Fountainhead, October 9, 1975


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Fountainhead
VOL. 7, NO. 9 EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
9 OCTOBER 1975, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA

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Campus housing
shows improvement
ByJOHNDAYBERRY
Staff Writer
The on-campus housing situation at
ECU has improved since the beginning of
the 75-76 school year, according to Dan
K. Wooten, director of housing.
"Although there were about 100
students that we were afraid we could not
house on campus, by the end of the first
two weeks of classes, there were enough
rooms said Wooten.
"This was because of the large number
of students who pre-registered for Fall
Quarter, and then did not show up.
"We furnished some of the rooms to
house three students, but all rooms were
down to two per room by the second
week
There are now 25-30 single vacancies in
the ECU dorms, mostly in the women's
dorms, according to Wooten.
"If a student's roommate moves out of
the room, the remaining student can keep
the room private by paying an additional
fee to the housing office.
"If no private room fee is paid, then we
can move someone in if the space is
needed.
"There is presently no way that we can
give a student who has a roommate a
private room, because there are no empty
rooms.
"Although there is no waiting list for
rooms with single vacancies, there is a
sizeable one for private rooms
The situation may change at the end of
Fall quarter due to withdrawals, but there
will also be an influx of students who lived
off campus during the quarter, according
to Wooten.
The off-campus student housing
situation in Greenville is still very
crowded, according to the local apartment
managers.
Student bicycle theft
becoming a problem
By HELEN TYLER
Staff Writer
Since the third of February, 1975, an
approximate number of 100 bikes have
been stolen on ECU campus. Only a very
small percentaae of these bikes have been
recovered and returned to the owners. Bike
thievery at ECU is a growing problem and
there does not seem to be a chance of
improvement anywhere in the near future.
Francis M. Eddings, of the ECU Police
Department, says that it is mainly up to the
students at ECU to help solve this
problem.
.Students who own bikes should secure
their bikes properly at ail times when the
bike is not being used. A cable or chain
which goes through both wheels and
locked to a stationary object is the safest
way to secure the bike. If the chain goes
only through one wheel, the wheel can
easily be removed, and a wheel from
another bike can be stolen to replace It.
Students who do not lock their bikes to
some stationary object are taking a very
big risk. Bikes can easily be lifted without
anyone noticing that the bike is being
stolen.
Any student bringing a bike on campus
must first register it at the Security Office.
A decal will be given to the student to put
on the bike so it can be identified. If a bike
is stolen, the chances of getting it back are
better if it has been registered. There is
only a 50 cents charge to register a bike.
The Greenville City Police work with
ECU police in getting the stolen bikes
back. Both places keep bikes which have
been found even if the bike has not been
registered in hopes that someone will
claim it. When the Greenville City Police
find a bike they check serial numbers with
the list of the ECU police to see if it is a
student's bike.
The SGA and ECU police have rebuilt
25 bikes to be used as courtesy bikes for
students who do not own bikes. Many of
the bikes which are stolen are really only
borrowed and found somewhere else on
campus than where the owner left it.
The purpose of the courtesy bikes is for
students who only need to borrow a bike
since they do not have one of their own.
They must not be locked or taken off
campus. They do not need to be checked
out anywhere. If a student sees one
parked, he is free to use and leave it when
he is finished with it. The bike will then be
available for another student's use.
ECU police are constantly on the
look-out for bike thieves. If someone is
caught stealing a bike, they will be taken
downtown to court.
Bikes are more likely to be stolen
during holidays when the campus is
deserted. Many students do not bother to
secure their bikes safely when they go
home for the holidays and should be
reminded to either take their bikes home or
up to their room during these times.
Bike thievery is a definite problem at
ECU and it takes everyone to help improve
it. Eddings would like to remind the
students, "Be more careful. Get your bike
registered
Over 11,000 bikes have been registered
at ECU since the beginning of fall quarter,
but if the bikes are not properly secured,
registering them will not be very much
help.
DANK. WOOTEN
SGA able
to spend
$169 thousand
By JIM ELLIOTT
News Editor
The Student Government has a balance
of $169,424.08 as of Oct. 5.
Larry Chesson, SGA treasurer, will
present this figure in a report to the
legislature Monday night along with the
Executive Council budget for this fiscal
year.
The SGA receives all its funds from a
$25.50 fee every full-time students pays
each quarter.
Chesson said Wednesday that the
treasury receipts as of Fall Quarter totaled
$251,288.49 including a surplus of
approximately $148 thousand that has
accumulated over the years.
So far this year the Executive Council
has appropriated $81,864.41, Chesson
said. This money partially funded the
Buccaneer, Fountainhead, WECU and the
SGA Executive Council and other campus
organizations for the current fiscal year
which began July 1.
According to Chesson, these funds
were needed for salaries and other
necessities required between the begin-
ning of the fiscal year and when legislature
can approve the regular yearly budgets.
During the summer, when the
legislature is not seated, the Exeuctive
Council assumes the power of
appropriation, he said.
Chesson said he will also present a
budget to the legislature for additional
funds needed by the Executive Council.
This budget requests $11,584.
Combined with the money already
appropriated to the Executive Council its
budget will be several thousand dollars
more than last year, said Chesson.
" This is mainly because of the increase
in salaries and the hiring of an attorney for
student consultations he said.
The Executive Council will also ask the
legislature for $1,450 for the North
Carolina Association of Student Govern-
ments, according to the treasurer.

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In our October 7, 1975 issue of the
Fountainhead we reported that the ECU
medical school is to be completed by Dec.
'1975. The correct date for the completion
of the med school is Dec. 1976.
Election
challenge
closed
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The Student Government Associate ?n's
September 30th election is still l
contested by candidates, but th
nothing they can do about its
according to James H. Tucker, D
student affairs.
Jeanne C. Robertson, SGA candidate
for day student representative filed a
complaint with SGA Attorney Genera!
Dennis Honeycutt.
Robertson, a physical education major,
lost by 18 votes which she believes she
could have gotten if the Minges Prec
was open on election day.
"At the mandatory meeting for ail
candidates, I was not told that Mmyes
would be open said Robertson. "My
fellow P.E. majors were not able to vote 'or
me since they only have classes in Minges
"It seems that no one remembers Roy
Turner (Election i Committee Chairman)
saying at the mandatory meeting that three
precincts would be closed except he and
Honeycutt, and Honeycutt wasn't e-en
there said one candidate.
The three precincts closed were
Minges, Allied Health and MendenhaM
Robertson voiced her complaint verbally
Wednesday morning before the elections
results were released. The next morning
she filed her written complaint with the
SGA executive secretary.
Honeycutt did not show up for two
scheduled meetings with Robertson after
the election.
Consequently, Honeycutt did not
receive Robertson's complaints within 24
hours as the SGA election rules require.
"There is nothing we can do about it
according to Dean Tucker said
Robertson. "Unleses Dennis Honeycutt
decides the complaints are valid the
results are final.
"The SGA did not give an official time
when the elections results were released
so the candidates did not know when the
deadline to file complaints was
Besides contesting the closing of the
three polling places, Robertson also said
in a written complaint that her name on the
ballot was not consistent with the other
names.
Her name was run to the edge of the
paper, and the line for the "X" was put
under her name, she said.
Robertson is just a "sore loser" said
Honeycutt. She does not have a valid case.
Finally in her complaint, Robertson
cited violations of the elections rules. She
said that while some students were
allowed to vote with tin activity card and
drivers license, other students were not
allowed to do so.
See Elections, page 23.





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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
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EditorialsCommentary
State netting results
North Carolina State had to go all the way South to Alabama to find a new
icellor to replace John T. Caldwell who retired at the end of June.
and, apparently State came up with a winner in Dr. Joab Langston Thomas,
v.no was Vice-President of Student Affairs at the University of Alabama.
Dr. Thomas becomes the ninth fulltime Chancellor for State, which began its
I year of operation last week.
The selection of Dr. Thomas appears to have already started netting benefits
State Not one full week after Dr. Thomas was named Chancellor,the
� oartment of Health, Education and Welfare dropped its case against State
d the proposed veterinary school that State hopes to land.
HEW had contended for almost a year that perhaps the vet school should go
N rth Carolina A&T in Greensboro, a predominantly black institution.
is interesting to note that Chancellor Thomas's old boss at Alabama was
i Javid Matthews, who several months ago was tapped by President Ford to
� me Secretary of HEW.
e action taken oy HEW in dropping its case against State was of such
tude that it is highly unlikely that the decision originated anywhere but
p. And, it never hurts to have a friend in court.
Je do not doubt Dr. Thomas's credentials, for they filled up no less than one
in the State newspaper. What we do wonder though is if there was not one
tte alumnus or administrator in the present UNC system that could have filled
5 Spot.
Out of all those engineers and scientists that N.C. State has turned out, and
vith all the other administrators in the system, it would seem that at least one
would qualify for the job.
We think it is a boost to a school when you can pick an alumnus for the top
b Apparently the selection committee at State, which reportedly reviewed
over 180 applicants for the job, did not feel that the school in Raleigh has turned
c it anyone capable of taking over the reigns.
ECU will be faced with the same situation in several years when Chancellor
Jenkins retires. Hopefully the selection committee for ihe job can find, if not an
ECU grad, at least a Tar Heel native capable of the task.
Some book worm
A New York lawyer has apparently carried the idea of being a "book worm" a
little too far.
During a recent inspection of the lawyers apartment fire officials discovered
the place was filled with library books literally piled from the floor to the ceiling.
A closer check found that the books belonged to the New York public library
and all told there were more than 15,000 books in the apartment.
It took the library three days using seven men to remove all the books. After
a final count a value of $125,000 was placed on the books.
The lawyer must have really enjoyed the stories in the books and just forgot
to return the books when they were overdue.
But, can you imagine the overdue fee on 15,000? At five cents a day it would
have cost the lawyer $7500 in fines for one day alone, much less for years on
some books.
The reader may be getting off cheaper than that though.
New York police officers charged him with theft.
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
prefer the latter
Thomas Jefferson
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor ,
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager-Sydney Green
Advertising Manaqer-Mike Thompson
News Editor- Jim Elliott
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise
Features Editor-Jim Oodson
Sports Editor-John Evans
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by the
Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during
the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.

I'M TIRED, NOT PR�PteD f ClASS, �DNT
FEEL WELL, NOLEAN CZLCHS, LBPT if
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Board request justified
The recent action by the Publications Board to include in their new by-laws a
request for any campus minority publication to be under their control is a
significant move by that committee.
The Pub Board presently directs operations of the three major campus
publications, Fountainhead, Buccaneer and Rebel. The Pub Board handles all
budget decisions for the publications, sets policy for them and hires and fires
editors. In case of a lawsuit against one of the publications, the Pub Board
would be the group getting sued, not the individual publication or editor.
It is only fair then that any other student publication that is financed by
student fees, should be under the control of the Pub Board. To allow one
publication free to roam under loose control is not fair to the other publication
and at the same time a dange-ous precedent.
The operations of the minority newspaper last year is a good example.
Last year the SGA directly funded a minority publication, the Ebony Herald.
And the SGA supposedly controled the operations of that publication.
But, to find someone in the SGA who actually had a handle on the
publication and its many far flung directions was hard to find.
The publication for the most part was of poor quality and several times
published material that was questionable as far as taste and newspaper ethics
were concerned.
Under a Pub Board that watches the operations of the publications, this
misconduct would have not been allowed to continue. But, under the loose
guide of the SGA the publication continued, free to wander wherever they so
choose.
Close scrunity of publications on this campus is most important.
We would welcome a minority publication on campus, a good minority
publication would be a welcomed addition to the other publications on campus
and we would support such a move to establish one.
But, such a publication should be under the same controls as the other
campus publications.

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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
orum
Film committee not at
fault for movie mix-up
To Fountainhdad:
In response to the "royally disgusted
student I feel that I must defent the Films
Committee. Once and for ail, we are not
responsible for the actual showings of the
films. Our job is to select films which we
feel are of quality, of wide appeal and of
general value to the student body. As for
"not caring what kind of service the
students are getting for their money we
attack the task of selection of films very
seriously, frequently vetoing our own
preferences in favor of those more likely to
be met with wide approval.
We do not run the projector and are not
in control of the ushers at the showings. A
member of our committee present at the
admittedly disastrous showing of
"Cinderella Liberty" inquired as to what
was going on and was herself rather rudely
rebuffed. We are concerned - we just have
no say in the matter.
As for screening the members of the
Committee, we are screened for
membership like any other applicants for
Student Union committees.
We are all sorry about the screw-up of
"Cinderella Liberty and we're concerned
that students get to see what they want.
We cannot, however, accept any blame in
this matter.
Sincerely,
Barbara Mat hews
Films Committee
SGA reminder to a Mend
To Fountainhead:
In the mist of politics, it is not always
wise to play games for in the end someone
gets hurt. Government should not fall in
the hands of a given coalition or party to
decide for all, but should comprise an
outlet for the needs of the constituents.
Lessons of history do not bear repeating.
Government should be open especially
at the local level as on this campus. I
believe that there are no events that are
relative to security and illusion that should
be hidden from the students of ECU. The
SGA in the past has been an open and
commonsense body, consisting of mostly
Rugby players
concerned individuals that are concerned
with all areas of campus community.
Power blocks seemed to never have been
obvious not of a vanitative nature. This
year's SGA I hope will be a wise body, for
that is what is needed. It has great
potential if conducted in the right manner.
In reflection upon the past as history
majors often do, I fear the thoughts of
conflict. Diplomacy even in the crudest
form, is more effective than hostility. The
year is young and the right context of mind
is essential
Directed to an old friend in a friendly
manner.
Don Rains
wanted
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To Fountainhead:
Would the person vho put an ad for a
rugby meeting in September, please
contact the North Carolina Rugby Union at
919 829-7342 (w) or 834-2761 (h). A starters
packet for new clubs could be sent to you
if your address were known. If you don't
wish to call, the address is: 2529Newbold
St Raleigh, N.C. 27603.
L.E. Babits
Forum policy
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ax-
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters
should be signed by their authoifs;
names will be withheld on request. Un-
signed editorials on this page and on the
editorial page reflect the opinions of the
editor, and an not necessarily those of
the staff.
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-
fuse printing in instances of libel or
obscenity, and to comment as an
independent body on any and all
issues. A newspaper is objective only in
proportion to its autonomy.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
By DANIEL PREVATTE
Luke 12:24 "Consider the ravens, for
they neither sew nor reap; and they have
no storeroom nor barn; and yet God feeds
them; how much more valuable are you
than birds
"Said the robin to the sparrow, Friend I
would really like to know why these
anxious human beings seem to rush and
worry so. Said the sparrow to the robin,
Friends I fear that it must be that they have
no heavenly Father such as cares for you
and me
unknown
Luke 12:27, 23 Consider the lilies, how
they grow; they neither toil nor spin; but I
tell you even Solomon in all his glory was
not arrayed as one of these.
For life is more than food, and the body
more than food
Matt. 4:4 "For it is written, man shall not
live by bread alone, but on every word that
proceeds out of the mouth of God
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FBI agents real
Watergate heroesk
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By JACK ANDERSON
with Las Whitten
WASHINGTON-Still hidden in secret
grand jury transcripts and locked
prosecutors' files is the dramatic story of
how the Watergate case was broken.
We have spent weeks interviewing FBI
sources, government prosecutors and
defense attorneys to get the details that
never came out at the public hearings.
The real heroes of Watergate, we have
concluded, were the FBI agents who
wouldn't let the White House obstruct their
investigation and the original Watergate
prosecutors who painstakingly fitted the
jigsaw pieces into a criminal conspiracy.
The three unsung prosecutors�Earl
Silbert, Seymour Glanzer and Donald
Campbell-handed the case on a silver
platter to the special prosecutor and his
staff of 90.
They had no way of knowing in June,
1972, that President Nixon personally had
issued the order to cover up the trail of
break-ins, bag jobs, forgeries, frame-ups,
rough-ups and buggings, which we now
know as Watergate.
The FBI agents, therefore, encountered
incredible obstacles from the moment they
started down the Watergate trail. The key
witnesses either lied outright or withheld
vital information.
As an example, the G-men for weeks
couldn't identify the two chief culprits, G.
Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt, who
were known to them only as George
Leonard and Ed Warren.
The notorious pair were well know, of
course, inside the White House, which
paid them blackmail to lay low. The CIA,
which provided the phony identities, also
knew them.
Late in the morning of the Watergate
arrests, Liddy sought out then-Attorney
General Richard Kleindienst on the
Burning Tree golf course. Thus, the
Attorney General actually met one of the
ringleaders whom the FBI was seeking.
On July 6, the CIA finally delivered a
memo to the acting FBI director, Pat Gray,
revealing that Liddy and Hunt had been
furnished false identities. Yet Gray locked
the memo in his sage, without breathing a
word of it to his own agents.
Not until November, 1972 did the
prosecutors learn the true identities of
George Leonard and Ed Warren. And it
was April, 1973, before they found out
about Liddy's meeting with Kleindienst on
the golf course.
Meanwhile, John Dean telephoned
Gray from the White House daily to find
what progress the FBI was making. On
several occasions, Dean slipped through a
private door in Gray's office to pick up FBI
teletypes, transcripts and raw reports on
the Watergate investigation.
Dean also prepared White House
witnesses for their FBI interviews and then
sat in on the questioning. And for awhile,
he was permitted to attend interviews that
the prosecutors conducted.
The prosecutors also gave their
superior, Assistant Attorney General
Henry Petersen, progress reports. He
passed on the key developments to Dean
and, sometimes to the President himself.
Thus, the White House knew every step
the prosecutors were taking and,
therefore, could keep ahead of them. But
the President's men did not reckon with
the determination of a judge named John
Sirica, the diligence of the press not the
doggedness of the prosecutors and
G-men.
Waterbugger James McCord, under
threat of a long prison term, was the first
to break. When one of the White House
conspirators, Jeb Stuart Magruder,
received a lofty new appointment, McCord
complained bitterly to John Dean: "I'm
going to prison and Magruder's getting his
picture in the papers
To save himself, McCord began to spill
what he knew. The prosecutors
immediately summoned Liddy, who was
tight-lipped as ever about his Watergate
role. But they deliberately detained him
and engaged him in idle conversation.
This generated alarmed whispers
inside the White House that the
unpredictable Liddy was talking. A panicky
Magruder flew to Bermuda in search of a
lawyer who had been recommended. And
the President dispatched Dean to Camp
David to write a Watergate report.
The cool, calculating Dean suspected
the President was setting him up. For if
Dean committed the White House cover
story to writing, he might make himself the
prime scapegoat. He, therefore, put
nothing on paper. Instead, he telephoned
his lawyer, Thomas Hogan, from Camp
David.
Hogan recommended an able trial
lawyer, Charles Shaffer, who met them
secretly in an out-of-the-way apartment in
the Washington suburbs. It took Dean
seven hours to summarize the conspiracy.
"It has to end he conclucded. "I'm ready
to end it
"Don't run into the machine guns yet
Shaffer advised. He sought out the
prosecutors to see what kind of a deal he
could make. The chief prosecutor, Earl
Silbert, refused to grant Dean immunity.
Arrangements were made, nevertheless,
for Dean to tell his story so the
prosecutors could judge what kind of a
witness he would make.
There followed a series of secret
meetings with the prosecutors, sometimes
lasting most of the night, in Shaffer's
Rockville, Md office.
Magruder, meanwhile, tried to lie to his
lawyer, James Sharp, who finally told him
bluntly: "Jeb, pretty soon you're going to
have to tell me the truth
When Magruder finally told the truth,
Sharp advised him: "Jeb, you've got no
choice. We should go to the prosecutors
and make the best deal we can
One by one, Silbert hauled tle wit-
nesses before the grand jury. Before he
was finished, the Watergate case had been
cracked.
�MH





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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 197.N
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FEATURES
OFF THE CUFF
You'll never get to Heaven
ByJIMDODSON
Features Editor
Wednesday 6:30 a. m
Sitting quietly at my desk gazing out over a quiet campus. The office is deserted and
still, the coffee adequate, and the thoughts, though misty from slumber, are beginning
to flow. Today will be good. A good day to write a column.
"Hhhrump I hear behind me. Startled that any human soul could be up and around
at this ungodly hour, I swivel around to find a rather rotund-looking little man standing
by my desk, dressed in a neat three-piece oxford tweed suit, and tortoise shell spectacles
perches high on cherub-like nose. He is holding a notebook.
"Good morning he says with a friendly nod.
"Hello, what can I do for you?" I ask, effecting a cordial tone.
"Oh, nothing really. I've just come down to check up on you. Our accounting
department occasionally likes to make inquiries into our "borderline" cases.
"Borderline case? What the hell, you from the registrar? My grades are fine. As a
matter of fact I'm just about to graduate
"Oh yes indeed, we know all about that. But this matter concerns another grade
book
"Other grade book? Man what on earth are you talking about?"
"Ah he smiles, "the grade book I'm talking about HAS NOTHING to do with this
earth son. I'll give you a hint. I represent that great grade book in the sky
"Huh? Wait a minute
"Come on, you can get it. The "eye in the sky the "pearly gates and "the man with
the plan understand?"
No one has to hit me with a hammer. This is it, I think. The end of my life right before
me. I'll die at my desk, slumped over the keys. Quick, catch one last glance of ole ECU
before you go. "Oh God I sigh.
"Right See that was easy wasn't it. But don't worry about it, your time hasn't come
yet. Not quite yet. We just want to update some of our records
Stunned, I recover enough to realize the hot coffee that once graced my styrofoam
cup is now scorching its way through my pants, where I have just calmly dropped it.
Well, uh are you from the "good place" or the bad place?" I ask.
� Oh from the good place, to be sure. We don't handle "their" accounts. We've just
been hearing some things about you and wanted to check them out. After all, you may
want to apply for admission to "our place" someday.
"Allow me to introduce myself says he extending a gold-blazoned business card.
Mortimet Angelely, executive inquirer for Father-Son-Holy Ghost, Inc 1000 Pearly
Lane. Heaven
(O.K. I think sitting back in my chair. This is really a cute joke. I wonder which of my
friends is responsible for this. Pretty elaborate joke, they almost had me believing he's
for real.)
This little man opens his notebook.
(Alright, I'll play along with it. What the hell, I didn't feel like writing a column
anyway. Heh, heh, heh.)
"Well, Mr. Angelely I say putting my feet on the desk, "what would you like to
know?"
"Well frankly Mr. Dodson, we've been a bit concerned about your attitude regarding
religion since you've been at ECU
"That so (smirk, smirk), "well what's wrong with it?"
"Participation for one thing. Our records show that only twice in four years have you
gotten up and gone to church on Sunday morning
"Well, that's because I might not get back in time to see the opening kick-off. Sure
would hate o miss a minute of NFL action
"Yes but HE thinks you should come more often
What's the matter, doesn't HE watch football?"
"Yes, when HE's not out trying to solve wars without them looking like miracles. HE
catches a game or two
"Who is HIS team?"
"The Saints. But that's not the issue here. Why don't you c me to Communion more
often?"
"Do you serve stewed prunes at communion?"
"No, but if you drink some black coffee before you come it might help to sober you
up
"O.K. I'll try to come next time. But tell me, how is HE going to solve the Middle East
mess?"
"It's all part of the plan my son
"Yeah, but who is HE planning on to let win?"
"I can't tell you that, but I'll say this; next year will be a good one for sesame bagels
and creme cheese
"And devil's food cake?"
"That's not funny. That's the whole problem, you treat religion too lightly
"For instance?"
till you raise a little
"Like last Christmas when you warned readers not to give money to the Salvation
Army because they would just go out and buy expensive tubas. And last year, when you
applied to Oral Roberts University, listing under qualifications�prodical son
"I just did that because I knew it would really be a 'miracle' if I got in
"Yes, but HE didn't appreciate the humor
"Doesn't HE have a sense of humor?"
"Of course, HE watches all of Billy Graham's crusades. Once in a while HE even calls
up "Dial-A-Prayer But HE's concerned about you
"Well, I've done good things at ECU. Once I remember when I found "Jesus saves
green stamps" carved into my desk in the dorm and I got out my pocket knife and carved
'to help the folks on welfare' beside it
"So, that's one point in your column
"I also went to see the Ten Commandments three times
"He doesn't like Charlton Heston
"Well guess it's like the old saying, 'one man's heaven is another man's hell
"HE didn't say that. But what is your conception of Heaven?"
"Immaculate
"He's not laughing
"How 'bout if I tell you a great St. Peter joke. One day Saint Peter was leaning up
against the pearly gates, catching a quick snooze, when
"Don't make fun of Saints
"Oh, I'm not. Actually I'm quite fond of them. I even have one
"Really? St. Matthew, Luke, Paul?"
"No, Bernard. Patron saint of snowbound winos
"Do you believe in HIM? Or are you an atheist?"
"I don't believe in aethism, because if the end of the world was to suddenly come and
the earth was shaking all over the place, which way would people look?"
"I get your point. Well how do you feel about heavenly bodies?"
"There's a girl in my English history class who really has had a heavenly body
"And what about faith?"
"Well, once while thumbing home for the weekend, a red neck gave me a life. No
sooner had I gotten in the pick up than he was off like a flash. He popped a "cool one"
and settled back as we whipped along the highway at about 90 mph, dodging cars and
trucks, and singing along with Buck Owens. That's when I noticed a figurine hanging
from the rear view mirror. On it was written: "I don't care if it rains or freezes 'long as I
got my plastic Jesus dangling from the dashboard of my carI can go ninety miles an
hour, long as I got the 'holy power' sittin' there on the dashboard of my car Right then
and there I realized the power of faith. So I took a "cool one" myself and settled back
knowing it would be another "miracle" if I lived through it.
"See, miracles do come true if you have faith
"And a weak kidney, cause he had to pit stop a few miles later and I hit the pavement
fast
"I see. Well, that's about all the time I can spend with you. I have a few more stops to
make before I head "back up there
"Well glad you stopped in Mort. Come back anytime
"Thank you. Just remember you will have to pay for your sins at ECU
"It's a sin what you have to pay at ECU. Do you take mastercharge "up there?"
"And like the cigar commercial says; sooner or later, we're gonna get you
�.� �-����
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ROCK 'N SOUL inc.
208 Eatit 5th Street
Dan Fogelberg
Crosby & Nash
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Bonnie Raitt
Eagles
Jethro Tull
Neil Young
'Captured Angel'
'Wind on the Water
'Stills'
'Home Plate'
'One of these Nights'
'Minstrel in the Gallery
Tonights the Night'
Wm
Alvin Lee 'Pump Iron'
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
5
FEATURES
Refrigerator red tape
No fun like SGA fridge
By AUCE SIMMONS
Staff Writer
To a hardnosed thief, the felonious
acquisition of a Student Government
Association refrigerator is child's play in
contrast to the scarlet (not just red) tape
any indolent but honest individual must
fight through in obtaining a refrigerator.
The female "Sloth" of ECU is
discouraged by the tremendous refrig-
erator lines behind Memorial Gwm on
Registration Day and retreats from the hot
pollor totally disillusioned by the SGA's
inability to ikeep peace; and order in
99-degree weather. (This line-avoider is
easily detected by a faint stream of smoke
emitted through both ears and an even
fainter muttering under the breath.)
Ms. Sloth (who really, honestly, truly,
genuinely wants a Mr. Cool refrigerator) is
told later via phone conversation with SGA
officials that she must report to the rental
office (231 Mendenhall) on the following
Monday at 3 p.m. Upon arrival there, she is
informed that she must report again to the
rental office on the FOLLOWING Monday
(also at 3 p.m.)
On Monday, Sloth (after hatching a
"Eureka brainstorm) sets out half an hour
early for the by-now-infamous Mendenhall
Office 231. Her self-assured smile and
hyper-confident jaunt dissolve as she
suddenly encounters a "blankety-blank"
line 29 miles long (not really, but it sure
gets the point across!)!
Sloth resigns herself to waiting behind
the multitude in hopes that the
refrigerators are not depleted. The line
slowly erodes and within a few, short
hours, she finds herself in the doorway of
Office 231 and is greeted by an efficient
refrigerator distributor from the SGA
("ONE OF THEM)
"Just fill out this contract. That will be
$34.00. Oh rats! You'll have to wait
momentarily while I get change for this
five. Make yourself comfortable
Fifteen minutes melt by before the
distributor returns to her office and prods
Sloth off her desk.
"Here's your change. Pick up your
refrigerator on the mall today. If you miss
the truck you'll have to get your refrigerator
somewhere downtown
Sloth hastens to the mall, eager to
catch the truck before it leaves. She creeps
into line and prepares for another lengthy
wait. She is finally pointed toward her
designated refrigerator (mistaken for
modern sculpture when she sees a glop on
top that may have resulted from a too hot
hotplate).
Sloth, in her innocence, wonders which
of the three hunks of masculinity before
her will transport her newly rented
refrigerator to her room. No one moves, to
Sloth's chagrin, until she herself strains to
COMING IN TUESDAY'S FOVNTAINHEAD
'How Much Does It Cost To Die
a look at the funeral home industry
BY Jackson liar rill
ELBOW ROOM
DISCO WEEK
NO COVER CHARGE ALL WEEK
TUESDAY 0CT.7 - TUESDAY OCT. 14
Every Sun. Night Is Ladies Night
Look For The 16 to. CRUNCHER!
lift the heavy appliance.
Sloth is proud (30 minutes, one half
mile, and two flights of stairs later) that
she has braved the poison-tipped arrows of
the SGA. She has conquered the
unconquerable by scrupulously attaining
her much-needed refrigerator (which still
required an adapter plug).
Sloth, with a smile of self-satisfaction,
flings open the door of "Mr. Cool" and is
practically floored by its orodiferous filth
and ghastly appearance. Sloth gives up
and puts the heavy-duty cleaning off until
tomorrow. Meanwhile she dreams up nasty
little schemes aimed at relieving the SGA
of its overflowing treasury. ("With
$148,000, I could incorporate my OWN
underground refrigerator rental service)
No jingle today
(CPS-ZNS)-A reversible birth control
device for men has reportedly been
developed by medical researchers at the
University of Missouri.
The device�called an "ultrasonic
chair-works by applying low-level doses
of hi-frequency vibrations to a man's
testicles, making him sterile for an
indefinite length of time.
Researchers say the ultrasonic chiar
could be used in a doctor's office, and
predict that someday the contraception
machines could become a common
bathroom fixture.
But the ultrasonic chair is still said to
be in the early experimental stage and not
yet ready for widespread use.
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6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
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Hinges fence project
cost nearly $20,000
By KEN CAMPBELL
Approximately $19,201 worth of metal
fencing has been erected on the athletic
fields adjacent to Minges Coliseum, at no
cost to the students, according to C.G.
Moore, vice chancellor of Business Affairs
at ECU.
The 4,800 feet of fence was erected in
segments over the last 18 months. The
first segment was erected to replace a
white picket fence which was destroyed
during the widening of Charles Street. It
was not on ECU property.
The new fence runs parallel to Charles
Street and around the practice football
field. The fence, erected because the
athletic departmert requested a fence to
keep cars off the football field during
football season, costs $9,508.
The second segment separates a
warehouse on Charles St. from one of the
ECU intramural sports fields. It begins
behind the warehouse and ends at Sanford
Drive. Costing $7,302, it is four to six feet
high and 1,763 feet long.
The third and most recent fence is an
800 feet long, three feet high fence that
costs $2,391.
It was erected inside Ficklen Stadium
to keep fans off the football field,
according to Moore.
It is a chain link fence with metal posts
that replaced a chain link fence which had
wooden posts.
4.800 FEET OF NEW FENCE has
segment adjacent to Charles Street.
erected around Minges Coliseum. Shown is a
CLASSIFIED
HEY! Yamaha classical guitar for sale.
Purchased just 4 weeks ago brand new but
must sell for cash immediately! New $140,
now only $100. 752 7398.
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. NO
experience required. Excellent pay.
Worldwide travel. Summer jobor career.
Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX
Dept. 12, Box 2049, Port Angeles,
Washington 98362.
FENDER Twin Reverb Amp. Only 1 year
old. One Fender Professional Series 15"
speaker. $375. 752 7398.
BOOK TRADER located corner Evans
and 11th. Trade your paperback books,
buy used paperbooks, also comic books.
Open Tues. Sat. 9 4.
SPEAKER CABINET Two 12's. Great
extension cabinet, very well built and in
good shape, only $100. 752 7398.
FOR SALE: '64 Buick, white with red
interior, good tires (snow tires on back).
Needs muffler and radio antenna. Price
$175.00.
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic
guitar. Excellent condition. 758-1207.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar -
two pickup exc. condition $100.
Call 752 7398.
WANTED: Commercial photographers.
Need 20 photographic models for
advertising and sports promotion. Experi-
ence helpful but not required. Outstanding
appearance a must. Apply in person at
Studio Photographen, MA. McGilvery &
Associates. 1131 South Evans (corner of
12th & Evans) 15 p.m. Mon. Fri.
GUITAR AND BASS LESSONS given
afternoons daily. Beginning and Inter-
mediate 752 5110.
FOR SALE: '65Olds, $200.00 Call 758 0497.
STURGILLGUITAR Carolina 100 model.
69th one made. W .case. $425. Call
7529496
Computers play vital role
By JAMES PERRY
Staff Writer
A complex which goes unnoticed
around campus is the ECU Computing
Center (ECUCC). Under the direction of Mr.
Richard Lennon, this complex is becoming
a vital organ in the university system.
At present the center uses a Burroughs
B-5500 computer system. This model was
introduced in 1962. The present model
arrived in 1972 replacing the former
systems (IBM 360-20 and 360-30).
The computing center also maintains
service with the Triangle University
Computation Center (TUCC). This link-up
provides a greater supply source for data.
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In size the Burroughs system occupies
what is equivalent to one and one-half
classrooms. The computing center as a
whole occupies the East wing of Austin's
first floor. Offices are located in A-107.
By now many students have had tests
that were computer graded. You often
wonder if the machine hasn't cheated in
some way.
Despite advanced technology it still
remains, according to Lennon, that human
error leads to a computer error.
Test grading is only one of a varied
number of services the ECUCC has to
offer. The services are both functional and
instructional.
Data processing and storage are
examples of an important functional
wmmmmgmmt m m n i i nm i � i
service. Data can be stored on tape and
disc and the processing speed is
incredible.
All of these services are available to
students, administraiton and faculty alike.
There are several reference sources
available to interested persons.
One reference source is the ECUCC
Newsletter which is available monthly in
A-108.
The second reference source may be
experienced in the classroom. These
courses (Math 200 and Acct. 122) are
concerned with computer programming.
Also available for a small charge is the
ECUCC Users' Guide, another good and
indepth source.
WANTED TO BUY: Wilson T 2000 tennis
racket, 4 58 medium. Call 758 6366
Monday and Wed. after 6:30 p.m.
FOR RENT party house 91' x 28 6 12
miles east of Greenville. Private parties
only, plenty of parking. 758-3079.
BICYCLE FOR SALE. Men's 10 speed,
orange Schwinn Varsity, excellent
condition, 1 yr. old. $55. 758 1455.
FOR SALE 1971 Open GT, excellent
condition, low mileage. $1800. Call
7589153.
ROOMMATES NEEDED 1 or 2 to help
share semi-furnished Village Green Apt.
Call Dwight Waller or Mark Bunch day or
night. 752 2434.
FOUND Ladies watch. 758 8631.
YOUNG COUPLE (with infant) are
looking for student to exchange part time
work for a room. 752 0928.
WANTED for new art shop photographs,
ceramics, crafts and such for sale on
consignment come by w sample between
15 p.m. Mon. Fri. Studio Photographen,
M.A. McGilvary & Associates, 1131 South
Evans (corner of 12th & Evans).
PART TIME WAITRESS pick your own
hours. Call 752 2024. Experienced bartend
er needed Call 752 2024.
SAAD'S
SHOE
SHOP
Material and
Workmanship
Guaranteed
Prompt Service
113 Grande Ave.
758-1228
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
7
Last year's SGA budget totalled$.3 million
SGA1974-75 BUDGET
TOTAL APPROPRIATIONS:
SURPLUS CARRIED FORWARD
REVENUE Student Feesl
INTEREST ON CC7S
INTERESTONTREASURYHLLS
INTEREST ON OVERDUE LOANS
REVENUE ON FRESHMAN REGISTERS
ECU PLAYHOUSE
MINORITY AFFAIRS
NCSL
PHOTOGRAPHY
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
PUBLICATIONS
WECU
PRESIDENTS CONFERENCE
HOMECOMING STEERING COMMTTEE
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS
SCHOOL OF MUSIC
PUBUC RELATIONS
COMF1 DENT! AL LOANS
NCASG
297,733.76
146,919.06
261,378.50
6,075.26
4,744.50
677.85
306.00
25,787.06
1,520.00
3,269.82
3,890.00
25,245.60
120,309.64
14,549.01
140.03
2,000.00
3,094.30
10,129.00
420.00
1,600.00
127.00
MODEL UN
BUCCANEER
XEROX EXP.
STUDENT CONSUMER UNION
REAL CRISIS
FRESHMAN NEWSLETTER
IAWS
TRANSIT SYSTEM
SUMMER ORIENTATION
EMERGENCY LOAN
EBONY HERALD
SIGMA TAU DELTA CONF.
SGA BANQUET
SENIOR CLASS
CLUB FOOTBALL
FOUNTAINHEAD RETREAT
COUNSELING PROGRAM
UNIVERSITY MARSHALLS
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
SUMMER SCHOOL TUITION
SUMMER BASEBALL
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2,307.20
32,773.56
724.48
1,394.00
2,000.00
42.00
3,749.40
26,514.00
2,500.00
5,600.00
900.00
162.51
1,275.00
2,441.13
715.00
250.00
150.00
110.00
810.00
234.00
1.000.00
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8
F0UNTA1NHEADV0L. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
m
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Kent State killings unjustified
By CURT KOEHLER
(CPS)The commanding officer of the
Ohio National Guard at the time of the
Kent State shootings repeatedly told a
federal grand jury investigating the
incident that the shootings were
unjustified, according to a story in the
Cleveland Plain Dealer
l he disclosure of former adjudant
general Sylvester Del Corso's secret
testimony is expected to boost the
changes of an upcoming appeal in the $46
million Kent State civil damages suit,
according to lawyers close to the case.
During the civil trial U.S. District Court
Judge Don Young had refused lawyers for
the parents of the four dead and nine
wounded students permission either to
ask Del Corso whether he considered the
shooting justified or to introduce Del
Corso's grand jury testimony into the trial.
The plaintiffs accused Del Corso, Ohio
Gov James Rhodes, former Kent State
University President Robert White and 26
guardsmen of depriving the dead and
wounded students of their civil right to life
and liberty "under color of law Exclusion
of Del Corso's testimony was considered a
major blow to the case against the state
and university officials.
Del Corso, accoring to the Plain
Dealder story, told a federal grand jury 16
times on Feb. 26,1974 that the guardsmen
were not justified in shooting - or even
aiming- at the students gathered oh the
Kent campus during a demonstration
protesting the American invasion of
Cambodia.
The Cleveland paper said Del Corso
"faced intense and repeated questioning
about the shootings" and reported that
"after what appeared to be an initial effort
to sidestep the question, Del Corso clearly
and consistently told the grand jury that
the Guard was wrong to shoot
"I say it was unjustifiable, because as I
see it, I can't see how it can be justified
Del Corso testified. "And to me, overall,
like I say. I can't see any justification in it
A grand juror asked Del Corso, "With
the distance the students were at, the
closest onewas 60 feet and the other
was 700 feet away, do you think they were
justified at aiming at the students?" Del
Corso responded, "No I don't think they
were at all
"Because certainly someone 100 feet or
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even 200 feet away, I don't think creates a
danger to the man's life unless he has a
gun or something and is charging at him
with something that could threaten his
life Del Corso continued. "But certainly
anyone that far away, there is no
justification to shoot
The general, a 42-year military veteran,
also said:
-The Kent State University administra-
tion was "very, very negligent" and should
have provided the students with a place to
hold a protest rally on the day of the
shootings. This dispersal of the students'
rally immediately preceded the shooting.
-Based on photographs of the
shootings the guardsmen were not
surrounded and their lives were not
endangered by the students.
-According to the Guard's investi-
gation there was no sniper fire prior to the
shootings.
The heart of the case against the state
and university officials had been to try to
prove that the various officials had acted
unjustifiably in dispersing a lawful protest
rally.
In refusing to allow Del Corso's
testimony to be introduced into the trial
Judge Young ruled that Del Corso could
not be forced to testify as an expert
witness-and consequently offer potential-
ly damaging opinions on whether the
shootings were or were not justified�
against himself.
This ruling, according to Joseph
Kelner, chief lawyer for the plaintiffs,
forms one of the grounds for the upcoming
appeal of the case. According to Kelner,
Judge Young made numerous prejudicial
rulings on the introduction of evidence
into the trial, including:
-Allowing defense lawyers to question
students who were shot about their
political views. Kelner said an individual's
political views were immaterial to the issue
of whether guardsmen were justified in
shooting that particular individual.
-Allowing evidence concerning the
burning of the Kent State ROTC building
into the trial. Kelner argued that none of
the dead or wounded was involved in the
burning and that such evidence was
again immaterial to the issue of
justifications for the shootings:
"The case was a monstrosity said
Kelner. "As far as a fair trial goes, we
didn't have it
Ki&rf� �
TheCdseoFIheUmkdShks Ihe Kznt STate
Guardsman willpleaseCtrne horder uh,please
9 P '�
SA VE up to $1000
$500 whh reg deposit $10 you pay in fuff
ON CLASS RING ORDERS
PLACED DURING OCT.
Students Supply Store
ArtCarved College Rings by John Roberts
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
9
ENTERTAINMENT
The Master Gunfighter: another loser for Laughlin
ByCHIPGWYNN
Staff Writer
Financial success gives anyone a
certain amount of freedom to do whatever
they want, with little or no pressure from
the "higher ups The commercial success
of the two previous Tom Laughlin films,
Billy Jack and The Trial of Billy Jack gave
Laughlin the financial freedom to produce
his own films. With this new found
freedom Laughlin, along with his wife
Delores Taylor, formed a corporation
which they aptly called Billy Jack
Enterprises. Their latest release, The
Master Gunfighter, which also stars
Laughlin, is a lot of things but
unfortunately there is nothing enterprising
about it.
The film takes place in Southern
California, where there are a lot of isolated
Indian villages to be exploited and a lot of
powerful Spanish hacienda owners to
exploit them. There were the days when
everybody carried a gun and a sword and if
you haven't already figured it out Laughlin
sides with the Indians. It is a rather
common theme �f vou are familiar with anv
'Billy Jack" films. In these films there is
always a peaceful group of people who are
so simplified that we really don't care what
happens to them and a powerful
group of people who always do a grave
injustice to the peaceful people. And then
there is Billy Jack, who appears to be
righting all the wrongs by killing off all the
persecuters.
In The Master Gunfighter Tom "Billy
Jack" Laughlin trades his Kung Fu arts for
a sword and a special twelve shot revolver.
Always the underdog, always outnumber-
ed and always the good guy Finley (Tom
Laughlin) blasts and slashes his way
across Southern California to right the
injustices suffered by the peaceful Indians
at the hands of the Spanish land owners.
The only twist is that the land owner, Don
Santiago, is Finley's brother-in-law, which
merely serves to prolong his death till the
end of the film.
Some of the photography along
California is excellent but the unfortunate
thing is that director Frank Laughlin neer
misses an opportunity to film the crashing
waves or setting sun or mistry spray from
the ocean. This overbearing almost
saccharine scenery not only slows the film
down, but also detracts from the original
effect. What director Laughlin gives us is a
lot of interesting scenes but the scenes are
ridden with cliche' in the book, when we
see Finlev and his wife riding off into the
sunset together. Maybe director Laughlin
figures that more people can relate to this
type of imagery than to more sophisticated
motifs and then again maybe he doesn't
know the difference.
It must be conceeded that director
Laughlin didn't have much of a story to
work with and his actors didn't have much
of a script to work with either. Much of the
acting was supposed to come through
facial gestures, which is another place
where the director got in over his head. The
cinematic device of employing facial
movement instead of words requires
excellence in directing as well as acting
and sadly to say there was none.
Tom Laughlin was perhaps the biggest
disappointment. With his newly sprouted
beard he looked more like he should have
had a small bit part as a mission priest
instead of the master gunfighter himself
He drags out his lines as if each word held
the gravest of meanings and when he gets
serious his voice seems ready to crack at
any instant. Laughlin also starts passing
out hard nosed looks that only Clint
Eastwood can get away with and the way
he apologizes before he kills someone is
getting a little old as well.
Outside of some of the scenery the
only bright spot in the film was Lincoln
Ki I pat rick as Jacques, who plays a federal
spy. Actually Kilpatrick fights with
Laughlin and it is refreshing to see hirn in
the film because he not only doesn't look
like a Spanish gunslinger, he doesn't act
like one either. He doesn't seem to take
anything seriously, which is a perfect
contrast to Laughlin, who never cracks a
smile through the entire film. Ron "Super
Fly" O'Neal, who plays Finley's brother-in-
law, Paulo, is also good. He doesn't have
much of a part and is also hurt by the poor
script but he does well with what he has.
Barbara Carrera plays Finley's wife, Eula,
who is pretty to look at but not much of an
actress.
In general, the film is not very good.
Even the scenes where Laughlin guns
down eight or nine people are not that
exciting because in order for him to appear
to be as fast as he is the cameras never
shows him doing anything, only people
falling dead. There is not much left to say
about a poorly plotted, badly directed film
that is tryint to capitalize on the Billy Jack
popularity to attrack viewers. Take my
advice and do not be fooled by the
elaborate promotion-it's a loser.
This film is now playing at the Pitt
theater in downtown Greenville.
Leo Jenkins art exhibit in Mendenhall Sunday
"I'd be a phoney if I told you I was an
artist I am a Sunday afternoon dabbler, at
best
In his 15th year as chief administrator of
East Carolina University, Chancellor Leo
W. Jenkins is a busy man. When he can
squeeze it in, he sneaks off to the cellar,
builds a canvas (or twoor three), spreads
his palette of oils out before him and
begins work.
But "work" is not a good word here. Dr.
Jenkins has had no instruction and insists
that his painting always be for fun.
Presented are about 20 paintings that
Dr. Jenkins has given as gifts through the
years. Mostly as presents to brides. "I get
joy out of giving my paintings away. Some
may use them as dart boards; some just to
cover bare walls nevertheless, each is a
more personal fist, and a conversation
piece.
Not all of Dr. Jenkins' work goes to
brides. Each year he donates a painting to
the Wake County Society for Retarded
Children, to be auctioned off. Dr. Jenkins
chuckles at the prices people bid for his
paintings, but then again, he is not out to
make money on his hobby; the reward is in
the joy he tries to express in his work and
the transfer of that feeling to the receivers.
The 1975-76 Student Union Art
Exhibition Committee asked Dr. Jenkins if
his work could be displayed during
Homecoming week, and after a case of
genuine stage fright he agreed to
particicate
This is his first exhibition of any kind.
The man paints for fun. Yet his work
shows concentration and energy. "The
Lord never built me to be an artist. I'm not
trying to prove anything. It's just a good,
positive escape
Included in the show will be
landscapes, seascapes and his impres-
sions of interesting old buildings. Most of
the canvases are large, and indicate his
tendency toward adventurous use of
color-ranging from delicate pastels to
murky greys and earth brownsto achieve
the desired effect of light and shadow and
to convey an appropriate mood.
The show will open Sunday, Oct. 12,
with an evening reception for Dr. Jenkins
�nd those friends who contributed the
paintings to be displayed, and will run
through the following week.
The Mendenhall gallery, located on the
top floor of the student center, is open to
the public each weekday from 8:30 a.m.
until 11 p.m. and for several hours on
Saturday and Sunday. The Jenkins
exhibition is the first major show to be
featured in the gallery since the
Mendenhall Student Center was opened
last fall. This is sponsored by the ECU
Student Union Art Exhibition Committee.
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10
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
m
Rutist and Guitarist
here tonight
LORIMER AND ZUKERMAN
On Thursday, October 9, 1975 in the
fv'endenhall Student Center Theatre, the
oudent Union Artists Series is proud to
fresent Michael Lorimer, the great
American guitarist, and Eugenia Zuker-
MICHAEL LORIMER
man, one of the world's leading flutists.
Only one performance will be given with
curtain time at 8:00 p.m.
Michael Lorimer follows in the
footsteps of his teacher, Andres Segovia,
in that he is himself a teacher, transcriber,
scholar, and one of the great classical
guitarists in the world today. During the
past eight seasons, he has been
concertizing throughout the United States,
Canada and abroad. Audiences have been
captivated by his playing as well as by her
personality, and critics have showered him
with accolades. In 1969, High Fidelity
Musical America named Michael Lorimer
as "one of the most promising artists" of
that year. "Ranking with the best
any where headed for the absolute top
said Heuwell Tircuit of the San Francisco
Chronicle. "Superb technical control and
sensitive spirit, stated Robert Sherman of
The New York Times.
Touring in concert with Lorimer this
season is Eugenia Zukerman, flutist, who
has appeared extensively in North
America, Europe, and Israel. Born in
Massachusetts and graduated from the
Juilliard School where she studied with
Julius Baker, Eugenia Zukerman made her
highly acclaimed New York debut in
March, 1971, at Town Hall in the Young
Concert Artists Series.
Among orchestras with which she has
performed are the Los Angeles
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Tickets for this distinguised event are
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tickets are $1.50 and Public tickets are
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Goose Creek Symphony
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
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Uriah Heep has not yet achieved superstar status
Mfice in
Student
Kets are
By ERNEST LEOGRANDE
Pop Scene Service
It was 1970, the 100th anniversary of
the death of Charles Dickens, and England
was engaged in a respectful celebration of
that fact.
The fact that a new rock group made its
debut that year was, by comparison,
unnoticed. Another new rock group. So
what else was new?
The group chose a name, Uriah Heep,
after one of the characters in Dickens'
"David Copperfield an unctuous,
conniving villian who constantly describes
himself as "very 'umble
It hardly sounds like a self-confident
choice. But Uriah Heep is one of "David
Copperf ield's" most memorable characters
and his namesake has established its own
recognition, from its first album, "Very
'Eavy, Very 'Umble
The original nucleus is Ken Hensley,
the chief writer and the keyboard man;
David Byron, who does the vocals and is
the romantic image for the girls to scream
over, and Mick Box, lead guitarist. After
some trial and error, a rhythm section was
firmed, Lee Kerslake on drums and John
Wetton on bass.
The group was in New York during the
course of a cross-country tour stretching
from July through November and Hensley,
sitting on the bed in his New York hotel
room, discussed going from humble to
heavy, from hesitant to happy.
"Gerry Bron chose our name for us
Hensley said. "That first year everybody
said it was a hype but he stuck with it. He's
our manager, our producer, agent and
music publisher and he deserves
everything he's got
Hensley has strong, well-defined
features and shoulder-length hair, which
he constantly brushed back around his
ears. With him was his fiancee, Pat, who
comes from New Jersey. The two had been
introduced by a friend who thought tney
would like each other and - as so rarely
happens in these cases - they did,
immediately.
"We want to become one of the
established rock names like the Stones
and the Who Hensley said, "groups who
have been able to sustain changes. We
have always consciously worked at the
idea that our group is a group, accepting
the differences in personality.
"Originally, because of our albums like
'Demons and Wizards' and 'The Magician's
Birthday we started to get labeled as a
cult black magic freak band.
"What I as a writer have been looking
for is a graduation and I think in our new
album, 'Return to Fantasy we've found it,
fantasy without the sorcery.
"Having John (Wetton) join the group
has rekindled the flame. He's very
important indeed
Wetton, the new bassist, joined this
year after the former bassist, Gary Thain,
quit.Thain reportedly had been suffering
from exhaustion as he recuperated from
the sort of accident rock groups always
fear: being knocked unconscious by a
high-voltage short circuit on his electric
guitar while performing. It became
necessary to find a replacement if the tour
was to go on as scheduled.
Wetton was rushed into the studio to
play on the tracks of "Return to Fantasy
One of the departures Hensley talked
about, a new sort of music for then . is
"Your Turn to Remember" on that LP It's
a blues song, the kind we haven't done
before he said.
The song is beautiful, with a
sophisticated country-and-western feel to
it. Hensley also debuted the mellotron, an
electronic keyboard, on this album.
Another song, "Beautiful Dream calls
to mind the story that Hensley frequently
gets his subject matter from his dreams.
"It's true he said. "It started with the
song Wizard' on Demons and Wizards
That was from a vivid dream I had recurring
over four nights. I'm always looking for
inspriation
BUCCANEER
Oct. 9 Thurs. Bill Deal & The Rondels
Oct. 10 Fri. Blackwater Express
Oct. 11 Sat. Blackwater Express
Oct. 12 Sun. Blackwater Express
BILL DEAL & RHONDELS
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Bring Your Mug Pay Cover Charge And You Can Drink Free All Nite
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
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Coastal Are
Nov. 6:
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Nov. 20
Outer Bank;
Dec. 4:
and Problen
Dec. 18:
Cycle
Jan. 15:
Effect on C
Feb. 5
Land
Feb. 1
Natural Pop
March 4
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
i ��iniimiii�rif io mm� i mm
13
I
oast a I
seminars
offered
A series of seminars on coastal
lesources will be offered by ECU at the
ECU Dare Marine Resource Center at
danteo on first and third Thursdays, Oct.
6-April 15.
Each program, scheduled to begin at 8
).m is designed to be of interest to
:ounty commissioners, members of
lanning boards, civic organizations,
eachers and lay persons interested in
vlorth Carolina's coastal areas.
According to Stephen Benton of the
ECU Environmental Education Program,
he seminar series will provide coastal area
;itizens with an in-depth understanding of
easons behind existing coastal regula-
ions, by thorough presentation of the
jeologic, natural and cultural history of
)oastal N.C.
"The series will explore natural forces
at work in the coastal area he said, "and
will give consideration to the human
nistory and population of the region and
suggest ways to balance human values
Aith the natural coastal systems
A final seminar will discuss the role of
:jood planning for the future.
Seminar directors will be Drs. Clifford
night, David Phelps and Richard
Btephenson of the ECU faculty.
Series co-sponsors include the
Pamlico Soil and Water Conservation
District, the National Park Service and the
Dare County Planning Board.
ECU will offer continuing education
credit to seminar participants who apply
through the ECU Division of Continuing
Education. Teachers who desire certificate
renewal credits may apply to their school
superintendents.
PROGRAM SCHEDULE
Oct. 16: "The Geologic History of the
Coastal Area
Nov. 6: "The Role of Vegetation on the
Outer Banks
Nov. 20: "The Cultural History of the
Outer Banks
Dec. 4: "Coastal Erosion: Processes
and Problems
Dec. 18: "The Economy and the Energy
Cycle
Jan. 15: "Population Trends and Their
Effect on Coastal Resources
Feb. 5: "Soils: The Need to Know Your
Land
Feb. 19: "Community Dyanmics:
Natural Population Control
March 4: "Eastern N.C: The Year
2000
March 18: "What We Do with the
Waste? The Need for Health Regulations
April 1; "Equal Access: The Role of
Regulations
April 15: "Coastal Planning Today and
Tomorrow
Further information about the seminar
eries is available from the ECU
Environmental EducationProgram, Divi-
sion of Continuing Education, ECU,
3reenville, N.C.
qdc) southeastern 7
luxurious
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505 EVANS STREET
LATE SHOW
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44
Camal Knowledge' I have experienced
only three or four movies that I was
genuinely sorry to see end. I was sorry
to see 'Carnal Knowledge' end
�Vincent Canby, N. Y. Times
Carnal Knowledge is a feast of a film.
It is a very funny and very cruel and very sad film. Mike
Nichols uses the screen as it has rarely been used heretofore.
Arthur Garfunkel and Jack Nicholson are
Superlative. Unlike too many of today's films, Carnal
Knowledge' lasts beyond the watching; it sticks to the mind-ribs
and bears long retrospection. The film !S brilliant
�Judith Crist, N. Y. Magazine
Carnal Knowledge' is one of the best
mOVieS ever�Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan
Mike Nichols, Jack Nicholson,
Candke Bergen, Arthur Garfunkel
Ann Margret and Jules Feiffer.
Carnal Knowledge
NOTICE
Discount Tickets AvaUbb At Central Ticket Office.
SAVE-
"T0MMY" Starts Oct. 3ht
MfMtiir
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Chape Hill
to run
health care
The University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill School of Medicine will be
administering a $14 million national
program in rural health caie funded by the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation of
Princeton. N.J
The Rural Practice Project will
establish 25 model community medical
practices in small towns throughout the
United States.
A five year, $2 million grant was given
to the UNC Medical School to administer
the project.
The new practices will be designed to
meet the health needs of the communities
they serve, according to Dr. Donald L.
Madison, director of the program. The
program will demonstrate how o over-
come professional isolationism and other
problems that have made careers in rural
practice increasingly unattractive to young
doctors and other health professionals.
More than 56 million Americans, about
one-fourth of the nations population, live
in rural areas, Madison said. The project
will attempt to develop a team of health
care personnel to deliver primary medical
care and preventive services to the
community.
� J; tmnbrnKop
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
is the largest national philanthropy in the
health field. It makes grants totaling $50
million annually and its principal focus is
on improving health services ourside
hospitals in the United States.
Car emission clinic planned for Pitt Plaza
OtYS
Located in Farmville
Big Red Building at Intersection of 264 & 258 By Pass
9:30-5:30 Mon. - Sat. Fri. 9:30 - 9:00
Your Fall Fashion Headquarters
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Bring this ad for 10 discount on any purchase
The East Carolina University Student
Affiliate of the National Environmental
Health Association in cooperation with the
Eastern Lung Association will sponsor a
Free Car Emission Clinic. The clinic will be
held at Pitt Plaza Shoppinq Center on Sat.
October 11, 1975, from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.
The Car Emission Clinic tests your
vehicle for carbon monoxide and
hydrocarbons emissions. If your motor is
running properly, the emissions it
produces will be minimal.
If not, you should know, so that you
can have your motor checked by a
mechanic to learn how to get better gas
mileage and maintain lower costs in car
operations.
Pollutants in the air are by-products of
man's activities and energy demands. High
concentration of these impurities - from
cars, power plants, incinerators, furnaces,
and factories can weaken your lung's
defenses and make them more vulnerable
to infection.
Pollut can irritate your lungs an
cause a n. -wing in the air passages tha
may became permanent breathind
difficulties.
A recent study shows death rates from
chronic respiratory disease are higher i
areas where pollution is heaviest.
Motors last longer and cost less to run
when they are properly tuned and
maintained. Also remember a car that has
minimal emissions is properly tuned, so it
gets the most miles per gallon possible.
The Sun Electric Company will be
providing all the testing equipment used in
the Free Car Emissions Clinic. They will
also provide one ' their representatives to
help run the res s and talk with car owners
who have questions about their test.
The ECU Student Affiliate of the
National Environmental Health Associ-
ation is sponsoring this free clinic to the
community's interest. Hopefully the clinic
will help to make us all more aware of the
pollutants in the air around us and how we
can save gas with proper maintenance of
our cars.
RESEARCH PAPERS
THOUSANDS ON FILE
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
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15
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Bobby Griffin rode his Yespa Ciao from Tarboro to Louisburg to Henderson
back to Tarboro and then to Jacksonville (296 miles) Total Fuel Costs
Less Than 75c Bobby then paid his sister MO00 gas money for her car
to bring him back to Tarboro so that he could be at work on time.
Bobby works at the Kwik Pik in Tarboro.
ASK HIM HOW HE LIKES HIS NEW VESPA!
� No Drivers License � No insurance
� No License Tags � No Helmet
Visit Us For A Demonstration Ride
Times
Bank Financing Available
209 W. St. James St. - Phone 823-4685
OPEN MONDAY thro SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
P
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NC college news
By JIM ELLIOTT
News Editor
CHARLOTTE-The Black Student Union
(BSU) of the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte received a budget $4,839 less
than requested after a lengthy and heated
debate on the floor of the UNCC Student
Legislature.
Budgets for student organizations are
normally considered by the legislature's
Finance Committee but when the BSU
budget came before it the committee could
not raise a quorum and did not meet.
Reacting to the "non-meeting of the
Finance Committee the Sept. 16 session
of the legislature designated itself a
committee-as-a-whole enabling it to
consider the BCU budget.
Over the fierce objections of Rep. Greg
Davis, the legislature moved to consider
the budget as a lump sum rather than each
item individually.
Davis, the prime legislative proponent
of the BSU's requested budget said this
move had effectively "asked us to put a
noose around our necks
If it had gone before the Finance
Committee, the budget would have been
considered on an item-by-item basis.
The legislature then heard Cynthia
Bennett, spokesperson for the BSU, defend
the requested budget of $9539, afterwards,
questioning her on it and last year's BSU
budget.
Finally, after debating several figures
that were progressively lower, the
legislature granted the Black organization
"no more than $4,700 meaning the
Finance Committee could appropriate a
lower sum if it so decided.
RALEIGH-The Graduate Students
Association (GSA) of N.C. State University
began receiving funds from student fees
last year and is planning to expand. The
GSA helps graduate students faced with
problems such as taxes, landlords, and
higher tuition. Grad students can also
receive funding for legal cases and a
"travel rund" when presenting papers at
professional meetings outside trie state.
BOONE-Students at Appalachian have
opened a used bookstore for paperbooks
and textbooks. Bookstore Manager, Tom
LaSalle explained that the store is just a
forum for students willing to sell books.
The bookstore takes a ten per cent
commission on each book sold.
ASHEVILLE-Criticism has been
raised over the 1975 Summit, Asheville's
yearbook. For the first time the Summit
has divided the yearbook into several
sections. One section includes a
photograph of a nude female. Summit
editor Jackie Stephenson defended the
publication saying, "A yearbookshould
represent a year at school as a whole,
complete with bad things, the funny
things, and the sad things, and the good
things
BOONE-Campus Security at Appala-
chian State University has hired four
students as Traffic Control Officers. They
are authorized to give out tickets for
parking and other traffic violations, but
they do not have the power of arrest,
according to Gary Morgan, chief of
security.
(CPSH
looks grim
applying
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years.
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had college
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
mmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmm
17
College graduates
shun army life
By ANTHONY SCHMTTZ
(CPS)-Even though the job market
looks grim, fewer college graduates are
applying for jobs through Army
recruitment offices. The perenially low
number of college graduates enlisting in
the Army has sunk even lower in recent
years.
While about 5 percent of Army recruits
had college degrees at the end of 1971,
only 1.8 percent are college graduates
now. During the same period the number
of recruits with at least one year of college
experience dipped from 18 percent to 10.7
percent.
Although fewer college students seem
interested in the Army, the Army isn't any
less interested in them. A recruitment
officer in Washington, D.C Major Fred
Shirley, said the Army would like to
continue to fill at least 10 percent of the
Army with college-experienced recruits.
"These people should be good for the
Army Shirley said. "They're easier to
Irain, they're easier to motivate
Even though the number of
college-trained recruits has sunk, higher
education standards have been imposed in
general for Army enlistees, Shirley said.
He also listed higher education standards
as one of the reasons why enlistment
quotas weren't met in August and probably
won't be reached in September.
The Army fell short of its August quota
by 18 percent, with auout 15,500 new
recruits signing up instead of the 18,900
projected. The predicted shortfall for
September is 2000 recruits.
Shirley said a recently imposed quota
system suggesting that at least 65 percent
of Army recruits have a high school degree
is responsible for some of the shortage of
recruits.In the last fiscal year, about 58
percent of Army recruits held a high school
degree, Shirley said.
An � pswing in the economy may have
been part of the reason for recruitment
problems as well, Shirley speculated. "We
can't deny that the economy had an
effect he said. "In the 17 through 21 age
group, the age group we recruit most, are
the people with no college or no training.
They have difficulty finding a job. But in
August, with the economy improving,
maybe they thought they'd stay out and
find a job
"Maybe they'll stay out until fail or
winter and then we might see them coming
back again Shirley added.
And as jobs go, Army pay is at least
better than most. Career military
personnel-both officers and enlisted
men-were found to earn $1500 more per
year than the average civilian in a 1973
Library of Congress study. The current
base pay is $344 a month, plus room,
board, and medical benefits.
Jim Carroll
enjoys working
with a
vicious killer.
Just three years out of college, laser technol-
ogist Jim Carroll didn't make senior research
physicist at Eastman Kodak Company by acting
timid. So when he had the courage to pit science
against a dread disease, we backed him. Win or
lose.
The medical community enlisted Kodak's
help in training lasers on the war on cancer. We
responded with a pair of 500 million watt laser
systems. And left the rest up to Jim.
In time, the lasers proved unsuccessful in
treating cancer, but we'd do it again if we had to.
Because while we're in business to make a profit,
we care what happens to society. It's the same
society our business depends on.
Kodak
Kodak.
More than a business.
-mm
m
m
m
ii





��:

18
FOUNTAJNHEADVOL.
7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975


MM
Booters fall to UNC2-0, in prep for ASU
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
CHAPEL HILL-Despite playing what was
probably its best game of the season, the
East Carolina soccer team droped a 2-0
decision here Tuesday to the University of
North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Despite the loss, which dropped ECU'S
record to 2-2-1, Coach Curtis Frye was
happy with his team's performance.
"We played well enough to win said
Frye. "Soccer is a funny game, when you
get to a certain level of talent it is just a
matter of whogets he breaks and Carolina
got the breaks
The breaks came in the form of two
East Carolina penalties, which allowed
Carolina to score its goals, as well as three
shots which were missed by the Pirates,
which easily could have been goals.
The first Carolina goal came on a short
dribbler off an indirect penalty kick, which
hit a Carolina player and rolled into the
net. Not an artistic shot, but it counted
just the same.
That shot gave Carolina a 1-0 lead at
halftime, but ECU did have a chance to tie
the score.
On one break, an ECU shot was
� deflected by the goalie, back to an ECU
player. The ECU player was faced with an
open net, but shot high of the net.
UNC added a goal in the second half on
a penalty kick after Bob Poser had made an
apparently good play on a fast break. The
referee, however, thought otherwise and
awarded Carolina a penalty kick. The kick
was good and Carolina won, 2-0.
Coach Frye said he was pleased with
his team's progress so far this season, as
he looked towards the team's next contest
at Appalachian State.
Appalachian State is the defending
conference champion and the Pirates have
Sports
Defense is Bulldog trait
So far this year, the story with the
Citadel team has been one of little offense
� and a tough, yard stingy defense.
In four games this year, the Citadel has
given up but 29 points and three
touchdowns while scoring 58. This has
added up to a 3-1 season so far.
However, the Bulldogs' 3-1 record is
quite deceiving. The three wins came
against Presbyterian (21-0), Wofford (16-7)
and William and Mary (21 -8). The Bulldogs'
loss was to Colgate (16-0).
It was in that game that the Citadel
offensive punch was eliminated when
Andrew Johnson, last year's Southern
Conference Player of the Year and single
season rushing record holder, was put out
with a broken leg. Since then, Johnson has
nad a leg operation and is out for the
season.
With Johnson gone, most of the
Bulldogs' running strength was depleted
and it had been the running game which
Citadel coach Bobby Ross had been
counting on to build his offense around.
Since Johnson's departure, though, the
Citadel had lost its number one
quarterback, Gene Dotson, a fact which
should have hurt the offensive picture even
more.
However, Ross and the Bulldogs were
fortunate enough to have Rod Lanning to
call on. Against Wofford, the game Dotson
was hurt in, Lanning came in to throw for a
touchdown pass and pull the game out.
Last week, Lanning threw for three
touchdowns in a 21 -6 win over William and
Mary. In that game, Lanning gained 180
yards on seven completions in 11 tries,
and the 'Dogs added 203 yards on the
ground.
Leading the running game was
freshman Peter Bistrian, with 88 yards. For
the year, Bistrian has gained 138 yards on
30 carries. The leading rusher for the
Bulldogs this year is Alvin Perkins.

Johnson's replacement, with 170 yards on
55 carries.
Perkins' alternate, Mac Bazemore, is
averaging over six yards a carry for 25
carries. These three give the Bulldogs
some running depth.
Lanning's performance last week has
earned him a starting berth over the now
healed Dotson and Ross feels his passing
has brought a much-needed addition to the
Bulldog offense.
"We now have somebody to come in
and give us the big play. That's something
we've needed since we lost Andrew. Our
passing game took some pressure off of
the defense in the William and Man game.
We've been waiting for this to happen
The defense is headed by Brian Ruff,
an all-conference selection at linebacker
last year, and safety Ralph Ferguson.
Other top players are David Sollazzo, Ron
Shelley and Alan Turner. Ross, however,
isn't too sure exactly how strong the
Citadel team is.
"East Carolina is better than anyone
we've played yet this season and
potentially, they're a helluva team.
"Defensively added Ross, "they're
much better than people expected them to
be. Especially Cary Godette. He's amazing
in that you never see him get knocked off
his feet
On offense, Ross respects the Pirate
team, also.
"They have added a new element this
year. They're throwing the ball more and
better. They still have the same running
threat that they had last year
What is the amazing thing, though, is
that Ross' Bulldogs are still considered a
conference contender, but ECU could
change that Saturday by beating the
Bulldogs in what Ross considers a very
important game.
"To us, this is a big game. As we keep
winning, each game is taken as more
important
never beaten the Mountaineers.
"I've never seen a group of guys work
so hard or closer together than this year's
team. They are really working hard at
winning the conference.
"We have a thing on the team where
everyone has to answer for his mistakes
and this has made the guys more orror
free. There was no one called down for
their errors in the Carolina qame
About Appalachian State, Frye said,
"Talent-wise, they are the best team we've
played. But even being the best team we
play, it is possible for us to win if some
things go our way.
"If we keep playing the way we have
been, with improvement, we have a chance
to be a real contender. We want to finish
higher than fourth in the conference,
which is what we finished last year. By
winning the conference, I would say we
would be as good as any team in the ACC,
with the exception of Clemson
ECU is in the Northern Division of tl
Southern Conference soccer setup, whi
means they are not in the same division;
Appalachian. At the end of the year, tl
two division champions play for the title
Frye, however, is not so pleased wi
the Pirates' division.
"We're in the Northern Division, but it'
not an advantage because we have Williar
and Mary and VMI in our division. Williar
and Mary is 4-1 and lost to Lynchburg,
good team, by on' 1-0. VMI bee
Richmond, 6-0, so thjy have a good tearr
The combination o' playing VMI an
William and Mary in our division is as ba
as playing only Appalachian State in tl
other
Sunday's game in Boone witl
Appalachian will start at 2 p.m. The Pirate:
next home game is Oct. 18 at 9:X a.m
against VMI.
Four to be inducted to Hall
East Carolina University will induct
four new members into the Pirate Sports
Hall of Fame here October 18. The
ceremony will highlight halftime activities
of the Pirate homecoming game with
Western Carolina University.
' Dave Alexander, Maurice Everette, Bill
Holland, and Ken Midyette will join the 10
initial inductees who were selected in
1974, the Hall of Game Selection
Committee has announced.
To qualify for nomination as a player, a
5-year time span from the time the
person's eligibility has expired must have
passed. The same qualification holds true,
in terms of service, as an administrator.
Alexander was one of EC's greatest
football players. In 1964 and 1965, he was
honored as the team's leading rusher,
leading scorer, and most outstanding
player. He led ECU to bowl victories in
1964 and 1965, and was on the 1963
Eastern Bowl squad. His senior year he
was an All-Southern Conference and little
Ail-American selection. During his career
he gained 2,852 total yards, 2,112 yards
rushing, currently the third highest total c
all-time, and scored 204 points, second fc
a career total.
In 1965, Alexander became the fir?
ECU player to gain 1,000 yards rushinc
His total of 1.029 yards still ranks as th
4th highest single season mark, and hi
1,587 yards that year rank as the 2n
highest season mark for total offense.
Everette was an outstanding player o
the ECU tennis team, although he came t
the school on a basketball scholarship
Everette won the North State Conferenc
Singles Tennis Championship thre
straight years from 1955-1958.
Holland was an outstanding baseba
and football player at ECU from 1936 t
1938. In 1939, he signed a professionc
baseball contract with the Washingtoi
Senators.
Midyette was one of ECU's mos
oustanding divers. He was the NAI
national diving champion in 1958 and 1959
and an Ail-American diver in 1957, as wel
as in 1958 and 1959.
This raises the total of inductees int(
the Hall to 14.
Wrestlers top field in tourney
The East Carolina University wrestling
team participated in the Neptune
Invitational in Virginia Beach, Virginia last
weekend. Teams from UNC, VP1, Old
Dominion, Florida Tech, and Temple
University were also invited.
Although there was no official winner,
had there been one, East Carolina would
have captured the tournament title, with
UNC in the runnerup position.
Out of ten events, ECU placed first in
five and second in the others.
Despite the presence of the other
teams, the tournament produced es-
sentially a match between ECU and UNC.
They went against each other in nine of the
finals events.
After Jeff Curtis and Paul Ketcham
came in second in the 118 and 126
divisions, respectively, Paul Osman turned
things around for the Pirate team. He won
the 134 pound weight class over UNC. This
put ECU at 1-2. Buddy Baker then won the
142 division, followed by Paul Thorp's wi
in the 150 class, producing a tcturnabout
UNC won the next two' weigh
divisions, taking finals victories over Pat
Prewitt and Phil Mueller in the 158 and 16
classes. But the Pirates came back again
led by Ron Whitcomb and Mike Radford
They wrestled to victories in the 177 an
190 events.
The appearance of VPI in th
heavyweight division assured ECU of th
unofficial win over UNC and th
tournament title. John Williams, of EG
placed second in this event.
Paul Osman was voted th
tournament's Most Valuable Wrestler.
Assistant coaches Bill Hill, Ik
Sherlock and Mike Waller accompanied th
ECU team to the Invitational. Head coach
John Welborn, said that these men "an
and always will be a tremendous help t
the ECU wrestling program and it:
success
It is an a
he act, but
Granted
xsople is a
vhen this si
he masses
With thi
ollowing le
DearWhi
tadium:
This wri
You did
ind out of I
The dan
)rogress an
lay. What tl
jveryone in
� sin in ECI
Were yc
nost part. 1
lad some C
Were yc
vhat soever
Do you
irink, to be
iny of the a
ndividual s
Probabh
riends this
ire lucky yc
ioing abou
xenalty.
What eve
iid. You m
)allgame, t
This wril
lame, but v
xe a securi
Olympics n
As a fan
vill detract
oday.
So think
Talk abc
Within a
)romotion-i
liamond.
Casey S
leceased.
It is botr
)f America'
Legends
vhen the te
No bette
3asey hobt
ninute. Yoi
But he c
QUOTEo
Wildcats we
he game w
PHIL RIZ
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"Take th
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
19
on
Hvision of tl
setup, whi
ne division;
the year, tl
for the title
pleased wi
sion, but it'
have Wi I liar
lion. Williar
ynchburg,
VMI bee
good tearr
3 VMI an.
3n is as ba
State in th
xne witl
The Pirate;
t 9:30 a.m
This Is True!
1
By W1LUE PATRICK
Staff Writer
A letter
f
hest total c
, second fc
le the fir?
ds rushinc
anks as th
rk, and hi
is the 2n
Dffense.
g player o
he came t
cholarship
Conferenc
;hip thre
ig baseba
�m 1936 t
rofessions
vashingtoi
XJ's mos
the NAI
iand1959
57, as wel
ctees int(
ey
horp's wi
urnabout
o' weigh
over Pai
58and16
ack again
i Radford
b 177 an(
in th
CU of th
and th
t, of ECl
tedth
jstler.
Hill,Ik
anied th
ad coach
men'an
s help t
andit:
It is an awful shame that a writer has to dignify a wretched act by making mention o
he act, but nevertheless there are times when this must be done.
Granted, that to limit a sports column to just the capacity of one or one group of
eople is a journalistic atrocity in some cases, but at the same time, there are times
vhen this simply must be done. Reaching the one is sometimes as important as reaching
he masses.
With this in mind, if you are the offending party this writer hopes you can read the
oil owing letter:
Dear Whatever loose term Threw the Liquor Bottles on the Field Saturday in Ficklen
tadium:
This writer has no sympathy for you, whatever your ultimate punishment will be.
You did something that wasin the manner of a pre-teen child who didn't get his way,
nd out of frustration or anger, threw the first thing in his hand.
The dangers of throwing something on to an athletic field while the contest is in
rogress are and have been known and enumerated in volumes of literature prior to this
lay. What this writer can't understand is why a semi-person such as yourself could hold
everyone in such flagrant disregard and fire an empty bottle (throwing a full one would be
i sin in ECU circles) toward a football field.
Were you displeased with the turn of events? So were 16,541 other people for the
nost part. They, and this writer will bet there were some more influenced than yourself,
lad some degree of restaint.
Were you angry with the way the Pirates played in general? In makes no sense
vhatsoever to try to destroy something to make it better.
Do you come to football games for the same reason as do many Pirate patrons? To
irink, to be fashionable or simply to socialize with friends? This writer doesn't condemn
inyof the aforementioned but at the same time he wouldn't like to think that the act of an
ndividual such as yourself would eventually restrict his privileges of doing the same.
Probably, this was done in a fit of drunken pique, for which you would say to your
riends thisweek Ireally showed 'em, didn't I?" People have been shot for less and you
ire lucky you haven't been among them. The courts will take insanity as an excuse for
ioing about anything in this country today, but drunkenness rates pretty tough for a
xenalty.
Whatever your lack of reasoning may be, there is just no way you can justify what you
Jid. You may take this letter as a response from someone who didn't care about the
)allgame, but that is further than the truth.
This writer figures that semi-persons like yourself will probably remain anonymous in
lame, but will continue to appear in body at athletic functions. And in the end, there will
xe a security guard for every three people just like there will be in Montreal at the
Dlympics next year, roughly.
As a fan, you don't want that to happen. This writer doesn't want it to happen, for it
vill detract from the glamorous state that college athletics have reached in this country
oday.
So think about it, will you? The next time you may not get the chance.
Talk about a bad week for baseball.
Within a five-day period, the baseball world lost its goodwill ambassador, premier
)romotion-minded president and club owner of the most amazin' team put on the
liamond.
Casey Stengel, Larry McPhail and Mrs. Joane Payson were the names of the now
leceased.
It is both ironic and sad that they departed prior to the climax of another great season
f America's national pasttime.
Legends about the "Ole Professor" abound and will be told for the coming week,
vhen the teams finish the playoffs and compete in the World Series.
No better fan had Casey than Leonard Schecter, who prior to his death wrote, "When
3asey hobbled out of baseball, I just wanted to say to him, 'Hey, wait just a damn
ninute. You can't leave now1
But he did. And there will never be another like him.
QUOTEo OF THE WEEK: Davidson College football coach Ed Ferrell after the
Wildcats were bombed 55-0 by VMI: "We weren't ready for VMI. But in spite of the score,
he game was much closer
PHIL RIZZUTO, former New York Yankee shortstop upon hearing of Stengel's death:
I never thought death would get Casey Stengel. I thought there would be some way
3asey could folk himself out of it
And a classic from CASEY himself, as read in one of Schecter's works: Casey's early
vlets were working in spring training when he selected a group of rookies to be separated
rom the veterans.
"Take those boys over to the other diamond Casey told an assistant. "We need to
ee how well they play on the road "
Co-Rec Carnival is Tuesday
Plans for the Co-Rec Sports Carnival
have been finalized. This year's carnival
offers a variety of new and different games
which will provide a good time for all
participants.
The carnival will consist of six events:
The Last Tangle in Greenville, Egg Throw,
Blind Man's Football, Balloon in the Sky,
the Human Innertube and the Kissinger
Shuffle. A more complete explanation of
each event is offered below.
The Last Tangle in Greenville promises
to keep you all tied up in what you're
doing.
The Egg Throw consists of tossing an
egg (not hard boiled) for your partner to
catch. Points are awarded for each
successful catch.
A Blind Man's Football team consists
of a quarterback, a center, a receiver, and a
cheerleader. The catch to this game is that
the center and quarterback are blindfolded.
After receiving the snap from center, the
quarterback must successfully pass the
ball to the receiver with the help of the
cheerleader's directions on the sidelines.
Points are awarded for each successful
reception in a given time limit.
The Balloon in the Sky game involves
passing water-filled balloons over a series
of progressively higher ropes to a
gathering table. Points are awarded for
each balloon that successfully makes it
intact to the gathering table.
To become a Human Innertube you
must be wearing enough innertubes to
cover your body from head to toe. In order
to win this game you must race from one
point to another, wearing all your
innertubes.
The Kissinger Shuffle keeps your whole
Co-Rec team together. Each team member
wears an innertube around their waist and
the team's feet are connected with
innertubes. Then, as one unit, the team
moves through an obstacle course while
each member carries a ping pong ball on a
spoon in their mouth. Use of hands is not
permitted. Each time anyone on your team
loses their ping pong ball, the team must
stop for the ball to be placed back on the
spoon. Points are awarded to the fastest
team.
The Co-Rec Carnival will be held on the
mall beginning at 4:15 on Tuesday,
October 14. Thursday, October 16 has
been selected as the rain date.
Teams for the Co-Rec Sports Carnival
consist of four (4) people, two (2) men and
two (2) women. For rosters and additional
information, stop by the Intramural Office
in Memorial Gym - Room 204. Rosters are
due by 5 00 on October 9.
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20
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975

iUw��
VW
waiim
i
Time-Out
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
More
grid picks
'Maybe they built the Ficklen lights at the wrong time. Now I can see how bad our
team really is
I heard an ECU student mutter these remarks the other day. His feelings, I hope, are
not the sentiments of all ECU students. That is, that they have given up on this year's
team after five games
True, the team did not look good in the second half against Richmond, a fact Coach
Pat Dye has pointed out. The point must je made, however, that Ricmond, despite
pre-season evaluations, is the team to beat in the conference this year.
Said Dye about last Saturday's game, 'Richmond had a good football team. They
were as good as any team we've played this year and we could have beat them
Dye blamed the team's mistakes on the field as a big reason for the loss.
"It was a matter of us not making the big plays on defense and our inability to make
them error on offense and come up with the ball. For example, that last touchdown drive.
We had them in three third down situations and one fourth down situation and let them
convert each time
All totalled, ECU committed five fumbles on offense, losing two, and the quarterback
slipped several times on the option-pitch This, Dye noted, was a big reason for the
Pirates ineffectiveness
"What hurt us more than anything was the quarterbacks slipping on the sharp cuts
upheld. Richmond actually stopped us only once the whole game. The rest of the time
we stopped ourselves.
"We had more to do with Richmond's success than they did
And the game play-by-play backs Dye up. Only once, in the second half, did
Richmond stop the Pirates without the home team making a penalty, a slip or a fumble to
help them out.
For the first time, Dye seemeato be wondering ifmaybe his youngsters aren't as good
as he believed they were. Also, he may be wondering if his team istooyoung this year and
more a team of the future
"I knew the game would go down to the wire and l was glad of that in the sense that I
wanted to see what kind of team we really were. I can't say, though, that I was impressed
with the results
Right now we are just a so-so football team. We aren't playing with the dedication,
execution or physical intensity we should be playing with and we haven't been doing it
We have the ability, but that doesn't make you a football player
Dye. too. is wondering how his recruiting, and those of those before him, has been.
"I guess I haven't done a good job in recruiting and neither did Coach Randle because
we're playing two of his classes and two of my classes right now. I don't think we're
coaching badly because I'm coaching the same way I always have
Apparently the ECU problem is unsolvable, because it seems to lie somewhere in that
gray area called pride Maybe, the ECU team is not that good. Maybe the players aren't
that talented. I don't know the answers Hopefully, the players will decide that for us.
FEARLESS FORECASTS: Came through with eight out of 11 last week, including a
big upset pick of Michigan State over Notre Dame. ECU, Hawaii and Baylor let me down,
though. For the year. I now stand 29-12-3 for a 708 percentage. Here's a rundown of this
week s picks as I see them.
ECU over the Citadel, 14-10.
�I haven't given up on the Pirates yet They should beat the Bulldogs- but just barely.
Maryland over N.C. State, 28-20.
-This should be the ACC title game, and with the home advantage, Maryland should be
the champion
Georgia Tech over VMI, 31-7.
-Just how good is VMP This game may be a inkling of just how good.
Notre Dame over North Carolina, 35-21.
�The Tar Heels put up a good fight against Ohio State two weeks ago, but Notre Dame
has been sluggish and is due to break loose
Michigan State over Michigan. 24-20.
�Oddsmakers play this one as even To me. MSU has been more impressive and it has
the home field advantage. TV game.
Nebraska over Kansas. 34-12.
�Easy selection
Oklahoma over Texas, 28-21.
�How can you pick against the Sooners? But Texas could come through in front of
home folk Both schools are unbeaten.
Army over Duke, 17-�.
�UPSET SPECIAL-Army is a heavy underdog, but there is something about West Point
that scares the devil of opponents Low scoring pick, but could easily be a high scoring
affair
Tennessee over LSU, 28-10.
�Tigers volunteer to be Tennessee's third victim. Tennessee well rested after a week's
layoff Tigers' claws have been somewhat tame as late
UCLA over Stanford, 34-23.
�A definite toughie, but Bruins are overdue and Stanford won too easily last week.
Penn State over West Virginia, 38-12.
�And then there was one. It will be Penn State in this battle of eastern unbeatens
t l WHBi IHWIIW III
Ladies take volleyball win
The ECU women's volleyball team, led
by strong spiking from Debbie Freeman
and overall team floorplay, captured an
11-15, 15-13, 15-7 victory over Louisburg
College at Minges Coliseum.
The first game was essentially a
seesaw battle with neither team
controlling the game. Finally, at the 5.50
manX, with the score still tied at 4-4,
Louisburg broke in front. Despite a Pirate
rally, Louisburg held together for the game
win.
In the second game it looked as though
the Pirates would be defeated, falling
behind 7-U. However, with Debbie
Freeman servng, the Pirates came back to
tie at 12-12. The game remained tieo for
several services until a Freeman spike put
the game away at 15-13.
ECU then jumped to a big lead in the
deciding game. The final game was a
display of team togetherness on ECU's
part with all players on the floor
contributing to the effort. Going into the
final service with a 12-7 lead, the Piratrs
finished the match at 15-7.
The victory gives the ECU team a 3-1
record. Their next match was scheduled
for yesterday afternoon against UNC-
Wilmington.
Hockey squad loses
Duke University came back in the
second half to stop the Lady Pirate field
hockey team, 2-1, Tuesday afternoon. ECU
led 1-0 at the end of the first half, but fell
prey to a very aggressive second half effort
by Duke. Gail Betton, 1974 Deep South and
Southeast All Star Team member, scored
ECU's single goal.
The field hockey's season record
stands at 2-4. ECU plays Wake Forest
University October 10 in Winston-Salem at
4:00.
ECU'S field hockey team owns a 2-4 record so far this year. Friday
the girls square off against Wake Forest in Winston-Salem.
"33,500.000
Unclaimed
Scholarship
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000 Current list of
these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975.
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
11 275 Massachusetts Ave Los Angeles, CA 90025
I lam enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling.
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIP SOURCES TO:
Name
Address
CityState
(California residents please add 6 sales tax.)
.Zip.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
21
2-0 records
the Piratos
team a 3-1
i scheduled
linst UNO
VMI, Richmond head conference grid standings
loses
ck in the
Pirate field
noon. ECU
alf, but fell
I half effort
South and
�r, scored
n record
ike Forest
vSalem at
r. Friday
East Carolina and the Citadel will be
the only conference schools squaring off
against each other this week, as the 1975
football season heads into its sixth week
Most conference schools, with the
exception of the Citadel ?xi Davidson,have
played at least two conference games and
the conference title race appears to be
shaping up.
For the Citadel, this weekend's contest
with ECU in Johnson Hagood Stadium
could be a big one, as the Bulldogs are 1-0
and only one half game behind the VMI
Keydets and Richmond Spiders.
On the other side of the fence, the ECU
Pirates were dealt a near mortal blow last
week when the Spiders, 2-2 overall,
defeated ECU, 17-14, in Greenville. So
until Richmond and VMI start losing the
best ECU can do is to play the spoiler's
role, which it can start doing this week in
Charleston.
The Richmond win put their league
record at 2-0 and tied them with VMI for the
league lead. VMI defeated Furman's
Paladins Saturday, 13-10, on a fourth
quarter field goal with 10 seconds left in
the game.
Only moments earlier, VMI had scored
a touchdown to move within 10-9, before
VMI coach Bob Thai man decided to go for
one, instead of a risky two. Earlier in
the season, Thai man had gone for
two-and failed-in one point losses to
Delaware, 10-9, and Virginia, 22-21.
Said Thalman, "I had no thoughts
about going for two after the touchdown.
There were still four minutes left in the
game and I had confidence in our defense
that they could get the ball back for us and
we could take it in
Thalman, last year's Conference Coach
of the Year, came out smelling like a rose.
As for Furman, well, like ECU, it was their
second league loss and dropped their
league record to 1-2 and overall record to
1-3. Furman had earlier lost a 27-21 thriller
to Richmond.
After the three undefeated schools,
Appalachian State ranks with a 1-1
The Mountaineers beat
17-10, for a non-league
conference mark
Tennessee Tech,
win.
Actually, the Mountaineers, with only
one loss and but three conference games
remaining may have the best chance of any
team. The Mountaineers have games with
Richmond, the Citadel and Davidson left
on the schedule, while VMI has games left
with ECU, in Greenville, Richmond, in
Richmond, the Citadel and William and
Mary.
ECU heads the conference's second
Tigers on probation
on
The NCAA finally took action Tuesday
the Clemson University basketball
program by placing the Tigers on a
three-year probation.
The Tigers were found guilty of 21
violations out of an original 64 violations
the NCAA chargeO them with. Included in
the allegations of which Clemson was
found guilty were illegal cash inducements
to sway the athletes into coming to the
school.
School officials were surprised by the
decision and the severity of the penalty
imposed by the NCAA.
Said Clemson legal counsel Joseph B.
McDevitt, "It's a persecution, not a
prosecution
President Robert Edwards decided not
to appeal the decision, which also issued a
warning to the Clemson football program,
and said, "the Unviersity accepts the
sanctions imposed by the NCAAand will
comply. We respect the role and mission
of the NCAA on the national level, and the
Atlantic Coast Conference and its member
institutions at the conference level
Said Tates Lock, former Tiger
basketball coach, "I haven't seen the
charges in detail. But I'm not surprised
about the NCAA ruling, after the length of
time this has been reviewed. I can't talk
intelligently about it now
All of the irregularities Clemson was
penalized for occurred during Locke's
tenure as head coach. Locke is now an
assistant with the Buffalo Braves.
Clubbers take first,16-0
East Carolina's club football team
unleashed what it calls its "Stray Dog"
defense on Duke University last Friday and
came away with a 16-0 club league victory.
The Pirate clubbers' defense, led by
Kenny Hymesand Dave Matteis, held the
Devils to only one first down for the game.
The Devils' first down was a result of an
ECU penalty.
The two teams played to a 0-0 tie in the
first half, despite several long drives by the
ECU offense after Duke turned the ball over
to them. Despite the defensive efforts,
though, the ECU offense could not score
against the rugged Devil defense.
ECU's first score came midway through
the third period on a four-yard pass from
Terry Tulley to Marion Barnes. The
touchdown was set up by a pass
interference penalty and a 25 yard pass
from Tulley to "Fonzy" Burden. Tulley and
Burden connected on the two-point
conversion and ECU led, 8-0.
The other ECU score came in the final
period when Terry Ramos scored on a
four-yard run to make it 14-0.
Later in the quarter, Duke had a punt
blocked by Matteis. The ball rolled out of
the end zone for a safety to give ECU its
final 16-0 lead.
The game was highlighted by the
defense, which according to coach Ernie
Wruck, "played just outrageous all night
and kept Duke deep in its own territory.
Wruck also credited the offensive line
with doing a good job in protecting Tulley
and allowing him time to throw the ball
effectively.
Said Wruck about his first win as
coach, "I think the team played well. It's
always great to win, although I would have
liked to see some more points on the
scoreboard. It looked like we finally put
everything together
The club, now 1-2, will have an open
date this weekend, before meeting Rock
Hill next Sunday at the Varsity practice
field. Originally, the team had been
scheduled to play American University in
Washington, DC. this weekend. The game
has been cancelled due to scheduling
problems.
division with a 1-2 record, tied with
Furman ECU is 2-3 overall and Furman is
1-3 overall. Davidson is at 0-1 and 0-2.
following a 26-10 loss to Guilford College
and William and Mary is 0-2 and 0-4 after
losing to the Citadel, 21-6.
This week's games include: ECU at the
Citadel, Appalachian State a' East
Tennessee St Lenoir Rhyne at Davidson,
Furman at Presbyterian, Ball State at
Richmond, VMI at Georgia Tech and Ohio
U. at William and Mary.
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
THROUGH OCTOBER 11
Richmond
VMI
Citadel
Appalachian St.
East Carolina
Furman
Davidson
Wm. & Mary
2-0-0
2-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0
1-2-0
1-2-0
0-1-0
0-2-0
2-2-0
2-2-0
3-1-0
3-1-0
2-3-0
1-3-0
0-2-0
0-4-0
vfi
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MEMORIES - ECU gets a chance to rebound against the Citadel this week in Charlestor
J Wilber
Family
Favorites
FEATURING:
Hickory wood flavored BBQ
Fried Shrimp dinners
Country fried chicken
Variety of Softdrinks
Fish
Roast Beef
Hamburgers
Cheeseburgers
Dairy Bar with Ice cream cones
Old Fashioned Milk Shakes �
Banana Splits Sundaes m
C �� LOCATIONS 14th St. Open 10am 10pm L
mi Corner of 5th and Roade ST. Open 10am 1am J ��
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22
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
V�
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Women studies violate federal law
i
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN
(CPS)The latest victims of anti-dis-
crimination laws may be women's studies
departments which were begun in the past
few years to combat the male bias of
traditional university curriculums.
The Women's Studies College at the
State University of New York (SUNY) at
Buffalo was advised last month that their
(fve all-women courses must be
discontinued or they will "simply be
barred" from the University course
offerings in January, 1976.
The courses, which feature enrollment
"for women only violate the Department
of Health, Education and Welfare Title IC
guidelines and the New York State Human
Rights Law, according to SUNY Counsel
and Executive Vice President Albert Somit.
The Title IX regulations, which took effect
July 21, prohibit discrimination in any
educational institution which receives
federal funds.
Riggan Shoe Repair Shop
& Shoe Store
Across from Blount-Harvey Store
Downtown Greenville
111 W. 4th Street
Repair All Leather Goods
But the Women's Studies College at
SUNY is not accepting the ruling without a
fight. "We are not discontinuing women's
studies classes a department coordinat-
or claimed. "That's what the administra-
tion would like to think
Spokeswoma, for the women's college
feel that the discrimination against men
serves a legitimate educational purpose.
"The selective use of all women's classes
is fundamental to our educational growth;
it is the unique element of our program,
and the foundation of our strong, national
impace on the development of other
women's studies programs a Women's
Studies College newsletter claimed.
Women's Studies College members
feel that their program is a "vital
affirmative action program for women
according to their newslatter. Women's
College members also accused the
University of being "incredibly lax in
developing and enforcing an affirmative
action program for women. It is obvious
they stated, "that the administration is
misusing legislation designed to protect
and advance the educational opportunities
for women in order to threaten the life of a
program on this campus committee to
those very goals
A spokeswoman for the Women's
Studies College said that SUNY at Buffalo
is not the only women's department which
offers courses "for women only but
administrators at other university women's
departments agreed that the practice of
keeping men out of classes was both
illegal and self-defeating.
"I don't think it would be consistent
with the philosophy we have here a
spokeswoman for the women's studies
department at Kansas University said. "We
think educating men is a basic part of
people being able to change the whole
social situation
"Men aren't really encouraged to take
classes in our department a faculty
memebr of the women's studies
department at Sacramento State University
said. "The classes are set up for women,
with a feminist perspective. They just don't
attract that many men. But it would be
discriminatory to exclude them al-
together
One argument in favor of all-women
courses is that women would feel more
freedom to speak out about their shared
problems without men in the classroom.
Women's studies faculty members
sympathized with this feeling but most felt
these problems should r 'acked outside
the classroom. "It's usei. r conscious-
ness-raising grou; s but not necessarily in
class the Kanss University spokeswo-
man added.
Other women's studies departments
have found it unnecessary to consider
offering all-women classes. "It's discrimi-
natory and we couldn't have done it here
Judy Wanhala, an administration associ-
ate at the University of Minnesota women's
studies department said. "But a lot of
courses end up being all women anyway. I
taught a course last summer for 30 people
and there were no men in it at all
The fever that wont break:
THE RISING COST OF A MEDICAL EDUCATION.
Like most things, the cost of
attending medical school
has risen sharply
over the last
decade To many
medical students
that cost repre-
sents a heavy
Purden. a financia
problem that can
affect your con-
centration
It needn't be
that way The
Armed Forces
Health Professions
Scholarship Program
was originated to
free you from those
worries Men and
women who duality
will have the costs of
then medical educa-
tion covered, and
will also receive a
substantial monthly
allowance
The program offers
more than tuition and
salary, it offers you the
opportunity to begin
your practice under very
favorable conditions As a health care officer in
the military branch of your choice, you'll find
yourself with responsibilities fully in keeping with
your training, and with the time and opportunity to
observe a full spectrum of medical specialties.
When you decide on the specialty you wish to
pursue, you may find yourself taking those
graduate medical studies at one of our many
large and modern medical centers If so. you can
count on that training being second to none
Both the clinical and research wok being done
in them have made Army, Navy and Air Force
hospitals a major new national medical resource
It's a long road, but the first step is simple Just
send in the coupon. The details e send you may
make the whole way a little smoott- er
'Grass' classified as non-medical
Marijuana is now classified as a
"schedule 1" substance, meaning it has no
currently accepted medical use.
The Drug Enforcement Administration
has officially declined to relax federal
controls on marijuana.
Two groups - the National Organization
for the Reform of Marijuana Laws
(NORML) and the American Public Health
Association - had petitioned the now
defunct Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs for the relaxation.
The denial of the petition was
published in the Federal Register by Henry
S. Dogin, acting DEA Administrator.
The petition asked that the DEA remove
all controls on marijuana or, if this was
refused, change its status so that it could
be sold legally across drugstore counters
like "schedule 5" drugs.
Homecoming queen
nominees are
� $
n
AN INT!JODUCTlON TO Wf MUDY O OS '� "i '
PUBLISHED 8Y LEA & FEBIGfR - PHIAUI OHIA
Armed Forces Health Care
DEDICATED TO HEALTH CARE AND
THE PEOPLE WHO PRACTICE IT
� Warships 1 I
P9000 � 'iVAi
Yes 1 '��� ' n Armed forces ons
� v;t ij oppctu �� ,jf jnd there is no obligation
Qdyjf . I
11. an
lent aiy'
'�n force
'liatry-
jW-iD'
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Se�nrVi ' II
ajrify
'�nt at
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Phone.
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JSchooD
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! J(.
� dry and Podiatry not available in Navy Program
M'xIk ky arid ivi r� togy rot available m Army Program
Nominees are presently being received
for the Homecoming Queen and Court for
Homecoming 1975 (America Revisited).
The Queen Selection is being organized by
the Kappa Sigma Fraternity and the Delta
Zeta Sorority in conjunction with the
Co-Greek Committee of ECU. The contest
is open to ALL interested groups and
nominees' names should be submitted to:
Homecoming Queen
co Don Childress
Kappa Sigma Fraternity
700 e. 10th St.
Greenville, N.C. 27834
There may be one nominee per
organization and she must be presently
enrolled at ECU. NO nominee may have
co-sponsors (1 girl for 2 or more
organizations). An 8 x 10 black and white
photograph must accompany the nomi-
nee's address, and phone numbei along
with an entry fee of $5.00.
The deadline for all entries will be
October 10, 1975 at 5:00. Voting will take
place from October 13-17 from 9:00 a.m.
to 3:00 p.m. by student I.D
Pictures will be displayed at the ballot
box table in the lobby of the Student Union
during the designated voting period. There
will be no limit on the amount of
advertising by the candidate. An eight girl
court will be selected and notified Friday
night prior to the parade on Saturday
October 18th. These eight girls will be
expected to ride in the parade and to
attend the game with an escort. A queen
will be chosen from these eight girls (on
totals accumulated during voting period)
and presented during half-time.
We urge all organizations to submit an
entry so that the court will be a true
representation of the ECU campus.
If you have any questions piaase
contact Don Childress at 752-5543 or
Bobby Harrell at 752-1593 or Gayle
McCracken at 752-5035. Also, all
pI'ticipating in the Homecoming
contest are urged to ride in the parade
However, transportation will only
furnished for the top eight girls. So if
plan to have your girl participate in t
parade, contact Don Childress.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
23
Chancellor dabs in art world
By FRANCEINE PERRY
ECU News Bureau
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins has been aptly
rmed "a man of many talents" and
Jdents and returning alumni at ECU will
ive a chance to observe at close hand one
his lesser-known abilities-painting.
A collection of oil paintings by the ECU
lancellor will be on display during
Dmecoming Week, Oct. 12-19, in the
illery of ECU's Mendenhall Student
3nter.
Included in the show will be
ndscapes, seascapes and his impression
interesting old buildings. Most of the
invases are large, and indicate his
ndency toward adventurous use of
)lor-ranging from delicate pastels to
urky greys and earth browns-to achieve
e desired effect of light and shadow and
convey an appropriate mood.
Among the subjects of the paintings
e a weathered millhouse with its large
ater wheel, woodland and country
sttinqs. peaceful coastal vingettes,
ountain views and an abandon Southern
lansion.
Ideas for his paintings are derived from
jggestions of Dr. Jenkins' associates and
om his mood at the moment.
"Sometimes I feel like painting snow
;enes, so everything I turn out then
happens to be covered with snow. At other
times, I'm in a 'beach mood so I paint
seascapes and studies of fishing piers and
seagulls said Jenkins.
Painting has been a favorite pastime for
Dr. Jenkins since the early 60s. Despite his
hectic schedule, he has managed to
complete quite a few paintings, so he is an
unusually rapid worker.
"My paintings are mass-produced he
says. With a few hours to spare, and a
clear mental idea of the result he wishes to
accomplish, he can complete a painting
very quickly.
When a painting is finished, Dr.
Jenkins presents it to a personal friend or
gives it to a young couple as a wedding
gift.
Dr. Jenkins has never studied art
formally, and is even reluctant to term
himself an "artist
"I am really a technician he admitted.
"And strictly an amateur. A while back I
needed a flesh tone, but had no idea how
to mix the colors to produce it.
"When I called Bud Gray (ECU art
school Dean Wellington B. Gray) for
directions, he told me flesh tones were
available already mixed in tubes of paint
Dr. Jenkins is an honorary member of
the ECU chapter of Delta phi Delta honor
society in art, but the Mendenhall show is
his first artist's exhibition.
Travel committee
plans New York
trip
The ECU Student Union Travel Committee is making big plans for another exciting
trip. New York City is our Thanksgiving destination. We are planning four days and
nights in the city at a cost of less than $65, which includes transportation and
accomodations.
In order to give the committee an idea of how many reservations are needed, and in
order to ease the process of making reservations, a form is provided here for those
interested in the trip. If interested, please fill out the form and turn it in to the information
desk in Mendenhall by Thursday, October 16,1975.Those names we receive will be put on
a list and will be given the first opportunity to sign up for the trip once the tickets go on
sale.
It should be an exciting trip. Don't miss out!
I am interested in being contacted first to purchase a ticket.
NAME.
ADDRESS.
PHONE.
ELECTIONS
Continued from page 2.
Other candidates have also complained
about the SGA fall elections, according to
James Mai lory, ECU dean of men.
One student complained that no one
was at the ballot box when he went to vote.
"That is inconceivable to me Mallory
continued.
Another student complained that hte
name was left off the ballot, but the
registrar's office said that he did not have a
2.0 grade average. That was the end of
that, Mallory concluded.
RESEARCH
Thousands of Topics
Send for your up-to-date. 160-
page, mail order catalog. Enclose
$1.00 to cover postage and
handling.
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.
11322 IDAHO AVE 206
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025
(213) 477-8474
Our research papers are sold for
research purposes only.
submit an
be a true
us.
ns piease
2-5543 or
or Gayle
, all girls
ing Queen
he parade
only be
. So if you
�te in the
Steven Photographers are in:
Wright Auditorium, Fletcher
Lobby, and Aycock Basement
9-12 1-5
Register for the FREE BICYCLE
when you go for your sitting
No sitting fee -
No Dress Requirement
Appointment Required
Make appointments at BUCCANEER
Office or call 758-6501.
Appointments should be made
a week in advance.
m
WM
m
M
MW
OT





24
F0UNTAINHEADV0L7, NO. 99 OCTOBER 1975
news
Adopt an animal Pub Board
The animals available for adoption this
week include three kittens, two mixed and
one Siamese, a brown and white mixed
breed, and two puppies, one black and the
other white and tan.
The people at Animal Control would
like to extend an invitation to all interested
persons to visit the animal shelter on 2nd
St. off Cemetary Rd.
Car wash
AFROTC is sponsoring a car wash
Saturday 11 Oct. from 10 a.m. til 4 p.m. at
College Exxon on 5th Street.
Model UN
There will be a Model United Nations
meeting Tuesday, October 14, in Room
C-101 in Brewster Building at 4 p.m.
Discussion wil1 center on plans for
United Nations Day activities at ECU.
Also, proposals for country representation
at conferences in Pennsylvania, Virginia
and Florida will be entertained.
Anyone not participating already, but
interested in learning about our
organization, is welcome to attend.
Model United Nations is sponsored by
the SGA and its membership is open to all
interested ECU students.
France travel meeting
There will be a meeting of all girls aged
18 or above interested in travelling to
France on the Au-Pair program next
summer.
The meeting will be held Thursday
October 16 at 3.00 p.m. in Brewster 304C
There is no foreign language for
participation in the program. All interested
women are urged to attend.
Alpha Phi B-day
The Alpha Phi's are celebrating their
103rd birthday Friday, October 10. Along
with this the Delta Alpha Chapter of Alpha
Phi is proud to announce they signed nine
fall pledges.
Pi Kap happy hour
Pi Kappa Phi fraternity will hold two
happy hours Friday, Oct. 10, in
conjunction with the annual Commode
Bowl. The pledges of Pi Kappa Phi will
hold a Greeks only happy hour, Friday,
from 3 to6 p.m. at the house. Friday night,
the brothers of Pi Kappa Phi will hold a
happy hour for all ECU students,
beginning at 12 midnight. The Pi Kappa
Phi honor is located on Hooker Road. Look
for the lake and the marquee in front of the
house.
There will be a meeting of the Pub
Board Thursday, October 9 at 2 p.m. in
room 248 Mendenhall. Representatives of
the student publications should be present
to discuss their budgets. The Rebel and
the minority newspaper, the Ebony Herald
are scheduled from 2-3:00, the
Fountainhead from 3-3:30, and th
Buccaneer from 3:30-4:00. The budgetj
should have their finishing touches, the
way they will be presented to the
legislature.
Psi Chi
There will be a Psi Chi Meeting on
Tuesday, October 14 at 7:00 p.m. in
Speight room 129. Featured speaker will
be Dr. Larry Bolen, professor in the
Psychology Department. His topic will be
"Factors Affecting Creative Functioning
Students interested in joining Psi Chi will
also be given information at this time.
Circle K
The Circle K Club is a coed service
organization sponsored by the Kiwanis
Club of Greenville. The primary purpose of
the Circle K is to provide service to the
campus and the community.
Nomination of officers will be held at
the organizational meeting Monday, Oct.
13th at 6:34 p.m. in room 202, Chemistry
Dept Flanagan Building right next door to
the Infirmary.
Former Circle K members, Key-Club-
bers, K-ettes, and other interested
students are urged to attend.
Car massage
The ECU Physical Therapy Club will
have a car wash on Saturday, October
11th, 10:00 a.m. until dark at Nunn's
Exxon, (10th Street, across from A&P
store). Prices: $1.50 car wash, $2.00
cleaned inside and out.
SOULS
Students interested in running for an
office in SOULS are asked to leave their
name and address in the office of
Internal-Minority Affairs in room 224
Mendenhall. Students interested in a
position should submit their names by
Friday, Oct. 10.
team
ECU Rifle coach Bob Helmick requests
that all candidates interested in trying out
for the rifle team attend a meeting in Room
143 of Minges Coliseum on Oct 15th at 7
p.m.
Rebel contest
The Rebel, East Carolina's Literary-Art
magazine, is sponsoring a Literary-Art
contest for students at East Carolina. First
prizes of $100.00 and second prizes of
$50.00 will be awarded in three categories:
Poetry, Short Stories, and Art work.
Deadline for the contest is November 30.
Entries may be submitted at the Rebel
office in the Publications Center between
the hours of 3 to 5, Tuesdays through
Thursdays.
Episcopal students
A service of holy communion, followed
by lunch will be held Tuesday at 12 noon in
the lounge and chapel of the Methodist
Center. Wednesday eucharist is celebrated
for students by Bill Hadden, chaplin, at
5:30 at St. Paul's Episcopal Church.
Emission test
The ECU Student Chapter of the
National Environmental Health Associ-
ation and the Eastern Lung Association
will conduct a free auto emissions test.
Oct. 11,1975 from 10:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center. This test will
determine whether your car's engine is
operating cleanly ai.d economically.
This three minute exhaust emissions
test will be done by ECU Environmental
Health students using sophisticated SUN
electronic equipment, and will be free of
charge. Pitt Plaza Shopping Center is the
place to be Oct. 11. Please bring your car
out and help Greenville have a cleaner
environment.
Law society
ECU Law Society will meet 7:30
Tuesday, Oct. 14 in 102 B-Brewster. Phil
Dixon, former ECU law society member
who is presently practicing law in the
Greenville area will speak.
Refreshments will be served and
membership dues of $4.00 taken. Anyone
interested in any facet of law is welcome to
attend.
NEHA car wash Forever Generation
A car wash will be sponsored by the
student chapter of the National
Environmental Health Association. It will
be at the Exxon Station beside Pitt Plaza,
Sat Oct. 11, from 10 a.m. -4 p.m.
The Forever Generation will be meeting
this Friday, Oct. 10 at 7:30 p.m. in room
244 Mendenhall.
Buccaneer photos a,es
3-1
All appointments for Buccanip
photographer scheduled in Tyler Lot
have been moved to the basement
Aycock. Appointments already made
not have to be rescheduled unless y
miss the scheduled time. Sorry for S
inconvenience.
A reminder to all students tl
appointments must be made befctne
pictures can be taken.Please schedue,d
your appointments the week before &
fell
ort
Senior art show
Paintings and drawings by Wal
James, senior student in the ECU Scr
of Art, are on display this week in
gallery of Mendenhall Student Center
Included in the show are aery
watercolorand oil paintings, charcoal;
crayon drawings, and some ceramic iter
James is a candidate for the BS degt
m art education, with a ma
concentration in painting. He has accept
a student teaching assignment in l
Haleigh schools for winter quarter Up
graduation, James plans to pursue a can
as a painter.
His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walt
Burton James, 4709 Wedgewood S
Raleigh. t
Staffers needed
All persons interested in earning son,
extra money are urged to come I
FOUNTAINHEAD office to stuff inserts c
Tuesday at 4:00.
Football money
Anyone who hasn't picked up their
�money for football contest, please corr
by the Fountainhead from 4-6 Mondae
Oct. 13 to collect.
e
mtmm






Title
Fountainhead, October 9, 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
October 09, 1975
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.349
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
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/39994
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Cite this item
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