Fountainhead, December 9, 1975


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Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY VOL. 7, NO. 21
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 9 DECEMBER1975
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SGA misplaces $85,000
Treasury miscalculates budget
By JIM ELLIOTT
News Editor
The Student Government Association
Treasury has a current budget of $15,490,
instead of over $100,000 as had been
anticipated.
However, SGA President Jimmy
Honeycutt stressed that the reduced sum
would not hinder the legislature's funding
of campus oraanizations.
SGA 1 reasurer Larry Chesson present-
ed the revised figure to the legislature at
the Monday night session.
"It is difficult to express my regret
and sorrow, for, in the course of
presenting the new budget I have
discovered this error Chesson said.
A budgetary report given to the
legislature in October indicated the SGA
had approximately $445,000 to work with,
when the actual amount was $353,143.
Chesson said the SGA financial
advisor and the campus auditor agreed
the error was due to a miscalculation on
the treasury's surplus from last year.
Jerry Paul
to help student
class action suit
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
Jerry Paul, who gained national
prominence with the Joan Little Case,
has agreed to visit ECU and talk with
SGA Legislative Assistant Tim Sullivan,
concerning a class action suit for
students arrested during the Halloween
night disturbance.
"Paul said he does not charge for
such cases according to Sullivan who
is also the Chairman of the SGA Select
Committee which investigated the
Halloween night disturbance for the SGA.
Paul, who was contacted in California
by Sullivan, said he will visit
"Paul said he has a lot of interest in a
law suit said Sullivan. "He was here for
the open council meeting in November,
and he received a copy of ther Select
Committee's report.
He said the ECU students were too
apologetic. They were innocent and
apologizing, yet they had nothing to
apologize about said Paul.
The Legislature debated Monday night
whether or not they can hire a lawyer for
the students. State law prohibits the SGA
from hiring a lawyer, but it can donate
mo a student defense fund
Aid to students does not have to be
tl aid. Sullivan explains!
"We are concerned about trie
lents. By law we cannot hire Mr
Paul. At present all we can say is that we
will - ize all those students who
courts so they
work with Paul - or whoever t
fair pla
"p. Midas touch He
introversial but unds as if he is
erned over what happened to the
students Halloween night.
After the budget presentation Honey-
cut said SGA plans to buy another bus
for the transit system were essentially
undermined, but that the funding of
campus organizations traditionally sup-
ported by SGA money would not be
affected
"The situation is serious, but not as
serious as it could be said Honeycutt.
"Judging from past experience in the
SGA, there are not that many groups
(campus organizations) remaining that
will ask for money for the rest of the
academic year
Honeycutt said he anticipates the
legislature has yet to spend $2,000 on a
consumer oriented apartment guide and
another $2,000 on departmental retreats.
In other business the SGA approved
President Honeycutt's nomination of
Johnny Shelton as new SGA attorney
general.
Dennis Honeycutt, the former attorney
general, was unable to hold the post
because he was not enrolled as a
full-time student this guarter.
The legislature approved the nomi-
nation of Shelton, a senior ore-med
student.
Shelton served as public defender on
the honor council this year
The legislature also received several
copies of a pamphlet printed by the SGA
and titled, "This Is Your Voice-Know
How To Use It
Dalton Nicholson, Internal Minority
Affairs secretary, told the legislators that
they could distribute the pamphlets to
their constituencies Copies will be
placed in the Croatan and Student Union
for day students, he said.
THE N.C. SHORELINE is one of the most beautiful on the American East Coast. These trollers are docked after a long day at sea
SGA denies boycott approval
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The SGA Monday night voted not to
give final approval to an earlier decision
to boycott downtown Greenville mer-
chants.
In a special session on Nov 17, the
legislature voted to boycott downtown
enville merchants in response to what
it calls unnecessary tactics used by
police to disperse a downtown crowd
Halloween night
ifty-six ; irrested during
the incident
rim Sullivan, chairman of the SGA
Seled Committee which investigated the
Halloween disturbance recommended
that the Legislature not give final
approval to it! earlier dei :x,ause
City Manager Harry Hagerty has agreed
to some of the committee's recommend-
ations.
"Forty-seven of the fifty-six charges
were dropped, and a city ordinance has
been charged to allow beer on campus
said Sullivan.
"We are presently working with the
City Council for student representation in
tl government. We will have I
details for the students and the council
y January
"The firsl offer by the city officials in
Novembei was turned down because we
fell it was not adequate. It was similai to
the position given a studenl representa
n the past, whk h did nol work We
want to partii ipate more
"Things il- Halloween should i
happen and it we student have more
imput, maybe they won't.
See Boycott, page 4.
The Greenville Peace Committee is
sponsoring a rally at the new Greenville
Mall Wed Dec. 10 from noon to 1 p.m
The demonstration was called to protest
a bill in the U S Senate that w
change the criminal justice system
rding to lit i tl from the Amer
Civil Liberties Union, the bill titled
vaguely written (il is 753 pages long)
-
the government in time u or

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mitte said � I irmation on thi
would be distributed at the rally
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2
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
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EditorialsCommentary
Students do have rights
A student has no inherent right to choose his hours. You
may issue cards at your discretion. However, if convenient, and
if the student has worked out a schedule which does not
conflict, it would assist the student in working out his schedule
if, in multiple section courses, you gave him the hour he
requested. Do not try to change any information on the card by
writing on card. Any changes must be authorized and made by
Registrar
The above quote is taken directly from a page of guidelines
given to professors who worked during registration last week
handing out class cards.
Several parts of the above listed items make for some
interesting reading-at least as far as the students are
concerned.
Apparently all the garbage going around concerning student
right does not apply to picking your own class schedule and for
that matter just what curriculum you will major in at this
university.
For, as the first sentence in item three explains, the student
does not have an "inherent" right to pick his classes or
schedule.
Please note students, if it is "convenientthe note does not
say who it is supposed to be convenient for-probably the
professor and not the student�then it is alright for the student
to get the cards they request�but only if it is convenient.
Of all the garbage we have read lately, this little item has to
take the cake.
Maybe we were wrong but we always thought that when you
paid your money�tuition�you could take about any course you
wanted to�whether it was convenient to anybody or not. Of
course we realize there are constraints to this taking any course
you want.
A senior can't take a freshman level course, without
permission, and a social work major could not take an advanced
business course. We understand there are certain course
prerequisites that must be followed.
But, these are procedural matters that all students
understand. What we think most students will fail to understand
is why the Registrars office, which runs registration and is the
think tank that turned out this aforementioned memo, would
send out such a set of directives to personnel handling
registration.
When a student hands the money across the counter at
Spillman at the start of every quarter we think he buys the
"inherent" right to take any course he may choose, within the
recognized boundaries.
The memo writer in administration who cranked out this
beauty should remember that students at this university are not
here at his pleasure, his conveniencethat he is here at their
pleasure and their convenience. And, if he does not think that
then he should consider what ECU would be tomorrow if all
11,000 plus students decided to drop out.
Then the need for this administrator, and his "inherent rights
convenience memo" would be out in the literal cold.
At the very least the Registrar should hire a professional PR
man to write memos since the wording in this one is nothing
but inflammatory.
But, we see in this something worse than just a slip of the
typewriter in preparing the registration guidelines.
For more than likely, there are quite a few people in high
places that support the convenience, no inherent right thesis.
And that causes more worry than just a poorly written memo.
We think students have an inherent right to pick the
courses they desire. And, quite frankly, we aon t give a damn
who it miqht inconvenience.
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you uant ro at a ujhat ojhem you ckouj uPT?
Use coupons
In today's FOUNTAINHEAD students will find over a dozen
coupon ads worth over $100 when redeemed with local
merchants. The paper sold the coupons to benefit the students
and hopefully the student body will take advantage of these
offers.
Future coupon issues depend on the response that local
merchants get from this first try.
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"Were it left to me to deckle whether we should have a government without
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
prefer the latter
j. u- im. t- i Thomas Jefferson
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson
News Editor-Jim Elliott
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use
Features Editor- Pat Coyle
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. 219 DECEMBER 1975
3
Th1:orum
Another student comes to defense of REBEL
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To Fountainhead:
Because I believe that the pen is
mightier than the sword, in writing this
letter I now pick up the former to assist
Mr. Phillip Arrington in his valiant
defense of The Rebel (Fountainhead,
November 13, 1975 issue). Although he is
certainly on guard he can hardly fight the
battle alone and expect a victory to go
down in the pages of ECU history.
Viewed in its totality, The Rebel, like
any literary magazine, is an opportunity
for the intepretation of life and
existence. A creative work of any nature
communicates only if the projected
matter of its contents evokes response.
Unless a work produces rapport between
eye and mind in the form of
contemplation, analysis, and criticism,
that work has indeed failed in purpose.
Erroneously The Rebel has been
viewed as a mere marriage of English and
Art attended only by the individuals of
those university departments. Somehow
those who might hold this myopic
misconception have failed to understand
the essence of any literary magazine's
Last chance to register
To Fountainhead:
For many students, the Christmas
vacation will be the last chance to
register to vote in a referendum of vital
importance to all students in the UNC
System.
On March 23, the same day as the
presidential primary election, there will
be a referendum on a bond issue for the
University. The deadline to register for
this election is Feb. 23, 1976, but many
students probably will not get to go
home between Christmas and that date.
On behalf of the Campaign for
Student Voters, a bipartisan group
organized by the North Carolina Student
Legislature and other statewide student
organizations, I would like to ask you to
publish in your newspaper, before
Christmas vacation, an appeal to
students to register to vote wnile they are
at home for Christmas.
In some university towns, of course,
many students register on campus, but
others choose to register at home; and
some counties do not allow students to
register at all. In any case I urge you and
your newspaper to help make the
students at your university aware of the
upcoming election, referendum, and
registration deadline. Many thanks.
Yours very truly,
Bruce M. Tindall
Public Information Director
N.C. Student Legislature
(Phone 919-942-3143)
scope. Art is not exclusively for Art
majors and literature for English majors;
the substance of art and literature comes
from many diverse fields of knowledge
and experience. The Rebel is not a
narrow product and is open to
contributors of all areas. Even a brief
glimpse of the biographical sketches of
the writers featured in the most recent
issue of The Rebel will reveal that
approximately a third of the literary
contributors were not English majors.
In regard to student interest in the
publication, I think that many of those
who fail to appreciate The Rebel do so
because they do not know how to
appreciate the elevated and the artistic.
For example, it is distressing to find
individuals with closed minds who scowl
sourly when the word "poetry" is
mentioned. Unfortunately such persons
are repelled by the arts because they
have been mentally polluted by ignorance
of the subject; they often fail to see
academic arts as a great adventure
because they grow up believing that
education is solely a "stiff" institution. In
the same respect they also fail to realize
that life's experiences can be enriched by
art and literature and vice versa. With
attitudes such as this it is little wonder
why many students discard the sublime.
At the same time art of literature
expressing very free, uninhibited
attitudes should not be frowned upon as
tasteless garbage simply because a
picture on a page might raise a few
Student has pity for SGA
To Fountainhead:
I'm not concerned with the fate of the
publications this year. I feel this is the
way most students and legislators feel. I
really pity the legislators. When they
cant see a real need, then everyone is
affected.
Why would something like budget
problems arise? All the legislators did
was increase last year's budget. All the
legislators did was to keep telling us
this. The legislators kept telling us. Why
were they telling us?
One of the reasons the SGA has such
a large budget would be the money not
spent. They have numerous other
organizations to fund. I don't disagree. I
don't think anyone would deny it. In fact
I don't think previous graduates will deny
that fact.
Previous graduates should be glad the
SGA hasn't spent their money, for some
fly-by-night organization. I don't think the
graduates would deny there isn't any
loyalty anymore. The administration In
power didn't trust organizations to spend
the corresponding student fees.
I don't think the SGA would deny their
fees are too large. All they did was
increase last year's budget for
publications.
How is this money used? By this
year's consensus, the majority of the
budget isn't being spent too wisely. This
is very apparent. The publications bring
the national, state, and local publicity
the school needs for that elusive status
symbol.
The company that printed the
yearbook is using last year's book as a
sample copy for their salesmen. It might
even win an award! The Buccaneer didn't
ask for more money. The legislators were
well informed of this.
The newspaper only asked for more
money. The newspaper only increased
their workload by half, not their staff.
Increased advertising would only pay for
the full-time secretary they asked for.
The Rebel only asked for two
magazines. They were given one. The
SGA by-laws only quarantee them three.
A few years ago The Rebel was nationally
recognized with only three and a staff of
twenty.
The Rebel only represents our
nationally recognized Art Department.
The Rebel only represents our humble
English Department. I don't think anyone
would deny there isn't any loyalty
anymore.
Why should the students have their
money channeled into these fly-by-night
organizations-The Rebel, The Fountain-
head and The Buccaneer? The SGA keeps
repeating they didn't do anything wrong.
All the publications did was ask for more
money.
memmm i�m in i i m i tm
The students we the only ones who
can ask their legislators to be
responsible. They are only our
representatives.
The legislators can see that our fees
are reduced or returned to us at the end
of the year. The SGA can see to it that
any fly-by-night organization seeking a
majority of student fees doesn't interfere
with the school's status seeking interest
group-We just won't have any.
I'm not concerned about the fate of
the publications. I'm not going to change
my vote-l don't have one. I'm only going
to be a typical student and continue to
support my apathy.
Apathetically yours,
Patrick M. Flynn
Publications Board Secretary
P.S. I pity those who don't believe in
anything.
P.S.S. I demand a recount now that
emotions have settled down, that is, if
we have one sensible legislator.
P.S.S.S. IF the recount isn't taken on the
three amendments, and the bill itself, I
demand a student referendum. I protest
the way the elections were run. I would
also like the names of this year's
candidate put on this referendum. We
could kill two birds with one stone, but I
forgot the SGA doesn't believe in the
death penalty.
H������� " I I
eyebrows or piece of literature might
contain a few gutsy words forbidden by a
clean-mouthed society. Sadly, The Rebel
as an extension of the academic arts is
susceptible to rejection because of
viewpoints ranging from cultural ignor-
ance to moral infatuation.
As a past contributor to The Rebel I
realize that I stand on quaking grounds
of dissent. However, I feel that to
conclude that The Rebel is on the decline
is a severe bigoted insult to the integrity
of Mr. Arrington and Mr. Hunt. Under the
very capable editorship of these
individuals the quality of The Rebel has
come a long way, and I believe the
magazine has shown a maturation.
Therefore, in my opinion any threat to
either abort or abolish The Rebel is a
threat to undermine creative intellect and
deny self expression. If the publication is
financially harassed to the point of
extinction, does it really have a fair
chance to prove its worth?
Teresa Speight
Eulogy notice
cruel joke
To Fountainhead:
An extremely cruel joke was played
on the students at ECU. We are speaking
of the "Eulogy Planned" in the December
fourth issue of Fountainhead. This
childish and immature prank was
perpetrated by the Omega Psi Phi'frater-
nity" which makes one wonder whether
or not such a "fraternity" belongs on
ECU's campus. It must take a very sick
mind to think of such a morbid pranK.
Why did peopie believe it? Because
Marion did pass out - more than likely
from the apparent starvation and
exposure caused by the demands made
on him when he went through the Q's
initiation This initiation is deemed
necessary by the Omegas in order to
prove one's "manhood
Only a hypocrite could call the Os a
real fraternity because fraternities are
supposedly based on brotherhood, and a
person does not ordinarily ask his
brother to "play dead Unfortunately, the
Fountainhead is partially responsible
for the widespread belief that
Marion Barnes was dead by printing the
eulogy announcement.
Sincerely,
Susan Parrish
427 Gotten Hall
Susan Young
429 Gotten Hall
Jennie Root
383 Cotten Hall
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all reactors to ex-
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters
should be signed by their authors,
names will be withheld on request Un-
signed editorials on this page and on the
editorial paga reflect the opinions of the
editor, and are not necessarily those of
the staff.
I





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4
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
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SGA votes to revise constitution
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The SGA voted Monday night to form
a constitutional revision committee to
make the SGA Constitution more
responsive to the students.
"We feel the present constitution is
archaic and that it definitely can be
changed and made more responsive to
the students' needs said SGA President
Jimmy Honeycutt.
"I feel something positive can come
out of this committee. It should help to
make the constitution a more efficient
voice of the students
the committee will meet later this
week, according to Honeycutt. It will
divide into subcommittees, and each
section will work in a separate area of
the constitution.
After each subcommittee is finished,
the whole revision committee will meet
to draft a new constitution.
The SGA will make copies of the draft
available to the students. Afterwards two
weeks of public hearings will be held on
the draft so that all students will have a
chance to voice their opinions on it,
according to Honeycutt.
After the public hearings the
jommittee will meet again to consider all
viewpoints expressed during the hear-
ings. If needed, it will amend the draft.
Then the draft will be presented to the
legislature during three weekly sessions.
If the revised constitution is passed,
it will be presented to the students. To
become a part of the SGA constitution,
at least 20 percent of the students must
vote, and two-thirds of the students
voting must vote for approval.
Each amendment will be voted on
separately, according to Honeycutt.
The constitution's revision committee
will include the SGA Vice President as
the committee chairman, SGA Attorney
General, two Review Board members,
and the chairman of the Legislative Rules
and Judiciary committee.
Also, three members will be
appointed by the Speaker of the
LEgislature, and three members will be
appointed by the SGA President. A
member of the Fountainhead staff will
also be appointed.
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Boycott
Continued from page 1.
Another recommendation accepted by
Hagerty is a change in po'ice tactics.
This change resulted from meetings
between Sullivan, and the city manager.
Sullivan spoke to the legislature
approximately 15 minutes reviewing
concessions which he said were made
by the city manager in response to the
SGA's recommendations. Afterwards, he
recommended that the boycott be called
off. The legislature debated the issue
almost 30 minutes, and then concurred
with Sullivan's recommendation.
Although the first decision to boycott
the downtown merchants was controver-
sial and unpopular Sullivan said The
Select Committee thought it was the best
way for students to be heard.
The SGA tried as students, to get
some changes made and to get the whole
story out. In meeting after meeting with
city officials, we hit a stone wall. The
legislature felt it had to fight for the
students any way it could.
"We sought pressure through boycott.
It was a tough decision, and it was
unpopular. But, it helped gain
concessions that would not have been
gotten. There was pressure on the
District Attorney's office about those
charges and we kept the pressure on
"Innocence was costly for some
students involved in the Halloween
disturbance said Sullivan.
Students who paid a bail bondsman,
and students whose cases were thrown
out of court did not get their money
back. Also, students who hired lawyers
and had their cases thrown out of court
had to pay their lawyers.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7. N 0. 219 DECEMBER 1975
5
Phelps issues field school study
A paper written by Dr. David S.
Phelps, about the archaeological field
school at Moratock Park in Williamston,
was presented to the Southeast
Archaeological Conference at a sym-
posium held at the University of Florida
in Gainesville,
The universities attending were ECU,
Univ. of Florida, Florida St and Univ. of
Alabama.
Phelps was unable to attend the
symposium. The purpose of the
symposium was to compare notes from
each of the universities' archaeology field
schools.
Items discussed were facilities,
student enrollment, research problems,
actual research sites, and finding more
efficient means to train students.
"The field school at Moratock Park is
a permanent research center used year
round at practically no cost to ECU
said Phelps.
"Percy Price from the Martin County
Economic Development Commission
invited East Carolina to teach its
students at the Park. The Park is a
cultural center still under construction on
the Roanoke River.
"Three acres of the park are set aside
to the field school. Housing and a
laboratory are included free said
Phelps. "The program is open to about
20 students during the first summer
school session.
"It is a five week program designed to
train the students in locating, recovering,
and processing artifacts. The school will
be advertised nationwide for the first
time this year even though local students
are given preference.
"The school is one of the best centers
on the east coast. Over 150 pre-historic
sites have been located in the
Roanoke-Chowan Region and three
historic sites have been studied
The areas studied are included in
about 50 miles of the Roanoke River
Valley, and the Chowan River Valley.
Knowledge is being gained about Martin,
Bertie, Halifax, Northampton, Washing-
ton, Chowan, and Hertford counties.
Fort Branch, in Hamilton, in Martin
Co. is being excavated, and will be
reconstructed for the park. The park will
have a boat to take tourists to the various
sites on the Roanoke River.
Jordans Landins ia a pre-historic site
dating back 1,000 - 1,500 AD. It is a
complete Tuscarora village located in
Bertie County. Phelps said that this is
the third summer of work at the stie.
The archaeology field school is going
to begin its sixth summer of operation
this summer. It will be run by Dr.
Kenneth L. Brown who is in his first year
as associate professor at ECU.
The advantage the East Carolina
archaeology field school has over others
is that students only pay for tuition and
food. Sleeping facilities are free.
The prerequisites for entry into the
program are Introductory Anthropology
121 and Introductory Archaeology 260.
Students must have a "B" average in the
two courses to be admitted into the field
school.
The day starts at 5:30 a.m. and ends
about 9 p.m. The students arrive at the
site about 7:30 a.m. and work until 3
p.m.
1 v Texas instruments
electronic calculators
immo urn scin
SR-5A $116.95
SR-50A 78.95
ECU real estaters donate money
The ECU Chapter of the Society of
Real Estate Appraisers has given 1,000
dollars to the ECU School of Business
for scholarships awards to students
interested in careers in the real estate
profession.
Formal presentation of the funds was
made by H.W. Wheless, owner of
Wheless Real Estate Services here, and
chairman of the chapter's scholarship
committee, and Joe Hayes, staff
appraiser with the N.C. Dept. of
Transportation.
Hayes and George West of Louisburg
are members of the chapter's scholarship
committee.
Accepting the funds, ECU School of
Business Dean James Bearden noted that
ECU real estate students "will be the
initial beneficiaries" of the award, but
that the real estate profession will
ultimately benefit from the gift.
"We are fortunate to have organi-
zations such as the Society of Real
Estate Appraisers who are sufficiently
interested in our program to provide
special financial support in futherance of
our undertaking he said.
Dr. Bearden said several scholarship
recipients will be selected within a few
weeks.
Founded in 1935, the Society of Real
Estate Appraisers now has 18,000
members in 184 chapters throughout the
U.S. and Canada. Members include
full-time professional real estate ap-
praisers and analysts and trainees of
appraisal programs.
Qualified members may receive three
professional designations: Senior Real
Estate Analyst (SREA), Senior Real
Property Appraiser (RPA),and Senior
Residential Appraiser (SRA).
The local chapter's 90 members
include 35 who have received profession-
al designation.
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6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, N O. 219 DECEMBER 1975
wmm
Consumer demands
Students ask for teacher evaluation
By DIANE AUERBACH
(CPS)-Whenever exam time rolls around,
students find themselves the target of
faculty scrutiny. Yet the role of the
evaluator may soon be reversed.
An increasing number of students
argue that fair play dictates tney be given
a chance to rate their teachers. As a
result, several colleges across the
country are taking a new look at faculty
evaluations by students.
The interest is generated by a
consumer's viewpoint says Chuck Leer,
author of a national report on faculty
evaluation sponsored by the Minnesota
Public Interest Research Group (PIRG).
"Students purchase their education, and
like any other consumer group, feel they
have the right to know as much as
possible about what they're spending
their money on
For the most part, faculty evaluations
are based on student questionnaires
which are distributed in each classroom.
Students are asked such questions as
"Does your professor encourage student
participation and discussion?" and "How
well does your professor make the course
material understandable?"
Survey results are then given to the
faculty members, who may use their
feedback as a means for improving their
teaching methods, or are placed in
faculty permanent files and reviewed by
the administration when pay raises or
tenure reviews come up.
Controversy over faculty evaluations
usually erupts when students attempt to
tabulate and publish the statistical
results of the surveys in a course and
faculty guide for students.
Students at the University of Oregon
at Eugene, for instance, are lobbying
hard for the publication of faculty
evaluations. Although the university
senate recently passed a resolution
requiring mandatory faculty evaluations
by students, it has yet to give the go
ahead for a faculty guidebook.
"I'm not sure it's fair to the professors
to have student opinion based on
transcripts made public said University
President William Boyd. "I have
reservations about the invasion of
privacy
This reluctance does not sit well with
the student government. "The adminis-
tration is paid by students through
tuition and by the public through tax
dollars countered the student body
president, Jim Bernau. The administra-
tion has a responsibility to provide "that
valuable information about teaching to
students
Another evaluation battle is in the
works at the University of Arizona. Earlier
this year, the administration switched its
support of voluntary faculty evaluations
to a requirement that all teachers
interested in promotion show "docu-
mented evidence" of their teaching
ability, in the form of student-conducted
evaluations.
In spite of administration and student
pressure, however, the faculty senate has
effectively squelched the mandate by
refusing to decide on an appropriate
evaluation form.
"Evaluations measure popularity, and
teaching is not a popularity contest
objected one professor. "I have little faith
in students knowing whether or not a
teacher knows his subject
Students and faculty are also
deadlocked at St. Johns University
in Jamaica, NY. where the student
government has begun its first year of
publishing a faculty and course guide.
Since the faculty evaluations are not
mandatory, any professor can bow out of
the evaluation process.
The problem for the students
publishing the course guide is that too
many professors have refused to
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cooperate. "We're trying to put pressure
on then now says the editor of the
student newspaper, "The Torch "Almost
every other school in the area has some
sort of successful evaluation process, so
we're pointing that out in the paper
Although relationships between
faculty and students often become
strained and distrustful when faculty
evaluations first hit the campus, this
does not have to be the case.
According to Chuch Leer of PIRG,
students "aren't out to get the faculty
He points to faculty evaluation processes
at the University of California at
Berkeley, Columbia University, the
University of Illinois and Princeton,
which have been in operation "for years
without much friction
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At any rate, faculty fears of
hypercritical student evaluations may be
unfounded, according to a recent San
Diego State University study. Students
tend to be too soft-hearted or intimidated
when they feel a negative evaluation may
cost a professor his job, researchers
found.
Concluded the study: "Students can
hardly be expected to go against an
authority they have been taught to
unquestionably obey for over three-
quarters of their lives
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snts
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
0m0mmm0m0mmmmmmm0mm0mmm
7
Women undecided
ERA Amendment debate rages
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN
(CPS-There are almost as many versions
of what will change when the proposed
Equal Rights Amendment is ratified as
there are people who have studied it. To
a majority, it means vague legal
reassurances that women may no longer
be discriminated against on the basis of
their sex. To an active minority, it means
the decay of society and the family.
Approved overwhelmingly by Con-
gress in 1972, the ERA has since been
bounced back and forth between the
forces of women's rights and the
protectors of woman's traditional role in
society. Women's rights advocates won
the first round when 13 states ratified the
ERA in the first three weeks after
Congress passed it. Now, three years
later, the ERA is just four states short of
the 38 necessary to become the 27th
amendment to the Constitution.
But the anti-ERA forces have gained
strength since the first ERA surge and
their lobbying efforts are paying off.
Amendments to the New York and New
Jersey state constitutions closely
paralleling the federal ERA were defeated
early in November. These victories have
given the ERA opponents a new impetus
to fight the ERA in state legislators,
where they have begun to drive a rescind
the ratifications New Jersey and New
York state houses have already given the
federal amendment.
ERA foes claim that the amendment
will leave the society open to immorality
and a weakening of family ties. A chapter
president of Operation Wake-Up, an
anti-ERA organization, said she feared
the "unisex movement" because "� are
not a unisex society
'It is the goal of many feminist
groups to destroy the family unit she
continued. "My husband is my support.
The male has been made provider and
protector. After the ERA we share equal
responsibility
Not only equal responsibility but a
whole range of immoral repercussions of
the amendment scare ERA opponents.
The most commonly cited evils of the
ERA include unisex bathrooms, co-ed
sports teams, female draftees, homo-
sexual marriages and repeal of alimony
laws.
One women, Phyllis Schlafly, has
even devoted her career to stopping ERA
since it was passed by Congress.
Schlafly publishes her own regular
magazine as an anti-ERA publication.
Schlafly argued that the ERA only
"pretends" to improve the status of
women. Actually, she says, "It will take
away the right of a young woman to be
exempt from the draft, the right of a wife
to be supported by her husband and to
have her minor children supported by her
husband And Schlafly also dislikes the
way the federal government will get its
"meddling fingers" into areas where it
has never had jurisdiction before, such
as marriage, divorce and child custody
laws.
Proponents of the ERA would just as
soon have those meddling fingers
regulating state laws. And as an ERA
advocate pointed out, the ERA does not
specify what laws will be enacted and
which will be repealed. "When a law is
restrictive, it will be struck from the
books. If it is protective, it will be
extended to include men
Other than that, pro-ERA forces
describe the effects of the ERA in
generalities simply because no one
knows how it will be interpreted by the
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courts. Workers for the ERA claim "equal
opportunities" and "constitutional pro-
tection to women" will be the result of
the ERA.
Although the specific opportunities
and protections are not spelled out by
the amendment, ERA advocates like the
way the burden of proof in discrimination
cases will be shifted from the individual
woman to the state.
Many ERA opponents believe that the
ERA means more responsibilities but
fewer rights for women. A representative
in New York who argued against the ERA
said that ci "torn and law have already
made American women the most
privilegec4 oeople in history and the ERA
could rrean a loss of some of those
privileges.
ERA proponents claim just the
opposite, arguing that the ERA "is the
only thing that protects the rights we
have
Both sides are planning stronger
lobbying efforts when legislatures
reconvene in Janaury. "We are through
with garden-variety politics a League of
Women Voters official said. "We're going
to run a hard political campaign
So are the anti-ERA forces, w hich are
already gearing up for supporting
anti-ERA legislators in upcoming
elections. We've got the momentum
claims Schlafly.
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g
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
mmm
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m
Features
12-year downward trend
Educators see SAT score decline
By JACKSON HARRILL
Staff Writer
"College-Bound Students' Test Scores
Drop"
"Research into the SAT score decline: a
progress report"
"Teachers Cite Obstacles to Learning"
"N.C. Pupils Lag On Test scores"
Headlines such as these are
becoming more and more commonplace
within the last few months as educators,
administrators and concerned parents try
to solve the "mystery" of the continuing
drop-off of SAT scores among high
school seniors. The scores peaked in
1963 and, since then, have gradually
declined, averaging a drop-off of three
points a year in verbal scores and two
points in mathematical scores.
The question is now arising, why did
the scores drop? What was the
underlying factor in all of this? No one
seems to be able to point to any one
definite reason, but here are some
causes which are being discussed: too
much television, lack of concern among
educators for the three R's. a changing
mix in the college-going population and
the unrest among young people during
the 1960's.
In comparing the figures of 1974
college-bound graduates to this year's,
the verbal scores fell from 444 to 434;
mathematical scores slipped from 480 to
472. Studies show that boys outperform-
ed girls on both sections- 437 to 431 on
verbal and 495 to 449 on the
mathematical. Until this year, however,
boys' scores have been dropping slightly
more than those of girls.
The College Entrance Examination
Board believes that one factor in the
declining average is that students taking
the test for the second time are no longer
improving their scores a much as they
once did. The mid-1950's reports show
that these "repeaters" used to gain about
35 points. By the mid-1960's this figure
had dropped to 20 and it is now about
15.
Mr. Gene Owens, and ECU
admissions officer, says that the drop-off
is reflected in the scores of this year's
freshman class. The average score,
according to Mr. Owens, was 840-850,
which is down about 12-13 points from
last year.
The Scholastic Aptitude Tests, first
administered in 1926, were taken by
one-third of this year's graduating high
school seniors. They made up roughly
two-thirds of those who entered college
this fall.
The verbal section of the test is
designed to measure vocabulary and
comprehension. The mathematical sec-
tion is intended to test problem-solving
ability.
Mr. Owens stated that, "The most
significant figure of the SAT, that we
found, is that a student has a higher
probability of success if they score 400
or better on the verbal section. The SAT
verbal section is primarily a guage of a
student's ability to read with speed and
with comprehension. If a student cannot
read well, then they are going to have
trouble in college
Given a hypothetical situation of two
students, one with a high school
transcript with grades averaging around
B, but with an SAT score of 790 or 800,
and another student with arades
averaging around D, and an SAT score of
1250-1300, Mr. Owens believes that the
student with higher grades and a low
score would be accepted over the other.
This judgment is based on the reasoning
that the first student would have the
proper background and would work more
for their grades. The second student
might have the ability, as reflected in
their score, but they have not put out any
sort of effort.
Admittance to most colleges and
universities in the United States is based
on two things, usually: the high school
transcript and the SAT score. At ECU,
more emphasis is placed upon the high
school record than the SAT score;
the high school record(is) a much
more solid indicator of the type of work
the student is capable of doing Mr.
Owens believes. "There is no exact
minimum SAT score (for admittance); it
is strictly a relationship between the high
school class rank and the SAT to give us
a satisfactory predicted grade average
Cigarette smoking, 1 975 style; it's a real drag
During the past several years, a huge
campaign has been launched against a
minority to which I belong; the world's
cigarette smokers. You can't turn on the
tube anymore without seeing some
anti-smoking commercial. It can really
make a person feel paranoid.
Things ere different when I picked
up the "evil habit" three years ago. At
that time, cigarettes were an integral part
of the social system.
We spent many happy hours at the
high school smoking area, blowing
smoke rings and chewing the fat.
Our weekend evenings were filled with
trips to the nearest Hardee's, where
romances bloomed, and french fries and
Marlboros were the latest thing.
Back in those days, the only people
who weren't convinced of the coolness of
my habit were my parents. For two years I
never came home without a wad of
Bazooka bubble gum in my mouth.
I can't count the hours I spent in my
locked bedroom, head hanging out of the
open window, dragging to my heart's
desire.
Graduation finali, came, then my
enrollment at EZU. "AHA I thought.
"Unabashed smoking freedom at last
Granted, it was like trv.t for awhile. I
went to classes armed with my cricket
lighter and Doral menthols, and found
that I was one of a fairly large group of
smokers on campus.
Things changed gradually, though. At
first, opposition to the habit was
confined to a few well-distributed "no
smoking" signs.
The campaign grew and flourished to
the point that I now get hassled by my
friends about smoking, and that's when
they're visiting MY room.
The situation's disintegrated to the
point where I have felt it necessary to
resume the old habit of running to the
ladies room for a cig. I've even had
people there complain about my fumes.
In fact, I am finding that the only
place in Greenville I can go for a
peaceful, hassle-free smoke is row 17,
seat 23 of Ficklen stadium, at 3:00 a.m.
on Tuesdays.
In that pastoral setting, I can smoke
every silly millimeter, secure that there
isn't an American Cancer Society member
within breathing distance.
I'm sure there are a multitude (or at
least a handful) of other smokers out
there who feel as overpowered and
suppressed as myself. I invite all of them
to ioin me early some Tuesday at
Ficklen. We can sit around comparing
our tar and nicotine levels.
By PAT COYLE
Roxy art center features arts and crafts fair
By Sylvia Crocker
If you are looking for a way to
express yourself in the arts, drama music
or literature in a free environment, maybe
the Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts Center
is for you.
The Roxy is an old theatre that a
group of people managed to rent with an
option to buy from a real estate dealer in
town. The theatre now serves as a
meeting place for talented people in
Greenville who need a place to jam, to
think, or to exchange ideas. There are a
mixture of people who run the Roxy;
they include students, dropouts and
jood people with a common bond of
ideas and energy. According to Bill
(Shep) Sheppard, "It is a combination of
energies that make Roxy what it is.
We've had a few parties to raise money
for rent and improvements, and now
we're having the craft show. Eventually,
we'll be able to paint the building, and
with the help of Tom Lassiter, a
horticulturist, we'll landscape the area.
We hope, among other things, the town
will take notice and help upgrade the
mm u i ynmmmm
neighborhood
If you wish to become acquainted
with the Roxy Music, Arts, and Crafts
Center, and its p'osophy, there will be
a Neighborhood Craft Show on Saturday,
December 13, at the Roxy Music, Arts
and Crafts Center. On hand will be
musicians, along with a number of artists
and craftsmen showing and selling their
work. Some of the artists, and their
crafts, include Eddie Smith and Jim
Whalen, potters; Don and Ron Vick,
jewelers; and Max Whitley, leathercraft.
In the future the Roxy will be a center
mmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmamm
for poetry reading, film festivals, trade
fairs and art-craft shows. Plans for the
first theatrical production, "York by Bill
Bong, are underway. The play is a study
in fantasy about a man, York, who
searches for peace. Auditions will be
held Tuesday night, December 9, 8:00
p.m. at the Roxy Music, Arts and Crafts
Center, 629 Albemarle Street, for anyone
interested.
mmm





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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
i i mn n i i mm "ii nniiipiwm
9
Quit growing cauliflower.
America needs the gas
'Energy-Expensive Cauliflower: There's
energy to be saved in the packaging of
food, reported the NEWS on July 15.
There's also energy to be saved in the
food we eat. Gary Heichel, station
scientist with the Connecticut Agriculture
Experiment Station, recommends that in
the event of another severe energy
shortfall, consumers should consider
lessening their consumption of energy
intensive vegetables such as cauliflower,
tomatoes, and melons as well as cutting
down on energy-intensive animal pro-
ducts such as beef. "It takes as much
energy to build the family car as is
needed to grow an acre of cauliflower for
a year says Heichel. Field crops such
as wheat, oat, soybeans, and com are
FARM OUT!
among the most energy-saving, using
four barrels of oil per acre per year or
less. For fruit and vegetable crops, this
can range up to 20 barrels of oil per acre
per year for cauliflower.
3
THIS WEEK AT THE
ELBOROOM
Tues.
Wed.

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HAPPY HOUR3-
IS LADIES NIGH
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WineS
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HOST CHARLIE HARRISON
INTRODUCING
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open: 752-5012
10-10 MON. THURS.
10-10:30 FRI. - SAT. FLEXIBLE"
CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar
two pickup exc. condition $100.
Call 752 7398.
$100 WEEKLY possible addressing,
mailing circulars tor mail order firm.
Send self addressed, stamped envelope:
Barlow Enterprises Dept. TM, 16447
ElCamino Real No. 4, Houston, 77058.
EXPERIENCED bartender pick your
own hours, rewarding job opportunity.
7589699.
FOR SALE: Color TV, $55.00 or make
offer. 758-0504.
FOR RENT: Private room for male.
752 4006 after 1:00.
WANTED: Female roommate inexpen
sive. 4 blocks from campus. 768 6611 ext.
210. Ask for Diane. After 5 call 752-6724.
EXPERIENCED waitress needed be
tween 18 & 23, good working conditions.
7589699.
STURGILL GUITAR Carolina 100 model.
69th one made. W.case. $425. Call
7529496.
EXPERIENCED spare time DJ pick
your own hours at least 2 days a week.
758 9699.
"HOMEWORKERS. Earn $2 hourly
addressing envelopes. Rush 25 cents and
a self addressed, stamped envelope to:
Opportunities, P.O Box 644, Douglasville,
Georgia 30134
BELLY DANCE instruction only $1.75
per lesson Call Sunshine 752 5214.
WANTED: Design advertising for intro
advertising design. Call 752 8143.
ARABIC DANCE "Belly Dancing" -
Donna Whitley former teacher in
Casablanca and California. Now schedu
ling for January classes. 752 0928.
FOR SALE '65 Olds best offer.
7580497
FOR SALE: 4 chrome reverse wheels &
E-70 Firestone wide oval tires with locks.
Very good condition $200 will consider
trade for 4 VM tires in perfect condition.
Phone 752 7398.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-5133.
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic
guitar. Excellent condition. 758 1207
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
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mm
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
� II I MfcHUl I IliWlMl
11
Entertainment
Street People, study finds, are a poorer breed of cat
By RICHARD TRUBO
Pop Scene Service
"When I come to a town, I usually go
to the longhair part and look for a place
to crash. It's not usually much
troubleI've got a lot of head hassles
and I don't want to settle down Those
are the words of a 17-year-old girl whose
lifestyle, as she describes it, is not much
more than "travel and survival She is
one of 292 nameless "street people" in
Berkeley whose lives have been probed in
a study by two University of California
researchers.
The 80-page study, "Down and Out in
Berkeley concludes that the "street
people" in Berkeley�and apparently in
other college towns as well-are a more
poverty-stricken breed than their "flower
children" counterparts of the 1960s.
The study was conducted by Henry
Miller, associate professor of social
welfare, and Jim Baumohl, a graduate
student. They concluded that while the
"dropouts" of a few years ago voluntarily
dissociated themselves from the main-
stream of society, many of the
hangers-on in today's college towns
would be willing to rejoin the system if
given the chance. However, most of them
are overwhelmed with a feeling of
hopelessness.
"I've crashed in five or six places in
the last two weeks, and the people here
have been warmer, friendlier, crazier than
any place else says a 19-year-old male
street person in Berkeley. "But it's
getting to be a hard trip, just
energy-wise, you know. I had a pack
stolen and got busted for pan-handling
The street people of 1975 do not look
much different than their counterparts of
the 1960s. Most have long hair, wear
faded or torn jeans, and carry their
possessions, if any, on their backs.
In Berkeley, they perch themselves on
the sidewalks of Telegraph Avenue,
which borders the southern edge of the
University of California campus. They
spend their days panhandling for money
or looking for someone who might offer
them food and lodging for the night.
Although the street people appear to
be there to stay, the community of
Berkeley is rapidly changing. It is the citv
where the Free Speech Movement was
born in 1964, and where students clashed
with police in 1969 while university
buildings burned.
Today, the Berkeley campus is quiet.
Today's freshmen were second graders
when the Free Speech Movement began,
and they seem more interested in
education than demonstration.
True, political organizations like the
Young Socialist Alliance and the Un;ted
Farm Workers still distribute their
literature in Sproul Plaza, the university's
largest congregating point. But most
students seem to be more interested in
signing up for the activities of the Ski
Club, or buying tickets to the latest film
series.
The street people, or the "Berkeley
Beggars" as the locals call them,
sometimes seem out of step with the
changing profile of the city. The
Miller-Baumohl study found that al-
though these hangers-on seem attracted
to college towns, they are generally
poorly educated.
One-third of them are high school
dropouts, and only 31 percent have
attended college at all. About 86 percent
of the street people are in their teens or
early 20s, but their backgrounds are
varied.
"For some says the report, "there
were serious family problems; for others,
there may well have been real limitations
in psychological and intellectual equip-
age.
Less than half of those surveyed said
their parents would permit them to return
home, and only 6.5 percent expressed
any interest in going back. Instead, they
survive on a day-to-day basis, begging
for the money to buy their next meal, or
stealing it from local markets.
Most reported that they wanted to
work, and 77 percent stated they had
been unsuccessful in constant attempts
to find a job. Many view their futures
with pessimism.
"There seems to be a subliminal or
barely articulated knowledge that 'making
it' in America has become more fantasy
than reality report the researchers.
However, more hope may exist for the
street people than even they realize.
Many of the social rebels who walked the
streets of Berkeley and Haight-Ashbury
in the 1960s have apparently assimilated
back into society.
That, at least, is the conclusion of
Stephen Pittel, a bearded and bushy-
haired psychologist who heads the
Haiqht-Ashburv Research Protect.
Pittell has kept track of 250 "hippies
whom he originally met and interviewed
in-depth in 1967-68. And 40 percent of
them are now back in the mainstream-in
jobs or in college, and off drugs. Of the
remainder, less than one-third are
still living on the street. The other 28
percent have made at least a semi-reentry
into society, living in communes and
making a living by selling their self-made
items like crafts.
According to Pittel, many of those
who reentered the system are using their
street experiences in a constructive way.
One girl, who earned a master's degree
before fleeing to Haight-Ashbury, is now
writing a novel about her life on the
streets.
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the tiny
ncert
Mac
Photographs by Stewart Campbell
FLEETWOOD MAC - Wilson. N C
By
Brandon Tise
Entertainment F
The Fleetwood Ma ' in Wilson
New Wilson Gym cou!
Preceded by a rather uninspiring, but not unta
came on about 9.20 PM to a thunderous welcc �
Members John and Christine Mc Vie. v xxj. am Buckingham
came on to do the opening number whict lowed by the appearance of
Stephanie (Stevie) Nicks to sing one of the highlights of the night "Rhiannon' from
their newest album. Stevie Nicks can best the words of the sono.
Rhiannon 'She is like a cat in the dark and then she is the I ' She has a
very sleek and female presence and indeed seemed to be noosed trance
during the music only to abruptly snap out of it between numtx-
This song was followed by a beautiful acoustic number. Landslide" featuring
Nicks on vocals and Lindsey Buckingham on guitar Shortly Christine Mc Vie led the
group in her latest hit song. Over My Head" to the wa ause of recognition and
appreciation from the audience.
In fact most of the songs of the night were from th e "Blue Lette
"World Turning "I'm So Afraid and others
Stevie Nicks, center stage dancing to some internal guidi � Buckingham
enveloped by a wall of classy guitar playing. Christine Mc Vie. surrounded by a
variety of keyboards of which she has undoubtedly mastered. Mick Fleetwood deep in
concentration behind his drums, and John Mc Vie, seemingly oblivious of tne others,
but in actuality keenly aware of the band as a unit, all blend beautifully into a sound
which can be as laid back as Christine Mc Vies "Why" or as rocking as Buckingham
and Mc Vie's "World Turning" which turned into a spontaneous jam onstage as the
final number of their regular show The encore numbers were highlighted by an extra
long version of Mystery To Me's "Hypnotized
Besides the fine performance of this number musically, the crowd was treated to
more mesmerizing dancing by Stevie Nicks the perfect embodiment of the "Lovely
woman in motion in Curtis Mayfield's Gypsy Woman"
FLEETWOOD MAC could have played longer than the 75 minutes they did. but it
was great while it lasted
'Copyright Rockhopper Music 1975
John Mc Vie
Mick Fleetwood
An Interview with John Mc Vie and Mick Fleetwood
of FLEETWOOD MAC
conducted Wednesday Nov 19-Wilson, N.C.
by
BRANDON TISE
Entertainment Editor
In conducting this short interview after the performance in Wilson on November 19
I was very impressed with the openness and sincerity of John Mc Vie and Mick
Fleetwood Never was there any indication of a big "rock star ego trip" side to their
character, but rather a friendly, unintimidating personality shone through in both of
them. This is perhaps best exemplified when one of their managers came in and said
to John that they should be going in about five minutes to which he replied, "Well,
we'll stay how ever long it takes to finish the talk. OK?"
Fountainhead .That did you think of tonight s concert9
Mc Vie: Beautiful, really beautiful We loved it The crowd was really great
Fountainhead: Do you like southern crowds, are they different9
Mc Vie ery .arm the best audiences really I'm not just saying that cause we're
down here, it's true and the most beautiful women too I live in L A now and
southern women are really the most beautiful
Fountainhead: Is the present sound of FLEETWOOD MAC the one that you want, the
one that you ve been looking for9
Mc Vie No. it s the one we've got We ve always worked around the songs and the
people that were in the band
Fountainhead: How did you get the new members in the band and are they working
out9
Mc Vie Yeah sure, great Mick was the one that found them though
Fleetwood . is looking for a studio to record our new album and I went to Sound
in L A Keith Olson an engineer, who ended up engineering our latest album,
was playmg some tapes just to demonstrate the studio and he happened to play some
tapes of Stevie and Lindsay and I went WOW (Throws his hands up in the air) At
that time Bob (Welch, the former guitarist) was still in the band but I could tell that
he was getting discontent and would probably leave soon He was very into this heavy
sound (Makes strumming motion! and also he was disappointed about the sales of
HEROES our album at the time So when he did leave early this year, (New Years
m look � from there
Fountainhead What is the difference in Bob W- : Lindsey Buckingham as far
as guar qo
Fleetwood It's not so much an improvement ii "�- I ical prowess (fast fingers an
imaginary guitar) with Lindsay as much as an improvement in taste and pitching
Lmdsav s even radically different now tnan wnen ne omea me band
Fountainhead mow9
Fleetwood We neither Stevie - id ever been on the road very much and
ed them up we rehearsed about ten davs and thei Me ent on the road.
and we've been out quite a bit this year you get changed
Fountainhead: What direction exl album take, a softer sound, harder or
what"
Fleetwood: Well I can't realiv sa ild be anything Basically we're ah musicians
enough where we could play anything I just don't real'y know jntil we get m the
studio what kind of direction we will follow
Fountainhead: Aside from the financial considerations, what size crowd do you most
prefer to play to9
Mc Vie: Ah. relatively small for our band, not over 6h3.000 people. Anymore than that
and you need someone like Elton John A lot of times at a very large concert.
someone will skimp on a P.A , get a small one like 20.000 watts or something which
isn't adequate tor a large crowd Why do that and ruin your show9 We had a really
good concert in San Francisco as pa ig show where there were 72.000 people
and it was great because the P A was fantastic and backstage facilities were great
They didn't stick us of1 some 1 newhere with one lavatory 'or all the groups
But it turned out so well because Bill Grahar vas t?hind it all After all
how many Bill Graham's are th
Fountainhead: Have you eve nad a bad experience with a large performa
Mc Vie: We were supposed to play at this speedwav n Modesto (California) and the
crowd was going to have to sit on this I all it?
Fountainhead Aspl
Mc Vie: Yeah, asphalt They were have t. that and I was like 85
�es and they were supposed I ike people
i1 ur concerts so they � and
you cant do it in a situation liki
Fountainhead Who inf
Fleetwood: It's hard to sa a the
I love it. individual artist; � '� but I
e
Mc Vie Liki Carole �
Fleetwood
Not like YES. I mi I � Laki
and Palrm
Fountainhead just
going through th
Mc Vie
Fleetwood Wi
night I like to
Mc Vie
Turning Lii
.
Good People- Good Baixl
�very,
like tonight dun 'C . �
v k ' : oi
FLEETWOOD MAC





FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
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ECU Chorale to perform
The ECU Chorale will present a varied
program of Christmas choral music
Sunday, Dec. 14, at 8:15 p.m. in the
Fletcher Music Center Recital Hall.
The program is free and open to the
public, and will include several
well-known selections to be sung by both
Chorale and audience.
Chorale conductor is Dr. Charles W.
Moore of the ECU faculty.
A special feature of the program will
be "Shepherds! Rejoice for men's
voices and brass ensemble, a composi-
tion by American composer Arthur
Frackenpohl. William White will be tenor
soloist.
Guitarist Michael Thompson will
perform with the Chorale in "What
Sweeter Music Can We Sing by
American composer Michael Fink.
Assisting the Chorale in "Calypso
Noel" will be instrumentalists Drew
Cooke, piano; Bob Hedrick, string bass
and Edward Asten and Charles Dardei
percussion.
The Chorale will also perfori
Christmas music at the opening prograi
of the season series at Greenville's ne
downtown mall at 12:15 p.m. Frida)
Dec. 12. They will be assisted by
student-faculty brass ensemble.
In addition, they will appear on t
program at the annual ECU Christ
assembly at 11 a.m. Friday, Dec. 19 i
Wright Auditorium and on the Chance
lor's Christmas program on WITN-T
Washington.
The taped television program will
broadcast on Christmas Day.
The University Chorale is
non-audition group open to all student
at ECU. Officers for 1975-76 are Bar
Robinson, president; Beverly HoffineL,
vice-president; and Paul Slovensky
librarian.
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Bring this ad and receive a 10 discount
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ni�imiii
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, N O. 219 DECEMBER 1975
15
, string bass
arles Dardei
Iso perfori
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975

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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
mug � uwiiwm i mmm � muwViMn i w
17
W
tssibe link with cancer
lirth control pi bad side effects examined
'� � �
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN
3)Just one little pill a day and the
nces of becoming pregnant are
iced to practically nothing. Millions
American women find the easy,
fire birth control pill the long-await-
answer to all their contraceptive
paints.
3ut in the past few years, the pill's
rtation for unpleasant side effects and
jected health hazards has been
ng more college women back to the
alternatives-the diaphragm, the IUD
condoms.
Vt most university health services, the
is still the most frequently requested
raceptive but increases have been
d in requests for other methods. In
y cases, women are encouraged by
age physicians to consider the
natives because of a shortage of
lable information about the pill's
-range effects. One woman studying
Jill at Columbia University has called
pill a "grand and unprecendented
ogical experiment
'It's amazing" how many women take
bill because everybody else does, Dr.
aon Fee, gynecologist at Iowa State
varsity said. But "when you give a
ale of this age group (college) a
mt combination of synthetic hor-
its, it can't do any good Fee added.
Hie synthetic harmones, estrogen and
jestin, are not "natural" hormones
; the body produces anyway,
rding to New York gynecologists
ld Speert. "It was not the honest
to do to call these hormones
)gens and progestins Speert
led. "They should be given chemical
les like those they use in the
oleum industry, of which they are
e deserving
A lot of women who wouldn't want
be taking some petroleum-type
mical into their bodies every day, are
ing to take something that sounds as
jgh their bodies are producing it he
I.
Intensive research on the pill has
juced suspected links with several
jrable diseases including cancer,
diabetes, strokes and heart disease. But
advocates of the pill insist that the
Studies have been inconclusive so far and
point to their own statistics which give
the pill a hirly clean bill of health.
Unfortunately, those studies have
only been underway since the pill's
American debut only 16 years ago and
the long-range effects are still unknown.
An assistant professor of medicine at the
Harvard Medical School said the studies
done in the early sixties which approved
of the hormone drug were based on a
very small number (100-200) of persons
who had been taking the pill for a year or
more.
The consumers of the pi I! haven't
been getting much advice on the hazards
and side effects from either the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) which
regulates the pill or the manufacturers
themselves. Iowa gynecologist Fee
pointed out that pill manufacturers are
very careful to downplay the hazards of
birth control pills in their promotional
literature. The only harmful effect most
of them mention is blood clots.
Even if a student is aware of the
possible side effects, her attitude is
often "that could never happen to me
Fee said.
But according to the coordinator of
gynecological services at the University
of Pennsylvania, more women there are
being scared away from the pill by
reports of weight gain, emotional stress
and bleeding disturbances.
Other possible side effects of the pill
range from skin problems to migraine
headaches to rashes, fatigue, depression
and cramps. And recently even the FDA
admitted that the pill might make some
women more susceptible to venereal
disease. Although the FDA hedged on
requiring manufacturers to warn women
of a possible pill - VD like, they did order
them to say on the warning label that the
pill would do nothing to prevent or treat
venereal disease.
The pill greatly lessens a woman's
natural immunity to vaginal infection and
disease, Fee claimed, by changing the
vagina from acidic to alkaline which
enhances bacterial growth.
A woman has the right to make her
own decision, but she ought to know
what she's gambling with, he added. "It's
easy to swallow a pill, but you have to
remember you're swallowing a harmful
substance
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nHomHHBH
18
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
m
ms
mmm
Remedial programs planned
We C
College freshmen lack basic grammar skillsc
(CPS)When college students were the
academic elite of their high school
classes, college administrators and
instructors assumed that entering
freshmen knew basic grammar and
composition cold. Now with more high
school students going to college and
admissions standards at many schools
loosening, college administrators are
recognizing the existence of a basic
skills gap which handicaps many college
students.
Colleges and universities across the
country are setting up remedial program
to meet the needs of students who find
they have never learned how to write in
complete sentences. Basic skills pro-
grams are more prevalent at two-year and
community colleges, but the problem has
also surfaced at private four-year schools
which have traditionally drawn the cream
of the high school crop.
At the University of South Carolina
(USC) where lower SAT scores prompted
a remedial grammar class called English
100, the admissions director blamed the
increasing popularity of college for
decreasing proficiency in English skills.
"A broader segment of people taking the
test results in a broader base of ability
being measured he said, referring to
the declining SAT scores.
The director of the English 100
program at USC called the program "a
survival course" and accused high
schools of over-emphasizing literature at
the expense of grammar. "It isn't always
the students' fault that they lack these
skills she said. "Most students tell us
that the last time they had a grammar
review was the eighth grade
Other university officials have
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different explanations for the under-
educated college student. Jerome Weber,
University College Dean at Oklahoma
University, attributed part of the problem
to the shifts in high school goals from
the three R's to more social and personal
growth.
Others claimed it was a problem
unique to this generation which was
raised on television and radio. Instructors
at the University of California have
reported that students in their freshman
English classes are not proficient in even
the fundamentals of grammar. The
remedial English or Subject A supervisor
argued that the "illiteracy" was a
"cultural problem, as students in an
electronic society have little chance to
acquire reading-writing skills
According to the director of academic
programs at UCLA, the television society
is to blame for less educated college
students. "Students today are more
verbal he said. "They don't read. They
don't have the written skills they once
did. They're TV educated
But a recent report in the Christian
Science Monitor holds the whole college-
oriented society responsible for the lower
level of skills of incoming freshmen. The
report states that many officials feel the
reason for the student skills gap is the
fact that the whole post-secondary
education system has become much less
elite.
This has been particularly true in
recent years when many colleges have
begun admitting students who would not
have met the minimum qualifications for
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ECl
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Hours: Monday thru Friday
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admission several years ago when
competition for college space
fiercer. For instance, students with
verbal scores of 350 can be admitteieany 30�
the University of South Carolina, ,s Cotter
enrollment in a basic skills prograr1" the
required for freshmen with verbal sclv a &anc
between 350 and 390. � showing i
Dld-fashioi
Although hundreds of colleges 0f pjn
universities are making basic s
programs available to their students, ost � tne
often the student's choice to attenr3" Cottei
not to attend. Unfortunately, rr:h Carolina'
students do not recognize their women's ri
needs for remedial classes and s?even allov
them. There is still a stigma attachen 1866 Sail
classes which set out to do no more dolph Cott
teach college students skills they shme intere
have acquired in secondary schools, cities. Won
many colleges which offer basic sq not mere
classes give little or no college credilpjght be as
the hours spent catching up. f opportunil
But if the basic skills levels speak theii
incoming freshmen continue to dec �ossessing
students may rush to the reme and lead
English courses just to insure ted a promir
survival in regular college classrooms he local an
the ac,
:ribed the
nen of the
clubs in r-
Dlina Feder
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m
�w�n
ioiw�

Ms
We Cotton (1846-1929)
Cotten dorm named for libber
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
�i.inwiij i � urn ii i mtmmmmtmmm
By FRANCEINE PERRY
ECU News Bureau
�rs ago when
lege space
students with
m be admitta68" 30� blue-jeaned residents of
Jth Carolina 's Gotten Ha" dormitory pass
skills proqrarugn tne dorm loDt)y evefy day. witn
with verbal sc'y a 9,ance at tne oil portrait on the
, showing a white-haired elderly lady
Dld-fashioned clothes cradling a
of colleges uet of pjnk carnations.
ing basic s
ieir students � �f tnem are unaware that Sal lie
oice to attend" Cotten (1846-1929) was one of
rtunately, rr: Carolina's outstanding proponents
Kjnize their wornen's rights long before women
asses and si3 even allowed to vote,
tigma attachen 1866 Sal lie Southall married Robert
) do no more dolph Cotten of Pitt County and
skills they shme interested in women's club
lary schools, cities. Women's clubs of the period
Dffer basic so not mere frivolous social gatherings
college creditpight be assumed, they provided the
3 UP- f opportunity for women to organize
skills levelsi speak their views on current issues,
inue to dec Assessing unusual charm, intelli-
o the remcjeand leadership ability, Mrs. Cotten
to insure ted a prominent role in women's clubs
e classrooms ne local and state levels.
the age of 80, Mrs. Cotten
:ribed the social climate in which
nen of the late Victorian era joined
clubs in her "History of the North
ina Federation of Women's Clubs,
-1925
verywhere women, while absorbed
the duties of motherhood and
remaking, felt, without understand-
the inner stirrings of undeveloped
kers.
he foresaw early signs of an
roved status of women as citizens,
ch she termed as "recolution with
Id-wide implications:
"The restricted conventions of her
lated individuality gave to the woman
the past what would now be called an
feriority complex which was simply
habit of sex-submission from which
will ultimately be emancipated
Mrs. Cotten has lived to see two
lificant obstacles overcome by activist
nen. A special committee of the
eration has studied the legal status of
nen in North Carolina and reported in
2 that women had few definite legal
its.
One o' the areas in which women
were poweness particularly rankled in the
hearts of the club members; women were
not permitted to sit on local school
boards.
When the Federation's next state
convention took place, Mrs. Cotten
assumed the presidency and joined in the
general elation among delegates that
progress had been made. A mass
lobbying effort by women had moved the
General Assembly to pass a new law
which allowed women to serve on school
boards.
The second victory, more far-reaching
than the first, came in 1920 with the
passage of the Equal Suffrage
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Mrs. Cotten, like other women
suffragists, optimistically believed that
with the right to vote, other inquities
suffered by women would rapidly vanish,
automatically opening up new opportun-
ities in business, the professions,
politics and government, education and
other phases of public life.
This early belief has been proven
overly hopeful. Widespread sex discrimi-
nation and what Sal lie Cotten called "the
habit of sex-submission" on the part of
women themselves continue to bar
women from achieving their actual
potential in society.
Another prominent eastern North
Carolina suffragist, Johnetta Webb
Spilman, recalls that one of Mrs.
Cotten's most intense interests was
vocational education for young people of
both sexes.
"I had a small business school in my
home then said Mrs. Spillman, "and
Mrs. Cotten often expressed pleasure
that these young people were being
trained for work. She believed Thai
women should have marketaoie skihs anu
be able to survive independently
Few women in the early 1900s
received training for gainful employment,
and Mrs. Cotten deplored the fact that
many widows were left penniless upon
the death of their husbands, usually with
children to support, Mrs. Spilman said.
This practical aspect of limited
education for women distressed Mrs.
Cotten as much as her realization that
women's abilities were often unused.
The Federation of Women's Clubs has
honored Mrs. Cotten's ardent desire that
young women be prepared for vocations
bv naminq its fund for women students
the Sallie Southall Cotten Loan Fund.
"She was very feminine said Mrs.
Spilman.
The traditional harsh stereotype of the
crusader for women's rights seems hardly
to fit Mrs. Cotten. One evidence of this
is the colorful Victorial "crazy quilt" she
worked which is now on display in
Cotten Hall.
Each velvet, satin or silk patch in the
quilt has been bordered or ornamented
with intricate embroidery. An original
four-stanza poem, worked in gold silk
outline stitches covers the crimson plush
quilt backing.
There can be little doubt that were
she alive today, the remarkable Sallie
Southall Cotten would be using her talent
to organize and lead league groups
towards the channeling of women's
"undeveloped powers" which she
perceived 50 years ago.
But the thousands of East Carolina
women students who have lived in Cotten
Hall during the past decades while they
worked toward college degrees have
already fulfilled one of her most
cherished dreamsopportunities for
women to receive educations and develop
their potential abilities.
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I
20
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
Sports
Pirates dropped by VMI, 73-56, for third loss
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
LEXINGTON, Va. The VMI
Fleldhouse is always a tough place for
opposing teams to play and Saturday
night the East Carolina University basket
ball team found out just how tough, as
they dropped a 73-56 conference game to
the VMI Keydets.
In the first conference game for both
teams, the Keydets jumped to an early
10-2 lead, and never trailed, as they took
advantage of East Carolina's cold-shoot-
ing and turnovers to offset their own lack
of height and speed.
After ECU closed to 14-12 with just
under 12 minutes to play in the first half,
VMI went on a 16-6 tear to take a 30-18
lead with five minutes to go in the half.
ECU never came closer than six points
the rest of the game.
The convincing loss at the hands of
VMI, gave ECU its third straight loss of
the year, all by a total of 96 points.
Despite this figure, ECU coach Dave
Patton wasn't really worried about the
loss.
"I'm not worried about the loss
tonight said Patton. "Not only did we
play in one of the toughest places in the
country, I saw things out there the
players have not done all year. I saw
what I've been hoping to see and that
was our guys hustling. With this in my
mind, I don't think it will be long before
we put it all together. It will be only a
matter of time
Patton might have been right. Despite
the score, ECU was beat by a good VMI
team which was supported by a
boisterous Keydet crowd of 2,200, near
capacity for the VMI Fieldhouse, whichi
is known as "the Pit
It was classic zone pressing and
hard-nose ball-hawking that the Keydets
used to force the Pirates into 26
Dave Montgomery and John Krovic
led the VMI offense, while it was a total
effort on defense. Montgomery was the
only Keydet of effectiveness off the
boards, with 11, and added 16 points on
8 of 11 shots, most of them off his
rebounds.
Krovic ended as the game's high
scorer with 17 points and his outside
DAVE MONTGOMERY toft and JOHN KROVIC right were the individual leaden for
the VMI Keydets in Saturday's 73-56 win over ECU. Montgonery had 16 points and 11
rebounds and Krovic added 17 points to lead the Keydets to victory in the first
conference game for both teams.
turnovers, which offset a 35-25
ECU rebound advantage. The Keydets
also used a 52 percent shooting night to
can five more field goals than the
visitors, despite the Pirates' 58-56 shot
advantage.
shooting threat kept ECU off Mont-
gomery and forward Ron Carter. This
opened the inside path to the basket.
Ironically, it was ECU's failure to gain
the inside route which probably cost
them the game.
Duke shows improvement in first games
So far in this short 1975-1976
basketball season, Duke University has
been a surprise, even to Blue Devil coach
Bill Foster.
"I've been real pleased with the hustle
the team has shown so far this year
said Foster. "We are much better this
year then we were last year
Last year, Foster led the Blue Devils
to a 13-13 record in his first year as
coach, an improvement of three games
over the year before. Despite this record,
and Fost : 221 career wins, the Devils
were picked to finish near the bottom of
the ACC this year by the coaches and
sports writers, primarily due to the loss of
three starters.
In its first three games, however,
Duke has looked like anything but an
also ran, having routed Johns Hopkins
103-72 and nipped Virginia 81-79 for a 2-1
record The Devils' only loss came to the
nationally-ranked Tennessee Volunteers.
In that game, the Devils extended the
Vols' to the final moments of the game,
before falling by an 86-80 score.
It has been a running type of game
that Foster has used at Duke, the same
type of offense the Pirates have seen in
their first three games, which they have
lost by srores of 127-84, 117-81 and
73-56.
"We'll continue to use the mnning
game and multiple defenses this year, as
long as we can get the rebounding. Our
defense has also improved over last
year
The team leader is 6-9 senior
co-captain Willie Hodge. Hodge was
shifted from forward to center this year,
to replace the graduated Bob Fleischer,
and so far he has produced. He is the
team leader in scoring and rebounding.
1 Hodge is averaging 24.3 points and 8.3
rebounds a game in the center spot,
better statistics than Fleischer compiled
at the spot last year. Against Tenner �,
Hodge scored 29 points.
The other senior starter for the Dukes
this season is 6-5 forward George Moses.
Although he has not been scoring a lot
of points, Moses has been a definite
attribute to the team with his
ball-hawking defense.
The rest of the Devils' starting five is
averaging around 37 points a game. The
backcourt leader is Tates Armstrong.
Armstrong is averag.ng just over 15
points a game, and his freshman sidekick
Jim Sparnarkel is scoring almost 12
points a game. The starting team is
completed with 6-7 Mark Crow at forward
next to Moses. Crow is averaging nine
points a game.
The Tennessee game showed that the
Blue Devils could stay on the court with
nationally-ranked competition and give
them a game, which is something the 0-3
Pirates of East Carolina haven't done in
games with Maryland and North Carolina
State.
ECU has some hope from the
improved play of freshman Louis Crosby
and injured center Larry Hunt. Crosby
and Hunt both started out slow against
Maryland, but have played much better,
against State and VMI.
The leading Pirate scorer is guard
Reggie Lee. Lee is averaging 13.3 points
a game after a disappointing game
against VMI, where he tallied just five
points. Two other Pirates, Hunt and
captain Al Edwards, are averaging just
over 10 points a game. East Carolina has
averaged 38 rebounds a game and scored
77 points a game, but the defense has
been poor.
Hunt leads the Pirates with eight
rebounds a game and sophomore Wade
Henkel, despite some lackluster shoot-
ing, has averaged seven rebounds a
game. Against Maryland and State,
freshman Tyrone Edwards was im-
pressive, but he played little against
VMI because of foul trouble and an
inability to get untracked.
If East Carolina expects to play with
Duke its defense must get better and its
shooting (39.1 at Maryland and 44.8 at
VMI) needs to improve. This is the last
leg of the Pirates' suicide opening
four-game road schedule and it would be
nice if the Pirate team could return home
Saturday with at least one win in the four
games. Duke just doesn't seem to be the
team for ECU to beat, though.
mm iiwii 1 "i mmtwm i mi
The staff i
It wasn't that the effort wasn't th1001!? a
for Larry Hunt grabbed 15 rebounds i'ul'y't'l(
Wade Henkel had eight, but rather'ular s.cnea
taller Bucs couldn't connect ins1lcPaI,�n '
Montgomery had a great deal to do 'e advanta9
this, blocking four ECU shots
proving a more imposing figure than
6-5 frame would normally allow aga Rosters ar
the 6-10 Hunt and 6-8 Henkel. 3 registratic
But, if ECU didn't click from ramural Sp
inside, A Edwards' 3-for-10 night 3WLING (M
Reggie Lee's 2-for-10 night ven-January
indicative of the outside shooting of-15, Womer
Pirates. Only freshmen Louis Crosby IM WRESTl
sharp outside the lane, hiti registratic
six-of-seven and leading the Pirates jthe Co-Rec
12 points. Ith a registr
It is Crosby, and perhaps Hunt, wprts activiti
may provide East Carolina with
take-charge leader which has
lacking so far. Crosby is
approaching the caliber of play equa
his pre-season billing and Hunt s�
back in top form after nursing
pre-season injury.
But, if Patton is pleased with
team's movement against VMI, he
better start worrying about the effect
opening losses, and a probable losi
Duke tomorrow, will have. Besides,
team is now 0-1 in Southern Confenfl Point stan
play. p. Majors U
"We have to keep from letting til Greene Do
losses get us down said Patton. "Wpma Sigma
coming around, but it will take t
before we get there. I think we got tf
Students e
fice. If then
the Intran
rticular acti
II be schec
ngs often t
or four guys trying to be team leatyision, Scot
and when we can stop the mistakes
the turnovers, we'll be ready"
After falling behind at 30-18,
points.
si Ion Kapp
Eint standing
h;
fought back to 34-27 at the half ancfterweed Ga
Fraternity
:ond place
Point stan
ndbook. If
36-30 and 38-32 early in the second
before a seven point VMI string put
game away for good at 45-32. It
never closer than nine over the final
minutes, as VMI used
offense to draw fouls,
converted into coffin-shutting nails to
Pirates.
The largest VMI spread came at 68
which ECU cut to 68-56 before (
Reppart and Krovic sank five straight K5�f u
throws over the last 20 seconds for
final spread.
ECU must play at Duke tomor
before opening its home season
ints.
The Men's
a slow djmputation,
which t
The numbe
sidence H
aduatelnde
h 22 teams
mes will b
conference foe Davidson on Decerrfliseum and
13, followed by UNC-Wilmington
December 18.
ECU
Lee
Braman
Crosby
T. Edwards
A. Edwards
Hunt
Henkel
Dincen
Gainer
f
1
0
0
0
0
3
4
0
0
t
5
10
12
0
6
11
6
2
4
TOTALS
East Carolina
VMI
� ill 1 Will ill
25 8 56
VMI
Krovic
Carter
Bynum
Reppart
Borojevich
Montgom.
Kelley
Watjen
Lombard
Nichaus
Smith
TOTALS
f
5
0
0
4
4
0
o
All Intrami
jdent Cente
person pe
wling centf
ssident's Ci
2915
27 29-56
34 39-73
mmmm
Approxima
Qasketball Of
ficials' clinii
ficials will ;
0 e rate of $2
officials pr





IHHimHIRHHHiHMBIBHBHHBKHH
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
21
��.
f By LEONARD SMITH, DIANE KNOTT and UNDA BRITT
OSS
The staff in the Office of Intramural Sports would like to take this opportunity to
rt wasn't th'come a" facultv rnembers and students back to school for Winter Quarter.
5 rebounds P'V- tne students and faculty members enjoyed their short 'vacation' from the
but rather,u,ar scnedule- Tne staff a,so hopes that the faculty and students enjoyed their
xnnect jnc1'0'1'00 in tne Intramural Sports activities of Fall Quarter and will continue to
deal to do'e advanta9e OT the many activities offered through the Office of Intramural Sports.
3U shots .
figure than -Rosters Due-
y allow aga Rosters are due in the Intramural Office not later than 5:00 p.m. on the last day of
nkel. 3 registration period for that particular sport. Registration periods for Winter Quarter
click from ramural Sports are: BASKETBALL (Men-December 1-5, Women-December 3-16);
ir-10 night )WLING (Men-December 8-11, Women-December 3-11); RACQUETBALL DOUBLES
) night ven-January 5-8, Women-January 5-15; FREE-THROW SHOOTING (Men-January
shooting oM5, Women-January 15); SWIMMING (Men-January 26-30, Women-February 2-10;
uis Crosby IM WRESTLING is also being offered in the Men's Intramural Sports Program and
lane, hitfc registration period runs from January 19 to January 26. The only event scheduled
the Pirates ihe Co-Recreational Intramural Sports Program is BADMINTON MIXED DOUBLES
th a registration period of February 2-12. This is a complete list of all intramural
ips Hunt, wiorts activities scheduled for Winter Quarter.
)lina with
ich has b -How About A New Intramural Sport?-
sby is
f play equa
id Hunt so
er
Continued from bottom.
-Technical Foul! fOUCH-
Related to basketball officiating is the technical foul rule. This year in intramural
basketball, players will be ejected from the game upon receipt of their second
technical foul. If a team receives three technical fouls in one game then the offending
team will forfeit the game at that time, regardless of the score at that tme.
-Call 756562 For 'Intra-Actioif-
Students may now call 758-6562 on weekends or after 5:00 p.m. on weekdays to
hear recorded information concerning the Men's, Women's, and Co-Recreational
Intramural Sports Programs at ECU. Such things as entry deadlines, schedules, and
postponed games will be on the recordings along with further information concerning
such things as free-play in the gyms, available facilities, and recreational swimming.
Clubbers take 10-0 victory
Students are reminded that their suggestions are always welcome in the Intramural
fice. If there is nothing on the above list of activities that interests you, then come
nursing the Intramural Office with your suggestions. If enough interest exists for the
rticular activity and it is feasible, then the chances are very good that that activity
II be scheduled. Don't get discouragjd if it doesn't happen immediately. These
ngs often take quite a bit of planning by the Intramural Staff.
ased with
: VMI, he
t the effect
obable iosi
5. Besides,
Bm Confer!
-President's Cup Points-
Point standings at the end of Fall Quarter are: in Women's Intramural Sports, the
E. Majors lead the Residence Hal IIndependent Division with 234 points, followed
n letting tli Greene Dorm with 196 and White Dorm with 190. In the Sorority Division, Sigma
Patton. "Wjma Sigma leads with 259 points while Chi Omega is a distant second with 203
will take tints.
k we got tf The Men's Intramural Point Standings are as follows: in the Residence Hall
i team tear,vision, Scott Dorm has gained the lead with 296 points while Jones Dorm trails with
mistakes 3 points. In the Club Division, the P.E. Majors lead with 330 points while Phi
ly si Ion Kappa is a distant second with 275 points. GraduateIndependent Division
I 30-18,
string put
45-32. It
dint standings show that Herb's Superbs is out in front with 335 points while
ye half anc terweed Gang struggled in with 238 points for second place. Kappa Alpha is atop
e second f? Fraternity Division standings with 408 points while Kappa Sigma holds down
ond place with 336 points.
Point standings are compiled in accordance with the guidelines in the Intramural
�r the finallndbook. If there are any questions concerning your team's point total or their
a slow dmputation, please contact the Intramural Office.
which I
ng nails to
-Men's Intramural Basketball-
2ame at 6ft
beforeTne numDer of Men's Intramural Basketball teams has jumped to 116, up from last
e straight as total of �1 Teams will compete in four divisions. The largest division is the
ccnds for sidence Ha" Division with 48 teams in six leagues followed by the
aduateIndependent Division with 30 teams in four leagues, the " atemity Division
jke tomortn teams in two leagues, and the Club Division with 16 teams in two leagues.
imes will begin on Tuesday, December 9 and will be played in both Minges
season
Oqoqw liseum and Memorial Gym.
ilmington
n
ul
jvich
)om.
i
ird
JS
9
6
7
5
2
0
8
0
0
1
0
0
-Intramural Bowling-
All Intramural Bowling matches will take place at the bowling lanes in Mendenhall
jdent Center. Matches will consist of three games. There will be a charge of $1.50
r person per match (3 games). This fee includes shoe rental and is payable at the
wling center. Bowling is considered an intermediate sport in the awarding of
ssident's Cup Points.
-Basketball Officials-
2915
f
5
0
0
4
4
0
0j Approximately 40 men and women students have been accepted as Intramural
0 asketball Officials. All officials were required to spend a total of four hours in
ficials' clinics and pass a written examination concerning rules interpretation. These
ficials will supervise and officiate all intramural basketball games and are payed at
e rate of $2.00 to $3.00 per game depending on ability and experience. This group
officials promises to be one of the best groups of intramural officials ever at ECU.
See above.
m
mmm
m
m
WASHINGTON D.C.�Two fourth
quarter scores and a tough defensive unit
led the East Carolina club football team
to a 10-0 win over American University
here on November 23.
The Pirates and the Eagles played
scoreless football through the first three
quarters before Danny O'Shea connected
on a 20-yard field goal to give the
clubbers a 3-0 lead.
The ECU team built on that lead when
Bruce Hall hit Chip Burden with a 28-yard
touchdown pass on the last play of the
game. O'Shea added the extra point for
the final ECU margin of victory.
The win closed out the ECU clubbers
season with a 6-4 record.
UIHM�KITY BOOK CXCH4liG�
DOWNTOWN GR�CnvLL�
SAVE MONEY
BOUGHT ANP SOLD
J
yys'sysysvyssscssys
H.L HODGES & CO JNC
210 East 5th St.
HOODED SWEA TSHIRTS
REGULAR $8"
mow $645
WITH THIS
COUPON ONLY
MANY COLORS SIZES
OFFER GOOD THRU DEC 19TH. 1975
�- ,
-





22
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
mmmmi �mum � i�n i i wigiu i �� �-

�M

ft

A Communique
from Cain
Dear Friend of the University,
As we put the football statistics on the
shelf until next September, some reflections
are in order on the fall season that has
recently closed.
In football, we finished with an 8-3 overall
record, which included six straight wins at
the end of the season. The Pirates also won
four of six Southern Conference contests.
It was especially gratifying to see the
Pirate supporters raiiy arouna me team when
the goinci was rough early in the season.
Taking the large groups to Chapel Hill and
Charlottesville had an outstanding effect on
the team and our hosts as well.
The Pirates open next footbali season in
Ficklen Stadium Sept. 11 against Southern
Mississippi. Between now and that time
Final ECU Football Statistics
Bill Cain
there must be a lot of hard work done by the
coaches and players to start what should be
another winning season. Alot of
hard work will come from persons like
yourself who support the Pirates. It is a
combination of these things that make the
Pirate program successful
I am trying to grow
Director of Athletics and I
for a while, in different
happens, there are lots
growing and making the transition from one
sport season to another must take place.
into the job of
will be doing so
ways. As this
of other ways
INDIVIDUALSTATIS'TICS NET
RUSHINGTCGAINLOSSAVG TT)
Hicks2429029612,3 2
High to we:p 149fiP.O i
Strayhorn 101662365s6.3 i
Greer7475426,0 1
Hawkins1P7612205925.5 5
Jcnes603o22QR5.0 2
Weaver6039613334.9 2
Kolanko19n6np64o 2
Sutherlaind 59281582233.8 2
Dauh733053333.8 3
Ingramf25523.3 1
Moss35093.3 0
French44143141292.9 2
Cnaty23r,420642.S 0
Boudreau6150152.5 C
Gallaher251� 4?.o a
TOTALS61?330921950905,0 29
RECEIVINGNOYDSAVGTl)
C-allaher134?335.3n 1
Hawkins1224720.62
Burnett811614.50
Strayhorn7507.10
French4287.00
Williamson46416.00
Krlank2189.00
Johnson28113.5r
Dross1-8-8.03
TOTALS
53 969 18.3 11
PASSING ATTFCCMPINTYDS
Conaty 59243463
Weaver 44171381
Sutherland 16110135
Daub 11ft-9
TOTALS 120534969
TEAM STATISTICS
NET RUSHING YARDS
Rushing Play3
Avg Per Play
A.vg Per Game
NET PASSING YARDS
Passes Attp
Passes Comp
Comp
Avg Per Game
Avg Per Attp
Avg Per Comp
TD Passes
Had Intercepted
TOTAL OFFENSE
Plays
Avg Per Play
Avg Per Game
ECU
39$
617
5.0
280.9
969
120
53
44.2
8R.1
n.i
18.3
11
4
40 5?
737
369.3
0PP
1877
593
3.2
17.6
1495
212
104)
47.2
135.9
7.1
15.0
6
24
3371
8C5
4.2
306.
Tin
By
East Care
ekend wh
ims in the
Smith poi
3 fact that
ary other 0
:e this yea
This write
�ms do no
isn't really
thin the cc
ice the lea
en a confei
modern c
Most layn
there is r
r, the con
I won by
Of course
termined b
jular seasc
lereby the I
jular-seaso
advantage
Furman rr
Paladins
me, and W
ntest for D
irman is in
hnston Gyr
im to play
Some won
y here eitl
wing to pla)
While EO
nference a
iam and fv
ims have
Are East (
me set?Pai
rcle season
s chance it
A part of
chmond pla
ay so far tr
ntest in the
the season
But, there
le league au
league gan
ly most evei
like no oth
I
RES
ALL
GIFT
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um





SHJBTOffflSS
Mueller fills wrestling gap
East Carolina Sports Information Director Ken Smith made a good point this past
ekend when he pointed out the inconsistencies of scheduling among member
ims in the Southern Conference.
Smith pointed out, after ECU had dropped a 73-56 decision to VMI in Lexington,
i fact that not all conference teams play a complete home-and-home schedule with
gry other conference team and that this could have a bearing on the basketball title
2e this year.
This writer took to task the project of checking to see which teams do, and which
�ms do not, play full 14-game schedules within the conference. I found out, but
isn't really surprised, that only East Carolina and Richmond play full 14 game slates
thin the conference, and are the only conference teams to have done so every year
ice the leage was expanded to eight teams in 1972. In addition, there has never
en a conference basketball champion who has played a full league schedule since
modem day inception of the conference in 1954.
Most layman sports fans will probably write this off as pure coincidence and trivia,
there is more to it than that. In both 1972 and 1973, and it almost happened last
ar, the conference champion played three games less than the conference runner-up
d won by only a small margin during the regular-season.
Of course, it is true that the league's NCAA representative and champion is
termined by the results of the conference championship tournament, and not the
jular seasons standings. But with the new format of conference tournament play,
lereby the league's top four finishers host the first-round playoff games, the league
jular-season standings is still important. It is therefore possible for a team to gain
advantage by scheduling certain teams at home and not playing them on the road.
Furman may enjoy an advantage this year with its 12 game schedule which finds
Paladins playing two of the league's better teams, VMI and Davidson, only at
me, and William and Mary once. Furman does play Davidson twice, but the "home"
ntest for Davidson is to be played in Charlotte, hardly a pro-Davidson site when
irman is involved. The other conference schools all play Davidson in the Wildcats'
hnston Gym, which is respected as probably the toughest place for an opposing
im to play in the conference.
Some would argue for the VMI Keydets' home court, "the Pit and Furman doesn't
y here either. So, the defending champion Paladins are aided this year by not
ving to play at either of the two toughest home courts in the league.
While ECU and Richmond play a full schedule of games, and they are the
nference co-favorites, Davidson plays just ten games, six of them at home, and
lliam and Mary has scheduled 11 league games, six at home. The remainder of the
ms have 12 conference games scheduled, with the Citadel playing 13 games.
Are East Carolina and Richmond at a disadvantage then, playing a complete 14
me set? Past finishes would seem to support this, since it is hard to go through a
lole season without losing one or two games and the less games a team plays, the
s chance it has to lose.
A part of the answer to this problem could be decided this weekend when
chmond plays at VMI. Viewing VMI in action last week, and watching Richmond's
ay so far this year, these two teams seem the ones to beat right now and the
ntest in the ancient Lexington gym could jostle the conference race, even this early
the season.
But, there shouldn't have to be a dispute over scheduling within the conference.
le league authorities could solve the problem by simply requiring every team to play
league games, or every league opponent on a home-and-home basis. This is the
ly most every conference in America operates. But, then, the Southern Conference
like no other conference in the nation.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
RESUMING TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9TH,
ALL ITEMS THAT COST OVER $200 WILL BE
GIFT WRAPPED FREE OF CHARGE.
STUDENTS SUPPL YSTORE
WRIGHT BUILDING
Probably no one anticipated the
opening of the 1975-76 wrestling season
longer than Phil Mueller. And, no one
has jumped off to a more impressive
start in the Pirates' three tournaments
this year than the 5-10 native of Eden,
N.C.
Mueller transferred to East Carolina
last year from the University of
, Wisconsin at Stevens Point where he was
one of the top wrestlers in the country in
the 158 pound weight class. As a
freshman, he finished fourth in the NAIA
championships and was the runnerup at
158 during his sophomore year.
But after transferring, he was forced
to sit out the 1974-75 season although he
did show occasional flashes of brillance
last season, winning two tournament
titles wrestling unattached to any team.
So the 1975-76 season finally rolled
around and Mueller was ready to go. He
took second place at 167 in the Neptune
Invitational and was runnerup in the
Monarch Open. And then put together his
most impressive performance of the
season two weeks ago, pinning four
straight opponents en route to the
championship in the 167 pound weight
class in the North Carolina Invitational
Tournament. He was voted the
Outstanding Wrestler in the tournament
and now carries the distinction of being
known as "The Number One Wrestler in
North Carolina
"I probably never wrestled better in
my life than I did in that tournament
said Mueller. "It sure has bolstered my
confidence. I just hope I can stay healthy
and continue to wrestle as well as I have
been during the first part of the season
Mueller's secret to such a fast start
this year? "Hard work and plenty of it,
claims Mueller. "The guys in practice like
Mike Radford and Ron Whitcomb really
make you work hard. I consider Mike and
Ron and some of the other guys on the
team as good as any wrestlers in the
country. You're only going to be as good
as your competition in practice is
Although Mueller has two runnerup
finishes, one title and a fine 10-2 overall
record this year, he was somewhat
disappointed with his performance in the
Neptune Invitational Tourney earlier in
the year.
"I've always been an offensive
wrestler and I was wrestling very
defensively in that tournament explain-
ed Mueller. "I was letting my opponent
make all the moves which was the main
reason I wasn't doing that well. Then
again, since I had sat out an entire year I
had also lost a lot of my competiive edge
which takes times to get back.
"But everything has started to come
back and winning the Outstanding
Wrestler Award at the N.C. Invitational
sure has given me plenty of confidence.
It sure has put me in a better frame of
mind and I know I'll be ready to go this
weekend in our big quad meet
The Pirates face nationally ranked
teams Lehigh and Oregon State, along
with Indiana State Friday and Saturday in
a quadrangular meet in Bethlehem, Pa.
"How we come out in this meet will
give the team a good idea of how we
stack up with the top teams in the nation
and just how good we really are said
Mueller. "The whole team is psyched for
this one. I just hope we can go up there
and give a good account of ourselves
mt
� m
mm





24
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 219 DECEMBER 1975
nawsFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH
S
Pub Board screening Ceramics sale
Masters and Johnson Cheerleader openin:
The screenings for the open positions
on the Pub Board are being held Dec. 18
at 4 p.m. in room 247 Mendenhall.
Applications are still being accepted for
these positions. If you are interested,
please stop by the Dean of Student
Affair's Office and fill out an application.
The Pub Board needs your support to
ensure an effective student organization.
Forever Generation
The Forever Generation will be
sponsoring a seminar entitled "The
Christian and Rock Music: Are They
Compatible?" Thursday, December 11,
1975. Speaking will be Mike Charles,
former rock musician and Forever
Generation staff worker at Ohio State
University. The seminar, which will be
held in the Biology Auditorium room 103
will begin at 8:00 p.m. We encourage
you to come.
Ceramics sale - Mendenhall Multi-
purpose room on Wed. Dec. 10, from
8:30 a.m. until 9 p.m. All proceeds go to
the Ceramic Guild Scholarship sale.
Rho Epsilon
Rho Epsilon is holding a meeting to
make final plans for the annual Christmas
party. All interested persons in Real
Estate are asked to attend at 3:00
Wednesday Nov. 10 in room 108.
SNEHA
The Student National Environmental
Health Association will meet Wednesday,
December 10 in room 101 Allied Health
Building at 5:00 p.m. All members are
required, and all perspective members are
urged to attend.
Holy Communion U.N. meeting
Episcopal Students Worship Holy
Communion 5:30 Wednesday rol lowed by
supper at 501 E. 5th St. (Methodist
Center).
League of Scholars
The League of Scholars will meet this
Wednesday, December 10th, at 5:00 P.M.
in Brewster B-103. Dr. David Lunney of
the ECU Department of Chemistry will be
presenting a lecture-slide presentation
entitled "It's Not Nice to Fool Mother
Nature: Some Natural Limits to
So-Called Progress We encourage all
members to come out and hear this
promising lecture. Hope to see you
there!
There will be a U.N. meeting
Wednesday, Dec. 10, in Brewster, C-100
(coffee room lounge) at 4:00 p.m. It is
very important for all members to attend
since officers will be elected. 758-6030 is
the number you can call if interested.
Throw a pie
Bahai
The weekly meeting of the Bahai
Association will be held Wednesday
evening, December 10th at 7:30 p.m in
room 238 Mendenhall Center. The
program will include a film on the history
of the Bahai Faith, newest of the world's
religions. The public is cordially invited
to attend.
Newman club
There will be a meeting of the
Newman Club Wednesday, Dec. 10, at 5
p.m. All interested persons are invited to
attend the Mass preceding and the
meeting following. Plans for an
up-coming Christmas party will be
discussed.
Come throw a pie in your favorite
Sigma's eye at the Sigma Sigma Sigma
annual Happy Hour and Pie Throw
Wednesday Dec. the 10th from 4-6 pm in
the Elbo Room. There will also be a
variety of games including a kissing
booth. Admission is 25 and tickets can
be bought from any Tri-Sigma or at the
door of the Elbo Room.
NTE final date
The final date during the regular
academic year for the National Teacher
Examination is February 21, 1976.
Students are reminded to submit
applications to Educational Testing
Service prior to January 29, 1976. You
may pick up your application at the
Testing Department, rooms 204-205
Speight building.
Pub Board meeting
There will be a regular meeting of the
Pub Board Thursday, Dec. 11, at 4 p.m.
in the Buccaneer office. All interested
persons are invited to attend.
There will be a Psi Chi meeting on
Tuesday, December 9, at 7:00 p.m. in
Speight room 129. Featured speaker will
be Dr. Charles Moore of the Psychology
Department. His topic will be "An
Overview of Masters and Johnson:
Sexual Behavior
This meeting is open to all interested
persons. Psi Chi members are especially
encouraged to come to this meeting.
Varsity band
All students interested in playing in
the Varsity Band, please meet in room
101 in the Music Building Monday,
Tuesday, or Thursday at 4:00 p.m. or
contact Carl Rohleder at 758-6982. No
audition required. Everyone gets to play.
Betty Adcock
Betty Adcock, author of "Walking
Out" will speak Tues. Dec. 9 at 8:00 p.m.
in room 244 Mendenhall. Ms. Adcock is
being sponsored by the ECU Poetry
Forum. No admission. The public is
invited to attend.
SCRC celebration
ECU'S chapter of the Student Council
for Exceptional Children is holding its
annual Christmas celebration Thursday
night at 7:00 p.m. in the Multi-Purpose
Room at Mendenhall. Christmas music
will be provided by the Caswell Chorus
and refreshments will be served
afterwards.
Job fair
A job fair will be sponsored by the
Student Planning Association on Thurs
Dec 11. It will be held in Brewster B-102
at 3 00 p.m. AH students are invited to
attend and talk with former ECU
graduates and others now in the planning
profession.
Phi Alpha Theta
Phi Alpha Theta, Honor Society in
History, will sponsor a lecture
presentation by Dr. Herbert Paschal,
chairman of the History Department, and
Dr. John East, professor of Political
Science, Tuesday, Dec. 9 at 7:00 p.m. in
Brewster B-104. Dr. Paschal will speak
on the Committees of Correspondence in
North Carolina and Dr. East will present
a conservative's view of the 1776 period.
All interested students an1 faculty are
cordially invited to attend.
r
ith
ttej
There's a position open for a Van
male cheerleader. If interested, oonrV
Pat Kinlaw at 758-4000 for a perse"1
interview.
sc
Alpha Beta Alpha
B
s
s,
era
The regular monthly meeting of n
Alpha Eta Chapter of Alpha Beta Air
(Library Science Fraternity) will be hel a
the student lounge in the Library Sciene
Department of Joyner Library at 5 p�
on Tuesday, December 16. It is import
that all pledges attend in orders,
rehearse the initiation ceremony. Pie s
be prompt.
'Crawdaddy Revues
t
Beginning Tues. night Dec. 9
10:30, WECU will start a new season
the "Crawdaddy Radio Revue 1
week's program will include intervk
with two of Europe's top jazz violinist
Christmas party
The Accounting Society will hav�
Chrsitmas party - Friday Dec. 12 at
p.m. at Miss Porters house. Sign ur. j
accounting office by Wednesday. f
WECU tee-shi
All winners of WECU Tee-Shirts �
pick them up Wednesday 10-12 i
Wednesday night 6-8. Bring inden
cation.
Hying club
The ECU Flying
Thursday, Dec. 11 at
Mendenhall.
Club will rr
7:30 in room





Title
Fountainhead, December 9, 1975
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
December 09, 1975
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.362
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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