Fountainhead, July 8, 1975


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Fountainhead

VOL. 6, NO. 57 8 JULY 1975
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY GREENVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA

Professors to receive
By GRETCHEN R. BOWERMASTER Copy Editor
North Carolina's university and munity college teachers this week are eculating on the meaning of “smail at raises” appropriated by the state slature several weeks ago Joted was $2.3 million for this fiscal yoar, $4.6 million for the next. to be tributed proportionately to the 16 ember universities of the Consolidated versity of North Carolina
The $4.6 million figure may be paid ver a longer period of time, and so is not
necessarily double said Or Susan McDaniel, Assistant to the Provost We're already in the first week of this fiscal year
In voting the “small merit raises,” the legislature matched the usual 1.8 percent seniority increment granted to other state employees. However, because teachers are usually employed only 9 months a year, the “srnail merit raise” represents 1 to 1.5 percent of total faculty's salaries among member schoois
Consolidated University of North Carolina officials in Chapel Hil! will receive the total sum and divide it at a Board of Governors meeting scheduled July 21
Interim city manager Hagerty remains inGreenville office
By CONNIE HUGHES Special to Fountainhead
weenvilles search for a new city
wager seems to have been shelved, xCOrding to Mayor Pro Tern Percy Cox.


Photo courtesy of Ihe Uaily Hetiector)

HARRY “Vhen William Carstarpnen resigned as enviile's city manager in February 1975 ty Council announced they would rch for a replacement. Meanwhile, they nied previous city manager Harry eny to be “interim” city manager
Attention
JUNTAINHEAD has decided to pend publication for second summer S10n, but will be back in the Fai!
Most of the staff will not be attending nd summer session,” said Mike
, Editor-in-Chief. “Even if we could editonal positions, not enough writers Oe around to print at least eight pages yank rive of the eight FOUNTAINHEAD
‘aters will be absent, leaving only the Ors and Entertainment Editor, the Copy ‘Of, and a couple of Business and verlising staff people
Onsensus of the staff was that they ‘ney could not keep up the high ‘andards set by earlier FOUNTAIN- “CADS. The decision to suspend
euDI ication until Fall Quarter came in a
“alt meeting heid June 30
Snony after Carstarpnen’'s resignation, Greenville Mayor Eugene West toid reporters the council had in its possession a stack of applications for the post
Now, after 5 months, the “interim” city manager Harry Hagerty still has the job, and no further searching is being sonducted
They are being checked into gradually, in that we Nave Hagerty and he is doing a good job,” said Mayor West. “That keeps us from having to rush with our selection, and we anticipate keeping Hagerty on at least until the first of the year
Mayor Pro Tem Percy Cox said he thougnt Hagertys position might last
Noe
7
As far as m concerned, Mr. Hagerty § doing such a good jod, as long as he its MS job. said Cox a iong term as years ago for health Caounci pre motiy hired Carstarpnen, a much younger man. Dur- ing Carstarphen's two years in Greenville, he and the Council reportediy ciashed
ften, though at the time of Carstarphen’s
resignation Cox said, “We regret very much to see Bill leave
When questioned about the ciashes, Mayor West said, Well, Mr Carstarphen came and is gone, and would prefer not to discuss him.”
wants it
Magerty ty manager J reasons The
resigned from


‘small merit raises’
people would probably get a larger § UNC's total, other teachers getting on! token amount.”
Speculators say because priv schools were voted financial aid at $200) $400 per student, anc because ot teachers were denied pay raises this the legisiature voted “small merit rai in compensation. Public schoo! teac will see no raises this year
Other ECU officiais declined to how much ECU will receive in the way pay bonuses. The official ammount will
For instance, UNC at Chapel Hili hires reieased after the Board of Governd research scholars. in high demand and free meeting scheduled for July 21st in Chag to go anywhere.” Dr. Ferrell said. “These Hill

Each school will total its faculty's salanes and present this figure to the Board of Governors,” said Dr. Henry Ferrell, Faculty Assembly Chairman The armnount each school gets will be about 1.4 percent of this total. Then each school's administration will divide it among teachers according to merit.”
Some teachers expect a1 to 2 percent bonus sometime soon, but Dr. Ferrell warns the raises may not be equal. Some teachers may get $100, some $500


a eae - Fs
IN ORDER TO be a real papoose, you've got to have @ feather. This youngster ic seem to be too concerned about it.
Seminar offers tuition aid to out-of-state students
Out-of-state students paying high tuition may find a solution to their financial problem by attending a one-day seminar the first day of second surnmer session.
Rob Luisana, SGA president for 1972-73, will be in Greenville July 15 at 2 p.m. in room 221 Mendernali to discuss how out-of-state students can change their status to in-state resident, without having to drop out of school to do it.
Luisana, an ex-student from Connecticutt, was able to the legal
possibilities for changing residency status while at ECU. Luisana is now teaching school history near Henderson, N.C and also running an antique store.
The SGA will be sponsoring his visit, paying expenses and a small fee, said Jimmy Honeycutt, SGA President. Luisana will be visiting four or five other North Carolina state-supported schools, he said.
The seminar will include copies of documents on legal matters resident status. The lecture will last about an hour, with another hour for working individual students.
Signs will be placed neer registration sites on the Students register ccnalten. Vein or tdihtay Ul ans tae “—


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FOUNTAINHEAD VOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY 1975



Ediftorials‘Commentary


Tuition meeting important
The Student Government Association-sponsored seminar set for Tuesday to discuss ut-of-state tuition rates is a “must attend” event for all out-of-staters at ECU Rob Luisana, a former SGA president and a student who had his residence status
everal years back. will conduct the program ffers all students a good chance to learn all the “Catch 22's
f-state to the in-state rate
© Seminar
involved in rye vv , ; try ry ut 4
Yothing is iilegal about holding a program of this type. It is something like the
ure who takes advantage of every loop-hole available when he fills out his income
ram iS especially timely with the hike in out-of-state rates set to go into fact eptember The recently-adjourned session of the North Carolina General ‘ ped the ante for out-of-staters by $100. Those students already paying attend N schools will be paying even more ‘. he trade exist in applying for in-state residency. Luisana should be abie to jents a through the hassie of trying to get the in-state rate
program, which shouid not last over a couple of hours, should be well worth it to By saving over $1000 a year, that could turn out to average $500 an
next Tuesday
» Student:
pDrogra;n
Paper closing down for summer
A After inking
the presses and tumming out five papers in the last six weeks with a ‘Keleton but determined crew, FOUNTAINHEAD has to throw in the towel for the rest of mer scnoo

not for lack of desire that the weekly campus astonisher will not longer be jown to a numbers game. FOUNTAINHEAD had been battling the Jame and losing ground a little each week. When second session rolls wOUNd Next week, five of the eight faithful who work on actual production of the paper wiil be
vaiiabdie It all Dols
staff numbers
absent
q that many people from an already small staff simply leaves too many holes to especially when students who are willing to work on the paper are plentiful as hens’
teeth around camous

The onginal FOUNTAINHEAD EIGHT, not to be confused with the Chicago Seven, were the only eight people around who had either the talent or interest to work on the ampus rag
y no replacements are available to step in and fill the gaps until the regular crew yetS back in September would seem that on a campus with a summer school enroliment of 4394, there should be more than eight people who have the talent and desire to help put out a paper S nothing new. In September as many as 12,000 students wii! rowd FOUNTAINHEAD may draw as many as 25 students willing
Hout then this problem
be enrolled From that
Well, so much for the soap box editorializing about lack of student interest. While FOUNTAINHEAD did publish for five weeks we managed to average 11 pages per week and generate $1222 in advertising revenue. Not good, but then not bad for eight Nard-working people
the immortal words of an American general as he beat a hasty retreat from an island the Pacif We shall return
yReMRe eH HHH HK HY HH KH HK OK

“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, Of newspapers without government, should not hesitate a moment to
preter the latter.” Thomas Jefferson
Editor-in-ChietMike Taylor
Managing EditorSydney Green Business ManagerTeresa Whisnant News EditorsSam Newell, Cindy Kent Advertising ManagerJackie Shalicross Sports EntertainmentJohn Evans Copy EditorGretchen R. Bowermaster
. ‘
Fountainhead will be published weekly during Summer Schoo! but will resume regulan
twice-weekly publication beginning in September Fountainhead is the student newspaper sponsored by the Student Governmen tf East Carolina University and appears each Tuesday and Thursday Omrin
the schoo! yea!
A « at ik f
Box 2516 ECU Station. Greenville N ( 758-6366. 758-6367 $10 annually for non-students
Mailing address Editorial Offices
Subscriptions
2 7 Ke 44





WASHINGTON - President Ford has told associates that he is prepared to take drastic Measures to prevent another war in the Middie East. Renewed fighting and another oil embargo, he said, would cause grave damage to the United States
He doesn't intend to let that happen, he said, if he has the power to prevent it. He implied that he would use all the power available to him to squeeze Cconoessions out of both sides
He can be as stubborn, he suggested, as the sraelis and Arabs. The implication again was that he would stop being nice and use whatever pressure was necessary to avert a war
But if war should erupt in the Middle East, he made it clear that he would not sit still for another oi! embargo
Oil Giveaway: The federal government iS preparing to give away millions of dollars worth of oil and gas
These reserves are located off the Atlantic coast. And the recipients of the

government's generosity will be — you juessed it the big oil Companies Here's how the ripoff works: The
Nimen must pay the U.S. Treasury for the night to drill on the public ocean bottom. The government sets the price that the oil is expected to bring. And then the nighest bidder gets to drill
The government has just set a ridiculously low price. The estimate is that oi! will bring $7 to $9 a barrel by the time it's drilled in 1980
Yet oil is selling today for almost $12 a barrel and all the evidence suggest that the price 1s going up, not down. The oiimen, therefore, will pay Uncie Sam only $7 to $9 for oi! that they can sell to the public for
Ford may take drastic action in Middle East

Jack Anderson
the going rate. Many experts believe the price by 1980 will be close to $20 a barrel
Once again, the government is putting oil interests ahead of the public interest
Rutugee Ruckus: The United States had admitted over 100,000 Vietnamese refugees fleeing from Communism. Yet at the same time, the United States has slammed the door shut on thousands of Chileans who wish to escape from the military dictatorship in Chile
The State Department wanted to admit the Chilean refugees in groups, but the Justice Department strenuously objected One reason for the opposition, according to our sources, is to placate Senate Judiciary chairman Jarnes Eastland
The Senator from Mississippi is the man that the Justice Department answers to on Capitol Hill. State Department representatives appeared behind closed doors to explain their position to his comrnttee
Sen. Eastiand, chomping on nis cigar, dispensed with the formal presentation He just wanted one question answered, he said. “Are we gonna be letting In any Communists?
Atter months of haggling, 4 compromise has been struck It 1S explained in a private letter to Eastland from the Justice Department. The Chilean refugees, according to the letter, will be screened abroad. Then the results will be scrutinized by the State Department Then
See Middle East, page 3.

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18
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY 19)



Money theme of Assembly sessio
Last in a series conceming the 1975 North Carolina General Assembly.
THE 1975 SESSION
A budget session
After five and a haif months the 1975 General Assembly has adjourned and if any one word can Characterize what this se8si0n was ail about it is “money.” The most difficult, time-consuming, frustrat ing, and important issue to be resolved was the budget
For the first time in many years the legisiators had to make substantial reductions in the expenditures recor mended by the Governor and Advisory Budget Commission. That was a task at which they had little experience and it ame in a year in which the House eadership decided to make significant hanges in the legistative Dudget-review Ng process
Separate comimuttees were appointed
consider the continuation and expansion budgets, joint committee neetings with the Senate were dropped 2nd line item review was restored. instead f a “super subcommittee” of the joint ippropriations committee, the final sitting and trading took place in a
nference commnnuttee trying to resoive the jifference between the House and Senate oroposails
After considerable anguish, agreement was reached and the result was a biennial budget apparently ending the two-year experiment in annual budgeting — but a 0-day review of the 1976-77 figures has been scheduled for late spring next year
The legislative institution Changes in the operation of the eneral Assembly have been considerabie the past several Sessions and this year was exception. For the first time North arolina has a legislative ethics act. The new law requires ilegisiators and andidates for legisiative office to file Statements indicating the extent anc nature of their financial hoidings and those ‘ their families These staternents are to be public records and failure to file can result in iisqualification of a candidate, failure to Seat a winner, or discipline of an ncumbent and withholding of his salary Attempts at improperty influencing egisiators are banned and legisiators are irected not to vote on matters where they may nave conflicts of interest. Also enacted was legislation tightening the requirement that lobbyists register and requiring them to tile statements of funds pent on lobbying. Those requirements begin with the 1977 session at which time yists will also begin paying a registration fee ectronic voting machinery was alled in the Senate for this session and Sg'Siation was approved and money »rovided to provide similar apparatus for ve Mouse beginning in 1977. The Speaker ' the House was provided with a full-time Insel for the first time this session, but ve legislators decided to cut back four of ‘he ten Legisiative Services Commission fessional staff positions they had 1UThOnZed in the last two years The staff of the Fiscal Research viSION continued to expand its verations, coming into the first open ontlict with the State Budget Office, over "he estimates of revenue to be available for
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expenditure in the biennium. Aliso in 1975 Fiscal Research made its first substantive review of the operations of a state agency the public schools administration, and provided the General Assembly with an in-house staff to audit the activities of the Soul City new community project
Lt. Governor James Hunt broke tradition by emphasizing continuity in the Senate and giving each available returning Senator the committee chairmanship he held in 1973 and 1974. In addition to splitting the appropriations committee, Speaker James Green introduced a prefiling rule to the House, requiring the bills to be left with the clerk the day before introduction
The Republican administration has heiped inspire an increasing activism on the part of the Generali Assembly, best evidenced this year by the staging of a unique event, the hearings and voting on the confirmation of gubernatorial appointees to a State agency
The agency was the Utilities Commission and two nominations were rejected, one being pressured out before onsideration ever really began and the other being formaily voted down in joint session. No consistent policy has been established yet on just what standards should be applied in confirmation (that was the subject on a good part of the senate m the Utilities Commission nominees) or on which agencies should be subject to this kind of review
Annual sessions, the experiment of 1973 and 1974, seems to have lost much of its appeal lf aconomic conditions were better a 1976 session would probably not be scheduled: as it is, the rules for that meeting have been made rather strict. The lagisiators will not convene until! May 3 they will be limited to 30 calendar days of session. and no matter other than one directly affecting the budget can be considered unless approved by a two-thirds vote on each house. The use of interim standing committees has also apprentily been abandoned, with the Lagisiative Research Commission being revived to handie most between session research
BUDGET; UTILITIES; ELECTION LAWS
The budget
The conference committee on the budget found its most difficult task to be ompromising the proposals of the two houses for public schools administration and higher education. What finally happened was that most of the deer House cuts in research and development evaiuation and assessment, and pubiK affairs, were rejected for the first year of the biennium but accepted for the second year. with a special study commussion c he appointed by the Speaker and Lt Governor t consider and make recommendations on those matters before the 1976 session
The Senate's university turlion increase for out-of-state students was accepted but it was agreed there would be no tuition raise for state residents in the UNC system or the community colleges. The Senate got half of its EPA salary increase funds for fiscal 1975-76 and all for 1976-77. No reserve was provided for teacher and state employee salary increases in the second year of the biennium, which the Senate has preferred, but that item was scheduled 2s
the first priority for the 1976 session
The budget bill for the biennium finally totaled $3.6 bilion in expenditures from the General Fund for operating expenses and about $80 million for capital projects. The changes in the economic picture meant the end of the five percent state employee salary increase that had been recommend- ed by the Governor, but there was stil! considerable new money in the document that was finally approved
Expansion of the kindergarten program continued, as did the funding for education of exceptional children and for reading programs
The East Carolina medical school benetitted from $32 million of the session appropriating $500,000 in 1976-77 for planning and developing a veterinary school at NC state. Funds were provided to help NC Central's law school avoid loss of accreditation
The formula for state aid to private colleges was doubled. About $3.8 million was provided for state parks, with $1 million of that earmarked for the state zoo. The state will be aiding mass transit from a $2.5 million appropriation for grants to local governments to match federal funds. Many of the recommended increases for the Department of Corrections were eliminated but $6 million supplemental construction money was provided and additidnal funds made available for expansion of the academic education and vocationai§ training programs
About $10 million was provided to ncrease the caseload in the aid to families with dependent children program, Dut the cost-of-living increase for that program was eliminated. State aid to public ibraries was increased. Additional staff was provided for mental hospitals, and funds were appropriated for a screening program for four-year olds with leaming and emotional disorders. By far the largest of the special appropriation bills approved was the one for the judicial depart ment to fund a retirement system for lerks of Court and to add new assistant district attorneys, investigators, district court judges, magistrates, and superior court secretaries in various districts around the state. The legisiation aiso established public defender offices in two new districts
Election laws
The House voted early in the session to discontinue the presidential preference primary, but the Senate would not agree and it remained alive. Eventually, the date for that vote was shifted from May tc March. but attempts to Nave al! nationally recognized candidates on the ballot failed to be approved. It will still be necessary for a candidate to affirmatively state his jesire to be listed in order to be piaced on the darot
The state primary was aiso shifted being moved from May tc August next ear Adiustments were made in the reports requirec by last years campaign financing act and party names were piaced n permanent alphabetical order for general election ballots (that is “D” comes before R
y
MISCELLANEOUS
insurance Another session came and went without enactment of no-fault automobile

insurance and its chances for the would seem dim. Legisiation limiti use of age in setting auto if insurance rates was passed, formula being devised to add to t for those with histories of convictions or accidents. Higher still allowed for new drivers for t two years on the basis of inexpenence A medical reinsurance exchang enacted in response to the increas of medical malpractice insurance various other proposals to malpractice suits were finally def leaving that matter for study by study commission
Middle East
Continued from Middle East, pr
the Justice Department will pass oO case The result will be to admit hundred refugees, one at a time, prove that theyre not “co terrorists or ‘economic distress Case Grousing at Justice: Attorneys Justice Department are quietly grurt about the new head of the crirmnal dt Richard Thornberg. Apparently, had some harsh things to say about f criminal ctmef Henry Petersen i aftermath of the Watergate scandal Petersen is still admurec sy the Justice Department lawyer. ind the not too happy about going .O work man who criticized their former boss Thornberg, incidentally, is expect reduce the power of local strike force increase the power of local d attorneys PLO vs. Police: A new contro involving the Palestine Liber Organization is brewing in the Nations. The U.S. invited the PL participate in a conference on prevention. The PLO, of course, gai fame by conducting terrorist raid israe! The International Association of P Chiefs has already informed the U.N they wont be party to crime preve conference that includes criminals Red Tape: if the government reg business in 1776 the way it does now, Sen. Hugh Scott, RPa we might st waiting for Betsy Ross’ flag. it have taken her seven years to sub the designs, diagrams and p information, says Scott Ms. Ross have had to get Bureau of Stand certification that her cloth was flammabie. And, adds Scott, she have had to engage in collective barga with her searnstresses Washington Whirl: Johnnie Ro the Mafia mystery man who tried td Fidel Castro for the CIA, Washington recently in such a disguise that he fooled photograg assigned to follow him around ; went south to liquidate Castro in 196 traveled as a lawyer for the big companies. Gaetana Enders, the bes wife of Assistant Secretary of Thomas Enders, appeared on a radio at a ritzy hotel recentiy and wo being assaulted by a group of rq conventioners who claimed they wanted ‘o kiss her. The White flagpole is now flying the Bic colors in addition to the famitiar § Stripes.







FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY 1975



By KEN CAMPBELL Staff Writer
Pitt County is Currently seeing a sharp
crease in solid waste along its highways xccord to Roger J. Barnaby, heaith jirector f the Pitt County Health
creates health hazards i we as making communities
yntly. said Barnaby. “We need to tell they should not do tnis t Nurts them aiso
Met in closed session
pf KHeTT
F ‘ 6 5.8761).
OeCcauUuse

Highwa
Solid waste debris along the roadside is Nazardous to pedestrians and bike riders. It also gets into the ditches and inhibits the running of water, he said
We get up to 50 complaints a year about litter on the roadside and on private property,” said Barnaby. “Most of the Jebris iS JUNK put Out by people doing routine summer cieaning
Litter
containers
artificial broken
such as tin cans, tires, aluminum foil
rDAoE AE
glass, or anything that holds water, can provide a Suitable place for mosquito breeding. Also, food thrown out could provide food for rats,” said W.M. Pate, chiet of the Environmental Health Division
Solid waste along the roadsides also presents another grave problem, Pate said. Animals may get injured while looking for food in the debris. And, Pate explained, an animal in pain is dangerous
Local board restricts stamp information
A rding to official records, almost 20 of Pitt County do not
sand residents
ealize they are eligible for food tamps everal programs have deen aunched to find these people, such as
act REACH However, not all of these
grams are being met with co-operation A rding to Rick Cagan, Pitt County -rorect REACH director aimost JO thousand people are below the poverty ievel Only 10 thousand of these
Dordinator and F
ire reCeIVING toHod
stamos. Project
tarted by the North Carolina lepartment of Human Resources in 1974
NaS already initiated aid to this group of ted): if , RADI id! 4 Ihe Pitt County League of Women it
é
totaling $134,789 have been of Allied Health Professions by the US Healtt Education and
iwarded the ECU School Poart ment ‘
ne grant, which arnounted to $91 862 ntended to assist in the development of Undergraduate Dietetics
with the ECU Schoo! of Home
AOordinated
r rar, 9) Al
PPPBPAIDADPD DD ODO LY
152-5612
LS DPD DC
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SOO WINES
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PAPA D OO
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321 €. 10th St.
DANNON YOGURT(1O Flavors)
oe

19 IMPORTED BEERS AND ALES ) AMERICAN BEERS - KEGS (COMPLETE SET-UP) PONY KEGS (After July 16th)
Check our prices before you spin your wheels.
, Open 10-10pm MonThur. 2 10-10:30pm FriSat.
Voters banded together with Project Reach
to gain wide distribution of food stamps. The Board of Education however, has refused to give out food
stamp information in county schools At a Board of Education meeting on
April 6, the request was made by Rick Cagan, local education associations, and the ministeral association, along with other groups
According to Mrs. Anne Frost Vice-President of the League of Women Voters, the chairman of the Board of
Education claimed executive session after the presentation was made. The chairman Stated that persons concemed would be notified as to the Board’s decision
: Allied Health receives grants
The other grant, which totals $42,927, will supplement a major effort by the ECU Division of Health Affairs to recruit and educate in all the health professions an increased number of minority and disadvantaged group persons
The recruitment-training program will focus on identifying and acquiring the best available teaching materials in the allied health subjects to assist students with special educational needs

Greenviite
SSCHEESES


The North Carolina Statutes require the members of the Board to vote before convening an executive session. According to Frost. no such vote was taken
The North Carolina Open Meeting Law States that the public may be exciuded while the board considers certain items These items range from. property acquisition and legal counsel to the threat of a not. All other meetings are officially open to the public. Frost has submitted a letter to the Board requesting all similar meetings be open in the future
y waste poses problem
‘All of us have health and econom) investments in Pitt County, and we need protect those investments.” said Barnaby
“Also, the building of houses and othe types of construction are Causing some of the dedris,” he said
People hauling their trash to disposa
sites should consider the solid waste problem, Barnaby said Put a cover over trash to keep it fron
blowing, and make sure the containers are
secure in the vehicle,” he said
‘Pitt County has an ordinance protecting citizens against a harmfy environment,” said Pate. “The ordinance reguiates storage, transportation, and disposal of solid waste in Pitt. It provides for a fine up to $50 for violators
The cities in Pitt provide collectior service, if the citizens put the trash where
the collectors can get to it,” said Barnaby
“Outside municipal areas, the county operates a landfill at state road 1208,” said Pate. “Individuals can transport their trash there.”
Information regarding private and
poDlic Nauling can be obtained from the Pitt County Health Department

JOHN’
Bicycle Shop
Free Raleigh Grand Prix
To be given away July 28, 1975 to an ECU Student.
Fill out registration blank below and deposit it at Johns Bike Shop before July 25, 1975

JOHN'S BICYCLE GIVAWAY


Freshman Name Sophomore Address : J ‘Junior Phone Senior


Deposit at John's Bicycle Shop 530 Cotanche St.
1 entry per person please
Raleigh Grand Prix ais
Features of this outstanding light weight quality bicycle include
Grad. Greenville, N.C.

Close clearance, feature cut fully lugged frame, Weinmann Center pull Alloy brakes with extension levers. Wide flange hubs with quick release mechanism. SIMPLEX 10 speed gear fitted with 40-52T chainwheel with wide ratio cluster. Racing Gumwall tires soft quilt padded saddle








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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 576 JULY 1975
aC CISA RIOT tant tate tadnttataata nan ans antnd damian amatentndntinetnatatintiniateatntn

OO
Union programming handled by students
By JOHN EVANS Entertainment Editor
programming of major becoming more and more ized today, due primarily to nvolved in securing top name
' Most colleges today simply cant
sk the money involved in ringing in a top act for a concert,” says Cann Donahower, in @ recemt articie in Billboard nm college promot ions
A nanower, of Pacific Presentations in
eles, goes on to Say why colleges ye and more for tuming their
ers tO DIG-time promoters
3 professional promoter comes
i; jot of the headaches off the ayd Donahower. “Artists seem t and it's steady business for us tne job properly.” Ken Hammond, East Carolina rogram Osrector, finds the use of outside moters to be detrimental to the schoo!
ECU has the only major
Because . of Raleigh promoters are wx ome here,” said Hammond by it ECU we nave a policy where
motors can not promote a show on the tv t es
e reasoning behind this is that if we rented the facility Out to promoters to put Na « the students would ultimately be the es who suffered.” continued
S68, when a promoter puts on an
xt ata ege campus he rents out the ‘acility and, after that, the school has no ay ‘icket prices or the like. Often
mes the promoters will charge the tudents large prices to see concerts they ) actually get a break on Hammond said, however, that there are ‘vantages to letting promoters put i Show at East Carolina Tt yStem is possibly advantageous ‘al maxes it easier to book the bigger ac1S DecaUuSse a promoter has more capital work with Adcs Hammond, “In addition, the vomoter's NOt going to bring an act which ‘Ol going to Sell, beacause he wants to are OMe “ammond stated the disadvantages weigh (he advantages when promoters 8 USEC On a college campus Mow 'hen, are the major acts which m™é 'O tast Carolina booked A’ programming is done under the nion committees,” relates with myself as the one who rersees the total involvement of these T1Viles by the students involved.” “am mond explained that the acts are ‘a) Durchased from a promoter by the atudent "10n for a specific date. After burcnase Nas been made, the act "eS the total promotion of the East
believes this is a good it enables us to contro! ind get some revenue back from tions ‘ast Carolina policy involves an 198 Of Contracts, where Negot iat ons a Ne Tes take as long as 30 days to
’ x AuUSe
ine East Carolina policy SIS it is One of the best in the
TT SS
Overall, we have one of the better operations in the country said Hammond. “The degree of profession-
alism by our staff and the students is very good
Our system is one where every Sa'eguard is allowed to insure that the ‘udents are the ones looked out for.”
4t East Carolina, the base ievel for the Mayor Attractions committee budget is $50,000. The Major Attractions committee Nandies ail major promotions such as rock acts and circuses and operates on a “break even basis
if the committee budget goes above $60 000 explained Hammond, “then the extra revenue is funnelied into other Union cormumttee Dudgets or put to use in the creation of new programs
However, if the amount falis below $40,000. the money is replenished by Student Union funds. In theory, this is how it works.’
Hammond explained that the theory very rarely Molds true in the event the ommittee's budget fails beiow $40,000
The other committee's budgets are set at the beginning of the year and it is rare that they are willing to heip out another committee when the budget drops

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For this reason, if the Major Attractions committee's budget drops below $40 900, then they have just about programmed themselves out. $40,000 in this inflationary era is about the least one Can operate with successfully on the type of program we have at East Carolina.”
This would seem to be a reason for East Carolina to adopt a policy where professional promoters are brought in to take the financial risks, with the college taking a definite sum of revenue
But, Hammond once again referred back to the East Carolina facility, Minges Coliseum
Even though it is the biggest place east of Raleigh,” pointed out Hammond,
Minges’ capacity is only 6,500. This would mean that the promoter would have to charge prices in the $10 range in order to make a profit
‘With places like Greensboro holding 16,000 and Duke holding 9,000, it is more advantageous to the promoter to book an act at these places.”
Hammond clarified his explanation a little further
‘In most cases when the failure of a group to appear at East Carolina is not as a result of inadequate funds, the committee

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or the locality of East Carolina. It is more the result of the size of the capacity in comparison to other facilities in the state.”
Principally, promoters agree pro or con with what Hammond said. Each promoter has his own feelings towards college
promoting today But, as far as East Carolina
concerned, the use of professional promoters is an idea which blossoms elsewhere, but which is not suited for Eastern North Carolina or East Carolina
University in general
Recital news
A recital of music for flute and piano will be presented this Wednesday, July 9, at 8.15 in Fletcher Recital Hall. Fioutist Davis and pianist Gary Fountain will join together in a prograrn of music ranging from the Baroque era to the twentieth
century
Miss Davis received music degrees trom Northwestern University and East Carolina University and has recently joined the faculty of Southeastern Louisiana
University in Harnmond, Louisiana.
Mr. Fountain received music degrees trom Rollins College and East Carolina University and is well known in this area an
an accompanist
The concert is open to the public and
there is no admission charge
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Mh
6 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY 1975


Entertainment Arthur Penn interview on Night Moves

Arthur Penn is one of Hollywood's most distinguished directors. His major films, The Left-Handed Gun, The Chase, The Miracle Worter, Bonnie and Clyde, Alice’s Restaurant, and Little Big Man, have evoked critical acclaim as well as controversy. His latest work is Night Moves, which stars Gene Hackman as private investigator Harry Moseby
Along with several other major directors, Penn came to feature films through television
‘ came out of live television when the movie business was just beginning to recognize that maybe in TV lay the next generation of directors,” says Penn. “Del Mann had already come to Hollywood and directed Marty, and the rest of us, people ike Robert Mulligan and John Frankenheimer and Sidney Lumet and ail those guys, well, we were contemporanes in television at the same time
But went the other way. My impulse was Originally toward the theater, so went n that direction, but couldn't get a play at that point. was still doing lots of live television and then -red Coe, who was one f the producers from live TV, got a deal to make a picture at Warner Bros. called The
Left-Handed Gun. and then when he ouldn't get Del Mann and he couldn't get three of four others, he finally came around and asked me if would do it
wasn't terribly attracted to the idea of film at the beginning, though was attracted to the idea of making that particular film. Film as a career didn't seem to me to make a whole lot of sense. thought the real thing to be was a theater rector
Following a return to the theater and successive hit plays. “Two For The See-Saw” and “The Miracle Worker’, Penn returned to film and began to develop his present cinematic style
The funny thing about recognizable Style and themes, although I've heard a lot about them and I've read a lot about them,” says Penn, “is that don't see them when I'm making afilm. am just not aware that there is any style emerging, and then finally a style emerges, but it's way after the fact. Maybe a couple of years later I'l! perceive it
For instance, see a certain cutting style, a visual style, which is kind of nervous, energetic, maybe even hyper energetic. There is a faint, continuing residue of theatricality in all of my films. also shoot an enormous amount of film, so there's a vast ammount of coverage. Every thing in the picture is usually Covered in a multipicity of, not angles, but distances from the subject so that there is a long shot and a medium shot, a medium close and a closeup. also like to escalate a scene, dramatically, by the rhythm of the utting. do that often, and think that is a distinct technique of mine
n order to put his approach into effect Penn is drawn to scripts which present both a visual and psychological chalienge
Explains Penn, “Some of the most bizarre things attract me to a script. in the case of Night Moves , for instance, what attracted me was the possibility of doing a certain kind of visual story, which really
had to do with a glass bottom boat and an
atmosphere around the Florida keys. That was at one level, a sort of cinematic level. At what you might call the thematic, philosophical level, something else appealed to me, which concemed the image of the detective in question
“In every detective story I've seen, the detective was cast as a kind of super-human being who was way over the top of it, you might say, a man who could clearly see everything, solve the problem, and disappear from your life like Superman. thought it would be fascinating to have a detective, Harry Moseby, who was not able to simply isolate a problem and then find a solution Instead, his life would be inextricably interwoven with the problem, which, in turn, would generate other problems in a continuing cycle.”
The movie projects Gene Hackman as a tough, though vulnerable, romantic lead, the basis for his sex appeal, according to Penn, developing from his very humanness
“What believe is sexy about a man is when he has some of his defenses down The idea of creating this supermacho hero, in my Opinion, makes him a non-sexual being because would assume if you were the woman watching him you'd think well, all he could do is have sexual relations with a goddess because he's obviously a god. That kind of super-screen macho has to be invaded, and think that the way we invade it is by saying that Moseby is not greatly different from me, although he's a terrifically attractive guy who is caught up in a tough problem, complicated by a Situation with his wife which is clearly not going well. He's on the bounce, there's a girl who he picks up with down in Florida, and so on
“It's not too exceptional. The new girl is a kind of dislocated member of society, much as he is, and probably much as every one of us is. think that little window into somebody's soul is what accounts for sexiness, and Gene Hackman, since he is such an exceptionally fine actor and a physical presence as weil, carries it off beautifully.”
Night Moves is a film with a dual nature, which overlaps cause and effect relationships to illuminate Penn's specific intentions
We hoped to lure the audience into a kind of loss of wariness, to lower their Quard. We set up ‘his problem and Moseby goes out and on a relatively minor scale of interest he solves it. Except that the case goes on. The solution gives birth to a whole new series of problems and that's when the picture begins to now escalate in tempo, begins to pick up rhythm, and begins to go more and more into cinematics. It moves away from a kind of character delineation and moves
into what finally ends up as a pure cinema closure
There is hardly a word spoken in the last five or six minutes of the picture. The final solution is only visual; you discover who-done-it, but only by what you see, not by what you hear.”





Continuing Events
Exorcist, through Thursday
Linda Blair stars in this spiritual shocker dealing with things like black masses. sz: and demonic possession
The Devil's Rain, starts Friday
Another horrifying film. This one has a cast of heavies which includes Ems Borgnine, Eddie Albert, William Shatner and ida Lupino
Girls Who Do, late show Friday and Saturday X-rated adult entertainment
PLAZA CINEMA
Walking Tali, Part Ii, through Thursday
A sequel to Walking Tall, Part
PARK
Four Musketeers, through Thursday
Stars Oliver Reed, Chariton Heston, Faye Dunaway, Michael York Rick Chamberlain and Racquel Weich
Walking Tail, Part li, starts Friday.
lECU FREE FLICKS
July 18The Reivers with Steve McQueen
July 25-Up the Sandbox with Barbara Streisand
August 1-6leuth with Sir Laurence Olivier
August 8-Start the Revolution Without Me- Gene Wilder and Donaid Sutherianc August 15-Last Picture Show - Sybil Shepard and Timothy Bottoms.
ECU FREE CONCERT
July 21 at 8 p.m. on Carmmpus Mall Band to be featured will be “Momingsong”
PLAYS
“The Lost Colony” being performed every night at 8:30 p.m except for Sundays The play is performed at the Waterside Theatre of Ft. Raleigh National Historica! Site onRoanoke Island, N.C. Early reviews say this is the best performance of this play done. For more information write: The Lost Colony, P.O. Box 68, Mane N.C. Telephone number is 919-473-2177



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By JOHN EVANS Sports Editor
Last of a four-part series.
in an interview with THE FOUNTAIN- HEAD. East Carolina Athletic Director Clarence Stasavich said the East Carolina Arhietic Department was in good financial
shape
Although there are several institutions
that are having financial trouble,” said Sasavich. “We haven't experienced any real difficulties financially.
There was a time a few years ago when sur program was having problems. But that was a year where football turnout was poor and we had a non-drawing basketbal! team Things are much better now.”
Stasavich listed the success of football and basketball as drawing powers as one 4 the major factors conceming the operating capital that the Athietic Department had to work with
The financial aid which is offered to the athletics 1S generally determined by the student interests We generally get about 7,000 students at football games, 3,500 at basketball games and the next largest drawers are wrestling, swimming and paseba
As tar as overall funding of athletics is concerned, Stasavich gave a breakdown of where the money comes from
All budgets in the department are based on the revenue from the gate receipts. Pirate club contributions and Student fees.” said Stasavich. “Each ontnbute about a third of the money
The Pirate Club money is put into yant-in-aid money and the gate receipt are Supplemented to pay for the rest of the yant-in-aids. Since have been Athietic Orector, student fees have never been
a Spent for grant-in-aid.”
What are student fees used for?
Student fees are used for other expenses such as funding of other sports, ransportation and general administrative Costs
Under Administrative costs, Stasavich Sted, “transportation for office personnel wd taxes. salaries, supplies, conference dues nN «6 Stadium and gymnasium operation
Under the overall athletic budget, not ret abproved for 1975-1976 because of the NOspital ization of Clifton Moore, Stasavich
‘aid that all sports have a separate oudget as weil as Sports Medicine, OPOrt s Publicity, the band and the Neer leaders
: Stasavich said, however, that the wt chunk of the budget is generally he age for football. Although Cerne, 1d not disclose the exact — research showed that footbal! ane $400,000 of the projected WA) Dudget for next year
9, stasavich Said funding an “Athletic woe was @ very pinpoint thing, where 6 Dudget in each area is reviewed
Vy ia:
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY i.


“The budget for each item is gone over item-by-item with the coaches,” pointed out Stasavich. “In making up a budget you figure an overall income and then you can figure out how much each sport will get.”
Although scholarships are included in each sport's budget, the decision a5 how the money is to be spent is left up to the coaches
“The coach recommends the scholar- ships he needs and have to approve the number,” said Stasavich
“There has to be some administrative control, but the decision on who gets the gramt-in-aid is Getermined by the coach.”
CLARENCE STASAVICH Stasavich said that although football and basketbai! are the only sports where full scholarships are readily awarded, that ‘in the case of an exceptional athlete in a lesser-funded sport,” changes can be made in the budget to supply the scholarships without seriously hampering other money for that program Among other athletes, Carter Suggs is an athlete who falls under such funding. Stasavich said some sports like Lacrosse and Crew were dropped from the budget because they were not conterence sports. Stasavich listed the same reason for adding Rifle as a funded sport “When we added Rifle, we wanted to field a complete program of conference sports and the conference Nas. a rifle competition, so rifle was added,” said Stasavich As tar as the lacrosse program Ss concerned, added Stasavich, “the problem was that it was not a conterence sport and getting a schedule was hard The same was the case with crew Lacrosse is an ACC sport and such schools as Duke, UNC, N.C. State and Wake Forest field teams. However, within North Carolina these are the only schools with a varsity lacrosse team Stasavich admitted that football and basketball were funded drastically greater than other sports, but added that ECU is running an Athletic Program, and not just aprogram eer athletics is that a sport is played for fun and in athletics you play because you have to win
Added Stasavich, “Football, basketball and baseball are funded pretty heavily, but other sports are not as important. How ever, we do run an athietic program here.”
‘Our program is continuing to grow and Change, as it will Change even more in the future. in relation to other conference schools we seem to have a program that is sound. ECU is as well-funded as any conterence school and as weil staffed as any school.”
Stasavich admitted that comers are Cut, but then every budget has comers cut.
“We can't have a lot of nice things and good funding,” said Stasavich. “But we try to operate a financially sound program
“We try and fund the athletic program leaning to where the interests lie.”
Stasavich sees about 10 per cent increase across the board for the athietic teams next year
“We figure there will be about a 10 per cent increase in the budget from last year which is what we figured the increased costs will be, so there should be no added
Hurlers win
By JOHN EVANS Sports Editor
Going into last Monday's contest with Louisburg College, East Carolina's summer baseball team had falien deeply into the basement of the North Carolina Collegiate Summer League standings with a 2-6 record
But Sunday, a week later, the story was different as the dust settled on the Pirates’ 14-3 rout of Methodist College.
Sunday's win was the sixth in a row for the Pirates in a week which saw ECU score 48 runs in six games. That six-game string had brought ECU from last-place, five games behind leader North Carolina, into second-place, only two games behind the Tar Heeis
And going into last night's road contest with UNC-Wilmington the Pirates heid an 86 season record and, more important, the momentum to lead to a very successful season. A type of season which only a week earlier had seemed unlikely
But, as ECU coach GeorgeWilliams stated following ECU's 31 win over Methodist on Friday night, the Pirates began getting the breaks which had gone against them earlier
“We got a lot of bad breaks earlier in the season,” said Williams. “Lately, though, things have started to go our way a little bit more.”
Williams pointed out that the breaks were not the only factors in East Carolina’s surge last week.
“We've been getting good defense, good pitching and have started hitting the ball with men on hase. These are the things needed to win in baseball.”

tudent interest influences athletic funding
burden
“We anticipate a slight increase in income this year from last year and the football and basketbal! tearns will get an increase.
“The main reasons for this is that the costs of grants-in-aid is going up and travel expenses are also going up
“Other men’s sports will all get a slight increase. Women's sports will almost be doubled and because of this we won't give a 10 per cent increase to all sports.”
Stasavich feels that ECU sports is on a rise and that the school’s students are getting their money's worth. That is provided they take full use of their student fees. He estimates that for $27.00 a year the student gets over $100.00 worth of sports
Just how much of this does a student use? This and many other questions can only be answered by students. But the fact remains that athletics like football and basketbaii pay for the program and therefore the program pays for them. The rest get what is left
six in a row
All the things which Williams pointed out were present in ECU's six-game win streak. Not necessarily in every game, but with enough consistency to give the Pirates a winning touch.
“We have gotten some good pitching of late,” said Williams. “But it has been someone different every night who has come up and given us a lift. These guys really deserve a jot of credit for coming from 2-6 to 8-6 like they have.”
In looking over the Bucs’ present winning streak, Williams’ comments ring out true.
Starting with last Monday's 96 win over Louisburg, no fewer than six or seven Pirates have shared the heroes’ role in the six Pirate wins.
The catalysts, however, would have to gg Gentry, Dean Reavis and Addison
While Gentry (.409 for the week with nine rbi's) and Bass (.333 and nine rbi’s) led the Pirates at the plate, Reavis has won his last three starts, and lowered his ERA to 1.95 for the season, which leads the
On Monday against Louisburg ECU jumped to a 9-4 lead and Reavis fought off a pair of late Hurricane rallies to lead the
Continued on page 8.

nN tn tc tl saa Sa
: 4 .




8 FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 6, NO. 578 JULY 1975
eterna
ECU's Gentry is chosen as Player of the Week
East Carolina shortstop Ken Gentry has been selected as the weekly North Carolina Summer League Player-of-the-Week.
In Six games last week Gentry batted 409 with two doubles, two home runs and nine runs batted in.
But Gentry had plenty of competition for the Player-of-the-Week selection from teammates Glenn Card and Dean Reavis.
Card also batted .409 for the week and batted in 5 runs and Reavis appeared in three games, winning two and saving one.
Gentry was instrumental in leading ECU to a 6-0 record for the week, which pulled the Pirates up to 8-6 for the season.
Gentry's big game of the week came against Louisburg Thursday night. A- gainst Louisburg, Gentry blasted two home runs and batted in seven runs to lead ECU to an 86 win.
Elsewhere around the league, Meth- odist's Eari Bunn has hurled in 11 of the Monarch’'s 15 games. in 11 games this season, Bunn has pitched 62 13 innings. He has won two and lost three and has compiled a 3.89 ERA.


Even though Louisburg College is still pounding the bail, Charlie Stevens is batting .409 and Sonny Wooten is hitting 400, but has lost their iast five games nonetheless.
Louisburg coach Sam White said, “pitching is what is killing us right now.”
The pitching woes have dropped Louisburg to 5-10 and last-place in the five-team summer league. The Hurricanes are 5 12 games behind league leader North Carolina.
Summer League Standings as of July 6)
UNC-Chapel Hill 10 EAST CAROLINA
1 8 Methodist 7 6 5

UNC-Wilmington Loulsburg
WIN Streak conics tom pape 1.
The next night the Pirates downed UNC-Wilmington, 7-4. The Pirate batting Star was Glenn Card. Card batted in three runs with a single and a triple while Durham scattered nine hits for his first win of the season
Thursday it was Gentry’s turn to lead the Pirates to victory. Against his former team, Gentry smacked two home runs and batted in seven runs as ECU downed a siumping Louisburg, 86 to move out of the cellar
Gentry's first roundtripper came in the fourth with the bases loaded. The grand Siam gave ECU a 5-0 lead and when Gentry added a three-run biast in the fifth, ECU led 81
Louisburg scored five runs in the eighth inning when ECU committed three errors, Closing the score to 86. In the ninth, Louisburg got runners on first and second with no one out w, Osean Reavis came in, for Pete Conaty, to: ‘ire the next three Louisburg batters. Reavy save gave Starter Joe Heavner his first win of the season
On July 4, ECU reached .500 for the first time of the season when Bob Feeney defeated Methodist, 3-1, on a four-hitter. The Pirates’ offensive punch this game came from Geoff Beaston and Methodist hurler Ear! Bunn. After Card and Gentry singled in the fifth, Bunn threw a pick-off attempt into center field, which moved Card and Gentry into position to score the winning runs when Eddie Lawing and Beaston hit for clutch hits. Beaston’s triple scored both Lawing and Gentry with the go-ahead runs, giving him the Starring role along with Feeney.
But the Pirates’ last two wins of the week, Sunday's 14-3 rout and a 7-2 win over Carolina Saturday, were probably the most Convincing.
On Saturday, Smith came up with an excellent play on a low throw from Gentry to complete a ninth-inning double play which kept Carolina from scoring the winning run.
In the tenth, ECU exploded for five runs on six hits and took a 7-2 win. The winning run scored when Bass singled

with the bases loaded to score Brinkley and Smith. When Card and Gentry followed with run-scoring doubles the end was all to plain for UNC. Reavis benefitted from the Pirates’ outburst as he went the full ten innings for his third win
And Sunday, ECU put the finishing touches on their perfect week by trouncing, Methodist, 14-3. In embarass- ing the third-place Monarchs, ECU belted out 18 hits. Bass, Steve Bryant and Smith each got three hits. Bass batted in four runs and Smith three to lead the Pirates’ run scoring attack
Meanwhile, Durham scattered nine Monarch hits, one a homerun by Sam Tolar in the ninth, to pick up his second consecutive win
As a tearm the Pirates batted 314 for the week as Bass, Brinkiey, Card, Gentry and Smith all batted .300 or better
Now in second place, the Pirates meet the league leading North Carolina Tar Heels tonight at 7:30 at Harrington Fieid.
ECU STATISTICS as of July 6
Batting: Player AB R H RBI
Bass
Gentry
Card
Brinkley McCullough Beaston
Smith
Bryant Paradossi Lawing Haithcock 1 Williford 2 TEAM 491
Pitching :
AVG
GS 12 3D 7 Oa 18 316 12 245 13 232 13 226 13 217
a
de a
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0.00 0.00 1.96
in
2.67 2.78
gc77
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PRA Teale RBEBS-oF Srrzeesek Bese ZoaG RBSok Zouo8
ws
With ECU at 86 and UNC at 16 this will Set the stage for Tuesday's ar, bet ween the two teams in Greeny: :
Leader Carolina's nine game winning Streak was snapped on Saturday by East Carolina, 7-2, in a ten-inning game.

And get three games for only $1.00. Bring three friends along. We'll let them in on the deal, too.


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Our new location is the old “A’Mok” building located between Hodges and Proctors across from
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Tuesday A—H
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Title
Fountainhead, July 8, 1975
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
July 08, 1975
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.340
Location of Original
University Archives
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