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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00039909_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
m<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
VOL. 5, NO. 377<lb/>
MARCH 1974<lb/>
mmmtmmmm<lb/>
'The first step'<lb/>
Med school gets limited expansion<lb/>
By SYDNEY ANN GREEN<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
Expansion of the East Carolina Medical<lb/>
School came closer to reality Tuesday,<lb/>
February 26 when the state legislature's<lb/>
General Assembly Joint Appropriations<lb/>
Committee approved a measure calling for<lb/>
the expansion.<lb/>
This bill calls for an increase from 20 to<lb/>
40 in the number of medical students, the<lb/>
addition of a second-year class at the ECU<lb/>
Medical School and the construction of a<lb/>
$15 million basic science building.<lb/>
The measure will not be considered by<lb/>
the House and Senate until early April.<lb/>
The plans for this expansion will be<lb/>
drawn up by the UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
and submitted to the 1975 General<lb/>
Assembly as part of the board's budget<lb/>
request, as stated by the bill.<lb/>
Dr. Wallace Wooles, dean of the ECU<lb/>
Medical School commented, "I'm<lb/>
convinced that what they've made is a firs;<lb/>
step toward a degree granting school and<lb/>
this is really a significant step. The<lb/>
legislatures are to be commended for<lb/>
responding to the needs of the people<lb/>
ECU buses stopped<lb/>
By DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
SGA President Bill Bodenhamer<lb/>
announced Tuesday that the ECU buses<lb/>
would cease running after 4:15<lb/>
Wednesday, March 6.<lb/>
Bodenhamer was in Raleigh yesterday<lb/>
to lobby support for an emergency<lb/>
allocation request ion from the governor's<lb/>
N.C. State Energy Commission.<lb/>
Earlier in the year, ECU had been<lb/>
warned of a possible fuel cutback to come<lb/>
around the first of March or<lb/>
April. Officials had advised ECU to look<lb/>
for other distributers around Greenville.<lb/>
But Bodenhamer explained, as of yet there<lb/>
was no word from local distributers about<lb/>
the 60 gallons needed every day, the cost<lb/>
would run about $650.00 a month.<lb/>
ECU was notified Tuesday, March 5<lb/>
Continued on page eleven.<lb/>
Wooles explained, "Our (the medical<lb/>
school) imminentt business is to<lb/>
implement what the legislature has<lb/>
passed. We will do our darndest to<lb/>
implement the expansion to a second<lb/>
year. Any time we get a mandate this<lb/>
university does its darndest to meet it and<lb/>
the medical school is no different<lb/>
He explained that the changes in the<lb/>
medical school would not take place over<lb/>
night although, "It can't happen soon<lb/>
enough to please this school he<lb/>
said. The Board of Governors will have to<lb/>
present the plans to the General Assembly<lb/>
- we hope it will be for next year. We'll try<lb/>
to implement the expansion as quickly as<lb/>
possible He added that the most<lb/>
immediately felt changes would be in the<lb/>
class size.<lb/>
According to Wooles the county has<lb/>
offered to sell the old hospital to Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins for use as a teaching facility for<lb/>
the medical school. "This many have the<lb/>
potential for being an excellent teaching<lb/>
facility. This is crucial. If planned well it<lb/>
can represent a great compliment to Pitt<lb/>
County hospital in providing help and<lb/>
excellent teaching facilities for people of<lb/>
the area and state<lb/>
The bill also has the following<lb/>
DR. WALLACE WOOLES<lb/>
amendments:<lb/>
-A requirement that the ECU Medical<lb/>
School concentrate of the training of<lb/>
family physicians.<lb/>
Continued on page five.<lb/>
ECU students join in streaking<lb/>
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A breath of spring kissed the ECU<lb/>
campus this week causing the spirits of<lb/>
students to reach an unprecedented<lb/>
high. The worries and anxieties of a crisis-<lb/>
striken winter were temporarily gone - and<lb/>
along with them went all clothing as the<lb/>
nationwide "streaking" fad hit campus full<lb/>
force. This student bliss, however, was<lb/>
soon to be somewhat dimmed as ECU<lb/>
administrators passed warnings to the<lb/>
students that possible criminal action<lb/>
would be taken against those involved with<lb/>
streaking activities.<lb/>
Flashes of flesh - and plenty of it were<lb/>
a common sight on College Hill Drive and<lb/>
in front of Greene Dorm Monday night as<lb/>
some 40-50 men and women "streakers"<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS "streak" on College Hill Drive.<lb/>
ran about in various sized groups cheering<lb/>
and laughing as they went. ECU students<lb/>
were participating in action that reinforced<lb/>
the title that the Raleigh News and<lb/>
Observer gave N.C. - the nation's streak<lb/>
center.<lb/>
In a Raleigh News and Observer article<lb/>
on March 6, Dr. Charles G. Mitchell,<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Psychology<lb/>
Department, commented on the Monday<lb/>
night streaking session. "The best<lb/>
response for authority is to laugh at<lb/>
it. The motivation for streaking is no<lb/>
different than eating goldfish, an older fad<lb/>
of college students Mitchell also<lb/>
mentioned panty raids, which were later<lb/>
popular saying that sometimes students<lb/>
were injured in the commotion of a panty<lb/>
raid. However, he stated that so far the<lb/>
streaking has been "non-destructive<lb/>
"Naked runners may disturb the<lb/>
sensibilities of some people Mitchell<lb/>
said, "but they aren't hurting anyone. If<lb/>
anyone gets shocked at the human body,<lb/>
that's their problem<lb/>
According to Mitchell, trouble resulted<lb/>
in the past when authorities attempted to<lb/>
interfere with student fads. However, he<lb/>
said, he could not predict whether<lb/>
streaking would die out or lead to other<lb/>
activities if allowed to continue.<lb/>
Following the streaking activities of<lb/>
March 4 and 5, James H. Tucker, Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs issued the following<lb/>
memorandumwarning to ECU students:<lb/>
All students should be aware of the fact<lb/>
that participation in the current fad of<lb/>
"streaking" constitutes the misdemeanor<lb/>
criminal offense of indecent exposure and<lb/>
is a violation of North Carolina General<lb/>
Statute 14.190.9.<lb/>
This statute states that any person who<lb/>
willfully exposes the private parts of his or<lb/>
her person in any public place and in the<lb/>
presence of any other person or persons of<lb/>
the opposite sex, or aids, abets, or<lb/>
procures another person to perform such<lb/>
act is guilty of a misdemeanor which is<lb/>
punishable by a fine of up to $500 and six<lb/>
months in jail.<lb/>
Civil offenses are matters over which<lb/>
the University has no control. Students<lb/>
who commit criminal acts must answer to<lb/>
local law enforcement officers and<lb/>
accordingly suffer the consequences on an<lb/>
individual case by case basis.<lb/>
I would like to commend all of you who<lb/>
have refused to participate in this latest<lb/>
fad. I appeal to the others to refrain from<lb/>
such conduct and to act in a mature and<lb/>
responsible manner.<lb/>
One streaxing episode involved one<lb/>
lone male student who shed his garments<lb/>
at one end of the crowded street in front of<lb/>
the Student Union and swiftly bicycled<lb/>
across campus in the nude. The crowd,<lb/>
made up mostly of students and faculty,<lb/>
responded with loud clapping, cheers and<lb/>
perhaps a few disgruntled looks.<lb/>
This particular streaker called his nude<lb/>
cruise through campus in broad daylight<lb/>
stimulating and exhilarating and said he<lb/>
would have enjoyed it more if he had not<lb/>
had to worry about being apprehended by<lb/>
campus authorities. He called his trip a<lb/>
"freedom unbefore experienced" and<lb/>
expressed his view that a streaking<lb/>
organization such as the American<lb/>
Streaker Society (at UNC-Chapel Hill)<lb/>
should be organized on the ECU campus<lb/>
so that the streaking campaigns would be<lb/>
larger and involve more students such as<lb/>
the ones held at UNC-Chapel Hill and<lb/>
ONC-Greensboro where groups of over 200<lb/>
, Continued on page eleven.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
wmmmmmmmwmm<lb/>
Streaking<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Re: Streaking<lb/>
All students should be aware of the fact<lb/>
that participation in the current fad of<lb/>
"streaking" constitutes the misdeameanor<lb/>
criminal offense of indecent exposure and<lb/>
is a violation of North Carolina General<lb/>
Statute 14.190.9.<lb/>
This statute states that any person who<lb/>
willfully exposes the private parts of his or<lb/>
her person in any public place and in the<lb/>
presence of any other person or persons of<lb/>
the opposite sex, or aids, abets, or<lb/>
procures another person to perform such<lb/>
act is guilty of a misdeameanor which is<lb/>
punishable by a fine of up to $500 and six<lb/>
months in jail.<lb/>
Civil offenses are matters over which<lb/>
the University has no control. Students<lb/>
who commit criminal acts must answer to<lb/>
local law enforcement officers and<lb/>
accordingly suffer the consequences on an<lb/>
individual case by case basis.<lb/>
I would like to commend all of you who<lb/>
have refused to participate in this latest<lb/>
fad. I appeal to the others to refrain from<lb/>
such conduct and to act in a mature and<lb/>
responsible manner.<lb/>
James H. Tucker<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs<lb/>
Group pictures<lb/>
Any member of any of the following<lb/>
organizations should contact the Buc-<lb/>
caneer office (758-6501) as soon as<lb/>
possible because these groups need to<lb/>
have their pictures taken immediately for<lb/>
the 74 Buccaneer:<lb/>
Student Nurses Association, Young<lb/>
Home Designers, Lambda Tay, Men's Glee<lb/>
Club, Pi Omega Pi, Phi Epsilon Mu,<lb/>
Canterbury Club, King Youth Fellowship,<lb/>
NAIT, SOULS, Epsilon Pi Tau, Phi Upsilon<lb/>
Omicron, Pi Mu Epsilon, Pre-Med,<lb/>
Pre-Dent Society, Hebrew Youth Fellow-<lb/>
ship, Baptist Student Center, Christian<lb/>
Science College Organization, Lutheran<lb/>
Student Association, Pi Kappa Lambda,<lb/>
Law Society, Rebel, Phi Delta Kappa, Phi<lb/>
Epsilon Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Gamma<lb/>
Theta Upsilon, Industrial &amp; Tech Ed. Club,<lb/>
National Art Ed. Club, NCMTA, Student<lb/>
Council for Exceptional Children, SEMNC,<lb/>
ECU Debate Union, Circle KClub, College<lb/>
Republicans Club, ACS, Accounting<lb/>
Society, Modern Dance Club.<lb/>
Ride to Raleigh<lb/>
Urgently needed: Ride to Raleigh,<lb/>
Wednesday March 13. Call 758-6366; ask<lb/>
for Pat Crawford or Diane Taylor, or leave<lb/>
name and number.<lb/>
Peace Corps<lb/>
Peace Corps and Vista have openings<lb/>
now in this country and overseas for<lb/>
qualified persons who want to help others<lb/>
in a meaningful way. There are 700<lb/>
programs in 50 states and 60 countries<lb/>
around the world where you skills and<lb/>
experience are earnestly needed. Living<lb/>
allowance, medical care, transportation<lb/>
costs are provided. Your reward will be<lb/>
doing something that makes sense<lb/>
today. Women and minorities are<lb/>
encourages to apply. We need: business<lb/>
people, home economists, Spanish<lb/>
speakers, french speakers, nurses,<lb/>
teachers, etc.<lb/>
To learn if you qualify, stop by and talk<lb/>
with former volunteers. They will explain<lb/>
in personal terms their own experience as<lb/>
a volunteer.<lb/>
Recruiters will be in the Student Center<lb/>
lobby March 11-14 from 9 a.m. to 4:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Study skills class<lb/>
Dr. George Weigand will teach the<lb/>
Study Skills Class Spring Quarter in Room<lb/>
209, Wright Building. The class will begin<lb/>
on March 11, Monday at 1:00<lb/>
p.m. Attendance is voluntary and it is not<lb/>
necessary to register for th.o class.<lb/>
If you are unable to attend class the<lb/>
first day you may come a few days late, or<lb/>
if your schedule is such that you cannot<lb/>
attend class every day you may attend<lb/>
part-time.<lb/>
Chem seminar<lb/>
Dr. David Rosenthal Assistant Director,<lb/>
Chemistry and Life Sciences Division,<lb/>
Research Triangle Institute, will present a<lb/>
seminar on "Recent Developments in Low<lb/>
Resolution Gas Chromatography-Mass<lb/>
Spectrometry Friday March 8, 1974 at<lb/>
3.00 p.m. in room 202 Flanagan Building.<lb/>
Coffee will be served in the conference<lb/>
room. All interested persons are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
STREAKING HITS ECUpage one.<lb/>
WESTMORELAND SPEAKS page three.<lb/>
CALENDAR COMMITTEE MEETS page four.<lb/>
MODEL UN; DR. BROWN page five.<lb/>
REVIEWS pages six and seven<lb/>
EDITORIALCOMMENTARYFORUM pages eight and nine<lb/>
CLASSIFIED page ten<lb/>
STREAKERS AND BUSES page eleven<lb/>
FLASHES page thirteen<lb/>
SPORTS pages fourteen, fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
Slave auction<lb/>
"Premarital Sex and Moral Values" will<lb/>
be discussed with Dr. Charles Moore in<lb/>
Garrett Dorm on Monday at 7:30. This is<lb/>
part of the bi-monthly Human Sexuality<lb/>
Series.<lb/>
All day Saturday will be the Garrett<lb/>
Dorm Slave Auction for a money-making<lb/>
project. Garrett Dormees offer your bodies<lb/>
AND your services for money and profit<lb/>
(the dorm's).<lb/>
Ping Pong Tournament deadline to sign<lb/>
up is Saturday. Competition begins on<lb/>
Monday. Join the action and the Garrett<lb/>
Hall Ping Pong Pros.<lb/>
Eckanar<lb/>
All students and staff are cordially<lb/>
invited to attend a film on ECKANKAR, the<lb/>
science of total awareness. It will be<lb/>
shown Monday, March 11, at 71J30 p.m. in<lb/>
201 of the ECU Student Union. There will<lb/>
be a question and answer session<lb/>
following the film.<lb/>
Teacher exams<lb/>
Less than two weeks remain for<lb/>
prospective teachers who plan to take the<lb/>
National Teacher Examinations at ECU<lb/>
April 6 to register.<lb/>
ECU Director of Testing J.S. Childers<lb/>
said all test registrations must be in the<lb/>
Princeton, N.J. office of the Educational<lb/>
Testing Service not later than March 14.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
materials are available from Childers at the<lb/>
ECU Department of Psychology or directly<lb/>
from the Educational Testing Service, Box<lb/>
911, Princeton, N.J. 08540.<lb/>
The tests consist of a common<lb/>
examination, including tests in profes-<lb/>
sional education and general education to<lb/>
be administered in the morning, and one of<lb/>
28 area examinations to be given in the<lb/>
afternoon.<lb/>
Parachute club<lb/>
Spring is the time to fly. The ECU<lb/>
Sport Parachute Club would like to help<lb/>
you find your wings and soar with the rest<lb/>
of us. A special spring price is being<lb/>
offered to all ECU students. $25 dollars<lb/>
includes the works, (static line jump,<lb/>
instruction, equipment, etc.) This is the<lb/>
cheapest price in the U.S.<lb/>
Classes are held each Friday night at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. in the ROTC classroom in<lb/>
Whichard annex. Classes are limited to<lb/>
seven students, so first come, first<lb/>
served. FFI call 752-7882.<lb/>
PRCS meeting<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Parks,<lb/>
Recreation and Conservation Society<lb/>
March 15 at 8:00 p.m. at Union<lb/>
Jack's. New memberships from recreation<lb/>
majors will be accepted at this time.<lb/>
Biographies needed<lb/>
Those students selected for Who's<lb/>
Who Among Students in American<lb/>
Universities and Colleges for 1974 who<lb/>
have not sent in their biographies to the<lb/>
publisher MUST do so at once or they will<lb/>
be removed from the list of those chosen,<lb/>
and their names and biographies will not<lb/>
appear in the 1974 edition of Who's Who.<lb/>
Mail biographies to: H. Pettus<lb/>
Randall, Director, Who's Who Among<lb/>
Students in American Colleges and<lb/>
Universities, 1700 Twenty-sixth Avenue,<lb/>
Tuscalossa, Alabama 35401.<lb/>
YAFF meeting<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of the Young<lb/>
Americans for Freedom will meet in Union<lb/>
206 at 7:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 7.<lb/>
All interested conservatives who have<lb/>
been disenfranchised by the liberal polices<lb/>
of the Democratic and Republican Parties<lb/>
are urged to attend. If you are disgusted<lb/>
with the sickness of Watergate,<lb/>
Nixonomics and McGovernism, come and<lb/>
join YAF.<lb/>
Art History tour<lb/>
The art and architecture of England,<lb/>
Germany, Austria and the Low Countries<lb/>
will be studied by an ECU touring group<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Conducted by Dr. Lloyd Benjamin of<lb/>
the ECU School of Art, the Art and<lb/>
Architecture Study Tour offers the serious<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate a chance to see<lb/>
and to study first hand European art of the<lb/>
past and present.<lb/>
Tour participants will receive nine<lb/>
hours' credit in the art history. The tour<lb/>
beings June 4 in New York with a flight to<lb/>
Frankfurt and ends July 8 in London with a<lb/>
return flight to New York.<lb/>
The itinerary includes museums, noted<lb/>
buildings of several architectural styles,<lb/>
and birthplaces and residences of famous<lb/>
artists in Frankfurt, Wurzburg, Rothen-<lb/>
burg, Munich, Vienna, Salzburg, Ulm,<lb/>
Heidelberg, Worms, Mainz, Cologne,<lb/>
Aachen, Antwerp, Ghent, Bruges,<lb/>
Haarlem, Amsterdam, Delfit, the Hague<lb/>
and London.<lb/>
Course requirements consist of<lb/>
attendance and participation at gallery<lb/>
lectures and on walking tours, written<lb/>
analysis of chosen works of art and a<lb/>
research paper due in early October.<lb/>
Deadline for tour registration is May<lb/>
1. Since only 20 persons will be accepted,<lb/>
early registration is suggested.<lb/>
Further details about the tour and<lb/>
registration materials are available from<lb/>
Dr. Benjamin at the ECU School of Art, or<lb/>
from the ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education, Boc 2727, Greenville.<lb/>
Who's Who<lb/>
Who's Who in American Universities<lb/>
and Colleges certificates are now available<lb/>
in 201 Whichard.<lb/>
s<lb/>
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to a se<lb/>
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graduatior<lb/>
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that he I<lb/>
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when the 1<lb/>
was riding<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039909_0003"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
3<lb/>
m<lb/>
Students favor graduation in<lb/>
� If<lb/>
II<lb/>
ByJOEVAUGHAN<lb/>
Special to the Fountainhead<lb/>
About 80 per cent of ECU'S seniors are<lb/>
in favor of graduation exercises according<lb/>
to a senior survey poll says James<lb/>
Westmoreland, senior class president.<lb/>
This percentage reflects the opinion of<lb/>
many seniors, but there was not an<lb/>
overwhelming response to the survey<lb/>
Questionnaire, Westmoreland said. The<lb/>
JAMES WESTMORELAND<lb/>
survey was distributed to all seniors last<lb/>
quarter asking for overall opinion on<lb/>
graduation functions.<lb/>
Following the favorable expressions for<lb/>
graduation functions, Westmoreland said<lb/>
that he looked into the possibility of<lb/>
making better use of the $10 graduation<lb/>
fee. The $10 fee is used for cap, gown and<lb/>
diploma expenses.<lb/>
Until this year, the senior graduation<lb/>
fee covered the rental of caps and gowns<lb/>
for $3.50, administration service and<lb/>
diploma for $6.50. An additional fifty<lb/>
cents was added to the $10.00 fee for<lb/>
purchase of the tassel.<lb/>
There is a price leeway for which the<lb/>
fees can be spent, Westmoreland<lb/>
said. The type of gown and quality of<lb/>
diploma parchment affect the overall price,<lb/>
he explained.<lb/>
"I asked Mr. Joseph Clark, head of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store, to look into the<lb/>
possibility of alternative set-ups for the<lb/>
caps and gowns. Mr. Clark found out<lb/>
about the Keepsake Gowns and we<lb/>
considered the idea further Westmore-<lb/>
land said. i<lb/>
The Keepsake Gowns, which are �<lb/>
purchased instead of rented, were adopted<lb/>
for use in this year's spring graduation<lb/>
exercises. The tassel cost has also been<lb/>
added into the $10.00 fee, but<lb/>
Westmoreland doesn't know why the cost<lb/>
was additional in the past. Diplomas will<lb/>
be mailed to students instead of being<lb/>
issued during graduation exercises.<lb/>
"Even with the additional cost in the<lb/>
acetate gowns from $3.50 to $6.00 and the<lb/>
mailing of all diplomas at a cost of $4.00,<lb/>
the senior fee could be better used<lb/>
Westmoreland said.<lb/>
Though elaborate and colorful gowns<lb/>
were proposed, the majority of senior<lb/>
consensus favored the black gown,<lb/>
Westmoreland said. Acetate gowns are<lb/>
not the most inexpensive, but were<lb/>
thought to best serve the price range of<lb/>
graduation fee and also prove to be<lb/>
durable, Westmoreland stated.<lb/>
Coed killed in crash<lb/>
ROSEMARY BURTON<lb/>
An ECU coed was killed here Saturday<lb/>
night and six passengers were injured<lb/>
when the 1971 Volkswagon in which she<lb/>
was riding was struck broadside on U.S.<lb/>
264 within the Greenville City limits.<lb/>
Miss Rosemary Burton, a 19 year old<lb/>
sophomore, was pronounced dead on<lb/>
arrival at Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
late Saturday night after which her body<lb/>
was interred at Wilkerson Funeral<lb/>
Home. Due to family requests, Miss<lb/>
Burton's body was flown to Rehobath<lb/>
Beach, Delaware, where her family resides<lb/>
and the funeral will be held.<lb/>
According to ECU administration<lb/>
reports, she was living off campus and<lb/>
little was known of her outside activities,<lb/>
although she was a noted scholar and was<lb/>
consistently on the Dean's List.<lb/>
Norwood B. Starling, also an ECU<lb/>
student, was attempting to make a left turn<lb/>
into the River Bluff Apartments when his<lb/>
Volkswagon was struck broad side by a<lb/>
1971 Pontiac driver by William H. Roach of<lb/>
Grimesland, Rt. 1. Both cars sustained<lb/>
$700 damage each and slid some 30 feet<lb/>
after impact, according to Trooper Bill<lb/>
Brinson of the State Highway Patrol.<lb/>
Roach was charged with unsafe<lb/>
movement, but received no citation for not<lb/>
wearing glasses while operating a motor<lb/>
vehicle as his drivers license requested,<lb/>
according to the highway patrol. He was<lb/>
treated for a broken hand and was later<lb/>
County Memorial<lb/>
all other injured<lb/>
released from Pitt<lb/>
Hospital, as were<lb/>
passengers.<lb/>
Surviving Miss Burton are her mother,<lb/>
Mrs. Mary S. Burton and one older<lb/>
sister. Her father is deceased.<lb/>
Several factors favored the idea of<lb/>
purchasing caps and gowns, Westmore-<lb/>
land says. Keepsake Gowns will give the<lb/>
student something for his money as well<lb/>
as becoming a graduation memento.<lb/>
Graduation pictures can be taken at the<lb/>
liesure of the students and parent;<lb/>
through avoiding the rush to return caps<lb/>
and gowns after graduation.<lb/>
Negative factors pointed out by<lb/>
Westmoreland, conclude that some<lb/>
students do not want a cap and<lb/>
gown. Under the present plan, students<lb/>
will own caps and gowns which they would<lb/>
rather dispose of.<lb/>
"I feel that the question of whether to<lb/>
wear or not to wear caps and gowns is<lb/>
really not much of an issue when people<lb/>
consider the graduation exercises and the<lb/>
attendance of parents and friends<lb/>
Westmoreland said.<lb/>
Students graduating in the spring<lb/>
should see Joseph Clark, Student Supply<lb/>
Store manager, by the middle of spring<lb/>
quarter if they are not contacted by mail<lb/>
considering graduation caps and gowns.<lb/>
JVC Student Legislature meets<lb/>
ECU was represented by a 24 member<lb/>
delegation at the North Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) which met in Raleigh<lb/>
March 6.<lb/>
This year, ECU introduced a bill<lb/>
entitled "The Juvenile Justice Act The<lb/>
bill will raise the age of a juvenile offender<lb/>
to 18. It will also create a division of youth<lb/>
development under the department of<lb/>
Social Rehabilitation and Control and deal<lb/>
with other problems which have been<lb/>
encountered in past years when dealing<lb/>
with juveniles, delegation spokesmen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The delegation was selected from<lb/>
interested ECU students through a<lb/>
screening boartd made of delegates from<lb/>
the year before. The selected delegation<lb/>
then works on bills and procedure they will<lb/>
be involved with in the next session.<lb/>
ECU delegates and alternates this year<lb/>
are: Steven Nobles, House Delegate; C.<lb/>
DiAnne Bowen, House Alternate; John<lb/>
Hunter Davis, House Alternate; and Harry<lb/>
W. Stubbs IV, House Delegate; James H.<lb/>
"Jim" Davis, House Delegate; Richard A.<lb/>
Gilliam, House Delegate; Vemon Bean,<lb/>
House Alternate; Maurice Huntley, House<lb/>
Delegate; Debra J. "D.D DJxon, House<lb/>
Delegate; John E. Prevette Jr Senate;<lb/>
Susan Ann Quinn, Observer; Sarah Jan<lb/>
Noffsinger, House Delegate; Lee R.<lb/>
McLaughlin, Advisor; Michael D.<lb/>
Edwards, House Delegate; Jimmy<lb/>
Honeycutt, House Delegate; Freida Clark,<lb/>
Senator; Debbie Marie Ruthledge, House<lb/>
Delegate; Sally Lou Freeman, House<lb/>
Delegate; Mike West, House Delegate;<lb/>
Sandy West, House Delegate; Ronald G.<lb/>
"Greg" Mcleod, House Delegate; Valerie<lb/>
Szabo, House Delegate; Susan Jewell,<lb/>
House Delegate; Angela R. Pennine,<lb/>
Alternate.<lb/>
JACK MORROW demonstrates a dive from the high board In the Southern Conference<lb/>
swim meet held during quarter break. The Pirate swimmers won 18 first place awards out<lb/>
of 18 events. See related story on page sixteen.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
MW�<lb/>
�MM<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0004"/><lb/>
 �<lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Grants totalling $31,695<lb/>
received by University<lb/>
A total of $31,695 in grants from<lb/>
government agencies and private corpor-<lb/>
ations was received by ECU during<lb/>
January. The largest grant, given by the<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina Association for the<lb/>
N.C. Regional Medical Program, was a<lb/>
Health Manpower Development grant to<lb/>
the ECU School of Allied Health and Social<lb/>
Professions. The grant amounted to<lb/>
$23,470.<lb/>
The ECU Department of Chemistry and<lb/>
the ECU School of Business each received<lb/>
$2,500 from the E.I. du Pont de Nemours<lb/>
and Co. under the du Pont's company's<lb/>
1974 support program for university level<lb/>
business, science and engineering<lb/>
educaiton.<lb/>
Other grants to ECU included an award<lb/>
of $2,500 to Dr. Lynis Dohm of the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine for his heart research<lb/>
and Dr. D. D. Gross of the ECU Department<lb/>
of Philosophy for an African-Asian<lb/>
Institute.<lb/>
DORM STUDENTS observe ECU streakers below.<lb/>
Early quarter system for '76 up for vote<lb/>
The Calendar Committee now has<lb/>
under consideration for study purposes,<lb/>
an early quarter system for the 1975-76<lb/>
Academic Year- tw-�. � ���<lb/>
There are advantages<lb/>
and disadvantaaes to any ayatem; their<lb/>
objectives are to minimize these,<lb/>
especially for the students. The commit-<lb/>
tee feels that advantages for the early<lb/>
quarter are numerous.<lb/>
1. ECU students will not be handicapped<lb/>
Fall 1975<lb/>
Saturdays<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
I Monday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Spring 1976<lb/>
Saturdays.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Winter 1975-76<lb/>
10 Saturdays.<lb/>
PROPOSED 1975-76 CALENDAR<lb/>
10 Mondays, 10 Tuesdays, 10 Wednesdays, 10 Thursdays, 10 Fridays, 10<lb/>
August 27, 1975<lb/>
August 28, 1975<lb/>
August 29, 1975<lb/>
September 22, 1975<lb/>
September 29, 1975<lb/>
November 6, 1975<lb/>
November 8, 1975<lb/>
November 10, 1975<lb/>
November 13, 1975<lb/>
Faculty Meeting<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Classes Begin<lb/>
Change of Major<lb/>
preregistration<lb/>
Classes End<lb/>
Reading Day<lb/>
Common Exams<lb/>
Exams Begin<lb/>
Exams End<lb/>
9 Mondays, 10 Tuesdays, 10 Wednesdays, 10 Thursdays, 10 Fridays, 9<lb/>
February 23, 1976<lb/>
February 24, 1976<lb/>
March 22, 1976<lb/>
March 29, 1976<lb/>
April 16, 1976 (10:00 pm,<lb/>
April 26, 1976 (8:00 am)<lb/>
May 8, 1976<lb/>
May 10, 1976<lb/>
May 13, 1976<lb/>
May 16, 1976<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Classes Begin<lb/>
Change of Major<lb/>
Preregistration<lb/>
Spring Holidays Begin<lb/>
Classes Resume<lb/>
See Below<lb/>
Exams Begin<lb/>
Exams End<lb/>
Commencement<lb/>
10 Mondays, 11 Tuesdays, 10 Wednesdays, 10 Thursdays, 10 Fridays,<lb/>
in obtaining summer employment since<lb/>
the school year terminates in the middle of<lb/>
May.<lb/>
2. An early quarter calendar coincides<lb/>
better with the public school system in Pitt<lb/>
and neighboring counties. This feature<lb/>
has two advantages in that our student<lb/>
teachers are out of phase with public<lb/>
schools with the present calendar. Also,<lb/>
this calendar gives students and faculty<lb/>
with children of school age more common<lb/>
free time.<lb/>
3. An early quarter calendar provides for a<lb/>
long enough spring holiday that permits<lb/>
students (and faculty) to take advantage of<lb/>
chartered trips and tours either for the<lb/>
purpose of study or for vacation.<lb/>
The Calendar Committee is seeking<lb/>
student reaction to the proposed early<lb/>
quarter calendar. In addition to reactions<lb/>
to the proposed early quarter calendar,<lb/>
they are seeking student reactions to an<lb/>
alternate Winter Quarter calendar if the<lb/>
energy shortage persists.<lb/>
This latter calendar departs from the<lb/>
conventional in that no provisions are<lb/>
made for Thanksgiving Holidays;<lb/>
moreover, regular classes will be held on<lb/>
Saturday as on any other school day of the<lb/>
week. This calendar provides the<lb/>
opportunity for the University to minimize<lb/>
use of fuel and electricity by closing from<lb/>
February 7, 1976 to February 22, 1976.<lb/>
The committee requests everyone to<lb/>
express their opinion of this early quarter<lb/>
calendar by completing a ballot and<lb/>
placing it in the ballot box in the University<lb/>
Union information desk. Ballots are<lb/>
located next to the ballot box. The<lb/>
deadline is Tuesday, March 12,<lb/>
1974. Students and faculty response will<lb/>
constitute the basis for deciding whether<lb/>
or not to implement this calendar. Public<lb/>
input is important.<lb/>
MondayNovember 17, 1975Registration<lb/>
TuesdayNovember 18, 1975 (8:00 am)Classes Begin<lb/>
TuesdayNovember 25, 1975 (10:00 pm)Thanksgiving Vacation<lb/>
MondayDecember 1, 1975 (8:00 am)Classes Resume<lb/>
MondayDecember 8, 1975Change of Major<lb/>
MondayDecember 15, 1975Preregistration<lb/>
SaturdayDecember 20, 1975 (12 Noon)Christmas Vacation Begins<lb/>
MondayJanuary 5, 1976 (8:00 am)Classes Resume<lb/>
SaturdayFebruary 14, 1976'See Below<lb/>
MondayFebruary 16, 1976Reading Day<lb/>
TuesdayFebruary 17, 1976Exams Begin<lb/>
FridayFebruary 20, 1976Exams End<lb/>
An alternate Winter Quarter if the energy shortage persists No Thanksgiving Holiday but<lb/>
Masses on Saturday with class periods to be determined. 8 Mondays, 9 Tuesdays, 9<lb/>
Wednesdays, 9 Thursdays, 9 Fridays, and 9 Saturdays<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
I<lb/>
November 17, 1975<lb/>
November 18, 1975<lb/>
December 2C, 1975 (12 Noon)<lb/>
January 5, 1976 (8:00 am)<lb/>
January 31, 1976<lb/>
February 2, 1976<lb/>
February 3, 1976<lb/>
Friday February 6, 1976<lb/>
Common Exams will be held and regular classes held<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Classes Begin<lb/>
Christmas Holidays Begin<lb/>
Classes Resume<lb/>
Classes End<lb/>
Reading Day<lb/>
Exams Begin<lb/>
Exams End<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Every Tues and Thurs. from 3-6<lb/>
Your favorite beverage<lb/>
 regular price<lb/>
Your favorite beverage and<lb/>
a meat taco, $m'�5<lb/>
264 By-Pass Beside Peppi's Pizza<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0005"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD VOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
MMMfMMMfPWMftMtM<lb/>
5<lb/>
Med school<lb/>
Continued from page one.<lb/>
-A requirement that the UNC board use<lb/>
a $15 million appropriation provided by the<lb/>
bill for the construction of a basic medical<lb/>
sciences building.<lb/>
-A requirement that the UNC and ECU<lb/>
medical schools cooperate in gaining<lb/>
accreditation for the two-year ECU medical<lb/>
school so its graduates can readily transfer<lb/>
into third and fourth programs elsewhere.<lb/>
Another amendment asked that the<lb/>
medical school make special efforts to<lb/>
recruit minority students.<lb/>
The passage of this bill is considered a<lb/>
setback for the UNC board of<lb/>
governors. Last year the board refused a<lb/>
request by ECU to expand the school to a<lb/>
two year school and instead appointed a<lb/>
committee of out-of-state persons to<lb/>
investigate the situation. The committee<lb/>
report called for establishment of several<lb/>
Area Health Centers to be placed main ly in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina and not to<lb/>
expand the ECU Medical School.<lb/>
Legislation calling for a statewide<lb/>
referendum on the question of exDansion<lb/>
failed earlier during this session. Private<lb/>
compromise talks failed also, opening the<lb/>
way for the General Assembly's<lb/>
consideration of the issue. This resulted<lb/>
in the bill approved by the Joint<lb/>
Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
Wooles expressed hope that a four year<lb/>
medical school could be obtained<lb/>
sometime in the future. "I agree whole<lb/>
heartedly with Dr. Jenkins. We will not<lb/>
cease in our efforts until a complete<lb/>
degree granting school is established.<lb/>
Because of the steps taken this could be a<lb/>
reality by 1980 or 1982 and even sooner if<lb/>
hard work has anything to do with it<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, ECU Chancellor,<lb/>
commented on the action of the state<lb/>
legislature. "The ECU medical school is a<lb/>
reality.<lb/>
Tuesday's action in Raleigh shows that<lb/>
the people of North Carolina have spoken,<lb/>
through their elected representatives. The<lb/>
message is clear. The people want<lb/>
broader health education opportunities<lb/>
through the medical school here at East<lb/>
ECU sends delegates<lb/>
to Model UN council<lb/>
ECU will be represented by a<lb/>
four-member delegation at a Model United<lb/>
Nations Security Council to be held at<lb/>
Hollins College, Va. March 8-10.<lb/>
The ECU delegation will represent the<lb/>
position of Indonesia at the conference.<lb/>
Members of the delegation will be judged<lb/>
as to how well they follow the actual<lb/>
Indonesian position on such matters as<lb/>
admissions, the Korean question, the<lb/>
Middle East situation and other threats to<lb/>
international peace and security.<lb/>
The conference consists of five<lb/>
sessions in which member delegations<lb/>
discuss issues similar to those actually<lb/>
pending before the U.N. Security Council<lb/>
in New York. These delegations are sent<lb/>
from various schools throughout the<lb/>
eastern United States and assume the<lb/>
position of the U.N. Security Council<lb/>
members in their debate.<lb/>
Two resolutions will be proposed by<lb/>
the ECU delegation at the conference. The<lb/>
first is a request for a world conference to<lb/>
discuss the removal of all foreign military<lb/>
forces from Southeast Asia and establish a<lb/>
neutral zone in the area. The second<lb/>
resolution will offer an amendment to the<lb/>
United Nations Charter which will limit the<lb/>
exercise of a veto by permanent memebrs<lb/>
of the Council in all questions except the<lb/>
deployment of U.N. military forces.<lb/>
The ECU delegation will compete for<lb/>
awards with fifteen other schools at the<lb/>
conference. Schools that will send<lb/>
delegations include West Point,Princeton,<lb/>
University of Virginia, University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania and Duquesne.<lb/>
Brown announces<lb/>
candidacy for Senate<lb/>
Dr. Robert Brown of Grimesland has<lb/>
announced that he will run in the sixth<lb/>
senate district composed of Edgecombe,<lb/>
DR. ROBERT BROWN<lb/>
Martin, Halifax and Pitt Counties.<lb/>
Brown, who is 43, is employed in the<lb/>
School of Education at ECU. Along with<lb/>
his wife, Charlene, he also runs a small<lb/>
farm. He is a veteran of the Korean<lb/>
conflict and has three children.<lb/>
He feels his entry has made a political<lb/>
appointment a race. Prior to his entry<lb/>
there were only two candidates for two<lb/>
seats. Basically he feels that the<lb/>
government belongs to the people. The<lb/>
citizens have a right to be informed of its<lb/>
actions and intended actions.<lb/>
Brown said, "The medical school has<lb/>
made progress this session. But it is only<lb/>
one step toward a four year school. The<lb/>
leadership should come from the district<lb/>
where it will be located<lb/>
He also feels that the government has<lb/>
grown away from the citizens. "It uses<lb/>
them instead of serving them. Govern-<lb/>
ment should be returned to the citizens<lb/>
and be responsive to their needs he<lb/>
said. "My entry will give the citizens a<lb/>
choice<lb/>
Carolina University to help meet their<lb/>
critical need. And I think the vote ir the<lb/>
Joint Appropriations Committee shows<lb/>
that this message is being heeded.<lb/>
We are going to continue our efforts to<lb/>
provide first class and full fledged medical<lb/>
education in a degree granting, four year<lb/>
medical school on our campus.<lb/>
We believe this is the ultimate mission<lb/>
given us by the General Assembly over the<lb/>
past 10 years.<lb/>
Expansion of our medical school<lb/>
program now is greatly encouraging. It<lb/>
gives our dedicated and able faculty and<lb/>
staff the encouragement needed to go<lb/>
forward. The program they have begun<lb/>
affords an excellent opportunity to<lb/>
strengthen medical educaiton in our state<lb/>
and thus, eventually, increase health care<lb/>
delivery.<lb/>
This is our mission - that intended by<lb/>
the legislature - that we afford this medical<lb/>
education opportunity to the people now<lb/>
deprived of adequate medical care,<lb/>
particularly in the small towns and rural<lb/>
areas, and especially in the practice of<lb/>
family medicine. This has been our stated<lb/>
poal from the beginning<lb/>
FRANK WOODARD does Ms thing in the warm Winter sunlight.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
�PWM<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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Reviews<lb/>
MaClean following<lb/>
'Way to Dusty Death'<lb/>
ByJIMDODSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
THE WAY TO DUSTY DEATH<lb/>
Alistair MaClean Doubieday Co.<lb/>
Inc NewYorfc<lb/>
Question: What do you do when you<lb/>
have a lot of time on your hands, and<lb/>
nothing to do with it? Answer: How<lb/>
about escape into the ubiquitous and<lb/>
m ever-changing world of imaginative<lb/>
fiction.<lb/>
To anyone particularly familiar with the<lb/>
trends in fiction literature these days, the<lb/>
name Alistair MaClean-should be one that<lb/>
immediately evokes a sensation char-<lb/>
acterized by mind-boggling suspense and<lb/>
intrigue, that invariably leaves nerve<lb/>
endings tingling with fear and<lb/>
anticipation. Certainly MaClean is not the<lb/>
average "run-of-the-mill" adventure writer<lb/>
as his financial success over the past<lb/>
twenty years should indicate. His ability<lb/>
to spin yarns of uch great intrigue and<lb/>
suspense has subsequently led to his<lb/>
acquiring, in literary circles, the title of<lb/>
"Master Storyteller<lb/>
There is no question that Alistair<lb/>
Maclean las become increasingly<lb/>
commercial in his technique .in keeping<lb/>
with the times perhaps. Indicative of this<lb/>
is his increasing use of romance in his<lb/>
stories. When once asked about his lack<lb/>
of the use of romance in his novels,<lb/>
MaClean replied that any romantic action<lb/>
would "hinder" the face-paced movement<lb/>
of the book's plot and subsequently<lb/>
interfer in the drawing of suspense and<lb/>
anticipation. Obviously the author no<lb/>
longer feels this way, for more and more<lb/>
romance has been quietly slipping its way<lb/>
into the plots. This may very well be one<lb/>
reason that recent works are not as<lb/>
penetrating and powerful as many of his<lb/>
earlier efforts.<lb/>
Recently, his long and eagerly awaited<lb/>
effort, The Way To Dusty Death, was<lb/>
released by Doubleday and Co. Inc. The<lb/>
anticipation of its arrival suggested<lb/>
another probable "bestseller" for MaClean<lb/>
but after finally reading it, anyone<lb/>
acquainted with his other works may feel it<lb/>
is considerably somewhat of a<lb/>
disappointment. There is something<lb/>
lackingas it leaves the reader with a<lb/>
feeling at the end that might well be<lb/>
expre .sed by the phrase, "Is that all there<lb/>
is?" Whatever is lacking, might be<lb/>
suggested to be a number of<lb/>
things-beginning with plot. It's not that<lb/>
the plot is uninteresting, or unbelievable,<lb/>
it is rather that it lacks the "substance" of<lb/>
most of MaCleans plots The action<lb/>
is never reany clearly defined, and you<lb/>
never know where it is leading you, or<lb/>
why Generally this is the "hallmark" of<lb/>
Maclean's technique-to tease the reader<lb/>
and hold back the punches for one final<lb/>
blow, but generally the plots are more<lb/>
conducive to this technique-this one is<lb/>
not. At times one might wonder if even<lb/>
Mr. MaClean knows where the action is<lb/>
leading.<lb/>
The story is set within the glamorous<lb/>
realm of the European Grande Prix circuit,<lb/>
where we find Europe's number one race<lb/>
iriver, Johnny Harlow involved in a vicious<lb/>
cycle of sabbotage, murder and<lb/>
smuggling. After a series of "unaccount-<lb/>
able" accidents involving Harlow, the word<lb/>
begins to spead that he is losing his<lb/>
nerve-and his jealous rivals begin to refer<lb/>
to him as a has-been. The owner of the<lb/>
team even begins to question the nerve<lb/>
and his belief of the young Harlow, whose<lb/>
semi-romantic relationship with the team<lb/>
owner's beautiful daughter, adds still<lb/>
further complications. As is the case with<lb/>
most Mclean heros, Harlow's apparent<lb/>
loss of driving skill and nerve, is the<lb/>
smoke-screen that he uses to uncover<lb/>
something more deadly and dangerous<lb/>
than what meets the eye. As usual, not<lb/>
until the final chapters is the reader fully<lb/>
aware of the motivating forces behind the<lb/>
action of the main character. The cover<lb/>
jacket sums it up nicely when it<lb/>
concludes: "But as the pressures and<lb/>
tensions mount, a vicious pattern begins<lb/>
to emerge-and Johnny finds himself in a<lb/>
hair-raising race, where the price is<lb/>
survival- and the penalty is death<lb/>
The troublesome lack of sufficient<lb/>
detail and description of the locale are in<lb/>
striking contrast to his previous works,<lb/>
such as his last novel, Bear Island, which<lb/>
was a much stronger novel by<lb/>
comparison. Detail lends credibility to the<lb/>
actions of the characters, but in The Way<lb/>
To Dusty Death it is almost as if Maclean<lb/>
hurries tnrought he story failing to draw an<lb/>
accurate picture as he goes. (Indeed the<lb/>
novel is only some two-hundred<lb/>
large-typed pages in hardbackprobably<lb/>
one hundred and fifty in paper back!) It<lb/>
might well be that the fact that Maclean<lb/>
has achieved relative success in his field,<lb/>
and doesn't appear to be too hungry these<lb/>
days, may have had a definite affect on the<lb/>
work that goes into the current novels. His<lb/>
earlier novels are much better written and<lb/>
reflect much more of the author's real<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
Some of his more familiar novels<lb/>
include, Ice Station Zebra, The Guns of<lb/>
Navarone, Fear is the Key, Where Eagles<lb/>
Dare and Puppet On A Chain, which were<lb/>
incidently made into very successful<lb/>
motion pictures Over the past several<lb/>
years his work has grown at an<lb/>
ever-increasing rate of populatiry. He has<lb/>
had no less than seven of his novels to<lb/>
climb their way to the top of the New York<lb/>
Times' Bestseller list, where they have all<lb/>
remained for a considerable length of<lb/>
time. Even under the pseudonym of Ian<lb/>
Stuart, he has a number of highly<lb/>
successful novels as well, including The<lb/>
Golden Rendezvous and The Satan Bug.<lb/>
Last year he tried his hand at a new type of<lb/>
literary endeavor and came up with an<lb/>
interesting and well received biography of<lb/>
the famous south-seas adventurer,<lb/>
Captain Cook.<lb/>
Death<lb/>
In all fairness, The Way To Dusty<lb/>
�th is a decent novel considerably<lb/>
y<lb/>
but<lb/>
intriguing fiction reading-it falls some-<lb/>
what short. If you are familiar with<lb/>
MaClean it should be read, for it is<lb/>
unmistakably Maclean. If you are not too<lb/>
familiar with his work, pick up any of the<lb/>
other mentioned novels and gauge your<lb/>
response upon their strength .in<lb/>
comparison there will be a considerable<lb/>
difference. Those of us who have come to<lb/>
know Alistair Maclean through his fine<lb/>
past performances certainly hope that this<lb/>
current release is not indicative of his<lb/>
literary way to dusty death!<lb/>
below his past performances,<lb/>
none-the-less worthwhile. On a cold rainy<lb/>
afternoon it makes for an interesting<lb/>
diversion, but for enveloping and<lb/>
Honest cop Serpico<lb/>
bucks<lb/>
payoff<lb/>
By PATSY HINTON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"I'd give an Oscar to Al Pacino for<lb/>
'Serpico says Judith Christ. "Highest<lb/>
rating proclaims The New York Daily<lb/>
News. All I can add to this high priase is<lb/>
an avid amen. Because Al Pacino is,<lb/>
without a doubt, deadly devastating in his<lb/>
role as the only cop not "on the take" in a<lb/>
big city police squad.<lb/>
Pacino portrays Frank Serpico, a<lb/>
young, Spanish-born, hippie-type cop,<lb/>
who looks like George Harrison and lives<lb/>
with a women, a parokeet, and a big mutt<lb/>
dog. He spends the entire movie fighting<lb/>
the corruption of his fellow police officers,<lb/>
as well as his superiors, who are aware of<lb/>
the pay-off system existing in their ranks,<lb/>
but choose to close their eyes to the<lb/>
situation. For two hours, I fought the<lb/>
battle with Serpico, the struggle against<lb/>
the "way things are" as opposed to the way<lb/>
things should be. Ostracized by his<lb/>
squad, and persecuted by higher-ups,<lb/>
Serpico is finally shot in the head as he<lb/>
tries, deliberately unaided by the two<lb/>
officers on duty with him, to break through<lb/>
a door in a drug bust. But he still fights,<lb/>
he still contends with a system that<lb/>
continuously refuses to look scandal in the<lb/>
eye.<lb/>
Pacino, one of America's magnificient<lb/>
male movie stars, is the Michael Corleone<lb/>
of "The Godfather And there is a parallel<lb/>
between this part and that of Serpico. In<lb/>
both roles, Pacino plays the sensitive,<lb/>
idealistic young intellect in a sea of<lb/>
corruption. But here a rift develops. In<lb/>
"TheGodfather Pacino finally conforms;<lb/>
that is, he eventually becomes a new<lb/>
"Don" and closes the door on his early<lb/>
ideals. In Serpico, Pacino is never<lb/>
absorbed by the organization of paid-off<lb/>
cops that he so bitterly fights.<lb/>
"Serpico" is frankly chilling in that it is<lb/>
quite possibly a true story. Al Pacino<lb/>
really brings to life the question of the<lb/>
honesty and integrity of big-city cops that<lb/>
other movies such as "The Friends of<lb/>
Eddie Coyle" or "The French Connection"<lb/>
only touched on.<lb/>
Whether one goes to see this movie<lb/>
(R-rated, due to crass language) for<lb/>
Pacino's toughing, tougher-than-hell<lb/>
performance, or for the timely subject<lb/>
matter, is of little consequence. On both<lb/>
aspects, the viewer will walk awak with<lb/>
plenty to think on very, very seriously.<lb/>
Southsound kills<lb/>
drop-add drudgery<lb/>
CONCERT REVIEW<lb/>
Painter and South Sound<lb/>
By BRANDON T1SE<lb/>
Tuesday night's concerts at Wright<lb/>
provided a pleasant break from drudgery<lb/>
of school and a rest for ECU'S famous<lb/>
streakers. South Sound (old KOKO), a<lb/>
local band provided good entertainment<lb/>
with selections from Beatles, All man<lb/>
Brothers, ZZ Top, an original by Bill<lb/>
Joyner, the bass player, and many more<lb/>
songs. The band was very well balanced<lb/>
out in their performance with every<lb/>
member sharing honors.<lb/>
The "feature" attraction, Painter, a<lb/>
group from the Canadian west then tried<lb/>
their best to ruin the good feeling left by<lb/>
South Sound. The songs lasted a<lb/>
minimum of six minutes with most lasting<lb/>
at least ten. The sound system was too<lb/>
high for Wright unless you enjoy no<lb/>
eardrums and this fact was one of my<lb/>
displeasures with the band. Another was<lb/>
after the lead singer went to so much<lb/>
trouble to make himself noticeable with<lb/>
his frantic gyrations, the distortion was so<lb/>
bad that you would rarely understand the<lb/>
words that he was singing. The highlight<lb/>
and lifesaver of Painter was the lead<lb/>
guitarist who played circles around the<lb/>
audience and the rest of the band. With a<lb/>
customized Gretch Tennessean guitar<lb/>
complete<lb/>
the soun<lb/>
his � inti<lb/>
leads. H<lb/>
last sonc<lb/>
"Ohio" l�<lb/>
the guita<lb/>
I wou<lb/>
Union fo<lb/>
students<lb/>
remain in<lb/>
Painter,<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Allei<lb/>
nasti<lb/>
Sleep<lb/>
child, is<lb/>
the best<lb/>
including<lb/>
hanging<lb/>
plays the<lb/>
beautifull<lb/>
played ir<lb/>
Money ar<lb/>
Sam, and<lb/>
to Know<lb/>
Ask.<lb/>
Wood<lb/>
of the Haj<lb/>
Greenwicl<lb/>
hospital f(<lb/>
frozen inj<lb/>
later in 21<lb/>
police ste<lb/>
rebel unde<lb/>
involved li<lb/>
Project, ir<lb/>
Disguised<lb/>
delivered<lb/>
Keaton),<lb/>
forces her<lb/>
and Wcxxh<lb/>
- after j<lb/>
Orgasmatr<lb/>
She conf id<lb/>
oral sex in<lb/>
tnat time p<lb/>
Woody<lb/>
star of tt<lb/>
shines in h<lb/>
not dead in<lb/>
more refii<lb/>
possible) n<lb/>
some of I<lb/>
hilarious aj<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
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9<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039909_0007"/><lb/>
HM<lb/>
FOUNTAIN HEAD VOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
HMiimimmii. ��pi. mm mumum<lb/>
7<lb/>
�<lb/>
complete with phase shifter to synthesize<lb/>
the sound he captivated the audience with<lb/>
his � intricate and lightening quick<lb/>
leads. His stunning performance in the<lb/>
last song, Crosby, Stills, Nash &amp; Young's<lb/>
"Ohio" left the audience and especially all<lb/>
the guitar players reeling in their seats.<lb/>
I would like to comment the Student<lb/>
Union for these concerts, and urge the<lb/>
students to come out and see the<lb/>
remaining ones this year. As in the case of<lb/>
Painter, one artist can make the whole<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Allen proves even<lb/>
nastier in 'Sleeper'<lb/>
By BRANDON TISE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Sleeper, Woody Allen's latest brain-<lb/>
child, is a mad, magnificient, comedy in<lb/>
the best tradition of the slapstick era,<lb/>
including pies in the face and perilous<lb/>
hanging off edges of buildings. Allen<lb/>
plays the same nasty minded, 98 pound,<lb/>
beautifully neurotic madman that he<lb/>
played in his previous films, Take the<lb/>
Money and Run, Bananas, Play It Again<lb/>
Sam, and Everything You Always Wanted<lb/>
to Know About Sex-But Were Afraid to<lb/>
Ask.<lb/>
Woody plays Miles Monroe, part owner<lb/>
of the Happy Carrot Health Food Store, in<lb/>
Greenwich Village. Who goes in the<lb/>
hospital for a ulcer operation and ends up<lb/>
frozen instead. He wakes up 200 years<lb/>
later in 2173 in the middle of an American<lb/>
police state. Revived by doctors of the<lb/>
rebel underground movement, he becomes<lb/>
involved in an intrigue to stop the Aries<lb/>
Project, in incredible topsecret operation.<lb/>
Disguised as a robot servant, he is<lb/>
delivered to the house of Luna (Diane<lb/>
Keaton), an avant garde poetess. He<lb/>
forces her to help him find out about Aries,<lb/>
and Woody of course, falls in love with her<lb/>
- after several experiences in the<lb/>
Orgasmatron, a futuristic love machine.<lb/>
She confides to Woody that she majored in<lb/>
oral sex in college, a "common major" in<lb/>
tnat time period.<lb/>
Woody Allen is the writer, director, and<lb/>
star of this film. Diane Keaton, who<lb/>
shines in her own r,rjht, proves slapstick is<lb/>
not dead in 1974. It's a movie that shows a<lb/>
more refined Woody Allen (if that's<lb/>
possible) not quite as frantic as he was in<lb/>
some of his earlier films, but still as<lb/>
hilarious as ever.<lb/>
Crucible, Long View Journal, Wake Forest<lb/>
Festival of Poets, Southern Accent, and<lb/>
elsewhere. A collection of her verse,<lb/>
will be published later this year.<lb/>
CalvinAtwood is an administrator at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina in the<lb/>
Graudate School of Business Administra-<lb/>
tion. Formerly he was editor of The<lb/>
Golden Horn in Istanbul, Turkey. He has<lb/>
published poetry in The New York Times,<lb/>
Southern Poetry Review, Crucible, The<lb/>
Texas Quarterly, and elsewhere.<lb/>
Mr. Atwood was a parachutist with the<lb/>
Marines in World War II and was<lb/>
wounded in action during the Iwo Jima<lb/>
invasion. Among other experiences, he<lb/>
has taught English and creative writing,<lb/>
has coached baseball, and has been<lb/>
Headmaster of a school. At Columbia<lb/>
University he received a Baker Award, and<lb/>
in 1965 he was recognized in the volume<lb/>
Outstanding Young Men of America.<lb/>
Vernon Ward teaches English at ECU,<lb/>
where he also directs the Poetry Forum<lb/>
and edits Tar River Poets. He has<lb/>
published one volume, Of Dust and Stars,<lb/>
and several booklets of poems. Some of<lb/>
his work appears in Richard Walser's The<lb/>
Poets of North Carolina.<lb/>
All poetry lovers are invited to attend<lb/>
"An Evening with North Carolina<lb/>
Poets There is no admission charge.<lb/>
Without the aid of props, scenery or the spoken word, Marcel Marceau captivated a<lb/>
full house test nite in Wright Auditorium. Marceau claims that he first felt the urge to<lb/>
pursue pantomime at the age of five, when his mother took him to see his first Charlie<lb/>
Chaplin movie.<lb/>
Tarheel poets<lb/>
plan reading<lb/>
Three NorthCarolina Poets will read in<lb/>
201 University Union on the ECU campus<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. Sunday, March 10. Mae<lb/>
Woods Bell of Rocky Mount, Calvin<lb/>
Atwood of Chapel Hill, and Vernon Ward of<lb/>
Greenville are the poets featured on "An<lb/>
Evening with North Carolina Poets The<lb/>
program is jointly sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Poetry Forum and the North Carolina Arts<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Mae Woods Bell, who, when she is not<lb/>
reading or writing poetry, is a Museum<lb/>
director, was born in England and<lb/>
educated in England, New Mexico,<lb/>
California and Kansas. She is Chairman of<lb/>
the North Carolina Writers Conference and<lb/>
a mamber of the Longview Writers. Some<lb/>
of her poetry has been published in The<lb/>
THIS WEEKiFffirnll<lb/>
AT THE kKirn RAN INC.<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA'S 1LIVE BANDS<lb/>
NO. 4 NIGHTCLUBDANCING � FOOTSBALL<lb/>
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TUESDAYMARCH 5PAPA DOC<lb/>
WEDNESDAYMARCH 6SWEETMEAT<lb/>
THURSDAYMARCH 7ROCKFISH<lb/>
FRIDAYMARCH 8CLASS MOON<lb/>
SATURDAYMARCH 9SOUTH WING<lb/>
Don't Keep Wasting Your Weekends<lb/>
59 Weeks on the Best-Seller List<lb/>
NOW IN PAPERBACK<lb/>
THE JOY<lb/>
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Central Newsfc Card Sho<lb/>
OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY TIL 10 P.M.<lb/>
321 Evans St. bbH�� Varnon<lb/>
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MEET YOUR DREAM DATE<lb/>
Let our computer match you with someone<lb/>
of similar interests right in your own area<lb/>
PLUS- You'll receive personal resumes of 5<lb/>
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for complete details send<lb/>
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STUDENT DATING SERVICE<lb/>
 O. BOX 533 ' CARRBORO, N.C. 27510<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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m<lb/>
�<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
U1WMIIPII<lb/>
HWWUU<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
wmmmmnmmmmm<lb/>
mmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
EdllaialsCommenlary<lb/>
Philosophically streaking<lb/>
Those of us who have been at ECU since the great boycottvisitation<lb/>
marchesFountainhead obscenity case of 1970-71 seem to have been through just about<lb/>
everything by now. We've seen the rise of the student movement, the immediate decline<lb/>
of the same, and now: streaking.<lb/>
The inclusion of streaking along with student politics may seem inappropriate at<lb/>
first. However, ECU'S student issues have never stemmed from earth-shaking things;<lb/>
the war in Vietnam caused only token interest, but visitation nearly had the campus in<lb/>
shards. ECU has always been what major campuses have only now become, a<lb/>
private-interest campus. We are, in short, interested in our own local cosmos.<lb/>
Some observers claim that streaking at ECU is indicative of a great humansexual<lb/>
awakening, the liberation of the student, and see tremendous social significance in nude<lb/>
running. A less profound thought is that streaking beats sitting around the Rat or the<lb/>
Crow's Nest, and is less trite than yet another panty raid. This editor can't agree fully<lb/>
with the "social significance" argument; however, when you consider the progress made<lb/>
at ECU in general terms, streaking must fit in somewhere.<lb/>
Four years ago getting visitation back was a vision of sorts, with students-versus-the<lb/>
Board of Trustees, and a march down Fifth Street - just to have co-ed visitation from 12<lb/>
to 12. Today visitation is uniform, with one co-ed dorm and promise of a second. Four<lb/>
years ago this newspaper was under fire for printing obscenities, with students cheering<lb/>
on one side and administration and Greenville citizens writhing on the other. This year,<lb/>
the Buccaneer came out with at least half a dozen items which were declared either<lb/>
objectionable or obscene by critics. Instead of re-establishing the old<lb/>
students-administration rift, everyone established his or her own view of the<lb/>
matter. Most people simply said, "So what else is new?" and went about their business.<lb/>
There have been changes in four years; we've seen a developing maturity in ECU<lb/>
students, or at least in student attitudes. And even the crowds who gather to watch<lb/>
streakers, or who participate in streaking, don't have the semi-obscene nature of the old<lb/>
panty-raiders. There's shouting, all right, and kidding around, but it's a celebration of<lb/>
sorts - no one's there just to stare or watch bodies. As for nudity - "So what else is<lb/>
new? but as a celebration of being alive, and of feeling secure enough anc confident<lb/>
enough in living to streak, and of bringing in Spring with something more natural than a<lb/>
panty raid or a three-day hangover, you can't beat streaking.<lb/>
No, streaking doesn't signify any great new social order. It's basically a friendly sort<lb/>
of thing, rather brotherly-sisterly, and marks for all its convival madness, another small<lb/>
change at ECU, from the expected to the human. At least today, before it's hit the stage<lb/>
of triteness, nothing could be less indecent than streaking.<lb/>
Jl<lb/>
.HIQi<lb/>
0HIQ<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
"Do you know because I tell you so, or do<lb/>
you know<lb/>
Gertrude Stein<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
MANAGING EDITORSkip Saunders<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gilliam<lb/>
AD MANAGERJackie Shallcross<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSDarrell Williams<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORSteve Bohmuller<lb/>
SPORTS EDITOR Jack Morrow<lb/>
ADVISORFrank I. Murphy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD is the student news-<lb/>
paper of East Carolina University and<lb/>
appears each Tuesday and Thursday of<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10 annually for non-<lb/>
students.<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiinir<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Enough oil in U.S.?<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON and LES WHITTEN<lb/>
WASHINGTON - Contrary to the<lb/>
tale being told by government on the<lb/>
energy crisis, the Arab oil embargo has<lb/>
nothing to do with America's fuel<lb/>
shortage.<lb/>
The truth is that an analysis of the<lb/>
industry's own statistics makes it clear tha<lb/>
we have enough oil to last almost eight<lb/>
years, even if the petroleum under Alasks's<lb/>
north slope is never produced.<lb/>
The real problem is not oil supply, but<lb/>
refinery capacity.<lb/>
Although the oil giants knew the<lb/>
demand for their products was increasing<lb/>
dramatically in the United States over the<lb/>
past 15 years, they built virtually 10 new<lb/>
US refineries. It was more profitar le, they<lb/>
found, to build refineries abroad, to<lb/>
supply foreign markets where der land and<lb/>
prices were growing even fasteilan in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
To tupply these markets, the oil<lb/>
companies used crude oil from the<lb/>
Mideast. This production was subsidized<lb/>
by billions of dollars in tax loopholes<lb/>
granted by the U.S. government.<lb/>
In short, the American taxpayer has<lb/>
been taken to help the oil companies make<lb/>
billions in the production and sale of oil<lb/>
everywhere but in the United States.<lb/>
The major loophold the big comapnies<lb/>
have used to pile up the profits is the<lb/>
so-called foreign tax credit. This tax<lb/>
break, like other government policies<lb/>
favoring the oil companies, has been<lb/>
justified as necessary for America's<lb/>
national security.<lb/>
But it resulted in the oil companies<lb/>
neglecting to build the refineries that this<lb/>
country do badly needs, and thus made the<lb/>
shortage of gasoline and other petroleum<lb/>
products inevitable. This is the opposite<lb/>
of national security.<lb/>
Although the shortage has been a<lb/>
hardhip for the people of the country, they<lb/>
have proved to be a bonanza for Big<lb/>
Oil. With the shortage, the prices have<lb/>
gone up and so have the profits.<lb/>
The oil barons have been getting other<lb/>
government help, too. Although energy<lb/>
czar William Simon talks tough in public<lb/>
about crackind down on the oil companies,<lb/>
his behind-the-scenes dealings with the<lb/>
biggest companies are far more gentle.<lb/>
A few weeks ago, Simon announced<lb/>
that he would sent teams of federal<lb/>
investigators out to check the actual<lb/>
petroleum supplies on hand at all the<lb/>
nation's refineries. The idea was to assure<lb/>
the public that the oil companies weren't<lb/>
holding back.<lb/>
Sources inside the oil industry,<lb/>
however have told us the Simon<lb/>
announcement did not come as a<lb/>
surprise. A week before the public<lb/>
announcement, the biggest companies<lb/>
received a letter from Simon asking for<lb/>
their opinion of the plan.<lb/>
Some responded negatively, some<lb/>
others did not answer at all. Their opinion,<lb/>
however, was not important.<lb/>
The key to the message was that the oil<lb/>
barons knew a week in advance that the<lb/>
government was planning to bring its own<lb/>
dip-stick to their tanks.<lb/>
When we asked a spokesman for Simon<lb/>
for a copy of the letter, he confirmed its<lb/>
existence, then added: "You're working<lb/>
with us, aren't you: The Anderson Co.?"<lb/>
When we explained which Anderson<lb/>
was calling, the spokesman was silent for<lb/>
moment, then groaned, "Oh and his<lb/>
interest in helping us get a copy of the<lb/>
letter vanished.<lb/>
Simon, nevertheless, hardly deserves<lb/>
some of the things that have happened to<lb/>
him lately. It seems that some Americans,<lb/>
crumbling under the psychological strain<lb/>
of the change in their lifestyles caused by<lb/>
the gas shortage, are blaming Simon<lb/>
personally for their troubles.<lb/>
Some cranks have even gone so far as<lb/>
to threaten Simon's life. The hate mail<lb/>
that comes to his desk is so cirulent, in<lb/>
fact, that some of Simon's associates are<lb/>
worried that someone might actually try to<lb/>
attack him.<lb/>
Our sources say that Treasury<lb/>
Secretary George Shu may well order<lb/>
Secret Service protect i for the energy<lb/>
czar.<lb/>
SUllll<lb/>
Ominous Signs: There are ominous<lb/>
signs in Latin America, where the extreme<lb/>
right and the extreme left strugge for<lb/>
power.<lb/>
In Brazil, where American arms and<lb/>
training have kept the military dictatorship<lb/>
in power, there are new moves against<lb/>
freedom of the press. The editor of Rio de<lb/>
Janeiro's leading paper, Jomal do Brasil,<lb/>
has been abruptly fired in hopes of<lb/>
appeasing the Arab oil moguls.<lb/>
The editor, Alberto Dines, made the<lb/>
mistake of trying to report both sides of<lb/>
the Middle East conflict. He was sacked<lb/>
by his publisher, Francisco Brito. When<lb/>
another paper hinted this was an<lb/>
anti-Jewish move against Dines - who is<lb/>
Jewish - that paper was suppressed.<lb/>
Behind it all is Brazil's need for $2.6<lb/>
billion worth of oil. Freedom and truty, to<lb/>
the dictators, is far less important than the<lb/>
fuel to keep the nation turning, and<lb/>
national discontent low.<lb/>
Meanwhile in Chili, our informants tell<lb/>
us that a secret guerrilla army is being<lb/>
formed to battle that country's new<lb/>
military dictatorship.<lb/>
When Marxist President Salvador<lb/>
Allende was overthrown and killed, the<lb/>
sources say, army units went into thw<lb/>
working class districts and selected<lb/>
victims at random for arrest, torture and<lb/>
execution. Many of the Marxist leaders,<lb/>
escaped are now regrouping.<lb/>
It is this leadership that is behind the<lb/>
new guerrilla organization. And they are<lb/>
skillfully suing the murders of the workers<lb/>
as a rallying cry for action against the<lb/>
government.<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
The<lb/>
FOUNTA<lb/>
press the<lb/>
should<lb/>
names w<lb/>
signed a<lb/>
editorial<lb/>
editor, a<lb/>
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FOUNTA<lb/>
fuse prii<lb/>
obocenit;<lb/>
independ<lb/>
issues. <lb/>
proportio<lb/>
To Foun<lb/>
This<lb/>
English<lb/>
instructs<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
Asca<lb/>
of Bill<lb/>
master,<lb/>
the inj<lb/>
checked,<lb/>
proof rea<lb/>
errors s<lb/>
paragrapl<lb/>
Think<lb/>
which we<lb/>
left - sp<lb/>
form.<lb/>
In th<lb/>
stressed,<lb/>
remembe<lb/>
"No-no"<lb/>
correctne<lb/>
These<lb/>
my mout!<lb/>
instructio<lb/>
illiterates<lb/>
correctly.<lb/>
P.S. Fou<lb/>
Tick<lb/>
To Fountaii<lb/>
OnFebr<lb/>
the Central<lb/>
ticket to se<lb/>
may be no<lb/>
closed sine<lb/>
happened t<lb/>
was still in<lb/>
still buy a t<lb/>
answer that<lb/>
have to pay<lb/>
door if I wa<lb/>
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then becauj<lb/>
ticket the<lb/>
no. Feelin<lb/>
pissed-off<lb/>
hating my�<lb/>
it suddenly<lb/>
solution to<lb/>
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and I can't<lb/>
than the fac<lb/>
to see the a<lb/>
not be ador.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0009"/><lb/>
MM<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
9<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
vas silent for<lb/>
h and his<lb/>
copy of the<lb/>
dry deserves<lb/>
happened to<lb/>
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made the<lb/>
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vas sacked<lb/>
irito. When<lb/>
i was an<lb/>
� - who is<lb/>
jssed.<lb/>
xj for $2.6<lb/>
id tarty, to<lb/>
int than the<lb/>
ning, and<lb/>
rmants tell<lb/>
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itry's new<lb/>
Salvador<lb/>
killed, the<lb/>
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selected<lb/>
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Dehind the<lb/>
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gainst the<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by their authorjs;<lb/>
names will be withheld on request. Un-<lb/>
signed editorials on this page and on the<lb/>
editorial page reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
editor, and are not necessarily those of<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-<lb/>
fuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obocenity, 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/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
This letter is in reference to N.C.<lb/>
English and the effectiveness of the<lb/>
instruction of it from elementary to college<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
As case in point let us take the example<lb/>
of Bill Bisenschwartz, present student<lb/>
master. No matter how the cake is baked<lb/>
the ingredients must be double<lb/>
checked. Are not our students informed of<lb/>
proof reading? With proper time and care,<lb/>
errors such as "Bot" and "To" (re.<lb/>
paragraph 2, line 1) can be avoided.<lb/>
Thinking back I also remember a rule<lb/>
which went "Indentation - no space, flush<lb/>
left - space" in reference to paragraph<lb/>
form.<lb/>
In the ninth grade redundancy is<lb/>
stressed. As this writer looks backward he<lb/>
remembers that it is a definite<lb/>
"No-no Research has proven the<lb/>
correctness of the statement.<lb/>
These errors are as plain as the teeth in<lb/>
my mouth. Let us strive to improve the<lb/>
instruction of English in order that our<lb/>
illiterates may at least look and write<lb/>
correctly.<lb/>
Steve Rauchle<lb/>
P.S. Four dots () are quite sufficient.<lb/>
Ticket Office<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
On February 20th at 4-20 p.m. I went to<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office to purchase a<lb/>
ticket to see the Warsaw Philharmonic. As<lb/>
may be noted the office was of course<lb/>
closed since their closing time is 4:00. I<lb/>
happened to notice that the "ticket lady"<lb/>
was still in the office and asked if I could<lb/>
still buy a ticket but received the obvious<lb/>
answer that they were closed and I would<lb/>
have to pay the public price of $5.00 at the<lb/>
door if I wanted to see the event. I asked<lb/>
again if I could please buy a student ticket<lb/>
then because I couldn't afford the "rip-off"<lb/>
ticket that night. She again said<lb/>
no. Feeling rather depressed and<lb/>
pissed-off at the whole situation and<lb/>
hating myself for not getting there earlier,<lb/>
it suddenly dawned on me that the simpel<lb/>
solution to this whole ridiculous situation<lb/>
would be for the Central Ticket office to<lb/>
sell student tickets at the door. These<lb/>
concerts are brought here for the students<lb/>
and I can't see any logical reason, other<lb/>
than the fact that more students might get<lb/>
to see the concerts, why this policy should<lb/>
not be adopted.<lb/>
Charlie Gregory.<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Tell Allreet that he is all wrong. The<lb/>
student arrested in the upstairs bar<lb/>
deserves what he gets. I saw the whole<lb/>
thing; he was drunk, obnoxious,<lb/>
stubborn, rude and a hundred other things<lb/>
that if I had time I would look up in Rogets<lb/>
Thesaurus and list them.<lb/>
A Witness<lb/>
P.S You can add dumb also. Anyone who<lb/>
is let go and returns the same night has<lb/>
got to be stupid.<lb/>
About concerts<lb/>
Re: the Commander Cody concert:<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
What the hell does this mean?<lb/>
"A successful concert now would make<lb/>
things much easier, in terms of securing a<lb/>
good group in the spring (stated by Tona<lb/>
Price in an article in the February 12<lb/>
edition of the Fountainhead) Why should<lb/>
any student pay good money to see<lb/>
Commander Cody just so we can have a<lb/>
good band come spring. That's utterly<lb/>
ridiculous and so was the concert last<lb/>
night. Any group mentioned in the article<lb/>
would draw more than enough money and<lb/>
students. Why should the students at<lb/>
ECU be blackmailed in such a way?<lb/>
Keith Bulla<lb/>
190Aycock<lb/>
Expansion<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Amid the growing controversy over the<lb/>
expansion of the East Carolina University<lb/>
Medical School it has become evident to<lb/>
me that the students, the individuals who<lb/>
would profit most from this expansion,<lb/>
have not apparently been properly<lb/>
informed nor involved in the decision-<lb/>
making process. There has been a failure<lb/>
in the media to get down to the basic<lb/>
points of the issue. (1) Are there enough<lb/>
doctors in North Carolina? and (2) Where<lb/>
will all the students who are now in<lb/>
pre-medical departments go to medical<lb/>
school?<lb/>
North Carolina has a very poor<lb/>
physician to population ration plus the fact<lb/>
that 25 per cent of the physicians now<lb/>
practicing will be 65 or older -by<lb/>
1980. Many towns are without physicians.<lb/>
North Carolina is badly in need of a large<lb/>
number of family practitioners as well as<lb/>
additional physicians in the bther<lb/>
specialities.<lb/>
But the second basic point is the one in<lb/>
which I believe your readers will be most<lb/>
interested. There are simply not enough<lb/>
spaces in medical schools in North<lb/>
Carolina for all you who are qualified North<lb/>
Carolinians to go to medical school - nor<lb/>
are there near enough spaces projected,<lb/>
and other states are closing their doors to<lb/>
out-of-state students. North Carolina<lb/>
ranks 14th in the states of the United<lb/>
States in the relative number of persons<lb/>
receiving bacculaureate degrees from<lb/>
colleqes but 50th in the number of spaces<lb/>
it provides those persons wishing to go to<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
If you are interested in seeing the State<lb/>
take the steps to provide the necessary<lb/>
medical school openings to meet the<lb/>
needs of qualified North Carolina<lb/>
students, you should contact your local<lb/>
representative and tell him or her to<lb/>
support the expansion of the Medical<lb/>
School at ECU.<lb/>
There are to be hearings on this in the<lb/>
Auditorium of the Legislature Building in<lb/>
Raleigh on Tuesday, Wednesday, and<lb/>
Thursday, February 19, 20 and 21, from<lb/>
4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. and you should<lb/>
attend if possible.<lb/>
Yours truly,<lb/>
John R. Gamble, Jr M.D.<lb/>
ECU'S failure<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Regarding the letter in the February 19<lb/>
issue, . concerning a beer drinking<lb/>
establishment in Greenville where<lb/>
students can intelligently discuss<lb/>
intellectual topics, I would like to make a<lb/>
couple of comments.<lb/>
First of ail, one reason why some<lb/>
"young capitalist" has not taken it upon<lb/>
himself to create such a beer hall is<lb/>
because there is not sufficient demand. A<lb/>
capitalist would be in it for the money and<lb/>
in Greenville there are more people who<lb/>
want to "boogie" than communicate.<lb/>
Second, I am afraid that many of the<lb/>
issues that motivated students to gain a<lb/>
better understanding of each other during<lb/>
the 1960's are simply not there in a potent<lb/>
way in 1974. The war and the draft are<lb/>
finally over and even many blacks do not<lb/>
seem as concerned about their place in a<lb/>
"white man's society" as they were during<lb/>
the '60's.<lb/>
I too, lament at the failure of<lb/>
Greenville, ECU and its students to provide<lb/>
a proper university atmosphere within the<lb/>
community but the plain fact is that most<lb/>
ECU students don't give a damn about the<lb/>
things that concern this university and its<lb/>
students. Until they do, there will<lb/>
probably be no positive growth in the<lb/>
learning process at East Carolina.<lb/>
Ray Tyler<lb/>
Apology<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
On behalf of the East Carolina<lb/>
University Artist Series Committee I would<lb/>
like to offer an apology for our last concert<lb/>
when we presented the Warsaw<lb/>
Philharmonic Orchestra. I feel some<lb/>
explanation for the delay and changes in<lb/>
the program are necessary.<lb/>
To begin with, the principal conductor<lb/>
became ill and was unable to do the<lb/>
performance, but for some reason, still<lb/>
unknown to me, the substitute conductor<lb/>
was not prepared to tonduct the program<lb/>
you were to hear. I found out about this<lb/>
trouble only upon arriving at the<lb/>
auditorium at 7:30 that night. The<lb/>
committee had a decision to make at this<lb/>
point whether tq cancel the performance<lb/>
and refund all ticket money, or allow the<lb/>
orchestra to perform a completely different<lb/>
program, ine majority decided upon the<lb/>
latter, and we then had to choose a new<lb/>
program. The delay in the performance<lb/>
came as a reult of the extensive<lb/>
negotiations which had to occur with the<lb/>
management company in New York before<lb/>
the orchestra could be allowed on stage.<lb/>
As a point in their favor let me say that<lb/>
the orchestra did cancel a date in Alabama<lb/>
due to the energy crisis to be here for our<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
Again, you have my apologies for the<lb/>
delay and changes, and I hope you enjoyed<lb/>
the substitute program.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Dale K. Tucker<lb/>
Chairman, Artist Series Committee<lb/>
Nutrition<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The February 19th article on dormitory<lb/>
nutrition interested me, but I'd like to make<lb/>
a few comments to set the records<lb/>
straight. Although I am a far cry from a<lb/>
nutritional expert, by reading about the<lb/>
subject of good eating a few concepts are<lb/>
clear. Your body does need the proper fuel<lb/>
to keep going through the day. But did<lb/>
you ever wonder why you get those<lb/>
mid-morning blahs or the afternoon<lb/>
droop? The reason could be that you are<lb/>
substituting sugary foods for the real<lb/>
proteir carbohydrates and fats that the<lb/>
body Uods to sustain energy levels. Sugar<lb/>
gives you a quick boost and lets you down<lb/>
just as quickly.<lb/>
For all you dormitory "cooks" who hate<lb/>
to cook, try instead eggs, cheeses, fresh<lb/>
fruits, cold or canned luncheon meats and<lb/>
unsweetened fruit or vegetable juices. All<lb/>
these products can be found in forms that<lb/>
have shelfability for students who don't<lb/>
have access to a refrigerator. Avoid soft<lb/>
drinks, ready to ear cereals (for the most<lb/>
past), sweet rolls, doughnuts and soft<lb/>
American white bread. These nutritional<lb/>
pitfalls contribute little to your diet and<lb/>
could leave you minus the pep you need to<lb/>
"make the grade" all day long.<lb/>
Margie Chapin<lb/>
co M.W. Aldridge, D.D.S<lb/>
Streaking<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
There will be a mammoth streak on the<lb/>
mall Thursday night March 7, 1974<lb/>
beginning at 9:00 p.m. Streakers are<lb/>
advised to wear shoes to avoid being taken<lb/>
to the infirmary with cut things on their<lb/>
bodies.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
The Streak King<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0010"/><lb/>
io<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD VOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmwmm<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
LOST: A 1973 Buccaneer was found on 3rd<lb/>
floor of Brewsfer Bldg. and may be<lb/>
claimed in Pol. Science Depf. Office,<lb/>
A 124<lb/>
LOST: A pair of dark rimed, wire rimed<lb/>
glasses; were in brown colored glasses<lb/>
case Thoughf to be lost around the end of<lb/>
January on campus or near by area. If<lb/>
found call 758 6426 from 2 6 p.m. or let it be<lb/>
known to room 217 C Belk Dorm.<lb/>
LOST PUPPY: Please help find him. 5<lb/>
weeks old, short, fat and fluffy brownish<lb/>
color with black (German Shephard type)<lb/>
markings. Last seen 4th and Pitt St.<lb/>
area. If found contact Susan Cowhing at<lb/>
500 W. 4th St.<lb/>
BABYSITTER WANTED: Mon Wed<lb/>
and Fri. from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Right<lb/>
nextdoor to campus. Call 752 4885.<lb/>
LOST: Small, all black male cat, no<lb/>
collar, very affectionate. Lost Jarvis<lb/>
Street vicinity. Please call 752 1029 or<lb/>
contact 111 N. Jarvis. I'll pay a reward.<lb/>
APARTMENTS FOR RENT: furnished<lb/>
and unfurnished, near campus. Call after<lb/>
5 at 752 1641.<lb/>
MARRIED COUPLE, BA degree, work<lb/>
with troubled youth in group home, room<lb/>
board and competitive salary. Contact<lb/>
Bill Harrington at 929 4337, Box 2287,<lb/>
Chapel Hill, n.C. 27514.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Call 758-5948.<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL BULLA, near Switzerland<lb/>
and Lake Como Professor invites<lb/>
colleagues to share his spacious, old world<lb/>
summer home in peaceful foothills of the<lb/>
Italian Alps. Write G. Previtali, 2945<lb/>
Bennett Ridge Road,Santa Rosa, Cal<lb/>
ifornia 95404.<lb/>
TWOGIRLS ARE DESPERATE for a ride<lb/>
to Raleigh on Wed. March 13. Can leave<lb/>
anytime after 11:00 If you are or know of<lb/>
anyone who is please call 758 6366, ask for<lb/>
Pat or Diane or call 758 5363 after 5:00<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private<lb/>
campus. Call 752 4006.<lb/>
room close to<lb/>
DONALD TAYLOR No. 135972, Viet Nam<lb/>
veteran, artist serving prison sentence for<lb/>
possession of marijuana. Has received no<lb/>
visits and few letters during the past<lb/>
year. Would gladly welcome receiving<lb/>
letters from any concerned sincere<lb/>
person. Donald Taylor, No. 135972, P.O.<lb/>
Box 787, Lucasville, Ohio, 45648.<lb/>
EUROPE ISRAEL AFRICA: Travel dis<lb/>
counts year round. Student Air Travel<lb/>
Agency, Inc. 201 Allen Rd. Suite 410,<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. 30328. (404) 256 4258.<lb/>
CHARCOAL PORTRAITS by Jack<lb/>
Brendle 752 2619.<lb/>
STUDY IN OXFORD this summer. Two<lb/>
sessions: June 30 July 25; July 25 Aug. 21.<lb/>
Courses offered included literature,<lb/>
drama, philosophy, history, art and<lb/>
biology. Six hours semester credit<lb/>
possible. Cost of room, board and all fees<lb/>
$485.00. Write UNC A Oxford, UNC Ashe<lb/>
ville, Asheville, N.C. 28801.<lb/>
ABORTION, BIRTH CONTROL info 8.<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/>
TYPING SERVICE 758 2814.<lb/>
Taking off?<lb/>
'flake us up.<lb/>
There's a place for you on<lb/>
Piedmont. For a weekend of<lb/>
fun, a game out of town, a<lb/>
quick trip home, whatever -<lb/>
there's a Piedmont jet or<lb/>
propiet flight to fit your<lb/>
plans. With personal,<lb/>
thoughtful service always.<lb/>
Piedmont � serving over 75<lb/>
cities including Chicago,<lb/>
New York, Washington,<lb/>
Norfolk, Atlanta, Memphis,<lb/>
("all us, or your travel agent.<lb/>
We've got a place for you.<lb/>
Piedmont<lb/>
Airlines<lb/>
l<lb/>
K<lb/>
VrAArV<lb/>
Miss Wonderful<lb/>
Goes all out for legs<lb/>
TOPLINER stands on the fashion platform approved<lb/>
by sole sisters to underline<lb/>
campus costumes. MISS<lb/>
- WONDERFUL loves a<lb/>
heel, and this lush lacer out<lb/>
shines the pack in shiny<lb/>
red patent.<lb/>
Ask for<lb/>
Topliner<lb/>
Price range 1IM20.<lb/>
See Yellow Paces lor nearesl MISS VVOND1 kl I I DEA1 I R<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
students<lb/>
activities a<lb/>
competing<lb/>
World Char<lb/>
No am-<lb/>
police durir<lb/>
occurred in<lb/>
and 14th St<lb/>
Joe Cak<lb/>
and security<lb/>
two thousar<lb/>
College Hill<lb/>
good natun<lb/>
30 to 40 stre<lb/>
and only oul<lb/>
any violent c<lb/>
than some c<lb/>
campus pol<lb/>
such a large<lb/>
Though i<lb/>
male, they<lb/>
female cot<lb/>
claimed sh<lb/>
College Hill<lb/>
standing arc<lb/>
bout to begi<lb/>
stripped of<lb/>
running<lb/>
When as<lb/>
streaking we<lb/>
to be inhibi<lb/>
hide. I'm pre<lb/>
of it. I think<lb/>
those peoph<lb/>
puritanical �<lb/>
looks. Some<lb/>
frightened o<lb/>
bodies of otl<lb/>
this is natun<lb/>
show them tf<lb/>
and beaut if u<lb/>
hidden ben in<lb/>
Finally, t<lb/>
feelings sr<lb/>
describing th<lb/>
Incc<lb/>
Ass<lb/>
Sponso<lb/>
Society<lb/>
Race: '<lb/>
Wnen:<lb/>
April 15<lb/>
Time: f<lb/>
Sat 1(<lb/>
�<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Spec<lb/>
Volk<lb/>
All w<lb/>
COLL<lb/>
110<lb/>
7!<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0011"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
0mmmmm<lb/>
Streak<lb/>
�'�! I<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
n<lb/>
Buses<lb/>
Continued from page one.<lb/>
students were involved in streaking<lb/>
activities at one time. (These schools are<lb/>
competing for the title of "Home of the<lb/>
World Champion Streakers)<lb/>
No arrests were made by campus<lb/>
police during the "streaking" events which<lb/>
occurred in the campus area between 10th<lb/>
and 14th Streets.<lb/>
Joe Calder, director of campus traffic<lb/>
and security, described the crowd of over<lb/>
two thousand streakers and spectators on<lb/>
College Hill Drive Monday night as "very<lb/>
good natured Calder commented, "the<lb/>
30 to 40 streakers there were good natured<lb/>
and only out to have fun. I didn't evidence<lb/>
any violent or harmful action by them other<lb/>
than some obscene name-calling aimed at<lb/>
campus police. This can be expected in<lb/>
such a large crowd<lb/>
Though most of ECU's streakers were<lb/>
male, they were not entirely without<lb/>
female companions. One ECU coed<lb/>
claimed she joined the streakers on<lb/>
College Hill Drive "because everybody was<lb/>
standing around waiting for the streaking<lb/>
bout to begin and I was impatient so I<lb/>
stripped off my clothes and started<lb/>
running<lb/>
When asked what her thoughts on<lb/>
streaking were sherespondedthat "It's hard<lb/>
to be inhibited when there's nothing to<lb/>
hide. I'm proud of my body, not ashamed<lb/>
of it. I think streaking will be good for<lb/>
those people who are so uptight and<lb/>
puritanical about the way their body<lb/>
looks. Sometimes people even seem to be<lb/>
frightened of their own bodies and the<lb/>
bodies of other people and I don't think<lb/>
this is natural Maybe our streaking can<lb/>
show them that the human body is natural<lb/>
and beautiful and shouldn't be forever<lb/>
hidden behind clothing<lb/>
Finally, the ECU coed revealed the<lb/>
feelings she had while streaking<lb/>
describing the experience as "kind of like<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
IncomeTax<lb/>
Assistance<lb/>
Sponsor: ECU Accounting<lb/>
Society<lb/>
Race: Wright Annex 306<lb/>
Wnen: Feb. 1-15; March 5-<lb/>
April 15<lb/>
Time: MonFri 3-6;<lb/>
Sat 10-12<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
&amp;s;<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Specialize in all type<lb/>
Volkswagon Repair<lb/>
All work guaranteed<lb/>
COLLEGE EXXON<lb/>
1101 E. Fifth<lb/>
752-5646<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
�<lb/>
� � ��<lb/>
�vX<lb/>
.v.<lb/>
W<lb/>
 t �<lb/>
-VV<lb/>
� � � �<lb/>
skinny dipping that feels good to my body,<lb/>
a rushing senation She admitted readily<lb/>
that she would to it again even though she<lb/>
had had doubtful thoughts about doing it<lb/>
for the first time because of possible law<lb/>
violations.<lb/>
Peacock list<lb/>
(CPS)-US Senate aides have put together<lb/>
lists of the ten best and worst dressed<lb/>
senators.<lb/>
The best dressed, the aides say, is<lb/>
John Tower (R-RX), who has his suits<lb/>
tailored in London.<lb/>
Following Tower on the peacock list<lb/>
are Abe Ribicoff (D-CT), George McGovern<lb/>
(D-SD), Mark Hatfield (R-OR), and Edward<lb/>
Brooke (R-MA).<lb/>
The worst dressed are reported as<lb/>
Claibourne Pell (D-RI), who allegedly wore<lb/>
the same suit five days in a row, followed<lb/>
by Quentin Burdick (D-ND) ("dandruff and<lb/>
soup stains on his tie"), Warren<lb/>
Magnusen (D-WA) ("sloppy and flushed"),<lb/>
Mike Mansfield (D-MT) ("uncoordinated"),<lb/>
and Norris Cotton (R-NH) ("looks like an<lb/>
oversized gunny sack").<lb/>
Continued from pege one.<lb/>
that the original 8000 gallons allocation<lb/>
from the state would be cut to 3600<lb/>
gallons, beginning with the March<lb/>
distribution.<lb/>
On the day of the announcement, C.G.<lb/>
Moore, Vice Chancellor for Business<lb/>
Affairs, his assistant, Julian R. Vainright,<lb/>
John S. Bell, Purchasing officer and<lb/>
Bodenhamer began a telephone campaign<lb/>
to officials in Raleigh, reaching up to the<lb/>
office of Governor Jim Holshouser.<lb/>
The governor's Energy Commission<lb/>
retains 3 per cent of North Carolina's gas<lb/>
supply for emergencies around the state.<lb/>
Bodenhamer explained that a requis-<lb/>
ition such as ECU's usually takes 20-30<lb/>
days. "But if we went without gas for 30<lb/>
days it would cripple our whole system<lb/>
he said. "I hope (we will hear something)<lb/>
within the next five to ten days he added,<lb/>
"but the earliest date jvould be next<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Bodenhamer sounded confident as he<lb/>
explained that ECU has the only student<lb/>
run, student owned and student operated<lb/>
bus system in N.C. The buses run<lb/>
approximately 2000 people a day, making<lb/>
stops at most apartments in Greenville and<lb/>
around campus twice every hour, on 60<lb/>
gallons a day, "which is almost<lb/>
unbelievable said Bodenhamer.<lb/>
When the second bus was added to the<lb/>
system in January 1974, "the gas situation<lb/>
was just as critical explained<lb/>
Bodenhamer. He went on to say that other<lb/>
fuel using areas of the campus were<lb/>
affected by the extra 30 gallons of gas a<lb/>
day needed by the new bus. But,<lb/>
according to Bodenhamer, the administra<lb/>
tion felt the bus system was worthwhile<lb/>
due to the number of people transported<lb/>
each day, and that it merited the cut to<lb/>
other areas of campus.<lb/>
"The Administration has done<lb/>
everything possible (for the system)<lb/>
Bodenhamer claimed.<lb/>
In a requisition of this nature, other<lb/>
areas of campus will also be affected if<lb/>
ECU receives the emergency allocation.<lb/>
Bodenhamer said however, that the bus<lb/>
system was "top priority The remainder<lb/>
of the gas would be distributed to other<lb/>
needy areas of campus.<lb/>
The SGA will place signs at every bus<lb/>
stop informing students when the regular<lb/>
bus schedule will be resumed.<lb/>
nn 15 April 1974 <lb/>
�Ttime runsoutforyou to enroll in the 2-year Air Force<lb/>
KOTC Program on this campus. And here's what you'll be missing:<lb/>
� $100a month, tax-free, during your junior and senior years.<lb/>
� the chance to win a full Air Force scholarship<lb/>
(includingtuition, lab fees, the works).<lb/>
� a challenging job as an Air Force officer upon graduation.<lb/>
plus<lb/>
� a future where the sky is no limit.<lb/>
Contact Colonel Bruton, Chairman AerospaceeStudles Department<lb/>
758-C;3?- Room 111 Wlchard Building<lb/>
(Available only to college juniors or students having at least 2 academic<lb/>
years left before graduation.)<lb/>
Find Yourself A Future In Air Force ROTC<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
This is when the long hours of<lb/>
practice pay off. When you know<lb/>
you're as good as you can be.<lb/>
When you can enjoy it, the way it<lb/>
was meant to be.<lb/>
It's the same with Pabst Blue<lb/>
Ribbon-it takes a lot of time, pa-<lb/>
tience and skill to create our good<lb/>
old-time flavor.<lb/>
Pabst-it's the way beer was<lb/>
meant to be.<lb/>
PABST<lb/>
Goodold-time flavor.<lb/>
The way beer<lb/>
was meant to be.<lb/>
Copyright 1974, PABST BREWING COMPANY. Milwaukee<lb/>
Wl Peoria Heights. III Newark, N.J Los Angeles, Cal.f Pabst, Georgia.<lb/>
<lb/>
MSp<lb/>
Two yeai<lb/>
program s<lb/>
motivated tc<lb/>
public poli<lb/>
managemen<lb/>
for quant it.<lb/>
academic<lb/>
sought. Fir<lb/>
internships<lb/>
for Urban i<lb/>
University o<lb/>
11790. Call (<lb/>
French<lb/>
French I<lb/>
Travelers, a r<lb/>
enrollment<lb/>
Continuing E<lb/>
Designec<lb/>
understanding<lb/>
a look at Fre<lb/>
the course <lb/>
anyone's sta<lb/>
Education sp<lb/>
The f irst c<lb/>
April 2, at 7 p.<lb/>
Building. Cla<lb/>
for approxi<lb/>
session. The<lb/>
course is Mar<lb/>
The course<lb/>
to 15 perse<lb/>
interested n<lb/>
programs, E(<lb/>
Educaiton, P<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
payable to Ea<lb/>
Busines<lb/>
Rachel H. I<lb/>
ECU Depart me<lb/>
tion, is the 197<lb/>
Credit Women-<lb/>
The Credit'<lb/>
scholarship to<lb/>
School of Bus<lb/>
eastern North (<lb/>
Guest r<lb/>
Professor<lb/>
University of Te<lb/>
when the gra<lb/>
students in<lb/>
Department me<lb/>
"Topology-an<lb/>
Calculut Studer<lb/>
Dr. Carruth,<lb/>
auspices of the<lb/>
of American, r<lb/>
from Louisiana<lb/>
active in reseat<lb/>
published in<lb/>
journals. In adc<lb/>
research, he ad<lb/>
Carruth serves a<lb/>
and in that capa<lb/>
for publication.<lb/>
While he was<lb/>
also addressed<lb/>
quium compose<lb/>
students. His tc<lb/>
TopoJogicat Alg<lb/>
����<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0013"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
13<lb/>
' :1<lb/>
MS program<lb/>
Two year innovative, individualized MS<lb/>
program seeks imaginative applicants<lb/>
motivated toward professional careers in<lb/>
public policy analysis, planning and<lb/>
management. Individuals with an aptitude<lb/>
for quantitative analysis from varied<lb/>
academic and career backgrounds<lb/>
sought. Financial aid and summer<lb/>
internships available. Contact: Program<lb/>
for Urban and Policy Sciences, State<lb/>
University of N.Y Stony Brook, N Y<lb/>
11790. Call (516) 246-8200.<lb/>
French class<lb/>
French Language and Culture for<lb/>
Travelers, a non-credit course, is open for<lb/>
enrollment at the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education.<lb/>
Designed to provide a basic<lb/>
understanding of spoken French as well as<lb/>
a look at French culture and personality,<lb/>
the course will "enhance the value of<lb/>
anyone's stay in France Continuing<lb/>
Education spokesmen said.<lb/>
The first class session meets Tuesday,<lb/>
April 2, at 7 p.m. in the ECU Social Science<lb/>
Building. Classes will meet every Tuesday<lb/>
for approximately three hours per<lb/>
session. The sign-up deadline for the<lb/>
course is March 21.<lb/>
The course will cost $28 and is limited<lb/>
to 15 persons for enrollment. Those<lb/>
interested may apply to: Non-credit<lb/>
programs, ECU Division of Continuing<lb/>
Educaiton, P.O. Box 2727, Greenville,<lb/>
N.C. 27834. Checks should be made<lb/>
payable to East Carolina University.<lb/>
Business scholarship<lb/>
Rachel H. Ipock, senior student in the<lb/>
ECU Department of Business Administra-<lb/>
tion, is the 1974 recipient of the Greenville<lb/>
Credit Women-International Scholarship.<lb/>
The Credit Women annually award the<lb/>
scholarship to a female student in the ECU<lb/>
School of Business who is a resident of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Union committees Appointment<lb/>
Guest math speaker<lb/>
Professor J. H. Carruth of the<lb/>
University of Tennessee was guest speaker<lb/>
when the graduate and undergraduate<lb/>
students in the ECU Mathematics<lb/>
Department met Feb. 20. His topic was<lb/>
"Topology-an Introduction for the<lb/>
Calculut Student<lb/>
Dr. Carruth, who is lecturing under the<lb/>
auspices of the Mathematical Association<lb/>
of American, received his Ph.D degree<lb/>
from Louisiana State University. He is<lb/>
active in research and has had articles<lb/>
published in ten different scholarly<lb/>
journals. In addition to his teaching and<lb/>
research, he advises Ph.D students. Dr.<lb/>
Carruth serves as referee for five journals<lb/>
and in that capacity helps choose material<lb/>
for publication.<lb/>
While he was in Greenville, Dr. Carruth<lb/>
also addressed the Mathematics Collo-<lb/>
quium composed of faculty and graduate<lb/>
students. His topic for this address was<lb/>
Topological Algebra<lb/>
Applications for chairman of Student<lb/>
Union committees are now being<lb/>
taken. They may be picked up at union<lb/>
information desk or union office any time<lb/>
this week. They should be turned in no<lb/>
later than 5:00 March 8, 1974. The<lb/>
committees are 1. Art exhibitions<lb/>
2. Artists series 3. Coffee House 4. Films<lb/>
5. Lecture series 6. Major attractions or<lb/>
"pops" 7. Recreation 8. Special concerts<lb/>
9. Travel 10. Video Tape 11. Theatre<lb/>
arts. Interviews will be held March 11-13.<lb/>
Poetry competition<lb/>
The National Poetry Press announces<lb/>
its spring competition for the College<lb/>
Students Poetry Anthology. The closing<lb/>
date for the submission of manuscripts by<lb/>
college students is April 10. Any student<lb/>
attending either junior or senior college is<lb/>
eligible to submit his verse. There is no<lb/>
limitation as to form or theme. Shorter<lb/>
works are preferred by the Board of<lb/>
Judges, because of space limitation.<lb/>
Each poem must be typed or printed on<lb/>
a separate sheet, and must bear the name<lb/>
and home address of the student, and the<lb/>
college address as well, also name of<lb/>
English instructor.<lb/>
Manuscripts should be sent to the<lb/>
Office of the Press, National Poetry Press,<lb/>
3210 Selby Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.<lb/>
90034.<lb/>
NCFCR treasurer<lb/>
Mark Burnette, an ECU sophomore has<lb/>
been elected state treasurer of the North<lb/>
Carolina Federation of College Republi-<lb/>
cans. Burnette won office unanimously at<lb/>
the College Republican state convention<lb/>
held on the UNC campus on Saturday,<lb/>
February 16.<lb/>
Correctional board<lb/>
H.G. Moeller of the ECU School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Professions is<lb/>
serving as one of four representatives from<lb/>
the field of criminal justice education to<lb/>
the board of directors of the American<lb/>
Correctional Association.<lb/>
Moeller, an associate professor in the<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services, attended the<lb/>
Board's mid-winter meeting Feb. 20-22 in<lb/>
Cleveland in this capacity.<lb/>
In addition to being a representative to<lb/>
the Board, Moeller will continue as<lb/>
co-chairman of the Association's Policy<lb/>
Statements Committee, a memebr of the<lb/>
Committee on National Standards and<lb/>
Goals and as a representative of the<lb/>
Association's Research Council to the<lb/>
Programs Committee.<lb/>
r<lb/>
C5COCCC5CCCCOGCO9CaO<lb/>
GOOD<lb/>
THINGS<lb/>
(it Nil r PfOPtt<lb/>
Jo Ann Bell, director of the ECU Health<lb/>
Affairs Library, has been appointed to the<lb/>
Medical Library Association's Continuing<lb/>
Education Committee.<lb/>
The appointment was made by Sam<lb/>
Hitt,president of the Medical Library<lb/>
Association, for the period covering<lb/>
1974-1975. The committee has the<lb/>
responsibility of developing and carrying<lb/>
out the continuing education programs of<lb/>
the association. These programs include<lb/>
short courses at national and regional<lb/>
meetings of the association.<lb/>
Current attention is being given to<lb/>
continued expansion of the continuing<lb/>
education courses to correspondence<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Ms. Bell will serve a two-year term on<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
Biology honors<lb/>
Three outstanding students in the ECU<lb/>
Department of Biology have received<lb/>
scholarship awards for unusual scholar-<lb/>
ship and research potential.<lb/>
They are graduate student Wayne Allen<lb/>
Gardner of Mebane, and undergraduates<lb/>
Ann Wilkes Fleming and Walter Thomas<lb/>
Calhoun of Greenville.<lb/>
The biology department, in cooperation<lb/>
with the University Scholarship and<lb/>
Financial Aid Committee, annually awards<lb/>
scholarships to one graduate and two<lb/>
undergraduate biology majors.<lb/>
Planetarium<lb/>
A new hobby at an old age has resulted<lb/>
in one of the Morehead Planetarium's most<lb/>
unusual productions, "Sunrise at<lb/>
Stonehenge showing nightly now<lb/>
through March 18.<lb/>
The show, which delves into the<lb/>
mysteries of Stonehenge, was written by<lb/>
Spencer Welch of Mount Kisco, N.Y. He<lb/>
works in the public relations division of<lb/>
IBM in New York and wrote the<lb/>
Planetarium script at nights and on<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
The general public may see "Sunrise<lb/>
at Stonehenge" without reservation on<lb/>
Monday through Sunday nights at 8 p.m.<lb/>
and at matinees on Saturdays at 11 a.m 1<lb/>
and 3 p.m. and Sundays at 2 ar.d 3 p.m.<lb/>
Admission at all times is 75 cents for<lb/>
children through age 11 or grade 6, $1 for<lb/>
students through college and $1.25 for<lb/>
adults.<lb/>
RigganShoe<lb/>
Repair Shop<lb/>
111 W. Fourth<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
���<lb/>
ocoooco<lb/>
Handcrafted Collection<lb/>
of<lb/>
Pewter Boxes<lb/>
PRC grad hired<lb/>
Ellen J. Phelps, graduating senior in<lb/>
the ECU Parks, Recreation and<lb/>
Conservation program, has been hired as a<lb/>
recreation supervisor by the City of<lb/>
Wilmington, N.C.<lb/>
She will be employed by the<lb/>
Wilmington Parks and Recreation<lb/>
Department upon completion of her degree<lb/>
requirements in March, and will work in<lb/>
the area of therapeutic and rehabilitative<lb/>
recreation.<lb/>
Internships<lb/>
handcrafted silver and turquoise by michael durkee<lb/>
Twenty-five internships are available<lb/>
for students in the Department of Natural<lb/>
and Economic Resources' Summer Intern<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
Applicants must have completed two<lb/>
years of college or technical training to<lb/>
qualify for the internships.<lb/>
This is the program's third year. It is<lb/>
designed to supplement student class-<lb/>
room work with practical experience, while<lb/>
providing the department with assistance<lb/>
in problem solving, according to Dr. Arthur<lb/>
Cooper, Assistant Secretary of the<lb/>
Department of Natural and Economic<lb/>
Resources. Most of the internship<lb/>
programs are located in the Raleigh area,<lb/>
with some scattered across the State. The<lb/>
students usually work for 12 consecutive<lb/>
weeks between May 6 and August 30.<lb/>
Among the projects to be covered are<lb/>
Land use planning, computerized<lb/>
inventory of state air quality and fuels, and<lb/>
geological properties of New Hanover<lb/>
County.<lb/>
Information blanks may be obtained<lb/>
from the Personnel Office, Department of<lb/>
Natural and Economic Resources, Box<lb/>
27687, Raleigh 27611, or by calling (919)<lb/>
829-4860. Deadline for applications is<lb/>
March 15.<lb/>
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SEMICID IS ALWAYS READY WHEN YOU ARE!<lb/>
If not available at your druggist, send<lb/>
S.V95 for the case containing ten mini-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039909_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD VOL 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Pirate trackmen finish third<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU track team won only one gold<lb/>
medal In finishing a disappointing third in<lb/>
the Southern Conference Indoor Track and<lb/>
Field Championships.<lb/>
The Pirates didn't do as well as<lb/>
expected inthe sprints and field events and<lb/>
William &amp; Mary and Furman's power in the<lb/>
middle and distance events spelled the<lb/>
Buc's defeat.<lb/>
William and Mary won the meet with 90<lb/>
points, followed by Furman with 74, ECU<lb/>
52, Richmond 32, Appalachian 12, VMI 7,<lb/>
Citadel 4 and Davidson 0.<lb/>
Tom Watson, the freshman shotputter<lb/>
from New Jersey, fought a head to head<lb/>
battle with William &amp; Mary's George Drexel<lb/>
in the shot and won the Pirates lone gold<lb/>
medal.<lb/>
In second place going into the finals,<lb/>
Watson threw 51' on his first attempt and<lb/>
then won the gold on his second with a<lb/>
heave of 52'1 12 Ivey Peacock placed<lb/>
third for the Pirates with a clutch throw of<lb/>
48'9 34" on his first throw in the finals.<lb/>
Watson commented on his school<lb/>
record throw, "In the finals I didn't rush<lb/>
myself and concentrated. I know the bad<lb/>
feeling of losing and really wanted to beat<lb/>
Drexel. I pushed weightlifting last week<lb/>
and my technique is finally together. With<lb/>
this win I can build a foundation for the<lb/>
outdoor season, my goal is between 54'<lb/>
and 55<lb/>
One of the most amazing performances<lb/>
of the meet was by high jumper Curt<lb/>
Dowdy. Dowdy cleared 6'6" for the silver<lb/>
medal, even though he stands only 5'6"<lb/>
tail.<lb/>
Dowdy was asked how man of his size<lb/>
could jump a clear foot above his height.<lb/>
"It's mainly willpower and the grace of<lb/>
God. During the week I train at 5'6 I<lb/>
feel that jumping higher heights during the<lb/>
week takes away the power in your legs<lb/>
you need for meets<lb/>
Roy Quick finished fourth and Al<lb/>
McCrimmons fifth for the Pirates giving<lb/>
the Bucs three out of the top fice places.<lb/>
The Bucs two outstanding distance<lb/>
runners both performed brillantly. Gerald<lb/>
Klas won a silver medal in the mile run<lb/>
after having led the race through the half<lb/>
' mile mark. Mac Collins of William and<lb/>
Mary, the gold medalist, then took the lead<lb/>
and Klas dropped to third. In the final lap<lb/>
Klass accelerated and finished second in<lb/>
4:13.5.<lb/>
Ed Rigsby won a bronze medal in the<lb/>
two mile in 9:10.2. Rigsby appeared<lb/>
superbly conditioned to challenge for gold<lb/>
medals outdoors in the three and six<lb/>
miles.<lb/>
Palmer Lisane turned in an exceptional<lb/>
performance in the 600 yd. run in winning a<lb/>
bronze medal in 1:13.8. Lisane's time<lb/>
broke the ECU indoor record. He felt he<lb/>
could have won except for some<lb/>
questionable tactics by several other<lb/>
runners.<lb/>
"Throughout the race guys were<lb/>
running into you, cutting you off coming<lb/>
into the (banked) curves and elbowing<lb/>
Dubious officiating was also noted in<lb/>
the 60 yd. dash, where ECU had three of<lb/>
the six finalists. At the tape it appeared<lb/>
Maurice Hunt ley of ECU won but the<lb/>
 judges gave him only third, with Ariah<lb/>
Johnson of the Pirates fourth, both in 6.5<lb/>
secofKls.<lb/>
In the first heat of the preliminaries<lb/>
Huntley clocked a 6.2, which qualifies him<lb/>
for the NCAA championships in Detroit,<lb/>
Michigan this weekend. Huntley's time<lb/>
broke the ECU record and tied the<lb/>
conference record.<lb/>
Three Pirates places in the 440 yd.<lb/>
dash, Johnson took third in 51.6, Charlie<lb/>
Lovelace fourth in 51.9 and Huntley fifth in<lb/>
52.1<lb/>
Other Pirate's who scored were Art<lb/>
Miller's bronze medal in the pole vault at<lb/>
14'6 Watson's fifth in the 35 lbs. weight<lb/>
throw at 40'1 11T, Larry Malone with a<lb/>
second and fifth in the long and triple jump<lb/>
respectively at 23V and 46'1 12 Willie<lb/>
Harves fourth at 22'1 in the long jump<lb/>
and Sam Phillips and Bill McRee third and<lb/>
fifth respectively in the 60 yd high hurdles.<lb/>
Pirate track coach Bill Carson<lb/>
commented on the meet, "We set three<lb/>
school records in the meet. We were five<lb/>
points ahead going into the 1000 and 880<lb/>
yd. runs but William &amp; Mary and Furman<lb/>
cleaned house. I felt it hurt us when they<lb/>
mispicked the 60 yd. dash. That and our<lb/>
overall lack of strength in the middle<lb/>
distances spelled out third place<lb/>
The Pirate's hopes are enlightened with<lb/>
the outdoor season, mainly because of the<lb/>
abundance of field events outdoors which<lb/>
can offset their weakness in the distance<lb/>
events.<lb/>
East Carolina opens its outdoor season<lb/>
March 15 with a tri-meet against N.C. State<lb/>
and Wake Forest.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINA BASKETBALL TEAM was upset in the first round of the Southern<lb/>
Conference tournament, dropping a double overtime contest to William and Mary by the<lb/>
score of 75-67. Earlier this season the Pirates had defeated the Indians by a 30 point<lb/>
margin. Reggie Lee led the Bucs with 16 points, and Larry Hunt, who tallied 11, led all<lb/>
rebounders with eight. W&amp;M's Mike Arizan led all scorers with 27. The top-seeded<lb/>
Furman Paladins won the tournament and will represent the conference in the NCAA<lb/>
playoffs. Furman plays South Carolina Saturday at the Palestra in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Camels and Blue Devils fall victim to Buc nine<lb/>
On Tuesday afternoon before a fine<lb/>
shirt-sleeved crowd at Harrington Field the<lb/>
East Carolina University baseball team ran<lb/>
its record to 2-0 as they downed Enos<lb/>
Slaughter's Duke Blue Devils rather<lb/>
convincingly, 11-6. Campbell College was<lb/>
the Pirate's first victim of the season<lb/>
Saturday, falling by the score of 9-1.<lb/>
The Bucs flexed their muscles against<lb/>
the Camels, clouting four homeruns. Ron<lb/>
Staggs tagged two and Carl Summerell<lb/>
and Russ Smith slugged one round-tripper<lb/>
apiece.<lb/>
Dave LaRussa went the first three<lb/>
innings on the mound for East Carolina<lb/>
and he was credited with the win.<lb/>
Against the Blue Devils, Summerell<lb/>
staked ECU to a 1 -0 advantage in the initial<lb/>
inning. He singled to drive in Staggs, who<lb/>
had singled earlier in the frame.<lb/>
The Pirate's big inning, however, was<lb/>
the second. Ronnie Legget scored on a<lb/>
single off the bat of catcher Rick<lb/>
McMahon. Jeff Beaston walked, then<lb/>
Smith singled to drive in McMahon.<lb/>
Staggs then crashed his third homer of the<lb/>
year, a three-run shot, giving ECU a 6-0<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
Duke pushed across two runs in the<lb/>
fourth, but the Pirates got the two runs<lb/>
back in their half of the sixth inning as<lb/>
Staggs tripled to drive in McMahon,<lb/>
followed by a single by Mike Hogan. This<lb/>
upped the Pirate margin to 8-2.<lb/>
The Bucs plated three more runs in the<lb/>
seventh. Jack Elkins drew a base-on-balls<lb/>
and Legget singled. Beaston then<lb/>
bounced a ball through the Duke infield,<lb/>
driving in Elkins, and then Smith singled,<lb/>
sending Beaston and Legget plateward for<lb/>
an 11-2 East Carolina lead.<lb/>
The Blue Devils then threw a scare into<lb/>
the Pirate nine, loading the sacks after<lb/>
scoring four runs in the eighth.<lb/>
But the rally stalled there as Steve<lb/>
Herring came in from the bullpen to put<lb/>
ogt the fire and the Bucs triumphed, 11-6.<lb/>
Wayne Bland went the first three<lb/>
innings for East Carolina and he was<lb/>
credited with the pitching victory.<lb/>
The Bucs now take off on a five game<lb/>
road trip, playing the nations sixth ranked<lb/>
team, N.C. State, yesterday and today in<lb/>
Raleigh. Next home game will be against<lb/>
another tough ACC foe, the Virginia<lb/>
Cavaliers, on March 18.<lb/>
Intramural champions are decided<lb/>
Bill D'Andrea's tap-in with one second<lb/>
remaining lifted the Horrors to a 40-38<lb/>
triumph over the Contured Phitz in the<lb/>
battle for the intramural basketball<lb/>
championship. The Horrors, frustrated by<lb/>
three consecutive near-misses in their<lb/>
championship quest, were paced by Benny<lb/>
Gibson's 13 points, while Fred Horeis<lb/>
contributed 10. Carl Summerell provided<lb/>
rebounding power. Terry Prilliman of the<lb/>
Contured Phitz captured scoring honors<lb/>
with 14 points.<lb/>
Kenny Moore of Herb's Superbs<lb/>
swished 21 of 25 freethrows to win the<lb/>
intramural foul shooting contest. John<lb/>
Bobo, representing the Contured Phitz,<lb/>
connected on 19 ot 25 tosses to finish<lb/>
second.<lb/>
Herb's Superbs swept five of nine<lb/>
weight classes enroute to a lopsided<lb/>
victory in the wrestling tournament. Bruce<lb/>
McDonald, Phil Hagen, Robert Campbell,<lb/>
Bob Synder, and Buddy Lowery all carried<lb/>
the Superbs' banner into the winner's<lb/>
circle. Other winners included John<lb/>
Seidel, Bill Dill, Barry John and Buddy<lb/>
Sudak.<lb/>
The fitness test was another high-water<lb/>
mark for Herb's Superbs as they easily<lb/>
MMflftMMPM<lb/>
outdistanced runners-up Kappa Alpha and<lb/>
Kappa Sigma. Indidivual winners from the<lb/>
Supbers included Phil Hagen, who gained<lb/>
laurels with 74 sit-ups and 30 pull-ups, and<lb/>
Paul Minshew, who circled the gym 35<lb/>
times during the 12 minute run.<lb/>
Sam Morgan's 179 average paced the<lb/>
Baptist Student Union to the campus-wide<lb/>
bowling crown. Second place belonged to<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha, led by Hubert Gibson,<lb/>
while Sigma Phi Epsilon gained third.<lb/>
The Contured Phitz outclassed the field<lb/>
en route to a resounding team triumph in<lb/>
the swimming meet. The Cp's grabbed top<lb/>
spots in both the 100-yard medley relay<lb/>
and the 200-yard freestyle relay. Jim<lb/>
Burden (CP) prevailed in the diving<lb/>
competition, while double-winner Tracy<lb/>
Connors (CP) recorded a 27.13 time in the<lb/>
50-yard backstroke and 11.66 in the<lb/>
25-yard butterfly. Dave Williams com-<lb/>
pleted the 50-yard breastroke in 32.83 for<lb/>
the other CP triumph.<lb/>
Other victors included Gary North<lb/>
(Arnold Air Society), with a 23.89 in the<lb/>
50-yard freestyle and 10.89 in the 25-yard<lb/>
freestyle, and John Woods (Herb's<lb/>
Superbs), who did 1:04.64 in the 100-yard<lb/>
individual medley.<lb/>
The <lb/>
champior<lb/>
captured<lb/>
classes i<lb/>
won at tl<lb/>
was held<lb/>
The F<lb/>
outdisiar<lb/>
State. Tl-<lb/>
liam&amp; M<lb/>
111 12.<lb/>
with a sh<lb/>
The<lb/>
finised a<lb/>
Citadel,<lb/>
Davidson<lb/>
Prior<lb/>
Wei born<lb/>
account<lb/>
match se<lb/>
showings<lb/>
now doe?<lb/>
to the co<lb/>
Was <lb/>
the squac<lb/>
"I don<lb/>
really. Oi<lb/>
ten class<lb/>
conferenc<lb/>
(Pirate 13<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0015"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
15<lb/>
Mft<lb/>
4MM�<lb/>
m<lb/>
Grappers now eye NCAA Tourney<lb/>
f<lb/>
vI<lb/>
the Southern<lb/>
d Mary by the<lb/>
by a 30 point<lb/>
led 11, led all<lb/>
te top-seeded<lb/>
in the NCAA<lb/>
elphia.<lb/>
cnme<lb/>
victory.<lb/>
on a five game<lb/>
ns sixth ranked<lb/>
iy and today in<lb/>
will be against<lb/>
, the Virginia<lb/>
icided<lb/>
appa Alpha and<lb/>
'inners from the<lb/>
en, who gained<lb/>
30 pull-ups, and<lb/>
kj the gym 35<lb/>
i run.<lb/>
rage paced the<lb/>
le campus-wide<lb/>
ace belonged to<lb/>
Hubert Gibson,<lb/>
ained third.<lb/>
;lassed the field<lb/>
earn triumph in<lb/>
p's grabbed top<lb/>
d medley relay<lb/>
yle relay. Jim<lb/>
in the diving<lb/>
e-winner Tracy<lb/>
7.13 time in the<lb/>
11.66 in the<lb/>
Williams com-<lb/>
)ke in 32.83 for<lb/>
d Gary North<lb/>
a 23.89 in the<lb/>
) in the 25-yard<lb/>
foods (Herb's<lb/>
in the 100-yard<lb/>
By DAVE ENGLERT<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The defending Southern Conference<lb/>
champion East Carolina wrestling team<lb/>
captured seven of ten individual weight<lb/>
classes en route to a third straight title,<lb/>
won at the conference tournament which<lb/>
was held at Boone on February 22 and 23.<lb/>
The Pirates piled up 171 points, far<lb/>
outdistancing second place Appalachian<lb/>
State. The Mountaineers surprised Wil-<lb/>
liam &amp; Mary, finishing with 121 12 to their<lb/>
,111112. The Indians were the only team<lb/>
with a shot at upsetting the Pirates.<lb/>
The remainder of the conferences<lb/>
finised as follows: VMI, 52 12; The<lb/>
Citadel, 38 12; Richmond, 23 12;<lb/>
Davidson, 10 112; and Furman, 3 112.<lb/>
Prior to the tournament, coach John<lb/>
Welborn made this statement, taking into<lb/>
account the matmen's undefeated dual<lb/>
match season and impressive tournament<lb/>
showings. "Anything we've done up to<lb/>
now doesn't mean a thing when it comes<lb/>
to the conference tournament<lb/>
Was he satisfied with the showing of<lb/>
the squad?<lb/>
"I don't guess a coach is ever satisfied,<lb/>
really. Our repeat of taking seven out of<lb/>
ten classes shows our domination of the<lb/>
conference. We lost real close at 34 and 67<lb/>
(Pirate 134 pounder Milt Sherman and 167<lb/>
PIRATE CO-CAPTAIN BILL HILL top, shown here in action earlier this season against<lb/>
Pembroke State, has compiled an amazing individual record this year of 40-2 while<lb/>
competing in the 177 pound weight class.<lb/>
pounder Ron Whitcomb, both 7-6. If they<lb/>
had won I would have been much happier<lb/>
Last year Sherman was the 142 pound<lb/>
champ and this year's 142 winner, ECU'S<lb/>
Tom Marriott, won the title at 150 pounds<lb/>
last year. With the Pirates relative<lb/>
weakness at 150 this year and the<lb/>
presence of William &amp; Mary's stellar 134<lb/>
pounder, Mark Belknap, the possibility<lb/>
existed that Welborn would shift both up<lb/>
one weight class.<lb/>
"No stated Welborn. "I'm sure they<lb/>
would have won, but they would have been<lb/>
outmanned at the nationals<lb/>
With the loss of Sherman to Belknap<lb/>
(Sherman has been the only one to defeat<lb/>
Belknap this season, that coming at a<lb/>
tournament early in the season), ECU'S<lb/>
chances of improving on last year's 19th in<lb/>
the nation finish have been dampened.<lb/>
Sherman is one of the top three wrestlers<lb/>
on the team, along with Bill Hill and Jim<lb/>
Blair.<lb/>
"He had the possibility of placing<lb/>
nationally said Welborn in praising<lb/>
Sherman. "That's the loss of possible<lb/>
points - now we don't have that<lb/>
chance. The same with Whitcomb. The<lb/>
loss of both of them will definitely hurt<lb/>
Also, according to Welborn, a chance<lb/>
in the scoring system wiH also hinder the<lb/>
Pirates ability to perform as well as last<lb/>
vear Continued on page sixteen.<lb/>
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First Class round trip transportation from winner's location to FT. LA'JDFRDALE!<lb/>
Honda rental bike during the duration of your stay!<lb/>
Dinner for two at the fabulous "Pink Pussy Cat<lb/>
Dinner for two at the "Windjammer"<lb/>
Dinner for two at "Pier 66" - the world's most fantastic supper club overlooking the beautiful blue ATLANTIC!<lb/>
$100.00 credit account in your name at "She" - the swingingest singles spot in Florida! Top name entertainment seven days a week'<lb/>
$60.00 credit account in your name at 'The Button" - Lauderdale's leading after hours club!<lb/>
$100.00 cash - to spend as you please!<lb/>
10 Each Second Prizes<lb/>
s.<lb/>
Three days, two nights at Holiday Inn, on the ocean, at FT. LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA.<lb/>
Round trip transportation (from winner's location).<lb/>
Dinner for two at 'The Windjammer<lb/>
$25.00 credit account in your name at "She<lb/>
$25.00 cash - to spend as you please.<lb/>
!Nk<lb/>
1,000 Third Prizes<lb/>
m<lb/>
1. Any one stereo LP or 8 track tape of your choice listed in the current New Era Records Catalog.<lb/>
vj<lb/>
RULES AND REGULATIONS<lb/>
Corvesi open only to bonafide students of an accredited college or university<lb/>
Winners will be selected by the W A Wilholt Corporation, an independent judging<lb/>
organization Winners will be selected at random and the decision of the nidges will be<lb/>
final A list of all winners will be available upon written request to New Era Records<lb/>
To register, print information in spaces provided on coupon �?<lb/>
Enclose1 00 for processing and handling Remit by check or postal money order only<lb/>
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Entries must be postmarked NOT LATER THAN March 8th 1974<lb/>
CURTIS ENTERPRISES - NEW ERA RECORDS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039909_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 377 MARCH 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Swimmers take eighth straight Title<lb/>
Coach Ray Scharf's dream was for his<lb/>
Pirate swimmers to win all eighteen events<lb/>
in the 20th annual Southern Conference<lb/>
Swimming and Diving Championships. At<lb/>
the end of the three day affair, the Bucs<lb/>
handed their coach his dream on a silver<lb/>
platter as they swam to victories in every<lb/>
single event.<lb/>
Despite the fact that ECU was out for<lb/>
quarter break, a fine crowd turned out at<lb/>
Minges Natatorium to witness the Pirates<lb/>
make mincemeat of the remainder of the<lb/>
conference. Every Pirate swimmer and<lb/>
diver gave it their all as they put on one of<lb/>
the most awesome displays of power the<lb/>
conference has ever seen.<lb/>
In winning theri eighth straight<lb/>
Conference title, the Bucs amassed a total<lb/>
of 685 points. The University of Richmond<lb/>
was a distant second with 337, William and<lb/>
Mary third with 270, VMI fourth with 249,<lb/>
Furman t, th with 131, and Appalachian<lb/>
State was sixth with 113 and Davidson was<lb/>
seventh with 75 points.<lb/>
Double winners for East Carolina were<lb/>
arry Green, who was superb in capturing<lb/>
he 500 and 1650-yard distance freestyle<lb/>
vents. Charlie Kemp, the meet's most<lb/>
utstanding swimmer, swam to victories<lb/>
i the 100 and 200-yard breakstroke<lb/>
avents. Ross Bohlken was victorious in<lb/>
the 100 and 200-yard freestyle events.<lb/>
Greg Hinchman displayed his versatility in<lb/>
capturing the 100-yard backstroke and the<lb/>
200-yard individual medley. Payl Schiflel<lb/>
turned in first place finished in the<lb/>
400-yard individual medley and the<lb/>
200-yard backstroke. The 100 and the 200-<lb/>
yard butterfly events were won by Mike<lb/>
Brett ing and Jack Morrow recorded<lb/>
ictories in the one and three-meter diving<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Jim Hadley was an individual winner as<lb/>
le was triumphant in the 50-yard freestyle<lb/>
jvent.<lb/>
East Carolina swept all three relay<lb/>
events as the 400-yard freestyle relay<lb/>
(Steve Ruedlinger, Hadley, Bob Vail and<lb/>
Bohlken), the 800-yard freestyle relay<lb/>
(Ruedlinger, Vail, Bohlken and Tom Falk),<lb/>
and the 400-yard medley relay (Schiffel,<lb/>
Kemp, Bretting and Vail) were all gold<lb/>
medalists.<lb/>
Fourteen conference and varsity<lb/>
records and one pool record was<lb/>
established. Varsity and conference<lb/>
records were set by Green in the 500-yard<lb/>
freestyle, Schiffel in the 400-yard<lb/>
individual medley, Kemp in the 100 and the<lb/>
?00-yard breakstroke events, Bretting in<lb/>
?e 200-yard butterfly, the 400-yard medley<lb/>
elay and the 800-yard freestyle<lb/>
elay. Morrow set a new pool record in the<lb/>
.hree-meter diving competition.<lb/>
East Carolina holds 17 of the 18<lb/>
conference records.<lb/>
Coach Scharf will not take a select few<lb/>
swimmers and divers to Princeton, Nevi<lb/>
Jersey for the Eastern Seaboard<lb/>
Championships to be held this weekend.<lb/>
1650 free:<lb/>
FINALS<lb/>
Green (EC)<lb/>
17:19.99,<lb/>
Kibiloski (R) 17:27.79, Schnell (EC)<lb/>
17:50.91.<lb/>
100 free: Bohlken (EC) :48.96, D.<lb/>
Havens (WM) :48.97, Vail (EC) .49.32.<lb/>
200 back: Schiffle (EC) 2:07.79,<lb/>
Hinchman (EC) 2(10.88, Hughes (EC)<lb/>
2:11.36.<lb/>
200breast: Kemp (EC) 2:18.19, Helms<lb/>
ASU) 2:23.8, Hartzler (WM) 2:24.4.<lb/>
200 butterfly: Bretting (EC) 2:00.48,<lb/>
H. Morrow (EC) 2:13.79, Cairney (R),<lb/>
- 04 85.<lb/>
3M diving: J. Morrow (EC) 481.90,<lb/>
Kopecky (R) 409.00, Morin (EC) 406.9.<lb/>
DETERMINATION AS SHOWN HERE<lb/>
unprecedented sweep of all 18 events<lb/>
quarter break.<lb/>
guided the ECU swimming team to an<lb/>
In the conference championships, held over<lb/>
Women eagers are dethroned<lb/>
The ECU women cagers broke even at<lb/>
the state tournament in Greensboro, Feb.<lb/>
21-23, by winning over High Point, 49-44,<lb/>
and dropping one to UNC-G, 63-50.<lb/>
It was a bad weekend for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates as they saw the women's state<lb/>
cage crown go to an undefeated team from<lb/>
Eton College. The Elon Christians ended<lb/>
their season 17-0 by downing Western<lb/>
Carolina, 61-48 for the championship title.<lb/>
In the first game against HighPoint, the<lb/>
women had a cold night from the floor<lb/>
hitting only 29 per cent of their<lb/>
shots. They took a five point lead into the<lb/>
locker room at the hald, 26-19. In the third<lb/>
quarter the ECU women surged to a nine<lb/>
point lead, 38-27, but the women from<lb/>
High Point gave ECU all they could take<lb/>
during a tense fourth quarter. The game<lb/>
ended with ECU on top, 49-45.<lb/>
The women had a good night from the<lb/>
foul line making 72 per cent � tneir<lb/>
attempts from the chairty line. Sheilah<lb/>
Cotten was high in rebounding with 16<lb/>
grabs and fellow co-captain Susan<lb/>
Manning followed with 13. Cotten was<lb/>
also high scorer with 14 points. Manning<lb/>
contributed eight and Frances Swenholt<lb/>
added nine points to the Pirate effort.<lb/>
On Friday night the ECU women were<lb/>
dropped by an inspired team from UNC-G,<lb/>
63-50. The Lady Pirates seemed unable to<lb/>
pull themselves together in the<lb/>
clash. They were down by two points at<lb/>
the end of the first quarter and at the half<lb/>
were down by three.<lb/>
In the third quarter, the Pirates battled<lb/>
their way to a four point lead, but were still<lb/>
unable to play well together. In the final<lb/>
quarter the women from ECU fell apart,<lb/>
relinquishing their chance for the state<lb/>
title. The UNC-G team blasted into the<lb/>
semi-finals by bettering the Pirates 13<lb/>
points, 63-50.<lb/>
Cotten was again the high scorer with<lb/>
23 points. Manning and Swenholt both<lb/>
tossed in eight points for ECU. Swenholt<lb/>
had a good defensive game, grabbing nine<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
Team co-captain, Sheilah Cotten, was<lb/>
named to the All State team which is<lb/>
headed up by U.S. World University team<lb/>
member, Marsha Mann, from UNC-CH.<lb/>
Coach Catherine Bolton commented on<lb/>
ECU'S tournament play, "Our play didn't<lb/>
have that flowing, free quality and without<lb/>
it you can't do anything. We didn't have it<lb/>
in the first game against High Point even<lb/>
though we won<lb/>
Bolton continued, "Everyone who saw<lb/>
our game against UNC-G said that<lb/>
Greensboro played their season's best<lb/>
game against us<lb/>
When asked about next year's<lb/>
prospects, Bolton said, "We will have to<lb/>
do some early season work on team<lb/>
attitude. We have a good number of<lb/>
players returning and have some talented<lb/>
freshmen coming in.<lb/>
The Pirates ended regular season play,<lb/>
7-4, and tournament play, 1-1.<lb/>
(EC) 1:02.57,<lb/>
Zeugner (VMI)<lb/>
400 free relay: ECU 3:15.75, W&amp;M<lb/>
3:15.75, Richmond 3:23.72.<lb/>
400IM: Schiffel (EC) 4:21.65, Kiviloski<lb/>
(R) 4:28.22, Cairney (R) 4:29.03.<lb/>
200 free: Bohlken (EC) 1:48.27, Vail<lb/>
(EC) 1:48.95, Primavera (R) 1:49.41.<lb/>
100 butterfly: Bretting (EC) :53.9,<lb/>
Morrow (EC) : 54.91, Dearfield (WM)<lb/>
:55.08.<lb/>
100 back: Hinchman (EC) :57.94,<lb/>
Cunningham (VMI) :58.82, Hadley (EC)<lb/>
:58.95.<lb/>
100 breast: Kemp<lb/>
Mclntyre (WM) 1:02.76,<lb/>
1:05.18.<lb/>
800 free relay: ECU 7:17.97, Rich-<lb/>
mong 7:28.3, W&amp;M 7 30.32.<lb/>
SOOfree: Green (EC) 4:53.53, Kibiloski<lb/>
(R) 4:58.92, Schnell (EC) 5:03.13.<lb/>
200 I.M Hinchman (EC) 2:03.19,<lb/>
Schiffel (EC) 2:05.07, Kemp (EC) 2:06.38.<lb/>
50 free: Hadley (EC) 21.95, Hagler (Fu)<lb/>
22.40, Mclntyre (WM) 22.54.<lb/>
1 Meter: Morrow (EC) 420.33, Morin<lb/>
(EC), Kipecky (R).<lb/>
400 Medley Relay: EC) 3.42.96, (WM)<lb/>
3:45.89, (VMI) 3.53.65.<lb/>
Wrestling<lb/>
Continued from page fifteen.<lb/>
Two Pirates continue on with amazing<lb/>
individual records. Hill is 40-2 on the year,<lb/>
while Blair is 41-3. Sherman also has an<lb/>
equally impressive mark 38-4.<lb/>
One other honor came back to<lb/>
Greenville with that championship<lb/>
trophy. Coach Welborn was voted by his<lb/>
fellow Southern Conference coaches as<lb/>
Outstanding Coach of the Year This<lb/>
was the first year that such an award was<lb/>
given.<lb/>
So now everything centers on a trip to<lb/>
Ames, Iowa, home of Iowa State<lb/>
University and site of this year's NCAA<lb/>
tournament. The tournament, which<lb/>
brings together the 32 best wrestlers in the<lb/>
nation at each weight class, will be held<lb/>
March 14-16.<lb/>
SUMMARY<lb/>
118-Jim Blair (ECU) by fall over Phil<lb/>
Sultie(ASU, 6:57.<lb/>
126-Glenn Baker (ECU) decisionea Jim<lb/>
Hicks (W&amp;M), 4-2.<lb/>
134-Mark Belknap (W&amp;M) decisioned<lb/>
Milt Sherman (ECU) 7-6.<lb/>
142-Tom Marriott (ECU) by superior<lb/>
decision over John Trudgeon (W&amp;M), 23-6.<lb/>
150-Chris Jacobson (ASu) by fall over<lb/>
Bill Hogan(W&amp;M), 7:22.<lb/>
158-Bruce Hall (ECU) decisioned Dale<lb/>
Midkiff (ASU), 13-5.<lb/>
167-Bob Stark (W&amp;M) decisioned Ron<lb/>
Whitcomb (ECU), 7-6.<lb/>
177-Bill Bill (ECU) decisioned Terry<lb/>
Thompson (ASU), 11-3.<lb/>
190-Mike Radford (ECU decisioned<lb/>
Alfred Ash (ASU), 11-5.<lb/>
HWT-Willie Bryant (ECU) decisioned<lb/>
Steve Crocker (RICH), 10-2.<lb/>
Gymnasts take meet Synchronization Women to nationals<lb/>
� Coach Eric Orders will take fo<lb/>
The East Carolina women's gymnastic<lb/>
team prepped for this weekend's state<lb/>
tournament as they defeated Longwood<lb/>
College last week by the score of 64-53.<lb/>
Seniors Joan Fulp and Melanie Rufty<lb/>
turned in fine first place performances to<lb/>
lead the team. Miss Fulp also placed<lb/>
second in two events. Gail Phillips<lb/>
continued her good season with two<lb/>
seconds and a third. Freshmen Charlie<lb/>
Daniels also garnered a third.<lb/>
All guys and girls who would be<lb/>
interested in synchronized swimming and<lb/>
possibly producing a show during spring<lb/>
quarter should meet next Wednesday at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Memorial Pool. Don't forget to<lb/>
bring your swimsuits.<lb/>
wm�immmammmmm<lb/>
Why the old dog howls with sadness.<lb/>
All of this and some of that's the only way<lb/>
to skin the cat.<lb/>
Coach Eric Orders will take four<lb/>
swimmers and two divers to Penn State<lb/>
University on March 14-16 to represent the<lb/>
East Carolina women's swimming team in<lb/>
the Women's National Intercollegiate<lb/>
Swimming and Diving Championships.<lb/>
Doris Conlyn, Beverly Osborn, Linda<lb/>
Smiley and Barbara Strange will swim,<lb/>
while Sue Bingham and Cindy Wheeler will<lb/>
participate in the one and three-meter<lb/>
diving events.<lb/>
oMmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039909_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>