<?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>
<pb facs="00040000_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY VOL. 7, NO. 14<lb/>
GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA28 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
iii?i?h nmwim<lb/>
?Mm i'i uiwiiK iwm<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich died Friday<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich, who served as both an East Carolina football coach and East<lb/>
Carolina Athletic Director, died Friday of a heart attack in Greenville. He was 62.<lb/>
Known by his friends as merely "Stas" or "Coach St as Stasavich had served at<lb/>
East Carolina University since 1962. It was in 1962, that "Stas" came from Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne to East Carolina University to head up the football program for Chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins. , <lb/>
In 1963 Stasavich added the role of Athletic Director to the head coaching job. He<lb/>
retired as head coach of the football team in 1969, but continued to serve as Athletic<lb/>
Director until his death Friday afternoon.<lb/>
Of Stasavich's death, ECU Chancellor Jenkins remarked, "I am deeply distressed<lb/>
to learn of the death of Clarence Stasavich. He was a close personal friend, a valued<lb/>
associate and an outstanding teacher and administrator<lb/>
Stasavich had complained of chest pains Friday morning, but had gone to teach<lb/>
his Friday morning health class just the same. Following the class, Stasavich went<lb/>
home and called his physician, then was driven to Pitt Memorial Hospital where he<lb/>
died a short time later<lb/>
Clifton Moore the athletic faculty chairman at ECU, expressed the personal<lb/>
feelings of many when he said, "We did not always agree, but whatever h.s feelings<lb/>
were you knew they were from the heart. The likes of Stas do not come our way<lb/>
often. ECU, its alumni and especially its student athletes, past and present, have lost<lb/>
a dear friend<lb/>
STARTED COACHING AT LENOIR RHYNE<lb/>
Before coming to East Carolina, Stasavich had coached for 16 years at Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne College in Hickory, N.C. At Lenoir Rhyne he built up one of the most<lb/>
impressive coaching records in football history, winning 120 and losing only 37<lb/>
games, with eight ties.<lb/>
He led the NAIA team to nine Carolinas Conference championships and the NAIA<lb/>
National championship in 1960. It was that 1960 season, when Lenoir Rhyne went<lb/>
undefeated, that Stasavich used to recall as his "greatest thrill in coaching<lb/>
While at Lenoir Rhyne, Stasavich was named National Coach of the Year in 1959<lb/>
and won the Carolinas Conference in 1951 and 1952, as well as consecutive titles<lb/>
from 1955 to 1961.<lb/>
BEGINNING OF AN ERA AT ECU<lb/>
When he came to East Carolina in 1962, it was the beginning of a new era.<lb/>
Although university officials had already made a decision to upgrade the school s<lb/>
athletic program, a dynamic personality was needed as football coach. That man was<lb/>
His first year at ECU, the Pirates were only 5-4, but over the next three years his<lb/>
teams compiled 9-1 records and were winning participants in three bowl games; the<lb/>
Eastern Bowl in 1963 and the Tangerine Bowl in 1964 and 1965.<lb/>
In 1964, the American Football Writers Association named Stasavich small college<lb/>
coach of the year. <lb/>
Stasavich coached for eight years before he gave up the reigns to work full time as<lb/>
Athletic Director. His final coaching record at ECU was 50-27-1. His ECU record gave<lb/>
him a combined record of 170-64-8 over 24 years of coaching.<lb/>
STAS AS ATHLETIC DIRECTOR<lb/>
But apart from his coaching career, and more important perhaps, was Stasavich's<lb/>
13 years as Athletic Director at East Carolina.<lb/>
During that time, all of the Pirates' major sports facilities were constructed,<lb/>
included Ficklen Stadium, Minges Coliseum and Harrington Field, but the Pirates not<lb/>
only gained admittance to the Southern Conference, but in 1965 were recognized a a<lb/>
major college school by the NCAA.<lb/>
Stasavich as an Athletic Director operated one of the tightest ships and became<lb/>
known as an extremely tight budgeter. At times he was referred to as a "penny<lb/>
P'nSaid Jenkins, "In recent years when many colleges have felt the pinch of red ink<lb/>
on their athletic budgets, Stas operated the East Carolina program in the black. He<lb/>
came here and took our program to a level that is not only one of the better ones in<lb/>
this state but also potentially one of the best situations in the South. His tenure at<lb/>
East Carolina since 1962 brought us an era of unprecedented growth in all our athletic<lb/>
Stasavich was to be buried this morning in Rosewood Memorial Cemetary, with<lb/>
services to begin at 11 o'clock at the First Presbyterian Church in Greenville.<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich, 1913-1975.<lb/>
Nothing could be finer,<lb/>
ECU routs Carolina,38-l7<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Just a day after the death of its great Athletic Director, Clarence Stasavich, East<lb/>
Carolina University made more news on the national scene by upsetting nationally-<lb/>
known University of North Carolina, 38-17, on the Tar Heels' home field.<lb/>
The master artisan behind the win was Pirate quarterback Mike Weaver. After the<lb/>
game Weaver said that Stasavich's death had some effect on the team's play.<lb/>
"We picked ourselves up and played this one for him said Weaver. "It was a<lb/>
feeling of, well like 'winning one for the Gipper I guess<lb/>
And ECU coach Pat Dye also dedicated the game partly to Stasavich.<lb/>
"You've got to give a lot of credit for this win to the man who passed away<lb/>
yesterday said Dye. "He had so much to do with us being able to reach this point.<lb/>
It's just a shame that he wasn't here to see it<lb/>
There is no doubt, either, that if "Stas" had been alive he would have seen the<lb/>
same outcome. The score may have read differently, but the winning team would have<lb/>
been the same. The victory was just that solid and convincing.<lb/>
Dye, himself, had said he had felt the win as early as the beginning of the week,<lb/>
but that on Friday night the feeling had really hit home.<lb/>
"I guess I just had a premonition said Dye after the game in the hectic Pirate<lb/>
dressing room. "Last night when I sent the managers out to buy boxes of cigars for<lb/>
the playersI had made up my mind that we were going to win and the whole dream<lb/>
came through<lb/>
Dale Carnegie would have been proud of coach Dye and the Pirates Saturday, but<lb/>
it is doubtful if he would have been as proud as the over 5,000 ECU fans that followed<lb/>
the team to Chapel Hill for the game.<lb/>
In the words of one fan, "We won a lot more than a football game today. We also<lb/>
won respect, power and prestige from the people at Carolina. We have finally made<lb/>
up for all these years of hearing nothing but Carolina<lb/>
That was only part of the feeling at Chapel Hill Saturday. The rest of the feeling,<lb/>
well, you would have had to have been there to feel it.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
MMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7,<lb/>
NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ifc Treffert speaks<lb/>
Mental health<lb/>
t ?<lb/>
inference held<lb/>
By JOHN DAYBERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Someone, often someone young, kills<lb/>
himself in the United States every twenty<lb/>
minutes, according to Dr. Donald A.<lb/>
Treffert, director of the Winnebago<lb/>
Mental Health Institute, in Winnebago,<lb/>
Wisconsin.<lb/>
"Suicides, drug use, and divorce are<lb/>
often reactions to something I call the<lb/>
American Fairy Tale said Treffert,<lb/>
speaking at the ECU Allied Health<lb/>
building on October 22.<lb/>
The American Fairy Tale is a story<lb/>
Treffort formulated when a fifteen year<lb/>
old patient of his killed herself after<lb/>
making the first "B" of her school career.<lb/>
"The people in the story, who are like<lb/>
many of us, place ultimate importance on<lb/>
the things which they, and others do,<lb/>
Blood drive<lb/>
breaks<lb/>
record<lb/>
By KENT JOHNSON<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
More people gave blood during the<lb/>
recent ECU blood drive than anywhere in<lb/>
Pitt County since World War II, according<lb/>
to Lt. Col. Ronald Henderson,<lb/>
department chairman for ROTC and<lb/>
faculty supervisor for the project.<lb/>
If you gave blood last week, and if<lb/>
you are like this reporter you probably<lb/>
had a tense moment just before entering<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. But the nurses and<lb/>
volunteers could not have been kinder,<lb/>
and it seemed everyone there had<lb/>
something in common. One girl was<lb/>
overheard to whisper, "Why the hell am I<lb/>
doing this?" Whether it was prodding<lb/>
from her sorority or a genuine personal<lb/>
sacrifice that made her do it, she is most<lb/>
likely not sorry.<lb/>
This blood drive was sponsored by Air<lb/>
Force ROTC Detachment 600, and was<lb/>
helped bv the Inter-Fraternity Council.<lb/>
"AFROTC had begun planning when<lb/>
the IFC got on board said Colonel<lb/>
Henderson. "We couldn't have gotten<lb/>
such a turnout without them. Most of all<lb/>
we want to thank the students that<lb/>
donated<lb/>
Mrs. Ruth Taylor, Exec. Sec. directed<lb/>
the drive for the Red Cross.<lb/>
"We want to thank ECU for the use of<lb/>
the facilities Ld the wonderful<lb/>
cooperation said Mrs. Taylor. "Of<lb/>
course it is the students who made the<lb/>
drive a success. We hope we will get as<lb/>
good a turnout when we come back next<lb/>
spring<lb/>
Fraternities and sororities volunteered<lb/>
to help with bookkeeping and enlisting<lb/>
donors. Sororities brought sandwiches<lb/>
for donors. Angel Flight, an AFROTC<lb/>
associated sorority was also instrumental<lb/>
in help with and planning the drive.<lb/>
See Blood, page 11.<lb/>
and have said Treffert.<lb/>
"This is tragic, because if these<lb/>
things are taken away from the people,<lb/>
they feel they have nothing, and are<lb/>
therefore worthless.<lb/>
"If people placed ultimate importance<lb/>
on that inner core of himself, and others,<lb/>
that part which makes us all unique, and<lb/>
human, then there would be no need to<lb/>
ever feel worthless<lb/>
Treffert also includes as a part of the<lb/>
American Fairy Tale an unwillingness to<lb/>
accept the individuality of oneself, and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
"There is no reason for everyone to<lb/>
think, feel, or act alike-it is not human<lb/>
nature said Treffert.<lb/>
"Even within a small unit like the<lb/>
family, there is plenty of room for all<lb/>
different kinds of personalities.<lb/>
"Maybe these differing personalities<lb/>
cannot always agree with one another,<lb/>
but if they try they can learn to respect,<lb/>
and even to love the individuality of one<lb/>
another<lb/>
Another aspect of the American Fairy<lb/>
Tale is the myth that mental health is the<lb/>
absence of problems, according to<lb/>
Treffert.<lb/>
"Mental health is instead the ability<lb/>
to cope with our problems said Treffert.<lb/>
"We have taught ourselves that it is<lb/>
unamerican to be bored, frustrated,<lb/>
lonely, or depressed.<lb/>
"Instead of resenting these feelings,<lb/>
which are a part of life, we have to learn<lb/>
to ride them out, and to cope with them.<lb/>
"Good feelings cannot always be<lb/>
rushing at us, and streaming through our<lb/>
bodies, and neither can excitement.<lb/>
"We have to tune in to the subtle<lb/>
ripples of feelings which are available to<lb/>
us everyday, and learn to enjoy them<lb/>
THE BLOODMOBILE was on campus this week seeking blood donors. This student is<lb/>
having his blood checked prior to giving blood.<lb/>
SGA approves NCSL budget<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU Student Government,<lb/>
Monday even approved a budget of<lb/>
$3,474.80 for the ECU delegation of the<lb/>
North Carolina Student Legislature.<lb/>
The monthly interim council meeting<lb/>
of the NCSL met here at ECU on Sunday,<lb/>
with more than 100 students attending.<lb/>
"It was one of the most productive<lb/>
meetings the NCSL has had said Steve<lb/>
Nobles, ECU felegation chairperson. "The<lb/>
workshops and standing committee<lb/>
meetings got a lot accomplished<lb/>
"A lot of important business on<lb/>
education, prison reform, and other areas<lb/>
was introduced. Some important events<lb/>
will be happening in the NCSL pretty<lb/>
soon. The ECU delegation is playing an<lb/>
important part.<lb/>
"One of the major items introduced<lb/>
was a resolution suggesting that the<lb/>
wmmmwmmwmwmmm<lb/>
North Carolina General Assembly meet<lb/>
earlier next year to consider some of the<lb/>
pressing problems such as malpractice<lb/>
insurance and auto insurance which is<lb/>
currently concerning most North Car-<lb/>
olinians said Nobles.<lb/>
The majority of the NCSL budget is<lb/>
devoted to expenses needed by the<lb/>
students' delegation when it attends tyhe<lb/>
annual state convention in Raleigh in<lb/>
March.<lb/>
The SGA legislature also passed a bill<lb/>
providing $680 for a student body opinion<lb/>
survey.<lb/>
Michael Cunningham introduced the<lb/>
bill which will give the SGA a rudder to<lb/>
know the students' views, he said. Dr.<lb/>
Young-dahl Song of the ECU Political<lb/>
Science Department will conduct and<lb/>
oversee the operation.<lb/>
Also funds for a Political Science<lb/>
See SGA, page 6.<lb/>
?i mm m ? MnMimnnwwu m<lb/>
What everyone wants most is a<lb/>
meaningful life, according to Treffert.<lb/>
Instead of placing ultimate impor-<lb/>
tance on things, trying to conform<lb/>
ourselves, and others to some desired<lb/>
image, and believing in the possibility of<lb/>
a trouble free life, which the people in<lb/>
the story do, Treffert's advice is to seek a<lb/>
meaningful life in another manner.<lb/>
"A meaningful life includes a<lb/>
structure in life, hope for the future, a<lb/>
life made through one's own efforts, and<lb/>
a sense of belonging to something bigper<lb/>
than oneself said Treffert.<lb/>
"But most of all, there must be warm<lb/>
human contact, a relationship in which<lb/>
one is free to be honest, spontaneous,<lb/>
and freely oneself.<lb/>
"If you have someone in your life who<lb/>
can know the worst thing about you, and<lb/>
still say 'that's okay then you have got<lb/>
everything<lb/>
Health care<lb/>
planned for<lb/>
eastern N.C.<lb/>
JIM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Consumer advocate Lillian Woo was<lb/>
at ECU Thursday to meet with William C.<lb/>
Byrd, associate dean of the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and the director of the<lb/>
Office of Community Health Services.<lb/>
Woo was in eastern North Carolina to<lb/>
evaluate the efforts of local government<lb/>
and civic leaders who are in the process<lb/>
of establishing a cooperative health care<lb/>
system in the Aurora-Vanceboro areas of<lb/>
Beaufort, Craven, and Pamlico Counties.<lb/>
A former member of the N.C. State Milk<lb/>
and Utilities Commissions, Ms. Woo<lb/>
represents the Consumer Center, a<lb/>
citizens organization which is studying<lb/>
similar cooperative health care systems<lb/>
throuqhout the state.<lb/>
"We would like to look at the deficit<lb/>
in hospital and health care systems in<lb/>
this part of the state, evaluate it, and<lb/>
come up with a set of recommendations.<lb/>
"It will be a long range project<lb/>
Backers of the health care cooperative<lb/>
Aurora are currently organizing a fund<lb/>
ti. sing drive.<lb/>
The ECU Office of Allied Health has<lb/>
provided technical assistance to the<lb/>
Aurora project by determining its<lb/>
eligibility for grants, helping the co-op<lb/>
apply for various licensed, and generally<lb/>
assisting them in cutting through a lot of<lb/>
the red tape involved in an effort such as<lb/>
this, according to Byrd.<lb/>
"This is a terrific project, the<lb/>
associate dean said.<lb/>
"Because there has been a tendencyin<lb/>
history for sparsely populated rural<lb/>
communities to havedifficultiesattracting<lb/>
health care practitioners, the question is<lb/>
how to make the small community<lb/>
attractive to them.<lb/>
"The attractive features to a health<lb/>
care co-op are that the practitioner does<lb/>
not have to be concerned with the<lb/>
volume of administrative work as in a<lb/>
private practice. This is the reason why<lb/>
many physicians are incorporating<lb/>
mmwmmmmmttmmimmmmmmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0003"/><lb/>
????IBiHHIHnHninBMlHnBHMMHHMflNHHIIHBHHIBMMHiBHnMHVHIHHMMnBHMiHHiMHI<lb/>
????????????????1<lb/>
!<lb/>
Kst is a<lb/>
rreffert.<lb/>
ate impor-<lb/>
) conform<lb/>
ne desired<lb/>
ssibility of<lb/>
people in<lb/>
s to seek a<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
eludes a<lb/>
i future, a<lb/>
fforts, and<lb/>
ling bigcier<lb/>
t be warm<lb/>
in which<lb/>
ntaneous,<lb/>
ir life who<lb/>
t you, and<lb/>
have got<lb/>
Woo was<lb/>
William C.<lb/>
School of<lb/>
r of the<lb/>
rvices.<lb/>
arolina to<lb/>
)vernment<lb/>
e process<lb/>
salth care<lb/>
o areas of<lb/>
bounties.<lb/>
State Milk<lb/>
rfs. Woo<lb/>
Center, a<lb/>
studying<lb/>
systems<lb/>
he deficit<lb/>
stems in<lb/>
3 it, and<lb/>
ndations.<lb/>
ct<lb/>
?operative<lb/>
ig a fund<lb/>
aalth has<lb/>
to the<lb/>
ling its<lb/>
1e co-op<lb/>
generally<lb/>
i a lot of<lb/>
such as<lb/>
ct, the<lb/>
ndencyin<lb/>
;d rural<lb/>
ittracting<lb/>
estion is<lb/>
mmunity<lb/>
a health<lb/>
ier does<lb/>
itrv the<lb/>
as in a<lb/>
son why<lb/>
9-<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
IftlUfflllltllllWUllUHWllll<lb/>
7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mMmm0mmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
3<lb/>
m<lb/>
Bicentennial musical opens today<lb/>
By TERRY DANIELS<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse bi-<lb/>
centennial season opens Oct. 28th with<lb/>
the world premier of "The Flight<lb/>
Brothers a musical by Bill Ries, Hub<lb/>
Owens, and Frank McNulty.<lb/>
The plot is based on the first airplane<lb/>
flight of the Wright Brothers. It's a story<lb/>
of how Orville and Wilbur Wright moved<lb/>
through crisis and accomplishments to<lb/>
the development of the airplane. The<lb/>
music is typical of small towns and<lb/>
includes big production numbers,<lb/>
dances, comic songs and ballads.<lb/>
The play is directed by Edgar Loessin,<lb/>
chairman of the ECU Drama department,<lb/>
and choreographed by Mavis Ray, Drama<lb/>
instructor of dance at ECU.<lb/>
The script was written two years ago<lb/>
for production at Kitty Hawk, N.C in a<lb/>
specially built theater. Progress slowed<lb/>
because of a lack of funds, according to<lb/>
Loessin. The authors wanted to do a trial<lb/>
production at ECU before opening at<lb/>
Kitty Hawk.<lb/>
"Doing the play first at ECU would<lb/>
help open job opportunities at Kitty<lb/>
Hawk for students said Loessin.<lb/>
Actors, singers and dancers make up<lb/>
the cast of 35 persons. According to<lb/>
Loessin, it's a technically difficult show<lb/>
with props including airplanes, bicycles<lb/>
and large pieces of scenery. However,<lb/>
there are no technical problems so large<lb/>
that the Playhouse would not be able to<lb/>
handle them, according to Loessin.<lb/>
"Flying scenery is used for a variety<lb/>
of the set changes, but a problem with<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium is the stage is<lb/>
shallow so the number of pieces is<lb/>
limited said John Boit, the set<lb/>
CMfU<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Continued from page 2.<lb/>
departmental retreat were made available<lb/>
by the SGA. The bill, introduced by Allen<lb/>
McCrae, gives $289.60 to the department<lb/>
for a retreat, November 2 and 3 in<lb/>
Atlantic Beach, North Carolina. At least<lb/>
30 students have signed up to attend the<lb/>
retreat.<lb/>
In other business, a drama budget of<lb/>
$16,900 introduced by Ron Rayne was<lb/>
passed by the legislature.<lb/>
The campus radio station, WECU (57<lb/>
AM), which was supported by approxi-<lb/>
mately 20 of its disc jockeys attending<lb/>
the SGA meeting, saw its budget sent<lb/>
back to committee.<lb/>
WECU is asking for $22,087.00. Most<lb/>
of this amount will compensate the disc<lb/>
jockeys for their air time, according to<lb/>
WECU's general manager Eric Sieurin.<lb/>
Presently only members of the<lb/>
executive of WECU are being paid for<lb/>
their work. Even that pay is minimal,<lb/>
according to Sieurin.With salaries for the<lb/>
disk jockeys WECU can become more<lb/>
professional sounding and more available<lb/>
to the students.<lb/>
In new business, Lu Ann Massey and<lb/>
Lee Ann Flanagan were sworn in as<lb/>
legislators.<lb/>
Speakers of the legislature delayed<lb/>
swearing in a graduate student for<lb/>
graduate school president until the SGA<lb/>
Attorney General rules on the constitu-<lb/>
tionality of this action.<lb/>
Larry Chesson, SGA treasurer,<lb/>
announced that the SGA treasury<lb/>
contained $172,326.97 prior to the<lb/>
October 27 meeting.<lb/>
Mike Taylor, editor of the Fountain-<lb/>
head received $500 for a trip to the<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press Convention<lb/>
in St. Louis, Missouri, in November.<lb/>
Also, emergency funds were appropri-<lb/>
ated for Fountainhead staffers.<lb/>
designer.<lb/>
According to Boit, two turntables are<lb/>
used to change the two main sets, and<lb/>
slide projections are used during the<lb/>
play, taken from drawings of the first<lb/>
conception of flying machines.<lb/>
The show is scheduled to run daily<lb/>
from Oct. 28 through Nov. 1 with<lb/>
performances in McGinnis Auditorium at<lb/>
8:15 p.m. ECU students are admitted<lb/>
free. The general public and faculty<lb/>
admission is $3.<lb/>
Other Playhouse productions for the<lb/>
season include "Who's Happy Now a<lb/>
modern comedy by Oliver Hailey; "The<lb/>
Rimers of Eldritch by Lanford Wilson;<lb/>
"The Contrast an early American<lb/>
version of comedy of manners written in<lb/>
1778 by Royal Tyler; and "La Traviata a<lb/>
romantic opera by Giuseppe Verdi.<lb/>
RESEARCH<lb/>
Thousands of Topics<lb/>
Send for your up-to-date. 160-<lb/>
page, mail order catalog. Enclose<lb/>
$1.00 to cover postage and<lb/>
handling.<lb/>
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. INC.<lb/>
11322 IDAHO AVE 206<lb/>
LOS ANGELES. CALIF. 90025<lb/>
(213) 477-8474<lb/>
Our research papers are sold for<lb/>
research purposes only.<lb/>
UNIVERSITY EXXON<lb/>
1101 E. 5TH ST GREENVILLE, NC.<lb/>
752-9958<lb/>
VW Specialist<lb/>
Atlas tires and batteries<lb/>
Road service<lb/>
SPECIALS!<lb/>
Tuesday Wednesday Thursday<lb/>
4 PM to 6 PM<lb/>
? Fried Chicken ? Fresh Fish i<lb/>
? Chicken Pastry ? Other Special<lb/>
Includes Vegetables and Tea<lb/>
Also Serving Beer, Wine, &amp; Set-ups<lb/>
( With Meals)<lb/>
Banquet and Party<lb/>
Facilities Available<lb/>
RIVERSIDE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
710 N. Greene St.<lb/>
Phone 752-2624<lb/>
RIVERSIDE<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
BARB-Q<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0004"/><lb/>
?v RfiK! ? -f ?<lb/>
4<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
EditorialsCommentary<lb/>
Stas-A fine gentleman<lb/>
Six weeks ago, during an interview with an area sportswriter,<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Clarence Stasavich explained how before<lb/>
he came to this university he was offered a similar post with a<lb/>
bigger institution that was also a member of the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
"In the long run I thought this would be the best job. It<lb/>
offered a challenge and I saw a lot of room for growth<lb/>
Stasavich told the writer.<lb/>
"The other position would have been a good one, but I have<lb/>
never regretted passing it by and taking the job here in<lb/>
Greenville Stasavich continued.<lb/>
In the wake of Stasavich's sudden death last Friday, it is<lb/>
safe to say that the university and this community are both glad<lb/>
that the former Lenoir Rhyne football coach choose Greenville.<lb/>
"or no one can dispute the fact that during his tenure here<lb/>
the son of a coal miner brought the ECU athletic department up<lb/>
from the depths of a hapless small college to major college<lb/>
status.<lb/>
The athletic facilities themselves are worlds better. The<lb/>
athletic schedules are vastly improved. The fact that three ACC<lb/>
schools dot the football schedule this Fall attest to the distance<lb/>
that Coach Stas has moved the athletic program.<lb/>
His methods were termed old fashion, like the single-wing<lb/>
that he ran in football.<lb/>
But, there is nothing more fashionable than winning and that<lb/>
is what he did, both as a coach on the sidelines and then<lb/>
behind the AD's desk.<lb/>
The man directed ECU to its best three back-to-back football<lb/>
seasons ever and to three straight bowl games.<lb/>
Later, he stepped aside as coach and directed the ECU<lb/>
athletic department in its biggest expansion program ever.<lb/>
That was Stas the AD, the football coach.<lb/>
Professionally he was something of a giant in his field.<lb/>
And, as Stas the man he was just as big.<lb/>
Always one with a smile or a friendly word-and always with<lb/>
a story about some past experience.<lb/>
A day after his death, a former ECU football coach called<lb/>
Stas "a fine gentleman And that covers the subject.<lb/>
During that interview six weeks ago Stas explained how<lb/>
when he retired he planned to remain in Greenville.<lb/>
"Some people have asked me when I retire if I will go back to<lb/>
Hickory where I coached Stas noted.<lb/>
"No, I will stav here. Greenville is home to my wife and me<lb/>
Greenville and the university were his adopted home. But, for<lb/>
sure, he could not have done more for the university and the<lb/>
community.<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/>
Editor-in-Chief-Mike Taylor Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager-Sydney Green<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Jim Dodson<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/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
A big win for ECU<lb/>
"This is the biggest thing that ever happened to the<lb/>
university<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins said that after ECU beat North<lb/>
Carolina State in football in 1971.<lb/>
Well, Dr. Jenkins, we think we have to update that a little in<lb/>
light of Saturday's resounding victory over the University of<lb/>
North Carolinaor just plain old Carolina if you please.<lb/>
To be sure, a win over State was something to behold in<lb/>
1971.<lb/>
You have to remember though that State is still considered a<lb/>
farmers' college. MOO U, in many quarters. They supposedly<lb/>
picked the color red to match everyone's neck.<lb/>
But, not Carolina-the academic and cultural center of the<lb/>
entire western hemisphere, second only to the Big Apple.<lb/>
So, the win over Carolina has to be savored for some<lb/>
time1 ike for the next year.<lb/>
No doubt Pat Dye and his charges are already long on their<lb/>
way to preparing for this Saturday's foe. The UNC game is<lb/>
history, or at least that is what Dye is trying to tell his kids.<lb/>
They can't live with that game-they must play for the future.<lb/>
Coach Dye is new to the state. He has not been room and<lb/>
raised with the conception of one university in the state-only<lb/>
one Carolina.<lb/>
He has not been berated with the fact that they do<lb/>
everything better in Chapel Hill-everything.<lb/>
They are the only place to train MD's, lawyers, and offer<lb/>
doctoral programs.<lb/>
Athletically they are also superior-or at least that is the way<lb/>
the story goes.<lb/>
But, this past Saturday Dye and his gridders proved that the<lb/>
people from Mount Chapel Hill are only mortals-something they<lb/>
have denied for ages. You know, the old story about cut them<lb/>
and they bleed mortal, or hit them hard and they fumble the ball<lb/>
mortal, or run around their defensive end mortal, or back them<lb/>
up with your kicking game mortal, or just plain beat the hell out<lb/>
of them mortal.<lb/>
Saturday was just a super day for true ECU fans.<lb/>
piioin mi wi?n i 11 wmmt mmmmm i irnwtwi f mn ? i<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0005"/><lb/>
?????????iMlMHHHBVHHBBmmMUHBMiH<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
5<lb/>
I ii?iw iiii<lb/>
T<lb/>
heForum<lb/>
Homecoming story noted<lb/>
? 0<lb/>
t- t<lb/>
verage<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In reference to your article on the<lb/>
Homecoming Ceremonies, I personally<lb/>
feel that the Fountainhead did a poor job<lb/>
of informing the students and the public<lb/>
on the crowning of the queen. I fail to<lb/>
see how you and your staff could<lb/>
overlook the fact that for the first time in<lb/>
the history of East Carolina, a black<lb/>
queen was elected. I personally feel that<lb/>
more could have been written on the<lb/>
event. You fail to tell the readers<lb/>
anything about Miss Barnes. Do I detect<lb/>
a sign of discrimination? Never before<lb/>
have I seen a queen qalk down the field<lb/>
without an escort.<lb/>
I speak not for a club, a team or a<lb/>
Lack of story on queen noted<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I would like to say that I was really<lb/>
shocked when I saw Tuesday's edition of<lb/>
the Fountainhead Why? Because I<lb/>
looked on every page for an article on the<lb/>
Homecoming Queen and didn't fino one.<lb/>
Now I would like to ask, why? Why<lb/>
wasn't she interviewed or was that too<lb/>
great a burden for the reporters.<lb/>
It was truly a disgrace, to say the<lb/>
least. I mean, there it was, history in the<lb/>
making and not even a cover story. The<lb/>
Midnight<lb/>
serenaders not<lb/>
appreciated<lb/>
I wish to express mysincerethanks to<lb/>
the midnight and late serenaders of<lb/>
White Hall. On various nights, the rear<lb/>
side of White Hall is singled out by<lb/>
courteous gentlemen to be a target for<lb/>
letting off their frustrations and<lb/>
drunkenness in the colorful form of<lb/>
vulgarities and obscenities. The gentle<lb/>
men seem pleased with the ruckus they<lb/>
make when some are trying to sleep.<lb/>
Just last night at 12:35 a.m (Thursday,<lb/>
the 23rd of October) two male serenaders<lb/>
wanted to make new friends. When asked<lb/>
to leave, one pumptly yelled, "Go to<lb/>
Hell Their unnecessary rude language<lb/>
accompanied the remark. I guess this<lb/>
inconsideration is just a phase all boys<lb/>
go through to become a man.<lb/>
Debbie Rouse<lb/>
Resident of White Hall<lb/>
fact that she was the first black to win<lb/>
the title was enough in itself for an<lb/>
article. I realize that a lot of people may<lb/>
have been shocked that she won, but she<lb/>
won and deserves credit. Her picture on<lb/>
the front page and a small caption is<lb/>
really a lot since you wasted almost two<lb/>
pages on the cancellation of Ike and Tina<lb/>
Turner. If this is all the credit and<lb/>
recognition she gets, I would say 'to hell<lb/>
with being Homecoming Queen<lb/>
Yours truly,<lb/>
Ronnie Bonnerman (Slick)<lb/>
concerned group, but for my own<lb/>
personal reasons, but still we must not<lb/>
overlook the fact that hundreds of others<lb/>
feel the same way I do.<lb/>
You and your staff spend most of you<lb/>
time criticizing coaches, apologizing for<lb/>
your stupid mistakes or just plain writing<lb/>
a lot of bull. Yet, a young lady made<lb/>
history and you just barely mention her<lb/>
name.<lb/>
It is my understanding that the<lb/>
purpose of a newspaper is to inform the<lb/>
people of the news as it happens and<lb/>
when it happens, in my opinion the<lb/>
Fountainhead failed to do this.<lb/>
ECU claims to be an equal<lb/>
opportunity organization, but yet you fail<lb/>
to represent the school in an equal<lb/>
opportunity manner. I surely hope that in<lb/>
the future you and your staff will make it<lb/>
your main duty to inform the readers in<lb/>
every single detail no matter what the<lb/>
circumstances may be.<lb/>
Joseph DeLoatch<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Some student getting<lb/>
To Fountainhead.<lb/>
What is going on at this campus?<lb/>
I went to the ECU game this Saturday.<lb/>
Besides all the Frat Rats who were "saving<lb/>
seats there was also a whole section<lb/>
roped off for who knows who - since half<lb/>
the seats "reserved" in this section were<lb/>
unoccupied for most of the game. (This<lb/>
really illustrated good school spirit when<lb/>
the section was flashed on the TV screen<lb/>
Saturday night after the game.)<lb/>
Now I just went to get my Buccaneer<lb/>
since a sophomore told me he got his last<lb/>
Friday. After trucking all the way across<lb/>
campus, I was njith signs proclaiming<lb/>
that the Bucs would be available this<lb/>
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. I<lb/>
ignored the sign as how could this be<lb/>
when other students received theirs last<lb/>
week? Of course, when I arrived in the Buc<lb/>
room, I was greeted with a parroting<lb/>
"available Wednesday, Thursday and<lb/>
Friday only<lb/>
What I want to know is how do certain<lb/>
people get the powers that seem to exist<lb/>
on this campus? Don't tell me that they are<lb/>
members of this or that because the<lb/>
person who got the Buc a week early is<lb/>
not. I don't know where these "privileged<lb/>
students get their power, but I would<lb/>
appreciate their answering and letting me<lb/>
know so I could go get some.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
A Concerned Student<lb/>
Coach Stas<lb/>
was<lb/>
great man<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The name of Coach Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich was familiar-I'd heard of him<lb/>
many times by many people. A few<lb/>
months ago I finally had the honor of<lb/>
meeting him. I shook his hand and we<lb/>
sat and talked. We didn't speak about<lb/>
football or his endless awards?we talked<lb/>
about things; college, family, dorm life,<lb/>
places of interest and recent trips. This<lb/>
warm talk was the first of many<lb/>
Eventually, his office was as familiar to<lb/>
me as my home and I grew to love him<lb/>
like my father. In no way did his<lb/>
personality flaunt his status, prestige and<lb/>
success with those of whom shared his<lb/>
companionship. To me. Coach Stasavich<lb/>
was a dynamic man who deserved the<lb/>
best from life, but instead he gave life<lb/>
his best.<lb/>
Coach Stasavich has departed from<lb/>
East Carolina University, but his spirit<lb/>
will remain forever He was well-1 iked by<lb/>
those who knew him and was respected<lb/>
by all. His underlying intelligence<lb/>
blended with his versatile personality<lb/>
left an invaluable mark on East Carolina<lb/>
University and those who knew and loved<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Lisa Dan ley<lb/>
Student thinks too many cops out for parity raid<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
What the hell is wrong with a panty<lb/>
raid at ECU? In the Oct. 21st issue of<lb/>
this newspaper, Dean Mallory was quoted<lb/>
as saying that panty raid is "a group of<lb/>
student letting off a little steam But,<lb/>
the dean then goes on to say that<lb/>
Wednesday's raid was an "unauthorized<lb/>
MASS DEMONSTRATION Quite a<lb/>
difference I'd say! In the same issue on<lb/>
the Forum page "Helpless" stated that<lb/>
panty raids were "just raising a little hell"<lb/>
and "having a little fun Exactly wnat<lb/>
nnmm ? j ? nmmn in ? mi? 11 mi<lb/>
they are supposed to be. So who the hell<lb/>
needs the campus police storming in<lb/>
with billvsticks and threatening to beat<lb/>
some heart? andor supply a free ride<lb/>
downtown? I am sorry about the<lb/>
treatment of "helpless" that night but she<lb/>
was certainly not helped by the campus<lb/>
police. As the joke goes, the police are<lb/>
never there when you need them and, as<lb/>
was evident on Wednesday night, when<lb/>
you don't need themIf only the police<lb/>
had left well enough alone, the window<lb/>
smashing incident would oeer have<lb/>
happened. They actually antagonized the<lb/>
MMMMM<lb/>
mwmtiiPiii<lb/>
students by being there.<lb/>
Why are panty raids outlawed on<lb/>
campus anyway? In general they are<lb/>
simply a spontaneous way to raise a little<lb/>
hell and a short diversion from the<lb/>
routine around here. I was involved in<lb/>
three harmless panty raids last year<lb/>
where the only damage was caused by<lb/>
the police themselves. This damage of<lb/>
course being inflicted on certain<lb/>
participating members of the student<lb/>
body.<lb/>
The next time this situation arises<lb/>
(and it certainly will) I recommend that<lb/>
the administration either call out the<lb/>
National Guard and put a definite stop to<lb/>
the unruly mass demonstration ,is it was<lb/>
called (as if during a panty raid the<lb/>
participants should march rank and file<lb/>
up the hill and call for panties by the<lb/>
numbers, not forgetting to obtain a<lb/>
parade permit) or simply allow the raid to<lb/>
run its course free from police<lb/>
intervention in which case the whole<lb/>
thing will end as quickly as it began.<lb/>
m<lb/>
A Thwarted Raider<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7,<lb/>
NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Kennedy shooting<lb/>
Local group interested in assassination<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The controversy over the assassination<lb/>
of John F. Kennedy will not rest. In the<lb/>
past nine months some of the most<lb/>
reputable news magazines in the country<lb/>
have run articles on the subject. Seven<lb/>
resolutions have recently been introduced<lb/>
in the House Rules committee for<lb/>
The orginal<lb/>
Joe Cod<lb/>
ksout<lb/>
 m<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am a "Joe Cool I own one of the<lb/>
original skateboards (from about 10 years<lb/>
back), two frisbees, and my ten-speed<lb/>
bike got ripped-off last year. I'm active in<lb/>
a few organizations on campus (or are<lb/>
you supposed to belong to any if you are<lb/>
a "Joe Cool I couldn't seem to get that<lb/>
straight from my source of information).<lb/>
But. I don't own a dog because I live in<lb/>
the dorm. What I'm trying to say is that<lb/>
most of the people on campus are "Joe<lb/>
and Jane Cools "Joe Cool" belongs to<lb/>
organizations, "Joe Cool" leaves organi-<lb/>
zations. Who in the hell else is left? I<lb/>
don't get the impression that a girl takes<lb/>
dancing just because they wear leotards.<lb/>
I understand that they are warm,<lb/>
comfortable. and they look pretty good,<lb/>
too. So, this is just to let someone know<lb/>
that being a "Joe Cool" is not so hard to<lb/>
do. All you have to do is to save all your<lb/>
toys from late childhood, get a good<lb/>
cheap practical means of transportation,<lb/>
and grow a bit of hair on your face and<lb/>
you've got it made.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Joe Cool<lb/>
P.S. Ms. Simmons is probably jealous<lb/>
because she can't grow a moustache.<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
stereotypes<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
It looks as if ECU has developed a<lb/>
dangerous problem. No, it's not the flu<lb/>
or even V.D. It's a bad habit so many<lb/>
people have developed around here of<lb/>
stereo-typing everyone from administra-<lb/>
tors and faculty right on down to the<lb/>
campus dogs. What's happened to<lb/>
everyone? What's happened to the<lb/>
open-mindedness educated people are<lb/>
supposed to have? There are PEOPLE on<lb/>
campus. These Greeks and "Joe and<lb/>
Jane Cools" are also individuals. And<lb/>
these people are worth getting to know,<lb/>
without condemning them on sight. What<lb/>
kind of snobbery is taking hold on<lb/>
campus? It's possible to have friends of<lb/>
all kinds. By condemning certain ones<lb/>
you might miss a chance to know<lb/>
someone really interesting. Let your-<lb/>
selves be secure enough to look beyond<lb/>
the coverings to the PERSONS inside.<lb/>
consideration. Some of these resolutions<lb/>
call for opening congressional investi-<lb/>
gation of JFK's assassination only, while<lb/>
others call for investigations of the<lb/>
assassinations of JFK, Martin Luther<lb/>
King, Jr Robert Kennedy, and the<lb/>
attempt of George Wallace. For the second<lb/>
year running the Lecture Series here at<lb/>
ECU is featuring a speaker on the subject<lb/>
of "Who Killed JFK?" (Harvey Yazijian,<lb/>
October 22nd). The Young Democrats Club<lb/>
here on campus hosted a guest speaker on<lb/>
the subject at a recent meeting.<lb/>
This summer a group was formed in<lb/>
New Bern to launch a petition drive in<lb/>
support of a congressional investigation of<lb/>
JFK's assassination. The group calls itself<lb/>
Americans for Reinvestigation of the<lb/>
Kennedy Assassination (ARKA) and has at<lb/>
present collected over two thousand<lb/>
signatures in New Bern and the<lb/>
surrounding area. The original petitions<lb/>
are sent to Walter Jones who is congress-<lb/>
person for this district and Xerox copies go<lb/>
to the two state senators, Robert Morgan<lb/>
and Jesse Helms. ARKA has shown a copy<lb/>
of the Zapruder film and presented<lb/>
materials relevant to this issue at many<lb/>
meetings in the area. On September 29th a<lb/>
meeting was held here in Greenville in the<lb/>
room over the Elm Street Gymnasium.<lb/>
Over sixty people (mostly ECU students)<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
As I've said, the controversy will not<lb/>
rest. The time seems ripe for an<lb/>
investigation of the recent assassinations.<lb/>
Anyone interested in supporting such a<lb/>
congressional investigation should write<lb/>
for information at the following address:<lb/>
Americans for Reinvestigation of the<lb/>
Kennedy assassination Post Office<lb/>
Box 1702, New Bern, N.C. 28560.<lb/>
CarmellaLane<lb/>
Loud<lb/>
? ft<lb/>
radios<lb/>
keeping students awake<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
For the past several nights, just as my<lb/>
mind was drifting off into dreamland, my<lb/>
sleep was abruptly shattered by the blaring<lb/>
of police radios and walkie-talkies. It<lb/>
seems that these humble public servants<lb/>
have chosen to park their cars directly<lb/>
beside White Dorm, between White and<lb/>
Greeneto talk over their day's activities. As<lb/>
2 and 3 officers congregate, their voices<lb/>
and laughter become louder and louder<lb/>
and every few minutes a call comes in over<lb/>
the radio that is loud enough to wake the<lb/>
dead-in Virginia Now come on people,<lb/>
isn't there some way to lower the volume<lb/>
on those things? If not, maybe they could<lb/>
find another parking space besides the<lb/>
"NO PARKING ZONE" on the side of our<lb/>
dorm. One night I couldn't fall asleep until<lb/>
about 2:30 A.M. because of that constant<lb/>
jibberish over those police radios. (Let's<lb/>
face itthe fact that a white male, 6 foot<lb/>
tall, 175 lbs has been seen leaving a blue<lb/>
sports car, license number BRC Baker,<lb/>
Rhonda, Charlie, 175004, behind Austin,<lb/>
really doesn't impress me at 2:15 A.M.<lb/>
when I have an 8:00 class the next<lb/>
morning) Several other girls in our dorm<lb/>
are also losing sleep, and patience,<lb/>
because of those super-loud radio<lb/>
messages. You want to find Car 54just<lb/>
close your eyes anc listen up, it's a sure<lb/>
bet that you'll find them!<lb/>
A sleepy student,<lb/>
Shannon James<lb/>
Band to make later trip<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I am responding to the letter in<lb/>
Thursday's Fountainhead concerning the<lb/>
Marching Pirates' trips to away games.<lb/>
As a band member, I disagree with the<lb/>
view expressed. Although the band would<lb/>
boost school spirit at the UNC game, the<lb/>
band deserves the bigger trip to the UVA<lb/>
game. The band rehearses a minimum of<lb/>
four and one-half hours a week; many<lb/>
times, its six hours (all for only one<lb/>
quarter-hour credit). This does not<lb/>
include the football games on Saturday<lb/>
night. All of this adds up to many hours<lb/>
of hard work for which the band gets<lb/>
little. Therefore, I do not think one away<lb/>
game over-night trip is too much to ask<lb/>
for the band.<lb/>
If the SGA would give the band more<lb/>
money for another away game trip, we<lb/>
would gladly go. But as long as we only<lb/>
have enough money for one trip, the<lb/>
band deserves the bigger trip. (Also,<lb/>
think how much money the football team<lb/>
spends on travelling a year!)<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Keith Henry<lb/>
No smoking?Phase<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Freedom. We all want it, but to what<lb/>
extent can we carry the totality of this<lb/>
notion? Can you ana I both be free? Are<lb/>
you only concerned with your own<lb/>
freedom? Do you believe that each and<lb/>
every person should have the right to be<lb/>
totally free? With the earth only providing<lb/>
so much space, and there existing so<lb/>
many people upon it, I hardly think this<lb/>
idea of total freedom could exist in our<lb/>
society today. There may be a point<lb/>
where your total freedom would restrict<lb/>
mine.<lb/>
And so, when I ask you to please not<lb/>
blow smoke in my face, keep these<lb/>
questions in mind. I do not wish to<lb/>
restrict your freedom. At the same time, I<lb/>
do not wish that you confine mine. All I<lb/>
ask is that I may have a small niche<lb/>
where I may have equal opportunities and<lb/>
breathe clean air.<lb/>
Standbp<lb/>
fortheBuc<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Marie Maxik<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
In view of your editor's recent letter to<lb/>
"apologize" for all the mistakes in the<lb/>
1975 Buccaneer, I became irrated with<lb/>
her attitude. Surely, when one spends so<lb/>
much time on a publication such as this,<lb/>
a certain amount of pride should be<lb/>
involved in the work.<lb/>
One would think the Buc staff should<lb/>
stand up for their work. If the editor<lb/>
admits defeat and makes excuses for the<lb/>
sloppy, careless errors, then she is<lb/>
proving her inability to handle the job. If<lb/>
this 1975 Buccaneer is so terrible, why<lb/>
do we have the same incompetent editor?<lb/>
Surely we cannot blame the photographer<lb/>
for all the mistakes, the final and most<lb/>
important decisions are made by the<lb/>
editor and the staff.<lb/>
Pissed off No. 2<lb/>
P.S. One more thing, your quality of<lb/>
advertising is incredible; is the condom<lb/>
ad for real?<lb/>
Experimental<lb/>
cats disturbing<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I have a class on Tuesday evening in<lb/>
the Allied Health Bldg. Since we only<lb/>
meet once a week, it is not exactly easy<lb/>
to absorb ali the material presented by<lb/>
the instructor. This week was at an all<lb/>
time low level of comprehension due<lb/>
mainly to a few of our "scientific" minds<lb/>
inconsideration in placing some experi-<lb/>
mental cats across the hall from one of<lb/>
the frequently used conference rooms. I,<lb/>
for one, do not appreciate having to<lb/>
listen to dumb creatures cry for freedom<lb/>
from their caged environment. I find it<lb/>
highly unconducive to a classroom<lb/>
environment, and feel that in the future<lb/>
the medical personnel should have a little<lb/>
more regard for the students who have to<lb/>
use the Allied Health Bldg. and who do<lb/>
not share the same enthusiasm for live<lb/>
animal experimentation.<lb/>
ACS.<lb/>
Wrong channel<lb/>
In a fairly recent interview, your fine<lb/>
publication made what I'm sure is a<lb/>
technical error.<lb/>
In a review of the television show "The<lb/>
Invisible Man it was stated in correct<lb/>
form that said show was aired by CBS.<lb/>
Being an affiliate of CBS for the past<lb/>
four years, I can safely say that CBS<lb/>
does not air "The Invisible Man and<lb/>
although David McCallumis a fine actor,<lb/>
CBS in all likelihood would not seriously<lb/>
consider airing "The Invisible Man<lb/>
aside from the technical errors, your<lb/>
review was totally accurate and intact.<lb/>
Thanx,<lb/>
Richard W Leagan<lb/>
TV engineer (who prefers the RCA-XL-<lb/>
100)<lb/>
<lb/>
P<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0007"/><lb/>
??MVHHHBHHHIHIMHHBnHHnNI<lb/>
?BMSBhUBBHBHHBHBIHHBBBBHHmB<lb/>
HHHIHHHHHBHiHHBB<lb/>
HHHHHHBBHHBB<lb/>
MMI<lb/>
e<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
7<lb/>
-??-??-??-?? -??-? -?? ??? -?? -??-?? -??-??-?? ? <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
UMREH<lb/>
112 E. 5TH ST.<lb/>
752-9100<lb/>
<lb/>
GRAND OPENING<lb/>
THIS SATURDAY, NOV. 1<lb/>
Register to win this<lb/>
. SUPER STEREO SYSTEM<lb/>
H worth over $70000 C .<lb/>
YAMAHA CR400<lb/>
Retail value $33000<lb/>
OHM D<lb/>
Retail value $12000<lb/>
DUAL 1225<lb/>
Retail value $14000<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY<lb/>
SPECIAL GRAND OPENING PRICES ON ALL EQUIPMENT<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
OHM D T<lb/>
Retail value $120??<lb/>
FREE : STEREO WAREHOUSE T-SHIRT<lb/>
WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF$2500 OR MORE!<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
REFRESHMENTS AND PASTRIES<lb/>
ALL DAY<lb/>
FREE: $1495 DISCWASHER RECORD<lb/>
CLEANER WITH EVERY MUSIC SYSTEM!<lb/>
FREE : $5000 worth of blank tape<lb/>
(OF YOUR CHOICE) WITH PURCHASE<lb/>
OF ANY CASSETTE DECK<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
i OR OUR CONVENI ENT REVOLVING CHARGE FINANCING w,<lb/>
??????<lb/>
 UNBELIEVABLE SPEAKER SALE<lb/>
FORUM SP210<lb/>
2 WAY 10" SPEAKERS<lb/>
$4000EACH<lb/>
FORUM SP310<lb/>
3 WAY KfSPEAKERS<lb/>
$5000 EACH<lb/>
DUAL 601 (DEMO) ?00<lb/>
WITH SHURE M91ED $325<lb/>
GRAND OPENING SALE PRICE $18400<lb/>
USE BANK AMERICARD , MASTERCHARGE,<lb/>
OR OUR CONVENIENT REVOLVING CHARGE FINANCING<lb/>
m?mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
IUII M Ml I limillMll<lb/>
7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Past couple years<lb/>
Tennis booming racket at ECU<lb/>
Almost everv dav at ECU the sounds<lb/>
of tennis balls being smacked against<lb/>
walls and rackets can De neara at ine<lb/>
tennis courts on the Hill or at Minges. It<lb/>
seems as if every ECU student has<lb/>
gotten into the tennis craze. This is<lb/>
evidenced by the long lines of people<lb/>
waiting to use the tennis courts on<lb/>
campus. According to one freshman<lb/>
durning orientation, she had to wait two<lb/>
and a half hours for a court.<lb/>
People start playing early in the day<lb/>
and the lights on the courts on the Hill<lb/>
do not go off until early hours of the<lb/>
morning<lb/>
Tennis has experienced a great<lb/>
increase in popularity in the past five<lb/>
years. The increase has been noted in<lb/>
many ways. One of the biggest reasons is<lb/>
the increased coverage by the news<lb/>
media. Such as televising many different<lb/>
tennis matches including Wimbledon<lb/>
each year ECU students have viewed this<lb/>
increased coverage by television in many<lb/>
different ways. Roy Turner remarked.<lb/>
"Tennis is commercialized too much now<lb/>
and that's why people are playing it more<lb/>
often Gary Davidson expressed the<lb/>
opinion that Television has made the<lb/>
sport greatly popular in the last three<lb/>
years, especially the match between<lb/>
Bobby Riggs and Billy Jean King<lb/>
Again, there has been an increase in<lb/>
the variety of tennis goods and an<lb/>
increase m the sale of tennis equipment.<lb/>
This has been witnessed by the devoting<lb/>
of more space to the tennis line in<lb/>
sporting goods and department stores.<lb/>
The increased variety and technological<lb/>
advances have come in the way of<lb/>
multi-colored tennis balls and the advent<lb/>
of the new aluminum tennis racket.<lb/>
These increases have made the cost of<lb/>
tennis goods increase significantly. A<lb/>
good aluminum tennis racket can cost an<lb/>
individual anywhere from twenty to sixty<lb/>
dollars. While the price of a wood racket<lb/>
can cost anywhere from ten to thirty<lb/>
dollars. A can of tennis balls which will<lb/>
last for about fifteen matches generally<lb/>
costs m the neighborhood of four to six<lb/>
dollars<lb/>
In its early days tennis was<lb/>
considered the sport of the affluent<lb/>
society: generally concentrated in the<lb/>
country club. The middle-class American<lb/>
of that day was more interested in the<lb/>
national pastime of baseball, or would<lb/>
rather root for his college football team.<lb/>
When individualism was stressed in the<lb/>
late 60s it spilled over into the tennis<lb/>
boom of the 70"s. Tennis is considered<lb/>
an individual sport; that is fast moving,<lb/>
where simplicity is the rule not the<lb/>
exception. This has been one of the major<lb/>
reasons for many people taking up the<lb/>
sport and participating in tennis.<lb/>
Also the exercise aspect of the game<lb/>
is a big incentive for those who play the<lb/>
game A typicai pomt-of-view of playing<lb/>
tennis was made by Valerie Chaffin when<lb/>
she said. "I think its fun and is good<lb/>
exercise She also remarked that, "It is a<lb/>
aood way to release anger and tension<lb/>
John Epperson commented that. "It is<lb/>
good exercise and convenient He<lb/>
added. "You can play with the opposite<lb/>
sex Chuck Freedman probably summed<lb/>
up the situation best when he said. "It's<lb/>
just fun and exercising<lb/>
Tennis is blessed with not being<lb/>
hindered by bulky equipment; all one<lb/>
generally needs is a tennis racket, tennis<lb/>
balls, sneakers, and some sort of<lb/>
recreational attire though some people<lb/>
add to the equipment by buying<lb/>
expensive tennis apparel that is sold in<lb/>
men and women's stores.<lb/>
Tennis has popped into the political<lb/>
realm on the ECU campus concerning the<lb/>
SGA appropriation money for lighted<lb/>
tennis courts over at Minges. This was<lb/>
??????<lb/>
part of some candidates's platforms<lb/>
during the recent elections. The only<lb/>
other public lighted courts in town<lb/>
besides the courts on the Hill are located<lb/>
at Elm Street Park and off of Hooker<lb/>
Road.<lb/>
Tennis at ECU has a greater variety of<lb/>
individuals participating in it than any<lb/>
other recreational activity on campus.<lb/>
The tennis boom has hit ECU and from<lb/>
the standpoint of many students they are<lb/>
more than willing to carry the sport<lb/>
forward to even greater heights.<lb/>
Wayne Hill<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Y7i<lb/>
'Big apple' cite Student Union trip<lb/>
The ECU Student Union Travel<lb/>
Committee is pleased to announce its<lb/>
first trip of the 1975-76 school year New<lb/>
York is our destination. Four fun-filled<lb/>
days and nights are in store for the<lb/>
participants in this Thanksgiving excur-<lb/>
Sion<lb/>
The Travel Committee sponsored group<lb/>
will leave Greenville late Fridav evening<lb/>
November 21st, and arrive in New York<lb/>
City Saturday morning. Checkinginto the<lb/>
Wellington hotel will be the first order of<lb/>
business for the group After that, the<lb/>
City, with its theaters, museums, and<lb/>
yreai restaurants will await the travellers<lb/>
in i iiumi n mm mi i ninpini<lb/>
For the art lovers there are the<lb/>
Guggenheim Museum, Metropolitan Mus-<lb/>
eum of Art and the Museum o' Modern<lb/>
Art For the theater lovers there is<lb/>
Broadway, with plays such as The Magic<lb/>
Show, The Wiz? and Godspell For<lb/>
those who love good food, you can eat<lb/>
one meal that you will never forget. The<lb/>
United Nations the Empire State<lb/>
Building, The Statue of Liberty, Times<lb/>
Square, and Rockefeller Center are more<lb/>
places to see in New York.<lb/>
The cost of this spectacular trip is<lb/>
only $65.00, which includes transport-<lb/>
ation and accomodation (Accomodations<lb/>
are based on triple occupancy. Double<lb/>
occupancy may be requested at<lb/>
additional cost.)<lb/>
Reservations for this November<lb/>
21st - 26th trip can be made beginning<lb/>
Wednesday, October 29th in the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office from 10 a.m4p.m Seats<lb/>
are limited, so don't delay Sign up and<lb/>
spend an exciting vacation in New york<lb/>
City!<lb/>
P<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0009"/><lb/>
HBVMHHHHHlHBHBBHHMHHHHiHHHHnHHlHHHHHHIHHNHil<lb/>
.<lb/>
?nmnHnmni<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAIN<lb/>
iADVOL<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
7, NO<lb/>
<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER<lb/>
1975<lb/>
9<lb/>
Planning for parenthood<lb/>
topic of discussion<lb/>
EDITORS AT LARGE<lb/>
Parenthood is the toughest job a<lb/>
person can undertake, but it is the one<lb/>
which persons are least prepared for,<lb/>
according to statements by an East<lb/>
Carolina University instructor of parent-<lb/>
hood last week.<lb/>
"People, today, want to know the<lb/>
whys and hows, and don't want to have<lb/>
anything pushed off on them, "according<lb/>
to Mrs. Lona Ratcliffe, one of two<lb/>
instructors in the "Preparation for<lb/>
Parenthood" class now in session at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"People no longer just accept an<lb/>
answer without question she added.<lb/>
The "Preparation for Parenthood"<lb/>
course is taught Wednesday nights from<lb/>
7:30 to 9:30 in the ECU Nursing<lb/>
building. The course is offered through<lb/>
the Division of Continuing Education.<lb/>
The course deals with pregnancy and<lb/>
child development through the first year.<lb/>
Areas such as improved labor and<lb/>
delivery, hospital routine and procedures,<lb/>
home preparation, and care of the<lb/>
newborn child are discussed.<lb/>
Special rates are offered for couples<lb/>
attending together. The current session<lb/>
has 33 couples and five mothers.<lb/>
Most of the participants in the<lb/>
program are of a middle socioeconomic<lb/>
level, according to Mrs. Ratcliffe.<lb/>
Janice Leggett and Mrs. Ratcliffe<lb/>
supervise the course which is taught by<lb/>
junior level obstetrical nursing student.<lb/>
Both Mrs. Leggett and Mrs. Ratcliffe<lb/>
feel they are adequately prepared for<lb/>
such a course since they have eight<lb/>
children between the two of them.<lb/>
"People finally are beginning to<lb/>
realize that they are not born being good<lb/>
parents, but must learn to be good<lb/>
parents, " said Mrs. Ratcliffe.<lb/>
The class began Oct. 1st and will run<lb/>
for seven weeks.<lb/>
By DAVID NASH<lb/>
Frisbee heaven perhaps?<lb/>
(CPS)What is likely to be the definite<lb/>
work on the frisbee has been compiled by a<lb/>
Grove, Ca. practicing psychiatrist.<lb/>
In a 221-page treatise, Dr. Stancil<lb/>
Johnson explores the history of the<lb/>
saucer, as well as frisbee aerodynamics,<lb/>
turbulance in flight and medical problems<lb/>
for frisbee players.<lb/>
Johnson's interest in the frisbee goeo<lb/>
beyond the book, however. He has written<lb/>
Jean blues<lb/>
(CPS)-Blue jean afficionados are paying<lb/>
more at the market these days. In the past<lb/>
year, the price of a pair of Levi's has<lb/>
doubled.<lb/>
Increased consumer demand for blue<lb/>
jeans has created a shortage of cotton, the<lb/>
major ingredient in denim, the Levi Strauss<lb/>
company reports and the shortage of<lb/>
cotton, aided by inflation, has jacked up<lb/>
the cost of blue jeans.<lb/>
Company officials don't anticipate that<lb/>
a higher price tag will keep customers<lb/>
away. "There's no end in sight, said one<lb/>
Levi Strauss employee, referring to the<lb/>
sales potential of blue jeans.<lb/>
The jean look is so popular that Levi<lb/>
Strauss has expanded its sportswear line<lb/>
to include jumpers, skirts, trenchcoats.<lb/>
bathing suits, and-more recent I y-denim<lb/>
tuxedos<lb/>
Forest Lawn Memorial Parks and<lb/>
Mortuaries requesting that upon death, his<lb/>
body be cremated and mixed with the<lb/>
finest grade raw industrial polyethylene to<lb/>
make 25 high-quality, professional model<lb/>
frisbees.<lb/>
Forest Lawn, however, has only agreed<lb/>
to the cremation.<lb/>
Today's Editor is Jim Dodson,<lb/>
Features Editor.<lb/>
By LYNN CAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Our "fair-weather features editor" is<lb/>
Jim Dodson, or 'Dob' as he is fondly<lb/>
called, (sometimes that is) by his fellow<lb/>
workers.<lb/>
"Features writing offers an unlimited<lb/>
scope for a writer says Jim. "When I<lb/>
became a Features Editor, I felt there<lb/>
was a need and an interest in something<lb/>
oesides cold, straight news<lb/>
Jim has been writing his Off the Cuff<lb/>
column for two years. "I like to feel that<lb/>
peoplesnjoy Ahat I write because I have a<lb/>
lot of fun doing it. There are always a lot<lb/>
of little things in everyday life that can<lb/>
make you smile if you just take the time<lb/>
to experience them. I was a little<lb/>
apprehensive of the students' reactions<lb/>
when I first wrote 'Off the Cuff. It was a<lb/>
new and different outlook, but I feel my<lb/>
efforts have been worthwhile<lb/>
Jim will graduate after fall quarter,<lb/>
and plans to take it easy for six months<lb/>
"to unwind and. hopefully go some-<lb/>
where, maybe Europe After that his<lb/>
plans include going on to graduate<lb/>
school - possibly in English. As an<lb/>
English major and Journalism minor, his<lb/>
ultimate goal is to become "the great<lb/>
American novelist Besides writing and<lb/>
'?<lb/>
reading. Jim fills up the remainder of his<lb/>
hours playing golf and tennis.<lb/>
When asked about his ouiiook on life.<lb/>
Jim quotes Thoreau who said. "To front<lb/>
only the essential facts of life and to see<lb/>
if I can not learn what they have to teach,<lb/>
and not discover when it came time to<lb/>
die. that I had never lived<lb/>
With the ambnton and dreams of this<lb/>
vivacious young man, the later part will<lb/>
definitely not be the case.<lb/>
???????????????2i<lb/>
n<lb/>
i<lb/>
This Week At The<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
$<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ft<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
TUES-<lb/>
WED- - FRI<lb/>
Disco Nite No cover Charge<lb/>
SAT<lb/>
?X<lb/>
THE ROYAL KINGS "<lb/>
Top 40 Bump &amp; Boogie From Va Beach<lb/>
Also At Happy Hour Fri. 3-7<lb/>
Fri. Halloween Party<lb/>
" CLEARSMOKE"<lb/>
After the game-<lb/>
Celebrate At The ELBO ROOM<lb/>
y.y<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
SUN<lb/>
Every Sunday Is<lb/>
Night<lb/>
w<lb/>
v<lb/>
s<lb/>
ft<lb/>
38-17 (CHAPEL WHO ?)<lb/>
WAY TO GO PIRATES<lb/>
W<lb/>
M<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
v.v<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
?&amp;:&amp;:<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mn<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmm?<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?iiiih?<lb/>
Federal marijuana decriminalizationindoubt<lb/>
"If the cannibis epidemic continues to<lb/>
spreadwe may find ourselves saddled<lb/>
with a large population of semi-zombi<lb/>
es Senator James Eastland.<lb/>
BY ALLAN RABINOWITZ<lb/>
(CPS)-At first glance, it would seem that<lb/>
the country is not far from reaching a<lb/>
national policy of decriminalizing<lb/>
marijuana.<lb/>
But it may take longer than expected.<lb/>
There are several obstacles to federal<lb/>
legislation to decriminalize marijuana,<lb/>
although six states have already passed<lb/>
such legislation on their own, and a<lb/>
presidential task force recently recommed<lb/>
ed that enforcement of pot laws be given<lb/>
low priority.<lb/>
One of the major obstacles, said<lb/>
Keith Stroup, chairman of the National<lb/>
Organization to Reform Marijuana Laws<lb/>
(NORML) is Senator James Eastland<lb/>
(D-MS) Eastland is a staunch opponent of<lb/>
marijuana decriminalization and chairman<lb/>
of the Judiciary Committee, through<lb/>
which any marijuana bill must pass before<lb/>
it reaches the Senate floor. In addition,<lb/>
Eastland is chairman of the Senate<lb/>
Subcommittee on Internal Security,<lb/>
which issued a report last year spelling<lb/>
out the details of a marijuana<lb/>
"epidemic<lb/>
There are good reasons to oppose the<lb/>
decriminalization of marijuana, according<lb/>
to Dave Marin, chief analyst for the<lb/>
Eastland subcommittee and coordinator<lb/>
for the hearings from which Eastland's<lb/>
report stemmed. Marijuana, said Martin,<lb/>
can make a person "anti-motivational" or<lb/>
"dysfunctional<lb/>
fC'tyr<lb/>
cat<lb/>
"If you have a drug said Martin,<lb/>
"that causes people to drop out of school<lb/>
and society; if you have something that<lb/>
enhances any psychological weakness a<lb/>
person may have to begin with ; if you<lb/>
have a drug that makes a person<lb/>
amotivational, then you must consider a<lb/>
person who uses this drug as the bearer<lb/>
3<lb/>
MTWW?<lb/>
tNin<lb/>
rinks<lb/>
formerly<lb/>
the Ice House<lb/>
recreation<lb/>
center<lb/>
ECU NIGHT<lb/>
AT<lb/>
TWIN RINKS RECREATION CENTER<lb/>
Wed. night 6:30 -11:00 pm<lb/>
4!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 75c<lb/>
'W<lb/>
m<lb/>
of a contagious germ and society has a<lb/>
vested interest in protecting itself against<lb/>
it<lb/>
Martin claimed that neither he nor<lb/>
Eastlantf recommended putting "youthful<lb/>
first offenders" behind bars, but insisted<lb/>
that possession of pot should remain a<lb/>
misdemeanor, since a "criminal record<lb/>
and probation provide a mighty powerful<lb/>
deterrent Marijuana decriminalization<lb/>
generally implies that no criminal records<lb/>
will be kept on minor marijuana arrests.<lb/>
Eastland's subcommittee has schedul<lb/>
ed a second set of marijuana hearings for<lb/>
November in which the latest scientific<lb/>
research will be examined, Martin said.<lb/>
"I'm not totally against decri mi nalizat ion I<lb/>
just want to take a go-slow attitude<lb/>
Several marijuana reform bills are in<lb/>
Congress now. There is a senate bill<lb/>
which must pass through Eastland's<lb/>
Judiciary Committee. Stroup of NORML<lb/>
is pessimistic about whether that bill can<lb/>
"be forced through" the committee. A bill<lb/>
in the House is caught in "the same kind<lb/>
of bottleneck Stroup said.<lb/>
The House bill must go through the<lb/>
Subcommittee on Health and Environ<lb/>
ment. The chairman of that committee,<lb/>
Paul Rogers (D-FL), is "sitting on<lb/>
the issue until after the 76 elections<lb/>
Stroup said. Rogers could not be reached<lb/>
for comment.<lb/>
Another marijuana reform measure is<lb/>
proposed to amend the controversial<lb/>
Criminal Justice Reform Act, which calls<lb/>
for a massive overhaul of the US Criminal<lb/>
Code. If that bill is passed without a<lb/>
decriminalization amendment, possessi-<lb/>
on of pot could be punished with a<lb/>
30-day jail sentence and or a fine of up<lb/>
to $10,000.<lb/>
But that controversial bill is moving<lb/>
very slowly Stroup does not see any hope<lb/>
of a federal decriminalization measure in<lb/>
the near future.<lb/>
Although more states are moving<lb/>
toward marijuana decriminalization-the<lb/>
District of Columbia is on the verge of<lb/>
approving such a measure and Minnesota<lb/>
is not far behind-overall Federal<lb/>
marijuana reform is currently bottled up.<lb/>
"We feel a little weak said Stroup, "we<lb/>
can't demand anything<lb/>
State Infirmary adds pharmacy<lb/>
RALEIGH-The infirmary at North<lb/>
Carolina State University this month<lb/>
added a pharmacy to the health services<lb/>
provided for students at the university.<lb/>
Prescription drugs were previously<lb/>
available in the infirmary, but the doctors<lb/>
there had to handle the procedure. Now<lb/>
there is a full-time pharmacist on duty to<lb/>
fill prescriptions written by the<lb/>
infirmary's doctors.<lb/>
State is the only school among the 16<lb/>
state schools in North Carolina to have a<lb/>
full-time pharmacist in its infirmary,<lb/>
according to Carolyn Jessup, dean of<lb/>
student activities at N.C. State.<lb/>
The doctors at State's infirmary<lb/>
decide which one of the several name<lb/>
brands will be chosen for a certain drug,<lb/>
and the pharmacy has to order only that<lb/>
brand, instead of stocking several brands<lb/>
of the same drug.<lb/>
However, the stocking procedure at<lb/>
the infirmary differs from that of a retail<lb/>
drugstore.<lb/>
The medicine is dispensed free as it<lb/>
was previously, being bought with<lb/>
student fees.<lb/>
? t ?A to ?f ?A? -Jf? ??If -il -Jf If t A -ilf ?If ?Jr -i Jf lr ilr i A -1 V A<lb/>
? "? p? ? ? Prr r r r r n r T TP P f h T <lb/>
Buy a sandwich, fries &amp; X<lb/>
a drink, you get a Fun ?<lb/>
Quiz card. Answer ?:<lb/>
questions correctly &amp; ?:<lb/>
you're a winner! 3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
it<lb/>
560 Evans Street <lb/>
man-in mm nil- i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0011"/><lb/>
MHBEBHH<lb/>
'??x?$8!&amp;??'<lb/>
??????i<lb/>
tmaam<lb/>
<lb/>
?v<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
wm0mmmm<lb/>
7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 19<lb/>
31<lb/>
Blood<lb/>
Continued from page 2.<lb/>
A trophy will be awarded the campus<lb/>
group with the highest ratio of donors. At<lb/>
least one fraternity seemed to have 100<lb/>
percent turnout, according to Jerry<lb/>
Fonke, a student director for the drive.<lb/>
"In an unofficial count Friday, Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau seemed to have 100 percent<lb/>
donors he said. "The results of the<lb/>
official count will not be here for about a<lb/>
week<lb/>
Tuesday, the first day of blood<lb/>
donations, the auditorium was not open<lb/>
until 3:00 p.m. and closed at 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Even though it was scheduled to open at<lb/>
11:00 a.m 178 pints were still collected.<lb/>
Wednesday was the first full day of the<lb/>
drive.<lb/>
"We set a single day mark of 345<lb/>
pints, but the third day we broke our own<lb/>
record with 384 pints said Fonke.<lb/>
"With a goal of 750 pints, the Red<lb/>
Cross left campus with 907 pints, and<lb/>
they had to turn away 93 potential<lb/>
donors, which would have made an even<lb/>
1000<lb/>
Col. Henderson said, "If we had any<lb/>
problems at all, they were in securing<lb/>
enough nurses and volunteers to help<lb/>
with the donations<lb/>
Indeed it did at times seem that they<lb/>
might be short of help. The situation was<lb/>
the worst on Wednesday afternoon. After<lb/>
the doors closed at 4:00 p.m. it took two<lb/>
and one-half hours to take care of the<lb/>
people inside.<lb/>
The first to donate blood was Dean of<lb/>
General College, Donald Bailey. The<lb/>
750th person was AFROTC cadette,<lb/>
Leonard Smith. Then, the break the goal<lb/>
number, 751, was Col. Henderson.<lb/>
TTTTrwrtTrrrTT  "rTrrrT1<lb/>
rewewber,<lb/>
these people<lb/>
will fcewrti 1<lb/>
j more conservative!<lb/>
mil2&amp;ii?A<lb/>
than yourselves<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
s hove line to<lb/>
worry oboor<lb/>
g. ideals<lb/>
Us<lb/>
?mm <lb/>
W fe the<lb/>
! practical<lb/>
<lb/>
eynay<lb/>
,not be us<lb/>
Imaginative,<lb/>
arxj concerned<lb/>
as you<lb/>
they<lb/>
-fare worthy<lb/>
of your<lb/>
. rfnot acting<lb/>
Wshton<lb/>
students<lb/>
IITZTTIXITTT<lb/>
mwwwmwrmTrrsnrrrrrrmncwwwwwwwwwwwwwmmwwmwwwrw<lb/>
umim A E0W20Y<lb/>
!<lb/>
SW?,l-C.<lb/>
riiiinniimiii??iiiHifitiifiiiitiim.iiinmt?miii?iiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiniiimi?r<lb/>
nrrn<lb/>
UMdn<lb/>
WIKWEEN WEEK<lb/>
MIGHT.<lb/>
lfeXecW)<lb/>
Friday ? $?5.00casii)(ize Vc .<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
i imm i i m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0012"/><lb/>
?????IHHBNn<lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Turner cancellation<lb/>
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 llth Trade your paperback books,<lb/>
buy used paperbooks, also comic books.<lb/>
Open Tue. 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/>
KENWOOD mMP KA8006 70 Watts a<lb/>
channel, Rectilinear 111 speakers,<lb/>
Pioneer Turntable PL 12ac, 11 months<lb/>
old, $700, Phone 758 5359.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed to share<lb/>
Eastbrook apt. with male. Reduced rent<lb/>
in exchange for housekeeping (washing,<lb/>
etc.). Call after 9 p.m. 758 2135.<lb/>
FOR SALE 1974 Bronco, excellent<lb/>
condition. MUST sale, $3300.00. Call<lb/>
758 0497, after 6 p.m.<lb/>
JVC RECEIVER 4VR 5414, 30 Watts a<lb/>
channel at quad, 60 Watts a channel<lb/>
at stereo, 18 months old, $350, phone<lb/>
758 5359.<lb/>
STURGILLGUIXAR Carolina 100 model.<lb/>
69th one made. W case. $425. Call<lb/>
752 9496.<lb/>
TYPING term papers. 756 0081<lb/>
FOR SALE: Silvertone Bass Amp. Good<lb/>
Condition $85. Hollowbody electric guitar<lb/>
two pickup exc. condition $100.<lb/>
Call 752 7398.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-5133.<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/>
 DUNES DECK<lb/>
Rt.5 Pacfolus Highway (In the heart of Nasty Town)<lb/>
GOOD BAR - GOOD GAMES - GOOD BEER<lb/>
Have a Beer with the Nasty Town Harem!<lb/>
TACOS - ENCHILADAS - TAMALES - RICE - BEANS -CHILI CON CARNE<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
AUTHENTIC TEXAS-STYLE<lb/>
MEXICAN<lb/>
DELICIOUS - NUTRITIOUS<lb/>
GREENVILLE'S<lb/>
GREAT NEW<lb/>
TASTE TREAT<lb/>
ECONOMICAL<lb/>
DINE IN<lb/>
TAKE OUT<lb/>
SUFFICIENT<lb/>
VARIETY<lb/>
TO SUIT EVERYONE.<lb/>
INCLUDING VEGETARIANS<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/>
O<lb/>
c<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
H<lb/>
O<lb/>
30<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
8<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
30<lb/>
O<lb/>
- aoodvas - w<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
? <lb/>
set at $2,685<lb/>
By JAMES PERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Several events preceeded the cancel-<lb/>
lation of Ike and Tina Turner rock show<lb/>
that was to have performed in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum Oct. 17.<lb/>
Dean of Student Affairs, S.R.<lb/>
Alexander said that "it was not ECU but<lb/>
the Turner Revue that cancelled the<lb/>
engagement resulting in a breech of<lb/>
contract<lb/>
After signing the contract the Turner<lb/>
Revue issued a number of requests,<lb/>
many of which were demands, that were<lb/>
not called for within the contract.<lb/>
In the first of these requests the act<lb/>
wished to receive payment prior to<lb/>
performance; the contract stated that<lb/>
payment would be made immediately<lb/>
following the performance.<lb/>
In an effort to accomodate them,<lb/>
Dean Alexander agreed that a check<lb/>
would be presented before the<lb/>
performance and the cash would be made<lb/>
available immediately following.<lb/>
Several days later another request was<lb/>
received that stated that a large truck<lb/>
would have to be provided to transport<lb/>
equipment to and from the Kinston<lb/>
Airport. Again, this had not been<lb/>
stipulated in the contract.<lb/>
Accomodations were again made by<lb/>
Dean Alexander and the Concert<lb/>
Committee and a truck would have been<lb/>
provided.<lb/>
Yet another call was received in the<lb/>
folk wing days. This was to inform the<lb/>
committee that Ike and Tina Turner would<lb/>
not be arriving at the Kinston Airport<lb/>
until 7:35 on the evening of the concert.<lb/>
The act was informed that if the show<lb/>
did not start by 8:30 (as expressed in the<lb/>
contract) then the contract would have to<lb/>
be renegotiated on-the-spot.<lb/>
A final call was then received stating<lb/>
that Ike and Tina Turner had cancelled<lb/>
the show.<lb/>
The loss incurred from the cancel-<lb/>
lation amounted to $2,684.87. This figure<lb/>
includes $600 for a sound system that<lb/>
was never unloaded, tickets and salaries.<lb/>
The cancellation of booked acts is not<lb/>
a new occurrence al ECU. Dean Alexander<lb/>
gave Ramsey Lewis and Alice Cooper as<lb/>
previous examples. Therefore the<lb/>
recovery of out-of-pocket expenses will<lb/>
be a familiar road for the Concert<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
"ECU does not plan to file suit as<lb/>
yet Dean Alexander said.<lb/>
"But we intend to follow procedure in<lb/>
order to recover funds<lb/>
A list of expenses will first be<lb/>
submitted to the Associated Booking<lb/>
Agency (NY) who handled the booking. If<lb/>
compliance is not made, the claim will<lb/>
then be sent to the American Federation<lb/>
of Musicians who are instrumental in<lb/>
handling such problems.<lb/>
Dean Alexander stated that it might<lb/>
take up to a year before the problem can<lb/>
be resolved. He did, however, express<lb/>
confidence in the outcome.<lb/>
"We have a very good track record in<lb/>
the number of successes we have had<lb/>
dealing with this problem he said.<lb/>
Certification proposal made<lb/>
By SUSAN BITTNER<lb/>
Dr. John Ball, chairman of the ECU<lb/>
Department of Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services submitted a<lb/>
proposal Oct. 10 to establish an<lb/>
in-service professional education program<lb/>
to the N.C. Department of Social<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ball, the program<lb/>
would provide off-campus courses in<lb/>
social work for field professionals<lb/>
without social work degrees. The<lb/>
program would enable participants to<lb/>
become certified social workers.<lb/>
Dr. Ball said the program would be<lb/>
designed mainly for social workers with<lb/>
college degrees, but guidelines would<lb/>
not exclude those without such degrees.<lb/>
Tentative sites for the courses are<lb/>
Plymouth, Jacksonville, Wilson and<lb/>
Williamston. Dr. Ball said, however,<lb/>
resources would be used to develop as<lb/>
many off-campus locations as possible.<lb/>
Assisting Dr. Ball in writing the<lb/>
proposal were Assistant Professor<lb/>
William Formby and Associate Professor<lb/>
Homer Yerick of the Correctional Services<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Yerick will head the new in-service<lb/>
program and will hire qualified course<lb/>
instructors if the proposal is approved.<lb/>
Planning for the program began last<lb/>
September when ECU was notified of a<lb/>
$145,257 general grant from the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Social Services. A portion<lb/>
of that grant was set aside to plan the<lb/>
in-service program.<lb/>
The remainder of the grant was<lb/>
allocated to the department's general<lb/>
operations and current programs.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ball, this renewable<lb/>
grant was the largest since the<lb/>
department's organization in 1968.<lb/>
If approved, the professional educa-<lb/>
tion program will be the department's<lb/>
fourth in-service program. A quarter's<lb/>
residency for N.C. Department of<lb/>
Corrections personnel is offered under<lb/>
the Institute for Correctional Administra-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Other in-service programs include<lb/>
law-enforcenient workshops throughout<lb/>
the year and concentrated course<lb/>
offerings during summer school.<lb/>
According to Dr. Ball, these programs<lb/>
improve the quality of professional<lb/>
services and provide social service and<lb/>
corrections personnel with an opportunity<lb/>
to renew their credentials.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0013"/><lb/>
?????????????OBHIMHBBBBBWBBBWBBBBBBBWBBBBi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
107 Trade St. (Next to Tarheel Toyota)<lb/>
Your Authorised Teac Dealer<lb/>
The Source of Perfection in Sound<lb/>
.l&amp;ltl<lb/>
??<lb/>
r<lb/>
every man ?<lb/>
Most musicians have<lb/>
dreamed about having at<lb/>
least a four-track studio at<lb/>
home, so they could have<lb/>
the time to experiment.<lb/>
After many demo sessions<lb/>
in the studio, some friends<lb/>
of ours ?The Hello People ?<lb/>
sacrificed the next demo<lb/>
date to buy our 3340S, and<lb/>
made the dream real.<lb/>
A few months later, they<lb/>
signed a contract with<lb/>
ARC-Dunhill-with the<lb/>
demo tapes they made at<lb/>
home on their 3340S. Now,<lb/>
the Hello People have helped<lb/>
.us produce an album on the<lb/>
&amp;mS,rr,oHthe:mOS.<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
From Teac<lb/>
TEAC<lb/>
The leader. Alwavs has been.<lb/>
 r&amp;z<lb/>
When music<lb/>
becomes more than just something to listen to,<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER is involved<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0014"/><lb/>
aMF<lb/>
???????????????H<lb/>
(???B VnHHHBBHMiHHHmHHBnHnMMIMi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
ixWIumi H? U i I IHJiiwIil I H?ill I i IK Mini ? ii<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
ECU Marching Pirates : dedicated group of student musicians<lb/>
By CHIP GWYNN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
To those students who live on the<lb/>
hill, the East Carolina Marching Band is<lb/>
a familiar sight But for those of us who<lb/>
do not live on the hill, the Marchinq<lb/>
performance of the band.<lb/>
The Pirate Band consists of 185<lb/>
members There are 128 winds, 17 flash<lb/>
flags (color guard), 3 members of an<lb/>
American flag party, 2 rifles, 2 drum<lb/>
majors, 8 majorettes, and 25 percussion<lb/>
members.<lb/>
percussion sections add a great deal to<lb/>
the overall performance of the band.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates practice about<lb/>
an hour and a half, three days a week<lb/>
when they do not have a game to perform<lb/>
at and four days a week when there is<lb/>
not a home game.<lb/>
Naff has a number of student leaders<lb/>
who help organize the band when it is on<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
The two drum majors are probably the<lb/>
most important part of the field<lb/>
maneuvers and music because they<lb/>
conduct the band while it is on the field.<lb/>
De seen<lb/>
nudi<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
at every home game.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates are under the<lb/>
direction of George Naff who takes<lb/>
responsibility, along with his assistants,<lb/>
Carl Rohleder and Jack Fetner, for the<lb/>
-<lb/>
"With a band that size I need a lot of<lb/>
help organizing things said Naff.<lb/>
Naff pointed out that his two<lb/>
assistants, Carl Rohelder, who specia-<lb/>
lizes in the color guard assignments and<lb/>
Jack Fetner, who organizes the<lb/>
w m<lb/>
0 jrs&amp;???<lb/>
Also this year the Marching Pirates<lb/>
are slated to play at two away games.<lb/>
They have already played at North<lb/>
Carolina State, the first game of the<lb/>
season and they are going to play at the<lb/>
University of Virginia in Charlottesville.<lb/>
"Our first choice was to play at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina game said<lb/>
Naff, but Carolina was having a number<lb/>
of high school bands play and there just<lb/>
wasn't room for us<lb/>
Naff along with his assistants also<lb/>
organize the drill that is performed while<lb/>
the band is on the field.<lb/>
"We try to organize the best drill and<lb/>
the best music to please ourselves as<lb/>
well as the students Naff said.<lb/>
A lot of work goes into organizing<lb/>
and executing a drill with a band as big<lb/>
as the Marching Pirates. For this reason<lb/>
This year the drum majors are Dave<lb/>
Rockefeller and Julee Gilbert, with Larry<lb/>
White handling the marching percussion.<lb/>
Other student field leaders include:<lb/>
Gary Cassedy, who handles the low<lb/>
brass (tubas and baritones); Bill Frazier<lb/>
and Tyler Dunlap, who work with the<lb/>
trumpets; Lee Brown, who holds the<lb/>
French Horns together: John Spence,<lb/>
Dennis Hart, and Don Hartlaub, who help<lb/>
to organize the saxophones; Denise<lb/>
Hodges. Jay Williams and Mike Waddell,<lb/>
who help arrange the clarinets; Joe<lb/>
Kasmark and Billy Grimmett, who help to<lb/>
lead the trombones; and Casey Parsons,<lb/>
John McLellan and J Diane Thomas,<lb/>
who work with the flutes.<lb/>
con't on page 15<lb/>
Rollerba<lb/>
make tl<lb/>
analyzin<lb/>
politics,<lb/>
executiv<lb/>
initiative<lb/>
implicat<lb/>
adequate<lb/>
"Who Kil<lb/>
on Oct.<lb/>
Bob Kat.<lb/>
John F.<lb/>
had the<lb/>
informati<lb/>
assassin<lb/>
event, fv<lb/>
irrespon:<lb/>
of a con<lb/>
Mushrooi<lb/>
hamburg<lb/>
eat a he<lb/>
Georgetc<lb/>
one thirc<lb/>
sauteed<lb/>
lettuce, t<lb/>
your wall<lb/>
Moi<lb/>
The I<lb/>
Theatre w<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
concert<lb/>
Student U<lb/>
tee is slat<lb/>
Monty<lb/>
the mus<lb/>
superstai<lb/>
Kingston,<lb/>
to the sol<lb/>
F<lb/>
p<lb/>
MWP<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0015"/><lb/>
v<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7,<lb/>
mmmmtmemm<lb/>
NO. 1428 OCTOBER<lb/>
r ? ? h<lb/>
CapsuelCrtticsm 1<lb/>
ByTHOHMLBMB I SWfVIMtar<lb/>
.M<lb/>
Rollerball - Movie - Plaza Cinema: It seems the main purpose of futuristic films is to<lb/>
make the viewer play a game of drawing conclusions, guessing motives, and<lb/>
analyzing philosophies. Rollerball takes place in a future society that has eliminated<lb/>
politics,nations, and war, and replaced then respectively with a corporation,<lb/>
executives, and Rollerball. In order to eliminate poverty and hunger, individual<lb/>
initiative and personal preference had to be sacrificed. The main social<lb/>
implication(sorry, didn't mean to get heavy on you) James Caan (as Jonathan E.) is<lb/>
adequate, the script fair, the action excellent, and the picture on a whole 12.<lb/>
"Who Killed JFK? - Bob Katz - Lecture: People overflowed Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
on Oct. 22, 1975. in order to learn what happened in Dallas, Texas, on Nov. 22, 1963.<lb/>
Bob Katz presented a well documented, well organized lecture on the assassination of<lb/>
John F. Kennedy Mr. Katz made mincemeat of the Warren Commission Report and<lb/>
had the audience buzzing and humming on numerous occasions with bits of shocking<lb/>
informationMost of what he said wasn't new to any student of Kennedy's<lb/>
assassination, but vital in any hopes of reopening an investigation into this tragic<lb/>
event. Mr. Katz never dictated any definite clear cut theories, and never made any<lb/>
irresponsible conclusions or judgments, but rather presented the probably existence<lb/>
of a conspiracy with documented evidence. Both his lecture and his causes receive<lb/>
Mushroom Burger - Jason's - Sandwich: There are hamburgers and there are<lb/>
hamburgers, but at Jason's there are Hamburgers. If your goal before graduating is to<lb/>
eat a hamburger in every restaurant in Greenville don't overlook Jason's, in the<lb/>
Georgetown Shoppes, for one of the better ones. Their Mushroom Burger consists of<lb/>
one third of a pound of fresh ground beef served on a sesame bun topped with<lb/>
sauteed mushrooms. Accompanying the sandwich are french fries or onion rings,<lb/>
lettuce, tomato and pickle. Although you may fill your stomach, you may also empty<lb/>
your wallet. This hefty burger carries a hefty price of $2.25. <lb/>
Ratings are on a scale of to '<lb/>
Monty Alexander Trio tonight<lb/>
The Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre will be the site of a jazz concert<lb/>
featuring The Monty Alexander Trio. The<lb/>
concert under the auspices of the<lb/>
Student Union Special Concerts Commit-<lb/>
tee is slated for Oct. 28 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Monty Alexander has been labeled in<lb/>
the music world as a "new jazz<lb/>
superstar Alexander was born in<lb/>
Kingston,Jamaica and grew up listening<lb/>
to the sounds of calypso and rhythm and<lb/>
blues, elements of which are very much<lb/>
present in his music today.<lb/>
The Monty Alexander Trio has that<lb/>
indefinable extra something, that cutting<lb/>
edge of vitality, that makes the listener<lb/>
immediately aware that he or she is<lb/>
confronted with a force to reckon with,<lb/>
not just another group. In the highly<lb/>
competive field of jazz trios, many are<lb/>
called but few are chosen. The Monty<lb/>
Alexander Trio has definitely been chosen<lb/>
to carrv on the nreat tradition.<lb/>
ROCK 'N SOUL'S<lb/>
"VICTORY SALE '<lb/>
Alburns Only<lb/>
SEALS B CROFTSIOr. Hits)<lb/>
JOHN DENVER THE WHO<lb/>
ELTON JOHN CROSBY Er NASH<lb/>
DAN FOGELBERG ANDREW GOLD<lb/>
NEW RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
M<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
Marching Pirates<lb/>
com from pg. 14<lb/>
All of these student leaders are to be<lb/>
commended for their work both on the<lb/>
field as well as off.<lb/>
The Marching Pirates work hard in<lb/>
order to put on a good show for the<lb/>
football fans at half-time and this hard<lb/>
work is always evident in their<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
From the stunning arrangement of the<lb/>
Star Spangled Banner to the tight rhythm<lb/>
of the percussion section the Marching<lb/>
Pirates rank as one of the best bands<lb/>
around<lb/>
Naff issued his sincere thanks for the<lb/>
student support the Marching Pirates<lb/>
have received this year.<lb/>
"We couldn't do it without the<lb/>
support of the students said Naff, and<lb/>
this year the support has been<lb/>
outstanding.<lb/>
So if you have not had a chance to<lb/>
see the Marching Pirates this year, either<lb/>
on the field or at the Homecoming<lb/>
parade, you will get your last chance this<lb/>
weekend when the Marching Pirates take<lb/>
to the field again.<lb/>
YkJ<lb/>
Art show at<lb/>
Whichard<lb/>
Currently on display in Whichard<lb/>
Gallery is a two man show by John<lb/>
ohoe and David St rot her.<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Bfe<lb/>
THE MUSICAL STORY OF<lb/>
ORVI LLE AND WILBUR WRIGHT<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium<lb/>
October 28-ovember 1 8:15<lb/>
OajBoruJ Admission '3.00<lb/>
' ?Cj; Students - I.D. &amp; Activity Cards<lb/>
Call 758-6390 For Reservations<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
?,????z<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
iV? i' :zz v -i .?. -r<lb/>
.  ?   .<lb/>
:?:??.? ??.??. M&amp;f:iiA'jii-At .? .??JS-i<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0016"/><lb/>
??IHBHBIBiHMiPHHHiBHIHIIBHHBBi<lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
MMMMM<lb/>
M<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
I<lb/>
?P<lb/>
mwmmw<lb/>
Tibetan quartetjashi, coming Oct. 30 to ECU 197<lb/>
Tashi (Tibetan for good fortune)<lb/>
brings together four of the country's<lb/>
leading young instrumentalists - pianist<lb/>
Peter Serkin, violinist Ida Kavafian, cellist<lb/>
Fred Cherry, and clarinetist Richardsstolt-<lb/>
man. This fine quartet will be featured in<lb/>
concert in the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Theatre on Thursday, October 30, I975 at<lb/>
800 p.m.<lb/>
The group is the outgrowth of<lb/>
informal sessions of music-making which<lb/>
the artists enjoy enough to want to share<lb/>
with others. Since their New York debut<lb/>
in 1973, they have been hailed for their<lb/>
unusual programs and exciting performan<lb/>
ces in concert across the country and in<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
Peter Serkin, piano, has appeared<lb/>
with such major orchestras as the<lb/>
Amsterdam Concertgebouw, The Cleve-<lb/>
land and Philadelphia Orchestras, the<lb/>
Chicago. Toronto, Boston and San<lb/>
Franciso Symphonies and me New York<lb/>
Philharmonic. His recital program and<lb/>
concerto repertoire frequently reflect his<lb/>
interest in contemporary music. Also<lb/>
among his recent projects were<lb/>
performances of the six Concertos by<lb/>
Mozart composed in the year 1784,<lb/>
recorded for RCA with the English<lb/>
Chamber Orchestra under Alexander<lb/>
Schneider.<lb/>
Ida Kavafian, violinist, was born in<lb/>
Istanbul, Turkey, of Armenian descent. A<lb/>
frequent prize winner, she most<lb/>
recently-in October 1973- won first prize<lb/>
at the Vienna Motta International Violin<lb/>
Competition in Lisbon, Portugal; and then<lb/>
gave recitais throughout Europe ? during<lb/>
the 1974-75 season. Miss Kavafian has<lb/>
of the leading organizations for new<lb/>
music. He is a founding member of<lb/>
Speculum Musicae and is also a member<lb/>
of the Galimir String Quartet and the<lb/>
Group for Contemporary Music. Mr.<lb/>
appeared frequently in recital, on<lb/>
television and with numerous orchestras.<lb/>
Fred Sherry, cellist, studied at the<lb/>
Julliard School with Leonard Rose, In<lb/>
addition to his active career as solo<lb/>
cellist, Mr. Sherry has performed with all<lb/>
I Wilber'i<lb/>
Family<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/>
2fc Dairy Bar with Ice cream cones <lb/>
Old Fashioned Milk Shakes g<lb/>
 Banana Splits Sundaes wBF<lb/>
TWO LOCATIONS 14th St. Optn 10am-10pm Jj"<lb/>
Corner of 5th and Roado ST. Open lOam-lam jE"<lb/>
MMAAJIUnMml<lb/>
Sherry has recorded for RCA Victor,<lb/>
Nonesuch and Phillips.<lb/>
Richard Stoltzman, clarinet, has<lb/>
appeared frequently in recital and<lb/>
chamber music performances throughout<lb/>
the United States and Europe. Mr.<lb/>
Stoltzman holds a Master of Music<lb/>
degree from Yale University and has<lb/>
studied with Keith Wilson and Kalmen<lb/>
Opperman; and is presently serving as<lb/>
Wester Regional Director for "Young<lb/>
Audiences" in addition to being on the<lb/>
faculty of the California Institute of the<lb/>
Arts.<lb/>
HcrHait's<lb/>
FORMERLY SHIRLEY'S<lb/>
<lb/>
?tMWIMHWIIIIIIItMMHIIIIIIIIIHIMHH<lb/>
- '? '??will j-aICv"myJUiim. a!<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
new Kxotbn of<lb/>
108 W. 10M.<lb/>
i in Photo Arts Studio Bid)<lb/>
appointments only<lb/>
call<lb/>
Ki mill III! IIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIMMM<lb/>
HERMAN HINES <lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
TIM MILLS<lb/>
Tickets for this event are available in<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office In Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. ECU student tickets are<lb/>
$1.50; Faculty and staff are $4.00; and<lb/>
public tickets are $4.00. Sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Union Artists Series<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Dance Theatre<lb/>
coming Nov. 4,5f6<lb/>
The North Carolina Dance Theatre has<lb/>
been engaged by the ECU Artist Series<lb/>
Committee to appear November 4, 5, and<lb/>
6. The Company will present a matinee<lb/>
on Wednesday, November 5, at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
The evening performance will be<lb/>
Thursday evening, November 6, at 8:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The North Carolina Dance Theatre, a<lb/>
professional touring company of fifteen<lb/>
dancers, was established in 1970 with the<lb/>
aid of a grant from the Rockefeller<lb/>
Foundation and is affiliated with the<lb/>
North Carolina School of the Arts in<lb/>
Winston-Salem. Originally created to<lb/>
serve the southeast, the Dance Theatre<lb/>
has achieved a reputation as a major<lb/>
dance company and has extended its<lb/>
touring area throughout the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Of particular interest to residents of<lb/>
eastern North Carolina is Gwen Spear, a<lb/>
resident of Greenville. Gwen is a<lb/>
graduate of the N.C. School of the Arts<lb/>
and has been a student of Mavis Ray,<lb/>
an ECU dance professor. She attended a<lb/>
summer session of the School of<lb/>
American Ballet in New York and has<lb/>
performed with the ECU Summer Theatre<lb/>
and the Pennsylvania Ballet.<lb/>
The Dance Theatre is supported by a<lb/>
grant from the National Endowment for<lb/>
the arts and participants in its Dance<lb/>
Touring and Artists-in-Schools programs.<lb/>
Tickets will be sold at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office-Students, $1.50; Public, Faculty,<lb/>
staff , $3.00; Non-ECU Students, $2.00<lb/>
for Thursday evening, November 6.<lb/>
Matinee performance, Wednesday,<lb/>
November 5, Students, $1.00; Public<lb/>
$2.00.<lb/>
??????????????? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Mrs. Stevens<lb/>
PALM READER<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
future<lb/>
jor?St<lb/>
J Can Help in all problems-business,<lb/>
J marital, separation, love. Located<lb/>
4-In Chocowinity, N.C. on Hwy. 17<lb/>
 South, 3 miles south of Washing-<lb/>
ton, N.C. Look for name and hand<lb/>
2sign. READINGS NOW $3.00. <lb/>
????????????????<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
PS)-An ac<lb/>
otect the "1<lb/>
t8 caused s<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
?74? which<lb/>
onth-to gi<lb/>
formation<lb/>
deral agenc<lb/>
er what otf<lb/>
m be sent t<lb/>
ms out th<lb/>
:t, Congres<lb/>
informatic<lb/>
ovide servk<lb/>
An additic<lb/>
me, is tha<lb/>
Hjsed infori<lb/>
lforcement<lb/>
I or many p<lb/>
Under th<lb/>
jency may<lb/>
:ion about<lb/>
arson's pi<lb/>
ongress ha<lb/>
nplementati(<lb/>
aing able t<lb/>
r const it uer<lb/>
ill not gi<lb/>
Stua<lb/>
If you are<lb/>
igh school c<lb/>
kiing until )<lb/>
ki Associat<lb/>
rtiich will sa'<lb/>
n sky lif<lb/>
quipment re<lb/>
asorts natior<lb/>
The progr;<lb/>
Dur SSA<lb/>
articipating<lb/>
weekday a<lb/>
cket for ha<lb/>
ame goes fo<lb/>
ntals at the<lb/>
olidays you'<lb/>
ft ticket-at<lb/>
5.50!<lb/>
For exami<lb/>
cket at Kill<lb/>
1 BLOCI<lb/>
321 EAST1<lb/>
HOS1<lb/>
I<lb/>
KEGS <lb/>
COM<lb/>
IMI<lb/>
AM<lb/>
SELECT<lb/>
CRACKI<lb/>
AND<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0017"/><lb/>
MWM?<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7,<lb/>
umn<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
NO<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
I PI PI Ml HIM ?! I<lb/>
17<lb/>
5l <lb/>
? -<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
e l<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
MS, <lb/>
led <lb/>
17<lb/>
1974 Privacy Act causes big problems<lb/>
PS)An act of Congress designed to<lb/>
otect the "fundamental right" of privacy<lb/>
18 caused some unexpected problems.<lb/>
Congress passed the Privacy Act of<lb/>
74which went into effect last<lb/>
onth-to give an individual access to<lb/>
formation collected about him by<lb/>
deral agencies and to give him control<lb/>
?er what other agencies that information<lb/>
m be sent to and how it is used. But it<lb/>
ms out that by enacting the Privacy<lb/>
3t, Congress has limited its own access<lb/>
information legitimately necessary to<lb/>
ovide service to its constituents.<lb/>
An additional problem, in the eyes of<lb/>
me, is that the agencies which have<lb/>
Hjsed information in the past-the law<lb/>
lforcement agencies?are exempt from<lb/>
I or many parts of the act.<lb/>
Under the Privacy Act, no federal<lb/>
jency may disclose personal inform-<lb/>
:ion about someone without that<lb/>
arson's permission. Members of<lb/>
ongress have complained, since the<lb/>
nplementation of the Privacy Act, of not<lb/>
alng able to answer simple questions<lb/>
r constituents because federal agencies<lb/>
ill not give them the necessary<lb/>
information.<lb/>
Rep. Philip Sharp (D-IN) complained<lb/>
that under the new act, he "can't answer<lb/>
a question about a social security<lb/>
problem or a pension matter or an<lb/>
emergency military leave One Con-<lb/>
gressman said that it may take up to<lb/>
eight weeks for an agency to respond to<lb/>
an information request that could<lb/>
formerly be handled by phone.<lb/>
The Office of Management and<lb/>
Budget (OMB), which lays out the<lb/>
guidelines for the Privacy Act, stated that<lb/>
the language of the act "does not<lb/>
autiorize the disclosure of a record to<lb/>
members of Congress acting in their<lb/>
individual capacities without the consent<lb/>
of the individual<lb/>
OMB's interpretation, insisted Rep.<lb/>
William Ford (D-MI) is "totally<lb/>
inconsistent with the intent of<lb/>
Congress<lb/>
The Privacy Act of 1974 was added as<lb/>
an amendment to the original Freedom of<lb/>
Information Act. There are some major<lb/>
differences between the two acts. The<lb/>
Freedom of Information Act was<lb/>
designed to afford public access to<lb/>
certain information kept and dispersed by<lb/>
public agencies. But the Privacy Act<lb/>
focuses on the right of an individual to<lb/>
have access to information about<lb/>
himself. This includes, but is not limited<lb/>
to, information such as a person's<lb/>
education, medical history, criminal<lb/>
record or employment history.<lb/>
Under the Privacy Act, a person also<lb/>
has the right to request that certain<lb/>
information be taken out of his record.<lb/>
The agency which holds the record can<lb/>
refuse, but the individual has the right to<lb/>
appeal that refusal.<lb/>
Information dealing with criminal<lb/>
investigations is exempt under the new<lb/>
law, whether the agency which holds this<lb/>
information is a law enforcement agency<lb/>
or not. The Internal Revenue Service can<lb/>
withhold from an individual information<lb/>
concerning an investigation of that<lb/>
person's tax returns, even though it may<lb/>
be only a civil law that is involved.<lb/>
The CIA is specifically exempt from<lb/>
the Privacy Act, and any agency whose<lb/>
"principle function" pertains to criminal<lb/>
law or law enforcement, is exempt from<lb/>
all or part of the law.<lb/>
Gary Mundt, an aide to Rep. Pat<lb/>
Schroeder (D-CO), complained that by<lb/>
exempting law enforcement agencies, the<lb/>
law exempts the agencies that have in<lb/>
the past abused information on a person<lb/>
the most.<lb/>
In addition, the law, though designed<lb/>
to protect the individual, "is in fact going<lb/>
to be used by bureaucracies as a screen.<lb/>
They will use the act as a reason why<lb/>
they can't give out information or explain<lb/>
their actions Mundt said.<lb/>
At least two amendments to the<lb/>
Privacy Act make it possible for members<lb/>
of Congress to obtain information<lb/>
without the written consent of the<lb/>
individual involved. Sharp of Indiana,<lb/>
co-sponsor of one of these amendments,<lb/>
said, "I am not aware of any invasions of<lb/>
privacy that have occurred because of an<lb/>
inquire by a member of Congress<lb/>
Student ski card saves vacation money<lb/>
NEWSR-52<lb/>
I PROGRAMMABLE CALCULATOR FROM I<lb/>
r Texas Instruments,<lb/>
If you are in college, graduate school,<lb/>
igh school or technical school, don't go<lb/>
kiing until you read this. The Student<lb/>
ki Association has a unique program<lb/>
rtiich will save you from $1 to $15 a day<lb/>
n sky lift tickets, lessons and<lb/>
quipment rentals at over 150 major ski<lb/>
sorts nationwide.<lb/>
The program works like this: present<lb/>
Dur SSA Student Ski Card at a<lb/>
articipating ski area's ticket window on<lb/>
weekday and you'll get your day lift<lb/>
cket for half the weekend price. The<lb/>
ame goes for ski lessons and equipment<lb/>
jntals at the ski area. On weekends and<lb/>
olidays you'll save at least $1 on your<lb/>
ft ticketat some areas as much as<lb/>
5.50!<lb/>
For example, a regular weekday lift<lb/>
cket at Killington, Vt. normally costs<lb/>
$11. With an SSA Student Ski Card a<lb/>
student will pay only $6a $5.00 per day<lb/>
savings.<lb/>
Membership in the Student Ski<lb/>
Association costs $7 for the entire<lb/>
season. There is no limit to the number<lb/>
of times that the Student Ski Card may<lb/>
be used at any one area.<lb/>
SSA also published "Poor Howard's<lb/>
College Guide to Skiing" which contains<lb/>
technical information, such as number<lb/>
of lifts, trails, vertical drop, restaurants<lb/>
and other facilities, on every participating<lb/>
area. To save students money on<lb/>
lodging, "Poor Howard's" has a unique<lb/>
guide to low cost lodges nearby<lb/>
participating areas.<lb/>
Every year SSA offers a potpourri of<lb/>
weekend and week-long ski "carnivals"<lb/>
and beach vacations. Each carnival is at<lb/>
a major ski resort like Aspen, Steamboat,<lb/>
Killington, Mt. Snow, Sugarloaf or Boone<lb/>
Mountain.<lb/>
This season's SSA student benefit<lb/>
programs and college ski carnivals are<lb/>
sponsored by the Miller Brewing<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
For a $7 annual membership or for a<lb/>
FREE copy of the article "How to Ski On<lb/>
a Student's Budget" write the Student Ski<lb/>
Association, 233 No. Pleasant St<lb/>
Amherst, MA 01002 or 2438 No. CLark<lb/>
St Chicago, II. 60614.<lb/>
? PROGRAM 5 Tf PS Mf TM<lb/>
lOPUOM! PRIWfK r<lb/>
I IH( t OS f 01 ? HP to<lb/>
I SO IHUt<lb/>
I 401 MCI iR)fKS<lb/>
R '14 ?l 4 0,<lb/>
R 'M SI ?j<lb/>
R 1t II i ai<lb/>
SMIPPfP IP.ll<lb/>
v i iuwo?fRs nn ? saus m? mm<lb/>
;C!iu :imo?fRs inn 4 mis mi<lb/>
hppio upos Rfifipr oi toufi rwrn<lb/>
OR C 0 D A00 ??. c 0 P III<lb/>
fttrvtuort Supply Company<lb/>
P 0 tOl 10" 104 <lb/>
Pf ? SOUTH CAROl IM<lb/>
"II 'b ?000<lb/>
- ? ? ? ? ? ??<lb/>
HtlHAH J!<lb/>
irnmi<lb/>
IIIUIIIIII<lb/>
m i .imnnn in<lb/>
1 BLOCK FROM MENDENHALL<lb/>
321 EAST 10th STREET, GREENVILLE<lb/>
HOST CHARLIE HARRISON<lb/>
THE HOME OF<lb/>
REALISTIC WINE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
752-5012<lb/>
HALLOWEEN<lb/>
CHECK OUR CANDLELIGHT SPECIALS!<lb/>
KEGS AND PONY KEGS<lb/>
COMPLETE SET UPS<lb/>
IMPORTED AND<lb/>
AMERICAN BEERS<lb/>
SELECTION OF CHEESES,<lb/>
CRACKERS SPICES TEAS<lb/>
AND fr GLASSWARE<lb/>
WINEOFTHE MONTH<lb/>
SELECTION OF THREE<lb/>
CALIFORNIA PETITE SIRAH'S<lb/>
OPEN:<lb/>
10-10 MON. - THURS.<lb/>
10-10:30 FRI. - SAT. FLEXIBLE<lb/>
-mi iwhm x mm in m wmmmmm$mmkmm0i<lb/>
FASHION FABRICS<lb/>
'Your sewing headquarters'<lb/>
We carry a complete line of Fine Fabrics,<lb/>
from campus fads to formats to<lb/>
Bridesmaids Fabrics also a complete<lb/>
selection of all sewing notions and<lb/>
accessories.<lb/>
Bring this ad and receive a 10 discount<lb/>
on any purchase<lb/>
Fashion Fabrics<lb/>
333 Arlington Blvd. Across from Pitt Plaza<lb/>
tPVTBBZTai<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
wm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0018"/><lb/>
<lb/>
T8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL<lb/>
7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
? MKi mm m i mm m ? ? i w i<lb/>
?i<lb/>
?<lb/>
1I?<lb/>
HP?P<lb/>
Discrimin ation may cost Texas $20 million<lb/>
(CPS)Sex discrimination may cost the<lb/>
University of Texas at Austin $20 million<lb/>
in federal contracts.<lb/>
The Department of Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare (HEW) has initiated formal<lb/>
proceedings to bar the school from<lb/>
receiving federal funds under regulations<lb/>
prohibiting sex discrimination by federal<lb/>
contractors.<lb/>
HEW charged the Texas school with<lb/>
sex bias in the hiring, compensation and<lb/>
promotion of Art History Professor Janet<lb/>
Berry. In addition, the government<lb/>
agency accused the University of refusing<lb/>
to cooperate or negotiate with HEWs<lb/>
Office of Civil Rights in the complaint<lb/>
investigation.<lb/>
Hearings on the issue will be<lb/>
scheduled within the next two months.<lb/>
Approval of a review panel of lawyers and<lb/>
HEW Secretary F. David Matthews would<lb/>
be needed before cutting off funds.<lb/>
The action marked the first time the<lb/>
government has formally proposed<lb/>
barring a college or university from<lb/>
receiving fedeial funds on the grounds of<lb/>
sex discrimination.<lb/>
The case dates back to August, 1971<lb/>
when Berry filed her complaint with<lb/>
HEW. Two months later, HEW<lb/>
investigators concluded that Berry had<lb/>
been discriminated against and ordered<lb/>
the University to take remedial action.<lb/>
The school's Committee on the Status<lb/>
of Women and Minorities, however,<lb/>
concluded that Berry had not been a<lb/>
victim of sex bias, consequently setting<lb/>
off protracted legal wranglings which<lb/>
have only recently resulted in the HEW<lb/>
funds cutoff action.<lb/>
In 1973 Berry and her husband,<lb/>
William Berry, also an art history<lb/>
professor at the University of Texas, filed<lb/>
suits seeking a total of $1 million in<lb/>
damages from the school for alleged<lb/>
harrassment due to "their (the Berrys')<lb/>
outspoken criticism of sex discrimination<lb/>
in university hiring and promotion<lb/>
policies<lb/>
Janet Berry's suit also listed HEW as<lb/>
Corner of 5th<lb/>
and Cotanche<lb/>
Are you looking for<lb/>
a plate in the afternoon<lb/>
to sit around.<lb/>
watch television<lb/>
and drink a cold one?<lb/>
MARTY' S<lb/>
is now opening at 4<lb/>
in the afternoon,<lb/>
seven days a weekj<lb/>
a codefendent for its failure to take<lb/>
action on her behalf after the initial<lb/>
positive findings by the agency's<lb/>
investigators. Those suits are still<lb/>
pending and according to Bobby Nelson,<lb/>
Janet Berry's attorney, will not be<lb/>
dropped in response to HEWs latest<lb/>
move. "They (HEW) are not enforcing the<lb/>
sex discrimination rules" just by "giving<lb/>
notice" that the school has been cited for<lb/>
sex bias, said Nelson.<lb/>
Noting the four years of legal<lb/>
maneuvers among the university, HEW<lb/>
and the Berrys, some observers have said<lb/>
the HEW hearings may finally provide a<lb/>
forum for confronting the issue of sex<lb/>
discrimination at the Texas school.<lb/>
"It is a very active issue to women<lb/>
faculty members who are not promoted,<lb/>
who receive lower pay than their male<lb/>
counterparts, who are not appointed to<lb/>
committees and who have to fight to get<lb/>
maternity leave editorialized the Daily<lb/>
Texan , the campus newspaper. "Women<lb/>
who complain about such matters are<lb/>
still considered as protagonists fighting<lb/>
for more than they deserve, instead of as<lb/>
equals<lb/>
"By stubbornly refusing to see the<lb/>
kind of discrimination on this campus,<lb/>
university officials have side-stepped the<lb/>
issue and have done as little as possible<lb/>
to correct it said the Texan . "At long<lb/>
last, HEW has forced the University to a<lb/>
showdown-with a possible outcome of<lb/>
real equality for faculty women<lb/>
Maybe trBfa<lb/>
accept cash ,<lb/>
tor some Kind<lb/>
of disarmament<lb/>
You cant<lb/>
bribe the<lb/>
5<lb/>
Russians?<lb/>
What Russians?<lb/>
I was -talKinq '<lb/>
about the KjjtA<lb/>
Gl Bill educates individuals<lb/>
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
NEWS RELEASE<lb/>
A record 2,691,566 persons trained<lb/>
under the Gl Bill during fiscal year (FY)<lb/>
1975 and projections indicate the number<lb/>
will exceed three million persons in this<lb/>
fiscal year, H.W. Johnson, Director of<lb/>
the Winston-Salem Veterans Administra-<lb/>
tion Regional Office reported. The FY<lb/>
1975 figures represented a 14 precent<lb/>
increase over FY 1974.<lb/>
The current Gl Bill entered its 10th<lb/>
year June 1. Participation rates have<lb/>
exceeded those under either of its two<lb/>
predecessors. Some 4.5 million of the 7.6<lb/>
million eligible Vietnam-era veterans have<lb/>
used Gl Bill benefits, about 60 percent.<lb/>
The participation rate was 43.4<lb/>
percent under 13 years of the Korean<lb/>
Conflict bill and 50.5 percent under 12<lb/>
years of the original World War II bill.<lb/>
The FY 1975 total included 266,890<lb/>
men and women still on active military<lb/>
duty. Of the remaining 2.4 million<lb/>
veterans, almost two million saw service<lb/>
during the Vietnam era. Two out of three<lb/>
persons trained in FY 1975 were at the<lb/>
college level.<lb/>
Preliminary reports received by VA of<lb/>
fall enrollment across the nation indicate<lb/>
the FY 1975 record will be short-lived.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
"Our best forecast at this time is fc<lb/>
3,077,000 trainees in fiscal year 1976,<lb/>
Johnson said.<lb/>
The FY 1975 figures included 890,00X<lb/>
persons entering training for the firs<lb/>
time. This is almost 100,000 more thar<lb/>
entered training in FY 1974. Of the nev<lb/>
trainees, 67 percent entered at colleg<lb/>
level, exclusive of correspondena<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
VA officials attribute the current surgt<lb/>
in participation to increased educationa<lb/>
assistance allowances enacted under thi<lb/>
Vietnam Era Readjustment Act of 1974.<lb/>
Single veterans attending school ful<lb/>
time receive $270 monthly. A veteran witl<lb/>
one dependent draws $321. $366 with tw<lb/>
dependents and an additional $2<lb/>
monthly for each dependent over two.<lb/>
A special outreach effort has bee<lb/>
started by the VA to urge 94,000 eligibl<lb/>
women veterans who have not used thei<lb/>
Gl Bill benefits. Deadline for completio<lb/>
of training is May 31, 1976, or 10 year<lb/>
from the veteran's date of discharge<lb/>
whichever is later. Only 46 percent of th<lb/>
174,000 eligible women veterans hav<lb/>
trained under the current Gl Bill.<lb/>
Among those 80,000 women who hav<lb/>
used the current bill, some may t<lb/>
eligible for a special retroactive paymen<lb/>
Women veterans who were married an<lb/>
who attended school under the Gl Bi<lb/>
between June 1, 1966, and Oct. 24, 197;<lb/>
may be eligible for about $30 for eac<lb/>
month they were in training wnil<lb/>
married.<lb/>
I<lb/>
iBUY<lb/>
Jpion<lb/>
MtfMtAMMtf<lb/>
jWfclMI,<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0019"/><lb/>
HBHHHHBIHMH<lb/>
HBBMnBHEBIHBHnmBmBH<lb/>
???????????BHHBmlH<lb/>
AW<lb/>
?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
i mmmii I i mwm ii "innwiiinyniiii!<lb/>
19<lb/>
:<lb/>
:<lb/>
natters are<lb/>
its fighting<lb/>
stead of as<lb/>
a see the<lb/>
s campus,<lb/>
tepped the<lb/>
is possible<lb/>
. "At long<lb/>
ersity to a<lb/>
utcome of<lb/>
ii,<lb/>
me is fc<lb/>
ar 1976,<lb/>
d 890,0(X<lb/>
the firs<lb/>
xre thar<lb/>
the nev<lb/>
I col leg<lb/>
iondenc<lb/>
ent surg<lb/>
lucationa<lb/>
jnder th<lb/>
)f 1974.<lb/>
;hool ful<lb/>
eran wit I<lb/>
with tw<lb/>
nal $2<lb/>
r two.<lb/>
las bee<lb/>
3 eligibl<lb/>
sed thei<lb/>
?mpletio<lb/>
10 year<lb/>
ischargc<lb/>
nt of th<lb/>
ms hav<lb/>
vho hav<lb/>
may b<lb/>
paymen<lb/>
ried an<lb/>
j Gl Bi<lb/>
24, 197;<lb/>
for eac<lb/>
g whil<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? BUY<lb/>
?piON<lb/>
:<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
P<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
DISCOVER WHAT<lb/>
JUST ONE PENNY WILL BUY AT<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH III<lb/>
BUY ONE S.A. SPEAKER<lb/>
AT REGULAR PRICE<lb/>
GET MATE<lb/>
FORK<lb/>
GETSHURE<lb/>
CARTRIDGE FOR l?<lb/>
ANY JVC,<lb/>
EER OR SOI "Ul iLE<lb/>
BUY ANY SONY, JVC,<lb/>
OR PIONEER RECEIVER<lb/>
GET PIONEER HEADPHONES FOR l?<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
m<lb/>
p<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
wmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0020"/><lb/>
PBMHHHVBHWnMy<lb/>
????????1<lb/>
??????i<lb/>
20<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wmmwmmmmfmwmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank<lb/>
Philosophy society<lb/>
holds fail meeting<lb/>
'APPAREAm-Y HIS ?ETIC UCEN6E<lb/>
EXPIREP AMP HE FORGOT TO RENEW T!<lb/>
Approximately 50 persons attended<lb/>
the annual fall meeting of the South<lb/>
Atlantic Philosophy of Education Society<lb/>
at ECU Oct. 24-25.<lb/>
They included representatiaves of<lb/>
college and university education facilities<lb/>
from five states and the District of<lb/>
Columbia.<lb/>
Theme of the meeting, "Values:<lb/>
Affective and Cognitive was carried out<lb/>
by a series of addresses by members.<lb/>
Keynote speaker was Thomas F. Green of<lb/>
Syracuse University whose topic was<lb/>
"Language of Values in Policy Making<lb/>
Dr. Joseph Congleton of the ECU<lb/>
School of Education Served as a member<lb/>
of the conference planning committee,<lb/>
with Robert J. Mulvaney of the University<lb/>
of South Carolina and Beatrice E. Sarlos<lb/>
of Loyola College, Baltimore.<lb/>
SAPES president is Michael B.<lb/>
McMahon of the University of Virginia,<lb/>
and J. Don Reeves of Wake Forest<lb/>
University is secretary and treasurer.<lb/>
Speakers included Professors Mul-<lb/>
vaney, Sarlos, McMahon and Reeves and<lb/>
the following other members:<lb/>
Alfred O. Schmitz and Frederick F.<lb/>
Ritsch Converse College; Roger Sullivan<lb/>
and Thontas Hawkins, University of<lb/>
South Carolina; William F. Losito<lb/>
College of William and Mary;<lb/>
John R. Scudder, Lynchburg College;<lb/>
Stanley I vie and Bruce Beezer, N.C. State<lb/>
University; Wayne Wiley and John B<lb/>
Haynes, Madison College, D.J. Self<lb/>
Carol Helwig and Franklin Ross Jones<lb/>
Old Dominion University.<lb/>
Samuel M. Holton, UNC-Chapel Hill?<lb/>
Herbert R. Paschal, ECU; Tom Buford<lb/>
Furman University; Paul H. Sartori<lb/>
Virginia Council of Higher Education.<lb/>
Sam Craver, Virginia Commonwealtr<lb/>
University; Frank H. Howard, Randolph<lb/>
Macon College; Edith Daubner, Long<lb/>
wood College and W. Thomas Jamison<lb/>
Appalachian State University.<lb/>
Dr. Paschal's address, "A Majo<lb/>
Society of the Colonial South: the Soutr<lb/>
and River Society of N.C was a specia<lb/>
presentation at the Friday evening<lb/>
banquet.<lb/>
A specialist in N.C. history, Dr<lb/>
Paschal is chairman of the ECL<lb/>
Department of History.<lb/>
The conference was hosted by th<lb/>
ECU Department of Secondary Educatior<lb/>
and School of Education in cooperatior<lb/>
with the ECU Division of Continuinc<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
e<lb/>
13<lb/>
?1<lb/>
Come Celebrate<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
With Us!<lb/>
(CPS)-Just<lb/>
begins, a p<lb/>
university li<lb/>
an article t<lb/>
neglected t<lb/>
from the pi<lb/>
wanted to '<lb/>
school inst<lb/>
for the orig<lb/>
the original<lb/>
The lib<lb/>
?machine, tl<lb/>
'details, bu<lb/>
Educational<lb/>
?fact, the m<lb/>
the student<lb/>
ree.<lb/>
But if C<lb/>
Legislation<lb/>
committees<lb/>
senate, the<lb/>
jtSO.OOO fir<lb/>
popies. The<lb/>
,and publis<lb/>
Decause of<lb/>
educators <lb/>
provide edu<lb/>
t hat might 1<lb/>
Last yes<lb/>
was passe<lb/>
session ?<lb/>
considered<lb/>
bDommittee<lb/>
jhat a new 1<lb/>
Jvithin the r<lb/>
The new<lb/>
he free c<lb/>
naterial "fc<lb/>
jomment,<lb/>
icholarshi<lb/>
amorphous<lb/>
he Suprem<lb/>
luling on a<lb/>
ase to <lb/>
Intangibles<lb/>
rf the work<lb/>
inancial t<lb/>
otential m<lb/>
Fair us<lb/>
Kill calls '<lb/>
opyrighted<lb/>
n mm mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m iii<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmm<lb/>
2 BL<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0021"/><lb/>
jpgjj<lb/>
?? ?,<lb/>
?HHHHH<lb/>
IMIMNMV<lb/>
NMW<lb/>
<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7,<lb/>
?<lb/>
ON 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
21<lb/>
F. Losito<lb/>
jrg College;<lb/>
, N.C. State<lb/>
id John B<lb/>
D.J. Self<lb/>
loss Jones<lb/>
Chapel Hlllj<lb/>
Dm Buford<lb/>
H. Sartori<lb/>
jcation.<lb/>
imonwealtr<lb/>
Proposed copyright law<lb/>
may cause problems<lb/>
(CPS)-Just two days before the semester<lb/>
begins, a professor frantically calls the<lb/>
university library to request 25 copies of<lb/>
an article to be put on reserve. He has<lb/>
neglected to order the book or journal<lb/>
from the publisher or perhaps he simply<lb/>
Randolph- wanted to write off tne P8086 t0 tne<lb/>
ner, Long<lb/>
s Jamison<lb/>
"A Majo<lb/>
the Soutf<lb/>
s a specia<lb/>
t eveninc<lb/>
story, Dr<lb/>
the ECL<lb/>
3d by th<lb/>
Educatior<lb/>
ooperatior<lb/>
Dntinuinc<lb/>
??s<lb/>
?q<lb/>
S<lb/>
school instead of charging his students<lb/>
for the original. Or maybe 25 copies of<lb/>
the original were unavailable.<lb/>
The library pays for the copying<lb/>
?machine, the paper, the administrative<lb/>
'details, but it pays no one for the<lb/>
?Educational material which it reprints. In<lb/>
'fact, the material that is so valuable to<lb/>
the students in the class is absolutely<lb/>
'ree.<lb/>
But if Congress passes the copyright<lb/>
llegislation now being considered by<lb/>
committees in both the House and<lb/>
Senate, the library would be liable for a<lb/>
?50,000 fine for reprinting those 25<lb/>
popies. The new law will protect authors<lb/>
,and publishers from losing revenues<lb/>
Decause of free reprints while depriving<lb/>
educators and libraries of the right to<lb/>
provide educational materials to students<lb/>
?hat might otherwise be unavailable.<lb/>
I h Last year, a substantially similar bill<lb/>
lavas passed in the Senate, but the<lb/>
isession ended before the House<lb/>
considered its own copyright legislation.<lb/>
iCommittee sources in the House predict<lb/>
Jhat a new copyright bill will be voted on<lb/>
Within the next year.<lb/>
The new law as proposed would allow<lb/>
he free duplication of copyrighted<lb/>
naterial "for purposes such as criticism,<lb/>
comment, news reporting, teaching<lb/>
scholarship, or research This<lb/>
amorphous doctrine" of "fair use as<lb/>
he Supreme Court called it last year in<lb/>
juling on a copyright case, varies from<lb/>
?:ase to case depending on such<lb/>
ntangibles as "the nature and purpose"<lb/>
M the work, the amount copied and the<lb/>
inancial effect of copying on the<lb/>
Potential market for the material.<lb/>
Fair use does not include what the<lb/>
Mil calls "systematic" reproduction of<lb/>
opyrighted material. Library copying for<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
inter-library loans and reserve copies<lb/>
would probably fall under this category<lb/>
of "systematic" reproduction.<lb/>
In testimony before the House<lb/>
Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Civil<lb/>
Liberties and the Administration of<lb/>
Justice this summer, educators claimed<lb/>
that this bill would be devastating to the<lb/>
teaching process. "Educational users<lb/>
need special protection over and above<lb/>
that provided commercial users Bernard<lb/>
J. Freitag, a National Education<lb/>
Association representative said. "They<lb/>
have a public responsibility for teaching.<lb/>
They work for people-not for profit<lb/>
The benefits of using reprints?access<lb/>
to materials that would otherwise be too<lb/>
costly for most libraries and students to<lb/>
afford-would be lost if the bill were<lb/>
approved, the educators argue . Provid-<lb/>
ing resources from a wide range of<lb/>
journals and collection gives the student<lb/>
a broader view than if one textbook were<lb/>
assigned for each class.<lb/>
But writers and publishers have a<lb/>
different perspective. While cheap<lb/>
reproductions mean less money from<lb/>
student pocket books, they also mean<lb/>
less money in the author's bank account.<lb/>
In many cases, this is a substantial<lb/>
financial loss for the writer.<lb/>
" Librarians and educators are asking<lb/>
writers to ignore their own economic<lb/>
difficulties and act like good socialists,<lb/>
spurning the profit motive and resigning<lb/>
themselves to a diminished income,<lb/>
while the rest of the country continues to<lb/>
act like a clutch of hard-nosed<lb/>
capitalists author Michael Mawshaw<lb/>
wrote in the Chronicle of Higher<lb/>
Education. "Does a society that feels it<lb/>
can casually reproduce and exploit an<lb/>
author's work for free really respect the<lb/>
written word?"<lb/>
The repercussions of the proposed<lb/>
legislation are already being felt on<lb/>
college campuses. At Arizona State<lb/>
University (ASU), the head librarian has<lb/>
refused to make more than one copy of<lb/>
an article for the reserve reading section<lb/>
citing the "fair use" doctrine.<lb/>
!<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
2 BLOCKS FROM ECU 211 JAVIS STREET<lb/>
" FREE CART SERVICE "<lb/>
Why carry your groceries<lb/>
when you can borrow<lb/>
a cart from us <lb/>
p4i<lb/>
eg<lb/>
I KNOW THAT<lb/>
MANY OF YOU<lb/>
ARE CONCERNED<lb/>
ABOirr THE ECONOMY<lb/>
A LOT OF PEOPLE<lb/>
HAVE PROPOSED THAT<lb/>
WE BROADEN OUR<lb/>
SOCIAL PROGRAMS<lb/>
TO HELP THE POOR,<lb/>
THE Hi, THE ELDERLY<lb/>
AND THE NEEDY <lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
BUTITHINK<lb/>
THAT IS A DANGEROUS<lb/>
POLICY WHILE I<lb/>
AM PRESIDENT<lb/>
OF THE COUNTRY,<lb/>
WE ARE HOT GOING TO<lb/>
DRIFT TOWARD<lb/>
SOCIALISM<lb/>
WE'RE JUST<lb/>
GOING TO<lb/>
DRIFT.<lb/>
"Publishers are in a pretty surly<lb/>
mood librarian Donald Koepp said. Not<lb/>
half as surly as ASU students will be<lb/>
when only one copy is available for<lb/>
reading, however.<lb/>
"The frustration level of students<lb/>
trying to use this place is very high<lb/>
Koepp admitted.<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/>
?????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
 70 4-I I II THURS. 0CT3L? 5<lb/>
JKathsblk ,?fp <lb/>
t ? ACOUSTIC GUTAR f'AMOACA X<lb/>
t CBOB DYLAN .STYLO J<lb/>
 ? VO COVE CHAAQF <lb/>
-rw ???????????????????????????????? ?????<lb/>
r<lb/>
?a<lb/>
(ft<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Welcome Students<lb/>
We're glad you're here!<lb/>
, OPEN 24H0URSSp?<lb/>
KJg 10 Discount to all ECU p <lb/>
?g jj Students with I.D - Mon.fr C lf<lb/>
?2l ? Tues. from 12 noon to 10 P.M.fr V<lb/>
Xfii &amp; Now Serving Vegetables jjj faf<lb/>
Serving Breakfast, Lunch and dinner<lb/>
at all hours<lb/>
2518 East 10th St.<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
?? ? <lb/>
?<lb/>
F :?? ??? ? ' nm ' ??<lb/>
MMM<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0022"/><lb/>
TBB<lb/>
22<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
SpOrtS How sweetitis! ECU-38, UNC-17Tm<lb/>
Dye, players<lb/>
relishing win<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL-Saturday was a great<lb/>
day to be a Pirate, following East<lb/>
Carolina's 38-17 rout of the Tar Heels in<lb/>
Kenan Stadium.<lb/>
An exuberant Pat Dye exclaimed after<lb/>
the game that the win may easily have<lb/>
been the greatest in ECU history.<lb/>
"This has to be the biggest win in<lb/>
East Carolina's history said coach Dye,<lb/>
after the game. "We had a lot of football<lb/>
players out there today. Even though<lb/>
Mike Weaver had a super football game,<lb/>
everybody played well<lb/>
For Weaver, it was probably the best<lb/>
game of his life, or at least his college<lb/>
career, which has had its share of pit<lb/>
falls in the last two years.<lb/>
We were ready for this one said<lb/>
Weaver. "We knew we had to go out and<lb/>
not make mistakes, as well as taking<lb/>
advantage of their mistakes<lb/>
That the Pirates' did. Seven times the<lb/>
Tar Heels lost the ball to ECU and on<lb/>
four of those occasions, ECU turned<lb/>
them into scores.<lb/>
But. the central feeling in the Pirate<lb/>
locker room after the game was one of<lb/>
happiness and togetherness.<lb/>
Senior Bobby Myrcik, who transferred<lb/>
to ECU following his sophomore year at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, was one of the happiest.<lb/>
"This is the only reason I came back<lb/>
for my fifth year said Myrick, who had<lb/>
to sit out a year following his transfer.<lb/>
'We've always playr-d well against ACC<lb/>
schools, but lost. People could only say,<lb/>
you played well, but lost know they can<lb/>
say that we beat the heck out of them<lb/>
Mynck's brother, Mike, had travelled<lb/>
over 1,000 miles from Little Rock, Ark. to<lb/>
see his brother play. The older Myrick<lb/>
had been team captain of the Pirates in<lb/>
1972 when Carolina won 28-27.<lb/>
During the game, ECU ran off 403<lb/>
total offensive yards and 370 yards on<lb/>
the ground. A lot of this success was<lb/>
due to the Pirates' line play.<lb/>
Ricky Bennett, an offensive tackle,<lb/>
and Wayne Bolt, a guard, gave some<lb/>
insight into their feelings.<lb/>
"I thought we controlled them in the<lb/>
line and came off the ball well said<lb/>
Bennett. "We ran on them all day real<lb/>
well I think that's probably why we<lb/>
won "<lb/>
Bolt was not as impressed with the<lb/>
Carolina defense as some, but said the<lb/>
true feelings of the win hadn't yet<lb/>
surfaced.<lb/>
"I didn't think their defense was that<lb/>
good said Bolt. "We knew what we had<lb/>
to do and that we could run on them<lb/>
from looking at the films. I guess it<lb/>
hasn't hit me yet, but I'm sure it will later<lb/>
in the week<lb/>
Behind those linemen were many<lb/>
runners, among them Willie Hawkins and<lb/>
Ray Jones.<lb/>
See Dye, page 27<lb/>
AMIMV<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL-East Carolina pulled<lb/>
off what is probably the greatest win in<lb/>
its football history here Saturday<lb/>
afternoon, by embarrassing the North<lb/>
Carolina Tar Heels, 38-17, before 42,000<lb/>
Band Day spectators.<lb/>
The rout, and that is what it was,<lb/>
avenged a 28-27 Tar Heel victory over the<lb/>
Pirates two years ago. In that one, a<lb/>
questionable pass interference call led to<lb/>
the winning Carolina score. But this<lb/>
time, Carolina never got close enough to<lb/>
let a referee's call make a difference in<lb/>
the outcome.<lb/>
The Tar Heels, who had spent the<lb/>
previous two weeks playing head-to-head<lb/>
with two powerful opponents, Notre<lb/>
Dame and North Carolina State, spent<lb/>
most of Saturday trying to catch up to<lb/>
the sky high Pirate team.<lb/>
The Pirates' offense was led by<lb/>
quarterback Mike Weaver, who made a<lb/>
strong bid for National Back of the Week<lb/>
honors with his role. Weaver, too, had<lb/>
engineered a 42-14 Pirate win over<lb/>
Western Carolina last week.<lb/>
As was the case the week before,<lb/>
Weaver guided the Pirate offense<lb/>
primarily along the ground, as the ECU<lb/>
runners ran off 370 rushing yards against<lb/>
the Tar Heels. Leading the Pirate runners<lb/>
were Ken Strayhorn with 72 yards on 14<lb/>
carries, Weaver With 68 yards on 12<lb/>
carries and freshman Eddie Hicks with 68<lb/>
yards on six carries. Hicks also broke<lb/>
free for the Pirates' third score on a 53<lb/>
yard scamper through the Tar Heel<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
North Carolina also mounted a potent<lb/>
running game of 238 yards against ECU,<lb/>
but most of that came from Mike Voight.<lb/>
Voight carried the pigskin 42 times for<lb/>
209 yards for the Tar Heels. Of those<lb/>
totals, however, Voight gained only 42<lb/>
yards on 13 carries in the second half.<lb/>
In that second half, ECU exploded to<lb/>
outscore Carolina 17-0 and the defense<lb/>
held the Tar Heels to only 70 yards<lb/>
offense and five first downs. This second<lb/>
half play nullified a late first half rally by<lb/>
the Tar Heels and resulted in the runaway<lb/>
victory for East Carolina.<lb/>
TAR HEELS SCORE FIRST<lb/>
Carolina opened the scoring at first,<lb/>
though, and it seemed the game may<lb/>
take a different turn.<lb/>
Giving the ball to Voight for 69 of the<lb/>
70 yards on the drive, Carolina took 13<lb/>
plays to score and go ahead 7-0.<lb/>
Voight lugged the ball 11 times on the<lb/>
drive, including a 31 yard scamper. He<lb/>
scored on fourth down from the one, but<lb/>
only after a Pirate player had missed<lb/>
making the tackle on him in the<lb/>
backfield.<lb/>
To Cary Godette, who was a standout<lb/>
on defense for the Pirates, this was the<lb/>
turning point of the ball game.<lb/>
Said Godette, "We knew after that<lb/>
first drive that we could stop them. Sure<lb/>
they scored, but look how they did it. We<lb/>
missed several tackles in key places and<lb/>
that was the only way they scored<lb/>
And if ECU had any doubt as to<lb/>
whether they could score on Carolina<lb/>
those doubts were put to rest on the next<lb/>
series when ECU drove 77 yards in 11<lb/>
plays for a score.<lb/>
The drive was pushed along by runs<lb/>
of 14 yards by Strayhorn, two runs of 15<lb/>
and 11 yards by Weaver and Willie<lb/>
Hawkins, and a 15 yard pass from<lb/>
Weaver to Terry Gallaher. It was<lb/>
Strayhorn who scored the touchdown on<lb/>
a six yard run.<lb/>
But ECU wasn't done. It began<lb/>
dictating the outcome of the game soon<lb/>
thereafter when it took two Carolina<lb/>
fumbles, both by Voight, and turned<lb/>
them into quick scores and a 21-7 lead.<lb/>
Turnovers would prove to undo the<lb/>
Heels by the game's end, as the Heels<lb/>
lost four fumbles and had three passes<lb/>
intercepted.<lb/>
THAT MAN HICKS - Eddie Hicks 28 prepares to cut up behind the block of Terry<lb/>
Gallaher 81. Hicks scored on a 53 yard run against the Tar Heels in Saturday's 38-17<lb/>
ByJ<lb/>
Sf.<lb/>
win.<lb/>
The first fumble by Voight came or<lb/>
the first play following the ECU kickoff<lb/>
and Jim Bolding, who could also add twe<lb/>
pass interceptions to his day's work, fel<lb/>
on the ball at the Heel's 19 yard line. Or<lb/>
the second play from scrimmage, Weavei<lb/>
used the wishbone to full advantage anc<lb/>
crossed up the Hells with an 18 yam<lb/>
pass to Clay Burnett for a touchdown.<lb/>
HICKS BREAKS LOOSE<lb/>
The Heels managed five plays afte<lb/>
the next kickoff before Voight fumble<lb/>
again. This time, Harold Fort fell on th<lb/>
Tar Heel workhorse's fumble and ECL<lb/>
needed one play to score.<lb/>
This time the score came compli<lb/>
ments of Eddie Hicks, a freshman toolko many of<lb/>
his first carry of the game and darted &amp;<lb/>
yards through the Carolina defense fo feeling was<lb/>
the score and a 21-7 lead. The Pirate;<lb/>
had scored three times in a three minut My basic at<lb/>
Clarence<lb/>
In trying<lb/>
In all du<lb/>
bean Sport:<lb/>
Before t<lb/>
unrelated tc<lb/>
As I enl<lb/>
Chapel Hill<lb/>
he phone.<lb/>
Over the<lb/>
Hill and, the<lb/>
more perso<lb/>
As a st<lb/>
i admittedly,<lb/>
Eof on what<lb/>
As Spor<lb/>
ven more<lb/>
My feeli<lb/>
.Department<lb/>
Moore, wtk<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
athlel<lb/>
W<lb/>
came<lb/>
period.<lb/>
After the game, Kenny Strayhon<lb/>
talked about Hicks' run. Said Strayhorr<lb/>
of Hicks' play. "When Eddie went in fo<lb/>
me he came up and asked me wha<lb/>
Carolina was doing. I told him not I<lb/>
worry, that he'd do well regardless<lb/>
what they were doing and to just go o<lb/>
there and run the ball. Danged if fylthat I woul<lb/>
didn't go out there and knock them all came, bega<lb/>
down on the first play jwhat had o<lb/>
East Carolina led 21-7 after the firs But afte<lb/>
period, but after Bolding ended one driv<lb/>
with an interception, Carolina drove for<lb/>
score to close it to 21-14.<lb/>
The Heels went 80 yards following<lb/>
47 yard Tom Daub punt for the score<lb/>
The biggest plays on the drive was a 11<lb/>
yard pass from Billy Paschal I to M?<lb/>
Collins and a 13 yarder to Charli<lb/>
Williams Voight scored from the six.<lb/>
ECU failed to move the ball an<lb/>
Carolina drove again. This time, Paschal<lb/>
hit Collins for 25 yards to the ECU 16<lb/>
but the defense held and Tom Blddh<lb/>
added a 32 yard field goal to the Tar He?<lb/>
tallies.<lb/>
Despite a fumble by ECU, the Pirate<lb/>
led at the half 21-17, but Carotin,<lb/>
seemed to have the momentum in th<lb/>
game.<lb/>
SECOND HALF ROUT<lb/>
In the locker room at halftime, coac<lb/>
Pat Dye urged his players not to choke.<lb/>
"At halftime we talked about how v?<lb/>
had choked in the past said Dye aft<lb/>
the game, "I told them there was no we<lb/>
we could win unless we beat them, ar<lb/>
you can't beat them if you choke<lb/>
Meanwhile Bill Dooley was telling h<lb/>
Tar Heel team not to let ECU score c<lb/>
their first possession following tf<lb/>
kickoff. Apparently, Dye's players we<lb/>
listening better.<lb/>
Taking the kickoff, the Pirates dro<lb/>
80 yards in just seven plays, bangir<lb/>
through the Tar Heel line.<lb/>
Weaver picked up 11 yards for a fir<lb/>
to the 31, then Raymond Jones brok<lb/>
loose for 43 yards and a first to the Uf<lb/>
26. Weaver moved for 16 more yards<lb/>
the 10, and three plays later, Will<lb/>
Hawkins scored from five yards out. EC<lb/>
then stood on top, 28-17.<lb/>
The next time ECU had the ball, tf<lb/>
foot of Tom Daub sent the ball 54 yart<lb/>
into the end zone for a touchback. F<lb/>
the game, Daub averaged a school reco<lb/>
of 48.4 yards on seven kicks.<lb/>
P<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
See Rout, page 27.<lb/>
They sa<lb/>
3 Mr. Moc<lb/>
I, too, <lb/>
he past yc<lb/>
Reflect!<lb/>
courtesy, b<lb/>
To look<lb/>
Director is<lb/>
College in<lb/>
xwer, in t<lb/>
under the ;<lb/>
Athletic pn<lb/>
Miilt partly<lb/>
Even w<lb/>
lumorous<lb/>
certainly in<lb/>
or his fur<lb/>
As an<lb/>
Clarence S<lb/>
That's ji<lb/>
Stas" was<lb/>
Retirem<lb/>
le was loo<lb/>
Such w<lb/>
He wanted<lb/>
.uddeness<lb/>
Now th<lb/>
Doubtle<lb/>
o name m<lb/>
honor woul<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0023"/><lb/>
HBIMHHHHHBBMIHHIHHBIBM<lb/>
23<lb/>
M<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
<lb/>
j Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ht came or<lb/>
ECU kickoffl<lb/>
ilso add twc<lb/>
s work, fel<lb/>
ard line. Or<lb/>
age, Weave'<lb/>
antage anc<lb/>
an 18 yarc<lb/>
jchdown.<lb/>
SE<lb/>
plays afte<lb/>
iht fumble<lb/>
fell on th<lb/>
J and ECL<lb/>
ne compli<lb/>
hman toolko many of those involved were caught totally off guard.<lb/>
d darted 5:<lb/>
The passing of a great man<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich is dead at age 62. The event happened so suddenly Friday that<lb/>
In trying to explain how I felt at the time, it would simply be impossible to do. My<lb/>
jefense fo feeling was not so much one of sorrow, but one of disbelief.<lb/>
rhe Pirate: In all due respects to "Stas I did not know the man as well as I now wish I had.<lb/>
iree minuU My basic attitudes towards the man had been formulated in the short 14 months I had<lb/>
P Sports Editor,<lb/>
efore then, my basic feelings, I'm afraid, were that of most students who were<lb/>
lated to athletics.<lb/>
vent in fot As I entered the Sports Information Department on Friday, prior to leaving for<lb/>
me wha .Chapel Hill, I was greeted with the news of his death and asked if I would help answer<lb/>
urn not t the phone. The news at that time was known, but no official announcement had been<lb/>
jardless cjrnade.<lb/>
Over the next two hours, I found myself in a historical position. A part in history<lb/>
that I would have just as soon not played. As I answered the phone and, when it<lb/>
came, began releasing the official annoucement to the news media, no true notion of<lb/>
what had occurred as far as my personal feelings were concerned was present.<lb/>
But after it was all over, the event began to sink in. As I made my way to Chapel<lb/>
Hill and, the following morning, prior to the ECU game, the death of "Stas" became<lb/>
more personal to me.<lb/>
'? As a student, all I knew was the legend of Stasavich as a head coach. But,<lb/>
ollowing iadmittedly, a record of 170 wins, 64 losses and eight ties speaks for itself, regardless<lb/>
the score; eof on what level of football it was achieved.<lb/>
ust go oir<lb/>
iged if rv<lb/>
k them al<lb/>
?r the fin<lb/>
j one drivi<lb/>
drove for<lb/>
1'<lb/>
i was a<lb/>
ill to Me<lb/>
o Charli<lb/>
he six.<lb/>
ball an<lb/>
i, Paschal<lb/>
 ECU 16<lb/>
m Blddl<lb/>
5 Tar Hee<lb/>
he Pirate<lb/>
Carol in<lb/>
m in th<lb/>
me, coac<lb/>
0 choke,<lb/>
jt how a<lb/>
Dye afti<lb/>
as no We<lb/>
:hem, ar<lb/>
e<lb/>
telling h<lb/>
score c<lb/>
ving tr<lb/>
ers we<lb/>
ites c!ro<lb/>
bangir<lb/>
for a fir<lb/>
les broH<lb/>
3 theUf<lb/>
yards '<lb/>
jr, Will<lb/>
out. EC<lb/>
ball, tl<lb/>
54 yarc<lb/>
?ck. F<lb/>
01 reco<lb/>
i As Sports Editor, I knew more about Clarence Stasavich-the Athletic Director, but<lb/>
even more about Clarence Stasavich-the man.<lb/>
i My feelings towards "Stas" were never as great as some of those in the Athletic<lb/>
.Department who had worked with him over the years, but I can agree with Clifton<lb/>
Moore, when he said:<lb/>
East Carolina University, its alumni, and especially our student<lb/>
athletes, past and present, have lost a dear friend.<lb/>
We did not always agree, but whatever his feelings you knew they<lb/>
came from the heart. The likes of Stas do not come our way often<lb/>
They say it is not right to steal a man's personal feelings, and for this I apologize<lb/>
a Mr. Moore, but he says it so well and so truthfully.<lb/>
I, too, did not always agree with Stasavich and his old-fashioned ways, but over<lb/>
the past year I had grown a slight, yet prevalent, attachment to the man.<lb/>
Reflecting back, Stasavich nww treated me with anything other than the utmost<lb/>
courtesy, but never gave the feeling that I was being "used<lb/>
To look at what strides East Carolina made during Stasavich's 13 years as Athletic<lb/>
Director is enough tribute to the man. He took the school from little East Carolina<lb/>
College in the NAIA and developed into one of the major powers, if not the major<lb/>
lower, in the Southern Conference of the NCAA. "Stas" also brought ECU out from<lb/>
jnder the shadow of the better known ACC and gave some pride and prestige to the<lb/>
Athletic program. Most of the athletic facilities currently in use by ECU's teams were<lb/>
Jxiilt partly or primarily through the hard labors of the white-haired gentleman.<lb/>
Even when not living in the past, as "Stas" often dio with his colorful, and<lb/>
lumorous stories, Stasavich was one of the most respected men in the nation and<lb/>
certainly in North Carolina, as will be evidenced by the throngs that should turn out<lb/>
or his funeral earlier this afternoon.<lb/>
As an administrator and as a man, one could always rest assured that what<lb/>
Dlarence Stasavich said or did was always from the bottom of his heart.<lb/>
That's just the way the man was. Whether in a business atmosphere or otherwise,<lb/>
'Stas" was always a friend.<lb/>
Retirement was just a few years away for Stasavich and one would have thought<lb/>
ie was looking forward to it. Indeed, he was a great hunter and fisherman.<lb/>
Such was not the case, however, Stasavich's life was athletics and the university,<lb/>
-ie wanted to go out on top while he was still active in the school. So, perhaps the<lb/>
iuddeness with which he left us was the best way for Clarence Stasavich to leave us.<lb/>
Now the man is gone, and so is the era which he brought about<lb/>
Doubtless many honors will be bestowed upon the man posthumously and moves<lb/>
o name many monuments will be proposed, but for those who new him the best<lb/>
KMior would be to remember him as he was?That is simolv, as a great man<lb/>
Former player remembers<lb/>
'Stas' as one who cared<lb/>
Flowering compliments have been<lb/>
flowing in since Friday following the<lb/>
death of Clarence Stasavich, most of the<lb/>
comments have come from people who<lb/>
knew Stasavich as an administrator or a<lb/>
friend, but few tell what Stasacish was<lb/>
like as a coach.<lb/>
In an interview with FOUNTAINHEAD<lb/>
on Sunday, Dave Alexander, one of<lb/>
"Stas players, spoke about Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich, the football coach, from his<lb/>
Gaithersburg, Maryland home.<lb/>
In the interview, Alexander spoke of<lb/>
Stasavich as more than a coach, but as a<lb/>
father-like figure.<lb/>
"As a football coach his record stands<lb/>
for itself said Alexander, "but he was<lb/>
most of all a man<lb/>
"As a coach he was very demanding<lb/>
of his players. Everything he did he<lb/>
planned out well in a meticulous manner.<lb/>
He wouldn't tolerate mistakes on or off<lb/>
the field<lb/>
Alexander said he had been thinking<lb/>
of Stasavich since Saturday morning,<lb/>
when he first heard of his death.<lb/>
"I've been thinking a lot about him<lb/>
since I heard the news said Alexander.<lb/>
"He was a great man and a great coach.<lb/>
His philosophy was that he'd rather help<lb/>
a kid than win a football game.<lb/>
"He was more interested in a kid off<lb/>
the field, than as a football player. He<lb/>
would have conferences with the<lb/>
individual players to see how they were<lb/>
doing, both in classes and their everyday<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
"His interests went far beyond<lb/>
coaching added Alexander, "he was<lb/>
more interested in shaping a man's<lb/>
character and helping him to grow than<lb/>
anything else. He changed a lot of kids<lb/>
and influenced their lives. To me, that's<lb/>
greatness in a man<lb/>
Alexander played three years under<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich, from 1963-1965, and<lb/>
is a recent inductee into the East<lb/>
Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. During his<lb/>
playing days, Alexander played on three<lb/>
Stasavich coached bowl teams. During<lb/>
those seasons, Stasavich coached the<lb/>
Pirates to a 9-1 record each season.<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
h! m<lb/>
PIER FRESH AT PIER FIVE<lb/>
264 By-Pass-Pitt Plaza<lb/>
GreenvHIe, N.C.<lb/>
756-4342<lb/>
Wednesday Special<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner<lb/>
Fresh Fillet of Trout $1.39<lb/>
Fresh fillet of Rounder $1.89<lb/>
Served with Coleslaw<lb/>
French Fries Hushpuppies<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
Whole Baby Flounder $1.89<lb/>
Coleslaw FF Hushpuppies<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp $1.99<lb/>
Coleslaw FF Hush puppies<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
m i tmmmm n<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtmw<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
SSMSSSMSSMSSSSMSMSSSSSSS<lb/>
?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0024"/><lb/>
?MMMWHHHHHHMHHHHIBH<lb/>
&amp; ? m ?????:<lb/>
24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmfm0immtmmmmjmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
The scoreboard high atop<lb/>
Kenan Stadium's press box<lb/>
showed ail too plainly to fie UNC fans<lb/>
the outcome of the game.<lb/>
In addition to the mighty offense<lb/>
the Pirates displayed, there were<lb/>
some defensive heroics, too.<lb/>
One was Reggie Pinkney's fourth<lb/>
quarter interception( lower rt)<lb/>
and fen the re was the gang tackling<lb/>
of the ECU defense<lb/>
Hart<lb/>
in the picture at the lower right<lb/>
Voight was one of few bright spots<lb/>
in the Heels' day, as he gained<lb/>
209 yards on 42 carries,<lb/>
he also fumbled twice to set<lb/>
up ECU scores.<lb/>
Harry Hart<lb/>
ch booted hi<lb/>
arolina troun<lb/>
soccer mate!<lb/>
; In beating<lb/>
9ayed a far i<lb/>
uke squad<lb/>
ednesday.<lb/>
lay in the gai<lb/>
jcorded only<lb/>
Is third shutc<lb/>
The score<lb/>
Mike Voight(no. M found that ouC3<lb/>
7er. Nonet h<lb/>
rye was plea:<lb/>
"We lookec<lb/>
ell said F<lb/>
lised its recc<lb/>
Ne did so rm<lb/>
:ored more tl<lb/>
In the first<lb/>
ay from the<lb/>
;oring until K<lb/>
)al with 20 n<lb/>
Won<lb/>
By<lb/>
Women's I<lb/>
The Speec<lb/>
'ednesday tr<lb/>
ivision, Sigm<lb/>
slta Pi were I<lb/>
iree for the t<lb/>
ave Tri Sigm<lb/>
ime but losi<lb/>
jsan Moore<lb/>
;ored in the i<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mt<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
v<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
N THE RUN<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0025"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
??<lb/>
?n<lb/>
aj be<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO<lb/>
V<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmmnwnmmMmm<lb/>
25<lb/>
C fans<lb/>
-lartofelis and Karpovich lead I<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
ers to 4-0 win<lb/>
fiat out<lb/>
I<lb/>
Harry Hart of el is and Jeff Karpovich<lb/>
ch booted home a pair of goals as East<lb/>
arolina trounced Pembroke State, 4-0, in<lb/>
soccer match yesterday.<lb/>
; In beating the Braves, the Pirates<lb/>
Sayed a far inferior opponent than the<lb/>
uke squad they had faced last<lb/>
ednesday. The Pirates so dominated<lb/>
lay in the game that goalie John Keener<lb/>
)corded only four saves in registering<lb/>
Is third shutout of the season.<lb/>
The score could easily have been<lb/>
lore one-sided if the Pirates' shooting<lb/>
ad been keener and the field a little<lb/>
7er. Nonetheless, ECU coach Curtis<lb/>
rye was pleased with his team's play.<lb/>
"We looked great and moved the ball<lb/>
ell said Frye, after his team had<lb/>
used its record to 3-4-2 on the season.<lb/>
Ae did so many things right to have not<lb/>
3ored more than we did<lb/>
In the first half, the Pirates dominated<lb/>
ay from the outset, but had problems<lb/>
coring until Karpovich slammed home a<lb/>
)al with 20 minutes gone in the period.<lb/>
On his goal, Karpovich took a perfect<lb/>
pass from Tom lozer, eluded one of<lb/>
many mud puddles and slammed the<lb/>
shot past the Pembroke goalie.<lb/>
And that's the way it stood at<lb/>
halftime. ECU had several more shots at<lb/>
the Pembroke goal, but the slippery<lb/>
footing, and perhaps the team's<lb/>
overanxiousness, prevented them from<lb/>
expanding on the lead.<lb/>
In the second half, the Pirates<lb/>
switched to the dryer side of the field<lb/>
and the footing seemed to improve the<lb/>
Pirates' play immediately.<lb/>
The Pirates' first goal of the half came<lb/>
by Harry Hartofelis on an assist from<lb/>
Pete Angus. On the play, Angus shot at<lb/>
the goal and the goalie deflected the<lb/>
shot, but did not block it. Hartofelis ttien<lb/>
booted the loose ball into the goal for<lb/>
the 2-0 lead.<lb/>
John Gwynn had an opportunity to<lb/>
score with 14 minutes left, but was wide<lb/>
to the left on a side shot. The Pirates,<lb/>
however continued to control play in front<lb/>
Df the net, as Hartofelis and Tozer led<lb/>
the ballhawking offense.<lb/>
It was out of this pack that Hartofelis<lb/>
booted in his second goal of the game,<lb/>
and sixth of the season, with 13:20 left<lb/>
in the game. Angus assisted on the goal<lb/>
ECU's fourth goal was a beautifully<lb/>
executed throw in from John Gwynn to<lb/>
Karpovich. Gwynn, throwing the ball<lb/>
vigorously, heaved the pass from out of<lb/>
bounds into a Pirate pack in front of the<lb/>
net. Karpovich then deflected the ball<lb/>
with his body into the open Brave goal.<lb/>
The goal came with seven minutes<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
At this point, Frye let several of his<lb/>
lesser used players into the game to gain<lb/>
some valuable playing time and<lb/>
experience. And two of these players<lb/>
nearly converted.<lb/>
First Jack Kelley and, then Jimmy<lb/>
O'Boyle, missed close up scoring<lb/>
opportunities for scores. On another<lb/>
kick, Kelly fired a seemingly perfect shot<lb/>
diagonally at the goal, only to have the<lb/>
ball hit the top crossbar and bounce<lb/>
harmlessly over the net.<lb/>
The Pirates' next meet Old Dominion<lb/>
on Wednesday night in Norfolk, Va.<lb/>
before returning home for what Frye<lb/>
terms as the "biggest game of the year'<lb/>
for the Pirates on Saturday That<lb/>
Saturday game matches the Pirates<lb/>
against a powerful William and Mary<lb/>
squad for the right to meet Appalachian<lb/>
State in the conference championships<lb/>
"We need a big crowd out here for<lb/>
William and Mary said Frye. "This<lb/>
game is a big gme and it means the<lb/>
conference to us<lb/>
The game Saturday begins at 11<lb/>
o'clock on the Minges soccer field.<lb/>
Women's intramural playoffs beginning in full swing<lb/>
By DIANE KNOTT<lb/>
Women's Intramural Speedaway<lb/>
The Speedaway Tournament began<lb/>
'ednesday the 15th. In the Sorority<lb/>
ivision, Sigma, Sigma Sigma and Alpha<lb/>
-2lta Pi were to play the best two out of<lb/>
iree for the tournament. Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
ive Tri Sigma a rough and very close<lb/>
jme but lost it to the Tri Sigs, 2-0.<lb/>
jsan Moore made the only two points<lb/>
ored in the game.<lb/>
In the Dorm Division, Slay forfeited to<lb/>
the Physical Education Majors in the<lb/>
play-off game for the championship.<lb/>
White and Greene were also in the<lb/>
play-offs for the championship game on<lb/>
Thursday. White beat Greene, 18-8. High<lb/>
scorer for White was followed by Phyllis<lb/>
Taylor who made 4 points. Carolyn Evans<lb/>
and Kathryn Keziah also assisted in<lb/>
scoring with two points each. Greene's<lb/>
scorers were Vicki Griffin with four<lb/>
points and Sue Crisp and Laura Johnson<lb/>
both scored two points apiece.<lb/>
The championship game was played<lb/>
at 4:30 Thursday the 16th for both the<lb/>
Sorority and Dorm Division. Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma played Alpha Delta Pi again for<lb/>
the championship game. The winner was<lb/>
Tri Sigma with the score of 10-4. Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi played a great defensive came.<lb/>
The scorers for Alpha Delta Pi were Jody<lb/>
Mann and Nancy Saunders, both scoring<lb/>
two points each. Tri Sigma scorers were<lb/>
Susan Moore with four points and Debbie<lb/>
Rutherford with two points.<lb/>
The Physical Education Majors won<lb/>
M THE RUN<lb/>
Mike Weaver 9 is pursued by two Tar Heel defenders on Saturday.<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmmm<lb/>
the tournament in the Dorm Division.<lb/>
They beat White 10-2. White played a<lb/>
great game to hold the Physical<lb/>
Education Majors' score down. The only<lb/>
scorer for White was Phyllis Taylor. For<lb/>
the Physical Education Majors Ginger<lb/>
Parrish, Debbie Knight. Debbie Phelps,<lb/>
Donna Sawyer and Marsha Person, ail<lb/>
made two points each.<lb/>
The all-campus tournament was<lb/>
played Monday the 20th between Tri<lb/>
Sigma and the Physical Education<lb/>
Majors. The Physical Education Majors<lb/>
won 24-0. The scorers were Donna<lb/>
Sawyer with 8 points, Debbie Knight with<lb/>
6 points, and Donna Edwards with 4<lb/>
points Gwen Ball. Brenda Baker, and<lb/>
Debbie Phelps helped by scoring 2 points<lb/>
each<lb/>
Co-Rec Carnival<lb/>
The Co-Rec Carnival had a great turn<lb/>
out. It was interesting, funny and very<lb/>
exciting.<lb/>
The first place team was Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Kappa II. The players were Susie Garber.<lb/>
Vickie Brown. Ceba Jackson and Kenny<lb/>
Mizelle.<lb/>
The second place team was SLAP<lb/>
The teammates were Lynn Yow, Skip<lb/>
Stiller, A.B Dodson, and Paul Osman.<lb/>
The third place team was the<lb/>
Meatballs. The Meatballs were Chuck<lb/>
Freeman, Roy Turner, Charlotte Marsh-<lb/>
burn and Rhonda Ross.<lb/>
Co-Rec INNERTUBE WATER<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Co-Hec Innertube Water Basketball<lb/>
started this past Wednesday night.<lb/>
There are two leagues-Titanic League<lb/>
and Tugboat League. The teams in the<lb/>
Titantic League are the Solubles, GMC.<lb/>
C.C. and Company, The Sinkers, Hardly<lb/>
Heroes, and Slay Sluggers Number One.<lb/>
In the Tugboat League the teams are<lb/>
Methodist Student Center, Wet Heads,<lb/>
Phi Epsilon Kappa, Dunkers. Slay<lb/>
Sluggers Number Two, and Whaletales.<lb/>
Scores for this past week are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
GMC beat Hardly Heroes. 36-12.<lb/>
Solubles and Slay Sluggers Number One<lb/>
See Intramurals, page 26.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0026"/><lb/>
26<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Strayhorn finds satisfaction in ECU victory Pl<lb/>
ml B fVtntin<lb/>
Saturday's upset of North Carolina<lb/>
was probably sweetest for Kenny<lb/>
Strayhorn. For Strayhorn it was the third<lb/>
game against the Tar Heels in his ECU<lb/>
career and the win meant the end of a<lb/>
long-awaited desire to beat an ACC<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"All you hear is Carolina and State,<lb/>
State and Carolina said Strayhorn. "You<lb/>
build up a grudge against them because<lb/>
no one wants to give up any recognition.<lb/>
People talk like they are the only two<lb/>
schools in the state. The more they talk,<lb/>
the bigger the lumps get<lb/>
"You just want to get on the field<lb/>
with them so bad you can hardly stand<lb/>
it. A lot of people have pushed us off as<lb/>
just a little school from the Southern<lb/>
Conference, but I think we showed them<lb/>
a thing or two today. At least the<lb/>
knawing in my gut is gone<lb/>
Strayhorn had his most productive<lb/>
game of the season against Carolina. He<lb/>
gained 72 yards on 14 carries and scored<lb/>
two of ECU's five touchdowns.<lb/>
Strayhorn did not attribute the win<lb/>
directly to the death of Athletic Director<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich, but did say that the<lb/>
players thought of him.<lb/>
"We didn't talk much about Stas<lb/>
before the game, but everyone knew<lb/>
said "the Horn "After the yame one of<lb/>
the players said 'Coach Stas is smiling<lb/>
down on us now This game was one of<lb/>
the things Stas had worked for<lb/>
Strayhorn said the win meant a lot to<lb/>
him personally besides the revenge it<lb/>
got against the ACC.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Continued from page 25.<lb/>
both forfeited.<lb/>
Wet Head lost to Phi Epsilon Kappa,<lb/>
42-54.<lb/>
Methodist Student Center forfeited to<lb/>
The Dunkers.<lb/>
C.C. and Company lost to The Sinkers,<lb/>
16-36.<lb/>
The Solubles forfeited to Hardly Heroes.<lb/>
TENNIS MIXED DOUBLES AND<lb/>
RACQUETBALL MIXED DOUBLES<lb/>
The finals of Tennis Mixed Doubles<lb/>
will be played October 29 by Bobby<lb/>
Morrill and Gilbert Hensgen against<lb/>
Brandon Tise and Tisa Curtis<lb/>
The finals of Racquetball Mixed<lb/>
Doubles will be played by John Archibald<lb/>
and Ellen Warren against Col. Henderson<lb/>
and Peggy Henderson.<lb/>
Cain named<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins announced<lb/>
Sunday that Assistant Athletic Director,<lb/>
Bill Cain, has been appointed acting<lb/>
Athletic Director following the sudden<lb/>
death of Clarence Stasavich on Friday.<lb/>
Cain has been in the ECU athletic<lb/>
department since 1968 when he became<lb/>
freshman football coach. In 1970, he<lb/>
became business manager, before being<lb/>
named to the Assistant Athletic Director<lb/>
position in 1972.<lb/>
Originally from Rockingham, Cain has<lb/>
earned a bachelor's and a master's<lb/>
degree from East Carolina.<lb/>
"It was a good win for me. It was a<lb/>
personal thing. I've been here three times<lb/>
and it didn't make any difference in the<lb/>
pressure. When I came here my freshman<lb/>
year, all I did was return kicks. My<lb/>
sophomore year we lost 28-27 and that<lb/>
really disappointed the team.<lb/>
"This time we knew we had a good<lb/>
enough team to beat them if we didn't<lb/>
make any mistakes.<lb/>
"We went out there and played our<lb/>
game and we didn't make any mistakes.<lb/>
It makes me feel good and it makes me<lb/>
feel better coming in my senior year. I'm<lb/>
looking at an 8-3 record now, whic<lb/>
would mean we'll have been 9-2, 9-2, 7<lb/>
and 8-3 my four years here<lb/>
When the stands unloaded at the er<lb/>
of the game and the ECU fans poured c<lb/>
the field, doubtless Kenny Strayhorn Wc<lb/>
in the middle of the mob whooping it u<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Dooley takes blame for UNC defeat<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL-While the East<lb/>
Carolina locker room was in shambles<lb/>
next door, you could have heard a pin<lb/>
drop in the University of North Carolina's<lb/>
locker room.<lb/>
While most of the press hoarded<lb/>
around ECU head coach Pat Dye and his<lb/>
players, Carolina coach Bill Dooley sat<lb/>
alone in the somber Carolina dressing<lb/>
room, reflecting upon the embarrassing<lb/>
manner in which his team had been<lb/>
upset by the Pirates.<lb/>
"This was the worst performance by a<lb/>
Carolina football team since I've been<lb/>
here said Dooley, "and that includes<lb/>
our 2-8 and 3-7 teams of 1967 and 1968<lb/>
At the same time, though, Dooley<lb/>
couldn't take away from the effort of an<lb/>
inspired ECU team. This week there were<lb/>
no official's calls to question and no<lb/>
gripes to make.<lb/>
"East Carolina came to play and were<lb/>
ready to play. We were just the opposite.<lb/>
You've got to give East Carolina credit,<lb/>
Service for'Stas'<lb/>
There will be a memorial service at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Theater tomorrow for<lb/>
Clarence Stasavich who died this past<lb/>
Friday. The service will be from 7-7:30<lb/>
p.m. All students and faculty are urged<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
fk.<lb/>
they beat us every way possible<lb/>
After taking the blame for the loss,<lb/>
Dooley vowed such an occurrence would<lb/>
not happen again.<lb/>
"I have to take full responsibility for<lb/>
our performance said Dooley. "Our<lb/>
team did not play well and that's no<lb/>
one's fault but mine. But I want to assure<lb/>
our students, alumni and fans that th!<lb/>
will never see a repeat performance<lb/>
what happened in Kenan Stadium today<lb/>
And what happened just got worse<lb/>
the second half, after East Carolina h?<lb/>
a 21-17 lead at the half. In that secoi<lb/>
half, ECU outscored UNC 17-0 and h?<lb/>
the Tar Heels to just 70 yards tol<lb/>
See Dooley, page 27<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/>
City.<lb/>
State.<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
(California residents please add 6 sales tax.<lb/>
Red Rooster Restaurant<lb/>
2713 EAST 10TH STREET ? GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
PHONE 758 1920<lb/>
open 7:00 am - 8:30 pm<lb/>
HOME COOKED MEALS<lb/>
R?D ROOSTGR 9P?CML9<lb/>
Mon. 11A 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/>
J<lb/>
all specials include rolls &amp; hushpuppies<lb/>
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits<lb/>
Contini<lb/>
Said<lb/>
feeling <lb/>
even ste<lb/>
around<lb/>
about it<lb/>
Jone<lb/>
the win.<lb/>
"I th<lb/>
said Jor<lb/>
today<lb/>
confiden<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
Coac<lb/>
Jones' e<lb/>
the gam<lb/>
made cai<lb/>
"Actu<lb/>
Appalach<lb/>
high the<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
"The I<lb/>
what I've<lb/>
been hei<lb/>
problems<lb/>
players vi<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
"They<lb/>
coach an<lb/>
this wasn<lb/>
On de<lb/>
a crowd c<lb/>
Rot<lb/>
Continuec<lb/>
On th<lb/>
Paschal I <lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
Once r<lb/>
Tar Hee<lb/>
occasions<lb/>
clinching<lb/>
on a swe<lb/>
was St ray I<lb/>
his 21st c<lb/>
his fifth e:<lb/>
On th<lb/>
Dooley re<lb/>
St rat ton i<lb/>
passing in<lb/>
"When<lb/>
half reas<lb/>
"we had t<lb/>
sore arm<lb/>
quarterbad<lb/>
If Pascf<lb/>
couldn't h,<lb/>
better. The<lb/>
move the F<lb/>
the ball o<lb/>
kicked it, tf<lb/>
Their ful<lb/>
of the many<lb/>
cheer the P<lb/>
Stratton<lb/>
Dool<lb/>
Continued f<lb/>
offense ar<lb/>
beginning i<lb/>
Dooley, ca<lb/>
opening driv<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
"When t<lb/>
half said<lb/>
would win. I<lb/>
right, we jus<lb/>
big plays<lb/>
The big<lb/>
ECU put it t<lb/>
m<lb/>
?m<lb/>
tm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mJ<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0027"/><lb/>
HBBHB9<lb/>
HHbSBBSDmSBH<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO<lb/>
1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
27<lb/>
y Players rejoicing in triumph over Carolina<lb/>
w nnntinufid from oaoe 22 <lb/>
dw, whic<lb/>
2, 9-2, 7<lb/>
at the er<lb/>
poured c<lb/>
lyhorn w?<lb/>
ping it u<lb/>
t<lb/>
s that th,<lb/>
jrmance<lb/>
um toda<lb/>
M worse<lb/>
irolina he<lb/>
hat secoi<lb/>
0 and he<lb/>
ards tol<lb/>
page 27<lb/>
,1<lb/>
At<lb/>
1.80<lb/>
1.80<lb/>
1.80<lb/>
1.80<lb/>
2.96<lb/>
cuits<lb/>
Continued from page 22<lb/>
Said Hawkins after the game, "I had a<lb/>
feeling we would win the game before we<lb/>
even stepped on the field. I haven't been<lb/>
around long, but I felt some sensation<lb/>
about it<lb/>
Jones also had deep feelings about<lb/>
the win.<lb/>
"I think Carolina was a good team<lb/>
said Jones. "We were just more together<lb/>
today than ever before. We were<lb/>
confident, but we played without making<lb/>
mistakes<lb/>
Coach Dye seemed to agree with<lb/>
Jones' evaluation that ECU was up for<lb/>
the game, but not so psyched that it<lb/>
made careless mistakes.<lb/>
"Actually, we were up more for<lb/>
Appalachian said Dye, "but we were so<lb/>
high then that we made too many<lb/>
mistakes and it killed us.<lb/>
"The kids are beginning to understand<lb/>
what I've been talking about since I've<lb/>
been here. There were communication<lb/>
problems at times last year, because the<lb/>
players were used to being yelled at all<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
"They are beginning to realize that I<lb/>
coach and communicate in my own way,<lb/>
this wasn't the case last year<lb/>
On defense, two players stood out in<lb/>
a crowd of players who combined for an<lb/>
Rout<lb/>
Continued from page 22<lb/>
On the second play after the punt,<lb/>
Paschall pitched wildly to Voight and Zac<lb/>
Valentine covered the ball at the 13.<lb/>
Once more ECU took advantage of the<lb/>
Tar Hee miscue, as they did on four<lb/>
occasions, and took the ball in for the<lb/>
clinching score. Strayhorn did the honors<lb/>
on a sweep from the seven. The score<lb/>
was Strayhorn's second of the game and<lb/>
his 21st of his career. Larry Paul added<lb/>
his fifth extra point and ECU led 35-17<lb/>
On the next series, UNC Coach<lb/>
Dooley replaced Paschall with Johnny<lb/>
Stratton in an attempt to get some<lb/>
passing in the lineup.<lb/>
"When we got behind in the second<lb/>
half reasoned Dooley after the game,<lb/>
"we had to throw. Paschall has had a<lb/>
sore arm all week, so we changed<lb/>
quarterbacks to Stratton<lb/>
If Paschall had a sore arm, Stratton's<lb/>
couldn't have been feeling too much<lb/>
better. The backup quarterback failed to<lb/>
move the Heels and with Daub slamming<lb/>
the ball over 45 yards every time he<lb/>
kicked it, the Heels never came back.<lb/>
Their futility proved to be the ecstasy<lb/>
of the many ECU fans who showed up to<lb/>
cheer the Pirates on.<lb/>
Stratton gave way to Johnny Elam,<lb/>
Dooley<lb/>
Continued from page 26.<lb/>
offense and five first downs. The<lb/>
beginning of the end, according to<lb/>
Dooley, came when ECU took the<lb/>
opening drive in for a score and a 28-17<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
"When they were up 21-17 at the<lb/>
half said Dooley, "I still thought we<lb/>
would win. It looked like we would be all<lb/>
right, we just needed to make a couple of<lb/>
big plays<lb/>
The big plays never came, instead<lb/>
ECU put it to Carolina, driving 80 yards<lb/>
exciting display of strength against the<lb/>
boys in baby blue.<lb/>
One was Jim Bolding. Bolding<lb/>
grabbed two interceptions and a fumble<lb/>
to continue an excellent season which<lb/>
has seen him steal seven passes in only<lb/>
five games.<lb/>
"It's time they quit calling East<lb/>
Carolina the school on the other side of<lb/>
the tracks said Bolding. "I think we<lb/>
established something today. We proved<lb/>
that we can play on the field with<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
Godette called it a satisfying victory,<lb/>
in the sense that he felt he, personally,<lb/>
might have choked in the game two years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
"The first time I came up here we lost<lb/>
a close game and it really hurt said<lb/>
Godette, who made several outstanding<lb/>
tackles on defense. "I thought that<lb/>
maybe we had choked that day because<lb/>
of inexperience. Today, I knew we could<lb/>
beat them after that first drive and I<lb/>
spent most of the day slapping people<lb/>
on the head and keeping the younger<lb/>
guys calm, but ready<lb/>
Jake Dove spoke of togetherness in<lb/>
the Pirate victory.<lb/>
"I'm real happy. Everyone seemed to<lb/>
play together. This was a real prestige<lb/>
who led the Heels once before Reggie<lb/>
Pinkney intercepted at the 11. Jim<lb/>
Bolding later set up the final ECU score<lb/>
with his seventh steal of the season at<lb/>
the UNC 30.<lb/>
ECU moved as far as the nine, but no<lb/>
further, and Paul hit on a 30 yard kick for<lb/>
the final score.<lb/>
Later, Carolina fumbled again at their<lb/>
own six, but Weaver played the<lb/>
sportsman's part and fell on the ball,<lb/>
instead of going for some added points.<lb/>
After the game, ECU coach Dye<lb/>
passed out victory cigars to the players<lb/>
and assembled ECU supporters and<lb/>
savored the victory.<lb/>
ECU, too, will savor the win for a<lb/>
long, long time.<lb/>
TEAM STATISTICS ECU UNC<lb/>
Total first downs 18 22<lb/>
Rushes-yards 370 232<lb/>
Passing yards 33 110<lb/>
Total yards 403 342<lb/>
Pdsstscompatt -int. 2-5-0 8-20-3<lb/>
Punts noyards-avg. 7-48.4 4.35.3<lb/>
Fumbles-lost 1-1 4-4<lb/>
Penalties-yards 8-90 2-13<lb/>
on seven plays for that first score of the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
"At .lalftime we talked about covering<lb/>
the kick and holding them. But they just<lb/>
took the ball and rammed it down our<lb/>
throats<lb/>
After ECU took the 28-17 lead, the<lb/>
Pirates got tougher and tougher and the<lb/>
Heels just got worse ana worse. The<lb/>
result, the 38-17 final score.<lb/>
"I've got to give East Carolina a lot of<lb/>
credit. They played very well.<lb/>
game for us and we played harder<lb/>
because Carolina was a bigger name<lb/>
team than we were. We came out and<lb/>
played our football game<lb/>
Coach Dye spoke of preparation for<lb/>
the big win over Carolina.<lb/>
"The winning comes in preparation.<lb/>
We had a great practice on Monday, were<lb/>
terrible Tuesday and finished the week<lb/>
strong. We didn't do anything different<lb/>
today, just better.<lb/>
"Before the Western game, we went<lb/>
back to our basic offense of a year ago<lb/>
added Dye "After that performance last<lb/>
week I knew this would be a better<lb/>
football team<lb/>
East Carolina has won its last three<lb/>
games and five of its last six games.<lb/>
During the last six games, the Pirates<lb/>
have outscored their opposition by<lb/>
161-55<lb/>
The Pirates return home next week<lb/>
against Furman in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
THOUSANDS ON FILE<lb/>
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of<lb/>
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling<lb/>
COLLEGIATE RESEARCH<lb/>
1 720 PONTIUS AVE SUITE 201<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State <lb/>
Zip<lb/>
D-D-DAY IS HERE!<lb/>
Greenville Breakfast Lions Club Proudly<lb/>
Announces It's 1st Annual Demolition<lb/>
Derby To Be Held Saturday And<lb/>
Sunday, November 15 &amp; 16 At<lb/>
The Pitt County Fair Grounds.<lb/>
USE THIS ENTRY BLANK TO ENTER YOUR CAR NOW!<lb/>
(SreemitlU-fireakfaHt linn OHiib<lb/>
GflEfcNVILLE. NOKTH CAROUN'k .7(134<lb/>
FIRST ANNUAL DEMOLITION DERBY<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
ENTRY BLANK PLEASE COMPLETE<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
ZIP CODE<lb/>
PHONE NO.<lb/>
PLACE OF DEMOLITION DERBY-PITT COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, GREENVILLE<lb/>
TIME, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, NOV. 15th 16th. 1975, 1:00 P.M. DAILY<lb/>
ENTRY FEE, $10.00 to b? .ent with application<lb/>
ALL ENTRY FEES TO BE RETURNED AS PRIZE MONEY FOR WINNERS OF HEATS<lb/>
EACH PERSON CAN HAVE AS MANY ENTRIES AS DESIRED.<lb/>
ALL PROFITS TO BE USED IN WORK FOR THE BLIND AND VISUAL! HANDICAPPED.<lb/>
WETURN ENTRY BLANK AND CHECK(MADE PAYABLE TO THE GREENVILLE BREAKFAST<lb/>
LIONf CLUB) TOi LION JAMBS B. LANGSTON, JR<lb/>
P.O. BOX 1507<lb/>
GREENVILLE NC 27834 <lb/>
PHONE 756-2195<lb/>
COMB BE A PART OP THIS ? SMASH HIT OF 1975<lb/>
I<lb/>
?mmauammi urn<lb/>
mm<lb/>
p<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
g?waHnWMan?g<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0028"/><lb/>
28<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1428 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
FLASH<lb/>
Stasavich Memorial Coffeehouse<lb/>
A special student memorial<lb/>
service for ECU Athletic Director Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich, who died suddenly Friday of a<lb/>
heart attack, will be held Wednesday<lb/>
night at 7 p.m. in the auditorium of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Four student athletes from ECU who<lb/>
played under Stasavich, and Dr. l.eo<lb/>
Jenkins, are scheduled to make remarks<lb/>
during the service.<lb/>
The service is being organized by<lb/>
Student Union President Diane Taylor.<lb/>
Ms. Taylor explained that the program<lb/>
would serve as the students' tribute to<lb/>
Stasavich.<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
S ? II i<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ, an<lb/>
interdenominational Christian movement<lb/>
meets every Tues. night at 7:00 in<lb/>
Brewster D-103. Join us for a time of<lb/>
fellowship, singing, and practical<lb/>
seminars on living the Christian life.<lb/>
Everybody's welcome. For more inform-<lb/>
ation, call 752-5056.<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
The Sigma Theta Tau National honor<lb/>
society of nursing will induct 34 new<lb/>
members into the Beta Nu Chapter. The<lb/>
induction ceremony will be held on Nov.<lb/>
1st at 2:00 p.m. in room 101 of the<lb/>
Nursing Building. Guest speaker will be<lb/>
Eva Warren, the first Dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Nursing. A reception will be<lb/>
held in the Home Economics Depart-<lb/>
ments' parlor following the induction. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend!<lb/>
PAP Clinic<lb/>
The Pitt County Health Department<lb/>
announces a temporary change of<lb/>
schedule for their weekly PAP Clinic held<lb/>
?ery Wednesday in Greenville. No clinic<lb/>
will be held for one month from October<lb/>
15 through November 12th. The PAP<lb/>
Clinic will resume as a regularly<lb/>
scheduled clinic every Wednesday<lb/>
beginning November 198th.<lb/>
SAM<lb/>
The Society for the Advancement of<lb/>
Management (SAM) is sponsoring a<lb/>
lecture by Mr. Furney James, the director<lb/>
of the ECU Placement Office. James will<lb/>
speak on how student organizations can<lb/>
effect possible opportunities in the job<lb/>
market. The current job market will also<lb/>
be discussed with questions accepted.<lb/>
The lecture will be Thursday, Oct. 30 at<lb/>
4 00 pm. in Rawl 101. The public is<lb/>
invited and welcome. Undergraduates and<lb/>
rising seniors will find this lecture<lb/>
nteresting as well as valuable.<lb/>
Coffeehouse will hold auditions for<lb/>
local talent on Nov. 1, and 2, 7 p.m.<lb/>
until. Come by the Student Union Office<lb/>
and sign up for your act. The public is<lb/>
invited to attend the auditions to show<lb/>
their preference of acts. Remember the<lb/>
coffeehouse is only 25 cents, and that<lb/>
includes free drinks and snacks.<lb/>
Bake sale<lb/>
The student advisory committee to<lb/>
the Social Work and Corrections<lb/>
Departments will hold a bake sale<lb/>
Wednesday beginning at 10 a.m. in the<lb/>
lobby of the first floor at the Allied<lb/>
Health Building.<lb/>
Distributive Ed<lb/>
Mr. George Crocker, owner-manager<lb/>
of the Galleon Esplanade at Nags Head,<lb/>
N.C. will speak to the BUED 200<lb/>
Distribution Technology I: Merchandising<lb/>
class Wednesday, October 29 at 1 p.m.<lb/>
in Rawl. Distributive Education students<lb/>
are invited to attend.<lb/>
Wresting Tournament<lb/>
The Delta Zeta - Pi Kappa Phi annual<lb/>
Greek Wrestling Tournament and Happy<lb/>
Hour will be held Friday, October 31. The<lb/>
Happy Hour will start at 11:00 p.m. and<lb/>
the Tournament will begin at 11:30 at the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi house on Hooker Road.<lb/>
All are welcome.<lb/>
Chess Club<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Chess Club<lb/>
every Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
room 14 of Mendenhall.<lb/>
Weight lifting<lb/>
There will be an organizational<lb/>
meeting for the ECU weight lifting club,<lb/>
Wednesday night, 7:30 p.m room 142,<lb/>
Minges Coliseum. Dr. Edwards, director<lb/>
of intramurals will speak on equipment<lb/>
funding.<lb/>
ptarie bridge<lb/>
There will be a duplicate bridge<lb/>
session every Tuesday night at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in room 14 of the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Contact Neil Bellinger or Mr.<lb/>
Lindsay Overton, recreation director of<lb/>
the Center, for further details.<lb/>
Recreation Committee Buc suggestions<lb/>
Anyone interested in applying for a<lb/>
position on the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Union Recreation Committee may pick up<lb/>
applications at the information desk at<lb/>
Mendenhall or from the secretary at the<lb/>
committee offices in Mendenhall. Eight<lb/>
available positions are open to those<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
Bahai<lb/>
"Religion &amp; Politics: Can They Be<lb/>
Reconciled will be the subject of this<lb/>
week's meeting of the Bahai Association<lb/>
Wed. Oct. 29 at 7:30 p.m room 238<lb/>
Mendenhall. The program will consist of<lb/>
a very brief address by Kim Kerby,<lb/>
chairman of the Bahai Association,<lb/>
followed by general discussion. Everyone<lb/>
is invited to attend<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
What is a yearbook to you? What do<lb/>
you think it should or should not<lb/>
include? What did you like or dislike<lb/>
about the 1975 BUCCANEER? The 1976<lb/>
BUCCANEER staff is interested in your<lb/>
opinion because we want to create a<lb/>
great book in 76. We need your ideas,<lb/>
suggestions or complaints so we can<lb/>
improve in the future. Please call us at<lb/>
758-6501, stop by the BUCCANEER office<lb/>
in the Publications Center between 9 and<lb/>
4 daily or drop a note in campus mail<lb/>
telling us what you think about the<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Your ideas and complaints<lb/>
will be greatly appreciated and carefully<lb/>
considered in the preparation of the 1976<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Help us make this<lb/>
yearbook your yearbook.<lb/>
A trio of experts on the North<lb/>
Carolina State Legislature will present a<lb/>
panel on "Human Issues in North<lb/>
Carolina Politics Mon Nov. 3, at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Ms. Barbara Smith, legislative<lb/>
chairperson for the North Carolina<lb/>
League of Women Voters; Rev. Collin<lb/>
Kilburn, legislative director for the North<lb/>
Carolina Council of Churches and<lb/>
Christopher Scott, executive director of<lb/>
the North Carolinians for Tax Reform will<lb/>
comprise the panel.<lb/>
This panel has extensive jxperience in<lb/>
working with senators and represent-<lb/>
atives in the State Legislature and have<lb/>
sponsored and advocated bills which<lb/>
would improve the State agencies which<lb/>
directly affect the lives of many citizens.<lb/>
Particular emphasis will be on prison<lb/>
reform, criminal justice and gun control.<lb/>
Other topics to be discussed will include<lb/>
tax reform, the sales tax on food,<lb/>
welfare, food stamps, migrant and<lb/>
seasonal workers, and the strategies for<lb/>
political action. The public is cordially<lb/>
invited to attend.<lb/>
Oriental Art Sale<lb/>
A special exhibition and sale of<lb/>
Original Oriental Art will be presented on<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. 20,1975, at the Social Science<lb/>
Bldq. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<lb/>
The modem pieces consist of a<lb/>
large group of original woodcuts,<lb/>
etchings, lithographs, serigraphs and<lb/>
mezzotints created by such world<lb/>
renowned contemporaries as Saito,<lb/>
Azechi, Mori, Katsuda, and Maki. A<lb/>
representative will be present to answer<lb/>
questions about the work, artists and the<lb/>
various graphic techniques employed.<lb/>
Prints are shown in open portfolios in an<lb/>
informal atmospherend you are invited to<lb/>
browse through this fascinating and<lb/>
well-described collection. The price range<lb/>
is wide and there is a treasure to be found<lb/>
for most everyone's budget.<lb/>
whic<lb/>
-2, 7<lb/>
e er<lb/>
-ed c<lb/>
n Wc<lb/>
it u<lb/>
Europe<lb/>
t th<lb/>
ce<lb/>
da<lb/>
rse<lb/>
ihe<lb/>
3COI<lb/>
he<lb/>
tol<lb/>
27<lb/>
Now is the time to plan your next<lb/>
summer. Your bicentennial vacation could<lb/>
be a turkey, or it could be one you'll never<lb/>
forget. ECU is offering a 76 European tour<lb/>
during the first summer session next year,<lb/>
and you could go. Europe is waiting: See<lb/>
Copenhagen, London Brussels, Amster-<lb/>
dam, Bonnand Paris. Forty-two days of<lb/>
travel, fun and education (nine credit hours)<lb/>
worth!) For more details, go to the<lb/>
Political Science Dept Brewster-A wing.<lb/>
Bicentenial bike ride<lb/>
Applications are beginning to come in<lb/>
from college students throughout the<lb/>
U.S. for the 1976 Cross Country College<lb/>
Bike Ride being held in honor of the<lb/>
American Revolution Bicentennial. The<lb/>
ride is sponsored by Universities<lb/>
throughout the U.S. and will begin in<lb/>
Denver on June 20, 1976, and terminate<lb/>
on July 15, in Philadelphia and<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
According to Steve Danz, project<lb/>
coordinator, riders will stay at colleges<lb/>
and hostels along the route. The route<lb/>
itself will be along the Transamerica Bike,<lb/>
Trail. Riders will participate in<lb/>
Bicentennial activities along the route.<lb/>
College students . "sted in joining the<lb/>
ride should write to kecentennial, 805<lb/>
Glenway Suite 227, Irx wood,Ca. 90302<lb/>
for application and further information.<lb/>
Football Contest<lb/>
Garrett Knotts of 283 Jones F. Dorrr<lb/>
took top honers in last week's football<lb/>
contest. R.M. Burbank of 103-F<lb/>
Lakeview Terrace was second in the<lb/>
contest and Patsy Stanley of 718 Fletcher<lb/>
Hall was third.<lb/>
Winners must pick up their prize<lb/>
money from the Fountainhead Business<lb/>
Manager by next Thursday at 5 p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00040000_0029"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>