<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
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Fountainhead<lb/>
VOL. 7, NO. 10 EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
14 OCTOBER 1975 GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Budgets (discussed<lb/>
NCASG holds meeting<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Student Governments (NCASG) held its<lb/>
"most important meeting so far" Friday<lb/>
and Saturday Oct. 3 and 4, according to<lb/>
Jimmy Honeycutt, president of the ECU<lb/>
Student Government Association and<lb/>
secretary-treasurer of the NCASG.<lb/>
An association of the 16 University of<lb/>
North Carolina Student Governments The<lb/>
NCASG held its meeting and a seminar at<lb/>
the Institute of Government in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The NCASG's monthly meeting on<lb/>
Friday night dealt with the budgets of each<lb/>
UNC school individually. Honeycutt said<lb/>
ECU's SGA budget was larger than that of<lb/>
any other student government in the UNC<lb/>
system. He also noted that many schools<lb/>
with much smaller student government<lb/>
budgets than ECU's are scrutinized more<lb/>
closely by the administration in their<lb/>
appropriations.<lb/>
Also discussed was a registration drive<lb/>
organized by the Campaign for Student<lb/>
Voters to which the NCASG donated $100.<lb/>
Honeycutt said the campaign is trying<lb/>
to get as many students as possible to<lb/>
register to vote, either in the towns where<lb/>
they go to school or in their home towns.<lb/>
The NCASG has also hired Marilyn<lb/>
Dixon Elliott as a temporary assistant,<lb/>
according to Honeycutt. She will act as<lb/>
coordinator between the student govern-<lb/>
ments of the UNC system, research the<lb/>
activities of the student governments<lb/>
around the country, and serve as a lobbyist<lb/>
for the NCASG.<lb/>
Honeycutt said the most important part<lb/>
of the two-day meeting was the seminars<lb/>
on Saturday.<lb/>
Speaking were William Dees, chairman<lb/>
of the UNC Board of Governors, and UNC<lb/>
President William Friday. Honeycutt said<lb/>
that Friday told the NCASG that a $50<lb/>
million bond issue was coming up that<lb/>
would affect nearly every school in the<lb/>
UNC system-among those not affected<lb/>
would be ECU.<lb/>
After Dees' speech, the Board of<lb/>
Governors chairman opened the floor to<lb/>
questions.<lb/>
Honeycutt said he asked Dees what the<lb/>
criteria were in making appointments to<lb/>
the Board of Trustees of the UNC schools<lb/>
and specifically why Roddy Jones was not<lb/>
reappointed to the ECU Trustees.<lb/>
According to Honeycutt, Dees replied<lb/>
that the objectives were: 1) to get<lb/>
members of the ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
from various parts of the state, 2) to get<lb/>
more minorities and women as Trustees, 3)<lb/>
to get people who were dedicated to the<lb/>
university, and 4) to make sure the people<lb/>
who served had not done so for a long<lb/>
time.<lb/>
To this Honeycutt responded that<lb/>
Jones was dedicated-he had been<lb/>
selected chairman of the board-and had<lb/>
only served for two years, as well as being<lb/>
from Raleigh. Also, of the new members<lb/>
who had been selected to the board, none<lb/>
was black or a woman.<lb/>
THIS DOG IS UP for Homecoming Week! If he's not careful he could spend the week in<lb/>
the city dog pound.<lb/>
CT&amp;T converts dorm system<lb/>
By JAMES PERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Registration day brings many hassles<lb/>
to the student, the least of which may now<lb/>
be with the phone company (Carolina<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph Company).<lb/>
For several years pay phones were<lb/>
located in each dorm creating a constant<lb/>
pain. If they even worked it was almost an<lb/>
act of God.<lb/>
In February 1971 CT&amp;T made the<lb/>
decision to convert its system. One<lb/>
influencing factor was the loss that year of<lb/>
$10,000 in property damage from just two<lb/>
dorms. That does not include money lost<lb/>
due to theft. According to Mr. D.A. Collier,<lb/>
CT&amp;T commercial manager, one of the pay<lb/>
phones was found in the Tar River behind a<lb/>
tobacco barn.<lb/>
Collier said that to date approximately<lb/>
$280,000 has been spent for the wiring<lb/>
alone CT&amp;T feels, however, that this<lb/>
figure will be a good long-run investment,<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
See Telephones, page 18.<lb/>
HOMECOMING FESTIVITIES begin tonight at Minges Coliseum with the presence of<lb/>
female vocalist - Linda Ronstadt. The show starts at 8 p.m.<lb/>
SGA approves<lb/>
new cabinet<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
By JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
Legislature approved the Executive<lb/>
Council's Cabinet Monday, with only one<lb/>
nay vote.<lb/>
Before confirming the cabinet, the<lb/>
legislature heard several of these<lb/>
nc ninees report on their activities as<lb/>
acting SGA officers during the summer<lb/>
and early fall terms.<lb/>
Greg Davis, transportation manager,<lb/>
said his office was considering the<lb/>
addition of two new buses to the ECU<lb/>
transportation system. The only time that<lb/>
the buses now being used can be serviced<lb/>
is during breaks between classes. If one<lb/>
breaks the system suffers until it can be<lb/>
repaired, he said.<lb/>
With the new buses, it would be<lb/>
possible to keep the system going while<lb/>
repairs are being made as well as<lb/>
expanding the present system, Davis said.<lb/>
The transportation office is seeking a<lb/>
$25,000 appropriation from the legislature<lb/>
for the 75-76 year.<lb/>
Student Welfare Secretary Tom<lb/>
Barwick told the legislature of his office's<lb/>
activities in the NC. Student Consumer<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Plans have been made to update a 1972<lb/>
SGA housing guide to Greenville along<lb/>
with the restaurant guide the SGA printed<lb/>
mm0m0mmmm<lb/>
this year, Barwick said.<lb/>
Rick Ketner, academic affairs secre-<lb/>
tary, recommended the continuation of<lb/>
the SGA retreat program. He also said he<lb/>
has appointed a student to the ad-hoc<lb/>
Semester-Quarter Transition Committee<lb/>
See SGA, page 8.<lb/>
New election<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
is holding new elections for the office of<lb/>
Junior Class Vice-President today.<lb/>
The candidates are Lynn Shubert,<lb/>
Tommy Thomason, and Kaye Norris.<lb/>
Precincts are open from 9 am. until 7<lb/>
p.m. in the old Student Union and Croatan<lb/>
snack bar.<lb/>
Commenting on the election which was<lb/>
called because Tommy Thomason's name<lb/>
was left off the ballot, SGA President<lb/>
Jimmy Honeycutt said it was unfortunate<lb/>
that her name was excluded.<lb/>
However, Honeycutt said the other<lb/>
complaints that had been registered<lb/>
concern inn the poll tenders qualifications<lb/>
and closing of certain precincts had been<lb/>
blown out of proportion by Fountainhead.<lb/>
"There has always been a lot of<lb/>
controversy over the elections Honeycutt<lb/>
said. "The losers always complain<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
Winih'rti<lb/>
MW<lb/>
�<lb/>
�a<lb/>
<lb/>
EditorialSCommenlary<lb/>
Budget making tough job<lb/>
ECU students can find out in only a couple of minutes more about their<lb/>
student government by reviewing last year's budget published in Thursday's<lb/>
Fountainhead than they could by spending an hour listening to Jimmy<lb/>
Honeycutt explain the virtues of the SGA.<lb/>
All you have to do is to follow the line-items in that budget and see where the<lb/>
SGA puts its money. You can tell a lot about most anybody or anything by<lb/>
simply watching how they spend their money.<lb/>
In last year's budget almost $38,000, or about 15 per cent of the total revenue<lb/>
raised through student fees, went into areas that we will lump together as<lb/>
"entertainment The ECU Playhouse, School of Music, and the Homecoming<lb/>
Steering Committee all received large chunks of student cash-and for the most<lb/>
part the goods and services they produced were for student enjoyment, student<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
Over 60 per cent of the budget went into the "communications" field on<lb/>
campus. Fountainhead, Buccaneer, WECU, Rebel, Ebony Herald and the<lb/>
Freshman Newsletter combined to get the lion's share of the entire budget.<lb/>
Dispensing campus information was a key part of last year's budget.<lb/>
Student transportation got another 10 per cent of the fees collected from last<lb/>
year's students. Another two to three per cent of the money went into the<lb/>
student emergency loan fund.<lb/>
Student consumer union interest were also safeguarded under the budget<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
So, last year's budget tried to maximize student fees to insure the best<lb/>
distribution to the student of student goods.<lb/>
Their interest were well directed last year and for the most part the money<lb/>
well spent.<lb/>
The new SGA will in the next month set its course for the coming year. All<lb/>
you have to do is look at their final budget to see in what direction they will go.<lb/>
There is always a lot of criticism of the way student fees are spent. But, last<lb/>
year, according to the budget at least, they were well appropriated-for the most<lb/>
part.<lb/>
Let's hope this year's new SGA can plot as good a course-and that at the<lb/>
same time they can discover some new directions that will benefit the students<lb/>
the most.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief-Mike Taylor<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager- Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Sydney Green<lb/>
Advertising Manaaer-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor- Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tlse<lb/>
Features Editor-Jim Dod-on<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
I DONT iCMOkJ fcHftT X fflE<lb/>
put i iHim m m <lb/>
WITHOUT Hi AMM&amp;S<lb/>
Joggers beware<lb/>
Greenville joggers better beware and obey all restriction signs, if any, they<lb/>
see posted around Ficklen Stadium and the practice football field these<lb/>
days-especialy in light of the recent incident at North Carolina State in Raleigh.<lb/>
In case you have not heard the latest from Moo U up in the capital, seems<lb/>
like a jogger, who turned out to be a State professor who claimed to be a big<lb/>
"Pack fan was arrested during a practice session for the North Carolina State<lb/>
football team. The arrest came as the professor jogged around the field after he<lb/>
was told by State grid boss Lou Holtz that the practice was closed and that he<lb/>
would have to leave.<lb/>
The jogger continued his jog and was promptly arrested by an off-duty<lb/>
security officer.<lb/>
The jogger contended that he had every right to jog around the f ield-whether<lb/>
it was a closed practice or not since he was no spy<lb/>
Seems like the reason behind closed practice sessions was thatHolz was<lb/>
worried about spies, apparently from Manland, watching the Pack drills.<lb/>
Really Lou, are you really getting that paranoid?<lb/>
The State team is not off to the flying start that a lot of people had expected.<lb/>
For sure they beat ECU but then this year that is NO BIG DEAL. Richmond, and<lb/>
Appalachian also have wins over us.<lb/>
Losing to Wake Forest must have upset the Pack boss to some extent.<lb/>
So, Greenville joggers, who do not want to run afoul of the law had better<lb/>
heed any signs they see posted around Ficklen.<lb/>
With the kind of season the Pirates are having, it might not be long before<lb/>
ECU boss Pat Dye is forced to close practices "to insure concentration" as Holtz<lb/>
puts it.<lb/>
Security precautions around the President of the United States were not that<lb/>
tight, until a pair of females tried to do old Jerry Ford in. But, then Ford does<lb/>
not have to explain to the Alumni why he lost the AOC grid title and let the guys<lb/>
from Chapel Hill beat him.<lb/>
Participate in<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
activities<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Mft<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
wp<lb/>
<pb facs="00039996_0003"/><lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wmmwnm i ii mi warn n m<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Would use SGA surplus<lb/>
Reader has election suggestions<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I just wanted to write on behalf of all<lb/>
the students on this campus who are<lb/>
concerned about DEMOCRACY, FAIR<lb/>
PLAY and AMERICA - to thank you on the<lb/>
staff who have put aside the archaic<lb/>
restraints of unbiased journalism to get<lb/>
THE REAL STORY out on the SGA<lb/>
elections. William Randolph Hearst is alive<lb/>
and well.<lb/>
I believe that it is time for a CHANGE in<lb/>
the way our SGA IS PICKED. I have a few<lb/>
-suggestions, which I am sure you and your<lb/>
staff will agree with.<lb/>
1) The common man, the average<lb/>
student, must be better represented at<lb/>
SGA. What we have up there is an elite<lb/>
corps: high grades, declared majors,<lb/>
people who have never heard of probation<lb/>
or math lab. I FEEL THAT NO ONE<lb/>
SHOULD RUN FOR SGA WHO HAS a 2.0<lb/>
OR BETTER AVERAGE. The common<lb/>
man, the kind that appreciates the stand<lb/>
Fountainhead has taken on these shoddy<lb/>
elections, deserves that right.<lb/>
2) Let's face it - the Greeks have a<lb/>
monopoly going. Do you know of a single<lb/>
Greek on this campus who doesn't belong<lb/>
to a fraternity or sorority? Case closed<lb/>
(good material for an editorial).<lb/>
Fountainhead wisely ignores these people<lb/>
because they really aren't news. So why<lb/>
don't we CONSTITUTIONALLY ignore<lb/>
them? NO ONE MAY RUN FOR SGA<lb/>
OFFICE WHO IS A GREEK, A RELATIVE<lb/>
OF A GREEK OR A COMMONLAW CHILD<lb/>
OF A GREEK. More than that. There is a<lb/>
person up at SGA who is one of the above,<lb/>
and I must criticize Fountainhead for not<lb/>
keeping up with its usual standards by<lb/>
making that fact know, if not over-known.<lb/>
Biker says racks needed<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In response to two articles i.e<lb/>
Bicycles and the blind, and Bicycle theft,<lb/>
I'm appalled at the rather one-sided views.<lb/>
First, I feel sorry for the blind who may<lb/>
trip over my bike, and apologize for the<lb/>
close calls we've had because theycould't<lb/>
hear me pedaling towards them.<lb/>
However, we, as bike owners must lock<lb/>
our bikes. Most of us try to lock them out<lb/>
of the way of student traffic and<lb/>
prospective thieves. But one of the best<lb/>
places to leave a bike is locked, around a<lb/>
streetlight, in the midst of people. The<lb/>
light (at night), people, and the lock<lb/>
usually discourages a thief. Unfortunately,<lb/>
thio seems to become an inconvenience to<lb/>
the blind.<lb/>
This is a classic example of minority<lb/>
versus a majority, complete with one-sided<lb/>
views and editorial complaints. Both are<lb/>
fully correct in their arguments, and both<lb/>
have their rights. But why don' they<lb/>
actively cooperate with each other to find a<lb/>
common, equally convenient solution?<lb/>
One simple solution is for the<lb/>
University to provide bike racks. They<lb/>
could be either the conventional rack (i.e.<lb/>
around the dorms), or a fence (i.e. around<lb/>
the Science Complex). Rawl, Old Student<lb/>
Union, Austin, the Infirmary have no rack<lb/>
or fence, so the bike owners must be<lb/>
creative in finding a suitable place to lock<lb/>
up. Generally this place will be in the way<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by their authors);<lb/>
names will be withheld on request. Un-<lb/>
signed editorials on this page and on the<lb/>
editorial page reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
editor, and are not necessarily those of<lb/>
the staff.<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD eeervee the right to re-<lb/>
fuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obscenity.<lb/>
of students. Rawl has a fence, but cyclists<lb/>
are sometimes late for class and can't stop<lb/>
to pick the bike up over the fence, as a<lb/>
result, it ends up locked to the fence<lb/>
projecting out to the sidewalk.<lb/>
From a lawful point of view: A bike is a<lb/>
two-wheeled vehicle, and it's rider must<lb/>
obey all traffic laws. Following on this<lb/>
information, cyclists can lawfully occupy<lb/>
parking places intended for cars. If some<lb/>
unfortunate driver ran over a parked bike in<lb/>
a properly designated parking place, that<lb/>
driver would be held in lieu of the bike's<lb/>
equivalence. This situation would truly be<lb/>
a hassle, for the driver and the bike owner.<lb/>
To sum things up, we need some racks,<lb/>
and plenty of time. If the bikes are<lb/>
provided protection, then the blind are<lb/>
also.<lb/>
Peter E. Hughes<lb/>
Noise level<lb/>
cited<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
It is almost unbelievable the way that<lb/>
the T.V. room has been laid out at<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
Who in the hell put the T.V. set so<lb/>
close to the foosball games?<lb/>
It is now impossible to pick up the<lb/>
audio portion of my favorite show "The<lb/>
Young and the Restless This is simply a<lb/>
situation that can't continue.<lb/>
While I enjoy the visual aspect of the<lb/>
show, (I just like to watch Jill's set bounce<lb/>
across the tube) I must hear the story to<lb/>
stay on top of the story.<lb/>
So, move those noisy foosball games,<lb/>
Is there anyone on campus who does not<lb/>
think "Young and Restless" is more<lb/>
important than foosball or even 1:00<lb/>
classes<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Since you haven't, I will. THREE DAYS<lb/>
PRIOR TO ELECTION THE SGA<lb/>
PRESIDENT MUST LEAVE THE STATE<lb/>
(Maybe he can go with your Feature Editor<lb/>
to Washington to cover a rock concert.<lb/>
Only don't let him use student fees, too).<lb/>
Also, the duty of SGA Election Chairman<lb/>
is too important a post to be picked by<lb/>
some elected official. Your news staff,<lb/>
which knows what kind of elections the<lb/>
students really deserve, should chose the<lb/>
person for the job.<lb/>
3) Pinkerton guards ($3.50 per hour)<lb/>
should be hired with the SGA SURPLUS to<lb/>
count votes and man the polls. My god -<lb/>
before only Greeks were stupid enough to<lb/>
put up with the hassle and the long hours<lb/>
with no credit, but now we can put that<lb/>
HUGE SGA SURPLUS to work and hire<lb/>
professionals, with guns, too. The<lb/>
Droblem of keeping the votes in a safe<lb/>
place often arises, as does the problem of<lb/>
cheating, and so why leave the barn door<lb/>
of speculation wide open, as I always say.<lb/>
The guards will do fine. Also, I believe that<lb/>
Brink's Trucks ($550 per day per truck)<lb/>
would alleviate the problem further if they<lb/>
were used to carry all the boxes to the<lb/>
middle bar of Croatan, where the<lb/>
Fountainhead Editorial Staff (and its<lb/>
mascot, the worm) could count them with<lb/>
tweezers.<lb/>
4) The final change SGA elections<lb/>
should go through is the polling place. MY<lb/>
CLOSEST FRIENDS HAVE CLASSES<lb/>
STRAIGHT FROM NINE IN THE MORNING<lb/>
TO SEVEN AT NIGHT, SO WHAT ARE<lb/>
THEY TO DO? The following places should<lb/>
be open from 9-5: All dorms, Croatan,<lb/>
Mendenhall, the old CU, the old coke<lb/>
machine and the third bench in the mall<lb/>
(the one the dogs like so much). BUT<lb/>
THAT'S NOT ENOUGH. SGA, with its<lb/>
SUPER SURPLUS, should have polls open<lb/>
for students, like my friends, who can't<lb/>
vote normally. The following places should<lb/>
be open from 7:30 to 9:30: Krispy Kreme,<lb/>
Tippy's Taco House and Darryl's (but be<lb/>
careful that "those people" who live next to<lb/>
it do not interfere with due process and fair<lb/>
practices). From 9:30 to 12:00, for those<lb/>
common students who had to study or<lb/>
sleep all day, there should be polls open at<lb/>
Tamerland, the Buc and the Attic (if you<lb/>
have to drop any of those places, drop the<lb/>
Attic - freaks are as bad as Greeks).<lb/>
Then, of course, a lot of people -<lb/>
including some of my best friends - have<lb/>
night classes. But they pay fees and have a<lb/>
right to vote, so from 2:00 a.m. until 6.00<lb/>
the polls should operate at Sambo's,<lb/>
Rigg's House, DWs and the alley beside<lb/>
the Elbo Room (for the average students<lb/>
who had a bit too much democracy). The<lb/>
price for all this will be great, but with the<lb/>
HUMONGOUS SGA BUDGET SUPER<lb/>
SURPLUS this year anything is possible.<lb/>
I think that your recent half-dozen<lb/>
editorials, on page 1 as well as on page 2,<lb/>
only hit the tip of the iceberg on voter<lb/>
fraud. To shut and bolt the bam door of<lb/>
speculation, before any student votes he<lb/>
or she must have a signed statement from<lb/>
Worth Baker, head of the Registrar's<lb/>
office, as proof of full-time student status,<lb/>
plus one of the following as further proof<lb/>
of identification: Social Security card,<lb/>
Credit card (Diner's Club accepted), a<lb/>
North Carolina driver's license, any<lb/>
northern driver's license, an ECU T-shirt<lb/>
from the Student Supply Store, or a<lb/>
memebrship card from the United Sperm<lb/>
Bank of Greater Greenville.<lb/>
This letter will get a lot of criticism, I<lb/>
know, but we in the right must speak our<lb/>
minds, as you at Fountainhead have done.<lb/>
They, the people from the Shoddy<lb/>
Government Association, say one thing,<lb/>
but, as is often the case, just writing it<lb/>
don't make it so. You know that.<lb/>
Signed,<lb/>
Democratic Student Concerned<lb/>
in Democratic Democracy<lb/>
Manpower<lb/>
needed<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
with Les Whitten<lb/>
WASHINGTON-The Federal Power<lb/>
Comm.ssion doesn't intend to let the truth<lb/>
stand ,n the way of its push for higher<lb/>
natural gas prices.<lb/>
President Ford, the gas industry, and<lb/>
the top brass at the FPC have concluded<lb/>
that the producers need prices deregulated<lb/>
as an incentive to find more gas and stave<lb/>
off an anticipated shortage.<lb/>
But there is only the industry's word to<lb/>
support the predictions of shortage.<lb/>
Indeed, the U.S. Court of Appeals has<lb/>
heard evidence that the gas companies are<lb/>
simply holding back their product until<lb/>
they get higher prices. The court ordered<lb/>
the FPC to determine if natural gas<lb/>
curtailments on the East Coast were<lb/>
deliberate or unavoidable.<lb/>
FPC officials, therefore have reluctant-<lb/>
ly instructed their staffs to find out<lb/>
whether the shortage really exists. A<lb/>
confidential study for the House Energy<lb/>
subcommittee states, however, that the<lb/>
FPC investigation is "doomed to failure<lb/>
The probe is miserably understaffed<lb/>
the study states, because FPC Chairman<lb/>
John Nassikas "has reassigned the more<lb/>
competent staff to work on deregulation<lb/>
Only two full-time people have been<lb/>
assigned to go through 109 crates of<lb/>
documents in the case. They have only one<lb/>
lawyer working with them, but he is also<lb/>
assigned to two other investigations.<lb/>
The Commission has other natural gas<lb/>
probes under way, but they also suffer<lb/>
from understating.<lb/>
One is supposed to detemiine whether<lb/>
there is more oas available in wells that the<lb/>
See Anderson, page 8.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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FEATURES<lb/>
Funeral industry examined<lb/>
The grim truth about death;can you afford it?<lb/>
By JACKSON HARRILL<lb/>
At some time in your life you are going<lb/>
to die. There is not too much you can do<lb/>
about that; about the only control you<lb/>
have over your death is causing it to take<lb/>
place a little earlier and how you will go.<lb/>
But when you go, what will your family<lb/>
be facing? How will your funeral be<lb/>
planned? And, most important of all, in<lb/>
these days when words like "economy<lb/>
"finance and "infaltion" are so much a<lb/>
part of our vocabulary, how much will your<lb/>
funeral cost?<lb/>
Funerals are not usually associated<lb/>
with money and cost, and most of the time<lb/>
they are not even thought of at all. Like<lb/>
nearly everything else, it will cost you (or<lb/>
whoever is left behind) something to die.<lb/>
The funeral business is big business; it is<lb/>
not recognized as a business by most, for<lb/>
much the same reasons funerals are not<lb/>
talked about. In 1963, a book about death<lb/>
and its financial aspects was published.<lb/>
The High Cost of Dying by Ruth Mulvey<lb/>
Harmer is a book, as the title says, about<lb/>
how much death costs. Mrs. Harmer<lb/>
believes that "the cost of death and burial<lb/>
has become one of the most crushing<lb/>
expenses facing American families. In<lb/>
1935. the average cost of an adult funeral<lb/>
was about $350; by 1960 it had risen to<lb/>
$1100. Rising costs, today, are of great<lb/>
interest to everyone. Consumers are<lb/>
wanting to know reasons behind things<lb/>
that thev hear and see.<lb/>
The Federal Trade Commission, for the<lb/>
past two years, has been investigating the<lb/>
funeral home industry. It was reported in<lb/>
the American Association of Retired<lb/>
Persons (AARP) News Bulletin in the<lb/>
October. 1975. issue that "The sweeping<lb/>
FTC proposalswere announced Aug.<lb/>
28The regulations were adopted<lb/>
following a two-year FTC investigation<lb/>
which a commission official said turned up<lb/>
deceptive practices that inflicted 'econom-<lb/>
ic and emotional injuries' to consumers by<lb/>
some of the 22,500 funeral homes in the<lb/>
United States<lb/>
Some funeral directors cited some of<lb/>
the possible reasons for the investigation<lb/>
as stemming from a lack of public<lb/>
information on the subject and consumer<lb/>
complaints from those who did have some<lb/>
knowledge of the trade. One director, Mr.<lb/>
Joseph Hagan of Hanes-Lineberry Funeral<lb/>
Service in Greensboro N.C believes that<lb/>
the investigation is good; it weeds out<lb/>
the bads ones and makes them honest" in<lb/>
their practice.<lb/>
The FTC proposals, as listed in the<lb/>
AARP News Bulletin would:<lb/>
Require undertakers to display some<lb/>
of their least expensive coffins 'in the<lb/>
same general manner as other caskets are<lb/>
displayed' and prohibit 'disparaging the<lb/>
quality, appearance or tastefulness of any<lb/>
such merchandise<lb/>
Require funeral homes to give<lb/>
accurate price information in response to<lb/>
telephone requests and to provide a<lb/>
detailed, dated price list for all coffins;<lb/>
Require funeral homes to make<lb/>
available an itemized statement for 'funeral<lb/>
goods and services' with the stipulation<lb/>
that customers could select only those<lb/>
items desired and, subsequently, would be<lb/>
charged only for those items<lb/>
"Prohibit embalming of corpses<lb/>
without family authorization and halt<lb/>
misrepresentations' - legal or otherwise -<lb/>
of the 'need' for embalming, which adds to<lb/>
the total cost of the funeral. Undertakers<lb/>
also would not be permitted to require<lb/>
embalming before creamation<lb/>
kicked the casket. 'That's the deal<lb/>
Pricing a funeral is done in one lump<lb/>
some, sometimes referred to as "unit<lb/>
pricing This method includes, in one<lb/>
figure, the price of the casket and services<lb/>
rendered by the funeral home (there are<lb/>
exceptions where not all services are<lb/>
included in the price). The services range<lb/>
from providing family cars to chairs for<lb/>
graveside services to opening and closing<lb/>
the grave.<lb/>
Mr. Robert Wilkerson, funeral director<lb/>
at Wilkerson Funeral Home in Reidsville,<lb/>
Has the overall price of funerals risen?<lb/>
Does inflation play any sort of role in this<lb/>
business as it does in others? Since 1945,<lb/>
costs have risen, with more funerals now<lb/>
priced over $1000 and less under $500. In<lb/>
1945, there were 61.7 per cent funerals<lb/>
priced under $500, while only 2.9 per cent<lb/>
were over $1000. "By 1955 only 26.3 per<lb/>
cent were less than $500 By 1960, only<lb/>
22 per cent were below that figure<lb/>
(Figures from The High Cost of Dying by<lb/>
Ruth Mulvey Harmer: The Crowell-Collier<lb/>
Press, New York; 1963, p. 162.) National<lb/>
Selected Morticians did a study for the<lb/>
calendar year 1974 and came up with these<lb/>
ranges for funeral purchases:<lb/>
The rules will not be put into effect<lb/>
until interested parties have had a chance<lb/>
to comment, public hearings held and a<lb/>
final review is made by the commission.<lb/>
This process could take up to twelve<lb/>
months.<lb/>
The National Funeral Directors<lb/>
Association has objected to the<lb/>
regulations, charging that the funeral<lb/>
industry had no opportunity to take part in<lb/>
making out the proposals.<lb/>
Ruther Harmer, in The High Cost of<lb/>
Dying . relates the story of a Los Angeles<lb/>
newspaper reporter who visited a funeral<lb/>
home that had advertised a low "special<lb/>
He was shown a selection room where<lb/>
various caskets were on display and<lb/>
noticed that none of the caskets there were<lb/>
of the advertised price. After inquiring<lb/>
about the price of the funeral he had seen,<lb/>
he was turned over to another salesman<lb/>
who led him down a flight of stairs to a<lb/>
basement room where a pine box stood<lb/>
partly in a puddle of water beneath the<lb/>
glare of an unshaded light. Beside it on the<lb/>
floor was a small assortment of fruit<lb/>
peelings, seemingly arranged for the most<lb/>
distasteful effect.<lb/>
There it is, bud ' The salesman<lb/>
N.C. believes that the unit pricing is not<lb/>
fair, that the family should be allowed to<lb/>
choose those services which they desire.<lb/>
Some services are paid for regardless of<lb/>
whether or not the family uses them. One<lb/>
example of this would be the funeral home<lb/>
chapel; many times a funeral will be held<lb/>
in a church, instead of the chapel, but the<lb/>
chapel is included in the costs.<lb/>
One of the FTC proposals is that<lb/>
funeral homes be required to itemize their<lb/>
expenses for the consumer, providing<lb/>
them with a list of all available services.<lb/>
This will allow the consumer to eliminate<lb/>
those services which do not fulfill his<lb/>
needs. Mr. Hagan, of Hanes-Lineberry,<lb/>
pointed out that right now some services<lb/>
are offered which are not charged for, such<lb/>
as setting up tents, but with itemizing<lb/>
each service will be charged for, baoed on<lb/>
the amount of operation costs Tents are<lb/>
set up and taken down at no cost by<lb/>
funeral homes for any number of<lb/>
functions: bake sales, exhibits, and fairs.<lb/>
With itemizing these services will be<lb/>
charged for. As of October 1, 1975,<lb/>
Wilkerson Funeral Home in Reidsville, has<lb/>
begun charging $20 for the use of their<lb/>
tents.<lb/>
$ 0- 600: 9.9 percent<lb/>
$ 601 - 900: 18.4 percent<lb/>
$ 901 -1200: 29.9 per cent<lb/>
$1201 - 1500: 24.6 percent<lb/>
$1501 - up: 17.2 percent<lb/>
(Figures from What Every Woman Should<lb/>
Know, Consumer information Bureau,<lb/>
Inc a subsidiary of National Selected<lb/>
Morticians, Evanston, Illinois; 1965, p.<lb/>
12.)<lb/>
In the pamphlet, "A Factual Guide to<lb/>
Funeral Costs it states that "The cost of<lb/>
living is rising considerably faster than the<lb/>
cost of dying. Since 1963, funeral cost has<lb/>
increased by 21.7 per cent while the cost of<lb/>
living has jumped 34.2 per cent They<lb/>
breakdown a funeral director's operation<lb/>
like this:<lb/>
Personal and Fringe Benefits: 31 6 percent<lb/>
Casket: 14.2 percent<lb/>
Use of Funeral Home: 13.1 percent<lb/>
Vault, Clothing, Orhter: 10.6 percent<lb/>
Auto: 5.8 percent<lb/>
All Taxes: 8.1 percent<lb/>
Administrative: 6.2 percent<lb/>
After Tax Profit: 4.2 percent<lb/>
<lb/>
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F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7, N 0. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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FEATURES<lb/>
Patriotic overdose?<lb/>
America's Bicentennial; love it<lb/>
By KIM JOHNSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
If anyone in the United States is not aware that America's Bicentennial year is<lb/>
approaching, they must be either blind, deaf, or never go to McDonald's, never buy gas,<lb/>
etc etc. Everywhere we turn we're constandly reminded of this forthcoming historical<lb/>
celebration. Is this good or bad? Does this contribute anything to our awareness of our<lb/>
country? Will it really boost enthusiasm and excitement, or will we be totally sick and<lb/>
tired of the whole thing by the time the actual celebration occurs? Should such publicity<lb/>
as "200 years ago Today" have waited until 76 to begin? These were questions put to the<lb/>
ECU students this week.<lb/>
"Do I like it? Yes and no said student<lb/>
Jim Imgram. "It's good because it is<lb/>
fostering an historical awareness of the<lb/>
country we live in. But, on the other hand, I<lb/>
don't like the way it is presented; it's so<lb/>
commercial. This commercialization of our<lb/>
heritage is taking us too far away from the<lb/>
ideals that our country was founded on.<lb/>
There should be more of an effort, I think,<lb/>
to exonerate the fact that we did go<lb/>
through a revolution and exactly what we<lb/>
were rebelling against. We could then draw<lb/>
parallels between political situations as.<lb/>
they were then and as they are now<lb/>
Should it have waited until 76 to start?<lb/>
"No, it's fine to start now. I don't think<lb/>
people will get sick of it<lb/>
Harry Suggs, a graduate student in<lb/>
political science feels that the<lb/>
Bicentennial publicity is presenting only<lb/>
one side of the actuality of that particular<lb/>
era in U.S. history. "We're trying to<lb/>
re-deify the founding fathers; we're never<lb/>
presented with the human side of the men<lb/>
and events. Sure, it's making us aware of<lb/>
our Heritage, but we don't get to see the<lb/>
whole picture. I sincerely hope all of this<lb/>
will build up excitement, but in such a way<lb/>
as to cause the American people to look<lb/>
deeper into their country and not be<lb/>
content with just a little bit of<lb/>
propanganda the government shoots us<lb/>
with. And, no, we shouldn't have waited to<lb/>
being in 76Americans don't wait for<lb/>
anything<lb/>
Georgina Langston agreed with Suggs<lb/>
on this last point. "Because of the great<lb/>
amount of apathy in the U.S it's really<lb/>
good that the TV. stations, etc. started a<lb/>
publicity campaign this year. It's like a pep<lb/>
rally before a big game<lb/>
Another student, Joe Riley, was<lb/>
concerned with the apathy in the U.S<lb/>
also. "I like the Bicentennial stuff a whole<lb/>
lot because it makes me feel that there is<lb/>
some unity within the country. There's so<lb/>
much apathy already. I think this is<lb/>
inspiring the people to become more<lb/>
patriotic and understanding of their<lb/>
country, of its causes and purpose, and of<lb/>
what it stands for. And I think it is going to<lb/>
build up to a peak just as the summer of<lb/>
76 rolls around<lb/>
Sue Ellen McLeod, on the other hand,<lb/>
does think the American people will get<lb/>
"burnt out" on the whole deal. "There's too<lb/>
much going on for too long. Yes, they<lb/>
should have waited on all the publicity.<lb/>
The originality is already lost and it's<lb/>
become too commonplace, too ordinary.<lb/>
Of course, it may contribute to the<lb/>
people's awareness of the nation and its<lb/>
history - what its done and what it is. But if<lb/>
it's dragged out too long, it's going to lose<lb/>
its significance<lb/>
A few students questioned demon-<lb/>
strated feelings of strong contempt<lb/>
against the American Bicentennial<lb/>
celebration. Two such students we 3<lb/>
Clarence Williams and Deane Smith.<lb/>
m<lb/>
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TACOS - ENCHILADAS - TAMALES - RICE - BEANS -CHILI CON CARNE<lb/>
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MEXICAN I<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S<lb/>
GREAT NEW '<lb/>
TASTE TREAT<lb/>
ECONOMICAL<lb/>
DELICIOUS - NUTRITIOUS<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
o<lb/>
H<lb/>
� TAKE OUT<lb/>
I<lb/>
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SUFFICIENT<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
TO SUIT EVERYONE.<lb/>
INCLUDING VEGETARIANS<lb/>
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a<lb/>
I<lb/>
TIPPY'S TACO HOUSE<lb/>
US 264 BY-PASS (ADJACENT PEPPI'S PIZZA)<lb/>
OPEN TILL 9:00P.M. EVERY NIGHT<lb/>
756-6737<lb/>
<lb/>
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Williams was greatly concerned with the<lb/>
emphasis on the past instead of the future<lb/>
involved. "I don't like it at all! The mass of<lb/>
propaganda is directed in the wrong way;<lb/>
so much is said of the past and so little is<lb/>
ever mentioned of the future. It's very sad<lb/>
to me to think that people fought so hard<lb/>
for freedom and personal liberties back<lb/>
then and now people are having to fight<lb/>
their way through poverty and still haven't<lb/>
felt any part of those ideals. We really<lb/>
don't have a lot to celebrate, in my<lb/>
opinion, unless we can celebrate the<lb/>
progress being made that those men gave<lb/>
their lives for to make available. Sure, all of<lb/>
this jazz might help those particular cities<lb/>
with nostalgic settings-Williamsburg, Old<lb/>
Salem, etc. - in that their economy could<lb/>
be lifted from all the tourist trade during<lb/>
the summer of 76. And it could prove to be<lb/>
a boost for the arts, especially drama. But<lb/>
until we really have something worth<lb/>
celebrating now, it all seems to<lb/>
insignificant<lb/>
Smith was concerned with the<lb/>
economy, also. "They're putting all the<lb/>
money out on the Bicentennial and people<lb/>
are starving! I think it's about time for<lb/>
another 'revolution' of sorts; it's time the<lb/>
American people stood up and said that<lb/>
they're tired of all this shit and then do<lb/>
something about it<lb/>
or leave it?<lb/>
The majority of the students The<lb/>
Fountainhead approached with these<lb/>
questions, however, approved of the<lb/>
Bicentennial publicity campaign. Very few<lb/>
felt that it is being overdone or that we'll be<lb/>
tired of hearing about it when the actual<lb/>
celebration commences next year. "200<lb/>
years ago Today the sixty-second<lb/>
historical reviews heard daily on CBS, was<lb/>
ranked "great" in the general consensus.<lb/>
Of course, NOW HEAR THIS couldn't<lb/>
continue much longer without running<lb/>
across at least one cynic from time to<lb/>
time. One particular anonymous student,<lb/>
when asked if he liked the Bicentennial<lb/>
propaganda pouring out these days,<lb/>
replied, "Sure I like itI like anything<lb/>
'bi Oh well<lb/>
NEED<lb/>
A<lb/>
LIFT?<lb/>
Try<lb/>
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH<lb/>
On Sundays<lb/>
Morning Worship-9:00&amp; 11:0a.m.<lb/>
Church School - 9:45 a. m.<lb/>
CORNER S. ELM. &amp; FOURTEENTH STREETS<lb/>
Paston - Rev. Richard R. Gammon<lb/>
Campus Minister - Rev. John N. Miller<lb/>
The First Presbyterian Mini-bus operates<lb/>
through ECU campus on the schedule below<lb/>
and returns after midday:<lb/>
Leaves<lb/>
Cotten Hall via Mall<lb/>
Green-White Area<lb/>
Umstead Hall<lb/>
College Hill-Tyler<lb/>
For Church School<lb/>
9:30 a.m.<lb/>
9:35<lb/>
9:40<lb/>
9:45<lb/>
For 11 a.m. Worship<lb/>
10:30 a.m.<lb/>
10:35<lb/>
10:40<lb/>
10:45<lb/>
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OUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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FEATURES<lb/>
Lingering rudiments of raeism<lb/>
Klan still alive and kicking<lb/>
(CPS)The Ku Klux Klan is organizing<lb/>
again-this time on the campuses of<lb/>
several southern universities.<lb/>
The organizer at the University of<lb/>
Alabama (UA), who believes that "America<lb/>
was founded by white people for the white<lb/>
man said he has been deluged by calls<lb/>
and has signed at least 20 members.<lb/>
Other organizers, he claimed, are<lb/>
working at Louisiana State University, Ole<lb/>
Miss and the University of Texas.<lb/>
Don Black, the University of Alabama<lb/>
organizer for the Knights of the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan (KKKK), distributed literature on<lb/>
campus in the past weeks urging persons<lb/>
"of gentile descent who are white" to join<lb/>
the organization and attend rallies held in<lb/>
the area.<lb/>
Black, a 22-year-old former UA student,<lb/>
said he "feels the races cannot live<lb/>
together" and believes in complete<lb/>
separatism, leaving blacks to their own<lb/>
part of the country and their own leaders.<lb/>
The organization has attracted "good<lb/>
quality people according to Black, wno<lb/>
feels the new KKKK has a "good chance of<lb/>
success<lb/>
The Klan is working the campuses<lb/>
because "you have to have youth if you<lb/>
want to organize a long lasting party<lb/>
Black said. The new, young branch of the<lb/>
Klan will differ in many ways from the Klan<lb/>
that came to public attention in the 60s,<lb/>
according to Black.<lb/>
The new KKKK is using different<lb/>
tactics and is a more open organization<lb/>
that will work through the political system,<lb/>
Black said. At least one member of the<lb/>
KKKK is running for public office, Black<lb/>
added, referring to national chairman Dave<lb/>
Duke's bid for a Senate seat in Louisiana.<lb/>
At Alabama, University officials said<lb/>
they were concerned about Black's<lb/>
distribution of pamphlets in University<lb/>
dormitories, but claimed that there was no<lb/>
way to stop the flood of literature even<lb/>
though it violates Unviersity rules.<lb/>
Black meanwhile has applied for a<lb/>
charter from the student government<lb/>
which would formally recognize the KKKK<lb/>
as a campus group. Black said he has<lb/>
already met membership requirements,<lb/>
and now only needs to find a faculty<lb/>
advisor.<lb/>
Three student government members<lb/>
sponsored a resolution in response to<lb/>
Black's efforts to be recognized by the<lb/>
University, calling on "all thinking and<lb/>
reasonable students" to ignore Black and<lb/>
his organization.<lb/>
A former student government official<lb/>
said there is no grounds for denying Black<lb/>
a charter, even though students may<lb/>
"deplore what it stands for<lb/>
Black said he has not been harrassed<lb/>
by area blacks, although he said he "would<lb/>
expect some opposition in the future<lb/>
And while he hasn't been threatened, he<lb/>
claims that "a lot of people are worried<lb/>
about my personal safety<lb/>
But, he believes, the "white majority in<lb/>
the South and the rest of the nation is in<lb/>
agreement with the Klan<lb/>
ECU Students explore life in Costa Rica<lb/>
By ROBERT E. CRAMER<lb/>
Nineteen ECU students are currently<lb/>
enrolled in the ECU project in Heredia,<lb/>
Costa Rica.<lb/>
The students left North Carolina in July<lb/>
1975 to participate the second semester a<lb/>
the Universidad National in Costa Rica.<lb/>
The school year in Costa Rica will<lb/>
terminate about the middle ot November,<lb/>
and the students will be returning to the<lb/>
ECU campus in time to enroll in the winter<lb/>
quarter. The second semester in Costa<lb/>
Rica, therefore corresponds to the second<lb/>
term of summer school plus the fall<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Professors Vernon Smith of the<lb/>
Department of Geography and John<lb/>
Satterfield of the School of Art are<lb/>
instructing the students who are receiving<lb/>
during the second semester 20 to 28<lb/>
quarter hours of credit which will be<lb/>
transferred to ECU campus as full credits<lb/>
with grades, hours and quality points. In<lb/>
addition to the ECU professors, the<lb/>
students are enrolled in a Spanish<lb/>
conversation course taught by a (Josta<lb/>
Rican. Most of the students attending this<lb/>
program had no knowledge of Spanish<lb/>
before going to Costa Rica. Credit for the<lb/>
Spanish language study is granted by the<lb/>
ECU Department of Foreign Language.<lb/>
Several students who are proficient in<lb/>
Spanish are enrolled in Universidad<lb/>
Nacional courses taught in Spanish by<lb/>
local professors.<lb/>
The first semester of the program<lb/>
started in early March and ended in July.<lb/>
Fifteen students attended the session<lb/>
which was under the direction of Dr.<lb/>
Donald Steila of the ECU faculty. East<lb/>
Carolina's present interest in Costa Rica<lb/>
was sparked by a month-long field camp<lb/>
which the Department of Geography<lb/>
organized in the summer of 1973 for all<lb/>
ECU students regardless of major or<lb/>
classification. Dr. Steila, associate<lb/>
professor of geography, conducted the<lb/>
camp for fifteen students. Again in 1974<lb/>
Dr. Steila returned for another 30 day camp<lb/>
with 16 students. Both of these camps<lb/>
involved lectures and field trips and ECU<lb/>
credits were obtained by the students.<lb/>
The current semester at the<lb/>
Universidad Nacional in Heredia, a suburb<lb/>
of San Jose, the capital, is highly<lb/>
successful with students seriously<lb/>
applying themselves to the classes held on<lb/>
the campus of the Universidad Nacional,<lb/>
and to the field trips to all areas of Costa<lb/>
Rica.<lb/>
Reports supplied by Professor Smith,<lb/>
Professor Satterfield, and the students<lb/>
indicate that this is one of the best<lb/>
semesters that our overseas students have<lb/>
experienced. They had adjusted well to the<lb/>
Costa Rican culture, they are living in<lb/>
private homes in Heredia, speaking<lb/>
Spanish, and they are well involved in<lb/>
"If its happening<lb/>
in fashion,<lb/>
its happening<lb/>
at Headstrong<lb/>
University activities on the local campus.<lb/>
Arrangements are being made to spend<lb/>
about five days in Panama, then they will<lb/>
go to El Salvador and Gratemala. From<lb/>
there some of the students will be<lb/>
returning home via Mexico while others<lb/>
will be flying home directly from Costa<lb/>
Rica.<lb/>
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impus.<lb/>
spend<lb/>
ey will<lb/>
From<lb/>
Mil be<lb/>
others<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
am mm iiiwiimiiin mu<lb/>
7<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
High costs of death<lb/>
Continued from page four<lb/>
With the rising costs and expenses of<lb/>
funerals, what do those in a lower-income<lb/>
bracket do about paying? Mr. Don<lb/>
Wilkerson of S.B. Wilkerson and Sons in<lb/>
Greenville, N.C stated that they can cater<lb/>
to them just as well as anyone else; they<lb/>
do not delete services for them. Mi.<lb/>
Hagan, of Hanes-Lineberry in Greensboro,<lb/>
said that for those who cannot pay, the<lb/>
funeral is free. But, he added, the family<lb/>
will sometimes send them so much a<lb/>
month, not fully covering the costs, but<lb/>
giving what they can. He believes that the<lb/>
funeral should be established to meet the<lb/>
needs of the family.<lb/>
Each state has an organization to<lb/>
which membership is open to funeral<lb/>
homes in that state. There are various<lb/>
other private organizations which have<lb/>
some specific purpose. One of thes<lb/>
organizations is Service Corporation<lb/>
International (SCI), the nation's largest<lb/>
funeral home chain with 139 establish-<lb/>
ments located in 16 states. In the AARP<lb/>
News Bulletin it was disclosed that the<lb/>
FTC had announved that it had gotten a<lb/>
consent order involving SCI. The consent<lb/>
order means that "a company does not<lb/>
acknowledge wrong-doing but agrees not<lb/>
to engage in specific conduct. J. Thomas<lb/>
Rosch, director of FTC's Bureau of<lb/>
Consumer Protection, said the Commis-<lb/>
sion investigation disclosed that some of<lb/>
Service Corporation Iternational's estab-<lb/>
lishments had been overcharging for items<lb/>
such as obituary notices, flowers and<lb/>
cremations that were furnished by a third<lb/>
party Under this order the practice must<lb/>
be stopped and the SCI must make refunds<lb/>
on all crematory fees for which<lb/>
overcharges were made since January,<lb/>
1971. The average overcharge, reported by<lb/>
Mr. Rosch, "was about $40 and, in some<lb/>
cases, as high as $75<lb/>
National Selected Morticians (NSM) is<lb/>
another organization boasting funeral<lb/>
directors in more than 800 cities. Their<lb/>
membership in NSM is by invitation only<lb/>
and, as their booklet on "The Code of<lb/>
Good Funeral Practice" states, "is<lb/>
extended only after meticulous observa-<lb/>
tion of character, service, performance,<lb/>
responsibility and facilities According to<lb/>
Mr. Joseph Hagan of Hanes-Lineberry<lb/>
Funeral Service in Greensboro, N.C<lb/>
whose firm is a member of NSM, the<lb/>
organization is geared toward the<lb/>
onsumer; the advantages of NSM are that<lb/>
the home if kept up-to-date on costs, the<lb/>
standards are the same in all of the<lb/>
member homes, and it is security for the<lb/>
family. The organization keeps a check on<lb/>
its homes by sending them reports which<lb/>
must be filled out.<lb/>
The funeral service is going through<lb/>
changes now, keeping up with the way<lb/>
people think today. Young people have<lb/>
funerals with guitar music and popular<lb/>
songs, in contrast with the services their<lb/>
elders have with organ music and<lb/>
traditional hymns.<lb/>
To most people the funeral industry is a<lb/>
drak, shadowy business; with the present<lb/>
government inspection many old practices<lb/>
of the trade are being changed. With the<lb/>
consumer in mind they are striving to<lb/>
improve the services funeral homes can<lb/>
offer. Can you afford to die? Yes, with the<lb/>
help from the right group of people th<lb/>
service you get and the price you have to<lb/>
pay for it should be about equal. One of<lb/>
these days you will die, hopefully, it<lb/>
should not be a burden financially to<lb/>
those you leave behind.<lb/>
2teJ32�eS0<lb/>
Corner Of 5th<lb/>
&amp; tiotanche<lb/>
" For Tbe Little Things<lb/>
That Add Pleasure<lb/>
To Your Life "<lb/>
Plants,<lb/>
Wicker,<lb/>
Jewelry,<lb/>
&amp; Much More,<lb/>
Costa Rico students<lb/>
Plans are under way at the present time<lb/>
to organize a second year of study in Costa<lb/>
Rica. The first semester of this program<lb/>
will start in early March corresponding to<lb/>
the spring quarter. The first semester will<lb/>
again end in July or the termination of our<lb/>
first term of summer school. The second<lb/>
semester will start in July and terminate in<lb/>
November. The program is open to all<lb/>
students attending East Carolina, as well<lb/>
ts any non-ECU student who is eligible to<lb/>
attend ECU. Early enrollment is urged as<lb/>
the number of students attending will be<lb/>
limited inquiries and tentative reservations<lb/>
Continued from six<lb/>
should be completed by Christmas. It is<lb/>
not necessary for students to have a<lb/>
speaking knowledge of Spanish, but they<lb/>
must be willing to learn the language once<lb/>
they are in Costa Rica.<lb/>
Dr. Robert E. Cramer in Brewster 222<lb/>
will continue to serve as the Coordinator<lb/>
for the program and all interested students<lb/>
should see him for additional information<lb/>
����<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ATTENTION ALL<lb/>
WOMEN<lb/>
Anyone interested in signing for sorority open<lb/>
rush, may do so now through Dean Fulghum's<lb/>
office (214 Whichard) or through fan Holt's<lb/>
office, Fletcher residence<lb/>
L <lb/>
�i'ppm in i mm-mmm<lb/>
Wilber's i<lb/>
Family 1-<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
Hickory wood flavored BBQ Fish<lb/>
Fried Shrimp dinners Roast Beef<lb/>
Country fried chicken Hamburgers<lb/>
Variety of Softdrinks Cheeseburgers<lb/>
 Dairy Bar with Ice cream cones <lb/>
Old Fashioned Milk Shakes<lb/>
Banana Splits Sundaes<lb/>
TWO LOCATIONS 14th St. Opt 10am-10pm j<lb/>
Comtr of 5th and Raadt ST. Opt 10am-tain JB"<lb/>
mmtin �m<lb/>
<pb facs="00039996_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
JrtCameras<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET A fa 1TI 752-0688<lb/>
526 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. 27834<lb/>
5fiot<lb/>
HOMECOMING SALE<lb/>
ALL THIS THIS WEEK<lb/>
Have an enjoyable Homecoming week &amp;<lb/>
remember the festivities with photographs.<lb/>
The special homecoming sale prices below on all our Vivitar Electronic<lb/>
Flash Units will enable you to get a great deal on a flash for your<lb/>
camera so you'll be able to remember the day in pictures. Stop in to<lb/>
see us during Homecoming Week to take advantage of these great<lb/>
savings. Prices good through Saturday, October 20.<lb/>
CLOSER<lb/>
Vivitar.<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
BUY!<lb/>
Vivitar. Automatic<lb/>
Tele Converters<lb/>
KOnOIRtGSl M<lb/>
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�M and the CMWT1<lb/>
�Ad enioy the luxury of long lenses<lb/>
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VIVITAR MODEL 200<lb/>
Electronic Flash<lb/>
reg. 29"<lb/>
Sale Price $23"<lb/>
VIVITAR MODEL 273<lb/>
Electronic Rash<lb/>
reg. 99"<lb/>
Sale Price $79"<lb/>
VIVITAR MODEL 102<lb/>
Electronic Flash<lb/>
reg. 19"<lb/>
Sale Price $17"<lb/>
VIVITAR MODEL 50<lb/>
Electronic Flash<lb/>
reg. 11"<lb/>
Sale Price $8"<lb/>
VIVITAR MODEL 252<lb/>
Electronic Flash<lb/>
reg. 49"<lb/>
Sale Price $39"<lb/>
VIVITAR MODEL 292<lb/>
Electronic Flash<lb/>
reg. 159"<lb/>
Sale Price $129"<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 2.<lb/>
The only negative vote on cabinet<lb/>
approval came from Maurice Huntley, Belk<lb/>
Dorm representatiave. Huntley questioned<lb/>
the newly created office of Executive<lb/>
Assistant.<lb/>
The office is held by Tim Sullivan.<lb/>
Huntley based his objection on the<lb/>
unspecified salary Sullivan would earn.<lb/>
SGA President Jimmy Honeycutt said<lb/>
that this matter was up to the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
In his report to the legislature, Sullivan<lb/>
said the legal rights session sponsored by<lb/>
the SGA in September drew about 50<lb/>
persons and noted that plans are being<lb/>
made to have three or four more sessions.<lb/>
Specific topics such as Greenville drug<lb/>
laws and landlord-tenant agreements<lb/>
would be discussed, he said.<lb/>
Sullivan gave a status report on the<lb/>
North Carolina Association of Student<lb/>
Governments, indicating to the legislators<lb/>
that ECU'S financial contribution of<lb/>
$15,000 to the NCASG should be approved<lb/>
by the SGA.<lb/>
The legislature heard additional reports<lb/>
on SGA activities from the Executive<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
Mike Brown, SGA vice-president,<lb/>
discussed the freshman register which is<lb/>
available to first year students in the SGA<lb/>
office in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Brown said the register, which comes<lb/>
in hard and soft bound copies, includes<lb/>
photographs of campus life, SGA<lb/>
information, and of course photographs of<lb/>
incoming freshmen.<lb/>
SGA Treasurer Larry Chesson present-<lb/>
ed this year's Executive Council budget to<lb/>
the legislature.<lb/>
So far this fiscal year the Executive<lb/>
Council has appropriated nearly $82,000,<lb/>
Chesson said.<lb/>
Chesson noted that as of Oct. 7, the<lb/>
treasury had a balance of $169,000.<lb/>
SGA President Jimmy Honeycutt, said<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander, associate dean of<lb/>
student affairs, plans to assemble a<lb/>
committee of student leaders to discuss<lb/>
the possibility of beer on campus.<lb/>
A motion passed by the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees in September approved beer on<lb/>
campus under the discretion of the<lb/>
administration.<lb/>
Anderson<lb/>
Continued from page 3.<lb/>
industry has shut down, as some critics<lb/>
have alleged.<lb/>
The FPC has received 50 volumes of<lb/>
technical material on the case from gas<lb/>
producers. The staff working on the<lb/>
investigation, therefore, asked Chairman<lb/>
Nassikas for an expert consultant to help<lb/>
them decipher the data.<lb/>
Internal FPC memos show that the<lb/>
request was made in July. But two months<lb/>
and a flurry of memos later, Nassikas<lb/>
finally decided that the funds for a<lb/>
consultant were not available.<lb/>
Nine months of staff work has gurgled<lb/>
down the drain, and the producers' side of<lb/>
the story has yet to be investigated.<lb/>
Nassikas, apparently, is more<lb/>
interested in getting the gas industry<lb/>
higher prices. And those higher prices will<lb/>
mean higher utility bills for American<lb/>
consumers.<lb/>
KENNERLY CONTROVERSY: The<lb/>
most controversial figure in the White<lb/>
House is turning out to be David Hume<lb/>
Kennerly, the former Associated Press<lb/>
photographer whom President Ford<lb/>
personally chose to be his official<lb/>
lensman.<lb/>
Kennerly, who is close to the Ford<lb/>
family and members of the international jet<lb/>
set, has brought some of the world's most<lb/>
glamorous figures to the White House,<lb/>
creating a few minor scandals in the<lb/>
process. He is also brash and does not<lb/>
hestitate to express his unsolicited views<lb/>
Iff<lb/>
WP<lb/>
m<lb/>
in White House policy councils.<lb/>
He has thus managed to offend top<lb/>
Ford aides, who feel that a photographer's<lb/>
opinions on profound domestic and world<lb/>
affairs are scarcely worth listening to.<lb/>
Presidential Press Secretary Ron Nessen,<lb/>
say our White House sources, is<lb/>
particularly upset with Kennerly's antics.<lb/>
In an effort to ease him out, therefore,<lb/>
top White House officials have begun<lb/>
spreading stories about Kennerly. One of<lb/>
the tales they have been whispering is that<lb/>
he accepted a $790 leather-encased edition<lb/>
of a new oil game called "Petropolis" from<lb/>
rock music superstar Mick Jagger.<lb/>
This would be a gross violation of a<lb/>
White House regulation which forbids any<lb/>
official from accepting a gift valued in<lb/>
excess of $25. Kennerly, moreover, is on<lb/>
friendly terms with Jaggers jet set wife,<lb/>
Bianca. On its face, therefore, the story<lb/>
appears credible.<lb/>
We carefully checked the story and<lb/>
found it to be only partially true. Kennerly<lb/>
was indeed given a Petropolis game<lb/>
worth$790, but not by Jagger. It came<lb/>
instead from Baron Arnaud de Rosnay,<lb/>
another international socialite and the<lb/>
inventor of the game. Kennerly, to his<lb/>
credit, realized it would be improper to<lb/>
accept the gift, so he returned it.<lb/>
Footnote: We made repeated calls to<lb/>
Kennerly for comment, but he never<lb/>
returned them.<lb/>
Copyright, 1975, United Feature<lb/>
Syndicate, Inc.<lb/>
wtmm0mmmm0mmm<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
9<lb/>
if 20 Discount On All Audio Equipment if<lb/>
With This Ad!<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
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10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
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�n<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Greenville community playhouse opens<lb/>
By JOHN DAYBERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A community playhouse is now<lb/>
operating in Greenville.<lb/>
The playhouse is under the directorship<lb/>
of Stuart Aronson, assistant professor of<lb/>
drama and speech with the ECU Division of<lb/>
Continuing Education.<lb/>
Aronson, and the Director of the<lb/>
Greenville Recreation Department, Boyd<lb/>
Lee, requested a grant from the N.C.<lb/>
Council of Arts last Spring in order to<lb/>
found the playhouse.<lb/>
The Council granted the project $2,500<lb/>
and the City of Greenville matched that<lb/>
amount.<lb/>
"I have been at ECU for four years, and<lb/>
have always thought that there was a great<lb/>
need for some kind of community cultural<lb/>
center said Aronson.<lb/>
"ECU does a lot for Greenville<lb/>
culturally, but the city should offer a lot<lb/>
too, thereby complementing, and being<lb/>
complemented by the university.<lb/>
"There is not much in the way of<lb/>
cultural entertainment to choose from in<lb/>
Greenville, and everyone will benefit from<lb/>
the playhouse<lb/>
The playhouse's first production will be<lb/>
Mary Chase's comedy "Harvey which<lb/>
was first presented on Broadway in 1944. It<lb/>
will be presented December 5, 6, and 7 in<lb/>
the Elm St. Gym.<lb/>
"Although the playhouse does not<lb/>
presently have a theatre of its own, we<lb/>
hope that with enough community support<lb/>
we can have one in the near future said<lb/>
Aronson.<lb/>
"We are planning another production<lb/>
for May, which will probably be presented<lb/>
outdoors at the new amphitheater the city<lb/>
is building at the town commons.<lb/>
"The cast is a cross-section of<lb/>
Greenville, including a few ECU students<lb/>
Aronson, who has appeared in leading<lb/>
roles of the ECU Summer Theatre, will<lb/>
direct the plays, and plans to act in later<lb/>
productions.<lb/>
"Time permitting, I plan for the<lb/>
playhouse to invovie the people of<lb/>
Greenville in every aspect of the theatre<lb/>
said Aronson.<lb/>
"There will be an improvosational<lb/>
workshop throughout the year, with<lb/>
makeup, and lighting consultants being<lb/>
brought in periodically to widen the scope<lb/>
of the project.<lb/>
"Greenville is rapidly becoming the<lb/>
economical center of Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and we should be taking steps to<lb/>
make it the cultural center of Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina also.<lb/>
"We have become a very pollution<lb/>
conscious people, always aware of the<lb/>
deterioration of our physical environment.<lb/>
"It is about time that we became aware<lb/>
of our cultural environment, or our lack of<lb/>
one, and work to make it suitable to the<lb/>
needs of the people<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
ECU professor Fuller reelected to fifth term<lb/>
ECU Professor of Education, Dr. Frank<lb/>
G. Fuller succeeded to his fifth term as<lb/>
City Councilman for Greenville in the Oct.<lb/>
7 elections.<lb/>
Greenville's newly elected Mayor Percy<lb/>
Cox expressed gratitude to the Greenville<lb/>
citizens for the confidence they placed in<lb/>
him following his victory in the three way<lb/>
race for mayor.<lb/>
"I want people to know that I will do my<lb/>
best to live up to this confidence and I<lb/>
know that the city council and I are going<lb/>
to work well together he said.<lb/>
"I think we are going to see a whole lot<lb/>
of changes come about now. My one big<lb/>
objective right now is to help bring<lb/>
harmoney among the city council, the<lb/>
county commissioners and all the different<lb/>
fc "J if " ' te " k &amp; A te te i� � C tf <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
OFFICIAL<lb/>
RING DAYS<lb/>
Wednesday, Thursday<lb/>
October 15th &amp; 16th<lb/>
from 9:00-4:30 PM.<lb/>
The John Roberts Ring Specialist will be here<lb/>
to help you select the ring that is right for you.<lb/>
Do your finger a favor ! See the rings<lb/>
in the lobby of the Students Supply Store,<lb/>
Wright BUg.<lb/>
SAVEUPTO$1000<lb/>
TODAY!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
community boards and commissions we<lb/>
have to work with he added.<lb/>
Cox announced early that he would not<lb/>
file for reelection to his seat on the Council<lb/>
and the filing deadline passed without his<lb/>
name on the roster as a candidate for<lb/>
mayor. Several weeks ago, he announced<lb/>
his intentions to run for mayor as a write-in<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
The Mayor carried every precinct last<lb/>
Tuesday in an impressive victory over<lb/>
incumbent Mayor S. Eugene West.<lb/>
First time candidate Willis Stancill ran<lb/>
far behind in every precinct to place third<lb/>
with 208 votes.<lb/>
Five incumbent Council members and a<lb/>
sixth new member will join the Cox<lb/>
governing board.<lb/>
Mrs. Mildred (Millie) McGrath led the<lb/>
incumbents with the most reuming votes.<lb/>
She was followed in order of vote totals by<lb/>
Joe Taft, Jr Dr. Frank Fuller, John<lb/>
Howard and Clarence Gray. The Rev.<lb/>
William J. Hadden, a political newcomer,<lb/>
won the sixth seat as he edged former<lb/>
member John Taylor by just over 200<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
The top six in the Council race all<lb/>
enjoyed a majority figure in the balloting<lb/>
and thus eliminated the possibility of a<lb/>
runoff in November.<lb/>
Mayor Cox has served as a member of<lb/>
the City Council for 12 years and as Mayor<lb/>
Pro-tern for the past 8 years.<lb/>
Former Mayor Eugene West lost after<lb/>
serving seven terms as Greenville mayor.<lb/>
The newly elected mayor and Council<lb/>
members will take office at the December<lb/>
regular meeting. The present Council and<lb/>
mayor will serve until that time.<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ArtCarved College Rings by John Roberts<lb/>
OB<lb/>
Nothing To Put On Your<lb/>
Form? Come To See Us<lb/>
t The Snooty Fox.<lb/>
We'll Get It All Together<lb/>
For Your Homecoming<lb/>
Weekend.<lb/>
203 E. Sib Street<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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BLAST OFF HOMECOMING<lb/>
ACTIVITIES AT THE<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
1<lb/>
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WITH<lb/>
�<lb/>
Tues<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
J<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
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Is Switcharoo Nite<lb/>
All guys dress like ladies and all ladies dress<lb/>
as guys. Free admission  A prize for<lb/>
the best dressed couple.<lb/>
 �.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
8<lb/>
v.v<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
Fri. Afternoon<lb/>
i<lb/>
Happy Hour 3-6<lb/>
iu�<lb/>
Fri. Nite<lb/>
�<lb/>
After concert continue your<lb/>
nite of partying at the Buccaneer<lb/>
t<lb/>
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Sat.<lb/>
After Game Have Your Homecoming<lb/>
Dance At The Buccaneer<lb/>
2<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
unm � iiiwiii m ii mm n n l 'i mm � �� i inn i<lb/>
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UMi<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
Emmanuelle better than most X-rated films<lb/>
ByCHIPGWYNN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Emmanuelle is billed as one of those<lb/>
X-rated films that should be set apart from<lb/>
the run of the mill pornographic films. The<lb/>
poster outside the theater sensually<lb/>
promises that "X was never like this And,<lb/>
indeed, Emmanuelle rates as soft-core<lb/>
pornography when compared to such<lb/>
jaded American classics as Deep Throat<lb/>
and Behind the Green Door.<lb/>
Emmanjelle arrived in this country<lb/>
courtesy of the French cinema, where it<lb/>
has already achieved staggering success.<lb/>
Emmanuelle has already grossed over 6<lb/>
million dollars in Fra.ice alone and the<lb/>
distributers are hoping for the same<lb/>
results in other countries, with particular<lb/>
attention to the United States.<lb/>
This popular French film is based on an<lb/>
equally as popular French novel, which<lb/>
could account for some of the financial<lb/>
success in that country. The story<lb/>
concerns the French wife of a diplomat.<lb/>
The wife runs the gauntlet of sexual<lb/>
experiences, which is the main reason the<lb/>
film received an X-rating. The film was<lb/>
short entirely on location in Bangkok,<lb/>
where the diplomat husband of<lb/>
Emmanuelle is stationed.<lb/>
Emmanuelle is built up to be the<lb/>
French edition of Last Tango in Paris<lb/>
(which was directed by an Italian, Bernardo<lb/>
Bertolucci. just so there is no confusion)<lb/>
and it seems as if director Just Jaeckin had<lb/>
Bertolucci's film in mind when he made<lb/>
Emmanuelle. From a strictly pronographic<lb/>
point of view, Emmanuelle and Last<lb/>
Tango in Paris are about equal but from an<lb/>
artistic point of view Emmanuelle falls<lb/>
way behind and the comparison stops<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Emmanuelle is played by a 21 year old<lb/>
Dutch actress, Sylvia Kristel, who plays<lb/>
the part with all the innocence and girlish<lb/>
charm that can be expected from one<lb/>
person. It is this innocence that creates<lb/>
the crux of the film and prompts all of<lb/>
Emmanuelle's sexual explorations. En-<lb/>
couraged by her husband to search for and<lb/>
seek out her own sexual pleasures without<lb/>
him, Emmanuelle embarks on a kind of<lb/>
erotic journey to find the ultimate sexual<lb/>
pleasure.<lb/>
Fortunately for the film, Emmanuelle's<lb/>
erotic journey takes her all over the city of<lb/>
Bangkok and in the process we are treated<lb/>
to some absorbing shots of that city.<lb/>
Jaeckin seemed to be especially conscious<lb/>
of his Oriental backdrop and used it to its<lb/>
maximum potential. The discordent<lb/>
settings of beautiful women photographed<lb/>
amid Bangkok's unusual atmosphere,<lb/>
crowded streets and waterways is quite<lb/>
effective. In one particular scene<lb/>
Emmanuelle. going to meet a friend, is<lb/>
shown walking along the canels of<lb/>
Bangkok in a flowing white see-through<lb/>
dress. The image created is almost<lb/>
dream-like, because she contrasts so<lb/>
sharply with the people along the canel<lb/>
and even the canel itself Jaeckin also shot<lb/>
many of this discordent scenes directly<lb/>
into the sun and deliberate over exposed<lb/>
the film, which also adds to the illusion of<lb/>
the dream.<lb/>
Director Jaeckin expressed his feelings<lb/>
about the film when he said it was the type<lb/>
of pornographic film that people could go<lb/>
see and leave without feeling guilty. There<lb/>
is little to feel guilty about in Emmanuelle.<lb/>
Perhaps Jaeckin dwells a little longer than<lb/>
necessary on the lesbian side of<lb/>
Emmanuelle's journey but then maybe<lb/>
Jaeckin feels that it is more erotic to show<lb/>
two women making love than a man and a<lb/>
woman. At any rate it seems to be easier to<lb/>
be discreet and erotic at the same time<lb/>
when two females are present.<lb/>
Because of the lesbian overtones that<lb/>
seem to dominate the film Emmanuelle<lb/>
temporally runs off with another female,<lb/>
Bee (Marika Green), a lady archaeologist.<lb/>
Emmanuelle feels that Bee is the answer to<lb/>
her quest for sexual nirvana. Green is very<lb/>
good in the film as Emmanuelle's lover and<lb/>
she comes across as a kind of predatory<lb/>
animal, who prowls across the screen. Bee<lb/>
teaches Emmanuelle the art of lesbian love<lb/>
but then professes no emotional attraction<lb/>
for Emmanuelle and Emmanuelle realizes<lb/>
that Bee is not the answer to her search.<lb/>
Finally, after being goaded again by her<lb/>
husband, Emmanuelle decides to go out<lb/>
with Mario, who is supposed to be the<lb/>
great teacher of the erotic art. Jaeckin<lb/>
seems to think that when it comes to erotic<lb/>
love, experience is the best teacher. For<lb/>
this reason Mario is old, though not so old<lb/>
as to be unattractive. One of Emmanuelle's<lb/>
friends explains to her the reason Mario is<lb/>
an expert on erotic love is because he is<lb/>
old and has to think about making love,<lb/>
where as it comes naturally when you are<lb/>
young. This type of logic is present<lb/>
throughout the film. Through most of the<lb/>
film the logic tsfaulty and the motivations<lb/>
for aggressive sexual action are<lb/>
unexplained.<lb/>
If the film has a theme it would have to<lb/>
center around the idea that liberation from<lb/>
sexual inhibitions comes by exploiting<lb/>
yourself to a wide variety of experiences,<lb/>
all of them sexual. Jaeckin continues his<lb/>
dream fantasy by letting Mario guide<lb/>
Emmanuelle through extensive sexual<lb/>
subjugation where she is raped, buggered<lb/>
and generally humiliated in order to free<lb/>
her mind of the normal taboos about sex<lb/>
and allow her to step into her dreams and<lb/>
experience the ultimate in erotic<lb/>
sensations.<lb/>
I hope that the film's success is not a<lb/>
result of this type of hocus pocus jargon<lb/>
about erotic teachers and realizing sexual<lb/>
fantasies. There is not much that I could<lb/>
see that should have rrade this the<lb/>
financial success that it is with the<lb/>
possible exception of the photography. If<lb/>
anything can account for Emmanuelle's<lb/>
success at the box office it would have to<lb/>
be that "skin flicks" are rarely approached<lb/>
from an artistic point of view and when an<lb/>
X-rated film is hailed as an artistic triumph<lb/>
then people will be motivated to see it out<lb/>
of sheer curiosity.<lb/>
Emmanuelle does seem to combine a<lb/>
certain sense of charm, style and<lb/>
innocence that does make it enjoyable to<lb/>
watch but the plotting never gives the<lb/>
audience a firm footing on which to stand.<lb/>
As a result I kept waiting for something to<lb/>
happen and when it finally did it was<lb/>
anti-climatic.<lb/>
This film is now playing at the Park<lb/>
Theater in downtown Greenville.<lb/>
New book<lb/>
on JFK<lb/>
murder<lb/>
(New York City)-The ever-growing<lb/>
controversy surrounding the assassination<lb/>
of President John F. Kennedy has now<lb/>
resulted in a timely new book-They've<lb/>
Killed the President The Search for the<lb/>
Murderers of John F. Kennedy by Robert<lb/>
Sam Anson.<lb/>
wm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm � iip i m<lb/>
See JFK, page 13.<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039996_0013"/><lb/>
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1<lb/>
The Invisible Man - Television - CBS: At least 20 of the 27 new shows to debut on<lb/>
television this fall should have never made it past the pilot stage. As usual, there is an<lb/>
assortment of junk disguised as drama and comedy. The Invisible Man aptly portrayed by<lb/>
David McCallum (as television's only nude hero on prime time) falls into the middle of the<lb/>
road (which isn't bad considering most of the new shows don't deserve gutter space). The<lb/>
show is often inaccurate, absurd, or just plain silly, but should be saved due to the<lb/>
unusual twist to the storylines. The scripts deal with the same old trite subjects;<lb/>
espionage, stolen art, defection, kidnapping, but the problem solving is definitely<lb/>
unique. The photographic effects are excellent and some of the situations show a lot of<lb/>
imagination. For those who like pure escapism with a good mixture of suspense,<lb/>
gimmicks, humor and action, catch The Invisible Man Mondays at 8:00 p.m. <lb/>
Sandwich - Tree Top Special - Tree House: Each week thousands of hamburgers, hot<lb/>
dogs, and submarines are devoured by the hearty appetites of ECU students. Greenville's<lb/>
eating establishments vie daily for its share of the students' taste buds by offering<lb/>
exotic, economical or enormous specials. Today's special is called the Tree Top and is<lb/>
served at the Tree House on the comer of Cotanche and Fifth Streets. The sandwich<lb/>
consists of small amounts of roast beef, ham, and turkey, and Swiss and American<lb/>
cheese. The lettuce is crisp and the sesame seed buns are fresh. The sandwich is served<lb/>
in a basket filled with potato chips and is a good bargain at $1.29. If you're prone to<lb/>
heartburn, avoid the other sandwiches and order the special. <lb/>
Seven Alone - Movie: I've never seen a G rated picture, and after viewing Seven Alone I<lb/>
probably won't again. However, I highly recommend it for the kids, as it beats the hell out<lb/>
of most of the garbage that's dumped at them out of the Hollywood "dump" lots. It's<lb/>
clean, wholesome, and absolutely entertaining. 12<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
JFK cont from page 12<lb/>
It is the first book to be published<lb/>
incorporating all the new evidence in the<lb/>
assassination which has surfaced as<lb/>
recently as September, 1975. More than<lb/>
1,800 citations appear in the book as well<lb/>
as a 16-page insert of black-and-white and<lb/>
four-color documentary photographs. A<lb/>
first printing of 250,000 is planned, backed<lb/>
by newspaper and network radio<lb/>
advertising and author publicity.<lb/>
They've Killed the President! takes its<lb/>
title from the words spoken by Dallas<lb/>
dress manufacturer Abraham Zapruder as<lb/>
he watched, through his home movie<lb/>
camera's eye, the murder of John F.<lb/>
Kennedy. His 22-second film has become<lb/>
the most important new piece of evidence<lb/>
in the assassination debate since a clear,<lb/>
reframed, bootlegged copy of it surfaced<lb/>
early in 1975.<lb/>
The book is a narrataive of the<lb/>
developments of the last 12 years since the<lb/>
assassination, which, based on all the<lb/>
available evidence gathered puts forth a<lb/>
plausible theory as to what really<lb/>
happened in Dealey Plaza and afterward,<lb/>
how it happened and why.<lb/>
Anson bases his book on research into<lb/>
CIA files and interviews with sources<lb/>
closely connected with the assassination<lb/>
and its investigation. For example, the<lb/>
chapter on the CIA and organized crime is<lb/>
based on interviews with 50 people,<lb/>
including two former Attorney Generals,<lb/>
CIA and other agency employees and<lb/>
264 By-Pass-Pitt Plaza<lb/>
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Fresh Fillet of Flounder $1.89<lb/>
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Coleslaw FF Hushpuppies<lb/>
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HOMECOMING WEEK AT THE<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m i "i mm in � wmiiiiii n iwm iirni � n w mmmil<lb/>
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MflM<lb/>
Bay City Rollers deny Beatles comparison<lb/>
By BARBARA LEWIS<lb/>
Pop Scene Editor<lb/>
It was the ides of September when the<lb/>
Bay City Rollers roared into the United<lb/>
States billed as conquering lions. In<lb/>
actuality they turned out to be tamed<lb/>
lambs.<lb/>
Prestigious TV newcasters, weekly<lb/>
news magazines and roack publications<lb/>
and two appearances on the new Howard<lb/>
Cosell show ballyhooed them as the new<lb/>
Beatles.<lb/>
It was the media, not the Rollers, who<lb/>
had made the comparison and if the fiery<lb/>
young Scotsmen did not measure up to the<lb/>
expectations, it was the hype, not the<lb/>
group, that was to blame.<lb/>
After all, the group does create<lb/>
near-hysteria when they perform in<lb/>
England - as the Beatles did. And they<lb/>
were introduced to America by Sid<lb/>
Bernstein - as the Beatles were. But at<lb/>
about that point, the comparison ends.<lb/>
Derek Longmuir, the group's drummer,<lb/>
explained during a dress rehearsal for the<lb/>
Cosell show that the Rollers had come to<lb/>
America in hopes that the public would<lb/>
like them. It was not a lion talking about<lb/>
conquering America's young. It was a<lb/>
humble pussy cat modestly reflecting the<lb/>
THE BAY CITY ROLLERS<lb/>
group's sentiments.<lb/>
"If they like us here, we'd like to come<lb/>
back and do a tour the blonde-haired<lb/>
drummer said in a heavy Scotch brogue.<lb/>
Either the Rollers don't read their press<lb/>
clippings or they don't place much stock in<lb/>
them as the press does. They came to<lb/>
explore the American music scene by<lb/>
offering a test sample of themselves. The<lb/>
American music public was being sold a<lb/>
group labeled as the new Beatles, an<lb/>
association Tarn Paton, the group's<lb/>
mentor and manager, assidiously avoids.<lb/>
Prior to their arrival, their N.Y. publicity<lb/>
firm. C.J. Strauss, seni seven reprints of<lb/>
articles published in British papers,<lb/>
describing riots, scenes of mass adoration<lb/>
and hysteria. One article describes stores<lb/>
in Glasgow shutting down before the<lb/>
Rollers' arrival because of an expected<lb/>
invasion of uncontrollable pre-teen girls.<lb/>
To what do they attribute this maniacal<lb/>
devotion, which the British rock press<lb/>
dubbed "fandemonium"?<lb/>
Longmuir says quite simply, "They can<lb/>
identify with us. Everyone who comes to<lb/>
our concerts wear sneakers and tartans<lb/>
like we do<lb/>
He separates his sentences with<lb/>
See Bay City, page 15.<lb/>
-5?<lb/>
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Buy a sandwich, fries �r <lb/>
a drink, you get a Fun <lb/>
Quiz card. Answer �:<lb/>
questions correctly &amp; �:<lb/>
you're a winner! J<lb/>
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560 Evans Street<lb/>
 11<lb/>
ri5 Kenier<lb/>
210 East Sth St.<lb/>
Zipper front hooded<lb/>
sweat shirts with pockets<lb/>
Navy Gray Lt. Blue Lt. Gold<lb/>
Also ECU lined jackets - two styles I<lb/>
Colors: navy, purple, and purple �r gold.<lb/>
Sizes small to extra large<lb/>
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with<lb/>
<lb/>
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4<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
15<lb/>
Bay City Rollers<lb/>
continued from pg.14<lb/>
pleasant giggles. "I mean, people cant<lb/>
dress like Gary Glitter, you know who I<lb/>
mean, Gary wears glittery suits that cost<lb/>
hundreds of pounds. But anybody can buy<lb/>
sneakers and trim their jeans with plaid<lb/>
What about their music?<lb/>
"Oh, they like us for that too<lb/>
Longmuir says modestly as his voice is<lb/>
drowned out by a band of bagpipes<lb/>
preparing to herald the entrance of the<lb/>
young rock group.<lb/>
The phenomonal rise of the group is<lb/>
attributed to Paton, a former professional<lb/>
musician who devoted his life to the Bay<lb/>
City Rollers. Tarn had been leading a<lb/>
dance band in Edinburgh when the group<lb/>
showed up and begged him to let them<lb/>
play.<lb/>
"They asked if I would help in getting<lb/>
them booked because I knew people in<lb/>
Edinburgh. I was enchanted with them. I<lb/>
can't say what it was; it's like charisma<lb/>
readily<lb/>
he said in a brogue more<lb/>
understandable than his charges.<lb/>
"They were all young and smiling he<lb/>
went on, "if you know what I mean. I was<lb/>
completely taken with them. I was a very<lb/>
bad musician. I played the piano and sang.<lb/>
I never met a group that was so interested<lb/>
in music. Not even me and I admired them<lb/>
for it.<lb/>
"They never let up. They called me<lb/>
every night and said they would not take<lb/>
no for an answer, and they had few<lb/>
numbers worker out, and could I get them<lb/>
a job for two pounds (about $5.20 at the<lb/>
time)<lb/>
Paton did better than that. He got them<lb/>
$12 for the booking and the group, whose<lb/>
average age was 14, were suddenly<lb/>
professional musicians, going to school<lb/>
during the day and playing gigs at night.<lb/>
That was nine years ago and there have<lb/>
been 10 changes and eight hit records in<lb/>
This weeks movies<lb/>
PLAZA CINEMA<lb/>
Love and Death, Woody Allen's hilarious tribute to Russia in the 19th Century. Also<lb/>
starring Diane Keaton as the girl he left behind (or was it the girl that left him behind'?)<lb/>
Plays through the 22nd.<lb/>
PARK<lb/>
Emmanuelle, X-Rated "art" film set in modem S.E. Asia. Concerns sexual exploits of the<lb/>
French Diplomatic corps. Based on best-selling French book. Plays through 16th.<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
Blazing Saddles, Mel Brooks' dubious epic returns for a short engagement. See why this<lb/>
movie earned him the title, "Farter of Our Country<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
Escape to Movie Orgy. A hilariously zany collection oi TV bloopers, commercials and<lb/>
film clips from all the good old days. For those of you who were lucky enough to see Son<lb/>
of Movie Orgy a couple of years ago - this is a must.<lb/>
Special feature on the mall 8 p.m. October 15. (Bring a blanket and get ready to roll<lb/>
with laughter.)<lb/>
the band since. Derek and his brother,<lb/>
Alan, are the only original members, and<lb/>
the rest of the lineup includes Leslie<lb/>
McKeown, Eric Faulknerm and Stuard<lb/>
"Woody" Wood.<lb/>
His first act as their manager was to<lb/>
enter them in a musical competition in<lb/>
London. There were 10 contestants and<lb/>
they came in last. Brian Epstein was there<lb/>
and, according to Tarn, said they were<lb/>
good but their problem was they had no<lb/>
image.<lb/>
"Image became the most important<lb/>
thing for me and I began concentrating n<lb/>
what it should be. So I changed the group<lb/>
and began looking to find pretty faces who<lb/>
could play instruments.<lb/>
"I also began to encourage the group to<lb/>
write their own material, and before we<lb/>
signed anyone, they had to play with the<lb/>
group for several months to prove they<lb/>
were interested in the music and not just<lb/>
the glamor.<lb/>
"I got tired of hearing people tell me<lb/>
they would never make it, everyone telling<lb/>
me they were rubbish. But I'm a stubborn<lb/>
Scotsman. It was a challenge and I decided<lb/>
to give it a try<lb/>
Curiously, there are those critics who<lb/>
contend that the Rollers will not last.<lb/>
Longmuir's retort to this is "that's what<lb/>
they said about us four years ago<lb/>
OOPS!<lb/>
Concerning the Leo Jenkins art story in<lb/>
last Thursday's .ssue, it should have read<lb/>
'some may use them as dart boards, some<lb/>
ust to cover bare walls, nevertheless each<lb/>
is more a GIFT , and a conversation piece<lb/>
Sorry Leo.<lb/>
A<lb/>
L<lb/>
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ROCK N SOUL, INC. 208 east sth street<lb/>
1. DAVE MASON -Split Coconut<lb/>
2. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN-Born to Run<lb/>
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5. ART GARFUNKEL - Breakaway<lb/>
6. PAUL SIMON -Still Crazy After AH Those Years<lb/>
7.FRANK ZAPPA Beefheart ft Mothers Bongo Fury<lb/>
8.MCCARTNEY -Venus ft Mars<lb/>
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O<lb/>
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JFK<lb/>
cont.from13<lb/>
�<lb/>
people who were within the Kennedy<lb/>
administration. Citations appear through-<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Robert Sam Anson, who is X years<lb/>
old, went to work for Time as a<lb/>
correspondent in 1967one of the<lb/>
youngest journalists ever to hold that<lb/>
position at the magazine. In his four years<lb/>
there he reported from Chicago, New York,<lb/>
Los Angeles and Indochina, where, in 1970<lb/>
while on assignment in Cambodia, he was<lb/>
taken prisoner of war by North Vietnamese<lb/>
troops and Cambodian guerrillas. His<lb/>
subsequent first-person account of his<lb/>
capture was the longest personal narrative<lb/>
ever to appear in Time.<lb/>
Anson is currently Executive Producer<lb/>
for Special Events for public television<lb/>
station WNET in New York, and the<lb/>
national political correspondent for New<lb/>
Times magazine. He has had two articles<lb/>
on the JFK assassination published in<lb/>
New Times, and has also written other<lb/>
articles for Harper's, the Atlantic, the<lb/>
Columbia Jounaiism Review and Ms.<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
TmnrrwrTTTrrTrpTTtTTFTTTTrrrrrTTrriirrmm<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
i hum mimm<lb/>
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ENTER FOUNTAINHEAD'S FOOTBALL<lb/>
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1st prize 15.00<lb/>
2nd prize 10.00 3rd prize 5.00<lb/>
FOOTBALL CONTEST ENTRY RULES<lb/>
1. Select the teams you think will win this Saturday's football slate from those listed in<lb/>
the advertising blocks on these two pages. Two games are listed in oacfr block. All<lb/>
twenty game blocks must be completed before this entry black will be ruied valid. To<lb/>
indicate your choice of the winner simply write the name of the winning school in the<lb/>
entry blank with the corresponding number.<lb/>
Each winner must be placed in the proper blank to be ruled valid.<lb/>
2. Tiebreakers include the final score of the ECU game of the week and the total yards,<lb/>
rushing and passing, that Pat Dye's charges pick up in that game for the week. Tiebreaker<lb/>
stats will only be used in case of ties. Prize money will be shared in the event of ties after<lb/>
using tiebreaker entries.<lb/>
3. All entry blanks must be placed in the box marked "football contest" located outside<lb/>
the Fountainhead office door in the new Publications Center by noon Friday following<lb/>
the Tuesday this contest appears in the paper.<lb/>
4. All entry blanks must be accompanied by a valid ID number.<lb/>
5. This contest is not open to members of the Fountainhead staff or their immediate<lb/>
families or faculty and staff members.<lb/>
6. Contest winners will be announced the Tuesday following the Saturday game slate.<lb/>
7. Appeals concerning the contest must be submitted in writing to the Editor-in-Chief of<lb/>
Fountainhead within one week of contest publications date.<lb/>
13. OHIO U. - MIAMI, OHIO<lb/>
14. TEXAS A&amp;M - TCU<lb/>
DIAMONDS � WATCHES - JEWELRY . CLOCKS<lb/>
ALII Kr BI7FD SEIKO AND TIMEX REPAIR CENTER<lb/>
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v<lb/>
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Discount Jewelers<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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5. CLEMSON - DUKE 6. TENNESSEE - ALABAMA<lb/>
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phone: 7522136 delivery service<lb/>
PRESCRIPTIONS<lb/>
cosmetics - photo supplies - fountain<lb/>
WE GIFT WRAP &amp; WRAP FOR MAILING<lb/>
Bankamericard - Charge Accounts<lb/>
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Total Points Scored Total Offense<lb/>
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10. PITTSBURGH - ARMY<lb/>
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12. MARYLAND - WAKE FOREST<lb/>
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Wed. - Fri. - Sat. Live Entertainment 8pm til 2am<lb/>
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Call: 752-2317<lb/>
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Brown Bagging<lb/>
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PHPPViWi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmmwmm nummi i ' i mum rnii m mi i<lb/>
Women voters sponsor forums<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Pitt County League of Women<lb/>
Voters, LWV, will sponsor the first in a<lb/>
series of public forums on "Eduation in<lb/>
Transition Tuesday, October 14 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. in the ECU Allied Health Building.<lb/>
i lie topic for Tuesday night's forum is<lb/>
"What Should the Schools Teach?"<lb/>
.Speakers for the evening will be Dr. Carl<lb/>
Dolce, dean of the School of Education at<lb/>
N.C. State University, and George Kahdy,<lb/>
Asst. Superintendent for Instructional<lb/>
Services at the State Dept. of Public<lb/>
Instruction. Both men have at one time<lb/>
served in the capacity of teacher, principal<lb/>
and superintendent or assistant superin-<lb/>
tendent in a public school system.<lb/>
Dr. Dolce received his M. Ed. in<lb/>
Educational Administration from Loyola<lb/>
University and his Ed. D. in Educational<lb/>
Administration from Harvard University.<lb/>
Kahdy received his M.A. from the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,<lb/>
specializing in school administration and<lb/>
has done post graduate work at N.C State<lb/>
University and Duke University.<lb/>
After the speakers' presentations,<lb/>
panel members with a background in the<lb/>
humanities will each comment briefly on<lb/>
the subject. The panel will include three<lb/>
ECU faculty members, Ms. Myree Hayes of<lb/>
the Psychology Dept Dr. Buford Rhea, of<lb/>
Sociology and Ms. Grace Ellenberg of<lb/>
Modern Languages.<lb/>
"We see this as a questioning time<lb/>
said Mrs. Myra Cain,ECU English<lb/>
professor and LWV member. "We'd like for<lb/>
the audience to come with questions and<lb/>
ideas of their own she added.<lb/>
The second public forum is scheduled<lb/>
for Tuesday, October 21 at 8:00 in the<lb/>
Allied Health Building. The topic will be<lb/>
"Who Runs the Schools?"<lb/>
The final forum in this series called<lb/>
Why Have Schools?" is acheduled for<lb/>
Tuesday, October 28, at 8:00 p.m. also in<lb/>
the Allied Health Building.<lb/>
-�<lb/>
������?�<lb/>
. 1.1. mil, m. iiiir,<lb/>
If you have room<lb/>
in your dash<lb/>
for an ordinary radio,<lb/>
you have room<lb/>
for Pioneer stereo.<lb/>
TP-6000<lb/>
a I � is �<lb/>
Maybe you always thought a car stereo<lb/>
would mess up the underside of your dash. Or a<lb/>
lot of wires would show.<lb/>
With Pioneer's TP-6000 no chance.<lb/>
Wherever your radio is now, that's where<lb/>
this car stereo goes. It has adjustable control<lb/>
shafts so it'll fit exactly.<lb/>
It plays 8-track stereo, FM stereo and AM.<lb/>
It has more power than any radio: 7.6 watts RMS,<lb/>
15 watts peak power.<lb/>
So now, Pioneer leaves you with only one<lb/>
reason not to treat yourself to an in-dash stereo.<lb/>
Our prices will probably take care of that.<lb/>
ADPIONEER<lb/>
TP-6000. In-da�h 8-track AMFM stereo.139�<lb/>
10 off price during Homecoming (Bring this ad)<lb/>
WOMACK<lb/>
ELECTRONIC SHOWROOM not, ion<lb/>
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"If you can get a consensus on why<lb/>
have schools, then you can come to terms<lb/>
with the curriculum Mrs. Cain said.<lb/>
"We would like to get people from all<lb/>
walks of life - parents as well as educators<lb/>
to attend these forums she added.<lb/>
Groups which have co-sponsored the<lb/>
forums with the League of Women Voters<lb/>
include the Greenville PTA Council, the<lb/>
Grenville Association of Classroom<lb/>
Teachers, The Sheppard Memorial Library,<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Education at<lb/>
ECU, and the Pitt Co. chapters of the N.C.<lb/>
Association of Educators.<lb/>
The public forum series follows a<lb/>
four-year study made by LWV on<lb/>
Greenville's educational system, accord-<lb/>
ing to Mrs. Cain.<lb/>
"The first two years were spent on<lb/>
studying the Greenville School Systems<lb/>
and the second two years were spent on<lb/>
comparing the Greenville City Schools<lb/>
with the Pitt County School system said<lb/>
Mrs. Cain. She added that there had been a<lb/>
Telephones<lb/>
Continued from page 1.<lb/>
During the past summer, permanent<lb/>
phone installations were made in all 15<lb/>
dorms. This provided 2,782 potential<lb/>
service lines.<lb/>
To speed up the process further, all<lb/>
potential orders were pretyped with<lb/>
numbers assigned to phones in each<lb/>
room. This step alone greatly cuts the<lb/>
process time for the student, Collier said.<lb/>
For nine days, before and after<lb/>
registration, locations were set up on<lb/>
campus for applications. During this<lb/>
period 2,034 applications were taken.<lb/>
In most instances the phones were in<lb/>
service that night (600 on registration day<lb/>
alone) and their numbers were listed with<lb/>
directory assistance by 7:00 a.m. the next<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
Collier said that as of September 30th<lb/>
there were approximately 3,500 phones in<lb/>
service to ECU students.<lb/>
Besides offering a convenience to<lb/>
students, the telephone company offers<lb/>
yet another advantage, Collier added.<lb/>
When you acquire a phone you also<lb/>
acquire a responsibility. Many subscribers<lb/>
fail to realize the importance of paying<lb/>
lot of talk about the merging of schools in<lb/>
the Greenville area.<lb/>
The public forums held by LWV are<lb/>
being sponsored by a grant of nearly<lb/>
$2,000 from the N.C. Humanities<lb/>
Committee. According to Mrs. Cain, LWV<lb/>
applied in June after learning that the<lb/>
Committee was giving grants on<lb/>
transitional things happening in society<lb/>
and in the community.<lb/>
A stipulation required the League to<lb/>
sponsor services to match the fund given<lb/>
by the grant.<lb/>
"We have overmatched the funds with<lb/>
over $4,000 in programs said Mrs. Cain.<lb/>
"People are particularty interested in<lb/>
curriculum topics. We thought there was a<lb/>
great deal of interest in educational<lb/>
topics she added.<lb/>
their bill on time.<lb/>
According to Collier the subscriber is<lb/>
rated on his promptness and efficiency.<lb/>
When the bill is paid late the subscriber<lb/>
not only runs the risk of having to pay<lb/>
$7.50 to have service restored, but his<lb/>
credit loses status.<lb/>
This credit reference sticks with you for<lb/>
life. When a former subscriber applies for a<lb/>
phone at a later date, a bad reference from<lb/>
CT&amp;T could mean a large deposit or the<lb/>
denial of phone service.<lb/>
It was amazing to find out that ECU<lb/>
students are good customers. Mr. Collier<lb/>
expressed great pleasure in the<lb/>
cooperation exhibited. "They are some of<lb/>
the most patient subscribers he said,<lb/>
"and they pay their bills well<lb/>
Some notes of interest: If there is a<lb/>
problem with your bill you may call the<lb/>
business office at 758-9111. If your phone<lb/>
is out of cider simply dial 611 and report<lb/>
your trouble. If you wish to avoid the<lb/>
sometimes crowded situation of paying<lb/>
your bill at the business office, payments<lb/>
may be made at the Student Bank in<lb/>
Mendenhall.<lb/>
I<lb/>
"33,500,000<lb/>
Unclaimed<lb/>
Scholarships<lb/>
Over $33,500,000 unclaimed scholarships, grants, aids, and<lb/>
fellowships ranging from $50 to $10,000. Current list of<lb/>
these sources researched and compiled as of Sept. 15, 1975.<lb/>
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
11275 Massachusetts Ave Los Angeles, CA 90025<lb/>
? I am enclosing $9.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling.<lb/>
PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF<lb/>
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS SOURCES TO:<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityState <lb/>
(California residents please add 6 sales tax.)<lb/>
-Zip.<lb/>
mww i mm<lb/>
S<lb/>
<pb facs="00039996_0019"/><lb/>
HBBsBHHHH<lb/>
HHnBHBHHOBBHHMiHiBi<lb/>
schools in<lb/>
LVW are<lb/>
of nearly<lb/>
imanities<lb/>
Iain, LVW<lb/>
that the<lb/>
ants on<lb/>
n society<lb/>
eague to<lb/>
jnd given<lb/>
inds with<lb/>
Irs. Cain,<lb/>
ested in<lb/>
ere was a<lb/>
ucational<lb/>
scnber is<lb/>
fficiency.<lb/>
ubscriber<lb/>
g to pay<lb/>
but his<lb/>
h you for<lb/>
liesfora<lb/>
nee from<lb/>
iit or the<lb/>
hat ECU<lb/>
r. Collier<lb/>
in the<lb/>
some of<lb/>
he said,<lb/>
iere is a<lb/>
call the<lb/>
jr phone<lb/>
kJ report<lb/>
oid the<lb/>
I paying<lb/>
ayments<lb/>
Bank in<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, N 0. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
iii i wiMian '� ni ii ii<lb/>
19<lb/>
<lb/>
SG A Big Whigs<lb/>
EXECUTIVE BRANCH<lb/>
1975-76<lb/>
OFFICE<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
OFFICE<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
HOME<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Millie Murphrey, Executive Secretary<lb/>
8:00-5:00 758-66II<lb/>
Rm. 228 Ext. 218<lb/>
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS<lb/>
Jimmy Honeycutt, SGA President<lb/>
Mike Brown, SGA Vice-President<lb/>
Larry Chesson, SGA Treasurer<lb/>
Katie Kennedy, Secretary<lb/>
Tim Sullivan, Executive Assistant<lb/>
Kim Kuzmuk, Public Relations Secretary<lb/>
Rick Ketner, Academic Affairs Secretary<lb/>
Dalton Nicholson, Internal &amp; Minority<lb/>
Affairs Secretary<lb/>
Tom Barwick, Student Welfare Secretary<lb/>
Greg Davis, Transportation Secretary &amp; Manager<lb/>
Ivan Peacock, Refrigerator Manager<lb/>
Roy Turner, Elections Chairman<lb/>
1:00-5:00<lb/>
Rm.228<lb/>
3:30-5:00<lb/>
Rm. 229<lb/>
9:00-12:00<lb/>
Rm.226<lb/>
3:00-5:00<lb/>
Rm. 230<lb/>
1:00-2:00<lb/>
Rm.228<lb/>
3:00-4:00<lb/>
Rm. 224<lb/>
4:00-5.00<lb/>
Rm.224<lb/>
10:00-11:00<lb/>
M-W-F<lb/>
(Rm. 224)<lb/>
3:00-5:00<lb/>
(M-W-F)<lb/>
Rm. 225<lb/>
3:30-5:00<lb/>
Rm.225<lb/>
2:00-4:00<lb/>
Rm. 231<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 218<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 228<lb/>
785611<lb/>
Ext. 217<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 214<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 218<lb/>
75&amp;6611<lb/>
Ext. 223<lb/>
75&amp;6611<lb/>
Ext. 223<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 223<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 216<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 216<lb/>
758-6611<lb/>
Ext. 215<lb/>
JUDICIAL BRANCH<lb/>
Dennis Honeycutt, Attorney General<lb/>
John Shelton, Public Defender<lb/>
10:00-11:00 758-6611<lb/>
M-W-F Ext. 216<lb/>
Rm.225<lb/>
Byappt. 758-6611<lb/>
Rm.225 Ext. 216<lb/>
756-2106<lb/>
756-2106<lb/>
756867<lb/>
758-2381<lb/>
752-5550<lb/>
752-1593<lb/>
752-5543<lb/>
752-7406<lb/>
758-8904<lb/>
752-1668<lb/>
756-6843<lb/>
752-1593<lb/>
752-4395<lb/>
758-3374<lb/>
Beer could be allowed In<lb/>
Mendenhall Center<lb/>
"We expect to have beer at some social<lb/>
functions in the Student Union in the near<lb/>
future according to Dr. James H. Tucker,<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs.<lb/>
Recently the ECU Board of Trustees<lb/>
voted to allow beer at University social<lb/>
functions if no city ordinance prohibited it.<lb/>
The voice was in response to a request<lb/>
submitted last year by the Student Union.<lb/>
But Greenville does have a city<lb/>
ordinance which has causea some<lb/>
concern.<lb/>
"The ordinance says you cannot drink<lb/>
or offer someone a drink of an alcoholic<lb/>
beverage in a public place Dean Tucker<lb/>
explained.<lb/>
To get a clarification of what a "public<lb/>
place" is, and to determine if the Student<lb/>
Union is included, a committee has been<lb/>
formed by the Student Affairs department.<lb/>
The committee worked with the city<lb/>
attorney and the University attorney, Dean<lb/>
Tucker said.<lb/>
"A first draft of our recommendations<lb/>
will be discussed at the student affairs<lb/>
staff meeting on Monday, Oct. 13 said<lb/>
Dean Tucker. "If the staff approves this, a<lb/>
final draft will be given to Chancellor<lb/>
Jenkins for his approval he added.<lb/>
There will, however, be regulations<lb/>
covering the use of beer at the student<lb/>
union.<lb/>
"We cannot buy beer with student's<lb/>
fees said Diane Taylor, Student Union<lb/>
President. "We cannot sell beer, we can<lb/>
only give it away. So the only way we can<lb/>
have beer is for someone to give it to us<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
'Peer review' approved<lb/>
Initiation of a "peer review" process<lb/>
was approved by the North Carolina<lb/>
Physical Therapy Association at its<lb/>
chapter meeting in Gastonia.<lb/>
The new peer review process will<lb/>
involve improvement of services offered by<lb/>
hospital physical therapists or privately<lb/>
practicing physical therapists, through<lb/>
review and observation of their work by a<lb/>
team of colleagues.<lb/>
Peer review will be requested by<lb/>
therapists who wish to benefit from<lb/>
suggestions and recommendations by the<lb/>
reviewing team.<lb/>
The peer review process is a result of a<lb/>
two-year grant awarded by NCPTA by the<lb/>
N.C. Regional Medical Program to assess<lb/>
the quality of physical therapy patient care<lb/>
available in the state.<lb/>
NCPTA members also discussed plans<lb/>
for the observance of Physical Therapy<lb/>
Week, Oct. 20-27, which will include<lb/>
dissemination of information throughout<lb/>
the state to increase public awareness of<lb/>
the physical therapy profession. At least<lb/>
one television program on physical therapy<lb/>
will be broadcast, by a Charlotte station.<lb/>
Physical therapy practice involves a<lb/>
variety of specialty areas in the field of<lb/>
rehabilitation of persons disabled through<lb/>
injury or disease.<lb/>
Among them are electroneuromyo-<lb/>
graphy evaluation procedures, chest<lb/>
physical therapy for respiratory patients,<lb/>
sports medicine, orthopedic physical<lb/>
therapy using mobilization techniques,<lb/>
cardiac care programs and pediatric<lb/>
development care programs.<lb/>
Steven Photographers are in:<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, Fletcher<lb/>
Lobby, and Aycock Basement<lb/>
9-12 1-5<lb/>
Register for the FREE BICYCLE<lb/>
when you go for your sitting<lb/>
No sitting fee -<lb/>
No Dress Requirement<lb/>
Appojntment Required<lb/>
Make appointments at BUCCANEER<lb/>
Office or call 758-6501.<lb/>
Appointments should be made<lb/>
a week in advance.<lb/>
<pb facs="00039996_0020"/><lb/>
PBPawea�<lb/>
20<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
toa-BuMi ��ii i wiiui 1 m nnmti u mi<lb/>
mt<lb/>
VA increases home loan<lb/>
mortgage interest rate<lb/>
The Veterans Administration increased<lb/>
its home loan mortgage interest rate<lb/>
ceiling from 8 percent to 9 percent,<lb/>
effective Sept. 2, H. W. Johnson, Director<lb/>
of the Winston-Salem VA Regional Office,<lb/>
announced. The increase was made in<lb/>
accordance with a joint Veterans<lb/>
Administration and Department of<lb/>
Housing and Urban Development policy of<lb/>
keeping the maximum rate in line with<lb/>
actual mortgage market conditions and to<lb/>
keep discount points to a minimum.<lb/>
The increase was necessary to permit<lb/>
the VAto maintain its mortgage interest<lb/>
rate ceiling at a level consistent with the<lb/>
demands of the loan market, Johnson<lb/>
said. If the interest rate is allowed to fall<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Material and<lb/>
Workmanship<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
113 Grande Ave.<lb/>
758-1228<lb/>
behind the market, the availability of<lb/>
money for VA loans becomes seriously<lb/>
impaired, he added.<lb/>
The increase to 9 percent will narrow<lb/>
the gap in relations to the loan market. In<lb/>
addition to improving the yield of such<lb/>
loans the increase in the interest rate also<lb/>
will reduct the discounts for VA loans.<lb/>
Sizable discounts arise when the VA<lb/>
interest rate ceiling does not reflect market<lb/>
conditions. Increased mortgage costs,<lb/>
therefore, can take the form either through<lb/>
a higher VA ceiling or larger discounts.<lb/>
The discounts, which are in effect a<lb/>
lump-sum interest payment made on the<lb/>
loan, can be even a more burdensome form<lb/>
of added cost than an equivalent increase<lb/>
in the VA interest rate ceiling to 9 percent.<lb/>
Since VA regulations prohibit payment<lb/>
of discounts by veterans, the discounts<lb/>
must be paid by the seller of the<lb/>
house.When discounts are high, many<lb/>
sellers refuse to sell to veterans and<lb/>
thereby prevent many veteran buyers from<lb/>
acquiring homes to meet their needs.<lb/>
LEAVES, LEAVES, LEAVES! Green still adorns trees in eastern N.C. In the western part<lb/>
of the state leaves have already begun falling to the ground.<lb/>
Faculty Column<lb/>
.w.v<lb/>
.v.w<lb/>
 � " � �<lb/>
� � � � �<lb/>
Jerry F. Lotterhos, Associate Professor<lb/>
and Director of the Alcoholism Training<lb/>
Program at ECU is a contributing author<lb/>
for a recently released, multi-authored<lb/>
book entitled, "Occupational Alcoholism<lb/>
Programs<lb/>
Lotterhos was instrumental in the<lb/>
development of the Occupational<lb/>
Alcoholism Training Program at ECU in<lb/>
1971. During the past three years, ECU ha<lb/>
trained 300 persons from all states of thi<lb/>
nation to be occupational progran<lb/>
consultants.<lb/>
The new book has six other<lb/>
contributors and is available through<lb/>
Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, Spring-<lb/>
field, III.<lb/>
Vivitar put it ml together<lb/>
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149<lb/>
FtroqL CamertLiSfiov<lb/>
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Dr. Keats Sparrow, assistant professor<lb/>
of English at ECU, has been elected vice<lb/>
president of the N.CVirginia College<lb/>
English Association.<lb/>
The College English Association is a<lb/>
federation of university and community<lb/>
college English professors from North<lb/>
Carolina and Virginia.<lb/>
The author of numerous professional<lb/>
articles on English and American<lb/>
literature, Dr. Sparrow is co-editor of a<lb/>
professional journal "Teaching English in<lb/>
the Two-Year College He is also an<lb/>
ex-officio member of the Steering<lb/>
Committee-Conference of English In-<lb/>
structors, N.C. Department of Community<lb/>
Colleges.<lb/>
���,<lb/>
�<lb/>
Ted Gartman, associate professor i<lb/>
the ECU Department of Social Work an<lb/>
Correctional Services, has been elect<lb/>
chairperson of the N.C. Council on Social<lb/>
Work Education.<lb/>
The NCCSWE is an organization of<lb/>
university and college faculty members<lb/>
who teach social welfare and related<lb/>
courses, and meets regularly to coordinate<lb/>
social work education in the state's<lb/>
institutions of higher learning.<lb/>
A primary emphasis of the Council is to<lb/>
help assure a continuum of social work<lb/>
education and reduce duplication as<lb/>
students move from community colleges<lb/>
to senior colleges to graduate studies.<lb/>
The N.C. Council on Social Work<lb/>
Education is among the first such<lb/>
statewide organizations in the U.S. and is<lb/>
a major resource to the National Council<lb/>
on Social Work Education.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
wmim iw<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
tmm<lb/>
Cheating kills<lb/>
By ANTHONY SCHMITZ<lb/>
(CPS)The stakes are high. The outcome<lb/>
of a test may decide whether students will<lb/>
find themselves safe in a medical or law<lb/>
school or out pounding the pavement for a<lb/>
job.<lb/>
The pressure�causing students both to<lb/>
cheat for high grades and to keep quiet<lb/>
about the cheating of othersis<lb/>
jeopardizing the future of honor codes at<lb/>
several colleges around the country.<lb/>
At Stanford, a "breakdown of ordinary<lb/>
standards of honesty" sparked a<lb/>
re-evaluation of the school's honor code.<lb/>
John Hopkins University ended its<lb/>
62-year-old honor code when a poll<lb/>
revealed 70 percent of its students had<lb/>
witnessed incidents of cheating and done<lb/>
nothing to stop them.<lb/>
After 50 students were put on probation<lb/>
at the University of Florida at Gainesville<lb/>
for bribing janitors to help them secure<lb/>
advance copies of tests, administrators<lb/>
claimed a "revitalization" of the code was<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
And at the University of Virginia, where<lb/>
the only penalty for conviction of an honor<lb/>
code offense is permanent expulsion, a<lb/>
poll is scheduled for November to<lb/>
determine the future of their code.<lb/>
Administrators at these schools blame<lb/>
pressure for hiqh qrades and a reluctance<lb/>
To "rat on other students for the crumbling<lb/>
honor codes tnat ask students to police<lb/>
themselves against cheating and plagiar-<lb/>
ism. And the offenders, they claim, are<lb/>
frequently excellent students rather than<lb/>
survival cases" who need to cheat to get<lb/>
by.<lb/>
Stanford's Ombudsman Jon Goheen<lb/>
said in a report to the school's president<lb/>
that "law and medicine, particularly, are<lb/>
attracting very large numbers of students,<lb/>
many more than these professional schools<lb/>
can accomodate The resulting competi-<lb/>
tion for admission to a professional school<lb/>
is intense<lb/>
One of the results of pressure and<lb/>
competition has been more cheating and<lb/>
less student cooperation in enforcing the<lb/>
cod Goheen asserted.<lb/>
Last spring. 12 cases of honor code<lb/>
violations were reported at Stanford. Ten<lb/>
of the 12 students were found to have<lb/>
consistently high grades and were<lb/>
compulsive about hiqh qrades. "Five of the<lb/>
students were suspended for violation of<lb/>
the code, which requires students "both<lb/>
within and without the University (to)<lb/>
maintain such respect for order, morality,<lb/>
personal honor and the rights of others as<lb/>
demanded of good citizens<lb/>
While Stanford is questioning the value<lb/>
of its code, John Hopkins scrapped its<lb/>
honor system this fall in the face of<lb/>
charges that it had become a "farce" and a<lb/>
"disgrace<lb/>
Where formerly tests were not<lb/>
proctored, they will be now. Alternate<lb/>
seating will be required during exams and<lb/>
a definition of plagiarism will be set.<lb/>
John Hopkins President Steven Muller<lb/>
said he regretted ending the honor system,<lb/>
but claimed it was necessary since "for<lb/>
some time there have been allegations of<lb/>
pretty consistent cheating. People were<lb/>
saying the honor system was a farce<lb/>
At the University of Florida, the "honor<lb/>
code has been on the decline for a long<lb/>
time because students aren't willing to<lb/>
testify against other students according<lb/>
to Rob Denson, director of student judicial<lb/>
affairs.<lb/>
Although the Florida honor code<lb/>
stipulates that tests not be proctored.<lb/>
instructors recently have begun proctoring<lb/>
tests since "many don't feel the honor<lb/>
code is a deterrent Denson said.<lb/>
In spite of a case of test-stealing<lb/>
involving "hundreds of students" last<lb/>
spring, Denson said he believes the honor<lb/>
code should be "revitalized" rather than<lb/>
abandoned, "if we leave it in writing it's<lb/>
good PR Denson said, "and after<lb/>
Watergate people are more in tune with a<lb/>
code of honor<lb/>
Meanwhile at the University of Virginia<lb/>
discussion centers on whether students<lb/>
still support the code.<lb/>
Ken Humphries, a student member of<lb/>
the honor committee, said that most of the<lb/>
dissatisfaction with the code has been<lb/>
over its "single sanction" provision, which<lb/>
mandates that there be no punishment<lb/>
other than permanent expulsion.<lb/>
While a poll is scheduled for November<lb/>
to determine student support, the<lb/>
student-run committee continues to<lb/>
decide cheating cases. Already this fall<lb/>
one student has been dismissed for<lb/>
plagiarism, while another case is on the<lb/>
docket for early October.<lb/>
FIRST SHOP OFF G4MPIK<lb/>
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HEY! Yamaha classical guitar for sale.<lb/>
Purchased just 4 weeks ago brand new but<lb/>
must sell for cash immediately! New $140,<lb/>
now only $100. 752 7398.<lb/>
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. NO<lb/>
experience required. Excellent pay.<lb/>
Worldwide travel. Summer jobor career.<lb/>
Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX<lb/>
Dept. 12, Box 2049, Port Angeles,<lb/>
Washington 98362.<lb/>
FENDER Twin Reverb Amp. Only 1 year<lb/>
old. One Fender Professional Series 15"<lb/>
speaker. $375. 752 7398.<lb/>
BOOK TRADER located corner Evans<lb/>
and 11th. Trade your paperback books,<lb/>
buy used paperbooks, also comic books.<lb/>
Open Tues. Sat 9 4.<lb/>
SPEAKER CABINET Two 12's. Great<lb/>
extension cabinet, very well built and in<lb/>
good shape, only $100. 752 7398.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '64 Buick, white with red<lb/>
interior, good tires (snow tires on back).<lb/>
Needs muffler and radio antenna Price<lb/>
$175.00.<lb/>
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic<lb/>
guitar. Excellent condition. 758 1207.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good<lb/>
Condition $dS Hollowbody electric guitar �<lb/>
two pickup exc. condition $100.<lb/>
Call 752 7398.<lb/>
WANTED: Commercial photographers.<lb/>
Need 20 photographic models for<lb/>
advertising and sports promotion. Experi<lb/>
ence helpful but not required. Outstanding<lb/>
appearance a must. Apply in person at<lb/>
Studio Photographen, MA. McGilvery 8,<lb/>
Associates 1131 South Evans (corner of<lb/>
12th 8. Evans) 1 5 p.m. Mon. Fri.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1971 Kawasaki 500, 12,000<lb/>
miles, exc. cond. $600. 756 2183.<lb/>
FOR RENT party house 9V x 28 6 12<lb/>
miles east of Greenville. Private parties<lb/>
only, plenty of parking. 758 3079.<lb/>
BICYCLE FOR SALE Men's 10 speed,<lb/>
orange Schwinn Varsity, excellent<lb/>
condition, 1 yr. old. $55. 758 1455.<lb/>
FOR SALE 1971 Opel GT, excellent .<lb/>
condition, low mileage. $1800. Call<lb/>
758 9153.<lb/>
STURGILLGUITAR Carolina 100 model.<lb/>
69th one made. W .case. $425. Call<lb/>
752 9496<lb/>
V,<lb/>
glamour beauty<lb/>
shoppe<lb/>
110 E. 5th St. Greenville<lb/>
phone 758-2563<lb/>
Cuts &amp; Curls<lb/>
for<lb/>
Guys &amp; Gals<lb/>
tk a<lb/>
AAA, di<lb/>
 ��� ��<lb/>
m<lb/>
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Will I mm<lb/>
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I<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED 1 or 2 to help<lb/>
share semi furnished Village Green Apt.<lb/>
Call Dwight Waller or Mark Bunch day or<lb/>
night. 752 2434.<lb/>
FOUND Ladies watch. 758 8631.<lb/>
YOUNG COUPLE (with infant) are<lb/>
looking for student to exchange part time<lb/>
work for a room. 752 0928. <lb/>
WANTED for new art shop photographs, '<lb/>
ceramics, crafts and such for sale on<lb/>
consignment come by w sample between<lb/>
1 5 p.m. Mon Fri. Studio Photographen,<lb/>
MA. McGilvary &amp; Associates, 1131 South<lb/>
Evans (corner ot 12th 8. Evans). a:<lb/>
PART TIME WAITRESS pick your own n<lb/>
hours. Call 752 2024. Experienced bartend<lb/>
er needed. Call 752 2024.<lb/>
l<lb/>
h<lb/>
FOR SALE : '65 Olds, $200.00. Call 758 0497. ,<lb/>
FOR SALE: Small Schwinn Varsity 10 r<lb/>
speed Ideal for small woman or child. $50. i<lb/>
1968 Volkswagen Squareback $1000. i<lb/>
756-6210.<lb/>
i<lb/>
TYPING term papers. 756 0081.<lb/>
Telev<lb/>
,)pportun<lb/>
; special"<lb/>
lieal wi<lb/>
parent ho<lb/>
itnnounct<lb/>
; Deper<lb/>
ind effec<lb/>
I nay deve<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
! A coi<lb/>
Jiwarded<lb/>
aborator<lb/>
jissess i<lb/>
iipproprial<lb/>
produce t<lb/>
television<lb/>
ieact ions'<lb/>
television<lb/>
luture pro<lb/>
o that use<lb/>
ind other<lb/>
1 BLC<lb/>
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HO!<lb/>
AN<lb/>
SELEC1<lb/>
CRACK<lb/>
AND<lb/>
<pb facs="00039996_0023"/><lb/>
�IiHMHHHMI<lb/>
�����������<lb/>
i<lb/>
HEW offers family<lb/>
planning TV program<lb/>
Television views will have an<lb/>
Opportunity next year to react to a<lb/>
; special" and two pilot programs which<lb/>
iieal with "Education for Effective<lb/>
parenthood HEWs Office of Education<lb/>
Unnounced.<lb/>
; Depending on the programs' success<lb/>
ind effectiveness, the Office of Education<lb/>
jnay develop a series of TV shows on the<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
A contract for $788,821 has been<lb/>
Jiwarded to Appalachia Educational<lb/>
laboratories in Charleston, W. Va to<lb/>
;tssess information needs, develop<lb/>
Appropriate and appealing materials, and<lb/>
Produce the "special" and two half-hour<lb/>
television programs. Analysis of audience<lb/>
ieactions will determine the feasibility of a<lb/>
jelevision series and possible content of<lb/>
iuture programs. This approach is similar<lb/>
jo that used in developing "Sesame Street"<lb/>
imd other federally supported television<lb/>
programs designed to give popular appeal<lb/>
to learning.<lb/>
"Parenthood training should be a prime<lb/>
national concern said U.S. Commission-<lb/>
er of Education Terrell H. Bell. "Through<lb/>
general parenthood education, we can<lb/>
alleviate some troubles common among<lb/>
young parents and help strengthen the<lb/>
family as the fundamental unit in American<lb/>
society he added.<lb/>
The "special" and pilots, using the<lb/>
latest research findings on child rearing<lb/>
and development, will focus on assisting<lb/>
new and prospective parents to acquire<lb/>
this competence. The "special" is<lb/>
expected to be ready early next year and<lb/>
will be available through local television<lb/>
stations and various places where adults<lb/>
have occasion to meet.<lb/>
Dr. Edward E. Gotts, director of<lb/>
Appalachian early childhood division, will<lb/>
head the project.<lb/>
VOTING BOOTH<lb/>
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INTRODUCING<lb/>
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OPEN:<lb/>
10-10 MON. -THURS.<lb/>
10-10:30 FRI. - SAT. FLEXIBLE!<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
23<lb/>
Vespa<lb/>
sets record<lb/>
Coast-to-Coast<lb/>
run averaging<lb/>
157 mpg<lb/>
k<lb/>
o<lb/>
w<lb/>
Richard S. Hartnett, 23, a student at the University<lb/>
of North Florida, rode this Vespa Ciao Moped 2,617<lb/>
miles on just 16.5 gallons of gas from Jacksonville,<lb/>
Fla to San Diego, CA in 11 days.<lb/>
The Ciao is a vehicle which was designed primarily<lb/>
for short-distance transportation. But when fueied<lb/>
and ready to travel, it can go just about anywhere<lb/>
because it has plenty of stamina.<lb/>
The Ciao is whisper-quiet, has automatic<lb/>
transmission, weighs about 75 pounds, and gets<lb/>
up to 168 mpg. You can pedal it like a bike, or relax<lb/>
and enjoy the motor.<lb/>
Most Ciao owners use the vehicle to go across<lb/>
town. This owner decided to go across the country.<lb/>
Test ride a Vespa Ciao Moped today!<lb/>
The Fun Way To Go!<lb/>
Visit Us For A Demonstration Ride<lb/>
NO DRIVERS LICENSE � NO INSURANCE<lb/>
NO LICENSE TAGS<lb/>
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Vespa Times<lb/>
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Phone 823-4685<lb/>
OPEN MONDAY thru SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00039996_0024"/><lb/>
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24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wn��i mmm hi<lb/>
MM<lb/>
<lb/>
Conaty lost for season<lb/>
Defense, penalty results in 3-0 ECU win<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHARLESTON, S.CWhen the NCAA rules committee passed a rule prior to the 1974<lb/>
season which made it illegal to block below the waist on kick returns, the move was<lb/>
made as a safety precaution against knee injuries. Saturday night, however, the rule took<lb/>
a whole different effect on the game, as East Carolina downed the Citadel, 3-0. in a<lb/>
defensive battle.<lb/>
The rule infraction may have cost the Citadel the game. With about seven minutes left<lb/>
in the second period, the Bulldogs' Mike Riley took a Tom Daub punt at his own 43 and<lb/>
weaved and dodged his way to an apparent 57-yard touchdown. However, with all the<lb/>
fuss made by his teammates, everybody seemed to miss the official's flag upfield, which<lb/>
signified the illegal block penalty and nullified the Bulldogs<lb/>
touchdown The score was the only threat the Bulldogs would really make all night in the<lb/>
3-0 defensive standoff.<lb/>
Somebody blocked below the waist said Citadel coach Bobby Ross. "It wasn't a<lb/>
clip, but it was illegal. I guess those things just happened<lb/>
But this time, "those things such as fumbles, penalties and interceptions,<lb/>
happened too often for the Bulldogs.<lb/>
CONATY HURT<lb/>
It's too bad that such a play would hang the game in balance, as both ECU and the<lb/>
Citadel played superb defense, prompting injuries and sore muscles for both teams.<lb/>
For the Citadel, three players, including starters Greg James and Peter Bistrian,<lb/>
hobbled to the sidelines, and ECU'S starting quarterback and kicker Pete Conaty was<lb/>
sidelined for the season with a separated shoulder.<lb/>
It seemed strange that Conaty wasn't around at the end, since it was his 25 yard field<lb/>
goal in the first period that decided the game's outcome.<lb/>
Conaty's place was taken by soph Jimmy Southerland, who led the Pirates on two<lb/>
second half drives which consumed valauable time against the stubborn Bulldog<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
With Conaty hurt and Mike Weaver in Greenville nursing the flu, Southerland became<lb/>
the only experienced signal-caller the Pirates had in a normal three-quarterback<lb/>
arrangement, but he was enough.<lb/>
The Bulldogs also used two quarterbacks. Rod Lanning, who threw for three<lb/>
touchdowns the week before, started and completed nine of 17 passes for 111 yards.<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Booters shutout by ASU, 4-0<lb/>
ECU meets VMI Saturday morning at<lb/>
9:30 on the varsity soccer field between<lb/>
Minges and Ficklen.<lb/>
BOONEEast Carolina University's soccer<lb/>
squad dropped a 4-0 decision here Sunday<lb/>
afternoon to conference power Appala-<lb/>
chian State before about 1,000 fans in<lb/>
Conrad Stadium.<lb/>
Playing on artificial turf for the first<lb/>
time this year, the Pirates were simply-<lb/>
outrun by the unbeaten Mountaineers, who<lb/>
are now 7-0 on the season. For<lb/>
Appalachian State it was the 17th straight<lb/>
soccer win over a two year period. The<lb/>
Mountaineers' were ranked eighth in the<lb/>
South prior to the game.<lb/>
The Mountaineers' were led by David<lb/>
Moore. Moore, an exchange student from<lb/>
Tel Aviv. Israel, scored all four ASU goals,<lb/>
two unassisted. Moore was an All-South<lb/>
and All-Conference selection last year.<lb/>
Appalachian's team was spiced with<lb/>
junior college Ail-Americans and they<lb/>
simply were better talented tnan the Pirate<lb/>
squad, especially on their home astroturt<lb/>
field.<lb/>
ECU, now 2-3-1, may play the Apps<lb/>
later in the season. Since ECU is in a<lb/>
different division from the Mountaineers,<lb/>
the two could meet in the conference<lb/>
playoffs, if ECU can get by VMI Saturday<lb/>
and William and Mary on November 1.<lb/>
Both games are home contests. If ECU<lb/>
should win the division, it would host the<lb/>
playoffs, most likely against Appalachian.<lb/>
One happy note for the Pirates was the<lb/>
limited action of freshman Jeff Karpovich.<lb/>
Karpovich, a starter at season's outset,<lb/>
was believed out for the season after a<lb/>
bout with mononucleosis.<lb/>
Tozer honored<lb/>
For the second week in a row, an ECU<lb/>
soccer player has been named Southern<lb/>
Conference Player of the Week.<lb/>
Tom Tozer, who collected three goals<lb/>
in a 4-0 Pirate win over Richmond, was<lb/>
awarded the honor this week, following the<lb/>
selection of Pete Angus last week.<lb/>
For the season, Tozer and Angus lead<lb/>
the Pirate scoring with four goals each.<lb/>
Tozer has added three assists and Angus<lb/>
has assisted on two other goals.<lb/>
Angus is a junior from Denville, N.J.<lb/>
and Tozer is from Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
ECU-Citadel stats<lb/>
ECU CITADEL<lb/>
First downs1312<lb/>
Rushing60-191338<lb/>
Passing (net yardage)24136<lb/>
Total offensive playsyd.70-21556-204<lb/>
Passes (comp'd, att'd. int.)3-10-111-23-3<lb/>
Punts (no avg.)7-36.77-38.0<lb/>
Fumbles-Fumbles lost4-22-2<lb/>
Times-yards penalized6-409-80<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
"mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
However, he could not get the Bulldogs in the end zone against the stubborn Pirati<lb/>
defense, who turned in the best performance against the Bulldogs this year in holding<lb/>
them to 204 yards total offense.<lb/>
Gene Dotson replaced Lanning on the first series of the fourth quai ut had litth<lb/>
luck against the psyched-up ECU defense.<lb/>
DEFENSE STEALS SHOW<lb/>
All in all, the outcome came down to big defensive playi ;rate defense and;<lb/>
ball-control running attack by the offense in the second half, when it was needed t<lb/>
protect the slim lead.<lb/>
ECU collected five turnovers from the Bulldogs on three interceptions and tw(<lb/>
fumbles and committed two fumbles and an interception on its own. Unlike th�<lb/>
Richmond game, though, the errors were caused more by defensive might than by poo<lb/>
offense execution.<lb/>
The two biggest plays in the game seemed to be a fumble recovery by Jim Boldim<lb/>
and an unsuccessful fourth down, fourth quarter run by the Citadel.<lb/>
Bolding's recovery, which followed a head hunting tackle by Reggie Pinkney, led t(<lb/>
the Pirates' score in the first period.<lb/>
Pinkney hit Bulldog halfback Alvin Perkins and the freshman lost the ball, witt<lb/>
Bolding finally recovering at the 31.  '<lb/>
Behind Conaty, ECU used a piling on penalty to move down to the 13. On fourth anc<lb/>
inches at the three, Conaty sneaked for the first down. When four more ECU plays nettei<lb/>
but one yard, ECU lined up for a field goal from the two, but took too much time<lb/>
Penalized five yards, Conaty nailed the three-pointer with 2:59 left for the ultimate<lb/>
winning 3-0 edge.<lb/>
ECU had a chance to score on one play later when Perkins fumbled the kickoff returr<lb/>
at the 28, and Larry Paul fell on the ball at the 25. The Bulldogs, however proved tough<lb/>
and pushed the Pirates back to the 31, where Conaty missed a 48 yard field goal.<lb/>
The teams traded punts until Lanning hit for three straight passes to carry the Citade<lb/>
to the ECU 34. On second down, after a run went for no gain, Lanning had a pass<lb/>
intercepted by Ernest Madison at the 18 to end the drive.<lb/>
TD CALLED BACK<lb/>
Two more punts followed and on fourth and seven at his 23, Tom Daub punted tc<lb/>
Riley. Taking the ball on stride, Riley darted up the middle and down the right sideline foi<lb/>
the apparent score and the Bulldog bench cleared. However, somewhere in the mass al<lb/>
midfield, one official had seen an illegal block. The score, and the Bulldog momentum.<lb/>
was erased. From this point on, ECU'S defense controlled the game. A 41-yard field goa<lb/>
attempt by Steve Bailey was the closest the Citadel came the remainder of the game.<lb/>
Although well behind in statistics at the half, ECU'S offense helped the defense out ir<lb/>
the second half, running off 39 plays to the Bulldogs' 24 in the second half and holdinc<lb/>
the 'Dogs to only 66 yards in the second half.<lb/>
The first four times the Bulldogs got the ball in the second half, they were backed up<lb/>
inside their own 20, at the 11, the 17, the 14 and the eight.<lb/>
ECU put together one long drive in the third period, driving from the 35 to the Bulldoc<lb/>
16. Conaty was hurt on the second play of the drive and Southerland came in to move the<lb/>
team. The drive stalled, though, and Larry Paul, in place of Conaty, missed from 33 yards<lb/>
out-well short of the goal.<lb/>
ECU drove again deep into Bulldog territory in the final period, following a short punt<lb/>
by Mike Caldwell.<lb/>
Caldwell's punt came after a bad snap and gave ECU the ball at the Citadel 46. Willie<lb/>
Hawkins, gaining 21 yards on three carries, led the Pirates for two first downs to the 17.<lb/>
Southerland then kept off his right side to inside the 15, but fumbled when hit by several<lb/>
tacklers. Stan Yarborough recovered at the eight. Dotson, now at quarterback, moved the<lb/>
ball to the 24 before Jim Bolding intercepted a pass at the Citadel 41, after a deflection by<lb/>
Bobby Myrick.<lb/>
BIG PLAY HALTS CITADEL<lb/>
Two plays later, Alexander French bobbled a pitch out and the Citadel's Ron Easterby<lb/>
recovered at the 40, the only time the whole second half the Bulldogs got the ball outside<lb/>
their own 20.<lb/>
Off this turnover, Dotson led the Bulldogs on one last drive, taking them into ECL<lb/>
territory for a first down at the 43.<lb/>
In three plays, Citadel picked up seven yards, giving them a fourth and three play al<lb/>
the 35.<lb/>
With 4:26 left, ECU had the Bulldogs in a similar situation as they were in againsl<lb/>
Richmond the week before-a fourth down, do or die, play late in the game.<lb/>
Dotson went to Bistrian, but Harold Randolph met the runner in the backfield anc<lb/>
tripped him up one yard shy of the first down.<lb/>
ECU moved to a first down on three runs and then used three more runs to eat up<lb/>
time, as well as two delay of game penalties. With 1:01 left, ECU punted to the Bulldogs<lb/>
The Bulldogs started at the 20, but ran off two plays before Pinkney intercepted al<lb/>
Dotson pass at the 31 with 33 seconds left. Two keepers by Southerland ran out the<lb/>
clock.<lb/>
ECU coach Pat Dye later praised the Bulldog defense, ninth in the nation entering the<lb/>
game, for its performance.<lb/>
"That was the hardest-hitting defensive yame I've been involved in since coming tc<lb/>
ECU said second year coach Dye. "The Citadel deserved more than it got<lb/>
Citadel coach Ross echoed Dye's sentiments<lb/>
"It was the hardest hitting ballgame I've ever been involved in said Ross. "Oui<lb/>
defense played very well, but everytime we trie'f rietting something together offensively<lb/>
we made a mistake, a fumble, or a penalty. But ast Carolina had a lot to do with that<lb/>
They are a damn good football teai<lb/>
Citadel, now 3-2, was a "dam' ood" team, too. When two "damn good" defenses<lb/>
get together, usually they aren't far apart. In this case, Pete Conaty's toe was the<lb/>
difference.<lb/>
wmmmp<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
25<lb/>
bom Pi rat <lb/>
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6. Willie<lb/>
3 the 17.<lb/>
several<lb/>
Dved the<lb/>
ction by<lb/>
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Maone, Phil Ford tied to Clemson cage case<lb/>
Easterby<lb/>
outside<lb/>
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play al<lb/>
against<lb/>
eld anc<lb/>
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tenses<lb/>
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Last Tuesday, Clemson University was<lb/>
landed down a three-year probation for its<lb/>
asketball teams, stemming from 41<lb/>
Violations of NCAA rules.<lb/>
Later in the week, numerous reports<lb/>
inked several of these allegations to deals<lb/>
jivolving Moses Malone, now with the<lb/>
BA Utah Stars, and Phil Ford, now a<lb/>
I'ophomore at North Carolina.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Also, former Tiger basketball coach<lb/>
jates Locke answered charged made by<lb/>
ihe NCAA.<lb/>
In a Wednesday night statement, Locke<lb/>
jtated, "I am very sorry it happened.<lb/>
iXjring the past several months, I have<lb/>
! ooperated completely with the school and<lb/>
Jntramurals<lb/>
the NCAA officials, answering honestly all<lb/>
questions and accusations that were put<lb/>
before me<lb/>
In a notarized statement, Locke<lb/>
admitted his guilt to the NCAA, but<lb/>
claimed innocence to several of the<lb/>
NCAA's charges, which stuck anyway.<lb/>
"The NCAA has chosen to hold me<lb/>
responsible for all violations said Locke.<lb/>
"I feel I am carrying the burden of guilt for<lb/>
that entire school and its representataives.<lb/>
"I don't want to implicate anyone else<lb/>
as I feel there have been enough people<lb/>
hurt already. I just hope the individuals in<lb/>
question can live with their consciences as<lb/>
I must live with mine<lb/>
By LEONARD SMITH<lb/>
!<lb/>
One-OrvOne Basketball<lb/>
i<lb/>
One-on-one Basketball will finish next week. The championship in the 6'1" and Over<lb/>
Division will be decided this week when Cedric Dicerkson and Jan Blount meet in the<lb/>
final match. Blount has had to scrap all the way to the finals, while Dickerson coasted in<lb/>
with a single actual playing victory and two forfeits by his first and second round<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
I In the Under 6'1" Division, competition has moved into the semi-final round. The two<lb/>
remaining matches this week will pit favored James Blanchard against Dave Applegate<lb/>
;and Chuck Hester against Sandy Peele.The winners will meet next week to determine the<lb/>
champion of the Under 6'1" Division.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
I After one week of competition, several teams have shown that they will put in a bid<lb/>
Ifor the championship. In th Fraternity Division-Apollo League, both Pi Kappa Phi and<lb/>
JKappa Alpha "A" team are u.idefeated with 3-0 records. In the Thor League, the Kappa<lb/>
jAlpha "B" team is also 3-0.<lb/>
I In the Residence Hall Division the favorites at this early season point are Scott's<lb/>
(Stumpy Stumps, Scott's Brewers, and Jones' Net Prophets. All three are 2-0 at this time.<lb/>
In the ClubGraduateIndependent Division, the Geology Jumpers (2-0) in the Big<lb/>
jFour League and B.S.U. (2-0) in the Tripod League are the early season favorites.<lb/>
'<lb/>
Touch Football<lb/>
The ranks of the unbeaten dwindled to three teams last week. The only unbeaten<lb/>
(teams remaining are Jones' Lost Gonzo Band (6-0) in the Residence Hall Division-Pitt<lb/>
League, Tau Kappa Epsilon (5-0) in the Fraternity Division-Gold League, and AFROTCs<lb/>
Ron's Raiders (6-0) in the Club Division.<lb/>
Upsets<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
t Several major upsets occurred last week. On Tuesday, October 7, "cott's.<lb/>
Time Out surprised previously unbeaten Scott's Moe's Zingos, 26-8. n Wednesday,<lb/>
Kappa Sigma pulled off a big upset in defeating heavily favored Kappa ipha, 8-0.<lb/>
( Perhaps the best game of the week found two evenly matched teams going at it tooth<lb/>
iand nail right down to the last second. The slight underdog, The Pack, fought to a 12-12<lb/>
"tie with favored Herb's Superbs at the end of regulation time. In over-time play consisting<lb/>
'of eight alternating plays, both teams scored a touchdown but neither could manage to<lb/>
(score the extra point. Therefore, at the end of overtime the game was still tied 18-18.<lb/>
jSince The Pack had managed to move the ball slightly further than Herb's Superbs during<lb/>
jthe remaining plays, they were awarded the victory. Neither team deserved to lose. The<lb/>
l loss knocked Herb's Superbs from the ranks of the undefeated and also pushed them out<lb/>
Jof sole possession of first place in the GraduateIndependent Division-American League.<lb/>
JA rematch is assured in the playoffs, so don't miss it.<lb/>
The results concerning last week's "TOP TEN" and the posting of this week's "TOP<lb/>
ITEN" will be in Tursday's edition of the Fountainhead so that the final regular season<lb/>
games can be included.<lb/>
Co-Recreational Program<lb/>
The Co-Rec Sports Carnival is scheduled for Tuesday, October 14 on the mall. If you<lb/>
aren't participating in this activity then you have passed up a really good opportunity for<lb/>
I some good clean fun. If you aren't entered then come on down to the mall and watch, you<lb/>
ii will still have a good time.<lb/>
I Rosters for Co-Rec Innertube Water Basketball are due by 5:00 p.m. on Thursday,<lb/>
October 16. Try it, you'll like it.<lb/>
mv mmm m n wnn i wm �� u nmm imi u tim � i i mm in i n<lb/>
Referred to in the NCAA reports as a<lb/>
"former basketball coach" Locke con-<lb/>
tinued that, "I was hired to do a job and<lb/>
dedicated five years of my life-time-wise,<lb/>
family-wise and financial-wise to succeed.<lb/>
In order to succeed, I had to do some<lb/>
things of which I am not proud and did not<lb/>
believe in at the time<lb/>
On Friday, a copyrighted story in the<lb/>
Clemson student newspaper, The Tiger,<lb/>
quoted a Clemson legal counsel, Admiral<lb/>
Joseph B. McDevitt as saying - Malone<lb/>
was involved in one of the most flagrant<lb/>
cases of the violation.<lb/>
Under the charges by the NCAA<lb/>
against Clemson, one is the matter of "a<lb/>
former head basketball coach supposed-<lb/>
ly Locke, making an offer to a prospect's<lb/>
mother to buy her a house and pay the<lb/>
utility bills during her son's enrollment in<lb/>
the University. According to McDevitt, that<lb/>
prospect was Malone.<lb/>
The paper, in the article by Sports<lb/>
Editor Steve Ellis, also linked Ford with<lb/>
infractions, quoting McDevitt as naming<lb/>
Ford, and a former Clemson player named<lb/>
Ricky Hunt, as being principals in the<lb/>
NCAA probe.<lb/>
McDevitt, in an interview in The State<lb/>
newspaper, claimed he had spoken with<lb/>
Ellis, but that he had not named any<lb/>
names to the reporter.<lb/>
McDevitt, however, said he could "not<lb/>
deny the factual nature of the story"<lb/>
printed in The Tiger, the school<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
Ford supposedly accepted an offer of<lb/>
cash from the coach, again believed to be<lb/>
Locke, and was offered a suite of new<lb/>
furniture.<lb/>
McDevitt was quoted by The Tiger as<lb/>
saying, Locke was handing out cash. He<lb/>
did this at West Point also. He was not<lb/>
using any athletic department funds. The<lb/>
official NCAA findings say that money<lb/>
came from Locke's summer basketbai<lb/>
camp<lb/>
The original sources of the accusations<lb/>
to the NCAA have never been released to<lb/>
the Clemson administration and The Tiger<lb/>
stated that McDevitt was angered by the<lb/>
fact that a former University of North<lb/>
Carolina basketball player investigated<lb/>
Clemson's involvement in the Ford case<lb/>
As stated earlier, Ford is now a member of<lb/>
the Tar Heel basketball team.<lb/>
On the subject of his talks with the<lb/>
Clemson student newspaper and the<lb/>
accusations made by the paper, McDevitt<lb/>
said , "They may be accurate conclusions,<lb/>
but it was not my intention to reopen the<lb/>
case when I talked to him (Elliot). On the<lb/>
contrary, we had hoped that the book was<lb/>
closed on this unhappy affair<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair Shop<lb/>
&amp; Shoe Store<lb/>
Across from Blount-Harvey Store<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
Repair All Leather Goods<lb/>
 DUNES DECK<lb/>
Rt.5 Pactolus Highway (In the heart of Nasty Town)<lb/>
GOOD BAR - GOOD GAMES - GOOD BEER<lb/>
Have a Beer with the Nasty Town Harem!<lb/>
Red Rooster Restaurant<lb/>
2713 EAST 10TH STREET � GREENVILLE, IM. C.<lb/>
PHONE 758-1920<lb/>
open 7:00 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
HOME COOKED MEALS<lb/>
R�D R009T�R 9PGCI1L9<lb/>
Mon. 14 BBQ Chicken, 2 Vegetables $1.80<lb/>
Tues. Country-style Steak, w Rice &amp; Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80<lb/>
Wed. Salisbury Steak, 2 Veg. $1.80<lb/>
Thues. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $1.80<lb/>
Fri. Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout, Shrimp, Oysters, F. F Slaw $2.95<lb/>
Red Rooster Will Be Open Homecoming Weekend<lb/>
all specials include rolls &amp; hushpuppies<lb/>
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits )<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
wn<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 10M OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
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IPMWWHW<lb/>
Pat Dye<lb/>
Fountainhead photographer<lb/>
Tim Chalmers<lb/>
captures Dye's moods during<lb/>
a 17-14 loss to Richmond<lb/>
two weeks ago<lb/>
Tir<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
ilWiMH'�)lli I WOllWHW<lb/>
27<lb/>
wmiffwinntm<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
World Series time is upon us again, and now that the series has switched to<lb/>
Cincinnati for the next three games and is tied at one game each, it seems as if the Reds<lb/>
have an upper hand at the overall Series win. This writer sees Cincinnati in no more than<lb/>
six.<lb/>
If Cincinnati wins the series they will have won 115 games this season, out of, at the<lb/>
most, 169 games. This record would mean that the Reds, with sluggers like Bench and<lb/>
Morgan and Rose leading the way, would win almost 70 percent of its games, an<lb/>
unbelievable feat even in this day of sport superlatives.<lb/>
East Carolina's foorball team played to the hilt Saturday in its 3-0 defensive struggle<lb/>
with the Citadel. During the game, ECU'S Pete Conaty was hurt. Conaty, who suffered a<lb/>
separated shoulder, was operated on Monday and will miss the rest of the season,<lb/>
seemingly throwing Jimmy Southerland in the number one slot, ahead of the flu-ridden<lb/>
Mike Weaver and freshman Steve Greer.<lb/>
Southerland started the season as the Pirates number three man but now has moved<lb/>
into the number one position due to injuries, sickness and his own good play. The new<lb/>
ECU starter has had trouble hanging on to the ball this year, but is the compromise<lb/>
between Conaty. the thrower, and Weaver, who specializes in running the wishbone.<lb/>
Passing this year. Southerland has completed nine of 13 for a 69.2 passing percentage.<lb/>
Southerland should be able to handle the quarterbacking chores.<lb/>
It only goes to show you the score means little, only whether you win or lose, but<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne took things a little out of hand Saturday against Davidson.<lb/>
The Bears moved to914 yards total offense against hapless Davidson College in a<lb/>
69-14 win in Davidson.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Western Carolina, a conference hopeful for admission, is struggling this<lb/>
year with a 2-3 record, but has played a better brand of football and a tougher schedule<lb/>
than the pathetic Wildcats, who have to be closing in on the distinction of being "the<lb/>
worst team in football How bad can Davidson get? Citadel may show us this week.<lb/>
One preseason SC poll for basketball has selected Richmond to take the basketball<lb/>
crown this year, with ECU second and William and Mary, third. To this writer, Richmond<lb/>
was a surprise pick, but apparently they have several "blue chippers" as transfers. ECU<lb/>
opens practice officially on Oct. 15.<lb/>
Paul plays many roles at ECU<lb/>
Larry Paul holds a very special<lb/>
position on the East Carolina football<lb/>
iteam. Not only is he a linebacker, but he<lb/>
lalso handles the kickoffs for the Pirates.<lb/>
Paul sees his chore as the kickoff man<lb/>
not as a burden, but as an important part<lb/>
'of the team.<lb/>
i "It's kind of important since I'm on my<lb/>
(own and it's so important to get a good<lb/>
kick for our guys to cover<lb/>
"I consider a good kick when the ball<lb/>
(gets up in the air with good height and is<lb/>
(inside the five yard line<lb/>
Not only is the kickoff an important<lb/>
jjob, but Paul also sees it as an art. He has<lb/>
jeven figured out a better method to get<lb/>
4more distance.<lb/>
1 "The wind has a lot to do with the<lb/>
'kicking, but I've found that if you turn the<lb/>
jstringsto the right, the foot will go further<lb/>
u the ball and you'll get rnore lift on the<lb/>
Iball<lb/>
Paul said it really doesn't bother him<lb/>
Jthat he doesn't get more playing time at<lb/>
linebacker. After all, he said look who is<lb/>
playing in front of him.<lb/>
Swim and hockey teams win<lb/>
spikers and netters lose two<lb/>
In hockey action this weekend, the<lb/>
Lady Pirates topped Wake Forest 2-0 and<lb/>
fell to North Carolina Club 4-0.<lb/>
Against Wake Forest Jane Gallop and<lb/>
Moira Delvin put the ball in the cage for<lb/>
ECU. Aggressive Pirate defense, balanced<lb/>
offense, and a hustling spirit contributed<lb/>
to the ECU win.<lb/>
N.C. Club dominated the first half of<lb/>
play against the purple team. While<lb/>
holding ECU scoreless, N.C. Clubbers<lb/>
scored three times. Second half play was<lb/>
more balanced. While ECU did not score,<lb/>
the Pirate defense held the Clubbers to<lb/>
just one goal.<lb/>
Karen Ftirz led the Clubbers in scoring<lb/>
with two goals. Joanne Messick and<lb/>
Jackie Silar added one goal each to the<lb/>
Clubbers' score.<lb/>
Coach Arrants felt that against Wake<lb/>
Forest the team "showed that they knew<lb/>
what the word 'hustle' means Even<lb/>
though N.C. Club vas the "better club<lb/>
according to Coach Arrants, ECU played a<lb/>
"basically good game<lb/>
The 1-1 weekend brings the team's<lb/>
record to 3-5. Next action for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates Hockey team will be against High<lb/>
Point College October 18 at 10:00 a.m. on<lb/>
the ECU field behind the Allied Health<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
In other action seen this past week,<lb/>
women's teams came away with two<lb/>
losses and one win.<lb/>
After leading 4-2 in singles<lb/>
competition, the women's tennis team<lb/>
failed to win any of the doubles, falling to<lb/>
UNC-G, 5-4, at Greensboro.<lb/>
Victories in singles matches for ECU<lb/>
were by Cathy Portwood, Susan Helmer.<lb/>
Cindy Arnold and Marie Stewart. All won in<lb/>
two set matches. Needing only one more<lb/>
match to assure the team victory, the<lb/>
Pirates failed to capitalize, losing in both<lb/>
the doubles competitions.<lb/>
See Women, page 28.<lb/>
endurocase<lb/>
"As far as I am concerned we have two<lb/>
of the finest linebackers around in<lb/>
Randolph and Pickett. I don't mind playing<lb/>
back up to them because I know they get<lb/>
the job done. Why put me in when they<lb/>
have two good linebackers in there?"<lb/>
Ironically, Paul, Pickett and Randolph<lb/>
are all walk-ons. All were considered too<lb/>
small to play college ball. Larry, however,<lb/>
feels that at 205 pounds he is about right<lb/>
for the ECU defensive setup.<lb/>
"Our linebackers are a good size<lb/>
because we're faster than other teams and<lb/>
we get outside quicker to stop the sweep.<lb/>
That's why we're in on so many tackles<lb/>
Paul also credits the coaching staff and<lb/>
a weight program for increasing the<lb/>
effectiveness of the linebackers, as well as<lb/>
changing the relationship on the team<lb/>
between each other and the coaches.<lb/>
"Everybody has been put on a weight<lb/>
training program and increased<lb/>
strength. We aren't a big team, but we've<lb/>
got strength. That is what it takes when<lb/>
the teams are bigger than you.<lb/>
See Paul, � a.<lb/>
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OUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
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Dye praises team togetherness in 3-0 win<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Following last week's 17-14 fourth-<lb/>
quarter loss to Richmond, ECU head<lb/>
football coach Pat Dye lamented that his<lb/>
team had no character-or at least they<lb/>
didn't seem to have any. At that time, Dye<lb/>
issued sort of a verbal challenge to his<lb/>
players, one ihe players must have taken<lb/>
him up on.<lb/>
"Last week I said our team had no<lb/>
character said Dye, after Saturday's 3-0<lb/>
shutout of the Citadel. "Tonight the<lb/>
players showed real class because they<lb/>
played a Citadel team wtiich can really play<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
"I've been talking all year about the<lb/>
umlimited ability this team has. Well,<lb/>
tonight we saw a lot of it. The team was<lb/>
more together tonight, more emotionally<lb/>
ready than they have been all year. It was<lb/>
really a temendous win for us that I can be<lb/>
really, really proud of because we beat a<lb/>
heckuva football team<lb/>
Saturday's game was one of those<lb/>
old-fashioned butt kickers with plenty of<lb/>
contact and good defense all night<lb/>
long-and it was a tired and elated Pirate<lb/>
dressing room after the game.<lb/>
One of those tired and elated players<lb/>
was offensive guard Wayne Bolt. Bolt, a<lb/>
sophomore, played the whole game at<lb/>
right guard across from tough David<lb/>
Sollazzo, where most of the action was<lb/>
inside.<lb/>
"Right now , I am sorer than I have ever<lb/>
been in my life said Bolt. "They were<lb/>
really tough on the ground and good at<lb/>
their two technique in the line charge<lb/>
Bolt said, however, that the Pirates<lb/>
stayed with their basic running game, even<lb/>
after Pete Conaty was hurt.<lb/>
"It was tough inside, but we were going<lb/>
right at them. We were trying to control<lb/>
them inside.<lb/>
"They were the best defensive team<lb/>
we've faced this year<lb/>
While Bolt and his counterparts on the<lb/>
line; Tim Hightower, Jim Walker, Randy<lb/>
Parrish, Larry Lundy and Ricky Bennett,<lb/>
were tearing it up on offense, the Pirate<lb/>
defense was matching the bulldog squad<lb/>
head-to-head.<lb/>
On defense, the Pirates were headed by<lb/>
Cary Godette, ZackValentine, and Harold<lb/>
Randolph.<lb/>
Of Valentine's performance, Dye said<lb/>
after the game, "He may only be a<lb/>
freshman, and I don't know just who<lb/>
played well, but I know Zack made some<lb/>
real big plays for us<lb/>
In addition, Dye added, "I have to give<lb/>
the defense credit for the shutout, despite<lb/>
the touchdown that was called back. I'm<lb/>
both humble and elated that we put things<lb/>
together the way we did and won<lb/>
Randolph, who played another great<lb/>
game at linebacker, said Coach Dye had<lb/>
cautioned the team about the Citadel's<lb/>
strength and credited a closer team unity<lb/>
for the win.<lb/>
"It was a real physical game, like Coach<lb/>
Dye had told us it would be. This is the<lb/>
first time we've really played together as a<lb/>
team and that makes it an even bigger win<lb/>
for us<lb/>
Bolt admitted the Pirates had done<lb/>
some soul-searching during the week.<lb/>
"We got together during the week and<lb/>
decided we had to play as a team to win.<lb/>
We did a lot of things wrong at first, but we<lb/>
played as a team tonight<lb/>
And it looked like a team in Charleston<lb/>
Saturday night. Upwards of two and three<lb/>
guys were generally making the plays on<lb/>
defense, with Godette, despite a mild<lb/>
injury suffered in the game, and Valentine<lb/>
usually leading the way.<lb/>
Although the score read only 3-0, the<lb/>
Pirates' win may have been much bigger<lb/>
than the score indicated, considering the<lb/>
cc�d tfctOtvt Sfofc<lb/>
1<lb/>
Vi Price Sale<lb/>
on all HERNANDIS and GARCIA guitars<lb/>
case<lb/>
incl.<lb/>
Georgetowne<lb/>
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Hours: 11:00 6:00 Mon Sat<lb/>
circumstances, the team played and tne<lb/>
surroundings.<lb/>
"I am doubly proud of our team that we<lb/>
won down here said Dye. "It's always<lb/>
rough to win on the road, but playing<lb/>
before the cadets down here made it ever<lb/>
rougher. I'm really proud of the team<lb/>
This weekend East Carolina returns t<lb/>
friendlier confines when it meets Westei<lb/>
Carolina in a Homecoming clash as 1:30 i<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Woman,<lb/>
Continued from page 27.<lb/>
The loss leveled the ECU team record<lb/>
to 1-1, with their next match today, at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The women's volleyball team lost to<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington 15-11, 17-19 and 7-15.<lb/>
The Pirates were handicapped from the<lb/>
onset by the absence of one of its starters,<lb/>
Gail Chamblee. The loss lowered the ECU<lb/>
record to 3-2 for the season.<lb/>
The Pirates' next match is against<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill and Chowan College,<lb/>
October 16 at 6:00 in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The women's swim team produced the<lb/>
only other victory for East Carolina that<lb/>
being a 74-34 victory over Meredith College<lb/>
last Wednesday.<lb/>
The Pirates won eight out of ten<lb/>
individual events. Clair Albrittan, who won<lb/>
the 100-yard freestyle, the 100-yard<lb/>
individual medley, and the 100-backstroke,<lb/>
was a standout for ECU also participating<lb/>
in the 200-yard medley relay team victory.<lb/>
She was joined by Beverly Osborn who<lb/>
won int he 50-yard backstroke, 50-yard<lb/>
butterfly, and the 100 butterfly.<lb/>
The Pirates host N.C. State on October<lb/>
17, here at Minges pool.<lb/>
Paul<lb/>
Continued from page 27.<lb/>
"The team is together more this yea<lb/>
than it was last year and the players have<lb/>
lot more respect for the coaches and coacl<lb/>
Dye than last year.<lb/>
"He has a different approach in hi:<lb/>
pre-game talks now, not so much jus<lb/>
winning, but winning for the school<lb/>
ourselves and our families.<lb/>
"Last year the coaches treated us witI<lb/>
little respect, but this year they treat uj<lb/>
more like men and equals. When you knov<lb/>
you've been treated right it's easier tc<lb/>
play<lb/>
Now that Pete Conaty has been put oul<lb/>
for the season, Paul will have anothei<lb/>
chore to handle on the ECU team. He wil<lb/>
now have to take Conaty's place kickinc<lb/>
extra points and on field goal attempts. Ir<lb/>
his first varsity kick last week against the<lb/>
Citadel, Paul was short on a 33-yard kick.<lb/>
Whether it's handling kickoffs, place<lb/>
kicks or playing linebacker, Paul is<lb/>
definite asset to the ECU squad.<lb/>
<lb/>
 ;�: ss's'sssssss<lb/>
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tNin<lb/>
rinks<lb/>
formerly<lb/>
the Ice House<lb/>
recreation<lb/>
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ECU NIGHT<lb/>
AT<lb/>
�����<lb/>
TWIN RINKS RECREATION CENTER<lb/>
Wed. night 6:30 - 11:00 pm<lb/>
4 Hours of Ice Skating for only1.50<lb/>
Now Celebrating Grand Opening of<lb/>
Our Roller Skating Rink<lb/>
Reminder: Anytime it Snows during the year -<lb/>
day or night free skating for all ECU Students<lb/>
Rental 75'<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
� iKinpiiinw ji win i mi miim i hi � ii mniiu<lb/>
29<lb/>
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anyone!<lb/>
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ley treat u;<lb/>
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ive anothei<lb/>
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30<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 75<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
W��<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
FBI harassment of campus radicals uncovered<lb/>
By ALAN RABINOWITZ<lb/>
(CPS)-No one is surprised anymore by<lb/>
reports of domestic surveillance by the<lb/>
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). But<lb/>
spying and harassment of campus radicals<lb/>
and radical organizations was practiced on<lb/>
a massive, systematic level, documents<lb/>
recently made public reveal.<lb/>
Documents obtained independently by<lb/>
Senator Frank Church (D-ID), the Young<lb/>
Socialist Alliance (YSA), the Socialist<lb/>
Workers Party (SWP) and various<lb/>
individuals who made use of the Freedom<lb/>
of Information Act, show that the FBI set<lb/>
up phony college newspapers, sent<lb/>
anonymous, derogatory letters to parents<lb/>
and professors, personally intimidated<lb/>
members of certain student groups and<lb/>
kept tabs on black student organizations,<lb/>
.n addition, documents obtained by<lb/>
College Press Service show extensive<lb/>
surveillance of the news service.<lb/>
Church, chairman of the Senate<lb/>
ntelligence Committee, learned that in<lb/>
1970 J. Edgar Hoover, then director of the<lb/>
rBI. ordered increased surveillance of<lb/>
adical campus groups and expanded use<lb/>
)f FBI informants.<lb/>
Hoover concentrated the increased<lb/>
Surveillance on black radical groups,<lb/>
Charles Brennan, former chief of the FBI<lb/>
Domestic Intelligence Division said in<lb/>
testimony given to Church's committee.<lb/>
According to Brennan, a 1970 memo by<lb/>
Hoover stated that "every black student<lb/>
union or group, regardless of their past or<lb/>
present involvement in disorders, should<lb/>
be the subject of a discreet inquiry to<lb/>
establish the background of its key<lb/>
activities<lb/>
But blacks were not alone. FBI files<lb/>
made public under the Freedom of<lb/>
Information Act show that the FBI<lb/>
operated several counter-intelligence<lb/>
programs, or Cointelpros, divided into<lb/>
different categories: "New Left "White<lb/>
Hate Groups "Communist Party, USA<lb/>
"Black Extremists" and "Socialist Workers<lb/>
Party<lb/>
Documents obtained by the Socialist<lb/>
Workers Party and the Young Socialist<lb/>
Alliance in connection with a suit they<lb/>
have filed against the Justice Department,<lb/>
show that th� FBI engaged in a wide<lb/>
variety of spying and harassment<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
The files show that the FBI:<lb/>
-Sent a derogatory, anonymous letter<lb/>
to officials with the approval of J. Edgar<lb/>
Hoover, designed to encourage the<lb/>
dismissal of an Arizona State University<lb/>
professor who had taken prt in anti-war<lb/>
activities and was a member of YSA and<lb/>
SWP.<lb/>
-Ran bogus college newspapers at<lb/>
American University and Indiana Univer-<lb/>
sity. The papers contained such wisdom<lb/>
as "war can only be abolished through<lb/>
war and attacked the "New Left Hippie<lb/>
Breed<lb/>
-Tried to have YSA chapters removed<lb/>
from the campuses of the University of<lb/>
Houston and the University of California at<lb/>
Los Angeles. At the University of Houston,<lb/>
the FBI was disturbed that the YSA had<lb/>
"free and continual access to meeting<lb/>
rooms i campus and the privilege of<lb/>
passing out their papers and literature<lb/>
among the students<lb/>
The suit filed by YSA and SWP calls for<lb/>
a federal injunction against further<lb/>
surveillance and claims damages of $27<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Further evidence that the FBI<lb/>
accelerated campus and campus-related<lb/>
surveillance is provided by files obtained<lb/>
by the College Press Service under the<lb/>
Freedom of Information Act. The files<lb/>
show that CP3 fell under the watchful eye<lb/>
of the FBI from 1970 to 1973. During the<lb/>
heaviest period of surveillance-1971 and<lb/>
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a<lb/>
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1972-the FBI monitored CPS releases,<lb/>
conducted periodic visits to the CPS home<lb/>
office in Denver, investigated CPA<lb/>
affiliates around the country and filed<lb/>
reports on the life-styles of members of<lb/>
the CPS collective.<lb/>
In one section of the 157-page report,<lb/>
the FBI was conaerned with "connection<lb/>
with New Left organizations, propensity<lb/>
for violence, whether any individuals<lb/>
reside in communal type existence and the<lb/>
extent of any foreign or domestic<lb/>
subversion All the details in this<lb/>
section were deleted. CPS is appealing<lb/>
several of the deletions.<lb/>
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Jf OPEN 24H0URS5p?<lb/>
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32<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1014 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m m i i m i i n iHiimi<lb/>
wm<lb/>
m<lb/>
news<lb/>
Buccaneer<lb/>
The 1975 BUCCANEERS will be<lb/>
distributed Oct. 15-16 in the Publications<lb/>
Center. All 1974-75 full-time students may<lb/>
pick up a copy by presenting both an ID<lb/>
and activity card at the BUCCANEER office<lb/>
from 9 to 4 during these days. All<lb/>
graduates should receive their copies in<lb/>
the mail within the next two weeks. Any<lb/>
student who was enrolled for less than<lb/>
three quarters last year should come by the<lb/>
office after Homecoming with $3 for each<lb/>
quarter not enrolled.<lb/>
Pets available<lb/>
The dogs available this week include a<lb/>
female Wire Haired Terrior, six mixed<lb/>
breeds, and a black mixed Labrador<lb/>
Retriever. The Animal Control Center on<lb/>
2nd St. can be visited at any time.<lb/>
Screening comm.<lb/>
The SGA Screening Committee will<lb/>
hold screenings Wednesday, Oct. 15, at 4<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall room 239 for openings<lb/>
in White and Fletcher.<lb/>
Pub Board<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Pub<lb/>
Board Monday, Oct. 20 at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
Buc office. The purpose of this meeting is<lb/>
to hear bids for the Buc printing contract.<lb/>
All members are urged to attend.<lb/>
ACEI meeting<lb/>
There will be an ACEI meeting,<lb/>
Tuesday, October 14 at 7:30, in room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. There will be a<lb/>
program on learning disabilities. Anyone<lb/>
interested in children is encouraged to<lb/>
attend.<lb/>
Happy hour<lb/>
A happy hour will be held at the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma house (located beside Darryl's)<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 16, at 4 p.m. until.<lb/>
NTE<lb/>
The last day to register for the<lb/>
November8 National Teacher Examination<lb/>
without penalty is October 16. Students<lb/>
are advised to mail applications prior to<lb/>
his date. The next date for the NTE is<lb/>
February 21, 1975. Students may pick up<lb/>
applications from Room 204 Speight<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
FIASHFLASHFLASWFLASH<lb/>
Jenkins art show Pep rally<lb/>
Rec. society<lb/>
A reception for the Leo W. Jenkins art<lb/>
exhibition will be held Oct. 16, 1975 at<lb/>
8:00 in the multipurpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
Everyone is invited.<lb/>
Law society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will hold a<lb/>
meeting Thursday, Oct. 9 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster B-102. Phil Dixon, alumnae of<lb/>
ECU law society who is currently<lb/>
practicing in the Greenville area will be the<lb/>
speaker. Membership dues of $4.00 will be<lb/>
taken. Anyone interested in pursuing a<lb/>
career involving any facet of law is<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
Newman club<lb/>
There will be a Newman Club meeting<lb/>
this Wednesday, Oct. 15 at 5:00 in room<lb/>
221 Mendenhall following Catholic Mass.<lb/>
You may attend either or both of the<lb/>
meetings.<lb/>
Rho Epsilon<lb/>
Rho Epsilon will meet Thursday, Oct.<lb/>
16, room 108 in Rawl Building, at 4:00.<lb/>
Guest speaker Freddir Morton will speak<lb/>
on "Setting up Real Estate Business AH<lb/>
members are urged to attend.<lb/>
Protein shortage<lb/>
"The World Protein Shortage" is the<lb/>
scheduled topic of an address at ECU<lb/>
October 16 by nationally known<lb/>
microbiologist Gerald H. Elkan.<lb/>
Dr. Elkan is a member of the N.C. State<lb/>
University faculty. His ECU appearance,<lb/>
arranged by the ECU chapter of Sigma Xi<lb/>
honor society in science, is scheduled for<lb/>
8 p.m. in the Biology Auditorium and is<lb/>
free and open to the public.<lb/>
An active researcher in the field of<lb/>
microbiology, Dr. Elkan has published<lb/>
widely in both scientific journals and<lb/>
general interest magazines on such topics<lb/>
as waste uses and disposal, food<lb/>
resources, and proteins.<lb/>
His lecture is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Sigma Xi chapter and the National Science<lb/>
Foundation's Bicentennial Program on<lb/>
Science and Society.<lb/>
Baha'i assoc<lb/>
The regular meeting of the Baha'i<lb/>
Association will be held Wednesday<lb/>
evening at 7:30 in room 238 Mendenhall.<lb/>
There will be a general discussion of the<lb/>
Baha'i Faith, the newest of the world's<lb/>
religions. Anyone who is interested is<lb/>
welcome to attend.<lb/>
The ECU cheerleaders would like to<lb/>
encourage all students to come out and<lb/>
show their spirit at a pep rally Thursday<lb/>
evening at 7 o'clock in front of Belk.<lb/>
The pep rally will begin on the women's<lb/>
side of campus and continue to Belk where<lb/>
Pat Dye will speak, along with several of<lb/>
this year's football team members.<lb/>
Frisbees and footballs will be thrown to<lb/>
the audience.<lb/>
Hopefully this will be a good kickoff to<lb/>
the Homecoming weekend.<lb/>
Study skills<lb/>
There will be a meeting at 7:00 on<lb/>
October 21, in Flanagan 239. Dr. Weigand<lb/>
will speak about his study skills class.<lb/>
Please come especially if you are<lb/>
interested in this class.<lb/>
Education assoc.<lb/>
The Student National Education<lb/>
Association will meet Monday, Oct. 20, at<lb/>
7:30 in the multi-purpose room of<lb/>
Mendenhall. Mrs. Rachel Welborn and<lb/>
Rod Whitley from Bethel Elementary<lb/>
School will present a slide presentation on<lb/>
Career Education.<lb/>
Acct. society<lb/>
The Accounting Society will meet<lb/>
Monday, Oct. 20 at 5:30 in Rawl building.<lb/>
The guest speaker, Mr. H. Gleen Williams<lb/>
will speak on "Illegal Payments and<lb/>
Management Fraud<lb/>
9nsity<lb/>
tals<lb/>
The ECU Recreation Society mont'd the<lb/>
meeting will be held on Wednesdstic<lb/>
October 15, at 6:30 in the multi-purrx this<lb/>
room of Mendenhall. Officers will aling<lb/>
elected and a packing trip to Linv<lb/>
George will be discussed.<lb/>
Health careers<lb/>
Public health departments, hospita,<lb/>
clinics and other employers of health a<lb/>
delivery personnel are invited to seJ<lb/>
representatives to ECU Nov. 6 to intervii<lb/>
students who plan careers in the heaj<lb/>
care fields.<lb/>
Furney K. James, director of the E(<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement Servii<lb/>
said students of the various<lb/>
disciplines offered through the E(<lb/>
Schools of Nursinq, Home Economic<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Professions<lb/>
gather at the reserved interview area in tl<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Union to discuj<lb/>
employment possibilities with<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Past Health Career Days at ECU ha<lb/>
been successful for both prospectH<lb/>
employers and employees, he said.<lb/>
Among the interviewing represent,<lb/>
tives have been nursing supervisor;<lb/>
hospital and clinic staff chiefs, dietitian:<lb/>
medical records librarians, therapists an<lb/>
other health care management personnel<lb/>
Fcther information about Healt<lb/>
Career Day is available from James on th<lb/>
ECU campus. Agencies and hospital<lb/>
interested in sending representative<lb/>
should reserve space at his office by Ocl<lb/>
29.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
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