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Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
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VOL. 7, NO. 15
30 OCTOBER 1975
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flota Rnwitainhead get the ax
Campus media stunted
MIKE TAYLOR
DIANE TAYLOR
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The Appropriations Committee of the Student Government
Association Wednesday night approved with amendments,
budgets for the Publications Board and WECU, the campus
radio station. ,??
The bills were amended in committee, and passed out
favorably. They will now be presented before the SGA
Legislature Monday.
Diane Taylor, chairperson of the Publications Board, and
Mike Taylor, editor of Fountainhead, expressed disappoint-
ment with their respective budgets.
The pub board budget for the Rebel, Fountainheal,
Buccaneer were submitted to the SGA during its second
meeting this fall. The board requested $132,000 from SGA and
a secretary for the Publications Center.
The Pub Board asked for $35 a week to hire a secretary.
Although someone may always be at the Center, they may
not know what other staffers are doing, according to Diane
Taylor who is the former editor of Fountainhead.
We need a secretary to see that important messages are
relayed, records are kept, and that some means of a
coordinated continuity is established, she concluded.
"We did cut through a lot of the publications budgets, but
even with the cuts, the appropriations committee gave the
publications center $26,000 more this year than they got last
year said Craig Hales, chairman of the Appropriations
Committee. , , . . ,
'What do they want - all the change from the students
pockets too?" . .
Mike Taylor explained the items of the Fountainhead
budget to the appropriations committee last Wednesday night,
Oct 22 The-committee felt Fountainhead is overstaffed and it
questioned the pay increases of the paper's staff, according to
Mike Taylor.
Thursday night, Oct. 23, the committee cut the
Fountainhead's payroll appropriation from $21,870 to $18,560,
a difference of $3,420.
"With the money they are giving the Fountainhead, we will
have to cut seven staff positions, including two that existed
last year said Taylor.
ECU student government wants
"Three of them have already been cut. In light of the act
that this year's Fountainhead is twice as large as it was last
year, I feel these cuts are unjustified
The Fountainhead averages 56 pages a week this year,
whereas it averaged 32 last year.
Fountainhead received enough SGA money, according to
Hales
"I don't expect Fountainhead to cover the appropriations
committee's work fairly, but just say this, ? the Rib Board
bill had been passed as they wanted, with all the extra
salaried position, telephones, and other things, the SCA
could not fund a lot of projects we feel the students need.
Publications gets more than one-third of student fees from
the SGA each year, and I think that's enough
Taylor noted that the growth of Fountainhead warranted
the increased appropriation. - , , u?,
"This year Fountainhead already has $9,000 in advertising
revenue, whereas last year we only had $13,000 for the entire
vear according to Taylor.
"We fully expect to make at least $30,000 this year.
An amendment to Fountainhead budget provides that all
ad revenue be reverted to the SGA general fund.
"I and the members of this committee and the whole
legislature were elected to spend the students money as best
we see fit said Hales.
"When we cut things, we look like the meanies. But no
one ever looks at the fact that the publications pad their
budgets, ask for super-large salary increases, and I believe the
students are being taken for a ride
How many people reading this article have read and
enjoyed the Rebel? asked Hales.
"Last year the Rebel came out so late that many students
could not pick it up. I think the students will back us on this.
"We don't want someone sitting back collecting salaries
and not doing any work. We have appropriated $1,200 more on
the Rebel this year than it got last year. We were fair
On the other hand, Jeff Rollins, editor of the Rebel, said
the Rebel will only exist for four and one half months this
year because of the limited appropriation.
The committee also approved a budget for WECU. It
amended WECU's budget by giving WECU salaries for its disc
jockeys until Feb. 1. WECU was asking for salaries for the
whole year but the station's general manager, Eric Sieurin,
agreed to the amendment. The bill will now go to the
legislature.
esentative to Greenville City Council
The Student Government Association
announced Wednesday that it is actively
seeking to establish a permanent liaison
with the Greenville City Council.
The SGA wants to gain a "strong
input" into the city council's activities,
according to Jimmy Honeycutt, SGA
president.
"We have been in touch with a few
people in the community, but no formal
contact has been made Honeycutt said.
"We're playing it by ear right now. We
hope the city council will be receptive to
our ideas and suggestions
Having SGA participation on the
Greenville City Council is not an
unprecedented idea for ECU, according
to Tim Sul'ivan, Executive Council
assistant and acting vice-president.
"From what I know, several times the
city council has opened its doors to
students Sullivan said.
"This line failed for several reasons.
First the students were not given as
active a part with the council as we feel
is necessary. The councilmen allowertthem
to sit in the audience, and basically have
input as 'outsiders Because of this the
interest went down and the represent-
atives did not go to the meetings.
"At another time a single student was
involved and, we heard, showed real
interest, but he had to leave because he
had to drop out of school.
"The important thing to remember is
that those attempts were good first
steps. The council made an effort
Honeycutt noted that there have been
several instances where cooperation has
occurred between the ECU campus and
the city.
"If anyone remembers last Spring's
Fight-the-Tuition-Raise rally, they would
remember that both the merchants and k
the council backed us in our battle
Honeycutt said.
"That is the type of cooperation
Greenville needs
The planning of a transportation
system within the city will also require
city-campus cooperation, Sullivan said.
By JIKI ELLIOTT
News Editor
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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s last stand?revisited
The three major campus publications have been before the
powerful SGA Appropriations Committee during the past week
in a remake of Custers' Last Stand.
Both the Fountainhead and the Rebel were trimmed,
butchered would be a more appropriate name for it, while
Buccaneer sailed through the stormy seas of appropriations
relatively unscathed.
In addition to axing the budgets of the campus newspaper
and the campus literary magazine, the Appropriations
Committee also made short order of the budget for the
Publications Committee.
The cuts for Fountainhead came mostly in the area of payroll
and salaries. General consensus of the members of the
Appropriations Committee, and the Speaker of the SGA, and
several power members of the Executive Council is that the
Fountainhead staffers are overpaid and that the payroll for the
paper is much too high.
So, to rectify this point, the committee, in all its wisdom,
trimmed over $3,000 out of the Fountainhead payroll. This nifty
little move caused the paper to cut seven positions from the
staff and lay off three students.
It should be pointed out that Fountainhead this year is
almost twice as large as the paper was last year. It should be
pointed out that the paper this year is averaging almost 28
pages an issue as compared to 16 pages an issue last year.
During the course of a week the Fountainhead staff turns out 56
pages of copy as compared to just 32 last year.
It should also be pointed out, and believe me it was to the
committee, that the paper is doing better than twice as much
advertising business this year as last. Last year, for the entire
year, the paper earned about $13,000 in ad revenue. This year to
date the paper has earned over $9,000.
Please note, that this $9,000 has been made in less than
one-third the school year and at the present rate, Fountainhead
will earn for the year $30,000 in ad revenue.
Not bad, but this apparently meant little to the SGA
committee for they set payroll at a level of $18,48 while last
year, when the paper was half this large it was $16,660.00.
The committee completely ignored the facts-that the paper
is doing twice as much and is making almost three times as
much.
Facts meant little to the committee, and several kingpins in
the SGA. The only thing they know, or care to know, is that the
paper was asking for too much money-they were sure of that.
In the case of the Rebel, a request for funds to put out two
editions of the magazine were totally ignored and the committee
funded only one magazine.
At the same time the committee slashed salaries of the staff
and has in effect sharply curtailed the operations of the campus
literary publication.
The cuts for the Rebel came from a general dislike for the
past performances of that publication. But, this year there is a
new staff and a plan to put out two issues. Of course, these
facts wpre totally iqnored by the committee, in all its wisdom.
The committee, in its budget, asked for money to pay for a
parttime secretary to man an office to work both for the
committee, and also for all three publications answering the
phone, doing typing and other office work and giving all three
publications the semblence of fulltime staffing.
In the case of the Fountainhead, this secretary position
would probably pay for itself in the course of a year simply
through the added advertising that the paper misses when
advertisers call the office and no one is there to get the ad.
Of course, this is another fact, and the committee and those
SGA kingpins do not deal in facts.
TKICK
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A recent recommendation from the Course Drop Appeals
Committee of the Faculty Senate should draw support from the
student body since the recommendation, if approved, would
help students with the tricky course dropping procedure.
The recommendation, from the Faculty Senate committee,
would extend the length of time a student could drop a course
without penalty from 20 days to 25 days.
And, the committee also recommended that professors
should give some type of quiz or assignment during that first
25 days to insure that a student would have at least one grade
prior to having to make a decision on dropping a course.
Urging faculty members to give some type grade during that
first 25 days is as important as the five day extension
recommendation we feel. While we don't advocate having
professors give additional tests, we personally think they
already give too many, it is not unreasonable to expect that a
student should have some basis for his decsion to drop a
course
The proposal to extend the drop period is a good one, for the
student at least. But, just as important is the urging by that
committee to all faculty members to give the student something
to gauge their progress on so a decision to drop will be bosed
on as solid evidence as possible.
"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
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor Thomas Jefferson
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager- Sydney Green
Advertising Manager-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.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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For Rebel, Fountainhead
PUb board chairperson hits budget cuts
To Fountainhead:
Listen my people and ye shall hear
of the sad realization of Pub Board's fear.
i
1 Of one bill they submitted with trembling
' hope
' Of the flogging they took from the SGA
rope
Of the appropriation inquisition-and all
i for the cause
Of letting you know some injustice of
laws.
1 But, listen my people and ye may yet
hear
A rebellious uproar in this coming year.
Yes, it's time to budget the publications
again.
Tuesday's three-hour session of the
hard-working appropriation's committee
wrapped-up the large bundle of
publications budget requests. The bundle
now lies quietly forlorn and licking its
wounds in silence until it is brought forth
in its naked state before next Monday's
legislature.
Yes, what could have been the
hopeful package of new ideas, room to
grow, improvements, and more efficiency
of publications this year has now become
a welfare dole. So once again
publications must swallow their hopes,
choke back the anger, and plod along in
the old footsteps of last year, and the
year before that, and the year before that,
ad infinitum.
As chairman of the Publications
Board I feel I owe it to you to tell you
what's going on; and I owe it to the
publications to explain, if possible, their
plight.
After two weeks of sweating out the
appropriations inquisition the editors are
faced with a bleak year of the same old
things.
The feelings of the "higher ups" seem
to be"What was good enough for last
year is still good enough this year What
for improvements, innovations, creativity,
that lovely capitalistic privilege of making
it better if you work hard enough?
Bullshit! Who wants that anyway?
Publications don't seem to be worth the
chance-so smirks the majority rule of
our heavenly elected body.
The fact still remains, however
galling it is to some, that publications
are THE ONLY appropriation the SGA
makes which benefits the entire campus.
Nothing else at ECU can tie this growing
campus together informatively like
publications can and do.
Hell, bemoaning our handcuffed state
will avail us nothing-at least this year!
Maybe facts will cause someone to
notice this deplorable situation.
Fact: The Fountainhead has been
churning out mammoth 32 and 26-page
issues this year. Seems logicial that a
bigger staff is needed than that of two
years ago when Fountainhead was 12
pages? (Staff not increased last year).
Not according to the appropriations
committee. Result: after two months of
work Fountainhead must fire several staff
members and shrug its shoulders to the
haggard editors.
Fact: Founainhead's advertising
revenue this year is estimated to be
$30,000 a 45percent of their budget. This
is work done solely by the staff. Seems
like the American way that when you
increase your income you should be able
to add to your product the improvements
you've worked for? Not according to the
appropriations committee. Result: ad
revenue goes right back to SGA general
fund, and Fountainhead gets no benefit
whatever-not a penny. Can Fountainhead
ever work for a better future? Hang it
up-no way can they get ahead.
Fact: Rebel has been constantly
accused of never putting out an issue at
all or on time. No one knows what a
Rebel is (so They say). Seems like the
best thing to do to get a publicity
campaign going, solicit articles and art
work, and get on the ball? Truth: Jeff
Rollins, editor, has been busting ass
since last year, has advertised frequently,
is receiving piles of submissions, and
was ready to go soon as he got his
budget ok'd.
Appropriations all but destroyed his
chances, refused to view his efforts as
proof this year's Rebel would meet the
deadlines, and beat Jeff over the head
with their opinions of how worthless the
publication is to the students. Result:
do the best you can, Jeff, with the bone
they threw your way.
Fact: Jeff wanted to put out five
Rebels this year (an attempt to get Rebel
ill 0 ?
back to what it should be) and
condensed his staff to three people only.
Since each person is filling about three
positions each and more than tripling
their workload seems like their salaries
could be a bit more. Sorry again-Jeff's
efforts as editor, critic, typist, layout,
business manager, public relations, etc.
are not deemed worth a $20.00 increase.
Result: His salary is reduced too and
Jeff lives off dedication alone, with
maybe a bit of satisfaction thrown in for
holiday feasts.
Fact: When Jeff says, "I don't care
what they cut as long as I can have two
books and our beloved, "let the people
vote president, Mr. Honeycutt, straight-
facedly says to his all-ears committee, if
you pass on two books "I won't sign the
bill, and you'd have a hard time getting
the veto overridden so you'll just be
wasting your time to do it one wonders
if "the people" really do have a chance,
orwhatever happened to majority rules?
Why not do away with the committees
and legislature altogether and make all
requests straight to our authorative
executive? Result: you guess the
committee vote!
Good try Rebel. But you know how it
is-once you slip and fall in performance
you might as well stay down because
you can't expect a second chance from
our unfailing electorate.
Fact: Publications asked for $35 a
week to hire a secretary for the
publications center to assure phones get
answered while the various staff
of control over
I must say that I too was not satisfied
in the '75 Buccaneer, but I knew last year
that the annual would be a weak one for
a number of reasons. Personally I feel
that I cannot take the full blame of the
downfall of this yearbook. After all, I was
only the photographer, and not the
editor.
I worked last year as the photographer
for the publications (Fountainhead,
Buccaneer, and a few other small college
publications). I found it most difficult at
times to be at two or more locations at
the same duration, but this was the job I
wanted and I tried to do my best in
covering what I could. For the most part,
I took the majority of photos in the
yearbook, but I will not accept the credits
of the photos that were taken from the
other photographers (photo credits p.
432, acknowledgements) and the photo
files. I can honestly say, that I would not
let such poor quality work be entered in
the annual. Anyone who knows me and
my work can verify this fact. As the
Editor stated "some coverage was better
than no coverage at all but did not
state where she received this coverage.
As for the self-portrait on page 170, I was
not informed how much the photo would
be enlarged. All I was asked for was a
photograph of myself. As I said before, I
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was only the photographer, not the
editor. What I can't understand is why
the explanation from the editor? There
should not have to be an explanation for
a publication of this magnitude.
The finger could be pointed at the
other reasons for the failure of the
yearbook, but I don't feel that I could be
justified in doing so without including
the vast majority of the student body and
their lack of enthusiasm. When high
school yearbook editors and staff are the
only ones who are willing to work on the
Buccaneer, the students will continue to
get a high school annual at ECU.
It takes a lot of time, effort and most
of all our money to put out a yeartxxk. It
is a shame that we continue to store
these annuals for the day when there is a
paper shortage.
By the way Fountainhead, I'm glad to
see your adds have joined the ranks of
Playboy and Penthouse in advertising the
use of contraceptives for the sensuous
man. What's next, the complete
Photographic Guide to Sexual Inter-
course. I must say the advertising in this
year's Fountainhead is of good taste;
like a lemon.
Regretfully yours,
Richard Goldman
1975 Pub Board Photographer
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members are in class, etc to see that
important messages get relayed, that
records are kept, business is handled
more efficiently, and some means of
coordinated continuity is established at
last. Are you kidding? The SGA has a
full-time secretary in the office; a
student secretary to handle legislative
matters, a paid presidential assistant to
keep Mr. Honeycutt in tune with what's
going on and all the various intricate
appointments and committees to keep
things running. HOW DARE the
publications think they deserve one little
secretary to meet the needs of three large
publications and a pub board as well.
Preposterous to think a $35 a week for
such folly.
As Mr. Price wisely pointed out,
"There are enough people over there,
they should be able to arrange their
schedules to make sure someone is in
the office all the time
Perhaps we should check into that
brilliant idea-but, I wonder if the layout
assistants could really answer advertising
rate questions; whether the typists could
answer circulation queries; whether a
Greek editor would know what the sports
editor is doing.
Hell, just because the publications
are utilizing hundreds of thousands of
dollars of students' money and actually
carry on important business under tight
schedules doesn't mean they should have
a secretary.
Guess the old SGA gang can't
imagine what it would be like without a
secretary (or two or three!); but, that our
SGA-they're all for organized efficiency
and priorities. Just ask them. Result:
advertisers will continue to give up trying
to call; important messages will go on
being forgotten; people will still find the
doors closed during the day, etc.
These were only a few of the
highlights of the last two weeks in
appropriations committee.
But stay put for all the fun to come.
Tune in next week, same time, same
station, and see if the maimed pub board
bill gets through the legislature-or has
the welfare recipient bitten the hand that
feeds it before it actually fed it?
And many more joys of text as
-the pub board struggles for
existence;
-as amendments to our by-laws are
kicked out the door until we make an
executive compromise;
-as certain SGA goers attempt to do
away with pub board and make
publications directly responsible to them
(do I see another political appointment or
committee on the horizon?);
-as Ebony Herald tries to find out who
they belong to and where they can get
some money;
-as-best of all- the offended exec's
make haste to reply to this waywardly
wordy accusation of a certain person's
vindictive pig-headedness;
-as someone comes up with the
famous last wordsl shall return" (the
issue, that is).
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Diane Taylor
Pub Board Chairman
4
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
WH
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Mching Pirates explanation given
This letter is written in response to
the letter of Mr. Joe Stroud which
appeared in the October 23 issue of
Fountainhead. Mr. Stroud wrote a nice
letter about the Marching Pirates and
asked for an explanation as to why the
band was not going to appear at the
UNC-ECU football game. The reason the
band did not go is that Carolina was
having "Band Day" and were expecting 20
to 30 high school bands for the game. If
the band had gone we would not have
been able to perform at halftime or in the
stands. Plus if we would have performed,
this would have meant five shows back
to back and probably five practices a
week to get them ready. Instead, Mr.
Naff chose to pass up the Carolina game
and perform at the Virginia game.
Anyone wanting information on ttw
band is asked to contact George Naft
What is wrong with sharing?
who is in charge of the Marching Pirates
organization in the School of Music.
Again, thank you Mr. Stroud for your
letter concerning the band. And
congratulations to the football team on
a job well done. Even though we didn't
make it to the game, we were still behind
you all the way.
Sincerely,
Keith Jones
ECU Marching Pirates
lo Fountainheaa
This letter is in answer to the letter in
Thursday's issue titled, "Gym is for
Student Use I would like to say that I
agree wholeheartedly with the students
on this issue. ECU facilities should be
available only to ECU students and
faculty. However. I would like to add
something to that letter
I am a staff member and therefore
eligible to use the ECU facilities. I realize
that the ECU facilities would be crowded
if all faculty and students used them so I
use the City of Greenville's faciltiies. The
City of Greenville is not paying to give
ECU students a place to play
tennis. However, it seems that every time
J have the chance to plav tennis. I have
to wait in line behind ECU students.
I ask all you tennis-loving students
who find it hard to secure a tennis court
on campus, how would you feel if the
City of Greenville had someone checking
ID's at the city tennis courts. What is
wrong with sharing?
Pam Whitehurst
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Appreciation
To Fountainhead:
I write the following couplet- in
appreciation for the incredible and
historical victory of ECU over UNC.
I dedicate this couplet to my three
children who are attending ECU. They are
Jonathan, David, and Mary Timmie.
"WATERLOOS"
Napoleon came to Waterloo;
Carolina came to Ficklen.
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Signed: V
Rev. S. Yorke Pharr, Jr. k
Entitled
To Fountainhead:
I resent having to approach you
sounding, perhaps, like a peculiar snob. I
do pay my activity fee however and
consequently feel that I am entitled to
voice my opinion in this matter.
I am aware that the Films Committee
works diligently to provide the student
audience with film selections ith which
they feel will please the consensual
appetite of ECU students. The film
selections of late (since the beginning of
the summer) have been very disappoint-
ing, however. I am also aware that the
Films Committee, in the past, has made
honest attempts to present 'artistic'
endeavors to the student body such as
Nick Roeg's Performance, Fellini's
Satyricon, Altman's Images and
Bergman's Persona. Painfully, I am also
cognizant that a great number of ECUers
grumbled their way out of these movies
expressing such things as "What a silly
movie "That was a lot of nonsense" and
"That flick's for queers
So it goes.
O.K. So the Films Committee has
decided to stick with more safe,
conventional, acceptable and less
intellectually demanding films. I under-
stand that different folks dig different
strokes and all that jazz. But can't the
Films Committee present just a few
intellectually stimulating (or "strange" as
in campus jargon) films this year? Many
great films are available - those by John
Cassavettes, Bergman, Roeg, and
Polanski - fine works of cinema such as
Don't Look Now and Steppenwolf that
approach and explore human experience
from a symbolic and, perhaps, more
esoteric level. This IS a university and
the films should reflect to some degree a
search for a deeper awareness and
understanding of Reality. That's what I
thought college was about.
Thanks for the space,
Larry Slaughter fcj
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Signed:
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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Health department checks micro-waveovens
By JOHN DAYBERRY
Staff Writer
Micro-wave ovens are safe when
properly used, and maintained, according
to a survey of the Pitt County Community
Health Department.
Out of 83 micro-wave ovens tested by
Sarah Dixon, sanitarian with the
department, only two were leaking
enough to cause any physical damage.
Both of these ovens were four to five
years old, according to Dixon, and
should have been monitored for leakage
level before.
SURVEY CONDUCTED
The survey was conducted in Pitt
County from September 22 to October 10,
with the use of a leakage monitoring
meter borrowed from the ECU Environ-
mental Health Department.
"I tested ovens in ail Pitt County
restaurants, area industries, and in
private homes of people who called in
requesting tests said Dixon.
"It is a public service which the Pitt
County Community Health Department
plans to do again next October, and once
every year.
"I would not be at all afraid to use a
micro-wave oven, but I would have it
checked once a year for leakage
Dr. Barney Kane, assistant professor
of environmental health at ECU explained
how a micro-wave oven works.
HIGH FREQUENCY
"A tube in the oven called a
magnotron radiates extremely high
frequency radio waves inside the oven
said Kane.
"These waves are of such short
wavelength that they go right through
glass, and paper, therefore the waves do
not affect such materials.
"But the waves are absorbed by water
molecules in food, and the energy
transferred causes the food to cook
Micro-waves, unlike x-rays, do not
break down molecular bonds, and
therefore can cause no genetic damage,
according to Kane
"The damaoe micro-waves might do
comes from their heating abilities said
Kane.
DAMAGE POSSIBLE
"If a person is exposed to high levels
of micro-waves, he is in danger of
developing cataracts, and in the male,
sterilization.
"Micro-waves cannot be felt, because
the skin is relatively dry, and would not
hurt when exposed.
"But the internal organs, and tissues
would cook like hamburgers if exposed
to verv hiah levels of micro-waves
Kane agreed that there is no danger
from properly manufactured, and properly
maintained micro-wave ovens.
"These ovens are manufactured with
skill, and precision, and will not work
when the doors are not closed said
Kane.
"The geometrical design of the oven
is very important, and when wear, or
accident results in a bent door, worn
latches, or loose hinges, then the
radiation could possibly leak out.
"That's why it is important to keep a
micro-wave oven in good repair, and to
have it checked if it is damaged.
"I would use a micro-wave oven, but I
would want to have it checked for
leakage when I bought it, about once a
year after that, and any time that it
became damaged.
"The danger present in a well made
micro-wave oven though, is the same as
the danger of getting sunburned on a
moonlit night, none
Semester calender change presents problems
By GAYLE McCRACKEN
The setting of departmental deadlines
for course revision submissions and
discussion of the semester calendar were
the main points of business at the
October 14 meeting of The Semester
Transition Committee.
"The main thing discussed was the
changing of quarter courses to semester
courses said Bobby Harrell, student
representative to the Faculty Senate
Committee. "What we are trying to do is
combine two courses without changing
the content too much
Deadlines were set and each
department will submit their revisions to
the Curriculum Committee for approval or
disapproval.
"Some simple course changes will be
approved immediately, and others will
have to go through a series of reviews
said Harrell.
The actual change is scheduled for
the 1977-1978 school year.
"The biggest problem with the
calendar will occur with the change over
in the fall said Harrell. "The summer
sessions of the last quarter system will
run right into the first fall of the semester
system
The first semester will end and exams
will be held before the Christmas
vacation.
"The course numbering will be
different said Harrell. "There will be
four numbers instead of three and they
will run from 1000 through 7,000.
"The change with books will be they
will only have to be bought twice said
Harrell. "Many of tne dooks now used
apply to two courses and these will not
have to be changed.
"There are pros and cons to the
transition and it's my obligation to help
my fellow students make the change as
easy as possible said Harrell.
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6
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
i urn M he i n?
Teacher evaluation clarified
The new teacher evaluation forms at
Wittenberg University group questions
into six factors that the Teacher
Effectiveness Sub-committee feels are
relevant to the teaching process.
Clarity of grading procedure, indivi-
dual help and availability, student
accomplishment, clarity and organization
of material, work load, and openness to
student participation are the factors that
contain approximately three questions
each.
Questions under the same factor may
seem redundant, said Dr. John Abma of
the sub-committee. This is not a check
on students' honesty, he emphasized,
but a method designed to cause students
to think carefully about how they feel,
and to give them a chance to change
their minds about a feeling.
For example, Dr. Abma explained,
factor B, individual help and availability,
contains three questions. The first, "The
instructor was willing to help each
student measures attitude. The second,
"The instructor made him-herself
available for help measures availability.
The third question, "The instructor spent
time with individual students measures
personal attention.
Faculty members, said Dr. Abma,
have been pleased with the new manner
of analyzing evaluation forms results.
Under the old system, he explained, they
received a printout of the questions with
corresponding percentages of positive,
neutral and negative responses.
This complex form made analysis of
needed areas of improvement very
difficult. The new system provides a
printout that shows the professor how he
rates on each of the six above-mentioned
factors, as well as responses to
individual questions.
The six factors, Dr. Abma continued,
do not exhaust everything important to
teaching. To provide a broader analysis,
the form contains open-ended questions,
and also provides the professor with
space to add questions of his own
invention, specifically related to his
course.
The new form, according to one
student subcommittee member, is a
result of a shift in emphasis that the
committee has taken. They are now
concerned not with judging professors,
but with faculty improvement.
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8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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Strickland calls for greater participation in government
By BETTY GUNTER
Sen Thomas E. Strickland, who has
announced his candidacy for Democratic
governor of North Carolina, said Monday,
people should become informed and
involved in government
"The key factor to any campaign is for
citizens to be well informed of the issues
before voting said Strickland.
Strickland made the comments as
guest speaker at a Young Democrats
meeting last Monday night.
About 25 to 30 persons attended the
meeting.
People should get out and be a part
of politics since it does influence daily
affairs, he said.
Strickland also expressed concern
over how to bring maturity to his own
campaign.
????????????????
He said he hopes to accomplish this
by curtailing campaigning and by letting
voters know exactly where he stands on
issues.
"I have prepared a list for various
news media explaining my feelings on
certain issues since 1967 said
Strickland.
"Since announcing my candidacy for
governor, I have tried to tell the news
media exactly where I stand
Strickland went on to express concern
over the rising influence of special
interest groups in politics.
"We have divided ourselves into
special interest groups which promote
separate interests he said.
"We must learn to discipline
ourselves and to look for overall good,
good for North
not just
Carolina
what
When asked why he favcred capital
punishment, Strickland said, "The people
of this state should be able to walk the
streets in safety
Responding to questions on why he
is against the Equal Rights Amendement,
Strickland said, "There would be no
certainty in the law, ERA would be
unsettled in too many areas
An example given by Strickland would
be the question of, who would be head
of the household under this amendment?
Commenting on the subject of
marijuana, Strickland said, he favored
lesser sentences for marijuana offenses,
but said such offenses should remain in
criminal law because its use may lead to
other drugs.
Boohing for apples, Halloween treat
Mrs. Stevens
PALM READER
ADVISOR
South, 3 miles south of Washing-
? ton, N.C. Look for name and hand
Jsign. READINGS NOW $3.00.
jarestfit
Can Help in all problems-business,
marital, separation, love. Located
in Chocowinity, N.C. on Hwy. 17
?$
HFRKIMFRVII.LK, N.YNow
there's this little old dame in
downtown Herkimerville named
Hannibal Smith. She doesn't
smoke, hasn't had sex since
1901, has never been to the Big
Apple i New York City), has
never flown in a plane, bates
bras, and drives a 1929 Essex
Terraplane.
Miss Smith (no Ms for hen
has voted a straight Republican
ticket from Warren Gamaliel
Harding through Richard Mil-
haus Nixon, prefers her own
stereoscope collection to the
boob tube, and chews Mail
Pouch Tobacco,
Just a nice, ordinary Sen-
ior Citizen, yes? No'
Hannibal Smith happens to be
the world's undefeated cham-
pion Halloween apple-bobber
since 1888. (She's also held a
title longer than any person in
history.) Generations have
tried, but no one has ever
beaten her record.
Blessed with an extraordin-
ary set ol teeth, she picked up
75 apples before she tell head-
first into a sea of delic. us
Apple Jack and had to be res-
cued from drowning by the
Herkimerville Volunteer Fire
Department.
The indefatigable Hannibal
made news today when she
hinted that she might retire as
a highlight ol America's Bi-
centt nnial next year.
"It's time to step aside and
let some younger bobbers take
over Hannibal said, as she
headed for the Village Tavern
to belt a few Jack Roses. "But
I'll be a consultant for the next
jo years to anyone planning a
Halloween apple-bobbing con-
test
Here are the secret ingredi-
ents, never b( ore revealed, for
Hannibal Smith's special Apple
Jack Punch.
I se one part Laird's Apple
.lack, one part club soda or
ginger ale, one part fruit juice
ol your choice. Pre-chill soda
and fruit juice. Mix in punch
howl, or any suitable container.
Sweeten to taste, add ice and
garnish with slices of fruit.
4pyOQ'
TAKWLLANE
I be SFTROABAAMISAHAOFO (Societ lor the Restoration of
Apple-Bobbing as a Major Indoor Sport at Halloween and Other
Festive Occasions) has two beautiful bobbers demonstrate the
proper technique at a seminar in New York (the Big Apple). All
you need are some apples, some energetic bobbers, a goodly
supply of Apple .lack, and oodles ?l gamesmanship. Ladies,
take your mark
PI LAMBDA PHI
HAPPY HOUR FRIDAY 2-8
3 Contest & prizes for
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FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
9
Resident's
Forum
set
SGAhvrtes
university
club leaders
Kim Kuzmuk , secretary of Public
Relations for the SGA, has announced
plans for a Presidents' Forum to be held
at the beginning of Winter Quarter.
"Unless there are complications the
ECU senior stated, "we will have our first
gathering in December. I think it's
important to the flow of information that
we get together as soon as possible
The Presidents' Forum, as an SGA
program, was created several years ago
in order to get all leaders of campus
organizations together to discuss what
each was doing and planning, according
to Kuzmuk. In particular, the Forum was
used by SGA to explain its projects and
programs, she said.
"Zeroing in on SGA goals is the first
priority Kuzmuk continued, "so that as
many people and as many groups as
possible know what the Government is
doing and where it is going. Also, we at
SGA want to know what everyone else is
doing and what they think. The Forum is
a way for us up at SGA to hear
complaints and problems the Virg lia
native said.
More than one hundred organizations
exist at ECU, and all will be contacted if
they show interest, she said.
"But we don't expect them all to
come, so we'll be happy if we have
participation from a third of them she
said.
rwm
KIM KUZMUK
PROPOUTS
1 MUST CERTAINLY DO
CM?, DO YOU FEEL THAT ??,
ACCEPTABLE POLITICAL
PRACTICE?
7
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HOUEVER, I DO CONSIDER IT POLITICALLY
INDISPENSABLE TO BE LESS THAN GftNPfP
AS OFTEN AS I CAN f-TZ
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10
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
mm
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FEATURES
Ktask dimensions
The haunts of Halloween
By BEVERLY BARNES
Staff Writer
Witches, fairies, goblins and ghosts were the beginning of
Halloween; but these things quickly became only pictures and
the idea of candy and "trick or treat" costumes came into effect.
There is perhaps no other night in the year that has a more
peculiar atmosphere than the thirty-first of October. It is
definitely a relic of the pagan times.
Halloween is the one night set aside for a universal walking
of spirits. People today, do, however, follow this idea quite
rigidly as can be attested by flat tires and nice runny eggs
smeared on the front of houses.
There are many customs that go hand-in-hand with
Halloween. The jack-o-lantern won its fame because a man
named Jack was kept out of heaven and not allowed to enter
hell because of the jokes he played on the devil. His
punishment was to roam the earth carrying a lantern until
Judgement Day.
The custom of costumes on Halloween is derived from
people in English parades who dressed queerly and went about
telling crazy stories.
While Halloween in America lacks thesuperstituious character
of the Old World Holiday, it does retain many of the old
customs, such as masquerading, visiting from house to house,
and eating the ever popular apples. But, it has also had a new
dimension added such as "be careful what you eat "wait til
you get home and let Daddy see what you get before you eat
anything "who slashed my tires?" "get that gooey egg off my
window Ah, yes the "today" sounds of Halloween, but the
good times still prevail. The "trick-or-treaters" of grade school
still enjoy themselves, and the bystanders still enjoy looking at
their reactions.
There will always be pranksters and that is really one of the
commonplace things about Halloween, but pranksters, please be
careful what you do this vear 'cause the goblins are out to get
you
Disillusioned prankster speaks
Another apathetic Halloween perhaps?
I am Dubliclv announcing my
permanent retirement due to overwhelm-
ing lack of support from those ratty,
inappreciative, cherubic ECU peoDle. In
years past, I have diligently strived to
please the student body at Halloween by
accepting the post of Ringleader of
Causing a Ruckus on Campus but my
RCRC position is now up for grabs to
anyone willing to tackle the difficult task
of showing the college kids how to have
a good times.
The slight amount of previous
Halloween turbulence can be attributed
to me I've received absolutely no help
from those little angels out there who
take the meaning
HALLOW EVEN")
it's hard to toilet
around here all
of Halloween (ALL
iterally. Believe me,
paper all the trees
by yourself. One
Halloween, I spent the whole night
sudsing the fountain, kicking out street
lights, and egging cars. (I think that's the
same year I staged a one-man bedpan
raid over at the infirmary.)
The apathy at this school is
astounding. I've never even been able to
round up any water ballon throwers to
man the library exits on Halloween night.
So, you goodie-goodies of ECU will
finally be rid of me this Halloween. I only
hope there is someone out there who will
miss my shenanigans desperately
enough to rekindle the trickery spirit.
I'm transferring to Pitt Tech. next quarter
in order to recruit some hardnosed
troublemakers in a new mischief brigade.
P.S. In order to alleviate the overall
negative tone of this letter, I would like
to say a great big "THANKS to my
mother for inspiring me during my deep
depressions when nobody would stop
studying long enough to help me rip any
hub caps off. Don't worry Mom. I'll live
up to your expectations yet!
ECU has never afforded me the
sufficient amount of wildness I had
hoped to create. Such a calm, quiet
school life is slowly driving me
bananas. You'11 regret losing me to Pitt
Tech. when you hear of all the
commotion we'll make next year.
Have a quiet, uneventful (as usual)
Halloween, kids!
Anonymous
(Past Head of RCRD)
Ex-truly yours,
Chauvinists beware
FE
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Bicycle;
Depart me
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Whiteville
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herself,
toured ab
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(CPS)-October 28 was the day when
women could apply for credit cards anc
not be denied because they are single,
divorced, separated, female or expectant.
A new credit discrimination law went
into effect then which prohibited
creditors from judging applicants on the
basis of sex or marital status. Banks,
credit card companies, department
stores, gasoline companies and anyone
who offers installment credit or loans
won't be allowed to ask if an applicant is
m
married or single. People victimized by
sex or marital discrimination can sue for
actual damages plus fines of up to
$10,000.
Other aspects of the law, such as a
married woman's right to set up her own
accounts and obtain a personal credit
rating don't take effect for almost three
years. The Federal Reserve Board also
removed its original requirement that
reasons for denial of credit, when
requested, must be given in writing.
m
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
n
FEATURES
aracter
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new
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the
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get
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Transportation rep present
Area cyclists assess needs
Mary Paul Meletiou, Assistant
Bicycle; Coordinator in the N.C.
Department of Transportation met
here Friday with cyclists from
Greenville, Cherry Point, Havelock, and
Whiteville.
Ms. Meletiou is a bicycle rider
herself. She estimates that she has
toured about 5,000 miles in the last three
years, not including trips around home.
The most varied triD went from Boston to
Salt Lake City, via Vermont, Canada,
Yellowstone Park, and the Grand Tetons,
where she did some hiking. She rented
the backpacking gear, but carried
camping equipment on the bicycle. For
parts of the trip she put her bicycle on a
train or car.
The Department of Transportation is
engaged in identifying routes on existing
roads that best meet the particular needs
of bicycle riders. The primary purpose of
Ms. Meletiou's visit was to get advice
from people who know the roads in this
area through their bicycle tires.
A bicycle needs most of the same
qualities in a road that a car does, but it
needs some of them more. For instance,
both vehicles need a smoothly paved
surface, but while a car has springs and
shock absorbers, bicycles don't-at least
the better bicycles. "Road shock is
transmitted to the cyclist the Road
Selection Criteria of the Department
explains. "After a few hours or riding on
rough paving) the cyclist's hands become
numb and great discomfort to other parts
of the body occurs Pot holes, low
shoulders, and chewed-up pavement
edges threaten his safety if he swerves
into traffic to avoid them, hits them, or
drops off the edge.Light traffic volume is
perhaps the most important value.
EDITORS AT LARGE
Todays Editor is John Evans, Sports
Editor.
As Sports Editor, John Evans has
become aware and involved in other
aspects of campus life. "My writing
serves as an outlet of expression. I have
learned more just living at ECU than in
the classroom. I have grown up alot
here John is also involved with the
Major Attractions Committee and is a
brother of Pi Kappa Phi.
John is a senior from Bethesda,
Maryland. He really enjoys the
opportunities to meet people and go
places that his job offers.
John was gently, but firmly, guided
into newspaper work by his father. "My
dad is my biggest critic. In my
sophomore year I wanted to drop out of
school. He said he wouldn't interfere in
any way in my life, except he absolutely
forbade me to quit college. My life wasn't
really going anywhere and my dad was
always there and teaching me to find out
things and ask "Why" all the time. I
guess that is why I love newspaper work
the way I do
By LYNN CAVERLY
Staff Writer
John is the epitome of dedication.
Not many nights go by when he isn't
burning the midnight oil, cuddled up at
his desk, busily pecking away at the
typewriter, endeavoring to finish a story.
His job is one of basically assigning
stories and reporting on all athletic
aspects of ECU.
"If I have accomplished anything jn
life, I hope it is the knowledge not to
pass judgements too quickly and to dig
deeper than the surface
I C Drive In Theatre
Ayden Highway - Open 6:30
Sun. Mon.
also showing
" RAPE SQUAD"
E.C.U. STUDENT
SPECIAL
For this program
With E.C.U. ID card 75
Routes marked for automobiles tend to
have good surfaces, but many, like U.S.
64 coming into Bethel, are heavily
traveled and have a drop of two or three
inches between the hiahway and the
shoulder. Often weak-maintained secon . .
dary roads provide the best route for the
cyclist. But how is he to find them? The
road will presumably carry a number,
such as 1002, but seldom will there be a
sign indicating where if goes, let alone
whether the paving stops in two miles.
In other words, bicyclists need route
information such as that which has long
been available to automobile drivers. Andi
the Department of Transportation is
taking a first step toward making it
available. Ms Meletiou-who is a
economist and experienced map maker
as- well as a cyclist-is studying and
mapping a "Bicentennial Route" from
Manteo to Murphy. The plans call for
camping facilities and or motel
accomodations every 25 or 40 miles
along the route. The maps will also
indicate historic and scenic points along,
and alongside, the route.
The Department of Transportation has
no money for signing the route at this
time.
Local cyclists pointed out that with a
maximum speed limit of 55 mph, there is
no reason for excluding bicyclists from
interstates. A paved shoulder on any road
is a natural bikeway, provided it is
smooth. Unfortunately, the shoulder on
the new northeast bypass and that on
highway 11 between the Griffon tumoff-
and Kinston have such rough surfacing
as to be practically unrideable
East Carolina Playhouse
Presents
Bte
SM
THE MUSICAL STORY OF
ORVILLE AND WILBUR WRIGHT
McCrtaMis Auditorium
October 28-November 1 8:15
6perjHli Admission f3.0
MQJ Students - I.D. & Activity CartJs
Call 758-6390 Far Reservations
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12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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The Hight Brothers trite to inexecusaMy
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By JEFF ROLLINS
Staff Writer
Although the cast made a noble
attempt to save this awful show, there is
only so much an actor can do when he is
working with such generally bad material.
The East Carolina Playhouse production
of "The Flight Brothers ranged from the
slightly trite to the terribly trite to the
inexcusably poor, with only a few but
bright sparkles of entertainment dimly
linhtinn thp rpst of thp sho
her sons the piece of advice that helps
them reach their goals. One of the most
cutesy songs of the show, it was saved
uy Anita Carpenter's warmth and ultimate
believability.
Although Miss Carpenter saved the
weak "Put It On Paper" with sheer good
acting, "A Warm and Tender Love' was
quite impossible to bail out. This song
was wretched. We ached that such good
singers as Miss Carpenter and, even
more notably, Ken Davis had to work
with such trite, sentimental, substance-
ORVILLE AND WILBUR WRIGHT as adults and chldlren Rodney Freeze, Larry Talbert,
Sandy Miller, David Sneed.
Perhaps we should have known what
we were in for when the orchestra made
its first unsuccessful attempt at flight,
limping through the flaccid overture like
a crippled dog. moanfully dying many
deaths at the base of the stage. The
score for "The Flight Brothers was very
reminiscent of the score to "The Sting"
and we were at once disenchanted with
that similarity.
One of the better features of the show
was the stage design. John Boyt used
nicely simple sets, allowing for much
open space These sets both afforded the
space needed for the scenes with many
actors, and enchanted the actors
themselves in the smaller scenes. His
bicycle shop set was excellent.
The musical opened with a very
well-sung "If God Meant Man to Fly An
excellent song about public reaction to
the idealistic Wright Brothers. Although
we liked the song itself and its
performance, we were disappointed at
the scene. How many times before have
we seen stiff-necked gentlemen and
umbrella toting ladies posing for at. old
linotype? The chorus was marvellous in
their singing, but unfortunately trapped
in a case of cliche.
The play was at its best in the big
scenes, when the stage was filled with
singing and motion. The costumes with
their flounce and swirl added immensely
to the vivacity that was so scarce in the
music "Two for a Penny" was effective
in this sense, as was "Go Peddle Your
Bikes
"Put It On Paper" was a "Sound of
Music" type song where the mother tells
less material. The hackneyed lyrics and
the dull nelody combined to totally
over-shadow these two fine voices. And
yet, there is worse. "It's All Up To You
My Son" is absolutely the pits. The idea
of the song is old, the lyrics have been
heard before, the song swims in a sugary
sentimentality, and flops.
Dan Nichols, Charlie, carried his
scenes with an endearing personality.
He was given some of the best lines in
the show and he well deserved them. In
his "It's Tell Charlie This and Charlie Do
That" he plays on the fact that he doesn't
have a voice and, with some nice
THE ATTITUDE of the average man toward flying in the 18698 is
musical number, "If Gof Meant Man to Fly"
in the
dancing, he brings the scene off
beautifully. His acrobatics in "Have You
Ever Wondered What It's Like To Fly"
proved to be the high-point of the show
The two leads, Sandy Miller and
Rodney Freeze, both gave excellent
performances. Mr. Freeze has a voice
that carries well and a remarkably large
stage bearing that complements Mr.
Miller's voice and stage presence very
well. If Miller was sometimes uncomfort-
able in a range that may have been too
low, then Freeze would save the moment
with his excellent baritone. If Freeze
seemed at times chilly and untouchable,
then Miller's warmth and believability
would bring the scene back to us. They
were a fine pair. "Two Friendly Brothers"
done by Miller and Freeze and a fine
actress and singer, Barbara Richardson,
was one of the best scenes in the show,
although the dancing was somewhat
shaky.
Miss Richardson's "Katherine's La-
ment" was extremely well-rendered. Her
voice slightly on the breathy side,
combined with her winning smile, makes
for an actress who enhances any role.
Ah, but these moments of entertain-
ment were too brief. The horrid
mediocrity of this play is what we
remember. In one of the worse travesties
of an ending ever on a stage, film of the
airplane's flight through history, all the
way to the rocket, are projected onto a
screen on stage. This grossity reminds
one all too exactly of a television station
signing off. If we were to be awed, we
were awed that they could be so corny, if
we were to be moved, we were moved to
near disgust.
A good musical can be corny and trite
and sentimental, in fact, most good
musicals are, and get away with it. "The
Flight Brothers" on the other hand, is
one of those musicals that will never
leave the ground.
w&
Corner of 5th
and Cotanehe
Are you looking for
a place in the afternoon
to Hit around,
watch television
and drink a cold one?
MARTY' S
is now opening at 4
in the afternoon,
seven days a week!
?
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
11 ? ?!? ini phi, ' ?VMi ? n ??H n i i iimjim g
13
of Music showsfor November
Musical selections by American
composers will be performed by the ECU
Symphonic Wind Ensemble at its
Chancellor's Bicentennial Concert Sun-
day, Nov. 2, in Wright Auditorium.
The program, scheduled to begin at
8:15 p.m is intended to honor ECU
Chancellor Leo J. Jenkins as well as
salute the American Bicentennial,
according to Wind Ensemble Conductor
Herbert Carter.
The concert is free and open to the
public. Included will be "Cazona by
Peter Minnin, "The Red Pony" by Aaron
Copland, William Billings' "Chester
arranged by William Schuman, "Vari-
ations on 'America' " bv Charles Ives and
William Schuman, "We Hold These
Truths by Floyd E. Werle, "The Free
Lance March" by John Philip Sousa and
an arrangement of "The Star-Spangled
Banner" by ECU Marching Pirates
Conductor George Naff.
The Naff arrangement of the National
Anthem has been performed several
times at ECU football games this season.
The Sunday performance will open the
program, as the ECU Air Force ROTC
Color Guard. Advances into the
auditorium with flags.
The Werle "We Hold These Truths" is
the featured work on the program and
includes spoken words taken front
Thomas Jefferson's 1801 Inaugural
ACOUSTC GUTAR ffiARMOAiiCa
CBOB DYLAN STYLE)
, AfO COVE CZAAOS'
$?????????????????????????????????
WECU
music
57
24 hours a day
Address and other writings. James L.
Rees, Director of Radio Services at ECU,
ivill narrate the spoken passages.
"We Hold These Truths" was first
performed in Washington, D.C. by the
U.S. Air Force Band with Walter Cronkite
as narrator.
Special video effects for the ECU
performance are done by Karl E. Faser,
Assistant to the Provost at ECU.
The ECU Symphonic Wind Ensemble
is a select group of student woodwind,
brass and percussion students. The
Ensemble goes on tour each year and
has performed several times at major
music educators' conventions. Several
recordings of recent Ensemble concerts
have been produced.
ROBERT TYSON, organ, Senior Recital, 3:15, Memorial
Baptist Church, Greenville, N.C.
THE CHANCELLOR'S BICENTENNIAL CONCERT
Symphonic Wind Ensemble, Wright Auditorium, 8:15
NANCY ATKINS, violin
JANICE WHITFIELD, piano, Senior REcital, 7:30
JAZZ ENSEMBLE CONCERT, 8:15
PAUL TARDIF, piano, Faculty Recital, 8:15
CONCERTO PRELIMINARIES, 8:15
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT Wright Auditorium,
3:15
CONCERTO FINALS, 8:15
PAUL TARDIF, piano, Faculty Recital, 8:15
CLAIRE HURLEY, voice, Junior REcital, 8:15
ROBERT TYLER, Saxophone, Senior Recital, 7:30
2Sunday
2Sunday
3Monday
5Wednesday
6Thursday
7Friday
9Sunday
12Wednesday
13Thursday
14Friday
17Monday
PLAZA
756-0088 ? PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER
SPECIAL LATE SHOW
FRI. ft SAT. NIGHTS 11:15PM
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JOHN GAVIN m JANET LEIGH
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"It could be the most
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kJ I have ever made p
ALFRED HITCHOOCKS
TheBirds
tarn TECHNICOLOR'
Rod Taylor - Jessico Tandy - Suzanne Pleshette
? TIPPrHEDREN
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For the dxve program only
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ONE AD PER PERSON!
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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'You just call out my name and you know wherever I
am, I'll come running , to see you again , Winter Spring ,
Summer, or Fall, all you got to do is call and I'll be
there yes I will-You've got a friend
James Taylor
Photographs by Tim Chalmers
'Oh, I've seen fire and I've seen rain, I've seen sunny
days that I thought would never end, I've seen lonely
times when I could not find a friend , but I always
thought that I'd see you again
Jame? Taylor ? 'Fire and Rain'
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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JAMES TAYLOR
By BRANDON TISE
Entertainment Editor
James Taylor brought his one man show to Minges Coliseum Sunday night,
October 26. Making ECU one of the few stops in the continental U S. for this tour, he
vas greeted by a very enthusiastic crowd from all over North Carolina.
Since most of his band is currently on tour with David Crosby and Graham Nash,
"aylor struck out solo on this tour and made Sunday night a highly enjoyable evening
hrough his individual efforts, sharing the spotlight only with some pre-recorded
'aylor harmonies.
The first forty-five minute set included songs like, "Baby It's Cold Outside' in
vhich ho used pre-recorded harmonies, "You Make It Easy Merle Haggard's Okie
:rom Muskogee a new Taylor song "Junkie's Lament the title song from his
? west album. "Gorilla the shimmering "Shower the People You Love with Love
i'ind the undoubted highlight of the first set "Carolina On My Mind
i Taylor explained that he had written this song when he and a companion (Karen)
nissed the last boat off of a Spanish island and, waiting for the first boat at sunrise,
!suddenly became very homesick and the song soon came pouring out. This song was
answered by a standing ovation from the exhilarated crowd. (If this song doesn't make
I ou proud of North Carolina, nothing will.)
u Taylor built up a great rapport with the crowd and kept his poise despite frequent,
l,nd in some cases obnoxious, outbursts from the crowd. Case in point: At a pause
etween numbers Taylor was drying himself with a towel when some guy yells out:
i Aren't you glad you use Dial9" Taylor without batting an eye replied an uninterested,
I don't get it
I
After a short intermission Taylor returned to the stage remarking, "I hope you
ljoyed the intermission as much as I did Following an acoustic number, he
Aitched to an electric guitar, dryly commenting, "This is an electric guitar, a red
ectric guitara vast improvement over the gas and steam ones that preceded it He
ayed "Daddy's All Gone" on this mellow sounding hollow body hooked up to a
iase shifter and then after another acoustic number, switched over to piano when a
male chorus in the audience screamed out "Close Your Eyes" to which Taylor
implied literally and quickly commented that he couldn't see the keyboard that way
aying off this subtle retort he continued to explain, "I'm going to try to play it on
e piano .1 don't play much piano but it's a lot like the guitar, 88 strings but hard to
ipo With this he began "Places In My Past
1 After this song he returned to acoustic guitar and began a barrage of hits. "Fading
vay" was first, followed by the current single hit. "Mexico a definite crowd
-vorite However, the enthusiasm for this song was quickly eclipsed by enthusiasm
zr the next song, the classic "Fire and Rain Inis drew another standing ovation,
id was followed by "Country Road After allowing the crowd to catch its breath
!th "Lighthouse he ended the regular show with a gutsy version of "Steamroller
ues" which sent many females reeling. He exited after this song but quickly
'turned for an encore of "Sweet Baby James
This is where the show was supposed to end but Taylor, inspired by the crowd's
tation. returned once again to do "You've Got A Friend
The James Taylor performance was a great success both from the financial and
ctistic points.One man and one guitar in a coliseum situation might have trouble
eping a crowd under control: Taylor had them in the palm of his hand.
Once again thanks to Diane Taylor, Bob Seriava, and the Major Attractions
jmmittee for bringing ECU another great concert.
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This is an electric guitar a red electric guitar, a vast improvement
over the gas and steam ones that preceded it
H i
"16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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The last 45 minutes of this film is
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BURT REYNOLDS
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
17
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Cohabitation still against official university policy
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN
(CPS)-University rules against men and
women spending the night under the
same roof have relaxed somewhat in
recent months, but outright cohabitation
is still against most official policy.
More campus dorms have been
converting to coed living, visitation hours
on many campuses run all day every day
and some local officials won't enforce
anti-cohabitation laws unless other
complaints are involved. But most
University administrators still maintain an
official stance against cohabitation and
local officials will occasionally enforce
the city laws.
barlier this month, 15 University of
Montana students learned that local
zoning laws prohibited cohabitation. The
city of Missoula's building inspector
said he doesn't have the time to check
every house in the University area for
"zoning" violations but would evict
tenants for cohabitation if other
complaints were involved.
The irony, according to ono Resident
Advisor there, is that no one bothers to
enforce the no-cohabitation rule anyway.
Students at the University of South
Carolina were told they could integrate
one of their women's dorms without any
request or agreement from the women
who live in it. In fact, many of the
women were "shocked" at the proposal.
The president of the dorm claimed that
the plan was "too liberal for many of
the girls in thcidorm
Dorm residents will have the final say
on the coed proposal but the Dean of
Residence Life has already come out in
favor of the idea. "Coed living can be an
enjoyable experience educationally he
said. "From my own experience I can say
that it does not lead to promiscuity
which the press would have us believe
Students living in an apartment
complex at the Rochester Institute of
Technology (RIT) in New York have also
tangled with University and local officials
over cohabitation policies. In cases
where there have been other problems
between student tenants and the
university landlord, cohabitation has
been cause for eviction.
At other schools, coed living, if not
cohabitation, is making advances A
university apartment building in Oregon
is now officially coed, a first for the
University of Oregon. Changes there were
easier than in other university housing
since the building was originally
designed as an apartment house with
separate bathrooms and living rooms.
At some schools, like Stanford
University, the dorms are coed by floor or
corridor and have been very popular with
students for several years. One student
claimed that Stanford's dorms had
optional coed rooms, but University
housing officials claimed it was not
authorized by them. "Things like that do
overnight in front of the housing office to
reserve a room in one. The forms there
are coed by floor or suite and there is a
24-hour visitation policy for everyone but
the coed-by-suite dorms. For these close
quarters the university requires an 8-houi
break in visitation hours every night.
The reasons for the policy, as the
SUNYGeneseo president explained, are
that there is no way to enforce
cohabitation restrictions with 24-hour
visitation and that everyone should have
the right to study without the boy or
girlfriend of the roommate around.
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"We do not condone or allow
cohabitation, RITs director of Business
Services said. But "if I happen to know
we have a situation possibly violating the
lease but there aren't any other problems
such as dogs or cats it is practically
impossible for us to police who is living
in apartments he added.
occur but it's not University policy a
spokesman said. "But coed situations
aren't usually associated with a lot of
problems
Coed dorms at the State University of
New York (SUNY) at Geneseo have
worked out so well that students camp
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Drama department adds new facility
EXTRA SPECIAL
By WILLIAM DAVIS
One of the newest additions presently
under construction on the ECU campus
is a new drama designer building,
located on the side of Wright Annex.
This building replaces the old one
previously located in the rear of Ragsdale
Hall, which is being renovated for the
ECU Med School.
The designer building serves as a vital
asset to the Drama Department in the
preparation of various activities, mainly
for designing scenery and architecture.
The Med School is paying for all the
charges for material for the new building
with ECU furnishing the labor.
The completion date is not final.
Presently, ECU laborers are not able to
devote full-time to construction on the
project.
CLOSE-OUT
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18
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.
7. NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
mnmmm
Kennedy assasination questions raised
1
By ROBIN PULZONE
?i0n
a iination ol John F
to the ; ' until
B
Bos-
:ical of thi trutl
sentation of
ECU Lecture Seri Wednesday,
Since 1960. all presidential elections
nfluenced by assassination or
political tricks Robert Kennedy was
assassinated during his campaign for the
1968 presidential election. An attemtped
assassination of George Wallace is
considered to have influenced the 1972
lion Watergate altered many people's
conception of the U.S. Justice Dept . the
C i A . the F.B.I . and also of the events
of the JFK assassination
Kennedy was told that Dallas might
be dangerous because of his liberal
viewpoint The motorcade met Kennedy
at the Dallas Airport on Nov 22. 1963.
and reached the downtown area at noon
shooting took place on Elm St
A police officer was shot while
questioning a man in a residential area
nearby
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Oswald was seen running
theatre and was arrested for
nurdei ol Kennedy and Police Officer
The police kept no records, tapes or
s notes of Oswald's
-rogation All that was kept was a
rd of the contents of Oswald's
? rhey justified this by saying they
had no recorders or room for
stenographers. Oswald had no lawyer. He
denied the shooting.
Jack Ruby appeared at the city jail
where Oswald was being held and shot
him.
The shooting took six seconds. Seven
shots were fired and the rifle found was
only capable of firing three shots with
aiming A tree also blocked Oswald's
view of the president.
The film also showed Kennedy
holding his neck and being thrust back in
the seat of the motorcade. It is against
the force of gravity for this shot to have
come from behind.
An autopsy was performed on
Kennedy at Bethesda, Md Naval
Hospital, but it was not done in detail.
The neck wound was not investigated
Furthermore, the autopsy notes were
burned.
President Johnson was sworn in
almost immediately He appointed the
Warren Commission to investigate the
assassination. The Commission justified
the three shots fired by the "single
bullet theory. They claimed that one
bullet hit Kennedy in the head, one in the
back, and one in the neck which passed
into Texas Governor John Connellv
Wilber'i
Family
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Hickory wood flavored BBQ
Fried Shrimp dinners
Country fried chicken
Variety of Softdrinks
Fish
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Dairy Bar with Ice cream cones
Old Fashioned Milk Shakes
Banana Splits Sundaes
TWO LOCATIONS Mth St. Open 10am 10pm
Corner of 5th and Reade ST. Open 10am 1am
111 II Mill Ml
(Connelly was sitting in the seat in front
of Kennedy)
According to the film, one full second
passed after Kennedy was hit in the neck
before Connelly reacted. When the
Warren Commission questioned Connel-
ly, he told them he had looked at
Kennedy before he was hit. The
Commission said Connelly was mistaken
about the time of the shot and also said
he had a delayed reaction.
There was no bullet at the accident
scene, but one which turned up at the
hospital was automatically linked to the
assassination.
In one picture, Oswald was seen in
the doorway of the book depository
building (to the right of the accident
scene) - not in the sixth floor window of
that building. A woman who appeared in
one of the pictures was investigated. She
had taken a movie which she took to the
FBI.
I he movie which she took at the
scene was never seen by anyone. What
was hidden? Will the public ever know
the whole truth?
On the same afternoon, there was a
photo of three men who were arrested for
vagrancy. Thirty minutes later, there was
no record of it. A total of twelve arrests
were made that afternoon but the only
one recorded was Oswald.
When Oswald was in the Marines in
Japan, he was known to have left, gone
to Russia, and to have given away
military secrets. When he wanted to
return to the U.S the State Department
sent him $485. His passport read "In New
Orleans, then to Dallas The Dept. of
the Defense blocked out the next six
words. The information was not given to
the public before.
Oswald was on the FBI payroll until
Kennedy's assassination. Then FBI head,
J. Edgar Hoover denied that information
and the subject was dropped.
Oswald was supposedly the New
Orleans secretary to "far fair play for
Cuba Commission" The Warren Com-
mission felt this was legitimate.
There are secret documents such as
"Oswald activities in Russia The titles
are known, but not the contents.
Congress defends this by claiming
national security. Katz said.
Life Magazine brought the crucial
movie made by a man at the scene of the
shooting. This movie proved to be full of
evidence. The crucial frames of the head
shot which could have disproved Oswald
as the killer were never published.
Time-Life, Inc. sold the film to CBS in
1974 CBS lawyers are suppressing films
from being shown.
The Americans for the Reinvestigation
of the Kennedy Assassination (ARKA), an
independent organization of citizens, is
sponsoring a petition drive which calls
for a full Congressional investigation into
the Assassination of President Kennedy.
According to the petition, seven
resolutions are in the House of
Representatives calling for congressional
investigation of the President's death, the
death of Martin Luther King and the
death of Robert Kennedy.
iVVXX3?3W?U?3?VVVV
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i
??
i
?t
t;
ik
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??p????-
aiaiSfeWaBiaw!
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Dept. of
next six
given to
roll until
Bl head,
ormation
he New
play for
in Corn-
such as
Tie titles
Dntents.
Maiming
i crucial
ie of the
)e full of
the head
I Oswald
jblished.
CBS in
ng films
st i gat i on
IKA), an
zens, is
ch calls
tion into
ennedy.
, seven
use of
essional
aath, the
and the
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FCHJNTAINHEADVOl. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
?i
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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 llth. 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
$17500.
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic
guitar Excellent condition. 758 1207.
FOUND: Platinum watch in Austin ladies
room 3rd floor. Contact Stephen Miles,
P.O. Box 991, Bethel.
TYPING: Call L.H. Barnes, 756 0752.
LOST: 3 keys on chrome penknife chain
dorm, mailbox, and padlock key. Return
to Dodi McKisson in room 111 Jarvis.
758 9348
KENWOOD AMP KA8006 70 Watts a
channel, Rectilinear 111 speakers,
Pioneer Turntable PL 12ac, 11 months
old, $700, Phone 758-5359.
FEMALE ROOMMATE - needed to share
Eastbrook apt. with male. Reduced rent
in exchanqe for housekeeping Call after
9 p.m. 758 2135.
FOR SALE 1974 Bronco, excellent
condition. MUST sale, $3300.00. Call
758 0497, after 6 p.m.
JVC RECEIVER 4VR 5414, 30 Watts a
channel at quad, 60 Watts a channel
at stereo, 18 months old, $350, phone
758 5359.
STURGILL GUITAR Carolina 100 model.
69th one made. Wcase. $425. Call
7529496.
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar
two pickup exc. condition $100.
Call 752 7398.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.
FLEA MARKET: Pitt County Fair
Exhibit Hall. Open every Wed. 1-5, Sat.
10 6. Come out and see how far your
dollar will stretch.
HONDA 350 for sale, $495 good condition.
7523376.
LOST: Female cat, white, tan and grey;
reward offered. Gayle 758-9307.
RESEARCH PAPERS
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SPAGHETTI SPECIAL
Monday
From 5 to 8
ONLY 1M
: ? All the Spaghetti You Can Eat ! i
ECU lowers entrance standards in
experimental admissions programs
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
An "Experimental Admissions Pro-
gram" was started at ECU during the fall
of 1974.
The purpose of the program is to
provide an opportunity for students to
attend college who would not ordinarily
be accepted under regular university
standards, according to William H. Cobb,
coordinator of the historyreading phase
of the program.
"Last year we admitted 15 students to
the program. These students were just
under the university's admissions
requirements said Cobb. "Of this total
129 remained in school for three
quarters.
"We developed a closed curriculum
for the students based on a
historyreading program. The students
get college credit for a history course(5x)
but with this they must take two hours of
reading without getting college credit for
the reading course.
"The program was designed because
the university feels that too many high
school graduates fail to achieve
satisfactory scores on standardized tests
simply because they have problems with
their reading said Cobb in the
curriculum proposal. "This program
enables them to overcome that deficiency
while earning college credit
"A lack of reading, language, and
study skills is characteristic of students
who come from disadvantaged cultural,
educational and economic backgrounds.
These disadvantages are artificial in that
they are all related to acquired skills and
have little or no relevance to native
intelligence or ability
In addition to the historyreading
course, during fall quarter the students
take two hours of math, three hours of
English, and two hours of health and
physical education, according to Cobb.
During Winter quarter the students
take History 5x which is a continuation
of the historyreading phase of the
curriculum. Three hours of math, three
hours of English, and either business 10
or Health 12 is also scheduled for the
students during Winter Quarter.
A choice of social science with
remedial instruction is offered during
Spring Quarter. English and a special
section of Biology 70 is also offered
The program allows the students tot
earn between 36 and 40 hours during!
their freshman year. Consequently, like"
other students, they have a sufficient
opportunity to graduate in four years.
"Each section of these classes is
special in that they are small, and only
professors teach these sections said
Cobb. "The tutorial classes are taught by
graduate students or honor students.
"We made an effort to use full time
staff members who have a good rapport
with the students
"The historyreading phase of this
program is based on a program used by
Xavier University in Louisiana and about
16 other southern universities. At ECU,
we took the historyreading program of
these universities and expanded it into a
whole closed curriculum
Of the 129 students who completec
the program last Spring, 99 re-enrolled at
ECU this Fall. They are taking regulai
university courses now.
"How they do out of the special
curriculum is the real test. Now that the
do not have special attention, and are or
their own will determine the success of
the program said Cobb.
"It's a qualified success so far. We
are in the midst of an evaluation of tr
program. We know what our people did
now we want to know how this compan
with regular university students
Comparative data including how we
the students are doing this year will
available near the first of the year.
ECU has continued the program thi
year under the name "The Specif
Studies Program
"This year things will be run t
same. Now that we know what we aijj
doing, things will go more smoothly. W
do not expect to lose' as many student j
this year as we did last year because w i
know more what to expect.
ECU has 137 students enrolled in tb?
program this year.
Lanier chairs library meeting
Over 1,000 librarians from around
N.C. will be meeting at the Benton
Convention Center in Winston-Salem this
week to hear noted speakers including
authors, politicians, and librarians, and
to view products from over 100 exhibitors
as they participate in the Forty-First
Biennial Conference of the N.C. Library
Association.
Dr. Gene D. Lanier, chairman of the
ECU Department of Library Science, is
current president of the state organi-
zation and will be presiding at the four
day conference.
"The Pursuit of Excellence Together
is the theme for the conference an
meetings are scheduled throughout eac
day and night. Speakers that wi
highlight the conference include author
Albert Murray, Bette Greene, Willie Sno
Ethridge, and Lawrence D. Kusche.
Members of the General Assemb
appearing at the conference will tj
Senators Thomas Strickland and McNe
Smith and Representative? Jimmy Grec
and H.M. Michaux, Jr.
Acti
(CPS)Pro
courted by
by the gc
denied th
doorways v
But now, c
profession
that it be d
She wa
trickster" b
name stucl
founder (
iorganizatior
I James, an
Stem
Approxii
a memorial
I Clarence S
I ECU whod
The opx
?Diane Tayl
s Other comr
?Ken Stray!
I baseball; I
Willie Harv
Nell St.
-and Physic
P Closing
Chancellor
'
J
'Lea
the I
The ho
Carolina :
changed sc
In a bl
students 01
contest to
y, what Wi
row be c
eferring
nascot.
A camf
jet ermine
he South
Saturday.
Pow
runs
CPSThe
puthouse
lortheast
National
electricity
Dumps tha
j Althou
Impark privy
solar cells
12 12 fee
The Fc
because t
running e
outhouse
overlook.
m
mmm
m
?
??mm
mm
m
I HJlBllI UK
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
wmmmmmnm
21
mm
tin
Activist prostitute founder of COYOTE
Jnce with
Bd during
a special
ffered
udents to
irs during!
Bntly, like"
sufficient
years.
lasses is
and only
ns said
taught by
tents.
full time
d rapport
of this
used by
nd about
At ECU,
agram of
it into a
ompletec
)rolled al
) regular
speciai
that they
d are or,
xess ol
far. We,
n of the
ple did
ampare
(CPS)Prostitution has never -been
courted by labor unions, not sanctioned
by the government. Prostitutes have
denied their vocation and hid in
doorways while police-cars cruised by.
But now, one prostitute is bringing the
profession out of the closet and asking
that it be decriminalized.
She was once called "the coyote
trickster" by a satisfied customer and the
name stuck. She is a hooker and the
founder of COYOTE, an activist
I organization for prostitutes. Margo St.
? James, an attractive, dark-haired woman
Stas memorial service
Approximately fifty persons attended
a memorial service Wednesday night for
I Clarence Stasavich, athletic director at
ECU who died of a heart attack Friday.
The opening remarks were made by
?Diane Taylor, Student Union President.
iOther comments were made by students:
?Ken Strayhorn, football; Jeff Beaston,
I baseball; Mike Radford, wrestling; and
Willie Harvey, track.
? Nell Stallings represented the Health
"and Physical Education Departments.
r Closing remarks were made by
Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins.
'Leader of
I
the Pack'
iow wei
- will
r.
?am thtj
SpecU
run ti
we
thly.
student
ausc
I in m
North
been
The homecoming t. ition at
Carolina State University has
changed somewhat this year.
In a blow for equality of the sexes,
I udents opened the homecoming queen
ntest to men and women. Consequent-
ly, what was once called a "queen" will
n be called "leader of the pack
deferring to Wolfpack, the school's
Irascot.
A campuswide vote this week will
jtetermine who will be crowned during
he South Carolina-NCSU football game
Saturday.
Powerized privy
m
runs off sun
get her
? an
it eac
t wi
tuthor
s Sno
iemb
rill tj
AcNe
Graf
4CPSThe world's first solar-powered
?Duthouse was installed recently near the
lortheast entrance of Yellowstone
Jational Park. The installation uses
slectricity produced by the run to run the
jumps that flush the toilets.
Although the outhouse looks like any
jjpark privy at first glance, more than 160
solar cells are housed in a pair of panels
12 12 feet long by 3 feet high.
The Forest Service picked the panels
because they were less expensive than
running a power line to the isolated
outhouse perched on a 9190 foot
overlook.
in her late 30s, started COYOTE (Call Off
Your Old Tired Ethics) in San Francisco
on Mother's Day, 1973. Now she is taking
the COYOTE message around the
country.
"The basic issue is the ownership of
our bodies she asserts. "No one really
has the right to tell me how to earn my
living-unless they want to give me a
better-paying job
With the support of the United
Nations, the American Civil Liberties
Union and various public defender
groups, St. James is hoping to mobilize
U.S. opinion against what she terms a
"hypocritical Congress" and eventually
do away with repressive laws against
prostitutes, one of the most oppressed
groups of women in the world.
St. James makes it clear that she is
working for decriminalization of prostitu-
tion, not across-the-board legalization.
"Legalization would do nothing to
remove the stigma she says. "The
government could still tell women what
to do with their bodies
Hookers, she says, are victims of an
oppressive, sexist society who fall prey
to everyone from the government on
jown.
By JIM W. SUCKE
DANDELIONS are fine in Indian
Summer-time.
m
MHHHBHMNH
22
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
m
m
m
mm
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STUDENT FINANCING
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE
Bo
East (
probably i1
season Sa
invades Gr
determine
Northern C
Williar
conference
mark, will
offense wt
and VMI 3
The ln(
the South
team the
Top Ten
season,
number si
Old Domir
H
i
I
9
; r
OOPS! M
I 89 knew
Saturday
Dye
Since
Carolina
-Complete
pame to a
hen the
arolina, i
y Coach
Ikhe player
since the
"Everyl
he Richm
he playei
jame, the
hemselve:
wer had
alked it o
mmmm
mmmu
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9gS ? ?' ? I ?
3
iA
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
23
Ml
Sports
t $nt-
s meet in crucial SC match
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
East Carolina will play what is
probably its biggest soccer game of the
season Saturday when William and Mary
invades Greenville for a clash which will
determine the champion of the SC
Northern Division.
William and Mary, with a 2-0
conference record and a 6-3-1 overall
mark, will bring with it a high-scoring
offense which has beaten Richmond 10-0
and VMI 3-0 in conference play.
The Indians are also ranked seventh in
i the South, which makes them the sixth
team the Pirates will have played in the
Top Ten South teams. Earlier this
season, William and Mary beat the
number sixth ranked team in the south,
Old Dominion, by 5-4 score. ECU played
Old Dominion yesterday in Norfolk.
Despite the power of the Indian
squad, ECU coach Curtis Frye feels ECU
will have a good chance of winning
against William and Mary.
"I think it will be a matter of one
goal said Frye on Wednesday. "It's not
ours and it's not theirs. The game also
has a big bearing on the conference
standings. If we win, we'll finish second
overall, but if we lose, it could put us as
far down as a tie for sixth
Although ECU is currently ranked
third in the conference, Frye said the
Pirates team is just now beginning to
reach its full strength.
"We are getting back healthy now
said Frye. "We are just about where we
want to be for the game. The early
season injuries really hurt us, but most
of those injured players are back
?
-u? A (V
r?v
v
COPS! Mike Voight 44 can't reach Billy Paachatrt iuj wiw pitch, but Zack valentine
. 89 knew where to look for it. Valentine's recovery set up ECU's fifth touchdown in
Saturday's UNC win. Photo by John Banks
Dye credits players with rebouid
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Since the Richmond game, the East
Carolina football team has done a
-fsomplete turnaround. The team's rebirth
jpame to a more apparent stage last week
jAhen the Pirates upset ACC rival, North
rolina, 38-17, in Chapel Hill.
j" Coach Dye credits the turnaround to
Ikhe players and their changed attitudes
since the disappointing Richmond loss.
"Everything that has happened since
he Richmond game has to be credited to
he players insisted Dye. "After that
jame, the players got together among
hemselves and straightened out what-
;ver had been the problem. They just
alked it out amongst themselves
A narrow 3-0 win over the Citadel
started ECU on the road back. It was that
win against the Citadel in Charleston Dye
feels turned the season around.
"That win at Charleston gave our team
a lot of confidence said Dye. "If we had
lost it might have worked in reverse,
instead of helping us. We all knew we
had played a helluva game to win and we
were proud of it
Next came a 42-14 Homecoming rout
of Western Carolina and, finally, last
week's historic win over North Carolina.
"Saturday was a great day in East
Carolina history said Dye. "What
occurred in Chapel Hill was made
possible by many people and I'm sure
folks will be talking about our win last
week for some time to come.
See ECU, page 26.
l in mm i m i my
William and Mary will be ECU's last
regular season game, but Frye said the
team is sufficiently rested for the game
Saturday, as Me as for yesterday's
contest with Old Dominion.
"I expect a close game with Old
Dominion commented Frye. "But we
had some rest this week and an easy
game after two real tough games with
VMI and Duke last week. Even though
our records (3-4-2) do not show it, our
kids have really been playing well.
"In every game, with the exception of
the Carolina and Appalachian State
games, our team has outshot the
opponent. We just haven't been able to
score on those shots
Frye cautions that ECU is going to
have to play their best to beat William
and Mary, nough.
"We won't be playing above our heads
against William and Mary, but we will
have to play our very best to win. Any
less, and it won't be enough
Saturday's game will start at 11:00 on
the Minges soccer field.
.?. r: $
fri&i
flFMan
Many people nave asked me who it is
that does the photography for my sports
pages. I teei that some recognition
should be made to these artists for their
work.
The staff photographer is Tim
Chalmers. Tim does nearly ail the
photography in the paper and nearly all
of it on the sports pages All the
photography of the home football games,
as well as of the State and Tuesday's
pictures on the Carolina game are Tim's
works. Normally no mention is made of
Tim in the picture cut since he is the
Fountainhead's own paid photographer.
But you can be reasonably sure that it is
Tim when there is no picture credit.
On occasions when the football team
is out ui town, the football photography
you will see is normally done by John
Banks. This includes the photos of the
Carolina game in today's edition, as well
as for the Southern Illinois, Appalachian
State and Virginia games are concerned.
In addition, all the mug head shots one
sees of the players and coaches will be
done by John, since he is also the
photographer for the Athletic Depart-
ment.
I have forgotten at times to give John
credit for those pictures that are his and
to John I apologize. The photos which he
allows us to use are done without
payment, which is true genorisiity on his
part.
In the future I will try and do better
concerning photo credits for John and
any other contributing photographers
other than Tim.
JOHN EVANS
ECU, Rirren to
clash Saturday
Thio Saturdays opponent. Furrnan
University, has a lot of similarities to the
East Carolina squad that beat North
Carolina last week. 38-17.
Like the Pirates, the Paladins have a
three game winning streak going,
following a three-point loss to a Southern
Conference toe
Also, the Paladins rely on the running
game for most of its offense Third, the"
Paladins are a team with a 2-2 conference
record meaning they are virtually
eliminated from any shot at the
conference championship.
But when one compares schedules,
personnel and coaching philosophies, the
Paladins (4-3) and the Pirates (5-3) come
out as different as night and day
Paladin coach Art Baker has taken an
experienced bunch of players and molded
them into a winning unit after a
disappointing start, while ECU Coach Pat
Dye has achieved a similar result with a
predominately inexperienced group of
players.
The Paladins returned 16 starters from
their 1974 team and most of those
players still make up the nucleus of the
team, including eight defensive starters.
Of the Pirates returning starters from
last year, very few are used on defense,
as Dye has employed two freshmen and
two sophomores to anchor the team.
On defense, the Pirates' strength has I
proved to be the Paladins' weakness. ?
ECU returned all four starters from last
year to the defensive secondary and. with
the addition of Bobby Mynck. fields an
all-star cast. On the other hand, the
Paladins return only one starter from
1974. but still have a nucleus of fine
talent.
Both secondaries are led by strong
free safeties. For ECU it is Jim Bolding.
For Furrnan. it is Mark Gordon
Bolding was conference player of the
week on defense and has intercepted
seven passes during the 1975 season.
This while missing three games due to a
shoulder injury.
Bolding leads a secondary that has
stolen 19 passes so far this season, with
Reggie Pinkney second on the team, and
third in the conference, with five
interceptions.
While Bolding leads the conference
and Pinkney is third. Gordon is
sandwiched between the two in the pass
interceptions rankings Gordon has
intercepted six aerials for the Paladins in
seven games However, all of Gordon's
(no. 28) interceptions have come in the
last four games Bolding. on the Jther
hand, has grabbed five steals in the last
two games
ECU has won its last two games in
convincing manner after narrowly beating
the nation's top defensive team, the
Citadel, by 3-0 ECU downed Western
Carolina two weeks ago. 42-14. before
routing North Carolina by a 38-17 upset
last week.
In the meantime. Furrnan has
struggled past three weaker opponents in
building its three game winning streak.
The three game streak was built on wins
over Presbyterian (21-14), Holy Cross
(21-14) and William and Mary (22-6). Prior
to these wins, the Paladins lost a tough
17-14 decision to VMI and a 27-21
See Furrnan, page 26.
mmm
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24
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
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Time-Out
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Sonny's A Big Man Too
I attended the funeral of Clarence Stasavich on Tuesday, along with about two
hundred other people, and paid my last respects to the man who did so much for
East Carolina athletics. While most of the varsity coaches served as pall bearers,
there were several other familiar faces from the past in the crowd, among them former
players and former ECU coaches. There were also two plane loads of people who flew
from Hickory to pay their last respects. It was a fitting funeral for "Stas
WHAT WILL BECOME OF SONNY RANDLE?
Among those at the funeral was former ECU head football coach Sonny Randle,
who has been the subject of many snide remarks concerning his lack of success at
the University of Virginia this year admittedly, this reporter isn't immune from
accusation on this count.
Seeing Sonny at "Stas's" funeral made me think a great deal more of the man than
I had before.
Most people expected Sonny to be there, but his presence at the funeral
undoubtedly caused more of a stir than if he had not been there. To me, it took a big
man to come to Greenville after the circumstances and manner under which he left,
and an even bigger man to attend the funeral of a man he did not often see eye-to-eye
with.
One must remember the risk that the man took when he left Greenville, "The sure
thing for his alma mater at Virginia. A football coach, like everyone else, has to
worry about his future, too. At the time he left, the challenge of rebuilding the
Cavaliers was a great one and being the man he was, Randle took it. In doing so, he
risked all he had achieved, in the way of coaching reputation and prestige, at ECU.
Always outspoken, Randle went out on a limb at the beginning of the season in
saying if Virginia did not have a winning season he would resign as head coach.
Since that time, nearly every sportswriter who concerned himself with the matter
has waited like a vulture to see Randle eat his words (and again, I can't claim
innocence to this count).
Saturday, Wake Fores embarrassed Virginia, 66-21, in Chartottesville. The win must
not only have been an embarrassing one for Randle, but it was also his sixth of the
season. The loss, in other words, assured Randle and Virginia of a losing season.
Now people lay in waiting for Randle to follow up on his word, to resign, or to
slither out of what he said at the beginning of the year. This reporter has heard
unconfirmed reports that Randle has already turned in his resignation at Virginia,
effective at the end of this season.
If this is indeed true, Randle would be a bigger man than most of us. He will have
kept his word. Whether he would have been fired or not will be hard to tell.
Few remember, or want to remember, what Randle meant to the East Carolina
football program in the three short years he was here. It was Randle who started the
road to success that Pat Dye has continued this year. It was also Randle who started
the winning tradition at this school that Dye nearly fell victim to at the beginning of
the year, before his youngsters matured and before the Pirates beat Carolina
Saturday.
Now. it seems, Randle's risk has backfired and he will morethan likely have to find
another job at the end of this year. We have all taken risks that have failed to pay off
and Randle's was iust a greater risk.
To Sonny Randle I wish a sincere good luck, whatever happens.
SOCCER GAME IMPORTANT SATURDAY
Saturday, the ECU soccer team will play its most important game of the year
against William and Mary.
The game will start at 11 o'clock on the soccer field between Ficklen and Minges,
and all ECU students are urged to attend. If you have yet to see a soccer game, that
is no excuse.
The Pirates' brand of soccer is quite good and even a beginning soccer fan will
enjoy hisherself. If ECU beats the Indians, who have long been a soccer power in the
conference, it will meet Appalachian State in the conference championships. Under
such a matchup, the Pirates would host the playoffs.
Vocal support is a great booster for these proud players, because they play for
little, other than personal pride.
ECU soccer has built up over the last year to a competitive level with any other
school in the conference and nearly any other school in the ACC, except Clemson.
Come out and support the Pirates.
Continued to top of page.
FEARLESS FORECASTS
My booster card has been revoked, for at least a week, and my season record has
been smashed, as I not only goofed on the ECU-UNC game, but also missed a total
of seven of eleven games last week. That leaves me at 50-23-2 for the year, a .685
percentage. I hope to rebound this week. My picks:
ECU over Furman, 27-6.
Notre Dame over Navy, 21-15.
Texas over SMU. 35-14.
Maryland over Penn State, 24-22.
Virginia Tech over William and Mary, 24-0.
The Citadel over Appalachian State, 17-12.
South Carolina over N.C. State, 27-20.
Georgia over Richmond, 33-23.
Nebraska over Missouri, 37-17.
North Carolina over Wake Forest, 24-20.
Oklahoma over Oklahoma State, 33-16.
Ohio State over Indiana, 49-0.
twvvAvvvAvvrtrtftArtftvvvvAvvvsAA
UNIVERSITY EXXON
1101 E. 5TH ST GREENVILLE, IMC.
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Road service
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Unclaimed
Scholarships
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
11275 Massachusetts Ave Los Angeles, CA 90025
? I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling.
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:
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(California residents please add 6 sales tax.)
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO.
1530 OCTOBER 1975
mn mii iiiPin
2
MM
Weaver aid Boldng honored as
SC Players of the Week
Mike Weaver and Jim Bolding became
the first ECU players this year to win
conference honors as player of the week.
Weaver was named Offensive Player of
the Week and Bolding was selected
Defensive Player of the Week. The two
were selected for the parts thev Dlayed in
ECU'S 38-17 upset of North Carolina .
last Saturday.
In that contest, Weaver led ECU to
most of its 403 yards total offense and
gained 68 yards rushing himself on 12
carries. Weaver also threw for 33 yards to
give him a total of 101 offensive yards for
the game.
The 6-0, 155 pound Williamston native
has also been instrumental in leading the
Pirates to a 42-14 Homecoming win over
Western Carolina the week before. Prior
to the Western Carolina game, Weaver
had missed three games due to an injury
and a case of the flu.
Bolding won honors for his
outstanding play on the ECU defense.
During the game, Bolding made six
solo tackles, caused a fumble, recovered
another fumble and intercepted two
passes. Bolding's second interception set
up Larry Paul's 30 yard field goal, which
was the Pirates' last score of the game.
For the season, Bolding now has
seven interceptions. The figure for 1975
gives the High Point native 16 career
steals, which is an East Carolina career
record. The seven interceptions also ties
an ECU season record for interceptions,
which Bolding holds himself with Bobby
Ellis. Bolding accomplished the feat in
his freshman year of 1973 and Ellis did it
in 1966.
Earlier this season Bolding broke the
career record for punt return yardage.
Bolding is currently ranked first in the
conference and second in the nation in
interceptions.
He leads an ECU secondary which
has intercepted one out of every seven
opposition passes and 19 so far in 1975.
Southern Conference Standings
Richmond4-0
Citadel3-1
East Carolina2-2
Furman2-2
VMI2-2
Appalachian1-2
Davidson0-2
William and Mary 0-3
4-3
5-2
5-3
4-3
2-5
5-2
0-5
0-7
we.
wani
your soul!
on paper of course
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 sec
ond 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 Pub
lications Center between the hours of 3 to 5,
Tuesdays through Thursdays.
.
This Is True!
By WILLIE PATRICK
Staff Writer
What A Week
Mark it on your old calendar.
Note it in next year's appointment book.
Oct. 21-28 was, to this writer's mind one of the most, if not the most, prolific
weeks in sports history.
It was an up and down week, punctuated by extreme joy and extreme sorrow, aix
one instance produced a mixed feeling of the two.
The Worid Series
Oct. 21 and 22 produced two more exciting World Series games, culminating in
the end of the most exciting annual production in recent memory.
Boston, a young team in the part of the underdog, strung "The Best Damn Team
in Baseball" down to the wire before bowing to the Reds.
Cincinnati is to be congratulated for its 115 victories: anything less than a World
Series championship would have been antichmatic.
The Red Sox became early sentimental favorites, due to their outstanding play and
their owner, Tom Yawkey, who has been in control of the team for the past 43 years.
At the same time, the popular gentleman has never had a team to win an autumn
classic.
The World Football League
The financial plan looked good, prior to the season's start.
After reading it, and the jargon about "percentage payments" and "minimum
salaries it wasn't hard to believe that even though the league wasn't going to make a
lot of money, it would indeed pay its debts this go-round.
The league paid its debts. But the players got tired of working for no profit The
front offices couldn't maintain the standards of operation vital to producing fine
football and a fine image and the ultimate decision was made.
Personally, this is one writer who was sorry to see it go by the wayside. Having
the opportunity to see two games in Charlotte, a first-hand view shows that there was
plenty of high-scoring football.
No defense, usually, in terms of points scored, but nevertheless some licks were
traded.
Interesting point to ponder too is exalted Ruler Rozelle of the NFL and his recent
decision to not allow signings of ex-WFL'ers. The WFL was not a bad leagueif it
was so Mickey Mouse, why didn't the ex-NFL stars burn up the stat pages?
But still, no fans equal no money equal no football.
It is like that on any level.
Coach Stas
Words on the subject of the passing of one of the football world's greatest all time
leaders seem terribly insignificant. Shakespeare couldn't do the situation any justice
A multitude of people who knew Coach Stas have remarked about what a fine wit
he had, and how he was such a warm human friend to those who really knew him.
This writer can attest that if someone didn't understand his policies, it usually was
the fault of the individual. For Coach Stas, no matter what the time of day or
situation involved, would always take the time to explain the workings of his office.
Like has been said, a person often didn't agree with his policies, but he always
knew whre he stood with him. East Carolina University lost a large part of its history
with his passing.
ECU 38, UNC-CH 17
Despite rumors that the Tar Heels will be demoted to small college status, Easl
Carolina will alwavs savor the crushing defeat it handed to the Tar Heels on that
lovely October afternoon in (phew!)beautiful Chapel Hill.
It was both ironic ana saa tnat it came after the Pirates' darkest hour
The Pirates performed with a flair that has been unmatched this season They
should be congratulated and cheered from now until the end of football, whenever
that is.
This writer didn't realize that so many people could scream so loudly and for so
long. It was rumored that the entire medical school would be moved to Chapel Hill.
The only upsetting performance of the day came from the striped shirts Thinking
of two years ago. fans saw Terry Gallaher get clobbered in pursuit of a pass, with no
call by the nearest zebra. One wonders how the worst ACC team in penalties for a
season can suddenly be penalized 13 yards in the entire game, while the Pirates
picked up considerably more.
It doesn't make for good journalism ethics to publicly knock the officiating, but
here goes:
"C'mon, fellas. Anybody in the stands can just about call the obvious plays. It is a
shame you guys can't call the close ones
The Pirates take on Furman Saturday in a game that should be a rematch of the
one that gave Pat Dye his initiation into Southern Conference football last season.
The Paladins will be a tough test once more, for the Pirates have to guard against
having an emotional letdown following Saturday's win.
Saturday's win took character, though, and though character is sometimes hard to
get, you have to work just as hard to lose it as well.
The Pirates won't lose it. You can bet that This Is True!
wn?n? iim i t ?mw? i pi wum ii i an ? mi ? hh winn i ? ? ?
iBHHHHHHBBBBHI
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26
FOUNTA1NHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
amemm
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Fiirman Continued from page 23.
contest to Richmond for the two
conference setbacks.
The Paladins do have one thing over
the Pirates in that they beat Appalachian
State. 130-23, prior to the VMI loss. The
Pirates were routed by the Mountaineers,
41-25, in their second game of the year.
Nonetheless, the Paladins' coach Art
Baker is concerned with the ECU team
Furman meets in Greenville this
weekend.
"Obviously, East Carolina got off to a
slow start said Baker, referring to
cCU's opening losses to N.C. State and
Appalachian, "but, boy, they have really
come around.
'They are looking good. They have
the same big strong people who can
really run and they are fresh of that win
over an ACC team
Baker believes the Paladins will have
to work harder on both offense and
defense to beat the Pirates, and claims
his three game winning streak doesn't
hold up to that of the Pirates.
"We really have our work cut out for
us even though we've been winning
said Baker "We can't play in the same
mold that we've been playing in the last
three weeks. We have to be sharper
Baker does feel, though, that his
team has come a long way in the last
three games from where they stood after
the VMI clash.
"We've matured as a football team in
that we are beginning to take advantage
? ; the mistakes of the other team and
what it gives us otherwise
Leading the Furman attack, which has
gained a total of 324 yards a game this
year are quarterback David Whitehurst
and running back Larry Robinson.
Whitehurst (no. 15) is second in the
conference in total offense, with a seven
game total of 961 yards. His best game
of the season came last week when he
totalled 176 yards against the Indians. In
addition, a point of note for the ECU
defense is that Whitehurst hasn't been
intercepted in his last 43 attempts. So far
this season, ECU'S defense has
intercepted one pass in every seven
passes by the opposition.
On the ground, the Paladins have
gained most of their yardage. They have
six runners with over 100 yards for the
season, but the leading rusher is
Robinson. So far this season, Robinson
(no. 31) has gained 552 yards.
Three ECU rushers have picked up
over 200 yards this season and they are
in ECU'S starting backfield. Willie
Hawkins is the team leader with 410
yards, Kenny Strayhorn is next with 368
yards and RayJones ranks third with 232
yards.
What all the comparing means is that
the game Saturday between ECU and
Furman will be a whole lot closer on
paper than the oddsmakers think. Right
now, ECU is figured as an eight point
favorite, but one can guarantee come
kickoff time that isn't going to make any
difference to ECU or Furman.
ECU
"All season long our kids have been
working hard and not getting anything
out of it. But they got some of those
things on Saturday. We've accomplished
one of our goals for this year, but we've
got more to accomplish now
Among those accomplishments, the
foremost is to win the rest of this year's
games. If that were to occur, ECU would
finish at 8-3, one game better than last
year. To do this, ECU has got to beat
Furman, Virginia and VMI.
The best way for Dye and his players
to do that is to approach each game one
at a time. And, true to the task, it is the
Furman game this weekend which Dye is
most worried about right now.
"The win last week was great, but
we've got to get ready for another game.
This win just has to be the solid block to
start building on. We have to keep on. In
my short time in the Southern
Conference I've learned that league
games are going to be a fiercer and more
emotion packed game than any of our
outside games.
"I certainly consider Furman as one of
the top teams in the conference,
especially with their beating Appalachian
and playing so close to Richmond. This
FurmanEast Carolina
5Tennessee Tech173N.C. State26
21Richmond2725Appalachian State41
30Appalachian St.2320William and Mary0
10VMI1341Southern Illinois7
21Presbyterian1414Richmond17
21Holy Cross143The Citadel0
22William and Mary642Western Carolina14
38North Carolina17
130
4-3, 2-2
114
186
5-3, 2-2
122
will be a real challenge for our coaches
and players to get ready to play this
week '
Dye said he was glad this game will be
a home game and that on several
occasions at Chapel Hill the crowd pulled
the team up and helped boost them.
"I'm glad we play Furman at home
and I hope we have a big crowd here
Saturday night because they will see one
heck of a football game
Kickoff time at Ficklen Stadium
Saturday night will be 7 o'clock.
Clubbers lose, 18-12
ECU'S club football team dropped its
third game of the season last Sunday by
an 18-12 score to St. Paul's.
ECU fell behind in the first half by a
12-0 before rallying back with two
touchdowns in the second quarter behind
Buddy Sadak.
Late in the third period St. Paul's
scored to go ahead 18-12.
ECU had one final chance to win the
game late in the final period, but fumbled
away the opportunity with one minute
remaining in the game.
The clubbers' next opponent will be
Central Piedmont Community College
this Sunday at 1:30 on the varsity
practice field.
ECU to host meets
East Carolina's cross country team
will host the Southern Conference cross
country championships this weekend.
Representatives of all eight conference
schools will congregate in Greenville at
11 o'clock for the championships.
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15
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BUCCANEER PORTRAIT BIKE WINNER!
Renee Parris . a sophomore, from Charlotte won the 10-speed bike in the BUCCANEER raffia
The bicycle was purchased from John's Bicycle in Greenville by Stevens Studios.
Stevens Studios will return to ECU for one week only in January to photograph any students who
were missed in October. Appointments may be scheduled after the Christmas holidays.
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By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
When Brad Smith graduated from
CU last year it left a big hole in the
CU soccer team's defense. Smith, who
ad been a three-time All Conference
erformer at center fullback, had been
ie nucleus of the Pirates' defense.
Smith's graduation left senior Scott
alas as the only returning starter to the
jllback area. The outlook appeared
loomy for the defensive part of ECU'o
jam. That is, until Tom Long made his
resence felt.
Long moved into the spot vacated by
mith and has filled the hole well enough
) make defense the strong point of the
CU team once again this season.
Now Long feels that the ECU defense
i as good as any team the Pirates' will
lay.
"Our defense is probably as good as
iy said Long. "In the Appalachian
ame only one guy scored against us and
3 is more than likely going to be an
II- American'
But Long is not the only fixture on
ie Pirate offense. He also credits Balas
id goalie John Keener with an
iportant role in the team's play.
"The defense works well as a unit,
cott will usually play up near midfield
nd I usually pick up the garbage shots
id play back up to the other fullbacks.
3hn Keener has been really good at the
aeper position. Being a freshman he has
ally responded well in a spot where we
ally needed him
Long, who was his high school
team's MVP his sophomore year, finds
the team to be playing better than 3-4-2
record it had going into last night's game
with Old Dominion.
"We have had good games against
every team we've played pointed out
Long. "Even though the record may not
show it, we have done well. It seems we
play well, but just can't score well
enough to win
A look at the Pirates' schedule will
back up Long's arguments. On this year's
schedule have been six of the South's
top ten ranked teams: Appalachian, Old
Dominion, UNC-Wilmington, William and
Mary, North Caiolina and Campbell
College.
"Most teams won't play the schedule
we have chuckled Long. "We have so
much competition on this tough
schedule. We need a couple of breathers
in there someplace.
"The level of competition we play will
improve us in the way we play. I think
it's better overall for the program to play
these teams
On Saturday, Long will be joining
Balas and the other fullbacks, Bob Poser,
Keith Wilson, Lloyd McClelland and
David Wasiolek in trying to stop the
fast-moving William and Mary team.
Long, however, said it will depend on the
offense rather than the defense.
"If we can score and pass the ball
against them we'll be in the thick of
things predicts Long. "If we can't we'll
be hurting
JTS AND BOLTS - Wayne Bolt 68 celebrates the thrill of 'ast week's victory with
ike Weaver 9 and Ronnie Ragland 63. Photo by John Banks
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
27
m
HAPPINESS ISa win over Carolina. Harold Fort 54, Emerson Picket! fSfil and
BmSs? f75 Wh?OP H UP ln ?,OSinfl minUteS ?f Saturday's P8 ? by
Fal Intramurals finishing 143
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By LEONARD SMITH
Horseshoes Championships
In Men's Intramural Horseshoe
Singles competition. James Blanchard
has successfully defended the singles
title that he won last Spring Quarter.
Blanchard defeated Tom Norman in two
straight games, 21-16 and 21-6, on
Thursday, October 23 to bring home the
championship.
In Men's intramural Horseshoe
Doubles competition, singles champion,
James Blanchard, teamed with his
championship game opponent from last
year, Whitey Martin, to defeat the team
of Randy Monroe and John Ballard, 21-5,
18-21, and 21-15.
One-On-One Basketball
The championship of the 6'1" and
Over Division was decided when Cedric
Dickerson defeated Jan Blount on
October 15. The new champion of the
Under 6'1" Division is Dave Applegate.
Appiegate defeated Chuck Hester by the
scores of 15-13 and 10-7 on October 22.
The first game of the march was a hard
fought battle all the way. The second
game found Applegate slowly wearing
down Hester and eventually taking the
title. Both contestants have proven that
they are capable of playing an excellent
brand of basketball Our hats are off to
both players
Volleyball
Only two unbeaten teams remain in
Men's Intramural Volleyball competition,
Scott's Stumpy Stumps at 7-0 and the
Kappa Alpha "B" team at 5-0.
All teams are really beginning to
show their skills as the playoffs draw
near. Several very fine matches have been
played in recent days. The Volleyball
regular season ends this week with all of
the Divisional Championship Games
also scheduled to be played.
On Tuesday, October 28 at 8:00 p.m.
in Minges, it was Scott's Stumpy Stumps
versus Scott's Brewers for the Residence
Hall Championship.
On Wednesday. October 29 at 8:45
p.m the Geology Jumpers were to meet
the Volley Follies for the Graduate
Independent Championship.
The Fraternity Division and the Club
Division Championship Games are
scheduled for Thursday, October 30 at
8:00 and 9:30 p.m respectively.
Touch Football Championship Playoffs
Last week the Divisional Playoff
Games and Divisional Championship
Games were held to determine which four
teams would represent their respective
divisions in the All-Campus Championship
Playoffs. As expected, several games
were decided in overtime, many tempers
flared, and several big upsets occurred.
Defensing champion, Pi Kappa Phi,
crushed Pi Lambda Phi, 34-0, on
Monday, only to be defeated by Kappa
Alpha in overtime on Tuesday. Kappa
Alpha then lost to Kappa Sigma, 14-8, in
the Fraternity Championship Game.
Scott's Moe's Zingos advanced to the
finals of the Residence Hall Division with
a 6-0 victory over Aycock's Schlitz Blitz
on Tuesday However, in the Champion-
ship Game. Scott's Moe Zingos were
beaten. 6-0, by Jones' Lost Gonzo Band.
In the GraduateIndependent Division
Championship Game, the Pack defeated
Herb's Superbs in a very wild game. 20-0.
The Club Division Championship
Game found Phi Epsilon Kappa avenging
their only regular season loss by
dumping previously undefeated
AFROTC s Ron's Raiders by the score of
22-6.
In the All-Campus Championship
Semi-Final Games on Monday, October
27, Kappa Sigma defeated Phi Epsilon
Kappa and in the other semi-final game,
The Pack defeated Jones' Lost Gonzo
Band. No scores or details of the games
were immediately available Therefore, it
was Kappa Sigma against The Pack for
the All-Campus Chan ionship on
Tuesday.
mmm
28
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975
mm
m
mm
news F LAS
Typing
Fountainhead is looking for a typing
assistant. Qualifications needed are
speed rnd accuracy. Salary and hours
will be discussed during interview.
(Experience on Compugraphic Compu-
writer I or II would be great, but not
necessary.) Contact Alice Leary at
? Fountainhead on Monday, Nov. 3 to set
kup appointment.
Prayer breakfast
How do you begin your Thursdays?
Well every Thursday morning between
7:00 and 7:45a Prayer Breakfast is being
held at 169 E. Fifth Street. Everyone is
welcomed!
Prayer changes things!
d
ARKA
Americans for Reinvestigation of the
KennedyAssassination (ARKA) will show
the Zapruder film and present other
materials pertaining to the assassination
on Tuesday, November 4th, at 7:30 p.m.
in the room upstairs over the Elm St.
Gym. Petitions in support of a
congressional reinvestigation of JFK's
assassination will be available. Admis-
sion is free. The public is invited.
Adopt a dog
The dogs available for adoption this
week include three brown eyes and white
bodied mixed puppies, a black and white
mixed breed, and a brown mixed breed.
Newman club
The Newman Club is sponsoring
Catholic Mass on campus every
Wednesday at 5 p.m. in room 221,
Mendenhall. The Biology Building will no
longer hs used for services.
Piii board appfcants
The Pub Board, SGA appointed
overseer of publications, is seeking
applications for a position on the Board.
The applicant should be a full-time
student with at least a 2.00 average.
Applications can be filled out in the Dean
of Student Affairs office. The applicants
will be notified via the Fountainhead
when the screening will occur.
FLASH FLASH FLASH
Coffeehouse auditions Art faculty exfirtm SNAmeefag
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Auditions for the Student Union
Coffeehouse Sat. Nov. 1 and Sun. Nov. 2
7-10. If you wish to audition come by
Student Union office and leave your
name, number of persons in group and
length of time of your performance.
Please limit time in consideration of
other performers. Remember not only
musicians, but any other acts suited to a
small place (dancr, readings, etc.) are
welcome.
Memorial fund
A memorial scholarship fund in the
name of Clarence Stasavich has been
established at East Carolina. Anyone
wishing to contribute to the fund may
sent money to the ECU Athletic
Department and indicate the money is for
the Stasavich fund.
Senior show
Senior show - Rawl cases - Nov. 2-8.
Combined show of ceramics, drawings
and textiles by Nan Forrester and Hunter
Foreman. Both B.S. candidates with
concentration in ceramics.
Sigma Theta Tau
The Sigma Theta Tau National honor
society of nursing will induct 34 new
members into the Beta Nu Chapter. The
induction ceremony will be held on Nov.
1st at 2:00 p.m. in room 101 of the
Nursing Building. Guest speaker will be
Eva Warren, the first Dean of the ECU
School of Nursing. A reception will be
held in the Home Economics Depart-
ments' parlor following the induction. All
members are urged to attend!
Forever Generation
The Forever Generation invites you to
come and join us every Friday night at
7:30, room 244 Mendenhall for some
good Christian fun, fellowship and
refreshments.
Talent
HVfi
St. James United Methodist Church
invites you to a talent bazaar November 6
10:00-7:00.
Multi-media group exhibition, School
nf Art faculty ECU, November 9 through
NovemT'Si. 1975 Opening rec.pt.on
Sunday November 9, 3 to 5p.m. at The
Hnes Gallery, Rocky Mount Arts and
Crafts Center, Rocky Mount, N.C.
Gotten square dance
Cotten Hall is sponsoring a square
dance Tues Nov. 11, in the parking lot
beside Spill man at 7:00 p.m.
Jerome Power, a professional caller
will be there. Everyone is invited.
SGAonj
? M
fV.H I
list
All presidents of honorary, social and
organizational groups please contact the
SGA as soon as oossible. Mendenhall or
7S&-6611, ext. 218. We are compiling a
lis'of organizations and their presidents
or the purpose of a Presidents Forum.
Go to France
Girls interested in going to France on
the "Au Pair" plan of living with a French
family are urged to attend a meeting Oct.
30 at 7:00 p.m. in Brewster Building,
room 307.
Suiotiillio dub
There will be a Sociology and
Anthropology Club meeting Monday
afternoon, Nov. 3 at 4:30 in Brewster,
D-302. All sociology and anthropology
majors and minors and any persons
interested are invited to attend.
The Student Nurses' Association
meet Tuesday night, November 4, at 7
in Room 101 of the Nursing Building.
Guest speaker will be Dr. Edwin
Cooper, an orthopedic surgeon, to sp
on rehabilitation after spinal cord inju
Alpha Beta Alpha
The regular monthly meeting of
Alpha Eta Chapter of Alpha Beta Al
(Library Science Fraternity) will be heli
the student lotinoe in the Library Scie
Department of Joyner Library at 5 p
Tuesday, Nov. 11.
All members and pledges
urged to attend.
RAP One
The Pitt County Health Departm3
announces a temporary change
schedule for their weekly PAP Clinic h
?very Wednesday in Greenvlle. No cli
will be held for one month from Octo
15 through November 12th. The P
Clinic will resume as a regula
scheduled clinic every Wednesc
beginning November 19Mh.
Wresting Tournament Recreation Comnitl
The Delta Zeta - Pi Kappa Phi annual
Greek Wrestling Tournament and Happy
Hour will be held Friday, October 31. The
Happy Hour will start at 11:00 p.m. and
the Tournament will begw at 11:30 at the
Pi Kappa Phi house on Hooker Road.
All are welcome.
Anyone interested in applying f(
position on the Mendenhall Stm
Union Recreation Committee may picl
applications at the information desl
Mendenhall or from the secretary at
committee offices in Mendenhall. E
available positions are open to tr
interested.
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