<?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="00040001_0001"/>
(<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
U<lb/>
ikP<lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
m<lb/>
VOL. 7, NO. 15<lb/>
30 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
flota Rnwitainhead get the ax<lb/>
Campus media stunted<lb/>
MIKE TAYLOR<lb/>
DIANE TAYLOR<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The Appropriations Committee of the Student Government<lb/>
Association Wednesday night approved with amendments,<lb/>
budgets for the Publications Board and WECU, the campus<lb/>
radio station. ,??<lb/>
The bills were amended in committee, and passed out<lb/>
favorably. They will now be presented before the SGA<lb/>
Legislature Monday.<lb/>
Diane Taylor, chairperson of the Publications Board, and<lb/>
Mike Taylor, editor of Fountainhead, expressed disappoint-<lb/>
ment with their respective budgets.<lb/>
The pub board budget for the Rebel, Fountainheal,<lb/>
Buccaneer were submitted to the SGA during its second<lb/>
meeting this fall. The board requested $132,000 from SGA and<lb/>
a secretary for the Publications Center.<lb/>
The Pub Board asked for $35 a week to hire a secretary.<lb/>
Although someone may always be at the Center, they may<lb/>
not know what other staffers are doing, according to Diane<lb/>
Taylor who is the former editor of Fountainhead.<lb/>
We need a secretary to see that important messages are<lb/>
relayed, records are kept, and that some means of a<lb/>
coordinated continuity is established, she concluded.<lb/>
"We did cut through a lot of the publications budgets, but<lb/>
even with the cuts, the appropriations committee gave the<lb/>
publications center $26,000 more this year than they got last<lb/>
year said Craig Hales, chairman of the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee. , , . . ,<lb/>
'What do they want - all the change from the students<lb/>
pockets too?" . .<lb/>
Mike Taylor explained the items of the Fountainhead<lb/>
budget to the appropriations committee last Wednesday night,<lb/>
Oct 22 The-committee felt Fountainhead is overstaffed and it<lb/>
questioned the pay increases of the paper's staff, according to<lb/>
Mike Taylor.<lb/>
Thursday night, Oct. 23, the committee cut the<lb/>
Fountainhead's payroll appropriation from $21,870 to $18,560,<lb/>
a difference of $3,420.<lb/>
"With the money they are giving the Fountainhead, we will<lb/>
have to cut seven staff positions, including two that existed<lb/>
last year said Taylor.<lb/>
ECU student government wants<lb/>
"Three of them have already been cut. In light of the act<lb/>
that this year's Fountainhead is twice as large as it was last<lb/>
year, I feel these cuts are unjustified<lb/>
The Fountainhead averages 56 pages a week this year,<lb/>
whereas it averaged 32 last year.<lb/>
Fountainhead received enough SGA money, according to<lb/>
Hales<lb/>
"I don't expect Fountainhead to cover the appropriations<lb/>
committee's work fairly, but just say this, ? the Rib Board<lb/>
bill had been passed as they wanted, with all the extra<lb/>
salaried position, telephones, and other things, the SCA<lb/>
could not fund a lot of projects we feel the students need.<lb/>
Publications gets more than one-third of student fees from<lb/>
the SGA each year, and I think that's enough<lb/>
Taylor noted that the growth of Fountainhead warranted<lb/>
the increased appropriation. - , , u?,<lb/>
"This year Fountainhead already has $9,000 in advertising<lb/>
revenue, whereas last year we only had $13,000 for the entire<lb/>
vear according to Taylor.<lb/>
"We fully expect to make at least $30,000 this year.<lb/>
An amendment to Fountainhead budget provides that all<lb/>
ad revenue be reverted to the SGA general fund.<lb/>
"I and the members of this committee and the whole<lb/>
legislature were elected to spend the students money as best<lb/>
we see fit said Hales.<lb/>
"When we cut things, we look like the meanies. But no<lb/>
one ever looks at the fact that the publications pad their<lb/>
budgets, ask for super-large salary increases, and I believe the<lb/>
students are being taken for a ride<lb/>
How many people reading this article have read and<lb/>
enjoyed the Rebel? asked Hales.<lb/>
"Last year the Rebel came out so late that many students<lb/>
could not pick it up. I think the students will back us on this.<lb/>
"We don't want someone sitting back collecting salaries<lb/>
and not doing any work. We have appropriated $1,200 more on<lb/>
the Rebel this year than it got last year. We were fair<lb/>
On the other hand, Jeff Rollins, editor of the Rebel, said<lb/>
the Rebel will only exist for four and one half months this<lb/>
year because of the limited appropriation.<lb/>
The committee also approved a budget for WECU. It<lb/>
amended WECU's budget by giving WECU salaries for its disc<lb/>
jockeys until Feb. 1. WECU was asking for salaries for the<lb/>
whole year but the station's general manager, Eric Sieurin,<lb/>
agreed to the amendment. The bill will now go to the<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
esentative to Greenville City Council<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
announced Wednesday that it is actively<lb/>
seeking to establish a permanent liaison<lb/>
with the Greenville City Council.<lb/>
The SGA wants to gain a "strong<lb/>
input" into the city council's activities,<lb/>
according to Jimmy Honeycutt, SGA<lb/>
president.<lb/>
"We have been in touch with a few<lb/>
people in the community, but no formal<lb/>
contact has been made Honeycutt said.<lb/>
"We're playing it by ear right now. We<lb/>
hope the city council will be receptive to<lb/>
our ideas and suggestions<lb/>
Having SGA participation on the<lb/>
Greenville City Council is not an<lb/>
unprecedented idea for ECU, according<lb/>
to Tim Sul'ivan, Executive Council<lb/>
assistant and acting vice-president.<lb/>
"From what I know, several times the<lb/>
city council has opened its doors to<lb/>
students Sullivan said.<lb/>
"This line failed for several reasons.<lb/>
First the students were not given as<lb/>
active a part with the council as we feel<lb/>
is necessary. The councilmen allowertthem<lb/>
to sit in the audience, and basically have<lb/>
input as 'outsiders Because of this the<lb/>
interest went down and the represent-<lb/>
atives did not go to the meetings.<lb/>
"At another time a single student was<lb/>
involved and, we heard, showed real<lb/>
interest, but he had to leave because he<lb/>
had to drop out of school.<lb/>
"The important thing to remember is<lb/>
that those attempts were good first<lb/>
steps. The council made an effort<lb/>
Honeycutt noted that there have been<lb/>
several instances where cooperation has<lb/>
occurred between the ECU campus and<lb/>
the city.<lb/>
"If anyone remembers last Spring's<lb/>
Fight-the-Tuition-Raise rally, they would<lb/>
remember that both the merchants and k<lb/>
the council backed us in our battle<lb/>
Honeycutt said.<lb/>
"That is the type of cooperation<lb/>
Greenville needs<lb/>
The planning of a transportation<lb/>
system within the city will also require<lb/>
city-campus cooperation, Sullivan said.<lb/>
By JIKI ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
mm ii i um<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0002"/><lb/>
2<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtm<lb/>
m<lb/>
 mum<lb/>
EditorialsCommenla<lb/>
M-<lb/>
s last stand?revisited<lb/>
The three major campus publications have been before the<lb/>
powerful SGA Appropriations Committee during the past week<lb/>
in a remake of Custers' Last Stand.<lb/>
Both the Fountainhead and the Rebel were trimmed,<lb/>
butchered would be a more appropriate name for it, while<lb/>
Buccaneer sailed through the stormy seas of appropriations<lb/>
relatively unscathed.<lb/>
In addition to axing the budgets of the campus newspaper<lb/>
and the campus literary magazine, the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee also made short order of the budget for the<lb/>
Publications Committee.<lb/>
The cuts for Fountainhead came mostly in the area of payroll<lb/>
and salaries. General consensus of the members of the<lb/>
Appropriations Committee, and the Speaker of the SGA, and<lb/>
several power members of the Executive Council is that the<lb/>
Fountainhead staffers are overpaid and that the payroll for the<lb/>
paper is much too high.<lb/>
So, to rectify this point, the committee, in all its wisdom,<lb/>
trimmed over $3,000 out of the Fountainhead payroll. This nifty<lb/>
little move caused the paper to cut seven positions from the<lb/>
staff and lay off three students.<lb/>
It should be pointed out that Fountainhead this year is<lb/>
almost twice as large as the paper was last year. It should be<lb/>
pointed out that the paper this year is averaging almost 28<lb/>
pages an issue as compared to 16 pages an issue last year.<lb/>
During the course of a week the Fountainhead staff turns out 56<lb/>
pages of copy as compared to just 32 last year.<lb/>
It should also be pointed out, and believe me it was to the<lb/>
committee, that the paper is doing better than twice as much<lb/>
advertising business this year as last. Last year, for the entire<lb/>
year, the paper earned about $13,000 in ad revenue. This year to<lb/>
date the paper has earned over $9,000.<lb/>
Please note, that this $9,000 has been made in less than<lb/>
one-third the school year and at the present rate, Fountainhead<lb/>
will earn for the year $30,000 in ad revenue.<lb/>
Not bad, but this apparently meant little to the SGA<lb/>
committee for they set payroll at a level of $18,48 while last<lb/>
year, when the paper was half this large it was $16,660.00.<lb/>
The committee completely ignored the facts-that the paper<lb/>
is doing twice as much and is making almost three times as<lb/>
much.<lb/>
Facts meant little to the committee, and several kingpins in<lb/>
the SGA. The only thing they know, or care to know, is that the<lb/>
paper was asking for too much money-they were sure of that.<lb/>
In the case of the Rebel, a request for funds to put out two<lb/>
editions of the magazine were totally ignored and the committee<lb/>
funded only one magazine.<lb/>
At the same time the committee slashed salaries of the staff<lb/>
and has in effect sharply curtailed the operations of the campus<lb/>
literary publication.<lb/>
The cuts for the Rebel came from a general dislike for the<lb/>
past performances of that publication. But, this year there is a<lb/>
new staff and a plan to put out two issues. Of course, these<lb/>
facts wpre totally iqnored by the committee, in all its wisdom.<lb/>
The committee, in its budget, asked for money to pay for a<lb/>
parttime secretary to man an office to work both for the<lb/>
committee, and also for all three publications answering the<lb/>
phone, doing typing and other office work and giving all three<lb/>
publications the semblence of fulltime staffing.<lb/>
In the case of the Fountainhead, this secretary position<lb/>
would probably pay for itself in the course of a year simply<lb/>
through the added advertising that the paper misses when<lb/>
advertisers call the office and no one is there to get the ad.<lb/>
Of course, this is another fact, and the committee and those<lb/>
SGA kingpins do not deal in facts.<lb/>
TKICK <lb/>
OK<lb/>
rmr<lb/>
DroD leoommendation soiled<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
A recent recommendation from the Course Drop Appeals<lb/>
Committee of the Faculty Senate should draw support from the<lb/>
student body since the recommendation, if approved, would<lb/>
help students with the tricky course dropping procedure.<lb/>
The recommendation, from the Faculty Senate committee,<lb/>
would extend the length of time a student could drop a course<lb/>
without penalty from 20 days to 25 days.<lb/>
And, the committee also recommended that professors<lb/>
should give some type of quiz or assignment during that first<lb/>
25 days to insure that a student would have at least one grade<lb/>
prior to having to make a decision on dropping a course.<lb/>
Urging faculty members to give some type grade during that<lb/>
first 25 days is as important as the five day extension<lb/>
recommendation we feel. While we don't advocate having<lb/>
professors give additional tests, we personally think they<lb/>
already give too many, it is not unreasonable to expect that a<lb/>
student should have some basis for his decsion to drop a<lb/>
course<lb/>
The proposal to extend the drop period is a good one, for the<lb/>
student at least. But, just as important is the urging by that<lb/>
committee to all faculty members to give the student something<lb/>
to gauge their progress on so a decision to drop will be bosed<lb/>
on as solid evidence as possible. <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 Oodson<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/>
1 in i i ii ? ? ? ntnummmmmmwmmmmmmwmmwtmm<lb/>
ForR<lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
To Founte<lb/>
Listen m<lb/>
of the sad<lb/>
Of one bil<lb/>
hope<lb/>
Of the flc<lb/>
rope<lb/>
Of the ai<lb/>
for the<lb/>
Of letting<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
But, liste<lb/>
hear<lb/>
A rebel lie<lb/>
Yes, it's<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Tuesd<lb/>
hard-worl<lb/>
wrapped<lb/>
publicati<lb/>
now lies<lb/>
wounds i<lb/>
in its n;<lb/>
legislatui<lb/>
Yes,<lb/>
hopeful<lb/>
grow, im<lb/>
of public<lb/>
a welf<lb/>
publicati<lb/>
choke b<lb/>
the old<lb/>
year bef<lb/>
ad infini<lb/>
As<lb/>
Board I<lb/>
what's <lb/>
publicati<lb/>
plight.<lb/>
After<lb/>
appropri<lb/>
faced w<lb/>
things.<lb/>
Thei<lb/>
to be<lb/>
year is ;<lb/>
for impr<lb/>
that low<lb/>
it bettt<lb/>
Bullshi<lb/>
Publicat<lb/>
chance-<lb/>
our hea<lb/>
The<lb/>
galling<lb/>
are TH<lb/>
makes '<lb/>
Nothing<lb/>
campu<lb/>
publica<lb/>
Hell<lb/>
will ave<lb/>
May<lb/>
notice<lb/>
Fact<lb/>
chumir<lb/>
issues<lb/>
bigger<lb/>
years<lb/>
pages?<lb/>
Not a<lb/>
commi<lb/>
work F<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0003"/><lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mt<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
? a mm- ig rnij ? ? ii i m u m ? i wrnm i n a<lb/>
3<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
rieForum<lb/>
V<lb/>
?l<lb/>
3<lb/>
For Rebel, Fountainhead<lb/>
PUb board chairperson hits budget cuts<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Listen my people and ye shall hear<lb/>
of the sad realization of Pub Board's fear.<lb/>
i<lb/>
1 Of one bill they submitted with trembling<lb/>
' hope<lb/>
' Of the flogging they took from the SGA<lb/>
rope<lb/>
 Of the appropriation inquisition-and all<lb/>
i for the cause<lb/>
Of letting you know some injustice of<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
1 But, listen my people and ye may yet<lb/>
hear<lb/>
A rebellious uproar in this coming year.<lb/>
Yes, it's time to budget the publications<lb/>
again.<lb/>
Tuesday's three-hour session of the<lb/>
hard-working appropriation's committee<lb/>
wrapped-up the large bundle of<lb/>
publications budget requests. The bundle<lb/>
now lies quietly forlorn and licking its<lb/>
wounds in silence until it is brought forth<lb/>
in its naked state before next Monday's<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Yes, what could have been the<lb/>
hopeful package of new ideas, room to<lb/>
grow, improvements, and more efficiency<lb/>
of publications this year has now become<lb/>
a welfare dole. So once again<lb/>
publications must swallow their hopes,<lb/>
choke back the anger, and plod along in<lb/>
the old footsteps of last year, and the<lb/>
year before that, and the year before that,<lb/>
ad infinitum.<lb/>
As chairman of the Publications<lb/>
Board I feel I owe it to you to tell you<lb/>
what's going on; and I owe it to the<lb/>
publications to explain, if possible, their<lb/>
plight.<lb/>
After two weeks of sweating out the<lb/>
appropriations inquisition the editors are<lb/>
faced with a bleak year of the same old<lb/>
things.<lb/>
The feelings of the "higher ups" seem<lb/>
to be"What was good enough for last<lb/>
year is still good enough this year What<lb/>
for improvements, innovations, creativity,<lb/>
that lovely capitalistic privilege of making<lb/>
it better if you work hard enough?<lb/>
Bullshit! Who wants that anyway?<lb/>
Publications don't seem to be worth the<lb/>
chance-so smirks the majority rule of<lb/>
our heavenly elected body.<lb/>
The fact still remains, however<lb/>
galling it is to some, that publications<lb/>
are THE ONLY appropriation the SGA<lb/>
makes which benefits the entire campus.<lb/>
Nothing else at ECU can tie this growing<lb/>
campus together informatively like<lb/>
publications can and do.<lb/>
Hell, bemoaning our handcuffed state<lb/>
will avail us nothing-at least this year!<lb/>
Maybe facts will cause someone to<lb/>
notice this deplorable situation.<lb/>
Fact: The Fountainhead has been<lb/>
churning out mammoth 32 and 26-page<lb/>
issues this year. Seems logicial that a<lb/>
bigger staff is needed than that of two<lb/>
years ago when Fountainhead was 12<lb/>
pages? (Staff not increased last year).<lb/>
Not according to the appropriations<lb/>
committee. Result: after two months of<lb/>
work Fountainhead must fire several staff<lb/>
members and shrug its shoulders to the<lb/>
haggard editors.<lb/>
Fact: Founainhead's advertising<lb/>
revenue this year is estimated to be<lb/>
$30,000 a 45percent of their budget. This<lb/>
is work done solely by the staff. Seems<lb/>
like the American way that when you<lb/>
increase your income you should be able<lb/>
to add to your product the improvements<lb/>
you've worked for? Not according to the<lb/>
appropriations committee. Result: ad<lb/>
revenue goes right back to SGA general<lb/>
fund, and Fountainhead gets no benefit<lb/>
whatever-not a penny. Can Fountainhead<lb/>
ever work for a better future? Hang it<lb/>
up-no way can they get ahead.<lb/>
Fact: Rebel has been constantly<lb/>
accused of never putting out an issue at<lb/>
all or on time. No one knows what a<lb/>
Rebel is (so They say). Seems like the<lb/>
best thing to do to get a publicity<lb/>
campaign going, solicit articles and art<lb/>
work, and get on the ball? Truth: Jeff<lb/>
Rollins, editor, has been busting ass<lb/>
since last year, has advertised frequently,<lb/>
is receiving piles of submissions, and<lb/>
was ready to go soon as he got his<lb/>
budget ok'd.<lb/>
Appropriations all but destroyed his<lb/>
chances, refused to view his efforts as<lb/>
proof this year's Rebel would meet the<lb/>
deadlines, and beat Jeff over the head<lb/>
with their opinions of how worthless the<lb/>
publication is to the students. Result:<lb/>
do the best you can, Jeff, with the bone<lb/>
they threw your way.<lb/>
Fact: Jeff wanted to put out five<lb/>
Rebels this year (an attempt to get Rebel<lb/>
ill 0 ?<lb/>
back to what it should be) and<lb/>
condensed his staff to three people only.<lb/>
Since each person is filling about three<lb/>
positions each and more than tripling<lb/>
their workload seems like their salaries<lb/>
could be a bit more. Sorry again-Jeff's<lb/>
efforts as editor, critic, typist, layout,<lb/>
business manager, public relations, etc.<lb/>
are not deemed worth a $20.00 increase.<lb/>
Result: His salary is reduced too and<lb/>
Jeff lives off dedication alone, with<lb/>
maybe a bit of satisfaction thrown in for<lb/>
holiday feasts.<lb/>
Fact: When Jeff says, "I don't care<lb/>
what they cut as long as I can have two<lb/>
books and our beloved, "let the people<lb/>
vote president, Mr. Honeycutt, straight-<lb/>
facedly says to his all-ears committee, if<lb/>
you pass on two books "I won't sign the<lb/>
bill, and you'd have a hard time getting<lb/>
the veto overridden so you'll just be<lb/>
wasting your time to do it one wonders<lb/>
if "the people" really do have a chance,<lb/>
orwhatever happened to majority rules?<lb/>
Why not do away with the committees<lb/>
and legislature altogether and make all<lb/>
requests straight to our authorative<lb/>
executive? Result: you guess the<lb/>
committee vote!<lb/>
Good try Rebel. But you know how it<lb/>
is-once you slip and fall in performance<lb/>
you might as well stay down because<lb/>
you can't expect a second chance from<lb/>
our unfailing electorate.<lb/>
Fact: Publications asked for $35 a<lb/>
week to hire a secretary for the<lb/>
publications center to assure phones get<lb/>
answered while the various staff<lb/>
of control over<lb/>
I must say that I too was not satisfied<lb/>
in the '75 Buccaneer, but I knew last year<lb/>
that the annual would be a weak one for<lb/>
a number of reasons. Personally I feel<lb/>
that I cannot take the full blame of the<lb/>
downfall of this yearbook. After all, I was<lb/>
only the photographer, and not the<lb/>
editor.<lb/>
I worked last year as the photographer<lb/>
for the publications (Fountainhead,<lb/>
Buccaneer, and a few other small college<lb/>
publications). I found it most difficult at<lb/>
times to be at two or more locations at<lb/>
the same duration, but this was the job I<lb/>
wanted and I tried to do my best in<lb/>
covering what I could. For the most part,<lb/>
I took the majority of photos in the<lb/>
yearbook, but I will not accept the credits<lb/>
of the photos that were taken from the<lb/>
other photographers (photo credits p.<lb/>
432, acknowledgements) and the photo<lb/>
files. I can honestly say, that I would not<lb/>
let such poor quality work be entered in<lb/>
the annual. Anyone who knows me and<lb/>
my work can verify this fact. As the<lb/>
Editor stated "some coverage was better<lb/>
than no coverage at all but did not<lb/>
state where she received this coverage.<lb/>
As for the self-portrait on page 170, I was<lb/>
not informed how much the photo would<lb/>
be enlarged. All I was asked for was a<lb/>
photograph of myself. As I said before, I<lb/>
fmmmmmwmmmmwmmmMmm<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
0 s<lb/>
was only the photographer, not the<lb/>
editor. What I can't understand is why<lb/>
the explanation from the editor? There<lb/>
should not have to be an explanation for<lb/>
a publication of this magnitude.<lb/>
The finger could be pointed at the<lb/>
other reasons for the failure of the<lb/>
yearbook, but I don't feel that I could be<lb/>
justified in doing so without including<lb/>
the vast majority of the student body and<lb/>
their lack of enthusiasm. When high<lb/>
school yearbook editors and staff are the<lb/>
only ones who are willing to work on the<lb/>
Buccaneer, the students will continue to<lb/>
get a high school annual at ECU.<lb/>
It takes a lot of time, effort and most<lb/>
of all our money to put out a yeartxxk. It<lb/>
is a shame that we continue to store<lb/>
these annuals for the day when there is a<lb/>
paper shortage.<lb/>
By the way Fountainhead, I'm glad to<lb/>
see your adds have joined the ranks of<lb/>
Playboy and Penthouse in advertising the<lb/>
use of contraceptives for the sensuous<lb/>
man. What's next, the complete<lb/>
Photographic Guide to Sexual Inter-<lb/>
course. I must say the advertising in this<lb/>
year's Fountainhead is of good taste;<lb/>
like a lemon.<lb/>
Regretfully yours,<lb/>
Richard Goldman<lb/>
1975 Pub Board Photographer<lb/>
ip i wm ? m li w m i ?? f i im ii n<lb/>
members are in class, etc to see that<lb/>
important messages get relayed, that<lb/>
records are kept, business is handled<lb/>
more efficiently, and some means of<lb/>
coordinated continuity is established at<lb/>
last. Are you kidding? The SGA has a<lb/>
full-time secretary in the office; a<lb/>
student secretary to handle legislative<lb/>
matters, a paid presidential assistant to<lb/>
keep Mr. Honeycutt in tune with what's<lb/>
going on and all the various intricate<lb/>
appointments and committees to keep<lb/>
things running. HOW DARE the<lb/>
publications think they deserve one little<lb/>
secretary to meet the needs of three large<lb/>
publications and a pub board as well.<lb/>
Preposterous to think a $35 a week for<lb/>
such folly.<lb/>
As Mr. Price wisely pointed out,<lb/>
"There are enough people over there,<lb/>
they should be able to arrange their<lb/>
schedules to make sure someone is in<lb/>
the office all the time<lb/>
Perhaps we should check into that<lb/>
brilliant idea-but, I wonder if the layout<lb/>
assistants could really answer advertising<lb/>
rate questions; whether the typists could<lb/>
answer circulation queries; whether a<lb/>
Greek editor would know what the sports<lb/>
editor is doing.<lb/>
Hell, just because the publications<lb/>
are utilizing hundreds of thousands of<lb/>
dollars of students' money and actually<lb/>
carry on important business under tight<lb/>
schedules doesn't mean they should have<lb/>
a secretary.<lb/>
Guess the old SGA gang can't<lb/>
imagine what it would be like without a<lb/>
secretary (or two or three!); but, that our<lb/>
SGA-they're all for organized efficiency<lb/>
and priorities. Just ask them. Result:<lb/>
advertisers will continue to give up trying<lb/>
to call; important messages will go on<lb/>
being forgotten; people will still find the<lb/>
doors closed during the day, etc.<lb/>
These were only a few of the<lb/>
highlights of the last two weeks in<lb/>
appropriations committee.<lb/>
But stay put for all the fun to come.<lb/>
Tune in next week, same time, same<lb/>
station, and see if the maimed pub board<lb/>
bill gets through the legislature-or has<lb/>
the welfare recipient bitten the hand that<lb/>
feeds it before it actually fed it?<lb/>
And many more joys of text as<lb/>
-the pub board struggles for<lb/>
existence;<lb/>
-as amendments to our by-laws are<lb/>
kicked out the door until we make an<lb/>
executive compromise;<lb/>
-as certain SGA goers attempt to do<lb/>
away with pub board and make<lb/>
publications directly responsible to them<lb/>
(do I see another political appointment or<lb/>
committee on the horizon?);<lb/>
-as Ebony Herald tries to find out who<lb/>
they belong to and where they can get<lb/>
some money;<lb/>
-as-best of all- the offended exec's<lb/>
make haste to reply to this waywardly<lb/>
wordy accusation of a certain person's<lb/>
vindictive pig-headedness;<lb/>
-as someone comes up with the<lb/>
famous last wordsl shall return" (the<lb/>
issue, that is).<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Diane Taylor<lb/>
Pub Board Chairman<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0004"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
WH<lb/>
IHIIID<lb/>
1heForLim<lb/>
Mching Pirates explanation given<lb/>
This letter is written in response to<lb/>
the letter of Mr. Joe Stroud which<lb/>
appeared in the October 23 issue of<lb/>
Fountainhead. Mr. Stroud wrote a nice<lb/>
letter about the Marching Pirates and<lb/>
asked for an explanation as to why the<lb/>
band was not going to appear at the<lb/>
UNC-ECU football game. The reason the<lb/>
band did not go is that Carolina was<lb/>
having "Band Day" and were expecting 20<lb/>
to 30 high school bands for the game. If<lb/>
the band had gone we would not have<lb/>
been able to perform at halftime or in the<lb/>
stands. Plus if we would have performed,<lb/>
this would have meant five shows back<lb/>
to back and probably five practices a<lb/>
week to get them ready. Instead, Mr.<lb/>
Naff chose to pass up the Carolina game<lb/>
and perform at the Virginia game.<lb/>
Anyone wanting information on ttw<lb/>
band is asked to contact George Naft<lb/>
What is wrong with sharing?<lb/>
who is in charge of the Marching Pirates<lb/>
organization in the School of Music.<lb/>
Again, thank you Mr. Stroud for your<lb/>
letter concerning the band. And<lb/>
congratulations to the football team on<lb/>
a job well done. Even though we didn't<lb/>
make it to the game, we were still behind<lb/>
you all the way.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Keith Jones<lb/>
ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
lo Fountainheaa<lb/>
This letter is in answer to the letter in<lb/>
Thursday's issue titled, "Gym is for<lb/>
Student Use I would like to say that I<lb/>
agree wholeheartedly with the students<lb/>
on this issue. ECU facilities should be<lb/>
available only to ECU students and<lb/>
faculty. However. I would like to add<lb/>
something to that letter<lb/>
I am a staff member and therefore<lb/>
eligible to use the ECU facilities. I realize<lb/>
that the ECU facilities would be crowded<lb/>
if all faculty and students used them so I<lb/>
use the City of Greenville's faciltiies. The<lb/>
City of Greenville is not paying to give<lb/>
ECU students a place to play<lb/>
tennis. However, it seems that every time<lb/>
J have the chance to plav tennis. I have<lb/>
to wait in line behind ECU students.<lb/>
I ask all you tennis-loving students<lb/>
who find it hard to secure a tennis court<lb/>
on campus, how would you feel if the<lb/>
City of Greenville had someone checking<lb/>
ID's at the city tennis courts. What is<lb/>
wrong with sharing?<lb/>
Pam Whitehurst<lb/>
BUYING A STEREO?<lb/>
o Center<lb/>
components?<lb/>
,aQ9<lb/>
ai ya ti$ <lb/>
.? .ji iil8 JW"<lb/>
t?iK "?o<lb/>
I x-W? ?<lb/>
U?<lb/>
KENWOOD KR-5400<lb/>
AMFM-STEREO RECEIVER<lb/>
35 Watts Per Channel, Minimum RMS at 8 ohms,<lb/>
20-20k Hz with no more than 0.5 Total Harmonic Distortion<lb/>
When music becomes more man just something to listen to.<lb/>
Pair Electronics Audio Center is involved.<lb/>
PAIR ELECTRONICS AUDIO CENTER<lb/>
107 Trade St (Next to Tarheel Toyota)<lb/>
THE SOURCE OF PERFECTION IN SOUND<lb/>
We are totally comoetitive with any audio dealer!<lb/>
Appreciation<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I write the following couplet- in<lb/>
appreciation for the incredible and<lb/>
historical victory of ECU over UNC.<lb/>
I dedicate this couplet to my three<lb/>
children who are attending ECU. They are<lb/>
Jonathan, David, and Mary Timmie.<lb/>
"WATERLOOS"<lb/>
Napoleon came to Waterloo;<lb/>
Carolina came to Ficklen.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
n<lb/>
Signed: V<lb/>
Rev. S. Yorke Pharr, Jr. k<lb/>
Entitled<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I resent having to approach you<lb/>
sounding, perhaps, like a peculiar snob. I<lb/>
do pay my activity fee however and<lb/>
consequently feel that I am entitled to<lb/>
voice my opinion in this matter.<lb/>
I am aware that the Films Committee<lb/>
works diligently to provide the student<lb/>
audience with film selections ith which<lb/>
they feel will please the consensual<lb/>
appetite of ECU students. The film<lb/>
selections of late (since the beginning of<lb/>
the summer) have been very disappoint-<lb/>
ing, however. I am also aware that the<lb/>
Films Committee, in the past, has made<lb/>
honest attempts to present 'artistic'<lb/>
endeavors to the student body such as<lb/>
Nick Roeg's Performance, Fellini's<lb/>
Satyricon, Altman's Images and<lb/>
Bergman's Persona. Painfully, I am also<lb/>
cognizant that a great number of ECUers<lb/>
grumbled their way out of these movies<lb/>
expressing such things as "What a silly<lb/>
movie "That was a lot of nonsense" and<lb/>
"That flick's for queers<lb/>
So it goes.<lb/>
O.K. So the Films Committee has<lb/>
decided to stick with more safe,<lb/>
conventional, acceptable and less<lb/>
intellectually demanding films. I under-<lb/>
stand that different folks dig different<lb/>
strokes and all that jazz. But can't the<lb/>
Films Committee present just a few<lb/>
intellectually stimulating (or "strange" as<lb/>
in campus jargon) films this year? Many<lb/>
great films are available - those by John<lb/>
Cassavettes, Bergman, Roeg, and<lb/>
Polanski - fine works of cinema such as<lb/>
Don't Look Now and Steppenwolf that<lb/>
approach and explore human experience<lb/>
from a symbolic and, perhaps, more<lb/>
esoteric level. This IS a university and<lb/>
the films should reflect to some degree a<lb/>
search for a deeper awareness and<lb/>
understanding of Reality. That's what I<lb/>
thought college was about.<lb/>
Thanks for the space,<lb/>
Larry Slaughter fcj<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0005"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
uplet. in<lb/>
ible and<lb/>
MC.<lb/>
ny three<lb/>
They are<lb/>
nie.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Signed:<lb/>
5harr, Jr.<lb/>
'<lb/>
ch you r<lb/>
' snob. I n<lb/>
rer and "<lb/>
itled to 9;<lb/>
mmittee<lb/>
student<lb/>
1 which<lb/>
sensual<lb/>
le film<lb/>
ning of<lb/>
ippoint-<lb/>
hat the<lb/>
s made<lb/>
artistic'<lb/>
uch as<lb/>
:ellini's<lb/>
and<lb/>
m also<lb/>
ECUers<lb/>
movies<lb/>
a silly<lb/>
e"and<lb/>
e has<lb/>
safe,<lb/>
less<lb/>
under-<lb/>
went<lb/>
11 the<lb/>
i few<lb/>
je"as ij<lb/>
Many x<lb/>
John J<lb/>
and <lb/>
:has IT<lb/>
that M<lb/>
ience<lb/>
more<lb/>
' and<lb/>
iree a<lb/>
and<lb/>
hat I<lb/>
:<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
aoe, t<lb/>
jhter J<lb/>
m<lb/>
mtem<lb/>
mm<lb/>
UMW<lb/>
m<lb/>
Be<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
5<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
Health department checks micro-waveovens<lb/>
By JOHN DAYBERRY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Micro-wave ovens are safe when<lb/>
properly used, and maintained, according<lb/>
to a survey of the Pitt County Community<lb/>
Health Department.<lb/>
Out of 83 micro-wave ovens tested by<lb/>
Sarah Dixon, sanitarian with the<lb/>
department, only two were leaking<lb/>
enough to cause any physical damage.<lb/>
Both of these ovens were four to five<lb/>
years old, according to Dixon, and<lb/>
should have been monitored for leakage<lb/>
level before.<lb/>
SURVEY CONDUCTED<lb/>
The survey was conducted in Pitt<lb/>
County from September 22 to October 10,<lb/>
with the use of a leakage monitoring<lb/>
meter borrowed from the ECU Environ-<lb/>
mental Health Department.<lb/>
"I tested ovens in ail Pitt County<lb/>
restaurants, area industries, and in<lb/>
private homes of people who called in<lb/>
requesting tests said Dixon.<lb/>
"It is a public service which the Pitt<lb/>
County Community Health Department<lb/>
plans to do again next October, and once<lb/>
every year.<lb/>
"I would not be at all afraid to use a<lb/>
micro-wave oven, but I would have it<lb/>
checked once a year for leakage<lb/>
Dr. Barney Kane, assistant professor<lb/>
of environmental health at ECU explained<lb/>
how a micro-wave oven works.<lb/>
HIGH FREQUENCY<lb/>
"A tube in the oven called a<lb/>
magnotron radiates extremely high<lb/>
frequency radio waves inside the oven<lb/>
said Kane.<lb/>
"These waves are of such short<lb/>
wavelength that they go right through<lb/>
glass, and paper, therefore the waves do<lb/>
not affect such materials.<lb/>
"But the waves are absorbed by water<lb/>
molecules in food, and the energy<lb/>
transferred causes the food to cook<lb/>
Micro-waves, unlike x-rays, do not<lb/>
break down molecular bonds, and<lb/>
therefore can cause no genetic damage,<lb/>
according to Kane<lb/>
"The damaoe micro-waves might do<lb/>
comes from their heating abilities said<lb/>
Kane.<lb/>
DAMAGE POSSIBLE<lb/>
"If a person is exposed to high levels<lb/>
of micro-waves, he is in danger of<lb/>
developing cataracts, and in the male,<lb/>
sterilization.<lb/>
"Micro-waves cannot be felt, because<lb/>
the skin is relatively dry, and would not<lb/>
hurt when exposed.<lb/>
"But the internal organs, and tissues<lb/>
would cook like hamburgers if exposed<lb/>
to verv hiah levels of micro-waves<lb/>
Kane agreed that there is no danger<lb/>
from properly manufactured, and properly<lb/>
maintained micro-wave ovens.<lb/>
"These ovens are manufactured with<lb/>
skill, and precision, and will not work<lb/>
when the doors are not closed said<lb/>
Kane.<lb/>
"The geometrical design of the oven<lb/>
is very important, and when wear, or<lb/>
accident results in a bent door, worn<lb/>
latches, or loose hinges, then the<lb/>
radiation could possibly leak out.<lb/>
"That's why it is important to keep a<lb/>
micro-wave oven in good repair, and to<lb/>
have it checked if it is damaged.<lb/>
"I would use a micro-wave oven, but I<lb/>
would want to have it checked for<lb/>
leakage when I bought it, about once a<lb/>
year after that, and any time that it<lb/>
became damaged.<lb/>
"The danger present in a well made<lb/>
micro-wave oven though, is the same as<lb/>
the danger of getting sunburned on a<lb/>
moonlit night, none<lb/>
Semester calender change presents problems<lb/>
By GAYLE McCRACKEN<lb/>
The setting of departmental deadlines<lb/>
for course revision submissions and<lb/>
discussion of the semester calendar were<lb/>
the main points of business at the<lb/>
October 14 meeting of The Semester<lb/>
Transition Committee.<lb/>
"The main thing discussed was the<lb/>
changing of quarter courses to semester<lb/>
courses said Bobby Harrell, student<lb/>
representative to the Faculty Senate<lb/>
Committee. "What we are trying to do is<lb/>
combine two courses without changing<lb/>
the content too much<lb/>
Deadlines were set and each<lb/>
department will submit their revisions to<lb/>
the Curriculum Committee for approval or<lb/>
disapproval.<lb/>
"Some simple course changes will be<lb/>
approved immediately, and others will<lb/>
have to go through a series of reviews<lb/>
said Harrell.<lb/>
The actual change is scheduled for<lb/>
the 1977-1978 school year.<lb/>
"The biggest problem with the<lb/>
calendar will occur with the change over<lb/>
in the fall said Harrell. "The summer<lb/>
sessions of the last quarter system will<lb/>
run right into the first fall of the semester<lb/>
system<lb/>
The first semester will end and exams<lb/>
will be held before the Christmas<lb/>
vacation.<lb/>
"The course numbering will be<lb/>
different said Harrell. "There will be<lb/>
four numbers instead of three and they<lb/>
will run from 1000 through 7,000.<lb/>
"The change with books will be they<lb/>
will only have to be bought twice said<lb/>
Harrell. "Many of tne dooks now used<lb/>
apply to two courses and these will not<lb/>
have to be changed.<lb/>
"There are pros and cons to the<lb/>
transition and it's my obligation to help<lb/>
my fellow students make the change as<lb/>
easy as possible said Harrell.<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/>
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/>
DIAMONDS ? WATCHES - JEWELRY - CLOCKS<lb/>
AUTHORIZED SEIKO AND TIMEX REPAIR CENTER<lb/>
COMPLETE JEWEl BV REPAIR<lb/>
I<lb/>
Floyd G. Robinson s<lb/>
Discount Jewelers<lb/>
FLOYO AND MIKE ROBINSON<lb/>
Licensed Watchmakim<lb/>
REMOUNTING ? ANTIQUE CLOCK REPAIR<lb/>
407 EVANR STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. 2734<lb/>
DOWNTOWN<lb/>
RHONE<lb/>
BUS. 75M4B2<lb/>
RKS 7861433<lb/>
Free Gift Wrap Ear Piercing - Free WEarring Purchase<lb/>
Engraving Greek Letters Also<lb/>
"If It Doesn't Ttek-Tock to Us<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT THE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
fuvtt. The Royal Kings<lb/>
also at Hppy Hour fti 3-7<lb/>
Fn. rate Haloween Party!<lb/>
Super Prizes for Best CoskmBa'<lb/>
Sat Clear Smoke<lb/>
Sun. Every Sin. b lades Mte<lb/>
38-17 Congratiatations rtrthM i<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
U<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
F0UNTAINHEADV0L.7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
i urn M he i n?<lb/>
Teacher evaluation clarified<lb/>
The new teacher evaluation forms at<lb/>
Wittenberg University group questions<lb/>
into six factors that the Teacher<lb/>
Effectiveness Sub-committee feels are<lb/>
relevant to the teaching process.<lb/>
Clarity of grading procedure, indivi-<lb/>
dual help and availability, student<lb/>
accomplishment, clarity and organization<lb/>
of material, work load, and openness to<lb/>
student participation are the factors that<lb/>
contain approximately three questions<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Questions under the same factor may<lb/>
seem redundant, said Dr. John Abma of<lb/>
the sub-committee. This is not a check<lb/>
on students' honesty, he emphasized,<lb/>
but a method designed to cause students<lb/>
to think carefully about how they feel,<lb/>
and to give them a chance to change<lb/>
their minds about a feeling.<lb/>
For example, Dr. Abma explained,<lb/>
factor B, individual help and availability,<lb/>
contains three questions. The first, "The<lb/>
instructor was willing to help each<lb/>
student measures attitude. The second,<lb/>
"The instructor made him-herself<lb/>
available for help measures availability.<lb/>
The third question, "The instructor spent<lb/>
time with individual students measures<lb/>
personal attention.<lb/>
Faculty members, said Dr. Abma,<lb/>
have been pleased with the new manner<lb/>
of analyzing evaluation forms results.<lb/>
Under the old system, he explained, they<lb/>
received a printout of the questions with<lb/>
corresponding percentages of positive,<lb/>
neutral and negative responses.<lb/>
This complex form made analysis of<lb/>
needed areas of improvement very<lb/>
difficult. The new system provides a<lb/>
printout that shows the professor how he<lb/>
rates on each of the six above-mentioned<lb/>
factors, as well as responses to<lb/>
individual questions.<lb/>
The six factors, Dr. Abma continued,<lb/>
do not exhaust everything important to<lb/>
teaching. To provide a broader analysis,<lb/>
the form contains open-ended questions,<lb/>
and also provides the professor with<lb/>
space to add questions of his own<lb/>
invention, specifically related to his<lb/>
course.<lb/>
The new form, according to one<lb/>
student subcommittee member, is a<lb/>
result of a shift in emphasis that the<lb/>
committee has taken. They are now<lb/>
concerned not with judging professors,<lb/>
but with faculty improvement.<lb/>
.V.V<lb/>
?-?.?.?.?-?.?.?.?.?.?.<lb/>
? ??????<lb/>
?:??.?.?.?.?.?.?<lb/>
SSilSSgS<lb/>
BUCCANEER<lb/>
&amp;$<lb/>
M.S<lb/>
?.?????.?-?.?.?.?<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Q<lb/>
m<lb/>
Thurs. nite- STAIRCASE the Buc!<lb/>
Ladies weekend - LADIES FREE ALL WEEKEND!<lb/>
Halloween (Fri. nite) - SONIC ZEBRA<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 3-7<lb/>
HALLOWEEN PARTY - WITH PRIZES<lb/>
FOR THE BEST COSTUMES<lb/>
1ST PRIZE-A YEAR'S PASS TO THE BUC!<lb/>
a ,? -SONIC ZEBRA<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
'i<lb/>
3<lb/>
I<lb/>
fflw?a<lb/>
?<lb/>
$<lb/>
If<lb/>
ikP<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
- m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0007"/><lb/>
?????nHIHMI<lb/>
mmmmmmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
F0UNTA1NHEADV0L 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
7<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
S8S8<lb/>
sr<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
3i;S<lb/>
BKS;<lb/>
p?<lb/>
<lb/>
S3<lb/>
?:?:?<lb/>
???<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
AV<lb/>
I<lb/>
555<lb/>
? ? i<lb/>
I<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
The following merchants would like to congratulate the<lb/>
coaches and players of the ECU Pirates for the fantastic victory<lb/>
over "CENTRAL CAROLINA" last weekend ! We would also<lb/>
like to thank all the ECU students and faculty for the "bread"<lb/>
they put on our tables !<lb/>
ROCK N SOUL<lb/>
COUNTRY VOGUE<lb/>
ELBOW ROOM<lb/>
H. L HODGES<lb/>
"HEADSTRONG"<lb/>
THE GAZEBO<lb/>
STEREO WAREHOUSE<lb/>
DAVE'S LEATHER SHOP<lb/>
NEWBY'S SUB SHOP<lb/>
TREE HOUSE<lb/>
STOP - SHOP<lb/>
"SCRAPS"<lb/>
BOOK BARN<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
OLDE TOWNE<lb/>
TAMMERLANE<lb/>
MARTY'S<lb/>
UNIVERSITY BOOK EXCHANGE<lb/>
SOCK IT TO FURMAN, PIRATES<lb/>
?W<lb/>
?iiiMum<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0008"/><lb/>
JsSSwsS Sf&amp;al ?'? ? ?: 81 K33PNB3B<lb/>
8<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
?p<lb/>
tm<lb/>
Strickland calls for greater participation in government<lb/>
By BETTY GUNTER<lb/>
Sen Thomas E. Strickland, who has<lb/>
announced his candidacy for Democratic<lb/>
governor of North Carolina, said Monday,<lb/>
people should become informed and<lb/>
involved in government<lb/>
"The key factor to any campaign is for<lb/>
citizens to be well informed of the issues<lb/>
before voting said Strickland.<lb/>
Strickland made the comments as<lb/>
guest speaker at a Young Democrats<lb/>
meeting last Monday night.<lb/>
About 25 to 30 persons attended the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
People should get out and be a part<lb/>
of politics since it does influence daily<lb/>
affairs, he said.<lb/>
Strickland also expressed concern<lb/>
over how to bring maturity to his own<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
???????????????? <lb/>
He said he hopes to accomplish this<lb/>
by curtailing campaigning and by letting<lb/>
voters know exactly where he stands on<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
"I have prepared a list for various<lb/>
news media explaining my feelings on<lb/>
certain issues since 1967 said<lb/>
Strickland.<lb/>
"Since announcing my candidacy for<lb/>
governor, I have tried to tell the news<lb/>
media exactly where I stand<lb/>
Strickland went on to express concern<lb/>
over the rising influence of special<lb/>
interest groups in politics.<lb/>
"We have divided ourselves into<lb/>
special interest groups which promote<lb/>
separate interests he said.<lb/>
"We must learn to discipline<lb/>
ourselves and to look for overall good,<lb/>
good for North<lb/>
not just<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
what<lb/>
When asked why he favcred capital<lb/>
punishment, Strickland said, "The people<lb/>
of this state should be able to walk the<lb/>
streets in safety<lb/>
Responding to questions on why he<lb/>
is against the Equal Rights Amendement,<lb/>
Strickland said, "There would be no<lb/>
certainty in the law, ERA would be<lb/>
unsettled in too many areas<lb/>
An example given by Strickland would<lb/>
be the question of, who would be head<lb/>
of the household under this amendment?<lb/>
Commenting on the subject of<lb/>
marijuana, Strickland said, he favored<lb/>
lesser sentences for marijuana offenses,<lb/>
but said such offenses should remain in<lb/>
criminal law because its use may lead to<lb/>
other drugs.<lb/>
Boohing for apples, Halloween treat<lb/>
Mrs. Stevens<lb/>
PALM READER<lb/>
ADVISOR<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 South, 3 miles south of Washing-<lb/>
? ton, N.C. Look for name and hand<lb/>
Jsign. READINGS NOW $3.00.<lb/>
jarestfit<lb/>
Can Help in all problems-business,<lb/>
marital, separation, love. Located<lb/>
in Chocowinity, N.C. on Hwy. 17<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?$<lb/>
HFRKIMFRVII.LK, N.YNow<lb/>
there's this little old dame in<lb/>
downtown Herkimerville named<lb/>
Hannibal Smith. She doesn't<lb/>
smoke, hasn't had sex since<lb/>
1901, has never been to the Big<lb/>
Apple i New York City), has<lb/>
never flown in a plane, bates<lb/>
bras, and drives a 1929 Essex<lb/>
Terraplane.<lb/>
Miss Smith (no Ms for hen<lb/>
has voted a straight Republican<lb/>
ticket from Warren Gamaliel<lb/>
Harding through Richard Mil-<lb/>
haus Nixon, prefers her own<lb/>
stereoscope collection to the<lb/>
boob tube, and chews Mail<lb/>
Pouch Tobacco,<lb/>
Just a nice, ordinary Sen-<lb/>
ior Citizen, yes? No'<lb/>
Hannibal Smith happens to be<lb/>
the world's undefeated cham-<lb/>
pion Halloween apple-bobber<lb/>
since 1888. (She's also held a<lb/>
title longer than any person in<lb/>
history.) Generations have<lb/>
tried, but no one has ever<lb/>
beaten her record.<lb/>
Blessed with an extraordin-<lb/>
ary set ol teeth, she picked up<lb/>
75 apples before she tell head-<lb/>
first into a sea of delic. us<lb/>
Apple Jack and had to be res-<lb/>
cued from drowning by the<lb/>
Herkimerville Volunteer Fire<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
The indefatigable Hannibal<lb/>
made news today when she<lb/>
hinted that she might retire as<lb/>
a highlight ol America's Bi-<lb/>
centt nnial next year.<lb/>
"It's time to step aside and<lb/>
let some younger bobbers take<lb/>
over Hannibal said, as she<lb/>
headed for the Village Tavern<lb/>
to belt a few Jack Roses. "But<lb/>
I'll be a consultant for the next<lb/>
jo years to anyone planning a<lb/>
Halloween apple-bobbing con-<lb/>
test<lb/>
Here are the secret ingredi-<lb/>
ents, never b( ore revealed, for<lb/>
Hannibal Smith's special Apple<lb/>
Jack Punch.<lb/>
I se one part Laird's Apple<lb/>
.lack, one part club soda or<lb/>
ginger ale, one part fruit juice<lb/>
ol your choice. Pre-chill soda<lb/>
and fruit juice. Mix in punch<lb/>
howl, or any suitable container.<lb/>
Sweeten to taste, add ice and<lb/>
garnish with slices of fruit.<lb/>
4pyOQ'<lb/>
TAKWLLANE<lb/>
I be SFTROABAAMISAHAOFO (Societ lor the Restoration of<lb/>
Apple-Bobbing as a Major Indoor Sport at Halloween and Other<lb/>
Festive Occasions) has two beautiful bobbers demonstrate the<lb/>
proper technique at a seminar in New York (the Big Apple). All<lb/>
you need are some apples, some energetic bobbers, a goodly<lb/>
supply of Apple .lack, and oodles ?l gamesmanship. Ladies,<lb/>
take your mark<lb/>
PI LAMBDA PHI<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR FRIDAY 2-8<lb/>
3 Contest &amp; prizes for<lb/>
?! best costumes Friday right<lb/>
m 1 tm11 m<lb/>
TACOS - ENCHILADAS - TAMALES - RICE - BEANS -CHILI CON CARNE<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
oi<lb/>
I<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
o<lb/>
h-<lb/>
E<lb/>
rr<lb/>
D<lb/>
CO<lb/>
o<lb/>
I<lb/>
u<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/>
OT<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
33<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
w<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
O<lb/>
33<lb/>
Z<lb/>
o<lb/>
S31VWV1 - 3Di? - osano nod iiihd - aiowvovno - aoojvas - w<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
?t<lb/>
4<lb/>
if<lb/>
ikf<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
???I<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0009"/><lb/>
?? v I<lb/>
why he<lb/>
idement,<lb/>
be no<lb/>
auld be<lb/>
id would<lb/>
be head<lb/>
ndment?<lb/>
ject of<lb/>
favored<lb/>
iffenses,<lb/>
jmain in<lb/>
lead to<lb/>
it<lb/>
-?<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
s<lb/>
'<lb/>
3!1<lb/>
<lb/>
? inuii<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
FOUNTAJNHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
9<lb/>
Resident's<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
set<lb/>
SGAhvrtes<lb/>
university<lb/>
club leaders<lb/>
Kim Kuzmuk , secretary of Public<lb/>
Relations for the SGA, has announced<lb/>
plans for a Presidents' Forum to be held<lb/>
at the beginning of Winter Quarter.<lb/>
"Unless there are complications the<lb/>
ECU senior stated, "we will have our first<lb/>
gathering in December. I think it's<lb/>
important to the flow of information that<lb/>
we get together as soon as possible<lb/>
The Presidents' Forum, as an SGA<lb/>
program, was created several years ago<lb/>
in order to get all leaders of campus<lb/>
organizations together to discuss what<lb/>
each was doing and planning, according<lb/>
to Kuzmuk. In particular, the Forum was<lb/>
used by SGA to explain its projects and<lb/>
programs, she said.<lb/>
"Zeroing in on SGA goals is the first<lb/>
priority Kuzmuk continued, "so that as<lb/>
many people and as many groups as<lb/>
possible know what the Government is<lb/>
doing and where it is going. Also, we at<lb/>
SGA want to know what everyone else is<lb/>
doing and what they think. The Forum is<lb/>
a way for us up at SGA to hear<lb/>
complaints and problems the Virg lia<lb/>
native said.<lb/>
More than one hundred organizations<lb/>
exist at ECU, and all will be contacted if<lb/>
they show interest, she said.<lb/>
"But we don't expect them all to<lb/>
come, so we'll be happy if we have<lb/>
participation from a third of them she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
rwm<lb/>
KIM KUZMUK<lb/>
PROPOUTS<lb/>
1 MUST CERTAINLY DO<lb/>
CM?, DO YOU FEEL THAT ??,<lb/>
ACCEPTABLE POLITICAL<lb/>
PRACTICE?<lb/>
7<lb/>
I<lb/>
ll-l<lb/>
HOUEVER, I DO CONSIDER IT POLITICALLY<lb/>
INDISPENSABLE TO BE LESS THAN GftNPfP<lb/>
AS OFTEN AS I CAN f-TZ<lb/>
s)<lb/>
Radio hack<lb/>
REALISTIC 24-CHAIMIMEL<lb/>
PHONO SYSTEM AT A<lb/>
GREAT LOW PRICE!<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
Components Sold<lb/>
Separately . .<lb/>
314.70<lb/>
Specially priced system consists i f<lb/>
Realistic s sensational QA-622 4-channel<lb/>
amplifier with SO and Quatravox M four<lb/>
MC-500 walnut veneer bookshelf speakers<lb/>
and Realistic LAB-12C automatic changei<lb/>
There s only one place you can find it<lb/>
Radio Shack<lb/>
mm<lb/>
fiff yon i .in<lb/>
CHARGE IT<lb/>
At Radio Shack<lb/>
 ai?B?Amihuno<lb/>
r master charge<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
OT<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0010"/><lb/>
iBMlMjE  <lb/>
??<lb/>
10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
p<lb/>
?K0<lb/>
<lb/>
W<lb/>
??<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
Ktask dimensions<lb/>
The haunts of Halloween<lb/>
By BEVERLY BARNES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Witches, fairies, goblins and ghosts were the beginning of<lb/>
Halloween; but these things quickly became only pictures and<lb/>
the idea of candy and "trick or treat" costumes came into effect.<lb/>
There is perhaps no other night in the year that has a more<lb/>
peculiar atmosphere than the thirty-first of October. It is<lb/>
definitely a relic of the pagan times.<lb/>
Halloween is the one night set aside for a universal walking<lb/>
of spirits. People today, do, however, follow this idea quite<lb/>
rigidly as can be attested by flat tires and nice runny eggs<lb/>
smeared on the front of houses.<lb/>
There are many customs that go hand-in-hand with<lb/>
Halloween. The jack-o-lantern won its fame because a man<lb/>
named Jack was kept out of heaven and not allowed to enter<lb/>
hell because of the jokes he played on the devil. His<lb/>
punishment was to roam the earth carrying a lantern until<lb/>
Judgement Day.<lb/>
The custom of costumes on Halloween is derived from<lb/>
people in English parades who dressed queerly and went about<lb/>
telling crazy stories.<lb/>
While Halloween in America lacks thesuperstituious character<lb/>
of the Old World Holiday, it does retain many of the old<lb/>
customs, such as masquerading, visiting from house to house,<lb/>
and eating the ever popular apples. But, it has also had a new<lb/>
dimension added such as "be careful what you eat "wait til<lb/>
you get home and let Daddy see what you get before you eat<lb/>
anything "who slashed my tires?" "get that gooey egg off my<lb/>
window Ah, yes the "today" sounds of Halloween, but the<lb/>
good times still prevail. The "trick-or-treaters" of grade school<lb/>
still enjoy themselves, and the bystanders still enjoy looking at<lb/>
their reactions.<lb/>
There will always be pranksters and that is really one of the<lb/>
commonplace things about Halloween, but pranksters, please be<lb/>
careful what you do this vear 'cause the goblins are out to get<lb/>
you<lb/>
Disillusioned prankster speaks<lb/>
Another apathetic Halloween perhaps?<lb/>
I am Dubliclv announcing my<lb/>
permanent retirement due to overwhelm-<lb/>
ing lack of support from those ratty,<lb/>
inappreciative, cherubic ECU peoDle. In<lb/>
years past, I have diligently strived to<lb/>
please the student body at Halloween by<lb/>
accepting the post of Ringleader of<lb/>
Causing a Ruckus on Campus but my<lb/>
RCRC position is now up for grabs to<lb/>
anyone willing to tackle the difficult task<lb/>
of showing the college kids how to have<lb/>
a good times.<lb/>
The slight amount of previous<lb/>
Halloween turbulence can be attributed<lb/>
to me I've received absolutely no help<lb/>
from those little angels out there who<lb/>
take the meaning<lb/>
HALLOW EVEN")<lb/>
it's hard to toilet<lb/>
around here all<lb/>
of Halloween (ALL<lb/>
iterally. Believe me,<lb/>
paper all the trees<lb/>
by yourself. One<lb/>
Halloween, I spent the whole night<lb/>
sudsing the fountain, kicking out street<lb/>
lights, and egging cars. (I think that's the<lb/>
same year I staged a one-man bedpan<lb/>
raid over at the infirmary.)<lb/>
The apathy at this school is<lb/>
astounding. I've never even been able to<lb/>
round up any water ballon throwers to<lb/>
man the library exits on Halloween night.<lb/>
So, you goodie-goodies of ECU will<lb/>
finally be rid of me this Halloween. I only<lb/>
hope there is someone out there who will<lb/>
miss my shenanigans desperately<lb/>
enough to rekindle the trickery spirit.<lb/>
I'm transferring to Pitt Tech. next quarter<lb/>
in order to recruit some hardnosed<lb/>
troublemakers in a new mischief brigade.<lb/>
P.S. In order to alleviate the overall<lb/>
negative tone of this letter, I would like<lb/>
to say a great big "THANKS to my<lb/>
mother for inspiring me during my deep<lb/>
depressions when nobody would stop<lb/>
studying long enough to help me rip any<lb/>
hub caps off. Don't worry Mom. I'll live<lb/>
up to your expectations yet!<lb/>
ECU has never afforded me the<lb/>
sufficient amount of wildness I had<lb/>
hoped to create. Such a calm, quiet<lb/>
school life is slowly driving me<lb/>
bananas. You'11 regret losing me to Pitt<lb/>
Tech. when you hear of all the<lb/>
commotion we'll make next year.<lb/>
Have a quiet, uneventful (as usual)<lb/>
Halloween, kids!<lb/>
Anonymous<lb/>
(Past Head of RCRD)<lb/>
Ex-truly yours,<lb/>
Chauvinists beware<lb/>
FE<lb/>
i<lb/>
Tram<lb/>
11<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
3<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
Bicycle;<lb/>
Depart me<lb/>
here F<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Whiteville<lb/>
Ms.<lb/>
herself,<lb/>
toured ab<lb/>
years, nc<lb/>
The most<lb/>
Salt Lak<lb/>
Yellowstc<lb/>
where sh<lb/>
the bac<lb/>
camping<lb/>
parts of<lb/>
train or c<lb/>
The C<lb/>
engaged<lb/>
roads ths<lb/>
Id<lb/>
Tod;<lb/>
Editor.<lb/>
As J<lb/>
become<lb/>
aspects<lb/>
serves a<lb/>
learned<lb/>
the cla<lb/>
here .<lb/>
Major <lb/>
brother<lb/>
Johr<lb/>
Marylai<lb/>
opportu<lb/>
places t<lb/>
Johr<lb/>
into ne<lb/>
dad is<lb/>
sophorr<lb/>
school,<lb/>
any wa;<lb/>
forbade<lb/>
really c<lb/>
always<lb/>
things<lb/>
guess t<lb/>
the wa<lb/>
(CPS)-October 28 was the day when<lb/>
women could apply for credit cards anc<lb/>
not be denied because they are single,<lb/>
divorced, separated, female or expectant.<lb/>
A new credit discrimination law went<lb/>
into effect then which prohibited<lb/>
creditors from judging applicants on the<lb/>
basis of sex or marital status. Banks,<lb/>
credit card companies, department<lb/>
stores, gasoline companies and anyone<lb/>
who offers installment credit or loans<lb/>
won't be allowed to ask if an applicant is<lb/>
m<lb/>
married or single. People victimized by<lb/>
sex or marital discrimination can sue for<lb/>
actual damages plus fines of up to<lb/>
$10,000.<lb/>
Other aspects of the law, such as a<lb/>
married woman's right to set up her own<lb/>
accounts and obtain a personal credit<lb/>
rating don't take effect for almost three<lb/>
years. The Federal Reserve Board also<lb/>
removed its original requirement that<lb/>
reasons for denial of credit, when<lb/>
requested, must be given in writing.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
jj<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0011"/><lb/>
KHLOHRH<lb/>
i?M<lb/>
M?M<lb/>
VP<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
n<lb/>
FEATURES<lb/>
aracter<lb/>
i old<lb/>
)use,<lb/>
new<lb/>
it til<lb/>
j eat<lb/>
f my<lb/>
the<lb/>
hool<lb/>
g at<lb/>
the<lb/>
3 be<lb/>
get<lb/>
the<lb/>
had<lb/>
quiet<lb/>
me<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
the<lb/>
jal)<lb/>
tirs,<lb/>
by<lb/>
for<lb/>
to<lb/>
s a<lb/>
wn<lb/>
riit<lb/>
ree<lb/>
I so<lb/>
iat<lb/>
en<lb/>
I<lb/>
-j<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
r.<lb/>
3<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
3<lb/>
C<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
1<lb/>
ikP<lb/>
s<lb/>
1<lb/>
Transportation rep present<lb/>
Area cyclists assess needs<lb/>
Mary Paul Meletiou, Assistant<lb/>
Bicycle; Coordinator in the N.C.<lb/>
Department of Transportation met  <lb/>
here Friday with cyclists from<lb/>
Greenville, Cherry Point, Havelock, and<lb/>
Whiteville.<lb/>
Ms. Meletiou is a bicycle rider<lb/>
herself. She estimates that she has<lb/>
toured about 5,000 miles in the last three<lb/>
years, not including trips around home.<lb/>
The most varied triD went from Boston to<lb/>
Salt Lake City, via Vermont, Canada,<lb/>
Yellowstone Park, and the Grand Tetons,<lb/>
where she did some hiking. She rented<lb/>
the backpacking gear, but carried<lb/>
camping equipment on the bicycle. For<lb/>
parts of the trip she put her bicycle on a<lb/>
train or car.<lb/>
The Department of Transportation is<lb/>
engaged in identifying routes on existing<lb/>
roads that best meet the particular needs<lb/>
of bicycle riders. The primary purpose of<lb/>
Ms. Meletiou's visit was to get advice<lb/>
from people who know the roads in this<lb/>
area through their bicycle tires.<lb/>
A bicycle needs most of the same<lb/>
qualities in a road that a car does, but it<lb/>
needs some of them more. For instance,<lb/>
both vehicles need a smoothly paved<lb/>
surface, but while a car has springs and<lb/>
shock absorbers, bicycles don't-at least<lb/>
the better bicycles. "Road shock is<lb/>
transmitted to the cyclist the Road<lb/>
Selection Criteria of the Department<lb/>
explains. "After a few hours or riding on<lb/>
rough paving) the cyclist's hands become<lb/>
numb and great discomfort to other parts<lb/>
of the body occurs Pot holes, low<lb/>
shoulders, and chewed-up pavement<lb/>
edges threaten his safety if he swerves<lb/>
into traffic to avoid them, hits them, or<lb/>
drops off the edge.Light traffic volume is<lb/>
perhaps the most important value.<lb/>
EDITORS AT LARGE<lb/>
Todays Editor is John Evans, Sports<lb/>
Editor.<lb/>
As Sports Editor, John Evans has<lb/>
become aware and involved in other<lb/>
aspects of campus life. "My writing<lb/>
serves as an outlet of expression. I have<lb/>
learned more just living at ECU than in<lb/>
the classroom. I have grown up alot<lb/>
here John is also involved with the<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee and is a<lb/>
brother of Pi Kappa Phi.<lb/>
John is a senior from Bethesda,<lb/>
Maryland. He really enjoys the<lb/>
opportunities to meet people and go<lb/>
places that his job offers.<lb/>
John was gently, but firmly, guided<lb/>
into newspaper work by his father. "My<lb/>
dad is my biggest critic. In my<lb/>
sophomore year I wanted to drop out of<lb/>
school. He said he wouldn't interfere in<lb/>
any way in my life, except he absolutely<lb/>
forbade me to quit college. My life wasn't<lb/>
really going anywhere and my dad was<lb/>
always there and teaching me to find out<lb/>
things and ask "Why" all the time. I<lb/>
guess that is why I love newspaper work<lb/>
the way I do<lb/>
By LYNN CAVERLY<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
John is the epitome of dedication.<lb/>
Not many nights go by when he isn't<lb/>
burning the midnight oil, cuddled up at<lb/>
his desk, busily pecking away at the<lb/>
typewriter, endeavoring to finish a story.<lb/>
His job is one of basically assigning<lb/>
stories and reporting on all athletic<lb/>
aspects of ECU.<lb/>
"If I have accomplished anything jn<lb/>
life, I hope it is the knowledge not to<lb/>
pass judgements too quickly and to dig<lb/>
deeper than the surface<lb/>
I C Drive In Theatre<lb/>
Ayden Highway - Open 6:30<lb/>
Sun. Mon.<lb/>
also showing<lb/>
" RAPE SQUAD"<lb/>
E.C.U. STUDENT<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
For this program<lb/>
With E.C.U. ID card 75<lb/>
 <lb/>
Routes marked for automobiles tend to<lb/>
have good surfaces, but many, like U.S.<lb/>
64 coming into Bethel, are heavily<lb/>
traveled and have a drop of two or three<lb/>
inches between the hiahway and the<lb/>
shoulder. Often weak-maintained secon . .<lb/>
dary roads provide the best route for the<lb/>
cyclist. But how is he to find them? The<lb/>
road will presumably carry a number,<lb/>
such as 1002, but seldom will there be a<lb/>
sign indicating where if goes, let alone<lb/>
whether the paving stops in two miles.<lb/>
In other words, bicyclists need route<lb/>
information such as that which has long<lb/>
been available to automobile drivers. Andi<lb/>
the Department of Transportation is<lb/>
taking a first step toward making it<lb/>
available. Ms Meletiou-who is a<lb/>
economist and experienced map maker<lb/>
as- well as a cyclist-is studying and<lb/>
mapping a "Bicentennial Route" from<lb/>
Manteo to Murphy. The plans call for<lb/>
camping facilities and or motel<lb/>
accomodations every 25 or 40 miles<lb/>
along the route. The maps will also<lb/>
indicate historic and scenic points along,<lb/>
and alongside, the route.<lb/>
The Department of Transportation has<lb/>
no money for signing the route at this<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Local cyclists pointed out that with a<lb/>
maximum speed limit of 55 mph, there is<lb/>
no reason for excluding bicyclists from<lb/>
interstates. A paved shoulder on any road<lb/>
is a natural bikeway, provided it is<lb/>
smooth. Unfortunately, the shoulder on<lb/>
the new northeast bypass and that on<lb/>
highway 11 between the Griffon tumoff-<lb/>
and Kinston have such rough surfacing<lb/>
as to be practically unrideable<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Bte<lb/>
SM<lb/>
THE MUSICAL STORY OF<lb/>
ORVILLE AND WILBUR WRIGHT<lb/>
McCrtaMis Auditorium<lb/>
October 28-November 1 8:15<lb/>
6perjHli Admission f3.0<lb/>
 MQJ Students - I.D. &amp; Activity CartJs<lb/>
Call 758-6390 Far Reservations<lb/>
P<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Si ?<lb/>
? m ' M ?  WM ? ffi ??;<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmtmmmmm mi i u ??<lb/>
WftflftfeMi<lb/>
I<lb/>
??<lb/>
UMH?<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Hight Brothers trite to inexecusaMy<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
By JEFF ROLLINS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Although the cast made a noble<lb/>
attempt to save this awful show, there is<lb/>
only so much an actor can do when he is<lb/>
working with such generally bad material.<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse production<lb/>
of "The Flight Brothers ranged from the<lb/>
slightly trite to the terribly trite to the<lb/>
inexcusably poor, with only a few but<lb/>
bright sparkles of entertainment dimly<lb/>
linhtinn thp rpst of thp sho<lb/>
her sons the piece of advice that helps<lb/>
them reach their goals. One of the most<lb/>
cutesy songs of the show, it was saved<lb/>
uy Anita Carpenter's warmth and ultimate<lb/>
believability.<lb/>
Although Miss Carpenter saved the<lb/>
weak "Put It On Paper" with sheer good<lb/>
acting, "A Warm and Tender Love' was<lb/>
quite impossible to bail out. This song<lb/>
was wretched. We ached that such good<lb/>
singers as Miss Carpenter and, even<lb/>
more notably, Ken Davis had to work<lb/>
with such trite, sentimental, substance-<lb/>
ORVILLE AND WILBUR WRIGHT as adults and chldlren Rodney Freeze, Larry Talbert,<lb/>
Sandy Miller, David Sneed.<lb/>
Perhaps we should have known what<lb/>
we were in for when the orchestra made<lb/>
its first unsuccessful attempt at flight,<lb/>
limping through the flaccid overture like<lb/>
a crippled dog. moanfully dying many<lb/>
deaths at the base of the stage. The<lb/>
score for "The Flight Brothers was very<lb/>
reminiscent of the score to "The Sting"<lb/>
and we were at once disenchanted with<lb/>
that similarity.<lb/>
One of the better features of the show<lb/>
was the stage design. John Boyt used<lb/>
nicely simple sets, allowing for much<lb/>
open space These sets both afforded the<lb/>
space needed for the scenes with many<lb/>
actors, and enchanted the actors<lb/>
themselves in the smaller scenes. His<lb/>
bicycle shop set was excellent.<lb/>
The musical opened with a very<lb/>
well-sung "If God Meant Man to Fly An<lb/>
excellent song about public reaction to<lb/>
the idealistic Wright Brothers. Although<lb/>
we liked the song itself and its<lb/>
performance, we were disappointed at<lb/>
the scene. How many times before have<lb/>
we seen stiff-necked gentlemen and<lb/>
umbrella toting ladies posing for at. old<lb/>
linotype? The chorus was marvellous in<lb/>
their singing, but unfortunately trapped<lb/>
in a case of cliche.<lb/>
The play was at its best in the big<lb/>
scenes, when the stage was filled with<lb/>
singing and motion. The costumes with<lb/>
their flounce and swirl added immensely<lb/>
to the vivacity that was so scarce in the<lb/>
music "Two for a Penny" was effective<lb/>
in this sense, as was "Go Peddle Your<lb/>
Bikes<lb/>
"Put It On Paper" was a "Sound of<lb/>
Music" type song where the mother tells<lb/>
less material. The hackneyed lyrics and<lb/>
the dull nelody combined to totally<lb/>
over-shadow these two fine voices. And<lb/>
yet, there is worse. "It's All Up To You<lb/>
My Son" is absolutely the pits. The idea<lb/>
of the song is old, the lyrics have been<lb/>
heard before, the song swims in a sugary<lb/>
sentimentality, and flops.<lb/>
Dan Nichols, Charlie, carried his<lb/>
scenes with an endearing personality.<lb/>
He was given some of the best lines in<lb/>
the show and he well deserved them. In<lb/>
his "It's Tell Charlie This and Charlie Do<lb/>
That" he plays on the fact that he doesn't<lb/>
have a voice and, with some nice<lb/>
THE ATTITUDE of the average man toward flying in the 18698 is<lb/>
musical number, "If Gof Meant Man to Fly"<lb/>
in the<lb/>
dancing, he brings the scene off<lb/>
beautifully. His acrobatics in "Have You<lb/>
Ever Wondered What It's Like To Fly"<lb/>
proved to be the high-point of the show<lb/>
The two leads, Sandy Miller and<lb/>
Rodney Freeze, both gave excellent<lb/>
performances. Mr. Freeze has a voice<lb/>
that carries well and a remarkably large<lb/>
stage bearing that complements Mr.<lb/>
Miller's voice and stage presence very<lb/>
well. If Miller was sometimes uncomfort-<lb/>
able in a range that may have been too<lb/>
low, then Freeze would save the moment<lb/>
with his excellent baritone. If Freeze<lb/>
seemed at times chilly and untouchable,<lb/>
then Miller's warmth and believability<lb/>
would bring the scene back to us. They<lb/>
were a fine pair. "Two Friendly Brothers"<lb/>
done by Miller and Freeze and a fine<lb/>
actress and singer, Barbara Richardson,<lb/>
was one of the best scenes in the show,<lb/>
although the dancing was somewhat<lb/>
shaky.<lb/>
Miss Richardson's "Katherine's La-<lb/>
ment" was extremely well-rendered. Her<lb/>
voice slightly on the breathy side,<lb/>
combined with her winning smile, makes<lb/>
for an actress who enhances any role.<lb/>
Ah, but these moments of entertain-<lb/>
ment were too brief. The horrid<lb/>
mediocrity of this play is what we<lb/>
remember. In one of the worse travesties<lb/>
of an ending ever on a stage, film of the<lb/>
airplane's flight through history, all the<lb/>
way to the rocket, are projected onto a<lb/>
screen on stage. This grossity reminds<lb/>
one all too exactly of a television station<lb/>
signing off. If we were to be awed, we<lb/>
were awed that they could be so corny, if<lb/>
we were to be moved, we were moved to<lb/>
near disgust.<lb/>
A good musical can be corny and trite<lb/>
and sentimental, in fact, most good<lb/>
musicals are, and get away with it. "The<lb/>
Flight Brothers" on the other hand, is<lb/>
one of those musicals that will never<lb/>
leave the ground.<lb/>
w&amp;<lb/>
Corner of 5th<lb/>
and Cotanehe<lb/>
Are you looking for<lb/>
a place in the afternoon<lb/>
to Hit 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 week!<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
ikP<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
c<lb/>
c<lb/>
r'<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
i <lb/>
1<lb/>
WP<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm in i mi<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0013"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
???????iOBBI<lb/>
m<lb/>
?wmmim<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
11 ? ?!? ini phi, ' ?VMi ? n ??H n i i iimjim g<lb/>
13<lb/>
of Music showsfor November<lb/>
Musical selections by American<lb/>
composers will be performed by the ECU<lb/>
Symphonic Wind Ensemble at its<lb/>
Chancellor's Bicentennial Concert Sun-<lb/>
day, Nov. 2, in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The program, scheduled to begin at<lb/>
8:15 p.m is intended to honor ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Leo J. Jenkins as well as<lb/>
salute the American Bicentennial,<lb/>
according to Wind Ensemble Conductor<lb/>
Herbert Carter.<lb/>
The concert is free and open to the<lb/>
public. Included will be "Cazona by<lb/>
Peter Minnin, "The Red Pony" by Aaron<lb/>
Copland, William Billings' "Chester<lb/>
arranged by William Schuman, "Vari-<lb/>
ations on 'America' " bv Charles Ives and<lb/>
William Schuman, "We Hold These<lb/>
Truths by Floyd E. Werle, "The Free<lb/>
Lance March" by John Philip Sousa and<lb/>
an arrangement of "The Star-Spangled<lb/>
Banner" by ECU Marching Pirates<lb/>
Conductor George Naff.<lb/>
The Naff arrangement of the National<lb/>
Anthem has been performed several<lb/>
times at ECU football games this season.<lb/>
The Sunday performance will open the<lb/>
program, as the ECU Air Force ROTC<lb/>
Color Guard. Advances into the<lb/>
auditorium with flags.<lb/>
The Werle "We Hold These Truths" is<lb/>
the featured work on the program and<lb/>
includes spoken words taken front<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson's 1801 Inaugural<lb/>
ACOUSTC GUTAR ffiARMOAiiCa<lb/>
CBOB DYLAN STYLE)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
, AfO COVE CZAAOS' <lb/>
$?????????????????????????????????<lb/>
WECU<lb/>
music<lb/>
57<lb/>
24 hours a day<lb/>
Address and other writings. James L.<lb/>
Rees, Director of Radio Services at ECU,<lb/>
ivill narrate the spoken passages.<lb/>
"We Hold These Truths" was first<lb/>
performed in Washington, D.C. by the<lb/>
U.S. Air Force Band with Walter Cronkite<lb/>
as narrator.<lb/>
Special video effects for the ECU<lb/>
performance are done by Karl E. Faser,<lb/>
Assistant to the Provost at ECU.<lb/>
The ECU Symphonic Wind Ensemble<lb/>
is a select group of student woodwind,<lb/>
brass and percussion students. The<lb/>
Ensemble goes on tour each year and<lb/>
has performed several times at major<lb/>
music educators' conventions. Several<lb/>
recordings of recent Ensemble concerts<lb/>
have been produced.<lb/>
ROBERT TYSON, organ, Senior Recital, 3:15, Memorial<lb/>
Baptist Church, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
THE CHANCELLOR'S BICENTENNIAL CONCERT<lb/>
Symphonic Wind Ensemble, Wright Auditorium, 8:15<lb/>
NANCY ATKINS, violin<lb/>
JANICE WHITFIELD, piano, Senior REcital, 7:30<lb/>
JAZZ ENSEMBLE CONCERT, 8:15<lb/>
PAUL TARDIF, piano, Faculty Recital, 8:15<lb/>
CONCERTO PRELIMINARIES, 8:15<lb/>
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT Wright Auditorium,<lb/>
3:15<lb/>
CONCERTO FINALS, 8:15<lb/>
PAUL TARDIF, piano, Faculty Recital, 8:15<lb/>
CLAIRE HURLEY, voice, Junior REcital, 8:15<lb/>
ROBERT TYLER, Saxophone, Senior Recital, 7:30<lb/>
2Sunday<lb/>
2Sunday<lb/>
3Monday<lb/>
5Wednesday<lb/>
6Thursday<lb/>
7Friday<lb/>
9Sunday<lb/>
12Wednesday<lb/>
13Thursday<lb/>
14Friday<lb/>
17Monday<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
756-0088 ? PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
SPECIAL LATE SHOW<lb/>
FRI. ft SAT. NIGHTS 11:15PM<lb/>
HITCHCOCK FILM FESTIVAL!<lb/>
1MfV INTO THE<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
-??<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
.?<lb/>
ICY BLACKNESS<lb/>
OF A MAN'S MINOI<lb/>
ANTHONY PERKINS ? VERA MILES<lb/>
JOHN GAVIN m JANET LEIGH<lb/>
t MARION CRANE<lb/>
A-L-S-0<lb/>
"It could be the most<lb/>
terrifying motion picture ,<lb/>
kJ I have ever made p<lb/>
ALFRED HITCHOOCKS<lb/>
TheBirds<lb/>
tarn TECHNICOLOR'<lb/>
Rod Taylor - Jessico Tandy - Suzanne Pleshette<lb/>
? TIPPrHEDREN<lb/>
LATE SHOW ADMISSION!<lb/>
For the dxve program only<lb/>
With This Ad $1.00<lb/>
Without This Ad $2.00<lb/>
ONE AD PER PERSON!<lb/>
ACRES OF FREE PARKING<lb/>
wwm<lb/>
mt<lb/>
mm<lb/>
 n mm<lb/>
tm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
t mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m ? ?<lb/>
'You just call out my name and you know wherever I<lb/>
am, I'll come running , to see you again , Winter Spring ,<lb/>
Summer, or Fall, all you got to do is call and I'll be<lb/>
there yes I will-You've got a friend<lb/>
James Taylor<lb/>
Photographs by Tim Chalmers<lb/>
'Oh, I've seen fire and I've seen rain, I've seen sunny<lb/>
days that I thought would never end, I've seen lonely<lb/>
times when I could not find a friend , but I always<lb/>
thought that I'd see you again<lb/>
Jame? Taylor ? 'Fire and Rain'<lb/>
mmmm0wmmmunmmrm0m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmummmmmmmm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0015"/><lb/>
15<lb/>
?P<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wmmwmtmmw<lb/>
JAMES TAYLOR<lb/>
By BRANDON TISE<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
James Taylor brought his one man show to Minges Coliseum Sunday night,<lb/>
October 26. Making ECU one of the few stops in the continental U S. for this tour, he<lb/>
vas greeted by a very enthusiastic crowd from all over North Carolina.<lb/>
Since most of his band is currently on tour with David Crosby and Graham Nash,<lb/>
"aylor struck out solo on this tour and made Sunday night a highly enjoyable evening<lb/>
hrough his individual efforts, sharing the spotlight only with some pre-recorded<lb/>
'aylor harmonies.<lb/>
The first forty-five minute set included songs like, "Baby It's Cold Outside' in<lb/>
vhich ho used pre-recorded harmonies, "You Make It Easy Merle Haggard's Okie<lb/>
:rom Muskogee a new Taylor song "Junkie's Lament the title song from his<lb/>
? west album. "Gorilla the shimmering "Shower the People You Love with Love<lb/>
i'ind the undoubted highlight of the first set "Carolina On My Mind<lb/>
i Taylor explained that he had written this song when he and a companion (Karen)<lb/>
nissed the last boat off of a Spanish island and, waiting for the first boat at sunrise,<lb/>
!suddenly became very homesick and the song soon came pouring out. This song was<lb/>
answered by a standing ovation from the exhilarated crowd. (If this song doesn't make<lb/>
I ou proud of North Carolina, nothing will.)<lb/>
u Taylor built up a great rapport with the crowd and kept his poise despite frequent,<lb/>
l,nd in some cases obnoxious, outbursts from the crowd. Case in point: At a pause<lb/>
etween numbers Taylor was drying himself with a towel when some guy yells out:<lb/>
i Aren't you glad you use Dial9" Taylor without batting an eye replied an uninterested,<lb/>
I don't get it<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
After a short intermission Taylor returned to the stage remarking, "I hope you<lb/>
ljoyed the intermission as much as I did Following an acoustic number, he<lb/>
Aitched to an electric guitar, dryly commenting, "This is an electric guitar, a red<lb/>
ectric guitara vast improvement over the gas and steam ones that preceded it He<lb/>
ayed "Daddy's All Gone" on this mellow sounding hollow body hooked up to a<lb/>
iase shifter and then after another acoustic number, switched over to piano when a<lb/>
male chorus in the audience screamed out "Close Your Eyes" to which Taylor<lb/>
implied literally and quickly commented that he couldn't see the keyboard that way<lb/>
aying off this subtle retort he continued to explain, "I'm going to try to play it on<lb/>
e piano .1 don't play much piano but it's a lot like the guitar, 88 strings but hard to<lb/>
ipo With this he began "Places In My Past<lb/>
1 After this song he returned to acoustic guitar and began a barrage of hits. "Fading<lb/>
vay" was first, followed by the current single hit. "Mexico a definite crowd<lb/>
-vorite However, the enthusiasm for this song was quickly eclipsed by enthusiasm<lb/>
zr the next song, the classic "Fire and Rain Inis drew another standing ovation,<lb/>
id was followed by "Country Road After allowing the crowd to catch its breath<lb/>
!th "Lighthouse he ended the regular show with a gutsy version of "Steamroller<lb/>
ues" which sent many females reeling. He exited after this song but quickly<lb/>
'turned for an encore of "Sweet Baby James<lb/>
This is where the show was supposed to end but Taylor, inspired by the crowd's<lb/>
tation. returned once again to do "You've Got A Friend<lb/>
The James Taylor performance was a great success both from the financial and<lb/>
ctistic points.One man and one guitar in a coliseum situation might have trouble<lb/>
eping a crowd under control: Taylor had them in the palm of his hand.<lb/>
Once again thanks to Diane Taylor, Bob Seriava, and the Major Attractions<lb/>
jmmittee for bringing ECU another great concert.<lb/>
mx niiwimiumn i ?? mmtimm?<lb/>
This is an electric guitar a red electric guitar, a vast improvement<lb/>
over the gas and steam ones that preceded it<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0016"/><lb/>
H i<lb/>
"16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
IMWWWMH IIM I?l?M<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
nm<lb/>
obc) southeostern 7w<lb/>
Luiutieut<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
A MUST<lb/>
DISCOUNT TICKETS AVAILABLE AT CENTRAL TICKET OFRCE.<lb/>
SAVE 50 ON ADMISSION.<lb/>
iU"<lb/>
Iffcj Friday &amp; Saturday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
The last 45 minutes of this film is<lb/>
unlike anything you have ever seen. It<lb/>
will have you howling and cheering<lb/>
like no movie ever has <lb/>
STARRING<lb/>
i<lb/>
ALL SEATS<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Theatre will be cleared after last shewing of TOMMY<lb/>
pillMlffTII'liTT<lb/>
BURT REYNOLDS<lb/>
THE LONGEST YARD<lb/>
?<lb/>
x<lb/>
m?m<lb/>
'MHiMinini<lb/>
c<lb/>
r<lb/>
Q<lb/>
(CPS)<lb/>
women<lb/>
same r<lb/>
recent i<lb/>
is still i<lb/>
Mor<lb/>
convert i<lb/>
on man<lb/>
and so<lb/>
anti-co<lb/>
compla<lb/>
Universi<lb/>
official<lb/>
 local o<lb/>
, the city<lb/>
j barli<lb/>
Montan.<lb/>
zoning<lb/>
city of<lb/>
said he<lb/>
every h<lb/>
j "zoning'<lb/>
( tenants<lb/>
I complai<lb/>
The<lb/>
Advisor<lb/>
enforce<lb/>
Stuc<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
one of<lb/>
request<lb/>
who li<lb/>
women<lb/>
The pre<lb/>
the plai<lb/>
the gir<lb/>
?<lb/>
Drc<lb/>
'3<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
One<lb/>
under o<lb/>
is a r<lb/>
located<lb/>
This bi<lb/>
previous<lb/>
Hall, wl<lb/>
ECU Me<lb/>
<lb/>
 L<lb/>
 r<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0017"/><lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
I<lb/>
mm<lb/>
tmmmiuw<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
17<lb/>
m<lb/>
Cohabitation still against official university policy<lb/>
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN<lb/>
(CPS)-University rules against men and<lb/>
women spending the night under the<lb/>
same roof have relaxed somewhat in<lb/>
recent months, but outright cohabitation<lb/>
is still against most official policy.<lb/>
More campus dorms have been<lb/>
converting to coed living, visitation hours<lb/>
on many campuses run all day every day<lb/>
and some local officials won't enforce<lb/>
anti-cohabitation laws unless other<lb/>
complaints are involved. But most<lb/>
University administrators still maintain an<lb/>
official stance against cohabitation and<lb/>
local officials will occasionally enforce<lb/>
the city laws.<lb/>
barlier this month, 15 University of<lb/>
Montana students learned that local<lb/>
zoning laws prohibited cohabitation. The<lb/>
city of Missoula's building inspector<lb/>
said he doesn't have the time to check<lb/>
every house in the University area for<lb/>
"zoning" violations but would evict<lb/>
tenants for cohabitation if other<lb/>
complaints were involved.<lb/>
The irony, according to ono Resident<lb/>
Advisor there, is that no one bothers to<lb/>
enforce the no-cohabitation rule anyway.<lb/>
Students at the University of South<lb/>
Carolina were told they could integrate<lb/>
one of their women's dorms without any<lb/>
request or agreement from the women<lb/>
who live in it. In fact, many of the<lb/>
women were "shocked" at the proposal.<lb/>
The president of the dorm claimed that<lb/>
the plan was "too liberal for many of<lb/>
the girls in thcidorm<lb/>
Dorm residents will have the final say<lb/>
on the coed proposal but the Dean of<lb/>
Residence Life has already come out in<lb/>
favor of the idea. "Coed living can be an<lb/>
enjoyable experience educationally he<lb/>
said. "From my own experience I can say<lb/>
that it does not lead to promiscuity<lb/>
which the press would have us believe<lb/>
Students living in an apartment<lb/>
complex at the Rochester Institute of<lb/>
Technology (RIT) in New York have also<lb/>
tangled with University and local officials<lb/>
over cohabitation policies. In cases<lb/>
where there have been other problems<lb/>
between student tenants and the<lb/>
university landlord, cohabitation has<lb/>
been cause for eviction.<lb/>
At other schools, coed living, if not<lb/>
cohabitation, is making advances A<lb/>
university apartment building in Oregon<lb/>
is now officially coed, a first for the<lb/>
University of Oregon. Changes there were<lb/>
easier than in other university housing<lb/>
since the building was originally<lb/>
designed as an apartment house with<lb/>
separate bathrooms and living rooms.<lb/>
At some schools, like Stanford<lb/>
University, the dorms are coed by floor or<lb/>
corridor and have been very popular with<lb/>
students for several years. One student<lb/>
claimed that Stanford's dorms had<lb/>
optional coed rooms, but University<lb/>
housing officials claimed it was not<lb/>
authorized by them. "Things like that do<lb/>
overnight in front of the housing office to<lb/>
reserve a room in one. The forms there<lb/>
are coed by floor or suite and there is a<lb/>
24-hour visitation policy for everyone but<lb/>
the coed-by-suite dorms. For these close<lb/>
quarters the university requires an 8-houi<lb/>
break in visitation hours every night.<lb/>
The reasons for the policy, as the<lb/>
SUNYGeneseo president explained, are<lb/>
that there is no way to enforce<lb/>
cohabitation restrictions with 24-hour<lb/>
visitation and that everyone should have<lb/>
the right to study without the boy or<lb/>
girlfriend of the roommate around.<lb/>
NEW<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
SR-52<lb/>
PftOGRAMMABLf CALCULATOR MOM<lb/>
V Texos Instruments<lb/>
' 'I PR0?,RA? SUPS ?I1H<lb/>
0PII0SAI PKIVHR AJ<lb/>
I fHf lOST 01 A HP bj<lb/>
V0H HfclVo<lb/>
4PIAM OKOim<lb/>
"We do not condone or allow<lb/>
cohabitation, RITs director of Business<lb/>
Services said. But "if I happen to know<lb/>
we have a situation possibly violating the<lb/>
lease but there aren't any other problems<lb/>
such as dogs or cats it is practically<lb/>
impossible for us to police who is living<lb/>
in apartments he added.<lb/>
occur but it's not University policy a<lb/>
spokesman said. "But coed situations<lb/>
aren't usually associated with a lot of<lb/>
problems<lb/>
Coed dorms at the State University of<lb/>
New York (SUNY) at Geneseo have<lb/>
worked out so well that students camp<lb/>
I<lb/>
SR WA ?.N )<lb/>
ISR C4 II 0,<lb/>
S R I b 11 J 0 ?,<lb/>
SHIPPfP fRff<lb/>
v i fusrowfis ?np ? uiu r? ?4?i<lb/>
I fWWn !UST0?URS 400 4 S4US Ml<lb/>
jlnPPfD UPOft MCtlPl 01 ?0(IR rwn<lb/>
OR C 0 D ADO tit (00 HI<lb/>
Surtmyor Supply Company<lb/>
SOI 010 104 ? CHATHAM SWH<lb/>
P 0<lb/>
APfl ?0RTN CAK0I I HA<lb/>
119' 6; "900<lb/>
??????<lb/>
))-0<lb/>
m<lb/>
' s. S , SS' SSS'SS'SSSS-sS. ? ,<lb/>
WMMmtMMMMMMMA<lb/>
Drama department adds new facility<lb/>
EXTRA SPECIAL <lb/>
By WILLIAM DAVIS<lb/>
One of the newest additions presently<lb/>
under construction on the ECU campus<lb/>
is a new drama designer building,<lb/>
located on the side of Wright Annex.<lb/>
This building replaces the old one<lb/>
previously located in the rear of Ragsdale<lb/>
Hall, which is being renovated for the<lb/>
ECU Med School.<lb/>
The designer building serves as a vital<lb/>
asset to the Drama Department in the<lb/>
preparation of various activities, mainly<lb/>
for designing scenery and architecture.<lb/>
The Med School is paying for all the<lb/>
charges for material for the new building<lb/>
with ECU furnishing the labor.<lb/>
The completion date is not final.<lb/>
Presently, ECU laborers are not able to<lb/>
devote full-time to construction on the<lb/>
project.<lb/>
CLOSE-OUT<lb/>
ON<lb/>
SEKINE BIKES!<lb/>
UNASSEMBLED<lb/>
3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 HALLOWEEN HAPPY HOUR <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
with BAND OF OZ<lb/>
 THURSDAY, OCT 30th<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
9:00 until<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon House<lb/>
505 E. 5th St.<lb/>
<lb/>
10 SPEED - BOYS<lb/>
REG. 1599S<lb/>
NOW 8995<lb/>
5 SPEED GIRLS a BOYS<lb/>
REG. 12995<lb/>
N0W6995<lb/>
HURRY! LIMITED SUPPLY<lb/>
TARHEEL TOYOTA<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mi<lb/>
109 TRADE ST.<lb/>
??????i?<lb/>
ttmwtt mm j nmiim mi<lb/>
756-3228<lb/>
HHHHH<lb/>
!&amp;K;35iJeafc?i3<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL.<lb/>
7. NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mnmmm<lb/>
Kennedy assasination questions raised<lb/>
1<lb/>
By ROBIN PULZONE<lb/>
?i0n<lb/>
a iination ol John F<lb/>
to the ; ' until<lb/>
B<lb/>
Bos-<lb/>
:ical of thi trutl<lb/>
sentation of<lb/>
ECU Lecture Seri Wednesday,<lb/>
Since 1960. all presidential elections<lb/>
nfluenced by assassination or<lb/>
political tricks Robert Kennedy was<lb/>
assassinated during his campaign for the<lb/>
1968 presidential election. An attemtped<lb/>
assassination of George Wallace is<lb/>
considered to have influenced the 1972<lb/>
lion Watergate altered many people's<lb/>
conception of the U.S. Justice Dept . the<lb/>
C i A . the F.B.I . and also of the events<lb/>
of the JFK assassination<lb/>
Kennedy was told that Dallas might<lb/>
be dangerous because of his liberal<lb/>
viewpoint The motorcade met Kennedy<lb/>
at the Dallas Airport on Nov 22. 1963.<lb/>
and reached the downtown area at noon<lb/>
shooting took place on Elm St<lb/>
A police officer was shot while<lb/>
questioning a man in a residential area<lb/>
nearby<lb/>
! SAAD'S<lb/>
SHOE<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Material and<lb/>
Workmanship<lb/>
Guaranteed<lb/>
Prompt Service<lb/>
Grande Ave<lb/>
228<lb/>
Oswald was seen running<lb/>
theatre and was arrested for<lb/>
nurdei ol Kennedy and Police Officer<lb/>
The police kept no records, tapes or<lb/>
s notes of Oswald's<lb/>
-rogation All that was kept was a<lb/>
rd of the contents of Oswald's<lb/>
? rhey justified this by saying they<lb/>
had no recorders or room for<lb/>
stenographers. Oswald had no lawyer. He<lb/>
denied the shooting.<lb/>
Jack Ruby appeared at the city jail<lb/>
where Oswald was being held and shot<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The shooting took six seconds. Seven<lb/>
shots were fired and the rifle found was<lb/>
only capable of firing three shots with<lb/>
aiming A tree also blocked Oswald's<lb/>
view of the president.<lb/>
The film also showed Kennedy<lb/>
holding his neck and being thrust back in<lb/>
the seat of the motorcade. It is against<lb/>
the force of gravity for this shot to have<lb/>
come from behind.<lb/>
An autopsy was performed on<lb/>
Kennedy at Bethesda, Md Naval<lb/>
Hospital, but it was not done in detail.<lb/>
The neck wound was not investigated<lb/>
Furthermore, the autopsy notes were<lb/>
burned.<lb/>
President Johnson was sworn in<lb/>
almost immediately He appointed the<lb/>
Warren Commission to investigate the<lb/>
assassination. The Commission justified<lb/>
the three shots fired by the "single<lb/>
bullet theory. They claimed that one<lb/>
bullet hit Kennedy in the head, one in the<lb/>
back, and one in the neck which passed<lb/>
into Texas Governor John Connellv<lb/>
Wilber'i<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Favorites<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
Hickory wood flavored BBQ<lb/>
Fried Shrimp dinners<lb/>
Country fried chicken<lb/>
Variety of Softdrinks<lb/>
Fish<lb/>
Roast Beef<lb/>
Hamburgers<lb/>
Cheeseburgers<lb/>
 Dairy Bar with Ice cream cones <lb/>
Old Fashioned Milk Shakes<lb/>
Banana Splits Sundaes<lb/>
TWO LOCATIONS Mth St. Open 10am 10pm<lb/>
Corner of 5th and Reade ST. Open 10am 1am<lb/>
111 II Mill Ml<lb/>
(Connelly was sitting in the seat in front<lb/>
of Kennedy)<lb/>
According to the film, one full second<lb/>
passed after Kennedy was hit in the neck<lb/>
before Connelly reacted. When the<lb/>
Warren Commission questioned Connel-<lb/>
ly, he told them he had looked at<lb/>
Kennedy before he was hit. The<lb/>
Commission said Connelly was mistaken<lb/>
about the time of the shot and also said<lb/>
he had a delayed reaction.<lb/>
There was no bullet at the accident<lb/>
scene, but one which turned up at the<lb/>
hospital was automatically linked to the<lb/>
assassination.<lb/>
In one picture, Oswald was seen in<lb/>
the doorway of the book depository<lb/>
building (to the right of the accident<lb/>
scene) - not in the sixth floor window of<lb/>
that building. A woman who appeared in<lb/>
one of the pictures was investigated. She<lb/>
had taken a movie which she took to the<lb/>
FBI.<lb/>
I he movie which she took at the<lb/>
scene was never seen by anyone. What<lb/>
was hidden? Will the public ever know<lb/>
the whole truth?<lb/>
On the same afternoon, there was a<lb/>
photo of three men who were arrested for<lb/>
vagrancy. Thirty minutes later, there was<lb/>
no record of it. A total of twelve arrests<lb/>
were made that afternoon but the only<lb/>
one recorded was Oswald.<lb/>
When Oswald was in the Marines in<lb/>
Japan, he was known to have left, gone<lb/>
to Russia, and to have given away<lb/>
military secrets. When he wanted to<lb/>
return to the U.S the State Department<lb/>
sent him $485. His passport read "In New<lb/>
Orleans, then to Dallas The Dept. of<lb/>
the Defense blocked out the next six<lb/>
words. The information was not given to<lb/>
the public before.<lb/>
Oswald was on the FBI payroll until<lb/>
Kennedy's assassination. Then FBI head,<lb/>
J. Edgar Hoover denied that information<lb/>
and the subject was dropped.<lb/>
Oswald was supposedly the New<lb/>
Orleans secretary to "far fair play for<lb/>
Cuba Commission" The Warren Com-<lb/>
mission felt this was legitimate.<lb/>
There are secret documents such as<lb/>
"Oswald activities in Russia The titles<lb/>
are known, but not the contents.<lb/>
Congress defends this by claiming<lb/>
national security. Katz said.<lb/>
Life Magazine brought the crucial<lb/>
movie made by a man at the scene of the<lb/>
shooting. This movie proved to be full of<lb/>
evidence. The crucial frames of the head<lb/>
shot which could have disproved Oswald<lb/>
as the killer were never published.<lb/>
Time-Life, Inc. sold the film to CBS in<lb/>
1974 CBS lawyers are suppressing films<lb/>
from being shown.<lb/>
The Americans for the Reinvestigation<lb/>
of the Kennedy Assassination (ARKA), an<lb/>
independent organization of citizens, is<lb/>
sponsoring a petition drive which calls<lb/>
for a full Congressional investigation into<lb/>
the Assassination of President Kennedy.<lb/>
According to the petition, seven<lb/>
resolutions are in the House of<lb/>
Representatives calling for congressional<lb/>
investigation of the President's death, the<lb/>
death of Martin Luther King and the<lb/>
death of Robert Kennedy.<lb/>
iVVXX3?3W?U?3?VVVV<lb/>
I<lb/>
SahJOY)<lb/>
orrs<lb/>
Located in Farmville<lb/>
Big Red Building at Intersection ol 264 &amp; 258 By Pass<lb/>
9:30-5:30 MonSat. Fri. 9:30 - 9:00<lb/>
Your Sportswear &amp; Fabric Headquarters<lb/>
New Merchandise Weeldy!<lb/>
Just arrived  New shipment of<lb/>
irregulars - only slight flaws !<lb/>
JACKETS - $7.98 SLACKS - $6.98<lb/>
SKIRTS &amp; BLOUSES - $5.98<lb/>
Also - New shipment of knit materials<lb/>
from New York - ONL Y $1.29 per yd.<lb/>
FABRIC SALE <lb/>
 Reg. $1.88 - Now $1.19 Reg. $1.59 - Now $1.00<lb/>
j Reg. $1.19 - Now 79? Wool - Now 50?<lb/>
I<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ajwen<lb/>
: S<lb/>
i<lb/>
??<lb/>
i<lb/>
?t<lb/>
t;<lb/>
<lb/>
ik<lb/>
H<lb/>
? ?!<lb/>
??p????-<lb/>
aiaiSfeWaBiaw!<lb/>
y'v  .v<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0019"/><lb/>
Dept. of<lb/>
next six<lb/>
given to<lb/>
roll until<lb/>
Bl head,<lb/>
ormation<lb/>
he New<lb/>
play for<lb/>
in Corn-<lb/>
such as<lb/>
Tie titles<lb/>
Dntents.<lb/>
Maiming<lb/>
i crucial<lb/>
ie of the<lb/>
)e full of<lb/>
the head<lb/>
I Oswald<lb/>
jblished.<lb/>
CBS in<lb/>
ng films<lb/>
st i gat i on<lb/>
IKA), an<lb/>
zens, is<lb/>
ch calls<lb/>
tion into<lb/>
ennedy.<lb/>
, seven<lb/>
use of<lb/>
essional<lb/>
aath, the<lb/>
and the<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
19<lb/>
mm<lb/>
UtfifiREHOUE m<lb/>
112 E. 5TH ST.<lb/>
752-9100<lb/>
GRANDOPENING<lb/>
THIS SATURDAY, NOV. 1<lb/>
Register to win this<lb/>
k SUPER STEREO SYSTEM<lb/>
worth over $70000<lb/>
? ? i. ?o? o<lb/>
YAMAHA CR400<lb/>
1 Retail value $330??<lb/>
OHM D<lb/>
Retail value $120??<lb/>
DUAL 1225<lb/>
Retail value $14000<lb/>
OHM D<lb/>
Retail value $120??<lb/>
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY<lb/>
SPECIAL GRAND OPENING PRICES ON ALL EQUIPMENT<lb/>
FREE : STEREO WAREHOUSE T-SHIRT<lb/>
WITH EVERY PURCHASE OF$2500 OR MORE!<lb/>
FREE : REFRESHMENTS AND PASTRIES<lb/>
ALL DAY<lb/>
t<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/>
UNBELIEVABLE SPEAKER SALE<lb/>
FORUM SP210<lb/>
2 WAY 10" SPEAKERS<lb/>
$4000EACH<lb/>
FORUM SP310<lb/>
3 WAY KT&amp;PEAKERS<lb/>
$5000 EACH<lb/>
DUAL 601 (DEMO)<lb/>
WITH SHURE M91ED zo<lb/>
GRAND OPENING SALE PRICE $18400<lb/>
SPECIAL STUDENT FINANCING<lb/>
PLAN NOW AVAILABLE<lb/>
 USE BANK AMERICARD, MASTERCHARGE,<lb/>
OR OUR CONVENIENT REVOLVING CHARGE FINANCING<lb/>
?Tiff 11.1iiffJ?l? i? ? i i f ? 1 f<lb/>
????<lb/>
itfi tit ? ?????,iJi.tai.?.<lb/>
T.TT.T.TT.TT.T.TT.T.<lb/>
JLJLtMeMm<lb/>
wmii wm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
iHjjHl<lb/>
 ?'?? ?? m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0020"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
mm<lb/>
:rv j ?  ;?S3B ? '<lb/>
20<lb/>
???<lb/>
FCHJNTAINHEADVOl. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
?i<lb/>
p<lb/>
EgggSKj<lb/>
WW&amp;Sf'<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
vm<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<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 Tues. Sat. 9 4.<lb/>
SPEAKER CABINET Two 12's. Great<lb/>
extension cabinet, very well built and in<lb/>
good shape, only $100. 752 7398.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '64 Buick, white with red<lb/>
interior, good tires (snow tires on back).<lb/>
Needs muffler and radio antenna. Price<lb/>
$17500.<lb/>
FOR SALE Yamaha FG 160 acoustic<lb/>
guitar Excellent condition. 758 1207.<lb/>
FOUND: Platinum watch in Austin ladies<lb/>
room 3rd floor. Contact Stephen Miles,<lb/>
P.O. Box 991, Bethel.<lb/>
TYPING: Call L.H. Barnes, 756 0752.<lb/>
LOST: 3 keys on chrome penknife chain<lb/>
dorm, mailbox, and padlock key. Return<lb/>
to Dodi McKisson in room 111 Jarvis.<lb/>
758 9348<lb/>
KENWOOD AMP 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 exchanqe for housekeeping Call after<lb/>
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/>
STURGILL GUITAR Carolina 100 model.<lb/>
69th one made. Wcase. $425. Call<lb/>
7529496.<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/>
FLEA MARKET: Pitt County Fair<lb/>
Exhibit Hall. Open every Wed. 1-5, Sat.<lb/>
10 6. Come out and see how far your<lb/>
dollar will stretch.<lb/>
HONDA 350 for sale, $495 good condition.<lb/>
7523376.<lb/>
LOST: Female cat, white, tan and grey;<lb/>
reward offered. Gayle 758-9307.<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/>
1720 PONTIUS AVE SUITE 201<lb/>
LOS ANGCLES, CALIF. 90025<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
!<lb/>
 Zip<lb/>
SPAGHETTI SPECIAL<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
From 5 to 8<lb/>
ONLY 1M<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
: ? All the Spaghetti You Can Eat ! i<lb/>
ECU lowers entrance standards in<lb/>
experimental admissions programs<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
An "Experimental Admissions Pro-<lb/>
gram" was started at ECU during the fall<lb/>
of 1974.<lb/>
The purpose of the program is to<lb/>
provide an opportunity for students to<lb/>
attend college who would not ordinarily<lb/>
be accepted under regular university<lb/>
standards, according to William H. Cobb,<lb/>
coordinator of the historyreading phase<lb/>
of the program.<lb/>
"Last year we admitted 15 students to<lb/>
the program. These students were just<lb/>
under the university's admissions<lb/>
requirements said Cobb. "Of this total<lb/>
129 remained in school for three<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
"We developed a closed curriculum<lb/>
for the students based on a<lb/>
historyreading program. The students<lb/>
get college credit for a history course(5x)<lb/>
but with this they must take two hours of<lb/>
reading without getting college credit for<lb/>
the reading course.<lb/>
"The program was designed because<lb/>
the university feels that too many high<lb/>
school graduates fail to achieve<lb/>
satisfactory scores on standardized tests<lb/>
simply because they have problems with<lb/>
their reading said Cobb in the<lb/>
curriculum proposal. "This program<lb/>
enables them to overcome that deficiency<lb/>
while earning college credit<lb/>
"A lack of reading, language, and<lb/>
study skills is characteristic of students<lb/>
who come from disadvantaged cultural,<lb/>
educational and economic backgrounds.<lb/>
These disadvantages are artificial in that<lb/>
they are all related to acquired skills and<lb/>
have little or no relevance to native<lb/>
intelligence or ability<lb/>
In addition to the historyreading<lb/>
course, during fall quarter the students<lb/>
take two hours of math, three hours of<lb/>
English, and two hours of health and<lb/>
physical education, according to Cobb.<lb/>
During Winter quarter the students<lb/>
take History 5x which is a continuation<lb/>
of the historyreading phase of the<lb/>
curriculum. Three hours of math, three<lb/>
hours of English, and either business 10<lb/>
or Health 12 is also scheduled for the<lb/>
students during Winter Quarter.<lb/>
A choice of social science with<lb/>
remedial instruction is offered during<lb/>
Spring Quarter. English and a special<lb/>
section of Biology 70 is also offered<lb/>
The program allows the students tot<lb/>
earn between 36 and 40 hours during!<lb/>
their freshman year. Consequently, like"<lb/>
other students, they have a sufficient<lb/>
opportunity to graduate in four years.<lb/>
"Each section of these classes is<lb/>
special in that they are small, and only<lb/>
professors teach these sections said<lb/>
Cobb. "The tutorial classes are taught by<lb/>
graduate students or honor students.<lb/>
"We made an effort to use full time<lb/>
staff members who have a good rapport<lb/>
with the students<lb/>
"The historyreading phase of this<lb/>
program is based on a program used by<lb/>
Xavier University in Louisiana and about<lb/>
16 other southern universities. At ECU,<lb/>
we took the historyreading program of<lb/>
these universities and expanded it into a<lb/>
whole closed curriculum<lb/>
Of the 129 students who completec<lb/>
the program last Spring, 99 re-enrolled at<lb/>
ECU this Fall. They are taking regulai<lb/>
university courses now.<lb/>
"How they do out of the special<lb/>
curriculum is the real test. Now that the<lb/>
do not have special attention, and are or<lb/>
their own will determine the success of<lb/>
the program said Cobb.<lb/>
"It's a qualified success so far. We<lb/>
are in the midst of an evaluation of tr<lb/>
program. We know what our people did<lb/>
now we want to know how this compan<lb/>
with regular university students<lb/>
Comparative data including how we<lb/>
the students are doing this year will<lb/>
available near the first of the year.<lb/>
ECU has continued the program thi<lb/>
year under the name "The Specif<lb/>
Studies Program<lb/>
"This year things will be run t<lb/>
same. Now that we know what we aijj<lb/>
doing, things will go more smoothly. W<lb/>
do not expect to lose' as many student j<lb/>
this year as we did last year because w i<lb/>
know more what to expect.<lb/>
ECU has 137 students enrolled in tb?<lb/>
program this year.<lb/>
Lanier chairs library meeting<lb/>
Over 1,000 librarians from around<lb/>
N.C. will be meeting at the Benton<lb/>
Convention Center in Winston-Salem this<lb/>
week to hear noted speakers including<lb/>
authors, politicians, and librarians, and<lb/>
to view products from over 100 exhibitors<lb/>
as they participate in the Forty-First<lb/>
Biennial Conference of the N.C. Library<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Dr. Gene D. Lanier, chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Library Science, is<lb/>
current president of the state organi-<lb/>
zation and will be presiding at the four<lb/>
day conference.<lb/>
"The Pursuit of Excellence Together<lb/>
is the theme for the conference an<lb/>
meetings are scheduled throughout eac<lb/>
day and night. Speakers that wi<lb/>
highlight the conference include author<lb/>
Albert Murray, Bette Greene, Willie Sno<lb/>
Ethridge, and Lawrence D. Kusche.<lb/>
Members of the General Assemb<lb/>
appearing at the conference will tj<lb/>
Senators Thomas Strickland and McNe<lb/>
Smith and Representative? Jimmy Grec<lb/>
and H.M. Michaux, Jr.<lb/>
Acti<lb/>
(CPS)Pro<lb/>
courted by<lb/>
by the gc<lb/>
denied th<lb/>
doorways v<lb/>
But now, c<lb/>
profession<lb/>
that it be d<lb/>
She wa<lb/>
trickster" b<lb/>
name stucl<lb/>
founder (<lb/>
iorganizatior<lb/>
I James, an<lb/>
Stem<lb/>
Approxii<lb/>
a memorial<lb/>
I Clarence S<lb/>
I ECU whod<lb/>
The opx<lb/>
?Diane Tayl<lb/>
s Other comr<lb/>
?Ken Stray!<lb/>
I baseball; I<lb/>
Willie Harv<lb/>
 Nell St.<lb/>
-and Physic<lb/>
P Closing<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
'<lb/>
J<lb/>
'Lea<lb/>
the I<lb/>
The ho<lb/>
Carolina :<lb/>
changed sc<lb/>
In a bl<lb/>
students 01<lb/>
contest to<lb/>
y, what Wi<lb/>
row be c<lb/>
eferring<lb/>
nascot.<lb/>
A camf<lb/>
jet ermine<lb/>
he South<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Pow<lb/>
runs<lb/>
CPSThe<lb/>
puthouse <lb/>
lortheast<lb/>
National<lb/>
electricity<lb/>
Dumps tha<lb/>
j Althou<lb/>
Impark privy<lb/>
solar cells<lb/>
12 12 fee<lb/>
The Fc<lb/>
because t<lb/>
running e<lb/>
outhouse<lb/>
overlook.<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0021"/><lb/>
??mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
I HJlBllI UK<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
wmmmmmnm<lb/>
21<lb/>
mm<lb/>
tin<lb/>
Activist prostitute founder of COYOTE<lb/>
Jnce with<lb/>
Bd during<lb/>
a special<lb/>
ffered<lb/>
udents to<lb/>
irs during!<lb/>
Bntly, like"<lb/>
sufficient<lb/>
years.<lb/>
lasses is<lb/>
and only<lb/>
ns said<lb/>
taught by<lb/>
tents.<lb/>
full time<lb/>
d rapport<lb/>
of this<lb/>
used by<lb/>
nd about<lb/>
At ECU,<lb/>
agram of<lb/>
it into a<lb/>
ompletec<lb/>
)rolled al<lb/>
) regular<lb/>
speciai<lb/>
that they<lb/>
d are or,<lb/>
xess ol<lb/>
far. We,<lb/>
n of the<lb/>
ple did<lb/>
ampare<lb/>
(CPS)Prostitution has never -been<lb/>
courted by labor unions, not sanctioned<lb/>
by the government. Prostitutes have<lb/>
denied their vocation and hid in<lb/>
doorways while police-cars cruised by.<lb/>
But now, one prostitute is bringing the<lb/>
profession out of the closet and asking<lb/>
that it be decriminalized.<lb/>
She was once called "the coyote<lb/>
trickster" by a satisfied customer and the<lb/>
name stuck. She is a hooker and the<lb/>
founder of COYOTE, an activist<lb/>
I organization for prostitutes. Margo St.<lb/>
? James, an attractive, dark-haired woman<lb/>
Stas memorial service<lb/>
Approximately fifty persons attended<lb/>
a memorial service Wednesday night for<lb/>
I Clarence Stasavich, athletic director at<lb/>
 ECU who died of a heart attack Friday.<lb/>
The opening remarks were made by<lb/>
?Diane Taylor, Student Union President.<lb/>
iOther comments were made by students:<lb/>
?Ken Strayhorn, football; Jeff Beaston,<lb/>
I baseball; Mike Radford, wrestling; and<lb/>
Willie Harvey, track.<lb/>
? Nell Stallings represented the Health<lb/>
"and Physical Education Departments.<lb/>
r Closing remarks were made by<lb/>
Chancellor Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
'Leader of<lb/>
I<lb/>
the Pack'<lb/>
iow wei<lb/>
- will<lb/>
r.<lb/>
?am thtj<lb/>
SpecU<lb/>
run ti<lb/>
we<lb/>
thly.<lb/>
student<lb/>
ausc<lb/>
I in m<lb/>
North<lb/>
been<lb/>
The homecoming t. ition at<lb/>
 Carolina State University has<lb/>
changed somewhat this year.<lb/>
In a blow for equality of the sexes,<lb/>
I udents opened the homecoming queen<lb/>
ntest to men and women. Consequent-<lb/>
ly, what was once called a "queen" will<lb/>
n be called "leader of the pack<lb/>
deferring to Wolfpack, the school's<lb/>
Irascot.<lb/>
A campuswide vote this week will<lb/>
jtetermine who will be crowned during<lb/>
he South Carolina-NCSU football game<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Powerized privy<lb/>
m<lb/>
runs off sun<lb/>
get her<lb/>
? an<lb/>
it eac<lb/>
t wi<lb/>
tuthor<lb/>
s Sno<lb/>
iemb<lb/>
rill tj<lb/>
AcNe<lb/>
Graf<lb/>
4CPSThe world's first solar-powered<lb/>
?Duthouse was installed recently near the<lb/>
lortheast entrance of Yellowstone<lb/>
Jational Park. The installation uses<lb/>
slectricity produced by the run to run the<lb/>
jumps that flush the toilets.<lb/>
Although the outhouse looks like any<lb/>
jjpark privy at first glance, more than 160<lb/>
solar cells are housed in a pair of panels<lb/>
12 12 feet long by 3 feet high.<lb/>
The Forest Service picked the panels<lb/>
because they were less expensive than<lb/>
running a power line to the isolated<lb/>
outhouse perched on a 9190 foot<lb/>
overlook.<lb/>
in her late 30s, started COYOTE (Call Off<lb/>
Your Old Tired Ethics) in San Francisco<lb/>
on Mother's Day, 1973. Now she is taking<lb/>
the COYOTE message around the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"The basic issue is the ownership of<lb/>
our bodies she asserts. "No one really<lb/>
has the right to tell me how to earn my<lb/>
living-unless they want to give me a<lb/>
better-paying job<lb/>
With the support of the United<lb/>
Nations, the American Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union and various public defender<lb/>
groups, St. James is hoping to mobilize<lb/>
U.S. opinion against what she terms a<lb/>
"hypocritical Congress" and eventually<lb/>
do away with repressive laws against<lb/>
prostitutes, one of the most oppressed<lb/>
groups of women in the world.<lb/>
St. James makes it clear that she is<lb/>
working for decriminalization of prostitu-<lb/>
tion, not across-the-board legalization.<lb/>
"Legalization would do nothing to<lb/>
remove the stigma she says. "The<lb/>
government could still tell women what<lb/>
to do with their bodies<lb/>
Hookers, she says, are victims of an<lb/>
oppressive, sexist society who fall prey<lb/>
to everyone from the government on<lb/>
jown.<lb/>
By JIM W. SUCKE<lb/>
DANDELIONS are fine in Indian<lb/>
Summer-time.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0022"/><lb/>
MHHHBHMNH<lb/>
22<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
WHAT Jc<lb/>
WILL BUY!<lb/>
CHECK THIS!<lb/>
JVC 5555<lb/>
S7F??0 WITH COMPLETE 4 CHANNEL<lb/>
W<lb/>
40 watts RMS per channel into 8 ohms<lb/>
$130?? worth of SAE equalizer<lb/>
(exclusive with JVC) walnut enclosure<lb/>
$39996 NO ONE CAN TOUCH IT!<lb/>
BUY JVC SYSTEM ? GET BIG DISCOUNT<lb/>
AND HEADPHONES FOR 1?<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
STUDENT FINANCING<lb/>
HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH<lb/>
DOWNTOWN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Bo<lb/>
East (<lb/>
probably i1<lb/>
season Sa<lb/>
invades Gr<lb/>
determine<lb/>
Northern C<lb/>
Williar<lb/>
conference<lb/>
mark, will<lb/>
offense wt<lb/>
and VMI 3<lb/>
The ln(<lb/>
the South<lb/>
team the<lb/>
Top Ten<lb/>
season, <lb/>
number si<lb/>
Old Domir<lb/>
H<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
9<lb/>
; r<lb/>
OOPS! M<lb/>
I 89 knew<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Dye<lb/>
Since<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
-Complete<lb/>
pame to a<lb/>
hen the<lb/>
arolina, i<lb/>
y Coach<lb/>
Ikhe player<lb/>
since the<lb/>
"Everyl<lb/>
he Richm<lb/>
he playei<lb/>
jame, the<lb/>
hemselve:<lb/>
wer had<lb/>
alked it o<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mmmu<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0023"/><lb/>
JHHBHBBPr<lb/>
9gS ? ?' ? I ?<lb/>
3<lb/>
iA<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
23<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
t $nt-<lb/>
s meet in crucial SC match<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
East Carolina will play what is<lb/>
probably its biggest soccer game of the<lb/>
season Saturday when William and Mary<lb/>
invades Greenville for a clash which will<lb/>
determine the champion of the SC<lb/>
Northern Division.<lb/>
William and Mary, with a 2-0<lb/>
conference record and a 6-3-1 overall<lb/>
mark, will bring with it a high-scoring<lb/>
offense which has beaten Richmond 10-0<lb/>
and VMI 3-0 in conference play.<lb/>
The Indians are also ranked seventh in<lb/>
i the South, which makes them the sixth<lb/>
team the Pirates will have played in the<lb/>
Top Ten South teams. Earlier this<lb/>
season, William and Mary beat the<lb/>
number sixth ranked team in the south,<lb/>
Old Dominion, by 5-4 score. ECU played<lb/>
Old Dominion yesterday in Norfolk.<lb/>
Despite the power of the Indian<lb/>
squad, ECU coach Curtis Frye feels ECU<lb/>
will have a good chance of winning<lb/>
against William and Mary.<lb/>
"I think it will be a matter of one<lb/>
goal said Frye on Wednesday. "It's not<lb/>
ours and it's not theirs. The game also<lb/>
has a big bearing on the conference<lb/>
standings. If we win, we'll finish second<lb/>
overall, but if we lose, it could put us as<lb/>
far down as a tie for sixth<lb/>
Although ECU is currently ranked<lb/>
third in the conference, Frye said the<lb/>
Pirates team is just now beginning to<lb/>
reach its full strength.<lb/>
"We are getting back healthy now<lb/>
said Frye. "We are just about where we<lb/>
want to be for the game. The early<lb/>
season injuries really hurt us, but most<lb/>
of those injured players are back<lb/>
? <lb/>
-u? A (V<lb/>
r?v<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
COPS! Mike Voight 44 can't reach Billy Paachatrt iuj wiw pitch, but Zack valentine<lb/>
. 89 knew where to look for it. Valentine's recovery set up ECU's fifth touchdown in<lb/>
Saturday's UNC win. Photo by John Banks<lb/>
Dye credits players with rebouid<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Since the Richmond game, the East<lb/>
Carolina football team has done a<lb/>
-fsomplete turnaround. The team's rebirth<lb/>
jpame to a more apparent stage last week<lb/>
jAhen the Pirates upset ACC rival, North<lb/>
rolina, 38-17, in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
j" Coach Dye credits the turnaround to<lb/>
Ikhe players and their changed attitudes<lb/>
since the disappointing Richmond loss.<lb/>
"Everything that has happened since<lb/>
he Richmond game has to be credited to<lb/>
he players insisted Dye. "After that<lb/>
jame, the players got together among<lb/>
hemselves and straightened out what-<lb/>
;ver had been the problem. They just<lb/>
alked it out amongst themselves<lb/>
A narrow 3-0 win over the Citadel<lb/>
started ECU on the road back. It was that<lb/>
win against the Citadel in Charleston Dye<lb/>
feels turned the season around.<lb/>
"That win at Charleston gave our team<lb/>
a lot of confidence said Dye. "If we had<lb/>
lost it might have worked in reverse,<lb/>
instead of helping us. We all knew we<lb/>
had played a helluva game to win and we<lb/>
were proud of it<lb/>
Next came a 42-14 Homecoming rout<lb/>
of Western Carolina and, finally, last<lb/>
week's historic win over North Carolina.<lb/>
"Saturday was a great day in East<lb/>
Carolina history said Dye. "What<lb/>
occurred in Chapel Hill was made<lb/>
possible by many people and I'm sure<lb/>
folks will be talking about our win last<lb/>
week for some time to come.<lb/>
See ECU, page 26.<lb/>
l in mm i m i my<lb/>
William and Mary will be ECU's last<lb/>
regular season game, but Frye said the<lb/>
team is sufficiently rested for the game<lb/>
Saturday, as Me as for yesterday's<lb/>
contest with Old Dominion.<lb/>
"I expect a close game with Old<lb/>
Dominion commented Frye. "But we<lb/>
had some rest this week and an easy<lb/>
game after two real tough games with<lb/>
VMI and Duke last week. Even though<lb/>
our records (3-4-2) do not show it, our<lb/>
kids have really been playing well.<lb/>
"In every game, with the exception of<lb/>
the Carolina and Appalachian State<lb/>
games, our team has outshot the<lb/>
opponent. We just haven't been able to<lb/>
score on those shots<lb/>
Frye cautions that ECU is going to<lb/>
have to play their best to beat William<lb/>
and Mary, nough.<lb/>
"We won't be playing above our heads<lb/>
against William and Mary, but we will<lb/>
have to play our very best to win. Any<lb/>
less, and it won't be enough<lb/>
Saturday's game will start at 11:00 on<lb/>
the Minges soccer field.<lb/>
.?. r: $<lb/>
fri&amp;i<lb/>
flFMan<lb/>
Many people nave asked me who it is<lb/>
that does the photography for my sports<lb/>
pages. I teei that some recognition<lb/>
should be made to these artists for their<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The staff photographer is Tim<lb/>
Chalmers. Tim does nearly ail the<lb/>
photography in the paper and nearly all<lb/>
of it on the sports pages All the<lb/>
photography of the home football games,<lb/>
as well as of the State and Tuesday's<lb/>
pictures on the Carolina game are Tim's<lb/>
works. Normally no mention is made of<lb/>
Tim in the picture cut since he is the<lb/>
Fountainhead's own paid photographer.<lb/>
But you can be reasonably sure that it is<lb/>
Tim when there is no picture credit.<lb/>
On occasions when the football team<lb/>
is out ui town, the football photography<lb/>
you will see is normally done by John<lb/>
Banks. This includes the photos of the<lb/>
Carolina game in today's edition, as well<lb/>
as for the Southern Illinois, Appalachian<lb/>
State and Virginia games are concerned.<lb/>
In addition, all the mug head shots one<lb/>
sees of the players and coaches will be<lb/>
done by John, since he is also the<lb/>
photographer for the Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
I have forgotten at times to give John<lb/>
credit for those pictures that are his and<lb/>
to John I apologize. The photos which he<lb/>
allows us to use are done without<lb/>
payment, which is true genorisiity on his<lb/>
part.<lb/>
In the future I will try and do better<lb/>
concerning photo credits for John and<lb/>
any other contributing photographers<lb/>
other than Tim.<lb/>
JOHN EVANS<lb/>
ECU, Rirren to<lb/>
clash Saturday<lb/>
Thio Saturdays opponent. Furrnan<lb/>
University, has a lot of similarities to the<lb/>
East Carolina squad that beat North<lb/>
Carolina last week. 38-17.<lb/>
Like the Pirates, the Paladins have a<lb/>
three game winning streak going,<lb/>
following a three-point loss to a Southern<lb/>
Conference toe<lb/>
Also, the Paladins rely on the running<lb/>
game for most of its offense Third, the"<lb/>
Paladins are a team with a 2-2 conference<lb/>
record meaning they are virtually<lb/>
eliminated from any shot at the<lb/>
conference championship.<lb/>
But when one compares schedules,<lb/>
personnel and coaching philosophies, the<lb/>
Paladins (4-3) and the Pirates (5-3) come<lb/>
out as different as night and day<lb/>
Paladin coach Art Baker has taken an<lb/>
experienced bunch of players and molded<lb/>
them into a winning unit after a<lb/>
disappointing start, while ECU Coach Pat<lb/>
Dye has achieved a similar result with a<lb/>
predominately inexperienced group of<lb/>
players.<lb/>
The Paladins returned 16 starters from<lb/>
their 1974 team and most of those<lb/>
players still make up the nucleus of the<lb/>
team, including eight defensive starters.<lb/>
Of the Pirates returning starters from<lb/>
last year, very few are used on defense,<lb/>
as Dye has employed two freshmen and<lb/>
two sophomores to anchor the team.<lb/>
On defense, the Pirates' strength has I<lb/>
proved to be the Paladins' weakness. ?<lb/>
ECU returned all four starters from last<lb/>
year to the defensive secondary and. with<lb/>
the addition of Bobby Mynck. fields an<lb/>
all-star cast. On the other hand, the<lb/>
Paladins return only one starter from<lb/>
1974. but still have a nucleus of fine<lb/>
talent.<lb/>
Both secondaries are led by strong<lb/>
free safeties. For ECU it is Jim Bolding.<lb/>
For Furrnan. it is Mark Gordon<lb/>
Bolding was conference player of the<lb/>
week on defense and has intercepted<lb/>
seven passes during the 1975 season.<lb/>
This while missing three games due to a<lb/>
shoulder injury.<lb/>
Bolding leads a secondary that has<lb/>
stolen 19 passes so far this season, with<lb/>
Reggie Pinkney second on the team, and<lb/>
third in the conference, with five<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
While Bolding leads the conference<lb/>
and Pinkney is third. Gordon is<lb/>
sandwiched between the two in the pass <lb/>
interceptions rankings Gordon has<lb/>
intercepted six aerials for the Paladins in<lb/>
seven games However, all of Gordon's<lb/>
(no. 28) interceptions have come in the<lb/>
last four games Bolding. on the Jther<lb/>
hand, has grabbed five steals in the last<lb/>
two games<lb/>
ECU has won its last two games in<lb/>
convincing manner after narrowly beating<lb/>
the nation's top defensive team, the<lb/>
Citadel, by 3-0 ECU downed Western<lb/>
Carolina two weeks ago. 42-14. before<lb/>
routing North Carolina by a 38-17 upset<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
In the meantime. Furrnan has<lb/>
struggled past three weaker opponents in<lb/>
building its three game winning streak.<lb/>
The three game streak was built on wins<lb/>
over Presbyterian (21-14), Holy Cross<lb/>
(21-14) and William and Mary (22-6). Prior<lb/>
to these wins, the Paladins lost a tough<lb/>
17-14 decision to VMI and a 27-21<lb/>
See Furrnan, page 26.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
NM<lb/>
"4M?<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mmm im<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sonny's A Big Man Too<lb/>
I attended the funeral of Clarence Stasavich on Tuesday, along with about two<lb/>
hundred other people, and paid my last respects to the man who did so much for<lb/>
East Carolina athletics. While most of the varsity coaches served as pall bearers,<lb/>
there were several other familiar faces from the past in the crowd, among them former<lb/>
players and former ECU coaches. There were also two plane loads of people who flew<lb/>
from Hickory to pay their last respects. It was a fitting funeral for "Stas<lb/>
WHAT WILL BECOME OF SONNY RANDLE?<lb/>
Among those at the funeral was former ECU head football coach Sonny Randle,<lb/>
who has been the subject of many snide remarks concerning his lack of success at<lb/>
the University of Virginia this year admittedly, this reporter isn't immune from<lb/>
accusation on this count.<lb/>
Seeing Sonny at "Stas's" funeral made me think a great deal more of the man than<lb/>
I had before.<lb/>
Most people expected Sonny to be there, but his presence at the funeral<lb/>
undoubtedly caused more of a stir than if he had not been there. To me, it took a big<lb/>
man to come to Greenville after the circumstances and manner under which he left,<lb/>
and an even bigger man to attend the funeral of a man he did not often see eye-to-eye<lb/>
with.<lb/>
One must remember the risk that the man took when he left Greenville, "The sure<lb/>
thing for his alma mater at Virginia. A football coach, like everyone else, has to<lb/>
worry about his future, too. At the time he left, the challenge of rebuilding the<lb/>
Cavaliers was a great one and being the man he was, Randle took it. In doing so, he<lb/>
risked all he had achieved, in the way of coaching reputation and prestige, at ECU.<lb/>
Always outspoken, Randle went out on a limb at the beginning of the season in<lb/>
saying if Virginia did not have a winning season he would resign as head coach.<lb/>
Since that time, nearly every sportswriter who concerned himself with the matter<lb/>
has waited like a vulture to see Randle eat his words (and again, I can't claim<lb/>
innocence to this count).<lb/>
Saturday, Wake Fores embarrassed Virginia, 66-21, in Chartottesville. The win must<lb/>
not only have been an embarrassing one for Randle, but it was also his sixth of the<lb/>
season. The loss, in other words, assured Randle and Virginia of a losing season.<lb/>
Now people lay in waiting for Randle to follow up on his word, to resign, or to<lb/>
slither out of what he said at the beginning of the year. This reporter has heard<lb/>
unconfirmed reports that Randle has already turned in his resignation at Virginia,<lb/>
effective at the end of this season.<lb/>
If this is indeed true, Randle would be a bigger man than most of us. He will have<lb/>
kept his word. Whether he would have been fired or not will be hard to tell.<lb/>
Few remember, or want to remember, what Randle meant to the East Carolina<lb/>
football program in the three short years he was here. It was Randle who started the<lb/>
road to success that Pat Dye has continued this year. It was also Randle who started<lb/>
the winning tradition at this school that Dye nearly fell victim to at the beginning of<lb/>
the year, before his youngsters matured and before the Pirates beat Carolina<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Now. it seems, Randle's risk has backfired and he will morethan likely have to find<lb/>
another job at the end of this year. We have all taken risks that have failed to pay off<lb/>
and Randle's was iust a greater risk.<lb/>
To Sonny Randle I wish a sincere good luck, whatever happens.<lb/>
SOCCER GAME IMPORTANT SATURDAY<lb/>
Saturday, the ECU soccer team will play its most important game of the year<lb/>
against William and Mary.<lb/>
The game will start at 11 o'clock on the soccer field between Ficklen and Minges,<lb/>
and all ECU students are urged to attend. If you have yet to see a soccer game, that<lb/>
is no excuse.<lb/>
The Pirates' brand of soccer is quite good and even a beginning soccer fan will<lb/>
enjoy hisherself. If ECU beats the Indians, who have long been a soccer power in the<lb/>
conference, it will meet Appalachian State in the conference championships. Under<lb/>
such a matchup, the Pirates would host the playoffs.<lb/>
Vocal support is a great booster for these proud players, because they play for<lb/>
little, other than personal pride.<lb/>
ECU soccer has built up over the last year to a competitive level with any other<lb/>
school in the conference and nearly any other school in the ACC, except Clemson.<lb/>
Come out and support the Pirates.<lb/>
Continued to top of page.<lb/>
FEARLESS FORECASTS<lb/>
My booster card has been revoked, for at least a week, and my season record has<lb/>
been smashed, as I not only goofed on the ECU-UNC game, but also missed a total<lb/>
of seven of eleven games last week. That leaves me at 50-23-2 for the year, a .685<lb/>
percentage. I hope to rebound this week. My picks:<lb/>
ECU over Furman, 27-6.<lb/>
Notre Dame over Navy, 21-15.<lb/>
Texas over SMU. 35-14.<lb/>
Maryland over Penn State, 24-22.<lb/>
Virginia Tech over William and Mary, 24-0.<lb/>
The Citadel over Appalachian State, 17-12.<lb/>
South Carolina over N.C. State, 27-20.<lb/>
Georgia over Richmond, 33-23.<lb/>
Nebraska over Missouri, 37-17.<lb/>
North Carolina over Wake Forest, 24-20.<lb/>
Oklahoma over Oklahoma State, 33-16.<lb/>
Ohio State over Indiana, 49-0.<lb/>
twvvAvvvAvvrtrtftArtftvvvvAvvvsAA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY EXXON<lb/>
1101 E. 5TH ST GREENVILLE, IMC.<lb/>
752-9958<lb/>
VW Specialist<lb/>
Atlas tires and batteries<lb/>
Road service<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?.State <lb/>
(California residents please add 6 sales tax.)<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m0m<lb/>
L.<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
m<lb/>
?.  :?? ?: <lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0025"/><lb/>
HHHRRHB<lb/>
HHHHI<lb/>
?????HBBISHBI<lb/>
HSBlDiBHMBI<lb/>
record has<lb/>
-sed a total<lb/>
ear, a .685<lb/>
AWW<lb/>
1<lb/>
?M?<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO.<lb/>
1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mn mii iiiPin<lb/>
2<lb/>
MM<lb/>
Weaver aid Boldng honored as<lb/>
SC Players of the Week<lb/>
Mike Weaver and Jim Bolding became<lb/>
the first ECU players this year to win<lb/>
conference honors as player of the week.<lb/>
Weaver was named Offensive Player of<lb/>
the Week and Bolding was selected<lb/>
Defensive Player of the Week. The two<lb/>
were selected for the parts thev Dlayed in<lb/>
ECU'S 38-17 upset of North Carolina .<lb/>
last Saturday.<lb/>
In that contest, Weaver led ECU to<lb/>
most of its 403 yards total offense and<lb/>
gained 68 yards rushing himself on 12<lb/>
carries. Weaver also threw for 33 yards to<lb/>
give him a total of 101 offensive yards for<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
The 6-0, 155 pound Williamston native<lb/>
has also been instrumental in leading the<lb/>
Pirates to a 42-14 Homecoming win over<lb/>
Western Carolina the week before. Prior<lb/>
to the Western Carolina game, Weaver<lb/>
had missed three games due to an injury<lb/>
and a case of the flu.<lb/>
Bolding won honors for his<lb/>
outstanding play on the ECU defense.<lb/>
During the game, Bolding made six<lb/>
solo tackles, caused a fumble, recovered<lb/>
another fumble and intercepted two<lb/>
passes. Bolding's second interception set<lb/>
up Larry Paul's 30 yard field goal, which<lb/>
was the Pirates' last score of the game.<lb/>
For the season, Bolding now has<lb/>
seven interceptions. The figure for 1975<lb/>
gives the High Point native 16 career<lb/>
steals, which is an East Carolina career<lb/>
record. The seven interceptions also ties<lb/>
an ECU season record for interceptions,<lb/>
which Bolding holds himself with Bobby<lb/>
Ellis. Bolding accomplished the feat in<lb/>
his freshman year of 1973 and Ellis did it<lb/>
in 1966.<lb/>
Earlier this season Bolding broke the<lb/>
career record for punt return yardage.<lb/>
Bolding is currently ranked first in the<lb/>
conference and second in the nation in<lb/>
interceptions.<lb/>
He leads an ECU secondary which<lb/>
has intercepted one out of every seven<lb/>
opposition passes and 19 so far in 1975.<lb/>
Southern Conference Standings<lb/>
Richmond4-0<lb/>
Citadel3-1<lb/>
East Carolina2-2<lb/>
Furman2-2<lb/>
VMI2-2<lb/>
Appalachian1-2<lb/>
Davidson0-2<lb/>
William and Mary 0-3<lb/>
4-3<lb/>
5-2<lb/>
5-3<lb/>
4-3<lb/>
2-5<lb/>
5-2<lb/>
0-5<lb/>
0-7<lb/>
we.<lb/>
wani<lb/>
your soul!<lb/>
 on paper of course<lb/>
The Rebel, East Carolina's Literary-Art magazine,<lb/>
is sponsoring a Literary-Art contest for students<lb/>
at East Carolina. First prizes of $100.00 and sec<lb/>
ond prizes of $50.00 will be awarded in three<lb/>
categories: Poetry , Short Stories, And Art work.<lb/>
Deadline for the contest is November 30. Entries<lb/>
may be submitted at the Rebel office in the Pub<lb/>
lications Center between the hours of 3 to 5,<lb/>
Tuesdays through Thursdays.<lb/>
.<lb/>
This Is True!<lb/>
By WILLIE PATRICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
What A Week<lb/>
Mark it on your old calendar.<lb/>
Note it in next year's appointment book.<lb/>
Oct. 21-28 was, to this writer's mind one of the most, if not the most, prolific<lb/>
weeks in sports history.<lb/>
It was an up and down week, punctuated by extreme joy and extreme sorrow, aix<lb/>
one instance produced a mixed feeling of the two.<lb/>
The Worid Series<lb/>
Oct. 21 and 22 produced two more exciting World Series games, culminating in<lb/>
the end of the most exciting annual production in recent memory.<lb/>
Boston, a young team in the part of the underdog, strung "The Best Damn Team<lb/>
in Baseball" down to the wire before bowing to the Reds.<lb/>
Cincinnati is to be congratulated for its 115 victories: anything less than a World<lb/>
Series championship would have been antichmatic.<lb/>
The Red Sox became early sentimental favorites, due to their outstanding play and<lb/>
their owner, Tom Yawkey, who has been in control of the team for the past 43 years.<lb/>
At the same time, the popular gentleman has never had a team to win an autumn<lb/>
classic.<lb/>
The World Football League<lb/>
The financial plan looked good, prior to the season's start.<lb/>
After reading it, and the jargon about "percentage payments" and "minimum<lb/>
salaries it wasn't hard to believe that even though the league wasn't going to make a<lb/>
lot of money, it would indeed pay its debts this go-round.<lb/>
The league paid its debts. But the players got tired of working for no profit The<lb/>
front offices couldn't maintain the standards of operation vital to producing fine<lb/>
football and a fine image and the ultimate decision was made.<lb/>
Personally, this is one writer who was sorry to see it go by the wayside. Having<lb/>
the opportunity to see two games in Charlotte, a first-hand view shows that there was<lb/>
plenty of high-scoring football.<lb/>
No defense, usually, in terms of points scored, but nevertheless some licks were<lb/>
traded.<lb/>
Interesting point to ponder too is exalted Ruler Rozelle of the NFL and his recent<lb/>
decision to not allow signings of ex-WFL'ers. The WFL was not a bad leagueif it<lb/>
was so Mickey Mouse, why didn't the ex-NFL stars burn up the stat pages?<lb/>
But still, no fans equal no money equal no football.<lb/>
It is like that on any level.<lb/>
Coach Stas<lb/>
Words on the subject of the passing of one of the football world's greatest all time<lb/>
leaders seem terribly insignificant. Shakespeare couldn't do the situation any justice<lb/>
A multitude of people who knew Coach Stas have remarked about what a fine wit<lb/>
he had, and how he was such a warm human friend to those who really knew him.<lb/>
This writer can attest that if someone didn't understand his policies, it usually was<lb/>
the fault of the individual. For Coach Stas, no matter what the time of day or<lb/>
situation involved, would always take the time to explain the workings of his office.<lb/>
Like has been said, a person often didn't agree with his policies, but he always<lb/>
knew whre he stood with him. East Carolina University lost a large part of its history<lb/>
with his passing.<lb/>
ECU 38, UNC-CH 17<lb/>
Despite rumors that the Tar Heels will be demoted to small college status, Easl<lb/>
Carolina will alwavs savor the crushing defeat it handed to the Tar Heels on that<lb/>
lovely October afternoon in (phew!)beautiful Chapel Hill.<lb/>
It was both ironic ana saa tnat it came after the Pirates' darkest hour<lb/>
The Pirates performed with a flair that has been unmatched this season They<lb/>
should be congratulated and cheered from now until the end of football, whenever<lb/>
that is.<lb/>
This writer didn't realize that so many people could scream so loudly and for so<lb/>
long. It was rumored that the entire medical school would be moved to Chapel Hill.<lb/>
The only upsetting performance of the day came from the striped shirts Thinking<lb/>
of two years ago. fans saw Terry Gallaher get clobbered in pursuit of a pass, with no<lb/>
call by the nearest zebra. One wonders how the worst ACC team in penalties for a<lb/>
season can suddenly be penalized 13 yards in the entire game, while the Pirates<lb/>
picked up considerably more.<lb/>
It doesn't make for good journalism ethics to publicly knock the officiating, but<lb/>
here goes:<lb/>
"C'mon, fellas. Anybody in the stands can just about call the obvious plays. It is a<lb/>
shame you guys can't call the close ones<lb/>
The Pirates take on Furman Saturday in a game that should be a rematch of the<lb/>
one that gave Pat Dye his initiation into Southern Conference football last season.<lb/>
The Paladins will be a tough test once more, for the Pirates have to guard against<lb/>
having an emotional letdown following Saturday's win.<lb/>
Saturday's win took character, though, and though character is sometimes hard to<lb/>
get, you have to work just as hard to lose it as well.<lb/>
The Pirates won't lose it. You can bet that This Is True!<lb/>
 wn?n? iim i t ?mw? i pi wum ii i an ? mi ? hh winn i ? ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0026"/><lb/>
iBHHHHHHBBBBHI<lb/>
?vri<lb/>
mm<lb/>
26<lb/>
FOUNTA1NHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
amemm<lb/>
m<lb/>
tmuti<lb/>
m<lb/>
Fiirman Continued from page 23.<lb/>
contest to Richmond for the two<lb/>
conference setbacks.<lb/>
The Paladins do have one thing over<lb/>
the Pirates in that they beat Appalachian<lb/>
State. 130-23, prior to the VMI loss. The<lb/>
Pirates were routed by the Mountaineers,<lb/>
41-25, in their second game of the year.<lb/>
Nonetheless, the Paladins' coach Art<lb/>
Baker is concerned with the ECU team<lb/>
Furman meets in Greenville this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
"Obviously, East Carolina got off to a<lb/>
slow start said Baker, referring to<lb/>
cCU's opening losses to N.C. State and<lb/>
Appalachian, "but, boy, they have really<lb/>
come around.<lb/>
'They are looking good. They have<lb/>
the same big strong people who can<lb/>
really run and they are fresh of that win<lb/>
over an ACC team<lb/>
Baker believes the Paladins will have<lb/>
to work harder on both offense and<lb/>
defense to beat the Pirates, and claims<lb/>
his three game winning streak doesn't<lb/>
hold up to that of the Pirates.<lb/>
"We really have our work cut out for<lb/>
us even though we've been winning<lb/>
said Baker "We can't play in the same<lb/>
mold that we've been playing in the last<lb/>
three weeks. We have to be sharper<lb/>
Baker does feel, though, that his<lb/>
team has come a long way in the last<lb/>
three games from where they stood after<lb/>
the VMI clash.<lb/>
"We've matured as a football team in<lb/>
that we are beginning to take advantage<lb/>
? ; the mistakes of the other team and<lb/>
what it gives us otherwise<lb/>
Leading the Furman attack, which has<lb/>
gained a total of 324 yards a game this<lb/>
year are quarterback David Whitehurst<lb/>
and running back Larry Robinson.<lb/>
Whitehurst (no. 15) is second in the<lb/>
conference in total offense, with a seven<lb/>
game total of 961 yards. His best game<lb/>
of the season came last week when he<lb/>
totalled 176 yards against the Indians. In<lb/>
addition, a point of note for the ECU<lb/>
defense is that Whitehurst hasn't been<lb/>
intercepted in his last 43 attempts. So far<lb/>
this season, ECU'S defense has<lb/>
intercepted one pass in every seven<lb/>
passes by the opposition.<lb/>
On the ground, the Paladins have<lb/>
gained most of their yardage. They have<lb/>
six runners with over 100 yards for the<lb/>
season, but the leading rusher is<lb/>
Robinson. So far this season, Robinson<lb/>
(no. 31) has gained 552 yards.<lb/>
Three ECU rushers have picked up<lb/>
over 200 yards this season and they are<lb/>
in ECU'S starting backfield. Willie<lb/>
Hawkins is the team leader with 410<lb/>
yards, Kenny Strayhorn is next with 368<lb/>
yards and RayJones ranks third with 232<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
What all the comparing means is that<lb/>
the game Saturday between ECU and<lb/>
Furman will be a whole lot closer on<lb/>
paper than the oddsmakers think. Right<lb/>
now, ECU is figured as an eight point<lb/>
favorite, but one can guarantee come<lb/>
kickoff time that isn't going to make any<lb/>
difference to ECU or Furman.<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
"All season long our kids have been<lb/>
working hard and not getting anything<lb/>
out of it. But they got some of those<lb/>
things on Saturday. We've accomplished<lb/>
one of our goals for this year, but we've<lb/>
got more to accomplish now<lb/>
Among those accomplishments, the<lb/>
foremost is to win the rest of this year's<lb/>
games. If that were to occur, ECU would<lb/>
finish at 8-3, one game better than last<lb/>
year. To do this, ECU has got to beat<lb/>
Furman, Virginia and VMI.<lb/>
The best way for Dye and his players<lb/>
to do that is to approach each game one<lb/>
at a time. And, true to the task, it is the<lb/>
Furman game this weekend which Dye is<lb/>
most worried about right now.<lb/>
"The win last week was great, but<lb/>
we've got to get ready for another game.<lb/>
This win just has to be the solid block to<lb/>
start building on. We have to keep on. In<lb/>
my short time in the Southern<lb/>
Conference I've learned that league<lb/>
games are going to be a fiercer and more<lb/>
emotion packed game than any of our<lb/>
outside games.<lb/>
"I certainly consider Furman as one of<lb/>
the top teams in the conference,<lb/>
especially with their beating Appalachian<lb/>
and playing so close to Richmond. This<lb/>
FurmanEast Carolina<lb/>
5Tennessee Tech173N.C. State26<lb/>
21Richmond2725Appalachian State41<lb/>
30Appalachian St.2320William and Mary0<lb/>
10VMI1341Southern Illinois7<lb/>
21Presbyterian1414Richmond17<lb/>
21Holy Cross143The Citadel0<lb/>
22William and Mary642Western Carolina14<lb/>
38North Carolina17<lb/>
130<lb/>
4-3, 2-2<lb/>
114<lb/>
186<lb/>
5-3, 2-2<lb/>
122<lb/>
will be a real challenge for our coaches<lb/>
and players to get ready to play this<lb/>
week '<lb/>
Dye said he was glad this game will be<lb/>
a home game and that on several<lb/>
occasions at Chapel Hill the crowd pulled<lb/>
the team up and helped boost them.<lb/>
"I'm glad we play Furman at home<lb/>
and I hope we have a big crowd here<lb/>
Saturday night because they will see one<lb/>
heck of a football game<lb/>
Kickoff time at Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Saturday night will be 7 o'clock.<lb/>
Clubbers lose, 18-12<lb/>
ECU'S club football team dropped its<lb/>
third game of the season last Sunday by<lb/>
an 18-12 score to St. Paul's.<lb/>
ECU fell behind in the first half by a<lb/>
12-0 before rallying back with two<lb/>
touchdowns in the second quarter behind<lb/>
Buddy Sadak.<lb/>
Late in the third period St. Paul's<lb/>
scored to go ahead 18-12.<lb/>
ECU had one final chance to win the<lb/>
game late in the final period, but fumbled<lb/>
away the opportunity with one minute<lb/>
remaining in the game.<lb/>
The clubbers' next opponent will be<lb/>
Central Piedmont Community College<lb/>
this Sunday at 1:30 on the varsity<lb/>
practice field.<lb/>
ECU to host meets<lb/>
East Carolina's cross country team<lb/>
will host the Southern Conference cross<lb/>
country championships this weekend.<lb/>
Representatives of all eight conference<lb/>
schools will congregate in Greenville at<lb/>
11 o'clock for the championships.<lb/>
is<lb/>
al<lb/>
15<lb/>
Bo<lb/>
at<lb/>
BUCCANEER PORTRAIT BIKE WINNER!<lb/>
Renee Parris . a sophomore, from Charlotte won the 10-speed bike in the BUCCANEER raffia<lb/>
The bicycle was purchased from John's Bicycle in Greenville by Stevens Studios.<lb/>
Stevens Studios will return to ECU for one week only in January to photograph any students who<lb/>
were missed in October. Appointments may be scheduled after the Christmas holidays.<lb/>
When<lb/>
CU last<lb/>
CU soco<lb/>
ad been<lb/>
erformer<lb/>
le nucleu<lb/>
Smith's<lb/>
alas as tl<lb/>
jllback i<lb/>
loomy fo<lb/>
am. Thai<lb/>
resence f<lb/>
Long nr<lb/>
mith and<lb/>
) make d<lb/>
CU team<lb/>
Now Lc<lb/>
i as good<lb/>
lay.<lb/>
"Our de<lb/>
iy said<lb/>
ame only<lb/>
3 is more<lb/>
II- Americ<lb/>
But Lor<lb/>
ie Pirate c<lb/>
"id goali<lb/>
iportant r<lb/>
"The d(<lb/>
cott will<lb/>
nd I usua<lb/>
nd play b.<lb/>
Dhn Keen(<lb/>
seper posi<lb/>
sally respc<lb/>
jally need<lb/>
Ik<lb/>
v<lb/>
<lb/>
tm ?<lb/>
AtS13i<lb/>
JTS AND I<lb/>
ike Weaver<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
?B<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0027"/><lb/>
oaches<lb/>
iy this<lb/>
i will be<lb/>
several<lb/>
pulled<lb/>
n.<lb/>
home<lb/>
d here<lb/>
ee one<lb/>
tad i urn<lb/>
ped its<lb/>
iday by<lb/>
If by a<lb/>
h two<lb/>
behind<lb/>
Paul's<lb/>
vin the<lb/>
umbled<lb/>
minute<lb/>
will be<lb/>
College<lb/>
varsity<lb/>
i team<lb/>
 cross<lb/>
?kend.<lb/>
ference<lb/>
ville at<lb/>
is<lb/>
al<lb/>
15<lb/>
W<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
$.$iir<lb/>
wrthtaknt<lb/>
at the hjiback<lb/>
t:$n t<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
When Brad Smith graduated from<lb/>
CU last year it left a big hole in the<lb/>
CU soccer team's defense. Smith, who<lb/>
ad been a three-time All Conference<lb/>
erformer at center fullback, had been<lb/>
ie nucleus of the Pirates' defense.<lb/>
Smith's graduation left senior Scott<lb/>
alas as the only returning starter to the<lb/>
jllback area. The outlook appeared<lb/>
loomy for the defensive part of ECU'o<lb/>
jam. That is, until Tom Long made his<lb/>
resence felt.<lb/>
Long moved into the spot vacated by<lb/>
mith and has filled the hole well enough<lb/>
) make defense the strong point of the<lb/>
CU team once again this season.<lb/>
Now Long feels that the ECU defense<lb/>
i as good as any team the Pirates' will<lb/>
lay.<lb/>
"Our defense is probably as good as<lb/>
iy said Long. "In the Appalachian<lb/>
ame only one guy scored against us and<lb/>
3 is more than likely going to be an<lb/>
II- American'<lb/>
But Long is not the only fixture on<lb/>
ie Pirate offense. He also credits Balas<lb/>
id goalie John Keener with an<lb/>
iportant role in the team's play.<lb/>
"The defense works well as a unit,<lb/>
cott will usually play up near midfield<lb/>
nd I usually pick up the garbage shots<lb/>
id play back up to the other fullbacks.<lb/>
3hn Keener has been really good at the<lb/>
aeper position. Being a freshman he has<lb/>
ally responded well in a spot where we<lb/>
ally needed him<lb/>
Long, who was his high school<lb/>
team's MVP his sophomore year, finds<lb/>
the team to be playing better than 3-4-2<lb/>
record it had going into last night's game<lb/>
with Old Dominion.<lb/>
"We have had good games against<lb/>
every team we've played pointed out<lb/>
Long. "Even though the record may not<lb/>
show it, we have done well. It seems we<lb/>
play well, but just can't score well<lb/>
enough to win<lb/>
A look at the Pirates' schedule will<lb/>
back up Long's arguments. On this year's<lb/>
schedule have been six of the South's<lb/>
top ten ranked teams: Appalachian, Old<lb/>
Dominion, UNC-Wilmington, William and<lb/>
Mary, North Caiolina and Campbell<lb/>
College.<lb/>
"Most teams won't play the schedule<lb/>
we have chuckled Long. "We have so<lb/>
much competition on this tough<lb/>
schedule. We need a couple of breathers<lb/>
in there someplace.<lb/>
"The level of competition we play will<lb/>
improve us in the way we play. I think<lb/>
it's better overall for the program to play<lb/>
these teams<lb/>
On Saturday, Long will be joining<lb/>
Balas and the other fullbacks, Bob Poser,<lb/>
Keith Wilson, Lloyd McClelland and<lb/>
David Wasiolek in trying to stop the<lb/>
fast-moving William and Mary team.<lb/>
Long, however, said it will depend on the<lb/>
offense rather than the defense.<lb/>
"If we can score and pass the ball<lb/>
against them we'll be in the thick of<lb/>
things predicts Long. "If we can't we'll<lb/>
be hurting<lb/>
JTS AND BOLTS - Wayne Bolt 68 celebrates the thrill of 'ast week's victory with<lb/>
ike Weaver 9 and Ronnie Ragland 63. Photo by John Banks<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
27<lb/>
m<lb/>
HAPPINESS ISa win over Carolina. Harold Fort 54, Emerson Picket! fSfil and<lb/>
BmSs? f75 Wh?OP H UP ln ?,OSinfl minUteS ?f Saturday's P8 ? by<lb/>
Fal Intramurals finishing 143<lb/>
m<lb/>
?<lb/>
w?<lb/>
By LEONARD SMITH<lb/>
Horseshoes Championships<lb/>
In Men's Intramural Horseshoe<lb/>
Singles competition. James Blanchard<lb/>
has successfully defended the singles<lb/>
title that he won last Spring Quarter.<lb/>
Blanchard defeated Tom Norman in two<lb/>
straight games, 21-16 and 21-6, on<lb/>
Thursday, October 23 to bring home the<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
In Men's intramural Horseshoe<lb/>
Doubles competition, singles champion,<lb/>
James Blanchard, teamed with his<lb/>
championship game opponent from last<lb/>
year, Whitey Martin, to defeat the team<lb/>
of Randy Monroe and John Ballard, 21-5,<lb/>
18-21, and 21-15.<lb/>
One-On-One Basketball<lb/>
The championship of the 6'1" and<lb/>
Over Division was decided when Cedric<lb/>
Dickerson defeated Jan Blount on<lb/>
October 15. The new champion of the<lb/>
Under 6'1" Division is Dave Applegate.<lb/>
Appiegate defeated Chuck Hester by the<lb/>
scores of 15-13 and 10-7 on October 22.<lb/>
The first game of the march was a hard<lb/>
fought battle all the way. The second<lb/>
game found Applegate slowly wearing<lb/>
down Hester and eventually taking the<lb/>
title. Both contestants have proven that<lb/>
they are capable of playing an excellent<lb/>
brand of basketball Our hats are off to<lb/>
both players<lb/>
Volleyball<lb/>
Only two unbeaten teams remain in<lb/>
Men's Intramural Volleyball competition,<lb/>
Scott's Stumpy Stumps at 7-0 and the<lb/>
Kappa Alpha "B" team at 5-0.<lb/>
All teams are really beginning to<lb/>
show their skills as the playoffs draw<lb/>
near. Several very fine matches have been<lb/>
played in recent days. The Volleyball<lb/>
regular season ends this week with all of<lb/>
the Divisional Championship Games<lb/>
also scheduled to be played.<lb/>
On Tuesday, October 28 at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Minges, it was Scott's Stumpy Stumps<lb/>
versus Scott's Brewers for the Residence<lb/>
Hall Championship.<lb/>
On Wednesday. October 29 at 8:45<lb/>
p.m the Geology Jumpers were to meet<lb/>
the Volley Follies for the Graduate<lb/>
Independent Championship.<lb/>
The Fraternity Division and the Club<lb/>
Division Championship Games are<lb/>
scheduled for Thursday, October 30 at<lb/>
8:00 and 9:30 p.m respectively.<lb/>
Touch Football Championship Playoffs<lb/>
Last week the Divisional Playoff<lb/>
Games and Divisional Championship<lb/>
Games were held to determine which four<lb/>
teams would represent their respective<lb/>
divisions in the All-Campus Championship<lb/>
Playoffs. As expected, several games<lb/>
were decided in overtime, many tempers<lb/>
flared, and several big upsets occurred.<lb/>
Defensing champion, Pi Kappa Phi,<lb/>
crushed Pi Lambda Phi, 34-0, on<lb/>
Monday, only to be defeated by Kappa<lb/>
Alpha in overtime on Tuesday. Kappa<lb/>
Alpha then lost to Kappa Sigma, 14-8, in<lb/>
the Fraternity Championship Game.<lb/>
Scott's Moe's Zingos advanced to the<lb/>
finals of the Residence Hall Division with<lb/>
a 6-0 victory over Aycock's Schlitz Blitz<lb/>
on Tuesday However, in the Champion-<lb/>
ship Game. Scott's Moe Zingos were<lb/>
beaten. 6-0, by Jones' Lost Gonzo Band.<lb/>
In the GraduateIndependent Division<lb/>
Championship Game, the Pack defeated<lb/>
Herb's Superbs in a very wild game. 20-0.<lb/>
The Club Division Championship<lb/>
Game found Phi Epsilon Kappa avenging<lb/>
their only regular season loss by<lb/>
dumping previously undefeated<lb/>
AFROTC s Ron's Raiders by the score of<lb/>
22-6.<lb/>
In the All-Campus Championship<lb/>
Semi-Final Games on Monday, October<lb/>
27, Kappa Sigma defeated Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Kappa and in the other semi-final game,<lb/>
The Pack defeated Jones' Lost Gonzo<lb/>
Band. No scores or details of the games<lb/>
were immediately available Therefore, it<lb/>
was Kappa Sigma against The Pack for<lb/>
the All-Campus Chan ionship on<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0028"/><lb/>
28<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1530 OCTOBER 1975<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
news F LAS<lb/>
Typing<lb/>
Fountainhead is looking for a typing<lb/>
assistant. Qualifications needed are<lb/>
speed rnd accuracy. Salary and hours<lb/>
will be discussed during interview.<lb/>
(Experience on Compugraphic Compu-<lb/>
writer I or II would be great, but not<lb/>
necessary.) Contact Alice Leary at<lb/>
? Fountainhead on Monday, Nov. 3 to set<lb/>
kup appointment.<lb/>
Prayer breakfast<lb/>
How do you begin your Thursdays?<lb/>
Well every Thursday morning between<lb/>
7:00 and 7:45a Prayer Breakfast is being<lb/>
held at 169 E. Fifth Street. Everyone is<lb/>
welcomed!<lb/>
Prayer changes things!<lb/>
d<lb/>
ARKA<lb/>
Americans for Reinvestigation of the<lb/>
KennedyAssassination (ARKA) will show<lb/>
the Zapruder film and present other<lb/>
materials pertaining to the assassination<lb/>
on Tuesday, November 4th, at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in the room upstairs over the Elm St.<lb/>
Gym. Petitions in support of a<lb/>
congressional reinvestigation of JFK's<lb/>
assassination will be available. Admis-<lb/>
sion is free. The public is invited.<lb/>
Adopt a dog<lb/>
The dogs available for adoption this<lb/>
week include three brown eyes and white<lb/>
bodied mixed puppies, a black and white<lb/>
mixed breed, and a brown mixed breed.<lb/>
Newman club<lb/>
The Newman Club is sponsoring<lb/>
Catholic Mass on campus every<lb/>
Wednesday at 5 p.m. in room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall. The Biology Building will no<lb/>
longer hs used for services.<lb/>
Piii board appfcants<lb/>
The Pub Board, SGA appointed<lb/>
overseer of publications, is seeking<lb/>
applications for a position on the Board.<lb/>
The applicant should be a full-time<lb/>
student with at least a 2.00 average.<lb/>
Applications can be filled out in the Dean<lb/>
of Student Affairs office. The applicants<lb/>
will be notified via the Fountainhead<lb/>
when the screening will occur.<lb/>
FLASH FLASH FLASH<lb/>
Coffeehouse auditions Art faculty exfirtm SNAmeefag<lb/>
as<lb/>
al<lb/>
35<lb/>
Auditions for the Student Union<lb/>
Coffeehouse Sat. Nov. 1 and Sun. Nov. 2<lb/>
7-10. If you wish to audition come by<lb/>
Student Union office and leave your<lb/>
name, number of persons in group and<lb/>
length of time of your performance.<lb/>
Please limit time in consideration of<lb/>
other performers. Remember not only<lb/>
musicians, but any other acts suited to a<lb/>
small place (dancr, readings, etc.) are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Memorial fund<lb/>
A memorial scholarship fund in the<lb/>
name of Clarence Stasavich has been<lb/>
established at East Carolina. Anyone<lb/>
wishing to contribute to the fund may<lb/>
sent money to the ECU Athletic<lb/>
Department and indicate the money is for<lb/>
the Stasavich fund.<lb/>
Senior show<lb/>
Senior show - Rawl cases - Nov. 2-8.<lb/>
Combined show of ceramics, drawings<lb/>
and textiles by Nan Forrester and Hunter<lb/>
Foreman. Both B.S. candidates with<lb/>
concentration in ceramics.<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/>
Forever Generation<lb/>
The Forever Generation invites you to<lb/>
come and join us every Friday night at<lb/>
7:30, room 244 Mendenhall for some<lb/>
good Christian fun, fellowship and<lb/>
refreshments.<lb/>
Talent<lb/>
HVfi<lb/>
St. James United Methodist Church<lb/>
invites you to a talent bazaar November 6<lb/>
10:00-7:00.<lb/>
Multi-media group exhibition, School<lb/>
nf Art faculty ECU, November 9 through<lb/>
NovemT'Si. 1975 Opening rec.pt.on<lb/>
Sunday November 9, 3 to 5p.m. at The<lb/>
Hnes Gallery, Rocky Mount Arts and<lb/>
Crafts Center, Rocky Mount, N.C.<lb/>
Gotten square dance<lb/>
Cotten Hall is sponsoring a square<lb/>
dance Tues Nov. 11, in the parking lot<lb/>
beside Spill man at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jerome Power, a professional caller<lb/>
will be there. Everyone is invited.<lb/>
SGAonj<lb/>
? M<lb/>
fV.H I<lb/>
list<lb/>
All presidents of honorary, social and<lb/>
organizational groups please contact the<lb/>
SGA as soon as oossible. Mendenhall or<lb/>
7S&amp;-6611, ext. 218. We are compiling a<lb/>
lis'of organizations and their presidents<lb/>
or the purpose of a Presidents Forum.<lb/>
Go to France<lb/>
Girls interested in going to France on<lb/>
the "Au Pair" plan of living with a French<lb/>
family are urged to attend a meeting Oct.<lb/>
30 at 7:00 p.m. in Brewster Building,<lb/>
room 307.<lb/>
Suiotiillio dub<lb/>
There will be a Sociology and<lb/>
Anthropology Club meeting Monday<lb/>
afternoon, Nov. 3 at 4:30 in Brewster,<lb/>
D-302. All sociology and anthropology<lb/>
majors and minors and any persons<lb/>
interested are invited to attend.<lb/>
The Student Nurses' Association <lb/>
meet Tuesday night, November 4, at 7<lb/>
in Room 101 of the Nursing Building.<lb/>
Guest speaker will be Dr. Edwin<lb/>
Cooper, an orthopedic surgeon, to sp<lb/>
on rehabilitation after spinal cord inju<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha<lb/>
The regular monthly meeting of<lb/>
Alpha Eta Chapter of Alpha Beta Al<lb/>
(Library Science Fraternity) will be heli<lb/>
the student lotinoe in the Library Scie<lb/>
Department of Joyner Library at 5 p<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 11.<lb/>
All members and pledges<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
RAP One<lb/>
The Pitt County Health Departm3<lb/>
announces a temporary change<lb/>
schedule for their weekly PAP Clinic h<lb/>
?very Wednesday in Greenvlle. No cli<lb/>
will be held for one month from Octo<lb/>
15 through November 12th. The P<lb/>
Clinic will resume as a regula<lb/>
scheduled clinic every Wednesc<lb/>
beginning November 19Mh.<lb/>
Wresting Tournament Recreation Comnitl<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 begw at 11:30 at the<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi house on Hooker Road.<lb/>
All are welcome.<lb/>
Anyone interested in applying f(<lb/>
position on the Mendenhall Stm<lb/>
Union Recreation Committee may picl<lb/>
applications at the information desl<lb/>
Mendenhall or from the secretary at<lb/>
committee offices in Mendenhall. E<lb/>
available positions are open to tr<lb/>
interested.<lb/>
9<lb/>
P<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mwvmmmwwm<lb/>
P$<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00040001_0029"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>