<?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="00039899_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY EOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
Evaluation<lb/>
committee<lb/>
is formed<lb/>
By MIKE PARSONS<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
Student evaluation of professors will<lb/>
soon have its day at ECU.<lb/>
The Teacher Evaluation Committee has<lb/>
been formed by SGA. The committee was<lb/>
created by a letter from Bill Bodenhamer,<lb/>
president of SGA, to Jim Davis, SGA<lb/>
secretary of academic affairs, giving<lb/>
Davis's office the authority to undertake<lb/>
evaluations of the ECU faculty on behalf<lb/>
of the student body.<lb/>
Larry Hurst, a sociology major, will<lb/>
head the committee. Hurst has the<lb/>
authority to select additional volunteer<lb/>
members of the committee from the<lb/>
student body to serve on the committee<lb/>
and aid in its work.<lb/>
The express purpose of the committee<lb/>
is to evaluate each full-time ECU<lb/>
instructor "at least once in one of three<lb/>
quarters of the school calender year The<lb/>
teacher and the class will be selected at<lb/>
random. As close to 100 percent of the<lb/>
class as reasonably possible will be used<lb/>
in tabulating the results.<lb/>
The format of the questions has not<lb/>
yet been determined and this will be the<lb/>
first task of the committee. The<lb/>
guidelines given in the letter of<lb/>
authorization for the committee state that<lb/>
they shall be impartial and objective in<lb/>
nature and designed for computer<lb/>
scoring.<lb/>
The evaluation will require financing<lb/>
for such expenses as computer time,<lb/>
materials and binding of the results.<lb/>
Anticipated expenses will be submitted to<lb/>
the SGAIegislature for approval in the<lb/>
form of an appropriations bill.<lb/>
The results will be published for the<lb/>
benefit of the student body. Present<lb/>
plans are to have the results compiled and<lb/>
bound and placed in the library for the use<lb/>
of anyone who desires.<lb/>
??m<lb/>
i HE OPEN STACK SYSTEM is "working quite mir according to Joyner Library administrator, Or. Ralph Kusseil.<lb/>
Joyner makes changes<lb/>
By TIM JONES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Since fall quarter, 1973, several<lb/>
changes have been made in the campus<lb/>
library system. The biggest difference is<lb/>
the open stacks procedure which is<lb/>
available to all students.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ralph Russell,<lb/>
administrator of Joyner Library, the<lb/>
system is working quite well. The open<lb/>
stacks are the result of past observation<lb/>
by the library staff and requests from<lb/>
students using the library.<lb/>
Because of the open stacks a checker<lb/>
is at the library exit ninety-two hours a<lb/>
vvofik to nrevent theft of hooks: hnuumor<lb/>
this method is not completely<lb/>
flawless. Presently that is no account of<lb/>
stolen books. This can only be obtained<lb/>
through a complete inventory of library<lb/>
material.<lb/>
With the open stacks system, there is<lb/>
less confusion at the circulation desk;<lb/>
therefore, student employees in the<lb/>
library are not as badly needed. "The staff<lb/>
feels more positive about their job<lb/>
stated Dr. Russell. In the past there has<lb/>
been an air of inefficiency, because<lb/>
employees at the circulation desk were<lb/>
unable to render rapid service to students<lb/>
who wanted books.<lb/>
Russell has found a necessity to<lb/>
increase the number of employees on his<lb/>
reference staff. More staff members are<lb/>
now needed to patrol the book stacks,<lb/>
and serve as aids and guides to students<lb/>
who are lost, confused, or simply unable<lb/>
to find the material that they seek.<lb/>
With this new system, there has been<lb/>
no drastic increase in students who use<lb/>
the library. The number of people using<lb/>
the library is basically the same.<lb/>
In hope of making the library more<lb/>
convenient for students, Russell has set<lb/>
up a suggestion box which has produced<lb/>
pleasing results. Students are also able<lb/>
to recommend books for purchase should<lb/>
they feel a certain book is needed in the<lb/>
library. This quarter the library will be<lb/>
open full-time on weekends of and before<lb/>
exams.<lb/>
ii fXl <lb/>
THE $2,935,000 MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER is nearing completion.<lb/>
Mendenhall center<lb/>
nears completion<lb/>
The new Mendenhall Student Center at<lb/>
ECU is in the final stages of<lb/>
construction. James J. Lowry, director of<lb/>
campus maintenance and operations,<lb/>
reports that the building is expected to be<lb/>
completed in March.<lb/>
The 86,000 square foot building was<lb/>
designed by architect Carter Williams of<lb/>
Raleigh. Total construction and furnish-<lb/>
ing cost is about $2,935,000.<lb/>
General contractor for the project is<lb/>
C.J. Kern of Greensboro. Other contract-<lb/>
ors include Bryant-Durham Electrical<lb/>
Contracting of Durham, Kinston Plumbing<lb/>
and Heating of Kinston (mechanical<lb/>
contractor), and James Askins, Inc. of<lb/>
Kinston (plumbing contractor).<lb/>
The center will feature an 800-seat film<lb/>
and lecture theatre, and eight-land<lb/>
liKi<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
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wmmm<lb/>
bowling alley, table games facilities<lb/>
including 12 billiards tables and six<lb/>
table-tennis tables, a crafts center, a<lb/>
coffee house, a television lounge, ten<lb/>
conference rooms a snack bar, a student<lb/>
bank and four music listening rooms.<lb/>
It will also include space for the<lb/>
campus Central Ticket Office, the Student<lb/>
Government Association and the Student<lb/>
Union, as well as miscellaneous meeting<lb/>
rooms and informal lounges.<lb/>
Landscaping of the patio areas and<lb/>
other grounds will be a university project.<lb/>
Later in the year the new building will<lb/>
be formally dedicated to Cynthia Anne<lb/>
Mendenhall, who was Director of Student<lb/>
Union Activities from 1954 until her death<lb/>
in February, 1972.<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
p<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmmmimmmmmu<lb/>
Buc group photos Chemistry grant Sigma Tau Delta Hebrew youth<lb/>
All organization presidents (clubs,<lb/>
fraternities, and sororities) should contact<lb/>
the Buc office to schedule pictures for<lb/>
their groups. Pictures need to be taken<lb/>
during January or the first of February. If<lb/>
you hours do not coincide with those of<lb/>
the staff, contact Nancy Leggett at<lb/>
756-7454 after 5.<lb/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
Dr. G. G. Meisels, professor and<lb/>
chairman of the University of Houston's<lb/>
chemistry faculty, will direct the weekly<lb/>
seminar program Friday at the ECU<lb/>
Department of Chemistry.<lb/>
His topic will be "Ionic Equilibria in<lb/>
the Gas Phase<lb/>
The seminar, scheduled for 3 p.m. in<lb/>
202 Flanagan Building, is free and open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Diabetes<lb/>
A workshop on diabetes nutrition is to<lb/>
be offered by ECUbeginning Jan. 29. The<lb/>
course will run for five evening sessions<lb/>
ending Tuesday, Feb. 26.<lb/>
The workshop will focus on proper<lb/>
dietary management of the diabetic,<lb/>
which according to recent research in the<lb/>
field, is the most important factor in the<lb/>
welfare of diabetic patients.<lb/>
Instructor Marilyn Steele, ECU faculty<lb/>
nutritionist, will discuss such topics as<lb/>
the importance of diet in the control of<lb/>
diabetes, the exchange diet plan,<lb/>
shopping techniques and food prepar-<lb/>
ations. The workshop will include<lb/>
lectures, demonstrations and discus-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Dr. William Fore, Greenville physician,<lb/>
will direct the first workshop session, an<lb/>
overview of diabetes, and will answer<lb/>
questions of class participants.<lb/>
Since class size will be limited to 25<lb/>
participants, early registration is advis-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
forms are available from the ECU Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education, Box 2727,<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Two members of the ECU Department<lb/>
of Chemistry have received research<lb/>
grants to fund current projects.<lb/>
Dr. Chia-yu Li, who joined the ECU<lb/>
chemistry faculty in 1973, received $5,800<lb/>
from the North Carolina Board of Science<lb/>
and Technology for his project,<lb/>
"Electrochemical and Spectroelectro-<lb/>
chemical Investigations of Biological<lb/>
Model Compounds<lb/>
Among the aspects electro-analytic<lb/>
chemistry involved in the project is the<lb/>
action of chemical compounds relating to<lb/>
the hemoglobin of blood.<lb/>
Dr. Edgar Heckel, who received a<lb/>
$1,000 grant from the Triangle Universities<lb/>
Consortium on Air Pollution, will study<lb/>
the formation of hydrofluoric acid from air<lb/>
pollutant fluorocarbons.<lb/>
One source of fluorocarbons is the<lb/>
common aerosol spray can, which<lb/>
releases these substances in minute<lb/>
amounts. Under oxidation or sunlight,<lb/>
fluorocarbons from aerosol cans turn into<lb/>
hydrofluoric acids, which are serious<lb/>
contaminants.<lb/>
Dr. Heckel's project will attempt to<lb/>
discover an extremely sensitive chemical<lb/>
device to detect small amounts of these<lb/>
acids.<lb/>
AAHE meeting<lb/>
Dr. Patricia G. Hurley, chairman of the<lb/>
ECU School of Home Economics housing<lb/>
and management department, attended a<lb/>
board meeting of the American<lb/>
Association of Housing Educators in<lb/>
Boston last week.<lb/>
As chairman of the AAHE education<lb/>
committee, Dr. Hurley reported on<lb/>
progress in five major areas, including the<lb/>
compilation of a list of U.S. colleges and<lb/>
universities which award graduate degrees<lb/>
in housing, home furnishings or<lb/>
household equipment.<lb/>
Such a list is designed to assist<lb/>
professors in advising students who wish<lb/>
to pursue graduate studies in the field of<lb/>
housing and management.<lb/>
Dr. Hurley also helped with planning<lb/>
the ninth annual AAHE conference<lb/>
scheduled for Durham, New Hampshire,<lb/>
in October.<lb/>
A diverse and refreshing program will<lb/>
be presented at the meeting of Sigma Tau<lb/>
Delta National English Honor Society on<lb/>
Thursday, January 24 at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Room 201 of the Student Union.<lb/>
The speakers, Dr. Theodore Ellis and<lb/>
Dr. Kirkland, will present a timely<lb/>
discussion of graduate school and teacher<lb/>
assistantships.<lb/>
Miss Janice Hardison and "Friend"<lb/>
will then entertain with a diversified<lb/>
presentation of music combining voices<lb/>
with a variety of instruments.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served and the<lb/>
public is invited.<lb/>
Toastmasters<lb/>
Since October 22,1924, more than one<lb/>
million men have profited from leadership<lb/>
training provided by Toastmasters<lb/>
International. Today, in the organization's<lb/>
fiftieth year, there are 3500 Toastmasters<lb/>
Clubs in 47 countries throughout the Free<lb/>
Worla. Membership is open to men and<lb/>
women eighteen years of age or older.<lb/>
In any given club, you'll probably find<lb/>
men and women v,ih interests as diverse<lb/>
as those of an engineer and an artist, an<lb/>
advertising executive and a labor union<lb/>
representative, a shoemaker and a dentist,<lb/>
a professor and a mechanic, a student<lb/>
and a doctor.<lb/>
The Toastmasters programs improve<lb/>
your ability to say what you are thinking,<lb/>
and think about what you are saying. You<lb/>
leam to evaluate the ideas of others and<lb/>
hear what you listen to.<lb/>
There is a Toastmasters Club forming<lb/>
in Greenville. The first meeting will be<lb/>
January 24th, at the Bonanza Steak<lb/>
House, commencing at 7:00 p.m. Those<lb/>
interested in improving their ability to<lb/>
listen, think and speak should contact,<lb/>
Chris Hay, at 758-3501.<lb/>
Meeting: Hebrew Youth Fellowship<lb/>
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 7:00. 706 E. 2nd<lb/>
St. If directions needed call 758-5500.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
During the week of December 4 thru<lb/>
December 13, the Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity, Inc. sponsored a Christmas<lb/>
drive for a family in the Greenville<lb/>
area. Items such as clothing, toys,<lb/>
monetary donations and food were<lb/>
collected in the lobby of the Campus<lb/>
Union. The fraternity would like to thank<lb/>
everyone who participated in this service<lb/>
activity.<lb/>
Black arts<lb/>
Thank you<lb/>
The MRC and WRC would like to thank<lb/>
all students who participated in the<lb/>
Salvation Army benefit dance. Eleven<lb/>
cases of food along with $40.00 were<lb/>
given to this organization for needy<lb/>
families. (Thanks again.)<lb/>
Contorts<lb/>
From January through April, combined<lb/>
elements of the University community will<lb/>
be organizing a Black Arts Festival of<lb/>
unprecendented proportions.<lb/>
The festival is being organized by the<lb/>
Black Arts Festival Steering Committee<lb/>
which is composed of representatives<lb/>
from the Black Studies Committee, the<lb/>
Drama Department, the Student Union,<lb/>
the S.G.A and the University Union. The<lb/>
purpose of the festival is to provide a<lb/>
framework in which the black experience<lb/>
can be communicated to the university<lb/>
community. Many forms of cultural<lb/>
expression will be utilized during this<lb/>
period including drama, sculpture,<lb/>
fashion, cinema, lectures, concerts, and<lb/>
recreational events.<lb/>
Although the festival is still in the<lb/>
initial planning stages, an outstanding<lb/>
program is taking shape and a wide base<lb/>
of enthusiasm appears to be developing.<lb/>
It must be added, though, that the<lb/>
festival's full potential will be greatly<lb/>
untapped unless the student body,<lb/>
faculty, administration and the Greenville<lb/>
public actively participates.<lb/>
The Steering Committee will be<lb/>
keeping you informed as the festival takes<lb/>
shape; in the meantime, if you have any<lb/>
suggestions, please forward them to the<lb/>
Student Union Committee Office in Room<lb/>
214 of the University Union.<lb/>
PRCS meeting<lb/>
PROS meeting Monday, January 21,<lb/>
1974 8:00 p.m. at Friar Tucks.<lb/>
COLORADO FEARS LAND DAMAGE<lb/>
FASHIONSpage four<lb/>
REVIEWSpages six and seven<lb/>
EDITORIALCOMMENTARYFORUMpages eight and nine<lb/>
KEN RICHTERS "DISCOVERING NEW ZEALANDpage<lb/>
SUMMER SEMINARS FOR COLLEGE TEACHERSpage eleven<lb/>
ERICH SEGAL IS COMINGpage twelve<lb/>
SPORTSpages fourteen, fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
Joe<lb/>
down tr<lb/>
to them<lb/>
they ov<lb/>
war, an<lb/>
1974, ar<lb/>
nearing<lb/>
they nov<lb/>
Joe,<lb/>
looking<lb/>
all the i<lb/>
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John<lb/>
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responsi<lb/>
3000,000<lb/>
already<lb/>
largely di<lb/>
acres of<lb/>
destructi<lb/>
Accor<lb/>
Quarterly<lb/>
strip mil<lb/>
percent<lb/>
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companie<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO.2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
3<lb/>
Colorado fears land damage<lb/>
By VALERIE SZABO and<lb/>
JOHNPREVETTEJR.<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
Joe and his friends were blasting<lb/>
down the highway. All doors were open<lb/>
to them. Civil rights was an issue, and<lb/>
they overcame it; there was an unjust<lb/>
war, and they stopped it. Suddenly it's<lb/>
1974, and they've noticed their gas tank<lb/>
nearing empty. Look around where are<lb/>
they now?<lb/>
Joe, while sputtering down the road<lb/>
looking for a place to fill up, noticed that<lb/>
all the gas stations were bearing signs<lb/>
that read "SOLD OUT. What Joe did not<lb/>
know was that not only the gas stations<lb/>
were sold out.<lb/>
John Love, ex-governor of Colorado,<lb/>
the past energy czar, was greatly<lb/>
responsible for the promotion of sales of<lb/>
3000,000 acres of shale oil land to the<lb/>
already prospering oil industry. It is<lb/>
largely due to his manuevering that 100,000<lb/>
acres of southern Colorado is doomed to<lb/>
destruction in the near future.<lb/>
According to the Congressional<lb/>
Quarterly, 71,066 tons of earth will be<lb/>
strip mined to produce a mere one<lb/>
percent of the oil needed in this<lb/>
country. Within ten years, if the oil<lb/>
companies proceed in extraction of oil<lb/>
from these lands, they will destroy all of<lb/>
southern and western Colorado The<lb/>
shame of the ordeal is that the oil<lb/>
companies are at present unsure of the<lb/>
outcome of their explorations into<lb/>
Colorado's natural resources. If their<lb/>
endeavors prove faulty, they will have<lb/>
succeeded only in destroying hundreds of<lb/>
thousands of acres of Colorado's prime<lb/>
land! If they succeed in mining oil, they<lb/>
will still have destroyed irreplaceable<lb/>
resources for only a trivial one percent of<lb/>
all that must be produced.<lb/>
The law upon which the Colorado<lb/>
sales are being based stands as it was<lb/>
originally drafted in 1876. The law states<lb/>
that first priority to all lands goes for<lb/>
mineral rights, be the lands public or<lb/>
private. Essentially, if you were to own a<lb/>
farm and oil was discovered on your<lb/>
property, oil companies could maintain<lb/>
the right to enter onto your<lb/>
property. They could legally set up<lb/>
derricks and drills, and, if the need be,<lb/>
could construct a road across your land<lb/>
with no compensation for damages done.<lb/>
The major oil companies are, at<lb/>
present, exploiting the resources of Saudi<lb/>
Arabia in an effort to build their already<lb/>
immense oil supply backlog. Fearful that<lb/>
the Saudi's will nationalize, the oil<lb/>
companies are extracting the oil in the<lb/>
cheapest manner possible with a flagrant<lb/>
disregard of the needs of the<lb/>
environment. The major oil producers are<lb/>
pumping out greater amounts of oil than<lb/>
meets demand, and are keeping it in<lb/>
storage. Although a considerable portion<lb/>
of the problem is resulting from a lack of<lb/>
imported refined oil, there is no lack of<lb/>
crude oil, and refineries are not operating<lb/>
to capacity. Colorado is receiving the<lb/>
blunt end of a misconception contrived by<lb/>
the major oil producing companies of the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
ant 'convmniMf<lb/>
Snack shops fill student's needs<lb/>
By BROWNIE WILSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One of the many needs of a pedestrian<lb/>
campus stch as East Carolina is a<lb/>
quick-service food system that can<lb/>
provide snacks for students between<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
The Croatan and the snack shop in the<lb/>
college union are maintained for just that<lb/>
reason. They are geared to the student<lb/>
with a few minutes to spend between<lb/>
classes and in need of a light meal or<lb/>
refreshment.<lb/>
Joe Clark, manager of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store which is in charge of the<lb/>
snack shops and vending machines on<lb/>
campus, said that all the food served in<lb/>
the shops is wrapped and able to be<lb/>
carried elsewhere.<lb/>
"Our purpose is not to give the<lb/>
student a complete meal, there are<lb/>
cafeterias on campus for that, we only<lb/>
wish to provide a place for a snack and a<lb/>
break from classes pointed out Clark.<lb/>
He also felt that the two locations of<lb/>
the shops were very important because<lb/>
they were in the middle of several<lb/>
classroom buildings and were easily<lb/>
reached by people.<lb/>
One of the objectives of the shops is<lb/>
quick service to its customers. Clark saw<lb/>
the Croatan as the best example of this<lb/>
system on campus.<lb/>
"The Croatan was designed so that a<lb/>
person could serve himself, pay as<lb/>
quickly as possible and be able to have a<lb/>
snack in pleasant surroundings said<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
Thi8 "scramble" system of operation<lb/>
came about after many types of snack<lb/>
shops at other colleges were studied.<lb/>
Clark has found that it is very popular<lb/>
because the amount of time spent waiting<lb/>
to be served can be done away with and<lb/>
people can serve themselves.<lb/>
Those familiar with the situation at the<lb/>
snack shop in the. college union are aware<lb/>
m<lb/>
mh CROATAN provides quick food<lb/>
for ECU students.<lb/>
that it is not as convenient as the<lb/>
Croatan. It relies on clerk help to serve its<lb/>
customers and often there is a wait to be<lb/>
served.<lb/>
"When the college union moves to its<lb/>
new location, we have plans to change the<lb/>
snack shop over to an operation similar to<lb/>
the Croatan said Clark.<lb/>
Clark also pointed out that because of<lb/>
the amount of time the college union<lb/>
snack shop stayed open, nights and<lb/>
weekends, it was important to have a first<lb/>
class type of shop available.<lb/>
"We have found the scramble system<lb/>
to work out best here at East Carolina and<lb/>
plan to use it with a few changes in the<lb/>
college union shop stated Clark.<lb/>
With the East Carolina campus<lb/>
growing and spreading over a large area of<lb/>
land, the location of snack facilities is a<lb/>
very important element. New buildings<lb/>
such as the Allied Health complex are<lb/>
away from the main campus and the<lb/>
existing shops.<lb/>
"At this moment we have no plans for<lb/>
expansion beyond the college union<lb/>
said Clark, "this includes the Ailed<lb/>
Health building<lb/>
"The main part of a successful snack<lb/>
shop is people and we can't operate<lb/>
without enough people to justify the<lb/>
location of a snack shop concluded<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
i.i iiiii.iiiiiiiiii,mi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039899_0004"/><lb/>
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FOUNTA1NHEADVOL 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
u<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
iiii<lb/>
of energy shortage<lb/>
Conference studies impact of crisis<lb/>
Editor's Note: The following information<lb/>
was sent to the Fountainhead by the<lb/>
Citizen's Energy Committee.<lb/>
Like so many shocks of the past year,<lb/>
the energy crisis has caught the country<lb/>
off guard. Nobody seems to know for<lb/>
sure how "real" it is or how tight the<lb/>
squeeze will become.<lb/>
But we do know this. The shortages<lb/>
have inspired all kinds of moves to cancel<lb/>
our hard-won victories for social justice<lb/>
and environmental protection. Already we<lb/>
have seen:<lb/>
-higher fuel prices and bigger tax<lb/>
breaks proposed as "production incen-<lb/>
tives" for the oil comoanies;<lb/>
-massive layoffs in industry after<lb/>
industry;<lb/>
-new moves to gouge Appalachia and<lb/>
Western lands for cheap supplies or coal;<lb/>
-campaigns against clear air standards<lb/>
and other environmental safeguards, all in<lb/>
the name of national security.<lb/>
When you add it all up, one thing is<lb/>
clear. The energy crisis is really a crisis<lb/>
of political and economic power.<lb/>
The outcome at every level will depend<lb/>
on who has the facts and who makes the<lb/>
decisions. And in spite of recent events,<lb/>
Congress is turning over more and more<lb/>
power to the President and his oil<lb/>
company friends.<lb/>
Energy policy still rests mainly with<lb/>
the men who have capped their wells,<lb/>
fought for oil import quotas and<lb/>
suppressed the facts on energy<lb/>
reserves. Movements for social change<lb/>
and environmental protection face an<lb/>
unprecedented challenge. The conference<lb/>
will examine the human and environment-<lb/>
al impact of the crisis and will begin the<lb/>
search for policy alternatives and action<lb/>
strategies.<lb/>
Speakers and discussion leaders will<lb/>
include spokesmen for poor and working<lb/>
people, energy and environmental<lb/>
experts, and political figures representing<lb/>
a broad range of opinion.<lb/>
A partial list of speakers will<lb/>
include: Stuart Udall, Rep. Don Dellums,<lb/>
Marty Lobel (antitrust attorney), Ralph<lb/>
Nader, Joel Schatz, (Energy Advisor to<lb/>
Gov. of Oregon), and Lee White (former<lb/>
Chairman, Federal Power Commission).<lb/>
The conference will take place at<lb/>
Shoreham Hotel, 2500 Calvert St N.W<lb/>
Washington, D.C. on Friday evening<lb/>
through Monday noon, Feb. 15-18, 1974.<lb/>
Mail registration form to Citizen's Energy<lb/>
Conference, 1000 Wisconsin Avenue,<lb/>
Washington, D.C. 20007, $8.00 per person<lb/>
for pre-registration, ($10.00 at the<lb/>
door). Give name and address.<lb/>
10 percent increase<lb/>
Clothes prices surge upward<lb/>
By CAROL WOOD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Spring shoppers will be able to feel<lb/>
the energy crisis when they purchase<lb/>
clothing. Prices will be increasing an<lb/>
estimated 10 percent over last years<lb/>
Why the increase? Unknowing to<lb/>
many people, a large number of synthetic<lb/>
fibers are refined from petrochemicals.<lb/>
Monsanto, Celanese, DuPont and<lb/>
other fiber producing companies, have<lb/>
already, or will in the near future, increase<lb/>
their price for synthetic fibers, 5 to 10<lb/>
cents per pound.<lb/>
The reason consumers haven't felt the<lb/>
"pinch" more than they have is that<lb/>
producers buy in bulk for the coming<lb/>
season. Therefore the energy crisis had<lb/>
little effect on the retail market last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
?&amp;tttt<lb/>
The Spring and Summer season will,<lb/>
however, be affected. The average<lb/>
consumer might suggest a return to<lb/>
natural fibers - but that is neither practical<lb/>
nor feasible.<lb/>
A shortage of natural fibers make the<lb/>
proposed answer impossible. Last year's<lb/>
cotton crop was severely damaged by<lb/>
floods, causing a shortage of cotton this<lb/>
past season.<lb/>
The "knit boom" has so dominated the<lb/>
market in recent years, that many<lb/>
producers "junked" their old weaving<lb/>
machines and converted to knitting<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
What makes the solution impractical is<lb/>
the consumer. Yes - the consumer - the<lb/>
sons and daughters of the TV - the<lb/>
spoiled softies who love - all in one -<lb/>
pre-assembled package deals!<lb/>
The consumer who is so attached to<lb/>
easy care fabrics - those that practically<lb/>
launder themselves - would never resort to<lb/>
totoal natural fibers again.<lb/>
Consumers banished the days of<lb/>
scrubbing out spots and stains, starching<lb/>
and ironing to a crisp. They herald in an<lb/>
age of soil resistant, permanent press,<lb/>
easy care, no iron fabrics.<lb/>
Synthetics are what make all these<lb/>
luxury features possible. To ask a<lb/>
consumer to give them up, would be like<lb/>
asking him to eat bread and water instead<lb/>
of filet mignon .and that's unthinkable!<lb/>
When you do go shopping for Spring<lb/>
apparel, and eventually you will,<lb/>
remember to go on a beautiful day - when<lb/>
you're in a good mood and have the world<lb/>
in your pocket .and also a lot of cash!<lb/>
f???ccsccocvc&amp;ac??c<lb/>
SGA REFRIGERATOR RENTALS<lb/>
PfmGW<lb/>
M?W LOCATION'<lb/>
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Spaghetti (with<lb/>
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$139<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
Free Ice Tea<lb/>
With All Meata<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
Free lea Tea<lb/>
WlthADMeala<lb/>
FRIDAY gJ:<lb/>
Ovenburfer, $1 Jig:<lb/>
Salad, Drinh ??wv?<lb/>
S<lb/>
oooae,<lb/>
! Beginning January 9th refrigerator rent will<lb/>
 be reduced to half price. A ten dollar deposit will<lb/>
 still be required.<lb/>
Rent $6.00, Deposit $10,00 (refundable), Total <lb/>
$16.00 for winter quarter. v<lb/>
Regular office hours will be:<lb/>
AA- 1:00-2:00<lb/>
T. -9:00-11:00<lb/>
W- 1:00-3:00<lb/>
Th-9:C0-ll:00<lb/>
s F-1:00-2:00 B<lb/>
8 8<lb/>
 Additional office hours: Jan. 15th, 16th and 17th fc<lb/>
 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. <lb/>
Refrigerators can be picked up in Slay dorm<lb/>
Phone 7527483 I<lb/>
DELIVERY SERVICE 1<lb/>
5P.M11PM 7Dayt <lb/>
&amp;5O500G00C?C?C0C?OC0O5??O?iCC2???O5C<lb/>
i<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0005"/><lb/>
IS<lb/>
kers will<lb/>
i Dellums,<lb/>
y), Ralph<lb/>
Advisor to<lb/>
te (former<lb/>
lission).<lb/>
place at<lb/>
St N.W<lb/>
evening<lb/>
-18, 1974.<lb/>
?'s Energy<lb/>
Avenue,<lb/>
er person<lb/>
at the<lb/>
aid in an<lb/>
nt press,<lb/>
all these<lb/>
ask a<lb/>
Id be like<lb/>
r instead<lb/>
inkable!<lb/>
Dr Spring<lb/>
)u will,<lb/>
ly - when<lb/>
the world<lb/>
)f cash!<lb/>
1<lb/>
rill<lb/>
rill<lb/>
ral <lb/>
!<lb/>
'th S<lb/>
Hughes receives<lb/>
Rotary Fellowship<lb/>
The ECU Scholarship Committee has<lb/>
received word that Claude L. Hughes, Jr.<lb/>
has been awarded a Rotary Intematio j<lb/>
Fellowship for one year's study ie<lb/>
University of Glasgow Medical Sou, in<lb/>
Glasgow, Scotland.<lb/>
The purpose of these scholarships is<lb/>
to improve understanding between<lb/>
countries by personal interaction and to<lb/>
grant outstanding scholars a broad<lb/>
intellectual experience. Rotary Inter-<lb/>
national Fellows are chosen on the basis<lb/>
of outstanding scholarship, proven<lb/>
qualities of leadership, and the necessary<lb/>
qualifications to be an ambassador for the<lb/>
Rotary Club.<lb/>
Hughes, an honor graduate of New<lb/>
Bern High School, was nominated by the<lb/>
New Bern Rotary Club. (The Fellowship<lb/>
includes transportation, education costs,<lb/>
living expenses and other related<lb/>
expenses for one year's study.)<lb/>
As a National Merit Semifinalist,<lb/>
Hughes attended the 1969 ECU<lb/>
Scholarship Weekend. He was interview-<lb/>
ed by the ECU Scholarship Committee<lb/>
and awarded a $4,000 ECU Academic<lb/>
Scholarship. At ECU, he received the<lb/>
Mary Caughey Helms Award for<lb/>
outstanding work in Biology and was<lb/>
selected for "Who's Who in American<lb/>
Colleges and Universities He was active<lb/>
in scientific research, and presented and<lb/>
published several scientific papers. In<lb/>
1973, he grduated Magna Cum Laude from<lb/>
ECU and is now attending Duke Medical<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Hughes is the son of Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Claude L. Hughes, Sr of New Bern. His<lb/>
wife, the former Susan Patricia Fiery is<lb/>
also a 1973 ECU graduate with a BS in<lb/>
Biology.<lb/>
Hughes plans to take a leave of<lb/>
absence from Duke Medical School and<lb/>
study immunology or immunochemistry<lb/>
in Glasgow. After his year in Scotland, he<lb/>
intends to obtain his MD from Duke<lb/>
University and do further medical<lb/>
research.<lb/>
Grad students receive aid<lb/>
lOOC<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A grant of $15,000 was recently<lb/>
awarded to the Department of Special<lb/>
Education at ECU by the N.C. Department<lb/>
of Public Instruction.<lb/>
The Spec. Ed. Department awarded<lb/>
three full-time graduate students with<lb/>
fellowships from the grant. Other funds<lb/>
will be used to pay tuition for in-service<lb/>
teachers who come to be trained and<lb/>
certified during the summer work shops<lb/>
and for the purchase of materials for the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
"Children with learning disabilities,<lb/>
known as L.D. children, are capable of<lb/>
learning but not learning to the full extent<lb/>
of their academic potential notes Mrs.<lb/>
Louise A. Levey, coordinator for the L.D.<lb/>
program and special education faculty<lb/>
member.<lb/>
The basic definition suggested by the<lb/>
National Advisory Committee on Handi-<lb/>
capped Children in its January, 1968<lb/>
report described the L.D. children as<lb/>
exhibiting disorders in listening, reading,<lb/>
talking, writing, spelling and arithmetic.<lb/>
Disorders include perceptual handicaps,<lb/>
brain injury, and brain dysfunction. Onej<lb/>
well-known dysfunction is hyperactivity in <lb/>
which children lack self-control. Mrs.<lb/>
Levey particularly explained that mental I<lb/>
retardation in L.D. children is al<lb/>
misconception.<lb/>
Major guidelines in the training of L.D.<lb/>
specialists which serve as basicl<lb/>
definitions include:<lb/>
1. Understanding the problems and needs j<lb/>
of children.<lb/>
2. Ability to use informal and formal<lb/>
diagnostic and prognostic skills.<lb/>
3. Ability to use appropriate strategies<lb/>
methods and techniques.<lb/>
4. Ability to design, implement, and<lb/>
evaluate learning programs for indivi-<lb/>
duals.<lb/>
In training, advisors work with specific I<lb/>
problems of visual, motor, or auditory <lb/>
difficulties.<lb/>
Mrs. Levey cites a typical problem <lb/>
child who is first referred to an L.D.<lb/>
specialist. The person trained in learning I<lb/>
disabilities may be an itinerate teacher<lb/>
serving several schools, or a resource<lb/>
teacher serving only one school. Various<lb/>
professionals including doctors, nurses,<lb/>
speech therapists, and clinical psycholo-<lb/>
gists may then examine the child -<lb/>
depending upon the nature of the<lb/>
disorder. Finally, the L.D. specialist<lb/>
writes a prescription and remedial aid is<lb/>
administered.<lb/>
A shortage of L.D. specialists exist<lb/>
and only a few specialists handle the 3<lb/>
percent of all school children in N.C. who<lb/>
have the problems. Mrs. Levey beamingly<lb/>
adds, though, that Greenville schools<lb/>
have varied approaches for helping<lb/>
children with learning disabilities.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
5<lb/>
CLAUDE L. HUGHES, JR.<lb/>
Shoneifi<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT:<lb/>
MONDAY - SPAGHETTI$1.40<lb/>
Served with meat sauce, Parmesan cheese, and Grecian bread.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY - - FISH DINNER$1.90<lb/>
Served with French Fried, Cole Slaw or Tossed Salad with<lb/>
choice of dressing and Grecian bread.<lb/>
SUNDAY ? FRIED CHICKEN DINNER$1.85<lb/>
Served with French Fries, Cole Slaw or Tossed Salad with<lb/>
choice of dressing and Grecian bread.<lb/>
Sun. Thurs. 6:30-11:00<lb/>
Fri. and Sat. 6:30 12:00<lb/>
NOW SHOWING!<lb/>
The greatest selling book in history (except the Bible) is now a<lb/>
movie!<lb/>
Ifs a life style.<lb/>
It's the beauty of love, the joy of freedom.<lb/>
Ifs the best-selling book. Ifs Neil Diamond.<lb/>
Ifs a motion picture.<lb/>
 Sag<lb/>
5<lb/>
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Jonathan Livingston<lb/>
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Shows Daily at 13 5-7-9<lb/>
Doon Open 12:30 P.M.<lb/>
752-7649 ? DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
COME DIAL A COLOR<lb/>
In A Lady Seiko Fashion Watch<lb/>
There's quite a collection of colors and it's quite a collection<lb/>
of watcher so come in and start your Lady Seiko collection<lb/>
today. Also Ma our fine selection of men's Seiko Fashion<lb/>
Watches.<lb/>
We Buy and Sell Diamonds<lb/>
Floyd &amp; Robinson Discount Jewelers<lb/>
407 Evans St Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Open 9:00 a.m. 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
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we<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039899_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
tn i ?i,ii im<lb/>
m<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
Joe Walsh: pure professionalism<lb/>
CONCERTS - Joe Walsh and Barnstorm,<lb/>
R.E.O. Speedwagon Jan. 12, 1974<lb/>
Cumberland County Memorial Auditorium<lb/>
Fayetteville, N.C.<lb/>
ByJ.K. LOFTIN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Good concerts have been relatively<lb/>
scarce in the eastern part of North<lb/>
Carolina for several months now, but that<lb/>
situation was much improved with<lb/>
Saturday night's performance by Joe<lb/>
Walsh. Ably assisted by the members of<lb/>
his band, Barnstorm, he presented not a<lb/>
rock n' roll or glitter show or anything else<lb/>
which might have been merely superficial,<lb/>
but an intelligently planned, produced,<lb/>
and extremely well performed example of<lb/>
musical entertainment.<lb/>
Joe Walsh, whom many know for his<lb/>
recent Top Ten record, "Rocky Mountain<lb/>
Way has been a top echelon<lb/>
professional for many years now. Origi-<lb/>
nally the lead guitarist, lead vocalist,<lb/>
keyboard artist, principle songwriter and<lb/>
general "raison d'etre" of the original<lb/>
James Gang, many people heard him<lb/>
several years ago doing such songs as<lb/>
"Tend My Garden "Funk 49" and "The<lb/>
Bomber songs which he did again<lb/>
Saturday night in a manner which served<lb/>
ot.ly to make the original recordings<lb/>
sound pale by comparison. But before<lb/>
looking much closer at the headliners, a<lb/>
few words about the warm-up band.<lb/>
R.E.O. Speedwagon (out of Chicago),<lb/>
opened up the night with some straight<lb/>
hard rock n' roll. Visually dynamic, lead<lb/>
singer Kevin Cronin, and lead guitarist,<lb/>
Gary Richrath, pounced on stage and at<lb/>
once captured the crowd's attention, and<lb/>
for about the first hour four songs kept<lb/>
it. But then the crowd began to realize<lb/>
that most of the songs, and even<lb/>
Richrath's "fabulously fast" guitar licks<lb/>
were beginning to sound all alike. In-<lb/>
terest waned even further after the first<lb/>
five minutes of his extended (over fifteen<lb/>
minutes) guitar solo as shown by the<lb/>
large number of those who had been<lb/>
standing and who were at that point<lb/>
sitting, and for the most part uninterested<lb/>
in Speedwagon's version of Marc<lb/>
Bolan. The high point of their<lb/>
performance was "Golden Country" off<lb/>
their latest album. This was the one song<lb/>
that had some smoother parts and a good<lb/>
control of dynamics. But perhaps all of<lb/>
this is forgiveable when compared with<lb/>
the overwhelming talent and maturity<lb/>
displayed by the headliners.<lb/>
This writer tries desperately to avoid<lb/>
over complementing when possible,<lb/>
always trying to find at least one<lb/>
not-so-good aspect about each item<lb/>
reviewed, but in the case of Joe Walsh<lb/>
and Barnstorm there was no such<lb/>
thing. They were simply extraordinary.<lb/>
From the opening strains of "Meadows"<lb/>
to the last note of "Rock Me Baby" they<lb/>
displayed talent, intelligence, subtlety<lb/>
and self-restraint to a point beyond any<lb/>
other performers this reviewer has even<lb/>
seen. The closest comparison for pure<lb/>
professionalism is perhaps Jethro Tull,<lb/>
although Tull comes on in a more<lb/>
jii i ?? u mm up ? m<lb/>
overt manner. Joe Walsh proved himself<lb/>
to be the master of understatement. He<lb/>
and Barnstorm always knew to move to<lb/>
something else long before the crowd<lb/>
grew weary of what they were doing at<lb/>
any particular time. A good example were<lb/>
the relatively short solos each member<lb/>
took, usually from two to four minutes<lb/>
long. During this time they did not<lb/>
engage in a "Hey, look how good I am"<lb/>
performance, but instead consciously<lb/>
aimed their performance at providing the<lb/>
best possible musical entertainment for<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
One of the things which determine<lb/>
how well a group is received is their<lb/>
opening number, which in this case was<lb/>
"Meadows a beautifully melodic song<lb/>
which sounded (as did everything else)<lb/>
better live than on the album, no minor<lb/>
accomplishment, for "The Smoker You<lb/>
Drink, The Player You Get" was one of the<lb/>
best produced albums of the past<lb/>
year. These musicians chose to present<lb/>
not just song after song, but rather a<lb/>
chain of selections for the first four<lb/>
numbers. Each song gently flowed into<lb/>
the next, culminating with a "Rocky<lb/>
Mountain Way" that was almost too good<lb/>
to be true. Even though everyone in the<lb/>
audience had heard the song more than<lb/>
enough on AM radio, Walsh made it fresh<lb/>
again and showed everyone what a real<lb/>
musician can do.<lb/>
The performance was marked through-<lb/>
out by numerous mood changes. Wlash<lb/>
manipulated the arrangements to<lb/>
exhilerate and relax, to incite and to<lb/>
sooth, to forbode and to anticipate. With<lb/>
his melodies, both vocal and instrument-<lb/>
al, he provided the audience with a<lb/>
complex emotional experience in con-<lb/>
junction with visual and aural aspects of<lb/>
the concert. In short, he and everyone<lb/>
there, were totally involved and caught up<lb/>
into what he was doing.<lb/>
Ably assisted by some of the finest<lb/>
musicians around, Walsh was able to<lb/>
move the show at his will. Drummer-<lb/>
flutist Joe Vitale, formerly with the<lb/>
Amboy Dukes, was nothing short of<lb/>
classy, from his flute solo to his drum<lb/>
solo which was amplified through a<lb/>
device which made it sound as if the<lb/>
drums were flying all over the<lb/>
auditorium. Bassist Kenny Passarelh<lb/>
not only played bass the way it should be,<lb/>
but contributed much with his stage<lb/>
presence and lead vocal on "Happy<lb/>
Ways a latin styled tune which he<lb/>
wrote. Unique with two full-time key-<lb/>
board men, (and Walsh sometimes acting<lb/>
as a third) Barnstorm obtained a full, rich<lb/>
sound. Rocke Grace added a lot with his<lb/>
organ, synthesizer, mellotron and electric<lb/>
piano work. The other keyboardist is<lb/>
relatively new with the band and was not<lb/>
introduced. His performance on the grand<lb/>
piano and occasionally organ and<lb/>
synthesizer was nonetheless well done.<lb/>
Technical aspects of the concert were<lb/>
also worth praise, most especially the<lb/>
lighting. The lighting system was not<lb/>
only very effective but added the precise<lb/>
visual timing to the sounds being<lb/>
produced. And in the soundarea the P.A.<lb/>
system came through well despite a bad<lb/>
mix on R.E.O. Speedwagon and its<lb/>
difficulty in handling the high frequencies<lb/>
produced by Joe Vitale's two-inch finger<lb/>
cymbals.<lb/>
Still, the focal point of the concert was<lb/>
thin, whiny, nasal, guitar-playing Joe<lb/>
Walsh. Using his unique voice and<lb/>
virtuoso guitar work to the best advantage<lb/>
he was nothing less than excellent. One<lb/>
of the finest lead guitarists America has<lb/>
produced, he amazed the audience first<lb/>
with his taste in playing beautifully<lb/>
melodic lines instead ofmeaningless<lb/>
flashy fingerwork. Aided by various<lb/>
electronic devices, including wah-wah,<lb/>
echo chamber, phase shifter, the bag, he<lb/>
made his guitar sound amazingly unique<lb/>
and thoroughly interesting throughout the<lb/>
entire performance.<lb/>
With the relative lack of top level<lb/>
concerts in the Greenville area it's nice to<lb/>
know that within a two hour driving time<lb/>
some fine entertainment can be<lb/>
found. The Fountainhead will try to<lb/>
inform its readers of upcoming events and<lb/>
provide reviews for those who are not able<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
R(<lb/>
UH<lb/>
ds<lb/>
ROBERTA FLACK<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Clint Eastwood picked up a Roberta<lb/>
Flack album which had been marked<lb/>
down for sale. He used her single, "The<lb/>
First Time Ever" in his movie "Play Misty<lb/>
For Me" to a provocative love scene. The<lb/>
movie and the song soared and before<lb/>
long Ms. Flack hovered somewhere<lb/>
beyond stardom's peak.<lb/>
Grammy Award Winner Roberta Flack<lb/>
serves a gentle rock beat with soft lyrical<lb/>
topping whipped in hot-buttered soul.<lb/>
mm m i u i?m<lb/>
With this unique combination, her music<lb/>
is immediately set apart and classified in<lb/>
a unique realm of its own accord.<lb/>
"Killing Me Softly Ms. Flack's<lb/>
newest album, bears the name of her<lb/>
recent hit single. The song portrays a<lb/>
young, star-studded girl awed by a<lb/>
handsome, young singer. Other romanti-<lb/>
cized sensations on the album include<lb/>
"Jesse" and "No Tears "River" gradually<lb/>
teases and tantalizes even the most<lb/>
nonchalant listener into her soft, smooth,<lb/>
melodramatic croonina.<lb/>
It is important to many artists that<lb/>
neither their music nor their talents be<lb/>
bagged. Unfortunately, few of them have<lb/>
acclaimed the rare distinction of<lb/>
multi-talented or universal. Roberta Flack<lb/>
is one exception. When artists like Ms.<lb/>
Flack make that claim to fame, their<lb/>
demanding talents afford them tne luxury<lb/>
of regular performances at prestigious hot<lb/>
spots.<lb/>
Roberta Flack's performances are<lb/>
minus the hip-shaking of the Pointer<lb/>
Sisters and the foot-stomping of other<lb/>
pseudo-show-biz sensations. Ms. Flack<lb/>
(also a concert pianist originally from<lb/>
North Carolina), is one of the greatest<lb/>
singers since Blues Artist Bessie Smith to<lb/>
perform almost entirely while seated. Her<lb/>
music and her rendition of song lyrics<lb/>
captivate world-wide audiences and<lb/>
heightens them to a crescendo of<lb/>
heart-felt tension which ultimately<lb/>
explodes into a cloudburst of thunderous<lb/>
applause and renders them into a placid<lb/>
cairn of violent contentment.<lb/>
ISLEY BROTHERS' '3 PLUS 3<lb/>
By TOM PATTERSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
One of the most talked about albums<lb/>
today is the Isley Brothers '3 plus 3 It is;<lb/>
their latest release and offers a variety of<lb/>
rhythms for the soul music man. '3 plus 3"<lb/>
follows up the Isley Brothers' former<lb/>
album 'Brother, Brother, Brother which<lb/>
was also one of the hottest albums of last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
'That Lady and 'Summer Breeze' from<lb/>
'3 plus 3' are the two recent cuts from this<lb/>
album. That Lady' entails a variety of<lb/>
rhythms and moods which helps to<lb/>
explain the lyrics of that song. The<lb/>
musical accompaniment includes Ernie<lb/>
Isley on the electric guitar, Marvin Isley,<lb/>
bass, Chis Jasper, piano, Rocky on the<lb/>
congos, Truman Thomas, organ, and<lb/>
George Moreland on the drums. These<lb/>
musical instruments supports the fast<lb/>
moving pace of the single and exhibits a<lb/>
degree of symbolism to African musical<lb/>
rhythms.<lb/>
The Isley Brothers implements an<lb/>
entirely different variation of 'Summer<lb/>
Breeze' which was previously released by<lb/>
Seals &amp; Crofts. The musical background<lb/>
for 'Summer Breeze' utilizes the Moog<lb/>
synthesizer (a whole new bag for soul<lb/>
artists) and the 6-string accoustical guitar<lb/>
to produce an exhilarating effect on the<lb/>
listeners.<lb/>
Another selection from '3 plus 3' which<lb/>
is destined for the top is 'You Walk Your<lb/>
Way Unlike 'That Lady 'You Walk Your<lb/>
Way' is an expression of regret over the<lb/>
parting of two lovers. 'You Walk Your<lb/>
Way' is composed in a moderate tempo<lb/>
which enhances this regret.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0007"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
her music<lb/>
lassified in<lb/>
d.<lb/>
s. Flack's<lb/>
me of her<lb/>
portrays a<lb/>
ved by a<lb/>
er romanti-<lb/>
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the most<lb/>
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seated. Her<lb/>
ong lyrics<lb/>
nces and<lb/>
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ultimately<lb/>
thunderous<lb/>
to a placid<lb/>
PLUS 3<lb/>
xjt albums<lb/>
us 3 It is;<lb/>
a variety of<lb/>
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its' former<lb/>
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feeze' from<lb/>
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variety of<lb/>
helps to<lb/>
song. The<lb/>
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arvin Isley,<lb/>
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Walk Your<lb/>
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et over the<lb/>
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rate tempo<lb/>
Books<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
7<lb/>
I LOST EVERYTHING IN THE POST-<lb/>
NATAL DEPRESSION by Erma Bombeck,<lb/>
Voice of the American Housewife<lb/>
By PATSY HINTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Erma Bombeck, in her highly read,<lb/>
syndicated column, "At Wit's End is<lb/>
comical, amusing, entertaining, and<lb/>
hysterically funny. In her latest book, I<lb/>
LOST EVERYTHING IN THE POST-NATAL<lb/>
DEPRESSION, she is even more comical,<lb/>
more amusing, and more entertaining,<lb/>
and hysterically funnier. The book is<lb/>
Bombeck at her best; blasting away,<lb/>
voicing the trials and tribulations of one<lb/>
of the most overworked and least<lb/>
understood and appreciated of American<lb/>
labor unions. This oppressed union is<lb/>
portrayed daily on television waxing<lb/>
kitchen floors and getting rid ot<lb/>
"ring-around-the collar and is generally<lb/>
labeled by sociologists and advertisers as<lb/>
"The American Housewife Bombeck is<lb/>
to this housewife what Ralph Nader is to<lb/>
the consumer, what George Wallace is to<lb/>
Alabama, and what Cesar Chavez is to<lb/>
The United Farm Workers.<lb/>
Erma Bombeck, who describes herself<lb/>
as "housewife, garbage hustler and pretty<lb/>
face is, in fact, a wife and mother of<lb/>
three. Thus she is a member of the group<lb/>
she so accurately writes of, about and<lb/>
for. I LOST EVERYTHING IN THE<lb/>
POST-NATAL DEPRESSION is her third<lb/>
book, following the best-sellers, AT WITS<lb/>
END and JUST WAIT TILL YOU HAVE<lb/>
CHILDREN OF YOUR OWN.<lb/>
The chapter titles in I LOST<lb/>
EVERYTHING IN THE POST-NATAL<lb/>
DEPRESSION range from "Ironed Sheets<lb/>
Are a Health Hazard" to "We Have<lb/>
MeaslesIt Must Be Christmas And<lb/>
subject matter covers the broad scope of<lb/>
what it is like to be an "average" American<lb/>
housewife (God only knows who or what<lb/>
this "average" American housewife is) in a<lb/>
society that is highly mechanized,<lb/>
fast-moving, and impersonal. Bombeck is<lb/>
funny, but the perceptive reader can<lb/>
detect an undertone that chides, "This<lb/>
may seem funny, but it is sadly true,<lb/>
sadly real<lb/>
For example, in the first chapter, she<lb/>
says: "For years, I have worked at being<lb/>
a simple, average housewife. I am ready<lb/>
to face the facts. I'm a loser. Excitement<lb/>
for me is taking a Barbie bra out of the<lb/>
sweeper bag. Fulfillment is realizing I am<lb/>
the only one in the house who can replace<lb/>
the toilet-tissue spindle. Adventure is<lb/>
seeing Tom Jones perform and throwing<lb/>
my hotel key at his feet (only to discover<lb/>
it's the key to my freezer) I wonder how<lb/>
many housewives, after reading these<lb/>
lines and initially laughing, think again<lb/>
and realize the frustration and emptiness<lb/>
expressed.<lb/>
With this ironical, it's-a-hopeless-<lb/>
situation humor, Bombeck attacks<lb/>
dieting: "I have dieted continuously for<lb/>
the last two decades and lost a total of<lb/>
758 pounds. By all calculations, I should<lb/>
be hanging from a charm bracelet Bom-<lb/>
beck's display of dry wit in covering<lb/>
vacations is hilarious but tainted with a<lb/>
hint of bitterness too. She remarks: "My<lb/>
husband's idea of a fun vacation is sitting<lb/>
around watching a ranger pick his teeth<lb/>
with a match cover<lb/>
On the subject of being thirty-nine<lb/>
plus, Bombeck complains: "Everyone<lb/>
around me is younger than I am. My<lb/>
doctor carries his stethoscope in a gym<lb/>
bag. My attorney has to shave only once<lb/>
a week. My son's math teacher is still<lb/>
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND at the<lb/>
Canticle is the Little Family. The Little<lb/>
Family is an authentic sample of Carolina<lb/>
Mountain bluegrass.<lb/>
The Photograph here is several years<lb/>
old, however it is still a good<lb/>
representation of the members in the<lb/>
band. Joel, the fiddler, is 17 and has<lb/>
played fiddle for ten years. Donnie, age<lb/>
14, received his banjo on his 5th birthday,<lb/>
and has been pickin' ever since Sharon,<lb/>
age 15, Anita, age nine, and little Ned<lb/>
sing and clog as part of the act. Mrs.<lb/>
Little has won several prizes in bluegrass<lb/>
competition for her bass playing and Mr.<lb/>
Little of course has had his share too.<lb/>
Performing in such places as South<lb/>
Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Virginia,<lb/>
and Florida, the Little Family promises to<lb/>
bring an entertaining evening to you<lb/>
bluegrass fans.<lb/>
The admission is I.D. and 25<lb/>
cents. Show time 8 &amp; 9 p.m. Menu<lb/>
consists of assorted cheese, freshly<lb/>
baked rye bread, assorted crackers, apple<lb/>
chunks, chips &amp; pretzels, hot tea, coffee,<lb/>
pepsi, and hot chocolate.<lb/>
wearing braces Here can be found the<lb/>
anxiety of the middle-aged housewife who<lb/>
suddenly discovers the world has moved<lb/>
on and left her behind in her rut of dirty<lb/>
dishes and laundry.<lb/>
Bombeck has even more to say of the<lb/>
monotony, the ingratitude, the boredom<lb/>
endured by "good ol' mom She<lb/>
philosophizes: "I always wondered if<lb/>
someone ran an ad in The New York<lb/>
Times: WANTED: Housewife drudge,<lb/>
140 hour week, no retirement, no sick<lb/>
leave, no room of own, no Sundays<lb/>
off. Must be good with animals, kids and<lb/>
hamburger. Must share bathWould 42<lb/>
million women still apply?" I wonder<lb/>
too, AND I know they would. Marriage is<lb/>
like the flu, and most women are far from<lb/>
immune.<lb/>
CROW'S NEST<lb/>
PANCAKE SUPPER<lb/>
Monday and Tuesday<lb/>
4:30 -7:30 p.m.<lb/>
All You Can Eat Including<lb/>
Coffee 85 cents<lb/>
AM The Pancakes You Can Eat<lb/>
Including 2 Pieces of Chicken<lb/>
and Coffee $1.50<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
BditortalsCorrrrienlary<lb/>
macrame<lb/>
Either life is a massive conspiracy, Time-Life, Inc has it in tor me or I'm destined<lb/>
to live a life of anguish. My experiences of the past three months indicate one of the<lb/>
above, but I'm not sure which.<lb/>
I've been a devoted subscriber to Time since 1970, and spent three years coasting<lb/>
along without trouble, receiving my compact magazine weekly and getting my<lb/>
pre-digested news with some regularity. Suddenly, terror struck the Time data system,<lb/>
and I beqan to receive two (2) magazines each week.<lb/>
EXTRA ISSUES<lb/>
A friend of mine benefited from the error, receiving the extra Time issue I didnt<lb/>
want. However, I was going mad juggling the magazines and trying to pry them out of<lb/>
the mailbox, so I sat down and wrote Time a letter.<lb/>
r<lb/>
It was a polite letter, with the two magazine address labels stuck to it so the Time<lb/>
people would know the essential subscription data. I received no reply within two<lb/>
weeks, and wrote a second letter. Within a week, a crumpled postcard arrived in the<lb/>
mail - the kind of thing that reads, "Dear Subscriber, We are and is followed with a<lb/>
list of what's being done. They had checked the line saying an investigation was taking<lb/>
Meanwhile, Time magazines were glutting my room, my mailbox was full of<lb/>
compacted, rollled-up magazines once each week, and I was still going absolutely<lb/>
nuts. I wrote a token letter or two before Christmas, but arrived back in January to find<lb/>
ten magazines arriving in one week.<lb/>
GUNG HO<lb/>
I was desperate. The crowning blow came when Time sent me a letter - one of<lb/>
those gung-ho things - requesting that I renew my subscription. In the<lb/>
no-stamp-necessary envelope they provided. I placed a scrawled note. "Dear Time, I am<lb/>
going crazy. I cannot read two magazines each week I kept receiving two<lb/>
magazines.<lb/>
Finally one weary Fountainhead layout night I sat at the typewriter and typed up<lb/>
two nearly-identical letters, with the two address labels attached to each letter. The<lb/>
letters read something to the effect of, "Dear Time, those two labelsirepresent the<lb/>
twomagazines I am receiving each week. Please do not sent two. I DO NOT WANT<lb/>
TWO TIME MAGAZINES, repeat<lb/>
PROBLEM SOLVED<lb/>
Within a week, I received a note from Time stating that the problem was<lb/>
solved. I began to receive one magazine. Birds began to sing, the.sky was blue, my<lb/>
life was uncomplicated, and God smiled.<lb/>
? And today I received a tat envelope from the Time people.<lb/>
The envelope had been addressed to the place I lived in in 1972, but was rerouted<lb/>
to me at my current address. "Dear former subscriber it read, "we've noticed you<lb/>
haven't subscribed to Time since 1972 - let us tell you what you're missing<lb/>
The frightening part of the deal is that I subscribe to at least two other magazines;<lb/>
any moment, the other magazine people may get punchy and play the same games.<lb/>
Within four months, Time, Inc. has plagued me; the state tax people have charged<lb/>
Fountainhead with deliquent taxes for not reporting the drink sales on a broken Coke<lb/>
machine that didn't sell anything; and some crafts group keeps mailing me ads for a<lb/>
craft library, reading "Learn to needlepoint! Macrame a house! Make your own shoes!<lb/>
or something like that. If ever the opportunity for paranoia presented itself, it does<lb/>
now Only the conditioning of contemporary society keeps us all from going bananas.<lb/>
profits checked, Mid<lb/>
is crucial to situation<lb/>
"Do you know because I tell you so, or do<lb/>
you know<lb/>
-G. Stein<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Pat Crawtoco<lb/>
MANAGING EDITORSklp Saunders<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gilliam<lb/>
AD MANAGERPerri Morgan<lb/>
NEWS EDITORS Darrell Williams<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORSteve Bohmuller<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
ADVISOR Dr 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/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
WASHINGTON - The federal energy<lb/>
office has announced an investigatior<lb/>
into oil profits.<lb/>
Rather than wait for the results, we<lb/>
have conducted our own investigation.<lb/>
We have talked to sources inside the big<lb/>
oil companies and managed to obtain<lb/>
corporate papers which were never<lb/>
intended to be read outside the executive<lb/>
suites. Here are our firJings:<lb/>
The oil companies definitely have<lb/>
squeezed higher p o its for themselves<lb/>
from the oil shortage. For example, the<lb/>
Persian Gulf countries have increased<lb/>
their oil income ty doubling taxes and<lb/>
royalties from three dollars to seven<lb/>
dollars a barrel.<lb/>
The oil companies, however, are<lb/>
permitted to charge off these payments,<lb/>
dollar for dollar, against their U.S.<lb/>
taxes. Then the companies add the<lb/>
foreign tax to the price of the oil In other<lb/>
words, the consumers really pay the<lb/>
overseas tax increase for it on their U.S.<lb/>
returns.<lb/>
The oil companies have also used me<lb/>
shortage as an excuse to cut back some<lb/>
of the products that aren't too<lb/>
profitable. The oil industry produces<lb/>
around 3,000 products, some of them vital<lb/>
to other industries. Now oil companies<lb/>
are channeling the available oil into the<lb/>
products that make the most money for<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
The majors are also closing their less<lb/>
profitable gas stations and putting the<lb/>
squeeze on independently-owned<lb/>
stations. This means the oil shortage will<lb/>
wind up increasing the profits that the big<lb/>
companies get from their retail outlets.<lb/>
So far, the oil shortage has been a<lb/>
bonanza for most companies. Only<lb/>
their customers are hurting.<lb/>
Delicate Stage: The Arab-Israeli talks<lb/>
have now reached a crucial juncture. The<lb/>
Israelis have offered to pull back about 18<lb/>
iles from the Suez Canel into the Sinai<lb/>
mountain passes. In return, they want the<lb/>
canal reopened and the towns along its<lb/>
banks resettled. This would be insurance,<lb/>
the Israelis feel, against a renewed<lb/>
Egyptian attack.<lb/>
The Egyptians, however, have refused<lb/>
any "partial settlement They will accept<lb/>
the Israeli offer only if it is tied to a<lb/>
timetable for total Israeli withdrawal from<lb/>
Egyptian lands. The Egyptians want to go<lb/>
back to the border that existed before the<lb/>
1967 war.<lb/>
Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dyan<lb/>
flew to Washington to win U.S.<lb/>
support. Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail<lb/>
Fahmy flew to Moscow to win Soviet<lb/>
support.<lb/>
But in the strictest secrecy, Fahmy<lb/>
has informed Secretary of State Henry<lb/>
Kissinger that the Egyptians would rather<lb/>
not work too closely with their Soviet<lb/>
allies.<lb/>
The Soviets, for example, wanted a<lb/>
seat on the military working group which<lb/>
is trying to separate the Egyptian and<lb/>
Israeli forces on the Suez-Sinai<lb/>
front. Fahmy confided to Kissinger that<lb/>
Egypt didn't want the Soviets on the<lb/>
working group.<lb/>
It will take delicate diplomacy,<lb/>
meanwhile, to achieve a settlement. But<lb/>
Kissinger privately is optimistic.<lb/>
Crack in Latin Left: The overthrow of<lb/>
Salvador Allende's Marxist regime in Chile<lb/>
has thrown the leftist movement<lb/>
throughout Latin America into a tizzy.<lb/>
Secret intelligence reports quote<lb/>
Cuba's Fidel Castro as calling Allende a<lb/>
weakling and blaming his timid leadership<lb/>
on the downfall of Marxism in<lb/>
Chile. Allende's failure, Castro has said,<lb/>
only confimr .is own convictions that a<lb/>
Marxist revo.c ion is impossible without<lb/>
mass mobilization and a complete<lb/>
crack-down on the opposition.<lb/>
But otner Latin American leftists,<lb/>
according to the intelligence reports, have<lb/>
bitterly blamed Castro for letting down<lb/>
the Allende regime. They have complain-<lb/>
ed that the Soviet Union also backed off<lb/>
when Allende needed support.<lb/>
Increasingly, the leftist movement in<lb/>
Latin America is sharply split between the<lb/>
regular Communists who follow the<lb/>
Moscow line and the splinter groups.<lb/>
These range from extremists and<lb/>
terrorists to moderate socialists.<lb/>
The anti-Soviet leftists look upon<lb/>
Castro as a Kremlin lackey. They believe<lb/>
Cuba has fallen under the !nfluence of<lb/>
Moscow until it no lor,ge supports<lb/>
revolutionary movements for the sake of<lb/>
reform but merely carries out Soviet<lb/>
policy in Latin America.<lb/>
Watergate Whirlpool: Some of our<lb/>
most respected government agencies<lb/>
have been caught in the Watergate<lb/>
whirlpool. The Central Intelligence A-<lb/>
gency became a cover for laundrying<lb/>
campaign cash in Mexico. The former FBI<lb/>
director destroyed incriminating evidence<lb/>
in his fireplace. The Secret Service has<lb/>
been accused of ordering millions of<lb/>
dollars worth of improvements on<lb/>
President Nixon's privates homes.<lb/>
But the agency which has been hurt<lb/>
the most - and the one that can least<lb/>
afford it - is the Internal Revenue<lb/>
Service. The American people pay their<lb/>
taxes on the honor system. We suffer in<lb/>
silence on the assumption everyone else<lb/>
is doing the same.<lb/>
Over the past year, however, we have<lb/>
learned that the President got away with<lb/>
paying less taxes than the average<lb/>
working family. Anyone else who had<lb/>
virtually wiped out his taxes with huge<lb/>
deductions would have been subjected to<lb/>
a thorough audit. Yet all Nixon received<lb/>
was a whitewash.<lb/>
Now the President has invited a joing<lb/>
congressional committee to review his<lb/>
taxes. Our sources inside the IRS say this<lb/>
made the agency nervous. Fearing<lb/>
congressional sleuths might find some-<lb/>
thing its own agents had missed, the IRS<lb/>
hastily ordered a reaudit of the President's<lb/>
tax returns.<lb/>
Our sources say the agents are taking<lb/>
a particularly close look at the financing<lb/>
of Nixon's San Clemente estate. The<lb/>
President bought the estate with money<lb/>
loaned to him by his millionaire friend,<lb/>
Robert Abplanalp; who canceled the debt<lb/>
in return for a deep to a part of the<lb/>
property. Yet the President wound up<lb/>
with the most valuable section and he has<lb/>
using Abplanalp's portion rent-free.<lb/>
Our sources confide that the President<lb/>
is almost sure to have to pay some back<lb/>
taxes.<lb/>
The<lb/>
FOUNTA<lb/>
press the<lb/>
should I<lb/>
names w<lb/>
signed a<lb/>
editorial<lb/>
editor, a<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTA<lb/>
fuse prii<lb/>
obscenit<lb/>
indoponrj<lb/>
issues. <lb/>
proportic<lb/>
Can<lb/>
To Fount;<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
As<lb/>
Freshmer<lb/>
fall. How<lb/>
because 1<lb/>
2.000 gra<lb/>
fall quart<lb/>
President<lb/>
for the re<lb/>
belief tha<lb/>
should be<lb/>
should ha<lb/>
should I<lb/>
govern me<lb/>
I belie<lb/>
and for th<lb/>
for the<lb/>
President,<lb/>
active it<lb/>
represent i<lb/>
S.G.A. Le<lb/>
the M.R.<lb/>
point avei<lb/>
was 2.875<lb/>
elect your<lb/>
remember<lb/>
be. Your<lb/>
represent<lb/>
is imperat<lb/>
Govern me<lb/>
Most ii<lb/>
VOTE! T<lb/>
Wednesda<lb/>
very impoi<lb/>
have any<lb/>
two vacan<lb/>
In cloi<lb/>
would api<lb/>
go to the<lb/>
suggest io<lb/>
or stop by<lb/>
Candida<lb/>
Moi<lb/>
To Founts<lb/>
"Typic<lb/>
heard sor<lb/>
infinitesin<lb/>
guess sc<lb/>
deserving<lb/>
movies frc<lb/>
screwed t<lb/>
But,<lb/>
movie die<lb/>
course al<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0009"/><lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mwmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
9<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAO invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by their authorfs;<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/>
FOUNTAINHEAO 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/>
Candidate<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Attention: FRESHMEN<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
As you remember, the two<lb/>
Freshmen class officers were elected last<lb/>
fall. However, both have now resigned<lb/>
because they did not meet the required<lb/>
2.000 grade point average at the end of<lb/>
fall quarter. Now we must elect a new<lb/>
President and Vice-President to lead us<lb/>
for the remainder of this year. It is my<lb/>
belief that an officer should be a leader,<lb/>
should be able (and willing!) to speak out,<lb/>
should have a real interest in his job, and<lb/>
should have experience in student<lb/>
government.<lb/>
I believe that I have these qualities,<lb/>
and for this reason, I have decided to run<lb/>
for the office of Freshman Class<lb/>
President. So far this year, I have been<lb/>
active in Student Government by<lb/>
representing Jones Dormitory in the<lb/>
S.G.A. Legislature. I am also serving on<lb/>
the M.R.C. House Council. My grade<lb/>
point average at the end of fall quarter<lb/>
was 2.875. When you go to the polls to<lb/>
elect your choice for class officers, please<lb/>
remember how important experience can<lb/>
be. Your Freshman Class President will<lb/>
represent you on the Executive Council. It<lb/>
is imperative that he understand Student<lb/>
Government and how it works at E.C.U.<lb/>
Most importantly, DON'T FORGET TO<lb/>
VOTE! The election will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday, January 23, 1974. This is a<lb/>
very important election because we do not<lb/>
have any class officers, and need to fill<lb/>
two vacancies.<lb/>
In closing, I would like to say that I<lb/>
would appreciate your support when you<lb/>
go to the polls to vote. If you have any<lb/>
suggestions or questions, please call me<lb/>
or stop by to see me. Thank you.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Tom Dickens<lb/>
Candidate for Freshman Class President<lb/>
Room 232 Jones Dorm<lb/>
Phone: 75&amp;0936<lb/>
Movie gripe<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
"Typical East Carolina I believe I<lb/>
heard someone say. Since ECU gets an<lb/>
infinitesimal number of decent bands, I<lb/>
guess someone decided to give we<lb/>
deserving students a break with a few<lb/>
movies from a decent band - and someone<lb/>
screwed that up.<lb/>
But, be lighthearted peop'e, that<lb/>
movie didn't cost you a thing except of<lb/>
course all that money you pay at the<lb/>
beginning of each quarter for all our great<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
activities. When I first found out about<lb/>
this "film festival I was starting to<lb/>
believe in ECU'S activity program; now I<lb/>
disbelieve more than ever.<lb/>
I had invited some friends from my<lb/>
hometown to come to this "festival" - I'm<lb/>
glad now they couldn't make it. A movie<lb/>
being stopped halfway through for no<lb/>
apparent reason would be rather hard to<lb/>
explain and I feel someone has got a lot<lb/>
of explaining to do. I have seen<lb/>
projectors go bad before and they have<lb/>
usually been simple to fix; it happens in<lb/>
theaters alot you know. Maybe I'm<lb/>
expecting too much from ECU and my<lb/>
activity money.<lb/>
As an avid Beatle fan, I must say I was<lb/>
more than highly pissed. I have never<lb/>
written the Fountainhead before and may<lb/>
never write again -1 guess. Thursday nite<lb/>
just brought everything to a head. I think<lb/>
that whoever was in charge should see<lb/>
about holding "Let It Be" over. I know<lb/>
alot of students feel the same as I, and all<lb/>
I can think to say to ECU and the<lb/>
projectionist is: Get Back.<lb/>
Fred Gray<lb/>
Freshmen, note:<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Attention: Freshman Class<lb/>
The office of Freshman Class<lb/>
President has been vacant since the end<lb/>
of Fall Quarter. Tommy Thomason is a<lb/>
qualifixj candidate running for this<lb/>
office. Tommy is actively involved in the<lb/>
Women's Residence Council and has both<lb/>
the motivation and the ideas needed to<lb/>
hold the office. Tommy Thomason also<lb/>
possesses the capability to maintain the<lb/>
office without losing the firm grip on<lb/>
other responsibilities. Tommy needs your<lb/>
vote .but more important than that, she<lb/>
needs your support. Freshman Class, if<lb/>
you really care who holds your office of<lb/>
Freshman Class President, vote Tommy<lb/>
Thomason-because she'll give her time<lb/>
and effort for you.<lb/>
Pat Samoriski<lb/>
S.G.A. Legislature<lb/>
on behave of Greene Dorm<lb/>
Chimes out<lb/>
Dear Fountainhood:<lb/>
What ever happened to the magic<lb/>
chimes that used to play each noon (and<lb/>
before and after then) on campus? The<lb/>
third floor of Austin hasn't been shaken<lb/>
by the glorious whatever it was since who<lb/>
knows when.<lb/>
Anyone's answer will be appreciated,<lb/>
particularly if it concerns the question.<lb/>
Amazingly yours,<lb/>
Person of letters<lb/>
i<lb/>
Seagram's jets noted<lb/>
By TRISTRAM COFFIN<lb/>
THE BOOZE JETS - Reuters says<lb/>
Seagram chartered twenty-four jets to<lb/>
ferry one hundred thousand gallons of<lb/>
Scotch whisky from Glasgow to New York<lb/>
and Chicago "to ensure that Christmas<lb/>
spirits remain high in North America<lb/>
The fleet was chartered to meet "a big<lb/>
rush of orders from the U.S. for the<lb/>
Christmas market<lb/>
The Associated Press notes that<lb/>
Skylab III "will be draining power from the<lb/>
energy short earth in giant gulps. The<lb/>
launch took 41,500 gallons of kerosene-<lb/>
type fuel. To boost the ship into orbit<lb/>
burned four thousand gallons of liquid<lb/>
hydrogen. The control center uses up in<lb/>
one hour the power used in an average<lb/>
three-bedroom house in one month.<lb/>
Anthony Lewis notes in the Times: (1)<lb/>
The Nixon Administration proposes that<lb/>
the Penn Central and other northeast<lb/>
railroads abandon half their tracks, and<lb/>
switch the freight to trucks. "This would<lb/>
require four hundred twenty million more<lb/>
gallons of fuel per year - an increase of<lb/>
3.5 percent in the total fuel used for<lb/>
hauling freight in this country (2) The<lb/>
World Trade Center in New York<lb/>
consumes as much electricity as a city of<lb/>
one hundred thousand.<lb/>
An Administration economist admitTd<lb/>
that the US is exporting "fifty-thide<lb/>
thousand barrels (of petroleum products)<lb/>
a dayup sharply over last year For<lb/>
the first nine months this year, the US<lb/>
exported 1.5 million barrels of home<lb/>
heating oil.<lb/>
HOW TO SAVE MONEY, TIPS FROM<lb/>
THE COUNTER-CULTURE - The young,<lb/>
and some not so young, in the<lb/>
counter-culture have learned to live at<lb/>
poverty levels. In this time of inflation<lb/>
and shortages, many of their ideas are<lb/>
good for most of us.<lb/>
One Spartan of our acquaintance, and<lb/>
we do not recommend his regimen<lb/>
generally, subsists on one meal a day and<lb/>
for clothing, a work outfit of old Salvation<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
Army or Goodwill purchased jeans<lb/>
patched up and several work shirts, and,<lb/>
for good, a pair of old but decent jeans<lb/>
and one shirt.<lb/>
Some general rules are:<lb/>
Never buy what you don't need. The<lb/>
don't-need items are called "mathoms<lb/>
For celebrations, some extravagence is<lb/>
allowed, like a bottle of American wine<lb/>
and hamburger.<lb/>
When you do buy, look for sales. The<lb/>
after-Christmas sales are a good time to<lb/>
scour the market place. Some necessities<lb/>
can be brought at Goodwill Industries and<lb/>
similar organizations, and second hand<lb/>
stores. Old furniture can be refinished,<lb/>
and provide hours of fun and satisfactory<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
Pay cash and don't get involved in<lb/>
sales that mean a stiff interest<lb/>
charge. Charge accounts and credit cards<lb/>
are tempters; avoid them like the plague.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmfmmmmmm<lb/>
Loam 10 do your own repairing. Many<lb/>
colleges, YMs and YWCA' have night<lb/>
courses on repairing everything from the<lb/>
car to the washing machine. One of our<lb/>
friends writes, "It has been eight years<lb/>
since I've taken a car to a trained and<lb/>
money-making mechanic. Nearly anyone<lb/>
can do repairs and tune-ups on his<lb/>
own. You can buy a book that gives<lb/>
step-by-step instructions for making most<lb/>
repairs (See your library.)<lb/>
Stop smoking and drinking hard<lb/>
liquor.<lb/>
Do your own laundry. One of the first<lb/>
purchases is a good, second hand laundry<lb/>
machine. If you can't swing that, use the<lb/>
laundromat.<lb/>
HOW TO SAVE MONEY ON FOOD -<lb/>
Kathie and her husband are students. He<lb/>
uses the Gl bill to pay for school, and she<lb/>
works 30-35 hours a week. She writes,<lb/>
"We don't eat lavishly but do not starve,<lb/>
most of the time. I must admit there are<lb/>
times we live on peanut butter and jeally<lb/>
and one-a-day vitamins. Some rules:<lb/>
Don't buy "convenience" foods, that is<lb/>
goods already prepared and ready to pop<lb/>
in the oven. If both hsuband and wife<lb/>
work, they can cook together in the<lb/>
evenings and prepare food for the next<lb/>
day. Not only will they learn a fascinating<lb/>
art, but discover each other in the<lb/>
process.<lb/>
Use meet substitutes as cheeses,<lb/>
chick peas, soy beans and nuts. All are<lb/>
loaded with proteins and very palatable if<lb/>
prepared well. For example, a chick peas<lb/>
casserole.<lb/>
3 cups chick peas (or, as sometimes<lb/>
called, garbanzo beans). Rinse, cover<lb/>
with water, soak overnight.<lb/>
2 T. shortening<lb/>
112 cup small onion rings<lb/>
1 4 cup olives or green pepper slivers<lb/>
2 cups canned tomatoes<lb/>
pinch of sweet basil<lb/>
Salt chick peas and cook one hour in<lb/>
water used for soaking. Simmer the onion<lb/>
rings and olives (or green pepper) in<lb/>
shortening about 3 minutes. Add<lb/>
tomatoes, basil, and salt to taste. Sim-<lb/>
mer a few minutes to blend flavor and<lb/>
then add to chick peas which have been<lb/>
rinsed and drained. Bake for 1 hour at 350<lb/>
F.<lb/>
Make your own bread or buy<lb/>
second-day bread.<lb/>
Have your own kitchen garden. If you<lb/>
live in a city, perhaps you can convince<lb/>
the owner of a vacant lot to let you use a<lb/>
piece of it to grow your own vegetables.<lb/>
Never throw away left-overs. Wonder-<lb/>
ful soups, stews and puddings can be<lb/>
made from left-overs. There is nothing<lb/>
more flavorsome than the French<lb/>
pot-au-feu soup, which is simply meat<lb/>
bones, water, and left overs.<lb/>
cv Jproblems!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Union lecture series<lb/>
presents Ken Richter<lb/>
The Student Union Lecture Series<lb/>
Committee of East Carolina Union will<lb/>
present Ken Richter who will personally<lb/>
narrate his film "Discovering New<lb/>
Zealand "Discovering New Zealand will<lb/>
be presented on January 22, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The film ranges through the length of<lb/>
both the North and South Islands of New<lb/>
Zealand, from smoking volcanos and<lb/>
streaming thermal valleys to waterfall-<lb/>
laced Milford Sound, probably the most<lb/>
beautiful fjord in the world. In the New<lb/>
Zealand Alps, among five times as many<lb/>
high peaks as there are in Switzerland,<lb/>
Mr. Richter will take his audience on a<lb/>
thrilling light-plane flight to land on a<lb/>
nine thousand foot high glacier and a<lb/>
moment later by jet-powered boat down a<lb/>
swift moving rocky river.<lb/>
Spectacular roses fill the gardens and<lb/>
lupines, grown wild from gardens, make<lb/>
the American flower-grower green with<lb/>
envy. The unexpected is everwhere.<lb/>
Wells of natural stream provide half the<lb/>
electric power used on the North<lb/>
Island. Grasslands are fertilized by planes<lb/>
operating from airstrips that look like<lb/>
ski-jumpers.<lb/>
A highlight of the film is a visit to a<lb/>
high country sheep station, as the New<lb/>
Zealanders call their sheep ranches. Dou-<lb/>
ble Hill station is one of the most<lb/>
beautiful spots on earth, forth miles from<lb/>
a paved road on a dirt track that washes<lb/>
out from time to time and leaves the<lb/>
owners happily stranded in their<lb/>
mountains for as much as six months at a<lb/>
stretch. The film climaxes with a flight<lb/>
over Sutherland Falls, second highest in<lb/>
the world, the only waterfall to leap from<lb/>
a half-frozen lake to land among<lb/>
sub-tropical ferns far below.<lb/>
This film captures the hospitality of an<lb/>
unknown land that celebrates Christmas<lb/>
in mid-summor and may well be the<lb/>
undiscovered tourist attraction of the<lb/>
decade.<lb/>
"Discovering New Zealand" has won<lb/>
several film awards. It will be one of the<lb/>
most beautiful and entertajning travel<lb/>
films to come to East Carolina this<lb/>
session.<lb/>
Tickets for this attraction went on sale<lb/>
on January 9, and may be purchased from<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office. Public tickets<lb/>
are priced at $1.00. Mail order request for<lb/>
tickets may be sent to the East Carolina<lb/>
University Central Ticket Office, Box 2731,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834. Mail order should<lb/>
include thirty-eight cents to cover<lb/>
certified return mail charges<lb/>
KEN RICHTER will narrate "Discovering New Zealand" Jan. 22, at 8:00 In Wright<lb/>
a ??? wvK .? -  Auditorium. i.<lb/>
?c<lb/>
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DUE TO LARGE TURNOUT THIS<lb/>
WEEK, BUCCANEER PORTRAITS<lb/>
WILL BE TAKEN THROUGH<lb/>
NEXT WEEK<lb/>
JA NUARY<lb/>
21-25<lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039899_0011"/><lb/>
10 In Wright<lb/>
<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
11<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
For cofft<lb/>
i-i'll-it<lb/>
Foundation offers summer seminars<lb/>
The National Endowment for the<lb/>
Humanities has extended grant offers<lb/>
totaling approximately $1.3 million to 24<lb/>
colleges and universities across the<lb/>
country in support of 34 summer seminars<lb/>
for college teachers to be offered during<lb/>
the summer of 1974. Announcement of<lb/>
the grant offers was made by Dr. Ronald<lb/>
Berman, Chairman of the Humanities<lb/>
Endowment.<lb/>
Begun during the summer of 1973, the<lb/>
program of summer seminars for college<lb/>
teachers provides teachers at smaller<lb/>
private and state colleges and junior and<lb/>
community colleges with opportunities to<lb/>
work for two months in their areas of<lb/>
interest with distinguished scholars at<lb/>
institutions which have libraries suitable<lb/>
for mature study. Each of the 34 seminars<lb/>
will enroll 12 teachers. The 1974 summer<lb/>
seminars will be offered in the disciplines<lb/>
of history, philosophy, and English and<lb/>
American Literature.<lb/>
Through reflection and discussion<lb/>
with the seminar director and their<lb/>
colleagues in a seminar atmosphere, the<lb/>
college teachers will sharpen their<lb/>
understandings and improve their ability<lb/>
to transmit their understandings to<lb/>
college students.<lb/>
Prospective applicants to the 34<lb/>
seminars must be teaching undergraduate<lb/>
courses in English or American Literature,<lb/>
in history or in philosophy at a smaller<lb/>
private or state college, or in a junior or<lb/>
community college. Preference will be<lb/>
given to college teachers who have been<lb/>
teaching for several years and who have<lb/>
not recently had the opportunity to work<lb/>
at a major library.<lb/>
The deadline for submission of<lb/>
applications for participation in any one<lb/>
of the summer seminars is February 11,<lb/>
1974. For further information about<lb/>
individual seminars and for application<lb/>
instructions, prospective applicants<lb/>
should write directly to the seminar<lb/>
director at the address indicated in the<lb/>
listing. Selection of the participants in<lb/>
the seminars will be made by the seminar<lb/>
directors, not by the National Endowment<lb/>
for the Humanities. Applicants should<lb/>
note that they may not submit<lb/>
applications to more than three seminars<lb/>
at the same time.<lb/>
Each teacher participating in a seminar<lb/>
will receive a stipend of $2,000 for a<lb/>
tenure period of two months and a travel<lb/>
and housing allowance of $250, if needed.<lb/>
The following provide examples of the<lb/>
kinds of work to be undertaken in the<lb/>
summer seminars:<lb/>
Professor Daniel Seltzer of the<lb/>
Department of English at Princeton<lb/>
University will lead a seminar considering<lb/>
in detail fifteen or sixteen of<lb/>
Shakespeare's major plays, representative<lb/>
of his development as a theatre<lb/>
artist. Emphasis will be placed upon<lb/>
Shakespeare's growing understanding of<lb/>
techniques of characterization for the<lb/>
stage, his use of various sorts of narrative<lb/>
and plot materials as appropriate for<lb/>
transferral to theatrical terms, and his<lb/>
gradual evolution of specific forms of<lb/>
drama congenial to the requirements of<lb/>
these devices of characterization and<lb/>
plotting. In addition to being a<lb/>
Shakespearean scholar, Professor Seltzer<lb/>
has had considerable on-stage experience<lb/>
as a Shakespearean actor.<lb/>
Professor Stephen Baxter of the<lb/>
Department of History at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina in Chapel Hill will direct a<lb/>
seminar on the topic of "England in the<lb/>
Age of the American Revolution The<lb/>
seminar will study England during the<lb/>
decade preceding the outbreak of the<lb/>
Revolution, with an emphasis on the<lb/>
differences between life in the mother<lb/>
country and in the colonies in all aspects<lb/>
- cultural, social, economic and<lb/>
demographic, as well as political ones.<lb/>
Professor Roderick Chisholm of the<lb/>
Department of Philosophy at Brown<lb/>
University in Providence, Rhode Island,<lb/>
will conduct a seminar on the topic of<lb/>
"The Self in Recent Philosophy The<lb/>
seminar will be concerned with the<lb/>
relevance of recent philosophical work to<lb/>
a number of traditional philosophical<lb/>
problems pertaining to the nature of the<lb/>
self. Recent philosophy, in this instance,<lb/>
refers primarily to American, British, and<lb/>
Western European philosophy of the past<lb/>
twenty years. The seminar will concen-<lb/>
trate on the problem of personal identity<lb/>
and the persistence of the person through<lb/>
time, self-awareness and self-observation,<lb/>
and the traditional problem of human<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
Yale University, New Haven, Conn. 06520<lb/>
Seminar Director: Donald Kagan, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Classics, "Historical Studies in<lb/>
the Origins of War"<lb/>
Seminar Director: Harold Bloom, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Poetic Influence and<lb/>
Romantic Tradition, British and American,<lb/>
1789 to the Present"<lb/>
Seminar Director: J. Hillis Miller, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English "New Directions in the<lb/>
Interpretation of English and American<lb/>
Fiction"<lb/>
Amherst Colege, Amherst, Mass. 01002<lb/>
Seminar Director: Benjamin DeMott, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Studies in Contem-<lb/>
porary American Literary Forms"<lb/>
Boston University, Boston, Mass. 02215<lb/>
Seminar Director: Helen Vendler, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Problems in the<lb/>
Interpretation of Poetry"<lb/>
Univ. of Mass Amherst 01102<lb/>
Seminar Director: Walker Gibson, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Writing in the First<lb/>
College Years"<lb/>
Princeton Univ. Princeton, N.J. 06540<lb/>
Seminar Director: Daniel Seltzer, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Shakespeare's<lb/>
Development as a Dramatist"<lb/>
Seminar Director: Gregory Vlastos, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Philosophy, "The Moral and<lb/>
Social Philosophy of Socrates and Plato"<lb/>
Seminar Director: John V. Fleming, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, "Major Metaphors of<lb/>
Medieval Literature: An Introduction to<lb/>
the Figural Patterns of Medieval Art"<lb/>
Seminar Director: W. Robert Connor,<lb/>
Professor of Classics, "History and<lb/>
Literature in Athens During the<lb/>
Peloponnesian War" (Please note: This<lb/>
seminar will be conducted at the Univ. of<lb/>
Colorado in Boulder.)<lb/>
Columbia Univ N.Y. N.Y. 10027<lb/>
Seminar Director: James P. Shenton,<lb/>
Professor of History, "Study of Ethnic and<lb/>
Racial History in America"<lb/>
Cornell Univ Ithaca, N.Y. 14850<lb/>
Seminar Director: Norman Malcolm, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of Philosophy, "Wittgenstein:<lb/>
Tractatus to Investigations"<lb/>
State Univ. of N.Y Albany, N.Y. 12222<lb/>
Seminar Director: Thomas M. Barker,<lb/>
Professor of History, "Central Europe<lb/>
from the Thirty Years War to the Common<lb/>
Market"<lb/>
State Univ. of N.Y Binghamton, N.Y.<lb/>
13901, Seminar Director: Theodore<lb/>
Mischel, Professor of Philosophy, "Phil-<lb/>
osophical Analysis and Psychological<lb/>
Theories of Man"<lb/>
Duke Univ Durham, N.C. 27706<lb/>
Seminar Director: Warren Lemer, Pro-<lb/>
fessor of History, "History of Socialism"<lb/>
Univ. of N. C, Chapel Hill, N.C. 97514<lb/>
Seminar Director: Stephen B. Baxter,<lb/>
Professor of History, "England in the Age<lb/>
of the American Revolution"<lb/>
Scholarship<lb/>
awarded to<lb/>
ECU student<lb/>
A $1,000 scholarship has been<lb/>
contributed to East Carolina University by<lb/>
White Concrete Company, Inc of<lb/>
Greenville Don Leggett, Executive Director<lb/>
of the ECU Foundation announced.<lb/>
Under the terms of the scholarship,<lb/>
the award will be made to a student who<lb/>
has been accepted for admission or<lb/>
already enrolled at ECUto pursue a degree<lb/>
in the Department of Industrial and<lb/>
Technical Education in the School of<lb/>
Technology. The White Concrete Scholar-<lb/>
ship will be applicable toward expenses<lb/>
for one year or three quarters and may be<lb/>
renewed in subsequent years.<lb/>
Recipients will be selected by the ECU<lb/>
Scholarships, Fellowships, and Financial<lb/>
Aid Committee from candidates submitt-<lb/>
ed to the Committee by the Dean of the<lb/>
School of Technology.<lb/>
Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins said that<lb/>
"White's gift is indicative of the firm's<lb/>
interest and support in the progress of<lb/>
academic programs here at East<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
"We are dependent on local<lb/>
businessmen for funds not available from<lb/>
state allocations. This scholarship is<lb/>
representative of the support received<lb/>
from the Greenville community through-<lb/>
out the history of East Carolina<lb/>
-OJDonrca:<lb/>
i -r? i?  -i- i-i- i? -i ? i-l- -I-<lb/>
? II w<lb/>
? ii mwii rum in<lb/>
TO ALL FREE-LANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS:<lb/>
Fountainhead welcomes any work you care to submit<lb/>
in return for publication of your photos and by-lines.<lb/>
We are especially interested in creative shots and-or<lb/>
 candid shots particularly on campus or the Greenvill<lb/>
larea. Please contact Skip Saunders MonFri. from<lb/>
3-5:00 p.m. at 758-6366 or 758-6367 or come to the<lb/>
Fountainhead offices over Wright Auditorium to talk<lb/>
HJW?)?I?.L-i-)ii? i-i-)  ir. ir I-u-I? M-u-I- i-i -1- l-l ? ??'? ??<lb/>
tm i n?<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
nm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
.&amp;?<lb/>
The Fuiurm of Utmratur'<lb/>
Love Story' author comes to ECU<lb/>
Erich Segal, best-selling author, film<lb/>
writer, classical scholar, athlete, and<lb/>
professor will be presented at ECU on<lb/>
Monday, January 28, 1974 at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Segal's subject will<lb/>
be "The Future of Literature<lb/>
Segal was bom in Brooklyn, New<lb/>
York. He was educated at Midwood<lb/>
HighSchool and Harvard University where<lb/>
he received both the A.B. and PhD<lb/>
Degrees. Segal had a distinguished<lb/>
career at Harvard, at commencement he<lb/>
was chosen both Class Poet and Latin<lb/>
Salutatorian, the only time that one man<lb/>
received both honors.<lb/>
In 1964, Mr. Segal was appointed to<lb/>
the Yale Uiversity Faculty where from<lb/>
1968-1972 he was Associate Professor of<lb/>
Classics and Comparative Literature. Dur-<lb/>
ing this time, he also lectured at<lb/>
universities throughout the U.S Europe<lb/>
and Japan, and delivered papers before<lb/>
the American Philological Association<lb/>
and the American Comparative Literature<lb/>
Association. His publications include<lb/>
'Roman Laughter the first study in<lb/>
English devoted entirely to Plautus,<lb/>
Rome's great comic playwright; a<lb/>
collection of essays on Euripides. In<lb/>
Proposes frqrfiwship<lb/>
ERICH SEGAL'S appearance is<lb/>
under the sponsorship of the<lb/>
Student Union Lecture Series<lb/>
Committee. Tickets for this event<lb/>
will go on sale January 21, 1974,<lb/>
Jenkins works for state<lb/>
and may be purchased from the<lb/>
ECU Central Ticket Office. Mail<lb/>
order requests for tickets may be<lb/>
sent to ECU Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Boc 2731, Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
Tickets are priced at $2.00<lb/>
each. Please include thirty-eight<lb/>
cents to cover certified return mail<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
recognition of his scholarly work, Segal<lb/>
was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship<lb/>
and the Humboldt-Stiftung.<lb/>
While teaching at Yale, Mr. Segal<lb/>
continued his writing career. He collabo-<lb/>
rated with Richard Rodgers on a musical<lb/>
comedy which, though it never reached<lb/>
the stage, did in fact reach the office of<lb/>
the Beatles. They hired Segal to write the<lb/>
shooting script for Yellow Submarine.<lb/>
Since 1968 when Yellow Submarine<lb/>
was released to enthusiastic reviews,<lb/>
Segal has written six films, includine Love<lb/>
Story, for which he received an Academy<lb/>
Award nomination, a Writer's Guild<lb/>
nomination and the Golden Globe Award<lb/>
for Best Screenplay of 1970. His novel,<lb/>
LOVE STORY, published in February of<lb/>
1970 has since appeared in twenty-nine<lb/>
languages and been read by an estimated<lb/>
hundred million people. Everywhere<lb/>
LOVE STORY was passionately debated.<lb/>
The English abhorred; the French<lb/>
adored. The Vatican attacked its language<lb/>
and the Kremlin its politics. Newsweek<lb/>
hated- Time liked. President Nixon<lb/>
recommended; Russian poet Yevtushenko<lb/>
cried.<lb/>
The chancellor of ECU has recently<lb/>
proposed a partnership of effort between<lb/>
higher education and the communities of<lb/>
North Carolina to create the image of a<lb/>
great state.<lb/>
The ECU chancellor, Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, called for a "two-way street<lb/>
program" between ECU and the region of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. "We feel that our<lb/>
university can reach out and serve<lb/>
others he said. "We are on the brink of<lb/>
true greatness but we must have that<lb/>
extra boost from you, the friends of ECU<lb/>
Speaking to a Wilmington Rotary Club<lb/>
audience, Jenkins cited his personal<lb/>
overriding concern about the breadth and<lb/>
adequacy of ECU programs "destined to<lb/>
respond not only to the traditional needs<lb/>
of the university's constituency, but also<lb/>
to contemporary demands of the region<lb/>
and the state<lb/>
"In like manner, we do urge<lb/>
communities, organizations and citizens<lb/>
to come to us at ECU and solicit our<lb/>
expertise he said.<lb/>
"I do not see why we here in the East<lb/>
I,uu t-g 8 ? g B g a a a a a o a a a a aa a a a a a a ??!? iiniirninoinn wn<lb/>
should lag behind any other section in<lb/>
growth and development he said.<lb/>
"I urge you to continue your<lb/>
partnership with us in our effort to make<lb/>
East Carolina University even greater in<lb/>
the years to come as a means to help lead<lb/>
this region and state to a better day<lb/>
"We in the East must take seriously<lb/>
the creation of not only a great state<lb/>
image but a great national image. We<lb/>
must paint a new picture of the East, and<lb/>
one of the most effective agencies in<lb/>
helping to do this is East Carolina<lb/>
University-in partnership with you, our<lb/>
friends<lb/>
Jenkins said a "massive coordinating<lb/>
effort" is needed to reverse such statistics<lb/>
as low industrial per capita income and<lb/>
below national average doctor-per-people<lb/>
ratio.<lb/>
"The time has come for Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina to do a few things to excite the<lb/>
nation; that will solicit the admiration of<lb/>
others. Let us exert ourselves for those<lb/>
things we should rightfully have. Let us<lb/>
pioneer on our own. Let us lead the way<lb/>
HEADSTRONG<lb/>
You can't lose on this one!<lb/>
ran mm<lb/>
CENTRAL NEWS AND CARD SHOP<lb/>
321 Evans St. Downtown<lb/>
We have a fine selection of Whitman and<lb/>
Russell Stover Valentine Hearts.<lb/>
While you're there, choose an American or<lb/>
Hallmark Valentine Card for your sweetheart.<lb/>
j9 flftf,0floflflooooooooPPOBBtt8BflttB?ttg BJLM 9 9 9 9 8 BOB 99 999M MAAMAMMAAM<lb/>
Sweaters<lb/>
Vests<lb/>
Shirts<lb/>
Knits<lb/>
Suits<lb/>
Blazers<lb/>
Dress Baggies<lb/>
Jackets<lb/>
One Group:<lb/>
Pants<lb/>
Leather Pants<lb/>
One Group:<lb/>
Shoes<lb/>
Leather Coat<lb/>
40 percent off<lb/>
50 percent off<lb/>
33 13<lb/>
percent off<lb/>
218 E.5th St.<lb/>
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AAon. - Fri.<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
10:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sat.<lb/>
f<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039899_0013"/><lb/>
cu<lb/>
i work, Segal<lb/>
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3, Mr. Segal<lb/>
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on a musical<lb/>
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ubmarine.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 2617 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
nmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
13<lb/>
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack<lb/>
Brendle, 752 2d 19.<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 '6467 and money or just money<lb/>
$7,000.00. Save gas in style. Owner<lb/>
Ludford Creef, 417 B Belk ECU, 752-2442.<lb/>
DI ANNA - even Zombies wake up<lb/>
eventually Sandpersons<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. WilJ 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/>
7524068.<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 i.<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/>
PRIVATE ROOM for rent close to campus<lb/>
Men only. Phone 752-4006<lb/>
GIRL'S 26" BIKE for sale. Generator<lb/>
light and baskets. Good condition $35.<lb/>
Call 752-1196.<lb/>
Veterans operate book exchange<lb/>
Starting February 25th a book<lb/>
exchange is being operated by the ECU<lb/>
Veteran's Club under the sponsorship of<lb/>
the S.G.A. It's purpose is to assist you in<lb/>
receiving what you feel is a fair price for<lb/>
your used textbooks and to assist you in<lb/>
paying a fair price for those books you<lb/>
need to buy. "We neither sell nor do we<lb/>
buy textbooks but merely act as an<lb/>
agent through which transactions may<lb/>
occur.<lb/>
A commission of ten percent is<lb/>
charged for the use of the exchange:<lb/>
only the seller pays the commission when<lb/>
he comes to collect his money. The buyer<lb/>
pays only for what he purchases.<lb/>
Past experience has shown that you '<lb/>
can save money if you:<lb/>
1. Know the value of your book. Be sure<lb/>
your asking price is less than someone<lb/>
can buy it for in the student store, but<lb/>
more than what you would get it you sold<lb/>
it there. You would be surprised to know<lb/>
the number of students last quarter who<lb/>
were asking more than the book store was<lb/>
selling them for or asking less than the<lb/>
book store was buying them for.<lb/>
2. In this exchange, like books are<lb/>
stacked together. Unlike the book store<lb/>
there is no set price for any one book. So<lb/>
be sure to check the prices of all the<lb/>
books of the type you want to<lb/>
buy. Remember-the price of the books<lb/>
are according to the wishes of the<lb/>
individual seller, and therefore, the prices<lb/>
do vary.<lb/>
3. Bring any textbooks you have<lb/>
regardless of how out dated they may<lb/>
be. Who knows-a major in that particular<lb/>
area of study may want the book for his<lb/>
personal library.<lb/>
4. If you do not see the particular book<lb/>
you want when you first come in. Check<lb/>
again as many times as possible. Sooner<lb/>
or later it should be there.<lb/>
Feel free to offer any suggestions and<lb/>
comments. Each one will be considered<lb/>
on its own merit. Your suggestions may<lb/>
help this exchange to be a bigger and<lb/>
better success.<lb/>
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL 5, NO. 2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmmt<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Trackmen open season<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The East Carolina track team begins<lb/>
their indoor season Saturday when they<lb/>
participate in the Chesterfield Invitational<lb/>
at Richmond, Va.<lb/>
A majority of the East's powerhouses<lb/>
will be there, among them William &amp;<lb/>
Mary, Maryland and North Carolina. The<lb/>
meet features several "Open" events<lb/>
allowing non collegians the opportunity to<lb/>
compete, which should add several<lb/>
Olympians and members of the U.S.<lb/>
World University Games team to the meet.<lb/>
ECU's Sam Phillips, considered by<lb/>
Coach Carson a real prospect for national<lb/>
honors in the high hurdles, is competing<lb/>
in the "Open" hurdles. The mile relay<lb/>
team is also in the "Open" event.<lb/>
Coach Carson's team seems ready to<lb/>
challenge perennial chamoion William and<lb/>
Mary outdoors, but with seven distance<lb/>
events and fewer field events indoors the<lb/>
Pirates will concentrate on individual<lb/>
honors this winter.<lb/>
Among the Pirate standouts compet-<lb/>
ing in Richmond are sprinters Maurice<lb/>
Huntley and Charles Lovelace, Palmer<lb/>
Lisane in the 600 yd. run, Gerald Klas in<lb/>
the mile and Ed Rigsby and Scott Miller in<lb/>
the two mile.<lb/>
In the field events co-captain Larry<lb/>
Malone and Lawrence Wilkerson will<lb/>
compete in both long jumps, Art Miller in<lb/>
the pole vault, co-captain Roy Quick in<lb/>
the high jump and Tom Watson and Ivey<lb/>
Peacock in the weight events.<lb/>
Indoors the Pirates face this year the<lb/>
likes of Notre Dame and Ohio State in a tri<lb/>
meet and most of Atlantic Coast Confere<lb/>
ence teams. The indoor conference meet<lb/>
will be held Feb. 22-23 at Lexington, Va.<lb/>
Gregg Ashom happy in South<lb/>
Followers of Southern Conference<lb/>
basketball could be in for a great many<lb/>
surprises from East Carolina this year.<lb/>
One of the most pleasant surprises to<lb/>
come along this season has been Gregg<lb/>
Ashorn.<lb/>
Before coming to East Carolina,<lb/>
Ashorn starred at North Greenville Junior<lb/>
College in South Carolina. He was later<lb/>
named to a National Junior College<lb/>
All-Tournament team.<lb/>
The 6'3" junior from Cincinnati, Ohio<lb/>
has added rebounding and scoring punch<lb/>
to Coach Quinn's running brand of<lb/>
basketball. He is a leader in most<lb/>
defensive catagories and can usually<lb/>
score in any situation.<lb/>
His roughest test of the season came<lb/>
in the N.C. State game when he faced<lb/>
David Thompson.<lb/>
"Thompson is simply fantastic felt<lb/>
Ashom, "and I was awed by their entire<lb/>
team in general<lb/>
Ashom is very happy in the South and<lb/>
here at East Carolina.<lb/>
"I enjoy Coach Quinn's running game<lb/>
on the court said Ashom.<lb/>
"But I feel that I need to take the better<lb/>
percentage shot instead of the outside<lb/>
jumpers to help the team<lb/>
A psychology major, Gregg hopes to<lb/>
enter the coaching field after he<lb/>
graduates. If a coaching position is not<lb/>
available he doesn't rule out the<lb/>
possibility of going into clinical<lb/>
psychology.<lb/>
<lb/>
P<lb/>
PIRATE BACKCOURT STAR Reggie Lee goes in for an uncontested layup in<lb/>
game against Appalachian State University Monday evening. Lee's 13 points<lb/>
led the Bucs in scoring as they squeaked out a 53-52 victory.<lb/>
Women face<lb/>
Heels, ODU<lb/>
"Saturday's meet will definitely be our<lb/>
toughest test of the season said head<lb/>
coach Eric Orders whose women<lb/>
swimmers will take on the University of<lb/>
North Carolina and Old Dominion<lb/>
University in a double dual swimming<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
The meet will begin at 1 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Natorium.<lb/>
Coach Orders felt that his women,<lb/>
who have never defeated the Tarheels in a<lb/>
dual meet, have an excellent opportunity<lb/>
to upset UNC. "The girls have been<lb/>
working hard all week and they really want<lb/>
to win this one badly Orders added.<lb/>
The women's strength will be cut,<lb/>
however, due to a knee injury to diver<lb/>
Cindy Wheeler. Miss Wheeler suffered<lb/>
the injury during a gymnastics workout<lb/>
and she will miss Saturday's meet.<lb/>
The lady Pirates, presently 3-0 in dual<lb/>
meet competition, having defeated<lb/>
Appalachian State, UNC-G and Duke<lb/>
University, will next face a very tough<lb/>
University of Tennessee team on January<lb/>
26 at 11 a.m. in Minges pool.<lb/>
1973-74 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Jan. 19 William &amp; Mary A<lb/>
Jon. 23 St. Peter's H<lb/>
Jan. 26 VMI H<lb/>
Jon. 28 Furmon H<lb/>
Jon. 30 Old Dominion H<lb/>
Feb. 2 Furmon A<lb/>
Fob. 6 Buffalo Sfofo H<lb/>
Fob. 9 William Mary H<lb/>
Feb. 11 Appalachian State A<lb/>
Feb. 16 Davidson A<lb/>
Fob. 20 Richmond H<lb/>
Fob. 23 The Citadel H<lb/>
Feb. 27 So. Conference Tourn. A<lb/>
Feb. 28, Mar. 1-2 (Feb. 27-Mar. 2)<lb/>
Bold type denotes home games<lb/>
J.V. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Jan. 19 William &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 denote home games<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?wn<lb/>
? :llpWW<lb/>
$<lb/>
r on Friday ,o ?J8ffiS&amp;BU.<lb/>
?4<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
Jan. 1<lb/>
Jan. 2<lb/>
Jan. 2<lb/>
Feb.<lb/>
Feb.<lb/>
Feb.<lb/>
Feb. 2<lb/>
Feb. 2<lb/>
Mar.<lb/>
Mar.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0015"/><lb/>
ison<lb/>
(even distance<lb/>
ts indoors the<lb/>
on individual<lb/>
louts compet-<lb/>
nters Maurice<lb/>
9lace, Palmer<lb/>
3erald Klas in<lb/>
Scott Miller in<lb/>
captain Larry<lb/>
ftlkerson will<lb/>
, Art Miller in<lb/>
Roy Quick in<lb/>
tson and Ivey<lb/>
s.<lb/>
this year the<lb/>
d State in a tri<lb/>
)oast Confere<lb/>
iference meet<lb/>
xington, Va.<lb/>
uth<lb/>
ien he faced<lb/>
ntastic felt<lb/>
 their entire<lb/>
he South and<lb/>
unning game<lb/>
?ke the better<lb/>
the outside<lb/>
gg hopes to<lb/>
I after he<lb/>
sit ion is not<lb/>
8 out the<lb/>
ito clinical<lb/>
y event in<lb/>
rimers will<lb/>
ouble dual<lb/>
f<lb/>
V<lb/>
-e<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTA1NHEADVOL. 5, NO.2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
15<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
Bucs edge ASU Mo unties in thriller<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Emotionally and physically drained<lb/>
from a string of pressure packed<lb/>
performances, the Pirates baskerball team<lb/>
barely defeated Press Maravich's Appala-<lb/>
chian State Mountaineers Monday night<lb/>
53-52.<lb/>
East Carolina returned home after a<lb/>
month on the road in which they were<lb/>
confronted with three one point<lb/>
decisions.<lb/>
Coach Tom Quinn reflected his players<lb/>
weariness.<lb/>
"Our players are obviously fatiqued<lb/>
from the last two weeks on the road. The<lb/>
mental and rigorous physical game<lb/>
conditions have taken their toll. The<lb/>
emotional pitch of a one point game is<lb/>
especially draining<lb/>
The Mountaineers broke out into a<lb/>
12-2 lead, but with Nicky White's three<lb/>
point play the Pirates closed to within six<lb/>
with 11:30 remaining.<lb/>
Appalachian continued to control the<lb/>
game, but six straight points by Nicky 3<lb/>
White, Greg Ashorn and Reggie Lee cut o<lb/>
the lead to 29-25 at halftime.<lb/>
In the second hald the Mountaineers<lb/>
buiit up a quick 11 point lead due largely<lb/>
to Stan Davis who scored 22 points in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Quinn loudly objected to several<lb/>
decisions by the officials and drew a<lb/>
technical foul, which quickly enlivened<lb/>
PIRATE CAGER NICKY WHITE battles Fairieigh-Dickinson center for control of a<lb/>
rebound. In the Pirates' last three games the outcome has been decided by one<lb/>
point.<lb/>
the Bucs.<lb/>
Larry Hunt and Lee both scored on<lb/>
thrilling drives and Roger Atkinson hit two<lb/>
free throws to make the score 48-45<lb/>
Appalachian with 2:15 left.<lb/>
With 26 seconds left the Bucs grabbed<lb/>
a rebound, Lee was fouled and sank both<lb/>
free throws to give the Bucs their only<lb/>
lead of the night but the most important<lb/>
one.<lb/>
The victory gave the Pirates a 6-6<lb/>
record and 3-2 in the conference, though a<lb/>
closer inspection 8 of the 12 games have<lb/>
been on the road.<lb/>
Quinn reflected on the conference<lb/>
race, "We have a definite chance at the<lb/>
championship. We've beaten Davidson<lb/>
and still play Furman twice and the<lb/>
Citadel at home. I think the team that can<lb/>
win at home plus win four road games will<lb/>
take first place in the conference race<lb/>
Reggie Lee led the Pirates with 13<lb/>
points, followed by White's 10, Atkinson's<lb/>
8 and Ashorn's 6.<lb/>
Next opponent for the Pirates is<lb/>
William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va. on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The Indians have had a long lay off<lb/>
between games but were pre-season<lb/>
ranked to finish in the top three in the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
ECU returns to Minges Coliseum for<lb/>
four straight home games beginning with<lb/>
St. Peters Wed. night and VMI on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Pat Dye adds three to grid staff<lb/>
East Carolina head football coach Pat<lb/>
Dye announced Tuesday the appointment<lb/>
of three assistant coaches: Frank Orgel,<lb/>
Ben Grieb and Lanny Norris.<lb/>
In making the announcement, Coach<lb/>
Dye said: "The key to any winning<lb/>
football situation is discipline, enthus-<lb/>
iasm and an excellent staff of assistants<lb/>
to cover all facets of the game. I am<lb/>
building an excellent staff and these three<lb/>
coaches are integral parts of the winner I<lb/>
hope to build here<lb/>
Orgel, a former high school coach in<lb/>
Warner Robbin, Ga is the oldest of the<lb/>
three at 34. He comes to East Carolina<lb/>
from Florence State University of Alabama<lb/>
where he served as a graduate assistant In<lb/>
charge of the linebackers.<lb/>
His Warner Robbins High School team<lb/>
posted a 28-4-2 record in three years and<lb/>
Orgel was twice named coach of the<lb/>
year. Two of the three seasons Orgel<lb/>
headed up the Warner Robbins football<lb/>
team it went on to win regional<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Coach Orgel has been a long time<lb/>
friend of Dye. They played college<lb/>
football together at Georgia and played<lb/>
against each other in the service. "Pat<lb/>
helped me go to Florence State. We have<lb/>
always said we wanted to coach together<lb/>
and when he called I couldn't believe it<lb/>
was happening. When he called and<lb/>
asked me to come, I made up my mind<lb/>
very quickly. Normally, you take your<lb/>
time and think about it, but I knew Pat<lb/>
would not leave Alabama unless he was<lb/>
coming to a good place<lb/>
Ben Grieb, a former East Carolina<lb/>
player and team captain in 1968, is the<lb/>
second appointee. Grieb was one of the<lb/>
few graduate assistants at Louisiana State<lb/>
University who did not come up through<lb/>
the playing ranks. He trained under Craig<lb/>
Randall, a noted defensive strategist and<lb/>
defensive coordinator at LSU.<lb/>
At East Carolina in a career running<lb/>
from 1965-68, Grieb played under Coach<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich in the Stasavich single<lb/>
wing.<lb/>
"I came here because my close friends<lb/>
at LSU said Coach Dye was No. 1. Also,<lb/>
this is a good school with a sound<lb/>
program. A winning tradition has been<lb/>
Continued on page 16.<lb/>
1973-74 SWIMMING<lb/>
Jan. 19 Army &amp; St Johns<lb/>
Jan. 22 N.C. State Unvi.<lb/>
Jan. 27 Unvi. of Maryland<lb/>
Feb. 1 Richmond<lb/>
Feb. 2 Univ. of Virgina<lb/>
Feb. lt Catholic Unvi.<lb/>
Feb. 21 Appalachian<lb/>
Feb. 23 VMI<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/>
The ice-cream lady melts away,<lb/>
To see you in the Passion Play.<lb/>
w<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
FISH HOUSE COUNTRY<lb/>
GO PIRATES<lb/>
IN WASHINGTON<lb/>
Drive a Little and Eet e Lot !<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
?<lb/>
FILET OF TENDER SWEET FRIED<lb/>
Flounder$J95 mams $925<lb/>
if<lb/>
419 West<lb/>
Main St.<lb/>
Telephone<lb/>
9461301<lb/>
DAILY SPECIAL<lb/>
FAMILY STYLE FISH DINNER<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$1.95<lb/>
including French Fries, Cote Slaw,<lb/>
and Hushpuppies<lb/>
Children under 12 $1.00<lb/>
RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT<lb/>
710 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Across the River<lb/>
I<lb/>
Also featuring Pitt Cooked BBQ, Chicken, and Steaks<lb/>
Phone 752-2624<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
nmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO.2717 JAN. 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
?w?n<lb/>
?<lb/>
Coach Rat Dye: oonfidentfafuture<lb/>
m  . r. - xl ?,i?r. ore rf 111<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
To carry on a winning tradition you<lb/>
obviously select someone with a<lb/>
successful background. With Sonny<lb/>
Randle gone, East Carolina University has<lb/>
done just that in naming Pat Dye of<lb/>
Alabama new head football coach.<lb/>
Dye first contacted ECU Athletic<lb/>
Director Clarence Stasavich four years ago<lb/>
when Mike McGee left to become head<lb/>
coach at Duke University, only to find that<lb/>
Randle already had one foot in the<lb/>
door. When the opportunity presented<lb/>
itself again, Dye jumped at the chance.<lb/>
"I flew up here December 9-the tenth<lb/>
was the interview recalled Dye. "I was<lb/>
offered the job at that time and accepted<lb/>
it three days later<lb/>
"I was impressed with the school, the<lb/>
community, and the players-they've got<lb/>
an excellent attitude<lb/>
Although this job represented a dream<lb/>
come true, Dye was surprisingly calm<lb/>
about the interview.<lb/>
"I had never been interviewed for a<lb/>
head coaching job before, and I was<lb/>
amazed that I was not nervous about it<lb/>
Dye related. "I know I'm not the smartest<lb/>
head coach in the world-I'd be putting<lb/>
people on the moon if I was. Communi-<lb/>
cation with the players is what I feel I do<lb/>
best<lb/>
Since 1935 Dye has served as an<lb/>
assistant coach under the legendary Paul<lb/>
?8631" Bryant of Alabama. Alabama has<lb/>
been breeding ground for head coaches<lb/>
all over the nation, and Bryant deserves<lb/>
staff<lb/>
Continued from page 15.<lb/>
established and I feel a little bit stunned<lb/>
at an opportunity like this<lb/>
"This area has a great football flavor<lb/>
with good people backing us. Most of all,<lb/>
this area has some very solid and very<lb/>
talented players. What's more, I think we<lb/>
zan recruit and build a team here<lb/>
The third new coach is Lanny Norris,<lb/>
Dne-time terror of Southeastern Con-<lb/>
?erence quarterbacks when he played<lb/>
strong safety for Alabama.<lb/>
Norris comes to East Carolina from<lb/>
Arkansas where he was serving as a<lb/>
graduate assistant. "This job means more<lb/>
o me than many people know Norris<lb/>
jays. "When Coach Dye called I was<lb/>
tattered to think he considered me<lb/>
naterial for the position. As young as I<lb/>
am, Coach Dye has given me a chance to<lb/>
rtart at a great football school. I will be<lb/>
ible to see if I really want to coach. That<lb/>
s not a negative comment, I simply<lb/>
laven't been in coaching that long. Every-<lb/>
hing I do here at East Carolina will be<lb/>
art of a learning process for me. I wish I<lb/>
:ould tell everyone how eager I am<lb/>
Norris started for three years at<lb/>
Mabama, playing strong safety for two<lb/>
'ears and cornerback his senior<lb/>
'ear. During that time, the Crimson Tide<lb/>
isited three post-season bowls: the<lb/>
stro-Bluebonnet Bowl, the Orange Bowl<lb/>
tnd the Cotton Bowl. As a high school<lb/>
layer in Russellville, Ala Norris quarter<lb/>
)acked the Russellville High School Team<lb/>
o a state championship.<lb/>
Coaching duties have not been broken<lb/>
lown specifically for any of the three<lb/>
Appointees. That will come next week<lb/>
ifter the staff has been completed.<lb/>
much of the credit. His influence on Dye<lb/>
is beyond explanation.<lb/>
"I studied coach Bryant closely<lb/>
because I was sort of an outsider, having<lb/>
played at Georgia Dye said. "He was<lb/>
more like a daddy than a boss to me, and<lb/>
I think be looked at me that way<lb/>
Alabama's success in collegiate<lb/>
football during the time that Dye was<lb/>
there is common knowledge to any<lb/>
football fan, and must hold many rich<lb/>
memories for him.<lb/>
"The 1965 national championship team<lb/>
was satisfying but the most rewarding was<lb/>
the 1966 team that went undefeated and<lb/>
beat Nebraska in the Sugar Bowl said<lb/>
Dye. "That was the year that Notre Dame<lb/>
and Michigan State played to that 10-10<lb/>
tie<lb/>
"The ultimate goal of any team is to be<lb/>
undefeated stated Dye. "When you do<lb/>
this you've done all you can. What more<lb/>
can you ask?"<lb/>
During his collegiate days as an<lb/>
All-America at Georgia, Dye. served as an<lb/>
alternate co-captain with Fran Tarkenton,<lb/>
who is now quarterback for the Minnesota<lb/>
Vikings.<lb/>
"I made him famous Dye jokingly<lb/>
remarked. "I was an offensive guard then<lb/>
and he had to scramble<lb/>
Dye has been influenced by many<lb/>
people in his lifetime, and he believes<lb/>
every coach he had was a definite<lb/>
influence on him. Especially important to<lb/>
him has been a statement made by one of<lb/>
his high school coaches-a statement he<lb/>
has lived by ever since.<lb/>
"He told me: 'Never follow a crowd<lb/>
unless you know you are an influence in<lb/>
the crowd, and know that what you are<lb/>
doing is right "<lb/>
"My daddy was probably my biggest<lb/>
influence Dye continued. "He taught me<lb/>
to always be honest and straightforward<lb/>
to your fellow man, regardless of whether<lb/>
it was good or bad for you<lb/>
A head football coach is faced with a<lb/>
dual challenge. He must win to survive,<lb/>
yet not forget that he is working within<lb/>
the educational atmosphere of the<lb/>
university.<lb/>
"That is so important to me<lb/>
explained Dye in reference to this<lb/>
challenge. "Those kids are here for four<lb/>
years to build a foundation to live for the<lb/>
rest of their lives<lb/>
"It's our job as coaches to set them on<lb/>
the right way, which we as mature adults<lb/>
know is the right way, to be successful in<lb/>
whatever they do<lb/>
Purple bops Gold<lb/>
Tuesday night the women's basketball<lb/>
team held their annual Purple-Gold<lb/>
contest with the Purple reigning<lb/>
victorious by the decisive margin of 57-34.<lb/>
Sheilah Cotton and Le Ann Swain were<lb/>
the top scorers for the Purple squad,<lb/>
picking up 24 and 13 points respectively.<lb/>
Fracis Swenholt led the Gold with 13<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Both squads were coached by Miss<lb/>
Catherine Bolten.<lb/>
First game for the team is this Friday<lb/>
when they travel to Chapel Hill to face<lb/>
North Carolina in Carmichael Auditorium.<lb/>
Tournament coming<lb/>
The intramural wrestling tournament is<lb/>
scheduled for January 22 at 7:00 p.m. at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Participants are asked<lb/>
to arrive at 6:00 p.m. for weigh-ins. Pro-<lb/>
spective entrants in the annual foul<lb/>
shooting contest have until January 25<lb/>
to submit their applications. Sam Byrer<lb/>
of Kappa Sigma will be on hand to defend<lb/>
his title in this event.<lb/>
Intramural basketball heads into its<lb/>
stretch drive with many league-leading<lb/>
contigents marking time until playoff<lb/>
action begins. Teams slated for post-<lb/>
season action include the Junkies,<lb/>
Horrors, Contured Phitz, Kool and the<lb/>
Gang, Zig Zag II. and the Royal Shafts.<lb/>
Several league races have not yet been<lb/>
decided, including Fraternity League One,<lb/>
where Pi Kappa Phi, Pi Lambda Phi, and<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha all cling to title<lb/>
aspirations.<lb/>
A photo-finish also appears imminent<lb/>
in Dorm League Five, where the Tri G's,<lb/>
Griffon Gorillas, and Cold Ducks have 2-0<lb/>
marks.<lb/>
Dye feels four things are of utmost<lb/>
importance if one is to be a success both<lb/>
on the football field and in life. They<lb/>
are: discipline, self-sacrifice, prepar-<lb/>
ation, and hard work.<lb/>
"Discipline, to me, means doing the<lb/>
things necessary to be successful that<lb/>
you don't like to do<lb/>
"Self-sacrifice is that quarterback who<lb/>
was a star in high school-who's had his<lb/>
heart set on playing quarterback, but who<lb/>
can't help his college team there so he<lb/>
plays in the defensive secondary<lb/>
"Preparation is starting right now and<lb/>
preparing for next season. And during the<lb/>
season you play them one at a time and<lb/>
start preparing for the next game right<lb/>
after the one you've played<lb/>
"Hard work is easy to talk about, but<lb/>
very few people in the world work<lb/>
hard. You have to work hard and then<lb/>
work even harder to outwork your<lb/>
opponent<lb/>
"Goals are important on and off the<lb/>
field concluded Dye. "They'll be lost off<lb/>
the field without them<lb/>
Dye concentrated 100 percent on the<lb/>
Sugar Bowl as far as preparation for Notre<lb/>
Dame was concerned, but suffered<lb/>
through a tremendous amount of<lb/>
distractions, including thinking about<lb/>
who he would invite to be his assistants<lb/>
at East Carolina.<lb/>
"I'm trying to build a young,<lb/>
enthusiastic staff made up of outstanding<lb/>
people asserted Dye. "And I said<lb/>
people-not coaches. Fhey'll be enthusi-<lb/>
astic coaches and outstanding people<lb/>
The East Carolina student body is a<lb/>
very vital force in coach Dye's concept of<lb/>
football.<lb/>
"The student body can have as much<lb/>
influence on a football team as any<lb/>
factor said Dye. "I don't feel that I have<lb/>
to solicit their support. We'd like their<lb/>
continued support<lb/>
Coaching a major college football<lb/>
team is a tough enough job, but Pat Dye<lb/>
is stepping into a difficult situation.<lb/>
Should the Pirate gridders continue<lb/>
their winning ways, there are those who<lb/>
will say he is just reaping Sonny Randle's<lb/>
harvest; and if they lose there are those<lb/>
who will say that he isn't the coachRandle<lb/>
was.<lb/>
Dye, young, confident and sincere, is<lb/>
ready to accept that challenge.<lb/>
(<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
SERVING CREATIVE FOODS<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 11 a.m. to 2 p.m 4:45 p.m. to 8 p.m.<lb/>
EARLY EATERS SPECIAL!<lb/>
Your choice of Meat, Salad, Vegetables, and<lb/>
Bread or Drink for only $1.35<lb/>
Lunch 11 a.m. -11:45 a.m.<lb/>
Dinner 4:45-5:30 p.m.<lb/>
 o<lb/>
-?.<lb/>
-a.<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039899_0017"/>
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