<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039898_0001"/>
<lb/>
Fountginhegd s<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA NO. 2510 JAN. ,974<lb/>
mm<lb/>
74Buc'wfflb<lb/>
Buccaneer sparks various 'reaction1<lb/>
By SUSAN SHERMAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"The Buccaneer for 1973 was created<lb/>
to warrant a reaction from the students at<lb/>
East Carolina This statement was made<lb/>
by Linda Gardner, 1973 editor. The<lb/>
student response initiated by the arrival of<lb/>
the annual gave the staff their wish.<lb/>
Those students who took the time to<lb/>
express an opinion were exceedingly<lb/>
blunt in doing so and these opinions<lb/>
varied from one extreme to the other.<lb/>
Many students centered their com-<lb/>
plaints around the spread on drugs and<lb/>
the nude photography. Other comments<lb/>
concerned the disorganized look and the<lb/>
late arrival of the 73 Buc.<lb/>
Linda Gardner, editor for 73, defends<lb/>
the book by saying "people with open<lb/>
minds who viewed the annual as a whole<lb/>
did not find it distasteful In addition<lb/>
she states that people who viewed the<lb/>
Buc with closed minds were not giving<lb/>
the book an "equal opportunity<lb/>
Ms. Gardner defends the four nude<lb/>
pictures by saying that the scene on the<lb/>
couch displayed no more than the normal<lb/>
male apparel commonly accepted on the<lb/>
beach. The other three followed more<lb/>
publically acceptable lines, the snowlady<lb/>
Jenkins talks<lb/>
on role of the<lb/>
common man<lb/>
Concern for the role of the working<lb/>
man and the middle class in today's trend<lb/>
toward "less political democracy" has<lb/>
been voiced by Dr. Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
chancellor of ECU.<lb/>
"The blue collar worker and the middle<lb/>
class man have contributed too nuch to<lb/>
this society for them to become second<lb/>
class citizens Jenkins said. He pictured<lb/>
the middle class as over-burdened and<lb/>
reduced in political forace. Today's<lb/>
society is pay'n9 "a dear Price" foJ<lb/>
"increased democracy in material things<lb/>
and this he said, leads to a "less political<lb/>
democracy<lb/>
"We may well price many of our public<lb/>
offices out of the market for the middle<lb/>
class man Jenkins said. He noted that<lb/>
the high cost of political campaigning and<lb/>
a disproportionate ability to make political<lb/>
contributions "creates not only a great<lb/>
temptation but almost a necessity for one<lb/>
who seeks high political office to<lb/>
prostitute himself to a few corporate<lb/>
giants Such a political candidate<lb/>
becomes "a servant to highly expensive<lb/>
news media costs he said.<lb/>
"Political and economic freedom in the<lb/>
United States may well be dying because<lb/>
of the strong control over our minds of<lb/>
the media of communications he said.<lb/>
"We must reject on its face the idea<lb/>
that elections must be won through costly<lb/>
public relations gimmicks<lb/>
Speaking to the ECU Stuoent<lb/>
Government Association, Jenkins said<lb/>
student government "ought to lead the<lb/>
way in insisting that candidates for all<lb/>
offices must be elected on their<lb/>
credentials-not on their ability to raise<lb/>
money He said student governments,<lb/>
Continued on page three.<lb/>
being one example of this.<lb/>
Ms. Gardner readily admits that the<lb/>
book was unorganized, however she<lb/>
stipulates that the purpose was to<lb/>
experiment with fresh ideas. She went on<lb/>
to explain that an irresponsible staff<lb/>
member, plus the loss of a set of proofs<lb/>
in the mail were the major reasons<lb/>
contributing to the late arrival of the<lb/>
Bucs. The latter portion of the book was<lb/>
finally returned once again to the printer<lb/>
in late July, which set production back an<lb/>
entire month; in turn causing the belated<lb/>
appearance of the annual. An inexperi-<lb/>
enced staff, of which only two had had<lb/>
previous experience, also contributed to<lb/>
the late arrival date.<lb/>
Gary McCullough, current editor says<lb/>
that in 74 the Buc will be completely<lb/>
different. Public Relations director,<lb/>
Nancy Leggett; Business Manager,<lb/>
Deborah Carson; along with editors,<lb/>
Cathy Jones, Pat Fountain, Patsy Mills,<lb/>
Jeanne Hagan, and Chris Mills are busy<lb/>
planning the 74 annual. General staff<lb/>
members Monika Southerland and Will<lb/>
Pittman are joined by the publications<lb/>
photographer, Guy Cox, in creating new<lb/>
ideas which could be utilized by the staff.<lb/>
Basically, the format of this year's Buc<lb/>
is to combine five books. Each book will<lb/>
present a different subject while<lb/>
remaining united with the entire<lb/>
annual, the first book will be a calendar<lb/>
of events covering the summer of 73 and<lb/>
regular 73-74 sessions. Pictures will be<lb/>
used to illustrate the events and their<lb/>
sponsoring groups.<lb/>
Organizations and university students<lb/>
will be featured in book two, while the<lb/>
third book concerns itself with features<lb/>
only. These features will be in-depth<lb/>
studies of such topics as sports, the<lb/>
Greeks, med. school, night life and<lb/>
others. The fourth book will feature the<lb/>
work of students at ECU.<lb/>
The staff has temporarily titled book<lb/>
five Expressions and its subject matter<lb/>
will be competed of just that. Students<lb/>
are invited to contribute free lance art<lb/>
work, photography, or creative articles<lb/>
such as poetry or cartoons. McCullough<lb/>
stressed that this section was devoted<lb/>
entirely to expressing the individual work<lb/>
of the students. He is encouraging<lb/>
students to submit items to his office for<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
A satire magazine will tie in the fifth<lb/>
and final book. "This magazine will not<lb/>
be directed at any one group or person,<lb/>
but will concern itself with humorous<lb/>
events or situations which occur on the<lb/>
campus he said.<lb/>
In addition to these new features,<lb/>
McCullough said that the 74 Buc will<lb/>
contain more color pictures, a wider use<lb/>
of spot color (for special effects), and the<lb/>
possible use of protruding dividers to<lb/>
make a certain section easier to find. The<lb/>
use of various paper stocks (grades of<lb/>
paper) for the individual books is also<lb/>
planned.<lb/>
Without the cooperation of the<lb/>
students, new features, elaborate plans,<lb/>
or visions will not be possible, he<lb/>
added. McCullough urges the students to<lb/>
submit their free lance or creative work for<lb/>
Expressions. He also emphasizes the<lb/>
importance of each student having his or<lb/>
her portrait made. The photographer will<lb/>
be at ECU during the week of January<lb/>
14-18 to finish taking portraits.<lb/>
mvmmmm i in Hi m � �<lb/>
�jaaueoonqg<lb/>
0<lb/>
n<lb/>
� COVER OF THE 'controversial' 1973 Buccaneer. Sea related photo on page ten.<lb/>
Circulation racks arrive<lb/>
Beginning this week, Fountainhead will no longer be delivered to Individual dorm<lb/>
rooms. Instead, red and white circulation racks will be Installed In dormitory loobies,<lb/>
and residents are asked to pick up their newspapers from these no-coln racks.<lb/>
WOMEN'S DORMS<lb/>
As of this date, the new circulation racks have been installed in all women's<lb/>
dormitories on the main campus, with a larger rack located In the Student Union<lb/>
lobby. Tyler Hall, the library and the Croatan will have circulation racks Installed when<lb/>
our second rack shipment arrives. <lb/>
By the completion of our revamped circulation plan, Fountainhead will have metal<lb/>
circulation racks In all woman's donm, the Union, Croatan and library. The men's<lb/>
dorms will be equipped with wooden racks by the end of this weak.<lb/>
NO CHAr JGE<lb/>
Our delivery policies to individual departments will remain the same, with no<lb/>
change in procedure or cut In quantity.<lb/>
Fountainhead is Instituting the above change In circulation policy for several<lb/>
reasons. First, installations of racks will enable us to cut down on our circulation staff,<lb/>
thereby saving mcney and making up for tosses we have encountered due to the rising<lb/>
cost of newsprint. Second, closed racks will hopefully avoid much of the<lb/>
scattered-paper syndrome and trash which has been a problem in the past. Third, the<lb/>
use of circulation racks will enable us to run a much more organized and professional<lb/>
ooofi&amp;tion<lb/>
F:ountainhead wishes to thank the ECU community for the help and appreciation it<lb/>
has shown us in the past, and trusts that the above changes will be Implemented with<lb/>
little difficulty.<lb/>
Pat Crawford, Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Mike Edwards, Circulation Manager<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
wmmmm<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mm<lb/>
news<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD repeats that it will<lb/>
not accept any copy for news flashes<lb/>
unless the information is typed before it<lb/>
is submitted for publication. No news<lb/>
flash information will be accepted over<lb/>
the phone. FOUNTAINHEAD will not<lb/>
guarantee publication unless the inform-<lb/>
ation is typed.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the January 10 issue of the<lb/>
Fountainhead, the article "Applications<lb/>
accepted for Union President" failed to<lb/>
mention Braxton Hall as a member of the<lb/>
Board of Directors of the Student<lb/>
Union. The Fountainhead regrets this<lb/>
omission.<lb/>
REAL volunteers<lb/>
REAL house needs volunteers. If you<lb/>
would like to help be sure and attend the<lb/>
REAL house meeting Wednesday night at<lb/>
7:30 in room 206 of the Student Union. If<lb/>
you would like to help and cannot attend<lb/>
the meeting contact the people at the<lb/>
REAL house, 758-HELP.<lb/>
Republicans<lb/>
The ECU College Republicans will be<lb/>
having a meeting Tuesday Jan. 15. at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in room 203 of the Student<lb/>
Union. Any interested students are<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
White Ball<lb/>
The Brothers of Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
would like to remind all campus<lb/>
organizations that they have till Jan. 18 to<lb/>
get their candidate's picture in to be<lb/>
eligible for the 1974 White Ball. Any<lb/>
questions concerning this project should<lb/>
be made to Greg Pace at 758-4826.<lb/>
Contents<lb/>
Internship<lb/>
Governor Holshouser urges North<lb/>
Carolina college students interested in<lb/>
State government to apply for the 1974<lb/>
State Government Summer Internship<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Holshouser said 24 students will be<lb/>
selected for the program. For 11 weeks<lb/>
next summer, the interns will do<lb/>
mean;ngful work in State departments and<lb/>
learn about various aspects of State<lb/>
government. The program will begin on<lb/>
May 27 and continue through August<lb/>
9. Interns will be paid $120 per week.<lb/>
To be eligible for the intern program,<lb/>
students must (1) be residents of North<lb/>
Carolina, (2) be currently enrolled in a<lb/>
college or university, and (3) have<lb/>
satisfactorily completed three years of<lb/>
college by June, 1974.<lb/>
The Governor noted that-applications<lb/>
must be mailed to the Institute of<lb/>
Government by February 1. Application<lb/>
forms and brochures describing the<lb/>
program may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Political Science departmental office,<lb/>
local offices of the North Carolina<lb/>
Employment Security Commission, the<lb/>
State Personnel Office in Raleigh, and the<lb/>
Institute of Government in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
New arrival<lb/>
Fountainhead proudly announces the<lb/>
arrival and installation of its Compu-<lb/>
Graphic CG7200L headliner, which<lb/>
celebrated its first day of operation<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
Date of birth: 14 January 1974<lb/>
Weight: 125 lbs.<lb/>
Length: 26 inches<lb/>
Parents: Pat Crawford, the Compu-<lb/>
Graphic Corporation, and the entire<lb/>
Fountainhead staff.<lb/>
With the arrival of this headliner, the<lb/>
old Varityper 820 (Alias Bonzo) goes out<lb/>
of business. In addition, the acquisition<lb/>
of both the CG7200L and the<lb/>
CompuWriter II (which was installed in<lb/>
September) mark the first and only major<lb/>
equipment changes Fountainhead has<lb/>
undergone since 1968-69.<lb/>
BUCCANEER GETS REACTION' page one<lb/>
CAMPUS TRAFFIC PROBLEMS page three<lb/>
HYPERTENSION: MED SCHOOL LECTURE page four<lb/>
REVIEWS page five<lb/>
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARYFORUM pages eight and nine<lb/>
SGA NEWS AND APPLEGATE PICTURE page ten<lb/>
SPORTSpages eleven and twelve<lb/>
Pub Board<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Publications Board of East Carolina<lb/>
University on Tuesday, January 15, 1974,<lb/>
in Room 215 of Wright Annex. The<lb/>
meeting will start at 3:00 p.m and all<lb/>
members are requested to be present.<lb/>
If any voting member of the Board will<lb/>
not be able to attend this meeting, please<lb/>
notify Bob McKeel at 758-2655<lb/>
immediately.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi<lb/>
The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi<lb/>
will meet Thursday, January 17, 1974 at 3<lb/>
p.m. in S.B. 104. Foremost on the<lb/>
agenda is the election of new members,<lb/>
and the planning of the iniation<lb/>
ceremony. All members, students and<lb/>
faculty are urged to attend.<lb/>
Dedication<lb/>
The new social sciences complex at<lb/>
ECU will be formally dedicated in honor of<lb/>
Dr. Lawrence Fay Brewster, retired ECU<lb/>
history professor, in ceremonies Sunday,<lb/>
Jan. 20.<lb/>
The four-wing complex, covering an<lb/>
area of about 129,000 square feet, was<lb/>
completed in 1970, at a cost of<lb/>
approximately $2.9 million. It was<lb/>
designed by Jesse M. Page and<lb/>
Associates, Architects, of Raleigh.<lb/>
Among the academic departments<lb/>
housed in the complex are the History,<lb/>
Philosophy, Sociology, Anthropology.<lb/>
Political Science, Foreign Languages and<lb/>
Geography departments, as well as<lb/>
several administrative offices.<lb/>
Dr. Herbert R. Paschal, professor and<lb/>
chairman of History, will be the principal<lb/>
speaker for the formal dedication<lb/>
exercises. A portrait of Dr. Brewster will<lb/>
be unveiled.<lb/>
Dr. Brewster is the founder of the<lb/>
annual Lawrence F. Brewster Graduate<lb/>
Fellowship in History at ECU. He taught<lb/>
at ECU from 1945 until his retirement in<lb/>
1969.<lb/>
Volleyball club<lb/>
All Volleyball Club team members<lb/>
must come to practice every Tues. &amp;<lb/>
Thurs. nights in Memorial Gym at 7:00<lb/>
p.m We are scheduled to play in a big<lb/>
tournament at Wilson, N.C. this<lb/>
month. So come and get back in shape<lb/>
after the long holiday and play. New<lb/>
members are welcomed.<lb/>
ROTC<lb/>
Areospace Studies Department is<lb/>
accepting applications for the 2 year Air<lb/>
Force ROTC course at ECU. You can try<lb/>
the Air Force on for size by letting the<lb/>
chairman of the Aerospace Studies<lb/>
Department know you plan to enroll in<lb/>
ROTC. Do this between now and April 1<lb/>
1974, Whichard Bldg Room 111.<lb/>
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack<lb/>
Brendle, 752 2619.<lb/>
LOST one female St. Bernard puppy,<lb/>
about 2 months old. Brown &amp; white,<lb/>
weighs about 20 lbs. bad left eye. Reward<lb/>
offered. Call 752 1408.<lb/>
FOR SALE PORSCHE 1972 911T Beauti<lb/>
ful white finish, black interior, 5 speed<lb/>
transaxle, fuel injected, double overhead<lb/>
cams, recent 185 15 red line radials. This<lb/>
car is perfect in every detail. Wants old<lb/>
VW '64 '67 and money or just money<lb/>
$7,000.00. Save gas in style. Owner<lb/>
Ludford Creef, 417 B Belk ECU, 752 2442.<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS to Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma for beihg No. 1 in scholarships Fall<lb/>
Quarter. We're<lb/>
Advisory Board<lb/>
proud of youAlumni<lb/>
NEEDED: Ride to Charlotte, Thursday<lb/>
Jan. 17 for the 69b Dylan concert<lb/>
(preferrably in a car, as opposed to riding<lb/>
in bicycle baskets or on the back of a<lb/>
horse.) Will be delighted to contribute<lb/>
driving time, gasoline and enlightened<lb/>
conversation. Please contact Karen,<lb/>
room 100 (or box 688) Jarvis Hall, or call<lb/>
756 6975 and leave a message.<lb/>
LOST: Levi Denim Jacket at ECU<lb/>
Student Center. Hand sewn "Singletree"<lb/>
on back. $20 reward. Call 758 2106.<lb/>
FREE adorable golden puppies. Call 752<lb/>
1684.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One 4x5 press type camera<lb/>
with 5 lenses, carrying case, several film<lb/>
holders, cable release, etc. A great buy<lb/>
for a serious photographer for only $200.00<lb/>
call 752 0679 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED TO BUY: Old comic books<lb/>
1930 1970. Will pay from 5 cents to 25<lb/>
cents depending on age and condition<lb/>
sometimes more. If interested call<lb/>
752 6389 after 6 p.m. or write Charles<lb/>
Lawrence, Box 27 Falkland, N.C. 27827.<lb/>
LOST: Black onyx Richmond Senior High<lb/>
School class ring. Reward offered. Call<lb/>
752 4068.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Weekend Desk Clerk to<lb/>
work all night shift 16 hours per<lb/>
week. Apply in person weekdays from 7<lb/>
a.m. til 3 p.m. Best Value Motor Lodge,<lb/>
2725 Memorial Drive.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL info &amp;<lb/>
referral no fee. Up to 24 weeks. General<lb/>
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligation<lb/>
also available. Free pregnancy test. Call<lb/>
PCS, Non-profit, 202 298 7995.<lb/>
m<lb/>
New officers<lb/>
Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta<lb/>
Sorority has selected their new officers<lb/>
for the year of 1974. They are: Dianne<lb/>
Lucas-president, Rita Towns-Vice Presi-<lb/>
dent, Kathy Fahrenbruch-Secretary,<lb/>
Susan Craig-Treasurer, Janet Loelkes-<lb/>
Assistant Treasurer, Gail Nixon-Rush<lb/>
Chairman, and Kathy Sheehan-Editor.<lb/>
Coffee house <lb/>
Garrett Dorm presents: Another<lb/>
Winkler, Smith, Brown, Goodling and<lb/>
guest COFFEE HOUSE. Come see and<lb/>
hear the new sound "new approach<lb/>
and "new songs" tonight at 9:30 in the<lb/>
Garrett lounge.<lb/>
mwmnmmwmmmmmmwmmmwm<lb/>
I Ch<lb/>
2jul<lb/>
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by Jack<lb/>
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&amp; while,<lb/>
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T Beauti<lb/>
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Wants old<lb/>
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irships Fall<lb/>
ul. -Alumni<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
in concert<lb/>
ed to riding<lb/>
back of a<lb/>
i contribute<lb/>
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;t Karen,<lb/>
Hall, or call<lb/>
at ECU<lb/>
Singletree"<lb/>
2106.<lb/>
?s. Call 752<lb/>
pe camera<lb/>
several film<lb/>
V great buy<lb/>
only $200.00<lb/>
jrnic books<lb/>
cents to 25<lb/>
condition<lb/>
ested call<lb/>
He Charles<lb/>
I.C. 27827.<lb/>
Senior High<lb/>
.ffered. Call<lb/>
iesk Clerk to<lb/>
hours per<lb/>
jays from 7<lb/>
otor Lodge,<lb/>
?OL info &amp;<lb/>
ks. General<lb/>
.a I ligation<lb/>
cy test. Call<lb/>
Kappa Delta<lb/>
lew officers<lb/>
are: Dianne<lb/>
-Vice Presi-<lb/>
;h-Secretary,<lb/>
et Loelkes-<lb/>
Nixon-Rush<lb/>
vEditor.<lb/>
its: Another<lb/>
codling and<lb/>
me see and<lb/>
v approach<lb/>
9:30 in the<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
3<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
No easy<lb/>
� .�<lb/>
New student union may aid traffic problem<lb/>
By JOE VAUGHN<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
There is no easy solution to traffic<lb/>
conjestion on ECU'S campus, says<lb/>
Joseph H. Calder, director of traffic and<lb/>
security at ECU.<lb/>
Little is being done about the traffic<lb/>
problems because there is no practical<lb/>
way to handle the conditions according to<lb/>
Calder. ECU, as most old campuses, is<lb/>
unable to support present transportaion<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
"We've been thinking about the car<lb/>
problem for ten years. Where the hell you<lb/>
gonna put them? The problem is here, its<lb/>
got to be lived with Calder stated.<lb/>
In 1960, 500 to 600 vehicles were the<lb/>
maximum number on campus, Calder<lb/>
said. Today, there are about 4,000<lb/>
campus registered vehicles which is an<lb/>
increase of over 200 vehicles since last<lb/>
year. Space is not available to meet the<lb/>
traffic needs, Calder explained.<lb/>
The earliest positive factor in easing<lb/>
traffic conjestion is a plan to put a street<lb/>
by the train tracks when they are<lb/>
closed. But this is at the minimum of two<lb/>
years away, Calder says. Meanwhile the<lb/>
university plans to take a close look at the<lb/>
situation when the new student center is<lb/>
completed. The new student center's<lb/>
completion will aid in an overall<lb/>
understanding of traffic needs, Calder<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"We're thinking about putting a street<lb/>
from the Mall to Tenth Street if we can<lb/>
buy the houses in the way on Tenth. Our<lb/>
biggest problem is if we own the land<lb/>
there is a house in the way Calder<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
A lack of funding is a serious draw<lb/>
back in solving raffic problems. The<lb/>
state buys the prjperty needed for road<lb/>
improvement, but traffic funds must take<lb/>
care of the other expenses, Calder stated.<lb/>
"Last year from parking tickets we<lb/>
took in $18,178 and we took in $17,973 in<lb/>
vehicle registration which brought in<lb/>
around $35,000 for the entire year Calder<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Parking tickets and registration are the<lb/>
traffic fund's only source of revenue. A-<lb/>
bout $12,00 of this sum goes to<lb/>
secretarial and general operating expense,<lb/>
Calder explained.<lb/>
"Last year's Education-Psychology<lb/>
building parking lot cost $13,000 and<lb/>
during Thanksgiving break we added five<lb/>
new parking spaces at Belk Dorm costing<lb/>
$800, Calder said.<lb/>
Now there is about $80,000 in the<lb/>
traffic fund, but $60,000 of this amount is<lb/>
for a new parking lot at Allied Health<lb/>
building. The remaining amount will not<lb/>
begin to cover the cost of parking decks<lb/>
which Calder feels to be a valid answer to<lb/>
traffic problems. Not commenting on the<lb/>
number or location of these parking<lb/>
decks, Calder said the cost of the decks<lb/>
would be at three million dollars.<lb/>
"To get parking decks, we would have<lb/>
to go up from five dollars registration fee<lb/>
to twenty-five dollars Calder said.<lb/>
Most universities of ECU'S size already<lb/>
have higher registration fees, Calder<lb/>
says. But he also stated that campus<lb/>
response to present traffic payments is<lb/>
negative and any increase would not<lb/>
receive public support.<lb/>
"I get more weeping and more crying<lb/>
over paying tickets .Only recently did I<lb/>
get faculty and staff paying parking fees<lb/>
and I've had faculty making as much fuss<lb/>
over paying parking tickets as students<lb/>
do Calder says.<lb/>
Calder said he spends a great deal of<lb/>
time listening to student complaint about<lb/>
car towing. Calder says he tries to<lb/>
consider legitimate excuses, but exces-<lb/>
sive abuse is not tolerated.<lb/>
"The rule is three unclear situations<lb/>
and you're towed, but we are not that<lb/>
definite. If the car is registered we give<lb/>
them the benefit of the doubt. We do not<lb/>
hesitate to tow non-registered vehicles. If<lb/>
you are not registered we tow you, L<lb/>
usually we don't make you pay the<lb/>
ticket. If you make an ass of yourself, we<lb/>
get you and tow you and charge you<lb/>
Calder said.<lb/>
There is no way lo make students<lb/>
respect parking areas, Calder says. But<lb/>
he feels that as long as the parking<lb/>
system remains crammed, the only<lb/>
effective safeguard against traffic<lb/>
conjestion is the tow.<lb/>
Jenkins speaks<lb/>
- Continued from page one.<lb/>
finding themselves with numerous<lb/>
problems, must operate in a context of<lb/>
the Jeffersonian ideal of Democracy, "the<lb/>
ideal that made America great<lb/>
"Student government must represent<lb/>
all the students-must be concerned with<lb/>
all the people He called on all students<lb/>
to play a role in student government.<lb/>
The problem of apathy is forever with us<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
"All students should appreciate the<lb/>
historic development of the democratic<lb/>
process, the Jeffersonian ideal of<lb/>
government, which is based on an<lb/>
educated citizenry, intelligent leadership<lb/>
and government of law he said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039898_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
MVMM<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
JOE CLARK, manager of the ECU student bookstore, presents Alton Waters,<lb/>
ECU student, with a set of Great Books of the Western World. Assisting Clark is<lb/>
Jim Layton, educational representative of Great Books of the Western World for<lb/>
Encyclopedia Britannica. The drawing took place Dec. 14. Registration for a second<lb/>
set of the Great Books is now going on in the student bookstore with the drawing to<lb/>
take place at the end of winter quarter.<lb/>
English honor fraternity<lb/>
offers tutoring services<lb/>
By CAROLYN DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If English courses are giving you<lb/>
problems just ask for help.<lb/>
Where?<lb/>
In the English office, first floor Austin.<lb/>
The ECU chapter of Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
National English Honorary Fraternity is<lb/>
offering tutoring in all phases of English,<lb/>
according to ETD President Pam Page.<lb/>
"Free tutoring is available to any<lb/>
undergraduate English student Page<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Tutors are ETD members offering to<lb/>
help English students with problems in<lb/>
their spare time. The fraternity members<lb/>
participating in the tutoring program are<lb/>
listed in the English office along with<lb/>
their times of availability and areas of<lb/>
special interest.<lb/>
Any undergraduate English student<lb/>
desiring the help of a tutor may make<lb/>
arrangements by requesting special help<lb/>
in the English office, said Page One of<lb/>
the secretaries will then notify a tutor and<lb/>
�set up an appointment for the student.<lb/>
"Most organizations have some service<lb/>
product for the school. That's ours<lb/>
Page said.<lb/>
Membership in ETD is open to anyone<lb/>
who has completed nine hours of English<lb/>
courses above the freshman level, has a<lb/>
3.0 average in English, a 2.5 overall<lb/>
average and has completed enough credit<lb/>
hours to be a last quarter sopnomore,<lb/>
according to Page.<lb/>
At present the fraternity has about 50<lb/>
members, including 15 English and<lb/>
journalism faculty members, five graduate<lb/>
English students and 30 undergraduate<lb/>
English majors.<lb/>
The recent induction of faculty<lb/>
members to the organization is a new<lb/>
addition to the fraternity. Page believes<lb/>
this will result in a greater understanding<lb/>
between students and the professors as it<lb/>
provides an outside look at the<lb/>
professors.<lb/>
"I think you can learn a lot more<lb/>
outside the classroom than in the<lb/>
classroom. It makes it easier to go by and<lb/>
talk with the professor. It also provides<lb/>
student voice in choice of curriculum<lb/>
suggestions she said.<lb/>
Faculty members and graduate<lb/>
students are included in the ETD tutoring<lb/>
program if they choose to offer their<lb/>
services.<lb/>
All English students desiring this aid<lb/>
are urged to contact the English office.<lb/>
Appointments may be made 9 a.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m. Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Ei<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
illy wasteful paper<lb/>
sells better than recycled<lb/>
(CPS)-The severe paper shortage, which is putting the squeeze on<lb/>
many newspapers across the country, has stimulated backward<lb/>
response from several major paper manufacturers-they are dropping<lb/>
their recycled lines.<lb/>
According to the International Institute for Environmental Affairs,<lb/>
major paper producers are quoted as saying recycled paper "hasn't<lb/>
caught on" because large buyers have found it just as expensive as<lb/>
virgin paper.<lb/>
In addition, the Institute reported paper manufacturers are cutting<lb/>
back on production of lighter, less expensive sticks, because they<lb/>
can get more money by selling only the heavier, more ecologically<lb/>
wasteful varieties.<lb/>
Ferguson on hypertension:<lb/>
'A very frequent U.S. disease'<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Hypertension, topic of a lecture by Dr.<lb/>
Alfred Lea Ferguson, is one of the most<lb/>
frequent diseases in the United States<lb/>
today. Out of a population of approxi-<lb/>
mately 220 million people around 50<lb/>
million people have hypertension and<lb/>
many don't realize they have it.<lb/>
Hypertension is high blood pressure.<lb/>
It is called hypertension because hyper<lb/>
means higher than normal and tension<lb/>
means the normal tone of blood.<lb/>
Blood pressure is highest at the heart<lb/>
and lowest the further away from the<lb/>
heart. When the doctor puts the blood<lb/>
pressure cuff on your arm it's because<lb/>
that is the closest to the heart he can get.<lb/>
Normal range of blood pressure is<lb/>
90-129 over 50-89. When the range is 140<lb/>
over 90 or above it is considered<lb/>
high. The blood pressure can be rising in<lb/>
one part of the body while falling in<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Persistant elevation of blood pressure<lb/>
may cause damage to various organs of<lb/>
the body. The organs it usually damages<lb/>
the most are the heart, brain, kidneys and<lb/>
eyes.<lb/>
Dr. Ferguson discussed some factors<lb/>
that are associated with hypertension that<lb/>
can be controlled by the individual.<lb/>
Stress, both mental and physical, can<lb/>
cause hypertension. In most persons<lb/>
there are internal reactions that occur<lb/>
when they are under stress. There are<lb/>
some cases where the stress was removed<lb/>
and the blood pressure dropped.<lb/>
Cholesterol, which comes to the body<lb/>
by way of food, may play many good rolls<lb/>
but it does play one bad roll in regard to<lb/>
hypertension. It deposits itself in the<lb/>
inner lining of the blood vessels. As a<lb/>
person ages, calcium grows on these<lb/>
deposits and the vessels get stiff.<lb/>
Dr. Ferguson cited cigarette smoking<lb/>
as the number one risk factor in patients<lb/>
that have hypertension. "Since tobacco is<lb/>
the number one revenue in Pitt County I<lb/>
will say no more he said.<lb/>
Exercise is very beneficial to<lb/>
hypertension but you must enjoy the<lb/>
exercise or otherwise you are suffering<lb/>
tension. People that have hypertension<lb/>
shouldn't take up weight lifting he<lb/>
cautioned.<lb/>
Obesity is a factor in hypertension.<lb/>
Studies in weight reduction in people<lb/>
showed a reduction in blood pressure.<lb/>
GLENDALE COLLEGE<lb/>
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Birth control pills can also cause<lb/>
hypertension. Some doctors say that 15<lb/>
per cent of young women on the pill are<lb/>
taking some medicine to control<lb/>
hypertension. Dr. Ferguson stressed that<lb/>
no woman on the pill should be evaluated<lb/>
for high blood pressure unless she goes<lb/>
off the pill. Some women, after they stop<lb/>
taking the pill, find that their blood<lb/>
pressure never goes back to normal but<lb/>
studies have shown that these women<lb/>
would have probably had hypertension<lb/>
later on in life anyway.<lb/>
A persons attituae when they find they<lb/>
have hypertension can be important. If<lb/>
the patient is willing to give up certain<lb/>
diet habits, learn to relax, stop smoking,<lb/>
take medications, lose weight, and<lb/>
exercise then it will be much easier to<lb/>
control hypertension.<lb/>
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE<lb/>
OF NEW YORK<lb/>
COUNTY OF NEW YORK<lb/>
STATE OF NEW YORK<lb/>
Plaintiff,<lb/>
-against-<lb/>
THE ABORTION INFORMATION<lb/>
AGENCY INC. JOHN A. SETTLE<lb/>
JR. and SHARON C. PETERS,<lb/>
Defendants.<lb/>
Pursuant to Article 11 of the<lb/>
Business Corporation Law and Sec.<lb/>
63, Subd. 12 of the Executive Law.<lb/>
Index No. 4052971<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
Notice is hereby given by the<lb/>
undersigned, BERNARD BIEN-<lb/>
STOCK, that he has been duly<lb/>
appointed Permanent Receiver of<lb/>
the property of the corporate<lb/>
defendant, and has duly qualified as<lb/>
such and entered upon the<lb/>
performance of his duties, and that,<lb/>
pursuant to Sec. 1207 of the<lb/>
Business Corporation Law, said<lb/>
Receiver requires:<lb/>
All creditors and claimants<lb/>
including any with unliquidated or<lb/>
contingent claims and any with<lb/>
whom the corporation has unfulfill-<lb/>
ed contracts to present their claims<lb/>
to said Receiver in writing and in<lb/>
detail at the office of his attorney,<lb/>
MORTIMER M. ROTHSTEIN, locat-<lb/>
ed at 475 Park Avenue South, New<lb/>
York, New York 10016 by the 15th<lb/>
day of May, 1974.<lb/>
Dated: November5, 1973.<lb/>
BERNARD BIENSTOCK<lb/>
Receiver of the Property of<lb/>
THE ABORTION INFORMATION<lb/>
AGENCY, INC.<lb/>
MORTIMER M. ROTHSTEIN<lb/>
Attorney for BERNARD<lb/>
STOCK Receiver<lb/>
475 Park Avenue South<lb/>
New York, N.Y. 10016<lb/>
BIEN-<lb/>
l<lb/>
"<lb/>
P<lb/>
Boi<lb/>
SORF<lb/>
E<lb/>
Sorry,<lb/>
here-and<lb/>
address, fv<lb/>
"now" v<lb/>
refreshing<lb/>
frivolous gh<lb/>
journals kn<lb/>
MS. is a<lb/>
practical p<lb/>
men of<lb/>
races. Alth<lb/>
oriented, n<lb/>
magazine<lb/>
should re<lb/>
understand<lb/>
view. Thos<lb/>
January iss<lb/>
informative<lb/>
A sami<lb/>
"Wednesda<lb/>
Divorce t<lb/>
nym), a sar<lb/>
how a<lb/>
disintegrate<lb/>
line Herscl<lb/>
interesting<lb/>
known wor<lb/>
the stars i<lb/>
world of 1<lb/>
Alice S. Re<lb/>
Friendship'<lb/>
of Susan<lb/>
Staton, an<lb/>
women's ri<lb/>
interview w<lb/>
is not just<lb/>
contempore<lb/>
women an<lb/>
"Found Wo<lb/>
MS. ha<lb/>
reviews on<lb/>
by women,<lb/>
the Natior<lb/>
zation, has<lb/>
"Keeping tr<lb/>
in which s<lb/>
against bis<lb/>
I'm against<lb/>
black worn<lb/>
made to fit<lb/>
protagonist<lb/>
which she f<lb/>
women. All<lb/>
movie "no<lb/>
"Cieopatra<lb/>
patra) doesi<lb/>
for survival,<lb/>
in her relati<lb/>
a mutual re:<lb/>
work<lb/>
In one <lb/>
Last" by Wi<lb/>
by a man!),<lb/>
finances i<lb/>
that medic<lb/>
estimates ti<lb/>
$59, 063 wi<lb/>
worth only<lb/>
is the dif<lb/>
earnings.) <lb/>
valuable tr<lb/>
that women<lb/>
than men-<lb/>
household j<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
�<lb/>
L<lb/>
5<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmtmwmmwmmm<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
Books<lb/>
SORRY, MALE CHAUVINISTS,<lb/>
By TERESA SPEIGHT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sorry, male chauvinists, but MS. is<lb/>
here-and not just as a formal<lb/>
address. MS. is Gloria Steinem's very<lb/>
"now" Women's Lib magazine, a<lb/>
refreshing change from the typical<lb/>
frivolous glamour guides and homemaking<lb/>
journals known as "women's magazines<lb/>
MS. is an exciting, intellectual, but<lb/>
practical publication for-and about-wo-<lb/>
men of all ages, professions and<lb/>
races. Although the content is woman-<lb/>
oriented, males should not exclude this<lb/>
magazine from their literary diet; men<lb/>
should read MS. as a must to<lb/>
understanding the female point of<lb/>
view. Those of either sex who read the<lb/>
January issue of MS. will find it witty and<lb/>
informative.<lb/>
A sampling of the articles reveal<lb/>
"Wednesday the Rabbi Called About My<lb/>
Divorce by "Marcia Karmen' (pseudo-<lb/>
nym), a sarcastic but touching account of<lb/>
how a marriage of nine years<lb/>
disintegrated. Elizabeth Pierce's "Caro-<lb/>
line Herschel: Tale of a Comet" is an<lb/>
interesting biographical sketch of a little-<lb/>
known woman astronomer who shot for<lb/>
the stars even in the male dominated<lb/>
world of 18th century English science.<lb/>
Alice S. Rossi's long article, "A Feminist<lb/>
Friendship is a very informative history<lb/>
of Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady<lb/>
Staton, and their inspiring struggles for<lb/>
women's rights. On the lighter side, an<lb/>
interview with Lily Tomlin. However, MS.<lb/>
is not just about famous women-many<lb/>
contemporarily successful yet little known<lb/>
women are featured in the column,<lb/>
"Found Women as well.<lb/>
MS. has interesting and intelligent<lb/>
reviews on music, books and art, all done<lb/>
by women. Margaret Sloan, founder of<lb/>
the National Black Feminists Organi-<lb/>
zation, has an exceptionally good article,<lb/>
"Keeping the Black Women in Her Place<lb/>
in which she attacks the discrimination<lb/>
against black women in movies (What<lb/>
I'm against is the persistent view of the<lb/>
black woman as victim or shadow, tailor<lb/>
made to fit the needs of the black male<lb/>
protagonist) "Cleopatra Jones" is a film<lb/>
which she feels offers a fair treatment of<lb/>
women. Although she considers, this<lb/>
movie "no work of art Sloan praises<lb/>
"Cleopatra Jones" because "She (Cleo-<lb/>
patra) doesn't use men or depend on them<lb/>
for survival. She is her own woman. Even<lb/>
in her relationship with her lover, there is<lb/>
a mutual respect and love for each other's<lb/>
work<lb/>
In one article, "Women and Children<lb/>
Last" by William Hoffer(at last something<lb/>
by a man!), the life values of the sexes in<lb/>
finances is explored. Hoffer mentions<lb/>
that medical economist Dorothy P. Rice<lb/>
estimates the value of a newborn boy at<lb/>
$59, 063 while a girl is estimated to be<lb/>
worth only $34,622. (The value difference<lb/>
is the difference in potential future<lb/>
earnings.) Why are men considered more<lb/>
valuable than women? Hoffer explains<lb/>
that women may not only get lower wages<lb/>
than men-they often have nonpaying<lb/>
household jobs.<lb/>
No words are needed to describe the<lb/>
"No Comment" section of MS. which<lb/>
pictures derogatory signs, advertise-<lb/>
ments, and newspaper items showing<lb/>
discrimination against women.<lb/>
Many males who have not yet read<lb/>
MS. probably wonder if this magazine<lb/>
mocks men. Generally MS. is relatively<lb/>
fair in treating men as humans, but I must<lb/>
admit that in at least one case an<lb/>
unjustified assumption is made. One<lb/>
item in the "Gazette" section says:<lb/>
"Will men ever understand women's<lb/>
sexuality? In Brazil recently, city<lb/>
councilman Demetrio Cameiro asked the<lb/>
government to order employers to provide<lb/>
chairs for women clerks in department<lb/>
stores. Why? Because women who stand<lb/>
all day, according to the councilman,<lb/>
become sexually excited<lb/>
Here MS. goes a little overboard. The<lb/>
introductory question appears to judge all<lb/>
men by one man. Unlike Carneiro all men<lb/>
do not consider women sexual objects.<lb/>
Incidentally, MC. also has fiction. For<lb/>
man I suggest the short story, "Still Life<lb/>
Without Fruits by Doris Betts, about a<lb/>
woman having a baby. It will certainly<lb/>
make the male reader understand what it<lb/>
is like to be a woman under such<lb/>
circumstances.<lb/>
With a magazine like MS. on the news<lb/>
stand no man should ever complain about<lb/>
women being a mystery.<lb/>
Records<lb/>
CHER: "BITTERSWEET WHITE LIGHT'<lb/>
By PATSY HINTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sonny Bono, speaking of his wife's<lb/>
album, "Bittersweet White Light<lb/>
supposedly stated: "I was asked to<lb/>
describe this album in words, I don't<lb/>
know if I can, I'll try. A singer should<lb/>
make you Feel. Every time I listen to Cher<lb/>
sing on this album I feel sad, I feel happy,<lb/>
I feel lonesome, I feel love, but most of all<lb/>
I feel. For the ten years I've known Cher<lb/>
she's always wanted to make people<lb/>
feel. She did it this time. She did it all<lb/>
this time<lb/>
Cher does make you feel, but<lb/>
happiness and love are definitely not two<lb/>
of the emotions fostered by this<lb/>
album. Indeed, the songs on this album<lb/>
can suppress even the slightest twinge of<lb/>
euphoria and leave you wailing "Am I<lb/>
Blue" along with Cher.<lb/>
In fact, I have never heard a more<lb/>
mournful, depressing, painful, grievous<lb/>
album. Perhaps Cher's selection of songs<lb/>
are a personal reflection of her life with<lb/>
Sonny Bono which, according to a recent<lb/>
issue of Newsweek, is not the model of<lb/>
marital bliss portrayed weekly to millions<lb/>
of viewers on the Bono's television<lb/>
show. Newsweek interviewed a friend of<lb/>
the Bono's who conceded, "The show has<lb/>
80 percent to do with the marriage. For<lb/>
all intents and purposes, they have split<lb/>
up<lb/>
Cher's album has such song titles as<lb/>
"By Myself "Am I Blue "How Long Has<lb/>
This Been Going On "Why Was I Bom<lb/>
and "The Man That Got Away The lyrics<lb/>
are even more suggestive of a deep dark<lb/>
despair over a desolate love. In Cher's<lb/>
first song, the line "I gotta go my way by<lb/>
myself, cause this is the end of<lb/>
romance weaves continuously in and<lb/>
out of a tapestry of pain and<lb/>
loneliness. The pattern becomes darker<lb/>
with "Am I Blue Cher laments: "There<lb/>
was a time when I was his only oneBut<lb/>
now I'm the sad and lonely one.Was I<lb/>
gay, oh was I gay until today.He's gone<lb/>
and we're through,Am I blue And then<lb/>
there are the sad, haunting lyrics of "Why<lb/>
Was I Born?" Cher entreats: "Tell me why<lb/>
am I livingWhat do I get? Or what am I<lb/>
giving?1What can I hope for?1 wish I<lb/>
knew.Why was I born to love you?"<lb/>
On the back cover of the album are the<lb/>
words, "This album was produced by<lb/>
Sonny Bono for Cher Bono I think it<lb/>
should read the other way around. Cher is<lb/>
telling us what has happened to her<lb/>
fairy-tale, rags-to-riches marriage, and<lb/>
she is also crying out to Sonny: "More<lb/>
than you know, More than you knowMan<lb/>
of my heart, I love you so.Lately I find,<lb/>
you on my mind.More than you<lb/>
know I need you so, more than you'll<lb/>
ever know<lb/>
For if an album can be likened to a<lb/>
novel, then it can be said of Cher's most<lb/>
recent album that there is no happy<lb/>
ending. Rather, Cher in her final song<lb/>
sings, strangely, in a voice that is cold<lb/>
and biting- "The night is bitterThe stars<lb/>
have lost their glitterThe wind blows<lb/>
colderAnd suddenly you're olderAnd all<lb/>
because of the man that got away And<lb/>
no final weekly T.V. chorus of "I've Got<lb/>
You Babe" can drown words like these.<lb/>
Depression is the emotional state of<lb/>
feeling sad, low, dejected. Depression is<lb/>
inevitable. So if you want to serve your<lb/>
time in the army of depression then there<lb/>
is no better force to join than the ranks of<lb/>
those who are listening to "Bittersweet<lb/>
White Light<lb/>
WFMAM<lb/>
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(andyour bottles and keg stickers, too)<lb/>
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AT E. CAROLINA UNIV.<lb/>
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GRAND<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
SECOND<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
THIRD<lb/>
PRIZE<lb/>
�n inr, iyiiijIjiljv riiiv-iLiVi-Lir<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
fe � i<lb/>
Color TV &amp; Odyssey Game<lb/>
Color TV &amp; Odyssey Game<lb/>
Panasonic Color Portable TV<lb/>
Panasonic Color Portable TV<lb/>
Panasonic Stereo Radio<lb/>
Wilson Sporting Goods<lb/>
Panasonic Stereo Radio<lb/>
See you again early in 71 with more<lb/>
great prizes in the Miller pick-em-up!<lb/>
AT MILLER WE'RE TRYING TO HELP CLEAN UP!<lb/>
HiGH LifF<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
MM<lb/>
�mM�MV<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
EditorralsAommenlarv<lb/>
Brick walls and decisions<lb/>
At some point - or points - in our lives, we're forced to decide what to do with<lb/>
ourselves for a fairly permanent period of time. The shock of decision affects us all at<lb/>
different times: the senior, prior to graduation; the dissatisfied employee attempting<lb/>
to move on; the housewife stranded at home when the kids have left; the retiree<lb/>
choosing between Florida and a part-time job.<lb/>
PUT IN CONTEXT<lb/>
Perhaps what makes these periods of decision more shocking is that we so<lb/>
rarely take time to put ourselves in context. After working for several years at one thing<lb/>
we thought would last forever - whether as a university student or a breadwinner - the<lb/>
pipedream ends, the individual is either graduated or miserably bored, and the game<lb/>
begins, how to fill up a remaining lifespan with something reasonably satisfying and<lb/>
conducive to survival.<lb/>
Several friends of mine have gone through their ECU years without a microscopic<lb/>
thought as to what they'd do upon graduation; suddenly they're thrown into a<lb/>
panic. The artificial womb won I last forever. Those who had planned their careers to<lb/>
the smallest detail are equally perturbed; the much-planned career is simply nifty, but<lb/>
there has to be something else. The virtues of knowing what you're doing begin to pall,<lb/>
and boredom sets in. ,<lb/>
BRICK WALL<lb/>
There is. undoubtedly, no solution to the sudden brick wall that hits us all on<lb/>
occasion, or the shock that one can't be satisfied by adequate planning alone I have<lb/>
few suggestions, and I face the same shock. But, if nothing else, these stabs of panic<lb/>
make ap appreciate legendary work horses - those people who decided to be something<lb/>
and became it despite the occasional boredom.<lb/>
Perhaps the keynote to these person's accomplishments is that they unequivocally<lb/>
believed in something - whether in themselves and their own egos, in a religious faith<lb/>
in relativity, in the continuous present, in nearly anything. When one says it's<lb/>
necessary to believe in something other than ourselves, the statement may not<lb/>
necessarily imply belief in God or a reasonable equivalent; it may simply imply an<lb/>
overwhelming passion about nearly anything. If the passion is collecting tinfoil the<lb/>
individual becomes the neighborhood eccentric. Should the passion be for writinq' and<lb/>
culminate in MADAME BOVARY, the case is decidedly different<lb/>
EXCESS IS NECESSARY<lb/>
The point of this lengthy ramble is simply that excess is a necessary thing Only<lb/>
a passionate interest or a passionate belief in just about anything can rescue us from a<lb/>
Glad Bag, Easy Off culture. And it's only be being interested in, or dedicated to<lb/>
something other than endless shopping, or drinking, or daydreaming that one can<lb/>
avoid, or at least prepare for, the sequential decisions. After all, you have better odds<lb/>
when you know what you want.<lb/>
Often we mock women who place so much import in their children's lives that when<lb/>
the children leave, the mother is lost. Yet each of us is guilty of basically the same<lb/>
thing - going througff four years of college or part of a life knowing what everyone<lb/>
wants on papers, at work, for grades - except us.<lb/>
k. TtreJS n�thing wrong with constructive pvcc. Gr interest, or thinking about<lb/>
Number One. There is, in fact, nothing wrong with making decisions. The problem li<lb/>
in preparing ror them. <lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
MANAGING EDITORSkip Saunders<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gilliam<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSDarrell Williams<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORSteve Bohmuller<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
ADVISORDr. Frank J. Murphy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-<lb/>
paper of East Carolina University and ap-<lb/>
pears each Tuesday and THursday of the<lb/>
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/>
Communist invasion<lb/>
vmm<lb/>
By SENATOR BARRY GOLDWATER<lb/>
With each passing day, the signs<lb/>
pointing to a new Communist invasion of<lb/>
South Vietnam grow more intense.<lb/>
In many military and diplomatic circles<lb/>
it is assumed that Hanoi will soon renew<lb/>
its efforts to dominate South Vietnam and<lb/>
all of Indochina.<lb/>
If and when this happens, there will be<lb/>
nothing the President of the United States<lb/>
can do but turn the fate of all Southeast<lb/>
Asia and the enormous strategic and<lb/>
material wealth which it represents over to<lb/>
the Congress of the United States.<lb/>
ANTI-NIXON FORCES<lb/>
No, that isn't the hitch. The real<lb/>
legislative paralyzer is contained in a<lb/>
provision that anti-Nixon forces have<lb/>
written into every appropriation act having<lb/>
to do with national defense or<lb/>
international affairs passed in the present<lb/>
Congress. That provision reads:<lb/>
"Notwithstanding any other provision<lb/>
of law, upon enactment of this act, no<lb/>
funds heretofore or hereafter, may be<lb/>
obligated or expended to finance the<lb/>
involvement of United States military<lb/>
forces in hostilities in or over or from off<lb/>
the short of North Vietnam, South<lb/>
Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia unless<lb/>
specifically authorized hereafter by the<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
OPEN INVITATION<lb/>
In the face of the war powers bill<lb/>
and the appropriations rider above<lb/>
quoted, the Communists have an open<lb/>
invitation to do whatever they want in<lb/>
Indochina and throughout Southeast<lb/>
Asia. The legislation adopted by this<lb/>
Congress in an ill-advised attempt to cut<lb/>
back the President's war powers<lb/>
destroyed America's credibility in any<lb/>
future crisis both among our enemies and<lb/>
our allies. What this legislation says is<lb/>
that Congress must approve any<lb/>
expenditure, however slight, that might be<lb/>
used to head off a Communist conquest<lb/>
in Indochina.<lb/>
And even if the funds were available, it<lb/>
says that Congress may stop whatever<lb/>
action the President may have started to<lb/>
meet crisis conditions. It compels the<lb/>
Congressa body never geared to quick<lb/>
decisions or rapid actionto vote on every<lb/>
crisis that happens to arise.<lb/>
NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE<lb/>
Throughout history, legislative<lb/>
meddling in the conduct of military<lb/>
actions has always resulted in delay and<lb/>
disaster. This is because it is nearly<lb/>
impossible to conduct a war, or even a<lb/>
police action, by committee. Valuable<lb/>
time is lost forever in disputes over<lb/>
strategy, personnel and politics.<lb/>
This kind of mechanism has never<lb/>
operated in the past and it certainly is not<lb/>
likely to in the future, when speed of<lb/>
action and logistics have been multiplied<lb/>
many times since those dreary days when<lb/>
George Washington was attempting to<lb/>
conduct our war of independence despite<lb/>
the interference and meddling of the<lb/>
Continental Congress.<lb/>
If and when the Communists decide<lb/>
upon a conquest through South Vietnam,<lb/>
the forces of freedom will have no way to<lb/>
respond quickly. Al they can do is look to<lb/>
the Congress of the United States and<lb/>
say, "What do we do now?" And if the<lb/>
Congress has a reafy answer, it will be<lb/>
the first time in my memory that it has<lb/>
ever responded quickly to any crisis<lb/>
condition confronting this nation.<lb/>
New Year's resolutions by indivi-<lb/>
dual Americans will have greater<lb/>
importance at the beginning of 1974.<lb/>
In fact, resolutions may have a bearing<lb/>
on the future of our entire society. My<lb/>
thesis depends on the vast majority of<lb/>
Americans resolving to do their bit to ease<lb/>
the energy and material shortages which<lb/>
suddenly have developed into a national<lb/>
crisis.<lb/>
Perhaps I am too optimistic. But I<lb/>
believe the formality of a resolve taken by<lb/>
individuals at the beginning of a new year<lb/>
can have an enormous effect if we all<lb/>
settle down and decide that, in this<lb/>
instance, we relly mean what we decide.<lb/>
I hope by this time we are beyong<lb/>
all the nonsense about the energy<lb/>
shortage being a political conspiracy to<lb/>
make the nation forget about Watergate or<lb/>
an industry conspiracy to gouge the<lb/>
consumer and yield higher profits for the<lb/>
oil companies and related industries.<lb/>
My hope and prayer is that all<lb/>
conscientious Americans will start the<lb/>
new year with a firm understanding that<lb/>
we are faced with the absolute necessity<lb/>
of eliminating the waste in our<lb/>
lives-especially the waste of energy<lb/>
resources. And it is further my hope that<lb/>
Americans will resolve seriously to do<lb/>
something about it on a permanent basis.<lb/>
Whether we like it or not, energy chief<lb/>
William E. Simon and his aides are not<lb/>
fooling when they say that Americans<lb/>
must begin to change their entire<lb/>
lifestyle.<lb/>
FRIVOLOUS TRIPS<lb/>
They mean that it will no longer be<lb/>
possible for each and every one of us to<lb/>
buy and burn any amount of gasoline we<lb/>
like to, whether the expenditure is for<lb/>
essential purposes of living or just on<lb/>
frivolous trips here, there and everywhere,<lb/>
including many places we could walk to<lb/>
or travel by some form of mass transit.<lb/>
It means that we must conserve<lb/>
electric power, not only in Christmas light<lb/>
displays requiring many kilowatts of<lb/>
electrivity, but also in the day-to-day uses<lb/>
of electric power in our homes.<lb/>
It means that from now on we would<lb/>
do well to cedce the heat in our homes to<lb/>
a level consistent with our health<lb/>
requirements rather than our comfort, and<lb/>
it would mean additional caution against<lb/>
overuse of electrical appliances for the<lb/>
foreseeable future.<lb/>
More than anything else, I believe we<lb/>
must resolve to maintain a continual<lb/>
awareness of the problem and the fact<lb/>
that it places on each of us a personal<lb/>
responsibility to conserve.<lb/>
ABUNDANCE OF EVERYTHING<lb/>
This resolution won't mean nearly<lb/>
as much hardship as we might<lb/>
imagine. We have been so wasteful and<lb/>
so unconcerned in our abundance of<lb/>
everything that most Americans don't<lb/>
realize how much energy and material<lb/>
they use which they could get along<lb/>
without. In fact, I have no doubt that<lb/>
such a resolution of awareness and action<lb/>
will produce enormous results.<lb/>
hel<lb/>
FOUNTAINH<lb/>
press their o<lb/>
should be<lb/>
names will t<lb/>
"Signed edito<lb/>
"editorial pa$<lb/>
editor, and<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINH<lb/>
fuse printin<lb/>
obscenity,<lb/>
-Independent<lb/>
. Issues. A r<lb/>
proportion t<lb/>
IAIR<lb/>
To Fountain<lb/>
In regard<lb/>
subsequent<lb/>
the reviewe<lb/>
wrong. You<lb/>
the idea o<lb/>
wrong was<lb/>
review to be<lb/>
Carolyn<lb/>
coherent r<lb/>
went wrong<lb/>
or the layc<lb/>
paragraphs,<lb/>
lack of perc<lb/>
viewing and<lb/>
fact, there v<lb/>
of the cast<lb/>
responded<lb/>
with the rev<lb/>
uptight audi<lb/>
intended inv<lb/>
The aud<lb/>
mance of tl<lb/>
was the<lb/>
serious. Th�<lb/>
were perfon<lb/>
atives of the<lb/>
Davis was a<lb/>
not explain<lb/>
not be obje<lb/>
objective be<lb/>
vb7 little ab<lb/>
Totally ui<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
A man<lb/>
we celebratec<lb/>
the brotherhc<lb/>
beliefs, distu<lb/>
long ignored.<lb/>
Calm and<lb/>
Martin Luther<lb/>
on the cities'<lb/>
from 1932 to<lb/>
the black cor<lb/>
The activ<lb/>
advanced tin<lb/>
advance it a<lb/>
reverse is tri<lb/>
barriers tuml<lb/>
A man c<lb/>
live up to th<lb/>
change with<lb/>
violence. Th<lb/>
advance. He<lb/>
commemoral<lb/>
Bothpers<lb/>
it toward a d<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0009"/><lb/>
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3t if we all<lb/>
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are beyong<lb/>
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gouge the<lb/>
Dfits for the<lb/>
jstries.<lb/>
s that all<lb/>
I start the<lb/>
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; in our<lb/>
of energy<lb/>
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usly to do<lb/>
ment basis.<lb/>
nergy chief<lb/>
jes are not<lb/>
Americans<lb/>
neir entire<lb/>
0 longer be<lb/>
ie of us to<lb/>
jasoline we<lb/>
ture is for<lb/>
or just on<lb/>
jverywhere,<lb/>
ild walk to<lb/>
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conserve<lb/>
stmas light<lb/>
owatts of<lb/>
o-day uses<lb/>
we would<lb/>
f homes to<lb/>
ur health<lb/>
fnfort, and<lb/>
on against<lb/>
3S for the<lb/>
believe we<lb/>
continual<lb/>
j the fact<lb/>
a personal<lb/>
ING<lb/>
jan nearly<lb/>
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and action<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
mmtmmm<lb/>
�MMWM<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN.<lb/>
mmmm�mi� i �<lb/>
1974<lb/>
9<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEAD invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by their author! s;<lb/>
names will be withheld on request. Un-<lb/>
signed editorials on this page and on the<lb/>
 editorial page reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
editor, and are not necessarily those of<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-<lb/>
fuse 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/>
HAIR protest<lb/>
<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In regard to the review of HAIR and the<lb/>
subsequent letter reply of 10 Jan. 74, both<lb/>
the reviewer and the letter writer were<lb/>
wrong. You were partly right in defending<lb/>
the idea of reviews. Where you went<lb/>
wrong was allowing a totally inadequate<lb/>
review to be published in the first place.<lb/>
Carolyn Davis seems able to write a<lb/>
coherent news article, but something<lb/>
went wrong with the review. Perhaps you<lb/>
or the layout staff transposed various<lb/>
paragraphs. In any case, there was a vast<lb/>
lack of perception on the part of Davis in<lb/>
viewing and understanding the show. In<lb/>
fact, there was an equal lack on the part<lb/>
of the cast toward the audience. Davis<lb/>
responded to the unorthodox opening<lb/>
with the revulsion shared by most of the<lb/>
uptight audience instead of accepting the<lb/>
intended invitation of involvement.<lb/>
The audience influenced the perfor-<lb/>
mance of the actors adversely and that<lb/>
was the only fault that I found<lb/>
serious. They should have known they<lb/>
were performing in front of represent-<lb/>
atives of the cultural wasteland of whom<lb/>
Davis was an average sample. She could<lb/>
not explain it clearly because she could<lb/>
not be objective and she could not be<lb/>
objective because she apparently knows<lb/>
vty little about her subject.<lb/>
Totally unprofessional as a reviewer.<lb/>
Charles Griffin<lb/>
Senior class<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
With the positive response on the<lb/>
survey of the Senior Class of 1974<lb/>
concerning Graduation and caps and<lb/>
gowns, more work was done in looking<lb/>
into the $10.00 Senior Fee. In the past,<lb/>
seniors have paid $10 plus 50 cents for a<lb/>
tassel.<lb/>
With the help of Mr. Joseph Clark and<lb/>
Mr. Cliff Moore, the Senior Class Officers<lb/>
have been able to hopefully make better<lb/>
use of the $10 fee. For our Graduation,<lb/>
we will have black acetate robes which<lb/>
will be yours to keep. This way you will<lb/>
be able to have your picture mace at home<lb/>
if you wish.<lb/>
All diplomas will be ma�ld out this<lb/>
year, but you will be able t carry your<lb/>
gown from the graduation aercises this<lb/>
year. There will be no additional cost for<lb/>
the tassel as in the past. Details on<lb/>
picking up your Caps and Gowns oan be<lb/>
obtained in the Student Supply Store.<lb/>
If you would like to know any more of<lb/>
the details about the $10 Senior Fee, you<lb/>
may call the SGA office at 758-6262 or the<lb/>
SGA Hotline at 758-0231.<lb/>
Jim Westmoreland<lb/>
Senior Class President<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
All Coeds<lb/>
Me- harmless federal prisoner, single and<lb/>
ancient (turned 45 today)<lb/>
You - send me a quarter, some info about<lb/>
yourself, a readable name and address<lb/>
Me - will send you an exciting love note,<lb/>
most girls love them!<lb/>
All my love,<lb/>
John<lb/>
John J. Desmond, Jr. 19491<lb/>
Box 1000<lb/>
Steila Coom, Wash. 98388<lb/>
Martin Luther King<lb/>
By MAURICE HUNTLEY<lb/>
A man of faith and conviction, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, wnose birthday<lb/>
we celebrated today, urged his community forward toward a broader understanding of<lb/>
the brotherhood of man. In so doing, the Rev. Dr. King challenged long accepted<lb/>
beliefs, disturbed comtortableconsciences, and opened many eyes to racial injustices<lb/>
long ignored. o.<lb/>
Calm and mild-mannered in appearance but rock-hard in determination, the Rev.<lb/>
Martin Luther King helped keep the calls of conscience and the demands of civil rights<lb/>
on the cities' agenda long before they became popular or winning causes. As pastor<lb/>
from 1932 to 1968 of Ebenezer Baptist Church, a historic and influential congregation in<lb/>
the black community, he occupied a powerful pulpit. �<lb/>
The activism which marked the Rev. Dr. King's pastorate and public career surely<lb/>
advanced the cause of racial justice in the community. Some would say it helped<lb/>
advance it at the cost of racial harmony, but the passage of time suggests that the<lb/>
reverse is true. Unpleasant truths were faced, old resentments slowly eased, ancient<lb/>
mmitted to brotherhood and Christian fate but urging his fellow men to<lb/>
live up to their ideals of faith and democracy, tne nev. Martin Luther King advocated<lb/>
change with constant persistence, but by means of persuasion and reason, not<lb/>
violence. Thus he rightly calculated the moving forces for racial and community<lb/>
advance. He left his mark upon the community. His name is appropriately<lb/>
commemorated in the Martin Luther King Library in Atlanta, Ga.<lb/>
Both persistent and persuasive the Rev. Dr. King helped shape the nation and point<lb/>
it toward a day in which all itt citizens share in its progress and its life.<lb/>
Mideast impeachment<lb/>
and Cambodian bombing<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
By TRISTRAM COFFIN<lb/>
OS COLLISION COURSE IN<lb/>
MIDEAST - The build up in the Mideast<lb/>
begdn before the recent fighting. A<lb/>
source tells us the US was pouring ships,<lb/>
planes and technicians into the Mideast,<lb/>
and "converting Iran into another<lb/>
Thailand This recalls the warning of<lb/>
Chairman Fulbright of the Senate Foreign<lb/>
Relations Committee in May that we may<lb/>
use "military potent surrogates" or Iran<lb/>
and Israel to occupy Persian Gulf oil<lb/>
lands.<lb/>
The Washington Post reports from<lb/>
Beirut (September 24), "More and more,<lb/>
Arab officials are convinced that<lb/>
justification for some kind of military<lb/>
operation against oil countries is being<lb/>
built up in the US A Saudi Arabian said,<lb/>
"Do they think in W; iington it is so easy<lb/>
to occupy oil fields wh troops? Let them<lb/>
come and try "<lb/>
This has prompted a Russian build up<lb/>
in neighboring Iraq, in Mideast power<lb/>
base. The Post (October 2) notes that<lb/>
"within the past few weeks Russia has<lb/>
sent "about a dozen TU-22 supersonic jets<lb/>
bomers to Iraq Movement of the planes<lb/>
appears to be a part of a continuing big<lb/>
power struggle for influence in the oil rich<lb/>
and volatile Persian Gulf<lb/>
Other pieces of the puzzle are:<lb/>
US Marines this summer engaged in<lb/>
extensive desert warfare training, as did<lb/>
National Guard units in the southwest.<lb/>
'Former CIA Director Richard Helms,<lb/>
as Ambassador to Iran, is building an<lb/>
extensive under-cover organization r the<lb/>
Mideast.<lb/>
�President Nixon hinted to Arab states<lb/>
if they withheld oil they might suffer the<lb/>
fate of Premier Mossadegh in 1953 when<lb/>
he nationalized oil fields. Mossadegh was<lb/>
thrown out in a coup engineered by<lb/>
QA. Libya's Col. Muammar Quaddafi<lb/>
"and his top aides appear to believe<lb/>
sincerely that the 'Nixon gang' is working<lb/>
toward a military take over (Post)<lb/>
At a summer meeting of the Carabao<lb/>
Club, composed of senior US military<lb/>
officers, Admiral Thomas H. Mooer,<lb/>
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,<lb/>
"talked about a tenth of the time on<lb/>
Southeast Asia and the rest on the<lb/>
military focus on the Middle East<lb/>
according to our source.<lb/>
IMPEACHMENT, A BILL OF<lb/>
PARTICULARS - On August 6 and 14, Air<lb/>
Force Master Sergeant Grant A. Schulke,<lb/>
44, a Vietnam veteran, wrote to the legal<lb/>
officer of Lowry Air Force base and to<lb/>
Senator Sam Ervin. He asked help in<lb/>
drawing up court martial charges against<lb/>
the Commander-ln-Chief, because he<lb/>
"refused to release information dealing<lb/>
with the Watergate investigation (Denver<lb/>
Post, August 29)<lb/>
On August 14, Sergeant Schulke was<lb/>
ordered to Fitzsimmons Army Hospital for<lb/>
psychiatric examination. The chief of the<lb/>
psychiatric department, Col Clotile<lb/>
Brown, testified that Schulke is "confused<lb/>
and not thinking too clearly (Rocky<lb/>
Mountain News, September 14) Writing in<lb/>
The Guardian September 29, a British<lb/>
psychiatrist speaks of "the systematic<lb/>
misuse of psychiatry and psychiatric<lb/>
facilities for the purpose of political<lb/>
repression in the Soviet Union � The<lb/>
victim is usualy a dissident who may have<lb/>
protested against .conditions prevailing<lb/>
within the Soviet Union<lb/>
This summer, police arrested one<lb/>
hundred fifty-eight persons for the crime<lb/>
of singing the Lord's Prayer and praying<lb/>
for peace in the White House. One of<lb/>
them, Quaker pacificist Robert Martin,<lb/>
was brutally mistreated in jail; later<lb/>
acquitted of "unlawful entry" by a<lb/>
Washington jury. (Washington Post,<lb/>
October 2)<lb/>
In this issue, we present a bill of<lb/>
particulars for the impeachment of the<lb/>
President. We agree with Sergeant<lb/>
Schulke who told AP, "I figure somebody<lb/>
should make the Commander-in-Chief<lb/>
stand to justice<lb/>
VIOLATION OF THE CONSTITUTION -<lb/>
"The Congress shall have Power. To<lb/>
declare WarTo raise and support<lb/>
Armies To provide and maintain a Navy<lb/>
 To make Rules for the Government and<lb/>
Regulation of land and naval Forces US<lb/>
Constitution, Article 1, Section 8.<lb/>
Nixon waged an undeclared war on<lb/>
Cambodia. The New Yorker states<lb/>
(September 17): "Together, they (Nixon<lb/>
and Kissinger) had planned the<lb/>
undisclosed bombing of Cambodia in<lb/>
1969 and 1970They had planned the<lb/>
invasion of Cambodia in 1970; they had<lb/>
planned the use of American air power to<lb/>
support the invasion of Loas in<lb/>
1971 .they had planned the mining and<lb/>
blockading of North Vietnamese harbors;<lb/>
later in 1972 they had planned the<lb/>
'Christmas bombing' of North Vietnam -<lb/>
all this done in secrecy and without<lb/>
Congressional consent<lb/>
Tom Wicker writes (July 24): "For<lb/>
fourteen months the Pentagon, State<lb/>
Department and White House repeatedly<lb/>
insisted that Cambodian neutrality was<lb/>
being respected, while all conspired to<lb/>
keep secret the fact that in 3,630 raids<lb/>
American B-52s had dropped more than<lb/>
100,000 tons of bombs on Cambodia<lb/>
Mr. Nixon himself appeared on national<lb/>
television and told the American people<lb/>
that since 1954 American policy had been<lb/>
to 'respect scrupulously the neutrality of<lb/>
the Cambodian people<lb/>
"And for five years, he said, 'neither<lb/>
the US nor South Vietnam has moved<lb/>
against' North Vietnamese sanctuaries in<lb/>
Cambodia This was after fourteen<lb/>
months of B-52 raids on Cambodia,<lb/>
including the sanctuaries. This was a<lb/>
deliberate and knowing lie, broadcast in<lb/>
person to the American people by their<lb/>
President<lb/>
NIXON DECIDES ON BOMBING - The<lb/>
New Republic reports, "The decision to<lb/>
bomb Cambodia was made by the<lb/>
President in the middle of March 1969 at a<lb/>
meeting with Kissinger, Rogers, Laird,<lb/>
Wheeler (Joint Chiefs chairman) and<lb/>
Richard Helms (CIA chief). It was Mr.<lb/>
Nixon who demanded total security<lb/>
(secrecy) Other evidence is:<lb/>
"We know that acting under President<lb/>
Nixon's personal authority, US military<lb/>
units engaged in almost daily ground<lb/>
incursions into Cambodia during 1989<lb/>
They were coordinated with secret B-52<lb/>
and tactical US air strikes in Cambodia<lb/>
that went on for fourteen months in<lb/>
1969-70 (New Republic, September 18,<lb/>
25)<lb/>
�"President Nixon personally authoriz-<lb/>
ed a secret Marine Corps combat<lb/>
operation inside Laos two days after his<lb/>
inauguration in 1969 .Military sources<lb/>
said that at least on Marine battalion -<lb/>
about 1,500 men - were sent into Laos,<lb/>
where it suffered extremely heavy<lb/>
casualties during pitched battles with<lb/>
North Vietnamese troops .Survivors said<lb/>
that some of the infantry units sent into<lb/>
Laos reported half their men killed or<lb/>
wounded<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mmtmmtmmm<lb/>
Liver research<lb/>
organizes here<lb/>
A non-profit corporation to promote<lb/>
research in the diseases of the liver has<lb/>
organized at ECU as the American Hepatic<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
Dr. Abdullah Fatteh, professor of<lb/>
Pathology of the ECU School of Medicine,<lb/>
and president of the AHF predicts the<lb/>
foundation will assume national import-<lb/>
ance as the country's major grant-giving<lb/>
agency to fund liver research. The<lb/>
American Hepatic Foundation's charter<lb/>
was filed with the state of North Carolina<lb/>
Dec. 3, 1973.<lb/>
"Our first objective is to raise money<lb/>
Fatteh said. He explained that when the<lb/>
funds are available, the AHF will present<lb/>
grants to selected research organizations<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
"Later, we plan to set up regional<lb/>
offices in different states he said.<lb/>
Citing the need for more research in<lb/>
liver diseases as the reason for organizing<lb/>
the AHF, Fatteh noted that liver diseases<lb/>
are common and increasing in<lb/>
frequency. The major problems are<lb/>
alcoholic liver damage, drug induced liver<lb/>
injury and viral hepatitis.<lb/>
"Unfortunately, the liver can be<lb/>
damaged without the individual being<lb/>
aware that anything is wrong and<lb/>
frequently the diagnosis of liver damage<lb/>
is made too latt Fatteh said.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU Chancellor,<lb/>
congratulated Dr. Fatteh and other<lb/>
members of the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
faculty for being instrumental in<lb/>
organizing the new foundation.<lb/>
Dr. Wallace Wooles, Dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine, explained that there<lb/>
was a great need for a foundation of this<lb/>
type of research. "Liver disease and the<lb/>
function of the liver is one of the least<lb/>
understood of all human organs he said.<lb/>
"With the increase of liver diseases<lb/>
and the involvement of the liver in many<lb/>
other diseases, it is time, that a<lb/>
foundation existed solely to advance our<lb/>
knowledge of this organ<lb/>
"We are pleased that the ECU School<lb/>
of Medicine, in its infancy, could address<lb/>
itself to a problem of this magnitude<lb/>
Wooles said.<lb/>
Officers presiding with the American<lb/>
Hepatic Foundation include: vice presi-<lb/>
dent, Dr. Sylvanus W. Nye of ECU and<lb/>
secretary-treasurer, Dr. Martel J. Dai ley of<lb/>
Williamson, N.C.<lb/>
Members of the Medical<lb/>
Advisory Board are: Dr. J. Garrott Allen<lb/>
of Stanford University; Dr. Kare Berg of<lb/>
the University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway;<lb/>
Carrol M. Leevy, New Jersey College of<lb/>
Medicine and Dentistry; Dr. Harold R.<lb/>
Roberts, University of North Carolina;<lb/>
and Dr. Hans F. Smetana of Tulan<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The foundation solicits contributions<lb/>
and invites correspondence and inquiries<lb/>
addressed to: American Hepatic found-<lb/>
ation, Inc. co Department of Pathology,<lb/>
School of Medicine, East Carolina<lb/>
University, P.O. Box 2701, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
JOE APPLEQATE posed nude In this photo Included In the 1973 Buccaneer, it<lb/>
called "out-of-taste" and "controversial" by some but caused "reaction which wee the<lb/>
objective of the Buc.<lb/>
SGA cuts music fund request<lb/>
By SUSAN QUINN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Performing organizations in the ECU<lb/>
School of Music were appropriated $1,000<lb/>
by the SGA Legislature Monday. $250 of<lb/>
the appropriation will be granted without<lb/>
conditions and the $750 must be matched<lb/>
by an equal amount by the Music School.<lb/>
The $1,000 appropriated is a<lb/>
considerable cut from the original request<lb/>
on December 3, 1973 for $10,000-$5,000<lb/>
to be used for scholarships and $5,000 to<lb/>
be used for support of student performing<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
Five new members were accepted in<lb/>
the legislature. They are as follows:<lb/>
Laddie Crisp representing Jones Dorm,<lb/>
Terry Wood of Greene, Debbie Rutledge of<lb/>
Cotton. Pat Samoriski of Greene and<lb/>
Sheilah Bolick of Jarvis. These new<lb/>
members are filling previously vacant<lb/>
positions on the legislature.<lb/>
A reorganization act was passed<lb/>
requiring a committee to review all bills<lb/>
and resolutions which were passed by the<lb/>
SGA legislature in previous years. This<lb/>
bill will allow the legislature to update or<lb/>
nullify previous legislation.<lb/>
It was announced that all organi-<lb/>
zations that have not already had their<lb/>
constitutions approved by the SGA<lb/>
Legislature, must submit their consti-<lb/>
tutions immediately to the SGA office. It<lb/>
was also announced that the Accounting<lb/>
Society will help adjust student's income<lb/>
taxes beginning February 1 in 306 Wright.<lb/>
MIHIIIIIMIHimilHimilHM<lb/>
IMimilllllllMMHI<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
THIS NUMBER<lb/>
752-7483<lb/>
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You may not need it today, tomorrow,<lb/>
or next week, but someday you will<lb/>
need it. everyone eventually do�s.<lb/>
ELiVERY SERVIC<lb/>
5-11 7 DATS<lb/>
NEW I! Chef Salad $1.35<lb/>
Pizza, lasagne, spaghetti sandwiches<lb/>
PIZZA CHEF<lb/>
Corner 5thCotanche St<lb/>
The YEARBOOK PHOTO-<lb/>
GRAPHER is RETURNING for<lb/>
ONE WEEK - Jan. 1418. If you<lb/>
have NOT had your portrait<lb/>
taken, this is your LAST<lb/>
CHANCE. Portraits can be taken<lb/>
from 9:00-12:00 and 1:00-5:00<lb/>
daily in Room 305 Wright Annex.<lb/>
No Sitting Fee<lb/>
No Dress Requirement<lb/>
No Appointment Necessary<lb/>
All undergraduates, graduates<lb/>
j and faculty members are urged to<lb/>
i make use of this FINAL<lb/>
I OPPORTUNITY - BE A PART<lb/>
(OF THE 1974 BUCCANEER!<lb/>
The Yearbook's Not Complete<lb/>
. Unless YOU Are In It! ('71, 72 <lb/>
land 73 Buccaneers are available j<lb/>
j in the yearbook office - 2nd floor f<lb/>
Wright.)<lb/>
i<lb/>
:<lb/>
"mill<lb/>
MM(ltMllMUIHIIMHnilliniMM�llliniMlllMMMIMlHltttlHlllliniMIIMIIIIIMnHnMHHMIIIinHI�lll(IMIMIllMIMMilHHtMIIMIMMIIIIMIIMIIMIHMlllllMI(l<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm�<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0011"/><lb/>
. It<lb/>
 which was the<lb/>
Ml.<lb/>
that all organi-<lb/>
ilready had their<lb/>
by the SGA,<lb/>
nit their consti-<lb/>
ie SGA office. It<lb/>
t the Accounting<lb/>
student's income<lb/>
11 in 306 Wright.<lb/>
timtMMftWMI<lb/>
'HOTO-<lb/>
NG for<lb/>
If you<lb/>
jortrait<lb/>
LAST<lb/>
e taken<lb/>
: 00-5:00<lb/>
Annex.<lb/>
i I<lb/>
It<lb/>
ary<lb/>
iduates<lb/>
rged to<lb/>
FINAL<lb/>
PART<lb/>
JEER!<lb/>
mplete<lb/>
71,72,1<lb/>
ailable l<lb/>
d floor<lb/>
 III! I'll HUM II Hill HUM HIM l ItllH H<lb/>
m mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2615 JAN. 1974<lb/>
11<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirates edge Keydets<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S ROBERT GETER battles Fairleigh-Dickinson center, Glenn<lb/>
Bolduc, for rebound in contest won by Bucs, 77-73. The Pirates returned to Minges<lb/>
Coliseum last night for a conference game against Press Maravich's Appalachian<lb/>
State Mountaineers.<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One point games are becoming a<lb/>
precarious habit for the East Carolina<lb/>
basketball team.<lb/>
Wednesday night at Richmond the<lb/>
Pirates lost 79-78 and Saturday night at<lb/>
VMI the Bucs won 59-58 to bring their<lb/>
overall record to 5-6 and their Southern<lb/>
Conference mark to 2-2.<lb/>
Last year's conference Player of the<lb/>
YearAron Stewart followed up his missed<lb/>
shot with a winning goal which gave<lb/>
Richmond their third win in the<lb/>
conference after having trailed most of the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Nicky White, the Pirate's center who is<lb/>
making a strong bid for All-Conference<lb/>
honors, led the Pirate attack with 29<lb/>
points and 15 rebounds.<lb/>
Coach Quinn commented on his<lb/>
center's play, "Nicky was simply<lb/>
outstanding. His was easily the best<lb/>
performance of the night. More teams are<lb/>
trying to zone and jam him now, which<lb/>
makes his efforts even more worthy<lb/>
ECU led throughout most of the<lb/>
contest, and with 7:58 remaining held a<lb/>
seven point lead which disappeared to<lb/>
76-76 with 1:40 to go.<lb/>
With 12 seconds left Steward tied up<lb/>
Tom Marsh forcing a jump ball. Rich-<lb/>
mond controlled the tap and Steward<lb/>
scored to ice the victory.<lb/>
Quinn commented on the game,<lb/>
"Richmond has the best front line in the<lb/>
conference next to Furman's. We're still<lb/>
yound and were playing only our second<lb/>
conference game on the road. We played<lb/>
well but made several costly turnovers<lb/>
Stewart led the Richmond attack with<lb/>
26 points, and Quinn gave him due praise.<lb/>
"Last year we could seal Stewart off<lb/>
up front, but this year he's playing with<lb/>
two other outstanding players up front in<lb/>
McCjrdy (who scored 21 points) and Gray<lb/>
(14 points). He has to share his shots<lb/>
now, but is still capable to taking over a<lb/>
ballgame<lb/>
Assisting White's scoring were Tom<lb/>
Marsh with 11 points and Greg Ashorn<lb/>
with 8.<lb/>
Saturday night the Buc's Donnie<lb/>
Owens hit a 20 foot jump shot with two<lb/>
seconds left to give ECUits victory.<lb/>
East Carolina broke out to a 16-3 lead<lb/>
and with Tom Marsh's two free throws<lb/>
and Larry Hunt's jumper led at halftime<lb/>
35-28.<lb/>
In the second half the Pirates<lb/>
continued to lead until Curt Reppart of<lb/>
VMI hit to give the Keydets a 58-57 lead<lb/>
with 1:29 remaining.<lb/>
East Carolina held the ball trying to<lb/>
get it into Nicky White, but with only a<lb/>
few seconds remaining VMI double<lb/>
teamed White forcing Owens to hit his<lb/>
pressure shot.<lb/>
White led the Pirate scoring with 16<lb/>
points followed by Marsh's 12, Roger<lb/>
Atkinson's 9 and Owens' 8.<lb/>
Coach Quinn assessed the season so<lb/>
far, "We haven't been home in a month<lb/>
and have had some tough road<lb/>
games. We had ten days off and then<lb/>
played a Marshall team which had just<lb/>
won a holiday tournament, and in the<lb/>
Presidential Classic lost a heartbreaker. I<lb/>
think our junior college players arc'<lb/>
coming around and we're starting to jell<lb/>
Monday night the Pirates face<lb/>
Appalachian State and hit the road again<lb/>
Saturday night to face William and Mary.<lb/>
Buc Tankers fell to Tarheels JVS drop m tourney<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirate swimmers fell<lb/>
behind early, made a slight comeback and<lb/>
then finally succumbed 68-45. to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina in a NCAA<lb/>
swimming meet at Minges Natatorium on<lb/>
Saturday afternoon.<lb/>
The Tar Heels, now 4-0 in dual meet<lb/>
competition, saw Jike Southard and John<lb/>
Kolesaire capture two events apiece.<lb/>
Southard won the 200-yard backstroke<lb/>
and 200-yard freestyle events and<lb/>
Kolesaire was victorous in the 200-yard<lb/>
individual medley and the 500-yard<lb/>
freestyle events.<lb/>
The meet was much closer than the<lb/>
final margin indicated. Paul Schiffel was<lb/>
just touched out for second place in the<lb/>
1,000-yard freestyle event, Ross Bohlken<lb/>
was edged for first place in the 200-yard<lb/>
freestyle and Charlie Kemp missed a bid<lb/>
for first place in the 200-yard individual<lb/>
medley. All three events were captured by<lb/>
UNC.<lb/>
Senior Jack Morrow captured both the<lb/>
one and three-meter diving events for East<lb/>
Carolina. His score of 272.45 points set a<lb/>
new meet record in the three-meter<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
Overall, Carolina won eight of the 13<lb/>
events. Pirate head coach Ray Scharf had<lb/>
mixed emotions following the meet.<lb/>
"We lost to a very tough team<lb/>
Scharf commented, "approximately 65 per<lb/>
cent of our swimmers had their best times<lb/>
of the season. How can I complain? We<lb/>
swam our best times and we just got<lb/>
licked<lb/>
Other East Carolina winners were Jim<lb/>
Hadley in the 50-yard freestyle, Bobby<lb/>
Vail in the 100-yard freestyle, and the<lb/>
400-yard freestyle relay, consisting of<lb/>
Hadley, Vail, Bohlken and Greg<lb/>
0mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Hinchman.<lb/>
The Pirates will now pack their bags<lb/>
for a sojourn to West Point, N.Y. on<lb/>
Saturday to take on Army and St. Johns in<lb/>
a double dual meet.<lb/>
The Army squad appears to be much<lb/>
stronger than the team that the Bucs beat<lb/>
two years ago in West Point. Scharf said,<lb/>
"Army will not pose the problem that<lb/>
Carolina did, but they do have depth and<lb/>
Ifeel that they must be considered slight<lb/>
favorites over us. St. Johns is the<lb/>
Metropolitan Champions, but we should<lb/>
be favored over them due to our depth<lb/>
The Pirates are currently 1-1 on the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
1973-74 SWIMMING<lb/>
Jan. 19 Army &amp; St Johns<lb/>
Jon. 22 N.C. State Unvi. 7:30<lb/>
Jan. 27 Unvi. of Maryland 2:00<lb/>
Feb. 1 Richmond<lb/>
Feb. 2 Univ. of Virgina<lb/>
Feb. 16 Catholic Unvi.<lb/>
Feb. 21 Appalachian 7:00<lb/>
Feb. 23 VMI 2:00<lb/>
Feb. 28, Southern Conference<lb/>
Mar. 1,2 meet<lb/>
Mar. 7,8,9 Eastern Championship<lb/>
Mar. 28-30 NCAA<lb/>
Long Beach, Co.<lb/>
Women hold Purple-Gold<lb/>
Tonight at 7:30 in Memorial Gym, the<lb/>
women's basketball team will hold their<lb/>
annual Purple-Gold intrasquad game.<lb/>
Admission is free of charge.<lb/>
mwmmmm<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina junior varsity<lb/>
basketball team lost both games over the<lb/>
weekend in the Mt. Olive Pickle Classic.<lb/>
Friday night Coach Tom Twitty's Baby<lb/>
Bucs lost a close one 86-85 to Mt. Olive<lb/>
College.<lb/>
The game was close in the ensuing<lb/>
moments but with two minutes left Mt.<lb/>
Olive hit 12 points in a row to hold a 49-38<lb/>
halftime lead.<lb/>
The lead changed hands several times<lb/>
in the second half until with seven<lb/>
minutes left Tyrone Williams hit a jumper<lb/>
to tie the score 74-74.<lb/>
With 1:15 to go Larry Cook of Mt.<lb/>
Olive hit a jumper making it 86-84 Mt.<lb/>
Olive, but the Baby Buc's Larry Modlin hit<lb/>
a free throw to bring ECU within one.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs stole the ball but<lb/>
Modlin failed to connect on a free throw<lb/>
and Williams' shot, off a jump ball, with<lb/>
one second remaining failed.<lb/>
The Baby Bucs were led by the<lb/>
superlative effort of Harry Miller who<lb/>
1973-74<lb/>
J.V. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Jon. 19 Williom &amp; Mary 5 45 p.m.<lb/>
Jan 24 Louisburg 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 30 Old Dominion 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Feb 2 U of No. Car 5:55 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 6 Chowan 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 9 William &amp; Mary 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Feb 16 Davidson 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 20 Richmond 5:45 p.m.<lb/>
Bold type denotes home tame<lb/>
mmmmmwmwwmmmmmmtm<lb/>
scored 30 points, followed by Al<lb/>
McCrimmons 15 and Williams'12.<lb/>
In the consolation game Saturday<lb/>
night the Baby Bucs lost to Louisburg<lb/>
Junior College 96-76.<lb/>
Kim Pastushok with 34 points in the<lb/>
game, led Louisburg to a 43-40 halftime<lb/>
lead and with Russell Davis' 22 points<lb/>
gave Louisburg an easy victory.<lb/>
For the Pirates' Lynn Blackley and<lb/>
Harry Miller each had 18 points, followed<lb/>
by McCrimmons'13 and Tommy Williams'<lb/>
11.<lb/>
1973-74 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Jan.19 William &amp; MaryA<lb/>
Jan.23 St. Peter'sH<lb/>
Jan.26 VMIH<lb/>
Jan.28 FurmanH<lb/>
Jan.30 Old DominionH<lb/>
Feb.2 FurmanA<lb/>
Feb.6 Buffalo StateH<lb/>
Feb.9 William &amp; MaryH<lb/>
Feb.1 1 Appalachian StateA<lb/>
Feb.16 DavidsonA<lb/>
Feb.20 RichmondH<lb/>
Feb.23 The CitadelH<lb/>
Feb.27 So. Conference Toum.A<lb/>
Feb.28, Mar. 1-2 (Feb. 27-Mar.2)<lb/>
Boldtype denotes home games<lb/>
Ours the interest,<lb/>
And we thank you.<lb/>
m<lb/>
wtmmwm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 267 JAN. 1974<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Buc grapplers down West Chester<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Thursday night in Minges Coliseum<lb/>
the East Carolina wrestling team defeated<lb/>
the Rams of West Chester State (Pa.) by<lb/>
the score of 28-10. Coach Milt Collier of<lb/>
West Chester provided some added<lb/>
fireworks for the crowd of 2,500 with<lb/>
antics which led to his eventual ejection<lb/>
from the match.<lb/>
This was the first dual meet for the<lb/>
Pirates, who had, in seven previous<lb/>
tournaments, taken titles in five of<lb/>
them. Against West Chester the grapplers<lb/>
started a little slow, but put forth a fine<lb/>
effort downing the tough Rams.<lb/>
"I wish we could have been more<lb/>
aggressive early, but overall we did<lb/>
alright said coach John Welborn. "It<lb/>
wasn't a great performance but I was<lb/>
pleased<lb/>
Collier, an East Carolina alumnus, was<lb/>
disappointed in the officiating, to say the<lb/>
least. When questioned about it he<lb/>
replied, "Don't ask me about that. He was<lb/>
nitpicking from the start<lb/>
There were many controversial calls,<lb/>
but only one was clearly blown. A<lb/>
takedown was credited to Glenn Baker in<lb/>
the 126 pound bout, but this proved<lb/>
inconsequential as Baker lost.<lb/>
Collier was ejected during the 167<lb/>
pound match between Ron Whitcomb of<lb/>
ECU and Steve Maxwell of West<lb/>
Chester. Maxwell suffered a severe<lb/>
nosebleed throughout the bout, delaying<lb/>
it many times. Just as Maxwell was about<lb/>
to reverse Whitcomb and put him on his<lb/>
back, his profuse bleeding was noticed<lb/>
once again by the referee. He properly<lb/>
stopped the match, but Collier was<lb/>
chagrinned at his timing. He leaped onto<lb/>
the mat, only to be ordered to the locker<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Whitcomb defeated Maxwell 5-4,<lb/>
breaking a 10-10 tie and putting ECU on<lb/>
top 13-10. With the wind taken out of<lb/>
their sails, West Chester lost the<lb/>
remaining three matches.<lb/>
Bill Hill and Willie Bryant both brought<lb/>
the roaring crowd to it's feet with exciting<lb/>
pins, while Mike Radford clinched the<lb/>
team victory with his decision in the 190<lb/>
pound match.<lb/>
SUMMARY<lb/>
118-Jim Blair (ECU) dec. Allen<lb/>
Gordon, 14-3.<lb/>
126- Bill Racich (WC) dec. Glenn<lb/>
Baker, 9-2.<lb/>
134 Milt Sherman (ECU) dec. Steve<lb/>
Powell, 11-6.<lb/>
142-Tom Marriott (ECU) dec. John<lb/>
Gallagher, 6-1.<lb/>
150Ralph Reish (WC) dec. Tom<lb/>
McAteer, 12-2.<lb/>
158- Paul Gillespie (WC) dec. Bruce<lb/>
Hall, 11-7.<lb/>
167 Ron Whitcomb (ECU) dec.<lb/>
Steve Maxwell, 5-4.<lb/>
177-Bill Hill (ECU) by fall over Ken<lb/>
Korbely, 5:34.<lb/>
190Mike Radford (ECU) dec. Andy<lb/>
Aronstam, 6-2.<lb/>
HWT-Willie Bryant (ECU) by fall over<lb/>
Robert Esgelman, 3:45.<lb/>
In exhibition matches, Bucky Baker at<lb/>
142, Jack Storz at 158 and Jim Cox at<lb/>
heavyweight all won decisions over their<lb/>
West Chester opponents.<lb/>
The Pirate matmen are back in action<lb/>
next January 26 when they travel to Boone<lb/>
to face the tough Mountaineers of<lb/>
Appalachian State University. Next home<lb/>
match is February 8 against William &amp;<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINA PIRATE GRAPPLERS are presently 1-0 in dual match<lb/>
competition as they defeated the club from Westchester last Thursday evening. The<lb/>
wrestlers will face Appalachian State University in Boone on Jan. 26.<lb/>
PIRATE FORWARD ROGER ATKINSON DRIVES for two points<lb/>
against the Knights of Fairteigh-Dickinson. Monday evening the<lb/>
Sues squeaked out a 53-52 victory over the Mountaineers of<lb/>
Appalachian State. The story on the game will appear in<lb/>
Thursday's Fountainhead.<lb/>
IMPEACHMENT<lb/>
because I love my Country<lb/>
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Semicid is lubricating, pleasantly scented<lb/>
and packaged in a unique patented case<lb/>
�smaller than a compact -that keeps it<lb/>
hygienic and untouched until ready for<lb/>
use. The case is small enough to be car-<lb/>
ried in your purse or pocket so it's always<lb/>
available.<lb/>
SEMICID IS ALWAYS READY WHEN YOU ARE!<lb/>
If not available at your druggist, send<lb/>
$1.95 for the case containing ten mini-<lb/>
suppositories, instructions for use and a<lb/>
free booklet on birth control.<lb/>
r<lb/>
�.v in in h Birth Control Institute Inc.<lb/>
On Fast 57th St New York. N.Y. 10022<lb/>
Inclosed is for <lb/>
packages of Semicid at S.I.95 each post<lb/>
paid Please send at once to<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address�<lb/>
 its<lb/>
.State.<lb/>
Z'P-<lb/>
: �qM<lb/>
<pb facs="00039898_0013"/>
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