Fountainhead, May 6, 1976


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





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Circulation 8,500
This issue- 16 pages
Fountainhead
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
VOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
Serving the East Carolina Community f6r over fifty years
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Sullivan appoints SGA Cabinet
By CINDY BROOME
Assistant News Editor
Tim Sullivan, Student Oovernment
Association President, announced to the
Legislature Monday night the people he
has chosen for his Cabinet.
The Secretary of Academic Affairs is
Tim McLeod; Secretary of Student Welfare
- Ray Hudson; Secretary of Minority
Affairs - Marshall McAdams; Secretary of
Information - Beverly Barns; Secretary of
Community Relations - Kim Taylor.
The Community Relations is a new
Cabinet post. According to Sullivan, this
new post will try to better relations
between the community and the student
body.
Tim McLeod will handle teacher
evaluation, retreats, and committee as-
signments, where there is a student on a
committee who represents the student
body.
Ray Hudson is to be a consumer
"watchdog" for the student body. He will
deal with problems that students might
have with merchants and also keep the
student body informed on consumer
problems.
Marshall McAdams will act as a liaison
between the SGA and the Blacks on
campus. He will also handle any matters
that the Legislature would deal with
concerning Blacks (Ebony Herald, Cultural
Center).
Beverly Barnes will keep the student
body informed on actions the SGA will take
by circulating an SGA newsletter. She is
also SGA representative to Fountainhead
and will handle a newsletter to the Board of
Trustees. She will also set up speaking
appearances for Sullivan on campus.
Kim Taylor will initiate joint student
and community projects, and she will also
keep the community informed on what is
happening on campus. She will act as
instigator for better relations between the
communitv and student body.
TIM SULUVAN
Spending freeze affects
ECU operations
SGA BULL- Former SGA Secretary Katie Kennedy gives SGA President Tim Sullivan a
shot of what every ' politician needs in life.
ByDENNISC. LEONARD
News Editor
The recent spending freeze on the state
level by the Hdshouser administration has
had some effect on the operation of the
academic and business sectors at ECU
according to various administrative
officials.
According to John Howell, provost,
there have been two basic problems in
meeting the specified guidelines set down
by the N.C. governor.
"We have had problems in meeting me
specific guidelines and there has been a
reduction in the budget during this quarter
of the year said Howell.
"We have had three professors die
since January and one departmental
secretary has resigned, so we are having
some staffing problems at the time
"Our out of state travel as been very
much curtailed, we have bought no new
office or laboratory equipment, or musical
instruments
There have been recent problems in the
availability of the funding provided by the
state and according to Howell, ECU has not
been allowed to spend what the governor's
memorandum stated in the guidelines.
"As far as needed supplies, postage,
and telephones we will operate normally,
but there will be no out of state travel
unless it meets the governor's guidelines.
The Budget Office is being quite rigid
in maintaining no faculty fillings nor new
equipment purchases added Howell.
Usually when educational expenditures
are reduced, the quality of education
suffers from the lack of money.
"It will have an adverse effect anytime
you have to put more students in a
See Freeze, continued on page 13.
Mexican prison escapae reveals story
Editor's Note:
The fascinating stay of Steve Wilson
will be told in the Fountainhead in the most
complete version yet printed. Previously
part of Wilson's story was published in the
October 1975 edition of Playboy from a
letter written by Wilson.
Since Wilson's escape before Christ-
mas of 1974, he has had trouble getting
people to believe his story. Until the
Playboy Forum article, some of Wilson's
friends did not believe the story.
Wilson has been investigated by the
U. S. Government under the auspices of a
Special Committee to the U.S. House of
Representatives chaired by Otis Pike,
Playboy, Penthouse, and several national
newspapers. The original letters Wilson
wrote from prison are in the restricted file
of the N C. Manuscript Collection in
Joyner Library.
"I invite investigation and if enough
peoplenvestigateme to find out I'm telling
the truth, maybe some one will help me get
Bob out said Wilson.
Robert Bob Allen Smith, like Wilson,
is an alumni of ECU and is still in prison in
Mexico.
The Steve Wilson story will he printed
m the FOUNTAINHEAD in five parts
beginning with this article with his arrest
and escape
By KENT JOHNSON
Special to Fountainhead
Stephen Harris Wilson, a 26 year old
ECU alumni, was held for a year and a half
in three successive Mexican prisons fa a
minor narootics violation. Wilson escaped
from the Centro de Redaptcion Social
Carcel in Nogales, Mexico the Saturday
before Christmas of 1974, in one last
desperate attempt.
Wilson was arrested with Robert Alle
Smith, also a former ECU student on June
25, 1973 fa .35 grams of marijuana that
Mexican Federal! aqents claimed to have
found in a chilum (pipe) in one of Smith's
knap sacks. Smith is now being held at
Hermosillo Carcel in Sonora, Mexico.
While visiting Central Mexico, taking
pictures and surfing, th? two visitas made
a wrong turn onto a dirt road while
searching fa Playa Azul, a surfing beach.
Wilson and Smith were lost in the
mountains of Michoacan on dirt roads fa
two and a half days. When the pair found
their way out, Wilson's Volkswagen was
burning oil badly. They were unable to find
serious mechanics in Guadalajara, and
decided to return to the United States,
while waking at the van aloig the way.
Aooading to Wilson, they made slow
progress with frequent stops to workon the
ii minimal j n m ii
van. At one stop we were jumped by four
Federalis with 9mm pistols, and they told
me they wanted my cameras said
Wilson.
When mae Federalis and Mexican
soldiers arrived, they searched the van and
found the broken chilum.
Wilson and Smith had only $16 between
them at the time of their arrest and al! of
their money, ciahes, and Wilson's camera
equipment were confiscated. When Wilson
asked if he would get his van back it was
sprayed with machine gun fire.
Wilson and Smith were faced to sign
documents, they assumed were con-
fessions, but could na read Spanish. In
ader to get Wilson and Smith to sign the
documents the Mexican officials used
several tature tactics.
Acaxding to Wilson, at one time a
revolver was placed to his head, an elderly
Mexican was tatured in their presence,
and many of the tatures read like excerpts
from Kaean prisoier of war tales.
After being placed in a tiny "drunk
tank" fa approximately five days, and
being assured by American Drug Enface-
ment Agents(DEA) waking in Mexico that
they would be in much mae trouble if they
did not sign the documents, they grudg-
ingly oonsented.
Wilson is convinced that they would
have never gone to prison had it na been
fa the American DEA in Mexico. "We saw
the American beating up a small Mexican
child, and said something about it to the
DEA, but they ga mad and told the
Mexicans to hold us longer explained
Wilson.
See Escape, continued on page 11.
STEVE WILSON
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
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EditortalsCommenlary
Charges cire pure BS
Normally we don't go along with answering letters to the editor.
But, in the case of the charges made by Ebony Herald editor Ken
Campbell we feel like some reply is necessary.
Campbell, a former Fountainhead assistant news editor,
blasted the paper for being unresponsive to campus blacks, and
said everything except the paper was loaded with a staff of bigots.
If the charges had come from anyone else we might be willing to
forget it, since few know how the paper really operates. But, for it
to come from Campbell, who knows better but is apparently out to
improve his standing as Ebony Herald editor, it is simply
unforgivable.
How Campbell can accuse the paper of being unresponsive to
campus blacks since he served as the second highest staffer on the
the news desk is inaedible. Assistant news editors enjoy pretty
much a free hand in writing their own stories and working with the
news editor in layout and story placement. Campbell's charge that
this paper has a negative attitude towards blacks is no more than a
charge against himself. Fountainhead printed every story
Campbell wrote, it was his choice as to tooics.
It should be pointed out that while Campbell served as assistant
news editor, the other assistant news editor was also a black. And,
we printed every story that she turned in.
If this paper is guilty of anything, it is a lack of overall coverage
in all phases of campus life. But, considering the size of our staff,
which is limited, we think the paper does a credible job.
There is no negative attitude towards blacks - and Campbell's
charges are bull.
It is Campbell that sees everything in the form of black and
white news. This paper sees it all as "student news" and does its
best to cover the main campus events. We don't send writers out to
get black or white stories - just to get campus stories that are
important to all students.
Sometimes we miss things we should cover, sometimes we do
not give adequate coverage to everything we should. But, that is
not by design but due to the same problems that plague all student
papers - time - space and manpower.
Campbell's contention that Fountainhead's lack of response to
blacks created the Ebony Herald is sheer B.S.
The Ebony Herald was created by the 9GA, so, as in the case of
the so called Afro Cultural Center, blacks could take their business
elsewhere.
Campbell claims Fountainhead is unresponsive. Then why
didn't he stay with the paper and apply for the editorship and
change that attitude? He stood as good a chance as anyone of
getting it. In fact, with only one other candidate fa the job, and his
experience, Campbell would have had a better than average chance
at getting the top ,xst.
Campbell's actions are similar to other blacks on campus who
have removed themselves from most student activities. Nobody
faced them out, they left on their own accad.
You can accuse this paper of being a lot of things, but don't try
to make the staff out to be bigots, especially with the shoddy
charges Campbell dreamed up.
Fountainhead is the student newspaper and has tried to present
the news of the entire campus. And will continue on that path.
"Were it left to me to deckle whether we should have a government without
newt papers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment to
prefer the latter
Thomas Jefferson
Editor-In-Chief-Mike Taylor
Managing Editor-Tom Tozar
Business Manager-Teresa Whieenant
Production Manager-Jimmy Williams
Advertising Manager-Mike Thompson!
News Editor-Dennis Leonard
Entertainment Editor-Brandon Tiee
Features Editor-Pat Coyfe
Sports Editor-John Evans
Advertising Repreeentattvea 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 Tuesday and Thursday
during the school year.
Mailing addraaa: Box 2518 ECU Station, Qreanvllla. N.C. 27834
Editorial Offlcaa: 758-8368, 756067, 7564308
Horn: $10.00 annually tor ran atudanta.
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NIB FOR flCTO
Referendum good idea
Some members of the Publications Board would like to have
campus publications break away from the student government
Then there are those in the SGA that don't want to see
publications go there own separate way.
The issue is a most controversial one to say the least. Pub Board
independence would take over 13 of the SGA's total yearly
budget. Last year campus publications took somethinq close to
$190,000 out of the budget. M
So, befae the SGA lets that much cash out of their bank rest
assured a fight will develop.
Personally, we feel that publication independence is a positive
step that would benefit campus media. But, we can also
understand agreements presented by SGA members who want to
keep the publications under student government wings.
One idea that might be wath trying to get student input into
the independence idea is a student referendum.
The idea was suaaested bv newly elected SGA President Tim
Sullivan, and it is wath consideration, as such a vote by
the students would offer guidance on just how to plot the faiths of
campus publications.
Perhapsa vote early in the Fall quarter could be arranged. The
key to such a vote would be an educational program by both sides
to get the real key points of the issue out front.
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TheForum
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 566 MAY 1976
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Students dislike
recent review
To Fountainhead:
Attention: Dennis Leonard
Who are you? You seem to be totally
against people choosing their own type of
music. We are speaking of your article on
Captain Beyond. We think it was a fine
concert performed by a young, but uprising
band. Just because you didn't enjoy the
concert, that doesn't mean that the band is
no good, it proves your ability to keep your
mind dosed to all types of music. Rhino,
the lead guitarist played much more than
three chords and also some good slide,
which you seemed to have missed. You
must not know much about lead guitarists,
as you also missed the lead runs by Rhino.
Bobby Caldwell played excellent with the
songs. The only place he was weak was in
his solo, but he did prove his ability to keep
a solid rock 'n' roll beat for a long amount
of time. What we really can't believe is you
cutting down the Capricorn label. Wow,
who are the Allman Brothers anyway. You
must not know anything about recording
labels either. We would appreciate you not
writing anymore articles on rock bands
unless you do some research on your
music. e.
Signed,
Scott Diffee
NeaJ Bradley
Mike Adams
Steve Staley
Entertainment Editor's Note: Yeah, who
are the Allman Brothers?
Review draws boos
To Fountainhead:
This article is in reference to Dennis C.
Leonard's review on the entertainment
page of the May 4th issue of Fountainhead.
It is dear to me from reading the artide
that a writer can be just as tasteless in his
form of art as the form of art he reviews as
tasteless.
I did not attend the Captain Beyond
show at the Attic and thus will not attempt
to rate it. But I would like to remind Dennis
Leonard that oomments like "three chord
raunchy rock" and "the drummercould
barely hdd two sticks and maintain some
simulation of rhythm" refer to the
technical skills of the musidan and in my
opinion would be withheld by any writer
judging a musical performance on the basis
of taste.
As fa Mr. Leonard's assertion that
"Captain Beyond kept the Capricorn
tradition by providing tasteless music fa
the hurting listena I would like to say
that judging by the success of Caprioan
tours he is in the minaity in his opinion,
but he is definitely a hurting listener.
William L. Coleman
PUBLICATION BOARD
OPENINGS FOR 76-77
Applications are now being taken for the
76-77 school year. All full time students can apply
at Whichard, room 204 from 9 to 5 daily If you
want to get involved with publications The
Buccaneer, The Rebel and Fountainhead) and the
11 SGA take tim a and apply no w.
Simply EaroMc
weoi
758-6657
FWNKLYSPEAMNG ??by pri frank
Rejection of art work
draws sharp comment
To Fountainhead:
lllumina, the Student Union Art
Exhibition Committee has dimbed through
my do-do. They are sponsaing a
student Art Show which ison display In the
Mendenhall Gallery this week. A work
which I had a hand in produdng is not on
display, presumably because of a lack of
space and realistically because the work
was judged to be in "poa taste The
piece consists of a place setting with a plate
full, a bowl full and a cup rull of fake feces
and was entitled Food for Thought. Our art
work was submitted purely to entertain,
and not to offend a embarrass, as we
wished to make a laughing matter of our
fecal matter. I question the committee's
omnipotence in this matter. If we can have
our SGA president displaying a condom in
our newspaper, we can have a crap in our
Union. I have this to say to the committee,
I'm sure you would see the same thing if
you took a rocket trip to Uranus.
Sincerely,
GregBoykin
CRAP (Committee fa Repulsive
Art Projects)
Constitutional proposals
deserved better place
To Fountainhead:
I have one simple question fa you.
Why couldn't you give a little more
coverage to the new SGA constitution? I
didn't even know it was in your paper until
I hurriedly flipped through the back of the
paper and discovered it on page 14. I
thought something as important as a
constitution of our student government
which will effed us all, would have at least
a mention on the first page.
In looking back through the paper (in
case I missed something else important) I
noticed that through the setup of sections
of the paper, the SGA received its aitidsm
on page two (2) but its positive adion was
placed on page fourteen (14).
I hope that Fountainhead will print the
constitution again this week, as there is a
public hearing on Wednesday, May 5.
It would be nice that in regarding this
issue, all politics and personal grievances
were fagotten and the students put first.
This constitution has them first.
Sincerely,
Lisa Hopkins
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X
FORUM POLICY
All letters to the EdHor must to
acoornpanied by an address along wi th the
writer's name. However, only the name
will be printed with letters published in the
Faum.
Trie letter writers address will be kept
on file in the Fountainhead office and will
to available, upon request, to any
students
Fountairhesd will, upon personal re-
quest from a letter writer, withhold a name
from publication. But, the name of the
writer will bo on file in the sdnor's office
and available upon request to any student.
All requests for withhold a name must
to made in person to the Sfftor.
Any letter received without this in-
fwmstion will to held until the iettsr writer
complies with the now policy.
emmm





4
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
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Would you believe
Heterosexual
liberation
ByPATCOYLE
Features Editor
As I'm sure at least a few of you have noticed, the school year is rapidly drawing to a
dose. It'satthistimethat many of us begin to look at the year in retrospect, to see what's
happened and to fantasize on what could have happened.
Gay liberation has been quite an issue this year at good ole EZU. It all started with the
Southeastern Gay Alliance (SGA?). This organization has worked hard to do away with
many universally held misconceptions about homosexuality and bisexuality. Its
leadership is dynamic, to say the least; they are willing to fight and filibuster for their
cause with anyone who needs conversion. You might say they are the "missionaries of
gay liberation.
The only objection I could raise to all of this is a more self-accusation than anything
else. It has occurred to me that the gays are putting the reticent straights to shame.
Seriously, fellow heteros, don't you think it's time we stood up to be oounted? Granted
it isn't exactly chic to be straight, but heterosexuality has had SOME value on the
development of modern civilization. Some of history's most prominent figures have been
straight. Adam and Eve, Joe and Rose Kennedy, Sonny and Cher, even George
Washington (the father of our country); the list goes on and on.
Without heterosexual ity, a lot of people would be out of jobs. Take for example
obstetricians, and the makers of Pampers. The outmoding of contraceptives would put a
big dent in drug company business, not to mention what it would do to the EZU Infirmary.
If it weren't for heterosexual ity, Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet wouldn't have
made much sense, and the material in Playboy and Playgirl would have to be switched.
Some of the classic songs would seem pretty dumb if heterosexual ity faded out. Paul
Anka's. biggie, "Havin' My Baby would be out the window, Jim Crooe's "Leroy
Brown" would hardly fight over a girl named Doris. Even Johnny Cash's "Boy Named
Sue would no longer hold any humor for us.
The point is, fellow straight people, that we should be proud of what we are. It's time
we came out of the closet.
Coming out of the closet won't be easy. It will take more than wearing your
slave-master tee-shirts on a date, it will involve even more than daring to walk arm-in-arm
in public places. What we need is an organization, a meansto write and to show the world
that straights aren't ashamed.
Every good organization, especially one with a cause, has an acronym, that is; initials
that spell out something significant. I have a oouple of suggest ions that, while not perfect,
are at least a start. How about
Organization
Pushing
Praise
On
Straights
In
Total
Ecstacy
OR
Blessings
And
Respect
For
Boys
And
Girls
As I said, MAYBE they're not exactly what an organization defending heteros' rights
would need, but it is a start.
So all of you closet heterosout there, get it together. Liberation is coming soonDrop
15 cents apiece off here at the FOUNTAINHEAD, and I'll arrange reservations for a
conference room at the Best Value Motel. Who knows? Someday we might be holding our
leetings at the Ramada Inn!
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'Inside Out' provides special experience
By HENRY DINGMAN
Special to Fountainhead
Project Inside-Out has been called a
"live-in a learning experience, an
achievement through the combined efforts
of a group of ECU students and the
residents and staff of Caswell Center for
the Mentally Retarded in Kinston.
The project, which took place March
18-20, gave 43 students and two special
education faculty members an opportunity
to experience life in an institution for
mentally retarded individuals.
For three days, the students lived, ate
and worked with the residents and staff at
the Center. The first day was spent
familiarizing the students with the facilities
at Caswell, and in seeing a presentation
dealing with the origin of specific
syndromes in mental retardation. The
students then assembled in reaction
groups. These allowed each of us to voice
our impressions.
Typical comments included expressions
of apprehension, fear and an inability to
respond when approached by a resident.
Participants also discussed the frustration
felt in attempts to communicate with
individualsof such limited intelligence that
they were unaware of our presence
The following day, each student was
assigned to a staff member. We accom-
panied the staffer throughout the day, and
observed their activities. Drawing from my
own experience, I accompanied a class-
room instructor who was working with
profoundly retarded individuals.
One subject in particular was a child
who had no means of communication, and
a seemingly withdrawn manner. In this
case, the instructor employed behavior-
modification techniques in an attempt to
lengthen the child's attention span.
Behavior such as eye contact from the
child, or a response when speaking to him
3
was the instructor's goal.
Official activities of the day were
terminated with an infotmal speech by Dr.
emotions, needs, and a
expression, if provided
opportunity.
desire for self-
with adequate
I
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PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE was a goal of the Inside-Outproject.
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INSIGHT into the reality of special education was provided
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Ann Wolfe, Deputy Secretary of the N.C.
Dept. of Mental Health. Wolfe discussed
the gains which have been made in
treatment of the mentally retarded,
emphasizing continuing transition in insti-
tutional reforms.
She noted that institutions are no
longer the cold, barren, dehumanizing
environments that used to prevail, but that
they now provide individual care, stimulat-
ing activit es for the severely and pro-
foundly retarded, and training for those
individuals capable of taking a position in
jociP'y.
PERSONA L IM PRESSIONS
Upon ending our stay at Caswell, many
found it difficult to leave. We had formed
relationships with residents, and by
casting off inhibitions and reconciling our
misconceptions, we discovered that re-
tarded individuals are human beings with
The value of the "Inside-Out" exper-
ience can best be seen through oomments
and reactions of project participants.
"At first, I was very apprehensive
about being in constant contact with the
residents said Jeannie Morris. "But by
the end of three days, I was able to go in
and out of wards without feeling uncom-
fortable
For Philena Evans, the program
provided career insights.
"Because of this trip, I would like to get
my master j degree in the area of the
profoundly and severely retarded, said
Evans.
Professor Aalan Sheinker assessed the
program's value for the special education
major.
"This is an excellent experience for all
special ed. students to have before they
graduate, said Sheinker.
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Jose Fumero visits ECU
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A workshop fa persons interested in
handcrafted textiles will be offered by
Craftsmen East, of the ECU School of Art,
Friday and Saturday, May 14 and 15.
Jose Fumero, the keynote speaker, will
discuss topics such as yarn construction
and application of yarn in woven fabrics,
samples of weaves, color inspiration in
weaving, and his own experiences as a
designer and weaver of textile materials.
Each participant will have the oppor-
tunity to work with Fumero's braiding
machine, creating his own yarn and fibers.
The machine can combine up to 16
different fibers to produce a single strand
of yarn, which can be used for weaving or
various other crafts.
Fumero is a fine arts graduate of the
Cooper Union Art School, and has taught
privately and through institutions in New
York and North Carolina.
He has lectured and held workshops
widely on the use of his braiding machine
fo&tTHE TREEHOUSERESTAURANT
"HAS A NEW BREAKFAST IDEA I
and textile design. Included in his previous
workshop sites are The American Color
Council in New York and Detroit, American
Textile Manufacturers in Charlotte, and
the American Crafts Council in Gatlinburg
and Richmond.
His fabric designs have been displayed
in several states, and he has had shows at
the Museum of Modern Art in New York,
and the Mint Museum in Charlotte, to
name a few.
Fumero has had 20 years of experience
as chief stylist for Collins and Aikman
Corporation, designing fabrics and carpet
for the automotive and airline industries.
At present, he works from his studio In
Blowing Rock.
Registration fee for the textile work-
shop is seven dollars. Participants are
asked to bring scrap yard, beads, fabric,
etc. Those interested in the program
should make reservations at room 215,
Jenkins Art building, or Dhone 758-65fi3
Friday, May 14 - Registration, Coffee, Doughnuts 9XX) -10:00
Workshop - 10tX) -12:00; 1 30 - 5:00
Slide Presentation - 730
Saturday, May 15 Coffee - 9:00
Workshop - 930 - 12XX); 1 30 - 4O0
MMIIIIMIIIIIIHI
Bring this ad with you &
get breakfast for Vi price
price
MonSat. 9:00a.m.to 11:00a.m.
Sun. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
fa self-
adequate
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Formerly the Loft
Thurs. - PINEY CREEK
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Thanks for the rain.
? THE ROXY PLAYHOUSE
629 A LBEMA RLE A VENUE
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA
NO. 1 SPECIAL ISSUE GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA MAY, 1976 BY THE GRACE OF THE PEOPLE
3

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6
EXTRA
HOT GROG HELD OVER!
ut" exper-
oomments
ants.
prehensive
?X with the
s. "But by
le to go in
ng unoom-
program
" ni(Mr Ml
d like to get kShf
irea of the
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.ssessed the
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before they
Greenville, N.C. "HOT GROG" has
been held over at THE ROXY PLAY-
HOUSE for four shows May 6-10. The
new show by North Carolina's own,
Jim Wann and Bland Simpson depicts
actual male & female pirates, despera-
dos, and romantics along the bawdy
coast of the Carolinas just after the
turn of the 1700's. It is brimming
with 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
memory for thousands of Tar Heel
theater goers. You'll regret not sharing
this unique southern esperience.
SHOWTIMES:Thurs Fri Sat. 9 pm - Sun. 2 pm. TICKETS: On sale at The Mushroom
Downtown Mall, Record Bar, Pitt Plaza and at the door. CALL: 752-3815, After 7 pm 758-9911
Produced by Pegleg Productions with Rosy. Ltd.
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6
FOUNTAINHEADVOL 51, NO.
556 MAY 1976
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Health department offers area
residents medical services
By BETTY GUNTER
Staff Writer
The Pitt County Health Department
offers extensive personal health services to
thousands of Pitt County residents each
month.
"We served 3,844 people during the
month of February, 1976 said Mrs.
Maryann Scandale, clinic supervisor.
"Immunizations, prenatal, family
planning, and veneral disease are the
. services used the most said Scandale.
The personal oounty health clinics
offered with a doctor and or nursing staff
present are maternity, family planning and
birth oontrol, pediatric, cancer check for
women, venereal disease, neurological and
orthopedic, according to Mrs. Doris
Davenport, health educator.
"The health department is funded by
special grants from the oounty and state
said Scandale.
"Family planning involves five basic
steps said Mrs. Gene Gibson, who works
in the family clinic. "One should first get
certified by the social services department
and pre-counseled by staff. A personal
decision on which method of oontrol to use
should them be made. The final steps are a
physical examination and post-counsel-
ing
"Appointmentsto receive birth oontrol
pills are made on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays of each week said Gibson.
"We can call and get a referral if there
is a problem we are unable to handle
added gibson. Gibson said this may save a
person in need of care a lot of time.
University students are not seen by the
family planning clinic because they have
access to the un'versity infirmary, accord-
ing to Debra Hylemon, health department
social worker.
"The family planning and birth oontrol
clinic operates through federal Title XX
and a grant from the mideastern commis-
sion said Hylemon.
The clinic has a set salary based on the
number of members in a family and its
inoome, according to Hylemon.
"If a family member falls below this
scale we use Title XX and if he is above we
use the mideastern grant said Hylemon.
"The amount of the grant is based on
reimbursements from Title XX
"In order to receive services a person
must bring his last four check stubs said
Hylemon.
If married a patient must bring stubs
fa the spouse also. If single and under 18,
a patient must bring stubs for both
parents. If single and over 18, a patient
needs only his own, according to Hylemon.
Hylemon added that medicaid stickers
will be honored at the clinic.
The health department's pediatric
clinic is divided into two servioes-the
well-baby and high-risk baby, according to
Mrs. Gilda Volkman, pediatric nurse
co-ordinator for Pitt County.
"The high-risk clinic is more indivi-
dualized and is accompanied by a closer
follow-up of the babies Volkman said.
According to Volkman, the health
department will handle children in these
specialized clinics until the age of five.
"The health department also offers
four satellite or 'mini' clinics which provide
a little bit of every service offered in the
main department said Volkman.
These clinics are located in Farmville,
Bethel, Ayden, and Grimesland at speci-
fied times of the week, according to
Volkman.
The health department is n9xt to Pitt
Memorial Hospital and is open from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. daily.
The only stipulation in using the health
department's services is that one be a
resident of Pitt County said Scandale.
S553
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TNE TREEPEOPLE ARE YOUR FRIENDS
HtMI'Mf"
.flfTVI
f t?4t?
MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIAL
OPEN SUNDAYS 1:30-53 I
GmHeti Cbfpr
I
I
?ON entitles you to 10 I
I off the regular price on all HARD
GOODS (flower pots, gift items, J
I furniture, baskets, pictures) except I
I
I chemicals and soils. I
OFFER EXPIRES 5:30 p.m May 7,1976. j
ThisCi
GRETSCH COUNTRY Gentlemen. Excel-
lent cond. A true gem. 752-7396 or
758-6366. Ask fa classified ad dept.
IRISH SETTER puppies
negotiate. 758-8158.
female $65 or
FOR SALE - Refrigerator. 752-6724.
COMPLETELY furnished efficiency for 2,
utilities incl. Also room & private bath for 1
with air conditioner and refrigerator
furnished. 758-2585.
WOULD LIKE a ride to Atlanta any
possible weekend Can leave anytime
after 3:30 on Thursdays & will help with
gas. 752-8903.
GUITAR PLAYERS! - Great scunding do
Silvertone tube amp - small, lightweight
and loud! A great rock 'n roll amp. Must
sell. $35. 752-7398.
PORTRAITS by Jack Brendle. 752-42.
WANT A SUMMER job without the
hassles? Make your own hours. Call
524-4268 for an appointment.
FOR SALE - '74 Yamaha 250 Enduro, good
cond must sell. Bargain price, call
756-6273 for Ben. If gone leave name and
ho.
TS-400 Suzuki -1975, $750 firm. 758-3221.
RESPONSIBLE women students desire
house to rent near campus, mid-summer or
fall. Please contact Julie at 752-9077 or
752-9066.
GOT THOSE SUMMER job blues? Smile
students now being selected to fill
positions. Earn approx. $210 pe week. Fa
info call 756-7294.
1973 HONDA 350 - Four, good condition.
Call 752-7292 afta 5.
2 BD. furnished apartment fa rent this
summer. Ph. 758-0135.
WANTED-neat, sharp persoi to wak as a
waiter in dining room of a country dub,
located approx. 30 miles from G'ville.
Transp. can be arranged. Great tips.
946-1514.
YARD SALE - Sat May 8, 10 a.m. until.
508 E. 11th.
WANTED - 1-2 bedroom apt.duplex to
rent. Cheap! For next school year.
Call758-1168 if you have info.
WANTED - to share an apartment fa the r
summer with single girl(s). Call Jo Beth
752-9209.
II
FOR RENT - private room (male) 4 blocks
from campus. 2nd summer session. Phone
752-4006.
FOUND - textbook wname Ricky. 758-
9910.
FOR RENT - 2 bedroom apartment,
furnished, fa summer. University Cai-
daniniums. Call 758-3413 afta 3.
LOST - gold watch wblack face some-
whae on campus. Reward. 758-2381.
i
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 would
cost:
.50 plus .25 equals .75 fa first insertion
.25 plus .25 equals .50 each fa second and third insertion.
Therefore total cost is 1.75. No charge fa lost and found classifieds
PAYMENT: Classified payable in advance. Send check or money orcter along wad to-
Fountainhead, Classified Ad Dept Old South Bldg ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
DEADLINES: Fountainhead publishes Tues. & Thurs. All classifieds & payments must
be received 2 days prior to requested insertion date. I
COPY: Fountainhead tries to publish only legitimate classifieds. Fountainhead
reserves the right to reject any and all ad copy that, in its opinion, is objectionable.
ERRORS: In case of errors in copy for which it is responsible, Fountainhead will
make the corrections in the earliest possible edition, without charge to the advertise
Coorl'c Material and
OaaU S4 Workmanship
Shoe,??,
Shop
113 Grande Ave.
758-1228
? Sister Mary
JPalm reader Advisor
MShe'll advise you on all problems.
She's helped thousands, why na
you? Hwy. 17Sputf of Washington,
? ???wirirwirf
T "1 f
fi
Qfoni
? HOOfiS -
StKr MO?ntl$
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?ent this
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try dub,
G'ville.
jat tips.
m. until.
Juplex to
ol year.
nt for the
I Jo Beth
) 4 blocks
xi. Phone
icky. 758-
)artment,
rsity Con-
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ace some-pt
2381.
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I 2 lines:
(Additional
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wad to:
27834.
ents must
intainhead k
ionable.
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advertise 1
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 956 MAY 1976
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Emissions clinic
to be held
May 8
The East Carolina University chapter of
the Student National Environmental
Health Association and the Eastern Lung
Association will oo-sponsor a free Car
Emissions Clinic. The clinic will be held on
Saturday, May 8 at Pitt Plaza Shopping
Center.
An infra-red exhaust analyzer will be
provided by Sun Electric Corporation to
evaluate levels of hydrocarbon and carbon
monoxide emissions from automobiles.
Readings will be taken at idle and at 25000
rpm on the tested vehicles. The driver of
each car will be given a copy of the test
along with an explanation of the readings.
The Car Emission Clinic tests your
vehicle for carbon monoxide and hydro-
carbon emissions. If your engine is
running properly, the emissions it pro-
duces will be minimal. If not, you should
know, so that you can have your motor
checked by a mechanic to learn how to get
better gas mileage and maintain lower
costs in car operation.
Pollutants in the air are by-products of
man's activities and energy demands.
High concentration of these impurities,
from cars, power plants, incinerators,
furnaces, and factories can weaken your
lung's defenses and make them more
vulnerable to infection. Pollutants can
irritate your lungs and cause a narrowing
in the air passages that may become
permanent, with breathing difficulties.
So help yourself and your oommunity,
oome to the free Car Emissions Clinic at
Pitt Plaza May 2-8 is Clean Air Week.
Pick a few bones
with Mr. Ribs
Students
Special
$2.95
'??n
m 7M-fMt I
Evans St. t
9oeoaooccocoooao9co9coo
S BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE S
DANCERS
805 DICKINSON AVE
GREENVILLE
SsOS?OQOaOOCCOCSCOSOC??Cr009
TROPICAL BLEND
FOR THE SAVAGE TAN
This is the darkest tan ever. And
you set it fast with Tropical
Blend, by Coppertone. It
smells like fresh coco-
nuts. And it has stranse
topca. a
tropical oils. It lets the sun tan you
wild. Unleash the savase
tan with Tropical Blend.
Then watch.The natives
will set very restless.
PERTONE
Sj PLOUGH. INC 1976





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8
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
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ENTERTAINMENT
Recognition eludes Roberta Flack
a
By ERNESTLEOGRA NDE
Roberta Flack had just come out of a
fitting fa a dress for a oonoert tour but she
put off any conversation about it. "It's
simple was the only description she
would give.
"That's basically my taste she
added I like not to have things that flash.
I like not to be disturbed by that myself if
I'm in the audience watching someone
play
Meeting a guest at home later she was
true to her word, dressed in a simple white
cotton caftan adorned only by some small
patchwork in earth tones at the collar.
However, the home itself-judging by
the living room?was a conflict in
simplicity and flash, starkly dramatic with
its wall-to-wall white carpet, leather-and-
chrome furniture and mirrored walls. And,
of course, a grand piano.
This is her place to rest when she's in
New York, the prestigious Dakota Apart-
ments, a monumental building that was the
setting fa the movie Rosemary's Baby
She considers her real home to be a
large house on 10 acres of land in
Wheaton, Md which she rents and which
is close enough, she says, to be "only an
hour away from Mom's kitchen table in
Virginia and all the love and security I
need "
Roberta Flack, it develops, still is 3
looking fa what she axisiers the proper
amount of recognition of her talent. She
won Grammies fa Recad of the Year two
years in a row, fa instance, and yet that
ROBERTA FLACK
achievement was glossed over, she feels.
"I don't think people made enough
noteof it she said. "I fe't very silly going
around blowing my own nan. I d'dn't
choose the material a perfam in that win
to win a Grammy, but it's like when Mark
Soitz wins six medals in a row - it should
be naed in the press
She certainly has waked hard enough
to get where she is. So hard that she took
the year of 1974 off. "From 1969 I had
waked with oily a day off here and
there she said, "and I was physically
tired. I ga sick really. Nothing maja. Just
the blahs. The docta said, You need to
rest. Can you rest'?"
She rested and when she went back on
tour last year, some reviewers made
remarks about her emerging from a
voluntary seclusion, which she felt were
unjustified.
A little further along in our conversa-
tion, she rethought that docta's diagnosis
and said, "I didn't really want a break but
the docta said I needed oie. I doi' t think I
was really tired. I think I was just baed
with the mechanics of what I was doing
This isa women who isn't used to being
tired. She started picking out tunes on a
secondhand piano in her parents' Nath
Carolina home when she was 4. She got a
scholarship to Howard University in
Washington, D.C at the age 15 and spent
time as a music teacher after graduation.
Then she began perfaming, playing piano
and singing at drinking spots in the
Geagetown section of Washington.
Jazz pianist Les McCann heard her and
got her an audition with Atlantic Recads.
After that, the nation and then the wald
heard her as she broke through with "The
First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
From this new U.S. tour, which ends in
July in California, she has gathered
together a new band, consisting of an extra
keyboard player, a bassist, a drumma and
a percussionist. She is constantly experi-
menting with new sounds, she says.
"Evaything with me jn music is a
matter of gestation she said. "Criticism
of what you do changes accading to the
weather. A real artist can't use that as a
guide. I don't listen to that. Not even if it's
good. If you pay attention to aitics,
nothing grows, nothing develops
She said she was integrating ha
classical training background into ha
music and she likes to recall with pride how
David Frost unexpectedly asked ha if she
would Dlay some classical pieces on his TV
talk program.
She revels in desaibing how she sat
down at the piano with trepidation (she
says) and then played ha way with the
greatest of ease through 20 minutes of
waks by such as Bach and Scarlatti.
She also is proud of the fact she
produced ha first recad album, Feel Like
Making Love, her latest. She got a
Grammy nomination fa the result. She is
producing the next one too. She says the
producing end of recading always has
been coisidered man's wak. She finds
doing it "vay liberating
Ballet stardom beckons 21 year old
By MICHAEL IACHETTA
Ballet stardom beckons to Marianna
Tchakassky at the ripe old age of 21 - and
the Oriental beauty thinks it's about time.
For the budding American Ballet
Theata soloist has been dancing an
avaage of five hours a day from the time
she was six and just another talented kid
growing up in Glen Cove, L.I N.Y. She
has since danced with companies ranging
from the Boishoi Ballet (at age 10) to the
New Yak City Ballet (in ha teens),
studied with teachers ranging from
exacting task mastas like Sean Williams of
the New Yak City Ballet to the company's
resident chaeographic genius, Geage
Balanchine; won sevaal fellowships rang-
ing from Ford Foundation grants to
stipends from the National Society of Arts
and Lettas, and waked ha way up to a
salary estimated at $25,000 a year in a
profession that notoriously underpays
up-and-coming talent.
But ballet is starting to catch on
nationally, with 11.5 millioi people having
attended dance events in 1975, up from 1
million a decade ago.
So all the pcactice is starting to pay off
fa Marianna, who recently won raves from
dance aitics fa ha pafamances opposite
Mikhail Baryshnikov, 27, the Russian
defect a who has become an intanational
supastar, in chaeographa Twyla Tharp's
"Push Comes to Shove a dazzling blend
of jazzy steps leading into classical ballet
movements to ragtime music.
Marianna makes the transition into
varying dance styles with a deceptive ease
that comes from a total dedication that
enables ha to be equally at home in ballets
ranging from a shjrt-em-up cowboy epic
thaysAoriesfeMilles'Jj
the classic stay of thwarted love that is
"Giselle
Indeed, chaeographa Anthony Tuda
of Amaican Ballet Theata has been so
impressed with the blossoming of Mari-
anna that he created a role especially fa
ha in his "The Leaves Are Falling" about
the loss of innocence through the discovay
of love, and ABT co-directa Lucia Chase
gave Marianna the plum of recently
dancing opposite Baryshnikov in "The
Specta of the Rose
Atthisstage, Marianna'sone true Icve,
ha consuming passion, is ballet. It has to
be. Fa being with an Amaican ballet
company is an unbelievably hard proposi-
tion, requiring seemingly endless hours a
preparation, almost from the time you can
walk.
"I give part of myself, from the inside
out, when I dance says Marianna. "It is
like the music is like the wind that gets
inside you and moves you, almost as
though your .body is a tree and your arms
are branches. So when I canoe I am flooded
with an almost spiritual feeling, as though
I'm achieving a breakthrough that
separates me from my mind and body so
that my soul is one with the music.
"It is like I am breaking out of the
theata and am absolutely free in time and
space, like the music has gotten inside my
body and taken me on this exhilarating trip
that takes me beyond my physical hurts so
I can rise above my problems
Thae isdefinitely a touch of the poet in
Marianna. And thae have been the hurts
and problems, ranging from ankle, thigh,
and back sprains, which have never
stopped ha from dancing and moving up
gracefully through the ranks without
alienating fellow dancers.
Thae has also been the hurdle of beina
a girl who has lived alone in New Yak City
fran ha earliest teens so she oould get the
best ballet training in the U.S.
"I like the city she says. "But I love
the country. So when I dance, I try to break
out of the city, to get back to nature as it
were, to the point whae I get off on
mountains, oceans and skies and try to
aeate those vistas through dance
Marianna was ban in Glai Cove, lived
in Washington, D.C and grew up in
Kensington, Md. Her mother was a
Japanese ballerina, ha father a musician,
her brotha and sista artistically inclined.
"I've been dancing as long as I can
rememba, first at hone with my motha
and then on scholarship with the Washing-
ton School of Ballet says Marianna.
Marianna is currently dancing on a
nationwide tour with American Ballet
Theata and will pafam with ABT during
the company's upcoming New Yak seasai
at the Metropolitan Opaa House unda the
Hurok aegis. She is a dancer to watch.
PARK
Greenville Movies
Through Thursday The Devil Within Her. Shows at 315, 5.10, 705, and 9:00. Rated
R. Starts Friday Psychic Killer.
PITT
Tarance Hill In Watch Out, We're Mad! Shows at 705 and 9O0. Rated G.
PLAZA CINEMA I
Charlton Heston and James Coburn in The Last Hard Men. Shows at 3.15, 510, 705
and 900. Rated R.
Starts Friday Crime and Passion
PLAZA CINEMA II
Lipstick with Anne Banaoft. Shows at 335, 525, 715, and 905. Rated R. Starts
Friday Trackdown.
TICE
The Rogue at 9:40 and Up Your Alley at 800. Both movies Rated R.
FRIDA Y'S FREE FLICK
The Odessa File. Shows at 5, 7, and 9. Rated PG.
Ii
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CRBATIV
PHOTOQ
Weddings
Con
2904 EAS
GREENVIL
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
9
NTERTAINMENT
Upcoming Concerts from
ling Concerts Iroi
wecs
Mendenhall Art Show
Hot Tona?? LiftJfi Aoo?Totiio?? &eazafcuahijtj ol?-Dc
2mtoo to F5v? feATUt2M? Oiioc C0426-CHeYSLf e hall-
RcseKeo ?at ??.
TX6 ruees -wakiw theatre ?? was h.dc- li i& ween m
L60Nl?weu?jewfZ4oee.s of the poepte. s&6?,pu;5 charu?:
TAANiCLS 8AMO-AT TYtG CAPitou ceMiea-
PotKnew. $tsr$ ?? Richmond wosfcue
uttle feat- rcHKV0KD wojue:
tffcOf5WUTM CtfAfct-OTTE COUSEOM
14- ?HC5BE 340- UiN?? AoO?TOKlUM- WASH D.C-
dl5-ilfc'?AUL M'OTWET 4WlVi$ ? 6XPTOUCeKT?K-6orHSHCV
dowiPLETEUf Sold out
20 60UWE f&lTT, UTO? fEAT ? OOTOOOiS AT M?" PARK
22" TOHNHY WINTER " UPlTOL C&WEK "&n
XV LWiAD ICVMA?0-WITH TEDKl06T6ttARUTnO)C?eJH
1 ?? Ys ? ? hamptgm &&o$ cousbum
5-
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EJKIG 1- 12. Top- Niof?Pbu. ScotfE
4 ? 5 4" 2d AnkIUAu WitUAM$6o?6 Bu?fe?ASS FESTIVAL ?
Johm rWrF&RD.LESfcK fw; Da. Vtsonj, to nah?
cuor a isvy ! War cm feure (?o. to si addD-
VA&AK CC?H6?4TS
)
easenotei Most snow times are approx. 8 XX) p.m. Since meet shows are out of town
irry) call us at WECU and we' II try to help out with addresses and directions. Majority
" he concert locations will accept mail-order requests when accompanied with stamped
-addressed envelope and prefer money orders. Conoerts are booked daily, also
icelled. So listen to WECU for current details and updates. Day Students CALL US
The Second Annual Art Show and
Competition is on display now in Menden-
hall Gallery fa free viewing to all. One
hundred and forty works representing 100
artists are featured in this diverse
presentation and the awarded works
designated with appropriate ribbons.
The judge, Chris Wilson, has been a
faculty member at Atlantic Christian
College for two years. He received his BA
at Valdoota College in Art History and his
MFA at the University of Georgia in
painting and drawing. He studied another
year at the University of Georgia and then
studied in Italy in the schools studies
abroad program. He has worked generally
inall media represented ir the show.
The winners are:
BEST IN SHOW $60 Jons Gunderson,
"Synthetic Diety" (jewelry)
PAINTING
1. $30 Constance Bumgardner,
Untitled No. 4448"
2. $20 Robert Dunning, Say Cheese
3. $10 Jackie Peele, "Untitled"
DRAWING
1. $30 Phil Harris, Two Nudes
2. $20 Matt Smartt, "Untitled"
3. $10 Mary Kane, "Untitled (owl)"
CERAMICS
No awards given. The judge felt that
the work did not warrant being
awarded.
PHOTOGRAPHY
1. $30 Ed Midgett, "Untitled" (steps)
2. $20 Ed Midgett, "Untitled" (nude)
3. No award
DESIGN
1. $30 Patricia Weirick, "Untitled"
(mbira)
2. $20 Kathy Kupke, "Spacesof
Infinity" (wall hanging)
3.10Ed Barnette, "Pattern" (jewelry)
PRINTMAKING
1. $30 Barbara McPhail, "Life Moves
Into a House"
2. $20 Bernard Gentry, Hour Upon
the Stage"
3. $10 Matt Smartt, "Ostrich"
Vegetable Plate
SPECIAL
$2.00
4 vegetable
?
" EAT FAMIU STYLE "
i
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OLDETOWNEINN
Monday - Thursday
4:30-7:30
$2.25 plus tax
one entree I all the vegetables,
bread I tea you ean eat
IITE.Sth ST. 758-1991
v
THE BEATLES
SPECIAL LATE SHOW
FRI.&SAT.11:15 PM.
IN If
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NIGHT"
All Seats $1.25
752-7649
n
NEED RESUME
PHOTOS?
Call Greenville's N?Ml
Professional Studio
752-0123
tmage&
creative mr W
PMOTOQRAPHY-
Weddings Portrait
Commercial
2904 EAST 10th STREET
GREENVILLE, N. C. 27834





LLWHBBBkk?BBBi?
10
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
mmm
Sigma Xi presents awards
to researchers
The ECU chapter of Sigma Xi presented
awards to ECU researchers at its annual
banquet Thursday evening.
Sigma Xi is a national honor society
which encourages excellence in scientific
research. Its members include students
and faculty members in campus science
and social science departments.
Biglogy student Joseph Tim-Yau Chan
of Hong Kong was awarded the Sigma Xi
undergraduate award for research. He is
the son of Mr. and Mrs Gordon Chan of
Hong Kong and the ward of Dr. and Mrs.
Victor Ng of Robersonville.
The Sigma Xi award for outstanding
Society prints
newsletter
By NANCY HARTIS
An English department newsletter was
circulated fa the first time April 12 to the
ECU English faculty and students.
The newsletter is published by mem-
bers of Sigma Tau Delta, an honor
fraternity for English students.
According to staff writer Monika L.
Sutherland, the purpose of the newsletter
is "to include newsworthy items that
pertain to English faculty and members
She said that the newsletter would
cover news about the English fraternity
and Alpha Phi Gamma, an honor fraternity
fa journalism students.
Miss Sutherland said, "The idea of a
newsletter had been around fa a long
time, and at our last retreat with the
English department, it was decided that
the fraternity would publish the newsletter
and the English department would pay fa
the paper
Miss Sutherland said, "Overall, the
response has been pretty good, but I don't
know exactly how many students got copies
because it was circulated right befae
Easter
She said copies of the first newsletter
could be picked up free in front of the
English department office in Austin
Building.
The next issue should be published by
May 3, she said. "And anyone that wants
to make announcements in the English
department can contact us she added.
Evelyn S. Fitzgerald and Sue Gadoi,
members of the fraternity, are writers fa
the publicatiai along with Miss Suther-
land. Mrs. Marie Farr is the faculty
advisor
Miss Sutherland said the next issue
would display the newsletter's new logo,
"The Wad aeeted by fraternity mem-
ber Phil Arnngton.
She said there would probably be no
mat issues after May 3 until next fall
?
A Lotof Bull:
NE12 POUND
STEER
BURGER
mm ???
graduate-level research was divided be-
tween two projects: one done by Craig
Zamuda, son of Joseph Zamuda of
Satellite Beach, Fla. and the other, a
cooperative project done by Carl Bailey of
Greenville, Scott Hardaway of Newpat
News, Va Scott Hartnessof Rooky Mount
and Don Foley of Staten Island, N.Y.
Receiving the Sigma Xi faculty award
fa outstanding research was Dr. A. Mason
Smith, faculty miaobiologist with the ECU
School of Medicine.
The awards banquet featured an
address by Dr. Arthur W. Cooper,
assistant secretary of the N.C Department
(4 Natural anrt Fmnnmir Rpaniirnm
r
tmmm
m
We're going to tell you how to
buy a loudspeaker
Were not going to tell you
which one. because loudspeakers
are very personal One man's
nice is another mans noise Still,
there are some common sense
and not-so-common sense)
things you should know For
instance
Enjoy yourself.
You're not getting tetanus shots
You're searching for love Enjoy
Bring your own music.
Bring a favorite record or tape:
something you know by heart
Theres no quicker, simpler way
to tell the difference between
speakers If you've been listening
in black and white you'll know it
when you hear Technicolor
Also, don't evaluate any
speaker by listening to radio
AM or FM By the time a radio
signal comes out of a speaker.
its been strained through gen-
erations of electronics and the
signal has been clipped on both
?nds It's just not a test of high
idelity sound
Listen to the speakers
through the kind
of electronic system you
plan to have at home.
No point listening through $5,000
worth of pre-amp. amp and turn-
table at the store unless that's
SIGMA XI AWARDS
Jow Zamuda and Don
Foley are shown re-
ceiving the graduate
research award.
what your speakers are going to
live with, right? Right.
Turn it up!
Way up Loud loud Kid-next-door
loud
You don t have to live with
loud music, but you ought to visit
there Loudness magnifies the im-
perfections that will scar your sub
conscious at regular listening
levels
Do you like the sound'? Is it
clean'? Is it clear'? Does it hum'?
Does it splatter'?
Loudness tells you what time
will do to your ears, your head,
your disposition So, turn it up1
Turn it down!
Right to the edge of silence
Are all the textures and details
and harmonics of the music still
there or does only the melody
linger on'?
No one wants to live with a
loudspeaker that can't make its
point unless it yells So. turn it
down
Don't stand right in front
of it. You're not
taking batting practice.
One way to spot a not-so-good
loudspeaker is to listen to the way
it handles high frequency sound
If the sound narrows as the tones
go higher if theres a peashooter
effect that requires you stand right
m front of the speaker to hear the
highs, that's not so good.
A good loudspeaker will dis-
perse the sound throughout the
room
So. stand to one side, then
the other If you don't get all the
music, move on
One demonstration isn't
a demonstration.
Expect to listen to three, four, five
different pairs of speakers Be
critical Be opinionated A little
honesty never hurt a courtship
Last point: Most of how is who.
One of the more expensive bits
of nonsense is that all great pro-
ducts sell themselves That's just
not true with loudspeakers
You're going to be better off
if you can find someone to help
you take a speaker through its
paces
And you just can't do any bet-
ter than an authorized JBL dealer
He's one of the nicest know-it-alls
you'll ever meet
High fidelity loudspeakers
from $156 to $3210.
Dcede L26
best wHtng two way
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Dacado L36
east expensive
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Natural oak cabinet
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ft ever rnade
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Horizon LI66
jhi s newest it has more
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The SmaHe6t Moor system
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been tra
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FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 566 MAY 1976
n
School of Business receives full accreditation
llwer
The elite graduate degree program,
Master of Business Administration (MBA),
in the School of Business at ECU has
received full accreditation, it was an-
nounced recently.
"This newly-acquired accreditation
status will likely further intensify interest
and admission demands for the MBA
degree, already one of the most sought-
after graduate degrees in higher edu-
cation Dr. James H. Bearden, Dean of
the School of Business, said.
Chanoellor LeoW. Jenkins, said, "this
is an event which brings credit to higher
education, both public and private,
throughout North Carolina ECU is one of
only two schools in tne state otrermg the
accredited MBA degree program.
Accreditation of the MBA degree
program here came at the annual meeting
of the American Assembly of Collegiate
Schools of Business (AACSB) last week-
end. The ECU program was the only one in
the South to be accredited this year.
The undergraduate degree program in
business administration at ECU was
accredited less than 10 years ago, in 1967.
"Not long after that achievement, Dean
Bearden and his faculty began planning for
the highest level of accreditation among
business schools, accreditation of its
graduate program said Dr. Jenkins.
Congratulating the administration,
faculty and student body of the School of
Business, Jenkins noted "long and hard"
work to achieve the new accreditation.
"We also know that such achievement
is made possible only through the
long-standing support of the taxpaying
public, voicing through their legislators,
the opportunity and the challenge for ECU
to serve' the people of the state. We will
continue to do that
On behalf of Dr. Bearden, Dr. Charles
Broome, dean of the graduate program in
the School of Business, said accreditation
means that ECU joins an elite group of
institutions in thisoountry which have both
the master's and undergraduate programs
accredited by the AACSB.
Dr. Bearden, in a statement, said, "For
a number of years now, ECU has operated
one of two accredited undergraduate
programs of business among North
Carolina's colleges and universities. The
North Carolina economy has absorbed and
benefited from the services of thousands of
young people who have received bac-
calaureate training at ECU'S School of
Business.
"In recent years, the ECU School of
Business has had the opportunity to
provide graduate level training for several
hundred men and women.
ESCAPE
Continued from page 1.
Without ever having a trial, or so much
as seeing a judge, Wilson and Smith were
put into the San Luis del Rio Colorado
Carcel in Senora, Mexioo. After that they
were shipped to the Nogales Senora
Carcel, "which is a nightmare said
Wilson. (Details of prison facilities and
treatment will be in the following article
next Tuesday). The final prison for Wilson,
the one from which he escaped was the
Nogales Carcel in Hermosillo. Smith had
been transferred deeper into Mexioo, to
the Hermosillo Carcel in Senora.
The followinq is an excerpt from
Wilson's original letter to Playboy: "I had
carefully planned my escape and had
waited two months and one week for it to
be executed. If the plan failed I would have
been locked in solitary, probably beaten,
and possibly killed. The most difficult part
was to prepare myself for failure. I felt I
had no choice but to try. I had thought of
suicide instead, but decided to make this
last desperate probably useless attempt for
my freedom
Aocording to Wilson, details of
the escape will not be printed until Smith is
out of prison, because the publication may
jeopardize Smith's chances for escape.
(Details of Wilson's negotiations with
Penthouse will be printed in the final
article of this five part series.)
To be oontinued.
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m ?'
??????????????ii
12
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
mtmemmm i ? i iu m ? ? u?
m
mm
MMP
Pitt Hospital pledges provide building funds a
By KENNETH CAMPBELL
Special to Fountainhead
The new Pitt County Hospital
Memorial Gifts Committee, which was
aeated in September 1973 to raise one
million dollars for the new hospital, has
already received approximately $400,000 in
pledges, according to G. Henry Leslie,
committee chairman.
About $201,590 of the pledges have
been collected by the committee.
Many of them are pledged over a four
year period, according to Leslie. The
committee's goal is to raise one million
dollars by September 1978.
because of inflation, the funds appro-
priated fa oonstruaion of the hospital are
about one million dollars shat. These
funds were raised through bond issues,
and taxation, Leslie said.
"The Memaial Gifts Conmittee was
aeated fa the purpose of raising the
supplementary funds needed to help
furnish and equip the new hospital
explained Leslie. "The new hospital is
scheduled fa completion in December
Although the committee was aeated in
1973, it did not seek any pledges until Sept.
1974. As its first project, it sought pledges
from doctas and industry, stated Leslie.
Now the committee is broadening its
scope. The current campaign is directed at
everyone.
Oxygen depletion cuts
Pamlico River stabilization
"There is na a mae wathy cause to
donate money to explained Leslie. "The
hospital will serve this community as well
as other areas
Persons wishing to donate money in
memay of someone can have a memaial
plaque with that person's name oi it
placed at a designated place in the
hospital.
It can be placed over a doo, wona
piece of machinery, a wherever the
contributa designates.
Sane pledges are donating their money
toward the purchase of certain pieces of
machinery. Some pieces of machinery are
as low as fifty dollars.
Current pledges range from a few
dollars by individuals to as much as
$30,000 pledged over a four year period by
a local industry, acooding to Leslie.
The new hospital will contain about 375
beds including a 14 bed psychiatric ward,
and a 55 bed rehabilitation center.
In the architectural (campus design),
plans are provided fa six additional
nursing towers. These towers will benefit
the ECU Medical School since additional
towers will be needed as the med school
enrollment inaeases.
The officers of the New Pitt County
Hospital Memaial Gifts Conmittee are G.
Henry Leslie, chairman; Joe Clark, vice
chairman; William C. Glidenwell,
treasurer; and Betty Speir, seaetary.
By KIM JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Oxygen depletion in the Pamlioo River
estuary could become a serious annual
problem if river conditions are not
stabilized, aocoding to Dr. Mark Brinson,
ECU biology professo.
The miao-oganisms in the water and
bottom sediment rapidly use up the river's
oxygen in their respiration process,
Brinson said.
Food matter in the water enables the
aganisms to carry on extensive res-
piration, he said.
Aocoding to Brinson, an inaease in
food matter will mean an inaease in
respiration which will, in turn, inaease the
deoxygenation.
Deoxygenation can lead to massive
fish-kills, he said.
Fish-kills have been periodically re-
poted in both the Albemarle and Pamlico
sounds.
"Our main concern lies in the fact that
industries may want to Iccate along the
estuary Brinson said.
"The industries will undoubtedly pour
their waste material into the river
According to Brinson, this waste
material will then be used by the
micro-organisms as foodstuff, thus
inaeasing the respiration process ana
further deaeasing the oxygen level of the
river.
Fish-killsmight then inaease and oocur
mae frequently with further deoxygen-
ation in the river.
Right now, the fish aren' t in too much
danger, Brinson said.
But with further oxygen depletion
there would be massive kills, possibly
every year instead of just a few fish killed
every 10 a so years as they ar ? now
Brinson and Dr. Graham J. Davis are
RED ROOSTER
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studying the oxygen depletion problem in
hopes of finding solutions that will allow
industries to locate along the Pamlico
without causing a dangerous inaease in
deoxygenation in the river.
The two biologists are receiving funds
fa their research fa one mae year fron
the Water Resources Research Institute of
the University of Nath Carolina at Chapel
Hill
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Entering
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ECU.
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m
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
mwmfimmm nun ?mm mmm
13
Mathematics student receives
coveted Putnam award
James Mackey Lewis of Hertford,
senior student in the ECU Department of
Mathematics, is a recipient of the 1976
Putnam Award.
Lewis is among outstanding students of
mathematics throughout the U.S. selected
to receive the $250 scholarship award.
Entering the Putnam award competition
were students at more than 350 U.S.
colleges and universities.
Lewis has also been recognized as
ECU'S outstanding senior by the campus
chapter of Phi Kappa Phi honor society. He
received a $100 scholarship and is eligible
for a national Phi Kappa Phi scholarship.
He v ?; initiated into Phi Kappa Phi as a
junior, having maintained an academic
grade point average of better than 3.8.
In addition, Lewis is this year's
outstanding senior in the ECU mathe-
matics department and was selected for
honorary membership in the American
Mathematical Association.
He has been chapter president of Phi M
Epsilon and Gamma Beta Phi honor
societies and was cited in "Who's Who
Among Students in American Universities
and Colleges
Earlier this spring he reported results
of his studies of continuous convergence to
a southeastern gathering of the Mathe-
matical Association of America in Char-
lotte.
Continued from page 1.
classroom and can't spend lab money, but
the freeze will not have a crippling effect at
ECU.
"The situation is beginning to look
more optimistic for next year and the
General Assembly Appropriations Com-
mittee is already putting money back into
the budget for expanded enrollment next
year
Aocording to Julian Vanright, ECU
business manager, the spending limit-
ations have had some effect, bet it has not
been a detrimental one.
Vainright cited examples of Richard
Blake, Dr. Jenkins' assistant, who lost his
secretary and could not hire a new one and
the curtailment of equipment purchases for
the physical plant.
"The state has been reluctant in
transferring funds because they are trying
to make so much money revert back to the
state budget said Vainright.
Alec White, director of aocountinr and
budget, related the same general feeling
about the reduction of spending on the
ECU campus.
"The N.C. Legislature has allotted 10
new teaching positions at ECU for next
year and this allotment is based on an
increased enrollment
MA TH AWARD- James Lewis received the 1976 Putnam A ward where more than 350
students competed tor the honor.
MWKMMMlMW
p. .?
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'Wrt
?I -vi&wfw
14
FCXJNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
m
mmm
mm
m
MMP
Sports
Vie
Final home game
is Saturday at 3
QEOFF BEASTON
SC expansion
to be discussed
Expansion will be the major topic of
discussion when the Southern Conference
leaders meet here beginning Wednesday.
With Richmond leaving the conference
this summer and ECU planning to do the
same in 1977, the Southern Conference is
faced with the prospects of being a
six-team loop or expanding.
At the present time, three schools have
expressed continued interest in joining the
conference. They are Western Carolina
University. University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga, and Marshall University of
Hjntington, West Virginia.
Southern Conference Commissioner
Ken Germann stated that he anticipated
the applications of these three schools
would be reviews x) that some action is
likely to take place n regards to granting
membership to one or more of the schools.
Western Carolina has been seeking
membership to the conference fa several
years now and appears to have the best
chance at being admitted to the oonferenoe
fa the 1976-1977 season. UT-Chattanooga
and Marshall seem to have less of a
chance, but could be considered for
admission the following year.
The addition of these schools, though,
would expand the geographical boundaries
of the oonferer e outside the states of
North Carolina, South Carolina and
Virginia. The oonferenoe has been seeking
such a setup since West Virginia and
Geage Washington left the oonferenoe in
the 1960's.
The depletion of the conference to six
schools fa the 1977 season appears to
enhance the chances of expansion this year
and next, with possibly all three schools
being admitted this year on a one-year
probationary status beginning July 1.
The meeting will also hear bids from at
least two, possibly four, cities fa next
year's conference basketball tournament.
Greenville, SC. and Roanoke, Va. have
already made bids fa the tournament and
Hampton and Williamsburg, Va. are
expected to present bids at the meeting.
The final discussion on the site of the
tournament will be made in June when the
Athletic Directors meet in Virginia Beach,
Va.
mmmmmm i M ami Umiii
ECU doses out its 1976 baseball season
this Saturday with a 3 p.m. game against
Campbell College at Harrington Field. In
many ways this season has been a great
one and in many other ways it has been a
disappointment.
From the basis of an overall reoad,
ECU'S current 22-7 reoad has to be
considered a successful season, but the
Pirates' fourth-place finish and 7-6 record
in the Southern Conference casts shadows
on this year's accomplishments
Not only does this year's team go down
as the winningest team since Earl Smith's
1967 squad, but t.iere have been some
outstanding perfamers as well.
At the plate, there has been the
seasoi-laig hitting of Joe Roenker (.300
with five home runs), Rick Kayda and
Pete Paradossi. At the mound the pitching
of Terry Durham (5-1), Pete Conaty (SO),
Keith Kurdewan and Dean Reavis has
been responsible fa 17 of the Pirates' wins
and the nucleus of the best pitching staff in
the Southern Conference.
ECU'S team has not been without its
share of reoads this season either.
First, Geoff Beaston has set career
reoads fa at bats, runs, hits and stolen
bases and has moved up to second-place in
the all-time rankings fa total bases, triples
and doubles.
There has also been single game
reoads by many Pirates, including Bobby
Supel's 11 total bases against VMI and
Roenker's four walks against Davidson.
The pitching aew has also set several
reoads fa the ECU squad this year.
Reavis set a reoad fa most innings
pitched in a game (12) against Maryland
and Durham set reoads against VMI fa
most oonsecutive strikeouts (four) and
most strikeouts in a single game (12).
And consider the undefeated reoad
that ECU had in its seven games with ACC
teams Duke, Maryland, N.C. State and
Nath Carolina and the season was not all
that bad.
But how those six oonferenoe losses
hurt ECU, four of which they lost by one
run, and ruined what could have been a
much better season.
After the Campbell game Saturday the
only thing the Pirates can do is sit and wait
fa sane wad fran the NCAA as to an
at-large bid to the NCAA championships.
Chances are it won't come. If that is the
case the Pirate baseballers will just have to
pack their bags and wait fa the start of the
Nath Carolina Summer League early in
June.
Nie ECU players will be making their
f nal appearances at Harrington Field this
Saturday when the Pirates meet Campbell
College.
Among those wearing the Pirate Purple
and Gold fa the last time will be Steve
Bryant, Ken Gentry, Geoff Beaston, Joe
Roenker, Howard McCullough, Glenn
Card, Dean Reavis, Joe Heavner, and
Addison Bass.
Beaston and Heavner will be finishing
their fourth year at ECU. The remainder of
the players, besides Bass, will be finishing
two-year careers fa the Pirates after
playing fa two years at junia col leges.
Bass has played baseball the last two years
after a football career was shatened by a
knee injury.
All nine players have been a contribu-
tion to ECU baseball over the past two
years and a huge aowd is expected to
oome and bid them farewell.
JOE ROENKER
Cheerleaders
chosen
Pirates down Sea Hawks
ECU attacked UNC-Wilmington Tues-
day night with a 14-hit assault to down the
Seahawks by a lopsided score of 11-2.
Six players collected two hits fa the
Pirates, who were winning their 22nd game
in 29 oontests this year. The Pirates
benefited also from six walks issued by
Seahawk pitchers, and stranded 10 runners
despite the 11 runs scored.
The Pirates, though, did not break the
game open until the late innings when they
scored 10 runs in the final three frames.
Going into the seventh, though, ECU
trailed 2-1.
After the second inning, when UNC-W
scored two runs on just one hit, ECU hurler
Terry Durham was marvelous, winning his
sixth game in seven decisions this season.
In the seventh ECU broke the game
wide open with five runs. Charlie Stevens
opened with a bunt single and stole
second. Pete Paradossi and Rick Kayda
each singled to bring aaoss Stevens and
moved up on an infield out.
Bobby Supel then lined a grounder to
second, but Paradossi beat the throw home
fa the go-ahead run. Singles by Steve
m
m
Bryant and Robert Brinkley scored Supel
and Kayda made it 5-2. Joe Roenker's hit
scored Byrant and made it 6-2.
The Pirates added four moe runs in the
eighth to take a 10-2 lead. Paradossi
walked and Kayda singled. The bases
loaded up when Howard McCullough
bunted fa a hit. Supel's single scored
Paradossi and Kayda scored on a saaifioe
fly by Bryant. Brinkley loaded the bases by
walking and Roenker followed with a hit to
soae yet another run fa the Pirates. Supel
scored the final run of the inning when
Card fooed Roenker at seoond.
The Pirates' final run of the game
scored in the ninth when Paradossi walked,
advanced on a walk by McCullough and
sooed when Bryant singled.
Bryant's three runs batted in were tops
fa ECU and Supel's two-fa-six at the
plate raised his average fa the year to .379
and gave him nine hits in his last four
games.
The Pirates dose meir season Saturday
with a 3 o'dock game at Harrington Field
against Campbell College.
m
By
There are
ng in Me
ng. Team
lalons wh
jues. The
iaion whid
the Grad
1 three leac
I two leagu
sioi in wh
Single leag
an oi Tue
i less than
ion oompet
rent leagu
n League
t's Time C
iue title al re
left whil
petitoshav
?s (3-2) an
) are prese
s' Good, I
is' Brewers
eague runn
off spot.
Belk's Tigei
spot in Do
ever, the
aining and
3 than three
it league te.
t's Brewers
I now appear
Last Thursday the 1976-1977 East t the numbe
Carolina University cheerleading squadDam Leagu
was chosen in Minges Coliseum. Selededyeen the A
to the squad were 12 individuals, six mens Gang (5-
and six women. iS are pretty
Returning from las year's squad are the excepti
Randy Alfad, Ken Lanier, Dawn William-) Knows (2-1
son, Leigh Davis, Edna Privett and Patty
Russell. Seleded to the squad fa the first -
time this year were Mark Lewis, DailioT?
Sexton, Rob Walters, Mike Harris, Freda
Brown and Peggy Walker. ? ?
Nine men and 19 women tried out fa III Oil
the squad, which was picked on the basis of
voice, attractiveness, personality and stenn's
poise, and coodination and stunt skills, inst sometou
The group was seleded by a panel of 8umb,ed to
ten judges which inducted persons from weekend s S
the Athletic Department, the university, ient m RicnrT
and the local community. he Pirates I
After tryouts, the cheerleaders met and sixth-place
seleded Miss Russell as Head Cheerleader (jav when all
fa next year. She is a junia fran gn Five of th(
Greenville and next year will be the second, Furman, w
year on the squad fa her rjdual champi
? mm he Pirates ha
Indians clinch of VMi
est individ
Commissioner's ZTZm
e the Pirates
Despite their first place finish in the
Southern Conference track tournament this
weekend, it appears nearly impossible that
ECU can win the Commissioner's Cup this
year.
William and Mary'sseccnd-place finish
in track and its fifth place finish in tennis
place it three points ahead of East Carolina
and Appalachian State in the cup race, but
the Indians are only one spot behind the
Pirates in baseball with nearly all the
places dedded.
As it stands now, with only baseball left
to tabulate, William and Mary has 62
points, ECU and Appalachian stand second
with 60 points, Richmond is fourth with 51
points, Furman stands fifth with 50.5
points, and it could move up since it has
dinched the baseball crown. The last three
spots are held down by VMI, the Citadel
and Davidson.

O W PI
? 88





Ml??
m

mm
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
?immmnummmmm inanaam ? m
15
Vlen 's Intramural softball enters sixth week
By LEONARD SMITH
There are eighty-eight teams partici-
? ng in Men's Intramural Softball this
H m rQ Teams compete in one of four
ialons which are subdivided into
' jjk jues. The largest division is the Dorm
Wi jjMj iaton which has five leagues, followed
WJm the GraduateIndependent Division
i three leagues, the Fraternity Division
i two leagues, and the eight-team Club
sion in which all eight teams compete
kP P single league structure. Softball games
P JP2 ?" o" Tuesday, March 23, and now,
MZ ' less ,nan ,wo weeks lef in regular
2 on competition, several of the eleven
?4m rent league titles are still undecided.
7H ! n League I of the Dorm Division,
B f s Time Out (6-0) has clinched their
I IJK tue title already. Time Out has only one
? fl le left while all of the other league
A Cu petitas have at least two losses. Belk's
W j3 es(3-2) and Belk's Nine of Diamonds
W &Tare presently tied for seoond, while
? Js Good, Bad, and Ugly (2-2) and
? is' Brewers (3-3) are still in contention
pBl eague runner-up honors and a possible
off spot.
Belk's Tigers (4-1) have the number
spot in Dorm League II at present.
Aever, the Tigers have two games
aining and no other league team has
3 than three losses. That means that all
it league teams are still in the race,
t's Brewers (3-2) and Scott's Scrapers
I now appear to have the best shot at at
1977 Eastt the number two spot,
ling squacDorm League III is a real dog fight
n. Selectedveen the Aycock Bullets (5-0) and
Is, six mens Gang (5-1). The other six league
is are pretty much out of the picture
squad are the exception of untested Umstead
vn William-) Knows (2-1).
t and Patty
Iterates take seventh place
uris, Freda
rs
League IV has thus far been a cakewalk
for Aycock's Bright Sluggers (6-0). The
toughest competition will be for second
place where Aycock's Sanford & Sons'
(3-1) and Scott's Rangatangs (3-2) are in a
real battle.
Belk Buzzards (5-0) would seem to be in
the League V driver's seat while Jones' 4th
Floor Aycock (4-1) and Jones' Bad News
(4-1) are easily within striking distance.
The GraduateIndependent Division
League I race is technically a close one
between three teams. However, The Pack
(4-0) appears to be the most talented team
and should take the league title while The
Dimples (5-1) and Tri-G's (4-1) battle for
second place.
Warren's What (5-0) is the odds-on
favorite to take the League II title in
competition with Herb's Superbs (4-1) and
Off The Wall (3-1). Honky Amusement
(2-1) and Hillcrest (3-2) have an outside
Women take
tri-meet win
ECU'S women's track team took a
victory in a tri-meet last Thursday by
taking first-place in six events.
The women beat Salisbury State and
Towson State in the meet in Salisbury,
Maryland.
Debbie Freeman took first-place in the
discus. Linda McLean won two events, the
100 yard dash and long jump; Sherry Rape
won the two-mile run, Jeannette Whitfield
won the 440 yard dash and Jean Evans won
the 880 yard run.
On Friday night, the ECU ladies
oompeted in the Florida State Invitational
in Tallahassee, Florida.
ied out fa
the basis of
nality and
int skills,
a panel of
rsons from
university,
rsmet and
Iheerleader
mior from
the second
nish in SC tournament
ECU'S tennis team found itself matched
inst some tough first-round competition
stumbled to a seventh-plaoe finish in
weekend's Southern Conference tour-
ient in Richmond, Va.
ich
er's
he Pirates found their hopes of a
sixth-plaoe finish dashed the very
day when all of its competitors were
en. Five of those losses were to players
i Furman, which wound up as the
'idual champions fa the tournament.
he Pirates had 19 points to place just
d of VMI fa seventh plaoe. The
est individual finish for the
netterswasin the sixth flight singles
and the number two doubles match,
e the Pirates placed sixth.
In the number six singles, Randy Bailey
finished sixth, winning two of his four
matches fa the tournament. The team of
Bob Neff and Doug Getsinger finished
sixth in the number two doubles.
The remainder of the ECU team placed
in seventh place except fa Doug Getsing-
er, who lost both his matches to plaoe l
in the number three singles competition.
ECU oompetitas were Tom Durfee,
Jim Ratliff, Bob Neff, Mitch Pergerson,
Durfee and Bailey in doubles, and Ratliff
and Mark Callaway in doubles.
The seventh place finish equalled
ECU's finish in the tournament last year.
Furman's domination was so great in the
tournament that they had the title wrapped
up after Thursday's semifinal rounds.
lish in the
lament this
ossible that
sCup this
place finish
t in tennis
ist Carolina
jp race, but
behind the
rly all the
baseball left
ary has 63
land second
urth with 51
with 50.f
since it has
he last three
the Citadel
Clip this coupon!
And get three games for only1.00.
Bring three friends along. We'll let
them in on the deal, too.
O Wt fPOCA
WASHINGTON HWY.
GREENVILLE, N.C
sha at the title but are far less talented
than the aha three frontrunnas.
The League III race will go down to the
least day since eight of the nine teams have
recads ranging from 2-0 and 0-2 and they
all have at least three games left. Bitta-
weedGang (2-1), Masta Hittas(2-0), and
the Snappy Gatas (2-1) are the three best
teams and the real competition will be
between the three of them.
In the single league Club Division Phi
Epsilon Kappa (5-0) is easily the team to
beat. Phi Epsilon Kappa has only two
games left and both games are with weaker
teams. A weak B.S.U. Bullet (4-1) team has
a good chance to take second place honas.
Five aha teamsarealso still in the second
place competition too but fa various
reasons the B.S.U. Bui lei now appear to
have the best chance of finishing in seoond.
The League I race in the Fratanity
Division is a battle between Kappa Alpha
A team (5-0) and Tau Kappa Epsilon A
team (4-0). Phi Tau (4-1) and Pi Lambda
Phi (2-2) have fair ball dubs but have an
outside o mce at a tie fa seoond place.
The U que II race is a jig-saw puzzle.
Lambda L i Alpha (4-1), Tau Kappa
Epsilon " iorn Losers" (3-2), Kappa
Alpha'sB team (4-1), Sigma Nu(3-1), and
Kappa Sigma (2-2) are all still in the
running and neitha of the teams have a,
prepondaance of talent. Thaefae, this is
anaha league battle which should go
?down to the wire.
The Playoff Picture
The Men's Intramural Softball Playoffs
will get underway either late next week a
on Monday, May 17, unless bad weatha
faces a delay. If no bad weatha hampas
the completion of regular season play, the
top two teams in each league will probably
be included in the playoffs.
In the opinion of this writa, the four
Divisional Champions should be the Belk
Buzzards in the Dam Divisiai, The Pack in
the GraduateIndependent Division,
Kappa Alpha's A team in the Fratanity
Divisiai, and Phi Epalon Kappa in the
Club Dvision.
fin wiiL iiiLjJw ih iijiirii
Wilbur's
Family
Favorites
Bok?rj ? flarartd 119
FrMSMwftNMn
???Iry fried oaioce
finely ?f SHirnks
SPECIAL! Hot dog with
homemade chile
Now featuring: 14 pounder wchoooo and
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J onkm ring, dill pickle & mayamaJai
T TWIL8CATIMS 14 St. OPEN 7 DAYS
?S Ceratr at Sta aat Reatft ST. A WEEK
6
?

m
m
m

J: - iK & : :?
? - ? ' ' ? :





16
m
FOUNTAINHEADVOL. 51, NO. 556 MAY 1976
mimrnta
mm
?p
m
m
mi
newsFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASHFLASH
Freaks Vs. Pigs
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 support-
ers are asked to attend to help with
community relations.
Car wash
The Kappa Sigma Chapter of Delta
Sigma Theta Sorority is sponsoring a car
wash and hot dog and coke sale Saturday,
May 15th. Plaoe will be decided later.
Young Democrats
On Monday, May 10th, at 8XX) in room
242 Mendenhall, the Young Democrats are
sponsoring a State Treasurer Forum. The
candidates speaking will be Marlane
Boyles and Lane Brown. Everyone is
invited.
Honor ceremony
On Wednesday, May 12, at 3:00 p.m. in
Minges Coliseum there will be a brief
ceremony to be held in honor of Dr. Nephi
M. Jorgenson. The ceremony will be held
in appreciation for Dr. Jorgenson's 29
years of service to ECU as an instructor,
Athletic Director, and Departmental
Chairman of Health and Physical Edu-
cation. The ceremonies will be followed by
a short reception.
The ceremonies will be attended by Dr.
LeoJenkinsaswell as other university and
departmental members, he public and all
other interested persons are invited to
attend.
Union art show
Come regenerate your brain cells! A
quite tremendous (in quality and quantity)
exhibition of student works is on view free
in Mendenhall Gallery this week (May 2-9)
Ribbon winners will be on view Tuesday
afternoon and all entrants must pick up
work Sunday, May 9 from 1 to 6 p.m.
Sponsored by the Student Union Art
Exhibition Committee (ILLUMINA) 1975-
1976.
Flea market
A Flea Market, sponsored by Menden-
hall Student Center, will be held on
Thursday, May 20, in Wright Auditorium
between the hours of 9jOO a.m. and 7fl0
p.m. Any university student, faculty a
staff member may sell items in the Flea
Market. Everyone who wishesto sell must
register and reserve space in Wright
Auditorium at the Mendenhall Student
Center Information Center, from 9fl0 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m May 10-14. Deadline fa
space reservation is May 15 at 5Q0 p.m.
Reservations will be made on a first come,
first serve basis.
REAL
Have a problem? Need information?
Real Crisis Center open 24 hours Call
758-HELP or oome by 1117 Evans St.
Ski Club
Cool Water Ski Club is providing free
transportation 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.
Chess master
Wald-renowned International Chess
Grandmaster Pal Benko will give a
simultaneous exhibition and lecture Satur-
day, May 8 at 1230 in the J.H. Rose High
School cafeteria. All interested persons are
invited to attend and urged to bring a chess
set. There will be a $.50 admission charge.
Mummification
Dr. Robert Bunger, professor of
anthropology, will make a presentation on
"The Scientific and Humanistic Approach
to Egyptian Mummification on Wedne-
day, May 12th, 1976 at 730 p.m. in
Brewster D-302. All intaested people are
invited to attend. A dub meeting will
follow.
Greek rosters
We must have a roster of all membas
and a list of all activities and any awards
the saaity a fratanity has woi no later
than 10XX) a.m. Friday, May 7 in ader fa
the infamatiai to be included in the 1977
yearbook. Failure to get the material to us
will result in no coverage in the
BUCCANEER
Cook out
mm
Phi Alpha Theta invites all students
interested in histay to attend its spring
oook-out at Tar River Estates Party House
on May 11 at 630 p.m. Please register by
Friday afternoon in the histay department
office. A $1.00 donation is asked of all
participants to aid in the purchase of
refreshmenta
Putt-putt tourney
The Intramural Office is sponsaing a
co-rec putt-putt golf tournament. Teams
must consist of one male and one female.
All students and staff members may
participate. Entry fams may be picked up
in the Intramural Office - Memaial Gym
Rcon 204 and must be turned'in to the
Intramural Office by 5:00 p.m. on
Wednesday, May 12. There will be a $1.00
per player charge to be paid at the
Greenville Putt-Putt course.
m
All you can eat Sigma Tau Delta r
All you can eat - cotton candy, popcan,
and sno-oones plus a band concert; that's
what the Spring Mini Carnival is all about.
Spaisaed jointly by Mendenhall Student
Center and the ECU Varsity Band, this free
event will be held on the University Mall an
Tuesday, May 11 beginning at 330 p.m.
and ending at 6:00 p.m. In case of
inclement weather the carnival will be held
on Thursday, May 13.
So wander over to the Mall on Tuesday
afternoon and lay back with a sno-oone in
one hand and popcan in the other and
listen to some first rate music!
HCSL screenings
The ECU delegation of the North
Carolina Student Legislature will hold
saeenings fa new members ai Wednes-
day, May 12 at 7:30 in room 244
Mendenhall. All interested persons are
urged to apply.
Guatemala pig pik
If you enjoy bluegrass music, eating,
square dancing, volleyball, meeting new
people and have aconcernabout the victims
of the Quatemala Earthquate, make plans
to attend the Guatemala Pig-Pickin' May
15, from 1 p.m. until.
The event is co-sponsaed by the ECU
Parks and Reaeation Society and the ECU
Student Volunteer Association. Tickets are
$4, and along with directions on how to get
to the setting fa the event, are available
fron members of both sponsaing groups.
Ground Speed is the featured enter-
tainment. There will be plenty of pig and
beverage fa all.
Proceeds go to the Guatemala Earth-
quake Fund.
Annual picnic
The annual Spring Picnic of the League
of Scholars will take place next Wednes-
day, May 12, from 5-7 p.m. Any member
who has rrat received a fam concerning the
Picnic may contact Dr. Ebbs fa furtha
details. You must notify Dr. Ebbs, no later
than Monday, May 10, if you plan to
attend. If you bring a date, please bring
$1.00 fa expenses and be sure to infam
Dr. Ebbs if you plan to do so.
Forever
The Faever Generation is an ECU
Christian fellowship group. We meet each
week fa Christ-centered Bible study,
prayer, singing and fellowship. We would
like to share with you what Jesus Christ
has done in our live Why not join us this
Friday night at 7?j p.m. in Mendenhall
244?.
Consumer problems?
Are you having problems with mer-
chants, merchandise, money, a any
oonsumer products? We can help! Contact
Ray Hudson, Mendenhall Student Center,
SGA Student Welfare Office, phone
758-6611, ext. 216.
Thae will be a meeting of Sigma Ta
Delta, the English Hona Society, on Me
13 in Mendenhall 244 at 730 p.m. M
Ovid Pierce will be present to answer
questions you may have concerning writir
a Southern Literature.
Vet checks
Ron Brown, VA representative at E(
says that a number of veterans
dependents will receive short checks fj
May. This is due to the VA's advanc
payment system, which uses approxir
dates to project anticipated enrollr
often a year or more in advanc
Adjustments can be made with a minimuC
of inconvenience. Anyone receiving
check fa less than 28 days fa May shouj
contact Brown at 758-3215, a oome L
room 206 Whichard Building.
Rebel '76
Rebel '76 has arrived and may I
picked up free of charge at Mendenh;
Student Center, the Old Student Unio
various dams, the Library, and th?
proninent places on campus. If you ha
trouble finding a copy, there are numerot
copies in the REBEL office in trast
Publications Center. The Rebel staff jad
grateful to the students and faculty thed
helped us make this year's copy such ran
success.
are
Grad record exam
irst
ton
The Graduate Reoad Examination v,
be offered at ECU on Sat June 12, 19
Application blanks are to be completed afof
mailed to Educational Testing ServiCg
Princeton, N.J. 08540 to arrive by May n(i
1976. These applications are also availat
at the Testing Centa, Rooms 105-k'qj
Speight Building, ECU.
ty,
Beta Gamma Signv
xn
Beta Gamma Sigma, the natiornq
business hona society, initiated 30 n
members in ceremonies at ECU this wet
These students - ten senias, twel
junias, and eight graduate students -
the ECU School of Business, are hona
fa academic excellence in their busirKQ
studies.
Beta Gamma Sigma chapters ?
limited to those schools of business whthe
are recognized by the specialized accrethis
ation of the American Assembly "at
Collegiate Schools of Business, it vhis
pointed out by Dean James H. Bearden
the School of Business. ish
Dr. R.B. Keusch, President of Bnis
Gamma Sigma chapter at ECU, stated tjna
these students had indeed shown oJt
standing pafamance since membershipe
the hcna society is limited to the top trie
percent of the senia class, five pacent
the junia dass, and twenty percent of let
graduate students
mm it i umi
m





Title
Fountainhead, May 6, 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
May 06, 1976
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.04.395
Contributor(s)
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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