Fountainhead, April 27, 1976


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





This issue-16pages
Circulation 8,500
Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
m

Serving the East Carolina Community for over fifty years
VOL 51, NO. 52
27 APRIL 1076
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ECU Sociologist dies in accident
By DENNIS LEONARD
Assistant News Editor
The recent death of noted ECU
sociologist, Dr. Yoon Hough Kim, was felt
deeply by other members of the ECU
Sociology Anthropology department. Kim
was fatally injured in a bike accident last
Wednesday and according to Dr. John
Maiolo, Kim died of multiple internal
injuries Thursday afternoon.
"A truck hit him early Wednesday
afternoon, while Dr. Kim was riding his
bicycle on Tenth St. heading east said
Maiolo.
Dr. Kim was a noted sociologist and
researcher and began his career in Pusan,
Korea as a case worker in the Foster Parent
program between 1958 and 1960.
From 1960 through 1962 Kim served as
a research assistant in the Family and
Childrens Center in Minneapolis In 1964
Kim oonducted an extensive research
project on the social life of the blind, which
was later published by the American
Foundation fa the Blind. The publication
which was later revised and edited, was
entitled "The Community of the Blind:
Applying the Theory of Community
Formation
Dr. Kim served as the regional director
for the N.C. Crime Victimization Study
form 1970 to 1971.
During 1972 Dr. Kim oonducted a study
of the social lifeof tho blind in Korea under
a grant from the Social Science Research
Council of New York.
In 1974 Kim directed a study of social
integration in Greene County in addition to
his supervision of the masters thesis
projects by a large number of the graduate
students in Sociology.
Dr. Kim received his B.A. degree from
Tong A University in Pusan, Korea. In
1964, Kim received the M.A. decree from
the University of Minnesota and his Ph.D.
in 1967.
Dr. Kim came to ECU in 1967 and since
that time has been very active in both
publications and reseat ch.
"We do not know how we are going to
fill the gap that his loss brings to the
department, because he was such a
conscientious and capable person said
Dr. Melvin Williams, ECU professor of
Sociology.
"At this moment it will be particularly
difficult to replace him as a supervisor of
research programs for graduate students in
Sociology
"Every faculty member has found him
to be always availaole for consultation and
assistance in their research. He was the
kind of person that was anxious to be of
assistance added Williams.
According to Paula Walker, of the N.C
Despite fund cut
DR. YOON HOUGH KIM
Professor of SociologyAnthropology
Highway Patrol, the driver of the truck was
not charged with any violation and the fatal
wreck was recorded as an accident.
Med School progresses
By JIMMY WILLIAMS
Production Manager
The $3.8 million cut in the ECU Medical
School budget should not affect the
progress of the school, according to Dr.
William E. Laupus, Dean of the School.
The proposed cut is merely "a
postponement of funding according to
Laupus.
The money was to be spent for the
construction of a bed tower at Pitt
Memorial Hospital, which would enable
the facility to accommodate more patients.
The money was appropriated away
from the ECU budget because it won't be
used until a later date.
"We might need the tower next year,
we might not need it for three years said
C.G. Moore, vice chancellor for business
affairs.
"It is our understanding that it (the
$3.8 million) will be returned to the
budget said Laupus.
The North Carolina Legislature's Joint
Appropriations Conference Committee
plans to use the $3.8 million to help raise
$61 million for a possible increase in state
spending.
Of the $61 million to be raised, $26.5
million will go fa additional enrollment in
oommunity colleges and technical insti-
tutes, $15.2 million will help the University
of Nath Carolina system with additional
enrollment, and $5.9 million to help make
up fa an underestimate oi salaries fa
public school teachers and principals.
In a recent news release, Chancel la
Leo W. Jenkins said of the med school,
"We are on track We intend tooontinue
our vigaous effats and to reach our goal
of enrolling our first students during the
ooming (1976-77) academic year
Bike pathway approved
AFTER A WEEK BREAK ECU'S famous wall next to the old Student Union was once
again loaded to capacity. These students no doubt were relating adventures of a sunny
Easter spent in true vacation bliss.
Heavily traveled Tenth St.
intersection claims victim
By TOM TOZER
Managing Edita
ECU sophomae, Jeannie Cox, a White
Hall resident, was struck by an automobile
Monday afternoon while attempting to
aoss Tenth St. at thecaner of College Hill
Dr.
Accading to the out-patient desk at Pitt
Memaial Hospital, Cox was still in the
emergency room Monday afternoon being
evaluated by doctas. Cox will be admitted
to Pitt Hospital.
Cox was struck by an oncoming vehicle
while attempting to aoss Tenth St. on her
bicycle and accading to Kelly Jacksai,
Greenville Rescue Squad offioer, Cox was
in a semi-conscious state when placed in
the ambulance.
"Three aher witnesses besides the
driver of the auto that struck Cox told
Greenville police officers that she ran the
light said ECU campus police offioer Bill
Barnes.
"Thegirl (Cox) entered Tenth St. from
College Hill Dr. and was hit by a 1972
Grand Prix Pontiac heading west into
town saia Barnes. "Tomy knowledge, at
this time, the driver of the car hasna been
charged.
"The accident occurred at approxi-
mately 1:40 p.m
Barnes added that the accident occur-
red during the early afternoon when traffic
and the flow of students is heavy.
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By JIM ELLIOTT
Staff Writer
The Student Government Association
Legislature Monday appropriated $12,000
fa a city-wide bike pathway program and
$4,025 to the Homecoming Steering
Committee.
Stating that there have been numerous
accidents involving faculty and students,
including a recent fatality, and that
alternatives are needed because of the
overaowded student parking situation, the
Bike Pathway Program bill allows the
summer Legislature to appropriate $12,000
to the Greenville Bikeway Program.
Articles to the bill stipulate that this
money is appropriated with the under-
standing that the city will match the funds
and that a supervisay board consisting of
an equal number of students and city
appointees will be established.
The bike pathway appropriation will be
used in conjunction with $12,000 the
Greenville City Council designated fa the
project.
The city has already spent $8,000 on the
project since its inception in 1974.
In his presentation to the Legislature,
City Planner John Schofield said the
combined appropriations would allow the
city to apply fa a matching federal grant of
$96,000. Schofield said Greenville would
be competing with five other North
Carolina cities fa the federal money.
"We have a relatively good chance fa
the federal funds Schofield, himself a
famer SGA President at ECU, told the
Legislature. "However, the chances of
approval depend on who reviews the
application
With the federal money the project
would only use two-thirds a three-fourths
of the available funds, according to
Schofield. The remainder of the money
would be used to develop an cm-campus
bike path, he said.
Schofield said that after the bikeway is
completed the city will assume all
responsibilities fa its upkeep. He also said
if the federal grant is not obtained, it is
possible money may be allocated fa the
program by the state.
The application fa the federal money
must be in Raleigh by June 1, 1976.
After approving two amendment-3
which together cut $975 fron the Home-
oaning Steering Committee budget a
See SGA, page 12.





2
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5227 APRIL 1P
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EdilorialsCommenlary
Newsletters wasteful
Last year in the Legislature a freshman legislator sponsored a
bill to finance a freshman newsletter.
Later that year and now this year that same student supported
efforts to publish the Ebony Herald.
Now, that same student is pushing for an SGA newsletter.
That same student campaigned for SGA President on a platform
to save the wasteful spendi.ig of student fees.
And, that student, Tim Sullivan, won the election and we hope
he can keep that promise in light of his past record when it comes to
duplicating publications.
The freshman newsletter last year was a duplication of services
already available in the Fountainhead.
Then the Ebony Herald came out and again a duplication of
services and a waste of money.
Now Sullivan proposes an SGA newsletter when there is
nothing that could go into that newsletter that could not go into
Fountainhead.
The main idea backed by the SGA appears to be "take your
business elsewhere" because they don't like the current paper.
No one approached the paper about allocating more space or
coverage to the blacks, freshmen or the SGA. Nobody really
offered any solid criticism of current publications that would
support the need for other supplemental publications.
The three papers in mention are duplications and waste. Yet
Sullivan campaigned hard to save money.
In light of the Legislature's willingness to fund any alternate
publication, the "Greeks athletic organizations, day students,
and left-handed blond-haired students from Alaska all have a
"right" to ask for their own publication.
By then there will be no need for Fountainhead so to get the
"news" all you will have to do is get copies of the dozen or so
alternate publications.
The freshman newsletter last fall opened the door to
duplication, now the Ebony Herald has come through that same
door and Sullivan is apparently working hard to get his newsletter
idea through.
Admittedly, all these publications are not as expensive to
operate as Fountainhead.
But, even if they oost a dime, it is a dime wasted. And, then
there is the waste of divided manpower and services.
There is a need fa a strong student newspaper and currently
we think Fountainhead fits the bill.
But, the continuous flow of alternate publications does little to
boost the paper.
The SGA should decide if it wants to fund either "one
newspaper" or half a dozen "newsletters
Some call it competition for the student paper, but it is not
competition, after all we all work for the same people who are
required to fund that competition.
It is not competition, it is duplication and waste!
"Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without
newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
prefe the latter"
Thomas Jefferson
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor
Managing Editor-Tom Tozer
Business Manager-Teresa Whisenant
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson
News Editor-Dennis Leonard
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Use
Features Editor-Pat Coyle
Sports Editor-John Evans
Advertising Representatives-Mary Anne Vail and Vicky Jones
Fountainhead is the student newspaper of East Carolina University sponsored by
the Student Government Association of ECU and appears each Tueeday and Thursday
during the school year.
Mailing address: Box 2516 ECU Station, Greenville, N.C. 27834
Editorial Offices: 7584386, 7588367, 758-8308
Subscriptions: $10.00 annually for non students.

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I UOADErT WHAT
uf forgot
fLittle guy 'may get hurt
The so-calledlittle guy is the one that always gets lost in the
shuffle.
And, in the case of athletics it is the minor sports that are the
little guys, and they may be very much in danger of getting lost in
the shuffle in ECU'S new athletic plans.
All the talk about pulling out of the Southern Conference was to
protect the football program from being declassified by the NCAA.
So, football apparently was the main reason for pulling out.
Coupled with that withdrawal was the announcement to enlarge
Ficklen and even a blind man could see that the latest endeavor is
aimed at "major sports" - notably football.
This is fine, if the football program can be improved without
cutting the throats of those "minor sports We fear however that
in the rush to boost football; wrestling, track, swimming, tennis,
golf, and even baseball will pay the price.
In swimming and wrestling the Pirates were perennial loop
champs. The track program was also strong.
Will they still get the support they need while the push is on to
boost football?
We doubt it. There are already some rumblings of discontent
from some in the athletic departments. And, it could get worse.
If you have but so much money you can divide it only so many
ways. And, with football getting the lion's share that leaves little
for the rest.
We would hate to see ECU'S fine minor sports program lost in
the football shuffle. But, nothing so far has been done to calm our
worst fears!
Maybe the realization is you can't have your cake and eat it too,
(or you can't have a well heeled football program and good minor
sports). But, other schools do it. And hopefully ECU can too.
We would hate to see those little guys get lost.
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News-Arf
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976
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TheForum
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L etter to Goldsboro editor
defends newspaper
Editor
News-Argus
Goldsboro, North Carolina
Dear Editor:
Of all the repulsive newspaper items I have seen lately, your editorial "ECU Campus
Newspaper Insults Journalism" takes the cake.
The real insult to journalism lies not in our April 1 edition, but in ihe editorial you
printed which was loaded with half-truths at best.
To begin with, I would like to see the poll you obviously took that indicated to you that
the paper is a source of oonosrn to students enrolled at ECU.
The only reaction I have received about the Lampoon edition has been very favorable.
All the indications I have seen from the students, staff and faculty have been very
positive.
So, I would like to know just how it is that your paper can speak for the entire student
body at ECU.
You would expect the people we highlighted in the paper to be the ones complaining.
Yet, they apparently have taken the paper in stride for what it is�just a humorous attempt
to make fun of various campus institutions.
I would also appreciate it if you would circle all the "language one might find on
honky-tonk" walls and send it to me. I don't know what honky-tonks you frequent but
they must be pretty Wand if they carry the everyday language we used in our April 1
edition.
But, what really burns me about your editorial was the contention that this paper has
expressed nothing but disrespect for Chanoella Jenkins. I personally challenge you to
point out all the times the paper has been disrespectful to the Chancellor. There is one
oelebrated occasion that an uncomplimentary closing was carried in a letter to the Editor
several years ago but outside of that, please tell me about all the disrespect we have
shown the Chancellor.
The question must arise to many of us at ECU: Was this an editorial effort to produce
the ultimate in slip shod journalism? Was it an effort on the part of an insecure and
immature editor to demonstrate his insecurity and immaturity?
And, after reading your editorial obviously you do not demand as much respect for the
institution of journal ism-after all you printed that editorial.
Sincerely,
Mike Taylor
Fountainhead Editor
Lot 200 Shady Knolls
Greenville, N.C.
f, PS Please send us X application blanks for your paper.
Editorials continue
to attack April 1 issue
i Editor's Note: This is a reprint from the
Goldsboro News-Argus.
We don't know Grace M. Ellenberg of
5 the Department of Foreign Languages and
f Literature at East Carolina University.
' But we're glad she s there.
FORUM POLICY
All letters to the Editor must be
xompanisd by an address along with the
ritsr's name. However, only the name
ill be printed with letters published in the
or urn.
The letter writer's address will be kept
i file in the Fountainhead office and will
s available, upon request, to any
udents.
Fountainhead will, upon personal re-
jest from a letter writer, withhold a name
om publication. But, the name of the
ritsr will be on file in the editors office
id available upon request to any student.
II requests for withholding a name must
i made in person to the editor.
Any letter received without this in-
rmation will be held until the letter writer
implies with the new policy.
Professor Ellenberg dared express her
"utter shame" at the April 1 issue of the
ECU student newspaper which featured on
the front page a picture of the exposed
posteriors of bent-over male students
Professor Ellenberg's letter to this
newspaper is refreshing and comforting
since it came hard on the heels of a letter
from the campus newspaper's editor and
other staff members alleging that response
to the vulgarity in the issue on the part of
students and staff members had been
"positive
We have since learned that the reaction
among members of the ECU Trustees - in
session shortly after the issue appeared -
was far from positive.
There is a feeling in this country that
one has the freedom to say or print
anything one likes, no matter how obscene
or vulgar or revolting it might be to others
And in our communities and on our
campuses, many people in responsible
positions are timorous of being critical lest
that contribute to student unrest or
compromise "academic freedom
Shame on such timidity.
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phil frank
MOT 00 YO0 JINK, vJERRy? MAYBB
VER RUSSIANS VOLD BUY SOME"
�College Med'O Services BoxQ-lM Be'keey, Ca 94709
Lampoon being blown
out of proportion
To Fountainhead:
Alright, so we had a lampoon with a
dirty picture on the front. So what? It is
getting blown up all out of proportion.
Nobody paid fa the picture, and I don't
think it seriously injured any maals, not
even in Goldsboro. I boldly charge
FOUNTAINHEAD edita with glay seek-
ing in the second degree. Let us examine
why he would comment on news staies,
and republish editaials condemning this,
ECU'S greatest bi-weekly student public-
ation.
Each of the two staies condemning our
FOUNTAINHEAD has been graciously
answered to in FOUNTAINHEAD. In doing
this is the FOUNTAINHEAD bragging a
oanplaining? Is the FOUNTAINHEAD
fishing fa compliments to their lampoon-
ing expertise, a is the thinking along the
lines that 'These great and true public-
ations (Goldabao and Raleigh) caught us
with our pants down? Why don't they leave
us alone?
There were agrano total of two 'great
and true publications' who 'caught us with
out pants down I should like to take this
oppatunity to discount evaything they
had to say about us
First of all brth papers found us worthy
of their time and effort to oondemn. This is
a compliment to begin with, but look at the
news stay about FOUNTAINBLAH in the
Raleigh News and Observer. A stay
condemning the filth to FOUNTAINBLAH
quoted the dirtiest parts to prove their
point. I am surprised they did not reprint
the cover picture to osnsa our censa
flags. Their aedibiiity is in questiai, to my
way of thinking, when they wallow in the
manure that they are cleaning up.
Now let us look at the Goldsbao
editorial. We might as well, no one else
did. I had heard of the Goldsbao papa
befae( to coin a phrase) the feds' incident,
but I did not know that they had editaials
l f there is a person that reads the editaials
fa any aha reason than baedon, there is
also someone who calls dial-a-prayer fa
religious oonsoiement. That editaial was
written with the same sort of rhetaic as a
John Birch Society newsJetta.
I think it is to the dis-aedit of these
great and true publications that they
attributed to the FOUNTAINBLAH as
much destructive powa as they did.
Maybe it is to the credit of the
FOUNTAINHEAD. Eitha way, it iseasy to
see that the FOUNTAINBLAH will be as
regular on campus as Halloween. It is dear
that the joint efforts of SGA and
FOUNTAINHEAD will rot make it possible
fa students to win a Halloween incident,
but even outside faces like Goldsbao and
Raleigh cannot take away from the good
time FOUNTAINBLAH had in its single
issue life span. We may neva win a
Halloween !ncident, but we won't loss a
Fools' Incident.
Kent Johnson
FRANKLY SPEAKING by phi frank
CCc:g� Mcd.o S�.v -�4 Bo.?JII B�-W!�r.Co 94W
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4
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976
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From Voice of America to the Sahara
Budding reporters do their thing
EDITORS NOTE: The stories by Ms. Roll and Mr. Fulghum were chosen from feature
stories submitted in a Rose High journalism 1 class. The FOUNTAINHEAD wishes to
thank the students, along with their Student teacher, ECU student Helena Woodard, for
sharing the stories with our readers.
By SALLY ROLL
Past farms, tobacco fields, and a dry,
dusty road on the outskirts of the small
college town of Greenville, North Carolina
lies the most powerful domestic installation
of Voice of America (VOA), a global radio
network of the U.S. Information Agency.
The primary purpose of VOA is to aid
foreign countries in understanding the
people, customs, and policies of the U.S.
VOA broadcasts achieve this through
unbiased and comprehensive news reports
and through feature programs that provide
in-depth views of American society,
thoughts and interests.
The government-owned and operated
Greenville complex is composed of one
receiving plant and two identical transmit-
ting stations. This Eastern North Carolina
site was chosen to avoid geographic and
atmospheric interference and to enable
clear, effective reception. The station
officially went on the air February 8, 1963.
In terms of collective transmitting
power, the Edward R. Murrow Transmit-
ting Station, more oommonly known as the
Greenville Relay Station, is the most
powerful in VOA's world-wide system.
This transmitting station accepts pro-
grams from the Master Control in
Washington, D.C where all VOA broad-
casts originate. VOA's Washington news-
room operates 24 hours a day and receives
a constant influx of news stories from many
sources, including international wire ser-
vice and VOA's own network of cor-
respondents. The information is compiled
into news stories for broadcast in 36
languages.
Before the stories are written, the data
is sifted through by editors who translate
and adapt it to make it suitable for the
listening audience. Having to satisfy a
global audience, much of the VOA program
material is tailored to suit specific tastes of
people in different parts of the world.
These stories are distributed to various
transmitter plants throughout the world,
such as the Greenville facility. These
stations then broadcast the programs to
receiving stations throughout the world.
The oombined Greenville plants alone
broadcast 1,640 transmitter program hours
weekly in 27 different languages.
There are 41 domestic VOA transmit-
ting stations located in Bethany, Ohio;
Delano and Dixon, California; and Green-
ville, North Carolina. There are also 72
overseas transmitters located in eight
countries.
The cost of running an operation like
VOA is staggering. The 1976 fiscal budget
alone is $58,700,000. Hopefully, the money
is well spent, because men must learn to
relate to each other in order to survive.
This is what VOA strives to accomplish.
cduclky riks &-id teacher
By DA VID FULGHUM
Traveling ever the Sahara Desert from
Casablanca, Morocco to Accra, Ghana is
quite an experience for anyone, and Donna
Whitley of Greenville is no exception.
Mrs. Whitley, a belly dance instructor,
who has lived in Africa for three years,
went through the world's largest desert to
Accra to study West African dance with the
Ghana Ensemble. Her husband, who she
met in Morocco, went along to increase his
woodcarving knowledge. The couple stay-
ed on the campus of the University of
Morocco while they were there.
The journey from Morocco to Ghana
took approximately six weeks, and during
that time, the Whitleys had a chance to get
to know the desert.
"Most people have the illusion of a
desert as being sand dunes, but only one
sixth of it is dune, and the rest is flat,
rocky, or mountainous said Mrs. Whit-
ley.
She went on to say that the sand is
firmly packed or hard instead of being in
dunes as most people might think.
Another interesting facet of the desert
journey was the weather. During the May
trip, the temperature was 120 degrees
during the day, but much cooler at night,
making sleeping conditions "pleasant
aooording to Mrs. Whitley.
The oouple also found that May is the
desert's rainy season, with, numerous
travelers' warnings due to sudden gushes
of rain.
Their return across the desert in
December was characterized by very edd
weather, according to Mrs. Whitley.
As for the people they encountered in P
the desert, "We went two to three days
without seeing anyone said Mrs. Whit-
ley. t
LANDROVER TROUBLE
Aooording to Mrs. Whitley, the most
frightening part of the trip occurred in a
desolate area between Mali and Algeria,
when their Landrover broke down. The
couple went fa help, leaving a young
companion from England to guard their
gear. The boy didn't see a single person
during the five days they were gone, and
he claimed to have almost gone stir crazy.
Another interesting point of interest
along the way was seeing a 2000 year old
tree on the Tassisili Plateau. The tree is
considered so sacred that Tuareg nomads
guard it constantly.
According to Mrs. Whitley, Tuaregs
love black tobacco, strong tea, and
coagulated camel's milk. They also eat
cactus berries and wild wheat.
The Tuareg women are more indepen-
dent than their other North Africans in that
they don't wash the men's clothing or wear
veils.
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Features
staff meeting
Thursday: 4:00
If you've got the time, we've got the $$$$
Graduates; watch out
m
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(CPS)-Dear Graduating Senior.
We would like to offer ou a golden
opportunity to spend your future income
quickly and painlessly with a aedit card
like the sample enclosed. Just oomplete the
handy application and in a few weeks, you
may be able to buy many items you never
thought you oould affad, and probably
couldn't.
Graduating senias all over the country
are now getting the aedit card blitz as they
prepare to enter the waking, spending
wald. But even with a solicitation like the
one above, students still have to pass
through the eye of the aedit companies'
needle befae they are entitled to trade a
piece of plastic fa goods and services.
There's no doubt that sometime the
prospective student-debta is going to be
glad there s a aedit card in his a ha
wallet. Hank cards like MasterCharqe and
BankAmaicard can be used fa almost
anything including shat-tam cash loans.
With a dean slate on any kind of aedit
card, the coveted "good aedit rating" is
backing otha loans a student might want
(a new staeo a the best used car deal of
the century). Finally, a student in many
cases has an easier time getting approval
fa a aedit card while a student than later
when he has moved a few times and hasn' t
kept a job fa more than a year.
Most Arrericans find deficit spending
with aedit cards a big boon to their
personal finances. In fact, at last count,
Americans were charging somewhere
around $127 billion a year, approximately
$600 in debts fa evay man, woman and
child in the U.S. Merchants encourage the ,
use of aedit cards whenever possible.
My customers use aedit cards so they '
See Graduates, page b.
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l-OUNTAINHEADVOL. 57, NO. 5227APRIL 1976
5
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�sert in
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itered in
ree days
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the most
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GRADUATES
Continued from page 4.
can buy meals they can't afford
explained one restauranteur.
The credit card racket provides its
debtors with those instant loans that
everyone wants sometime but oome the
end of the month, the bill oollector will
have his hand out. On the most oommon
types of credit cards-gasoline, retail store
and bank cards-the service is generally
free if the bill is paid within 30 days. But
once the first 30-day grace period is over,
interest rates zoom up between 12 and 18
percent annually. On travel and entertain-
ment cards, an annual fee is charged even
if the card is not used.
Because of two new credit laws pas.1 J
last year, the credit card situation las
improved somewhat fa potential debtors.
Credit cards arent any easier to get but if
you re denied one, the creditor hai to spell
out the reasons (not in writing). If they
have checked your credit rating with an
independent agency, you have the right to
find out what's in the file that caused the
adverse ruling. If there s a mistake, the
agency must go through the motions of
re-investigating. And if the agency refujes
to correct the error, you have the right to
w
00
$$$
Hit
for almost
ash loans,
d of credit
rating" is
night want
car deal of
it in many
g approval
: than later
and hasn't
t spending
n to their
last count.
omewhere
xoximately
voman and
xxjrage the ,
r possible,
ds so they '
tes, page 5.
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add your own version of the story to the file
which must be given to all inquiring
creditors.
Another triumph for debtors came with
a new Federal Reserve Board regulation
applying mainly to the bank cards.
Previously, when someone paid for either
goods or services with a bank card and the
merchandise or work was faulty, the
customer had noreoourse. The bill still had
to be paid to the aedita, which was a
bank. Now customers who paid more than
$50 fa something a made the purchase
within 100 milesof their home can withhold
payment fa bad merchandise a service.
I hat sa good reason fa limiting the use of
bank cards while traveling,
Women made some gains with the new
credit laws although not as many as had
beer: lobbied fa by women's groups.
Creditors may no longer evaluate a
woman b credit potential on the basis of
net nusband s aedit ratings nor may the
creditor oonstder married people more
ueuit-worthy than singles. Women's
uiuuoeanng intentions can no longer be
scrutinized and part-time income as well as
alimony and child suppat payments can be
countea as part of a woman's inoome.
Financial wizards who know the value
of a good aedit rating have devised a few
strategies for getting credit even as
low-income students. Former banker
Michael Phillips, who wrote The Seven
Laws of Money, suggests opening a
checking account with the largest amount
of money possible even if it means
barowing fa a oouple of days. Many
bankers keep that first figure faemost in
tinir minds when making the great aedit
decision.
I nen. Phillips said, you need to have a
job (being a student will do), an address
Sister Mary
Palm reader �Advisor
She'll advise you on all problems.
Shes helped thousands, why not
you? Hwy. 17 South of Washington,
��������������




X
RED ROOSTER
REST? JRANT
2713 E. i thSt.
Weloomes
K ECU Students
and Faculty
to Enjoy
Home Cooked
Meals
with Low Prices.
Daily Specials featured M-F open 8-8.
and a checking account fa a.e year. Try
applying fa agasoline aedit card, then a
Department stae card. These are the
easiest kinds of aedit cards to get. Next,
go fa a natioial department stae card and
use it once a twice. Pay your bills
promptly. Then go fa the biggie, the Bank
Amencard a MasterCharge.
Of course if you re a student and you
received an invitation to get a bank card,
faget the above steps and go to the head of
the class. Even if you don't use the card, a
zero balance from non-usage is usually
every bit as valuable fa your aedit rating
as plenty of paid-up bills.
IF YOU MISSED ME
BEFORE EASTER
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A RELAXING ATMOSPHERE
WITH MELLOW MUSIC
OPEN MON- SAT3:00 PM 2:00 AM
THINK SUNSET
ON A HOT AFTERNOON
119 East 5th St.
K i tut Id V
From the creators and cast of the Otf Broadway hit "DIAMOND STUDS" r
HOT GROG
Carolina's Notorious Blackboard
is coming to Greenville, April 26 M.iy 1 at the � V
ROXY PLAYHOUSE
629 Albeiti.�. ��.� Avonue, � "��m iville. MC
What
they
said
auout DIAMOND STUDS
ueei (Jeliyhl I ha best show of its type
i.ice 'Jacques Hnl' and it will deservedly become
i cult. Be am�� firsl t the culture I
( uv� Barries, New York Tunes
"not c
Yvyi . i
anough to inaka a lUnv
.ilk to its rtexl d.�ik Jley
Ki M New l
Eastern Not th Catolina t
exclusive tjn'jjytment
featuring thn notorious
BLACKBEARO
llOWV
Mod. Ilnus. tt:00 )'ii
Fri. fii Sat
7:00 & 10:00 ,� in.
Tor infor�v,�iion un
reserved suiis, all
752-3810 or SB 0911
' I:
What
�hey 'r�'
�tying
.il�out HOI GROG
llltl � 'C it Hi I ii ' . J ttl MI i ' 'If IjU, �'
I'll Mofi �� ' ' �� , j
hirjti s.ii.ii v.t �! i i ulm i throughout
R (ty Hi rqes, Durham Morning Herald
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Academic cheaters abound
(CPS)-Someday the prioe of admission
to a medical or law school aptitude test may
be attaching the arms of prospective
doctors or lawyers to a polygraph machine
and questioning them closely.
Are you really (name of applicant)? Are
these statements about yourself on this
application form true? Have you ever
attempted to falsify the records you have
submitted to us?
Already administrators of the Law
School Admissions Tests (LSAT) have
begun to thumbprint applicants who take
the test instead of asking for a driver's
license or other photo-bearing identifi-
cation as they had in the past. The Medical
Schools Association has asked candidates
for the Medical College Admissions Test
(MCAT) to send photographs when they
register for the exam and these are
forwarded to the test centers where
proctors screen candidates when they
arrive.
The increasingly stringent security
applied to professional school entrance
exams is partly the result of a new wave of
cheaters who are enrolling in top graduate
schools with the help of falsified docu-
ments and hired exam-takers. Recently a
few big cases have come to light and
professional school administrators assume
they are only the tip of the iceberg.
The most famous case was that of the
husband am wife team who wangled
admittance to Harvard's law and business
schools using falsified transcripts. The
team was caught when the man, Spiro
Pavlovichlll, bragged to some lawyers who
were interviewing him fa a summer job.
Without his boasting, the two Pavlo-
vichs may never have been found out.
Expertly forged transcripts are difficult to
spot in the mass of applications which
deluge professional schools. Inside help is
not unheard of. In February, the president
of Brooklyn College acknowledged that 12
employees of the school's registrar's off ice
had been implicated in transcript-doctoring
" to improve their own academic records a
those of friends and relatives
NEED RESUME-
PHOTOS?
Call Greenville's Newes.
Professional Studio
752-0123
image
creative w f
PHOTOGRAPHYr
Weddings Portrait
Commercial
2904 EAST 10th STREET
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834
Another case involving heavy touching
up of a student's official transcript was
decided by a Circuit Court of Virginia in
February. The student, Harold S. Blumen-
thal, was convicted of forging and passing
a falsified transcript after investigators
found that he had overstated his grades,
listed himself as a summa cum laude
graduate and forged the registrar's
signature on the transcript he submitted to
the medical schools' association.
Tests administered by the Educational
Testing Service (ETS) are also increasingly
vulnerable to cheaters as anxious candi-
datas stop at less and less to win those few
previous places in top professional schools.
The ETS has reached the point where it
must aggressively police the people who
take the tests and investigate in cases
where cheating seems likely.
Suspicions about test cheating are
usually triggered when a student receives a
test score much better than previous scores
out of line with his academic record. ETS
pulls what it calls "large score gain
rostersscored exceeding earlier ones by
150 points or morefrom its oomputers,
investigates some 300 of the 13,600 LSAT's
that fall into this category, and eventually
cancels 9ome 24 scores.
In a case still pending in federal court,
a graduate of the University of California at
Berkeley Law School is suing the ETS for
canceling the score on her third LSAT
after handwriting experts had testified that
she had not taken the test. ETS notified the
Berkeley school that her test score was no
longer considered valid but after consult-
ing an expert of their own, law school
officials decided to admit her anyway. The
student has sinoe graduated from law
school but the case still sits awaiting action
in a Boston court.
CO
MosS
E�coos'aoovscoso'
" EAT FAMILY STILE "
OLDE TOWNE INN
Monday - Thursday
4:30-7:30
$2.25 plus tax
one entree I all the vegetables,
treat A tea yeu can eat
117E. 5th ST. 758-199t
n
m
m
m
WANTED to share apartment for summer
Single girl. Call Sally, 752-6724.
FOR SALE- 1971 TR-6 - Excellent
condition. 758-2663.
EUROPE
fare
WWirtM
800-325-4867
�2? Utv.Travel Chatters
WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any
possible weekend. Can leave anytime
after 3:30 on Thursdays & will help with
gas. 7528903.
OVERSEAS JOBS. Asia, Australia, Africa,
Europe, South America. All occupations.
$600-$2,500. Invaluable experiences. De-
tails 25 cents. International Employment
Research. Box 3893 H9, Seattle, WA
98124.
FOR RENT - private room close to campus,
for summer school and Fall quarter. Phone
752-4006 after 1 p.m.
Nice 2-bdrm. apartment, four blocks from
campus for rent starting June 1. Girls or
oouples only. Call 752-6724.
1973 HONDA 350 - Four, good condition
Call 752-7292 after 5.
FOR SALE - Black, vinyl, tufted sofa. Good
cond. $75 - 756-4096.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brenrtle. 752-4272
WANTED - 2 gins to help serve dinner atj
Lambda Chi Alpha. Free meals plus fringe!
benefits. Call Scott 752-5325.
LOST - gold locket - initials C.G.H.
752-8680. Reward.
FOR SALE: VW Camperbus good con
dition, 36,000 miles, many extras ready fi
travel. Call 728-4694.
FOR SALE: 12 string Univox guitar
excellent condition. Will sell for best offer
758-1489. Ask for Ed.
GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile
students now being selected to fill
positions. Earn approx. $210 pe week. Foi
info call 756-7294.
HOW TO USE FOUNTAINHEAD CLASSIFIEDS
SIZE: To determine the no. of lines needed for your ad, figure 40 letters and spaces'
per line. Ex. The following ad contains 67 letters and spaces, thus requiring 2 lines:
FOR SALE: 1 slightly used but like new
widget. Reasonable. 758-xxxx.
RATES: First insertion: 50 cents first line, 25 cents each additional line. Additional
insertions; 25 cents each line. EX. The above 2 line ad inserted in 3 issues woulc
cost:
.50 plus .25 equals .75 for first insertion
.25 plus .25 equals 50 each for second and third insertion.
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge for lost and found classifieds
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money order along wad to:
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. & Thurs. All classifieds & payments mus
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date.
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainheac
reserves the right to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionaole.
ERRORS: In case of errdrs in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead wil
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertise! I
oe
THE TREEHOUSE PEOPLE ARE
GLAD OUR FRIENDS ARE BACK.
XX�X
WEDGE SANDALS
11
DANELLE
Regular
?16 ft M7
W7FVANSST r.UFFNUII 1 F N f
307 EVANS ST . GREENVILLE, N.C
OPEN DAILY �:30A.M. 5:30 P.M
PHONE 7SI fl9
Owned A Operated By Charles Hardee
ft )
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C.G.H. Call
good con-
as ready fc
vox guitar,
r best offer
lues? Smile
jted to fill
e week. Fa,
md spaces
ig 2 lines:
Additional
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3 wad to:
. 27834.
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IRS audits check for tax return cheaters
By JACK LAIL
Staff Writer
Now that most everyone has filed their
1975 tax return it is enlighting to look at
how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
checks to see that you were honest.
The IRS checks the accuracy of a tax
statement by meansof an audit. An audit is
when the IRS looks into your financial
records to determine if your tax statement
is correct.
"The IRS audited 51,000 tax returns in
North Carolina last year said Glen Jones,
of the public affairs office of the N.C.
District of the IRS. "We don't have the
people to audit more.
"We use a combination of human
eyeballs and oomputers to choose tax
returns that show a possible high degree of
error. I was even audited last year. We
oontinually try to impress upon people to
keep good records.
"We have a policy stating that if we
audit a taxpayer one year, we don't audit
them again the next year unless there is
evidence of criminal intent to evade taxes.
"We audited about twice as many
people in the $25,000 to $50,000 tax group
than in the lower groups. It was 5 taxes.
peroent of the returns in the higher group
and about 2 percent in the lower group.
"In 20 peroent of the audits there is no
change in the original tax statement. In 10
peroent we end up owing the taxpayer
money. The other 70 peroent owe money to
us
"An official of the IRS can put you in
jail said Milton Friedman, a noted
economist. " I doubt there is a person in the
U.S. who couldn't be convicted of a
technical violation of some aspect of
personal inoometax
"In house" manuals of the IRS
i eleased under the Freedom of Information
Act says that errors can be found in 99
peroent of all tax returns.
"We had about 70 tax fraud cases in
N.C.in 1975 said Jones. "Some were
decided in favor of the defendant and some
in favor of the IRS.
Fraud is a fraudulent statement where
the taxpayer knowingly states false in-
formation.
"Evasion is not declaring part of his
income. It is side stepping paying taxes.
"A taxpayer convicted of tax fraud
must pay all costs of the civil trial,
penalties, back taxes, and interest on back
I ECU Placement office
suspends campus mailing
ByKENCARPUNKY
Staff Writer
The ECU College Placement Office has
temporarily suspended the mailing of
monthly employment bulletins to on-
campus students because of the hike in
postage rates from 10 cents to 13 cents.
"Our budget was set-up last year on
the basis of the 10 cent stamp said ECU
College Placement Director Furney K.
James.
"Ordinarily extra money would be
available, but funds are very tight at this
time
According to James, the suspension
involves the May and June bulletins only.
"We have stopped mailing the bul-
letins while the students are here so we can
send them out when the students have
gone said James. "In our April bulletins
we asked off-campus students and alumni
to send us stamps if they desired to receive
the May and June bulletins and the
response has been good.
It costs approximately $150 for each
mailing of the job bulletin, according to
James. This year's budget was approxi-
mately $250 short.
"The new budget will be approved July
1 said James Hopefully we can resume
mailing the bulletins at that time. This is
the first time the bulletins could not be
mailed according to James.
"Many college placement offices don't
bother to mail job listings at all said
James.
"The University of Wisconsin charges
$15 a year for theirs
The May job bulletin is now available at
the ECU College Placement Office.
acwoevw
XSSSXSSSSXXXSSXXSSS�SS30CSSS
F
get into the coffeehouse
treef, atmosphere ofthetreehouse
Restaurant eastern Carolina's
1 coffeehouse
tftftfCCCC�'C4C4C4C!C4CCCC4CC�C�CCCC'CC��CCCC�CC�'CCC�C�CC
SHIRTS AND $HF
on Evans Street Mall across from "Big WOOW"
JUST ARRIVED
&&i
SfTW
'&�
RUGBY SHIRTS 15 OFF
GIRLS GAUZE TOPS
HALTERS, PONCHOS,
SLEEVELESS
"We very seldom bring charges against
a person for one year, usually it is for
violations in four, five or more years.
"Our revenue offioers are empowered
to seize property to collect taxes. A seizure
has to go through a U.S. Attorney.
"A revenue officer has to collect taxes.
It is a harsh last resort. We would rather let
a business remain open so they oould pay
taxes they owe us, but after a reasonable
time we have to take action.
"A taxpayer has closely protected
rights of privacy, we cannot just go down
and pull out a tax return. We must have a
reason to see tax returns.
"When we request information from a
taxpayer we are required by law to tell why
we want it. The taxpayer has the right under
the Freedom of Information Act to see all
letters, memos, and other documents
dealing with only his case
If after an audit you do not agree with
the IRS agents' decision you may appeal
either within the IRS a the courts, me
steps and options of appeal are described
in IRS publication 17, "Your Federal
Income Tax" available at any IRS office.
According to the April issue of
" Playboy" there are from four million
to ten million persons who failed to file a
Vnaa Shit Repair 3tt
I Sntt Start
from Mount
tax return last year.
One popular means of evading taxes is
to write the Fifth Amendment on their
return.
"Unless the forms have figures on
them and are signed we say it is not filed.
We send them forms to file and if they
don't, we see that as failure to file. We
don't have many of those cases in N.C
The "Playboy" article states that
according to secret IRS manuals obtained
under the Freedom of Information Act that
the IRS normally seeks to extort money
that is not owed. Agents are dispatched
with quotas for raising additional revenue
and are given wide latitude when it comes
down to methods.
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BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE &
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IVMr Phom 7M-9SM
70 Evans St.
w.sem wj& wjs '&x& &ts
805 DICKINSON AVE
GREENVILLE
752-5186
I JB?I
521 COTANCHE STREET
IN GEORGETOWN SHOPPES
Phone 752-6130
PHONE IN ORDERS FOR PICK-UP
OPEN- MonThurs. 10:00 to 1:00 a.m.
Fri. & Sat. 10 to 2 a.m Sun. 12 to 12
( HOWABOUTSTUFFY'S FREE
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OF $2.00 OR MORE)
Your choice of 12 delicious hot & cold
subs starting at 79
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'
8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 57, NO. 5227 APRIL 197b
ENTERTAINMENT
Hemingway dull in 'Lipstick'
By JOHN EVANS
In her debut on the screen, high-dass
model Margaux Hemingway, in her role as
a model, is relatively unimpressive in
Lipstick
But her acting can not totally be blamed
on her talent alone, at least not yet,
because the role in which Ms. Hemingway
is cast is too shallow to allow her to show
additional talents other than modeling.
Where she is posing as the high-class
model on location, she does an under-
standably good job, but for the rest of the
film it is a different story. In this case, at
least, it shows that beauty isn't everything
m becoming a good actress.
The film itself isa lot to blame. With its
overused subject matter of rape, and
revenge for the act, the film never really
goes anyplace.
Chris Sarandon, one might remember
as the homosexual wife" of Al Padno in
Dog Day Afternoon - for which he received
an Academy Award nomination, appears
as the psychologically unstable musiaan-
rapist who tarnishes the modeling reput-
ation and silky-smooth image of the
heroine in a unique rape-sodomy sequence
in her apartment (have to give the director
some credit for trying this new approach to
such an overused plot send-off).
That plot which then develops centers
around the heroine's court battle against
the rapist and the affect the publicity and
experience has on her career and self-
esteem
Even with the half-hearted casting ot
Anne Bancroft as the heroine's incom-
petent, but well-meaning, lawyer the film
and its true impact is over about
half-an-hour after it goes on the screen.
The director, Lament Johnson, and the
screenwriter, David Rayfiel, must have
realized the dead-end the plot arrives at
because they attempt to save the film with
a second rape oommitted by the musician
on the heroine's kid sister-who is played
by Margaux Hemingway's true-life sister,
Marie! Hemingway. The quick slam-bang
ending evolves from this-with the heroine
gaining some measure of justice and
revenge from the outcome.
That outcome is about as unbelievable
and unacceptable as the film is unpolished
but somehow the film does not end as a
total wipe-out.
Indeed, the acting of the two Heming-
way women is a test for possible future
roles-and in this case, the younger Mariel
comes out as the far better actress.
As fa Margaux�one has to wonder
why she is trying to branch out from her
highly-successful modeling career into
movies. Her role in Lipstick js not the kind
which will make her a star overnight. For
that matter, Ms. Hemingway may do
better by sticking to her modeling career
because as an actress she may never make
it. She certainly can't make it in the type of
role she was burdened with in Lipstick.
Bluegrass on the mall
BITTER CREEK, a blend of hard-driving traditional and contemporary bluegrass.
John Worthington: vocals, guitar; Lane Hollis: vocals, banjo; Frankie Harrison:mandolin;
Phii Lamer: vocals, acoustic bass. Appearing 8:15 P.M. Sat May 1 at the ECU Spring
Bluegrass Festival - ECU Mall. Festive! begins at 2.00 P.M will also feature five other
acts and the Green Grass Cloggers. Sponsored by ECU Student Union Special Concerts
Committee.
One Day At A Time'
star interviewed
By RICHARD TRUBO
Pop Scene Service
Mackenzie Phillips-with script in hand
and chewing gum in mouth - bounces into
her dressing room trailer on the Hollywood
studio lot where "One Day at a Time" is
being taped She proceeds to slide into a
chair, glances at issues of People and Time
magazines that are perched nearby, and
then sits back to talk about how a 16 year
old copes with being a TV star
"It's enjoyable hectic, explains Mac-
kenzie. "That's the best way I can describe
it We work a very hard and rigorous
schedule, but I m having fun, too
Mackenzie leaves the impression that
she solder than someone in her mid-teens.
She has amazing poise and self-oonfidenoe
At an age when most of her peers are
nervousiy struggling with their first pair of
false eye'ashes, she is leading a rather
norous life and earning a very
ixnf or table salary
Chamber ensemble May 3
The chamber music ensemble of
JAMES HOULIK & FRIENDS will appear
at Mendenhall Student Center Theatre on
Monday, May 3, at 8:00 P.M. The group,
now in its third season, is comprised of
oboe, clarinet, saxophone, and piano.
James Houlik assembled this unusual
combination of instrumental voices as a
part of his continuing efforts to establish
wider exposure for the saxophone and in
response to the public thirst for a greater
variety of oonoert fare In addition to the
fresh sound of these instruments in consort
the members perform delightful solo
pieces. In recent seasons the group has
appeared throughout the eastern United
States including several New York per-
formances and broadcasts.
More than just a name, the performers
truly share friendship and enthusiasm for
the music they make together. A unique
repertoire ranging more than three
centuries and an unusual combination of
musical instruments make JAMES HOU
LIK & FRIENDSa veritable mixed bouquet
of musical moments with a broad audience
appeal
Admission to the oonoert for ECU
students will be by I.D. and activity card,
and for ECU faculty and staff by
Mendenhall Student Center Membership
card. Tickets for the public are priced at
$4.00 each, and may be purchased from
ECU Central Ticket Office. The concert is a
Mendenhall Student Center Production.
'HotGrog'atRoxy
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MACKENZIE PHILLIPS
But Mackenzie, who portrays Julie
Cooper in CBS "One Day at a Time has
never fit intoany mold. She is the daughter
of John Phillips, founder and lead singer of
the Mamas and Papas. While other kids
See Star, page nine.
HOT GROG will play at the Roxy
Playhouse in Greenville, North Carolina,
April 26 - May 1. The new musical by Jimm
Wann and Bland Simpson, and produced
by Peg Leg Productions, recently com-
pleted a sucoessful premiere engagement
of forty-four shows at The Ranch House in
Chapel Htii
rhe show depicts actual male and
female pirates desperados and romantl
along with the bawdy coast of the
Carolinas just after the turn of the 1700s.
It is brimming with the moving and
magnetic music of Wann-Simpson,
Carolina's leading young songwriters,
whose DIAMOND STUDS became an
off-Broadway sensation. "HOT GROG"
joins DIAMOND STUDS as treasured
memcxy tor thousands of tar heel theater
goers
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f-OUNJAINHEAUVOL 67, NO 5227 APRIL 1976
hump m i �mifcii ii 'iwiiii mm
9
ENTERTAINMENT
Greenville Movies
PARK
Today through Thursday, the horror fantasy Phantom of Paradise. Shows at 315,
5:10, 7:05 and 9.00. Rated PG.
Starts Friday The Devil Within Her. Rated R.
PITT
Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman in All the President's Men ends Thursday. You
ought to see this one. Shows at 7 00 and 9:30. Rated PG.
Starts Friday Watch Out We're Mad.
PLAZA I
Walt Disney No Deposit No Return starring Don Knotts. Shows at 315, 515, 7:15 and
9:15. Rated G.
Starts Friday The Last Hard Men Rated T.
PLAZA II
Jeremiah Johnson is another Redford movie. An adventure story with shows at 3, 5, 7,
and 9. Rated PG.
TICE
Through Wednesday Goodbye. Nor ma Jean at 9:40 and Summer School Teachers at
8:00. Both are rated R.
STUDENT CENTER WEDNESDAY CLASSIC
Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion at 8.00 Wednesday. Rated R.
FRIDAY FREE FLICK
The Conversation starring Gene Hackman and Allen Garfield focuses on the personal
life of an "electronic surveillance technician Shows at 5, 7, and 9. Rated RG.
STAR
Continued from page eight
Mary Grover, a senior piano major, will
give a recital April 28 at A.J. Fletcher
Recital Hall at 7:30 p.m. The program will
include pieces from Schubert, Bach and
Scriabin. Everyone is welcome.
were writing fan letters to the Beatles and
the Rolling Stones, Mackenzie recalls
meeting them, as well as watching her
father sing in a recording studio when she
was not much more than six years old
But her early childhood was not entirely
pleasurable Mackenzie's parents,
divoroed when she was very young, and
she lived mostly with her mother, Susan
Adams Phillips, and her older brother,
Jeffrey. As with most broken homes, there
were pressures and heartaches to contend
with that are not found in a normal family
situation.
"That's why'One Day at a Time' is so
fascinating to me says Mackenzie. "I
play the daughter of a divorcee, and I think
the show portrays the whole circumstance
very realistically. There are millions of
divorced families in America, but until
now, no TV show has jver dealt with what
really goes on. I'm glad we're not on the air
in the family hour, so we can deal in reality
a lot more
"The character I play is a half-
sophisticated, half-creepy teen-ager re-
marks Mackenzie. "And she's going
through a lot of things - like missing
daddy, and then hating mommy and
mommy's boy friend for it
Mackenzie's own career goals were
originally to be a nurse. But the musical
influences in her life led her to form her
STILL SERVING THE BEST PIZZA,
own group when she was just 12. One
evening, while performing on amateur
night at the Troubadour in West Holly-
wood, she was spotted by an agent. A
phone cal I and two audit ions later, she had
been cast in her first acting rote, in
"American Graffiti
Snce then, Mackenzie has starred in
Rafferty and the Gold Dust Twins as
well as three TV movies-of-the-week: "Go
AskAlioe "Miles to Go Before I Sleep,
and Eleanor and Franklin She also
guested on segments of the "Baretta
Moving On and "Mary Tyler Moore"
shows.
"Music still means a lot to me she
says But so much has happened to me so
fast, I just don't know exactly when we're
going to have time to do the album
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BROTHERHOOD OF PEACE
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People's College produces street lawyers
Bv DIANE AUERBACH
(CPS)-For years, a stint in law school
guaranteed an insular existence. Law
students renounced all interest in worldly
affairs, retreated to a book-lined enclave of
torts and briefs, and emerged three years
later, ready to sling legalese with the best
of 'em.
But their three-year live burial in
classic cases prepared most lawyers fa
only certain kinds of litigation: million
dollar divoroes, upper inoome tax returns
and trials of kidnapped heiresses, yes.
Indicted 13-year-old heroin addicts, in-
junctions against picketing protesters and
evictions of 20-member ghetto families, no.
Besides, there were all those expensive law
school debts to pay off and a comfortable
position waiting with Higgins, Matlook,
Johnson, Johnson and Johnson.
A good street lawyer was too hard to
find, decided a few attorneys. They wanted
a school to deaease the shortage-and at a
reasonable price to students. Enter the
People's College of Law.
"If you want to become deputy district
attaney or work in the legal department of
some corporation the school catalog
says, "don't waste your time and ours by
applying. There are other schools for
you-all the others
The People's College of Law in Los
Angeles prepares its 130 students, nearly
half of whom are women and minorities, to
work fa social change. It's an alternative
to law schools that stress elitism and
competition, its founders say. And it's the
only one of its kind.
Students pay $350 a semester to attend
the new school, which is unaccredited.
Califania, unlike meet states, does not
require attendance at an accredited law
'Walk for Humanity' planned for May 8
By PAT F LYNN
Staff Writer
The ECU Newman Club is sponsoring
the 1976 Walk fa Humanity. The third
annual walk is scheduled fa May 8.
The Walk, previously called the Walk
fa Human Development, was started in
1961 by the American Freedom from
Hunger Foundation as a national voluntary
committee tosuppat the hunger campaign
of the United Nations.
As in the past, money raised will be
given to a local group, the Pitt County
Social Services Crises Fund, and an
international group, Bread fa the Wald.
"The route will cova different areas in
Greenville and view the various types of
living conditions in Greenville. The City
Manager and Pol ice will approve the route
and pre vide the necessary aid in control-
ling traffic fa protection of the walkers
from accidents said Jeanine Blake,
President of the Newman Club.
"The walk is designed to cover 25
miles. It will begin at Fioklen Stadium at 8
p.m. and end at the Baptist Student Union.
Final registration fa the Walk is at 7 p.m.
at Fioklen Stadium.
"The Newman Club hopes to involve
the total Greenville community in wath
while action.
"Anyone who is physically able is
asked to walk. A prospective walker is na
required to complete the 25 miles, but the
donation will be computed on the total
number of miles walked.
"Sponsors may suppat mae than one
hiker. Hikers are urged to secure mae
than oie spoisa if possible.
"In the next couple of weeks all walkers
planning to walk are asked to pick up a
"Walk card" at the Newman Club meeting
a at any lecal church. Walkers are then
asked to fill these cards up with as many
pledges as they can.
"Fa minas a waiver fam is also
included fa parental permission The
cards also list the checkpoints where a
walker gets his card stamped and
validated.
"There will be numerous checkpoints,
areas where food, medical and toilet
facilities can be used by those in need, as
well as rest areas fa weary hikers.
"One a two days after the walk is
completed, walkers are asked to visit their
sponsa and collect their pledged donatiois
and tell them about the Walk.
"The past walks have been very
successful, Walkers have collected over
$3000 each of the past two years. Last year
the money was given to Volunteer
Greenville, Meadowbrook Day Care Cen-
ter, The Paper The Boy's Club Summer
Camp program, and a drought-stricken
African country
school as a prerequisite fa taking the bai
exam.
The school's first year students an
given conventional classes to prepare therr
fa the state bar-administered First-Yeai
Law Examination. The students must pas?
these to continue studies in an unao
credited school.
But in the next three years, they takt
classes that many say they could fine
nowhere else, dealing with tenant-landloc
law, ooisumerism, immigration, polio
brutality, sterilization and racism.
"We're trying to turn out fully trainee
people lawyers, lawyers who will go back tc
their communities to practice says Henr
di Suvero, a faculty member and movinc
face behind the opening of the school.
The emphasis at People's College is no
on past grades-B.As and LSAT scoe:
are not even required-but oi the ability tc
learn, the faculty say. The school i;
virtually run by students. Extensive
participation in the school's legal clinic i
mandatoy. Remedial writing classes are
available, as is free child care. All classe5
are held in the evening, so that student
can hold onto current jobs.
"What we're doing says Studen
Mario Vasquez, "is demystifying the law
saying that it's not fa the chosen few.
traditional law school is very alienating
You go to UCLA and you feel the fear
Professos use the Sccratic method o
teaching. We don't play that kind of game
We say, Here is the principle of law ane
this is how it applies
The real test fa People's College wil
come in two years with its first graduating
class. Then its ability to produoe graduate:
who can pass the Califania Bar Exami
natioweputedly oie of the toughest in th
oountry-will be gauged.

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Peace Corp flooded
with eager applicants
By ANTHONY SCHMITZ
(CPS)Dave Scharnhorst just oouldn't
take it anymore. The Peace Corps had
plopped him down in what might have
been a tropical paradise on Tonga Island in
the South Pacific. He found later that "the
electricity was off after 10 p.m. There was
nothing to do but go to bed and listen to the
rats rustle
The food was so poor, he claimed, that
he and other trainees left their language
classes to forage in the jungle for green
coconuts to supplement their diet. His roof
leaked, there was no running water.
Eventually, Scharnhorst and six or
seven of the 33 other trainees stationed on
the island returned to Washington. But
although Washington Peace Corps officials
admit that Scharnhorst's living situation
was not unprecedented, they've still been
turning away applicants in droves.
Finding work with the Peace Corps has
become even tougher than cracking the
gloomy domestic job market for liberal arts
graduates. The volunteer agency has been
flcoded with applicants eager to join a staff
that has shrunk steadily since the Peace
Corps heyday in 1966.
Nearly 29,000 applications came piling
into Peace Corps offices last year from
persons looking for jobs in one of the 68
countries receiving volunteers. Adminis-
trators were left with the job of throwing
out more than 80 percent of them to round
out the 6,400-member staff.
Although requests, from developing
nations for volunteers has risen, funding
for the agency has not. The Peace Corps'
budget has shrunk from a peak of $114
million in 1966 to $81 million in the 1976
fiscal year. Under pressure to tighten its
belt even further, the Corps is expecting
$67 million next year.
Along with the budget, the number of
volunteers put to work has shrunk since the
salad days under President Johnson's
Great Society. While 15,000 volunteers
filled the ranks in 1966, that number has
dropped by about 60 percent over the past
ten years.
Would-be volunteers armed with
bachelors degrees can expect a hard time
cracking the agency. Even though the
subsistence living allowance and native
housing doesn't seem glamorous, the
Peace Corps is asking for-and getting-
technicians and skilled laborers to fill the
limited number of positions open.
While a B.A. graduate with knowledge
of French might still be able to find a job
with the Peace Corps, the agency has been
shying away from unskilled workers in
recent years. Architects, nurses, municipal
planners and persons with agricultural
skills have a chance of finding jobs, while
history and English majors are usually left
to take their chances on the American
marketplace.
In spite of extensive screening, about
15 peroent of the Peace Corps staff drop
out before finishing their hitches. Like
Scharnhorst, who decided that "I don't
regret going into the Peace Corps and I
don't regret coming back either they
leave fa reasons ranging from physical
hardships to the lack of liquor and sex.
A volunteer recently returned from
Omani said that although her group was a
good one, three people never showed up in
Philadelphia where the group departed
from. "One man dropped out a week after
we were in Oman, and one woman dropped
out after she heard that liquor and sex
weren't readily available the volunteer
said.
Of 12 Peace Corps volunteers who went
to Man in 1974, six were left at the end of
their scheduled stay, according to the
former volunteer who didn't wish to be
identified. Rumors have it that the Omani
government has been displeased with the
staying power of the last group of
volunteers and the success of the next
group will "be an important factor in
whether or not the Omani government
continues to request volunteers the
former staff member said.
George Wakiji, press officer in Wash-
ington, said that although the Corps
reoognizes the attrition problem, in many
cases it might be understandable. After a
recent survey of Peace Corps projects in
Guatemala following the earthquake,
Wakiji said he found volunteers working in
conditions "that I don't know if I could
have put up with
But with 29,000 applications and a
tough domestic job market, there shouldn't
be much trouble f riding replacements.
tVo
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12
hOUNTAINHtADVOL. 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976
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Student Iranians protest Shah's strict rule
By BILL McGray
(CPS)This is the story of secret police,
a megalomaniac, some American univer-
sities, one hundred million dollars and
student protesters who wear bags over
their heads.
The students are young Iranians;
according to the Iranian Embassy in
Washington there are nearly 17,000 of
them currently taking courses at U.S.
colleges, making them this country's
second largest foreign delegation after
studentb from Hong Kong.
1 he Iranians are overwhelmingly male,
they are mainly studying engineering and
other technical subjects, most hail from
Iran's upper class and many of them are
angry
Like no other group of students these
nays, militant Iranians, mainly members of
the '3.000 strong Iranian Students Associ-
ate n (ISA), are raising a collective stink at
dozens of colleges across the country and
around the world.
If they aren't going on hunger strikes or
shouting down speakers, the Iranians are
holding teach-ins, sit-ms, dashing off
siting letters to campus editors, leaf-
leting or parading about with signs,
holding their identities with ski masks and
bags that make them look like medieval
joust ers.
The target of their ire and the reason
for their paranoia is His Imperial Majesty,
Mohammed Reza Pahlevi, King of Kingi
and Light of the Aryans, also known as the
Shah of Iran. The Shah gained power in
1953 after a now-acknowledged CIA coup.
In 1967 he crowned himself after reported-
ly watching a film of Queen Elizabeth's
coronation 20 times in preparation.
The ISA and its many world-wide
sympathizers say the Shah is an iron-fisted
dictator who uses Iran's annual $20 billion
oil revenues to consolidate his power and
turther his empire, all at the expense of
that country's poor-most of irans 32
million people. The Shah has bought over
$10 billion wath of sophisticated U.S.
weapons and ships in the past decade.
"U.S. arms sales come from money sucked
from the Iranian people says an ISA
student at New Mexico State.
Censorship abounds in Iran, the ISA
SGA
Continued from page 1.
next year, the Legislature passed a bill
giving $4,025 to the committee.
The first amendment, introduced by
'isi-tore Valerie Chaffin, would nave
�nated the $475 "Contingency' line
item, but was defeated. The Legislature
later suspended rules to a.low reconsider-
ation of the Cha vnG.T.ont, which
parsed on the secr.i vote.
Chaff;n saic th s expense couid oc
covered by the $705 rpiUb from this
,e?r Homecominn Committee cdqet.
'��sscoate Dear, oi Stuaent Affa.rs
Rjdolph Alexander, who s acv.sor to the
St dent on,or, tad tne Legislature it
should eliminate a $500 item in the budget
for "entertainment" if a cut had to be
made. Alexander said the SGA had gotten
out of the business of programming when
the Siudent Union became independent
several years ago and that it should stay
out now.
Snort I y thereafter, Legislator Ray Hud-
son introduced an amendment eliminating
the entertainment line item. This amend-
ment Jassec with one negative vote.
Student onion President-eiect Barry
Roc "son, responding to quer.es on the
i ear's Homecoming Committee
. . m� .on. it icQica,rc tii3t tne
CGiTii u,ee rioO in previous yeao oolioiec
money from ;no downtown rr,erchants Put
this year the committee has oeen emoar-
'&ocJj id CO so.
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claims, and when it comes to "God's
Shadow as the Shah likes to be called,
never is there heard a discouraging word.
Failure to abide by this rule means prison,
where 100,000 political opponents of the
Shah now sit, battered by cattle prods and
other modern devices of torture, aocording
to Amnesty International, the French
newspaper Le Monde and several other
European organizations. Since 1972, over
300 Iranians have been executed for
political crimes. The Shah also controls the
70,000-member SAVAK secret police, and
even the Iranian embassy has admitted
that there are SAVAK agents on the prowl
in America, keeping an eye on Iranian
ex pat riots.
What really rankles the ISA and its
supporters is the complicity between U.S.
universities and the Shah. Ever since the
Arab oil boycott two years ago, college
administrators have been tripping over
each other in their attempts to strike up
bargains with Iran, seeing the wealthy
country as one way out of their present
money woes.
American educational experts put the
total value of educational services gone
from the U.S. to Iran at $100 million. One
of the largest deals is an $11 million,
five-year agreement with George Wash-
ington University in which its professors
will set up an economic institute in
Iran. UCLA, Berkeley, the University of
Pennsylvania, MIT, Harvard, and dozens
of other schools have also agreed to
establish some sort of program with the
Shah's government.
Little of this has gone unnoticed at the
sshoois involved. "Some (academic per-
sonnel) have scruples about doing anything
to reinforce the Shah's rule but the
prevailing feeling seemsto be that it's nice
to help a oountry fight its backwardness
commented Science Magazine.
But some Iranian students, as well as
American students and professors, point
out the militaristic nature of many of the
agreements and ask how they will help
raise Iran's$1,800 annual per capita wage
or cut into its 75 percent illiteracy rate.
Student protests last fall at Southern
Massachusetts University over a plan to
use the campus as a training ground for the
Iranian Navy led officials there to cancel
the program. In early February, a debate
on Iran at the University of Texas ended in
a brawl between ISA members and a
photographer whom they accused of
working for SAVAK.
Most recently, protests and verbal
outbursts disrupted John Hopkins Uni-
versity's Graduation Day celebration when
the university-which has an agreement
with Shah-awarded an honorary degree to
his wife's sister.
Reza, an Iranian graduate student in
engineering at the University of California
at Berkeley, says it is easy for Iranians to
turn against the Shah once they leave Iran.
"The Shah built the oountry he was a
great man, Reza thought before he came to
the U.S. to study. "So I came here, I saw
American papers, watched some TV.
Automatically, my mind started opening
up. It happens to all Iranians here
As for the Shah, he does not appear
worried that many of his hopes for the
future have turned into enemies. "I am not
afraid of my people, he told CBS last
year. "They trust me. I trust them
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13
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51. NO. 5227 APRIL 1976

Sports
; Pirates dump VMI, running record to 20 wins
f
i
East Carolina's Pirates swept a double-
header from VMI Saturday by 11-0, 11-1
scores and thus ran its' season record to 20
wins and six losses.
Prior to the VMI twinbill, the Pirates
had defeated William and Mary, 6-1, and
lost to Pembroke State, 5-1. The three SC
wins over VMI and William and Mary ran
ECU'S record to 7-5 in the conference and
the loss to Pembroke was the first loss
outside the conference for ECU.
Getting back to baseball, the VMI
sweep gave ECU its most victories in a
season since 1970, when Earl Smith
coached the SC champion Pirates to a 20-13
record. In 1968, the Pirates won 21 and in
1967 they won 23 games. Both of these
records are within striking distance for this
year's team-which has four games to play
following yesterday's game with Rich-
mond.
Against VMI, the Pirates had two-hit
pitching performances by Terry Durham
and Dean Reavis. In the first game,
Durham struck out a record 11 batters,
including a record four in a row, to set the
Keydets back.
In the nightcap, Reavis came back and
struck out eight Keydet batters while
hurling a two-hitter Reavis faced only 22
batters in the sever i -inning contest.
It was the first time since April 3 that
Reavis had gone the route in a contest, and
his first win in the same amount of time.
The ECU hurler is now 4-2 on the season
and Durham stands at 5-1 fa the year.
In the opener, ECU blasted out 17 hits
against the hapless Keydets and got
homeruns from Geoff Beaston, Charlie
Stevens and Sonny Wooten. For Beaston it
was his first home run of the year. For
Stevens it was his second and for Wooten it
was his third roundtripper of the year.
Beaston drove in three runs and went
2-for-4 at the plate, while six other ECU
batters came up with two hits or more.
Leading the way with three hits was
Howard McCullough, who had two more
hits in the nightcap. McCullough had two
singles and a double in the first game to
bat across four runs. For the twinbill, he
was 5-for-7 with six runs batted in.
Beaston, Steve Bryant, Wooten, Joe
Roenker, Stevens and Addison Bass all had
two hits for ECU, with Wooten batting
across three runs for the Pirates.
The only run off Durham came in the
final inning when VMI scored on an error
by Bobby Supel and a double which scored
the runner with two out. It was an
unearned run. Before that, Durham had
retired 15 batters in a row.
In the nightcap, Reavis did not allow a
runner past second and after the third
inning Reavis did not allow a baserunner.
At the plate, Supel led the way. Playing
third instead of Beaston, Supel blasted two
home runs, a double, scored four runs and
batted in three more to lead the Pirates'
12-hit assault.
Supel homered to lead off the first and
homered with two aboard in the fourth. He
doubled in the sixth and scored on a
sacrifice, and then he was intentionally
passed in the seventh, scoring on a single
by Sonny Wooten. MoCullough's two hits
and two runs batted in also aided the ECU
cause and Wooten continued his hitting
tear with a two-for-five showing at the
plate.
Against Pembroke, the Pirates dropped
their first non-conference game of the year.
ECU's Keith Kurdewan started and was hit
for four runs in as many innings. Bob
Feeney and Joe Heavner went the
remainder of the way for ECU.
Stevens and McCullough each got two
hits for the Pirates, who stranded ten
baserunners in the game. ECU s only run
scored in the first when Beaston opened
with a double and scored on a sacrifice fly
by Robert Brinkley.
On April 17, the Pirates avenged an
earlier 10-9 loss to William and Mary by
downing the Indians, 6-1. in Williamsburg.
Larry Daughtridge and Feeney combin-
ed to pitch a three-hitter, with Daughtridge
going the first five and Feeney pitching the
final four in relief. Feeney allowed only one
hit in his four inninqs.
Pete Paradossi, Brinkley and Rick
Koryda each picked up two hits and a run
batted in to lead the Pirate plate
performanoe. Three East Carolina runs
were a result of William and Mary
errors.
On April 15, the Pirates wasted a
grand-slam home run by Wooten as they
dropped a 7-6 decision to Richmond at
Harrington Field. The Pirates had gone
ahead 4-2 on Wooten's blast, but Rich-
mond came back with two to tie it and then
three more to go in front, 7-4, before ECU
came up short with a run in each of the
final two innings.
Welton, Pirates finish second in SC tourney
By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
For two rounds ECU's golfers stood eye
to eye with defending conference champion
Furman in the Southern Conference
tournament in Florence, S.C. In the third
round, though, ECU blinked.
The Pirates led the Paladins by three
after the first day of the three-day
tournament and trailed by an identical
margin following the second day's play. On
the tournament's final day, though, the
ECU team skied to a 391 team score and
wound up 21 strokes behind the first-place
Paladins, who shot a team score of 373, and
in seoond place for the third year in a row.
Perhaps the secret to the Pirates'
success the first two days and their failure
on the final day lay in ECU coach Mac
McLpndon'spre-tourney prospects.
Before the tournament, McLendon had
said the top three ECU scores each day had
to be 75 or better in order fa the Pirates to
win. In those first two rounds, the ECU
team was successful in getting three
golfers at 75 a betta-thus the successful
rounds. On the third day, however, ECU
failed to record a single scae of 75 a
better.
Nonetheless, the Pirates fine rounds
the first two days kept favaite Furman
fron making a farce of the tournament, as
had been expected, and left the title as a
two-team matchup between ECU and the
Paladins, as Appalachian State and
Richmond failed to mount any challenge
fa second place.
The opening round for ECU was
anchaed by Trip Boinest's 73. Boinest, the
Pirates' number six man, led a group of
four ECU golfers which matched McLen-
don' s goal. M ike Buckmasta fired a 74 and
Rob Welton and Keith Hiller carded 75's.
The fifth ECU score was Steve Ridge's
77, which gave ECU a team score of 374 the
first day, three strokes ahead of Furman's
377. ASU and Richmond were well off the
pace even after the first day, with 389 and
390, respectively.
On the second day, Furman fired a
team scae of 369, nine over par as a team,
to pass the Pirates and move into
first-place with a 764 total. ECU fired a 375
team soae, and again had three rounds of
75 a better.
ECU'S top round the second-day was
turned by Welton, who fired a one-under
par 71. The 71 put him at 146 for tht
tournament and put him in second-place
behind Furman's Ken Ezell, who was at
143 after shooting 73.
Ridge fired an even-par 72 and Hilla
stroked a 74 to put their totals at 149, which
was good fa third-place, giving ECU three
of the top four places after the second day.
After his 73 the first day, Boinest
ballooned to 84, but Frank Acker's 76 gave
ECU four good rounds fa the day. Again,
Richmond and ASU fell furtha back in the
race, with totals of 771 and 778 respective-
ly.
On the final day, the roof caved in on
the ECU golfers. The best scae of the day
fa the Pirates was Boinest's 76 and only
three other golfers, Welton, Hilla and
Ridge, broke 80. Welton and Hilla fired
78's and Ridge finished with a 79 as the
Pirates watched Furman run away from the
pack.
Fa Welton, it was frustrating. Fur-
man' s Ezell fired a 78 the final day to finish
with a 221 total in first place, but Welton
could do no betta than a 78 playing with
i�PHllMPH l HI" Ml l I �� �Ui i
Ezell and remained three strokes behind in
seoond-plaoe with a 225 scae.
Naietheless, McLendon was still pleas
ed with Welton's play in the tournament.
"Rob was a pleasant surprise fa us
said McLendon. "He played well the first
two rounds and didn't play that badly when
playing with the leader Ezell the final day.
I just wish the entire team oould have
played betta that last day.
"But, then, that has been our problem
all year-putting three good rounds toge-
tha. We've played two good rounds in
eve. y tournament this year and then blown
it all with a bad third round.
"It was disappointing that we got so
dose and then couldn't win added
McLendon. "You have to give a lot of
aedit to Furman, though. They played like
real champions and didn t fold. When you
have six golfas in the top ten then you
must be doing something right.
ECU placed two otha golfas besides
Welton in the too ten, which also counted
fa the All-Con'erence team.
Hilla s 78 gave him a total of 227,
which tied him fa sixth place, and Ridge's
79 put him in a tie fa eighth-place wth a i
228 scae. Altogetha, Furman ano ECU
placed nine of the ten playas on the
All-Confaenoe team.
Otha scores by ECU golfas wae
Boinest with a 76 fa a233 total, Acka with
80 and 234, Buckmasta with 81 and 236,
and Phil Bell with an 81 to finish at 244.
In the team totals, Appalachian passed
Richmond with a 387 scae to finish in third
with 1,168 strokes. Richmond finished with
1,181 and then, inada, came William and
Mary, VMI, the Citadel and Davidson.
The Pirate golfas will play in oily one
more event this year. That will be in the
Southan Intaoollegiate tournament in
Athens, Ga. on May 27-29.
Two cage recruits signed
East Carolina head basketball coach
Dave Patton announced the signings of two
playas to grant-in-aids fa the 1976-77
basketball season.
Signed wae Jim Ramsey of Gary, N.C.
and Herb Krusen of Silver Spring,
Maryland.
Ramsey is a 6-2 guard from Cary High
School and was selected to the All-Metro
team. He was the Playa of the Yea in the
Raleigh aea last season. He avaaged ova
20 points a game.
Krusen comes fron Nothwood High
School, just outside of Washington, D.C
whae he was named to the All-County,
All-State and seoond team All-Metropoli-
tan squads in the Washington aea.
Krusen is oonstdaed to be one of the
top five playas fron the state of Maryland.
During the 1975-76 season, Krusen
avaaged 23.7 points a game and shot 96
pa cent fron the foul line, including 43 in
a row at one point. His 1,067 points during
his two-yea carea at Nothwood wae eight
points shy of the school record fa scoring.
Krusen is a 6-5 forward.
Coach Patton said he was pleased to get
these two playas and that they wae a pair
of top-notch reauita The signings briny
the total of ECU recruits fa this yea to
three. Ealia ECU signed guard Dai
Whitaka fron Louisburg Junia College.
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14
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL ,976
III! UMlll HUH
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Alston hopes for good showing in SCmeet
By STEVE WHEELER
Staff Writer
Many times in athletics, it takes aa
injury to key performers to give a guy a
chance to prove himself in a starting
situation. And when this person gets the
chance to prove hirrself, it sometimes
turns out that he is better than his
predecessors. Calvin Alston falls into this
mold.
During the indoor season, Alston was
the fourth best sprinter on the team (three
others above him qualified for the
nationals, but he failed in the 60 yard
dash). Larry Austin was injured in the
indoor conference meet, while Donnie Mack
and Carter Suggs were injured in the first
two outdoor meets. This gave Alston the
chance he needed. He definitely took
advantage of this.
In the next meet after Suggs was
injured, Alston ran at the South Carolina
State-Record Relays in Columbia, S.C.
against some strong competition. He did
really well, running third in the 200 meters
with a fine time of 21.0. This time, when
oonverted to yards, set a new school record
fa East Carolina, 21.1 (oonversiai fada
fran 200 meters to 200 yards is to add .1
seconds). This is not bad fa the man who
was considered to be the fourth best
sprinter on the team. Alston commented on
his efforts.
"I knew I could run the 200 a 220 in a
good time. I'm a bit slow on the turn, but
when I hit the straightaway, I can really
turn it on. I believe I can run a 20.8 a 20.9.
I got my chance when the others were
injured, which is a bad way to get it, but I
took advantage of it
Being diminutive (listed at 5-8, which
looks to be a bit tall) seems to be no
problem fa Alstai. When he comes off the
curve in the 200 meters a 220 dash, Alstai
turns it oi and usually stalks down his
con petition.
On his height, Alston says that "it
helps me being shat because the other
Netters win two matches
ECU'S tennis team ran its season
recad to 7-10 with a pair of victaies over
non-conference fees UNG-Wilmington and
Campbell, after dropping a conference
match to Davidson College the week
befae. The loss to Davidson put ECU'S
conference mark at 2-4 fa the year, with
wins over VMI and William and Mary.
At the same time, Mitch Pergerscn ran
his season mark to 9-4 with a pair of wins.
Pergerson's recad ranks him as the top
number five singles competita in the
conference going into this weekend's
conference tournament in Charleston, S.C.
ECU beat UNC-W by a 90 soae and
Campbell by an 8-1 count, after falling to
Davidson 9-0 on April 17.
Tom Durfee, Pergerson, Bob Neff,
Randy Bailey and Doug Getsinger all took
two wins apiece and Jim Ratliff took one. In
doubles play, the teams of Durfee-Bailey,
Get singer-Neff and Ratliff-Calloway all
took two wins apiece, despite being
shutout by Davidson.
With the tournament approaching,
Pergerson's 9-4 mark is the best on the
team and he oould stand a chance of
placing high in the number-five singles
competition, but will be hard-pressed to
win, sinoe he has a 2-2 recad against
conference foes.
The netters close out their regular
season on Tuesday with a match against
small-college power Atlantic Christian in
Wilson.
TKEs hold boxing tournament
The First Annual Tau Kappa Epsilon
boxing tournament found three ECU
varsity athletes stealing the spotlight by
winning championships in three of the nine
weight classes.
In the heavyweight class, ECU footbal-
ler Harold Randolph connected with an
uppercut to flcor wrestler Phil Mueller in
the first-round of their scheduled three-
rounder.
Two wrestlers, Clay Scott, in the
welterweight class, and Paul Osman in the
featherweight class, took championships.
Osman was voted the tournament's
Outstanding Boxer.
Other winners were Kevin Johnson in
the most exciting match of the night
against Milton Green, Robert Spizzo in the
light welterweight dass, John Leggett in
the middleweight dass, Jerry Leggett in
the light middleweight dass, Mark Jones
in the light heavyweight dass and Mark
Davis in the middle heavyweight dass.
The TKE tournament was run under
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) rules and
referees were used from the Jacksonville,
N.C. AAU.
guysthink I'm too shat to beat them. This
gives me the edge
Alston came out of high school not
really being touted as a superstar sprinter.
He ran a 9.6-100 yard dash and 21.5-220
yard dash, which are good statistics fa the
scholastic scene. But since entering East
Carolina, Alston has really been impro-
ving. Track coach Bill Carson commented
on his improvement.
"Calvin has really been waking hard
all year and has had a marked improve-
ment. His hard wak has really paid off
good dividenda"
The Pirates are starting preparations
fa the oonferenoe meet this weekend and
Alston thinks the Pirates are going to
unseat William and Mary fa the first time
in 11 years.
"I think we are going to win the
conference, if we can get everybody back
from injuries. I'm sure we are going to be
ready. East Carolina has played second
fiddle fa too long
About hischancesof winning the 220 at
the meet, Alston thinks they are good.
"I'm really pointing to that meet. I think I
can win, but there are some fine
perfamers in the conference and on this
team
f
CALVIN ALSTON-will be competing for the ECU track team in the SC track
championships in Davidson this weekend. Alston will be competing in the 200 and 220
yard dashes and the 440 yard relay Photo by Kip Sloan.
Clip this coupon!
And get three games for only1.00.
Bring three friends along. We'll let
them in on the deal, too.
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WASHINGTON HWY
GhEENVILLE, N.C
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By JOHN EVANS
Sports Editor
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227 APRIL 1976
15
Ali: A Champion In More Ways Than One
c When a champion oomes to town it is usually not iceable, even in the case of a town like
Washington, D.C.
Last week, Muhammed Ali came to the nation's capital along with challenger Jimmy
iung in preparation fa their 15-round Wald Champiaiship bout on Friday. And the
t(tion's capital was waiting fa them.
')
id First of all, hundreds of boxing fans and interested non-fans paid three and four
larsahead to watch the champion wakout at his suburban headquarters. Actually the
oee and four dollar tickets gave the people the right to stand in line fa a chance to get
2: but not necessarily a shot at the champ.
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j, Once one did get in, though, Ali was up fa the show. He would spar through wakouts
,( h his entourage of sparring partners, which included Jimmy Ellis, a famer champion
j, nself back when Ali had been stripped of his title. Ali also was there with the gab fa
r( i press and the Washingtoi press caps, who are used to big-time spats but not so
ejjch big-time boxing, were up to the task of interviewing the champ.
?.
Muhammed Ali is fa sure a first-dass spats personality and he is as exciting in
soi as he is oi the tube, oily much larger in size and stature. Where in the ring he
s to intimidate opponents, he is not so much that way with the press and tose who
4lize himthe youth of the champ's following.
Even in the heat of trying to prepare fa the heavyweight fight, Ali found time to visit
al school children and spend an afternoon with them.
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The trip was not an egaistical one fa the champ, but rather it evolved as a spats idol
ing down with the kids and talking to them on their level. Ali did not speak of what it
3 like to beat people up a how great it was to be a fighter, but rather he spoke of how
xxtant it was to stay in school, get an education and beoome a responsible adult. And
children listened.
This is the coe side of the champ that few spats fans see. The side away fron the
stful antics he displays in front of the press a the televisiai camera.
Ali has said, and he said it again during interviews in Washington, that when he does
re from the boxing game he will become an evangelist. He wants to spread the wad
teachings of his god, Allah, to all the black men and women of the wald.
Fa Ali this isa sacred goal and one he must certainly be serious in fulfilling. The man
s what he says he will do, inside and outside the ring, and he is a person who when
close up and in person, impresses as a sincere, but entertaining, celebrity.
Muhammed AM knows that one of his maja traits is entertainment. And entertain is
it he does, both inside and outside the ring. He has helped to save the spat of boxing,
just by his personal achievements but by bringing the game back to the level it had
bn from in the early 60's befae he came into being a professional boxer.
'Phe spat was most certainly hurt during the three years Ali was held inactive, but
that he has returned to boxing so has the sport beoome one of the highest paying and
t popular spats, not only in the United States but in the wald. There are very few
ts where people will pay 20 dollars fa the cheapest seat in the house and boxing is
of them.
Mi is partly the cause of thisand as long as he is in the spat it will remain prosperous.
The fight coming up this weekend is an example. It is probably the top fighting card of
ime in Washington, D.C. and oompletes a rebirth of top-grade boxing which started
years ago when Abe Pollin built his Capitol Centre. It took a Muhammed All fight to
though.
Jut, there is another fighter in this fight besides Ali. His name is Jimmy Young.
;re Ali is to make over one million dollars on the fight, Young will make only 100,000
irs. Far lessisat stake fa Young than fa Ah.If he wins he becomes Wald Champiai,
may end Ali s career as a boxer. If he loses it isnowaseafeat than what befell greats
Joe Frazier, Geage Faman and so many lesser men befae them. Surely Young will
fter Ah and the champ doubtlessly knows it.
�or 100,000 dollars Young can do a lot more than people think he may be able to do,
t is extremely tough to vote against the mae intriguing and mae popular Ali. Few
unless they are out to make a quick buck.
his fight has all themakingsof a great fight. It oould be better than most fights up to
. except maybe the first and third Ali-Frazier fights and the Faeman-Frazier fight fa
ement. Naietheless, Young probably will not last the fight. Certainly, Ali will
ince you of that and talking to Young one may not change your thinking. The
enger is playing it that oool.
any rate, oome Friday night Muhammed Ali will onoe again be asked to shut up and
v the wald what he can do. We predict that once again he will do it successfully
nst still another up-and-coming challenger and continue to stake his claim as one of
greatest-if not the greatest-boxers of all-time.
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Women netters take, 7-2
win over N. C. State
ECU'S women's tennis team avenged
an early-season loss by downing Nath
Carolina State, 7-2, here April 16. Earlier
in the year, the Packettes had downed
ECU, 5-4.
In the singles's competition, ECU
jumped out and clinched the match by
winning five of six matches.
Winning in straight sets were Dacas
Sunkel over Carol Woodard, 6-4, 6-1;
Marie Stewart over Margie Acker, 6-0, 6-1;
Susan Helmer over Peggy Smith, 6-3, 6-3;
Vicki Loose over Kathy Sizemae, 6-2, 6-1;
and LaaDioiis over Kathy White by 6-4
and 6-3 scaes.
In the doubles' competition, Cathy
Patwood helped to avenge her loss in the
singles' play by teaming with Sunkel fa an
8-6 win over State's Alicia Jones and Peggy
Smith. The other doubles' victay was
turned in by Stewart and Dicnis. The
wonen paired to down State's duo of
Sizemae and Wcodard, 6-1.
The win ran the women's record oi the
year to 2-1.
In addition, the ECU women's track
team downer Mlliam and Mary in a home
meet with Debbie Freeman and Velma
Thompson each winning three events. The
win was the first fa the Lady Pirates' in
their oily dual meet of the year.
Sports Shorts
Vito Ragazzo, a former assistant
football coach at ECU, has been hired as an
assistant coach at Wake Faest. Ragazzo
was a member of the University of Nath
Carolina coaching staff last year and was at
one time the head football coach at VMI.
ECU's golf team, wfiich finished second
to Furman at last week's conference
tournament, will play in the Southern
Intercollegiate Tournament in Athens, Ga.
on May 26-28. It will be the first
appearance by ECU in the Southern
Intercollegiate.
Bill Blair, who coached VMI to a 22-10
record and a second-place finish in the
NCAA Eastern Regicnals this year, has
been named head basketball coach at
Colaado.
Blair'scoaching reoadat VMI included
the team's first winning basketball team in
35 years and the school's first Southern
Conference basketball championship since
1964.
Blair'ssucoessa at VMI will be Charlie
Schmaus. Schmaus served as an assistant
on the VMI staff the last two seasons.
Both the ECU tennis and track teams
will be participating in Southern Confer-
ence tournaments this coming weekend.
The track team will travel to Davidson
Friday and Saturday fa the conference
meet. The tennis team will travel to
Richmond, Va. Thursday through Saturday
fa the oonference tournament. Last year,
the Pirate harriers placed second and the
tennis team was seventh in the oonference.
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16
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO. 5227APRIL 1976
ii ii �wnwmmimwiiiiaw i up miai
newsFL
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Young Democrats Buccaneer
Grad Art
Sports Equipment
ai
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There will be a Young Democrats Club
meeting on Wednesday, April 28, at 7 30 in
Mendenhall Student Center. Check at desk
for meeting room number.
Art Tour Canceled
ECU'S annual art and architecture tour
of Europe has been canceled. A lack of
interest was sighted as one of the major
causes.
The tour sponsored by the Division of
Continuing Education and the School of
Art was to have made stops in Paris,
Athens, Corinth, Rome, Pompeii, and
several other cities and sites of artistic
value. The participants could have received
six quarter hours in Art 325G, if they had
achieved 144 hours of accepted work. For
those who had accumulated less than the
144 hr. minimum, six credit hr. in Art 155
was offered. You also could opt to not
attempt credit work.
Other factors weighed heavily in the
cancellation.First, the pamphlet describing
the tour was not received at the prescribed
time. This limited theoirculation and flow
. of information concerning the tour. Secon-
dly, the tour was to last only 21 days and
carry 6 hr. of credit opposed to other
similiar tours, academic or other wise, that
last the length of the summer and offer 12
hr. credit. Finally and probably most
importantly was the price tag, $1,452.
While included were economy class air fare
to and rrom New York, room at first rate
hotels, transportation between oities and
tuition; passport and visa fees, laundry,
and an average of 1 meal a day
included.
Although speculative, it is thought that
the tour will be offered next year.
Are you creative? Do you like to write?
Are you involved with campus life and
want to contribute to something worth-
while? If you answered yes to any of the
above questions we want you. If you
answered no but would like to get involved
we still want you. There will be a meeting
of all persons interested in working on the
Buccaneer staff for 76-77 on Wednesday,
May 5 at 4XX) in the Buccaneer office,
located on the second floor of the
Publications Center. No experience neces-
sary.
Honor Society
The spring initiation of Phi Eta Sigma,
national honor society for freshmen, will be
held in the Multipurpose Room of
Mendenhall Student Center on April 29,
1976, beginning at 730 p.m. All students
to be initiated are urged to be present.
Pub Applications
Pub Board applications are now being
taken for the Pub Board of 76-77 school
year. Applications can be picked up at
Wright room 204. Screenings will be held
the first week of May. It only takes a few
minutes to apply and it is painless.
Featured this week in Mendenhall
Gallery is a wondrous barrage of beauteous
debris created by the Art students slaving
through Graduate school. Come by for a
delicious meal fa the senses and inspira-
tion fa the soul. The show features 45
waks by 25 artists and will squat in oie
gallery until Sunday May 2. It's a gas, gas,
gas! Spoisaed by ILLUMINA. the Art
Exhibitiai Canmittee.
ai
Do you need a volleyball and net fa i
game around the dams? How abou
softballsa basketballs? If you need spat: '
equipment, oome by the MRC office ir
Scott Dam Lobby and bring your ID care
and your MRC a WRC card. Check thi
schedule on the dcor a call 758-6084 to sa
when the office will be open.
re
Newman Club
Ski Club
Cool Water Ski Club is providing free
transpatatioi and instructions fa skiing
slalom or on two skies forward or
backwards. Rafting and surfing is also
available. All meetings are held in
Washington fa mae infamatiai call
758-1640.
BC
tc
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e:
There will be a Newman Club meetim
this Wednesday at 5:00 p.m room 223
Mendenhall. Dinner will be served follow
ing Mass. Those persons planning t ,
participate in the Walk fa Humanity ar
asked to drop by and pick up their Wal V(
cards. All interested persons are invited t
attend.
Basketball
Art Show
There will be an Easter Seal Basketball
game between the SGA and the Greenville
Police Department. It will be the "Freaks
vs. Pigs" in a shoot out at Minges
Coliseum on May 6th. Student suppat-
ers are asked to attend to help with
community relations.
Psi Chi Officers Seminar
The Second Annual Art Show an
Competition will take place in Mendenha
Gallery from Sunday, May 2 to Sunday
May 9,1976. Entry famsfa all categaie
will be available by Thursday at Mender
hall Infamatiai Desk, Jenkins Art Of fie
a the Rawl Art Office. Six hundred dollar
prize money will be awarded with 1st, 2nc
3rd in each categay and a best In Sho
Award. Stay tuned to this Channel fa ma
this week. The show will be sponsaed fc
ILLUMINA, The Art Exhibition Canmi
ree.
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Astrology
Congratulations to the newly elected
Psi Chi offioers fa 1976-77: President-
Mark Brodsky; Vioe-President-Jim Vallely;
Secretary-Betty Manning; Initiate Seaet-
ary - Beth Lambeth; Treasurer - Cynthia
Harrell; Publicity Chair per son-Janet
Gaino; Library Chairperson-Barbara
Peoples.
If you are interested in Astrology a
reincarnatiai, there is now a place fa you
to go in the Greenville area to study these
' Subjective Sciences . The Center fa Study
and Growth is in the Greenville area fa
your use in learning about all things of
which there are no classes about at ECU.
Get in oontact with Lois Dean at 752-3008.
Psych Picnic
A picnic fa Psi Chi members will be
held ai Tuesday, May 4, at 330 p.m. Also
a Softball game is planned: Psychology
faculty vs. Psi Chi. Contact Psychology
faculty members a Psi Chi offioers fa
further details.
The Computing Center had scheduled a
seminar entitled "Introduction to SPSS"
fa April 20, 1976. This seminar has been
rescheduled fa April 27, 1976 at 4.00 p.m.
in Austin 211. Everyoie is invited to
attend.
Gamma Beta Phi
The last business meeting of the year
fa Gamma Beta Phi will be Thursday,
April 29, at 7 p.m. in room 244 of the
Mendenhall Student Center. AH pledges
and members are requested to attend and
bring $3.00 fa the Spring Banquet.
OSR
Alpha Phi Gamma Campu$ Cru$ale
Alpha Phi Gamma will meet Wednes-
day night at 7:00 in the Buccaneer office.
All new members are asked to be present.
Also there will be a meeting at 430
Wednesday afternoon in 301 Austin of the
wakshop oommittee. It is important that
everyone attend.
SGA Openings
Students in Slay, Aycock and Greene
dams - are you suffering from lack of
interest syndrome? Cure that ill! Apply
immediately to SGA fa positions
now open. Stay tuned to Fountainhead fa
time and place. SGA Screening and
Appointments Committee.
9M
m
Campus Crusade fa Christ an inter-
doninatiaial Christ centered Christian
organization will meet this Tuesday
evening, April 27, at 7:00.
We will be meeting at the Campus
Crusade House, 1509 E. Fifth St. (across
from Nursing Bldg.) Cone join us fa a
time of Christian Fellowship.
Animals Available
The dogs available fa adoption this
week include a mixed shepard, a black and
white, mixed breed, and two kittens. The
people at Animal Control would like to
invite all interested persons to visit the
Animal Shelter located off Cemetery Road
on 2nd Street.
��
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Any person interested in working
on the FOUNTAINHEAD staff this
summer should be at the staff j
meeting Tuesday, May 4 at at 4:00 j
Blood Drive
Suppat your Red Cross Blood Drive.
Give blood to save lives on April 27 from
11-4, April 28 from 10-5, April 29 from
10-5, in Wright Auditaium, ECU campus.
These people - students and nonsti
dents - who have been in contact with tr
Organization fa Student Rights about tr
class action lawsuit being filed against tf
City of Greenville can fill out "power i
attaney farns now. The fams need to t
filled out by each person who wishes to t
a plaintiff in the case as scon as possibl
either this week a the week after East
break. All that is required is a signatur
Those who wish to take part in this actk
should go to the law office at 119 We
Third Street, across the street from the c
courthouse, and inquire with one of tl
secretaries. You can go from 9�)0-5�
The OSR urges all people who feel th�
rights were violated, whether they we
arrested a not, to file. Let's make �
Halloween a little safer fa everybody, ai
fight to see that the past does not repe
itself.





Title
Fountainhead, April 27, 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
April 27, 1976
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.392
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.
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/40039
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