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<pb facs="00040004_0001"/>
Fountainhead<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
VOL. 7, NO. 18<lb/>
11 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
SGA votes for Cannon's removal<lb/>
By JrM ELLIOTT<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
Legislature Monday passed a resolution<lb/>
calling for the removal of Greenville<lb/>
Police Chief E. Glenn Cannon.<lb/>
The legislature passed with one<lb/>
negative vote the conclusions and<lb/>
recommendations of the SGA sponsored<lb/>
Joint Executive-Legislative Committee on<lb/>
the Downtown Greenville Disturbance of<lb/>
October 31, 1975.<lb/>
SGA Legislator and committee<lb/>
member Mike Cunningham told the<lb/>
legislature that the committee had<lb/>
reached its conclusions after having<lb/>
reviewed 39 eye-witness statements of<lb/>
students, and written and oral statements<lb/>
from the Greenville Police Chief, City<lb/>
Manager, other city and campus officials,<lb/>
and eight downtown merchants whose<lb/>
businesses sustained damage during the<lb/>
Dr. Best<lb/>
trial<lb/>
begins<lb/>
By TOM TOZER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
The trial of Dr. Andrew A. Best,<lb/>
charged with six counts of illegally<lb/>
dispensing controlled substances, began<lb/>
yesterday morning in Pitt County<lb/>
Superior Court, Greenville.<lb/>
The indictment against Best, an ECU<lb/>
Trustee and a member of the state<lb/>
Human Relations Board, charged that he<lb/>
sold or delivered a controlled substance<lb/>
"not within the normal course of his<lb/>
professional practice" to undercover<lb/>
State Bureau of Investigation (SBI)<lb/>
agents.<lb/>
The incidents allegedly occurred<lb/>
between Feb. 4, and March 25, 1975.<lb/>
Sidney S. Eagles Jr special deputy<lb/>
attorney general in charge of the division<lb/>
which assist local prosecutors, was<lb/>
called in to assist District Attorney Eli<lb/>
Bloom of Greenville in presenting the<lb/>
state's case.<lb/>
In jury selection proceedings that<lb/>
lasted from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m a<lb/>
mixed racial jury of seven women and<lb/>
five men was finally seated. Two<lb/>
Halloween melee.<lb/>
The committee's findings as related to<lb/>
the legislature were as follows:<lb/>
1 The Chief of Police did not attempt to<lb/>
notify the ECU campus officials, either<lb/>
administrative or student, before he<lb/>
ordered the use of tear gas and arrest.<lb/>
He did not make any effort to contact<lb/>
ECU officials to prevent the disturbance,<lb/>
even though he should have anticipated<lb/>
the trouble because of past incidents<lb/>
similar to the one of October 31, 1975.<lb/>
2. The way in which the police acted<lb/>
during the disturbance demonstrates that<lb/>
no prior instructions were given on how<lb/>
to control the situation peacefully.<lb/>
3 Preparation made prior to Friday night<lb/>
indicate that the Chief of Police was<lb/>
expecting violence and prepared for the<lb/>
worst, and made no effort to prevent the<lb/>
injuries of the people downtown, and his<lb/>
own men, or the destruction of property.<lb/>
4 The Chief of Police made no effort to<lb/>
give adequate warning to the groups of<lb/>
people scattered throughout various<lb/>
sections of the downtown area, or to<lb/>
inform them in advance that he<lb/>
considered the blocking of traffic "a<lb/>
riotous situation" and that the groups<lb/>
were in violation of the law and subject<lb/>
to the actions he later implemented.<lb/>
5. The majority of the people involved,<lb/>
unaware of the order to disperse, learned<lb/>
of the intentions of police only after<lb/>
police used "Pepper Fog And, while<lb/>
that device was used to clear persons<lb/>
from the streets and the downtown area<lb/>
without resorting to mass arrest, no<lb/>
adequate "avenue of dispersement" was<lb/>
given through which the crowd could<lb/>
escape the gas and also avoid arrest.<lb/>
DR. ANDREV A ESTECU Trustee, is being tried In Pitt County Superior Court for<lb/>
the alleged sale of "controlled substances"<lb/>
alternate jurors were also selected in<lb/>
case one of the regular 12 jurors should<lb/>
fall out during the trial.<lb/>
The two alternates, one man and one<lb/>
woman, will sit with the jury throughout<lb/>
testimony and hear the entire case but<lb/>
will not decide in the verdict unless one<lb/>
of the regulars steps down<lb/>
Chief defense attorney, Marvin Blunt,<lb/>
made it clear to all prospective jurors<lb/>
that the state must prove "guilt beyond a<lb/>
reasonable doubt Blunt instructed the<lb/>
prospective jurors that should the state<lb/>
not prove Best's guilt beyond a<lb/>
reasonable doubt it is their moral<lb/>
obligation to render a not guilty verdict.<lb/>
After opening statements by both the<lb/>
state prosecution, the defense attorney,<lb/>
and jury selection, the state swore in<lb/>
four witnesses. The state opened its<lb/>
prosecution with testimony from SBI<lb/>
undercover agents. They were cross<lb/>
examined by the defense attorney Blunt.<lb/>
Best, a prominent black physician,<lb/>
was a charter member of the Pitt<lb/>
Interracial Council in 1961 and was<lb/>
appointed to the State Good Neighbor<lb/>
Council by former Governor Terry<lb/>
Sanford. He was also reappointed to the<lb/>
20 member Human Relations Commis-<lb/>
sion Governor James E. Holshouser<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
The i al will continue Tuesday in<lb/>
Superior Court, Judge Bradford Tillery of<lb/>
Wilmington presiding.<lb/>
Pitt Hospital link-up a,<lb/>
010<lb/>
By KENNETH CAMPBELL<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine is<lb/>
currently preparing for extensive faculty<lb/>
recruitment since its affiliation agreement<lb/>
with Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
(PCMH) was approved by the Educational<lb/>
Planning, Policies and Programs commit-<lb/>
tee of the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors, Monday, Nov.<lb/>
nil! nil WW1 IlllUHMl I<lb/>
"The administration of the School of<lb/>
Medicine is pleased that the affiliation<lb/>
agreement with the hospital has been<lb/>
completed and approved said William<lb/>
E. Laupus, Dean of the ECU Med<lb/>
School.<lb/>
We are especially pleased that all<lb/>
conditions for allocation of capital<lb/>
improvement funds have been met and<lb/>
the faculty can now turn to the next<lb/>
order of activity which is extensive<lb/>
faculty recruitment.<lb/>
The planning committee will recom-<lb/>
ment the affiliation agreement to the full<lb/>
board of governors on Nov. 14.<lb/>
The Board of Governors is the basic<lb/>
group responsible for supervision of all<lb/>
educational programs in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina school systems, said<lb/>
The agreement provides for PCMH to<lb/>
be the primary teaching facility of the<lb/>
med school.<lb/>
See Hospital, page 6.<lb/>
6. The underlying cause of the confusion,<lb/>
panic, injuries and damage which marked<lb/>
Friday night was the lack of<lb/>
professionalism shown by those who<lb/>
were supposed to be in command of the<lb/>
serious police actions.<lb/>
7. The Chief of Police misjudged the<lb/>
intentions of the people and their actions<lb/>
in calling the situation a riotous one. His<lb/>
viewpoint from the start was a negative<lb/>
one, and the plan of action he chartered<lb/>
for his men was never meant to avert the<lb/>
use of tear gas and mass arrest<lb/>
8. The Chief of Police by misjudging the<lb/>
situation andor preferring to send his<lb/>
men into action before he had a clear<lb/>
perspective of the complete situation,<lb/>
caused what had been several separate<lb/>
groups of people to act in common<lb/>
defense against the arbitrary arrests and<lb/>
use of tear qas.<lb/>
See SGA, page 6.<lb/>
Rights<lb/>
reviewed<lb/>
By PAT COYLE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Members of the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union (ACLU) discussed the<lb/>
legal and social implications of the<lb/>
disturbance and subsequent arrests<lb/>
Halloween night at their meeting<lb/>
Wednesday, Nov. 1.<lb/>
Included in the approximately 50<lb/>
people attending the meeting were, in<lb/>
addition to ACLU members, several of<lb/>
those taken into custody, plus interested<lb/>
persons from the campus and com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Chapter Vice-Chairman Donovan<lb/>
Phillips opened the floor to comments<lb/>
from those attending. Several people,<lb/>
including the arrest victims, gave<lb/>
accounts or wnat happened Halloween as<lb/>
they saw it. Interspersed with these<lb/>
accounts were comments from interested<lb/>
Greenvillians on the constitutionality of<lb/>
the arrests and tear-gassing.<lb/>
According to one citizen, her daughter<lb/>
was dancing in a downtown nightclub<lb/>
when the permeating teargas forced her<lb/>
to leave. "It is our responsibility to see<lb/>
that our children and all of the young<lb/>
people in Greenville are not hassled just<lb/>
for having a good time she said.<lb/>
One arrest victim, a worker for the<lb/>
Pitt County Mental Health Association<lb/>
said he was heading home after a<lb/>
Halloween party at The Way ministry,<lb/>
when he was taken into custody. "I teach<lb/>
retarded adults; they depend on me.<lb/>
have no idea how much time I'M miss<lb/>
while I go to court he said.<lb/>
ACLU members expressed their desire<lb/>
to act on behalf of those arrested. In<lb/>
addition to the possibility of legal aid,<lb/>
action through the Greenville City<lb/>
Council was discussed, and the<lb/>
formation of a civilian review board was<lb/>
suggested, with the board functioning<lb/>
not only to resolve legal and social<lb/>
repercussions of the present situation,<lb/>
but also to formulate some means of<lb/>
preventing this sort of incident from<lb/>
recurring.<lb/>
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F0UNTAINHEADV0L. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
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EditortalsCommentary<lb/>
SGA break considered<lb/>
For the last few years the Publications Board on campus has<lb/>
taken its licks from the Student Government Association when<lb/>
budget making time came around.<lb/>
But, this year's axe murder may have been the cat fish<lb/>
needed to get the Pub Board working on a plan to take care of<lb/>
themselves, without the "help" of the SGA.<lb/>
The Pub Board, immediately following last week's setbacks<lb/>
on the floor of the SGA, held a short impromptu meeting at<lb/>
which time it was decided that the Pub Board would initiate a<lb/>
study to investigate the possibilities of the campus publications<lb/>
breaking away from the SGA, financially that is.<lb/>
Such a break-away arrangement would be similar to the<lb/>
Student Union on campus which is solely independent of the<lb/>
SGA. The Union is guaranteed a set amount of money per<lb/>
student per guarter so it operates its own budget, free of SGA<lb/>
harassment and politicking.<lb/>
Unfortunately the Publications on campus must go, hat in<lb/>
hand, to the SGA each Fall and literally beg for cperations<lb/>
money.<lb/>
So, in the wake of the last axing by our legis'ators, the Pub<lb/>
Board is checking into the possibilities of t.ie Publications<lb/>
going the same way as the Union did a few years back-free of<lb/>
the SGA.<lb/>
It is a bold step, a step that should not be taken lightly but<lb/>
we feel it is a necessary step if the Publications on this campus<lb/>
are going to be allowed room to grow and prosper, as we are<lb/>
jure most of the student body wants.<lb/>
Going independent would give the Publications complete<lb/>
freedom for the most part to budget as they feel the need<lb/>
tonot as some appropriations committee that knows nothing<lb/>
about publications wants to budget. And, with such a program<lb/>
the publications could make some long range plans, longer than<lb/>
the nine months we are currently budgeted for.<lb/>
At the same time Publications could directly tie their own<lb/>
ability to grow into their own ability to improve the product and<lb/>
sell it. Fountainhead this year has a projected advertising<lb/>
income of 2 12 times what it was last year and some paper<lb/>
officials feel that the ad revenue could grow much higher, to at<lb/>
least $40,000 by next year.<lb/>
Under present SGA law this money reverts to the SGA<lb/>
general fund and the only chance that the money will find its<lb/>
way back to the publication that made that money is a<lb/>
"promise" by the SGA that they will take this ad revenue amount<lb/>
into consideration next year when the budget is made out.<lb/>
Oh boy.<lb/>
If we do a real good job the SGA might, just might, let us<lb/>
have some of the money that we made back-next year.<lb/>
Approximately one half of the student newspapers in the<lb/>
country are financed independently of their student government<lb/>
association. And, while admittedly there are some problems<lb/>
with this system, it is most assuredly a better one than having<lb/>
to play "patty-cake" with the SGA each Fall.<lb/>
No doubt it will take some time, years we would guess, for<lb/>
publications to get the independence they seek. But, at least<lb/>
this year's Pub Board has seen the necessity to follow that<lb/>
course.<lb/>
I DUMJO - YOU!<lb/>
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Representative good idea<lb/>
Sometimes it is hard to find any good to make out of certain<lb/>
situations like the incident last Friday night in downtown<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
But, maybe there is a chance that something good might be<lb/>
made out of the mess created by both students and local police.<lb/>
For some time the idea of having an ECU student serve as the<lb/>
representative from the student body to the Greenville City<lb/>
Council. The status of this student would be that of observer for<lb/>
the student body who could hopefully provide the city fathers<lb/>
with some student insight into various city problems that affect<lb/>
the university population.<lb/>
Such an idea has been kicked around and even attempted<lb/>
before but at the present time it is still in a state of limbo.<lb/>
Right now, in the wake of the trouble of a week ago, we<lb/>
can't think of a better idea than to have some type student<lb/>
representation on the city council.<lb/>
This is not to say that if there had been a student sitting in<lb/>
on the governmental unit that the incident could have been<lb/>
avoided. Possibly nothing could have avoided the confrontation<lb/>
Every meeting that local governmental unit makes decisions<lb/>
that greatly affect the some 5,500 on campus population of the<lb/>
university and the estimated 3,000-4,000 other students who live<lb/>
in the immediate Greenville area. Yet, for the most part, few of<lb/>
the students can vote in local elections. They represent a large<lb/>
part of the city population but they swing very little influence.<lb/>
Some type representation is needed-now more than ever.<lb/>
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without<lb/>
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to<lb/>
prefer the latter<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief-Mike Taylor Thomas Jefferson<lb/>
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer<lb/>
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant<lb/>
Production Manager- Sydney Green<lb/>
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson<lb/>
News Editor-Jim Elliott<lb/>
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tise<lb/>
Features Editor-Jim Dodson<lb/>
Sports Editor-John Evans<lb/>
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the school year.<lb/>
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309<lb/>
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.<lb/>
The<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
WHH�IWiHliniilliiiM<lb/>
3<lb/>
TheForum<lb/>
Column draws fire<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The article you wrote in the<lb/>
Fountainhead for 5 Nov. 1975, not only<lb/>
showed your lack of judgement, but<lb/>
obviously a narrow-minded attitude. It is<lb/>
most obvious to those of us who had<lb/>
personal encounters with the Greenville<lb/>
Police, esp. Chief Cannon, or Gleni"<lb/>
Gannon, as you so ignorantly put it. He<lb/>
only stated a few times, that the trouble<lb/>
was not with the ECU students, but<lb/>
outsiders as well were involved. He never<lb/>
once has acted like you so crudely<lb/>
attempted to portray him. You tried to<lb/>
make him appear as a hayseed, just<lb/>
another ignorant person. Well, let me tell<lb/>
you buster, you are the ignorant one. The<lb/>
police acted with calmness, and dignity.<lb/>
If I only had a penny for those students<lb/>
who remarked how they were "Gonna<lb/>
raise hell, and tear up downtown again<lb/>
this Halloween I too was there, but not<lb/>
in the midst of the crowd. In Jock's as<lb/>
well as a few other places, they<lb/>
announced not to go outside, there was<lb/>
a disturbance. Maybe a few who said<lb/>
they were just innocently watching,<lb/>
hadn't been brought up to stay away<lb/>
from trouble, not to run to it, and only<lb/>
add to the confusion. I just am trying to<lb/>
say you'd better think twice when you<lb/>
write such slander, and harsh statements<lb/>
about someone its only OBVIOUS that you<lb/>
don't know. Try putting yourself in Chief<lb/>
Glen Cannon's position, and see how<lb/>
you'd like it if some fool like JIM<lb/>
DODSON didn't have anything better to<lb/>
do than waste paper with some obsolete<lb/>
article.<lb/>
If you students, yes this includes you<lb/>
JIM DODSON, don't like Greenville, then<lb/>
LEAVE!<lb/>
A Concerned ECU Student!<lb/>
Student disagrees with<lb/>
Dodson column on Chief<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I just read the article called "Off the<lb/>
Cuff It was a disgrace, but mainly to its<lb/>
author. I remember a run in I had with<lb/>
Chief Cannon. He was nothing, but<lb/>
calm, considerate, and collect. I have had<lb/>
many run-ins with the city police, and<lb/>
they too were the same way.<lb/>
I tried to put myself in Chief Cannon's<lb/>
place, how would I feel if I'd read that<lb/>
article? Not too bad, cause anyone who<lb/>
reads this article, (don't bother if you<lb/>
haven't done so,) it's not worth your<lb/>
time, nor the paper it was printed on, can<lb/>
tell that the author, Jim Dodson, only<lb/>
makes fun of subjects he knows little or<lb/>
nothing about.<lb/>
People should realize that anytime<lb/>
people gather and do nothing but stand<lb/>
in the streets antagonizing the police and<lb/>
only gathering with the intent of causing<lb/>
trouble what to expect.<lb/>
I too realize that the unfortunate ones<lb/>
who were arrested were probably not the<lb/>
guilty ones, the ones who broke the<lb/>
windows probably ran. I happened to be<lb/>
leaving downtown, or trying to, and I'll<lb/>
admit I heard the warning, which made<lb/>
Taylor's<lb/>
efforts cited<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Just a note to say thanks to Diane<lb/>
Taylor for the job she did organizing the<lb/>
memorial for Coach Stas. I was<lb/>
disappointed in the turnout but that was<lb/>
no fault of Ms. Taylor's. She did the<lb/>
student body a service by putting this<lb/>
program together and deserves our heart<lb/>
felt thanks for a job well done.<lb/>
A friend from the<lb/>
Athletic Department<lb/>
me aware that I'd better leave, in a hurry.<lb/>
Those who stayed got exactly what they<lb/>
deserved.<lb/>
The whole point I'm trying to reach is<lb/>
that when Jim Dodson i wrote the<lb/>
article, he should nave tried to put<lb/>
himself in Chief Cannon's position.<lb/>
Nothing but an apology, written to<lb/>
Cannon would be appropriate. But since<lb/>
Dodson only writes worthless trash, he<lb/>
probably wouldn't know how.<lb/>
Sign me,<lb/>
Frances Howard.<lb/>
Dodson column<lb/>
off base<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Are you crazy? You expect the police<lb/>
to protect us, the ECU students, and you<lb/>
write such an article.<lb/>
I realize you tried to be "cute, or<lb/>
funny You only showed yourself. Never<lb/>
once have I ever heard anyone knock<lb/>
Chief Cannon, only commend him. Yet,<lb/>
you try to make him look like a mean,<lb/>
communist. It only proved your<lb/>
ignorance.<lb/>
Boycott Greenville merchants. They<lb/>
are the ones who support the Pirates<lb/>
Club, etc. You'll only hurt ECU.<lb/>
I heard Chief Cannon remark it was<lb/>
outsiders as well as ECU students. No<lb/>
wonder UNC and NCSU knock ECU,<lb/>
they have every right, for fools like you<lb/>
who write such stuff. You had your<lb/>
choice of colleges, if you don't like<lb/>
Greenville, GET THE HELL OUT, but<lb/>
don't slander and knock a citizen, Chief<lb/>
Cannon, who's trying to protect you. Jim<lb/>
Dodson, you really showed YOUR ASS,<lb/>
not Chief Cannon.<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Mark Johnston<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Dodson article attacked<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
I. like many other people, went<lb/>
downtown Fri. nite, with the intent of<lb/>
having fun; we didn't wish anyone harm.<lb/>
But the letter, or article I read in the 4<lb/>
Nov. 75 issue "Off the Cuff" was<lb/>
uncalled for. I did hear a large no. of<lb/>
people rant and rave how they'd probably<lb/>
tear down Greenville on Halloween. What<lb/>
for? What good would that do them or<lb/>
anyone else? I can see the costumes, I<lb/>
wore one, but not the bottles, bricks,<lb/>
etc. But, the article was written in poor<lb/>
taste. Anyone who knows anything<lb/>
should know that article was intended as<lb/>
a joke, but appeared to be a joke on the<lb/>
author JIM DODSON. Too bad he doesn't<lb/>
know enough to write a good, sensible<lb/>
article. I can see why other schools<lb/>
bad-mouth ECU, because their own<lb/>
newspaper can't do anything but cut<lb/>
down someone who tries to help them.<lb/>
Why don't you realize Chief Cannon, not<lb/>
Forum policy<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD invites all readers to ex-<lb/>
press their opinions in the Forum. Letters<lb/>
should be signed by their author's;<lb/>
names will be withheld on request Un-<lb/>
signed editorials on this pegs and on the<lb/>
editorial pegs reflect the opinions of the<lb/>
editor, and are not necessarily those of<lb/>
the staff<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEAD reserves the right to re-<lb/>
fuse printing in instances of libel or<lb/>
obscenity, and to comment as an<lb/>
independent body on any and all<lb/>
issues. A newspaper is objective only in<lb/>
proportion to its autonomy.<lb/>
only supports ECU, with N.C. state taxes<lb/>
but thinks enough of ECU to send his<lb/>
own child here! You'd better think twice<lb/>
before you write such rotten, cruel<lb/>
statements about a concerned person.<lb/>
A Local Student!<lb/>
Stickers leek<lb/>
cless<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
A bumper sticker that reads "ECU 38 -<lb/>
UNC 17" has no "class Period. Nobody<lb/>
is happier over the win than myself. I<lb/>
was at Kenan Stadium on that fine<lb/>
Saturday and loved every second of it,<lb/>
but I'll be damned if I'll display a bumper<lb/>
sticker with the game score. Those<lb/>
bumper stickers make it look like that<lb/>
game was the best thing that's ever<lb/>
happened to us - ever. Sure, it was sweet,<lb/>
but be subtle about it. Don't make it<lb/>
seem like it was a big-time win for a<lb/>
small-time school. When State or<lb/>
anybody else beats Carolina they don't<lb/>
advertise it like it was a miracle or<lb/>
something; they hold a cockey head and<lb/>
bask in the rays of victory, and then turn<lb/>
to the next game. Why can't we do the<lb/>
same? Coach Dye said .hat in order to be<lb/>
a winning football team we have to show<lb/>
"class" both on and off the field. The<lb/>
Pirates have shown "class" on the field.<lb/>
As students let's show some "class" off<lb/>
the field - bury those bumper stickers.<lb/>
Mover<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
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With resolution<lb/>
SGA overstepped authority<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
The resolution enacted by the SGA,<lb/>
"A Resolution To Be Entitled: What<lb/>
Happened on October 31, 1975 is very<lb/>
disturbing to us. We feel that such an<lb/>
investigation, conducted by the Student<lb/>
Government, by students, will only result<lb/>
in more confusion, and a greater<lb/>
separation between the citizens of<lb/>
Greenville, and the University Com-<lb/>
munity.<lb/>
Assistant Dean of Student Affairs, Mr.<lb/>
C.C. Rowe, summed it up quite well<lb/>
when he stated in the November 4 issue<lb/>
of Fountainhead: "When students go<lb/>
downtown they are private citizens<lb/>
What kind of authority does the SGA feel<lb/>
it has? This is not Watergate. The SGA<lb/>
should not appoint some "Special<lb/>
Committee" to investigate "downtown<lb/>
Tyndall<lb/>
position<lb/>
attacked<lb/>
Dear Mr. Tyndall:<lb/>
I think you have done many students<lb/>
at ECU a great dishonor by saying that<lb/>
ECU should have been named a<lb/>
Children's College. The majority of<lb/>
students here work hard to achieve good<lb/>
academic standards, and are very serious<lb/>
in their studies. They work hard all week<lb/>
long at these studies, and wfien the<lb/>
weekend comes, they deserve the time to<lb/>
take a break and enjoy themselves<lb/>
downtown. Halloween is one occasion<lb/>
that the students look forward to because<lb/>
of the masquerade parties that take<lb/>
place. Tell me you've never heard of<lb/>
parents who attend masquerade parties.<lb/>
Why then, is it immature for the students<lb/>
to attend them, and you condemn the<lb/>
students, yet not the parents?<lb/>
I really don't think the students at<lb/>
ECU care what UNC and N.C. State<lb/>
students say about them. What makes<lb/>
them so much better than ECU students?<lb/>
Certainly not the fact that they attend<lb/>
"top universities ECU has everything<lb/>
they have, plus a concerned student body<lb/>
who is concerned with what happened to<lb/>
their fellow students during this<lb/>
disturbance. Can other universities say<lb/>
the same?<lb/>
If you were to read all the articles<lb/>
written about the occurrence downtown<lb/>
last Friday night, you would find that it<lb/>
was not only ECU students involved, but<lb/>
many other people as well. Then why is<lb/>
the blame passed to the students?<lb/>
Especially, when no one really knows all<lb/>
the facts. You may feel that the students<lb/>
have regressed 100 years, but I feel that<lb/>
the students at ECU are a conscientious<lb/>
group of young people who work hard at<lb/>
their studies, and deserve some kind of<lb/>
recognition for their hard work, instead<lb/>
of this continuous put down.<lb/>
I do believe, Mr. Tyndall, that you<lb/>
owe an apology to the students at East<lb/>
Carolina Unviersity for your unjust<lb/>
accusations. Sjncefey<lb/>
Cindy Sue Frederick<lb/>
activities Contrary to what seems to be<lb/>
a popular belief, the SGA does not run,<lb/>
or even have any authority over, the<lb/>
government of the City of Greenville.<lb/>
From what we have read and heard,<lb/>
there seems to be some feeling that the<lb/>
city police over-reacted. We charge that<lb/>
the SGA is over-reacting to the<lb/>
aftermath. If the SGA wants to legally<lb/>
help, it should hire a professional<lb/>
investigator; or hire lawyers for those<lb/>
students who were unfortunately arrest-<lb/>
ed, and work through the legal system.<lb/>
Students have rightsbut responsi-<lb/>
bilities as well. It is true that perhaps the<lb/>
police over-reacted, but has anyone<lb/>
asked what gave them the reason to do<lb/>
so? We agree in part with the letter of<lb/>
DAVID WHITEHURST, published in the<lb/>
Novembei 6 issue of Fountainhead:<lb/>
"Because of Friday night, ECU has taken<lb/>
ten steps backwards in their strive to<lb/>
become a recognized academic univer-<lb/>
sity<lb/>
Before we all jump on the bandwagon<lb/>
of boycotts and Student Government<lb/>
investigations, let us step back for a<lb/>
moment and look at ourselves. We do<lb/>
have freedoms and rights enjoyed no<lb/>
where else in the world. Those rights and<lb/>
freedoms however, did not come from a<lb/>
"raise hell, party, party generation. We<lb/>
must accept our freedoms, and rights,<lb/>
with the mature convictions of respect<lb/>
for others, and a great deal of individual<lb/>
responsibility.<lb/>
The next time we "have a right to do<lb/>
something let us ask ourselves if that<lb/>
right could infringe on the "rights" of<lb/>
someone else.<lb/>
Robert Wayne Allen<lb/>
453 Jones Hall<lb/>
Gary Wayne Woody<lb/>
451 Jones Hall<lb/>
Police beatings cited<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Last Halloween an appalling thing<lb/>
happened in Greenville. Not only did it<lb/>
affect the students of East Carolina<lb/>
University but the citizens of Greenville<lb/>
as well. There were many offensive acts<lb/>
committed on that Friday night but the<lb/>
most unjust, and the least publicized,<lb/>
was the sadistic beatings committed by<lb/>
Student<lb/>
disagrees<lb/>
with Tyndall<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
m<lb/>
I don't know who Bob Tyndall is but I<lb/>
read his note in the Nov. 4 Fountainhead.<lb/>
In his note he said that ECU students<lb/>
were immature children, and that ECU<lb/>
should have been changed to Children's<lb/>
College. I assume he was basing this on<lb/>
the Halloween incident.<lb/>
From the figures I have read, there<lb/>
were only 500 people downtown that<lb/>
night and only 50 percent were ECU<lb/>
students. When you take 15,000 students<lb/>
and subtract that 250, I hardly think that<lb/>
250 is enough to base how mature our<lb/>
student body really is.<lb/>
Bob Tyndall must be the one who is<lb/>
immature, because any mature person<lb/>
who had looked at the figures would<lb/>
never write what he did about the ECU<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
I myself did not go downtown<lb/>
Halloween night, and I don't appreciate<lb/>
Tyndall including me in his letter. I<lb/>
would just like him to know that all<lb/>
14,750 students who were not involved<lb/>
do not appreciate his letter and he won't<lb/>
gain any friends by writing such letters.<lb/>
It's not easy to live with 14,750 enemies.<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
Frankie Gibson<lb/>
the Greenville police foice. Possibly there<lb/>
were some blows inflicted toward people<lb/>
who were resistina arrest or threatening<lb/>
the police. But I know there were several<lb/>
people who were beaten for no other<lb/>
reason other than the fact that they were<lb/>
at the wrong place at the wrong time.<lb/>
When I say beaten I mean maliciously<lb/>
with "billysticks" often incurring cuts<lb/>
that required several stitches. Can we let<lb/>
this go by without so much as a<lb/>
whimper? I am not a radical person nor<lb/>
am I easily upset, but the acts committed<lb/>
by "our" police force are repulsive to me.<lb/>
No one but the people who were<lb/>
beaten, and the witnesses, can do<lb/>
anything about these unjust acts. The<lb/>
rest of us can rant and rave and scream<lb/>
to the top of our lungs, but legally we<lb/>
are helpless. Please, if you were beaten<lb/>
by the police and there was no legal<lb/>
cause for their actions, do something<lb/>
about it. Do not sit back and let this<lb/>
happen, it could be a lot worse next<lb/>
time. There is free legal advice on<lb/>
campus-take advantage of it, or call the<lb/>
American Civil Liberties Union. Please,<lb/>
the rest of us are helpless, do not allow<lb/>
these Gestapo methods to be used in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Thank you,<lb/>
Police<lb/>
support<lb/>
chief<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
There has been a lot said about<lb/>
directions given by E.G. Cannon, Chief<lb/>
of Police, and conduct of Greenville<lb/>
Police officers during the recent<lb/>
Halloween night disturbance in Down-<lb/>
town Greenville.<lb/>
Many accusations and false state-<lb/>
ments have been made and untrue<lb/>
rumors started, even to the extent that<lb/>
the Chief of Police should and is going<lb/>
to resign from his position. We feel that<lb/>
his resignation would be an immeasur-<lb/>
able detriment to the City of Greenville.<lb/>
During his tenure of employment as<lb/>
Police Chief, employment standards and<lb/>
practices have been elecated and training<lb/>
standards and schools have been<lb/>
upgraded.<lb/>
We, the undersigned police employees,<lb/>
appreciate the job the Chief is doing and<lb/>
want to let the citizens of Greenville<lb/>
know that we back and support him.<lb/>
Nadine H. Bowen<lb/>
Randy M. Nichols<lb/>
Kanneth E. Thompson<lb/>
David L. Garrison<lb/>
John E. Ennis E.E<lb/>
Clifton E. Weatherington<lb/>
Peter E. Lavin, Jr.<lb/>
Robert D. Butelli<lb/>
Hugh J. Benson<lb/>
J.M. Simonowich<lb/>
David Ricky Best<lb/>
Kerry Dale Bowers<lb/>
James A. Moore<lb/>
L.J. Russell<lb/>
D.A. Jackson<lb/>
Cherry Tumage<lb/>
Douglas H. Ross<lb/>
Eulah R. McCracken<lb/>
Thelma S. Dove<lb/>
Clarence Jr. Warren<lb/>
James E. Hoover<lb/>
D.L. Crandle<lb/>
Robert L. Gorham<lb/>
Frank J. Konkle<lb/>
J.A. Briley<lb/>
R.B. Elks<lb/>
Lawrencie Jackson<lb/>
Joseph J. Phillips<lb/>
Douglas M. Thurston<lb/>
M.W. Roope<lb/>
Charles M. Greene<lb/>
John E. Nichols<lb/>
Joseph R. Tripp<lb/>
J.L. Keer<lb/>
Ceasar Corbett, Jr.<lb/>
Arthur E. McAbee<lb/>
J.W. Corbett, Jr.<lb/>
Charles B. Landreth<lb/>
A.G. Whitaker<lb/>
W.H. Tripp<lb/>
Allen Heath<lb/>
Laugh inghouse<lb/>
J.E. Williams<lb/>
R.C. Thornton, Jr.<lb/>
W.A. Reid, Jr.<lb/>
H.L. Causey, Jr.<lb/>
L.V. Luttrell<lb/>
J.M. Alexander<lb/>
J.E. Linvill<lb/>
J.W. Guffey<lb/>
Delia Stubbs<lb/>
Audrey Strickland<lb/>
David R. Bullock<lb/>
Pat Bundy, Jr.<lb/>
Leon A. Darden<lb/>
R.R. Cotter<lb/>
C.H Stubbs<lb/>
R.A. Haislip III<lb/>
Roger Benton<lb/>
George E. Merritt, Jr.<lb/>
J.R. Lee<lb/>
Mary Bland<lb/>
P.L. Jewett<lb/>
James E. Allen<lb/>
Ted G. Pollard<lb/>
John Fleming<lb/>
E.J. Wallace, Jr.<lb/>
Emmanuel Tyndall<lb/>
Ronald M. Darden<lb/>
Gladys N. Lawson<lb/>
J.H. Tripp<lb/>
Ronald L. Clark, Jr.<lb/>
K.P. Stocks<lb/>
C.W. Mills<lb/>
Tyndall comments noted<lb/>
To Fountainhead:<lb/>
Here are a few words for super-<lb/>
sophisticate Mr. Bob Tyndall (Nov. 4<lb/>
issue), who thinks that college students<lb/>
wearing Halloween masks are immature<lb/>
children: I'm not forty years old and I<lb/>
don't intend to act like it. Life ain't easy,<lb/>
and I take every chance I can find to have<lb/>
a little fun. I really think it's great that<lb/>
college students can still get into<lb/>
Halloween. Maybe if a few more people<lb/>
would "lower" themselves by participat-<lb/>
ing in "childish" things once in a while,<lb/>
the world wouldn't be such an uptight<lb/>
u mm i imiiBH<lb/>
place. Halloween, Mr. Tyndall, has<lb/>
nothing to do with academic standards.<lb/>
You don't have to wear a solemn<lb/>
expression and horn-rimmed glasses 364<lb/>
nights out of the year to be a good<lb/>
student.<lb/>
Of yeah, Fountainhead, congratu-<lb/>
lations on excellent coverage of the<lb/>
happening Friday night. Especially<lb/>
commendable was J. Dodson's "Off the<lb/>
Cuff" exclusive. Good work, Dodson.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Wasn't Halloween a scream?<lb/>
Patsy Hinton<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
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5n Heath<lb/>
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Williams<lb/>
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Luttrell<lb/>
exander<lb/>
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Guffey<lb/>
Stubbs<lb/>
'ickland<lb/>
Bullock<lb/>
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Darden<lb/>
Cotter<lb/>
Stubbs<lb/>
lislip III<lb/>
Benton<lb/>
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R. Lee<lb/>
Bland<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
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SGA continued<lb/>
From page 2.<lb/>
9. The Chief of Police used the wrong<lb/>
strategy in attempting to control the<lb/>
situation, over-reacted with the use of<lb/>
force against mostly innocent people and<lb/>
allowed those few in the crowd who later<lb/>
acted violently to exploit the police's<lb/>
surprise actions. These few trouble-<lb/>
makers could not have hidden from<lb/>
police or gotten unwitting support from<lb/>
the crowds if the Chief of Police had not<lb/>
taken the people by surprise with his<lb/>
ANTI-RIOT tactics.<lb/>
10. The response of scattered groups of<lb/>
people to the police tactics, resulting in<lb/>
injury to some policemen and in property<lb/>
damage to stores, is not condoned but<lb/>
condemned as malicious, thoughtless<lb/>
and stupid. However, the impromptu<lb/>
violence of some was due to tne<lb/>
complete lack of control and supervision<lb/>
of the police by their commanders.<lb/>
11. The arrests of the majority of the<lb/>
people showed that the police treated<lb/>
them in sub-human fashion, detaining<lb/>
them on crowded buses for long hours,<lb/>
spraying already detained people with<lb/>
mace, using indiscriminate arrest<lb/>
powers, and unnecessary rorce. The<lb/>
attitude which filtered down from those<lb/>
in command was that the people werennot<lb/>
a part of the community and were not to<lb/>
be given any such consideration.<lb/>
12. The Chief of Police, by not exercising<lb/>
good judgement or foresight, turned a<lb/>
peaceful if revelous night into a violent<lb/>
confrontation between police and young<lb/>
people by failing to give adequate weight<lb/>
to less violent tactics. With little concern<lb/>
for control, proper communication or<lb/>
prior organization, he placed his men in a<lb/>
potentially dangerous situation. He put<lb/>
innocent young people's lives in jeopardy<lb/>
by his disregard for any crowd control<lb/>
procedure which would have .averted<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
13. A feeling of mistrust and disrespect<lb/>
now exists between the young people of<lb/>
Greenville and the civil authorities, due in<lb/>
great part to the negative attitude taken<lb/>
by some officials in high places of public<lb/>
trust, particularly the Chief of Police.<lb/>
The Joint Executive-Legislative Select<lb/>
Committee on the Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Disturbance of October 31, 1975,<lb/>
recommends:<lb/>
1. That the Greenville Chief of Police be<lb/>
removed and replaced by a person of<lb/>
high professional standards who believes<lb/>
in the use of preventive action and who<lb/>
has the respect of the entire community.<lb/>
2. That projects and activities begin as<lb/>
soon as possible which would improve<lb/>
the atmosphere of student-police<lb/>
relations and better their communication.<lb/>
The SGA should implement programs<lb/>
such as student participation in the<lb/>
day-to-day patrols and duties of local<lb/>
authorities and police-student seminar<lb/>
sessions, to accomplish these goals of<lb/>
better rapport.<lb/>
3. That all charges of failure to disperse,<lb/>
inciting to riot and related offenses be<lb/>
dropped against those arrested during<lb/>
the October 31st incident. Charges of<lb/>
assault, looting and vandalism which<lb/>
came or may come of the Friday night<lb/>
disturbance should remain and run their<lb/>
legal course.<lb/>
4. That the students of ECU have a post<lb/>
of ex-officio, non-voting membership on<lb/>
the Greenville City Council with speaking<lb/>
privileges.<lb/>
5. That the SGA conduct regular Legal<lb/>
Rights Sessions using a local legal firm<lb/>
to meet with students, answer questions<lb/>
�Mimini�.inimiiiiimimmni�M�lnnamniiHtmHMiimiMHlll<lb/>
318 Evans St. PH0NE: 752 " 381S<lb/>
(on the mall across from<lb/>
Central News and Coffmans)<lb/>
THE MUSHROOM GIFT SHOP<lb/>
ANNOUNCES ITS NEW LOCATION<lb/>
ON THE EVANS STREET MALL.<lb/>
THE CHRISTMAS SHOP<lb/>
IS NOW OPEN!<lb/>
Good things for Gentle People<lb/>
OPEN MONFRI. 11 - 7 SAT. 11 - 6<lb/>
l 'T T r t r r r r f r rrr r t rrr rr<lb/>
Buy a sandwich, fries L <lb/>
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questions correctly it �;<lb/>
you're a winner! 3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
560 Evans Street<lb/>
and keep the students informed of local,<lb/>
state and federal law.<lb/>
6. That, in order to avoid future student<lb/>
congestion in the downtown area, the<lb/>
Municipal ordinances concerning bever-<lb/>
age (e.g. beer) be re-evaluated for<lb/>
possible change to allow "beer on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
7. That this legislative body contact a<lb/>
private investigative agency for the<lb/>
purpose of uncovering the complete story<lb/>
Hospital<lb/>
Continued from page 2.<lb/>
The agreement is the result of several<lb/>
meetings between ECU med school<lb/>
officials, PCMH trustees, Pitt County<lb/>
Commissioners, Greenville physicians,<lb/>
members of the planning committee, and<lb/>
members of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina administration.<lb/>
State representation on the hospital's<lb/>
board of trustees was a major area of<lb/>
controversy according to PCMH Director<lb/>
Jack Richardson.<lb/>
Med School representatives asked for<lb/>
50 percent representation on the board of<lb/>
trustees, but the board offered 33 percent<lb/>
representation to the med school. In a<lb/>
compromise, the med school was given<lb/>
40 percent on the board.<lb/>
Therefore the agreement provides that<lb/>
three of the seven member executive<lb/>
committee of the hospital's board of<lb/>
trustees will be from the School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
Richardson listed five major provisions<lb/>
of the agreement.<lb/>
"The agreement guarantees local<lb/>
administrative control of the hospital<lb/>
said Richardson. He cited the 60-40<lb/>
representation provision as the major<lb/>
guarantee of local control.<lb/>
"The agreement also assures for an<lb/>
open medical staff policy, and it<lb/>
guarantees the rights and privileges of<lb/>
physicians said Richardson. "It<lb/>
provides for the state to assume<lb/>
of the evening of October 31, 1975.<lb/>
8. That this SGA call an emergency<lb/>
session on Monday, November 17, 1975,<lb/>
to evaluate the actions taken in response<lb/>
to the above recommendations. If the<lb/>
most important reoommendations are<lb/>
acted upon and decided cooperation<lb/>
shown in improving the now tense<lb/>
atmosphere surrounding this community,<lb/>
the SGA will consider partial restitution<lb/>
to individual merchants for property<lb/>
damage incurred.<lb/>
educational cost of operating the med<lb/>
school, and finally it assures that there<lb/>
will not be duplication in expensive<lb/>
administrative costs<lb/>
Three conditions must be satisfied<lb/>
before the med school can receive capital<lb/>
improvement funds, according to Laupus.<lb/>
There has to be a comprehensive<lb/>
health plan for changes in design of<lb/>
PCMH for purposes of education, an<lb/>
accreditation of PCMH, and the affiliation<lb/>
agreement.<lb/>
After approval of the affiliation<lb/>
agreement on Friday, Nov. 14, the board<lb/>
of Governors will begin allocating the<lb/>
needed funds, according to Laupus.<lb/>
Total state funds available to the med<lb/>
school for the 1975-76 school year total<lb/>
$21 million, according to Laupus. All<lb/>
totals are subject to change since they<lb/>
are based on architects' estimates.<lb/>
$550,000 has already been allocated<lb/>
for renovations of Ragsdale Dormitory.<lb/>
Other funds in the budget include<lb/>
$205,000 for purchasing the land at<lb/>
PCMH for where the med school will be<lb/>
constructed. Also included in the budget<lb/>
are $1,808,000 for planning, $650,000 for<lb/>
interim clinical and library facilities, and<lb/>
$4,800,000 for modification of PCMH.<lb/>
$3,820,000 is reserved for a bed tower<lb/>
which will be constructed at the hospital,<lb/>
$6,000,000 is reserved for basic<lb/>
educational facilities, and $1,667,000 is<lb/>
reserved for additional equipment.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1875<lb/>
7<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Greenville utilities studies growth<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BEST<lb/>
In an effort to comply with national<lb/>
goals established by Congressional law<lb/>
in 1972, the Greenville sewerage<lb/>
department is conducting a study of<lb/>
projected growth of the area, according<lb/>
to Charles Home, director of Greenville<lb/>
utilities.<lb/>
"The 201 plan, a comprehensive,<lb/>
detailed engineering study of Greenville<lb/>
sewerage facilities, will result in<lb/>
modifying the existing plant or<lb/>
constructing a new plant within the next<lb/>
three or four years said Home. "It<lb/>
includes any proposed additions or<lb/>
expansions for the future as well as how<lb/>
we intend to best serve the entire area.<lb/>
"A pre-requisite for grant funding by<lb/>
the Environmental Protection Agency<lb/>
(EPA) for any treatment facility<lb/>
improvements or additions is the<lb/>
submittal of that plant's 201 facilities<lb/>
plan said Wadie Lewis, superintendent<lb/>
of the Greenville Water and Sewer<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
"Olson and Associates engineering<lb/>
firm has been working on Greenville's 201<lb/>
plan for about a year now according to<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
"The plan is 85 per cent complete. It<lb/>
is supposed to be completed by March of<lb/>
1976, but it's difficult to determine<lb/>
exactly how long this study will take<lb/>
"The 201 plan will cost, at the<lb/>
maximum, $65,000 said Home.<lb/>
"Seventy-five per cent of this amount is<lb/>
provided by the federal government, 12<lb/>
112 per cent by the state, and 12 1 2 per<lb/>
cent comes from local funds<lb/>
"The federal government provides<lb/>
guidelines to follow in preparing the 201<lb/>
plan according to Lewis.<lb/>
"It will include eight chapters.<lb/>
"Chapter eight will offer alternatives<lb/>
to constructing a new plant, and until<lb/>
chapter eight is complete, we won't know<lb/>
whether constructing a new plant or<lb/>
upgrading the existing plant is the best<lb/>
solution. The EPA will make the final<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
"If we found that we needed to<lb/>
construct a new waste treatment plant,<lb/>
we would have to post and hold a public<lb/>
hearing said Lewis. "The federal and<lb/>
state agencies would also have to<lb/>
approve our plans.<lb/>
"We would then have to decide which<lb/>
type of treatment plant we needed<lb/>
The present plant was constructed in<lb/>
the early '9fXfs, according to Lewis.<lb/>
Until that time the water was returned to<lb/>
the river untreated.<lb/>
"The plant has been 100 per cent<lb/>
expanded said Lewis. "These ex-<lb/>
pansions were completed at the end of<lb/>
1972<lb/>
"Our present system is a trickle filter<lb/>
system said Boyd Connaway, chemical<lb/>
analyst at the sewerage plant.<lb/>
"We do our own tests on the water<lb/>
before and after it has undergone<lb/>
treatment to see if we have been<lb/>
effective said Connaway. "Then the<lb/>
water plant treats the water to make it<lb/>
safe and pure for the town<lb/>
"The Greenville sewage plant is<lb/>
designed for a hydraulic capacity of eight<lb/>
million gallons per day said Lewis. "We<lb/>
are not at full plant load, so there is<lb/>
room for growth.<lb/>
"There is a limit to the amount of<lb/>
wastes we can discharge into the river.<lb/>
The discharge limit is constantly<lb/>
changing, so we must keep up with these<lb/>
changes<lb/>
In order to eliminate the discharge<lb/>
completely, the water treatment plant<lb/>
plans to install equipment which would<lb/>
treat water returned to the river from the<lb/>
plant, according to Lewis.<lb/>
The cost of this equipment is<lb/>
estimated at $280,000. This estimate was<lb/>
prepared by Olson and Associates.<lb/>
"If we don't have any discharge, we<lb/>
won't need a discharge permit said<lb/>
Lewis. "The cost of maintaining a permit<lb/>
would be substantially greater than the<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
"This year's operation and main-<lb/>
tenance figure for the entire Grenville<lb/>
sewerage system is $686,800 said<lb/>
Lewis. "This figure includes administra-<lb/>
tive costs, utilities costs, building costs,<lb/>
and many other things as well as plant<lb/>
cost.<lb/>
"The amount budgeted for this year's<lb/>
capital improvements is $132,000. This<lb/>
includes analytical tests, laboratory<lb/>
improvements, new equipment, building<lb/>
improvements, and other additions in the<lb/>
way of service.<lb/>
"This year's capital project fund,<lb/>
which encompasses major expansions, is<lb/>
$1,047,960.<lb/>
"The bulk of this projected<lb/>
expenditure is for new sewage pumps<lb/>
and stations and to serve the new<lb/>
hospital - especially the Walter B. Jones<lb/>
Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center.<lb/>
"These are anticipated figures said<lb/>
Lewis. "They may or may not materialize.<lb/>
"The system for the hospital will take<lb/>
approximately 12 months to complete<lb/>
said Lewis.<lb/>
"Organic wastes help produce better<lb/>
crops.<lb/>
"In an effort to determine the net<lb/>
effects of these wastes upon crops, we<lb/>
send samples to the laboratories of North<lb/>
Carolina State University for analysis at<lb/>
three month intervals said Home.<lb/>
Greenville was cited last April by the<lb/>
EPA for not complying with federal<lb/>
standards. They were given X to 40 days<lb/>
to meet with the standards or pay a fine<lb/>
of $10,000 per day.<lb/>
"It was a problem of communication<lb/>
said Lewis.<lb/>
"EPA had told us to expand our<lb/>
chlorination facilities. We planned to add<lb/>
1000 to 1200 ft. of piping, a pressure<lb/>
pump, and a new chlorinator. We were<lb/>
proposing a $20,000 to $25,000 addition<lb/>
to chlorine facilities.<lb/>
"EPA thought we were only going to<lb/>
add a new chlorinator said Lewis.<lb/>
"Without any written communication or a<lb/>
phone call, we received an administrative<lb/>
order to have chlorine facilities installed<lb/>
within 30 to 40 days. We were in the<lb/>
process of getting price information on<lb/>
chlorine faciltiies at that time.<lb/>
"We hurriedly came to the conclusion<lb/>
that the installation of this new<lb/>
equipment was more important to EPA<lb/>
than we had thought.<lb/>
See Sewer System, page 19.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
n i muni i vmmititwijmim<lb/>
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<lb/>
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New conference<lb/>
center study planned<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
On October 13, the Greenville<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce and Merchants<lb/>
Association voted to request the<lb/>
Regional Development Institute to make a<lb/>
comparative study on the feasibility of<lb/>
building a conference center in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Under the terms of the request a<lb/>
conference center would be a facility with<lb/>
the capabilities of holding up to 750<lb/>
persons, with equal facilities to<lb/>
accomodate these persons overnight.<lb/>
The group's decision came after a<lb/>
two-year study on the subject. The same<lb/>
morning an ECU group also voted to<lb/>
approve such a study.<lb/>
A study similar to the one which the<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce is requesting was<lb/>
made two years ago by the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute, following a<lb/>
request by the Chamber to do so.<lb/>
Since the first study, there has been<lb/>
considerable debate concerning the<lb/>
proposed size of the meeting center.<lb/>
The Director of the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute, Tommy Willis,<lb/>
said the study in 1973 revealed that there<lb/>
was a need for a small meeting center in<lb/>
Greenville, but not for any sort of<lb/>
coliseum-convention center complex.<lb/>
"What we did in the 1973 study<lb/>
according to Willis, "was to contact a<lb/>
number of organizations in North<lb/>
Carolina to see if they would use such a<lb/>
building if it were built and, how often<lb/>
they would utilize it and how many<lb/>
people would be using it.<lb/>
"From the replies we received from<lb/>
these groups, which included raternal<lb/>
organizations as well as trade groups, it<lb/>
was determined that a facility for about<lb/>
750 persons was the best suited<lb/>
This finding virtually ruled out the<lb/>
possibility of the construction of a<lb/>
coliseum for Greenville, which could be<lb/>
used to supplement or replace Minges<lb/>
Coliseum.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum is owned by the<lb/>
university, but under the present<lb/>
agreement between the school and the<lb/>
city it has been used by the city in<lb/>
special instances.<lb/>
It was the opinion of many, including<lb/>
Daily Reflector Sports Editor Woody<lb/>
Peele and ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
that Minges is inadequate as a coliseum.<lb/>
But, according to Willis, there is no<lb/>
feasibility for such a facility to be built in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina. For that matter,<lb/>
added Willis, there was no possibility of<lb/>
a larger convention center being built.<lb/>
Willis explained the difference.<lb/>
"When we conducted the study we<lb/>
determined that approximately 750 was<lb/>
the size needed for the facility in<lb/>
Greenville. Any number above that, we<lb/>
decided, would tend to go to a more<lb/>
metropolitan area. We did not get enough<lb/>
response to show that a facility of over<lb/>
750 seats would be utilized<lb/>
Another problem pointed out by Willis<lb/>
concerned the availability of accomod-<lb/>
ations for anyone coming to Greenville<lb/>
for an overnight convention or<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
"One of the major problems<lb/>
concerning the building of such a facility<lb/>
is the number of places necessary to<lb/>
accomodate overnight visitors said<lb/>
Willis.<lb/>
In their decision to ask for another<lb/>
study the conference committee of the<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce used the<lb/>
convention center at Appalachian State<lb/>
University in Boone as an example for<lb/>
the type of facility to be constructed in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
According to Barry Rogers, who is the<lb/>
coordinator of the convention center at<lb/>
Appalachian, "It's not unusual to have a<lb/>
group of men with junior high educations<lb/>
in one room training for their job and to<lb/>
have a group of nuclear physicists across<lb/>
the hall discussing something like<lb/>
hydrogen bombs<lb/>
The ASU center provides motel<lb/>
facilities in addition to conference<lb/>
facilities. For this reason, the Greenville<lb/>
committee added to its proposal a<lb/>
special motion to include the study of<lb/>
hotel facilities for the center.<lb/>
According to Houston Tucker, the<lb/>
chairman of the Chamber's committee, a<lb/>
small motel center in the Greenville area<lb/>
would not upset the area commerical<lb/>
motels.<lb/>
Willis tended to agree with Tucker. In<lb/>
fact, he said that a conference center<lb/>
would be beneficial to the Greenville<lb/>
merchants as well.<lb/>
"It would help the city for bringing in<lb/>
revenue to the area. The figure we<lb/>
determined in 1973 was that it would<lb/>
being in $34 of added revenue per person<lb/>
into the city each day.<lb/>
"This would mean that a facility for<lb/>
750 persons would bring n a great deal<lb/>
of extra revenue to the city<lb/>
Many persons involved in the plan<lb/>
had hoped for a much larger facility to be<lb/>
looked into, such as a place where city<lb/>
athletic events, concerts, and con-<lb/>
ventions could be held. According to<lb/>
Willis, however, such a facility would not<lb/>
be feasible.<lb/>
"There is little feasibility in a<lb/>
coliseum-type operation said Willis.<lb/>
"You need to be a destination center of<lb/>
sorts. Besides, we have a coliseum and<lb/>
how many times have we filled it up?<lb/>
"The fact that Greenville is the home<lb/>
of East Carolina University makes it a<lb/>
small destination point, but the student<lb/>
groups are more apt to use the school<lb/>
facilities which are already in existence.<lb/>
However, with the medical school we<lb/>
figured it would bring more people to the<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"From these findings concluded<lb/>
Willis, "our study showed that a facility<lb/>
of 750 seat capacity, with a minimum of<lb/>
two rooms would be needed for a<lb/>
meeting place<lb/>
Willis said the center would help<lb/>
bring trade shows to Greenville, since the<lb/>
biggest conference center at this time<lb/>
seats only 300, and from these trade<lb/>
shows the city could become a bigger<lb/>
See New Center, page 17.<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/>
FLEA MARKET: Pitt County Fair<lb/>
Exhibit Hall. Open every Wed. 15, Sat.<lb/>
10 6. Come out and see how far your<lb/>
dollar will stretch.<lb/>
TYPING: Call L.H. Barnes, 756-0752.<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 nth. 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/>
QUAD RECEIVER Harmon Kardon<lb/>
(900 plus) 90 wts. p. ch. stereo, 40 wts. p.<lb/>
ch. quad. List $750. Excellent cond. 8 mo.<lb/>
old. $450. 758-5581.<lb/>
FOR SALE: One adult red tiger oscar<lb/>
and one 12" black shark. Former<lb/>
tankmates now incompatable. David<lb/>
Faber 946 2360 after 4.<lb/>
$100 WEEKLY possible addressing,<lb/>
mailing circulars for mail order firm.<lb/>
Send self addressed, stamped envelope;<lb/>
Barlow Enterprises Dept. TM, 16447<lb/>
ElCamino Real No. 4, Houston, 77058.<lb/>
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-5133.<lb/>
PRIVATE PARTIES Now is the time to<lb/>
book the Wildflower Club for Thanks-<lb/>
giving and Christmas parties. Plenty of<lb/>
parking, 6 12 miles from Greenville,<lb/>
building is 28' x 91 Phone 758 3079.<lb/>
QUAD RECEIVER Harmon Kardon<lb/>
(900 plus) 90 wts. p. ch. stereo, 40 wts. p.<lb/>
ch quad. List $750. Excellent cond. 8 mo.<lb/>
Old. $450. 758 4581.<lb/>
FOR SALE Yamaha FG i60 acousm<lb/>
guitar. Excellent condition. 758 1207.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Quad Receiver, Fisher 314,<lb/>
25 watts a channel at quad. 50 at stereo.<lb/>
$375. Stereo Receiver, Sansui 3000A, 50<lb/>
watts a channel. $175. 758-5359.<lb/>
STURGILL GUITAR Carolina 100 model.<lb/>
69th one made. W.case. $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/>
WANTED Part time janitorial<lb/>
supervisor. Hours: 6-10 p.m 5 nights a<lb/>
week. Prefer experience in janitorial<lb/>
supervision. Reply to 919 832-8861. Ask for<lb/>
Larry Clifton.<lb/>
WANTED 50 100 students part and full<lb/>
time work all hours. $2.00 per hour. Come<lb/>
by London Inn, room 300, for personal<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Refrigerator 11.5 cu. ft 2<lb/>
burner hot plate, 7x9 green rug.<lb/>
758 2390.<lb/>
Riggan Shoe Repair Shop<lb/>
6 Shoe Store<lb/>
Across from Blotint-Harvey Store<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
111 W. 4th Street<lb/>
Repair All Leather Goods<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
 . w-   �<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0009"/><lb/>
tm ttmu<lb/>
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wmmm<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
mmtmnt � m m � iwuiw i mu mi i i mi n<lb/>
9<lb/>
Poly Sci debates Marxism vs. Captialism<lb/>
By BETTY GUNTER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
About 150 persons attended the<lb/>
controversial debate on Marxism versus<lb/>
Captialism Wednesday night, Nov. 5.<lb/>
Dr. James Smith from the Political<lb/>
Science Department presented the<lb/>
marxism side as opposed to Dr.<lb/>
John East who represented the<lb/>
capitalists side.<lb/>
The debate began with each side<lb/>
being allowed ten minutes for an opening<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
"Around the year 2000 our children<lb/>
will be living under communism said<lb/>
Dr. East.<lb/>
"The key to this great secular Utopian<lb/>
vision is the truth has been found and<lb/>
thus this truth will be imposed upon<lb/>
you said East.<lb/>
East noted that the disturbing issue<lb/>
concerning this secular Utopia is "no<lb/>
one believes it is on the march<lb/>
East elaborated on this by saying<lb/>
even the news media refer to China as<lb/>
the "Peoples" Republic of China.<lb/>
Speaking for the marxism side Dr.<lb/>
Smith first stated that he was not a<lb/>
marxist.<lb/>
"To understand oneself and its<lb/>
context one must undertake a history of<lb/>
ideas said Smith.<lb/>
Commenting on marxism, Smith<lb/>
stated, "The central point of marxism is<lb/>
the meaning of human requirements<lb/>
Marx said, "One must act on the<lb/>
basis of self interest, not on the<lb/>
benevolence of others said Smith.<lb/>
According to Smith, Marx said, "Man<lb/>
has to believe in man, each person<lb/>
needs to bring himself to himself through<lb/>
the history of ideas<lb/>
The debate began when Dr. East<lb/>
questioned the fact that one can redeem<lb/>
oneself through history which marxism<lb/>
promises to do.<lb/>
"I do not believe anyone including<lb/>
Marx will or can totally redeem 'us' as a<lb/>
ECU students help Universidad<lb/>
Nacional baseball team<lb/>
HEREDIA, COSTA RICA - When a<lb/>
grop of East Carolina University students<lb/>
end their semester at Costa Rica's<lb/>
Universidad Nacional many Costa Rican<lb/>
friends will miss them, but none more<lb/>
than the university's baseball team.<lb/>
Six ECU students enrolled in the<lb/>
Central American study program spon-<lb/>
sored by the ECU Department of<lb/>
Geography joined the baseball team in<lb/>
July, and helped the team climb from<lb/>
last place in the league to fourth place.<lb/>
ECU geography professor Vernon<lb/>
Smith, who accompanied the ECU study<lb/>
group to Costa Rica, was elected coach<lb/>
after the team, with its new U.S.<lb/>
members, began to score some wins.<lb/>
The team's record had been one win<lb/>
and eight losses. Prof. Smith and the<lb/>
ECU players were large contributors to<lb/>
the 6-10 record the team compiled by the<lb/>
end of the season. From last place, the<lb/>
team ranked fourth in a six-team league.<lb/>
The league is in a division one level<lb/>
below the major Costa Rican baseball<lb/>
leagues.<lb/>
Altogether there were 22 players on<lb/>
the team:six from the U.S nine from<lb/>
Venezuela and seven from Costa Rica,<lb/>
representing each of the Costa Rican<lb/>
provinces.<lb/>
ECU members were Tom Hodgin of<lb/>
Greenville, David O'Neal of Clayton,<lb/>
Frank Evans of Raleigh, Scott Mitchell of<lb/>
Westfield, N.J Howard Albright of<lb/>
Morehead City and Tom Blinten of<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
Unfortunately the semester will end<lb/>
before the team goes on an international<lb/>
tour, and the U.S. students will have to<lb/>
return to ECU to begin the winter quarter.<lb/>
The Latin American players have unani-<lb/>
mously agreed that the close and friendly<lb/>
association with their teammates from<lb/>
the U.S. was more important than the<lb/>
actual number of wins and losses.<lb/>
Perhaps the next ECU student group<lb/>
scheduled to go to the Universidad<lb/>
Nacional next year will include jome<lb/>
equally skillful baseball players. At least<lb/>
the Costa Rican players of this "great<lb/>
American sport" are hoping for this!<lb/>
CROWS NEST<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
208 East 10th Street<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
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people said Dr. East.<lb/>
Responding to the statement on<lb/>
history redeeming people, Dr. Smith<lb/>
remarked that Marx built a truly human<lb/>
environment from history.<lb/>
"A sense of history can do a lot<lb/>
toward pointing out a nation's mistakes<lb/>
in the past said Dr. Smith.<lb/>
The debate became quite heated when<lb/>
members from the audience began to get<lb/>
involved in the issues.<lb/>
Dr. East was questioned on an earlier<lb/>
statement he had made stating that Marx<lb/>
in his works preaches racial hatred. The<lb/>
question asked was where in Marx's<lb/>
works is racial hatred mentioned?<lb/>
"Marx preaches class hatred in his<lb/>
works thus the real world would end up<lb/>
in racial hatred under this concept said<lb/>
Dr. East.<lb/>
Dr. Smith replied to East's reaction<lb/>
with a question, "Does this mean that in<lb/>
our society different races are in different<lb/>
classes?"<lb/>
The question ended on a comment<lb/>
SAAD'S<lb/>
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IMPORTED AND<lb/>
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SELECTION OF CHEESES<lb/>
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from a member of the audience stating<lb/>
that things should be put into context.<lb/>
That even the Declaration of Indepen-<lb/>
dence denoted hatred toward some<lb/>
things.<lb/>
Another question asked was why did<lb/>
Dr. East believe communism would<lb/>
control this country by the year 2000.<lb/>
"We have become selfish and our epic<lb/>
of individualism is almost to the point of<lb/>
nausea said Dr. East. "There is no<lb/>
resolve for a people who do not maintain<lb/>
a sense of duty and obligation. The<lb/>
American society is predicted on the<lb/>
individual. We can't develop moral fibers<lb/>
to survive individually or collectively<lb/>
The debate ended with Dr. Smith<lb/>
making the comment "that you can't tell<lb/>
one thing is better than another till you<lb/>
read information on both sides<lb/>
Both professors agreed that material<lb/>
on both capitalism and marxism needed<lb/>
to be read in order to be fair in<lb/>
discussion.<lb/>
Corner of 5th<lb/>
and Cotanche<lb/>
Are you looking for<lb/>
a place in the afternoon<lb/>
to sit around,<lb/>
watch television<lb/>
and drink a cold one?<lb/>
MARTY' S<lb/>
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in the afternoon,<lb/>
seven days a weekj<lb/>
THE HOME OF<lb/>
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10<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
F�4 7I7ES<lb/>
Greeks display spirit at<lb/>
Lambda Chi field day<lb/>
By WAYNE HILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
On Saturday, November 1, Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha sponsored its annual fall field<lb/>
day for Greek social fraternities and<lb/>
sororities. This year all greek organi-<lb/>
zations participated with the exception of<lb/>
one fraternity.<lb/>
No one knows for sure how long<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha field day has been<lb/>
held. But, the general concensus is the<lb/>
Lambda Chi's have been sponsoring the<lb/>
event in excess of ten years. This year<lb/>
Chi Omega sorority served as a<lb/>
co-sponsor for the field day.<lb/>
This years field day consisted of<lb/>
seven events They were: The<lb/>
backwards crab relay, the five-legged<lb/>
race, the sweat-pants relay, tug-of-war.<lb/>
and the obstacle course, which were all<lb/>
held at the field at the bottom of the<lb/>
campus hill. The final event, the beer<lb/>
drinking contest, was held at the Lambda<lb/>
Chi Alpha house.<lb/>
The general feeling among greeks is<lb/>
the field day is one of enjoyment and a<lb/>
festive mood where all greeks can get<lb/>
together. Kappa Sigma alumni Scott<lb/>
Rhodes presented these feelings when<lb/>
asked about Lambda Chi field day, "It<lb/>
promotes cooperation and good will<lb/>
among greeks Lee Atma, a Chi Omega,<lb/>
who was acting as coach for the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma team, remarked that she thought<lb/>
"It was fun because all the fraternities<lb/>
and sororities were there Dawn Hewett<lb/>
an Alpha Delta Pi said. "If you're in the<lb/>
events it takes a lot out of you Lucien<lb/>
Hutcherson noted that "I think it's<lb/>
exciting, and it beats watching cartoons<lb/>
on Saturday morning He then went<lb/>
further to probably sum up the feelings<lb/>
among many greeks when he said, "It<lb/>
shows a lot of enthusiasm onhe part, of<lb/>
the greek system at ECU "<lb/>
In the fraternity portion of the events<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau proved consistent when<lb/>
they edged out Kappa Sigma by one<lb/>
point Kappa Sigma took first place in<lb/>
four out of the seven events. But the Phi<lb/>
Tau's nudged them out by consistently<lb/>
finishing second and third in all events<lb/>
except one - the water balloon relay<lb/>
which they won.<lb/>
In the first event, the crab relay,<lb/>
Kappa Sigma took first with Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau second. This was an early indication<lb/>
of how the stage was to be set for the<lb/>
rest of the day. In the next event, Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau took their only first place<lb/>
finish with Delta Sigma Phi finishing<lb/>
second, their best finish of the day. The<lb/>
third event was the sweat pants relay<lb/>
with Kappa Sigma taking another first<lb/>
with Kappa Alpha finishing second. The<lb/>
fourth event was the five-legged race with<lb/>
Sicma Phi Epsilon finishing in its only<lb/>
first place position, with Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
finishing second. The tug-of-war was the<lb/>
next event and probably the closest of<lb/>
the day. Kappa Sigma taking its third<lb/>
place finish with the teams of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha and Phi Kappa Tau finishing<lb/>
second and third respectively. The last<lb/>
event to be held at the bottom of the hill<lb/>
was the obstacle course. In the obstacle<lb/>
course all the winning times were close<lb/>
with Joey Sanders of Kappa Sigma<lb/>
finishing first, giving Kappa Sigma four<lb/>
first place finishes.<lb/>
The last event ol the day was held at<lb/>
the Lambda Chi Alpha house, the event<lb/>
was the beer drinking contest. The rules<lb/>
of this contest were who could finish the<lb/>
most beers in fifteen minutes. Kappa<lb/>
Alpha won this one with nine beers and<lb/>
the Phi Taus finishing second to give<lb/>
them all the points they needed to win<lb/>
and nose out the Kappa Sigs by one<lb/>
point in the final tally.<lb/>
The final fraternity totals were: Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau 44, Kappa Sigma 43, Kappa<lb/>
Alpha 39, Tau Kappa Epsilon 15, Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon 10, Delta Sigma Phi 7, Sigma<lb/>
Nu 7, Pi Lambda Phi 3, Pi Kappa Phi 3.<lb/>
In the sorority portion Tri-Sigma crept<lb/>
to first place in a close race. It was a<lb/>
three way race between Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma, Alpha XI Delta, and Delta Zeta.<lb/>
ITS ALL IN A DAY'S work for this enthusiastic sister.<lb/>
The sorority division came down to the<lb/>
wire and was decided by the beer<lb/>
drinking contest. Cathy Walls of Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sigma won it by finishing first<lb/>
place in the beer drinking contest. The<lb/>
Alpha Xi's came in second in the beer<lb/>
drinking which also gave them second in<lb/>
the final point standings.<lb/>
The final sorority point standings<lb/>
were: Sigma Sigma Sigma 50, Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta 48, Delta Zeta 39, Kappa Delta 28,<lb/>
Mpha Delta Pi 16, Alpha Phi 13, and<lb/>
Alpha Omicron Pi 0.<lb/>
After it was all over there was a<lb/>
general feeiing that everybody had a<lb/>
good time at the biggest field day for<lb/>
Greeks during the year. <lb/>
EDITORS AT LARGE<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI field day finds<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
m � ii inuwttfi mm<lb/>
Phi Tau's all tied up in the heat of the<lb/>
By LYNN CAVERLY<lb/>
Features Writer<lb/>
The major reason for increased ad<lb/>
revenue for the Fountainhead this year is<lb/>
due to the enduring efforts of Mike<lb/>
Thompson, Advertising Manager, and his<lb/>
staff of hustling ad salesmen.<lb/>
"My ad salespeople, Mary Anne Vail<lb/>
and Clarissa Carowan, and even though<lb/>
he isn't with us anymore, Gary Wong,<lb/>
have really done a fantastic job. They<lb/>
have really gone out and sold ads this<lb/>
year. We already are on our way to<lb/>
tripling our ad revenue over last year's<lb/>
Mike is a senior from Rocky Mount,<lb/>
and is majoring in Marketing. He got his<lb/>
start on the Fountainhead in February of<lb/>
75 as an ad salesman. His job today<lb/>
entails generating the ad revenue and<lb/>
seeing that what has been paid for in ad<lb/>
space gets in each issue of the paper.<lb/>
Mike tries to keep on top of what<lb/>
happens around him, and in his spare<lb/>
time plays guitar, listens to music and<lb/>
enjoys reading current material. "Besides<lb/>
m<lb/>
trying to stay out of jail, I try to keep<lb/>
well informed and avoid complacency<lb/>
And to keep from being satisfied with the<lb/>
present so I can reach for higher goals<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0011"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
�?<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
IT<lb/>
iMHHWlfcl<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
FEA TURES<lb/>
Increasing services<lb/>
Birth control major campus issue<lb/>
By CYNTHIA CROSSEN<lb/>
(CPS)-College administrators used to<lb/>
think that if they did not provide birth<lb/>
control services on campus, female<lb/>
students would either stay celibate or go<lb/>
to a local clinic off campus. Either way,<lb/>
the university washed its hands of the<lb/>
whole morality question and avoided<lb/>
taking a stand on the right of college<lb/>
women to contraception and counselling.<lb/>
The federal legislation against sex<lb/>
discrimination known as Title IX may<lb/>
have changed all that and forced<lb/>
universities into the vanguard of family<lb/>
planning services. Although a require-<lb/>
ment to provide birth control devices is<lb/>
not included in the new Department of<lb/>
Health, Education and Welfare's reg-<lb/>
ulations, some women's groups claim<lb/>
that the implication is there.<lb/>
What Title IX does say is that any<lb/>
institution which receives any federal<lb/>
funds and "provides full coverage health<lb/>
service shall provide gynecological care<lb/>
But "gynecological care" does not<lb/>
necessarily imply distributing birth<lb/>
control devices. One spokeswoman for<lb/>
the Alan Guttmacher Institute, the<lb/>
research branch of Planned Parenthood,<lb/>
claimed that it is discriminatory not to<lb/>
provide gynecological care and access to<lb/>
contraceptive services "because the one<lb/>
fundamental difference between men and<lb/>
women is in regard to their reproductive<lb/>
roles and health care needs. If female<lb/>
students don't get help through the<lb/>
college health service 4hey have to<lb/>
purchase it through a private physician or<lb/>
incur health and pregnancy risks<lb/>
The fact is, most college women need<lb/>
access to birth control services.<lb/>
According to the Commission on<lb/>
Population Growth and the American<lb/>
Future, nearly half of the unmarried<lb/>
women in the United States have had<lb/>
sexual intercourse by age 19. The<lb/>
picture, however, is not one of "rampant<lb/>
sexuality among the sexually inexperi-<lb/>
enced but of greatly misinformed<lb/>
women with vague ideas about how<lb/>
pregnancy occurs and the use of<lb/>
contraception.<lb/>
In the past, schools have generally<lb/>
treated sex-related health needs as a<lb/>
separate medical need, outside the realm<lb/>
of their responsibility to women on<lb/>
campus. And although women students<lb/>
usually pay their schools a separate<lb/>
charge for health care, most have had no<lb/>
alternative but to rely on a private<lb/>
physician for gynecological care and<lb/>
contraceptive advice, resulting in<lb/>
additional costs to the student.<lb/>
With increasingly liberal attitudes<lb/>
toward visitation, coed dorms and<lb/>
cohabitation, more schools are including<lb/>
birth control clinics in their health<lb/>
services. Some schools, however, are<lb/>
still fighting against the dissemination of<lb/>
contraceptive advice on their campuses.<lb/>
Recently the Board of Regents of<lb/>
Arizona State University (ASU forbade the<lb/>
campus health service from giving family<lb/>
planning counselling and birth control<lb/>
devices to students. The Regents'<lb/>
decision is now being contested in court,<lb/>
but meanwhile women students are<lb/>
shuttled off to the local Planned<lb/>
Parenthood which sees an average of 35<lb/>
patients a day. "Sixty percent are<lb/>
students and more than half of that<lb/>
figure are ASU students one worker<lb/>
there said.<lb/>
The attitude of the Regents,<lb/>
according to the Student Association<lb/>
president of ASU is well reflected in an<lb/>
editorial that appeared in the Arizona<lb/>
Republic "The public education system<lb/>
does not need to add a function designed<lb/>
to bail out students whose frolicsome<lb/>
sexual freedom is pursued with abandon,<lb/>
often with sad results. Now is the time<lb/>
for them to learn on their own the costs<lb/>
of promiscuity, and to either use<lb/>
common sense or pay<lb/>
Even those who do use common<lb/>
sense end up paying. Although birth<lb/>
control is offered on many more<lb/>
campuses now than ever before, women<lb/>
students are often expected to support<lb/>
such services with money in addition to<lb/>
their regular health care fees. At the<lb/>
University of California at Davis, students<lb/>
interested in getting contraceptives<lb/>
through their health service will pay<lb/>
THIS WEEK AT THE<lb/>
ELBO ROOM<lb/>
Starting Tuesday Nov. 11th for 1 week<lb/>
'SPECTRUM<lb/>
ONE OF THE FINEST TOP 40 GROUPS<lb/>
EVER IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
Tues. - NO COVER<lb/>
EVERY SUNDAY IS LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
� �����<lb/>
$17.50 a visit not including the cost of<lb/>
the device itself. The $17.50 will have to<lb/>
be paid before an appointment at the<lb/>
clinic can be made. The fee is necessary,<lb/>
state officials claim, because the health<lb/>
service fees from students are designated<lb/>
only for the treatment of "acute or<lb/>
sub-acute" conditions.<lb/>
Women students pay in other ways,<lb/>
too. Many have to wait two or three<lb/>
months to set up an appointment with a<lb/>
gynecologist through the health service.<lb/>
At Washington University in St. Louis,<lb/>
there is one gynecologist for 5000 female<lb/>
students. The health service at<lb/>
Washington U will take care of<lb/>
emergency gynecological problems right<lb/>
away but as the � gynecological nurse<lb/>
explained, "We can't consider a request<lb/>
for birth control as an emergency We<lb/>
hate to tell women they have to wait an<lb/>
extra month and they don't like to hear it,<lb/>
but there is nothing we can do<lb/>
Booze has effects, baby<lb/>
(CPS)Women who drink heavily during<lb/>
their pregnancy may be doing irreparable<lb/>
harm to their babies by passing along the<lb/>
"fetal alcohol syndrome a growing<lb/>
problem across the country.<lb/>
A recent study by doctors in<lb/>
Oklahoma City showed that babies<lb/>
affected by alcohol will have similar<lb/>
features that make them all look alike,<lb/>
among them large noses, out-turned ears<lb/>
and small fingernails. Sensory impair-<lb/>
ment and low IQ's may also accompany<lb/>
the physical defects.<lb/>
Dr. George Sharpe of the Children's<lb/>
Memorial Hospital in Oklahoma City said<lb/>
a women did not have to be an alcoholic<lb/>
to give birth to a baby afflicted by<lb/>
alcohol syndrome. Persistent and<lb/>
increasing alcohol consumption in a<lb/>
non-alcoholic woman can damage the<lb/>
fetus, he said.<lb/>
Most of the mothers studied by<lb/>
Sharpe were chronic alcoholics, however<lb/>
One of the women in a Seattle study of<lb/>
fetal alcohol syndrome drank two quarts<lb/>
of red wine a day during her pregnancy.<lb/>
Ksaraoesxxxssssxsxxs<lb/>
S G A<lb/>
REFRIGERATOR<lb/>
RENTALS<lb/>
RENT NOW FOR WINTER<lb/>
QUARTER ONL Y 50<lb/>
REFRIGERA TORS LEFT<lb/>
Price<lb/>
8.00 rent per quarter<lb/>
10.00 deposit<lb/>
18.00 total<lb/>
YOU CANT BEA T THIS<lb/>
PRICE ANYWHERE I<lb/>
GET YOUR REFRIGERA TOR<lb/>
NOW - DON'T WAIT !<lb/>
Office 231 Mendenhall<lb/>
Hours M - F 2:00 - 4:00<lb/>
Phone 758-6611 ext. 215 ,<lb/>
�P<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
.�&amp;$ ' - V ���<lb/>
MHBHmHHBHHBHHBHmHH<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0012"/><lb/>
BMRWmmmBMmmmmB<lb/>
�R<lb/>
12<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
m i mm mi. uniim . i �mm mm � n m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ikk im<lb/>
m<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
m<lb/>
Fellini's Armacord: drama of human life<lb/>
By THOMAS LEWIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A new release by Federico Fellini<lb/>
seems to ring a magic bell in the film<lb/>
industry. "Armacord" is no different. The<lb/>
picture received the highest acclaim from<lb/>
bandwagon. I believe that the film's<lb/>
greatest claim to success is the fact that<lb/>
the name Fellini is attached.<lb/>
The movie is an inside look at the<lb/>
drama of human life as seen through the<lb/>
mind and soul of Fellini. He attempts to<lb/>
most of the top critics within the "great<lb/>
circle of influence His latest effort, a<lb/>
collection of everyday events" in the<lb/>
lives of everyday people puts him on a<lb/>
new and higher pedestal of admiration by<lb/>
the critics. This, however, is one critic<lb/>
who isn't going to jump on the<lb/>
WSr<lb/>
convey to us the emotions, feelings,<lb/>
frustrations, and dreams of a society that<lb/>
resembles a cross section of side show<lb/>
freaks and rejects from the Po Valley.<lb/>
The picture takes place in the early<lb/>
forties in a small town in Italy. It evolves<lb/>
around the random events of one familv<lb/>
and their acquaintances. Continuity seem<lb/>
to be of little importance in Fellini's<lb/>
scheme. If there is meant to be a tight<lb/>
sequence of events in this production,<lb/>
then I failed to grasp the method or<lb/>
meaning. It appears to me to be a<lb/>
scrapbook collection of touching, funny,<lb/>
and meaningful moments in the lives of<lb/>
these pitiful Fellini beings. As always he<lb/>
touches on politics, death, physical pain,<lb/>
emotional instability, religion and sex.<lb/>
Sex if the focal point around which all<lb/>
else rotates. The hopes and dreams, the<lb/>
frustrations and inadequacies all center<lb/>
around sex.<lb/>
As we follow these physical, mental,<lb/>
and emotional misfits through their times<lb/>
of awkwardness, anger, and defeat we<lb/>
begin to feel both compassion for them<lb/>
and identification with them. Fellini<lb/>
leaves a lot of room for personal<lb/>
interpretation and involvement. These are<lb/>
his people, but he is sharing with us.<lb/>
So why am I not on the Fellini<lb/>
bandwagon9 Vincent Canby (New York<lb/>
Times) and Paul D. Zimmerman<lb/>
(Newsweek) call it "extravagantly and<lb/>
hilariously funny I call it humanly<lb/>
funny. William Wolf (Cue Magazine) calls<lb/>
it "enthralling . call it mildly<lb/>
enchanting. Bruce Williamson (Playboy)<lb/>
calls it "a cornucopia abrim with things to<lb/>
amaze and gratify any moviegoer still<lb/>
capable of responding to priceless<lb/>
sonnets I call it a conglomerate of<lb/>
events to adequately entertain anyone<lb/>
able to enjoy anothers' personal<lb/>
philosophy. Stanley Kauffman (The New<lb/>
Republic) says Fellini "triumphs I say<lb/>
he succeeds modestly.<lb/>
Fellini ranks high on the list of<lb/>
genius filmmakers who treats his films<lb/>
as works of art and should be recognized<lb/>
as a master of his craft. However, I<lb/>
believe he lacks appeal to the masses.<lb/>
Maybe he's too intellectual, maybe he's<lb/>
too much a perfectionist in his approach,<lb/>
or maybe he just doesn't care. Americans<lb/>
especially find it hard to identify with a<lb/>
film that has a cast of unknowns, a<lb/>
rambling script, or a non escapist<lb/>
purpose. If you can appreciate a film<lb/>
without heros or defined happy endings<lb/>
then take the time to see "Armacord it's<lb/>
worth it. The act is good and the<lb/>
photography under the direction of<lb/>
Guiseppe Rotunno is absolutely superb.<lb/>
Federico Fellini cannot be denied his<lb/>
place in the history of film, bjt I don't<lb/>
believe he should be considered a God<lb/>
within the industry.<lb/>
'Purlie Victorious' is a welcome performance<lb/>
By HELENA WOODARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
It was obviously more than a case of<lb/>
shaving off the rough edges" of<lb/>
characters as rather modestly and simply<lb/>
put by ECU Guest Director Ron Mcllwam.<lb/>
For the ECU cast members of "Purlie<lb/>
Victorious last Sunday night's per-<lb/>
formance must have represented more<lb/>
definitive DreDaratory actions such a<lb/>
sleepless nights, cutting classes, hot<lb/>
temper flashes, and near hermit-like<lb/>
existences for the weeks which<lb/>
culminated into a performance nearing<lb/>
perfection.<lb/>
The feeling one gets from viewing just<lb/>
one performance with the cast and<lb/>
perhaps from observing them in a more<lb/>
informal way  when they dream "lemon<lb/>
pies etc. is that their existence for the<lb/>
past three weeks has consisted of the<lb/>
most self-restrictive disciplinary acting<lb/>
measures reserved and exemplified only<lb/>
by the most serious of future actors and<lb/>
actresses.<lb/>
Leading actor Marshall McAden can<lb/>
now be seen wandering around campus<lb/>
portraying the exclusive airs of one<lb/>
victorious of purpose, (he plays the<lb/>
character, Purlie Victorious). His high-<lb/>
strung expressiveness aided in his<lb/>
portrayal of dignity and pride.<lb/>
Gloria Brewington's distinct articu-<lb/>
lation as Lutiebelle Jenkins seemed to<lb/>
flow naturally and effortlessly so that there<lb/>
was the absence of artificiality in her role<lb/>
for the most part.<lb/>
Kathy Williams (Miss Judson) was<lb/>
very impressive expressing a rather<lb/>
'ow-keyed southern diction.<lb/>
C.R. Knight (Gitlow Judson) played a<lb/>
highly versatile role which brought out<lb/>
the natural qualities in his acting talents.<lb/>
His range from foot shufflino. eve-haii<lb/>
rolling, and head scratching, to cunning<lb/>
wit exemplified his varying style.<lb/>
Gem Hamilton (01 Cap'n) was one of<lb/>
the most flexible of characters in the<lb/>
play. His ability to range his emotions,<lb/>
moods, tones and mannerisms was both<lb/>
staggering and realistic.<lb/>
The production, as with any play, was<lb/>
not without faults. A few forgotten lines<lb/>
If i k<lb/>
m<lb/>
and awkward pauses are rare and<lb/>
short-lived. Marshall McAden, though<lb/>
rather staid and somewhat unreceotive at<lb/>
times to other characters around him,<lb/>
excelled in his resoundinq soliloquy-like<lb/>
mm<lb/>
sermons.<lb/>
Charlie Cotchipee, played by James<lb/>
Ingram, was simply "tired" though at<lb/>
times in the play, this was a very<lb/>
laugh-provoking and appropriate quality.<lb/>
Staris Newsome (as Idella) exhibited<lb/>
an appropriate mother-like image and one<lb/>
could hear (amid the aggravating<lb/>
sqawking of babies in the audience) a<lb/>
few well-placed notes in the final scene<lb/>
indicating her singing abilities in addition<lb/>
to her acting abilities.<lb/>
"Purlie Victorious written in 1961 by<lb/>
Actor Ossie Davis, is a play which<lb/>
everyone can relate to. For ECU blacks, it<lb/>
is probably a rare and welcome<lb/>
occurrence as a production on campus<lb/>
and it gave many students an opportunity<lb/>
to exhibit their talents.<lb/>
The play, set in the recent South,<lb/>
involved conflicting identities of those<lb/>
slow to change. It was thought-provoking<lb/>
as much as it was hilarious.<lb/>
The cast, especially considering a<lb/>
three-week deadline were obviously very<lb/>
serious performers constantly reaching<lb/>
out for discipline and perfection.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Fa<lb/>
F<lb/>
The <lb/>
Raymond<lb/>
LOVELY i<lb/>
set design<lb/>
Hollywooc<lb/>
mood of t<lb/>
the class<lb/>
Marlowe<lb/>
M<lb/>
The corr<lb/>
vouid seen<lb/>
Breenville r<lb/>
;urrent owr<lb/>
oo when r<lb/>
pgo.<lb/>
Marty's<lb/>
jreenville<lb/>
here is no<lb/>
3ntertainme<lb/>
�t-up. This<lb/>
)f the other<lb/>
"It's just<lb/>
vide variety<lb/>
Marty's I<lb/>
vhere peopl<lb/>
xers and li<lb/>
vith friends<lb/>
(ntertainmei<lb/>
layed over<lb/>
ancey.<lb/>
"We pla<lb/>
aid Yancey<lb/>
ther typesi<lb/>
teach Boys<lb/>
Besides<lb/>
larty's also<lb/>
ie form of<lb/>
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tertainmer<lb/>
ms are u;<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040004_0013"/><lb/>
<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
13<lb/>
MMP<lb/>
'Farewell My Lovely' is worth seeing twice<lb/>
FAREWELL MY LOVELY<lb/>
By BRANDON USE<lb/>
Entertainment Editor<lb/>
The current screen version of<lb/>
Raymond Chandler's FAREWELL, MY<lb/>
LOVELY is a showcase tribute to modern<lb/>
set designers, costumers, and other great<lb/>
Hollywood technicians in re-creating the<lb/>
mood of the 1940's. Robert Mitchum in<lb/>
the classic role of detective Philip<lb/>
Marlowe is perhaps not as good as<lb/>
Bogart was in the role of Marlowe, but<lb/>
still very charismatic in the role.<lb/>
The over-zealous attempt at re-<lb/>
creating the look of the 1940's is<lb/>
sometimes a detraction from the<lb/>
performances of the actors. Several times<lb/>
I noticed myself looking at the sets and<lb/>
not the action - which is a bad sign for<lb/>
the film.<lb/>
Another detraction to the film is the<lb/>
blatant attempt by the filmmakers to<lb/>
make Charlotte Rampling, the female<lb/>
lead, become the modern day Lauren<lb/>
Bacall. All of her scenes, movements,<lb/>
hairstyles, costuming, etc. are designed<lb/>
to catch that unique "Bacallness if you<lb/>
will, - she doesn't.<lb/>
The plot is very twisted and exciting<lb/>
with political big men, typical Chandler<lb/>
crooked cops, wasted Los Angeles<lb/>
Burlesque performers, one of the<lb/>
bitchiest madams you're ever likely to<lb/>
see, and likewise one of the biggest men<lb/>
you'll ever see, aptly called Moose<lb/>
Malloy.<lb/>
After committing, causing or wit-<lb/>
nessing seven murder Marlowe cleverly<lb/>
MARTY'S!<lb/>
By CHIP GWYNN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The corner of Fifth St. and Cotanche<lb/>
would seem to be an ideal place for a<lb/>
reenville night spot. Marty Yancey, the<lb/>
current owner of Marty's bar thought so<lb/>
oo when he bought it several months<lb/>
Marty's is a bit of a rarity in the<lb/>
jreenville night club tradition in that<lb/>
here is no cover charge; there is no live<lb/>
?ntertainment; and there is no disco<lb/>
�t-up. This separates Marty's from many<lb/>
)f the other clubs in Greenville.<lb/>
"It's just a bar said Yancey, "with a<lb/>
vide variety of people<lb/>
Marty's has the kind of atmosphere<lb/>
vhere people want to go and have a few<lb/>
)eers and listen to some music and visit<lb/>
vith friends. Marty's does not have live<lb/>
entertainment but a variety of music is<lb/>
ilayed over the sound system, explained<lb/>
ancey.<lb/>
"We play a lot of disco type music<lb/>
aid Yancey, "but we also play alot of<lb/>
ther types of music such as Beatles and<lb/>
teach Boys<lb/>
Besides good music to listen to<lb/>
larty's also has a visual presentation in<lb/>
ie form of old movies and some slides<lb/>
om around the Greenville area. The<lb/>
Tovies are all part of the atmosphere and<lb/>
ntertainment provided at Marty's. The<lb/>
Ims are usually silent with sub-titles<lb/>
id range anywhere from the Marx<lb/>
rothers to Tarzan to old horror films.<lb/>
jhese films add to the overall<lb/>
mosphere of Marty's and add a unique<lb/>
iversion from the table games such as<lb/>
otsball and pinball (which Marty's has<lb/>
so).<lb/>
The second aspect of Marty's visual<lb/>
traction is in the form of a kind of slide<lb/>
iow. Yancey explained that a<lb/>
lotographer goes around taking pictures<lb/>
ther on campus or around town or any<lb/>
jace where students might be. These<lb/>
ctures are then presented as a slide<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
show at Marty's.<lb/>
"Sometimes we have people come in<lb/>
just to see themselves on the wall<lb/>
Yancey said.<lb/>
Marty's even has several bean bag<lb/>
chairs for those who want to just sit back<lb/>
and watch the movies or for those who<lb/>
lust get tired of sitting at the tables.<lb/>
Yancey feels that Marty's is the type<lb/>
of bar that projects a friendly<lb/>
atmosphere.<lb/>
"Most of the people know the<lb/>
bartender by name said Yancey.<lb/>
Besides boasting a no cover charge<lb/>
policy at the door, Marty's also has some<lb/>
of the lowest beer prices in Greenville.<lb/>
Yancey explained that other clubs have<lb/>
things besides low beer prices to offer its<lb/>
customers but Marty's does not have<lb/>
comments, "Everything I touch turns to<lb/>
shit Briefly, Moose Malloy hired<lb/>
Marlowe � nrd "mv Velma" whom he<lb/>
hasnt seen in seven years (while he's<lb/>
been in prison for a bank robbery).<lb/>
Marlowe's attempt at finding "Velma"<lb/>
causes all the action, everyone wants<lb/>
Moose, but Marlowe, himself can't even<lb/>
contact him. Moose has a bad habit of<lb/>
pushing things out of his way: Marlowe,<lb/>
cops, cars, and walls.<lb/>
Despite the aforementioned de-<lb/>
tractions, the film is by no means a<lb/>
loser. The excellent character actors,<lb/>
among them Sylvia Miles and Anthony<lb/>
Zerbe. really add much to life of the film.<lb/>
The film is very successful in<lb/>
maintaining its mysterious aura, and<lb/>
there is a "surprise ending " It is worth<lb/>
seeing once. MAYBE EVEN TWICE.<lb/>
This film now playing at Plaza Cinema.<lb/>
Their cooperation is gratefully<lb/>
appreciated.)<lb/>
much else so the beer prices become all<lb/>
the more important. In other words,<lb/>
Marty's uses its low beer prices to attract<lb/>
customers since there is no band or<lb/>
diSCO SPt-un<lb/>
"The people make the bar said<lb/>
Yancey, "and we want the customers to<lb/>
be happy<lb/>
"We offer the students consistance<lb/>
added Yancey, "the people that come<lb/>
here everv week know what to expect<lb/>
With no cover charge, beanbag chairs<lb/>
and crazy old films. Marty s seems the<lb/>
logical place to go with some friends any<lb/>
day of the week to have some cold beer<lb/>
at low prices with a friendly atmosphere<lb/>
to enjoy it. So if you have not helped<lb/>
yourself to Marty's hospitality then be<lb/>
sure and do so. it's free.<lb/>
�M<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
N.C. Dance Theatre: family with common goa<lb/>
By BOB GLOVER<lb/>
The North Carolina Dance Theatre's<lb/>
evening performance was an example of<lb/>
excellent dancing in the area of modern<lb/>
ballet, with a wide variety of dramatic<lb/>
themes, innovative props and visual<lb/>
effects. Unfortunately, the choreography<lb/>
lacked development and failed to support<lb/>
the overall excellence of the troupe.<lb/>
The first piece. "Fugitive Visions<lb/>
was a colorful and sometimes explosive<lb/>
work. The lighting effects, combined with<lb/>
the costumes of the cast, created visually<lb/>
dynamic scenes throughout this piece.<lb/>
The cast was technically very good;<lb/>
however, the performance of Katie Starr,<lb/>
from the obscurity of the chorus,<lb/>
exhibited a quality beyond the realm of<lb/>
technique. The choreography was above<lb/>
average, but did not adequately portray<lb/>
the theme of this piece, which moved<lb/>
from a young peoples' search for identity<lb/>
to a downfall of ideas drawn from the<lb/>
riots at the Chicago Democratic<lb/>
convention, and finally to an illumination<lb/>
of self-realization.<lb/>
The second piece, "Myth a story of<lb/>
a women with a series of three lovers,<lb/>
was supported by the music of<lb/>
Stravinsky, which is a statement in itself.<lb/>
The piece featured Gwen Spear, a former<lb/>
ECU student, who gave a very good<lb/>
interpretation of her part using a wide<lb/>
variety of dance forms that were executed<lb/>
with excellence. Mike Michael's interpret-<lb/>
ation of the second lover was<lb/>
outstanding and the choreography in the<lb/>
scene with the third lover was very good.<lb/>
The third piece, "The Grey Goose of<lb/>
Silence (A Tale of Appalachia) was the<lb/>
enthusiastic favorite of the audience and<lb/>
the highpoint of the evening. The cast<lb/>
danced with excellence throughout this<lb/>
piece, but the finest performances came<lb/>
from Liz Kuethe. Larry Harper and Mike<lb/>
Michael. The dramatic theme and music<lb/>
of this piece was excellent and is a<lb/>
reflection of North Carolina's folk<lb/>
heritage.<lb/>
The story line dealt with the love<lb/>
affair jet ween a blind boy (Harper), and a<lb/>
young woman (Keuthe), their human<lb/>
obstacles and dreams, covering a span of<lb/>
twenty years. The choreography did not<lb/>
develop the characters as thoroughly as<lb/>
it could have and several dream<lb/>
sequences were not made apparent,<lb/>
causing some confusion between the<lb/>
dreams of a young woman and the reality<lb/>
of the story. Due to the under-develop-<lb/>
ment of the choreography, there were<lb/>
sections that were somewhat boring and<lb/>
several transitions between the scenes<lb/>
were very cloudy. It is a shame that the<lb/>
choreography is not better developed to<lb/>
coincide with the standard of excellence<lb/>
that exists in every other aspect of this<lb/>
fine piece.<lb/>
In the fourth and final piece, Bach's<lb/>
"Brandenburg Three it was refreshing to<lb/>
see the cast enjoying themselves. The<lb/>
cast and audience seemed to thrive off of<lb/>
the light and comical atmosphere<lb/>
surrounding the three scemes of this<lb/>
piece. The second scene was an<lb/>
experience in absurdity and humour, with<lb/>
the cast wearing large, helium-filled<lb/>
Student Theatre is great<lb/>
By CINDY KENT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU student-workshop theatre<lb/>
has outdone itself with its first<lb/>
production of the season, "The Amazing<lb/>
Activity of Charlie Contrare and the 98th<lb/>
Street Gang From a play by Roy<lb/>
London, the campus production took<lb/>
place in the studio Theatre Nov. 7 &amp; 8.<lb/>
The play came under some first-class<lb/>
dirf'nq by Mark Schwartz as well as<lb/>
some "3 performances by all.<lb/>
In e ?nce. the abstract-like plot<lb/>
revolved t ound shades of characters<lb/>
invented by 16 year old Charlie Contrare<lb/>
(Terry Pickard).<lb/>
Highlights included some satirical<lb/>
touches by Schwartz which created<lb/>
intensely humorous scenes (such as one<lb/>
in which Bev Medlin played a<lb/>
mannequin like wind up toy. The costume<lb/>
shop's hard efforts were rewarded by this<lb/>
performance).<lb/>
Although the script itself seemed to<lb/>
drag in a few places, the handling and<lb/>
showmanship of the students was<lb/>
outstanding, and I'm sure Charlie himself<lb/>
would have thought so, too.<lb/>
V<lb/>
LEO'S PERCO<lb/>
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anything at ttie station except gas<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
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balloons attached to their heads. The final<lb/>
scene revolved around a wall with five<lb/>
doors, with the entrances and exits of<lb/>
the cast performed in a rhythmical<lb/>
procession that was symmetrical and<lb/>
perfect in timing.<lb/>
After the performance Gwen Spear<lb/>
gave some of her views concerning the<lb/>
art of dance. Gwen believes that a dancer<lb/>
must have "a hell of a lot of dedication! I<lb/>
don't think most people realize the<lb/>
determination a person must have to go<lb/>
up to that bar in some drab studio and<lb/>
practice movements over and over, day<lb/>
after day. I've seen dancers that have<lb/>
more discipline than talent completely<lb/>
overcome a dancer with talent and no<lb/>
discipline. I've found that dancing is<lb/>
actually mentally controlling the body,<lb/>
and as that mental control begins to take<lb/>
form in the physical sense there is a<lb/>
growing sense of awareness and energy<lb/>
that affects you personally Gwen also<lb/>
feels that consistent quality is what<lb/>
separates great dancers from good<lb/>
dancers. "There is a fine line that a<lb/>
dancer must be aware of and learn to<lb/>
control when you talk about performing.<lb/>
That fine line exists between parking too<lb/>
early and peaking too late! A dancer<lb/>
should strive for that consistent quality<lb/>
of peaking during the performance. To<lb/>
many times a dancer will peak too early,<lb/>
like at rehearsal, and then go on stage<lb/>
and their performance will be very flat,<lb/>
mechanical rather than alive. Great<lb/>
dancers have that consistent quality of<lb/>
always being more than just technically<lb/>
good What Gwen enjoys most about<lb/>
the troupe is "the vitality and sense of<lb/>
oneness we have. It's like a large family<lb/>
with one common goal<lb/>
The goal of the North Carolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre is to dance and they do it very<lb/>
well.<lb/>
TELEVISION<lb/>
The Grand Ole Opry at 50A Nash-<lb/>
ville Celebration a freewheeling,<lb/>
spontaneous combination of down-home<lb/>
jubliee and jam session, will air on the<lb/>
ABC Television Network, Tuesday,<lb/>
Novemebr 11 (8:30-10:00 p.m. EST).<lb/>
The 90-minute program will salute the<lb/>
Opry and its many performers over the<lb/>
last 50 years, and features Hal Holbrook<lb/>
as host and a huge cast of the nation's<lb/>
favorite Grand Ole Opry stars. The<lb/>
performers include (in alphabetical<lb/>
order): Roy Acuff, Bill Anderson, Chet<lb/>
Atkins, the Carter Family, Johnny Cash,<lb/>
Roy Clark, Freddy Fender, Grandpa<lb/>
Jones, Loretta Lynn, Barbara Mandrel I,<lb/>
Bill Monroe, Dolly Parton, Minnie Pearl,<lb/>
Charlie Pride, Marty Robbins, Hank<lb/>
Snow, Ernest Tubb and Porter Wagoner.<lb/>
Designed as a celebration of the 50th<lb/>
anniversary of the Grand Ole Opry, the<lb/>
90-minute program will feature flashback<lb/>
sequences to evoke its fascinating<lb/>
history along with location sequences<lb/>
which will show the origins of country<lb/>
music and its far-reaching influence on<lb/>
American life.<lb/>
SPECIALS <lb/>
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,� 4 PM to 6 PM<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
15<lb/>
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THANKS FOR MAKING US A SUCCESS<lb/>
DURING OUR FIRST THREE YEARS ECU' <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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f I WE LOVE YOU <lb/>
rl EAST 5th STREET GREENVILLE �<lb/>
� ����������������it<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040004_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
P<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
IMP<lb/>
ECU geography students study old Greenville<lb/>
n<lb/>
More than 60 ECU students are<lb/>
studying "old Greenville" as part of an<lb/>
introductory "Earth and Man" geography<lb/>
course (Geography 15).<lb/>
"We are concentrating our analytic<lb/>
efforts on Green Street north of the Tar<lb/>
River and Evans Street in the downtown<lb/>
area said Jim Stembridge, instructor of<lb/>
the course. "Each student is approaching<lb/>
the area from his or her own point of<lb/>
view, bringing individual talents, tech-<lb/>
niques and interests into the study.<lb/>
Some have chosen sketches or<lb/>
photographs as recording techniques,<lb/>
while others are concentrating on making<lb/>
maps of various sorts<lb/>
Several students were in the<lb/>
downtown area during the first week of<lb/>
November. Many shared the opinion of<lb/>
Sherry Johnson, a sophomore from<lb/>
Raleigh: "To begin with I thought the<lb/>
project was going to be a bore Ms.<lb/>
Johnson said, "but after I walked over<lb/>
the designated area I really enjoyed it. I<lb/>
learned a lot about Greenville that I didn't<lb/>
know Karla Metcalf, a 3rd year student<lb/>
from Greenville added that the flexibility<lb/>
of the project gives students "the<lb/>
opportunity to be creative and bring in<lb/>
our own points of view<lb/>
"I've been over this route many time,<lb/>
but I never really knew anything about<lb/>
it according to Linda Huff, a junior<lb/>
from Eden. "After completing the field<lb/>
work for my project now I know a little<lb/>
more about where I've been living for<lb/>
three years she said.<lb/>
"We're trying to utilize class lecture<lb/>
and book materials to answer questions<lb/>
like "Why is Greenville where it is?"<lb/>
"Why are businesses and homes located<lb/>
where they are?" "How have the people<lb/>
of the area organized their activities and<lb/>
their use of the land?" The main goals<lb/>
are to learn some principles of<lb/>
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geography, to get to know the<lb/>
community a little better, and to have<lb/>
some fun doing it Stembridge said.<lb/>
"This appraoch is a little unusual for<lb/>
an introductory level course said<lb/>
Stembridge, "but we have found it to be<lb/>
especially valuable for many different<lb/>
kinds of students; including those who<lb/>
go on to more advanced study in<lb/>
geography and those who are experienc-<lb/>
ing the only formal geography instruction<lb/>
they will ever receive.<lb/>
"In the past I think most instructors<lb/>
wanted students to do more book<lb/>
learning before they approached unde-<lb/>
fined field problems, but we've found<lb/>
that an early field problem, if it is quite<lb/>
general in nature, adds realism that is<lb/>
hard to get from pure book and map<lb/>
study.<lb/>
"We've discovered several interesting<lb/>
themes throughout the area said<lb/>
Stembridge. "The most obvious one is<lb/>
'change' represented by the new Town<lb/>
Common and the work on the mall. There<lb/>
is evidence of other changes that is not<lb/>
quite so obvious though, he said. At the<lb/>
end of Pitt Street are pilings from an<lb/>
early bridge over the Tar River. Several<lb/>
homes have been converted to business<lb/>
uses on all sides of the central business<lb/>
district.<lb/>
"We hope that students will begin to<lb/>
be able to make order out of apparent<lb/>
chaos, and continue to be students of<lb/>
"earth and man" long after they have left<lb/>
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Mcllwaii<lb/>
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Accc<lb/>
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this, the)<lb/>
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Accon<lb/>
with theal<lb/>
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Bob S<lb/>
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HHBBBHHHBBBBBHHBlHHH<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0017"/><lb/>
�<lb/>
m<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
Mcllwain praises 'Purlie Victorious' cast<lb/>
By HELENA WOOOARD<lb/>
Assistant News Editor<lb/>
"I have never seen as much<lb/>
abounding talent as I've seen with this<lb/>
cast. They have potential beyond their<lb/>
own realms of imagination<lb/>
These words were spoken by Guest<lb/>
Director Rom Mcllwain for the cast<lb/>
members of "Purile Victorious" as the<lb/>
nationally-known Ossie Davis production<lb/>
enters its final evening of performance at<lb/>
ECU on Nov. 11.<lb/>
"I helped them master the discipline<lb/>
of acting which will come with<lb/>
experience. Their horizons are unlimited<lb/>
Mcllwain continued. "I certainly wouldn't<lb/>
New Center<lb/>
Continued from page 8.<lb/>
destination point in Eastern Carolina.<lb/>
According to ECU Chancellor Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, the university would welcome<lb/>
such a facility as a major coliseum, as<lb/>
well as a smaller facility. Jenkins did say<lb/>
that Minges Coliseum was inadequate.<lb/>
"Minges is not adequate as a major<lb/>
sports arena because the seats are not<lb/>
conducive to comfortable sitting and<lb/>
many of the older and middle-aged<lb/>
residents can't sit through a sports<lb/>
activity on the bleacher seats. Because of<lb/>
this, they won't attend the events.<lb/>
"If a plan were undertaken in<lb/>
Greenville to build a city coliseum, ECU<lb/>
would be very much in support of it<lb/>
According to Jenkins "a coliseum<lb/>
with theater-type seats would be ideal for<lb/>
concerts like they have at State College,<lb/>
as well as for meetings, conventions, and<lb/>
basketball tournaments. For these<lb/>
purposes, Minges Coliseum is in-<lb/>
adequate<lb/>
Bob Seraiva, chairman of the East<lb/>
Carolina Major Attractions committee<lb/>
said, when questioned what advantages a<lb/>
major coliseum would have for<lb/>
Greenville, that such a facility would be<lb/>
ideal for money-making productions for<lb/>
the city, as well as the university.<lb/>
"A concert hall in the Greenville area<lb/>
would bring a greater variety of talent<lb/>
into the area said Seraiva, "because of<lb/>
the fact a coliseum not affiliated with the<lb/>
mind coming back here again to direct<lb/>
another play<lb/>
Ron Mcllwain, actor, comedian,<lb/>
athlete, professional singer, and the<lb/>
talented guest director for the final event<lb/>
of the Black Theater Symposium<lb/>
sponsored by the National Endowment<lb/>
for the Arts.<lb/>
The grant, under the aegis of<lb/>
the Dept. of Drama and Speech at ECU,<lb/>
also sponsored award winning Play-<lb/>
wriglu, Ed Bullins and Poetess China<lb/>
Clark as lecturers on campus over the<lb/>
three-year period of its existence.<lb/>
"Purlie Victorious now running on a<lb/>
Broadway as a smash musical entitled<lb/>
"Purlie" was the comic work chosen by<lb/>
school would be open to professional<lb/>
organizations, as well as school<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
"Because professional organizations<lb/>
per se cannot use school facilities, this<lb/>
would open another avenue to bring<lb/>
talent to the Greenville area<lb/>
According to Jenkins the problem is<lb/>
that "too many people are scared to plan<lb/>
big" and that a major facility would draw<lb/>
the people to the city if the right shows<lb/>
were presented.<lb/>
"If we go from here up there pointed<lb/>
out Jenkins, "then why shouldn't people<lb/>
come from there down here<lb/>
Despite the arguments for a larger<lb/>
facility, the Chamber of Commerce<lb/>
continues to consider the smaller center<lb/>
as a more feasible project and have<lb/>
instructed to have a further study<lb/>
undertaken.<lb/>
According to Willis such a study<lb/>
would involve the economic aspect of a<lb/>
conference center, since none has been<lb/>
done yet.<lb/>
Willis said such a study which would<lb/>
be necessary, would take from three to<lb/>
six months to complete.<lb/>
After the completion of such a study,<lb/>
however, the feasibility and possibilities<lb/>
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Mcllwain as a production for ECU cast<lb/>
members.<lb/>
"I didn't decide on "Purlie" until I met<lb/>
the people I'd be working with. It's a very<lb/>
demanding production and we had only<lb/>
three weeks in which to do it in Ron<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The director's job is to shave off the<lb/>
rough edges from the characters-not<lb/>
transforming or dominating one's<lb/>
personality. I am very, very pleased and<lb/>
inspired by tue eninusiasm and response<lb/>
of the actors and actresses in the play<lb/>
Ron added.<lb/>
Mcllwain, who has acted in "Purlie<lb/>
Victorious picked the play with the<lb/>
consideration of the time involved.<lb/>
"I had acted in it and I had a good<lb/>
idea of the sound and action in it. Some<lb/>
50 people showed up for auditioning<lb/>
(which was held on campus). It proved to<lb/>
be a bit of casting genuis. They (the cast)<lb/>
far exceeded my original expectation of<lb/>
them he added.<lb/>
This writer observed a profound<lb/>
working relationship between 32 year-old<lb/>
Mcllwain and the members of the cast of<lb/>
"Purlie Victorious Some of the leading<lb/>
cast members included Marshall McAden<lb/>
as Purlie, Gloria Brewington, Lutibelle,<lb/>
C.R. Knight, Git low, and Gem Hamilton<lb/>
as 01' Cap'n. The time and setting for the<lb/>
play represented the recent past at an old<lb/>
cotton plantation of the old South<lb/>
According to Ron, one of the biggest<lb/>
problems involved in the play was the<lb/>
difficulty in getting the stage for<lb/>
rehearsals. "We had to rehearse in a<lb/>
room at first and we didn't get the props<lb/>
until late. But I'm not complaining.<lb/>
Things turned out for the best he<lb/>
added<lb/>
Mcllwain had never directed a campus<lb/>
play before "Purlie Victorious For the<lb/>
past five years or so, he has appeared in<lb/>
numerous motion pictures, workshop<lb/>
productions (including some 45 plays),<lb/>
and network TV credits. These include<lb/>
"Mixed Company "The Great White<lb/>
Hope "Detroit 9,000 "Hawaii Five O<lb/>
"The Bob Newhart Show "Get Christie<lb/>
Love "That's My Mama and many<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Mcllwain, a graduate of Laurinburg<lb/>
Institute, also attended Clark College in<lb/>
Atlanta and received training as an actor<lb/>
at the famous American Conservatory<lb/>
Theatre in San Francisco.<lb/>
He was a professional football player<lb/>
and his hobbies include horseback<lb/>
riding, dancing, tennis, hunting and<lb/>
swimming.<lb/>
As an actor, Ron believes that one<lb/>
must take advantage of every opportunity<lb/>
that comes along. He believes that<lb/>
"blaxploitation films" (low budget black<lb/>
films in which the bad guys also win)<lb/>
were a necessary step in the evolution of<lb/>
the coming of the black cinema.<lb/>
"You can't knock it. There was<lb/>
obviously an audience for these<lb/>
pictures he said. "The eventual goal<lb/>
should be to have our own theaters so<lb/>
that we can recycle our revenue. Right<lb/>
now, the film powers structure takes all<lb/>
the gross percentages he added.<lb/>
"We're getting more and more black<lb/>
writers transitioning into the mainstream<lb/>
of all creative areas Mcllwain said.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mm tit mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
Cohabitation attitudes studied<lb/>
By RONALD DAVID FRANKUN<lb/>
Questionnaire By MELVIN WILLIAMS<lb/>
193 students in the Sociology,<lb/>
Psychology and Mathematics depart-<lb/>
ments responded to a questionnaire<lb/>
designed to aid in the study of<lb/>
cohabitation attitudes among ECU<lb/>
students. Although the sample is neither<lb/>
random nor stratified in the purest<lb/>
scientific sense, it was select in that it<lb/>
was directed towards students with<lb/>
sufficient tenure to allow them to be<lb/>
aware of the attitudes of the general<lb/>
student body. The sample resulted in 73<lb/>
male and 120 female respondents.<lb/>
Furthermore, 63.2 percent and 64.7<lb/>
percent of the female respondents were<lb/>
married and cohabitating respectively<lb/>
whereas 36.8 percent and 35.3 percent of<lb/>
the males fit those respective classifi-<lb/>
cations. The average age of the sample<lb/>
was 21. The mean age of persons<lb/>
cohabitating was near the total average<lb/>
(21.9) but the deviation was roughly a<lb/>
year less.<lb/>
When the students were asked "About<lb/>
what percentage of ECU undergraduate<lb/>
women would you say will experience<lb/>
cohabitation prior to graduation" most<lb/>
students answered 40 percent, the<lb/>
average answer was 38 percent and 68<lb/>
percent of the students give an estimate<lb/>
between 16 percent and 60 percent.<lb/>
Next students were asked "About<lb/>
what percentage of undergraduate women<lb/>
would you say will have sex relations<lb/>
before they graduate?" Most of the<lb/>
respondents listed 90 percent with a<lb/>
mean of 80 percent and 68 percent of the<lb/>
students answered between 62 percent<lb/>
and 99 percent.<lb/>
Generally, the higher percentages of<lb/>
males agreeing with statements which<lb/>
offer greater sexual access would support<lb/>
the long standing idea that college males<lb/>
are more eager for sexual experience or<lb/>
access that are college females.<lb/>
Women were more likely than men to<lb/>
agree with the statements regarding why<lb/>
women do not cohabitate. It is interesting<lb/>
to note the significant difference in the<lb/>
question of immaturity. There are notable<lb/>
exceptions to the female agreement just<lb/>
mentioned, the question of economic and<lb/>
physical impracticability reverse the<lb/>
trend. This could be the result of "sey<lb/>
roles" or of the inexperience of women in<lb/>
encountering the terms. The latter could<lb/>
be a result of differences in socialization<lb/>
now entirely removed from the "sex role"<lb/>
concept. The question regarding "fear of<lb/>
pregnancy" not only reverses the general<lb/>
trend but does it significantly. It appears<lb/>
the boys are more concerned (or think<lb/>
the girls are more concerned) about<lb/>
unexpected motherhood than are the<lb/>
prospective mothers. It would be<lb/>
interesting to study the effects of birth<lb/>
control in regards to male-female<lb/>
differences in "fear" of pregnancy.<lb/>
If males are more inclined to agree<lb/>
with statements of sexual access than<lb/>
females one might assume females<lb/>
would be more likely to disagree. This is<lb/>
actually the case with the exception of "a<lb/>
no-sex coop The reversal here seems to<lb/>
lend even more support to the notion of a<lb/>
greater desire for sexual involvement on<lb/>
behalf of males despite claims by some<lb/>
feminists that this is not the case.<lb/>
I have presented a breakdown<lb/>
between the marital states of marriage<lb/>
and cohabitation along with the<lb/>
breakdown of sex differences. Generally<lb/>
the married respondents were more in<lb/>
favor of greater sexual access than the<lb/>
cohabitating respondents. The exception<lb/>
is in the area of group-sex arrangements.<lb/>
This leads me to assume that<lb/>
cohabitation is primarily a monagamous<lb/>
relationship which has a slightly more<lb/>
limited concept of sexual freedom or<lb/>
sexual access, hence possibly a more<lb/>
possessive type of relationship.<lb/>
The significant difference found with<lb/>
the comparison of attitudes in sharing a<lb/>
room with another cohabitating couple<lb/>
tends to support this contention.<lb/>
Essentially, however, the data suggests<lb/>
there is no significant difference in the<lb/>
attitudes tested between married and<lb/>
cohabitating persons. As with males and<lb/>
females, the trend reverses when we<lb/>
compare married and cohabitating<lb/>
respondents on the reasons women do<lb/>
not cohabitate. The cohabitating re-<lb/>
spondents are more likely to agree with<lb/>
the married respondents although the<lb/>
differences are not significant. These<lb/>
differences which are similar to sex<lb/>
differences could be attributed to sex<lb/>
differences within the marital status but<lb/>
the number of respondents in each of<lb/>
these categories is not sufficient to<lb/>
either support or deny this point but<lb/>
please note the differences are NOT<lb/>
significant at any rate.<lb/>
One additional significant difference<lb/>
is found in regard to "fear of pregnancy<lb/>
There is considerably more concern with<lb/>
cohabitating respondents than with<lb/>
married. Moreover, there are almost twice<lb/>
as many females cohabitating in this<lb/>
sample than males and there is a greater<lb/>
percentage of females from the total<lb/>
sample who are cohabitating than are<lb/>
married. Remember males were more<lb/>
concerned about pregnancy than fe-<lb/>
males? It would be interesting to know if<lb/>
cohabitating males are more concerned<lb/>
about pregnancy than cohabitating<lb/>
females, however a larger sample would<lb/>
be necessary. It might be that this shift<lb/>
from the response given by women 'in<lb/>
general' to the response by persons<lb/>
cohabitating is a result of 'women in<lb/>
general' making the statement knowing<lb/>
the actual possibility of their being in the<lb/>
situation is not 'that great' whereas<lb/>
women who are cohabitating 'face the<lb/>
music every day It would not be too<lb/>
much of an assumption to say the<lb/>
possibility of pregnancy increases<lb/>
DIRECTLY with the frequency of<lb/>
intercourse. This sample does not<lb/>
question frequency only occurrence.<lb/>
Hence if 80 percent of undergraduate<lb/>
women "do it79 percent might not "do<lb/>
it" but once. One might also infer the<lb/>
frequency of intercourse to be greater<lb/>
among cohabitating than non-cohabltat-<lb/>
ing females. Therefore, if the frequency<lb/>
is higher the possibility is more real and<lb/>
immediate, consequences of the possibi-<lb/>
lity is more real and immediate,<lb/>
consequences of the possibility are more<lb/>
pertinent. When one is faced with<lb/>
undesirable consequences, one is forced<lb/>
to formulate alternative behavior patterns<lb/>
and attitudes which are in keeping with<lb/>
the consequences; In other words,<lb/>
pregnancy to an unwed college student<lb/>
would have a more profound effect upon<lb/>
her life than upon the life of a married<lb/>
college student and would, therefore give<lb/>
cohabitating respondents a greater "fear<lb/>
of pregnancy<lb/>
For the most part this study seems to<lb/>
support several "facts" which "some<lb/>
folks" seem to take for granted. "College<lb/>
boys like to get-it-on more than the girls<lb/>
do "There ain't no difference in gettin'<lb/>
married an' livin' together "Women can't<lb/>
make up their minds (support here<lb/>
could be evidenced by the almost<lb/>
categorically higher percentages of<lb/>
women with no opinion) and "The pill<lb/>
takes the worry out of being close If<lb/>
this study is actually indicative of ECU<lb/>
students there also appears to be<lb/>
sufficient student support for at least one<lb/>
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Dr. Kane.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEAOVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
i BnniwimiTMig� mi Hi n pawning nmmm<lb/>
19<lb/>
Minority Greeks form council<lb/>
By RENEE MOORE<lb/>
A new council is being formed by the<lb/>
minority greeks on campus. Chairman for<lb/>
the council is Thomas M. Huntley. Dean<lb/>
James Mallory is the council's advisor.<lb/>
The council will finance itself through<lb/>
a $5 membership charge for each<lb/>
organization. This fee is due every 15<lb/>
weeks of the school year, said Huntley.<lb/>
"The money will be used primarily to<lb/>
help develop programs the greeks<lb/>
establish. For example a sorority might<lb/>
want to start a reading program in the<lb/>
city. They can get a loan from the<lb/>
council after members of the council<lb/>
have approved a proposal said Huntley.<lb/>
The idea for the council came about<lb/>
two years ago when the minority greeks<lb/>
felt there needed to be some group to<lb/>
coordinate their activities.<lb/>
"The campus is not large enough for<lb/>
several activities among minorities to<lb/>
happen at one time said Huntley.<lb/>
"Presently there is a bit of over lapping.<lb/>
Because of this, hard feelings are<lb/>
developed.<lb/>
"These feelings aren't condusive to<lb/>
good greek relations said Huntley.<lb/>
Dean Mallory feels the minority<lb/>
greeks don't have the man power or<lb/>
resources to compete on an equal basis<lb/>
with the Panhellenic Council or the Inter<lb/>
Fraternal Council (IFC).<lb/>
"They want a group that can meet and<lb/>
get things done, a way to come<lb/>
together said Mallory. "They aren't<lb/>
strong enough to be an active part of the<lb/>
other councils.<lb/>
"It's open to all greeks just like the<lb/>
Afro American Cultural Center is orjen to<lb/>
everyone said Mallory.<lb/>
"The new council has not been named<lb/>
officially said Huntley, "because we are<lb/>
waiting on a reply from another<lb/>
organization<lb/>
This council is separate from the<lb/>
Panhellenic and Inter Fraternal Councils<lb/>
because of the dissatisfaction the<lb/>
minority greeks found with it. They feel<lb/>
their values are different and therefore<lb/>
money was being lost because the<lb/>
minorities were not participating in the<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
"I thnk it's a good idea. It shows<lb/>
unification among the black greeks on<lb/>
campus said Miss Carol J. Caldwell of<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta social service sorority.<lb/>
"It serves the purpose of organizing<lb/>
the black greeks. The IFC can't because<lb/>
ECU offers European tour<lb/>
By JACK LAIL<lb/>
A study tour of eight West European<lb/>
countries is offered by the ECU Political<lb/>
Science Dept. during the first summer<lb/>
session of 1976, for $1150 per student.<lb/>
"I need to know who is planning to go<lb/>
by the end of fall quarter said Dr. Hans<lb/>
H. Indorf, coordinator of the program.<lb/>
"This year is the last chance for<lb/>
students to go until 1978<lb/>
Enrollment is open to undergraduates<lb/>
registering for POLS 233 (nine credits)<lb/>
and graduate students registering for<lb/>
POLS 436 (six credits).<lb/>
"This program is beneficial to all<lb/>
students regardless of major said Dr.<lb/>
Indorf.<lb/>
The trip leaves New York on May 31<lb/>
and returns to New York on July 12.<lb/>
Sewer System<lb/>
Continued from page 18.<lb/>
"We installed a new chlorinator<lb/>
immediately to meet 'heir requirements.<lb/>
"We have intentionally held up on the<lb/>
installation of some of the other chlorine<lb/>
facilities because we have been advised<lb/>
that EPA is now considering elimination<lb/>
of chlorine requirements.<lb/>
"If they're undecided about what<lb/>
they're going to do, I don't want to spend<lb/>
more money<lb/>
Wastes from East Carolina University<lb/>
and industries comprise a major part of<lb/>
the waste treatment plant's load,<lb/>
according to Lewis.<lb/>
Burroughs-Wellcome has a plant that<lb/>
pretreats water before it goes to<lb/>
Greenville's plant, according to Dr.<lb/>
Bernard Kane of the Department of<lb/>
Environmental Health at ECU, and a<lb/>
member of the Governor's Water Quality<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
"Research into areas of new waste<lb/>
treatment technology is obviously needed<lb/>
and much research is being done said<lb/>
Dr. Kane.<lb/>
"Our department is not engaged in<lb/>
research on waste treatment for two<lb/>
reasons-limited research facilities and a<lb/>
primary committment of our resources to<lb/>
undergraduate teaching.<lb/>
"The immediate needs for protection<lb/>
of water quality in the Tar River basin are<lb/>
being met using existing technology<lb/>
through development of the 201 planning<lb/>
and the Water Quality Management Plan.<lb/>
"We will visit Bonn (Germany,<lb/>
Amsterdam (Netherlands), Brussels<lb/>
(Belguim), Paris (France), London<lb/>
(England), Copenhagen (Denmark), and<lb/>
Stockholm (Sweden) said Dr. Indorf.<lb/>
"The greatest advantage of the<lb/>
program is that it gets away from the<lb/>
classroom and lectures and into the real<lb/>
world. It gives the student exposure to<lb/>
other countries and their life styles.<lb/>
"I feel students should be exposed to<lb/>
more real life situations like this. We talk<lb/>
to the people in Europe who textbooks<lb/>
are written about<lb/>
The $1150 includes tuition and fees,<lb/>
program costs, travel expenses, and<lb/>
accomodations. This price does not<lb/>
include meals other than breakfast,<lb/>
passport and incidentals.<lb/>
"The Department of Natural and<lb/>
Economic Resources has made a study<lb/>
of all river systems in North Carolina,<lb/>
called the Water Quality Management<lb/>
Plan.<lb/>
"This department submits a plan<lb/>
stating what standards need to be met at<lb/>
each point along the river. It sets safety<lb/>
standards for drinking, for fish and<lb/>
wildlife, or for industries, which is the<lb/>
lowest standard.<lb/>
"They hold a public hearing in which<lb/>
citizens can ask that standards be raised<lb/>
or lowered and try to resolve these<lb/>
differences.<lb/>
"The nature and volume of the<lb/>
existing stream is very important in<lb/>
deciding how much waste can go into<lb/>
water safely said Dr. Kane.<lb/>
The Water Resources Research<lb/>
Institute has funded studies to consider<lb/>
ways and means of minimizing waste<lb/>
treatment costs<lb/>
According to Dr. Mark Brinson of the<lb/>
ECU Biology Dept an increased amount<lb/>
of nutrients in water, such as algae, is<lb/>
becoming a problem because it<lb/>
decreases the value of estuaries for<lb/>
recreation.<lb/>
"If we could trap these nutrients<lb/>
upstream before they get into estuaries<lb/>
by diverting the water through a swamp<lb/>
forest, we could eliminate this problem<lb/>
said Dr. Brinson.<lb/>
A $100 deposit must accompany the<lb/>
application. Airfare payment of $400 is<lb/>
due by January 15, 1976. Those paying<lb/>
after this date will have to submit an<lb/>
additional $50.00 for tickets. The<lb/>
remaining $650 is due by March 15, 1976.<lb/>
For applications and further inform-<lb/>
ation contact Dr. Indorf at A-132 Brewster<lb/>
their activities are not geared toward<lb/>
creating a comfortable situation for<lb/>
minorities said Cedric A. Dickerson of<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity.<lb/>
"I think it's good. It'll bring about<lb/>
unity and that's what we need said<lb/>
Miss Mildred Ramsey of Alpha Kappa<lb/>
Alpha social service sorority.<lb/>
"It will be something we can relate to<lb/>
better because it will cater to our needs<lb/>
and interest as compared to the Inter<lb/>
Fraternal Council said Thomas V. Lee<lb/>
of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity.<lb/>
"We think it'll be a good thing if<lb/>
people will abide by the bylaws. It will<lb/>
bring harmony among the greeks said<lb/>
Jimmy Adams of Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
imumtuhnii �mm muhi imp.<lb/>
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Sports<lb/>
Offensivepowerhouse buries Cavs, 61-10<lb/>
By WILLIE PATRICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VAThe parties<lb/>
were in full swing.<lb/>
Cars were moving slowly on their way<lb/>
toward an evening of fun and<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
It was Homecoming 75 at the<lb/>
University of Virginia here Saturday, and<lb/>
this city dropped into the Appalachian<lb/>
mountains was jumping with excited<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Most of them had left Scott Stadium<lb/>
by the middle of the fourth quarter,<lb/>
though, save the 2,000-plus foreigners<lb/>
from the flatlands who were making a lot<lb/>
of noise<lb/>
East Carolina University had one of<lb/>
its greatest days in football, thumping<lb/>
the Cavaliers for a homecoming gift,<lb/>
61-10. The Pirates did about what they<lb/>
wanted to do in moving the football at a<lb/>
record-setting pace and stealing it with<lb/>
the same fervor.<lb/>
While there was an added incentive of<lb/>
(yawn, but let's hear it one more time<lb/>
and put the phrase to rest for this year)<lb/>
playing against their old coach, Sonny<lb/>
Randle, there must be a word said in<lb/>
defense of the fonner Pirate boss:<lb/>
He did not walk on the football field<lb/>
at any time, other than to verbally<lb/>
disagree with the officiating and his own<lb/>
team's play. He did not block, tackle, run<lb/>
the football, or kick it either.<lb/>
It is unfortunate that the Cavaliers in<lb/>
uniform failed to do those things as well.<lb/>
And East Carolina had a whole lot to say<lb/>
about that.<lb/>
Pirates Score First<lb/>
It could have been an omen, but Cav<lb/>
kicker David Hottowe bcxled the first<lb/>
kickoff out of bounds to open the game.<lb/>
Ken Strayhorn returned the next kick 27<lb/>
yards to set the Pirate offensive machine<lb/>
in motion for the first time.<lb/>
Well, the Pirates didn't score the first<lb/>
time they had the ball, as Tom Daub<lb/>
punted 41 yards to Joe Sroba and the<lb/>
Cavs.<lb/>
The Cavs moved to a 47-yard field<lb/>
goal attempt by Hottowe, which also<lb/>
failed (He couldn't hit a 60-yard stretch of<lb/>
the ground minutes earlier, so why a<lb/>
field goal try now?). This was the last<lb/>
time the game would be as close.<lb/>
East Carolina took over on its own 20.<lb/>
Moving with gains as short as three, five,<lb/>
once a seven, four sixes and an 11-yard<lb/>
pickup, the Wishbone offense put the<lb/>
ball in the endzone at 5:21 remaining in<lb/>
the quarter, that coming on a six-yard<lb/>
blast over the middle by Willie Hawkins.<lb/>
Pete Conaty, dressed for action for the<lb/>
first time since the game at The Citadel,<lb/>
missed the PAT kick.<lb/>
The Cavs retaliated with a 27-yard<lb/>
field goal by Hottowe, then watched in<lb/>
horror as the Pirates blew them out of<lb/>
the game for good.<lb/>
A pass interception staved the<lb/>
execution till early in the second quarter.<lb/>
The Cavs moved to the Pirate 16, where<lb/>
with fourth and one, Willie Bryant<lb/>
engulfed the Cav offensive line and<lb/>
nailed Donnie Flow for a one-yard loss.<lb/>
The Pirates took the ball at their 22<lb/>
and moved for a score, Daub barreling<lb/>
two yards for the score. Conaty had<lb/>
problems with the PAT again, leaving the<lb/>
Pirates up 12-3.<lb/>
The Cavalier "Pass, Punt and Pray"<lb/>
offense moved to its 45 before giving up<lb/>
the ball again. East Carolina didn't score<lb/>
But big plays on defense turn tide<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE-During Sonny<lb/>
Randies last two years at East Carolina,<lb/>
he used to call the Pirates' defensive unit<lb/>
the "Wild Dogs but Saturday here in<lb/>
Charlottesville it was a different bunch of<lb/>
Wild Dogs" which Randle and his<lb/>
Cavaliers ran into.<lb/>
This group of "Wild Dogs" was not<lb/>
the defense, but rather it was the<lb/>
offense. And since ECU coach Pat Dye<lb/>
has said the defensive "Wild Dogs" died<lb/>
last year, then yesterday the offensive<lb/>
team certainly tried to coin the phrase for<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Perhaps the "Big Purple Steamroller"<lb/>
or some like name would be better,<lb/>
because the ECU offense virtually rolled<lb/>
over the Cavs by a 61-10 score before a<lb/>
Charlottesville Homecoming crowd.<lb/>
More embarrassing for the Cavs,<lb/>
though, were the 690 yards of total<lb/>
offense the Pirates amassed, a new ECU<lb/>
school record. Of those 690 yards, 633<lb/>
came along the ground, which also set a<lb/>
new ECU record.<lb/>
A drained and emotionally discour-<lb/>
aged Sonny Randle gave his evaluation of<lb/>
the game, as the losing coach.<lb/>
"That was an excellent example of<lb/>
one group of kids who wanted to play<lb/>
and one who didn't said Randle. "I<lb/>
knew early this morning we weren't going<lb/>
to win and I knew it wouldn't even be<lb/>
close<lb/>
But, actually the Cavs did have a<lb/>
chance for most of the first half, except<lb/>
for several plays by the Pirates and a<lb/>
back-breaking 96-yard touchdown drive<lb/>
by the ECU offense. In fact, with less<lb/>
than five minutes left in the half, Virginia<lb/>
PPP<lb/>
trailed by only 12-3 and were knocking at<lb/>
the Pirates' door.<lb/>
Fumble Halts Drive<lb/>
The Cavs had driven all the way down<lb/>
to the Pirate two and, with first and goal,<lb/>
a touchdown seemed certain. It was at<lb/>
this point, however, that ECU'S defense<lb/>
came up with probably its biggest play of<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Quarterback Scott Gardner gave the<lb/>
ball to Dave Sloan, who headfxj over the<lb/>
top. When Sloan came back down again,<lb/>
though, the ball did not come with him.<lb/>
D.T. Joyner, the Pirate middle guard,<lb/>
jarred the ball loose from Sloan and<lb/>
Harold Fort was there for the recovery,<lb/>
ending the Cavs' last drive until the<lb/>
game's final minute.<lb/>
When the ECU offense took over and<lb/>
drove 96 yards on nine plays for a<lb/>
touchdown, the game was a good as erver<lb/>
for Virginia. The Cavs quit from three on<lb/>
out, and the Pirates kept making the big<lb/>
play in the most lopsided victory since<lb/>
they routed Newport News Apprentice by<lb/>
a 74-0 score in 1959.<lb/>
Eight Records Set<lb/>
In all, the Pirates set four team<lb/>
records and four Conference records.<lb/>
The first conference record was<lb/>
broken right after the Pirates' 96-yard<lb/>
drive, when Jim Bolding grabbed his<lb/>
ninth interception of the year to set up<lb/>
another ECU touchdown just before the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The steal gave Bolding, the top<lb/>
interceptor in the nation, 18 career steals<lb/>
for a Southern Conference career mark.<lb/>
The remainder of the Pirates' marks<lb/>
came as a result of the team game totals.<lb/>
ECU ran the bail 80 times, a school<lb/>
record, for 633 yards, both a school and<lb/>
conference record, and totalled 690 yards<lb/>
overall, which was also both a team and<lb/>
conference mark.<lb/>
All this yardage allowed ECU 36 first<lb/>
downs, which was also a new school and<lb/>
conference record.<lb/>
And if this wasn't enough, Ken<lb/>
Strayhorn went over 2,000 yards rushing<lb/>
for his career with a 103 yard day on 13<lb/>
carries. Strayhorn has now run for 2,093<lb/>
yards during his career.<lb/>
But despite his day, Strayhorn was<lb/>
overshadowed by his heir apparent to the<lb/>
halfback slot. Eddie Hicks, a freshman,<lb/>
led the Pirates' ten man rushing assault<lb/>
with 164 yards rushing, including an<lb/>
electrifying 87-yard third-period score<lb/>
which brought even the Virginia fans to<lb/>
their feet.<lb/>
Defense Changes Momentum<lb/>
But the defense made its share of<lb/>
plays, too. It was these plays which<lb/>
ultimately gave ECU the initial<lb/>
momentum against the "flat" CavaJiers,<lb/>
and led to the eventful day in ECU<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Even before the two defensive plays<lb/>
already mentioned, the ECU defense had<lb/>
pulled two big stands to ward off the<lb/>
Cavs.<lb/>
The first time Virginia held the ball, it<lb/>
drove steadily into ECU territory before<lb/>
the defense held at the 30 and forced a<lb/>
field goal attempt, which never came<lb/>
close.<lb/>
Virginia drove again on its second<lb/>
series, this time for a first and goal at<lb/>
the ECU ten. But on a third down play at<lb/>
the five, safety Bobby Myrick blitzed in<lb/>
to drop the Cav ballcarrier for a five-yard<lb/>
loss and Virginia settled for a field goal<lb/>
and trailed 6-3.<lb/>
ECU'S second touchdown drive<lb/>
See Defense on page 21<lb/>
on this possession, and after allowing<lb/>
the Cavs to move to the Pirate two<lb/>
(where D.T. Joyner forced a fumble,<lb/>
recovered by Harold Fort), did record TD<lb/>
number three, Strayhorn racing 13 yards<lb/>
with a pitchout to put ECU up 18-3. The<lb/>
conversion pass attempt failed.<lb/>
Jim Bolding auspiciously put Scott<lb/>
Gardner's name in the record books, as<lb/>
the free safety picked off his ninth pass<lb/>
of the season, breaking and thus setting<lb/>
a new Southern Conference mark for<lb/>
career interceptions (19).<lb/>
Quarterback Mike Weaver, who<lb/>
directed the Pirates to 307 yards total<lb/>
offense in the first half, kept the ball on<lb/>
an inside run for the next six and then<lb/>
raced right on the option, putting the<lb/>
game away 26-3 for the Pirates at the<lb/>
half.<lb/>
The Second Half<lb/>
Weaver directed the Pirates for one<lb/>
more series in the first half, as the team<lb/>
raced 68 yards in five plays, Daub getting<lb/>
the last eight and the six points. Conaty<lb/>
booted the PAT, drawing both cheers<lb/>
from the fans in the corner of the<lb/>
stadium and mournful looks from the<lb/>
populated middle areas of Scott Stadium.<lb/>
After this, it was a matter of who, for<lb/>
how much, and how many.<lb/>
Fullback Raymond Jones got the next<lb/>
six, and Conaty the next PAT. Vince<lb/>
Kolanko was next in line, and Conaty<lb/>
evened his record to 2-2 with the ensuing<lb/>
boot. Second-line quarterback Jim<lb/>
Southerland raced and pitched to<lb/>
freshman Eddie Hicks for 13 yards and<lb/>
next score. Conaty split the posts again.<lb/>
Freshman quarterback Steve Greer did<lb/>
his number in the same line as the two<lb/>
quarterback predecessors, masterminding<lb/>
an 84-yard march in 13 plays, the Durham<lb/>
native keeping the last nine yards on the<lb/>
TD for himself. Conaty booted again,<lb/>
making his recoed 4-2 on the day and the<lb/>
score East Carolina 61, Virginia 3.<lb/>
Oh, yes, the Cavs entertained the<lb/>
remaining faithful, possibly too bad off<lb/>
to find the gates with a last minute<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
East Carolina 6 Si 21 14<lb/>
Virginia 3 0 0 7<lb/>
ECU-Hawkins 6 run (kick failed)<lb/>
VA-FG Hottowe 27<lb/>
ECU-Daub 2 run (kick failed)<lb/>
ECU-Strayhorn 13 run (pass failed)<lb/>
ECU-Weaver run (Weaver run)<lb/>
ECU-Daub 8 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
ECU-Jones 9 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
ECU-Kolanko 2 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
ECU-Hicks 87 run (Conaty kick)<lb/>
ECU-Geer 9 run (Conaty kicl)<lb/>
VA-Flow 2 run (hottowe kick)<lb/>
A-21,950<lb/>
-61<lb/>
-10<lb/>
First Downs<lb/>
Rushes-yards<lb/>
Passing-yards<lb/>
Return yards<lb/>
Passes<lb/>
Punts<lb/>
Punts<lb/>
Fumbles lost<lb/>
Penalties-yards<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
pp<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
36<lb/>
80-633<lb/>
57<lb/>
0<lb/>
2-4-1<lb/>
2-0<lb/>
2-39<lb/>
2-0<lb/>
2-10<lb/>
iUPJI<lb/>
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After<lb/>
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Was<lb/>
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The 1<lb/>
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What<lb/>
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Too, t<lb/>
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was in Gre<lb/>
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denying wl<lb/>
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Virginia. 71<lb/>
Sonny I<lb/>
recruiting <lb/>
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Commonw<lb/>
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Just liki<lb/>
have they I"<lb/>
It does<lb/>
with no rel<lb/>
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training for<lb/>
The Pira<lb/>
starting at 1<lb/>
Football<lb/>
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Just begun.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0021"/><lb/>
�mMBOT<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
21<lb/>
This Is True!<lb/>
By WILLIE PATRICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
All Is Not Right In the ACC Heaven<lb/>
1975 Results: ECU 99, ACC 27<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VAPat Dye had every right in the world to be a bit<lb/>
speechless. But his manner was partially concealed when he spoke to the ebullient<lb/>
crowd outside the Pirate locker room Saturday after the Pirates had further dismantled<lb/>
the U-Va. Cavaliers, 61-10.<lb/>
"You people saw a great football team out here today said Dye, in what anyone<lb/>
could see was a tremendous, though truthful, understatement.<lb/>
After further questioning by the excited mob, Dye made a comment that was not<lb/>
entirely picked up by the reporters in attendance. This writer thinks, and will now go<lb/>
out on a limb, by addind-that it wasn't picked up because most of the people who<lb/>
ahve to see their work in print every day didn't fully understand the magnitude of the<lb/>
of of o f TV n t<lb/>
"There are five good football teams in the Southern Conference. I wish they were<lb/>
all like Virginia , , .<lb/>
Was this an intentional derogatory comment on Dyes part. This writer doesnt<lb/>
think so, and wants to possibly shed a little light on the matter.<lb/>
The 1974 edition of the East Carolina University Pirates finished with a 3-3<lb/>
conference mark, while they were 4-1 against outside competition. Thus far in 1974,<lb/>
the Pirates rate 3-2 in conference play, and 4-1 against outsiders. A two-year,<lb/>
21-game mark thus shows ECU to be 8-2 against outside memebrs and 6-5 in the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
What does this mean to Dye and the Pirates?<lb/>
"The Southern Conference has some damn tough football being played<lb/>
The Other Side<lb/>
Too, this writer has to look at the University of Virginia program and wonder if it<lb/>
will suffer in the same manner as Wake Forest over the past seasons.<lb/>
The Cavs have won but a single game this season, coming against nearby VMI,<lb/>
which has won but a pair in eight tries this year. A loss like the one the Pirates<lb/>
pinned ont he locals Saturday will hurt their program, indeed.<lb/>
Was the high point difference intemtional?<lb/>
"I wish they had just let the clock run in the third quarter, in a way, said Dye.<lb/>
"There was nothing we could to to keep the score down because we didn't have a lot<lb/>
of our good people on the trip, in a sufficient quantity where we could take them out<lb/>
and play a lot of subs<lb/>
Also noted was that the entire second half offensively, except for one drive, was<lb/>
manned by the second and third offensive units. Freshman quarterback Steve Greer<lb/>
took the Pirates on an 84-yard match for one score and freshman halfback Eddir Hicks<lb/>
qalloped 87 yards for another six points in the onslaught.<lb/>
Dye noted after the Pirates whipped UNC that "this Southern Conference football<lb/>
is getting better than a lot of you guys (meaning the press) think More fuel to that<lb/>
comment was supplied by ECU nemesis Appalachian (UNC-Tweetsie?) who nailed the<lb/>
University of South Carolina, 39-34, Saturday as well.<lb/>
The Future of Sonny<lb/>
A distraught Ulmo Shannon commented after the game that he was "completely<lb/>
raiThere has to be a lot of truth in that statement, not only from Saturday's game,<lb/>
but his entire stay in Charlottesville as well. <lb/>
This writer didn't have the opportunity to work around the program when Randle<lb/>
was in Greenville, and can only get comments second-hand.<lb/>
He is cussed and discussed by a lot of people in Greenville, but there is no<lb/>
denying what he said in his post-game comments.<lb/>
"It might be tht I can rrrtivate the player at East Carolina and not the one at<lb/>
Virginia. They might be two different types of individuals<lb/>
Sonny has to be at least partially correct. Not taking away from the fine positive<lb/>
recruiting jobs people in North Carolina do, this writer wonders why Carl Summerell (<lb/>
a Randle product) and Mike Voight are allowed to escape from the Old<lb/>
Commonwealth. There has to be a marked difference in priorities up there than can<lb/>
explain why they consistently and frequently get out-recruited by visiting colleges<lb/>
Just like Sonny said: "How long have they been losing here? How many coaches<lb/>
have they had? That ought to tell you something<lb/>
It does indee, Sonny. This writer feels like you are marching up a box canyon<lb/>
with no relief in sight. The football coach can only do so much, and if hedoesnt<lb/>
have any support, he may as well go to selling insurance or something out of the<lb/>
This writer can't criticize someone he don't know, but he can feel a certain<lb/>
empathy with the guy's situation.<lb/>
What's In Store This Week<lb/>
The Pirates will have a day or so to savor the victory over Virginia, then will begin<lb/>
training for a return match against VMI, who lost to William &amp; Mary SJurday.<lb/>
The Pirate junior varsity will entertain Lees-McRae Saturday in Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
ootball is winding down a bit, one would think, but In evaluation ofwhat has<lb/>
hapsince the Pirates whipped The Citadel. It isn't hard to think that the fun has<lb/>
Just begun.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Defense Continued from page 20.<lb/>
followed a big defensive play by ECU in<lb/>
the second period.<lb/>
Virginia stood third and 12 at the ECU<lb/>
27 when Gardner hit end Jim Wicks for<lb/>
11 yards to the 16. Gardner, declining an<lb/>
ECU offsides inf. action, chose the fourth<lb/>
and one play instead.<lb/>
On the fourth and one play, ECU'S<lb/>
Willie Bryant stopped Don Flow for no<lb/>
gain and ECU took over on downs,<lb/>
instead of giving the first down to<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
The Pirates then drove 78 yards for a<lb/>
score and the 12-3 lead. Following the<lb/>
big plays by Fort and Bolding and the<lb/>
two ensuing first period scores the<lb/>
Pirates' 26-3 halftime advantage was<lb/>
momentum enough for the rout which<lb/>
evolved in the second half.<lb/>
And that rout got started when ECU<lb/>
drove 80 yards in five plays and scored<lb/>
on Tom Daub's eight yard run for a 33-3<lb/>
lead. After that time, the offense took<lb/>
over and made a shamble of the Virginia<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
After the game ECU coach Pat Dye<lb/>
didn't speak of a few great plays or<lb/>
performers, but rather of an entire team<lb/>
effort.<lb/>
"You people he screamed to an<lb/>
assembled ECU crowd outside the<lb/>
dressing room, "saw a great football<lb/>
team out here today. A football team that<lb/>
has worked hard. We are a class football<lb/>
team both on and off the field, and each<lb/>
is important<lb/>
Dye also noted that he thought ECU<lb/>
was now one of the best teams in the<lb/>
southeast and that he "knew that we<lb/>
should score everytime we had the ball<lb/>
Nine times ECU scored, but it all<lb/>
really boiled down to the big plays early<lb/>
in the game which gave ECU the<lb/>
momentum and forced an unconcerned<lb/>
Virginia team to quit on Sonny Randle.<lb/>
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
H I limit I II ll�iuu f ��� � IM i �<lb/>
�ft�<lb/>
MR<lb/>
MMI<lb/>
M<lb/>
WP�<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
oports Lditor<lb/>
ECU Players: K<lb/>
Respect For Handle<lb/>
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VAAlthough many East Carolina fans in Charlottesville<lb/>
were after revenge and a win over Sonny Randle, and indeed they got it, such was not<lb/>
necessarily the feeling among those East Carolina players who had played for Randle<lb/>
when he was coaching at ECU.<lb/>
One player in particular, Will Williamson, went out of his way to talk to this writer<lb/>
and make it clear how he felt following the Pirates' 61-10 win over the Cavaliers.<lb/>
"Sonny is catching a lot of abuse. I, for one, did not come up here to beat Sonny<lb/>
Randle. Personally I just wanted to win this game and come a little close to an 8-3<lb/>
record. I'm sorry Sonny came to be in this type of situation<lb/>
Williamson then went back to when Randle was a coach at ECU and how those<lb/>
years continue to linger in his mind.<lb/>
"When he was at ECU I was on the team and I enjoyed playing under Randle.<lb/>
When I played under him I really got to know him and I know Sonny Randle to be a<lb/>
winner. It's a shame he's had guys quit on him here who could have helped the<lb/>
team<lb/>
But even as ECU fans were speaking about "apples and oranges" outside the<lb/>
Pirates dressing room, ECU coach Pat Dye also spoke of the man his team had just<lb/>
humbled.<lb/>
"Coach Randle is in a rough situation here. I watched his team's play at East<lb/>
Carolina, and I have a lot of resoect for him. I don't know what's happened since he<lb/>
came to Virginia, but he had a great team at East Carolina.<lb/>
"I wish Coach Randle luck and I hope everytning turns out right for him. He did<lb/>
well at ECU aid I hate to see anyone get beat the way he did<lb/>
ECU passed the 500 yard mark in total offense before the third period even ended<lb/>
and just kept rolling up the score, to the pleasure of most ECU fans, but, Dye saw no<lb/>
need for gloating about it. In fact, he said he wished he could have kept the score<lb/>
down.<lb/>
"I wished we could have quit at the end of the third period when ECU led 47-3,<lb/>
out you can't do that. We only had 48 men with us and what can you do to keep the<lb/>
score down when that's all you have. I had played all my men in the first half,<lb/>
already.<lb/>
"You can't send a freshman out there and tell him not to run for the goal line, so<lb/>
there was nothing we could do<lb/>
With the 48 man rule behind them, as well as almost 5,000 ECU fans, the Pirates<lb/>
just kept rolling to a 61-10 win, the biggest in two centuries for the Pirates.<lb/>
But, fans, remember when you begin to gloat and wear your "ECU-61 Virginia-10"<lb/>
shirts around how many of us felt after the Appalachian games and after N.C. State<lb/>
beat us 57-8 two years ago, and remember these words, too, by Sonny Randle<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
"It might be that I can't motivate the people here like I could the people at East<lb/>
Carolina. They just might be different type of individuals there than they are here.<lb/>
"I'm drained and it can't be all me. I can't answer for the players, but I wanted<lb/>
them to play for themselves and forget about me. If you can't play for yourself then<lb/>
you can't think much of yourself, and it's written all over their faces<lb/>
Yes it feels great to win and even better to win big, but think of how it feels to<lb/>
lose, too, and how it felt before ECU started to win and before Pat Dye became a folk<lb/>
hero of sorts in ECU for beating Carolina, and now Virginia. You are only as good in<lb/>
victory as you are in defeat. Think about it.<lb/>
Golfers fifth in competition<lb/>
The late fall brought a bit of stiff<lb/>
competition for the East Carolina golf<lb/>
team last Monday and Tuesday, as the<lb/>
golfers participated in the Duke<lb/>
Invitational Collegiate Golf Tournament in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Playing in the first group, which<lb/>
featured the number one teams from<lb/>
each school, the Pirates golfers<lb/>
competed against five ACC schools in a<lb/>
54-hold competition.<lb/>
The Pirates finished fifth out of the<lb/>
six man field, beating out Virginia by 21<lb/>
strokes for that position. ECU had a<lb/>
1,153 score.<lb/>
The medalist for the ECU team was<lb/>
freshman Mike Heafner, who placed 16th<lb/>
in the overall field with a score of 227, 11<lb/>
over par. In compiling his total. Heafner<lb/>
fired rounds of 75-74-78, while playing<lb/>
with the number one golfers from Wake<lb/>
Forest on the first day and the number<lb/>
one golfers from Duke on the second<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Other scores for ECU competitors<lb/>
were: Rob Welton-231, Frank Acker-232,<lb/>
Mike Buckmaster-233, Steve Ridge-234,<lb/>
and Phillip Bell-241. The top five scores<lb/>
from each round were taken in tabulating<lb/>
the final team totals.<lb/>
The overall team winner in the<lb/>
tournament was Wake Forest. The<lb/>
Deacons finished with a 1,096 total, six<lb/>
strokes ahead of runner-up North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
After the Tar Heels, the field was<lb/>
spread out, with N.C. State at 1131, Duke<lb/>
at 1,138, then ECU and Virginia.<lb/>
Strong defense<lb/>
Bolding is Athlete of Month<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
If his name has not become familiar<lb/>
with East Carolina football fans, then his<lb/>
style of play has become a fearsome<lb/>
familiarity for ECU football opponents<lb/>
during the 1975 season.<lb/>
His name is Jim Bolding. The style of<lb/>
play is all out and his ball-hawking pass<lb/>
coverage has made him not only the top<lb/>
ECU career interceptor, but also the<lb/>
number one man in the nation in<lb/>
interceptions this year.<lb/>
Jim Bolding is also the Fountain-<lb/>
head's Athlete of the Month for October.<lb/>
During the month of October, Bolding<lb/>
anchored the ECU defense during a 3-1<lb/>
showing. During the month, the Pirates'<lb/>
defense allowed just 48 points to the<lb/>
opposition.<lb/>
As for Bolding, his credentials for the<lb/>
month showed six interceptions,<lb/>
selection as the Conference Player of the<lb/>
Week for his play against North Carolina,<lb/>
and a three-interception showing in a<lb/>
42-14 Homecoming romp of Western<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Add what he had done earlier in the<lb/>
year and Bolding had eight steals going<lb/>
into the Virginia game. Not bad, for a<lb/>
guy who was supposed to be too small<lb/>
to play major-college football.<lb/>
Lucky for ECU and coach Pat Dye,<lb/>
East Carolina was able to grab hold of<lb/>
the High Point native.<lb/>
"Everybody told me I was too small<lb/>
(150 pounds in high school) to play<lb/>
punts returned. After his injury, though,<lb/>
Bolding doesn't return punts.<lb/>
The reason he gives is his right ankle.<lb/>
Pointing to his ankle, he jokes "It's that<lb/>
ankle right there, I like to return punts<lb/>
more than anything else, but the ankle<lb/>
isn't strong enough and I'm needed on<lb/>
defense<lb/>
So far in his career Bolding has 17<lb/>
interceptions, which tie him with the<lb/>
Southern Conference career mark. If he<lb/>
intercepted a pass in the Virginia game<lb/>
then the junior set yet another record.<lb/>
With another year ahead of him,<lb/>
Bolding still has some goals he wants to<lb/>
achieve.<lb/>
"As team goals, we'd like to beat<lb/>
N.C. State and Carolina. Another goal of<lb/>
the team, and one of my own, is to play<lb/>
in a bowl game. As an individual goal I'd<lb/>
like to break the National NCAA career<lb/>
record for interceptions<lb/>
The NCAA record is 29 and if Bolding<lb/>
has a senior year like he has had this<lb/>
year and in his freshman year, when he<lb/>
stole seven passes, he could come very<lb/>
close to that record.<lb/>
But Bolding refuses to talk about his<lb/>
interceptions without giving a great deal<lb/>
of the credit to his teammates in the<lb/>
secondary.<lb/>
"A lot of people have asked me about<lb/>
my records and being number one in the<lb/>
nation. You got to remember, though,<lb/>
that there are three other guys back there<lb/>
who help me out. It takes everybody<lb/>
covering their area to make a quarterback<lb/>
throw the type of pass which can be<lb/>
intercepted<lb/>
MK?<lb/>
SELECTED - Jim Bolding 23 talks to Bobby Myrtcfc during the<lb/>
month's Athlete of the Month.<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
major-college football and that included<lb/>
State and Carolina.<lb/>
"ECU came to see me and I didn't<lb/>
think they were interested so I was going<lb/>
to play with Western Carolina, then East<lb/>
Carolina came back in January and<lb/>
offered me a scholarship. I took it and<lb/>
came here<lb/>
It didn't take Bolding long to make<lb/>
the starting squad, thanks to a 57-8 loss<lb/>
to N.C. State and a defensive overhaul by<lb/>
coach Sonny Randle following the defeat.<lb/>
"When I came here as a freshman my<lb/>
goal was to make the traveling squad and<lb/>
play on the specialty teams said<lb/>
Bolding. "But after that loss I got my<lb/>
chance to play and started the rest of the<lb/>
season<lb/>
Since that time, Bolding has missed<lb/>
but one game, that against Southern<lb/>
Illinois this year, and has set both the<lb/>
career and season interception records at<lb/>
ECU. He also holds the career punt<lb/>
returning records for yardage and number<lb/>
mm<lb/>
"Playing together we feel each other<lb/>
out there. We'll know who will back up<lb/>
who out there. Next year we hope to<lb/>
keep up the tradition we've established<lb/>
Bolding and cornerbacks Ernest<lb/>
Madison and Reggie Pinkney have been<lb/>
playing together for three years and all<lb/>
are juniors. Only Bobby Myrick graduates<lb/>
this year and Bolding is sure that there<lb/>
will be someone to fill in.<lb/>
"Next year we hope to find someone<lb/>
who will fill in well for Bobby. When he<lb/>
joined us this year there was no real<lb/>
problem with him fitting in. After he<lb/>
learned our signals he filled right in like<lb/>
he'd been playing there for three years1<lb/>
Regardless of what Bolding accorrk<lb/>
plishes the remainder of this year anc<lb/>
next year, he definitely has embroiderec<lb/>
himself into the East Carolina recorc<lb/>
books for a long time, as well as in the<lb/>
minds of those who have played againsv<lb/>
him and seen him play.<lb/>
�jii.�i mi urn i mi<lb/>
Leo Je<lb/>
that time<lb/>
instrumen<lb/>
During<lb/>
the NAIA<lb/>
NCAA's S<lb/>
Fountainhi<lb/>
Despite<lb/>
university's<lb/>
believed th<lb/>
be made.<lb/>
"There<lb/>
ment sai<lb/>
improveme<lb/>
I'm pleasec<lb/>
in most ol<lb/>
see more p<lb/>
"I hope<lb/>
when we b<lb/>
hey have i<lb/>
he distar<lb/>
mprove, bi<lb/>
hink we'll<lb/>
Two of<lb/>
Jenkins haj<lb/>
:oncern EC<lb/>
he possit<lb/>
Stadium to<lb/>
setter sch(<lb/>
schools Ea<lb/>
oad. Dr. Je<lb/>
oo.<lb/>
"We hav<lb/>
o expand<lb/>
When we f<lb/>
hree part p<lb/>
"The fi<lb/>
lompleted<lb/>
leed to w(<lb/>
nvolves e<lb/>
unning ar<lb/>
icreasing<lb/>
tands.<lb/>
"As it<lb/>
adequate.<lb/>
3 cover us,<lb/>
decent p<lb/>
etter gues<lb/>
ow<lb/>
LEO<lb/>
Jenkins :<lb/>
iproving<lb/>
cklen.<lb/>
"It would<lb/>
ating sai<lb/>
' either rur<lb/>
d zone or<lb/>
ake the ste<lb/>
<pb facs="00040004_0023"/><lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
23<lb/>
dftPM<lb/>
Jenkins discusses progress<lb/>
made by ECU athletics<lb/>
By JOHN EVANS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Leo Jenkins has been Chancellor at East Carolina University for 15 years. During<lb/>
that time he has been one of the most ardent supporters of the athletic program and<lb/>
instrumental in the advancements which have been achieved.<lb/>
During his term as Chancellor, ECU has grown from small East Carolina College in<lb/>
the NAIA to East Carolina University, which is now one of the major powers in the<lb/>
NCAA's Southern Conference. On Thursday afternoon, Dr. Jenkins sat down with the<lb/>
Fountainhead and talked about East Carolina Athletics.<lb/>
Despite the strides made in the<lb/>
university's Athletics, Jenkins said he<lb/>
believed that improvement could always<lb/>
be made.<lb/>
"There's always room fo improve-<lb/>
ment said Dr. Jenkins. "I'd like to see<lb/>
mprovement in our track programs, but<lb/>
I'm pleased with the advarjements made<lb/>
in most of the other sports. I'd like to<lb/>
see more people in the Pirates' Club.<lb/>
"I hope I can see the time in my day<lb/>
when we beat William and Mary in track,<lb/>
hey have dominated it so long. I think<lb/>
he distance running will need to<lb/>
mprove, but there will be a time when I<lb/>
hink we'll be able to beat them<lb/>
Two of the biggest questions Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins has been encountered with lately<lb/>
concern ECU'S interest in the ACC and<lb/>
he possibility of expanding Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium to hold more people and bring<lb/>
Defter schools to ECU, like the ACC<lb/>
schools East Carolina now plays on the<lb/>
oad. Dr. Jenkins discussed these topics,<lb/>
oo.<lb/>
"We have for a long time been hoping<lb/>
o expand our stadium said Jenkins.<lb/>
When we first built it we knew it was a<lb/>
hree part plan.<lb/>
"The first two parts have been<lb/>
completed added Jenkins, "now we<lb/>
leed to work on the third part which<lb/>
nvolves expanding our press box,<lb/>
unning an elevator up to it, and<lb/>
icreasing the seating capacity of the<lb/>
tands.<lb/>
"As it is now, our press box is<lb/>
adequate. If we're going to get writers<lb/>
d cover us, we are going to have to have<lb/>
decent press box. We also need a<lb/>
etter guest box than what we have<lb/>
ow<lb/>
LEO JENKINS - AS A FAN<lb/>
Jenkins said there are two ways of<lb/>
iproving the seating capacity of<lb/>
cklen.<lb/>
'It would take a year to increase the<lb/>
ating said Jenkins. "It could be done<lb/>
either running the stands down to the<lb/>
d zone or building on at one end to<lb/>
ake the stadium a horseshoe<lb/>
Jenkins feels East Carolina should<lb/>
have a bigger stadium, being the only<lb/>
major college in Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
"Eastern North Carolina is larger than<lb/>
13 of our states and we feel we should<lb/>
have an adequate stadium where we<lb/>
could have exhibition pro football games,<lb/>
crusades like Billy Graham and outdoor<lb/>
concerts. Of course a larger stadium<lb/>
would also make it easier to get the big<lb/>
schools like State, Carolina and Virginia<lb/>
to come here.<lb/>
"We played before 47,500 at State and<lb/>
45,000 at Carolina. That's well and good<lb/>
as far as crowds go, but we don't want to<lb/>
have to go there all the time. It would be<lb/>
nice to play those schools on a home<lb/>
and home basis, but we can't do that<lb/>
with an inadequate size stadium.<lb/>
"We are now arriving at a place where<lb/>
we have to start looking into the future.<lb/>
When we started our series with State,<lb/>
people said we wouldn't draw peanuts,<lb/>
but we've drawn real well. If people will<lb/>
go from here to there to see the game,<lb/>
then they will come from there down<lb/>
here<lb/>
Jenkins admitted that there had been<lb/>
an anonymous offer to help the university<lb/>
build such an addition, but stated that a<lb/>
lot more was needed to enlarge Ficklen.<lb/>
"We h'jve had an offer of $250,000<lb/>
from an anonymous person. This person,<lb/>
and I still don't know who he is, said he<lb/>
would consider giving us $250,000 if we<lb/>
would match the sum.<lb/>
"It was the understanding that if we<lb/>
matched his $250,000 he would then give<lb/>
us another$250,000to get us on our way<lb/>
to the amount needed.<lb/>
"At the present time we are meeting<lb/>
informally to decide what moves to<lb/>
make, but the money can't be raised from<lb/>
taxes, so we've considered some<lb/>
fund-raising ideas, but there is still<lb/>
nothing formal that has been discussed<lb/>
Jenkins added that it would cost<lb/>
$2.5 million to expand the stadium's<lb/>
capacity to the size needed.<lb/>
On the question of East Carolina<lb/>
University and the possibility of entering<lb/>
the ACC, Jenkins said it was a matter of<lb/>
ECU being asked to join, not wanting to<lb/>
join.<lb/>
"The rules of the game are that a<lb/>
school will wait to be invited explained<lb/>
Jenkins, "and we haven't yet been<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
"Under the code, as Chancellor it is<lb/>
my responsibility for the Athletic<lb/>
Department and I'm responsible to the<lb/>
Board of Trustees for what I do.<lb/>
"However, if we were invited it would<lb/>
be up to my discretion as to whether or<lb/>
not we accepted such an invitation<lb/>
Jenkins did say that entering the ACC<lb/>
would be a goal he'd like to see ECU<lb/>
achieve.<lb/>
"I'd like to see us in the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference or an equivalent type<lb/>
See Jenkins on topr<lb/>
Jenkins From bottom.<lb/>
program because there are a lot of<lb/>
advantages. We've already proven we can<lb/>
compete with them in the small dabbling<lb/>
we've done in competition with these<lb/>
schools<lb/>
East Carolina's successes against the<lb/>
ACC will have positive effects on<lb/>
recruiting, according to Jenkins.<lb/>
"I am very proud of the successes of<lb/>
our football team of late and it's going to<lb/>
help recruiting greatly because most<lb/>
young high school athletes want to play<lb/>
for a team that is a winner and teams<lb/>
that are growing. It could change<lb/>
athlete's minds who may have been<lb/>
thinking about going elsewhere<lb/>
Finally, Jenkins discussed his<lb/>
philosophies concerning how he handles<lb/>
the athletic programs, and how he<lb/>
handled business in general.<lb/>
"I like to surround myself with very<lb/>
competent people and then let them<lb/>
alone to do their job. I would be stupid<lb/>
to think I knew as much about football or<lb/>
basketball as Pat Dye or Dave Patton. So<lb/>
far. this policy has paid off well, not only<lb/>
in athletics, but in other disciplines.<lb/>
Many folks work better in a position<lb/>
where they have some independence<lb/>
Jenkins adds that he only has three<lb/>
more years before retirement since hs is<lb/>
now 62 and the retirement aqe is 65.<lb/>
Regardless of this, Dr. Jenkins continues<lb/>
to be a leading force in developing tne<lb/>
East Carolina Athletic program.<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
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Men. 1IA BBQ Chicken, 2 Vegetables $1.80<lb/>
Tues. Country-style Steak, wRice &amp; Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80<lb/>
Wed. Salisbury Steak, 2 Veg. ' $1.80<lb/>
Thues. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. �1.80<lb/>
Fri. Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout, Shrimp, Oysters, F.F Slaw $2.95<lb/>
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<pb facs="00040004_0024"/><lb/>
24<lb/>
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 1811 NOVEMBER 1975<lb/>
news<lb/>
Poetry contest<lb/>
Thanksgiving food Soci. and Anthro. Sigma Tau Delta<lb/>
A $1500 grand prize will be awarded<lb/>
in the current Poetry Contest sponsored<lb/>
by World of Poetry, a monthly newsletter<lb/>
for poets.<lb/>
Poems of all styles and on any<lb/>
subject are eligible to compete for the<lb/>
grand prize or for 49 other cash or<lb/>
merchandise awards. Second place is<lb/>
$500.<lb/>
According to contest director, Joseph DeJ Phi<lb/>
Mellon, "We are encouraging poetic I Dl will<lb/>
talent of every kind, and expect our<lb/>
contest to produce exciting discoveries<lb/>
Rules and official entry forms are<lb/>
available by writing to: World of Poetry,<lb/>
801 Portola Dr Dept. 211, San<lb/>
Francisco, 94127.<lb/>
SuDDort the Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Thanksgiving Food Drive for needv<lb/>
families by contributing canned goods at<lb/>
the following places: Vista Office<lb/>
(Methodist Student Center, 501 E. 5th<lb/>
St Elm Street Gymnasium, and the Afro<lb/>
American Cultural Center.<lb/>
Environmental<lb/>
Student National Environmental<lb/>
Health Asso ECU chapter will have a<lb/>
meeting Nov. 12, Wednesday at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. It will be held in the Allied Health<lb/>
Building rm. 222. All men.Ders are asked<lb/>
to please attend.<lb/>
Chess Club<lb/>
The ECU Chess Club is seeking new<lb/>
members. There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Chess Club on Wednesday, Nov. 12 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center room 14. If<lb/>
you are interested, but not able to<lb/>
attend, call Allen Mendenhall at<lb/>
756-4631. Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
There will be a Psi Chi (honorary<lb/>
psychology fraternity) meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday, Nov. 11, at 7:00 p.m. in"<lb/>
Speight room 129. Featured speaker will<lb/>
be Karl Wuensch, his topic wil be<lb/>
achievement motivation, locus of control,<lb/>
and academic performance. Fall quarter<lb/>
initiation will be held at this meeting.<lb/>
After the meeting, there will be a book<lb/>
sale in the Psi Chi Library. Everyone is<lb/>
welcome to attend the meeting.<lb/>
Job opportunities<lb/>
There will be a<lb/>
meeting at 7:30 Thursday, Nov. 13 in<lb/>
Physics 303. Dr. Keith D. Holmes of<lb/>
Burroughs-Wellcome will speak about job<lb/>
opportunities in the science fields in<lb/>
particular instrumentation on pharma-<lb/>
ceutical chemistry. This is a regular<lb/>
meeting for members of Chi Beta Phi<lb/>
also. Please come.<lb/>
The Sociology and Anthropology Club<lb/>
is presenting guest speaker, Dr. William<lb/>
V. D'Antonio, who will speak on teaching<lb/>
undergraduate sociology, Thursday, Nov.<lb/>
13, at 3:00 p.m. in Brewster D-301.<lb/>
Dr. DAntonio is chairperson of the<lb/>
Sociology Department at the University of<lb/>
Connecticut, a member of the American<lb/>
Sociological Association on teaching<lb/>
undergraduate sociology, and is the<lb/>
co-author of an introductory sociology<lb/>
textbook.<lb/>
Majors and members of the sociology<lb/>
and anthropology club are invited.<lb/>
Legislature Clerk<lb/>
Lynne Yow of Seagrove, N.C. has<lb/>
been appointed Clerk of the ECU Student<lb/>
Legislature by Speaker of the Legislature<lb/>
Ricky Price. Very active in her high<lb/>
school student government association,<lb/>
Lynn held the positions of both SGA<lb/>
President and Secretary-Treasurer. Pre-<lb/>
sently Lynne is a sophomore working<lb/>
towards a B.F.A. in interior design.<lb/>
NCSL meeting<lb/>
The North Carolina Student Legis-<lb/>
lature will hold a delegation meeting<lb/>
Tuesday, November 11, at 7:30 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. Screenings<lb/>
will be held for students interested in<lb/>
joining the NCSL. All students are<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
Sigma Tau Delta English Honor<lb/>
Society will hold its fall induction of new<lb/>
members November 13 at 7:00 p.m. ir<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall. Also Mrs. Mari�<lb/>
Farr and Dr. Sally Brett will speak on th�<lb/>
literary views of women.<lb/>
Bahai Faith<lb/>
The birthday of the prophet founder o<lb/>
the Bahai Faith, Bahaullah, will b<lb/>
celebrated by the Bahai Association at it:<lb/>
regular Wed. evening meeting at 7:3<lb/>
p.m. Nov. 12, in room 238 o<lb/>
Mendenhall. Leslie McNair and Kin<lb/>
Kerby are in charge of the program whicl<lb/>
will include music and a brief history o<lb/>
the Faith given by Lanse Johnson fron<lb/>
University of Florida. Guests an<lb/>
welcome.<lb/>
The final meeting of the fall quarte<lb/>
will be held Wed. Nov. 19.<lb/>
League of Scholars<lb/>
The last meeting of the quarter for th<lb/>
League of Scholars will be held Wed<lb/>
Nov. 12 at 5:00 in Brewster B-103. Th<lb/>
meeting will feature a guest speaker. W<lb/>
encourage all League members to b<lb/>
there.<lb/>
English Dept sponsors language conference<lb/>
By SUSAN BITTNER<lb/>
"Reading Instruction in Secondary<lb/>
Schools" is the theme of the fifth annual<lb/>
Language Arts Conference, Nov. 13-14,<lb/>
from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m in the<lb/>
Thomas W. Willis Building, First<lb/>
and Reade Sts Greenville.<lb/>
The conference, sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU department of English, will be<lb/>
directed by Mrs. Janice Hardison<lb/>
Faulkner, assistant professor of English<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Faulkner, con-<lb/>
ference sessions will probe basic reading<lb/>
problems of high school students.<lb/>
Strategies for solution to reading<lb/>
problems will be discussed.<lb/>
"This conference on reading in-<lb/>
struction in the content areas and its<lb/>
relation to improving reading in the<lb/>
secondary schools is a product of a<lb/>
continuing effort by the English<lb/>
department to stay attuned to a<lb/>
constantly changing scheme said Mrs.<lb/>
Faulkner.<lb/>
According to Mrs. Faulkner, the<lb/>
program is based on the belief that<lb/>
reading problems affect students in all<lb/>
subject areas.<lb/>
Session topics include "How Children<lb/>
Learn to Read or Not to Read "The Role<lb/>
of the Content Area Teacher in Extending<lb/>
Reading Skills and "The Reading<lb/>
Problem: Diagnosis and Identification<lb/>
Other topics are "Determining the<lb/>
Readability of Classroom Materials<lb/>
"The Application of Comprehension and<lb/>
Study Skills and the SQ3R to Content<lb/>
Areas and "Reading in Your<lb/>
Classroom<lb/>
"The situation has gotten so critical<lb/>
that we're devoting the program entirely<lb/>
to the reading problems in public<lb/>
schools said Mrs. Faulkner.<lb/>
�M<lb/>
Mrs. Faulkner said the reading<lb/>
problem is partially due to overcrowded<lb/>
schools and "buck passing Teachers<lb/>
often pass the responsibility of<lb/>
developing poor reading skills to a<lb/>
student's previous teachers.<lb/>
Another factor cited by Mrs. Faulkner<lb/>
is television.<lb/>
"We've bred a generation of passive<lb/>
screen-chidlren who don't have any<lb/>
contact with the written word said Mrs.<lb/>
Faulkner.<lb/>
Thomas Chambliss, director of<lb/>
student teaching at ECU, agreed with<lb/>
Mrs. Faulkner.<lb/>
"Television is used as a substitute for<lb/>
even limited parental involvement with<lb/>
children said Dr. Chambliss.<lb/>
"It has a definite impact on the<lb/>
development of reading and communi-<lb/>
cation skills<lb/>
Other factors named by Dr. Chambliss<lb/>
were a lack of language experiences<lb/>
the pre-school environment, a lack<lb/>
contact with printed materials and a la<lb/>
of verbal experiences.<lb/>
Conference speakers include Mr<lb/>
Faulkner, Mrs. Elizabeth Humphrie<lb/>
ESEA coordinator, supervisor of el<lb/>
mentary education, and director of tl<lb/>
Right to Read program in Pamli�<lb/>
County; Miss Ann Paul, assista<lb/>
principal and history instructor<lb/>
Pamlico Junior High School, and Ai<lb/>
Burks, director of reading at P<lb/>
Technical Institute.<lb/>
The conference is open to all schc<lb/>
personnel interested in aspects<lb/>
language arts and reading disability<lb/>
The registration fee is $4 per day.<lb/>
Interested ECU students will<lb/>
admitted free with an ECU identificatf<lb/>
card. !<lb/>
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