meter freestyle<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
COMMENT<lb/>
The retiring of Jackie Stewart is sad news to all sports fans. Not only was<lb/>
Stewart a great athlete, but he continuely defeated the man who lived in his cockpit,<lb/>
death<lb/>
Stewart saw three of his friends die in flaming wrecks, and chose to stop at his<lb/>
peak Stewart in 1973 for the third time in his career won the world driving<lb/>
championship. He won 27 Grand Prix victories this year which set a record for the<lb/>
most in one year. He won South Africa, Belgium and Monte Carlo and wound up the<lb/>
year with victories at Zandvoort and The Nurburgring. He dominated his class.<lb/>
Possibly the most recent of his long line of friends to die, Francois Cevert,<lb/>
described Stewart best.<lb/>
"Jackie faces two options, neither of them very appealing. He can quit racing<lb/>
and save his life, or he can quit racing and lose what his life is about. There are two<lb/>
kinds of death in this sport. There is physical death, which probably does not hurt<lb/>
as much, and there is psychic death, which I'm certain hurts quite a little bit. If<lb/>
Jackie retires, what can he do that will take the place of this<lb/>
So a legend is gone from the sports pages of the world, yet unlike his<lb/>
companions he walked away from it.<lb/>
Quotes about Citadel<lb/>
HENRY TREVATHAN, Defensive Back-<lb/>
field Coach"Stopping The Citadel is a<lb/>
complex job. We will have to deal with<lb/>
the Houston Veer attack-the same as<lb/>
North Carolina State used against us<lb/>
"To stop the Veer, you can't stop the<lb/>
pitch, or the dive or the pass. You have to<lb/>
stop the entire attack-all the options<lb/>
"Some teams use the Veer in different<lb/>
ways. State passed a little more than they<lb/>
ran. The Citadel now runs more than they<lb/>
pass which changes the emphasis on our<lb/>
defense. With Gene Ltotson at quarter-<lb/>
back, they probably will run more<lb/>
"We hope to maka them do what the<lb/>
defense, our defens, dictates. That is, if<lb/>
Dotson is quarter'jacking we hope to<lb/>
shutoff the run x) they will have to<lb/>
pass. If Lynch is quarterbacking, we hope<lb/>
we can shutoff the pass and force the<lb/>
run<lb/>
"In either case, our "Wild Dogs<lb/>
defense will have to adopt a kamikaze<lb/>
attitude<lb/>
CARL REESE, Defensive Coordinator-<lb/>
"The Citadel is very similar to the last<lb/>
couple of teams we've played. By that I<lb/>
mean they haven't done real well record<lb/>
wise which has caused them to switch<lb/>
personnel to find the people who want to<lb/>
play<lb/>
"In the case of The Citadel, they have<lb/>
found a young man with speed and good<lb/>
football knowledge to run the team. That<lb/>
is Gene Dotson, their sophomore<lb/>
quarterback. He adds something new to<lb/>
the attack. Before, we had to stop the<lb/>
passing of Harry Lynch. Now, we have to<lb/>
stop Dotson and that will be difficult<lb/>
because he is a fine option quarterback<lb/>
"With the running game working, The<lb/>
Citadel has been able to minimize<lb/>
mistakes. I think they are on the right<lb/>
path because you have to be able to run<lb/>
the ball effectively before you can develop<lb/>
and build your team<lb/>
TEDD SCHOCH, Head Scoutl saw<lb/>
The Citadel twice-against V.M.I, and<lb/>
against UT-Chattanooga last week.<lb/>
Against Chattanooga, they were a<lb/>
different team. They ran 75 offensive<lb/>
plays and only 18 of them were<lb/>
passes. They have a great runner in<lb/>
Andrew Johnson who scored three<lb/>
touchdowns last week. They're coming<lb/>
around<lb/>
DANNY KEPLEY, Middle Linebacker-<lb/>
"The Citadel has put together a better<lb/>
offensive attack than I can remember.<lb/>
With that new quaiterback (Gene Dotson)<lb/>
their running game has really come<lb/>
-round. In the past, we used to work on<lb/>
our drops a lot the week of The Citadel<lb/>
game because of Harry Lynch and his<lb/>
passing. Now we have to work on<lb/>
stopping the running game<lb/>
"Really, I don't think The Citadel does<lb/>
anything we can't stop. But, I do think<lb/>
the "Wild Dogs" will have to play very<lb/>
well. Lately, we've been playing more like<lb/>
the "Wild Dogs And we have Butch<lb/>
(Strawderman) back<lb/>
"I don't know, but I think we have had<lb/>
more enthusiasm over the past three<lb/>
games or so<lb/>
MIKE MYRICK, Defensive Back,<lb/>
Co-Captai I remember The Citadel's<lb/>
quarterback from last year and he wasn't<lb/>
plaving quarterback. He caught a<lb/>
touchdown pass over Rusty (Markland)<lb/>
and me. Now this year, he's playing<lb/>
quarterback and he can really run<lb/>
"My freshman year, The Citadel beat<lb/>
us 35-0 and they called time out at the<lb/>
end of the game to try for another<lb/>
score. The last couple of years, we've<lb/>
won but in the last few minutes of the<lb/>
game<lb/>
"Citadel-East Carolina games are<lb/>
crazy-you can't predict what will happen<lb/>
and many times when one teams looks<lb/>
like the better team, the game turns<lb/>
around<lb/>
"This new quarterback (Gene Dotson)<lb/>
changes our defensive plans. We're going<lb/>
have to be more awar. )f the run,<lb/>
especially by him. He picked up 122<lb/>
yards last week<lb/>
"And when they do pass, they will<lb/>
probably use their backs out of the<lb/>
backfield. This makes it really tough on<lb/>
the linebackers<lb/>
BILLY HIBBS, Weak Side Linebacker-<lb/>
"The Citadel hasn't won much, but they<lb/>
still scare me a lot. They can be very<lb/>
explosive-either running or passing.<lb/>
When Lynch was quarterbacking we could<lb/>
count on about 40 passes a game. With<lb/>
Dotson running the team, we will have to<lb/>
be more aware of tho run and the Veer<lb/>
option ,<lb/>
BOBBY VOIGHT, Wide ReceiverThis<lb/>
is the first time I've really studied The<lb/>
Citadel's football team. At first, I wasn't<lb/>
impressed because I've been following<lb/>
their record this year. But after seeing them<lb/>
on film, I'd say they looked really<lb/>
good. Sure, they made some mistakes,<lb/>
but they have a sophomore quarterback.<lb/>
He makes the offense go. Harry Lynch<lb/>
makes it go in the air, but this Gene<lb/>
Dotson really makes it work on the<lb/>
ground. They definitely are not a<lb/>
pushover. They're at home, coming off a<lb/>
win and hosting the SC champs<lb/>
Randle concerned about injuries Tickets on sale<lb/>
East Carolina head coach Sonny<lb/>
Randle has been talking about injuries<lb/>
since before the season started. He has<lb/>
warned repeatedly that the Pirates have a<lb/>
"good" football team and that baring<lb/>
injury, East Carolina should be in the<lb/>
thick of the Southern Conference title<lb/>
fight.<lb/>
"I think most everyone thought I was<lb/>
crying just to hear myself cry and to<lb/>
motivate my players. Well, it's a different<lb/>
story now and I think anyone following<lb/>
East Carolina football fortunes is as<lb/>
concerned as I am<lb/>
"We are starting down the stretch in<lb/>
the conference race and we don't have<lb/>
very important, very talented and very<lb/>
skilled people<lb/>
"In our 42-7 win over V.M.I we lost<lb/>
tight end Benny Gibson for the season<lb/>
with a complete shoulder separation.<lb/>
Benny will have surgery this week. Be-<lb/>
lieve me, that's a tough way to end a<lb/>
really fine season<lb/>
"And we're hoping to get Cary<lb/>
Godette, our defensive end, back next<lb/>
week. A couple of weeks ago I said Cary<lb/>
was playing on the verge of<lb/>
greatness. Then he got hurt. We thought<lb/>
he was gone for the year. We're lucky<lb/>
he's coming back<lb/>
"I've been talking to this thing all<lb/>
year. First we lose a valuable player. We<lb/>
finally got Butch Strawderman, our Sarah<lb/>
linebacker back, after seven weeks. That<lb/>
is a real boost to the entire "Wild Dogs"<lb/>
defense<lb/>
"I want to alarm some people, because<lb/>
that is the situation we are in now. I'm<lb/>
alarmed, some of my coaches are alarmed<lb/>
and I think some of the players realize<lb/>
what injuries are doing to the team<lb/>
"And, this is not a crying session<lb/>
because we have the tough ones<lb/>
ahead. I've talked about injuries all<lb/>
year. I've looked ahead to the schedule<lb/>
coming up and Ive been truthful. Right<lb/>
now, we're going to play just like we have<lb/>
been playing-one game at a time. The<lb/>
players will discover that they just have to<lb/>
buckle the belt a little tighter and go<lb/>
This Saturday the Pirates travel to<lb/>
Charleston, SC. to face The Citadel in a<lb/>
Southern Conference clash.<lb/>
The Bulldogs are coming off their big<lb/>
win of the year against U of<lb/>
T-Chattanooga. The Citadel is 0-2 in the<lb/>
conference, and this victory raises their<lb/>
overall mark to 2-4.<lb/>
Tickets for the game with The Citadel<lb/>
went on sale this morning at Minges<lb/>
ticket office. Student tickets are $2 and<lb/>
the price for everyone else will be<lb/>
$6. Tickets will be on sale at The Citadel<lb/>
field house until 11 a.m. Saturday<lb/>
morning and then they will be on sale at<lb/>
the stadium prior to the game.<lb/>
Students are urged to purchase their<lb/>
tickets immediately for the UNC game<lb/>
because there are only a limited amount<lb/>
available. Student tickets are $3.50 and<lb/>
admission for others will be $7.<lb/>
Sad misdeeds in disarray,<lb/>
the sore thumb screams aloud.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039884_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>