Fountainhead, October 31, 1974


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]







Peto,
ed CG : r EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA





Nes VOL. 6, NO. 16 31 OCTOBER 1974 we Pp rate Wick : When a Dtions : Omecomi Mf? - laa Said 1 the 4 nst if § The t ‘or an Wh Paso YJ ere W er e - f ng Fd vy EE vouin ‘52? 1A NSt © for By ELVA HARKRADER Staff Writer eme, “Happy Days: A Look at SON ly will make thus Homecoming the SEN IOr e in years, according to Wade ey. 2 3. president of the Student Union erence jent of the Homecoming Steering Nave been working on. this n ng since the last one,” said th’s theme was chosen from oley’s rons made by membders of the se at : ning Steering Committee m hig ecoming activities begin on »s by iy with the October Fest from 3 to 5 (he mall fi ctober Fest will give people a aan yet loose and be crazy,” said : ertificates for $5 will be given to ‘ ' three-legged race and similar an a Mock funeral wil! be heid at a Auditorium. A procession of ast nes will attend § the burial of the : jong “opefully, a bonfire will follow in ster itadei will be burned in effigy,” : “Q00d commented 50's dance will be held Friday night in Auditorium, featuring the Spon- » the Shirells, and Mary Wells ‘ey are good bands that are still 1 from the 50's,” Hobgood said “ Alumni Breakfast will be heid Y z jay at 10:00 am. in Mendenhall wae 4 t Center wa 3 ‘here is always a good turn out of E at Homecoming, and this year a . int be any different,” said Hobgood g Ne parade at 10:30 am. on Fifth eS et will include a women's drill team, a & show, 15 floats and five bands dS : "ne parade should be really good,” ' Hobgood. “There are only two at en drill teams in the country and we've
e of them. And the horse show we as been in Macy's New Year
r
106
“ickoff for the game against Citadel be 1 30 p.m. at Ficklen Stadium.
Marx Brothers Film Festival will be 1 in McGinnis Auditorium Saturday at 8
The Homecoming weekend will close
day with the ECU orchestra playing in Nt Auditorium at 3:00 p.m
'O get everyone in the spirit of the 50's,
et the Good Times Roll” and “The Wild
©S were shown Monday night. Stu
‘©OtS were also able to see James Dean in
“ebdel Without a Cause.”











) FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974


news FLAS!



cian
Jones Grade A
Jones Cafeteria has received a grade A rating by the Health Department. Stan Linder, area manager for Servomation, said the rating was due to the empioyee s
efforts. Two students, majoring in food science and ecology assisted the inspectors AOTT AO Pi
AOTT wil! be Trick-or-Treating for the
Arthritis Foundation from 7:00-9:00 p.m on October 31. Sorogty members will be wearing their jerseys. All contributions will be greatiy appreciated
All Saints mass
There will be mass Friday November 1 a oS 6A 1 room 103 of the Biology s All Saints Day which Is
DU NG rr ay a mandatory service for Cat S Any- ny no r aArVviCe e else interestec attend 19 ine service s invited to attend. You must come WwWy
Meet the governor
Ome meet G0OveMmMor Holshouser senatorial candidate Bil! Stevens, and Attorney General candidate Jim Carson
Free coffee and doughnuts. Have your picture taken with the Govemor
You are invited this Friday, Nov. 1 8:30 a.m. until 10:00 a.m. to attend this reception at the Ramada Inn social room, 264 By-pass, Greenville
For more details cal
752-4287
Devin Day
Initiation
Fall initiation for Psi Chi will be held on Tuesday Nov. 12 at 7:00 p.m. in Speight 129. Dr Leo Craghan will speak on the topic “The Roots of Dynamic Therapies- Cnarlatanisrr Witch Doctors and Exorcism.” All members are urged to
Anyone interested in joining Psi Chi should apply now. Application forms an be obtained from the Psi Chi Library or the Psychology Department office
zwteNnd
Homecoming ?
ECU almost got the chance to have a
male homecoming queen this year McCall Thompson
nonor
candidacy
i was senious
antagonism and
his name in omplied willingly, but re-persuaded to run
Queen It's not the same thing,” he said
Camelia Society
Milton Brown, f the American Camellia Society and a fall f'ower show on the ECU campus
The show is free and open to the public from 3:00 to 9:00 p.m. in room 222 of the Mendennal! Student Center. Cut blooms a areas Of the state, both jreennouse and garden grown, will be entered and displayed
Any grower may enter blooms, whether he is a society member or not. All blooms for the show and competition must be Jelivered to the Mendenhall Center by 11:00 in time for the judging
Awards given for prizewinning varieties are being donated by Greenville Dusi nesses
acoress by
Jirector (
r
ACEI meeting
The ECU Association of Childhood Education International will meet Thursday
Oct. 31 at 7:00 p.m. in the Mendenhal!
Student Center. A guest speaker will be
presented and refreshments will be served
New members as well as old are invited to attend
Vets club
There will be a meeting of the ECU Veterans Club in Room 220 Mendenhal! Wed Nov. 6 at 7:30 p.m. The Book Exchange, Christmas Party, and another Car Rallye will be discussed
a student in the Drama Department, was nominated for the was accepted by the school, and onsequently was forced to withdraw his
about it,” said Thompson think this business of a beauty queen is absurd. But got so much confusion from the students that decided it wasn't worth it.”
When asked for his permission to print the paper, Thompson would not be for Homecoming
Camellia Society will meet nere Sati'rday, Nov. 2, for a luncheon executive


CONTE
HOMECOMING Dage NEWS FLASHES. page two JOYNER ADDITIONS page three
OFF THE CUFF . page four FEATURES pages five and six REVIEWS
NTS
seven, eight and nine
pages EDITORIAL COMMENTARYFORUM. pages ten and eleven
INFLATION PROPOSAL DAS Wel rE
CLASSIFIEDS page thirteen ROCKATHON page fourteen NEHA page fifteen FINANCIAL AID page sixteen SPORTS
pages seventeen, eighteen and nineteen
Tyler will be lit
Thursday and Friday mghts the letters
ECU will be lit up on the front of Tyler Dorm
‘Scent of Flowers’
Auditions for “A Scent of Flowers” wil be heid from 7:30 - 11:00 p.m. on Nov. 3 and 4. Scripts are on reserve in the library. Everyone is invited to try out
SIMS free lecture
The Student International Meditation Society will present a free lecture on Transcendental Meditation at the Metho- dist Student Center, 501 E. Fifth St on Thurs Oct. 31 at 7:30 p.m
This past week the pledges of the social sororities helped Aipha Phi Omega collect money for the United Fund by means of a Rock-athon. The event began Thurs Oct. 24 at 7 am. and continued through 5 p.m. Sat Oct. 26. The pietiges were on the job around the ciock and collected a total of $1,650 for the fund
Congratulations to the pledges of Delta Zeta and Aipha Phi for receiving the “most spirited award
Baha'i
Out of God's Eternal Ocean”, a film strip depicting the history of the Baha'i Faith, will be shown Friday night at 8:00 p.m. in room 238 Mendenhall Student Center. Discussion will follow. Literature on the Baha'i Faith, the youngest of the world's religions, will be available
ECU symphony
The ECU Symphony Orchestra will present its first concert of the year on Sunday, Nov. 3 at 3 pm. in Wrigh: Auditorium
Admission charges are $1.50 for adults and 75 cents for students. Tickets may be purchased at the door
Robert Hause will conduct the program which features the works of Henry Purcell, igor Stravinsky and Antonin Dvorak
Tyler trick or treat
Crawl into your Halloween costume at 7:00 tonight in Tyler Dorm for trick or treating. Floors 1-3, 46 7-9 will participate together. The prize for the best outfit is a $5.00 record of your choice at
the Record Bar. Judging is at 8:30 along with the Halloween Brew
FLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASE
— a
Union travel
The Student Union is formir
galt Committee. Students interest ty
60 in work.
iNg on the committee should come by 2 7
Mendenhall and talk to Lynn Kars sometime in the next two weeks
The Political Science Department 4 planning @ weekend retreat to Atlanty Beach Nov. 9 and 10 Anyone Majoring o minoring in Political Science may SQN ip for the trip. Maximum participation « about 30 students. Check with tte Political Science Department for furthey information. First come first served
Correction
In the Oct. 24 issue F uNtainnead reported in a headline the Gaogor Department proposed channelization Green Mili Run. This is incorract The Geology Department opposes ite channelization
The story stated the channe! ZatiOn was a several million Gollar project. Accordin
to Or Stan Riggs in the Gaolog, Department the project wil! actually cos:
$342 thousand
Seminar
David €E Henrie, professor Chemistry at UNCG, will present a seminar On “Hypersensitivity - or - An Observable in Search of an Operator’ on Friday, Nov ' at 3p.m. in room 201, Flanagan Building
Refreshments will be servec in te conference room at 2°30 p.m
Men nurses
Three men have been inducted into
ECU chapter of Sigma Theta Tau hone society in Nursing ; : They are Richard Berry, RN, °
Danville, Pa Jay Silvers of Paterson N.J and Mickie Jones of Gaffney, S.C The three are the first males every nductec by ECU's Beta Nu chapter Berry is a captain in the U.S Army anc a graduate of the Pennsylvania Hosp'é School of Nursing for Men. He is now 4 candidate for the Bachelor of Science Nursing degree from ECU Silvers has a BS degree from Atlant Union College in Massachusetts and the MA degree from William Patterson College in Wayne, N.J. He is now a senior in the ECU School of Nursing, having transferred from Duke University last year A Jones received the BS degree biology from Appalachian State Unviers't) in 1966. Before entering the ECU nursing school, he taught biology at the high school and junior college level Candidates for induction into Sig Theta Tau must demonstrate outstand!? academic achievement and show ev of professional leadership potential in the field of nursing








FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974
3

AS


By KENNETH CAMPBELL Staff Writer
) a £4
é yf

Zz
eee
EUGENE W. HUGUELET
According to Eugene W Huguelet, associate director of Library Services, the present library has a capacity of about 600,000 volumes, whereas the annex will accomodate one million
The Nonprint media center, the microfilms room, the North Carolina room, the manuscripts room and the technical preparation of library materials facility will remain in the present library
“The book acquisition rate will not be increased because of the new library addition " said Russell.
Sports Center
nat fo Trav i $3 million dollars are being spent for an cone won. « to ECU's Joyner Library. According ‘phe dy 2 Ralph Russell, the building should red "Keng mpleted in January, 1975 ‘a 1a rhe annex is designed to accomodate a rhe entire campus community,” said Boring F director of Library Services TAY Sign up pation» four-story, 90,000 square foot with te will house the circulation for furthy epartment, reference room, bound erved a oo odicals, and the card-catalog " e US. and U.N. documents will also ved to the annex YL be completely carpeted, said. “This will cut down on the hehe ind make it more comfortable for IBOGON ne Zation of TBC. The ne annex will be barrier-free for the wes the jicapped. Smoking areas will be ; es: gnated for those who wish to smoke,” zat On was q Mm ntinued ACCT 0 q Y @ The stacks will be open,” said Mrs mnry ¢ ’ artna Lapas, reference librarian. “ think : the card catalogue with closed stacks j f a sterile arrangement.” ‘ he annex will have four rooms for 4 studying. They can either be be. eserved of used on a first-come 4 served basis oe Areas with sound-proofed booths will & 1 50 De available for student typing. About — “00 private study corrals will be in the SET vale ney y, Now ' Suiiding n the nto the , honor iN, oO fterson
j Everything for ECU me ECU Lined Jackets
my and 4 ospita Navy Blue and Purple nows
rein with gold lettering tlaritic j of ECU
nd the @
in the ferred
om $16.95
sing sigma
n the
ECU Plaques
ersity ECU Toboggans ia ; ECU Football Jerseys ig j ECU Tennis Racket covers
ECU Knitted Golf Club covers


Three million dollars buys Joyner annex
“The present library's heating and cooling system will be renovated. This will make it more comfortable for those of us who work here and those who use the library.”
Only the housekeeping staff will expand because of the annex
Librarians Mrs. Lapas and Mrs. Dorothy Brockman will be transferred to the annex
‘T'll be in the basement,” said Mrs Lapas. “We have no windows down there, but guess we can get used to it. The floor will be carpeted, that will be nice.”
“ thought the new building would look like a hamburger joint, but it doesn't. It’s quite attractive, commented Mrs Brockman
“The library staff and students I've talked with are very excited about what's in store for them with the services of the new library,” Russell said. “Things are reaily looking up.”
Mr. Wendel! Smiley, director Emeritus of Library Services planned the annex. He was ECU librarian for 30 years before he retired in 1973

4:00-6:00

Wednesday Nights- sessions
6:30-8:30
$1.00 per session Skates Included
Ask About Our Intramural Ice Hockey Program



oe


9:00- 11:00









4 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974



“THE GREAT WHITE WITCH”
Look there, my fnend at yon Narvest moon who on the frosted hillside’s shrouded gaze Waits patiently for restiess souls to se,
A
ANd roam upon their ‘ghostly ways
Now feel the ch Swirling leaves Who dance to autumn’s tune The mournful dirge that witches bring
Aste
W goblins’, ‘ghosts’, and ‘ghouls
How well know where shouid be
In this night when souls are free,
xO home go to light the fire, and bolt the door, And DAaSS this A Maliows E en
As yes, once again that “ghostly” time of the year has descended upon we mortal souls. And as the poem suggests, tonight is the night that witches, goblins and ghouls roam their restiess ways over the earth
Last week in search of a fitting topic for the occasion, extended an invitation to any ghosts or witches who might be intersted in appearing in this column. At first was sure the endeavor was ai! for naught, but then came a phone call late Thursday afternoon
FEELING FROGISH
The voice at the other end of the line belonged to a man, and he toid me that he was a witch. After recovering from the initial shock of having someone actually respond to the solumn, managed to gather my composure and jot down a few necessary details. We arranged to meet at 4 30 that afternoon
Now, am one of those people to whom fate and circumstances seem to always work against. And this time was no exception. Our illustrious Editor-In-Chief scheduled a sudden editors meeting for 4.00. As the hour approached, the meeting started and very shortly realized that was late for my appointment with the witch. Ignoring comments from my cohorts that was probably going to be turned into a frog for being late, grabbed my pen and pad and hopped off to the interview. About half way there felt an insatiable desire to sit on a lily pad, and caught myself trying to snare a pesky fly with my tongue, who had been buzzing around the car at a stop light. Nevertheless, arrived there in one piece, (still craving that fly but basically in the same physical form)
WICCA COVEN
The witch was Ray Gilbert, or as he is sometimes known around Greenville, Poncho” My immediate reaction upon meeting him was that he didn't look like any witch had ever seen before, but then my experience with witches is, to say the least, rather limited. really didn't know where to begin my inquiry into the occult, so just let him start from the beginning Poncho is a member of the “Wicca Tradition” of witches in Greenville. Members of the “Wicca” coven are known as “white witches” and they practice nghts and ceremonies that are basically characterized as a celebration of the earth” One point he brought out which surprised me was that witches of the “white” variety believe in God, the only difference being that they do not celebrate their belief in the traditionally accepted methods of worship. “This adds to a great deal of confusion and misunderstanding on a number of people's parts about what we do and think.” he added
FAMILY TRADITION
Gilbert, whose family has been involved in witchcraft since the 14th century, said tha!
no one iS born a witch. You must develop your abilities and skills like in any other
pursuit. He suggested that it is a matter of mental discipline and practice which helps
ne attain “the powers to make things happen as you want them to
asked him for some instances where he had helped people with his powers. First of
all he explained that he never uses his powers for self gain, and that witches of his coven will not accept money for services performed. He described one instance when two girls came to town, whose luck had been altered by a curse put on them somewhere along their travels. They had difficulty in finding a job, a place to live, and even friends with whom to associate. Ray put his concentration onto the problem, and through the use of incantations, both traditional and adapted, helped the girls find employment and a place


While Ray was telling about another incident of a fellow who had come to ask his heip in getting his girl friend back, the phone rang and he had to leave for a moment He returned with a smile on his face and told me that it was the fellow whose girl had left him and that he was calling to thank him because she had come back
asked him about life in Greenville, and whether or not he got much inquiry from the college here. “Oh, yes, think things are much easier here than from where came from because people take more of an intellectual interest in the subject After that, they very often become involved in it,” he said
HALLOWEEN PRANKS
The topic of Halloween came up in the course of the discussion, and my witch fnend told me that witches take a great deal of interest in the custom, but that it really does not hold a great deal of significance for them. He told me that they enjoy playing pranks on people and recounted the time when he was sitting on a porch and managed to cause a pumpkin to fall on a cat's head. He added that the one thing that really bothered him most about the pagan celebration is the fact that witches are always Gepicted as being ugly. “This just isn't the way it is.” He laughed
Near the end of our conversation the topic got around to paim reading Ray said he had been practicing it for a couple of months and offered to read my paim. Taking my uptumed paim the first thing he said was that can't hold onto money.guess he saw
my checkbook from last month!) Next he told me that arm inclined to be forgetful and scatter-brained. Then he went on to list a number of my “characteristics”, which, must confess, were ail basically true
At the close of the interview thanked him for his time (remembering the lily pad and fly,) and indicated that he had enlightened this reporter a great deal on the subject of witchcraft. could not leave the interview without feeling a newly acquired respect for one of the world’s oldest and it seems, most misunderstood, folk traditions. As got into my car noticed a crack in one of my windows and was tempted to ask hirn for a little help in getting it fixed, then remembered that final exarns are just around the comer, and decided to come back and see him in a few weeks




MEY, WEY
“£CU
OME COMIN a FRI- SAT.
GODEN was iy (GT DY SS a 7» WEEKEND
15. GRGENVLE.










FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974 5









while the basketball team managed a 15-7 season, winding up in third place in the North
State Conference. 53 AND WHERE WERE WE?
The latest addition to the campus was the new Teacher's Dormitory beside North Cafeteria. The basketball team went 15-3, and the football team managed a decent 2aS0N going 6-3-2, and losing to Clarion College in the Lion's bowl. The anticipation of ‘all holidays was characterized as such “We flunked our exams—so what! A new Year will be here soon, and before that Thanksgiving and Mom's turkey.” The Dean that year was None other than Lao Jenkins of whom the the Annual said, “To every student Dean Jenkins is very well known! He listens to our pleas for excused absences, and then lets "iS Conscience be his guide!” The yearbook also changed its name to the Buccaneer.
Nineteen hundred and fifty-eight marked the fiftieth year of East Carolina's existence. The occasion was marked by a festive Winter Wonderland'’s Valentine Sweetheart Bai! in winter quarter. The military also heid a “big bail” in winter quarter, and the Junior-Senior Prom was heid with the music provided by an RCA Hi Fi, because the “Ambassadors” failed to show up. (Some things never change.) At homecoming that year the Pirates lost to Elon 21-12, Johnny Long and his Orchestra played to the largest crowd ever to assembie in Wright Auditorium, and Jarvis Hali won the dorm decoration contest. Students jived to the beat of “Jailhouse Rock”, and WNCT-TV carrie? hoth CRS and ABC networks.
WO ya cntnateneanin inten ti rrr tr tt dN ee — . - ustom Halloween;a time f ick atime tor tots and tricksters By PAT COYLE Staff Writer see ae it was a night when supernatural force” concept of Hai- more strongly symbolize fun than fear, the Matural beings ran rampant loween. But perhaps the greatest symbol - " : As the sun abdicates its reign over Vestal maidens believed their future of the holiday is the punahia ; Rea ethrsspasitin hep pag today, the last day of October, the streets husbands’ identity would be revealed if Pumpkins entered into tradition as a mt by di sania themeeives and will soon be inhabited by ail varieties of they: looked in a mirror at midnight after representative of the abundant of autumn a in Ay ° ghoulies and ghosties and things that go —- eating a piece of bread, sowed hemp seed harvest. But a pumpkin for pumpkin’'s helececuniae came to be. with bump in the night”. Halloween has under the moon while chanting to the sake on Halloween? Never! adults “bribing” md “ghosts and goblins” arrived! Spirits, threw corn into the wind three Legend has it that long ago there was appearing pug. seattle so the smal The very young will be donning a tines, or performed a multitude of other an Irish man named Jack. who. because of spirits wouldn't pull mischief multitude of costumes, from those of the —ituals his inordinately stingy nature, was barred So here we are, in the sophisticated ommercial genre, not intended to last For many civilizations, Halloween (also from Heaven, and who, because of his 20th century, full aunre that celebrating beyond one night's reveiries, to the type of known as Summer's End and May Eve) was practical jokes on the devil, wasn't Halloween is a nt quaint tradition, but yetup that a loving and original mother 4 day of thanksgiving to various gods for weicome in Hell either. Poor old Jack was that there aren't REALLY any evil spirits might invent the gift of a good harvest condemned to wander on Earth until lurking in the bushes or down by the For those of us who are not quite so The arrival of Christianity added a new Judgement Day, carrying a lantern to light tracks. But it’s still fun to throw a few young, the reasons for “dressing up” are dimension to the varied reasons for his way eggs, and set off a cherry bomb or varied: “Everybody else is doing it “My Celebrating Halloween. The Christian Jack's lantern became the jack-o0- two. No, we're not afraid of supernatural boy (girl) friend said he (she) would if Hallow's Eve was the day before all Saints’ lantern, and jack-o-lanterns eventually forces Anyone for a stroll down by the would.” Or “You have to be dressed up to ay, a holy occasion interrelating the sported faces ugly enough to scare away power plant?? yet in the Buc.” Face it, it's just plain fun wealth of harvest with the desire to allow any hideous, perverted spirit roaming Halloween, aS we know it now, has SOU! of the departed to rest around on Halloween night feveloped from numerous other fetes. Black cats, bats, fairies, trolls and the As the world’s people began to mature elebra'ad through the centuries like are present day remnants of the in their beliefs, and Halloween began to helo He ) left 7 ae a nostalgic look at E.C.U the fifties the A yA a lt A Tom very By JiM DOOSON Features Editor Tomorrow night the band is going to strike up in ole Wright Auditorium, and the kids are once again going to be boppin’ and jitter-buggin’ to the strains of good time rock n’ 4 roll music If a stranger happens to glace in the door way at ali of the “bobby socks” and saddie 4 oxfords, he might well wonder if ECU students have finally “freaked” out. Wasn't end Halloween last night? He would ask himself. To be sure, Halloween has come and gone y not for another year, but their is something supematural about al! of this madness: it is ‘ son called “fifties mania”, and it has been carefully resurrected from the dusty pages of ps ea antiquity, given a shot of glitter in the arm, and presented affectionately to the al um generation of the seventies. ‘ ing But what about all of those peopie who were really a part of the fifties? How different “ hate to tell you this Billy, but Betty Sue a oe were they from the college kids of today?To nna a ae dees web neg back a few is going with me to the sock-hop.” r “e “Man, like It only took two to get years and see what was happening at good o in abulous fifties ; ow Mary Lou in the back seat.” i Le WHERE WERE YOU IN 52? WITH SPIRIT ONCE MORE FOR OLD 'S4 , J sst Most of us were just in tne process of being thought of way back in ‘52, but for those That year there was a new library for the student's convenience (Or inconvenience). ‘ college age in Greenville it was an era characterized by change and development. Ragsdale dorm added a new wing, and the football stadium expanded its size by adding nd Probably one of the greatest changes to occur that year was in the name of the school two new sections down to the 20 yard lines. Married students lived in the basement of of ‘self, from East Carolina Teachers College to East Carolina College. New additions to dormitories, and the faculty strove to help “ECU live up to its name as the ‘friendliest ‘or the campus in "S2 included the Little Theatre, and the New Gymnasium (which is now college in the state’. The senior class that year had 360 members, and the freshman ot know as the old gymnasium). in those days every student at ECU was a member of the Class was the largest in the school’s history with 857 students. The football team lost to tle Student Government Association. The student newspaper was known as the Teco Echo, Morris Harvey oh gripes og Elks Bowl ig ee 2. Cokes in the student nd the tearn st led to a 4-6-0 season union were ten S, sponsored its fi dance. ad and the annual as the Tecoan that year. The footbal rug9 SCHOOL WAS GREAT IN ’58
IN 59 IT WAS SO FINE
Closing out the decade of the fabulous fifties, 1959 was a year of change on the old ECC campus. Garett Dormitory was the latest addition to the women's resident halls. William B. Umstead hall opened up for male students. The Parniico Room and North Cafeteria were opened to hungry students, and Jones Dorm the first building erected on south campus became the tallest building in Greenville. five stories. EC carried on its fiftieth anniversary with a pageant celebrating the school's halt century of growth and development, “East Carolina's Spade: To Serve”. Hal Langdon’s “Hi Five”, Rose Rich and the “Dreamers”, and Ralph Marterie and his band provided the music at dances that year. The Pirates had a mascot for the first time, proto-type of the “wiid dog”, a great Dane called “Buc”, and sixteen inches of snow fell on Greenville on December 4th.
So as you can see boys and girls, things at ECC (oops, excuse me, ECU) haven't changed all THAT much. We still do ail of those “crazy” things the kids did back in fifties, only now a “bop” is a super cool groupie with an over-active thyroid condition, rather than a dance. But alas, tomorrow night you are going to get your chance to “bring the bop back”, and have as much fun as those felicitious fellows of the fabulous fifties



“Duh, now put my foot over here. Right?






FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974


Strange things revealed

You don't have to be an astrologer to know stuff
By ASTROPHEL ASTROLOGY
This past summer finally made the acquaintance and friendship of a high schoo! best friend's mother, after five years of knowing she existed. The friend had returned home after a four-year jaunt to Gulf Breeze, ugly Pensacoia’s beautiful and seciuded beach. As she and ! were relating everything we Nad leamed in our separated maturing process, we got into the mystical world of full moons and their
fluence, specifically on the nse in x;imission rates to emergency rooms and nentai wards on the night of a full moon was an easy step from planetary astrology and my fnend's My mother knows everything the universe about the Universe.’ Ana, thought, just like everybody else this age of interest, sometimes rabid, in knowing What in the World if Going on and Why. This led to my first conversation with my friend's mother and the realization that the basis of astrology is observation f reality and real people's reali actions found to be common within the limitation f their Dirthdates Those of you who are “just interested’ astroiogy, aSkK suNSiQNS and pay attention to people, may know more than you think. If you Know two people with the same Sign and with some Dasic personality facet in common, you may Nave something there. You can learn more about astrology ust Dy opening your mind as you open your eyes. Then, if you are so inclined yOu can amaze friends and infivence peopie if they ever ask you about Stuff. For instance Saggitarius, Nov. 22 to Dec. 21: The Saggitarians know have more energy than anybody around, aimost to the point of hyperactivity ften wonder why they Jont collapse into nervous exhaustion more often than they do. One of them has had three top-level careers, professions many people consider the peak of their ives. She is 26. The other Saggitarian is a drummer, employed most of the time, but he moves from group to group. Perhaps the label for Saggitarnians is “movement. Movement and achievement. These peo- ple are amazing but if you are of a slower disposition, they are likely to give you the nervous twitches Pisces, Feb. 20 to March 20: The Pisces people nave Known have always been gentie, artistic and kind to animals. And their mothers. And people. They have aiso. been confused, escapist and vague. The typical Picean home is beautiful and delicate and not at ali »ostrusive. When you visit a Piscean you are likely to be served an exotic tea with honey and when you leave, your mind is full of a world of fairies and spirits and cloaks of invisibility. Pisceans remind me of highly imaginative children. If you are too worldly-conscious, go see a Piscean and forget Cancer, June 22 to July 21: have met one Cancer very recently, and so all can say about them is what she told me. She said that Cancers are moor-children, ruled by the moon, and when that moon is full other peopie can tell it by her actions. “Mary (not her reali name) is acting crazy again, the moon must be full.” The woman herself is quiet but vivacious, life-loving but studious, serious but potentially a fun friend She has been “out in the world” for several years and has come back to school for a hel ping profes- sions degree Does this sound like a er you know? If it does, then maybe Bw something about them
ences t
statement

Capricom, Dec. 22 to Jan. 20: Mrs. X, that best friend's mother, toid me that Capricorms work too hard. My brother and are Capricoms and we work too hard Just ask us. Capricoms aiso tend to share with other peopie gifts that have been meant expressly for them, she said ausing consternation in the giver. Cap ncoms are like the turtle in the turtie-and-hare race, and Richard Nixon is a prime example: they are not flashy and not particularly popular, but they end up being President of the United States Watch out for those stoic dullards around you. Of all the signs they are most likely to become nich and famous whether you ike it or them or not Gemini, May 21 to June 21: did not know new a Gemini until yesterday, when she read this article in its rough(en form and said didn't say anything about her And so for you, my dear: Geminians are ncredibly intelligent, stunning, hard workers, good mothers, have good taste, are sensitive, kind, irresolute, and make fantastic soup. Actually, if this lady is typical of Geminians, then they are not the kind of people who are unconcemed with ther people's lives. Even ina business-like” atmosphere they are humanistic people, interested in the weifare, development and peace of others, themselves, their chidiren and their spouses. There is nothing restricted or closed about Geminians; they are outward-reaching people and heip others to reach out, too. Perhaps this is only personal prejudice. But if it holds true for most Geminians, hope meet some more Scorpio, Oct. 23 to Nov. 21: Scorpios seem to end up in the drama department, and maybe one day I'll take a poll to see actually how many there are in the acting profession. Scorpios, if they want to get aiong with anyone, have to watch their tongues. They are often sarcastic and would not like to pair them with other strong signs. have never known a stupid Scorpio, Nowever; perhaps they simply say what they're thinking, whereas others just think it. What astrologer Marcia Moore says about the Scorpio is that heshe “is often obliged to fight his basic instincts, to renounce his ingrained egotism and curb his independent spirit.” It surprised me to read that my experience with Scorpios was documented Leo, July 22 to August 21: The Qualities traditionally ascribed to lions can often be attributed to people born under the sign of Leo. They are strong, masterful and imperious people, say the books. One of my roommates was a Leo. and though we liked and admired one another and chose to live together, the overbearing dominance of her personality caused me to move out. We were fast inends again a few weeks later, though Leos are no siouches and are often worthy of the respect they insist on ommanding. My sister is a Leo and so is her twin brother, and though one of them nicer than the other, both have very ING personalities Virgo, August 22 to Sept. 22: The virgin IS Supposed to represent the virgoan, but the one person know is a virgoan definitely does not fit this type. Though he is intelligent, he is not an intellectual, and is a lot of fun to play with. Though he has long-standing relationships and is very loyal, he flits from person to person and yOu cannot count on your fingers and toes the number of people he's known for a weekend. He is concerned with his physical appearance, puts all sorts of strange substances on his
etry
hair and body, and therefore looks better than most people have rarely had serious discussions with him but he sure knows how to entertain
Libra, Sept. 23 to Oct. 22: Sometimes it seems as though everybody know is a Libra. My mother, that “best friend”, my present roommate and a buddy in my home town are all Librans. get along beautifully with all these people, so perhaps Capricoms and Librans are meant for one another. Or maybe Librans are just easy to get along with. They are usually very interested in music or the mind of writing of something out-of-the-way, like Geology. They don't hold grudges but they are sensitive and their feelings are easily hurt. Stick up for a Libran sometimes they won't do it themselves
Aquarius, Jan. 21 to Feb. 19: know one Aquarian and he is a quiet person, a free thinker and a draam-buiider. He is a hip-nik but slightly impersonal, given to formal gatherings and will say “do come back” in a way that makes you think you need an appointment. Regardiess, he is friendly and thoughty and the relationship with an Aquarian is likely to be interesting. Some famous Aquarians have been Gypsy Rose Lee, Fabian, Andres Segovia and General Dougias MacArthur, whatever that means
Aries, March 21 to April 19: have known many Anes people, and every one of them had a strong personality, not

unlike the Leo. My sister, the LAO, ig matched to an Aries, and whe heard about it said, you've got to be out of your mind! A Leo with an Aries! figured would last about a month, but theym getting married next weekend. so guess they've worked something out Th): Aries iS loving and trusting in his relations 98 but very proud and desirou: the lead. He knows his own mind anc Px DACts you to go along with him. told him onop that it was going to be naat having him try a brother-in-law and his react we intense, SO perhaps the Aries alor with other people, Nas a strong need fy acceptance
Taurus, April 20 to May 20: Taurus « another sign that works too hard. but this one will not complain of it The are practical, dedicated to family, and have a big heart. My father is a Taurus and the things have seen in him are usually applicable to other Taurus people Ta US is the bull, and sometimes this can be seen in their minds as well as their bodies. Most of the time they are @aSy-goIng and open-minded. but they avoid ulcers with loud outbursts of rage roaring like the bulls they are Those of you whose projected marriage partners were bor under the sign of Taurus have probably got a good parent and spouse or your hands
Questions answered? Now it's your tum
wm Km mK KKK KKK Kk Ky
203 E. Sth Street Greenville
eemewe aa Ke Ke KKK KKK KKK KK KKK KK kk KK

Let’s Help The Wild Dogs Cast A Spell On The Citadel!
fein wee ee ee ee a oe oe a a a oe

ch RRM HM em MH MM OM MH OM OH MH HM MH HK HK HK HK MH HM







Darts
NCR
Was with
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974 7



Reviews





A history of rock and roll1955-1960
A SHORT HISTORY THE ROCK-N-ROLL YEARS 1955-1960
Compiled by Patsy Hinton Stafi Writer
if you were thirteen years old or
thereabouts in 1954, World War i was a uniform in a closet and dirty stories of Jap tortures; the Korean War was games of
get the gook” on the neighborhood block, and national prosperity was your own bedroom in a new suburban house and an allowance fromDaddy, who always said he had never gotten one. Blacks were
solored people”. The Supreme Court
decision on school integration was a headline. You and just about everybody elise were normal—had crew cuts, letter sweaters, and loafers. There might have been a few hoods around. with greased-back hair and leather jackets, maybe even switchbiades and “juvie” records, you envied them, but they were scary, maybe even illegal, and, anyway, oretty dumb. Cars, like the two-tones and hard tops and hydramatics, were keen, but you had to be sixteen to drive. Same to smoke. Too old for Little League and the kiddie stuff on television, radio, the movies, of in general, you were too young for everything aimed at adults.
Music was no exception: Perry Como,
Eddie Fisher, Pattie Page, ali coming from the radio ballroom shows—it was Okay, and you hummed the tunes when they were on Your Hit Parade. But they weren't done for you, and they didn’t do anything to you. They were just there, coextensive with and 4s natural as that Ike-WASP-peace-and- prosperity consensus which was threaten- ed only by a few commies at the top level n government dug up by Joe McCarthy.
Then one day you heard “Rock Around the Clock” and you knew there were worid they” hadn't toid you about.
April, 1954. An aging country ‘n western singer called Bill Haley had cut
Rock Around the Clock”. By 1955 it was a hit in America, and then it was a hit in Britain, and then it was a hit all over the world. And it just kept on selling; it wouldn't quit. It stayed on the charts for one solid year.
By the time it was finished, it had sold ‘ifteen million copies. It had also started rock
“Rock Around the Clock” went with a movie by that name. When it was shown in the summer of 1956, audiences danced in the aisles, ripped up cinema seats, hit each other, and destroyed anything they could lay their hands on. In one shot, it crystallized the entire rock rebellion. The main plot of the film was that Bill Haley grinned. He picked his guitar, and his kiss curl wobbied. He sang the title song, and the best stroked up, and kids everywhere went berserk. For the first time, the concept of Teenager was used aS News, aS a major selling point, and in no time, everyone else was up on the bandwagon. Churchman offered spiritua comfort, psychologists explained, magis- trates got tough, parents panicked, businessmen became rich, and rock exploded into a central issue.
Suddenly, the generation war was fact. As for Bill Haley, he just kept font on grinning. But not for long. Through 1965 and on into 1966 he held complete control. He racked up another million seller with “See You Later Alligator” and had another monster film “Don't Knock the Rock”. He was everything then - singer, face, prophet, explorer - and no one else counted.
But Bill Haley was aging, married, comy, square, a father. And it caught up with him. “Don't Knock the Rock” was the signal. It was Bill Haley's film, but he lost it; he had it torn right out of his hands by Little Richard, a guaranteed genuine rock howler out of Macon, Georgia. Little Richard was the real thing. Bill Haley wasn't.
What really did him in was the coming of Elvis Presiey. The moment Elvis cut “Heartbreak Hotel”, Haley was lost. With- in a year, he couldn't get a hit to save his life
It. was really quite bitter. After all, he was everyone's first try at pop, and having him turn out like this was very much like getting drunk, losing one’s virginity, and then waking up in an empty bed the next moming
But rock fans did not spend much time in mourning. Elvis was there. Little Richard, who could sing higher and faster and lower than anybody, was there. And there was a twenty-eight year oid, handsome, flamboyant showman from St. Louis named Chuck Berry.
Chuck Berry. He had gone up to Leonard Chess, the founder of Chess Records, with a tape he had made on a borrowed recorder in St. Louis: “Wee Wee Hours”, a meliow blues he had written, and “Maybellene”, a novelty number based on a country tune he had rewritten and given a boogie-woogie beat. Chess told Chuck to do “Maybellene” for him and give it a bigger beat. Then Chess took the record up to New York and gave it to Alan Freed, the disc jockey at WINS who had coined the term “rock and roll.”By the time Chess got back to Chicago, Freed had called a dozen times, saying it was his biggest hit ever.
On stage, Chuck was dynamite. Every star danced as he sang, but only Chuck Berry had the “duck walk” that he first did at the Brooklyn Paramount in 1966. His back stiff and straight, he'd squat down over one heel, his other leg sticking out in front, and with his head at a weird tilt, he'd bounce across the stage, hodling his guitar before him like a machine gun. After “Maybellene” came “Rool Over, Beethoven”, then “Schoo! Days”, and then you begin to lose track: “Sweet Little Sixteen”, “Rock 'n Roll Music”, “Johnny B. Goode”, “Oh Baby Doll”, “Reelin’ and Rockin’’. All hits. All great. All Chuck Berry.
Elvis was there too, though, writhing his way to stardom amid the shrieks of millions of teenage girls. And Elvis was white-which mattered very much in the fifties. To many, Elvis was where pop began and ended. Elvis was king.
He had been signed by RCA Victor in 1956 to make the record “Heartbreak Hotel”. It sold a million and a half straight
off. By the end of six months, he'd soid eight million records, worked up to ten thousand letters a week, and raised the shrillest, most prolonged teen hysteria ever. By the next year, he had grown into an annual twenty-million-dollar industry.
He would come out on stage riding a goiden Cadillac. He wore a golden suit, and on his feet he had goiden slippers. His sideburns reached down to his earlobes, and his hair, heavy with grease, come up in a great ducktail plume off his forehead. He had a lopsided grin, and he used it all the time. When the music started, he’s begin wriggling, and he wriggled so hard that quite a few cities banned him for obscenity. He was flash- he had four Cadillacs, a three-wheeled Messerschmitt, two monkeys, and too much jewelry. He built himself a house for a hundred thousand dollars, and it glowed blue and gold in the dark. He was smooth. He was Elvis.
There were others in the years of ‘55 through 60 that did their share to establish the rock scene. Jerry Lee Lewis, a Classic rocker, from Louisiana, for instance. He used rhythm and biuves with country and attacked the keys in very much the same style as Little Richard, bopping them with fists, feet, elbows, and anything else that was handy. Toward the end of his act, he'd actually climb on top of the piano, hold the mike like a lance, and stay up there until the audience got hot enough to dash forward and drag him down.
Buddy Holly. He came out of Texas
with broken teeth, wire glasses and bad breath. He wasn't appetizing. In fact, he was an obvious loser. But he had a voice, and he wrote natural hit songs. So, a tough, no-nonsense agent Lioyd Green- field took him up and changed him into another person. Buddy had his teeth capped, his breath cleaned, his hair styled, his wire glasses exchanged for big Diack ones. He learned how to smile and become All-American. His hits included such biggies as “That'll Be the Day”, “Oh Boy, Maybe Baby”, and “Peggy Sue”. But in February of 1969 he got killed in an air crash at Fargo, North Dakota. He was only twenty years old. Twelve years later Don McLean would sing: “ can't remember if criedWhen read about his widow brideBut something touched me deep insideThe day the music died.”
indeed, many saw the death of Buddy Holly as a major catastrophe in the worid of rock. To make matters worse, Elvis had been drafted the year before (1958) by the United States army, who just didn't understand how indispensible The King was to rock. Jerry Lee Lewis had had his tour of Britain canceled in the same year when the British press got wind of the fact that Jerry Lee was married to a thirteen-year- old girl.
And perhaps the saddest story of all. Chuck Berry. Late in 1969 he had picked up a prostitute while on tour in Juarez, and then he had brought her back to St. Louis to be a hat check girl in his club. She was fourteen, and when Berry dropped her, she turned herself in to the police. Berry was arrested and charged
with violating the Mann Act. And he was convicted.
The fifties were the golden age of hype. Hype, short for hyperbole. Hype means to promote by bribery, hustle, pressure. You slip some cash to radio stations, maybe some to TV producers, maybe some more to the press. You also throw nice parties, and do all the conventional publicity strokes. Alto- gether, you do everything possible. There was a huge scandal about the ethics of hype in 1969. A lot of people came crashing down, including Alan Freed, the deejay who'd put on the first rock shows in Cleveland back in the early fifties.
Things have never been the sarne since. in the four years before the crash, though, form 1955-1958 everyone had themselves a carnival.
1960 was probably the worst year that rock has been through. Everyone was gone. Elvis to the army, Chuck Berry to jail. Little Richard had got religion. And Buddy Holly was dead. It was a wholesale plague, a wipeout. It would be four years before rock would be rejuvenated by the appearance of The Beatles, but that’s another story.
Note: Credit must be given to sources: ROCK IS RHYTHM AND BL by Lawrence N. Reed, ROCK FROM BEGINNING by Nik Cohn, and FOLK by Michael Lydon.
ART
ART SHOWING: GUY SCOTT TABER
$253
By PAT FLYNN Staff Writer
Appearing at the Mushroom Gallery October 6-26, now past, was Guy Scott Taber. He was displaying jewelry in a show called Imagery in Goid and Silver. do not know if the artist had decided if he wanted to make the objects for show or for everyday use. The artist is experimenting with moods and expressions of himself through the metal he works with. Some of these expressions can be seen clearly and others are just metal designs hang on a chain.
Alot of feeling went into the rings, which are his best and most beautiful efforts. Everything elise seems to be shapes mixed together without any real feeling from the artist. The feeling put into the rings, glows because of the visible love put into their making.





-
a
. Rs. S-





FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1632 OCTOBER 1974

Reviews


Special Concerts Committee
By PAT FLYNN
, staff Writer
e Mendennal! Student Center there
are yar is mmittees which run the
ta programs mous. The
ees we se carated rom the
tudent government a few years ago. The
; are w directly given t the
ather faving the funds
appropriated through the legisiature. The
ecial Concerts Committee is given sc
noney each semester tO work with
A hm hey a spenc the money in one SUTT rior many sMairer groups
be J he Special Concerts Committee wi for Homecoming f the dance wii! be Ok at the fifties”. There wil) be three groups performing for the w The Spontanes, Mary Wells, and he Shirelles The 50's show and dance wil Nave refresnments and concessions set up The dance wi take piace ack that evening
ance thame
apoy Oays a
1 at8:O0 oc » sale Now. the prices are $3 Student Coupies $2 Student Stag $5 Put oupie
Public Stag
This w be the only concer for Homecoming Week sponsored by the ; Committees. The pro moter, Steve Pardue, the people who work urge student participation, as this is the first dance on campus in four years
wOvem per
“Kets are
tudent Center
r hore
The next event sponosred Dy the
‘concerts Committee will be the aravan Concert November 19 Caravan has four albums and is on its first American tour. Their latest album is called Caravan and the new symphonia . which is ndon Records e band originated from London, where they started their tour Billboard has given them a good write-up regarding their latest album and the gigs they have olayed on this tour. Tickets will go on sale two weeks before the show and the cost will be minimal. The concert will be Neard the Student Center Theatre The Concerts Committee will silk- screen T-shirts with a Caravan design. If you bring a T-shirt with your name engraved in ink to room 233 in the Student Senter by Thursday October 31, they will jladly silk-screen your shirt for you They expect to have them compieted the next Monday. and you can pick them up in the samme room 233 The Special Concerts Committee is planning a few theme programs in sonjunction with most of the Student Center Committees. These themes are tenative ideas and are subject to change or be canceied at any time. The peopie on the committees want students advice because they are open for suggestions as to what to entertain the student body with Jur ng ‘nese programs The first idea is Beatles Week, for which no date has been set. Again they are open for suggestions as to things
s0eC 1a
Th
pertaining to Beatles Week. They want to include a band called Liverpool from Canada in the festivities. This band looks and sounds just like the Beatles. Steve Pardue saw them in Goergia and said that this band creates about as much energy as the Beaties do when they toured Their set starts off with early Beatie material and moves up to cuts off Sgt. Pepper's (1967)
The next idea woul be an End of the World Theme. Steve said that this would be a week of mind biowing expenences with such movies as 2001, lecturers such as Van Dankien, Rod Serling, and finally music by someone like Virgil Fox
Another tenative idea would be to bring the Hanneford Circus to campus in March or April. They want to bring things related to the circus and need suggestions
The committee wants you to come up and talk to them to get your ‘feelings understood by them. They ask this so the students will get what they want, not just what the members of the committee want. They want the students to be involved and to take an interest in the music provided. There has been some Quality Music on campus and the students have not seen it. The committees do not want Top 40 groups to play but rising U.S. and English groups. In the past there were meager responses to Chic Corea who sold out within Three days at Chapel Hil Seais and Crofts were unknown when they played for the students here. if the students become involved, the committees can provide better and more music in the
Why no major attractions?
By BILL WOMBLE Chairman, Major Attractions Committee
Major Attractions is the Mendenhai! Student Union Committee responsible for oringing nationally known entertainers to the ECU campus. The Committee regretably announces that it Nas been insuccessful in producing an attraction for Homecoming. The Committee made fers on eight different attractions, but for various reasons they were ali declines America’ was the first group negotiated for, then the “Eagies” and the “Atianta Rhythm Section”, then “Jackson Browne and “Bonnie Raitt”, then “Earth, Wind and Fire’. and finally “T-Rex” and “Tower of Power’ The only reason the Committee stopped making offers after the ast-named, was bDecase there was not enough time to secure an act and Make the necessary arrangements to produce the show in time for Homecoming
in regards to the petition that was made for Homecoming ‘74 requesting that either “Earth, Wind and Fire” Ohio Players”, or “Rufus” be booked for this occasion is as follows 1. “Earth, Wind and Fire” are not available because their current tour puts them too
great a distance from ECU for the Homecoming date 2. “Ohio Players” are not availabie
because they have no open dates
3. “Rufus” is not available in this area for tour yet
These three groups are not available in the indicated time siot for Homecoming However, they may be available for future dates not associated with Homecoming and every consideration will be given to these bands
There nas been some questions concerning all the “cash” the Committee has for producing concerts. The Committee would like to make this clear. Major Attractions is not subsidized by activity fees as the other committees are in the Student Union. Major Attractions has a 40 thousand dollar risk fund, and as the name implies, the money is used only after we produce a concert at a loss. The goal of the Committee is to select and produce an act without a loss after expenses
The Committee would like the student body to know we are sensitive to your wants and we are trying diligently to satisfy you. The Committee has been in meetings every week since Fal! Quarter began to produce a concert. The Committee is presently negotiating for concerts in November and December. We are very optimistic that a concert will be forthcoming soon. All suggestions are weicomed and should be turned in to Major Attractions office, Room 233, in the Mendenhall Student Union. Thank you for your cooperation in this matter
future. But student
are urged
involvernent necessary to bring this about. Students to come and heip
the
committees out. The committees wi!
make a harder effort
students respond with interest
Portraite
LIVE FOREVER
Professional Portraiture RUDY'S STUDIO

PHOTOGRAPHY
Job Placement Photos 1025 Evans St.
For Appointment
Phone 752-5167

Caravan, an upcoming (Novernber 19)
attraction of the Committee
Special Concerts

to put good
entertainment on campus only the







rad





F
II

FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974 9


Reviews

eee aad
Electric Light Orchestra: Edorado
ELDORADO: ASYMPHONY BY THE ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA
By DAVID SAVAGE BROWN Staff Writer
you've never heard anything by the Ele Light Orchestra then ELDORADO explains it all. A symphony written by Jeff ELDORADO makes the Electric ¥chestra sound like more than just ther rock band Ever since its initial inception back in 1972. the Electric Ligh Orchestra has been a powertul force in the pseudo classical ‘eld of rock music. The Move, a popular English ensemble in the late Sixties which never obtained the same recognition in the JS. was the beginning of the Electric ant Orchestra. Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne were the main forces behind this new dea which was supposed to make the Move obsolete. With the addition of
MS, cellos, oboes, and other classical
nstruments, the sound was to become forceful and hard-driving with the nstruments used as texture rather than additives. no answer was their first album with Wood playing nearly al! of the assical instruments, ieaving Lynn open to the vocals, writing and rock additions to the sound. This album proved to be much of what was expected but the overall idea was not complete. Jeff Lynn preferred a more refined approach causing inter-group conflicts which led to the exiting of Wood. Wizzard was the band then formed by Wood and Lynn was left with the Electric Light Orchestra
ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA Ii fol- lowed with the addition of strings from the London Symphony Orchestra. The sound was still somewhat the same with the exception of a well-known number, Chuck Berry's “Roll Over Beethoven”. This song was released as a single and the popularity
Bonnie Raitt: classy
“STREETLIGHTS” - BONNIE RAITT
By CINDY KENT Staff Writer
Bonnie Raitt is a very classy lady who i happens to be an exceptional
mposer, an Outstanding guitarist, and possesses a voice like you'v e never heard before. Her new album is a fine one, like
f itS predecessors, especially her sbums GIVE IT UP. and TAKIN’ MY TIME its too bad, though, that she joesn t use all of her talents more fully on STREETLIGHTS.
For example, none of the songs on this 1.DUM were written by Ms. Raitt, which is a jisappointment after listening to the ncredibly good material she has tumed
Jt in the past. However, she has aimost made up for the difference by including written by such well-known
mposers as Joni Mitchell Lou ourtney and James Taylor
Another disappointment is that Raitt
Dlays her guitar in three songs out of
iibum's ten, although the other jultanists, such as David Spinozza, John Robert Mann, and Jeff Mironov, put remarkable performances. Other gui- include Charlies Brown, John
vea, and Jerry Friedman.
) spite of these disappointments, the
' 4S a whole has not been hurt one bit
ally. Bonnie Raitt has definitely
ven that she can take it easy and get way with it
"he album starts out with a really high- 'aSS song by Joni Mitchell, “That Song “oout the Midway”. This tune, which has ' SIOW pace, has a slightly different and
‘Tre complex arrangement than the ‘ginal. Although it is difficult to ompare Raitt's voice with Mitchell's because the latter's high tones are so ‘yStal clear, it can be said that Raitt’s ‘OC! Qualities really add alot to this song, VING it a definite sexy song. Arthur JENKINS accents this song with various
vercussion instruments, especially the ongas
SR asarrmatiaaastestena nets OPI A et tet eA a NSS na
The next song is also a first-class one: “Rainy Day Man”, by James Taylor. The lazy, mythmic, biuesy sound gives Raitt some perfect chances to take off into vocal riffs at the end of her phrases. The horns in the background of this tune add emphasis to its biue tone.
Two other outstanding songs on the first side are “Angel From Montgomery”, by John Prine, another biues-type song that has great background vocals (David Lasely, Lou Courtney) and “ Got Plenty”, by Joey Levine and Jim Carroll, which also has good background vocais, with the addition of two female vocalists, Sharon Redd and Tasha Thomas.
Side two of STREETLIGHTS starts out by changing the pace with two lively boogie-type tunes, “What Is Success”, by Allen Toussaint, and “Ain't Nobody Home by Jerry Ragovoy. Both of these songs Raitt sings with a definite sexy tone
Ms. Raitt then switches back to a slow tune, a beautiful love song, “Everything That Touches You by Michael Kamen. Raitt shows her ability to adapt to this simple but pretty melody by singing with a low, breathy quality
Another song that stands out is “Got You On My Mind”, by Allen Willis and David Lasley, a catchy song with an easy-going rhythm highlighted by fine background vocals
As a whole, the album could be considered more mellow and much less showy than some of Bonnie Raitt’s earlier material. But is Ms. Raitt has meliowed, she’s certainly done it with style - a style that is exhibited on STREETLIGHTS.

shown for this cut made Lynne wonder about the future of his group. Its style was somewnat unique and the album that followed was the same
ON THE THIRD DAY, the Electric Light Orchestra's third album brings out the true artistic accomplishments of Jeff Lynne All of the writings, vocals, and guitar work on this production are by him. “Show- down’ was the single from this album which may have been their biggest popularity break to date. This piece showed a new and different side of their music with the sound being more orchestral with a surprisingly amount of rock ‘n roll and vocal harmonies far superior to any previous works.
ELDORADO IS THE NEWEST ADDITION TO THE Electric Light Orchestra's gallery of fine music. The same style is still lingering with the complete symphony written and produced again by Lynne. To go into an ‘in depth
study of this recording wouid be purely a waste of the readers time, for the album speaks for itself. Each song contributes to the central theme just the way a classical piece would but this time it is rock. The original concept of the Electric Light Orchestra comes to its fullest in this masterpiece. It's refined and shows that Lynne and his cohorts have succeeded in bringing pop music to a whole new plateau. As Phonograph Record Maga zine’s Greg Shaw puts it, “Quite simply, you've never heard anything like this before.”


Marx Bros. Festival
By CHIP GWYNN
Here they come, the fabulous Marx Brothers. The East Carolina Films Committee is proud to present a Marx Brother Film Festival as a special part of the Homecoming weekend. Follow the antics of these famous funny men in towyes TWOof their greatest films.
“Horsefeathers” features the Marx Brothers as they direct their madness to a college campus. Groucho returns to his aima mater as the new coliege president in order to graduate his son, Zeppo, and to win the annual football classic. “Horse feathers” has been called the first Marx Brothers film to really satirize its period The film includes a hilarious biology lecture by Groucho (Prof. Quincy Adams Wagstaff), Chico and Harpo as a pair of unlikely college athietes, and the frenzied football finale, involving cmriots, hotdogs, banana skins, elastic bands, and countiess pigskins.
The second feature brings the Marx Brother together in: ‘A Night at the Opera’ Many people believe that this film caught the Marx Brothers at the peak of their career. “A Night at the Opera” is a satite on the pomp that surrounds grand opera. Groucho, with dubious assistance from his brothers, crosses the ocean with an italian Opera company and contrives to get two young singers a break. Their best foil, Margaret Dumont, is a patron of the arts. Groucho’s stateroom sequence and Harpo'’s backstage chase are considered comedy classics.
The action takes place in the Student Center Theater with two complete showings on Saturday. . The first set begins at 6:00 p.m. and the second set starts about 8:30 p.m. Come and enjoy continuous Marx Brothers from 6:00 tili 11:00. Admission is by 1.0. and activity card.









10 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974
Ediforials‘Commentary





FOR
Fties in ‘ew: ECU steps back m (Tues In revi . sig)
; edi
The ‘Fabulous Fifties’, passing in review. Finding time to buzz the busy brains still trying to recuperateed!
from mid-terms mash :
In the ruling days of Truman and Eisenhower the country boys caught city fever, joined the ranks of i te
WWII vets and jammed the cities for work. : lus
Two button suits and vest made room for the Ivy League, crew cut, loafer set. Skirts went up ang ob
glimpses of provocative calves and shins shone between bobby socks and just below the knee swinging vi
ea i i e P C
Rock-n-roll moved in to the early rumblings of college unrest. Money was tight, interest high and the ore
Korean War burst open in time to slow the post war recession from WWII. Our somewhat stung her General Douglas MacArthur returned home to oe embraced to the bosom of his homeland.
the a
The Andrews Sisters sung in fantastic Hudson’ with its catchy ‘new body line’. Buicks boomed on and Studebakers advanced styling took the folks by surprise
Sock-hops were keen and sitting at the local drive-in hamburger joint with your favorite Betty Lou or Franky, sharing a milk-shake and growing dreamy-eyed over


the latest Fountain meow!
hit —"“Three Coins in a was
As ECU takes a few steps back and tries to remember the fifties, FOUNTAIN- HEAD wishes gobs of grease and pony-tai! parties to everyone
Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins joins the
weil, it was just the cat's ;

S § meas f
a

staff in saying weicome to all visitors and a EC hearty homecoming to all
See you at the dance Friday night and os (leave mom at home this time) W

Ford follows
By STEVE LEVINE

IF) Contrary to the uncharitabie comments of some observers there were a couple of surprises in Gerald's economic message. it is surprising that, after the nineteenth century economists of the Nixon administration turned in such a dismal performance in coping with the nations mounting economic problems, Ford would depart from the prior policy so little
Rather than charting a clear course of nis own, Ford basically reaffirmed the oid tenents of republicanism: the consumer must Dear the burden, business must be encouraged, the federal rule must be kept to a minimum, the job must be accomplished through hard work and individual sacrifice. The controversial Surcharge embodies this attitude. if one ppens to be a thrift institution or a tal intensive basic industry, the Ford wnistration will rush to your aid with at wil! turn out to be enormous amounts financing from the national dedt, but if DU re a steam fitter with three kids and a rigage, you have to make do with less This not only represents little deviation the policies of Richard Nixon. it presents little deviation from the policies
Herbert Hoover
Indeed, it emerged last week that ¥S economic oracie, the myopic Alan pan, is an admirer of Ayn Rand, the f of the surviving nineteenth century ian retrogrades
iS a reason, and they are ng this in Europe right now, why ics no longer work
IDEAL PEOPLE
an ideological point, the . like tories everywhere, hold


Nixon’s economic policy too close 7.
that itis possibie to run an economy without people. They would have working people eat air and produce goods. They believe, for some utterly unfathomable reason, that people will tolerate msing prices and a decline in their standard of living simultaneously.
Having set no precedent whatever for self-sacrifice, the old boys of business and government are nuts if they think working people are going to transcend § their example
In fact, the current deterioration of the western economies is an inevitable result of the chronic overheating inherent in cartel economics. The precipitous rise in the price of petroleum, which is principally a political matter, has merely
accelerated a long extant process
if there is an answer, and there had better be, it will not be a return to a still more antiquated perspective. If the western economies are to survive it will require no less than the dramatic measures employed by the New Deal. The government must step in to balance the scales, which are now tipped overwhelm ingly toward big business, to creat real incentives, both negative and positice, for both business and public to maximize their committment to renewed productivity.
On the international scene, we must move to a less bellicose posture, must prepare to trade with the worid on a parity basis. If the sheiks want to buy General Motors, we gotta let ern have it. We can no longer afford to manipulate credit entirely to our satisfaction
What this country needs, Mr. Ford, is not so much a lowering of personal aspirations as a de-escalation of corporate greed. And it rather surprises me that
there is not a soul among the authors of the economic message who see that ANTI-AMERICA
Speaking of discredited policies, one is now passing before our eyes
The bizarre and unscrupulous role this nation has played in maintaining corrupt dictatorships along the Mediterranean is now paying off with the rise of left-leaning anti-American regimes in half a dazen countries. Socialism may well have been an inevitability for troubled Southem Europe, but the hateful brutality we employed in trying to stifle left-wing opposition in these countries made potentially friendly nations with differing ideologies into a virtually united anti-American front
And at this point would remind those who think that such matters should be handed over to the CIA that inflation in the manufacture of juntas has now priced us Out of the international intrigue market.
IN CITY You read it here first. Though have no urge to brag about it really.
The new most inmost spot in America is Bisby, Arizona, a dusty little hamiet on the Mexican border.
There is not much to do in Bisby—no mountains, nO water—just ratilands desert. The cultural life is nil. And there are some things could tell you about Bisby's recent criminal past that could not be printed in a family newspaper, or even this newspaper
All in all Bisby is about as likely a site for a successful resort as, say Tierra Del Fuego
But for reasons that only they can fathom, some of the same big shots who developed Aspen are now sinking their bucks into Bisby. Thus many Aspen
people are moving down there, for at ieast
part of the year. 3 th In @ way you have to appreciate
it. Unlike a lot of places, development
can't hurt Bisby much
Fountainhead
a

“Do you know because tell you so, or do you know Gertrude Stein
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Diane Taylor 4 n MANAGING EDITORLee Lows E v BUSINESS MANAGER Deve Englert 4 CIRCULATION MANAGER Warren Leary 4 " AD MANAGER Jackie Shaiicroes 4 4 CO-NEWS EDITORS Sydney Ann Green 4 a Gretchen Bowermaster E ASST. NEWS EDITOR Denise Ward 7 . CITYFEATURES EDITOR Jim Dodson 4 REVIEWS EDITOR Brandon Tise 4 P SPORTS EDITOR John Evans . LAYOUT Janet Pope 4 ' PHOTOGRAPHER Rick Gokdman q ,

—— ss Fe 6B COL



awa —— «






east
ciate ment
» do
ein
ga





oreevamena
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex- oress their opinions in the Forum. Letters should be signed by their authors),
the staff
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to tuse printing in instances of libel obscenity, and to comment as independent body on any and ail issues. A newspaper is objective only in proportion to its autonomy
Football
untainhead
Pat Dye is bush. Going for a 2 point
version after a game is literally over, is
suppose the score 34-6 sounds a
‘tle better than 33-6 or 32-6. Right?
1g! hope someday somebody roils core up on you. You deserve it!
Bob Wilson
Editors Note:
According to Coach Dye the play was called on the field by the quarterbeck. When the bail is furnbled by a quarterback there is an automatic roll to the ight. “And they went for two points rather than none.”
Dye commented, “When the score is 32-6 agree 100 percent that going for two is bush league.”
However, Dye had nothing to do with the call.
Real World
Fountainhead :
would like to write about something ve noticed on this campus. It is a strange ight to look into a person's eyes. You never know what you will see in another verson. Wherever you walk these days you isually find people going the other way. When it comes to loneliness, we are 1 going the same direction. We never see each other pass, we don't see the Meliness in their footsteps. Seals and Croft said something pertaining to these Jeas in one of their songs, “We may never pass this way again.”
Everyone I've talked to here talks about what they see in life, what they want out of 't, but people never go out of their way to understand people as they ‘tally are. People never go out of their way to understand a person they don't understand. What usually happens is a generalized stereotype, somehow fitting into the way people of his type act in this certain situation, but maybe they aren't (his way at all. A person says, “Next time ll talk to him and I'll ask him what want to know from him.” It usually comes down to @ hesitant hello, with eyes quickly Staring at the ground.
We all look at the earth with eyes wide open, this is called waking up. The earth iS 4 pure spirit of life which doesn't bark or stare at us. We just accept it for what we believe it is. This is what life is. Now as people, we look at life and people exactly opposite of the way these should be dealt with. We don't see people and life for what they are. People in Greenville make up a community within the total community of man
People add to much thought to what they do to explain a person. Things would go much easier for people if they would just accept things for what they are. When we add our thoughts to explain this something in people, we are trying to reflect ourselves into what they are. So therefore we don't see them, we see part of ourselves. We understand our experiences in terms of our previous experiences. We explain the experience in terms of how we reacted to the experience; did this when this happened
We can understand people in terms of our experience, ourselves or in terms of themselves. The question to ask is which way is best. All of them. The ideal way to see people is to see God in every person. This means you see life and want life in every man. This is not beyond our reach if we just take a little time to look within ourselves and realize that everyone has eyes. We know that two alike things should go togther. For example Greenville and you. Greenville isn't together unless you're involved with it. Two halves of something, when brought together, form a whole. How can you be a whole person, when haif your sight is missing. When is this world going to stop reflecting on what they think life is and come to accept what it is and live it? The essence of life is God, what God is, have come to accept.
Pat Flynn
Women
To Fountainhead :
it was with great interest that read your coverage of the Equal Employment Opportunity Program held here last week. The Affirmative Action Program has been in existence on this campus for approximately two years, it is reassuring to know that Affirmative Action is making progress, at least in the hiring of minority
on the teaching faculty.
However, judging from the news releases coming from other departments on campus, very little, if any progress is being made toward the hiring and promotion of women, especially in SPA positions. Within the past few months several new administrative assistants have been chosen within the administration and not one has been a woman. This fact should not surprise anyone, since the ratio of men to women in top administrative positions at East Carolina overwhelmingly favors men.
Dr. Stevens indicates in the article that the University will soon deal “another program that will concentrate on areas which have traditionally discriminated against women.” Bravo Dr. Stevens, and may say that it is about time.
Sinceriey, inaz N. Fridley



Ne Student government
am a member of the Student Government Association Executive Council. My area of concentration is Academic Affairs. Presently am concentrating my efforts on improving the relationship of students and faculty. Since the beginning of the schoo! year the SGA has been working diligently with students and faculty of the Department of Political Science and the School of Music in developing a project which the SGA feels will vastly improve the relationship of students and faculty. The project centers around the idea of leaving the “restrictive classroom atmosphere” to discuss problems of immediate concer.
The Schoo! of Music and the Political Science Department were chosen as pilot projects because of their overwhelming enthusiasm for the program. Presently, the SGA and the Schoo! of Music are still working on the details of their retreat. However, al! of the preliminary steps have been completed for the Political Science Weekend Retreat. The retreat, consisting of 40 participants, will take place November 9th and 10th at Atlantic Beach, N.C. A detailed schedule of events for the weekend has been developed by a student-faculty committee
Moreover, the topics which wil be discussed by the participants during the retreat have been decided. Just a few of the important topics are:
1. What type of job can be obtained with my degree?
2. What is the relevancy of five hour courses as opposed to three hour courses?
3. What is my concept of the ideal teacher?
Discussions will be heid in smail informal groups composed of approximately six students and one faculty member. The SGA Legislature has provided support for this unique project by appropriating monies to heip subsidize it. It must be emphasized that the retreat idea is only a pilot project at present and will be continued only if it is judged to be successful. Upon completion of the retreat, a committee of student and faculty participants will present a detailed evaluation to the Legisiature. This evaluation will include: topics discussed, decisions arrived at on the topics, and recommendations concerning continuation of such a program. Therefore, the SGA Legisiature has complete authority concerning the continuance of this project.
feel that the evaluation of the retreat will be positive enough to warrant its continuance. If the legislature votes to continue it, the SGA will make a sincere effort to inform and encourage al! interested departments to participate.
The weekend retreat idea is only one of the many projects which the SGA feels will help bridge the gap between students and faculty. will keep you informed on the progress of this and other projects in the area of academic reform. if you have any questions or suggestions in the area of academics please come to see me in room 224 of Mendenhall Student Center.
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974











’ FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974
eR AED EDN NM DLO i ELL TCA OPS OLED BPI IOP NALD AI OED ADL AID IER SELENE DIET LE ty,

RC
Econ professor proposes inflation remedy
By BOB CUNINGHAM
gat? Ari?é
a v¥ er
eA v¥ £ Nave oa a : etcn the MKS ‘ Ne a i 4 ; ; Na o (™ €™ r ‘ a i € a? ’ ¢ q a Hearcle ea tT tre 6.8. t ess ack ; and Frank ose bs aSSoc ial 5S Ueve ex ¢ i a ‘ t " St pOa©re ip) eal the eT a nce Preaceidant Fords ‘ fiae 4 i rogra , Ur. gzincone defines flation as a a situat wherein the businesses and
onsumers Nave the money t tnat are not availabie Jemand. in the immediate future, demand must be cut, and in the long run, supplies Must be increased by wiser use of energy sources and raw material. Decrease in Jemand and increase in goods are not
Duy goods thus AUSING excess
provided for in Ford’s plans A 5 percent surcharge, proposed by Ford, which is a surcharge on the taxes to
be paid on $15,000 and higher incomes, will affect about 28 percent of the taxpayers. These taxpayers are the ones with money oO put Into Savings accounts Business firms depend on ioans from SaviNgS and iOan associations and Darnns and with decreased savings deposits from “consumers, the money market wil! become tighter, causing higher interest rates
The idea behind Ford's pian is to pinch ndividuais and firms in the waliet to reduce their ability to spend and their Jemancd for goods



264 E

Hwy
ee
)
AND) fe) VAC
-
Complete line of Beer, Wine Groceries and Party Items-Plus Full Line of Maverick Sports Wear.
dead
? miles toward Washington
EPEC OOO SDS HM SSS OHS SS® SSS SOOO O eS «7424 224 64 &
4

DR. LOUIS ZINCONE
inflation could also be slightly detained f the federal government would decrease ts spending. Previous attempts to cut spending have failed and future attempts will probably also fail
The key to deflation is whether or not something can be done to reduce profit margins of businesses, increase pro duction, and hold down labor wage
increases to generally hoid prices at present levels. Dr Zincone and his
associates believe they have the key
Their proposal is one that would offer a tax credit to businesses that show restraint On price increases. For example, if a firm raises its price by five percent. it
BRANCH’S GENERAL STORE
10 Discount to all ECU students with I.D.



“7-7. . 4444 4 O44 OOOO OOOOH Ht SSVTTH VST VSeTeTeteetew ete
4
iii nn nn eid
receives only a 2 percent tax credit, but if increases none of its prices, it gets a substantially larger tax credit. The credit would be issued in the form of a refund after the firm pays its income taxes the government of or not it has increased the price of
the firm
and shows proof tc whet ner
aach unit (item) it sells The Ooea f the proposal s tc provide entive to the nations businesses o
halt any and possibly ai! price increases on their products. The plan may also encourage manufacturing firms to make ise of energy and raw materials. If al! businesses inthe U.S. were to take part n the tax credit plan, then labor would not be abie to give price increases on consumer goods as a reason for labor wage increases
The tax credit plan could not be 100 percent effective since firms could not be required to participate in the restraining of prices. Also, some firms that would anticipate the enacting of the plan by Congress might greatly increase their prices before the plan took effect. This could be solved by making the plan retroactive, meaning that the prices of goods before the tax credit plan would be
hyottear Wetle .

enacted would be the price to adhere
The price of foreign raw materials might rise. The tax credit proposal would serve 0 encourage firms to KBD oF . ncreases limited to the ncrease on foreign materials
Another potential problem in the ; § that tax revenue would be lost by the payment of tax refunds to businesses thar restrain price increases according to Dr Zincone, could be made up by an increase in gasoline taxes o, taxes on other such items. But would nor the increase of gas tax Cause everyone the U.S. to be affected by another par of inflation? Not so, according to Or Zincone, because tax is not considered a price
Dr. Zincone feels the tax credit plan he and his associates have developed wil! be more anti-inflationary than President Ford's proposals. The plan was recently mailed to the members of Congress from North Carolina for their consideration
amount ‘ LIMported iW
al 3
This lost revenue


southeastern Fxeanes


It was the summer
hey d never fi



—— JUMORROW —
CONRACK SURE CAN SHAKE UP A TOWN!
f 69 when he came roet ni
Ne was Nacked ff wilh
VOIGHT
t CONRACK

All Seats $1.50
Started because the systen
le Mm it ail
a
JON




Friday-Saturda

LATE SHOW
Mia Farrow
ROSEMARY’S BABY


y 11:15 pm


RS Bete eS
Aa sangha ae

SEN aa
ae
ae
4 a be a


i a ‘ i


ray
oat
Wid





MY. cae ee . eae a iia :
Hie ieee a
MESA SLAMS ee ARE
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974

Piano recital
A duc plano recital will be presented »y ECU School of Music Dean Everett Pittman and Assistant Oean Charies Stevens on Wednesday, Nov. 6, at 8:15 n the Recital Hall of A.J. Fletcher Music Center
The program will include the following works for two pianos by Composers from the nineteenth and early twentieth entunes. Debussy, “En blanc et noir’: hor Rondo in C Major’; Rachmani- ‘ Romance and Waltz from “Suite No
ind Bizet, “Jeux de’enfants.”
Fossil lecture
Four staff mernbers of the Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian ‘itute will be speaking on the fossil assembiage of the Taxas Gulf Lee Creek nine at Aurora on November 6th at 7:30 . n Graham Building, room 309. Drs. Ray, Whitmore, Olson, and Meyer will Porate on their recent geological and
pale tological studies of fossil seals,
s, birds and fishes of the Lee Creek
ality
LASHFLA CLASSIFIED
py TUBBS in RCU Gravely Wing C. Memoria! Hospital in Chapel Hill and
will be there for at lea st 3 mont wishes mail ts tees
FOR SALE: Girl's 3 speed bike f or sale. 752.0679 after 6 p.m pee
FOR SALE; Sony Stereo System, AM FM receiver with Dual turn table and 3-way speakers. 752.7233 or 758.4927
GIRL SCOUT TROOPS need helpers interested in crafts, camping, singing ano lots of fun that will donate their free time Call Mrs. Everett (Susan) Pitman for information 756.5288
FOR SALE: 1967 Pontiac Runs well, air conditioned. Needs muffler, front body work, minor engine repair. $125.00. See car at 2007 E. Sth St or call Ken 752-2730.

IN addition, the Smithsonian Institute nas made casts of some of their rarest finds form the Texas Gulf mine. These Casts will be on display the evening of the meeting, and will be donated to the ECU Geology Department's fossil collection.
The public is cordially invited to attend and to bring andy fossil specimens of eastern North Carolina that they wish to have identified.
Come down to
and get into our jeans, For The Casual Party Look
House Of Levis Featuring the complete line of Levis Denim, Cords
(St. Leg & Bell Bottom) Leather & Denim Coats
And Also Flannel& Western Shirts
You’ll Have A Ball
10 Discount With Presentation of This Ad Good thru Nov. 15th

FOR SALE: 1954 Gibson J45, good cond $235.00 new in ‘54 will sell for $100. CONN F.10 new Cond. yr. old. $110.00 new will sell for $75.00. Both guitars can be seen in 116 Garrett
WANTED: Female roommate to share expenses in a2 bedroom apt. Cal! 752.3485 after 4p.m
SUZUKI 1972 750cc, 4,000 miles. Extras $1395. Phone 756-4950
EARN $100 or more by selling a unique line of Christmas gifts. Call 756-5128
TYPING SERVICE: Call 758-594. PORTRAITS by Jack Brendie 7S
AL ADA AF

en a al 3 it! Don’t Wait!
till
CHRISTMAS
FOR SALE: ‘72 Toyota Corolla, $1,650. 752-0881 after six.
WANTED: Persons to sell hand-made items on sosignment in an arts and craft shop now opening in Kinston, N.C. You make it, we'll sell it. 527-4264 or 523-1782.
WATERBEDS: All sizes available at Rock ‘N Soul. Also ‘‘custom made jeweiry’’. 112 E. Sth St. Open on Sunday !
TYPING SERVICE. Papers, theses, manuscripts. Fast professional work at ressonable rates. Call Julia Bloodworth at 756-7874
A am © a . a,

Christmas Cards - Boxed and Loose t
FREE ;
BIBLES
All Bibles, $5 and over - Name imprinted
FREE in gold .
GET READY FOR CHRISTMAS EARLY :
Central News & Card Shop
OPER MIOHTLY & SUNDAYS UNTH @ Pm

Hallmark and American Greeting Card Buy $3 box or over - Name imprinted ,
ag . .
RIVERSIDE RESTAURANT
Across the River - 710 N. Green St. Phone 182-2624
TRY OUR BIG SPECIALS Fresh Filet Bluefish
served with french fries, colesiaw, and hush puppies
Large Servings for only $1.50 Many other fresh seafoods available
Bar-B-Q Cooked Daily TAKE OUT OR EAT IW



13

. a & ae Se





14 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1532 OCTOBER 1974
SN PITTI ONION Ete

Greeks collect donations for United Fund
By CINDY KENT Staff Writer
The Alpha Phi Ornega Rockathon, the annual drive for the United Fund, ended Saturday, Oct. 26 after 57 hours of fund collecting
The 1974 Rockathon received a total of $1650 in donations, according to Rick Balak, president of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity
Unfortunately, the $2000 goal was not reached, despite the assistance of the ECU sorority pledges
‘This may Nave been due to a conflict with another organization on Saturday,” said Balak.
Many local merchants and organi- zations contributed to the project,” said Balak
A note of appreciation should go out to Greg Pace of Hendersonville, this year's chairman of the United Fund Rockathon, and Rusty Krainick of Fayetteville, both students at ECU. They did an outstanding job,” said Balak
Krainick sat in a rocking chair at five points downtown Greenville for the entire 57 hours: Thursday moming through Saturday afternoon
“Appreciation should also be given to all of the sororities and Alpha Phi Omega pledges that participated,” Balak said
Two trophies for spirit and enthusiasm were awarded to the Delta Zeta and Alpha Phi sororities Sat. night
Peeeeseseevreeesrevesvnees
with this coupon
All 28 ounce soft drinks are 3 for $1.00
Get a 10 pound bag of ice for only 30
Uffer Good Through Sat. Nov. 2, '74
COTE EHHRET EEO EHEO EEE OEE EEE EEES
Hugh Bazemore, campaign chairman of the 1974 Pitt County United Fund drive, was presented with a check for received donations at the ECU football game Sat. The original pian wes for a presentation at halftime, with Chancellor Leo Jenkins, Bazemore, Pace and Balak present. However, due to complications with Band Night, the presentation was cut
short “This kind of poor planning kind of
belittied the whole importance of the project,” said Balak
All the contributions will go to the United Fund, which inciudes such organizations as Red Cross, Boy Scouts, Boy's Clubs, Girl Scouts and Girls’ clubs
The student who heiped with the collections had mixed reactions from donators
According to Pasquale (Bob) Furci of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity, several people would not contribute when they realized the money would go to the United Fund
Two people told me they would contribute if got a haircut,” said Jerry Jonnson, also of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity. “Several people wouldn't even stop
The idea for the Rockathon developed four years ago, according to Rick Balak
The gimmick of the rocking idea came from “Guiness Book of World Records”, where the record then was 120 hours,” Balak said
just a long field goal from Ficklen Stadium




‘The first year we rocked for 60 hours, but we've cut it down because after afew Said Balak. “People gave 4 jc, days we found we were getting dejected.” oNey when they saw a pretty Qitt com,
The first time the sororities Over to their car.” 4 participated was last year
,t was the best move we ever mare:
Thurs Fri Sat. High O Silver
High O Silver formerly from Richmond now from Durham wil! grace the stage at the Aftic this Thurs Fri Sat. Their hard bives rock music will guarantee to keep you on the dance fioor aii night. With super talent like Bil! Hatley and Dave Haziette entertain ing; those coming to town for Homecoming will be glad they made the trip to watch ECU tear it up on the football fleid and High O Silver tear it up at the Aftic
ATTIC
The Attic will have its first annual footsball
tournament Nov. 6,J,and 8.



Betty Lou's gone. but yesterdays Quality is back!
Celebrate the Fifties and Homecoming with a stop at




Wilber'’s
Family Favorites
Fourteenth St. at CharlesGreenville


ERENT RE I ARIES SEE RIOT A BD a SOR ORS eee Wied i ;






Ant in attendant tata ntttnanattate
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1874 5

parece
Students formnewchapter of N.E.H.A.
By JENNIFER LYNNE GIBBS Staff Writer
FCU Environmental Health Students had its first organization meeting on Wed wtober 9, 1974 The ECU Chapter is affiliated with the National Environmental Association through the N.C. Environmental Health A iation
he ECU Chapter, one of 13 in the was set up by Oris Blackwell, the ent of N.E.H.A who thought it
better the community Hendrix, student president of East arolina NEH.A said, “the objectives of the chapter are: to contribute to the betterment of the Greenville community's health through control of the environment: to promote the active improvement of ' nmental health professional edu
Cation; to involve its members in the social, Moral and ethical Obligations of the professions of environmental health: to assist in the improvement and understanding of the state, national and world environmental health problems; to contribute to the welfare of the environmental health students and to advance the profession of environmental nealth; to support the activies. programs anc objectives of the N.C. Environmental Health Association and Student National Environmental Health Association”
Membership is available to anyone working toward a degree in Sanitary Science, Public Health and Environmental Of related academic disciplines within the confines of East Carolina University
The chapter does not refuse anyone membership on the basic of race, religion, color, sex, national origin, or creed,”
Rehabilitation Dept. receives grant
By TOM FRANK Staff Writer
The Department of Rehabilitation seling recently received a supple tal grant of $34,599, the largest ever ceived, to be used for graduate eeships and the development of new Fams Sheidon Downes, chairman of the partment, explained that the previous totaled $53,945 and is currently viding traineeships for 16 students supplemental grant will allow 20 xJd tional students to receive aid in the Vinter Quarter There are 43 full-time students and over part-time students in the graduate ral
The traineeships are provided for

Hours Mon-Thur 11-11
Fri. &@ Sat 11-12
Sun. 3-1

For lunch and
Students with a financial need,” Downes said. “It would be difficult for the students without aid.’
Rehabilitation counselors assist handi- capped persons by making available such things as counseling, medical services, job training, and, finally job placement.
‘Our past graduates have had no problem finding employment in the field,” said Downes. “There is a need for rehabilitation counselors.”
The grant was made available through the Rehabilitation Services Adminis- tration, part of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare
Approximately $2,000 of the grant will be used for the development of several new courses within the program which will lead to minor areas of specialization in Vocational Evaluation and Rehabilitation
Services Management
f » ” ‘" ' of fre ben re» we GA ME siti ed ff

” tm
Famous Hamburgers
isuuaT 1eea!
guarer

Hendrix stated. It supports non-discrimin- ative practices in every endeavor it is associated with
“All officers are members of the chapter in good standing at the time of their election they obligate themselves to serve a full term of office. If unable to fulfill this obligation, they must surrender the office immediately. Officers include Gil Hendrix, president; David Angle, vice-president; Eleanor Guirkins, se cretary; and Patricia Lewis, treasurer
The chapter elects its officers at a meeting in May of each year
“An advisor sits in at all Executive Committee meetings as an Ex Officio,” Hendrix said. He must hold academic rank in the Dept. of Environmental Health at ECU and be a member of the National Environmental Health Association.”
The amount of dues for members if





r




$7.00 annually and an additional one dollar monthly. Of that mount, $5.00 goes to the Student National Environmental Health Association treasury, one doliar to the N.C. Environmental Health Association treasury, and one dollar to the chapter treasury
The ECU chapter has four standing committees: Public Relations Commit- tee, to keep the public informed of theis chapter's projects and accomplishments ; the Executive Committee; the Project Committee, to investigate ways and means of fulfilling the chapter's objectives; and the Events Committee, to investigate ways and means of obtaining funds and planning coordination of social activities for the chapter
“The ECU chapter is composed of 28 student members enrolied in ECU's Environmental Health program,” said Hendrix


A senior can get his life insurance policy before

he gets his degree. am

That's really planning ahead
Education, job, then life insurance That's how it usually goes
But Pilot's Senior Plan changes the traditional order of e ‘ents if you are a semor in coliege Or in yOur last year of graduate school, you are eligible for a life nsurance plan that recognizes your need
for life insurance night now a @

nances the first year for you yOu Pay the first year is a nominal
JOwn payment on the annual Senior Plan
remium. The amount will depend on the
amount of the px y yOu select

he second year, when you have begun to produce income, you start paying the premiums yourself end of the fourtr year the policy Nas Dull up cash values which are ele r; a encowment whic

automatically repays the amount aned

Stadii

sh your life insurance

program as soon as possible Pilot 5 Senior Plan will make it possible ud thought


“ive





6 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974


aa - i. — By ANTHONY RAY EVERETTE proof of need will receive consideration for Educational Opportunity Grant, N.C In fact Boudreaux @xDlainag the — Staff Writer financial aid,” Boudreaux explained. “De Tuition Scholarship, Nursing Loan, and only time a source is not used " pendent students’ aid is determined on the Nursing Scholarship follow in that order.” someone donates money to a fund ang There are five types of financial basis of the parents’ income and the specifies that it is to gO toa particy " LS P ’ , , ‘ la assistance awarded to students entering student's own assets. Independent stu 4 oe worn on ree that all person of particular type individua Tt ECU, ° said Robert Boudreaux, director of lent’s aid is determined on the resources 8 a by of course, if MO such person enrojic the the financial aid program. “These are available to the student aione Students . money is not used.” Bi long-term loans, grants scholarships No matter where you go, students Students interested in ap, VIN for
part-time employment and summer There are two million dollars a year in — near that there are scholarships financial assistance should stop ¥i-camous erolonvent financial aid available,” said Boudreaux and loans going to waste with no one 201 Whichard Building to The source with the most money is the using them,” he said. “That's one of the
¥ fOom
a 2 application form along with a Parents
-

Any student who is. enroiled or National Direct Student Loan. The biggest fallacies around. All of our Confidential Stat we form. The ; accepted for enrollment at ECU and offers Work-Study Program, Supplementary financial aid Sources are put to use phone number is 758-6610 sei : your bicycle a 94.3 FM : from yar am () S. : a Specialist. é i a

“we've got what you want’ it
STEREO ROCK 24 HOURS A DAY io
Thank you for listening
ty , 7) y ,a , r ’ ; 3 i wy . ; F bay $ 4 fron
: - 6
BICYCLE SHOP 192-4854 GREENVILLE, N.C.
JOHN’
eeee eee eee eeeeeeeeevoeeeeeeeeaeee

HAVE YOUR
BUCCANEER PORTRAIT
Taken in room 212 WRIGHT ANNEX 'E 4 9:00-12:00; 1:00-4:00 daily through November 15
No Appointment No Dress Requirements. THE YEARBOOK‘S NOT COMPLETE UNLESS —t
ANNAN Ny
by
YOU ARE IN IT!





aIN@Q the
18
eacing rusher will
ry


FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974


ie



Early gametime results in soccer defeat
By NEIL SESSOMS Staff Writer
ontusion reigned Tuesday as Oid Dominion defeated East Carolina 3-0 in a er match on Minges Field ack of communication between the Pirates’ coach, Curtis Frye, and his players ted in the team being forced to play the first half without the services several of their key players
The game contract called for a 3:00 starting time. Frye informed his players that the game would begin at 4:00. The
left the Pirates with no alternative
r than to start the game with players wno were present. Among those missing yt game time were Tom Tozer, Bucky Moser and Jeff Kunkler
The first ODU goal came off the foot of orge Cruz fourteen minutes into the first Four minutes later, ODU went ahead Scott Parkers goal. Both goals were assisted by Mike Wigg. Just before the nalf, Parker booted in his second goal 25 yards out and Old Dominion led
it the half
The first two goals came off of titution goalie Wayne Barrow before
arrival. The third was scored Qainst Moser
as ’
The chaotic first half proved to provide he only scoring in the game as injuries igued the second haif
Early in the second half, Tom Long Sed the ball and struck ODU's Kevin Hoff an in the shin. Following first aid team trainer, Craig Sink, Hoffman was taken to the hospital while Long was Jelined for the remainder of the contest
Piratesto
Last week, the nation’s sixth ranked
passer came into Fickien Stadium to
‘alienge the East Carolina defense. The Vid Oogs” performed well against ‘4yion’s Tom Vosberg and came away NITN 4 O46 win
'NiS week the Pirate defense will be put nother test, this time on the ground
‘Ne test is in the person of Andrew
the nation’s third accompany his wmmates from the Citadel into Ficklen at urday
Johnson, with his 966 yards on 184 @S. 18 the key to the Bulldog offense 510, 179 pound junior ranks behind Vy Ohio State’s Archie Griffin and
son. Johnson
Jklanoma’s Joe Washington in rushing
JONNSON is Not the only powerhouse in
'Ne Bulidogs’ backfield. Gene Dotson, the
Raga IIIA SIAN NSO I

ECU SOCCER COACH Curtis Frye looks on as his troops fall to Old Dominion. Trainer Sink was kept busy throughout
the final injuries Coach Frye attempted to bring the tearm back with an “emergency” offense which called for all players but the goalie and one fullback to play on the offensive side of midfield. This offense failed to produce any goais and East Carolina finished on the short end of the 3-0 score.
“ take the loss personally,” was all coach Frye could say after the game, attributing to his failure to correctly inform
period administering other
Citade! quarterback, has gained 636 yards along the ground and through the air for the Bulldogs. In last week's win over Appalachian, Dotson accounted for three Bulldog scores On a pass and two runs
On defense, the Bulidogs are weak against the run and strong against the pass. Their top defensive man is Brian Ruff. Ruff has twice been selected as the conference's defenseman of the week this season. Only a sophomore, the 6-0, 216 pounder is the head of the Bulidogs’ young defense. Freshman Tony Starkes and senior Mike Dean lead the Bulldogs’ defensive front line
The Citadel stands at 2-5 with a lone victory in four Southern Conference games this season. That 2-5 record may be deceiving though. Included on the Rilidogs schedule were Tulane and Delaware. Both are nationally ranked
his players of the starting time for the contest.
Assistant coach Jamshid Jafari was not so concerned with that aspect of the loss. He attributed the loss. to overconfidence
“Beating three ACC teams made us overconfident ” was Jafari’s comment.
The three victories he was referring to were over Duke, N.C. State and Carolina.
However Jafari found some priase for the team.
powers. Tulane beat the Bulldogs 30-3 and Deleware, the nation’s third ranked smali college team, defeated them 48-12. The squad’s four SC games have all been close with losses to William and Mary, Richmond, and VMI marring their record. Last week's 28-17 upset of Appalachian may be a true sign of the teams real strength
Most of East Carolina's bumps and bruises have healed and the team seems pretty healthy for Saturday's game. Kenny Strayhorn is coming off his best game this year Statistically and it may be another day of heavy duty for the Pirate back
if the Pirates can run on the Bulidogs, which most everyone this year has, and if they can stop the running of Johnson, which few have done, then this years homecoming contest should be a pleasant one for the Pirates
‘East Carolina's soccer tear has never previously had a winning record or beaten an ACC team. This has been a winning season so far and we have beaten three ACC schools,” said Jafari.
Brad Smith added, “Most players prepare mentally for a match ail day and so changing the starting time can be devastating.”
East Carolina closes its soccer season Monday with a match against North Carolina Wesleyan in Rocky Mount. The team’s record presently stands at 6-4.
host nationally ranked back
SC STANDINGS
CONF OVERALL VMI 40-0 5-2-0 ASU 2-10 444) ECU 1-10 5-2-0 Richmond 1-1-0 3-30 Furman 2-240 4-3-0 Wm. & M 1-2-0 35-0 Citadel 1-3-0 2-5-0 Davidson 0-2-0 1-41
Conference games :
Furman at ASU Davidson at Guilford Citade! at ECU
VMI at Richmond


.
ior





18 FOUNTAINHEAD VOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974


New SID stresses organization in office


SID SMITH and assistant Willie Patrick r
4 7 i a 7 i! i ? he ' at hae v ) ted wit AN ’ ¢ ‘ , 8 4 we ivf ‘y rk ‘ i i Mat » uy ee j ‘e i i » Vva yt . seat (et « ‘ 4 ct Wa s 8 4 4 ark Se 4 1 t j wna he 4 e 4 ra “A y 4 4 ’ i ally he ms aa . 4 Ne i are atis at the 4 Poan ment af e .
Lafayette Holiday are
intramural leaders PEPRALLY TOP TEN TEAMS om HAPPY HOUR
Fifties Prices-25° cans 2-4:30
ELBO ROOM
Hear Steel RAil NO COVER CHARGE Happy Hour Prices continuous till 6:45 Remember- SUNDAY is Ladies’ Nite
Steel Rail Plus 10° drafts for girls NO COVER CHARGE
‘Steve the Dream’ will return soon for ‘60's show



co

WORST TEN TEAMS






FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 1631 OCTOBER 1974













r b Ly d j wees, e tT y UGHES JOd anc ane 34! Of mG 6PMOxanne Assistant Soorts Ea Rant j . - POMS CCIOF 2 each nad one y JOHN EVANS : e lady Pirates d find Miah P he Fact 4 Ht ryt Cds . CaS zal Na fieid ?- ‘ : : x Ke azary 4 YyMiatir rye , : y rye ; Asif and ‘ y AMG A “A pbe 3 Nara ; 4 t he ; f ‘ . , j he 4 ol a ' ‘ ei ast WV iQ! est oth teams eft the fieid . ‘ 4 ver and We Ve a ney 4 LOW! mainooe liege 41 re ; oe . v y 4 4 a 4 a4 2¢ i jte M jt womed A . . “ BaAVY WeIQnt r rir r r i © i jPy Na ; , a 7! f Lat s A 4 4 reies JAalyy wit! ror v nm? e fTiif t¢ ¢¢ ‘ ? NA ‘ we! tr my rf , ener aa ; . ‘ a ; rega ad the ae : ‘ e ack ‘ j ¢ ri jar e ne r ‘ 4 we ; tenn 1 RJ WIN e failed artar Ww ' 3 Pirate offense was abie t om the j i se @ if fr leftf Fi ‘ tar TY ‘ he tor P OV e Ud ¥ and wer! ae y ie lay ‘ v y vé wamobe ame wher 3 the iin 5 : j jay v i re r rr — . ting 4 ‘ : y A Joalie ‘ 4 als rel yr 2 ¢ 1Ve ’ rs got 1 PeR act 4) em thy 3 hack wi «COD nas 1tofeaat T? ‘ 5 4 be 4 a jefeaatec ting ra at ; : , : rudy iy i ey Oerier ro" , ‘ The fig . A awn am thie ¢ “4 y ’ jld r ; hy 5 . one . wks ea " ta 4 ; wisi cs KaK eS ; 'aat ever reaater Us ad, WOrge ARNE ©C €a fryr th F . 4 - a1 i' wa f reary ’ ah x ae 8 A et “V Was sUDDOSed maMNoOodoe S rad the first j0a thy The A rer P f rt ‘ v“ nee arr ' Tse Ke Most pBopie wa at P f hut P the and of the f ‘ AAITIDOe 4 1 (Te f the f bye : one . Nt, Dut wher haar wac - ‘ . sid ede ec Mea rien Tr irsday 4 WAS tat A aSt f Nt didi . ‘ alNDoe WA rmieace 4 ‘ a ‘ i ¥ “ eir tinal reo ery - y F Levee as there ever beer a we ie a hg yw 1 halt hil py A : : : sia 3A SO Jal man Ww fidn mtr Mune ‘ y Pirates f r the cain : oi 0 DOx than MA . i ee r 4 “a JO Ave the ALIN dy a think f Ne Oremier “ort 5 ‘ ” Viuhammed A 2x00eC tw re ™ ¢ t Ne tally ear P yea nrerar ‘ ge ear i vv aT ar: vr r val b Ad a 32 Career was made t n the 4-1 ‘ ae s ala © JBeC "oe OY WV 3d He f nao tw » Y? rmament if -fraRaant , i MA monle foroet that A P , sfeesnix yf NOV p , al A A mr 3.9 7 ‘ vic i DOXKING harry - ‘ i efor eorge Forema R : pa : 5 alli, ris feat came ‘ ht ar re 5 ‘ ios 4 ¢ te y « : 4 il Avert ; at yt tr A P “a. ‘ hefore the A x ad cacr tartead with ’ : O Wwe ' weiin 4 . : 4 td ¢ , 4 af x y ’ a “1 . Was “? a? i¢ 4 ‘ . . WTF ” ‘ ; rn . i wo dive f , thy 5 - sheet fs ner prime The f , . ° ‘ 7 4 WITT A i , re F 1 A 2 Ww ¥ ‘ Da Orear ve rié r ‘ , pe Ahywert ry , arity ¢ - : ue : ii toa sian ; : ; yix a ee pDiavec a . rs oor 4 . vt ‘ ’ 4 Jats 10a thc i — ¥ . i. e- ‘ aR a mia )f Ao 4 al? d . er Ww 16a ‘ . ‘the x ¢ . i ; vv ey traveler x a ) P wa ‘ ‘ ¢ 3¢ re ; i ¢ 4 OX 20Q0re vely and wor ‘ P re j ‘ a , 1 a 2 Vitat 4 1 3v . . rheowt ‘ rn Wa jerad . . y acai 40a ? é ; ' b ix i, Aopala ' iat - rl . x , ' ‘ t - a pare thy if WV xD ox ; ‘ : . x vs 3 . tj . A ‘ A ‘ wc 1 et ¢ é “eh. Was the ' . SOTVeX ii 7 v4 4 ‘ é pag a6 »¢ Cu ‘ ae yor 7 wit si ¥y aU s ie e : ent ‘ ti - 4é 44a re Ba Ay ay : 4 a 2 4 ty We ¥ il ack ele’ $e , ‘ . ‘ os I 1 4 aCex f Vera é . atawt re ’ ? : Nov ; : : : : are ack . ag 2x A tire it ‘ ‘ . piaCe Cast ennesser al , ’ we ¢ 4 ; ere Hew ro" ¢ " AA “ AAR I® Na ‘ox ; A i pa fe om RIK vvr ‘ ; Pa) ' . ba i aac lr atc 4 f 4 4 ; , x ; sivas ‘ ‘ o ee ’ p ¢ ;every get ner “a ; ‘ F : beats ‘ “ b a4 iv , ‘: 2 c ¥ ¥ Y Ud IwmMent 34 SENIORS P ate : tteam Appalachian. Tr ‘ ee : : ERFORM FOR LAST TIME spe Pk versity this weeken JR LAST TIME, AT HOME roe Ue 4 three-way tie for first at tr y asi? . ‘ y y - y e vy4 ’ r tk : NV i ’ 4 NES SE , , ’ pi " EVEN BE rirat ! iv' el ‘ . ' frywyth i ar? tour c j ed t ’ “ " 4 1 ta t 4 , ’ : ary ‘ wt vv 4 ; . . a ? a KeD ey Butct traurts y x an . e cute “y y¥y POW. Asi if MA ry , f2 di ” , v¥ re VIIKE . ¥ F VV «xt A é ; y vy ¥a Ker y M wwe fou) ‘ as r , ve Onc nar sary Nikia and Ne . “s i er 4 tn 4 € Cast Caf a wome t¢ ry Averett ‘ — i Ve ae" aut 9 ‘ sh ' Ft ha Oa MVYETeTiC ary Arche FCA 4 vv afr e2cy Tw ‘ a & o ¢ 1, ex ar ‘ dul A ” ‘ vv q r wor ‘ Vi« . m4) 4 of azt : , : wot y Nave ‘ r A 4 the atec Vva am aker Er f m4 4 Aa ee . « 4 y Rass Ce oe esday M PEP RALLY TONIGHT les play Ellen War the ; ; ’ ’ X oo la 5 r Y c j i «i i Chee eacde A ‘ ‘ 4-yuA AAn sy “ 3 . watch itwascCUU s ng aidions 1 my 1 y if vet 3hd an VIAL 10egNeGaMA a 7 “ a Pe « a wid @0 10 Oe t wich y ‘ 4 . ¢ A A 7 7 " Ss VASO A Set ris ver 1 yw e eye S , ‘ ‘ re’ r ¥ ' ¥ vy iit « r pA - 454 . A i wot ; ‘ ‘4 ‘ J 41S rs) ee Hing ef aff eat ex Hetr vv ‘ 4 ey Ria af 4 ‘ ‘eo ‘ : ’ i if New tings f ate , sa thank th ; Va ymaker ‘ M y yE ; Viel! y 9? : Lb aod ‘ r tag! ‘ ryt ‘ ‘ ‘ ¥ " , , a poms program. Everyone is as 4 et women Swe, joubles The ¢ ts . Ww ihe okt ab Oh y aS KEO At Diay a whasa?7 rex ‘ i ‘ i NOMmes Y i. fa WV 4 a tnree natcnes Alar Tr ‘ ‘ 3 yy ‘ Pi ™ € VVarrer 4 . ¥t 5 t r miavtake m the ere ; ; J 1a : S SHS FTV TSO4 mily ¢ WOOd (ft alt — KA ; Ss. : ms A vier er Aliege tear hee ee a — ba ‘ S © FF STTWSTTVSTSSE ‘ 1 a ver te lartct . x and , . , Western Sizzlin Steak House Ete ; ’ ° ; THE FAMILY S i © eam h i K HOUSE C S ooting r4 ’ 4 & ; OPEN FROM , At the press ‘ ; By NEIL SESSOre, Heimick'’s squad c Ww De pract No 4 the - 1 1A M to 10 pP M ; staff Writer Oa e e range ‘ . e fee! Meal rr 4 ; : ; v f ei MICK said he nad Jetir te ’ 74 The East rolin ‘ plans on pushing for a range On Cary 4 ra Pe) un. Thurs ‘ Cas ma a rifle taam beoins : g a range O AIMPUS a ' rif r this , VOY 7 anc statec tnat De pians t . ; week in preparation for its matcr plans ook into the 11AM. to 11P.M. against William ang M smatch rumors that there is an indoor range in th pe ‘ “ m : 2 ; 4 ° . O ° . 4 yd . i Vialy f December hacament s - . ange ine » 4 ‘ r4 n “ © 1 Ant building. If one . - »4 T 1MWes exist A al : A of ry ry ‘ we ; na ‘ . 4 Fri. and Sat. 4 © Ca ewly formed this year would sais ee pid see what can be 4 ke 10 oet inascn aS — IONE If Ye Way f using it fe ory 4 : ' - - oie tice aS possibie aif . . . tean ; try Tx ; — '@ 3 rs) ‘no vet ’ . . Fy » 4 F , y k i v4 Me ASO! SO that — a or Take Out Servic at Coach Bot Each n ides ry e Cat MING ‘ ‘ 4 dKe ut ervice y4 4¢ k ca better wine tis é weting this season will be y 4 t ; Th ‘ : . , Gaim S peratedc nger the si .art ree : Call 758 af ’ ’ e first practice will be directed quarter match format i t tar enryt r ’ ; 7 F 4 ‘ towards the methods f safet : 5 S per mar in each f three 9g S afety on the ‘ia - rar : POSITION will he " to 3.99 U.S.CHOICE BEEF CUT DAILY f “” s. There will be ten members t - narticipate i: ice seal : ’ FE 7 ‘ ‘ b pa each match with the five Gés : fy LoOTeSs Ong towards . « ; ATURING 15 SIZZLIN VARIETIES 4 JOINg towards the final point tally lh te









!
STUDENTS & STEREOS
Harmony House South GIVES ADDITIONAL years of warranty 4
Loaners during service
-a Lay i Guaranteed trade-up on speakers fO Free turntable check-up adjustment &
stmas First stylus replacement at dealer cost fl Special student ’NO INTEREST ’ terms fl
Chr! And now a Christmas Special with BOSE Inerauti 10 Year Guarantee
$250°° Pioneer SX-535 $299°° BSR 310AXE 391°
eZ
Mtg. suggested List Price $641.75 Save $142.75
iHHS Student System Price 9499!
Et Buy Name Brand From AUDIO SPECIALISTS!
iA Senote: We will match or better any EXTRA Christmas Gift juote from a legitimate H.F.dealer Pioneer Headphones at Dn any merchandise we sell! ‘2 price with this system
We encourage trade-insWe service everything we sell
Harmony House South, Inc.
Downtown Greenville i aD Wie: te Ge Se Mees a SA EH ee AG GN Men BS eS Ua RE BE

ee



eS EG HO RR es ae ge I ee ee ee ee ws




a

Te)


Title
Fountainhead, October 31, 1974
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
October 31, 1974
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.300
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/39943
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy