<?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">
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<pb facs="00039885_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
ECU mfcj expansion<lb/>
Land purchase needs $1.25 million<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU has requested $1 1 4 million from<lb/>
the state for the acquisition of new land.<lb/>
The proposed areas include the<lb/>
tobacco warehouse on Charles St near<lb/>
Minges Colliseum and all the land not<lb/>
already owned by ECU, from 7th St. to<lb/>
both sides of 9th St. (east-west) and<lb/>
Cotanche St. through 608 9th St.<lb/>
(north-south).<lb/>
"If we can ever get the money for the<lb/>
Planetarium, we're going to put it on<lb/>
some of that land explained C.G.<lb/>
Moore, vice-chancellor for Business<lb/>
Affairs.<lb/>
The area behind Joyner Library, on 9th<lb/>
St. "would be the most logical place for it<lb/>
since those teaching (in the Planetarium)<lb/>
will have their offices in the Science<lb/>
Education Department, based in Flana-<lb/>
gan Moore said.<lb/>
He also said, "I'd like to use some of<lb/>
that land to build more parking<lb/>
lots However, he went on to say, "there<lb/>
is a committee which chooses the land to<lb/>
be purchased and how it will be used<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
00<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
In the October 16 issue of<lb/>
Fountainhead on page 3, the business<lb/>
manager of the Buccaneer is mistakenly<lb/>
named as the source of a statement which<lb/>
says the Buccaneer has no money to<lb/>
begin operations. The reply is instead "no<lb/>
comment<lb/>
Moore said the warehouse would be<lb/>
used to store campus vehicles,<lb/>
maintenance equipment, etc. "But our<lb/>
chances for getting this are, I would say, x<lb/>
pretty slim he added. "Probably the g<lb/>
only way we'll ever get it is to condemn<lb/>
It<lb/>
"The problem is, we don t know how<lb/>
much monty the (state) legislature has<lb/>
appropriated for the acquisition of land,<lb/>
Moore explained. "We already know that<lb/>
the legislature has appropriated money to<lb/>
the Board of Governors for the acquisition<lb/>
of land, but we don't know how much<lb/>
ECU will qet<lb/>
He said that ECU sends in a request<lb/>
for state funds necessary to buy land, to<lb/>
General Admissions in Chapel Hill. The<lb/>
request specifies the parcels of land ECU<lb/>
wishes to obtain. A division of the<lb/>
Department of General Admissions then<lb/>
contacts the owners of the land and if he<lb/>
is willing to sell, they send a local<lb/>
appraiser to evaluate the possible<lb/>
cost. They then negotiate the sale, if the<lb/>
price is acceptable to the appointed<lb/>
budget. The office then notifies ECU<lb/>
that the land has been acquired, or that it<lb/>
has not.<lb/>
Moore said the Board of jovernors<lb/>
does not publicly announce (he amounts<lb/>
of state funds appropriated to the<lb/>
universities for purchase of land, because<lb/>
the price of the land would increase<lb/>
before negotiations could even begin. For<lb/>
that reason, the Department of General<lb/>
Admissions handles the transactions.<lb/>
If the money is appropriated for the<lb/>
Planetarium, Moore said that actual<lb/>
construction on it could not begin until<lb/>
after July 1 of 1975. He estimated it's<lb/>
completion to be "around the end of 76<lb/>
Current construction of new buildings<lb/>
at ECU includes the new student center,<lb/>
an addition to Joyner Library, half of the<lb/>
School of Art and the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute at 1st and Reade<lb/>
Streets.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
ANY CAMPUS ORGANIZATION<lb/>
INTERESTED IN BUILDING A<lb/>
HOMECOMING FLOAT PLEASE<lb/>
CONTACT: CHRIS RIPPER<lb/>
CHAIRMAN HOMECOMING PARADE<lb/>
752-9132<lb/>
DEADLINE 6:00<lb/>
Wed. 24th<lb/>
??<lb/>
nn C G MOORE vice chancellor w business affairs discusses possible<lb/>
future' construction on the ECU campusECU <lb/>
of $1 14 million for new land acquisitions and $880 thousand for a<lb/>
new planetarium.<lb/>
Plans are in progress<lb/>
for new planetarium<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Plans are being made for a<lb/>
planetarium at ECU according to Clifton<lb/>
Moore, Vice-Chancel lor of business<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
Moore said that in the budget<lb/>
submitted to the Board of Governors, part<lb/>
of the money requested was for advanced<lb/>
planning money for high priority<lb/>
projects. The planning money requested<lb/>
was for improvement and renovation of<lb/>
the Wahl-Coates school building, the<lb/>
Summer Theatre and the planetarium.<lb/>
"This indicates to me that if they are<lb/>
requesting planning money for the<lb/>
planetarium, there is a strong indication<lb/>
that the next time they will request the<lb/>
money for the building itself Moore<lb/>
said. .<lb/>
He said the total cost of the<lb/>
planetarium has been estimated at $880<lb/>
thousand, $315 thousand of which has to<lb/>
be in gifts and grants to the university for<lb/>
the planetarium. The remaining $565<lb/>
thousand will be state appropriated.<lb/>
Forty-four thousand dollars is being<lb/>
requested from the Board of Governors for<lb/>
planning such as architectural planning of<lb/>
the planetarium.<lb/>
Moore said there was no way of being<lb/>
sure when the money would be approved<lb/>
until after the legislature meets sometime<lb/>
in January. He said the legislature would<lb/>
probably decide sometime next May or<lb/>
June.<lb/>
Moore speculated that the earliest the<lb/>
university could hope to have the<lb/>
planetarium for use would be in the latter<lb/>
part of 1975.<lb/>
"If the legislature appropriates the<lb/>
money in 1974 the earliest we could start<lb/>
with the building would be in July of<lb/>
1974. It would take about a year to build,<lb/>
making it ready for use in about July<lb/>
1975 he explained.<lb/>
The planetarium will probably be built<lb/>
on the property the university has<lb/>
acquired on Ninth Street which is now<lb/>
being used for parking lots.<lb/>
"I can't say unequivocally where it will<lb/>
be placed but that seems the only logical<lb/>
place to put it Moore added.<lb/>
The planetarium will be used for<lb/>
instruction and therefore will be put as<lb/>
close to Flanagan as possible, allowing<lb/>
instructors to have close access to the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
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Announcemenfs Drama<lb/>
Anyone wishing to submit articles or<lb/>
announcements to FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
should turn in. their copy for Tuesday's<lb/>
paper by 12 noon Monday and copy for<lb/>
Thursday's paper by 12 noon Wednesday.<lb/>
All copy must be typed. Material that is<lb/>
not typed and does not meet the deadline<lb/>
will not be published. No announcements<lb/>
will be taken by phone.<lb/>
Hebrew Youth<lb/>
To all Hebrew Youth Fellowship<lb/>
Members and prospective members: A<lb/>
general meeting is scheduled for Oct. 25<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m. in Wright Annex (Student<lb/>
Union) room 204. Please attend.<lb/>
Sigma Alpha<lb/>
Pi Sigma Alpha, a political science<lb/>
honor society, will meet Thursday, Oct.<lb/>
25. 1973 at 7:00 p.m. in Social Studies<lb/>
building C-105.<lb/>
Drama Workshop<lb/>
The Theatre Workshop presents Kurt<lb/>
Vonnegut Jrs 'Happy Birthday Wanda<lb/>
Jane" on Tuesday and Wednesday nights,<lb/>
Oct. 30 &amp; 31 in McGinnis Auditorium. Ad-<lb/>
mission FREE.<lb/>
Teacher Exams<lb/>
Students planning to take the National<lb/>
Teacher Examinations on November 10,<lb/>
1973 should send their applications<lb/>
immediately as they have to arrive in<lb/>
Princeton, N.J. by October 18,<lb/>
1973. From this date until October 25,<lb/>
closing registration date, a late fee of<lb/>
$3.50 is necessary. The next NTE date is<lb/>
during Winter Quarter, on January 26,<lb/>
1974. For information, come to the<lb/>
Testing Department, Education-Psycho-<lb/>
logy Building, Room 204, or call 758-6811.<lb/>
"The Merry Wives of Windsor a<lb/>
dramatic production presented by the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse, will conclude its<lb/>
performances on Tuesday, Oct. 23, and<lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 24. The production has<lb/>
been running since Oct. 17 in the "new<lb/>
and agreeable studio theatre located in<lb/>
the old Wahl-Coates school.<lb/>
"The Merry Wives of Windsor" begins,<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in the evenings. Admission<lb/>
costs for the public is $2.00. ECU student<lb/>
will be admitted by presenting their ID's.<lb/>
Tickets are still available for the UNC<lb/>
game at Kenan Stadium on Saturday.<lb/>
Students are urged to come by the Minges<lb/>
ticket office to purchase their tickets as<lb/>
soon as possible due to the fact that a<lb/>
small number are available.<lb/>
Prices will be $3.50 for students and<lb/>
$7 for everyone else who is not fortunate<lb/>
enough to be a student.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Dr. Myron L. Caspar, associate<lb/>
professor of Chemistry at ECU, will<lb/>
conduct a seminar at Clemson University<lb/>
Oct. 23 on the topic, "The Cyclic<lb/>
Reduction of Ketones<lb/>
The seminar subject will deal with<lb/>
research by Dr. Caspar at ECU which was<lb/>
presented to the American Chemical<lb/>
Society in Chicago in August.<lb/>
Caspar's seminar is under auspices of<lb/>
the Clemson University Department of<lb/>
Chemistry.<lb/>
Work<lb/>
A job is being offered by the ECU<lb/>
Sports Information Office to any student<lb/>
available for work 2 or 3 hours on Monday<lb/>
or Wednesday afternoons or both. The<lb/>
job will involve letter writing, filing and<lb/>
other general office work. The salary will<lb/>
be $1.80 an hour. Anyone interested<lb/>
should contact the ECU Sports<lb/>
Information Office in Minges 168.<lb/>
Contents<lb/>
PROPOSED CONSTRUCTION ON ECU page one<lb/>
POLITICAL SCIENCE PROFESSORS COMMENT ON NIXON page three<lb/>
FILM COURSES page three<lb/>
CHARLOTTE ASSOCIATED PRESS CHIEF VISITS ECU page four<lb/>
EDITORIALCOMMENTARY FORUM pages eight and nine<lb/>
COLORADO PSY. INSTRUCTOR FILES SUIT page eleven<lb/>
SPORTS pages fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
Depression<lb/>
Dr. Hans Lowenback, professor of<lb/>
psychiatry at Duke University will discuss<lb/>
how to cope with mental depression when<lb/>
he speaks at ECU Tuesday, Oct. 23.<lb/>
His speech, entitled "Depression and<lb/>
Loss" is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Allied Health Auditorium on the<lb/>
ECUcampus.<lb/>
Dr. Lowenbach is the second in a<lb/>
series of lecturers sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine in an effort to give the<lb/>
general public a better understanding of<lb/>
medicine as it relates to physical and<lb/>
mental health. The project is co-spon-<lb/>
sored by the Department of Pathology at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Dr. Abdullah Fatteh, professor of<lb/>
pathology at ECU, described Dr.<lb/>
Lowenbach as an "outstanding authority<lb/>
on the subject of mental depression<lb/>
"He will explain the important<lb/>
differences between true and lasting<lb/>
mental depression and temporary changes<lb/>
in mood due to unwelcomed circum-<lb/>
stances Dr. Fatteh said.<lb/>
"He will also discuss the ways to<lb/>
handle mental depression and will provide<lb/>
us with some expert advice on mental<lb/>
health in general<lb/>
A native of Duisburg, Germany, Dr.<lb/>
Lowenbach came to America in 1938 and<lb/>
has been on the staff of Duke University<lb/>
since 1940.<lb/>
He presently serves as consultant in<lb/>
forensic psychiatry to Dorothea Dix State<lb/>
Hospital in Raleigh and is also consultant<lb/>
to Mental Health Centers in Washington,<lb/>
N.C. and Elizabeth City, N.C.<lb/>
Juniors<lb/>
Juniors-This is your chance to know<lb/>
what your SGA is doing or to get involved<lb/>
in student government! A Junior Class<lb/>
Interest Committee is forming and there<lb/>
will be a meeting this Thursday, Oct. 25 at<lb/>
7:00 in room 204 of the Union. All juniors<lb/>
are invited to get involved and to become<lb/>
aware of what is happening on campus.<lb/>
Colorado<lb/>
Take a trip through Colorado and the<lb/>
Grand Canyon tonight at 7:30 without<lb/>
leaving your seat in the lobby of<lb/>
Garrett. Jackie Armyette, graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in Geography, will be sharing her<lb/>
slides of her recent travels with us. Come<lb/>
and get some inspiration for a summer<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
Meditate<lb/>
All stCTdents and faculty are invited to<lb/>
attend an introductory lecture on the<lb/>
principles and practice of Transcendental<lb/>
Meditation on Tuesday October 30 at 7:30<lb/>
in Social Sciences B-102. Transcendental<lb/>
Meditation is a natural technique which<lb/>
allows the individual to gain deep rest and<lb/>
relaxation while at the same time<lb/>
experience more happiness and clarity of<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
ATTENTION TRANSCENDENTAL<lb/>
MEDIATAORS: Weekly meetings for<lb/>
meditators are held every Sunday night at<lb/>
7:30 in room 204 of the student union.<lb/>
Scientist award<lb/>
Dr. Hal J. Daniel, III of ECU was<lb/>
presented the Junior Scientist award for<lb/>
1973 by the 15,000 member American<lb/>
Speech and Hearing Association at the<lb/>
annual convention of the association<lb/>
in Detroit October 14.<lb/>
The recipient of this award if chosen<lb/>
for outstanding research done within five<lb/>
years of completion of his advanced<lb/>
degree studies. Dr. Daniel was recog-<lb/>
nized for extensive pioneering research<lb/>
done since 1968 both here and in<lb/>
Switzerland on otosclerosis. This is a<lb/>
disease of the inner ear that affects 10-20<lb/>
percent of all people and is one of the<lb/>
leading causes of deafness.<lb/>
Dr. Daniel joined the ECU faculty in<lb/>
1968 and is Associate Professor in the<lb/>
Department of Speech, Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology in the School of Allied<lb/>
Halth and Social Professions. He<lb/>
received his BS and MA from the<lb/>
University of Tennessee and his PhD from<lb/>
the University of Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
Total health<lb/>
William Byrd, Associate Dean of the<lb/>
School of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions at ECU, will participate in a<lb/>
panel discussion of rural health in<lb/>
Winston-Salem on Oct. 27. Total health is<lb/>
the subject of concern at this year's<lb/>
semi-annual meeting of the North<lb/>
Carolina Sociological Association, meet-<lb/>
ing at Wake Forest University.<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
Eight National Merit Scholarships and<lb/>
17 Academic Scholarships have been<lb/>
awarded to gifted and promising entering<lb/>
freshmen students at ECU for 1973-74.<lb/>
The recipients of this year's awards<lb/>
will be honored at the annual ECU<lb/>
Scholarship weekend banquet Sunday,<lb/>
Nov. 11. Guests at the banquet will<lb/>
include a large number of outstanding<lb/>
high school seniors from North Carolina<lb/>
and Virginia who have been invited for<lb/>
special Scholarship Weekend activities at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Certificates of honor will be presented<lb/>
to those entering freshmen who have<lb/>
received either National Merit Scholarsips<lb/>
or ECU academic scholarships. The<lb/>
awards will be presented by Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins, ECU Chancellor, assisted by<lb/>
Robert Boudreaux, director of Scholar-<lb/>
ships and Financial Aid, ECU.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Mildred H. Derrick,<lb/>
chairman of the Scholarship, Fellowship<lb/>
and Financial Aid Committee, the<lb/>
following scholarship winners will be<lb/>
honored:<lb/>
Henry Eugene Latham, Julius D.<lb/>
Register, Patrick R. Pearce, Jane L.<lb/>
Peterson, Arthur J. Mayfield, Patricia C.<lb/>
Coyle, Otho Allen Daniel III, Priscilla A.<lb/>
Hudgins, Karen A. Campbell, Phyllis<lb/>
Robin McKee, Pamela A. Radford,<lb/>
Deborah A. Holloman, Barbara Ann<lb/>
Mathews, Michael Wayne Kegerreis,<lb/>
Jeffrey H. Krantz, Steven S. Boyd, Pamela<lb/>
Jean Fisher, Cathy L. Cowart, Jennifer E.<lb/>
Lambeth, William L. Barlow, Julia Ann<lb/>
Cleveland, Cynthia L. Freeman, Wardlow<lb/>
C. Hawes, Alan Stewart McQuiston, AND<lb/>
Andrea L. Harman.<lb/>
Continued page 13<lb/>
Resiai<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
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Campus figures view politics<lb/>
Saturday saw the resignation of<lb/>
Attorney General Elliot Richardson and<lb/>
dismissal of Deputy Attorney General<lb/>
Ruckelshaus and Special Prosecutor<lb/>
Archibald Cox.<lb/>
This is the first of a series of<lb/>
interviews designed to express opinion<lb/>
around the campus concerning these<lb/>
occurences and the action that the public<lb/>
and the Congress could take. Persons<lb/>
interviewed in this article are Dr. William<lb/>
F. Troutman, chairman of the political<lb/>
science department, Dr. H.A.I. Sugg,<lb/>
assoc. professor of political science, and<lb/>
Mr. Lawrence E. Hough, asst. professor<lb/>
of political science. The questions were:<lb/>
1. What was your first reaction to Nixon's<lb/>
action Saturday?<lb/>
2. What purpose could the President<lb/>
serve by taking such action?<lb/>
3. What action should the legislative<lb/>
branch take now?<lb/>
4. What action should the citizenry take?<lb/>
"You couldn't publish my initial<lb/>
reaction stated Hough. "He (the<lb/>
President) removes a thorn, and one can<lb/>
only conjecture as to what could be on<lb/>
the tapes Hough added that his view<lb/>
was toward the negative in that there was<lb/>
Films tauaht as li<lb/>
something to hide.<lb/>
An expanded judicial investigation on<lb/>
the part of Congress should be conducted<lb/>
theorized Hough. This is the feeling<lb/>
expressed by several Congressmen such<lb/>
as Senator Stevenson of Illinois and<lb/>
Representative Davis of Minnesota.<lb/>
Hough added that Nixon apparently was<lb/>
upset by the refusal of Cox to accept the<lb/>
proposal that was offered the Ervin<lb/>
committee, and decided to have him fired.<lb/>
Hough feels the citizenry should be<lb/>
aroused and express their feelings to their<lb/>
congressmen. He concluded by alluding<lb/>
to Machiavelli's two concepts of virtue<lb/>
with Cox, Richardson, and Ruckelshaus<lb/>
representing the citizen and Nixon<lb/>
representing the state. In this, "Nixon<lb/>
has not only put his private interests<lb/>
above those of the citizenry and the state<lb/>
(contrary to Machiavelli's directions), but<lb/>
has placed himself above the legal basis<lb/>
for our society explained Hough.<lb/>
"Shock, surprise and then shock" were<lb/>
Troutman's reactions. "Nixon had offered<lb/>
compromise with the Ervin committee,<lb/>
and felt that if Mr. Cox had to go, then<lb/>
everyone would excuse him for his<lb/>
action<lb/>
Apparently Nixon didn't want the<lb/>
Supreme Court to rule on this<lb/>
constitutional crisis conjectured Trout-<lb/>
man. He also felt that a politically<lb/>
acceptable settlement would avoid a legal<lb/>
showdown.<lb/>
"Congress would be remiss in their<lb/>
obligations and failing in duty if they did<lb/>
not look into the matter of grounds for<lb/>
impeachment Troutman stated. If the<lb/>
individual citizen is concerned that the<lb/>
President is acting beyond his powers,<lb/>
then he should write his congressman.<lb/>
"If one admires integrity and courage,<lb/>
he should write Richardson, Ruckelshaus<lb/>
and Cox showing support for those who<lb/>
seem to exercise these qualities he<lb/>
added. "Men of integrity have not found a<lb/>
home under Mr. Nixon's administration,<lb/>
and this frightens me more than legal<lb/>
problems<lb/>
"I was not greatly surprised at Cox's<lb/>
firing stated Sugg. "I was interested<lb/>
concerning Mr. Richardson's resignation,<lb/>
since in HEW and DOD, he did certain<lb/>
things that placed loyalty above other<lb/>
feelings<lb/>
The purpose was to remove what<lb/>
Nixon felt was an insubordinate in the<lb/>
administration who had been told to stop,<lb/>
but failed to do so observed Suggs.<lb/>
Suggs doesn't feel that there is a<lb/>
precipitate action that Congress should<lb/>
take. "The issue of the Watergate tapes<lb/>
mat seem to be central to the committee<lb/>
and to Judge Sirica's interests still has<lb/>
not been resolved, so I feel further<lb/>
investigation is warranted Suggs feels<lb/>
that although there has been some talk of<lb/>
impeachment to resolve the constitutional<lb/>
crisis, there are two things to be<lb/>
considered. First, the problem is that<lb/>
impeachment procedures would seem to<lb/>
be incapable of resolving the crisis except<lb/>
where the effort succeeds. He noted that<lb/>
if it fails, even by a narrow margin as was<lb/>
the case with Andrew Johnson, the crisis<lb/>
seems to remain. The second point is<lb/>
that it is not clear at this point how strong<lb/>
the movement for impeachment is among<lb/>
the Congress and in the public at large. It<lb/>
will be some time before the<lb/>
congressional leadership can assess the<lb/>
situation in Congress and the public in<lb/>
general.<lb/>
"Overall, a great many of the actions<lb/>
that Nixon seems to have taken tend to<lb/>
aggrevate the situation Dr. Sugg<lb/>
observed in closing.<lb/>
Stephenson offers film study<lb/>
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
What do you see when you go to the<lb/>
movies? What gives movies their great<lb/>
appeal that attracts millions of viewers<lb/>
yearly? How are movies made? What<lb/>
value do movies have as an art?<lb/>
Answers to these and other questions<lb/>
relating to motion pictures can be<lb/>
provided in a unique film study program<lb/>
offered by Dr. William Stephenson,<lb/>
professor of English at East Carolina<lb/>
University.<lb/>
He explained that the four course<lb/>
program is an introduction to what to look<lb/>
for in films. "Most people don't know<lb/>
why they like to dislike a film he says in<lb/>
his relaxed but acutely fascinating<lb/>
manner, "these courses give students the<lb/>
tools to better evaluate the films they<lb/>
see. They are taught from the viewpoint<lb/>
of the audience<lb/>
Stephenson, working quietly at his<lb/>
shaded, lamp lit desk, seems at home in<lb/>
his well organized office, being<lb/>
surrounded by colorful literary work<lb/>
ranging from the 18th century to the most<lb/>
contemporary cultures.<lb/>
"This film study program has been my<lb/>
'baby my personal development for over<lb/>
three years Stephenson observes,<lb/>
smiling with his pride for it from behind<lb/>
his gold-rimmed spectacles. "It has taken<lb/>
long range planning to achieve a program<lb/>
of this sort which emphasizes film as a<lb/>
humanities and as literature<lb/>
Stephenson has long been interested<lb/>
in films, dating back to 1934, when he<lb/>
was three years old and living in Bourbon,<lb/>
Indiana.<lb/>
MM?<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Bourbon was an ironical name for<lb/>
such a puritanical town mused<lb/>
Stephenson, his features highlighted by<lb/>
his moustache and wavy brown hair, "It<lb/>
didn't have a movie theatre because films<lb/>
were regarded as 'the devil's playground'<lb/>
and were practically forbidden. But my<lb/>
mother and I didn't think like many of the<lb/>
others and on Wednesday afternoons we<lb/>
would go to Plymouth, the county seat,<lb/>
and pay ten cent 3 each to see the current<lb/>
films. My love of drama and motion<lb/>
pictures began here with a film starring<lb/>
Gloris Swanson called "Music in the<lb/>
Air It was marvelous<lb/>
Stephenson pursued his interest in<lb/>
drama and film, receiving a degree in<lb/>
drama from Indiana University.<lb/>
"There were, of course, no film<lb/>
courses offered in universities at that<lb/>
time reminisces Stephenson, casually<lb/>
glancing to the antiquated map of London<lb/>
above him, "and I had to settle for 18th<lb/>
century English literature as my area of x<lb/>
study, but I constantly attended movies O<lb/>
and watched them with growing interest ?<lb/>
The University of California at Berkley<lb/>
kept Stephenson busy for six years as he<lb/>
worked on his English Doctorate.<lb/>
"It was here that I really got involved<lb/>
with looking at films. I used to go down<lb/>
to an old theatre in Berkley several times<lb/>
a week where current art films would be<lb/>
shown. It was called The Cinema Guiild<lb/>
and was run by a woman named Pauline<lb/>
Kael who used to write the programs out<lb/>
for the films shown there. She is now a<lb/>
renowned film critic, studied in serveral of<lb/>
my classes<lb/>
See "Stephenson" on page five.<lb/>
m<lb/>
DR. WILLIAM STEPHENSON professor<lb/>
of English at ECU discusses the "unique<lb/>
film study program" which he has<lb/>
developed. He hopes to eventually<lb/>
expand the film studies program<lb/>
presently offered.<lb/>
IMMMMP<lb/>
ttttm tm ? m<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
?mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
AP Chief sees<lb/>
image change<lb/>
Ross: 'death and dying'<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
William J. Dill, bureau chief of the<lb/>
Charlotte Office of Associated Press (AP),<lb/>
spoke to two journalism classes at ECU<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
The image of the AP has changed<lb/>
somewhat from the cinema image of the<lb/>
40's and 50's Dill explained. With<lb/>
computer technology freeing the staff<lb/>
members to go to the field, AP has<lb/>
become an originator of news stories<lb/>
rather than a collection and distribution<lb/>
agency for its members.<lb/>
"There are really people involved and<lb/>
not just machines states Dill. The staff<lb/>
at AP is young and progressive. There is<lb/>
no position for the old "retreads" which<lb/>
people tend to think make up the<lb/>
staff. The oldest member is 62 years old,<lb/>
and the youngest is in his twenties and<lb/>
just out of college. The staff members are<lb/>
on the road much more producing their<lb/>
own stories rather than just editing and<lb/>
transmitting.<lb/>
"The staff is more specialized" stated<lb/>
Dill. Departments of organization involve<lb/>
the normal news departments that cover<lb/>
politics and sports to be specialized areas<lb/>
dealing with aerospace, youth, and<lb/>
religion. There are also departments of<lb/>
writers who specialize in the areas of<lb/>
investigative reporting that produce<lb/>
insight valuable to the public for<lb/>
evaluation of world events.<lb/>
Listening to Dill and his description of<lb/>
computer banks storing and delivering<lb/>
stories to cathode ray tube readers cause<lb/>
memories of Buck Rogers to come to<lb/>
reality. Capabilities of 24 hour photo-<lb/>
graph transmission to any subscribing<lb/>
news office are now matter of<lb/>
fact. Realization that, in a few years, an<lb/>
editor will be able to call for edited<lb/>
versions complete with photos cropped<lb/>
and shaded to specification are<lb/>
unbelievable. Then, when one learns that<lb/>
the items will be processed for production<lb/>
instantaneously, the feelings are of<lb/>
incredibility.<lb/>
Associated Press is a cooperative<lb/>
news service. The newspapers that<lb/>
subscribe to it are the actual<lb/>
owners. Through its services, it enables<lb/>
member newspapers to carry comprehen-<lb/>
sive coverage of events in a world that is<lb/>
otherwise too large and complicated for a<lb/>
single paper to cover. The service is<lb/>
headquarted in New York under the<lb/>
operational direction of a 33 year-old<lb/>
executive editor.<lb/>
Mr. Dill, a graduate of Southern<lb/>
Illinois University, is bureau chief of just<lb/>
one of the 37 territories that help to<lb/>
coordinate the coverage of events<lb/>
throughout the United States.<lb/>
Dr. Elizabeth Kubler Ross, inter-<lb/>
national consultant, lecturer and author<lb/>
on the subject of Death and Dying will<lb/>
present a two-day conference in<lb/>
Greenville, Oct. 30 and 31. The Schools<lb/>
of Allied Health and Social Professions,<lb/>
Medicine and Nursing of ECU, and the<lb/>
Pitt County Mental Health Associations<lb/>
are co-sponsoring the conference.<lb/>
On Oct. 30, 8 p.m at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, Dr. Ross will speak<lb/>
on "Understanding Death and Dying On<lb/>
Oct. 31, at 10 a.m Allied Health<lb/>
?Building, her presentation will be<lb/>
"Exploring Children's Conception of<lb/>
Death Time will be included for<lb/>
questions. Discussion of these questions<lb/>
and audience participation is encouraged.<lb/>
There is no admission fee.<lb/>
On Tuesday at 4 p.m. and Wednesday<lb/>
at 12:30 p.m. Dr. Ross will meet with<lb/>
health professionals and students of<lb/>
co-sponsoring Schools in closed sessions<lb/>
which will be held at the Allied Health<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
A native of Switzerland, Dr. Ross<lb/>
received her medical degree from the<lb/>
University of Zurich in 1957. She came to<lb/>
the United States in 1958 and did her<lb/>
internship at Community Hospital, Glen<lb/>
Cove, Long Island, N.Y. and her residency<lb/>
at Manhattan State Hospital, Research<lb/>
Job outlook is favorable for<lb/>
future ECU graduates<lb/>
The future employment outlook for<lb/>
ECU graduates is favorable, according to<lb/>
ECU Placement Service Director Furney<lb/>
James.<lb/>
While the national economic situation<lb/>
in recent years has meant a high<lb/>
unemployment rate among the college-<lb/>
trained, all but a few ECU Placement<lb/>
Service registrants have been able to find<lb/>
jobs.<lb/>
"We registered 1,128 seniors in the<lb/>
class of 1973 and 412 former graduates<lb/>
during th" past year said James. "Most<lb/>
of these found employment; as of<lb/>
September, only 100 were still<lb/>
job-hunting<lb/>
The ECU Placement Service acts as a<lb/>
liaison between large employers and<lb/>
graduating seniors who seek employment.<lb/>
The Service refers the names and<lb/>
credentials of students to companies who<lb/>
request such information, and schedules<lb/>
periodic interviews on campus between<lb/>
company recruiters and job-seeking<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Since its establishment, the Place-<lb/>
ment Service has arranged for thousands<lb/>
of ECU graduates to have jobs waiting fo<lb/>
them immediately upon graduation.<lb/>
Most of the employers who seek the<lb/>
help of the campus placement office a.<lb/>
private businesses and industries<lb/>
government agencier and school<lb/>
systems for several states.<lb/>
tmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Some ECU alumni return to campus to<lb/>
avail themselves of the Placement Service<lb/>
when they wish to change jobs or<lb/>
relocate.<lb/>
ECU students who are preparing to<lb/>
teach are finding that teachers are no<lb/>
longer in the great demand of former<lb/>
years, but that teaching jobs are still<lb/>
available in certain fields.<lb/>
"The South does not seem to be<lb/>
oversupplied with teachers, not yet<lb/>
anyway said James. "We are still<lb/>
receiving a number of requests for<lb/>
graduates who can teach mathematics,<lb/>
science, special education, and the<lb/>
elementary grades<lb/>
"And with the advent of public<lb/>
kindergarten in North Carolina, there will<lb/>
continue to be increasing demands for<lb/>
teachers in the area of early childhood<lb/>
Other employment opportunities in-<lb/>
clude sales, accounting and industrial<lb/>
technology, he said.<lb/>
"A high percentage of the companies<lb/>
deal with are interested in employing<lb/>
personnel in various aspects of<lb/>
manufacturing.<lb/>
"The production of consumer goods is<lb/>
an operation which always needs<lb/>
well-trained technology graduates<lb/>
James noted that the older g aduate<lb/>
has a considerable edge with the average<lb/>
mmwmnm<lb/>
employer.<lb/>
"Generally speaking, the students who<lb/>
are in most demand are older students, in<lb/>
the middle twenties, who have had<lb/>
previous employment experience or who<lb/>
are veterans. Employers seem to prefer<lb/>
the more mature graduate<lb/>
Now that the national economy has<lb/>
stabilized somewhat after the President's<lb/>
phase program, more employers are<lb/>
interested in interviewing potential<lb/>
personnel among ECU'S seniors.<lb/>
Last year 101 business firms and<lb/>
government agencies visited the campus<lb/>
for interviews; this year at least 124 are<lb/>
already expected, an increase of about 25<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Scheduled to recruit on campus during<lb/>
October are representatives from W.T.<lb/>
Grant Co Sears and Roebuck, Corning<lb/>
Glass Works, the North Carolina<lb/>
Extension Services, Ortho Pharmaceu-<lb/>
ticals, Proctor and Gamble, and several<lb/>
large accounting firms.<lb/>
While there are still good employment<lb/>
opportunities for many ECU students, few<lb/>
graduates can pick and choose their<lb/>
locations from several choices.<lb/>
Often acceptance of employment<lb/>
means locating wherever the job happens<lb/>
to be, even if the location ;s not the<lb/>
preferred one, James explainer.<lb/>
mmmnmmm<lb/>
?<lb/>
Division, New York.<lb/>
Until recently Dr. Ross, psychiatrist,<lb/>
was Medical Director of the Mental Health<lb/>
and Family Services Health Center of<lb/>
South Cook County in Chicago Heights,<lb/>
Illinois. She was also teaching and a<lb/>
consultant at the Lutheran Shcool of<lb/>
Theology in Chicago. At the University of<lb/>
Chicago she hs served as professor of<lb/>
Psychiatry, Chief of Consultation and<lb/>
Liaison Section-La Rabida Children's<lb/>
Hospital and Research Center, Assistant<lb/>
Director of Psychiatric Consultation and<lb/>
Liaison Service, Associate and Acting<lb/>
Chief, Psychiatric In-patient Service.<lb/>
She is a member of the Advisory and<lb/>
Editorial Board, Thantology Foundation,<lb/>
Columbia University, the Academy of<lb/>
Religion and Mental Health, Chicago<lb/>
Chapter, American Psychistric Assoc-<lb/>
iation; American Psychosomatic Society,<lb/>
and the American Association for the<lb/>
Advancement of Science.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Joseph N. LeConte,<lb/>
Executive Director, Pitt County Mental<lb/>
Health Association, Dr. Ross said "I am<lb/>
now limiting my professional involvement<lb/>
to being a psychiatrist, lecturer and<lb/>
author Her book On Death and Dying,<lb/>
was developed as a result of a university<lb/>
inter-disciplinary seminar on death?the<lb/>
first of its kind-planned and conducted by<lb/>
Dr. Ross.<lb/>
Faith healers<lb/>
practice<lb/>
'no medicine'<lb/>
(CPS)Faith healers are attempting to<lb/>
clarify their practice following the death<lb/>
of an 11 year old diabetic who died when<lb/>
his parents allegedly withheld his insulin<lb/>
because they believed he had been cured<lb/>
during a church healing service.<lb/>
Dr. R. Wilkerson, pastor of the 8000<lb/>
member Melodyland Christian Center in<lb/>
Anaheim, California, said "The thing we<lb/>
don't believe in is abuses, error and<lb/>
fanaticism in the area of Christian<lb/>
healing<lb/>
"The first error which the boy's parents<lb/>
made was attributing their son's condition<lb/>
to demon possession and withholding<lb/>
insulin because of it said Wilkerson.<lb/>
"According to the Bible, Christians<lb/>
cannot be demon possessed but can<lb/>
come under demonic attack<lb/>
Wilkerson pointed out it was wrong to<lb/>
tell the child to discontinue taking his<lb/>
medicine. "Discontinuance of the boy's<lb/>
medicine is a decision that only a medical<lb/>
doctor should make and evangelists who<lb/>
conduct healing ministries have an<lb/>
obligation to give their congregation this<lb/>
instruction he said.<lb/>
At Melodyland, people who believe<lb/>
they have been healed by God are told to<lb/>
see their doctor for a medical verification<lb/>
and to have a complete physical<lb/>
examination twice a year.<lb/>
Another mistake was the idea that no<lb/>
matter what happened, God would<lb/>
resurrect their son if they persisted in<lb/>
prayer, Dr. Wilkerson said, "There is no<lb/>
scripture in the Bible which promises or<lb/>
commands us to raise the dead<lb/>
Ste<lb/>
Continue<lb/>
Soon<lb/>
Stephen'<lb/>
where he<lb/>
the fall o<lb/>
I had<lb/>
ECU, Ste<lb/>
chance t(<lb/>
on the ur<lb/>
film as<lb/>
professio<lb/>
special c<lb/>
actors th.<lb/>
for such i<lb/>
Steph<lb/>
has met<lb/>
film prof<lb/>
American<lb/>
the Unive<lb/>
just com<lb/>
director<lb/>
American<lb/>
"The Two<lb/>
"Once<lb/>
says Step<lb/>
which gl<lb/>
memories<lb/>
where A<lb/>
process o<lb/>
tour had r.<lb/>
I had beer<lb/>
studios in<lb/>
'master<lb/>
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when I fc<lb/>
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headed be<lb/>
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d<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
5<lb/>
Stephenson starts film courses<lb/>
Continued from page three.<lb/>
Soon after completing his education,<lb/>
Stephenson started teaching at UCLA<lb/>
where he remained until arriving at ECU in<lb/>
the fall of 1970.<lb/>
I had a good reason for coming to<lb/>
ECU, Stephenson recalls. "Here was my<lb/>
chance to develop a film studies program<lb/>
on the university level which would teach<lb/>
film as a humanities as well as a<lb/>
profession. I learned at UCLA through<lb/>
special classes and guest directors and<lb/>
actors that there was a place and a need<lb/>
for such a program in the university<lb/>
Stephenson has traveled widely and<lb/>
has met many people involved with the<lb/>
film profession. He is a member of the<lb/>
American and British Film Institutes and<lb/>
the University Film Association. He has<lb/>
just completed an article on the British<lb/>
director Thorold Dickinson and the<lb/>
American director George Cukor called<lb/>
"The Two Versions of Gaslight<lb/>
"Once I was on a tour in London<lb/>
says Stephenson, relating an experience<lb/>
which glowed with warmth of fond<lb/>
memories, "which took us to the studios<lb/>
where Alfred Hitchcock was in the<lb/>
process of making a film at that time. The<lb/>
tour had been terribly boring that day and<lb/>
I had been eagerly awaiting the visit to the<lb/>
studios in hope that I might see the real<lb/>
'master of suspense Disappointment<lb/>
wasn't an adequate work for my feelings<lb/>
when I found out after arriving at the<lb/>
studios that Hitchcock would be away for<lb/>
the day. This news totally dampened my<lb/>
enthusiasm for the trip through the<lb/>
studios so after a hurried view of them I<lb/>
headed back to the bus. Well, as I was<lb/>
walking through the parking lot, I noticed<lb/>
a special place marked off just outside the<lb/>
studios. I walked over to it, and to my<lb/>
pleasant surprise it was where 'he' was<lb/>
designated to park: in bold yellow letters<lb/>
in front of the space were the words<lb/>
'Alfred Hitchcock I just stood there in<lb/>
his parking place, being thankful, at least,<lb/>
for this association with the director<lb/>
whose work I respect and admire so. I<lb/>
then walked happily on to the bus, my day<lb/>
having been brightened by this occasion<lb/>
The present film study program at ECU<lb/>
initiated by Stephenson consists of four<lb/>
separate courses offered at different times<lb/>
in the year. English 211 is the<lb/>
introductory course and is prerequisite for<lb/>
all the other courses. It is titled 'The<lb/>
Literature of Films The next course if<lb/>
English 316 which is the first part of a two<lb/>
part series covering the history of<lb/>
films. It deals with the first films made<lb/>
through films made in 1940. The<lb/>
follow-up sequence is English 317 which<lb/>
takes up films made in 1940 and traces<lb/>
their history up to the present.<lb/>
The last course is English 322G which<lb/>
deals with special aspects of film. It will<lb/>
change every year, presenting each time a<lb/>
new topic of study relating to films. Its<lb/>
present topic is 'Alfred Hitchcock' whose<lb/>
works and ideas as a director will be<lb/>
discussed throughout the quarter. Step-<lb/>
henson hopes to deal with such topics as<lb/>
gangster movies, screen comedies, and<lb/>
documentaries in future 322G series.<lb/>
All of these courses involve in-depth<lb/>
contact with films, spending at least two<lb/>
hours weekly viewing different films and<lb/>
at least two hours weekly discussing and<lb/>
analyzing them.<lb/>
Stephenson feels that the student of<lb/>
the cinema should look closely at films<lb/>
for their art value and for their insight into<lb/>
modern culture.<lb/>
"The film is unique as an art says<lb/>
Stephenson, reflecting on what is so<lb/>
much a part of his professional life. "It<lb/>
was born almost entirely in the 20th<lb/>
Century, in an age of technology. It<lb/>
depends entirely upon the camera and<lb/>
pieces of celluloid-both manufactured by<lb/>
man. We should ask ourselves what the<lb/>
implications of this exclusively 20th<lb/>
Century art are. What does the history of<lb/>
film tell us about ourselves? What effects<lb/>
do films have on us as part of the popular<lb/>
culture? -A study of films and their<lb/>
history might provide the answer.<lb/>
American idea of<lb/>
success changes<lb/>
The American idea of success is<lb/>
changing, according to a 52-page report<lb/>
recently published by American Manage-<lb/>
ment Associations, the world's largest<lb/>
not-for-profit management education<lb/>
institution. The report, by 29 year old<lb/>
business writer, Dale Tarnowieski,<lb/>
concludes that "the success idea that is<lb/>
emerging as values shift may exalt above<lb/>
material well-being the richness of human<lb/>
experience and the rewards inherent in a<lb/>
social reality in which genuine<lb/>
opportunities for self-expression are<lb/>
nearly limitless<lb/>
According to the report, The Changing<lb/>
Success Ethic, people have worked<lb/>
for organizations for too long; it's time<lb/>
for organizations to go to work for the<lb/>
people<lb/>
The report is based on a survey of<lb/>
2,821 American businessmen-the largest<lb/>
number of responses to a major survey in<lb/>
the 50 year history of American Manage-<lb/>
ment Associations. The report notes that<lb/>
traditional notions of success are waning<lb/>
and "For more and more people, success<lb/>
if a way of life and not just a goal<lb/>
Highlights of the report which may<lb/>
prove of particular interest to educators<lb/>
include:<lb/>
-Nearly three out of every four<lb/>
businessmen surveyed agreed that<lb/>
youth's disenchantment is greatly<lb/>
overblown by educators and others.<lb/>
-Respondents with no more than a<lb/>
high school education consistently<lb/>
reported the highest levels of personal<lb/>
and professional satisfaction.<lb/>
-The higher the respondents level of<lb/>
education, the more likely he was to point<lb/>
to educational background and training as<lb/>
an important factor in the determination<lb/>
of personal goals and aspirations .and<lb/>
to attribute the disenchantment of youth<lb/>
to "an informed intellectual rejection of<lb/>
traditional values by a better educated<lb/>
generation of young people<lb/>
-Respondents holding advanced de-<lb/>
grees were more inclined than those<lb/>
holding undergraduate degrees to believe<lb/>
that they were "frequently or occasional-<lb/>
ly" expected to compromise personal<lb/>
principles to conform to organizational<lb/>
standards or to those standards<lb/>
ummmmnm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
See "American<lb/>
fourteen.<lb/>
<lb/>
success" on page<lb/>
OW<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
m<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
Student parents<lb/>
evicted from<lb/>
NY dorm<lb/>
(CPS)Citing "safety reasons the State<lb/>
University of New York (SUNY) at Stony<lb/>
Brook has ordered the eviction of married<lb/>
students with children from campus<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
The new rule affected six families<lb/>
living in married student dormitories as<lb/>
part of an experimental system which<lb/>
offered campus living at rentals $30 to $50<lb/>
lower per month than those in the<lb/>
surrounding area. The ban on children for<lb/>
safety reasons discriminates against<lb/>
families by forcing them to live in higher<lb/>
rent districts, according to student<lb/>
charges.<lb/>
Stony Brook dormitories were not built<lb/>
with the "special safety needs of children"<lb/>
in mind, said the University's acting<lb/>
vice-president of student affairs. In early<lb/>
August the University notified the student<lb/>
parents of the regulation and told them to<lb/>
move.<lb/>
A series of unsuccessful appeals and<lb/>
negotiations with the University officials<lb/>
followed the original eviction notices.<lb/>
Last week the couples were forced to<lb/>
comply with safety policy. Some<lb/>
students sent their children to live with<lb/>
relatives and others moved off campus<lb/>
into more expensive apartment housing.<lb/>
Stony Brook began a crackdown on<lb/>
safety regulations enforcement when a.<lb/>
man was killed after wandering into a<lb/>
campus construction site several months<lb/>
ago. A ban on children in one married<lb/>
student complex had been included in<lb/>
1972 housing contracts but it had not<lb/>
been enforced until last August.<lb/>
OP<lb/>
m<lb/>
Self-determination? bas sponsors<lb/>
The North Carolina Bicentennial and<lb/>
the North Carolina Internship Office have<lb/>
announced an innovative program<lb/>
involving post-secondary senior college<lb/>
students in self-initiated service-learning<lb/>
projects to re-examine America's origins<lb/>
and values. Through their work the<lb/>
students will be initiating practices that<lb/>
foster self-determination among citizens<lb/>
and communities in North Carolina.<lb/>
Any student enrolled in a senior public<lb/>
or private institution of higher education<lb/>
in North Carolina may apply. A total of 14<lb/>
students will be chosen and they may<lb/>
work as individuals or as a team. Novem-<lb/>
ber 23, 1973 is the deadline for all<lb/>
applications and the earliest possible<lb/>
project initiation date is December 17,<lb/>
1973. All projects must be completed by<lb/>
May 31, 1974.<lb/>
Funds for the program are being<lb/>
supplied by the North Carolina<lb/>
Bicentennial, the Southern Regional<lb/>
Education Board, the Department of<lb/>
Administration and the North Carolina<lb/>
Internship Office. An individual student<lb/>
will receive no more than $1,000 for a total<lb/>
project grant and no team of students will<lb/>
receive more than $2,500.<lb/>
A Selection Panel will review the<lb/>
applications and determine the projects to<lb/>
be funded. The members are: Mrs.<lb/>
Elizabeth Koontz, Coordinator, Depart-<lb/>
ment of Human Resources; Mrs. Janis<lb/>
Somerville, Academic Dean, Salem<lb/>
College; Dr. Bonnie Gillespie, Professor,<lb/>
Shaw University, Mr. Hector MacLean,<lb/>
Chairman, North Carolina Bicentennial,<lb/>
and Mrs. Dabney M. Enderle, Director,<lb/>
North Carolina Bicentennial.<lb/>
Applications are available from the<lb/>
North Carolina Internship Office, 116<lb/>
West Jones Street, Room 408K, Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. 27603.<lb/>
For additional information contact Liz<lb/>
Fentress, 109 East Jones Street, Raleigh,<lb/>
N.C. 27611, (919) 829-24530, Media<lb/>
Director, North Carolina Bicentennial.<lb/>
Kodak announces new<lb/>
photographers contest<lb/>
A new competition for amateur<lb/>
photographers with a "People Helping<lb/>
People" theme has been announced by<lb/>
Eastman Kodak Company. The 1974<lb/>
Kodak Community Service Photography<lb/>
Awards will provide cash prizes for the<lb/>
best photographs that show how people<lb/>
devote their skills, time and money to<lb/>
helping others improve the quality of their<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
The contest is divided into two<lb/>
categories-black and white and color-<lb/>
with equal prizes being offered in<lb/>
each. There will be eight Awards of<lb/>
Excellence at $100 each; eight Awards of<lb/>
Distinction at $75 each; eight Awards of<lb/>
Metir at $50 each; and Special Awards of<lb/>
$25 each, to be determined by the judges.<lb/>
Entries for the 1974 awards must not<lb/>
be postmarked later than February<lb/>
1. Original slides or prints of any size are<lb/>
acceptable and all prints must be<lb/>
accompanied by the original negative.<lb/>
This Awards program has been<lb/>
initiated to call attention to the value of<lb/>
photography in dramatically recording the<lb/>
human aspect of a wide variety of<lb/>
community service projects in which<lb/>
people help people-such as programs for<lb/>
the deaf, mute, blind, retarded,<lb/>
handicapped; rehabilitation; day care;<lb/>
cultural enrichment; disaster service;<lb/>
youth development; family service, job<lb/>
training; health service. These are the<lb/>
types of activities that will offer subject<lb/>
matter for the competition.<lb/>
An informal brochure, including rules<lb/>
and official entry form, can be obtained<lb/>
by requesting Kodak Community Service<lb/>
Photography Awards (A3-77) from<lb/>
Eastman Kodak Company, Department<lb/>
841, 343 State Street, Rochester, New<lb/>
York, 14650. For prompt reply, a<lb/>
self-addressed business size envelope (no<lb/>
postage necessary) should be included.<lb/>
yearbook burn<lb/>
(CPS)-Members of the Black Action<lb/>
Society (BAS) at Slippery Rock State<lb/>
College sponsored a yearbook burning<lb/>
September 26 to protest the "lack of<lb/>
recognition in the yearbook given to black<lb/>
events and organizations<lb/>
The BAS was angry with the 1973<lb/>
Saxigena's non-inclusion of a BAS group<lb/>
photo and photos of a Black Arts<lb/>
Weekend.<lb/>
The yearbook distributed two days<lb/>
before the BAS rally. A preliminary<lb/>
meeting of BAS with yearbook and<lb/>
college officials failed to prevent the<lb/>
indicent.<lb/>
According to Lynn Moosman, Editor of<lb/>
the 1973 Saxigena, a BAS organization<lb/>
photo was scheduled with a professional<lb/>
photographer, but the group failed to<lb/>
show up. The appointment was resche-<lb/>
duled with a student photographer, who<lb/>
subsequently lost the negatives. The<lb/>
negatives were discovered to be missing<lb/>
so close to the printing deadline that no<lb/>
new photos could be taken.<lb/>
As for the Black Arts Week pictures,<lb/>
Moosman maintains they never reached<lb/>
the Saxigena office.<lb/>
Kevin Taylor, BAS chairman, called it<lb/>
"a deliberate oversight" on the part of the<lb/>
Saxigena staff.<lb/>
When contacted by CPS, Don<lb/>
DiSpirito, advisor to the yearbook and<lb/>
public relations director for Slippery<lb/>
Rock, said it was, "just a mechanical<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The day after the Saxigena burning,<lb/>
BAS presented a list of demands<lb/>
including an increase in black related<lb/>
courses, and hiring of blacks to certain<lb/>
college offices to the Slippery Rock<lb/>
administration. The organization gave the<lb/>
college until November 12, 1973 to reply<lb/>
to its demands<lb/>
THCflNKTMiDKAlCAM<lb/>
ATTMIlOWISTPtKIS<lb/>
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KM YOUt CAM, COMfOtT AN0<lb/>
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OUi UNMtSTANMNC C0UWSI-<lb/>
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BURNED OUT?<lb/>
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Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,<lb/>
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RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.<lb/>
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OL'MINER<lb/>
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WITH THIS<lb/>
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small pizza plus salad V1J<lb/>
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NEXT TO PITT PI.AZA KCSlBUTdlll &amp; HVefll<lb/>
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HELP V<lb/>
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LOST: V<lb/>
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FREE F<lb/>
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FOR SA<lb/>
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WANTE<lb/>
Dei<lb/>
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Chicago<lb/>
trespassir<lb/>
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Those<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039885_0007"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
7<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/>
HELP WANTED $100.00 weekly possible addressing mail for firms Full and<lb/>
part time at home Send stamped self addressed envelope to COMMACO, BOX<lb/>
157, ROUND ROCK, TEXAS, 78664.<lb/>
NICE PERSON TO live in trailer. $40.00 per month. Should have car. Contact<lb/>
William Cleveland at Lot 30, Pineview Trailer Court on Rt. 3.<lb/>
LOST: WOMEN'S DIAMOND RING. Either in or in vicinity of ECU Studio<lb/>
Theatre. Lost Wednesday Oct. 17. Call 752 5578. Reward.<lb/>
PRIVATE ROOM &amp; BATH in backyard with refrigerator for male student Call<lb/>
758 2585.<lb/>
FREE FOOTSBALL for ladies and couples Thurs. nite 5:00 9:00 P.M. Basement<lb/>
of Aycock.<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. livina in dorm. Phone 758-2469.<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. STUDENT WIFE or student for baby sitting and light<lb/>
housework. Daily 12 5. Call 756 3369 after 5 p.m.<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/>
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/>
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/>
Demonstrators protest<lb/>
latin recruitment<lb/>
(CPS)Some 38 demonstrators protesting the University of Illinois'<lb/>
policies concerning recruitment of Latin students were arrested at the<lb/>
Chicago Circle Campus early in October and charged with<lb/>
trespassing on state property and interverence with public institution<lb/>
of higher education. Bond was set at $1,000 for each.<lb/>
Those arrested were among one hundred demonstrators who<lb/>
occupied ihe ground floor and the elevators of the campus' tallest<lb/>
building. They were arrested after refusing a police order to vacate<lb/>
the building.<lb/>
A spokesman for the demonstrators said they were trying to<lb/>
establish a separate recruiting program for the Puerto Rican and<lb/>
other Latin students. He said the school's Educational Assistance<lb/>
Program, which recruits from all minority groups, was not sufficient.<lb/>
:CftWS:W:ff?:W:w:ws<lb/>
Pfm6faf<lb/>
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Spaghetti (with ?MJu<lb/>
Meat Sauce Salad<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
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With All Meala<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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Phone 752-7483<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
5P.M11P.M 7Days<lb/>
?verseas iraiiin<lb/>
For the session starting Fall, 1974,<lb/>
the European Medical Students<lb/>
Placement Service, Inc. will assist<lb/>
qualified American students in<lb/>
gaining admission to recognized<lb/>
overseas medical schools.<lb/>
And that's just the beginning.<lb/>
Since the language barrier constitutes<lb/>
the preponderate difficulty in succeed-<lb/>
ing at a foreign school, the Euromed<lb/>
program also includes an intensive<lb/>
12 week medical and conversational<lb/>
language course, mandatory for all<lb/>
students. Five hours daily, the course<lb/>
is given in the country where the stu-<lb/>
dent will attend medical school.<lb/>
In addition, the European Medical<lb/>
Students Placement Service provides<lb/>
students with a 12 week intensive<lb/>
cultural orientation course, with Amer-<lb/>
ican students now studying medicine<lb/>
in that particular country serving as<lb/>
counselors.<lb/>
Senior or graduate students currently<lb/>
enrolled in an American university are<lb/>
eligible to participate in the Euromed<lb/>
program.<lb/>
For application and further<lb/>
information, phone toll free,<lb/>
(800) 6451234<lb/>
or write,<lb/>
EUROPEAN MEDICAL<lb/>
Students Placement Service, Inc.<lb/>
170 Old Country Read<lb/>
Mmeola. N.V. 11501<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
EdilatalsCcxTimenlarv<lb/>
A little of everything:<lb/>
Gold water views Agnew<lb/>
the SGA and languages<lb/>
We had originally planned an<lb/>
action-packed editorial full of violent,<lb/>
caustic protest regarding SGA President<lb/>
Bill Bodenhamer's proposed publications<lb/>
budget cut. We are against the cut, which<lb/>
entrance requirement. Exposure to the<lb/>
"foreign" is one of the simple necessities<lb/>
of a decent education.<lb/>
POOR ARGUMENT<lb/>
The fact that a high school student<lb/>
By SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER<lb/>
Today's Washington, with its<lb/>
actual and suspected political intrigues,<lb/>
might easily put history's Machiavelli to<lb/>
shame.<lb/>
The process of achieving and<lb/>
manipulating political power in the<lb/>
strongest capital in the world is rough at<lb/>
the best of times. But in the atmosphere<lb/>
would shear off slightly under one-quarter may not be particularly fond of German, create(j by the Watergate scandal and<lb/>
 e-i.i.k?.i. ?; kjnn? UauUa ? Cranh rr Qrvani;h is a DOOr u?,?? ? nrimimi mionnHurt anainst<lb/>
of Fountainhead's entire budget, leaving<lb/>
us with three alternatives: reduced<lb/>
quality in a twice-weekly paper,<lb/>
production of a weekly paper rather than<lb/>
twice-weekly. . .or simply running this<lb/>
newspaper at its present level and<lb/>
frequency until we went broke, perhaps<lb/>
sometime in March. However, rather than<lb/>
bursting on the scene with a wild<lb/>
editorial, Fountainhead demands time to<lb/>
think, to formulate decisions and to<lb/>
consult both Mr. Bodenhamer and the<lb/>
remnants of our Publications Board.<lb/>
Readers are perhaps not accustomed to<lb/>
hearing this sort of thing from a<lb/>
newspaper which once had a reputation<lb/>
for violent accusation and immediate<lb/>
retraction.<lb/>
But tnis is a new Fountainhead, as<lb/>
many of our readers have informed us via<lb/>
much-appreciated commendations. Let<lb/>
us think on the matter .and if our<lb/>
results fit, that caustic editorial may be<lb/>
on the way.<lb/>
FOREIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
As for non-SGA business: we<lb/>
were disturbed to receive notice of the<lb/>
proposal to eliminate foreign language<lb/>
requirements for incoming freshmen. The<lb/>
Forum letter supporting the pro-language<lb/>
stand states this case quite eloquently.<lb/>
We can recall a former editor's statement<lb/>
that foreign languages were inessential,<lb/>
but must disagree.<lb/>
The belief is widespread that an<lb/>
or French, or Spanish, is a poor cnarges of criminal misconduct against<lb/>
argument; few people are fond of former vice President Agnew, it is<lb/>
geography, history, or math, but their downright unbelievable,<lb/>
value to a human being in the For example, the city boasts a large<lb/>
contemporary world can hardly be gr0up of citizens who believe absolutely<lb/>
disputed. Others may state that students tnat tne entjre Watergate affair was<lb/>
should be given a choice as to what is p)anned and executed by Democrats<lb/>
beneficial to them - whether a foreign seekjng to discredit the Nixon<lb/>
language will have any bearing on their Administration. The whole subject of<lb/>
careers. To this, we answer that a possible "double agentry" has been<lb/>
three-year old child is also capable of exp0red in the best James Bond<lb/>
making a choice- but that whether such a fasnion. And what appears to be a state<lb/>
choice is a good one without guidance is 0f 0pen COmbat between some of the<lb/>
disputable. principals and agencies involved in the<lb/>
SURVEY SCENE Watergate and Agnew charges has<lb/>
Perhaps the promoters of a confUSed and further complicated an<lb/>
permissive, less taxing educational format aready complicated situation,<lb/>
and those who wish to herd students in Qn every hand there are political<lb/>
droves to ECU should step back and paradoxes which have had no precedents<lb/>
survey the scene more objectively. In<lb/>
time, the lack of a language requirement<lb/>
for those entering could lead to other<lb/>
convenient requirement omissions, lead-<lb/>
ing East Carolina back to the days of its<lb/>
ECTC image. And, most pertinently, the<lb/>
lack of a language requirement and the<lb/>
inevitable list of succeeding requirement<lb/>
lapses will enforce the belief of many that<lb/>
college is simply a glorified high school,<lb/>
that any true education can be found only<lb/>
by way of travel or non-academic<lb/>
work .and that attending ECU is really<lb/>
not worth the cost.<lb/>
GREATLY SADDENED<lb/>
in our 200 years as a nation.<lb/>
And when you have a condition where<lb/>
the Vice President has resigned and<lb/>
accepted a sentence for income tax<lb/>
evasion, and demands are heard for the<lb/>
impeachment of the President himself,<lb/>
you have a situation that would delight, if<lb/>
not completely overcome, the heart of<lb/>
that devious old rascal and expert in the<lb/>
art of unscrupulous political conduct,<lb/>
Niccolo Machiavelli.<lb/>
But even in this wildly unusual<lb/>
situation, the most ridiculous argument I<lb/>
can find is the one that holds that the<lb/>
charges against former Vice President<lb/>
We will be greatly saddened should Agnew were actually "leaked" to the news<lb/>
MIC UCMOI IJ ??IVJO(-I&amp;OVJ uiai ??? ??v rim k? yiv??nj wwrwvi .w? ? Myi ICW WCIC OMUBIIJ IOOHVU<lb/>
undergraduate college degree today is the the foreign language entrance requirement media by his own attorneys.<lb/>
'? ml?iil nt t kink K-vl .nWnitlnn Ksi HrnnewH It Mill renrocont nnt nfllw a TU? IJi r, rrrrf?rrrt a<lb/>
equivalent of a high school graduation<lb/>
certificate years ago. Rather than<lb/>
enhancing the image of a university<lb/>
education, ECU is proposing a massive<lb/>
downgrade in eliminating the language<lb/>
success in removing things academic<lb/>
from the world of academia.<lb/>
staff<lb/>
NO, MY FRIENDS,<lb/>
THE TRUTH WILL NOT BE<lb/>
KNOWN BY EXAMINING THE<lb/>
FACTS. THE TRUTH WILL 11<lb/>
. KNOWN ONLY BY INNUENDO<lb/>
AND DENIAL.<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/>
be dropped. It will represent, not only a The idea is preposterous on its face,<lb/>
lowering of standards, but a gap in the but it did at one stage receive currency in<lb/>
dignity of an education and one more Washington, largely because it seemed to<lb/>
be the only answer Justice Department<lb/>
officials were able to muster in reply to<lb/>
charges that the government itself leaked<lb/>
the case.<lb/>
When you try to give this argument<lb/>
political credence, it boggles the<lb/>
mind. To begin with, you would have to<lb/>
accept as fact the idea that the Vice<lb/>
 President, or men representing him,<lb/>
( speeded up the process of destroying Mr.<lb/>
 Agnew's political future by drawing on<lb/>
 immediate and serious questions of his<lb/>
-Ohonesty and integrity. And, eventually,<lb/>
J you would have to accept the fact that the<lb/>
.Vice President's own nten were<lb/>
responsible for publicly degrading the<lb/>
second highest office in the land, and<lb/>
subjecting Mr. Agnew, his family and<lb/>
friends to an almost unbearable type of<lb/>
personal agony and distress.<lb/>
- "? The idea that the Vice President's<lb/>
attorneys did the "leaking" was offered by<lb/>
 at least one high official in the Justice<lb/>
y Department as a clever, roundabout move<lb/>
 j i by Agnew people to lay groundwork for an<lb/>
Lt N appeal, should the Vice President be<lb/>
ji indicted and convicted. As one Adminis-<lb/>
y tration official posed the idea, "Who<lb/>
Vjstands to gain the most from<lb/>
 unauthorized leaks of criminal charges<lb/>
being considered against an official?"<lb/>
Then he went on to suggest that the<lb/>
prosecution stands to lose in the event<lb/>
the legal process is poisoned by<lb/>
prejudical publicity.<lb/>
4<lb/>
i<lb/>
IT'S THE AMERICAN WAY<lb/>
<lb/>
C I KVl ?<lb/>
k x s<lb/>
r-v UN I'M.wr<lb/>
"SCA Mm.<lb/>
CP5<lb/>
One of the stranger facets of this<lb/>
Machiavellian suggestion is that it<lb/>
persisted even after denials by Mr.<lb/>
Agnew's lawyers were followed by direct<lb/>
action to prove their point.<lb/>
Thus, in the midst of all the<lb/>
conjecturing about a possible "in family"<lb/>
leak by the Agnew camp, the people<lb/>
handling the legal work for the Vice<lb/>
President sought and obtained from a<lb/>
federal court the right to subpoena and<lb/>
question members of the news media who<lb/>
had published charges against the Vice<lb/>
President on the basis of information<lb/>
from unnamed sources. It strikes me that<lb/>
if the Agnew attorneys were responsible,<lb/>
either directly or indirectly, for any of the<lb/>
news leaks about their client, they would<lb/>
have been rather foolish to haul the<lb/>
newsmen they tipped off into court and<lb/>
demand that they reveal the sources of<lb/>
their information.<lb/>
The wheels of justice grind<lb/>
slowly. And while they grind in the<lb/>
Watergate and the Agnew cases, the<lb/>
perpetrators of bizarre and weird theories<lb/>
of political maneuvering are having a field<lb/>
day.<lb/>
In some respects, it is unfortunate that<lb/>
the case of Spiro Agnew was not given a<lb/>
full congressional airing so that all angles<lb/>
of this unprecedented situation could be<lb/>
seen by the public.<lb/>
With every passing day, I feel more<lb/>
strongly that the American people should<lb/>
be given a good hard look into the legal<lb/>
machinery that was used against the<lb/>
second highest elected official in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
It is time the public was told in detail<lb/>
about the workings of special legal<lb/>
techniques, such as the kind the Justice<lb/>
Department used to bring a grand jury<lb/>
case built on promises of immunity for<lb/>
the former Vice President's accusers. The<lb/>
people have a right to know how<lb/>
dangerous and lethal the immunity laws<lb/>
could be in the hands of arrogant,<lb/>
ambitious and unprincipled government<lb/>
prosecutors.<lb/>
Although I am not accusing anyone in<lb/>
the government of taking unfair advantage<lb/>
of the special legal devices, I am saying<lb/>
that the whole question of granting<lb/>
immunity to one person for the purpose of<lb/>
nailing someone else should be better<lb/>
understood.<lb/>
In some respects, this whole<lb/>
picture-when applied to prominent<lb/>
citizens-is downright frightening. Indeed<lb/>
a scenario could be written to show<lb/>
precisely how government prosecutors<lb/>
can make use of the immunity laws to<lb/>
bring about the indictment of what former<lb/>
Vice President Agnew has described as a<lb/>
"big trophy<lb/>
On Thursday, investigative columnist<lb/>
Jack Anderson writes of Nixon's therapist<lb/>
and continued fighting in the Vietnam<lb/>
countryside.<lb/>
m<lb/>
MflMfttfM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0009"/><lb/>
?eForum<lb/>
Braillard again<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
With the trumpeting of dingy bugles<lb/>
and the beating of drums that have a<lb/>
tendency to fall to the ground at the<lb/>
wrong moment, I slither through the grass<lb/>
to rejoin the glorius reunion of insanity<lb/>
that has once again entered its varied<lb/>
comments into the forum of the campus.<lb/>
I wish to thank the Fountainhead for<lb/>
setting my mind straight with what is<lb/>
really going on on campus. SGA has<lb/>
been received well and gives me<lb/>
clarification on questions which were<lb/>
pretty much unanswered except for the<lb/>
rumors, half-truths, and total ignorance<lb/>
which Mr. Bodenhamer and I despise<lb/>
so much.<lb/>
In view of this, I offer congratulations<lb/>
to the cabinet for their excellent start,<lb/>
although more questionnaires like those<lb/>
of Bob Lucas would be appreciated and<lb/>
could bring more involvement of the<lb/>
student body into university affairs.<lb/>
I offer a suggestion to Brooks Bear,<lb/>
since she has Internal Affairs, to publish a<lb/>
questionnaire concerning the student<lb/>
body's feeling toward publications to find<lb/>
the students idea of what should be<lb/>
expected of each particular one.<lb/>
Also, since we are doomed to have a<lb/>
second bus, the secretary of transport-<lb/>
ation, Walter Mann, should do the same<lb/>
and use his questionnaire to determine<lb/>
feelings towards bus outes. I mean<lb/>
really, Walter, a bureaucracy is fine as<lb/>
long as it is first efficient and second it<lb/>
attempts to learn the constituents' desires<lb/>
at the least possible expense to them.<lb/>
So as not to lose the old touch,<lb/>
Debbie Wright in her letter to the<lb/>
Fountainhead of Oct. 12 should consider<lb/>
carefully her statement of what has been<lb/>
earned.<lb/>
A person elected in a minority vote has<lb/>
not particularly earned anything at<lb/>
all. Furthermore, if that election result<lb/>
produces a petition for a recall carrying<lb/>
more valid signatures than the so-called<lb/>
mandate which the "victor" received, the<lb/>
right is less earned.<lb/>
And then if the petition is ruled illegal<lb/>
or void because of one word not being<lb/>
appropriately descriptive of the position<lb/>
then held, there is NO right<lb/>
whatsoever. Instead, the results of that<lb/>
fiasco becomes the albatross which<lb/>
hangs about that person's neck.<lb/>
If one can be jealous of that situation,<lb/>
he is surely in worse shape than the fool<lb/>
who rushes to his idols support without<lb/>
the paddle to return down the creek with.<lb/>
However, the identical situation exists<lb/>
for the apathetic critic who takes no<lb/>
action until the event which he feared<lb/>
most has really occurred at the authorship<lb/>
of persons who rely on apathy to block<lb/>
the opposition through its non-partici-<lb/>
pation. Confusing as that may seem, it<lb/>
can be rephrased in the words of Nixon<lb/>
when he stated he felt thankful to the<lb/>
silent majority for their silent support.<lb/>
If all people who try to emulate Nixon<lb/>
would remember that the "silent majority"<lb/>
was first referenced in the Greek Classics<lb/>
as a euphemism for the dead, perhaps we<lb/>
could attempt to produce a viable,<lb/>
representative government wherever we<lb/>
are.<lb/>
Thank you.<lb/>
Michael le Brail lard<lb/>
Baseball et al<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Recently perhaps due to some change<lb/>
in the moon's phase, a large percentage<lb/>
of the baseball team, kenneled in Belk<lb/>
Hall, has undergone a radical change.<lb/>
Not content with wearing jocks over their<lb/>
heads, these poor souls have turned to<lb/>
howling at the moon. Now I am all for<lb/>
them relieving their premeval urges on<lb/>
trees and automobile tires, but to disturb<lb/>
the blissful sleep of scholars with<lb/>
mournful howls is simply asking too<lb/>
much.<lb/>
Perhaps, the baseball coach could<lb/>
change the team's feeding and watering<lb/>
time so that all physiological functions<lb/>
can be handled during the day, and then<lb/>
too, a simple obedience lesson might<lb/>
produce more control over the team's urge<lb/>
to howl. Of course, the whole problem<lb/>
could probably be solved by simply<lb/>
procuring one bitch in heat to serve as<lb/>
team mascot. The Athletic Department,<lb/>
so quick to send out memos on the<lb/>
academic standing of its scholars, surely<lb/>
can find a dollar or two in its silk purse. I,<lb/>
a poor and obscure jester, will even<lb/>
contribute two cents to this worthy cause<lb/>
(if King Billie doesn't withhold my salary).<lb/>
Yours humbly,<lb/>
M.D. Hickson, Jr.<lb/>
Language issue<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In an attempt to increase the student<lb/>
enrollment at East Carolina University, the<lb/>
Admissions Committee has proposed the<lb/>
dropping of the foreign language as an<lb/>
entrance requirement.<lb/>
What this means, in effect, is a<lb/>
lowering of the very standards that our<lb/>
university officials are so adamant in<lb/>
achieving.<lb/>
But more importantly, this proposal if<lb/>
passed by the Faculty Senate, would<lb/>
mean a reduction in the whole purpose<lb/>
and challenge of the educational<lb/>
system. It is this increasingly softened<lb/>
attitude toward education that I am most<lb/>
concerned with.<lb/>
It seems that East Carolina is<lb/>
concerned more with the quantity rather<lb/>
than the quality of the student body. With<lb/>
the dropping of this important and<lb/>
necessary requirement, any high school<lb/>
graduate will be able to enter East<lb/>
Carolina, stay here for 4 years, graduate,<lb/>
but he will have accomplished nothing.<lb/>
This applies not only to the foreign<lb/>
language but to the other humanities as<lb/>
well. If the foreign language or any other<lb/>
requirement is dropped, what incentive<lb/>
does the college-bound student have to<lb/>
learn all he can about life and<lb/>
himself? Take away these requirements<lb/>
and you take away the challenge of<lb/>
education.<lb/>
We are concerned so much about<lb/>
student population at East Carolina. Let's<lb/>
stop worrying about the number of<lb/>
students and start worrying about the<lb/>
quality of students. Does East Carolina<lb/>
want to produce computerized men and<lb/>
women with just a mediocre education or<lb/>
would it rather educate its students to<lb/>
become the finest human beings<lb/>
possible?<lb/>
Let us now consider the advantages in<lb/>
learning a foreign language. First of all,<lb/>
the world is obviously becoming smaller<lb/>
everyday. We in America need to know all<lb/>
we can about the other nations of the<lb/>
world in order to appreciate the world<lb/>
community. What better way to begin<lb/>
this understanding than through a foreign<lb/>
language. The barriers of language exist<lb/>
not only between America and other<lb/>
countries, but even among our own<lb/>
people. How do you communicate with<lb/>
the 16 million Spanish-speaking persons<lb/>
living in the United States, if you have no<lb/>
knowledge of their Spanish language?<lb/>
Secondly, the knowledge of a foreign<lb/>
language greatly enhances the under-<lb/>
standing of the English language. The<lb/>
study of a foreign language, I think,<lb/>
increases one's ability to think more<lb/>
clearly and precisely. Through the study ?<lb/>
of a foreign language, we can learn so "<lb/>
much not only about the other cultures<lb/>
and societies of the world, but we come<lb/>
to a greater understanding of our own<lb/>
culture as well.<lb/>
This brings us back to the purpose of<lb/>
education. If our goal is to educate<lb/>
students to be well-rounded thinking<lb/>
individuals, then we at East Carolina must<lb/>
strive for the highest standards<lb/>
possible. We would like to see an<lb/>
increased enrollment, but is it not true<lb/>
that the best universities in the country<lb/>
have the longest waiting lists? If, in the<lb/>
future, East Carolina is to be a truly fine<lb/>
institution, then now is the time to<lb/>
establish ourselves. East Carolina can<lb/>
begin now to meet the challenge of higher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
The first step would be a retention of<lb/>
the foreign language as a requirement for<lb/>
admission. If the proposal to drop the<lb/>
requirement is passed, then the university<lb/>
may as well present overy incoming<lb/>
freshman with his degree as soon as he<lb/>
arrives, because the next four years he<lb/>
spends here will mean absolutely nothing.<lb/>
I urge all members of the Faculty<lb/>
Senate to consider the damage this<lb/>
proposal will do not only to future<lb/>
students but to the entire system of<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Cheryl Perry<lb/>
Football team<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The East Carolina University football<lb/>
team has suffered the agony of defeat<lb/>
and, fortunately, more often, the ectasy of<lb/>
triumph and victory this current football<lb/>
season. The entire team - including the<lb/>
coaches have put forth a most extensive,<lb/>
and admirable effort on behalf of the<lb/>
University and I certainly hope their<lb/>
chances at a bowl game aren't bungled<lb/>
because of "lack of support" as they were<lb/>
last year. It appears to me that the team<lb/>
has more support behind them than they<lb/>
ever had before as evidenced at the last<lb/>
home game against VMI. We're all hoping<lb/>
for big things from this great team effort<lb/>
and, I for one, am grateful to the ECU<lb/>
Football Team!<lb/>
A supporter for the<lb/>
ECU FootbaP Team<lb/>
More evidence<lb/>
Editor's Note: Following is the conclu-<lb/>
sion of an article by Tristram Coffin,<lb/>
beginning in the Oct. 18 FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
which purported to show evidence that<lb/>
President John F. Kennedy had been the<lb/>
victim of an assassination conspiracy.<lb/>
NEW EVIDENCE-) New Orleans<lb/>
district attorney Jim Garrison is said to<lb/>
have a copy of an FBI report, quoting<lb/>
Oswald, and warning of the assassination<lb/>
of President Kennedy. This did not<lb/>
appear in the Warren Commission<lb/>
reports. Professor Peter Dale Scott of the<lb/>
University of California claims to have<lb/>
evidence of a massive official "cover-up"<lb/>
of evidence of the slaying.<lb/>
(3) A Secret Service man present at<lb/>
the scene of the assassination says<lb/>
privately he is sure shots were fired from<lb/>
the knoll. He was not questioned by the<lb/>
Warren Commission, and has not<lb/>
volunteered his information publicly for<lb/>
fear of retaliation.<lb/>
(4) The French paper, L'Aurore<lb/>
(October 2, 1972) claims a French soldier<lb/>
of fortune was hired to kill President<lb/>
Kennedy May 31, 1961 during his visit to<lb/>
Paris. The contact with the hired gunman<lb/>
was made through a CIA man in Algiers.<lb/>
(5) The Washington Star-News reports<lb/>
(November 6, 1972) that four detectives<lb/>
hired by Aristotle Onassis conducted a<lb/>
private investigation and presumably<lb/>
found "the names of the 'real' murderers<lb/>
?of President Kennedy The report is<lb/>
locked away in Onassis' private safe at<lb/>
Glyfada<lb/>
mm0mmmmmmmm<lb/>
(6) Donald Freed, co-author of<lb/>
Executive Action, a novel of the<lb/>
assassination, told the Los Angeles Star,<lb/>
"The professionals in the Watergate .are<lb/>
tied to the CIA, Cuban politics, the Miami<lb/>
area, and assassination He states there<lb/>
was a plot "to assassinate Castro before<lb/>
or coincident with the invasion and this<lb/>
was called off bv President Kennedv.<lb/>
Freed claims Hunt and Frank Sturgis,<lb/>
another Watergate defendant, were<lb/>
involved in this action, and two other<lb/>
assassination plots, in Haiti and<lb/>
Guatemala. Also he states in a new book,<lb/>
Give Us This Day, that Hunt, Sturgis and<lb/>
Liddy "were in Mexico City in 1971 as part<lb/>
of an executive action to assassinate the<lb/>
president of Panama" but this was "called<lb/>
off and aborted<lb/>
Freed suggests the answer to a<lb/>
mystery of the Watergate hearings. Why<lb/>
.did the White House order CIA officials to<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by the authorfs; names<lb/>
will be withheld on request. Unsigned<lb/>
editorials on this page and on the editorial<lb/>
page reflect the opinions of the editor,<lb/>
and are not necessarily those of the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to<lb/>
refuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment as an<lb/>
independent body on any and all<lb/>
issues. A newspaper is objective only in<lb/>
proportion to its autonomy.<lb/>
stop the FBI from investigating the<lb/>
laundering of funds through Mexico?<lb/>
"The probabilities were that they (FBI)<lb/>
might come up with someone from the<lb/>
Kennedy assassination and the whole<lb/>
thing would be blown open<lb/>
Some investigators believe the<lb/>
assassination was organized in Mexico<lb/>
the pay-off money passed through there<lb/>
and the "team" came to Dallas two days<lb/>
Defore the murder from Mexico.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
m<lb/>
New goals are cited<lb/>
for future universities<lb/>
(CPS)lndividual colleges and universities<lb/>
in the United States have larger<lb/>
responsibilities than solving their<lb/>
particular "crises in higher education"<lb/>
according to the concluding report of the<lb/>
Carnegie Commission on Higher Edu-<lb/>
cation released October 9.<lb/>
Summarizing nearly six years of study<lb/>
and deliberations the Commission<lb/>
sketched broad guidelines for a socially<lb/>
just and financially stable post-secondary<lb/>
educational network of the future. The<lb/>
Commission included hundreds of<lb/>
specific recommendations aimed at<lb/>
implementing these goals.<lb/>
"Survival, with memories of past<lb/>
glories, is not enough of a program for<lb/>
higher education as it approaches the year<lb/>
2000 reported the Commission. "Nor is<lb/>
it enough for society as it relies more and<lb/>
more in creating its future on the high<lb/>
skills and careful thought that higher<lb/>
education can so effectively help supply<lb/>
The Commission's agenda for higher<lb/>
education, organized under six "Priorities<lb/>
for Action" include:<lb/>
-Advancement of social justice<lb/>
-Enhancement of constructive change<lb/>
- Achievement of more effective<lb/>
governance<lb/>
-Assurance of resources and their<lb/>
more effective use<lb/>
-Clarification of purposes<lb/>
-Preservation and enhancement of<lb/>
quality and diversity<lb/>
The distinguished panel of American<lb/>
educators and laymen who make up the<lb/>
Commission began their work in July,<lb/>
1967 with a charge from the Carnegie<lb/>
Foundation for the Advancement of<lb/>
Teaching to make a systematic appraisal<lb/>
of higher education and to suggest<lb/>
guidelines for its development in the<lb/>
1970's and beyond to the year 2000. Dr.<lb/>
Clark Kerr, former president of the<lb/>
University of California, served as its<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
The Commission stated "all remnants<lb/>
of inequality of educational opportunity<lb/>
due to race, sex, family level of income,<lb/>
and geographic location should be<lb/>
overcome substantially by 1980 and as<lb/>
completely as possible by the year 2000<lb/>
In its analysis the Commission<lb/>
recognizes "there is very little time to<lb/>
make the necessary adjustments and<lb/>
that realizing its egalaterian goal "may be<lb/>
the work for a generation requiring<lb/>
efforts until the year 2000 and perhaps be-<lb/>
yond According to the Commission<lb/>
"Ten years too late could easily become<lb/>
thirty years too late<lb/>
The report supported "affirmative<lb/>
action" programs of consciously hiring<lb/>
women and members of minority groups<lb/>
to offset past employment practices.<lb/>
Such programs, according to the<lb/>
Commission, will require constant<lb/>
reevaluation and "force many to confront<lb/>
rather uncomfortable realitied<lb/>
In dealing with such problems, the<lb/>
Commission observed, "The most<lb/>
important single issueis whether it<lb/>
(change) will come primarily from internal<lb/>
leadership or whether it will be imposed<lb/>
more totally from external sources<lb/>
The report identified four potential<lb/>
new shocks' to higher education-collect-<lb/>
ive bargaining, the polidealization of<lb/>
institutions, the possible resurgence of<lb/>
student activism, and the "glacial" spread<lb/>
of public control.<lb/>
The Commission favored "internal<lb/>
initiative as the basic pattern of change<lb/>
and has argued for the selection of<lb/>
'activist' presidents" with increased input<lb/>
from students trustees, and faculty<lb/>
members.<lb/>
In calling for new goals for higher<lb/>
education the Commission said, "There<lb/>
has been no basic discussion of<lb/>
purposes, engaged in widely within higher<lb/>
education for a century. There should be<lb/>
some new aspirations, some new<lb/>
versions<lb/>
Among the specific recommendations<lb/>
of the Commission were:<lb/>
-Equal reqard for teaching as for<lb/>
research, except for research at the<lb/>
"highest levels of competence"<lb/>
-The creation of "open-access"<lb/>
educational centers available at low or no<lb/>
net tuition and within commuting<lb/>
distance to all high school graduates who<lb/>
want to attend.<lb/>
-The improvement of old and the<lb/>
creation of new alternatives to college<lb/>
attendance including on-the-job training,<lb/>
proprietary schools, apprenticeship pro-<lb/>
grams, education in the military,<lb/>
education by off-campus extension work,<lb/>
and national service opportunities.<lb/>
-The absorbtion of about one-half of<lb/>
the public share of total monetary outlays<lb/>
for higher education by the federal<lb/>
government.<lb/>
WORK OVERSEAS<lb/>
Male<lb/>
All trades, skills and professions<lb/>
Students and Graduates<lb/>
Female<lb/>
?v<lb/>
Higher pay, no taxes, travel to Australia, Europe, So. and 55<lb/>
Central America, Africa and So. East Asia 3<lb/>
Write for our brochure: ?$<lb/>
Worldwide Student Opportunities $<lb/>
'$ P.O. Box 1255 :?:?<lb/>
? 1075 Camino F lores S<lb/>
: Thousand Oaks, Calif, 91360 :j:j<lb/>
'Humanity' is topic<lb/>
(CPS)-Man must accept the principle that "all of humanity is<lb/>
integrated R. Buckminister Fuller said at a symposium to mark the<lb/>
opening of the papers on urban affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson<lb/>
Library at the University of Texas.<lb/>
Man can no longer think the whole world is made up of "just<lb/>
parts Fuller declared. Thinking in terms of "parts he said, has led<lb/>
to such problems as pollution. The behavior of whole systems<lb/>
operate on interrelated principles that are "inherently eternal<lb/>
Throughout the ages, Fuller said, man has thought there has not<lb/>
been enough to go around, and that once resources had been mined,<lb/>
man thought they were lost. But nothing is ever lost, he said.<lb/>
"Iron doesn't get lost; copper doesn't get lose he emphasized,<lb/>
noting that when you melt down a Cadillac "you can get two<lb/>
Chevrolet s<lb/>
"Even though he does not yet fully understand how to get on in<lb/>
the worldFuller said, "the universe is trying very hard to rake<lb/>
humanity a success he concluded.<lb/>
Tele-lecture' offers<lb/>
modern education<lb/>
(CPS)-West Virginia has developed a lecture system called<lb/>
"tele-lecture" that involves telephone circuits linking WVU's<lb/>
Morgantown campuses with 72 West Virginia hospitals and health<lb/>
facilities, and six WVU extension centers.<lb/>
Health service workers, pharmacists, educators, administrators,<lb/>
social workers, and other professionals throughout the state listen to<lb/>
lectures from WVU and then respond with questions or<lb/>
comments-all via telephone.<lb/>
The American habit of talking on the telephone has been adapted<lb/>
to educational purposes by WVU's School of Nursing through a grant<lb/>
of $86,531 from the U.S. Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare.<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
Hardee's has got<lb/>
your number.<lb/>
If your student ID. number<lb/>
is listed here, you're the winner<lb/>
of a free meal at Hardee's:<lb/>
721111 738053 734765 725076<lb/>
735999 718421 738043 725431<lb/>
721617 735904 705993 716215<lb/>
736472 718562 718888 722658<lb/>
729942 714226 732759 734590<lb/>
For the payoff just present<lb/>
your ID. at Hardee's. You'll get<lb/>
a Deluxe Huskee or Huskee<lb/>
Junior, a regular order of<lb/>
French Fries, and a regular<lb/>
size Soft Drink, all absolutely<lb/>
free.<lb/>
Offer good only at<lb/>
300 E. Greenville Boulevard,<lb/>
and 10th Street, in Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m i him ii<lb/>
m<lb/>
X?<lb/>
<lb/>
fc<lb/>
Jfc<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0011"/><lb/>
IIC<lb/>
"lanity is<lb/>
mark the<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
of "just<lb/>
, has led<lb/>
systems<lb/>
I<lb/>
? has not<lb/>
n mined,<lb/>
d.<lb/>
?hasized,<lb/>
get two<lb/>
let on in<lb/>
to make<lb/>
?s<lb/>
) called<lb/>
WVU's<lb/>
d health<lb/>
strators,<lb/>
listen to<lb/>
ons or<lb/>
adapted<lb/>
i a grant<lb/>
I fare.<lb/>
J<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT.<lb/>
rr. 1973 <lb/>
Instructor sues Colo, college for<lb/>
infringing on fmoral character9<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.CA Colorado college psychology<lb/>
instructor, refused a second-year contract allegedly in retaliation for<lb/>
presenting a panel on lesbianism to one of her classes of<lb/>
Psychology of Women is filing suit in Denver today (Oct 12) for<lb/>
reinstatement, back salary and $100,000 in damages.<lb/>
Susan Brown is suing Ames College in Greeley, contending that<lb/>
she was denied her "procedural due process rights in that she was<lb/>
never provided written reasons for her nonretention nor a fair hearinq<lb/>
concerning nonrenewal of her contract The National Education<lb/>
Association and its affiliate, the Colorado Education Association are<lb/>
supporting federal litigation on Ms. Brown's behalf.<lb/>
The NEA and CEA are also supporting two other Colorado<lb/>
teachers filing nonrenewal suits today in the U.S. District Court in<lb/>
Denver. They are Florence Coen, a teacher at Lincoln Elementary<lb/>
School, Boulder Valley School District; and Donald Weathers a<lb/>
teacher and basketball coach at West Grade School, West Yuma<lb/>
HiS0 District- Both are seekinQ reinstatement, back salary<lb/>
and $200,000 in damages.<lb/>
In the Brown suit against members of the College Council of<lb/>
Ames College and Ed Beaty, college president, Ms. Brown's brief<lb/>
states that the panel discussion of three members of the Denver<lb/>
Lesbian Center was relevant to the subject matter of her course and<lb/>
she had advance approval by her administrative supervisors to have<lb/>
the discussion. The panelists answered students' questions about<lb/>
sex roles, employment difficulties, married homosexuals, and<lb/>
childbearing.<lb/>
Additionally, the Brown brief contends that the nonrenewal of her<lb/>
contract "was accompanied with accusations concerning (her) moral<lb/>
character so that the nonrenewal imposes upon her a stigma<lb/>
foreclosing other employment opportunities in her chosen profession<lb/>
as a teacher, depriving plaintiff thereby of her liberty without due<lb/>
process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment In<lb/>
addition to legal assistance, Ms. Brown is receiving a loan from the<lb/>
NEA DuShane Emergency Fund.<lb/>
In the other contract nonrenewal suits the NEA and CEA are<lb/>
supporting two elementary school teachers who are alleging that they<lb/>
have been treated unfairly in evaluation procedures and also have<lb/>
been deprived of their property and liberty rights without due process<lb/>
of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.<lb/>
In the Florence Coen suit against the Boulder Valley School<lb/>
District directors, the district school superintendent, the principal of<lb/>
Lincoln Elementary School, and the director of the Follow Through<lb/>
Program, Ms. Coen is charging defendants with reneging on the<lb/>
evaluation procedures set forth in the collective bargaining<lb/>
f?M"MM???? <lb/>
i<lb/>
agreement between the Board ana the Boulder Valley Education<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Ms. Coen's brief states that she received satisfactory evaluations<lb/>
for her first two years at Lincoln, but that in 1971-72 she was not<lb/>
given constructive leadership and guidance by administrative and<lb/>
supervisory staff as provided by the district's policies. Neither was<lb/>
she gien oral or written warnings by the principal of his intention<lb/>
not to recommend that her contract be renewed, also required by the<lb/>
district's policies.<lb/>
When the principal's unfavorable evaluation was submitted to the<lb/>
school board and Ms. Coen's contract was not renewed, she filed a<lb/>
grievance stating that the evaluation was not made in accordance<lb/>
with the bargaining agreement and that no guidance had been<lb/>
provided. The board claimed the matter was not subject to grievance<lb/>
procedure.<lb/>
Additionally Ms. Coen is claiming she was deprived of her<lb/>
academic freedom rights under the First Amendment. The actions of<lb/>
her supervisor and principal in interfering with her performance of her<lb/>
teaching duties, interrupting and criticizing her performance in aid of<lb/>
dissident factions in the community were, her complaint alleges,<lb/>
"arbitrary and unreasonable, (and) attended with malice<lb/>
Ms. Coen further contends that a parent of one of the students in<lb/>
the Follow Through Program stated at a public meeting "that there<lb/>
was a teacher at Lincoln Elementary they wanted to get rid of The<lb/>
Coen complaint alleges that the parent "enjoyed the favor of the<lb/>
supervisor and principal and that the two undertook not to give<lb/>
plaintiff constructive leadership and guidance.<lb/>
Donald Weathers, a nonrenewed teacher and basketball coach, is<lb/>
claiming in his suit that in light of Colorado statutory requirements<lb/>
and the written employment contracts of the West Yuma County<lb/>
School District No. R-J-1, he had a legitimate expectancy of<lb/>
continued employment in that district and therefore he could not be<lb/>
deprived of his job without a written notice of the reasons for<lb/>
nonrenewal and a hearing.<lb/>
Weathers has taught two years in West Grade School but was not<lb/>
rehired for the 1972-73 school year despite evaluations by the<lb/>
superintendent and principal that he was a satisfactory and efficient<lb/>
employee. His suit alleges his contract was not renewed because of<lb/>
complaints from individuals or groups made to school directors and<lb/>
either never referred to the superintendent, or if referred, were<lb/>
satisfactorily adjusted by him.<lb/>
Weathers further asserts that his termination was "accompanied<lb/>
with accusations and innuendos concerning his professional<lb/>
competence" which affect his future job opportunities.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
MMMMIMM<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Assembly discusses<lb/>
unity among blacks<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Projects designed to increase black<lb/>
students' awareness of themselves and<lb/>
other students at ECU were the topics<lb/>
discussed with Secretary of Minority<lb/>
Affairs Maurice Huntley recently.<lb/>
"Unity more in 74" was the theme of<lb/>
an assembly held for black ECU students<lb/>
a few weeks ago. Between 100-150<lb/>
students attended. Discussions were held<lb/>
concerning how the black community at<lb/>
ECU could increase their rapport with<lb/>
black citizens of Greenville and<lb/>
surrounding areas as well as with other<lb/>
students who attend ECU.<lb/>
A community action program is in<lb/>
progress designed to unite the Greenville<lb/>
black community and students at<lb/>
ECU. The stress is on service. The action<lb/>
is in tutorial aid, music, and cultural<lb/>
awareness. The black community in<lb/>
Greenville has had little to do with the<lb/>
black students at ECU stated Huntley.<lb/>
With this program, he and the other<lb/>
minority students hope to show Greenville<lb/>
blacks that there really are benefits in<lb/>
their fellowship.<lb/>
Minority recruitment is another area of<lb/>
concern. The office of minority affairs<lb/>
hopes to publish two brochures designed<lb/>
to publicize black-oriented programs<lb/>
available at ECU for both pi spective<lb/>
Committee requires child's<lb/>
Social Security number<lb/>
(CPSLNS)-The Senate Finance Committee approved a plan this<lb/>
month that would require every child in the country to be assigned a<lb/>
Social Security number upon entering first grade, beginning in 1974.<lb/>
The committee is studying a plan that would make fingerprinting<lb/>
mandatory for "older" persons who apply for cards but "voluntary"<lb/>
for children receiving cards for the first time.<lb/>
According to aides of committee chairman, Russel B. Long<lb/>
(DLa.), the plans are aimed at precenting misuse of cards for fraud.<lb/>
"I personally think that everyone ought to have fingerprints on<lb/>
file, but I don't think we should require it at six Long said.<lb/>
The Social Security and Welfare bill, to which the fingerprinting<lb/>
plan would be attached if approved, will be ready for Senate action<lb/>
soon ??????HritaHHBH<lb/>
students and those presently enrolled.<lb/>
The administration has not done a whole<lb/>
lot, stated Huntley concerning the efforts<lb/>
at minority recruitment. There is a<lb/>
curriculum with many good programs<lb/>
which should be brought to the attention<lb/>
of blacks who desire to go to college, but<lb/>
have not made their choice yet. Most of<lb/>
those who come are attracted mainly for<lb/>
sports, while there should be emphasis<lb/>
on the academic as well.<lb/>
Saturday, a bus for minority students<lb/>
will travel to the ECU-UNC game to<lb/>
empha .ize their support as a group for tht<lb/>
school. "This is not a program to stress<lb/>
separatism he stated. "We feel before<lb/>
we t jrn our attentions to something else,<lb/>
we have to get out heads together first<lb/>
Black enrollment has been steadily<lb/>
increasing at ECU. Huntley feels that a<lb/>
lot of the credit for the increased interest<lb/>
should go to the black Greek<lb/>
organizations. There are now four<lb/>
organizations on campus that are<lb/>
nationally affiliated. The office for<lb/>
minority affairs also works closely with<lb/>
Souls, a campus organization for blacks.<lb/>
Through the coordination of these<lb/>
groups, Huntley plans to produce an<lb/>
awareness of the administration to the<lb/>
particular problems of minorities and their<lb/>
recruitment for college, as well as the<lb/>
necessity of more black faculty members.<lb/>
Factory termpapers cause<lb/>
two students' probation<lb/>
(CPS)-Two students who bought and submitted "factory" termpapers<lb/>
have been placed on disciplinary probation for the remainder of their<lb/>
academic careers at Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts.<lb/>
The violators' names became known after Boston University filed<lb/>
suit against the term-paper firms. The suit, which Tufts helped<lb/>
finance, closed down the termpaper industry in Massachusetts and<lb/>
required the companies to turn over their records to Boston<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Because this was the first offense for each student, punishment<lb/>
was limited to disciplinary probation. Students who repeat the<lb/>
violation will be suspended or expelled, a Tufts' official said.<lb/>
Scuba diving grows<lb/>
If you are a good swimmer, then you<lb/>
probably enjoy all types of water sports.<lb/>
One of the newest and fastest growing<lb/>
water sports is SCUBA DIVING. Getting a<lb/>
first hand look at what lies under the<lb/>
surface of the water, or exploring old ship<lb/>
wrecks and collecting souvenirs can be<lb/>
fascinating. SCUBA DIVING is perfectly<lb/>
safe as long as certain safety precautions<lb/>
are observed nd the equipment is used<lb/>
properly. Tr,d oport is growing so fast<lb/>
that many states have passed laws<lb/>
requiring that divers be certified before<lb/>
than can use SCUBA equipment.<lb/>
Learn how to become an efficient,<lb/>
competent diver. Enroll in the BASIC<lb/>
SCUBA CERTIFICATION COURSE spon-<lb/>
sored by the Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education of ECU. This 27-hour course is<lb/>
designed to train the student in the sport<lb/>
of SKIN and SCUBA DIVING and to react<lb/>
favorably under both normal and adverse<lb/>
conditions on the surface and under<lb/>
water.<lb/>
The course will consist of eight<lb/>
three-hour sessions. The first session<lb/>
will be an introductory session. At that<lb/>
time students will be given details on<lb/>
equipment arrangements for the course, a<lb/>
swimming test will be administered,<lb/>
medical examination forms distributed,<lb/>
and the objectives of the course will be<lb/>
outlined. The ninth and final session will<lb/>
consist of a deep dive test to be arranged<lb/>
by the student and the instructor. Most<lb/>
deep dives will take place off Radio<lb/>
Island, Morehead City, N.C.<lb/>
Each student will have to supply his<lb/>
own flippers, mask and snorkel. The<lb/>
remainder of the equipment, including the<lb/>
air, may be obtained from the instructor<lb/>
for $33.50 for the duration of the course.<lb/>
Mr. Robert Eastep will teach the<lb/>
course. He has taught the Los Angeles<lb/>
County Program for several years, is<lb/>
recognized as one of the outstanding<lb/>
SCUBA instructors in the Southeast, and<lb/>
is certified in Red Cross First Aid and Life<lb/>
Saving.<lb/>
Classes will meet on Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday nights, November 15-December<lb/>
13,1973, 7:00-10:00 in Minges Coliseum,<lb/>
Room 145. Class will not meet on<lb/>
November 22, Thanksgiving. Students<lb/>
must attend all classes and observe all<lb/>
regulations for pool sessions each night.<lb/>
Tuition is $40.00 per student (plus<lb/>
equipment, if needed), and class size is<lb/>
limited to 20 students. For further<lb/>
information contact the Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education, East Carolina<lb/>
University, P.O. Box 2727, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
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thoughtful service always.<lb/>
Piedmont ? serving over 75<lb/>
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Call us, or your travel agent.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
13<lb/>
Frat Speech<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma social sorority at<lb/>
ECU hosted representatives from other<lb/>
North Carolina campuses and several<lb/>
alumnie officers at a regional leadership<lb/>
workshop at ECU Oct. 19-21.<lb/>
ECU'S Gamma Beta chapter provided<lb/>
the location for one of eleven such<lb/>
workshops held throughout the U.S.<lb/>
Workshop participants included Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma members from UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill, Elon College and Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College. National representatives in-<lb/>
cluded alumnae members from Texas,<lb/>
Illinois and Ohio.<lb/>
The workshop consisted of sessions<lb/>
on rush, Panhellenic procedures, chapter<lb/>
management and other organization<lb/>
interests.<lb/>
Home Ec<lb/>
Dr. Patricia G. Hurley and Thelma<lb/>
Snuggs of the ECU School of Home<lb/>
Economics have returned from the annual<lb/>
conference of the American Association<lb/>
of Housing Educators in Madison, Wis.<lb/>
Both are members of the ECU housing<lb/>
and management faculty.<lb/>
The conference featured addresses by<lb/>
architects, designers and other pro-<lb/>
fessionals on the theme of multi-family<lb/>
dwellings in the total environment.<lb/>
Dr. Hurley was selected as chairman<lb/>
of the Association's Educational Com-<lb/>
mittee for the coming academic<lb/>
year. Among the committee projects she<lb/>
will direct are preparing and distributing<lb/>
educational materials on methods of<lb/>
teaching housing to the membership and<lb/>
awarding scholarships to housing<lb/>
graduate students.<lb/>
Dr. Miriam B. Moore, dean of the East<lb/>
Carolina University School of Home<lb/>
Economics, was a discussion leader at<lb/>
the Lake Placid. N.Y conference of the<lb/>
American Home Economics Association<lb/>
Oct. 14-17.<lb/>
She and several other leaders were<lb/>
selected among home economics<lb/>
professionals to explore in-depth<lb/>
direction for the Association.<lb/>
Leaders were selected by state<lb/>
presidents and members of the AHEA<lb/>
governing board to lead discussions on<lb/>
Leaders were selected by state<lb/>
presidents and members of the AHEA<lb/>
govemin board to lead discussions on the<lb/>
future of the home economics<lb/>
profession. Their ideas will be followed<lb/>
up at individual state meetings and at the<lb/>
65th annual meeting of the AHEA in Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
Sophmores<lb/>
Attention: All Sophomores - There<lb/>
will be a meeting Wednesday Night at<lb/>
7:30 in room 308 of the student<lb/>
union. The major purpose is to discuss a<lb/>
homecoming project. Your help is needed<lb/>
in order for the project to be carried<lb/>
through. If you are interested but can't<lb/>
attend please contact Jimmy Honeycutt,<lb/>
758-4994.<lb/>
NCAEDS<lb/>
Boating<lb/>
The Greenville Flotilla of the U.S.<lb/>
Coast Guard Auxiliary will give a special<lb/>
one-lesson course on boating safety on<lb/>
Monday (Oct. 29) night in Room 103 of the<lb/>
Biology building on the East Carolina<lb/>
University campus. The course, entitled<lb/>
the Skippers Outboard Special (SOS), will<lb/>
begin at 7:00 p.m. and last for 2 12 to 3<lb/>
hours. This program is designed espec-<lb/>
ially for operators of small boat who are<lb/>
not able to enroll in the Auxiliary's more<lb/>
comprehensive course on boating safety<lb/>
and seamanship which will be taught<lb/>
beginning around the first of the year.<lb/>
The U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary is a<lb/>
volunteer, non-military organization which<lb/>
cooperates with the U.S. Coast Guard in<lb/>
promoting boating safety. The entire<lb/>
family is welcome at all public education<lb/>
classes conducted by the Auxiliary.<lb/>
High School<lb/>
On Friday November 2, 1973, the A.L.<lb/>
Brown High School is having its<lb/>
homecoming festivities. Some of our<lb/>
1973 graduates are attending ECU.<lb/>
Friday Nov. 2,1973 - date of homecoming<lb/>
Special tea-11:30-3:00<lb/>
Recognition at the ceremony<lb/>
Tennala A. Gross of the ECU<lb/>
mathematics faculty was elected to a<lb/>
second term as treasurer of the North<lb/>
Carolina Association for Educational Data<lb/>
Systems at the Association's annual<lb/>
meeting in Raleigh last week.<lb/>
Other offers included faculty members<lb/>
from state and private colleges and<lb/>
universities, technical institutes and<lb/>
public schools, and officials from the<lb/>
state education agencies.<lb/>
The meeting featured addresses by Dr.<lb/>
James D. Powell of the NCSU computer<lb/>
science faculty; Steve Painter of the<lb/>
North Carolina Educational Computer<lb/>
Service; Bob Johns, director of the N.C.<lb/>
Dept. of Administration's Office of<lb/>
Management Systems; and Alan Hill,<lb/>
Director of the Dept. of Public<lb/>
Instruction's Management Information<lb/>
System.<lb/>
Legal Counseling<lb/>
The SGA attorney-general, Tom Clare,<lb/>
reminds the student body that there is<lb/>
free legal counseling available. This<lb/>
counseling service makes available<lb/>
lawyers to the students who provide<lb/>
advice on such matters as criminal cases,<lb/>
civil suits, residency problems, and just<lb/>
about anything else that requires these<lb/>
services.<lb/>
Interested students should call<lb/>
758-6262 and ask for Tom Clare, or visit<lb/>
his office on the third floor of Wright<lb/>
between the hours of 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.<lb/>
Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 11<lb/>
a.m. Tuesday and Thursday.<lb/>
Joint meeting<lb/>
William Byrd and Don Dancy, faculty<lb/>
members of the School of Allied Health<lb/>
and Social Professions, ECU, recently<lb/>
attended the annual joint meeting of the<lb/>
North Carolina Association of Health<lb/>
Educators and the Society of Public<lb/>
Health Educators. The keynote address<lb/>
was given by Dr. Lee Holder, Dean,<lb/>
College of Community and Allied Health<lb/>
Professions, University of Tennessee.<lb/>
Both Byrd and Dancy are members of<lb/>
the combined organizations' Action<lb/>
Committee which has led the professional<lb/>
health educators toward a mere active<lb/>
political role in state and federal affairs.<lb/>
The theme of the two-day conference<lb/>
was "The Challenge of the Legislative and<lb/>
Planning Process Major presentations<lb/>
were made by John Morrisey, Executive<lb/>
Director of the NorthCarolina Association<lb/>
of County Commissioners; Ernest Ratliff,<lb/>
Director of the Center for Health Law;<lb/>
Mary Lou Skinner, HEW; Elmer Johnson,<lb/>
North Carolina Director of Comprehensive<lb/>
Health Planning; Frank Kivett, Director of<lb/>
Metroline Council of Governments and<lb/>
Goerge Stockbridge, Executive Director of<lb/>
the Health Planning Council for Central<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Dr. Alvin A. Fahrner, professor of<lb/>
History at ECU, addressed Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
National Honor Fraternity at their dinner<lb/>
meeting of October 17.<lb/>
Delivering his famed speech concern-<lb/>
ing his experiences in the Navy on the day<lb/>
Pearl Harbor was attacked, Fahrner said<lb/>
that he learned one thing from that<lb/>
event-never to be caught "unawares in<lb/>
my underwears" again.<lb/>
Math meets<lb/>
Meeting offers<lb/>
emergency<lb/>
information<lb/>
TRAUMA. Care of Patients with<lb/>
Multiple Injuries a two-day conference<lb/>
for emergency medical personnel, will be<lb/>
hosted by East Carolina University Oct.<lb/>
29-30.<lb/>
The purpose of the conference is to<lb/>
provide each participant with information<lb/>
on the correct procedure of emergency<lb/>
treatment and transportation of a patient<lb/>
suffering from multiple injuries.<lb/>
The conference course is designed for<lb/>
registered nurses, licensed practical<lb/>
nurses and rescue squad members who<lb/>
must deal with accident victims in<lb/>
emergency medical situations.<lb/>
Conference speakers will include five<lb/>
Greenville physicians: Dr. Ira Hardy and<lb/>
Dr. Robert Timmons, neurosurgeons;Dr.<lb/>
Jack Welch, anesthesiologist; Dr. John<lb/>
Wooten, orthopedic surgeon; and Dr.<lb/>
Frank Longino, thoracic surgeon.<lb/>
Also speaking at a conference will be<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital Administer Jack<lb/>
Richardson; Sylvia Waters, head nurse<lb/>
with Pitt Memorial Hospital's Special<lb/>
Surgical Unit; and Evelyn Perry, dean of<lb/>
the ECU School of Nursing.<lb/>
All sessions are scheduled for the<lb/>
auditorium of the ECU Allied Health<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Conference co-sponsors with ECU are<lb/>
Pitt Memorial Hospital and the N.C. State<lb/>
Association of Rescue Squads.<lb/>
Among the topics to be covered at the<lb/>
conference are types and diagnoses of<lb/>
injuries commonly seen in the<lb/>
multi-trauma patient, commonly used<lb/>
life-saving techniques, and proper<lb/>
transportation of victims of head and<lb/>
spinal cord injuries.<lb/>
The Mathematics Department at ECU<lb/>
will be represented by a group of ten<lb/>
students and five faculty members when<lb/>
the third annual state Mathematics<lb/>
Conference Convenes in Raleigh this<lb/>
wseekend.<lb/>
Dr. Katharine W. Hodgin will preside<lb/>
at the general interest section for college<lb/>
personnel. Other faculty members attend-<lb/>
ing include Mrs. Millie Derrick, Dr. Robert<lb/>
Joyner, Mr. Vann Latham, and Dr. Katye<lb/>
Sowell. The student group includes John<lb/>
Barrow, Vickie Boyd, Dorothy Doyle, Sue<lb/>
Hagan, Dianne Boseman, Elizabeth Hurst,<lb/>
Flonie Jones, Mary Catherine Lloyd,<lb/>
Linda Vann and Laura White.<lb/>
The conference is co-sponsored by the<lb/>
N.C. Council of Teachers of Mathematics<lb/>
and the Mathematics Division of the State<lb/>
Department of Public Instruction. It<lb/>
attracts students and teachers from<lb/>
schools and colleges through the state<lb/>
and much of the time is devoted to<lb/>
workships and sectional meetings in<lb/>
which the delegates are active<lb/>
participants<lb/>
Meredith College is the site for this<lb/>
year's meeting. Out-of-state speakers<lb/>
include Staley Bezueka, Boston College,<lb/>
Ruth Hoffman, University of Denver,<lb/>
Raymond Wilder, University ofialifomia<lb/>
at Santa Barbara, and Lauren Woodby<lb/>
from the National Science Foundation,<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
forms are available from the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, Box 2727,<lb/>
Greenville. Pre-regi strati on deadline is<lb/>
Oct. 24.<lb/>
MM<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 Bedford.<lb/>
Those eligible for membership in the<lb/>
society will be invited to join Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta THursday evening.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
mt0m<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
ftfti<lb/>
ft<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?000<lb/>
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m<lb/>
Student Union shows British film<lb/>
The Student Union Lecture Series<lb/>
Committee will present Robert Davis who<lb/>
will present his travel film "Britain's<lb/>
Holiday Islands" on November 1, at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Robert Davis, noted lecturer, cinema-<lb/>
tographer, and film producer is one of<lb/>
those rare individuals who changed an<lb/>
avocation to a vocation and has been in<lb/>
constant demand ever since. Though he<lb/>
calls the woods of Trout Valley in<lb/>
Northern Illinois his home, he is a world<lb/>
traveller who has won renown for his color<lb/>
documentary films featuring many areas<lb/>
of the globe. Mr. Davis was bom in<lb/>
Kansas City, Missouri and while in<lb/>
elei oentary school he acquired an 8mm<lb/>
camera and immediately began filming<lb/>
everything in sight. Later he switched to<lb/>
16mm while working at Calvin film<lb/>
production studio in Kansas City.<lb/>
"Britain's Holiday Islands a varied<lb/>
playground of historical and scenic<lb/>
delights, will be expertly narrated for the<lb/>
viewers by Robert Davis. The film will<lb/>
take the viewers on visits to the homes of<lb/>
John Keats and Queen Victoria, as well as<lb/>
through the streets of Sark Island, where<lb/>
bicycles and carriages replace automo-<lb/>
biles.<lb/>
The Isle of Man, home of the Tailess<lb/>
Manx Cat, and Dunvegan Castle on the<lb/>
Isle of Skye will captivate viewers with<lb/>
their simplistic beauty.<lb/>
Admission for ECU students and<lb/>
Faclty will be by I.D. card, ECU staff, fifty<lb/>
cents, and Public admission is<lb/>
$1.00. Tickets may be purchased<lb/>
beginning October 25 at the ECU Central<lb/>
Ticket Office.<lb/>
On the Isle of Man, thousands of foreign visitors come to take Dart in the world famous Tourist Trophy Motorcycle<lb/>
Races. You will have a areater understanding and appreciation of the contestants and their cycles when<lb/>
you observe the loving care, preparation and details displayed in the two weeks of racing. Speeds up to 130 mph,<lb/>
(including sounds) will fascinate you! From the travel-documentary film, Britain's Holiday Islands personally<lb/>
presented by Robert Davis, of Cary, Illinois.<lb/>
American success<lb/>
ideal transformed<lb/>
crossword puzzle<lb/>
Continued from page five.<lb/>
established by corporate superiors. The<lb/>
survey sub-group most inclined to believe<lb/>
that "pressures to conform" were<lb/>
decreasing was composed of respondents<lb/>
holding at least one advanced degree.<lb/>
-Respondents who did not complete<lb/>
high school were consistently the most<lb/>
dissatisfied with respect to career<lb/>
advancement and the sense of personal<lb/>
fulfillment. The next most dissatisfied<lb/>
group was composed of businessmen (of<lb/>
all ages) currently pursuing post-graduate<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
Few businessmen surveyed equate<lb/>
success with greater material reward<lb/>
andor job or career advancement. In<lb/>
fact, more than a third of the 2,821<lb/>
executives say that "success increasingly<lb/>
represents the realization of goals and<lb/>
aspirations which have little or nothing to<lb/>
do with career advancement. Nearly half<lb/>
of the respondents define success in<lb/>
terms of greater job satisfaction and more<lb/>
meaningful work Here they would seem<lb/>
to be in substantial agreement with U.S.<lb/>
college students who, according to<lb/>
pollster Daniel Yankelovich, are "turning<lb/>
away from the extrinsic rewards of a<lb/>
career, such as money and status,<lb/>
and turning toward its inherent<lb/>
satisfactions A 1972 report by the<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
College Placement Council, moreover,<lb/>
reveals that young people today are<lb/>
increasingly interested "in activities that<lb/>
satisfy oneself rather than in activities<lb/>
that promise recognition from the larger<lb/>
society<lb/>
In responses to rapidly changing<lb/>
values, the AMA report concludes,<lb/>
organizations are going to have to move<lb/>
away from elitism and "rigidity of<lb/>
methods and structure and toward the<lb/>
establishment of an organizational<lb/>
climate that is more natural, spontaneous<lb/>
and organic-and not just on paper, but in<lb/>
practice. Those that do will be those that<lb/>
sense the direction in which human<lb/>
progress is moving<lb/>
Dale Tarnowieski is a former Senior<lb/>
Research Associate for American<lb/>
Management Associations and co-author<lb/>
of four AMA research reports, including<lb/>
The Four-Day Week and Trade With<lb/>
China. He has written a number of<lb/>
articles for newspapers and periodicals,<lb/>
including Personnel Magazine.<lb/>
The Changing Success Ethic is an<lb/>
AMA membership publication. It is<lb/>
available through AMACOM, publishing<lb/>
division of AMA. The cost of the report if<lb/>
$5.00 to AMA members; $7.50 to<lb/>
non-members.<lb/>
mmmmmtmmMmmwmm<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 At the pinnacle<lb/>
5 Duct<lb/>
8 For each<lb/>
11 The  of<lb/>
Orleans<lb/>
12 Struck with<lb/>
a light,<lb/>
splashing<lb/>
sound (var.)<lb/>
13 Old French<lb/>
coin<lb/>
14 Birthstone<lb/>
16 Canadian<lb/>
province (ab.l<lb/>
17 No part<lb/>
18 Dreary<lb/>
19 Birthstone<lb/>
23 Blockhead<lb/>
24 Caribbean<lb/>
island<lb/>
25 Skidded<lb/>
27 ? and tucker<lb/>
28 Dance<lb/>
30 Dennis the<lb/>
Menace, for one<lb/>
33 Alaskan island<lb/>
34 Jim Ryun,<lb/>
for example<lb/>
36 Engrave<lb/>
38 Short, open<lb/>
vest<lb/>
39 Plant of the<lb/>
lily family<lb/>
40 Blessing<lb/>
42 Drink little<lb/>
by little<lb/>
43 Abandoned<lb/>
child<lb/>
48 Actress Lupino<lb/>
49 Otherwise<lb/>
50 Carry out<lb/>
51 Turkish cap<lb/>
52 Know (arch.)<lb/>
53 Boorish person<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Amount lab.)<lb/>
2 Greek letter<lb/>
3 Hear (Sp.)<lb/>
4 On the double<lb/>
(ab.)<lb/>
5 Song: "You're<lb/>
so <lb/>
6 Part of a church<lb/>
7 ? Mhre Eglise<lb/>
8 Birthstone<lb/>
9 Brilliant success<lb/>
10 Birthstone<lb/>
12 Money (coll.)<lb/>
15 Discover<lb/>
18 Supreme being<lb/>
19 Chatter (coll.)<lb/>
20 Jackie's husband<lb/>
21 Massage<lb/>
22 Note well (ab.)<lb/>
23 Birthstone<lb/>
25 Southern<lb/>
Methodist<lb/>
University (ab.)<lb/>
26 Pound (ab.)<lb/>
29 University of<lb/>
Texas lab.)<lb/>
30 - de la Citd<lb/>
31 Sea in Cherbourg<lb/>
32 Joe Namath.<lb/>
for instance<lb/>
Answer to Puzzle No. 111<lb/>
3 once aaa<lb/>
a as'jra rjuaa<lb/>
l:l HBUU<lb/>
heir fjaa Ea<lb/>
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33 Playing card<lb/>
35 Duce<lb/>
36 Suppress<lb/>
37 Birthstone<lb/>
38 Tibia or<lb/>
femur<lb/>
39 As though<lb/>
(two words)<lb/>
40 Kind of knife<lb/>
41 Eiect<lb/>
43 Of small<lb/>
number<lb/>
44 Daily record<lb/>
45 Nigerian tribe<lb/>
46 Combining<lb/>
form: recent<lb/>
47 Swindle<lb/>
wVbpI?!17I'pfc'Y?<lb/>
f?1PfetL<lb/>
Vv.R0iSiu6<lb/>
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Distr. by Putties, Inc. No. 112 c<lb/>
IS.<lb/>
wamm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0015"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
cle<lb/>
OP<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
15<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Strawderman returns<lb/>
To-Morrow's Sports<lb/>
By JACK MORROW<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
UGH<lb/>
I was somewhat awed as I stared at my television screen last Tuesday evening<lb/>
to view the third game of the 73 World Series. Was the mechanism that works my<lb/>
eyesburned out or did I see Met outfielder Cleon Jones blow his dinner right in front<lb/>
of 56,000 fans at Shea Stadium?<lb/>
Well NBC's Curt Gowdy and Tony Kubek (alias Laurel and Hardy) were very<lb/>
diplomatic about it as they remarked, "Jones appears to be having some difficulty in<lb/>
leftfield However, Met announcer Lindsey Nelson blurted forth, "I wonder if we<lb/>
could get an instant replay of Jones throwing up in the outfield<lb/>
A further investigation showed that Jones was suffereing from a case of the flu.<lb/>
I am reminded of the White Sox pitcher, Bob Locker, who was facing the New<lb/>
York Yankees in New York on a Sunday afternoon before a large crowd.<lb/>
As the game moved into the fifth inning, Locker was working on a fresh plug of<lb/>
"Beech Nut" when he was hit in the abdomen with a wicked line drive. He<lb/>
swallowed the tobacco and promptly turned around and gave it up on the back of the<lb/>
mound along with his cookies.<lb/>
MORE ON "ANNOUNCERS"<lb/>
I should think that the President of NBC would think twice before sending guys<lb/>
like Curt Gowdy, Jim Simpson and Tony Kubek to "announce" baseball<lb/>
games. These "3Musketeers" not only give NBC a bad name, but they hurt the game<lb/>
of baseball as well.<lb/>
Gowdy is consistently giving wrong names, faces, positions and scores. When<lb/>
Simpson is behind the microphone, I am lucky if I know who is playing. In short,<lb/>
Gowdy and Simpson give me the illusion that I am watching an old Dean Martin and<lb/>
Jerry Lewis movie.<lb/>
When Kubek flashes that "cheese" smile and then spits out his juvenile remarks,<lb/>
I feel compelled to grab a 34 ounce "Louisville Slugger" and beat my television set<lb/>
to a pulp.<lb/>
The most important aspect of an announcer's job is to be prepared. If the<lb/>
announcer does his homework he can keep the fans abreast of what is happing on<lb/>
the field of play.<lb/>
Bob Lamey, voice of the Carolina Cougars, is a prime example of a dedicated<lb/>
reporter. He has all of his information stored in the memory bank in his head and he<lb/>
does not need it all typed out in front of him as do out NBC boys.<lb/>
NBC statistician Alan Roth keeps Gowdy and company "alive" with some very<lb/>
interesting facts. I would think that if they were without the services of Mr. Roth,<lb/>
Gowdy would come on the air thusly, "Good evening ladies and gentlemen this<lb/>
is<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
The Pirate Athletic Council's decision to drop lacrosse as a varsity sport has<lb/>
been challenged and questioned by many.<lb/>
Clark Franke, a member of the 1972 East Carolina lacrosse team, presented<lb/>
Athletic Director, Clarence Stasavich, with a list of 13 points outlining the reasons<lb/>
why he and his supporters feel lacrosse should be reinstated as a varsity sport.<lb/>
The following are Franke's 13 points:<lb/>
1. ECU will be in a new lacrosse league, the South Atlantic Lacrosse League of the<lb/>
NCAA, if the Pirates are a varsity sport.<lb/>
2. The U.S. Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) has grown from 50<lb/>
members in 1962 to well over 100 in 1972.<lb/>
3. Lacrosse is now played in Chapel Hill high school and Durtiam Academy with<lb/>
equipement and coaching supplied by UNC-CH and Duke University.<lb/>
4. The Lacrosse Hall of Fame in Baltimore has offered many services to help us<lb/>
regain our varsity status.<lb/>
5. Lacrosse has gained national exposure through "Sport Magazine a great deal of<lb/>
coverage in "Sports Illustrated" and lacrosse is featured in Chevrolet's recent<lb/>
brochure for new cars.<lb/>
6. For the past four years, there has been a national championship series which has<lb/>
had great attendance records.<lb/>
7. There are some 30 experienced lacrosse players here at ECU, practically all being<lb/>
either freshmen or sophomores, recruited exclusively to play lacrosse.<lb/>
8. The National Hall of Fame is investigating potential volunteer lacrosse coaches<lb/>
living in the Greenville area. Here at ECU we have a faculty member (David<lb/>
MacNaught, Dept. of Sociology) who would be willing to coach the team as a varsity<lb/>
sport.<lb/>
9. The Hall of Fame has offered us a kit to completely outfit (sticks, balls, gloves,<lb/>
armpads, helmets, shoulderpads, goals and nets) the team with all new equipement<lb/>
for up to 30 players for only $600. We feel that this fact shows clearly the low cost<lb/>
of a full varsity lacrosse program.<lb/>
10. We feel that this kit, along with a volunteer coach and total varsity status will<lb/>
allow us to operate on a budget even smaller than the very small budget we had last<lb/>
year. If a team is interested enough in the sport that they play, then there appears to<lb/>
be no valid reason to cut out such a progressive sport.<lb/>
Less than a week before East<lb/>
Carolina's opener against North Carolina<lb/>
State, strong (Sarah) linebacker Butch<lb/>
Strawderman crumpled to the group<lb/>
during a freak practice mishap.<lb/>
The diagnosis: sprained knee, out for<lb/>
four to six weeks. The problem: how to<lb/>
replace one of the wildett of the "Wild<lb/>
Dogs<lb/>
Four weeks turned into five and five<lb/>
into six. Finally, after seven and one half<lb/>
weeks by Strawderman's careful count, he<lb/>
played as a starter against VMI.<lb/>
"I never thought I'd see the day. When<lb/>
I hurt my knee, the doctors told me I'd be<lb/>
back for Furman (Sept. 29) if I took care of<lb/>
it and worked hard at rehabilitating<lb/>
it. Things didn't go to well at first, but<lb/>
now the knee has come around.<lb/>
Against VMI, I felt pretty good. I think<lb/>
my knee is back almost 100 percent. But I<lb/>
played like a dummy. I made a lot of<lb/>
mistakes and I'll tell you, the first series I<lb/>
was about to die. It was a long series and<lb/>
VMI did try to throw a lot, but I didn't<lb/>
realize how much conditioning I missed.<lb/>
"The worst thing that happened was<lb/>
that I couldn't catch the football. I had a<lb/>
chance to intercept two passes and one of<lb/>
them was a sure touchdown.<lb/>
"I'd better change that. The worst<lb/>
thing was the assignments I missed. The<lb/>
tight end for VMI got me a couple of times<lb/>
when I was playing where I shouldn't have<lb/>
been. Then the guy knocked me down. I<lb/>
don't like that<lb/>
"The best part of the game was being<lb/>
back with the 'Wild Dogs I say that<lb/>
because they are playing super<lb/>
defense. Coach Randle likes to say they<lb/>
were 'flyin around' on defense. If you<lb/>
look at the points on the visitors side of<lb/>
the scoreboard you can tell how much<lb/>
flyin' around there was.<lb/>
"Against VMI the "Wild Dogs' were<lb/>
flyin I think they came up with pass<lb/>
interceptions and at least three<lb/>
fumbles. The scoreboard took care of<lb/>
itself-seven points. The 'Dogs' shutout<lb/>
Davidson, allowed Furman only three<lb/>
points, scored two touchdowns against<lb/>
Southern Illinois and shutout Southern<lb/>
Mississippi. I'm proud to be a part of that<lb/>
outfit, even though I wasn't playing when<lb/>
they were doing all the flyin' around<lb/>
Strawderman will have his chance to<lb/>
fly around over the next five weeks. He is<lb/>
back and the defense needs him. Cary<lb/>
Godette, defensive end, is playing hurt as<lb/>
is Buddy Lowery. Strawderman's return<lb/>
adds striking power to the "Wild Dogs<lb/>
Lady swimmers drop ASU<lb/>
Before a sparse crowd at Minges<lb/>
Natatorium Saturday afternoon, the East<lb/>
Carolina women swimmers won 14 out of<lb/>
15 events on their way to a 105-19<lb/>
thrashing of the women from Appalachian<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
Sophomore Co-Captain Linda Smiley<lb/>
and sophomore Beverly Osborn accounted<lb/>
for three individual first place finishes.<lb/>
Miss Smiley won the 50 and 100-yard<lb/>
butterfly events and the 100-yard<lb/>
individual medley while Miss Osborn<lb/>
captured the 50, 200 an' 400-yard<lb/>
freestyle events. Both girls Sw?am on the<lb/>
victorious 200-yard freestyle relay.<lb/>
Double winners were senior Cindy<lb/>
Wheeler, who won both the one and<lb/>
three-meter diving events, and freshman<lb/>
Linda Shull who swam to victories in the<lb/>
50 and 100-yard backstroke events. Miss<lb/>
Shull also swam on the winning 200-yard<lb/>
medley relay.<lb/>
Other Pirate winners were junior<lb/>
Barbara Strange in the 50-yard breastroke<lb/>
and junior Donna Webb in the 100-yard<lb/>
breastroke.<lb/>
Head coach Eric Orders was quite<lb/>
pleased with his team's efforts. He<lb/>
awarded the team's Gold Award<lb/>
(outstanding performance) to Miss Smiley<lb/>
and he presented the entire team with the<lb/>
Purple Award (outstanding effort). Even<lb/>
chough the girls from Appalachian didn't<lb/>
pose much of a problem, the lady Pirates<lb/>
still turned in good times, which is the<lb/>
mark of a fine team.<lb/>
The competition will get a bit stiffer as<lb/>
the girls travel to Chapel Hill on Friday for<lb/>
the UNC Relays. Stiff competition should<lb/>
be provided by UNC-G, UNC-CH and Duke<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Ladies shutout<lb/>
Tar Heels, 8-0<lb/>
ECU'S women's field hockey team<lb/>
used a blanket defense and the scoring of<lb/>
Terry Jones to bomb UNC 8-0.<lb/>
Gail Betton and Marion Hart combined<lb/>
to stop all the Tar Heel attempts at<lb/>
scoring while goalie Nancy Richards<lb/>
registered her first shutout of the season.<lb/>
Miss Richards has allowed only one<lb/>
goal in two games this year.<lb/>
At halftime the Pirates led 4-0, yet the<lb/>
game was never in serious doubt as Terry<lb/>
Jones scored four goals set up by the<lb/>
accurate passing of her teammates.<lb/>
Also scoring for ECU were Jane Gallop<lb/>
with two goals and Carlene Boyd and<lb/>
Frances Swenholt with one each.<lb/>
11. We need to gain varsity status because, in order to make up a schedule of our<lb/>
own, other coaches have told us that they cannot definitely schedule us if we are not<lb/>
a team. Schedules which were set up before we were cut out have since been<lb/>
terminated.<lb/>
12. Being college students on budgets of our own, we can hardly afford to pay the<lb/>
costs of new equipment, transportation and, most importantly, medical<lb/>
costs. Should any of our players incur any injury, we would have to be able to use<lb/>
the services of East Carolina's Sports Medicine Center.<lb/>
We would have to purchase the items discussed above because, as of now, we<lb/>
have enough equipment to outfit less than half of our team. Obviously we could not<lb/>
purchase these things on our own.<lb/>
13. Lacrosse is an original American sport. It was established by the Indians who<lb/>
lived in the Southern, Western and Northeastern areas of our country. The sport has<lb/>
generated a great deal of national interest in ECU. Also, we have a team composed<lb/>
of active, interested and talented players. For these reasons, we feel that there is a<lb/>
basic and strong need to reinstate lacrosse as a varsity sport immediately here at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
MMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039885_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 1323 OCT. 1973<lb/>
? !???'?<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Pirates subdue Bulldogs, 34-0<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S.CEast Carolina<lb/>
won it's 12th straight conference game<lb/>
since a mid-1971 loss to Richmond and<lb/>
moved into first place with a 34-0<lb/>
whitewashing of The Citadel.<lb/>
Carlester Crumpler ran for three<lb/>
touchdowns and a total of 98 yards in a<lb/>
sloppy game marred by 12 fumbles and<lb/>
some unruly behavior on the part of the<lb/>
cadets.<lb/>
"We played as well as we could in the<lb/>
first half said coach Sonny Randle.<lb/>
"And although we let down in the second<lb/>
half, that was only natural. I was<lb/>
extremely pleased with the game<lb/>
The "Wild Dogs" turned in another<lb/>
"routine" performance, limiting The<lb/>
Citadel to 92 yards rushing and only 54<lb/>
yards through the air.<lb/>
"I didn't think we would dominate<lb/>
them as we did said coach<lb/>
Randle. "We're got a mighty fine defense,<lb/>
and the credit goes to Carl Reese, our<lb/>
defensive coordinator. In fact, all the<lb/>
coaches have been doing a great job<lb/>
The Citadel head coach Bobby Ross<lb/>
made this comment after the game:<lb/>
"East Carolina was a faster team, I am<lb/>
sure, but we just didn't play good football<lb/>
offensively or defensively. We never<lb/>
blocked that number 42 (ECU'S Danny<lb/>
Kepley-honorable mention All-American<lb/>
last season). He is a fine football player<lb/>
Quarterback Carl Summerell had a<lb/>
superlative day at the reigns of the Pirate<lb/>
offense, which piled up 416 yards. Sum-<lb/>
merell completed 12 of 14 passes (yes,<lb/>
that is 86 percent) for 175 yards.<lb/>
"Summerell makes their offense what<lb/>
it is said opposing coach Ross. "He's<lb/>
just a fine athlete and hurts you in many<lb/>
ways<lb/>
Coach Randle posed this question to<lb/>
the press after the game. "You (the press)<lb/>
keep saying that he (Summerell) has his<lb/>
best game each week. I challenge you to<lb/>
name a better quarterback in the eastern<lb/>
part of the country<lb/>
Kenny Strayhom, Southern Con-<lb/>
ference leading rusher going into the<lb/>
game, scored ECU'S first touchdown after<lb/>
Cary Godette recovered a Citadel fumble<lb/>
on the game's second play. Five<lb/>
consecutive rushes by the "Horn" gave<lb/>
the Pirates a 7-0 lead.<lb/>
Later in the quarter Jim Bolding went<lb/>
back to field a punt, and was called for<lb/>
signaling for a fair catch when all he had<lb/>
in mind was to shield the sun from his<lb/>
eyes. The Citadel also suffered the same<lb/>
misfortune later in the second quarter. It<lb/>
was a good thing that the punt returners<lb/>
never had an itchy nose, for the referees<lb/>
would probably have mistaken that for a<lb/>
fair catch signal, too.<lb/>
As the first quarter came to a close,<lb/>
Mike Shea fumbled a pass from<lb/>
Summerell at The Citadel eight. Godette<lb/>
promptly recovered his second fumble on<lb/>
the next play, and three plays later<lb/>
Summerell ran it in from the four for a<lb/>
14-0 Pirate lead.<lb/>
Crumpler scored his first touchdown<lb/>
in the second quarter on an unmolested<lb/>
eight yard run through a gaping hole in<lb/>
The Citadel line which was big enough to<lb/>
drive the team bus through. The offensive<lb/>
line was "blowing them out according to<lb/>
coach Randle.<lb/>
The next 1:25 was typical of the<lb/>
"giveaway" style that seemed to be the<lb/>
order of the day. First Reggie Pinkney<lb/>
recovered a fumble on the first play after<lb/>
the kickoff. Two plays later Jimmy Howe<lb/>
fumbled to give the ball back to The<lb/>
Citadel. Jim Bolding then intercepted a<lb/>
pass on the very next play to give the ball<lb/>
back to the Pirates. Enough is enough,<lb/>
but Crumpler missed a handoff on the<lb/>
second subsequent play, and once more it<lb/>
was the Bulldog's ball.<lb/>
Crumpler scored again before halftime<lb/>
climaxing a 10 play, 80 yard drive with a<lb/>
-two yard plunge. Jim Woodymissed for a<lb/>
change on the conversion, but the Bucs<lb/>
were still on top 27-0.<lb/>
A key play in the drive was a third<lb/>
down Summerell pass to split end Vic<lb/>
Wilfore, good for 22 yards and a first<lb/>
down. Summerell threw to Wilfore five<lb/>
PIRATE LINEBACKER DANNY KEPLEY sacks Citadel's quarterback during Saturday<lb/>
afternoon's game in Charleston. Kepley and the "Wild Dogs" were plenty wild as<lb/>
they shutout theBulldogs.<lb/>
RUNNING BACK KEN STRAYHORN prepares to turn the corner as he leaves Citadel<lb/>
defenders in his wake.<lb/>
times for a total of 73 yards.<lb/>
In discussing Wilfore's improvement<lb/>
of the past few weeks, coach Randle said<lb/>
that "Vic was our best receiver last<lb/>
season, but was in the National Guard<lb/>
andmissed spring practice. This caused<lb/>
him to get off to a slow start but now he's<lb/>
playing like we all know he can<lb/>
In the third quarter tempers started to<lb/>
wear a little thin. On a third down play<lb/>
The Citadel quarterback, Harry Lynch,<lb/>
completed a pass only to have Pirate<lb/>
. linebacker Kepley pop the receiver so hard<lb/>
that he coughed up the ball. Pinkney<lb/>
recovered his second fumble of the game.<lb/>
Citadel partisans questioned the<lb/>
referees interpretation, to put it<lb/>
mildly. They felt that maybe it should<lb/>
have been just an incomplete pass. The<lb/>
fans took their chagrin out on the Pirates,<lb/>
and unfortunately they got a little out of<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
With 2000 cadets screaming and<lb/>
jumping up and down on the aluminum<lb/>
stands of Johnson Hagood Stadium, the<lb/>
Pirates twice had to go back to the huddle<lb/>
without being able to call a play due to<lb/>
the noise.<lb/>
"It's a shame they let the cadets<lb/>
behave like that said coach Randle.<lb/>
"Enthusiasm is great but there is a time<lb/>
and place for everything<lb/>
On the first play the Pirates were able<lb/>
to finally run, a lineman jumped offside,<lb/>
unable to hear Summerell call the<lb/>
signals. "It was a fiasco the last 30<lb/>
minutes according to coach Randle. "I<lb/>
just told the team to maintain their<lb/>
composure<lb/>
"It is common courtesy to allow the<lb/>
visiting team a chance to run their plays<lb/>
without having the band blowing full<lb/>
blast continued the coach. "It was just<lb/>
disgraceful<lb/>
The Pirates ate up the last 4:38 of the<lb/>
game before Crumpler scored his third TD<lb/>
with three seconds left on the clock. His<lb/>
one yard run, followed by Woody's<lb/>
conversion made the final score 34-0.<lb/>
The fact still remains that the Bucs did<lb/>
fumble the ball away six times, and one<lb/>
shudders to think what would happen<lb/>
against the Tar Heels if that should<lb/>
continue.<lb/>
"The turnovers, those fumbles?they<lb/>
will be corrected in time for our trip to<lb/>
Chapel Hill. I guarantee it said Randle.<lb/>
Citadel coach Ross had this to say<lb/>
about the Pirates after the game. "I'd say<lb/>
they were comparable to William &amp; Mary,<lb/>
just that they get after it better on<lb/>
defense<lb/>
So the Bucs head to Chapel Hill next<lb/>
week to tackle a Tar Heel squad which is<lb/>
having an unusual season-a losing one.<lb/>
After a 16-0 loss to Tulane they will be<lb/>
breathing fire in anticipation of a much<lb/>
needed victory.<lb/>
Women blank UNC-W<lb/>
Winning is becoming a habit with the<lb/>
women's tennis team as ECU blanked<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington 9-0 last week to run their<lb/>
record to 6-0.<lb/>
The pattern for the match was set early<lb/>
by Ellen Warren in a swift victory which<lb/>
saw her lose only one game in winning<lb/>
6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
The Pirates in fact swept all the<lb/>
singles matches in straight sets. Ann<lb/>
Archer won 6-0, 6-2, Gwen Waller 6-1,6-1,<lb/>
Susan Bussey 6-3, 6-4, Ann Chavasse 7-5,<lb/>
6-2 and Ginny Deese 7-5, 6-4.<lb/>
The dominance in the singles matches<lb/>
was evident in the doubles where all three<lb/>
of the Pirate's pairs won.<lb/>
Misses Archer and Waller won 8-1.<lb/>
Misses Bussey and Warren won 8-5 and<lb/>
Cynthia Averett and Miss Deese won 8-4.<lb/>
The last home match of the season<lb/>
will take place at the Mmges Courts Oct.<lb/>
25 against Peace College at 3 p.m.<lb/>
The match against Peace College has<lb/>
an added flair in that both teams are<lb/>
presently undefeated.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
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