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<pb facs="00039911_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Review Board<lb/>
Jenkins reverses decision<lb/>
By DARRELL E. WILLIAMS<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
A Feb. 25 advisory opinion of the<lb/>
Review Board was reversed by Chancellor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins Friday on the advice of David<lb/>
S. Stevens, ECU legal advisor. Bill<lb/>
Phipps, chairman of the Review Board,<lb/>
stated today that the board "was in the<lb/>
process of trying to get the decision<lb/>
reinstated<lb/>
The Feb. 25 Review Board decision<lb/>
"concerned the legal authority of the SGA<lb/>
President (presently Bill Bodenhamer) to<lb/>
allocate funds which have been<lb/>
appropriated as a 'miscellaneous funds'<lb/>
line item to the Student Government<lb/>
Cabinet and the Executive Council<lb/>
according to Stevens.<lb/>
The Review Board decision stated<lb/>
basically that "money appropriated to the<lb/>
Cabinet as a line item under the Executive<lb/>
Budget shall be voted on by all members of<lb/>
the Cabinet in the case of a controversy<lb/>
between the members of the Cabinet. Any<lb/>
expenditure of monies from the Cabinet<lb/>
requires a majority vote of the members of<lb/>
the Cabinet. This decision is based on the<lb/>
fact that the money was appropriated<lb/>
specifically to the Cabinet and not to the<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
Stevens, in reversing this decision,<lb/>
stated that "the only legal limitation on the<lb/>
allocation of duly appropriated miscellan-<lb/>
eous funds by the SGA President and his<lb/>
cabinet is that the funds be used for an<lb/>
official or public purpose<lb/>
"(The Review Board decision) does not<lb/>
address the legal issue at hand Stevens<lb/>
said in his opinion. "To deal with<lb/>
possible future conflicts of this nature, I<lb/>
strongly recommend adoption of the<lb/>
procedures set forth by the Board in its<lb/>
opinion Thus, as in this statement, the<lb/>
Review Board decision was overturned. A<lb/>
follow-up of the Review Board decision<lb/>
will appear in the next issue of<lb/>
Fountainhead.<lb/>
?????<lb/>
International major possible<lb/>
By BARBARA TURNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An International Studies Program,<lb/>
involving an inter-disciplinary major and<lb/>
emphasizing various aspects of the<lb/>
international scene, may soon be a part of<lb/>
the ECU academic curriculum. According<lb/>
to a recent poll taken by the SGA Internal<lb/>
Affairs Committee, there is a strong<lb/>
interest among ECU students for an<lb/>
international studies major.<lb/>
Grier Ferguson, spokesman for the<lb/>
Internal Affairs Committee, proposed an<lb/>
Best delegation and best bill<lb/>
ECU dele<lb/>
By SUSAN QUINN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Not only did the ECU delegation of the<lb/>
North Carolina Student Legislature (NCSL)<lb/>
set a record as being the fi'st college in<lb/>
international studies major to the<lb/>
SGA. He interpreted and commented on<lb/>
figures from the poll taken in three<lb/>
Political Science classes and at random in<lb/>
the dorms.<lb/>
Ferguson said, "The results were quite<lb/>
positive. My general conclusion is that 95<lb/>
percent of the students who responded<lb/>
thought the major would be worthwhile.<lb/>
534 students responded of the 1000 ballots<lb/>
sent out. Fifty-three percent of the ballots<lb/>
were returned<lb/>
Continued on page thirteen.<lb/>
x<lb/>
8<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
(9<lb/>
?<lb/>
09<lb/>
"WIND SONG one of the recent sculptural works of ECU art professor Robert<lb/>
Edmiston is seen In its new location in front of Fletcher Music Building.<lb/>
many NCSL<lb/>
JOHN PREVETTE<lb/>
North Carolina to receive awards for both<lb/>
the best delegation and best bill, but it<lb/>
also carried home many other honors and<lb/>
awards from the 37th annual NCSL.<lb/>
The ECU delegation is one of the 40<lb/>
schools represetned in the model<lb/>
legislature. Some other schools partici-<lb/>
pating in NCSL are as follows: Wake<lb/>
Forest, Duke University, North Carolina<lb/>
State University, University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Greensboro, Methodist<lb/>
College, Peace College and Queens<lb/>
College.<lb/>
The awards of best bill and best<lb/>
delegation represented the hard work of all<lb/>
of the ECU delegation members. The best<lb/>
bill was awarded to the ECU delegation for<lb/>
their bill entitled "The Juvenile Justice<lb/>
Act The bill provides for raising the age<lb/>
of a juvenile offender to 18. It will also<lb/>
create a division of youth development<lb/>
under the department of Social<lb/>
Rehabilitation and Control and deal with<lb/>
other problems which have been<lb/>
encountered in past years when dealing<lb/>
with juveniles.<lb/>
Jim Davis, Sally Freeman, and Vallerie<lb/>
Szabo wrote and revised the bill and the<lb/>
other delegation members lobbyed the bill.<lb/>
ECU delegates receiving awards were<lb/>
as follows: Freida Clark was elected to<lb/>
the conference committee, a committee<lb/>
which approves the final form of<lb/>
legislation which is to be sent to the N.C.<lb/>
General Assembly; Lee McLaughlin was<lb/>
elected to the Carlisle Committee, which<lb/>
was responsible for selecting the best<lb/>
legislator of the year. Jane Noffsinger was<lb/>
appointed recording secretary of the house<lb/>
of representatives. Sally Freeman was<lb/>
elected secretary of state. Harry Stubbs<lb/>
was elected Speaker Pro Tern and received<lb/>
an award for best delegation chairman.<lb/>
Jim Davis received an award for best<lb/>
speaker of the house. John Prevette,<lb/>
Harry Stubbs and Maurice Huntley<lb/>
received certificates of appreciation from<lb/>
the governor of NCSL.<lb/>
Other members of the ECU delegation<lb/>
include D.D. Dixon. House Delegate;<lb/>
Steve Nobles, House Delegate; Dianne<lb/>
Bower, House Alternate; John Davis,<lb/>
House Alternate; Rick Gilliam, House<lb/>
Delegate; Maurice Huntley, House<lb/>
Delegate; Lee McLaughlin, Advisor;<lb/>
Michael Edwards, House Delegate; Jimmy<lb/>
Honeycutt, Senate Alternate; Debbie<lb/>
Ruthledge, House Delegate; Mike West,<lb/>
House Delegate; Sandy West, House<lb/>
Delegate; Greg McLeod, House Delegate;<lb/>
Angela Pennine House Alternate; Susan<lb/>
Jewell, House Delegate; Vemon Bean,<lb/>
House Alternate; and Susan Quinn,<lb/>
Observer.<lb/>
These legislators worked together<lb/>
lobbying their ideas concerning bills and<lb/>
resolutions, particularly the juvenile<lb/>
justice bill and the Medical School<lb/>
resolution. They also worked in commit-<lb/>
tee revising and amending other school's<lb/>
bills In fact Vallerie Szabo rewrote the<lb/>
Methodist College bill concerning the<lb/>
abolishment of corporal punishment and<lb/>
this bill was awarded the best bill from a<lb/>
small school.<lb/>
Besides the many hard, long hours of<lb/>
work and the sessions and committee<lb/>
meetings, the delegation did attend<lb/>
several social activities. Wednesday<lb/>
NCSL was invited to a tea at Chancellor<lb/>
Caldwell's of North Carolina State<lb/>
University and Wednesday night NCSL<lb/>
HARRY STUBBS at NCSU.<lb/>
attended a banquet with many General<lb/>
Assembly members.<lb/>
The ECU delegation was also invited to<lb/>
parties given by the larger schools<lb/>
including NCSU, UNC-Cbapel Hill and<lb/>
Continued on page five.<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
news<lb/>
Women's Week Clogging lesson<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
International festival<lb/>
Fr<lb/>
Attention musical groups or indivi-<lb/>
duals! General entertainment too! If you<lb/>
are interested in being a part of the<lb/>
entertainment program that is being<lb/>
sponsored for Women's Awareness Week<lb/>
in April, contact either of the following<lb/>
people: Kathy Kleppinger at 758-6074 or<lb/>
Pam Holt at 758-6101. The program will be<lb/>
in the amphitheater behind Fletcher Dorm.<lb/>
Canticle<lb/>
This spring the members of the ECU<lb/>
coffeehouse committee, The Canticle, are<lb/>
bursting forth with energy to bring you the<lb/>
most pleasant entertainment available.<lb/>
Starting this Saturday night, March 16,<lb/>
at 8:00 will be Rick Goodling &amp; Keith<lb/>
Winkler who received unusual attention<lb/>
from the audience at the Old Time<lb/>
Bluegrass Convention outside of Charlotte<lb/>
this past fall. Rick and Keith play a variety<lb/>
of styles of music. Charlie Rodgers will<lb/>
also be performing. Since this is a local<lb/>
show, auditions are encouraged after the<lb/>
scheduled show.<lb/>
This committee is planning on having a<lb/>
coffeehouse almost every week this<lb/>
quarter which will include outstanding<lb/>
professional entertainers as well as several<lb/>
local shows. We encourage all types of<lb/>
entertainment to audition because it is not<lb/>
just the singer and guitar player that gains<lb/>
attention but also the dancer, dramatist,<lb/>
hypnotist, and classical bassoon player<lb/>
than an audience is sentitive to.<lb/>
The committee is presently working on<lb/>
entertainment for spring, planning a new<lb/>
coffeehouse for next year, and trying to<lb/>
establish a system where students can<lb/>
bring beer or wine with them while they<lb/>
listen to music. Hopefully the spring will<lb/>
bring warm weather so that entertainment<lb/>
can be enjoyed outside on the patio behind<lb/>
the student union.<lb/>
Admission to all shows is 25 cents plus<lb/>
I.D. This week's show will be held in<lb/>
Room 201 of the Student Union.<lb/>
The E.C.U. Volleyball Club will resume<lb/>
practice sessions on Tuesday, March 19th<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m. in Minges. Practices will be<lb/>
held thereafter each Tues. and Thurs.<lb/>
evenings from 7 until 9 p.m. Additional<lb/>
players are needed. Students, staff and<lb/>
faculty, both men and women are invited<lb/>
to join.<lb/>
Basic clogging will be demonstrated<lb/>
and taught in Garrett Dorm Monday at<lb/>
7:30. Come prepare yourself for the<lb/>
Fiddler's Convention.<lb/>
Concert Band<lb/>
The Concert Band of ECU, under the<lb/>
direction of George Noff, will present a<lb/>
concert on Monday, March 18, at 8:30<lb/>
p.m. in A.J. Fletcher Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Program to include overture; Fanfare<lb/>
Capriccio, by Schaefer; Incidental Suite,<lb/>
by Smith; The Silver Quill, by Nestico;<lb/>
Incantation and Dance, by Chance; The<lb/>
Klaxon, by Fillmore; and Divergents, by<lb/>
McBeth.<lb/>
The students, faculty and. staff of ECU<lb/>
are cordially invited. Admission free to<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Travelogue<lb/>
From Mexico north through the<lb/>
American and Canadian Rockies to the<lb/>
foot of Alaska's Mt. McKinley, film maker<lb/>
Don Cooper traces the routes of the early<lb/>
westerners in his travelogue, "Trails of the<lb/>
Mountain West The program, part of the<lb/>
ECU Student Union Lecture Series, will be<lb/>
presented on March 25, at 8 p.m. in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Traveling in a rustic mobile home<lb/>
which they constructed on the bed of a<lb/>
resurrected Model-T Ford truck, Don and<lb/>
his brother Dennis set out on the route<lb/>
traveled by the Spanish explorer Coronado<lb/>
in his search for the seven cities of gold.<lb/>
They go along the Sante Fe Trail in New<lb/>
Mexico, over the pass into Colorado and<lb/>
along its historic mountain railroads,<lb/>
through Wyoming and its spectacular<lb/>
mountain scenery, through Yellowstone<lb/>
Park and into Montana along the cattle<lb/>
trails. Cooper's striking photography<lb/>
provides close-ups of wildlife as well as<lb/>
dramatic scenery and historic sites of the<lb/>
early west.<lb/>
Cooper deftly mixes with his humor<lb/>
and beautiful photography a plug for the<lb/>
beauty of the mountains and their wildlife,<lb/>
and makes a point for conservation<lb/>
without belaboring the issue.<lb/>
Tickets for this program may be<lb/>
purchased from the ECU Central Ticket<lb/>
Office, Box 2731, ECU, Greenville, N.C. or<lb/>
telephone 758-6278.<lb/>
NSCL AND REVIEW BOARDpage one.<lb/>
THE FRANKFORD'Spage three<lb/>
THE ATTICpage four<lb/>
REVIEWSpages six and seven<lb/>
EDITORIALSCOMMENTARYpages eight and nine<lb/>
STREAKING pages ten and eleven<lb/>
THE CIRCUS IS COMING page twelve<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL page thirteen<lb/>
SPORTS pages fourteen, fifteen and sixteen<lb/>
Attention Spring Quarter graduates.<lb/>
Graduation announcements are now on<lb/>
sale and can be picked up in the Student's<lb/>
Supply Stores. Caps and Gowns for<lb/>
Spring Quarter graduates will be delivered<lb/>
March 26-28, from 9-4 p.m. in the<lb/>
Students's Supply Stores. These caps and<lb/>
gowns will be yours to keep.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
Fountainhead needs a reviews editor<lb/>
and a layout assistant. Call 758-6366 or<lb/>
758-6367, or come up to the Fountainhead<lb/>
office over Wright Auditorium lobby<lb/>
between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Mond. - Fri.<lb/>
Just ask for Pat Crawford of Skip<lb/>
Saunders.<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will hold Spring Rush<lb/>
on Tuesday, March 19 at 7:00 p.m. at the<lb/>
Baptist Student Center.<lb/>
Gamma Bata Phi is a co-ed national<lb/>
honor-service society based on scholar-<lb/>
ship and character. Prospective members<lb/>
are required to have an overall grade point<lb/>
average of a 3.0 or more.<lb/>
All interested students are urged to<lb/>
attend this meeting on March 19. For<lb/>
more information call Bill Murphy at<lb/>
752-3776.<lb/>
MRC free flicks<lb/>
This Monday, March 18, the M.R.C.<lb/>
will again be sponsoring a free flick for all<lb/>
students. This week we will be showing<lb/>
three short Comedy Classics: Mae West's<lb/>
"I'm No Angel W.C. Fields' "California<lb/>
Bound and Laural and Hardy's "Sugar<lb/>
Daddies We will begin at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Belk Hall's basement T.V. room. Everyone<lb/>
is invited.<lb/>
'Career Job Guide'<lb/>
A new "Career Job Guide" paperback<lb/>
has just been published to help students<lb/>
with after-college employment.<lb/>
It lists the names and addresses of over<lb/>
500 companies and school districts plus<lb/>
short descriptions of types of industries<lb/>
and talents needed, written by leaders of<lb/>
specific fields such as R. H. Macy on<lb/>
"retailing General Foods Corp. on the<lb/>
"food industry etc.<lb/>
The book also supplies information on<lb/>
available government careers and gives<lb/>
tips for a successful interview as well as a<lb/>
sample resume.<lb/>
Some of the vocational fields covered<lb/>
in the book are engineering, urban<lb/>
planning, aerospace, book publishing,<lb/>
communications, advertising, public<lb/>
relations and others.<lb/>
"Career Job Guide" is available at<lb/>
college book stores or send $1.50 plus 25<lb/>
cents handling charge to N.E.A.S 360<lb/>
Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10017.<lb/>
Foreign Languages and Literatures will<lb/>
be sponsoring an International Festival<lb/>
March 20-22. It will open Wednesday<lb/>
Night with speakers and films concluding<lb/>
with an International Fair on Friday with<lb/>
students of Foreign Languages coming<lb/>
from eastern N.C. counties.<lb/>
Service auction<lb/>
There will be a service auction in<lb/>
Garrett Dorm lobby this Saturday (March<lb/>
16th) at 11:00 a.m. Auctioneers are our<lb/>
own Vicki Pridgen &amp; John Evans. Come<lb/>
and help make this auction a success. All<lb/>
money will be used for future dorm<lb/>
projects.<lb/>
Classical guitarist<lb/>
Classical guitarist Mario Abril will<lb/>
perform a concert at ECU Thursday, March<lb/>
21. The concert, scheduled for 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the campus Recital Hall, is free and<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Now a member of the music faculty at<lb/>
the University of Tennessee, Dr. Abril was<lb/>
formerly a member of the Florida State<lb/>
University faculty.<lb/>
Dr. Abril studied guitar with the<lb/>
renowned English virtuoso Julian<lb/>
Bream. He pursued his musical studies at<lb/>
the University of Albuquerque, N.M. and at<lb/>
Florida State Univeristy where he received<lb/>
his PhD degree in music theory.<lb/>
During his ECU visit, Dr. Abril will<lb/>
conduct a workshop in Latin American<lb/>
music as part of the fourth annual ECU<lb/>
Latin American Symposium.<lb/>
The workshop wil be in Room B-102<lb/>
Brewster Building at 10 a.m. Friday, March<lb/>
22, and is also open to all interested<lb/>
oersons.<lb/>
Business<lb/>
MM<lb/>
The School of Business, ECU is now<lb/>
offering a course of study at Fort Bragg<lb/>
leading to a Master of Business<lb/>
Administration degree. Civilians as well<lb/>
as military personnel may enroll. The<lb/>
courses are scheduled during evening<lb/>
hours and the program is designed for a<lb/>
part-time students who are employed<lb/>
full-time.<lb/>
Undergraduate preparation in business<lb/>
or economics is not required for admission<lb/>
to the MBA Program. Undergraduates<lb/>
from such diverse majors as political<lb/>
science, psychology, engineering, bio-<lb/>
logy, mathematics, physics, computer<lb/>
science as well as many others are actively<lb/>
seeking the MBA Degree. Courses in<lb/>
economics, managerial accounting, stat-<lb/>
istical analysis, organizational behavior,<lb/>
and computer operations are included in<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
The admission test for graduate study<lb/>
in Business is required. The test will be<lb/>
administered at Fort Braff on March<lb/>
30. Applications for the test should be<lb/>
sent to Educational Testing Service prior<lb/>
to March 8. The Fort Bragg test center<lb/>
number is 5318. Applications and test<lb/>
booklets may be obtained from the<lb/>
Registrar, Fayetteville State University,<lb/>
Fort Bragg Branch, by calling 396-6737.<lb/>
The next test date will be July 13, 1974.<lb/>
Continued on page seven.<lb/>
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m<lb/>
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mmmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
3<lb/>
Frankfords offer counceling service<lb/>
By CAROLYN DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Helping people realize their own<lb/>
individuality and strength is a major<lb/>
concern of two ECU social work teachers,<lb/>
Joseph and Gladys Frankford.<lb/>
In January the Frankfords announced<lb/>
the opening of their private practice in<lb/>
counseling, thus bringing a professional<lb/>
counseling service to Greenville. Their<lb/>
services are offered not only to the<lb/>
Greenville community, but to surrounding<lb/>
areas as well.<lb/>
The Frankfords' services are compre-<lb/>
hensive, offering pre-marital and marriage,<lb/>
family and child counseling, individual and<lb/>
group therapy, and social work<lb/>
consultation.<lb/>
Basically, in all these areas, the<lb/>
Frankfords strive to help people "realize<lb/>
that they are the ones that make their own<lb/>
lives work according to Mr. Frankford.<lb/>
"We try to help them see that they're<lb/>
not that helpless, that they have a lot of<lb/>
strength. We help then find in themselves<lb/>
what they want out of life, and that it's<lb/>
their decision, not someone else's, what<lb/>
Communications<lb/>
major<lb/>
considered<lb/>
ByGLENHARGETT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Student's interest in a communication<lb/>
degree at ECU was the subject of a recent<lb/>
survey.<lb/>
The survey was given the last week of<lb/>
classes winter quarter by professors in the<lb/>
English Department and some Speech<lb/>
classes, especially those dealing with<lb/>
Broadcasting.<lb/>
The communications major would span<lb/>
both the Drama and Speech Department<lb/>
and the English Department. If the<lb/>
program is approved then a student will be<lb/>
able to concentrate in broadcasting (which<lb/>
is in the speech department) or<lb/>
concentrate in Journal ism (currently under<lb/>
a BS English . The Communications<lb/>
majors would receive a BS degree and have<lb/>
no language requirement.<lb/>
A minor would be required to bring the<lb/>
number of hours up to graduation<lb/>
level. There has been interest in<lb/>
establishing a communications degree at<lb/>
ECU for the past two years. Karl E. Faser,<lb/>
Assistant to the Provost and Margaret<lb/>
Blanchard, Assistant Professor of English<lb/>
have been working on the latest proposal<lb/>
for presentation.<lb/>
The survey is the first step in determing<lb/>
student interest in the major. Blanchard is<lb/>
now writing the report for presentation to<lb/>
the various committees which the proposal<lb/>
must go through. Final approval will be by<lb/>
the UNC Board of Governors.<lb/>
Sophomores who would wish to<lb/>
graduate with this degree may be able to<lb/>
do so. The plan is able to be put through<lb/>
many of the committees during the next<lb/>
year, allowing for current sophomores or<lb/>
freshmen to declare a communications<lb/>
major.<lb/>
Those who are interested in the<lb/>
program but who were not contacted by<lb/>
the survey or those who wish further<lb/>
information should contact Karl Faser at<lb/>
75&amp;6241 or Margaret Blanchard in 318<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
they do<lb/>
"We help them see that they are as<lb/>
independent as they really are, that they<lb/>
are as responsible as they really are he<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
PRACTICE BEGINS<lb/>
The Frankfords' private practice is<lb/>
separate from their teaching professions at<lb/>
ECU, where they teach classes in social<lb/>
work and corrections. Counseling is<lb/>
conducted on an appointment basis in<lb/>
their home located on the 264 by-pass in<lb/>
the Red Oak subdivision.<lb/>
Formal announcements were sent in<lb/>
January to local ministers, doctors,<lb/>
lawyers, professors, and various people in<lb/>
the community, to inform these contacts<lb/>
of their new practice.<lb/>
"We sent the announcements to people<lb/>
that we thought could give us referrals<lb/>
from their own practices Mrs. Frankford<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We tried to aim at a group that could<lb/>
use what we were offering said<lb/>
Frankford.<lb/>
Frankford pointed out that in Pitt<lb/>
County there are few services or agencies<lb/>
that are dedicated to helping people with<lb/>
problems in their lives that aren't actually<lb/>
physical or mental.<lb/>
"There was little service for people who<lb/>
needed help, and weren't mentally sick,<lb/>
and could pay for it (the help) he<lb/>
commented.<lb/>
The Frankfords also considered the<lb/>
feelings of people who are "embarrassed,<lb/>
and humiliated to go to an agency to ask<lb/>
for help<lb/>
By aiming at professionals in the<lb/>
community who have contact with people<lb/>
who have problems in their lives, these<lb/>
professionals can now spot problems and<lb/>
refer their patients to the Frankfords for<lb/>
counseling.<lb/>
Local residents may independently<lb/>
arrange an appointment with the<lb/>
Frankfords for any type of counseling by<lb/>
calling their home at 756-4994.<lb/>
TYPICAL PROBLEMS<lb/>
The problems brought to the<lb/>
Frankfords by troubled people are not<lb/>
"catastrophic" according to Frankford, but<lb/>
are things in life that have mounted up to<lb/>
make their lives uncomfortable, and even<lb/>
miserable for them.<lb/>
"The people that come to us are<lb/>
miserable and have been for a long time,<lb/>
and don't want to be. They've had too<lb/>
much total misery .It's usually problems<lb/>
with a relationship with a person in their<lb/>
lives, or a combination of relationships<lb/>
with several people. They don't like the<lb/>
way they get along with their husband or<lb/>
wife, children, or parents, other people, or<lb/>
just don't like the way they feel about<lb/>
themselves said Frankford.<lb/>
"A lot of people come before that<lb/>
teachers, ministers, friends said Mr.<lb/>
Frankford.<lb/>
"So many times in these situations a<lb/>
big hardship is created for the parents<lb/>
because they feel they have failed as<lb/>
parents when their children are<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
cc<lb/>
u.<lb/>
<lb/>
CO<lb/>
JOSEPH AND GLADYS FRANKFORT strive<lb/>
through a private counseling service.<lb/>
stage, though said Mrs. Frankford.<lb/>
"They realize something is wrong and they<lb/>
want to do something to help the<lb/>
situation. Usually at this stage they want<lb/>
the other person to change and want to<lb/>
know how they can live with the way things<lb/>
are<lb/>
This is a common finding in premarital<lb/>
counseling, according to Mrs. Frankford.<lb/>
Often the couple will realize there is a<lb/>
problem but they lose track of what started<lb/>
it because everything blurs together.<lb/>
The Frankfords work with the couple,<lb/>
individually or together, to help them sort<lb/>
out feelings and occurences that<lb/>
contribute to the overall discontent.<lb/>
By talking with the couple, the problem<lb/>
is usually discovered and brought out by<lb/>
the Frankfords. The couple can be made<lb/>
aware of the problem causing conflicts,<lb/>
and advised of action that can patch up the<lb/>
relationship.<lb/>
In their present practice the most<lb/>
frequent problem brought to the<lb/>
Frankfords is of the parent-child<lb/>
relationship. These problems usually<lb/>
stem from "children who are troubled and<lb/>
juDlesome in all their relations-parents,<lb/>
to help people realize their individuality<lb/>
troublesome. The mother feels she has<lb/>
failed as a mother and the father feels he<lb/>
has failed as a father he said.<lb/>
In such parent-child conflicts the<lb/>
Frankfords most often begin their<lb/>
counseling sessions by talking to the<lb/>
troubled child. Then, as things progress<lb/>
and problems and feelings become<lb/>
evident, group counseling is begun<lb/>
including the parents or the whole family.<lb/>
"I enjoy working with small children<lb/>
said Mrs. Frankford. "They are usually<lb/>
more hopeful and have more hope that<lb/>
things will get better<lb/>
"By the time they get to be 18, the<lb/>
children and the parents are often all fed<lb/>
up with the situation said Frankford.<lb/>
"Sometimes it is a more difficult situation<lb/>
in these cases because the 18 year olds are<lb/>
set in their ways and it's often difficult for<lb/>
the parents to see this.<lb/>
"However, change is more frequent<lb/>
with 18-year-olds than with smaller<lb/>
children because they want to work for a<lb/>
change, too, and are willing to make<lb/>
changes more than small children he<lb/>
said. <lb/>
Continued on page thirteen.<lb/>
Forum allows students personal contact with<lb/>
paid and elected University officials<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
A student forum uniting ECU students<lb/>
with campus leaders will be held Tuesday<lb/>
night March 19 in room 201 of the<lb/>
University Union.<lb/>
The objective of the forum is to allow<lb/>
students to have a personal, face-to-face<lb/>
contact with the elected, appointed and<lb/>
paid officials of the university. Both ad-<lb/>
ministration and faculty will be<lb/>
represented.<lb/>
Amond those expected to be present a<lb/>
the forum will be Bob Woodside, presiden<lb/>
of the faculty-senate, editors of the-<lb/>
Bucaneer and Fountainhead and speaker<lb/>
of the student legislature Braxton Hall.<lb/>
Tentatively expected to attend are Wade<lb/>
Hobgood, in-coming president of the<lb/>
Student Union and Dr. John Home,<lb/>
representing the administration and<lb/>
admissions. Also the out-going and<lb/>
in-coming SGA administrations will be in<lb/>
attendance. Moderator for the student<lb/>
forum will be Jim Davis, secretary of<lb/>
Internal Affairs.<lb/>
Students are asked to direct any<lb/>
questions they might have concerning any<lb/>
area of campus life or the university to the<lb/>
representatives at the forum. There are<lb/>
four ways students can relate questions to<lb/>
the forum. Questions can be mailed in to<lb/>
the SGA office through campus<lb/>
mail. These letters can be taken to the<lb/>
departmental offices and forwarded to the<lb/>
SGA through the campus mail<lb/>
system. Students can also call the Hotline<lb/>
number, 758-0231, and leave their<lb/>
questions with the answering service.<lb/>
These questions will be answered at the<lb/>
forum meeting.<lb/>
There will also be telephones at the<lb/>
forum for students to call in their<lb/>
questions. The numbers for calling will be<lb/>
758-6262 and 768-6263. Students may<lb/>
attend the forum and personally ask the<lb/>
representatives their questions.<lb/>
WECU will broadcast the forum to the<lb/>
dorms.<lb/>
Jim Davis, spokesman for the forum<lb/>
emphasized that if the forum is<lb/>
successful, more student forums will be<lb/>
held in the future.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
Safety standards to improve<lb/>
Attic changes with styles, students<lb/>
By CAROLYN DAVIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The Attic was inspected Thursday,<lb/>
March 7, by an inspection crew from the<lb/>
fire department to determine its<lb/>
compliance with state and national safety<lb/>
standards for a public establishment,<lb/>
according to Fire Marshall McLawhorn.<lb/>
In January, 1974, Attic manager Tom<lb/>
Haines felt that the legal capacity for<lb/>
maximum number of occupants in the<lb/>
Attic at a single time might be raised from<lb/>
the existing 396 to over 400. However,<lb/>
when inspected last Thursday, the legal<lb/>
number of occupants within the legal<lb/>
capacity. Thus, the admission was raised<lb/>
to 75 cents.<lb/>
"I couldn't stand at the door after a<lb/>
certain number of people had come in and<lb/>
begin to turn people away, so we raised<lb/>
the price to 75 cents and it's knocked out<lb/>
about 200 people said Haines.<lb/>
The admission hike to 75 cents was the<lb/>
third price increase instituted by The<lb/>
Attic. There was originally no admission<lb/>
charge at The Attic.<lb/>
When the cost of entertainment and<lb/>
transportaion began rising, bands began<lb/>
makinr demands fo?- higher orices. In<lb/>
FOOTSBALL<lb/>
capacity was not raised but remained at<lb/>
396.<lb/>
The inspection crew consisted of<lb/>
Inspector Jane Murray, Lieutenant James<lb/>
E. Smith, Chief Building Inspector A.E<lb/>
Warren and Fire Marshall McLawhorn.<lb/>
The Attic was found to be generally in<lb/>
compliance with fire regulations, although<lb/>
the inspection crew found two deviations<lb/>
from the rules. One of the back exit doors<lb/>
was padlocked instead of equipped with a<lb/>
panic bar, and combustible material was<lb/>
found under the front stairway leading<lb/>
from the street to the Attic entrance.<lb/>
The inspection crew requested that<lb/>
panic bar be installed on the padlocked<lb/>
door and the lock removed so that the exit<lb/>
door could not be locked from the<lb/>
inside. A panic bar is a horizontal bar that<lb/>
extends across the door and must be<lb/>
pushed to open the door. When it is<lb/>
pushed and the door opens, an alarm<lb/>
sounds in the building to notify others of<lb/>
danger.<lb/>
If a panic bar is installed and the<lb/>
combusitble material is removed from<lb/>
under the stairway, the Attic will be in<lb/>
compliance with fire regulations, accord-<lb/>
ing to McLawhorn.<lb/>
"But we couldn't raise the legal<lb/>
capacity because of the building itself and<lb/>
because of the back exit door and<lb/>
combustible material under the stairway<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
PRICE CONTROLS<lb/>
On the average night 600 to 1,000<lb/>
people enter The Attic, according to<lb/>
Haines. This is not representative of the<lb/>
number of people in The Attic at any one<lb/>
time, however, he said.<lb/>
Because of the large numbers<lb/>
frequenting The Attic, some type of<lb/>
control had to be instituted to keep the<lb/>
ROOM at The Attic.<lb/>
order to book good bands, these demands<lb/>
had to be met, and an admission charge<lb/>
had to be incurred.<lb/>
Initially admission was 25 cents, but<lb/>
when even that extra amount put a strain<lb/>
on Attic funds, the charge was raised to 50<lb/>
cents. The bands are paid from a portion<lb/>
of money received from admissions<lb/>
Haines said.<lb/>
ATTIC OFFERINGS<lb/>
This past fall The Attic had the<lb/>
distinction of being rated the most popular<lb/>
college night club in the state, based on<lb/>
the number of customers.<lb/>
Despite a slow and unsuccessful start<lb/>
as a changeover from the Id, The Attic has<lb/>
steadily gained popularity with the<lb/>
students of ECU, and is now enjoying its<lb/>
peak, according to Haines.<lb/>
"More people have gone through the<lb/>
doors of The Attic this past fall than of any<lb/>
other college club in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina said Haines.<lb/>
The Attic is correctly called a night club<lb/>
because of its offerings. An establish-<lb/>
ment is termed a night club if it sells<lb/>
alcoholic beverages and offers live<lb/>
entertainment. Without live entertain-<lb/>
ment, a night spot selling alcoholic<lb/>
beverages is a tavern.<lb/>
The popularity of The Attic may be<lb/>
attributed to the variety that may be found<lb/>
in both atmosphere and entertainment in<lb/>
the room above The Fiddler's Three,<lb/>
Haines proposes.<lb/>
"Our main objective as far as<lb/>
entertainment is concerned in variety " he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Haines tries to engage in variety of<lb/>
bands because he feels that most people<lb/>
especially highly intelligent people such<lb/>
as college students, get bored easily<lb/>
seeing the same bands doing the same<lb/>
routines.<lb/>
ECU students seem to frequent The<lb/>
Attic because of this variety found in the<lb/>
bands, according to Haines.<lb/>
"They seem to come for the<lb/>
music. This can be seen in their<lb/>
response. If we have a bad band the place<lb/>
will be empty in a minute. And if the<lb/>
band's good the place'll get packed "<lb/>
VARIETY ERA<lb/>
The Attic is now in a variety era, the<lb/>
third phase of changes began several years<lb/>
ago to keep up with the desires and<lb/>
demands of the customers.<lb/>
Some students can remember when the<lb/>
upstairs spot now occupied by The Attic<lb/>
was The Place To Be Above The Fiddler's<lb/>
Three and featured soul music with the<lb/>
beach and soul bands.<lb/>
Next came the Id which is probably<lb/>
remembered more by current ECU<lb/>
students. The Id offered a psychadelic<lb/>
atmosphere with black lights, strobe<lb/>
lights, mirror balls and ihe sounds of hard<lb/>
rock, rock and roll, and acid rock.<lb/>
In September 1971 when Haines<lb/>
became manager of the night spot, the<lb/>
setting changed once again, replacing the<lb/>
features of the psychedelic age with a<lb/>
natural ecology decor which remains<lb/>
today.<lb/>
Tables and wall fixtures were made<lb/>
form the outside bark portions of logs that<lb/>
were gathered from the Greenville saw<lb/>
mill. "It doesn't have that store-bought<lb/>
look Haines said of the setting.<lb/>
With the change in atmosphere came a<lb/>
change in the band image from the rock<lb/>
sounds to a use of variety featuring blue<lb/>
grass, blues rock and some show bands.<lb/>
"The only thing we don't use right now<lb/>
are the beach music and soul bands<lb/>
because that is the Bucanneer's<lb/>
attraction said Haines.<lb/>
Now at the height of its variety era, The<lb/>
Attic offers more than a place to go get<lb/>
something to drink, Haines feels. "There<lb/>
are areas for people to dance, play<lb/>
footsball, pinball machines or air hockey,<lb/>
plus tables and corners where you can just<lb/>
sit and talk<lb/>
The Attic is responsible for bringing<lb/>
footsball to Greenville, according to<lb/>
Haines.<lb/>
"We were the first people in Greenville<lb/>
to put in footsball tables on a large<lb/>
scaln As a matter of fact, I think the first<lb/>
footsball tables in Greenville period "<lb/>
COLLEGE ORIENTED<lb/>
Although The Attic's main concern<lb/>
in entertainment in variety, it not so with<lb/>
the customers it attempts to attract.<lb/>
"Our main interest is with school said<lb/>
Haines.<lb/>
The Attic is the only club in town that<lb/>
regulates its schedule by ECU's schedule<lb/>
according to Haines.<lb/>
"When the school's open, we're open<lb/>
when the school's closed, we're closed<lb/>
The Attic also works with the school in<lb/>
providing attractions for students. For the<lb/>
past three years The Attic has presented an<lb/>
annual faculty talent show. The MRC and<lb/>
Real House often work in conjunction with<lb/>
The Attic for various benefits, also.<lb/>
ECU students serve as both customers<lb/>
and employees of The Attic. All of the<lb/>
employees with the exception of Haines,<lb/>
an ECU graduate, are full-time students at<lb/>
ECU. "We make it a policy to hire students<lb/>
to help themselves finance their way<lb/>
through school Haines said.<lb/>
Besides aiding in financial assistance<lb/>
Haines feels that The Attic and the entire<lb/>
downtown area serves another useful<lb/>
purpose for ECU students.<lb/>
"The school supplies the students with<lb/>
a good cultural, social and athletic<lb/>
calendar with the free flicks on Friday<lb/>
nights, the concerts, lectures and<lb/>
basketball and football games Haines<lb/>
"The void that's left is filled with the clubs<lb/>
downtown Continued on page five<lb/>
BIGGS DRUG STORE<lb/>
yGrdley<lb/>
Opposite Court House<lb/>
phone 752-2135<lb/>
Slicker Nail Polish<lb/>
Rrto'Gloss<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
-d-H"(.<lb/>
Faulk<lb/>
A fou<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
April 12,<lb/>
reviews,<lb/>
wide inte<lb/>
Pierce<lb/>
preparatic<lb/>
Guest a<lb/>
Coleridgi<lb/>
Mariner<lb/>
as Publisl<lb/>
style of tl<lb/>
Sam<lb/>
poet, edit<lb/>
for the pu<lb/>
York, tha<lb/>
Guest' eq<lb/>
eloquent i<lb/>
of the Soi<lb/>
"His c<lb/>
and he d<lb/>
life largel'<lb/>
know of<lb/>
explores<lb/>
place in tl<lb/>
Pierce<lb/>
sor of En<lb/>
the past ;<lb/>
situations<lb/>
Coi<lb/>
Continue<lb/>
Haines<lb/>
the stude<lb/>
their trie<lb/>
unwind a<lb/>
from stuc<lb/>
"It ma<lb/>
school<lb/>
So<lb/>
the numt<lb/>
time, and<lb/>
the Fire <lb/>
complain<lb/>
"We'vi<lb/>
but I don'<lb/>
William C<lb/>
complainl<lb/>
said. "Th<lb/>
anyway,<lb/>
complainl<lb/>
This v<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
 - ???? mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0005"/><lb/>
its<lb/>
dance, play<lb/>
or air hockey,<lb/>
3 you can just<lb/>
for bringing<lb/>
according to<lb/>
in Greenville<lb/>
on a large<lb/>
hink the first<lb/>
period<lb/>
:D<lb/>
nain concern<lb/>
not so with<lb/>
attract.<lb/>
school said<lb/>
in town that<lb/>
l's schedule,<lb/>
we're open,<lb/>
re closed<lb/>
he school in<lb/>
nts. For the<lb/>
resented an<lb/>
e MRC and<lb/>
jnction with<lb/>
also,<lb/>
i customers<lb/>
All of the<lb/>
of Haines,<lb/>
students at<lb/>
re students<lb/>
their way<lb/>
assistance<lb/>
I the entire<lb/>
ier useful<lb/>
idents with<lb/>
: athletic<lb/>
on Friday<lb/>
ures and<lb/>
" Haines.<lb/>
? the clubs<lb/>
page five.<lb/>
sh<lb/>
9-Mtv?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
wmmjmmmm<lb/>
5<lb/>
Faulkner styled<lb/>
Pierce novel well received<lb/>
A fourth major novel by author Ovid<lb/>
Williams Pierce, scheduled for publication<lb/>
April 12, is already receiving favorable<lb/>
reviews. It is expected to be received with<lb/>
wide interest.<lb/>
Pierce's latest work, four years in<lb/>
preparation, is entitled "The Wedding<lb/>
Guest a title drawn from Samuel Taylor<lb/>
Coleridge's "Rime of the Ancient<lb/>
Mariner Pre-publication reviewers such<lb/>
as Publisher's Weekly have compared the<lb/>
style of the novel to those of Faulkner.<lb/>
Sam Ragan, Southern Pines, N.C<lb/>
poet, editor and literary critic, has written<lb/>
for the publisher, Doubleday and Co New<lb/>
York, that "Ovid Pierce's 'The Wedding<lb/>
Guest' equals the best of Faulkner in an<lb/>
eloquent interpretation and understanding<lb/>
of the South.<lb/>
"His characters are masterfully drawn,<lb/>
and he deals with an aspect of Southern<lb/>
life largely unexplored in fiction. In fact, I<lb/>
know of no other work of fiction which<lb/>
explores in depth the transition taking<lb/>
place in the South<lb/>
Pierce, writer-in-residence and profes-<lb/>
sor of English at ECU, both reconstructs<lb/>
the past and treats critical contemporary<lb/>
situations in the book, examining the<lb/>
OVID WILLIAMS PIERCE<lb/>
effects of rootlessness in today's<lb/>
society. In the novel, Pierce's wedding<lb/>
guest is an elderly college professor who,<lb/>
in the Spring of his retirement year, returns<lb/>
Complaints prompt Attic inspection<lb/>
Continued from page four.<lb/>
Haines feels that this is important for<lb/>
the students as it allows them to be with<lb/>
their friends in a different atmosphere,<lb/>
unwind after a term paper, take a break<lb/>
from studying or just get out of a rut.<lb/>
"It makes it a lot easier getting through<lb/>
school he added.<lb/>
COMPLAINTS<lb/>
Someone must be concerned about<lb/>
the number of people in The Attic at one<lb/>
time, and the condition of the building, as<lb/>
the Fire Department has recently received<lb/>
complaints of these things.<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
TOM HAINES<lb/>
"We've had complaints from someone,<lb/>
but I don't know who. Also City Manager<lb/>
William Carstarphen has called with some<lb/>
complaints Fire Marshall McLawhorn<lb/>
said. "The Attic was due for an inspection<lb/>
anyway, but when we had these<lb/>
complaints, we decided to go now<lb/>
This week the fire inspection crew is<lb/>
beginning inspections for a number of<lb/>
night spots and restaurants in Greenville.<lb/>
These inspections will not be announced,<lb/>
and will last indefinitely, according to<lb/>
McLawhorn.<lb/>
"We're not announcing the times when<lb/>
we'll be coming because then, naturally,<lb/>
everything would be in compliance. We<lb/>
want to see them as they really are and<lb/>
how they operate on any night he said.<lb/>
The regulations followed by the fire<lb/>
department are those found in the State of<lb/>
North Carolina Building Code and in the<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
Continued from page one.<lb/>
UNC-G. Saturday night the ECU delegation<lb/>
upheld its party spirit by having every<lb/>
member present at a dance and beer-blast<lb/>
sponsored by NCSL and North Carolina<lb/>
Budweiser Distributors.<lb/>
Partying was only a small portion of the<lb/>
five day session, however, as the ECU<lb/>
delegation worked long hours and<lb/>
attended all sessions and meetings having<lb/>
at least 13 delegates or alternates present<lb/>
in the house and two senators or alternates<lb/>
in the senate.<lb/>
The 37th annual NCSL at Raleigh was<lb/>
indeed a profitable one for the ECU<lb/>
delegation.<lb/>
Silmarillion<lb/>
The late J.R.R. Tolkien's final work,<lb/>
"The Silmarillion a lengthy prologue to<lb/>
the events that made up "The Lord of the<lb/>
Rings" trilogy, won't be published for<lb/>
another year, at least. Tolkien's British<lb/>
publishers, Allen and Unwin, say that the<lb/>
unfinished manuscript consists of a<lb/>
series of as-yet unconnected legends.<lb/>
They expect Tolkien's son, Christopher, to<lb/>
put them together.<lb/>
? ? II ? i ?<lb/>
SGA says<lb/>
no monies<lb/>
to WECU<lb/>
By SUSAN OUINN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The SGA Legislature voted for the<lb/>
second time not to appropriate money to<lb/>
WECU for research for the possibilities of<lb/>
an FM station at ECU. Allen Dehmer of<lb/>
WECU asked the legislature to reconsider<lb/>
and to appropriate $495 to be spent for a<lb/>
study of FM frequencies for WECU. Deh-<lb/>
mer said that the proposed FM station<lb/>
would be an educational station and would<lb/>
be funded by grants instead of<lb/>
advertisements.<lb/>
A controversy centers around the<lb/>
management of a financial account that<lb/>
WECU owns. The account contains $6,500<lb/>
which a WECU representative said would<lb/>
be used for capital improvements of the<lb/>
AM station, but some of the legislators felt<lb/>
that this fund could be used to pay for the<lb/>
survey. The bill was brought to the floor<lb/>
and was tabled because the Speaker,<lb/>
Braxton Hall, ruled it out of order because<lb/>
the bill with the same subject matter can<lb/>
not be considered after defeat.<lb/>
In other SGA action, Jim Davis,<lb/>
Secretary of Academic Affairs, announced<lb/>
to the legislature that the teacher<lb/>
evaluation system will not be effective at<lb/>
the present. "We will not be in a position<lb/>
to have a teacher evaluation at ECU he<lb/>
said. Davis said because of the time<lb/>
element involved in the defeat of the bill<lb/>
for student evaluation at the end of the<lb/>
quarter that "this session of the SGA will<lb/>
not be able to provide this needed<lb/>
evaluation to the students.<lb/>
In other business the legislature did<lb/>
not override the SGA president Bill<lb/>
Bodenhamer's veto of the repeal of a bill<lb/>
which appropriated $1,200 to the SGA<lb/>
cabinet. The bill was repealed February 19<lb/>
but Bodenhamer vetoed the bill and the<lb/>
legislature's attempt to override his<lb/>
decision failed.<lb/>
Michael Brown was accepted as a new<lb/>
day student representative.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
IS f,<lb/>
"FISH HOUSE COUNTRY<lb/>
GO PIRATES<lb/>
IN WASHINGTON<lb/>
to his ancestral home and finds the rural<lb/>
South of the 1970s deep in crisis and<lb/>
confrontation. A modern superhighway,<lb/>
with non-ending streams- of traffic,<lb/>
exposing the people to unheard of vistas<lb/>
and destroying regional identity is the<lb/>
symbol of rootlessness and departure from<lb/>
the old ways. The wedding guest is the<lb/>
man to whom they all come, to whom the<lb/>
characters relate their stories as the<lb/>
Ancient Mariner told his fearful and<lb/>
symbolic story to Coleridge's Wedding-<lb/>
Guest.<lb/>
Pierce's previous major novels are "The<lb/>
Plantation" (1953), "On A Lonesome<lb/>
Porch" (1960), and "The Devil's Half"<lb/>
(1968).<lb/>
He is twice winner of the Sir Walter<lb/>
Raleigh award for fiction published by a<lb/>
North Carolina writer and won the 1969<lb/>
North Carolina Gold Medal for Literature.<lb/>
He received the 1973 O. Max Gardner<lb/>
award of the University of North Carolina<lb/>
for contributions to culture which<lb/>
described him as a "masterful writer,<lb/>
teacher of the craft of writing, sympathetic<lb/>
and profound interpreter of life (who has)<lb/>
produced an authoritative portrait of the<lb/>
South helped to right the distorted view<lb/>
that fiction too often gives to our region<lb/>
National Fire Prevention Code, fondly<lb/>
called "the bible" by McLawhorn.<lb/>
"We're not trying to be sneaky by not<lb/>
announcing the times we'll inspect. We're<lb/>
not out to catch them-we're just seeing<lb/>
how these places normally operate and<lb/>
that everyone can be safe while they're<lb/>
 there and not get hurt if anything should<lb/>
happen<lb/>
Drivt<lb/>
ALL<lb/>
and Eat a Lot f<lb/>
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a Litfl a<lb/>
LL YOU<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039911_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
w<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Reviews<lb/>
The Beatle era<lb/>
Holding hands to turning on but always cashing in<lb/>
By BRANDON TISE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
THE BEATLES- 1964-1974<lb/>
Was it ten years ago that the Beatles<lb/>
first hit the USA9 It doesn't seem that long<lb/>
ago since they rocked the States with "I<lb/>
Want To Hold Your Hand" and<lb/>
Beatlemania had begun. At one time in<lb/>
April 1964 they held thirteen of the top<lb/>
song posit'ons in the US introducing the<lb/>
mania of longhair (go back and look at<lb/>
their 1964 pictures), they became the<lb/>
lovable moptops elevating rock musicians<lb/>
to acceptable levels from their lowly 1950's<lb/>
status.<lb/>
Celebrities posed with Beatle wigs<lb/>
(usually succeeding in making themselves<lb/>
look like assholes), words such as "Luv<lb/>
"Poppycock and "Bird found their way<lb/>
into the vocabularies of American<lb/>
teenyboppers. Elvis Presley, The King,<lb/>
had his title ungloriously taken for the rest<lb/>
of the decade. Ten thousand fans greeted<lb/>
them at Kennedy Airport upon their arrival,<lb/>
but that was only a small number<lb/>
compared to the 300,000 fans who stormed<lb/>
the streets of Adelaide, Australia when<lb/>
they went on a Far east tour. Everyone<lb/>
desperately wanted to see the Beatles;<lb/>
remember the girl who mailed herself in a<lb/>
box to the BeaWes in New York? Yes,<lb/>
those were fun days. In those days the<lb/>
FAB FOUR broke all entertainment records<lb/>
and made more money doing it than any<lb/>
one had ever done before. Surely you girls<lb/>
remember belonging to a neighborhood<lb/>
Beatles fan club and being chastised by<lb/>
your friends for not being able to<lb/>
remember Paul's birthday.<lb/>
In 1965 the Beatles performed before<lb/>
the second largest enclosed crowd in<lb/>
history, that was in Shea Stadium. They<lb/>
made over half a million dollars for that<lb/>
concert playing the longest time they ever<lb/>
played: twenty five minutes. Throughout<lb/>
1964, 1965, 1966 they toured the world<lb/>
making movies, putting out 10 albums and<lb/>
in general making money, money,<lb/>
money. They made millions of dollars and<lb/>
thumbed their noses to the world by<lb/>
buying all the comforts of life such as<lb/>
psychedelically (remember that word?)<lb/>
painted houses and Rolls Royces. In<lb/>
these years they dropped their yeah, yeah<lb/>
yeah, for love, love, love.<lb/>
In 1966, they were offered one million<lb/>
dollars to play Shea Stadium again but<lb/>
turned it down because they were tired of<lb/>
touring. The new refined sound they had<lb/>
displayed on 'Rubber Soul' and<lb/>
'Yesterday And Today' came out even<lb/>
stronger on their next album 'Revolver1.<lb/>
'Revolver1 (which Lennon called "acid") had<lb/>
two main influences, the drugs, and<lb/>
Harrison's interest in Indian music and<lb/>
religion.<lb/>
The first "superalbum 'Sergeant<lb/>
Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band utilized<lb/>
new song structures and instruments<lb/>
which had been hinted at on previous<lb/>
albums were now firmly implanted in<lb/>
Beatle style. The Beatles announced that<lb/>
they had taken drugs, in particular LSD,<lb/>
and the lovable moptops became the<lb/>
leaders and heroes of a new<lb/>
ind John almost went<lb/>
H<lb/>
to live in the rising Haight-Ashbury section<lb/>
of San Francisco. The Beatles instead<lb/>
found a new place to go - to India with the<lb/>
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. They renounced<lb/>
materialism, went to India with their wives<lb/>
Mick Jagger, and Mia Farrow. When the<lb/>
Beatles found out the Maharishi was<lb/>
thinking of exploring Mia Farrow's body<lb/>
and in fact had already tried, they saw his<lb/>
hypocrisy and left him forever. 'Magical<lb/>
Mystery Tour their next album, was well<lb/>
received by critics but the movie was<lb/>
panned almost worldwide. That coupled<lb/>
with a previous Lennon wisecrack that the<lb/>
pop world press misconstrued to say the<lb/>
Beatles thought that they were greater<lb/>
than God brought out the first anti-Beatles<lb/>
publicity. We all remember - when radio<lb/>
stations refused to play Beatles records<lb/>
and come cited burned Beatle records in<lb/>
the streets (How foolish we can be<lb/>
sometimes, right?) After the untimely<lb/>
death of their manager, Brian Epstein, the<lb/>
Beatles seemed to drift apart when the<lb/>
next album, 'White Album came out it<lb/>
revealed each Beatles individual talents<lb/>
more than ever. Their single "Hey<lb/>
JudeRevolution which came out in<lb/>
October, 1988, showed the difference<lb/>
between Paul's music and John's<lb/>
music. "Hey Jude" became their second<lb/>
most popular selling song in history.<lb/>
It is often overlooked by many that the<lb/>
Beaties fortune was ripped-off by British<lb/>
taxes, phoney inventors and artists, and<lb/>
anyone else who could pursuade them to<lb/>
be their patrons. The Beatles established<lb/>
a chain of boutiques in London as a tax<lb/>
write off, but closed them down with a<lb/>
grand finale by giving away $35,000.00<lb/>
worth of clothes. Their newly established<lb/>
corporation, Apple, would gradually<lb/>
become a monster in the hands of<lb/>
unscrupulous businessmen.<lb/>
John divorced his first wife, Cynthia,<lb/>
and married Yoko Ono, an avant-garde<lb/>
artist. She immediately received the wrath<lb/>
of the other Beatles and the Apple staff<lb/>
who used to give her the finger behind her<lb/>
back. John and Yoko traveled around the<lb/>
world holding "peace-ins" and "love-ins<lb/>
and Viet Nam rallies and giving thousands<lb/>
of pounds to the "Liberate Marijuana"<lb/>
campaign. (John and Yoko had been<lb/>
busted in 1968 for hashish which many<lb/>
(jvew Improved full oiminsional srtmd)<lb/>
BEATLES<lb/>
THE WORLD'S MOST POPULAR FOURSOME! JOHN -PAUL GEORGE RINGO<lb/>
YOU UK! MI TOO MUCH ? Till MI WNAT rOU SII ? SAD BOY ? DIZZY MISS LIZZIE ? IIGHT DAYS ? WiiK ? VIS IT IS<lb/>
WORDS Of 10VI ? KANSAS CITY ? I DON'T WANT TO SPOIL TNI PARTY ? IVIRT LITTLE TNIN6 ? WNAT YOU Rl DOINC<lb/>
people think was a set up.)<lb/>
Paul in the meantime had married<lb/>
Linda Eastman who some called the<lb/>
world's greatest groupie. They went to<lb/>
Paul's farm in Scotland where they became<lb/>
recluses for a time. John Eastman and Lee<lb/>
Eastman, Linda's brother and father<lb/>
respectively, wanted to become the new<lb/>
managers of Apple and with Paul's backing<lb/>
almost had the job when Lennon backed<lb/>
Allen Klein, the Rolling Stones<lb/>
Manager. Lennon thought Eastman was<lb/>
an "animal" and refused to have him head<lb/>
Apple. Klein eventually got the job but<lb/>
then turned into the "animal" that Lennon<lb/>
had feared in Eastman. This manager<lb/>
controversy was a major cause in the 1970<lb/>
Beatle breakup.<lb/>
During the filming and recording of<lb/>
"Let It Be" in early 1969, the last to be<lb/>
released, it became quite evident that there<lb/>
was a rift in the group. Each Beatle was<lb/>
into his own personal taste in music too<lb/>
much to bother with the others.<lb/>
Later in 1969, after the release of<lb/>
'Abbey Road' (the last Beatle album), John<lb/>
told Paul that he was leaving the group. It<lb/>
was decided to keep the whole thing<lb/>
hush-hush. Paul went into seclusion in<lb/>
Scotland working on his solo album.<lb/>
In 1970 a student at the University of<lb/>
Michigan and a Detroit disc jockey<lb/>
dreamed up the "Paul is dead"<lb/>
campaign. For a week the girls cried<lb/>
(including many of you), while reporters<lb/>
seached high and low to find the<lb/>
"deceased" Paul. Fans looked back at<lb/>
their old Beatle albums for the "clues"<lb/>
depicting Paul's "auto death" in<lb/>
1966. Luckily for the world, and all of the<lb/>
teary eyed teenyboppers, he was found<lb/>
safe on his farm in Scotland. In 1970, Paul<lb/>
released "McCartney" while simultaneous-<lb/>
Continued on page 7.<lb/>
Continue<lb/>
ly annou<lb/>
leaving tl<lb/>
left eigf<lb/>
formed<lb/>
which br<lb/>
Since<lb/>
albums,<lb/>
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for Bhan<lb/>
smash A<lb/>
his own<lb/>
broke up<lb/>
Rolling 5<lb/>
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1972, he <lb/>
"One To<lb/>
Garden,<lb/>
children<lb/>
tried to<lb/>
refused h<lb/>
to leave l<lb/>
back in.<lb/>
get Kyok<lb/>
marriage<lb/>
find since<lb/>
child in 1<lb/>
appeal inc<lb/>
Radio Lu<lb/>
bust.<lb/>
Paul I<lb/>
for two y<lb/>
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US again<lb/>
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AAon Fri<lb/>
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girls cried<lb/>
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I on page 7.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
7<lb/>
Continued from page 6.<lb/>
ly announcing to the world that he was<lb/>
leaving the Beatles when in fact John had<lb/>
left eight months previously. He later<lb/>
formed "Wings" with his wife, Linda,<lb/>
which broke up in the fall of 1973.<lb/>
Since the breakup, Paul has put out five<lb/>
albums, John has put out five, George<lb/>
four, and Ringo three. George has had the<lb/>
most success rutting on benefit concerts<lb/>
for BhanglaDeshand with his three record<lb/>
smash All Things Must Pass John and<lb/>
his own Plastic Ono Band which later<lb/>
broke up, jammed with Frank Zappa, the<lb/>
Rolling Stones, and performed at clubs<lb/>
with Elephants Memory. In the fall of<lb/>
1972, he put on his own benefit concert the<lb/>
"One To One Concert" in Madison Square<lb/>
Garden. John gave the money to a<lb/>
children's hospital in New York. John<lb/>
tried to become a US citizen but was<lb/>
refused for his old hashish bust and fears<lb/>
to leave the country because he can't get<lb/>
back in. Also, John and Yoko are trying to<lb/>
get Kyoko Cox, her daughter by another<lb/>
marriage, whom they have been unable to<lb/>
find since they were granted custody of the<lb/>
child in 1973. At the present time, John is<lb/>
appealing to Queen Elizabeth through<lb/>
'Radio Luxembourg for a pardon of his drug<lb/>
bust.<lb/>
Paul has been kept out of the country<lb/>
for two years for minor drug busts, but in<lb/>
December, 1973, was allowed to enter the<lb/>
US again. One condition of the entry visa<lb/>
is a concert benefiting the Phoenix House,<lb/>
a drug rehabilitation center in New<lb/>
York. In his latest Rolling Stone interview,<lb/>
McCartney stated plans for a major United<lb/>
States tour this spriny while also saying<lb/>
that studio work with the other Beatles<lb/>
would be more than welcomed by him.<lb/>
The latest Beatles reunion rumor was<lb/>
sparked by every Beatle contributing<lb/>
songs and performances on 'Ringo<lb/>
Starr's latest album. John, George, and<lb/>
Ringo were in a Los Angeles studio at one<lb/>
time last fall but McCartney was unable to<lb/>
get in the US because of his busts. Now<lb/>
that all of them are in the United States, an<lb/>
album by the four is now very<lb/>
possible. However, as McCartney stated<lb/>
in his last Rolling Stone interview, this<lb/>
would not be a Beatle album, but rather an<lb/>
album where the four contributed so as to<lb/>
not start the myth again. The return of<lb/>
Bob Dylan has also interested the<lb/>
ex-Beatles in performing together live<lb/>
again since the Dylan tour was an<lb/>
unprecendented success.<lb/>
Right now all the ex-Beatles are<lb/>
involved in lawsuits with each other, and<lb/>
with Allen Klein, who they have rejected as<lb/>
their manager. Millions of dollars in<lb/>
royr.lties are at stake and Klein wants to<lb/>
get his hands on as much as<lb/>
possible. This may prevent any reunion on<lb/>
stage and on record during 1974. Whether<lb/>
it is an unscheduled one-night stand or a<lb/>
full blown tour no one knows but John,<lb/>
Paul, George, and Ringo themselves. In<lb/>
1964 the Beatles were introduced to the<lb/>
United States, in 1974, they may<lb/>
reintroduce themselves.<lb/>
<lb/>
NEEDED: Fountainhead needs a reviews<lb/>
editor and a layout assistant Call 758 6366<lb/>
or 758 6367, or come up to the<lb/>
Fountainhead offices over Wright Aud<lb/>
itorium lobby between 10 am and 4 p m.<lb/>
Mon Fri Just ask tor Pat Crawford or<lb/>
Skip Saunders.<lb/>
news<lb/>
DONALD TAYLOR: No. 135972, Viet<lb/>
Nam, 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/>
JUST RECEIVED: Large shipment<lb/>
waterbeds. Five year warranty. Now<lb/>
only $16.95. Freight Liquidators, West<lb/>
End Shopping Center, Greenville.<lb/>
ECU SENIORS AND GRADUATE<lb/>
STUDENTS: If you can work 10 20 hrs.<lb/>
per week, you can earn $50 75. NATION<lb/>
AL CONCERN NEEDS MEN AND<lb/>
WOMEN FOR SURVEY WORK. No<lb/>
selling. Can fit hours into your schedule.<lb/>
May lead to full time after graduation.<lb/>
Call Al Elmore MON THURS. 756 2797<lb/>
Ext. 123.<lb/>
CONSIDER MAKING YOURSELF<lb/>
AVAILABLE. For information write:<lb/>
ECU Student Services, Box 2001, ECU<lb/>
Station, Greenville.<lb/>
NEEDED: Adult male studderers to be<lb/>
used in a speech and hearing research<lb/>
study. All information confidential. Con-<lb/>
tact Barbara Wells at 758 6961 Ext. 227 or<lb/>
7520574.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1970 Kawasaki "350" Big<lb/>
Horn, Completely over-hauled. Call Gene<lb/>
Cole 756 6558, after 5.<lb/>
LOST: Leather key chain made by Dave<lb/>
from Mushroom, VW key, madterlock key<lb/>
and brown and white onxydon key -Very<lb/>
Important- Call Rodney at 758-2206.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Kawasaki 500-going<lb/>
overseas and need cash. Excellent<lb/>
condition 525.00 or best offer. Call Tom<lb/>
weeknights 756-5094.<lb/>
"WANT A DATE?" Computer dating is<lb/>
back. Don't keep wasting your weekends.<lb/>
Let our computer match you with your<lb/>
dream date. Your matches will come<lb/>
from the names of thousands of students<lb/>
from over 50 colleges in North<lb/>
Carolina. For complete detail send name<lb/>
and address to:Student Dating Service,<lb/>
Box 533, Carrboro, N.C. 27510.<lb/>
GENERAL TYPING: Papers, thesis,<lb/>
manuscripts. Fast professional work at<lb/>
reasonable rates. Call Julia Bloodworth,<lb/>
7567874.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Private room close to<lb/>
campus. Call 752-4006.<lb/>
EUROPE ISRAEL AFRICA: Travel dis-<lb/>
count 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-August<lb/>
21. Courses offered include 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 and<lb/>
referral no fee. Up to 24 weeks. General<lb/>
anesthesia. Vasectomy, tubal ligationalso<lb/>
available. Free pregnancy tests. Call<lb/>
PCS, non profit, 202 298 7995.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: 758 2814.<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/>
Continued from page two.<lb/>
Medical admissions<lb/>
The Medical College Admission Test<lb/>
will be offered at ECU on May 4,<lb/>
1974. Application blanks are to be<lb/>
completed and mailed to The ACT<lb/>
Program, Iowa City, Iowa, to arrive by April<lb/>
12, 1974. These applications are available<lb/>
at the Testing Department. Rooms<lb/>
204-205, Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
D.A.T. offered<lb/>
The Dental Aptitude Test will be offered<lb/>
at ECU on April 20, 1974. Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and mailed to<lb/>
the Division of Educational Measure-<lb/>
ments, American Dental Association, 211<lb/>
East Chicago Avenue, Chicago, Illinois<lb/>
60611 to arrive by March 25, 1974. These<lb/>
applications are available at the Testing<lb/>
Department, Rooms 204-205 Speight<lb/>
Building, ECU.<lb/>
Grad record exam<lb/>
The Graduate Record Examination will<lb/>
be offered at ECU on April 27,1974. Appli-<lb/>
cation blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Princeton, New Jersey 08540 to arrive by<lb/>
April 2, 1974. These applications are<lb/>
available at the Testing Department,<lb/>
Rooms 204-205, Speight Building, ECU.<lb/>
Reaearch results<lb/>
Two learning specialists at ECU have<lb/>
discovered the importance of an indivi-<lb/>
dual s preference of auditory or visual<lb/>
stimuli upon his learning ability.<lb/>
Dr Patricia N. Daniel of the ECU<lb/>
elementary education faculty and Dr.<lb/>
Robert S. Tacker of the psychology faculty<lb/>
reported results of their research in the<lb/>
February Journal of Educational Research.<lb/>
They selected three groups of 15<lb/>
children about eight years old for their<lb/>
research, using one group of children who<lb/>
respond well to the visual sensory<lb/>
modality, one who responds well to the<lb/>
auditory modality and one composed of<lb/>
children who respond equally well to<lb/>
either.<lb/>
Each group was given material to be<lb/>
memorized both by sight and by sound,<lb/>
and was then tested for recall of the<lb/>
material.<lb/>
The findings showed that children learn<lb/>
best when material is presented through<lb/>
the preferred modality and worst through<lb/>
the nonpreferred modality.<lb/>
Drs. Daniel and Tacker concluded that<lb/>
modality preference can be an important<lb/>
variable in learning and that educators<lb/>
should provide congruity between a<lb/>
learner's preference and the mode of<lb/>
instruction.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE<lb/>
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8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
EcfflorialSCommenlcry<lb/>
SGA decision made<lb/>
By the time this editorial appears, the fate of next year's SGA will have been decided.<lb/>
This editor can't speculate at great length upon the matter of elections; I'm writing<lb/>
this pretty much on the run, on the way to a Columbia Press convention in New<lb/>
York. We'll be anxious to hear the results of the 74-75 elections, and hope a major<lb/>
portion of the student body undertook some refelctive thinking re: our last editorial,<lb/>
which supported Mitchell Riley for SGA president, Tom Clare for Vice-President and Bill<lb/>
Beckner for Treasurer. Our support still stands; it remains to be seen if the student<lb/>
body will agree with us. Good luck.<lb/>
Anderson says bankers cause gas lines also<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
WASHINGTON - Those gas lines<lb/>
that you have to wait in have been caused<lb/>
by a deadly combination of industry greed<lb/>
and government bumbling. But they were<lb/>
also caused by bankers.<lb/>
The world is awash in oil, but there are<lb/>
not enough refineries to make it into<lb/>
gasoline. The major oil companies have<lb/>
built few refineries in the last 10 years.<lb/>
Here's where the bankers come in.<lb/>
Independent refiners have had trouble<lb/>
getting financing to build new plants,<lb/>
because of the close ties between the eight<lb/>
major oil companies and the nation's<lb/>
largest banks. Many of the same men,<lb/>
who sit on the boards of the banks, also sit<lb/>
on the boards of the oil companies.<lb/>
Therefore, they did not want to see the<lb/>
independents build more refineries and cut<lb/>
into the profits of the major oil companies.<lb/>
In addition to freezing the indepen-<lb/>
dents out, the bankers have helped make<lb/>
the oil industry interdependent, rather than<lb/>
competitive. For example, the Chase<lb/>
Manhattan Bank is both the largest<lb/>
shareholder in Atlantic Richfield and the<lb/>
second largest shareholder of Mobil. Ob-<lb/>
viously, it is not in the bank's interest to<lb/>
promote competition between the two.<lb/>
The Federal Trade Commission,<lb/>
meanwhile, has charged that the oil<lb/>
business is not free enterprise at all, but a<lb/>
monopoly which operates to the detriment<lb/>
of the public. It has filed suit to break up<lb/>
the oil trust.<lb/>
Battles for Oman: The headlines hold<lb/>
out hope of peace in the Middle East and<lb/>
detente with Russia. But the opposite is<lb/>
developing in an obscure but strategic<lb/>
comer of the world.<lb/>
The place is the oil-rich Shiekhdom of<lb/>
Oman, which controls the entrance to the<lb/>
Persian Gulf. All tankers, carrying oil from<lb/>
the world's greatest oil reserves, must<lb/>
pass from the Persian Gulf into the Gulf of<lb/>
Oman.<lb/>
Under hostile control Oman could<lb/>
bottle up the flow of oil out of the Persian<lb/>
Gulf. This is the jugular which carries the<lb/>
West's economic lifeblood.<lb/>
Now the Shiekh of Oman, backed by<lb/>
the United States is challenged by<lb/>
Communist insurgents, who are backed by<lb/>
the Soviet Union. Our staunch ally, Iran,<lb/>
has dispatched troops to Oman to battle<lb/>
the rebels.<lb/>
Meanwhile, fishing fleets from both the<lb/>
United States and the Soviet Union have<lb/>
suddenly taken an interest in fishing the<lb/>
crucial Gulf of Oman.<lb/>
The American fishing vessels are<lb/>
owned by Charles Black, the husband of<lb/>
former child star Shirley Temple. She has<lb/>
close connections with the Nixon<lb/>
Administration. This had led to rumors<lb/>
that her husband's boats are really fishing<lb/>
for information.<lb/>
The Soviet trawlers are also bristling<lb/>
with electronic gear, more suitable for<lb/>
spying than fishing.<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
"Do you know because I tell you so, or do<lb/>
you know Gertrude Stein<lb/>
EDITOR-IN-CHIEFPat Crawford<lb/>
MANAGING EDITORSkip Saunders<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGERRick Gillian)<lb/>
AD MANAGERJackie Shallcross<lb/>
NEWS EDITORSDarrell Williams<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
REVIEWS EDITORSteve Bohmuller<lb/>
SPORTS EDITORJack Morrow<lb/>
ADVISORFrank J. 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/>
The battle for Oman is beginning to<lb/>
look a little like a rerun of Vietnam. The<lb/>
stakes: access to the world's largest oil<lb/>
supply.<lb/>
Too Eager: The case against the<lb/>
Watergate defendants may be jeopardized<lb/>
by overeager prosecutors. This is causing<lb/>
concern among Special Prosecutor Leon<lb/>
Jaworski's lawyers. They are particularly<lb/>
upset over the trial of former Attorney<lb/>
General John Mitchell and Commerce<lb/>
Secretary Maurice Stans.<lb/>
The Watergate prosecutors secretly<lb/>
believe Mitchell and Stans stand a good<lb/>
chance of acquittal. They fear this will<lb/>
influence the juries that hear the Watergate<lb/>
cases and may adversely affect the<lb/>
chances of obtaining convictions.<lb/>
The Jaworski team blames the New<lb/>
York prosecutors who were so eager to get<lb/>
into the Watergate spotlight that they went<lb/>
ahead with a weak case. The trouble with<lb/>
the case, my sources say, is that a<lb/>
principal player, Robert Vesco, won't be<lb/>
there. He is still in the Caribbean, ducking<lb/>
subpoenas. Without Vesco, the New York<lb/>
prosecutors may have trouble convicting<lb/>
Mitchell and Stans.<lb/>
The Watergate prosecutors, them-<lb/>
selves, were also too eager to nail a<lb/>
prominent Democrat and, thereby, prove<lb/>
they were nonpartisan. They asked the<lb/>
grand jury to indict a former Lyndon<lb/>
Johnson aide, Jake Jacobson, for<lb/>
allegedly lying about his role in the milk<lb/>
scandal.<lb/>
But the indictment, the prosecutors<lb/>
secretly fear, was faulty and eventually will<lb/>
be thrown out. This may cause future<lb/>
juries to question the Watergate<lb/>
indictments.<lb/>
Budget Bombs: Once again, the<lb/>
Pentagon is asking for billions of dollars to<lb/>
develop new weapons. Last year, they re-<lb/>
quested $8.5 billions for research and<lb/>
development. This year, they want $9.3<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
Once work starts on a weapon, it is<lb/>
almost impossible to stop. Commanders<lb/>
use them as excuses to demand more<lb/>
men, more money, more gold braid. Bu-<lb/>
reaucracies build up around them.<lb/>
In 1964, for example, the Army began<lb/>
developing the "main battle tank Seven<lb/>
years and $235 million later, Congress<lb/>
ordered it junked. But last year, it showed<lb/>
up in the budget again - as the XM-1.<lb/>
Then there's the Cheyenne helicopter.<lb/>
After six years and $40 million, it too was<lb/>
shelved. But last year it was back as the<lb/>
"advanced attack helicopter<lb/>
And remember the B-1 manned<lb/>
bomber, which keeps disappearing and<lb/>
reappearing on the Pentagon drawing<lb/>
boards? Last year, the brass hats<lb/>
appeared before a closed session of a<lb/>
m<lb/>
Senate subcommittee and pleaded for<lb/>
more money for the B-1 bomber. They got<lb/>
it.<lb/>
All to often, the weapons that the Army<lb/>
develops don't work right. For example,<lb/>
the Army has started to mass-produce a<lb/>
truck, which is supposed to be able to float<lb/>
across calm water. Army drivers drove it<lb/>
into Maryland's Chesapeake Bay recently<lb/>
for a test run. It sank.<lb/>
Elsewhere<lb/>
RIYADH - I have followed the<lb/>
Watergate trails all the way to the Middle<lb/>
East. Witnesses have told the Senate<lb/>
Watergate investigators that millions were<lb/>
tunneled into President Nixon's campaign<lb/>
from such Middle Eastern potentates as<lb/>
the Shah of Iran and the Saudi Arabian<lb/>
royal family.<lb/>
The name of Adnam Khashoggi has<lb/>
been mentioned in the secret testimony.<lb/>
He is a mysterious man about-the-world,<lb/>
who has excellent contacts in the ruling<lb/>
Saudi circles.<lb/>
I tracked him down to his home in<lb/>
Riyadh, the remote capital of Saudi<lb/>
Arabia. He also has an office in Riyadh<lb/>
under the name of the Triat International<lb/>
Marketing Co.<lb/>
But Adnam Khashoggi is never in one<lb/>
place for long. I reached his brother, who<lb/>
said Adnam was in Khartoum. No one<lb/>
seemed to know where he would be<lb/>
heading from there.<lb/>
According to the secret testimony,<lb/>
Adnam Khashoggi delivered the Saudi<lb/>
money to the Nixon campaign. So far,<lb/>
however, I have been unable to catch up<lb/>
with Khashoggi. And the Senate investi-<lb/>
gators haven't gotten as close as I have.<lb/>
It is not Khashoggi, but Saudi Arabia's<lb/>
King Faisal who can do the most to help<lb/>
Nixon now. Faisal, the absolute ruler of<lb/>
the world's largest oil reserves, will make<lb/>
the final decision whether to relieve<lb/>
America's oil shortage.<lb/>
He is intensely anti-Communist.<lb/>
Therefore, he lines up solidy behind the<lb/>
United States and against the Soviet Union<lb/>
during the cold war.<lb/>
But he is also intensely anti-Zionist.<lb/>
He finally shut off oil exports to the United<lb/>
States in retaliation for U.S. arms<lb/>
shipment to Israel during the October war.<lb/>
No one can be certain what goes on in<lb/>
the mind of the brooding, hawk-like<lb/>
Faisal. Those who are close to him say he<lb/>
has a strong sense of honor and of loyalty<lb/>
to his friends.<lb/>
They say he still regards the United<lb/>
States as a friend, despite its aid to<lb/>
Israel. He cut off the oil, partly to<lb/>
Co<lb/>
strengthen I<lb/>
partly to ren<lb/>
him for gran<lb/>
But qui(<lb/>
prestige in<lb/>
moderation,<lb/>
other Arab<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
In the en(<lb/>
he will still I<lb/>
Other p<lb/>
Faisal's oil.<lb/>
The out?<lb/>
Yamani revex<lb/>
changing po<lb/>
Arabia's oil n<lb/>
petroleum u<lb/>
Yamani one<lb/>
men.<lb/>
In his out<lb/>
baron almos<lb/>
appointment:<lb/>
businessman<lb/>
'make him cc<lb/>
when Yama<lb/>
room. Three<lb/>
arrived from<lb/>
usual whet<lb/>
appointment?<lb/>
They all I<lb/>
over the oil b<lb/>
and thought<lb/>
shortage. It i<lb/>
he said, to h<lb/>
But to ea:<lb/>
wells will soc<lb/>
barrels a day.<lb/>
millions of c<lb/>
said, to reacr<lb/>
he has promi:<lb/>
continued ex<lb/>
Arabia's alrea<lb/>
The mone<lb/>
create other p<lb/>
There is o<lb/>
of using some<lb/>
purchase nuc<lb/>
Saudi leaders<lb/>
acquire a nu<lb/>
world to coun<lb/>
They are o<lb/>
building nude<lb/>
see it, if p<lb/>
Arab-Israeli w<lb/>
the Saudis bel<lb/>
better. Thelsi<lb/>
use their nucl<lb/>
It is this<lb/>
Arabs worriec<lb/>
the money a<lb/>
clout to arm<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
No overt u<lb/>
according to r<lb/>
nuclear arms<lb/>
seriously disc<lb/>
The approa<lb/>
to the French,<lb/>
to the Russia<lb/>
French would<lb/>
necessary, to I<lb/>
Clearly, an<lb/>
East could be<lb/>
wwrrs Bt<lb/>
SOU<lb/>
HHMHMm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0009"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
9<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Commenlary continued<lb/>
so<lb/>
saded for<lb/>
They got<lb/>
the Army<lb/>
example,<lb/>
Droduce a<lb/>
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No one<lb/>
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nmunist.<lb/>
ehind the<lb/>
Het Union<lb/>
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S. arms<lb/>
ober war.<lb/>
oes on in<lb/>
hawk-1 ike<lb/>
im say he<lb/>
of loyalty<lb/>
le United<lb/>
s aid to<lb/>
tartly to<lb/>
strengthen his voice in the Arab world,<lb/>
partly to remind the Americans not to take<lb/>
him for granted.<lb/>
But quietly, he is using his new<lb/>
prestige in the Arab world to argue for<lb/>
moderation. He is also trying to persuade<lb/>
other Arab oil producers to hold down<lb/>
prices.<lb/>
In the end, say those who know Faisal,<lb/>
he will still be in America's comer.<lb/>
Other powers are also lusting for<lb/>
Faisal's oil.<lb/>
The outer office of Sheik Ahmed Zaki<lb/>
Yamani reveals, in a glimpse, the world's<lb/>
changing power patterns. Yamani is Saudi<lb/>
Arabia's oil minister. Saudi Arabia's sea of<lb/>
petroleum under its hot sands makes<lb/>
Yamani one of the world's most powerful<lb/>
men.<lb/>
In his outer office, a gruff American oil<lb/>
baron almost groveled before Yamani's<lb/>
appointments secretary. A rich Lebanese<lb/>
businessman, whose aides scurried to<lb/>
'make him confratable, did the scurrying<lb/>
when Yamani's deputy enetered the<lb/>
room. Three Japanese, who had just<lb/>
arrived from Tokyo, bowed lower than<lb/>
usual when they approached the<lb/>
appointments secretary.<lb/>
They all knew that Yamani has them<lb/>
over the oil barrel. He spoke to me softly<lb/>
and thoughtfully about the world oil<lb/>
shortage. It was better for Saudi Arabia,<lb/>
he said, to hold down production.<lb/>
But to ease the crisis, he said, Saudi<lb/>
wells will soon be producing nine million<lb/>
barrels a day. It will take a few years and<lb/>
millions of dollars in development . he<lb/>
said, to reach the 20-million barrel output<lb/>
he has promised. Meanwhile, he believes<lb/>
continued exploration, will double Saudi<lb/>
Arabia's already vast oil reserves.<lb/>
The money pouring into Riyadh could<lb/>
create other problems.<lb/>
There is ominous talk in Saudi Arabia<lb/>
of using some of the nation's oil billions to<lb/>
purchase nuclear weapons. Responsible<lb/>
Saudi leaders told me they may have to<lb/>
acquire a nuclear arsenal for the Arab<lb/>
world to counter the Israeli nuclear threat.<lb/>
They are convinced that the Israelis are<lb/>
building nuclear warheads. As the Saudis<lb/>
see it, if peace should fail, another<lb/>
Arab-Israeli war is inevitable. Next time,<lb/>
the Saudis believe, the Arab armies will do<lb/>
better. The Israelis, as a last resort, might<lb/>
use their nuclear weapons.<lb/>
It is this possibility which has the<lb/>
Arabs worried. Today, the Saudis have<lb/>
the money and their oil gives them the<lb/>
clout to arm the Arab side with nuclear<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
No overtures have yet been made,<lb/>
according to my Saudi sources, to obtain<lb/>
nuclear arms. But the idea has been<lb/>
seriously discussed in the Arab capitals.<lb/>
The approach is more likely to be made<lb/>
to the French, or perhaps the British, than<lb/>
to the Russians. The Saudis believe the<lb/>
French would sell nuclear weaponry, if<lb/>
necessary, to keep their oil pipelines filled.<lb/>
Clearly, another blow-up in the Middle<lb/>
East could be catastrophic.<lb/>
WHAT BUSt?IM?j<lb/>
WOO?<lb/>
'Perhaps it's time for another Presidential trip, Bebe . . . .<lb/>
99<lb/>
Nixon's emotional heath questioned<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
By TRISTIN COFFIN<lb/>
THE HIDDEN ALARM - "As the media<lb/>
linger over his 'ravaged' face, his public<lb/>
quirkiness, his increasing isolation, the<lb/>
question of Mr. Nixon's emotional health<lb/>
has become a kind of muttered<lb/>
counterpoint to the more public issues of<lb/>
guilt or innocence, impeachment or let-it<lb/>
be<lb/>
Washington's hidden alarm is<lb/>
President Nixon is not capable of pulling<lb/>
America through a tough economic crisis,<lb/>
and Congress hasn't the guts to get rid of<lb/>
him. The hope-Nixon will suffer a<lb/>
breakdown and withdraw under terms of<lb/>
the 25th Amendment. The most influential<lb/>
member of Congress, Chairman Wilbur<lb/>
Mills of the Ways and Means Committee,<lb/>
has publicly pleaded with Nixon to<lb/>
resign. He told newsmen that if Nixon<lb/>
"were looking to me for advice I would say<lb/>
resign in the near future<lb/>
This is the talk in the Congressional<lb/>
cloakrooms, and is reflected in a jittery<lb/>
Wall Street. More revelations lie ahead.<lb/>
The New York Times hints at what the<lb/>
underground press has been saying for<lb/>
months, Nixon's links with organized<lb/>
crime, through gambling interests in the<lb/>
Banamas.<lb/>
The Miami Herald says agents of the<lb/>
Irving Committee are in Florida<lb/>
investigating the passing of gambling<lb/>
money to Nixon, and adds: "Seymour<lb/>
Alter, a Miamian with Bahama gambling<lb/>
connections, said he has visited the Key<lb/>
Biscayne Presidential Compound four or<lb/>
five times to make social calls on C.G.<lb/>
(Bebe) Rebozo .An investigation by state<lb/>
attorney Gerstein's office is currently<lb/>
tracing out Alter" s movement of money<lb/>
from the Bahamas into the US through the<lb/>
mmmmfm0mmm0mmmmmm0mm<lb/>
Key Biscayne Bank headed by Rebozo.<lb/>
Author Gore Vidal in The New York<lb/>
Review suggests that some White House<lb/>
"plumbers" and Watergate burglars may<lb/>
have been involved in the assassination of<lb/>
John Kennedy and the shooting of George<lb/>
Wallace.<lb/>
When Nixon came back from<lb/>
California, the cautious TBR called him<lb/>
"Bleak and ravaged Time said he<lb/>
"looked haggard and phrased his thoughts<lb/>
uncertainly in a quavering voice" in his talk<lb/>
on the Mideast. A Congressman who was<lb/>
brought to the White House is startled by<lb/>
the man behind the desk; he is obsessed<lb/>
with his ability to destroy seventy-five<lb/>
million Russians in twenty minutes, and<lb/>
vice versa.<lb/>
Columnists Evans and Novak tell of a<lb/>
Nixon talk to top Government officials:<lb/>
"He then advised his audience to read<lb/>
Albert Speeds 'Inside the Third Reich<lb/>
particularly the description of how Speer,<lb/>
as (Hitler's) arms production boss, had<lb/>
kept German war production at peak<lb/>
levels, even during the worst of the Allied<lb/>
bombing .The reaction of some of those<lb/>
listening bordered on shock. Worse than<lb/>
that, some of the President's official<lb/>
family felt that the easy praise for<lb/>
convicted war criminal Spoor's industrial<lb/>
mobilization was slightly ominous<lb/>
NIXON'S NEUROTIC HISTORY - The<lb/>
record seems to be that under both<lb/>
pressure and adverse criticism, Nixon falls<lb/>
apart. After a considerable investigation,<lb/>
Irving Wallave wrote that Nixon "suffered<lb/>
physical problems that came from<lb/>
emotional problems and from 'great<lb/>
pressure<lb/>
Columnist Drew Pearson revealed to<lb/>
the National Press Club in November 1968<lb/>
that Nixon had been a patient of New York<lb/>
psychiatrist Arnold A. Hutschnecker who,<lb/>
currently, is recommending "that all<lb/>
Presidential candidates ought to be<lb/>
screened by a panel of psychiatrists and<lb/>
then monitored for 'mental health' as<lb/>
closely as they are for physical<lb/>
health Nixon was treated with severe<lb/>
depression and psychosomatic illness<lb/>
while Vice-President and after his defeat<lb/>
for Governor of California in 1962.<lb/>
After the bombing of Cambodia and the<lb/>
protests, Nixon one May night went to the<lb/>
Lincoln Memorial and talked to visiting<lb/>
students. Some of them told CBS<lb/>
newsman Bob Schieffer: "He was just<lb/>
rambling about things that didn't make any<lb/>
sense, that didn't relate He seemed very<lb/>
tired and nervous, and you know, he was<lb/>
all leaning over, and he was looking at the<lb/>
floor, he couldn't look at anybody His<lb/>
sentences wre incoherent He looked<lb/>
like he had a mask on<lb/>
WHO WILL LEAD? - In the absence of<lb/>
leadership in the White House or Congress<lb/>
"the desire for leadership has grown so<lb/>
strong .that it has opened the door to<lb/>
dictatorship This is the view of Father<lb/>
Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of Notre<lb/>
Dame. "The mood is dangerous because I<lb/>
think it's the kind of mood you could see in<lb/>
other countries before dictatorship moved<lb/>
in; people so desperately looking for<lb/>
leadership that they'll almost go with any<lb/>
strong man<lb/>
More specifically, Max Lerner in the<lb/>
New York Post, fears a military take-over<lb/>
"if and when they are convinced that the<lb/>
civilian leaders have turned America into a<lb/>
second-rate (military) power<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039911_0010"/><lb/>
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Q<lb/>
2<lb/>
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z<lb/>
<lb/>
Z<lb/>
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XOO AHO A9<lb/>
BY CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
CO<lb/>
Ct3<lb/>
s<lb/>
CO<lb/>
<lb/>
CD<lb/>
BY CHARLES GRIFFIN<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0011"/><lb/>
o<lb/>
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in<lb/>
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12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
wmwmrmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
Thirty acts<lb/>
Hanne ford Circus comes to Minges<lb/>
Trained wild animals and beautiful girl<lb/>
performers will be important elements in<lb/>
the varied performance of Hanneford<lb/>
Circus when it appears in Greenville on<lb/>
Thursday, March 21. 1974 at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. With an impressive array of<lb/>
new features, the 1974 program of this<lb/>
popular circus promises to be the<lb/>
strongest in its history.<lb/>
High on the list of animal features will<lb/>
be the lion and tiger act presented in the<lb/>
incorporated into the circus. In "Nep-<lb/>
tune's Holiday" shapely sea nymphs and<lb/>
mermaids sail through the air in a colorful<lb/>
aerial ballet. "Circus Parade" is a second<lb/>
spectacle that utilizes the entire company<lb/>
in a dazzling circus-style salute to the<lb/>
"Nashville sound" of country music.<lb/>
Among other features of the show,<lb/>
many of them being seen in this country<lb/>
for the first time, are the Hungarian<lb/>
Troupe, in an exhibition of acrobatic<lb/>
MINQES WILL BE insured for $1,000,000 for the upcoming circus.<lb/>
steel arena by the lovely, graceful and<lb/>
fearless lady trainer, Tajana. She performs<lb/>
with a mixed group of jungle-bred cats<lb/>
which include both Bengal and Siberian<lb/>
tigers plus a black-maned African lion. As<lb/>
the climax of her act she presents a savage<lb/>
black panther that mounts and rides the<lb/>
back of one of its natural enemies, an<lb/>
Indian elephant.<lb/>
At another point in the program, blond<lb/>
and beautiful Gina Dubsky presents a<lb/>
group of performing African leopards. In-<lb/>
sofar as women are seldom seen in the<lb/>
highly dangerous role of wild animal<lb/>
trainers, the appearance of two such girl<lb/>
performers within one circus program may<lb/>
well constitute a circus "first<lb/>
Additional animal stars include Janos's<lb/>
Chimpanzees in a fantastic demonstration<lb/>
of animal intelligence and Lacey's<lb/>
Performing Seals, who do a hilarious<lb/>
routine. Joanne's Pets are another popular<lb/>
item in this year's show - an adorable<lb/>
congress of very appealing and very well<lb/>
trained dogs and ponies. Finally there are<lb/>
the ever-popular performing elephants and<lb/>
horses.<lb/>
Beautiful girls and gorgeous costum-<lb/>
ing are emphasized in the three all-new<lb/>
production spectaculars which are<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmn<lb/>
SHONEY S BIG BOY<lb/>
UNDER NEW<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
This Coupon Good<lb/>
for one slice freshly<lb/>
made Strawberry<lb/>
pie with any<lb/>
combination or dinner<lb/>
order<lb/>
Expires April 30.<lb/>
strength and coordination; the Pinsons,<lb/>
courageous high-trapeze daredevils;<lb/>
Marina Radulescu, shapely young<lb/>
Rumanian aerialists; the Barrys and the<lb/>
Roberts, whirlwind tumblers and trampo-<lb/>
linists; Don and Lana, unbelievably clever<lb/>
jugglers; the Four Dubskys and the<lb/>
Argentinos, high perch-pole balancing<lb/>
artists; and an entire troupe of clowns,<lb/>
headed by the side-splitting comic, Doug<lb/>
Ashton, Australia's contribution to the art<lb/>
of funny slapstick comic. As always, the<lb/>
prestigious Hannefora Family Bareback<lb/>
Riding Act will give added luster to the<lb/>
show with its big cast of horses and riders,<lb/>
again featuring Tommy Hanneford, the<lb/>
riding comedian, and dashing Peter<lb/>
Haubner, young guest riding star from the<lb/>
Hungarian State Circus in Budapest.<lb/>
The Hanneford name is one of the<lb/>
oldest and most respected in the circus<lb/>
world, dating back to an original in<lb/>
England in 1621. Still produced and<lb/>
directed by the present generation of the<lb/>
Hanneford family, the show exhibits<lb/>
exclusively in sports arenas and<lb/>
auditoriums in line with present-day<lb/>
emphasis on greater audience comfort.<lb/>
This year's performance runs a very<lb/>
fast-paced two hours, and includes 30 acts<lb/>
in 20 displays. It embraces many startling<lb/>
and unusual features against a colorful<lb/>
and elaborate production background that<lb/>
one would normally expect in a Broadway<lb/>
show or a major ice show.<lb/>
There will be two performances of the<lb/>
Hanneford Circus on March 21, 1974. The<lb/>
matinee will be presented at 4:30 p.m. and<lb/>
the evening performance will be at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. Student tickets for the matinee are<lb/>
$.50 and for the evening show $1.00. Any<lb/>
child 12 years or younger will be admitted<lb/>
free when accompanied by a regular ticket<lb/>
holder. Tickets will be on sale at the ECU<lb/>
Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
THE CIRCUS WILL feature many trained<lb/>
animal acts.<lb/>
maaaaDiBaifleicJbiaoiBoiasiciaicdibbio<lb/>
TO ALL FREE-LANCE PHOTOGRAPHERS:<lb/>
Fountainhead welcomes any work you care to<lb/>
submit in return for publication of your photos and<lb/>
by-lines. i<lb/>
x<lb/>
We are especially interested in creative shots<lb/>
and-or candid shots particularly on campus or the<lb/>
Greenville area. Please contact Skip Saunders<lb/>
MonFri. from 3-5:00 p.m. at 758-6366 or 758-I<lb/>
3367 or come to theFountainhead offices over<lb/>
Wright Auditorium to talk<lb/>
<lb/>
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1. I think<lb/>
Studies wo<lb/>
Of 185 fresl<lb/>
Of 169 sopl<lb/>
Of 111 juni(<lb/>
Of 69 senio<lb/>
2. I agree<lb/>
establishing<lb/>
Studies.<lb/>
Of 185 fresf<lb/>
Of 169sop-<lb/>
Of111 junk<lb/>
Of 69 senioi<lb/>
3. Ifamajoi<lb/>
have been s<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
Of 185 fresh<lb/>
Of 169 soph<lb/>
Of 111 junic<lb/>
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yes<lb/>
Drmances of the<lb/>
:h21, 1974. The<lb/>
at 4:30 p.m. and<lb/>
will be at 8:00<lb/>
the matinee are<lb/>
how $1.00. Any<lb/>
will be admitted<lb/>
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sale at the ECU<lb/>
? many trained<lb/>
BEESESEDiqa<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
mmm0m<lb/>
13<lb/>
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m<lb/>
International studies Counceling services<lb/>
Continued from page one.<lb/>
Following are the results of the poll:<lb/>
1. I think the major in International<lb/>
Studies would be useful.<lb/>
Of 185 freshman, 175 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 169 sophomores, 156 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 111 juniors, 106 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 69 seniors, 68 answered yes.<lb/>
2. I agree that ECU should consider<lb/>
establishing a new major in International<lb/>
Studies.<lb/>
Of 185 freshmen, 173 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 169 sophomores, 155 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 111 juniors, 106 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 69 seniors, 68 answered yes.<lb/>
3. If a major in International Studies would<lb/>
have been available, I might have chosen<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
Of 185 freshmen, 48 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 169 sophomores, 52 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 111 juniors, 42 answered yes.<lb/>
Of 69 seniors, 34 answered yes.<lb/>
The figures of the above poll are from<lb/>
special classes and are not necessarily a<lb/>
Commemorates anniversary<lb/>
sample of the total student population.<lb/>
According to Ferguson "exact details<lb/>
have not been worked out for the proposed<lb/>
major Dean Capwell of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, Chairman of the International<lb/>
Affairs committee now has the proposal<lb/>
pretty much in his hands. Dean Capwell<lb/>
and his committee will make recommend-<lb/>
ations to the administration about the<lb/>
major.<lb/>
"There is a positive out-look now,<lb/>
especially as far as the student body. It is<lb/>
not definite, but there may be a possible<lb/>
deceleration of ECU programs in Japan<lb/>
and Rome due to financial reasons. Be-<lb/>
cause of this there may be a acceleration<lb/>
of campus studies said Ferguson.<lb/>
When asked why he thought an<lb/>
International Studies major is necessary at<lb/>
ECU, Ferguson said, "ECU has the<lb/>
strongest international studies program in<lb/>
N.C. with campuses in Rome, Japan, and<lb/>
Mexico. Mexico is the most stable<lb/>
campus. It could prepare you for job<lb/>
opportunities in big trade cities and would<lb/>
have practical applications - the market is<lb/>
there. We also feel that any school with as<lb/>
much emphasis on International Studies<lb/>
as ECU should have a major in<lb/>
International Studies rather than only a<lb/>
minor as we now have<lb/>
Continued from page three.<lb/>
The Frankfords are well qualified to<lb/>
deal with children's problems because of<lb/>
the extensive amount of experience they<lb/>
have both had in this and other areas.<lb/>
For the past 30 years both Gladys and<lb/>
Joseph have been in social work and<lb/>
correctional fields. Most of this time has<lb/>
been spent in North Carolina.<lb/>
Both received their master's degrees in<lb/>
social work, Mrs. Frankford from<lb/>
Columbia University in New York, and Mr.<lb/>
Frankford from the University of<lb/>
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. They are<lb/>
also both members of the Academy of<lb/>
Certified Social Workers (ACSW).<lb/>
Membership in the ACSW<lb/>
is equivalent to possessing a license for a<lb/>
particular practice. Social workers do not<lb/>
earn licenses for their work. Instead, they<lb/>
gain credit from the ACSW for actual<lb/>
practical experience gained under<lb/>
supervision of an accredited social worker.<lb/>
Frankford had been doing social work<lb/>
in Baltimore, Md. for nine or 10 years when<lb/>
he was contacted by the dean of social<lb/>
work at Chapel Hill about a social work<lb/>
position in Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
"I had never heard of Charlotte Mr.<lb/>
Frankford said with a laugh as he recalled<lb/>
the offer. "But I felt like I was in a rut in<lb/>
Baltimore, so I decided to come down and<lb/>
look at the offer<lb/>
He accepted the position as director of<lb/>
a comprehensive program of social work in<lb/>
the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school system.<lb/>
Mrs. Frankford also began working in<lb/>
Charlotte supervising student units in<lb/>
social work f'om UNC at Chapel Hill. She<lb/>
worked with students sent from Chapel<lb/>
Hill to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg area to<lb/>
do their field work for a six-month period.<lb/>
In 1970, the Frankfords came to<lb/>
Greenville "to get involved in what was<lb/>
happening at East Carolina The<lb/>
department of social work and corrections<lb/>
was expanding and beginning new<lb/>
programs in allied and mental health. "We<lb/>
like to keep our hands in things that are<lb/>
happening t?day said Frankford. "There<lb/>
is a danger in teaching in that if teachers<lb/>
don't keep going and continue research or<lb/>
work in their field, they become<lb/>
stale .they are actually teaching about<lb/>
the past. That's one of the reasons we<lb/>
started this counseling service<lb/>
The Frankford's schedule appoint-<lb/>
ments for counseling for week-day<lb/>
evenings after 5:30 p.m. and all day<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
"Right now we're both doing about 10<lb/>
hours a week each, maximum in<lb/>
counseling. We try to leave at least one<lb/>
night a week open for ourselves, and of<lb/>
course, Sunday. We don't do any<lb/>
counseling on Sunday's" said Mrs.<lb/>
Frankford.<lb/>
International Festival Plans varied program<lb/>
By BARBARA TURNER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An International Festival and Sym-<lb/>
posium, commemorating the 50th<lb/>
anniversary of the ECU Department of<lb/>
Foreign Languages and Literatures will be<lb/>
held on the ECU campus March 20-22.<lb/>
MICHAEL BASSMAN<lb/>
The three day program is being planned<lb/>
by the departmental Special Projects<lb/>
Committee and Dr. Michael Bassman,<lb/>
chairman of the committee.<lb/>
The festival date coincides with a<lb/>
second symposium sponsored by the Latin<lb/>
American Area Studies Committee which<lb/>
will present speakers from the U.S.<lb/>
Department of State; a classical guitarist,<lb/>
Dr. Mario Abril of the University of<lb/>
Tennessee; and Dr. Emir Rodrigue-Mone-<lb/>
gal of Yale University, who will speak on<lb/>
"Contemporary Latin American Litera-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
Marguerite Perry, Chariman of the<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages and<lb/>
John Lang, ECU Vice-Chancel lor of<lb/>
External Affairs will open the festival and<lb/>
welcome guests. Principal speakers for<lb/>
the program will be Dr. Edward Stack,<lb/>
professor of Modem Languages at NCSU<lb/>
and David Cat heart, personnel officer and<lb/>
management recruiter from NCNB-<lb/>
Charlotte. Dr. Stack will speak on<lb/>
"Languages and the Machine" and David<lb/>
Cathead will be speaking on "Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Business Opportunities<lb/>
During the Wednesday afternoon<lb/>
program, former chairmen of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Foreign Languages will be<lb/>
recognized: Mr. James Fleming, Dr.<lb/>
Henry Wanderman, and Dr. Joseph A.<lb/>
Fernandez. Mr. Fleming served as<lb/>
chairman for twentv-five vears, (1945-<lb/>
1970). Following the afternoon activities<lb/>
there will be a reception to honor ECU'S<lb/>
international students.<lb/>
On Wednesday evening in Nursing 101<lb/>
several films will be shown. They include<lb/>
"Yevtushenko" about a Russian poet; "The<lb/>
Paris of Trancois a French film about the<lb/>
typical life of a French child; German film,<lb/>
"Bar bar tanz" - (Dance Bear Dance); and<lb/>
"Mexico: A Photo Adventure" will be<lb/>
shown through the courtesy of Eastman<lb/>
Kodak Company.<lb/>
Thursday is primarily for the Latin<lb/>
American Symposium. Friday will be for<lb/>
ECU students and "invited high school<lb/>
students in N.C, principally in eastern<lb/>
N.C added Dr. Bassman. Memorial Gym<lb/>
will have many booths featuring items<lb/>
ranging from Russian Easter eggs, tacos,<lb/>
crepes - to a booth with a ham radio totune<lb/>
in foreign countries.<lb/>
Memorial Gym will also be the scene of<lb/>
talent from high schools, local Greenville<lb/>
people and ECU students. A poetry<lb/>
contest for high school students, who<lb/>
have memorized poems or written an<lb/>
original poem in French, Spanish, German<lb/>
or Russian is also scheduled. A skit<lb/>
competition for high school students is .<lb/>
planned. Prizes will be awarded.<lb/>
Jones Cafeteria will have Foreign<lb/>
Language tables and foreign conversation.<lb/>
The festival will conclude with a scene<lb/>
from the French play "La Valse des<lb/>
Toreadors" (Nursing 101) and a Spanish<lb/>
play reading, "Corona de Amor<lb/>
Muerte The presentation from "La Valse<lb/>
des Toreadors" will be part of the southern<lb/>
competition at Clemson University later<lb/>
this spring.<lb/>
All ECU students are welcome to the<lb/>
International Festival activities.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Consider makina yourself avail- v<lb/>
able. For information write:<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECU STUDENT SERVICES<lb/>
BOX 2001, ECU STATION 0<lb/>
GREENVILLE S<lb/>
PEYOTE<lb/>
FINE INDIAN<lb/>
JEWELRY<lb/>
Turquoise, coral, silver'<lb/>
CALL KELLY CWIN<lb/>
752-0111<lb/>
This week at the<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wed. March 13 Blackfrost<lb/>
Thur. March 14 Singletree<lb/>
Fri. March 15 Flatland<lb/>
Sat. March 16 Steve Ball<lb/>
Notice: The front door is now an emergency<lb/>
exit and the back door is the main entrance.<lb/>
m<lb/>
MPW<lb/>
?mN?M?MW<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
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m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0014"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
? ?????<lb/>
OMJ<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
To-Morrow's Sports<lb/>
By JACK MORROW<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
The departed coach Tom Quinn was supposed to be replaced Wednesday by Dave<lb/>
Patton, but controversy still reigns as Quinn has not signed his release. Another<lb/>
position on the East Carolina basketball staff appears to have been mislaid and it is a<lb/>
very sad affair. So those of you faithful readers who cried at "Brian's Song" and "The<lb/>
Roy Campanella Story" had better not read any further.<lb/>
Along with Quinn, freshman basketball mentor and assistant coach Tom Twitty was<lb/>
told that his time to exit the scene had also come. Now, the Pirate basketball situation<lb/>
appears to be in a bit of a sticky situation. They have a head coach, and a very good one,<lb/>
and an able assistant as George Estes was retained from the Quinn staff, but that is all.<lb/>
The burden of running a major college basketball team is amightyone and with only<lb/>
two people to bear the load - well it's going to be rough.<lb/>
My question is why not keep Twitty on as a recruiter and coach of the junior<lb/>
varsity? The man was a one-man coaching legend at Louisburg High School as he<lb/>
coached football and basketball. His cage teams recorded a five year record of 62-18. It<lb/>
is a crying shame that this coaching talent is going to be wasted.<lb/>
There are many questions that need to be answered and I hope that the athletic<lb/>
council will see the light and keep Tom Twitty on the staff. Two men are certainly not<lb/>
enough.<lb/>
I am still not over the decision that rid the University of one of the finest coaches that<lb/>
they have ever employed. John Lovstedt wascoachingsoccer, lacrosse and diving when he<lb/>
was given the axe last year.<lb/>
He was the winningest coach ever in the history of East Carolina lacrosse and<lb/>
soccer. His diving coaching was where his true ability was and I feel confident to say<lb/>
that there are few diving coaches in America better than John Lovstedt.<lb/>
John Lovstedt was a tribute to East Carolina and he put them on the map as far as<lb/>
collegiate diving was concerned. He set his goals high and he achieved them, but E.C.U.<lb/>
did not want his successful and positive attitude. Instead of rising to the heights of<lb/>
greatness. East Carolina appeared to be content, wallowing in the depths of mediocrity.<lb/>
When coach Lovstedt was relieved of his duties, the best excuse that the University<lb/>
could give him was that he was being fired for the purpose of hiring a more experienced<lb/>
soccer coach. Well before I make any more enemies, let me bow out of this commentary<lb/>
gracefully.<lb/>
This year's football team has eight assistant coaches and I hope and pray that those<lb/>
eight coaches were not the reason behind the firing of these top-notch coaches. Maybe<lb/>
the athletic council deciued to get rid of these coaches to make room for a larger grid<lb/>
staff and then maybe there was another reason. I wish that someone would tell me the<lb/>
answerplease!<lb/>
HOT WATER NEEDED<lb/>
The following letter was submitted to Fountainhead's sports' desk:<lb/>
To the Sports Editor of Fountainhead<lb/>
To the administration of Minges Coliseum:<lb/>
Winners of five tournaments before Christmas, second in another and fourth in the<lb/>
"Rose Bowl of Wrestling" - Wilkes Open - undefeated for three consecutive years, and<lb/>
now recognized as one of the top 20 teams of the nation; the East Carolina wrestling<lb/>
team has a " chillling" complaint.<lb/>
For approximately three weeks, the week before and two weeks since the S.C.<lb/>
tournament we've been working as hard as humanly possible. Now, after qualifying<lb/>
seven for the NCAA finals to be held in Ames, Iowa on March 14-16, we have to put up<lb/>
with something very few high schools have problems with.<lb/>
Imagine working your body to near exhaustion and going into a shower that, at best<lb/>
is 55 degrees.<lb/>
First, it's painful, second it is bad for team moral, and third it has caused an outbreak<lb/>
of colds, strep throat, the flu or whatever the M.Ds at the infirmary call it.<lb/>
It seems as though someone in Minges Coliseum could have the courtesy to see to it<lb/>
that there is hot water spraying from the faucets.<lb/>
Although it won't do the wrestling team any good this year (they're in Ames for the<lb/>
NCAA finals) it might make a few ECU students happy who need showers after P.E.<lb/>
cJasses and intramural events to be held in Minges for the rest of the year.<lb/>
We, the wrestling team, cannot find out who is responsible because whoever we ask<lb/>
always seems to "pass the buck" to someone else. Maybe, just maybe, the person<lb/>
responsible will read this letter and get from behind his desk and stop pushing his pencil<lb/>
long enough to see that there is hot water in Minges Coliseum "for the duration<lb/>
Thanks very much,<lb/>
The ECU. wrestlers<lb/>
it74 GOLF SCHEDULE<lb/>
?rch 14. IS, 16<lb/>
tv,<lb/>
March 19<lb/>
March 71, 73,<lb/>
March IS.<lb/>
April 3<lb/>
April IS<lb/>
April 30<lb/>
May I<lb/>
June l? 21<lb/>
Palmetto Intercollegiate<lb/>
Golf Tournament<lb/>
UNC WILMINGTON<lb/>
Camp Lejeune Tourney<lb/>
Fur man Tourney<lb/>
RICHMOND Southern Conn<lb/>
Campbell<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
10 00a.m.<lb/>
2 OOp m<lb/>
10 00 a m<lb/>
10 00a m<lb/>
I OOp m<lb/>
1:00pm<lb/>
10 00am<lb/>
10 00a m<lb/>
COACH Bill Cain<lb/>
ALL CAPS DENOTE HOME GAMES<lb/>
Tell me is it you who are here<lb/>
For our good cheer.<lb/>
Or are we here for the story, for the glory,<lb/>
For the gory satisfaction of telling you<lb/>
how absolutely awful you really are.<lb/>
mmtmmtmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA ASSISTANT BASKETBALL coach Dave Patton is expected to be<lb/>
named new Pirate head coach. Patton served for two years as an assistant to Tom<lb/>
Quinn, former Buc mentor. No reason for the delay in naming a new coach has<lb/>
been given by the athletic council.<lb/>
Pirate spring sports fill the air<lb/>
Three East Carolina spring sports,<lb/>
facing unexpected pressure from a tight<lb/>
Southern Conference Commissioner's Cup<lb/>
race, open their respective seasons this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The golf team, under new head coach<lb/>
Bill Cain, opens play in the Palmetto<lb/>
Intercollegiate Tournament in Orangeburg,<lb/>
S.C, while Wes Hankins' tennis team<lb/>
takes on UNC-Wilmington Saturday at 2<lb/>
p.m. at the Minges Coliseum courts. Bill<lb/>
Carson's outdoor track team opens a<lb/>
12-meet schedule Friday in Chapel Hill<lb/>
against North Carolina and Wake Forest.<lb/>
The extra pressure placed on all Pirate<lb/>
spring sports teams is due to the slim lead<lb/>
held over William &amp; Mary in the annual<lb/>
chase for the Commissioner's Cup which<lb/>
is awarded to the institution with the best<lb/>
overall athletic program. East Carolina<lb/>
has never won the Cup.<lb/>
The golf team is expecting a banner<lb/>
year because of the return of Ail-American<lb/>
player Eddie Pinnix and five other<lb/>
experienced and consistent players. Bebo<lb/>
Batts, a senior, also returns along with Jim<lb/>
Ward, a stellar player, Carl Bell, another<lb/>
senior, Doug Owens, a sophomore with<lb/>
great promise and Steve Ridge, a freshman<lb/>
who cracked a tough team with good<lb/>
practice sessions.<lb/>
The golfers participate in eight<lb/>
tournaments including the Southern<lb/>
Conference and NCAA Championships.<lb/>
Following the opener Thursday, the golf<lb/>
team will host UNC-Wilmington on March<lb/>
19 at Greenville Golf and Country Club<lb/>
then travel to Camp Lejeunne Tournament<lb/>
and the Furman Tournament on March<lb/>
22-24 and March 28-30. East Carolina<lb/>
hosts Richmond on April 3 and visits<lb/>
Campbell on April 15 before conference<lb/>
tournament action begins on April 30.<lb/>
The tennis team returns five<lb/>
experiences players who are all battling for<lb/>
the No.1 singles position. Coach Wes<lb/>
Hankins, who finished with a 7-11 record a<lb/>
year ago after losing the first seven<lb/>
matches, will be counting heavily on Chris<lb/>
Davis, the No. 1 player a year ago, along<lb/>
with Wray Gilette, Howard Rambeau, Ed<lb/>
Spiegel and Thomas Marion. Doug<lb/>
Getsinger, a freshman, is coming off a<lb/>
torrid spring performance and is expected<lb/>
to surprise several opponents in the<lb/>
middle of the singles groupings.<lb/>
Outdoor track has the distinct problem<lb/>
of running every meet on the road because<lb/>
of problems with the surface of the home<lb/>
track which also hinders practice<lb/>
sessions. The Pirates boast a host of<lb/>
standouts including Les and Kenny<lb/>
Strayborn, both speedsters, Maurice<lb/>
Huntley, Carlester Crumpler, Ivy Peacock<lb/>
in the weights, Roy Quick in the high jump<lb/>
and Charley Lovelace.<lb/>
Pirate road meets include visits to<lb/>
Baptist College and Princeton (dual meet<lb/>
in Charleston, S.C), The Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Relays, the Carolina Relays, the<lb/>
Mountaineer Relays in Morganton, W. Va<lb/>
the Maryland and Tennessee Invitationals<lb/>
as well as the Southern Conference and<lb/>
NCAA meets.<lb/>
174 BASEBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
March 2 (Sat)Campbell3 OOp m<lb/>
March S (Tuas)DUKE UNIVERSITY3 OOp m<lb/>
March 6 (Wad)N C State3 00pm<lb/>
March 7 (Thur)NC. State3 OOp m<lb/>
March 13 (Wad)Duke University3 00pm<lb/>
March 16 (Sat)Furman (2games)130pm<lb/>
March K (Mori)VIRGINIA3:00p.m<lb/>
March 11 (Thur)U.N.C. CHAPEL HILL1 00pm<lb/>
March 23 (Sat)SHIPPENSBURG! 00pm<lb/>
March 24 (Sun)SHIPPENSBURG3 OOp m<lb/>
March 30 (Sat)DAVIDSON (2)1:30pm<lb/>
March 31 (Sun)PEMBROKE1 00pm<lb/>
April 1 (Mon)RICHMOND1 00pm<lb/>
April 2 (Tue)NC. STATE3:00p.m.<lb/>
April 4 (Thur)William &amp; Mary3:00p.m.<lb/>
April 6 (Sat)APPALACHIAN (2gamas)130pm<lb/>
April 12 (Ff-I)Pembroke3:00p.m.<lb/>
April 13 (Sat)Citadel3:00p.m.<lb/>
April IS (Mon)U.N.C. Wilmington (2games1:30pm<lb/>
April 20 (Sat)WILLIAM &amp; MARY3:00p.m.<lb/>
April 24 (Wed)Richmond3:00p.m.<lb/>
April 27 (Sat)V.M.I. (2games)130pm<lb/>
April 29 (Mon)CITADEL3:00p.m.<lb/>
May 3 (Frl)UN C.WILMINGTON3:00p.m.<lb/>
May 7 (Tue)CAMPBELL300pm<lb/>
COACH: George Williams<lb/>
ALL CAPS DENOTE HOME GAMES<lb/>
For we do love you like a son,<lb/>
Of that there's no doubt.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
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K<lb/>
EAST CAR(<lb/>
and this we<lb/>
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of the home<lb/>
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a host of<lb/>
and Kenny<lb/>
s, Maurice<lb/>
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slays, the<lb/>
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Invitationals<lb/>
ference and<lb/>
JLI<lb/>
n)<lb/>
m?s)<lb/>
3.00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
1:30p.m.<lb/>
1:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
1:30pm.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
130pm<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
1.30 p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
130pm<lb/>
3:00p.m.<lb/>
3:00pm<lb/>
3:00pm<lb/>
a son,<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
15<lb/>
Lady gymnasts finish second<lb/>
The East Carolina Women's Gymnastic<lb/>
team surprised everyone but themselves<lb/>
Saturday, with an excellent second place<lb/>
finish in the State Meet in Boone. Placing<lb/>
second to Western Carolina, whose Susan<lb/>
Bullock won every event, the girls put on a<lb/>
fine team performance. Five women<lb/>
placed for the ECU team, which was more<lb/>
than any other team.<lb/>
The girls' strongest showing came in<lb/>
the uneven parallel bars. Joan Fulp placed<lb/>
second and Gail Phillips finished third, as<lb/>
the team placed first in this category of the<lb/>
competition. Miss Phillips also placed<lb/>
fifth in the floor exercises.<lb/>
The girls also made a good showing in<lb/>
the balance beam ccompetition where<lb/>
Myrna Ocasio placed fourth and Charlene<lb/>
Daniels fifth. Freshman Linda Lane placed<lb/>
third in the vaulting exercises for the team<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
The team's other competitors; Jenny<lb/>
Griffin, Beth Wheeler, and Debbie Laurer<lb/>
made contributions to the team by scoring<lb/>
high enough to figure in the team's final<lb/>
point total.<lb/>
The girls, although they had a losing<lb/>
record this year, proved they were winners,<lb/>
after all, by defeating both Appalachian<lb/>
State and UNC-Chapel Hill, two teams that<lb/>
had previsouly beaten the girls earlier in<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
The girls will continue to practice for<lb/>
the Regionals on March 23 and then<lb/>
prepare for their spring show. Any woman<lb/>
interested in competing in the show or on<lb/>
next year's team is welcome to come and<lb/>
practice with the team following the<lb/>
Regionals.<lb/>
Sports medicine conference set<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S BASEBALL TEAM took on the Duke UniversityBlue Devils yesterday<lb/>
and this weekend they travel to Greenville, S.C. to battle the Furman Purple Paladins in a<lb/>
doubleheader on Saturday. The bucs return to Harrington Field on Monday to face the<lb/>
University of Virginia. Gametime is 3 p.m.<lb/>
A Sports Medicine Conference for<lb/>
athletic trainers and coaches will be<lb/>
offered by ECU May 10-11.<lb/>
The conference is sponsored by the<lb/>
Sports Medicine Division of the ECU<lb/>
Athletic Department, the ECU School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Professions and<lb/>
the ECU Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
The program is designed to provide<lb/>
coaches and student trainers with<lb/>
necessary skills and techniques for<lb/>
developing a systematic and successful<lb/>
program of treatment and rehabilitation of<lb/>
athletic injuries.<lb/>
Further information and registration<lb/>
materials are available from the ECU<lb/>
Division of Continuing Education, Box<lb/>
2727, Greenville, or telephone 75&amp;-6148.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039911_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 5, NO. 3914 MARCH 1974<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmwm<lb/>
Sports World<lb/>
By STEVE TOMPKINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
PART II THE NECESSITY OF CHANGE<lb/>
East Carolina is building itself gradually to athletic supremacy in the<lb/>
East Surprised? Well, here's how our athletic director intends to get there.<lb/>
To build an athletic program you start with football, since gate receipts and alumn<lb/>
support for this sport are greater in this area. A winning football team brings fans but<lb/>
more importantly it brings television.<lb/>
N C State got $110,00 for a regular season appearance, $250,000 for its victory in tne<lb/>
Liberty Bowl. Even lowly Louisiana Tech made $100,00 for the second regional game<lb/>
te'i?yoAuBprojct your budget for just gate receipts like Clarence Stasavich does and<lb/>
then you pick up an extra 100 grand you're on your way. Southern<lb/>
Sounds simple doesn't it? Ah, I can see your puzzlement If ECU won theSojJtrwn<lb/>
Conference championship this year, had a man named Crumpler goodUjnoutfo run with<lb/>
Orange Juice and a quarterback named Summerell who is a Giant, plus a colorful and<lb/>
Dhotoqraphic coach in Sonny Randle, where was the television? <lb/>
Answer, Clarence Stasavich failed to come through. Oh, he applied for a contract,<lb/>
bUtShtavdich isTnThe6 NoXcaro.ina HaH Fan an honor he richly deserved after f,<lb/>
f ine S aL an athlete and coach. But his greatness was in the 50's, and unlike other<lb/>
men he's failed to change with the decades.<lb/>
"You have to spend money to make money" is an old cliche, but aptly applied<lb/>
here. And the key to making it in college athletics is publicity.<lb/>
If our athletic director would only open his door and walk across the hall to the Sports<lb/>
information Department he might wake up from a ten year sleep.<lb/>
Thn Evenly our SID, is an accomplished journalist who knows the ropes of he<lb/>
press His bCdgei you would guess would be substantial. Get ahold of yourselves, it s<lb/>
"YouasMor comparison. N.C. State spent our budget plus in promoting Bill Yoest for<lb/>
the AHJSrfcan te? in football. Funny that the entire National RxMeagueMWW<lb/>
to see the value of this consensus All-American. Yoest may not block too well but he<lb/>
had his name in every newspaper in the country.<lb/>
Did you see Crumpler or Summerell on those squads. And yet bo h were draftedhn<lb/>
the fourth round of the NFL draft. In essence didn't our athletic director rob them from<lb/>
 And aTyourself why with all this talent we didn't go to a bowl game. Again the<lb/>
primary factor was our AD failed to heed the value of publicity. Notre Dime&amp;?<lb/>
froe Sugar Bowl, Penn State $500,000 from the Orange Bowl and Miami of Ohio<lb/>
$197,000 from the Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
Notre Dame puts aside $25,000 if they even remotely think a senior has a shot at the<lb/>
He NTonTer0?hyool in the ACC, Southeastern, Big Ten, Pac Eight, Southwest or Big<lb/>
Eiaht Conferences spend less than $80,000 for sports publicity.<lb/>
Even six of the seven other schools in the Southern Conference spend more than we<lb/>
retStoSeUney folks. First let's get our Pirate Glut, moving. Instead of<lb/>
spending a few bucks on coffee and donuts to get the membership up, build a solid<lb/>
foundation of supporters that will grow instead of remaining stale. Pursue our graduates<lb/>
as well as wealthy businessmen. .<lb/>
Fix up that "barn" we call a press room at Ficklen Stad.um. Impress the press;and<lb/>
they become talkative and friendly. Get some respect in this state instead of being<lb/>
laughed at. There's not even a heater in that press room!<lb/>
If you're going to build a football power then build one. Get those lights behind the<lb/>
stand's, get the training facilities Coach Dye requests. We've learned that Dye asked fora<lb/>
fence around the field for privacy during practices yet this requea was<lb/>
ignored. Stasavich's teams might have practiced in cow fields but todays athletes<lb/>
defGeU lobby started in the state legislature. Do something about this obstacle course<lb/>
we call a road from here to Raleigh. A four lane highway would make n'OMoameajn<lb/>
Greenville easily accessable from anywhere In the Piedmont. At least start some noise,<lb/>
don't just sit behind a desk reading Football Weekly.<lb/>
Do something about the student body's support. Don't ignore 10,000 peopL JUSt<lb/>
because they don't pay. This conglomerate mass can communicate a program s worm in<lb/>
far more ways than any newspaper. <lb/>
The saying "don't make waves" is dead and long since buried. To gam supremacy<lb/>
even in the conference is an uphill fight. It will take a strong and hungry leader to get us<lb/>
t hfrp<lb/>
Unfortunately, our master has his hands in his pockets, his mouth tightly clasp, and<lb/>
hjs publicity department chained into uselessness.<lb/>
Jim Fuller named to grid staff<lb/>
Jim Fuller, who boasts a solid<lb/>
championship background as both a coach<lb/>
and player, was added to the staff of new<lb/>
head fooiball coach Pat Dye Monday. Ful-<lb/>
ler will serve as offensive line coach, a<lb/>
position he held at Jacksonville State<lb/>
University (Ala.) before coming to East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The announcement of Fuller's<lb/>
appointment brings the total staff to seven<lb/>
including Henry Trevathan, who was<lb/>
retained as assistant head coach. The Dye<lb/>
staff is expected to number eight when<lb/>
completed, however, no deadline has been<lb/>
set for completing the staff.<lb/>
Fuller played college football at the<lb/>
University of Alambama as an offensive<lb/>
guard and defensive tackle. During his<lb/>
playing years, The Crimson Tide visited<lb/>
the Orange Bowl twice and the Sugar Bowl<lb/>
once. During two of Fuller's three<lb/>
seasons, Alabama won back to back<lb/>
national collegiate championships.<lb/>
Fuller's coaching experience began at<lb/>
Fairfield High School in Fairfield, Ala.<lb/>
where he played high school athletics,<lb/>
reaping many honors including Athlete of<lb/>
the Year Awards and letters in four<lb/>
sports. Before moving to Jacksonville<lb/>
Sate in February of 1970, Fuller served as<lb/>
an assistant coach and eventually head<lb/>
football coach and athletic director. His<lb/>
high school record was 23 wins to seven<lb/>
losses.<lb/>
"East Carolina University and North<lb/>
Carolina are new to me. I was bom and<lb/>
raised in Alabama and all my playing and<lb/>
coaching experience was in Alabama<lb/>
Fuller says. "That is one of the reasons I<lb/>
came here. I wanted to step up in major<lb/>
college circles and at the same time, I<lb/>
wanted to coach and work with people who<lb/>
I didn't know. That is the biggest<lb/>
challenge I know of<lb/>
"The second reason I came here was<lb/>
because of Pat (Dye). I played on both<lb/>
offense and defense when he was<lb/>
coaching at Alabama. He knew his<lb/>
football and he had what I think was a near<lb/>
perfect relationship with his players.<lb/>
He is a great person and will be an<lb/>
excellent coach to work for and learn from.<lb/>
m<lb/>
iw<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
Specialize in all type<lb/>
Volkswagon Repair<lb/>
All work guaranteed<lb/>
COLLEGE EXXON<lb/>
1101 E. Fifth<lb/>
752-5646<lb/>
GfiB<lb/>
1<lb/>
Fuller is married to the former Peggy<lb/>
Allridge of Fairfield, Ala. They have two<lb/>
daughters: Kimberly seven and Katherine,<lb/>
five.<lb/>
Commissioner's Cup<lb/>
Scoring for the Commissioner's Cup<lb/>
shows East Carolina University leading<lb/>
William &amp; Mary by 4 112 points. This cal-<lb/>
culation includes all sports through winter<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
ECU has 47 points to the Indians 42112<lb/>
Appalachian is in third with 32 12,<lb/>
Furman and Richmond are tied with 33,<lb/>
V.M.I, has 22112, Davidson has 20 points<lb/>
and The Citadel has 17 12.<lb/>
Grapplers to Ames<lb/>
Seven East Carolina University<lb/>
Wrestlers will travel to Ames, Iowa to<lb/>
compete in the National Collegiate<lb/>
Athletic Association's Wrestling Champ-<lb/>
ionship March 14-16.<lb/>
The Pirates have a two-year dual match<lb/>
record of 18-0 and they are the current<lb/>
Southern Conference Champions.<lb/>
Representing East Carolina in the<lb/>
Championships will be Jim Blair in the 118<lb/>
pound weight class, Glen Baker at 126,<lb/>
Tom Marriott at 142, Bruce Hall at 158, Bill<lb/>
Hill at 177, Mike Radford will compete in<lb/>
the 190-pound division and Willie Bryant<lb/>
will wrestle in the heavyweight class.<lb/>
Chancellor entertains<lb/>
Chancellor and Mrs. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
entertained the members of the 1973-74<lb/>
East Carolina swimming team and friends<lb/>
on Tuesday evening at their home.<lb/>
The Pirates swimmers and divers won<lb/>
18 of 18 events in this year's Southern<lb/>
Conference Swimming and Diving<lb/>
Championships which were held in Minges<lb/>
Natatorium.<lb/>
There was a rush along the Fulham Road.<lb/>
There was a hush in the Passion Play.<lb/>
S5M<lb/>
RigganShoe<lb/>
Repair Shop<lb/>
111 W. Fourth<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
???????<lb/>
?<lb/>
March 15 (Fri)<lb/>
March 23 (Sal)<lb/>
March 30 (Sat)<lb/>
April 5 &amp; 6 (Sat)<lb/>
Hi I DOOR TRACK SCHEDULE<lb/>
N C. StateWake Forest 1 00 pm<lb/>
Baptist CollegefPrincetonUniv 2 00 pm<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Relays<lb/>
Colonial Relays<lb/>
AprM 13 (Sat)<lb/>
April 70 (Sat)<lb/>
April 27 (Sat)<lb/>
May 3 &amp; 4 (Sat<lb/>
May 11 (Sat)<lb/>
May 19 (Sun)<lb/>
May 25 (Sat)<lb/>
June 67.8<lb/>
COACH Bill Carson<lb/>
ALL CAPS DENOTE<lb/>
Carolina Relays<lb/>
Mountaineer Relays<lb/>
U of South Carolina<lb/>
Southern Conterence<lb/>
Pitt invitational<lb/>
Maryland Invitational<lb/>
Tennessee invitational<lb/>
NCAA National Championship<lb/>
1:00p.m.<lb/>
3 00p.m.<lb/>
10:00pm<lb/>
10 Mam<lb/>
10 00a m<lb/>
1 30p m<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
IncomeTax<lb/>
Assistance<lb/>
Sponsor: ECU Accounting<lb/>
Societv<lb/>
Race: Wright Annex 305<lb/>
When: Feb. 1-15; March 5-<lb/>
April 15<lb/>
Time: MonFri 3-6;<lb/>
Sat 1012<lb/>
We sleep by the ever bright hole in the<lb/>
door,<lb/>
Eat in the corner, talk to the floor.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039911_0017"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>