Fountainhead, February 10, 1976


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8,500
Circulation
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
Fountainhead
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This Issue-
24 Pages
VOL. 7, NO. 35
10 FEBRUARY 1973
R
? If
inson to head Student Union
By DENNIS FOSTER
Staff Writer
In the Feb. 4 meeting of the Student
Union Board of Directors, Barry Robinson
was selected as Student Union president
for the upcoming year.
According to Assoc. Dean of Student
Affairs S. Rudolph Alexander, "Barry was
chosen for his abilities as a leader and a
spokesman combined with his experience
with the Student Union
Robinson served as a member of the
Artists' Series Committee and is
presently chairman of that committee
which enables him to take office with an
understanding of operations and pro-
cedures of the post, an advantage few
Student Union presidents have enjoyed.
Diane Taylor, present Student Union
president, said, "the nine applications
were the most ever filed for the position,
and of the nine, Robinson was the best
man for the job.
BARRY ROBINSON - New Student Union President
"The Student Union is the main
programming organization on campus, it
consists of 12 committees which decide
what events, social, travel, concerts
etc are planned for student entertain-
ment said Taylor.
Every student is a member of the
Student Union by means of paying
tuition. A part of each quarter's tuition is
allotted to the Student Union, therefore,
acting as dues.
"My primary goal is to have more
students involved in the Student Union
stated Robinson. "I would also like to
see the committees work together as a
total Union instead of separate factions
within the Student Union.
"My goal as Student Union president
is to publicize the Student Union, to let
the student know what the Student Union
is and what it does stated Taylor.
Robinson is currently working on a
double major of Music Therapy and
Education and is a member of Sigma Nu
fraternity.
Wright Annex
discussed
Union Board rejects
adding non-student
By DENNIS LEONARD
Assistant News Editor
In-the last issue of Fountainhead, the
Wright Annex and student fees input
system were discussed. The amount of
student fees paying off the debt of
Wright Annex and other buildings totals
$72 per student per academic year.
This $72 per student is not paid
quarterly as earlier reported, but paid by
the entire academic year.
The revenue bond that was passed by
the Boardof Trustees forthe construction
of Wright Annex on May 1, 1964 for
$650,000, was to be depleted by student
fees. According to Cliff Moore, Vice
Chancellor of Business Affairs, $532,000
still has to be paid as of June 30, 1975.
"There is a pledge of $75,000 per year to
reduce the debt in Wright Annex said
Moore.
"When these bonds were issued in
1964 for Wright Annex (which became the
student center) the population of he
student body was around 5,000. The
doubling of the student population
precipitated the need for a new student
center
Another clarification of last week's
article, is that a revenue bond ones carry
an obligation to be paid by the
university, and it is up to the university
to decide the proper funding mechanism.
Wright Annex was previously used by
the SGA, Student Fund Accounting,
See Wright Annex, page 8.
By TOM TOZER
Managing Editor
In last Tuesday's Student Union Board
of Directors meeting a proposal to add
another non-student member to the board
was recalled.
The amendment to the Student Union
constitution, introduced by Student
Government Association (SGA) President
Jimmy Honeycutt a member of the
board, called for a voting member to be
added to the board from the ECU
business office.
According to Honeycutt , SGA
Speaker Ricky Price, another Board
member, decided to recall the proposal
after inspecting the amendment. The
proposal was not put to vote.
See Union Board, page 8.
HONEYCUTT
Ebony Herald lives
WRIGHT ANNEX - Student feee continue to fund bond debt.
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By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Assistant News Editor
The Student Government Association
Legislature Monday passed a bill which
reorganizes the staff of the Ebony
Herald.
The Ebony Herald is ECU'S minority
newspaper which began publication last
year.
The bill, introduced by Legislator Phil
Arrington, called attention to the fact
that the publication was having
production problems.
"It was a rather radical move and it
was intended to be said Arrington. "It
was apparent that the problems could not
be solved because the editor had no
powers, and the paper had neither
guidelines nor a format
Under the new rules, a Board of
Directors is set up to screen the editor of
the Herald, and to perform certain
oversight functions. The Board will
include the president and the public
relations secretary of SOULS, the editor
of the Herald, and the SGA Secretary of
Minority Affairs. Also included on the
Board are the Speaker of the Legislature
or an appointee of the Speaker, and the
President of the SGA or his appointee.
In its oversight functions, the
committee will screen and approve the
editor of the Herald, approve the editor's
staff, and oversee the administration of
all appropriations.
The bill also gives powers to the
editor of the Herald, and provides the
Herald with a set of guidelines.
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VMrio as rip ping-off whom
In a story last week concerning an accident in which a bus
struck a student's car, Transportation Director Greg Davis,
claimed the student was "trying to take advantage of the SGA
When you study the case, however, it looks more like Davis
is trying to take advantage of the student.
The case in question comes out of an incident ?.9veral
months ago in which an SGA bus struck a parked car. The
owner of the car, David Aman, went to Davis to seek restitution
for the damage to his car. Davis told the student to get
estimates of the damage and the SGA would be glad to pay.
But, when Aman returns with his estimates Davis is less
generous than before and offers Aman $50.00 cash to settle.
Davis feels the car, a 1964 model, is not worth the $140 plus
estimate that Aman has secured.
On top of that Davis claims that Aman was illegally parked.
So far Aman has refused to accept the $50.00 and has gone
through miles of red tape trying to simply get a little justice,
but, as yet he has not found any.
Davis considers Aman's request to fix the car back to its
original state a rip-off. And, apparently Davis is backed on the
decision by SGA president Jimmy Honeycutt.
Aman is not trying to rip-off the SGA. It is the SGA, through
the Transportation Director, that is trying to rip-off Aman.
First, Davis claims that Aman's car was illegally parked.
Well, if that was the case why didn't the bus driver who struck
the car report it to the local police. We know first hand that they
will tow a car in an instant. If the car was illegally parked as
Davis contends then Aman has no legal basis for his claim.
But, Davis is the one who has no legal claims that the car
was illegally parked since it was not ticketed. Several students
who witnessed the accident have volunteered to testify that
Aman's car was not illegally parked.
Then there is the matter of Davis making his generous $50.00
offer on the basis that Aman's car is such an old model and
hardly worth the $140.00 repair estimate.
For sure an insurance company will not make a repair
payment for any work worth more than the car. But, at the same
time, an insurance company will either repair the car or replace
it back to its original state. Davis's offer of $50.00 will not repair
the car back to its original state.
But the point is not the model year of Aman's car. He should
not have to apologize for driving a 1964 model instead of a 1975
model and al the same time he should not be penalized for it.
The point is that a student's car was damaged by trie SGA
bus. Now the SGA through the Transportation Director will not
make good on their responsibility - to pay for the damage that
they are responsible for.
To top all this off is the fact that the SGA bus system has
insurance that will cover about a third of the cost. With $100
deductible, the SGA would have to pay but $100 for the repair
while the insurance company that insures the buses would pick
up the rest of the cost.
Maybe Aman should charge the driver of the bus with hit and
run and then ask to see Greg Davis' licenses that allow him
to go into the insurance business. No doubt his patience is
worn after getting so many run arounds!
It is a sad state of affairs when a student gets the run
around and then is accused of trying to rip-off the SGA when he
only seeks what he is legally entitled to ?
UVs cUny Ke rme i4 cKonatU
to decide whether we should have a government without
without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
Thomas Jefferson
"Were it left to
newspapers, or
prefer the latter
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor
Managing Editor-Tom Tozar
Business Manager?Teresa Whieenant
Production Manager?Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson
News Editor-Jim Elliott
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tiee
Features Editor-Pat Coyte
Sports Editor-John Evans
Founteinhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tuesday and Thursday
during the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N C 27834
Editorial Offices: 758-6366, 758-6367, 758-6309
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.
Growing Pains
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The SGA again postponed a resolution favoring on-campus
parking for freshmen which would add another 650 to 700 cars
to the nightly drag race from downtown to the severely limited
numoer or parking slots on the hill. According to Campus
Security Chief Joe Calder, equal parking rights for freshmen
would up the present five percent shortfall of parking places on
the hill to a whopping 25 percent.
The SGA recently passed another resolution which concerns
freshmen, sophomores, and all other students who live in
dorms. This resolution, titled "Dorm Contract seeks to
gain student input into these leases that dorm dwellers are now
forced to sign. The present system, to which there is no
alternative for non-commuting students, dictates to freshmen
and sophomores the conditions under which they must live if
they wish to attend this university. Since its implementation this
academic year, the contract system has accounted for slightly
more than three percent in increased room utilization. Official
university explanation for utilizing this system is "to give
preference to those students who are going to be here for the
entire year
A more plausible reason would be to make the dorms appear
to the Board of Trustees and the N.C. General Assembly to be a
viable financial operation. Even though the increase in
occupancy is only about four percent (there are a total of 5,435
spaces available in the dorms), this translates to a monetary
increase of $63,300 over last year. Nevertheless, the best that
dorm dwellers can hope for is no immediate increase in room
rent. Despite increased revenue there will be no reduction in
room rental fees, according to Cliff Moore, vice-chancellor of
business affairs. The investigatory committee which was set up
by the SGA after passage of the dorm contract resolution will
hopefully determine exactly what the future is for dorm life at
ECU as envisioned by the administration.
The freshman parking resolution, on the other hand, would
only benefit those students who stake out their parking places
early in the evening or are persistent enough to race 'round and
'round Aycock dorm until being rewarded with the welcome
sight of a pair of backup lights.
But, what the SGA is struggling to solve here is more than a
question of who is to make the sacrifices. Instead, our
representatives are trying with their limited powers, to manage
the problems arising from the mismanaged growth of this
university.
In a speech to the Greenville Chamber of Commerce last
October, ECU Chancellor Leo Jenkins said that with state
support he sees no reason why we cannot have an enrollment of
20,000 in the next 15 to 20 vears.
As alumni, we may return in a decade to find the SGA
grappling with the problems of a doubled student population, a
campus spread out over the entire city, and an administration
that still wears blinders to any goals but growth for its own
sake.
By JIM ELLIOTT
News Editor
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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TheForum
Reasoning for name
change noted
Fountainhead is currently working on
plans to ask the Publications Board to
officially change the name of the
newspaper- I have already presented the
idea of a name change to the Pub Board.
But, first a new name must be
secured. Then the Pub Board will
consider changing the name - but only
when a suitable new name has been
found.
If the Pub Board approves the name
change then the SGA must also approve
the new name before the paper can
change its name.
I have mentioned the name change in
an editorial but would like to mention a
few points again in talking about why I
would like to see the name changed.
First of all, the name Fountainhead
has no relationship at all to the campus
or the university. When you say the
name Fountainhead, people wonder just
where or what you are talking about. For
sure the name is now recognized by
many people in the community - but
then people get used to any name after a
while - no matter how bad it is.
Paper names like Daily Tar Heel (UNC)
and Technician (N.C. State) are names
that relate to the schools they represent.
Fountainhead has no such relationship to
the university.
Secondly, a letter writer last week
questioned if anyone had bothered to
look up the word in a dictionary. To be
honest, we had not. But, it is a hell of a
note that you have to get down the old
dictionary to find out what the name of a
paper means. We would prefer a name
that maybe you did not have to refer to
Webster's all the time to find out what it
meant, or where it was coming from.
And, thirdly, I would like to clarify
one point mentioned in an editorial. My
reasoning for changing the name of the
paper does not have anything to do with
the paper's move from Wright to the new
Publications Center by the library. I
thought it was a dumb name when the
paper was in Wright and still think it is
dumb since we moved.
The name relates to nothing at this
university, or on this campus.
And we dislike a name that takes a
reference to the dictionary to explain.
The paper was named the East
Carolinian before it was changed to
Fountainhead in 1969.
At least with that name you know
what was being discussed.
So far there have only been three
letters to the Forum mentioning the
name change. There must be more
students than that who have an opinion
on the subject.
We do not plan to go out and change
the name if the overwhelming student
sentiment is to leave it the way it is. But,
it is hard to gauge that sentiment if we
don't hear from you.
And unless we hear otherwise, we will
proceed with the idea of changing the
name.
m
Mike Taylor
Editor
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NAME THAT PAPER
CONTEST

You have heard of name that tune. Now, you have name that paper.
And, to the lucky person who submits the "right" name for the
campus paper there is a grand prize worth - $25.00, or an all-expense
paid weekend in Pactolus, whichever you prefer.
To submit a name for the paper, simply write your choice for name on
this entry blank and place it in the box marked "names" outside the
Fountainhead's office in the new Publications Center. The newspaper staff
will select the best entry based on how it relates to the university and
submit it to the Pub Board for approval. Upon approval by the Pub Board
and the SGA, the student who submitted the winning name will be
awarded his $25.00, or trip, and also a year's subscription to the paper.
The awarding of the cash prize will not be made unless the name
submitted for approval is approved by both the SGA and the Pub Board.
Sorry, but we only pay for winners, folks.
SUGGESTED NAME
FOR PAPER
YOURNAME
ADDRESS
I.D.NO.
PHONE
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Student questions
content of free flick
To Fountainhead:
The past fifteen years have witnessed
dramatic changes on college campuses
throughout America. Perhaps the most
outstanding of these changes has come
in the form of less censorship.
Everything from dress codes and curfews
to entertainment has been liberalized.
Now that students are exercising
more control over these areas, they must
discharge their responsibility with
consideration for what is appropriate and
in good taste. In our opinion, last
Friday's free flick "The Devils was
neither tasteful nor appropriate.
The university, as an institution
dedicated to intellectual and artistic
pursuits.should screen high caliber films.
There are dozens of inoffensive films
which are both stimulating and
artistically well done. Entertaining
classics and relevant contemporary
pictures seldom available elsewhere in
the community should take first priority
on the selection list. Students should
have some kind of a popular forum for
choosing films which meet standards of
basic decency, and enjoy wide appeal.
Fountainhead reviews and advertise-
ments should be accurate and detailed
enough to provide movie goers with a
good idea of what they're in for.
Controversial films should receive at
least two reviews (not short explanations
of the film), expressing varying opinion.
The 'review' of "The Devils" in the Feb.
5th Fountainhead was misleading and
insufficient. First of all Russel's film was
neither well documented nor historically
accurate. The depiction of religious and
political upheaval in 17th century France
was sketchy and superficial at best.
Russel has a very i ak historical excuse'
for most of his portrayal of Father
Grandier, Louis XIII, or Catholic -
Protestant political intrigue in this period
of European history.
As for theaestheticquality of the film,
it should be noted that the vast majority
of reviews in Europe and the United
States gave it very poor ratings. TIME
Magazine's July 26 71 review says:
"The decadent self indulgent quality
(in the form of graphic tortures, profane
theophanies, demoniac masques, and
blasphemous orgies) - that makes for
unique and stunning spectacle, finally
cripple Russel as an artist
Variety Magazine (noted as a liberal
voice in dramatic critique) has this to
say:
"The picture abounds, some will say
revels, in visual shocks so deliberately
relentless in their effect becomes akin to
comic relief. When early in the film,
Reed, as the crucified Christ, descends
from the cross, to have Miss Redgrave
suck the blood from his wounds and then
writhe with him in the wind and the mud,
sado-eroticism becomes Grand Camp,
and the film never recovers
One doesn't have to be a religious
fanatic or a Victorian style prude to see
how the highly controversial content of
this film might be objectionable. We have
no particular objection to avant garde
films but those containing little more
than degraded sex, multiform violence
and sacrilegious attacks are not suitable
for campus screening. This type of film
should be relegated to the hardcore Kit
Kat theaters on the othei side of the
tracks. Anyone finding h nself driven to
seek out such cinematic -fnius' wouldn't
hesitate for a minute to fork out three
bucks for a ticket.
If an accurate poll of student taste in
movies indicates a desire for plain sex or
violence, perhaps we should order "Deep
Throat" or "The Bombing of Hiroshima
but let's not kid ourselves about what
we're doing. We muft draw the line
somewhere. Can we really justify
showing any film, regardless of its
content, simply by calling it art?
Disappointedly,
Sheila Kurie
Bob Marshall
Forum policy
All letters to the Editor must be
accompanied by an address along with
the writer's name However, only the
name will be printed with letters
published in the Forum.
The letter writer's address will be kept
on file in the Fountainhead office and
will be available, upon reque" to any
student.
FOUNTAINHEAD WILL, UPON PER-
SONAL REQUEST FROM A LETTER
WRITER, WITHHOLD A NAME FROM
PUBLICATION. BUT, THE NAME OF THE
WRITER WILL BE ON FILE IN THE
EDITOR'S OFFICE AND AVAILABLE
UPON REQUEST TO ANY STUDENT. ALL
REQUESTS FOR WITHHOLDING A
NAME MUST BE MADE fN PERSON TO
THE EDITOR.
Any letter received without this
information will be held until the letter
writer complies with the new policy.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER
Mendenhall faces
rising electric cost
By CINDY BRCOME
Staff Writer
Mendenhall Student Center has
received astronomical electric bills in
recent months.
Mr. S. Rudolph Alexander, Associate
Dean of Student Affairs and Executive
Director of Me enhall Student Center,
stated that dur g the summer months,
the air conditioning unit at Mendenhall
required more electricity than did heat
during the winter months.
The electrical bills at Mendenhall for
the months of July through December
totaled $28,647.50.
PROJECTED COST$32,843
ACTUAL COST
July August September October November December3,703.64 5,639.50 4,765.26 6,296.88 4,355.03 3,887.19
6 Months Total$28,647.50
Mr. Larry E. Snyder, Plant Engineer,
stated that, after the air conditioning
unit, the fl lorescent lighting throughout
the Student Center consumes a great
deal of electricity. The refrigeration in the
Snack Bar also uses much electricity.
The budget allotted to Mendenhall
comes from student fees and generated
receipts - money made by the bowling
alley, billiards parlor and tables, and
foosball. When the building was being
planned, the "energy crisis" had not yet
occurred. The electrical bills were
anticipated to be between $20,000 to
$25,000 per year. In just six months
time, the bills already totaled over
$28,000.
Alexander stated that Mendenhall was
just "faced with rapidly rising costs He
also stated that he and his staff were
doing everything possible In crder to cut
costs. Alexander said that when
Mendenhall can no longer pay its bills,
the University Board of Trustees will take
necessary steps to handle the problem.
Alexander stated that lights burning
unnecessarily should be turned off. This
would help a good deal in cutting the
costs.
Sixth grade word skiffs
decline in eastern N. C.
The language skills of N.Cs sixth
graders have improved since 1972 in the
Western end of the state, but have
declined along the Coastal Plain.
N.C. students scored behind other
Southeast students and scored seven
months below the national average.
The language skills test measures
spelling, capitalization, punctuation, and
word use.
The lower scores on the eastern end
are attributed to lower incomes and
educational levels. During the span
between 1972 and 1974, reading and
language skills showed an improvement,
but then dropped by nearly five months
in 1975.
The N.C. Department of Public
Instruction could not explain or provide a
reason as to why the language levels
dropped along the Coastal Plain.
Dr. Lois MacGillivary, a sociologist
with the Research Triangle Institute,
believes that the scores may have been
influenced by "out migration" from the
East. "While most of those who leave are
less than well-to-do, the poorest remain
said MacGillivary. "The drop could also
have been influenced by school factors
such as curriculum and instruction.
According to the report, sixth graders
from families with incomes below $5,000
scored slightly below the norm for the
beginning of the fifth grade, while those
from families with incomes above
$15,000 scored at the fourth month of the
seventh grade.
The average score in the Coastal Plain
fell slightly less than one month overall,
but plummeted 2.7 months in spelling,
dropped 1.1 months in capitalization, and
1.3 months in word use.
In another test designed to measure
student's abilities to do specific tasks,
the sixth graders did best in listening,
followed by writing, language study, and
study skills and most poorly in creative
writing.
North Carolina ranks 38th in the
nation in per capita income and 45th in
the level of education of its adults. In
addition there are only four states that
are more rural, the report added.
Qbc) southeastern
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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Black History Week
scheduled, Feb. 15-21
)
By HELENA WOODARD
Special to Fountainhead
Aldriche Z. Davidson. Chairman of the
Student Union Minority Arts Committee,
recently released a schedule of events for
Black History Week, Feb. 15-21.
On Sunday, Feb. 15, at 4 p.m a
Souls Food Dinner will be catered by
Bell's Cafeteria in the Afro-American
Cultural Center. The menu will consist of
fried chicken, barbecued chicken,
chitterlings, collard greens, potato salad,
cole slaw, sweet potato pie, com bread
and tea. Tickets for the dinner ($1.25) will
be on sale at the box office
Mendenhall Student Center from Feb.
12.
On Mon. Feb. 16, 8:00 p.m. in
AACC, Charles W. Woodard,
psychologist from the University of South
Carolina, will speak on "A History of
Black Psychology as related to the
in
the
a
Black experience in America. A "rap
session" and reception will follow.
Or. Tuesday, Feb. 17, beginning at
8:00 p.m Games Night will be held in
the AACC. Games will consist of
checkers, chess, scrabble, pokeno,
cards, etc. Refreshments will be served
and small prizes will be given to the
winners of various games.
On Wed. Feb. 18, Black art will be
featured at the AACC and will last
through Friday. Art will be displayed
from 8:00 a.m. until 7:30 p.m.
On Friday, Feb. 20, a dance will be
held in the Multipurpose Room of
Mendenhall Student Center beginning at
7:00 p.m. Tickets will be sold at the door
at $1.00 each. The Symbolic Functions
featuring the Duke and the Duchess will
be getting it on with some of their own
sounds including "Symbolic Funk and
"Jam Pack Dance and show will end at
11:30 p.m.
S.C. psychologist
to speak at Center
Charles W. Woodard, community
psychologist from Greenwood. S.C, will
speak. Mon Feb. 16. at 8:00 p.m. in the
Afro-American Cultural Center.
Woodard, who is being sponsored by
the Student Union Minority Arts
Committee, will lecture on "A History of
Black Psychology Emphasis will be
placed on the dissolution of myths
concerning black intellectual ;nferiority
as recently perpetuated by William
Shock ley and others.
Woodard, who holds a master's
degree from the University of South
Carolina, wrote his thesis on "Children
Comprehension of Teacher and Peer
Speech He received much of his
experience from such agencies as The
Midlands Retardation Center in
Columbia, S.C, The Inter-Agency
Council in Dillon, S.C, and the Mental
Health Center in Greensboro, N.C
He is presently employed by Gleams
Community Actions Agency Inc in
Greenwood, S.C where he is director of
Mental Retardation Programs and Social
Services for Headstart.
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AMERICAN GRAFFITI REVISITED
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For Sale: "34" length classical guitar in
good cond. 2 yrs. old. Call Cindy,
758-8294.
TYPING SERVICE-please call 756-5167
PIANO & GUITAR lessons - Daily and
evenings. Richard J. Knapp, B.A
756-3908.
7" Reel to reel tapes - wide assortment of
music - many are factory pre-recorded.
752-7398:
FURNISHED EFFICIENCY for 2. Utilities
included. Across from campus. 758-2585.
LOST: Cigarette case near Spain's
Foodland. Sentimental value. Reward.
752-3393.
FOR SALE - Girl's 10 speed 27" bike.
Call 758-8706.
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Will have own
room Upperclass student desired. Rent
$63. 307 H. Eastbrook. Ph. 752-0872.
NEEDED: 1 female to share nice 4
bedroom house with 3 other girls.
Already furnished. All you need is a bed.
Rent, utilities, and phone approx. $60.00
per month. Available immediately. Call
758-2217 for details.
FOUND: Earrings, in Graham. 752-8011.
WANTED: Sharp person to be waiter part
time in yacht and country club dining
room. Great tips! Only 25 miles away.
Transportation available. Call 946-1514,
8:30-5:00. MonFri.
JOBS ON SHIPS! American. Foreign. NO
experience required. Excellent pay.
Worldwide travel. Summer jobor career.
Send $3.00 for information. SEAFAX,
Dept. 12, Box 2049, Port Angeles,
Washington 98362.
FOR TRADE: 1974 Datsun pick-up. Call
after 5:00. 752-4400.
FOR SALE "Ibanez V 2 months old,
perfect cond. $350 or best offer. Call Bill
or Carlton 752-8049
FOR SALE: 4 chrome reverse wheels &
E-70 Firestone wide oval tires with locks.
Very good condition $150 will consider
trade for 4 VW tires in perfect condition.
PKone 752 7398.
FOR SALE - Dorm size refrig stereo,
hot plate. Cheap. 758-9095.
FOR SALE: 72 Toyota Corina. New
clutch and mufflers, good tires. Good
nas mileage. $1550. Call 756-3301.
LOST - Small black cat named David.
Lost vicinity of 1300 Forbes St. 758-1900.
WANTED - 1 or 2 female roommates to
share 2 bedroom apt. at Tar River Estates
spring quarter and summer if possible.
Call Debbie 752-3757.
FOR SALE: Typewriter. 752-4006.
FOR SALE: 72 VW bus. 758-2599.
FLEA MARKET: Located Pitt County Fair
Exhibit Hall in front of Airport. Open Fri.
1-4 & Sat. 10-5. Household items,
furniture. Some of everything. We buy,
sell & trade. We like you ECU students
so come on out. If you can't buy
anything the lookin' is free.
FOR SALE: BSR 310 AXE turntable
$45.00. 752-4009.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752 5133.
FOR RENT: Furnished, 2-bedroom
trailer. Extra nice. Reasonable rent.
Located at Red Barn Trailer Court. Call
758-0032 after 6:00 p.m.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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7
Area merchants refuse to honor gift
? fit
ks
By RICHARD DROGOS
Staff Writer
ECU students who have bought
Merchant's Gift Checkbooks and have
experienced difficulty in cashing them in
should not feel all alone.
The list of merchants in the
Greenville area who have stopped
honoring them is increasing. Three more
businesses, La Kosmetique, King
Sandwich and a men's hair styling shop,
have quit honoring them in light of a
possible lawsuit that will question the
legality of the books.
"The man definitely said that they
would not be sold for under $19.96 said
Miss Nell Perry, owner of La
Kosmetique.
"Now the town is flooded with these
coupon books and people are actually
purchasing them for two or three dollars.
"I really believe that something is
wrong somewhere said Miss Perry. "I
don't believe any of the merchants
involved expected the books to be sold
so quickly and cheaply
The proprietor of a men's hair styling
shop refused to talk about the coupon
books on the advice of his Greenville
attorney.
The merchants seem to be in
agreement about the coupon books. They
feel there is a breach of contract. The
books are obviously undersold, said
some of the merchants interviewed.
"I can give the books away if I want
to said Joe West, one of the persons
responsible for the books. "There is
nothing in the contract that stipulates
what price the books should be sold for
West, who bought the remainder of
the books from William Owens of
Smithfield, N.C. said that he did not
know what Owens had told the various
merchants when he petitioned them for
space in the coupon books.
"I wasn't with him when he talked to.
the merchants but now I'm in the middle
of the mess and I'm not sure which
alternative I will pursue in making sure
that the merchants honor the coupons
said West.
Mr. West has had trouble finding a
Greenville attorney who will handle the
case because of the locality of the
merchants. "I don't think any attorney in
Greenville will handle the case because
they have to deal with the merchants
also said West. When asked if he
would go out of town to seek help, West
replied, "I don't know
Some students who have had trouble
until now in cashing coupons can still
expect some trouble if the various
merchants decide to take legal action.
West has stopped selling the books in
light of the upcoming legal battles.
One of the coupons in the book is
good for a free mystery gift worth up to
$30.00. The mystery to some students is
whether they will get it or not.
"I have some friends who mailed off
their coupon for the mystery gift as long
as November and they have yet to receive
anything said Miss Perry of La
Kosmetique.
West said in a recent interview that
Miss Perry must be mistaken because the
books were not printed until December.
The coupon for the mystery gift says
in the corner "void if detached This
could possibly be the reason why
students are not getting their free gift.
"If the thing is void when you detach
it, then how are you supposed to mall
the coupon in said Miss Perry.
According to Miss Perry, Hotline in
Raleigh, a consumer complaint depart-
ment located in one of the towns
newspapers is not looking into the
mystery gift problem.
Legal action, if any, will soon settle
the problem but until then, students will
have to wait and see.
Johnson runs for College Demo I. P.
By BARBARA MATHEWS
Staff Writer
ECU student Robert Daniel (Danny)
Johnson, 19, is a candidate for vice-
president of the N.C. Federation of
College Democrats.
Johnson, an unban regional planning
major, said he is running for office to
insure that it is used to full capacity.
"The office of vice-president has not
been used as it should have been in the
past Johnson said.
"As vice-president, I would use the
office for lobbying, founding clubs
across the state, and working with the
state party
The Federation is an organization for
college students' participation in the
N.C. Young Democrats.
Johnson's political ambitions include
participation in state politics.
According to Johnson, the N.C.
Young Democrats are now involved with
other state young people's organizations
in a suit to permit 17-year olds who will
turn 18 by the November elections to
vote in the primaries.
"It is a constitutional question said
Johnson.
"But we feel 17-year-olds have that
right, and we plan to work towards that
goal
The College Federation will have a
convention February 27-28 in Greensboro.
"Thirty to 35 college clubs will be
represented said Johnson.

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"We will elect officers, adopt
resolutions, and provide an informal
forum for candidates and their
representatives on both the state and
national levels
According to Johnson, 1976 is an
important year for Democrats.
"The people elected will influence our
lives for the next four years Johnson
said.
"I would like to encourage everyone to
register and vote, regardless of party
affiliation.
"I would like to become active in
party politics Johnson said.
"But I would like to be a public
servant, too. Hopefully, through party
politics I will be able to achieve elective
office
"Everyone must get involved so that
we can help make this a better state, a
better nation
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Phone 752-2624
fif"





8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1978
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
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Union Board
Continued from page 1.
Efcony Herald
Continued from page 1.
"Although students would still have a
majority on the Student Union Board,
adding a new voting member from the
administration could have upset the
balance said Honeycutt
The Student Union constitution
provides that to pass an amendment a
three-fourths majority of the Board of
Directors must approve it at two
consecutive meetings. If three individuals
on that board are non-students, passage
of an amendment could be vetoed. The
non-student members voting together
would constitute a one-third voting block
enough to supress any mree-fourths
approval.
Presently there are eight voting
members on the Student Union Board of
Directors, six students and two
non-students. Adding another voting
administration member would have
allowed the non-student members to veto
any amendment to the constitution.
According to Student Union President
Diane Taylor, a non-voting member of the
board, the reasoning behind adding a
business administrator was to help in
examining the annual spring budget for
the Student Union.
"I still think that adding a business
administrator to the board would help in
economic matters, but he would have to
be an ex-officio member without a vote
said Honeycutt. "Tucker (James H.
Tucker, Dean of Student Affairs) feels
that without the vote no business
administrator would participate. I
disagree with Dean Tucker on this
The eight voting members of the
Board of Directors are: SGA President
Jimmy Honeycutt; SGA Speaker Ricky
Price; SGA Treasurer Larry Chesson;
Women's Residence Council President-
Shelly Scott; Men's Residence Council
SGA SPEAKER - RICKY PRICE
President-Danny Hinnant; Inter Fraternity
Council President-Bit I Harwood; Dean
Tucker; and Art Department faculty
member-Ray El more.
The two non-voting members of the
Board are; S. Rudolph Alexander,
Assistant Dean of Student Affairs, and
Diane Taylor, Student Union President.
The editor can select his staff and act
as a voting member of the Board of
Directors.
The approval of the present bill
authorizing the organization of the Herald
did not come about without difficulty.
Originally, Arlington introduced a bill
on Monday, Jan. 26, asking that all
Ebony Herald funds be reverted back to
the SGA treasury. The bill was sent to
the appropriations committee where it
was postponed. In postponing the bill,
the appropriations committee agreed to
allow the staff of the Herald to publish
another paper before acting.
Arlington introduced yet another bill
in the legislature the following Monday,
Feb. 2. The new bill, the one on which
the legislature acted Monday, Feb. 9,
was introduced before the Ebony Herlad
had a chance to publish another edition.
"The new bill was introduced before
the Ebony Herald had an opportunity to
come out because it was apparent that
the problems were managerial and
organizational said Arrington. "Also,
whether or not the present staff would
exist as it is, the Herald needs a set of
guidelines which this new bill gives it
Maurice Huntley, editor of the Herald,
explained to the appropriations commit-
tee that the Christmas edition of the
Herald was ready for publication but the
Publications Board photographer did not
get pictures for the edition on time. The
whole paper was based on the pictures,
according to Huntley.
At a SOULS meeting, Thurs. night,
Feb. 5, he explained that the January
edition was held up because the SGA
Treasurer would not release Ebony Herald
funds.
The Treasurer held up Ebony Herald
funds because the bill that was
postponed could have left the Herald
without funds, according to Ricky Price,
Speaker of the Legislature. If this had
happened, there would be no money to
pay for printing the paper.
However, since the new bill was
passed Monday night, funds should be
released.
The recent edition of the Herald,
which was ready well in advance of
publication, was released last Friday.
In other matters, the legislature failed
to override a veto by SGA President
Jimmy Honeycutt. The bill to extend SGA
elections to two days was introduced by
Legislator Ray Hudson.
The Legislature also approved a
Constitution and appropriation for ECU'S
Rugby team.

Wright Annex
Continued from page 1.
Presently Wright Annex is not being
used for student organizations, but is
housing the Student Counseling Center,
AFROTC, and campus attorney's office.
When the Mendenhall Student Center
was constructed in 1974, the student
organizations in Wright Annex were
moved there. At that time the Pub
Board requested to be moved to South
Cafeteria where the REBEL, BUCCANEER
and Fountainhead presently occupy the
Publications Center
With the departure of student
organizations, Wright Annex was left
vacant, temporarily, but student fees are
still being used to reduce the debt.
Some of the student organizations
that are presently housed in "university
owned" buildings are the REBEL,
BUCCANEER, Fountainhead and WECU
The only student organization that
moved into Wright Annex is the Student
Counseling Center. The AFROTC is not a
student-wide organization, a student is
not permitted to talk with the campus
attorney unless that student has a
referral from an administrative official.
"I would rather see a member of the
university family housed in existing
facilities, instead of seeing the building
vacant and deteriorating added Moore.
Some people still thinh
we don't exist.
Little do they hiKrw
WEea
OLDE TOWNE INN
117E.5THST.
758-1991
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jy P i w r W tf r WP T r P r
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL
7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
imiM ii m Bin npiT n
9
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Sullivan resigns SGA position
By HELENA WOODARD
Staff Writer
Tim Sullivan, Student Government
Association executive assistant, an-
nounced his resignation at the Feb. 9
session of the legislature.
"I'm leaving mainly because of my
grades Sullivan said in a speech before
the legislature.
Sullivan praised SGA President Jimmy
Honeycutt for not showing "jealousy"
when Sullivan often received the limelight
for legislative work. Sullivan received a
standing ovation following his announce-
ment from members of the legislature.
Sullivan, who was appointed execu-
tive assistant by Honeycutt at last
spring's inaugural banquet, served as
liaison between the SGA president and
the legislature.
As a freshman legislator, Sullivan
helped form a freshman caucus from
which he initiated Operation Freebird,
which led to self-limiting hours for
freshmen women. He cited Operation
Freebird and the formation of the
Halloween Riots Committee as two of his
major efforts as a legislator over the past
two years.
Sullivan said he was the first
freshman class president to serve for a
full year in that post.
"As freshman cjass president, I was
the chief proponent for WECU Sullivan
said.
In his newly created post as SGA
Executive Assistant, Sullivan worked on
special projects, worked with Honeycutt
in the North Carolina Association of
Student Governments, and as a liaison
with the legislature. He also helped put
out a freshman newsletter.
Two main projects are still pending,
Sullivan said. They are the legal rights
sessions and an SGA newsletter.
Sullivan declined to confirm any
intentions of running for SGA president
in the upcoming Spring election.
"Any decision that I make will be
made in the next two weeks he said.
However, he added that he believed
student government is in trouble of being
isolated.
"I'm worried about that trend. I want
to be involved again he added.
SGA bus accident
remains unsettled
By TOM TOZER
Managing Editor
The pre-Christmao SGA accident that
did an estimated $139 worth of damage
to a car owned by David Aman, an ECU
student, was "hit and run" according to
eyewitness Bill Burnett.
Burnett together with two other ECU
students, Warren Beck and Bill Sermon,
were in a car behind the SGA bus when
the accident occurred.
According to Burnett, Beck wrote the
note informing Aman that his car had
been hit. It had been reported early that
the driver of the SGA bus had left the
note.
"The back end of the bus struck the
car as it made a left hand turn on to
Ninth St said Burnett. "The car was hit
hard enough to shake it around on its
shocks.
"The damage was pretty bad, the
front fender was scraped and dented
According to Burnett the car was in a
legal parking space.
"The car was definitely in a legal
parking zone said Bill Shermon. "The
front fender on the driver's side needs to
be completely replaced.
"In my opinion the bus driver should
be arrested added Shermon.
Aman has yet to receive any money
from the SGA for the damage done to his
automobile. According to SGA Trans-
portation Director Greg Davis, he has not
been able to locate Aman.
Girls like it.
rST
Sullivan's legislative work has not
been without some controversy however.
Sam Hicks, an SGA legislator who wrote
a recent letter to Fountainhead criticizing
Sullivan, said he believed Sullivan was
helping the students, but was using
them.
"Sullivan is using the students for
personal gain said Hicks. "Sure he has
helped the students, but he is using
them to get the limelight Then he
added, "I'm just anti-Sullivan
Phil K. Arrington, also an SGA
legislator, said Sullivan is one of the
"most intelligent, aware, and hard
working individuals in student govern-
ment
Sullivan said he believed that the
biggest criticisms involving him as a
legislator centered around "anti-SGA
feeling his age (he's a 19-year-old
sophomore), and his controversial stand
on self-limiting hours for freshmen
women and the Halloween disturbance.
For the Halloween disturbance,
Sullivan was instrumental in contacting
Attorney Jerry Paul and getting him to
represent ECU students in a suit against
Greenville.
Sullivan also acted as liaison between
the SGA and the Greenville City Council
before and after the Halloween
disturbance.
W
TIM SULLIVAN - Ex-SGA Executive AMteUnt
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io
FOINTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
m
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FEA TURES
Since 1919
Moore has watched EC grow
By ELIZABETH BEST
In 1919 approximately 500 students
were enrolled at ECU, the faculty was
very small, and very few buildings had
been constructed on campus. Since that
time the campus has changed
tremendously, according to Pearlie W.
Moore, who has worked at ECU for 56
years.
Moore became a waiter in 1919,
serving tables at ECU'S dining hall until it
changed from table service to cafeteria.
He served many prominent persons, such
as U.S. Vice-Pres. Barkley in 1945, U.S.
Sec. of Labor, Mrs. Frances Perkins, and
several North Carolina governors.
When the dining hall changed to a
cafeteria, Moore became supervisor of
the salad department and remained
there until he retired in 1966. At the same
time he catered to parties after regular
working hours.
"I've come in contact with some very
nice people at ECU said Moore. "That's
why I've enjoyed my work so much
Moore now works two and a half
hours a day MonSat. and one hour on
Sunday at ECU'S greenhouse.
"I knew nothing about plants when I
first started working at the greenhouse,
but now my wife and I really enjoy
working witn plants at home said
Moore.
"I transplant plants, root plants, water
them, and keep the bugs off of them for
the ECU Biology department he added.
"Dr. Donald Jeffries is my supervisor
Moore has worked on campus during
the administration of all of ECU'S
presidents-Dr. Robert H. Wright, Dr.
Leon R. Meadows, Dr. John D. Messick,
and Dr. Leo W. Jenkins.
"I have enjoyed every job that I've had
on the ECU campus says Moore.
"Contrary to the hectic atmosphere of the
cafeteria, it's very quiet here in the
greenhouse
Moore has had the experience of
seeing the college grow since he began
working here in 1919.
"At that time, there weren't many
teachers, students, or buildings here
said Moore. "There weren't even any male
students here then
Moore has observed that ECU
students have changed quite a bit since
1919.
"From what I can observe, the
students aren't as friendly as they used
to be he said. "In the beginning
everybody knew everybody else, but this
is no longer possible due to the growth
of the school
But Moore sees great value in the
growth of ECU.
"ECU has caused a lot of industry to
come to Greenville and is therefore
responsible for its growth he said.
Moore intends to continue working at
the greenhouse as long as he is able to
work.
Pitt, ECU Young Demos gather
for annual installation banquet
By RAY TYLER
Staff Writer
1976 is not only the bicentennial year,
but it is also an election year. Political
candidates have hit the banquet circuit
and the quadrennial madness of
hand-shaking, cocktail parties, and
speech-making is virtually unavoidable.
Greenville experienced one such
gathering, Feb. 3, when the Young
Democrats of Pitt County combined with
the Young Democrats Club at East
Useful pointers on
? ?
wntown etiquette
Oh hail downtown, the mainstay of EZU social life. Through the years, countless
romances (and babies) have been conceived within the black lighted, smoke filled,
beer scented confines of Greenville's clubs (also known as beer joints, saloons, and
dens of inequity).
The saddest malady ever facing an EZU student is the feeling of not fitting in
downtown This problem seldom affects Greeks (what a difference a "delta' makes),
freaks, or hardened alcoholics.
The affected group, nevertheless, is surprisingly large.
It is for these lost souls that these "D.T guidelines are aimed.
1 Never take your date downtown. It might lead members of the opposite sex to
believe that you're already taken. Besides, with the rising cost of beer who can afford
to pay for booze for two?
2. Evening attire is not required. Gingiss formal wear doesn't stand up well on lighted
dance floors. Also, an unsuspecting alkie may mistake you for a tall penguin, and try
to put a leash on you.
3. Don't drive downtown. There's no room at Tamerlane for your Volkswagon.
4 Schedule your restroom trips 15 minutes before the necessity arises. Those lines
can be something else.
5 Use Head & Shoulders regularly to avoid that
black lights
'little snowflake" look under the
6 Never use your Newby's sub for a midnight foott all game at Fifth and Cotanche.
The sub might fly through the open window of a passing police car.
7 Never flick your Bic while dancing, no matter how "lit" you and the dance floor
might be, especially if your partner has long hair.
8 As you stagger back to campus, cross Reade Street at the traffic light. The Reade
Street drag strip between Fifth & Cotanche doesn't lend itself to swaying pedestrians.
9 Speaking of traffic lights, never mistake them for strobe lights under which one
may dance You might be doing the hustle, but passing cars will be doing the bump.
10 Speaking of the bump, don't get carried away with hip motions. Sure you want to
"send" your date, but not all the way to Bear Grass, via the hip express.
Carolina University and held their
Installation Banquet.
Although two local politicos, ECU
Chancellor Leo Jenkins and First District
Congressman Walter B Jones were
absent, two candidates for statewide
office did make it. They were Lillian
Woo, who is running for state auditor
and Waverly Akiens, a candidate for Lt.
Governor.
"I think this is going to be a
Democratic year said Akiens, who was
the featured speaker. 'The Democrats are
going to win big
Akiens, a 1955 graduate of ECU, is
from Fuquay-Varina and serves on the
Wake County Board of Commissioners.
Like other politicians he argues that this
position has given him insight into North
Carolina's major problems.
"We have good things in North
Carolina but we have problems also. We
are like a ship on an endless sea said
Akiens.
Then Akiens got close to the heart of
every voter by talking about jobs and
wages.
"We have to create 40 thousand jobs
per year just to stay even. The question
is what kind of jobs? We have the lowest
industrial wage in the nation: Is this
good? I say no Akiens said.
But the tall president of the North
Carolina County Commissioners, talked
mostly about development of industry in
the state.
"We have the finest land and the
finest soil but we have scarred the land,
desecrated it. I say if we are going to be
part of the free enterprise system we
should be the best part argued Akiens.
And Akiens hit on the sometimes
touchy issue of highways saying "you
could get on an interstate and drive to
the Pacific but try getting on one and
driving to the Atlantic
Akiens, who joined the FBI after
graduating from the University of North
Carolina Law School, to throw curveballs
at organized crime, tossed his political
pitch to the Young Democrats.
"Look at the candidates and what
they have done for the respective areas
from whence they came he argued.
When the speech-making was over,
the main business of the evening took
place, which was installing the new
officers of the local clubs.
Pam Marks, the new president of the
campus club, commented on activities
her organization may come up with in the
future.
"We are thinking of having a forum
with state Democrats and see how thev
got involved, on that level said Miss
Marks. "We want to get away from the
idea that not everyone in politics is a
politician, most are just everyday
people
The club is not allowed to support
any particular candidate before the
primary, according to Marks. But they are
willing to help any of them get organized
and get votes in an indirect way.
"We plan to start getting certified as
notary publics so we can validate
absentee ballots stated the Jacksonville
native.
Marks feels her club is inexperienced
at the moment but that they will be able
to get others involved.
"We want to get people involved in
social issues of interest to everybody not
just Democrats; issues that benefit
students Marks explained.
Marks' partisan partner is John
Prevatte, president of the Pitt County
Young Democrats.
"Our main mission is not a total
Democratic victory in November but to
help restore the faith of people in
politics said Prevatte. "We want to get
people involved in politics
Prevatte said his club will act as a
liaison between the campus community
and official campaigns.
"We will be working closely with the
campus club to provide a political outlet
for people who want to work in a
campaign explained Prevatte.
"We will be bringing all the major
state candidates here and hopefully some
of the national candidates like Carter,
Harris, Bentsen, Udall, Jackson, and
possibly Wallace said Prevatte.
In a political year like 1976 what else
could one expect but a lot of flesh-
pressing and speech-making.
1
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By PAT COYLE
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HHHIHHHH
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m
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3610 FEBRUARY 1976
11
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mmm
ENTERTAINMENT
'Smarter Brother'shows humor in the rough
THE ADVENTURES OF
SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER
Bv BRANDON USE
Entertainment Editor
Thinking of detectives? Among the
first of the list must be Sherlock Holmes.
Maybe if you know your subject well
enough you may be able to include
Mycroft Holmes, Sherlock's brother. But
to separate the pros and amateurs all one
must do is observe whether the name
Siegerson Holmes is included among the
flatfoot Who's Who.
Yes, Siegerson Holmes the daring,
swashbuckling hero of THE AD-
VENTURES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES'
SMARTER BROTHER. Siegerson is the
brainchild (no pun intended) of Gene
Wilder who wrote and directed the film
as well as starring as Siegerson. In
repeat performances from YOUNG
FRANKENSTEIN are Marty Feldman as
Siegerson's sidekick and Madeline Kahn
as the cerebrally offset female lead.
Siegerson, we learn, is "other"
Holmes, who sums up his feeling about
his famous brother by announcing that
his name should be pronounced,
"Sheerluck The plot loosely revolves
around finding a stolen English
government document which will
supposedly cause devastating war if it
falls into the wrong hands.
I say "loosely revolves" because it is
almost 45 minutes into the movie before
we are sure if there is a plot at all. For
the longest time I thought it was a
"Revolution No. 9" on film, a never-
ending series of non-related sight gags
and one-liners.
I suppose that it is inevitable to
compare this movie to YOUNG
FRANKENSTEIN, but I will try to keep it
to a minimum by saying that where
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN completely
knocks you in the aisle with some lines,
SMARTER BROTHER merely makes you
laugh out loud. This is due to the
missing continuity in the latter. The plot
is kept secondary and sometimes hidden
completely in order for the sight gags to
stand out; and they do, but often, too
awkwardly.
Do not misunderstand, there are some
absolutely hilarious scenes in the movie,
but this is where I find another contrast
with YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN that
points out the weakness of YOUNGER
BROTHER. I left YOUNG FRANKEN-
STEIN thinking what a hilarious MOVIE, I
left YOUNGER BROTHER thinking what
hilarious SCENES.
Dom DeLuise is superb as a
"different" opera singer and Leo McKem
is sufficiently menacing as the evil
Professor Moriarity. Gene Wilder is
again excellent and sometimes you're not
sure if he's not Dr. Frankenstein replaced
in Victorian England.
There is an overkill of sight gags in
the film and Marty Feldman is used to
the max for comic potential as the loony
sidekick. Wilder shows us great potential
in the directing and writing part of
moviemaking but still has not become
smooth enough to let viewers avoid
rough parts in the film that seem as
uninteresting as they do chaotic.
All in all, the film is not as bad as it
is rough.
The laughs are there, just unpolished.
If you go to a movie for laughs, your time
will NOT be wasted with this one. If you
expect a polished film to go along with
laughs then take vour chances.
This film now playing Plaza Cinema 2.
Bob Dylan's 'Desire' is packed with emotion
By ROGER WHITSON
Staff Writer
Bob Dylan knows Desire. He speaks
to and from the heart of America. The
vagrant balladeer of the sixties has struck
again. Like a lightning bolt burning
through mountains of AM radio hits and
plastic-packaged superstars, Dylan
recaptures America.Good to tap feet to, a
journey into the soul, the record is Dotn.
"Hurricane" is not the story of some
forgotten tropical storm. The illegal
imprisonment of Rubin (Hurricane)
Carter, friend of Dylan and ex-heavy-
weight boxer, is lamented. It expresses
tearful rage at such disregard of human
rights. The old songs "still make us
weep where there's suffering to be sung.
Flowing over the listener like a deep
brown river, "Isis slow steady
calculating Dylan's beckons to the hearts
of all. Street life, shabby clothes old
beggars and new lyrics - Dylan still
searches America's soul for some trace
of meaning. Lured into a search for
absent treasure in the ice-capped
mountains and ice-covered hearts of
strangers, Dylan returns to his old love,
weary, disillusioned and mellowed out, in
love.
Calypso, reggae, whatever one
chooses to call that singular eternal
spring time music bom in the Caribbean,
plays host to Dylan on"Mozambique"and
Earn while you learn about
business working at the Happy
Store. We have an opening for a
perttime employee who is willing to
work just about every Friday,
Saturday and Sunday night
Including summer and holidays for
a minimum of two years. Must
have a car. Apply in person to
Fred Austin, Supervisor
Happy Store
10th & Evans f ts.
Between 3-6 P.M.
on Wednesdays
graciously he courts her. Nice lyrics, nice
tune - little meaning.
Plaintively murmuring, calling out,
"One More Cup of Coffee pulls the
listener into its mystic depths. Dylan and
Emmy Lou Harris melt together in tragic
harmony. A sense of uncontrolled
resignation to a love he cannot possess
seems to fill Dylan - the emotional
impact of this tune is indescribable.
"Joey "King of the Streets , unlikely
sensitive gangster Gallo made a hero
by Dylan, was gunned down by rivals in a
Brooklyn restaurant while dining with his
family. A deserved fate? People are
people Dylan implores convincingly.
Unseen forces drive Dylan to sympathy
with the "underdogs" of society-
outmoded emotionalism? Not as long as
someone, anyone, gives a damn.
The full-range, the whole world, trip
arranged by B. Dylan and Associates
(Rolling Thunder). "Romance in Durango"
sit back, take a nice big hit of tequila or
whatever and fall into Mexico. Dust
covered bandidos ride out from the
speakers - careful with your spurs there
on the table, pass the tequila, don't bum
holes in the rug.
"Black Diamond Bay grand hotels,
gambling casinos hit by glistening
chandeliers, mysterious women, natural
disasters and unnatural behaviors. A
volcano erupts and destroys everything
leaving a disinterested Dylan, beer in
hand, watching the whole scene with
"old Cronkite on the seven o'clock
news So what? "Nothing anyone can
say, and I never planned to go anyway,
to Black Diamond Bay Apathy. America
in the seventies.
Crying soul trapped in physical body
and unable to escape as tears flow. "Sara"
questioning, pleading with words and
harp. Dylan begs lost love to stay - like
an attempt at recapturing innocence,
noble but impossible.
Overwhelmina emotion. Desire . Bob
Dylan - if not for you, would America
still have a conscience. Bob Dylan's
Desire, on Columbia Records, a mind trip
worth any price.
THIS WEEK AT THE
ELBO R
? It
Tues
Wed
Thurs.
Fri
"AUGUST TIDE
" "no cover"
Sun.
"THE EMBERS"
AUGUST TIDE" (3-7)
DAY PARTY
NO CO VER CHARGE
Contests & Prizes
LADIES NIGHT
in mm
?
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aamaai





12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3610 FEBRUARY 1976
mm
mm
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Mi
JoniMitchellat Duke by Curt Bowman
A woman CAN have everything
? . ?
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3610 FEBRUARY 1978
13
m
ENTERTAINMENT
Behind the scenes at the Union
By LAURIE WILSON
Staff Writer
"We have been getting ripped off by
the Student Union. There hasn t been a
group here since James Taylor. All we
hear about are rumors and then nothing
happens
If any of this sounds familiar to you
and your sentiments are like those above,
then finish this article. If you still feel
the same way, then I suggest you do
more than talk.
The Student Union receives appropri-
ations in the amount of $3.50 per full
time student. Other than money from
ticket sales, this is the only money
distributed among twelve committees,
with the exception of the major
attractions committee, to be used for
programming for an entire year. Major
attractions is on a separate, or restricted,
budget. They receive $45,000 to $50,000
at the beginning of the year for their
programming. Now, this many sound like
a lot of money, but if you stop to realize
how much a really good name costs to
bring here, it isn't that much at all.
James Taylor alone cost the committee
$25,000 and Linda Ronstadt was just a
little less. Money was made on these two
concerts, but the money goes back into
the committee to help bring other
attractions. If the committee's funds go
over $50,000, the excess goes into a
savings account. Then next year after the
new budget has been received, the
money is redistributed among the
committees. If the major attractions
committee goes below $35,000, they
cannot program for the rest of the year.
Who picks the programs we do get
and who is spending all of this money?
The committee members compile a list of
likely prospects and begin to look at
charts in their respective areas. For
instance, the travel committee checks out
all possible trips to see which is the best
for the money for the students. The
concert committee looks at record sales
and talks to radio stations to see who is
the most asked for performer. Inform-
ation is received from the National
Entertainment Conference which pub-
lishes data from other schools on how
certain performers were received in their
area Major attractions uses this to
decide how well the performer might do
here.
This is only the beginning. The other
committees must be checked so that no
dates will conflict, if possible. The times
around mid-terms and finals are bad to
hold anything big, so that doesn't leave
much time in between for twelve
committees to work with. Then, they
must check to see if the coliseum,
auditorium or theater hasn't already been
booked. If all of this checks out, then the
information is voted on with a majority
vote ruling and the decision goes to the
program advisor. He calls the agencies to
check dates and prices.
If we can afford the performer on the
right date, he must call again to get the
contract. This contract is gone over by
Dean Alexander to see if it is legally
acceptable. The group may ask for
special equipment or privileges. If we
can't provide these requests, then special
riders must be attached to the contracts
and sent back for approval. If all is
agreed upon, the contract is signed by
both sides. A cancellation within a
certain number of days before the
performance date causes the group to be
liable for pocket expenses which includes
ticket printing, posters, money returned,
etc. If there is a no-show, then they must
pay a percentage of the fee. All of this
takes 60-90 days before the actual
performance - that is more than a month
the committee has worked to bring just
one group.
The committee must also cope with
problems with the agencies. There are
not many tours scheduled for the winter
and, because of the bicentennial year,
they are holding back even more till
spring, hoping to get big outdoor jobs.
Then again, some of the bigger
names won't even come to an auditorium
unless it seats a certain number of
people. Now think about Minges - can it
even be compared to State or UNC?
These other schools have more students,
therefore more money to work with, not
to mention the bigger coliseums. East
Carolina is a big drawing area in this part
of the state, but we are limited by money
and seating.
Big deal so far? Well then, think
about the size of the organization known
as the Student Union There are 60 people
working on these twelve committees to
keep 11,000 students happy as well as
serve the community. Of course there
will be problems, both internally and wi'i
the students Only the members dec.ui.
on what programs to bring here and they
are the only ones spending the students'
money, not the administration or the
SGA. All of their work is done
voluntarily, too. None of them are paid
with the exception of the Student Union
president.
Another fact to consider, and be
proud of, is that East Carolina's student
union is one of a few in the U.S. that is
independent and operating on its own
budget. The Student Union is not
connected with the SGA either through
organization or money. It gets its own
percent of student fees, and the
responsibility and position of the Student
Union president is equal to that of the
SGA president. The difference between
the two organizations should be made
clear to the students, as expressed by
Greenville
movies
PLAZA ONE
Jan. 28 (14 days) Three Days of the
Condor
Feb. 11 (14 days) Hustle
PLAZA TWO
Feb. 6 (14 days) Sherlock Holmes
Smarter Brother
Feb. 207 days) blackboard's Ghost
PITT
Feb. 6 Legend of Bigfoot
Feb. 13 Alice Doesn't Live Here
Anymore
Feb. 20 Dog Day Afternoon
PARK
Fen. 13 The Killing Machine
Feb 20 Hearts of the West
Ri??n Shot Repair Shop
I Shoe Store
Across from Blount-Harvey Store
Downtown Greenville
111 W. 4th Street
Repair All Leather Goods
JOIN IN ON
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Diane Taylor, the current Student Union
president "When it comes to politics, go
to the SGA president When it is about
entertainment, come to me. When it
comes to representing the students, we
should both be contacted
It is hoped that planning will be
easier when East Carolina changes to the
semester system since there will be more
time to work with. Until then, the
committees have planned a big spring
quarter although it has been proven in
the past that this is a bad time for
university audiences. The call of the
beach and downtown is a powerful one in
the spring and weekends find the campus
empty. But, if you can, support their
efforts. If you think about it, the
responsibility for getting decent pro-
grams also lies with us. The more
support we give, the more the
committees have to work with.
So there you have another viewpoint
of the Student Union. If you are still not
satisfied, then do more than complain.
Go to the second floor of Mendenhall
The people there are open to suggestions
and ready to listen. It is your money
and you can have a say on how it is
spent.
Vincent Price will be appearing Wed
Feb. 11. in the Theatre Arts Series giving
his performance THREE AMERICAN
VOICES . The voices are Walt Whitman.
James Mac Neil Whistler, and Tennessee
Williams
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MBnHBM
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HflHB
14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
v?
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ENTERTAINMENT
'Rimers of Eldritch'
through Feb.14
The Playhouse opened The Rimers of
Eldritch , the third show of this season
Monday night in the Studio Theatre. The
show will run through Saturday, February
14th.
The Rimers of Eldritch won the
Vernon Rice Award in New York and
introduced a new and talented
playwright, Lanford Wilson. Mr. Wilson
wrote the smash hit Hot L Baltimore.
Working with a structure similar to
Our Town, the playwright employs in
Rimers a unique chronological technique
to capture with eloquence and insight the
very heart and meaning of the small
mid-western town of Eldritch.
Kurt Mortmeyer is playing tne
somewhat central character of Skelly.
Barbara Richardson plays Cora and
Charlotte Cheatham plays Eva. Con-
stance Ray, Faye Precious in Who's
Happy Now? , plays Eva's mother, Evelyn.
Stephen B. Finnan directed Rimers
and John Boyt designed the lights and
set. Carol H. Beule designed the
costumes.
Student tickets are free with I.D. and
activity cards at the McGinnis
Auditorium box office. The run of the
Morningsong At
Wright Auditorium
CONSTANCE RAY plays mother to
Charlotte Cheatham's Eva in the
Playhouse's "The Rimers of Eldritch
show is from February 9th through the
14th at 8:15 in the Studio Theatre.
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mimmn
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
15
Nixon has bagged
Democratic hwlquattefs
qttehtfed to
Ifscreaif
rwl leaders
10 MINUTES
Of YOUR TIME
COULD SAVE
A FRIEND'S LIFE
The CIA
Oarrled out. ?,
assasSlnoTiOnS
The Ffentagon has fib
on every US (
The IHS?.
.1H .
htfsiwj
In the time it takes to drive
your friend home, you could save
his life.
If your friend's been drinking
too much, he shouldn't be driving.
The automobile crash is the
number one cause of death of
people your age. And the ironic
thing is that the drunk drivers
responsible for killing young people
are most often other young people.
lake ten minutes Or twenty
Or an hour. Drive your friend
home That's all. If you can't do
that, call a cab Or let him sleep on
your couch.
We're not asking you to be
a doctor or a cop Just a friend
r
DRUNK DRIVER. DEPT Y
BOX 2345
ROCKVILLE. MARYLAND 20852
I want to save a friend's life
Tell me what else I can do
"I
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Address
City
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IMS HH,HA? ?AM n ?i !tn I MMMITU t
IF YOU LET A FRIEND DRIVE DRUNK, YOU'RE NO FRIEND.
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umbers i
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Fried Shrimp dinners Roast Bool
Coantry fried ehiokoa Namberf ere
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Feb. 14,1976)
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16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7. NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
:
?
"feuVe always
thoughtyou were
a
Now prove it
(JoinUs.)
There are a lot of jobs to be done in this world, helping
people in trouble, in pain, in distress American Red Cross
takes on more of these jobs than anybody Surprised?
Remember: Red Cross is more than blood drives. It's
more than helping the thousands of victims of disasters. In
fact. American Red Cross tackles over 100 different kinds of
Helping People jobs?in the city, the suburbs, wherever
you are
We need money, it's true, so we can go on offering all
our free services But we also need hearts And hands. And
conviction.
Call your local chapter Join us.
The American
Red Cross.
The Good
Neighbor.
kAZZ )AZZ R?CORD9
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list $698
FOR $4"
LYNARD SKYNARD
Gimme Back my Bullets"
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All $798 list 8- track tapes on a sale for $5
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Roses are red,
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From
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If you are the traditionalist on Valentines Day
or if you prefer something a hit more original, you
can send your Valentine a personal message
through Fountainhead's Classified Valentines.
Just replace these blanks with words of affection,
(25 or less) , and bring them by the Fountainhead
office before 3:00 Wednesday Feb. 11.
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FOUNT AINHEADVOL. 7, NO.
ii ii iia i m u m i unm i.
3610 FEBRUARY 1978
iw i wnwsflmi
17
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For candidate Jimmy Carter
Ramsey appointed campaign coordinator
By BETTY QUNTER
Staff Writer
East Carolina student Dennis Ramsey
has been appointed as campus campaign
coordinator for presidential democratic
candidate Jimmy Carter.
Ramsey was appointed by David
Parker who is state wide campus
coordinator for Carter.
"My main purpose
something organized on
Carter said Ramsey.
"East Carolina and the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill are the only
two schools in the state that have
campus campaigns going for Carter
According to Ramsey, various other
schools in the state including Wake
Forest, UNC at Wilmington, and State
is to get
campus for
will be beginning campaign programs for
Carter.
"A booth supplied with pamphlets
and persons who can explain Carter's
position on various issues will be set up
in the old student center
Also a poll conducted throughout the
dorms to see how many students are
registered to vote was suggested by
Ramsey.
"Regardless of how someone votes, it
is important that they vote said
Ramsey.
Spending is limited but publicity by
radio, pamphlets and personal contact
will be utilized by the campaign,
according to Ramsey.
In conducting a campaign, Ramsey
commented that personal contact may
have the greatest impression.
Librarians attend
ECU workshop
Twenty-four librarians from universi-
ties and public libraries across the state
recently completed a three-day workshop
on non-print library materials at ECU.
The program was sponsored by the
N.C Library Association and the N.C
Division of State Library, in coordination
with the ECU Division of Continuing
Education. Funding was provided under
Title I of the Library Services and
Construction Act.
Workshop coordinators were Lloyd
Childers, LCSA federal program assis-
tant, and Raleigh librarians Diana Young
and Barry Mangum.
Purpose of the pro im was to
acquaint participating librarians with
such non-print library resources as
recordings, art prints, sound and silent
I!
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films, games, transparencies, posters,
toys and the equipment necessary to use
these items.
The program included discussion of
the uses, processing and circulation of
non-print materials and participants were
given opportunities to learn about
production of photography, videotapes
and slide presentations.
Among the workshop instructors were
Dr. Budd Gambee, associate pofessor of
library science at UNC-Chapel Hill; Trish
Gwyn, project director for the Rocking-
ham Public Library in Eden; Patrice
Gafney of the Forsyth County Library's
audio-visual department; Dr. Robert
Brown, professor of education at ECU;
Walter McLendon, instructor of education
at ECU; Tom Thuma, director of
instructional resources for the ECU
Division of Health Affairs, and Marietta
Franklin, media coordinator for Ravens-
croft School, Raleigh.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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Phone phreaks harrass Ma Bell
(CPS)When Joe Engressia was a
student at the University of Southern
Florida, he was simply flipped out over
phones. He knew amplitude tolerance
like most students know rock music and
was on intimate terms with multiple line
tie capabilities and high precision
op-amps. On top of all this technological
know-how, Engressia had perfect pitch.
So it came as no surprise when
Engressia was nabbed by Bell Telephone
authorities in 1968 for whistling into a
dorm telephone to wrangle free calls for
his fellow students. Engressia was
warned by Bell and disciplined by school
authorities but a true phone phreak had
been bom.
Engressia, who is blind, was just one
of hundreds of American phone freaks
who got Ma Bell's number during the
sixties and early seventies. College-aged
phone phreaks were everywhere: some
drove VW buses crammed with
switchboards and computers, others sat
at home and looped their voices across
the continent a few times and then
zoomed over to Europe to ring a phone
booth and ask about the weather. Young
phone freaks stung Ma Bell for nearly $16
million in 1971 but today, everything has
changed. Phone phreaking has gone
respectable.
"By and large, students are in the
minority these days says Dennis
Mollura, an AT & T spokesman in New
York. "Now it's businessmen and lawyers
and doctors - it's people of means, not
students
Mollura's claim is backed up by
recent phone phreak arrests. Robert "Love
That Bob" Cummings faces a year in jail
and a $1,000 fine for his alleged use of a
blue box which police and Bell security
agents say the actor was holding when
they burst into his apartment last
December 16. Lainie Kazan, the singer,
recently pleaded guilty to phone fraud
and was placed on 18 months probation
in addition to repaying the phone
company. A New York coin dealer also
has been forced to fork over nearly
$6,000 to Ma Bell for the several
trans-oceanic blue box calls he made one
day in 1974.
Phone company officials cite greed
and a "cheat Ma Bell attitude" as the
reasons these normally model citizens
opt for the blue box.
The box, a small device with 13
buttons, enables the user to bypass the
phone company's tolling equipment. It
was first built in the early sixties after a
student discovered an article in a college
engineering library which explained the
tone frequencies which Bell uses to
activate its electronic switching
mechanisms. Ironically, the article was
written by a Bell scientist. All copies of
the magazine have since been withdrawn
at Bell's request.
The box - simple, inexpensive and
easy to build - simply duplicates the
tones by pushing the buttons. The tones
are emitted nuch like Engressia's whistle
and when pressed up against a phone
mouthpiece, the blue box enables the
user to slip unnoticed into Bell's millions
of miles of lines. A black box, on the
other hand, allows a person to receive
incoming long distance calls for free.
Tooling around the world via Bell's
wires caught the fancy of many
electronic wizards in the late sixties and
somewhat of an underground movement
sprung up. They went by names like "The
Chesire Cat "Dr. No" and "Captain
Crunch talked to each other in late night
conference calls by way of Moscow and
surprised friends by popping up in the
middle of their phone conversations as
they tapped into lines - ah with the blue
box.
One phreak the infamous Captain
Crunch, once slipped into the system
and boosted his voice completely around
the world. As his voice headed back into
North America, he asked the last
operator in the chain to ring the phone in
the booth next to him so he could chat
with himself.
"Needless to say I had to shout to
hear myself Crunch told Esquire
magazine in October, 1971. "But the echo
was far out. Fantastic. DelayedI could
hear myself talk to myself
"Ma Bell is a system I want to
explore Crunch continued. "I'm not out
to screw Ma Bellif I do anything it's for
the pure knowledge of the system. You
can learn to do fantastic things. Have
you ever had eight tandems stacked up?"
As time passed, more and more
people, mainly young, discovered
methods for duping Bell. The use of false
credit cards became a favorite trick but
as fraud increased and Bell's losses
mounted, the company decided to crack
down.
"We got much more agressive says
Bell spokesman Mollura. "Before when
we discovered fraud we tried to talk to
people. Now we prosecute to the full
extent of the law
In 1972, according to Bell's statistics,
1,023 people were arrested nationwide for
various types of fraud. 848 were
convicted. In 1974, 739 people were
collared by Bell's large internal security
force and 656 were convicted. During the
same period, Bell's losses dropped from
$10 million in 72, to $6.8 million in 1974,
the last year for which complete figures
are available.Many convicted users
received stiff fines or even jail terms.
Mollura says Bell agents find little in
the way of organized groups defrauding
the company these days other than
organized crime figures. He did say that
Bell is still plagued by "underground
papers" which print detailed instructions
on how to cheat the company. Bell tries
to have these publications suppressed
and In many cases courts go along with
the company. A court order In 1972
forced Ramparts magazine to yank its
June issue off library shelves all across
the country, but last summer, The Fifth
Estate, an alternative paper in Detroit,
beat a Bell rap when a jury found the
paper innocent of attempting to convey
information that would defraud the huge
company.
Mollura feels the Fifth Estate case is
unusual. "I guess my message is that
one time there was a myth that it was
easy to cheat the phone company. But
now the evidence is to the contrary.
People are getting caught he warns.
Rich ones at that.
Senator Morgan against proposal
A recent news letter released through
Senator Robert Morgan's office warned of
a proposed bill introduced in the U.S.
Senate that could hurt North Carolina's
tobacco farmers and the tobacco
manufacturing industry.
The bill, introduced on January 29, by
Senator Gary Hart of Colorado and
Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts,
would increase the tax on a package of
cigarettes by 30 cents. This increase is 10
cents above the present average Federal
and State tax of 20 cents per package.
According to Morgan, the result of
passa e of this legislation would be
catastrophic to N.Cs agriculture and
tobacco manufacturing plants.
In the news release it was pointed out
that tobacco products are the heaviest
taxed commodity in this country. In 1975,
the Federal government collected $2.2
billion and the State governments
collected $3.2 billion from the tax on
cigarettes
It was pointed out that the bill, which
promises "better health" would actually
add $180 a year in taxes to the 50 million
Americans who now pay an average of
$120 a year on the cigarettes they buy.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL.7, NO. 3610 FEBRUARY 1976
?IW l ???'?? IIIIIHUBH1I
19
mmmm
mm
ECU receives
unrestricted gift
An Eastern North Carolina financial
institution, East Federal Savings and
Loan Assn has contributed an
unrestricted gift of $5,000 to the ECU
Foundation, executive director Don
Leggett announced recently.
R. Ben Rayford Jr of Kinston, senior
vice president, said the "parallel growth
of East Federal Savings and East
Carolina University is not a coincidence
in that they have both contributed greatly
to the economic and cultural growth of
eastern North Carolina.
"Sensing the need for continued input
from the university in its growing
influence in building a more viable
eastern North Carolina, East Federal is
proud to become a donor to the ECU
Foundation both now and on a
continuing basis
J.V. Brittle, East Federal president,
said "We are keenly aware of the benefits
given to all element of this section of the
state by this fine university. It is
necessary that business accept the
responsibility of being one source of
more financial means to assure this
continued contribution
Leggett and ECU Chancellor Leo W.
Jenkins expressed appreciation on behalf
of ECU, stressing importance of support
from the business community.
Greenville Lions
want donors
for N C Eye Bank
The Greenville Host Lions Club is
cooperating with State agencies for the
blind in its appeal to ECU students,
faculty and staff to support the North
Carolina Eye and Human Tissue Bank,
which serves as a clearing house for all
Eye wills and requests for eyes and other
human organs.
Volunteers from the faculty, staff and
student body will be available in Wright
Building, February 19, 1976, to discuss
the Eye Will Program designed to help
some of the thousands of blind people to
see.
There is a great need for tissue to
carry on the work that goes into the
miracle of modem science - the corneal
transplant operation. The cornea is a
thin, transparent lens-like covering in
front of the pupil of the eye.
Most of the victims of corneal
damage from accident or disease can be
helped by the transplantation of corneal
tissue retrieved from recently deceased
persons. Such operations have become
commonplace and have a high rate of
success.
In some cases the condition of a
damaged eye can be helped with the
transplantation of sclera or white of the
eye. There are also some instances when
the vitreous, the jelly-like substance that
fills the eye, can be transplanted when
there are retinal problems.
Human eye tissue, secured through
the eye-bank's donor program is not
keeping pace with the demand, according
to Professor Melvin J. Williams,
Chairman of the Eye Bank program of the
Lions Club.
Those wishing to sign donor cards
should contact a volunteer at the table in
the Wright Building or see Dr. Mel
Williams, Dr. James Hix, Dr. Robert
Lamb, Dr. Warren McAllister, or Mr.
Robert Boudreaux.
If further information is desired,
phone Mr. Boudreaux, President of the
Lions Club, or Dr. Williams, Chairman of
the Eye Bank Program.
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DONATION RECEIVED - East Federal Savings and Loan Assn. has contributed $5,000
to the ECU Foundation. Shown making the presentation to Or. Leo W. Jenkins, ECU
Chancellor, is R. Ben Rayford of Kinston, senior vice president R( and John L. Gray
Jr Kinston, senior vice president and treasurer LJ. ECU News Bureau photo.
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FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
On Sundays
Morning Worship-9:00& 11:0a.m.
Church School - 9:45 a. m.
CORNER S. ELM. & FOURTEENTH STREETS
Paston - Rev. Richard R. Gammon
Campus Minister- Rev. John N. Miller
y- The First Presbyterian Mini-bus operates
through ECU campus on the schedule below
and returns after midday:
Leaves
Gotten Hall via Mall
Green-White Area
Umstead Hall
College Hill-Tyler
For Church School
9:30 a.m.
9:35
9:40
9:45
For 11 a.m. Worship
10:30 a.m.
10:35
10:40
10:45





HBHHhHBIH
20
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
mmmmmmmmmmmmmm
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tmmmim
Sports
Wrestlers drop State
RALEIGH-East Carolina took four
consecutive matches here last night to
rebound from a 15-5 deficit and down the
North Carolina State wrestlers, 22-18.
ECU found itself down by 10-0 after
the first two matches, the result of a
forfeit and a 6-3 loss by Wendell Hardy,
and failed to gain ground, even though
Paul Osman took a decision over State's
Clay Fink and Tim Gaghan matched
State's Jay Martin for a draw.
When Tom Marriott lost a decision to
Joey Whitehouse at 150, the Pirates
found themselves down by a 15-5 count.
Paul Thorp and Phil Mueller made up
the difference in the next two matches,
as Thorp took his man by a pin. Mueller
took a superior decision over State's
Howard Johnson to knot the count at
15-15 going into the 177 pound class.
At that level, ECU'S Ron Whitcomb
ran his season record to 25-1 over the
year, and 1fX) in dual meets, with a
superior decision over Lee Guezo.
With ECU up by 19-15 going into the
190 pound class, Mike Radford had a
chance to clinch it for ECU-and he did.
Radford was impressive in his
decision over Sam Catalano, as he
finessed his way through the match and
to a victory in the 190 class. The victory
staked ECU to a 22-15 lead and pushed
Radford's season record to 22-2, 8-1 in
dual meets.
That meant the only thing for ECU
heavyweight D.T. Joyner to do, against
State's massive Tom Higgins, was to go
out and try his best. Joyner, a freshman,
took the ACC runner-up wrestler and
All-America football player to the limit
before coming out on the short end of a
3-2 decision. Earlier in the year, Joyner
had defeated Carolina's Dee Hardison,
another ACC football standout.
The wrestling team now stands 9-2 for
the year, with the only losses coming
against nationally ranked LeHigh and
Oregon State in the first matches of the
year.



-
I
RON WHITCOMB
Besides Whitcomb, Mueller has gone
through the dual meets undefeated.
Mueller nas won all ten of his dual
matches and compiled an impressive 20-2
overall record. Thorp raised his record up
to an impressive 21-5-1 slate.
East Carolina will now have one dual
meet left before participating in the
Southern Conference tournament on
February 27 and 28. The match will take
place this Friday night against Old
Dominion in Minges Coliseum. The ECU
wrestlers have won the SC tournament
the last four years.

Sports Spotlight
Tuesday, February 10
ECU Women at Elon College
Swimming at Duke
Thursday, February 12
ECU Women's Basketball vs. Georgia
?Friday, February 13
Wres
Wrestling vs. Old Dominion
Women's Basketball vs. Winthrop CCMIege
?Saturday, February 14
Bask
Basketball vs. Appalachian State
Gymnastics at Longwood, Wm. & Mary
Woman's Basketball vs. Winthrop Tournament
Track at Delaware State
?Monday, February 16
Basketball vs. Furman
?Tuesday, February 17
Elon College Durham7:00 7:30
Rock Hill, S.C.7:00
HOME Rock Hill, S.C.8:00
HOME 7:30 Williamsbura, Va. 2:00 Rock Hill, S.C. Wilmington, Delaware
I Women's Basketball vs. Old Dominion
I Basketball at Mercer
HOME
HOME
Macon, Ga.
7:30
7:00
8:00
mm
Time-Out
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
Winter Sports Coming To An End
NOT IN THE LAST SEVEN YEARS
East Carolina hasn't had a losing basketball team in seven years. The last time the
Pirates finished with a record below the .500 level was in 1967-68.
Ironically, that was Tom Quinn's second year as head coach at ECU. Quinn is the
man current ECU coach Dave Patton replaced at the helm last year. That makes this
the second year as head coach for Patton.
During that 1967-68 season, the ECU team compiled a 9-17 record. With the ECU
team currently holding an 8-12 record, this year's team will hopefully better that
record, but it will be hardpressed to finish above .500.
In order to avoid a losing season, the 1975-76 version of East Carolina's basketball
team would have to win five of the six games it has left on it's schedule. These six
games include at least one Southern Conference tournament game.
With Appalachian State, Furman, Western Carolina, Mercer and Georgia Southern
left on the ECU schedule that may not appear too hard a feat, but when one considers
the way East Carolina has played so far this year ECU could be lucky to win half of
its' remaining games.
Certainly, the most important games of the remaining five will be against ASU and
Furman, both at home. Appalachian State is probably the most improved team in the
conference this year, while Furman is probably the biggest flop of the year-even
when one considers the dismal ECU season so far.
After watching Saturtfc a fiasco between the Pirates and the Athletes in Action
one might laugh when th writer says that he feels the Pirates can still finish in
fourth place in the confer ce, and 13-12 going into February 28th's first round
tournament game. In order to host that first round game, East Carolina would have to
finish fourth (or better). Since it is currently fifth and ASU is in fourth-place, this
Saturday's game with the Mountaineers is probably the most important of the year for
East Carolina. Of course, there have been a lot more of those "most important games
of the year" this year because the Pirates continue to lose the "big games" then
rebound to win another, which serves to keep them in contention while still putting
the team with its back against the wall.
With Saturday's game with Appalachian and Monday's contest with Furman, it will
be do-or-die time for the Pirates. If they win, the Pirates will finish 8-6 in the
conference, which should be good enough for a fourth place finish and maybe even a
third-place slot in the conference.
Should the Pirates' lose one or both of those games, however, particularly, the
Appalachian game, it will be nearly impossible for them to finish higher than fifth. To
place fifth would mean that ECU would have to play on the road and that would mean
an added burden foi the Pirates.
NOT MUCH LEFT THIS WINTER
Looking over the sports schedule for the remainder of the Winter season, both the
wrestling and the swimming teams are just about through with their pre-Southern
Conference competition. The wrestling team, with an 8-2 record going into last night's
match at North Carolina State, and the swim team, 8-2 after Saturday's win over
Virginia Commonwealth, each have only one match left this winter.
The tankers' last meet comes tonight against Duke, the fourth ACC school the
Pirates will be swimming against this winter. The wrestler's last match will be Friday
night against Old Dominion. The match will be held in Minges.
ONLY BASKETBALL LEFT OTHERWISE
Except for conference championships in track, swimming and wrestling, the
remainder of the action following this week will primarily be limited to the men's and
women's basketball teams.
The women's basketball team, especially, will have a tough schedule over the next
two weeks.
Beginning with the Winthrop Tournament this weekend, the Lady Pirates will be
playing eight games between February 12 and February 28, and four over a five day
period between February 17 and February 21. The Lady Pirates' final home game will
be on February 17 against Old Dominion at 7 o'clock. This week's schedule finds the
women at Elon College and playing in the Winthrop Tournament this weekend. The
first round opponent for ECU will be the University of Georgia.
ATHLETE-OF-THE-MONTH
The choice of Athlete of the month for January was an extremely hard choice.The
selection ultimately came down to a choice between Ron Whitcomb, Stewart Mann
and Debbie Freeman. Whitcomb and Mann have been performing well all year long for
the Pirate wrestling and swim teams and certainly were worthy of mention for such an
honor.
Debbie Freeman was chosen, however, because of her outstanding play for the
women's basketball team. Not only is she the leading scorer in the state, but Miss
Freeman has also brought a great deal of note to a sport thai has for so long been
without a great deal of publicity. Perhaps it may have been better to recognize all
three athletes as Athletes of the Month, but Miss Freeman certainly ranks as the most
outstanding of the three in this writer's mind.
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
21
Debbie Freeman is
A thlete of the Month
By JANET HOEPPEL
Assistant Sports Editor
The statistics will speak for
themselves a 22.9 scoring average,
which is number one in the state, and
the state's third leading rebounder with
12.6 a game. But to any observer who
has attended the women's basketball
games this season, the general play is
evidence enough. And it is for her play
during January that Debbie Freeman has
been selected as Fountainhead's Athlete
of the Month.
Freeman's presence on the court is,
to say the least, impressive. Assists,
countless defensive interceptions, team
work, not to mention her point
productions and rebounding contri-
butions together add up to quite
impressive performances. This has made
Freeman a valuable asset to the team and
her play has been instrumental in ECU'S
5-3 record this year.
In addition to an indispensible place
on the Pirate team, Freeman, a
sophomore, has established several
personal records and accomplishments
during the young season.
In the season opener against West
Chester State, Freeman broke a Pirate
record for free throws attempted with 15
shots at the line. In that same game, she
also broke the team record for the most
free throws made as she converted on 13
of those 15 attempts.
In the second game of the season
against N.C. State, Freeman set a new
mark for the most field goals made in a
single game when she hit on 16 of her
shots from the floor.
Freeman has also led the team in
scoring in almost every game played and
on several occasions was high
rebounder. In the early season loss to
State, she scored 34 points, which was a
career high.
In regard to the records, Freeman
says that at the beginning of the season
she was not expecting to be playing such
an important role on the team, especially
in scoring.
"I hadn't set any personal goals at the
beginning of the year. The first couple of
games it just happened that I got the
ball. It started coming to me and so I've
been shooting it
Freeman attributes two factors to her
performance so far this season.
One reason is the team's fast moving,
run and shoot style which Freeman says
enhances her own individual style of
play.
"We play best when we can run and
shoot. That helps me because that's the
way I learned to play basketball.
"There wasn't a high school team at
home, so I played recreation basketball,
when I got the ball I just took off down
court. That's how I started laying and
why I fit in with this team
This year Freeman was one of several
women awarded athletic scholarships -
the first given to women athletes at ECU.
And Freeman cites this fact as an
underlying reason why she has played
with such intensity.
"Since I would be playing under a
scholarship, I felt that I had something to
prove. Therefore, I figured I had to work
harder
As for the remainder of the season,
Freeman thinks the Pirates will have a
good chance to win the rest of their
games, adding that the team is ready to
play.
"The tournament win at Elon really
helped the team by making everyone
want to play harder and win. It hasn't let
us down at all.
ATHLETE OF THE MONTH ? Debbie Freeman 35 goes up for a shot against
UNC-Greensboro in the Lady Pirates' 86-68 win. Miss Freeman has been selected
Athlete of the Month for January. Photos by Kip Sloan.
"Our next games will be away and
everybody is looking forward to them
Debbie feels the Pirates will be in
good shape against any team mainly
because no one can afford to concentrate
on one individual player.
"They can't do that with our team. To
a certain extent, State tried to
concentrate on me, but with April, Rosie,
and the other players on our team, you
can't afford to do that
See Freeman, page 23.
heqpt()Sfpre's
For entertaining a group of friends or just
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choice at the 10th Street Happy Store. We have
the widest selection of wines in eastern North Carolina,
and now give our friends special Valentine Day
prices on selected domestic wines.
Stop by our store at 10th and Evans Streets in Greenville.
l&lenfiri
Special
ON SPECIALLY MARKED GALLO, TAYLOR, AND
ITALIAN SWISS COLONY WINES
Choose from Sichel, Tytell,
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Almaden, Taylor,
Sebastini, Beameister,
and your favorite
domestic and
imported beers,
too.
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Free Fountain Pepsi
Special Gas Price
Amoco Regular Lead Free
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Come in today to The Happy Store, 10th and Evans Streets in Greenville.
Coupon expire hebruary 14, 1976
PH





22
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 7. NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
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Are basketball players selling themselves short?
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
Envision this. It is 1986 and the
National Basketball Association is
conducting its playoff championships.
They are down to the final series of
seven games. The New York Knicker-
bockers are hosting the Los Angeles
Lakers in the seventh and deciding game.
Madison Square Garden has only a
couple of thousand fans in the stands
and it is almost game time. What is
going on? Back in good old '76 the
Knicks could draw 19,500 if they were
playing against a high school team.
This is very well what could happen
since the players are now fighting for
their rights and disregarding the rights of
future possible professional athletes.
These $200,000 a year cry-babies would
carry an owner to court just because his
pension provides only $50,000 annually
from the time he retires at age 30 for the
rest of his life. Most people in the United
States would love to work hard labor for
the rest of their lives for that kind of
money.
What brought all this up was the
contract signed last Tuesday between the
NBA Player's Association and the owners
of NBA ballclubs. This contract could be
a landmark development in professional
sports. The pact actually settled three
controversial areas that have had players
in an uproar since the Curt Flood case in
baseball.
The option clause has always been a
tool with which the owners have binded a
player to one club for his professional
career unless traded or released as a free
agent. This was the main basis for most
of the suits that have kept the game of
basketball in the courtroom instead of on
the court.
Commentary
The college draft has always been the
device used by owners to begin the
binding process on the players. After a
player had finished his college eligibility,
his name was put in the pro draft pool. If
he was selected by a team he was legally
stuck with that team unless traded or
released. The draft has always been one
of the first things players' unions have
struck at in court.
If a player negotiated a jump from one
team to another, the team he was
originally with was due compensation by
the team who pulled off the heist. This
meant if the New York Knicks signed
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar after his contract
expires, they would have to give the
Lakers a player or players equal to Jabbar
in ability. This is another rule struck
down by the new contract.
What these rules actually did was to
guarantee each franchise that they would
have a chance to be competitive. Each
season, the team that finishes with the
worst record in the NBA selects first in
the college draft, giving it a chance to
pick up the top or one of the top players
in the collegiate ranks. This gives this
team a chance to turn their program
around and become a winner.
With the new contract, a player such
as Adrian Dantley or Kenny Carr can
come out of college and be drafted. If
they do not like the team that drafts
them, they can sit out a year and have
their name put in the draft the next year.
If again they do not approve of the team
that picks them, they sit out another year
and be a free agent. As a free agent they
can hold an auction and sell their
services to the highest bidder. In
essence, this ruling means that a player
is obligated for no more than two years
to any team unless under contract.
With the option cause removed and
compensation issues settled, players in
the NBA will be able to play out their
contracts with their present clubs and
sign with any club they want, provided
that club tops the bid made by the
present club. All-Star players George
McGinnis and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar have
expressed their dismay at not being able
to play for the Knicks. The Knicks played
their cards right with these two. They
could have traded to get them, but would
have traded away everything they had to
get them. Now, they can wait until the
two play out their contracts and then
sign them and give up nothing.
This type of activity by one ballclub
just to build a super-team could prove to
be the demise of the NBA. The "Money
Towns" such as New York, Chicago,
Philadelphia, New Orleans, and Los
Angeles can latch on to the superstars
and pay the big money as their cities can
fill the coliseums day-in and day-out. The
cities such as Seattle, Detroit, Portland,
and Cleveland will get the leftovers, the
kind of players that keep all the fans at
home watching, and hope to put together
a competitive team.
The end result of this will be the rich
getting richer while the not so rich dry up
and blow away with the cold winter wind.
The teams that are already financially
troubled should just as well go on and
close their doors, for their best players
will want more money when their
contracts expire and these teams will not
be able to pay the price.
Bidding wars will take their toll on the
weak teams in the league. After finding
that they cannot compete in money
offers, these clubs will lose more and
more games and fans at the same time.
Thus, a scaling down of the league
through folding of clubs, as the American
Basketball Association experienced this
year with three of its teams, clubs that
hung on to the last minute until
bankruptcy was certain.
In the next ten years, this writer sees
the NBA scaling down to about six to
eight teams. These clubs will put super
basketball players on the court, but the
college senior who aspires to pfay the
game further will be out of luck if he is
not an all-America. The Knicks could
possibly field a team with the likes of
Abdul-Jabbar at center, McGinnis and
David Thompson at forward, Walt Frazier
and Phil Chenier at guard. Sure, a super
squad, you say, but who will they play?
In essence, professional sports can
do nothing but suffer from the agreement
reached last Tuesday between the NBA
owners and players' union. But, do not
try to tell the money-mongers known as
athletes. Let them find out by
themselves, in the unemployment lines
with the rest of us common people.
Pirate swimmers take eighth victory of season, 68-43
East Carolina's swim team, swimming
shorthanded because of the flu epidemic,
turned in a good performance to whip the
Rams of Virginia Commonwealth Univer-
sity. 68-43, in a meet held Saturday
afternoon in Richmond.
In winning their eighth meet of the
season, the Pirates won nine of the
thirteen events held. John McCauley and
Stewart Mann picked up double victories
for the Bucs, while David Kirkman, Doug
Brindley, John Tudor, and Lund Sox were
also winners. The 400 inedley relay team
also defeated the team fielded by the
Rams.
Coach Ray Scharf was proud of his
team having to swim under such adverse
conditions. "We left a lot of boys at
home with the flu. And when we arrived
in Richmond, we found we had some
more sick guys. Steve Ruedlinger and
Stewart Mann really showed courage
swimming as they were really under
Mann picked up victories in his two
specialty events, the 200 individual
medley and 200 backstroke. In the
medley. Mann timed out in 2:02.2 while
two Ram swimmers finished second and
third. Mann won the backstroke in a time
of 2:05.8, while David Moodie finished
second in 2:08.3
McCauley had a double in the two
sprints, the 50 and 100 freestyles.
McCauley's time in the 50 was 21.8, one
of his bests of the year in the event. In
the 100, McCauley clocked a 48.2 and
Ross Boh I ken placed second in 49.1.
Coach Scharf had praise for his sprint
swimmer.
"Jchn really looked good out there
today That time in the 50 (21.8) was one
of his bests of the year
Kirkman turned in another fine time
in the 200 breaststroke. winning with a
2:15.4 clocking, his second best eve'
Coach Scharf said his star "was looking
better every time he swims
Brindley, a walk-on on the swim
team, registered a triumph in the !000
freestyle and a second place in the 500
freestyle. In the 1000 Brindley was timed
in 10:12.5. John Tudor won the 500 with
a 4:55.0 clocking while Brindley took
second in 4:56.5 Scharf had high praise
for his two distance swimmers.
"Doug has really been coming on in
the last half of the year, and he i just a
walk-on. He's really been fantastic th'is
far. And John has been burning up that
500 since we moved him up
Sox won the three-meter div ing with a
score of 166.75, the second consecutive
victory for him on the high board.
The win moved the Pirates' seasonal
record up to 8-2. The last regular season
meet will be tonight when the Bucs travel
to Durham to take on the Blue Devils of
Duke. Most likely, the meet will be close
as coach Scharf's troops will still be
down with the flu bug.
Rankins leads ECU track team at VMI
Marvin Rankins was named the meet's
outstanding runner Saturday as the East
Carolina track and field team showed a
good account of themselves by winning
four events at the VMI Winter Relays.
Rankins won the 60 yard high hurdles
in a meet record of 7.2, barely nosing out
Paul Richardson of Hampton Institute,
who finished with the same time.
"Marvin really ran well out there
today said an elated coach, Bill Carson,
"and that boy he was running against
was real strong too. That kind of
competition has to help
Tom Watson also won an individual
event, the 35-pound hammer throw.
Watson's heave of 47-7 112 won by three
and a half feet. Watson leads the
conference in this event for the season.
Watson also placed fourth in the shot put
behind three putters from N.C. State. His
put of 52-3 11A was the best of the year
in the Southern Conference.
Of the four relay teams put out by
Carson in these relays, two finished first
and two finished second, although the
880 relay team was disqualified.
In the mile relay, Ben Dunkenfield
started off with a leg of 49.5 to have the
Pirates close. But Howard University
moved away from the Pirates in
methodical fashion and won with a
3:19.2, while the Bucs placed second in
3:21.6.
The team of Donnie Mack, Carter
Suggs, Maurice Huntley, and Larry
Austin won the 440 relay in a time of
43.2, a meet record. Carson had praise
for Huntley.
"Maurice is coming off an injury and
he looked great today. He is coming
along so well we are expecting big things
by the time the conference champion-
ships get here
In the 880 relay, that same team
finished second but was disqualified for
cutting off someone in the race. Their
time was 1:32.6.
The team of Ben Dunkenfield, Charley
Moss, Calvin Alston, and Jim Willett
turned a good time in the sprint medley
relay as the Bucs won going away from
Delaware State, with a time of 3:52.2.
The track team will be traveling to
Wilmington, Delaware for a meet at
Delaware State. This meet will have some
of the top runners in the nation at it.
Sammy Phillips is the only runner still
out and may be held out until the
conference meet. Triple jumper Herman
Mclntyre injured his ankle Saturday and
will be out until the conference meet
also.
Diamond
A team of "Diamond Darlings" is
being sought for the 1976 East Caro'ina
University baseball season.
This team will serve as hostesses, oat
girls and field attendants at the Pirate
home games at Harrington Field. At least
one game matching the "Diamond
Darlings" against a celebrity team is
being planned as well.
No experience in doing anything but
being attractive is necessary. Salary at
this time is non-existent, but the fringe
benefits can be outstanding. For
information, contact the Department of
Athletics at 758-6589 or 758-6448
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Pirates dumped by Athletes in Action in 88-72 loss
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
The Athletes in Action used 15 points
in a five minute span, while they held
East Carolina scoreless, early in the
second half to break open a close
ballgame and went on to wallop the
Pirates, 88-72, in a exhibition game
played Saturday night in Minges
Coliseum.
After Wade Henkel hit a lay-up to
close the gap to 45-41 with 15:48 to go,
the Athletes started on their skein. Scott
Magnusan scored half a dozen in
that period while Harry Sheehy collected
five. Louis Crosby broke the streak on a
jump shot with 10:45 to go in the game.
This seemed to break the Bucs' back
as they never could again pull any closer
than the final outcome, 16 points.
Play was ragged all during the game
as the Athletes, the athletic ministry of
Campus Crusade for Christ, threw up a
sticky man-to-man defense that forced
the Pirates to shoot only 43.2 percent for
the game from the floor. The Athletes
shot 48.6 percent.
The ECU Pep Band played a familiar
tune a couple of times during the contest
that described play perfectly. They broke
out with the M-l-C-K-E-Y M-O-U-S-E
song, which turned out to be a perfect
selection for the occasion.
The Athletes in Action, tne East
team, had won just five games against 22
losses coming in. Most of these games
were against Division 2 competition. This
and the margin of the loss left head
coach Dave Patton embarrassed.
"I'm very embarrassed about the way
we lost tonight. I'm not embarrassed for
the players. I'm embarrassed for our
fans. They deserve better than this
The Bucs opened the game on a goo '
note as they reeled off the first six points
of the game. One of the turning points of
the half was when the score was 12-6.
Scott Magnuson hit a lay-up as Henkel
fouled him. He finished the three-point
play to pull the Athletes to within three.
Sheehy then hit a pair of 20 footers to
give the Athletes a lead they never again
relinquished.
Athletes in Action built on the lead
through the remainder of the half mainly
on the shooting of Sheehy, who tallied
14 points in the first half. Earl Garner
kept the Pirates close throughout the half
with his shooting. He had 13 points.
After two and a half minutes of the
second half, Magnuson hit a hook shot
to give the Athletes a ten point lead.
Buzzy Braman hit a 20 foot jumper while
Hunt and Henkel hit lay-ups to pull the
Bucs within four. That is when the
Athletes went on their skein.
Playoffs begin this week
The Intramural Divisional playoffs
began yesterday with 13 teams still
unbeaten. Last week, four teams dropped
from the ranks of the unbeaten, including
seventh-ranked Purple Steam and the
ninth-ranked Jack Rollers. In Your Eyes
also fell from the ranks of the unbeatens,
as they lost by one point to ninth-ranked
Lafayette Holiday, 27-26.
Purple Steam was upended by H and
A Company in one of the biggest upsets
of the year. The H and A team defeated
the Dorm Division Five champs by a
whopping score of 56-36. The Jack
Rollers lost a heartbreaker to sixth-rank-
ed Bitterweed Gang, 47-34, as Tim Epley
was high scorer with 20 points. In a
battle of unranked unbeatens, the P.E.
Majors chilled the Phi Epsilon Kappa
Walkers, 31-26, behind Donnie Owens' 19
points.
Although they were not beaten, the
previously second-ranked Hatchets drop-
ped two places to fourth after an
unimpressive win over Jones Jumping
Jacks, 52-47. In the game, Terry Nobles
blasted in 26 points to lead the Hatchets,
but fell short of the Revolutionary Bucks'
Erwin Durden for the regular-season
scoring crown.
Durden scored 39 points in two
games to finish with an average of 23.1
points a game. Nobles finished right
behind with a 23.0 average. Durden,
however, will miss the playoffs as the
Revolutionary Bucks failed to qualify.
Nobles' Hatchets won their dorm division
and will advance to the playoffs.
The Average White Team defeated the
Red Raiders, 39-33, to gain second-place
and the Herbs Superbs jumped to third
with a 60-47 win over the Follies.
The team with perhaps the toughest
action of the week was Pi Kappa Phi. The
Pi Kapps held on to their fifth-piace
ranking with a pair of close victories over
Phi Kappa Tau and Kappa Alpha Psi. The
Pi Kapps beat the Phi Taus, 76-60, and
Kappa Alpha Psi, 34-25. Len Blackley
scored 27 points against the Phi Taus, as
John Musgrove scored 26 for the losers.
Hank Wylie added 20 in the win.
Pi Kapp and Tau Kappa Epsilon
were to meet for the Fraternity Division
One championship last night. Both teams
stand 6-0.
In the final game of the year, Dat's
the Worst came through to beat W.Wand
the Boys, 40-38, in overtime. It was the
first win of the year for Dat's the Worst.
Other top wins for playoff teams
were: the Lafayette Holiday over the
Tapers, 63-23; Tekes beat Lambda Chi
Alpha, 53-14; and the Kappa Alphas,
25-23; Belk Bucks beat the Bar Boys,
61-41; and the Nutties Buddies remained
number one with a 55-25 win over the
Scott Brewers and will be the favorites
going into the tournament.
Pre-Toumament Top Tan
1. Nutties Buddies 17-0
2. Average White Team 37-0
3. Herbs Superbs 47-0
4. Hatchets 264
5. Pi Kappa Phi 564
6. Bitterweed Gang 87-0
7. Desperados 664
8. lieartbreak Kids x7-0
9. Lafayette Holiday 107-0
10. The Marauders x6-0
Regular Season Scoring Leaders
denotes one regular tleaaon game to
play
Durden, Rev. Bucks 71823.137
Nobles, Hatchets 7161 23.033
Gray, Mud Sharks S111 22.231
McCrtmmons, APA 6127 21.126
Blackley, PI Kapps 6124 2U.tt27
G.SmHh,High Rollers 7134 19.131
Mckinney,Supersonic 7126 18.326
Ownes, P.E. Majors 7127 18.139
Packman, Hatchets 7123 17.625
Hope, Purple Steam 7121 17.322
High Individual Game-Owens39
High Team Game Jack Rollers93
Magnuson, who hit for 16 big second
half points, was the game's leading
scorer with 25 points. Sheehy hit for 23,
most of them coming in the first half,
while Keith Harris hit 12. Magnuson
pulled ten rebounds while Bob Homstein
grabbed eight.
Larry Hunt was the big man for the
Bucs as he hit for 16 points. Earl Gamer,
who fouled out midway in the second
half, finished with 13, all in the first half.
Wade Henkel hit several from the 20 foot
range and ended up with 12. Louis
Crosby was the only other Pirate to finish
in double figures, as he tallied ten.
Henkel was the big man on the
boards as he fought for 15 big rebounds,
but was also the leader in turnovers with
eight, most coming after rebounds when
the 6-8 forward would attempt to dribble
down court on the fast break. Hunt
pulled 11 retrieves.
The two regular guards, Crosby and
Billy Dineen accounted for seven and five
turnovers, respectively. These three had
20 of the 25 Pirate turnovers in the
contest.
The Pirates are idle until Saturday
night when they play host to the
Mountaineers of Appalachian State in a
key Southern Conference game that
could settle fourth position in the season
standings.
FREEMAN
Continued from page 21.
Offensively, Debbie comments that
the Pirates need some improvement.
"We've been working on our free throw
shooting. Our shot selection is alright,
but we just need to improve our
percentage
How do the Pirates look defensively?
"Our defense has basically been
strong. That's because we have defenses
which look alike. For example, our zone
looks like a man to man. Teams don't
know what's coming
Debbie, personally, has been trying to
improve her own defensive play, saying,
"Last year my defense was my weakness.
Now I've been more conscious of it,
trying to get down and set up faster
Basketball is not the only forte of
Debbie, who is a P.E. major. This past
fall she was a starter on the varsity
volleyball team and is looking to
participate in track and field competition
this spring.
"I enjoy basketball the most, but I
look for something to play every quarter
It is for basketball, though, that
DEBBIE FREEMAN
Debbie Freeman is recognized. And ECU
fans will continue to look forward to the
basketball wonders of the super
sophomore.
N- C. soccer meeting to be held
The North Carolina Soccer League
would like to invite any participants to
ioin in the spring 1976 soccer season.
The North Carolina league is a United
States Soccer Federation affiliated adult
leaaue that beoan in the spring of 1975
to promote soccer in the state of
North Carolina.
With increasing interest from the
supporting universities and colleges, it is
fast expanding into an off-season playing
experience for college players.
ECU coach Curtis Frye extends an
invitation for any ECU student or
Greenville resident to join the N.C.
soccer league. There will be a meeting
Tuesday, Feb. 10 at 5:00 on the Minges
soccer field.
The opening game will be on Feb. 15
and the season will consist of ten games
through the middle of April.
Red Rooster Restaurant
2713 EAST 10TH STREET GREENVILLE, N.C.
PHONE 758-1920
open 7:00 mm - 8:30 pm
HOME COOKED MEALS
R?D ROCKTGR fl?CldL9
Mon. 14 BBQ Chicken, 2 Vegetables $1.80
rues. Country-style Steak, w Rice & Gravy, one Vegetable $1.80
Wed. Salisbury Steak, 2 Veg. $1.80
Thurs. Meat Loaf, 2 Veg. $1.80
Fri. Seafood Platter - Fresh Trout, Shnmp, Oysters, F.F Slaw $2.95
all specials include rolls & hushpuppies
ALSO: Breakfast served (homemade biscuits )
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24
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 7, NO. 3510 FEBRUARY 1976
news
Bahai Faith
This week we will continue the study
of the Bab, the forerunner of Bahaullah,
who set down the foundation of the
Bahai Faith and prepared the way for the
coming of the new teacher. Join us in
room 238 Mendenhall, Thursday evening
at 7:30 p.m.
Auditions
Rugby Club
Heart Fund
At Happy Hour, Feb. 13th, WRC will
be collecting for the Heart Fund at the
Elbo Room, Jolly Roger's, Tamerlane and
Marty's. With a donation of 25 cents or
more you will be given a balloon.
Hiilel
Attention Jewish students. Sunday
morning brunch on Feb. 15, 1976 at
11:30 a.m. at the DEN (corner of 9th and
James Sts.).
PACE
PACE applications are now available
in the Financial Aid office for the
summer. Please pick up these
applications immediately.
Bike Ride
There is still time to apply to join the
Collegiate Cross-Country Bike Ride being
held in honor of the American Revolution
Bicentennial, according to Steve Danz,
College group co-ordinator.
The special college-age group will be
leaving from Pueblo, Colorado, and
arriving approximately 45 days later in
Richmond, Virginia. Thus far, college
students from 20 states have joined. The
route itself will be along the Trans
America Bike Trail. The trail will be newly
inaugurated this summer, and students
must be members of the official
Bikecentennial group to ride the trail. It
is estimated that the riders will cover
50-70 miles per day, and will camp and
stay in youth hostels on the trip. While
thousands of bikers will be on the trail,
no single group of riders will number
more than 12, in order not to over-load
the trail or the accomodations en route.
College students wishing to join the ride,
starting on June 21, should write directly
to Collegiate Bikecentennial, 615-Nevada,
Sausalito, California, 94965 and enclose
a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
SGA Opening
There is an opening for SGA
legislature from Fletcher Dorm. Screen-
ings at 4:00 in Mendenhall, SGA Office
3n Wednesday
Real Crisis
Have a problem? Need information?
Real Crisis Intervention, Inc open 24
hours a day. Call 758-HELP or come by
1117 Evans St Openings for volunteers.
The East Carolina Playhouse will hold
auditions for its fourth major production,
"The Contrastin McGinnis auditorium
Feb. 10 and 11 at 7:30 till 10:00.
Everyone is invited to try out.
The Contrast is a charming musical
version of an early American comedy
about the difference between high
English style and rowdy American
common sense. Those who plan to
audition should bring their own music.
An accompanist will be furnished.
There are several good non-singing
roles. Copies of "The Contrast" are on
reserve in the library.
Rho Epsilon
Rho Epsilon will hold a meeting
Wednesday, Feb. 11 at 3:30 in Room 221
Mendenhall. Hi I Ion Watson, a builder for
Colony Realty, will speak on con-
dominiums, how to finance and build
them. All members are urged to attend.
Law Society
The ECU Law Society will hold a
meeting Thursday, Feb. 12 at 7:30 in
Brewster B-102. Mrs. Crisp, an attorney
for ECU students and citizens of
Greenville, will speak on "A Woman and
the Law All members and persons
interested are invited to attend.
Sweetheart Dance
The MRC will be sponsoring a
Sweetheart's Dance on Feb. 14, from
9:30 - 12:00 p.m. in the Mendenhall
Multi-purpose Room. ECU I.D. required
in addition to a 25 cents donation to the
Heart Fund. Free refreshments and a live
band.
Childhood Ed.
There will be a meeting of the ECU
Rugby Club in Brewster 103 Wednesday
at 7:00. Any people interested in Rugby
should attend. A group of "trouble
shooters" will be there with slides to
help us be a winning team.
Jimmy Carter
There will be a meeting of the
Students for Jimmy Carter on Monday,
Feb. 16, 1976, in Mendenhall Room 248
at 7:30 p.m. All students intersted in
working in Carter's N.C. primary
campaign are invited to attend.
AKD Luncheon
An AKD luncheon will be held
February 12 at 12:00, in Brewster D-301.
Dr. Yoon Kim from the Sociology Dept.
will be lecturing on busing. All interested
persons are invited to attend and bring a
bag lunch.
Newsletter
The ECU Computing Center News-
letter for February is now available in
Austin 106. All students and faculty
either using or wanting to use the
Computing Center facilities are encour-
aged to pick up their free copies now.
Chi Beta Phi
Attention all members: The initiation
dinner at Bonanza on February 11 will
begin at 6:00 p.m. Please excuse this
omission and try to come.
Law Society
The ECU Law Society will hold a
meeting Thursday, Feb. 12 at 7.30 in
Brewster B-102. Mrs. Crisp, an attorney
for ECU students and citizens of
Greenville, will speak on "A Woman and
the Law All members and persons
interested are invited to attend.
MRC Equipment
Need to borrow a basketball, football,
ping pong paddle, etc.? All you have to
do is come to the MRC office in the
lobby of Scott Dorm and trade your MRC
Activity Card and ID for one of these
items. Remember to check the schedule
for when the office is open.
Lecture Committee
The Lecture Committee is now
accepting applications for new members.
Apply now at Mendenhall if you're
interested in helping choose campus
speakers.
Slogan Contest
Volunteer Greenville is sponsoring a
slogan contest to all the citizens of
Greenville and Pitt County. The contest
started February 1st and will end the 13th
of February. The Jaycees of Greenville
are donating $50.00 for the best slogan.
The slogan will be used to represent
Volunteer Greenville and its purpose:
VOLUNTEERISM.
If you would like to submit a slogan
please send it to Volunteer Greenville,
P.O. Box 1905, Greenville, N.C. 27834
before the 13th of February. Please
include your name, address and
telephone number.
Organization Info. Symposium
The Association of Childhood
Education International will meet tonight
in Mendenhall 201. This is an important
educational association. We need new
members. Please come and join us, 7:30,
Feb. 10th.
Any organization which has not
turned in their organization information
sheet should do this immediately. If your
club has not received one, call the'
Buccaneer Office. It is important that
these sheets be turned in.
Alpha Beta Alpha Coffeehouse
The regular monthly meeting of the
Alpha Eta Chapter of Alpha Beta Alpha
(Library Science Fraternity) will be held in
the Student Lounge in the Library
Science Department of Joyner Library at
5 p.m Tuesday, Feb. 10.
All members are urged to attend.
SGA Officers
The filing dates for the following
offices in the SGA (president, vice
president, treasurer, secretary, graduate
school president) are Feb. 11 through
Feb. 4th, tK, M-K rhe campaign will
run March 8 - March 24. Election date -
March 24.
Peter Spencer, guitarist and composer
who is now touring the East Coast, will
bring the Coffeehouse two evenings of
music with the flavor of Leo Kottke.
Shows are at 8 & 9 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday with a 50 cents admission.
Chess Club
There will be a symposium entitled
"Women in International Literature Feb.
12 at 4:00 in Room 221, Mendenhall.
The program is sponsored by the
department of foreign languages and
literatures, and will feature short talks by
several professors from the department.
The public is invited.
Phi Beta Lambda
Phi Beta Lambda will have a bake sale
Feb. 16 at Allied Health.
There will be a Phi Beta Lambda
dinner meeting Wed Feb. 11 at 5:00
p.m. at Three Steers. Honorary
memberships will be given. A guest
speaker will be present. Coat and tie
required. Three unexcused absences
constitute expulsion. Cost per meal
$3.30.
Every Wednesday night at 7.00 P.M.
in Room 14 of Mendenhall, the ECU
Chess Club will meet. Attendance Is
increasing weekly and the competition is
at all levels. If interested, attend or
contact Allen Mendenhall (756-4631) or
Lindsay Overton, Recreation Director at
Mendenhall (758-6611).
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Title
Fountainhead, February 10, 1976
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
February 10, 1976
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.376
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/40021
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